Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
12538Videsne, domine Præsul, quòd repellimur ab hostibus, nec eos nisi per ignem subjugare poterimus? 11808 R117351, 11Sep53, Elizabeth Glass Wardell( C) Well, why not? 11808 R119422, 23Oct53, Arthur S. Pederson( Wr) What? 11808 Well, why not? 11808 What? 11808 Which way Parnassus? 12537 Quid tanto vesana malo profecit Erynnis? 12537 The bookseller ventured to submit to his Majesty, that the article in question, as one highly curious, was likely to fetch a high price.--How high?"
12537Upon it was this inscription:--"Malades, voulez- vous soulager vos douleurs?
12064Who are the Benighted now?
12064The servants are summoned by the exclamation of"Boy"instead of the_ Qui hi_?
12064We were laughing and talking with each other, when, suddenly starting up, the stranger youth exclaimed,"You are English?
11138And what can you give my ally, Hardrada?
11138Why wear the Danish yoke,they asked,"and be ruled with a rod of iron?"
11138John Ball chose as a war- cry and transparency these words:"When Adam delved and Eve span, Where was then the gentleman?"
11410("Quid Domini Domus in Castro, nisi foederis arca In Tempho Baalim?
11410A flat gravestone in the churchyard has the following curious inscription:-- JOHN STARRE Starre on Hie Where should a Starre be But on Hie?
11410How many towns on the coast claim their particular semicircle of bay to be"the English Naples"?
11410It is insulting to the villager and humiliating to oneself to ask"What place is this?"
11410There are two headstones of very early date--1579(?)
11410Weymouth is in possession of a keepsake of these stirring times in the statue of His Hanoverian Majesty that graces(?)
11410poor Bucket gone?
12676***** Why is Mr. Whitbread in his brewery like the Jerusalem coffee- house?
12676A.M., of Westfelton, near Shrewsbury._"_ Hamlet._ Do you see nothing there?
12676But may not the habitual application of the narcotic influence to the nervous system have its evils also?
12676Is this a good shilling?"
12676May it not weaken or deaden the nervous and muscular action which is needful to digestion?
12676Why does not some man of public research enlighten the public on the proceedings at the Mint?
11554If you propose to convert us after you have conquered us, why not convert us before you have conquered us?
11554Is there, then, anything whatever to be said for the English in the matter?
11554What could such mere order of the words matter?
11554What was it then that first made war-- and made Napoleon?
11554What was this thing to which we trusted?
11554Why, as a fact, did not England interpose?
133762) Did the defendant commit the disseisin?
13376And the said John Solas is bound to the said Thomas Profyt in 100 pounds by a bond to make defense of the said lands and tenements by the bribery(?)
13376As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool?
13376For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life?
13376Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood?
13376Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor?
13376What am I?
13376What am I?
13376What is this, if not to be mad?
11801R56338, 23Dec49, Dorothy Canfield Fisher( A) WHAT SINISTER HOUR IS THIS?
11801R57910, 27Jan50, Mrs. Frank A. Vanderlip( W) WHAT SHALL WE DO NOW?
11801R60043... Why authors?
11801R60056, 21Mar50, Elizabeth Monroe Story( NK) SELF- DISCOVERY; or, WHY REMAIN A DWARF?
11801R60761, 10Apr50, William Evans( A) WHAT NEXT IN EUROPE?
11801R61159, 13Apr50, Ellis A. Lardner( W) WHY remain a dwarf?
11801R63259, 15Jun50, Louise Fox Connell( W) ARE YOU A SHORT- SWORD MAN?
11801SEE Are you a short- sword man?
11801SEE Self- discovery; or, Why remain a dwarf?
11801SEE Self- discovery; or, Why remain a dwarf?
11801SEE What next in Europe?
11801WHY AUTHORS?
11801What shall we do now?
11801What sinister hour is this?
11801What sinister hour is this?
11801What sinister hour is this?
12745But is this all?
12745But what is this progress?
12745Have we exhausted the natural and usual sense of the word?
12745His mournful exclamation was heard,"Can not there be found a Christian to cut off my head?"
12745How manie nose gaies did her grace receive at poore women''s hands?
12745How oftentimes staid she her chariot, when she saw anie simple bodie offer to speake to her grace?
12745Is it the Blue Nile, which seems to come down from the distant mountains?
12745Or is it the White Nile, which has traversed the immense plains of equatorial Africa?
12745The guardianship of the crowns almost approached the dignity of a priesthood, for was not the urseus, which adorned each one, a living goddess?
12745What is this development?
12745What were the causes of this depression from which Babylon suffered at almost regular intervals, as though stricken with some periodic malady?
12745What, then, is civilisation-- this grave, far- reaching precious reality that seems the expression of the entire life of a people?
12745Which is the true Nile?
11543Is your Majesty in earnest?
11543What,exclaimed the philosopher,"must I, in order to foretell the weather, stay here, and watch which way that black ram turns his tail?"
11543Will ye, sir? 11543 But here it may be objected, why instead of eating his pie in a corner, did he not share it with his companions? 11543 He exhibited no marked originality of style-- he founded no school-- and as for his imitators, where are they? 11543 How are we to manage this? 11543 Is not the honey- bee, we are asked, a wise animal?--We grant it.--Doth he not improve each passing hour?"
11543Is''t fit you waste your choler on a burr?
11543Meanwhile, will nobody write the_ hic jacet_ of the deceased?
11543Regard what such would say?
11543What merit to be dropp''d on fortune''s hill?
11543When very near her end, she inquired of one of the physicians in attendance,"How long can this last?"
11543gratuitously cruel?
11543or no publisher engage for his reminiscences?
10719How can that besaid MacKinnon,"when I bestowed this entertainment upon you in free good- will?"
10719Lord D----"an enchanting shape--"Will move for"--"Maraschino""Pray, Julia, how''s your mother''s ape?"
10719Love''s shafts are weak--"my chestnut kicks"--"Heart broken;"--"broke the traces"--"What say you now of politics?"
10719Well, but have you any weapons of defence?
10719''What has made you so bitter?''
10719''What''s like a good action?''
10719''You can not recommend me a valet, Findlater,''renewed his lordship;''a good, honest, sensible fellow, who can neither read nor write?''
10719And where your brogue, Sir Lucius?
10719But have you forgotten how you scorched my fingers twenty years ago, with a burning cake?
10719The good- hearted Sir Christopher stopped--''Who is that poor fellow?''
10719Thus in the"Merry Wives of Windsor,""What say you to young Mr. Fenton?
10719Was ever such a happy swain?
10719Who could have thought he would have turned out so?''
10719here are met All tongues, and times, and faces, The Lancers flirt with Juliet, The Bramin talks of races; And where''s your genius, bright Corinne?
10719who taught that man to valtz?"
13651Is He the Man?
13651Is He the Man?
13651King or Knave?
13651Married or Single?
13651Married or Single?
13651Miss or Mrs.?
13651Under which Lord?
13651Under which Lord?
13651Was She Justified?
13651What will the World Say?
13651Who Poisoned Hetty Duncan?
10940Am I not fit to be your master? 10940 And that one,"I asked,"with the large Milanese cap on his head, who holds an old book?"
10940Eh, but, my son,they said,"have you dispensation from fasting on a Friday?"
10940How did our fathers live?
10940Of what use are these cloaks?
10940That one,I replied,"and who has turned towards us?"
10940That one,he answered,"who is scratching the end of his nose with one hand and his beard with the other?"
10940What do you think of that?
10940What institutions had they? 10940 Whose garments are the more valuable and the more useful?
10940Can there be a greater_ miracle_ than is to be seen in this court, where the maimed walk upright?"
10940Can you not place before us their pastimes, their hunting parties, their meals, and all sorts of scenes, sad or gay, which composed their home life?
10940Frédégonde said one day to Rigouthe,''Why do you continually trouble me?
10940One respectable lady approached her and said,''My friend, what do you call that fashion?''
10940What were their political rights?
10940Where, then, did the gipsies obtain interpreters?
10940Who is there who could thoroughly describe or even appreciate all the happy or unhappy vicissitudes relating to the establishment of the Communes?
10940mine, for which I have only paid a sou( about twenty- two francs of present money), or yours, which have cost so much?"
10940they answered,"if He had appeared on earth should we still be miserable?"
10940what will the Duke Francis and his Bretons do?
11856Can education be defined?
11856Clue to danger?
11856Dead end?
11856Did you see what I saw?
11856Do you know your skills?
11856End of the search?
11856Exit?
11856Finishing touch?
11856Foundations of the metaphysics of morals, what is enlightenment?
11856Have you seen Orja Corns?
11856How do you do?
11856How''s the back view coming along?
11856Jesus-- God, man or myth?
11856Should we have more TVA''s?
11856Television-- servant or master?
11856What does it take to enjoy a poem?
11856What is modern design?
11856What now?
11856What would they say?
11856Who dreams of cheese?
11856Who?
11856Why ask for permission?
11856Why should I?
11856Will you wait?
11849Are clothes modern?
11849Can France hold her eastern empire?
11849How big is big?
11849How is it possible, woman, in the awful and magnificent times we live in, to be preoccupied exclusively with the piddling?
11849International trade: cooperative or competitive?
11849Is there time?
11849Last reprieve?
11849Must we fight Russia?
11849The Poet speaks?
11849To whom Palestine?
11849Together?
11849Was them the days, boys?
11849What became of the literary radicals?
11849What is modern architecture?
11849What is modern painting?
11849What next for women?
11849What next for women?
11849What next for women?
11849What next for women?
11849What next for women?
11849What''s the good news?
11849What, no warts?
11849Where are we heading?
11849Who killed the monkey?
11849what shall I wear?
11854Are we asking for another Pearl Harbor?
11854Can Protestantism win America?
11854Caroline?
11854Creed or chaos?
11854Eva?
11854Friend or foe?
11854Girl without a country?
11854How Puritanian can you get?
11854Last of Lanny?
11854Poland: a change ahead?
11854Trapped?
11854War scare in campaign?
11854What are the odds?
11854What do you expect to do when I''m gone, may I ask- live by your wits?
11854What is literature?
11854What makes Sammy laugh?
11854What shall I do?
11854When were you built?
11854Which grade of braille should be taught first?
11854Who say ye that I am?
11854Whose business was it?
11854Why are you single?
11854Why socialism?
11854Will you follow Jesus?
10857How many ponies can he pay for her?
10857And has he not good cause to rejoice and be contented with his lot?
10857Are not his gleeful children, who are enjoying a romp on the huge sand hills, obedient and reverential in his presence?
10857Arriving at Richmond he asked the usual question:"Is not the negro idle, thriftless and thievish?"
10857Do you like me?
10857Do you think me pretty?
10857Does Prohibition prohibit?
10857Does civilization civilize?
10857Has he not a faithful and charming wife?
10857He drew his pistol and started for the nearest man on the station platform, shouting:"You''ll take care of us, will you?
10857How do I affect you?"
10857In this room the couple begin to dance, making signs to each other, the meaning of which may be:"Well, what do you think of me?
10857Or were they some of the followers of Votan or Zamna, who had wandered north and founded a colony of the Aztecs?
10857She was both to leave that place and said:''How long shall I stay here?
10857The question is often asked, Will this hieroglyphic writing ever be deciphered?
10857Well, when we got there, what do you think we saw?
10857What did he?
10857What saw he?
10857What white man or boy would think of catching blackbirds in such a way?
10857Who were these people who formed a great nation here in the obscurity of the remote past?
11853Are the children in your school safe from fire?
11853Are you sure?
11853Church union-- why not?
11853How long will it stand?
11853How many does it-- er-- sleep?
11853If Jesus was to come today?
11853Is God evident?
11853Is Jesus God?
11853Is economics a science?
11853Mister Carmichael?
11853Secular illusion or Christian realism?
11853Shall he live again?
11853The Country that can feed the world?
11853To win or to lose?
11853Trapped?
11853Was it for me?
11853What am I?
11853What book is that?
11853What good is high school?
11853What is psychoanalysis?
11853What''s right with America?
11853Where''s Mister Chumley?
11853Where''s the fire, McGarry?
11853Who is your judge?
11853Why stay in school?
11853Will you have your tedium rare or medium?
11828After the New Deal, what?
11828How are you?
11828How are you?
11828Oh, say, can you ski?
11828PREUS, J. C. K. What is Christianity?
11828Patriots, patrirots, and parasites; is patriotism forever dead in our own United States?
11828Penny wise?
11828SEE CLEATOR, P. E. What''s this?
11828SEE Dybvig, Philip S. What is Christianity?
11828SEE Vizetelly, Frank H. What''s the name please?
11828Soviet communism: a new civilization?
11828Soviet communism: a new civilization?
11828Soviet communism: a new civilization?
11828Wake up and live, eh?
11828What do you know about the kilowatt?
11828What does America mean?
11828What does America mean?
11828What gentleman strangles a lady?
11828What is Christianity?
11828What''s the name please?
11828What''s this?
11828What''s this?
11828What''s this?
11828Where''s George?
11828Where''s George?
11828Where''s George?
11828Where''s George?
11828Which am I, bird, beast, or fish?
11828Whose Constitution?
11828Would you step over here a second, Waldo?
13613Alice, although she was frightened out of her wits, managed to stammer:''He could n''t see me-- you could n''t see me, could you?''
13613Blacker is her hair than the darkness of night, blacker than the berries of the blackberry bush(?).
13613But I had managed to collect my senses a bit and although still under that maternal eye I asked,--at last turning slowly around to Alice:''See?
13613Do you know what keeps me straight?
13613Harder are her teeth(?)
13613How can love( as I use the expression-- i.e., sexual passion) continue?
13613I feigned surprise and asked''What is the matter?''
13613See what?''
13613These being the objective manifestations, what manifestations are to be noted on the subjective side?
13613Was I mad, or what?
13613What could I do?
13613What do you mean?
13613What more could be needed to suffuse the world with the deepest meaning and beauty?
13613Why are musical tones in a certain order and rhythm pleasurable?
13613With a feeling, that I can only describe by calling it an intuition, I moved nearer him, and asked:''Do you ever play with yourself?''
11835< pb id=''154.png''n=''1967_h1/ A/1180''/> MACGLASHAN, LIONEL C. Can a whiskey keep a secret?
11835BODE, BOYD H. What is democracy?
11835Can America stay neutral?
11835Can he make it?
11835DULLES, ALLEN W. Can America stay neutral?
11835Do you need money?
11835Do you want to become a banker?
11835Do you want to become a doctor?
11835Dr. Livingston, I presume?
11835For what do we fight?
11835Has anyone a suggestion?
11835How do you know you do n''t like it if you wo n''t even try any?
11835How firm a foundation?
11835NAGEL, HENRY R. When''s your birthday?
11835Pensions or penury?
11835Religious or Christian?
11835Religious or Christian?
11835Religious or Christian?
11835SEE Crook, Wilbur F. CROOK, WILBUR F. Do you want to become a banker?
11835SEE Gates, Arthur I. BEHRMAN, S. N. Hyper or hipo?
11835SMITH, T. V. What is democracy?
11835We go fast?
11835What am I doing away from home?
11835What did he see?
11835What is democracy?
11835What use is religion?
11835What''s Keydo up to?
11835What''s happened to Tommy?
11835Where did your garden grow?
11835Where did your garden grow?
11835Who''s running this sales department anyway?
11835Why did they confess?
11835Wo n''t you walk a little faster?
11672Are you afraid that Polydamas and the Trojan Ladies will prefer Labeo to me?
11672Are the manufacturers willing to send their 1,300,000 female employees back to their"sphere"?
11672But is she to be accorded an autonomy in outside affairs that is denied her in the home?
11672But who said that Nature had acted scurvily with the characters of women and had contracted their virtues into a narrow sphere?
11672Do we cast the twice- married from the Church?
11672Do we condemn second marriages?
11672Do you say that the young man who is of age does not represent his mother?
11672Do you say that the young man who pledges at the altar to love, cherish, and protect his wife, does not represent her and his children when he votes?
11672How many men realise these facts?
11672If so, which of them is to yield, if a difference of opinion arises?
11672Is this authority the conjoint privilege of husband and wife?
11672No, the imperative question confronting us is this: What are we to do that her life once more may be full and useful as it used to be?
11672Quare?
11672Quis ergo iam quamlibet illicitam concupiscentiam potest recte a fornicationis genere separate, si avaritia fornicatio est?
11672Quis fortem spoliatum crine peremit?
11672Quis iusti sacrum caput ense recidit?
11672Quis patrem natas vitiare coegit?
11672Quis suasit primo vetitum gustare parenti?
11672What sort of foolish stuff are you trying to inject into this tariff debate?...
11672When the Christ of God came into this world to die for the sins of humanity, did he not die for all, males and females?
11672[ 187] Persius, i, 4- 5: Ne mihi Polydamas et Troiades Labeonem praetulerint?
11672[ 190] The famous verses of Martial: Quid tibi nobiscum, ludi scelerate magister?
11672[ 244]Jerome expresses the more tolerant and orthodox view:"What then?
10674A fifth question of a mechanical nature is, Which is preferable, bound or loose- leaf note- books?
10674Ask yourself frequently,"Is that true?"
10674Ask yourself, when beginning a printed discussion, What am I looking for?
10674Ask yourself,_ why_ is this so?
10674CHAPTER XIII MENTAL SECOND- WIND Did you ever engage in any exhausting physical work for a long period of time?
10674Can we facilitate recall by any other means than by faithful and intelligent impressions?
10674Can you find elements of worth in this method, which will warrant you in adopting it, at least, in part?
10674Can you see it all the time?
10674Can you see the headlines of the sections and the paragraphs?
10674How are the ideas being modified during the intervals between impressions?
10674How can we explain this distressing blank?
10674How long a time do you estimate will be required for the formation of the new habit?
10674How many times a minute does it come and go?"
10674In the face of these possibilities is there anything that will guide us in distributing the repetitions?
10674Now what was the matter?
10674One question that frequently arises concerning works of the imagination is, What is their source?
10674Or shall you distribute them among several sittings?
10674Shall you make these thirty repetitions at one sitting?
10674Since we are endowed with the energy requisite for such efficient work, the obvious question is, why do we not more frequently use it?
10674The question before us, then, is, What is the nature of these changes?
10674The question then arises, what is the most effective distribution?
10674Under such circumstances how could one expect to retain and recall the name?
10674What concrete steps will you take in order to accommodate your study to the fluctuations of attention?
10674What do you regard as the causes?
10674What if her eyes were there, they in her head?
10674What is the author going to talk about?
10674What light through yonder window breaks?
10674What specific steps will you take to eliminate them; to ignore the unavoidable ones?
10674Why do the masses so easily fall victims to doubtful reforms in national and municipal policies?
11730But why did n''t you go to the War Office?
11730Desire you to accompany me?
11730Do you expect us to believe that?
11730Have you seen this morning''s paper?
11730What make of aeroplane does your son drive?
11730Wo n''t your brother need it?
11730Would n''t it be quicker,said Whitlock,"if you and I went up on the roof and looked down the chimney?"
11730And who is going to tell him it was you brought me there?
11730But if the milkman fails to leave the milk, and the baker the rolls, is the joke on the milkman and the baker or is it on the"constant reader"?
11730But if you are not an officer, why, in the photograph, are you wearing war ribbons?"
11730But why did you kick me down- stairs?
11730Could I describe the air- ship I had seen?
11730Do the boys on the ground love the boy in the grand stand and are they grateful to him?
11730Does the fact that they do not love him and are not grateful to him for telling them the news distress the boy in the grand stand?
11730How far in safety would the word carry us forward?
11730How long do you think this war will last?"
11730If I were an Englishman would I cross the ocean to New York to buy a hat?"
11730It said:"Do you want us to run this war or do you want to run it?"
11730The question to be determined was: What were"environs"and how far do they extend?
11730What during the same two months did the man at home see?
11730What is your name?"
11730What, they asked, would befall the live stock they had abandoned, the ducks on the pond, the cattle in the field?
11730What?"
11730When I returned to New York every second man I knew greeted me sympathetically with:"So, you had to come home, hey?
11730Which goes hungry?
11730Who would feed them and give them water?
11730Will you tell them what you saw?"
11730Would we lose if we plunged on Wavre?
11730Would you object if we put a German in it?"
11852Any milleniums today, lady?
11852Artery for what?
11852Cave- in?
11852Did Roosevelt start the war?
11852Drawing captioned"Do you remember, Crosby, when the only thing to fear was fear itself?"
11852Drawing captioned"What did those flying saucers turn out to be, George?"
11852Great Northern?
11852Here you there?
11852How do you say ha- ha in French?
11852How long wilt thou forget me?
11852How shall we pay for education?
11852How supervise?
11852How supervise?
11852Is God in there?
11852Is that me?
11852Jesus, and shall it ever be?
11852Lovest Thou me?
11852Lovest thou me?
11852May I go out and play?
11852May I just step inside?
11852Mother, may I go out to swim?
11852O say, can you hear?
11852O say, can you hear?
11852Old friends?
11852Quis custodiet?
11852Secular illusion or Christian realism?
11852What happened to Fluffy?
11852What of it?
11852What''s that?
11852Who crucified Jesus?
11852Who did which or who indeed?
11852Who has been tampering with these pianos?
11852Whose disciples?
11852Yonder peasant, who is he?
12045And I?
120451552- 1619(?).
12045A series of her mural decorations was exhibited in various German cities, and finally shown at the Paris Exposition of 1890(?
12045Among the latter are"What Will Become of the Child?"
12045An amphora decorated with landscape and figures was exhibited at the Promotrice in Florence in 1889(?)
12045At Milan, 1886, her"Will He Arrive?"
12045Because the artist was a foreigner?
12045Can one doubt that such a Museum must be an element of artistic development in those who are in contact with it?
12045Did not women paint those pictures of Isis-- goddess of Sothis-- that are like precursors of the pictures of the Immaculate Conception?
12045Does this mean that she had been ungenerous in depriving him of the privilege of asking for what she so freely bestowed?
12045Have I achieved a success, in the true, serious meaning of the word?
12045How pathetic her written words:"I have spent six years, working ten hours a day, to gain what?
12045In 1895 she settled in Berlin, where she has made a specialty of women''s and children''s portraits in olgraphy(?)
12045Is it not more than the mere ableness of method, still more than the audacity of brush work, that often passes for style?
12045Is it not the aim of painting to copy nature?
12045Is it possible to dissociate the manner of a picture from its embodiment of some fact or idea?
12045Is not this the key to the charm of her works?
12045Miss Halse executed the reredos in St. John''s Church, Notting Hill, London; a terra- cotta relief called"Earthward Board"(?)
12045Of this time she writes:"Am I satisfied?
12045Paints genre subjects, some of which are"Captain John,"in National Museum;"Laughing Child,"in C. P. Huntington Collection;"Who Comes?"
12045Was Constable in advance of his critics?
12045Were there not artists among them who decorated temples and tombs with their imperishable colors?
12045What could Henriette Knip do except paint pictures?
12045Who knows?
12045Why was this verdict not confirmed by the jury?
12045Will the judgments of the present be thus reversed in the future?
12045You have guessed it, have you not?
12342);"Hamlet,"1602,"Measure for Measure,"1603;"Troilus and Cressida,"1603- 1607(?
12342);"Richard II.,"1594;"King John,"1595;"Merchant of Venice,"1596; 1 and 2"Henry IV.,"1597- 1598;"Henry V.,"1599;"Taming of the Shrew,"1597(?
12342; is the hero of the Cornish ballad,"And shall Trelawney die?"
12342Black?"
12342CLIFFORD, JOHN, D.D., Baptist minister in London, author of"Is Life Worth Living?"
12342COLLINS, MORTIMER, a versatile genius, born at Plymouth; wrote poems, novels, and essays; was the author of"Who was the Heir?"
12342EST- IL- POSSIBLE?
12342How?
12342In such a case the challenge of Goethe is_ apropos_,"What have I to do with names when it is a work of the spirit I am considering?"
12342Johnnie Cowp, are ye wauken yet?"
12342MANNA, the food with which the Israelites were miraculously fed in the wilderness, a term which means"What is this?"
12342Saved or Lost?
12342Sure enough, I am; and lately was not; but Whence?
12342Whereto?"
12342got for answer the counter- challenge"Who made you king?"
12020And do you recall your misery when I seized you one evening at your birthday party( you were twenty), and dragged you about the room in a waltz?
12020And she would have found some excuse to shorten her visit under my roof, and then where would be my opportunity to influence her?
12020And what do I think about it?
12020And you, madam, how about_ your_ children?
12020But can you, my dear Winifred,_ reimburse your mutual losses in other ways_?
12020Can you wear cheap clothing and ride in trolleys, and economize on laundry bills to prove your love for this man?
12020Do you imagine she was_ jealous_ of your compliment to me?
12020Do you recall your horror the first time I told you I had read a book on reincarnation, and confessed that it had made me anxious to study the theory?
12020He chose for your mother, a woman of rare mind, and of poetic taste, and why should he not be proud and glad that his son resembles her?
12020How dare you assume greater virtue, greater respectability, greater fineness of sentiment, than the tempest- tossed, passion- beaten souls, about you?
12020How dare you condemn those who do not reach your standard?
12020Now I think I hear you saying,"But why should not my lover give this proof of devotion as well as I?
12020Oh, mothers, mothers, what are you thinking about, to be so blind to the work put in your hands to do?
12020Suppose one plant said to the sunlight that it must have all the sun, would not that be ridiculous and selfish?"
12020Were all the good women of America to begin such a crusade, where would they obtain the proofs of their accusations?
12020What do you know of real virtue, real strength?
12020What shame or degradation is there, pray, in being animate with the all- pervading impulse which underlies the entire universe?
12020When will fathers learn that sons are more frequently like their mothers, and daughters like their fathers, than otherwise?
12020Why am I more unloving, or selfish, than he, to refuse to give up my name?"
12020Why have you not considered turning this talent to account?
12020Why should not he be ready to sacrifice a tradition, and a name, to please me?
12020Why?
12020Why?
12020Will you, when refused entrance at the front door, go in at the rear and hobnob with the servants?
12020or of your praise of the girl''s beauty at the Country Club?
14044Had n''t they seen him with his sword on every''quid''they''d ever had?
14044It''s all right now, is n''t it?
14044Well well; but how did you come here? 14044 What are they talking about?
14044What does it all mean?
14044What is it?
14044What,said the wounded man,"the place they used to tell us about in Sunday school?
14044Why should English archers use French terms?
14044And after all, what do we know?
14044But what about that wound?"
14044D''ye see them?
14044They do n''t think I''d let down my pals?"
14044Where did you get that?"
14044Who am I that I should doubt the faith of a clerk in holy orders?
14044Why should they have lilies?"
14044Would I allow them to reprint"The Bowmen"as a pamphlet, and would I write a short preface giving the exact authorities for the story?
14044Yet the very next paragraph in the article begins:--"''Where was this?''
14044he asked?
11013And what has been the success of the plan?
11013Are they good people, these Indians?
11013Are you not afraid of Tanner?
11013Are you not lawyers?
11013Did it have any effect on the election?
11013Did the government know of it?
11013Do they follow any regular industry?
11013Do they never drink too much whisky?
11013Etes- vous Canadien?
11013Had he received any provocation?
11013Have you heard the very reverend Mr.----, in---- chapel?
11013How do the democrats take it?
11013How do you know that it was a copper- head that bit him?
11013Is there nobody else,we asked,"who will take us down the falls?"
11013Some of these are Africans?
11013Was it done openly?
11013Was the place as considerable sixty years ago as it now is?
11013What do you pay them?
11013What is the matter with the passport?
11013What say you,he called out to his companion who stood in the door looking into the street,"shall we let them pass?
11013Where are you going?
11013Where did you get all the stones with which you have made these substantial fences?
11013Why is that? 11013 Will it rain all day?"
11013Will they stop the mill for the new tariff?
11013Will you go up to town, sir?
11013You do not go to La Pointe?
11013--are you a Canadian?
11013But who amongst its mountains Of cold and ice would stay, When he can buy paraira In Michigan-_i- a_?"
11013Clair?"
11013Do mankind gain any thing by these improvements, as they are called, in the art of war?
11013It has been said that the French have become a graver nation than formerly; if so, what must have been their gayety a hundred years ago?
11013Scott?
11013Shall we never see an example of the like munificence in New York?
11013What will they talk twenty years hence?
11013When he was asked whether the castle was not the one spoken of by Scott, in his Peveril of the Peak, he replied,"Scott?
11013why are they all drunk to- day?"
10769Am I really to live again?
10769But what are we going to have for dinner?
10769Why do n''t you speak to me?
107691232?)
107691240-?
107691266--by Bronzino, and the version of Leonardo''s S. Anne at the Louvre by Andrea Salaino of Milan( 1483?-1520?).
107691276?)
107691302), and Giotto( 1267-?
107691337), and pass steadily to Luca Signorelli(?
107691410?)
107691428?)
10769After all these pictures, how about a little climbing?
10769After that what is an ordinary person to say?
10769And the portent?
10769Art thou gone Below the mulberry, where that cold pool Urged to devise a warmer, and more fit For mighty swimmers, swimming three abreast?
10769But the Uffizi?
10769Donatello born( d. 1466) 1387 Fra Angelico born( d. 1455) 1391 Michelozzo born( d. 1472) 1396(?)
10769For the rest, is there not the library?
10769For the serious student the first room is of far the most importance, for there he may begin with Cimabue(?
10769Giovanni Bellini born( d. 1516) Antonio Pollaiuolo born( d. 1498) 1430 Cosimo Tura died 1431 Andrea Mantegna born( d. 1506) 1432(?)
10769I doubt his memory much, his heart a little, And in some minor matters( may I say it?)
10769Is it perhaps the unfinished Leonardo after all?
10769Knowing this( as he did know it) how could he be wholly cast down?
10769Masaccio died 1428 Desiderio da Settignano born( d. 1464) 1429(?)
10769Of this court what can I say?
10769So where are we?
10769The pictures, although so few, are peculiarly attractive, being the work of two very rare hands, Piero della Francesca(?
10769Was there ever anything prettier?
10769What sports, what cares( Since there are none too young for these) engage Thy busy thoughts?
10769What then would he have said of one who has spent not a few afternoon hours, between five and six, in watching the game of pallone?
10769Who painted it if not Filippino?
10769Who, sitting here, can fail to think that?
11432And now, would you like to hear me play,Said the traveller,"ere you go your way?
11432Do I deserve a fate like this, Who''ve ever acted well, Since first I left the chrysalis, And fluttered from my shell? 11432 From Him, who has brought us another year round, Who gives every blessing, wherewith we are crowned, Their gratitude who can withhold?
11432O have you nought to tell me, That will ease my aching breast, About my tender offspring That I left within the nest? 11432 What will become of that poor, idle one When the light sports of the summer are done?
11432Will you be_ boiled_her owner said,"To be arrayed in glowing red?
1143238 WHICH IS THE WISER?
1143238 WHO SHALL BE GREATEST?
11432= Humility; or, The Mushroom''s Soliloquy.= O, what, and whence am I,''mid damps and dust, And darkness, into sudden being thrust?
11432= The Lost Nestlings.="Have you seen my darling nestlings?"
11432And, where is the covert to which he may run To find a safe winter abode?
11432But, where was the one who had spoiled it Concealing his guilty face?
11432Do n''t you know, the other day, What fell out with Fanny Spy?
11432Gayly arrayed in gold, crimson, and green, When to their view I have risen; Will they not wonder how one so serene Came from so dismal a prison?
11432Gentle friend, dost thou inquire What''s the lineage whence I came?
11432How have you passed the night?
11432I asked my mother, who o''er me bent, What all this show of the Seasons meant?
11432Meek, harmless thing, afraid of man?
11432Now, have you ever known or heard Of biped, from his sphere Descending, like that silly bird To buy a fish so dear?
11432Questioned how it happened there, What can blushing Fanny say?
11432Think''st thou he would like to know What has brought my state so low?
11432To whom can they look as a helper-- a friend?
11432What was I yesterday?
11432Will you go in, and there be boiled, To have your dress, so old and soiled, Exchanged for one of scarlet hue?"
11432and what will be, Perchance, to- morrow, seen or heard of me?
11432are the tears going to start?
11432but who art_ thou_, Rattling along from the restless bough?"
11432his feelings who can name, As mute he stood and eyed it?
11432sobbing so quick?
11432what do you think we shall do on that day?"
11432who can insure The fruits of_ Summer_ to get mature?
11432who comes here with voice so kind To the ear of a poor old man who''s blind?"
11432who comes here?"
11432who that saw that bird at noon So high and proudly soar, Could think how awkwardly-- how soon, He''d fall to rise no more?
13612''Did Mr.----''s insistence on your changing give you any pleasure?'' 13612 ''Why?''
13612Does this explain what I mean? 13612 (Wird bei jungen Unverheiratheten zur Zeit der Menstruation stärkere sexuelle Erregheit beobaehtet?"
13612But do you know one man who will take the same trouble?
13612But why should a child of 6 do such things unless it were a natural instinct in him?
13612Do I at all persuade you that my pleasure was a reflection of hers?
13612Euripides emphasized the importance of women;"The Euripidean woman who''falls in love''thinks first of all:''How can I seduce the man I love?"''
13612FOOTNOTES:[ 230]"A practical question arising out of the foregoing is whether such semen should be committed to the vagina?
13612Hence, may we not conclude that the progress toward development is not so abrupt as has been generally supposed?...
13612Is it not much short of drinking an health naked on a signpost?
13612May it not be as theologically defended as the husband''s correction of his wife?"
13612Now, how do marriage and divorce affect the sexual liability to suicide?
13612Suppose it were( as it is not) true, may not some eminent congregational brother be found guilty of the same act?
13612The question naturally arises: By what process does pain or its mental representation thus act as a sexual stimulant?
13612This leads to the question whether the critical sensation specially involves the sympathetic nervous system?
13612Thus in the Leipzig district when a girl is asked"How did you fall?"
13612What are the special characters of the sexual impulse in women?
13612What is the cause of the connection between sexual emotion and whipping?
13612What would be the effect on a man of a sudden check at the supreme moment of sexual pleasure?
13612When Moârbeda was once asked:"In what part of a woman''s body does her mind reside?"
13612Why is it that love inflicts, and even seeks to inflict, pain?
13612Why is it that love suffers pain, and even seeks to suffer it?
13612Why is this, unless he would like it if a woman, and confuses in his mind the two personalities?
14325[ 35] Tertullian addressed women in these words:Do you not know that you are each an Eve?
14325But why and how does this nuclear material determine sex?
14325How may such biological material be safely used?
14325Hubert and Mauss of L''Année Sociologique?
14325In other words, what is the nature of the process of differentiation into male and female which it sets in motion?
14325Marett in his essay"Is Taboo a Negative Magic?
14325PART I THE NEW BIOLOGY AND THE SEX PROBLEM IN SOCIETY BY M. M. KNIGHT, PH.D. CHAPTER I THE PROBLEM DEFINED What is sex?
14325THE PROBLEM DEFINED What is sex?
14325What are the outstandingly significant sex differences which application of the above criterion leaves?
14325What shall we say of a sterile individual, which produces neither?
14325What, then, do we mean by"male"and"female"in man?
14325Why does not the female become a true, functional male?
10761Are God and Nature then at strife, That Nature lends such evil dreams? 10761 For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?"
10761For, do n''t you mark? 10761 Is it a trade?"
10761Is it metaphysics?
10761Is it some language?
10761Is not this the hour of the class? 10761 Why, then, what is''t?"
10761After what fashion, I pray thee?
10761And what would it be to grow old?
10761And what, in God''s name, is all this pother about?
10761And what, pathologically looked at, is the human body with all its organs, but a mere bagful of petards?
10761And, shall I say, Poor Editors?
10761Are they like us, I wonder in the timid hope of some reward, some sugar with the drug?
10761Do the old men mind it, as a matter of fact?
10761Do you really fancy you should be more beholden to your correspondent, if he had been damning you all the while for your importunity?
10761Does it stop with the dog?
10761Does it stop, then, with the ant?
10761Exactly what does he mean by this phrase?]
10761For what cause do they embitter their own and other people''s lives?
10761Have they indeed forgotten nature''s voice?
10761How comes it, then, that he could so often fob us off with languid, inarticulate twaddle?
10761If he had heard a letter from_ Clarissa_, would he have been fired with the same chivalrous ardour?
10761Is it mathematics?"
10761Is man the friend, or is he the patron only?
10761Is there really any contradiction in his statements?]
10761What woman would ever be lured into marriage, so much more dangerous than the wildest sea?
10761When nature is"so careless of the single life,"[22] why should we coddle ourselves into the fancy that our own is of exceptional importance?
10761Who would project a serial novel, after Thackeray and Dickens had each fallen in mid- course?
10761Who, if he were wisely considerate of things at large, would ever embark upon any work much more considerable than a halfpenny post card?
10761Why, if this be not education, what is?
10761Worldly Wiseman[14] accosting such an one, and the conversation that should thereupon ensue:--"How, now, young fellow, what dost thou here?"
10761Would you not suppose these persons had been whispered, by the Master of the Ceremonies, the promise of some momentous destiny?
10761[ 22] Who would find heart enough to begin to live, if he dallied with the consideration of death?
10761[ Note 6:_ What will he Do with It_?
10761and does not life go down with a better grace, foaming in full body over a precipice, than miserably straggling to an end in sandy deltas?
10761and should''st thou not be plying thy Book with diligence, to the end thou mayest obtain knowledge?"
10761and that this lukewarm bullet on which they play their farces was the bull''s- eye and centrepoint of all the universe?
11617''What''s the matter now?'' 11617 Absolutely top- hole, I am sure, my dear; but supposing you let me know what it''s all about?"
11617An''what was the reply?
11617De Blavincourt? 11617 I accosted''i m and said,''Ere, citizen, wot do you mean by wearin''a collar like that?''"
11617I wonder if you remember a French interpreter by the name of de Blavincourt, Sir? 11617 Is n''t it too glorious, George?
11617Little gunner man, wore red plush bags and a blue velvet hat? 11617 Not guilty?"
11617Now then, comrade, wot''s the charge?
11617Oh, George, is n''t it simply splendid?
11617Sergeant James,we said,"how goes it?"
11617Well,said the President gruffly,"we carn''t''elp that, can we, comrades?
11617What about the coal we are burning? 11617 What happened?"
11617Would the high- well- born be so fearfully gracious as to allow them to continue until 10 P.M.?
11617You call this a clean, white, shiny collar? 11617 ''''Ello,''it said,''seen anythin''o''the lads?'' 11617 ''Vot more use to me my life, hein? 11617 ''What are you doing here, my dear? 11617 *****''Eh, what?''
11617*****[ Illustration:_ He( new to the Jazz and eager to learn)._"WHICH STEP IS THIS?"]
11617And where, by the way, did she get that charmingly- cut skirt in the Second Act?
11617Are you French?''
11617But need she have been quite so refined?
11617But was he even as detached and eccentric as the average modern don?
11617But we are given some fine hunting, with a surprise at the end of it, and what more can treasure- hunters, or we who read of them, possibly want?
11617Did I know anything about it, and if so, would I punish the evildoer and restore the implement?"
11617Did he seem surprised?"
11617Fawn- colour, if you like; speckled-- yes; but white-- clean?
11617Fifteen, possibly; but three?
11617From a placard in a shop- window:--"Do you buy Tea, or do you buy_ our_ Tea?"
11617I leapt upon him, snarling,''Where''s that map?''
11617Is it true that he meditates appointing Mr. AUGUSTUS JOHN Minister of Fine Arts?
11617Is it true that until quite recently he had never heard of JOAN OF ARC and thought that VICTOR HUGO was a Roman emperor?
11617Now then, prisoner, you''ve''eard the charge; what have you got to say about it?"
11617On that old problem of the economists,"What is a pound?"
11617She was not a bit shy and, after asking me to take a chair, began to put questions-- our income?
11617Since he belonged to all three, to which of them should he now report?
11617The electric light we are using?
11617Was it one of my_ Soldaten_, perhaps?
11617Well, jump on your gee and go scout the thing, will you?''
11617Who is going to pay?"
11617Why?"
11617You''re an old horse- soldier, I believe?
11617also among the profiteers?
11617margarine or butter in the kitchen?
11617wages?
11617what other servants we kept?
11617your profession?
14567As Browning says,"A man''s reach should exceed his grasp, or what''s a heaven for?"
14567But how may the child acquire this habit of mastery?
14567But the student who has imagination and industry inquires"What then?"
14567Can it be denied that this man is all the better citizen for his ability to appreciate the wonderfulness of a sunrise?
14567Only such as the defiant, wicked, and rebellious Cain can ask the question,"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
14567Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy?
14567Turning to the boys he exclaimed,"Are you pure in heart?
14567Whereupon the artist replied,"Do n''t you wish you could?"
12043A chestnut? 12043 A red lion?"
12043AND WHAT ARE YOU IN THE NAVY, MAY I ASK?
12043And now, Number Ten, tell me what coloured''orse you are ridin''? 12043 Are you sure of that?"
12043DO YOU KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT AN AEROPLANE COMING DOWN SOMEWHERE NEAR HERE?
12043How has this country been attacked?
12043IS THERE ANYONE DOWN THERE?
12043MUMMY, AREN''T WE EXCEEDING THE SPEED RATION?]
12043Number Three, do n''t flap yer helbows like an''en; you ai n''t laid an hegg,''ave you? 12043 Take the little dorg off you?"
12043Tigers?
12043WOULDN''T CARE TO BE IN BLIGHTY NOW, REG., WHEN IT''S ROTTEN FORM TO GO IN FOR FANCY TEAS AND THAT-- WHAT?
12043What about a game of tennis?
12043What about a lion?
12043What about signs?
12043What are you lyin''there for? 12043 What ever are they doing?"
12043What''s he going to do now?
12043Where be gwain''?
12043Who by-- I mean by whom?
12043With what avail? 12043 ***** WHO INVENTED THE NAMESAMMIES"?
12043A red cat on a green- and- white chess- board back- ground?
12043AND WHAT DO YOU WAG FLAGS FOR?"
12043As it was, Mr. G.D. FABER''S interjection,"Do you want to limit munitions?"
12043But are you sure you wo n''t forget it again?"
12043But why did n''t you tell me you were trying to remember something?"
12043COULDN''T YOU DO SOME OF YOUR TRICKS HERE?"]
12043Day- dreaming?
12043Disgraceful?
12043Does the Government, they ask sarcastically, expect their class of patron to wipe their mouths on their shirt- cuffs?
12043Got a strain of wild Cossack blood in you, eh?
12043How could it be?
12043How then, O brother songsters, can You take it lying down, and meekly Submit to this tyrannic ban Laid on you by_ The British Weekly_?
12043I SEZ,''ME?''
12043I SEZ,''WHO?''
12043I s''pose you''re goin''to tell me you''re''urted now?''
12043I''ve all but--""What_ are_ you up to?"
12043If you must dispense with one or the other, why not leave out the acting?
12043KENNEDY- JONES?"
12043Oh,''tis a Greek word meanin''a stoppage, is it?
12043Ought he not therefore to be re- elected before taking up his new appointment?
12043That there rumpus i''the village laast Saturday night?
12043Then Nevin, who is a thoughtful person, said suddenly,"I suppose you made quite sure that the line of these posts will cross the centre of the court?"
12043WHAT ARE YOU DOING?
12043You perceive the mystery of it?
12043You see it now?
12043exclaimed Nevin aggressively,"what have you been up to?"
10151But where,demanded the wise grandson of Olga,"is your country?"
10151But,says he,"it will be said, perhaps, how do we know that this work came from the Lord?
10151Desirest thou power?
10151Did not I tell thee,said the latter, mournfully,"what the consequences would be; that we should be driven from our palace and country?"
10151See you,said he to his disciples,"these hills?
10151Thou wert indeed a true prophet,replied the self- accused father;"but what power could avert the decrees of fate?"
10151Valiant warriors,said Hastings to Rollo,"whence come ye?
10151Yes,said Rollo,"we have heard tell of him; Hastings began well and ended ill.""Will ye yield you to King Charles?"
10151And what shall we do-- whither shall we go, when we have no longer a country?''
10151Are these military ensigns, or are they not rather the garnishments of women?
10151Are you ignorant that these fierce inhabitants of the desert resemble their own native tigers?
10151But what can one man, however able and advanced, do against the current of his age?
10151But who art thou, thou who speakest so glibly?"
10151Can it happen that the sharp- pointed sword of the enemy will respect gold, will it spare gems, will it be unable to penetrate the silken garment?
10151Could the holiest office in Christendom be more deeply outraged than by a sale such as this?
10151Dost thou not perceive that thy Moslems flee?
10151Dost thou wish the Mussulmans to curse me?
10151Had he the right to massacre?
10151How can our Lord say to such,''Ye are the light of the world,''''the salt of the earth''?
10151How can the saying be applied to them,''Blessed are the poor in spirit''?
10151How can they say with the apostle Peter,''Lo, we have left all and followed thee,''and,''Silver and gold have I none''?
10151If peradventure these walls had been confided to thy keeping as they have been to mine, wouldst thou do as thou biddest me?"
10151If these can only be rallied, who can say what may follow?
10151Is it peace, or is it war?"
10151Knowest thou not that King Charles doth purpose thy death by cause of all the Christian blood that thou didst aforetime unjustly shed?
10151Now who is it who writes thus?
10151The weight of the name of Olga decided her grandson, and he said no more in answer than these words:"Where shall we be baptized?"
10151Upon one occasion the King came to speech with Leif, and asked him,"Is it thy purpose to sail to Greenland in the summer?"
10151What are they about?
10151What did that signify to him?
10151What do ye, sirs?
10151What does it matter?
10151What insufferable madness is this-- to wage war with so great cost and labor, but with no pay except either death or crime?
10151What is the name of your lord and master?
10151What miracle dost thou work that we should believe thee?
10151What seek ye here?
10151Whence, therefore, O soldiers, cometh this so stupendous error?
10151Who can say that, in such a case, the three kingdoms would have taken the form they took in 843?
10151Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee?
10151[ 40][ Footnote 37: These chains are not mentioned by the Arabs; but what can be expected from their brevity?]
10151said the African,"how long wilt thou remain here?
10151what tidings bringeth this stranger?
11101And will your mother pity me, Who am a maiden most forlorn? 11101 By thy long grey beard and glittering eye, Now wherefore stopp''st thou me?
11101Sleep you, sweet lady Christabel? 11101 ''But why drives on that ship so fast? 11101 ''Is it he?'' 11101 10 With lips unbrightened, wreathless brow, I stroll: And would you learn the spells that drowse my soul? 11101 30 What strange disguise hast now put on, To_ make believe_, that thou art gone? 11101 465 Is this the hill? 11101 575''Say quick,''quoth he,''I bid thee say-- What manner of man art thou?'' 11101 620 Why is thy cheek so wan and wild, Sir Leoline? 11101 75 Said Christabel,How camest thou here?"
11101And are those two all, all the crew, That woman and her fleshless Pheere?
11101And is that Woman all her crew?
11101And what can ail the mastiff bitch?
11101And what does your worship know about farming?"
11101And wouldst thou wrong thy only child, Her child and thine?
11101Are these thy boasts, Champion of human kind?
11101Are those her ribs through which the Sun 185 Did peer, as through a grate?
11101Are those her sails that glance in the Sun, Like restless gossameres?
11101But who shall tell us all the kinds of them?
11101Can she the bodiless dead espy?
11101Can this be she, The lady, who knelt at the old oak tree?
11101For can it be a ship that comes onward without wind or tide?]
11101From the fiends, that plague thee thus!-- 80 Why look''st thou so?"
11101III My genial spirits fail; And what can these avail 40 To lift the smothering weight from off my breast?
11101Instead of this stanza the first edition had these two:"Are those_ her_ naked ribs, which fleck''d The sun that did behind them peer?
11101Is Death that woman''s mate?
11101Is that a Death?
11101Is the night chilly and dark?
11101Is this mine own countree?
11101Lamb wrote from London in January:"Is it a farm that you have got?
11101Perhaps it is the owlet''s scritch: For what can ail the mastiff bitch?
11101Quid agunt?
11101Said Christabel,"And who art thou?"
11101Sed horum omnium familiam quis nobis enarrabit?
11101The lovely lady, Christabel, Whom her father loves so well, What makes her in the wood so late, 25 A furlong from the castle gate?
11101The night is chill; the forest bare; Is it the wind that moaneth bleak?
11101The spirit who bideth by himself In the land of mist and snow, He loved the bird that loved the man Who shot him with his bow?''
11101What if her guardian spirit''twere, What if she knew her mother near?
11101What is the ocean doing?''
11101What sees she there?
11101What tell''st thou now about?
11101Where are those lights, so many and fair, 525 That signal made but now?''
11101Why stares she with unsettled eye?
11101With new surprise,"What ails then my beloved child?"
11101Without or wave or wind?''
11101_ Ere_ I was old?
11101and are there two?
11101dost thou loiter here?
11101et gradus et cognationes et discrimina et singulorum munera?
11101is this indeed The light- house top I see?
11101is this the kirk?
11101quae loca habitant?
11101quoth one,''Is this the man?
11101speak again, 410 Thy soft response renewing-- What makes that ship drive on so fast?
11101such sights to see?)
11101the ranks and relationships, the peculiar qualities and gifts of each?
11101what ails poor Geraldine?
11101what they do?
11101where they dwell?
10798A lot of those poor devils will die?
10798And for what, might I ask?
10798Are you sufficiently wearied?
10798Are you sure you saw it?
10798But in the name of God, man,I said,"why do n''t they call a truce-- both sides-- and put that horror underground?"
10798But the bayonet wounds and the saber wounds?
10798Can not this thing be done more quietly?
10798Did n''t you have a pass to go through the lines?
10798Did you have any losses in the charge?
10798Do these things count in the sum total? 10798 Do you see that man?"
10798Get you?
10798Highly interesting, is it not? 10798 How about them?"
10798How far away are the Germans?
10798Hurt anyone? 10798 I say, what news have you from the front?
10798The British, then-- they must be there by now?
10798This war-- it is a most terrible thing that it should come on Belgium, eh? 10798 Well, if they are Americans, why do n''t they talk the American language then?"
10798What''s the news there?
10798When did he die?
10798Where is he?
10798Where was this?
10798Who killed him?
10798Who wanted to get you?
10798Why all the noise, Herr Lieutenant?
10798You had charge of another execution this morning, did n''t you?
10798You won that lately?
10798A German said to me afterwards:"Why do we win?
10798All goes well, eh?
10798All?
10798Are we giving the Germans a proper''iding all along the line?"
10798Assuredly many innocent ones will suffer then with the guilty; but what else can we do?
10798Bullet wounds?
10798But had anybody been killed?
10798Do you know what my men say?
10798Do you think I shall be permitted to enter Brussels and seek for my two daughters?
10798Had he beheld these things with his own eyes?
10798He said:"We had not our daily victory to- day, eh?
10798Hostile gun butts had splintered her front door; why not a stray bullet or two through her back window?
10798I buy me a swine-- what you call him?--a pork?
10798Is it not so, doctor?"
10798Is not that so?"
10798Shrapnel wounds?
10798So, then, I shall have the pleasure of seeing you in the morning, shall I not?
10798Speaking so low that we could scarcely catch his words, he said in broken English:"M''sieurs, the French are in Brussels, are they not?"
10798Then he added:"Could you tell us, sir,''ow''s the war going?
10798There might be some stupid, angry common soldier, some over- zealous under officer-- you understand me, do you not, gentlemen?
10798To him I put the question:"What have you done, now, to merit the bestowal of the Cross?"
10798What did he care for the code of war?
10798What do you want to know?"
10798Why should they?
10798Will you buy some postal cards, m''sieur?
10798Wounds from fragments of bombs?
10798Yes?
10798You heard about the case, did n''t you?"
13468Shall I, the gnat that dances in Thy ray, dare to be reverent?
13468Another may say,"Why should the real democracy of a young country be tied to your snobbish old squirarchy?"
13468But what was it that went wrong?
13468But where is Sir Herbert Samuel''s national home?
13468But why are there lions, though of French or feudal origin, on the flag of England?
13468But would President Wilson say it?
13468But would even a German Chancellor put it exactly like that?
13468Can Armenian usury be a common topic of talk in a camp in California and in a club in Piccadilly?
13468Could we talk of the competition of Armenians among Welsh shop- keepers, or of the crowd of Armenians on Brighton Parade?
13468Does Dickens show us a realistic Armenian teaching in the thieves''kitchens of the slums?
13468Does Shakespeare show us a tragic Armenian towering over the great Venice of the Renascence?
13468For if a man is ignorant of his other self, how can he possibly know that the other self is ignorant?
13468He is the head of the whole Moslem religion, and if he does not know, who does?
13468How can I even say that I always had it, or that it did not come from somewhere else?
13468How had this immemorial institution disappeared in the interval, so that nobody even dreamed of it or suggested it?
13468How often would he have met a Franciscan or a Zionist?
13468How often would he have met a Moslem or a Greek Syrian?
13468How was it that when equality returned, it was no longer the equality of citizens, and had to be the equality of men?
13468If I have a self of which I can say nothing, how can I even say that it is my own self?
13468If everybody is satisfied about how it is done, why does not everybody do it?
13468If the Normans were really the Northmen, the sea- wolves of Scandinavian piracy, why did they not display three wolves on their shields?
13468In a great industrial city like London or Liverpool, how often do they even meet each other?
13468Is it seriously suggested that we can substitute the Armenian for the Jew in the study of a world- wide problem like that of the Jews?
13468It suggests a sort of derisive riddle; where does London End?
13468My simple Eastern Christian would almost certainly be driven to cry aloud,"To what superhuman God was this enormous temple erected?
13468One man may say,"Why should the jolly English inns and villages be swamped by these priggish provincial Yankees?"
13468The rising generation, when asked by a venerable Victorian critic and catechist,"What does God know?"
13468They may be talking in such terms as they use after a motor smash or a bankruptcy; where was the blunder?
13468They may be writing such books as generals write after a military defeat; whose was the fault?
13468Was a Vestal Virgin like a Christian Virgin, or something profoundly different?
13468Was he quite serious about Venus, like a diabolist, or merely frivolous about Venus, like a Christian?
13468What I want to know is, why do we not all do the same?
13468What did they mean by devils?
13468What do we mean by madness?
13468What is evil?
13468What is pain?
13468What made the difference?
13468What was it that had happened between the rise of the Roman Republic and the rise of the French Republic?
13468When I told a distinguished psychologist at Oxford that I differed from his view of the universe, he answered,"Why universe?
13468Why did not the French and English princes find in the wild boars, that were the objects of their hunting, the subjects of their heraldry?
13468Why did the equal citizens of the first take it for granted that there would be slaves?
13468Why did the equal citizens of the second take it for granted that there would not be slaves?
13468Why do we not also do this and become rich?"
13468Why does not a cultivated clergyman in Cornwall make a casual remark to an old friend of his at the University of Aberdeen?
13468Why does not a harassed commercial traveller in Barcelona settle a question by merely thinking about his business partner in Berlin?
13468Why has not John Bull been content with the English bull, or the English bull- dog?
13468Why should it not be a multiverse?"
13468Why was an English king described as having the heart of a lion, any more than of a tiger?
13468Why was not the Parthenon originally built in the neighbourhood of Potsdam, or did ten Hansa towns compete to be the birthplace of Homer?
13468Would Mr. Moore have thought that story any more incredible than the other?
13468Would anybody put it in the exact order of words and structure of sentence in which Dr. Weizmann has put it?
13468Would he have risen to his feet and told Mr. Yeats that all was over between them?
13468Would he have thought it worse than a thousand other things that a modern mystic may lawfully believe?
12887''What''s the idea?'' 12887 Do you think that a good thing?
12887How about that?
12887How do you like the movies as compared to the speaking drama? 12887 Is n''t it a pity,"we hear people say,"that, with all his brains, he has n''t sense enough to make himself presentable?"
12887To thine own self be true,says the great Shakespeare and how can we be true to our own selves if we train with inferiors?
12887What do you want me to do now?
12887What doth it profit a man to win the whole world if he_ loseth_ his own soul?
12887What effect is the movie going to have on the speaking drama?
12887What in the name of mischief have you been doing now?
12887-- Do you ever laugh?
12887--"Have you credentials?"
12887--"Why did you leave there?"
12887A friend once said to a banker:"How do you know when to lend money?"
12887A"Close- Up"of Douglas Fairbanks LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Laugh and Live Do You Ever Laugh?
12887After an awkward pause the youngster inquired:"Where can I find him?"
12887And if cleanliness is fundamental in their case why not in our own?
12887And what has this to do with energy?
12887Are they gloomy, morose and irritable?
12887Artistry?
12887But what''s to hinder practising?
12887But where does this come from?
12887Could we blame others if they passed us up as a companion?
12887Could we go to him with the secrets of our heart?
12887Could we trust him?
12887Does n''t it mean the substitution of feeling for thinking?"
12887Dull in the Mohave desert?
12887Good looks?
12887Have n''t we often read of the brave fireman who sprang forward and by doing the right thing instantly, saved a multitude of lives?
12887Have we allowed ourselves to be discouraged by cowardly"ifs"?
12887Have we fallen by the wayside of carelessness?
12887He is in_ check- rein_--how can he laugh when his_ pep_ is all gone and the_ sand in his craw_ is n''t there any more?
12887How do the great minds generate this glorious means of self- propulsion?
12887How many times has this happened to us?
12887If this is true with the dullard, the weakling, then what must it mean_ when possessed by the great_?
12887If we are untrue to ourselves how can we be true to others?
12887Now the point is, how shall we guard and keep fresh this element in ourselves?
12887Perhaps you did n''t realize that laughing automatically re- oxygenates the blood--_your_ blood-- and keeps it red?
12887Perhaps you had n''t thought of that?
12887Questions are asked--"Where were you last?"
12887So, why not charge them up to"profit and loss"at the start and kick them off into the gutter where they belong?
12887So- and- so?"
12887That''s the idea--_but how shall we feed it_?
12887The world''s greatest men have been readers-- would they have cared for books unless they were inspiring?
12887Then the question is, why should we allow ourselves to be satisfied with an imperfect personality?
12887Then why should n''t youthfulness be made a permanent asset?
12887These little ungainly volumes which we purchase on the stands may be the classics of tomorrow... who knows?
12887We all have a certain amount of energy..._ why should n''t we all be successes_?
12887We go to the man who does things and say to him:"Here is my little idea-- do you want to help me put it over?"
12887We should not ask him how old he is... we should ask:"_ What can he do_?"
12887What does it matter if disappointments follow one after the other if we can_ laugh and try again_?
12887What has been the result?
12887What would the world do without these men?
12887When the night comes down and the lights go up, is n''t there a blue minute now and then?"
12887When we say:"Why should n''t we all be successes?"
12887Wherein lies this magic of laughter?
12887Why not stick along?
12887Why not?
12887Would we trust anyone who might turn traitor?
12887[ Illustration:_ Do You Ever Laugh?_(_ White Studio_)] And, mind you, physical training does n''t necessarily mean going to an expert for advice.
12887_ Did we lack the sand_?
12887_ Then, why not a man and wife?_ Needless to say they can, and do.
12193Are you aware,said he, savagely,"that the rules direct that all fruit shall be gathered by the head gardener, and by him alone?"
12193Brothers,said the Governor,"shall we order the troops and police in every city to fire?
12193But how about the stuffing?
12193But, how happens it,said he, in astonishment,"that you speak my language?"
12193Dearest,cried Henry,"when can we meet again?"
12193Did you expect any?
12193Do yer''spect dere may be soon, sah?
12193Do you think,shrieked the irate virago,"that I will allow my daughter who is studying French, Latin, Greek, and German to wash your dirty dishes?"
12193Father,cried the Governor,"will the 9th Regiment kill their own brothers if ordered to shoot?"
12193How did you do it?
12193Just as you please, gentlemen, peace or war?
12193May I know your name?
12193Passing out of the shadow Into eternal day-- Why do we call it dying, This sweet going away?
12193Sherman,said I, to my stroke oarsman, as we landed on our island,"why did n''t you throw me overboard?"
12193Well,said the little imp,"how do ye know but what that feller lied?"
12193What for you dune dar?
12193What for you here?
12193What you laughing at?
12193What, you be a minister?
12193Who you be?
12193Yes,said the dunce,"are we not commanded in the holy book to preach the gospel to every critter?"
12193You''ll hold your employers out in the cold, will you? 12193 ''The shoo- fly-- the shoo- fly,''said he;''why did n''t we think of that? 12193 ''What on airth, father, you doin''?'' 12193 ''What you laughing at?'' 12193 ''Where? 12193 --Boys,"I said, turning to the darkies,"what''s the matter?"
12193Are we craven crows to be scared by such windy effigies?"
12193At last, the Judge, in despair, said:"Foss, will you go?"
12193But what is that?
12193Do you want any more such times?"
12193Do you want that kind of provender again?
12193Had our spirits been wandering through the universe millions of years seeking each the other, nor finding rest until we met?
12193Had we lived and loved on some fairer shore?
12193His pastoral calls were appalling; arm extended like a pump handle to shake hands, one up and down motion, a"how do you do?"
12193Is it strange that I and many others lost all faith in a religion that brought forth such bitter fruit?
12193Little Blue Bell, one of the medium''s cabinet spirits, them came, pointing to the door, saying:"See that little fat snoozer?"
12193My life seemed a failure; I reflected long upon the question of the Psalmist,"What is man?"
12193One would step to the window and in an exasperatingly in- no- hurry way, say:"Anything for Andrew Jackson, sah?"
12193Shall they be satisfied, the spirit''s yearning, For sweet communion with kindred minds?
12193Shall we ever forget the feeding of the pigs?
12193Sunbeam, at this my first glance, I love you; can you sometime love me?"
12193The millions of dollars, now worse than wasted by our selfish millionaires?
12193The owners who have plenty of money, or you who are dependent upon the work they give you for every cent you get?
12193The silent love that here meets no returning, The inspiration, which no language finds?
12193Well, who''ll freeze to death first if you stop the factories?
12193What de hell you do on de doo''?"
12193What is death but a journey home?
12193What wonder that our country now has in Washington over five hundred millions of gold dollars; the richest treasury ever known on earth?
12193Whence came that vital spark blending our souls in one?
12193Where are the Injuns?"
12193Who can tell?
12193no corn juice pison nor nuthin''?
12193where?''
13983Oh, Rakush, why so thoughtless grown To fight a lion thus alone? 13983 Tell me now, friend Volker, will you stand me by, If these men of Kriemhild''s would my mettle try?
13983Was it this, ah me, I followed over land and sea? 13983 Where is my Roland, sire,"she cried,"Who vowed to take me for his bride?"
13983''But what a scene was there?
13983AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE Who would list to the good lay Gladness of the captive grey?
13983And fate to numbers, by a single hand?
13983For fate who fear''d amidst a feastful band?
13983Have I struck thee, brother?
13983Him, while he pass''d, the monster blind bespoke:"What makes my ram the lag of all the flock?
13983His plans are, however, detected by Dido, who vehemently demands, how he dares forsake her now?
13983How could thy master have conveyed His helm, and battle- axe, and blade, Unaided to Mazinderan?
13983How then in the gates of Valhall may the door of the gleaming ring Clash to on the heel of Sigurd, as I follow on my king?"
13983How then may the road he wendeth be hard for my feet to find?
13983In jest or earnest say, Have I offended you?
13983Is it with Rustum only thou wouldst fight?
13983Meanwhile, further to satisfy his curiosity, Adam inquires how the sun and stars move so quietly in their orbit?
13983One of the sufferers confined here suddenly asks Dante,"Who art thou that earnest ere thine hour?"
13983Roland marvelled at such a blow, And thus bespake him soft and low:"Hast thou done it, my comrade, wittingly?
13983Seest thou these lids that now unfold in vain,( The deed of Noman and his wicked train?)
13983She, too, sends Brahmans in all directions, singing"Where is the one who, after stealing half of his wife''s garment, abandoned her in the jungle?"
13983Then, addressing Satan, Gabriel demands why he broke his prescribed bonds?
13983Then, all at once, a voice addresses Dante, who, prompted by Virgil, inquires where the next stairway may be?
13983Then, hearing her order that his bed be removed to the portico, he hotly demands who cut down the tree which formed one of its posts?
13983Then, turning upon his interlocutor, Christ inquires why he is so anxious to promote the one whose rise will entail his fall?
13983Thirsting for information, Dante inquires of him"how bitter can spring when sweet is sown?"
13983What if my lost beloved I may revenge at last?"
13983Why did ye carry with you brides ye loved not, treacherous curs?
13983Why didst thou fail to give the alarm, And save thyself from chance of harm, By neighing loudly in my ear?
13983Why have ye laid my heartstrings bare?
13983Why tear their flesh in Corpes wood with saddle- girths and spurs, And leave them to the beasts of prey?
13983_ 12th Adventure._ Twelve whole years elapse ere Brunhild asks Gunther how it happens his vassal Siegfried has never yet come to Worms to do homage?
13983_ Canto XIV._ The two spirits leaning close together, in their turn question who Virgil and Dante may be?
13983_ Canto XXXIII._ The seven Virtues having chanted a hymn, Beatrice motions to Statius and Dante to follow her, asking the latter why he is so mute?
13983in my friend''s dear spoils arrayed To me for mercy sue?
13983shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?"
13983what excuse, what answer do ye make?
13983wherefore dost thou vainly question thus Of Rustum?
13911And would you advise, then, that married couples live apart one- third of the time, in the interests of domestic peace?
13911And, Zeke, what did you do with your dollar?
13911Do you know why their love was so very steadfast, and why they stimulated the mental and spiritual natures of each other so?
13911For God''s sake, Walter,whispered Payn,"you are not going to explain to''em how you do it, are you?"
13911How long have you studied law?
13911It''s not Bill Spear who keeps a secondhand- shop, you want, mebbe?
13911No, why was it?
13911The which?
13911Well, Dan,said the father,"did you spend your money?"
13911What can all this fuss be about?
13911What''s it about?
13911You know those suits against you in the Admiralty Court?
13911*****"Are n''t we staying in this room a good while?"
13911After a little pause my inquiring mind caused me to ask,"Who made Judge Davis?"
13911And how did Richard Henry Lee like it, and George Wythe, and the Randolphs?
13911And is all this worry the penalty that Nature exacts for dreaming dreams that can not in their very nature come true?
13911And is your sleep disturbed by dreams of British redcoats or hissing flintlocks?
13911And what have you heard or observed of his character or merits?
13911And whether, think you, it lies in the power of the Junto to oblige him, or encourage him as he deserves?
13911As Pendleton handed his pistol to Hamilton he asked,"Shall I set the hair- trigger?"
13911Did Patrick Henry wax eloquent that afternoon in a barroom, and did Jefferson do more than smile grimly, biding his time?
13911Did Washington forget his usual poise and break out into one of those swearing fits where everybody wisely made way?
13911Do you know of any deserving young beginner, lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto in any way to encourage?
13911For sin is only perverted power, and the man without capacity to sin neither has ability to do good-- isn''t that so?
13911Hath any deserving stranger arrived in town since last meeting that you have heard of?
13911Have you any weighty affair on hand in which you think the advice of the Junto may be of service?
13911Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your country, of which it would be proper to move the legislature for an amendment?
13911Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people?
13911Have you read over these queries this morning, in order to consider what you might have to offer the Junto, touching any one of them?
13911He reminded us boys several times when we kicked, that he had a good claim on it-- for did n''t he furnish the door and the window- frames?
13911I was feeling quite useless and asked,"Ca n''t I do something to help?"
13911In what manner can the Junto, or any of its members, assist you in any of your honorable designs?
13911Is there any difficulty in matters of opinion, of justice and injustice, which you would gladly have discussed at this time?
13911Jefferson''s experience seems to settle that mooted question,"Can a man love two women at the same time?"
13911Merchant- prince and agitator, horse and rider-- where are you now?
13911One fine day, one of his schoolmates put the question to him flatly:"In case of war, on which side will you fight?"
13911Or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting?
13911Spear, the antiquarian?"
13911The non- slaveholding North was rubbing its sleepy eyes, and asking, Who is this man Seward, anyway?
13911The question at issue was,"Is a bequest for founding a college a charitable bequest?"
13911Then did the boy ask the question, What moral right has England to govern us, anyway?
13911They look at me out of wistful eyes, and sometimes one calls to me as she goes by and asks,"Why have you done so little since I saw you last?"
13911Were we talking of the seasons?
13911Wha-- what''s that you said?"
13911What benefits have you lately received from any man not present?
13911What happy effects of temperance, of prudence, of moderation, or of any other virtue?
13911What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard; of imprudence, of passion, or of any other vice or folly?
13911What was it?
13911Where is the man who in a strange land has not suffered rather than reveal his ignorance before a shopkeeper?
13911Who is there who can not sympathize with that groan?
13911do you understand the situation?
13911how has Samuel managed to get himself so enormously in debt?"
11289Meanwhile,they will say, with a stiff impatience unusual in their class,"about_ us_?"
11289And how far does it mean a reconstruction of human society, within a few score of years, upon sounder and happier lines?
11289And was there not some fearful rubbish, not only in German but in English and French, about the"decadence"of France?
11289And what after all is the Prussian dream of world empire but an imitative response to the British empire and the adventure of Napoleon?
11289And what is our fundamental purpose in all this reform of our higher education?
11289And what prospects are there of a_ lingua franca_?
11289And when one is taken by surprise the tendency is not to say with the untrained man,"Now, who''d ha''thought it?"
11289Are people likely to overcome these very serious difficulties in the future, and, if so, how will they do it?
11289But what of the result?
11289But what when presently the beam has so tilted against Germany that an unprofitable peace has become urgent and inevitable?
11289Had he not better wait for that?
11289Had they not bombarded Algiers?...
11289How FAR WILL EUROPE GO TOWARD SOCIALISM?
11289How are they going to behave when they realise fully that they have suffered and died and starved and wasted all their land in vain?
11289How best can this new spirit be defined?
11289How far in each country will imagination triumph over tradition and individualism?
11289How far is this thing going to be done finely; how far is it going to be done cunningly and basely?
11289How far will greatness of mind, how far will imaginative generosity, prevail over the jealous and pettifogging spirit that lurks in every human being?
11289How far will she be chastened and disillusioned by the end of this war?
11289How will so- and- so behave, and how will the nation take it?
11289In other words, what are the prospects of a fairly fundamental revolution in German life and thought and affairs in the years immediately before us?
11289Is it already proven a dream?
11289Is it, in fact, a hopeless and ineradicable trait that we stick to extravagance and confusion?
11289Is the Russian seeking only a necessary outlet to the seas of the world, or has he dreams of Delhi?
11289It is n''t now a question of"What thing-- what faculty-- what added power will come to hand, and how will it affect our ways of living?"
11289It is-- or shall I write,"it may be"?
11289It was only when the agitation of the Pankhurst family, aided by Miss Robins''remarkable book"Where are you going to...?"
11289Let us ask, can we do without him?
11289May we even hope that Great Britain will step straight out of the war into a phase of restored and increasing welfare?
11289Men?
11289Must that reconstruction be preceded by a revolution in all or any of the countries?
11289Now is the time to ask what sort of training should a university give to produce the ruling, directing, and leading men which it exists to produce?
11289Shall we toss to see who shall do it, and let the other man go off to find something useful to do?"
11289The international question is, can we get a new Germany?
11289The national question everywhere is, can we get a better politician?
11289To what extent can the world produce the imagination it needs?
11289V. HOW FAR WILL EUROPE GO TOWARD SOCIALISM?
11289Was the hope expressed in those phrases a dream?
11289What are these Allies going to do about their"subject races"?
11289What had brought that about?
11289What is Coming?
11289What is the world going to do about the"subject races"?
11289What more obvious course, then, than to keep them going by turning them on to manufacture goods of urgent public necessity?
11289What reason is there to suppose that they will relapse into a state of superfluous energy after the war?
11289When they learn too that the cause of the war was a trick, and the Russian invasion a lie?
11289When, they asked, was it to be returned to them?
11289Where will it be strongest?
11289Will England presently produce a military genius?
11289Will any country go altogether to pieces in hopeless incurable discord?
11289Will the economic history of the next few decades be the story of a restoration of the capitalistic system upon a new basis?
11289but"Now, what was it we overlooked?"
11289or what will Mr. Belloc say the day after to- morrow?
10837, butWhat part shall we take?"
10837A glorious example, prophetic of what is coming all over the world, perhaps more quickly than we dare hope to- day; but what made it possible?
10837A long and troubled path, with many faults and evils meantime?
10837All very well if others choose to respect them, but suppose some one does not?
10837Do we regard self- preservation as the highest law for the individual?
10837Does an educational institution exist for the sake of its reputation, or to serve its constituency?
10837France has saved and regenerated her soul; but Germany--?
10837Has the machine run away with its maker?"
10837Homer represents Ulysses as the favorite pupil of Pallas Athena, goddess of wisdom: why?
10837How does India happen to be a part of the British realm?
10837How far has the policy succeeded?
10837How many have followed the example of Socrates, remaining in prison and accepting the hemlock poison for the sake of truth?
10837How then can the people be trusted, since democracy depends upon trusting them?
10837If Belgium had not resisted Germany, what would be the future of democracy in Europe?
10837If that is true, is it not a pity that the high school is so largely dominated from above by the demand of the college upon the entering freshman?
10837If the Athenians had not resisted the hordes of Asia, what would have been the history of Europe?
10837If the English colonists had not resisted taxation without representation, what would be the present status of America?
10837If the French had not resisted tyranny and injustice in the Revolution, what would have been the civilization of the last hundred years?
10837If the artisan groups had not united and fought economic exploitation, what would be their life to- day?
10837If you wish to try out non- resistance, why not let some city apply it?
10837Is it creature comforts, pleasure, selfish privilege, or the largest life and the fullest service of humanity?
10837Is it not evident that the very added efficiency of the instrument means greater graft and corruption?
10837Is it not possible to do more than we have done, consciously to develop such leadership?
10837Is it poverty, even starvation: do you whine and grovel, or stand erect, with shut teeth, andwring heroic manhood from the breast of suffering?
10837Is the American college and university doing all that it might do in cultivating moral leadership for American democracy?
10837Is there not, however, a subtle fallacy in the very phrasing of the indictment?
10837It is a far- off dream, is it not?
10837Nearly every time this change has been made, the result has been an immediate cleaning up of the city government; but why?
10837Need it be added that this does not mean teaching morals and manners to children, thirty minutes a day, three times a week?
10837Need the moral be pointed?
10837Now suppose, disarmed, we should enter the conflict utterly unprepared?
10837Of what worth is life, if one is only a cog- wheel in the economic machine?
10837People say,"Do we want to give up our traditional isolation?"
10837Shall it profit a people, more than a man, if it gain the whole world and lose its own soul?
10837The hour of sacrifice has struck for the American people: will it rise to the test?
10837The question is no longer,"Shall we take a part in world problems?
10837The reason is obvious: we run a railroad efficiently by getting a good president and giving him arbitrary control; why not a university?
10837Under such a shock, we ask,"Has civilization over- reached itself?
10837VII AMERICA''S DUTY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Since the world solution is, at best, so remote, our question is: what are we to do meantime?
10837What does it mean: that women have contributed less than one part in a hundred and five to the development of American life?
10837What does that mean?
10837What does this mean?
10837What followed?
10837What is a police force?
10837What would be the conclusion of this process?
10837What would happen?
10837What you have is merely the condition, the important question is, what do you do with it?
10837What, then, are the reasons for the discrepancy?
10837Where has such a plan been tried?
10837Where is it trained?
10837Which shall it be: God or Mammon, Men or Machines?
10837Why has a phrase, used so widely in the past, all but disappeared?
10837Why not apply the same division of functions of government that has proved so successful in the state?
10837Why not?
10837Why not?
10837Why should we perpetuate any institution that does not serve life?
10837Why was that phrase used so widely?
10837Why?
10837Why?
10837Will this always be true?
12736Was ever lady in such humor wooed?
12736Yes? 12736 ''Are you, indeed? 12736 ''Go, poor devil, get thee gone, why should I hurt thee? 12736 ''Yes; pretty well; but are they all horrid? 12736 After all, importance in fiction is exactly like importance in life; important to whom? 12736 And is it honest or an affectation? 12736 And when the scene was hissed, he said to the disconsolate player:I did not: give them credit for it: they have found it out, have they?"
12736Are there flaws in the weaving?
12736Are you not wild to know?''
12736Are you sure they are all horrid?''
12736But has this amazing creation a meaning, or is Roy merely one of the results of the sportive play of a man of genius?
12736But is not Dickens within his rights as artist in so changing the features of life as to increase our pleasure?
12736But what of Thackeray''s view, his vision of things?
12736But what of her philosophy?
12736Consider Dr. Holmes''"Autocrat of the Breakfast Table,"for example; is it essay or fiction?
12736Did he play the game well?
12736Do I live but for her?''
12736Does Dickens make his characters other than what life itself shows, and if so, is he wrong in so doing?
12736Does he bear down unduly upon poor imperfect humanity?
12736For how, in sooth, could they keep away or avoid talking shop when they were bursting with the books just read?
12736Has any philologist said all that could be said, so succinctly?
12736Has indeed the same number of equal weight and quality been given forth by any other English writer?
12736Have you gone on with Udolpho?''
12736Here she looked at him tenderly almost a minute, and then bursting into an agony, cried:''Oh, Mr. Jones, why did you save my life?
12736How shall we characterize"Puddin''Head Wilson"?
12736If the"silvery laughter"betimes sounds a bit sharp and thinly feminine, what would you have?
12736Is the trouble one of thought or expression?
12736Is"Roughing It"more typical of his genius than"Tom Sawyer"or"Huckleberry Finn"?
12736Jones, for Heaven''s sake, how came you here?
12736Lessing felt this when he wrote his brilliant quatrain: Wer wird nicht einen Klopstock loben, Doch wird ihn jeder lesen?
12736Or is it that such a type calls forth the novelist''s powers to the full?
12736Perhaps the central gift of all is that for character-- is it, in truth, not the central gift for any weaver of fiction?
12736Plot, story- interest, is it not the backbone of romantic fiction?
12736Shall we ever forget Mr. Crummles and his family?
12736She stood a moment silent, and covered with confusion; then, lifting up her eyes gently towards him, she cried:''What would Mr. Jones have me say?''
12736Should it follow Scott and the romance, or Jane Austen and the Novel of everyday life?
12736Success or failure means but this: have I grown in my higher nature, has my existence shown on the whole an upward tendency?
12736The Daniel Boone of history must have had, we feel, the nobler qualities of Bumpo; how otherwise did he do what it was his destiny to do?
12736The most untrue thing in a novel may be the fact lifted over unchanged from life?
12736The only query would be: Is the picture undistorted?
12736Then follows this dialogue:''O, my Sophia, what means this dreadful sight?''
12736Under what category shall we place"A Yankee at the Court of King Arthur"and"Joan of Arc"?
12736Was this well for the novelist?
12736What appears to be the main difference between it and the romantic inheritance from Scott and Hawthorne?
12736What are they all?''
12736What can be said with regard to it?
12736What has insured its popularity?
12736What is the cause of this to- and- fro of judgment?
12736What is the philosophy unfolded in his representative books?
12736What then are some illustrative creations?
12736What, to illustrate, could be more of the present intellectually than his remarkable sonnet- sequence,"Modern Love"?
12736Who does not find something likable in the Fotheringay and in the Campaigner?
12736Who, in truth, reads epics now-- save in the enforced study of school and college?
12736Why has"Felix Holt"been treated by the critics, as a rule, as of comparatively minor value?
12736Why should it be necessary to miss appreciation of the creator of"Vanity Fair"because one happens to like"David Copperfield"?
12736With all these things in its favor, why has appreciation been so scant?
12736and what was his purpose in satire?
12736does there not lurk the thought that the pseudo- romantic attitude toward Life is full of danger-- in truth, out of the question in modern society?"
12736yes, quite; what can it be?
14901And He asked his father, How long is it ago since this came unto him? 14901 How old is the child, madam?"
14901What is the moral ideal set before children in most families? 14901 ***** CHAPTER XXI TRAINING THE NERVOUS CHILDWhen shall I begin to train my child?"
14901A common procedure is to send a question form, and, after answering the query,"What are you suffering from?"
14901After some months of treatment, ask yourself-- Am I able to walk ten miles with ease?
14901Another old remedy was to cut off a lock of the victim''s hair while in a seizure and put it in his hand, which stopped(?)
14901Awkward questions require truthful answers, even though these only suggest more"Why s?"
14901One highly popular type consists of port wine, reinforced(?)
14901The question is not:"How much can I eat?"
14901To give an instance: Does the son of a drunkard inherit a tendency to drink?
14901We protect these unfortunates against others; why not posterity against them?
14901_ Cassius_: Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humour which my mother gave me Makes me forgetful?
14901but:"How much do I need?"
14901to be good company for myself on a rainy day?
14901to entertain visitors so that all enjoy themselves?
14901to listen to a lecture, and be able afterwards to rehearse the main points?
14901to read essays or poetry with as much pleasure as a novel?
14901to submit to insult, injustice or petulance with dignity and patience, and to answer them wisely and calmly?
14901when introduced to a stranger of either sex or any age, to converse agreeably, profitably and without embarrassment?
10042Ca n''t I make something in wood like Boy does?
10042Do you know there''s nothing in this world that I''m not tired of?
10042Is it Bible story to- day or any_ kind_ of a story?
10042Must we talk about them before we take the flowers home?
10042Shall I go up to the nursery now?
10042Soak itcame at once, and"Could you get hot water?"
10042WHAT''S IN A NAME?
10042What was the good of that?
10042What would happen to the clay when it was put on the fire?
10042Which won?
10042Why, Jack,said another,"you''ve painted your cow green; did you ever see a green cow?"
10042''Have you done your work?''
10042''What a naughty piggy,''said Auntie,''and what next?''
10042And Browning?
10042And animals?
10042And is he wrong?
10042And the boy who said,"If I had done a thing, could God make it that I had n''t?"
10042And what would they do?
10042Auntie, can you smile?
10042BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX PART I THE CHILD IN THE NURSERY AND KINDERGARTEN CHAPTER I"WHAT''S IN A NAME?"
10042Because children love babies, they love"Where did you come from, baby dear?"
10042But why is it that children crave for stories?
10042Cecil said,"But what is the name of the road?"
10042Children are apt of course to make startling remarks, but it is only the teacher who is startled by:"Was all this before God''s birthday?"
10042Do we lose the vision because we are not bold enough to take that enjoyment as our chief end?
10042He does not necessarily mean to tease, only why should he watch an animal that does nothing?
10042He is interested in things for longer and asks for stories, music and rhymes, and what does this mean?
10042How are these cravings usually satisfied in the early stages of history teaching of to- day?
10042How can we best aid development into the wholeness or healthiness and the scope of sanity and wisdom?
10042How can we he sure that the surroundings we provide and the activities we encourage are in accord with children''s needs?
10042How did he know that she had sat in his chair?
10042How then can this play spirit be maintained side by side with work?
10042How then can we secure for him that the new experiences presented to him in school will be in line with the old?
10042How, then, can we provide for their experience of this side of life?
10042I said,"Which would you rather be, the Countess who put the crown on the King''s head, or the brother who ran away?"
10042In its answer to the question"What is the chief end of man?"
10042Is he not in truth collecting material for his future life building?"
10042O man, who roamest through garden and field, through meadow and grove, why dost thou close thy mind to the silent teaching of nature?
10042Often after Robinson Crusoe there has been a direct question,"How did Robinson Crusoe know how to make his things; had any one taught him?
10042One child said with pathos one day,"May we spell as we like to- day, for I''ve got such a lot to say?"
10042Rather did he hold with Confucius, whose answer to the question of a disciple,"How shall I convert the world?"
10042The fairies accomplish wonders, again why not?
10042The first question of the summer term was,"What''s Mr. Bird going to do this term?"
10042The majority of the class, however, seemed to feel with another who asked,"Why did n''t he promise while the Danes were there?
10042The question"Is it true?"
10042Traherne says in the seventeenth century:--"Will you see the infancy of this sublime and celestial greatness?
10042We also watched a boy cleaning the station windows, and Dorothy said,''Miss Beer, is n''t it wonderful that you can see through glass?''
10042What do such terms as home, dinner, bed, bath, birth, death, country, mean to him?
10042What does he do?
10042What is the real aim of what we call Nature- lessons, Nature- teaching, Nature- work?
10042What is the unconscious need that is expressed in this craving, why is this desire so deeply implanted by Nature?
10042What made these long- ago people think of using their fire to cook food?
10042What store of experiences does a child from such a neighbourhood bring to school, to be assimilated with the new experiences provided there?
10042What was the reason for this binding of things together?
10042What would these people think of the cloth?
10042When shall I make my little ship?
10042Who made the things he had seen; who made the very first and how did he know?"
13029''Where,''cried Reginald Fitzurse,''is the traitor, Thomas Becket?''
13029And lest they come weeping, accursed, and alone, let us ask, how shall we recognize them?
13029And they said:''Is not this Joseph''s son?''"
13029Are the art schools and the art museums making themselves ready to assimilate a new art form?
13029Are the distributors willing to send out a musician with each film?
13029Are the institutions with a purely literary theory of life going to meet the need?
13029But what, more specifically, are prophet- wizards?
13029By what means shall we block it in?
13029Can you not attain to that informal understanding in pictorial delineations of such people?
13029Having read thus far, why not close the book and go round the corner to a photoplay theatre?
13029He brings to one''s mind the tearful book, much loved in childhood, Parted at the Altar, or Why Was it Thus?
13029Here are two bits from his discourse:--"Strike the dialogue from Molière''s Tartuffe, and what audience would bear its mere stage- business?
13029How are they going to make a practical national distribution of the accompaniment?
13029How are we to step in to the possession of such a destiny?
13029How could memories of Ladies''Entrance squalor be made into Castles in Granada or Carcassonne?
13029How could these people reconstruct the torn carpets and tin cans and waste- paper of their lives into mythology?
13029How does public opinion grip the journalist?
13029How far may it go in cultivating concerted emotion in the now ungoverned crowd?
13029If you are so disposed, consider your answers to these questions: What play or part of a play given in this theatre did you like most to- day?
13029Is it not possible to have a Michelangelo of photoplay sculpture?
13029Is it too much to expect that some American prophet- wizard of the future will give us this film in the spirit of an Egyptian priest?
13029Is there a reform worth while that can not be embodied and enforced by a builder''s invention?
13029Is this also sculpture?
13029Is this photoplay physician such a one?
13029Or between Shakespeare''s Lear and any one else''s Lear?
13029Or what is the type of institution that will ultimately take the position of leadership in culture through this new universal instrument?
13029Prospective author- producer, do you remember Landor''s Imaginary Conversations, and Lang''s Letters to Dead Authors?
13029Prospective author- producer, why not spend a deal of energy on the photoplay successors of the puppet- plays?
13029Should we not look for him in the fulness of time?
13029So without too much theorizing, why not erect our new America and move into it?
13029Suppose the seated majesty of Moses should rise, what would be the quality of the action?
13029There came magicians, saying,"Where is he that is born king of the Jews, for we have seen his star in the east and have come to worship him?"
13029Though no photoplay tableau has yet approximated the brush of Inness, why not attempt to lead Jeanne through an Inness landscape?
13029What becomes of the difference between Shakespeare and Sheridan Knowles in the film?
13029What do I mean by New Arabia?
13029What is the best picture you have ever seen anywhere?
13029What is the high quixotic splendid call?
13029What materials should the photoplay figures suggest?
13029What pictures, seen here this month, shall we bring back?"
13029What possibilities lie in this art, once it is understood and developed, to plant new conceptions of civic and national idealism?
13029What shall be done in especial by this generation of idealists, whose flags rise and go down, whose battle line wavers and breaks a thousand times?
13029What the least?
13029When the use of alcohol is treason, what will become of those all but unbroken lines of slum saloons?
13029When you are appraising a new film, ask yourself:"Is this motion as rapid, as godlike, as the sweep of the wings of the Samothracian?"
13029Where is the inspired camera that will record something of what Inness beheld?
13029Where will the money come from?
13029Where will we find our precedents for such a cavalcade?
13029Where will we get our story?
13029Who do we mean by The Prophet- Wizard?
13029Who will endow the local photoplay and the Imagist photoplay?
13029Who will endow the successors of the present woman''s suffrage film, and other great crusading films?
13029Who will see that the public documents and university researches take on the form of motion pictures?
13029Who will take the first great measures to insure motion picture splendors in the church?
13029Why are our managers so mechanical?
13029Why can not our weekly story be henceforth some great plan that is being worked out, whose history will delight us?
13029Why do men prefer the photoplay to the drinking place?
13029Why do the people love Mary?
13029Why do the people love Mary?
13029Why do they flatten out at the moment the fancy of the tiniest reader of fairy- tales begins to be alive?
13029Why does the audience keep coming to this type of photoplay if neither lust, love, hate, nor hunger is adequately conveyed?
13029Why not ballot on the matter in hand?
13029Why not face this idiosyncrasy of the camera and make the non- human object the hero indeed?
13029Why not have the most beautiful scenes in front of the theatres, instead of those alleged to be the most thrilling?
13029Why not rest the fevered and wandering eye, rather than make one more attempt to take it by force?
13029Why not this for the adventure of the American architects?
13029Why not this new splendor?
13029Why should we not consider ourselves a deathless Panama- Pacific Exposition on a coast- to- coast scale?
13029Why was this model of Notre Dame made with such exquisite pains?
13029Why would you be imitators of these leaders when you might be creators in a new medium?
13029Why?
13029Will this land furthest west be the first to capture the inner spirit of this newest and most curious of the arts?
13029Would not their action be as heroic as their quietness?
13029Young artist in the audience, does it pass you by?
14344MY_ EXECUTION_? 14344 O where and O where is our Harcourt Laddie gone?
14344Quite a stormy petrel do n''t you think?
14344What''s he up to?
14344_ MAY_ I ASK YOU HOW YOU MANAGE TO KEEP YOUR LITTLE PET SO SLEEK AND THIN?
14344*****"Are you staying in town?"
14344And so you are the Uncle of the Prisoner?
14344But do n''t you_ think_, dear, it would be nicer to see the_ other_ things first, and keep that for the_ last_?
14344F._ A fly?
14344F._ That Torture is a lost art?
14344FREDERIC, have you gone_ quite_ mad?
14344FREDERIC, how_ can_ you?
14344Faint, CECILIA?
14344Here, JOHNNIE, what''s_ this_ mean?
14344Hideously suggestive that, is it not?
14344How will this sound to the uninitiated millions?
14344Is n''t that what you were going to say?
14344Lives there yet The lady of that royal line, The peerless proud Plantagenet, Will KENNETH''s great emprise be mine?
14344MARSHAM?
14344My Lord, I appeal to you, is it fair that I should be treated in this fashion?
14344Now, what_ is_ the use of my taking you to a place of this sort to divert your thoughts, if your mind is running on something else all the time?
14344Oh, but I think that makes it so much_ more_ horrible, do n''t_ you_?
14344Pray let us get on?
14344Shall I find favour, as of yore Did DAVID, Earl of Huntingdon?
14344Should you think Mr. Fawcepps will have one of those?
14344THE PEOPLE OBJECT TO ENCLOSING A FEW ACRES OF THIS OPEN SPACE FOR STATE PURPOSES-- FOR THEIR OWN BENEFIT?
14344This distinguished Thespian was never an"hereditary bondsman,"then why not always"at liberty"?
14344Well, will you sit on the Spanish Donkey?
14344What fun those old fellows must have had in those days, must n''t they?
14344What had he thought of modern notions queer Concerning Common Rights and Open Spaces?
14344What more can the most thorough Home- Rulers want, if they would only be content to make their home in Burmah instead of Ireland?
14344When I go to Lord''s on a summer day, which of my contemporaries do I meet there?
14344Why do they call it a_ Penitent''s_ Girdle?
14344Why is it that the Duffer keeps up his interest in Cricket, while the good players cease to care much about it?
14344Why, man, how can it be your duty?
14344Would you mind just stepping inside and allowing us to close the door?
14344You are n''t afraid of a donkey?
14344You know you would n''t hurt a fly?
14344You wo n''t?
14344[_ Disappointedly._[ Illustration:"Oh, but I think that makes it so much_ more_ horrible, do n''t you?"]
14344and to this he said nothing?
14344for Def._ Do you not think it a grossly cruel and revolting thing that a man should give evidence against his near relative?
14344for the Pros._ But, in spite of being an unwilling Witness, you undoubtedly saw the Prisoner forge your name?
14344for the Pros._ I take it you are an unwilling Witness?
14344not five minutes ago?
13368But what could he do?
13368Can he not now repudiate the agreement or can he not rid the world of his presence? 13368 Do you beat an old man, seventy years old, this way?"
13368Do you know now how wrong it is to call''Mansei''?
13368Do you seriously suggest that America or Great Britain should risk a breach of good relations or even a war with Japan to help Korea? 13368 Is it worth while for any of us to live any longer?
13368Koreans, if in the past for small things we have suffered injuries, how much more shall we suffer to- day? 13368 We are rebuilding our houses,"he said,"but of what use is it for us to do so?
13368What do you want us to do?
13368What does this mean?
13368What is seventy years, you rascal of a Christian?
13368What is the task that this League of Nations is to do? 13368 What is the use of our resisting?"
13368What is there to be frightened about?
13368What place have we or our children? 13368 Where are your people?"
13368Where are your women? 13368 Why have you broken your promises?"
13368Why have you broken your promises?
13368Why should they protect you, if you do not protect yourself?
13368Why should we live when our land is dead?
13368Will you ever dare to do such a thing again?
13368Would you not yield,the Marquis said,"if your Emperor commanded you?"
13368At a famous political trial, one question was put to the prisoner,"Have you read the''Tragedy of Korea''?"
13368At this time, how can you Japanese show such ill feeling and such treachery?
13368Can we be indifferent?
13368Can we not speak out?
13368Did foreigners?''
13368Did they want a thing?
13368Did you take part in the assassination plots?''
13368Even if the Government of Japan were benevolent, how could the Japanese understand the aches and pains of another race of people?
13368Had he any outposts placed in positions?
13368His seniors tried to restrain him, but in vain,"What way is this for Samurai to treat Samurai?"
13368How can he again stand before the Emperor and with what face can he ever look upon any one of his twenty million compatriots?
13368How can you injure us with guns and swords?
13368How can your violence be so deep?
13368How could he put on the plumed hat of a Generalissimo with a topknot in the way?
13368How far were these stories true?
13368How long would it be before the triumphant Japanese, following up their victory, attacked the town?
13368How were they organized?
13368If not, what is the use of saying anything?
13368In the country people were stopped by soldiers when walking along the roads, and asked,"Are you Christians?"
13368Japan had done this before; why should she not do it again?
13368Meanwhile five or six police dropped in and said,''Have you repented?
13368One question was pressed on every prisoner, usually by beating and burning,"Who instigated you?
13368Shall it be extinguished?
13368She heard them asking one another,"Have you enrolled?"
13368They asked:"''Why did you wear straw shoes?''
13368Though their weapons are sharp, how can one man kill a thousand?
13368To what end?
13368WHAT CAN WE DO?
13368Was it the foreigners?"
13368Was the river- way guarded?
13368What barrier can we not break, what purpose can we not accomplish?
13368What can we do?
13368What can we do?
13368What could these mean but that Christians were urged to become an army and attack the Japanese?
13368What enemy will withstand when our race marches forward with righteousness and humanity?
13368What happened after the Regent and the Japanese reached the palace?
13368What has become of our land?
13368What if her family was, for a time, in disgrace?
13368What power would be filched from him by the shearing of his locks?
13368Where are your children?"
13368Where can we speak?
13368Where was their leader, the man who had urged them all to resist to death?
13368Which is the right explanation?
13368Who talks of torture in these enlightened days?
13368Why go back and become discouraged?
13368Why have you eyes if you do not watch, why have you strength if you do not prevent the Eui- pyung from doing- mischief?
13368Why should I take off my clothes before you?''
13368Why should one woman be allowed to stand between them and their purpose?
13368Why?
13368Will she choose the nobler end?"
13368Will the world hear?
13368With her evil Government can there be anything but racial extermination for us?"
13368Would the mistress come and disperse them?
13368XIX WHAT CAN WE DO?
11505And could he have failed to notice,the others reason indignantly,"how disgusting we were?
11505As long as there are roses and lilies on the earth shall I not remain here?
11505Is not life a lovely thing and worth saving?
11505Should I not prolong the exquisite miracle of consciousness?
11505And what is the good of being a Tariff Reformer if you ca n''t say that?
11505And what, in the name of the Nine Gods, is the ordinary man?
11505Are we without the fault because we have the opposite virtue?
11505Briefly, have we left off being brutal because we are too grand and generous to be brutal?
11505But does any one believe that the brewer throws bags of gold into the party funds without any particular reason?
11505But does any one believe that the laborious political ambitions of modern commercial men ever have this airy and incommunicable character?
11505But shall we attack it?
11505But the question is not how cheap are we buying a thing, but what are we buying?
11505But what can it mean?
11505But what point would there be in so performing an arbitrary form of respect that it was not a form of respect?
11505But what should we think of the man who kept his hands in his pockets and asked the lady to take his hat off for him because he felt tired?
11505But who can tell how much influence in keeping members away may have been exerted by this calm assumption that they would stop away?
11505Can this institution be defended by means of any of them?
11505Did he expect to find a fossil Eve with a fossil apple inside her?
11505Did he suppose that the ages would have spared for him a complete skeleton of Adam attached to a slightly faded fig- leaf?
11505Did they look for the funeral games of Patroclus?
11505Did they think that immortality was a gas?
11505Did they think that it was something to eat?
11505Did they think that long rows of Oriental dancing- girls would sway hither and thither in an ecstasy of lament?
11505Did they think there would be human sacrifice-- the immolation of Oriental slaves upon the tomb?
11505Did you ever hear a small boy complain of having to hang about a railway station and wait for a train?
11505Do any of these broad human divisions cover such a case as that of secrecy of the political and party finances?
11505How can any man be expected to help to make a full attendance when he knows that a full attendance is actually forbidden?
11505How can the men who make up the Chamber do their duty reasonably when the very men who built the House have not done theirs reasonably?
11505How could physical science find any traces of a moral fall?
11505How could physical science prove that man is not depraved?
11505How, for instance, do we as a matter of fact create peace in one single community?
11505If it is a matter of sentiment, why should he spoil the scene?
11505If it is not a matter of sentiment, why should he ever have visited the scene?
11505If it was the man''s religion to live as long as he could, why on earth was he enlisting as a soldier?
11505If the canal is to be taken as realistic, why not the hat and the head?
11505If the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself for the battle?
11505If we are not interested, why on earth should we be worried?
11505In what other sense could one believe in the Holy Ghost?
11505Is Lord Curzon one of the rugged and ragged poor men whose angularities have been rubbed away?
11505Is choosing your husband''s dinner one of these things?
11505Is indecency more indecent if it is grave, or more indecent if it is gay?
11505Is it not exquisite?"
11505Is it penetrated through and through with a mystical charity, with a psychological tenderness?
11505Is it really true that our English political satire is so moderate because it is so magnanimous, so forgiving, so saintly?
11505Is it really true that we are_ better_ than brutality?
11505Is it really true that we have_ passed_ the bludgeon stage?
11505Jones?"
11505My correspondent says,"Would not our women be spared the drudgery of cooking and all its attendant worries, leaving them free for higher culture?"
11505Or are we without the fault because we have the opposite fault?
11505Or is he one of those whom Oxford immediately deprived of all kind of social exclusiveness?
11505So it comes to this: If you have no faith in the spirits your appeal is in vain; and if you have-- is it needed?
11505The Puritans are always denouncing books that inflame lust; what shall we say of books that inflame the viler passions of avarice and pride?
11505They did not say,"You do n''t like melted lead?....
11505They had passed to their homes at twilight through the streets of that beautiful city( or is it a province?
11505Was it not true, for instance, that the other day some mad American was trying to buy Glastonbury Abbey and transfer it stone by stone to America?
11505What can be the sense of this sort of thing?
11505What can people mean when they say that science has disturbed their view of sin?
11505What is Britain?
11505What is the good of saying that?
11505What on earth does all this mean?
11505What part do these gentlemen play in the mental process?
11505What sort of view of sin can they have had before science disturbed it?
11505What traces did the writer expect to find?
11505What, in the name of Acheron, did they expect it to be?
11505When people say that science has shaken their faith in immortality, what do they mean?
11505Where is Britain?
11505Why do we laugh?
11505Why is it funny that a man should sit down suddenly in the street?
11505Why should it be unpleasant to the well- ordered and pious mind?
11505Why should they not mean the ritual of the world?
11505Why should we celebrate the very art in which we triumph by the very art in which we fail?
11505Why take something which was only meant to be respectful and preserve it disrespectfully?
11505Why take something which you could easily abolish as a superstition and carefully perpetuate it as a bore?
11505instead of"How is your wife?"
11505the King of Britain?
13367And by what are yours?
13367And to what shore,said I,"do you mean to sail?"
13367And what is that?
13367By what is he controlled?
13367In what way,said I,"does it guarantee good work?"
13367Of what voyage?
13367Then tell me,I said,"whence do you believe these moments come?
13367What cruise, then, are you about to take?
13367What town?
13367***** Was I not right in saying that everywhere in the world one can look in and in and never find an end to one''s delight?
13367***** Was I not right in saying when I wrote about Ely that the corner of a corner of England is infinite, and can never be exhausted?
13367And did old Richardson?
13367And he said to me,"Mowing?"
13367And what, thought I, is paid yearly in this town for such a roof as that?
13367And why had the boat such a sprit?
13367And will you give me half your onion?"
13367And yet... what is that in me which makes me regret the Griffin, the real Griffin at which they would not let me stay?
13367And you, since you reject my guess at what may be reserved for us, tell me, what is the End which we shall attain?"
13367Are there such men?
13367But as for all those functions which we but half fulfil in life, surely elsewhere they can not be fulfilled at all?
13367But she drew little water?
13367But which of you who talk so loudly about the island race and the command of the sea have had such a day?
13367But who lives above his shop since Richardson died?
13367Did she leak?
13367Do you ferret him?
13367Do you hunt him with dogs?
13367Do you stalk him?
13367For whoever yet that was alive reached an end and could say he was satisfied?
13367Have you money to pay?
13367He said: Could I not see that the man was cleaning the bridge?
13367He:"Yet these things would not be, but for the mind which receives them; and how can we make sure what channels are necessary for the mind?
13367How long will his agony crush men with its despair?"
13367How many deities have we not summoned up to inhabit groves and lakes-- special deities who are never seen, but yet have never died?
13367How many men, I should like to know, have discovered before thirty what treasures they may work in her air?
13367I said: When would that be?
13367I will do what the poets and the prophets have always done, and satisfy myself with vision, and( who knows?)
13367If there were no such thirst, why should you and I debate such things, or come here to The Lion either of us, to taste antiquity?
13367In what way did we begin to form this difficult place, which is neither earth nor water, and in which we might have despaired?
13367In what were we to put to sea?
13367Into what place have we come?"
13367Is there such an influence?
13367MYSELF(_ angrily pointing to an enormous field with a little new house in the middle_): Who owns that?
13367MYSELF(_ as though full of interest_): Then you set your drills to sow deep about here?
13367MYSELF:"Well, then, what is the End?"
13367MYSELF:(_ cheerfully_): A sort of loam?
13367Now, a man who recognises this truth will ask,"Where could I find a model of the past of that Europe?
13367One of them said to me,"Knight, can your grace sing?"
13367So I asked him:"Are you from Ireland, or from Brittany, or from the Islands?"
13367So I drifted in the slow ebb past the South Goodwin, and I thought:"What is all this drifting and doing nothing?
13367St. Wilfrid then in some contempt said again:"Why do you not make nets?"
13367St. Wilfrid, shrugging his shoulders, said:"Why do they not eat fish?"
13367The Griffin painted green: the real rooms, the real fire... the material beer?
13367The other said:"How long will the death of this crucified god linger?
13367The words were these:-- MYSELF: This land wanted draining, did n''t it?
13367Their names?
13367Their names?
13367Then I said to him:"What day is this?"
13367Then I said to him:"What river are we upon, and what valley is this?"
13367Then I said to my companion,"There are, I know, two mouths to this harbour, a northern and a southern; which shall we take?"
13367Then I said,"You sing and so advertise your trade?"
13367Then he asked, with evident anxiety:"Is there no inn about here where a man like me will be taken in?"
13367Then one of the two, who had long guessed by my dress and face from what country I came, said to me:"And you, how is it in your country?"
13367Then, as being next the gate, I again called out: When might we pass?
13367Then: MYSELF: Who owns the land about here?
13367They cross it now and then, and they forget it; but who, unless he be a son or a lover, has really known that plain?
13367They gave themselves a hundred names!__"Well, well,"you say to me then,"no matter about the names: what are names?
13367They have been written of enough to- day, but who has seen them from close by or understood that brilliant interlude of power?
13367Through this entanglement you are told to creep as best you can, and if you can not( who could?)
13367Was a boat about to pass?
13367Were these two men not much of an age?
13367Were they not indeed a people?...
13367Where else, thought I, in England could you say that nine years would make no change?
13367Where is Labbé?"
13367Which way?
13367Why was it open thus?
13367Why?
13367Will you take some of my money?"
13367Yet who has not desired so to reach an end and to be satisfied?
13367_ Quid dicam?_ A Sprit of Erebus.
13367and may not the mind stretch on?
130A man chooses to have an emotion about the largeness of the world; why should he not choose to have an emotion about its smallness?
130And to the question,"What is meant by the Fall?"
130And what is the matter with the anti- patriot?
130And what is the matter with the candid friend?
130Are there no other stories in the world except yours; and are all men busy with your business?
130But do we want so crude a consummation?
130But do we want the universe smashed up for fun?
130But even supposing that those doctrines do include those truths, why can not you take the truths and leave the doctrines?
130But how can this be an answer when even in saying"Japan has become progressive,"we really only mean,"Japan has become European"?
130But how can we rush if we are, perhaps, in advance of our time?
130But the question is, do we want to have longer and longer noses?
130But we may ask in conclusion, if this be what drives men mad, what is it that keeps them sane?
130But what are we to say of the fanatic who wrecks this world out of hatred of the other?
130But what do we mean by making things better?
130Can I thank no one for the birthday present of birth?
130Can he hate it enough to change it, and yet love it enough to think it worth changing?
130Can he look up at its colossal evil without once feeling despair?
130Can he look up at its colossal good without once feeling acquiescence?
130Can he, in short, be at once not only a pessimist and an optimist, but a fanatical pessimist and a fanatical optimist?
130Christianity had also felt this opposition of the martyr to the suicide: had it perhaps felt it for the same reason?
130Could I not be grateful to Santa Claus when he put in my stockings the gift of two miraculous legs?
130How can I answer if there is no eternal test?
130How can I denounce a man for skinning cats, if he is only now what I may possibly become in drinking a glass of milk?
130How can it be noble to wish to make one''s life infinite and yet mean to wish to make it immortal?
130How can man be approximately free of fine emotions, able to swing them in a clear space without breakage or wrong?
130How can one say that Christmas celebrations are not suitable to the twenty- fifth of a month?
130How can we contrive to be at once astonished at the world and yet at home in it?
130How can we make a man always dissatisfied with his work, yet always satisfied with working?
130How can we rush to catch a train which may not arrive for a few centuries?
130How can we say that the Church wishes to bring us back into the Dark Ages?
130How can you overtake Jones if you walk in the other direction?
130I am not saying this fierceness was right; but why was it so fierce?
130I said to him,"Shall I tell you where the men are who believe most in themselves?
130If Cinderella says,"How is it that I must leave the ball at twelve?"
130If I ask,"Why credulous?"
130If better conditions will make the poor more fit to govern themselves, why should not better conditions already make the rich more fit to govern them?
130If clean homes and clean air make clean souls, why not give the power( for the present at any rate) to those who undoubtedly have the clean air?
130If sweaters can be behind the current morality, why should not philanthropists be in front of it?
130If the standard changes, how can there be improvement, which implies a standard?
130If you are merely a sceptic, you must sooner or later ask yourself the question,"Why should ANYTHING go right; even observation and deduction?
130If you like to put it so, shall it be a reasonable or an unreasonable loyalty?
130If you see clearly the kernel of common- sense in the nut of Christian orthodoxy, why can not you simply take the kernel and leave the nut?
130In Sir Oliver Lodge''s interesting new Catechism, the first two questions were:"What are you?"
130In what world of riddles was born this monstrous murder and this monstrous meekness?
130Is he enough of a pagan to die for the world, and enough of a Christian to die to it?
130Is there any answer to the argument that those who have breathed clean air had better decide for those who have breathed foul?
130Is there any answer to the proposition that those who have had the best opportunities will probably be our best guides?
130It may be so, and if it is so how are we to test it?
130Perhaps you know that you are the King of England; but why do you care?
130The Evolutionist says,"Where do you draw the line?"
130The question was,"What did the first frog say?"
130The real problem is-- Can the lion lie down with the lamb and still retain his royal ferocity?
130They are both movements in the brain of a bewildered ape?"
130They do not prove that Adam was not responsible to God; how could they prove it?
130They might reasonably rejoin( in a stentorian chorus),"How the blazes could we discover, without being angry, whether angry people see red?"
130Thus, if one asked an ordinary intelligent man, on the spur of the moment,"Why do you prefer civilization to savagery?"
130To the question,"What are you?"
130Was Lord Bacon a bootblack?
130Was the Duke of Marlborough a crossing sweeper?
130We say there must be a primal loyalty to life: the only question is, shall it be a natural or a supernatural loyalty?
130What could be better than to have all the fun of discovering South Africa without the disgusting necessity of landing there?
130What could be the nature of the thing which one could abuse first because it would not fight, and second because it was always fighting?
130What could it all mean?
130What is the evil of the man commonly called an optimist?
130What is the matter with the pessimist?
130What on earth is the current morality, except in its literal sense-- the morality that is always running away?
130What was this Christianity which always forbade war and always produced wars?
130Who ever found an ant- hill decorated with the statues of celebrated ants?
130Who has seen a bee- hive carved with the images of gorgeous queens of old?
130Why should a man surrender his dignity to the solar system any more than to a whale?
130Why should not good logic be as misleading as bad logic?
130Why, then, should one worry particularly to call it large?
130and"What, then, is the meaning of the Fall of Man?"
130her godmother might answer,"How is it that you are going there till twelve?"
14955Ah why go mourning all the day, Or why should I from trials shrink?
14955And shall we dare call ourselves followers of Christ, And yet his known precepts presume to evade?
14955But how to reply?
14955But some may ask,"then why am I to blame Because I sin, if God hath made me thus?"
14955But when, blessed Saviour, ah when was the time, That we fed, clothed, or visited thee?
14955But who thy future lot can see?
14955But who''s this that we see, with that mild pensive air, And a look so expressively kind?
14955Can not happiness perfect be found on this earth?
14955Dark and yet darker my day''s clouded o''er; Are its bright joys all fled, and its sunshine no more?
14955Hast thou so soon forgotten the plagues on thee sent, Or so hardened thy heart that thou can''st not relent?
14955Have you found a father, mother, In that distant clime to love, Or a sister, friend, or brother, Better than the long- tried prove?
14955Must it always be thus, peace banished forever, And joy to this sad heart returned again never?
14955No pageant to welcome, to children no fun?
14955Now Kossuth is coming, pray what''s to be done?
14955Now in Cromwell the ruler of England we find; Right or wrong, I never could make up my mind; Still all must allow( for deny it who can?)
14955Now what could I do?
14955Say, have you seen her?
14955Since all thy children chastening need, And all_ so called_ must feel the rod, Why for exemption should I plead, For am I not thy child, my God?
14955Then his son Henry third, deny it who can?
14955Then say not when with cares oppressed, He hath forsaken me; For had thy father loved thee less, Would he so chasten thee?
14955Then why desponding, oh my soul, Because of trials here below?
14955Three times at this meeting the question was asked,"Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?"
14955Thrice this same Peter his Lord had denied, And had he not reason reproaches to fear?
14955What could I desire more welcome and better?
14955What means that cry of anguish, That strikes the distant ear; The loud and piercing wailing, In desert wilds we hear?
14955how couldst thou bear To live in this world, and thy idol not here?
14955short- sighted monarch, dost thou think to pursue The Israel of God, and recapture them too?
14955stop and reflect, what''s the test that''s required?
14955tell me ye shepherds, tell me I pray, Have you seen the fair Jessie pass by this way?
14955tell us wherefore You''re so anxious to be gone; Is the country late adopted Dearer to you than your own?
14955what canst thou do?
14955what is this life?
14326Are all these people landlords?
14326Is Sir Edward on board?
14326WHAT ANSWER FROM THE NORTH?
14326What matter if they would,was the reply,"would n''t we let on that we wo n''t have it?
14326Where on the Earth was the like of it done In the gaze of the sun? 14326 And let it be known and blazoned wide That this is the wage the faithful earn: Did she uphold us when others defied? 14326 Are Englishmen and Scotchmen prepared to fasten it upon them by military force? 14326 Are you willing to back me to the finish in this undertaking? 14326 But has there ever been arebellion"the object of which was to maintain the_ status quo_?
14326But he continued, without budging from the gangway,"Och aye, we''re getting in plenty; but my God, did n''t Mrs. Blank o''Dungannon bate all?
14326But if success is not the test, what is?
14326But was eloquent persuasion really required at such a moment to still the voice of faction in the British House of Commons?
14326But what majority?
14326But, had not that necessity now arisen?
14326CHAPTER VII"WHAT ANSWER FROM THE NORTH?"
14326CHAPTER XII WAS RESISTANCE JUSTIFIABLE?
14326Could they have been snatched from their homes and haled to London, what fate would have befallen them?
14326Did ye hear about her?"
14326Had she been captured by a destroyer from Pembroke, or overhauled, pirate as she was without papers, by Customs officials from Rosslare?
14326Had the Government any policy in regard to Ulster?
14326Had the War Office made up its mind what to do with General Gough and the other cavalry officers when they arrived in London?
14326Had the time come when they ought to put forward in Parliament an alternative policy to the absolute rejection of the Bill?
14326Had they considered how they could deal with the threatened resistance?
14326How are you going to overcome that resistance?
14326Is it the aim of the men who resist?
14326Is the Treaty to be construed as Britain pleases, and always to the prejudice of the weaker side?
14326No?
14326Smith, Walter Long, and Bonar Law?
14326Surely this can not be the meaning of America''s message to mankind glowing from the pen of her illustrious President?
14326The hour was too late: could they not wait till daylight?
14326WAS RESISTANCE JUSTIFIABLE?
14326Was it likely, he asked, to do more than was now offered by the Government?
14326Was the day at last approaching when Lord Randolph Churchill''s exhortation must be obeyed?
14326Well, then, what was their authority?
14326What answer from the North?
14326What is a recompense fair and meet?
14326What is their reward?
14326What was the reason?
14326Where is your car?
14326Where there was no law establishing military service for Ireland, what"alteration or regulation"respecting such a law can legally bind?
14326Where, then, lies the basis of the claim that they can be forced to take them up for the defence of others?
14326Why did you not say so at once?
14326exclaimed Crawford,"is Sir Edward there?
14326had made the same supreme sacrifice?
14326where her justification for armed revolt?''"
14326ye never heard o''Mrs. Blank o''Dungannon?
14496Are the cantons going to help you pay your debts?
14496Brother, do you pledge me safety?
14496For whom does your prince labour? 14496 Is it true?
14496To whom?
14496What could you do alone? 14496 What tidings, Monsieur, do you bring us?
14496Yes, yes,was the quick answer of the fickle crowd.--"You desire the suppression of the_ cueillotte_, do you not?"
14496[ 3] What was the significance of these veiled allusions? 14496 --You want all your gates opened again, your banners restored, and your privileges reinforced as of yore?"
14496As to an assessment, what is the use unless the tax is surely to be paid?
14496Between Peronne and Namur did the party turn aside to visit the young Duchess of Burgundy, either at Hesdin or at Aire?
14496But what of that?
14496But what was to be done?
14496CHAPTER XIX THE FIRST REVERSES 1474- 1475"Who is this that cometh, this that is glorious in his apparel, travelling in the greatness of his strength?"
14496Did he want Paris too?
14496Do you think that I should wage a war of benefit if I should lead my troops thither?''
14496Do you think you can coerce a rabble like this by threats and hard words-- a rabble who at this moment do not value you more than the least of us?
14496From the walls they hurled words at the foe:"Is your old doll of a duke tired of life that you have brought him here to perish?
14496Had Henry van Borselen done all he could to prevent Warwick''s landing in England?
14496Had not the former been a beggarly suppliant at his father''s gates, as dauphin?
14496Have you made peace?"
14496Is it I who wanted the French crown?
14496Is it for himself or for you, for your defence?
14496Is that a king of France, the greatest king in the world?
14496It was Groothuse alone who averted disaster:"Do you not see that your life and ours hang on a silken thread?
14496Relinquish Normandy, restored by the hand of heaven to its natural liege lord after its long retention by the English kings?
14496Under these circumstances what remained to hinder the attainment of Charles''s desire?
14496Was Charles too exigeant with his demands, too chary of his daughter?
14496Was I not equally obliged to proceed against Liege, in behalf of my countship of Namur, which sprang from the bosom of Flanders?
14496Was he not the very person to tame insolent Swiss cowherds?
14496What man in Europe was better able to teach them a lesson than Charles, the destroyer of Liege, the stern curber of undue liberty in Flanders?
14496What was the reason for their selfish insubordination?
14496With killing of every kind at his service, what greater solace could a homeless prince expect?
14496Would he not perhaps be an excellent mediator between the lesser dukes and the king?
14496Would it not be better to suspend action until his opinion was known, etc?
14496Would not Matthias consider the two offices?
14496[ 2] Where are they?
14496[ 9] How could Burgundy furnish money?
14496and himself to divide France between them?
14496to whom?"
14968After an exceedingly humorous trio("Cosa sento?
14968After she leaves with Leporello, Don Giovanni sings a serenade("Deh?
14968As a whole, the opera is melodious, forceful, full of snap and go, and intensely dramatic, and is without a dull moment from the prologue("Si può?
14968Assad beneath a solitary palm- tree laments the destiny which pursues him("Whither shall I wend my weary Steps?").
14968But what would the"Harmonicon"have said, had it had Wagner''s instrumentation before it?
14968Eagerly he asks,"Shall I find in Walhalla my own father Wälse?"
14968Entsetzen?")
14968Eurydice chides him("Am I changed or grown old that thou wilt not behold me?").
14968Hab''ich dich wieder?").
14968Has it come to this,--that faithless the faithful must fail thee?"
14968He has saved the King''s honor: will the King destroy his?
14968His scene opens with a prayer("Gerechter Gott") for the aversion of carnage, which changes to an agitated allegro("Wo war ich?")
14968In reply to his question,"Who art thou?"
14968In the next scene we have a trio("Wie?
14968Knowest thou, friend, How far I shall need thee?
14968Or, is it reality?").
14968Senta then appears accompanied by Eric, who seeks to restrain her from following the stranger in a very dramatic duet("Was muss ich hören?").
14968She lays her flowers at the base of the shrine and sings a restless love- song("Why love I thus to stray?").
14968Soon follows Lakme''s bell- song("Where strays the Hindoo Maiden?
14968The act closes with the joyful song of Orpheus:"Will pitying Heaven with wondrous Favor restore mine own?"
14968The first scene contains a vigorous aria for the hero("Wohl an so mög es sein"), which leads up to a fiery terzetto("Adriano du?
14968The fourth act contains a grand duet between Eleazar and the Cardinal("Hört ich recht?
14968The fourth act is short, its principal numbers being the introduction, terzetto and chorus("Wer war''s der euch hierher beschied?
14968The next number is a trio for soprano, alto, and tenor("And must I then dissemble?
14968The second scene is a most elaborate love- duet between the guilty pair, the two voices at first joining("Bist du mein?
14968The third scene is a quintet for Papageno, Tamino, and the Queen''s three attendants("Wie ihr an diesem Shreckensort?
14968With passionate earnestness he asks,"Shall Siegmund there embrace Sieglinde?"
14968was?
14968what do I hear?").
14968why art thou sleeping?
13764Alas,he wrote in another letter,"what can I do with my wit?
13764Blameable in ten thousand other respects,he wrote to Conway seventeen years later,"may not I almost say I am perfect with regard to you?
13764Have you forgot,he asked his followers,"the close, the milk- house, the stable, the barn, and the like, where God did visit your souls?"
13764How can a tall man help thinking of his size,he asked,"when dwarfs are constantly standing on tiptoe beside him?"
13764Know him?
13764Might he not,he asks,"have written these prophetic lines with his mind''s eye upon France of the Terror or upon modern Russia?"
13764Was ever so agreeable a man as King George the Second,he wrote,"to die the very day it was necessary to save me from ridicule?"
13764What have I written,he asks,"that was worth remembering, even by myself?"
13764What signifies what a man thought,he wrote,"who never thought of anything but himself, and what signifies what a man did who never did anything?"
13764Why so?
13764Why then,he asks, should the Germans have attempted to lay violent hands upon our Shakespeare?
13764Will your baby tell us anything about pre- existence, madam?
13764And what next?
13764Are we not told that Wordsworth died as his favourite cuckoo- clock was striking noon?
13764Are you that d-- d atheist, Shelley?"
13764Born Originals, how comes it to pass that we are Copies?"
13764But did he?
13764But how else is one to define the peculiar quality of his style-- its hesitations, its vaguenesses, its obscurities?
13764But of what quality is this fascination?
13764But was there ever a passage written suggesting more forcibly how much easier it is to explain poetry by writing it than by writing about it?
13764But what of the equipment of the reviewer?
13764Could there be a more effective example of the return to reality than we find in the final shape of this verse?
13764Did not Stevenson write_ Pulvis et Umbra_?
13764Did not even Horace attempt to escape into Stoicism?
13764Do it?
13764Do n''t you think, if he had never been heard of before, that he would have been invented on the late partition of Poland?"
13764Do you ever stop and ask,"Is it all going to happen again?"
13764For who do you think should be there but I and Mrs. Love- the- flesh, and three or four more, with Mr. Lechery, Mrs. Filth, and some others?"
13764He cries out against a love that is merely an ecstatic friendship: But O alas, so long, so far, Our bodies why do we forbear?
13764He had a strong imagination and the true sublime?
13764He was scarcely capable of open rudeness in the fashion of Beau Brummell''s"Who''s your fat friend?"
13764His line in_ The Everlasting Mercy:_ And yet men ask,"Are barmaids chaste?"
13764If he the tinkling harpsichord regards As inoffensive, what offence in cards?
13764If we consider realities rather than labels, however, what do we find were the chief political ideals for which Swift stood?
13764Is it any wonder that during a great part of his life Tennyson was widely regarded as not only a poet, but a teacher and a statesman?
13764Is not the old ward- robe there still?
13764Is there any prettier anecdote in literary history?
13764Is this to lower literary standards?
13764Since I was fifteen have I not loved you unalterably?"
13764The shoemaker,"being an honest man,"had at once told the boy''s master: Bowyer asked me why I had made myself such a fool?
13764Thought''s"Wherefore?"
13764Was his a generous genius?
13764Was it not Mr. Gosse who early in the war glorified the blood that was being shed as a cleansing stream of Condy''s Fluid?
13764What has the"sweet master Campion"who wrote these lines to do with poisoned tarts and jellies?
13764What of his standards?
13764What, then, are his standards to be?
13764What, then, of Mr. Ransome''s estimate of_ Salomé_?
13764Who is so safe as we, where none can do Treason to us, except one of us two?
13764Who is there who would not rather have written a single ode of Gray''s than all the poetical works of Southey?
13764Will it embarrass you if I now present you with the entire brood in the name of a friendship that has lasted many midnights?
13764With his pet hares, his goldfinches, his dog, his carpentry, his greenhouse--"Is not our greenhouse a cabinet of perfumes?"
13764Would he have turned pessimist if he had lived to see the world infected with Prussianism as it has been in our time?
13764_ What is Art?_ was unquestionably the most remarkable piece of sustained hostile criticism that was ever written.
13764and"When?"
13764died, he wrote a brief note to Thomas Brand:"Dear Brand-- You love laughing; there is a king dead; can you help coming to town?"
13764how can anybody hurt them?
13467And how can anyone take Solomon''s rod any more literally than she does the Savior''s cross? 13467 In your school, do you manage to get the mothers to co- operate?
13467And acting?
13467Are drawing and modeling at school"fads"or living bases for educational processes?
13467Are there any questions which you would like to ask in regard to the subjects taken up in this lesson?
13467Are there any questions you would like to ask or subjects which you wish to discuss in connection with the lessons on the Study of Child Life?
13467Are there any questions you would like to ask, or subjects which you wish to discuss in connection with this lesson?
13467Are we influenced by fear of what the neighbors will say?
13467Are we self- indulgent about trifles?
13467Are we truthful in spirit as well as in letter?
13467But in reality, is this necessary?
13467By whom?
13467Can anyone take this task from you?
13467Do we permit ourselves to cheat the street- car and the railroad company, teaching the child at our side to sit low that he may ride for half- fare?
13467Do we practice democracy, or only talk it and wave the flag at it?
13467Do we seek justice in our bargaining, or are we sharp and self- considerate?
13467Do you agree with those who think that the Kindergarten makes right doing too easy?
13467Do you believe in fairy tales for children?
13467Does corporal punishment accomplish this object?
13467Faced with a task like this we have only to ask ourselves not"Is it hard?"
13467For, if we come to analyze them, what are the speeches which find so objectionable?
13467From your own experience as a child what can you say of teaching the mysteries of sex?
13467Have any faults a physical origin?
13467Have we one standard of courtesy for company times, and another for private moments?
13467He seems good and pleasant and obedient( 12 years old), but I keep wondering why?"
13467How can we expect it?
13467How can you bring the influence of art to bear upon your child?
13467How can you employ it?
13467How do you train for prompt obedience in emergencies?
13467How does Fiske account for the prolonged helplessness of the human infant?
13467How does the child''s world differ from that of the adult?
13467How may children be taught the use of money?
13467How will you train your child religiously?
13467How would you encourage the love of nature in your child?
13467How, then, is it possible that a system of education and training can be devised suitable for their various dispositions?
13467If a rule fails when you attempt to apply it, before questioning the principle, may it not be well to question your own tact and skill?
13467If so, why?
13467If they are unwilling to help, how do you induce them to help?
13467If you are not the fit person to teach your child these important facts, who is?
13467In training a child morally, how do you know which faults are the most important and should have, therefore, the chief attention?
13467In training the will, what end must be held steadily in view?
13467Is obedience important?
13467It is he, is n''t it?
13467OTHER PEOPLE''S CHILDREN Is n''t it ridiculously true that, as soon as we get enlightened ourselves, we burn to enlighten the rest of the world?
13467Obedience to what?
13467Of 7 to 8 years?
13467Should parents become acquainted with the teachers of their children and their methods?
13467Should you let the children help you about the house, even when they are so little as to be troublesome?
13467Suppose that your child had some undesirable acquaintances, how would you meet the situation?
13467To what practical conclusions does this lead?
13467What are the advantages or disadvantages of a broken will?
13467What are the dangers of precocity?
13467What are the natural playthings?
13467What are the two great teachers according to Tiederman?
13467What are those canons of conduct by which we judge others and even occasionally ourselves?
13467What can you say of accomplishments for children?
13467What can you say of commands, reproofs, and rules?
13467What can you say of the fault of untidiness?
13467What do you consider were the errors your own parents made in training their children?
13467What do you think about children''s dancing?
13467What do you understand to be the correlation of studies?
13467What have they meant in_ your own_ experience?
13467What is it that the Kindergarten can do better than the home?
13467What is the aim of moral training?
13467What is the difference between amusing children and playing with them?
13467What is the influence of music?
13467What is the object of punishment?
13467What is the proper method?
13467What is the value of play in education?
13467What kind of punishment is most effective?
13467What rules must be borne in mind in teaching the Bible at home?
13467What two sayings of Froebel most characteristically sum up his philosophy?
13467What would you suggest as regular duties for children of 4 to 5 years?
13467When he goes out into the world without his parents, what will happen?
13467When the child asks"Why?"
13467Where are the foundations of morality laid-- church, school, home, or street?
13467Wherein may the mother learn from the child?
13467Which do you consider the more important, the housework or the child?
13467Why not let the children alone, and allow them to spring lightly from one enthusiasm to another?
13467Why, then, expect to be able to apply principles instantly and unerringly to a little child?
13467Why, then, take the rod literally?
13467Why?
13467Why?
13467Yet, at the same time, these same persons would be tempted to inquire,"But can any training meet such a difficult situation?"
13467You do not wish your child to form the habit of working for approval, do you?"
13467_ Can_ training, especially by correspondence, meet the need?
13467but"Is it in truth my task?"
12600''God sent... the crow... a piece... of cheese....''Have you written it?
12600And our wives?
12600Do you think,he asks,"she would give me a few words on''How it Feels to be a Widow?''
12600Here,he said,"You want to know square sennit?
12600Is Ekaterina Pavlovna in the garden?
12600Why four kisses?
12600:-- Not see?
12600And here is Rossetti''s jaunty English:-- Tell me now in what hidden way is Lady Flora, the lovely Roman?
12600And when the whole crew gathers round to impress upon Dauber the fact of his incompetence,"You hear?"
12600Archipiade, ne Thaïs, Qui fut sa cousine germaine?
12600Behind the veil, forbidden, Shut up from sight, Love, is there sorrow hidden, Is there delight?
12600But can one call_ Daisy Miller_ pitiless?
12600But is there more than the decoration of music in the verses which express the poet''s last farewell to his passion?
12600But what sort of food?
12600But you hate fish?
12600But, it may be asked, are his people real?
12600Chloe is prudent-- would you too be wise?
12600Come life, come death, not a word be said; Should I lose you living, and vex you dead?
12600Could you expect me to rejoice in the inferiority of your connections?
12600Did Swinburne, in going to Putney, go to the Devil?
12600Did he allow Swinburne to have a will of his own?
12600Do it?
12600Fish?
12600Has he also the secret of poetry?
12600Has he not made a perfect book of these things, with a thousand fancies added, in_ The Four Men_?
12600He says that history should be written backwards; and what does this mean but that it should be dyed in prejudice?
12600Here is Villon''s beginning:-- Dictes- moy où, n''en quel pays, Est Flora, la belle Romaine?
12600I shall never tell you on earth, and in heaven, If I cry to you then, will you care to know?
12600In an earlier version, the last line was still more arrogant:-- But where''s the wild dog that has praised his fleas?
12600Is it all an exquisite farce or is it splendidly heroic?
12600Is joy thy dower or grief, White rose of weary leaf, Late rose whose life is brief, whose loves are light?
12600Like du Bellay, he asked himself and his contemporaries:"Are we, then, less than the Greeks and Romans?"
12600Nor in any crowd: yet, strange and bitter thought, Even now were the old words said, If I tried the old trick, and said"Where''s Willy?"
12600Not hear?
12600Or did not Watts- Dunton rather play the part of the good Samaritan?
12600Or hurled the little streets against the great, Had they but courage equal to desire?
12600Or looks at Norfolk, and can dream of grace?
12600Or_ What Maisie Knew_?
12600Rather a good title for an article, is n''t it?"
12600The laugh from underground, the deeper gloom-- are they not all but omnipresent throughout his later and greatest work?
12600The little fox he murmured,"O what of the world''s bane?"
12600The question that has so far not been settled is: Did Watts- Dunton put his hand over Swinburne''s mouth and forcibly stop him from shouting?
12600They are whimpering to and fro-- And what should they know of England who only England know?
12600To congratulate myself on the hope of relations whose condition in life is so decidedly beneath my own?"
12600Was Watts- Dunton, in a phrase deprecated by the editors of a recent book of letters, a"kind of amiable Svengali"?
12600Was there another Troy for her to burn?
12600Was there ever such a pause and gathering of courage as in the verses that follow in which the last of the knights takes his resolve?
12600What are we to eat then?
12600What do you take his age to be?"
12600Where''s Hipparchia, and where is Thaïs, Neither of them the fairer woman?
12600Which would one rather have-- a complete novel or the torso of a novel with the artist''s dream of how to make it perfect?
12600Whither?
12600Who has not felt the same kind of joy as Henry James felt when George Eliot allowed him to run for the doctor?
12600Why did n''t you say so?
12600Why should I not say it when I believe that it is true?
12600Why, what could she have done, being what she is?
12600Would Chloe know if you''re alive or dead?
12600You may interpret the little red fox and the sun and the moon as you please, but is it not all as beautiful as the ringing of bells?
12600_ Youth, Typhoon, Lord Jim, The Secret Sharer, The Shadow Line_--are not all these fables of conquest and redemption?
12600he writes to his brother:-- Why four kisses-- you will say-- why four?
12600quoth another, resignedly,"Dwell they on our deeds?"
12600what are its history and its works weighed with those of Egypt?"
12600who sees majesty in George''s face?
138''Ah, how is it that there is only one cup?'' 138 ''Did you have tea yesterday evening?''
138''If you are reading, why do you put the candle out?'' 138 ''What are you doing?''
138( 7) In March she wrote to Charles Duvernet:Do you know that fine things are happening here?
138Are you so very much afraid of me, my poor Hydrogene? 138 Can a man be jealous of a woman''s advantages?
138Can she not be well educated without this spoiling her and without being pedantic? 138 Did I write them?
138Did you not know her?
138Have you ever seen an albatross?
138Have you read Baruch?
138Have you read Poncy, a poet bricklayer of twenty years of age?
138Is it a crime, then, for my brother to love Victorine?
138Is this joy? 138 Mademoiselle Artemise?
138Not even stuffed? 138 Of the Government of yesterday or of to- day?"
138Should we even have time to think about the impossible if we did all that is necessary? 138 What do the doctors say?"
138What, in Heaven''s name, is this?
138Who is not a baron at present?
138Why should a woman be ignorant?
138_ Consuelo and La Comtesse de Rudolstadt_, what are these books?
138And how can we help adding a little gratitude and affection to our admiration for the woman who was the good fairy of the contemporary novel?
138And what is to become of genius while I am being orderly?"
138And what will this thirteenth or fourteenth day be?
138And yet what is more interesting than the history of the heart, when it is a true history?
138Are you a_ bourgeois_ poet or a poet of the people?
138Beside all this, is there not more reason than we imagine for every one of us to be indulgent towards the stupidity of other people?
138Besides, what was there to complain about, and why should she not accommodate herself to conditions of existence with which so many others fall in?
138But as we had Victor Hugo''s verses, of what use was it for them to be rewritten by Poncy?
138But what about me?
138But why should he not read to the young woman the works of Pierre Leroux?
138But, after all, is not passion a fatal and irresistible thing?
138By what extraordinary misfortune has he such an exceptionally unhappy lot?
138Can a lover dislike his sweetheart to have success?
138How can I give myself up to literature or to anything in the world at such a time?
138How long was this to last?
138I am in despair, overwhelmed with fatigue, suffering horribly, and awaiting who knows what future?
138I do not wish to call this into question, but even if she should not err, is it not possible that she may suffer?
138In a union of this kind, how could the sacred and beneficial character of marriage have appeared to her?
138In order to reply to these paradoxes, where shall we go in search of our arguments?
138Is George Sand recalling here any hidden and painful memories?
138Is n''t it a lady with papers?"
138Is not this something like Solness, the builder, from the top of his tower?
138Is there not a child somewhere whose father he could imagine himself to be, and to whom he could devote himself?
138Is there not, somewhere in the world, a woman whom he could love and who would make him suffer?
138It is rare for a woman to feel no kind of attachment for her husband, but is that attachment love?
138Of what use is literary history?
138Perhaps his last one?
138She is eminently a distinguished woman, and she asks without shrinking:"Do you know what it means to love a woman such as I am?"
138Should we despair ourselves if we were to restore hope in those people who have nothing left them but hope?"
138The following dialogue then took place:"Who are you?"
138The next questions are, when did they become lovers, and how did Musset discover their intimacy?
138The question is, Was George Sand blameless in the matter?
138The question is, how can Victorine''s tears be dried?
138The question is, was this really love?
138Was he not a part of this humanity himself?
138Was he to write them with the hearts of other people?
138We might ask whether what was natural in 1832 would be natural in 1910?
138What good was one month of prison?
138What greater praise can we give to her than that?
138What has he to complain of, this grown- up child who is too naive and who expects too much?
138What has he to offer to the woman whose peace of mind he disturbs and whose position he ruins?
138What is her essential objection to marriage?
138What is the moon, and what is its nocturnal magic to me?
138What is the use of getting irritated with life, since we do not wish to die?
138What more can be asked of a husband than to allow his wife to have a man friend and a cousin?
138What will she do now with her liberty?
138When Musset left Venice, after all the atrocious nights she had spent at his bedside, she wrote:"Whom shall I have now to look after and tend?"
138Where has it sprung from, and what is it for?
138Who knows?
138Who would have thought that the charming diva, the pupil of Porpora, was to have such strange adventures?
138Why have you left me?
138Why have you written such a book?
138With what was an author to write his books, if not with his own sentiments and emotions?
138asks Sophie,"and is it mad of me to think that you will give your consent?"
138is asked, and the reply comes:"What do the doctors say?
138wrote Jules Neraud, the_ Malgache._"Where have you been in search of this?
10533E''en in thy desert what is like to thee? 10533 Old Marlborough is dying,"said the wit;"but who can tell?
10533Why did he love her? 10533 Why,"said she,"should we marry at our age?
10533And among the Pagan nations, who does not admire the heroism of such women as we have already noticed?
10533And even if the form remains, what is a mortal body without the immortal soul which animates it?
10533And if we do suffer, what of that?
10533And shall a woman dare to take to herself that man whom Nature meant to be the ornament and benefactor of the human race?
10533And the voices which inspired the Maid of Orleans herself,--what were these?
10533And what young woman with such a nature and under such circumstances could resist the influence of such a teacher?
10533And who can point out any fundamental inferiority or superiority between them?
10533And why not, since they have more leisure for literary pursuits than men?
10533And, as a wedded wife, why should she conquer it?
10533Are not all His ways mysterious, never to be explained by the reason of man?
10533As a rule, is she not already better educated than her husband?
10533But Christianity said,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
10533Can any words be as vivid as a sensation?
10533Did not the occasion seem to warrant something extraordinary?
10533Do not well- educated women speak French before their brothers can translate the easiest lines of Virgil?
10533Do we wish to enthrone them in the chairs of our universities, to deliver oracles, harangues, and dissertations?
10533Do you admire the one who prevailed over him?
10533Does any one doubt or deny that the sphere of women_ is_ different from the sphere of men?
10533From lips like those, what precept failed to move?
10533Have they not quickness, brilliancy, sentiment, acuteness of observation, good sense, and even genius?
10533He suffered for our sake, shall we not suffer for his cause?"
10533How could she thus triumph over all the inequalities of feudalism unless divinely commissioned?
10533How could she work what seemed to be almost miracles if she had not a supernatural power to assist her?
10533How could she, unacquainted with wars and sieges, show the necessary military skill and genius?
10533How long her fame will last, who can tell?
10533However domestic she may be, can not she still paint and sing, and read and talk on the grandest subjects?
10533If she was sent by a voice that spoke to her soul, and that voice was from God, what was human greatness to her?
10533In America, what single novel ever equalled the success of"Uncle Tom''s Cabin"?
10533Is human love the fruit of human will?"
10533Is she not really more privileged than her husband or brother, with more time and less harassing cares and anxieties?
10533Is this statement denied?
10533Is woman, in restricting herself to her sphere, thereby debarred from the pleasures of literature and art?
10533It is harder to tell what captured her, for who can explain the mysteries of love?
10533May He not choose such instruments as He pleases?
10533Now, what is meant by a high education for women?
10533O Death, where is thy sting?"
10533She doubtless will live as long as any English novelist; but do those who amuse live like those who save?
10533Should women murmur because they can not be superior in everything, when it is conceded that they are superior in the best thing?
10533Take away intellect from woman, and what is she but a toy or a slave?
10533The question is, Is it wise for boys and girls to pursue the same studies in the more difficult branches of knowledge?
10533To some it may seem exaggerated in its transports; but can transports be too highly colored?
10533True it is that the impression we receive of human life is not always pleasant; but who in any community can bear the severest scrutiny of neighbors?
10533Was Josephine to blame because she loved a selfish man after she was repudiated?
10533What can satisfy a restless and ambitious woman whose happiness is in external pleasures?
10533What could be more flattering even to a woman of the world, especially if this man had noble traits and great cultivation?
10533What good can I do?
10533What is Christmas without the sentiments which hallow the evergreen, the anthem, the mistletoe, the family reunion?
10533What is impossible for God to do?
10533What is inspiration?
10533What man does not accept woman as a fellow- laborer in the field of letters?
10533What schools are better kept than those by women?
10533What sympathy could feudal barons have with a low- born peasant girl?
10533What was his glory, as a conqueror, compared with the cause she loved, trodden under foot by an iron, rigid, jealous, irresistible despotism?
10533What was rank or learning to her?
10533What would become of our world if men and women were left to choose their partners with the eye of unclouded reason?
10533When did supernatural voices first begin to utter the power of God?
10533When will the voices of inspiration cease to be heard on earth?
10533Who can deny that the daemon of Socrates was something more than a fancied voice?
10533Who can explain such mysteries?
10533Who can sit in judgment on the ways in which Providence is seen to act?
10533Who can tell?
10533Who could save it?
10533Who could stand before such insinuations?
10533Who denies the insight, the superior tact, the genius of woman?
10533Who laughs at blue- stockings?
10533Who now sneers at the intellect of a woman?
10533Why have I chosen her as one of the Beacon Lights of history?
10533Why may not women cope with men in the proudest intellectual tournaments?
10533Why should a young woman have selected such books to translate?
10533Why should not the most unquestioning faith have preserved her from the charge of heresy?
10533Why should the priests of that age have treated her as a witch, when she showed all the traits of an angel?
10533Why should they not become great linguists, and poets, and novelists, and artists, and critics, and historians?
10533Will the witty sayings of Dickens be cherished like the almost inspired truths of Plato, of Bacon, of Burke?
10533Would she really exchange her graceful labors for the rough and turbulent work of men?
11632And what is to be done for widows, or poor women who have never been blessed with husbands?
11632And, in the face of all this, it is sneeringly asked,"What can reasonable women want more than they already have?"
11632Are men deprived of civil rights because some of them are puny?
11632Are these existing differences less to be deprecated than those likely to result from extending the franchise to women?
11632Are they, therefore, deprived of the franchise or other privileges?
11632But is it really right to indorse for any one, under any circumstances?
11632But suppose this were not so, to what would the objection amount?
11632But what of the spirit?
11632But what say the Scriptures upon the subject?
11632Could not this infant mission be shielded from thy shafts?"
11632Do n''t you know that a carriage with ponies is a toy for little gentlemen?
11632Does not civilized law give a woman a lien upon her husband''s property?
11632From what rights does custom debar them?
11632Had their knowledge of Latin and Greek made them either inefficient or hard?
11632How could terms, dictated on the one side and agreed to on the other by base passion, be aught but shameful and humiliating?
11632How far may she engage in business, and in what branches?
11632If a woman''s husband is to be her irresponsible lord, to whom she is to go for instruction, who is the qualified judge of what is lawful?
11632If implicit obedience is her duty, is there any justice, then, in punishing her for obeying the order of him whom she is bound to obey?
11632If she be unable to reflect a light when there is none to borrow, what then?
11632If she is not possessed of sufficient mental capacity to judge for herself in all things, how can she know when she should obey or when disobey?
11632If, in the long run, women became frivolous, brainless, and heartless, why was it?
11632In none of the countries of antiquity had women more liberty than in Egypt; and yet what was her real condition there?
11632In what respect did she exhibit inferiority to those men associated with her in the trying year( 1546) in which she earned her crown of martyrdom?
11632In what way had women become unfitted for their sphere by a liberal education?
11632Is Christ therefore not equal with God?
11632Is it not equally strange that the Lord should have answered him by her mouth?
11632Is the careful wife and mother, then, to be cut off from the rights of citizenship because she is a wife and mother?
11632Is there any reason for such an aggregation?
11632Is there superiority and inferiority between the Father and the Son?
11632Is there, then, no distinction made between the sexes in the text?
11632Let it be retarded, then; for why should the capitalist have two chances to the trader''s one?
11632Mrs. Boardman''s biographer says:"What could be more appalling to the stoutest heart than the situation of Mrs. Boardman and her helpless family?
11632Must unmarried women forever continue in ignorance of the glorious Gospel of Christ, because they have no husbands to teach them?
11632She became his first missionary to the people of her city, to whom she told the story of his wonderful wisdom, and said,"Is not this the Christ?"
11632The greatest interest is at present excited by the question,"Should women have the ballot?"
11632The law professes to punish seduction and rape; but when either or both are proved, what are the sentences?
11632The sufferings of women and children from the effects of the liquor- traffic, is perfectly frightful; and what help is there for it?
11632They say unto him, Why did Moses then command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her away?
11632Upon what tenure is she allowed to hold it?
11632Was it possible that one so gifted, so beautiful and pure, could arouse malicious envy, or make an enemy by the exercise of talents God had given her?
11632What of it?
11632What other triumph could compare with this?
11632What rights, it may be asked, ought women to have accorded to them which they do not now enjoy according to law?
11632What was Scripture usage?
11632What was the employment of ladies who had graduated in universities in this crisis of their country?
11632When the wife of a Hindoo dies, does he sacrifice himself upon a funeral pile, in order to honor her in another state of existence?
11632Where is either the justice or the moral honesty of such a course of procedure?
11632Where is justice in this case?
11632Where is the clergyman of whom more can be said?
11632Where, then, is the inferiority?
11632Which is likely to do the most for the benefit of mankind?
11632Which of our living authors possesses a more terse or vigorous style than Gail Hamilton?
11632Which sex usurped authority in that case?
11632Which was the weaker mentally, Mark Antony or Cleopatra?
11632Who created all that her eyes beheld?
11632Who shall stay its ravages, or curtail its power?
11632Who, in our times, stands higher on the list of artists than Rosa Bonheur or Miss Hosmer?
11632Why did n''t you play with them?
11632Why should it?
11632Why was she not severely rebuked for her presumption, and put in her place, and taught to keep silence, as becometh a woman?
11632Why, then, should the frivolity of some women be urged against the whole sex?
11632Why, then, should the one enjoy the privilege of the ballot- box or the polls, and it be denied to the other?
11632Why, we wonder?
11632Would not men, in similar circumstances, be just as bitter?
11632_ Query_: Which was the greater crime, killing a woman or stealing a watch?
11632and does not this counterbalance his lien upon hers?
11632or rather should not his having done so, forever silence such questioning?
11632what is her proper work in the Church, and to what extent may she perform public religious services?
11632what should women know about business?
12044Hast thou ever asked thyself what the slave would think of thy book if he could read it? 12044 Now why should not_ all_ this be done immediately?
12044Why, where do you want to sit?
12044''And why?''
12044''But why,''I asked,''if thou really believest what thou contendest for, namely, that their situation is as good as thine?''
12044After arguing for some time, one evening, with an individual, I proposed the question:''Would''st thou be willing to be a slave thyself?''
12044After speaking two hours, we returned to his house to tea, and he asked:''Why did you not tell the people why you believed you had a right to speak?''
12044Again I put the query:''Suppose thou wast obliged to free thy slaves, or take their place, which wouldst thou do?''
12044Again and again she asked herself:"How can I give them up?"
12044And how can you doubt of immortality when you look on your beloved''s face?
12044And how is it in South America?
12044And is it possible, I would ask myself to- night, is it possible that I have this day paid my last visit to the Presbyterian Church?
12044And now, my dear friend, what does all thou hast said in many pages amount to?
12044And what is the reason_ I_ am to be scolded because_ sister_ writes letters in the_ Spectator_?
12044Any evidence that we are wrong, or that slavery is a good and wholesome institution?
12044Are not the people in the West Indies principally mulatto?
12044Are not these unfortunate creatures expected to act on principles directly opposite to our natural feelings and daily experience?
12044Are the marks of discipleship changed, or who are thy true disciples?
12044Are we aliens because we are women?
12044Are we bereft of citizenship because we are the mothers, wives, and daughters of a mighty people?
12044Beecher''s absurd views of woman that I had better suppress my own?
12044But what should that be?
12044But who got it up, God or the devil?...
12044But, Is it?
12044Can you believe that the soul which looked out of those eyes can be quenched in endless night?
12044Did it once ascend to God in broken accents for the deliverance of the captive?
12044Did they not amalgamate there?
12044Did thy heart once swell with sympathy for thy sister in_ bonds_?
12044Didst thou even ask thyself what the free man of color would think of it?
12044Didst thou ever hear anything so absurd as what Catherine says about the certificate and a companion?
12044Divining her thought, I said,''Is it death?''
12044Do you know how this subject has been agitated in the Virginia legislature?"
12044Dost thou know that, from the beginning to the end, not a word of compassion for_ him_ has fallen from thy pen?
12044Dr. Kolloch''s parting question to her, spoken in the most solemn tones,"Can you, then, dare to hesitate?"
12044Hast thou thought of_ these_ things?
12044Have women no country-- no interests staked on the public weal-- no partnership in a nation''s guilt and shame?
12044He said,''And yet it is_ audaciously_ asked: What has the North to do with slavery?''
12044I am indeed thankful for it; how could I be otherwise, when it was so evident thou hadst my good at heart and really did for the best?
12044I asked what had made them so depraved?
12044In one of her letters she asks:"Dearest, does our precious mother seem to have any idea of leaving Carolina?
12044In one she asks:"Didst thou know that great efforts are making in the House of Delegates in Virginia to abolish slavery?"
12044In receiving and treating thee as an equal, a sister beloved in the Lord?
12044In the latter part of the second letter she says:--"Dost thou ask what I mean by emancipation?
12044In the spring, she writes in a letter to Thomas:--"The following proposition was made at a Colonization meeting in this city: is it strictly true?
12044In what did it consist?
12044Indeed, I should like to know what I have done yet?
12044Is it any wonder that she tried to grasp too much at first?
12044Is it not forgetting the great and dreadful wrongs of the slave in a selfish crusade against some paltry grievance of our own?
12044Is it right that I should separate myself from a people whom I have loved so tenderly, and who have been the helpers of my joy?
12044Is it right to give up instructing those dear children, whom I have so often carried in the arms of faith and love to the throne of grace?
12044Is it such an exhibition of slavery and prejudice as will call down_ his_ blessing on thy head?
12044Is n''t this cheering news?
12044More stones were thrown at the windows, more glass crashed, but she only paused to ask:--"What is a mob?
12044My story does n''t sound Southerny, does it?
12044O Jesus, where is thy meek and merciful disposition to be found now?
12044O sister, shall we ever wash our robes so white in the blood of the Lamb as to be clean enough to enter that pure and holy Temple of the Most High?
12044Shall woman refuse her response to the call?
12044She asked me if I thought it wrong to plant geraniums?
12044She could, she says, think of nothing else; and the question continually before her was,"What can I do?
12044She thus writes to a friend:--"Didst thou ever feel as if thou hadst no home on earth, except in the bosom of Jesus?
12044Still the question was ever before her:"Is there nothing that I can do?"
12044Thanks be to Him, I have not yet felt like complaining; nay, verily, the song of my heart is, Who so blest as I?
12044The master burst out laughing, and exclaimed:"Why, are you a nigger too?"
12044The meeting had been gathered some time when I arose, and after repeating our Lord''s thrice- repeated query to Peter,''Lovest thou me?''
12044The only answer she received was:"You are a girl; what do you want of Latin and Greek and philosophy?
12044The question naturally arises: if a little, why not more?
12044To his anxious question,''Pray, what is it?''
12044Was it not a fact that the minds of slaves were totally uncultivated, and their souls no more cared for by their owners than if they had none?
12044Was the paper once moistened by the tear of pity?
12044Weld, of more than two hours, on the question,''What is slavery?''
12044What a crowd of reflections throng the mind as we inquire,_ Why_ does her full heart thus overflow with gratitude?
12044What am I to do?
12044What can I do?"
12044What does brother Thomas think will be the issue of the political contest?
12044What dost thou think of some of_ them walking_ two, four, six, and eight miles to attend our meetings?"
12044What is the matter with thee?
12044What meaneth that loud acclaim with which they hail it?
12044What will you run a tilt at next?"
12044What would the breaking of every window be?
12044Which of these things is to be done next year, and which the year after?
12044Who shall dare to say when and where the echoes of her soul died away?
12044Why ca n''t you have eyes to see this?
12044Why, then, let me ask, is it necessary for you to enter the lists as controversial writers on this question?
12044Will Christian women heed such advice?
12044[ 4] Now, dearest, what dost thou think of it?
12044or carest thou not for the blessings and prayers of these our suffering brethren?
12044that I have taught my interesting class for the last time?
12044there is no Christ to multiply the garments, and what are those I send among so many?
12044why am I kept in Carolina?
16079Pray, Lady Spencer,said Walpole,"is it owned that Lord Althorp is to marry-- Miss Shipley?"
16079Walpole''s comment on this was:"Who could have believed a Gunning would unite the two great houses of Campbell and Hamilton?
15194How long before you go into the line?
15194The people need us,they said, and then,"you do n''t think we''ll be moved back, do you?"
15194What are you going to do?
15194What lies before us? 15194 What lies before us?"
15194All this spurious gaiety-- what was it?
15194Almost the first question that was asked was,"What do you think about the United States?"
15194And what are these women doing at Grà © court?
15194And why?
15194Are there really people in England who--?"
15194But could we beat her so thoroughly that she would never dare to reperpetrate this horror?
15194Could we prove to her that war is not and never was a paying way of conducting business?
15194Do you wonder that I at last began to share the Frenchman''s hatred for the Boche?
15194For three and a half years everything they have loved has been led away-- how can they believe that these Americans mean only mercy?
15194Had it?
15194Hauntingly the words came back,"Who is this that cometh from Domrà © my?
15194How could it be, with his homesteads ravaged, his cities flattened, his women violated, his populations prisoners in occupied territories?
15194How did he know?
15194How many nights had she spent here with girlish folded hands, her face ecstatic, the cold eating into her tender body?
15194I caught the words that were being shouted,"Are we downhearted?"
15194Is it to be wondered at that the strangers to whom she is sent are not always glad to see her?
15194Is it to be wondered at that, after her repatriation, she often wilts and dies?
15194It is true that his armies were beaten and retiring; but does not that fact rather enhance their valour?
15194The hand of love would have made the burden bearable and, if for her, why not for himself?
15194This man with the top- hat and the evening- dress, he had n''t suffered-- how could he understand?
15194Was he merely a lout or something worse-- the prototype of our Conscientious Objector: a coward who disguised his cowardice with moral scruples?
15194We do n''t want any one to appreciate us, so why go praising her?"
15194Were there ever feet less suited to dancing?
15194Were we going to put on a new offensive or were we going to resist one?
15194What brought America into the war?
15194What can be more contagious than a panic statement or a doubt daily reiterated?
15194What did an alarm- clock, an empty bird- cage, a pair of patched boots, a string of sauce- pans, a bundle of ragged umbrellas signify in any life?
15194What kind of a man could he have been?
15194What lies before us?"
15194What right had the Boche to leave these people so comic after he had squeezed the life- blood out of them?
15194What were his reflections as he went about his farm- work and thought of his sister at the head of armies?
15194What would those men say to the flaxen- haired babies who nestled against the women''s breasts?
15194Where had I seen their expression before?
15194Who is she in bloody coronation robes from Rheims?
15194Who is she that cometh with blackened flesh from walking in the furnaces of Rouen?
15194Why be decent?
15194Why be polite or kindly?
15194Why not be automatons?
15194Why seek out affections?
15194Why the devil does your censor allow the P---- to sneer at us every morning?
15194Would we come in?
1478A good joke?
1478And how is the dear General this evening?
1478And one day this brave handsome man was out making whisky and he had just sampled some when he looked up and what do you suppose he saw?
1478And that is what you Puritan gentlemen of God and volcanoes of Correct Thought snuffle over as a good joke? 1478 Do you mean to say,"gasped Priscilla,"that I can return to earth?"
1478Eh-- what''s that? 1478 Gee-- don''t youse know?"
1478Grandfather was awful brave, was n''t he father?
1478I wonder what this medicine show is like?
1478Madam,said he, turning to Mrs. van der Griff,"Am I to understand that there is liquor in those glasses?"
1478Medicine shows?
1478Mother,said George,"when I get to be eighteen, can I be a soldier just like grandfather up there?"
1478Now tell me, said the King,"is there any chance that a man who sails to the westward will ever return?"
1478Oh do you think so, Aunt Polly?
1478Oh you do n''t want to hear that again, do you children?
1478Shall we go a la salle- a- manger?
1478There will not be a drop of wine served to- night, and now General, shall we go in to dinner? 1478 Was it, by any chance, Colombo?"
1478Well this is the land of religious freedom, is n''t it? 1478 Well, sister, what seems to be the matter here?"
1478Well-- anything else?
1478Well-- what happened then?
1478What charming story did he tell this time?
1478What is the matter with these people?
1478What''s going on to- night?
1478Whom are you, said he,"to be thus wandering in the very unspeakable forest of the very unnamable sorcerer Thyrston?"
1478Why ca n''t I get to sleep?
1478Will you have a drink of champagne wine, General?
1478Would Monsieur like to see the journal? 1478 Yes, are n''t they?"
1478Yes?
1478("Did Will put the cat out?")
1478("Or is it me?")
1478And after an interval Colombo said,"There, my dear, do you not see how ridiculous it is to suppose that the earth is anything but round?"
1478And what do you suppose the stranger had?"
1478And when the brave handsome man offered the stranger a drink what do you suppose the stranger said?"
1478Besides-- what good did the war do anyway-- except make a lot of rich people richer?
1478But just as I was leaving I thought,"Priscilla, how about a drink-- just one little drink?"
1478Do you think Priscilla is thinking about marrying anybody in particular?
1478Hello Miles-- shoot many Indians today?
1478I''d love to shoot an Indian, would n''t you, auntie?
1478It would be a blessed relief when the thing was finally done beyond chance of recall; why could n''t that stupid waiter hurry?
1478It''s-- it''s cool for June, is n''t it?
1478JOHN: By whom?
1478Jean( Reading)--Sell my piano?
1478MILES( eagerly): She''s a-- a fine girl, is n''t she?
1478MILES( nervously): Yes, but it-- it is cool for June, is n''t it?
1478MILES: A military man?
1478MILES: Do you really think so, Mrs. Brewster?
1478MILES: Mistress Priscilla is n''t home, then?
1478Need I name her?
1478Of course it is not at all the kind of thing that will sell, is it-- and the metre must be patched up in places, do n''t you think?
1478Old graduates?
1478PRISCILLA: Miles, would you mind closing that window?
1478PRISCILLA: Miles, would you mind passing me that pillow over there?
1478Pat-- Say buddy any chance for a job here?
1478Pat-- Why-- was you across?
1478So I said, did n''t I?
1478THE VOICE: Where in hell did you put the vermouth?
1478That''s what you came here for, did n''t you?"
1478The Lieutenant-- Is there anything we can do to ease the pain?
1478The Lieutenant-- Well, men, do you feel ready?
1478The Streetcleaner''s Son-- That makes a fellow feel pretty good inside, does n''t it?
1478The angel-- Why the hell were n''t you satisfied to stay in heaven?
1478There is a most amusing story about---- The bill, Monsieur?
1478Thyrston?"
1478What did the stranger have?"
1478Will you be so kind as to lead the way with Miss Rhinelander?"
1478You know the reason why I came over here tonight?
12674''"We can not find your book,"I said;"where have you concealed it?"
12674''Am_ I_ going to die, grandmamma?''
12674''If your spirits are spirits, why do they let the world wag on in its old way, why do they confine themselves to trivial effects?''
12674''Is she going to die?''
12674''Is there no one present,''the learned judge asked in general,''who can give better testimony?''
12674''Soon?''
12674''What friend?''
12674''Where are the soules that swarmed in time past?
12674''Who knows?''
12674''Why do you weep, grandmamma, are you not happy where you are?''
12674And whither has it led us?
12674And why not toleration for''immoral''actions?
12674Are the sounds in Haunted Houses real or hallucinatory?
12674Being asked why she had always withdrawn before, she said she had seen''like a boyn( halo?)
12674But this evidence is in itself a fact to be considered--''Why do these gentlemen tell this tale?''
12674But we still ask:''_ Do_ objects move untouched?
12674But who ever swore that he_ saw_ witches so transported?
12674But why is it always the same old story?
12674But why not, as we know nothing about our relations with the invisible world?
12674But, when they expect nothing, and are disappointed by having to witness prodigies, the same old prodigies, what is the explanation?
12674By what sign can we be sure that the manifesting agency present is that of a god, an angel, an archon, or a soul?
12674Can''high scientific attainments''leave their possessor with such humble powers of observation?
12674Do impostors and credulous persons deliberately''get up''the subject in rare old books?
12674Do the expenses of exorcism fall on landlord or tenant?
12674Does Mr. Sully believe that the portrait was an original portrait of a real person?
12674Finally, the author has often been asked:''But what do you believe yourself?''
12674First, why abuse the judge at Tours?
12674From the hour of my marriage till this day, what have I wrought against thee that I need conceal?''
12674Have all other Mediums secret wires?
12674Have you ever had any hallucination?
12674He asks, among other things: How can gods, as in the evocations of gods, be made subject to necessity, and_ compelled_ to manifest themselves?
12674He would ask:''Does M. Littre accept the alleged facts; if so, how does he explain them?''
12674How did his Zulu learn the method of Home, of the Egyptian diviners, of St. Joseph of Cupertino?
12674How do''expectancy''and the''dominant idea''explain this experience, which Mr. Aide has published in the Nineteenth Century?
12674How does a demon differ from a hero, or from a mere soul of a dead man?
12674How is the identity of the spirit to be established?
12674How is the inquirer, how was Porphyry to know that the assertion is correct, that it is not the mere''boasting''of some vulgar spirit?
12674I have been at a loss ever since what to make of this last,''says Patrick Walker, and who is not at a loss?
12674In either case, what causes the hallucination, or are there various possible sorts of causes?
12674In what sorts of periods, in what conditions of general thought and belief, are the alleged abnormal phenomena most current?
12674Is it a disease of observation?
12674Is it not the business of the owner of the house to''whustle on his ain parten,''to have his own bogie exorcised?
12674Is there a method of imposture handed down by one generation of bad little girls to another?
12674Is there such a thing as persistent identity of hallucination among the sane?
12674It is suggested that Graime himself was the murderer, else, how did he know so much about it?
12674Now, could a hallucination lift a mosquito- curtain, or even produce the impression that it did so, while the curtain was really unmoved?
12674Now, had the peay tradition reached Cock Lane, or was the peay- man counterfeiting, very cleverly, some real phenomenon?
12674Now, if the committee do not provide themselves with a good''sensitive''comrade, what can they expect, but what they get, that is, nothing?
12674On the night of Lindsay''s death, Pitcairn dreamed that he was in Edinburgh, where Lindsay met him and said,''Archie, perhaps ye heard I''m dead?''
12674On the other hand, if Reginald Scot asked today,''Who heareth the noises, who seeth the visions?''
12674On this turned the fate of Joan of Arc: Were her voices and visions of God or of Satan?
12674Or are demons in some way evolved out of something abstracted from living bodies?
12674Or are there certain mystic correspondences in the nature of things, which may be detected?
12674Or, if we disbelieve this cloud of witnesses, if they voluntarily fabled, we ask, why do they all fable in exactly the same fashion?
12674Saint or sorcerer?
12674So far, everybody is agreed: the differences begin when we ask what causes hallucinations, and what different classes of hallucinations exist?
12674That is simple, but why are sane, scientific, modern observers, and even disgusted modern sceptics, in a tale, and that just the old savage tale?
12674The neighbours make the noises, and again the narrator asks''how?''
12674The question was, did an indicator move, or not, under a certain amount of pressure?
12674The spiritus percutiens,''rapping spirit''(?)
12674Then were the spectators of the agile crockery collectively hallucinated?
12674They asked:''What is the difference between a living body and a dead one?''
12674Thyraeus now raises the difficult question:''Are the sounds heard in haunted houses real, or hallucinatory?''
12674To the friends of a force or faculty in our nature, M. Littre remarks, in effect,''Why do n''t you_ use_ your force?
12674Vincent?''
12674Was he well?
12674Was there any coincidence between the hallucination and facts at the time unknown to you?
12674We do not so much ask:''Are these stories true?''
12674Well, be it so; what does anthropology study with so much zest as survivals?
12674What have she- goats to do in the matter?
12674What is his motive?
12674What makes them repeat the stories they do repeat?
12674What then is the type, the typical haunted house, from which, if narratives vary much, they are apt to break down under cross- examination?
12674When they met, she said:''Did you take your friend with you?''
12674Whence, then, comes the uniformity of evidence?
12674Why should the behaviour of ghosts be an exception?
12674Why was there no trial of the case till''about 1798 or 1799''?
12674Will can move my limbs, if it also moves my table, what is there superstitious in that?
12674X X?
12674Yes: but how does that explain volatile pots and pans?
12674and how many portraits of mediaeval people does he suppose to exist in English country houses?
12674and''why?''
12674as,''_ Why are these stories told_?''
12674what have I done that thou should''st help to assail me?
12674where are the spirits?
12674who heareth their noises?
12674who seeth their visions?''
12674why do n''t you supply a new motor for locomotives?
12674{ 207b} Consequently, they, at least, were hallucinations; so what was Lieutenant B.?
12674{ 319b} Perhaps the unscientific reader supposes that Dr. Carpenter replied to the arguments of M. de Gasparin?
12674{ 65b} How do you discriminate between demons, and gods, that are manifest, or not manifest?
12674{ 70b} Or is there a blending of the soul''s operations with the divine inspiration?
11965How do I love thee? 11965 A man may have no ear for music, and yet be a good and noble man; but who will deny that he lacks something because he has it not? 11965 Again, this morality for which( it is affirmed) society is prepared to pay so horrible a price-- what is it? 11965 And for what purpose is a child to be brought into the world under conditions so imperfect? 11965 And if not, why not? 11965 And on what, in the end, is it based?
11965And people begin to ask;"What real difference can a mere ceremony make?"
11965And what are a child''s rights?
11965And when people enter on this relationship, how are they prepared?
11965And when you see the extreme result, the prude on one side, the rake on the other, do you not begin to desire a better way?
11965And why?
11965Are her"morals"then at the mercy of another person?
11965But what should be the nature of that concern?
11965But why do you desire it to be easy to judge?
11965But yet, is it not a heroic path that I point out to you?
11965Can one take such a gift lightly, and pass from one relationship to another with a readiness which would seem contemptible in a friend?
11965Can you take that-- and give it-- and pass on, as though it were a light thing?
11965Did God join those two together?
11965Do you imagine that because you have a contract to protect you while you do it, you are doing what is moral?
11965Do you know how many of those married people seized the opportunity to desert each other and go and marry somebody else?
11965Do you remember the cry of Julie in"The Three Daughters of M. Dupont"?
11965Do you think that medicine will ever be able to rid the world of what are called the diseases of immorality as long as immorality remains?
11965Do you wonder if the term"old maid"has become synonym for everything that is narrow, and hard, and prudish and repressive?
11965Does anyone suppose that it was a mere instinct of asceticism that drove St. Francis to make out of snow, cold images of wife and child?
11965Does she reason all that out?
11965Does that mean that he regrets his choice?
11965Have they not born into the world with travail of soul, the souls of men and women?
11965How are we to know?
11965How are we, who have many friends, many neighbours, on whom our standards must react, to judge their lives?
11965How could one so physically vital, so humanly and divinely full of love, escape the conflict?
11965How many have even tried to understand?
11965How many have refrained from scorn?
11965How on earth does that change anything at all?
11965How shall they see clearly whom we have clothed in darkness, or judge truly who are so terribly alone?
11965How would He have developed that spiritual power, how would He have become so great a Lover of the world if He knew nothing of that side of life?
11965If it is not given outright in the belief that the gift is final, can the"experiment"be valid?
11965If they affirm"the right to motherhood"when they want children, or the satisfaction of the sex- instinct when that need becomes imperious?
11965If they determine to snatch at anything that yet lies in their grasp?
11965If this be the normal vocation of the normal woman how many of these have been deprived of all that seemed to them to make life worth living?
11965In marriage is it possible to know finally until the final step is taken?
11965In other words, should physical union be the expression of spiritual union?
11965In what way do they differ?
11965Is it anything but prostitution to sell yourself for money, whether you are a man or a woman?
11965Is it astonishing if they rebel?
11965Is it not certain that the expression of love does intensify and deepen love?
11965Is it really fair to say to them that their moral standards are going down, that they have no sense now of morality or self- respect?
11965Is it the"outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace?"
11965Is it worth such a price?
11965Is not the"moral problem"really created, not by human nature, but by the attempt to bind what can not be bound and to coerce what should be free?
11965Is not this very sense of finality-- this desire to give and burn one''s ships-- of the very essence of love?
11965Is passion a cause or an effect?
11965Is that difficult to believe in these days, when psychology is teaching us how all- important thought is?
11965Is that not the height and depth of cruelty?
11965Is the whole community willing to pay it, or is it exacted from us alone?
11965Is there any mockery of motherhood more complete than this sacrifice of the child to the mother?
11965Is there one here who is not conscious of some dislocation in his life that he must combat?
11965Is there one whit of difference, morally, between the prostitution that has no legal recognition and the prostitution that has?
11965Is this the ideal of the Sermon on the Mount?
11965Is this to abandon the ideal I have been upholding?
11965Is this to be a cause for divorce?
11965It is something, however?
11965Looking at marriage from that point of view, can one desire that it should be anything less than permanent, indissoluble?
11965Marriage should be indissoluble; but what is marriage?
11965May I sketch what I imagine is the experience of most people?
11965Men and women claim the right to"experience,"but experience of what?
11965Or is it a means by which that grace is achieved?
11965Or who, having loved in any of these ways, will lightly break the bond?
11965Ought you to find it hard to believe that what you do in the utmost secrecy affects others, since it affects you, and no man lives to himself alone?
11965Should it ever be exclusive or proprietary?
11965Should love ever be other than perfectly free, and is not the attempt to bind it essentially"immoral"?
11965That which God made, and, therefore, which no man should put asunder?
11965There is another test also for love: Does it express itself naturally and rightly?
11965There we cease to be literal: how then can we fall back on a literal interpretation at another point?
11965This little set of iron rules makes it very easy to judge, does it not?
11965To ask yourself whether there is not a third choice before you?
11965To have so great and wonderful a thing in your nature and to suppress it as though it were something shameful and weak?
11965To some people it seems to be immoral even to ask the question-- on what are your moral standards based?
11965V THE MORAL STANDARD OF THE FUTURE: WHAT SHOULD IT BE?
11965We do not do it with the other virtues: why do we desire to do it with this one?
11965What answer then shall we give to the rising generation which questions us--"On what do you base your moral standards?"
11965What difference has been made in their relation to each other?
11965What does she buy?
11965What is the significance of such teaching?
11965What should we-- the community-- hold up as the right standard of sex- relationship, and what methods should we use to impose it on others?
11965What then should those do who have this temperament?
11965What woman that hast lost her husband does not realize the truth of what I say?
11965What, then, are the realities of our nature?
11965What?
11965When a woman sells her body for money, do you think that it makes it moral that she does it in a church or in a registry office?
11965When shall we learn that every human being is a unity, and that to ignore any part of it-- body, mind or spirit-- is idiotic?
11965When you hear of a Beethoven deaf or of a Robert Louis Stevenson spitting blood, are you not conscious of disharmony?
11965Where is your little set of rules?
11965Where then lies the difficulty, since probably men and women alike would agree that what I have said is true?
11965Who can say:"These people are moral because they are married, and those are immoral, they are not married?"
11965Who knows what is our ultimate goal?
11965Who knows yet of what it is capable?
11965Who shall deliver us from this body of death?
11965Who shall say that he is wrong?
11965Who that has once heard this can easily take anything less?
11965Whose nature is all harmony?
11965Whose temperament guarantees him from temptation?
11965Why have we done it?
11965Why have we persisted?
11965Why should she not cheat and thieve?
11965Why should you?
11965Why?
11965Why?
11965know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?"
15246But,came the question,"what would have been the consequences of a change of residence?"
15246What can I do for you, my pretty girl?
15246Why should I discontinue this symbol?
15246[ 11] In reading through these State letters, one is struck with the diplomatically(?) 15246 A vivid justification of the opposition to another Austrian princess sharing the throne of France is embodied in the lofty ideals(?) 15246 Besides, what had any of them to gain by sending forth distorted statements and untruthful history? 15246 But what of the Commissioners representing Russia, Austria, Prussia, and the Most Christian King of France? 15246 Could she forget the oft- repeated declaration that his ruling principle was that he would have no divided affection? 15246 Did Napoleon fare better than his prototype, inasmuch as he was not the victim of the assassin''s dagger? 15246 Facts Illustrative of the Treatment of Napoleon Bonaparte in St. Helena, by Theodore Hook(?). 15246 He asks excitedly,Is she ill?"
15246He had been led to adopt a sort of"For God''s sake, what does she want?"
15246How shall they fare at the hands of posterity?
15246I burst out laughing, and said to Metternich,''Do you suppose I am going to waste my time over such foolishness?
15246Is it not rather to live?''"
15246Is that the invention of a man?
15246Is that to die?
15246May it not have been part of the subtle policy of Austria in arranging the marriage?
15246Napoleon was kept advised, during his stay at Elba, of their designs on the liberty they had graciously(?)
15246Perhaps the virulent treatment of Byron ranks with the meanest and most impotent actions of the militant oligarchists because of his shocking(?)
15246Should it be manslaughter or murder?
15246Suppose it were true, what good would it do me?
15246The advantages to France would be inestimable, and would it not establish himself and his dynasty more firmly on the throne?
15246The same authority(?)
15246Tricked into a false position by Lowe and the virtuous(?)
15246What I want to know is: What have you done with this France which I left you so glorious?
15246Who knows?
15246Why did Lord Keith not give_ them_, as he did the devoted Frenchmen, a little sermon on the orthodoxy of the gallows?
15246Why does Scott quote Gourgaud if, as he says, it is probable that the malady was in slow progress even before 1817?
15246Why should he complain in the fretful way he does of his treatment and his condition?
15246Why should she be so anxious to be in the immediate reach of tyranny?"
15246You are craving for more victories?
15246You ask for the capture of a town?
15246You demand a prompt march?
10666''From your husband? 10666 ''Get on, will you?''
10666''Have you your pistols?'' 10666 ''How so?''
10666''What is the matter with you?'' 10666 ''Where to, sir?''
10666''Why, have n''t you ever seen anything?'' 10666 ''Why?
10666''Why?'' 10666 But how to get rid of him?
10666What is that for?
10666''Will you take something?
10666A glass of wine?''
10666A thimbleful of_ cassis_?
10666And in what respect, if you please?
10666Apollonius says to Saint Anthony:--"What is knowledge?
10666Are they men who are interested in political or social economy?
10666Besides, was she not''a lady''and a married woman-- a real mistress, in fine?"
10666But can this last long?
10666But how could she live?
10666But in these quarrels, who is it that is beaten, buffeted, and ridiculed?
10666Can it be said that this is only an historic parenthesis?
10666Can it be that you make an indictment for simply translating the formula of the ritual:_ Quidquid deliquisti per oculos, per aurem_, etc.?
10666Can that be so serious that you reproach us with having insulted the memory of that unfortunate woman?
10666Do you know what they imagined?
10666Do you not see the glorification of adultery in it?
10666Do you think his love is then shattered?
10666Do you wish for another example?
10666Do you wish me to show you that corsets can appear in a classic book, a very classic book?
10666Do you wish to read books in which ecclesiastics play a deplorable rôle?
10666Does not a punishment so terrible drive one to virtue and encourage it?
10666From the side of physical beauty?
10666From the side of the heart?
10666Gentlemen, do you know of language anywhere in the world more expressive?
10666Gentlemen, does Madame Bovary love her husband, or try to love him?
10666Had she not drunk to the last dregs her shame and baseness?
10666Has he tried to show her on the side of intelligence?
10666Have I represented him as a gourmand, a libertine, or a drunkard?
10666Have you done what you ought for their happiness?
10666Have you ever seen a more lascivious picture?
10666Have you taught them that?
10666How have we insulted death?
10666I had need of but two scenes: Do you not see the moral outrage in the fall with Rodolphe?
10666In what tongue does one pray to God in language addressed to a lover in the outpourings of adultery?
10666Is all description to be prohibited?
10666Is it natural for a little girl to invent small sins, since we know that for a child the smallest sins are confessed with the greatest difficulty?
10666Is not all that you have just listened to designed to show you the bitterness of passion?
10666Is she of perverse nature?
10666Is that lascivious?
10666Is there anything analogous in what I am going to read you?
10666Is there in this adulterous woman going to communion anything of the repentant faith of a Magdalene?
10666Is there not, on the contrary, a horror of vice that this"something dreary glides in between them to separate them?"
10666Is this lascivious, gentlemen?
10666It is the good woman of the inn who offers something to her curate:"''What can I do for you, Monsieur le Curé?''
10666M. Flaubert constantly sets forth the superiority of the husband over the wife, and what superiority, if you please?
10666M. SENARD: If not in its inner meaning, where then, is it?
10666My client has depicted in_ Madame Bovary_ what sort of woman?
10666Now, at the Castle Vaubyessard do you know what most attracted this young woman, what struck her most forcibly?
10666Now, how has it come about that a work like this can incur a process of law?
10666Now, what has M. Flaubert desired to paint?
10666On the part of mind?
10666Or is it necessary for me to quote you Jean- Jacques Rousseau in his_ Confessions_, and some others?
10666Shall we sum up, Mr. Attorney?
10666She poisons herself, why?
10666Should it be in the name of conjugal honor that the book be condemned?
10666Should it be in the name of public opinion?
10666The Government Attorney has asked: Did she even try to love her husband?
10666The general objection will be: But after all the romance is moral on the whole, for is not adultery punished?
10666Then with a more serious air,''Do you know, it is very improper?''
10666There remained to her but one course: to beg her husband''s pardon?
10666This language would not wound you in the mouth of a father, would it?
10666To explain the matter to him?
10666To read the whole romance?
10666To what, gentlemen, do the minds of children, curious, ardent, and tender, lend themselves, especially the minds of young girls?
10666Very certainly I could not allow such details, but where have I allowed them?
10666Was any of this scorn lacking in the book?
10666Was she not condemned?
10666What does it mean?
10666What has M. Flaubert done?
10666What has he shown?
10666What have we shown?
10666What is glory?
10666What is it that the author called the platitudes of marriage?
10666What is lascivious there?
10666What is the book which M. Flaubert perused day and night, and which has inspired the passages that the Government Attorney condemns?
10666What is the duty of the Public Ministry?
10666What is the outline he has chosen, the subject he has taken, and how has he treated it?
10666What is the title of the romance?
10666What is this?
10666What is to be done in such a case?
10666What was it that seduced Rodolphe and prepared him?
10666Whence came this insufficiency of life-- this instantaneous turning to decay of everything on which she leant?"
10666Whence has Flaubert derived his inspiration, gentlemen?
10666Where are they?
10666Where can you find it?
10666Where had she learned these caresses almost immaterial, so profound and evasive were they?"
10666Where, I pray you, have you found this scepticism?
10666Who are the ones to read M. Flaubert''s romance?
10666Who has said that?
10666Who has written these words which you are about to hear upon these excitements and excessive ardor?
10666Who would condemn this woman in the book?
10666Who, now, has written that?
10666Why not?
10666Why the sacrament, since in her last thought she is going to annihilation?
10666Why, when there is not a tear, not a sigh of the Magdalene over her crime of infidelity, her suicide, or her adulteries?
10666Why?
10666Why?
10666Will you condemn it in the name of religious sentiment?
10666Will you condemn it in the name of the author''s conscience?
10666Without doubt it is difficult to comprehend and believe it, but why this stupefaction which manifest''s itself at death?
10666Would you know in what kind of language M. Flaubert speaks of religion?
10666Would you see Madame Bovary in her lesser acts, in a free state, without a lover and without sin?
10666Wouldst thou feel thy body sink itself, as in a wave, in the sweet flesh of swooning women?"
10666Wouldst thou refresh thine eyes under the humid jasmines?
10666and where is the severe colour?
10666she said,''Are you ill?
15892Did you like history?
15892In die Erd''isi''s aufgenommen, Glucklich ist die Form gefullt; Wird''s auch schon zu Tage kommen, Dass es Fleiss und Kunst vergilt? 15892 Now tell us all about the war, And what they fought each other for?"
15892What did you think of so and so?
15892What good came of it at last?
15892What think we of thy soul? 15892 Are the results in any degree proportioned to all these repeated and accumulated efforts? 15892 Are they the only ones who do not know? 15892 But who can make them will to be something more, to become, as Montalembert said,a_ fact_, instead of remaining but a shadow, an echo, or a ruin?"
15892Did they ever need it so much as they do now?
15892Is it clear to every one else?
15892Is this the fault of those who so decline in power?
15892The frightened question about some childish wrong- doing--"is it a mortal sin?"
15892The question was asked,"What is science?"
15892To come to practice-- What can be done for girls during their years at school?
15892Wenn der Guss misslang?
15892Wenn die Form zersprang?
15892What about Canossa?
15892What about Investitures?
15892What about Mentana or Castel- Fidardo?
15892What about the laity?
15892What about those who are now leaving childhood behind and will be in the front ranks of the coming generation?
15892What are these means?
15892What can be done for the girls to give them first more independence in their language and then more power to express themselves?
15892What do we want to bring up?
15892What then shall we call a well- educated girl, whom we consider ready for the opportunities and responsibilities of her new life?
15892Whence can they have come?
15892Yet what is all this compared with one hour, one of earth''s short hours, of the magnificences of celestial love?
11982Again, I ask, is it possible to discuss all the laws of a relation, and not touch the relation itself? 11982 Are you one of them?"
11982As we have no conventions,said he,"on hand, what do you say to a ride on horseback this morning?"
11982Before that Committee on Revolutionary Claims why could not this most revolutionary of all claims receive immediate and ample attention? 11982 Dear Eliza:"In a recent letter to Mrs. Miller, speaking of the time when we last met, you say,''Why was Mrs. Stanton so solemn?''
11982Did Miss---- ask you to do so?
11982Did you know that Miss---- had copied that from the book of another young lady?
11982Do not the above citations clearly prove inequality? 11982 Do you think,"said I,"any of your friends would enjoy a present you made at the risk of your health?
11982Doctor,said I,"which do you like best, boys or girls?"
11982Have you any more thoughts to publish on that bread powder?
11982How does thee do Elizabeth?
11982How is my trunk going?
11982In retrospective vision bright, Can you recall dear Martha Wright Without her work or knitting? 11982 Is Marriage a Failure?"
11982Ladies,I said,"it takes me no longer to speak, than you to listen; what have you done with your children the two hours you have been sitting here?
11982Oh,I replied,"is that all?
11982Say you,''These are but the opinions of men''? 11982 Suppose I had not found this out, did you intend to keep silent?"
11982Then why did you not read your own?
11982Well, do you know that I agreed to pay twenty dollars to have that bread powder advertised for one month, and then you condemn it editorially?
11982Well,said I to the landlord,"I must be at Maquoketa at eight o''clock to- night; have you a sleigh, a span of fleet horses, and a skillful driver?
11982Well,said I,"where have you gentlemen been?"
11982What can I do?
11982What do you propose to do?
11982What next?
11982What, pray,said I,"does he know about stoves, sitting in his easy- chair in Washington?
11982Who,said he,"runs this concern?"
11982Why did you not defend yourself on the spot?
11982Why have you allowed yourself to remain in such a false position for a whole week?
11982Why, do n''t you see those boys?
11982Yes, but I would rather have you stay,I replied,"for what can I do when you are gone?"
11982A voice from the corner asked,"Is your bed comfortable?"
11982Are not these delicate matters left wholly to the discretion of courts?
11982Are not women, as a factor in civilization, of more importance than Indians?
11982Are not young women from the first families dragged into our courts,--into assemblies of men exclusively,--the judges all men, the jurors all men?
11982As the historical fact is that, as far back as history dates, the man has been of the woman, should he therefore be forever in bondage to her?
11982But how ended that rebellion of weak colonists?
11982But what is the use, say some, of attaching any importance to the customs and teachings of a barbarous people?
11982Can you give me one good reason, nurse, why a child should be bandaged?"
11982Charlotte, what have you been doing?''
11982Do you not agree with me that a"bread- winner"can be a conscientious reformer?
11982From Coke down to Kent, who can cite one clause of the marriage contract where woman has the advantage?
11982Had I taken the veil in my old age?
11982How can a man know what implements are necessary for the work he never does?
11982How can we discuss all the laws and conditions of marriage, without perceiving its essential essence, end, and aim?
11982How can we get it without involving the arm, is the question?"
11982I exclaimed;"what will you say when he meets you again?"
11982I had just congratulated myself on my power of adaptability to circumstances, when I suddenly started with an emphatic"What is that?"
11982I ran with the rest and exclaimed,"What is it?"
11982I remarked to her, one day,''Are you sure your men vote as they promise?''
11982I said,"what do you mean?"
11982I was scarcely seated when he said:"Mother, do you know anything about babies?"
11982If the leaders in the Republican and abolition camps could deceive us, whom could we trust?
11982In asking for a voice in the government under which we live, have we been pursuing a shadow for fifty years?
11982In seeking political power, are we abdicating that social throne where they tell us our influence is unbounded?
11982In talking with him on that point, he said:"I suppose your nursing mothers drink beer?"
11982Indeed as we run the mind back over the pages of history, what queen came to a more triumphant throne in the hearts of a grateful people?
11982Is there not something very touching in the fact that she never bought a book or picture for her own enjoyment?
11982It may be, however, that I helped them to get ready; who knows?
11982More than that, as I said before, if there is any tribunal that could give undivided time and dignified attention, is it not this committee?
11982My theme was,"What has Christianity done for Woman?"
11982My wife has presented me with eight beautiful children; is not this a better life- work than that of exercising the right of suffrage?"
11982Now I think this child will remain intact without a bandage, and, if I am willing to take the risk, why should you complain?"
11982On what else, I ask, are the hundreds of women depending, who, this hour, demand in our courts a release from burdensome contracts?
11982Or, like high- church Anglicans and Roman Catholics, had I made this my retreat?
11982Recovering myself, I said,"Is it possible, Mrs. Seward, that you agree with me?
11982She said,"Where is yours that you wrote for that day?"
11982She then asked,"Did you copy it from her book?"
11982Should they ride on Sunday?
11982Should women ride?
11982Sitting next to Mrs. Mott, I said:"As there is a Quaker in the chair now, what could he do if the spirit should move you to speak?"
11982Stove pipe in hand he turned to me with a look of surprise, and said:"Do they ever come without spines?"
11982Suppose a child was born where you could not get a bandage, what then?
11982The needles flying in her hands, On washing rags or baby''s bands, Or other work as fitting?
11982Then why, when I was so hard pressed by foes on every side, did you not come to the defense?
11982Wandering through a gorgeous palace one day, she exclaimed,"What do you find to admire here?
11982Was it not an historic scene which was enacted there in that little courthouse in Canandaigua?
11982We naturally asked the question, As Congress has a special committee on the rights of Indians, why not on those of women?
11982We never had experienced anything like this journey, and how could we help being surprised and delighted?
11982Weary of the trials and tribulations of this world, had I gone there to prepare in solitude for the next?
11982What are"God''s intentions"concerning them?
11982What could I do?
11982What could I say to an audience of lunatics?"
11982What do you think ails it?"
11982What is that compared with a good stove 365 days in the year?
11982What is there to pay for the one insertion?"
11982What should they wear?
11982Where did you learn this lesson?"
11982Who can describe the varied audiences and social circles she has cheered and interested?
11982Who can sum up all the ills the women of a nation suffer from war?
11982Why not change the system and try the education of the moral and intellectual faculties, cheerful surroundings, inspiring influences?
11982Will you get tickets to- day for me, the nurse, and children?"
11982Will you give me a Greek lesson now, doctor?
15537Do you assent?
15537If the marshall of the host bids us do anything,he said,"shall we do it if it be against the great captain?
15537What care the clergy though Gill sweat, Or Jack of the Noke? 15537 Who does cite me?"
15537[ 720] Thus, therefore, with much regret the council decided-- and, in fact, why should they have decided otherwise? 15537 And he said who were they? 15537 And is it not time to have an end in seven years? 15537 And now, what should the clergy have done? 15537 And will ye know who it is? 15537 Can we suppose that he designed to dupe Henry into submission by a promise which he had predetermined to break? 15537 Did any twinge of remorse, any pang of painful recollection, pierce at that moment the incense of glory which she was inhaling? 15537 Had the meaning of that awful figure hanging on the torturing cross suddenly revealed itself? 15537 If he was persuaded that Henry''s cause_ was_ good, why did he in the following year pronounce finally for Catherine? 15537 If it be bad, why will you not say that it is bad, so to hinder a prince to whom you are so much bounden from longer continuing with it? 15537 Is it likely that he was in Italy on such an occasion in the interval? 15537 May we not justly be ashamed of ourselves? 15537 On the other hand, what object at such a time can be conceived for falsehood? 15537 Quid aliud quam quod decuit Christianissimum regem? 15537 Quid deinceps egit? 15537 The king demanded who they were? 15537 The question was this:''Master Latimer, do you not think, on your conscience, that you have been suspected of heresy?'' 15537 To the question, if ever it was asked, May I not do what I will with my own? 15537 We find only an effort to express again the old exhortation of the Wise Man--Will you hear the beginning and the end of the whole matter?
15537What comyn folke is so mighty, so strong in the felde, as the comyns of England?"
15537What manner of men be you?"
15537What was it?
15537What went you about?
15537What would ye have brought to pass?
15537Whither had he gone, then?
15537Who can tell?
15537Yea, who is able to number the great broad bottomless ocean sea full of evils that this mischievous generation may bring upon us if unpunished?
15537[ 575]"I pray you, in God''s name, what did you, so great fathers, so many, so long season, so oft assembled together?
15537[ 587] Are we to believe Foxe''s story that Cromwell was with the Duke of Bourbon at the storming of Rome in May, 1527?
15537[ 630] Extraordinary as it must seem, the pope certainly bound himself by this engagement: and who can tell with what intention?
15537_ If_ I may kill a man to prevent him from robbing my friend, why may I not deceive a man to save my friend from being barbarously murdered?
15537and why throughout Europe were the ultramontane party, to a man, on Catherine''s side?
15537the prior inquired; and where was he at that time?
15537why had he imperilled so needlessly the interests of the papacy in England?
15537why had his conduct from the beginning pointed steadily to the conclusion at which he at last arrived?
11279A king?
11279A knight? 11279 A message?
11279And father?
11279And is this why you came to see me?
11279And you have come all the way to Washington, D.C. in order to increase your weight?
11279And you will take me to the country club?
11279Any rank? 11279 Are you sure?"
11279Bant?
11279But have you any social position?
11279But why did you come?
11279Ca n''t you guess?
11279Can you beat that? 11279 Corker?"
11279Do I look like a Scandinavian? 11279 Do I understand that you are traveling abroad because of your unpopularity at home?"
11279Do I? 11279 Do n''t you generally succeed in having your own way with him?"
11279Do n''t you think it would be better if you went alone to these hotels? 11279 Do they wish to know about me?
11279Do you feel competent to take charge of her and regulate her conduct?
11279Do you mean to say that there is a country in which all the woman are fat?
11279Do you mean to say that you never heard of a gin fizz?
11279Do you see this badge with all the jewels in it? 11279 Does he ever scold you for being thin?"
11279Does he_ what_?
11279Does it?
11279Dollars?
11279Duck?
11279For what?
11279From your first interview with her, do you believe that it would be advisable for any of us to attempt to interfere with her plans?
11279Have you questioned Kalora again?
11279Hideous? 11279 How dare you?"
11279How did he escape?
11279How did he manage to escape?
11279How do you do?
11279How-- ah-- where did you get this description?
11279I-- I never have seen you before, have I?
11279I?
11279Is he ever angry with you because you are not big and plump and-- and-- pulpy?
11279Is it possible that somewhere in this world there is a food which will add a pound a day?
11279Let''s see, what shall we tackle?
11279Oh, really?
11279Once more pardon me, but have you done anything for it?
11279Over a wall ten feet high?
11279Shall I try to put up a bluff, or fight it out?
11279So this is how you have managed my affairs?
11279That''s why you notified me as soon as you arrived, is n''t it? 11279 The Princess-- ah--?"
11279The what?
11279Then in your country I would not be considered hideous, would I?
11279Then you do n''t think fat women are beautiful?
11279Then you know what constitutes beauty?
11279These are what you call beautiful women?
11279Were you invited?
11279What are you doing here?
11279What are you trying to tell me?
11279What can I do?
11279What country is this?
11279What does it mean?
11279What is the meaning of this shocking exhibition?
11279What would that be in piasters?
11279What''s the matter with my wealth and social position? 11279 Why do n''t you duck?"
11279Why remain in Morovenia?
11279Why should you know anything about tennis- balls? 11279 Wo n''t you be seated?"
11279Would you mind if I butted in with a suggestion?
11279You are not displeased to find me here?
11279You are_ here_--here in Morovenia? 11279 You have been in America a long time?"
11279You have met many people-- that is, the important people?
11279You have seen many women in many countries?
11279You have traveled a great deal?
11279You said American, did n''t you? 11279 _ Find_ some one?"
11279_ Find_ some one?
11279And you?"
11279Any title?
11279Are you a real ingénue, or a kidder?"
11279Are you from America?"
11279Are you trying to string me by asking such questions?
11279Besides, you do n''t need any help, do you?"
11279But what in the name of all that is pure and sanctified are you doing in the land of the free?"
11279But why tell you the story of my life?
11279Can you beat that?
11279Could she well escape the gaieties of Washington?
11279Did they carry her?
11279Did you ever hear of the town of Bessemer?"
11279Did you?"
11279Do n''t you remember?
11279Do you love him?"
11279Do you see the point?
11279For a simple and democratic people you are rather fond of high- sounding titles, do n''t you think?"
11279For me?"
11279Have you a title?"
11279How could one man be worth four hundred million piasters?"
11279How long have you been here?"
11279I described you, but-- your name--_please_ tell me your name again?
11279In other words, why did n''t you drop me a line?"
11279Is it necessary to tell?
11279It is n''t you, is it?"
11279Must they know the truth?
11279Now, why not America?
11279She reasoned thus with herself:"To- day I have disgraced myself to the utmost, and, since I am utterly shamed, why not revel in my lawlessness?"
11279Take off your hat-- ah, I remember, you leave that on, do n''t you?"
11279Tell me-- the stranger-- you know, the one in the garden-- has he been taken?"
11279That evening he made a most astonishing report to his intimates of the corps and asked:"What shall I do?"
11279That''s the really proper thing to do, do n''t you think?"
11279Was he going to attempt to poke a hole through a wall three feet thick?
11279Was it really Popova?
11279We know each other pretty well-- don''t you think we do?
11279What are the requirements?
11279What do you think of me?"
11279What ensued?
11279What is it you wish to say?"
11279What is the capital of the United States?"
11279What more can I say, except that I shall always remember you?
11279What must a woman be, that all men would call her beautiful?"
11279What of that?
11279Where am I?"
11279Why had she called upon the Secretary?
11279Will you pardon me for being a wee bit personal?
11279Yes, I must exhibit her, but how-- how?"
11279You are an Englishman, I presume?"
11279You came all the way?"
11279You go to balls and dinners and the theater, do n''t you?"
11279You met him abroad?"
11279[ Illustration:"Are you a real ingénue, or a kidder?"]
101And how can I reach you?
101Are they gon na feed us?
101Are you a police officer, sir?
101Are you familiar with Bellcore Technical Reference Document TR- TSY-000350?
101Big guy, heavyset?
101But is n''t this what you said was basically what appeared in Phrack?
101But you are a` Phoenix Resident?''
101Did you hear what Godwin said about INSTRUMENTALITY OF A CRIME?
101Excuse me?
101How about if you take copies of the data?
101Oh, did you know so- and- so?
101Really? 101 Really?
101Somebody broke in to your computer, huh?
101Sort of like the Bell System buying Western Union?
101Taiwan and Ireland?
101What is your name, sir?
101What kind do you WISH you had?
101What kind of computer do you have?
101Why did you say I was` quaint?''
101Yeah?
101Yes?
101You guys crash here a lot?
101You know who works in that building over there?
101You''re going to put a TEENAGER in charge of a federal security BBS?
101.was THAT the problem?
101Access- code theft?
101And if it''s money, then why are n''t they free to compete for it?
101And just how widespread was this sort of thing?
101And was it possible?
101And what about a certain stolen E911 Document, that posed a direct threat to the police emergency lines?
101Are TAIWAN and IRELAND really in the forefront of this stuff?
101Breaking into ATM bank machines?
101But can they do it, in the real world?
101By what right?"
101Computer intrusions?
101Consider this: if"hacking"is supposed to be so serious and real- life and dangerous, then how come NINE- YEAR- OLD KIDS have computers and modems?
101Could he take the charts out in the street and show them to anybody,"without violating some proprietary notion that BellSouth has?"
101Did n''t he have to go to the bathroom?
101Did n''t he know Terminus?
101Did you ever hack into a system?
101Did"Sundevil"send''em reeling back in confusion?
101Do n''t they already have their own generators in this eight- story monster?
101Do we add ID?
101Do we add new protocol?
101EVEN THE 911 SERVICE?
101Exactly what bits of knowledge in the Document were, in fact, unknown to the public?
101Fear?
101For example, what happened when the subscriber dialed 911?
101Gas utilities?
101Had n''t Neidorf removed much of this?
101He had lost some computers in an ongoing investigation-- so what?
101How come nobody can come up with four lousy grand so this woman can do her job?
101How dare this near- criminal dictate what is or is n''t"acceptable"behavior from AT&T?
101How do you keep people disposable, yet assure their awestruck respect for your property?
101How had"misguided teenagers"managed to alarm the United States Secret Service?
101How much does he actually have, then?
101How painful, to be restricted to boards in one''s own AREA CODE-- what the heck is an"area code"anyway, and what makes it so special?
101How will they be regarded, by the mouse- whizzing masters of cyberspace?
101How will those currently enjoying America''s digital bounty regard, and treat, all this teeming refuse yearning to breathe free?
101How''d he get in?
101If a tree falls in the forest and nobody hears it, how much is the noise worth?
101If it''s"service,"why are n''t they treated like a public service?
101If there were hackers into BellSouth switching- stations, then how come nothing had happened?
101Indifference?
101Is it-- credit card fraud?
101Is posting digital booty of this sort supposed to be protected by the First Amendment?
101Kids: this one is all yours, all right?
101Locations of E911 computers?
101My immediate reaction is a strong rush of indignant pity: WHY DOESN''T SOMEBODY BUY THIS WOMAN HER AMIGA?!
101Need advice?
101Need training?
101Neighborhood watch?
101OF COURSE they spy on Madonna''s phone calls-- I mean, WOULDN''T YOU?
101Ongoing maintenance subcommittees?
101Or are they only dreaming?
101Or were they best defined as TRESPASSERS, a very common teenage misdemeanor?
101Phone numbers for telco personnel?
101Phone- phreaking?
101Police watch television, listen to radio, read newspapers and magazines; why should the new medium of boards be different?
101Pornographic bulletin boards?
101Records tampering?
101Right?
101Satellite TV piracy?
101Should they be sternly treated as potential AGENTS OF ESPIONAGE, or perhaps as INDUSTRIAL SPIES?
101So what happens to the telephone companies?
101So: from the law''s point of view, why risk missing anything?
101Software piracy?
101Software viruses?
101Some journo had asked him:"Would you describe these people as GENIUSES?"
101Some kind of vigilante group?
101Theft of cable service?
101There''s a case on record of a single question--"How''d you do it?"
101UNUSUAL PROBLEMS WITH HER PHONE?
101Waltz?
101Was hacking FRAUD?
101Was hacking THEFT OF SERVICE?
101Was it some kind of automatic keyboard- whacking device that could actually type code?
101Water utilities?
101Were they PUBLIC INFORMATION, these charts, all about PSAPs, ALIs, nodes, local end switches?
101Were they VOYEURS, snoops, invaders of privacy?
101Were they dangerous?
101Were they just BROWSERS, harmless intellectual explorers?
101Were they"mischievous?"
101Whaddya gon na do?
101What are we to make of this?
101What did they want?
101What distinguishes it from a standard board?
101What does an underground board look like?
101What exactly HAVE you"stolen,"anyway?
101What happened to backups?
101What if the computer is the instrumentality of a crime?
101What on earth do they expect these dual guests to do with each other?
101What other group of criminals, she asks rhetorically, publishes newsletters and holds conventions?
101What were computer- intruding hackers, anyway-- how should society, and the law, best define their actions?
101What will computer crime look like in ten years?
101What''s to be done with these people, in the bright new shiny electroworld?
101Where had they come from?
101Who WERE they?
101Who knows what they''re up to, in Oregon or Alaska or Florida or California?
101Who remembers the name of the SECOND head of the Secret Service?
101Who were these"underground groups"and"high- tech operators?"
101Who?
101Whom did it hurt, really?
101Why did Prophet do this?
101Why did the alarm systems blare automatically, without any human being noticing?
101Why does this Nice Lady hang out with these unsavory characters?
101Why had those New York switching systems simply run out of power?
101Why should he be?
101Will it get better?
101Will it have Phrack on it?
101With contempt?
101Would my computer be seized by the Secret Service?
101Would n''t that spell the doom of AT&T as an institution?
101You BOUGHT it?"
101or is it Organized Against Crime Threat?
12882An''sae wi''you, ye weel- bred knight,"And what''s your will wi''me?
12882An''winna ye pity my poor steed,Stands trembling at yon tree?"
12882And has na thou mind, Lord Gregory,As we sat on the hill,"Thou twin''d me o''my maidenheid"Right sair against my will?
12882And hast thou play''d me that?
12882And if I were thine, and in thy propine,[A]O what wad ye do to me?"
12882And wha has kill''d the master kid,That ran beneath that ladye''s bed?
12882And wha has loosed her left foot shee,And let that ladye lighter be?"
12882And wha has ta''en downe that bush o''woodbine,That hung between her bour and mine?
12882And wha will father my young sonTill Lord Gregory come hame?"
12882And wha will glove my hand? 12882 And wha will lace my middle jimp"W''a lang lang linen band?
12882And wha''s ta''en out the kaims o''care,That were amang that ladye''s hair?
12882And what is the bird, the bonnie bonnie bird,Sings on the evening gale?"
12882And what needs a''this courtesie?
12882And what''s the little boat,she said,"Can sail the world all round?"
12882Are ye sleeping, Margaret?
12882Arise, and speak three words to me!--Whether thou''se gotten thy deadly wound,"Or if God and good leaching may succour thee?"
12882But how sall I your true love find,Or how suld I her know?
12882But how shall I thee ken, Tamlane? 12882 But what''s the little coin,"she said,"Wald buy my castle bound?
12882Gar douk, gar douk,[B] the king he cried,"Gar douk for gold and fee;"O wha will douk for Erl Richard''s sake,"Or wha will douk for me?"
12882Hast thou pitied the afflicted, O man? 12882 Hast thou play''d me that, Carmichael?"
12882Have ye no under robe of steel? 12882 How dares thou stand to speak to me?
12882Is there ony room at your feet? 12882 Is there ony room at your head, Saunders?
12882Now whether are ye the queen hersell,( For so ye weel might be)"Or are ye the lass of Lochroyan,"Seekin''Lord Gregory?"
12882O Billie, billie, bonny billie,Will ye go to the wood wi''me?
12882O chuse, O chuse, Lady Marg''ret,he said,"O whether will ye gang or bide?"
12882O come ye here to fight, young lord,Or come ye here to play?
12882O come ye here to part your land,The bonnie forest thorough?
12882O dinna ye mind, Lord Gregory,As we sat at the wine,"We chang''d the rings frae our fingers,"And I can shew thee thine?
12882O have ye tint, at tournament,Your sword, or yet your spear?
12882O hey, how mony small penniesMake thrice three thousand pound?
12882O is there na a bonnie bird,Can sing as I can say;"Could flee away to my mother''s bower,"And tell to fetch Johnie away?"
12882O kent ye by my rosy lips? 12882 O see na thou yon bonny bower?
12882O sleep ye, wake ye, Lillie Flower? 12882 O wanted ye your meat, Willie,"Or wanted ye your fee?
12882O were ye ever a soldier?
12882O wha has done the wrang, sister,Or dared the deadly sin?
12882O wha is yon, that came this way,Sae hastilie that hither came?
12882O wha will kame my yellow hairWith a new made silver kame?
12882O wha will shoe my bonny foot? 12882 O whae is this at my bower door,"That chaps sae late, nor kens the gin?
12882O where hae ye been, Lord Randal, my son? 12882 O where hae ye been, my handsome young man?"
12882O where were ye, my milk- white steed,That I hae coft sae dear,"That wadna watch and waken me,"When there was maiden here?"
12882O winna ye pity me, bonny lass,O winna ye pity me?
12882Or by my yellow hair? 12882 Or come ye here to drink good wine"Upon the wedding day?"
12882Or come ye here to wield your brand,On the dowie houms of Yarrow?"
12882Or gat ye e''er an angry word,That ye ran awa frae me?"
12882Or how shall I thee knaw,Amang so many unearthly knights,"The like I never saw.?"
12882Or kent ye by my milk- white breast,Ye never yet saw bare?"
12882Or mourn ye for the southern lass,Whom you may not win near?"
12882Or ony room at your side, Saunders,Where fain, fain, I wad sleep?"
12882Or why come ye to Carterhaugh,Withoutten leave o''me?"
12882Sall we young Benjie head, sister,Sall we young Benjie hang,"Or sall we pike out his twa gray een,"And punish him ere he gang?"
12882Say, have you got no armour on? 12882 The night is misty and mirk, fair may,"And I have ridden astray,"And will ye be so kind, fair may,"As come out and point my way?"
12882Thy faith and troth thou sall na get,And our true love sall never twin,"Until ye tell what comes of women,"I wot, who die in strong traivelling?
12882Weel I wat, ye be a very bonny may,But whae''s aught that babe ye are wi''?"
12882Wha was sae stout, and feared nae dout,As thraw ye o''er the linn?"
12882What became of your bloodhounds, Lord Randal, my son? 12882 What became of your bloodhounds, my handsome young man?"
12882What doth this mean,George Wharton said,"To strike in such unmanly sort?
12882What gars ye break the tree? 12882 What gat ye to your dinner, Lord Randal, my son?.
12882What gat ye to your dinner, my handsome young man?
12882What news, what news, ye gray- headed carle,What news bring ye to me?"
12882What''s fairer than the lilye flowerOn this wee know[B] that grows?"
12882What''s paler than the prymrose wan? 12882 What''s redder than the rose?
12882What''s that thou says, thou limmer loun? 12882 Where gat ye your dinner, Lord Randal, my son?
12882Where gat ye your dinner, my handsome young man?
12882Where hae ye been, now, ladye fair,Where hae ye been sae late?"
12882Why pu''ye the rose, Janet,Within this garden grene,"And a''to kill the bonny babe,"That we got us between?"
12882Ye lied, ye lied, my very bonny may,Sae loud as I hear you lie;"For dinna ye mind that misty night"I was i''the bought wi''thee?
12882You are both stark and stoor;Would you defile the king''s own bed,"And make his queen a whore?
12882--"But, nevertheless, now, Erl Richard,"Ye will bide in ray bower a''night?"
12882And ay she sat in her mother''s bower door, And ay she made her mane,"Oh whether should I gang to the Broomfield hill,"Or should I stay at hame?
12882And out then spake her White Lilly;"My sister, we''ll be gane:"Why suld we stay in Barnisdale,"To mourn our hour within?"
12882And, as he sate at meat, he askyd a monke of the house, how moche a lofe was worth, that was before hym sete at the table?
12882Art born of gentle blood and pure descent?
12882As I was walking all alane, I heard twa corbies making a mane; The tane unto the t''other say,"Where sall we gang and dine to- day?"
12882Bastard or bastinadoed?
12882But think na ye my heart was sair, When I laid the moul on his yellow hair?
12882Claverhouse said to his wife,"What thinkest thou of thy husband now, woman?"
12882General Dalyell held to the hill, Asking at them what was their will; And who gave them this protestation, To rise in arms against the nation?
12882George Wharton cry''d,"Art thou a living man, tell me?
12882Hast thou clothed the naked?
12882Hast thou consoled the orphan?
12882He came in, and said,"And has this gentleman( designed by his name) given poor Sandie, and thir poor things, such a fright?
12882He said twice over,"What do I mean?
12882Henry the Great casually asked him, how he lost his eye?
12882In anger he went to the queen, Who fell upon her knee; He said,"You false, unchaste woman,"What''s this you''ve done to me?"
12882Is thy pedigree As long, as wide as mine?
12882Isabel Alison, executed at Edinburgh, 26th January, 1681, was interrogated, before the privy council, if she conversed with David Hackston?
12882O think na ye my heart was wae, When I turn''d about, away to gae?
12882Or wha wad, wish a lealer love Than Brown Adam the smith?
12882Out then spak her eldest brother,"O how shall we her ken?"
12882Out up then spake a bonny bird, Sat high upon a tree,-- How could you kill that noble lord?
12882Says--"Why pu''ye the rose, Janet?
12882She said,"If ye were permitted, I doubt not but your cruelty would go that length; but how will ye make answer for this morning''s work?"
12882She saw the flames ascending high, The tears blinded her e''e:"Where is the worthy knight,"she said,"Who is to fight for me?"
12882She set the cog[A] upon her head, An''she''s gane singing hame--"O where hae ye been, my ae daughter?
12882The king said unto Rodingham,"What news have you to me?"
12882The king, supposing the accident the consequence of a duel, immediately enquired,"Does the man yet live?"
12882Then out bespake the king again,--"My boy, now tell to me,"Who dwells into yon bigly bour,"Beneath yon green aik tree?"
12882Then saft she smiled, and said to him,"O what ill hae I done?"
12882Then they''ve ta''en up the comely corpse, And laid it on the ground--"O wha has killed our ae sister,"And how can he be found?
12882Then up and spak the popinjay, That sat upon the tree--"What hae ye done wi''Erl Richard?
12882Then up and spake him, Brown Robin,"And what needs this?"
12882Then up and spake the king himsell, When he saw the deadly wound--"O wha has slain my right- hand man,"That held my hawk and hound?"
12882Then up and spake the popinjay, Says--"What needs a''this din?
12882Then up bespak her eldest brother,"O see na ye what I see?"
12882They asked me, when saw ye John Balfour( Burly), that pious youth?
12882They asked, if the killing of the bishop of St Andrews was a pious act?
12882They asked, when?
12882Thinks thou still fit thus for to treat Thy captive cruelly?
12882Were none of all thy lineage hang''d, or cuckold?
12882When ended, John Muirhead enquired what he meant by Brown''s blood?
12882When she came before the king, She knelit lowly on her knee--"O what''s the matter, may Margaret?
12882Which the prince overhearing,''Why, Richard,''says he,''do you think you may practise here your old tricks upon the borders?''
12882Who fought with all these arms at once?
12882Why the devil do ye na march?
12882do you not see them?"
12882he says,"Or are ye waking presentlie?
12882quo''he;"Or what can woman do for you,"That canna be done by me?"
12882said Christie Graeme,"But where sae lang frae hame were ye?"
12882sir knight, sestow this?
11431And he swore?
11431And how long,said Alexander,"have I to live?"
11431And you expect me, a stranger on your lake, to find this place without chart, course, distance, latitude, longitude, or soundings? 11431 And you,"replied the pirate,"by what right do you ravage the world?
11431Better than teaching school and writing learned articles?
11431Do n''t you?
11431From far?
11431Have you learned that fame is an icy shadow?
11431Have you?
11431His name?
11431How, friend,replied the archbishop,"has it[_ the homily_] met with any Aristarchus[_ severe critic_]?"
11431I''m a sort of a kind of a nonentity; arn''t I, sergeant Drill?
11431If you once saw me in battle, you''d never forget it; would he, sergeant Drill?
11431In your opinion, who is the greatest genius that France has ever produced?
11431Is the sinful servant more Than his gracious Lord who bore Bonds and stripes in Jewry?
11431My character for valor is pretty well known; is n''t it, sergeant Drill?
11431That gratified ambition can not make you happy? 11431 That was pretty well, egad, eh?"
11431The ladies will be happy to-- eh?
11431Then prithee, sweetheart, do you know the bailiff''s daughter there?
11431Was he a-- ah-- peaceable man?
11431What''s here? 11431 Where were you born?"
11431( Query,"Seint Eloy"for Seinte Loy?)
11431... The same Astarte?
114311): Have you forgot the elder Dionysius, Surnamed the Tyrant?...
11431Allow me to ask if you think a mariner runs by his nose, like one of Pathfinder''s hounds?"
11431Ask you for whom my tears do flow so?
11431BETTY DOXY, Captain Macheath says to her,"Do you drink as hard as ever?
11431BORS(_ King_) of Gaul, brother of king Ban of Benwicke[ Brittany?].
11431Bishop Bruno, whither art thou travelling?
11431But Ogier gazed upon it[_ the sea_] doubtfully One Moment, and then, sheathing, Courtain, said,"What tales are these?"
11431But what are these to great Atossa''s mind?
11431Byron refers to it in the lines: Like friar Bacon''s brazen head, I''ve spoken,"Time is, time was, time''s past[?]"
11431C. Dibdin says none who ever saw W. Parsons( 1736- 1795) in"Corbaccio"could forget his effective mode of exclaiming"Has he made his will?
11431Can this last long?
11431Can we the Drapier then forget?
11431Care I for the limb, the thews, the stature?...
11431Clytus?
11431Cowley,_ Who''s the Dupe_?
11431Cui a Deo æternum meritum nisi vero Catholico Recaredo regi?
11431D''ye give it up?
11431D''ye think my niece will ever endure such a borachio?
11431Did he mean all that by shaking his head?
11431Did you think I should live for ever?
11431Do n''t you hear how lord Strutt[_ the king of Spain_] has bespoke his liveries at Lewis Baboon''s shop[_ France_]?...
11431Do you love me?"
11431Doll Tearsheet for a lady of quality in Temple Garden; if he were wiser than he is... of what worth were he to us?
11431ELEAZAR the Moor, insolent, bloodthirsty, lustful, and vindictive, like"Aaron,"in[ Shakespeare''s?]
11431EST- IL- POSSSIBLE?
11431Fond of saying"good things,"and pointing them out with such expressions as"There I had you, eh?"
11431From Corin came it first?
11431Have you not heard the poets tell How came the dainty Baby Bell Into this World of ours?
11431He is stabbed by Deme''trius and Chiron, sons of Tam''ora queen of the Goths.--(?)
11431He rarely finishes a sentence, but runs on in this style:"Dover is an odd sort of a-- eh?"
11431He turned at random to the"Prayer of the Jews,"in Baruch, and was so struck with it that he said aloud to Racine,"Dites, donc, who was this Baruch?
11431His one and only inquiry is"How many quarterings has a person got?"
11431His wife says to him: Here''s a goodly jewel.. Did you not win this at Goletta, captain?..
11431How dare you infest the seas with your misdeeds?"
11431Iago, speaking of the lieutenant, says: And what was he?
11431If then, Castara, I in heaven nor move, Nor earth, nor hell, where am I but in love?
11431If this had been the case it would, indeed, have been startling; but what are the facts?
11431Is not our nation in his debt?
11431Is not this dying with courage and true greatness?
11431Justice Shallow remonstrated, but Falstaff exclaimed,"Will you tell me, master Shallow, how to choose a man?
11431Now, if the food was in the great- coat, and the great- coat was stolen, how is it that the victuals remained in Sancho''s possession untouched?
11431Or to the dreadful summit of the cliff That beetles o''er its base into the sea?
11431Pilate''s question, QUID EST VERITAS?
11431Shakespeare would have furnished them with a good motto,"Use every man after his desert, and who shall''scape whipping?"
11431Shall sapient managers new scenes produce From Cherry, Skeffington, and_ Mother Goose?_ Byron,_ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_( 1809).
11431Sinopê,"He who made a tub his home?"
11431Sir Fine- face, sir Fair- hands?
11431The captain was taken up by a coaster from Eye, loaded with cheese--"[ Now, pray, what did parson Prunello say?
11431The lady Astarte his?
11431The measure was agreed to in full council, but one of the sager mice inquired,"Who would undertake to bell the cat?"
11431The sailors trembled at sight of him, and the fiend demanded how they dared to trespass"where never hero braved his rage before?"
11431This Curio, hated now and scorned by all, Who fell himself to work his country''s fall?
11431Thus,"Does your master stay in town, as the saying is?"
11431Was I for this nigh wrecked upon the sea, And twice by awkward wind from England''s bank Drove back again unto my native clime?...
11431Was it not for this that no cortejo ere I yet have chosen from the youth of Sev''ille?
11431Were you at Sedan?
11431What is this jargon?
11431What say you does this wizard style himself-- Hakeem Biamrallah, the Third Fatimite?
11431What says my Æsculapius?
11431What would Sir Roger de Coverley be without his follies and his charming little brain- cracks?
11431What''s the matter with me?"
11431What, however, says history proper?
11431Whatty, what is this?
11431When Crillon heard the story of the Crucifixion read at Church, he grew so excited that he cried out in an audible voice,_ Où étais tu, Crillon_?
11431When like a wretche led in an iron chayne, He was presented by his chiefest friende Unto the foes of him whom he had slayne?
11431Where is the great Alcidês of the field, Valiant lord Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury?
11431Where were they when I, unaided, Rescued thee from thirteen foes?
11431Who can Amiel''s praise refuse?
11431Who in their useless pyramids would live?
11431Who is it thou hast slain?
11431Who knows not Circe, The daughter of the sun, whose charmed cup Whoever tasted lost his upright shape, And downward fell into a grovelling swine?
11431Who would not weep if Atticus were he?
11431Why does he wish to swear away the life of that young man who never did him any harm?
11431Why is Chelmsford Theatre like a half- moon?
11431Why is a pump like viscount Castlereigh?
11431Why should I not, had I the heart to do it, Like to th''Egyptian thief at point of death, Kill what I love?
11431_ Bacchus_ or_ Saturn_?
11431_ Beonê_ or_ Oenonê_?
11431_ Ce''lia_, a poetical name for any lady- love: as"Would you know my Celia''s charms...?"
11431_ Critias_ or_ Crito_?
11431_ Dites, donc, avez- vous lu Baruch?_ Said when a person puts an unexpected question, or makes a startling proposal.
11431can you prefer a man to the interests of Rome?"
11431de quoi servait- il sur la terre?
11431do they run already?
11431in thy anguish What is there left to thee?
11431is he dead?
11431my Galen?...
11431said the prince of darkness;"so you think by these churches and convents to put me and mine to your ban, do you?
11431the hapless husband cried;"young as I am and unprepared?"
11431who comes here?
15808''Where is my lord cardinal?'' 15808 And how does the King do?"
15808And the King?
15808And what have you to say to him?
15808And what is Quinte Essence?
15808And what is it you would have me to do?
15808And what is that little thing?
15808And what was it that our Lord said to you, sir?
15808And what was that?
15808And what will be your message,I asked,"when you come to the King?"
15808And why do you tell me this?
15808And you wish to leave us?
15808Are you willing that the King should be deaf and dumb to your message?
15808Are you willing to go dumb before the King?
15808Did he say he knew nothing of me?
15808Do you know the tale of the Persian king, Sir John?
15808Have you weapons upon you?
15808He went to the parsonage with Sir John, and talked with him there a long while--"Did he see my books?
15808How could I forget that?
15808How should I speak then?
15808Is Sir John here?
15808Is it the priest you want, Master Hermit?
15808It has persevered ever since, my son Richard,I said?
15808My lord cardinal?
15808Now tell me, sir,said the King,"what is this tidings that you bear?"
15808There is no sin,I said,"that has darkened your eyes?"
15808What are the tidings, sir?
15808What is that which you bear on your breast?
15808What is your business, sir?
15808What matters?
15808Where is your authority,he said"to examine me?"
15808Who are you, sir?
15808Why do you look at me like that?
15808Will you not tell us here, sir?
15808Will your grace be pleased to hear him in private?
15808All who set not their minds on this world are accounted fools; but who will be the merrier in the world that is to come?
15808And if the officer could lie in this matter, why should he not lie in other matters?
15808And if they be delusions, why should not other matters be delusions too?"
15808Are you yet in the way of perfection?"
15808But what if God Almighty wishes you to be at peace?
15808But will you hear them now or to- morrow?"
15808I cried in my heart with David,_ Fili mi, Fili mi; quis mihi tribuat ut ego moriar pro te, fili mi, fili mi?_["My son, my son!
15808Is it true that this is from our Lord, and that I must go to see the King?"
15808Now Master Richard knew that the King could not die, else where were the passion he was to undergo?
15808Shall I bid them begin, or will you tell us what it is that you have done to the King?"
15808What have you done to his grace?"
15808What is it that you have done to his grace?"
15808Who would grant that I might die for thee, my son, my son?"
15808Would it not be pleasant to you to be in the country again, and to serve God with all your might in some sweet and secret place where men are not?"
15808], is there not?"
15808do you question that?
1602630 Next came the question of time--_when_ should the flight commence?
16026As synonymous with what words is it often incorrectly used?
16026Besides, though the Empress might accept an excuse for the past, would she the less forbear to suspect for the future?
16026But tell me before we part-- was it accident only which led you to my rescue?
16026But what was to be their final mark-- the port of shelter after so fearful a course of wandering?
16026But where or how should this notification be made, so as to exclude Russian hearers?
16026Can you give any illustration?
16026Did the Bashkirs at any point collect into a cluster for the sake of giving impetus to the assault?
16026Do you believe that this is true?
16026Does De Quincey exaggerate when he terms these experiences of the Tartars"the most awful series of calamities anywhere recorded"?
16026Does this paragraph constitute a digression, or is it a useful amplification of the narrative?
16026Etymology?
16026Etymology?
16026Etymology?
16026Has De Quincey, in his note, quoted Milton accurately?
16026How did the word, derived from_ Roman_, get its present significance?
16026How does it stimulate interest?
16026How does the interrogation add strength?
16026How is it appropriate here?
16026How_ romantic_?
16026In what sense is the phrase used figuratively?
16026Is their use to be justified?
16026Is there any gain in force by adding_ repulsive_?
16026Is this literal?
16026Is this use correct?
16026Or had you acquired any knowledge of the plot by which I was decoyed into this snare?"
16026The Czarina''s_ pardon_ they might obtain, but could they 20 ever hope to recover her_ confidence_?
16026The entire scene is the product of De Quincey''s imagination; do you consider it truthful?
16026Was it_ from_ their enemies as creatures whom they feared?
16026Was their misery to perish without fruit?
16026Were they to lose the whole journey of two thousand miles?
16026What are the qualities indicated by this adjective?
16026What derivatives have we from this French expression?
16026What does it mean?
16026What figure of speech does this illustrate?
16026What is the full effect of this epithet?
16026What is the linguistic source of both words?
16026What is the literal significance of this word?
16026What is the meaning of each word?
16026What more common form is used synonymously?
16026Wherefore?
16026Why is the phrase varied, do you suppose?
16026Why so called?
16026Why"_ almost_ a competitor"?
16026Yet compare: Or from above Should intermitted vengeance arm again His red right hand to plague us?
16026_ rhetoric._ In what sense used here?
16736How can a man come to know himself?
16736Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar?
16736Still studying Dante?
16736With every intelligent man or woman the question is not,"Shall I take account of them?"
16736but"How shall I get the most and the best out of them for my enrichment and guidance?"
10854And what becomes of you, Nan?
10854But why did n''t Walker shoot Falardeau, old man?
10854Charlemagne?
10854Cur non te fingi scurram, Pasquille, rogâsti? 10854 Dear girls, what have I ever done, that you should love me so?"
10854Did you notice the one with the queer eye,--him in the Scotch cap and_ shupac_ moccasons?
10854Do you ask why at his last hour Leo could not take the sacred things? 10854 How much might the pants be worth, now, at cost price?"
10854In an oil- mill? 10854 John, have you seen Philip since you wrote about your last meeting with him?"
10854John, what are you thinking of?
10854John, you absurd man, what are you doing?
10854Nan, are you in hysterics?
10854Say whence, Alecto, has this peace shone forth? 10854 She stood before her brother:''O brother, may I go to the Lord Halewyn?''
10854She stood before her father:''O father, may I go to the Lord Halewyn?'' 10854 She stood before her mother:''O mother, may I go to the Lord Halewyn?''
10854She stood before her sister:''O sister, may I go to the Lord Halewyn?'' 10854 So you''re Pete Walker, be you?"
10854The Lord Halewyn says to her:''As you are the loveliest of all virgins, say, how will you die? 10854 Them pants all wool, now?"
10854Ut canerent data multa olim sunt vatibus aera: Ut taceam, quantum tu mihi, Paule, dabis?
10854What does she gird round her lovely waist? 10854 What does she put on first?
10854What does she put upon her kirtle? 10854 What does she put upon her scarlet petticoat?
10854What does she set on her beautiful fair hair? 10854 What will happen then, John?"
10854When are you going to make your fortune, John, and get out of that disagreeable hardware concern?
10854Where did you get your English, old man?
10854Where is Laura?
10854Where is father, Sally?
10854Where is your father?
10854Where''s Di?
10854Where''s Sally?
10854Why have you not asked, O Pasquil, to be made a buffoon? 10854 You insinuate that I should pick at the pudding or invade the cream, do you?
10854[ 7] What does the difference between Mr. Darwin and his reviewer now amount to? 10854 ''Beautiful virgin, have you not seen my son?'' 10854 ----What is this? 10854 25):--_Contra folium__ quod vento rapitur ostendis potentiam tuam?
10854A great deal is said, to be sure, about the rights of the South; but has any such right been infringed?
10854And what should I know about washing off tar?
10854And why should the old_ voyageur_ have thus reserved his experiences from those who were near and dear to him?
10854And would an explanation of the mode in which those woodpeckers came to be green, however complete, convince him that the color was undesigned?
10854And-- oh, my dear boy,_ have_ you been to supper yet?"
10854Are all the figures in this melancholy procession equally emblematic?
10854As the intellectual connection here is realized through the material connection, why may it not be so in the case of species and genera?
10854Because natural, that is,"stated, fixed, or settled,"is it any the less designed on that account?
10854But now, as the genus and the_ species_ have no material existence, how can they vary?
10854But the Flemings speaking nearly the same language as their Protestant neighbors, where is their literature now?
10854But what is the position of the reviewer upon his own interpretation of these passages?
10854But where is our avalanche to fall?
10854But where was the iceberg?
10854But will the election of Mr. Lincoln endanger the Union?
10854Can we keep our strength, without the tonic of his example?
10854Could n''t you take my best checkers for''em, now, with fifty dollars quilted into the waistband,--s- a- ay?"
10854Did not the very reeds tell the fatal secret about King Midas?
10854Does he sup on them, or are they only the cups and saucers of his vegeto- aquarian_ mà © nage_?
10854Girls, you know, when father died, John sent us money, which he said Mr. Owen had long owed us and had paid at last?
10854Had she, after all, some human tenderness in her heart?
10854Have I not raised myself Unto this height, and shall I cease to soar?
10854Have we not similar grounds for inferring design in the supposed varieties of a species, that we have in the case of the supposed species of a genus?
10854He had been a widower long enough,--nigh twenty year, wa''n''t it?
10854He must live for this child''s sake, at any rate; and yet,--oh, yet, who could tell with what thoughts he looked upon her?
10854Heirs of the stock in trade of two defunct parties, the Whig and Know- Nothing, do they hope to resuscitate them?
10854Her happiness found expression in verse:--"Dic unde, Alecto, pax haec effulsit, et unde Tam subito reticent proelia?
10854How can I be expected to remember that Sally''s away, and people must eat, when I''m hearing the''Harper''and little''Mignon''?
10854How happens it to be away just now?
10854How have you been?
10854How many of the land animals and plants which are enumerated in the Massachusetts official reports would it be likely to contain?
10854How much, now?"
10854If any of us were born unlike our parents and grandparents, in a slight degree, or in whatever degree, would the case be altered in this regard?
10854If individuals alone exist, how can the differences which may be observed among them prove the variability of the species?
10854If species do not exist at all, as the supporters of the transmutation theory maintain, how can they vary?
10854Is all this a result of the failure of democratic institutions?
10854Is conservatism applicable only to property, and not to justice, freedom, and public honor?
10854John, how dare you come here and do my work, instead of shaking me and telling me to do it myself?
10854Marance laughed merrily, as she tripped away; then, turning, she said,--"But what if I never get back?
10854Meanwhile the only point in which voters are interested is,--What do they mean by the Constitution?
10854Nay, am not I a God?
10854Quid abest?
10854Rather does not the proof extend to the intermediate species, and go to show that all four were equally designed?
10854See, I''m getting on finely now;--you''re a judge of such matters; is n''t that nice?"
10854Shall I fetch him in?"
10854She was genteel enough for him and-- let''s see, haow old was she?
10854The German barons who ruled cared little for their own tongue: how should they have manifested interest in that of their Belgian subjects?
10854The discussion of Slavery is said to be dangerous, but dangerous to what?
10854Then Laura looked up, saying, playfully,--"Here are the good and wicked sisters;--where shall we find the Prince?"
10854Then a voice rang out from the oak overhead,--"Why well- a- day for the old, old days?
10854There was a book of hymns; it had her name in it, and looked as if it might have been often read;--what the_ diablo_ had Elsie to do with hymns?
10854To which we reply by asking, Which does the question refer to, the category of thought, or the individual embodiment?
10854Walker?--how do you find yourself this morning, Sir?"
10854What better evidence for such hypothesis could we have than the variations and grades which connect one of these species with another?
10854What does he write books full of smart''Phillinas''and interesting''Meisters''for?
10854What else can it be?
10854What facts could better attest not merely a singular harmony of character, but an admirable conformity of virtues?
10854What is wanting?
10854What makes you think she''s in love with him?
10854What need, Ye proud Immortals, that my balanced plumes Should grow, like yonder eagle''s, from the nest?
10854What other wing, If not a God''s, could in the rounded sky Hang thus in solitary poise?
10854What will save the country from a Senate and Supreme Court where freedom shall be forever at a disadvantage?
10854What wonder, that, after this, it is added,"that his memory is venerated in many places at Rome"?
10854Where do you think it is?"
10854Where does she get those books she is reading so often?
10854Where were we when I lost my head?
10854Whither, then, are you bound?
10854Who could know all these things, except the few people of the household?
10854Who would_ dare_ to marry Elsie?
10854Why did Theodore Parker die?
10854Why did n''t you let us know you were coming so soon?
10854Why may not the new species, or some of them, be designed diversifications of the old?
10854Why should n''t he make up to the Jedge''s daughter?
10854Will you, dear?
10854Would n''t you like to take it to him, John?
10854and if individuals alone exist, how can the differences which may be observed among them prove the variability of species?"
10854and predict that the good daughter will yet prove the happy wife?"
10854and what makes you so late to- night?
10854and what were we talking about?"
10854che bisogna fare?_""If we speak, the galleys; if we write, the gallows; if we stay quiet, the Inquisition.
10854responded my lord judge, rubbing his burly brow,--"Charlemagne lived, I think, in the sixth century?"
10854that Laura the artist has not conquered Laura the woman?
10854what must we do, then?"
10854wherefore so suddenly has the noise of battle ceased?
15082O Paradise, O Paradise Who does not sigh for rest?
15082The Scholar said to his Master: How may I come to the supersensual life, that I may see God and hear Him speak? 15082 The Scholar said: How can I hear when I stand still from thinking and willing?
15082The Scholar said: Is that near at hand or far off? 15082 What fruits dost thou bring back from this thy vision?"
15082Where,says Jacob Boehme,"will you seek for God?
15082[ 28] Is it possible to state more plainly the indivisible identity of the Spirit of Life? 15082 [ 39] How many people do each of us know who work and will in quiet love, and thus participate in eternal life?
15082[ 41] And what is worship but a reach- out of the finite spirit towards Infinite Life? 15082 [ 91] What happens in it?
15082Again, we have to remember that the instinctive self, powerful though it be?
15082And if in a group or church, what should the character of this society be?
15082And last, if we ask as a summing up of the whole matter:_ Why_ man is thus to seek the Eternal, through, behind and within the ever- fleeting?
15082And the next question-- a highly practical question-- is,"How_ both_?"
15082And what is perfection of joy but grace complete?
15082But the crucial question which religion asks must be, does fresh life flow in from those visions and contacts, that intercourse?
15082Can we honestly say that young people reared in them are likely to acquire this temper of heaven?
15082Do the masters, or the workers, work and will in quiet love?
15082Do we always manage or even try to give it that enduring object, in a form it can accept?
15082Do we take enough notice of it?
15082Does it send them out equipped with the means of living a full and efficient spiritual life?
15082Does it train them to regard humanity, and their own place in the human life- stream, from this point of view?
15082First, does the average good education train our young people in spiritual self- preservation?
15082How is he to be dealt with, and the opportunities which he presents used best?
15082How is the traditional deposit of spiritual experience handed on, the individual drawn into the stream of spiritual history and held there?
15082How is this done?
15082How many politicians-- the people to whom we have confided the control of our national existence-- work and will in quiet love?
15082If anyone who has followed these arguments, and now desires to bring them from idea into practice, asks:"What next?"
15082If, then, it does achieve the social phase what stages may we expect it to pass through, and by what special characters will it be graced?
15082Is nothing left out?
15082Is such a view complete?
15082Is transcendental feeling involved in them?
15082Last, to what extent do we try to introduce our pupils into a full enjoyment of their spiritual inheritance, the culture and tradition of the past?
15082Or after considering the inner nature of international diplomacy and finance?
15082Or after reading the unvarnished record of our dealings with the problem of Indian immigration into Africa?
15082Ought we not to introduce our pupils to them; not as stuffed specimens, but as vivid human beings?
15082Secondly, does it give them a spiritual outlook in respect of their racial duties, fit them in due time to be parents of other souls?
15082Secondly,_ Process._ What is the line of development by which the individual comes to acquire and exhibit these characters?
15082This question, often put in the crucial form,"Did Jesus Christ intend to form a Church?"
15082V.][ Footnote 98: Que frutti reducene de esta tua visione?
15082What about industry?
15082What about our English saints?
15082What about the hurried, ugly and devitalizing existence of our big towns?
15082What about the master and the worker in such a possibly regenerated social order?
15082What are we to regard as the heart of spirituality?
15082What is it, then, from which he must be saved?
15082What is that supernal symphony of which this elusive music, with its three complementary strains, forms part?
15082What next?
15082What thing is grace but beginning of joy?
15082What was this impulse and urge?
15082What, then, are we doing about this?
15082When the young man with great possessions asked Jesus,"What shall I do to be saved?"
15082Where then would be our most heart- searching social problems?
15082Wherein do its differentia consist?
15082Would not this, at last, actualize the Pauline dream, of each single citizen as a member of the Body of Christ?
15082Yet is there in this state of things nothing but food for congratulation?
15082[ 56] What, then, is the character of the life which St. Benedict proposed as a remedy for the human failure and disharmony that he saw around him?
15082that is to say with diligence and faithful purpose, without selfish anxiety, without selfish demands and hostilities?
16209Is there here any dear friend of Caesar? 16209 The trees in Sherwood Forest are old and good; The grass beneath them now is dimly green: Are they deserted all?
16209Thirty days hath September,& c. But if the jingle of names assists the memory, may it not also quicken the fancy?
16209(--or the poet laureat either, we may ask?)
16209And shall I, who heard him then, listen to him now?
16209And shall we cut ourselves off from beauties like these with a theory?
16209And why?
16209But who is there to undertake it?
16209But why then publish?
16209Can any thing be more elegant and graceful than the description of Belinda, in the beginning of the second canto?
16209Did any one here ever read Mrs. Leicester''s School?
16209Do you imagine that Shakspeare, when he wrote Lear or Othello, was thinking of any thing but Lear and Othello?
16209Homer has celebrated the anger of Achilles: but was not the hero as mad as the poet?
16209If it be asked, Why we do so?
16209Is it possible, say they, that a boy should produce compositions so beautiful and masterly?
16209Is no young mien, With loose- slung bugle, met within the wood?
16209Is this the fault of themselves, of nature in tempering them of too fine a clay, or of the world, that spurner of living, and patron of dead merit?
16209Martinmas wind, when wilt thou blaw, And shake the green leaves aff the tree?
16209On the contrary, who knows but he might have lived to be poet- laureat?
16209Or dextrous Deborah Siserah him?
16209Shall Arthur use him like King Tollo?
16209Shall David as Uriah slay him?
16209The bugles that so joyfully were blown?
16209Think''st thou the warbling Muses never smil''d On his lone hours?
16209Thus he says to Arbuthnot--"Why did I write?
16209To Bolingbroke he says--"Why rail they then if but one wreath of mine, Oh all- accomplish''d St. John, deck thy shrine?"
16209Was there nothing in this scene, which God and nature alone witnessed, to interest a modern critic?
16209What if his dull forefathers us''d that cry, Could he not let a bad example die?
16209What is this world?
16209What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater?
16209What other poet would have thought of such a casual resource of the imagination, or would have dared to avail himself of it?
16209What punishment all this must follow?
16209What right has he to do this?
16209What said he?
16209What sin to me unknown Dipp''d me in ink, my parents''or my own?
16209What sort of a figure would he cut, translated into an epic poem, by the side of Achilles?
16209What wonders there the man, grown old, did?
16209Whence comes this difference?
16209Where is the throng, the tumult of the race?
16209Why should Lord Byron now laud him to the skies in the hour of his success, and then peevishly wreak his disappointment on the God of his idolatry?
16209Would their effect be the same if we were not acquainted with the text?
16209hast thou ever stood to see The Holly Tree?
16209what axen men to have?
16209when shall my bones ben at reste?
16209who does know the bent of woman''s fantasy?
15998''Then why,''I asked again,''do you ever wear them?''
15998''Why,''I asked,''do you sometimes take off your spectacles to read the paper?''
1599817"Is Mars Habitable?"
1599846"Shall we have Common Sense?"
15998And for what?
15998Are lizards and sea- birds the only, or even the chief, possible enemies of the species?
15998Aug. 14| 1908| Public Opinion| Is it Peace or War?
15998But here comes the question-- are there any land- quadrupeds in Bali or in Lombok?
15998Can you refer me to any papers by yourself which might enlighten me and perhaps answer some of these queries?
15998Can you tell me whether Darwin did teach this?
15998Closely associated with"Man''s Place in the Universe"is a small volume,"Is Mars Habitable?"
15998Could it exist an hour?
15998Even if the Glacial period was such that it was enveloped in a Greenlandic winding- sheet, there would have been some Antarctic animals?
15998Firstly, on the principle that the resistance in a fluid, and I believe also in air, increases in a greater ratio than the velocity(?
15998Had n''t I better decline it, with thanks?
15998Has anybody answered de Vries yet?
15998Have they?
15998Have you ever considered the explanation of this fact on Darwinian principles?
15998Have you seen Mivart''s book,"Genesis of Species"?
15998How else can you produce a more equal distribution of wealth than by making the rich and idle pay more and the workers receive more?
15998I have put"?"
15998I presume your question"Why?"
15998If you have or can get this work of his with that paper, can you lend it me for a few days?
15998In these views may he not become the peer of Darwin?
15998Is not that clear?
15998Is such a condition of things physically possible?
15998Is there, then, a depth of 600 feet in that narrow strait of Bali, which seems in my map only two miles or so in breadth?
15998It surprises me, however, how much we differ, and it is another illustration of the problems[?]
15998May I ask-- as a very great favour-- to be allowed to call on you some day in London, and to see your insects?
15998Must we unite South America with the Galapagos Islands?
15998New Edition, 1 vol., 1908 1907"Is Mars Habitable?"
15998October 22, 1897._ My dear Violet,--In your previous letter you asked me the conundrum, Why does a wagtail wag its tail?
15998P.S.--Two of my books have been translated into Japanese: will you ascertain whether the Bodleian would like to have them?
15998R. Miller, on Sleeper''s"Shall we have Common Sense?"
15998Reply to||| Dr. Saleeby Nov. 12| 1903| Daily Mail| Does Man Exist in Other Worlds?
15998Stirling''s"Darwinianism, Workmen and||| Work""| 549|"| B. Kidd''s"Social Evolution""| 610|"| What are Zoological Regions?
15998Sunday,[?
15998That terrible indictment was doubly underscored in his MS. What, in his mature judgment, were the causes and remedies?
15998The question is, which speculation is most in accordance with the known facts, and not with prepossessions only?
15998Thursday evening,[?
15998WALLACE[?
15998We are satisfied with illimitability at one end, why not at the other?''
15998What has been gained by your séances, compared to your studies?
15998What kept the almost infinitely rare metallic gases in the gaseous state all this time?
15998Why should there have been no mammalia, rodents and marsupials, or only one mouse?
15998Why this instead of the usual"protective"?
15998Will it not be about 1 in 64?
15998Will you please plant them out carefully in the zinc tray of peat and sphagnum that stands outside near the little greenhouse door?
15998[ 31]"The Bearing of the Study of Insects upon the Question, Are Acquired Characters Hereditary?"
15998[ 40]"Shall we have Common Sense?
15998a century?
15998a day?
15998a year?
15998and where is he who knows?
15998between the inorganic and organic, between vegetable and animal, and between animal and man, I asked,''Why postulate a beginning at all?
15998| 273| 1900| Is New Zealand a Zoological Region?
15998| 611| 1889| Which are the Highest Butterflies?
15998| Are Individually Acquired May||| Characters Inherited?
15998| The Problem of Utility: Are||( v. 25)| Specific Characters always or||| generally Useful?
15998| The Remedy for Unemployment July||| July| 1908| Times| Letter on the First Paper on||| Natural Selection July| 1908| Delineator| Are the Dead Alive?
15998| of Bouru April| 1863| Zoologist|Who are the Humming- Bird''s||| Relations?
15867An heiress and a girl with such a distinguished air? 15867 And did you find it?"
15867And you do n''t think he would be interested in Ethelinda?
15867Are you from Lloydsboro Valley, too?
15867But are n''t you going to tell us what_ is_ your greatest ambition?
15867But does n''t all this devotion to the useful interfere with your pursuit of the beautiful? 15867 Did you ever see more animation?
15867Did you ever see such colossal unconcern?
15867Did you have any adventures?
15867For mercy''s sake, Norman Ware,she answered, impatiently,"have n''t we enough trouble now without your bringing home a wild- cat to add to them?
15867How does it feel to be so successful at last, after being so bitterly disappointed?
15867How is that for a fine swear?
15867I''ve something to show you,While she was looking through her desk to find it she asked,"Well, how goes it, little girl?
15867Is n''t it simply perfect?
15867Is n''t it strange?
15867Mary, will you promise not to get mad and throw things at me if I ask you something?
15867Oh, did she?
15867Oh, is it for me?
15867Oh, is n''t this a good old world? 15867 Oh, is she a real''My- lady- the- carriage- waits''?"
15867Oh, is she as bright and funny as Kitty?
15867Oh, what is it?
15867Oh,_ why_ did it have to be?
15867Phil,she asked,"would you mind telephoning down to the station to find out if that Washington train is on time?
15867Well, what did_ you_ think of the offertory, Miss Mary?
15867Well?
15867What I want to know is, what made you wander from your own fireside?
15867What can she do with them when it is all over?
15867What career_ did_ you have planned, little sister?
15867What do you want them for?
15867What kind of things for instance?
15867Where did_ you_ drop from? 15867 Where is''Pat''s Pill''?"
15867Where''s your candy?
15867Who told you it means that?
15867Who, dear?
15867Would n''t you like to know Jack Ware?
15867Wouldst take my only crutch? 15867 ''Does it annoy you? 15867 ''Who''ll cheer us in our doldrums?'' 15867 ''Who''ll help us bear our troubles by making us forget them? 15867 All through the trip she sat going round and round the same circle of thoughts, ending always with the hopeless cry,Oh,_ why_ did it have to be?
15867And now, if thou hast lived through this one day, why not another?
15867Are n''t we, Mary?"
15867Are we, Mary?"
15867Art brave enough to lift the gauntlet that Despair flings down and wage this warfare to thy very grave?"
15867As they started to undress she managed to ask,"Well, have you sent for that watch- fob yet?"
15867Awfully pompous and important, is n''t he?
15867But how is one to know an Opportunity when it comes in a chicken- coop disguised as a Wild- cat?"
15867But where did_ you_ happen to know her?"
15867Canst think of any other?"
15867Did not the very stars foretell success?
15867Do_ you_ know her?"
15867Does n''t it?"
15867Ethelinda drew herself up with a stare, and asked in a patronizing tone that nettled Mary:"May I ask how_ you_ happen to know so much about her?"
15867Ethelinda made no comment for a moment, but presently asked in a strained tone,"Did you have any doubts of Miss Berkeley''s claims?
15867Have they really been accepted?"
15867Have you taken a partner?"
15867How can I endure that sight day after day when my arms must remain for ever empty?
15867How can_ I_ play such a part?"
15867How could God let such an awful thing happen to him, when he has always lived such a beautiful unselfish life?"
15867How we roared the day she gravely informed us that it was her highest ambition to be''the toast of two continents,''Is it still that, Mary?"
15867Is n''t it awful?
15867Is school all you dreamed it would be?"
15867Is that why you looked her up in the peerage?"
15867Jack?
15867Mary, what do you think?
15867Now he stood and gazed upon the prostrate man who turned away his face and would not answer his low- spoken words:"What ails thee, brother?"
15867She could hardly credit the evidence of her own ears when a meek little voice called imploringly,"Oh, Joyce, could you come and get me?
15867She held out her arms to it, whispering brokenly:"Oh,_ you_ understand how hard it is, do n''t you, dear?
15867She looked up with a little puckered smile as Betty drew a chair to the opposite side of the table, asking as she seated herself,"What''s the matter?
15867Was not he born for conquest?
15867What do you mean by shocking your fond relatives and friends almost into catalepsy?
15867What do you say?"
15867What matter that the thought of Vesta stabbed him nigh to madness when he looked on hearth- fires that could never blaze for him?
15867Where do you find time for your art?"
15867Who knows?"
15867Why not lie here and starve, and thus force Death to turn the key, and break the manacles which bind me to my misery?"
15867Why struggle any longer''gainst my lot?
15867Will you ever forget the way she rang the changes on''my Uncle Willie''?
15867Will you go?"
15867Wo n''t she be astonished?
15867Would it be too much trouble for you to send word to her now?"
15867Would n''t you know that she was a doctor''s daughter, by giving her doting uncle a pill for a name?"
15867Would you believe it?"
15867_ You_ know how it would be, do n''t you, Mary?"
16746It''s a female, is n''t it?
16746So you have seen her?
16746And farther north in the Netherlands, there are Rembrandt and Rubens; and ought not Vandyke to be allowed to stand aloft with them?
16746And the chief huntsman asked,"Which way did he go?"
16746Are not the memories of youth abiding?
16746But who are the spectators that Ibsen saw in his mind''s eye when he imagined his plays bodied forth in the actual theater?
16746But who shall say that this immediate inferiority of the play to the novel is inherent in the form itself?
16746By common consent of mankind who are the supreme soldiers, the supreme painters, the supreme poets?
16746By the side of Michelangelo there is Raphael, also an Italian; and has any one really a right to exclude Titian from their fellowship?
16746Did Thackeray borrow it from the romance or from the libretto?
16746Did any novelist of the eighteenth century reveal a subtler insight into the hidden recesses of feminine psychology than Marivaux?
16746Did any novelist of the seventeenth century lay bare the palpitations of the female heart more delicately than Racine?
16746Did n''t Mark ever tell you?
16746For what could be more beneficent, more salutary?
16746How would it be presented now in the twentieth century if it should be chosen again by Mr. Howells or by Mr. James?
16746How would it have fared in the nineteenth century if Dickens had been attracted to it, or Thackeray?
16746How would this tale have been told in the eighteenth century by the author of''Robinson Crusoe''?
16746Is there no rich variety of self- analysis in''Macbeth,''one may ask, and in''Hamlet''?
16746Is this a case of conveyance, such as is often carelessly called plagiarism?
16746It was in his lecture on Emerson that Matthew Arnold asked:"Who are the great men of letters?"
16746Or did he reinvent it for himself, forgetting that it had already served?
16746The play so worked upon the feelings of this perfervid Scot that he was forced to cry out triumphantly:"Whaur''s your Wully Shakspere noo?"
16746Who will deny that it may be merely the defect of the playwrights of our time?
16746Who, then, are the supreme leaders in the several departments of human endeavor?
16746and can any one of us free himself wholly from the bonds of early environment?
16746by the author of''Clarissa Harlowe''?
16746by the author of''Tom Jones''?
16746by the author of''Tristram Shandy''?
16746or is it a case of unconscious reminiscence?
13474How can he[ or she] get wisdom that holdeth the plough[ or the broom],--whose talk is of bullocks[ or of babies]?
13474How shall I make myself heard? 13474 Is it because you know that they will not obey?"
13474Why do you object?
13474Why should my girls be sacrificed,she said,"to improve your boys?"
13474Why,she asked,"did you rest the argument on so narrow a ground?
13474Wonder what the Orthodox churches would have said to that ten years ago?
13474Would you have the goodness to tell us how success can be obtained?
13474--"Of course she is,"he answered;"did you ever see a woman who was not great, when the emergency required?"
13474ARE WOMEN NATURAL ARISTOCRATS?
13474And this naturally suggests the question, What is to be the future of masculine costume?
13474And who can help echoing this opinion?
13474Are women so much more vain than men?
13474Because they learn science, must they unlearn the arts, and, above all, the art of being beautiful?
13474Because women learn the use of the quill, are they to ignore"featherses"?
13474But as this alternative is found to exist for both sexes, and on all occasions, why charge it especially on the woman- suffrage movement?
13474But can laws be executed without brute force?
13474But how does Mrs. Blank precisely mean to accomplish this?
13474But now that they are awake they ask, Is not this sufficient?
13474But the important point is: What does"the good of the governed"mean?
13474DARWIN, HUXLEY, and BUCKLE When any woman, old or young, asks the question, Which among all modern books ought I to read first?
13474Did people suppose there were to be no ups and downs?
13474Does it merely mean better street cleaning, or something more essential?
13474Does it show some constitutional inferiority in women, as to this particular faculty?
13474Does it turn upon the question of saintliness, or of brains?
13474Does she send them to the post- office?
13474Does she want the money the government owes to her father?"
13474Does this bear in any way upon suffrage?
13474Does woman already know too much, or too little?
13474Foam and Current In Society The Battle of the Cards Some Working- Women The Empire of Manners Girlsterousness Are Women Natural Aristocrats?
13474For is it not securing liberty to have cleared off a dozen calls from your list, and found nobody at home?
13474For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure, without his consent?
13474For what service is that child to render in the universe, except that he, too, may write and speak and act for that which is good and true?
13474Grant, for the sake of argument, that Miss Ream gave us poor art; but what gave her so much power?
13474Granted that woman is weak because she has been systematically degraded: but why was she degraded?
13474Granting that her condition was once at low- water mark, who is authorized to say that it has yet reached high tide?
13474HOW WILL IT RESULT?
13474Has it been so felt?
13474He seriously declared that, on more than one occasion, he had heard an American married woman say to her husband,"Dear, will you bring me my shawl?"
13474How came she into this attitude originally?
13474How can this be answered, my dear young lady, when you leave it to the reader to guess what your definition of success may be?
13474How could the Jews, for instance, elevate woman?
13474How do we know that even the later condition is final, or that anything is final but entire equality before the laws?
13474How is it done?
13474How shall I keep my head clear?
13474How shall I learn to express myself?
13474I should wish to have her from the adjoining room call to me,''My dear, what do two and two make?''"
13474If every step in freedom has brought about a more peaceable state of society, why should that process stop at this precise point?
13474If one woman could do so much, how would it be with one hundred?
13474If this is one of the successful laborers, where shall we place the unsuccessful; or, rather, is success, or failure, the greater honor?
13474If this sort of thing goes on, who can tell where the paper warfare shall end?
13474If we apply this to muscle, why not to mind?
13474If, then, a political theory so utterly breaks down when applied to men, why should we insist on resuscitating it in order to apply it to women?
13474In Rome, when the bride first stepped across her threshold, they did not ask her, Do you know the alphabet?
13474In large cities, for instance, where there is already more law than is enforced, will her additional ballots afford the means to enforce it?
13474Is it a success to have secured a sale like that for your books, and then to die, and have your brother penmen ask,"Who was he?"
13474Is it not like a campaign?
13474Is it so?
13474Is the present formlessness and gracelessness and monotony of hue to last forever, as suited to the rough needs of a workaday world?
13474Is their sex any the weaker for it?
13474Is there any school for debate?"
13474Is there not altogether too much tendency to predict what women will do when they vote?
13474It is necessary to ask, sometimes, what was really the truth about our grandmothers?
13474It so happens that the outdoor partner has the handling of the money; but does that give him a right to claim it as his exclusive earnings?
13474MY NOBLE FRIEND:--Here are the featherses sent my soul, my noble friend, are there no other featherses leaved in the shop besides these featherses?
13474Might?
13474Mrs. Dahlgren abhors politics: a woman in Congress, a woman in the committee- room,--what can be more objectionable?
13474Now, why should this triumph of good over evil be practicable among men, and not apply to women also?
13474Now, will women carry this same quality of temperament into their public career?
13474OUGHT WOMEN TO LEARN THE ALPHABET?
13474Once open your eyes to the fact that it has changed, and who is to predict where the matter shall end?
13474Or if, as we are told, women will merely reflect their husbands''political opinions, why should they dispute about them?
13474Ought women to learn the alphabet?
13474Past?
13474People look at the coarseness and dirt now visible at so many voting- places, and say,"Would you expose women to all that?"
13474Shall she have the alphabet, or not?
13474So- and- so?"
13474THE LIMITATIONS OF SEX Are there any inevitable limitations of sex?
13474Take away the occupant of the position, and put in a woman, and will she become impotent because her name is Elizabeth or Maria Theresa?
13474That being the case, would it not be better to keep clear of this dangerous ground of prediction, and keep to the argument based on rights and needs?
13474That they have yet been carried halfway to the end, who knows?
13474The Fact of Sex How will it Result?
13474The German poet Wieland claimed to be the parent of fourteen children and forty books; and who knows by which parentage he served the world the best?
13474The mere amount of money might not trouble the American woman; but where to get the service?
13474The rank and file do not yet demand the ballot, you say; but how is it with the general officers?
13474The representative women,--those who naturally stand for the rest, those most eminent for knowledge and self- devotion,--how do they view the thing?
13474There is a wrong; but where?
13474These last are her brothers and her friends; the others are-- her enemies?
13474They are very dear, who buyses dheses?
13474They have generally called, as my friend wished, from some other room, saying,"My dear, what do two and two make?"
13474This is her view; but is this the historic fact in regard to marriage?
13474Very well: why, then, do not all the landless men in a town unite, and take away the landed property of all the women?
13474Very well; but why, then, should they care if they encounter those same disreputable characters when they go to drop a ballot in the ballot- box?
13474Was she created for man''s subject, or his equal?
13474Was she intended as a satire on womankind, or as a sincere representation of what womankind should be?
13474Were they such models of bodily perfection as is usually claimed?
13474What kind of psychology?
13474What relation has this favored circle, if favored it be, to any movement relating to women?
13474What then?
13474What was the reason?
13474What, now, was the testimony of those who saw our grandmothers in the flesh?
13474When Bonaparte wished to silence Madame de Staël, he said,"What does that woman want?
13474When an American woman of to- day says,"I have all the rights I want,"is she on any surer ground?
13474When shall we have a movement for the prevention of cruelty to mothers?
13474When she turned at last for advice to her confessor, with the agonized inquiry,"What is it my duty to do?"--"Do?"
13474When they go out, will she send messengers through the streets to bid people hide their faces, as when an Oriental queen is passing?
13474When things go wrong, what is it one''s impulse to do?
13474When told that the lecture- room was needed for a class of young women in psychology, he said,"Psychology?
13474Who are the women of real influence in America?
13474Who can deny that the philosopher Antisthenes was right when he said,"The virtues of the man and the woman are the same"?
13474Who can read without shame and indignation this report from"The New York Herald"?
13474Who is Mrs. Blank, and how does she bring up her daughters?
13474Who knew, when the negroes were set free, whether they would at first use their freedom well, or ill?
13474Who knows that, when"the world''s great bridals come,"people may not look back with pity, even on this era of the Brownings?
13474Who knows the secret of their success?
13474Why do not all the mothers cry out against such a law?"
13474Why is it necessary to say all this?
13474Why is this difference?
13474Why should he be?
13474Why should it be otherwise with ward rooms and town halls?
13474Why should the advocates of woman suffrage expect any different treatment now?
13474Will her more ardent zeal solve the problem on which so much zeal has already been lavished in vain?
13474Will she shut up the maidens in a harem?
13474Women give way to tears more readily than men?
13474Would a woman vote to give her husband the power of bequeathing her children to the control and guardianship of somebody else?
13474Would they work?
13474Yet who now doubts this?
13474You a mechanic, when you have not proved that you understand any of these things?
13474You know about Celery and Cherubs, do n''t you?
13474and if to men''s minds, why not to women''s?
13474and, if so, what is the separation?
13474but who knows how soon these fatiguing letters of the alphabet, rallying to the defence, will come, pasteboard in hand, to return the onset?
13474they asked simply, Can you spin?
13474why not?
13474would they avoid crimes?
13474would they justify their freedom?
15717And Alfred Douglas?
15717Do you prohibit Galsworthy''s''Man of Property''?
15717Do you prohibit Jacob Tonson''s last novel?
15717Do you really think so?
15717Have you read any of Balzac''s novels?
15717Have you read it?
15717Have you read it?
15717The Cenci?
15717Wells?
15717***** Can you not now sympathize with the King as he ran through, in his mind, the whole range of British drama?
15717***** Who am I that I should take exception to the guffaw?
15717***** Why, then, does the backbone put itself to the trouble of reading current fiction?
15717..."''How dare you?
15717After this, who can complain against a Library Censorship?
15717And among living practitioners?
15717And even assuming that the truth_ would_ deal a fatal blow, etc., is that a reason for hiding it?
15717And their tone says:"Would you mind very much if we leave this painful subject?
15717And what then?
15717And who that began even"Il Fuoco"could resist it?
15717And why"orgy of lust"?
15717And would the amanuensis have made £ 350 more out of the thing then Mr. Murray himself?
15717And yet, honestly, am I likely at this time of day to be excited by a novel by Henry James?
15717And, not very long ago, was not Sir William Robertson Nicoll defending the genius of Lytton in the_ British Weekly_?
15717Any one read"The Blue Lagoon"yet?
15717Are booksellers people who have a conscientious objection to selling books?
15717As for the intrigue with a typist, has Claudius Clear never heard of an intrigue with a typist before?
15717But are the great towns any better off?
15717But do I write and complain, and ask Mudie''s to withdraw such books altogether?
15717But does this estimable practice aid the living author to send his children to school in decent clothes?
15717But is that a reason for abolishing the sevenpenny?
15717But one would ask: Has it ever read the opening paragraph of"The Return,"perhaps the most dazzling feat of impressionism in modern English?
15717But supposing that in a deeper sense I were?
15717But what do I care about other subscribers?"
15717But whose fault is it that bookshops are so few?
15717But why all this fuss about a simple matter?"
15717But why were the expenses so astounding?
15717But why?
15717By the way, would Canon Lambert as soon send a Miss Lambert to a house infected with mumps as put"Measure for Measure"into her hands?
15717Can one think of Dickens as a man of letters, as one who cared for books, as one whose notions on literature were worth twopence?
15717Can you wonder that it should carry deposits of jam, egg, butter, coffee, and personal dirt?
15717Crosland?"
15717Did she hunt through the files of newspapers for what she might find therein, and was she thus rewarded?
15717Did the mandarins imagine that they were going to stop the sevenpenny, that anything could stop it?
15717Do you know anybody who really buys new books?
15717Do you see the point?
15717Do you want to buy something good, at simply no price at all?"
15717Does Canon Lambert hold that the Hull libraries are to contain no volumes which he would not care for his daughter to read?
15717Hand, the librarian at Leeds, said:"I have n''t read the book through( Why not?
15717Have these men entered into a secret compact not to touch a problem even with a pair of tongs?
15717Have you ever heard tell of such a being?
15717How can the confession affect his reputation?
15717How dare you?''
15717How many men know England-- I mean the actual earth and flesh that make England-- as Mr. Hudson knows it?
15717How would that suit you?''
15717I made inquiry and discovered that books with these labels are only given out to persons of( what shall I say?)
15717I thought,"Is Davray at last''stumped''?"
15717In faithfully and decently describing an intrigue with a typist, has one necessarily written a"Justine"?
15717Modern plays being ruled out, you must either have Shakespeare or-- or what?
15717Oh, Colonel Newcome, sugared tears, golden gates, glimmering panes, passings, pilots, harbour bars-- had Mr. George Bourne never heard of you?
15717Or did some tremendous and omniscient expert give her the tip?
15717Or is it that nobody wants to buy books?
15717Shall I even read it?
15717Something ghastly, but where?
15717Synge, author of"The Playboy of the Western World?"
15717The man of taste asked,"Have you read the book?"
15717They write:"Wo n''t you be good enough to let us hear from you?"
15717This is a damning criticism; but what would you have?
15717We presently arrived at this point: He asked impatiently:"Well, who_ is_ there who can write tip- top poetry to- day?"
15717Well, then,--why not"Money"?
15717Wells, why did you not bring down the wrath of God, or at least make the adulterer fail in the problems of flight?
15717What had happened?
15717What is there?
15717What then?
15717When will publishers grasp that an imitative hack knows by the grace of God forty times more about the public taste than a publisher knows?
15717When will publishers grasp this?
15717Where was she?
15717Who among you, indeed, could be relied upon to choose properly a play for a State performance?
15717Who really does buy books?
15717Who the deuce said it was free from faults?
15717Why call that a burden which can never be lifted?
15717Why did Diana of the Crossways marry?
15717Why does Diana Mallory"go to"her preposterous Radical ex- M.P.?
15717Why should the King be supposed to be acquainted with its extreme badness?
15717Why should this phrase drive me to fury?
15717Why, then, Mrs. Humphry Ward being reviewed specially, is not Miss Marie Corelli reviewed specially?
15717Why, therefore, should we deceive ourselves?
15717Why?
15717Would Anne Elliot have made such an inexplicable fool of herself?
15717Would it disappoint?
15717Would the illustrations have so enriched photographers?
15717Would the paper have been so precious and costly?
15717and the landlady replies:"Yes, but how long would that take him?"
15717exclaimed a smart, positive little woman-- one of those creatures that have settled every question once and for all beyond reopening,"Wells?
15931Are those her sails that glance in the sun Like restless gossamers? 15931 Dost thou reck That I am beautiful, Lord, even as you And your dear mother?"
15931Hernaniopened with an_ enjambement_"Serait ce déja lui?
15931If it were otherwise,he said,"do n''t you suppose that we would have tried Schiller''s''William Tell''?
15931In the mean time,he asks,"what have we got instead?
15931Seest thou not its blue waves above us?
15931What is the use,asked Pugin,"of praying for the Church of England in that cope?"
15931What was it attracted the thousands to the launch? 15931 ( Mais où sont les neiges d''antan?) 15931 And once more, what was that upon her breast--that bosom old-- that bosom cold"?
15931And where, in Fine, in all our English Verse, A Style more trenchant and a Sense more terse?"
15931And why does the picturesque tourist, in general, object to the substitution of naphtha launches for gondolas on the Venetian canals?
15931And why is it romantic?
15931Are we not good enough to paint ourselves?''
15931But the action, the story?
15931But wherefore this?
15931Consider, brethren, shall not we too one day be antiques and grow to have as quaint a costume as the rest?
15931Did she really utter the words of a charm, or did her sweet bedfellow dream them?
15931Did we see it, or imagine it?
15931Does he thereby also weaken it?
15931Down there, have you found any fair Laid in the grave with you?
15931For nature brings not back the Mastodon, Nor we those times; and why should any man Remodel models?
15931For--"Why take the style of those heroic times?
15931His scorn, his grief are as transcendent as his love; as, indeed, what are they but the_ inverse_ or_ converse_ of his love?"
15931How much of it is now done by them; done by anybody?
15931How, for example, can kings and queens who swear be tolerated?
15931Is Tennyson to be classed with the romantics?
15931Is death''s long kiss a richer kiss Than mine was wo nt to be-- Or have you gone to some far bliss And quite forgotten me?"
15931Mais où sont les oeuvres exécutées d''après ce modèle et ces principes?
15931Nay, was not the mariner, too, a spectre?
15931Or did he tell me, or did I only dream it?
15931Or who, in spite of"Balder Dead"and"Tristram and Iseult,"would classify Arnold''s clean- cut, reserved, delicately intellectual work as romantic?
15931The antique Venus is beautiful, admirable, no doubt; but what has spread over the figures of Jean Goujon that graceful, strange, airy elegance?
15931There can be nothing more poetical in its aspect than the city of Venice; does this depend upon the sea or the canals?
15931There is Hawker''s"Song of the Western Men,"which Macaulay and others quoted as historical, though only the refrain was old:"And shall Trelawney die?
15931This being reported to Ward, he asked,"What are mullions?
15931Was Geraldine really a witch, or did she only seem so to Christabel?
15931Was it a wound, or the mark of a serpent, or some foul and hideous disfigurement-- or was it only the shadows cast by the swinging lamp?
15931Was the malignant influence which Geraldine exerted over the maiden supernatural possession, or the fascination of terror and repugnance?
15931What care though striding Alexander past The Indus with his Macedonian numbers?
15931What care, though owl did fly About the great Athenian admiral''s mast?
15931What distinct image of the woman portrayed does one carry away from all this squandered wealth of words and tropes?
15931What does this dreamer of dreams and charming decorative artist in a London police court?
15931What has given them that unfamiliar character of life and grandeur, unless it be the neighbourhood of the rude and strong carvings of the Middle Ages?
15931What is the difference?
15931What is the matter with Morris''poetry?
15931What may not happen to a man alone on a wide, wide sea?
15931What was it that Christabel saw on the lady''s bosom?
15931When shall we learn to see it as it was?"
15931Where can you show, among your Names of Note, So much to copy and so much to quote?
15931Where have you seen a Parterre better grac''d, Or gems that glitter like his Gems of Paste?
15931Who can read the following stanza without thinking of Beatrice and the"Paradiso"?
15931Who has not found pleasure on the seashore in viewing the distant rock whitened by the billows?
15931Who has not spent whole hours seated on the bank of a river, contemplating its passing waves?
15931Why did Ruskin lament when the little square at the foot of Giotto''s Tower in Florence was made a stand for hackney coaches?
15931Why did our countryman Halleck at Alnwick Towers resent the fact that"the Percy deals in salt and hides, the Douglas sells red herring"?
15931Why else do the idiots in"MacArthur''s Hymn"complain that"steam spoils romance at sea"?
15931Why linger at the yawning tomb so long?
15931Why not have called the book, then,"A History of the Mediaeval Revival in England"?
15931Why were ye not awake?
15931Yet what Englishman will be satisfied with a definition of_ romantic_ which excludes Scott?
15931[ 14]"Shall gentle Coleridge pass unnoticed here, To turgid ode and tumid stanza dear?"
15931[ 33] Does not the quarrel of Richard and Philip in"The Talisman"remind one irresistibly of Achilles and Agamemnon in the"Iliad"?
15931[ 41]"Quel est Fouvrage littéraire,"asks Stendhal in 1823,[42]"qui a le plus réussi en France depuis dix ans?
15931_ Cf._"Christabel":"Is the night chilly and dark?
15931for who knoweth What thing cometh after death?"
15931shall I ever tell its cruelty, When the fire flashes from a warrior''s eye, And his tremendous hand is grasping it?"
15931what mortal hand Can e''er untie the filial band That knits me to thy rugged strand?"
15931wherefore all this wormy circumstance?
13444''And yet your husband loves you?'' 13444 ''Can you talk with him upon this subject?''
13444''Do you think so?'' 13444 AND YOU, MOTHER, knowing the danger that besets your daughters at this critical period, are you justified in keeping silent?
13444How can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit?
13444Think you that good seed sown will bring forth bitter fruit? 13444 This is up- hill work,"said Jenny;"So is life,"said I;"shall we Climb it each alone, or, Jenny, Will you come and climb with me?"
13444Thunderstorms clear the atmosphere and promote vegetation; then why not Love- spats promote love, as they certainly often do?
13444WHAT IS IT, THEN, THAT USUALLY CAUSES distress to many women, whether a bride or a long- time wife?
13444***** SHALL PREGNANT WOMEN WORK?
13444***** WHERE DID THE BABY COME FROM?
13444A COMMON QUESTION.--The question is often asked,"Can Conception be prevented at all times?"
13444ADMIRED AND BELOVED.--Young lady, would you be admired and beloved?
13444Afraid of the girls, are you?
13444And what place is as secure as that chosen, where they can be reached only with the utmost difficulty, and than only as the peril of even life itself?
13444And why?
13444And, think you, that your son and daughter, later in life will make you their confidant as they ought?
13444Are jesters and buffoons your choice friends?
13444Are not such parents largely to blame?
13444Are the magistrates and the police powerless?
13444Are there not"as good fish in the sea as ever were caught?"
13444Are they not criminals in a high degree?
13444Are you a true, straightforward, manly fellow, with whose healthful and uncorrupted nature it is good for society to come in contact?
13444Are you able to make any return for social recognition and social privileges?
13444BRAINY ENOUGH.--What kind of women make the best wives?
13444Because you would rather be Mrs. Nobody, than make the effort to be Miss Somebody?
13444But how did you come to us, you dear?
13444CHARACTER OF ILLEGITIMATES.--Wherein, then, consists this difference?
13444CONCLUSION.--Would you, then, secure the love and trust of your wife, and become an object of her ever- growing tenderness and reverence?
13444CONFIDENCE AND EXPOSURE.--I hear some of you say, can not some influence be brought to bear upon this plague- spot?
13444Can maternity be natural when it is undesigned by the father or undesired by the mother?
13444Can not many now unhappy remember them as the beginning of that alienation which embittered your subsequent affectional cup, spoiled your lives?
13444Can you be held guiltless if your daughter ruins body and mind because you were too modest to tell her the laws of her being?
13444Do n''t say where are you stopping?
13444Do n''t say who may you be; say who are you?
13444Do women in all circles of society, when practicing these terrible crimes realize the real danger?
13444Do you blame me because I write so freely?
13444Do you know anything?
13444Do you love and seek the society of the wise and good?
13444Do you seek to be with the profane?
13444Do you, can you love me?
13444Does not this alone prove to us, conclusively, that there is a Divinity in the background governing, controlling and influencing our lives?
13444FATAL CONDITIONS.--What are all lovers''"spats"but disappointment in its very worst form?
13444FLIRTING JUST FOR FUN.--Who is the flirt, what is his reputation, motive, or character?
13444FOOLISH DREAD OF CHILDREN.--What is more deplorable and pitiable than an old couple childless?
13444Feet whence did you come, you darling things?
13444From what other source do or can they come?
13444George F. Hall says:"why not pay careful attention to man in all his elements of strength, physical, mental, and moral?
13444God has ordained that children should thus be brought into the world, do you call the works of God silly?
13444Had you rather take the lowest seat among these than the highest seat among others?
13444Have they not fouled their own nest, and transmitted to their children predisposition to moral evil?
13444Have you a good set of teeth, which you are willing to show whenever the wit of the company gets off a good thing?
13444Have you, young man, who are at home whining over the fact that you can not get into society, done anything to give you a claim to social recognition?
13444He who maims my person effects that which medicine may remedy; but what herb has sovereignty over the wounds of slander?
13444He who plunders my property takes from me that which can be repaired by time; but what period can repair a ruined reputation?
13444How can her own brothers and sisters associate with her?
13444How can you look an innocent girl in the face when you are degrading your manhood with the vilest practice?
13444How can you, my friend, secure for your person the loving care and respect of your wife?
13444How did they all come just to be you?
13444I wonder if you are as impatient to see me as I am to fly to you?
13444In other words, as a return for what you wish to have society do for you, what can you do for society?
13444In short, do you possess anything of any social value?
13444In what other can they?
13444Indeed, as ontaigne[ Transcriber''s note: Montaigne?]
13444Is it not both unwise and self- destructive; and in every way calculated to render your case, present and prospective, still more hopeless?
13444Is it that one false step which now constitutes the boundary between virtue and vice?
13444Is not this the only proper method, and the one most likely to result happily?
13444Is the law and moral right to continue to be trodden under foot?
13444Is there no relief for helpless women that are bound by the ties of marriage to men who are nothing but rotten corruption?
13444Is this your habit?
13444Let echo answer, What?
13444MOTHERS, DOES GOD THUS PUT the endowment of your darlings into your moulding power?
13444May I hope?
13444Nature has no secrets, and why should we?
13444Now what think you of this"seeing life?"
13444Now, if in such conditions men beget their children, who can affect surprise if they develop licentious tendencies?
13444Now, what law has been broken, to induce this penalty?
13444Of the throng that struggle at the gates of entrance, how many may reach their anticipated goal?
13444Oh, Laura, can you love me in return?
13444On a sunny Summer morning, Early as the dew was dry, Up the hill I went a berrying; Need I tell you-- tell you why?
13444Or is this the way either to retrieve your past loss, or provide for the future?
13444Or rather, the discovery of that false step?
13444RETRIEVE YOUR PAST LOSS.--Do sun, moon, and stars indeed rise and set in your loved one?
13444SOCIETY OF THE VULGAR.--Do you love the society of the vulgar?
13444SUFFERING WOMEN.--Who can be astonished at the many unhappy marriages, if he knows how unworthy most men are of their wives?
13444Shall other animals rear nearly all their young, and shall man, constitutionally by far the strongest of them all, lose half or more of his?
13444TELLING THEIR LOVE.--The generality of the sex is, love to be loved; how are they to know the fact that they are loved unless they are told?
13444THE FIRST LESSONS.--Should you be asked by your four or five- year old,"Mamma, where did you get me?"
13444THE PENALTIES FOR LOST VIRTUE.--Can the harlot be welcomed where either children, brothers, sisters, wife, or husband are found?
13444THE SECOND LESSON.--The second lesson came with the question,"But_ where_ is the nest?"
13444TOO OFTEN THE HUSBAND thinks only of his personal gratification; he insists upon what he calls his rights(?
13444The corset more than any other one thing is responsible for woman''s being the victim of disease and doctors...."What is the effect upon the child?
13444The principle is the same; and if the principle is right, why not multiply methods?
13444The stars live in the harmony of love, and why should not we, too, love each other?"
13444Then by what?
13444To whom can you introduce her?
13444WHAT ARE YOU GOOD FOR?--Are you a good beau, and are you willing to make yourself useful in waiting on the ladies on all occasions?
13444WHY NOT MATRIMONY?]
13444What can you say concerning her?
13444What is the result?
13444What kind of coin do you propose to pay in the discharge of the obligation which comes upon you with social recognition?
13444What makes your cheek like a warm, white rose?
13444What makes your forehead so smooth and high?
13444What man is there who can not trace the origin of many of the best maxims of his life to the lips of her who gave him birth?
13444What plummet can sound the depths of a woman''s fall who has become a harlot?
13444What power shall blanch the sullied show of character?
13444What rendered him thus perfect?
13444What rounded off his natural asperities, and moulded up his virtues?
13444What will be his fate in life?]
13444When will mothers awake from their lethargy?
13444Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss?
13444Where did you come from, baby dear?
13444Where did you get that little tear?
13444Where did you get the eyes so blue?
13444Where did you get this pretty ear?
13444Where did you get those arms and hands?
13444While now--(will God forgive me?)
13444Who can redeem it lost?
13444Who can tell how much this state of things is due to the enervation of maternal life forces by the one instrument of torture?
13444Who shall quarrel with the Divinely implanted instinct, or declare it to be vulgar or unmentionable?
13444Who shall repair it injured?
13444Who will dare question that this mother''s effort to destroy him while in embryo was the main cause in bringing him to the level of the brutes?
13444Who will not confess the influence of a mother in forming the heart of a child?
13444Why Bring Into the World Idiots, Fools, Criminals and Lunatics?
13444Why have I found grace in thine eyes that thou shouldest take knowledge of me, seeing I am a stranger?"
13444Why marry at all if not to found a family that shall live to bless and make glad the earth after father and mother are gone?
13444Why may not lying be as legitimately cured by blisters made with hot coals as by black and blue spots made with a ruler or whip?
13444Why should we do less?
13444Will she ask mamma whether it is ever proper to sit in her lover''s lap?
13444Will the legislature or congress do nothing?
13444Will you kindly favor me with a testimonial as to my character, ability and conduct while at Boston Normal School?
13444Will you love her selfish, shirking, calculating nature after twenty years of close companionship?
13444Will you trifle with the dearest interests of your children?
13444Wilt thou, then, Spurn at His edict, and fulfill a man''s?
13444With assumed harshness the lady asks her lover: Who are you, and what do you want?
13444With what inherent repulsion do you look back upon them?
13444Would you be an ornament to your sex, and a blessing to your race?
13444[ Illustration: THE TWO PATHS-- WHAT WILL THE GIRL BECOME?
13444[ Illustration: THE TWO PATHS-- What Will The Boy Become?
13444and can you not catch them?
13444because his earnest manly consecrated life is a mighty power on God''s side?
13444because she is pitiful to the sinful, tender to the sorrowful, capable, self- reliant, modest, true- hearted?
13444because you feel you can not live without him?
13444because you have a great empty place in your head and heart that nothing but a man can fill?
13444in brief, because she is the embodiment of all womanly virtues?
13444is this the order of nature?
13444say where are you staying?
13444which think you is the most sensible and fraught with the least danger to your darling boy or girl?
16325''But why,''you ask,''the most wonderful civilizing agency?
16325''Why, what did they want to build a city right up here for, anyway?''
16325Ah, yes, but what proportion of him?
16325And how did the first Watt or Edison of metallurgy come to make that earliest bronze implement?
16325And how does the preponderance of butterflies in the upper regions of the air affect the colour and brilliancy of the flowers?
16325And what Roman or English name does it represent?
16325And what are the elements of this tropical curriculum which give it such immense educational value?
16325And what is it that makes all the difference between this''cute Yankee marsupial and his backward and belated Australian cousins?
16325And what then do you see?
16325And when we do so, we see for ourselves at once that almost all capsules open-- where?
16325And why?
16325And why?
16325And why?
16325Because it''s too cold for them?
16325But did they really exterminate the native Celt- Euskarian population?
16325But how about the juice, the sap, the qualities of the soil, the manure required?
16325But what inroad could the stone hatchet make unaided upon the virgin forests of those remote days?
16325But what is the meaning of Wigorna ceaster or Wigran ceaster?
16325But where?
16325But why are cactuses so almost universally prickly?
16325But why did the people of the Arno Valley fix upon the particular site of Fiesole?
16325But why this particular height rather than any other of the dozen that jut out into the plain?
16325For why does Fiesole stand just where it does?
16325Have you ever grown mustard and cress in the window on a piece of flannel?
16325How are slums conceivable or East Ends possible where every man can plant his own yam and cocoa- nut, and reap their fruit four- hundred- fold?
16325How can he ever form any fitting conception of the glory of life-- of the means by which animal and vegetable organisms first grew and flourished?
16325How can he frame to himself any reasonable picture of civilised society, or of the origin and development of human faculty and human organisation?
16325How does it come that in these southern climates the hill- top town has survived so much more generally to our own day than in Northern Europe?
16325How''s that for an inducement to study life where it is richest and most abundant in its native starting- place?
16325However, this rough solution of the problem proves too much: for how then can we have a still softer form in Danish Leicester itself?
16325If any one were to ask me( which is highly unlikely)''In what university would an intelligent young man do best to study?''
16325If dead sheep are good to eat, why not also living ones?
16325Now, how does this bear upon the family of parrots?
16325Now, why are Alpine plants so anxious to be seen of men and angels?
16325Now, why should a parrot so strangely disguise itself and belie its ancestry?
16325Was the change partly due to the preservation of the older sound on the lips of Celtic serfs?
16325What are the efficient causes of this exceptionally high intelligence in parrots?
16325What did the bronze axe ever do for humanity?''
16325What is the use of the roots, and especially of the rootlets, if they are not the mouths and supply- tubes of the plants?
16325What keeps them down, then, in the end to their average number?
16325What made them build a city up there, anyway?
16325What need of carpentry where a few bamboos, cut down at random, can be fastened together with thongs into a comfortable chair?
16325What prevents the development of the whole seven hundred?
16325Whence comes the mud?
16325Why does Hodge, who is so strong on grain and guano, know absolutely nothing about carbonic acid?
16325Why is this, since everything in nature must needs have a reason?
16325Why is this?
14710And Dora, where can Dora be? 14710 And I hope my''big Jule,''is using his vacation in some sensible way?"
14710And that too, is that the work of the young gentleman, who will soon return to college?
14710And you, Rolf, how is it with you?
14710Are we really going away, Aunt?
14710Are you good at guessing riddles? 14710 Are you ready to say your prayers, Lili?"
14710Battiste,she said very firmly,"where is the spout that is used to fill the tubs in the wash- house?"
14710But mamma, with whom can I have any real companionship? 14710 But we must not shoot with it; do n''t you remember that papa said so, Lili?"
14710But, Battiste, I only want a little water from the spring; why ca n''t I have just that?
14710Can I really go into that beautiful garden where the children are?
14710Certainly, my dear boy, why not? 14710 Did you hear that, Mrs. Kurd?
14710Do I hear some one playing on the piano, Jule?
14710Do n''t those five all belong together, and have one name? 14710 Do tell me, doctor, will her arm be lame?
14710Do you know any other tune?
14710Do you really think so?
14710Do you think that was a rabbit?
14710Have they taken the notion of being virtuous, into their small noddles?
14710Have you guessed it, Dora?
14710Have you guessed that?
14710How big is it?
14710How can you allow yourself to speak in that way? 14710 How can you be so stupid, Hunne?
14710How can you feel so?
14710How can you say so, Mrs. Kurd, after hearing that intolerable uproar last evening? 14710 How could a_ shake_ sing by the water side, Jule?"
14710How old are you, Dora? 14710 I hear a terrible cry; but who says they are drowning?
14710I think it must be''Caesar,''is it not, my son?
14710If I throw a cracker into the fire, wo n''t it burn?
14710If you break out into charades too, what will become of us? 14710 Is it a boy?"
14710Is it much hurt?
14710It must be''welcome,''is it not, Rolf? 14710 Look up, Rolf;"she said,"do you see those five twinkling stars up there?
14710My dear Jule, why do you make the children behave so badly? 14710 My dear Titus,"cried the good woman really in great astonishment,"is it possible that you did not hear what we are ordered to do?
14710My dearest Titus, how can you decide such a thing in one second? 14710 Never mind, I will try another country; how is this?"
14710No, indeed; can you tell the names of the stars Rolf? 14710 No, no, Dora; not for the world; what are you thinking about?"
14710Now what are you laughing at?
14710Now, we must lift it up,she said,"so; and put the arrow in here, Wili, do you see?
14710Oh dear, what can that be?
14710Oh, Aunt Ninette,cried the child,"Is n''t it perfectly beautiful?"
14710Oh, in heaven''s name, how can you ask me such a thing? 14710 Plenty of Latin learned?
14710Sha n''t we be able to jump up quick, and get out of the way?
14710That is fine-- Rolf must have been the author of that, was he not?
14710Then I sha''n''t have to go to America, shall I, mamma?
14710Was not I named for her, mamma?
14710Well, what is it, my little man? 14710 What are you talking about, dear Wili?"
14710What are you two about?
14710What do you mean?
14710What has got into the twins now?
14710What have you done, Lili, to make him angry?
14710What have you two been about this time?
14710What in the world are you chattering to Dora about now, Hunne?
14710What is its name?
14710What is the matter with my little boy?
14710What nice thing has my little Hunne done to- day?
14710What sort of a place have we come to?
14710Where did you get this paper, Dora?
14710Where shall we try it? 14710 Who will pull off my riding boots?"
14710Why Dora,he said,"I thought you were going to guess my charade; will you try now?"
14710Will you really?
14710Wo n''t you try just one?
14710Yes, that''s right; and did you hear the others I was saying, and did you guess them?
14710You''ll wake me up then Jule, wo n''t you?
14710All was now curiosity and excitement; how did the child look-- what would she say?
14710Am I right?"
14710And are you fond of them?"
14710And giving the twins each a kiss he asked them,"Well now, have you been very good and happy?
14710And what will happen, who can tell?
14710And where would the money come from if you could find the time?
14710And where?
14710Another poem?"
14710At dinner- time, Julius taking out a paper, asked,"Who can guess this excellent charade, composed by Miss Hanenwinkel?"
14710At last he replied with a question in his turn:"Did your mamma send you to ask me?"
14710At that moment their father exclaimed,"What is that?
14710At this their father arose, and called out,"Who has guessed the charade?"
14710But what is this?
14710But what will be the end if this is the beginning?
14710Do n''t you know that your uncle is in the next room, and is already at work?"
14710Do n''t you think so, dear Titus?"
14710Do you know their names, Dora?"
14710Do you know them all?
14710Do you see them distinctly?"
14710Do you think that I can ever learn it in my life?"
14710Dora took her things from her aunt''s hands, but while passing the window, she asked softly,"May I just look out of these windows a minute now, Aunt?
14710Dora was silent for a while, and then she said thoughtfully,"Papa, how can we help being''overwhelmed with care and worry?''
14710Ehrenreich?"
14710Have you any preference as to the place?
14710Have you gone into the garden again?"
14710He rushed back to the house, calling out,"Jule, Paula, did you know that the twins shot a child yesterday?"
14710How are we to live, how can we ever get along, if your arm is lame?"
14710How can you say such dreadful things?"
14710How can you worry me so?
14710How could she live, away from all this dear family with whom she had learned to feel so entirely at home?
14710How could you do anything of the kind in our house?
14710How shall we ever live through this misfortune?"
14710How will my husband stand it?
14710I just want to see how it is done; do n''t you understand?"
14710Is she bewitched too?
14710Is there any one very ill in the next house?
14710It is time for her to begin her sewing; where can she be?
14710Just think about it a little, can a nut cover some one on his last way?"
14710Just try to think a little; can you hear a cracker sizzling as its cooks, and will it make you hungry to hear it?"
14710Kurd?"
14710Last of all Jule asked,"Hunne, I want to get some good out of Dora, too, what shall it be?"
14710Mew-- sick-- music, do n''t you see?"
14710More new puzzles ready?"
14710No?
14710Not much older than I am?"
14710Now, my little Hunne, what have you to tell me?"
14710Oh, Dora, where did you get hold of that unfortunate idea?
14710Rolf approached them, repeating his question,"Will you guess, Jule?
14710Should you like that?"
14710Speak, child, did you fall down?
14710Stiff all the rest of her life?"
14710The moment she appeared, Hunne called out,"Where was it hit?"
14710Then, having softly closed the door, she broke forth complainingly,"How can you make me so uneasy, dear brother?
14710Thus she would say to the persistent scissors- grinder, who came to the door,"Have you come back so soon?
14710To- morrow; will you tell me to- morrow?"
14710What comes next?"
14710What could it be?
14710What did you say?"
14710What is it?
14710What is this?"
14710What shall we do?"
14710What should you say if we put off going home, another fortnight?
14710What will become of us if this goes on?"
14710What will become of us?
14710Where did you find it, my son?"
14710Where is Mrs. Kurd?
14710Who knows but that I may have a few to give you in return?"
14710Who would have believed that such things could happen?"
14710Why do you ask?"
14710Why, when I have to practise, I get perfectly tired to death, do n''t you, Wili?"
14710Will you try to think of this, my child?
14710You did not hear the dreadful things the doctor said would happen to Dora, if she did not have more and better blood?"
14710You''ll get it for us, wo n''t you?"
14710You''ll help about that, wo n''t you, Dora?"
14710and obedient, too, all this long time?"
14710and then each one asked a different question, and all at once:"Is it a child?"
14710cried her aunt,"what is the matter?
14710do n''t you hear them call?"
14710have you been doing what you ought not?"
14710have you no dear friend with you yet?"
14710have you quite forgotten your father''s verses?"
14710he called out,"is this the beginning of some mischievous prank?"
14710is this it?"
14710said his brother,"what is the rest?"
14710said she gently,"have you something wrong in your heart?
14710what are you thinking of?
14710what do you mean?
14710who could have foreseen this?
17188But, Abner,said she,"do you think we have the right?"
17188Do you suppose that I would eat you in the street?
17188Which star do you think he looked at, good wife?
17188It was the same old story; resting quietly in a peaceful harbor, what danger had they to expect?
17188Mr. Rhett had done very well; why should not he?
17188What could the strange ship want here?
16245And who will enable us to pardon ourselves, if we cover ourselves with such infamy?
16245Do you think,said he to M. Balasheff,"that I care a straw for these Polish jacobins?"
16245What do you want?
16245A man at Geneva said to me,"Do not you think that the prefect declares his opinion with a great deal of frankness?"
16245After having sacrificed the ancient honor of his house, what strength remained to him of any kind?
16245And what is the consequence of this servile obedience?
16245And what reply did he make you?
16245And why did he torment me in this manner?
16245And will there never arise a man superior to this man, who will demonstrate its inutility?
16245And yet, what would become of a country governed despotically, if a lawless tyrant had not to dread the edge of the poniard?
16245But by what road to get to Sweden?
16245But is not this deplorable system still in full sway in Europe?
16245But the people are slaves, it will be said: what character therefore can they be supposed to have?
16245But what came Bonaparte to offer?
16245But who knows if the virtues which this war has developed, may not be exactly those which are likely to regenerate nations?
16245But why should not you leave it then?
16245But, in short, what destiny is there, great or little, which the man selected to humble man does not overthrow?
16245By what could this rage have been provoked?
16245Can she not live well and sleep well in a good house?"
16245Did he bring a greater liberty to foreign nations?
16245Has not General Bernadotte already taken the side of making peace with England?"
16245Have you seen the Chinese town?
16245His fellow citizens?
16245How was it possible, after this horrible action, for a single monarch in Europe to connect himself with such a man?
16245I answered,"do n''t you see that this can only be a report spread by the enemies of France?"
16245I heard continually buzzing about me the commonplaces with which the world suffers itself to be led:"Has not she plenty of money?
16245I will give orders for it: a residence in Paris?
16245In short, what is it she wishes?"
16245In the midst of all this noise, is there any room for love?
16245In what did it then consist?
16245It was easy for me to judge that I could not remain at Vienna after the French ambassador returned to it; what would then become of me?
16245Necessity, will it be said?
16245Opinion was in favor of the Duke d''Enghien, in favor of Moreau, in favor of Pichegru:--was it able to save them?
16245Should I return to my father, or should I go into Germany?
16245There is a sanctuary in the soul to which his empire never ought to penetrate; if there were not, what would virtue be upon this earth?
16245To what miserable shifts are those princes reduced, who are constantly told that they must yield to circumstances?
16245Was he in the right in doing away as much as he could, oriental manners from the bosom of his people?
16245Was it necessary since that to be continually hearing of the triumphs of him who made his successes fall indiscriminately upon the heads of all?
16245Was it possible that a foreign tyrant should reduce me to wish that the French should be beat?
16245Was it right to punish such a being for the crime which his arm had committed?
16245Was not thy wife fair and good?
16245Wert thou then unhappy on this earth?
16245What is it then I see, in advancing towards the North?
16245What resources therefore could remain to him?
16245What would war do, in the midst of such peaceable establishments?
16245Where could these doves fly to, from the arms of the conqueror?
16245Where is his country?
16245Why is it, say they, that thou hast abandoned us?
16245Why therefore hast thou left her?
16245Why, said he to me yesterday, why does not Madame de Stael attach herself to my government?
16245Will this oath ever allow me to revisit beautiful France?
16245Will you, I was asked, buy some Cashmere shawls in the Tartar quarter?
16245and have not the powerful of the earth carefully gathered up the shameful inheritance of him whom they have overthrown?
16245and out of so many victories, has there ever arisen a single gleam of happiness for poor France?
16245the payment of the deposit of her father?
16245was it right to fix his capital in the north, and at the extremity of his empire?
16245what is it she wants?
16245what is it without independent organs to express it?
16245what is it without the authority of law?
17202Who killed Cock Robin?
17202Who stole the bird''s nest?
17203How many innocent people have perished in the flames on the asserted testimony of supernatural circumstances?
17203How often have purely accidental associations been taken as convincing proofs?
17203What form did he assume?
17203What parish were you in?
17203What were you doing?
17094And the seeds and the strawberry plants?
17094Could we take one to Mom Beck, mothah? 17094 Do you suppose that I could train my dogs to do that?
17094How did he get here?
17094What do you suppose his name is?
17094What is it in English?
17094Where did they get all those stores?
17094A lookin''-glass that would play''Kingdom Comin'',''when she picked it up?
17094Is it something Swiss or French?"
17094May I take Hero?"
17094Now, what is it you say to Hero when you want him to hunt the men?
17094Perching on a bench near by with Hero for a foot- stool, she asked,"Majah, is Hero a St. Bernard or a Red Cross dog?"
17094So how could I evah find out?
17094They were blue as the flax- flowers she used to gather-- thirty, was it?
17094Why did you have it put on the collah, Papa Jack?"
17094Why is he bowing to Papa Jack?"
10127After all, now that you''ve vowed to protect him, are n''t you just a little bit curious as to who he is?
10127And can I get that ox, too?
10127And do you think that Witch pulled a good scare when she sent those angry birds to attack Dorothy and her friends?
10127And if you truly are, how could you still be alive hundreds of years after you were born?
10127And what about your friends?
10127And what is a book?
10127And where, my little friend, do you think earth is? 10127 And would you happen to be Bastinda Slinky Myrna Evillene Allidap?"
10127Any other bright ideas?
10127Are there any other kind?
10127Are you a real unicorn?
10127Are you a villain?
10127Are you really William Shakespeare?
10127Are you the next TV heart- throb? 10127 But how did I get there from the Emerald City?
10127But where do you think these came from if the whole thing was some kind of hallucination? 10127 Ca n''t we go to your Emerald City to find out?"
10127Ca n''t you see? 10127 Can you speak, boy?"
10127Could the Witch have done something to Ozma? 10127 Did you really think I was fooled by that ruse?
10127Do I look more beautiful to you? 10127 Do n''t you know who I am?
10127Do n''t you think so, Telly?
10127Do you have a name?
10127Do you remember how the Wicked Witches sent the terrible Forest Monster after the Wizard?
10127Duped?
10127Have you ever tried to go to him to ask for a job?
10127He died?
10127Helen, why do you always ignore me?
10127Hello?
10127How about the lion and tiger?
10127How could I not?
10127Huh?
10127I am, are n''t I? 10127 I am?"
10127I can stay here and be with Telly and the Cowardly Lion and the Hungry Tiger forever?
10127I really am something, are n''t I?
10127I was actually trying to say,''How do you do?''
10127Imby,retorted the Tiger,"will you kindly tell my dear boy here that our Queen has not been transformed into a gelatin mold?"
10127Is he g- going to h- hurt us?
10127Is it?
10127Is that so?
10127Is there anything you''d like to watch? 10127 Is this the home of Bastinda Slinky Myrna Evillene Allidap?"
10127Is this the one?
10127Maybe your little pal Graham has come to let me capture him as well? 10127 My lucky what?"
10127Oh, I see,replied the being,"but how do I do what?"
10127Oh? 10127 Ozma was mean to you?"
10127Penny for your thoughts?
10127Really? 10127 Really?
10127Really?
10127Really?
10127Really?
10127Should she be?
10127So she only takes that which is rejected from my farm?
10127So the Witch is n''t after me after all?
10127So you mean that was n''t Ozma who talked to me?
10127So you want to make things difficult, do you? 10127 So,"continued the Lion,"are there really slaves of the W- w- w- witch around here?"
10127That poor little waif of a unicorn?
10127Then what is this clinking, clanking, clattering collection of caliginous junk babbling about?
10127Then why did he attack me like that?
10127They are?
10127Tige,he said,"do you really believe that our beloved Queen is so absent- minded?
10127Wait for what?
10127Well, what do you think?
10127Well, what say you now, squirt? 10127 Well,"replied Doré,"you just happen to be in the right place... You see that old well where you quenched your thirst?
10127Well,she said in her youthful but queenly voice,"have you enjoyed your little trip to Oz?"
10127What about this lion?
10127What are these words on it?
10127What are you talking about, Tube- face?
10127What can I do to make you happy?
10127What did he say?
10127What do you think?
10127What has she done to you? 10127 What if she''s made them all into little candy corns or tea bags or Jell- O Jigglers or something?"
10127What is that annoying noise?
10127What is this machine up to, boy? 10127 What the dickens are you?"
10127What''s wrong?
10127What''s wrong?
10127What?
10127Where are you, Telly?
10127Where did your brain come from?
10127Where else would Ozites turn to see their favorite Rankin- Bass Oz cartoon episodes? 10127 Where is this book?"
10127Who are you?
10127Who could that be? 10127 Who is Telly?"
10127Who is that?
10127Who is the little unicorn? 10127 Why do n''t you just knock my door down?"
10127Would they like a drink? 10127 Yeah?"
10127You do n''t know anything, do you? 10127 You do?"
10127You mean it?
10127You thought you''d seen the last of ol''Allidap, did you? 10127 You want him to butt some hay?"
10127AND HOW WAS HE GOING TO GET BACK?
10127After all, who could resist experimenting with spells from a book with a title like_ The Best and Most Complete Book of Witchcraft Ever Written_?
10127An airport in Oz?
10127And does it not travel through space with over a hundred billion other suns of its galactic family, not to mention an untold number of other planets?"
10127And how could I read German words if the words were n''t in my consciousness to begin with?
10127And how could it be moving toward him?
10127And that if it suddenly disappeared at this moment in our time, would we not know it for another two point three million years?
10127And what might that be?"
10127And what might that be?"
10127And who was that captain addressing when he said"ladies and gentlemen"?
10127Are you going to take the couch potatoes of the world by storm and make all of them yearn to be you?
10127BEING?
10127But did not Shakespeare say that he wanted him to inform the world that he had written his own stuff?
10127But does n''t it apply equally to girls?"
10127But how shall we do it?
10127But no harm done, right?
10127By the way, what is the mission you mentioned?"
10127Ca n''t you bring them here to live as well?"
10127Ca n''t you turn around just this once and smile at me?
10127Can I look at him?
10127Can you help me find it?"
10127Could Ozma have done this to permanently entrap him?
10127Could she have locked him away in a torture chamber someplace?
10127DO YOU?
10127DO YOU?"
10127Dare I do it?
10127Did you hear me?"
10127Did you say''Old Mickey- D?''
10127Do n''t you know it''s twelve midnight?
10127Do n''t your eyes work?"
10127Do you mind if I sit here?
10127Do you still hate me?"
10127Found you at last, have n''t I?
10127Graham, do you believe in love at first sight?"
10127HAVEN''T YOU?"
10127HOW LONG HAD HE BEEN GONE?
10127Had he actually used his penny to desert his friends when they needed him most?
10127Have you any ideas how I could get back before that Witch captures me again?"
10127How about we go and see Dorothy?
10127How are you today?"
10127How come?"
10127How could he think for one moment that this was William Shakespeare?
10127How did she manage to lift that son of hers?
10127How would the crone react?
10127I have strived-- er, striven?
10127I love you so much... Wo n''t you turn and smile at me?
10127I mean, how far can you go with this stuff?
10127I''ll be happy to take him off your hands if he''s such a... a coot, I think you said?"
10127If Ozma could trust a girl, why not a boy?
10127In fact, you know what I''m going to do to her?
10127Is it not suspended in space like all of the other planets?
10127It did not dawn on him that, if this was a dream, where did the German words come from if they were not in his consciousness to begin with?
10127Just this once?"
10127Maybe I could transform you into a little brown wart on the left foot of a slimy old toad?
10127Maybe I should turn you into a candy cane and gobble you up?"
10127Ms. Allidap, can you look excited and happy?
10127Or a bucket of rotten peas?
10127Or had he?
10127See how beautiful I look?
10127So what do you think about that?"
10127So you are n''t slaves of the bad Witch, or sent to kill me?"
10127Some terrible winding maze such as he had just left?
10127THOUGHT YOU''D ESCAPE FROM ME, EH?
10127The next Susan Lucci?
10127The one I see out there in my fields?
10127They are enchanted or cursed or destroyed or--""Are you trying to scare yourself?"
10127They do n''t bite, do they?"
10127WHY, OH WHY HAD HE NOT TRIED TO HITCH A RIDE WITH THE SPACE PEOPLE?
10127Want to see?"
10127Was it him?
10127What are you waiting for?"
10127What do they say?"
10127What do you think it means?"
10127What if I do smile?
10127What is Dorothy doing now?
10127What is this plan?"
10127What must you have thought of me?"
10127What would his history teacher and his fellow classmates think?
10127Where are you?"
10127Where have you been taken?"
10127Where is it?"
10127Who spoke?
10127Why are you so glum?"
10127Why did n''t I think of that first?"
10127Why did n''t you tell me?
10127Why was she acting so cruelly toward himself, but toward no one else?
10127Why was she so structured about things?
10127Why would a great big airplane take off with no passengers except himself?
10127Will he expect me to smile every day?
10127Would you like to accompany me on my mission?
10127Would you like to have it?
10127Would you like to have me summon them?"
10127Would you like to watch one now?"
10127You have hated me ever since you first read about me, have n''t you?
10127You mean that they have too many harsh TV critics?"
10127You remember how realistic my illusionary Emerald City was?
10127[ Illustration]"HowHowHow?"
10127[ Illustration]"Who''s sh- she?"
10127[ Illustration]"Why do n''t you stand here in front of your television set?"
10127_ How does he know he is going to die?
10127_ Is someone hiding behind a bush?
10127_ What am I saying?_ thought Graham.
10127_ What on earth could a television set be doing here_?
15546And were there two little boys with him?
15546But was Solomon John inquiring for it?
15546Can anything have happened to the family?
15546Could not Dick crawl in?
15546Did you go to Vesuvius?
15546Did you roast eggs in the crater?
15546Did you see anything of your father?
15546Did you, too, think it was Pnyx?
15546Elizabeth Eliza would know;but how could she reach Elizabeth Eliza?
15546Have they gone to Egypt?
15546Have you been there all this time?
15546Have you had fresh dates?
15546Have you heard the new invention, my dears, That a man has invented?
15546How did you get away?
15546How should she be able to speak to him, or tell anybody whom Elizabeth Eliza had married?
15546Is there a Sphinx in Athens?
15546Oh, Carrie,said her mother, mournfully,"how can you use such expressions now, when you have wasted your opportunity in such an extravagant wish?"
15546The seam we pin, Driving them in; But where are they, by the end of the day, With dancing and jumping and leaps by the sea? 15546 WHERE CAN THOSE BOYS BE?"
15546WHERE CAN THOSE BOYS BE?
15546Was his name Solomon John?
15546Was she eating her own supper or somebody''s else? 15546 Were there two little boys?"
15546What are you going to wear?
15546What had happened? 15546 What is it?
15546What shall we do?
15546What shall we do?
15546When did you begin to grow?
15546Where are Jonas and Dick?
15546Where are the boys?
15546Where do you suppose we shall go?
15546Where have you been all winter?
15546Where have you been?
15546Where is Elizabeth Eliza? 15546 Where is it?"
15546Where is that other omnibus?
15546Who are the Pentzes?
15546Who is Mr. Peterkin''s banker?
15546Why did n''t you come sooner?
15546Why did n''t you telegraph?
15546Why did you go to Vesuvius, when Papa said he could n''t?
15546Why not spend the night?
15546Why not telegraph to her for advice?
15546Why not write out your family adventures?
15546Why should not we ask the''grateful people''?
15546Why, yes,he said decidedly;"the horses of Achilles talked, do n''t you remember?"
15546You do n''t think Jonas and Dick both went to dine at the Wilsons''?
15546''How long do you think,''turning to Oscar,''you could keep them up in the air without letting them drop?''
15546A whole roomful of chocolate creams do you consider a waste?"
15546And how could you consult your books, your dictionaries, your encyclopædias?
15546Ann Maria, who had come late and taken the last seat on the other side, turned round and called across to me,"Why do you always take the sunny side?
15546But how can you go the day before, when you do n''t yet know the day?
15546But how many people are up at sunrise?
15546But how was Dick to get out again?
15546But how were they to be got into the squirrel- cage?
15546But of what use is it for me to write about what everybody is seeing, as long as they can see it as well as I do?
15546But where was Mr. Peterkin?
15546But where were they now?
15546But, Hester, do n''t you think fables are tiresome?
15546Could Mr. Peterkin have ventured into this treacherous place?
15546Could he have been in time to reach Elizabeth Eliza?
15546Could n''t you raise any dinner?"
15546Could she bear it, day after day, week after week?
15546Could she sacrifice what hair she had to the claims of literature?
15546Could she trust these men?
15546Did they come in that way?
15546Did you ever hear of a beast talking, Ernest, except in a fable?"
15546Do n''t you remember him?
15546Do not you see that we can make our fortune with chocolate creams?
15546Do you prefer it?"
15546Everybody said that she had best earned the distinction; for had she not come to the meeting by the longest way possible, by going away from it?
15546Had Solomon John been telegraphed to?
15546Had he come to Bordeaux with them?
15546Have you got something slam- bang for me?
15546How can we look at the sun?
15546How could they ever get into the parlor again, unless they were eaten up?
15546How had Agamemnon reached them?
15546How had they got in?
15546How many did she expect?
15546How, then, can we depend upon their statements, if not made from their own observation?--I mean, if they never saw the sun?
15546How, then, if we can not look at it, can we find out about it?
15546If she is dead, indeed, how can he?
15546If they went as far as Nijninovgorod, which was now decided upon, why could they not persevere through"Russia in Asia"?
15546In my two hands I can hold fourteen; now, how many times that do you suppose there are in the room?"
15546Is the Governor coming here?
15546Might not something be done by way of farewell before leaving for Egypt?
15546Mr. Dyer was a poor man; why should not he make a little money?
15546Of what use had the Noah''s Ark been?
15546Oh, wo n''t the men let us this new thing use?
15546Perhaps she had better give it up?
15546Peterkin?"
15546Questions and answers interrupted each other in a most confusing manner:--"Are you the little boys?"
15546She could fall in but once, but by the time they should reach Egypt, how many would be left out of a family of eight?
15546Should Jedidiah charge for the show, or not?
15546Should she now find herself on the back of one of those high camels?
15546Should they then meet Solomon John at the Pnyx, or summon him to Egypt?
15546The chariot and four( that means horses), the maid, and the boot- hooks,--no, the maid was scratched out,--not the chocolates?"
15546The little boys, however, said there always had been maple sugar every spring,--they had eaten it; why should n''t there be this spring?
15546The sight was indeed a welcome one to Mrs. Peterkin, and revived her so that she even began to ask questions:"Where had he come from?
15546Their return train was 3.30; how could 5 P.M. help them?
15546They supposed they had; but would they ever reach the vessel in New York?
15546They were all together; why not go home?
15546To whom, however, would she wish to send a telegram?
15546Was China invented at that time?
15546Was he Chufu or Shufu, and why Cheops?
15546Was it possible?
15546Was it they who had locked the door?
15546Was not this a snare to entice her into one of these narrow passages?
15546Were there three Solomon Johns?
15546Were they Peterkins, or were they not?"
15546Were they ready now to give up Plymouth?
15546What could be better?
15546What did the Governor say?"
15546What had become of the body of Chufu?
15546What had delayed them?
15546What have you seen?
15546What was it you told mother?"
15546What woman would know How to make the thing go?
15546When had Elizabeth Eliza seen him last?
15546Where could one find boot- buttoners enough?
15546Where indeed?
15546Where is Solomon John?"
15546Where was Solomon John?
15546Where were the other little boys?
15546Where would you keep your chariot and the four horses?"
15546Who was he?
15546Why had Mr. Dyer ever been so generous with his potatoes?
15546Why had he invited all the people to come?
15546Why had n''t they?
15546Why not have a pocket for the case in the umbrella?
15546Why not make their proposed excursion to the cousins at Gooseberry Beach, which they had been planning all summer?
15546Why not stop there, though there were some pages more?
15546Why should it not be a fancy ball?
15546Why should not they take their luncheon- basket across some ferry?
15546Would any of them be alive?
15546Would it be necessary for her to wish that Ben Sykes''s neck should be made shorter?
15546Would it not be better to remain in the ship, go back to Southampton, perhaps meet Elizabeth Eliza there, picking up Mr. Peterkin at Malta on the way?
15546Would not this be a good chance to have their photographs taken for their friends before leaving for Egypt?
15546Would the name be spelled right in the newspapers?
15546and where were the other little boys?
15546exclaimed Mr. Peterkin;"and how do you spell it?"
15546instead of those wearisome thorns, my dear, Those wearisome thorns?"
11158''Does she mean to stay me?'' 11158 ''The mermaids refuse my offering,''I said;''will you accept it?''
11158And not to see Mrs. Aaron Wilton?
11158And you are afraid to trust me with it?
11158Are you not ashamed to plead it? 11158 But Ernest?"
11158But how is this, Anna? 11158 But would not Maryland lose many more slaves, as the border member of a foreign confederacy, than she does now in the Union?"
11158But,the writer ventured to inquire,"what will become of the Federal District, since its inhabitants have no''State right of secession''?"
11158Can not give me my sister''s letter?
11158Can not he be both sexton and artist?
11158Could you bear to be shut in?
11158Crisis? 11158 DEAR HARRY,--"Do you know that I love him?--that I love Ernest?
11158Did Miss Lettie commission you to ask?
11158Did n''t I? 11158 Did you hear that noise, Miss Anna?"
11158Do I look like a murderer?
11158Do n''t turn your eyes away; do you know what certain words in this world mean?
11158Do you know the contents of the letter that made Lettie so anxious?
11158Do you know what it is, what it means, when a human soul calls out from its highest heights to another mortal,''Thou art mine''?
11158Do you refuse to give it to me?
11158Father, have you made me your friend?
11158Have you ever studied law?
11158Have you one drop of mercy for him who destroyed your sister?
11158Have you the letter that you picked up last night?
11158How can he?
11158How could we pass quietly along the very place?
11158How is he?
11158How?
11158I do n''t dispute the general truth,I replied,--"but, particularly, is this man''s life in danger?"
11158In case of general secession and war,the writer ventured next to inquire,"would there probably, in your opinion, be danger of a slave insurrection?"
11158Is Mr. Axtell an artist?
11158Is he so much hurt?
11158Is it any harm, papa?
11158Is it like Mary?
11158Is tea over?
11158Is this a place for songs? 11158 It will, papa; what is it?"
11158Look a here, Miss Anna,--isn''t it vastly funny master''s bringing a crazy man here? 11158 Look down upon us?"
11158No, how should you? 11158 Not if I were Harry''s betrothed?"
11158Papa,I said, as if introducing the most ordinary topic of conversation,"what was the occasion of sister Mary''s death?
11158Papa,I said,"why not tell me truly?
11158Perhaps I have not worn this one; but will you wear it to please me?
11158Secede? 11158 Sing for you?"
11158To pity Harry?
11158To whom, father?
11158Ugly time? 11158 Upon which side, Sir, do you think there is usually the most misunderstanding,--on the part of the North concerning the South?
11158Was Mary engaged to be married, father?
11158Was she sick, Chloe?
11158Were you here when she died?
11158What are you thinking of? 11158 What for?"
11158What has this to do with poor Ernest?
11158What is it? 11158 What it has done for me?"
11158What made her die, Chloe?
11158What should I know of the Nereïd?
11158What would these two good people say,I asked myself, in thinking,"if they knew all that I have learned in my visit, not yet a week long?"
11158Where are you going?
11158Where is it?
11158Who is it?
11158Who painted the portrait in your house?
11158Who was the master, Chloe?
11158Whose grave is this?
11158Why Ragmuff?
11158Why does not my father take me in? 11158 Why not, Mr. Axtell?
11158Why were we not lost in the same storm?
11158Why will it please you? 11158 Why, I did n''t consider there was one chance in a thousand of success,--did you?"
11158Why, how is this?
11158Will you come away from that cold, damp place?
11158Will you go?
11158Will you listen to me a little while?
11158Will you make me one promise, only one?
11158Will you rise?
11158You are confident, then, Sir, that fifteen States will secede?
11158You do not mean that my boy will look down upon his mother?
11158You do not mean to send Violet to Italy, and to take care of Ernest?
11158You will stay and see Harry and Ernest?
11158Your dream is too mystical; will you tell me what it has done for you? 11158 ----?
11158A few days after his mother''s death, he said to Violet,--"Is it not time for you to tell me that it is I who need you more than Ernest?
11158Almost every letter contains the inquiry,"What is the new breech- loading rifle you allude to, and where is it to be had?"
11158Am I a freeman?
11158Am I not his child, even as Sophie?"
11158And I looked down at my two passive hands, and asked,"Which one of them?"
11158And if they have done and are doing all this, who will be to blame, if the enemy shall accomplish their purpose?
11158And so I began by asking,--"Am I like my sister who died, Chloe?"
11158And where, oh, where, will it rise to?
11158Are not these still Iduna''s apples, the taste of which keeps the gods forever young?
11158As she lowered the latch without any sound, she would say to herself,"Why is it that boys must have all the fun, and girls all the work?"
11158At least, have not all men, everywhere, the sacred and comprehensive right of equal freedom of endeavor to occupy their highest capacities?
11158Besides, gentlemen do n''t wear marriage- rings: how came you to?"
11158But these beautiful thickets of birch and alder along the bank, how to get through them?
11158But what to do?
11158But( do you hate the moral to a story?)
11158Could not you hold it to earth more closely than that?
11158Could you be satisfied with him?
11158Did my father mean to keep me forever?
11158Do you know, Violet, that takes the life out of me?
11158Hath this been in your days, or even in the days of your fathers?...
11158Have you any more remarks to me?
11158He asked me,"Why?"
11158He has attained now, Ernest has, what he was looking for; and have I not a right to my reward?"
11158He looked at it, as he then had done, uncomprehending, and said only,--"Will I let you?"
11158He looked up, great tears falling from his eyes, and asked,--"Where?"
11158Honey darling, do n''t you know that Master Percival, your father, was my master ever so many years?"
11158How can society be kept together, if men will not keep their compacts?
11158How can we live with such men?
11158How can we remain?
11158How does the gardener treat his plants?
11158How, then, are they formed?
11158I am older than Sophie was when you took her in where I have not been; why will you not make me your friend?"
11158I asked,--"How is your sister since morning?"
11158I lifted my head from my father''s shoulder, and asked, in some dismay,--"What is it, father?"
11158I thought of the face in the Upper Country, and asked,--"Why?"
11158If you can not live for yourself, for me, will you not live for Harry''s sake?"
11158In what Jericho of the forest can he hide his diminished head?
11158Is it feared that taxes will check immigration?
11158Is my State, a free State, to lie down and submit because political fossils raise the cry of''The Glorious Union''?
11158Is not the body precious, too?
11158It is not symbolical, is it?"
11158KINDERGARTEN-- WHAT IS IT?
11158Lesser examples of this are seen in his grim jest at Westminster Hall,--"What use of so many lawyers?
11158Miss Percival, could you wear such a vestment in the march of life?"
11158My mother smiled: or was it my fancy?
11158Of what worth would the Declaration of Independence be now, had it not been for Trenton and Princeton, Saratoga and Yorktown?
11158Ordilinier?"
11158Refuse them, and what then?
11158Seward?"
11158That is pleasant, after all, is it not?"
11158The only question, is, How?"
11158The words,--what_ are_ they,--those that ope the door?
11158To secure the wisdom and perpetuity of this experiment, are not governments instituted?
11158Undoubtedly gentlemen make revolutions in history; but since all may be Christians, may not all men be gentlemen?
11158Was that the young girl?
11158Was there one that hung so high and sheltered by the tangled branches that our sticks could not dislodge it?
11158What am I to do?
11158What are the imported half- ripe fruits of the torrid South, to this fruit matured by the cold of the frigid North?
11158What care I for Iduna''s apples so long as I can get these?
11158What could Mr. Axtell have meant by saying that he had killed Mary, who, Chloe had assured me, died peaceably in her father''s house?
11158What do you think of it now?"
11158What if the brokers''quotations show our stocks discredited, and the gold dollar costs one hundred and twenty- seven cents?
11158What is a Kindergarten?
11158What matter, if I held the cold iron thereof to my lips awhile?
11158What was here?
11158When I found voice, it was to ask,--"''Who are you?''
11158When he paused for breath, in the width of detail that he furnished, I asked,--"When was this stranger brought here?"
11158When it came, she looked up into her father''s face and said,--"Papa, I am not a child, to be coaxed into forgetfulness; why will you not trust me?
11158Where is the Archimedes?
11158While the manly man of the woods is breathing Nature like an Amreeta draught, is it anything less than the_ summum bonum_?
11158Who shall stand godfather at the christening of the wild apples?
11158Whose fault is that?
11158Why a railroad, even a wooden one, here?
11158Why did self come up?
11158Why not marry shallop to stream?
11158Why not yield to the enticement of this current, fleet and clear, and gain a few beautiful miles before nightfall?
11158Why publish it just as the tide of war was turning in our favor?
11158Why was it that this little omission of Jeffy''s, the African boy, should create a vacancy?
11158Why wilt you be so careless of that?"
11158Why, it has been asked, spring it so suddenly upon the country?
11158Will you come into this boat, now?''
11158Will you come on shore?''
11158Will you come to me on the twenty- fifth of March?"
11158Will you forgive my rudeness?"
11158Will you take a walk with me?"
11158Would it ever go down?
11158Would it not tax a man''s invention,--no one to be named after a man, and all in the_ lingua vernacula_?
11158Would not the very soil of America, in which Liberty is said to inhere, cry out and rise against any but an affirmative answer to such questions?
11158Would you let her come?"
11158You can read, can you not?"
11158You will give me to him?
11158and think you that they will let Loki or Thjassi carry them off to Jötunheim, while they grow wrinkled and gray?
11158are you very sure the Nereïd is a sound vessel?"
11158how shall we know where to find him?"
11158or am I a man to sing?"
11158or on the part of the South concerning the North?"
11158said the honest soul,--"what for can that icy lady want to see old Chloe?"
11158what has happened to my child?"
11158what has happened?"
11158why?"
11158will this man recover?"
10532Canst thou by searching find out God?
10532Canst thou by searching find out Him? 10532 What is man that Thou art mindful of him?"
10532What sought they thus afar? 10532 Ah, what indeed is reality; what is the higher good; what is that which perishes never; what is that which assimilates man to Deity? 10532 And although it is supposed that the inductive method of Bacon has led to the noblest discoveries of modern times, is this strictly true? 10532 And do all men worship these forms of beauty which the imagination creates? 10532 And is any love worthy to be called love, if it does not inspire emotions which prompt to self- sacrifice, labor, and lofty ends? 10532 And is love, among mortals generally, based on such a foundation? 10532 And what man ever had such a sublimity of aspect and figure as the creations of Michael Angelo? 10532 And what then? 10532 And who, since Paul, has rendered greater service to humanity than Luther? 10532 And why? 10532 And will you, ye boasted intellectual guides of the people, extinguish reason in this world in reference to the most momentous interests? 10532 Are all her struggles in behalf of liberty in vain? 10532 Are not flowers and shrubs which beautify the lawn as desirable as beans and turnips and cabbages? 10532 Are not most of the sciences which are based upon it progressive? 10532 Are they inhabited by intelligent and immortal beings? 10532 Are we really swinging back to Paganism? 10532 Bright jewels of the mine? 10532 But around what centre do they revolve? 10532 But has America no higher destiny than to repeat the old experiments, and improve upon them, and become rich and powerful? 10532 But how could this El Dorado be reached? 10532 But is it a failure? 10532 But where were the men capable of framing a constitution for the republic? 10532 But who can interpret them? 10532 Can any woman, or any man, seen exactly as they are, incite a love which is kindred to worship? 10532 Can anybody doubt the marvellous progress of Protestant nations in consequence of the translation and circulation of the Scriptures? 10532 Can not a country grow materially to a certain point, under the most adverse influences, in a religious and moral point of view? 10532 Can peasants and women, or even merchants and nobles? 10532 Can she lay hold of forces that the Old World never had, such as will prevent the uniform doom of nations? 10532 Can such a man be stigmatized asthe meanest of mankind"?
10532Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?"
10532Creation involves a creator; and can the order and harmony seen in Nature''s laws exist without Supreme intelligence and power?
10532Did not the Romans have nearly all we have, materially, except our modern scientific inventions?
10532Do not our cities elect such rulers as the demagogues point out?
10532Do not the few rule, even in a Congregational church?
10532Do we not plant our grounds with the acacia, the oak, the cedar, the elm, as well as with the apple, the pear, and the cherry?
10532Does San Francisco or New York send its greatest men to Congress?
10532Does this fidelity to an official and professional duty, even if he were harsh, make him"the meanest of mankind"?
10532Grant that Essex had bestowed favors, and was an accomplished and interesting man,--was Bacon to ignore his official duties?
10532Has she no higher and nobler mission?
10532Has she no other mission than to add to perishable glories?
10532Have not material forces and glories been developed and exhibited, whatever the religion and morals of the fallen nations?
10532Have not your grand councils given contradictory decisions?
10532Have the spots upon the career of Bacon hidden the brightness of his general beneficence?
10532Have we yet learned the ultimate principles of political economy, or of geology, or of government, or even of art?
10532Have you considered what a mighty crime you thus commit against God, against man?
10532How are these things to be reconciled and explained?
10532How could he have written sonnets without an inspiration, unless he felt sentiments higher than we associate with either boys or girls?
10532How could the inexperienced citizens of Florence comprehend the complicated relations of governments?
10532How often did he excuse him to his royal mistress, at the risk of incurring her displeasure?
10532I ask myself, Why should America be an exception to the uniform fate of nations, as history has demonstrated?
10532If so, how ignominious are all politicians who flatter the people and solicit their votes?
10532In what consisted the real glory of the country we are never weary of quoting,--the land of Phidias and Pericles and Demosthenes?
10532Is America to become like Europe and Asia in all essential elements of life?
10532Is he the meanest of men because he had great faults?
10532Is induction, great as it is, especially in the explorations of Nature and science, always certain?
10532Is it an improvement to give up a simple life and lofty religious enthusiasm for materialistic enjoyments and epicurean display?
10532Is it not by deduction that we ascend from Nature herself to the God of Nature?
10532Is it not natural to be obsequious to those who have offices to bestow?
10532Is not the rose or tulip as great an addition to even a poor man''s cottage as his bed of onions or patch of potatoes?
10532Is not this science worthy of some regard?
10532Is she to teach the world nothing new in education and philanthropy and government?
10532Is that the meanest or the most uncommon thing in this world?
10532Is that which is most useful always the most valuable,--that, I mean, which gives the highest pleasure?
10532Is the time to be hailed when all religions will be considered by the philosopher as equally false and equally useful?
10532Is there an imagination so lofty that will not be oppressed with the discoveries that even the telescope has made?
10532Is there nothing before us, then, but the triumphs of material life, to end as mournfully as the materialism of antiquity?
10532Knowest thou the ordinances of Heaven?
10532Now what inspired so strange a purpose?
10532Of what are they composed?
10532Or is it what we fancy in the object of our adoration, what exists already in our own minds,--the archetypes of eternal ideas of beauty and grace?
10532Some may boldly say,"Why not?
10532Suppose she had become his wife, might he not have been disenchanted, and his veneration been succeeded by a bitter disappointment?
10532The great question of all time pressed upon his mind with peculiar force,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
10532The wealth of seas,--the spoils of war?
10532This trait is not commendable, but is it the meanest thing we see?
10532Unless something new is born here which has a peculiar power to save, wherein will America ultimately differ from other parts of Christendom?
10532Was it not a good time to die and consummate his protests?
10532We admit that Bacon was a sinner; but was he a sinner above all others who cast stones at Jerusalem?
10532What are the great realities,--machinery, new breeds of horses, carpets, diamonds, mirrors, gas?
10532What conservative power has been strong enough to arrest the ruin of the nations of antiquity?
10532What could austerities do for_ him_?
10532What gave beauty and placidity to Descartes and Leibnitz and Kant?
10532What had he more to gain?
10532What has Voltaire or Hume or Froude told the world, essentially, that it did not know before?
10532What has made France rich since the Revolution?
10532What is more certain than deduction when the principles from which it reasons are indisputably established?
10532What is the explanation of this singular phenomenon?
10532What is the marketable value of friendship or of love?
10532What is the material profit of a first love?
10532What is the scale to measure even mortal happiness?
10532What is the secret of such a wonderful success?
10532What made"The Pilgrim''s Progress"the most popular book ever published in England?
10532What makes the dinner of herbs sometimes more refreshing than the stalled ox?
10532What mortal woman ever expressed the ethereal beauty depicted in a Madonna of Raphael or Murillo?
10532What other guide has a man but his reason?
10532What philosophical teachings led to the machinery of the mines of California, or to that of the mills of Lowell?
10532What raised Plato to the highest pinnacle of intellectual life?
10532What remains of Nineveh, of Babylon, of Thebes, of Tyre, of Carthage,--those great centres of wealth and power?
10532What remains of Roman greatness even, except in laws and literature and renovated statues?
10532What was life to him, diseased, infirm, and old?
10532What was the spirit of the truths_ he_ taught?
10532What were realities to Anselm, Bernard, and Bonaventura?
10532What would Gregory I. say to the verdicts of Gregory VII.?
10532When Florence is deliberating about the choice of an ambassador to Rome, he playfully, yet still arrogantly, exclaims:"If I remain behind, who goes?
10532Where has civilization shown any striking triumphs, except in inventions to abridge the labors of mankind and make men comfortable and rich?
10532Where was he to get money except from the contributions of Christendom?
10532Which is worse, the physical arm of the beast, or the maniac soul of a lying prophet?
10532Who but the Church can do this?
10532Who can deny them?
10532Who can improve on the sagacity and worldly wisdom of the Proverbs of Solomon?
10532Who can love this perishable form, unless one sees in it some traits which belong to superior and immortal natures?
10532Who could adequately pay him for his services; who could estimate the value of his gift?
10532Who could smile or joke or eat or sleep or have any pleasure, if he thought seriously there would be no cessation or release from endless pains?
10532Who devised the cathedrals of the Middle Ages?
10532Who does not admire the church architecture of the Middle Ages?
10532Who does not criticise his neighbor''s house, its proportions, its general effect, its adaptation to the uses designed?
10532Who does not stop to admire a beautiful window, or porch, or portico?
10532Who does not value them?
10532Who ever tires in gazing at a locomotive as it whirls along with the power of destiny?
10532Who ever was satisfied in contemplating the diversified wonders of those venerable structures?
10532Who first sang the odes which Homer incorporated with the Iliad?
10532Who first turned up the earth with a plough?
10532Who first used the weaver''s shuttle?
10532Who gave the keel to ships?
10532Who gave the lyre to primeval ages, or the blacksmith''s forge, or the letters of the alphabet, or the arch in architecture, or glass for windows?
10532Who invented chimneys?
10532Who invented the mariner''s compass?
10532Who is not astonished at the triumphs of the engineer, the wonders of an ocean- steamer, the marvellous tunnels under lofty mountains?
10532Who solved the first problem of geometry?
10532Who was the first that raised bread by yeast?
10532Who will not value them so long as our mortal bodies are to be cared for?
10532Who would call Webster the meanest of mankind because he had an absurd desire to live like an English country gentleman?
10532Who, then, and what, is God?
10532Whom shall we believe?
10532Why could he not see the perfections he adored shining in other women, who perhaps had a higher claim to them?
10532Why could not Galileo have been as great in martyrdom as Savonarola?
10532Why could not those races retain their primitive revelation?
10532Why did Christianity itself become corrupted in four centuries?
10532Why did Copernicus escape persecution?
10532Why did he not accept the penalty of intellectual freedom, and die, if die he must?
10532Why did he suffer himself to be conquered by priests he despised?
10532Why did not civilization and Christianity save the Roman world?
10532Why did not the Middle Ages preserve the evangelical doctrines of Augustine and Jerome and Chrysostom and Ambrose?
10532Why did so bold and witty and proud a man betray his cause?
10532Why did the Jesuits become unpopular and lose their influence?
10532Why did the Jewish nation steadily retrograde after David?
10532Why did the descendants of Noah become almost idolaters before he was dead?
10532Why did the fervor of the Puritans burn out in England in one hundred years?
10532Why did the great Persian Empire become as effeminate as the empires it had supplanted?
10532Why did the light of the glorious Reformation of Luther nearly go out in the German cities and universities?
10532Why did they lose their popularity?
10532Why have the doctrines of the Pilgrim Fathers become unfashionable in those parts of New England where they seemed to have taken the deepest root?
10532Why should not Protestants of every shade cherish and defend this sacred right?
10532Why should not good institutions be perverted here, as in all other countries and ages of the world?
10532Why speak of life or death to me, Whose days are but a span?
10532Why till recently was Germany so poor?
10532Why were the antediluvians swept away?
10532Why were they so distrusted and hated?
10532Will he abjure the doctrines on which his fame rests?
10532Will he recant?
10532Will he subscribe himself an imposter?
10532Yea, the popes themselves, your infallible guides,--have they not at different times rendered different decisions?
10532and if I go, who remains behind?"
10532or are they affections, friendships, generous impulses, inspiring thoughts?
13631''Are you T. Markham Worthington?'' 13631 ''Authorized to sell his picture in the Academy, Number----?''
13631''But you do n''t mean to say,''I exclaimed,''that your contributors are expected to work from charity?'' 13631 ''Does it hang next to a lady in a purple shawl, by Huntington?''
13631''Glad to see you, Sir,--hope you''ll continue your contributions,--Uncle Job,--good idea, Sir,--love the little ones? 13631 ''How much are you willing to give?''
13631''How much does he ask for it?'' 13631 ''Will you give me my manuscripts?''
13631''Will you give me my manuscripts?'' 13631 A bad match for her?"
13631A friend of yours?
13631And what of the last, or of both?
13631And you intend to leave this wholesome world,--you, whose career might be such as few have it in their power to choose? 13631 Art beguiled you then, perhaps?"
13631Can you imagine my feelings?
13631Did they bring slaves?
13631Did you ever hear of Herbert Vannelle?
13631Did you ever paint again?
13631Did you ever write poetry?
13631Do you mean that pleasure must be an outgrowth of pain to be properly appreciated?
13631Doctor,said King James to a Puritan divine,"do you go barefoot because the Papists wear shoes and stockings?"
13631For who,as it was sometimes pertinently asked,"would charge anything for a poor little innocent child?"
13631Give up? 13631 Has any one described to you this house or its contents?"
13631Have you ever tried it?
13631He has n''t a married look, has he?
13631How do my good friends in Foxden?
13631I wash my hands in de mornin''glory, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? 13631 Is Mr. Clifton of Foxden in the library?"
13631Is he married?
13631Is it possible?
13631Is it too late?
13631Is it true that Dr. Dastick has presented his cabinet of curiosities to the town?
13631Now what will you do, driver?
13631On what?
13631Pray, Tony, pray, boy, you got de order, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh? 13631 Tried it?"
13631Wal, what''s the good on''t? 13631 Was it a man?
13631Well, he don''t.--What do you say to these trunks? 13631 Well, when you grow up, you''ll probably get married, as other people do, and you''ll have your little children; now, what will you do with them?"
13631Well, who''ll pay the teacher?
13631What State?
13631What are you going to do there?
13631What are you going to do with the corn?
13631What are you going to do with the cotton?
13631What are you going to do with the money you get for it?
13631What are you reading?
13631What else are you going to do with your money?
13631What else will you buy?
13631What else?
13631What has he done for you?
13631What island?
13631What town?
13631What was this man?
13631What''s this? 13631 When?"
13631Where from now?
13631Who brought them?
13631Who came the same year to Plymouth, Massachusetts?
13631Who is your Governor?
13631Who is your President?
13631Who''s going to pay him?
13631A devil infernal?
13631A street- boy of some sort?
13631A teacher in Beaufort put these questions, to which answers were given in a loud tone by the whole school:--"What country do you live in?"
13631After greeting his child, he said,"And how does mamma''s little girl like her leaving her?"
13631An angel supernal?"
13631And did I not vindicate triumphantly Miss Patty''s confidence?
13631And how shall this be done?
13631And now, Lewis, whence come you, and whither go?"
13631And the blood in our veins, it is an infinite force: but of what temper?
13631And what''s to be done with these three packages?"
13631And where is that model race which shall sway them all?
13631And, will the reader believe it?
13631And_ how_?
13631As Clifton emerged from the magical influence of Vannelle, was it not concentrated upon me?
13631Babe in silken cradle lying, To low music tossed, Will they wake thee for my dying?
13631But I must have dreamed it, or how should I have thought it the last trumpet, when it was only the stage- driver''s warning knock?
13631But as they approached nearer,"What have they got with''em?"
13631But how deal with what came to me from that wondrous writing in the ambiguities of common language?
13631But how shall he do any good who bears about him a quick conscience, a skeptical understanding, sensitive religious affections, and a feeble will?
13631But what is it in the sea which affects Lord Byron''s susceptibilities to grandeur?
13631But what use to go on without the driver?
13631But what were the authorities to do, when, in addition to all legal and Scriptural precedents, the prisoners insisted on entering a plea of guilty?
13631But what, then, have you in there,--I mean, besides your shirts, etc.?"
13631Did the famous Cambridge Platform rest, like the earth in the Hebrew cosmology, upon the waters,--strong waters?
13631Did you ever go fishing in a dory when the wind was off shore?"
13631Do you go to the Deacon''s?"
13631Do you walk?
13631Does it minister to Moloch, or to Apollo?
13631Does the best stage- trick of your liberal clergy help them to anything but a plasticity of mind to be moulded into artistic forms of skepticism?
13631For of what sort is this unusual activity?
13631Had I a doubt?
13631Had this refined probing and questioning deadened all sense of duty?
13631Hence it happens that so many of our fellow- countrymen are at this moment asking the question with which we head these pages,--"Who is Roebuck?"
13631His daughter arranged the blankets around them, saying,"Is that better, papa?"
13631How can I describe the events and vicissitudes that befell us during this journey of three days and a half to New York?
13631How can we love with our whole heart what we do not know with our whole mind?
13631How can you come out from your partial dogmas to enter Truth and find it alone dogmatic and compulsive?
13631How can you feel the delight of a definite, positive affirmation which accounts for and includes all creeds and lives of men?
13631How give words to the singular emotions which soon possessed me?
13631How is it that the time not thus occupied is spent?--in what remembrances, in what hidden thoughts, what passing dreams?
13631How many drops?
13631How many hours will it be before she can be here?
13631How much of that which glorified De Quincey was due to opium?
13631How would it seem among so many others?
13631How, then, resist the inclination to see out the adventure upon which I had stumbled?
13631Huddy oh?
13631I wash my hands in de mornin''glory, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh?
13631I would only faintly express how terribly real was the delusion( the world would so call it, and who am I to gainsay it?)
13631If it is unusual or improper, why does he not deny the soft impeachment so much credited both in this country and in his own?
13631If the proceeding in question is a usual one, why does he not openly avow it?
13631In such pleasant chat( and why not?
13631In which settlement of the Massachusetts Colony is the great observance to pass before our eyes?
13631Is it certain that the same evidence which sufficed for the foundation of religious faith five hundred years ago will suffice equally well to- day?
13631Is it through any high moral purpose or meaning that seems to sway the movements of destruction?
13631Is it warm, or is it cold?
13631Is n''t it the very worst specimen of art you ever saw?''
13631Is there not here some solution of the question of prejudice or caste which has troubled so many good minds?
13631It is the old distinction; but for which is the ship built, to be afloat or to be at anchor?
13631Like one caught in the whorls of some happy dream, who will not pause to ask,"Whither?"
13631May it not be that God adapts the proofs of that which it is important that man should know to the intellectual progress of mankind?
13631May it not be that the links connecting the two phases of existence are gradually to become more numerous and apparent?
13631Mortimer, do you know where them are?''
13631Moving in another direction, I said to a soldier,--"What do you think of that regiment?"
13631One is, Will the people of African descent work for a living?
13631One night he said, when I entered the room,--"''Is that you, Horace?''
13631Pray, Tony, pray, boy, you got de order, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh?
13631Shall we ever finish packing?"
13631Shall we try again to compress the gigantic genie into the copper vessel?
13631Should I take her to look at it?
13631Should I tell her it was mine?
13631So deep is the sky: but of what_ hue_, of what aspect?
13631Some white soldiers seeing them approach from the wharf, one said,--"What are those coming?"
13631Springing down, he went on, laughing, before us, now and then calling back to ask if we were nearly through?
13631That is, do you like walking for four hours''_ on end_''--(which is our archaic expression for_ continuously_)?
13631The questions and answers, in which all the pupils joined, were these:--"Where were slaves first brought to this country?"
13631Then the question was put,--"What are you going to do Sundays?"
13631Vannelle turned to me and said, slowly,--"Have you been here before?"
13631WHO IS ROEBUCK?
13631Was I bound to jeopard all the common good of life for the chance of-- just failing to know existence from a higher plane?
13631Was any agency then expected which has not been forthcoming?
13631Was he ever known to make his appearance at any dinner in season, or indeed at any entertainment?
13631Was it good, after all?
13631Was it his style?
13631Was it learning?
13631Was it only the Derry Presbyterians who would never give up a p''int of doctrine, nor a pint of rum?
13631Was it were- wolf spectral, or bear aboriginal?
13631Was this the end of my Absolute Philosophy, that the intellect should usurp the place of the conscience and the moral law?
13631We had a dialogue substantially as follows:--"Children, what are you going to do when you grow up?"
13631What blame to me, if I am here to do this?
13631What can it be?
13631What else is there?"
13631What need to tell how I was fascinated, mesmerized, into a humble companionship?
13631What sycophant could fawn and smirk in that chilly presence?
13631What was De Quincey_ without_ opium?
13631What was it, again, that entitled Johnson to kingly honors?
13631What woman would kiss that ghastly cheek?
13631What''s better than that?"
13631What, then, was to be done?
13631When they asked Mary Dyer,"Are you not ashamed to walk thus hand in hand between two young men?"
13631Whence this marked difference?
13631Where shall it be sent?''
13631Who had bought my picture?
13631Who has ever scaled the rapture of the former, or fathomed the pathos of the latter?
13631Who now remembers that our progenitors for more than a century disused religious services on both these solemn occasions?
13631Who would buy it?
13631Why art thou not with us?
13631Why has not some poet celebrated the experience of thawing?
13631Why not you?"
13631Wifely love, the closer clinging When men need thee most, Shall I come, dishonor bringing?
13631Will it shape the Madonna face, or the Medusa?
13631Wine is strong, and so is the crude alcohol but what the_ mellowness_?
13631Would Ellen like it?
13631Would it be accepted?
13631Yet who can say that this habit of agonizing introspection wholly shut out the trivial enjoyments of daily life?
13631You are sure our names are down at the stage- office?"
13631You take tea, I suppose?
13631[ A] In de mornin''when I rise, Tell my Jesus, Huddy oh?
13631[ Footnote A: How d''y''do?]
13631and the other is, Will they fight for their freedom?
13631how I became inspired with his own mighty belief in the feasibility of the object he strove to attain?
13631no habitant of earth thou art,-- An_ unseen_ seraph we believe in thee"?
13631or the following:--"Who loves, raves,--''tis youth''s frenzy,"etc.?
13631what avails it, if the spring be bright?''
13631what is that?
15794Charlie, my dear,said Mrs. Marlow,"Do n''t you think we could finish the story after dinner?
15794How do you know Mr. McFee wants to see you?
15794How''s the game this morning?
15794Is it?
15794Is n''t the house very cold?
15794Is that the_ Leviathan_ up there?
15794Is this one of them?
15794Now, why did you get on a train without making sure where it stopped? 15794 Pigs in clover,"they sometimes call it, but who knows why?
15794Single, or return?
15794Want to see a freak?
15794Well,he said, without a trace of nervousness;"what''ll you have?"
15794What is he doing now?
15794What was it you ordered?
15794What''s the matter with this car?
15794Which of the vice- presidents are you going to vote for?
15794You see?
15794( Heavens, were they some minor offshoot of the Hohenzollern tribe?)
15794( Speaking of that, a very jolly article in this month''s_ Bookman_, called"How Old Is Sherlock Holmes?"
15794( What, the club wondered inwardly, does Mr. La Follette know of seafaring?)
15794( Who sees so little as he who looks through a microscope?)
15794( Who was Cobb, we wonder?)
15794AJAX: How would you work out the plan?
15794AJAX: I wonder if your experience is the same as mine was?
15794AJAX: What do you mean by that?
15794Against that stump-- is it a real stump, or only a painted canvas affair from the property man''s warehouse?--surely that is a demijohn of cider?
15794And at the top, what do you find, just before going out upon that gallery to spread your eye upon man''s reticulated concerns?
15794And did he therefore look down upon, or otherwise feel inclined to belittle our tie?
15794And then, when all the children were bedded for the night, how would the domestic atmosphere be simulated?
15794At the corner of Grand Street is the Sapphire Café, and what could be a more appealing name than that?
15794But where is the beautiful girl with slick dark hair who used to be at the Reading terminal news- stand?
15794But who is this gallant little figure darting up the rope ladder with fluttering skirts?
15794But, is there not just a faint suggestion of smugness in her mien?
15794Can he jump so far?
15794Can the spiders have learned their technology by watching those cheerful scientists on the golf greens?]
15794Can you guess the writer of it?
15794Can you look on them without marvelling at their gallant mien?
15794Can you see that caravan of life without a pang?
15794Did J---- keep his copy of the book, I wonder, and did he annotate it with lively commentary of his own?
15794Did he_ infer_ the existence of that spot, even though he did not see it?
15794Do we expect great things to come to pass without corresponding suffering?
15794Do you find a little temple or cloister for meditation, or any way of marking in your mind the beauty and significance of the place?
15794Do you remember how Burke''s speech on Conciliation was parsed and sub- headed in the preface to the school- texts?
15794Does he not belong to the conquering class that has us all under its thumb?
15794Does our intrepid weaver hurl himself madly six feet into the dark, trusting to catch the leaf at the other end?
15794Excuse me, but have you seen me jump up and pull the baby''s clothes from the line?
15794For two thousand years poets have mocked and taunted the cruelties and follies of men, but to what purpose?
15794GISSING: Do you believe in Right and Wrong?
15794GISSING: Then instinct is not to be obeyed?
15794Hardy writes"The Dynasts,"Joseph Conrad writes his great preface to"The Nigger of the_ Narcissus_,"but do the destroyers hear them?
15794Have you read again, since the War, Gulliver''s"Voyage to the Houyhnhnms,"or Herman Melville''s"Moby Dick"?
15794How is it done?
15794How is it, he wondered, that ladies know instinctively, even when vested in several layers of blankets, if anything is wrong with the furnace?
15794How many million such he has devoured, and must he take these, too?
15794I mean, are they absolute, or only relative?
15794I wonder if the critics have not too insistently persuaded us to read our poet in a black- edged mood?
15794Is Time never sated with loveliness?
15794Is it possible that tadpoles weep?
15794Is there no one who wonders about these merry little hostages?
15794It being now 5:10 by our time, what are we to do?
15794No?
15794Now can Pete Corcoran wonder why we are fond of it, and why, ever and anon, we get it out and wear it in remembrance?
15794O where hae ye been, my handsome young man?
15794On such an occasion, the chat went like this: GISSING: Do you believe in God?
15794Or a pigskin tobacco pouch while it is still rather new?
15794Or the colour of the_ Atlantic Monthly_ in the old days, when it lay longer on the stands than it does now, and got faintly bleached?
15794Poor Mrs. Marlow( have I mentioned her before?)
15794SOCRATES: And when Cassandra went away you found yourself desolate?
15794Shall we dash up to the waiting room and have another look?
15794Shall we say, the colour of a corncob pipe, singed and tawnied by much smoking?
15794So when Pete Corcoran spoke about our tie, was that what was in his mind, we wondered?
15794Surely it would be more seemly to be at home?
15794The last I knew-- six years ago-- he was a contractor in an Ohio city; and( is this not significant?)
15794There was a wayside chapel with painted frescoes and Latin inscriptions( why did n''t we make a note of them, we wonder?)
15794This moves us to ask, how can you tell?
15794Very well, very well indeed, we said to ourselves; let the world revolve; in the meantime, what is that printed in blackface type upon the menu?
15794Was it a yell against the railroad for not adding an extra brace of cars?
15794Was it written that sticks should be pursued in this strange and alien element?
15794Was n''t there such a ditty?
15794Was that the Mohawk Valley that glittered in the morning?
15794Was this Gorgeous Georges, this blood- smeared, wilting, hunted figure, flitting desperately from the grim, dark- jowled avenger?
15794We think seriously of writing a note,"_ What are you reading?_"and weighting it with an inkwell and hurling it down to him.
15794We wonder if any Albany booksellers chance to recall a sudden flash of colour that came, moved along the shelves, and was gone?
15794We wonder whether he has gone back yet?
15794We wonder who bought her, and how much he paid; and why she carries the odd name of that Long Island village?
15794We wonder, is it out of order?
15794Well, should she arrive here at two o''clock or at four?
15794Were Mr. Green such a man as the captain, would he be lowering himself to have any truck with journalists and such petty folk?
15794Were we really blowzy, we said to ourself?
15794What are you making such a racket about?
15794What do we care for what( most of) the critics say?
15794What do you say, shall we have recourse to a beaker of ginger ale and discuss this matter?
15794What does it matter that he( probably) knows less about cooking than you or I?
15794What happens to the used ribbons of modern poets?
15794What is there that so moves the heart?
15794What should we do?
15794What was this etiquette?
15794When the barber says, genially,"Well, have you done your Christmas shopping yet?"
15794Where, now, do we see any cohesive binding together of humanity?
15794Who else, in modern times, came so close to holding unruffled in his hand the shy wild bird of Poetry?
15794Why, one wonders, should we cry out at the pangs and scuffles of the subway?
15794Why, we asked gently, in these peaceful times is it so difficult to visit a friend who happens to be in a ship?
15794Why, we wonder, does n''t our friend fill the remaining blank panel on his side wall by painting there some stanzas from Calverley''s"Ode to Tobacco?"
15794With what strange cruelties will he trouble them, their very gayety a temptation to his hand?
15794Would he take gladly to the ocean?
15794Yes, I know you were in a hurry, but that was n''t our fault, was it?
15794You heard the brakeman say:''Newark and Philadelphia''?
15794[ Illustration] BOOKS OF THE SEA The National Marine League asks, What are the ten best books of the sea?
15794[ Illustration] THE CLUB OF ABANDONED HUSBANDS AJAX: Hullo, Socrates, what are you doing patrolling the streets at this late hour?
15794[ Illustration] WEST BROADWAY Did you ever hear of Finn Square?
15794had not the company manager himself condescended to share a two- room suite with us in the Kingsborough Hotel that night?
15794we raise the book and point to this maxim:_ Taciturnity is natural to man._ When he says,"How about a nice little shampoo this morning?"
15122Ai n''t that a cooky slipped around to the back of my blouse? 15122 Am I to keep it always, fair princess?"
15122And the seeds and the strawberry plants?
15122Betty, are you awake?
15122Could n''t we take one to Mom Beck, mothah? 15122 Did we lose any of them on the way, Allison?
15122Did you ask in the office, Papa Jack, when the girls would be back?
15122Did you evah see anything so sma''ht as that in all yo''life? 15122 Did you hear what Colonel Wayne told mamma as we left?"
15122Do n''t you see that he does n''t like it?
15122Do you heah that?
15122Do you remember the night I put you to sleep at the Cuckoo''s Nest?
15122Do you suppose that I could train the two Bobs to do that? 15122 Do you suppose there is a spinning- wheel anywhere in the neighbourhood that we could borrow?"
15122Have you had a hard storm here?
15122How did he get here?
15122How will you go all the way to the seashore to tell her?
15122I suppose nothing could induce you to give him up to the army?
15122Is he really mine?
15122Is he your dog?
15122Is n''t it going to be a Red Cross entahtainment, and is n''t Hero a Red Cross dog? 15122 It was an accident, was it not?"
15122May I hold him for a minute?
15122Oh, do you really think I could, godmother? 15122 Oh, what is it?"
15122Really, Papa Jack? 15122 See the caldron and the bells on the handle?
15122The night after you fell down the barn stairs, playing barley- bright? 15122 The seven brothers who were changed to swans, and the good sister who wove a coat for each one out of flax she spun from the churchyard nettles?
15122Think I''d go back on anybody that had saved my life? 15122 Was n''t Hero fine?
15122Was the trip as delightful as you dreamed it would be, my little Tusitala?
15122Well, what is it, Titania?
15122Well, what is it, my Princess Winsome?
15122Well, why not?
15122What can we use for the brassards and costumes?
15122What do you mean?
15122What do you suppose his name is?
15122What happened next? 15122 What is it in English?"
15122What kind of a memory are you leaving behind you?
15122What makes you so quiet?
15122When did Hero save your life?
15122When did_ you_ come?
15122When is the family coming out from town, Andy?
15122Where did he go?
15122Where did they get all those stores?
15122Where is Hero?
15122Where is the bugler of this camp? 15122 Who''ll buy all the balloons for the fairies, and make our spangled wings?"
15122Whose day is it for the pony- cart?
15122Why ca n''t you distinguish yourself by writing a play that will make us all proud of you, and at the same time swell the funds of the Red Cross?
15122Why did Papa Jack write this on the first sheet in the box, mothah?
15122Why not? 15122 Will it be a Road of the Loving Heart?"
15122Will you give him the order, Miss Lloyd?
15122Will you tell us some more to- morrow?
15122Wo n''t you look ovah it, please, and see if all the words are spelled right? 15122 Would n''t you like to come too, and hear the fairy tale with us?"
15122You got them at the cake shop on the corner, did n''t you? 15122 You''d nevah think that she was only fifteen, would you?"
15122You''re goin''to put Hero in it, are n''t you?
15122_ Do_ you wish you were back in the French army, following the ambulances and hunting the wounded soldiahs? 15122 A lookin''-glass that would play''Kingdom Comin'', when she picked it up? 15122 A sympathetic silence fell on the little circle left behind as they heard Lloyd cry out,Shot my dog?
15122And now, O Princess Winsome, How much hast thou spun, As thy wheel, a- whirling, Turned from sun to sun?
15122And that Howl will follow me around as he did on shipboard, beggin''for stories?
15122Are we, Henny?"
15122Are you in earnest?
15122Are you in earnest?"
15122But what if she Has made mistake, and thread of gold Is not enough to draw our son From out the Ogre''s cruel hold?
15122Can it be That thou hast taken such shape?
15122Canst think of nought, your Majesty?
15122Did n''t he do his part beautifully?"
15122Did n''t she, mamma?
15122Did you evah think how solemn it is, Betty Lewis, to be away out in the middle of the ocean, with nothing but a few planks between us and drownin''?
15122Do n''t they, mamma?"
15122Do you begin to realise, Mary, what a load of responsibility we have taken on our shoulders?
15122Do you suppose he has forgotten his training, Lloyd?
15122Do you want anything?"
15122Do_ you_ know them?"
15122Does n''t she, Henny?"
15122Have you got anything to trade for a chance to go?"
15122Have you seen him?"
15122He laid a book upon it, open at a picture of seven white swans,"Do you remember this?"
15122He was a war dog, was n''t he?
15122How could one be hungry when some inward power, past understanding, was making music in one''s soul?
15122How did you ever think of it?"
15122How did you get heah?"
15122How would you like to have yo''name come out in a big American newspapah?"
15122Is he goin''to stay heah all the time?"
15122Is it something Swiss or French?"
15122It''s better to do that than to take more than a week, and give up the camping party, is n''t it?"
15122It_ could n''t_ be anything so lovely as that, could it?"
15122Knowest thou not full well The Princess thou hast stolen away Is guarded by Fairy spell?
15122Little white dove with the white, white breast, What may that message be?
15122May I go walkin''with him aftah awhile, mothah?"
15122May I read it now at the table, mothah?
15122May I take Hero?"
15122May n''t I go now?"
15122Mrs. Sherman laughed and Mr. Sherman said,"Do you know that you are actually up above the clouds?
15122Must we stand here And powerless lift no hand to speed The rescue of our children dear?
15122Now are all the characters decided upon?"
15122Now, what is it you say to Hero when you want him to hunt the men?
15122ON THE WING"Who is going away?"
15122Of nothing else?
15122Perching on a bench near by with Hero for a foot- stool, she asked,"Majah, is Hero a St. Bernard or a Red Cross dog?"
15122Princess Winsome kneeling with arm around Dog''s neck.__ Princess.__ Art_ thou my brother?
15122See how sunshiny and satiny they are?
15122Shot_ Hero?_ Oh, he ought to be killed!
15122Sir Knight, the Faithful Feal, Is to my rescue riding?
15122So how could I evah find out?
15122Sort of wheezy, was n''t it?
15122That magic flute of the South Wind, sweet, Will he blow it, over the lea?
15122The Major would have chosen this?
15122The Princess Winsome thou shalt we d._ Queen._ But tell us, how dost thou think to cope With the Ogre so dread and grim?
15122They were blue as the flax- flowers she used to gather-- thirty, was it?
15122Was I right?
15122Was it some call to duty that thrilled him, or only a homesick longing?
15122Was n''t that a lovely thing to have said about one?
15122What did you get, Betty?"
15122What do you want to see?"
15122What is the charm that bids thee hope Thou canst rout and vanquish him?
15122What was the word he told?
15122Who goes there?"
15122Who must I remembah in Tours?"
15122Why did you have it put on the collah, Papa Jack?"
15122Why is he bowing to Papa Jack?"
15122Will the fairy folk its call repeat, And hasten to rescue me?
15122Wilt thou_ his_ wrong not set aright?
15122Wo n''t that be funny?"
15122Would n''t that have made a difference in your manners?"
15122Would n''t you love to look like her?
15122Would n''t you, old boy?"
15122You do n''t mean that we are going abroad, do you?
15122[_ Disappears behind curtain.__ Princess._ All good things shall speed me?
15122[_ Pauses with uplifted hand._ What''s that at my casement tapping?
15122_ Are_ you homesick, old fellow?"
15122_ Is_ there no hope?
15122_ Witch._ Now why didst thou plot such a wicked thing?
15122a palace full of gold and silver and precious stones and give up Hero, or keep him and be a beggar in rags?"
15122she insisted,"the same as Tarbaby is Lloyd''s?"
10708And now, upon your conscience, sir, by the virtue of your oath, in what state were the stockings?
10708Are they blind? 10708 Are they mad?"
10708Are you satisfied at last?
10708But where,and I turned to our own crew--"Where are the lovely women that danced beneath the awning of flowers and clustering corymbi?
10708Do I? 10708 Do you see_ that_?"
10708Does it mean stale bread?
10708I say,he cried out in an extempore petition, addressed to the emperor through the window,"how am I to catch hold of the reins?"
10708Is this a sufficient reason for losing one''s_ prandium_?
10708Is_ this_ the right thing?
10708Say, all our roses why should girls engross?
10708Semper ego auditor tantum?
10708The man was murdered;--how will this sound in Latin?
10708_ Or again,''siccum pro biscodo, ut hodie vocamus, sumemus_?''
10708''Is it so?''
10708''What for?''
10708--But_ are_ they always visionary?
10708--wherefore shouldst_ thou_ not fear, though all men should rejoice?
10708A Welshman, sitting behind me, asked if I had not felt my heart burn within me during the continuance of the race?
10708After paying his little homage to his_ patronus_, in what way has he fought with the great enemy Time since then?
10708Again, to cite another great authority, what says the Stagyrite?
10708And what caused the difference between our ancestors and the Romans?
10708And what follows from that?
10708And what may this word_ dry_ happen to mean?
10708And what sort of a concern would it be?
10708And why not?
10708And why was he concerned, gentlemen?
10708And, besides, of what use was it?
10708Apply these four tests to_ prandium_:--How could that meal answer to the first test, as_ the day''s support_, which few people touched?
10708At this moment, what is the single point of agreement between the noon meal of the English laborer and the evening meal of the English gentleman?
10708Being again asked,"At sunset, did you look in on Sir Isaac?"
10708Being up then, and stirring not long after the lark, what mischief did the Roman go about first?
10708Besides, if he does not get dinner now, when will he get it?
10708But can_ they_ lay their hands on their hearts, and say that they were in time for me?
10708But could I pretend to shout like the son of Peleus, aided by Pallas?
10708But could she do less?
10708But how shall this be conveyed and made palpable?
10708But how stood the case?
10708But how, if the alien nature contradicts his own, fights with it, perplexes, and confounds it?
10708But she, the child that, at nineteen, had wrought wonders so great for France, was she not elated?
10708But still, what can be said?
10708But what if everybody, Sir Isaac included, had deferred his substantial meal until night, and taken a slight refection only at two?
10708But what of that?
10708But what then?
10708But what was Cyclops doing here?
10708But who was L.M.?
10708But why did he do that?
10708But why linger on the subject of vermin?
10708But why should_ that_ delight me?
10708But why?
10708But would it not make a saint"grim,"to hear of such preparations for the morning meal?
10708But, by the way, an occasion arises at this moment; for the reader will be sure to ask, when we come to the story,"Was this other creature present?"
10708But, meantime, what has our friend been about since perhaps six or seven in the morning?
10708By the way, gentlemen, has anybody heard lately of Hare?
10708Ca n''t they take a lesson upon that subject from_ me_?
10708Could it be expected to provide tears for the accidents of the road?
10708Deny it, my dear?
10708Did I tell her the truth?
10708Did I then make love to Fanny?
10708Did ruin to our friends couch within our own dreadful shadow?
10708Did she not lose, as men so often_ have_ lost, all sobriety of mind when standing upon the pinnaclè of successes so giddy?
10708Did you ever hear of a cannon- ball that killed an emperor?"
10708Do the sixty centuries of our earth imply youth, maturity, or dotage?]
10708Do they woo their ruin?"
10708Do you give it up?
10708Do you suppose, reader, that the junior lords of the admiralty are under articles to darn for the navy?
10708Epilepsy so brief of horror-- wherefore is it that thou canst not die?
10708For this night, wherefore should she not sleep in peace?
10708For what, we demand, did this fleshly creature differ from the carrion crow, or the kite, or the vulture, or the cormorant?
10708For, if he were king already, what was it that she could do for him beyond Orleans?
10708God bless my soul, gentlemen, what is it that people mean?
10708Had I the heart to break up her dreams?
10708Had the medical men recommended northern air, or how?
10708He will die no less: and why not?
10708How could that meal answer to the second test, as the_ meal of hospitality_, at which nobody sate down?
10708How could that meal answer to the third test, as the meal of animal food, which consisted exclusively and notoriously of bread?
10708How long do we intend to keep him waiting?
10708How, if it be published on that distant world that the sufferer wears upon her head, in the eyes of many, the garlands of martyrdom?
10708How, if it were the"martyred wife of Roland,"uttering impassioned truth-- truth odious to the rulers of her country-- with her expiring breath?
10708I exclaimed,"shalt thou be the ransom for Waterloo?
10708If you_ can_ create yourselves into any of these great creators, why have you not?
10708In that most humorous appeal of Perseus--"Cur quis non prandeat, hoc est?"
10708In the forests to which he prays for pity, will he find a respite?
10708In what regiment?
10708Irritating as this blindness was,( surely it could not be envy?)
10708Is a prison the safest retreat?
10708Is it a martyr''s scaffold?
10708Is it, indeed, come to this?
10708It is your first duty to ask yourself,_ quid valeant humeri, quid ferre recusent_?
10708Knowing that she would reap nothing from answering her persecutors, why did she not retire by silence from the superfluous contest?
10708Living, therefore, with such sobriety, how was it possible that he should die a natural death at forty- four?
10708Meantime, how had Toad- in- the- hole happened to hear of this great work of art so early in the morning?
10708Meantime, what are we stopping for?
10708Might I not seize the guard''s horn?
10708Might it not have been left till the spring of 1947?
10708Must we, that carry tidings of great joy to every people, be messengers of ruin to thee?"
10708My lord, have you no counsel?
10708Not one of these men was ever capable, in a solitary instance, of praising an enemy--[what do you say to_ that_, reader?]
10708Now what_ was_ the consideration?
10708Now, terror there may be, but how can there be any pity for one tiger destroyed by another tiger?
10708Oh, reader, do you recognize in this abominable picture your respected ancestors and ours?
10708One, perhaps, might suggest the_ Iliad_--the other the_ Odyssey_: what do you get by such comparisons?
10708Or a lunatic hospital?
10708Or again--"_siccum pro biscocto, ut hodie vocamus, sumemus_?
10708Or can it be fancied, amongst the weakest of men, that the bodies of the criminals will be given up to their widows for Christian burial?
10708Or the British Museum?"
10708Or to the fourth test, of the meal_ entitled to survive the abolition of the rest_, which was itself abolished at all times in practice?
10708Out of which varieties( who would think that a nonentity could cut up into so many somethings?)
10708Passing so suddenly into darkness, wherefore is it that still thou sheddest thy sad funeral blights upon the gorgeous mosaics of dreams?
10708Shall my Lord of Beauvais sit again upon the judgment- seat, and again number the hours for the innocent?
10708She would have said,"Who ever heard of such a thing?
10708So, after shaving,( supposing the age of the_ Barbati_ to be passed), what is the first business that our Roman will undertake?
10708St. Peter''s at Rome, do you fancy, on Easter Sunday, or Luxor, or perhaps the Himalayas?
10708Still, gloriously as tiffin shines, does anybody imagine that it is a vicarious dinner, or ever meant to be the substitute of dinner?
10708Such is the logic of a sensible man, and what follows?
10708Such now being, at that time, the usages of mail- coaches, what was to be done by us of young Oxford?
10708That fact speaks for itself,--breakfast and luncheon never could have been confounded; but who would be at the pains of distinguishing two shadows?
10708The faces, which no man could count-- whence were_ they_?
10708The rear part of the carriage-- was_ that_ certainly beyond the line of absolute ruin?
10708Then, again, how would he tool?
10708Then, looking at particular friends, he said--"Why, Jack, how are you?
10708This mutinous individual, looking as blackhearted as he really was, audaciously shouted,"Where am_ I_ to sit?"
10708Upon which Toad- in- the- hole, that cursed interrupter, broke out a- singing--"Et interrogatum est à Toad- in- the- hole-- Ubi est ille exercitus?
10708Was I then vain enough to imagine that I myself, individually, could fall within the line of his terrors?
10708Was Toad- in- the- hole mad?
10708Was he to have nothing in return?
10708Was it from the bloody bas- reliefs of earth?
10708Was it from the crimson robes of the martyrs that were painted_ on_ the windows?
10708Was it from the reddening dawn that now streamed_ through_ the windows?
10708Was it industry in a taxed cart?
10708Was it youthful gaiety in a gig?
10708Was our shadow the shadow of death?
10708Well, would you believe it?
10708Were the Romans not as barbarous as our own ancestors at one time?
10708What ailed me, that I should fear when the triumphs of earth were advancing?
10708What are they about?
10708What building is that which hands so rapid are raising?
10708What could be done-- who was it that could do it-- to check the storm- flight of these maniacal horses?
10708What could be the meaning of all this?
10708What could injure_ us_?
10708What else but her meek, saintly demeanor, won from the enemies, that till now had believed her a witch, tears of rapturous admiration?
10708What else drove the executioner to kneel at every shrine for pardon to_ his_ share in the tragedy?
10708What else, I demand, than mere weight of metal, absolute nobility of deportment, broke the vast line of battle then arrayed against her?
10708What evil has smitten the pinnace, meeting or overtaken her?
10708What followed, in consequence?
10708What is it that I shall do?
10708What is the single circumstance common to both, which causes us to denominate them by the common name of_ dinner_?
10708What is to be thought of sudden death?
10708What is to be thought of_ her_?
10708What logic was there in this, unless to a man who was always dreaming of murder?
10708What power could answer the question?
10708What reason is there for taking up this subject of Joanna precisely in this spring of 1847?
10708What then must he do?
10708What will the wretches want next?"
10708What_ was_ the little consideration again, I ask, which the law would insist on the doctor''s taking?
10708Whence came_ that_?
10708Wherefore should we grieve that there is one craven less in the world?
10708Wherefore_ was_ it that we delayed?
10708Whither have fled the noble young men that danced with_ them_?"
10708Who admires more than myself the sublime enthusiasm, the rapturous faith in herself, of this pure creature?
10708Who and what could it be?
10708Who else is to do it?
10708Who is she that cometh in bloody coronation robes from Rheims?
10708Who is she that cometh with blackened flesh from walking the furnaces of Rouen?
10708Who is this that cometh from Domrémy?
10708Who were these that followed?
10708Why did he do this?
10708Why, Tom, how are you?
10708Why, then,_ did_ she contend?
10708Will these ladies say that we are nothing to_ them_?
10708Will they burn the child of Domrémy a second time?
10708Would Domrémy know them again for the features of her child?
10708Yet why?
10708Yet, how should this be accomplished?
10708_ Ridentem dicere, verum quid vetat_?
10708can these be horses that( unless powerfully reined in) would bound off with the action and gestures of leopards?
10708could I not seize the reins from the grasp of the slumbering coachman?
10708he shrieked aloud;''what for will I lose my precious throat?''
10708or how?
10708or, perhaps, left till called for?
10708said I,"nunquamne reponam?"
10708to saying"_ Pucelle d''Orléans, as- tu sauvé les fleurs- de- lys_?"
10708what are you about?
10708wherefore have we not time to weep over you?"
10708will_ this_ do?"
16224But you are doubtless acquainted, Sir, with the COMTE DE LA FRESNAYE, who resides in yonder large mansion?
16224Have you many English who visit this spot?
16224How so?
16224In respect to the_ sacrament_, what is the proportion between the communicants, as to sex?
16224It seems you are very fond of old books, and especially of those in the French and Latin languages?
16224Vois- tu comme ces fleurs languissent tristement?
16224Vous n''avez rien comme ca chez vous?
16224What are you about, there?
16224What is that irregular rude mound, or wall of earth, in the centre of which children are playing?
16224What is that?
16224What might this mean?
16224What( says M. Licquet) will quickly be the result, with us, of such indiscretions as those of which M. Dibdin is guilty? 16224 What-- you confess here pretty much?"
16224Yes,( resumed I) tell me what you are about there?
16224You are from London, then, Sir?
16224You were yesterday evening at Monsieur Pluquet''s, purchasing books?
16224Your daughter Sir, is not married?
16224Your name, Sir, is D----?
16224( say you:)"not_ one_ single specimen from the library of your favourite DIANE DE POICTIERS?
16224--"Comment ça?"
162241690,( 1679?)
16224And if you take river scenery into the account, what is the_ Seine_, in the neighbourhood of Paris, compared with the_ Thames_ in that of London?
16224At length, turning a corner, a group of country people appeared--"Est- ce ici la route de Tancarville?"
16224Before dawn of day I heard incessant juvenile voices beneath the window of my bedroom at the Grand Turc; What might this mean?
16224But do you know no one...?"
16224But tell me, Sir, how can I obtain a sight of the CHAPTER LIBRARY, and of the famous TAPESTRY?"
16224But the sun was beginning to cast his shadows broader and broader, and where was the residence of Monsieur and Madame S----?
16224But, would you believe it?
16224Can this be possible?"
16224Can you possibly advise and assist me upon the subject?"
16224Chalon?)
16224Coutances?)
16224Dare I venture to say it was the_ cowhouse_?
16224Dibdin, Ministre de la Religion,& c._"Avec un ris moqueur, je crois vous voir d''ici, Dédaigneusement dire: Eh, que veut celui- ci?
16224Did I tell you that this sort of ornament was to be seen in some parts of the eastern end of the Abbey of Jumieges?
16224Do you remember the emphatic phrase in my last,"all about the duel?"
16224En feignant d''ignorer ce tendre sentiment;"Pourquoi,"lui dis- je,"ô ma sensible amie, Pourquoi verser des pleurs?
16224Et comment s''étonneroit- on Si tant de fléaux nous tourmentent?
16224Et quand l''avez- vous battue?
16224Has the author passed a bad night?
16224How shall I convey to you a summary, and yet a satisfactory, description of it?
16224I exclaimed--"Ha, is it you Sir?"
16224I was well contented with coffee, tea, eggs, and bread-- as who might not well be?...
16224In the mean while, why is GALLIC ART inert?
16224Is it not a pretty thing, Sir?"
16224Is it possible that one spark of devotion can be kindled by the contemplation of an object so grotesque and so absurd in the House of God?
16224It is surely the oddest, and as some may think, the most repulsive scene imaginable: But who that has a rational curiosity could resist such a walk?
16224J''ai vu en beaucoup d''endroits de votre Lettre, que vous avez voulu imiter_ Sterne_;[4] qu''est- il arrivé?
16224Je ne la peux faire lever le matin: Je l''appelle cent fois:_ Marguerite: plait- il ma Mere?
16224Licquet; but what is a cow- house but"an_ outer building_ attached to the Abbey?"
16224May I give him your name?"
16224Ne voulez vous pas me répondre; en un mot, combien y a- t- il de temps que vous ne vous êtes confessée?
16224On pointing to_ Houbigant''s Hebrew Bible_, in four folio volumes, 1753,"do you think this copy dear at fourteen francs?"
16224On the other hand, has he had a good night''s rest in a comfortable bed?
16224Ose- t- on ravaler un Ministre à ce point?
16224Pensez- vous done, ou Charles Lewis pense- t- il, qu''il n''y ait plus d''esprit national en France?
16224Qu''ai- je donc de commun avec un vil artiste?
16224Que me veut ce_ Lesné_?
16224Que voulez vous?"
16224Savez- vous bien, Monsieur, pourquoi je vous écris?
16224Scarcely fifteen people were present, I approached the bench; and what, think you, were the intellectual objects upon which my eye alighted?
16224Still tarrying within this old fashioned place?
16224The porter observed that they had just sat down to dinner-- but would I call at three?
16224The woman said,"What, if you never return?"
16224These be sharp words:[11] but what does the Reader imagine may be the probable"result"of the English Traveller''s inadvertencies?...
16224Un ouvrier français, un_ Bibliopégiste_?
16224What a difference between the respective appearances of the quays of Dieppe and Havre?
16224What earthly motive could have led to such a brutal act of demolition?]
16224What he adds, shall be given in his own pithy expression.--"Où la coquetterie va- t- elle se nicher?"
16224What is meant to be here conveyed?
16224What lovely vicinities are these compared with that of_ Mont Martre_?
16224What say you therefore to a stroll to the ABBEY of ST. OUEN?
16224What then, is the Abbé de la Rue in error?
16224What was to be done?
16224Where was the attendant guard?--or pursuivants-- or men at arms?
16224Where was the harp of the minstrel?
16224Where was the warder?
16224Wherefore was this?
16224Who in France would dare to risk such a sum-- especially for three, volumes in octavo?
16224Why is it endured?
16224Why is it persevered in?
16224Would not the_ Debure_ Vocabulary have said"non rogné?"]
16224[ 47] How long will this monument--(matchless of its kind)--continue unrepresented by the BURIN?
16224[ Has my friend Mr. Hawkins, of the Museum, abandoned all thoughts of his magnificent project connected with such a NATIONAL WORK?]
16224[ dans un lit_ comfortable_?]
16224_ Saint Joseph_, que vous ai- je fait?
16224et par quel changement Abandonner ton ame à la melancholie?"
16224said he!--"How, Sir,"( replied I, in an exstacy of astonishment)--you mean to say fourteen_ louis_?"
16224the baseness of John of Luxembourg, or the treachery of the Regent Bedford?
16224who, by his strength, policy and wit kept them all out of the principal dominions of France, and out of this noble duchy of Normandy?
16943Are you master of your horses?
16943But,he persisted,"you will drink ale with me?"
16943But,said he,"you will give_ me_ a glass?"
16943How,they asked,"was she from home?"
16943Where shall we go?
16943Will it be worth our while to go so far to see a small cemetery?
16943You came to see these graves?
16943And how long can such a state of things continue without dragging down the women who marry such men?
16943And was it not very natural for it to jump from belief to infidelity?
16943Are such pictures as can be found in the French gallery, pictures which express sensuality and debauchery, productive of good?
16943Can we rest content with such a prospect?
16943Dead and buried nobility-- what is it?
16943Did I ever go out of my way to see even buried_ royalty_?
16943Do these things improve the morals of a city or nation?
16943Does the world not know him to have long been an open and thoroughly debauched libertine?
16943For should not the exchange for the greatest merchants of Paris be built in a stable rather than in a slight and beautiful manner?
16943Have you not thought to see the wide meadow rise before you, bathed in the rosy light of the evening when you saw it for the first time?
16943He met his friend, the marquis de Pastorel, one day, who said:"How are you, Horace; where have you kept yourself for these two years?
16943He wrote to a friend in France:"How can I forget the barbarous manner with which I have been treated in my own country?
16943His father at one time remonstrated with the old man for taking the boy thus early to the theater, and asked,"Do you mean to make an actor of him?"
16943How comes it, then, that so near Paris, agricultural implements are so far behind the age?
16943How could a man with an independent intellect succumb to such a church?
16943I wish to know what is deemed an outrage to the established government of France?''
16943If so, why is it that wherever naked pictures and sensual statuary abound, the people are licentious and depraved?
16943Is it well to look at so much nakedness, even if it be executed with the highest art?
16943Now is it not a significant fact, that within a bow- shot of Paris I found tools in use, which would be laughed at in the free states of America?
16943One of the men who had her in charge, cried out,"Do you wish the window of the carriage to be closed?"
16943Pure, guileless generous-- and poor, what could he do in New York?
16943Should a fiend be allowed to personate liberty longer?
16943Such is not the fact, as the Paris Exhibition proved, but_ who buys them_?
16943The gentlemen of the police knew nothing of bush- fighting, and might have exclaimed with the muse in Romeo,''Is this poultice for my aching bones?''"
16943The king was very angry, and asked,"Does he think that he knows everything because he writes verses?"
16943The subject is hackneyed and old-- what can_ I_ say about the Louvre which will be new to the reader?
16943This was the peasant under the walls of Paris-- what must he be in the provincial forests?
16943Was it not hard?
16943What can be the morality of any town, while such facts exist in reference to its condition?
16943What is the moral character of the first men in the empire?
16943When Aurore spoke of her snuff- boxes, he laughed heartily;"but,"said he to Sandeau,"why do not you become a journalist?
16943Who carries in his bosom that sentiment towards the man who procured his throne by perjury?
16943Who is the man now ruling France?
16943Will any one who has read Charles Dickens ever forget his"Curiosity Shop,"the old grandfather and little Nell?
16943said Dumas,"in what book?"
10079And Denslow?
10079And Honoria?
10079And what may that be?
10079But I do n''t intend to wait till he comes; ca n''t you send the demands to a lawyer where he is?
10079But the valet, Rêve de Noir?
10079But when did you come to town?
10079But will you tell us by what accident this copy happened to be in Italy?
10079But, Sarah,--if he loved you?
10079By you?
10079Dear father,said the frightened girl,"what shall I do for you?
10079Did I yield in Paris?
10079Did the Duke and his man come in a carriage?
10079Did you never love Honoria?
10079Did you refer to the notes from Ploughman?
10079Did you see Condé himself?
10079Do n''t you know that the afflatus always exhausts the priestess? 10079 Do we?"
10079Do you call the farmer fool, because he is not satisfied with the soil, but wishes to grow wheat thereon? 10079 Do you hear those creatures?"
10079Edward, do you know that you have not spoken a kind word to me to- night, until now?
10079Fool, why was he not satisfied with his money?
10079I am very glad to see you,said Mildred;"but is n''t your coming sudden?"
10079If this,said she,"is a copy, what must have been the genuine work?
10079If, then, you know at sight that this gentleman is my friend Mr. De Vere, why do you hesitate about the other?
10079Is it Lord N----?
10079Is it he?
10079Is the person now in the rooms the Duke of Rosecouleur?
10079Jupiter, you were at the door when the Duke of Rosecouleur entered?
10079Loved? 10079 Lucy Ransom,"said Mrs. Kinloch,( for it was she, just returned from her drive,)"Lucy Ransom, what are you blubbering about?
10079Mark? 10079 My opinion is,"said Lethal, holding out his crooked forefinger like a claw,"that this_ soi- disant_ duke-- what the deuse is his name?"
10079My young friend, what is the reason of this heat?
10079Nalson, do you believe that this person is an impostor?
10079Nalson, you were a servant of the Duke in England?
10079Not so; would you not as soon strangle this Rosecouleur for making love to your wife in public, as you would another man?
10079Of what dog were you speaking, Edward?
10079Oh, Mark, were you treated so?
10079Rather rough,--ha, De Vere? 10079 Sha n''t I go for the doctor, father?"
10079Shall I tell your fortune now, Letty? 10079 Tell me, did he say anything?"
10079The thick, tough husk of evil grows about Each soul that lives,I mused,"but doth it kill?
10079Then can not you leave her to that care? 10079 This from you?
10079Urgent business?
10079Was n''t that a nice little tableau, Letty?
10079Well, what do you call the moral, Letty?
10079Were you at the door when the Duke entered?
10079What do you want to undeceive her for, Sally? 10079 What is all this, Honoria?"
10079What is it, Jo?
10079What is it, Sally?--what do I look like?
10079What made the smash, then?
10079What mean you?
10079What the Devil do you mean, you lubber, throwing stones over here to scare away the fish?
10079Where is Honoria?
10079Which way is the wind now?
10079Who knows,said Lethal, with a deceptive innocence of manner,"whether aristocracy itself be not founded in mesmerical deceptions?"
10079Who the Devil are you?
10079Who, the valet?
10079Who? 10079 Why, what has he done?"
10079Why, you do n''t doubt these fundamental points?
10079Will his Highness do us the honor to lay aside the mask, and appear in his true colors?
10079Yes, did Rêve de Noir recognize you?
10079You an American girl, Jo, and do n''t think at once of Washington?
10079You knew the Duke of Rosecouleur in Europe?
10079You were with us at the picture scene?
10079----The divinity- student wished to know what I thought of affinities, as well as of antipathies; did I believe in love at first sight?
10079A man!-- how dare you call him a man?--don''t you know he is a myth, an abstraction, a plaster- of- Paris cast?
10079A meeting of the church?
10079Adonaïs coughed in his cravat, and hinted,--"How would it do to call him''Barnum Dalton''?"
10079Am I an ass because I know nothing of pictures?
10079And so might any of the hunters; and what is the difference in the sport, but the name?
10079And why?
10079Are not the Denslows enormously rich?
10079Are the wonders exhausted?"
10079Are you quite waked up?"
10079As we walked home, along the quiet street overhung with willows and sycamores, I said to her,"Jo, how came you to know Letty''s secret?"
10079At length he darted forward, pounced upon one of the soldiers, and shouted,"Where is the_ montura_?"
10079But how to get rid of him?
10079But if the Society is to await this golden opportunity with such exemplary patience in one case, why not in all?
10079But what are the facts about matters other than Slavery?
10079Can he who has discovered only some of the values of whalebone and whale oil be said to have discovered the true use of the whale?
10079Can he who slays the elephant for his ivory be said to have"seen the elephant"?
10079Can it be that oars have risen and fallen, sails flapped, waves broken in thunder upon our shores in vain?
10079Could it be the roar of the thousand wheels and the ten thousand footsteps jarring and tramping along the stones of the neighboring city?
10079Dangerous to what?
10079Did I ever tell you what a price Denslow paid for that picture?"
10079Did the circulation of the firmament stop in terror because Newton laid his daring finger on its pulse?
10079Did you ever dare suppose he ate, or drank, or kissed his wife?
10079Did you ever hear any human trait of his noticed?
10079Did you ever know a woman who gave up a man she loved because she was warned against him?--or even if she knew his character well, herself?
10079Did you ever walk through Ann Street, Boston, or haunt the purlieus of the Fulton Market?
10079Did you never before notice the likeness between the queen, in that picture, and myself?"
10079Do you think I was necessarily a greater fool and coward than another?
10079Had Honoria tasted of the Indian drug, the weed of paradise?
10079Had her father borne it with him in his wanderings?
10079Harsh Fortune, that in cruel death finds''t joy, Why is my Maximus thus sudden reft, So late the pleasant burden of my breast?
10079His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles?
10079How can the poor girl be undeceived before it is quite too late?"
10079How do you know it was vanity, my dear?
10079How does he strike you?"
10079How long do you propose to stay?"
10079Hush,--said I,--what will the divinity- student say?
10079I suppose all of you have had the pocket- book fever when you were little?--What do I mean?
10079If he were of the heroic race, what virtue in being heroic?
10079If memory has its pleasures, has it not also its glimpses of regret?--and who can say that the former compensate for the latter?
10079If that was so, how came the chair to tip the way it did?
10079If you have been so deceived in a picture, may you not be equally cheated in a man?
10079Is a mistake possible?"
10079Is anything, then, of God''s contriving endangered by inquiry?
10079Is he here?
10079Is it the lumberman, then, who is the friend and lover of the pine, stands nearest to it, and understands its nature best?
10079Is it the tanner who has barked it, or he who has boxed it for turpentine, whom posterity will fable to have been changed into a pine at last?
10079Is not Dalton a sovereign of elegance?
10079Is the_ taboo_ of a thousand valid?
10079Is your Christianity, then, he would say, a respecter of persons, and does it condone the sin because the sinner can contribute to your coffers?
10079Kinloch?"
10079Lethal, tell me who he is?
10079Lethal?"
10079M. de Lauzun marries on Sunday, at the Louvre,--whom now?
10079Malden?"
10079Mildred, who was with him?
10079Moreover, you are picturesque: people look at you, and then look again,--and, any way, love you, do n''t they?"
10079Mr. De Vere, Sir?"
10079Mrs. Kinloch went to the door, and leading out Lucy Ransom, the maid, by the ear, exclaimed,"You hussy, what were you there for?
10079Must I see in the leaves a symbol Of the fate which awaiteth you?
10079Must I tell you, then?
10079My first question to Josephine was,"Where is Mr. Waring''s mother?"
10079Of a hundred?
10079Of ten?
10079On the Temperance question; against Catholicism;--have these topics never entered into our politics?
10079Or that enamelled person, Adonaïs?
10079Shall it be said that its kingdom is not of this world?
10079Should you like to hear them?
10079The cigar seemed wonderful to the half- frightened, all- amazed child; but who ever sees a fast young man without a cigar?"
10079The heathen epitaphs are loaded with titles of honor, and with the names of the offices which the dead had borne, and, like the modern Christian(?)
10079Tracts have been issued and circulated in which Dancing is condemned as sinful; are all Evangelical Christians agreed about this?
10079Was I, then, face to face with, nay, touching the hand of a highness,--and that highness the monarch of the_ ton_?
10079Was he not the guest, and had not I been presented to him by Honoria as her"friend?"
10079Was it a fire?
10079Was it her mother''s hair?
10079Was it not better to live alone?"
10079Was it the system of the universe, or the monks, that trembled at the telescope of Galileo?
10079Was the doctor sent for?
10079Was the subtile aroma of love ever blended with its fragrance?
10079Was there ever a Simony like this,--that does not sell, but withholds, the gift of God for a price?
10079We all looked at Honoria, to whom the Duke leaned over and said,--"Would you be willing for a moment to lose that exquisite beauty?"
10079Were n''t you brought up to regard him as a species of special seraph, a sublime and stainless figure, inseparable from a grand manner and a scroll?
10079Were we transformed?
10079What claim has Slavery to immunity from discussion?
10079What did he say to you, dear?"
10079What do you think about the book, Letty?"
10079What fair hand had first plucked it?
10079What have_ I_ done?
10079What is the dredging- song which the oyster"come of a gentle kind"is said to love?
10079What is the matter?"
10079What is the number of men whose outraged sensibilities may claim the suppression of a tract?
10079What men of that age eclipsed or equalled the address and daring of those delicate and highborn women?
10079What pledge did it carry?
10079What sings the cook at the galley- fire in doleful unison with the bubble of his coppers?
10079What was the intricate business that required the constant attention of a legal adviser?
10079What was the state of society, it will undoubtedly be inquired, in which the defeat of a handful of men could result in such a despotism?
10079What were the stanzas which Luckie Mucklebackit sang along the Portanferry Sands?
10079What, then, does the sailor sing?--and does he sing at all?
10079What_ is_ a Gaucho?
10079When did he come?"
10079When did marriage ever reform a bad man?
10079When the wording of the significant hint was conveyed to Rosas, he exclaimed,--"Well, what does it mean?"
10079Who can say what these things might have ended in, under other circumstances?
10079Who had departed?
10079Who should have thought it, Darby?"
10079Who that has been on the Pampas but can picture to himself this party as it left the little mud- hut on the plain?
10079Who was this husband whose far- off journeys had so separated him from his lately married wife?
10079Who were they who so loved as no others had loved?
10079Who will tell us of these songs, not indeed of the deep sea, but of soundings?
10079Why did I let my hair down?
10079Why do n''t you unfold Letty''s fate?"
10079Why does that sallow wretch, Lethal, follow them?
10079Why have no tail to speak of?
10079Why have so long a head?
10079Why should it stand so high at the shoulders?
10079Why will not some one take the trouble to learn what we have?
10079Why you go so dam fast, when hot sun he make snow for tire, eh?
10079Will it not be a little presumptuous, as well as superfluous, to undertake the doing over again of what He has already done?
10079Will not our Southern brethren take alarm?
10079Would a police- justice discharge a drunkard who pleaded the patriarchal precedent of Noah?
10079You believe in a special Providence, Sarah, do n''t you?"
10079You may call the story of Ulysses and the Sirens a fable, but what will you say to Mario and the poor lady who followed him?
10079_ I_ am the State!"?
10079_ is_ he dead?--no life left?"
10079de Retz?''
10079he marries on Sunday, at the Louvre, by his Majesty''s permission, Mademoiselle,--Mademoiselle de,--Mademoiselle( will you guess again?)
10079or Mr. Rook?
10079or Squire Clamp?
10079or would he not rather give him another month in the House of Correction for his impudence?
10079said Josephine,"when did you turn gypsy, Sally?
10079said Mr. Clamp,"that is it?
10079said he, as he approached;"the governor asleep, Mildred crying, and you scolding, mother?"
10079she exclaimed,"Is it you?
10079that no whistle of the winds, or moan of the storm- foreboding seas has waked a responsive chord in the heart of pilot or fisherman?
10079what has happened?
10079where_ did_ thee ever see him, Josey?"
16910If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen?
16910If it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France?
16910No government without the consent of the governed?--When has our consent been asked, the consent of twenty- five million people? 16910 An art which England had been centuries in learning, how could France be expected to master in a decade? 16910 And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was he doing to save her? 16910 And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate-- while the_ Faubourg St. Germain_ stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his brand- new aristocracy? 16910 And theGentle King,"where was he while this was happening?
16910And was not Austria the leader of the coalition against France?
16910And was this not a triumph for the revolutionary principle which offset the existence of an empire, as its final result?
16910And where was"his Majesty"while this work was being done?
16910Are we sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years, without our consent?"
16910As one after another of the cities helplessly fell, someone asked why Louis came himself-- why he did not send his valet?
16910But how could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread?
16910But what could he do?
16910But what if he ceased to be ornamental?
16910But what if they should refuse?
16910But where was his knighthood, where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest against her fate?
16910Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly?
16910Could any scales weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been endured?
16910Could the upper ranks fall lower than this?
16910Could they ever wipe out the stain which had made them odious in the sight of Christendom?
16910Did Madame du Barry think of it?
16910Did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged shrieking and struggling to the guillotine?
16910Did she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his heads?
16910Did they recall this time?
16910Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it?
16910Had not the kingdom reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour?
16910Had she been, not set free, but simply annexed to the realm of the barbarian across the Rhine?
16910Had she exchanged one servitude for another?
16910How could sensuality and vice at Rome be reconciled with a divine infallibility?
16910How was it in Germany?
16910How was it with Catharine?
16910If the ballad- poetry of Provence satirized the lives and manners of the priests, was it not dealing with what was true?
16910Is it strange that, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled, Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages?
16910Napoleon had captured not alone Italy, but France herself?
16910Of all miracles, is not this the greatest?
16910Private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life, treasure, all eagerly given, for what?
16910That thrones, empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before His name?
16910Then why was there no mention of him as one of that martyred group?
16910They had rescued them from one terrible fate, might they not deliver them from another?
16910This hero of Marengo, and Austerlitz, and Jena, and Wagram, the man before whom Europe trembled, was he not, after all, only a crowned citizen?
16910Was any human event ever fraught with such consequences to the human race as the conquest of Gaul by Julius Caesar?
16910Was there not, after all, a certain irritating reserve in the homage paid him?
16910Was this not an embodiment of their dreams?
16910Was this the equality they expected when they cried,"Down with the Aristocrats"?
16910Was this wasting away the result of a drug?
16910What could be expected of a woman with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with Catharine de''Medici as her model and teacher?
16910What might she not accomplish with such a leader?
16910What should they do with this strange being, claiming supernatural powers?
16910What would they build upon the ruins of their ancient despotism?
16910What would they do with it?
16910Where were the pale- faced, determined patriots who sat in the National Assembly?
16910Where would he find chains more galling, more unnatural, than in Italy, held by the iron hand of Austria?
16910Whether Fredegunde or Brunhilde was the more terrible who can say?
16910Whether the conversion of the Bourbon prince was of that nature or not, who can say?
16910Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the most regenerative force the world had ever known?
16910Why had Henry of Navarre been spared?
16910Why should the simple- hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see: that victory or failure was alike full of peril for France?
16910Would they ever be forgiven for disgracing the name of Liberty?
16910the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what miracle could he produce the other?
16910was there not a touch of condescension in the friendship of his royal neighbors?
17511Have you any resources?
17511Marshal,said Foch,"your line is cracked?"
17511Well, gentlemen,said he,"our affairs are not going badly; are they?
17511What have we to do here?
17511And also there came those, representing France and her interests in this country, who said:"Wo n''t you put the facts about Foch before your people?"
17511And what were they doing?
17511Is there any condition which, in the opinion of any of you, could be imposed upon the enemy then, more conclusive than those of the armistice?"
17511Now, where were those other armies?
17511The phrase oftenest on his lips was:"What have we to do here?"
17511They did n''t know how to fight-- they could n''t know-- they had never done any fighting, and whom had they had to teach them warfare?
17511What fullness of detail there must have been in the mental pictures he was able to conjure of St. Louis embarking here on his two crusades?
17511What had happened?
17511Where was that calm, quiet man who had said:"Well, gentlemen, our affairs are not going badly; are they?"
17511Who was he?
14384''Are they all gone?'' 14384 ''Eathen?''
14384''How many people were there in your day?'' 14384 ''What, you an American citizen?''
14384''Where was she born?'' 14384 A man lives only a little while,_ hein_?
14384And Climber of Trees Who Was Killed and Eaten?
14384And the procession, was it successful?
14384And what will you do with that ten minutes?
14384And_ popoi_ and pigs?
14384Another god on the altar then?
14384Are they Marquesans?
14384Are we afraid of that ugly beast? 14384 Beaten to Death perished by the club?
14384Ben Santos,inquired the judge, with a critical glance at Daughter of the Pigeon,"What return did you make to this woman for keeping your house?"
14384But Beaten to Death--?
14384But Tufetu, the grandfather of my friend Mouth of God?
14384But if that stone broke your head, why did you not die?
14384But there are not many whites here?
14384But why two packs?
14384But with whom can I see that world?
14384Did you not lie in wait for those murderers?
14384Do we go near her home?
14384Do you have trouble over women in your island? 14384 Do you think the eating of men began by the_ ave one_, the famine?"
14384He will play ze bloff?
14384Honi?
14384How do they make that cloth?
14384How many men to a rope?
14384It is beautiful in your islands, is it not?
14384It is n''t bad,_ hein_?
14384It was she who rode the white horse, and bore the armor of Joan in the great parade?
14384Kahuiti, is it not good that the eating of men is stopped?
14384Of what are you thinking?
14384Of what good is that? 14384 Oo can say wot the blooming wind will do?"
14384Paul Gauguin lived here?
14384She some pumkin, eh? 14384 So it was all as you had planned?"
14384So the slaying of Beaten to Death was unavenged?
14384The pig men climb?
14384There were signs at the commemoration?
14384They had guns?
14384This man, whose name was Honi--"Honi?
14384Was Great Night Moth the real son of Male Package?
14384What I do?
14384What caused that war?
14384What do you do here all alone?
14384What does the_ Menike_ seek?
14384What for?
14384What if the good sisters heard me? 14384 What is the manner of their fishing?"
14384Where are you going?
14384Where do you go with the_ mei_?
14384Why, sure I do? 14384 Why?
14384Why?
14384Will you drink_ kava_?
14384Write to me when you are in Tahiti, and tell me if you think I would be happy there?
14384Yes?
14384You came by the_ Fatueki?_.
14384You do not doubt her miraculous intercession?
14384You have never seen a man fight the_ mako_? 14384 You knew Hemeury Francois when he was young?"
14384You know what that signifies? 14384 You mean Jones?"
14384You returned to that ship when the boat picked you up?
14384You_ Menike_ like him?
14384Your name?
14384_ I hea?_ Where do you go?
14384_ I hea?_ Where do you go?
14384_ Kisskisskissa? 14384 _ Namu?_ Have they rum?"
14384_ Namu?_ Have they rum?
14384_ Vraiment?_"_ Absolument_,answered Père Simeon.
14384''Born in my own state, and painted up like Sitting Bull on the warpath?
14384''Could there by chance be a woman living there named Manu?
14384Ai n''t that so, Gedge?"
14384Also, would Satan have been able to tempt Eve if God had not made the tree of knowledge_ tapu_?
14384Am I not here over thirty years, and have I met a man like Gauguin?
14384And all his twelve children by that Henriette?
14384And at length he rose and came down to the oven, saying,''What''s up?''
14384And strike-- where?
14384And the wicked?
14384And what, when the same shark had been killed and eaten by other Marquesans?
14384And would I tell her of the women of my people in the strange islands of the_ Memke?_ They were very far away, were they not, those islands?
14384And would I tell her of the women of my people in the strange islands of the_ Memke?_ They were very far away, were they not, those islands?
14384And you know that Polonaise, with the one eye- glass, that lives in Papeite, that Krajewsky?
14384And''ow about''ell?"
14384Are the girls of your valleys very lovely, and do they all sleep in golden beds?"
14384Are you ready for the ovens of our valley?''
14384As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go?
14384As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go?
14384As we followed the steep trail past it, I called,"_ Kaoha!_""_ I hea?_"said a woman,"_ Karavario?_ Where do you go?
14384But if, as the priests said was most probable, Adam and Eve had received pardon and were in heaven, why had their guilt stained all mankind?
14384But who knows the human heart, or understands the soul?
14384But why was it forbidden for her son to live with Jeanette, being not married to her?
14384Ca n''t I live here an''be Your Dog again?''
14384Come and have a drink?"
14384Could he mean Rozinante, the steed to whom T''yonny had entrusted me, and who had so basely deserted his trust over a cliff?
14384Did God do that?
14384Did I bestride a metempsychosized man- eater, a revenant from the bloody days of Nuka- hiva?
14384Did I know this woman?
14384Did n''t I know her before you?
14384Did not Scallamera become a leper and die of it horribly?
14384Did they still fight in Bottle Meyers, and was his friend Tasset on the police force yet?
14384Do n''t you think it wise to segregate them?"
14384Do those grim warriors who survive the new régime ever relapse?
14384Do you know an officer of the_ Zelee_, with hair like a ripe banana?
14384Do you know why it is called rose- wood?
14384Do you not remember your sister?"
14384Do you want the_ mako_ to eat them?
14384Does not Socrates, in the dialogues of Plato, often speak of"going to the world below,"where he hopes to find real wisdom?
14384Does not that word_ hantu_, meaning in Malay an evil spirit, have some obscure connection with our American negro"hant,"a goblin or ghost?
14384Ducat, very pale, an inscrutable look on his face, his black eyes narrowed, said quietly,"Monsieur, do you mean that?"
14384Farther even than Tahiti?
14384Forty?
14384Had I not tasted the_ chicha_ beer of the Andes, and found it good?
14384Had he known matches in his youth?
14384He demanded brusquely,"What are you_ oui- oui_-ing for?"
14384He must go to Huapu with the chief, who was again at the door,"And did the fête help the parish?"
14384He was a regular-- what do you call''em?
14384How compare such names with John Smith or Henry Wilson?
14384How could I know the devil behind her eyes when she came wooing me again?
14384How could one explain his benign, open- souled deportment and his cheery laugh, with such damnable appetites and actions?
14384How deep beneath the sea could their women dive?
14384How do you know what God likes?
14384How is Teddy and Gotali?"
14384How long ago?
14384How many years--?
14384I was sure that, with her wealth, she would have many suitors,--but what of a tender heart?
14384If shocked further it opened its leaflets as if to say,"What''s the use?
14384In one house, under one roof?
14384Is cannibalism in the Marquesas a thing of the past?
14384Is that so?"
14384Is there no more rum?
14384It would be pleasant to be called"Blue Sky"or"Killer of Sharks,"but how about"Drowned in the Sea"or"Noise Inside"?
14384Kivi laughed, and dimly I heard his inquiry:"_ Veavea?_ Is it hot?"
14384Kivi laughed, and dimly I heard his inquiry:"_ Veavea?_ Is it hot?"
14384McHenry said,"Say, how''s your kanaka woman?"
14384Of the people that once were here?
14384Please, will you give me now the note to Ah You?"
14384Said the soldier to the sailor,''Will you give me a chew?''
14384Shall I tell you the tale of how he escaped death at the hands of his father?
14384She said,''Is there no pig?''
14384She was made different by her mother, by the prayers of Père Simeon, and by something strange in her_ kuhane_--what do you say?
14384Since when have Marquesan women said no to the command of the_ adminstrateur_?''
14384Suppose I give them rum?
14384Tari a rutu mai i hea?
14384The New York hotel in which her poor son lived?
14384The same as that of the girls in your own island, is it not?"
14384Then he said,''Where is the pig?''
14384Then how did it get into heaven?
14384Then, speaking English and very precisely, he asked,"Do you mean my wife?"
14384These dogs that go after things for you?
14384To Calvary?"
14384Was all that tender care of his whiskers to be wasted on scenery?
14384Was it cocoanut land?
14384Was it not good land?
14384Was not knowledge a good thing?
14384Was the Bella Union Theater still there in Frisco?
14384We must all be from the same valley, or at least from the same island, they thought, for were we not all Americans?
14384Were the women of that island, Chile, white?
14384Were these two peoples once one race, living on that long- sunken continent in which Darwin believed?
14384What am I saying?
14384What could a hotel be?
14384What could he mean?
14384What do I need from the great cities?"
14384What do you say?"
14384What does it matter?
14384What have I to do with a man I hate?''"
14384What is money compared to life?
14384What is that?"
14384What made the angels fall?
14384What motive had led the Maker and Knower of all things to do this deed?
14384What of matches before the French came?
14384What shall I do?
14384What was her name?
14384What will become of them, I wonder?"
14384What would God do in cases where sharks had eaten a Marquesan?
14384What would she do?
14384What''s this wife business?"
14384When I was goin''to bed he''d say,''McHenry, Your Dog is goin''now, but ca n''t Your Dog sleep here?''
14384Where had she gained these fashions and desires of the women of cities, of Europe?
14384Who can come from France and live here without money?
14384Who can say?
14384Who of us but dreads to pass a graveyard at night, though even to ourselves we deny the fear?
14384Why could not this idyllic, fierce, laughter- loving people have stayed savage and strong, wicked and clean?
14384Why does she not die?
14384Why should n''t I mean it?
14384Why would the_ mutoi_ take hold of her son, as he feared?
14384Why?"
14384Would I accompany her thither?
14384Would I not give her matches-- the packets of matches that were under the Golden Bed?
14384Would she be happy in Tahiti?
14384Would you like to meet my wife''s father- in- law, Kahuiti?
14384Wretched as I felt, I returned his glance, and said"_ Tiatohoa?_"which means,"Is that so?"
14384Wretched as I felt, I returned his glance, and said"_ Tiatohoa?_"which means,"Is that so?"
14384Yet why cavil at the vehicle by which one arrives at Nirvana?
14384You have seen there a stone foundation that supports the wild vanilla vines?
14384You know how he suffered?
14384You know how the drums speak?"
14384You know_ le droit du mari_?
14384You will not forget to deign to speak to the governor concerning the matter of the gun?"
14384_ Aoe?_ Then I will tell you."
14384_ E mea tiatohu hoi!_ Do you not know of the Piina of Fiti- nui?
14384_ Je ne sais pas._ Twenty years?
14384of the twelve- foot drums?
17174''Is it true?''
17174''You want me to die, then?''
17174A madman, the world will say; why not content one''s self with attending those people without indulging in the luxury of heroism so repugnant?
17174And how was one to expect that these poor farmers could maintain their pastor and build a church?
17174And what do we find as a compensation for so many evils?
17174DE LAVAL AND THE SAVAGES Now, what were the results accomplished by the efforts of the missionaries at this period of our history?
17174Did he think himself justified in expecting to see his efforts crowned with success?
17174His Master''s words were inspiration enough:"Wist ye not that I must be about my Father''s business?"
17174His health is weakened by the trials of a long mission, but what matters this to him?
17174How many crimes arise from the same source?
17174In his zeal for making his episcopal authority respected, could not the prelate, however, have made some concessions to the temporal power?
17174In what, then, must we seek for the cause of the futility of these efforts?
17174Is it necessary to mention with what zeal, with what devotion the Canadians brought to Mary in this new temple their homage and their prayers?
17174Moreover, where are the men of true worth who have not found upon their path the poisoned fruits of hatred?
17174On what is Fame dependent?
17174The Christians, suffering a great dearth of provisions, asked each other,''Can we feed all those people?''
17174Were the missionaries of the New World, then, less zealous, less disinterested, less eloquent than the apostles of the early days of the Church?
17174What do we know about it?
17174What more could be desired?
17174Why this economy?
17174Will he, at least, like the traveller who, exhausted by fatigue and privation, reaches finally the promised land, repose in Capuan delights?
17174de Laval?
17174de Laval?
18099What can have been Donatello''s intention?
18099Why give such prominence to this graceless type?
17760Do you know why Alphonse left his place?
17760will you come and take a glass of wine with me?
17760How infectious is cheerfulness, when I have the blue devils I always go and take a walk on the_ Boulevards_; and what makes these people so happy?
17760Pray, sir, is she one of your beauties?"
17760What boots it I would ask?
17760said the Frenchman,"you find it very fine, do you, you''re a foreigner, what countryman are you?"
17760shall I ever see the like again?
14324''And where is Creil?'' 14324 ''Are you quite sure?''
14324''Can I get a carriage to take me there?'' 14324 ''How could you leave the track if you did get to Creil?
14324''How far is this place from Creil?'' 14324 ''I want to go back to Creil''( I knew I should find a hotel there):''wo n''t you come with me and show me the way with your lantern?''
14324''Is it time to go?'' 14324 ''Is n''t it a town?''
14324''Is only that preposterous notion in the way?'' 14324 ''Is there a hotel here?''
14324''Is there an inn there?'' 14324 ''Is there no other inn here?''
14324''This is much better than sleeping in the fields,''he remarked cheerily as we entered:''shall I make you a fire?'' 14324 ''What is the nearest town?''
14324''Why not?'' 14324 A good- looking man rather, with a fresh complexion and gray hair?"
14324About your career, I mean?
14324And do n''t you see, mother, how it all lies within her reach? 14324 And the stooping shoulders?
14324And what did you say?
14324And what keeps you in London at this time of the year?
14324And what were you doing all this time?
14324And you are not going to be vexed, eh? 14324 And you have sent no message that you were coming?"
14324Are any of the house- servants''witched?
14324Are you going to remain in England long, Roscorla?
14324At Plymouth Station, grandmother?
14324But it was a promise given in ignorance: she did n''t know-- how could she know? 14324 But what else have we been speaking about?
14324But, Edward,persisted I, putting my hand over his book to make him stop reading,"how came those things where they were found?
14324But, Edward,said I,"why did those three powders turn black?"
14324Doctor,inquired Edward in a loud voice,"can you tell who is conjured and who is not?"
14324Have you been enjoying yourself, Wenna?
14324How can you know?
14324How long do letters take in going to Jamaica?
14324How?
14324I suppose it is in reference to your career?
14324I suppose you have n''t got a trap waiting for you?
14324Is she ill?
14324It is not the stage, surely?
14324Mabyn, what do you mean?
14324Mabyn, what''s the matter? 14324 Miss Rosewarne?"
14324Mr. Trelyon, do you think it is fair to go and frighten Wenna so?
14324Now, was n''t that talk silly? 14324 Oh yes,"Wenna answered; adding hastily,"Do n''t you think mother is greatly improved?"
14324Oh, Mabyn,Wenna said,"how could you be so extravagant?
14324Oh, mammy, do you know whom I''ve seen? 14324 Say?
14324The man''s in Jamaica?
14324Then she is coming out to you?
14324To her? 14324 Well, but why did not the others turn black too?"
14324Well, what is your plan?
14324Wenna, what is the matter? 14324 Wenna,"said Mabyn rather timidly,"do you think he has left Penzance?"
14324Wenna,she said in a low voice,"have you sent him any message?"
14324What dat he say, honey?
14324What do I care about Mr. Trelyon''s marriage? 14324 What does this man mean by writing these letters to me?"
14324What fool would have his comfort and peace of mind depend on the caprice of a woman? 14324 What is all settled?"
14324What is he doing? 14324 What then, Mabyn?"
14324Where did you get what was in the plates, that made the lights, you know?
14324Where is she?
14324Why are you going down to- day?
14324Why does n''t he come forward like a man and marry her?
14324Why not?
14324Why, how?
14324Yes: shall I introduce you?
14324You have surprised me, any way,said Mabyn,"for how can you be so thoughtless?
14324You know that road from the château? 14324 Your fancy about getting into the army?
14324''Have n''t I told you the reason?''
14324--"Will your heads grow again?"
14324Above these scenes, and rise to tragic lore?
14324All this that had happened was new to him: it was old and gone by in England, and who could tell what further complications might have arisen?
14324And aunt?
14324And do n''t you think our Wenna would fascinate everybody with her mouselike ways and her nice small steps?
14324And indeed I hope the poor child wo n''t sink under the terrible strain that is on her: what do you think of her looks, Mabyn?"
14324And keep invention in a noted weed,_ That every word doth almost tell my name_,_ Showing their birth and whence they did proceed_?
14324And now this sudden shock has come upon her, she seems to think she is not fit to live, and she goes on in such a wild way--""Where is she?"
14324And something also of vexation?
14324And the other watchman?
14324And what did I do?
14324Are you hurt?
14324But herein have we not the main difficulty stated?
14324But was it likely that Nature, who is so grudging of her gifts, after having endowed her so highly physically would do as much for her mentally?
14324But what must have been the state of mind in Old Russia when the stunning blows of Peter the Great seemed to be dashing everything to pieces?
14324But, after all, what harm has the man done?
14324But, you inquire, what could our breasts inflame With this new passion for theatric fame?
14324Ca n''t you see that if you persist in this idea of yours, our pleasant acquaintance must end?''
14324Can you guess?
14324DEAR MR. TRELYON: Do you know what Mr. Roscorla says in the letter Wenna has just received?
14324Day after day passed in that monotonous fashion: what had one to look forward to but old age, sickness, and then the quiet of a coffin?
14324Dear Mr. Trelyon: How could you do such a thing?
14324Did she fear that the young man was determined to throw them into a ditch or down a precipice, with the wild desire of killing his rival at any cost?
14324Did we think that we had reached the last purpose for which the homespun woolen yarn was required?
14324Did you ever see anybody placed as I am placed, Mabyn?
14324Did you want to go there?''
14324Do n''t you see that I must bring you up to it gradually, so that the shock will not be too great?"
14324Do you hear, Wenna?"
14324Do you know what you are doing?
14324Does that look like the conduct of a light and fickle heart?
14324Done burnt up, is you?
14324For is not that always the case?
14324How can I tell what may happen?
14324How can you think of frightening her so?
14324How come you do n''t trus''on Him week- a- days?"
14324How shall we account for so striking an analogy between the two most extensive empires of the two continents?
14324How you know?
14324I addressed myself to a half- grown boy who was standing near me:''When does the next train go to Paris?''
14324I had no right to assume that you wished-- that you wished for the-- for the opportunity--""Of marrying Wenna?"
14324I have met this Mr. Roscorla, have n''t I?"
14324I suppose none of those wonderful ladies would have acted so, would they?
14324If I were found there, should I be taken before the police as a vagabond?
14324If all turns out well, I do n''t see why we should not live in London, for who will know there who her father was?
14324If not, had he left Penzance, or would he return that night?
14324If she were succeeding, I should hear of it soon enough; and if not, why should I give her pain?
14324If we are to interpret Shakespeare in this manner, where is such foolery to cease?
14324If you are in love with somebody else, what''s the good of your keeping the promise?
14324If you could keep out of her way altogether--""You know all about it, then, Mabyn?"
14324Is Miss Wenna Rosewarne at all like her sister?"
14324Is Wenna ill?"
14324Is he leaving her to herself too?"
14324Is it any wonder he wanted to get Wenna for a wife?"
14324Is it to be unlimited?"
14324Is she to be made the prize of a sort of fight?
14324Is there not some perplexity in it?
14324Is you been tricked?"
14324It would be interesting to know what the Pompadour or Queen Elizabeth would have done under the circumstances, would n''t it?
14324Might he not hear her humming to herself, as she sat and sewed, some snatch of"Your Polly has never been false, she declares"?
14324Now a gruff voice called out,''What do you want?''
14324Now tell me how you come to be here?''
14324Now, mother, wo n''t you argue with her?
14324Now, will you argue with her, mother?"
14324Oh yes, I have my suspicions; and she''s engaged to another man, is n''t she?
14324On what subjects, who shall say or attempt to guess?
14324P.S.--Are you never coming back to Eglosilyan any more?"
14324Poetry?"
14324Roscorla?"
14324Shall I tell you the truth?
14324She had just time to write a few lines:"DEAR MR. TRELYON: Do you know what news I have got to tell you?
14324She has sent him away?
14324She lives here, does n''t she?
14324Should I go on to the next large town, or should I stay?
14324Should they yield without another struggle?
14324That''s two to one, or three to one, is it?
14324The government is impoverished; the war makes no progress; what becomes of the enormous revenue derived from the taxes?
14324The truth flashed upon me, and impulsively I left my car, rushed to the conductor, and asked,''What place is this?''
14324Then came Wash, great big Wash; and when his powder changed, what do you suppose he did?
14324Then less quickly,''Will you tell me, have you an understanding, or are you engaged, or do you care for any one else?''
14324Then she said timidly,"You are not very angry, Wenna?"
14324There is your sister engaged to this fellow out in Jamaica--""Is n''t he a horrid wretch?"
14324They said some time ago that there was a good chance of Mr. Trelyon marrying the daughter-- the tall girl with yellow hair, you remember?"
14324This the quiet, reasonable, gentle and timid Wenna Rosewarne, whose virtues were almost a trifle too severe?
14324Trelyon?"
14324Trelyon?"
14324WHAT IS A CONCLAVE?
14324WHAT IS A CONCLAVE?
14324Was that the packet bound for England, carrying to Wenna Rosewarne the message that she was free?
14324Was there an accident?
14324Well, the girl is engaged to another man: what more is to be said?"
14324Well, well, Harry; and what is all this about you and the young lady your mother has made such a pet of?
14324Well, well, no matter; but has n''t that got something to do with your glum looks, Harry?"
14324What blooms here, Filling the honeyed atmosphere With faint, delicious fragrancies, Freighted with blessed memories?
14324What could be done to save her?
14324What if he should come, and, this being the room allotted to himself and companion, refuse to be barred out?
14324What in the practice of our former days Could shape our talents to exhibit plays?
14324What indeed is this year of our Lord?
14324What is it you mean?"
14324What is the matter with you?"
14324What is the matter?''
14324What is there in the way?
14324What might not happen in four hours?
14324What''s to be done?
14324Wherefore-- many ask-- wherefore continue the race when the archangel''s trump is about to proclaim the end of humanity?
14324Who could have foreseen it?
14324Who taught thee how to make me love thee more The more I hear and see just cause of hate?
14324Who were those persons he evidently feared to waken?
14324Why did you not call it?''
14324Why should not our whole life be like this past year?''
14324Why, how could you do it?
14324Why, mother, have n''t you had eyes to see that these two have been in love for years?
14324Will you permit me to be the medium of your sentiments upon the subject?"
14324Will you send him back the ring?"
14324Will you?"
14324With so many things to do, how did they find time to make those marvels of misplaced industry, the patched bed- quilts?
14324Wo n''t you walk back by the other road behind the town?"
14324Would n''t that fetch him back pretty quickly?"
14324Would you like to see her, Mr. Trelyon?
14324You do n''t mean to say you care for the opinion of a man who would write to any girl like that?
14324You know aunt has no patience with vanity and--""But about yourself, Eleanor?"
14324You will be able to tell her that Mr. Roscorla has arrived, wo n''t you?"
14324and the balloon to ascend just at the proper moment?
14324and who or what was it screaming so?
14324back in England again?
14324cried the Raskolnik.--"What do you, think of brandy?"
14324exclaimed Martha in desperation,"is you gwine to go back on de Lord cos''tain''t Sunday?
14324or was it likely that so noble a man as Charles Mountjoy would have died of grief for the disgrace he had brought upon a notoriously bad woman?
14324or was that the very last ballad in the world she would now think of singing?
14324to the vastness of their territories and the scanty diffusion of population and culture over areas so immense?
14324what has he said to you?"
17244Qu''est que ça me fait si elle suait sous les bras, ou au milieu du dos?
17244Are we never to have your skill, your observation, your amassing of"documents"turned to any account?
17244But,_ Can_ they be successful if the accepted masterpieces of modern sculpture are not to be set down as insipid?
17244Can anyone doubt it who sees an exhibition of their works?
17244Does nature look like this?
17244How many foreigners know that he painted what are called architectural subjects delightfully, and even_ genre_ with zest?
17244III What do we mean by style?
17244In the event of such an irruption, would there be any torsos left from which future Poussins could learn all they should know of the human form?
17244Indeed one is tempted often to inquire of the latter, Why so much interest in what apparently seems to you of so little import?
17244Is it caution or perversity?
17244Is not sympathy with what is modern, instant, actual, and apposite a fair parallel of patriotism?
17244Is the absolute value of the parts in shadow lowered or raised?
17244Is there more individuality in a thirteenth- century grotesque than in the"Faun"of the Capitol?
17244It was felicitously of him, rather than of Dupré or Corot, that the naif peasant inquired,"Why do you paint the tree; the tree is there, is it not?"
17244The first thought is not, Are the"Saint Jean"and the"Bourgeois de Calais"successful works of art?
17244What does a canvas of Claude Monet show in this respect?
17244What has been gained?
17244What is the effect where considerable portions of the scene are suddenly thrown into marked shadow, as well as others illuminated with intense light?
17244What was he thinking of?
17244Where is the realistic tragedy, comedy, epic, composition of any sort?
17244Wherein does the charm consist?
17244Who knows?
17244Why is he so obviously great as well as so obviously extraordinary?
17244Why should not one feel the same quick interest, the same instinctive pride in his time as in his country?
17244Why?
17244Will it?
17244Would there be any_ disjecta membra_ from which skilled anatomists could reconstruct the lost_ ensemble_, or at any rate make a shrewd guess at it?
15025''; and presently the mother would ask,''Where is that smell of violets coming from?''
15025''And I suppose you never drop in for a pipe at"The Three Tuns"now of an evening?''
15025''Come,''she said at length,''which is it to be-- the revolver, marriage, or the money?''
15025''Do n''t you understand?''
15025''Hast thou any courage hid in any crevice of thee?''
15025''How do you sell your violets?''
15025''If you know, dear, why do you ask?''
15025''Is it Alice Sunshine?''
15025''Is n''t it better to try and keep cool rather than to fly into a temper about nothing?
15025''It is n''t Edith Appleblossom, surely?
15025''Jenny Hopkins?''
15025''Lucy Rainbow?''
15025''Maud Willow?''
15025''Monstrous dull, is n''t it?
15025''Now who else was there?
15025''Now, which is it to be?''
15025''Once more-- death, marriage, or the money?''
15025''Poor- spirited creature,''I said,''where is thy valour?
15025''Somewhat of a_ non sequitur_, is it not, my love?''
15025''Well what?''
15025''Why shed blood?''
15025''Wo n''t you have some wine with me?''
15025''You have, I say.... Well, why do you look at the envelope in that way?
15025A CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE Why do we go on talking?
15025And I?
15025And do you remember our favourite line:"_ Our loves into corpses or wives_?"''
15025And how have they, in eight cases out of this nine, treated her?
15025And if you do n''t marry, what do you want with money?
15025And take a cigar?''
15025And then, how was she to receive it?
15025And was not the play itself an allegory of our coming lives?
15025And will you believe me?
15025Are you mad?''
15025As the metropolitan trains load and unload in a morning, what does one see?
15025At home at last and in bed, how could I sleep?
15025Be angry; what does it matter to me?
15025But are those pictures to be taken as documents, or are they not the product of Mr. Chevalier''s idealistic temperament?
15025But do lovers, one wonders, still observe his ancient, though mistaken, rites?
15025But then, reader, why tease you with transparent secrets?
15025But was it not a startling coincidence?
15025But why?
15025Can it be possible that any one of my readers has ever been in a like case?
15025Can you imagine it?
15025Can you see it in London?
15025Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season?
15025Could anything be more characteristic of the whimsical humour of Time, which loves nothing better than to make a laughing- stock of human symbolism?
15025Could he not waive so ridiculous a blemish?
15025Did n''t you hear the birds calling you?
15025Did not Galatea symbolise all the sleeping beauty of the world that was to awaken warm and fragrant at the kiss of our youth?
15025Did such ridiculous things happen?
15025Do n''t you think you had better go?''
15025Do true lovers still remember the day to keep it holy, one wonders?
15025Do you remember?
15025Does Ophelia still sing beneath the window, and do the love- birds still carry on their celestial postage?
15025Does he never appeal to you with any more human significance, a significance tearful and uncomfortably symbolic?
15025Does that residuum actually incarnate all the love, devotion, honour, and other noble qualities in man?
15025Does the coster actually worship his''dona''with so fine a chivalry?
15025Does the dream of him rise silvery in the imagination of woman?
15025For what is art but a faint reflection of the beauty already sown broadcast over the face of the world?
15025For what is the lot of woman?
15025For who knows what is in the heart beneath that poor soiled coat?
15025For, indeed, was that not the dream of all of us?
15025Forgive me, but she would n''t quite understand you, I fear....''''Would n''t quite approve, eh?''
15025Had she missed this sovereign?
15025Have I quoted correctly?
15025Have we no feeling for them?
15025Have you ever gloatingly pictured their absolute bewilderment as, with a stern sense of family pride, they sit down to cut your pages?
15025Have you never felt a sort of absurdity in paying for a rose-- especially if you paid in copper?
15025He is strong, and swift, and splendid-- but seems he holy?
15025His grin disagreeably reminded me-- had I not myself that very night ignorantly flourished on a brass knocker?
15025How could they, poor things?
15025How many faggots to the dram?
15025How many hundred times was he bigger than the earth?
15025I continued,''but couldst thou fight against the enemy of thy land?
15025Is he a star to lift her up to heaven with pure importunate beam?
15025Is he angel as well as god?
15025Is he so sentimentally devoted to his''old Dutch''?
15025Is it but an insular fancy to suppose that Englishmen, beyond any other race, still retain the most living faith in the sanctity of womanhood?
15025Is it impious to infer that the Angel Gabriel himself dreads a blue- stocking?
15025Is it not curious that the very follies we delight in for ourselves should seem so stupid, so absolutely vulgar, when practised by others?
15025Is it not meet that men should strive together for such possessions?
15025Is it to impart information?
15025Is it?''
15025Is there hope for us, my brother?
15025It is an earthly accomplishment, it is as walking is to flying-- is it not stigmatised''pedestrian''?
15025It is true that it is within his reach to be a father; but what is''paternity''compared with motherhood?
15025It was an irresistible temptation to ask him:''Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?
15025It was n''t Lilian, after all?''
15025Nay, why worry to be''original''?
15025O river that runs so sweetly by their feet, when you shall have stopped running will they rise?
15025O sun that shines above their heads, when you have ceased from shining will they come to us again?
15025Oats, you care for children, do n''t you?''
15025Of the two, so far as they are at present developed, is there any doubt that the woman with beauty is better off than the woman with brains?
15025Of what is he_ dreaming_?
15025One feels inclined idealistically to ask,''Ought poets to sell?''
15025Or canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons?''
15025Or was it that Sir Philip Sidney paid for the lock with his poem?
15025Poor old fellow, can you be selfish to him?
15025Strange, is it not, how we pat and stroke our possessions as though they belonged to us, instead of to our money-- our grandfather''s money?
15025Suppose I were to say that I wo n''t come home?''
15025Surely thy valour would melt at the clash of swords and the voice of the drum?''
15025THE PHILOSOPHY OF''LIMITED EDITIONS''Why do the heathen so furiously rage against limited issues, large- papers, first editions, and the rest?
15025Then he looked at me with his blue eyes, and I recognised him with a start''What''s the new book?''
15025To whose account of the six would I fain be credited?
15025Was it less bright tonight?
15025Was it the Muse in dainty modern costume and delicately tinted cheek?
15025Was love less sweet because my next- door neighbour knew it as well?
15025Was not that the shallow excuse by which they had hung on for ever so long?
15025Was there anything in the world quite so commonplace as suicide?
15025We feel a pride in being spoken of as''specialists''--and yet what is a specialist?
15025We''re one as fickle as the other, so where''s the harm?''
15025Well, and if they do?
15025What are these wonderful things you are whispering to my soul?
15025What chance indeed would he have with our modern viragoes of the brain, the mighty daughters of the pen?
15025What do you mean?
15025What does he make of the lark up there?
15025What have we to offer in exchange for his priceless manna?
15025What is Socialism but a vast throb of man''s desire after unity?
15025What is a poet?
15025What is he thinking as he rustles about disconsolately among the bushes?
15025What is it now?
15025What is the relation of one pin- maker to the whole social economy?
15025What is the truth about this pair?
15025What''s the matter?''
15025What, in fact, do we talk about?
15025What, indeed, has become of that mystery of the Printed Word, of which Carlyle so movingly wrote?
15025Where would champagne be if those intoxicants were restricted by expensive licence, and sold in gilded bottles?
15025Which of my friends do I love the most?
15025Who will save us from this remorseless law of eternal subdivision?
15025Who would miss such a poor imitation?
15025Why do you call me?
15025Why such haste to be unlike the rest of the world, when the best things of life were manifestly those which all men had in common?
15025Why, oh why, do we go on talking?
15025Will it always seem so much worse to pick a man''s brains than to break a woman''s heart?
15025Will the true lovers go next?
15025Will you be my wife?
15025Will you not go shares with me?''
15025Will you not take them?
15025Would the same reason make death less bitter?
15025and answer me; Did you my sailor see?
15025and what is a publisher?
15025are you so_ great_ that you have lost the sense of pity?
15025est- ce toi?_ Fame in Athens and Florence took the form of laurel; in London it is represented by''Romeikes.''
15025he said presently,''what have you been doing with yourself all these years?''
15025he said,''are your cheeks so painted that you have lost all sense of shame?''
15025or the purple bilberry, or the boot- bright blackberry in the entremets thereof?
15025reader, do n''t you wish you could make such a splendid mistake?
15025tell me, tell me, did you pass my sweetheart''s ship last night?
15025violins, whither would you take my soul?
15025wouldst thou die for thy friend?''
14884Perhaps you think you could play this at sight, boy?
14884To what shall we compare Ole Bull''s playing? 14884 What else can you do?"
14884What? 14884 Would not a single string suffice for your talent?"
148841678| Paris 1753| Geminiani, Francesco| Lucca 1680| Dublin 1762| Alberti, Guiseppe Matteo| Bologna 1685|?
148841700| Laurenti, Bartolomeo G.| Bologna 1644|?
148841700|?
148841726| Vitali, Tomasso| Bologna c1650|?
148841743| Eccles, Henry| London 1660| London?
148841749| Gentili, Georges| Venice 1688|?
148841760|?
148841763| Aubert, Jacques|?
148841765|?
148841770|?
148841777| Van Malder, Pierre| Brussels 1724| Brussels 1768| Glaser, John Michel| Erlangen 1725|?
148841784| Leclair, Jean Marie| Lyons 1697| Paris 1764| Graun, Jean G.| Germany 1698| Berlin 1771| Francoer, François| Paris 1698|?
148841785|?
148841787| Abaco, Evaristo F. Dall| Verona c1700|?
148841794|?
148841794|?
148841797| London 1871| Girard, Narcisse| Nantes 1797| Paris 1860| Müller, Karl Friedrich| Brunswick 1797|?
148841800|?
148841800|?
148841805|?
148841813| Schlick, Regina( Sacchi)| Mantua 1764|?
148841815|?
148841819| Haack, Friedrich| Potsdam 1760|?
148841823| Weiss, Franz| Silesia 1778|?
148841830|?
148841830|| Garcin, Jules A. S.| Bourges 1830|?
148841839| Labarre, Louis J.C.| Paris 1771|?
148841861| Benesch, Joseph| Batelow 1793|?
148841873| Arditi, Emilia|?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884?
14884But do you wish to hear the fantasia before or after the sonata?"
14884Caroline|?
14884Cloud 1866| Lafonde|?
14884L.|?
14884On arrival at the theatre he asked the driver,"How much?"
14884Ten francs?
14884The rehearsal was about to commence when Von Büllow paused and asked,"Which of you gentlemen is Burmester?"
14884Then why not employ them?
14884c1600|?
14884c1700|?
14884c1750|?
14884c1750|?
14884c1800| Stamitz, Anton| Mannheim 1753| Paris?
14884c1850| Müller, John Henry| Königsberg 1780|?
14884de Sales| Passy 1771| Paris 1842| Festa, Guiseppe M.| Naples 1771|?
14884| Alberghi, Paolo| Italy c1600|?
14884| Amsterdam 1799| Königsberg 1866| Gattie, Henry|?
14884| Anderle, F.J.|?
14884| Bagatella, Antonio| Padua 1750|?
14884| Baltazarini| Italy c1550|?
14884| Batta, Alexandre| Maastricht 1816|?
14884| Bayonne 1815| Paris?
14884| Bazzini, Antonio| Brescia 1818| Milan 1897| Dancla, Jean B. C.| Bagnières de||| Bignon 1818|?
14884| Belgium 1797| Paris 1869| Coronini, Paolo| Vincenza 1798|?
14884| Bitti, Martini|?
14884| Bonnet, Jean Baptiste| Montauban 1763|?
14884| Borghi, Luigi|?
14884| Boucher, Alexandre Jean| Paris 1770| Paris 1861| Gerbini, Luigia|?
14884| Brown, Abram|?
14884| Carbonelli, Stefano| Rome c1700| London?
14884| Cartier, Jean Baptiste| Avignon 1765| Paris 1841| LaCroix, Antoine|?
14884| Collins, Isaac|?
14884| Cortellini, Camillo| Italy c1600|?
14884| Cothen c1700|?
14884| Danzi, Franz| Mannheim 1763| Carlsruhe 1826| Peshatschek, François| Bohemia 1763| Vienna 1816| Alday, P| Perpignan 1764|?
14884| Eberwen, Karl| Weimar 1786| Weimar 1868| Granafond, Eugene| Compiegne 1786|?
14884| Eccles, John| London 1650| London 1735| Marini, Carlo Antonio| Bergamo c1650|?
14884| Eller, Louis| Graz 1819| Pau 1862| Hering, Karl| Berlin 1819|?
14884| England c1600|?
14884| Farina, Carlo| Italy c1580|?
14884| Festing, Michael C.| London?
14884| Fiorillo, Federigo| Brunswick 1753|?
14884| Fuchs, Peter| Bohemia 1750| Vienna 1804| Henry, Bonventure|?
14884| Gautherot, Louise|?
14884| Givet 1749|?
14884| Guiliani, François| Florence 1760|?
14884| Hampeln, Karl von| Mannheim 1765| Stuttgart 1834| Eck, Johann F.| Mannheim 1766| Bamberg 1809| Hunt, Karl| Dresden 1766|?
14884| Hellmesberger, Georg| Vienna 1800| Newaldegg 1873| Meerts, Lambert| Brussels 1800| Brussels 1863| Müller, Theodore Heinrich| Brunswic 1800|?
14884| Hesse 1687| Eisenach 1733| Montanari, Francesco| Padua?
14884| Kramer, Traugott| Codburg 1818|?
14884| Kriegck, J.J.| Bebra 1750| Meiningen 1813| Sirmen, Maddalena| Venice c1750|?
14884| Leduc, Pierre| Paris 1755| Holland 1816| Fauvel, André Joseph| Bordeaux 1756|?
14884| London 1752| Ferrari, Domenico| Piacenza?
14884| London 1790| London 1830| Lipinski, Karl Joseph| Poland 1790| Urlow 1861| Goetz, Jean N.C.| Weimar 1791|?
14884| London 1806|?
14884| Lorenziti, Bernado| Würtemburg 1764|?
14884| Madorus, Giovanni| Venice c1600|?
14884| Manoir, Guillaume|?
14884| Milan 1778|?
14884| Morigi, Angelo|?
14884| Obermeyer, Joseph| Bohemia 1749|?
14884| Padua 1657| Ferrara 1716| Vivaldi, Antonio| Venice 1660|?
14884| Paris 1769| Paris 1839| Paravicini, Signora| Turin 1769|?
14884| Paris 1771| Pagin, André Noel| Paris 1721|?
14884| Paris 1780| Enderle, Wilhelm C.| Bayreuth 1722| Darmstadt 1793| Nardini, Pietro| Tuscany 1722| Florence 1793| Lefêbre, Jacques| Prinzlow 1723|?
14884| Parma 1788| Lemière|?
14884| Pichatschek, François| Vienna 1793| Carlsruhe 1840| Filipowicz, Elizabeth M.|?
14884| Piedmont 1753| London 1824| Kranz, Johann F.| Weimar 1754| Stuttgart 1807| Mosel, Giovanni F.| Florence 1754|?
14884| Piedmont 1759|?
14884| Poland? 1779|?
14884| Poland? 1779|?
14884| Prume, François Herbert| Liège 1816| Liège 1849| Deldevez, Ernest| Paris 1817| Paris 1897| Göbel, Johann Ferdinand| Baumgarten 1817|?
14884| Rome 1730| Matheis, Nicola|?
14884| Turin 1778|?
14884| Turin 1778|?
14884| Turin 1781| Turin 1853| Mazas, Jacques F.| Beziers 1782|?
14884| Valentini, Guiseppe| Florence 1690|?
14884| Veracini, Francesco| Florence c1685| 1750| Senaillé, Jean Baptiste| Paris 1687|?
14884| Wanski, Johann N.| Posen c1800|?
14884| Woldemar, Michael| Orleans 1750| Clermont-|||-Ferrand 1816| Barthelemon, François H.| Bordeaux 1751|?
14884|------------------------------------------------------------------- Alessandro, Romano| Italy c1530|?
14884|?
14884|?
14884|?
14884|?
14884|?
14884|?
14884|?
16907''Polly''s''? 16907 And how did he get it?"
16907Billy Robinson? 16907 But, what_ is_ it?"
16907Ca n''t you?
16907Do you hate it like that?
16907Does a bird need to theorise about building its nest, or boast of it when built? 16907 Eh-- oh-- just a_ Giocho di Bocca_,"she returned vaguely,"a game of bowls-- how should I know?"
16907How about''Polly''s''?
16907How much did you pay for this thing?
16907Indeed?
16907Is this the heart of Bohemia?
16907Twine?
16907What is it?
16907Whence the more than Oriental splendour?
16907You do n''t object, ladies?
16907''How, you rascal?''
16907A LAST WORD And after all this,--what of the Village?
16907A piano rather out of tune?
16907Affection?
16907America, though-- I hear you say!--America, for whom he fought and laboured and sacrificed himself: she surely appreciated his efforts?
16907Among other strange performances, they levelled the hills of New York-- is it not odd to remember that there once were hills, many hills, in New York?
16907And have you ever seen anything quite like that workshop?
16907And now shall we go back, for a few moments only, to Richmond Hill?
16907And said he quite sweetly:"Why not?
16907And the kings said, after they had read:"This is beautiful literature, but what is the country like,--that of which they write?"
16907Are not your favourites beyond the Magic Door all good trenchermen?
16907Blind, confident adoration?
16907But the Villager?
16907But what of the spirit of Greenwich?
16907But wicked?
16907But-- did you say_ Liberal_ Club?"
16907Ca n''t you say you lost it?"
16907Congress, by the bye, is about two yards long; do you happen to know it?
16907Did it fall from the skies or was it built in a minute like the delectable little house in"Peter Pan"?
16907Did you know that"Greenwich Village"is tautology?
16907Do you remember Colonel Turnbull who had so much trouble in selling his house at Eighth Street because it was so far out of town?
16907Do you think all the artistic costume- creating is done in the Rue de la Paix?
16907Does it not sound like very real and very fascinating art?
16907Got any?"
16907Grim?
16907Have you ever heard, for instance, of the psychoanalysts?
16907Have you ever read the letters that passed between these three, by the bye?
16907How are ye ground between the laws and the customs?
16907How can people be both reckless and deeply earnest?
16907I can paint people green if I like, ca n''t I?"
16907I demanded, devoured by curiosity;"the stage door of a theatre,--or what?"
16907I wonder whether little old"Washington Hall"was built too late to come under these regulations?
16907In 1812 it seemed safe, even advisable, for the exile to return to America again, but where was the money to be found?
16907In what prisons are ye flung?
16907Interesting?
16907Is it any wonder that in England the"Crisis"was ordered to be burned by the hangman?
16907Is it far- fetched to assume that Oliver found his small brother something of a handful?
16907Its name?
16907Just what is it?
16907Just what is the Liberal Club?
16907Like it?
16907Maybe you''d take a cup when it''s ready?"
16907Pose?
16907Regard, then-- one perceives they are not happy-- eh?
16907Said a girl, who, Village- like, would not perjure her soul to be polite:"Why so much magenta?"
16907Said one tragically:"My dear, is n''t it awful?
16907Says Mr. Martin:"The most interesting thing that ever happened in the''Old Martin''?
16907She will fix you with eyes utterly devoid of a twinkle and answer:"I?
16907So the sensible chamberlain took a certain little object and held it close to the eyes of one of the kings, and cried,"What is this?"
16907Someone said today to the author of this book:"How can you write about the Village?
16907Then he held another thing close before the eyes of another king and cried again,"What is this?"
16907Therefore one of the kings said,"How can that be truth?
16907This quotation might almost serve as a text for the life of Paine, might it not?
16907To them enters a youth, who is hailed with"How is Dickey''s neuralgia?"
16907To what lowliness are ye bowed?
16907What do you suppose that ardour was like when he was not forty- two but twenty- four?
16907What shall we do without you?
16907When Theodore Roosevelt called Thomas Paine"a filthy little Atheist"( or was the adjective"dirty"?
16907Where are you moving to, dear?"
16907Where could he fall a- nodding, to dream himself back into the quaint and gallant days of the past?
16907Where did it come from-- that quaint little house with the fanlight over the door and the flower- starred grassplot in front?
16907Where would he smoke his ancient Dutch pipe in peace?
16907Who are we to improve on Omar''s wise and tolerant philosophy?
16907Who ever heard of a dyspeptic hero?
16907Who wants to study a city''s life through the registries of its civic diseases or cures?
16907Yet did Paine, with this solemn horror of war, suggest that the United States stop fighting?
16907he exclaimed earnesly,"do ye play tennis?"
16907the choice what heart can doubt, Of tents with love, or thrones without?
10608''Does the damsel know nothing of this-- does she not go with her eyes open?'' 10608 ''How know you this?''
10608A wedding- gift?
10608Ah,he said, softly,"there is a woman, is there?"
10608Ah,said his host,"it is love, is it?
10608Ali,he said,"who lives in the first house beyond the mosque, on the left-- the house with the green lattices?"
10608And her maid- servant?
10608And the maid?
10608And to you?
10608And why do you go to Biskra?
10608And you, since you are a bachelor?
10608And you,said the lawyer, turning to Nicha,"who is your father?"
10608And your mother?
10608And your mother?
10608And your mother?
10608Are you a professional or an amateur?
10608Are you quite well?
10608Are you rested?
10608Art thou alone?
10608At what hour do you dine?
10608Beloved,she said,"knew you this?"
10608But what of Mirza?
10608But your real name?
10608Can a man''s belief need preaching to in such a case as this? 10608 Chancellor,"he said,"is this binding?"
10608Did I not tell thee?
10608Did ever a man die the easier because he had grovelled at the knees of Huxley? 10608 Did you buy it, Bobby?"
10608Did you ever see a hunting- leopard?
10608Do I get the cup?
10608Do ye see that buttherfly?
10608Do you love him?
10608Do you pay in dates, hides, ivory, or gold- dust?
10608Do you think her beautiful?
10608Do you wish to be Minister of Justice?
10608Doubtless,said Abdullah;"since all women are named for the mother of the Prophet; but what is your other name, your house name?"
10608Doubtless,said the cardinal, with a shrug;"but have you nothing more to say about the niece?"
10608Father,asked Abdullah,"will you now marry us, since we are Christians?"
10608Father,he said, after some moments of silence,"_ have_ women souls?"
10608God help her,said the man of the goats;"shall I give her some warm milk-- there is plenty?"
10608God help them,said Abdullah;"have they not trouble enough, without souls to save?"
10608Gout?
10608Has he a green turban?
10608Has he been to Mecca?
10608Have I not crossed the desert nine times with you? 10608 Have you seen a ghost, my lord?"
10608He''s prompt, is n''t he?
10608How can one, born as I, know his mother?
10608How can you distinguish at this distance?
10608How dare you send me such a petition?
10608How did it happen?
10608How do you know that?
10608How know you this?
10608How long will it take me to learn the game?
10608How many words are there?
10608How old is the one I wore yesterday?
10608I wish that I might serve you; but, when children cry for the moon, what is to be done? 10608 I?"
10608Ilderhim,she answered;"but why do you ask?
10608In every word you speak I recognize my master, but is it not possible that my master may nod? 10608 Is any one dying?
10608Is it an electrical contrivance?
10608Is it legal?
10608It wo n''t bore you?
10608Lady Nora?
10608May I bring my wife to your house? 10608 Me?"
10608Mine?
10608Mirza,said the commandant,"do you hear?"
10608Mirza?
10608Mistress?
10608Monsieur le Commandant,he said,"will you have the kindness to read this?"
10608Monsieur,he said at length,"is it very difficult to become a Christian?"
10608Must I continually remind you,said Abdullah,"that to- morrow may never dawn?
10608My friend,he said, at length,"whom do you consider the most powerful person in Biskra, the person to be first reckoned with?"
10608My friend,said the lawyer,"will you place me doubly in your debt by shaking hands with me a second time?
10608My son,said the old man,"how canst thou believe with all thine heart?
10608Nicha,she answered;"do you like it?"
10608Nora, darlin''?
10608Of course he may come,said the commandant;"what is to prevent?"
10608Oh,said Lady Nora,"why do you remind me of such tiresome things as the treasury?
10608Perhaps I am detaining you?
10608Phelim,she said, smiling,"_ you_ would do something for me, if I were to ask you, would you not?"
10608Pietro?
10608Shall I read it?
10608Shall dinner be served, your eminence?
10608Shall we camp, master?
10608She had beauty, had she not?
10608She was beheaded, was she not?
10608Signor Testolini?
10608That was nice of him, was n''t it?
10608The French rule is beneficent, doubtless?
10608The man in the green turban?
10608To whom were they spoken?
10608To- morrow?
10608Was it a valuable jewel, my lord?
10608Well, my son,said his host, after Abdullah began to pick and choose,"what brings you to me?"
10608Well,said the commandant,"what is the solution?"
10608What did it cry? 10608 What do you mean?"
10608What do you see?
10608What is it?
10608What is it?
10608What is that strange word?
10608What is that?
10608What is the price?
10608What is your age?
10608What kept you, Bobby,she said,"a business engagement, or did you fall asleep?"
10608What man would ever marry such a wretch as I?
10608What need?
10608What religion do you choose?
10608What time is it, Pietro?
10608What?
10608When did you love me first?
10608While my lord is occupied with the crucifix,said the cardinal,"will you not walk with me?"
10608Who are you?
10608Who are you?
10608Who art thou?
10608Who is she?
10608Who owns this cup?
10608Who should know that better than I?
10608Who?
10608Whose words were those?
10608Why are we waiting?
10608Why do you not have him on?
10608Why in the world,he asked,"did you object to my harboring Abdullah?
10608Why is she so powerful?
10608Why the law, Monsieur the Chancellor?
10608Will money help?
10608Will you send this reply for me?
10608Will your horse stand, corporal?
10608Willingly,said Ali;"what shall the new one be?
10608Would it please you,said the old man,"to take a passenger for Biskra?"
10608Would you believe it? 10608 Would you like the Campanile for a paper- weight?"
10608You are a Frenchman, are you not?
10608You''ve won,she said;"why be disagreeable?
10608Your eminence,she said,"the evening will be fine; shall we dine on deck?"
10608''And the little gossoon?''
10608''Bobby,''she said, suddenly,''did you mean it?''
10608''Did you mean it?''
10608''He was six, to a minute,''said the little man, looking into the pistol,''Was he chape at the price?''
10608''He was,''said the little man''Was he six years old?''
10608''How is the poor woman?''
10608''Is your mother bad?''
10608''Was the horse sound?''
10608''What''s that?''
10608''Where''s your mistress?''
10608''Who is she?''
10608''Will you lind me a horse, Phelim?''
10608''_ Good_ whiskey?''
10608A month, a year, until it avails nothing, and she is gone?
10608A woman has a soul, has she?
10608Abdullah, have you anything which you wish to say to me?"
10608Again, I ask you, what doth hinder me to be baptized?"
10608All is fair in love and war, is it not?"
10608Am I forgiven?"
10608Am I needed?"
10608And as they went on_ their_ way, they came unto a certain water: and the eunuch said, See,_ here is_ water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?
10608And he said, How can I, except some man should guide me?
10608And you, your eminence, will you honor me?"
10608Are their names published?
10608Are you a Catholic?"
10608Are you about to tempt me?"
10608At what hour do you start?"
10608Can we make forty- two miles in one day, so as to cut Okba out?"
10608Can you forgive me, my lord, and will you tell me how I can serve you?"
10608Commerce, invention, speculation-- why could I not succeed in one of these?
10608Could I not have been a stockbroker?''
10608Did Ilderhim, your father, give you these silks and these emeralds?"
10608Did n''t you hear Aunt Molly say that Phelim is on the Continent?
10608Did you not hear it?"
10608Do you ask, now, why she is the most powerful person in Biskra?"
10608Do you hope that he will bring it?"
10608Do you know how many men it takes to officer a mosque of the first class, such a one as we have here?
10608Do you not know her, since you lived in Biskra?"
10608Have you learned nothing-- have you heard no whisper-- have you no message for me?"
10608He admitted this grudgingly, for an Englishman is slow to see a rival in a foreigner, and who so foreign as an Irishman?
10608He opened it unluckily, for the first words that met his eye were these, and he read them:"Woman, what have I to do with thee?"
10608He read it a second time, looked up, and said:"Well, what of it?"
10608How can a camel rest if, when he kneels, his load does not touch the ground?
10608How can one describe a song?
10608How is it now; even here in Venice, where art still exists, and where there is no bourse?
10608How long must I believe a religion that saves her I love?
10608How many of them were good women?
10608How should you?
10608I have four thousand pounds at Coutts''s, all I have in the world; will it lift the cup?"
10608I kiss the images of saints every day,"he added,"why not this one?"
10608I know you''re a fortune- hunter, but what blame?
10608If I believed there was nothing after this life, do you think I should be sitting here, feeding the pigeons?
10608If I take it, whom do I wrong?
10608In an hour the girl whispered,"Abdullah?"
10608Is she English, French, Spanish, or American?
10608Is there a hotel in Venice big enough to take me in?
10608Is there aught in your book that argues that woman has a soul?"
10608It is doubtless Byzantine, but where did its maker live; in Byzantium or here, in Venice?
10608May I come?_"ABDULLAH."
10608Now that I consider the trouble and expense he is put to on my account, surely I should love him, should I not?"
10608Now, the question in me mind is, shall I pay Father Flynn the ten pounds I promised him, a year ago Easter, or shall I buy the buttherfly?
10608Now, what are the chances of the junior hand discardin''a ten and drawin''a higher card?
10608One day the earl spoke out--"Tommaso,"he said,"you are not a rich man, I take it?"
10608Read the lines upon his tomb, written by his wife-- what do they teach?
10608Shall I uncover the Palo d''Oro, my Lord, or light up the alabaster column; they are both very fine?"
10608She bent her knee and then went on, but as she passed she laughed and whispered,"Which trade pays best, yours or mine?"
10608That was a long time for a savage to amuse a Grand Duke, was it not?
10608That was strange, was n''t it?"
10608The cardinal began to laugh-- then he suddenly ceased, looked hard at the earl and asked,"Are you serious, my lord?"
10608The offer is printed in the newspapers of the land and its originator reaps much-- what is the word I wish?--acclaim?
10608There was no answer,"Mistress?"
10608They entered the hut, and the priest, pointing toward the chamber- door, asked:"Does she believe?"
10608This was the costume of the woman, but the woman herself, as she stood in the doorway, the taper in her hand, who may describe her?
10608Was it the man, Adam, or the woman, Eve?"
10608What could you have whispered to her, Monsieur le Commandant, as you left my poor house?"
10608What cries it now?"
10608What did Huxley preach?
10608What did he say?"
10608What do you see now?"
10608What doth hinder_ me_ to be baptized?"
10608What right have you to doubt my belief in a God who will save my love to me?
10608What will the laws of France do for me?"
10608What would they say and do at his clubs?
10608When Abdullah rose from his knees, his forehead dripping, he drew his hand across his face and asked,"Am I a Christian?"
10608When you go back to France, what are you looking forward to?"
10608Where are the witnesses, Abdullah?"
10608Where did it come from?
10608Where was I, Pietro?"
10608Where was I?"
10608Where, in all the world, could he hide himself, if he did this thing?
10608Who is she?"
10608Who is your father, Abdullah?"
10608Who is your father, beloved?"
10608Who loses the freight?"
10608Who placed the primal curse of labor on the race?
10608Who would ever have attained any great thing if he had not despised small things?"
10608Who would ever have won a battle if he had taken thought of the widows?
10608Whom have you with you, another mistress, or, at last, a wife?"
10608Why did you wake me?"
10608Why dig it up?"
10608Why does he compel me to so one- sided a bargain?
10608Why does he not do something that will make the world call me his wife, instead of calling him my husband?
10608Why does he not write a page that some one will read?
10608Why does he not write a song that some one will sing?
10608Why does he not_ do_ something to even up the transaction?
10608Why does n''t he get his clothes at home?"
10608Why should he not earn me?
10608Why, then, is it not mine as well as any one''s?
10608Will you come, Bobby?
10608Will you have some tea?
10608Would God let Nora Blake''s granddaughter make shipwreck?
10608You are, perhaps, fourteen?"
10608You understand, do you not?"
10608You, Abdullah-- I beg your pardon, Philip-- that was the name I gave you, was it not?"
10608asked Miss O''Kelly;"did your man stale it?"
10608asked the cardinal;"is he within?"
10608exclaimed the cardinal;"then you know Ennis?
10608he exclaimed,"how come on the wife and baby?
10608no; kudos?
10608says I. Phelim leaned down from the dog- cart;''Aunt Molly,''says he,''we ca n''t afford to keep what we have already, can we?''
15392*** Having now shown what can not save the Union, I return to the question with which I commenced, How can the Union be saved?
15392A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then?
15392Absorbed in a thousand trifles, how has the nation all at once come to a stand?
15392Admitting, however, that the old United States are in no danger from this principle-- why is it so?
15392Again: Have they stood forth faithfully to repel violations of the Constitution?
15392All political power may be abused, but is it to stop where abuse may begin?
15392An American no longer?
15392And are there any degrees of injustice which will withdraw from sovereign power the capacity of making a given law?
15392And is it not plain to every man?
15392Are all the seeds of distraction or division crushed and dissipated?"
15392Because the defence was unsuccessful?
15392But can this be done?
15392But can you make this compact?
15392But does he know how remarks of that sort will be received by the laboring people of the North?
15392But how stands the profession of devotion to the Union by our assailants, when brought to this test?
15392But what did he say?
15392But will it be the last?
15392But will the North agree to this?
15392Can they point to any State where a powerful oligarchy, possessed of immense wealth, has ever existed without attempting to meddle in the government?
15392Do gentlemen perceive the consequences to which their arguments must lead if they are of any value?
15392Does not the event show they judged rightly?
15392Does success gild crime into patriotism, and the want of it change heroic self- devotion to imprudence?
15392Does the gentleman remember that freedom to preach was first gained, dragging in its train freedom to print?
15392Even now, does not manufacturing, banking, and commercial capital perpetually vex our politics?
15392Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine?
15392Have sixty years taught us nothing?
15392Have they abstained from violating the Constitution?
15392Have you settled the questions which you have been so long discussing and deliberating upon at Washington?
15392How is each of the thirty States to defend itself?
15392How is the Union formed?
15392How shall the stream rise above its fountain?
15392How would the intimation have been received, that Warren and his associates should have merited a better time?
15392If even all those great patriots, and all that enthusiasm for justice and liberty, did not avail to keep us safe in such a Union, what will?
15392If it is, why does our power of correction sleep?
15392If this be so, what are they worth?
15392If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports?
15392If you make it enter into a new and additional compact, is it any longer the same Union?
15392In 1831, what was the state of things?
15392In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted?
15392Is a citizen, or are the courts of justice to inquire whether that, or any other law, is just, before they obey or execute it?
15392Is all peace and all quiet?"
15392Is all quiet-- all happy?
15392Is it denied that those States possess a republican form of government?
15392Is it, then, not certain, that if something is not done to arrest it, the South will be forced to choose between abolition and secession?
15392Is the assertion of such freedom before the age?
15392Is the doctrine to be sustained here that it is imprudent for men to aid magistrates in executing the laws?
15392Is the original cause of the movement-- that slavery is a sin, and ought to be suppressed-- weaker now than at the commencement?
15392Is the right to hold slaves a right which Massachusetts enjoys?
15392Is there any danger of the torch being applied to any portion of the country?
15392Is there any thing inherently wrong in such denunciation of such criticism?
15392Is there any violation of principle there?
15392It has been asked why Lovejoy and his friends did not appeal to the executive-- trust their defence to the police of the city?
15392It is in fact simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot?
15392Men are continually asking each other, Had Lovejoy a right to resist?
15392Mr. President, what is a compromise?
15392Mr. President, what is an individual man?
15392Now, I ask, what limitation can possibly be placed upon the powers of a government claiming and exercising such rights?
15392On a church resolution, hidden often in its records, and meant only as a decent cover for servility in daily practice?
15392On a few cold prayers, mere lip- service, and never from the heart?
15392On political parties, with their superficial influence at best, and seeking ordinarily only to use existing prejudices to the best advantage?
15392Or has the South greater means of influencing or controlling the movements of this Government now, than it had when the agitation commenced?
15392Perhaps not-- but who shall answer for their successors?
15392Pray, what is the evidence which every gentleman must have obtained on this subject, from information sought by himself or communicated by others?
15392Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?
15392Shall we, then, trust to mere politics, where even revolution has failed?
15392So much before the age as to leave one no right to make it because it displeases the community?
15392That speaker has lived twenty- two years, and the complaint of twenty- three millions of people is,"Shall we never hear of any thing but slavery?"
15392The Union is a compact; and is it an equal party to that compact, because it has equal Federal rights?
15392The man who understands his own time, and whose genius moulds the future to his views, he is a statesman, is he not?
15392The next question to be considered is: What has caused this belief?
15392The next question, going one step further back, is: What has caused this widely- diffused and almost universal discontent?
15392The question is, what must we do if we do anything?
15392The question now is, Did he act within the constitution and the laws?
15392The question then recurs: What is the cause of this discontent?
15392The question, then, is, How can this be done?
15392Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard?
15392Well, what was the result?
15392What States are to secede?
15392What am I to be?
15392What are we-- what is any man-- worth who is not ready and willing to sacrifice himself for the benefit of his country when it is necessary?
15392What consequence follows?
15392What else was it that foiled the whole power of Persia at Marathon and Salamis?
15392What follows?
15392What is a State in the sense of the Constitution?
15392What is that Union?
15392What is the denunciation with which we are charged?
15392What is this harsh criticism of motives with which we are charged?
15392What is to become of the army?
15392What is to become of the navy?
15392What is to become of the public lands?
15392What is to remain American?
15392What may you not do by dexterity and perseverance with this terrific power?
15392What must it be?
15392What must we admit, and into what?
15392What new guaranties does he propose to prevent the voyage from being again turned into a piratical slave- trading cruise?
15392What then is the professed result?
15392What was the course of my friend upon this subject of the Wilmot proviso?
15392What were the purposes of coming into the Union among the original States?
15392What will be the judgment of our constituents, when we return to them and they ask us:"How have you left your country?
15392What would become of Missouri?
15392Where is the eagle still to tower?
15392Where is the flag of the Republic to remain?
15392Where is the line to be drawn?
15392Where shall our church organizations or parties get strength to attack their great parent and moulder, the slave power?
15392Where, then, was the imprudence?
15392Who converted these men and their distinguished associates?
15392Who could tune for Slavery?
15392Who doubts it?
15392Who invents this libel on his country?
15392Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing?
15392Who, then, or what converted Burlingame and Wilson, Sumner and Adams, Palfrey and Mann, Chase and Hale, and Phillips and Giddings?
15392Why give mobs to one and monuments to the other?
15392Why is the constitutional guaranty suffered to be inactive?
15392Why should not slave capital exert the same influence?
15392Why, sir, what coercion is there?
15392Why, what would be the result?
15392Why, who are the laboring people of the North?
15392Why?
15392Will not all the monarchs of the Old World pronounce our glorious Republic a disgraceful failure?
15392Will she join the arrondissement of the slave States?
15392Will the gentlemen tell us that it is the quantity of slaves, not the quality of slavery, which takes from a government the republican form?
15392Will the honorable Senator permit me to interrupt him for a moment?
15392Will the militia of the nation, which must furnish our soldiers and seamen, increase as slaves increase?
15392Will you go home and leave all in disorder and confusion-- all unsettled-- all open?
15392Yes, but what sort of a compact?
15392You have thus had forced upon you the greatest and the gravest question that can ever come under your consideration: How can the Union be preserved?
15392or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground?
15392what response, Mr. President, can you make to that wife of your choice and those children with whom you have been blessed by God?
18223144 Was Poe Immoral?
18223171 Has Life Any Meaning?
18223How can a system requiring the infliction of misery on other beings be called a religious system?...
18223How should I be capable of leaving thee in thy calamity?...
18223I then will ask you, if a man, in worshipping... sacrifices a sheep, and so does well, wherefore not his child,... and so do better?
18223Is She of small account?
18223Is she a child?
18223Is she honorable?
18223Is she old?
18223Shall we in worshipping slay that which hath life?
18223What is a true gift?
18223What is goodness?
18223What is it to you... whether another is guilty or guiltless?
18223What man is there who would be remiss in doing good to mankind?
18223Wherein does religion consist?
18223Who is a( true) spiritual teacher?
18223Why should there be such sorrowful contention?
18223Why should we cling to this perishable body?
18213Where is the Drina? 18213 Why do not the French hasten to our aid?
18213But where was the first great blow to strike?
18213Could he get them there on time?
18213For the brave Irish, was not Marshal MacMahon of near- Irish descent and the first president of the Third Republic?
18213Should they, rather than permit the enemy to invade the soil of France, make a supreme effort to check the Germans on the frontier?
18213To what resolution did General Joffre, come?
18213To what resolution had the French commander in chief come?
18213What at that moment was the real situation of the French army?
18213What chance had Maubeuge against such a potency?
18213What is the political value of this beleaguered domain?
18213What plan had the French staff in mind to oppose to this plan of the Germans?
18213What was the comparative strength of these naval combinations when the war started?
18213When will they come?
18213Where is the Drina?"
18213Will the British fail us at the twelfth hour?"
18213Would they bite?
18213from the bottom of our hearts to all those who offer themselves for the defense of the country?
17386Do you think we shall ever have a second revolution?
17386Is he thrown to the ground?
17386Is he wounded?
17386Is my son killed?
17386( 1603?)
17386(?)
17386* Fortescue''s Governance of England( Plummer''s edition)( 1460?).
17386-- Hegel THE COMING OF THE SAXONS, OR ENGLISH 449(?)
17386--Macaulay Beginning with the Divine Right of Kings and Ending with the Divine Right of the People King or Parliament?
1738639) married Anne Neville, widow(?)
17386After the Romans abandoned Britain the English invaded the island 449(?
17386As they looked into each other''s hollow eyes, the question came, Must we surrender?
17386Before that time the Norman''s contempt for the Saxon was so great, that his most indignant exclamation was,"Do you take me for an Englishman?"
17386From one end of it to the other the people were now heard singing:"And shall Trelawney die, and shall Trelawney die?
17386Henry, looking around, asked timidly,"Am I a prisoner?"
17386His Majesty patronizingly asked him,"Well, my man, what have you to sell?"
17386How did it occur?
17386How, then, can my claim be disputed?"
17386If they objected to Episcopal government in the one, might they not presently object to royal government in the other?
17386In a different spirit, Chaucer,"the morning star of English song,"now began( 1390?)
17386Jenkinson?"
17386John( Lackland),( Coeur de Lion), H 1199- 1216 1189- 1199 Arthur, murdered H by John?
17386O. W. Holmes Political Reaction-- Absolutism of the Crown-- The English Reformation and the New Learning Crown or Pope?
17386Rise of the English Navy( SS401, 408) 1589(?).
17386Seizing their"rough- handled spears and bronze swords,"they set sail for the shining chalk cliffs of Britain, 449(?).
17386The Britons beg for Help; Coming of the Jutes, 449(?).
17386The New Movement in Literature, 1390(?).
17386The ballad began:"Ho, Brother Teague, dost hear de decree?
17386The question then arose, Might not a still further advance be made by employing steam to draw cars on these roads, or, better still, on iron rails?
17386Then the miners took up the words, and beneath the hills and fields the ominous echo was heard:"And shall Trelawney die, and shall Trelawney die?
17386There were no more ringing Jacobite songs, sung over bowls of steaming punch, of"Wha''ll be king but Charlie?"
17386What came of it?
17386What caused it?
17386When did the event occur?
17386When the fight was over, the King asked,"What is the name of that castle yonder?"
17386Where did it occur?
17386[ 1] See"Why did the Pilgrim Fathers come to New England?"
17386[ 2]"What building is that?"
17386what for mine and me, What hath bread tax done for thee?
17386when?
17386|++1485- 1509 of York( murdered in H the Tower by=================================---------------- Richard III?
13942Ah, gentlemen, what you say? 13942 And in what regiment?"
13942And you have bees, too-- don''t they sting the children, and give you a great deal of trouble? 13942 And, hast thou forgotten, friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me?
13942But,you say,"how can I find out whether a book is good or bad, without reading it?"
13942Did you compose it?
13942Do they not know that even truth is not to be spoken at all times? 13942 Has a son with him then?"
13942He''ll drop at last,said the corporal,"and what will become of his boy?"
13942How dead? 13942 How?"
13942Is he in the army, then?
13942Is it possible?
13942Is n''t she the best mother in the world?
13942Is something forgotten?
13942Methinks I hear some of you say,''Must a man afford himself no leisure?'' 13942 O is not love a marvel Which one can not unravel?
13942Sha n''t we be lonesome next winter?
13942So what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? 13942 Then what is to become of his poor boy?"
13942They say I do not trust Englishmen; do I mistrust Gordon Pasha? 13942 To what end,"says the former,"have I studied hard, and widened my resources?
13942WHO IS THIS FELLOW?
13942Well, what have you come for, Samuel?
13942What are you reading?
13942What deposit?
13942What, sir,said one of the royal princes to La Fayette,"do you really demand the assembling of a general congress of France?"
13942Where did you get it?
13942Who did you say was waiting for me?
13942Who has honor? 13942 Why from thy defenseless father,"He cried,"dost thou turn in flight?
13942Why, general,asked the young man,"what do you want with such a place of torment as hell?"
13942Why, how can people be so heedless?
13942''Do you so?''
13942***** Conclusion, True worker with the Lord, He labors not for hire; Co- partner in the sure reward, What can he more desire?
13942***** Now and Here O not to- morrow or afar, Thy work is now and here; Thy bosom holds the fairest star-- Dost see it shining clear?
13942***** With His Foes The king of beasts was dead-- By an old hero slain; Did dreams of honey for his bread Dance through the hero''s brain?
13942A man must have a backbone, or how is he to hold his head up?
13942After all, the difficulty to be got over is this-- how is mankind to be taught to take a just estimate of things?
13942All men, almost, agreed with all men that slavery was wrong; but what can we do?
13942An old tree is picturesque, an old castle venerable, an old cathedral inspires awe-- why should man be worse than his works?
13942And a great voice above him ask,"Dost thou thy brethren own?"
13942And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered?
13942And ask not, What doth God require At the Eternal Day?
13942And is it not, therefore, even independently of myths and mysteries, entitled to be called the divine art?"
13942And shall we forfeit hope Because the fountains Are up the mighty slope Of yonder mountains?
13942And the words?
13942And thou, O human will, As wondrous as the light, Cans''t thou thy little trust fulfill Save through Another''s might?
13942And vanished the Star forever, When they turned from the Child away?
13942And want to get it back?"
13942And we must not be indefinite: begin what?
13942And what excuse is there, after all, for running the terrible risk?
13942And what shall I utter to comfort The heart that is dearest of all?
13942And what was Wordsworth''s conduct under this unequaled experience of bad faith and bad feeling?
13942And who can calculate the money- value to commerce in the production of instruments used in the application of electricity to medicine?
13942And will ye now despond Amid consuming toil, When there is hope and joy beyond Which death can not despoil?
13942And, lastly, what are our thoughts and struggles, vain ideas, and wishes?
13942Are there not some few among you with courage to lead where multitudes would follow-- some to whom a kind Providence has given liberty of action?
13942Are they weak, puny men, or men of physique?
13942Are you then your own master?
13942Art thou a mourner here?
13942Art thou my friend, blue, sparkling sea?
13942Art thou of both possessed?
13942Beneath their grievous task Did not his kindred groan?
13942But do not the purest and most beautiful conceptions of man partake of a divine character?
13942But how will the bundles mix?
13942But in how much obscurity are these difficult problems involved?
13942But what shall I say to the prostitution of this art to purposes of iniquity?
13942But when Winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then?
13942But who doth remember the gloom and the night, When the sky is aglow with the beautiful light?
13942Can he who owns her rule supreme From her caresses turn?
13942Can not you get somebody else to speak?
13942Canst show a finer touch, A grain of purer lore--"I could not love thee, dear, so much, Loved I not honor more?"
13942Could he believe that the grand lady, all blazing with jewels, and whom every body seemed to worship, would really sing his little song?
13942Could n''t she help her boys, for whom she was ready to die?
13942Do you say that you can find no work worth the doing?
13942Does old age need its apologies and its defenders?
13942Dost see how calm they are?
13942Dost thou truly love?
13942Dost wait for perfect good In man or womanhood?
13942Enough, this beginning?
13942Evil In the great wilderness Through which I hold my way, Is there no refuge from distress, Where foes are kept at bay?
13942For the bud it never unfolded, The light it flickered away, And whose is the power to utter The grief of that bitterest day?
13942For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?''
13942Friendly Readers: Last time I made a book I trod on some people''s corns and bunions, and they wrote me angry letters, asking,"Did you mean me?"
13942Has he a crook in the back?
13942Hast eyes to read the poem?
13942Hast music in thy heart, O toiler day by day, Along life''s rugged way?
13942Hast thou no thought or care?
13942Have you been told this before?
13942He fires up at once:"Twelve, did you say, sir?
13942He heard the psalm of peace, He sought again the plow; O civic toil, canst thou increase The laurels for his brow?
13942His faults are many-- Hast thou not any?
13942His form is yet before me, With the fair and lofty brow, And the day since last we kissed it-- Is it long since then and now?
13942How could their lives flow on evenly together?
13942How did he recompense all this exertion and endurance oh his behalf?
13942How is thy heart protected?
13942How much of addition to human comfort that one sentence includes, who can estimate?
13942How shall we ever be able to pay them?
13942I have made one mistake?
13942I hear their voice--"Come, play, rejoice; Come, be as happy as are we; Why should you not thus happy be?"
13942I want to ask them if they suppose our eyesight is not so sharp as theirs?
13942I wish mother could help; but, then I guess mother''s--""Help how?"
13942If God be for us, who can be against us?
13942If the world brings not fruition, Must we in darkness grope?
13942If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings?
13942If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle?
13942If your children were threatened with typhoid fever would you have time to go for the doctor?
13942In gazing into heaven In idle ecstacy, What progress make ye to the haven Where ye at length would be?
13942In less than a thousand years we shall all be bald and poor too, and who knows what he may come to before that?
13942Is he beginning to stoop?
13942Is he getting round- shouldered?
13942Is it a benefit or a calamity?
13942Is it possible to put old heads upon young shoulders?
13942Is it so blessed and happy and flourishing as it seems to us?
13942Is it so dreadful to grow old?
13942Is not every thing better and brighter far then than in middle life?
13942Is not the art of music generally acknowledged to be one of these?
13942Is not youth a perpetual state of intoxication?
13942Is the country delivered, since General La Fayette is in Paris?"
13942Is the earth the limit To bright and beautiful hope?
13942Is this-- is_ this_ thine album?
13942Muscular strength, organic instincts, are all gone; but what then?
13942Never?
13942No Heaven in Truth and Love?
13942Now, in such circumstances, what would a mean, calculating young man have done?
13942O wouldst thou know The rarity Of Charity?
13942O, what are peace and beauty That stop this side of God, Though infinite the distance Remaining to be trod?"
13942O, what are peace and beauty, Except they stir the soul And make the man a hero, To gain some happier goal?
13942One more extract:"Why should I, at every mile, be stared at by the grinning skulls of those who are at rest?
13942One who knew how deeply the empire was indebted to him, wrote,"Can China tell how much she is indebted to Colonel Gordon?
13942Or did he chafe at this: That pain is everywhere?
13942People, he writes, should be taught by my example; they can not go beyond me--"What can he do that comes after the king?"
13942Practically unknown when the sun went down one day, when it rose next morning all Boston was saying,"Who is this fellow?
13942Put it into his money- box?
13942Shall I pour your honor out a glass of sack to your pipe?"
13942Shall our minds be the receptacle of every thing that an author has a mind to write?
13942Shall there be no distinction between the tree of life and the tree of death?
13942Shall we mire in impurity, and chase fantastic will- o''-the- wisps across the swamps, when we might walk in the blooming gardens of God?
13942Shall we stoop down and drink out of the trough which the wickedness of men has filled with pollution and shame?
13942Shone it not then in their bosoms, The light of Eternal Day?
13942Something for nothing?
13942Standing, as we do, chin- deep in fictitious literature, the first question that many of the young people are asking me is,"Shall we read novels?"
13942THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?"
13942The battle is set, The field to be won; What foes have you met, What work have you done?
13942The girl you fall in love with may be silly and ill- favored; but what of that?
13942The minstrel''s heart in sadness Was wrestling with his fate;"Am I the sport of madness,"He sighed,"and born too late?"
13942The question commonly asked by visitors to that corner of Grasmere churchyard was: Where would_ she_ be laid when the time came?
13942The reporters were here; when were they ever not?
13942Then he whispered to me, saying:"Why do you remove that chair?
13942This Album comes a- tapping At many a friendly door; Yea, gently, gently rapping--"Hast aught for me in store?
13942This hard, calculating, mercenary youth, did he seize the chance of shaking off a most troublesome and injurious traveling companion?
13942Thou that slavest, And self all spends; Thou that savest, And usest never; Thou that cravest, With no endeav- or, Thou that gavest, And hast forever?
13942Too young for the losses and crosses, Too young for the rise and the fall?
13942Troost?"
13942WENDELL PHILLIPS.--THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?"
13942Was she only"mother,"who prepared their meals and took care of their clothes?
13942Was she too old to begin?
13942We do not eat and drink for them: why should we lend them our ears and not our mouths?
13942We touch at last the mysterious door-- are we to be pitied or to be envied?
13942Well does Coventry Patmore sing:"Who is the happy husband?
13942What accumulated objections arise when we wish to examine them with mathematical rigor?
13942What are examples and citations to them?
13942What are ninety- two years compared with the years that open the first page of the future?
13942What books and newspapers shall we read?
13942What can I wish thee better Than that through all thy days,_ The spirit, not the letter_, Invite thy blame or praise?
13942What cared he for money now?
13942What could be the matter with me, an''please your honor?"
13942What death?"
13942What did the calculating wretch do with the money?
13942What does the reader, who has his own work to do, care for a great multitude of details which are not needed for the setting of the picture?
13942What had he done at that age to command more than ordinary respect and admiration?
13942What is a Vanity Fair, a mob, a hubbub and babel of noises, to be avoided, shunned, hated?
13942What is a monument of Aberdeen granite beside a monument of intellect and souls?
13942What is altogether deceitful upon the scales?
13942What is an epitaph of a few words cut by a sculptor''s chisel beside the epitaph of coming generations and hundreds writing his praise?
13942What is the use of reading or hearing for other people?
13942What mean the strange, hard words,"through tribulation?"
13942What now shall fill these widowed arms?
13942What shall we read?
13942What then are toil and trouble, With strength to meet them, double?
13942What though Spring is in the air, And the world is bright and fair?
13942What though the triumph of thy fond forecasting Lingers till earth is fading from thy sight?
13942What will friends be good for When the witness is needless they stood for?
13942What would you advise us to do?"
13942What''s in a name?
13942When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,"Elizabeth, why did''st thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?"
13942Whence honor, wealth, or fame, Which God delights to see?
13942Where can a cow live and not get milked?
13942Where is he now?
13942Where will the ass go that he will not have to work?
13942Where will you find land without stones, or meat without bones?
13942Which stuck to you?
13942Who are the leaders in the Churches?
13942Who are the men prominent in the pulpit?
13942Who is bravest Of my four friends?
13942Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has on us?
13942Who is this Phillips?"
13942Who is this eager stranger Dismounted so soon at the door?
13942Who mourns the loss of liberty, With all things else secure?
13942Who shall say how much inspiration the noble band of ministering women in our civil war derived from the heroine of the Crimea?
13942Why are fifty per cent of the criminals in the jails and penitentiaries of the United States to- day under twenty- one years of age?
13942Why are they created?
13942Why do n''t they stop it?
13942Why should it be odious and ridiculous?
13942Why should we forget the dear sounds now she is our wife?
13942Why will you go sounding your way amidst the reefs and warning buoys, when there is such a vast ocean in which you may voyage, all sail set?
13942Why, at home you are at home, and what more do you want?
13942Will not those heavy taxes quite ruin the country?
13942With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man?
13942Would 20,000,000 taels repay the actual service he has rendered to the empire?"
13942Would you have time for the funeral?
13942Would you have time to watch the progress of the disease?
13942Would you like to come to my concert?"
13942Wouldst have another gem In Friendship''s diadem?
13942X. Dost give away thy heart, With all its sweet perfume?
13942Yet, what is altogether lighter than vanity?
13942You suddenly go in and say:"What are you doing?".
13942and if I, in astonishment, echo,"Sick?
13942continue what?
13942cries out poor, melancholy, morbid Hamlet, striking on a vein of thought,"what''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?"
13942did I cry out?"
13942in sadness I cried, Where is thy trust in the Crucified?
13942said little Johnnie, who had taken no part in the talk; until now;"wo n''t mother be afraid?
13942said she,"at what price can you buy it?
13942who, who shall doubt Thy Master''s will was done?
178612 Was she as mad as they thought?
178612 What are we to do now?
178613 Now what is the nature of this strange and incredible faculty?
178613 Suddenly?
178613 What was to be the issue of this war?
17861After what they have done in cold blood, what excesses, what disasters must we not expect of the last convulsions of their rage?
17861Are we to believe in a sort of autosuggestion that induces us to realize things which we have been foretold or of which we have had presentiments?
17861Are you quite sure that, in other times which we think better and more virtuous than our own, men would not have seen it, would not have spoken of it?
17861Did history ever witness a more poignant, a more desperate tragedy?
17861Did the evil come from above or below, or was it everywhere?
17861Did the rulers make the nation like unto themselves, or did the nation select and support them because they resembled itself?
17861Do we know what it is that dies in our dead, or even if anything dies?
17861Do you mean that the news...?
17861Does our ever- watchful instinct of self- preservation notice causes or traces which escape our ever- inattentive and slumbering reason?
17861Have the rulers dragged the whole nation after them, or has the whole nation driven its rulers on?
17861He is not dead?
17861He is quite astonished that death should be so easy, so slight a thing.... You do not understand?
17861His parishioners asked him under their breath:"What does he say?
17861How and under what aspect?
17861How are we to stop them?
17861How long will that be?
17861How many will you find?
17861I do not explain the matter to the others; what would be the use?
17861Is he thus by nature, or has he been perverted by those who lead him?
17861Is it not better and more worthy of yourselves than all the subtleties, plottings and petty bargainings of diplomacy?
17861Is success then practically certain?
17861Must we hate the enemy to the end of time?
17861They saw that he was Korneliz''boy and cried from the window:"What''s the matter?
17861Was I not about to witness one of those hopeless griefs at whose feet all words fall to the ground like shameful and insulting lies?
17861What can be done?
17861What is he going to do?"
17861Which of us to- day is not familiar with these mournful interviews, this dismal duty?
16926And yet,philosophized the lady,"if we are dissatisfied in our prosperity, what must a life be that contains nothing?"
16926Could anything be more beautiful? 16926 Heat?
16926Matches, sir?
16926Matches, sir?
16926My wife a hypocrite? 16926 Now, just where is Ashcroft?"
16926What do you mean?
16926What is it?
16926Where did you get that cat?
16926Why does he not fall into the Thompson and get drowned for accommodation?
16926Why does she not die?
16926Why should a man be anchored to one spot of the geographical distribution like a barnacle to a ship during the whole of his mortal belligerency?
16926And what could be a greater security than a whole mountain full of gold?
16926And what is there here?
16926Are our efforts worth while when we have no immediate prospects of improvement?
16926But how was this revolution in the private disposition of a man to be accomplished?
16926But what vision would he"get busy"on?
16926But where was Cultus Johnny and his sister all this time?
16926By the way, where is your office?"
16926Can you imagine such a condition?
16926Could a sadder instance of degeneration be written in the annals of the human family?
16926Could he cast the blame upon his ancestors?
16926Could it be possible he had two homes?
16926Did he belong to the human family?
16926Do you give orders to Syracusan women?
16926For how many years have the husbands been coming home from work daily to partake of a meal which an attentive and tender wife has prepared for him?
16926G. Has one a tolerable chance of getting there?
16926Had he a cantankerous disposition?
16926Had he boils, like Job?
16926Had he offended the fair sex in any way?
16926Had some false reputation preceded him into the community?
16926Having gained an entrance, he was accosted by his wife, who exclaimed:"Harry, you drunk?"
16926How on earth are we ever to get through all this?
16926I unhappy among all this kingly paraphernalia, and with a queen wife?"
16926I went home puzzled to my wife and said:"Do you know, Teddy is not all ours?"
16926If a man does not support his country during the war, what can he expect after the war is over?
16926If this moderate climate makes you uncomfortable, what will be your condition in California?
16926Is Praxinoe at home?
16926Is it a wonder then that the Eskimo worships the sun?
16926Is it possible that the world''s goods are so unevenly divided?"
16926Is she ill, or is she playing a wild, deceitful part?
16926Is she sitting on me with all her weight?"
16926Is the Eskimo destined to everlasting failure-- perpetual degeneration?
16926It was plain that she loved him, for what else in a woman could overlook such darkness in a man?
16926Kill you?"
16926Mother, are you from the palace?
16926Must you and I be satisfied and consent to endure this animal existence to the end of our days because it is our only heritage from our ancestors?
16926My dearest Gorgo, what will become of us?
16926Not one of them could speak French, although a few of them could repeat, parrot- like, the words"Parlez- vous Francais?"
16926Now, after all, was this man not right, and is the Eskimo not to be pitied?
16926Now, just why was he unpopular?
16926Now, what in the world possessed this despotic imbecile to form a senate?
16926Others enjoyed the good things of this life, and why not he?
16926P. Heavenly patroness of needle- women, what hands we hired to do that work?
16926Perhaps they were seeking martyrdom?
16926See?
16926Selling matches on Christmas day?"
16926Simon?"
16926Since we can grow a new finger nail, why can not we grow a new finger?
16926Supposing just here they had met five hundred crazy Indians with five hundred crazy bows and arrows?
16926The object of his past had been a preparation for a better future; and why not?
16926They are enough to kill one with their broad lingo-- nothing but a, a, a. G. Lord, where does the man come from?
16926This happens very frequently on Sundays-- for who or what was ever on time on a Sunday?
16926Was ever a business so philanthropic in its foundation?"
16926Was he a German, or an Austrian, or a Turk?
16926Was he a criminal?
16926Was he a plague?
16926Was he a woman hater?
16926Was he an undesirable citizen?
16926Was he inflicted with some loathsome disease?
16926Was he mean, stingy?
16926Was he poor?
16926Was he repulsive in appearance?
16926Was he repulsive?
16926Was he stupid, ignorant, uneducated, brainless?
16926Was he ugly?
16926Was it heredity?
16926What had he done that this measure should be constantly graduated out to him?
16926What is it to you if we are chatterboxes?
16926What is that we see falling like grain before the reaper?
16926What machinery required adjusting?
16926What profits a man to gain the world, if he lose his peace of mind?
16926What was city life in comparison with this?
16926What was the consequence?
16926What was wrong?
16926Where is the key of the large wardrobe?
16926Who designed those beautiful patterns?
16926Why do you not control your storm and calm down like the lake?
16926Why not see everything, know everything?
16926Why should he be denied this one sweet dream?
16926Why this caution?
16926Why was he an outcast?
16926Why was he the Job of Ashcroft society?
16926Why was he the most unpopular man on these sand downs?
16926Will you join us?
16926With what disease then was he afflicted?
16926why do n''t you take care of my dress?
14432All ca nt,do you say, reader?
14432And after?
14432And has no doctor been out here yet?
14432And pray why, Croesus? 14432 And then?"
14432And when you touched deck again, what did you think?
14432And you''ve begun, dear Mr. Fullerton, have you not?
14432Are you in a situation?
14432Are your men game enough?
14432But how long would the carrier be in running home?
14432But you will tell us how Tom Betts fared in the end?
14432Ca n''t you persuade them?
14432Can you give us any assistance, sir? 14432 Can you send us help, sir?
14432Could you edge us towards the cutter, skipper?
14432Could you get them to care for anything of the kind? 14432 Did the time seem long?"
14432Did you ever know any one so clever as Marion?
14432Do you mean it''s the yacht?
14432Do you think many are lost?
14432Do you think we''re out of the track of ships?
14432Does the rolling hurt you badly, my man?
14432Got the doctor on board?
14432Has he spoken lately?
14432Has he sweated?
14432Have you eaten anything?
14432Have you ever been hurt before?
14432Have you nerve enough to assist me, skipper?
14432He''s out on the sea now, dear, and I expect that he''s in some abominable cabin--"Catching smallpox to infect cleanly people with?
14432How are we to get him again, sir?
14432How many missionaries''wives died in the last ten years?
14432I say, Doctor, how would you like one of your men to operate just after he had been handling fish? 14432 I suppose we did n''t know the real danger?"
14432Is it so very bad?
14432Is n''t heaven wide enough?
14432No, sir; why?
14432Not a single surgeon?
14432Now, gentlemen, shall I run or not?
14432The rockets?
14432Then?
14432This is what your fine scheme has come to, is it? 14432 Warm it seems, Thomas?
14432We must n''t blame the poor ladies,said Fullerton:"how could they know?
14432Well, how is it now, skipper?
14432Well, sir, what could we do? 14432 What Tom Betts?
14432What are you driving at?
14432What are you?
14432What can that be?
14432What could a boy know of good?
14432What could he du? 14432 What do you think of our work so far, Ferrier?"
14432What do you think, skipper?
14432What is your idea now, Ferrier, about the business? 14432 What sort of hurts?"
14432What would the Cowes fellows say to this, I wonder?
14432What''s our chance?
14432What''s that, Freeman?
14432What''s that?
14432What''s this? 14432 Who durst try to pass a line under his arms?"
14432Who, uncle?
14432Who?
14432Why not? 14432 Will it give me a chance?
14432Will she turn turtle?
14432You mean the steamer?
14432You trust them five hundred miles up country?
14432You understand shipbuilding?
14432You were trawling when that breeze started?
14432You''ll go right for the Short Blues, as we arranged?
14432You''re what?
14432***** Ferrier was pale when Frank asked"Where am I?"
14432A sweet- faced lady smiled softly, and said,"Is it poetry to- night, or a new scheme for regenerating everything?"
14432A tub will float in a seaway; why should n''t the vessel?"
14432Am I a- dreaming?''
14432An''lose my woyage maybe?"
14432And now, how on earth are we to lower him down that narrow companion?
14432And the great ships will pass your beautiful ship, and when people ask''What is that craft, and who is Cassall?''
14432And what does his highness of many tails want?"
14432And you say they''ve dropped drink?"
14432And, let me see, you ca n''t ask Mr. Phoenix the Sawbones?"
14432Are we meaner or more griping than the Americans?
14432Are you right, sir?"
14432At last she turned, and said,"When do you think we shall sight them?"
14432But I do hope there is no danger for the poor fishermen?"
14432But what about next morning?
14432But where''s your man?"
14432But why should I talk of misery?
14432By the way, who is this-- this what''s- the- name-- the Doctor, that you mentioned?"
14432By the way, you knew Tom Betts had come away in the old_ Achilles_, did n''t you, sir?"
14432Can I stand the pain?"
14432Can a seaman be other than superstitious or religious?
14432Cassall broke in,"Yes, yes, by all means; but, I say, could you not try steam as well?
14432Could it be possible that, in wealthy, Christian England there ever was a time when no man knew or cared about this saddening condition of affairs?
14432Could you and he make it convenient to come to us from Saturday next until Monday?
14432Could you not give them a chance of looking_ round_ a bit?"
14432Did n''t I do up that skipper''s arm in his sling after you took off his finger?
14432Did n''t they?
14432Did those placid, good blue eyes see anything?
14432Did you ever know, Miss Dearsley, of a man doing such a thing before?
14432Did you notice how that fellow choked and sobbed when he told us how the youngster refused to leave him during the gale?
14432Did you work all through the gale?"
14432Did you work through it?''
14432Do I not know them?
14432Do n''t cher see the Mission ship bloke?"
14432Do n''t you think I can?
14432Do n''t you think that would be interesting?
14432Do n''t you think we may all meet?
14432Do the thoughts of the Past arise in his soul?
14432Do they clean the fish, Mr. Fullerton?
14432Do you consent to have the leg taken off?"
14432Do you hear me?"
14432Do you imagine that religious people are dull, or dowie, as the Scotch say?
14432Do you know that a seaman is the most absolutely conservative of the human race?"
14432Do you know what a Bengali Baboo or a Pathan is really like?
14432Do you know, it struck me that those good souls are very like a live lizard cased in the dry clay?
14432Do you think I shall die, sir?
14432Does any one supervise your missionaries?"
14432Does he tremble?
14432Eh?
14432Excuse me, sir, have you done what they call found Christ?
14432Ferrier?"
14432Had they not prayed before they set out?
14432Have you looked in the jaws of death?
14432Have you still got the doctor aboard?"
14432He cut away the clotted hair, cleansed the wound; then he said sharply--"How did you come to let your shipmate lose so much blood?"
14432He is a most unblushing, scoffing sceptic, is he not, madam?"
14432He would say,"Have we not good white men here who are capable of anything?
14432How are the men aft?"
14432How can we?
14432How long?
14432How many men go on board one vessel?"
14432How much money have you per year?"
14432How would you manage if you had a very foul wind after your man got cured?"
14432How''s the glass, skipper?"
14432I asked,"What did you think?"
14432I know that my dream may be translated into fact, for have we not the early success of the superb hospital smack to reassure us?
14432I suppose there''s no chance of our going like that?"
14432I wonder what we could possibly do, if anything came into us as that barque did?
14432I''m not much in that line myself, but do n''t you think maybe an odd word would n''t be some help like in this frap?
14432If Larmor of the_ Haughty Belle_ will come, can you work with him?"
14432In all the wide world was there such another drama of peril and tenor being enacted?
14432In low, full tones she asked,"Did no one ever work among the fishers before Mr. Fullerton found them out?"
14432Is it not enough to make one misanthropic?"
14432Is it?
14432Is that not so?
14432Is that the proper word?
14432It is ghastly, and yet what can we do?
14432Just before the''66 breeze I used often to think,''Shall I go overboard?''
14432Larmor?
14432Lennard brooded long, and at last he went to the skipper and asked,"Old man, shall Bob shove her head for home?"
14432Lennard had kneeled with the others, and he said,"Shall I go?"
14432Lewis thought a little and said--"Will you let me take him aboard of us now while it''s smooth, and I''ll see if we can find you a man?
14432Look here, Blair: do you mean to say that I could n''t make a regular fairy tale out of the geology of these Banks?
14432Man with concussion of the brain, was n''t it?"
14432Now would n''t you?
14432Now, I put it to any business man,"Is not this a result worth paying for, if one wants to invest in charitable work?"
14432Now, if we can go on doing just a little with our ordinary dispensaries, is it wise to risk playing at magnificence?
14432Now, what is your share?''
14432O Lord, holy and true, how long?
14432Per year?"
14432Say, shall we go?
14432Scandal and tittle- tattle begun on board?
14432See''em, skipper?"
14432See, he''s off to sleep now his pain''s gone, but where will he be if the sea rises?"
14432She turned to the staid and taciturn Mrs. Hellier and asked,"How do you find your readings suit at your mission- room?"
14432Sir James broke in,"Your vessels have to fish, have n''t they?"
14432Talkin''of the market, and I''ve been nearly dead, and not out o''the muck yet-- does the people know what us chaps gets for fish?"
14432Tell me frankly, Mr. Fullerton, what_ would_ you do if you took off a smallpox case, and got becalmed on the run home?"
14432Tell me now, sir-- you''ve got time, have n''t you, sir?
14432Tell me, how will you manage if you have a vessel short of hands to work her?"
14432The girl said--"Is that the steam- carrier I have heard of?
14432The skipper asked,"Shall the steward fetch your bread in here, sir?
14432The skipper hailed:"Are you all right, sir?
14432Then, again, supposing I were to tell those men something accurate about the movement of the stars?
14432They do?
14432Turn Mrs. Walton loose at me?
14432Was ever millionaire in such fashion won?
14432Was ever millionaire in such manner wooed?
14432Was he to leave the kindly world?
14432Was this the Diana of Ferrier''s imagination?
14432Was this the end of all-- youth, love, brave days of manhood?
14432Was this the queen of whom that athletic young gentleman was silently dreaming as he swung over the pulsing mountains of the North Sea?
14432Were all to be seen no more?
14432What are you going to do if you have a foul wind or a calm?"
14432What do men say when they meet the last together?
14432What do you think, Miss Ranken?"
14432What does the man know about it?
14432What must it have been at sea?
14432What was he doing?
14432What will you do first when you get home, Tom?"
14432What would be the use?
14432What''s up?"
14432What?
14432When Lewis came alongside of the Admiral he sang out"What cheer?"
14432When it comes a breeze he wants a doctor hisself, and how would that suit?"
14432When on deck he said,"Now, my man, what would you have done if you had n''t met us?"
14432Where''s Bob?"
14432Which o''them would stop for one winter month?
14432Which of us is not held in bondage by some creature of the kind?
14432Which of you durst come with the boat, and I''ll send a cocoanut- fibre one for him?"
14432Who could smile at the gruff, innocent familiarity?
14432Who talks of kindness and goodness in face of a scene like this?
14432Who, among us landsmen, durst face weather like this constantly?"
14432Why can not you speak to women?"
14432Why not assist_ them_?"
14432Why on earth did n''t Blair tell me something of this before?
14432Why?"
14432Will He cast me to nothingness after I have fulfilled my purpose?
14432Will the smack hit her?
14432Will you have bread and milk, or beef- tea and toast, you luxurious person?
14432Will you let me run her?
14432Would any negro help us?
14432Would any one imagine that a half- inch rope could be made the centre of a column of ice three inches in diameter?
14432Would any one imagine that a small block could be the nucleus of a lump as large as a pumpkin?
14432Would n''t that be splendid?
14432Would you?
14432You have fish every day-- mostly twice?"
14432You have n''t seen my plans, have you?
14432You know why?
14432You say he is out at sea now?
14432You take me?
14432You understand?
14432You''re not frightened, Mrs. Walton, I hope?"
14432_ Why_, in the name of common sense, why should I support two vessels and their hulking crews-- who chew tobacco, of course, do n''t they?
14432are you sure, skipper?"
14432do not I remember my first trip on a carrier, when I was treated rather like a bundle of coarse fish?
14432friends who trifle cheerily with that dainty second course, what does your turbot cost?
14432is n''t it?"
14432what''s that?"
14457''Berlue,''he said,"is-- what do you Americans say-- dotty?
14457And how far from that are the German trenches?
14457And these German newspapers, are they neutral?
14457And when the young ladies went out, were they watching the bombs burst?
14457And when there is an attack the attacking side must go through the water?
14457And you have not slept?
14457Are there no nurses at all along the British front?
14457Are you a good climber?
14457Are you the Duchess of Sutherland?
14457But I thought you lived in the administration building?
14457But as a necessity of war?
14457But how do they know when an ammunition train is coming?
14457But if the townspeople fired on the Germans?
14457But there is still need?
14457But what are you doing here?
14457But what do you do?
14457But why did you not tell us?
14457By the victims themselves?
14457Can I get to Ypres?
14457Can you lend us a car?
14457Did you accomplish much to- day?
14457Do you mean that when you go out on scouting expeditions you can communicate with the station here?
14457Do you mean to say that you sleep here?
14457Do you think La Panne will be bombarded?
14457Do you want the Q.M.N.G.?
14457Do you want to know the bravest man in all the world?
14457Have many of them been ill?
14457Have you a camera with you?
14457Have you seen any of the English hospitals on the Continent?
14457Have you seen the Queen?
14457How about seeing the Indians?
14457How deep is the water?
14457How does America feel as to the result of this war?
14457How goes it?
14457How is America affected by the war?
14457How many French have you in the United States?
14457How much farther?
14457How near are we to the trenches?
14457I have seen a number, Your Majesty,"Do they seem well supplied?
14457I mean, of course, from this boat?
14457I? 14457 In the event of the German Army''s retiring from Belgium, do you believe, as many do, that there will be more destruction of cities?
14457In the trenches also?
14457Is madame a good walker?
14457Is there anything further Your Majesty can suggest?
14457Is there no petrol to be had?
14457Is this the town?
14457It''s quite a party, is n''t it?
14457Now, Mrs. Rinehart,she said, straightening,"just why are you going?"
14457Oh, do n''t they?
14457Perhaps,said Makand Singh,"you will have coffee?"
14457Shopping, for what?
14457That is true, of course; but what can we do? 14457 The German position is better, is n''t it?"
14457The Germans can see us plainly, ca n''t they?
14457The best we can do seems so little to what the men are doing, does n''t it?
14457Then you do not believe that they will make a further advance toward Paris?
14457There was no justification, then, for the violation of Belgian neutrality?
14457They were verified?
14457They would confiscate it?
14457To the first line?
14457To the vaults?
14457Towed?
14457Trenches? 14457 We are more modest than the Germans, then?"
14457Were you not frightened the night you were in the Belgian trenches?
14457What about a torpedo?
14457What about the official German order for a campaign of''frightfulness''in Belgium?
14457What are six or seven miles to the German Army? 14457 What can we do?"
14457What do you think of the blockade, General Foch?
14457What does a periscope look like?
14457What is its effect? 14457 What is possible to know of the general condition of affairs in that part of Belgium occupied by the Germans?"
14457What is the percentage of German population?
14457What is your impression of the French and Belgian hospitals?
14457What sort of an errand?
14457What the devil is that to you?
14457What were you told to do?
14457What will happen if it freezes over?
14457What will you do if you see a submarine?'' 14457 When did you get in from the trenches?"
14457Where did you come from?
14457Where do they go at such times?
14457Where do you want to go?
14457Where do you wish to go?
14457Where is the gold?
14457Where shall I go?
14457Where?
14457Why not?
14457Will that land be as fertile as before?
14457Will you see our museum?
14457Will you tell me just what you do?
14457Would you like to see the trenches?
14457You are a cavalry regiment?
14457You came just now in a large car?
14457You do n''t mind, do you?
14457You do not know that in America?
14457You have known very little?
14457You have not gone to mass, Mademoiselle?
14457You intend to stay here for some time?
14457You mean that they have been in a dangerous place?
14457You wished to see the gold? 14457 ***** Do you recall the school map on which the state of Texas was always pink and Rhode Island green? 14457 A general brutalising? 14457 Again, what is he to do? 14457 All these wrecks of boys and men, where are they to go? 14457 And Canada a region without colour, and therefore without existence? 14457 And may I come to the fire?
14457And over there, beyond the line of poplar trees, what?
14457And then they went on-- to what?
14457And what next?
14457And yet who knows?
14457Are there any blows left to rain on Belgium?
14457Are they Belgians and French, driven by the ruin of everything they possess to selling out to the enemy?
14457Are they still there?
14457Battle- scarred France, where liberty has fought so hard for life-- what was France doing?
14457Brussels, for instance?"
14457But is it petty to labour and love?
14457But what else did we know of France and its part in the war?
14457But what of that large percentage who will never be whole again?
14457But what of the Bavarian- born Queen of the Belgians?
14457But what was really happening beyond the barriers that guarded the front so jealously?
14457But what will happen now?
14457But your press endeavours to be neutral, does it not?"
14457But-- exactly what can I do for you?"
14457Did the German officers sit about that pine table and throw a nut to summon an orderly?
14457Did the Germans find and silence that concealed battery of seventy- five- millimetre guns under its imitation hedge?
14457Did the"rabbit trap"do its work?
14457Do figures mean anything to us any more?
14457Do they ever glance at the moving cord of the war map on the wall?
14457Even if she had the mines, where would she get men to labour in them, or trains to transport the coal?
14457Had its last occupant died and the mattress been burned?
14457Have you been in the other part of Belgium?"
14457Have you got any of them?
14457Have you seen the flooded district?"
14457Have you seen the government report?"
14457Having done its part, was it holding an honorary position in the great line- up?
14457How can America know what to believe?"
14457How can we play?
14457How can we think of anything else?
14457How did the men live under these new and strange conditions?
14457How many grown- ups can think of it with dry eyes?
14457How many of the boys I watched playing prisoners''base round their guns in the intervals of firing are there to- day?
14457How many of the officers who shrugged their shoulders when I spoke of danger have gone down to death?
14457How many of them are left to- day?
14457How many remain of that little company of soldiers who gave three cheers for me because I was the only woman they had seen for months?
14457How was it possible to manipulate a large field gun, with a target moving at a varying height, and at a speed velocity of, say, sixty miles an hour?
14457How would you like that?"
14457I always thought it was Flemish for"May I come in?"
14457If even wells contain dead bodies, how about the open water- courses?
14457If there was a God, why should my husband be killed?
14457Is he by any chance a relative?"
14457Is it any wonder that two- thirds of Belgium''s Army is gone?
14457Is it influencing public opinion?"
14457Is n''t it just splendidly boyish?
14457Is that tea?
14457Is the duty of the nation greater than the duty of the home?
14457Is the nation greater than the individual?
14457Is the whole greater than the sum of its parts?
14457Is this war to them only a matter of a courtyard or a windmill?
14457It was Chesterfield, was n''t it, who spoke of_"Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re"?_ That is General Huguet.
14457Madame did not suspect?"
14457Men without a country, where were they to go when the hospital ship had finished with them?
14457Now they contained torn and stained uniforms, weapons, knapsacks, Does it matter how many wards there were, or how many surgeons?
14457Of mud and the upheaval of quiet lives?
14457Only for a time, I think, for was it not there that the Germans broke through?
14457Or about the soldiers who have been caught in the barbed wire with which these inland lakes are filled?
14457Or about the wounded who fall helpless into the flood?
14457Or cold and insufficient food?
14457Or fear?
14457Or hope?
14457Or scraping acquaintance with the only woman he had seen in months?
14457Or the wind?
14457Over beyond the field and that narrow line of trees, what has happened?
14457Seven miles behind the line?"
14457Since my return, almost the only question I have been asked about France is:"Is Paris greatly changed?"
14457The baby at La Panne-- why should it go through life on stumps instead of legs?
14457The boyish officer-- why should he have died?
14457The loss of much that is fine?
14457The result of the raid?
14457The smiling officer, so debonair, so proud of his hidden battery, where is he?
14457The tiny bridge, has it run red this last week?
14457The watchman in the tree, what did he see, that terrible day when the Germans got across the canal and charged over the flat lands?
14457Theatrical?
14457To inoculate an army means much money, and where is the Belgian Government to get it?
14457Was he merely curious?
14457Was it a fragment or an army, an entity or a memory?
14457Was it resting on its laurels?
14457What Queen Elisabeth of Belgium says, she believes; and who should know better?
14457What are the people to do?
14457What are they to do?
14457What brings you both so far from your thriving and prosperous little community?"
14457What business had he to look away from the sea?
14457What did she think of it all?
14457What did they think?
14457What do you see?"
14457What does America generally know of France, outside of Paris?
14457What does it all mean to them?
14457What does she hope for and pray for-- this Queen without a country?
14457What had become of the heroic Belgian Army?
14457What happened in the little village of D----?
14457What happened to the little"sick and sorry"house during those fearful days?
14457What has become of them?
14457What has happened on that road, guarded by buried quick- firers, that stretched to the German trenches beyond the poplar trees?
14457What if it is to be of years?
14457What if the town was being shelled and the Germans were only six hundred feet away?
14457What is a little time more or less, now?
14457What is one death to men who have seen so many?
14457What matter wet trenches, discomfort, freezing cold?
14457What mattered broken boots and the mud and filth of their trenches?
14457What mattered the German aëroplane overhead?
14457What must they think as they lie there during the long dark hours between twilight and the late winter morning?
14457What then?
14457What was France doing?
14457What was happening then, over there, beyond the horizon,"somewhere in France"?
14457What were the thoughts of these people?
14457What will be the result?
14457What would happen if one of the''dummy''fleets met the other?
14457When the Germans were shelling a town, who was I that a shell should pick me out to fall on or to explode near?
14457When they return to their country, what will they go back to?
14457Where can I get it?"
14457Where is he to go?
14457Where was the mattress?
14457Who are these spies?
14457Who goes there?"
14457Who goes there?"
14457Who goes there?"
14457Who shall say he is not entitled to it?
14457Who was in the tree lookout as the enemy swarmed across, and did he get away?
14457Why?
14457Why?
14457Why?
14457Will madame do us the honour of walking across it?
14457Will there ever be any great poems about these men who have been drowned in ditches?
14457Would I be allowed to land?
14457Would it be a battle of expletives?
14457Would it come?
14457Would the German consonant triumph over the English aspirate, and both ships go down in a sea of language?
10125Ecquid in antiquam virtutem?
10125Hailed who might be near( the"canvas- coverture moving,"by the by, is laughable);"a woman and six children"( by the way, why not nine children?
10125How shall we tell them in a stranger''s ear?
10125To an Infantis most sweet; is not"foodful,"though, very harsh?
10125What have I with time to do? 10125 Who art thou, fair one, who usurp''st the place Of Blanch, the lady of the matchless grace?
10125Wouldst thou divert thyself from melancholy? 10125 ''Tis a selfish but natural wish for me, cast as I am on life''s wide plain, friendless,Are you acquainted with Bowles?
10125), was_ he_ not an elevated character?
10125A chopped missionary or two may keep up the thin idea of Lent and the wilderness; but what standing evidence have you of the Nativity?
10125A tree is a Magnolia, etc.--Can I but like the truly Catholic spirit?
10125Again, would such a painter and forger have taken £ 40 for a thing, if authentic, worth £ 4000?
10125Ai n''t you mightily moped on the banks of the Cam?
10125Am I in the_ date_ive case now?
10125Am I the life and soul of every company I come into?
10125Am I to understand by her letter that she sends a_ kiss_ to Eliza Buckingham?
10125An''t you glad about Burke''s case?
10125An''t you glad about Tuthill?
10125And does not Southey use too often the expletives"did"and"does"?
10125And how does little David Hartley?
10125And in sober sense what makes you so long from among us, Manning?
10125And is it a year since we parted from you at the steps of Edmonton stage?
10125And what is the"Brussels Gazette"now?
10125Are impossibilities nothing?--be they abstractions of the intellects, or not( rather) most sharp and mortifying realities?
10125Are men all tongue and ear?
10125Are the women_ all_ painted, and the men_ all_ monkeys?
10125Are there not libraries, halls, colleges, books, pictures, statues?
10125Are we unstrangulable, I ask you?
10125Are you acquainted with Massinger?
10125Are you and the First Consul_ thick_?
10125Are you intimate with Southey?
10125Are you not glad the cold is gone?
10125Are you yet a Berkleyan?
10125As I sat down, a feeling like remorse struck me: this tongue poor Mary got for me, and can I partake of it now, when she is far away?
10125But consider what must I have been doing all my life, not to have lent great portions of my heart with usury to such scenes?
10125But do n''t you conceive all poets after Shakspeare yield to''em in variety of genius?
10125But how can you answer all the various mass of interrogation I have put to you in the course of the sheet?
10125But my spirits have been in an oppressed way for a long time, and they are things which must be to you of faith, for who can explain depression?
10125But what is the reason we have no good epitaphs after all?
10125But what''s the use of talking about''em?
10125But why do I relate this to you, who want faculties to comprehend the great mystery of deposits, of interest, of warehouse rent, and contingent fund?
10125But why waste a wish on him?
10125But would not a poem be more consecutive than a string of sonnets?
10125By the way, when will our volume come out?
10125Can I cram loves enough to you all in this little O?
10125Can we ring the bells backward?
10125Can we unlearn the arts that pretend to civilize, and then burn the world?
10125Can you make out what all this letter is about?
10125Can you tell me a likely place where I could pick up cheap Fox''s Journal?
10125Come, fair and pretty, tell to me Who in thy lifetime thou mightst be?
10125Concerning the tutorage, is not the salary low, and absence from your family unavoidable?
10125Cottle read two or three acts out to as, very gravely on both sides, till he came to this heroic touch,--and then he asked what we laughed at?
10125Dear B.B.,--What will you not say to my not writing?
10125Dear P.,--Excuse my anxiety, but how is Dash?
10125Did I not, in your person, make the handsomest apology for absent- of- mind people that was ever made?
10125Did the eyes come away kindly, with no Oedipean avulsion?
10125Did you ever have a very bad cold, with a total irresolution to submit to water- gruel processes?
10125Did you ever have an obstinate cold,--a six or seven weeks''unintermitting chill and suspension of hope, fear, conscience, and everything?
10125Did you ever read it?
10125Did you ever read that garrulous, pleasant history?
10125Did you ever taste frogs?
10125Did you flesh maiden teeth in it?
10125Did you see a sonnet of mine in Blackwood''s last?
10125Do children die so often and so good in your parts?
10125Do we come into the world with different necks?
10125Do you get paunch for him?
10125Do you mean I must pay the postage?
10125Do you observe my direction?
10125Do you publish with Lloyd, or without him?
10125Do you take the pun?
10125Do you trouble yourself about libel cases?
10125Do you understand me?
10125Does Master Hannah give maccaroons still, and does he fetch the Cobbetts from my attic?
10125Does his mighty name work wonders yet upon his little frame and opening mind?
10125Does his tail wag horizontally or perpendicularly?
10125Dost thou love picking meat?
10125Doth he take it in ill part that his humble friend did not comply with his courteous invitation?
10125For literary news, in my poor way, I have a one- act farce[ 1] going to be acted at Haymarket; but when?
10125Goes he muzzled, or_ aperto ore_?
10125Had not you better come and set up here?
10125Had you no cursed complement of boiled neck of mutton before it, to blunt the edge of delicate desire?
10125Has Mrs. He- mans( double masculine) done anything pretty lately?
10125Has he bit any of the children yet?
10125Has it not reached you, that you are silent about it?
10125Has not Master Southey spoke very slightingly in his preface and disparagingly of Cowper''s Homer?
10125Have I not enough without your mountains?
10125Have I seen him at Montacute''s?
10125Have I thanked you, though, yet for"Peter Bell"?
10125Have you let that intention go?
10125Have you met with a friend of mine named Ball at Canton?
10125Have you seen a man guillotined yet?
10125He is at present under the medical care of a Mr. Gilman( Killman?)
10125How are my cousins, the Gladmans of Wheathampstead, and Farmer Bruton?
10125How do you like my way of writing with two inks?
10125How do you make your pigs so little?
10125I did not distinctly understand you,--you do n''t mean to make an actual ploughman of him?
10125I''m glad to see you like my wife, however; you''ll come and see her, ha?"
10125If God''s judgments now fail to take away from the the heart of stone, what more grievous trials ought I not to expect?
10125If we are to go three times a- day to church, why has Sunday slipped into the notion of a_ holi_day?
10125If you do, can you bear new designs from Martin, enamelled into copper or silver plate by Heath, accompanied with verses from Mrs. Hemans''s pen?
10125If you told me the world will be at an end to- morrow, I should just say,"Will it?"
10125In the ignorant present time, who can answer for the future man?
10125Is Lloyd with you yet?
10125Is Sunday, not divinely speaking, but humanly and holiday- sically, a blessing?
10125Is his general deportment cheerful?
10125Is it Gallic, classical?
10125Is it a farm that you have got?
10125Is it as big as Old London Wall by Bedlam?
10125Is it built of flints?
10125Is it folly or sin in me to say that it was a religious principle that_ most_ supported me?
10125Is it not a pity so much fine writing should be erased?
10125Is it not odd that every one''s earliest recollections are of some such place?
10125Is life, with such limitations, worth trying?
10125Is not the last circumstance exquisite?
10125Is the chair empty?
10125Is the muse of L. E. L. silent?
10125Is the phrase classic?
10125Is the sword unswayed?
10125Is there a possible chance for such an one as I to realize in this world such friendships?
10125Is there any distinctive mark under our left ears?
10125Is there no law against these rascals?
10125Is there no possibility of averting this sore evil?
10125Is there no_ lineal descendant_ of Prester John?
10125It will be unexpected, and it will gire her pleasure; or do you think it will look whimsical at all?
10125Knew you old Norris of the Temple, sixty years ours and our father''s friend?
10125Let it begin,"Is this the land of song- ennobled line?"
10125Lloyd, it minded me of Falkland in the"Rivals,""Am I full of wit and humor?
10125Lord have mercy upon me, how many does two and two make?
10125Manning, your letter, dated Hottentots, August the what- was- it?
10125Mary''s love?
10125May not a publican put up the sign of the Saracen''s Head, even though his undiscerning neighbor should prefer, as more genteel, the Cat and Gridiron?
10125Must I then leave you, gin, rum, brandy,_ aqua- vitae_, pleasant, jolly fellows?
10125N.B.--Is there such a wall?
10125Now am I too proud to retract entirely?
10125Oh, my friend, I think sometimes, could I recall the days that are past, which among them should I choose?
10125Or are you doing anything towards it?
10125Or better, perhaps, BORES in Old English characters, like Madoc or Thalaba?
10125Or else be drowned in thy contemplation?
10125Or perhaps the Comic Muse?
10125Or shall I have no Apollo,--simply nothing?
10125Or wouldst thou in a moment laugh and weep?
10125Or wouldst thou lose thyself, and catch no harm, And find thyself again without a charm?
10125Pray, is there anything new from the admired pen of the author of"The Pleasures of Hope"?
10125Shall I find all my letters at my rooms on Tuesday?
10125Shall I say two?
10125She lugs us out into the fields, because there the bird- boys ask you,"Pray, sir, can you tell us what''s o''clock?"
10125She proposes writing my name_ Lambe?
10125Singly what am I to do?
10125So you still want a motto?
10125That is not my poetry, but Quarles''s; but have n''t you observed that the rarest things are the least obvious?
10125The expression in the second,"more happy to be unhappy in hell,"is it not very quaint?
10125The foul enchanter[ Nick?
10125Then what puddings have you?
10125There are no Quaker circulating libraries?
10125There is a march of Science; but who shall beat the drums for its retreat?
10125There is a tinge of_ petit_( or_ petite_, how do you spell it?)
10125There is no doubt of its being the work of some ill- disposed rustic; but how is he to be discovered?
10125There''s your friend Tuthill has got away from France-- you remember France?
10125Thy"Watchman''s,"thy bellman''s verses, I do retort upon thee, thou libellous varlet,--why, you cried the hours yourself, and who made you so proud?
10125To come to the point, then, and hasten into the middle of things, have you a copy of your Algebra[ 1] to give away?
10125Was I a candid greyhound now for all this?
10125Was the crackling the color of the ripe pomegranate?
10125Wesley( have you read his life?
10125What am I to do with such people?
10125What are we better than they?
10125What by early hours and moderate meals?
10125What can a mortal desire more for his bi- parted nature?
10125What can make her so fond of a gingerbread watch?
10125What do you think of( for a title) Religio Tremuli?
10125What fun has whist now?
10125What has happened to learned Trismegist?
10125What have I gained by health?
10125What is a Leadenhall clerk or India pensioner to a Deputy- Grecian?
10125What is all this to your letter?
10125What is the reason we do not sympathize with pain, short of some terrible surgical operation?
10125What is to become of the good old talk about our good old king,--his personal virtues saving us from a revolution, etc.?
10125What makes him reluctant to give Cowper his fame?
10125What matters it what you lead, if you can no longer fancy him looking over you?
10125What poems is he about to publish?
10125What says Coleridge?
10125What testimonials shall I bring of my being worthy of such friendship?
10125Where am I to look for''em?
10125Where will these things end?
10125Where will you get holly to stick in your churches, or churches to stick your dried tea- leaves( that must be the substitute) in?
10125Whither can I take wing from the oppression of human faces?
10125Who is Baddams?
10125Who looked over your proof- sheets and left_ ordebo_ in that line of Virgil?
10125Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?
10125Who shall describe his countenance, catch its quivering sweetness, and fix it forever in words?
10125Who shall persuade the boor that phosphor will not ignite?
10125Who, that standeth, knoweth but he may yet fall?
10125Why any week?
10125Why any week?"
10125Why did you not add"The Wagoner"?
10125Why do you seem to sanction Landor''s unfeeling allegorizing away of honest Quixote?
10125Why does not his guardian angel look to him?
10125Why not your father?
10125Why should not you write a poetical account of your old worthies, deducing them from Fox to Woolman?
10125Why sleeps the lyre of Hervey and of Alaric Watts?
10125Why the next?
10125Why the next?
10125Why was n''t he content with the language which Gay and Prior wrote in?
10125Will Dr. W. accept of my respects at the end of a foolish letter?
10125Will Miss H. pardon our not replying at length to her kind letter?
10125Will none of you ever be in London again?
10125Will they, have they, did they come safe?
10125Will you drop in to- morrow night?
10125With these dark words begins my fate; And their meaning is, whence can comfort spring When Prayer is of no avail?"
10125Without its institution, would our rugged taskmasters have given us a leisure day so often, think you, as once in a month?
10125Would Wilberforce give us our Tuesdays?
10125Would clod be anything but a clod if he could resist it?
10125Would his"School- mistress,"the prettiest of poems, have been better if he had used quite the Goody''s own language?
10125Would not"dulcet"fruit be less harsh, or some other friendly bi- syllable?
10125Wouldst read_ thyself_, and read thou knowest not what, And yet know whether thou art blest or not By reading the same lines?
10125Wouldst thou be in a dream, and yet not sleep?
10125Wouldst thou be pleasant, yet be far from folly?
10125Wouldst thou read riddles and their explanation?
10125You had all some of the crackling-- and brain sauce; did you remember to rub it with butter, and gently dredge it a little just before the crisis?
10125You have seen Beauties of Shakspeare?
10125You knew Dick Hopkins, the swearing scullion of Caius?
10125You know what Horace says of the_ Deus intersit_?
10125You like the Odyssey: did you ever read my"Adventures of Ulysses,"founded on Chapman''s old translation of it?
10125You stop the arm of a murderer, or arrest the finger of a pickpurse; but is not the guilt incurred as much by the intent as if never so much acted?
10125You understand music?
10125[ 1] What are you to do among such Ethiopians?
10125[ 3] The first line of the poem on Bolton Abbey:--"''What is good for a bootless bene?''
10125_ A propos_( is it pedantry, writing to a Frenchman, to express myself sometimes by a French word, when an English one would not do as well?
10125_ November_ 3, 1800,_ Ecquid meditatur Archimedes?_ What is Euclid doing?
10125_ November_ 3, 1800,_ Ecquid meditatur Archimedes?_ What is Euclid doing?
10125_ racemi nimium alte pendentes?_?
10125_ racemi nimium alte pendentes?_?
10125and does it stand at Kingsgate?
10125and what does your worship know about farming?
10125are men nothing but word- trumpets?
10125brick and stone walls in her way, which she can by no means eat through?
10125is it as good as hanging?
10125is there not from six to eleven P.M. six days in the week, and is there not all Sunday?
10125nuts in the Will''s mouth too hard for her to crack?
10125or Tremebundi?
10125or are there not a_ few_ that look like_ rational_ of_ both sexes_?
10125or did I do right?
10125or wouldst thou see A man i''the clouds, and hear him speak to thee?
10125or, if it had not been instituted, might they not have given us every sixth day?
10125said I,"who are you talking of?"
10125sore lets,_ impedimenta viarum_, no thoroughfares?
10125was the wanderer wrong?"
10125what am I now?
10125what could he mean?
12923''Lost,''is it? 12923 ''Not the man?''
12923''Sabugal?'' 12923 Ah,"said I,"but how am I to believe that?"
12923Ah,said I,"so you have already been making arrangements?"
12923All born in Badajos?
12923And I suppose it will be absolutely fatal to remain here long after daybreak?
12923And I suppose,said I,"you will leave her in charge of it when you join the Morays?"
12923And all the while you were distilling this?
12923And pray, sir, what about me, his Colonel, and the rest of his brother officers? 12923 And then?"
12923And what the deuce can it matter?
12923And you set yourself to lay a trap for him?
12923And you?
12923And your cavalry?
12923Another?
12923Any definite charge before to- night''s?
12923Are we three the only souls in Panama?
12923Are you come all on one business?
12923Are you the rebels?
12923As well as of disguises? 12923 Aw,"he asked,"who''s to be skipper, then?"
12923Bain''t you asleep?
12923Baint''ee goin''to say_ nothin_'', then?
12923Believe you?
12923Brought to you by a Spanish pilot, who had picked it up on the Barbary coast?
12923But could you not return and discover?
12923But had the minister any complaint, whatever-- to ride off without a word? 12923 But how can I help you?"
12923But what brings''ee here? 12923 But what did she die of?"
12923But what folly is this?
12923But what is the madman after?
12923But what''ll he do?
12923But where be you going?
12923But would you have sent him_ knowing_ that he must die? 12923 But_ they-- they_ have gone?"
12923Can I be of any service to your friends?
12923Can death be welcomed,asked Graul,"save by those who find life worse?"
12923Can not you imagine some_ genie_ of the Oriental Tales dragging the beast across Europe and dumping it down here in a sudden fit of disgust? 12923 Can you tell me anything about this?"
12923Come to bid us good- bye, I s''pose? 12923 Come to the house, honest man, and we''ll talk it over; for thou''lt sleep with us, no doubt?"
12923D''Arfet?
12923Do you know you have accused that young man of a villainy which must damn him for life? 12923 Do you know,"said he,"it has just occurred to me to pay you a tremendous compliment-- McNeill to McNeill, you understand?
12923Do you mean the child''s game?
12923Do you understand?
12923Dom Bartholomew Perestrello, are you a happy man?
12923Done? 12923 Eh?
12923Eh? 12923 Eh?"
12923Gone?
12923Got a match about you?
12923Has it been so long? 12923 Hats full, pockets full, eh?
12923Have you any idea? 12923 Hey?
12923How can a gentleman sleep for your thrice- accursed hammering?
12923How dare you? 12923 How know you that?"
12923How then?
12923How''s things at home?
12923I believe,said I,"you and he are not of the same religion?"
12923I do n''t know what accusation this coin may carry; but why need it be Mackenzie''s? 12923 Ice?"
12923Indeed, Colonel? 12923 Is Mark going to fight?"
12923Is it here?
12923Is it here?
12923Is it serious?
12923Is it worth while, sir?
12923Is that you, Donald?
12923Is there good cover on the other side? 12923 Is there reason to suppose that, besides this woman and( let us say) her accomplice, any one shared the secret of these pilferings?"
12923Is this the stuff?
12923It begins,''How many horses has your father got?'' 12923 It is curious,"he repeated, and turning to Gonsalvez said in a voice empty of passion,"You refuse me, I understand?"
12923Look here, have you your instruments about you?
12923Look here,my brother asked:"did you lock your door?"
12923May I have a word with you, Colonel?
12923Meeting, I suppose, just opposite the ford? 12923 Morales?
12923Mr. Urquhart,I asked,"is this the only occasion on which you have possessed the second sight, or had reason to think so?"
12923Night?
12923No infantry?
12923No? 12923 No?"
12923Nothing else?
12923Now why should he go up the lane?
12923Of course not; but it sounded--"Oh, did it?
12923Of my parole?
12923Of what are you telling her?
12923Once more, Master Abbot-- will you show us your treasures, or will you not?
12923Other things to drink?
12923Ready? 12923 Rescued?
12923Shall I fetch him?
12923Shall I find her, when I step home this evening? 12923 Shall us cross the fire?"
12923Shall we inspect our legacy, my brother, and make arrangements for the coronation?
12923So you be Nat Ellery? 12923 Surely,"I said,"this is a bad mistake of Urquhart''s?
12923The fare hard? 12923 Then what have you been thinkin''of all these days?"
12923Then, excuse me, but how the devil do you propose to manage?
12923They must have caught sight of our fellows-- listen, was n''t that a cheer? 12923 This too?
12923Thy name?
12923To assault Ciudad Rodrigo? 12923 Two men?
12923Was it the first or only time last night you believed you were granted it?
12923Well, but does n''t that prove it? 12923 What d''ee mean by that?"
12923What depth?
12923What do''ee think?
12923What does this mean?
12923What has happened?
12923What have I done?
12923What is the matter?
12923What is the matter?
12923What is this, and who are you?
12923What is this?
12923What is your guess?
12923What nation?
12923What sale?
12923What shall I do? 12923 What stories?"
12923What the devil do_ you_ want here?
12923What the dickens is wrong?
12923What''s this?
12923What''s wrong, my dear?
12923What? 12923 Where are you going?"
12923Where is Mark?
12923Where?
12923Who is it?
12923Who marked this coin?
12923Why, do n''t''ee know? 12923 Will you kindly inform us how it is possible for a player to cheat and not know that he is cheating?"
12923With what purpose? 12923 Yes?"
12923You awake?
12923You compel me?
12923You have been here-- all the while?
12923You have been keeping watch?
12923You say the pirates have left?
12923You think so?
12923Your desire Sir, is to buy the grave I spoke of?
12923Your horses?
12923''But how can we tell what perils await us there?''
12923''But who,''I asked,''ever saw a fixed cloud?''
12923''But, excuse me, after so much finesse it was a blunder-- hein?''
12923''Hear me, my lord,''I would say,''what is four hundred shekels of silver betwixt me and thee?
12923''I am told, sir, that this servant shared and furthered most of your adventures?''
12923''You will cross thither?''
12923Ah?
12923An''what cheer wi''_ you?_"he asked.
12923And if you come from the farm below, what may be the name of it?"
12923And the Coroner listened and asked:"Can you account for conduct of deceased?
12923And yet of such a bargain how can he speak as he has spoken?"
12923And, if so, how came a temple of the sun- god upon this unhomely coast?
12923As he reached the_ entresol_, a voice-- my brother''s-- called down from an upper landing, and demanded,"What''s wrong there?"
12923At dinner he said:"You''ll be up in the summer- house this afternoon?
12923But Captain Jones had plenty to eat till he cut his way out with a clasp- knife--""How_ could_ he?"
12923But did you happen to notice the date on the General Order?"
12923But for the stumble of a horse-- who knows?
12923But since, general, you ask my opinion, and speaking without local knowledge, I should say--""Yes?"
12923But the question just now is how am I to get across the Tormes?
12923But where in the next two days was I to find the help which Mina had refused?
12923But why did you show any hesitation?"
12923But why not try it with ice?"
12923By the way, do you happen to understand French?"
12923Can you ride bareback?"
12923Captain Murray, will you go and bring me Mr. Urquhart and the Major?"
12923Come, what do you think of it?"
12923Could Marmont be planning against Trant the very_ coup_ which Trant had planned against him?
12923Could it( someone suggested) be the pavement of a temple?
12923Could this at last be one?
12923Do I gather that you have confronted Mackenzie with this?"
12923Do you ever play at blind- man''s buff in these parts?"
12923Do you know what it means to kiss over running water?"
12923Do you question that assertion?"
12923Do you understand?"
12923Does he deny it?"
12923Does it surprise you to learn that, barring him, Elspeth is my only retainer?"
12923Encouraged by this he pressed on to the very gates of the town, and had actually entered the street when the alarm was sounded-- and by whom?
12923For while with the Allies the first question on hearing of some peculiarly daring feat would be"Which McNeill?"
12923Had an English gentleman committed my recent error of supposing him to hint at assassination, General Trant( who can doubt it?)
12923Had he been drinking that evening?"
12923Had we forgotten or been too careless to close the door after us when Brother Bartolomà © let us in?
12923Had you heard before this evening of any hints against Mr. Mackenzie''s play?"
12923He died, as one might say, without a stain on his character?"
12923He fell on his knees--""How could he, you silly?
12923His indignation and passionate defiance were gone: his eyes seemed to ask me,"How much do you know?"
12923How d''ee do, my lad?
12923How do I know that Marmont''s temper was abominable?
12923How far do they patrol?"
12923How is it patrolled on the far side?"
12923How much will the cups hold?"
12923How should he?"
12923How were you planning to cross?"
12923I asked her,''Was thieving one of them?''
12923I asked,''What trouble?
12923I brought them help; but they desert me now-- for thee doubtless?"
12923I demand, therefore, what is your purpose?"
12923I have reasons-- I was mistaken just now--""Mistaken, sir?"
12923I took his arm and asked insinuatingly,"Now, where do you usually have it done?"
12923I wonder how our boys are feeling on the right?
12923In that uniform?"
12923Is it your intention that I should cross in the darkness or wait for daylight?"
12923Is it your pleasure that I first taste this also?"
12923It broke with such fury that the Stranger, with the black bottle under his arm, paused on the threshold as much as to ask his father,"Shall I go?"
12923It was amusing-- eh!--the barber''s shop?
12923Mackenzie?"
12923Meanwhile, why not leave them?
12923Now, can you explain how this coin came into your possession?"
12923Of course the bank is, watched on this side?"
12923Or can you form any guess?"
12923Pardon the question, Captain, but how long have you been within the French lines?"
12923Prayers?
12923Shall we sit and talk awhile together, for their sakes?"
12923She was there by the supper- table?
12923Short?
12923That''s so, eh?"
12923The glacis?
12923The ladder too short?
12923Then said he,"I thank you: but will you sail with me in my pinnace or in your own?"
12923Ugh?
12923Was it danger of life, for instance?''
12923Was that a part of the"wash"now hanging in a row along the parapet?
12923What are you doing?"
12923What became of him?"
12923What can he want to purchase in the Gulf of Cedars but his wife''s grave?
12923What did''ee take out of''em?"
12923What have I done?
12923What have I done?"
12923What mattered anything?--what they did, or what they suffered, or what news the home- coming boats might bring?
12923What on earth( I asked myself) was this nonsense about Sabugal and a barber''s shop?
12923What other place on earth can he want to assault?
12923What shall I do?
12923What shall I do?"
12923What sort of delusions?"
12923What the devil were they groaning at?
12923What time is it?"
12923What was the silly word capering in his head?
12923What will I be doing?''
12923What''s amiss?"
12923What''s that?"
12923Which of''ee may happen to be Master Ephr''m Lantine?"
12923Why did n''t somebody stop those silly bugles sounding the Advance?
12923Why do n''t Hester invite you inside?
12923Why had Graul not turned Rubh''s head perforce and ridden back to die with her, since help her he could not?
12923Why in the world were they dropping like that?
12923Why not throw up the business and go home?
12923Why not travel, for instance?"
12923Why on earth"Mill- clappers?"
12923Will you send one of your men to prove that I speak truth?
12923Will you take notes while I dictate?"
12923Would you care to question the messenger?"
12923Yet could this be a Roman villa?
12923You have heard my name before?"
12923You know my name, and you guess what that wrong was: but you ask yourself,''Is it possible this old man remembers, after sixty years?''
12923You understand?
12923Your eyes were moist, I make no doubt, when you first listened to the pretty affecting tale of their love and misfortune?
12923Your man, I suppose, can look after himself?"
12923but you''re a clever one-- and at Huerta, eh?"
12923he asked--"how many?"
12923he broke in, with a voice which betrayed his relief:"you are in earnest about that?
12923he demanded aloud; then, with a catch of his breath,"Mines?"
12923he exclaimed,"are you responsible for this?"
12923he said eagerly,"you have n''t missed anything, have you?"
12923is that all?"
12923said I,"a surprise?"
12923so that question came up, did it?"
1499Canst thou by searching find out God?
1499Canst thou by searching find out Him? 1499 What is man that Thou art mindful of him?"
1499What sought they thus afar? 1499 Ah, what indeed is reality; what is the higher good; what is that which perishes never; what is that which assimilates man to Deity? 1499 And although it is supposed that the inductive method of Bacon has led to the noblest discoveries of modern times, is this strictly true? 1499 And do all men worship these forms of beauty which the imagination creates? 1499 And is any love worthy to be called love, if it does not inspire emotions which prompt to self- sacrifice, labor, and lofty ends? 1499 And is love, among mortals generally, based on such a foundation? 1499 And what man ever had such a sublimity of aspect and figure as the creations of Michael Angelo? 1499 And what then? 1499 And who, since Paul, has rendered greater service to humanity than Luther? 1499 And why? 1499 And will you, ye boasted intellectual guides of the people, extinguish reason in this world in reference to the most momentous interests? 1499 Are all her struggles in behalf of liberty in vain? 1499 Are not flowers and shrubs which beautify the lawn as desirable as beans and turnips and cabbages? 1499 Are not most of the sciences which are based upon it progressive? 1499 Are they inhabited by intelligent and immortal beings? 1499 Are we really swinging back to Paganism? 1499 Bright jewels of the mine? 1499 But around what centre do they revolve? 1499 But has America no higher destiny than to repeat the old experiments, and improve upon them, and become rich and powerful? 1499 But how could this El Dorado be reached? 1499 But is it a failure? 1499 But where were the men capable of framing a constitution for the republic? 1499 But who can interpret them? 1499 Can any woman, or any man, seen exactly as they are, incite a love which is kindred to worship? 1499 Can anybody doubt the marvellous progress of Protestant nations in consequence of the translation and circulation of the Scriptures? 1499 Can not a country grow materially to a certain point, under the most adverse influences, in a religious and moral point of view? 1499 Can peasants and women, or even merchants and nobles? 1499 Can she lay hold of forces that the Old World never had, such as will prevent the uniform doom of nations? 1499 Can such a man be stigmatized asthe meanest of mankind"?
1499Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?"
1499Creation involves a creator; and can the order and harmony seen in Nature''s laws exist without Supreme intelligence and power?
1499Did not the Romans have nearly all we have, materially, except our modern scientific inventions?
1499Do not our cities elect such rulers as the demagogues point out?
1499Do not the few rule, even in a Congregational church?
1499Do we not plant our grounds with the acacia, the oak, the cedar, the elm, as well as with the apple, the pear, and the cherry?
1499Does San Francisco or New York send its greatest men to Congress?
1499Does this fidelity to an official and professional duty, even if he were harsh, make him"the meanest of mankind"?
1499Grant that Essex had bestowed favors, and was an accomplished and interesting man,--was Bacon to ignore his official duties?
1499Has she no higher and nobler mission?
1499Has she no other mission than to add to perishable glories?
1499Have not material forces and glories been developed and exhibited, whatever the religion and morals of the fallen nations?
1499Have not your grand councils given contradictory decisions?
1499Have the spots upon the career of Bacon hidden the brightness of his general beneficence?
1499Have we yet learned the ultimate principles of political economy, or of geology, or of government, or even of art?
1499Have you considered what a mighty crime you thus commit against God, against man?
1499How are these things to be reconciled and explained?
1499How could he have written sonnets without an inspiration, unless he felt sentiments higher than we associate with either boys or girls?
1499How could the inexperienced citizens of Florence comprehend the complicated relations of governments?
1499How often did he excuse him to his royal mistress, at the risk of incurring her displeasure?
1499I ask myself, Why should America be an exception to the uniform fate of nations, as history has demonstrated?
1499If so, how ignominious are all politicians who flatter the people and solicit their votes?
1499In what consisted the real glory of the country we are never weary of quoting,--the land of Phidias and Pericles and Demosthenes?
1499Is America to become like Europe and Asia in all essential elements of life?
1499Is he the meanest of men because he had great faults?
1499Is induction, great as it is, especially in the explorations of Nature and science, always certain?
1499Is it an improvement to give up a simple life and lofty religious enthusiasm for materialistic enjoyments and epicurean display?
1499Is it not by deduction that we ascend from Nature herself to the God of Nature?
1499Is it not natural to be obsequious to those who have offices to bestow?
1499Is not the rose or tulip as great an addition to even a poor man''s cottage as his bed of onions or patch of potatoes?
1499Is not this science worthy of some regard?
1499Is she to teach the world nothing new in education and philanthropy and government?
1499Is that the meanest or the most uncommon thing in this world?
1499Is that which is most useful always the most valuable,--that, I mean, which gives the highest pleasure?
1499Is the time to be hailed when all religions will be considered by the philosopher as equally false and equally useful?
1499Is there an imagination so lofty that will not be oppressed with the discoveries that even the telescope has made?
1499Is there nothing before us, then, but the triumphs of material life, to end as mournfully as the materialism of antiquity?
1499Knowest thou the ordinances of Heaven?
1499Now what inspired so strange a purpose?
1499Of what are they composed?
1499Or is it what we fancy in the object of our adoration, what exists already in our own minds,--the archetypes of eternal ideas of beauty and grace?
1499Some may boldly say,"Why not?
1499Suppose she had become his wife, might he not have been disenchanted, and his veneration been succeeded by a bitter disappointment?
1499The great question of all time pressed upon his mind with peculiar force,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
1499The wealth of seas,--the spoils of war?
1499This trait is not commendable, but is it the meanest thing we see?
1499Unless something new is born here which has a peculiar power to save, wherein will America ultimately differ from other parts of Christendom?
1499Was it not a good time to die and consummate his protests?
1499We admit that Bacon was a sinner; but was he a sinner above all others who cast stones at Jerusalem?
1499What are the great realities,--machinery, new breeds of horses, carpets, diamonds, mirrors, gas?
1499What conservative power has been strong enough to arrest the ruin of the nations of antiquity?
1499What could austerities do for HIM?
1499What gave beauty and placidity to Descartes and Leibnitz and Kant?
1499What had he more to gain?
1499What has Voltaire or Hume or Froude told the world, essentially, that it did not know before?
1499What has made France rich since the Revolution?
1499What is more certain than deduction when the principles from which it reasons are indisputably established?
1499What is the explanation of this singular phenomenon?
1499What is the marketable value of friendship or of love?
1499What is the material profit of a first love?
1499What is the scale to measure even mortal happiness?
1499What is the secret of such a wonderful success?
1499What made"The Pilgrim''s Progress"the most popular book ever published in England?
1499What makes the dinner of herbs sometimes more refreshing than the stalled ox?
1499What mortal woman ever expressed the ethereal beauty depicted in a Madonna of Raphael or Murillo?
1499What other guide has a man but his reason?
1499What philosophical teachings led to the machinery of the mines of California, or to that of the mills of Lowell?
1499What raised Plato to the highest pinnacle of intellectual life?
1499What remains of Nineveh, of Babylon, of Thebes, of Tyre, of Carthage,--those great centres of wealth and power?
1499What remains of Roman greatness even, except in laws and literature and renovated statues?
1499What was life to him, diseased, infirm, and old?
1499What was the spirit of the truths HE taught?
1499What were realities to Anselm, Bernard, and Bonaventura?
1499What would Gregory I. say to the verdicts of Gregory VII.?
1499When Florence is deliberating about the choice of an ambassador to Rome, he playfully, yet still arrogantly, exclaims:"If I remain behind, who goes?
1499Where has civilization shown any striking triumphs, except in inventions to abridge the labors of mankind and make men comfortable and rich?
1499Where was he to get money except from the contributions of Christendom?
1499Which is worse, the physical arm of the beast, or the maniac soul of a lying prophet?
1499Who but the Church can do this?
1499Who can deny them?
1499Who can improve on the sagacity and worldly wisdom of the Proverbs of Solomon?
1499Who can love this perishable form, unless one sees in it some traits which belong to superior and immortal natures?
1499Who could adequately pay him for his services; who could estimate the value of his gift?
1499Who could smile or joke or eat or sleep or have any pleasure, if he thought seriously there would be no cessation or release from endless pains?
1499Who devised the cathedrals of the Middle Ages?
1499Who does not admire the church architecture of the Middle Ages?
1499Who does not criticise his neighbor''s house, its proportions, its general effect, its adaptation to the uses designed?
1499Who does not stop to admire a beautiful window, or porch, or portico?
1499Who does not value them?
1499Who ever tires in gazing at a locomotive as it whirls along with the power of destiny?
1499Who ever was satisfied in contemplating the diversified wonders of those venerable structures?
1499Who first sang the odes which Homer incorporated with the Iliad?
1499Who first turned up the earth with a plough?
1499Who first used the weaver''s shuttle?
1499Who gave the keel to ships?
1499Who gave the lyre to primeval ages, or the blacksmith''s forge, or the letters of the alphabet, or the arch in architecture, or glass for windows?
1499Who invented chimneys?
1499Who invented the mariner''s compass?
1499Who is not astonished at the triumphs of the engineer, the wonders of an ocean- steamer, the marvellous tunnels under lofty mountains?
1499Who solved the first problem of geometry?
1499Who was the first that raised bread by yeast?
1499Who will not value them so long as our mortal bodies are to be cared for?
1499Who would call Webster the meanest of mankind because he had an absurd desire to live like an English country gentleman?
1499Who, then, and what, is God?
1499Whom shall we believe?
1499Why could he not see the perfections he adored shining in other women, who perhaps had a higher claim to them?
1499Why could not Galileo have been as great in martyrdom as Savonarola?
1499Why could not those races retain their primitive revelation?
1499Why did Christianity itself become corrupted in four centuries?
1499Why did Copernicus escape persecution?
1499Why did he not accept the penalty of intellectual freedom, and die, if die he must?
1499Why did he suffer himself to be conquered by priests he despised?
1499Why did not civilization and Christianity save the Roman world?
1499Why did not the Middle Ages preserve the evangelical doctrines of Augustine and Jerome and Chrysostom and Ambrose?
1499Why did so bold and witty and proud a man betray his cause?
1499Why did the Jesuits become unpopular and lose their influence?
1499Why did the Jewish nation steadily retrograde after David?
1499Why did the descendants of Noah become almost idolaters before he was dead?
1499Why did the fervor of the Puritans burn out in England in one hundred years?
1499Why did the great Persian Empire become as effeminate as the empires it had supplanted?
1499Why did the light of the glorious Reformation of Luther nearly go out in the German cities and universities?
1499Why did they lose their popularity?
1499Why have the doctrines of the Pilgrim Fathers become unfashionable in those parts of New England where they seemed to have taken the deepest root?
1499Why should not Protestants of every shade cherish and defend this sacred right?
1499Why should not good institutions be perverted here, as in all other countries and ages of the world?
1499Why speak of life or death to me, Whose days are but a span?
1499Why till recently was Germany so poor?
1499Why were the antediluvians swept away?
1499Why were they so distrusted and hated?
1499Will he abjure the doctrines on which his fame rests?
1499Will he recant?
1499Will he subscribe himself an imposter?
1499Yea, the popes themselves, your infallible guides,--have they not at different times rendered different decisions?
1499and if I go, who remains behind?"
1499or are they affections, friendships, generous impulses, inspiring thoughts?
12769;Are the data which have been brought together adequate?
12769;To what degree have the fallacies which are more or less common in reasoning entered into my thinking?"
12769;What was assumed as a basis for arriving at the conclusion which I have accepted?
12769Has it a stomach?
12769What is the makeup with which children start in life?
12769Who made it?
12769Why ca n''t she stand up?
12769Will it die?
127693. Who else came besides Jim and Dick?...........................
127693. Who is mentioned in the paragraph as the person who desires to have all lessons completely done?..............................................
12769And what is the great joy which is his, and which may belong to us, if we really see the beautiful things in nature?
12769Are any of the sex differences noticeable in the achievements of the school children with whom you are acquainted?
12769Are children always primarily engaged in thinking when they study?
12769Are children who observe school rules and regulations necessarily growing in morality?
12769Are we to try to secure equal development in all directions?
12769Are you a boy or girl?.......
12769Are you a boy or girl?.......
12769Are you a boy or girl?....... In what grade are you?.......
12769Are you a boy or girl?..........
12769Are you able to discover in the exercise any other value?
12769Are you able to distinguish differences in type of mind( or general mental make- up) among the children in your classes?
12769At what stage of the inductive process is deduction involved?
12769At what time of day will it overtake the freight train if the freight train stops after it has gone 56 miles?
12769But why talk about metals at all-- and if so why hardness rather than color or effect on bases or some other characteristic?
12769Can first- grade children think?
12769Can one study a subject even though he may dislike it?
12769Can one study without interest?
12769Can you cite any example in your teaching in which children have progressed from forced to free attention?
12769Can you classify the members of your class as visualizers, audiles, and the like?
12769Can you give any example of an instinctive tendency which you think should have been outgrown but which seems to persist among your pupils?
12769Can you name any physical habits which may be considered socially undesirable?
12769Curiosity is also present, but now the questions asked are such as,"What makes her eyes work?"
12769Desirable?
12769Do children( or adults) work hardest when they are forced to attend to that from which they derive little or no satisfaction?
12769Do we forget with equal rapidity in all fields in which we have learned?
12769Do you wonder that the poet says of his experience,"I gazed-- and gazed,--but little thought what wealth the show to me had brought"?
12769Does free attention imply lack of effort?
12769Does the power to criticize poetry or music necessarily involve appreciation?
12769For what factor in education is the environment most responsible?
12769For what purposes should examinations be given?
12769Geography?
12769Growth in power of appreciation?
12769Had you ever thought of flowers as a jocund company?
12769History?
12769How can a teacher study with a pupil and yet help him to develop independence in this field?
12769How can reviews be organized to best advantage during the year?
12769How can we make the identity of methods of work most significant for transfer of training and for the education of the individual?
12769How can you hope to improve children''s memories?
12769How can you teach children what is meant by concentration of attention?
12769How can you teach children what it is to concentrate their attention and the value of concentrated attention?
12769How can you use the fighting instinct in your work with children?
12769How can you use the tendency to enjoy mental activity?
12769How could a girl be of use to her mother?.......................
12769How do children( and adults) most frequently solve their problems?
12769How do you distinguish between thinking and reasoning?
12769How have you found it possible to develop a critical attitude toward their work upon the part of children?
12769How important is heredity in determining the achievement of men and women?
12769How increase the number of associations?
12769How is it possible for a child to be unmoral and not immoral?
12769How is the process of imagination like memory?
12769How long did Tom say he would wait for them?..................
12769How long do children in your classes seem to be able to work hard at verbatim memorization?
12769How many brothers had John?..........................
12769How many did he buy?
12769How many magazines were there?
12769How many pencils can you buy for 50 cents at the rate of 2 for 5 cents?
12769How many pupils are there in the night school?
12769How may children contribute to the social welfare of the school community?
12769How may pupil participation in school government be made significant in the development of social moral conduct?
12769How may small groups of children work together advantageously in studying?
12769How may teachers prove most effective in developing the power of appreciation upon the part of children?
12769How may the conduct of parents and teachers influence conduct of children?
12769How may the keeping of a record of one''s improvement add in the formation of a habit?
12769How may we hope to have children learn to study in the fields requiring judgment?
12769How much did each receive?
12769How much money did she have at first?
12769How much money has George?
12769How old will you be?.....
12769How old will you be?.....
12769How old will you be?......
12769How satisfactory is the morality of the man who claims that he does no wrong?
12769How shall they divide the money?
12769How should a teacher adjust his work to the individual differences in capacity or in achievement represented by the usual class group?
12769How transitory are they?
12769How would you handle a boy who is hi the habit of confusing memory images with images of imagination?
12769How would you hope to correct habits of speech learned at home?
12769How would you teach a pupil to study his spelling lesson?
12769How would you teach your pupils to memorize?
12769How would you use this fact to refute the argument that we possess a general faculty of memory?
12769If 3- 1/2 tons of coal cost$ 21, what will 5- 1/2 tons cost?
12769If one learns most readily by reading rather than hearing, does it follow that his images will be largely visual?
12769If you buy 2 tablets at 7 cents each and a book for 65 cents, how much change should you receive from a two- dollar bill?
12769If you were teaching a poem of four stanzas, would you use the method of memorization by wholes or by parts?
12769In acquiring skill in swimming?
12769In how far is it advantageous to become a creature of habit?
12769In how many adults does the collecting instinct still persist, and the instinct of personal rivalry?
12769In how many has the crude desire for material ownership or the impulse to punish an affront by physical attack died out?
12769In the second place how quickly do these tendencies fade?
12769In what activities may children engage outside of school which may count toward the betterment of the community in which they live?
12769In what degree are we justified in speaking of the social instinct?
12769In what do they differ?
12769In what does skill in the supervision of play consist?
12769In what grade are you?......
12769In what grade are you?......
12769In what grade are you?.......
12769In what respect is the procedure in a deductive lesson like that which you follow in an inductive lesson?
12769In what respects are the processes of induction and deduction alike?
12769In what sense is it possible to attend to two things at the same time?
12769In what sense is it true that all progress, is dependent upon productive imagination?
12769In what sense is it true that lapses from moral conduct are the teacher''s best opportunity for moral teaching?
12769In what sense is it true that we form the habit of concentrating our attention?
12769In what sense is it true that we have habits of thought?
12769In what sense is it true that we work hardest when we give forced attention?
12769In what sense is it true that we work hardest when we give free attention?
12769In what sense is thinking dependent upon the operation of the laws of habit?
12769In what sense may one study in learning to write?
12769In what way can you improve the organization of associations upon the part of children in any one of the subjects which you teach?
12769Is it possible to classify children as belonging to one stage or the other by their ages?
12769Is the boy who reads over and over again his lesson necessarily studying?
12769Is this type of memory ever useful in later life?
12769Latin translation?
12769May a teacher ever expect the children in his class to be equal in achievement?
12769Memorization?
12769Occasions will occur when several possible lines of conduct suggest themselves; what kind of success will one choose, what kind of pleasure?
12769Of being courteous?
12769Of being prompt?
12769Of the larger social group outside of the school?
12769Of what factors in habit formation must children become conscious, if they are to study to best advantage in this field?
12769Of what significance in the life of an adult is fanciful imagery?
12769Questions are asked such as,"Where did it come from?"
12769Reading?
12769Should school children reason their responses in case of a fire alarm, in passing pencils, in formal work in arithmetic?
12769Some psychologists are asking what is the value of such a classification?
12769Suppose people could be put under types in imagery, what would be the practical advantage?
12769Take as an illustration mother- love; what are the original tendencies and behavior?
12769The farmer?
12769The instinct to imitate?
12769The question ought to be common,"What can I do to help you?"
12769The question which the teacher should ask herself is not,"What can I do to punish the pupil?"
12769The social reformer?
12769To what degree does creative imagination depend upon past experiences?
12769To what degree is it possible to teach your pupils to think?
12769To what degree may skill in creative work result in power of appreciation?
12769To what degree may the activities of the school be made play?
12769To what extent is intellectual activity involved in moral conduct?
12769To what extent is maturity a cause of individual differences?
12769To what extent is the environment in which children live responsible for their achievements in school studies?
12769To what extent, if any, would you be interested in the immediate heredity of the children in your class?
12769Under what conditions do children think and yet reach wrong conclusions?
12769Under what conditions may a very slight amount of transfer of training become of the very greatest importance for education?
12769Under what conditions may an activity which we classify as play for a civilized child be called work for a child living under primitive conditions?
12769Under what conditions may the writing of the material being memorized actually interfere with the process?
12769Under what conditions should we compel children to work, or even to engage in an activity which may involve drudgery?
12769Under what limitations do you work?
12769Upon what grounds and to what extent can lecturing be defended as a method of instruction?
12769Was John''s sister tall or short?.....................
12769What advantage has the method of concentration over the method of repetition in memorization?
12769What advantages do verbal images possess as over against object images?
12769What are some conditions that might make even the best boy leave school work unfinished?............................................
12769What are the characteristics of the mental states which are involved in appreciation?
12769What are the different types of identity which make possible transfer of training?
12769What are the elements involved in appreciating human nature?
12769What are the elements which make for success in an appreciation lesson?
12769What are the essential elements in reasoning?
12769What are the important elements to be found in all thinking?
12769What are the instincts upon which we may hope to build in moral training?
12769What are the principal causes of differences in abilities or in achievement among school children?
12769What can teachers do to influence the education which children have received or are getting outside of school?
12769What changes in school organization would you advocate for the sake of adjusting the teaching done to the varying capacities of children?
12769What constitutes growth in morality for the adult?
12769What criteria would you apply in testing the questions which you put to your class?
12769What did they do after eating the apples?.....................
12769What differences in action among the children in your class do you attribute to differences in original nature?
12769What evidence is available to show the fallacy of the common idea that children of the same age are equal in ability?
12769What exercises can you conduct which will help children to learn how to use books?
12769What factors determine the rate of forgetting?
12769What habits which may interfere with or aid in your school work are formed before children enter school?
12769What happened after the boys ate the apples?..................
12769What instinctive basis is there for immoral conduct?
12769What is involved in the"step"of presentation?
12769What is it that might seem at first thought to be true, but really is false?
12769What is meant by saying that we possess memories rather than a power or capacity called memory?
12769What is the difference between work and play?
12769What is the essential element in the appreciation of humor?
12769What is the moral significance of earning a living?
12769What is the relation of imagination to thinking?
12769What is the significance of one''s emotional response?
12769What is the significance of pupil participation in school government?
12769What is the type of memory employed by children who have considerable ability in cramming for examinations?
12769What kind of images do you seek to have children use in their work in the subjects which you teach?
12769What kinds of plays are characteristic of different age periods in the life of children?
12769What may be expected in the way of achievement from two children of widely different heredity but of equal training?
12769What may be the relation between a good recitation lesson and the solution of a problem?
12769What measures have you found most advantageous in securing speed in drill work?
12769What might a boy do in the evenings to help his family?.........
12769What might be the effect of his father''s death upon the way a boy spent his time?.................................................................
12769What motives have you found most usable in keeping attention concentrated during the exercises in habit formation which you conduct?
12769What opportunities can you provide in your class for moral social conduct?
12769What particular difficulty is involved?
12769What poems, or pictures, or music would you expect first- grade children to enjoy?
12769What possible weakness is indicated by this procedure?
12769What precaution do we need to take to insure permanence in memory upon the part of those who learn quickly?
12769What provision do you make in your work to guard against lapses?
12769What stages of development are distinguishable in the moral development of children?
12769What to differences in education?
12769What type of imagery is most important for the work of the inventor?
12769What type of study is involved in learning a multiplication table, a list of words in spelling, a conjugation in French?
12769What values in the education of an individual are realized through growth in power of appreciation?
12769What was his sister''s name?..........................
12769What was the total cost of uniforms and shoes for the nine?
12769What, if any, is the danger involved in reveling in idealistic productive imagery?
12769What, if any, of the differences noticed among children may be attributed to sex?
12769What, then, from among all of the facts or principles which are available are we to select and what are we to reject?
12769When are questions which call for facts justified?
12769When did Jim and Dick come?...................................
12769When is one most efficient in individual pursuits-- when his activity is play, when he works, or when he is a drudge?
12769When is your next birthday?......
12769When is your next birthday?......
12769When is your next birthday?...... How old will you be?.....
12769When is your next birthday?.......
12769When may habit formation involve thinking?
12769When may it help?
12769When may repetitions actually break down or eliminate habitual responses?
12769When should examinations be given?
12769When, are repetitions most helpful in habit formation?
12769Which of our actions should be the result of reason?
12769Which of the factors involved are subject to improvement?
12769Which of the instincts seem most strong in the children in your class?
12769Which of the three is the most valuable for educational purposes?
12769Which stage is he recapitulating, that of the fishes or the monkeys?
12769Which would seem real and worth solving to the duller members of the group?
12769Which, in your judgment, was the most worth while from the standpoint of the social development of boys and girls?
12769Why are children less able to concentrate their attention than are most adults?
12769Why are children who skip a grade apt to be able to skip again at the end of two or three years?
12769Why are questions which call for comparisons to be considered important?
12769Why are some people found in the slums for generations?
12769Why are you not justified in grouping children as bright, ordinary, and stupid?
12769Why do adults attend to fewer things than do children?
12769Why do all children attend when the teacher raps on the desk, when she writes on the board, when some one opens the door and comes into the room?
12769Why do ideals which seem to control in one situation fail to affect other activities in which the same ideal is called for?
12769Why do some children go to high school and others not?
12769Why do some choose classical courses and some manual training courses?
12769Why do we sometimes become less efficient when we fix our attention upon an action that is ordinarily habitual?
12769Why does building a boat make a stronger appeal to a boy than engaging in manual training exercises which might involve the same amount of activity?
12769Why have moral reformers sometimes been considered immoral by their associates?
12769Why is Latin a good subject from the standpoint of training for one student and a very poor subject with which to seek to educate another student?
12769Why is it hard to break a habit of speech?
12769Why is it important for a teacher to seek to cultivate his own power of appreciation?
12769Why is it important to allow children to choose the poems that they commit to memory, or the pictures which they hang on their walls?
12769Why is it important to have positive satisfaction follow moral conduct?
12769Why is it important to phrase questions carefully?
12769Why is it not possible to educate children satisfactorily by following where instincts lead?
12769Why is it possible to have longer recitation periods in the upper grades and in the high school than in the primary school?
12769Why is it true that one''s character depends upon the deliberate choices which he makes among several possible modes or types of action?
12769Why is the desire to excel one''s own previous record preferable to striving for the highest mark?
12769Why may it not be wise to attempt to teach"their"and"there"at the same time?
12769Why may we not consider the several"steps"of the inductive lesson as occurring in a definite and mutually exclusive sequence?
12769Why may we not hope for the largest results in training by compelling children to study that which is distasteful?
12769Why should a boy think through a poem to be memorized rather than beginning his work by trying to repeat the first two lines?
12769Why should a teacher ask some questions which can not be answered immediately?
12769Why should drill work be discontinued when children grow tired and cease to concentrate their attention?
12769Why should reviews be undertaken at the beginning of a year''s work?
12769Why should we seek to make the play element prominent in school activity?
12769Why will not consciousness of the technique of study make pupils equally able in studying?
12769Why would you ask children to try to image in teaching literature, geography, history, or any other subject for which you are responsible?
12769Why?
12769Why?
12769Why?
12769Why?
12769Why?
12769Why?
12769Why?
12769Will a boy or girl in your class be more or less easily distracted as he gives free attention or forced attention to the work in hand?
12769Will a boy who has unusual ability in music certainly be superior in all other subjects?
12769Would you be satisfied to utilize the motive which brings results most quickly and most surely?
12769Would you expect fifth- grade children to grow in appreciation of poetry by having them commit to memory selections from Milton''s Paradise Lost?
12769the telling of stories of truthfulness, the teaching of moral precepts, and the like?
11664''Curse on him,''quote false Sextus,''will not the villain drown?''
11664''What noble Lucumo comes next to taste our Roman cheer?''
11664A nature which can work up such a passionate loyalty for an adopted country-- what must its feelings have been toward its own native land? 11664 A toothache, maybe?"
11664A what?
11664Agony Wing,she raged,"do you think for a moment that Veronica would have anything to do with enemy agents?
11664And do you remember the light man that came into_ your_ life, Hinpoha?
11664And these headaches generally occur at night?
11664And who''s going to work our''Quick Curtain''there?
11664Are Slim and the Captain coming?
11664Are n''t we going to have a Ceremonial Meeting tonight to take Agony and Oh- Pshaw into the Winnebagos? 11664 Are we getting initiated?"
11664Are we?
11664Are you acquainted with my girls?
11664Are you ready to be a Torch Bearer, too?
11664Are you sure you did n''t leave it at home?
11664Atterbury?
11664But Veronica, why did n''t you tell us before about this?
11664But Veronica,said Nyoda, both amused and perplexed,"is it possible to throw away a title like that?
11664But can you call her Many Eyes if she only has one eye?
11664But do you really think she took the letter?
11664But we''d be_ willing_ to die for America''s cause, would n''t we?
11664But what about the other man you said you saw in her fortune, the light- haired man who was going to turn dark after a while?
11664But what did you put the one eye on her for?
11664But what on earth was all that racket as we came up?
11664But what, if I might make so bold as to ask,said the Captain,"are_ you_ two doing here in the wet, wild woods, all by your wild lone?"
11664But why did n''t you put_ two_ eyes in her?
11664But why do you keep the goat if he is such a nuisance?
11664But you were not born in America?
11664But, Father,said Oh- Pshaw eagerly,"do n''t you really wish you_ could_ be there to see?
11664But,continued Agony,"do n''t you see?
11664Can I help you figure it out?
11664Come up to the house with me,said Mr. Wing presently,"and I''ll show you-- Hello, what''s this?"
11664Did I hear you say you could get to Oakwood on the electric?
11664Did n''t it strike you strange that she should have gone walking at that hour?
11664Did n''t you get my wire saying I was coming?
11664Did you ever see a real prince?
11664Did you ever see anything so quaint?
11664Did you really play before the king?
11664Did your uncle have a title?
11664Do n''t you mean''euphonious''?
11664Do what?
11664Do you believe she is?
11664Do you think I''ve gotten any thinner?
11664Do you think she''ll be_ interred_?
11664Do you want me to tell yours, Sahwah?
11664Do you wonder why I changed my name when I came to America and took the simple, sensible name of Lehar? 11664 Do_ you_ think he''s so wonderful?"
11664For goodness''sake, you are n''t going to enter that thing in the contest?
11664Goodness gracious, child, what do you think I am, an encyclopedia?
11664Gracious, Hinpoha, ca n''t you hold still a_ minute_?
11664Handkerchiefs-- did you get them in?
11664Has anyone heard from Veronica lately?
11664Have you a headache? 11664 How can you say such a thing?
11664How did Sherry, happen to be on the ocean?
11664How did we do to- day, Miss Raper?
11664How did you ever do it?
11664How did you happen to come?
11664How did_ he_ find it out?
11664How do you know it was the same one?
11664How does a moon rise, anyway?
11664How fast would a Primitive Woman go up and how many pounds would she pull?
11664How on earth did you happen to do that?
11664How so?
11664How''s the big case coming?
11664I mean a kite built like Many Eyes, our Primitive Woman symbol; would she fly high and pull a heavy tail?
11664I wonder how she feels about things?
11664Is Hinpoha there?
11664Is everybody home?
11664Is everybody ready?
11664Is he a great friend of Hinpoha''s, too?
11664Is n''t he-- dead?
11664Is n''t it queer the way things work out sometimes? 11664 Is that true?"
11664Is there anything left?
11664Is_ that_ loud enough, Nyoda?
11664It''s hard to believe----"_ Do you believe she''s a traitor_?
11664Lady-- what?
11664May I ask you also to say nothing about it?
11664May I use the telephone in the study?
11664Now, can a girl design a kite?
11664Now, where''s the Moon?
11664Nyoda,she burst out as soon as she was inside the door,"how fast would a Primitive Woman go up and how many pounds would she pull?"
11664Oh dear,said Migwan regretfully,"why did you say that about Harpies, Hinpoha, and make us laugh?
11664Oh, Mis''Elizabeth, you- all ai n''t goin''ter give dat goat away?
11664Oh, Sahwah, are you alone?
11664Oh, are n''t they the most fascinating things you ever saw?
11664Oh, dear, why ca n''t things like that happen now? 11664 Oh, may we?"
11664Oh, whatever did you take salt for?
11664RunNyoda?
11664Sahwah, dear,she said soberly, while the hurt animal look came back into her eyes,"you would n''t want me to tell you my secret, would you, dear?
11664Shall I dive in and find out?
11664Since when are you a boy?
11664So she often goes out walking at midnight, does she?
11664Strikes?
11664The other one was a German prince,said Veronica, and then laughingly added,"I do n''t suppose you care to hear about_ him_?"
11664Then is n''t_ your_ name Lehar either?
11664Then why ca n''t you get rid of him?
11664They ca n''t make me go back, can they?
11664To whom did you telephone from this study last night?
11664Towels, soap case, hairpins, buttonhook?
11664Was it the one your mother gave you, with her picture in?
11664Was n''t it a miracle that Sahwah happened to be in the woods when the plane came down?
11664Was she?
11664Was your grandfather a baron?
11664Well, if we''d be perfectly willing to die for_ our_ country''s cause, why would n''t Veronica be willing to die for_ hers_?
11664Well, what_ were_ they, then? 11664 Were there any more entries?"
11664What are you doing here?
11664What are you going to do with him?
11664What does''Forward_ Hunch_''mean?
11664What for?
11664What is he, a rhinocerous?
11664What is it, Mis''Elizabeth?
11664What is it, Nyoda?
11664What is it, a riddle?
11664What kind of a kite do you call that? 11664 What on earth do you suppose_ that_ is?"
11664What time is it?
11664What was it?
11664What was your title?
11664What were you chasing the chicken for?
11664What''ll Moon rise on?
11664What''s that noise?
11664What''s that?
11664What''s the idea?
11664What''s the matter with Veronica?
11664What''s the matter, are you cold?
11664What''s the matter?
11664What''s the matter?
11664What''s the matter?
11664What''s the matter?
11664What''s''at ol''goat bin a- doin'', honey?
11664What''s_ he_ got to do with it?
11664What?
11664What_ do_ you suppose will happen next?
11664Whatever can she want out there?
11664When you girls reached home after this party last night was Miss Lehar there?
11664Where are my gloves?
11664Where did you go when you left this house last night?
11664Where did you go, then?
11664Where have you been all this while?
11664Where have you been?
11664Where is Veronica?
11664Where is he, is he gone?
11664Where''ll we find one?
11664Where''s Oh- Pshaw?
11664Where''s Sahwah?
11664Where''s Veronica?
11664Where''s the flag I''m to hold up when it''s done?
11664Which one is it?
11664Who brought the flag along?
11664Who can be telegraphing at this time of night?
11664Who is the girl in the picture, Nyoda?
11664Who said_''Front? 11664 Who wants any lunch?
11664Who''s going to shoot him?
11664Who''s the nervy party with the chin whiskers that''s cabbaged Hinpoha?
11664Who''s there?
11664Who''s there?
11664Who?
11664Whom did you meet?
11664Why are you so quiet?
11664Why did n''t you tell us you were coming? 11664 Why did n''t you turn aside?"
11664Why did she come stealing in the back door that way?
11664Why do you ask?
11664Why not?
11664Wo n''t you stay to dinner? 11664 Would n''t it be dreadful if Veronica were to be interned?"
11664Would you like to go back to Hungary?
11664Would you like to see them?
11664Yes,replied Gladys,"and do you remember the time you predicted I was going to flunk math at midyears and I took the prize?"
11664You are a Hungarian, are you?
11664You belonged to the upper class, did n''t you?
11664You love the water better than anything else, do n''t you?
11664You thought she had gone home with a sick headache and was in bed?
11664You took that letter to somebody, did n''t you?
11664You would have stood up for your friend, no matter what the others said, would n''t you?
11664You''ll stay here in the house until I come back, wo n''t you, girls?
11664_ Anything_ broken?
11664_Do you know of anyone who would take him?"
11664--and signed by Prince Karl Augustus of Hohenburg?
11664Already the party seemed days in the past-- could it be that this was still the same night?
11664And what did you go and paint that one eye on there for and nothing else, and then enter her as_ Many Eyes_?"
11664Besides, who would ever take the trouble to look for me when our estates have been swept away by the Russians?
11664But I can paddle a canoe, standing on the gunwales-- could you do that?"
11664But does it take two to speed the fatal ball?
11664But now you really love me and wo n''t let it make any difference?"
11664But what was a letter addressed to such a person doing in the possession of the artist?
11664By the way, Slim, where is it now?"
11664CHAPTER XIV NEWS FROM THE FRONT"Does Mrs. Andrew Sheridan live here?"
11664CHAPTER XIX KAISER BILL MIXES IN"Is n''t it just too wonderful for anything?"
11664Ca n''t you come and spend your vacations with me, as many of you as have vacations?
11664Ca n''t you?
11664Could you do Trudgeon, and Australian Crawl?
11664Did you ever_ hear_ of anything so romantic as this, anyway?
11664Did you see that officer over there turn around and look when you laughed?
11664Did you think I was going in with my clothes on?
11664Do n''t you really ever have any regrets over it?"
11664Do n''t you see the water moving?
11664Do you realize what he''s done?
11664Do you remember, Gladys, the time I told you you were going to get a letter from a distance, and you got one from France the very next day?"
11664Do you think she''d fly high, Nyoda?"
11664Do you think she''d steal letters for him?"
11664Do you_ have_ to go back to Philadelphia?"
11664For, hang it all, if_ she_ did n''t, who under the shining sun did?"
11664Gettin''light- headed, was n''t you?
11664H- how did you get the m- man loose and up on shore?"
11664Had hearing played some bizarre trick on her?
11664Had she dreamed that about Veronica last night?
11664Had she really heard the telephone ring and Veronica answer it?
11664Have you got one, too?"
11664Horrible monsters?
11664How am I going to tell you apart?"
11664How came it in the possession of this strange aviator?
11664How can we have curtain calls without a curtain?
11664How do they know but what I perished, too?
11664How will they ever know that I am here in America when I go by the name of Lehar?
11664If you were born Lady Veronica Szathmar- Vasarhà © ly can you deliberately say you''wo n''t be it''?
11664Is n''t it wonderful?"
11664John?"
11664Kaiser Bill,"he remarked reproachfully,"ai n''t I done fetched you up no better''n_''at?
11664Mr. Carrington asked,''Why the umbrella?''
11664Mr. Wing''s curiosity concerning her was plainly written on his face, and finally he asked,"You are not an American, are you?"
11664Naturally all suspicion points to her, and how could Sanders do anything else but put her under arrest?
11664Now do you believe it?"
11664Oh, dear, why ca n''t things be as they were last year?"
11664Oh, dear, will I ever learn not to be so careless with my things?"
11664Oh, the poor, poor child, why did n''t she tell?"
11664Or could n''t you swim?
11664Shall I go and get it?"
11664She certainly would n''t feel bitter toward the Americans because the Russians burned their town and killed her father, would she?"
11664She went in to pull it back and while she was in the room he opened his eyes and said,''Is it really you?''
11664The ribbon had evidently come from the ship, but what was it doing here under the lining of Eugene Prince''s portfolio?
11664Then had come Nyoda''s letter: DEAREST WINNEBAGOS: Ca n''t you take pity on me and relieve my loneliness?
11664Then he asked,"Whom did you meet down there at the edge of town?"
11664Then she added,"How are you ever going to be a Torch Bearer if you ca n''t keep cool?"
11664They say they''ll only be beaten out by Hillsdale anyway, so what''s the use?
11664Twelve?
11664We would n''t divulge it for worlds, would we, Oh- Pshaw?"
11664What comes next?
11664What do you think of my father?"
11664What have you put in her tail?"
11664What on earth are you doing here?
11664What time was it, anyway, eleven?
11664Whatever would she want with such a thing as that?"
11664When did the Winnebagos ever let a challenge of their supremacy go unanswered?
11664Where are the Guns?
11664Where are you?"
11664Where had she gone on those excursions?
11664Where''s your baby?
11664Who has it?"
11664Who is More Trees?
11664Who shall dispute the will of the gods?
11664Who was Waldemar von Oldenbach?
11664Why did n''t she confide in them and satisfy their minds on this point?
11664Why should n''t Veronica steal out quietly and go for a walk if she wanted to?
11664Why was he carrying around a ship''s ribbon from an interned German vessel?
11664Why would he be coming to America now?"
11664You can just hear the teachers pronouncing it, ca n''t you?
11664You remember my writing to you about the Heavenly Twins, the Wings, the famous Flying Column of the class?
11664You''ll be careful, wo n''t you?"
11664You''ll get up a company of the girls here, wo n''t you?"
11664You_ are_ a lawyer, are n''t you?
11664_ Now_, will you say there is n''t any truth in fortunes?"
11664cried Sahwah savagely,"do_ you_ believe Veronica''s a traitor?"
11664exclaimed Agony reproachfully,"do you think for a minute we''d do military drill with these shoes on?"
18080''But have you no partridges?''
18080''Et après?''
18080''Les liévres?
18080''Well, but have you no covert shooting-- no hares?''
18080''Why were they proud-- because red- lined accounts Were richer than the songs of Grecian years?
18080''[ 13] Do the officials of Heralds''College( we may ask in parenthesis) believe in their craft?
18080''[ 26]''What does Monsieur think?''
18080( for we are favoured with a little confidence from our young friend), and what can we say?
18080And as to girls-- who knows the impression left for life on young hearts, by the dead walls and silent trees of a French_ pension_?
18080Are either of our''memorials''likely to fulfil these conditions?
18080Are there bounds which they overstep and which we can not pass?
18080Are we really more straightforward and honourable than they?
18080Do these atoms on the earth''s surface hope to change the order of the elements, to serve their own purposes?
18080Do we dream dreams?
18080Do we exaggerate the evils of over- centralization?
18080Do we overdraw the picture?
18080How many"titled"people in these days possess the one, or accept the other?
18080How shall we describe it?
18080If rain were needed, would it not come?
18080It would seem reserved for the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries to create a state of society when the question''Who is he?''
18080Le petit Alphonse s''est marié avec elle, comme ça il est un peu père de famille; nous l''épargnerons, n''est- ce- pas, monsieur?
18080Nous les chasserons sans doute si monsieur le veut;_ mais que feronsnous l''année prochaine_?
18080Of the ladies''attire what shall we say?
18080The mediæval architect is a sad and solitary man( who ever met a cheery one?
18080We are received in the ancient guard- room by a''young brother,''who has( shall it be repeated?)
18080What does it all mean?
18080What real sympathy has the kind, fat, fatherly figure before us with soldiers, saints, or martyrs?
18080Why do we speak of what is done every day in every city of France?
18080Why were they proud-- again we ask, aloud, Why in the name of glory were they proud?''
18080Why-- it may be asked in conclusion-- do we cling to costume, and prize so much the old custom of distinctive dress?
18080Would she be willing to repeat the follies of her ancestors in the days of the_ Trianon_ and Louis XIV.?
18080Would she complete the fall which began when knights and nobles turned courtiers-- and roués?
18080[ 13] We lately saw an english crest, bearing the motto"Courage without fear;"a piece of tautology, surely of modern manufacturer?
18080[ 63] Is it of no moment to be able to express our thoughts quickly and easily?
18080[ 6] All this, and much more the artist finds to his hand, and what does the architect discover?
18080for imaginary honours?
15029Ai n''t Pop brave?
15029Are we going all the way in the car?
15029Are you busy, Uncle Cassius?
15029Are you going to eat all those apples, Kit?
15029Are you the young lady who has the renting of these tents which I see every once in a while?
15029Billie, are you really after bugs and things-- I mean, are you going to really be a naturalist?
15029But do n''t you think your mother will need you here? 15029 But what can you do about it, my dear?
15029But what does it say?
15029But where would you put her, dear?
15029But, Aunt Daphne, does n''t he act just exactly as though he had been a retainer in our honored family for generations?
15029But, Mrs. Peckham,pleaded Kit,"when you were Sally''s age, was n''t there ever anything that you wanted to do or be with all your heart and soul?
15029But, brother, the Beaubiens won all their suits, did n''t they?
15029But, brother, what about the child? 15029 Could I, Aunt Daphne?
15029Dearest, am I domineering to you? 15029 Delphi?"
15029Deserts, islands or mountain peaks?
15029Did you call up Han Hicks?
15029Did you hear them all talking about him over at Elmwood while we were there? 15029 Did you, child?
15029Do n''t any of your brothers want to come?
15029Do n''t they?
15029Do n''t you feel''the rushing torrent of ambition''s flood sweeping away the barriers''and-- what else did the Dean say?
15029Do n''t you have to take them in when it storms or the wind blows, just like sails?
15029Do n''t you wish you''d been there when they dug them up? 15029 Do you know the Dean?"
15029Do you mean Marcelle Beaubien? 15029 Do you remember, Piney, the place where Billie and I had our birch tepee long ago?
15029Do you suppose Ra lives here, Uncle Cassius?
15029Do you suppose he''d be willing to play''Home, Sweet Home''on that thing if we asked him to? 15029 Do you suppose he''ll survive, Shad?
15029Do you suppose,Kit leaned forward impressively, as she sprang her plan,"do you suppose Charity would loan her room for a Founders''Tea?"
15029Does Marcelle know?
15029Does n''t it seem good to get some of Cousin Roxy''s huckleberry pancakes again, girls? 15029 Does n''t this remind you, Daphne, of some of the basket luncheons we used to have in England and France years ago?"
15029Had n''t I better go for help?
15029Have n''t you got some of that painted tinware, too, Sally?
15029Have you ever heard her sing, mother?
15029Have you?
15029He does n''t act a bit important or dignified, does he?
15029He''s about fourteen, is n''t he? 15029 Hello, Rex, are you coming over?"
15029Historic tradition?
15029How be you, Jerry? 15029 How could they smuggle way off here?"
15029How did you find out about this, my dear?
15029How did you find out?
15029How do you do?
15029How do you do?
15029How do you like it here?
15029How do you think you''re going to like Hope College?
15029How on earth did you ever get way out here?
15029I never thought it would look just like that, did you, Billie?
15029I wonder-- I do n''t suppose you''d have any sale for braided rag rugs, would you? 15029 I''m afraid the Dean made a little mistake, did n''t he?
15029In France?
15029Is he here, now?
15029Is he still alive?
15029Is it very far down the bluff to the shore, Delia?
15029Is n''t she going up to rehearsal?
15029Is n''t she odd?
15029Is that all?
15029Is that you, Shad?
15029Is this a truce, or a lasting peace? 15029 It is still another one of you?"
15029It''s Dan Peckham, is n''t it?
15029It''s our dormitory, do n''t you know?
15029Just mummies?
15029Like playing forfeits, is n''t it?
15029Mind?
15029Mother says I ought to dress very simply, but a Duke''s daughter would have even a stuff dress cut in fashion, would n''t she? 15029 Mother,"called Helen,"were you ever in Delphi, where Uncle Cassius lives?"
15029Now, what are you going to eat, Anne? 15029 Now, what on earth do you suppose he meant by that?"
15029Oh, are you the founder''s granddaughter?
15029Oh, but I''d love to help,Kit pleaded,"and I did help before on the aborigines of Japan, did n''t I?
15029Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud, sister mine? 15029 Poor little Peggy,"Charity murmured,"getting into trim for a Shakespeare drive?
15029Queer?
15029Reaching years of discretion, are n''t you, girlie?
15029Semblance of verity? 15029 Smuggling?"
15029Sounds just like Pope, does n''t it?
15029That''s the new name, is n''t it? 15029 The Beaubiens on the shore, my dear?"
15029They ai n''t calculatin''to fish over there beyond the dam, are they? 15029 They''re all older than you, are n''t they?"
15029This is it, is n''t it? 15029 Those half- breed French Canadians?"
15029Told me what?
15029Uncle Cassius, what would you do if everything was just swept away from you, health, money, home and your work; what do you suppose you would do? 15029 Was everything all right?"
15029Was he heading this way?
15029Well, for pity''s sakes,exclaimed Kit, as she stood before the plain, squat, terra- cotta urn,"is that the royal urn?
15029Well, what are they going to do about it? 15029 Well, what if it is?"
15029Were n''t you telling me something about a place in China where they had a whole grove filled with sacred silkworms, Aunt Daphne?
15029What did he want to sell us, Dorrie, lightning rods or sewing machines?
15029What do you think of that?
15029What do you want?
15029What does it mean when the crows circle over Gilead?
15029What does the inscription say?
15029What if they did? 15029 What kind of branches?"
15029What''s that?
15029When?
15029Where are you bound for?
15029Where did you purloin that, Peg?
15029Where do you find those, my dear?
15029Where''s Anne?
15029Whiskers?
15029Who wants to meditate, anyway?
15029Who was Ra?
15029Why did n''t you try to catch me? 15029 Why do n''t you buy yourself some things that you''ve been wanting?
15029Why on earth should n''t they?
15029Why, I do n''t know; Walt Whitman, Ibsen, Longfellow, Joaquin Miller? 15029 Will you come down to the tent this afternoon and take me there?
15029Will you tell me something, honest and true?
15029Wo n''t he tell you his secrets, Uncle Cassius?
15029Would n''t it be strange, Billie, if either of us were famous some day,she said, thoughtfully,"and this picture would just be priceless?
15029Would you mind so very much, Miss Kit, asking if any one has telephoned a telegram up for me from the station? 15029 You did n''t?
15029You do n''t know him very well, do you?
15029You mean,she said,"supposing he decided that my brain measured up to his expectations of Jerry, Jr., and they wanted me to stay all winter?
15029You miss the fun, being a day student, do n''t you?
15029You''re in my class, are n''t you?
15029''Tain''t nothin''but a big fiddle, is it?"
15029All I want to know is, who told you?"
15029Another thing, Kit, do you suppose Marcelle would have any relics around of her grandfather that we could kind of spring on them unexpectedly?"
15029Are n''t these apples bully though?
15029Are n''t you glad the fire did n''t bum the cupola?
15029Are they Chinese porcelains and jewels, or just mummy things?"
15029Are you going to let her keep on painting?"
15029Are you preparing a treatise?"
15029Brought company with you, too, did n''t you?
15029Can I borrow your steamer trunk, Jean?
15029Come to stay a while?
15029Could n''t I go to school there, just as well as here?
15029Could n''t we fix up some kind of glorified lemonade?"
15029Could n''t we start a regular tent colony?
15029Did he tell Dad that?"
15029Did n''t you ever just want to get away from what you had been doing for years, and start something new?"
15029Did you save all the chickens, Shad?"
15029Did you see old Hannibal''s face and Evie''s, too?
15029Do n''t I wish I were twenty so I could do some Red Cross work and get over?
15029Do n''t you love this old pond, Billie?
15029Do n''t you notice, Anne, how I cling to all the soft pastel nondescript tones?
15029Do n''t you realize that I''m fifteen and a half?"
15029Do n''t you really think that I''m peculiarly fitted for this sort of a career?
15029Do n''t you think it will be?"
15029Do n''t you think so, Kit?"
15029Do n''t you think that they look like the Breton fisher people in some of the old French paintings?
15029Do n''t you want to, Marcelle?"
15029Do you remember what Emerson had inscribed over his study door?
15029Do you suppose it could mean the rim of the urn?"
15029Do you suppose they''ll mind very much if we stay just a few minutes?
15029Do you suppose, mother, that Mr. Peckham would let Sally manage anything like that up here?
15029Do you think he will?"
15029Do you think he''ll mind so very much when he sees me?"
15029Do you think so, Hiram?"
15029Do you think the boys would stand for that?"
15029Enjoy it?
15029Has Uncle Cassius got any pets at all?"
15029Has anything happened?"
15029Have I crushed your spirit, and made you all weak and pindlin''?
15029Have you discovered all these shelves in your wardrobe?
15029Have you seen Charity''s room?
15029He''s playing on something, is n''t he?"
15029Hicks?"
15029Home folks or just visitors?"
15029Home for Christmas?"
15029How dare you keep back any news of my family from me?"
15029How do you like the decoration?"
15029How do you like your new brother, Kit?"
15029How long can you stay?"
15029How was I to know he was hunting gypsy moths and other winged beasts when I saw him bending over bushes in our berry patch?
15029Howdy, Philemon?
15029I am seventy- four now, and what heritage am I leaving to the world beyond a few books of reference, and my collections?
15029I just caught him red handed as he was bending down right over the bushes, and what do you suppose he tried to tell me, Miss Kit?
15029I wonder what people were thinking about back in those days to worship that sort of thing?"
15029If there was any spot of earth that was peaceful and restful, and that you loved best, would n''t you want to go to it?
15029Is Charity going to decorate the study for the festal occasion?
15029Is n''t it a dear, drowsy dreamful place?
15029Is n''t it beautiful?
15029Is n''t it inspiring, Kit?
15029Is n''t there anything at all that you long to do more than anything in the world?
15029Is n''t there something besides just plain tea?
15029Is n''t this a celestial rose jar?
15029Is the statue very beautiful?"
15029It will be sad, wo n''t it, if the royal princesses have to be launched without wedding chests and dowries?
15029It''s so kind of solitary and restful, is n''t it, up here?"
15029Just as they got to the veranda steps he said, under his breath:"Are you all right, Kit?"
15029Kit repeated again, slowly:"''He shall lie in peace, encompassed by Ra,''That means surrounded by Ra, does n''t it, Uncle Cassius?"
15029Kit''s going to dash off some little simple trifle in spare moments for us, are n''t you?
15029Kit, my child, did you hear that?
15029Kit, you big goose, what did you ever go in that boat alone for?
15029Know him?"
15029Let''s see, Jean, he would have been our great- great- great- grandfather, would n''t he?
15029Maybe we could arrange a trip, do n''t you think so, mother?"
15029Not the real west, either; I mean the interesting west like Saskatchewan and Saskatoon and-- and California; you know what I mean, Jean?"
15029Oh, Kit, why do you suppose he keeps away from every one?"
15029Oh, but was n''t she splendid, Anne?
15029Peckham?"
15029People do n''t do that out west, do they, Uncle Cassius?
15029Something that you''ve thought and thought about for months and months until it became like a light ahead of you?"
15029Sticking his head out through the tent flap, he called down to the beach:"Say, Stan, where''s the granite pot with the long handle?"
15029There are four or five of them----""Boys or girls?"
15029Tin,--ancient Britain-- and something about Carthage, or was that Queen Dido?"
15029Tolstoi had long straggly ones, did n''t he?"
15029Want me to''phone over for a rig to take you up?
15029Was n''t it Rubenstein, Kit, who used to take his violin and play the music of the rain and falling water?"
15029We admit the surge, but would you really and truly be willing to go to this place?
15029We ought to have something sort of different, do n''t you think so?"
15029What is Hecuba to you, or you to Hecuba?"
15029What on earth, she used to argue, was the use of being a family if you did n''t all lean on each other and derive mutual strength and support?
15029When were you in Gilead last?"
15029Whereupon Piney would have to respond interestedly,"Fine or superfine?"
15029Which dormitory was she in?"
15029Who ever heard of raising hogs when they could raise anything else at all?
15029Who on earth do you suppose, girls, wants to rent one of your tents for the whole summer?"
15029Who on earth would he be getting a telegram from?"
15029Who was that, Kit?"
15029Who was the gentle poet that sang of the lady who buried her fond lover''s head in a flower pot and watered it with her tears?"
15029Who''s against her?"
15029Why did n''t you come earlier?"
15029Why do n''t you just write to Jerrold and make known your willingness?
15029Why, Kit?"
15029Will you write to me when you are away?"
15029Would n''t it be funny if she got proud and haughty, and marched away from our Founders''Tea?"
15029Would she really be away from the home nest until next June?
15029Ye secret, black and midnight hags, what is''t ye do?"
15029You know Cousin Roxy, do n''t you, Uncle Cassius?"
15029You know Marcelle Beaubien?
15029You need n''t laugh, Doris,''cause Billie saw him too, did n''t you, Bill?
15029You remember Mr. Howard, who came to look after our trees?
15029You''ll be a nice crowd of farmerettes next summer, wo n''t you?"
11606''How much,''did you say? 11606 Ah?
11606And do you carry it there, Sir?
11606And mine, Mademoiselle?
11606And now will Monsieur do me a favor? 11606 And the diamond?"
11606And why?
11606And you wo n''t tell me?
11606Any chances to invest, Fletcher? 11606 Art thou there?"
11606But with a_ boule blanche_, Monsieur?
11606Delphine, do you attend?
11606Do you find there what Count Arnaklos begs in the song,asked Delphine,--"the secret of the sea, Monsieur?"
11606Do you know,he replied,"I thought I must have been mistaken?"
11606Do you mean to say you endeavored to escape with that bawble? 11606 Do you suppose I am a capitalist?--that I own Fogarty, Danforth, and Dot?"
11606Do you suppose I ever forget that paper, or how you bullied it out of me? 11606 Do?
11606Eh, bien, Monsieur,--and if you should?
11606Fletcher, as you ca n''t do what I want, how much will you give outright for the little obligation? 11606 Fletcher, what''s in the wind?
11606Have you met with anything further in your search, Sir?
11606He shall be instructed to recognize it? 11606 How are you, Sandford?"
11606How can he[ or she] get wisdom that holdeth the plough,[ or the broom,]--whose talk is of bullocks[ or of babies]?
11606How did you know whose money I had?
11606How do you suppose I can raise fifteen hundred dollars?
11606I wonder if he suspects my connection with old Bullion?
11606If Monsieur betrays his friends, the police, why should I expect a kinder fate?
11606Is it your design, Mademoiselle?
11606Madame?
11606Monsieur doubts me?
11606Nor papers?
11606One?
11606Over the left?
11606The Baron?
11606The Marquis? 11606 The cellar?"
11606The diamond? 11606 Then why do you let it go to protest?"
11606Then you''d rather see this paper in an officer''s hands?
11606To our cousins, the slaves there?
11606Trouble that I can not soothe?
11606We should soon exhaust the orders,I interposed;"for who builds like his neighbor?"
11606Well, what are you going to do about it?
11606What am I going to do? 11606 What news?
11606What suspicion, pray?
11606What''s the use of being mealy- mouthed? 11606 Who should know?"
11606Why in the Devil, then, did you lay your corns to get the place, and make me all this trouble for nothing?
11606Why not?
11606Wine- cellar,I thought;"and what then?"
11606You are acquainted?
11606You beckoned me?
11606You do n''t expect me to tell their business, do you?
11606You have not heard?
11606You have seen them?
11606You propose to pay sometime, I believe?
11606You will take immediate measures for flight?
11606Your ring?
11606''I give thee sixpence?
11606***** OUGHT WOMEN TO LEARN THE ALPHABET?
11606----What is the saddle of a thought?
11606--The cunning dog!--"How did you find it, Sir, may I ask?"
116061,) in this passage,--"what''s open made To justice, that justice seizes: what knows the law That thieves do pass on thieves?"
11606After so many people had used their best wit and had their say, could there be any unconsidered trifle left for a new editor?
11606Again the solo demands:--"De todos los Generales cual es el major?"
11606Ah, who shall tell?
11606Am I never to sit at your table but some new device charms me?"
11606And Delphine, what had she to do with them?
11606And art thou by their feeling and control Thus eloquent?
11606And how do we know that_ bowget_ was not pronounced_ boodget_, as it would be, according to Mr. White, if spelt_ budget_?
11606And how was_ moth_ really pronounced?
11606And if I was only her friend, was that a reason why she should permit in me the thousand intimacies of look and caress that are the novitiate of love?
11606And struck with wonder at this fantasy, and greatly alarmed, I imagined that a friend came to me, who said,''Dost thou not know?
11606And the cathedrals, what were they?
11606And the intelligence is the price of the diamond?
11606And this agent of the government,--one could turn him like hot iron in this vice,--who was he?"
11606And where the players printed from manuscript, is it likely to have been that of the author?
11606And who may be the valiant General, the General with his guard of honor, excelling all the rest?
11606And why was it spelt_ moon_?
11606Another?"
11606Any news from India, Hay?"
11606Are_ you_ in trouble, too, like all the world?"
11606Because he could not help throwing sizes, was he to avoid the dice which for others would only come up ames- ace?
11606Because time softens its outlines and rounds the sharp angles of its cornices, shall a fellow take a pickaxe to help time?
11606But a sudden thought struck her, and, before he could frame a sentence, she spoke:--"You have heard bad news this morning?"
11606But even if this be not the meaning, is Mr. White correct in saying that_ influence_ had no plural at that time?
11606But had I?
11606But had these been told of the thing clutched in the hand of a passer, how many of them would have known where to turn?
11606But how many_ th_ sounds does he mean to rob us of?
11606But how to obtain it?
11606But how will this butler know me, in season to prevent a mistake?
11606But in its light, what new madness seized me?
11606But is this precious affair to be seen?"
11606But perhaps he pronounced_ thing, ting_?
11606But soon there came that inevitable question, first in the catechism of all human society: Whom shall we obey?
11606But the ulterior question remains behind,--How came she into this attitude, originally?
11606But this proves nothing( noting?
11606But was absolute identity in sound ever necessary to a pun, especially in those simpler and happier days?
11606But when they asked him,"For whom has Love thus wasted thee?"
11606But why do I speak so of the trinket?
11606But will rhymes help us?
11606But you may know some chance to borrow that sum?"
11606Ca n''t get''em, eh?
11606Can Mr. White find an example of_ dod_ for_ doth_, where the word could not be doubtful to the compositor?
11606Can he have furnished the model I saw at the sculptor''s?
11606Could I live?
11606Could he undeceive her?
11606Could the sharpest eyes find more needles in this enormous haystack?
11606Cyr?--if, in short, Mademoiselle, I should request you to become my wife?"
11606DID I?
11606De todos los Generales cual es el mejor?
11606Did I commit suicide?
11606Did I, in the eyes of any watching angel, consciously cast my life, brittle and blind as it was, away in that fashion?
11606Did our ancestors have no short_ u_, answering somewhat to the sound of that vowel in the French_ un_?
11606Do I look like one who possesses such a trophy?
11606Do I not owe it a thrill of as fine joy as I ever knew?
11606Do n''t Danforth& Co. do their own buying and selling?
11606Do you hear it?
11606Do you wish anything more of me?"
11606Do you_ dare_ to set yourself to put_ me_ down?
11606Does he consider"To justice, that justice seizes: what knows the law"an alexandrine,--and an alexandrine worthy of a student and admirer of Spenser?
11606Does my shop resemble a mine?
11606Does woman already know too much, or too little?
11606Equally good is his justification of himself for omitting Theobald''s interpolation of"Did she nod?"
11606Fletcher continued:--"Well, what is it?
11606From the farthest extremity of the encampment comes a querying solo:--"De todos los Generales cual es el valiente?"
11606Granted that woman is weak because she has been systematically degraded; but why was she degraded?
11606Has he talent?
11606Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys?
11606Have I not said how I grasped at the great idea of a God, and held it with a death- gripe in the midst of assault?
11606He does retain_ puisny_ as the old form, but why not spell it_ puisné_ and so indicate its meaning?
11606He gasped for breath,--turned pale, then red,--at length with difficulty said,"You defy me, then?
11606He handed it to the butler, observing,"I find here no"----"Salt, Monsieur?"
11606How am I certified of it?
11606How could the Jews, for instance, elevate woman?
11606How did Ben Jonson pronounce the word?
11606How did I come in the water?
11606How long did this pronunciation last in England?
11606How much?"
11606How much?"
11606How shall you determine how your first word is pronounced?
11606How should_ I_ have the funds?"
11606I had held her stainless and holy, intact of evil or deceit; what was she now?
11606I was there, it was true; but was I guilty?
11606I wonder, now, what he would give for this little paper?
11606If I had not chanced to pick it up, my throat,"and she clasped it with her fingers,"had been no slenderer than the others?"
11606If there is no forbearance, no brotherly aid, how are the complicated settlements of a mad community like this to be made?
11606If they had it not, how soon did it come into the language?
11606In Rome, when the bride first stepped across her threshold, they did not ask her, Do you know the alphabet?
11606In the present instance how do we know that_ avouch_ was sounded as it is now?
11606Is he brilliant?
11606Is it not a fairy thing?
11606It being admitted, then, that society is our normal state, where is it to be obtained in such perfection as at Paris?
11606It is yours?
11606Liberals are countenanced there?"
11606Me?
11606Might I do an awkward thing?
11606Morality,--we were not speaking of it,--the intrusion is unnecessary; must that word with Anglo- Saxon pertinacity dog us round the world?
11606Moreover, who knows what a day may bring forth?
11606Neighbor met neighbor, asking, with doleful accent,"Where is this going to end?"
11606Now, if there could be any doubt that"wash"means_ cosmetic_ here, the next speech of Don Pedro("Yea, or to_ paint_ himself?")
11606Now, what next?
11606Ought women to learn the alphabet?
11606Shall she have the alphabet, or not?
11606Shall we always be youthful and laughing and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away?
11606Suddenly the woman turned, and, laying the prettiest of little hands on my sleeve, said, with a winning smile,--"Is it a crime of_ lèse- majesté_?"
11606Suppose I lay the matter before them?"
11606That fellow''s the"Speaker,"--the one on the right;"Mr. Mayor,"my young one, how are you to- night?
11606The Baron Stahl was, then, the thief?
11606The myriad faces?
11606The two parted; which should I pursue?
11606Then what were all those harmonies of which she read,--masses, fugues, symphonies?
11606There is a wrong; but where?
11606There, a cable to haul up the treasure, was the chain;--where was the diamond?
11606They do n''t employ Tonsor, do they?"
11606Through what streets had I come?
11606To what hand but hers could so much beauty have gathered?
11606Was Fletcher in the conspiracy?
11606Was it snowing I spoke of?
11606Was it the draught, or was it the smile, Or my own false heart?
11606Was she created for man''s subject, or his equal?
11606Was there no one of the bald or grizzly- haired gentlemen who smiled so benignly whom he could ask for aid?
11606Was_ beat_ called_ bate_?
11606We are not sure if we understand him rightly; but have they lost it?
11606We believe that Shakspeare wrote"What''s open made To Justice, Justice seizes; knows the Law That thieve do pass on thieves?"
11606Wealthy, of course,--but_ gauche_?"
11606Wear''st thou those glories draped about thy soul Thou dost present?
11606Well, you have noticed how quietly and rapidly the cars kept on, just as if the locomotive were drawing them?
11606Were they all to share in the proceeds of the diamond?
11606What did Butler mean by"_ oo_ short"?
11606What diplomate?
11606What experience have they of life,--not to mention gayety and pleasure, but of the great purpose of life,--society?
11606What has he told us of himself?
11606What impels me to ask the idle question, If it were well to save her life for this?
11606What injury had he done me, that I should pursue him with punishment?
11606What might be that marvellous music of the_ Miserere_, of which she read, that it convulsed crowds and drew groans and tears from the most obdurate?
11606What might be those wondrous pictures of Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci?
11606What might prevent it?
11606What sayeth God?
11606What singular frost was it that froze the sound in a few words for a few years and left it fluent in all others?
11606What was Fletcher doing?
11606What would it be to see the Apollo, the Venus?
11606What, then, is the value of the first folio as an authority?
11606When Benedick''s friends are discussing the symptoms which show him to be in love, Claudio asks,"When was he wo nt to wash his face?"
11606When did_ soon_ and_ spoon_ take their present form and sound?
11606When he was fairly up the hill, Miss Sandford said,--"You know how to sail a boat, do n''t you?"
11606When that devilish suggestion came to me on the bank, did I entertain it?
11606Where are the restless throngs that pour Along this mighty corridor While the noon flames?
11606Who had touched me?
11606Who knows?
11606Who says we are more?
11606Whom had I met?
11606Why do n''t they wear a ring in it?
11606Why had I undertaken the business at all?
11606Why needed I to meddle in the_ mêlée?_ Why-- But I was no catechumen.
11606Why not continue with my coffee in the morning, my kings and cabinets and national chess at noon, my opera at night, and let the poor devil go?
11606Why should I freeze myself?
11606Why should the Frenchman call his wooden shoe a_ sabot_ and his old shoe a_ savate_, both from the same root?
11606Why should_ foot_ and_ boot_ be sounded differently?
11606Why_ food_ and_ good_?
11606Will Mr. White decide how the_ ea_ was sounded?
11606Will he inform me by what means he ascertained these facts?"
11606Wine- cellar, of course,--that came by a natural connection with butler,--but whose?
11606Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men?
11606Yet how can we wonder at these opinions, when the saints have been severer than the sages?
11606Yet, even then, why was I the one to administer justice?
11606You approve of my judgment?"
11606You do love me,--don''t you, George?"
11606You do n''t want me to rob my employers?"
11606You have mentioned Vienna, and why?
11606You have sometimes been in a train on the railroad when the engine was detached a long way from the station you were approaching?
11606You know, then, that I have sold it?"
11606You will dine with me soon?
11606You will go?
11606You''ll take these notes?
11606Your hat, Sir?--your lunettes?
11606[ I] Had he forgotten"the sweet_ influences_ of Pleiades"?
11606[ K] Or did Mr. Fox invent the word_ boon_?
11606_ Could_ he withdraw, while, as he held her soft hand, that lambent fire played along his nerves?
11606_ Quis custodiet ipsos custodes_?
11606and did it infect any of Saxon root?
11606and we,--are we any better?
11606and which of two rhyming words shall dominate the other?
11606but to return shortly?
11606could she not have taken my heart, and wrung it, and thrown it away, under some more commonplace pretext than the profaned name of Friendship?
11606does Mr. White believe the"that"and"what"are Shakspeare''s?
11606had I arrived at a clue?
11606had any other man preceded me?
11606he asked, with a rueful face,--"questions my word, which is incontrovertible?"
11606how shall I meet him?"
11606in that imperfect rhyme of_ leap_ and_ swept_,(_ Merry Wives_,) call the former_ lape_ and the latter(_ Yankicè_)_ swep''_?
11606oh, why is he not with thee?
11606quid censent electi judices?
11606that, with him, friendship can be inviolate, and to betray it an impossibility?
11606the hurrying crowd Whose footsteps make the city loud?
11606they asked simply, Can you spin?
11606to how many words did it extend?
11606was it possible?
11606what business has Death in such a world?
11606what might not life have been?
11606what of Madonna means?
11718A telegram for me?
11718And what then?
11718And_ expiravit_said Sahwah,"what''s that from?"
11718Any friends of yours on board?
11718Are they all good?
11718Betty,gasped Migwan, turning white,"you do n''t mean that you''ve burned them?"
11718Betty,said Migwan sternly,"did you hide my work?"
11718But how are we going to keep the one locked up away from the other?
11718But just suppose,he said slowly,"that there should n''t be any investigation when the oldest girl comes of age?
11718But what good will it do me to work for honors?
11718But you can beat her, ca n''t you?
11718But you do n''t care if I go to them at other girls''houses, do you?
11718By the way, Sahwah,she said when the laughter had died down,"how are you coming on in Latin?
11718By the way,said Nyoda, as she rose to depart,"how do you get to Bates Villa?"
11718Ca n''t I do something?
11718Ca n''t somebody please think of a new game?
11718Ca n''t you stay and spend the day with us, now that you''re here?
11718Ca n''t you take the punching bag over to Jim''s?
11718Camp Fire Girls?
11718Can it be possible,said Gladys,"that it was only this afternoon that we broke into our house?
11718Can this be real,asked Nyoda, looking around her in a daze,"or are we in the middle of some nightmare?
11718Could anything be lovelier than the country in May?
11718Could the authoress be persuaded to desist from her labors for a while?
11718Dick,she said,"will you come with me even if the others wo n''t?"
11718Did n''t your friends stay rather late?
11718Did she say you could n''t?
11718Did we come into the room through there, or did we only imagine it?
11718Did you ever see her around when there was any work to be done?
11718Did you ever see such a snowfall in March?
11718Did you know that John Brown, owner of the said body, was born in Akron, and there is a monument here to his memory?
11718Do I have to go to Aunt Grace''s?
11718Do n''t you want to go, Migwan?
11718Do owls eat crumbs?
11718Do you ever have visitors?
11718Do you know that they took their daughter out of the private school she had been attending and sent her to public school this year? 11718 Do you know,"said Nyoda,"that bead band Gladys made has given me an idea?
11718Do you know,she said,"I believe I could fill in that place with dark color so it would never be noticed?
11718Do you mean to tell me that you have an owl in a cage somewhere in this house?
11718Do you mind if I copy them from your list? 11718 Do you mind if you have one to- night?"
11718Do you really mean it?
11718Do you remember,said one of the mothers,"how we used to go coasting down the reservoir hill?
11718Do you suppose I had better break the pantry window,she asked,"or possibly one of the cellar ones?
11718Do you suppose she really is deaf?
11718Do you suppose you could finish this sweeping?
11718Do you think this is seasoned right?
11718Do you want to see me do it?
11718Does anybody know what two historical things are near here?
11718Does n''t the old Portage Trail run through here somewhere?
11718Five girls with red ties?
11718For vy did you want to amputate her leg off?
11718Gladys has n''t arrived there?
11718Gladys,she said,"do you know what kind of people they give dull knives to?
11718Had n''t it better be tied down?
11718Had n''t we better eat something?
11718Have n''t you heard,replied the second lady, with the air of imparting a delicious secret,"that Mr. Evans is on the verge of financial ruin?"
11718Have we a new electrician?
11718Have you anything against the Thessalonian Society?
11718Have you been in the house since the last people moved out?
11718Have you heard the latest?
11718Have you put your potatoes in yet?
11718How about our middy ties?
11718How could an owl get in here with all the doors and windows shut?
11718How did you do it?
11718How did you ever manage to do it?
11718How did you happen to leave anything in the electric room?
11718How did you know I had written any story?
11718How do you like the new cook?
11718How many more of these girls''mothers are our old schoolmates, I wonder?
11718How many would it take for a family of four?
11718How much are they a bushel?
11718How much is porterhouse steak?
11718How much is round steak?
11718How much time have you?
11718I do n''t suppose you could go for a long walk with me Sunday afternoon?
11718I presume the death of her parents was a terrible shock to her?
11718I wonder if there is anything in the house I could make into a dessert?
11718I wonder,she said musingly,"if I drove on to a house in the road and telephoned your aunt that she would let you stay?"
11718If I lent you five dollars to pay for the books, would you take it?
11718In whose house are we?
11718Is n''t he spooky looking?
11718Is n''t it pretty far?
11718Is she killed?
11718Is that you, Diamond Dick?
11718Is there any to be had now?
11718Is-- is there any way of making tough round steak tender?
11718Its what?
11718Let''s see, just how was it? 11718 Lion, Lion,"it called,"where are you?"
11718Missed the car?
11718Mother,called Migwan up the stairway,"where did you put the pages of my book?
11718No,said Mrs. Gardiner;"what good would that do?
11718No,said the second voice,"what is it?"
11718Not even to save yourself from being expelled?
11718Not on this one?
11718Now about this hip, yes?
11718Now, my dear,she said quietly,"will you please tell me the whole story?
11718Now, what''s the other thing?
11718Oh, is there any mistake?
11718Oh, may n''t I stay until half past nine?
11718Oh, mother,she called,"oh, moth-- why, what''s the matter?"
11718One, two,_ three_, four, Who are_ we_ for? 11718 Run down, will you, girls, and entertain them until I come?"
11718So much?
11718Sometime you and I vill go camping and you vill make someting like dis, mein Liebchen?
11718Speaking of diaries,said Gladys Evans,"what do you think of this for one?"
11718Surely we did n''t come through that little grating that opens on top, did we? 11718 The Bible and Thomas à   Kempis,"said Nyoda musingly;"where did I hear those two mentioned before?
11718Then have we dropped back into one of the novels of Dumas? 11718 There really is n''t any danger of your not getting it in, is there?"
11718They did n''t cut it off, did they?
11718Tom,she said appealingly,"would n''t you and the boys just as soon play outdoors or in somebody else''s house?
11718Well, are n''t you going to that precious meeting of yours?
11718Were n''t you worried to death to have them in Europe so long with the war going on?
11718What are you doing to pass the time away?
11718What are you doing?
11718What are you planning for supper?
11718What are you so happy about?
11718What are you taking medicine for?
11718What can all these things be?
11718What can that mean? 11718 What car do you take, Dick?"
11718What did you say about the_ Francona_?
11718What did you want with it?
11718What do you mean?
11718What does it mean?
11718What does this mean?
11718What has that to do with it?
11718What is Mr. Bob barking at?
11718What is going to happen?
11718What is it?
11718What is it?
11718What is it?
11718What is it?
11718What is the meaning of this?
11718What is this dress?
11718What is this mysterious something you are always doing?
11718What kind is it?
11718What kind is that?
11718What kind of a bat was it?
11718What kind of meat is this?
11718What of that?
11718What on earth could have happened?
11718What was it?
11718What were you doing in there in the first place?
11718What will the girls think, anyway, when we fail to arrive at the Bates''s?
11718What will we feed him?
11718What will your aunt say when she sees him?
11718What''s that?
11718What''s the matter?
11718What''s this?
11718What''s this?
11718Whatever have you done with yourself?
11718Whatever is the matter?
11718When are your mother and father coming home?
11718When will you do it?
11718Where are you going?
11718Where did you get that poem?
11718Where did you get them?
11718Where did you learn to do that?
11718Where did you put the red ties?
11718Where is that beautiful vase I brought your mother from the World''s Fair?
11718Where?
11718Who is that young girl in here?
11718Who is the best Latin scholar here?
11718Who put on de tourniquet?
11718Who stands without?
11718Who taught you to take strychnine as a stimulant?
11718Who the dickens are you?
11718Who''s the Dutchman that''s doing the bossing?
11718Who''s your friend?
11718Who''s your friend?
11718Whom have you brought us, John?
11718Whose house is it, then?
11718Why ca n''t Betty do it?
11718Why did you try to steal, Emily?
11718Why have we never had any of this at our house?
11718Why not tie the bob to the machine,she said,"and go for a regular ride?"
11718Why not?
11718Why were n''t you?
11718Will she go in?
11718Will you take us in if we get off the car?
11718Will you?
11718Wo n''t she really?
11718Would n''t it be a joke,said Gladys,"if we were to get there ahead of the others, after missing the car?
11718Would n''t this be a grand place for a Ceremonial Meeting?
11718Would n''t you like to have me read you something else before we begin the next volume?
11718Would you just as soon run up to the attic and get the blanket sheets out of the trunk?
11718Would you like to drive, mother?
11718Would you really be willing to have me cut it up?
11718Yes?
11718You admit, then, that you were in the electric room twice on Thursday afternoon, doing something which you can not explain?
11718You are coming home with me, as we planned, until it is time to take the car?
11718You are going away and leave me?
11718You are n''t going to lose your nerve at this stage of the game, are you? 11718 You certainly do n''t think I cut those wires, do you?"
11718You do n''t mean to tell me that you are mixed up in any such foolishness as that?
11718You like to study History pretty well, do n''t you?
11718You mean, cut her leg off?
11718You remember John Rogers?
11718You remember that cunning little book you made me for Christmas?
11718You were not at the play yourself, were you?
11718You''ll surely go coasting to- morrow night?
11718_ Quis,_ who;_ crudis_, raw;_ enim_--what''s_ enim_?
11718_ Rufus_ is''red,''continued Sahwah,"and is_ albus_''white''?"
11718And was it any wonder?
11718And you wo n''t say anything about the picture,"she said, clasping her hands beseechingly,"if I put it back where I got it?"
11718Are we kidnapped?
11718Brewster, yes?
11718But vot is dis I hear about operating?"
11718By the way,"she said to Aunt Phoebe,"may I borrow this girl for to- day?
11718Ca n''t you come out next Saturday?"
11718Can this be the year 1915?
11718Did I ever tell you the time mother and I coasted down the walk and ran into Aunt Phoebe?"
11718Do you suppose we are being held for ransom?"
11718Do you suppose you could come along?"
11718Gladys,"she called, looking into her daughter''s room,"where is your Camp Fire meeting to- night?"
11718Have we-- have we-- disappeared?"
11718He was Professor of Anatomy in the_ Staatsklinick_''95-''96, do n''t you remember?"
11718How did we get here, anyway?"
11718How had the bird gotten out?
11718How long do you suppose they will keep us here?"
11718I may keep him until his wing heals, may n''t I?"
11718In the future people would say,"The Winnebagos?
11718It is absurd of course to accuse you of cutting those wires, but what were you doing in that room?
11718It looks pretty suspicious, does n''t it?"
11718It was,"How would you like to be the odd one in the crowd, and have all the others take notice of you because you did n''t match your surroundings?
11718Like the roar of the waves of the sea rose the yell of the Washingtonians:"Who tied the score when the score was rolling?
11718Oh, yes, it was one of your number who won the basketball championship for the school by making a record jump for the ball, was n''t it?"
11718Sahwah knew that her failure to come from school would call out a search, but who would ever look for her in the statue on the stage?
11718Send Gladys away?
11718Suppose she should never put in a claim for her property?"
11718The Big Chief, who was conducting the lesson, thought she wanted something, and said benevolently:''What is your desire?''
11718The Perfect Tense with''Avoir''With the Subject must agree( Or does this rule apply to the Auxiliary''to be''?)."
11718The question was in the Ancient History group and read, in part,"Who was the invader of Israel before Sennacherib?"
11718Then she burst out,"Oh, Dick, wo n''t you take us coasting to- morrow night?
11718Then who had cut the wires?
11718To face a battery of eyes that were amused or scornful or pitying, according to the disposition of the owner of the eyes?
11718To feel lonesome in the midst of a crowd and wish you were miles away?"
11718WHO CUT THE WIRE?
11718Was there ever such a fool as I?"
11718Was this a girl she was trying to guard, or was it an eel?
11718Well, I thought, why ca n''t we make a furnished room of that?
11718What business had Joe Lanning on the stage at this time?
11718What do you say if we register our commendable doings in colors, but record the event in black every time we break the Law?"
11718What do you think of her?"
11718What on earth are we into?"
11718What was Aunt Phoebe to do?
11718What was Nyoda thinking of her, anyhow?
11718What was this strange Something that the Camp Fire had instilled into her?
11718What would they do about the play?
11718Where can Mrs. Bates be, I wonder?"
11718Where can she be?"
11718Where did she learn how to do it?"
11718Who do you suppose has come?"
11718Who tied the score when the score was rolling?
11718Who told you so?"
11718Why ca n''t we keep a personal record in bead work?
11718Why did she come dressed in such a fashion?
11718Why is it that a knife in one''s hand inspires a desire to cut something?
11718Why not burn all her sheets around the edges?
11718Will you kindly state what you did in there?"
11718Wo n''t mother be glad when she finds it broken and she can prove that none of us did it?"
11718Wo n''t they laugh, though, at you being the late one?"
11718Would n''t they stare, though, to find us waiting for them?
11718Would she be willing to do it?
11718Would she go down head first or feet first?
11718Would she not send the first payment of five dollars by return mail so that his enjoyment might begin as soon as possible?
11718Would she see two and a half dollars lying in the street and not pick it up?
11718Would you be willing to do it?"
11718You have had all three of those subjects, have you not?"
11718You know that big unfinished space over the kitchen?
11718You remember that Professor Parsons who lectured to the school on various historical subjects last winter?
11718You say they have no relatives and are now away in school?
11718You would hardly look for a girl to be cutting electric wires, would you?
11718_ But was it the right one?
11718echoed Mrs. Evans in well- feigned astonishment;"why, what''s wrong with them?"
11718said Nyoda;"will you give me a copy?"
18384Another cup?
18384Some tea?
18384And if there were a laureate in prose romance, whom should we choose?
18384As the Gospel has it--"Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?"
18384Can we imagine_ Sartor Resartus_ being published in the age of Johnson, or_ In Memoriam_ in that of Byron?
18384Does the present generation know that frank and amusing book-- one of the most brisk and manly autobiographies in our language?
18384Has it given him a foremost place in English literature?
18384Have they any common standard of form, any type of metre?
18384He never attempts grandiloquence; but then he never sinks into the fashionable bathos of--"Sugar in your tea, dear?"
18384How many a"general reader"steadily reads through_ Sartor_ from cover to cover?
18384In what things would Southey and John Morley agree, except about books and pure English?
18384Nay, the question has begun to arise, If there is to be a laureate in poetry, why not a laureate also in prose romance?
18384Now, what are the masterpieces of Thomas Carlyle?
18384O, Thomas, Thomas, what Titania has bewitched thee with the head of Dryasdust on thy noble shoulders?
18384Of the multitude that have read her books, who has not known and deplored the tragedy of her family, her own most sad and untimely fate?
18384Of what other fiction can this be said?
18384The only question is, if she be real?
18384What can they mean?
18384What is the cause?
18384What would one say if even fine passages out of Wordsworth''s_ Excursion_ had been accidentally bound up between the pages of Shakespeare''s_ Hamlet_?
18384Which of her readers has not become her friend?
18384Who cares to know how big was the belly of some court chamberlain, or who were the lovers of some unendurable Frau?
18384Who reads every word of these ten volumes?
18384Who, nowadays, imagines Mahomet to have been an impostor, or Burns to have been a mere tipsy song- writer?
18384Why is it, that, in an age pre- eminently historical, in an age so redundant of novels, the historical novel is out of fashion?
18384on"Aristocracies,""Captains of Industry,""The Landed,""The Gifted"?
18384why so glum?"
11079''Ear that, Albert?
11079''Ear that, Albert?
11079Ai n''t I a nice little girl?
11079Ai n''t it wicked for a woman to have such an imperence?
11079Ai n''t she got a cheek?
11079All art--Mr. Clarkson was beginning, when the policeman said"Grand Jury?"
11079And why should n''t nice- lookin''people have a good blow- out, same as you?
11079Any questions?
11079Are those flowers to cheer the prisoners?
11079Are those stains blood?
11079Are those the beauties?
11079Are we worse than Chinamen,he asked,"that we seek to confer nobility on fellows sprung from unknown forefathers?"
11079Bit slow, is n''t it, old man?
11079Can these smudgy, dirty, evil- smelling creatures compose the dominant race?
11079Child, what hast thou with sleep to do? 11079 Do you mean to tell me that is all?"
11079Does it appear to you, sir, fitting to sit here wasting time?
11079Enjoy common humanity?
11079Ernest what?
11079Got a bit on?
11079Have I not watched over my people? 11079 I beg your pardon, but may I remind you that you are standing on my steps?
11079I should like to ask you, my man,said the venerable juror,"how you spell your name?"
11079I suppose you do n''t happen to have milk, sugar, bread and butter, and an egg or two concealed about your person, do you?
11079I thought that was the last_ Dreadnought_?
11079I wonder if her terror arises from the hideousness of the legal style or from association of ideas?
11079Is it that they unconsciously appreciate''o''as the most beautiful of vowel sounds? 11079 Is n''t the retort a trifle middle- aged?"
11079Is n''t this all a little personal?
11079Is that a bath- brick you are manipulating?
11079Is the King returning from the Opera?
11079Is there any peace in ever climbing up the climbing wave?
11079Just a drop of something to show there''s no ill- feeling?
11079Let me see,said Mr. Clarkson,"which was Jim?"
11079Like it warm?
11079No doubt the day is being marked in the United States by some special event,Mr. Clarkson continued,"and you are waiting for the account?"
11079No ten? 11079 No, no, no life,"cries Lear:"Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all?
11079Not come?
11079Oh, that''s what you wanted to speak about so particular, is it?
11079On what qualification are they selected as critics?
11079Should not one question,he asked himself,"the possibility of creating beauty by preconcerted design?
11079Six columns speeches in already; how much?
11079Tea?
11079That do n''t sound as if they was un''appy, do it, sir?
11079That paperweight''s been lost these two or three days, and it was you who stole it, was it?
11079Then, what_ do_ you do?
11079This young nobleman''s name''s Looney, is n''t it?
11079Well, boys, having a real good time, are you? 11079 Well, no; I have n''t exactly got anything on,"said Mr. Clarkson, uneasily;"but may I ask what cable you mean?"
11079What do you think of the upper- cut?
11079What do you want?
11079What is the British Empire to me,I heard a Whitechapel man say,"when I have to open the window before I get room to put on my trousers?"
11079What part of France do you come from?
11079What tongue do your Visions speak?
11079What''s the meaning of that?
11079What''s yer name, fat-''ead?
11079Who are you calling the Whistler?
11079Who are you? 11079 Who hath believed our report?"
11079Who''s that he''s callin''middle- aged?
11079Why all this cookery?
11079Why died I not from the womb?
11079Why do the common people love to add''o''to their words?
11079Why, what''s the matter with you?
11079Why-- why, how can you help it? 11079 Witty?"
11079Would there be any objection to your depositing the milk upon the doorstep?
11079You alone in a house, sir? 11079 You fit for go shore one time?"
11079You''ve not been here long, have you?
11079***** And will they not repay the treasures lent?
11079--My brothers, You?
11079A fashionable wit?
11079A great Power says:"How much of Persia, Turkey, China, or Morocco do I dare to swallow?
11079A plain duty confronted him, but how could he face it?
11079Against such obstinacy, what headway can the critics make?
11079And may not this be just the very reason we are seeking for-- the very reason why all the world loves a rebel, at a distance?
11079And so on down to the lines:"If with such talents Heaven has blest''em, Have I not reason to detest''em?"
11079And what has Hungary, Bohemia, Syria, or the Tyrol to do with Austria?
11079And you''ll''ave children, of course?"
11079And, if Heine was not to be counted as a German revolutionist, what was the good of it all?
11079Are our praises of death in victory, then, all ca nt, and are all the eloquent rhapsodies of poets and essayists a sham?
11079Are we to suppose that no one grows fat on the people''s money?
11079Are we to suppose the English people have not the hereditary instinct of sparrows to keep them outside its meshes?
11079As to money, what should all the wealth of the shrine profit a man compelled, in Bishop Ken''s language, to live each day as it were his last?
11079Besides, what manners, what sense, could be expected of a chauffeur, occupied with oily wheels and engines, instead of living things and corn?
11079Better being here than starving outside, is n''t it?"
11079But I wonder whether I ought to have blacked that range before I lighted the fire?
11079But he refrained, and only remarked,"What_ is_ a Beauty Show?"
11079But if word goes round that one or two prisoners have crept out of gaol, who would not burn to follow?
11079But is there no other means?
11079But of what service was nobility if its obligations were abolished?
11079But should we pay the price of compulsion?
11079But then come the deeper questions: Do people love peace?
11079But what force could she bring against me, if it came to extremities, and what force could I set against hers?"
11079But what is nationality?
11079But what was the good of son or grandchild now?
11079But where in the scenes of present life around them have they hailed that torn but flying banner?
11079But with what motive, century after century, no matter at what interval of years, did a volunteer always come forward to slay and to be slain?
11079Can it be that for that barren honour a human being dyed his hands with murder and risked momentary assassination for the remainder of his lifetime?
11079Could anything be more desolate, more hopeless, or, I may say, more disagreeable?
11079Could not a few timely words from them hold the productive powers of certain brains in check?
11079Could the lilies of the field or Solomon in all his glory have shown a finer indifference to worldly cares?
11079Creeping down the passage, he said"Who''s there?"
11079Did I not give him a great palace to live in, and gardens where he could walk with few to watch his safety?
11079Did I not grant him such women as he desired, and books to read, and musicians to delight his soul?
11079Did I not send him every day delicate food from my own table?
11079Did it not seem that a true revolutionist was justified in comparing him to a boy chasing butterflies on the battle- field?
11079Do n''t we, Ma?"
11079Do the people call the tune of peace or war?
11079Do they hate war?
11079Do we not always get one or other of the lot?
11079Do you suppose that Krupp''s Company regards war as disadvantageous, or circulates Norman Angell''s book for a new gospel?
11079Does it not remind one of the horror with which the wise and prudent about a century ago began to regard the birth- rate?
11079Dr. Adams:''What do you mean by damned?''
11079Even peace, they say, may be bought too dear, and what shall it profit a people if it gain a swill- tub of comforts and lose its own soul?
11079For, after all, what is the root cause of all this dirt and ignorance and shabbiness and disease?
11079For, though they speak with the tongue of men and angels, and have not action, what are they but sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal?
11079Has not the name of Marseilles breathed the very spirit of liberty all over the world?
11079Have I not toiled?
11079Have I not upheld the city against the enemy?
11079He wished to follow up a train of thought suggested by the question:"Should Aristotle be left out?"
11079Horrible mutilations?
11079How came it that there was always a candidate for that bloody deed and disquieting existence?
11079How can a man or woman engaged in such labour for ten hours a day at subsistence wage enjoy a fully developed life?
11079How can you avoid it?"
11079How then?
11079I suppose, if you liked, you might without exaggeration call it the White Man''s Hope?"
11079I wonder whether he misses me?
11079If decent women took to this kind of service, where would the charm of womanhood be fled?
11079If he left them mixed, would anyone be the less wise?
11079If that feeble lot could win their pennyworth of freedom, who might not expect deliverance?
11079If the working classes refuse to fight, what will the kings, ministers, speculators, and contractors do?
11079If there is talk of conflict, were it not better to leave the issue in the discriminating hands of One whose judgment is indisputable?
11079Is it a fad?
11079Is it a plot for contemptible ends?
11079Is it a riot-- a moment''s effervescence-- or a revolution glowing from volcanic depths?
11079Is it a trick?
11079Is it inevitable?
11079Is it to be desired?
11079Is not the parallel remarkable?
11079Is there a Brixton Branch?"
11079Is there not as much to be said for taking one line as another?
11079Jones?"
11079Joy in the divine service?
11079Margate mystery?
11079May we not advise them to drop the old method of frontal attack altogether?
11079Might not teachers of eugenics do something drastic, and at once?
11079Might one not rather say that the perpetual misfortunes of our friends are the chief plague of existence?
11079Mr. Clarkson protested;"a trifle-- what should I say?--Oriental, perhaps?"
11079Mr. Clarkson whispered,"or are they the rudimentary survivals of the incense that used to counteract the smell and infection of gaol- fever?"
11079Nice, juicy cut from the joint, and a little dry sherry?
11079Or let us take one verse from the lines,"O Lord, how long?"
11079Or should it be little Ben, lying there with eyes sunk deep in his head, and one arm outside the counterpane?
11079Or, in this country herself, what movement of men or of women striving to be free have they welcomed with their paeans of joy?
11079Ought we to maintain soldiers for love-- for fear of losing the advantages of war?
11079Perhaps you''ve never heard of the White Man''s Hope?"
11079Pills, did we say?
11079Pleasure is so agreeable, and none too common; or, if one wanted pain for salt, are there not pains enough in life''s common round?
11079Promise of future and eternal bliss?
11079Shall I sit with a novel over the fire?
11079Shall I take life at second- hand and work up an interest in imaginary loves and the exigencies of shadows?
11079Should it be Alfred, the child of her girlhood, already so like his father, though he was only just nine?
11079Still, at moments of deep distress or public wrong- doing, we may hear the echo of the Corn- law Rhymer''s anthem:"When wilt thou save the people?
11079Suddenly the further question came-- which of the four?
11079Swift appealed to him one day"whether the corruptions and villainies of men in power did not eat his flesh and exhaust his spirits?"
11079That refined and respectable women should go on such an errand-- how could propriety endure it?
11079The powerlessness of the word is the burden of writers, and"Who hath believed our report?"
11079They''ve found the corpse?
11079To come within our own sphere, what ecstatic rhapsodies have they composed to greet the rising nationalism of Ireland, or of India, or of Egypt?
11079To what can we look?
11079Was there not, at all events, one strenuous Canon of the Established Church who defiantly proclaimed that he would rather be damned than annihilated?
11079We all know that, and sometimes, perhaps, at the sight of some artist or poet like Heine-- or, shall we say?
11079Well, and why on earth should they not?
11079What are all the firesides and fictions of the world to me that I should loiter here and doze, doze, as good as die?
11079What could a man do when exposed to temptation so severe?
11079What could such a man do against temptation?
11079What did the sorrows of exile profit him, if he had no part in the cause?
11079What do I care about being healthier?
11079What do we know of this woman, for instance-- her history, her distress, her state of mind?"
11079What do you say?"
11079What do you take me for?"
11079What energy of the personal soul is exercised in a mill- hand, a tea- packer, a slop- tailor, or the watcher of a thread in a machine?
11079What excess of delight have I taken with the women sent me as presents year by year?
11079What future could be theirs?
11079What have they said or done for freedom''s emblem in Persia, or in Morocco, or in Turkey?
11079What is so terrible as death?"
11079What of the possible results of a union with a being from the stage?
11079What other Sultan has kept his own brother alive for thirty years?
11079What pleasure have I given myself?
11079What support have they given it in Finland, or in the Caucasus, or in the Baltic Provinces?
11079What working man or woman on hearing of it did not burn to follow, and did not feel the grievances of life harder to be tolerated than before?
11079What would the host and daughter say if their guest began to prophesy or discuss the nature of justice?
11079What''s a man to do at night out here?
11079What''s them teachers got to learn_ me_, I''d like to know?"
11079What''s your name, did you say?"
11079What, would you kill a ruler like me?
11079When asked if he had any message to send home before he died, he wrote upon the paper,"Did we win?"
11079When have I been drunk with wine as the Infidels are drunken?
11079Where should we feel the difference most?
11079Wherefore feed, and clothe, and save, From the cradle to the grave, Those ungrateful drones who would Drain your sweat-- nay, drink your blood?"
11079Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery?
11079Wherefore weave with toil and care The rich robes your tyrants wear?
11079Which shall we recall of those ghostly poems, once so quick with flame?
11079Whither has the sweet gregariousness of human converse strayed?
11079Who are the figures in history round whom the people''s imagination has woven the fondest dreams?
11079Who could have given us a finer present?"
11079Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
11079Who shall deliver us from the body of these shades?
11079Who would not choose to plunge out of life like that?
11079Who, without profanity, shall tell his wrath?
11079Why are those rebels so quick?
11079Why does not the telegraph speak?
11079Why is it, then, that all the world loves a rebel?
11079Why is it, then, that one nation desires to subjugate another at all?
11079Why should only the law talk like that?"
11079Why should we fluster ourselves, why wax so hot, when time thus brings its inevitable revenges?
11079Why should we fuddle our conversation with paradoxes and intellectual interests when nature presents us with this sempiternal theme?
11079Why should we seek to add pain to pain, and raise a wretched life to the temperature of a torture- room?
11079Why, then, did he do it?
11079Why, then, should we not talk about rain, and leave plays and books and pictures and politics and scandal to narrow and abnormal minds?
11079Will they go out to fight each other?
11079Would not grievances then be simultaneously discovered to be intolerable?
11079Would the total abolition of war be a good thing for the world?
11079Would you kill an old, old man?"
11079asked the cabman;"Jim Corbett, or John Sullivan?"
11079is given, and they blow the souls out of one another:"Had these men any quarrel?"
11079per cent., Blood, sweat, and tear- wrung millions-- why?
11079said the superintendent,"what are you doing here?"
11079when?
11079would you live for ever?"
18860Have I lived,cried Falstaff, in the moment of his discomfiture,"to stand at the taunt of one that makes fritters of English?"
18860But why should these be expected?
18860Dancer( she that became in succession Mrs. Spranger Barry and Mrs. Crawford) and her memorable scream, as Lady Randolph, at"Was he alive?
18860Did the great actress find those attributes in the part( they asked themselves), or did she infuse them into it?
18860Her quiet archness at the question,"Will you go yet?"
18860What are the faculties and attributes essential to great success in acting?
18860What will a man do for the woman whom he loves?
13500''And who has told you all this, my child?'' 13500 ''What voices?''
13500''Who is your Lord, my child?'' 13500 And have you heard nought of the commotion going on there?"
13500And how have they of Domremy behaved themselves to her since?
13500And if I do, is that so strange? 13500 And then it was that my voices asked of me:''Jeanne, hast thou no fear?''
13500And what answer did the Seigneur de Baudricourt make to her?
13500And what thinks De Baudricourt of her mission? 13500 And your parents, what think they of this?
13500Are you he whom men call the Bastard of Orleans?
13500Are you not afraid, Jeanne,they asked,"of going into battle, of living so strange a life, of being the companion of the great men of the earth?"
13500Are you not pleased with them, my child?
13500Ay, if the good God will arise to work miracles again, such things might be; but how can we look for Him to do so? 13500 But what matter will that be, when the siege of Orleans shall be raised?"
13500But who has told you of this sword, my maiden?
13500Child, how dost thou know me?
13500Did he dream that? 13500 Did you doubt, Sire?"
13500Did your voices speak to you, mistress mine? 13500 Have they bidden you to go back-- to do no more for France?"
13500Have you a message from Him to me?
13500Have you good spurs, M. de Duc?
13500Have you seen the wonderful Maid of whom all the world is talking?
13500He gazed upon her full for awhile, and then he suddenly asked of her,''And when shall all these wonders come to pass?'' 13500 How can it be otherwise than for the best?"
13500How know you the thing of which you speak, girl?
13500How old are you, fair maiden?
13500How will it end, my General, how will it end?
13500I trow she did,he answered,"but think you that the ribald jests of mortal men can touch one of the angels of God?
13500If then the Lord be with us, must we not show ourselves worthy of His holy presence in our midst? 13500 If then, Maiden, you can thus read the future, tell me, shall I recover me of this sickness?"
13500If this be so; if, indeed, the Dauphin shall be made King, what matters that I be taken away? 13500 If we believe in the power of the good God, shall we not also believe that He can work even miracles at His holy will?"
13500In broad daylight, lady, and before the very eyes of the foe?
13500It is no matter,answered the Maid, with shining eyes;"is it anything to my Lord whether He overcomes by many or by few?
13500It was even as she said?
13500Jeanne-- fairest maiden-- what do you see?
13500My daughter,spoke the Abbe gravely,"have you security in your heart that the visions and voices sent to you come of good and not of evil?
13500Nay, gentle Dauphin, but that will not be,she said;"One shall increase, another shall decrease-- hath it not ever been so?
13500O my father, have you no word for me? 13500 Shall I be believed?"
13500Shall I be believed?
13500She desires speech with me? 13500 She was beautiful, you say?"
13500Sire,she faltered-- and anything like uncertainty in that voice was something new to us--"of what victories do you speak?
13500Sweet Chevaliere,he would say, calling her by one of the names which circulated through the Court,"why such haste?
13500Then has she indeed wedded?
13500Then you believe in her?
13500Truly that is so, my father; but is it not also written that those who put their trust in the Lord shall never be confounded?
13500Was that all he promised?
13500Well, and what make you of the girl? 13500 Went ye into the town today?"
13500What are you doing here, ma mie? 13500 What day will that be-- the day after to- morrow?"
13500What is it?
13500Which way are their faces?
13500Why should I tell this to the Seigneur de Baudricourt?
13500Why, Maiden, of what speak you?
13500Will not your Lord help you yet? 13500 Yet how could it be otherwise, my General, when the soldiers will follow you alone?--when all look to you as their champion and their friend?"
13500You fear not, then, to disobey your parents?
13500You would not go to mock, friend Jean de Metz?
13500A creature of earth or of heaven?"
13500Ah!--where had the Maid learned her skill in any kind of warfare?
13500And are you not sure in your heart that the cause of the French King will yet triumph?"
13500And even so not with all our heart and strength?"
13500And how could it be saved if nothing could rouse the King from his slothful indifference?
13500And how did we come upon them at last?
13500And if that city once fall, why what hope is there even for such remnants of his kingdom as still remain faithful south of the Loire?
13500And is it meet that we Christian knights should trust Him less than did the Jews of old?"
13500And is it wonderful that it should be so?
13500And must not the soldier be obedient above all others?
13500And now, what did we see?
13500And shall His will be set aside?
13500And should we seek to put the message aside as a thing of nought?
13500And the battle?
13500And was it wonder?
13500And was that word lacking?
13500And what is this I hear?
13500And where is she now?
13500And wherefore not now?
13500And yet who would have thought it possible three months ago?
13500And, look you, what hath she done to the English?
13500Are we not vowed to His service?
13500Are you well assured in your heart that you are not thus deceived and led away by whispers and suggestions from the father of lies?"
13500Ay, verily, and has it not been so?
13500But again, had not the Maid ever prevailed in battle over her foes?
13500But as for those other words of yours-- what did you mean by them?
13500But could it indeed be possible that such a miracle could be wrought, and by an instrument so humble as a village maid-- this Jeanne d''Arc?
13500But then his mind did change, and he said to me,''Are you noble?''
13500But wherefore have I been led hither by this bank, instead of the one upon which Talbot and his English lie?"
13500But yet why should we fear?
13500Can I look to receive the same protection as before?
13500Can any man pass through such experiences as mine, and not receive a wound which time can never wholly heal?
13500Can you think that the mind of the Lord has changed towards me and towards France?
13500Could you believe such folly, such treachery?"
13500Did not the cake of barley bread overturn the tent and the camp of the foe?"
13500Did not the three hundred with Gideon overcome the hosts of the Moabites?
13500Did she not give her daughter to the English King in wedlock, that their child might reign over this fair realm?
13500Did she not repudiate her own son?
13500Did they understand how much depended upon the rescue of the devoted town?
13500Did we doubt her ability, wounded as she was, to lead us?
13500Do I not well to be angry?"
13500Do not all men trust in you?
13500Do they think her a mere beautiful image, to ride before them and carry a white banner to affright the foe?
13500Does he ever speak of it?"
13500For had not rumours reached the city many times that day of the death of the Deliverer in the hour of victory?
13500Great God, but how would it be with our Maid when the real battle and bloodshed should begin?
13500Had I not in some sort been witness to a miracle?
13500Had I not seen how she was visited by sound or sight not sensible to those around her?
13500Had not something very like a miracle been wrought?
13500Had we not been asking this from the first?
13500Half confounded by her words I asked:"Who is your Lord?"
13500Hath He not said before this that He doth take of the mean and humble to confound the great of the earth?
13500Hath Orleans fallen into the hands of the English?"
13500Have I not ever been ready and longing to lead them against the foe?"
13500Have they not fought again and again, and what has come of it but loss and defeat?
13500Have you not yet forgiven your little Jeanne?
13500Her clear, ringing tones would ask the question:"Shall we, who go forward in the name of the Lord, dare to take His holy name lightly upon our lips?
13500How can I do this if you turn back, and take with you the hearts of my men?"
13500How can I tell of our entry into Rheims?
13500How can I think of it?
13500How can my poor pen describe the wonders of the great scene, of which I was a spectator upon that day?
13500How can she consort with princes and with peasants?"
13500How can she hope to rise?"
13500How can the servant be greater than his Lord?"
13500How can you witness the joy of a distant village, when you will be leading forward the armies of France to fresh victories?"
13500How could I dare question such a being as to her visions?
13500How could we expect it to be otherwise if the presence of the Maid were withdrawn?
13500How could we hope to lead on the armies to fresh victories, if the soldiers were told that the Maid would no longer march with them?
13500How long is this to continue, Robert de Baudricourt?"
13500How shall I describe the sight which greeted our eyes in the gathering dusk, as we looked towards the city?
13500How shall I tell of the sight I beheld?
13500How should she be, indeed, who was looking forward with impatience to her appearance at the Court of an uncrowned King?
13500How then could I refuse to do it?"
13500How would De Baudricourt take it?
13500How would she bear this contradiction and veiled contempt, she who had come to assume the command of the city and its armies at the King''s desire?
13500How would the Maid bear it?
13500I lowered my voice to a whisper as I said:"You mean the fear lest he was not the true son of the King?"
13500I made it my task to see her safely home; and as we went, I asked:"Was it an offence to you, fair Maid, that he should thus seek to test and try you?"
13500If a queen-- if an angel-- if a saint from heaven stood in stately calm and dignity before one''s eyes, how could we think of the raiment worn?
13500If she be a mad woman, why should I be troubled with her?
13500If she can not face a score of simple country nobles here, how can she present herself at Chinon?
13500If the Maid who comes from the King of Heaven puts that name upon him, need he fear to take it for his own?"
13500If the visions of the maiden had been true, why doth not the Lord strike now, before Salisbury of England can invest the city?
13500Is His arm shortened at all, that He should not fulfil that which He has promised?
13500Is His arm shortened at all?
13500Is it against the towers I must go, to assail them?
13500Is it boy, or angel, or what?
13500Is it not always so when the Lord uses one of His children?
13500Is it not right that I should listen to them as well as to you?
13500Is it not time that you should rest and take your ease after your many and arduous toils?
13500Is it not wiser to act with deliberation and prudence?"
13500Is it some disaster?
13500Is it the same, Bertrand, of whom you did speak upon the day we parted company?"
13500Is she still abiding content at home, awaiting the time appointed by her visions?"
13500Is she witch, or mad, or possessed by some spirit of vainglory and ambition?
13500Is that agreed?
13500Is that not enough?"
13500It is well that we may not read the future, else how could we bear the burden of life?
13500Know you not how near you stand to death this night?
13500Little Charlotte here pulled the Maid by the hand, crying out:"What are you saying?
13500Many men, by their gorgeous raiment, might well be the greatest one present; but how to tell?
13500Many must be slain ere we can call it ours, but will you follow and take it?"
13500Might she not laugh to scorn all such threats?
13500Must not it be of heaven, this thing?
13500My heart sank strangely within me, for had I not learned to know how truly the Maid did read that which the future hid from our eyes?
13500Need I say more?
13500Need such a question be asked of the Maid?
13500O my father, can you doubt that I was sent of them for this work?
13500O, was it not wonderful?
13500Oh, how can I write of it?
13500One Dominican monk sought to perplex her by asking why, since God had willed that France should be delivered through her, she had need of armed men?
13500Or is it that Fastolffe comes against us with yet another host?"
13500Other places had fallen before the victorious Maid, and why not this?
13500Pray what hath befallen, good sir?
13500Shall I ever forget that evening?
13500Shall I ever forget the thunder of applause which fell upon our ears as we passed into the city through the bridge?
13500Shall I take upon me that which my Lord puts not upon me-- whether it be honour or toil or pain?"
13500Shall we mock Him by calling ourselves His followers, and yet doing that without a thought which He hath forbidden?"
13500Shall we not seek to obey Him?
13500Shall we, His children, hang back and thwart Him, just in the hour when He has put the victory in our hands?
13500She, whom I have seen riding beside the King?
13500Sir Guy de Laval looked full in our faces as he spoke these words, and what could one reply?
13500Sir Guy made no reply, but fell into thought, and then asked a sudden question:"Who is this peasant maid of whom you speak?
13500Surely she did not think to leave us just in the hour of her supreme triumph?
13500Tell me who and what is she?
13500That name as applied to the Angelic Maid set our teeth on edge; yet was it wonderful that some should so regard her?
13500Then wherefore not do His will and march to the appointed spot?
13500They had infinite confidence in the Maid as a leader against stone walls, for had they not seen her take tower after tower, city after city?
13500To whom do you speak?
13500Was Orleans to fall next into the greedy maw of the English adventurers?
13500Was Paris in the King''s hands in less than seven years?
13500Was any project of relief on foot amongst the Dauphin''s soldiers?
13500Was ever courage like hers?
13500Was it for us to approach and ask of her what had been thus revealed?
13500Was it indeed a city of stone and wood which shone before us in the level rays of the sinking sun?
13500Was it not already threatened?
13500Was it not likely he would fear she might speak truth?
13500Was it possible that her Lord was about to take her from us, her task yet unfulfilled?
13500Was it treachery?
13500Was it wonder that the people believed in her?
13500Was it wonderful that every house should seek to hang out a white banner in honour of the Angelic Maid, and her pure whiteness of soul and body?
13500Was it wonderful they should hunger for her presence amongst them?
13500Was she dreaming?
13500Was she sad or pensive then?
13500Was there an instant''s hesitation?
13500We are to attack the foe upon the south?
13500Were the English driven from France in less than twenty?
13500What are His own words?
13500What can a peasant maid know of the art of war?
13500What could he be speaking of?
13500What did it mean?
13500What did she mean by these words?--this Heaven- sent Maid to whom we owed so much?
13500What did those last words signify-- when hitherto all she had spoken was of deliverance, of victory?
13500What future is there for hapless France?
13500What has she said to you, and what think you of her?"
13500What have I to do with the friends of royalty?
13500What looked she like?--and what said she?"
13500What madness would she next propose?
13500What manner of man is the Dauphin of France that he should look for divine deliverance?
13500What matter who shall fall ere the task be accomplished-- so that it be done according to the mind of the Lord?"
13500What matter whose the work, or whose the triumph?
13500What need have they of other leader?
13500What said she to that counsel?"
13500What said they when you bid them farewell for such an errand?"
13500What think you of it yourself, good Bertrand?
13500What was the condition of the garrison?
13500What was the disposition of the beleaguering force?
13500What were the armies of England doing?
13500What would even St. Louis of blessed memory feel, could he witness the changes wrought by only a century and a half?
13500What would the great Charlemagne say, could he see us now?
13500When I spoke to one grizzled old soldier about it, he shrugged his shoulders and made reply:"What would you?
13500When she left the room I followed her at her sign, and asked:"Then you go not forth to battle today, General?"
13500When will they believe?"
13500When will they understand?
13500Where was the weakness, the feebleness, the faintness of the wounded girl?
13500Wherefore should I not be their friend and sister still?"
13500Wherefore such haste?
13500Who believes in miracles now?"
13500Who but that wicked Queen Isabeau is at the bottom of the disgraceful Treaty of Troyes, wherein France sold herself into the hands of the English?
13500Who can it be?"
13500Why must he adventure himself again into danger?
13500Will not that be enough?"
13500Will not the soldiers fight for and with you?
13500Will you cease to hear and to obey?"
13500Will you undertake a mission from me to this maiden?
13500Would they speak thus of the Blessed Virgin?
13500Would you neglect to hear her cry to you in the hour of her need?
13500Yet was there something ironical in the very humility of some?
13500Yet what has been the truth?
13500Yet who dare say that she did not see and did not rejoice even then?
13500You have done all these great things for me; what am I to do in return for you?"
13500You may ask, are they of the Devil?
13500You they will follow to a man; but will they follow others when they know that you have deserted them?
13500asked De Baudricourt,''and have you naught but voices to instruct you in such great matters?''
13500cried Bertrand hotly;"you say the city is not so closely blockaded but that with care and caution men may get in or out?
13500cried Sir Guy, as he gazed at Bertrand with a look betwixt laughter and amaze,"and what said your worshipful uncle to that same message?"
13500he answered;"is not this jewelled weapon good enough?
13500he cried in dismay;"then shall we fly before them?"
13500she cried( how did she know?
13500she whispered,"but why did he not heed the warning?"
13500that they would have been ready to tear in pieces any who durst contemn her mission, or declare her possessed of evil spirits?
13500they ask, and how can she command troops and lead them on to victory, where veterans have failed again and again?
13635Been in India lately?
13635Has the world gone mad that it has ceased to believe in our sincerity?
13635Is that what is written on the paper?
13635So that is not the pipe he really smokes?
13635Sure?
13635The pipe he smokes?
13635What price Tom Mann?
13635Why was he neutral?
13635You do n''t suppose,I said,"that any one writes them for him?
13635* And now, before I leave the subject of Belgium, what have we done for Belgium?
13635* Are We Barbarians?
13635* Are We Hypocrites?
13635* Barrie at Bay: Which Was Brown?
13635* Do you think that we would carry on our militarism and our expensive drilling if we lived on an island as you do?
13635* Does the German conscript believe in the efficacy of his leaders?
13635* How About the Leaders?
13635* In the presence of such events as are passing before our eyes, how can we keep our minds free?
13635* Now, some of your readers may ask:"Why is it?
13635* To succeed in it, what means must she employ?
13635* Was Belgium a Mere Excuse?
13635* What Is a Militarist?
13635* What is a Junker?
13635* What is civilization in the German and true sense of the word?
13635* What is the German reply to this case?
13635* What was this treaty which it was proposed so lightly to set aside?
13635* Why Not Kill the German Women?
13635** Russian or Prussian Barbarism?
13635--what would it mean to speak of their courage?
13635Alas, when the Belgian soldier cried:"Where are the English?"
13635Am not I thy tongue that spake, thine eye that led thee, Not I thy child?
13635Americans, does your racial feeling, at other times so sensitive, remain silent in view of this unexampled shame?
13635And do you know how it is atoned for?
13635And in that case, with what right will you still pretend, as you have written, that your cause is that of liberty and human progress?
13635And to find in the countries which declare themselves neutral, distrust, reserve, and, in fact, doubt of our honest intentions?
13635And what answer save one could any Briton give to it?
13635And what is that spirit?
13635And which competitor would be the next one after us that would become awkward to the trust on the Thames?
13635And would Great Britain have drawn the sword for us if France had violated the neutrality of Belgium by marching through it?
13635And, if so, what becomes of your penal code?
13635Are not these the hands that raised thee fallen, and fed thee, These hands defiled?
13635Are the law professors and the economists willing to defend such a manner of acquiring property?
13635Are these incendiaries?
13635Are these slaves, whom a despot points the way to the rolling dead?
13635Are these to judge mankind?
13635Are they not always the ever- recurring words of wrath from one ill- balanced man?
13635Are you the children of Goethe or of Attila?
13635As the world recognizes this astonishing proposition it asks with anxiety, what may be its future relations to Germany?
13635Astounding fatuity?
13635Blind and foolish, did they not know by past experience that we would keep our promise given?
13635But Russia?
13635But do you deny it also for your Government?
13635But he would also have answered my Why not?, which is more than any consistent Militarist can.
13635But how about a country from which once America had to wrest its own liberty in bloody battle?
13635But how can a race of stiff, dry, duty- performing beings awaken love?
13635But how is he prevented from avenging himself with an axe?
13635But it may well be asked why then did they dislike us, and why did they weave hostile plots against us?
13635But they certainly were-- shall I say a little upset?
13635But to what good?
13635But what do words matter, when the most brilliant of them would pale before acts of which each day makes us the witnesses?
13635But what is the use of crying for spilt milk?
13635But where then is the deep- lying reason for this friendship?
13635But whom did Prussia ever emancipate-- even by accident?
13635But will they agree to make these conditions moderate?
13635Ca n''t you stop it?
13635Can any one candidly say that they have left on any one of these people the faintest impress of progress or liberation?
13635Can it be reborn?
13635Can it be that the disease of individualism is a thing of yesterday?
13635Can one speak of courage?
13635Could anything be more refreshing?
13635Could he honestly think that this was right?
13635Could that be approved by reason?
13635Could that be reconciled with what is right?
13635Could they drive a wedge between us by showing that we were a fair- weather friend whom any stress would alienate?
13635Did not Poutsma say as much the other day?
13635Did not the English at the very beginning of the war cut our cable, in order to be able to guillotine our honor without the least interference?
13635Did these professors of the Fatheland not know this?
13635Do we deserve to have our love requited with hate?
13635Do you and your co- signatories include in German science and art the science and art of housebreaking?
13635Do you believe that, Americans?
13635Do you believe that, Americans?
13635Do you believe that, Americans?
13635Do you believe that, Americans?
13635Do you know what the ancients, the very Greeks and Romans from whom you have drawn your blood and temperament, called that sin?
13635Do you not know of the net that has been spun around us and drawn tight for the last half of a generation, to choke us?
13635Do you therefore consider such deeds as those specified to be a high expression of civilization?
13635Do you wage war against armies or against the human spirit?
13635Does he hold the principality up as a model administration and the source of its prosperity as above reproach?
13635Does no doubt ever lancinate him?
13635Furthermore, what sort was the spirit which received them?
13635Has it come from the proximity of our English allies?
13635Has she not herself admitted that she is making war on us principally because she sees in us an uncomfortable competitor in trade?
13635Have we saved her soil from invasion?
13635Have you who read this played your part to the highest?
13635How about Egypt for example?
13635How about England?
13635How can business be carried on as usual, or carried on at all, on unoccupied office stools and at counters with no men behind them?
13635How can such a combination of contradictory elements, such a synthesis, be possible?
13635How could an army be anything but dangerous which had such units in its line of battle?"
13635How could an honest German whose mind was undebauched by a controlled press justify such an interference as that?
13635How could the ego exist if there was not somewhere a non ego to which it is opposed?
13635How did this miracle, for it is little less, happen?"
13635How long is anybody expected to go on with that sort of game, or keep peace at that illimitable price?
13635How long must we pursue a road in which promises are all fetiches in front of us and all fragments behind us?
13635How long would it be before Russia lost England''s help forever?
13635How shall we account for the unique predominance of the expert in German life?
13635How the general sentiment is often expressed in the gesture of a single person-- you did that for us-- how can we sufficiently requite you?
13635How will she fill them?
13635How will the well- taught parade schritt avail them when it comes to a stricken field?
13635How, then, do you, and the signatories of your appeal, dare to state:"It is not true that Germany provoked the war"?
13635How, then, ought Germany to behave to other nations?
13635I am glad that they see their blindness now-- but why this sentimental friendliness for those who hoodwinked them?
13635I wonder what President Eliot himself would have done under these circumstances had he been the guardian responsible for Germany''s fate?
13635If he can not do that, can he not, at least, fight for his side?
13635If he hits his neighbor on the head with the kitchen chopper what do we do?
13635If not, why, we repeat, did you not make them known to all the world, instead of making an ambush for us by your senseless silence?"
13635If so, where does your moral superiority come in, hypocrites that you are?
13635If the welfare of the world does not suffer any more by an English than by a German defeat who cares whether we are defeated or not?
13635If you today approve of the burning of the Louvain Library, have you until now approved of the destruction of the library at Alexandria?
13635In London and Paris and Berlin nobody at present dares say"Sirs, ye are brethren; why do ye wrong one to another?
13635In the present conflict, which momentarily almost splits the entire world into two camps, where do the interests of America lie?
13635In vain did Sazonoff repeat,"But if you are going to fight, as you know you are, why not say so?"
13635In what way is the"Battle of Dorking"like Bernhardi?
13635Instead of the world- inspiring phrases of a Goethe or a Schiller, what are the words in the last decade which have been quoted across the sea?
13635Is it a German officer of twenty- three, with offensive manners, and a habit of cutting down innocent civilians with his sabre?
13635Is it not now the duty of every Englishman to sink all differences in the face of the common peril?"
13635Is not this proposal a bit too naïve for you, Bernard Shaw?
13635Is the English giant fleet an instrument of peace?
13635Is there no such thing as militarism in France and in Russia?
13635Is this belief now to be contradicted?
13635It may be asked: Why an apology?
13635May it not add to the difficulties of our troops if a policy of"arming every woman, child, and cat and dog"is favorably regarded by us?
13635Not even if they promised not to touch the French colonies?
13635Not if the Germans promised not to annex French territory?
13635Now that we begin to see where we really are, what practical morals can we draw?
13635Now what does this mean to the wage worker?
13635Or rather, how would the Germans reply to it if their official Militarist and Kaiserist panjandrums had the wit to find the effective reply?
13635Our romantic Junkers added"and serve us right too: what man will pity us when the hour strikes for us, if we skulk now?"
13635Sane men gasp at such placards and ask angrily,"What sort of fools do you take us for?"
13635Shall I remind you how Great Britain has disported herself in the matter of treaties and pleasant promises?
13635Since he says he is not English, and that it is an English war, whom does he mean by"We"?
13635Suppose she wants Constantinople as her port of access to the unfrozen seas, in addition to the dismemberment of Austria?
13635Suppose she wants not only Poland, but Baltic Prussia?
13635The time has past when her philosophers proclaimed the inviolability of justice, the eminent dignity of the person,( the individual?
13635Then why preface these statements by a series of attacks upon the country which is admitted to be justly fighting in a just cause?
13635These, and the others, the thousands of others, shall we speak of their courage?
13635WHO BEGAN THE WAR AND WHY?
13635Was the Triple Entente founded in order to bring about the millennium on earth?
13635Was there ever a stupidity so worthy of his scorn as this attempt to bombard the spirit?
13635Was there no way out?
13635Well, cry the Militarists, suppose it by all means: could we desire anything better?
13635Well: are we not prepared to fight always when our turn comes?
13635Were she recalcitrant we need not even murmur in her ear:"What would you have extorted if you''d won?"
13635Were we at her side with half a million men when the avalanche fell on her?
13635What Generals?
13635What are our lives or our labors, our fortunes or even our families, when compared with the life or death of the great mother of us all?
13635What are the essential dogmas of this truth, which is German because it is true and which is true because it is German?
13635What course is open to you, gentlemen, once you are enlightened as to the policy of your country?
13635What does that mean?
13635What earthly or heavenly good is done when Tom Fool shoots Hans Narr?
13635What else could he do if his people were not to be abandoned to their own destruction?
13635What has made Germany formidable in this war?
13635What have we to gain if we win?
13635What impression was the strongest?
13635What is the conclusion?
13635What is the result?
13635What is their non- reciprocity but an inability to imagine, not a god or devil, but merely another man?
13635What is their sophism of"necessity"but an inability to imagine tomorrow morning?
13635What troops are meant?
13635What was Britain to do under this growing menace?
13635What was the deepest impression?
13635What was the use of a Peace Conference in such circumstances?
13635What will be the population of London, or Manchester, or Chemnitz, or Bremen, or Milan, at the end of it_?"
13635What would light be without the shadow from which it is detached?
13635Where are our men?
13635Where lies the ideal of contemporary Germany?
13635Where, for instance, does that nickname come from applied by them to the enemy-- the"Boches"?
13635Where, if England should succeed in downing Germany, would her eyes next be pointed?
13635Who can tell with what sinister motives the man was standing there within reach of the hatchet?"
13635Who indeed are you and what name do you conjure us to call you, Hauptmann, you who reject the title of barbarian?
13635Why argue with such hypocrites?
13635Why did she do this stupid thing?
13635Why did they accept the stars and crosses of Caligula- Attila?
13635Why does she wish to destroy us?
13635Why go back to all the dull details with which the business began?
13635Why hob- nob with the docile creatures of his chancery, and spread at home and abroad the worship of Geist and Kultur?
13635Why not, if you are really going in to be what you, never having read"this Neech they talk of,"call a Nietzschean Superman?
13635Why not?
13635Why should the Irish consider themselves English?
13635Why this continual depreciation?
13635Why?
13635Wo n''t you be reasonable?
13635Would Britain keep her word or would she not?
13635Would Great Britain, had she been in our position, have hesitated a moment to do likewise?
13635Would it have issued a milder ultimatum than Austria''s?
13635Would it have permitted prostrate Russia to recuperate undisturbed from the almost annihilating blows of the revolution and the Japanese war?
13635Would it have quietly suffered the open or hidden challenges, the machinations of its enemies constantly appearing more plainly?
13635Would it make less atheists or more?
13635Would not an apology be implied in the payment of an indemnity?
13635Would the Entente, if we had been foolish enough to disarm, have guaranteed our possessions as a reward for being good?
13635Would this intervention be any wiser or likely to be better in its results?
13635Would we promise to spare Germany if Belgium were left untouched?
13635Would we say on what conditions we would spare Germany?
13635Would you have submitted, on the part of one of your pupils, to so grave an imputation, so lightly bandied?
13635Yes, would it have tried again and again to improve its relations with these very same enemies by the greatest advances?
13635You do n''t write them for him by any chance, just as you blackened the pipe, you know?"
13635what would happen if she attacked_ us_?"
12270A lump of tallow, dost thou hear, my Prudencia?
12270Ah, can_ I_ make_ you_ tremble? 12270 All?
12270An Estenega? 12270 And at your suggestion?"
12270And books will suffice, then?
12270And did not I dream that Tomaso and Liseta would marry? 12270 And he may die?"
12270And how is, thy little one?
12270And if I saw you every day for two months would I no longer care whether you came or went?
12270And thou lovest thy brother?
12270And thou wilt stay?
12270And why dost thou walk when thou canst sit down?
12270And yet thou wouldst not help her brother?
12270And you forgave and were forgiven?
12270And you would never disobey one of her mandates?
12270Are we all such shams as that?
12270Are you ambitious?
12270Are you an atheist?
12270Are you aware,he said, abruptly,"that your brother is accused of conspiracy?"
12270Are you not a Catholic?
12270Are you sure that you still hate him?
12270Art thou afraid?
12270Art thou asking me how I like the enemy of my house? 12270 Art thou sure that to train the intellect means happiness?"
12270Before you do what?
12270But do you think her beautiful?
12270But why not accept this break? 12270 Can one go to confession with a hating and an unforgiving heart?
12270Canst thou not put thy meaning in fewer words?
12270Canst thou not wait until he comes thy way?
12270Did he not come from the ball- room with thee?
12270Did he say that, Eustaquia?
12270Diego,I said, divided between despair and curiosity,"you have fancied many women: wherein does your feeling for Chonita differ?
12270Do you care?
12270Do you know what I thought as I stood by you in the church?
12270Do you realize that again you have raised a barrier between yourself and your religion? 12270 Do you realize that you are playing with fire?"
12270Do you so despise your womanhood, the most perfect thing about you?
12270Do you suppose I shall let you do anything of the sort? 12270 Do you want me to go?"
12270Does it look well, Don Diego?
12270Don Diego Estenega,said the Governor,"will you tell us what you have thought whilst the others have talked?"
12270Dost thou know where he has gone?
12270Dost thou think I am made of doubloons, that thou wouldst buy a whole ship''s cargo? 12270 Dost thou wish to?"
12270Gentlemen,he said,"will you not sit down and smoke another cigarito?
12270Have you begun to realize that your Church can not satisfy you?
12270Have you no remorse?
12270How can I tell what the captain has until I see? 12270 How can he be, when in each moment of attainment he is pricked by the knowledge that it must soon be over?
12270How did you know that I came?
12270How dost thou feel?
12270I believe I was made from his rib,she thought, angrily,"else why can he have this extraordinary power over me?
12270If he goes to Santa Barbara with Alvarado this summer wilt thou ask him to be thy guest?
12270Is Anita alone with you?
12270Is it sweet or terrible to feel this way?
12270Is it true that he has been conspiring with Carillo, and that an extraordinary and secret session of the Departmental Junta has been called?
12270Is it true that this Estenega of whom I hear so much is a member of the Junta?
12270Is not that a woman to make known to herself? 12270 Is she not beautiful?"
12270Is there gold in these mountains?
12270It is more satisfactory to stay at home and read about it?
12270It is war, then?
12270Life is always the same with thee, I suppose,--smoking, riding, swinging in the hammock?
12270Like what does he look? 12270 Most of our guests leave this afternoon: will you let me sleep alone to- night?"
12270Mother of God, wilt thou ever forgive me?
12270My brother is to be arrested, you say?
12270Nothing would have been done if it had not been for you?
12270Señor,murmured Valencia,"thou wilt tarry with us long, no?
12270Shall I bring thy mantilla, Doña Carmen?
12270Shall I tell you? 12270 Suppose,"she said, suddenly,--"suppose you had failed, and those men had seized me and made me captive: what then?"
12270Tell me,she cried, trembling from head to foot, the blood rushing over her face,"did I go to your room last night?"
12270Tell me,she exclaimed,"what is it in you that I want?--that I need?
12270Tell me,she said, imperiously,"what do you want?"
12270Tell me?
12270Then is anything worth while except reading? 12270 Then is no one happy?"
12270Then of what use to live at all?
12270Then why have you brought me here?
12270There-- do you see that?
12270Thou art rested, Doña Eustaquia? 12270 Thou askest perjury and disloyalty and dishonor of an Iturbi y Moncada?"
12270Thou darest to say that to me, and yet would marry my sister?
12270Thou hast come here in the night to ask me such a question as that?
12270Thou must have eaten too many dulces for supper: didst thou?
12270Thou wilt be one of my bridesmaids, no, Doña Valencia?
12270Thou wilt keep thy promise soon, no?
12270Thou wilt think of what I have said?
12270Thou wouldst have me marry him? 12270 Thou wouldst not exchange thy life for another?
12270To curse?
12270To what end? 12270 Very well; come with me and thou shalt know him.--Wilt thou come too, Eustaquia?
12270What a beautiful wedding, no?
12270What did you mean by such a performance?
12270What difference, if the next generation be beautiful?
12270What do you mean?
12270What dost thou mean?
12270What has a baby like that to confess?
12270What have I done?
12270What have you read?
12270What is it thou wishest me to understand, Reinaldo?
12270What is she?
12270What is that? 12270 What is that?"
12270What is the matter?
12270What is this rumor of pirates on the coast?
12270What promise?
12270What?
12270What?
12270Where are we? 12270 Where have you been, sir?"
12270Where is Estenega?--and the Castros?
12270Where is Reinaldo?
12270Where is his Excellency?
12270Who is?
12270Who?
12270Why canst thou not be more sincere, my brother? 12270 Why did he, of all others, tarry?"
12270Why did you never ask me for what you wanted?
12270Why do I feel like this for you? 12270 Why dost thou wear that black gown this beautiful morning?"
12270Why have you brought me here?
12270Why not call me a Jesuit? 12270 Why?
12270Why?
12270Will you walk to that opening over there with me? 12270 Wilt thou be glad to see Reinaldo, my Prudencia?"
12270Wilt thou go?
12270Wilt thou not present him to me?
12270Wilt thou not stay with us here in Monterey?
12270Wilt thou stay with me?
12270Would I regret if he no longer made me tremble, or would I go on my knees and thank the Blessed Virgin?
12270Would I sacrifice my country for her a year hence?
12270Would nothing tempt thee to stay, Don Diego?
12270Yes, mamacita?
12270You are warmly clad?
12270You believe that, Chonita?
12270You have read all those books?
12270You no longer care?
12270You-- you would have the Americans? 12270 A delusion? 12270 A man? 12270 A renegade? 12270 Again she asked herself, what did it mean? 12270 And her brother? 12270 And if he had had the same advantages-- those years in Mexico and America and Europe-- would he not know as much as Diego Estenega? 12270 And is not the Virgin the model for all women?
12270And now that you are reasonably sure of being forgiven, will not you forgive me?
12270And she?
12270And the vow I made,--do you forget that?
12270And the words of it?
12270And thou wilt tell me all about thy visit to Monterey, no?"
12270And wouldst thou like any of my white things?
12270And you,--how long could you love anybody?
12270And, being safe, why should I deny myself the pleasure of talking to him?
12270Are you going to let that girl alone?"
12270Art thou alone?"
12270As for your vow,--what is a vow?
12270As to the exercise of it-- why not?
12270But come and take thy siesta, no?
12270But could I,_ I_, conspire against a wise and great man like Juan Bautista Alvarado?
12270But what are our men?
12270But what are we to do with this life?
12270But what has Mexico done for California?
12270But whither is all this tending, Diego?
12270But why worthier?
12270But you-- are you resigned to the time when even the withered old beau will not look at you,--you who are the loveliest woman in the Californias?"
12270But, my sister, is it not so that one can sacrifice himself, his mere personal feelings, upon the altar of his country?
12270Come to the dining- room, no?"
12270Could the folly of man further go?"
12270Could these Missions have been built without gold?--these thousands of Indians Christianized?"
12270Couldst thou not have spoken a few simple words like himself, and not blackened thy soul?"
12270Did not I dream that the good captain would bring pink silk stockings?
12270Did not every gown already made have a train longer than herself?
12270Did you ever see bay bluer than that?
12270Do not stay long at the church, no?
12270Do not you hear the voices?"
12270Do we go to the ship, my uncle?
12270Do you care to hear more?"
12270Do you forget my vow?"
12270Do you picture, in a life of solitude and cold devotion to phantoms, any happiness equal to what you would find here in my arms?"
12270Do you think I will give her up for a trifle like that?"
12270Do you think a Catholic would break that vow?
12270Do you understand?"
12270Do you want water?"
12270Does it not give us the power to abstract ourselves from life when we are tired of it?"
12270Does not the Bible say that faith shall make ye whole?
12270Dost thou believe in dreams?"
12270Dost thou realize that our Reinaldo will be with us this night?
12270For a moment I thought her terrible hatred was about to hurl its vengeance at me; but she only asked,--"What did he say?"
12270Had she been to Estenega''s room the night before?
12270Hast thou been well and happy since I left?"
12270Hast thou ever known any one who could converse with lighter ease than I and thy brother?"
12270Have you been to confession?"
12270He had reason to believe that gold lay under California; but where?
12270He looked into her rich Southern face and approved of it: when had he ever failed to approve of a pretty woman?
12270How are you?"
12270How can I accomplish this great and desirable end?
12270How can I avoid to ask him, when he is of the party?"
12270How can I find this place from without?"
12270How can you be sure that this is love?
12270How could imagination shape such scenes, such perfection of union, of companionship, if reality were not?
12270How could it be?
12270How couldst thou?"
12270How dared a woman with hair of gold wear the color of the brunette?
12270How dost thou like my friend, Chonita?"
12270I am ambitious for him; and so art thou, Chonita, for thy brother?
12270I do not know the princess, although she has sent me word many times to visit her-- Did an Indian try to carry her off?"
12270If the man is ready to bend his neck in sacrifice to the glory of his house, is it for the woman to think?"
12270Is it Ramon, Esteban, or Diego?
12270Is it not so, my Prudencia?"
12270Is it not so, my sister?"
12270Is it not so?"
12270Is it possible that a man calling himself a Californian could give utterance to such sentiments?
12270Is it so?"
12270Is it true--_ay, triste de mi!_--what he said of my brother?
12270Is it you?--you?"
12270Is that thy meaning?"
12270It is hope of future reward, I suppose,--or fear?"
12270It would infuriate me if done in private; why should it not at least disgust me in public?
12270May I kiss your hand?"
12270Poor grain of sand-- what can he give, comparable to the cold serene happiness of fidelity to self?
12270Reinaldo conspire against his government?
12270Shall I say that I have a worthier motive in wishing to aid in the development of civilization?
12270Shall I tell it to a woman,--and an Iturbi y Moncada?
12270Shall his daughter be weak where he was strong?
12270Shall we gallop back?
12270Shall we gallop?"
12270She turned to Adan:"They will be happy, you think,--Reinaldo and Prudencia?"
12270Suppose thou hadst to sacrifice thy religion or thy books, never to read another?
12270Tell me, how do you like my friend Valencia?"
12270Tell me, my daughter,--God of my soul, but I am glad to have thee back!--what thoughtest thou of this son of the Estenegas?
12270Tell me,--you know everything, and I so little,--why is it?"
12270Thou art devoted to thy house, no?"
12270Thou dost not wish to travel?"
12270Thou rememberest the books that were burned by the priests when the governor was a boy, because he had dared to read them, no?
12270Thou smilest, my daughter; but thou wilt not commend the enemy of thy house, no?
12270Thou wilt not ask him to cross the threshold of Casa Grande?"
12270Thou wilt stay now, no?
12270Thou wouldst make a Christmas doll of thyself with satin that is too heavy for thy grandmother, and eke out thy dumpy inches with a train?
12270Under what hill?
12270Was he dead?
12270Was it like living over again the books of travel?"
12270Was not in her arms the oldest- born of a new generation of Alvarados?
12270Was the soul but brain?
12270What I want to know is this: Is it your duty to gallivant about town?
12270What can you tell me of him?
12270What could I do?
12270What did it mean?
12270What do you think of her?"
12270What does he care that the women of his day are coffee- colored and stringy or fat?
12270What else could I be here?"
12270What good has the wisdom in my books done me, when I confess my dependence upon a man, and that man my enemy-- and the acquaintance of a few weeks?"
12270What have men of exceptional talent to fight down in the Californias except the barriers to its development?
12270What have we done with it in our seventy years of possession?
12270What is this terrible power?"
12270What is your idea of love?"
12270What must she think?
12270What was thy dream, my Chonita?"
12270What will the next generation be?
12270What will you do then?"
12270What would she do in the coming convulsion?
12270What would you have the stumbling and unanchored do with what has been thrust upon him?"
12270What-- what had happened to this proud, reserved, careless daughter of the Iturbi y Moncadas?
12270Where had The Doomswoman, the proud daughter of the Iturbi y Moncadas, gone?
12270Where is my pride now?
12270Where is the outlet?"
12270Which wouldst thou choose?"
12270Who is there to love?
12270Who shall judge the complex heart of a man?
12270Who, who, in sober reason, would defy that brace of frowning gods?"
12270Why are our few great men so very great to us?
12270Why are you a Catholic?
12270Why are you afraid to disobey?
12270Why do n''t you go to Paris again?
12270Why do you cling to the Church with your back braced against your intelligence?
12270Why should he care to talk so to another woman?
12270Why?
12270Will Doña California be pleased to observe that whale spouting in the bay?
12270Will you help me, or not?
12270Will you show me the other way out?"
12270Wilt thou do it?"
12270Wilt thou marry me?"
12270Wilt thou send these things to the North, to be worn by an Estenega?
12270Wilt thou unhand her?"
12270Would I, a Californian maiden, betroth myself without his knowledge?"
12270Would you not rather live in our capital?
12270Would you?"
12270You are so far away down there, and there are but few of the_ gente de razon_, no?"
12270You fall back into the bosom of your Church with joy, I suppose?"
12270You have traveled everywhere, no?
12270You would cast this fair gift of Almighty God at the feet of American swine?
12270You would invite, welcome, uphold, the American adventurer?
12270You would tear apart the bosom of your country under pretense of doctoring its evils?
12270and are they not my own this minute?"
12270and not ride those five leagues twice again?
12270and shall we buy this afternoon?
12270he will fall in love with her; and what then?"
12270is it the delirium?"
12270or a more perfect semicircle of hills than this?
12270or a more straggling town?
12270or is your place at this hour beside your wife?"
12270or sand whiter?
12270she added to herself,"why do I not tell who alone is to blame?
12270the daughter of the governor of The Californias?
18757And how comes it,proceeds Cadamosto,"that these people want to use so much salt?"
18757Who then with these passages before him, ought even to speak of Antipodes?
18757Again, the world can not be a globe, or sphere, or be suspended in mid- air, or in any sort of motion, for what say the Scriptures?
18757And I, to try him, exclaimed''Why is he so bitter against the Christians?
18757And how did Ptolemy lend himself to this?
18757And how was this?
18757And what were these postulates?
18757Are we to make war on the infidels or no?
18757Did either or both of these join the Arctic Ocean?
18757Did it connect with the Euxine?
18757Did the Court of Sagres suppose the ostrich to be some large kind of hen?
18757Did they get right, as it were, by chance?
18757For was it not their own proudest and strongest city- state, and"Who can stand before God, or the Great Novgorod?"
18757From this point of view it is perhaps disappointing; the inlet of the Rio d''Ouro(?
18757If so, was there also an unknown Southern Continent?
18757On the 13th, the last day of her illness, she roused herself to ask"What wind was blowing so strong against the house?"
18757Was Africa an island?
18757Was Ptolemy''s longitude to be wholly accepted, and if not, how was it to be bettered?
18757Was it another island?
18757Was it not better to die as soldiers than as traitors without a hearing?
18757Was the Caspian a land- locked sea?
18757Was there no one nearer than Farosangul?
18757What else did they buy negro slaves for?
18757What is it to us working men?
18757What was the shape of South- Eastern Asia?
18757What would the higher criticism answer, out of its infallible internal evidence tests?
18757Would he guide them to Battimansa?
18757except the men who had built it, and would rush to sack it if it turned against them?
18839__ Ta douleur, du Perrier, sera donc éternelle? 18839 Alphonce, le roy d''Arragon, Le Gracieux Duc de Bourbon, Et Artus, le Duc de Bretaigne, Et Charles Septiesme, le Bon?.... 18839 Encor fais une question: Lancelot, le roy de Behaigne, Où est il? 18839 He answered, somewhat angrily:In what did you think?
18839Le roy de Chippre, de renom?
18839Mais où est le preux Charlemaigne!__ ENVOI.__ Où est Claguin, le bon Breton?
18839Mais où sont les neiges d''antan?__ Où est la très sage Hellois, Pour qui fut chastré et puis moyne Pierre Esbaillart à Saint- Denis?
18839Mais où sont les neiges d''antan?__ Où est la très sage Hellois, Pour qui fut chastré et puis moyne Pierre Esbaillart à Saint- Denis?
18839Où est le Tiers Calixte Dernier decedé de ce nom, Qui quatre ans tint le papaliste?
18839Où est son tayon?....
18839Où le conte daulphin d''Auvergne Et le bon feu Duc d''Alençon?...
18839Semblablement, où est la royne Qui commanda que Buridan Fust gecté en ung sac en Saine?
18839The old monk had said to him:"In what resolution do you die?"
18839What animal of the sixteenth century lives so clearly as these two?
18839_ Blanche_ may be Blanche of Castille, but more likely she was a vision of Villon''s own, for what did St. Louis''mother ever sing?
18839_ Mais quelle recompense aurois- je de tant suivre Vos danses nuict et jour, un laurier sur le front?
18839_ THE DEAD LORDS.__ Qui plus?
18839et le bon roy d''Espaigne Duquel je ne sçay pas le nom?...
18839pource Que j''ay perdu depuis trois jours Mon bien, mon plaisir, mes amours: Et quoy?
18462Are your eyes so heavy that ye can not watch? 18462 Auf dasz ichs nit anheb umsunst Wolauf, wir haben Gottes Gunst; Wer wollt in solchem bleiben dheim?
18462Dost thou not blush,Nicodemus says,"to sell thy Lord and Master?
18462Have I been so long time with thee, and yet hast thou not known me, Philip?
18462I hear another ask, Yankee- like,''What will he gain by it?'' 18462 If thou givest up thy life,"he says,"what will become of us?"
18462Tell me, am I right?
18462We marvel,says one writer,"how the peasant Rendl learned to bear himself so nobly or to utter the famous question,''What is truth?''
18462What do I see? 18462 When thou and I behind the veil are past, Oh, but the long, long while the world shall last?
18462Again, amid the railings of the Jews,"My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
18462Am I a surgeon?
18462And I asked,''What is contained in the book?''
18462And I said to him,''Respected Doctor, what do they call that book?''
18462And I said,''What will you do about it?
18462As more objects are apprehended, more complex relations arise, but the primal condition remains-- What can I do with it?
18462Before Thee now I make my claim, O Lord,-- What shall I pray Thee as a meet reward?__ I ask for nothing.
18462Before this, Father Serra had said to Governor Galvez,"And for our Father St. Francis is there to be no mission?"
18462But tell me, Omar, hast thou said the whole?
18462But the mule- driver answered,''Father, what remedy can I know?
18462Can you dry up the fountain of thought?
18462Do we not read in the prophets that Christ lives forever?
18462Emerson?"
18462How shall it be with you?
18462How shall you respond to the seeming difference?
18462I have denied thee, how can it be possible?
18462I said,''What is the use of the Greek?
18462In like manner, the brain which has been misued[ Transcriber''s note: misused?
18462It does not matter where we walk; the question is, How?
18462Jesus or Barabbas, which will ye choose?"
18462Not what a man knows, or what he can say; but what is he?
18462See you not that the wind of Freedom[2] is blowing?
18462Shall you give up the truth of high thinking for the appearance of speedy success?
18462The first relation of the child to external things is expressed in this: What can I do with it?
18462Then I saw a little book, newly printed, lying on the floor, and I said to him,''Respected Doctor, what lies there?''
18462Till you and I came over to him?
18462To Hutten''s father Eitelwolf wrote:"Would you bury a genius like that in the cloister?
18462What can I do with it?
18462What is it to me?
18462What is its relation to me?
18462What is the character of that calm which follows when the law and the slaveholder prevail?
18462What single point have they in common?
18462What was the value of this short and troubled life?
18462When were the good and the brave ever in the majority?
18462Where does such treason take its rise?
18462Which way had he taken?
18462Which way have they thrown their lives, pray?
18462Will you not vindicate yourself?''
18462Would you have had him wait till that time came?
18462[ 2]"Sehet ihr nicht dasz die Luft der Freiheit weht?"
18462that you can not endure blame even for those who have fought for you in time of danger?
18462what can he can do?
14348''What about your poor wife?'' 14348 ''What''s that?''
14348''What''s that?'' 14348 ''Yes,''I says;''and suppose the report comes back that this water is fatal to man and beast?
14348A bore?
14348Ah, but how?
14348Ai n''t I been telling him for a year to buy Liberty Bonds with his money? 14348 Ai n''t I just talked straight to Snell?
14348Ai n''t I right, though, about the foolish way people fly at their mail?
14348Any one hurt in the runaway?
14348But how?
14348But what''s to be done?
14348But you just told Tilton--"Well, Snell is going to be there, ai n''t he?
14348Ca n''t you remember? 14348 Ca n''t you think?"
14348Call yourself a cowman, do you?
14348Call yourself a cowman, hey? 14348 Calls himself a cowman, does he?
14348Change of venues?
14348Change of venues?
14348Did you open it?
14348Do n''t he look a heap more egregious by that mess of bones than he does by his own flesh and blood? 14348 Do you suppose that fire would destroy the silly things?
14348Elephants?
14348Ever talk to one of these rich capitalists that has rubber stock for sale in South America or a self- starting banana orchard? 14348 Fencin''?"
14348Have many fights?
14348Have n''t I told you I took them out?
14348He do n''t look near as proud in this as he does in that one he sent me himself-- here, where is that thing?
14348How about the way you talked to Tilton before you saw Snell?
14348How did you ever do it?
14348How do you know?
14348How far did he say I was hurled?
14348How''s that?
14348I ai n''t sayin''I''d like to mix with one when he''s vexed,continued the lady judicially;"but why vex''em?
14348I know I had them out in the living room--"Why did you ever take them out there?
14348It''s your only way out,says Minna;"and I''ll do everything I can--""You will?"
14348Keats might have turned out even worse than I did,he says,"but if there was n''t going to be any way where he could do it legally, what was the use?
14348Keys?
14348Me? 14348 Mother to what?"
14348Now,I wondered,"what devastating bomb shall we hurl into this flower- spiced Arcady?
14348Open it?
14348Remind you?
14348Say, did n''t I ever tell you about Mrs. Julia Wood Atkins, the well- known lady reformer?
14348So she''s that kind, is she?
14348That would be a catastrophe indeed, would it not? 14348 Then what you crying for?"
14348Well, did you lick Ben?
14348Well, what of it?
14348What for?
14348What in time did you think I was going to do?
14348What keys? 14348 What was the matter of life and death?"
14348Would n''t it be awkward if they were in that rubbish?
14348You know what he does when he wants a mess of trout? 14348 You opened that trunk?"
14348You reckon we better both leave the place at once?
14348You remember Squat Tyler, that long cow- puncher working for me when you were here last time?
14348You seen the party that stopped here this morning in that big, pompous touring car?
14348''Ai n''t that a fine new fiddle that Dave bought with his twelve dollars?
14348''Why did you postpone it?''
14348Ai n''t I the heinous old madcap, thinking of jokes like that?
14348Ai n''t it the truth?
14348Ai n''t it time someone showed up the moral ravages war commits on our best young men?
14348And Uncle Henry said here was a quart bottle of his peach brandy, going on eight year old, and would I take it along back with me and try it?
14348And did he show the ravages of time?
14348And do n''t you think, yourself, it''s a lot better fiddle than Dave''s old one?''
14348And does Timmins want to throw in with us?
14348And does n''t she ever play anything cheerful?"
14348And even if they could rustle their own feed, what kind of a business is it where you could only ship once in a lifetime?
14348And he wanted to bring his assistant, Professor Pennypacker; and could I put them up?
14348And high time, too, because he was now in line for general manager, and how would it look for him to be mixed up in brawls?
14348And how about taking him on at the Arrowhead, where he could begin a new life?
14348And how about that lady anyway?
14348And how is his affair coming on?
14348And how would you get a branding iron on a whale, and what good would it do you?
14348And just because the skunk happened to be superbly gifted in this respect, was that any reason to ostracize him?
14348And sheep?
14348And was Ben keeping up his exercise?
14348And was n''t it fine to stand there and watch them bottles laugh their heads off at this food profiteer?"
14348And was n''t it the greatest accident that ever happened to anybody?
14348And was n''t it worth postponing my wedding for, so we could have some music?''
14348And what chance would he have with women when they was told how he regarded children?
14348And what did one do now-- if anything?
14348And what does one do in such a case?"
14348And what does the Government do?
14348And what had Ed expected, anyway?
14348And who knows what might happen?
14348And why would n''t she?
14348And would it be important if true?
14348And would you have wondered when he sifts in a couple days later and makes me a cold offer of sixty dollars a head for this choice livestock?
14348And would you think that this poor, simple- minded old rancher would be any match for their wiles?
14348And, to make it worse, had n''t she laid out a wrong color of socks with his lavender tie?
14348Any one else?
14348Anything wrong with it?"
14348Anyway, when he begun to think he was n''t meant for this art, who steps in but this same director that had made such a beast of himself with Vida?
14348Are you losing your mind?
14348Are you really still maundering about that?
14348As how?
14348Because why?
14348Because why?
14348Because, going to work at such- and- such a place, this here fatal feeling made''em think one place was no worse than another; so why not stick here?
14348Beryl Mae held her glass up to the light and said,"After all, does anything in life really matter?"
14348But Aunt Mollie said, then, how about some prime young pork tenderline?
14348But did you ever see one work after the man got it outside, where he needed it?
14348But had he been cross to her, as most men would of been?
14348But what about the other side of these same stories?
14348But, no; Julia just thought all water ought to be analyzed on general principles, and would n''t I have a sample of ours sent off at once?
14348Can you imagine her wishing to flaunt such a thing?''
14348Did n''t it show guile of their kind?
14348Did n''t the best cowboy now on the pay roll wear a derby hat and ride a motorcycle by preference?
14348Did you see the way he tried to switch the laugh over on to us, and me with his trusty check right here in my hand?
14348Did you thank the lady, Dave?''
14348Do n''t I know a thing or two?
14348Do n''t you see how they all try to get away from you?
14348Do you get that?
14348Do you think a mob will be very long blaming me for a hand in it?
14348Ed says no; this is far enough to tell him for his own good not to be such a bore; an''Ben says how is he a bore?
14348Ed says, what''s the matter-- couldn''t he get to copy the report?
14348Ever see a moving- picture mother that had a chance to be happy for more than the first ten feet of film?
14348Fire in her voice?
14348Floud?''
14348Gale?"
14348Had Homer the shadow of an excuse?
14348Had I ever seen a hog that thought any other hog was good enough to associate with him?
14348Had he looked for some verses of poetry about his accident, or a novel?
14348Had n''t I noticed how common cows got paunchy and how well the fat was distributed on the pure- breds?
14348Had n''t he run away from a good home in Iowa when he was sixteen, account of being the oldest of seven?
14348Had n''t he watched it for hours?
14348Had n''t she been reading all her life about champagne being served at wedding breakfasts?
14348Had n''t she combed out the county hospital and poor farm to get a haying crew?
14348Have I done something stupid?
14348He answered they would wait till my hay was garnered-- that''s the pretty word he used-- and could he also bring his mouthless chit with him?
14348He could have put only all over the rock and it would still have been thirty- two miles, would n''t it?
14348He could n''t understand this, because how could they know he was the one that caused all that trouble in San Francisco?
14348He said why did n''t Minna take up something else?
14348He says it''s an office sofa and where in something is the red plush one that belongs to the set?
14348He wanted to know what Ben was promoted to by this time, and was he looking as hearty as ever?
14348His old college chums all love him too-- a boy makes so many valuable friends in college, do n''t you think?
14348Homer said what good would all that money do him?
14348How can one?"
14348How could so misused a remnant cope with the manifold cares of the long- harried Arrowhead ranch?
14348How did they get their bread from day to day?
14348How did you get her?
14348How many men can you take?
14348How was Ben, anyway?
14348How, then, did the young woman open the trunk?
14348I again lead the dangerous beast--"What you humouring that old skate for?"
14348I have to protect my honour, do n''t I?"
14348I reminded Ben that Ed had never yet done anything you''d think a human being would do, so why expect him to begin now, when he had abundant leisure?
14348I said was he really bent on it?
14348I said was it possible?
14348I said yes, yes, and undoubtedly, and all very interesting, and well and good in its place; but, really, was this its place?
14348I told you about whales, did n''t I?
14348I wonder if Bugs Plunkett ever looks at that writing now and blushes for his lost angel face?
14348I wonder what that funny little mite of hers will say when she sees her to- night?
14348I would say:"Come on, now; what about this Herman Wagner that paints wheedling messages across the face of Nature?"
14348I''d be in a hell of a fix-- wouldn''t I?''
14348In the picture captioned"Why Did You Make My Mamma Cry?"
14348Is he vigorous and hearty, or does office work seem to be sapping his vitality?
14348Is n''t there something interesting about that?"
14348Is that the only sign of Herman''s you saw?
14348It had once been mere star dust, had n''t it?
14348It seems they tried her in one of these"Should a Wife Forgive?"
14348It would be slow music and make you think of the quiet old churchyard where your troubles would be o''er; and why not get there as soon as possible?
14348Lew Wee said that was just the thing; and would the cousin come over and help him in case the animal would be timid and not want to go in the sack?
14348Life was full of danger for the best of us, with people dropping off every day or so; and why should Ed have hoped to be above the common lot?
14348Lydia says"Oh, dear, wo n''t he ever stop his silly chatter about his stupid old trunk?"
14348Make her up for this part, understand?
14348Manuel is tickled and says what does Herman think of paying him?
14348Many a night her pillow had been wet with tears on this account, and did I believe in any of these remedies for reducing?
14348Me?
14348Me?
14348Me?
14348Me?
14348Me?
14348Must n''t they have fallen from the hook?"
14348Now is n''t that a perfectly darling plan?"
14348Now what did I do with those wretched old keys?"
14348Once more I--"What I never been able to figger out-- how can a dame like that fool herself beyond a certain age?
14348Pretty soon they''d have every last organic remains put into a catalogue, the whole set complete and unbroken-- and then what?
14348Reasons?
14348Shall I still survive?
14348She had hoped to give Dulcie a good time, but how can she sully herself with any of our young people that have took up Bohemianism?
14348She says why ever did Homer do such a monstrous thing?
14348She''d say to me:"He does care frightfully about himself, does n''t he?"
14348So I says:''Why did n''t you fight back?
14348So what about it?
14348So why not let it rest?
14348Still and all, why give everyone a chance but cattle raisers?
14348Such a good what?"
14348Then Ed says:"Say, Ben, what''s the matter with you, anyway?
14348Then Shelley says to him:"Say, kid, do you like your curls?"
14348They never look for trouble; then why force it on their notice?
14348Tilton will be there, wo n''t he?"
14348Was it honest, genuine, open?
14348Was n''t he the heedless Hugo?
14348Was n''t it being told to me by the happiest woman I ever set eyes on?
14348Was n''t that the confession of a weakling?
14348Was n''t that the party with hostile views about children?
14348Was n''t that the truth?
14348Was n''t that what you wanted the trunk open for-- to get the keys?
14348Was n''t we all offensive at those times?
14348Was she not kindness itself?
14348Was she not, in truth, just a shade too kind?
14348Was she right; or was n''t she?
14348Was that any way to talk about a fellowman-- not to say a first cousin?"
14348Was that so?
14348Well, it had got so I hired everything that come along; so why not Herman?
14348Well, who persuaded them?
14348What about him?
14348What about the village good boy that goes through war''s purifying flame and comes back home to be the town tough?
14348What about this mere shattered bit of flotsam from the world welter?
14348What could any one of said?
14348What did you think he was going to do with it?''
14348What do you know about that?
14348What do you think of that?
14348What else had we come there for?
14348What else?
14348What is the man talking of?
14348What next?
14348What next?
14348What of that?"
14348What then?
14348What think?"
14348What was your fists for?''
14348What woe will she put upon its unsuspecting dwellers, even as she has ruined four other homes this day?
14348What would have to happen to a person before he''d call it serious?
14348What''s got into you to keep dragging that accident up out of the dead past that way?
14348What''s in the least absurd about that?''
14348When I again uttered"Well?"
14348Who told you he was?"
14348Why did n''t I think of it before?
14348Why did n''t he have it right there?
14348Why insanely push thirty- two miles on in a country where miles mean something serious?
14348Why insult the poor thing?
14348Why not begin cautiously with a series of why s?
14348Why not pick out a good glen that parties can slip off to for a quiet evening without breaking up a whole week?
14348Why pinch pennies?"
14348Why should I terrorize him?
14348Why will men at critical junctures stoop to such trickery?
14348Will you look at that mess of clouds?
14348Would n''t that fade you?
14348You can see she''s a great actress; look at that one:''Why Did You Make My Mamma Cry?''
14348You got to have a foundation to build on, have n''t you?"
14348of Wagner''s Sylvan Glen?
14348of a sylvan glen, why should he have gone thirty- two miles farther for one?
14348or"What''s your favourite flower?"
18901But how about me?
18901How will these women dress? 18901 And why not? 18901 But where is the fair woman who will say that a failure to emerge from a dressmaker''s hands in a successful costume is not a tragedy? 18901 CHAPTER IV THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CLOTHES Has the reader ever observed the effect of clothes upon manners? 18901 Did not the strong red, green, and blue of Napoleon''s time follow the delicate sky- blues, rose and sunset- yellows of the Louis? 18901 Have you been in Russia? 18901 Have you chanced to ask yourself why the outline of the individual members of the chorus was so lacking in charm, and Madame Farrar''s so delightful? 18901 Have you seen with your own eyes any phase of the violent contrasts which at last have caused the worm to turn? 18901 If it is a ball- room, and the occasion a costume- ball, is it done in light or dark colours, and what is the prevailing tone? 18901 If striped, horizontal or perpendicular? 18901 If you ask,Where do fashions come from,--why''periods''?"
18901If your gown is white and your object to create line, can you see how you defeat your purpose by wearing anything but white slippers or shoes?
18901In this, does she outrank her less accomplished sisters?
18901No wonder Poiret, the Paris dressmaker, seized upon Bakst as designer( or was it Bakst who seized upon Poiret?).
18901Our first impression of this type was in Paris, at the Russian Church on Christmas( or was it some other holy day?)
18901The catechism of good dressing might be given in some such form as this: Are you fat?
18901They are very natty, are n''t they?
18901Were materials flowered, striped, or plain?
18901Were velvets, satins or silks worn, or all three?
18901What of those betwixt and between?
18901Will they be given military uniforms short of skirt or even skirtless?
18901_ From an Early Victorian Fashion Paper._"When was that''simple time of our fathers''when people were too sensible to care for fashions?
17268What are the little things?
17268What?
17268What?
17268Why did not the good God give me a voice like Vittorio or a skilled hand like Angelo?
17268; at the present rate of increase, when will Canada catch up to Great Britain?
17268APPENDIX THE FIRST CHRISTMAS TREE Did you ever hear the story of the first Christmas tree?
17268And as for myself, have I ever forced my own subjects to do anything against their religion even when I had all power and authority over them?
17268Can you tell me now what place on the St. Lawrence would be taken as the western terminus of the new railway?
17268Did they have much influence on public opinion?
17268Do you see now why a railway was needed from Quebec to Halifax?
17268Do you suppose they came?
17268Do you think that is usual?
17268Do you want to know why Florence Nightingale was the one person out of all the people of England to be asked to go?
17268For example: How would you attempt to destroy the fort?
17268For what period are they elected?
17268How and by whom are they elected?
17268How and when did this custom originate?
17268How can children be brought to appreciate the difficulties connected with the question of Clergy Reserves?
17268How can the preceding conditions and the terms of the Magna Charta be brought home to a class?
17268How did she do it?
17268How do they raise the money needed for their work?
17268How do we manage about them?
17268How do we send our goods to Europe now in winter?
17268How is the board organized for the conduct of business?
17268How is the board rendered continuous?
17268How would the people here ship their goods in the winter?
17268If you were a railway contractor and had to build the road without thinking of anything but getting it done, what route would you be likely to follow?
17268In what wars did the French fight against the Iroquois?
17268Is it the airship, giving man the conquest of the last element still unmastered?
17268Is there anything on the map to show this?
17268Now, how did he accomplish his desire, without paying the penalty?
17268Now, how would a moist, mild climate affect agriculture in England?
17268Now, what place on the St. Lawrence would be chosen as the other terminus?
17268Now, what routes would they be likely to take in going to Canada?
17268On what did English kings base their claim to be the overlords of Scotland?
17268Such a question as"Did Champlain do right in taking the side of the Hurons against the Iroquois, or even in taking sides at all?"
17268THE COLOURS OF THE FLAG What is the blue on our flag, boys?
17268THE INFORMATION STAGE There are several questions that children soon come to ask:"When?"
17268The following questions may serve as an outline of study for all the political bodies by which we are governed: 1. Who compose the board of trustees?
17268The question for the class is:"What would you do in the circumstances?"
17268The question for the pupil here is"Why?"
17268Were there many people living in Upper Canada fifty years ago?
17268What Act gave the people of Ontario this method of holding land?
17268What advantage can accrue to you from denying me this?
17268What do you notice about the coast line in comparison to the size of the Island?
17268What duties have they to fulfil?
17268What explorers of North America were trying to find a way to China and India?
17268What is a possible future for the Western Provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan?
17268What is one occupation the people would follow?
17268What is the red on our flag, boys?
17268What is the white on our flag, boys?
17268What led the French to place their soldiers down as far as the Montmorenci?
17268What methods of travel could they use?
17268What might have been the state of North America to- day, if the Rocky Mountains had run along the East coast, instead of along the West?
17268What part of our country has the same latitude?
17268What powers do they possess?
17268What route could be taken to prevent any trouble of that kind?
17268What were the chief taxes?
17268What were the probable routes they would follow?
17268When surpass her?
17268Where may Wolfe land his soldiers?
17268Where would the money come from?
17268Which explorer did the most for Canada, Champlain or La Salle?
17268Which of the reasons we have mentioned would make them want to keep as far from the border as they could?
17268Why are certain places fitted for certain manufactures?
17268Why should they build the railway just to the St. Lawrence?
17268Will Vancouver outstrip San Francisco?
17268Will Winnipeg become a more important city than Montreal?
17268With what result?
17268_ T._--Do you know what happens to the St. Lawrence every winter?
17268_ T._--How can we ship by rail?
17268_ T._--How far?
17268_ T._--How would she defend herself?
17268_ T._--Is there any other reason, one connected with the cost?
17268_ T._--Isn''t she dependent on any other nation at all?
17268_ T._--Suppose Britain had trouble with any other country that might be a cause of war, would her position make any difference to her?
17268_ T._--The next point to think about is-- How had Canada been shipping her goods across the sea in winter before this?
17268_ T._--Then the climate of Britain ought to be the same?
17268_ T._--Well, why did the people not continue doing that, instead of wanting to build a railway of their own?
17268_ T._--What are they built of to- day?
17268_ T._--What are they built of?
17268_ T._--What else would they do?
17268_ T._--What is the climate of Labrador?
17268_ T._--What is the next way they might think of?
17268_ T._--Where does she get that?
17268_ T._--Where would she get her ships?
17268_ T._--Where would that be?
17268_ T._--Where would that be?
17268_ T._--Where would the road go then?
17268_ T._--Which country, Canada or Britain, would be the most interested in the military considerations?
17268_ T._--Why do you say"too near"?
17268_ T._--Why do you think Halifax was chosen as one terminus?
17268_ T._--Why?
17268_ T._--Why?
17268_ T._--With which countries?
17268_ T._--Would that be the cheapest line to build?
17268_ T._--Would the people build it along that line?
17268_ T._--Would they take that way?
17268_ T._--Would this have any effect on the life and occupations of the people?
17268_ Teacher._--Did you notice the two places that were to be connected by the road?
17268and"Where?"
17268and"Where?"
17268and"Who?"
17268and"Who?"
17268just as in the preceding stage the questions were"When?"
14841A certain high personage,--"a certain peeress,"--"a certain illustrious foreigner,"--what do these words ever precede, but defamation?
14841A step beyond decorum,has a soft sound, but what does it express?
14841And the serpent writhing in her beak?
14841But I am sorry for you; for if you are so well acquainted with life at your age, what will become of you when the illusion is still more dissipated? 14841 Here,"said he,"we are all now together-- but when, and where, shall we meet again?
14841If thou regret''st thy youth,_ why live_? 14841 My dear Lord,"How is your gout?
14841The ninth day of the month, you say?
14841What is well? 14841 Why?"
14841Wie soil ich dem, den ich so lang begleitet, Nun etwas Traulich''s in die Ferne sagen? 14841 You have been here before!--How came you never to mention this to me?
14841You must have heard,he says,"that I am going to Greece-- why do you not come to me?
14841''Where,''said he,''shall we be in a year?''
14841''Why, how now, saucy Tom?''
14841*****"Matter is eternal, always changing, but reproduced, and, as far as we can comprehend eternity, eternal; and why not_ mind_?
14841--"Not understand me?"
14841--"Was it man or woman said so?"
14841----, Lydia''White Lady of Avenel''''White Lady of Colalto''''Who killed John Keats?''
14841: thus are they supported, and how are they recruited?
14841A frequent question of his to Dr. Kennedy was,--"What, then, you think me in a very bad way?"
14841After these were finished, he exclaimed,"You perceive that bird?"
14841Afterward he asks,"Shall he fling dirt and receive_ rose- water_?"
14841Allow me to ask our spiritual pastors and masters, is this training up a child in the way which he should go?
14841Allow me to ask, are you not fighting for the emancipation of Ferdinand VII., who certainly is a fool, and, consequently, in all probability a bigot?
14841Also,''Why was I not aware of this sooner?''
14841And are the English schools or the English women the more corrupt for all this?
14841And can not you relieve the beggar when your fathers have made him such?
14841And from what does the_ spear_ of Achilles derive its interest?
14841And how are they taught?
14841And how can I refuse it if they_ will_ fight?--and especially if I should happen ever to be in their company?
14841And is all this because nature is niggard or savage?
14841And is not Phillips''s translation of it in the mouths of all your women?
14841And is this general system of persecution to be permitted; or is it to be believed that with such a system the Catholics can or ought to be contented?
14841And now that we have heard the Catholic repreached with envy, duplicity, licentiousness, avarice-- what was the Calvinist?
14841And what are your remedies?
14841And why?
14841Are not his Odes the amatory praises of a boy?
14841Are the very laws passed in their favour observed?
14841Are these the remedies for a starving and desperate populace?
14841Are we aware of our obligations to a mob?
14841Ariosto''s is not an_ epic_ poem; and if poets are to be_ classed_ according to the_ genus_ of their poetry, where is he to be placed?
14841Ask the traveller what strikes him as most poetical, the Parthenon, or the rock on which it stands?
14841Bowles!--what say you to such a supper with such a woman?
14841But Mr. Bowles says,"Why bring your ship off the stocks?"
14841But am I to be told that the"nature"of Attica would be_ more_ poetical without the"art"of the Acropolis?
14841But are the Catholics properly protected in Ireland?
14841But are these the doctrines of the Church of England, or of churchmen?
14841But he answered,''They are too large-- why do n''t they show their colours?''
14841But how?
14841But if he has been so charged, and truly-- what then?
14841But of what"_ order_,"according to the poetical aristocracy, are Burns''s poems?
14841But should I, for a youthful frolic, brand Mr. Bowles with a"libertine sort of love,"or with"licentiousness?"
14841But where is the Greek fleet?
14841But, after all, would not some of us have been as great fools as Pope?
14841By the way, there has been a_ thirty years''war_ and a_ seventy years''war_; was there ever a_ seventy_ or a_ thirty years''peace_?
14841Can the church purchase a rood of land whereon to erect a chapel?
14841Can the officers deny this?
14841Can there be more_ poetry_ gathered into existence than in that wonderful creation of perfect beauty?
14841Can you commit a whole county to their own prisons?
14841Cromwell''s dragoons stalled their steeds in Worcester cathedral; was it less poetical as an object than before?
14841Did Mr. Bowles ever gaze upon the sea?
14841Did Mr. Ings"_ envy_"Mr. Phillips when he asked him,"How came your Pyrrhus to drive oxen and say, I am_ goaded_ on by love?"
14841Did any man, however,--will even Mr. Bowles himself,--rank Hughes and Fenton as poets above_ Pope_?
14841Did any painter ever paint the sea_ only_, without the addition of a ship, boat, wreck, or some such adjunct?
14841Did he envy Bolingbroke?
14841Did he envy Gay the unparalleled success of his"Beggar''s Opera?"
14841Did he envy Swift?
14841Does Mr. Bowles know how to revenge himself upon a hackney- coachman, when he has overcharged his fare?
14841Does Mr. Bowles sit down to write a minute and laboured life and edition of a great poet?
14841Does Mr. Gell translate from the Latin?
14841Does he anatomise his character, moral and poetical?
14841Does he present us with his faults and with his foibles?
14841Does he sneer at his feelings, and doubt of his sincerity?
14841Does he unfold his vanity and duplicity?
14841Else why do we live at all?
14841Has any human reader ever succeeded?
14841Has not the Scripture something upon"the lusting after a woman"being no less criminal than the crime?
14841Have the Irish Catholics the full benefit of trial by jury?
14841Have we nothing to gain by their emancipation?
14841He himself calls it a"divine comedy;"and why?
14841He one day asked his faithful servant, Tita, whether he thought of returning to Italy?
14841He spoke also of Greece, saying,''I have given her my time, my means, my health-- and now I give her my life!--what could I do more?
14841He was asked,"who that was?"
14841His poem is not an epic; then what is it?
14841How will you carry the bill into effect?
14841I do n''t know-- do you?
14841I do not know; and who does?
14841I have had, by desire of a Mr._ Jerostati_, to draw on Demetrius Delladecima( is it our friend in ultima analise?)
14841I opposed, and will ever oppose, the robbery of ruins from Athens, to instruct the English in sculpture; but why did I do so?
14841I said to Darvell,"How did you know this?"
14841If Mr. Bowles so readily forgets the virtues of others, why complain so grievously that others have a better memory for his own faults?
14841If Mr. Bowles will write"hasty pamphlets,"why is he so surprised on receiving short answers?
14841If his great charm be his_ melody_, how comes it that foreigners adore him even in their diluted translations?
14841If one of these fits come over me when we are in Greece, what shall I do?"
14841If you are disposed to relieve him at all, can not you do it without flinging your farthings in his face?
14841If you proceed by the forms of law, where is your evidence?
14841In Gray''s Elegy, is there an image more striking than his"shapeless sculpture?"
14841In the course of dinner, he said,"Lord Byron, did you know that, amongst the writers of addresses, was Whitbread himself?"
14841In the sublime of sacred poetry,"Who is this that cometh from Edom?
14841In what does the infinite superiority of"Falconer''s Shipwreck"over all other shipwrecks consist?
14841In what state of apathy have we been plunged so long, that now for the first time the house has been officially apprised of these disturbances?
14841Is Mr. Bowles a poet, or is he not?
14841Is Mr. Bowles aware to what such rummaging among"letters"and"stories"might lead?
14841Is a review to be devoted to the opinions of any_ one_ man?
14841Is a storm more poetical without a ship?
14841Is it bringing up infants to be men or devils?
14841Is it not poetry?
14841Is it solely from the legs, and the back, and the breast, and the human body, which they enclose?
14841Is it supposed that a brigade can be formed without them?
14841Is it the canal which runs between the palace and the prison, or the"Bridge of Sighs,"which connects them, that render it poetical?
14841Is it the"_ marble_"or the"_ waste,_"the_ artificial_ or the_ natural_ object?
14841Is not Sappho''s Ode on a girl?
14841Is not her"_ champaigne and chicken_"worth a forest or two?
14841Is not this play upon such words"a step beyond decorum"in a clergyman?
14841Is not this sublime and( according to Longinus) fierce love for one of her own sex?
14841Is not this the original of the far- famed--"''Tis distance lends enchantment to the view, And robes the mountain in its azure hue?"
14841Is not"Anacreon"taught in our schools?--translated, praised, and edited?
14841Is the plea of"not recollecting"such prominent facts to be admitted?
14841Is the sea itself a more attractive, a more moral, a more poetical object, with or without a vessel, breaking its vast but fatiguing monotony?
14841Is the"Atys"of Catullus_ licentious_?
14841Is there any harm in negus?
14841Is there any thing in nature like this marble, excepting the Venus?
14841Is there not blood enough upon your penal code, that more must be poured forth to ascend to Heaven and testify against you?
14841Is this fair play?
14841Is this harsh?
14841Is this the frame of mind and of memory with which the illustrious dead are to be approached?
14841Is this the religion of the Gospel before the time of Luther?
14841It does not depend upon low themes, or even low language, for Fielding revels in both;--but is he ever_ vulgar_?
14841It has been asked, in another place, Why do not the rich Catholics endow foundations for the education of the priesthood?
14841Mr. Bowles makes the chief part of a ship''s poesy depend upon the"_ wind:_"then why is a ship under sail more poetical than a hog in a high wind?
14841Mr. Bowles was not always a clergyman; and when he was a very young man, was he never seduced into as much?
14841Must it not vary according to circumstances, and according to the subjects to be criticised?
14841Now that this should not act_ separately_, as well as jointly, who can pronounce?
14841On coming again to himself, he asked Fletcher, who had then returned into the room,"whether he had sent for Dr. Thomas, as he desired?"
14841Petrarch the_ sonneteer_: it is true that some of his Canzoni are_ not less_ esteemed, but_ not_ more; who ever dreams of his Latin Africa?
14841Schools do you call them?
14841Setting aside the palpable injustice and the certain inefficiency of the bill, are there not capital punishments sufficient in your statutes?
14841Some persons have compared the Catholics to the beggar in Gil Bias: who made them beggars?
14841The COLUMNS of Cape Colonna, or the Cape itself?
14841The authors of the"Rejected Addresses"have ridiculed the sixteen or twenty"first living poets"of the day, but do they"envy"them?
14841The bigots are not to be conciliated; and, if they were-- are they worth it?
14841The rocks at the foot of it, or the recollection that Falconer''s_ ship_ was bulged upon them?
14841There is a letter also of two lines from a gentleman in asterisks, who, it seems, is a poet of"the highest rank:"--who_ can_ this be?
14841There is an imperious necessity for some national fund, and that speedily, otherwise what is to be done?
14841These letters are in existence, and have been seen by many besides myself; but would his_ editor_ have been"_ candid_"in even alluding to them?
14841Things must have had a beginning, and what matters it_ when_ or_ how_?
14841We may be answered that these were his friends-- true: but does_ friendship_ prevent_ envy_?
14841Well, how did he describe it?"
14841Were Petrarch to be ranked according to the"order"of his compositions, where would the best of sonnets place him?
14841What can it give us but years?
14841What does he mean?
14841What is England without Ireland, and what is Ireland without the Catholics?
14841What is there of_ human_, be it poetry, philosophy, wit, wisdom, science, power, glory, mind, matter, life, or death, which is"_ invariable_?"
14841What made Socrates the greatest of men?
14841What makes a regiment of soldiers a more noble object of view than the same mass of mob?
14841What makes the poetry in the image of the"_ marble waste of Tadmor_,"or Grainger''s"Ode to Solitude,"so much admired by Johnson?
14841What proved Jesus Christ the Son of God hardly less than his miracles?
14841What resources have been wasted?
14841What revenge?
14841What rhubarb, senna, or"what purgative drug can scour that fancy thence?"
14841What says Paley?
14841What should we say to an editor of Addison, who cited the following passage from Walpole''s letters to George Montagu?
14841What talents have been lost by the selfish system of exclusion?
14841What then has ruined it?
14841What was it attracted the thousands to the launch?
14841What was the necessity of a prayer?
14841What will any reader or auditor, out of the nursery, say to such namby- pamby as"Lines written at the Foot of Brother''s Bridge?"
14841When death is a relief, and the only relief it appears that you will afford him, will he be dragooned into tranquillity?
14841When such was the veneration shown towards him by strangers, what must have been the feelings of his near associates and attendants?
14841Where is Dante?
14841While they sneer at his Windsor Forest, have they ever seen any thing of Windsor except its_ brick_?
14841Who are enriched with the spoils of their ancestors?
14841Why do you not permit them to do so?
14841Why is this?
14841Why should not the mind act with and upon the universe, as portions of it act upon, and with, the congregated dust called mankind?
14841Why talk of"Cibber''s testimony"to his licentiousness?
14841Why were the military called out to be made a mockery of, if they were to be called out at all?
14841Why would Mr. Bowles edite?
14841Why, then, is Mr. Gilchrist to be singled out"as having set the first example?"
14841Why?
14841Will Mr. Bowles tell us that the poetry of an aqueduct consist in the_ water_ which it conveys?
14841Will that which could not be effected by your grenadiers, be accomplished by your executioners?
14841Will the famished wretch who has braved your bayonets be appalled by your gibbets?
14841Will you erect a gibbet in every field, and hang up men like scarecrows?
14841Would"the comer"be poetical without his"_ dyed garments?_"which strike and startle the spectator, and identify the approaching object.
14841You would not have had me leave him in the street with his family, would you?
14841[ Footnote 1: Of these there is one ranked with the others for his SONNETS, and_ two_ for compositions which belong to_ no class_ at all?
14841_ I should like to know_ where_ our life_ is_ safe, either here or any where else?
14841_ Then_, indeed, the lights are rekindled for a moment; but who can be sure that imagination is not the torch- bearer?
14841_ This is envy;_ but where does Pope show a sign of the passion?
14841_ Who_ could come forth clearer from an invidious inquest on a life of fifty- six years?
14841and her own description too?
14841and of the still all Greek and glorious monuments of her exquisitely artificial genius?
14841and restore Sherwood Forest as an acceptable gift to the crown, in its former condition of a royal chase and an asylum for outlaws?
14841and the helmet and the mail worn by Patroclus, and the celestial armour, and the very brazen greaves of the well- booted Greeks?
14841and then omit the good qualities which might, in part, have"covered this multitude of sins?"
14841and then plead that"_ they did not occur to his recollection_?"
14841and what could you be doing in a place where no one would remain a moment longer than they could help it?"
14841and who will ever lay down Pope, unless for the original?
14841and yet, in_ fact_, what do they convey?
14841and''My hour is come!--I do not care for death-- but why did I not go home before I came here?''
14841because Hope recurs to Memory, both false-- but-- but-- but-- but-- and this_ but_ drags on till-- what?
14841both_ much_ undoubtedly; but without the vessel, what should we care for the tempest?
14841depopulate and lay waste all around you?
14841even of Milton''s_ poetical_ character, or, indeed, of_ English_ poetry in general?
14841how came you to make the Woods of Madeira?"
14841is he the less now a pious or a good man, for not having always been a priest?
14841is it come to this?
14841of the Temple of Theseus?
14841or does Mr. Bowles drink negus?
14841or how is the difficulty removed?
14841or is it the worse for being_ hot_?
14841or mankind ungrateful?
14841or rather, how are you?
14841or that three thousand pounds would be sufficient?
14841or was there even a DAY''S_ universal_ peace?
14841or will you proceed( as you must to bring this measure into effect) by decimation?
14841or, in the poem of the Shipwreck, is it the storm or the ship which most interests?
14841place the county under martial law?
14841suicide-- and why?
14841that religion which preaches"Peace on earth, and glory to God?"
14841to what does this amount?
14841what do you mean?"
14841what the h-- ll are_ you_?
14841with Dante and the others?
14841with_ dyed garments_ from Bozrah?"
10867Ah!--And who saved you from the shark?
10867Ah!--do_ they_ smoke?
10867And now where shall we put those?
10867And so you''ll give me up, old friend, whose life_ I_ saved?
10867And suppose you had caused the recapture of a French officer?
10867And what are they?--farmers?
10867And what do you think of this pipe?
10867And when may I reach the coast?
10867And who are you?
10867And who''s the bridegroom?
10867And why am I to take your name?
10867And you are single?
10867And your name?
10867Are n''t you_ ever_ going back to it, Sir?
10867Are you ready?
10867At the very other end of the town?
10867But suppose the king ordered him?
10867But your neck?
10867Can you write, Elizabeth?
10867Daniel? 10867 Do I understand you?"
10867Do women kneel to you when they ask the pardon of those they love?
10867Do you hear me?
10867Do you know whom this is for, Mr. Manuel? 10867 Do you love Cordier?"
10867Do you remember faces, Mistress?
10867Do you remember the poor sailor- boy Daniel?
10867Do you remember them for six years?
10867Does he love you?
10867E.K.,therefore, must be considered as pretty high authority; and what says"E.K."?
10867Elizabeth, do you love this prisoner?
10867Elizabeth, is it so? 10867 Exile?
10867For Madeline; is it a pretty view?
10867Give it to Bertha?
10867Go there, angel?--why?
10867Have you ever had a lover?
10867Have you learned when the vessel sails?
10867He is so handsome?
10867Home?
10867How thief?
10867How your wife?
10867How?
10867Hum,--so you''ve lots of lovers?
10867I have n''t the least idea that I have caused a recapture; but suppose so?
10867I suppose, Mistress, if he did not come back for six years, you would forget him,--wouldn''t you?
10867I think he ought to have got there by this time; do n''t you, Sir?
10867I think, Doome,--they call you Doome, do n''t they? 10867 I?--who but I?
10867Is it because you think I am a child that you say so?
10867Is that his name?
10867Is there not? 10867 Is this your answer?"
10867Law, sailor- friend,(_ I_ do n''t know your name,) why?
10867Mrs. Morris,he said,"may I be permitted to speak a word here?"
10867My wife and I,said the other, laughing"You, comrade?
10867No?
10867Not going to marry me?
10867Nothing?
10867Oh, Sir, can I tell her you are well?
10867Oh, is she a grand lady?
10867Oh, then, may I go? 10867 Really for her, Elizabeth?"
10867Rob you of your wife?
10867So you can trust your secret with me,--a woman?
10867So, Daniel is there, is he? 10867 Stop here?"
10867Stranger? 10867 Suppose the French took Rügen?"
10867That is my wish,said Pauline;"is n''t it yours, Adolphus?"
10867The silver teapot--"_ My_ sil-- my aunt''s silver teapot?"
10867Then you go alone?
10867Thief?
10867To Chalons?
10867To send them back again?
10867We?--who?
10867Well, suppose they did?
10867Well, to me, one wife or another,--and she is a nice girl,--and, friend Daniel, where shall we go?
10867Well,--yes,--good- bye, I suppose,--and-- and promise me one thing?
10867What do you mean, Elizabeth?
10867What do you mean, young man?
10867What do you mean, young man?
10867What do you mean?--tomorrow? 10867 What is that price?"
10867What is the matter? 10867 What shall I do to move you?
10867What shall I say? 10867 What will you have?"
10867What, little one? 10867 Where are you going, Bertha?"
10867Where now?
10867Where would you keep_ him_, then?
10867Where?
10867Who are ye?
10867Who is this person?
10867Whom is it for, Elizabeth?
10867Why do you weep?
10867Why harsh?
10867Why? 10867 Will you take care of it, Doome?"
10867Wish he had?
10867Wo n''t you ever see it again?
10867Yes, and then suppose he did n''t care for you?
10867You are Daniel, are you?
10867You are Daniel, are you?
10867You know Madame Kurrig''s?
10867You might write--"A letter?"
10867You queer little Doome!--Are any of them rich?
10867You?
10867Your sister, Sir?
10867_ But Miss Wimple''s Hoop,--will you never come to that? 10867 _ But, by your leave, where was this''silken wonder''when your unhandy heroine was casting about her for a substitute for the quilted petticoat_?"
10867--Is the breakfast- hour past?
10867--or shall he, in holy despair, throw his life away on Austrian bayonets?
10867Am I ill?
10867Am I mistaken?
10867Am I not in earnest?
10867And shall I let you write to her?
10867And should you say now,--just speaking off- hand,--that two hundred and fifty dollars would be money enough to repair them?
10867And while this can be said, what has Chalons, or any other spot on earth, that it should lure her into rest?
10867Are there not India- rubber rings?
10867Are there not corals?
10867Are we, then, salamanders?
10867Are you afraid to leap that fence?
10867Are you afraid to swim that river?
10867Are you going to take your mother along with you?"
10867As he was, she beheld him now;--was it safe for her to sit there gazing at that likeness?
10867As perfect a whole as any of its parts, must not the universe have a definable outline or shape,--one to which nothing amorphous can possibly belong?
10867Besides, how should she get the money for the check?--to whom dare she confess herself in possession of it?
10867But have we not the whole family of carminatives?
10867But how should she ask it of her child?
10867But is not Mr. Cushing''s anxiety misdirected, and wilfully so, in seeking the material for its forebodings of danger to the Union in the Free States?
10867Can it be said that we are not fit to decide upon a tax, yet are fit to decide our fate for all the mysterious future?
10867Can not Truth comfort her?"
10867Can you not see that I never could have come here to plead for a bad man''s life?
10867Could she, then, better afford to weep than to rejoice with him?
10867Did I collar you, Dr. Slop?
10867Did I smash the instruments beyond repair?
10867Did not a kind Providence vouchsafe to us a Daffy?
10867Did the immortal Godfrey live and die in vain?
10867Did you mean it?
10867Do I dote, Don Bob?
10867Do I not know what a hell your''home''is?--and as for''safety,''shall I seek that among snakes?
10867Do I rave, Don Bob?
10867Do gases feed like air?
10867Do we gain much by reasoning from an assumption below the ken of the microscope to a conclusion above that of the telescope?
10867Do we live A charmèd life?
10867Do you carry your broken watch to a blacksmith or to a stone- mason to be mended?
10867Do you come from him,--Stephen Cordier?"
10867Do you know the Old Man of the Sea, of the Sea?
10867Do you not hear me?
10867Do you not know me now?
10867Do you not remember that I was particularly brilliant upon that occasion, and that I told my best story only three times in the course of the evening?
10867Do you not see that I am not your mother, nor Josephine, nor Adelaide, but only Sally Wimple, little Miss Wimple, of the bookstore?
10867Do you shrink from the dizzy height of yonder magnificent pine?
10867Do you think I have been idle, or that I have left anything undone that I could think to do?
10867Do you think that it is because I love myself better than him, that I have not bought his freedom at this price?
10867Does he know your errand here?"
10867Does he mean, that we have said hard things of our Southern brethren?
10867Fritz?"
10867Has Massachusetts ever mobbed an envoy or brutally assaulted a Senator of South Carolina?
10867Has a Rarey for vicious hobbies been a_ desideratum_ so long, and has such a benefactor of his species found his avatar at last in Mr. Cushing?
10867Has it worn me to see him, this year past, dying by inches?
10867Has reason caught the royal trick of the century, and left her throne?
10867Has the world among all its manifold sorrows any sorrow like unto this?
10867Have you met with that dreadful old man?
10867Have you never had a sorrow?
10867He spoke,--"What is this man to you?"
10867How can we sorrow more?
10867How could they who never saw him have discoursed so rightly upon virtue?"
10867How had this stranger managed to discover what was so securely hidden from the observation of ordinary eyes?
10867How would they punish you, if they learned the truth?"
10867If a war of race be justifiable in White against Black, why not in so- called Anglo- Saxons against Kelts?
10867If so, can there be infinite power, either material or spiritual?
10867If the universe is spherical because its molecules are, can the molecules compose any other than the spherical form?
10867Is it not a remarkable coincidence, that both his supposed dramatic counterparts have the same peculiarity?
10867Is she your mother?"
10867Is there a smirk, a villanous, unfeeling, disagreeable, cynical sneer, lurking under your confounded moustache?
10867Is there any truth in the statement of Don Lopez Cervantes Murillo, that Columbus was"brought up by hand"?
10867Is this house going to be the death of you?"
10867Is this intended as a depreciation of our free institutions, by showing the results to which they inevitably lead?
10867Is''believing and waiting''so hard to do?
10867It is simply,--Shall the course of the Republic be so directed as to subserve the interests of aristocracy or of democracy?
10867It was near closing- time; Miss Wimple said,"Now, Simon,_ will_ you go?"
10867It would seem that the only question to be asked with regard to the fitness of a man for being a director is-- Is he rich and respectable?
10867Madeline started, made a quick movement, as though to snatch the book, but checked herself with an effort, and said, with stern composure,--"Well?"
10867Manuel?"
10867May I go?
10867Must I go back to see him die?"
10867No doubt, now he had come back to Germany, he would soon learn German again, and speak it like a native;--eh, friend sailor?"
10867Now, dear Don, is not that an interesting piece of information?
10867Or dare you withstand God?
10867Or is it your intention to''omit the part of Hamlet by particular request_?''"
10867Or were those who had invited him_ negrophilists_,( to use Mr. Cushing''s favorite word,) and therefore deserving of such retribution?
10867P.P.S.--Do Spanish nurses use Daffy?
10867P.S.--Could you tell me the precise age at which Japanese children begin to learn the use of globes?
10867Perhaps we do not like the prospect?
10867Perhaps we love the picturesque charm with which novelists and poets have invested the old feudal order of things?
10867Shall I complain?
10867Shall he lift his streaming eyes to heaven with the resigned ejaculation,"Father, not my will, but thine, be done"?
10867Shall it be your Hollands, your Aromatic Scheidam, your Nantz, or our own proud Columbian article?
10867Shall our Territories be occupied by lord and serf, or by intelligent freemen?--by laborers who are owned, or by men who own themselves?
10867Shall we ever see the bits of that bridle?
10867Shall we find a more pointed warning of the worthlessness of success in the words than in the example of the orator?
10867Shall we go to Foray?
10867Should we call it foolish, if she told us her thoughts, and the events that take place daily in her quiet life?
10867So tell me,--how shall I serve you best?
10867So, when you ask me, Why did not Sally Wimple sooner think of her great- grandmother''s dress?
10867Tell her she must love you for my sake,--though there is no need to tell her.--Do you see?"
10867Tell me,--you are an old man,--have you no pity?
10867The indignant pedant justifies, and, pointing to his physiognomy, inquires,''What is this?''
10867The inquiry, Is it necessary?
10867The man who is now in power, and through whom alone the king can be reached, will grant him liberty"--"_ He will_?"
10867The question, Who is in office?
10867They went over to Ireland with Strongbow; one branch assumed( can the heralds tell us why?)
10867This behavior the burgomaster attributed to his own proper presence, and asked himself,--Could he survive degradation?
10867To one of his restless career what image of life more dreadful could have been presented than was in this testimony?
10867Was ever burgomaster in such a fix?
10867Was she not liberty and the joy of life to him?
10867Was this, then, a mere Baratarian banquet, a feast of reason, to which Mr. Cushing had been invited?
10867Were it otherwise, how could we explain the existence of courage in Frenchmen or Indians?
10867What can I do for you?"
10867What can we say more in its praise?
10867What concerns them is, How and in what interest are the offices administered?
10867What could you give?
10867What do you know, for instance, of lactation and the act of sucking, Sir?
10867What dost thou here, pale chemist, with thy brow Knotted with pains of thought, nigh hump- backed o''er Thy alembics and thy stills?
10867What further, Elizabeth?
10867What harm could I do you?--how could I offend or hurt you?
10867What have I not done?
10867What have I yet to do?
10867What if she answers you in the same mood?
10867What is a name, if it conveys no meaning to my mind?"
10867What is its figure?
10867What is the direction of that progress likely to be?
10867What is the lesson of the past?
10867What is the use of this kind of writing?
10867What seek they?
10867What sort of success was to be expected, now that he occupied the passage to royalty?
10867What will you do, Elizabeth?"
10867What, then, have been Mr. Cushing''s political antecedents, and what is his present creed?
10867Where do the possibilities of such faith end?
10867Whereupon,"he adds,"who did not busy his braine to hammer his devise out of this forge?"
10867Who has not shuddered over the description of that Arkansas duel, fought by two naked combatants, with pistol and bowie- knife, in a dark room?
10867Who sighing beholds her?
10867Who was he that found his cell- doors opened suddenly, and a messenger from out the courts of heaven there to guide his steps?
10867Who will accuse him because of this confidence?
10867Who''ll be the wiser, burgomaster?"
10867Who, then, is Menalcas?
10867Who, then, was Menalcas?
10867Whom?"
10867Why should he, the deceived, make the married pair happy, with one piece of cloth, several balls of wool, and a white rabbit?
10867Why should not they who are able to provide for every want of the body or soul be revered as Superior beings?
10867Why should railway- directors work for nothing for the stockholders?
10867Why unjust?
10867Why was she so cautious?
10867Why, do you think I should forget you, Fritz,--Mr. Fritz,--if you were my husband, and if you went away for six years?"
10867Why, what do you think I am here for?"
10867Will not this be better, Don Bob, than pistil and stamen and radicle?
10867Would it not be shameful, that war should leave us such memories as these, and peace bequeathe us only money and repose?
10867Yet where, amid the mausoleums of the world, is there carved an epitaph like that?
10867You are after-- what?
10867You are cold; are you hungry also?
10867You could endure exile for him?"
10867[ 1] But what does the"Cotton- Plant"understand by"equality"?
10867["But why,"you will ask,"did not Madeline write to Miss Wimple?"
10867and does not the"white- basis"sufficiently explain what is meant by the systematic depreciation of the colored race in Mr. Cushing''s letter?
10867are n''t you satisfied?
10867he said again,--"what are you to him?"
10867is it the prison?
10867murmurs the Voice,"that would reedit the works of the Almighty?"
10867not, Is it advantageous?
10867or why was this name specially selected by our poet to designate the man he disliked?
10867repeated she;"I say, what will you have, Madam?"
10867the_ very_ Daniel?"
10867well, suppose you only had one, when you were a poor girl, and he left you, what then?"
10867what!--given_ you_ up for_ any one_?"
10867which way am I to go?"
10867who is sufficient?"
10867who''d have thought it?"
10867why am I lorn?)
10867why do I love?)
10867why in her caution lurked so much of fear?
14888After all,I thought to myself,"why should n''t that girl have played at being a denizen of another sphere?
14888And Churchill?
14888And I may come with you?
14888And now...I asked, at last,"shall we ever meet again?"
14888And that reminds me,she went on,"--I mean the fact that the country is going to the dogs, as my husband[ You have n''t seen him anywhere, have you?
14888And those financial articles... in the_ Hour_... were they now?... 14888 And what will you_ do_?"
14888And when is our turn coming? 14888 And you want?"
14888And... what is the procedure?
14888And...?
14888Anybody seen Mr. Fox? 14888 Are you a popular author?"
14888Are you coming to the Grand?
14888Are you coming to this confounded flower show?
14888Been dropping money over him?
14888But de Mersch then?
14888But what has it to do with me?
14888But what to me?
14888But what''s to be done?
14888But who are the others that I am to provide with atmospheres?
14888But why do you tell me all this?
14888But you have really palmed yourself off on my aunt?
14888But, I say, what''s de Mersch''s little game?
14888Come, Arthur,she said, and then to him,"You have heard the news?"
14888Did n''t he start the rag called--?
14888Did n''t you, now?... 14888 Did n''t you,"he began categorically;"did n''t you advise me to buy those debentures of de Mersch''s?"
14888Did you hear him?
14888Do n''t you see that you are offering me the chance of a lifetime?
14888Do n''t you see? 14888 Do they want to get rid of you?"
14888Do you good, eh?
14888Do you know I do n''t like to hear that?
14888Do you not number it among your national characteristics?
14888Do you think I will enlist with you?
14888Do you think I would? 14888 Does she always talk like that?"
14888Dry work,he said;"but the simile''s just, is n''t it?"
14888Eh, what?
14888Eh; what?... 14888 Had not something better be done, Miss Granger?"
14888Has she found a companion to suit her yet?
14888Have I been unusually cranky lately?
14888He''s not in London,it answered, with a wink of the creased eyelids,"but, I suppose, now, Fox and de Mersch have n''t had a row, now, have they?"
14888How could I resist you?
14888How did you come to see it?
14888How did you know?
14888How in the world do you know what Fox said to me?
14888How would flirting with that man help you?
14888Hullo, Evans,Fox shouted across it,"just see that man from Grant''s, will you?
14888Hullo,he said, in an ostentatiously genial, after- dinner voice,"what are you two chaps a- talking about?"
14888I ca n''t retire with you,she said;"''it would look odd,''you''d say, would n''t you?"
14888I say,he said,"I say, what does it mean;_ what_ does it mean?"
14888If he''s the coming man, where do you come in?... 14888 In the name of God,"I shouted,"what do you work for-- what have you been plotting and plotting for, if not to enjoy your life at the last?"
14888In your''Boldero?''
14888Indeed,he answered, absently, and then, after a pause,"You know Callan?"
14888It is n''t good form, I suppose?
14888It means that?
14888It''s a little ridiculous, is n''t it?
14888It''s settled?
14888It_ is_ pretty_ strong_, is n''t it? 14888 Make a good sketch that, eh?"
14888Might I call on my aunt?
14888Oh, I am about my own business,she said,"I told you last night-- have you forgotten?"
14888Oh, I see,I answered--"and... and now?"
14888Oh, as for ideas--"Well?
14888Oh, so you do n''t dwell in amity?
14888Oh, you wo n''t frighten me to- day,I asserted,"not here, you know, and anyhow, why should you want to?"
14888Read Churchill''s letter?
14888Shall I throw it up?
14888So, she''s your sister?
14888Soane''s as bad as ever, then?
14888Splendidly timed, you see,she said,"do you observe my husband''s embarrassment?"
14888The Jenkins story?
14888Then I suppose I''m in the way?
14888There,I said, pointing toward it,"does n''t that suggest something to you?"
14888They really_ do_ talk about it then?
14888To inherit the earth?
14888To meet again?
14888Very often?
14888We work together still?
14888Well, and how''s Sussex?
14888What Churchill?
14888What are they doing there?
14888What blessed chance brought you here?
14888What could I say?
14888What does it all mean?
14888What have you to say against that?
14888What the devil,I said, hysterically--"what the devil do you play these tricks upon me for?"
14888What would happen if I stopped the presses?
14888What would happen if what?
14888What''s that to me?
14888What''s that?
14888What''s the matter with that thing?
14888What''s the matter?
14888What''s their specialty?
14888What''s up at the_ Hour?_"I''m sure I do n''t know,I answered curtly.
14888Where are you going to- night?
14888Where do you come from?
14888Where in the world do you come from?
14888Which way are you going?
14888Who starved her governess?
14888Who''s the next?
14888Why have you never been to see me?
14888Why not?
14888Why not?
14888Why should there be any fair play?
14888Why the...I began before it had well closed,"do you allow that thing to make love to you?"
14888Wo n''t it upset the apple cart to- morrow,he said, very loudly;"wo n''t it?"
14888Would you have him?
14888You absolutely refuse to pay any attention?
14888You are going to Halderschrodt''s?
14888You are not an American?
14888You are unattached?
14888You could get him to negotiate these for Etchingham?
14888You do n''t drink-- what''s your pet vice?
14888You do n''t happen to be one yourself? 14888 You have seen her?"
14888You know who Jenkins stands for?
14888You really wish to know where I come from?
14888You really wo n''t?
14888You see?
14888You want me to''ghost''for you?
14888You want?
14888You wo n''t tell me who you are?
14888You would like to be?
14888You would say''_ Habet_,''would n''t you?
14888You''ll do it, I suppose?
14888You''re a friend of Mr. Callan''s, are n''t you?
14888You-- you are n''t in_ earnest_?
14888You?
14888..."Oh-- Etchingham Granger....""Is he queer?"
14888And I was very happy-- it struck me as a pleasant sort of fooling...."I suppose you will let me know some day who you are?"
14888And Waring?
14888And if the girl wanted to be my sister and a Granger, why the devil should n''t she, so long as she would let me continue on this footing?
14888And it''s only too true that there''s hundreds of Slingsbys-- I''m not boring you, am I?"
14888And then?
14888And what of Churchill?
14888And where is it to- day?
14888And you are going to continue to-- to break up the universe?"
14888And... and it does n''t affect you... do n''t you_ see_?
14888As I was leaving the room, the idea occurred to me,"By the way, you do n''t know anything of a clique: the Dimensionists--_Fourth_ Dimensionists?"
14888Because I had the fever,_ hein_?"
14888Been doing old Red- Beard?
14888But I heard one of them ask:"Who''s that fellow?"
14888But I suppose it was not off your own bat?"
14888But come further off; stand beside me, and what does it look like?
14888But how could I tell him even the comprehensibles?
14888But how if she would never look upon me again?
14888But one ca n''t get at the innards of things.--No such luck-- no such luck, eh?"
14888But the question was, who was Jack?
14888But were they-- any one of them?
14888But what I do not understand is; what bearing that has upon-- upon the Fourth Dimension, I think you said?"
14888But what claim upon me does that give you?
14888But what does it lead to?...
14888But what is that to me?
14888But you would like him to-- to make a good fight for it, would n''t you?
14888Did I hear the words, did her lips merely form them?
14888Did I say anywhere that you were responsible?
14888Did I want to hear his news?
14888Did he still paint?
14888Did she know; had she put the power in my hand?
14888Dismiss me?...
14888Do n''t you see that de Mersch, and-- and all these people-- don''t really count?
14888Do n''t you see?
14888Do n''t you see?
14888Do n''t you understand?
14888Do n''t you understand?"
14888Do you think I could?...
14888Eh?
14888Eh?"
14888Go under as Fox went under?
14888Got deuced thick with that lot in the F. St. Germain-- some relation of yours, ai n''t they?
14888Granger?"
14888Gurnard?
14888Have a manuscript?"
14888Have n''t I seen... have n''t I seen it?"
14888He said, languidly-- almost protestingly,"What am I to do about the Duc de Mersch?"
14888He''s the coming man, is n''t he?"
14888Heard from the Central News yet?"
14888How could I tell him that I would not do the work, that I was too proud and all the rest of it?
14888I asked later,"he gives no sign of relenting?"
14888I asked my returning friend;"were they talking about me?"
14888I do n''t care, I''m off.... By- the- bye: What is he doing it for?
14888I hazarded,"as for ideas--?"
14888I say, what the deuce is up?
14888I suppose it''s too late to draw back?"
14888I thought you''d like it and, look here, Polehampton''s taken over the_ Bi- Monthly_; wants to get new blood into it, see?
14888I want....""You want?"
14888I wanted to know what''s your pet vice.... Wo n''t tell?
14888If I thwarted her-- she would... what would she do now?
14888If it resembles your particular hell upon earth, what is that to me?
14888If the grand duke does not get the money for his railway, the grand duke will be turned out of his-- what is it-- principality?
14888If you ca n''t sleep at night for thinking that you may be in the workhouse to- morrow-- like Slingsby?
14888If, now, I thwarted her, she would... what would she do?
14888Is it through him that this man committed suicide?
14888Is it true that he is at the bottom of all this mischief?
14888Is n''t he a stern brother?
14888Is n''t it so?"
14888Is n''t that so, General?"
14888It is not the thought of the harm you have done the others.... What are they-- what is Churchill who has fallen or Fox who is dead-- to you now?
14888It may be acquired, may n''t it?"
14888It seemed to say:"Why any noisy vigour?"
14888Jinks?"
14888Just for what?
14888Let me...."I pushed him roughly aside-- what business was it of his?
14888Lie on white sand, in the sun... blue sky and palm- trees-- eh?...
14888Money?
14888Mr. Gurnard may differ from me in points, but do n''t you see?..."
14888My God, what was honour to me if I could see nothing but her on earth?
14888Not really?"
14888One knows that it''s impossible, but what can one do?
14888Or was it passion?
14888Ought to shake out some of the supporters, eh?
14888Powers-- what''s powers to me?--or Greenland?
14888She had been all that to me... and to how many more?
14888She uttered my name and he gave the slightest of starts of annoyance-- a start that meant,"Why was n''t I warned before?"
14888Someone said:"Feel better now?"
14888Speak like him, look as he looks now.... Me?
14888Stand and look at them, conscious that they all dropped their voices instinctively when I came near them?
14888Tell you what: you take him out to lunch, eh?
14888That is the correct phrase, is it not?"
14888That was it, who was Jack?
14888The light of the sun?
14888The wind on the heath?
14888Then, of course, you have seen this famous Duc de Mersch?"
14888They''re only accidents; the accidents that--""That what?"
14888Throw the indispensable Soane overboard like a squeezed lemon?...
14888Warm sand, warm, mind you... you wo n''t?"
14888Was I to let the light pass me by for the sake of... of Fox, for instance, who trusted me?
14888Was he even alive?
14888We inherit the earth and you, your day is over.... You remember that day, when I found you-- the first day?"
14888Well, and now you''ve come, you''ll stop and help me to put the_ Hour_ to bed, wo n''t you?
14888Well, it''ll soon be a voice without a county.... What is it?
14888Well, then, where''s Slingsby, if that''s philanthropy?
14888What are you to me?
14888What could I do there?
14888What could the man know about me?
14888What did they want to look at his teeth for; was he a horse?
14888What do you come for?
14888What do you live for?
14888What had I got to say?
14888What had happened?
14888What if I wrote to Fox, and resigned?...
14888What is at the end of it all?"
14888What is it to you more than to me?
14888What kind of a being could conceive this impossibly barbaric room, could enshrine those impossibly crude designs, and then fold his hands?
14888What kind of sentence was I to open with?
14888What was I to do?
14888What was I to him, or he to me?
14888What was his name?
14888What were their passions, their joys, their fears, their despair, their outcry, to me?
14888What would Fox say?...
14888What would you have had me do?
14888What''s the good of the saner policy that Mr. Churchill talks about, if you ca n''t trust anyone with your money, and have to live on the capital?
14888What''s the state of popular feeling to him?
14888Where did I wish to go to?
14888Where do you come from?"
14888Who wants to frighten?...
14888Who will believe in them, now that it is proved that their tools were people... like de Mersch?
14888Why did he disturb me?
14888Why?...
14888Wine?
14888With pluckings of an apologetic string, without prelude at all-- or how?
14888Would honour or wine or sun or wind ever give me what she could give?
14888Would you?...
14888You and the Right Honourable Charles Gurnard are Dimensionists, and who are the others of your set?"
14888You do n''t mind my being candid, do you, now?"
14888You know Fox, of course?"
14888You might safely-- I''m off.... No.... Want to tell me mine?...
14888You see the position, eh?"
14888You think it a bit below you, do n''t you?
14888You understand?"
14888You understand?"
14888You''re going to restore the Stuarts, are n''t you?"
14888You''re making your pile, are n''t you?
14888You''ve been playing the very devil, have n''t you?
14888_"Il s''agissait de_...?"
14888and then:"If I do not----?"
14888he said,"what''s brought you here?
14888he said;"you recognised him?"
14888or dare?
14888she asked sharply;"would you make him if you could?"
14888when there''s Slingsby, a man I''ve smoked a pipe with every market evening of my life, in the workhouse?
14353''Tis true-- but, doctor, let us wave all that-- Say, if you had your wish, what you''d be at?
14353But where,say they,"shall we bestow these weavers, That spread our streets, and are such piteous cravers?"
14353Dame,said I, as loud as I could bawl,"do you know what a loss I have had?"
14353Does not,says Pope,"still to one Bishop Phillips seem a wit?"
14353How is the Dean?
14353How shall we fill a library with wit, When Merlin''s cave is half unfurnish''d yet?
14353Madam, the goldsmith waits below; He says, his business is to know If you''ll redeem the silver cup He keeps in pawn?
14353Then I''ll appeal to each bystander, If this be not a Salamander?
14353Well, I remember what she won; And has she sent so soon to dun? 14353 What brought Sir Visto''s ill- got wealth to waste?
14353What tyrant e''er invented ropes, Or racks, or rods, to punish hopes? 14353 _ Quis in seculo peccavit enormius Paulo?
14353-- So wise Simplicity esteem''d; Quite otherwise True Wisdom deem''d; This question rightly understood,"What more provokes than doing good?
14353-- What then could make their rage run mad?
14353--"Agree;"quoth Apollo:"from whence is this fool?
14353--"Indeed,"says I,"never worse: But pray, Mary, can you tell what I have done with my purse?"
14353--"Sprout;"quoth the man;"what''s this you tell us?
14353--"Sprout;"quoth the man;"what''s this you tell us?
14353--But why such fears?
143531730 Five hours( and who can do it less in?)
14353A hundred a penny, In conscience too many: Come, will you have any?
14353A victim to the last essays Of vigour in declining days, He dies, and leaves his mourning mate( What could he less?
14353Am I awake, or do I dream?
14353Am I spiteful, proud, unjust?
14353And can I then be faulty found, In dreading this vexatious round?
14353And had the Dean, in all the nation, No worthy friend, no poor relation?
14353And have we lost our only friend?
14353And if so black the cloud that Heaven''s bright queen Shrouds her still beams; how should the stars be seen?
14353And is not this a grievous burden?
14353And must my lady slip her season?
14353And must you needs describe the chest?
14353And precedents we can produce, if it please ye: Then why should the dean, when whores are so cheap, Be put to the peril and toil of a rape?
14353And shall not miss be flower''d as well as they?
14353And shall two bards in concert rhyme, and huff And fret these Muses with their playhouse stuff?
14353Another of the Thames inquires, If he has seen its gilded spires?
14353Are those double- gilt nails?
14353Are you positive and fretful, Heedless, ignorant, forgetful?
14353At Goodman''s Fields I''ve much admired The postures strange of Monsieur Brilla; But what are they to the soft step, The gliding air of Domitilla?
14353BY MRS. PILKINGTON Shall then my kindred all my glory claim, And boldly rob me of eternal fame?
14353Because I was civil, here''s a stir with a pox: Who is it that values your---- or your fox?
14353Believe me, Sir, I will not gibe: For who would be satirical Upon a thing so very small?
14353But how can I describe the ravenous breed?
14353But how shall I describe her arts To re- collect the scatter''d parts?
14353But leave it standing full in sight, For you to exercise your spight?
14353But was it not confounded hard?
14353But whence this wondrous charity in players?
14353But where shall Smedley make his nest, And lay his wandering head to rest?
14353But, Pallas, you''ve applied too late; For,''tis decreed by Jove and Fate, That Ireland must be soon destroy''d, And who but Hort can be employ''d?
14353But, in the chronicles of former ages, Who ever heard of servants paying wages?
14353By Censure[1] frighted out of Honour''s road, Nor dare to use the gifts by Heaven bestow''d?
14353By old Popish canons, as wise men have penn''d''em, Each priest had a concubine_ jure ecclesiae_; Who''d be Dean of Fernes without a_ commendam_?
14353CHARIOT Why, how now, Doll Diamond, you''re very alert; Is it your French breeding has made you so pert?
14353Ca n''t you go work, or serve the King?
14353Can Chloe, heavenly Chloe,----?
14353Can anything be more unkind?
14353Can he, who knows that real good should please, Barter for gold his liberty and ease?"
14353Can he, who makes himself a slave, Consult his peace, or credit save?
14353Can it be strange, if I eschew A scene so glorious and so new?
14353Can such a deity endure A mortal human touch impure?
14353Can we the Drapier then forget?
14353Can you call me rude or haughty?
14353Can you on Dublin look with scorn?
14353Can you take delight in viewing This poor Isle''s[2] approaching ruin, When thy retrospection vast Sees the glorious ages past?
14353Canst thou imagine, dull divine,''Twill gain her love, to make her fine?
14353Come, tell us, has she play''d the whore?
14353Could I not, through all his ermine,''Spy the strutting chattering vermin; Safely write a smart lampoon, To expose the brisk baboon?
14353D-- n her, why do n''t you slit her tongue?
14353Dear Cassy, though to ask I dread, Yet ask I must-- is Celia dead?
14353Deuce is in you, Mr. Dean: What can all this passion mean?
14353Dick suffer''d for his peace and credit; But who believed him when he said it?
14353Did I e''er my mite withhold From the impotent and old?
14353Did I ever break my trust?
14353Did Paulus e''er complain of sweat?
14353Did Paulus e''er the sun forget; The influence of whose golden beams Soon licks up all unsavoury steams?
14353Did female virtue e''er so high ascend, To lose an inch of favour for a friend?
14353Do I, like the female tribe, Think it wit to fleer and gibe?
14353E. B._ Ye wise philosophers, explain What magic makes our money rise, When dropt into the Southern main; Or do these jugglers cheat our eyes?
14353E. B._] DR. DELANY''S VILLA[1] WOULD you that Delville I describe?
14353E. B._] TO A LADY WHO DESIRED THE AUTHOR TO WRITE SOME VERSES UPON HER IN THE HEROIC STYLE After venting all my spite, Tell me, what have I to write?
14353Flaccilla?
14353From bad to worse, and worse they fall; But who can reach the worst of all?
14353Give me time when coming on; Who regards him when he''s gone?
14353God of Time, if you be wise, Look not with your future eyes; What imports thy forward sight?
14353Hath she no other wants beside?
14353Have you seen a rocket fly?
14353Hearken what my lady says: Have I nothing then to praise?
14353How can the Muse her aid impart, Unskill''d in all the terms of art?
14353How could I more enhance its fame?
14353How could a nymph so chaste as Chloe, With constitution cold and snowy, Permit a brutish man to touch her?
14353How could so fine a taste dispense With mean degrees of wit and sense?
14353How does he fancy we can sit To hear his out- of- fashion''d wit?
14353How shall a new attempter learn Of different spirits to discern, And how distinguish which is which, The poet''s vein, or scribbling itch?
14353How shall we pass the time between?
14353How shall we search Thee in a battle gain''d, Or a weak argument by force maintain''d?
14353How then, dear Harley, could I guess That you should meet, in love, success?
14353I love my friend as well as you:[ 2]But why should he obstruct my view?
14353I promised him, I own; but when?
14353I throw into the bargain Tim; In London can you equal him?
14353I would ship her to Jamaica,[1] Or truck the carrion for tobacco: I''d send her far enough away---- Dear Will; but what would people say?
14353II But where is even thy Image on our earth?
14353III But what does our proud ignorance Learning call?
14353If I treat you like a crown''d head, You have cheap enough compounded; Can you put in higher claims, Than the owners of St. James?
14353If maidens are ravish''d, it is their own choice: Why are they so wilful to struggle with men?
14353If they have mortify''d my pride, And made me throw my pen aside; If with such talents Heav''n has blest''em, Have I not reason to detest''em?
14353If you resent it, who''s to blame?
14353If your expenses rise so high; What income can your wants supply?
14353In every mouth the question most in vogue Was, when will they turn out this odious rogue?
14353In good manners am I faulty?
14353In haste, with imprecations dire, I threw the volume in the fire; When,( who could think?)
14353Inquire what regimen I kept; What gave me ease, and how I slept?
14353Is he just come from reading Pythagoras at school?
14353Is he to avarice inclined?
14353Is not our nation in his debt?
14353Is not the truth the truth?
14353Jove sent her to me, her power to try; The Goddess of Beauty what God can deny?
14353Let censuring critics then think what they list on''t; Who would not write verses with such an assistant?
14353Methinks I hear the ladies cry, Will he his character belie?
14353Must I not see,''cause you are blind?
14353Must never our misfortunes end?
14353My lady now returning home, Calls"Cracherode, is the Doctor come?"
14353My lord''s abroad; my lady too: What must the unhappy doctor do?
14353Next morn betimes the bride was missing: The mother scream''d, the father chid; Where can this idle wench be hid?
14353Nor ever fools or knaves expose, Either in verse or humorous prose: And to avoid all future ill, In my scrutoire lock up my quill?
14353Nor shall the vapours upwards rise, Nor a new star adorn the skies: For who can hope to place one there, As glorious as Belinda''s hair?
14353Now all alone poor madam sits In vapours and hysteric fits;"And was not Tom this morning sent?
14353Now, pray, observe the doctor''s choice, A Peacock chose for flight and voice; Did ever mortal see a peacock Attempt a flight above a haycock?
14353Now, should I own your case was grievous, Poor sweaty Paulus, who''d believe us?
14353Observe what loads of stupid rhymes Oppress us in corrupted times; What pamphlets in a court''s defence Show reason, grammar, truth, or sense?
14353On me, who think them all so fair, They rival Venus to a hair; Their virtues never ceased to sing, Since first I learn''d to tune a string?
14353One asks the watermen hard by,"Where may the Poet''s palace lie?"
14353Or call them rogues, or get them kickt?
14353Or in harmonious numbers put The deal, the shuffle, and the cut?
14353Or is he criminal that flies The living lustre of your eyes?"
14353Or shall the charms of Wealth and Power Make me pollute the Muses''bower?
14353Or show the anguish, toil, and pain, Of gath''ring up herself again?
14353Or, stuff''d with phlegm up to the throat, What poet e''er could sing a note?
14353Or, would you see his spirits sink?
14353PHILLIS But what to me does all that love avail, If, while I doze at home o''er porter''s ale, Each night with wine and wenches you regale?
14353Quis in religione gravius Petro?
14353Quo signo?
14353Relaxing downwards in a stink?
14353SPOKEN BY MR. GRIFFITH Who dares affirm this is no pious age, When charity begins to tread the stage?
14353Say, Britain, could you ever boast Three poets in an age at most?
14353Say, fair ones, must I make a pause, Or freely tell the secret cause?
14353Say, foolish females, bold and blind, Say, by what fatal turn of mind, Are you on vices most severe, Wherein yourselves have greatest share?
14353Say, had the court no better place to choose For triee, than make a dry- nurse of thy Muse?
14353Say, has the small or greater pox Sunk down her nose, or seam''d her face?
14353Shall I give o''er?
14353Shall a subject so loyal be hang''d by the nape, For no other crime but committing a rape?
14353Shall the wide hoop, that standard of the town, Thus act subservient to a poplin gown?
14353Shall wit and learning choose To live obscure, and have no fame to lose?
14353Should I the Queen of Love refuse, Because she rose from stinking ooze?
14353Should vice expect to''scape rebuke, Because its owner is a duke?
14353So sweet a passion who would think, Jove ever form''d to make a stink?
14353So, as the_ devil_ would have it, before I was aware, out I blunder''d,"_ Parson_"said I,"can you cast a_ nativity_, when a body''s plunder''d?"
14353So, you know, what could I say to her any more?
14353Some faults we own; but can you guess?
14353Suppose you have them all trepann''d, With each a libel in his hand, What punishment would you inflict?
14353THE PROBLEM,"THAT MY LORD BERKELEY STINKS WHEN HE IS IN LOVE"Did ever problem thus perplex, Or more employ the female sex?
14353That if you heard you''d be no gainer?
14353The court invited more than one or two: Will you, Sir Spencer?
14353The cringing knave, who seeks a place Without success, thus tells his case: Why should he longer mince the matter?
14353The offals of a church distrest; A hungry vicarage at best; Or some remote inferior post, With forty pounds a- year at most?
14353The skin, that vies with silk, would fret with stuff; Or who could bear in bed a thing so rough?
14353The superstitious whims relate, That fill a female gamester''s pate?
14353Then tell us what is Fame, where shall we search for it?
14353Then to her glass; and,"Betty, pray, Do n''t I look frightfully to- day?
14353Then where, said I, shall Harley find A virgin of superior mind, With wit and virtue to discover, And pay the merit of her lover?
14353Then, why these quarrels to the sun, Without whose aid you''re all undone?
14353Then, would you paint a matchless dame, Whom you''d consign to endless fame?
14353Think not so poor a book below thy care; Who knows the price that thou canst make it bear?
14353This enraged god Apollo, who Mercury sent, And bid him go ask what his votary meant?
14353This may be true-- submitting still To Walpole''s more than royal will; And what condition can be worse?
14353This odious chair, how came I stuck in''t?
14353Thou that''s drawn by two beasts, and carry''st a brute, Canst thou vainly e''er hope, I''ll answer thy suit?
14353Though you lead a blameless life, Are an humble prudent wife, Answer all domestic ends: What is this to us your friends?
14353Thus Venus to the sea descends, As poets feign; but where''s the moral?
14353Thus the bright empress of the morn[3] Chose for her spouse a mortal born: The goddess made advances first; Else what aspiring hero durst?
14353Thus, after four important hours, Celia''s the wonder of her sex; Say, which among the heavenly powers Could cause such wonderful effects?
14353Thy various follies who can trace?
14353VERSES WRITTEN ON A WINDOW, AT THE DEANERY HOUSE, ST. PATRICK''S Are the guests of this house still doom''d to be cheated?
14353We all behold with envious eyes Our_ equal_ raised above our_ size._ Who would not at a crowded show Stand high himself, keep others low?
14353Were I in some foreign realm, Which all vices overwhelm; Should a monkey wear a crown, Must I tremble at his frown?
14353What can not our vicegerent do, As poet and as patriot too?
14353What claim have you to place or pension?
14353What could I''ve said?
14353What edifice can long endure Raised on a basis unsecure?
14353What had the public done for him?
14353What has he else to bait his traps, Or bring his vermin in, but scraps?
14353What has he left?
14353What hope of custom in the fair, While not a soul demands your ware?
14353What house, when its materials crumble, Must not inevitably tumble?
14353What northern hive pour''d out these foes to wit?
14353What poet would not grieve to see His breth''ren write as well as he?
14353What reason can there be assign''d For this perverseness in the mind?
14353What serpent''s that which still resorts, Still lurks in palaces and courts?
14353What think you of my favourite clan, Robin[5] and Jack, and Jack and Dan; Fellows of modest worth and parts, With cheerful looks and honest hearts?
14353What though the royal carcass must, Squeezed in a coffin, turn to dust?
14353What use in life to make men fret, Part in worse humour than they met?
14353What was the message I received?
14353What writings has he left behind?
14353What''s to be done?
14353When actors, who at best are hardly savers, Will give a night of benefit to weavers?
14353When did ever I omit Due regard for men of wit?
14353When have I esteem express''d For a coxcomb gaily dress''d?
14353Whence came these Goths to overrun the pit?
14353Where shall he find a decent house, To treat his friends and cheer his spouse?
14353Where you have nothing to produce For private life, or public use?
14353Where''s the lustre of Kerry, To set off the Knight, and to finish the Jerry?
14353Which of all our modern dames Censures less, or less defames?
14353Who can be happy-- who should wish to live, And want the godlike happiness to give?
14353Who ever yet a union saw Of kingdoms without faith or law?
14353Who that had wit would place it here, For ev''ry peeping fop to jeer?
14353Who weaves the chaplet, or provides the bays, For such wool- gathering sonnetteers as these?
14353Who with less designing ends Kindlier entertains her friends; With good words and countenance sprightly, Strives to treat them more politely?
14353Who would not swear, when you contrive thus, That you''re Don Quixote redivivus?
14353Who''d smell of wool all over?
14353Whose breast is so unmann''d, as not to grieve, Compass''d with miseries he ca n''t relieve?
14353Why Battus?
14353Why am I robb''d of that delight, When you can be no loser by''t Nay, when''tis plain( for what is plainer?)
14353Why are we then so fond of two, When by experience one would do?
14353Why certainly the captain raved?
14353Why do we grieve that friends should die?
14353Why is a handsome wife ador''d By every coxcomb but her lord?
14353Why on that brow dwell sorrow and dismay, Where Loves were wo nt to sport, and Smiles to play?
14353Why should I ask of thee, my Muse, A hundred tongues, as poets use, When, to give every dame her due, A hundred thousand were too few?
14353Why then does Nature so unjustly share Among her elder sons the whole estate, And all her jewels and her plate?
14353Why will you aim to be preferr''d In wit before the common herd; And yet grow mortified and vex''d, To pay the penalty annex''d?
14353Why, Cassy, thou wilt dose thy pate: What makes thee lie a- bed so late?
14353Why, Strephon, will you tell the rest?
14353Why, doctor!--will you never be content?"
14353Will Cadenus longer stay?
14353Will you regard the hawker''s cries, Who in his titles always lies?
14353Wrapp''d up in majesty divine, Does he regard on what we dine?
14353XI Shall I believe a spirit so divine Was cast in the same mould with mine?
14353Yet what avails it to complain?
14353You change a circle to a square, Then to a circle as you were: Who can imagine whence the fund is, That you_ quadrata_ change_ rotundis_?
14353You have been libell''d-- Let us know, What fool officious told you so?
14353You''ve cause to say he meant you well: That you are thankful, who can tell?
14353[ 14] or will you, or you?
14353[ 21] The hawkers have not got them yet: Your honour please to buy a set?
14353[ 2] With head reclining on his shoulder, He deals and hears mysterious chat, While every ignorant beholder Asks of his neighbour, who is that?
14353[ 32] Yet why should we be laced so strait?
14353[ 3] For foreign aid what need they roam, Whom fate has amply blest at home?
14353_ quanto rectius, tu adepte, Qui nil moliris tarn inepte_?
14353and who''s his heir?"
14353be proud To lodge behind a golden cloud?
14353but, said I, what if, after all, the Chaplain wo n''t come to?
14353dost thou not envy the brave Colonel Chartres, Condemn''d for thy crime at threescore and ten?
14353madam,"says Mary,"how d''ye do?"
14353must I still Be here detain''d against my will?
14353not a word come from thy lips?
14353relate The sum of all their senseless prate, Their innuendoes, hints, and slanders, Their meanings lewd, and double entendres?
14353said I,"what shall I do?
14353what could he do more?
14353what is it you intend?
14353what sound is this?
14353what would you do there?
14353where must needy poet seek for aid, When dust and rain at once his coat invade?
14353which of all thy sins,( Say, hapless isle, although It is a bloody list we know,) Has given thee up a dwelling- place to fiends?
14353why do n''t you break her limbs?
10688''O better that her shattered hulk should sink beneath the wave,''eh?
10688A week? 10688 All ready now?"
10688All snake holes?
10688And Agony,begged Bengal,"may I have a lock of your hair to keep?"
10688And what about Carmen?
10688And who got it last year?
10688Are all assembled?
10688Are n''t there going to be any who live to grow old? 10688 Are n''t you afraid to touch it?"
10688Are n''t you glad we did n''t stay here?
10688Are we supposed to get into our bloomers right away?
10688Are you our neighbor from Avernus? 10688 Are you really willing to divide your bloomers?
10688Are you sick? 10688 At half past six in the evening?
10688Beh- hold, it is I; w- who else could it be?
10688Behold, it is I; who else_ could_ it be?
10688Bengal Virden in the same tent with Claudia Peckham? 10688 Bengal?"
10688But what are we going to do about it?
10688But where was Bagdad?
10688But, my dear, why did n''t you wait and let your father drive you down in the morning?
10688Ca n''t we do something?
10688Can I go with only one stocking on?
10688Carmen, did n''t it ever occur to you that Jane was making fun of you when she said she would bring blankets for two? 10688 Come, Migwan, are you going to day- dream here forever?
10688Could n''t they?
10688Could n''t we put two of us together?
10688Could n''t we sing a bit for her?
10688Did I look glum? 10688 Did I scare you, girls?"
10688Did anything ever smell so good?
10688Did n''t you bring any blankets at all?
10688Did n''t you go in?
10688Did somebody get Tiny Armstrong''s red striped stockings?
10688Did you ever see anything so funny as that coral snake business of hers?
10688Did you have a good night''s sleep?
10688Did you know,confided Bengal, with a fresh burst of giggles,"that Pecky shaves?"
10688Did you see her demonstrating the Australian Crawl yesterday in swimming hour? 10688 Did you see that girl who came running into the dining- room this morning with her middy halfway over her head?"
10688Do n''t you just_ adore_ her?
10688Do n''t you know that snakes climb trees?
10688Do n''t you think I can?
10688Do n''t you think it does?
10688Do n''t you think it''s unladylike to have your muscles all hard and developed?
10688Do new girls ever win the Buffalo Robe?
10688Do you live in the Avenue or the Alley?
10688Do you live in the east or in the west?
10688Do you really mean that there are girls here from Australia and India?
10688Do you suppose he will speak to me?
10688Do you suppose they''re going to throw us into the river?
10688Do you think we''ll have to sit here all night?
10688Do you want to ruin our stunt for us? 10688 Does n''t he look pathetic, with his little paws held out that way?"
10688Does n''t it look civilized, though, after what we''ve just experienced? 10688 Edwin Langham?"
10688For goodness''sake, are you going to preach all night? 10688 Good morning, Agony, whither bound so early, and what means that portentous frown?"
10688Goodness, who was she?
10688Had n''t I better help you paddle?
10688Had n''t you better throw it out and get some fresh? 10688 Have you noticed that there is something queer about Agony lately?"
10688Have you seen the hippopotamus over there in the bow? 10688 Have you taken any notes yet?"
10688How about Sacajawea, I''d like to know?
10688How can you bear to touch such a thing?
10688How can you tell a poisonous toadstool from a harmless one?
10688How could you do it?
10688How did it happen?
10688How did you ever make a fire at all?
10688How did you happen to fall into that ravine?
10688How do the other two get along with her?
10688How does it come that I have never met you before, Miss Peckham? 10688 How long have you been spying upon my movements, Miss Virtue?"
10688How long is he going to stay?
10688How soon are you going?
10688How soon can you arrange to go?
10688I suppose you swim?
10688I wonder what that house is for?
10688I wonder what the special announcement is tonight?
10688I''m all in a position to do it-- see?
10688Is everybody gone on a trip?
10688Is he going along with us on the canoe trip?
10688Is it a bird?
10688Is n''t Miss Peckham a prune?
10688Is n''t it be- yoo- tiful?
10688Is n''t she lovely?
10688Is n''t she lovely?
10688Is n''t she stunning in that coral silk sweater?
10688Is n''t she wonderful?
10688Is n''t there some other place where we can camp, Jo,asked Migwan,"and let these blossoms live?
10688Is that someone calling to us?
10688Is that the only kind of women you admire?
10688Jane,said Agony seriously,"if I promise not to tell Mrs. Grayson this time will you promise never to do this sort of thing again?
10688Jo?
10688Katherine,said Miss Judy feelingly,"_ vous et moi_ we speak the same language,_ n''est- ce pas_?"
10688Let me take your knife, will you please, Agony?
10688Like?
10688Meaning?
10688Must you go so soon?
10688No clothes?
10688Not really?
10688Now what?
10688O Jane,cried Agony,"you have n''t been over at that boys''camp, have you?
10688O Miss Judy,they called to her,"what''s happened?"
10688Oh, Agony, do n''t you understand? 10688 Oh, Miss Judy, please, please, ca n''t we live in the Alley?"
10688Oh, are you a Camp Fire girl?
10688Oh, do you know_ The Desert Garden_?
10688Oh, please, Tiny, may I do this one dive?
10688Oh, what are they?
10688Oh, what_ is_ it?
10688Oh, where is my other stocking?
10688Oh,she said,"did you hear it?"
10688Please, wo n''t you, Bengal dear?
10688Serenade her, I mean; just a few of us who are used to singing together?
10688Shall you go to Japan too, if your father goes?
10688That''s easy,laughed Migwan,"Who but Pocahontas?"
10688That''s way up near the bungalow, is n''t it?
10688The Jamaica ginger,asked Carmen''s thin voice in a bewildered tone,"what shall I do with it?
10688The view is exquisite here,_ n''est- ce pas_? 10688 Then why did you tell Carmen you would sleep with her?"
10688Then you deliberately deceived her?
10688Then, what will you do when you land, Sahwah?
10688This is Topsy- Turvy Day, do n''t you remember? 10688 Wants who to go on a canoe trip with her?"
10688Was n''t this the wildest evening we ever put in?
10688Was your suitcase on it?
10688Was''Pocahantas''just a nickname?
10688Well, and what if I did?
10688Well, what do you expect me to do about it?
10688Well, what if I did?
10688Well, what if I have?
10688Well, what of it?
10688Were n''t you horribly scared?
10688What are they blowing the bugle in the middle of the night for?
10688What are we going to do?
10688What business is it of yours, anyway?
10688What can be the matter?
10688What do they mean by living''in the Alley''?
10688What do you mean?
10688What do you think of_ her_?
10688What is he like?
10688What is her name?
10688What is it now?
10688What is it?
10688What is it?
10688What is it?
10688What is it?
10688What is it?
10688What is it?
10688What is that?
10688What is the Buffalo Robe, please?
10688What is the book?
10688What is the matter? 10688 What kind of a costume do I wear?"
10688What nationality was Sinbad, anyhow?
10688What on earth?
10688What was it?
10688What was that?
10688What''s happened?
10688What''s that loud cheeping noise?
10688What''s that?
10688What''s the excitement?
10688What''s the mater, Agony, have you a headache again?
10688What''s the matter with everybody?
10688What''s the matter with her?
10688What''s the matter with the rest of the folks in Avernus-- can''t they make beds either?
10688What''s the matter, Monty, is your load too heavy for you?
10688What''s the matter, Tiny?
10688What''s the matter, ca n''t you make your bed?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the matter?
10688What''s the use of rushing so, anyway?
10688Whatever can this be?
10688When is he coming?
10688When is he coming?
10688Where are we to be?
10688Where is Miss Amesbury?
10688Where is my middy?
10688Where on earth have you been? 10688 Where''s Jane Pratt?"
10688Where''s Tiny?
10688Where''s my flashlight, Katherine?
10688Which tent?
10688Who am I to talk of a''nice sense of honor''to Bengal Virden?
10688Who is Mary Sylvester?
10688Who is Pom- pom?
10688Who is it?
10688Who is my girl, and what is her nickname?
10688Who is n''t here yet?
10688Who is the girl sitting third from the end on this side?
10688Who was it?
10688Who wrote it?
10688Who''s going to make them?
10688Who''s gone south with my shoes?
10688Who''s your councilor?
10688Who?
10688Whoever heard of a snake climbing a tree?
10688Why are n''t you in bed with the rest of the infants?
10688Why are you tying up your ponchos that way? 10688 Why did n''t we think of that before?
10688Why did you come in that way?
10688Why did you put your bathing suit on when you did n''t have any intention of going into the water?
10688Why do n''t you share your own blankets with her, if you''re so concerned about her?
10688Why not capsize some distance out in the water and swim ashore?
10688Why not?
10688Why so pensive?
10688Why, what does she do?
10688Will she really send you home?
10688Will somebody please show me how to make a bed?
10688Will somebody please tell me where my middy is?
10688Will someone tell_ me_ where the other leg of my bloomers is?
10688Will you be my sleeping partner for the first overnight trip that we take?
10688Will you do it for me if you wo n''t do it for Miss Peckham?
10688Will your father think I''m dreadfully silly?
10688Wo n''t she suspect what we''re going to do if I borrow them?
10688Would you like to get in a canoe with some of the girls?
10688Yes, where are you?
10688Yes?
10688You know a great deal about the woods, do n''t you?
10688You were to arrive by automobile at Green''s Landing this noon, were you not, and come across the river in the mail boat? 10688 Your what?"
10688_ The Lost Chord_? 10688 *****Why, where is everybody?"
10688After all, why not let them think that?
10688All from picked families, eh?
10688And have you some Jamaica ginger?
10688And the flower that was so determined to blossom that it grew in the desert and bloomed there?"
10688And the tent is still standing?"
10688Are n''t you going to get up to see the Stunts?"
10688Are the other girls on already?"
10688Are you coming?"
10688Are you our Councilor?"
10688Are you sick?"
10688Assuming a timid, shrinking demeanor, and speaking in a high, shrill voice, she piped,"Mother, may I go out to swim?"
10688But the old chief says sadly,''Why will you be such a tomboy, my child?''"
10688By the way, how is she getting on?
10688By the way, what are_ you_ doing here?"
10688By the way, where_ is_ Gladys?
10688CHAPTER V ON THE ROAD FROM ATLANTIS"Would you like to come along?"
10688CHAPTER X TOPSY- TURVY DAY"Why, where_ is_ camp?"
10688CHAPTER XII THE STUNT''S THE THING"Where would a shipwreck look best, right by the dock, or farther up the shore?"
10688Ca n''t you fix it so that I can be in your tent this year?"
10688Can it be possible that it is only a mass of dead chalk and not a ball of burnished silver?
10688Can it be that you are really his cousin?
10688Could she give it up-- could she bear to see their admiration turn to scorn?
10688Could she still take the story back, she wondered, and tell it as it really had been?
10688Did she have a withering touch now?
10688Do n''t you feel that way about it, too?"
10688Do n''t you feel that way, Agony?"
10688Do n''t you know that it''s terribly bad taste to make fun of people''s personal blemishes?"
10688Do you like it?
10688Do you mind if I break up the camp color scheme for one day?"
10688Do you want anything?"
10688Had the Lone Wolf also heard them talking about her?
10688Have you read_ The Silent Years_?"
10688How could she ever humble herself before Jane Pratt and witness Jane''s keen relish of her downfall?
10688How did you ever manage to think of it, Migs?"
10688How do you get such a''nice sense of honor''as you have?
10688How do you suppose he ever got in?"
10688I know one of you must be Agony, I recognize her alto, but who are the rest of you?
10688I suppose she was born in Bengal?"
10688Is it a contraction of Sarah Ann?"
10688Is it not so?"
10688It''s about six miles to Atlantis-- would you care to walk that far?
10688Katherine, you wo n''t forget to get that gaudy blanket off the Lone Wolf''s bed, will you?"
10688No?
10688Now if you will just let me show you--""Why you are putting that stout girl"--indicating Bengal--"in the stern of the canoe?
10688Now, do you say that a woman ca n''t go exploring as well as a man?"
10688Now, who''ll be Miss Peckham?"
10688Oh, dear, did you ever see anyone so funny as Katherine?"
10688Oh, my gracious, how can we ever stand him around here a week?"
10688Oh, wo n''t it be great fun when I do that in the stunt?
10688Oh- Pshaw looked timidly at the human Colossus standing in the middle of the tent, and inquired meekly,"Are you Miss Armstrong?
10688Require references and all that sort of thing?"
10688Shall I put it in the hot water bottle?"
10688Should she make a clean breast of it now and have nothing more to fear, or should she take a chance on Jo''s never mentioning it to Mary?
10688So you''ll give me your promise, wo n''t you, Bengal dear, that you will never mention this matter to anybody around camp?"
10688That''s the way it has always been with us Winnebagos, has n''t it?
10688The Elephant''s Child came in at the end with a fervent plea:"Please, ca n''t I be in Pom- pom''s tent_ this_ year?"
10688The Winnebagos?
10688The voice, the intonation, the expression, were Carmen Chadwick to a T. But how did the Alleys know about her attitude toward bathing?
10688The"who else_ could_ it be?"
10688Then the girl smiles demurely at him, and says coyly--""Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?"
10688Then, turning to Mrs. Grayson, he asked plaintively:"Mother,_ why_ do we have to be afflicted with Jane Pratt year after year?
10688Then, turning to the man in the chair, she exclaimed,"There now, who said it was impossible?"
10688There was a pause, and then the other girl asked, somewhat hastily,"Who do you suppose will get the Buffalo Robe this year?"
10688Those are supposed to be the symptoms, are n''t they?"
10688Was it any wonder that Robert Allison, seeing her for the first time, should have exclaimed involuntarily,"Minnehaha, Laughing Water"?
10688Was it not possible that Mary had mentioned the robin incident in this letter?
10688Was it perhaps true after all?
10688Was n''t she funny, though, when I told her that father might have to go to Japan in the interests of his firm?
10688Was this the road she was going to travel; was this the direction in which she had set her face?
10688What are they all laughing at, I wonder?
10688What color did you say it was?"
10688What could she suspect?
10688What does the name mean?"
10688What for?"
10688What part of the country are you from?"
10688What shall I do?"
10688What''s the rest of your name?"
10688What_ can_ it be?"
10688Where is she?
10688Which one are you in?"
10688Who are you?
10688Who could the girl be?
10688Who has she in the tent with her?"
10688Who wants to come with me and see if we can find a cave?
10688Who wants to come with me?"
10688Who''s going to impersonate Tiny Armstrong?"
10688Who''s in her tent?"
10688Why had n''t she herself been the one to climb up and rescue that poor bird?
10688Will anyone have any more pudding?"
10688Wo n''t you please try?"
10688Would n''t you like to come along and keep me company?
10688You were n''t rummaging among her things, were you?"
10688You''re right near the path to the river, are n''t you?
10688You''ve noticed how kind of hairy her chin is, have n''t you?
10688asked the Doctor,"the two that have not moved underneath, as yet?"
10688said Agony firmly,"do n''t you_ dare_ do anything like that?
10688who else_ could_ it be?''"
19157Shall Rome or Heathen rule in Arthur''s realm? 19157 You who are the oldest, You who are the tallest, Do n''t you think you ought to help The youngest and the smallest?
19157You who are the strongest,( p. 36) You who are the quickest, Do n''t you think you ought to help The weakest and the sickest? 19157 AMUSEMENTS AND HANDICRAFT Where''s the cook? 19157 And didst Thou play in Heaven with all The angels, that were not too tall, With stars for marbles? 19157 And what did it feel like to be Out of Heaven, and just like me? 19157 Coolidge................................................ 163 What Shall We Do Now? 19157 Did the things Play_ Can you see me?_ through their wings? 19157 Did the things Play_ Can you see me?_ through their wings? 19157 Didst Thou sometimes think of_ there_, And ask where all the angels were? 19157 GEOGRAPHY, TRAVEL, AND DESCRIPTION Where shall we adventure, to- day that we''re afloat, Wary of the weather and steering by a star? 19157 Hadst Thou ever any toys, Like us little girls and boys? 19157 Oh, where be these gay Spaniards, Which make so great a boast O? 19157 RELIGION AND ETHICS Little Jesus, wast Thou shy Once, and just so small as I? 19157 RELIGION AND ETHICS What can I give Him, Poor as I am? 19157 RELIGION AND ETHICS( p. 184) Who is the happy Warrior? 19157 Shall it be to Africa, a- steering of the boat, To Providence, or Babylon, or off to Malabar? 19157 Should not you?
19157What Shall We Do Now?
19157What Shall We Do Now?....................................
19157Where are the Little Prudy books( p. xii) which once headed the list?
19157Where are the stories of Oliver Optic?
19157Where go the children, travelling ahead?
19157Where is Jacob Abbott''s John Gay; or Work for Boys?
19157Which is the way to Boston Town?
19157Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be?
19157_ THIRTEEN YEARS OF AGE_( p. 171)_ Where go the children?
19157do n''t ye hear it roar now?
19157do n''t you wish that you were me?
19157is supper ready, the house trimmed, rushes strewed, cobwebs swept?
19157let us a voyage take; Why sit we here at ease?
19724And is mine one?
19724O Liberty, can man resign thee Once having felt thy generous flame? 19724 Are there not deep, sad oracles to read In the calm stillness of that radiant face? 19724 Be thou a spirit of health or goblin damned, Bringing with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell, Be thy intents wicked or charitable? 19724 Beauty, theme of innocence, how may guilt discourse thee? 19724 But why, O king, Why dost thou start, with livid cheek?--why fling The untasted goblet from thy trembling hand? 19724 Can dungeons, bolts, or bars confine thee, Or whips thy noble spirit tame? 19724 Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,What writest thou?"
19724Had the soft light in that adoring eye Guided the warrior where the swords flash''d high?
19724Shall the sleeper be awakened?
19724The village stile-- and has it gone?
19724Was that the leader through the battle storm?
19724What shall be done?
19724Why shake thy joints?
19724thy feet forget to stand?
19724what is it?"
19535Am I a boy?--Why am I a boy?--Why are n''t I a chair?--What is a chair?
19535Have you formed any conception of the condition of marksmanship in the British Army?
19535Each one of them was whispering to himself,"What can I alter?"
19535God, Pompilia, will you let them murder me?"
19535He said in substance,"If we are democrats, let us have votes for women; but if we are democrats, why on earth should we have respect for women?"
19535If he is to be anything else than this, why should we desire him, or what else are we to desire?
19535If the Superman will come by human selection, what sort of Superman are we to select?
19535If the Superman will come by natural selection, may we leave it to natural selection?
19535If the flag of England was a piece of piratical humbug, was not the flag of Poland a piece of piratical humbug too?
19535If the new drama had an ethical purpose, what was it?
19535If the ordinary man may not discuss existence, why should he be asked to conduct it?
19535If we hated the jingoism of the existing armies and frontiers, why should we bring into existence new jingo armies and new jingo frontiers?
19535Into what kind of world did he step?
19535Is there a father''s heart as well as a mother''s?"
19535It_ is_ true that the Irishman says,"Who will tread on the tail of my coat?"
19535The immediate answer, of course, is sufficiently obvious: the ape did not worry about the man, so why should we worry about the Superman?
19535We can imagine him crying,"Why in the name of death and conscience should it be tragic to be a widow but comic to be a widower?"
19535What have you grasped in me?
19535What then is the colour of this Irish society of which Bernard Shaw, with all his individual oddity, is yet an essential type?
19535When a demagogue says to a mob,"There is the Bank of England, why should n''t you have some of that money?"
19535and if Ibsen was a moral teacher, what the deuce was he teaching?
19535and second, What did he imagine it to be?
19535or of Stevenson,"Shall we never shed blood?"
19535or, if the phrase be premature, What did he imagine it was going to be?
18049But,said I,"I see no soldier; where is the garrison to defend the fort?"
18049Compassion is wasted upon such creatures,said R----;"do you not see that their minds are degraded down to their condition?
18049Indi esclamo, qual''notte atra, importuua Tutte l''ampie tue glorie a un tratto amorza? 18049 Nothing else?"
18049Vous n''avez pas lu le Solitaire?
18049After this specimen, sketched from life, who will say there are such things as caricatures?
18049Ah!--true-- I remember: was n''t she the widow of Charles the Second, who married Ariosto?"
18049Are they sans eyes, sans souls, sans taste, sans every thing, but money and self- conceit?
18049At least to keep her infirmities from view and not to expose her too undressed?
18049At length he ventured to ask, in bad provincial Italian, what I did there?
18049But the antidote of Paul-- even faith-- may it not be mine if I duly seek it?
18049But this is not well; why indeed should I repine?
18049Can it then be possible that he is right?
18049Even at Naples, even in this all- lovely land,"fit haunt for gods,"has it not been with me as it has been elsewhere?
18049Have I seen, have I felt the reality of what I have so often imagined?
18049He begged to know,"_ come diavolo_,"I had got there?
18049I apologized politely:"And where,"said I,"is the governor?"
18049I asked,"why should such faultless, such exquisite sculpture be thrown away upon a high pediment?
18049I can not quite forget; but if I can cease to remember for a few minutes, or even, it may be, for a few hours?
18049I turned back to ask her whether she had ever been told that she was like_ that_ picture?
18049If such is this country in winter, what must it be in summer?
18049In one devoted heart I reign, And what is all the rest below?
18049Is it not strange that while life is thus rapidly wasting, I should still be so strong to suffer?
18049Must it be ever thus?
18049Painting has been called the handmaid of nature; is it not the duty of a handmaid to array her mistress to the best possible advantage?
18049Shall I hear it to- morrow, when I wake?
18049The whole scene was-- but how can I say what it was?
18049Think you if Laura had been Petrarch''s wife, He would have written sonnets all his life?
18049To- day I saw the same crucifix in a suit of mourning; why should not our South Sea missionaries come and preach here?
18049We take him perhaps for another Pygmalion?
18049We visited the church of San Pietro in Viscoli, to see Michel Angelo''s famous statue of Moses,--of which, who has not heard?
18049What can be more grand than a noble forest of English oak?
18049What can charm us more?
18049What is that little cupid about, who is groping in the cistern behind?
18049What then must it be to me?
18049What would have become of me if I had not thought of keeping a Diary?
18049What would it avail me to keep a mere journal of suffering?
18049When he said that the object existed not in this world which could lead him twenty yards out of his way, did this sound like happiness?
18049Who had inhabited the edifices I trampled under my feet?
18049Who knows but this dark cloud may pass away?
18049Why to my desponding heart, Darkly thinking, Sadly sinking, Can ye no delight impart?
18049Why was I proud of my victory over passion?
18049Yes-- but what must I do, then, with my volume in green morocco?
18049Yet if this vain philosophy lead to happiness, would not S** be happy?
18049Yet_ if_ he should be right?
18049[ A]*****_ Calais, June 21._--What young lady, travelling for the first time on the Continent, does not write a"Diary?"
18049[ B]_ July 12._--"Quel est à Paris le suprême talent?
18049[ Footnote M: Quid times?
18049_ Duomo d''Ossola._--What shall I say of the marvellous, the miraculous Simplon?
18049_ Geneva, Saturday Night, 11 o''clock._--Can it be the"blue rushing of the arrowy Rhone"I hear from my window?
18049_ O che bel ceffo!_ thought I--"and what, Signor Governor, is the use of your fort?"
18049and dropped a few natural tears-- tears of weakness, rather than of grief: for what do I leave behind me worthy one emotion of regret?
18049and much,_ much_ more?
18049and the full heart Languish with sense of beauty unexprest, And faint beneath its own excess of life?
18049and were those the tresses which enslaved the ocean''s lord?
18049and what earthly help can now avail me?
18049celui d''amuser: et quel est le suprême bonheur?
18049may I not say as truly, I have not weakly yielded, I have not"gone about to cause my heart to despair,"but have striven, and not in vain?
18049or more beautiful than a grove of beeches and elms, clothed in their rich autumnal tints?
18049or more delicious than the apple orchard in full bloom?
18049the boast, the charm of Englishwomen?
18049virtue, honour, feeling, generosity, you are then but words, signifying nothing?
18049vous?
18049was this the guerdon of thy love?
18049what then: have I been till now the dupe and the victim of factitious feelings?
18049who can controul their fate?
18049who ever indulged grief that truly felt it?
18049why does Profane Love wear gloves?
18049why within our limited sphere of action, our short and imperfect existence have we such boundless capacity for enjoying and suffering?
18049would not the soul Be lost in its own depths?
1973But who was to be sacrificed? 1973 Why be so fierce?"
1973Why hast thou slain Deiphobus and robbed me of my revenge?
1973Why make so much trouble about one girl? 1973 Will nobody go as a spy among the Trojans?"
1973You swore to give me a gift,said Ulysses,"and will you keep your oath?"
1973But Hector said,"Have ye not had your fill of being shut up behind walls?
1973But, tell me, do the Trojans keep good watch, and where is Hector with his horses?"
1973How hast thou borne to be thus beaten and disgraced, and to come within the walls of Troy?
1973Is there bad news from home that your father is dead, or mine; or are you sorry that the Greeks are getting what they deserve for their folly?"
1973Then Achilles rose again, and cried:"What coward has smitten me with a secret arrow from afar?
1973Then Calchas--"here he stopped, saying:"But why tell a long tale?
1973Then OEnone answered scornfully:"Why have you come here to me?
1973This man has slain many of my sons, and if he slays thee whom have I to help me in my old age?"
1973Thou hast not the strength to fight the unconquerable son of Peleus, for if Hector could not slay him, what chance hast thou?
1973Where is Diomede, where is Achilles, where is Aias, that, men say, are your bravest?
1973Will none of them stand before my spear?"
1973have we not here among us many Trojan prisoners, waiting till their friends pay their ransom in cattle and gold and bronze and iron?
18118And is it a stone- mason you want to make of my heir and firstborn?
18118And what are you working at?
18118And who painted that?
18118Are they fierce?
18118Did you ever see a live horse?
18118Did you walk?
18118Have you seen Keppel''s portrait?
18118He will do nothing but draw pictures? 18118 Is it true-- is it true that there are pictures by Rubens in the Louvre?"
18118Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?
18118Me? 18118 Me?
18118Me? 18118 Me?
18118Pray you,said Rubens,"to which Van Dyck do you refer?
18118Should we two old men, about ready to die, stand in the way of the success of that boy?
18118So you do not care for the picture?
18118Then you painted the picture alone?
18118To Barcelona-- ten miles, and back?
18118Well, boys, what shall we draw today?
18118Well, why can not all your scholars draw like that, then?
18118What can you do?
18118What did I tell you?
18118What did I tell you?
18118What is the painter''s name?
18118What is this book you are working on?
18118What shall it be?
18118Where am I?
18118Where do you wish to go?
18118Where have you been?
18118Where have you been?
18118Who did this?
18118Who is with you?
18118Who wants me?
18118Why are you always late?
18118Why do you no longer come to my atelier?
18118You are quite sure my presence will not make you nervous, then?
18118You do not mind my watching you work?
18118You see the palace there in the picture, do you not?
18118And did she guess that this child would be the sustaining prop for her son when she, herself, was gone?
18118And this is well-- God made it all, and did He not look upon His work and pronounce it good?
18118And why should they not be?
18118But he contributed to the quiet joy of a million homes; and it is not for us to say,"It is beautiful; but is it art?"
18118But love is greater than man- made titles, and when was there ever a difference in station able to separate hearts that throbbed only for each other?
18118Can you mistake Kemble''s"coons,"Denslow''s dandies, Remington''s horses, Giannini''s Indians, or Gibson''s"Summer Girl"?
18118Can you read"Captain, My Captain,"or listen to the"Pilgrims''Chorus,"or look upon"The Man With the Hoe"without tears?
18118Could not the distinguished painter remain over one day and give his hosts a taste of his quality?
18118Delaroche and others declared his work was great, but how could they make people buy it?
18118Did Aubrey Beardsley infuse his own spirit into his work?
18118Did not the artist Salvio commit suicide?
18118Did the chief citizens of Leyden in the year Sixteen Hundred Thirty regard Rembrandt''s beggars as immortal?
18118Do you hear me, Mother, calling and crying for you?
18118Do you hear, Mynheer Van Swanenburch?
18118Do you understand me?
18118H.?"
18118He could hire men to paint, but where could one be found who could govern?
18118He could paint houses or wagons, and, then, did n''t the shipyard folks employ painters?
18118He had no quarrel with his environment, for did he not stay here a hundred years( lacking half a year), and then die through accident?
18118He roused enough to answer the question:"Dore-- Gustave Dore-- an artist?
18118If Elizabeth never discovered Shakespeare, how could she be expected to know Raphael?
18118If Rubens could not paint the picture of a lady without falling in love with her, what should be expected of his best pupil, Van Dyck?
18118In a week Lacroix said to Dore, who had called,"Well, have you begun to read my story?"
18118Into all his work Giorgione infused his own soul-- and do you know what the power to do that is?
18118It occurred to certain capitalists that if people would go to see one Dore, why would not a Dore gallery pay?
18118Jean Francois did not belong in Paris: how can robins build nests in omnibuses?
18118Let''s see-- what was it, then, that we were talking about?
18118No one there remembered seeing the boy-- how can busy officials be expected to remember everything?
18118Now, who shall say that Louis the Fourteenth has not enriched the world?
18118The diplomat well masked his true errand with the artist''s garb: and who of all men was ever so well fitted by Nature to play the part as Rubens?
18118The mother simply waived the taunt and asked,"Do you tell me the schoolmaster says he will not do anything but draw pictures?"
18118The question is, What will you collect?
18118The question was, for what profession should he be educated?
18118We will not think less of you, for see, do we not invite you to our board?"
18118What more can be done for you?
18118Who will be presumptuous enough to say what would have occurred had not this happened and that first taken place?
18118Why?
18118With such an entree into life, how was it possible that he should ever become a master?
18118and was n''t your husband really guilty, and did n''t you know it all the time?"
18118how should I know?
18118or does your avatar live somewhere here in this world?
18118turned to dust these three hundred years, what star do you now inhabit?
18118who can make a statue such as Michelangelo made?
10868After that? 10868 And are you?"
10868And can it never be changed?
10868And this is a free country? 10868 And to avenge his death, must other innocent lives also be sacrificed?"
10868And what is that?
10868And what is the answer to the riddle?
10868And what proof have we of His coming?
10868And what then?
10868Answer? 10868 Are those my thoughts?"
10868Are you satisfied now?
10868But did He save it? 10868 But why stir people up?"
10868But, my dear fellow, if you see this shameful thing, why not try to prevent it?
10868By love of those who believe?
10868Dear old Bodhisattva,he said,"what do you want to do?
10868Did he suffer much?
10868Did they cure the others?
10868Did you not want to see me?
10868Do n''t you believe that I see what infinitely small chances of success a revolution would have now in our country, under present conditions? 10868 Do you believe in miracles?"
10868Do you certainly know what is in vain? 10868 Do you mean that I am not free to say what I think?"
10868Do you think belief comes by willing to have it?
10868Even so,he said,"do you think that your republic will have no need of astronomers, just as the first one could get along without chemists?
10868Forgive you for what? 10868 Free?"
10868Give the boche your skin for a present? 10868 Have you had any news?"
10868Help from me?
10868Him? 10868 How about the excitable Lagneau, who talks about blowing everything to pieces?"
10868How about the present?
10868How can you imagine such things to add to your trouble?
10868I admit that a scholar is bound to defend the Truth that he has discovered, but is this social question your mission? 10868 I did fall, I assure you....""No, I know it is not true... tell me,... someone struck you...?"
10868Is it an article of faith?
10868Is it not always through love, and only in that way, that we learn to trust?
10868Is this what you wished?
10868It amounts to this, that you think I am wrong?
10868It ought, at least, to be of some use,--why play into their hands? 10868 Look here, my little girl, you think as I do about this, do you not?"
10868My dear friend,said he,"have you been ill?"
10868My name? 10868 Now?
10868Ought I to betray the truth, when it is clear to me?
10868Stay at home, why? 10868 Tell me about this fortune of hers?"
10868Then you agree that I ought to fight against these murderous mistakes?
10868Then you think I am right?
10868They had no pity on us,thought the unhappy ones,"why should we pity them?"
10868Time is not the only one you kill?
10868War with whom?
10868Was he happier towards the last?
10868Was it a wound?
10868We are the miracle, for is it not one that in this world of perpetual violence we have kept a constant faith in the love and the union of men?
10868What do you mean, my good friend?
10868What have I done?
10868What have we to do with truth? 10868 What is the matter?"
10868What was that, Agénor? 10868 What would become of France, of Europe, in twenty years?"
10868What? 10868 Where are you wounded?"
10868Where are you?
10868Who, all?
10868Why do you say that?
10868Why does this desire flame up so furiously? 10868 Why not, by gosh?
10868Why not? 10868 Why not?
10868Would you like to see him?
10868Would you resist her laws?
10868Yes, Papa, I suppose so...."You only suppose?... 10868 Yes,"said Clerambault, pulling himself together,"you must have known Sergeant Clerambault?"
10868You are a revolutionary then because you are discouraged?
10868You come from the country?
10868You have lost someone?
10868You here?
10868You old humbug,said his father, laughing gaily,"What does happen then all day long in your trenches?"
10868You say it is not,--not?
10868You were watching over me, were you not?... 10868 You yourself,"repeated Clerambault,"do you believe in it?"
10868You? 10868 --Is that all?"
10868--"With Servia?"
10868--Clerambault did not dare to ask for details, but after a pause:"Do you suffer much?"
10868... Our modern faith sees in the social group the summit of human evolution, but where is the proof?
10868... We did what we had to do, and let it go at that;--the end?
10868A little while before he went, Maxime came into his father''s study resolved to explain himself:"Papa, are you quite sure?"
10868After a moment''s silence, Clerambault asked:"Has he been wounded?"
10868After four years of unheard- of pain and ruin, can we possibly admit that it was all for nothing?
10868All his doubts came back upon him.... What forced him to speak?
10868Am I wrong in thinking that the shoe should be made to fit the foot, not the foot for the shoe?"
10868And do we not often see ourselves small and humble under the eyes of a child?
10868And must your sons be not only victims but accomplices, assassinated and assassins?..."
10868And of what use had been all the efforts of the ages?
10868And particularly for talking differently from other people?"
10868And to what end?
10868And to what end?
10868And whom would you save?"
10868And why so much hidden hatred?--What had he done to them?...
10868Are their fifty acres of ground on the globe where independent honest people can take refuge?
10868Are we to leave these crazy countries, this old continent, and emigrate?
10868Are you afraid lest I should prove to be in the right?"
10868Are you free to act?
10868Are you free to speak or to write?
10868Are you quite sure?"
10868Because you have lost someone you love, must you lose your head too?
10868Brothers of the world, which of you envies the others or would deprive them of this just happiness?
10868But at what time were they darker than they are now?
10868But do you believe when I was working in the soil, sweating all the fat off my bones, that any of them bothered their heads about me?
10868But do you really care?
10868But how can he be, if his self is merged in others?
10868But now our souls are poisoned, since thou hast called these things sacred....__ Why these combats?
10868But perhaps it was not necessary to write it....""Not necessary?
10868But was he sure that it was not there?...
10868But was it a question simply of his country?
10868But what can I say?"
10868But what did I do to defend him against this scourge which was coming upon us_?
10868But what would life be without it?
10868But where?
10868Butcher, murderer, you have had no pity, why should you implore it for yourself today?...
10868By what right do a hundred, a thousand, one or forty millions of men, demand that I shall renounce my soul?
10868Cain, what hast thou done with them?
10868Can it ever come to pass?
10868Can you even think for yourselves?
10868Can you expect me to love or hate a nation?
10868Can you tell beforehand which seed will germinate and which will turn out sterile and perish?
10868Clerambault felt a pang as he said quickly:"When he came back?"
10868Clerambault looked at Rosine, whose eyes, in spite of herself, shone with happiness:"And my little girl is not''poor''any longer, is she?"
10868Clerambault started:"Pleasure,"he said,"pleasure?"
10868Country?
10868Dear boy, what do you think of it yourself?"
10868Did not the wisest people set him the example of silence?
10868Did we unite to increase, and grow stronger to hate and destroy?
10868Did you ever see such a darling?"
10868Do n''t you think it is right?"
10868Do not think me so vain; but how can I help it, if I feel it is my duty to speak?"
10868Do not try to spare me now, but tell me, am I wrong to think as I do?"
10868Do we not see the beginnings already?
10868Do you remember the beautiful words of the Seer of St. Jean d''Acre?
10868Do you suppose that the people are of our way of thinking?
10868Do you think I am insensible to the pain of these poor souls whose faith I undermine?
10868Do you want to know what is at the bottom of it all, Sir?
10868Does God rule, or do some charlatans speak for the oracle?
10868Does it soothe my pain to inflict injury on others?
10868Does justice demand that millions of innocents should fall, a ransom for the sins and the errors of others?
10868For do we respect the plans of Nature when we stifle one part of its thought, and the higher, at that?
10868For how could he tell, who thought very little about it, his head being always full of some new work?
10868For some minutes they continued in silence; then Moreau seized his old friend''s arm, and said excitedly:"How did you know it?"
10868For the sake of whom, or what?
10868For what do they grow up?
10868For who will speak, if we do not?
10868For, on the contrary, he believed that the means are even more important to real progress than the end... what end?
10868Had he not done his duty?
10868Had they not trouble enough?
10868Has the war been really more atrocious?
10868He is like a soldier in battle, to whom a dangerous message is entrusted; is he free to shirk it?...
10868He might very well have come of his own accord; and it was impossible to say what his intentions were, perhaps he hardly knew himself?
10868He was awfully sorry... hoped there was no hard feeling?...
10868How can people be so wicked?"
10868How could he like extremes of thought, which are the cultures in which the germs of war develop?
10868How did it get in here?)
10868How is he to communicate his calm to them?
10868How many sons are there who feel a devout paternal affection for an old mother?
10868How then was he to get out of this tragic no- thoroughfare?
10868I do not oblige you to come with me, so why are you angry?
10868I must rebuild my house, the home of us all, for you have none, yours is a dungeon.... How can it be done, where shall I look, or find shelter?...
10868I wept with joy as I read them; I am not then left alone to suffer?
10868I wonder what will happen to this poor little chap twenty years hence?"
10868I''m no good,--what could I work at?
10868If not, what remains?
10868If we are not to be the masters, then we shall be victims;... we, do I say?
10868If you are alone against the world, have you cause to complain?
10868In the name of what theory?
10868Is crime to be washed out by crime?
10868Is he at the Front?"
10868Is it not the ideal of most Frenchmen to accept their plan of life ready- made in childhood and never change it?
10868Is it right, is it even possible for us to utter all our thoughts?
10868Is it so much less dangerous to believe oneself His manager, or His secretary?
10868Is it to satisfy the greed of some among us, and can it be that the Country will fill their maw at the cost of public misfortune_?
10868Is not this the first law, the first of joys?
10868Is that what you want?
10868Is that what you would have?
10868Is the price too high?
10868Is there no place in your mind for the hope of a higher future?"
10868It is clear enough, despair is all that drives me to will anything....""Why despair?"
10868It is terribly difficult for one soul to communicate with another, impossible perhaps, and who knows?...
10868It was terribly painful to break these ties, to meet the hatred of others halfway.... Was he strong enough to resist?...
10868Long enchained instincts stretch their stiffened limbs, cry out and leap into the open air, as of right-- right, do I say?
10868No, do n''t look at me like that, I shall not follow Pilate''s example, and ask: What is Truth?
10868Non- resistance?
10868Now where have we been led?
10868Of all these, which are the worst?
10868On what did he found this overweening self- confidence?
10868One conviction a day is enough for them; and what does the quality matter, since they are fresh every hour?
10868Or are they all to be mobilised?
10868Or humanity itself?
10868Or must we all sit down to leeward?
10868Or shall we join in and cut the throats of the weak, without the shadow of an illusion as to the blind cosmic cruelty?
10868Outside in the throng, how can he see over the heads of those who press about him?
10868Queer enough, is n''t it?...
10868Rosine blushed:"Why do you say that?"
10868Shall we resign ourselves to a voluntary sacrifice through pity or weariness?
10868Shall we spread them broadcast?--Suppose the seed of thought may spring up in weeds or poisonous plants...?
10868Shall we stifle thought, uproot living ideas?
10868Sometimes at night he had moments of oppression, he was uneasy, wakeful, discontented, ashamed;... but of what?
10868Sometimes they all blow up together.... How guard against this danger?
10868Still he could not seem to understand;"I do n''t hear,--Jaurès?
10868Suppose there were no more conquerors left in France?
10868Surely it is not for our sakes that men wage these combats between nations, this universal brigandage?
10868That could be settled afterwards.--Conquer?
10868The State?
10868The earth we tread on?
10868The family?
10868The lofty thoughts of the sages, of Jesus, of Socrates; how were they received?
10868The question was to conquer; at what price?
10868The sadness and folly of the present day, what do they matter?
10868The same intelligence which darkened my eyes, has now torn away the bandage; how can it be, at the same time, a power for truth and for falsehood?"
10868The worst is to be off by yourself; and you''re not lonesome, are you, boy?"
10868Their own suffering?
10868Then is it because men had more faith in the war of today?
10868Then turning to Clerambault, he added:"He is the one who keeps us all up, is it not so, Madame Fanny?"
10868There is no going, back, but I often think that if I had to begin over again--""When did you change your mind about all these things?"
10868There''s no merit in being patient when there''s nothing else to do.... A little more or less, what does it matter?...
10868These people wound me?
10868They asked him if he thought himself cleverer than anyone else, that he set himself up against the entire nation?
10868They lived in different worlds... could they ever understand each other again?...
10868They really exist, and can not be destroyed?
10868This is the hardest battle, that waged by the man divided against himself; and in the end who will conquer?
10868This liberty of which he was the master and the slave-- this imperious need to be free?
10868Those which rouse long echoes in the conscience of mankind, or those which are known alone to the stifled victim?
10868To be butchered like this?
10868To satisfy blind instincts, or rogues?
10868To set us free?
10868To what end?
10868Was there nothing left?
10868We are all answerable, do you say?
10868We must wait and not go too fast for nature...""Wait, until the appetites of the exploiter, and the folly of the exploited are equally exhausted?
10868Were you unhappy?"
10868What are we to do, if our hands are full of verities?
10868What are you free from, and which of you is free in your countries today?
10868What can you expect from such feather- headed creatures who do not know if they are on their heads or their heels?
10868What causes them the most pain?
10868What choice is left, but to try to keep out of the struggle through selfishness-- or wisdom, which is another form of the same thing?"
10868What could he mean?
10868What could this wretched man do, symbol as he was, of the mutilated, sacrificed people?
10868What did this poet mean by giving lessons to the socialists in a party paper?
10868What do you say?
10868What does it matter, since we are all in the same column?
10868What else mattered?
10868What else was there for them to do but talk?
10868What good is it to us?
10868What have we to do with the ambitions and rivalries, covetousness, and ills of the mind, which they dignify with the name of Patriotism?
10868What help have we ever given him?
10868What is it that possesses us all?
10868What is she?
10868What is this blind love, of which the other side of the shield is an equally blinded hate?
10868What meaning had there been in this long troubled course, now ending in darkness?
10868What need have we of further conquests, when the land of our fathers has grown too wide for their children?
10868What of the youth of Europe remained behind the lines?
10868What remains?
10868What should we have left on earth if it were not for our country?"
10868What then is this Country, this living thing to which a man sacrifices his life, the life of all but his conscience and the consciences of others?
10868What was this freedom, then, which intoxicated him so completely?
10868What was this mania he had for talking?
10868What wicked insanity that turns us against our better selves?...
10868What will it find outside?
10868What would it be in the case of a nation, of ten nations, or of civilisation as a whole?...
10868When Xavier Thouron first came to see Clerambault how could anyone know if he was in the Secret Service?
10868When an artist submits his work for your approval, is it proper to say to him:"I should prefer to read another one quite different from this?"
10868When the boat leans over, must I not throw my weight on the other side to keep an even keel?
10868When will you cease to insist on the absolute good?"
10868Where are those who travail all over the world?
10868Where had he seen her before?
10868Which we can only maintain, it would seem, by renouncing it; and for the sake of what carnivorous gods?...
10868Who can tell?
10868Who will give us back the sun, and our love for our brothers?...
10868Who would listen to him, and what good would it do?
10868Whom did he wish to justify?
10868Whom do you mean?"
10868Why choose this inoffensive, unbiassed man, who was kind to everyone, and almost too comprehending to all sides?
10868Why do they not see the imbecility of their conduct, in face of the gulf that swallows up each man that dies, all humanity with him?
10868Why do we have children?
10868Why do you say such things?"
10868Why does not everyone understand these things?"
10868Why is it that in this war men lost their mental balance more than in any other at any previous time?
10868Why not urge him to act, instead of trying to hold him back?
10868Why not?
10868Will it be in the East, or in Europe?
10868Will it die out?
10868Will there ever be such a thing?
10868Will you come another time?"
10868Yes, or no?"
10868You ask why I did it?
10868You can not set others free, in spite of them, and from the outside; and even if it were possible, what good would it do?
10868You have fought and suffered for your country, and what have you gained by it?
10868You must think me terribly selfish?"
10868You talk of struggles and hatred between races?
10868You would not wish to stay its course?"
10868Your way is the best, the only one, you say?
10868_ What glory can be found in death and destruction?
10868_ What have I to do with your nations?
10868_ What have these shadows of the past to do with us today?
10868and you)?
10868he commanded, and standing behind his brother- in- law as he read, he went on:"What does the beastly thing mean?"
10868is that you, old man?"
10868or murder by murder?
10868said Moreau,"are you ill?"
10868the Clergy?
10868thought Clerambault, and in the hearts of these good people he read the answer:"Why not?"
10868what can I do?
10868what have you been doing now?"
10868why hast thou deserted and betrayed me?
10868why hast thou forsaken us?"
10868you tripped and fell?..."
10868you''think''that you struck your cheek?...
10410''A necklace of diamonds?'' 10410 ''Are you not Mademoiselle de Renzie''s lover?''
10410''What was in the case which the man afterwards murdered slipped into your pocket?'' 10410 A newspaper?
10410A promise?
10410Across the Channel?
10410After you''d killed me, as you said?
10410Ah, it''s a lost document?
10410Am I a fool, or wise, to let myself believe you?
10410Am I to hear the rest-- according to your protà © gà ©?
10410And if I were n''t true-- if I deceived you?
10410And of any lack of faith?
10410And what hotel shall you choose in Paris?
10410And whatever happens, you will say nothing about having heard Maxine''s name from me?
10410And you did n''t deny it to him?
10410And you-- have I really spoiled your life by forcing you to make that promise? 10410 Annoyances?"
10410Are n''t those funny, gargoyley faces up there? 10410 Are n''t_ you_ evading the point far more than I?
10410Are you going out of town?
10410Are you surprised to see me, Monsieur?
10410As for these letters, you are still anxious about them, Mademoiselle?
10410As much as that? 10410 At least you will listen while I go on with the news I came to tell?"
10410But afterwards? 10410 But what reason had you to suppose that any danger of discovery threatened you because of a knock at the door?"
10410But why has your conscience begun to reproach you for trying to put me against Ivor? 10410 But you can guess what has brought me?"
10410But you''ve heard of it? 10410 But-- I thought you said that its loss was already discovered?"
10410But-- but at least, you''re not going on purpose?
10410But-- if you''re breaking a promise to me?
10410Ca n''t it wait until to- morrow?
10410Ca n''t? 10410 Could n''t he have shown the note sent by the thief?"
10410Could not possibly have committed? 10410 Di, are you there?"
10410Did n''t the-- weren''t you warned who would be the man to come?
10410Did you dance every dance?
10410Did you hear anything then?
10410Do n''t you want to wait and see how long Ivor Dundas stops?
10410Do you know what this is, Miss Forrest?
10410Do you make war on women?
10410Do you think still that I let a man in, and hid him when I heard you ring?
10410Do you think there is much chance for concealment in this dress?
10410Do_ you_ think he will, Eric?
10410Does it please you to do things for me?
10410Does n''t it occur to you that, at this very moment, a couple of lovers may be sitting hand in hand on the seat under the old yew arbour? 10410 Even at the gate-- what?"
10410For his sake?
10410Goodness, is it you or your ghost?
10410Has Ivor''s message-- to do with that?
10410Has your trouble anything to do with a document?
10410Have you a headache, dear?
10410Have you got hold of it?
10410Have you really ordered a motor cab?
10410Have you seen a newspaper to- day?
10410He suspected that someone was with you? 10410 He told you-- that?"
10410How can anything you know save him?
10410How can you know anything about it?
10410How did you know?
10410How is it possible that you can give me the document?
10410How_ could_ you?
10410I may come to you as soon as I''m free?
10410I suppose you wo n''t try to do anything until after lunch, will you, Mountstuart?
10410I wonder what the man in the shadow would do if he saw us?
10410I''ve got you a chauffeur too, and--"Then what has happened? 10410 If I care for him?"
10410In what detail have I failed? 10410 Is it Ivor?
10410Is n''t he clever, after all?
10410Is n''t she a friend of yours?
10410Is there nothing we can do then? 10410 Is there really serious danger of that?"
10410Is this the Rue d''Hollande?
10410Is this why you wished to know what I would do if you deceived me?
10410Is this your''inspiration''?
10410Is your detective''s name Anatole Girard, and does he live in Rue du Capucin Blanc?
10410It does n''t look much like a thing that a man would carry about with him, does it?
10410It''s not much to be brave for a man you love, is it? 10410 Jewels?"
10410Keep the secret, yet use it to free the Englishman?
10410Knows what?
10410Lisa, are you planning to go somewhere in particular, do something you want to''spring''on me when it''s too late for me to get out of it?
10410Marianne''s? 10410 Mr. Dundas sent you to me?"
10410Not deserve them?
10410Now are you happy again?
10410Now, are you satisfied?
10410Of course, he''s Lord Mountstuart''s cousin, and brother- in- law as well, and that makes him seem quite in the family, does n''t it? 10410 Oh, Lisa, does sophistry of that sort matter?
10410Oh, my darling, what would n''t I promise you, to atone for my brutal injustice to an angel? 10410 Ought I to help you?"
10410Save me from what?
10410Sha n''t I come with you?
10410Shall I mention the word--_document?_he hinted.
10410Shall I take you upstairs to your own room?
10410Shall it be the à � lysèe Palace?
10410Shall we go and look, or shall we leave them in peace?
10410Suppose all these people out there had hated and hissed me, instead of applauding?
10410Supposing I got ill in a hired cab? 10410 Surely Mr. Dundas must have been able to prove an-- an-- don''t you call it an alibi?"
10410That''s rather a hard name, is n''t it? 10410 That''s your answer?
10410The diamonds?
10410The treaty?
10410Then, what_ is_ there would make you love me less?
10410To Di?
10410Until this time to- morrow?
10410Well?
10410Well?
10410What about Uncle Eric''s study?
10410What connection can Ivor Dundas''coming to Paris have with Raoul du Laurier?
10410What could that mean?
10410What do you know of that?
10410What do you mean?
10410What do you mean?
10410What document?
10410What good will their destruction do me, though, if you are not merciful?
10410What if a voice in the auditorium should suddenly shout that Maxine de Renzie had betrayed France for money, English money?
10410What if some word had come to him in the theatre-- about the treaty?
10410What if they know all I''ve done?
10410What is it you want to see me about?
10410What is it, Raoul?--why do you look like that?
10410What jewels?
10410What language was that?
10410What makes you think of her?
10410What news? 10410 What news?"
10410What shall I do?
10410What things?
10410What time was all that?
10410What treaty?
10410What was the dreadful thing that happened?
10410What will become of me?
10410What you know of the document you mentioned?
10410What''s that?
10410When am I to have you? 10410 When did you see him?
10410Where, then, is the document?
10410Who told you I was leaving?
10410Why may n''t I look now?
10410Why not? 10410 Why should a detective watch Mademoiselle de Renzie''s house?"
10410Why should n''t he slip, or slide, or steam, or sail in a balloon, if he likes?
10410Why to- night of all nights? 10410 Why, indeed?
10410Why, what''s wrong with him?
10410Why?
10410Will Godensky be in the audience, too?
10410Will you ever be blasà ©, like the rest of the men I know?
10410Will you give me the diamonds, too?
10410Wo n''t you search further?
10410Wo n''t you sit here, sir?
10410Would Mountstuart and Lady Mountstuart approve?
10410Would n''t it be more to the point if you told me what the document is, and how it concerns me?
10410Would you be so very kind, sir,he said to me,"to beckon a porter, as you are near the door?
10410Would you prefer to have me call at her house, and save her coming to a hotel? 10410 Would you still be proud of me, still care for me?"
10410Yet how could I have dreamed of it?
10410You dared to tell Raoul that?
10410You do like poor little me a tiny bit, then?
10410You do n''t believe then,I asked,"that Godensky has had any hand in the disappearance of the treaty?"
10410You do n''t mean to say you have n''t yet opened the little bag I gave you at the theatre?
10410You know me, and you know Godensky-- yet you need an explanation of anything evil said of me by him?
10410You know of her already?
10410You mean, thank God he was n''t sooner, do n''t you, darling?
10410You say the man you were engaged to was at your house while Ivor was there?
10410You see I''m right, do n''t you?
10410You swear by everything you hold sacred to break with him to- morrow?
10410You want me to go to France?
10410You would like to know their fate?
10410You''re certain it''s the same?
10410You--_didn''t bring it_?
10410( Ah,_ was_ it not, if he had known?)
10410A disappointment, that affair, was n''t it?
10410A thousand times I thank you for trusting me in spite of appearances, but-- after all,_ were_ they so much against me?
10410Already I''ve given something, but--""What have you given?"
10410And if there had been a struggle-- what of the treaty?
10410And one was number thirteen, was n''t it?"
10410And you dedicated your book about Lhassa, that made you such a famous person, to her, did n''t you?"
10410At last, dearest lady, you begin to see what there is in this string of questions and answers to bring me straight to you?"
10410But I hope you do n''t call yourself my''enemy''?"
10410But how could I manage it after refusing-- as I must refuse-- to let Raoul go home with me?
10410But how long would that be?
10410But was he going to her?
10410But what good to deny what I had just said?
10410But what of a man who has been scorned-- by a woman?
10410But what use to ask more questions?
10410But what''s a man worth who does n''t lose his head when he loves a woman?
10410But- who knows?
10410But-- because I''m engaged to be married to-- perhaps you know that, though, among other things?"
10410But--""Would you rather not be bothered with me?"
10410By the way, used Maxine de Renzie to come here, when she was acting in London at George Allendale''s theatre?
10410Ca n''t you imagine how they started and tried to hold their breath lest you should hear, as you opened the gate and came up the path?"
10410Can you imagine Raoul''s feelings?
10410Could I have changed so quickly, do you think?"
10410Could he, would he help me to do that?
10410Could it be that I was to hear, now?
10410Could the Foreign Secretary had given me the necklace,_ instead_ of what you expected?"
10410Could those diamonds have been inside it?
10410Did you know of her engagement?"
10410Do n''t you see it''s reserved?"
10410Do n''t you see, it''s just what he''d like best?
10410Do you despise me for my enthusiasm?"
10410Do you feel strong enough to go upstairs?"
10410Do you forgive me?"
10410Do you know him?"
10410Do you know him?"
10410Do you know-- you are killing me?"
10410Do you understand?"
10410Do you want me to believe_ this_ his message?
10410Do you want me to go mad?"
10410Does anything matter except saving him?"
10410Dundas?"
10410Dundas?"
10410First, I want to ask if you were n''t glad when you saw the jewels?"
10410Girard-- the man Dundas chose to employ-- was the very man I''d sent to England; on what errand, do you think?
10410Had Lord Mountstuart been arranging a tête- à  -tête between Di and Ivor Dundas?
10410Have you seen du Laurier?"
10410He now returns, as he mentioned that he might do?"
10410He stood watching, outside your gate?"
10410How could I expect him to believe the real truth now?
10410How did you get this necklace, that meant so much to me( and to one I love), and how did you hide the-- other thing?"
10410I ca n''t imagine what I should want with any dry old document out of the Foreign Office, can you?"
10410I could n''t help adding--"Even though I''m different from other girls?"
10410I hope, at least, that du Laurier knows about the necklace?"
10410I said"How do you do?"
10410I sha n''t take any calls-- after dying, it''s too inartistic, is n''t it?
10410I suppose you''ll do the same?
10410I''ll trust you, if--""If what?"
10410If I''d cared for him, why should n''t I have accepted him instead of you?
10410If I''m right, and Ivor''s there, shall you think it wise to give him up?"
10410If he says yes--""You''ll tell him all is over between you?"
10410Is it large or small?
10410Is it not that Monsieur has been here already?
10410Is n''t it the same thing?"
10410Is that merely your opinion as a loyal friend, or have you come to make a communication to me?"
10410It is much the same, is n''t it, if one has secrets to keep?
10410Meanwhile--""Meanwhile, you do n''t mean to send me away from you?"
10410My God-- what shall I do?
10410My last words to her were:"What is the use?
10410No?
10410Nothing has happened?
10410Now you understand all, do n''t you-- even if you did n''t before?
10410Now, does it feel exactly as if it were the green letter- case with which you started out?"
10410Now, where shall I take you, Imp?
10410Now, will that assurance make it easier for you to put your whole soul into your part to- night?"
10410Now, you understand thoroughly?"
10410Of course, you''ve seen the evening papers?
10410Oh, surely they_ are_ still in the bag?"
10410Oh,_ why_ do you stand there, looking at me like that?
10410Or is it that you were more realistic in your acting to- night than ever before?
10410Or-- that we would urge_ others_ to do?"
10410Probably she hoped that by this time I was gone; but how could I go?
10410Rather womanish, is n''t it?"
10410Remember you''re in training for a diplomatic career, what?
10410Shall I say you are not receiving?"
10410She knows of course that I love her--""And if you get the consulship, you''ll put the important question?"
10410So why should I suppose you would rather du Laurier did n''t know?
10410Still-- why had he looked so miserable, if he did n''t care what I thought, and was really ready to throw me over at a call from her?
10410Supposing Ivor had had bad news, and thought it best to warn me without delay?
10410Supposing him a spy, employed to track and rob me of what I carried, why should he have made me a present of these rare and precious diamonds?
10410Tell me, Mademoiselle de Renzie, did he lose anything of value near your house?"
10410Tell me-- how did you work such a miracle?
10410That is likely, is it not?
10410The thing is, it would have been rather awkward, would n''t it?
10410The very asking of such a bold question--"Do you think I let a man in, and hid him?"
10410They''ll soon be eating humble- pie, and begging England''s pardon for wrongful treatment of a British subject, wo n''t they, Eric?"
10410Was he nice when he proposed?"
10410Was he with you for long-- so long that he could n''t have got to the other place in time to commit the murder?"
10410Was it a bluff, or did he know-- not merely suspect-- something?
10410Was n''t Mrs. George awfully jealous of her husband when he had such a fascinating beauty for his leading lady?"
10410What about supper?"
10410What about you, Lord Bob?"
10410What audience would stop in the theatre after an announcement that their Maxine''s understudy would take her place?
10410What can it matter now?"
10410What could I do to escape from such an_ impasse_?
10410What could have happened?
10410What had he done?
10410What if I spoke, and startled him?
10410What if it should be Raoul-- what if he has seen our shadows on the curtain?"
10410What if this became known, this thing that she had said, and Diana should hear?
10410What if, in spite of all, Ivor should tell Di how he loved her, and they should be engaged?
10410What made you think that?"
10410What shall I do?"
10410What use to have one?
10410What was he to do?
10410What''s the good of me-- to myself or anyone?"
10410Where''s your brave, independent American spirit?"
10410Who can he be, if not Ivor?
10410Who could it be?
10410Why could n''t I have thought of that danger?
10410Why do you ask?
10410Why do you make it to me?"
10410Why dwell on horrors, when I might have five minutes of happiness-- perhaps the last I should ever know?
10410Why was that, Mademoiselle, since there was nothing for him to be ashamed of?"
10410Why, has the Government gone out?"
10410Why?"
10410Will that satisfy you?"
10410Will you do that?"
10410Will you promise me that?"
10410Will you speak without my prompting?"
10410Would I be so extremely obliging as to throw an eye about the platform to see if it had fallen there?
10410Would Mademoiselle take supper?
10410Would Monsieur give himself the pain of waiting a few minutes, until dinner should be over?
10410Would du Laurier have you if he knew what you are-- as he will know soon unless you let me save you?
10410Would he point out the_ cocher_ to me?
10410Would the bribe for which he used his skill reach anything like the sum he could obtain by selling the stones?
10410Would the people who occupied that room let it to me for a few hours?
10410Would three louis be enough?
10410Would you go with me?"
10410Would you like to know, if some magical bird could tell you, what questions were put to Mr. Dundas, and what answers he made?"
10410Would you take advantage of that?"
10410You agree to that?"
10410You are surprised that a document was found on the prisoner?"
10410You do n''t want to see my rings?
10410You have-- the paper?"
10410You know that your English friend is in prison?"
10410You might just say,''How have you been for the last twelve months?''"
10410You must know of the Duchesse de Montpellier?
10410You saw him?"
10410You''ll never be jealous and make me miserable again, will you, no matter what Count Godensky or any other wretched creature may say of me to you?"
10410You''re shocked to hear what my inner life has been?"
10410You''ve been engaged only a week?"
10410You_ will_ say''yes''when he does, wo n''t you, and have the engagement announced at once?"
10410_ Something''s going to happen._""Do you feel that, too?"
13292Ah-- h-- A wounded man?
13292All the time?
13292All_ what_?
13292And that''s why you came here?
13292And your sleeping draught was for Gurney?
13292Are n''t you glad you came? 13292 Are they coming?"
13292Are you all right, Sharlie?
13292Are you certain?
13292Are you quite sure?
13292Billy-- John is n''t hurt, is he?
13292Billy-- do you remember that day at Melle, when John lost me? 13292 Billy-- what did happen, really?
13292Blood?
13292Ca n''t I? 13292 Ca n''t you think?"
13292Ca n''t_ you_?
13292Can I do anything, Monsieur?
13292Charlotte,he said,"did you really think I''d left you?"
13292Charlotte-- are we never to get away from him? 13292 Charlotte-- are you sure you do n''t care for him?"
13292Coming? 13292 Could n''t it?
13292Could you tell me what you dreamed?
13292Did I?
13292Did n''t you let him?
13292Did you dream about me?
13292Did you hear that, Mademoiselle?
13292Did you see how they glared?
13292Did''it''do cowardly things to''save''itself?
13292Do I? 13292 Do n''t I know it?"
13292Do n''t you see how awful it''ll be for the Corps?
13292Do n''t you want to be in the big thing?
13292Do you ever dream about him, Charlotte?
13292Do you know who he is?
13292Do you like him?
13292Do you mean she knows?
13292Do you mind?
13292Do you suppose,he said,"I have n''t?"
13292Do you suppose,she said,"they''ll get our range?"
13292Do you want to stay on here?
13292Do you want to?
13292Do you_ know_ what happened?
13292Does anybody else know?
13292Does he think they''ll hold it?
13292Does he? 13292 Does it matter?"
13292Does it strike you,he said,"that Billy is n''t very keen?"
13292Does n''t he?
13292Does n''t it?
13292Dr. McClane, if you took Charlotte out among the shells, would you run away and leave her there?
13292Effie?
13292For what?
13292Good?
13292Gwinnie-- you know why McClane wo n''t have John?
13292Had n''t I better take his feet?
13292Has old Burton said anything?
13292He betrayed me?
13292He was getting in Germans?
13292He wo n''t mind your leaving him?
13292He''s been too much for you, has he?
13292How about Gwinnie and me?
13292How are you going to get into it?
13292How could you be so_ cruel?_ What did you do it for? 13292 How could you be so_ cruel?_ What did you do it for?
13292How could you tell?
13292How do you know?
13292How do you mean, hit it off?
13292How do you mean, wrong?
13292How many did you get?
13292How on earth did you know that? 13292 I say, John-- my car_ does_ cover Gwinnie''s a bit, does n''t it?"
13292I thought you said if it was a toss up between you and a wounded man--? 13292 I''m to go by myself then?"
13292I? 13292 I_ say_, what are you doing?"
13292If you can keep him in bed for the duration of the war--"Are you talking about John?
13292Is John hurt?
13292Is he hurt?
13292Is he killed?
13292Is n''t it a bit too late?
13292Is n''t it a pity to frighten him?
13292Is n''t it the way to tie yourself tighter?
13292Is that wise? 13292 Is this your farm?"
13292It would have been the next best thing.... Did you notice in the lists the number of Army Medical men killed and missing? 13292 It''s easier to break through a thin ring than a thick one, and who''s going to push?"
13292John, was Mrs. Rankin any good?
13292John, you_ are n''t_ going to faint or be sick or anything?
13292John,she said,"are you hurt?"
13292John,she said,"can I have one of the cars to- morrow afternoon?"
13292John,she said,"you ca n''t go on like this--""Like what?"
13292John-- Conway? 13292 John-- do my knees show awfully as I walk?"
13292Look here, from the time he realised the danger, did he go out or did he stay under cover?
13292McClane is n''t keen on Mrs. Rankin.... Ca n''t you see he''s trying to hoof John out of Belgium, because he wants all the glory to himself? 13292 McClane?"
13292Me? 13292 Me?"
13292Me?
13292My God-- you thought I could do that?
13292My dear child, do n''t you know why? 13292 My pyjamas?
13292No? 13292 Not coming back?
13292Of course, if you''re going to be unhappy about it--"The only thing is, can we go after him? 13292 Oh, Billy, I-- I could n''t do that.... What made you think of it?"
13292Oh, Billy, wo n''t you leave him one shred?
13292Oh-- so you were frightened, were you?
13292Oh_ that_--You mean if I-- It would n''t happen, and if it did, what difference would it make?
13292Shall we have to sleep with it?
13292Sharlie, you do n''t mean to say that_ you''re_ not keen?
13292Sharlie-- with the Germans coming into Ghent do you honestly believe anybody''ll remember what he did or did n''t do?
13292So you got through?
13292Suicide? 13292 Supposing I had n''t?"
13292That Belgian boy?
13292The Corps? 13292 The German?"
13292Tired? 13292 To him?"
13292To keep me off him?
13292Too much--? 13292 Unbalanced?"
13292Was he all right?
13292Was he?
13292Was the boy dead or alive when he left him?
13292Well--She thought:"Why ca n''t he leave it alone?
13292Well?
13292Were you going to change into your pyjamas at Ostend?
13292What about?
13292What are you going to do about Conway?
13292What are you going to do with that walking- tour johnnie?
13292What are you smiling at?
13292What are you thinking of? 13292 What are you thinking of?"
13292What can they do?
13292What can you say?
13292What did you do that for?
13292What did you say?
13292What did you want?
13292What do I do now?
13292What do any of us know about McClane?
13292What do you know about me?
13292What do you suppose it was then?
13292What else can I do? 13292 What excuse do you think he''ll make?"
13292What for?
13292What happened?
13292What is it, then?
13292What is it?
13292What is n''t?
13292What makes you think of wounds?
13292What makes you think so?
13292What makes you think so?
13292What makes you think so?
13292What on earth makes you think that?
13292What soldier?
13292What was I to think?
13292What was it?
13292What''s he done this time?
13292What''s that he''s saying now?
13292What''s the good? 13292 What''s the matter with him?"
13292What''s the matter with him?
13292What''s up?
13292What? 13292 What?
13292What? 13292 What?"
13292What?
13292What_ should_ happen again?
13292Whatever made you think of it?
13292When? 13292 When_ will_ you learn that you''ve simply got to obey orders?"
13292Where did that shell burst?
13292Where have you come from?
13292Where is Monsieur?
13292Where is he?
13292Where is he?
13292Where is he?
13292Where was he hit?
13292Where?
13292Where_ is_ Billy?
13292Who have I betrayed you to?
13292Who have?
13292Who to?
13292Who told you that?
13292Who wants a lady''s tea- party? 13292 Who-- who told you?"
13292Whose death?
13292Why did n''t he go back with you himself, then?
13292Why did n''t you then?
13292Why did n''t you?
13292Why is n''t it? 13292 Why not?
13292Why should I have betrayed you?
13292Why should n''t it?
13292Why should you? 13292 Why?"
13292Would it make you happier to think that he was or to know that he was n''t?
13292You could n''t live if you remembered...."Oh, John, do you think it was as horrible as all that?
13292You do n''t imagine,Charlotte said,"by any chance that we''re_ afraid_?"
13292You do n''t suppose they meant anything?
13292You do n''t suppose,she said,"I should leave Mr. Conway?
13292You insist that I was trying to get away? 13292 You lied, then?"
13292You mean with-- just anybody?
13292You mean you have others more urgent?
13292You mean you''d come back?
13292You think you''ve seen that?
13292You would n''t want to go back?
13292You''re not going to be unhappy about him?
13292You''ve forgiven him?
13292You?
13292You_ knew_ it was n''t possible?
13292Zele? 13292 _ Can_ you tell me the name of the volunteer who''s been killed?"
13292_ Had_ he?
13292_ He_ gave it you?
13292_ Is_ it? 13292 _ Me_?"
13292_ Was_ it?
13292_ You_ going?
13292*****"Do you mind,"John said,"if Sutton goes instead of me He has n''t been out yet?"
13292*****"Is that you, Charlotte?"
13292A bad wound?
13292Alice, did n''t I say, the minute I saw Mr. Conway with that car of his, did n''t I_ say_ we ought to have him?"
13292And afterwards?"
13292And she?
13292And who was she to judge him?
13292As big as that?
13292But she thought: Supposing he went, loathing it, shivering, sick?
13292But, Billy, why did you lie about him?"
13292But_ I_ would.... You know I_ do_ care for you?"
13292Can I?"
13292Can we spare a car?"
13292Cirencester?
13292Conway?"
13292Could n''t Billy tell him?"
13292Could n''t she see that?"
13292Could war tire you and wear you down, and change you from yourself?
13292Could you do without it and go on caring?"
13292Did he know why John was there?
13292Did he think she wanted to get anything out of their passion?
13292Did he_ leave_ the German?"
13292Did you ever feel anything like the peace of it?"
13292Did you tell him I was going back with you?"
13292Do I know the way?"
13292Do n''t you know I only cared for you because I''d done with that?"
13292Do n''t you know why he took you out with him everywhere?
13292Do you know I could get you fired out of Belgium to- morrow?"
13292Do you know old Burton''s going to keep us on?
13292Do you know?"
13292Do you mind?"
13292Do you want him?"
13292Does that matter?
13292Driven out of Stow- on- the- Wold by Gibson?
13292Even if we did, you would n''t be sorry for that, would you?"
13292Except that one dreadful minute last year when he had wanted to raise her salary-- afterwards-- and she had said"What_ for_?"
13292From the Barrow Hill Farm time?
13292Go and leave my cars to Sutton?"
13292Going on to Cirencester when you wanted to be in Stow- on- the- Wold, what_ was_ it but a cowardly retreat?
13292Gwinnie struck in,"Are you all right?"
13292Gwinnie was looking in at the messroom door and saying"Do you know where Charlotte is?"
13292Had n''t she always somehow, in secret, been afraid?
13292Had n''t we better go on and strike the main road?"
13292Had they taken a man with a wound in his back?
13292Half the night she lay awake wondering: Do I hate him because he does n''t care about me?
13292Have you got it clear?"
13292Have you seen their cars?
13292He had met that with his"Well-- what did you want?"
13292He is n''t much good, is he?
13292He looked just like that.... Oh, Billy, do you think the past''s really past?...
13292He''s taken his toothbrush and his sleeping draught.... You know he tried to get leave yesterday and they would n''t give it him?"
13292Her face had the mark of what he had done to her...."Much firing?
13292His servant was with him; they were calling out to Conway--""_ Calling_ to him?"
13292How could you care for a thing like that?
13292How could you forget a wounded man?
13292How could you want a thing like that to care for you?
13292How could you want anything but this for ever?
13292How did she know what he would n''t have done?
13292I ca n''t_ stand_ it, ca n''t I?"
13292I did n''t_ want_ to hurt her.... Billy, are you sure it makes no difference?
13292I had an operation.... Is that a wounded man you''ve got there?
13292I sha n''t ever have that awful feeling of wondering what he''ll do next.... Billy-- you were with him, were n''t you?"
13292I suppose he lost him, too?"
13292If I could cure him--""Ca n''t you?"
13292If John went--"John, shall you stay on here?"
13292If he hasn''t--""Yes-- if he has n''t?"
13292If it gives the show away I ca n''t help seeing, can I?"
13292If that was right, the rest was right.... Supposing Billy had n''t told him anything of the sort, though?
13292In two weeks?
13292Is he always to stick between us?
13292Is n''t it better to recognize that he''s rotten?
13292Is n''t there some way he could go on being what he_ was_?"
13292Is there any vile thing he did n''t do?"
13292It was not possible, he said, that they had been left behind?
13292It''s no use taking it like that, Jeanne, as one consummate tragedy... How are_ you_ feeling about it?"
13292More, really...."... Jeanne-- do you realise that if we''ve any luck, any luck at all, we shall take the same risks?"
13292No?
13292Oh well-- why should he have ruined himself for her?
13292Oh, John, what''s the good of lying?
13292Oh, why are we so beastly hard on each other?
13292Or back to Stow- on- the- Wold?
13292Or because he does n''t care about the wounded?
13292Or from yesterday?
13292Or supposing he was still warm and limp like the boy at Melle?
13292Or was it that Effie''s sad, sharp face slipped between?
13292Perhaps his way of calling her"Poor Sharlie?"
13292Presently he came to himself with a long sigh--"Charlotte, what are we going to do now?
13292She could n''t say to Billy:"_ Did_ you tell John I was going back with you?
13292She shouted down at him,"Why ca n''t you_ take_ the damned thing?
13292She thought: We were safe enough before, but--"Supposing,"she said,"they alter their range?"
13292She thought: What''s the good of lying when they all know?
13292She wondered: Had he seen?
13292Shows how much they wanted him, does n''t it?"
13292Supposing he did n''t go, supposing he stuck, and had to be pushed on, by bayonets, from behind?
13292Supposing he was n''t?
13292Supposing her body had been bound to him so that it could n''t get away?
13292Supposing his funk extinguished something in him that could only be revived through cruelty?
13292Supposing it happened again?
13292Supposing you found dead men lying out on the fields at Stow?
13292Supposing you had always to go in fear of its happening?...
13292Sutton?"
13292Sutton?"
13292The man who raced the Germans into Zele?"
13292There are all sorts of jolly things we could do together.... Would you like to live with me, Charlotte, on my farm?"
13292Through the glass door she heard Sutton saying,"If you''re right, McClane, I ca n''t very well leave her with him, can I?"
13292Was it possible that he had forgotten him, too?...
13292Was it the disgust of knowing that you were only one of a procession?
13292Was that why he shot him?"
13292We shall bring him in--""He''s dead then?"
13292Well, did n''t she?
13292What could you want to get out of it, or give, but joy?
13292What did you want?
13292What did you want?
13292What did you_ do_ it for?"
13292What do you mean?"
13292What do you suppose it feels like, driving a heavy ambulance car by yourself?
13292What had he really thought of her?
13292What made you come?"
13292What''s the matter with me?"
13292When I saw you the first time-- Do you remember?
13292When?"
13292Where_ is_ he?"
13292Why could n''t he speak out?
13292Why had John done it?
13292Why not?
13292Why should n''t Billy leave him one shred?
13292Why should they?
13292Why?
13292Why?
13292Why?"
13292Would it be what it was last autumn and winter and in the spring before he came?
13292Would they take a stretcher and find him?
13292You did n''t suppose I was really going to bolt, did you?"
13292You do n''t suppose I''m going to let McClane fire me out of Belgium?...
13292You knew?"
13292You turn round and go the way we went that first day-- you remember?
13292You''ll say he could help betraying you--""To you, too?"
13292_ That_ man?
13292_"Ca n''t_ you shove it in at the bottom?"
12057After the combat, if you wish to tell him--"But if he should fall?
12057Ah, did he say that of me?
12057Ah, our guards have stolen Grion''s cow, have they? 12057 Ah, you do?"
12057Alone with Sir Max after dark?
12057Am I not safe here? 12057 And Your Grace''s unhappy daughter is to be the shuttlecock, my lord?"
12057And was I right in my other divination?
12057And were delivered at the gate?
12057And you are not dying for love of her, are you?
12057And you, Fräulein?
12057And you, Fräulein?
12057Are Frenchmen apt at such matters, Fräulein?
12057Are you advising me wrongly for the first time in my life?
12057Are you coming back to me? 12057 Ay, gladly,"I responded,"but where and why?"
12057But how could the lady have felt sure you were not seeking her for the sake of her estates?
12057But how is that to be done, Fräulein?
12057But if he does n''t, Max?
12057But if he wants it?
12057But if the duke is gone, can not you get the order when he returns?
12057But what assurance have you that King Louis will accept your terms?
12057But what have they done?
12057But you say this young man is from Styria?
12057But, my dear, how will that help you?
12057But-- but what will father say?
12057By what good fortune are you here, Sir Karl?
12057Did I ever steal or commit wilful murder?
12057Did Sir Max tell you who he is?
12057Did not Sir Karl say something about your having been born in Styria?
12057Did you coax all this information out of him, you little witch?
12057Did you ever tell a lie, Little Max?
12057Did you find King Louis at Paris?
12057Did you not bring one, my lord?
12057Did you not command me to address you as Fräulein or Yolanda?
12057Did you not know that I would come?
12057Did you search all places of possible concealment for an arquebuse?
12057Did you see any one else-- except the house?
12057Did you so greatly desire the promise, Yolanda?
12057Did-- did she wish to marry you? 12057 Do n''t you know, Fräulein, what great pleasure I should have taken in giving you the bird?"
12057Do n''t you see we are not alone?
12057Do n''t you think it did happen? 12057 Do n''t you want to know who I am before you we d me?"
12057Do you bring me the promise?
12057Do you clearly see the danger?
12057Do you expect to take service with him?
12057Do you know Her Highness?
12057Do you know anything of them? 12057 Do you know aught of him, Sir Karl?"
12057Do you know the duke?
12057Do you know,said Yolanda, with as much seriousness as she could easily command,"that your friend, Sir Karl, is a philosopher?
12057Do you know?
12057Do you not fear me?
12057Do you not see her manner is assumed, though her fear is small because of her great faith in your prowess?
12057Do you really wish me success, Fräulein?
12057Do you see yonder dust- cloud? 12057 Do you think I am a snivelling scrivener, carrying quill and ink- well in my gown?"
12057Do you think Twonette a very pretty girl?
12057Do you wish to tell me now, Fräulein?
12057Does Your Grace mean to ask if I am here in the capacity of a spy, as Calli has charged?
12057Does any other man in presence know these men?
12057Does the princess dine with you?
12057Does the-- will the-- the gentleman who is with you accompany us?
12057Even at the risk of your life?
12057From what part, may I ask?
12057Has God put a curse upon women, mother?
12057Has he? 12057 Has the princess told you what she wants you to do?"
12057Has the younger man name or title other than you have given?
12057Has this letter been despatched?
12057Have you concluded to join us in our little holiday excursion against these mountain swine?
12057Have you no word for me, Sir Max?
12057He is known as Guelph, but who is he?
12057He said-- I am sure you will not take amiss what he said?
12057How came you to discover they were spies?
12057How came you to take the name Yolanda?
12057How did you bring the meeting about?
12057How did you learn all this, Fräulein? 12057 How do you know she has never seen me?"
12057How is the fair princess? 12057 How long had he been without it?"
12057How will the duke feel concerning the old proposition of marriage?
12057I also am a Walloon,she answered;"and your friend?
12057I have often wondered, Fräulein, if the papers reached the castle before the duke arrived?
12057I hear this Duke Charles has no son to inherit his rich domain?
12057I jealous?
12057I looked at the castle and at the moat, like a silly fool, and-- and--"Castleman''s house?
12057I understand the duke recently arrived in Peronne?
12057I was watching long before dark on the battlements, and--"On the battlements, Fräulein?
12057If he should fall, not knowing who I am?
12057If one may be free and happy for an hour without breaking those terrible chains of God''s welding, is he not foolish to refuse the small benediction? 12057 In God''s name, uncle, what more would you ask in a man?"
12057In what manner does help lie in the word''now,''child?
12057In what manner, child?
12057In what respect were they suspicious?
12057Indeed? 12057 Indeed?"
12057Is he to remain there?
12057Is her father your brother?
12057Is it because we give him our daughter to be the wife of his bandy- shanked, half- witted son? 12057 Is it not glorious, Sir Karl?"
12057Is it not natural that she should greet her father whom she has not seen for a year?
12057Is not my life full of vexations without this deluge of tears at home? 12057 Is that true?"
12057Is that your only evidence against them?
12057Is there nothing I can do to save myself?
12057Live wren pie?
12057May I not crave Your Grace''s indulgence for a half- hour?
12057May we not have comfortable quarters, and may we not be placed in one cell?
12057No man may impugn my Lord d''Hymbercourt''s honesty, but may he not be mistaken? 12057 No, no, stay where you are,"cried Yolanda; then, turning to me,"Where did I stop?"
12057Nor for love of any woman?
12057On what ground do you base your suspicion, my lord?
12057Perhaps she possessed vast estates?
12057Perhaps you have been drunk for the last three or four days since I have been here?
12057Perhaps your family lives in both places?
12057Send the count out to the rude world to associate with underlings? 12057 Shall not we return to Burgundy?"
12057Shall we come to you?
12057She happened to be near the bridge?
12057She met her father just inside the Postern?
12057She met him inside the Postern, say you?
12057She was in the castle yard when her father entered,--and at the Postern?
12057Since when did my Lord d''Hymbercourt turn traitor?
12057Sir Count, did you not say this knight wished to kill me, even at the cost of his own life?
12057Still, you wish me to win the lady who sent me the ring?
12057Tante, is supper never to be served?
12057Tell me now, my little witch, who is the lady? 12057 Tell me, Yolanda,"demanded Castleman,"what has passed between you and this Sir Max?"
12057The Swiss have stolen a sheepskin? 12057 The dev-- Max, you ca n''t mean what you say?"
12057To see her face again is like coming back to heaven; is n''t it, Karl?
12057Truly, Karl?
12057Upon your honor?
12057Was she dark or light, short or tall, plain of feature or beautiful, amiable of temper or vixenish? 12057 We hope to see you again for supper to- morrow evening, do n''t we, uncle?"
12057Well, uncle, where are our guests?
12057Were you born in both places?
12057What can Burgundy do?
12057What can we do to rescue our friends if they still live, or to avenge them if dead?
12057What did she say?
12057What did you say during the brief interview?
12057What did you there?
12057What do you mean, Karl?
12057What do you think of Burgundy, Sir Max?
12057What do you want, daughter?
12057What have we here?
12057What in the devil''s name do you want at this time of night?
12057What is it, Mary, and where is the help?
12057What is that to you?
12057What is there amazing about so small an act?
12057What manner of person was she?
12057What news, my Lord Count?
12057What of the lady who gave me the ring?
12057What papers?
12057What shall I tell him?
12057What trouble?
12057What were they heard to say and where did they say it?
12057What were you thinking of, Yolanda?
12057What will you do about Yolanda, Max?
12057What will you take in gold, my good man, and let us go our way in peace with our cargo of silks?
12057What would you do, Fräulein?
12057What would you have me say, Karl?
12057When did you leave?
12057Whence else did it come? 12057 Whence, then, did it come?"
12057Where heard you that name? 12057 Where is the duke?"
12057Where is your home and your friend''s?
12057Where suppose you Sir Max is-- and Sir Karl?
12057Where were you, and how--"My words? 12057 Which is it to be, think you, Karl, liberty or death?"
12057Which is the princess?
12057Who are they?
12057Who are you?
12057Whoever heard of a rich princess who was not beautiful? 12057 Why did not others see your wondrous shaft from the hand of God?"
12057Why did not your father take you into his council?
12057Why do you believe so, uncle?
12057Why do you not wish to meet her?
12057Why do you say''alleged spies,''my Lord d''Hymbercourt?
12057Why do you suppose he was so incautious?
12057Why does not Duke Charles buy them?
12057Why has he not come? 12057 Why should we show King Louis courtesy?"
12057Why waste them on a graceless hypocrite?
12057Why, then, did you go to the bridge?
12057Why?
12057Will Your Grace accept the hawk?
12057Will my young friend be with me?
12057Will you see her before you go?
12057Will you tell me, Fräulein,he asked,"how you were enabled to know the history of my ring?
12057With his advice?
12057Would you commit an act which the law calls a crime?
12057Would you do that for me, Sir Max?
12057Would you have me lie, Fräulein?
12057Would you not rather see him dead than a coward?
12057Yes, and then--He paused; and, after a little time, I asked:--"And what then, Max?"
12057You are a flatterer, uncle-- isn''t he, tante?
12057You are surely not so weak as to allow a burgher girl to hold you?
12057You will not fail to send for me?
12057You will not tell Sir Max?
12057You would not have me marry Yolanda?
12057Your authority?
12057_ I_ go with the mules? 12057 ''And if he is not in Tours, Your Grace?'' 12057 ''Are you really going to send that cruel letter to King Louis?''
12057''Are you still there?''
12057''Shall I do all this without eating or sleeping?''
12057''What have you to say?''
12057''Who is to win her?''
12057''You, Sir Karl, or Sir Max?
12057A laugh gurgled in her throat as she asked:--"What else?"
12057After a little time Max asked hesitatingly:--"Have you written of late to my Lord d''Hymbercourt?"
12057After a long pause she stepped close to him and asked:--"Did you not want me to come?"
12057After a long silence I queried,"Well?"
12057After a long, delicious pause, Max said:--"Have I your promise, Fräulein?"
12057After a moment she suggested:--"Shall we return, Sir Max?"
12057After a pause, while we rested to take a breath, I said:"What is it you want me to do, Yolanda?
12057After a time I said:--"If you are still interested in the lady, why do n''t you go to Burgundy and try to win her?"
12057After a time she turned almost fiercely upon him:--"Do you know what I should do, Sir Max, were I in your place?"
12057Ah, tell me, has he?
12057Am I not right, uncle?"
12057Among much that was said I quote the following from memory, as Max told me afterward:--"So you are from Italy, Sir Max?"
12057And are we welcome to sojourn for a time in Peronne?
12057Are they friends of yours?"
12057Are you pleased with my offer?"
12057Are you ready to begin the journey at once?"
12057Are your veins filled with water and caution?"
12057Body of me, why stand you there like a wooden quintain?"
12057But tell me, Sir Karl, have you ever told Sir Max who I am?"
12057By the way, Sir Max, are you still wearing the ring?"
12057CHAPTER V WHO IS YOLANDA?
12057CHAPTER XVIII YOLANDA OR THE PRINCESS?
12057Can it be possible that the voice of a dreamer can travel to a distance and penetrate stone walls?
12057Charles turned toward his courtiers and continued:--"There is one man who does not fear me-- man, say I?
12057Did Karl tell you of it?"
12057Did not I command you to make haste?"
12057Did she come with you?"
12057Do I look it, my lord?"
12057Do n''t we show it?"
12057Do n''t you think it best that we come back to Peronne after this war?"
12057Do n''t you understand, Sir Max?"
12057Do n''t you wish to try?"
12057Do n''t you, tante?"
12057Do n''t you?"
12057Do not you believe that this bolt came from the hand that was seen by these worthy friars?"
12057Do you know, sir, to whom you speak?"
12057Do you live in Peronne?"
12057Do you not see?
12057Do you remember?
12057Do you understand, Sir Karl?"
12057Do you understand?"
12057Do you want to see her, Sir Max?
12057Does God impose but one duty on you-- that of your birth?"
12057Does it require an hour to write a missive of ten lines?
12057Dream?
12057Even though God should hereafter give me a son, who should cut the princess out of Burgundy, will she not be queen of France?
12057Fortune had been kind to us thus far; would she remain our friend?
12057Had she not seen Max from the battlements, and had she not fled at sight of the duke?
12057Have I my lord''s permission to present him?"
12057Have you more in your budget, Sir Count?"
12057Have you never seen one?"
12057Have you the right to come into my life as you have done, and to leave me?
12057He laughed and said--""Yes, yes, what did he say?"
12057He passed the falcon to a page, and continued,"What business have these men at my court?"
12057He then turned to Calli, and asked,"When were these men arrested?"
12057How did you learn it, Fräulein?"
12057How far is it to Styria, Sir Karl?"
12057I do not know you, and-- did I not tell you that if you made this mistake with the princess you would not so easily correct it?
12057I had heard him, but there was another question dinning in my ears so loudly that it drowned all other sounds--"Who is Yolanda?"
12057I hope she is not dead?"
12057I knew the cause of his detention, and, ignoring his remark, turned to Hymbercourt:--"Do you want to give the reasons for your advice?"
12057I stood near the throne, and, suspecting Louis of fraud, made bold to inquire:--"Most humbly I would ask Your Majesty, is this the Cross of Victory?"
12057I wonder if she really has a heart?"
12057I wonder which I shall find him to be?"
12057If Your Lordship had a son, would you send him forth as a spy for the sake of Burgundy?
12057In that event may I depend upon you and Sir Max to escort my niece and my daughter to Peronne without me?"
12057In the face of the evidence against this man, may he not be mistaken?
12057Is Your Grace now satisfied that we are not Swiss spies?
12057Is it Yolanda?"
12057Is it not strange that I should find them among these low- born people?
12057Is my friend in danger?"
12057Is she a great lady?
12057It has been said that-- what do they call her?
12057Mary could hardly conceal her exultation, but she answered calmly:--"Will Your Majesty sign now?"
12057Meantime, I understand that you and Sir Max wish to remain incognito at Peronne?"
12057Night before last?"
12057Now, now, now, do you hear, Hymbercourt?
12057Now, uncle?"
12057One day Twonette was visiting me, and we-- we-- Sir Max, what in the world are you and Twonette talking about?
12057Or am I wrong?
12057Or shall we leave Burgundy and return to my father in Styria, to tell him that you turned a guest and a friend from your door?"
12057Resuming the ducal voice, she continued,"Are there complaints, my Lord Seneschal?"
12057Shall I read the missive, my lord?"
12057Shall we fight them?"
12057Shall we put our horses to the gallop?"
12057She did, however, succeed in turning her face toward us, and said poutingly:--"Why do n''t you leave the room?"
12057She doubtless was dressed in gala attire for so rare an occasion?"
12057She looked quickly up to his face and stepped back from him:--"Did you come to see Twonette?
12057She offered me her hand and asked:--"But what is your news?"
12057Soon the voice came again, and we heard the words:--"Little Max, do you hear?
12057Strange thoughts and speculations had of late been swarming in my mind until they had almost taken the form of a refrain,"Who is Yolanda?"
12057Tell me, whom has he overthrown?"
12057The duke acquiesced by rising, and said, turning to Max:--"May we not try our new hawk together this afternoon?"
12057The frown deepened, and she turned sharply upon me:"But in what respect, pray, have I wandered?
12057The right or the wrong of his visits to the moat depended entirely upon the answer to my riddle,"Who is Yolanda?"
12057Then there was a touch of anger in his voice as he continued:"Have I blood in my veins?
12057Think you Calli would have spared you, boy?"
12057Twonette knows that, do n''t you, Twonette?
12057Twonette ventured:--"What will father say, Yolanda?"
12057Vain?
12057Was he ever ill?"
12057Was it her artlessness?
12057Was not that hour with Max worth all the pains that Yolanda had taken to deceive him?
12057Was she like any one you have ever seen?"
12057We are glad to have you sit, are we not, mother?"
12057We are not dirt under the nobles''feet, if we are plain burgher folk, are we, uncle?"
12057What could be more natural than that my father should wish nothing of importance to occur until after this war with Switzerland is over?
12057What did she have to say for herself, Max?"
12057What has the herald to say?
12057What have you to say?"
12057What more would the perverse girl have?
12057What of them?"
12057What think you of the plan?"
12057What think you, gentlemen, of the delay?"
12057What would my dear old father and mother say if they should see me and know the life I am leading?
12057When Yolanda returned, I said:--"Fräulein, will you not eat?"
12057When he had finished telling me his troubles, I asked:--"What will you do to- morrow night?"
12057When she is queen of France she will also be king of that realm-- and in God''s name what more could the girl ask?"
12057When the ceremony was finished, the king turned to Mary and said:--"Whom will Your Highness select for a husband?"
12057Whence, my Lord d''Hymbercourt, whence?"
12057Where can we turn for help against this greedy king?
12057Where could she have learned it, and how could she have known it was my mother''s love- name for me?"
12057Where learned you your oratory, Sir Count?"
12057While one might count ten she rested her head on his breast, but all too quickly she turned her face to his and whispered:--"Are you sure?
12057Why did we ever come to Switzerland?
12057Why do n''t you give the bird to me, Sir Max, if you are eager to part with it?"
12057Why do you come?"
12057Why do you, born a mountain lion, stay mewed up in this castle like a purring cat in your mother''s lap?
12057Why kiss a lady''s hand when her lips are so near?
12057Why should not this daughter of mine give a few tears?
12057Why should she object to this marriage?
12057Why, may I ask?"
12057Will not those qualities fit a man for any one''s regard and delight any woman''s heart?
12057Will you come back to me?"
12057Will you do it for me?"
12057Will you help me?"
12057Will you tell me of yourself?"
12057Without it, what would our chivalry amount to?
12057Without it, why should a peacock spread its tail?
12057Without that spirit of"show- off,"what would induce our knights to meet in glorious tournaments?
12057Wo n''t you help them to pay me, Fräulein?"
12057Would Max be strong enough to hold out against her wooing?
12057Would she ever be able to choose?
12057Yolanda laughed, and the burgher, pinching his wife''s red cheek, protested:--"_ You_ frown?
12057Yolanda waited for a moment and then, turning her face toward Max, asked:--"You had hoped for what, Sir Max?"
12057You did want me to come, else why do you come to the bridge?
12057_ We_ want for food to eat or place to lay our heads?
12057she asked banteringly,"or did you ever deliberately break a promise?"
16742And what?
16742And while you are about it, wo n''t you please telephone for my hairdresser?
16742And why not? 16742 And you did n''t ask me to help you?"
16742And you''ll promise not to say or think such nonsense again?
16742And your neck, too?
16742Are we getting out of our course?
16742Are you hurt?
16742Are you quite through, Virginia?
16742Are you really?
16742Are you trying to see how quickly you can sink? 16742 But where they concern me?"
16742But why were you hiding?
16742Butchery? 16742 Can you imagine how much I trust you?
16742Captain Merrithew-- are-- you-- coming?
16742Captain,said the shipping magnate,"how are we now?"
16742Captain,she said,"is it possible you prefer speeches in Spanish to our company?"
16742Certainly,said Mrs. Van Vleck;"why in the world did n''t you tell us, Horace?"
16742Dan Merrithew, have you left me?
16742Did I say anything so terrible then?
16742Do I intrude upon your sacred precincts?
16742Do I understand you to mean that you are going to make me Captain of the_ Tampico_?
16742Do you mean to say you are going to stay up all night and sail? 16742 Do you suppose he''d mind if I spoke to him?"
16742Do you suppose,she cried,"I am going to let you be alone now?
16742Do you think I am a coward? 16742 Do you want me to put you all into the trough?"
16742Do you want them to discover and drown us? 16742 Does it seem absurd?"
16742Does n''t it?
16742Dreaming? 16742 Every one accounted for?"
16742Everybody accounted for?
16742Fine, ai n''t it?
16742For what?
16742Going to have a good time, all by yourself?
16742Have n''t I seen you somewhere before, Captain Merrithew? 16742 Have these men keep the course and look out for things, will you?
16742Have you ever thought how much we owe you? 16742 Have you thought about that, Daniel Merrithew?"
16742Have you thought,said Dan,"that it might pay to be very economical with your chocolate?
16742He? 16742 Hello, what tug is that?"
16742How does it strike you?
16742How-- how much is she taking in?
16742I wonder if you realize your responsibility?
16742If I answered you in one way I should not be at all polite,she said;"and if in another, I should not be-- be--""Honest?"
16742If we were on a yacht, how soon would you-- wish to?
16742Is it really-- that?
16742Is it so? 16742 Is that why you let the assassin go?"
16742Is that you, Captain Barney?
16742Is there anything that could?
16742It is nearly eight o''clock, is n''t it?
16742Just a little bit dusty out here, eh, Arthur?
16742May I say something? 16742 Not happy?
16742Now what can you do in four days to atone?
16742Now, you are tactful, are n''t you? 16742 Say, do you know what you want up there?
16742Say,cried Captain Barney, as Dan hurried away;"how much''ll it be?
16742See that fellow, will you?
16742See that star up there?
16742Shut up, will you?
16742So,he said, with unctuous dignity, as Dan met him at the rail,"the Capitan?"
16742Something for the kid, eh?
16742Take the wheel a while, Cap''n?
16742Thank you,said Virginia;"and now?"
16742That you, Ralph? 16742 The women here to- night are a great deal less dowdy than one would imagine, do n''t you think?"
16742Then you, too, have felt as I feel?
16742Then,she said,"I guess you had better not tell me-- unless--""Unless?"
16742There; you hear him, Captain Merrithew,cried Miss Howland;"do n''t you think that''s a horrid way to talk?"
16742Virginia, Virginia, where are you? 16742 Virginia, Virginia-- are you all right?"
16742Was n''t it some time ago?
16742Well, Sam, how are they working?
16742What are the chances that it wo n''t?
16742What are you goin''to do after I get aboard?
16742What are your force pumps going for?
16742What can be the matter with those fellows? 16742 What do you know about Walton?"
16742What do you mean?
16742What does that mean?
16742What have you under your coat sleeves? 16742 What is he going to do now?"
16742What is it?
16742What is the matter with those rascals?
16742What now?
16742What vessel is that, and whither bound?
16742What''s the matter with you?
16742What''s the matter with your yacht?
16742What?
16742When did this come?
16742Where are Phillips and Fagan?
16742Where is she and what''s ashore?
16742Where the yacht hit us?
16742Who gave you permission to come in here and cook?
16742Why do n''t they shell those insurgents? 16742 Why not, please?"
16742Will the bulkhead hold?
16742Will you be good?
16742Will you go in, Virginia?
16742Will you keep still?
16742Will you?
16742Will-- will you please go away-- a moment? 16742 Will_ I_ do?"
16742Wo n''t you please try to be? 16742 Yes, I want to compliment you on your discipline and-- and what is the exact situation?"
16742Yes, why did n''t you?
16742Yes? 16742 Yes?"
16742You do n''t mean to say-- what do you know about Percy Walton?
16742You owned the tug?
16742You were the captain of the tug?
16742You''ve locked them in, eh?
16742''What the past has shown,''"she quoted,"''who can gainsay the future?''
16742A wild ride-- to where?
16742Aboard that laboring section of gingerbread, in the hands of incompetents and poltroons?
16742And now,"said the girl, smiling at Dan,"what have you to tell me that is thrilling?"
16742And there was another emotion, which she sought not to deny-- the Captain, what if he should fall?
16742And those silesia bunk tapestries, are n''t they fascinating?"
16742And what about, pray?"
16742And when it faded, as fade it must, in the vastness of the dark-- why, what then?
16742And when you return--""When I return?"
16742And yet-- and yet?
16742And-- oh, father, is there any chance that we''ll have that house- party at our San Blanco estate next Spring?
16742Are n''t those curtains dear?
16742Are you ready for breakfast?
16742Are your arms bandaged?"
16742As you well know, Señor Howland never travels with empty lockers-- there is much of a certain wine that sparkles-- see?"
16742But how''ll you take her out again?"
16742But still, why should they?
16742But there, I must not think of that, must I?"
16742Can you forgive one who is no better than a-- than a blamed pirate?"
16742Captain, tell me, is my father safe, and my aunt-- and the rest?"
16742Could a woman sing like that, sing as Miss Howland sang, to no one?
16742Could the little line stand the strain?
16742Daniel Merrithew, do you ever feel that now you have the right to be interested in that life that you alone saved?"
16742Did n''t you?"
16742Do n''t you see there are lives to save?
16742Do n''t you see we are coming alongside?
16742Do you recall?"
16742Do you remember last Fall, what fun it was?
16742Do you remember my looking at your books and exclaiming over the selection?
16742Do you remember that night at the dinner when I told you that if our friendship was to continue it was to be one of limitations?
16742Do you suppose my father is there now?"
16742Do you understand?
16742Except--""Eh?"
16742Has your experience with women taught you that is the best way to please them?"
16742How could it be otherwise with Virginia Howland?
16742How much would you charge to beautify my cabin?"
16742How''ll you do it?"
16742However,--how long will it take to get away from here, Captain?"
16742Howland?"
16742I''ll arrange that-- you''re always such a dear about such things, and you wo n''t mind, will you?"
16742If they died together, would they wake together?
16742Impersonally?
16742Is he qualified to be a captain?"
16742Is it?"
16742Is n''t there anything in your cabin you want to save?"
16742Is that the reason you are silent?"
16742Is there a chance that the yacht may not get where you are taking her?"
16742It struck the man in the back, and as he turned, Oddington called,"Have a cigarette, Bill?"
16742More, perhaps; who knows?"
16742Need it be suggested that this amounts to saying that Mr. Howland was the brains and guiding spirit of the San Blanco Republic as then constituted?
16742Not an alarming one, would you say?"
16742Now, why have you that little amused twinkle in your eyes?
16742Oh, I say, there''s not a drop getting into the fire room yet?
16742Or was it shoreward, with oblivion coming in the dreadful grinding and crashing and shattering of timbers?
16742Or would it pass them far out to sea?
16742Say, come in here like a good chap, will you?
16742There, that may be putting it clumsily, but do n''t you understand?"
16742To whom was she singing?
16742Understand?"
16742Was it fair, was it right to her-- now?
16742Was it going away?
16742Was she aboard that yacht now?
16742Was she?
16742Was the hull opening and disintegrating?
16742We are going to be better friends, are n''t we?"
16742We''re in danger, then, are we?
16742Were they driving out into the lonely heart of the deep, there to perish in a last long dive?
16742What I meant was, will we go on the_ Tampico_?
16742What difference can your past life make to your friends?
16742What have I done or not done that suggested in your mind ideas of my responsibility to you?"
16742What next?
16742What was a dollar to him?
16742Where could it have been?
16742Where is your prisoner?"
16742Where would all the beauty of the world be then?
16742Why do n''t they chase us and be done with it?"
16742Why do n''t you put her head up?"
16742Why do n''t you take care of her?
16742Why does n''t Captain Merrithew stop the boat and leave the bridge?
16742Why the devil had he not thought of finding out about those grandchildren and of buying them something for Christmas?
16742Why?"
16742Will you come?
16742Yes, but was it coming toward them?
16742Yet each day came the old question, What next?
16742You are not going to leave me again, are you?"
16742You did n''t know he had friends in the rowboat business, did you?"
16742he exclaimed under increasing impulse of anger,"what am I?--a steward, or a-- or a monkey?"
16742she asked,"or am I welcome?
16742she cried,"did you ever see a man?
16742where would it all be?
16742yelled the angry man,"why in hell do n''t ye let me know when ye''re goin''to sling''er across seas?
17210''But what in the name of Columbus are you doing here?'' 17210 ''Come to see the Gineral, I s''pose, stranger?''
17210''Did n''t have a chance to smuggle, according to that, eh?'' 17210 ''Do n''t know Solomon Smooth, eh?''
17210''Do you tell me that? 17210 ''Does Britannia rule this territory?''
17210''Expecting a good appointment?'' 17210 ''General ai n''t got so mighty big since he moved from New Hampshire?''
17210''Had a good passage, eh, Hornblower?'' 17210 ''Had a good supper, Squire Smooth?''
17210''Like every one who visits Washington these times, yer a friend of the Gineral''s, and have fit with him in the Mexican war?'' 17210 ''Now, General, I reckon how you did n''t get the hang of this''ere establishment all on a sudden?
17210''Put it? 17210 ''Seeing it''s you, Jacob,--and knowing that you must be worn down with toil, s''pose we strike a trade in a small sort of way?''
17210''Somethin for us citizens to have a go- in- at, you means, I s''pose?'' 17210 ''Then you''re from the States down yonder?''
17210''True?'' 17210 ''Well,--have no objection; but tell us, General, how is the missus?''
17210''What business is that to you?'' 17210 ''What is Squire?''
17210''What the devil do I care about yer Winking Weazels? 17210 ''Who are you, anyhow?''
17210''Who, or from whence on earth do you come?'' 17210 ''Ye hain''t seen Uncle Caleb''s craft-- her name''s the Winking Weazel-- as ye come from down north, have ye?''
17210''You are who?'' 17210 ''You do n''t know if the General is at home, do you?''
17210''You do n''t mean to tell me that he has left?'' 17210 ''You groan over it some, do n''t you, old fellow?
17210''You mean that the General''s friends do n''t shine over on the square?'' 17210 ''Your lookin for somethin, I take it?''
17210I calmly intimated that he might be right, but inquired if he ever knew a Yankee out- yankeed? 17210 John spoke, inquiring if his preferences were not for him?
17210The Chair thought it time to interrupt the speaker by inquiring what the forlorn order prayed for? 17210 ''Anything wanted for Major Smooth?'' 17210 ''By appointment?'' 17210 ''Did n''t expect to see you looking so bright, General-- rather a bad kettle of fish that you unfortunately got into yesterday, eh?'' 17210 ''From Vermont, I take it?'' 17210 ''From York State, I take it?'' 17210 ''I looks somethin''of a judge, I take it, now?'' 17210 ''I suppose you have orders for all these little affairs?'' 17210 ''Is the General at home?'' 17210 ''It''s all for me!--who are you?'' 17210 ''Never bin to Washington-- I reckon?'' 17210 ''No contraband goods on board, eh, Hornblower?'' 17210 ''Now, why the devil did n''t you come to when you saw our signal?'' 17210 ''On your way to see the General, stranger?'' 17210 ''Peppers I think you said?'' 17210 ''Stonished you yourself, did n''t it? 17210 ''Then it''s you, General?'' 17210 ''This, Uncle John''s, too?'' 17210 ''Was not I in the city seven weeks before the inauguration? 17210 ''What on earth have ye got in that, eh?'' 17210 ''What on earth is that?'' 17210 ''What on earth is the matter with you, stranger? 17210 ''What shall we do?'' 17210 ''You''re on the passage, too-- are you, John?'' 17210 ''_ Cuba at any price_''--underneath--''_This side up, with care?_''No. 17210 ( I touched him on the shoulder)''''taint more nor three years since we used to go fishing in old Sam Peabody''s pond; hain''t forgot it, I reckon?'' 17210 A happy thought, however, soon flashed across his mind: was he not protected by the sacred character of the mission? 17210 And inside the point as well, I suppose?'' 17210 And now that they are so firmly and extensively identified with each other in pursuits of the noblest character, would it not be a sin to quarrel?'' 17210 Anyhow, Jacob, since we ca n''t strike a trade, nor do a thing or two in the way of speculation, s''pose we take a drop of whiskey punch?'' 17210 But can half you say be true?'' 17210 But why pain the feelings with recapitulations like these? 17210 Ca n''t''commodate us with a sup of fresh water, can ye? 17210 Can you tell a stray citizen where the General hangs out in the morning?'' 17210 He bowed, and I bowed, until he was satisfied I was somebody,''Who would you see?'' 17210 He spoke after this manner, and quick as thought the spectacle vanished-- it was but a dream? 17210 How are all the Young Americans down your way-- the real go- ahead stripe?'' 17210 I replied,--''who do you think it is?'' 17210 I take it you have not been long in the Capital?'' 17210 If the concentrated wisdom of the nation riots here( thought I as I entered the city) who can gainsay my coming? 17210 If we can sell the Emperor''s people Lowell cotton, at the same time you are selling them Manchester stripes, where can be the objection? 17210 It teaches these poor devils of natives to talk English, and, sir, can you calculate what a blessing that will be when it comes into general use? 17210 It was a strange penance over the mound of one so old; and yet who in the political world that had not paid it? 17210 Lord love yer soul-- is it you?'' 17210 Modestly, John touched me on the shoulder, and whispered:--''S''pose we call this distant Britain? 17210 Mrs. Bolt must have more fashionable apartments; there was that splendid diamond bracelet at Peppers''? 17210 Musn''t take what I say amiss; but you looks as if you could do some blowing: the General standing much in need of that article, why not volunteer? 17210 Nicholas, John Bull said, was a ruffian of the go- ahead school; but, of the three ruffians, which shall we choose? 17210 Now and then he would spread his hands, as if to say-- why not eat of what I give you? 17210 Of course something must be said in return; so Crappo puts in his say:--''Can''t you suggest some way to stop it, Uncle John?'' 17210 Prompt,''said I,''may I consider myself entirely in your hands?'' 17210 Running up to me, with hand extended, and exulting with joy, he spake:''Great kingdom, Smooth!--is it you?'' 17210 S''pose it''s because Uncle Sam stands at the gangway serving the shot?'' 17210 Satisfied on the dockerments, ai n''t ye?'' 17210 Scarcely expected to brush old General Scott''s fuss and feathers into a cock''d up hat, eh? 17210 Smooth belongs to the Young American party, if I mistake not?'' 17210 Smooth never was down South?'' 17210 Smooth, I believe, is the name?'' 17210 Smooth, in proof of his fast principles, will have no objection to tying up in the seventh story?'' 17210 Smooth, my dear fellow, what place is this below?'' 17210 Smooth,''says he,''what in the name of changes be you going to do with so many little kingdoms? 17210 Smooth-- doesn''t he belong to the self same party, the know- nothings? 17210 Smooth? 17210 Smooth? 17210 Smooth?'' 17210 Smooth?'' 17210 Sure an''warn''t it the brave boys that halicted Gineral Pierce and his cumrades?'' 17210 Sure, ye dark spalpeens, is it by the same token ye''d trate the gintleman? 17210 That fellow Smooth at it, again, fishing inside of the line? 17210 There''s nothing like a man keeping his mouth shut when he''s got others to do the fighting for him; you know that, do n''t you, General?'' 17210 Two years ago, and who''d a''thought a''seeing you here? 17210 Well, there was no help for it, we must feel kind and happy to see so many happy ones around one, who could not? 17210 Were they not more needed in his own Indian dominions? 17210 Why tear down the noble edifice you can not rebuild? 17210 Will his men in the bye- ways have done anything to which it may recur with pride? 17210 Will you take somethin?'' 17210 Yet, as arrogance is but another name for weakness, is it not better to brush off than kill the wasp? 17210 and did n''t I carry everything for the General down in Pennsylvania?'' 17210 have not these men hearts of oak, nerves of steel, and bone that, like their souls, never breaks in time of need?'' 17210 said I,''what on earth has brought you here?'' 17210 she must have that rich honitan cape and accompaniments at Stebbin''s? 17210 somebody thundered at the door, when, alarmed, they all cried out--''whose there?'' 17210 what say ye for yourself? 17210 why blight the cheering prospects of thousands to gratify the vain ambition of pedantic politicians? 17210 ye ai n''t goin to stow this citizen away in that ar place, be ye?'' 17210 you ai n''t going to make a shaking machine of your broad sides, be ye?'' 17085 !--_what''s this?_ GIN! 17085 And what was the Trinity Flower like, my Father?"
17085Did I pay him back?
17085Did ye never go to school?
17085Did ye never hear hoo oor wee Baby was burrrned? 17085 Did you pay him back?"
17085Does he draw a rum allowance?
17085Emma, where''s the water- can?
17085If we still love those we lose, can we altogether lose those we love?
17085Is that to give it a peaty flavour?
17085Keep out o''t''_ leet_ ca n''t ye?
17085Oh, then you_ had_ flowers?
17085So you live in the docks with your coffee- barrow, mother, that you may be sure not to miss Micky when he comes ashore?
17085Some of you ask yourselves that question to- day-- this evening_ as you''re walking to Aldershot_,''Wherefore am I come?'' 17085 Why would n''t I, acushla?
17085Would I be the black- hearted thief to him that was kind to me? 17085 Yon''s the Land o''the Leal?"
17085_ Fifteen?_ But, mother, if he were like me when he went, he ca n''t be very like me now. 17085 ''What will it be?'' 17085 ''What would it be, Micky, from your mother?'' 17085 ''owever did_ that_ slip through my fingers now? 17085 ( Did you ever read the correspondence between Charles Napier and Mr. Gurney on Trade and War?) 17085 ( You know Lady Grant was in the action at Chillianwallah and has the medal?) 17085 ( for Rex is too familiar even for a Bishop) correct my musical efforts? 17085 ), and said piteously to the porter,What_ does_ he say?
17085***** I hope you liked that_ Daily Telegraph_ article on the Back Gardener I sent you?
17085***** Talking of drawings, what do you think?
17085***** Why should you think I should differ with Dante in his estimate of sin?
17085-- But is n''t it_ exquisite_?
17085A sort of feeling,"What will be the end?"...
17085After a long silence: Paddy I.--"D''ye mix much in society?"
17085An_ Isle of Man_(do you remember?)
17085And if you want peace and quiet, where can one bury oneself so safely and completely as in the mud?
17085And poor Mrs. S---- says''_ Is it_, Miss M----?''
17085And why do n''t you allow me to stumble over my German?
17085Are nuts hardy?
17085Are they really losing Old Father again so soon?"
17085Augustine?"
17085A||||| Requiem for||||| One Alive|||||||||| How Many Years|"Songs for Music, by|"Verses for|S.P.C.K|| Ago?
17085But is not the fact indubitable that God tries us as He did Job, though by different methods?
17085But it is worth investigating.... Or again, I wonder what Herkomer would charge for an_ etching_ of the dying old Woodcutter, and his kneeling son?
17085Can you kindly return it, dear?
17085Could it be possible that you might have any rose under development that you would care to deposit here for the winter and fetch away in the spring?
17085Could words, could a long romance, give one a finer picture of the ex- soldier turned"Gentleman of the Road"?
17085Could ye read a bit to me, laddie?"
17085Did I ever tell you of him?
17085Did I tell you about"Tuck of Drum"?
17085Did I tell you that Lady L. has sent_ me_ a ticket this year for her Sunday afternoons at the Grosvenor?
17085Did she evolve the plots and characters entirely out of her own mind, or were they in any way suggested by the occurrences and people around her?
17085Did you ever meet Mr. F., R.E.?
17085Do Brahmans like cats?
17085Do n''t you know?
17085Do n''t_ you_ like"Aldegunda"( Blind Man and Talking Dog)?
17085Do the Farrants?
17085Do you know any naturalist who would tell you this?
17085Do you like it?
17085Do you like the"Kyrkegrim turned Preacher,""Ladders to Heaven,"and"Dandelion Clocks"?...
17085Do you object to the ending of"Lætus"--to Lady Jane having another son, etc.?
17085Do you remember it?
17085Do you think you''d know him?"
17085Does n''t he sound like a fellow in_ Hiawatha_?
17085Going stood the biting winds?
17085Going''s suggestions-- emboldens me to ask if you happen to have in your garden any of the Hellebores?
17085Has shoo gotten Jack?"
17085Have you really_ given me_ Quarles?
17085Have you seen March_ A.J.M._?
17085He goes in, lays his finger on the cigars, and says--"Poor wun frank?"
17085He plays, does he?
17085He said,"Have you?
17085How about rhododendrons?
17085How''s shoo to see through thee?"
17085I created quite a sensation by saying that"Old Father"was ordered to Bechuanaland--"Oh, how old are the Queers?
17085I deeply desire some"Ladders to Heaven"--(does she know that old name for Lilies of the Valley?)
17085I do n''t know if change of air and soil is ever good for them?
17085I suppose in the spring I had better cut off these long shoots from the bushes in the open border away from the hedge?
17085I told you that Bishop Ewing had written me such a charming letter, and sent me a sermon of his?
17085I trust your poor back is rather easier?
17085I wonder if I really keep them better?
17085I wonder whether you thought of us yesterday?
17085I wonder whom it does belong to?
17085In all these philosophizing days-- who touches him in philosophy?
17085Is it not rather that some few souls keep alive the lamp of zeal and high desire which GOD lights for most of us while life is young?
17085Is it not terrible about Prince Leopold?
17085Is n''t it nice?
17085Is there any trifle you are"in want"of?
17085Lead up to your answer: thus--_ Eleanor._"S. Augustine was a missionary Priest from-- now answer all together?"
17085May I write again and tell you when I am fit for Aldershot?
17085My black silk-- go to my room-- murdered who?
17085My dear Marny-- can''t you and R---- come here_ en route_ if only for a night?
17085Norman Neruda, Piatti, and_ Janotha_--have you heard Janotha play the piano?
17085Not Amethyst-- what IS the name?
17085Now I want to know if there is a chance of tempting you down here for a little visit?
17085Now am I_ not_ a Brute?
17085Prayer- book?
17085Should you require military information for any scene here?
17085Sir Colin:"Sergeant, does yon boy belong to your company?"
17085The method by which he silenced awkward questions from any of his family is truly delightful:"Will the donkey be cooked when he is fat?"
17085Then I touched him and said,"Are you blind?"
17085This is beautiful, is n''t it?
17085To whom came the answer of God--"If thou_ didst_ know it, what wouldst thou do then?
17085Used you not to like the first- class Americans you met in China very much?
17085Very unfavourable for one''s aches and pains?
17085WE BEGAN with the DRAMA and left off with the Epic-- Milton''s-- what- is- it?
17085Was it unselfishness or love of approbation, benevolence or fussiness, the gift of sympathy or the lust of power, or was it something else?
17085Was it, as the doctors say,"an effort of nature"to make her live outside herself, and be happy in the happiness of others?
17085Was n''t that a splendid bit of praise to hear all these miles away from one''s dear old wonderful old Mother?...
17085Wha can fill a coward''s grave?
17085Wha sae base as be a slave?
17085What do you think of my papers, Mrs. Hewin?
17085What else made the ungraceful Buddlæa lovely in her eyes?
17085What were those girls when they came?
17085What''s shoo bound to do wi''''em all?"
17085What_ grand_ bits there are in it?
17085When Rex said to him, at luncheon--"How did you who are a Rose Fancier and such a flower maniac-- LIVE all those years in such a part of London?"
17085When a candle had been brought in and placed near the bed, the Highlander roused himself and asked:"Is there a Bible on yon table?
17085When we got in a"rehearsal"( dramatic) was going on, and the chaff was"Have you come for the rehearsal or the coffee- house?"
17085Where is the Hospital whose walls are simply decorated like some Lord Mayor''s show with trophies taken from us and from every corner of the world?
17085Will it be published soon?
17085Will it do if you have it by February 8?...
17085Will you ever forgive me?
17085Will you try for that, please?
17085Would it be possible for Wolf to illustrate it?
17085Would the metre of Longfellow''s"Coplas de Manrique"be good for music?
17085You know how you indulged my senses with bay leaves when I was far from them?
17085You know_ that_?
17085You never read anything about the making of common Dutch toys did you?...
17085[_ Fredericton_, 1867?]
17085[_ In pencil._] Where does R---- sail from?
17085[_ Sketch._] Do you remember Whitley Hall?
17085_ Can I risk it now?_ and how about hardy azaleas-- things I love!
17085_ That_ has a sort of sound like old times, has n''t it?
17085_ Wherefore art thou come?_ what art thou about-- what is thy object?
17085_ Wherefore art thou come?_ what art thou about-- what is thy object?
17085burning bright, In the forest of the night, What immortal Hand and Eye Framed thy fearful symmetry?"
17085cried three of my children; and"What is brandy?"
17085do ye hear the pipes?"
17085is that you?
17085these eighteen years,"and S. Paul''s,"to deliver such an one to Satan for the destruction of the flesh,"analogous to the account in Job?
17085through the belfry windows in a strange chirruping antiphon, as if outside they sang:"Have you found a house, and a nest where you may lay your young?
17085what are YOU talking Scotch for, and you a Knaresborough man?''
17085where''s your kitchen cloths?
17085wherefore art thou come?"
17085would do it in shades of brown or grey?
19028Is it mysticism?
19028It must be literary art, then?
19028(_ Frightened._) What are you doing?
19028And it''s that kind of a poacher''s love you''d make, Christy Mahon, on the sides of Neifin, when the night is down?
19028Because we newly find ourselves as though surprised into an intimate relationship of which we have been unaware or have indifferently ignored?
19028Can one who was once so resolute a realist really appreciate"faint Celtic haze; a vision of silver mist and distant mountain and moor"?
19028D''ye think them proud city folk will listen to his poor ould ballads with the heart of the boy singing through them?
19028Did you feed the hens?
19028Do not these things augur a future?
19028Does any man at all speak lies at the very brink of death, or hold any secret in his heart?
19028Does he not admire Torcall Cameron and Archibald Ruthven, stern Calvinists both?
19028Had I seen them on the stage would my thoughts of them have been thoughts of the theatre, as were all my thoughts of Sir Arthur''s plays?
19028His father, an admirer of Whitman, preached to him the doctrine embodied in the text--"Will you seek afar off?
19028His wife tells their friends that she is ruined, that"pretty nearly all"their property is mortgaged, but Tyrrell cries out,"All, do you say?
19028How can we get that effect?
19028How can we get them, even in an exact translation,"just as they are"?
19028I''d be nice, so, is it?
19028If a near death is coming what will be my trouble losing the earth and the stars over it, and you, Deirdre, are their flame and bright crown?
19028If so, what effect would such discussion as that of"The Lynn of Dreams"and"Maya"have upon him?
19028Is it economics?"
19028Is it mad you''s are?
19028Is it only dramatically that Mr. Moore wrote when he put upon Kirwan''s lips in 1900 the words,"Life is the enemy-- we should fly from life"?
19028Is not this as revelatory as any?-- Is this because, in the wilderness, we recover something of what we have lost?...
19028Is that egg boiled?
19028Is this ending, or is it not, sadder than the catastrophe of"Ghosts"?
19028It is only when one comes to one''s self on the curtain- fall that one finds one''s self wondering, Can this be prose?
19028It was very dear, then; was n''t it?
19028Nora speaks as she pours out whiskey for her young man:-- Why would I marry you, Mike Dara?
19028Starting from you, is it?
19028Threw it to the ducks, I suppose?
19028Was it me you saved or was it the young man?
19028Was it thus, I wonder, always to the imagination of William Sharp, Lowland life real, Highland life mystical?
19028What about the calves?
19028What are you doing?
19028What did you do with the bottom of the pot?
19028What if he had never written a play?
19028When you pulled him off me, did you save me, or was it him you saved from being hung?
19028Where else will you find cheek by jowl such sardonic humor as this and such poignancy of lament for the passing of youth?
19028Why quarrel with Synge, in short, because his style is of the very essence of life, and of nature, which is the background of life?
19028Why should you die when one can bear it all?
19028Why should you die?
19028Why would I fret after him that so soon forgot his wife, and left her in a wretched way?
19028Will I boil an egg for your breakfast, granny?
19028With the linen on the hedge?
19028Would you go making murder in this place, and it piled with poteen for our drink to- night?"
1827And what did he say?
1827Brussels, 1842( May?). 1827 Do you know what soothsayers I would consult?"
1827Do you want some one to help you with your bottle, sir? 1827 Have you forgotten the sea by this time, E.?
1827Have you seen anything of Miss H. lately? 1827 Is he coming?"
1827Is there any talk of your coming to Brussels? 1827 What is the matter?"
1827What publishers would be most likely to receive favourably a proposal of this nature? 1827 What shall I do without you?
1827Why do you smile?
1827Why not?
1827Why, only,''D- n him; what do I care?''
1827Would it suffice to_ write_ to a publisher on the subject, or would it be necessary to have recourse to a personal interview? 1827 You remember Mr. and Mrs.---?
1827_ Tabby_.--''Who from?'' 1827 _ Tabby_.--''Who?''
1827''Have you no doors in your country?''
1827''Indeed; what is her name?''
1827''Why are you so glum to- night, Tabby?
1827*****"Do you know this place?
1827An old man appeared, standing without, who accosted her thus:--"_ Old Man_.--''Does the parson live here?''
1827And yet what to do?
1827Are you well?
1827But how?
1827CHARLOTTE BRONTE"De temps en temps, il parait sur la terre des hommes destines a etre les instruments[ predestines]{ Pourquoi cette suppression?}
1827Can you give me a notion of the cost?
1827Can you give me any hint as to the way in which these difficulties are best met?
1827Cette faiblesse de vue est pour moi une terrible privation; sans cela, savez- vous ce que je ferais, Monsieur?
1827Cities in the wilderness, like Tadmor, alias Palmyra-- are they not?
1827Could I meet you at Leeds?
1827Did I not once say you ought to be thankful for your independence?
1827Did Pain''s keen dart, and Grief''s sharp sting Strive in his mangled breast?
1827Did he feel what a man might feel, Friend- left, and sore distrest?
1827Did longing for affection lost Barb every deadly dart; Love unrepaid, and Faith betrayed, Did these torment his heart?
1827Did you chance, in your letter to Mr. H., to mention my spectacles?
1827Did you not feel awed while gazing at St. Paul''s and Westminster Abbey?
1827Do you remember whether there was any other school there besides that of Miss---?
1827Entre son berceau et sa tombe qu''y a- t- il?
1827For instance, in the present case, where a work of fiction is in question, in what form would a publisher be most likely to accept the MS.?
1827Have I said enough to clear myself of so silly an imputation?
1827His sight diminishes weekly; and can it be wondered at that, as he sees the most precious of his faculties leaving him, his spirits sometimes sink?
1827How could the point be managed?
1827How do you get on?
1827How far is it from Leeds to Sheffield?
1827How kind and affectionate that was?
1827How long are we likely to be separated?
1827I did not intend it, and have only one thing more to say-- if you do not go immediately to the sea, will you come to see us at Haworth?
1827I do not mean, of course, to stay, but just for a call of an hour or two?
1827I forget God, and will not God forget me?
1827I have no doubt their advice is completely at your service; why then should I intrude mine?
1827I longed to go to Brussels; but how could I get there?
1827In March, 1835, she writes:"What do you think of the course politics are taking?
1827In a postscript she adds:--"Will you be kind enough to inform me of the number of performers in the King''s military band?"
1827In answer to her correspondent''s reply to this letter, she says:--"You thought I refused you coldly, did you?
1827Is it age, or what else, that changes me so?"
1827Is it grown dim in your mind?
1827Is not this childish?
1827Is papa well?
1827Je n''ai pas de magnanimite, dit- on?
1827Last Saturday night he had been sitting an hour in the parlour with Papa; and, as he went away, I heard Papa say to him''What is the matter with you?
1827Leeds and Manchester-- where are they?
1827M. thought you grown less, did she?
1827Mais parler ainsi n''est- ce pas attribuer gratuitement a Napoleon une humaine faiblesse qu''il n''eprouva jamais?
1827Meme que vous me perdiez( ose- je croire que mon depart vous etait un chagrin?)
1827Mr.--- is going to be married, is he?
1827Mrs. Bronte, whose sweet nature thought invariably of the bright side, would say,"Ought I not to be thankful that he never gave me an angry word?"
1827Now to that flattering sentence must I tack on a list of her faults?
1827Or can you still see it, dark, blue, and green, and foam- white, and hear it roaring roughly when the wind is high, or rushing softly when it is calm?
1827Papa will, perhaps, think it a wild and ambitious scheme; but who ever rose in the world without ambition?
1827Quand donc s''est- il laisse enchainer par un lien d''affection?
1827She confessed it was not brilliant, but what could she do?
1827So where he reigns in glory bright, Above those starry skies of night, Amid his Paradise of light Oh, why may I not be?
1827The question was, to what trade or profession should Branwell be brought up?
1827This is not like one of my adventures, is it?
1827To be sure, my opinion will go but a very little way to decide his character; what of that?
1827Under these circumstances how can I go visiting?
1827What could she do to nurse and cherish up this little sister, the youngest of them all?
1827What could they do?
1827What think you?
1827What to find there?
1827What was to be done?
1827When do you set off?
1827When do you wish to go?
1827Where am I going to reside?
1827Where do you wish to go?
1827Where were his comrades?
1827Where''s the use of protestations?
1827Whether offered as a work of three vols., or as tales which might be published in numbers, or as contributions to a periodical?
1827Who that has read"Shirley"does not remember the few lines-- perhaps half a page-- of sad recollection?
1827Why are we to be denied each other''s society?
1827Why are we to be divided?
1827Will you favour me with a line stating whether_ any_, or how many copies have yet been sold?"
1827You ask me if I do not think that men are strange beings?
1827You remember the letter she wrote me, when I was in England?
1827You will ask me why?
1827_ When will you come home_?
1827and Tabby?
1827is it not odd?
1827que m''importe ce qu''on dit de moi?
1827where his mate?
14301''And Ceghéir- ben- Cheikh has always fulfilled his duties successfully?'' 14301 ''And then?''
14301''Antinea? 14301 ''Ceghéir- ben- Cheikh,''I said,''do you know him?
14301''Do you know Gramont- Caderousse''s lastmot"?''
14301''Have you many shops in your capital?'' 14301 ''He has never made a mistake?''
14301''How did little Kaine die?'' 14301 ''How did you like that young Arabian gentleman who was so taken with you last night?''
14301''Of what did he die?'' 14301 ''She is very well, Sire, I thank Your Majesty,''"''And Clémentine?
14301''She keeps them a long time?'' 14301 ''Sire?''
14301''Tell me,''I said, controlling my voice as well as I could,''when Antinea holds one of us in her power, she shuts him up near her, does she not? 14301 ''Well, Captain?''
14301''Well, would it please you to mount on a throne, like our august sovereign, the Empress Eugénie?'' 14301 ''Well?''
14301''What bluff is this?'' 14301 ''What child?''
14301''What did Antinea say when she saw them?'' 14301 ''What is it?
14301''What is the matter?'' 14301 ''What?''
14301''Whom have I the honor of addressing?'' 14301 ''Why,''I asked, turning the conversation,''why, since she spared them their lives, did she not free the pastor and M. Le Mesge?''
14301''Why?'' 14301 A Targa?
14301A hundred and twenty miles, that makes seven days?
14301A mummy, a mummy?
14301A pretext? 14301 A storm?"
14301Alarming? 14301 Am I to conclude from all this that I do not know the real aims of your trip, and that they have nothing to do with the official motives?"
14301And Gâo?
14301And how has it happened?
14301And if that should be so,he said with the most charming attitude,"if I had before leaving the conviction you say, what do you conclude from that?"
14301And my mehari?
14301And now, will you, in your turn, ask me''What is this woman?'' 14301 And the camels?"
14301And the prefix,_ an_?
14301And then what? 14301 And this word belongs, according to your theory, to what language?"
14301And when we are down, how will we get out? 14301 And which, my master, the geographer Berlioux....""You knew Berlioux-- you were his pupil?"
14301And you are not afraid,I asked,"that I will disclose the secret of Antinea if I return among Frenchmen?"
14301And you find that alarming?
14301And you know the road well?
14301And you?
14301And you?
14301And your comrade, the Captain?
14301And,I murmured,"he-- he believed it?"
14301And-- she?
14301And... where is Major Russell?
14301André,I cried stupidly,"I swear to you--""What do you swear to me?"
14301Anything interesting in this number?
14301Are you mad?
14301Ass,I burst out,"will you speak?"
14301Because,replied the little man imperturbably,"this book is her patent of nobility, her_ Almanach de Gotha_, in a sense, do you understand?
14301Born at...?
14301But he murdered his companion, Captain Morhange, did he not?
14301But is your mind absolutely made up?
14301But what? 14301 But, but, sir, then you have heard mentioned, you are familiar with the question, the problem of Atlantis?"
14301But...."But what?
14301By what route?
14301Can you tell me what is the meaning of this?
14301Ceghéir- ben- Cheikh,I asked in a low voice,"why are you doing this?"
14301Chatelain, Chatelain, why not be sensible? 14301 Cigarette, sidi?"
14301Come now,I said sharply,"is that all?"
14301Did I have any lucid moments in the course of these hours? 14301 Did he say nothing else?"
14301Do n''t you see that the glasses are empty? 14301 Do n''t you see?"
14301Do you know that?
14301Do you know that?
14301Do you know what he has come to? 14301 Do you need examples?
14301Does this arrangement recall nothing to you?
14301Everything?
14301Ferradji,angrily demanded the little officer of the Department of Education,"why were these gentlemen brought into the library?"
14301For what, I beg to ask? 14301 From what town?"
14301Gentlemen,said Le Mesge, suddenly entering the room,"why are you so late?
14301Gâo is just over there, is n''t it?
14301Has he said nothing?
14301Have I been in Duras?
14301Have you considered it well?
14301Have you ever heard of the_ Atlas of Christianity_?
14301Have you got it?
14301Have you had occasion, sir, to verify this very ingenious etymology?
14301He-- did not die instantly, did he?
14301He_ was_ asleep, you are sure?
14301How can we escape?
14301How far are we from the Soudan road?
14301How far is it to the first well?
14301How so?
14301How?
14301How?
14301I have the Lieutenant''s permission?
14301I might have guessed that,she said ironically,"but from what part of France?"
14301I will come back?
14301In part? 14301 In- Salah?
14301Is it possible, sir, that I have put myself to the trouble of talking to you for a solid hour about the Critias with such trifling effect? 14301 Is n''t Aguida a beauty?"
14301It is to the Mountain of the Evil Spirits that you are taking us?
14301It was dark, was it not, in the room where_ he_ was?
14301Kill me?
14301Known what?
14301Lieutenant Ferrières, is it not?
14301Lieutenant Ghiberti?
14301Nothing? 14301 Nothing?
14301Of what did they die, sir? 14301 Of what did they die?"
14301Once out of the enclosures, what way did you plan to go?
14301Only tell me, could he not have gone somewhere else to be amused?
14301Our fellow diners?
14301See there?
14301Shall I help you?
14301Shall I take him away?
14301She added, however,''And... the child?'' 14301 She is beautiful, is she not?"
14301That I never meant--"To speak of Wadi Tarhit? 14301 That I will repeat nothing to her?...
14301The Critias? 14301 The Kel- Tahats are the serfs of the tribe of Kel- Rhelâ, the great nobles of Hoggar?"
14301The Major Russell,I repeated, obeying his injunction as if in spite of myself,"who left Khartoum last year, to explore Sokoto?"
14301The cave is here?
14301The doors were not closed, then?
14301Then how did you get in?
14301Then surely_ he_ could not have known?
14301Then they did n''t tie you up?
14301Then what do you intend to do?
14301Then?
14301Then?
14301There, are you satisfied?
14301There, there, I say, you are n''t angry, are you? 14301 To where?"
14301To where?
14301To whom does it refer? 14301 Tomorrow, Captain, but your luggage?"
14301Vengeance?
14301We are of the same class, are n''t we?
14301We are there? 14301 Well then?"
14301Well what is it? 14301 Well, Captain Morhange,"Le Mesge called out to my comrade who had taken a mouthful of fish,"what do you say to this acanthopterygian?
14301Well, old man, what do you want me to do about it? 14301 Well, sir?"
14301Well, then?
14301Well, what have you to say now?
14301Well?
14301Well?
14301Well?
14301What am I to do?
14301What are you saying?
14301What did he say?
14301What do I intend to do?
14301What do I think, my poor friend? 14301 What do you say to that case, to begin with?"
14301What do you take to be the meaning of this word?
14301What do you think of doing?
14301What do you want me to say? 14301 What do you want of me at this hour?"
14301What good would it have done? 14301 What happened to him?
14301What is it, Bou- Djema?
14301What is it, what is the matter with you, anyway?
14301What is it?
14301What is it?
14301What is it?
14301What is it?
14301What is that book?
14301What is that?
14301What is that?
14301What is the captain doing?
14301What is the little fool waiting for?
14301What is your name?
14301What mission is he talking about?
14301What must we do?
14301What next?
14301What of it?
14301What time is it now?
14301What time is it?
14301What tribe do you belong to?
14301What was your first garrison?
14301What were you going to do at In- Salah?
14301When do you expect to leave me?
14301When will we reach this cave with the inscriptions?
14301Where are we?
14301Where do you come from? 14301 Where do you come from?"
14301Who are you, anyway?
14301Who gave that cry, then?
14301Who is this fellow?
14301Who is this native?
14301Who wants cards?
14301Who was disagreeably surprised by the fall of Sedan? 14301 Why did you let the leopard pass?
14301Why do I tell you this? 14301 Why do n''t you answer the Captain?"
14301Why do you ask that?
14301Why do you do this?
14301Why not? 14301 Why should I?
14301Why?
14301Why?
14301Would there be any indiscretion?....
14301Would you object to repeating them to me?
14301Yes, why?
14301Yes?
14301You are a Sonrhaï, Tanit- Zerga?
14301You are a Targa and you are not afraid of the_ ilhinen_?
14301You are a lieutenant?
14301You are sure I am not wearying you? 14301 You do not guess why?...
14301You have been there?
14301You have seen her?
14301You heard what I said to the Captain?
14301You know Duras?
14301You know what our fate is to be?
14301You remember my name?
14301You remember-- our route yesterday, our abduction, the two corridors that we had to cross before arriving at this mountain?... 14301 ''Are you quite sure?'' 14301 ''But,''I said at the end of my arguments,''why not Le Mesge?'' 14301 ''Why not the Reverend Spardek?'' 14301 *****Are you sure at least that this inscription is interesting enough to justify us in our undertaking?"
14301..._ Satyrs, Egipans_... is n''t it very strange to find Greek names given to the barbarian spirits of this region?
14301A European pipe?"
14301After that... oh, Morhange and Antinea.... And then?"
14301All?
14301And I ask you, what could I, with a dislocated shoulder, do against that man whose agile strength I already knew?
14301And besides, what difference does it make?
14301And he added:"Antinea?"
14301And is it necessary to remind you that, although Islam forbids bells as a sign of Christianity, the harness of Tuareg camels are trimmed with bells?
14301And it is signed... do you know by whom it is signed?"
14301And what is this, I ask you, but a cave turned into a workroom, with pictures of the Venus de Medici and the Apollo Sauroctone on the walls?
14301And why should n''t I be all mixed up?
14301And, as I remained strangled in my muteness:"To Wadi Tarhit, do you mean?"
14301Are these writings more interesting than the others we have come upon before?"
14301Are you a man capable of enduring the weight of that confidence, and further, if necessary, of assuming the consequences it may bring?
14301Are you acquainted with that detail, sir?"
14301Are you afraid that I am going to repeat what you say to your new Captain?"
14301Are you embarrassed by them?"
14301Are you satisfied?"
14301Because it established her prodigious genealogy: because she is....""Because she is?"
14301But between ourselves you will admit, will you not, that she is a little thin?"
14301But is it really the fault of the language or of those who abuse the word?
14301But what difference do you suppose that makes to me?"
14301But what of it?
14301But what of it?
14301But what was she beneath all this?
14301But you also, you must promise me....""What?
14301But you are not going to leave me like this, my dear boy?
14301Can you enlighten me?"
14301Captain?"
14301Colonel, what did I say?
14301Did she feel the danger hovering over her and did she wish to brave it by her surest artifices?
14301Do I know myself?
14301Do n''t you see that they are quite drunk?"
14301Do you begin to admit the hypothesis of the Saharan sea?"
14301Do you know the way through the barriers?"
14301Do you know what it is calling, that voice, do you know what it is calling in the tones of someone used to the phrase?
14301Do you recall it?"
14301Does he resemble you?"
14301Does love, then, need so much death in order that it may be multiplied?
14301Evil days may be in store for you, but what does that matter?
14301For how long?
14301Furthermore, where were you this afternoon?
14301Had I suspected him unjustly?
14301Had he been faithful to me, after all?
14301Have you never read the book of that practitioner?
14301He continued pitilessly:"Then you are n''t willing to say anything?"
14301He is entirely devoted to her?''
14301He was gambling: with you and the minister, doubtless?"
14301Here are the stars again.... Is this ridiculous course going to keep on?...
14301How can the camels...?
14301How have we incurred her hatred?"
14301How have you been able to keep from doing anything as long as this?"
14301However, his tone was altogether natural when he said:"You will let me borrow it, of course?"
14301I do not recall having even said to myself,''What, are n''t you ashamed?
14301I finally said:"You give me your word that when you have seen these famous grottos, you will make straight for Timissao by Tit and Silet?"
14301I frowned:"What is this new idea?"
14301I have authorized you to speak of Wadi Halfa, have n''t I?
14301I obeyed; what else was there to do?
14301I understood that this smile meant:"Can he be less obtuse than I had supposed?"
14301If, at that moment, someone had offered to lead me back to the route across the white plain near Shikh- Salah, would I have accepted?
14301In the name of God, am I or am I not at Ahaggar?
14301Indeed, at Tidi- Kelt?
14301Is n''t it a geographical work published by the Benedictines under the direction of a certain Dom Granger?"
14301Its etymology?
14301Kanem?
14301Kill me at the moment when you can reap the fruits of the murder of....""Did-- did he suffer?"
14301May I in turn ask one favor, ask you one question?"
14301More beautiful?
14301Nobody sees him any more?''
14301Perhaps you can tell me?"
14301Shall I send Sydya to my room to get the silver hammer?
14301Shall I suggest several?"
14301Shall I tell you what is the matter with you?"
14301Still the same dear child?''
14301The girdles of earth and of water?...
14301Then I asked him the following question:"May I prove my gratitude by making you a confession?"
14301Then what were you saying a little while ago?"
14301Then why do n''t you show it to us?"
14301Then, does Your Majesty know what Gramont hurled at him?''
14301Therefore I ask him: has one the right to spoil a Bambara cook by addling his head with theological discussions for which he has no predisposition?"
14301This manuscript, this notebook, have you any idea what it was?
14301To whom?"
14301Torkou?
14301Two tunnels, two enclosures of earth?"
14301Under those conditions....""Under those conditions?"
14301Was she praying?
14301Was this Morhange?
14301What are they saying?...
14301What can it be?''
14301What date?"
14301What did he die of?"
14301What drug can this fellow be taking, anyway?"
14301What good is it to beguile yourself with the stories of Tanit- Zerga, charming as they are?
14301What has been capable of causing this metamorphosis in me?
14301What have the lieutenant and I done to Atlantis?
14301What is he like?
14301What is her rôle in the story of Atlantis?"
14301What is there behind those mysterious rocks, those dim solitudes, which have held at bay the most illustrious pursuers of mystery?
14301What is there to do in Landes, if you neither eat nor drink?
14301What is this dynasty, from which, I believe, you trace the descent of Antinea?
14301What more accessible in appearance than the immense Sahara, open to all those who are willing to be engulfed by it?
14301What should I say of Theseus and Ariadne?
14301What was the use of spoiling my action by a continual exhibition of disapproval?
14301What was there to do?
14301What were these statues?
14301When do you wish to leave Wargla?"
14301When does he arrive?"
14301Where did you get this paper?''
14301Where had Morhange learned this insight into the human heart?
14301Where is the place you proposed to show the Captain?"
14301Who may he be?"
14301Why should it be in her possession?"
14301Why should you not speak to me of Wadi Tarhit?"
14301Why then, this obsession, this fever, this consumption of all my being?
14301Why?
14301Will you forgive me?''
14301Will you give me the flowers that you have around your neck?''
14301With me, sir?
14301Without the kindness of the Emperor, where would I have been?
14301Would you care for it?
14301Yet what is more secret?
14301You are forgetting, then, the passage where Pliny the Elder speaks of the library of Carthage and the treasures which were accumulated there?
14301You do not remember her?
14301You want me to go on?"
14301[ 10][ Footnote 10: How did the_ Voyage to Atlantis_ arrive at Dax?
14301[ 5] What were you doing, so far from your home territory when we saved your life?"
14301he said, in a mocking tone,"you have seen her?"
14301there are no more of you?...
14025''Christian dost thou see them?''
14025''My shoe buckle or my lips''? 14025 A good one?"
14025Ah, otherwise engaged, maybe?
14025And Christian? 14025 And how do I know the young chap will be any easier than the old one?
14025And the country''s quiet?
14025And what might it be intended to represent, Miss?
14025And what the devil are they saying about me?
14025And why not, pray?
14025And will you tell me how can I hold your hand when it''s round my waist?
14025Are they long ones?
14025Are you hurt?
14025Are you the youngest young lady, I beg your pardon?
14025But it is what the people is sayin''on the roads about( sob)"about"( sniff)--"About_ what_?''
14025Ca n''t you get a bit of string and tie up the surcingle Tommy?
14025Carmody''s?
14025Claret, I_ could_ give him--?
14025Could n''t you stop him?
14025D''ye mean Daniel? 14025 D''ye want to be ill on my hands again?
14025D''you read, Miss Christian?
14025Did he tell you he''s learning Irish? 14025 Did n''t I hear that old Fogarty is giving up the Dispensary here?
14025Did n''t you say you had a message for me from your father?
14025Difference to what?
14025Do you know what about?
14025Do you mean that it''s Prendergast the Member who''s dying? 14025 Do you mean the place is n''t theirs any more?"
14025Do you remember you advised us to send him to Oxford?
14025Do you? 14025 Draw the line at dinner, eh?"
14025Eh, Larry?
14025Face what?
14025Francis, may I come in? 14025 Go back?
14025Got a fox for me, Larry? 14025 Got to try, have I?"
14025Have you forgotten that I''m the prospective candidate for this constituency? 14025 Have you given up wearing them?"
14025He''s''recapturing''it all right, eh?
14025How can you make me sorry?
14025How could I, with my property loaded with charges, that were no fault of mine, sell at the price you could afford to take? 14025 How d''ye like it now ye''ve got it?"
14025How did it happen?
14025How did you know where I was?
14025How do you know it is the case?
14025How is he?
14025How old is the boy now? 14025 I like that; how much?
14025I say, you remember the old companions of Finn? 14025 I shall call it''Christian, dost thou hear them?''"
14025I wonder did Francis say anything to him?)
14025I wonder where is Tishy gone to? 14025 Indeed?
14025Is he as big a pup as them young Lowrys?
14025Is it a hurry?
14025Is n''t it what they say they puts the best of goods in the small passels?
14025Is that news to you? 14025 Is that true?"
14025Is what?
14025It''s a grand hot day, is n''t it?
14025It''s my turn now-- which will you have?
14025Knew nothing of what?
14025Larry,she said, with a light in her eyes, and a flush in her cheeks,"do_ you_ think I ought to go back?"
14025Look here, Mary,began the Major, with a touch of severity;"what''s all this about Doctor Aherne?"
14025Maybe you did n''t hear he''s got the Coppinger''s Court Agency? 14025 Me?
14025Not the seventh, most noble Samurai,she said, anxiously;"Wo n''t it do from the strand?"
14025Now, then,as Evans returned,"what''s your wonderful bit of news?"
14025Oh, and is a boy all he is then?
14025Oh, so you''re going to see the Doctor, are you?
14025Oh, that poor little fellow?
14025Our turn for what?
14025So that''s the way, is it?
14025Tell me now awhile, John, what day is this th''election is?
14025Tell me now, why did n''t the Unionists support you? 14025 Thank you for the cocoa, Evans, but why must I?"
14025The Major up, Evans? 14025 The left, was n''t it?"
14025Then is n''t the Derrylugga gorse somewhere hereabouts? 14025 Then it''s true, is it?
14025Then what have people against him? 14025 Then why repeat the statement?"
14025There''s just one good thing about it, my father did n''t know--"What_ is_ it? 14025 Very critical-- no worries-- nourishment-- would he have a nurse?"
14025Well, I sha n''t put him out, shall I?
14025Well, I suppose I may draw my own conclusions from what I see?
14025Well, Mary,said Dick,"who is it who''s so hard up for ha''pence?"
14025Well, and is n''t she quite right, too?
14025Well, and what will I give him for his dinner to- day, Norrse?
14025Well, listen to me now,said the Doctor, well pleased,''Tell me what d''ye think of this marriage of Tishy''s?"
14025Well, my dear,she began, eagerly, as the door closed,"when are you going to announce it?"
14025Well, well,he resumed,"''What business is it of yours?''
14025Well, what have you got to say to that, Mrs. Mangan? 14025 Well, what then?"
14025What about a bird''s eye view?
14025What about seeing from a distance, and seeing the whole and not the part?
14025What d''ye mean?
14025What do you mean, Francis? 14025 What do you mean?"
14025What do you mean?
14025What do you think of that, Barty?
14025What dog?
14025What good are they going to do?
14025What harm is it to want to get a better education than what I have? 14025 What next, I wonder, will Master Larry be asking for?"
14025What on earth are you talking about?
14025What shall you call the picture? 14025 What sort of a lad is that?"
14025What way?
14025What''s he going to do in Cluhir?
14025What''s that to me?
14025What''s the use of hurting me and hurting yourself like this? 14025 What''s true?"
14025What? 14025 What_ is_ it, lovey?
14025Where are we?
14025Where on earth did you go, Barty? 14025 Where shall I put the ghost?"
14025Where''s the meet, Miss?
14025Who''s that?
14025Who''s there? 14025 Why a fool''s errand?"
14025Why do you tell me these things?
14025Why on earth did n''t you say you were coming? 14025 Why the devil did none of you stop the brute?"
14025Why would n''t ye wote for Larry Coppinger, John?
14025Worse?
14025Would he like a bit of fish now? 14025 Ye did n''t see the_ Irish Times_ yet, I think?"
14025You do n''t mean it-- how could you bear to look at me?
14025You have n''t seen Cousin Dick yet, have you?
14025You know that Cousin Dick is a good deal changed since you saw him?
14025You''re regretting the choice you made, are you?
14025''And is n''t that a great sin for you,''says I,''to give up going to church?''
14025''Have n''t she no powder?''
14025''Maybe,''said I, funning him,''some day he might be before you in Heaven with his story, and what''ll you do then?''
14025Ah, yes, the youngest Miss Talbot- Lowry, of course, and which brother was it?
14025All jolly fine for old Bill, but where did young Mr. Coppinger come in?
14025And is that the case?
14025And then, when that cur had done his dirty work and bolted, was there a whimper or a cry from her?
14025And there was Ned Cloherty--(this was the medical student)--that she had as good as asked to come-- and what could she say to him now, she wondered?
14025And what are you doing out there in the wet?"
14025And what do you suppose they were talking about?
14025And what does it want?"
14025And who were these, coming up the path from Mr. Coppinger''s lovely river?
14025Are you sorry?"
14025Away there to the south, surely were the trees of Coppinger''s Court; could it be the Mount Music earths for which the fox was heading?
14025Barty was saying to himself, distractedly:"What''ll I say to her?
14025But Georgy cut me out, did n''t he?"
14025But the red- headed Cloherty was crosser than any of them, and what the devil was it to him what Larry''s politics or his matrimonial intentions were?
14025But you would n''t want me to go back of my word?
14025But_ what_ was"the argument he had up his sleeve?"
14025CHAPTER I"Christian, dost them see them?"
14025CHAPTER VI Are childhood and youth indeed Vanity?
14025Can you hear?
14025Cassidy?"
14025Christian, you_ did_ hear them, did n''t you?
14025Come in, ca n''t ye?"
14025Coppinger?"
14025Curse you, ca n''t you do as you''re bid?"
14025Did he know that he was"in black books"with her father?
14025Did n''t I see her go mountains over the stone gap awhile ago?
14025Did n''t her brother that was marrit in it, send her her ticket, and was n''t there good money to be airned in it?
14025Did they say anything about me?"
14025Do n''t you feel being a Protestant is a bit-- well-- stodgy-- and respectable-- no sort of poetry?"
14025Do n''t you think so, Father?"
14025Do you mean my getting into Parliament?"
14025Do you mind if I call them''dogs,''just till I get used to them a bit?"
14025Do you remember?"
14025Do you?"
14025Father Greer was"inside,"the elderly and ugly housekeeper said;"would the Doctor sit in the parlour a minute and he''d come down?"
14025For we do, Christian, do n''t we?"
14025Four years, was n''t it?
14025Gallant as she was, what could she do against a raking, trained galloper, well over sixteen hands, and nearly thoroughbred?
14025Got your threshing done yet?"
14025Had he changed?
14025Had his father said anything to her?
14025Had she minded what he said about the Unionists?
14025Have n''t you to meet Father Greer at twelve o''clock, Larry?
14025He tried to think of them in terms of paint;_ Brun de Bruxelles_, and a touch of cadmium, or was it_ Verte Émeraude_?
14025His expression said:"And why should n''t they?"
14025How can paint do more than suggest the colours of a sunlit moorland pool?
14025How could I leave them?
14025How could I?
14025How could she contribute to the Great Ideas?
14025How do you like him?"
14025How does your garden like all this rain, Mr. Cotton?
14025How the devil can I eat an egg without salt?
14025How was he to have known?
14025How will I build my chapel without the land to put it on?
14025How would that do?
14025I ca n''t see--""Unless,"interrupted Judith, thoughtfully,"unless we sort of acted it--?"
14025I dunno what harm he could do the children at all?"
14025I like old Barty, do n''t you?"
14025I say, do you remember that thing in The Spirit of the Nation,''Orange and Green will carry the Day''?
14025I suppose this is how people always fetch up at meets in France?
14025I suppose you talked German to your Boston doctor?"
14025I suppose you would n''t be disposed to become a member, Miss Christian?"
14025I suppose_ you_ see more of them?"
14025I was going to ask you if you knew of anything?"
14025I was wondering, Larry, would you come with me?
14025I wonder might I ask your man, that''s looking after your young ladies, to have an eye to her, too?"
14025I''m absolutely in honour bound to play up if I''m wanted--""Whether you know the game or no?"
14025I''m sure there''s no one would disapprove of_ me_, is there, Annie?"
14025I''ve come all right out of it; why should n''t I give the tenants the best terms I could?"
14025In God''s name, why could n''t he be let go home to his own?"
14025Indeed?
14025Is it nothing to you that your father''s out alone?
14025Is it to frighten me into my grave you want?
14025Is n''t he there at Mount Music all day and every day, at their tea- parties and their dinner- parties?
14025Is n''t it?
14025Is n''t that what he''s for?"
14025It seldom does, does it?"
14025It was, of course, a purely nominal affair-- but still-- what about a mortgage on the house and demesne?
14025Judith and Mrs. Brady say he''s taking all the fowl, and they''re going to lay poison-- I do n''t mean the fowl--""Is n''t he bright this morning?"
14025Larry said hotly;"what else did she pretend to know about you?"
14025Larry would protest,"then why wo n''t you let me get up?"
14025May I come in, Cousin Dick?"
14025Mrs. Cassidy had thought the youngest of Lady Isabel''s family was a twins-- or_ were_ a twins?
14025Must I call it''foot''?
14025My shoe- buckle or my lips?
14025No?
14025Not really?"
14025Not you?
14025Now, will you remember that?"
14025Of the_ fiancé_ and of his frame of mind, what shall be said?
14025Oh, the youngest one?
14025Oh, will you take care of yourself now, Francis?"
14025On earth, what can you do more for him?"
14025One half of Larry''s mind said"Better?
14025One of the Twins would hiss between his teeth:"Christian, dost thou see them?"
14025Said Michael Donovan in a low voice to John Kearney:"Will she go back, d''ye think?"
14025She also--?"
14025Silly old ass, what did she know about it?
14025Sixteen last October?
14025Sure I thought he''d be kept back in England till the Christmas?"
14025Surely he was n''t afraid of the Mangans?
14025Tell me, did you hear they have Larry Coppinger chosen to be the candidate, when Prendergast retires, as he says he will, before the next election?
14025That''s very creditable to him-- a decent old fellow Tom was-- and you say he wants to hunt?
14025The Member?"
14025Was he going to laugh?)
14025Was it possible that he was to be married next week?
14025Was it possible?
14025Was that why they went away?"
14025Were n''t his daughters''souls more to him than bookshelves?"
14025What are you talking of?"
14025What could he do?
14025What devil had possessed him?
14025What did it matter what he said?
14025What do I care?
14025What do you suppose will be left to us after the next''Revision of Rents,''as they call it?"
14025What have you done to yourself?
14025What need to attempt to recount what he said or thought?
14025What on earth was he afraid of?
14025What on earth was he to do from now till one o''clock?
14025What room was there for phantom fears when these things were certainties?
14025What spectre from the other world has power to break a heart?
14025What were they saying?
14025What''d I say to the Doctor if I had to tell him his pet dog was dead?"
14025What''ll I talk to her about?"
14025What''s it coming at this hour for?"
14025What''s quite nice?"
14025What''s the difference between a stale mate and an old inmate?
14025What''s the matter with him, any how?
14025What''s_ he_ got to say to you, Father Tim?"
14025Where are you going to draw?"
14025Where d''ye think we''ll find him?"
14025Where did you get him?"
14025Where had Joker got him to?
14025Which ought she to say?
14025Which will you have?
14025Which won is it?
14025Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?
14025Who but he would have dared to aspire for his children as he had?
14025Who shall pity the Big Doctor, or blame him over- much?
14025Who shall say if she believed him?
14025Who shall say that she did not do her duty according to her lights?
14025Who won it?
14025Why did he?
14025Why did you come away here?"
14025Why did you die?"
14025Why did you leave us, Owen?
14025Why do n''t you run him for that?"
14025Why do these rotten old songs stick in my head like this?
14025Why had he thought of that beastly hymn?
14025Why on earth could n''t Bill get into the country and let them have a school at least, and get away from these damned motors?
14025Why should n''t I be tired if I like?"
14025Why should we?
14025Why should you?"
14025Will you come, Aunt Freddy?"
14025Will you take Mike with you?"
14025Will you tell me that?"
14025Wo n''t they have him married up to one of the daughters before you can look around?
14025Would he care if he did know?
14025Would he stay?
14025Would you think Miss Christian Talbot- Lowry was good enough for him?"
14025You''re off it?
14025You''re to be as civil as be damned to old Frederica, and tell Barty he''s to fix up with Larry to come here-- what day is this to- day is?
14025You''ve given me the chuck?"
14025are they in bonds?"
14025chaffed Larry( who, until that moment, had been unaware that he possessed any corn);"it''s a good harvest all round, is n''t it?"
14025demanded Judith,"and who do you mean?"
14025exclaimed Larry, startled out of his sulk;"to sell?"
14025he murmured;"did he hear me, d''ye think?"
14025said Nurse Brennan,"and how d''ye think they settled it in the end?
14025said Richard, intensifying his favourite invocation in his surprise,"but what''s wrong with Ireland?"
14025said Tishy, pushing the boots under the sofa,"are n''t you obliged to me?
14025said the cook, saturninely,"But what''s the drawn''-room carpet to conjuring a supper out of me pocket in five minutes?
14025says Larry, beaming back;"oh,_ this_?"
14025shouted Mrs. Mangan, slinging a long gold watch- chain over her head and festooning it upon her ample bosom:"Did you meet Pappy?"
18292Are you with the infantry?
18292Are you wounded?
18292Asleep up there in the barn,said I;"why did n''t you call us?"
18292Aw, what the hell are you getting at? 18292 Billy, do n''t you want to live to get back home?
18292But how did you come to get into a Canadian unit?
18292Cheer up, Billy, cheer up, old pal, how in hell are we going to pull through if you give way like this?
18292Did the cow stop in front of your gun?
18292Did you know him?
18292Did you notice anything peculiar in the farmer''s actions?
18292Did you want to kill yourself?
18292Did you want to see me, sir?
18292Do n''t you know enough to salute your superior officer? 18292 Do n''t you know how to salute?
18292Do you remember that night I was telling you about when I was out observing?
18292Fellows, are you ready?
18292For what, Messieurs? 18292 Hello, matey, what you doing out here?"
18292Here, you soldier, what are you running away for?
18292How about the others?
18292How can I? 18292 How did he come to be down here?"
18292How does it happen,said he, in support of his suspicion,"that he always has a little change when the rest of us are broke?"
18292I can plainly see that, but what makes it that color? 18292 I do n''t know; how should I know?"
18292Is your name Grant?
18292Oh, repairing the wire, were you? 18292 Sergeant, would you kindly help us to a drink of water?"
18292Shell grazed him at Mons? 18292 That so?"
18292Then why are you not with your men?
18292Thinking? 18292 Well, did n''t you hear me say we''d be over there shortly?"
18292Well, if it was n''t the cookhouse, is it that letter that is coming for you tonight?
18292Were you wounded?
18292What are they here for?
18292What are you doing out here wandering around in this fashion?
18292What are you going to shoot at?
18292What did you do that for?
18292What did your dog run at me for?
18292What do you want?
18292What happened?
18292What in hell are you fellows doing around here again?
18292What is it, Billy? 18292 What is it, Billy?
18292What the hell are you hanging around here for? 18292 What''s that?"
18292What''s the matter, Canada?
18292What''s the matter, Corporal, winded?
18292What''s them bloody things?
18292When are you going to fire?
18292Where have you been, Henderson?
18292Where is he now?
18292Where is that damned fool of a Sergeant- Major?
18292Where the hell were you fellows?
18292Where we lost Thompson and the others when the flare went up? 18292 Who are you?"
18292Who in hell broke into those hives?
18292Who owns these?
18292Why did n''t he come at me with his other end?
18292Why did n''t you hit him with the other end?
18292Why did you take the pin out?
18292Why do n''t you go and look them up?
18292Wo n''t you wait a moment, sir, and see the Major? 18292 Wot the bloody''ell will Fritz think of these beauties?
18292You bleedin''idiot,I said,"do n''t you know a mushroom when you see it?
18292You know what happened Lawrence, do n''t you? 18292 Almost desperate, I shouted in his ear,Billy, old pal, think of your mother and father; what would the old man say if he saw you acting like this?
18292And for what?"
18292But how can sympathy obtain for devils in human form?
18292Did n''t I tell you to beat it to the wagon lines before you got hit?
18292Did you hear that, Grant?"
18292Do n''t you know how to stand to attention?"
18292Do n''t you know what it will mean to your mother and your father if anything happens to you?
18292Do you think he really means it?"
18292Do you think your horseshoe luck is going to stay with you forever?
18292Do you want to let someone else gang hungry?
18292Do you want to wish it on yourself?"
18292Have you got a sup of hot tea, Scotty?"
18292He asked permission of my husband, who was a loyal Belgian, to use our house-- for what?
18292He called out,"Grant, I do n''t quite get this safety catch and bolt; would you mind showing it to me again?"
18292His teeth chattered like the keys of a typewriter as he asked me,"What do you think will come o''it, Grant?
18292How many messages did you send them last night, Sergeant?"
18292In a half- humorous, half- scolding voice he would say,"Mon, what do you want to be a hog for?
18292Is that so?"
18292Is that you, Burt?
18292It was blood, but whose?
18292Pete''s answers to the officer, while respectful, were tantalizing to a degree:"What did you do that for?"
18292The cookhouse?
18292Then he saw me standing there and he yelled,"Do you think there''ll be any more?"
18292Thinking of what?
18292Well, what''s the use of tempting fate?
18292Well, you know that big Prussian I told you about, that came so near getting me?
18292What bloody well nonsense is this?
18292What do you mean?"
18292What do you say?"
18292What''s the trouble?"
18292Where is your battery operating?"
18292Where will I meet you?"
18292Which ones you shoot first?
18292Who goes there?"
18292Who goes there?"
18292Who was the guy that got the mushrooms?"
18292Why did n''t you stay in your trenches?"
18292You are going, are n''t you?"
18292You get me, Reg, do n''t you?"
18292You, Grant, who has done this?"
18292he asked me;"I mean, with his white cow?"
20468''Mad Anthony''looked at me and replied,''Hell, is n''t one white man as good as three niggers?'' 20468 Bailey:How do you expect a man to stand at attention with sand- paper underwear on?"
20468Could it be a mistake?
20468Who would be called first?
19036But, you do n''t mean to say,he continued,"that they really want to cut our throats on account of our bad manners?"
19036Caerula quis stupuit lumina? 19036 Was ist des Deutschen Vaterland?
19036What do these Germans want?
19036What does Germany want?
19036What wud ye do if ye were a king an''come to this counthry?
19036A shady beer- garden, capital music, and happy fathers and mothers and children, what arithmetic, or algebra, or census tells you anything of that?
19036And who writes thus?
19036Are reasonable men to strip themselves of all armor, and suffer unreason to prevail?
19036But are we not to know our neighbors the English, the Germans, the French?
19036But art has nothing to do with brooms and dust- pans, and human nature is woven of surprises and emergencies, and what then?
19036But is man fed by bread alone, even in the sugared form of music and theatricals?
19036But what has happened?
19036But, pray, what is to be done where there is no reason to appeal to?
19036Canst thou tolerate, O Jupiter, that a foreigner should come to sit in the sacred temple as a senator, as a consul?"
19036Cato wrote of women''s suffrage:"Pray what will they not assail, if they carry their point?
19036Could anything be more burningly irritable to the Germans than those two unnecessary statements?
19036Does it revert to the giver, the chief of the tribe, or does it go to the children of the owner?
19036How is that to be regulated?
19036How many Englishmen or Americans who sniff at German civilization ever see anything of the inside of German homes?
19036If this is what they do to the greatest man in their history, what is to be expected elsewhere?
19036Is this the price that a nation must pay for its industrial progress?
19036Ist''s Preussenland?
19036Ist''s Schwabenland?
19036Ist''s wo am Belt die Möve zieht?
19036Ist''s wo am Rhein die Rebe blüht?
19036It is easy to say:"Dic mihi si fueris tu leo, qualis eris?"
19036John Wesley, writing of this word"sentimental"as used in Sterne''s"Sentimental Journey,"says:"Sentimental, what is that?
19036May I beg the reader and the student to follow me with this point clearly in mind?
19036My readers may look back to the title of this chapter and ask: What has all this to do with the status of women in Germany?
19036Of all these so- called indiscretions there is the question to ask: Should these things have been said?
19036Over this whole force presides, a politician?
19036Should these things have been written?
19036The Krüger telegram was not written by the Emperor, and when the worst construction is put upon it, it expressed what?
19036There has been no fulsome flattery, no bowing the knee to foreign idols, and what has been the result?
19036They are there, there is no doubt about that; the question is, does he smile or scowl?
19036Thus writes John Stuart Mill, and what else can be said of the political activities of the Germans?
19036What do these men and movements mean?
19036What does the moaning monotony of a Korean love- song mean to the westerner, or what does the Swan song mean to the Korean?
19036What has become of Lessing, and Winckelmann, and Goethe, and their teachings?
19036What has poor Joachim Friedrich done that he should pose forever in the Sieges Allee as an intoxicated hitching- post?
19036What has the press to chronicle with insistence and with dignity of such flabby political and social conditions?
19036What if we all turned to and gave something without being forced to do so?
19036What journalist or what patriot indeed can take seriously a majority that has no power?
19036What nation would not be even unduly keen to resent any appearance of an attempt to jostle it from its hard- won place in the sun?
19036What nation would not be self- conscious after such dire experiences?
19036What nation would not be tenderly sensitive as to its treatment by neighboring powers?
19036What people can call itself free to whom its rulers are not responsible?
19036What would become of them without the goose, the pig, the calf, and the duck, that meagre alimentary quartette?
19036When shall we all recover from a certain international sickliness that keeps us all feverish?
19036Where can one find a stable- man in our country who reads Shelley or Edgar Allan Poe, or who ever heard of William James and Pragmatism?
19036Where would the"Yellow peril"and the"German menace"be then?
19036Who can go to war with the countrymen of Racine and Molière and Pascal and Montesquieu and Descartes?
19036Who can not see anarchy looming ahead of this programme, for it is surely a lunatic negation of all the laws of God and Nature?
19036Why should I debar a man from my sympathy because he is a king or an emperor?
19036do they dominate him, or he them?
19036does he work away toward a solution, or allow himself to be swamped by them?
19036flavam Caesariem, et madido torquentem cornua cirro?
19355( But what of the immoral French?
19355A Southern Puritan?
19355A hypothetical outrage?
19355A silly begging of the question, for does n''t posterity also make mistakes?
19355A tale of the spirit''s triumph, of youth besting destiny?
19355And does an extravagance or an error here and there lie validly against the saying of it?
19355And if they did n''t?
19355And what else is there in Balzac, Goethe, Swift, Molière, Turgenev, Ibsen, Dostoyevsky, Romain Rolland, Anatole France?
19355And what have we in"The Financier"and"The Titan"?
19355And why did it lie so long in manuscript, and finally go out stealthily, under a private imprint?
19355Arthur Schnitzler?
19355But does all this argue a total lack of justice in the American character, or even a lack of common decency?
19355But is the Conrad I here describe simply a new variety of moralist, differing from the general only in the drift of the doctrine he preaches?
19355But through whom?
19355But what joy can there be in rolling up sentences that have no more life and beauty in them, intrinsically, than so many election bulletins?
19355But what of Tschaikowsky, with his childish Slavic whining?
19355But who else?
19355But"The''Genius''"?
19355Carl Van Vechten?
19355Clara Viebig?
19355Even the Czech- Irish hypothesis( or is it Magyar- Irish?)
19355For some undetermined reason-- the influence of the American tourist?
19355Gustav Frenssen?
19355Here, I suspect, he meant to say Czech instead of Magyar, for is n''t Pilsen in Bohemia?
19355How many remain?
19355If it be His will, what right have I or any one to say aught?
19355In Sudermann, Germany has a writer of short stories of very high calibre, but where is the German novelist to match Conrad?
19355In the preface to"What is Man?"
19355Irish?
19355Is Conrad the beyond- Kipling, as the early criticism of him sought to make him?
19355Is Titian''s chromo of Moses in the bullrushes seriously to be regarded as the noblest picture in Europe?
19355Is either passion animal?
19355Is it really the mark of a smart fellow to lift a peasant''s cackle over"Lohengrin"?
19355Is such coarse and ignorant clowning to be accepted as humour, as great humour, as the best humour that the most humorous of peoples has produced?
19355It is pretty, but what is it all about?...
19355Just what do they mean?
19355Just what is Dreiser driving at?
19355Lawrence Gilman?
19355Need anything else be said in praise of a critic?
19355Or in the Hauptmann of"Fuhrmann Henschel,"or in Hardy, or in Sudermann?
19355Or in the Zola of"L''Assomoir,""Germinal,""La Débâcle,"the whole Rougon- Macquart series?
19355Or in the laborious confection of such stuff as this, from Book I, Chapter IV, of"The''Genius''"?
19355Philip H. Goepp?
19355Philip Hale?
19355Save one thinks of H. B. Fuller( whose"With the Procession"and"The Cliff- Dwellers"are still remembered by Huneker, but by whom else?
19355So translated by Floyd Dell:"O ye deathward- going tribes of man, what do your lives mean except that they go to nothingness?"
19355Suppose we saw them striving blindly, too, and pitied them?...
19355Thomas Mann?
19355Tolstoi, after"Anna Karenina,"wrote"What Is Art?"
19355Turn to"The Mysterious Stranger,"or"What is Man?"...
19355Well, why not?
19355What could be more erroneous than the common assumption that Puritanism is exclusively a Northern, a New England, madness?
19355What good would it do us, asks Dreiser, to know?
19355What is Captain MacWhirr, hero or simply ass?
19355What is Falk, beast or idealist?
19355What is Lord Jim, scoundrel and poltroon or gallant knight?
19355What is the fact?
19355What modern civilization save this of ours could have produced Christian Science, or the New Thought, or Billy Sundayism?
19355What of Liszt, with his cheap playacting, his incurable lasciviousness, his plebeian warts?
19355What of Richard Strauss, with his warmed- over Nietzscheism, his flair for the merely horrible?
19355What of Wagner, with his delight in imbecile fables, his popinjay vanity, his soul of a_ Schnorrer_?
19355What other could accept gravely the astounding imbecilities of English philanthropy and American law?
19355What other could have yielded up the mawkish bumptiousness of the Uplift?
19355What, then, is Sherman''s complaint?
19355Who but a German goes into woollen undershirts at 45, and makes his will, and begins to call his wife"Mamma"?
19355Who but a German sheds tears over the empty bottles of day before yesterday, the Adelaide Neilson of 1877?
19355Who ever heard of an Irish epicure, an Irish_ flâneur_, or, for that matter, an Irish contrapuntist?
19355Why does he do it?
19355Why, then?
19355Why?
19355[ 13] Who cares?
13034''And maybe we can bungle through with a few bearings for a while, can we?'' 13034 ''So it stands to reason, does it?''
13034... Do you love him, Helen?
13034A shortage as big as that last year? 13034 All for me?
13034All right, boys?
13034And did n''t he ever come back?
13034And last night he was in that car on the bridge.... Where do these Bols hang out?
13034And suppose the red lamp had been disregarded?
13034And then what did she ask you?
13034And then what did she say?
13034And then?
13034And when Uncle Stanley dies-- what then?
13034And you wo n''t let anybody run away with you until I''ve had another chance?
13034And, indeed, why should n''t they be? 13034 Any of them married?"
13034Anything I can do for you, Miss Mary?
13034Anything wrong?
13034Are n''t you going to kiss me, too?
13034Are they going to boycott us?
13034Are you forgetting a little detail like that?
13034Are you ready?
13034Are you sure your figures are right?
13034Are you sure your women workers are turning out bearings so much cheaper than the men did?
13034Besides,thought Mary,"she''d only say,''Oh, all right,''and yawn and change the subject-- and what could I do then?"
13034But do n''t you think it''s altogether wrong,said Professor Marsh,"to deprive a child of the advantages of home life?"
13034But how can they?
13034But tell me: Is that why you are making so many additions to the factory-- because we are changing to a corporation?
13034But what are you doing here?
13034But who''ll run the factory?
13034But would they be for ever blue?
13034But, Helen-- don''t you think it''s just possible-- that you''ve been worrying him?
13034Ca n''t you begin to see that the average woman has always worked harder than the average man? 13034 Can I come in?"
13034Can a woman do a man''s work? 13034 Can you come down to the office early this morning?"
13034Can you read it?
13034Can you speak French?
13034Could n''t you play the drum?
13034Did Helen cry, when she saw how late it was getting?
13034Did n''t you hear anything of this-- in Charleston?
13034Did n''t you say you expected trouble?
13034Did you get your copy of the annual report?
13034Did you have a quarrel?
13034Do n''t I think what, dear?
13034Do n''t you feel well?
13034Do n''t you know by now that it''s the one great thing in life?
13034Do n''t you see? 13034 Do n''t you think that love is the greatest thing in life?"
13034Do n''t you think we''ve waited long enough?
13034Do you know if the piano''s here yet?
13034Do you know what I would do if I were you?
13034Do you love me a little bit now?
13034Do you mind then if I start a subscription for the instruments?
13034Do you think it''s fair?
13034Do you think she''s as pretty as Mary?
13034Do you think they are overworked?
13034Do you think we had better try it a little longer and see how it works out?
13034Do you, know you''re getting to be fashionable?
13034Does it remind you of old times, the same as it does me?
13034First you catch it in their eye and in their voice:''Are you sure you''re comfortable?'' 13034 Going to have an artists''colony up here?"
13034Good news?
13034Got all we can handle now, have n''t we?
13034Got who?
13034Has he asked you yet?
13034Have you ever been the least bit sorry,he asked,"that you turned me down-- for a business career?"
13034Helen,she said, when their visitor had gone,"do you really love Wally-- or are you just amusing yourself?"
13034How are you getting on?
13034How are you going to pass a law like that when women can vote?
13034How did you do it?
13034How long are you going to try it, do you think?
13034How long does it take to break in an ordinary man?
13034How many have been rejected today?
13034How many men are out now?
13034How''s Aunt Patty and Aunt Cordelia?
13034How''s Wally?
13034How?
13034Hutch,he said in a quieter voice,"do n''t you remember me?"
13034I can almost imagine that we''re an old married couple, sitting in here like this-- can''t you?
13034I did n''t make much of a hit with the governor, but then you know I seldom do--"Where did you get the pictures?
13034I guess it''s a question of pride on the man''s part-- as much as anything else--"Oh, Archey-- don''t you think a woman has pride, too?
13034I understand,said Mary; and turning to the four she asked,"How do you feel about it?"
13034I wonder what they would think of this?
13034I wonder what they would think of women working here?
13034I wonder who he is?
13034I''ve just been in Helen''s room,she said,"and what do you think she has on her dresser?"
13034If anything happens to young Josiah,I can imagine him thinking to himself with a grin,"I may own this place myself some day.... Who knows?"
13034If that dam breaks, it will sweep away the factory and part of the town.... What are you going to do?
13034If they can do it, we can do it, too-- don''t you think so?
13034In what way?
13034Is Miss Spencer in?
13034Is Mr. Strauss here? 13034 Is Woman Really Man''s Equal?"
13034Is it because the heirs expect too much?
13034Is it you, Master Paul?
13034Is n''t it true,she began,"that most of the machinery we use does n''t require a great deal of skill to run it?"
13034Is that the bell now?
13034Is their work fairly accurate?
13034It is Archey; is n''t it?
13034It sounds possible-- the way Miss Spencer puts it-- but will it work?
13034It was Uncle Stanley''s idea, then?
13034It would only bother them,she told herself,"and what good could it do?"
13034Joe, will you please tell Mr. Woodward, Sr., that I would like to see him?
13034Let''s take a stroll down there, shall we?
13034Like them? 13034 Looking for somebody?"
13034May I look at that?
13034May we confer with you Monday at your office regarding situation at New Bethel?
13034Might I ask, Miss Mary, of what nature is the subject?
13034Mr. Edsol, is n''t it?
13034Not mad at your uncle, are you, little girl?
13034Not tired? 13034 Now first of all,"she said,"just how badly do you four women need your pay envelopes every week?"
13034Now why did he save this clipping?
13034Now,smiled Mary to the spokesman of the committee,"wo n''t you tell me, please, what fault you find with these four women?"
13034Oh, dad,Mary had said, looking up and speaking on impulse,"did I hear you say last night that Burdon Woodward was in New York?"
13034Oh, who do you think was there tonight?
13034On what, for instance?
13034Or is it because I have other things to think about? 13034 Patty,"said Miss Cordelia one day,"do you know that child of ours is seventeen?"
13034Poor Brad-- didn''t I tell you?
13034Quarrel with Burdon Woodward?
13034Shall I tell the rest of the men?
13034So have I,said Miss Patty in a low voice,"but where''s the letter?"
13034Stopped him? 13034 Take Mr. MacPherson,"she thought;"how is he my natural enemy?
13034Tell them what, Uncle Stanley?
13034That we''re going to shut down till further notice?
13034That''s all?
13034The next thing we know,he said to Mary one day,"every man on the place will walk out, and what are we going to do then?"
13034The only reason you wish these women discharged is because they are women, is that it?
13034The present question is: How can we settle this matter to suit both sides?
13034Then did you ever hear of any one in our family named Paul?
13034Then why is it?
13034There is n''t? 13034 Tired, dear?"
13034Tired, dear?
13034To college?
13034Was n''t there a girl''s name which means bitterness?
13034Wash the dishes? 13034 Well, do n''t you see?
13034Well, have n''t you?
13034Well, what can I do?
13034Well?
13034What are the men saying now?
13034What are the men saying now?
13034What are they striking for?
13034What are us men going to do after a while?
13034What are you going to do about Walter Cabot?
13034What are you going to do when you have used up all your local women?
13034What are you going to do with them?
13034What are you laughing at?
13034What can I do?
13034What did he discharge you for?
13034What did the garage man find was the trouble with your car?
13034What do they see?
13034What do you say if we have it printed in big type, and pasted on the bill- boards?
13034What do you think, Helen?
13034What do you think, Mary?
13034What for?
13034What is it, ma cherie, which you can not believe?
13034What is it?
13034What makes you think it''s going to spread?
13034What more can I say?
13034What on earth are you listening for?
13034What time do we get there?
13034What was it dad used to call me sometimes-- his''Little Hustler''?
13034What would have happened if the oven had n''t been opened when the white light appeared?
13034What would you do?
13034What''s all this excitement about Martha? 13034 What''s the matter with Burdon down at the office lately?
13034What''s the matter with them?
13034What''s the matter with those men who are going out?
13034What''s the matter, Archey?
13034What''s the matter, Mary?
13034What''s the matter, Wally?
13034What''s the matter? 13034 What''s the matter?"
13034What''s the use of having so many bath- bowls in this table,asked Professor Marsh,"when you only have two nurses to do the bathing?"
13034What''s the use?
13034What''s this?
13034What?
13034What?
13034When is Mr. Woodward expected back?
13034Where do they get their flowers?
13034Where''s Burdon?
13034Where''s the phone, Mary? 13034 Who discharged you?"
13034Who says factory work is easier than housework?
13034Who sent it? 13034 Who was that?"
13034Who-- who did this?
13034Who? 13034 Who?"
13034Why are parents so careful? 13034 Why did our earnings fall down so low last year?"
13034Why do n''t you audit his books and see who paid for that car?
13034Why do n''t you take him?
13034Why do you feel like ignoring it, if it''s such a natural question?
13034Why does n''t it go over?
13034Why not?
13034Why not?
13034Why not?
13034Why not?
13034Why not?
13034Why should n''t they get as much as the men if they are going to do men''s work?
13034Why, Ma''m Maynard,said Mary,"you do n''t think that all men are fools, too, do you?"
13034Why, you want to be good; do n''t you?
13034Why?
13034Why?
13034Why?
13034Will you mark them with a tick, please-- those you ca n''t dance?
13034Wo n''t you be seated for a few minutes?
13034Would they want to go back to candles?
13034Y- yes--"Who was he?
13034Yes, and who knows? 13034 Yes, dear?"
13034Yes?
13034You know the old saying, do n''t you?
13034You mean for the women to be making bearings?
13034You mean to say they all kissed you?
13034You mean to say they will go on strike before they will work with their own wives and sisters?
13034You mean working for wages?
13034You mean your friends?
13034You think so, ma cherie? 13034 You think so?"
13034You think so?
13034You''ll do that, Miss Spencer?
13034You''re sure it has nothing to do with this?
13034You''re sure there''s nothing more I can do?
13034You''re to go right back to your work,she said, and in a gentler voice,"Wally, can I speak to you, please?"
13034You''ve never seen my daughter, have you?
13034Your friends are n''t with you tonight?
13034''Are you sure you do n''t feel a draft?''
13034''Are you sure you''re warm enough?''
13034''What do you mean, rough stuff?''
13034''What do you mean: good scares?''
13034... Are you going to boycott us now?"
13034... You do n''t mean to say that they have made you an aunt already?"
13034All those who would like to try it-- will they please stand up?"
13034Aloud he said, pretending to yawn,"Great events, batuchka?
13034Aloud she said,"What do you think of it?"
13034And again"Is it you, Master Paul?"
13034And aloud in quite a humouring tone he said,"We do n''t need men?
13034And seeing that she hesitated he added, first looking cautiously over his shoulder,"Is it anything, for instance, to do wi''Mr. Woodward?
13034And the babies?
13034And the home?
13034And then he said,''What time did you leave Mary''s?''
13034And why was he singing so sadly, so plaintively just underneath Mary''s window?
13034Any better?"
13034Archey?"
13034At any other time she would have asked herself,"Why is he inquiring for Burdon?"
13034Because who would hire a man at$ 21 a week after the war if they could get a woman to do the same work for$ 15?"
13034But how are you getting on, Helen?....
13034But how did he know Helen was there?
13034But what''s the woman going to do?"
13034But you do n''t condemn the eight hour day-- do you?--just because it does n''t fit everybody?"
13034But you would n''t call children natural enemies, would you-- or try to get along without them?"
13034But you would n''t call food a natural enemy; would you?
13034But-- if it was any other man than Stanley Woodward, I would say today that he was doing his best to-- to--""To''do''me?"
13034CHAPTER I"Patty,"said Miss Cordelia one morning,"have you noticed Josiah lately?"
13034Can we tell the men that they are going to get women''s wages?"
13034Did he kiss you?"
13034Did young Josiah want to leave the office early?
13034Did young Josiah yearn for life and adventure?
13034Do n''t you think that''s a good thing?
13034Do you care to see them, or shall I tell them you are out?"
13034Do you expect him tomorrow?"
13034Does he understand it?"
13034Does n''t that mean a lot to you, Aunt Patty?
13034Edsol?"
13034For great men would not spend their days in catching little fishes-- am I not right, batuchka?"
13034For why?
13034Have you a car here?"
13034Helen appeared at the office soon after nine and the moment she saw Mary she said,"Has Wally''phoned you this morning?"
13034Helen nodded and glanced at Mary with a look that said,"Did you hear him call me''Dear''?"
13034How are you?
13034How could you, if he were driving very fast?"
13034How did they find time to do their washing and ironing?
13034How did they train the women?
13034How long is it since your bookkeeping system was overhauled here?"
13034How?"
13034I do n''t want to go to Miss Parsons''school--""Where do you want to go then?"
13034I hope he brings his handsome son again-- don''t you?"
13034I said to him,''that a woman ca n''t do a man''s work and get away with it?
13034I think I ought to ask you something first, though.... Did any one ever tell you that you had a brother Paul?
13034I thought he was leaving earlier than usual tonight; did n''t you?
13034If I take you this morning, will you promise to be a good girl, and sit in the office, and not go wandering off by yourself?
13034If women can do such wonderful things for the Red Cross, why ca n''t they do wonderful things in other ways?"
13034If women enter the trades, what are the men going to do?
13034Is it not because all the world knows well that a man can not be left to his own promise, but has to be bound by the law as a lion is held in a cage?"
13034Is that your idea of woman''s work?''
13034It was the sight of him down there that reminded me: that''s all.... How has everything been running here?
13034Life-- thankfulness for life-- a joy so deep that it was n''t far from pain-- hoping-- longing- yearning... for what?
13034Mary; tell me you love me just a little bit; wo n''t you?"
13034Me?"
13034Now that she had the ballot and could no longer be legislated against, could she hold her own industrially on equal terms with man?
13034One day Mary suddenly said to her father,"Who was Paul?"
13034Or Archey Forbes?
13034Or Judge Cutler?
13034Or Wally Cabot?"
13034Or sweep the streets?
13034Or what?"
13034Or, putting it as briefly as possible,"Could she make good?"
13034Or, say, the conduct of the business?"
13034Queer, is n''t it?"
13034See?"
13034See?"
13034She kissed her cousin twice, quotation marks of affection which enclosed the whisper,"Do you mind if I stay all night?"
13034She waited until her cousin paused for breath and then,"Did Burdon Woodward ride home with you tonight?"
13034Smoothly, I hope?"
13034So it''s silly to say''What''s the use?''
13034So, do n''t you see?
13034Strauss?"
13034Suppose last night, instead of coming home, he had turned the car toward Boston or New York, what would you have done then?"
13034Suppose the idea spreads and after a while there are millions of women doing work that used to be done by men-- what are the men going to do?"
13034That''s why I''m here.... Can I have my old room?"
13034The accountant looked at her with the same quizzical air as an astronomer might assume in looking at a child who had just said,"What?
13034The millionaire and the mill- hand-- somehow they always manage to leave less than every one expected--""Why is that?"
13034The old familiar office seemed to be waiting for her, the pictures regarding her as though they were saying"Where have you been, young lady?
13034The sun ninety million miles away from the earth?
13034Then how about Worth, and those other big men dressmakers?
13034Then how about that butler up at Miss Spencer''s?''
13034Then how about the chefs at the big hotels?''
13034Then how about the steam laundries where nearly all the shirt ironers are men?''
13034Then who''s to do the work?"
13034There is so much work that has to be done in the world every day; is n''t there?"
13034They returned to the office and when they were seated again, Mary said,"What is it you wanted to say?"
13034This merry letter, for instance, which Mary read and smiled over-- who was the"Jack"who had written it?
13034To show you how her mind worked, one night she asked her father,"What makes a machine squeak?"
13034To stop improvements now would be inviting ruin-- They had their hands on the top rung of the ladder now; why let go and fall to the bottom--?
13034Unless for demonstrated incapacity, upon what grounds shall we now deny them equal opportunities?
13034Wally Cabot?"
13034Wally out of town?"
13034Was her equality theoretical-- or real?
13034Was young Josiah late the next morning?
13034Were n''t you surprised yourself when your idea worked out so well?"
13034What about the children?
13034What are the men going to do if the women take their jobs?"
13034What are you doing there in Mary''s bed?
13034What do you suppose reminded me of it?"
13034What do you understand by a man''s work?''
13034What have you been doing to him?"
13034What would a girl know about mergers, combinations, fundamental patents, the differences between common and preferred stock, and all that?
13034What would everybody think if those new buildings stayed empty--?
13034What''s the use of having things if you ca n''t enjoy them?"
13034Who is she, anyway?"
13034Why are chaperons require''--even in the highest, most culture''society?
13034Why is marriage require''?
13034Will there be work enough for everybody?"
13034Will you please follow me?"
13034Will you promise me that?"
13034Woodward?"
13034Woodward?"
13034Would n''t it be awful if-- if we were to be married-- and then got like that, too?"
13034Would n''t you like to see it go on?"
13034You do n''t think he''d do anything to hurt Spencer& Son; do you?"
13034You''ll promise to be here when I come back?"
13034you and Wally?"
1631A town''s messenger, is he not?
1631A very proper stratagem indeed,I said,"but now, gentlemen, there is one little matter; how will Sir Hugh Kennedy take this device of ours?
1631And Mistress Elliot Hume, has she forgiven her lover yet? 1631 And how, good father?"
1631And is she proud now that she is so great?
1631And may we not put the steel in that Scotch dog who delayed us? 1631 And now where are we?
1631And that was all? 1631 And the Maid, where is she, Randal?"
1631And the jackanapes?
1631And what counsel gave the Maid?
1631And what make you here, fair squire, with arms in a sick man''s chamber, and loud words to disturb the dying? 1631 And what may that have been?"
1631And wherefore should not I go to the wars,she cried,"and fight beside the Maid?
1631And wherefore, in Heaven''s name, should we not be happy on such a day as this was an hour agone? 1631 And who is that great Scot, with his Scots twang of the tongue, who called you''son''?
1631And who shall the French lord be, Elliot?
1631And you love her very dearly?
1631And yours?
1631And, Jeannot, do you fear nothing?
1631Answer a civil question,he said,"before it comes to worse: Armagnac or Burgundy?"
1631Burgundy or Armagnac?
1631But Paris?
1631But as touching this Puzel, how may I have my view of her, that you graciously offered me?
1631But how am I to make my peace, and win my pardon, being innocent as I am?
1631But what would you? 1631 But where is my jackanapes, that should have been here to salute his mistress?"
1631But why spoil you your rod?
1631Did the archers tell me false, then, when they said that you had fired up at a chance word, and flung yourself and the sentinel into the moat? 1631 Do I look white?"
1631Do you see this little rod?
1631Do you so terribly dread your mistress''s anger? 1631 Elliot, ma mie,"she said, very sweetly,"what mean you by this anger?
1631Fool, had I not seen, would I not have given the word? 1631 Gentle demoiselle, are you the gracious Queen of Faerie?"
1631Gentleman you call yourself, sir,said her father;"may I ask of what house?"
1631Had I been a false traitor,he said,"would not her brethren of heaven have warned the blessed Maid against me?
1631Hath the pain passed?
1631Have I been seeking safety since you knew me?
1631Have ye found the body of that man?
1631Have you been on pilgrimage, or whither have you been faring?
1631Have you ever seen it in this manner?
1631Have you seen this fair company of hers?
1631He played a good sword?
1631How comes he in arms?
1631How could I look men in the face, and how could I ever see the Maid again, if I go not?
1631How far to Lihons?
1631How fare the Burgundians?
1631How have I been so unhappy as to offend mademoiselle?
1631How many notches are cut in it?
1631How may that be, if thieves robbed and bound you?
1631I, Norman Leslie, of-- of Peet-- What name is this? 1631 In Our Lady''s name, what is this?"
1631Is a Leslie turning recreant?
1631Is it not so, father? 1631 Is that you, Robin of my heart?"
1631Is there no good tidings from the messenger?
1631Knave of a Scot,she cried,"wouldst thou strike a holy man and my prisoner?
1631Know you any covert nigh the road?
1631May I let bring a litter, for I can not yet walk, and so go back with you to her?
1631May it not be spoken here?
1631Methinks I have seen her face before; and what ails you?
1631My brethren of Paradise; who could she be that rode so late in company of armed men, and yet spoke of such great kinsfolk?
1631My dear, dear little friend, what make you here?
1631Nay, but, Brother Thomas, saw''st thou what we saw? 1631 Nay, father, with whom am I to brawl, or how should I curse in your good company?
1631Nay, pardon me one moment: when relieve you the guard that enters at curfew?
1631Nay, wake up,I cried;"ye are dull revellers; what say ye to the dice?"
1631Nom Dieu, whom have we here?
1631Norman, my lad, when were you in a stone bicker last?
1631Norman, will you play this part in the mumming?
1631Now is it war or peace?
1631Of what man speak you?
1631On what business come you, and by what right?
1631Said I not so?
1631Scots are Heliote and her father, and a Scot are not you also, damsel? 1631 Shall I find out her lodgings, and be carried thither straightway in a litter?
1631Speak unkind words? 1631 The Maid?"
1631The Pucelle?--do you speak of her, gentle maid?
1631Then I must lay by my quarrel, for who am I to challenge my captain? 1631 Then, Brother Thomas, how do you mean to cross this water which lies between you and the exercise of your holy calling?
1631Then, in the name of Antichrist-- that I should say so!--how scaped you drowning, and how came you here?
1631Thou hast not slain these men?
1631Thou wouldst not have me lag behind, when the Maid''s banner is on the wind?
1631Was he a Scot?
1631Was it you who gave counsel that I should come by this bank, and not by the other side, and so straight against Talbot and the English?
1631Was there an onfall of the enemy?
1631We played the same game before Verneuil fight, and won it,said one;"will the English have forgotten the trick?"
1631Well, and what have the Scots to do with that?
1631Well, my son,cried my master, taking my hand,"why so pale?
1631What desperate peril are you minded to run?
1631What fair lady is this who travels so secretly?
1631What has he in his mind?
1631What has passed?
1631What is it that ails you?
1631What is that sound,whispered one,"so heavy and so hoarse?"
1631What make you gaping here, you lousy wine- sack of Scotland?
1631What make you here with doors barred, false priest?
1631What manner of country lies between?
1631What mean you, fair sir?
1631What mean you?
1631What saw I? 1631 What stirring is that in the wood, father?
1631What stroke may France now strike for the Maid?
1631What, in the name of all the saints, make you here, in this guise?
1631What, you would take service?
1631When march we on Paris?
1631Whence comes your great captain, Sir Hugh Kennedy?
1631Wherefore not in the town?
1631Whither make you, damsel, in such haste?
1631Who may that proud damsel be, and what ails her at my roses?
1631Why do ye not speak, man?
1631Why laugh you, in the name of Behemoth?
1631Why so early astir, our sick man?
1631Why, what ails all of you?
1631Why, what did she? 1631 You are of gentle blood?"
1631You can guide me thither?
1631You can keep your own?
1631You have seen war?
1631You saw it? 1631 You speak the tongue of the Northern parts,"he said;"are you noble?"
1631You speak,I said,"of the gracious Queen of Sicily and Jerusalem?"
1631You will not ride into Rouen in English guise? 1631 You would join the men under the banner of Sir Thomas Grey of Falloden, I make no doubt?"
1631Your name?
1631Your name?
1631Yours, then, is a very large country?
1631Ah, must you really go?"
1631And as for the bonny Book of Hours--''Master,''I said with shame,''was that my ransom?''
1631And for thy pilgrimage to the shrine of this fair saint, where does she dwell?"
1631And has she not seen us twain together in one place, and happy, because of the coming of the Maid?
1631And how could any man, were he himself a saint, see what was passing by, when his head was turned the other way?
1631And how is the little champion?"
1631And now that I have told you the very truth, what should I do?"
1631And now, what now?
1631And that puts me in mind--""In mind of what?"
1631And wherefore callest thou me''false priest''?
1631And who so glad as Elliot when the Maid put this command on her, after we got thy letter?
1631And you go south, this very day, is it not so?"
1631And, indeed, what hope could I have, being so young, and poor, and in visible station no more than any''prentice lad?
1631And, were it so, where is our force, in midwinter?
1631Are you Scots so smooth- spoken?
1631At this tale the girl Elliot, crossing herself very devoutly, cried aloud--"O father, did I not tell you so?
1631But how does all this bring me nearer the hope of hearing about her, and how she fares?"
1631But how would it be if your hundred men and Norman set forth in the dark, and lay hid not very far from the St. Denis Gate?
1631But of what avail was that to us who loved the Maid?
1631But to what avail?
1631But what make we next?"
1631But wherefore should my sinful soul be now in mind of these old vanities, repented of, I trust, long ago?
1631But you are a clerk, I hear you say, and have skill enough to read and write?"
1631But, as touching what this gentle demoiselle has said, I may march also, may I not, when the Maid rides to Orleans?"
1631But, making no motion, she only said--"And thou, wherefore hast thou mocked at one who did thee no evil, and at this damsel, thy master''s daughter?"
1631But, tell me, hath she heard any word of thee and me?"
1631CHAPTER XXVIII-- HOW THE BURGUNDIANS HUNTED HARES, WITH THE END OF THAT HUNTING"Tell me, what tidings of him?"
1631CHAPTER XXX-- HOW NORMAN LESLIE TOOK SERVICE WITH THE ENGLISH"What make we now?"
1631Call they not him the Good Duke?
1631Deil''s buckie,"he said in the Scots,"will water not drown you?
1631Did she not come all these leagues at a word from me, hearing that I was sick?"
1631Did she speak unkindly then, to my kind nurse?"
1631Did you speak of me in your letter to her father?"
1631Do you comprehend?
1631Do you swim?"
1631Fair Saints, do I dream but a dream?"
1631Find you Scots so froward?"
1631Flavy turned in wrath and great amaze:"In God''s name, who cried?"
1631For, were we not pretty, would you we d us?
1631Had it not been for that chance hurt, how long might I have wooed ere I won her?
1631Had they slain the Maid?
1631Hast thou paper or parchment?"
1631Have I said enough, and do I well to be angry?"
1631Have we in the Pluscarden ring a relic of the Monk of Pluscarden, the companion of Jeanne d''Arc, the author of"Liber Pluscardensis"?
1631He bowed low to the Maid, who cried--"Are you the Bastard of Orleans?"
1631Heard you any new noise of war this day?"
1631Her heart may be softened when she sees that I can not walk or mount a horse?"
1631Herein, then, as always, they lied in their cruel throats; for, as the Psalmist says,"Quare fremuerunt gentes?"
1631How like you my brother, the Carmelite?"
1631How mean you?
1631How might this be, and was she not to be ever victorious, and drive the English forth of France?
1631I could but stammer my lady''s name--"Elliot-- shall I see her soon?"
1631I gulped something down in my throat ere I could say,"Then it is death?"
1631I said;"or had she any prophecy of our fortune?"
1631Is it not so?"
1631Is it young Pothon de Xaintrailles?
1631Is she a Scottish saint, then?
1631Know you Nichole Cammet?"
1631Know you, gentle damsel,"she said to me,"where she abides?
1631May I go within?"
1631Me she will never forgive while the world stands; for have I not been your nurse, and won you back to life and to her service?
1631Mine host came to me in a servile English fashion, and asked me what I would?
1631Moreover, on the first day of March they had asked her, mocking her--"Shalt thou be delivered?"
1631Nay, when I bade her make haste, she said that haste there was none; and when I, marvelling, asked,''Wherefore?''
1631No pride has she, but sat at meat, and spoke friendly with all these manants, and it was''tu''and''toy,''and''How is this one?
1631Now, tell me, in all the time since you left us at Chinon, how often have you thought of him?"
1631Now, what would you give to see that lady?"
1631O Norman, can we do nothing?
1631Our craft, methinks, is to hold them in an ambush, but what if we catch them not?
1631See you how cunningly all her limbs are gyved, and chained to the iron bolts of the bed?
1631Shalt thou be with us yet?"
1631Some while I remained with Rutherford, Kennedy, and many others, for what could we avail to help the Maid?
1631Stop, will you wear another woman''s short kirtle over your cuisses and taslet?
1631Surely, when you are whole again, you have vowed a pilgrimage to the shrine of the saint, your friend?"
1631Tell me, then, do I merit your wrath as a jester and a mock- maker, or does this gentle lady well to be angry with her servitor?"
1631That there will be strange matters I make no doubt, for when before, save under holy Deborah in Scripture, did men follow a woman to war?
1631The Maid stanched the blood, saying--"Did I not bid thee to be silent?
1631Then the flush faded, and she grew ashen pale, while she said--"But thou, how shalt thou get forth?"
1631Then touching me on the shoulder that I should rise, he said--"You are young enough to climb a tree; are your eyes good?"
1631There were many heavy hearts in the town; for, once it was taken, what man could deem his life safe, or what woman her honour?
1631They asked how it went with the Maid, and whether she would not fain be at home among her kine, or in the greasy kitchen?
1631Thou art a clerk, hast thou wherewithal to write?"
1631Thou art none?
1631To what purpose make a truce, and leave out of the peace the very point where war should be?
1631Was it a squirrel?
1631Was it ever yet heard that brownie or bogle mixed colours for a painter?
1631What ails you, man?
1631What mean you?"
1631What sight saw''st thou?"
1631What would my lady Jeanne give me for this little master- key?"
1631Wherefore should I say more?
1631Who can tell where, or who, his owner is?
1631Will you not let me look at the sacred thing?"
1631Will you, my lad?"
1631With your good leave, shall we sup?"
1631Would I be appeased when he came straight to seek me, borne in a litter?
1631Would I--?"
1631Would she anger my lady to my ruin with her sharp tongue?
1631Would this mad girl be mocking or meek?
1631You are not afraid of a crack on your curly pate, are you?"
1631You saw them?"
1631and that one?''
1631and were we not fools, would we we d you?
1631and where would God''s world be then?
1631does your leg give a twinge?"
1631perchance St. Margaret, of whom I have read?
1631said he, and laughed again, which angered me some deal, for what was there to laugh at?
1631she said, laughing again,"how have you the ill courtesy to look so joyous?
1631there sounded a voice that I knew right well, for Elliot was asking of the people"who was hurt?"
1631what make you here?
1631when they take the boulevard we lose the river, and if once they bar our gates to the east, whence shall viands come?"
1631will no man save him?"
1631you may be taken, and when shall I see you again?
1631{ 38}"And wherefore come you here alone, and in such plight?"
16933''And did you,''asked the priest,''receive the sacrament in your male attire?''
16933''And have they,''asked the Bishop,''foretold what will now happen?''
16933''And the doctors who examined you,''asked Beaupère,''at Poitiers, did they not want to know regarding your being dressed in man''s clothes?''
16933''And what did it say to you?''
16933''And what did you say?''
16933''And who is he?''
16933''And who,''asked de Metz,''is your Lord?''
16933''And why,''asked Beaupère,''did he receive you?''
16933''And,''continued the Bishop,''what did they say?''
16933''Are there two?''
16933''At what o''clock of the day before?''
16933''But then,''said Cauchon,''are you now no longer afraid of being burnt?''
16933''But then,''the priest asked,''had she not prayed that it might bring her good fortune?''
16933''But was there not a picture of you,''asked Beaupère,''in your host''s house at Orleans?''
16933''But why,''then asked Beaupère,''does the voice not speak to the King now, as it did formerly, when you were with him?''
16933''But,''next inquired Beaupère,''when you were at the castle of Beaurevoir, did not the ladies there ask you to do so?''
16933''But,''replied Cauchon,''have you not abjured, and promised never to take to wearing this dress again?''
16933''But,''said Cauchon,''do you imagine then that God is not able to reveal to some one besides yourself things that you may be ignorant about?''
16933''But,''said Cauchon,''if we were to order a grand procession to restore your health, then would you not submit yourself?''
16933''But,''said Cauchon,''those acts and words of yours which have been found evil by the judges, will you recant them?''
16933''But,''said the Bishop,''are you not aware you have now no right to wear such a dress?''
16933''But,''then said Cauchon,''do you mean to tell us that you still persist in saying that you have been sent by God?''
16933''Did he not,''said Cauchon,''speak the truth?''
16933''Did it awake you by touching your arm?''
16933''Did she not receive the sacrament and confess herself as she passed through the country?''
16933''Did the voice always encourage you to follow the army?''
16933''Did the women not touch your rings and charms?''
16933''Did they say that you would be free in three months''time?''
16933''Did you acknowledge it by kneeling?''
16933''Did you expect the King to see you?''
16933''Did you expect,''was the next question,''that you would be able to raise the siege?''
16933''Did you know beforehand that you would be wounded?''
16933''Did you make a present to your brothers of those arms?''
16933''Did you make the sortie by the command of your voices?''
16933''Did you not also bear arms and a shield?''
16933''Did you not know,''was the next question put,''that your partisans had prayers and masses said in your honour?''
16933''Did you not order them to be rung?''
16933''Did you not question them about the time in which you would be taken?''
16933''Did you not sprinkle holy water on the banners?''
16933''Did you not,''asked Beaupère,''say that the flags made like your banners were of good augury?''
16933''Did you often hear that voice?''
16933''Did you then wear a sword?''
16933''Did your voice tell you so?''
16933''Did your voices cause you to make that sortie, and not tell you the manner by which you would be captured?''
16933''Did your voices urge you to resist giving way about the recantation?''
16933''Do they always appear to you in the same dress?
16933''Do they wear ear- rings?''
16933''Do your voices inspire this advice?''
16933''Does He,''asked the priest,''tell you not to wear the man''s dress?
16933''Does not Saint Margaret speak in English?''
16933''Had it said anything to you before you interrupted it?''
16933''Had she not,''she was asked,''made use of these rings to heal the sick?''
16933''Had she,''she asked Alençon,''ever given him reason to doubt her word?''
16933''Had you been fasting?''
16933''Had you it when at Lagny?''
16933''Had you not another one as well?''
16933''Had you not,''asked the priest,''when you went to Orleans, a banner or pennon?
16933''Had you then consulted your voices to know whether you should accord them that delay or not?''
16933''Have you anything to complain about?''
16933''Have you not good hope in God''s mercy?''
16933''How did you communicate your message to the King?''
16933''How did you know there was a sword there?''
16933''How do you distinguish one from the other?''
16933''How long have they been in communication with you?''
16933''How many soldiers did the King give you,''asked the priest,''when he gave you a command?''
16933''How should she,''was the answer,''when she is not on the side of the English?''
16933''In what manner were you wounded?''
16933''Nothing more?''
16933''Of what material was the banner made?
16933''Since then, did your voices tell you that you would be taken?''
16933''Then you admit,''said the Bishop,''that the King and others have sometimes urged you to act as you have done?''
16933''Then,''continued the Bishop, with eagerness,''you retract your abjuration?''
16933''Then,''continued the Bishop,''you deny that to which you swore on oath only last Thursday?''
16933''Then,''said the Bishop,''will you not tell us in the King''s presence in what way your voices communicate with you?''
16933''Upon your banner, the one you carried, was not a picture painted representing the world and two angels?
16933''Was it in your room?''
16933''Was it on a feast day?''
16933''Were the bells of the church rung on the occasion of your arrival?''
16933''Were you wearing that sword,''asked Beaupère,''when you were captured?''
16933''Were you wounded?''
16933''What benediction did you bestow on that sword?''
16933''What did you attempt to do against Paris?''
16933''What do you ask of it?''
16933''What had become of the Fierbois sword?''
16933''What is your name?''
16933''What kind of horse were you riding when you were captured?''
16933''What sort of voices were theirs?''
16933''What was Saint Michel like?
16933''What were these revelations?''
16933''What were you doing,''asked Beaupère,''when the voices called you?''
16933''What,''asks M. Wallon,''had her accusers to reproach her with?
16933''What,''next asked Beaupère,''what did you think this voice which manifested itself to you sounded like?''
16933''When did you first hear the voices?''
16933''When were you wounded?''
16933''When you arrived at Compiègne did many days elapse before you made the sortie?''
16933''When you came to the King,''she was asked,''did he not inquire if your change in dress was owing to a revelation or not?''
16933''When you made the sally did you pass over the bridge at Compiègne?''
16933''Which were you fondest of?''
16933''Who bore your flag?''
16933''Who had given you that horse?''
16933''Who painted your banner?''
16933''Who?''
16933''Why,''now asked the priest,''did you not come to terms with the English captains at Jargeau?''
16933(_ Advienne que pourra!_) B.--''What do you know regarding the Duke of Orleans, now a prisoner in England?''
16933), ou Tilet de la Mesnardière(?
16933----''Jeanne d''Arc était- elle française?
16933-------- Londres( Paris?
169332. Who were her parents?
169333. Who were her god- fathers?
16933A- t- elle été brûlée?''
16933Always in the same form, and richly crowned?''
16933And what language did they converse in with her?
16933B.--''Could you understand it?''
16933B.--''Did that voice solicit you often?''
16933B.--''Did you learn any trade at home?''
16933B.--''Did you make your confession every year?''
16933B.--''Did you not once leave your father''s house before you left it altogether?''
16933B.--''Did you see any angel above the figure of the King?''
16933B.--''Did you speak much to him about your journey?''
16933B.--''Did your father know of your departure?''
16933B.--''From what direction did the voices come?''
16933B.--''Had you fasted on the day before?''
16933B.--''Had you not some business with the Duke of Lorraine?''
16933B.--''Have you received the Eucharist at other festivals besides that of Easter?''
16933B.--''How could you see the light when you say it was at the side?''
16933B.--''How old were you when you left your home?''
16933B.--''How were you dressed when you left Vaucouleurs?''
16933B.--''How, then, did you recognise him?''
16933B.--''In what manner of form did the voice appear?''
16933B.--''Tell me, now, by whose advice did you come to wear the dress of a man?''
16933B.--''Was that all?''
16933B.--''Was the voice accompanied with a bright light?''
16933B.--''What advice did it give you regarding the salvation of your soul?''
16933B.--''What did Baudricourt say to you when you left?''
16933B.--''What did you do on arriving at Orleans?''
16933B.--''What did you do then?''
16933B.--''What else did it say to you?''
16933B.--''What was your occupation when at home?''
16933B.--''When at Chinon, could you see as often as you wished him you call your King?''
16933B.--''When your voices revealed your King to you, were they accompanied by any light?''
16933B.--''Who pointed out the King to you?''
16933Benserade, J. de(?
16933But how was she to make her parents understand that it was their child who was appointed by Heaven to fulfil this great deliverance?
16933But, asked Beaupère, could she not prevail on the voices to visit the King?
16933C.--''What are your parents''names?''
16933C.--''Where were you baptized?''
16933C.--''Where were you born?''
16933Could the wariest statesman have better parried that question?
16933Did Joan on one occasion escape to Neufchâteau on account of a military raid, and was she then in the company of her parents?
16933Did she confess often?
16933Did she frequent the fairies''tree and the haunted well, and did she go to places with the other young people of the neighbourhood?
16933Did she often frequent the churches and places of devotion of her free- will?
16933F...., E.G.,''Jeanne d''Arc a- t- elle existé?
16933Had an angel appeared above the head of the King at Chinon?
16933Had he a pair of scales with him?
16933Had her standards not been copied by the men- at- arms?
16933Had the saints long hair?
16933Her visions?
16933How could the town be taken without a siege train and artillery?
16933How could these good people of Troyes hope to withstand such a power?
16933How did she conduct herself between her seventh year up to the time she left her home?
16933How did she leave her home, and how did she accomplish her journey?
16933How did she occupy herself, and what were her duties?
16933How had she been able not only to learn the tactics of a campaign, the rudiments of the art of war, but even the art itself?
16933How were they to arrive at a certain knowledge regarding those mystic portents?
16933If the poles were broken, were they renewed?''
16933J.--''Yes, to sew and to spin, and for that I am not afraid to be matched by any woman in Rouen?''
16933John de la Fontaine questioned the prisoner as follows:--''When you went to Compiègne from which place did you start?''
16933Lepage, H.,''Jeanne d''Arc est- elle Lorraine?
16933Mais où sont les neiges d''antan?''
16933Meanwhile the English soldiers began to grumble at the length of these preparations:''Do they expect us to dine here?''
16933Of what colour was that?''
16933One difficult question arises-- namely, are these notes to be relied on?
16933Other absurd questions followed-- as to his hair; long or short?
16933Paris, 1855(?)
16933Rouen, 1590(?)
16933The cry was,''When will the angelic one arrive?''
16933The former styled Joan of Arc''a monstrous woman,''and also suggested that fine passage beginning''Why ring not the bells throughout the town?''
16933Then Cauchon asked Joan if she believed in the holy Scriptures?
16933This brings one to the much debated question,''Who wrote the First Part of_ King Henry VI._?''
16933Was he clothed?''
16933Was she piously brought up?
16933Was there not growing there a certain fabulous plant, called Mandragora?
16933Were any investigations made in her native country at the time she was taken prisoner?
16933Were they of good character and of good repute?
16933What more could be required of her than this entire submission to the Church?
16933What was the significance of that?''
16933When and where was Joan born?
16933When had she last heard it?
16933and had not Baudricourt,''he added,''wished she should dress as a man?''
16933asked Beaupère,--''your banner or your sword?''
16933she cried,''must I die here?
20803And have four hundred such fellows a right to take our liberties?"
20803Or how did Cornwallis happen to be at Yorktown when Washington made such a long leap and pounced upon him there?
20803This led many people to ask,"What business has a parliament sitting the other side of the ocean to be making laws for us?"
20803What makes Mr. Fiske''s histories just what they are?
20803Why did the British armies make South Carolina their chief objective point after New York?
20803Why were New Jersey and the Hudson river so important?
18117Already back? 18117 And if it is fine?"
18117And the gunner?
18117And you can leave us like that?
18117Are n''t you coming to mass?
18117But how?
18117Clouds, waiting over there, motionless, on the edge of the horizon, what are you waiting for? 18117 Could n''t you be of service with respect to making engines, etc.?"
18117Do n''t you know somebody in your class at Saint- Cyr who could help me?
18117Do n''t you see any change in me?
18117Do n''t you see how little they understand? 18117 How can one enlist in the aviation corps?"
18117How comes it that your foot was not injured?
18117In what part of France?
18117Is it really so early?
18117The dog? 18117 Then, what did you do?"
18117Under what circumstances?
18117Vexed for what?
18117What can I do?
18117What does it matter? 18117 What is it you miss here at home?"
18117What is this, Bagheera?
18117What scouting have you done this morning?
18117Whence do you come?
18117Where are you going, father?
18117Who is it?
18117Who is this?
18117Why not stop awhile? 18117 Why this trip to Pau?"
18117Without replying?
18117Would he make a cavalryman?
18117You are going?
18117You have lost your Boche?
18117You wo n''t do it? 18117 You?
18117[ 20] What difference does it make, then, if they depart in company for glory or for death? 18117 ''Do n''t you know anybody who could take me up some Sunday?'' 18117 --Has the attack succeeded?"
18117... Que s''est- il donc passé?
18117Ah, the regulations refuse the hunter this game?
18117And to what purpose?
18117And what about US?"
18117And what was the use of flying on an unsatisfactory airplane?
18117Are you a captain?"
18117But Guynemer?
18117But can a Guynemer be quite lost?
18117But could this message be credited?
18117But had he thought himself invincible?
18117But how to rid them of these enemies, and render the latter incapable of harm?
18117But these fathers and mothers, these wives and children, when they read this book, will not say:"What is Guynemer to us?
18117By what wings did he manage thus to glide into immortality?
18117Could it be possible?
18117Could it be that the German had escaped?
18117Did he not feel the exhaustion consequent on the nervous strain of unlimited effort?
18117Did he really re- read them?
18117Did it not occur to him that his hour, whether near or not, was marked down?
18117Did you see me?
18117Do we really choose our friends in early life?
18117Do you understand?..."
18117Does this not embody the upspringing force of Guynemer''s brilliant youth?
18117For my eighth combat, this was decidedly annoying...."It was annoying, but what could be done?
18117Guynemer''s biography is of such a nature that it must seem like a poem: why not, then, conclude it with an_ envoi_?
18117Had Guynemer really succeeded four times?
18117He had an admiration for Beauchamp, but when did a Roland ever listen to an Oliver?
18117He was impatient to know where they were to go:''Where are we going?...
18117Hercules, Achilles, Roland, the Cid-- where shall we find outside of mythology or the epics any prototypes for the wild and furious Guynemer?
18117How do you feel about it?"
18117How had it been able to get there?
18117How old are you?"
18117How will he supply this deficiency?
18117How would it be when he should have his own airplane?
18117I am writing you in the mess, while two comrades are elaborating social theories...."Would he be able to endure this workman''s existence?
18117I speak to you as a former officer: does your conscience assure you that your son is fit to carry a knapsack and be a foot- soldier?"
18117I swallowed a question I was going to ask: What about yourself-- some day?
18117If so, why not fly?
18117In the beginning did he think of becoming a pilot?
18117In what, then, lies the superiority?
18117Is not his loss the loss of something akin to life?
18117Is this a letter?
18117Of whom has he not asked this question?
18117One of his comrades asked with assumed negligence:"Are n''t you going to wait till Major du Peuty and Major Brocard arrive?"
18117Only that?
18117Or the long- enduring, robust, admirable_ sous- lieutenant_ Nungessor, or Sergeant Sauvage, or Adjutant Tarascon?
18117Quel est cet équipage?
18117Shall you take us to the Grand Palais?
18117So I am not an impressive captain, then?
18117Some said it was useless; was it not sufficient that the airplanes of the army corps and those for bombardments could defend themselves?
18117Their inner conviction must be that their young chief is dead; and besides, what is death, what is life, to devoting one''s all to France?
18117This time another objection arose: If he receives the"cross"for this victory, what can be given him for succeeding ones?
18117This was really too much: was he going to lose his prey?
18117To which Deullin answered:"Why does it?
18117Truly the hour was badly chosen-- but when is it chosen at the will of mortals?
18117Was he no longer the stubborn Guynemer?
18117Was he not hourly to hear that he might go to the Buc works for his machine?
18117Was he not tired of hunting, killing, or destroying in the high regions of the atmosphere?
18117Was he thinking of his future at all?
18117Was he tired of holding the door tight against destiny, or feeling sure that destiny could not look in?
18117Was he to be involved in the new tactics and to become a mere unit in a group, or a chief with the responsibility of collective maneuvers?
18117Was his sister awake?
18117Was it Captain Ménard, or Sangloer, or de la Tour?
18117Was it Deullin, skilled in approach, and prompt as the tempest?
18117Was it possible for him to stay there alone when the whole of France had risen?
18117Was it the chain of the Pyrenees covered with snow which, breaking this uniformity, wrested a cry of admiration from the aviator?
18117Was it to be believed?
18117Was this Guinemer, like the pirate of Jerusalem, doing penance for some wrong?
18117Were not these strange words, if indeed Guynemer attached any meaning to them?
18117What could have led him to a determination apparently so sudden?
18117What did he do in the air?
18117What does he care about an airplane-- don''t they know that his old passion and dream are dead?
18117What gifts would he ask of his father?
18117What had happened?
18117What lover was ever more ingenious and madder in his rendezvous?
18117What nerves could stand such a strain?
18117What on earth can I write?"
18117What ought Guynemer to do?
18117What shades of gold and purple were shed over the scene by the setting sun?
18117What sort of story had the German who brought him down told?
18117What would Guynemer do now?
18117What would it matter if some envious people should make remarks?
18117When had he ceased to think himself invincible?
18117When the latter reopened his eyes-- for only a short while-- he asked:"Where am I?"
18117When they talked together on school outings, or as they walked along beside the walls of Stanislas, had they ever foreseen this destiny?
18117Where are the friends who have never had a dispute?
18117Where has he gone?
18117Where was he, then?
18117Where was his teacher?
18117Where was the Revolutionary Tribunal?
18117Whereupon another guest asked:"Could you imagine him bragging?"
18117Who has not seen him hunting for a missing exercise in a copybook full of scraps of paper?
18117Who were the noncommissioned officer and the two soldiers?
18117Why could he not forge them himself?
18117Why had these villages been attracted to this particular camp?
18117Why was it Guynemer, according to the testimony of all his rivals?
18117Why, then, did he alone have the power, like a great military chief, of leaving universal sadness behind him?
18117Will our new Roland allow himself to be outdistanced by these terrible children of former ages?
18117Will you stand idle and let me awaken my brother, who is resting?"
18117Without the technical lessons of Jean Krebs, could Guynemer later have got into the aviation field at Pau, and won so easily his diploma as pilot?
18117Would Guynemer be put out of action from the beginning, as at Verdun?
18117Would he fall?
18117Would he have applied himself so closely to the study of his tools and the perfecting of his machine?
18117Would he hesitate?
18117what dog?"
20427How foolish your songs,said a lump of clay,"What is there, I ask, to prove them?
20427= The Tulip Bed At Greeley Square= You know that oasis, fresh and fair In the city desert, as Greeley square?
20427And if he chanted, who would list his songs, So hurried now the world''s gold- seeking throngs?
20427And who save Custer and his gallant men Could calm the tempest into peace again?
20427And who shall claim them when I pass away?
20427And yet shall silence mantle mighty deeds?
20427Are you easing the load, Of overtaxed lifters, who toil down the road?
20427Can blooming June be fond of bleak December?
20427Have I done nobly?
20427Have I done wrong?
20427Have you considered, friend?
20427In which class are you?
20427Just look at the walls between you and the day, Now, have you the strength to move them?"
20427Or are you a leaner, who lets others share Your portion of labor, and worry and care?
20427Right in the breast of the seething town Like a gleaming gem or a wanton''s gown?
20427That bright triangle of scented bloom That lies surrounded by grime and gloom?
20427Upon those spreading plains is there not room For man and bison, that he seals its doom?
20427What other hero in the land could hope With Sitting Bull, the fierce and lawless one to cope?
20427What other warrior skilled enough to dare Surprise that human tiger in his lair?
20427What pleasure lies and what seductive charm In slaying with no purpose but to harm?
20427What though the foe outnumbers two to one?
20427What were her vaunted independence worth If to obtain she sells her sweetest rights of birth?
20427Why sit down in gloom and darkness, With your grief to sup?
20427Yet are these treasures mine, or only lent me?
18879''Think ye,''quoth she,''that subjects, having power, may resist their princes?'' 18879 If some dogmas are incomprehensible and some rites superstitious,"he seemed to say,"what does it matter?
18879My dog,sneered one of them,"were you not at mass last Sunday?
18879Vanity makes most humanists skeptics,wrote Ariosto,"why is it that learning and infidelity go hand in hand?"
18879What if you should be a saint like Dominic or Francis?
18879What is it to you,he apostrophizes the pontiff,"if our republic is crushed?
18879( English translation,_ What is Christianity_?
18879All claim inspiration and who can tell which inspiration is right?
18879And hast thou become so totally different from what thou wast, so cruel and contrary to thyself?
18879And now I ask you whether it is not the same whether you enter Paradise by the door or by the window?
18879And to all great men, her own and others, he puts but one inexorable question,"What did you do for the people?"
18879And what do the stories amount to?
18879And what means the smile?
18879And yet there was a sprinkling of saintly parsons like him of whom Chancer[ Transcriber''s note: Chaucer?]
18879Another Earl of Warwick had been a king- maker, why not the present one?
18879But among all these fairly- tales[ Transcriber''s note: fairy- tales?]
18879Can any man now readily understand the following definition of"pronoun,"taken from a book intended{ 664} for beginners, published in 1499?
18879Can the same Spirit tell the Catholic that the books of Maccabees are canonical and tell Luther that they are not?
18879Did he doubt anything?
18879Did he think he wrote well?
18879Did he{ 61} like anything?
18879Do we not see that noble cities are erected by the people and destroyed by princes?
18879Does not his Medusa chill us with the horror of death?
18879Dürer while in the Netherlands paid a messenger 17 cents to deliver a{ 469} letter( or several letters?
18879For what else would Satan do than burn those who call on the name of Christ?
18879He blamed Brenz for his tolerance, asking why we should pity heretics more than does God, who sends them to eternal torment?
18879He might have been supposed to be ready to support any enemy of such an institution, but what does he say?
18879How much more natural and more likely do I find it that two men should lie than that one in twelve hours should pass from east to west?
18879If our temples have been pillaged?
18879If our virgins and matrons have been violated?
18879If the city is innundated with the blood of citizens?
18879Imagine that Christ, the judge of all, were present and himself pronounced sentence and lit the fire,--who would not take Christ for Satan?
18879In short, truth is a near neighbor to falsehood, and the wise man can only repeat,"Que sais- je?"
18879Indeed, in this enlightened era of the Renaissance, what porridge was handed to the common people?
18879Is it not notable that in_ The Labyrinth_ the thread of Ariadne is not religion, but reason?
18879Is n''t that maintaining the gospel?
18879Is not Beatrice d''Este already doomed to waste away, when he paints her?
18879Is not his portrait of himself a wizard?
18879O Christ, creator of the world, dost thou see such things?
18879Or what are you within this commonwealth?"
18879Shall we choose the master of a ship and not choose him who is to have the care of so many cities and so many souls?
18879T. C. Hall:"Was Calvin a Reformer or a Reactionary?"
18879The Lord, however, objected and addressed the suppliant:"Hast thou never heard that I am the way and the door to life everlasting?"
18879The doctor of the gentiles saith,"If an heathen come in and hear you speak with several tongues, will he not say that you are mad?"
18879Thou hast freed us from the yoke of tradition, who is to free us from the more unbearable yoke of the letter?
18879To take but one example out of many that might be given: what has modern criticism made of Calvin''s doctrine of the inerrancy of Scripture?
18879W. Sombart:_ Der Moderne Kapitalismus?_ 2 vols.
18879Was not Bayard, the captain in the army of Francis I a"knight without fear and without reproach"?
18879What cause detached North Germany, Denmark, most of Switzerland, Holland, England, Scotland, and Ireland[ sic] from the Roman communion?
18879What could a heresy trial do?
18879What could art be in the life of a man who was fighting for his soul''s salvation?
18879What did Leonardo make of it?
18879What do you say to that?
18879What family more holy, what home more pure?"
18879What glory can compare with that of Homer?"
18879What is the etiology of religious revolution?
18879What mercy was shown to the Lollards or to Savonarola?
18879What serious clergyman would now compare three of his friends to the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost, as did Luther?
18879What tolerance was extended to the Hussites?
18879What was free, except dentistry, to the Jews, expelled from Spain and Portugal and persecuted everywhere else?
18879What was he trying to express?
18879What wealth or what scepters would I exchange for my tranquil reading?"
18879What, indeed, are smoking, drinking, and other wooings of pure sensation at the sacrifice of power and reason, but a sort of pragmatized poetry?
18879When Erasmus wrote:"Who ever heard orthodox bishops incite kings to slaughter heretics who were nothing else than heretics?"
18879When Knox took the liberty of discussing it with her she burst out:"What have you to do with my marriage?
18879When Sir David Lyndsay asked,[ Sidenote: 1528] Why are the Scots so poor?
18879Who will finally bring us Christianity such as thou thyself would now teach, such as Christ himself would teach?"
18879Who would not think that Christ were Moloch, or some such god, if he wished that men be immolated to him and burnt alive?
18879Who would now name a ship"Jesus,"as Hawkins''s buccaneering slaver was named?
18879Would he have thought so after 1919?
18879[ 1] Could he have been David Borthwick or David Lyndsay?
18879[ Sidenote: 1515] Was he already a Reformer?
18879[ Sidenote: Browne, 1550?-1633?]
18879[ Sidenote: Valla attacks the Pope] And if the legality of the pope''s rule was so slight, what was its practical effect?
18879[ Transcriber''s note: 691?]
18879do yet get so hard and so poor a living and live so wretched a life that the condition of the laboring beasts may seem much better and wealthier?"
18879he asked himself,"ay, what if you should even surpass them in sanctity?"
18879or opinion so strange,"he asked,"that custom hath not established and planted by laws in some region?"
18879that a state grows rich by the industry of its citizens and is plundered by the rapacity of its princes?
18879that good laws are enacted by elected magistrates and violated by kings?
18879that the people love peace and the princes foment war?
18879{ 65}"What can I do,"he kept asking,"to win a gracious God?"
18879{ 717} To whom do I owe the power of publishing what I am now writing, save to this liberator of modern thought?"
11328Afraid-- for me?
11328After all those years-- he found her?
11328Am I shot?
11328An''--an''you know this?
11328And Quade?
11328And are you sorry?
11328And he believes you will do it?
11328And how many of the other kind have you made?
11328And it will be dangerous, too? 11328 And may I ask what some of them were?"
11328And that was a creepy sort of conversation to load you down with, was n''t it, Ladygray? 11328 And that was-- all?"
11328And the grave, Mac?
11328And the way I have looked at you?
11328And this man, the half- breed, has sold himself-- for a woman?
11328And we can get there ahead of them?
11328And why utterly?
11328And will it disappoint you, Mr. John Aldous, if I tell you that all these figures stand for riches which some one else possesses? 11328 And without friends you are going--_there?_"she cried.
11328And yet you are going?
11328And you are to stay with the Ottos?
11328And you compare me to--_her?_"Yes,said Aldous deliberately.
11328And you dare to say-- you dare to_ think_ that she is not your wife?
11328And you had a reason-- you and MacDonald-- for not wanting the girls to know the truth?
11328And you love me, Joanne?
11328And you mean that you would fight for me-- again?
11328And you think I''ll go in the Frazer?
11328And you will talk to me?
11328And you wo n''t forget to tell Mrs. Blackton that we may not return by four o''clock?
11328And you would come to me without reservation, Joanne, trusting me, believing in me-- you would come to me body, and heart, and soul?
11328And you, John Aldous? 11328 And you, John?"
11328And you-- are his daughter?
11328And your plan, Donald?
11328Any bones broken?
11328Any watch to- night, Donald?
11328Are we going to encounter worse things than beasts, and poisonous serpents, and murderous savages-- even hunger and thirst, John? 11328 Are you gettin''lame, Mis''Joanne?"
11328Are you just a little ashamed of me, John?
11328Are you sorry-- so very, very sorry that you let me come, John?
11328Ashamed? 11328 But it is so nearly finished, you say?"
11328But-- if it should rain?
11328Ca n''t I see, Aldous? 11328 Can you direct me to it, please?"
11328Can you find it?
11328Can you never see beyond my hair, John Aldous?
11328Dear God in Heaven, Joanne-- can you not hear them? 11328 Dear John, you love me?"
11328Did I hit you pretty hard, Bill?
11328Did Quade get me with the knife?
11328Did you see anything over the range?
11328Do n''t you see? 11328 Do n''t you understand?"
11328Do you care a great deal for riches?
11328Do you hear?
11328Do you?
11328Does the golden pot at the end of the rainbow hold out a lure for you?
11328For me?
11328God bless her soul-- what for?
11328Gone?
11328Got the checks, Aldous?
11328H''are you buying''orses or looking for hinformation?
11328Half a dozen''Noblemen,''he said to the man behind the counter; then, to Rann:"Will you have one on me?"
11328Has old Donald written you lately?
11328Have you?
11328He found her-- he found her?
11328He''s done that?
11328How many?
11328How much?
11328How the deuce did you get here?
11328How-- both?
11328I might as well be frank, do n''t you think? 11328 I was coming-- in a moment,"she said,"I was beginning to fear that----""--he had struck me down in the dark?"
11328I-- I am a little late, am I not, Joanne?
11328If it was n''t enough do you think I''d be out of bed at this hour of the night?
11328If we start now----"Can you have everything ready by morning?
11328Including blankets, saddles, pack- saddles, ropes, and canvases?
11328Is it a go?
11328Is it a go?
11328Is it checkmate?
11328Is it necessary for me to tell you what this man Quade is-- why he was looking through the window?
11328Is it to be like''Fair Play?''
11328Is it worse than fever, and famine, and deep swamps, and crawling jungles?
11328Is n''t_ that_ funny?
11328Is she asleep, Johnny?
11328Is there no other place where you can stay?
11328It ca n''t be that you had very bad dreams, little wife?
11328It do n''t seem very far now, do it, Joanne?
11328It was really quite heroic of me to follow you into Bill''s place, do n''t you think? 11328 Joanne, my darling, you understand now-- why I wanted to come alone into the North?"
11328Joanne, wo n''t you stay with the Blacktons, to please me?
11328Joanne, you do n''t think they wo n''t dig us out, do you? 11328 Joanne,"he whispered, holding her two hands against his breast,"you are not afraid?"
11328John, have you already forgotten what we said in that terrible cavern-- what we told ourselves we would have done if we had lived? 11328 John, is it_ that?_"she cried, and joy shone through her tears.
11328John?
11328Johnny,he said gently,"Johnny, be you sure of yourself?
11328Kill me?
11328Like-- Stevens'', for instance?
11328Look here, MacDonald-- what in thunder has happened? 11328 Looks as though I''d run away, do n''t it, Johnny?"
11328Mac, are you sure you can go to the valley of gold without DeBar?
11328May I hire one until the train leaves for Tête Jaune Cache?
11328Not with two guides, a cook, and a horse- wrangler on your pay- roll-- and a hospital bill as big as Geikie staring you in the face?
11328Now, what do''ee think, Johnny?
11328Peggy----"Why in heaven''s name do you light a match then, with us standing over all those tons of dynamite?
11328Pretty near a billion, ai n''t it?
11328Quade?
11328See here, Aldous, you did n''t mean what you said last night, did you? 11328 See here, Johnny, boy-- tell me what''s in your mind?"
11328Shall we wander up on the mountain?
11328She wants to see me?
11328So there_ is_ an advantage on their side, is n''t there, Mac? 11328 So you did n''t send that damned note?"
11328Take this, will''ee, Johnny boy?
11328That ai n''t why you''re doin''this-- for me''n the kid-- is it?
11328That means-- the wild country?
11328Then if they do n''t find us to- morrow, we''ll go back home?
11328Then to- morrow we can go to the grave?
11328Then you have n''t heard of his-- accident?
11328There is no danger, is there, Donald?
11328They are, are they, Donald? 11328 They have n''t shot her?"
11328They might-- follow?
11328They would have killed you?
11328This is n''t much like the shell plaza in front of the Cape Verde, is it?
11328To- morrow?
11328Up there in the North-- there are no people?
11328Wait?
11328Want some fresh court- plaster?
11328Want to see him?
11328We are near the cavern?
11328Well?
11328Were you asleep, Johnny?
11328Were you going to fish me out-- or the colt?
11328What I have said?
11328What am I going to do, Mac? 11328 What can I do?"
11328What can that grave have to do with Quade?
11328What d''ye mean-- home stretch?
11328What do you mean?
11328What do you mean?
11328What do you mean?
11328What has frightened you, Joanne?
11328What in heaven''s name is the matter?
11328What is it?
11328What is it?
11328What time is it?
11328What time is it?
11328What was it, dear?
11328What was the dream?
11328What you goin''to do?
11328What''s the matter, Mac?
11328What''s the matter, Peter?
11328When did this happen?
11328When will Donald return?
11328Where is Quade?
11328Where is she? 11328 Who''s your new friend?"
11328Whose face?
11328Why do n''t you come right out and tell me to stay at home, instead of-- of--''beating''round the bush''--as Peggy Blackton says? 11328 Why would n''t it be just as well if I told the police of his threat?"
11328Why?
11328Will the train stop here very long?
11328Will you go out there with me, in the sunlight, where we can look down upon the little lake?
11328Will you help me into the wagon? 11328 Will you promise me that, John?"
11328Will you tell me?
11328Wo n''t you be my guest, Ladygray?
11328Wo n''t you let me thank you-- a last time?
11328Wo n''t you take a little walk with me right after dinner?
11328Would he--_dare?_she demanded.
11328Would it be a grizzly, John?
11328Would you mind telling me?
11328You ai n''t seen or heard anything, Johnny?
11328You are going to Tête Jaune?
11328You are new?
11328You are no longer afraid, Ladygray? 11328 You are not afraid of-- death?"
11328You believe that?
11328You do n''t mean, John-- there''s more about Quade-- and Culver Rann?
11328You do n''t think I''m sellin''myself, do you, Aldous?
11328You figger they''ll get away with DeBar?
11328You found Jane?
11328You have lived that life, Ladygray?
11328You have made a mistake?
11328You have no husband-- no brother----"What place is this?
11328You have seen it?
11328You mean on the adventure you were telling me about?
11328You mean that you will kill him?
11328You remember what you told me, Johnny, that you''d play the game fair, and give''em a first chance? 11328 You see the little cabin-- nearest the river?"
11328You sick?
11328You still believe that I will be unable to take care of myself up at this terrible Tête Jaune?
11328You think they will show up to- morrow?
11328You will excuse me, wo n''t you, while I finish my hair?
11328You will make yourself at home while I am gone, wo n''t you?
11328You wo n''t fight-- over the gold?
11328You would be my wife?
11328You''d take her along?
11328You''ll be there, Mac-- in front of the Blacktons''--just as it''s growing light?
11328You''re sure of it, Peter?
11328You''ve discovered something to- day?
11328A few minutes later, when Aldous was saying good- night to MacDonald, the old hunter said again, in a whisper:"Now what do''ee think, Johnny?"
11328After all, was it so strange that Quade would do these things?
11328After local colour?"
11328Am I a curiosity?"
11328And I should play up to my part, should n''t I?
11328And I''m wondering----""If I''m going to choke, too?"
11328And by whom?
11328And does he want you to do this pretty job because I gave him a crack on the jaw?"
11328And if alive?
11328And if, through years and years, I faced those things with my father, do you suppose that I want to be left behind now, and by my husband?"
11328And if-- if she goes I ca n''t very well follow her, can I, Mac?"
11328And it makes the game most eminently fair, does n''t it?"
11328And our outfit?
11328And then----""Well?"
11328And was Quade actually planning the same end for him and Joanne?
11328And was their assassination the first step in a plot to secure possession of the treasure?
11328And what reason could this Culver Rann have for doing him injury?
11328And why was she going to Tête Jaune?
11328And wo n''t you let me remind you that we''re getting a long way from what I want to know-- about your trip into the North?"
11328And you-- Donald?"
11328And, even though he kept the truth from her until Mortimer FitzHugh was dead, would he be playing fair with her?
11328Are these great, big, beautiful mountains more treacherous than those Ceylon jungles from which you ran away-- even you, John?
11328Are they all drowned?"
11328Are they more terrible to live in than the Great African Desert?
11328Are you cold?
11328Are you glad?"
11328Are you in on this with me?"
11328Are you ready?"
11328Are your bears worse than tigers, your wolves more terrible than lions?
11328As they entered the bungalow, Aldous whispered to Joanne:"Will you please go right to your room, dear?
11328At last he heard her say:"Where is Donald?"
11328Be you a man, Johnny?"
11328Besides----""What?"
11328But could he keep Joanne from guessing?
11328But had Joe DeBar, the half- breed, actually betrayed them?
11328But most of''em have come over, ai n''t they, Culver?
11328But what the devil_ is_ the trouble?"
11328But why did you run?
11328But why does Donald talk as though we are_ surely_ going to be attacked by them, or are_ surely_ going to attack them?
11328But why, he asked himself again and again, should Culver Rann want to kill him?
11328But-- what you goin''to do?"
11328But-- will you?"
11328By_ what?_ A little fiercely he packed his pipe with fresh tobacco.
11328Ca n''t you understand plain English, Stevens?
11328Could he keep her from discovering the truth until it was time for her to know that truth?
11328Could he keep that terrible truth from her?
11328Curious old ghost, is n''t he?"
11328Curly?"
11328D''ye think I''m blind?
11328Dammit, man, do n''t you know his system?
11328Did you pick up any of the little red bloodshells?
11328Do n''t say anything to Joanne, but bring him to the house right away, will you?"
11328Do n''t you believe a man when he''s a gentleman?
11328Do n''t you see that I ca n''t?
11328Do n''t you understand?
11328Do you ask me why I go now?
11328Do you mean to tell me you''re on the square when you offer to turn over a half of your share in the gold if I help you to get this woman?"
11328Do you mind if I tell him to come back and ride with you for a while?"
11328Do you see that black base of the mountain yonder?--right there where you can see men moving about?
11328Do you want to be square enough to give me a word?"
11328Eh, Johnny?"
11328Eh?
11328Find the coffee, will you?
11328Get out your emergency kit, will you?
11328Had Culver Rann discovered the secret mission on which he and the old mountaineer were going into the North?
11328Had he learned of the gold-- where it was to be found?
11328Had he sold himself to Culver Rann, and did Rann hold the key to the secret expedition they had planned into the North?
11328Have I made you feel that?"
11328Have you?"
11328He added, smiling straight into the other''s eyes,"What are you doing up here, Aldous?
11328He would n''t say Ladygray as if she wore a coronet, would he?"
11328How did you know?"
11328How much do you want a head?"
11328How the devil am I going to get out of it?"
11328How will a four o''clock breakfast suit you?"
11328How would Quade, who was mad for possession of Joanne, accept FitzHugh''s claim of ownership?
11328I suppose you know what a salted mine is, Ladygray?
11328If she had seen a bear in the fire- glow she would n''t have thought it was Mortimer FitzHugh, would she?
11328If she went with him into the North, would she not guess?
11328If they found Joanne''s husband alive at Tête Jaune-- what then?
11328If you do----""What will happen?"
11328If you were afraid of snakes, why did you go up the Gampola, in Ceylon?"
11328Is it a bargain?"
11328Is it ready?"
11328Is it very remarkable that you do not find me happy, Mac?
11328Is that suspicious, or ai n''t it?
11328Is there a hotel here?"
11328It had that peculiar effect on us, did n''t it, Peggy?"
11328It was a terribly close shave, was n''t it?"
11328It was n''t a pretty sight, was it?"
11328John, dear, are n''t you going to mind me?"
11328John?"
11328Lord bless me, did you hear them last night-- after you went to bed?"
11328May I sit with you for a few minutes?
11328My God, I did n''t make you think_ that?_""I''m a stranger-- and they say women do n''t go to Tête Jaune alone,"she answered doubtfully.
11328Need I tell you that I worshipped him-- that to me he was king of all men?
11328Now how the deuce can I explain going through a window like a gentleman?"
11328Now, if some one were to touch off those explosives at this minute---- What''s the matter, Peggy?
11328Now, yo''fool, what have yo''gone an''done?"
11328On the other hand, was this arrangement fair to Joanne, even though it gave him the chance to square up accounts with Quade?
11328Only----""What?"
11328Otto?"
11328Otto?"
11328Perhaps it is this-- your desire for adventure-- that makes you want to go with me to Tête Jaune?"
11328Perhaps it was imagination that made him think there was a slight tremble in her voice when she said:"This-- is the place?"
11328Quade has a tremendous amount of nerve, setting Slim to follow her, has n''t he?
11328See that bunch of spruce over there?"
11328See the point, Johnny?
11328See them thick spruce an''cedar over there?
11328Shall I move out there?"
11328So am I. I hope----""What do you hope?"
11328So why crave riches, then?
11328Then Quade asked:"Any need of writin'', Culver?"
11328Then he said,"You''re thinkin''of me, Johnny, an''what we was planning on?"
11328Then he said:"Do you see that break over there across the plain?
11328Then he said:"You''re sure of all this, are you, Donald?
11328Then she said, very softly:"And why do you think that will displease me, John, dear?
11328Then why do you go for this gold?
11328There''s nothing in that hand, is there?"
11328They asked themselves no questions-- why the"coyote"had not been fired?
11328They have all asked the same question: Why do you not write of the good things in women instead of always the bad?
11328They''re going to kill us?"
11328To him it will be-- what?
11328Understand?"
11328Was Stevens right in that detail?
11328Was he lying in wait for him near the cabin?
11328Was he mad?
11328Was it again to play its part in a terrible drama of men''s lives, as it had played it more than forty years ago?
11328Was it possible that there might be some other opening-- a possible exit-- in that mountain wall?
11328Was it right for him to take Joanne to his cabin at all?
11328Was n''t that funny?
11328Was that thought in Joanne''s mind, too?
11328Was the old tragedy of it to be lived over again?
11328We were going adventuring, were n''t we?
11328What are you going to do meantime, Aldous?"
11328What can I do?
11328What could be her mission at Tête Jaune Cache?
11328What do you say?"
11328What do you think of_ that_, Aldous?
11328What is it?"
11328What time is it, John?"
11328What was the deeper significance of this visit to the grave, and of her mission in the mountains?
11328Where had she come from?
11328Where is Joanne?"
11328Who shot you?
11328Who was she?
11328Who was this Joanne Gray?
11328Why I shall fight, if fighting there must be?"
11328Why did n''t they jump on us when they had the chance?"
11328Why did n''t you stay and fight?"
11328Why did you warn me?"
11328Why do they stare at me so?
11328Why do you run the risk?
11328Why do you want me to lie here when I''m strong like an ox, as Donald says?"
11328Why had Joanne not confided more fully in him?
11328Why had Quade stolen on ahead to Tête Jaune?
11328Why had he not waited for to- morrow''s train?
11328Why not have these friends meet them at the train and take Joanne direct to their house?
11328Why should FitzHugh come over into this valley alone?
11328Why should n''t I be, if I know that you are in danger?"
11328Why should they follow us-- if we leave them everything?
11328Why should they, John?
11328Why, John, do n''t you see, do n''t you understand?
11328Will that be too much trouble for you and your wife?"
11328Will you agree to that?"
11328Will you believe me?
11328Will you excuse me while I pick up a few things that I want to take on to Tête Jaune with me?"
11328Will you leave''em to me?"
11328Will you let me be a friend, if you need a friend?"
11328Will you please hurry me to it, John Aldous?"
11328Will you tell her that?"
11328Will you, Mac?
11328Will you?
11328Will you?"
11328Without knowing, seeing me only as you have seen me, do you think that I am terrible?"
11328Would he believe his partner?
11328Would he even believe Joanne if, to save herself from him, she told him FitzHugh was her husband?
11328Would you try to cross?"
11328Yo''ca n''t very well miss a man at a hunderd yards, Johnny?"
11328Yo''re sure-- there ai n''t no one following?"
11328You ai n''t figgerin''on that now, be you?"
11328You are going to tell me that?"
11328You can imagine a lover saying''Dear little_ Lady_gray, are you warm and comfy?''
11328You did n''t mean-- that?"
11328You do n''t believe in concealing your thoughts out here in the wilderness, do you?"
11328You do n''t think it is immodest for me to say these things to my husband, John-- even if I have only known him three days?"
11328You have good proof-- that Joe has turned traitor?"
11328You have n''t heard-- about the bear?"
11328You know every mountain and trail about the place, do n''t you?"
11328You remember Stimson?"
11328You see the system, Johnny?
11328You will come early?"
11328You would n''t guess that for more than forty years that blessed old wanderer ahead of us has loved a dead woman, would you?
11328You would n''t leave me among them, would you?"
11328You would not have forgotten that, John-- or have grown tired?"
11328You''re going to be polite enough to accept, are n''t you?"
11328_ Is n''t_ it funny?"
11328gang has done?"
20897But what would our populace, in our epoch, have actually learned if they had learned all that our schools and universities had to teach?
20897I fully accept the truth in Mr. Kipling''s question of"What can they know of England who only England know?"
20897If a man has a right to choose his wife, has he not a right to choose wrong?
20897If a man has a right to vote, has he not a right to vote wrong?
20897What did they believe of their fathers?
20897What forced her into it?
20897What would the guttersnipe have learnt as a graduate, except to embrace a Saxon because he was the other half of an Anglo- Saxon?
20897Who was St. Thomas, to whose shrine the whole of that society is thus seen in the act of moving; and why was he so important?
20897Why, for instance, are they called Canterbury Tales; and what were the pilgrims doing on the road to Canterbury?
20812And who,they asked,"is your Lord?"
20812Do you believe,they asked,"that you are in a state of grace?"
20812Do your voices,asked the judges,"forbid you to submit to the Church and the Pope?"
20812Who is your captain?
20812Will you submit,they demanded at last,"to the judgement of the Church Militant?"
20812How then can my right be disputed?"
20812On your consciences, I ask you, am I a traitor?"
20812What can be more searching, deep, and refined than the judgement of Linacre?
20812What has been the result?
20812When did Nature mould a temper more gentle, endearing, and happy than the temper of Thomas More?"
20812Who does not wonder at the wide range of Grocyn''s knowledge?
20812Why do we not rather venerate the living and breathing picture of him in these books?
20812what should a man in these days now write,"adds the puzzled printer,"eggs or eyren?
12482And do you remember the day I came to see you and you proposed everything to me, and I rejected everything? 12482 And do you suppose he is in earnest, Rowan?"
12482And does he never come to town?
12482And is Miss Anna coming?
12482And is it your feeling that you must begin with me?
12482And what did you expect when you determined to tell me this? 12482 And what is he doing in the parlor?
12482And where were you when you began again?
12482And why, please?
12482And you are going away without giving me the reason of all this?
12482Are n''t all your authorities in your office?
12482Are n''t you well, Anna?
12482Are you calling me to account?
12482Are you coming in?
12482Are you grand people never coming to breakfast?
12482Are you never going to get down?
12482Are you never going to love me a little, Marguerite?
12482Are you not going to marry him, Isabel?
12482Are you really coming in?
12482Are you too happy to care for me any longer?
12482At what other people do you suppose this one could have been directed?
12482But did you expect him to be genius enough to understand that? 12482 But how can I sacrifice what is best in me without lowering myself?
12482But how can he think I''ll be pleased? 12482 But how do you happen to have a calf, Harriet?"
12482But how do you know I''d flirt him?
12482But if you had this on your conscience already, what right had you ever to come near me?
12482But of course she is going with you?
12482But ought I not to know what these reasons are if I must act upon them as though they were my own?
12482But what has happened since?
12482But why should n''t he?
12482But would he marry against my wishes?
12482Can I be of any further service to you?
12482Can I do anything?
12482Can not you help me?
12482Can not you tell me?
12482Can you imagine any one calling on such an afternoon?
12482Can you not see?
12482Can you tell me what it is?
12482Come,he said seriously,"what is the meaning of this, Anna?"
12482Dearest friend, what shall I tell you of my own life-- of my nights, of the mornings when I wake, of these long, lonesome, summer afternoons? 12482 Did he ever wrong you before?"
12482Did she say she would come down?
12482Did you come to see me or did you come to see my flowers?
12482Did you ever know the last of May to be so hot?
12482Did you ever see anything so_ black_? 12482 Did you expect him to be a philosopher?"
12482Did you have any motive?
12482Did you see the Osborns at church? 12482 Did you tell him what the doctors have said about his health?"
12482Did you wish to see me about anything, grandmother?
12482Did you wish to see me about anything, grandmother?
12482Did your love of me give you the right to win mine?
12482Do you expect me to be angry with any soul for loving you and wishing to be loved by you? 12482 Do you know how long it has been since you were here?"
12482Do you know the necessity of self- sacrifice?
12482Do you know what these things are?
12482Do you realize to whom you are speaking, and that what I have done has been through friendship for you?
12482Do you suppose I''d tell my Maker if He did not already know it?
12482Do you suppose he has heard that? 12482 Even if I were, commonplace women always make the best wives: do they not?"
12482For the summer?
12482Grandmother, did you not give me your word?
12482Harriet is married; what troubles have I, then? 12482 Have I denied it?
12482Have n''t you any cases?
12482Have you ever had any great trouble before, Isabel?
12482Have you every reason to believe this?
12482Have you made it possible for me to be anything else?
12482Have you seen Kate?
12482Have you seen Rowan lately?
12482Have you tried?
12482How and when is the swain to be courted?
12482How are you, Rowan?
12482How can I bear to stay?
12482How can I read? 12482 How can I stay?"
12482How can I tell?
12482How can he treat me with so little consideration? 12482 How can you interfere?"
12482How can you?
12482How could I ever have loved you?
12482How do I know? 12482 How do you do, Anna?"
12482How do you like this dress, Anna?
12482How does she know what everybody thought?
12482How high is she?
12482How is she going to dress as a man?
12482How many generations of babies do you suppose there have been since this immortal infant was born?
12482How much is it? 12482 How shall I recognize it?
12482How should I know?
12482I know it,she replied briskly,"have you been so long in finding it out?"
12482I mean, do you think he knows his own mind?
12482I think it a misfortune for a young woman to have much to say to children about Pterodactyls under their bed-- is that the name? 12482 I thought you and your grandmother were going later: is not this unexpected?"
12482If I do not, who will? 12482 If I ever can, will you tell me?"
12482If I were a book,she said thoughtlessly,"where should I be?"
12482If he is in trouble, why does he not come and tell me? 12482 Is Miss Conyers at home?"
12482Is any one ill, Anna?
12482Is it not Rowan?
12482Is it so serious?
12482Is it then wrong for a man to do right? 12482 Is so little of me so much nowadays?"
12482Is the lord of the manor ready for his breakfast?
12482Is there anything I can do?
12482Is there anything in all these years that you have not told me?
12482Isabel,he asked,"are you suffering because you have wronged Rowan or because you think he has wronged you?"
12482Isabel,she asked sharply,"why did you not see Rowan when he called a few minutes ago?"
12482Isabel,she cried,"do you forget to whom you are speaking?"
12482Isabel,she said reproachfully,"is this the way you come back to me?"
12482It will be easy when the right man steps forward: am I the right man?
12482Mamma,protested Marguerite, with indignant eyes,"do you wish Isabel to stand here and eclipse your daughter?
12482Marguerite,he said,"do you mean that you do not love me?"
12482May I stay here? 12482 Most of all, the century plant: how is she?"
12482Motherhe said simply,"come into the parlor a moment, will you?
12482Mother,exclaimed Harriet with horror,"have you_ eaten_ my squabs?"
12482Now, why is he not here? 12482 Sadden, the whole summer,"she repeated,"a summer?
12482Should I have had my fling and never have cared and never have spoken? 12482 Sit here, wo n''t you?"
12482Suppose I moved away with you to some other college entirely out of her reach?
12482Suppose you take the great passions: what new one has been added, what old one has been lost? 12482 Systematically kind?"
12482The ceremony of your church?
12482The sermon on the prodigal? 12482 Then you have heard what they are saying about Rowan?"
12482Wait for_ what_?
12482Well, did I get them off about right?
12482Well,she objected apologetically,"is n''t it customary?
12482What am I doing?
12482What can I do?
12482What can she teach me on that subject?
12482What day?
12482What did she mean?
12482What did you do?
12482What did you tell me to do?
12482What did you think of the sermon this morning?
12482What do I care?
12482What do you suppose I did? 12482 What effect do you suppose it would have on mine?"
12482What has disgraced you?
12482What is at the very top?
12482What is grass? 12482 What is it that troubles you, Rowan?
12482What is it you are making?
12482What is the meaning of this, Isabel?
12482What kind of a turn in Heaven''s name?
12482What practice?
12482What right have you to listen to scandal in order to suppress it?
12482What shall I care then?
12482When Isabel comes up, do you think I ought to go to her room and see whether she wants anything?
12482When did you see Rowan?
12482When is he going to send you some more? 12482 When should you like to go?"
12482Where did you sleep last night? 12482 Where do the young come in?"
12482Where is your Miss Isabel?
12482Who rang?
12482Why are n''t you angry with him?
12482Why damn the French code? 12482 Why did not they learn it after they had left school and after they had learned manners?"
12482Why do I get so tired when I walk with you, Barbee? 12482 Why do you do that, Anna?
12482Why does he not come home? 12482 Why does he not come?"
12482Why is it not you that come to tell me of your engagement? 12482 Why not?"
12482Why, Anna, what on earth is the matter?
12482Will he be there?
12482Will you name the day?
12482Will you smoke?
12482Would it have been nice?
12482You are not going?
12482You do not mind my speaking to, you about this, Rowan?
12482You have not believed these things?
12482You mean that you would tell her?
12482''Do you know what that is?''
12482Am I not worth coming to see?
12482And by whose summons?
12482And can not you see how she lowers herself in his eyes also and ceases to be his ideal, through her willingness to live with him on a lower plane?
12482And could he believe it?
12482And did you notice him?
12482And his Apostles-- where do you find him saying to them,''Preach my word to all men as the secrets of a priesthood and the mysteries of the Father''?
12482And she quickly went on:"How is he?"
12482And was it true that this grandchild, for whom she had planned and plotted, did not even respect her and could tell her so to her face?
12482And what does a young girl understand about her duty in things like that?
12482And what have I done to deserve it?
12482And with what guidance?
12482Are he and Rowan as good friends as ever?"
12482Are n''t women reading history now?
12482Are n''t you tired of books yet?
12482Are not children to be as much regarded in their rights of descent as rams and poodles?"
12482Are you coming to my ball?"
12482Are you coming to my ball?"
12482Are you going to call on her?"
12482Are you never going to get tired?
12482Are you to be in town long?"
12482At other times contradictory characteristics appeared and the father, looking silently at her, would in effect inquire:"Whence does he derive these?"
12482Besides, do n''t you like to see people make bad things good, and things with holes in them whole again?
12482But after all the question remains, what is our characteristic mettle?
12482But can not you do something?
12482But how can he know, how can the young ever know how the old love them?
12482But public severance of all relations with him in her social world-- how should she accomplish that and withhold her justification?
12482But this boy, what can you and I do for him?
12482But why do you attempt to deny that it is also your work?"
12482But you saw him-- in town-- on the street-- with his friends-- attending to business?"
12482Calves do have destinies, do n''t they, Anna?"
12482Can any man ever know?
12482Can you for a moment realize what is involved?
12482Close the house to him and not know why?
12482Could she trust the untrustworthy?
12482Cut him in public without his having offended me?
12482Dear friend, have you forgiven me?
12482Dent engaged, Dent to be married in the autumn-- why, Rowan, am I dreaming, am I in my senses?
12482Did he live at all?
12482Did he tell you the story?"
12482Did you ever hear one?"
12482Did you imagine that while it was still fresh on your lips, I would smile in your face and tell you it made no difference?
12482Did you never see these things before?
12482Did you suppose that he could understand such a thing as kindness without a motive?
12482Do n''t you think so?"
12482Do n''t you understand botany?"
12482Do noise and confusion make it better or greater?"
12482Do you know what that means?
12482Do you know what you are doing, Isabel?"
12482Do you never wish to hear them yourself?"
12482Do you really wish me to be kept in the dark in a matter like this?
12482Do you remember the blind man of the New Testament who saw men as trees walking?
12482Do you remember the day when you ran away with Dent and took him to a prize fight?
12482Do you suppose they have a parlor?
12482Do you think it will rain?"
12482Does a woman care what a man may have done, if he be not found out?
12482Does he dream what it means to us women to sacrifice ourselves as they often require us to do?
12482Does it dance?
12482Evolution-- is it anything more than change?
12482For the night would be very warm; and then Marguerite-- but was she the only one?
12482Had any such confession been made to any one of them-- either before marriage or afterwards-- by the man she had loved?
12482Has he added to the civilizations of Europe the spectacle of a single virtue transcendently exercised?
12482Has he ever spoken to you about it?"
12482Has he not yet understood what he is to me?
12482Has it all gone out of life?
12482Have I not known you always?"
12482Have n''t you been kind to him?"
12482Have you not seen them reappear in American life in your own generation?
12482Have you seen him?"
12482He asked reluctantly:"Is there any trouble?"
12482He has had new ideas; but has he developed a new virtue or carried any old virtue forward to characteristic development?
12482He laughed outright:"What do you suppose I''d do?"
12482He met her but she said:"May I go in there?"
12482He smiled at her sadly:"Shall I tell you what the trouble is?"
12482He stopped at last:"Here?"
12482Her anxious look recalled his attention,"Did I not hear Harriet harrowing you up again with her troubles?"
12482How can I sleep?"
12482How can I, how can I?"
12482How can you men so cloak yourselves before marriage?
12482How can you, who have me, tolerate such a looking object as that?
12482How could I go to her about Rowan?
12482How could he linger?
12482How could he wander so far from the happiness of moments too soon to end?
12482How could she like me, knowing me no better?"
12482How do you like it?"
12482How is she?"
12482How many more years must he and I wait?"
12482How should she spend the forenoon?
12482I am going up to write to him now, and will you post the letter to- night?
12482I know; because what have I to do but to interest myself in people who have affairs of interest?
12482IV"Barbee,"said Judge Morris one morning a fortnight later,"what has become of Marguerite?
12482If I roll back the responsibility to them, had they not fathers?
12482If I, your closest friend, have shrunk, how could any one else be expected to perform the duty?
12482If he should ask why I treat him in this way, what am I to tell him?"
12482If you have done evil, shall you live the whited sepulchre?
12482In her delirium of whom do you suppose she incessantly and pitifully talked?
12482Is anything ever lost to him?
12482Is it a virtue in a woman to throw away what she holds to be as highest?"
12482Is it ever right to do wrong?"
12482Is not her highest ideal for him a profitable reputation, not a spotless character?
12482Is she growing?"
12482Is there a true place for deception in the world?
12482It was some moments before she asked in a guilty voice:"What did you_ do_?"
12482Judge Morris-- has he done nothing?"
12482Kate''s mouth trembled:"Isabel, why are you so changed toward me?"
12482Marguerite coughed and pointed across the street:"Are n''t those trees beautiful?"
12482May I depend upon you?"
12482May our hypocrisy with each other be a virtue?
12482Might they not, as a love token, be-- unrefined?
12482Miss Anna spoke almost in a whisper:"Shall I have some light sent in?"
12482Mrs. Conyers pressed forward with gathering determination:"What happened last night?"
12482Must I refuse to speak to Rowan and have no reason?
12482Now ought n''t I?"
12482Now you propose to let it run down to me-- or up to me: how do you know it will not run past me?"
12482Now, was n''t it?
12482Of course every one knew about tobacco and turkeys; but was n''t it clever of me to think of idle curiosity?
12482Of whom did he cause her to think?
12482On rose leaves?"
12482One night not long ago you complained of her as an obstacle in the path of your career: does she still annoy you with her attentions?
12482Or have you found out at last that he has no intention of marrying you-- has never had any?"
12482Shall we go in where it is cooler?"
12482She looked at it all a long time:"How can I go away?
12482She resolved to go to the library: what desire had she ever known that she had not gratified?
12482She spoke with entire quietness:"After all that I have seen to- night, are you not going to marry Rowan?"
12482She went on quickly:"Did you know anything about this?
12482She went over this again and again:"Am I to be the mother of his tragedies?"
12482She will think I do not even know how to sit in a chair, and she will tell Dent, and Dent will believe her, and what will become of me?"
12482She yearned to say:"What is it, Rowan?
12482So long as a single human being expresses faith in us, what matters an unbelieving world?
12482Tell me one thing: have you heard it said that I am responsible for the circulation of these stories?"
12482The old question comes newly up to us: Is anything ever added to him?
12482Then she looked up at him with eyes suddenly kindling:"Have you heard what Kate''s life has been since her marriage?"
12482Then why have you waited?
12482They say that no one has told her the truth: how could any one tell her such things about her own son?
12482Was I to hear you speak of one whose youth and innocence you took away through her frailties, and then step joyously into her place?
12482Was it for some such reason that one had been content to fold her hands over her breast before the birth of her child?
12482Was it true then that the desire and the work of years for this marriage had come to nothing?
12482Was this the unfeeling, the degraded soul you thought to be mine?
12482Was this why another lived on, sad young wife, motherless?
12482Was this why in the town there were women who refused to marry at all?
12482Webb?"
12482Webb?"
12482Webb?"
12482Webb?"
12482Were we not speaking the other day of how the old tragedies are the new ones?
12482What are they?"
12482What can a young man with two thousand acres of the best land say to an old man with fifty of the poorest?
12482What can make us so cruel to those who vainly love us as our vain love of some one else?
12482What can you bear for dinner?"
12482What did I ever refuse you?"
12482What did you suppose such a confession would mean to me?
12482What do I care for grass?
12482What do we care for their suffering?
12482What does either of you know of me who had both?
12482What had she been all her life but burden- bearer, sorrow- sharer?
12482What has become of it?
12482What have I to do, Anna, but interest myself in other people''s affairs?
12482What is it all about?
12482What is the mettle of the American?
12482What possessed me?"
12482What right has Dent to injure his children in the race for life by giving them an inferior mother?
12482What right has a woman to give up life so soon?
12482What right has she to make herself happier by making you miserable, lengthening her life by shortening yours?
12482What troubles her?"
12482What was his past to her?
12482What was the meaning of this?
12482What would become of the world?"
12482What''s the objection?
12482What''s the trouble?
12482When she spoke again, it was with difficulty and everything seemed to hang upon her question:"Does any one else know?"
12482When the evening is nearly over, will you find me and take me to some place where we may not be interrupted?
12482When the top decays, as it always does in the lapse of time, whence shall come regeneration if not from below?
12482When they returned to the front of the house, Pansy turned:"Do you think you will ever love me?"
12482Where did Ravenel Morris live now?
12482While she read, she wished to watch: might he not pass?
12482Whither home passed they?
12482Who does not know the relief of confessing to some one who does not understand?
12482Who is it that can mark down the moment when we ceased to be children?
12482Who troubles her?
12482Who was he?
12482Why are you so displeased?"
12482Why ca n''t music be simple and sweet?
12482Why did I criticise the way the portrait was hung?
12482Why did I say such things?
12482Why did he not come?
12482Why did n''t he come around to the side door?
12482Why did you think of asking?"
12482Why do people desire the impossible person?
12482Why do you still wait?"
12482Why does he not wish to come home?"
12482Why does nature fill it if not to have you empty it?"
12482Why had Rowan never confided these things to him?
12482Why have you not set Dent an example as to the kind of woman he ought to marry?
12482Why not tell women the truth then instead of leaving them to find it out afterward?
12482Without it what is any wife worth to a high- minded man?
12482Would I have been worthy even of the poor love you could give me, if I had done that?"
12482Would falseness itself for once be true?
12482Would he not come?
12482Yet it hurt her: she was but one woman in the world; could the thought of this have made it easier for him to let her go away now without a protest?
12482Yet might he not believe it?
12482You are looking extremely well-- now are n''t you?"
12482You have but to sip a glass slowly-- and where are they?"
12482You remember our once saying to each other that we would try never to believe slander or speak slander or think slander?
12482and had not their fathers fathers?
12482and then hung all over with golden ornaments and the heaviest golden utensils?"
12482cried Miss Anna,"I am too old to talk about such silly things myself; but what does a woman care whether she is married or not if she has had offers?
12482exclaimed Pansy;"why, Mrs. Meredith, do n''t you_ know_?
12482he asked, frowning with pretended impatience,"so that a laboring man may go to his work?"
12482he cried,"has somebody been making love to you?"
12482she asked;"and what is that?"
1583''Business looking up any?'' 1583 ''Can you herd sheep?''
1583''Can you herd''em-- take charge of a flock of''em?'' 1583 ''Cash down now?''
1583''Do you mean_ have_ I heard sheep?'' 1583 ''Do you remember reading in the papers, about a month ago,''says he,''about a train hold- up on the M. K.& T.?
1583''Excuse me,''says I,''can you tell me where Mr. Hinkle lives?'' 1583 ''Gold- dust?''
1583''Herdin''sheep?'' 1583 ''How did you know?''
1583''How do they work off this unearth increment?'' 1583 ''Hunky,''says High Jack Snakefeeder, looking at me funny,''do you believe in reincarnation?''
1583''I wonder who gets this rake- off?'' 1583 ''John-- what?''
1583''Run away?'' 1583 ''Well,''says I,''what if she, what if she, what if she?
1583''What do you know about him?'' 1583 ''What does this mean?''
1583''What kind of a looking man is he?'' 1583 ''What kind of a looking man is the man you work for?''
1583''Where''s the boss of this ranch?'' 1583 ''Would_ you_ let me come there?''
1583''You?'' 1583 A new band?"
1583After we had disbanded in the armory, Willie says to me:''Want to walk out a piece with me?''
1583Am I late?
1583And now?
1583And the fourth dimension?
1583And the price?
1583And up there,said he,"they are playing Mendelssohn-- what is going on up there?"
1583And you have nothing else to eat at home?
1583And,I went on, enthusiastically,"do you know the value of ducks besides their beauty and intelligence and order and sweetness of voice?
1583Any sisters?
1583But how''ll I do it, pa?
1583But they''re hermits,said the youngest and beautifulest,"because they''ve lost the right one, are n''t they?"
1583But what about Miss Blue Feather?
1583But you would n''t object to a Northern circulation, would you?
1583Ca n''t you get a story out of it?
1583Ca n''t you see,he said,"what a rattling fine story it would make?
1583Can there be anything higher,asked Goodloe,"than to dwell in the society of the classics, to live in the atmosphere of learning and culture?
1583Did n''t you think it rather queer that I should ask you to come to my studio at midnight?
1583Do n''t you think that Shakespeare was a great writer?
1583Do n''t you think the apple- sauce they serve over there is execrable? 1583 Do you want the dime back in advance?"
1583Got the blues again?
1583Have n''t you got anything else to eat with it?
1583Have you anything in the way of a proposition to make?
1583Have you got a dollar?
1583He gets me a dipper of water out of a red jar hanging up, and then goes on:''Do you want work?''
1583He would n''t write anything to anybody that was n''t exactly-- I mean that everybody could n''t know and read, would he?
1583How about the bills they found in his pocket?
1583How did you catch this cold?
1583How was that?
1583How will it cost me four dollars?
1583How,I asked,"have I imposed upon you?"
1583Howdy, Marse Blandford-- howdy, suh?
1583Howdy, Uncle Jake?
1583I suppose you''ve been there, of course?
1583I? 1583 Is that_ you_?"
1583It is n''t possible that you''ve cornered John D. Rockefeller''s memoirs, is it? 1583 It makes a difference, does n''t it?"
1583It makes a difference, does n''t it?
1583It makes a difference, does n''t it?
1583Kind of late for you to be out, ai n''t it?
1583Met your affinity yet, John?
1583Mr. Cunningham,said Ileen, with her dazzling smile, after she had sung"When the Leaves Begin to Turn,""what do you really think of my voice?
1583Nevada,called old Jerome,"pardon me, my dear, but would n''t it be as well to send him a note in reply?
1583Now, how much of this stuff I''ve brought can we get into the January number? 1583 Oh, I did n''t tell you about that, did I?"
1583Oh, Nevada,he said,"just look at the headlines on the front page of that evening paper on the table, will you?
1583Olivia,said he,"on what date will you marry me?"
1583Phil,she said, in the Telfair, sweet, thrilling tones,"why did n''t you tell me about it before?
1583Raw?
1583Say, did you ever crack open a wormy English walnut? 1583 Say, kid,"said Hetty, staying her knife,"you ai n''t up against it, too, are you?"
1583Say,said Mack,"tell me one thing-- can you hand out the dope to other girls?
1583She kind of moves in the professional class, do n''t she?
1583Since you''ve already read it, what''s the difference? 1583 So you''ve taken time enough off from your plate- glass to have a romance?"
1583Some sort of a story, even if you have to fake part of it?
1583That nasty old North River?
1583That you, Jack? 1583 Then why are you leaving the stage?"
1583Then why do you eat onions,she said, with biting contempt,"and nothing else?"
1583Then why, in the name of Pan and Apollo,he asked,"have you been singing this deceitful pæan to summer in town?"
1583Then why,asked North, a little curiously,"do n''t you go there instead of staying cooped up in this Greater Bakery?"
1583Then why,pursued Hetty, inflexibly,"were you going to eat a raw onion?"
1583Uncle Jake,said one of the young men,"would you mind taking that chair over there in the corner for a while?
1583Uncle Jerome, Gilbert is a nice boy, is n''t he?
1583Well, Tripp,said I, looking up at him rather impatiently,"how goes it?"
1583Well, what''s the trouble about running the article,asked Thacker, a little impatiently,"if the man''s well known and has got the stuff?"
1583What about it?
1583What could I do? 1583 What do you think of that?"
1583What else can you do to earn a living?
1583What else could she do? 1583 What ever became of the King?"
1583What for?
1583What is going on here to- night?
1583What is it, Snipy?
1583What is it?
1583What is the story?
1583What is this variation that you speak of?
1583What kind of stuff is it?
1583What kind of work do you do?
1583What was the name?
1583What were you going to do with that onion?
1583What words are these, Tripp?
1583What''s your price for the letters?
1583Where can you find air any fresher or purer than this?
1583Where did I hear that expression?
1583Where have you been, Tommy?
1583Where''s Ileen?
1583Which way you been travelling?
1583Who is it from?
1583Who is it, please?
1583Why am I a fool?
1583Why did n''t she? 1583 Why did n''t you hunt for it yourself?"
1583Why did n''t your father look this up?
1583Why did you leave your bed? 1583 Why do n''t you cop the lady out?"
1583Why do you get off at this end- o''-the- world?
1583Why do you think I shall lose?
1583Why not have her in,said Black- Tie,"and bring matters to a conclusion?"
1583Why, dear, you do n''t want me to open Gilbert''s letter to you? 1583 Why, say, Cecilia, kid,"said Hetty, poising her knife,"is it as bad art as that?
1583Would it be all right to go?
1583Would n''t a broiled lobster or a Welsh rabbit do as well?
1583You do n''t mind my cousin being present, do you? 1583 You got''em to sell, ai n''t you?
1583You know any more girls?
1583You know me, do n''t you, Rayburn?
1583You read my letter?
1583_ Beg_ your pardon,said Hetty, as sweetly as her dilute acetic acid tones permitted,"but did you find that onion on the stairs?
1583''And so you are the government depository of this gang of moneyless money- makers?
1583''Any refreshment, welcome, emoluments, or even work for a comparative stranger?''
1583''Are you through, now?''
1583''Do n''t you know this dugout?
1583''Does old George Ramey own this place yet?
1583''How did you get in the game?
1583''I wonder,''says I to myself,''if she has been reincarcerated, too?
1583''Impersonating idols and believing in-- what was it?--recarnalization?
1583''Is it thus?
1583''Or do they feed him every day?
1583''Then why do you so recklessly chase the bright rainbow of fame?
1583''This is a rather quiet section of the country, is n''t it?''
1583''Was n''t there a kind of a reward offered for the capture of this desperate character you have referred to in your preamble?''
1583''What are you doing to yourself in the glass?''
1583''What did you say your name is-- John?''
1583''What''s the matter with you?
1583''What''s this gag you''ve got about gold?
1583''Wo n''t you''light, and tie your horses?''
1583''Would_ you_ talk to me if I was to call?
1583( O Tripp, was n''t it the_ silver_-tongued orator you wanted?)
1583Ai n''t the court- house jammed with everybody in town waiting to honor the hero?
1583Am I right?"
1583And two brass- bands, and recitations and flags and jags and grub to follow waiting for you?''
1583And what do you think?
1583And you invested all your capital on a stranger''s story?
1583And, by the way,''says I, kind of looking H. Ogden over,''was there any description mentioned of this single- handed terror?
1583Another one of''em comes over to me and says:"''Young man, do you know what you''ve done?''
1583Anything wrong with the-- er-- swans, were n''t they, that used to sing on the farms at night?"
1583Are you on?"
1583Are you sure you corralled your sheep so they wo n''t stray out?''
1583Are you with me?"
1583Asked me where she could find_ George Brown in New York City!_ What do you think of that?
1583Before you go, which one of you has got any chewing- tobacco?''
1583But did n''t you find the sheets a little damp and the food poor?
1583But has n''t it been your experience that, by common consent, such things lose their seriousness when viewed in the next day''s sunlight?
1583But how about this write- up of the Atlanta, New Orleans, Nashville, and Savannah breweries?
1583But please come up to the house, wo n''t you?"
1583But what do you think of what we was talking about?
1583But who cares for that?
1583But why are you in the city so late in the summer?"
1583But, anyhow, do n''t you see that she''s got to get back home before night?"
1583Ca n''t you go back with me for a week, old man?"
1583Can you chin''em and make matinée eyes at''em and squeeze''em?
1583Could n''t you go with us, uncle?"
1583D.?''
1583Did I laugh?
1583Did he look like he had money?"
1583Did n''t I know that voice?
1583Did they overtake, overhaul, seize, or lay hands upon the despoiler?''
1583Did you ever run across that story about the captain of the whaler who tried to make a sailor say his prayers?''
1583Did you ever,''he says,''feel the avoirdupois power of gold-- not the troy weight of it, but the sixteen- ounces- to- the- pound force of it?''
1583Do n''t you know that no Indians ever shave?
1583Do n''t you pay enough interest on it to enable one of your depositors to buy an Augusta( Maine) Pullman carbon diamond worth$ 200 for$ 4.85?''
1583Do n''t you think you are wasting your time looking for her?"
1583Do you expect to be elected President, or do you belong to a suicide club?''
1583Do you know of anything he gets in the end that can pay him for the trouble?
1583Do you make it-- or them-- of course you must have changes-- yourself?
1583Do you run a hack line or only a bluff?''
1583Does it prove that woman never progresses, or that she sprang from Adam''s rib, full- fledged in intellect and wiles?
1583Ever put up there?''
1583Getting along all right with the company?"
1583Had his ten years of renunciation, of thought, of devotion to an ideal, of living scorn of a sordid world, been in vain?
1583Have you brought the watch?"
1583Have you got any smoking- tobacco?''
1583Have you seen or heard of any strangers around here during the past month?''
1583He weighed about as much as a hundred pounds of veal in his summer suitings, and he had a''Where- is- Mary?''
1583He''s all right, and good to you, ai n''t he?"
1583Hermits do n''t ever marry, do they?"
1583Honestly, Hamp, do n''t you think you''ve been a darned fool?"
1583How do you size me up?"
1583How soon would you have found your treasure if my knowledge had not shown you your error?"
1583I do not know whether immortality shall accrue to man; but if not so, I would like to know when men like old Jerome get what is due them?
1583I hope you''ll have a pleasant trip back to Minneapolis-- or Pittsburgh, was it?
1583I was red to my feet with the drip, but what did that matter?
1583I''ve heard one of you was a Southerner-- I wonder which one of you it is?"
1583I''ve noticed you throwing out a good many grappling- hooks for this here balloon called fame-- What''s ambition, anyhow?
1583II"Say,"said Pescud, stirring his discarded book with the toe of his right shoe,"did you ever read one of these best- sellers?
1583If all the benefits of it are to go to others, where does it come in?
1583In talking things over one afternoon he said to me:"Suppose you do find her, Ed, whereby would you profit?
1583Is it a go?"
1583Is it ambition, business, or some freckle- faced Phoebe at home that you are heroing for?''
1583Is it the heat or the call of the wild that''s got you?''
1583Is that right?"
1583Is the gentleman you are seeking white?''
1583Is there any one of''em you like better than another?"
1583Is there going to be another secession?"
1583Jacks?"
1583Just consider that I am ignorant of it, will you, dear?
1583Let''s shock''em-- it''s our funeral, ai n''t it?"
1583May I ask her name?"
1583Must two ladies knock a young gentleman down and drag him inside for the honor of dining with''em?
1583No?
1583No?
1583Now, how is it?''
1583Now, what do you do it for?
1583Now, what do you say?''
1583Now, what kind of a beef- stew can you make out of simply beef?
1583Now, will everybody please sit still until they are called upon specifically to rise?
1583Railroad freight depot at Tuscaloosa?"
1583Say, do you pay much attention to politics?
1583Say, kid, you have n''t got a couple of pennies that''ve slipped down into the lining of your last winter''s sealskin, have you?
1583Say-- do you live in the Vallambrosa?"
1583Shall I bring him in?
1583Thacker?"
1583The kimonos were her encyclopedia, her"Who''s What?"
1583The waters in front of the inn were gay with fireflies-- or were they motor- boats, smelling of gasoline and oil?
1583There were her four sisters and her mother and old man Carr-- you remember how he put all the money he had into dirigible balloons?
1583Was his lineaments or height and thickness or teeth fillings or style of habiliments set forth in print?''
1583Was n''t I telling you?
1583Was she very beautiful and charming?"
1583Was there not such a thing as being too frank?
1583Well, you indolent cockney, what are you doing in town?
1583What did you do with the letter I sent you to- day?"
1583What did you send for me for?"
1583What difference does it make whether he''s a prince or a burglar?
1583What do you say, Miss De Ormond-- will it he orange blossoms or cash?"
1583What do you think about''em?"
1583What do you think of the plan?"
1583What does a man do it for?
1583What does a man risk his life day after day for?
1583What does he expect to get out of it?
1583What good is all his brain, muscle, backing, nerve, influence, and family connections?
1583What has your learning done for you?
1583What is a Piggott, anyway?"
1583What is it like, Jim?"
1583What is this talk about heads and baskets?
1583What is your name, and what do you do on this ranch?''
1583What is''salvage,''Hetty?"
1583What of your wasted efforts through your ignorance of simple mathematics?
1583What was this loafer''s case or anybody''s case compared with mine?
1583What would Miss Greene think of you?"
1583What would she think of me?
1583What you going there for?''
1583What''d you do it for, Hamp?
1583What''s a little snow- storm?
1583What''s his game?
1583What''s supply if there''s no demand for it?"
1583What''s the chip over the bug?"
1583What''s the matter with that Utopia on Long Island where you used to take your typewriter and your villainous temper every summer?
1583What''s the use?"
1583What''s this 8,000 to 1 shot about?"
1583What''s your name, first, please?''
1583Who cares-- who cares?
1583Who gave you the keys of the city?''
1583Who''d ever expect to find such a desperate character among these song- birds and muttons and wild flowers?
1583Who''s Bessie Belleclair, who contributes the essay on the newly completed water- works plant in Milledgeville?"
1583Why does he try to outdo his fellow- humans, and be braver and stronger and more daring and showy than even his best friends are?
1583Why not tell it to him?
1583Why not?
1583Why should that sense fall upon one as a weight and a burden?
1583Why should they keep this thing up?
1583Will you do it?"
1583Will you kneel now, or must we have a scuffle?
1583Will you marry me or not?
1583Will you, or will you_ not_?"
1583Would I aspire?
1583Would I?
1583You ai n''t going to kick, are you?"
1583You been reading Edward Allen Poe?
1583You do n''t mind running over it with me?
1583You have n''t by any accident gotten hold of a copy of one of Daniel Webster''s speeches, have you?"
1583You know Bill McCarty?
1583You met him on a ferry- boat, did n''t you?
1583You remember I told you High Jack said that Miss Florence Blue Feather disappeared from home about a year ago?
1583You will?
1583You would n''t think, W. D.,''says Shane,''that I had poetry in me, would you?''
1583You''re just shy when it comes to this particular dame-- the professional beauty-- ain''t that right?"
1583Your name''s Zollicoffer, ai n''t it?"
1583family that he carries as a handicap?"
1583muttered the hermit;"but what do I care for the world''s babble?
1583says he,''ai n''t you one of the Babes in the Goods, W. D.?
16858About a half mile?
16858Ai n''t you got no mama and papa?
16858And mama was born in Scotland?
16858And you had a king at the head of your armies?
16858Boss, ai n''t you got three cents?
16858Come out, you imp, what are you doing under there?
16858David, what''s that in thy hand?
16858Has he any money, and is he a member of the church?
16858Have you a Christian man with the train?
16858Have you no mother?
16858How deep do you own into the earth?
16858How do you make that out?
16858How far do you own eastward?
16858How far do you own toward the west?
16858How old are you, sir?
16858Know what? 16858 My little lad, what''s that you have?"
16858My purse is light, but what of that? 16858 No, boss, what''s de matter?"
16858Shamgar, what''s that in thy hand?
16858Sir, are you a Christian?
16858That is well so far, but may we ask what sacrifice would this home be willing to make for the republic if its flag were in peril?
16858That''s a good job,said the Judge;"why did n''t I think of that?"
16858What are you doing with that sign?
16858What did you do, Pat?
16858What do you mean by getting so close to me? 16858 What''s the nationality of that gintleman, anyway?"
16858What''s the trouble?
16858Where are you going, all by your little self, anyway?
16858Who are you?
16858Who are your neighbors?
16858Why, my child, he has no trade, no money, and very little education; what are you going to do for a living?
16858Wo n''t you ask God to hold that train? 16858 Yes, dear; why do you ask?"
16858You never used liquor?
16858A Chicago editor quoted the statement and asked:"Is it possible education breeds in woman a distaste for matrimony and home life?"
16858A friend called to see him and said:"Jim, what have you to say after this misfortune?"
16858A friend said to me, during the great depression:"Do n''t you think it will be over soon?"
16858A little boy in Chicago said:"Papa, you were born in England?"
16858A man riding along a highway said to a farmer by the wayside:"How far to Baltimore?"
16858A physician came and as he bent over to examine the heart, the tramp said:"Was the little one saved?"
16858A visiting lady after service said:"Doctor, have you any more of the breed of that dog?
16858Again a half- drunk Union soldier rode up to our gate and said:"Who lives here?"
16858Am I putting too much stress upon the humanity side of national life?
16858An old woman suffering from rheumatism was asked by a friend:"Did you ever try electricity?"
16858And what was the fare to slumberland?
16858Another question was:"Who was Abraham Lincoln?"
16858Are they bankers or leading business men?
16858As they neared the poor fellow, one said to the other:"Did you ever see such an appeal for a drink?
16858Before I close would you like to have me point you to greatness?
16858Boys, are you poor?
16858Boys, can you stand the test?
16858Boys, have any of you done this within the past month, or six months?
16858Bring me the Bible and what do I find?
16858But how many are there who regret they ever put the bottle to their lips?
16858But suppose when the occasion comes, instead of inspiration one has indigestion, then what?
16858But what do you think?
16858But, who is the government?
16858Ca n''t we be just as earnest and eloquent in dealing out the truth?"
16858Call me a tramp, do you?
16858Can the man obey the doctor?
16858Can we save the cities of this republic?
16858Can you afford to wrap up your hopes of happiness in him and to him swear away your young life and love?
16858Cromwell said:"What good are they doing as silver apostles?
16858Did I say too much when I said the preacher would eat the turkey?
16858Did Solomon know what he was talking about when he gave it that detestable name?
16858Did he go to a better?
16858Did he settle it?
16858Did he settle it?
16858Did that settle it?
16858Did you sign it for him to sell to other fathers''sons and not yours?''
16858Do n''t you see you have put mud on my dress from your shoes?
16858Do n''t you think if alcoholic liquor had been intended as a beverage for mankind, the great Creator would have made a few springs of it somewhere?
16858Do our brothers stumble over strong drink?
16858Do you ask has the platform any blemishes?
16858Do you ask what we are to do with the Philippine Islands?
16858Do you know half the failures of life come from misfits of occupation?
16858Do you know how to do things?
16858Do you know what that means, a match struck in the dark?
16858Do you realize what it means when an American home is destroyed by drink?
16858Do you say that no such ignominious possibility hangs over any boy in this audience?
16858Do you say you can drink or let it alone?
16858Do you tell me money is the great question of this country, tariff the great question?
16858Does he let them stand?
16858Does it deceive and mock?
16858Does some young man in this audience say,"I can quit if I please?"
16858Does strong drink make our brother to offend?
16858Finally a very beautiful, blue- eyed, charming young lady said:"Since you do not dance, may I engage you for a promenade around the ball room?"
16858Go to the churches; are they crowded with men?
16858Go to the gambling halls; are they crowded with women?
16858Go to the jails and penitentiaries; are they full of women?
16858Go to the saloons; are they frequented by women?
16858Going to the house I said to my wife:"Where is Charlie?"
16858Going to the parlor I said:"What are you doing here?"
16858Going to the spot from whence came the voice and bending over the prostrate form of a dying soldier, the chaplain asked:"What can I do for you?"
16858Good for strength?
16858Have men all the intelligence?
16858Have men all the virtue?
16858Have mightier than we fallen through strong drink?
16858Have some of you had sorrows you could not harmonize with the logic of life?
16858Have you a trade?
16858Have you ever considered how it is baited to resist the forces of evil?
16858He answered:''No, father, but you signed that man''s petition to set up the saloon; whom did you expect him to sell to?
16858He asks,"Is not this my wife?"
16858He further said:"Will I ever drink again?
16858He immediately addressed the man who had the monkey:"Sir, is that gintleman in the cage paying his fare?
16858How does regulation regulate?
16858How would you have enjoyed being with the majority at the time of the flood?
16858I admit you can drink but are you sure you can let it alone?
16858I am frequently asked:"What do you recall as the best introduction you ever had?"
16858I am often asked:"Where do you find the most appreciative audiences?"
16858I answer by asking: What becomes of the men the saloons put out of business?
16858I called to mother; she came running, and taking the chicken from him said:"Do n''t you know to eat solid food will kill you?"
16858I said,"Judge, the question is, which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art?
16858I said:"This is a trying time with me, wo n''t you take a stroll along the beach and let me be alone today?"
16858I said:"Yes, but what are you going to do with it?"
16858I staggered to the colt, held the halter rein and when the tooth was removed my uncle, looking at me, said:"What''s the matter with you?
16858I''m sorry''bout the mud, you''ll''scuse me, wo n''t you, good lady?"
16858If I had life to live over would I do any better than I have done?
16858If it''s good for strength, why not give it to the ox, the mule and the horse?"
16858If we enter that young man''s home what do we find?
16858If you are going to California tomorrow, which way would you start, east or west?
16858If you can_ now_, are you sure you can two years hence?
16858If you merchants could take in eighty thousand dollars, could n''t you pay out six thousand and not get hurt?
16858Is alcoholic liquor as a beverage hurtful and wrong?
16858Is dat de chile I loved and laid wake wif so many nights and cooked so many sweet things for?
16858Is it a counterfeit business?
16858Is it any wonder the saloons hide behind green blinds or stained glass windows?
16858Is our country in danger?"
16858Is that true?
16858Is the drinker weak?
16858Is wine a mocker?
16858Is you got a knife?
16858Is you got a little girl like me?"
16858Judge, will you please let me kiss my little sister before you take her from me?"
16858Just then my uncle called:"George, where are you?"
16858Mr. Spurgeon called lecturing an art, and why not?
16858My answer is: how much more would they drink if we had not done what has been done?
16858My brother, what''s that in thy hand?
16858My reply was:"Are minorities always wrong or hopeless?
16858Nearing the old man he said:"Uncle, would you loan me three cents to cross the ferry?"
16858Now and then I am asked:"What will become of the men who are engaged in the liquor business if the country goes dry?
16858Now if public sentiment has made such a mistake in the allotment of virtues, why may it not have made a greater mistake in the allotment of spheres?
16858On leaving the platform an old miner said:"How do you stand on the money question?
16858On one occasion the question for debate was:"Which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art?"
16858On our way to the hotel I said:"Were you not frightened when we started down that mountain?"
16858One night when he was sleeping drunk in one room, his old mother in another said:"Oh God, is my cup of sorrow not yet full?"
16858One who had heard me many times said:"Why do you do better at Ocean Grove than anywhere else I hear you?"
16858Seated one day in front of a hotel in London, a bootblack halted before him and said:"Mister, will you have a shine?"
16858Seeing the Yankee farmer at the front gate she rode up, dismounted and said:"Sir, will you please tell me, is this the way to Wareham?"
16858Several years ago my brother said to me:"Are you going West soon, as far as Kansas City?"
16858She had a baby in her arms, and I said:''Madam, what are you crying about?''
16858She said:"Is n''t this a grand sight?"
16858Some years ago when out on a little coast ride for pleasure,( if that''s what you call it) I said to the captain:"How long till we reach the shore?"
16858Students of history are asking,"Will the fate of Rome be repeated in the history of this republic?"
16858The Judge said:"Pat, how many times have you been before this court?"
16858The boy went but soon returned with his rosy cheeks cleansed, saying:"Sir, how do you like the job?"
16858The buyer looked the horse over and said:"Young man, what is your price?"
16858The drunkard with help arose and said:"Where am I?
16858The friend asked:"What does she do with so much money?"
16858The great jurist hailed the boy, saying,"Boy, have you a string?"
16858The judge rapped for order in the court and repeated the question,"Are you guilty or innocent of the charge?"
16858The lad had never seen a monkey and as they played their pranks about the cage he said:"Father, did God make monkeys?"
16858The little six- year old boy of the home said:"Mother, did you say little brother came from heaven?"
16858The man sinking into a chair said:''O God, am I never to see my home again?''"
16858The old woman broke the silence, saying:"Is dat my chile?
16858The superintendent said:"Will you help me lift this on to the track?"
16858The teacher of his class said to him:"James, who was the strongest man of whom we have any account?"
16858The three entered the saloon, the glasses were filled and the tramp took his and draining it, said:"Young men, I''m very thirsty, may I have another?"
16858They say to me:"What steps did you take?"
16858To a woman who could speak English I said:"How do you like this country?"
16858To say,"Of all my father''s family I love myself the best, If Providence takes care of me, who cares what takes the rest?"
16858Turning to the guide he said:"Who are these?"
16858Was n''t I in good condition for the trip?
16858Was strong drink recommended as a stimulant?
16858Was there ever a word of more weight in its application?
16858What about intelligence?
16858What about this inhuman denial of the right to order meat, drink, clothing and home life?
16858What are the consequences?
16858What are these little traits in human character?
16858What are you going to do about it?"
16858What becomes of their families?
16858What does this fellowship imply?
16858What makes the drunkard?
16858What makes the saloon?
16858What management would allow a horse to be thus handicapped?
16858What may the young before me expect in the next fifty years?
16858What supplies the drink?
16858What was done to revive him and renew his strength?
16858What was it?
16858What will become of their families?"
16858What would have become of the ship?
16858What''s the matter?"
16858When I answered, he asked:"Can your mother get supper for fourteen soldiers in thirty minutes?"
16858When I asked;"What''s your trouble?"
16858When brought before the court an austere judge said:"Who claims this child?"
16858When he said:"Going down the mountain to where we came from,"I said,"What will we hold to?"
16858When the father replied:"Yes,"the boy said:"Well, do n''t you guess God laughed when he made the first monkey?"
16858When they admitted they had, I said to my son:''Did I ever set such an example for you to follow?''
16858When they tired of the confinement, the older boy said:"Mother, can we go out for a walk?"
16858Where is the man who would be so inconsiderate as to thus hinder a horse?
16858Which is the safer, moderation or total- abstinence?
16858While taking my supper my hostess said:"Would you know smallpox if you were to see the symptoms?"
16858Who are the license voters?
16858Who is my neighbor?
16858Who makes the law?
16858Who makes the legislator?
16858Who would have thought an Emperor of Germany would ever"go back"on beer?
16858Whom did Daniel Webster leave his seat in the Senate that he might hear his eloquence?
16858Why do you ask that?"
16858Why is this?
16858Why was it better?
16858Why will he eat when he knows it means death?
16858Will he eat it?
16858Wo n''t you take her now?"
16858Young man, start wrong and end right?
16858Young man, which way are you going?
16858Young man, will you tamper and trifle with strong drink?
16858Young men, did Luke Howard go to a better hotel?
16858Young men, why was it a tree that had withstood the storms of ages, should, before such a little gust of wind bow its head and die?
16858Young people, do you know you live in a testing world, a world in which all buds and blossoms are tested?
16858who runs this house?"
16293''And Captain Tonino? 16293 ''And Count Villaforte?''
16293''And Mademoiselle Zephyrine?'' 16293 ''And my diamond ring, captain?''
16293''And the French?'' 16293 ''And the castle?''
16293''And the passengers?'' 16293 ''And where am I to_ seguir_ you?''
16293''And where then is_ he_ gone?'' 16293 ''And wherefore need we take the sharp knife, and wherefore need we open the white breast, or look upon the rebellious heart?
16293''But for whom in particular, if I may make bold to ask?'' 16293 ''But why are we put into this grotto?''
16293''Can ye raise up a city of hewn stone in a hundred years?'' 16293 ''Can you distinguish what there is on the flag of the nearest one?
16293''Do they come from a sure source?'' 16293 ''Do you know the shawl- dance in the ballet of_ Clary_?''
16293''For Heaven''s sake, what do you want with me?'' 16293 ''For whom wert thou praying, Marphóusha?''
16293''Hast thou still the letter to King Kazimír from our good brother- in- law and ally-- him whom thou yet callest the Great Prince of Tver?'' 16293 ''How canst thou tell that?''
16293''I always was,''answered she,''but how could I without music?'' 16293 ''If thou knewest it, Nástenka, what wouldst thou not do for love?''
16293''In that case,''said Méry,''the thrush was hit?'' 16293 ''Joking, eh?
16293''Love?'' 16293 ''May I take my bass?''
16293''My friend,''said I to him,''is there any town, village, or house in this neighbourhood?'' 16293 ''No nearer?
16293''No; why should I? 16293 ''Nástenka, my life?''
16293''Of what?... 16293 ''To separate me from my companions?''
16293''Well, Monsieur le Musicien,''said Rina,''do you not help me to get on my horse? 16293 ''Well,''repeated he,''are you all deaf?
16293''Were it not good to show them an example at once, by punishing the criminals before them?'' 16293 ''What can we do with them?
16293''What countryman are you?'' 16293 ''What is the matter?''
16293''What is the matter?'' 16293 ''What is the meaning of all this, Mademoiselle?''
16293''What saith it?'' 16293 ''What would you like me to play, Mademoiselle?''
16293''What, captain,''cried I,''is it you?'' 16293 ''When was power in the wrong?
16293''Where are you taking me?'' 16293 ''Where was I?''
16293''Who calls me captain? 16293 ''Wilt thou not think again?''
16293''Would you like to see one?'' 16293 ''Yes, it is,''said I;''but how do you know my name?''
16293''You are a musician?'' 16293 ''You saw some feathers?''
16293''Zephyrine is really here, then?'' 16293 ''Zephyrine, why do n''t you answer when I call?
16293''_ Ove sono_?'' 16293 ... Solem quis dicere falsum Audeat?"
16293But will the king suffer this? 16293 Do you know what you missed in the other room?"
16293Has a citizen''s wife but an only babe? 16293 Has he had any thing to do in this campaign?"
16293Have I not in my time heard lions roar? 16293 How was it to be helped, Guiscard?
16293Love,said Jane,"are all_ these_ slaves?"
16293Not like!--How not like? 16293 Said I,''How do you know?''
16293Velasquez!--who''s he?
16293Well, what is Lord Holland to me?
16293Well, what sport?
16293Well,said the duke, turning to me, with his customary grace of manner--"What does our friend, the Englishman, say?"
16293What calls the council to- night?
16293What is the matter?
16293What then have you to fear?
16293What think you now, my friend?
16293What think you of that, gentlemen?
16293Why am I then summoned?
16293Why do you not rescue him?
16293Why, sir,said he;"I find I have been all wrong-- what can it be?
16293Will the duke follow up the blow?
16293''Do you amuse yourself in firing at such game as that?''
16293''Is it this one?''
16293''Thou hast then seen him?''
16293''Tis you, then, who betrayed us?''
16293''What makes you look so blank?
16293''Where are they?''
16293***** SITTING FOR A PORTRAIT What could induce you, my dear Eusebius, to commit yourself into the hands of a portrait- painter?
16293A cigar?''
16293A friend who knew my inexperience, and regarded me as a victim dressed out for sacrifice, called to me--''What, Wilberforce, is that you?''
16293And by whom was it thus published?
16293And what became of the grand historical?
16293And what had Antony to hope for there?
16293And what is written in thy book against royal murderers and conspirators?''
16293And what shall the"recording angel"do?
16293And what was the result?
16293Are there a dozen literary men or women amongst us who could read a Russian romance, or understand a Russian drama?
16293Are there any thrushes in the park?''
16293Are there bad news?''
16293Are you afraid of being made too amiable, or too plain?
16293Are you afraid, that you want me to keep you in countenance, where I shall be sure to put you out?
16293Are you fond of shooting?''
16293Are you not ashamed to sit after that?
16293Are you prepared to have your every lineament scrutinized by every body?
16293As it is, who can tell the ultimate effect of this important deprivation?
16293As to the grounds of quarrel, could any questions or speculations be found so little fitted for a popular intemperance?
16293Besides, did you not lend me the other day a book of Mr Cooper''s, the_ Pioneers_, in which the fact is authenticated?''
16293But can he not discover any remnant of the letters of Selwyn himself?
16293But did Lord Aberdeen by that change establish the right of the patron as an unconditional right?
16293But how are they any church at all?
16293But how can_ he_ complain, if he is found by an impartial court of venerable men objectionable on any score?
16293But is any thing more natural?
16293But is this a reason, I only ask you, for leaving, like an uncultivated waste, that holy army of martyrs, the spinsterhood of Great Britain?
16293But what are the troops of France?
16293But what could I say, sir, to a dumb beast which God had not gifted with reason?''"
16293But what man of his day escaped the gout, and the natural termination of that torturing disease in dropsy?
16293But who is to judge whether they_ are_ reasonable?
16293But why?
16293But would you think it too much to mount your horse now, and ride with me, before you send your despatches to your cabinet?
16293By what agencies and influence?
16293Can they produce a single instance in which our concessions in favour of their rude produce have led to a corresponding return in favour of ours?
16293Could any guardian of public interests, under so wicked a threat, hesitate as to the line of his duty?
16293Did I ever tell you the anecdote respecting him?
16293Did not Hogarth do something of this kind?
16293Did not knightly blood boil in his veins?
16293Did not the spirit of adventure whisper in his heart its hopes and high promises?
16293Did the Scottish Kirk, at the last crisis, divide broadly into two mutually excluding sections?
16293Did you hear nothing more of him?''
16293Do you believe in the story of the origin of portrait-- the Grecian maid and her lover?
16293Do you not mean to dine with us?''
16293Do you remember how a foolish man lost a considerable sum of money once, by forgetting this human propensity?
16293Does not then a thrill run over your whole being?
16293Dost thou vouchsafe me to speak what hath come into my mind?''
16293First, then, WHAT_ is it that has been done_?
16293For how stands the case?
16293For what was to be done with patronage?
16293Fourthly, can the church complain?
16293From whom, then, came the attempt to change?
16293Grant this demand-- for it can not be evaded-- and what becomes of the model for church government as handed down from John Knox and Calvin?
16293Had I been so unfortunate as to make a conquest, which would render me the rival of the captain?
16293Have I not heard great ordnance in the field, And heaven''s artillery thunder in the skies?
16293Have I not heard the sea, puft up with wind, Rage like an angry boar chafed with sweat?
16293Have I not in the pitched battle heard Loud''larums, neighing steeds, and trumpets clang?"
16293Have not the wives of England husbands to whisper wisdom into their ears?
16293Have you any specimens?
16293Have you ever seen something resembling a smile on the jaws of a human skull?
16293How came it that no aurora of early light, no prelusive murmurs of scrupulosity even from themselves, had run before this wild levanter of change?
16293How can it be so, when, in all old states, the monied is the prevailing interest which sways the determinations of government?
16293How did the Scottish clergy obey them?
16293How should_ that_ be done?
16293I exclaimed in surprise;"of what nation are the troops which we have fought in the Argonne, and are now following through the high- road to Paris?
16293I thought there must be some mistake, and was walking backwards out of the apartment, when the lady said--"''My dear M. Louet, where are you going?
16293I wish you would tell me where it is not like?"
16293If enactory, then why did the House of Lords give judgment against those who allowed weight to the"call?"
16293If not, then why quarrel with the Non- intrusionists?
16293If pride has not a fall in the portraits of the great and noble, where shall we find it?"
16293If they pass over America why should they not pass over Marseilles?
16293In his demure voice, he said,''Pray, ma''am, how long has your ladyship left the pale of our church?''
16293Is he of good moral reputation?
16293Is he orthodox?
16293Is he sufficiently learned?
16293Is it necessary to say that this moment ought to be pervaded by a leading idea?...
16293Is it to consider the matter too curiously, to conceive that the laws of nature affect the mind?
16293Is my friend_ un peu philosophe_?"
16293Is not this a weighty reason?
16293Louet, have you ever seen a naval combat?''
16293Louet?''
16293Louet?''
16293Louet?''
16293Louet?''
16293Louet?''
16293Louet?''
16293Nay, that we always endeavour to hide our own-- and which do you mean to hide, or do you intend to come out perfect?
16293No; but a second man of his own choice: and, if again he chooses amiss, who is to blame for_ that_?
16293Now, are you so sure of the absence of all these defects, that you venture?
16293Now, the governor asked him,"What brought him out to the West Indies?"
16293Of what historical importance are the stories on which Shakspeare has founded his_ Romeo and Juliet_--his_ Othello_--his_ Hamlet_, or his_ Lear_?
16293One night, when Selwyn was hurrying into the lobby with a crowd of members, a nobleman coming up asked him,"Is the house up?"
16293Or did he do so, in humble submission to the parish, as having by their majorities a legal right to the presentation?
16293Or that the southern and western Irish, vehement, impassioned, and volatile, came from the same stock which pervades the whole west of Britain?
16293Perhaps, in reality, honour and fame await thee there?''
16293Refuse it, and what becomes of the future subscriptions?
16293Say where is it not like?"
16293Secondly, how can the patron complain?
16293Shall I tell how much Boniface will draw in a week?
16293Soliman opened his eyes and stared at me; as much as to say,"What is the meaning of all this?"
16293Tell my judge of Moscow-- the court judge-- to have the Lithuanian and the interpreter burned alive on the Moskvá-- burn them, dost thou hear?
16293The question that will naturally be asked, is-- What does he wait for?
16293Thirdly, can the congregation complain?
16293This can not be the common French snuff?''
16293Was any church more deeply pledged to the spirit of meekness?
16293Was it a billet- doux?
16293Was it to be sustained, or was it not?
16293Was the affirmative and negative shared between them as between the black chessmen and the white?
16293Was there any such incorporation reputed to be more internally harmonious than the Scottish church?
16293Was there one of these bisections which said_ Yes_, whilst the other responded_ No_?
16293Was_ that_ trivial?
16293What are the_ remote results_ yet to be apprehended?
16293What awaiteth thee then?
16293What could a briefless barrister do better than throw himself upon the law?
16293What could this paper be?
16293What do they take me for?...
16293What do you see?''
16293What do you think of that, Eusebius, for a position?
16293What is going to happen?''
16293What is it that we wish the English reader to collect from these distinctions?
16293What law?
16293What man can calculate the power of those untried elements?
16293What other man carried loaded pistols there?
16293What should the Assembly do for the vindication of their authority?
16293What space do Balfour of Burleigh, or Rob Roy, or Helen Macgregor, fill in history?
16293What were the_ immediate results_ of these acts?
16293What wild shape of power is now to take up its fallen sword?
16293What_ can_ be the grounds upon which an_ acharnement_ so deadly has arisen?
16293When the feasting was over,"''You have not forgotten your promise, Rina, I hope?''
16293When they had taken every thing from us--"''Is there a musician amongst you?''
16293Where is the water of life that can revive those thou hast slain?
16293Who could suppose that the Dutchman, methodical, calculating, persevering, was next neighbour to the fiery, war- like, and impetuous Frenchman?
16293Who dares call the sun a flatterer?
16293Why did Vassílii Féodorovitch build such a fine house?
16293Why did he build it so near the Great Prince''s palace?
16293Why should you be exempt from what kings are subject to?
16293Why suffer a schism to take place in the church?
16293Why, then, are_ they_ to be coaxed or lectured by tabby- bound volumes, while_ we_ are left neglected in a corner?
16293Will the emperor stand by and see this done?"
16293With tears he gave him his blessing for the journey.--''Who can tell,''said he,''that this is not the will of fate?
16293Would you like a dog, or not?''
16293Would you like to see a veritable portrait of Angelica-- or of your Orlando in his madness?
16293Yet again, will even this fund, partially as it seems to have been divided, continue to be available?
16293Yet how should this be accomplished?
16293Yet why?
16293You have been to Rome?''
16293You may not have to make your bow to a Venus Anadyomene-- but how will you be able to face the whole Muggletonian synod?
16293You wo n''t go with me?''
16293_ How_ was it done?
16293_ Secondly_, How_ were these things done?_ By what means were the hands of any party strengthened, so as to find this revolution possible?
16293_ Secondly_, How_ were these things done?_ By what means were the hands of any party strengthened, so as to find this revolution possible?
16293_ What_ is it that has been done by the moving party?
16293and didst thou not fear to go to him?''
16293and what could be his purpose but the one which he effected, to fire them both, one at the wretched woman, and the other at himself?
16293captain,''cried I, feeling myself grow pale;''you do not mean to say we are going to have a naval combat?
16293cried I,''are you going to take me to the captain?''
16293cried he,''Zephyrine, where are you?''
16293cried the captain in a voice of thunder;''no instrument?''
16293do n''t you think it like, sir?"
16293does not your heart leap within you?
16293doth it delight thee?...
16293exclaimed Varnhorst,"What are troops without discipline, and generals without science?
16293how long will he get sitters to_ submit_?
16293not in your bed yet?"
16293she said--''Is he not a heretic?''
16293to hear behind a screen the disparagement of your lips, your eyes thought deceitful, and, in addition, a sentence of general ugliness passed upon you?
16293what aileth thee?''
16293what aileth thee?''
16293without a token of her love?
15913''What was that?'' 15913 ''What''s he think of the chances?''
15913And did the minister go on?
15913Are they ready?
15913At it?
15913But you''ll take them?
15913But your wife? 15913 Demon?
15913Did I tell ye that? 15913 Did you?"
15913Do you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? 15913 Do you see that black pool under the sycamore?"
15913Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old moustache as I am Is not a match for you all?
15913Does the old man still live?
15913Ef it is-- What ef he misses, an''wo n''t go back with me? 15913 Eh?
15913For what? 15913 Have you anything to which to turn, if this disappoints you?
15913Have you given up all hope of serving your fellows?
15913Heartsome? 15913 How does thee think it looks, Andy?"
15913How goes it, Mary?
15913How old is he?
15913I say, look here, why have row? 15913 I wish I could induce you to stay and have a talk over your future prospects, eh?
15913I wish, lad-- Would thee say,''God bless thee, Jane''? 15913 If it fails?"
15913If,said Ole Bull,"I kiss my enemy, what have I left for my friend?"
15913Mine, is it, lad? 15913 Mine?"
15913More noosances?
15913No; why should I? 15913 Perhaps thee''d be amused to look over Joseph''s case of books?"
15913Recreant, eh? 15913 Says I,''See my ducks an''sack, Mr. Starke?
15913Shall we stay here? 15913 She?
15913Shoes, eh?
15913Since then you have not seen her, I understand you? 15913 Starke and his wife?"
15913Success, you mean? 15913 The dog''s owner?"
15913Thee means_ God_, thee knows?
15913Thee scalds the raisin'', do n''t thee, now?
15913Thee''ll take neighbor Wart into town, Andrew?
15913Thee''s tired too, Jane?
15913This engine-- have you nothing to care for in life but that?
15913Thus o''er the ocean faint and far Trailed the gleam of his falchion brightly: Is it a god, or is it a star, That, entranced, I gaze on nightly?
15913To- morrow, did thee say, we would go home?
15913To- morrow, thee said, Andrew?
15913To- morrow, then?
15913Was summat wrong? 15913 Well?"
15913What ails him?
15913What ails ye, Jane?
15913What are you waiting here for, Mary?
15913What did she say?
15913What do you think of that fellow, Mary?
15913What do you tremble for, eh?
15913What is it, Jane?
15913What kept thee all day, Andrew?
15913What use, boy?
15913Whatever is thee glowerin''thataway about?
15913Why, God bless my soul, Sir, what can_ they_ do? 15913 Will ye speak wickedly for God?
15913Will you try again?
15913You do n''t care to hear the ins an''outs of it? 15913 You have children?"
15913You have little time for reading?
15913You have yourself lost faith in your invention?
15913You never work with it?
15913You seemed to me to be the very man to lead a forlorn hope against ignorance: are you quite content to settle down here and do nothing?
15913''An''without a decent suit to yer back, how kin you carry the thing before Congress?''
15913''He s_ he_ influence?''
15913''How kin ye?''
15913A''n''t I kind to her?
15913Afford it?
15913After all, my dear Andrew, why are you so sensitive on the subject of Slavery?
15913An armistice to whom, and for what purpose?
15913And the whiff of the fresh clover- blossoms?
15913And what has been the result of this ill- omened alliance?
15913And what is poetry but that song?
15913And when once confiscated, why should they not be employed in whatever manner will make them most serviceable to us?
15913And who shall say that their confidence was unreasonable?
15913Are these white men, with Anglo- Saxon blood in their veins, and the fair fame of this country in their keeping?
15913Are they brave?
15913At it for some time?"
15913But has not the President published to the world that the Proclamation was a measure of military necessity?
15913But how?
15913But where are your other fourteen?
15913But who are those enemies?
15913But who pays attention to newspaper- articles?
15913But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear?
15913But will the slaves consent to enlist?
15913But you''ll take care of it, wo n''t you?"
15913But, creatures of sympathy, needy dependants on approbation, as we are, shall we surrender to all or any of these lies?
15913But, once more, my friend, have you any reason to be attached to Slavery on political grounds?
15913But_ would_ she care?
15913Can there be any doubt about the issue now offered to the North by Peace Democrats?
15913Can you justify yourself in standing upon such a platform?
15913Certainly, but-- You''re a little nervous, Mr. Starke, and-- Wouldn''t it be better if you were not present?
15913D''ye smell yer oats?
15913Did Monsieur Credit die on the seventeenth of November?
15913Did honest and dull"Conservatism"have ever a happier description?
15913Did not all their past experience justify such confidence?
15913Did you think it would be brought in here?"
15913Do I object to that sentiment?
15913Do n''t that expand your lungs?
15913Do n''t you see it?"
15913Do they not say what they please, and vote as they choose, without molestation or hindrance?
15913Do you believe that this rule could have been maintained for so many years without the connivance and coöperation of Northern Democrats?
15913Do you dare to complain of this deliverance?
15913Do you deny that I have presented a truthful picture of the present position of your party?
15913Do you know his wife?"
15913Do you ne''er think who made them, and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought?
15913Do you see the big, brave eyes of him?"
15913Does thee frequent the prize- fighters''ring, that thee''s got their slang so pat, lad?"
15913Eh?
15913For he asked, perfectly unconsciously,--"Pray, what has become of Texas?
15913Go?
15913Graff?"
15913Had they not repeatedly tested the temper and measured the_ morale_ of the people?
15913Have you ever had the curiosity to investigate the causes of this disaster?
15913Have you never seen her since?"
15913Have you seen Captain Back''s curious account of Sir Thomas Hoe''s Welcome?"
15913He''s my namesake, Mary, did you know?
15913His father replied,--"Your piece?
15913Home or friends?"
15913How are those enemies to be overcome?
15913How could I dare to return home and confront your wrath?
15913How does the balance incline, when a man or woman stands before us with a letter of introduction in hand?
15913How long_ did_ they mean to wait?
15913How many men know their vocation?
15913How?
15913How?"
15913I believe I never mentioned to you,"looking at Jane,"how I smuggled him into the pants you made, you thinkin''him a friend of mine?
15913I come out here to study my sermons, did you know?
15913If it fails, where''s your''justice on earth''?
15913Ignoble souls will shrivel in that day: The brightness of its coming can you bear?
15913Is it possible he is not with you?
15913Is it that God has room for all things in this Life of His?
15913Is nobody but Shakspeare a poet?
15913Is she always well, Andrew?"
15913Is the efficient aid of such men to be rejected?
15913Is thee comfortable?"
15913Is their noble self- sacrifice to be slighted?
15913Is there in the martyrology of poets any passage sadder than these lines?
15913Is there no mountain- peak but Dhawalaghiri?
15913Is there no music but Beethoven''s?
15913Is there nothing more important just now than to devise means of reinstating your party in power at the next Presidential election?
15913Is this a time in which to permit your old party animosities to render you indifferent to the honor and welfare of the nation?
15913Is this loyalty to the Constitution and the Union?
15913Is this the allegiance which a citizen owes to his country?
15913Is this the jocund Pilgrim of Outre- Mer?
15913Is''t home- like lookin''?
15913It''s different when some folks pokes fun at me, askin''for the lantern, an''"--"What odds?"
15913It''s ours now, an''it''s stocked, an''--Don''t thee think the house is snug itself, Andrew?
15913It''s yours now, Mr. Starke, d''y''understand?
15913Maybe thee thought me a hard woman?"
15913Mine, eh?"
15913Morning nap?
15913Mr. Starke, I may come and see you to- morrow, you said?
15913Murger replied,--"See it?
15913Not wished to see her?"
15913Now does not this correctly describe our position?
15913One ill, maybe?"
15913Only, where shall I begin?''
15913Others''ll be found to do it when it''s needed; what matter if he fails?
15913Richard''s our boy, thee knows?
15913See the man?
15913See what?"
15913Shall I have the honor of dancing?"
15913Should he keep him?
15913Should he let him go?
15913Sir?
15913Starke?
15913Starke?"
15913Starke?"
15913The Tabard inn is gone; but who, henceforth, will ride through Sudbury town without seeing the purple light shining around the Red Horse tavern?
15913The woman was tenacious; for what will not a mother''s heart brave?
15913Thee thinks it looks comfortable?"
15913Thee''ll not want to eat alone?"
15913Then,''Where was Vicksburg?''
15913There is good fishing hereabouts, eh, Jim?"
15913They would be freer in deciding, and-- suppose you and I stay here?"
15913To die like a grub?
15913To what does universal commendation amount more than universal indifference?
15913Was he thinking of that old dream?
15913Was it that which brought out from the face of the middle- aged working woman such a strange meaning of latent youth, beauty, and passion?
15913Was it welcomed by slaveholders?
15913We make no question about the calamities of war; but how are these calamities to be avoided?
15913Well, I used to sit thinking there, after the day''s work was done, until my head ached, of how I might do something,--to help, you understand?"
15913What are you so anxious an''wild about, Jane?
15913What avails it to talk of the blessings of peace and the horrors of war?
15913What boot they, when he on whom they are bestowed is beyond the reach of earthly voices?
15913What chance has it?
15913What chances has he, Miss?"
15913What critic shall decide if the song of a new singer be poetry, or the bard himself a poet?
15913What d''ye say?''
15913What in the name of Heaven could you have gotten at Dagneaux''s for five cents?
15913What is the reason of this deceit?
15913What kin_ I_ do?"
15913What kin_ I_ do?"
15913What more delightful to remember than that we brought together those who were each other''s counterparts?
15913What news from town?"
15913What right had any man to know what his wife was to him?
15913What sober step pauses at the Wayside Inn?
15913What was a man to do?
15913What would she say when he came back?
15913What''s the use of telling it?"
15913What, then, if he were called to account by the Department for violating the order of 1807?
15913When had any one of their schemes, no matter how monstrous it might at first have appeared, ever failed of final accomplishment?
15913Where is the young lion?"
15913Where was his youth, that it came not to the rescue?
15913Where will you go now, Jane?"
15913Who but the nation, or some part of it, dictates to the clerk?
15913Who can resist a mother struggling for her son?
15913Who is a poet but he whom the heart of man permanently accepts as a singer of its own hopes, emotions, and thoughts?
15913Who is going about to tie on the labels?
15913Who would you be willing should tie on yours?
15913Why did you let me go out with my pockets so full of money?
15913Why is n''t Richard down?
15913Why part with a present good, with the risk of incurring a future evil?
15913Will not our foes have good cause to despise our folly, if we leave in their hands this most efficient element of their power?
15913Will they fight for the cause which they have dared so many dangers to espouse?
15913Will you say that I have misrepresented the record of the Northern Democratic party?
15913Would you know other shadows and other sights than those you find in"Galignani''s Messenger"under the rubric,"Stranger''s Diary"?
15913Would you know something of the way in which men live in Paris?
15913Would you penetrate a little beneath the brilliant, glossy epidermis of the French capital?
15913Yet, on the whole, Andrew, what have you gained by it?
15913You do n''t believe in Phrenology, eh?
15913You have not cut up any of the old ones, I hope?''
15913You know him?
15913You know my wife, then?"
15913You know what a quiet place Philadelphia is?
15913You will not judge him too harshly, will you?
15913You''ll forgive me?"
15913_ Nothing but good of the dead_, do you say?
15913_ Would_ he go back to it?
15913and talk deceitfully for Him?"
15913and wherefore?
15913canst thou not be Blithe as the air is, and as free?"
15913do you catch that river- breeze?
15913do you remember the mysteries we boys used to invent about his room, in the old Intrepid days?
15913every hunger, loss, effort, held underneath and above in some infinite Order, suffered to live out its purpose, give up its uttermost uses?
15913for all these problems, all Evil as it seems to us?
15913no cataract but Niagara?
15913sharply,"did thee bring thy lunch, to eat at my stall?
15913that I have charged them with a submission and subserviency to the dictates of their Southern allies, which truthful history will not confirm?
15913that nothing in any man''s life is wasted?
15913the basket ye''ve got?
15913the trading look going out of her eyes suddenly,"Oh, are you his friends?
15913was I ever wo nt to do so unto thee?"
15913what will it not endure?
15913you do n''t mean to say that they are still playing it?"
19983And Monsieur le Marquis?
19983Boat, sir, boat?
19983Coach, sir, coach?
19983Do you know that lady?
19983Do you not think the Signorina exceedingly like Madame Pasta?
19983Do you see Mademoiselle----, dancing in the set before you?
19983Désirée, où est Désirée?
19983Est- ce que monsieur compte me présenter tout ceci?
19983Go and see what?
19983How do you address this lady-- as Her Highness?
19983How do you make that out, Sir William?
19983How long do you mean to be absent?
19983I hope you have breakfasted?
19983Is America anywhere near Van Diemen''s Land?
19983It is, indeed; what is your fare?
19983London, sir, London?
19983Savez- vous, mon ami, où est l''Hôtel d''Angleterre?
19983Then why not adopt it?
19983Were is Désirée?
19983What do you think I_ ought_ to get for carrying this load,''sqire?
19983Where?
19983Why does she not bear his name, if that be the case?
19983You get notes occasionally from the lady, or you could not read her scrawl so readily?
19983_ N''est- ce pas_?
19983---- que j''ai l''honneur de voir?"
19983After a moment''s delay the door was cautiously opened, and the captain, in his gruffest tone, demanded,"Cur vully voo?"
19983After asking me a few questions concerning the country, he very coolly continued--"Et combien de temps avez- vous passé en Amérique, monsieur?"
19983As we were walking together, arm and arm, my companion suddenly placed a hand behind him, and said,"My fine fellow, you are there, are you?"
19983But did I not condemn the want of historical truth in its pictures?
19983But what is all this compared to the constant accessions of Europeans among ourselves?
19983Can your experience suggest anything more?
19983Did I not think he had done gross injustice to the noble and useful order of the Templars?
19983Does this augur good or evil, for the world?
19983He clearly does not love us; but what Englishman does?
19983He related the story of M. Cloquet and the cancer, with great unction, and asked me what I thought of that?
19983He who is all attention and smiles to the lady?"
19983How is it with you?"
19983How know we that such is not the origin of comets?
19983I get no privileges by my birth; whereas, in England, where I have been, it is so different-- And I dare say it is different in America, too?"
19983If any prince should inquire,--"Who is this that approaches me, clad so simply that I may mistake him for a butler, or a groom of the chambers?"
19983If these views are correct, why may not an English writer secure a right in this country, by selling it in season, to a citizen here?
19983If we are any better ourselves, is it not more owing to the absence of temptation, than to any other cause?
19983In putting into the mouth of Falstaff the words,"Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn?"
19983In what manner?"
19983It could not possibly be the consumption of a country-- he did not say it, but he evidently thought it-- so insignificant and poor?
19983Madame Pasta played_ Semiramide_"How do you like her?"
19983Now will it be pretended that his right is lost, always providing that his own is the first_ American_ publication?
19983Of what avails our beautiful glass, unless we know how to cut it?
19983On entering, they eagerly inquired if"I had not been charmed, fascinated; if any thing could be better played, or more touching?"
19983On whom do you imagine the curtain will rise?
19983This startled A----, who, having full faith in my nautical experience, asked what we were to think of it?
19983Were the earth dissolved into gases by fusion, what would become of its satellite the moon?
19983What became of the precedency of the married lady all this time?
19983What more could any reasonable man ask?
19983When two regiments assault each other, it is in compact line--""How,"I interrupted him,"do not you open, so as to leave room to swing a sabre?"
19983Why do not these people appear in America?
19983Why should we go to the_ restaurateurs_ to eat?
19983Will this happen?
19983_ Tenez_--do you see that gentleman who is standing so assiduously near the chair of Madame de S----?
19983exclaimed my country neighbour;"why so, sir?"
19983mon frère!--que fais- tu?"
19983my fancy, whither dost thou go?"
19983or of what great advantage, in the strife of industry, will be even the_ skilful_ glass- cutter, should he not also be the_ tasteful_ glass- cutter?
19983or, do they come, and get absorbed, like all the rest, by the humane and popular tendencies of the country?
19693''Were you speaking to me?
19693But have you the legal right to do that?
19693But under Dutch law?
19693But what difference? 19693 But why,"said the German counsellor, sitting by my study fire--- a Prussian of the Prussians--"why do you refuse?
19693Can you sell us a little bread?
19693Were you here in the fighting?
19693Were you here in the fighting?
19693What do you mean by Peace,said the Householder, looking grimly around him;"do you mean all this?"
19693What were these Prussian soldiers doing there? 19693 Why so many soldiers,"I asked,"and where are they all going?"
19693Will the man get well?
19693Will you see an operation?
19693Are we not brothers?
19693But do you think they will arrest me when I get to New York?"
19693But have you any right to arrest me and send me to America?"
19693But how could it be avoided?
19693But how shall I creep in?"
19693But might it not still be used as a make- weight in the scales of negotiation rather than as a weapon of actual offense?
19693But what about things on the French side of the border in that same week of June, 1914?
19693But what do we mean now by peace?
19693But what if it lost its purely mythical quality and became historical, actual, contemporaneous?
19693But when would that be?
19693But would the organization of such a league of nations to defend peace make war henceforward impossible?
19693But-- well, did you ever see a wren resist an eagle?
19693Can there be any Peace in the world if you go loose in it, ready to break and enter and kill when it pleases you?
19693Can there be any forgiveness until you repent?
19693Could Germany have taken this absolutely"committal"position if she had been ignorant of what Austria intended to do?
19693Could it be that Europe of the twentieth century was to be thrust back into the ancient barbarism of a general war?
19693Could it be the big neighbor from across the lake?
19693Could the precarious peace be maintained until measures to enforce and protect it by common consent could be taken?
19693Do n''t you want it?"
19693Do we not both love Peace?
19693Do you accept?"
19693Do you mean to restore the plunder you have grabbed?"
19693Does it mean a constitutional remoulding of the empire?
19693Fight?
19693General scepticism?
19693Had they come to spy out the land and the city in preparation for an invasion?
19693How could it be otherwise in a throng of about a million, scooped up and cast out by an evil chance?
19693How did this gentleman in Munich come to know about the ultimatum, while the gentlemen in Berlin professed ignorance?
19693How long would that lack hold off the storm?
19693If it seemed dreamlike to us, so near at hand, how could the people in America, three thousand miles away, feel its reality or grasp its meaning?
19693Indifference?
19693Is it likely that the predatory Potsdam gang will be willing to accept these three conditions soon?
19693Is it not so?"
19693Is n''t that a fair division?
19693Might he not still be content with showing and shaking the sword, without fleshing it in the body of Europe?
19693Might not the Kaiser still be pleased with his dramatic role of"the war- lord who kept the peace"?
19693Might not the Werwolf get himself disliked?"
19693Mr. Eyschen said to me:"You have heard of the famous''Luxembourger Loch''?
19693N''est- ce pas vrai, cherie?"
19693Now and then an independent German like Maximilian Harden is brave enough to blurt it out:"Of what use are weak excuses?
19693Preoccupation with other designs which made the discussion of peace plans premature and futile?
19693Shall I deny it?"
19693Shall the United States be asked to rewrite this article of international law, in the midst of a great war on sea and land?
19693Tell me, what have you to say about my children and my servants whom you have tortured and murdered?"
19693The first question was: Did Germany approve in advance the Austrian ultimatum to Servia?
19693Then the Queen asked about the Dutch immigrants in America, especially in recent times-- were they good citizens?
19693There were old men so feeble that one''s first thought on seeing them was:"How did you get away from your nurse?"
19693These Kriegs- Herren had better go home at once-- at once, did they understand?"
19693Was it the carrying out of the cold- blooded policy of"frightfulness"as a necessary weapon of war?
19693Was it the drink found in the cellars of the houses that made the German officers and soldiers mad?
19693Was there a stray prince or duke among them who wanted to marry the Grand Duchess?
19693Were Algiers and Tunis and Tripoli"civilized states"when they sent out the Barbary pirates in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries?
19693What about the damage you have done here?
19693What else could she do?
19693What had the Potsdam High- Sea Fleet to do with this peaceable overland traveller from Belgium?
19693What if a few shots were fired by ignorant and infuriated civilians from the windows of houses?
19693What is it that we are pledged by President Wilson''s statement to insist upon as a precondition of any peace conference with Germany?
19693What was it, then, that forced such a nation into a conflict of arms?
19693What was it?
19693What was the meaning of this?
19693Where was it?
19693Who are WE?"
19693Who feeds you?
19693Who gave you a place?
19693Who shall repair it?"
19693Why do you call attention to it, instead of talking politely and earnestly about the blessings of Peace?"
19693Why not call on the signer of the letter of credit for the money instead of calling on the addressee?
19693Why not make the drafts directly on New York?
19693Why not simply transmit the note to your colleague in Brussels as you did before?
19693Why not?
19693Will you lay down your weapons and come before the Judge?"
19693Will you not?"
19693Would it not change its aspect?
19693Would not people object to it?
19693Yet why would not the killing of a French sister under the Red Cross be just as wicked?
19693You want it to go on?"
15067And Behemoth and Leviathan, spoken of by Job?
15067And Father Gévresin-- how did you first know him?
15067And besides,cried Madame Bavoil,"what does all that matter?
15067And besides-- besides-- is not the weariness that is crushing me to some extent the fault of the Abbé Gévresin? 15067 And do you suppose that I have not blamed myself for my cowardice of heart?"
15067And has no one ever been able to discover the name of any one of the original architects, sculptors, or glass- makers of this Cathedral?
15067And how are the Fathers employed?
15067And how is that?
15067And if it still rains?
15067And if the See remains long vacant?
15067And need I remind you that the liturgy assigns a meaning to each vestment, each ornament of the Church, according to its use and form? 15067 And now where was I?"
15067And the Canons have no perquisites?
15067And the cathedral at Antwerp, which has two more aisles?
15067And the names of the architects are unknown?
15067And the oblates?
15067And the sacristy?
15067And the windows?
15067And then,said Durtal,"is it not another mouth to feed out of the wretched pittance allowed by the State?"
15067And were you satisfied with your visit?
15067And what have you there?
15067And what in your opinion constitutes the soul of Chartres?
15067And what is the daily life of Solesmes?
15067And what must the nuns think as they hear these continual departures for the outer world? 15067 And what, in short,"asked she,"may we hope for from this journey?"
15067And why have their successors so long lost it, as well as their red? 15067 And why this neglect?"
15067And you never take any other nourishment?
15067And you never were refused hospitality?
15067And you, Monsieur l''Abbé?
15067Are you in pain?
15067Avarice? 15067 Besides, what use is therein disputing the fact?
15067But are you sure that Roger van der Weyden intended to ascribe such meanings to the colours?
15067But can the principles of a ritual of colour which you have discerned in Angelico be verified with equal strictness in other painters?
15067But for what can she be watching? 15067 But has the colour of a step ever represented an idea in the science of symbolism?"
15067But how then am I to set to work? 15067 But if I have nothing to say to Her?"
15067But is it really she? 15067 But is this possible to any but a saint?
15067But it can be done?
15067But why Saint Columba?
15067But why, then, did not the Virgin protect Her particular church more effectually?
15067But why,remarked Durtal,"is the son of Jonas in the midst of the Old Testament?
15067But you must have been very dull travelling about alone?
15067But, first, will it not be our bounden duty to erect a tower for Our Lady of the Seven Dolours, such as we find in many churches? 15067 Did you ever take laughing gas?"
15067Do you know,said Durtal,"that this grotto is prefigured in the Old Testament by a human structure of almost official character?
15067Do you know,said he,"the theories of Honorius of Autun as to the symbolism of the censer?"
15067Do you like the dish, our friend?
15067Father,said she,"will they cut his moustache off if he enters the cloister?"
15067From my lodgings?
15067Greediness?
15067How did the glass- makers discover and compound that twelfth century blue?
15067How do you account for that?
15067How is that to be done?
15067How is that, Monsieur l''Abbé?
15067How is that?
15067How many worshippers can the Cathedral contain? 15067 How of railway stations?"
15067I am simply bored to death,said he to himself,"and why?"
15067I do not say-- but--"But what?
15067I? 15067 Imaginary zoology was far more amusing!--Why, what is this vegetable?"
15067In all this obscurity,Durtal went on,"is it at least possible to discern some dim landmarks, some vague law?
15067Indeed-- then if there are any, do they lead the same life as the Fathers?
15067Is it known?
15067Is it not also the smoke- stained shrine, the gloomy retreat, constructed for black Virgins? 15067 Is not this the prototype of the cave of Chartres and the well of the Strong Saints?
15067Is the chapel ancient?
15067It is astounding, certainly; but is this the only instance of such infernal filth?
15067It is everywhere adulterated, I suppose?
15067My trunks?
15067Now, from a practical point of view, what has the influence of symbolism been on souls?
15067Now, what is the reason? 15067 Now, what is the very special character of the mysticism of the East?
15067Oh, our friend, must that gentle Jesus, as the Venerable Jeanne says, be for ever the poor man pining for admittance at the door of our heart? 15067 Perhaps he may have cured lunatics and healed those possessed?"
15067Really?
15067Shall we now inquire into the iconography of the right- hand portal? 15067 So you heard I had been to Communion?"
15067Still, he is, I suppose, free to come and go-- his actions are free?
15067Take Saint Thomas, the Treasure of God, as Saint Bridget calls him: where was he born? 15067 Take the figurative sense of the walls and translate that; the great walls are representative of the four Evangelists, Can you find plants for them?"
15067The Abbé Gévresin has guided me so far, but how? 15067 The gain to my soul?
15067The origin? 15067 The ruby, the garnet, the aqua- marine; are they speechless?"
15067The tansy?
15067Then Madame Bavoil is a saint?
15067Then St. Hildegarde made a study of natural history in its relations to medicine and magic?
15067Then is there nothing, absolutely nothing, to the credit side for the Church?
15067Then it is a very different thing from the Benedictine service of nuns in the Rue Monsieur in Paris?
15067Then the rule in the thirteenth century was to place the Virgin in the northern portion?
15067Then you are fully determined,said the Abbé Gévresin,"to write a paper for your_ Review_ on allegorical beasts?"
15067Then you have just come back from Solesmes?
15067These women were the sieves through which His grace was poured, and what need I care whether the instruments were of yesterday or to- day? 15067 This is male incense; do you see those oblong tears, those almost transparent drops of faded amber?
15067To return to our starting point,said the Abbé Gévresin:"what was the birthplace of the Gothic?"
15067Was the life I led there unlike that I lead here? 15067 Well, but then what is the significance of Saint Agnes''mantle of green lined with orange?"
15067Well, now, shall I harness myself to a history of this venerable Abbess? 15067 Well, our friend, are you dreaming?"
15067Well, then, what is there to hinder you? 15067 Well, where would be the harm?
15067Well,said Durtal,"but supposing that Madame Bavoil should wish to plant a liturgical garden, what should she select for it?
15067What am I to do? 15067 What can I send to the_ Review_?"
15067What do you mean by the word?
15067What do you think of the monastery?
15067What does she say, Madame Bavoil?
15067What does that matter?
15067What exactly is a Canon; what are his functions, and the origin of his office?
15067What is really the matter with him?
15067What oblates? 15067 What then is the system of this Institution?"
15067What would you do in my place?
15067Where could you find a grander shrine or a more sublime dwelling for Our Mother?
15067Where do you find that?
15067Wherefore this difference? 15067 Why is that?"
15067Why is this?
15067Why regret Paris-- why, indeed?
15067Why, above all, have created La Salette and then sacrificed it, as it were? 15067 Why, are not you going off to a convent?"
15067Why, what is the matter?
15067Why,said Durtal,"this substance suggests to me the idea of a symbolism of odours; has it ever been worked out?"
15067Why? 15067 Why?"
15067Why?
15067Will you come the day after to- morrow at about two o''clock? 15067 Will you eat nothing more?"
15067Would not you like to see it?
15067Yes; but what is the ligure or ligurite?
15067Yes; but where can I find the necessary strength to brush myself clean from this dust of the soul?
15067You do n''t get the like at La Trappe, our friend, eh?
15067Ah, how is it to be kept under till the day shall come when it shall be quelled?
15067And as he spoke the despairing words,"My God, my God, wherefore is my spirit heavy, and why dost Thou afflict me?"
15067And do you remember the Simeon, the Virgin, and the St. Anne at Reims?
15067And for the hundredth time he asked himself,--"Am I happier than I was before I was converted?"
15067And how much then do you suppose he has left to live on, if you deduct his charities?
15067And is not the monarch''s character even more enigmatical than his career?
15067And is not this the case to a great extent with the various interpretations that you accept from Sister Emmerich?
15067And seeing that Durtal was listening to him with interest, the Abbé came back to his seat, and said,--"What is a symbol?
15067And then might we not conclude that the first is symbolical of the Virgin and the second of Her Son?
15067And what is time, or past or present, when we speak of God?
15067And what, after all, were these trifles, these minor details in the splendid completeness of the cloister?
15067And where is he?"
15067And why, if her name is not in the Book of Life, has she a glory?
15067And you, are you packing your trunks?"
15067Apart from the probable purpose of dividing the height into two equal parts in order to rest the eye, has this string- course any other meaning?
15067Are not these mere old women''s remedies, precious ointments, quack medicines, for which the pious and virtuous have a weakness?"
15067Are we then in the presence of that sovereign?
15067Are you still satisfied with her?"
15067Besides, have not the standards of measurement been different at different times?
15067Besides, if I were in difficulties, would not my Friends Above come to advise me?"
15067But come, in the absence of early Scriptures what do the seers say?
15067But does not the fern bear a symbolical meaning?"
15067But if so, where are those wonderful representations of Genesis hidden?"
15067But is that quite certain?
15067But ought not Confession to display violet rather than red; and how, in any case, are we to account for Confirmation being figured in yellow?"
15067But the postulants-- the novices?
15067But then, in spite of the exquisite array of angels, is this picture monotonous and dull?
15067But this angel with a nimbus, standing barefoot under a canopy, supporting a sun- dial against his breast, what does he mean, what is he doing?
15067But what have these two persons to do with the life of the Virgin?"
15067But which?
15067But, then, where is decent glass to be had?"
15067By the way, Monsieur l''Abbé, had you not some remarks to communicate on the zoology of the Scriptures?"
15067By what right does the author of that admirable book''Ecclesiastes''find a place in these ranks of honour?"
15067Can they hear the inane exclamations of the tourists who laugh to see them so stiff and so lengthy?
15067Did he, then, sincerely long for suffering and penance?
15067Did they cause the death of their companions, the five other statues that have vanished for ever from the little assembly?
15067Did you not tell me that you especially devote yourself to ladies who can still condescend to take an interest in Our Lord in this town?"
15067Do not you think, Monsieur l''Abbé, that these youths occupy their bodies just enough for suffering and to expiate the sins of others?
15067Do they listen, through the closed doors, to the wailing breath of heart- broken psalms, and the roaring tide of the organ?
15067Do they, as many saints have done, smell the fetor of sin, the foul reek of evil in the souls that pass by them?
15067Do you recall Our Lady of Paris, later, I believe, by a century?
15067Does Sister Emmerich speak of him?"
15067Does it embody any particular idea?
15067Does not He take note of our intentions?
15067Does not the Lord know when we mean well?
15067Had he expiated his apostacy and his fall?
15067Had he forgotten La Trappe, where the food was far more innutritious and the rule far stricter?
15067Has she attained to the perfect negation of all things?
15067Have you brought us the article on the Angelico, as you promised?
15067He was silent; then, changing the subject, he said,--"And do you still hold communion with Heaven, Madame Bavoil?"
15067He was the patron Saint of Spain; but did he really ever preach in those lands, as Saint Jerome and Saint Isidor assert, and the Toledo Breviary?
15067Here there was nothing; and yet where were there more promising conditions for the performance of Gregorian music than at Chartres?
15067His meditations were interrupted by a ring at the bell:"Why, has the Abbé Plomb really come out in spite of the gale?"
15067How are we to make sure?"
15067How is it that the Bishop, the priests, the Canons do not prohibit such treason?
15067How, indeed, could it have been anything but still- born?
15067I?
15067In fact such colour can only be conceived of-- if at all-- as used in small chapels; why stain the walls of a cathedral with motley?
15067In short, His will be done!--And you, our friend, do you still think of taking shelter in a cloister?"
15067In what lands did he preach the new faith?
15067Is it because there are too many and various communities in the Church?
15067Is it by reason of the poverty of the monasteries?
15067Is it not for my benefit that these good friends are laying their heads together?
15067Is it not so, my dear colleague?"
15067Is it that of an architect, of a workman, or of a night watchman on the look- out at that time in the tower?
15067Is it the expression of some phrase relating to the Virgin, in whose name the cathedral is dedicated?"
15067Is it, then, the austerity of the rule?
15067Is not ivory indeed the most admirable material to serve as a sanctum for the most pure white flesh of the Sacrament?"
15067Is not that true?"
15067Is not the chrysolite, the symbol of wisdom, a very exact image of the_ Sedes Sapientiae_?
15067Is not the sentiment exquisite of our Lord dwelling in the heart of the Virgin, the Ivory Tower of the Canticles?
15067Is not this picture of the Pilgrims to Emmaus a typical instance of this?
15067Is she living the life of Union with God beyond the worlds, where time is no more?
15067Is that the fact?
15067Is this much- talked- of work over- praised?
15067It is you, Madame Bavoil?"
15067It may also be remarked that on a pane in our church we read_ Petrus Bal...;_ is this the name, complete or defaced, of a donor or of a painter?
15067It must once have existed at Chartres-- but where?
15067Lentils, for instance-- you grow lentils?"
15067May they, without offence to God, enjoy a_ Charlotte_?
15067Might we not conceive of a fabulous spider, of which the key- stone is the body and the ribs stretching under the vaults are the legs?
15067No?
15067Of what use would it be to mention the nationalities to which they belong?
15067Or is it, on the contrary, the final stage where it is Thy will that I should remain fixed?
15067Or, admitting that the statement is correct as to all Romanesque churches, is it equally so with regard to Gothic churches?
15067Shall we now examine it, first as a whole, and then in detail?
15067Shall you mention in your article these accompaniments to the saints?"
15067Should the same tale be repeated, twelve hundred years later, of pitiless households, inhospitable inns, and crowded rooms?
15067So why?"
15067Still it is needful to understand oneself; but of what use is it for me to try to sound the well of my own soul?
15067Still, that is not the only question to be considered-- there is something else-- and besides, who knows?"
15067The cathedrals of Reims, of Paris, of Laon, and many more, were to have had spires rising from their towers; and where are they?
15067The dreaded arrival of the king bent on tearing her from her Abbey at Poitiers to replace her on the throne?
15067Their rule seems to be mild; you will live in a world of learned men and writers; what more would you have?"
15067Then do you not perceive the meaning of this juxtaposition?
15067Then do you understand gardening?"
15067Under what form could she picture to herself the trains she heard thundering and shrieking?"
15067Was She not, above all, the living and thrice Blessed Mother?
15067Was he the architect, the sculptor, the donor of this porch-- or the butcher?
15067Was he, like his fathers, received into Abraham''s bosom?
15067Was it not natural, then, that He should take to prefigure Him, a man who, like others, had sinned?"
15067Was it not the case of the mote and the beam, with the parts reversed-- imperfections discerned in others, when he was so far their inferior?
15067Was not She the bottomless Well of goodness, the Bestower of the gifts of good Patience, the Opener of dry and obdurate hearts?
15067Was not the very absurdity of it a proof that this notion was one of the presentiments that we sometimes feel without understanding it?
15067Well, is that pretty well expressed, our friend?
15067Well, shall I tell you the truth?
15067What are they nowadays?
15067What do the commentators think of him?"
15067What do you say to that narrative?"
15067What is he like?"
15067What is it that you want to know, exactly?"
15067What is the meaning of these enigmas?
15067What were the circumstances and reasons of his call?
15067What were the men who executed such work?
15067What, then, is the use of expatiating on the kind of punishments to be endured?
15067Whence did this inferiority proceed?
15067Where can I unearth that?
15067Where were we?"
15067Who was Robir?
15067Why be alarmed beforehand?
15067Why did the Abbé Plomb promise the Benedictines that he would take me with him?
15067Why do you not retire to a Trappist convent?"
15067Why not?''
15067Why should the phoenix here typify Chastity, for it is not used generally in that sense in the Bird- books of the Middle Ages?
15067Why the weasel?
15067Why then go?
15067Why then humbug Him with these feints and grimaces?
15067Why was this?
15067Why, am I not a peasant?
15067Why, then, fail to understand that God should have chosen him as a precursor?
15067Why, then, who would dare to look at them?
15067Why?
15067Will you come with me, our friend?"
15067With my large Crucifix on my breast, my gown looking like a nun''s-- every one asked:''What can that woman be?''
15067Would it not be better to depart than to drag myself thus, with such a bad grace, into Thy presence?
15067Would not Chartres be a sort of monastic haven, of open cloister, where he could enjoy his liberty and not have to give up his comforts?
15067Would not the tide of worship cleanse everything, and wash away the small defects of men, like straws in a stream?
15067Would you like me now to inform you in a few words as to the allegories set forth in the aisles?"
15067Would you like some instances?
15067Would you, yourself, repulse anyone who paid you a compliment, however clumsily, if you thought he meant to please you by it?
15067You are not ignorant, I suppose, of the exploits in which Satan indulged against that saint?"
15067You have read''_ De Bestiis et aliis rebus_,''by Hugh of Saint Victor?"
15067You know the portions which survived the wreck of that mad attempt?"
15067You know, no doubt, Quicherat''s theories of Gothic art?"
15067You remember the pillars?
15067You talk of writing the Lives of Saints; will you not work at them far better in the silence of the country than in the uproar of Paris?"
15067in the culture of wrong- doing, who nevertheless find mercy at Her feet?
15067said he;"the gas which sends you to sleep and is used in surgery for short operations?
15067she exclaimed,--"Do you suppose that anywhere else you will find, side by side, such an image of the contemplative life and the active life?"
15067she went on, looking at him over her spectacles,"do you suppose that by moving your soul from place to place you can change it?
15067where am I?"
18820''A gift, my lord?
18820''Am I wanted?''
18820''Can I ever forget it?''
18820''Do n''t you think you had better be wheeled to your room?
18820''Do you then desire to lead an isolated life?''
18820''Have I not?''
18820''He with whom you passed the night?''
18820''I presume, Aunt Sarah, you could as little appreciate the attractions to be found in a walk of over twenty miles in ten hours?''
18820''I presume, then, Elsie, you also have had adventures?''
18820''Is that all?''
18820''Nay, twenty sestertia, was it not?''
18820''Nor that I won money of you?''
18820''Surely that thing was not done?''
18820''That will do, Williams.--Hill is getting better, is he?''
18820''The state of the case is it?''
18820''The whole allotment?''
18820''What care I for your master?''
18820''What else would you wish?
18820''What ho, master?''
18820''What transit was that, Lucy?''
18820''Who, mamma?''
18820''Williams, have you heard how Mr. Hill is to- day?
18820''Williams, who was that young man I saw come to the door this morning?''
18820''Would you be good, and fill each human duty?
18820''Ye said it in your_ haste_, did ye, David?
18820***** Meanwhile, where is Harriet?
18820***** Reader, what think you?
18820...''So you think that your Delilah is striving to gain time by all these pious and otherwise interesting remarks?''
18820Am I not right, comrades?
18820And did you not,_ entre nous_, like it better than those stiff, formal views of the French and Italian cities?
18820And for me?''
18820And if more pleasing, why cling to the effete and cumbrous tyrannies of a soulless classicism?
18820And if the gods felt really outraged, why did they let their thunders sleep so long?
18820And, in very truth, is it not?
18820Architecture?
18820Are not such studies more beneficial and satisfactory than the idleness and play which fill up so much of our lives?
18820Are we waiting for somebody to invent it?
18820Are you not afraid you entertain a species of repulsion toward your fellow men?''
18820Because a lie is a respectable lie, believed and patronized by respectable people, shall you respect it?
18820But can the doctrine of man''s antiquity be made to harmonize with the essentials of Christianity and the inspiration of the Scriptures?
18820But have we not Public Opinion, stronger than any despot?
18820But if such be a true statement of the case, what are these good ladies to do?
18820But what if the fact should change?
18820But what would you expect?
18820But will not error do just the same?
18820Can it be made to harmonize with what is now known as orthodox and evangelical Christianity?
18820Can it be that he pretended his intoxication the more easily to outwit me?
18820Can we get along without a little of his help?
18820Could it be that during those few months of absence he had learned to think less dearly of her?
18820Could it be that the angry look was for her, and that it could be justified by any word that she had ever spoken or any duty that she had neglected?
18820Did you ever consider the superior elegance of a corner house?
18820Do you not believe that they will constantly feel cruel disappointments, infinite tortures, and the deepest anguish?''
18820Do you think the old German burghers built in any regular style?
18820Do you think they can find in the family the realization of the brilliant dream caressed by them from the earliest years of infancy?
18820Had he not said that something had made him angry?
18820Have we forgotten Lawrence?
18820Have you ever seen a street view of Bruges or Nuremberg, those fantastic old cities of medià ¦ val Germany?
18820Hereaway, is not the Devil mightier?
18820How did Gus turn out?
18820How is a divine, who has already said that the_ Bible teaches_ the modern origin of man, to avoid panic fears?
18820How is it best performed?
18820How will I remember what happened during that awful pause?
18820How_ could_ a man preach truth, framed in such a staring lie?
18820I find, next in order, the following:''So you wish me to_ prove_ that we were married, do you?
18820Is n''t it terrible?''
18820It may be strong preaching, but how can one help it?
18820May I not, in my turn, ask if your feelings are quite Christian?
18820May it not be that I paid too high a price for his friendship, and hence have a right to be angry?''
18820Might it not be, after all, that this great happiness, with its tender whisperings and caresses, would ever continue unbroken, as in past times?
18820Now what shall be done?''
18820Now, take the truth, tear away the lies patched about it, tell it all, and you have quenched that particular lie that worried you, do you not see?
18820Of what use would a garment be, though ever so elaborate, if it did not fit?
18820Our warehouses and even our factories might become imposing objects if appropriately conceived, for is not labor ennobling?
18820Perhaps you do not care to hear the rest?''
18820Quit her husband, did I say?
18820Since we are so fond of the classic, why not have chariots for carriages, and triremes instead of gunboats and steamers?
18820So far so good, but--?
18820Such being practically their attitude, what are the real demands and needs in the case?
18820The fair or foul deceiver( who knows?)
18820The question in the child''s catechism,''_ Who was the first man?_''will by and by be easier asked than answered.
18820The reply was,''Why-- do you not see?
18820This is what is done in painting and other arts, and why not in architecture?
18820WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
18820WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
18820WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
18820Was it then so great dishonor For that chief so young and brave-- Who had led them on to the battle-- To be with them in the grave?
18820Was it_ done_ like the folding doors?
18820Was not the play as I have stated it?''
18820Was not the poetry more pleasing than the prose?
18820Well, Dorcas, now you have finished the book, what do you think of it?
18820Well, and the final conclusion to all this?
18820Were my new slaves sent in last night?''
18820Were they only a pretence at teeth?
18820What can I say?
18820What could be happier than the cupids of the brush and comb on the frontispiece?
18820What demon put it into his head so suddenly to look for bone and muscle rather than for girlish graces?''
18820What do you see?
18820What healthy- minded person loves not to behold the eye- sparkle of pure admiration between young man and maid?
18820What if not only one, but many fossil human bones should be found?
18820What matters the amount, when I paid you upon the moment, and you now have the sum, whatever it may be, in your own purse?''
18820What must be thought of an otherwise educated body of men who would willingly reduce the faith of the Christian world to such a posture as that?
18820What now, in conclusion, is to be the effect of this new development of science on the received and traditionary thinking of the time?
18820What then?
18820What_ has_ occurred in the past annals of this planet?
18820What_ is_ fact?
18820What_ is_ the actual and true history of its bygone ages, and of the dwellers therein?
18820What_ is_ truth?
18820Where is his own?''
18820Who would ever notice Boston State House or the Baltimore Cathedral, but for their elevated and central positions?
18820Why can you not be content with the ordinary highways, where people travel comfortably in good boats and rail cars?
18820Why crush out all symptoms of natural growth to make room for the unsightly exotic?
18820Why not?
18820Why should Congress release Arkansas from the payment of her State obligations?
18820Why should the tone be changed now?
18820Why thus justify the repudiation of her bonds?
18820Why, after all, should she presume to criticize matters which did not arouse the discontent of the wisest of men?
18820Would we not despise such a paltry method of making matter serve for mind-- such a miserable make- shift to save the labor of invention?
18820Would you not say that their glory was gone-- their beauty departed?
18820You know that for months all Rome has been preparing for that time?''
18820such as are totally unfit associates for two well- bred young women?''
18820what do?
19857, I ought to have said,Are we straightening the line?"
19857Capital, he replied,"Wo n''t you come and have lunch with me tomorrow?"
19857Did you come over with the men?
19857Do you take me for a spy?
19857Funf kinder?
19857Hello, boys, how are you getting on?
19857How can we desert them?
19857How can you find out?
19857Ja, ja,Then I said,"Gutt drinken?"
19857Well,I said,"do n''t you know we always read in the papers, when a man is hanged, that before he went out to the gallows he ate a hearty breakfast?
19857What''s that?
19857What''s the matter with your text now, Canon?
19857Where are the infantry?
19857Where do you live?
19857Who does he say he is?
19857Who is in command?
19857Whyhe said,"what better training could you have than you are getting here?
19857A French lady said to me"How can we go on much longer; our man- power is nearly exhausted?"
19857As I was marching beside them, a sergeant called out to me,"Where are we going, Sir?"
19857At once, we were challenged,"Halt, who are you?"
19857Could any performer ask for a more sympathetic hearing?
19857Could it be possible that England was about to be crushed under the heel of a foreign tyrant?
19857Had all our precautions been in vain?
19857He brought them quickly to attention by calling out,"Who are you?"
19857He laughed at this and said,"How will you protect yourself, Sir, if the enemy should get into the trench?"
19857He looked round and said,"You call that a gun?
19857He said,"Where is it?"
19857He stopped and turned to me and said,"I know what you have been trying to do for me, Sir, is there any hope?"
19857How could I refuse, or enter upon a discussion of the validity of Anglican Orders?
19857How long will the lecture last?"
19857How many of those men will ever come back?
19857How many of those who had been with us at the dawn of 1917 had passed away?
19857How would it be brought about?
19857I asked the German,"Gutt wasser?"
19857I asked,"Where are your officers?"
19857I called out,"Is anybody there?"
19857I recognized them as the 16th Battalion, Canadian Scottish, and I called out,"Where are you going, boys?"
19857I said to myself,"Has old England lost the War after all?"
19857I said to one of the men,"Is this a sleeping hero?"
19857I said,"How old are you, Cope?"
19857I was just near the large gateway, however, when a most stentorian voice shouted out,"Halt, who goes there?"
19857If death awaited us, what nobler passage could there be to Eternity than such a death in such a cause?
19857Immediately the young despatch rider came up to me and said,"Who are you, who are stopping a British officer in the performance of his duty?
19857In my heart went up the cry,"How long, O Lord, how long?"
19857Instead of saying,"Is this a general retreat?
19857Is n''t that fine?"
19857It seemed so ghostly and mysterious that I called out,"Is anyone here?"
19857Many and many a time when the war from our point of view has been going badly, and men would ask me,"How about the war, Sir?"
19857My friend went over to him and said,"Do n''t you know that Canon Scott told us that this really is n''t a pack, but it''s the Cross of Christ?"
19857Of course you know I do n''t mind being shot or hanged by the Germans, but, if I am, who will write the poems of the War?"
19857One question which was asked me again and again in trenches and dugouts and billets was--"Are we winning the war?"
19857Or were we on the eve of a victory which was going to shatter the iron dominion of the feudal monster?
19857Should I ever again see the splendid battalions and the glad and eager lives pressing on continuously to Victory?
19857Should they wear old clothes or should they be arrayed in their best?
19857Someone asked me afterwards if it had"put my wind up?"
19857Someone called out,"What are those boats?"
19857The Colonel looked up with bleary eyes and said,"Shall I put him in the guardroom?"
19857The band struck up the strains of"D''ye ken John Peel?
19857The captain accordingly came over and greeting me pleasantly said,"How do you do, Sir?"
19857The captain then said,"Who are you, Sir?"
19857The only question was, had we taken the Germans by surprise, or were they waiting with massed forces to resist our attack?
19857The spy with a guttural voice then said,"I suppose I may go, Sir?"
19857Then I said,"Why do n''t you send a runner?"
19857They then came up to me and the first one peered at me in( p. 040) the darkness and said in abrupt military fashion,"Who are you?"
19857Voices from different parts would say,"May I have one, Sir?"
19857Was it to be a true Easter for the world, and a resurrection to a new and better life?
19857Was there a table in the whole world at which it was a greater honour to sit?
19857Were the Germans aware of our contemplated assault?
19857Were they lying in full strength like a crouching lion ready to burst upon us in fury at the first warning of our approach?
19857Were we not wanted in France?
19857Were we really making any progress?
19857What Briton could endure to live under the yoke or by the permission of a vulgar German autocrat?
19857What could the enraged Saul do on such occasions but forgive, throw down the javelin and listen to the music of the harping David?
19857What did fate hold in store?
19857What did the enemy''s quietness portend?
19857What did the next twenty- four hours hold in store for us?
19857What great and fierce battle would lay the Germans low?
19857What higher praise could be desired?
19857What more could one want?
19857What was it going to mean to us?
19857When I asked them one night"Which shall it be, Boys?"
19857When I came to their lines, to my dismay I was halted by a sentry with a fixed bayonet, who shouted in the darkness,"Who goes there?"
19857When I got in, I said to him quite innocently,"Is this a general retreat?"
19857When do you think this God dam war will be over, eh?"
19857When was this life going to end?
19857When were we going to leave?
19857Where could one find a nobler, knightlier body of young men?
19857Who amongst us would be spared to see it?
19857Who will ever forget the road up to it, and the corner near the ruined fosse, which was always liable to be shelled unexpectedly?
19857Why were we( p. 033) kept there?
19857or"Are we pinching the Salient?"
19857or,"Are we winning the war, Sir?"
16458''Wert thou the cause of my mother''s death?'' 16458 A dirty trick, but what wilt thou do now?"
16458An arrow?
16458And delighteth he not in incantations of shamans and jossakeed( inspired prophets) and in self- torture?
16458And hast thou no fear, little sister?
16458And if she had not left thee free,queried Pocahontas,"what wouldst thou have done?"
16458And the journey through the woods, didst thou fear for my safety then that thou didst follow all the way?
16458And thou, my Brother,she queried eagerly,"will thy squaw and thy children come soon?"
16458And what doth Pocahontas in the woods at night?
16458And what is thy will?
16458And who then will teach me; how shall I learn?
16458And whom wilt thou choose, Pocahontas?
16458And why did ye come ashore on my land and build yourselves lodges on my island?
16458And why?
16458And yet thou dost hesitate? 16458 Are these the fire- tubes of which we have heard?"
16458Art thou a king?
16458Aye,answered Smith,"art thou strong enough to carry one to Werowocomoco?"
16458But thou dost not plan to return to Virginia for a long; time yet?
16458But what meant the songs and dances in the hut in the woods, Matoaka?
16458But where do the shamans call to him?
16458But why, Pocahontas,asked another of her companions,"dost thou not use more of these red beads?
16458But why?
16458But,asked Nautauquas slowly and gravely, as if weighing the matter,"why should we wish to destroy these white men?
16458By what magic are ye served? 16458 Captain John Smith hath written to the Queen about me?"
16458Claw- of- the- Eagle,she whispered,"is it thou?
16458Come,called Pocahontas to her;"why dost thou tarry, lazy one?"
16458Did she ill- use thee also?
16458Did the bear, thy bedfellow, scratch thee?
16458Did thy squaws make thy coat for thee when thou hadst slain that-- that new beast?
16458Do white men have squaws, too?
16458Dost thou desire, Matoaka, that these men should be freed?
16458Dost thou hear that, Pocahontas?
16458Dost thou know that?
16458Dost thou remember the day when, lying wounded before thy door, thou didst make me promise to be ever a friend to Jamestown and the English?
16458Dost thou then like these paleface strangers and their ways?
16458Hast thou forgiven me, my uncle?
16458Hast thou forgot thy father''s lodge now that thou hast dwelt among these strangers?
16458Hast thou not heard our father''s word that no one shall go near the island where the strangers be?
16458Hast thou seen him yet? 16458 Hath Your Majesty heard how men speak of Captain Smith in the Colony?"
16458Hath he naught to eat?
16458Hath thy manitou spoken?
16458Have they bewitched thee, Matoaka?
16458He is dead?
16458I have kept my promise, Father, have I not?
16458I heard thee singing, little White Feather; what was thy song?
16458I remember, Matoaka; how could I forget it?
16458I see enough,he answered, turning his head from side to side;"but where dwelleth the white man''s Okee?"
16458I think,she answered, speaking slowly,"that within me is an arrow-- not of wood and stone, but one of manitou-- how shall I explain it to thee?
16458Is Wansutis by her hearth?
16458Is it indeed our little Matoaka?
16458Is it more comfortable than our mats?
16458Is it then so hard to forget an old lodge and other ways?
16458Is that too for me?
16458Is yon the squaw of the great white werowance?
16458It is easy,said one,"to pull up a young oak sapling, whereas who may uproot a full- grown tree?"
16458Knoweth The Powhatan that she hath left his lodge?
16458Matoaka,he called,"whither goest thou?"
16458Matoaka,he cried, stepping from the shadow;"what dost thou here alone at night?"
16458My children ask of me''What shall we do with these captives?'' 16458 My father,"she cried,"dost thou remember the old days in Wingandacoa when thou earnest first to Werowocomoco and wert my prisoner?"
16458Pocahontas,exclaimed Opechanchanough,"how camest thou here ahead of us, and in that dark robe?"
16458Shaman,she asked,"tell me where went the manitou of my sister while she lay there dead?"
16458So thou hast no drink of forgetfulness to give me?
16458That must thou not do,remonstrated Pocahontas, trying not to laugh; but Uttamatomakkin grunted:"Why should I not do what a squaw doth?"
16458The God of the Christians?
16458The same herb for both,snapped the squaw;"for whom wilt thou brew it, for thine adopted son, thou who art no squaw and too young to have a son?
16458Then the Lady Rebecca doth not like our country?
16458Then thou wilt go?
16458Thou hast heard, Matoaka?
16458Was it because he wanted to give a present in return?
16458Was it one of this village?
16458Was she fair?
16458Was she more beautiful than I?
16458Welcome, little Sister,he said,"and how dost thou like thy father''s new robes?"
16458Wert thou afraid to come into my father''s country and caused fear in him and all his people but me, and fearest thou here I should call thee father? 16458 What beasts are those?"
16458What did the old savage mean?
16458What dost thou behold, son of Wansutis?
16458What dost thou here, Wansutis?
16458What dost thou here?
16458What dost thou mean by such strange words?
16458What doth he look like?
16458What doth it signify?
16458What doth thy pattern mean, Pocahontas?
16458What good hath thy god of them?
16458What hast thou done with him? 16458 What hast thou done with my son, Wansutis?
16458What hast thou done with my son?
16458What hast thou done with_ my_ son?
16458What hath befallen my white Brother?
16458What is it thou dost, Uttamatomakkin?
16458What is it, Matoaka; what words wait to cross the ford of thy lips?
16458What is the meaning of all this, Smith?
16458What is this mantle made of?
16458What is yon curious thing, Pocahontas?
16458What meaneth this, Matoaka?
16458What news, my Brother?
16458What see ye?
16458What then are thy thoughts of?
16458What will all the ladies do at a ball?
16458What will they do, Master Bishop?
16458What would ye have me do, men?
16458When Adam delved and Eve span Who was then the gentleman?
16458Where is he now?
16458Where is my child?
16458Where thinkest thou he can have gone?
16458Where was it they nearly brained thee, Captain?
16458Where wilt thou go?
16458Who is he, and what doth he say?
16458Who may that be?
16458Who taught thee thy medicine?
16458Why didst thou leave him?
16458Why do ye put always flowers on that table?
16458Why dost thou care to come here?
16458Why dost thou wear such garments? 16458 Why doth he not get up?"
16458Why should anyone make sport of thee? 16458 Why shouldst thou have seen it all?"
16458Wilt thou eat a persimmon?
16458Wilt thou not adorn thyself,he asked,"with the bright chains of the white men?"
16458Wilt_ thou_ be their gaoler, Matoaka?
16458Wouldst thou not like to try to wear clothes such as our women wear? 16458 --Can war canoes find their way on it?"
16458--"Come the good oysters from its depths?"
16458--"If he live how shall we be safe?"
16458And how canst thou build such great canoes with wings?"
16458And if The Powhatan and his people had sworn friendship to him, would that not mean that through him the colony should be saved?
16458And this, too, was what Pocahontas was thinking: what would her father do with this man?
16458Are ye in truth like unto us; do ye die as we do or can your medicine preserve you forever like Okee?
16458Art thou, the daughter of a mighty werowance,_ afraid_ to try to escape?"
16458As they walked along the path from the fort to Jamestown''s one street he asked:"Tell me, my little jailor, how came The Powhatan to set me free?
16458Canst thou change thyself into an animal at will?
16458Captain?"
16458Catanaugh said nothing, but Nautauquas laid his hand on his sister''s arm and looked her in the eyes searchingly:"Art thou happy?"
16458Claw- of- the- Eagle knew that it was useless to plead and yet he pleaded:"Come back with me, Matoaka; what are the white men to thee and me?"
16458Claw- of- the- Eagle?
16458Could not one of our shamans or our braves make it obey him also?"
16458Didst thou think Englishmen could live forever without wife or chick at their hearths?"
16458Dost thou remember when I came at night through the forest to warn thee?"
16458Doth he love me still?"
16458Doth not her absence cause thee some anxiety?"
16458Every day she would ask, sometimes Mistress Lettice, sometimes Sir Thomas Dale, or anyone with whom she spoke:"When cometh back the Captain?
16458Father, wilt thou?"
16458Gradually their curiosity got the better of their fear and they began to question:"How many leagues does it stretch, Pocahontas?"
16458Had he not proved his valor on the warpath and under torture while they were only gaming with plumpits?
16458Had they not wounded him and carried her off?
16458Hast thou brought the provisions thou didst promise?
16458Hast thou not seen old Father Noughmass when the bees swarm over his neck and hands?
16458Hath the old savage asked of thee yet our errand, Smith?"
16458Have ye thought to try to frighten my people to sell thee of their stores?
16458He shook his niece, saying:"What meaneth this, I ask?
16458Her brothers and sisters came to see her occasionally; but what purpose could one of them have in stealing her child?
16458How could Smith be alive when she knew that he was dead?
16458How did Smith know, they asked, that these savages were acting at the command of their chief?
16458How have they dealt with thee in thy captivity?"
16458How mighty are thy medicine- men?
16458How much dost thou desire to make me owe thee, Pocahontas, my life, my freedom, my return home and now this pleasure?"
16458I have stored away as many as a squirrel stores nuts for popanow-- what keeps the ship from floating with the tide down to the great water?
16458If at times its spray dashed too high, could he be angry?
16458If he were a strong man who defied her command to give up the grandson of Powhatan, how should she compel him?
16458If she did not take it, what lay ahead of her?
16458Is it not hard, my father?
16458Is it not so?"
16458Is it not so?"
16458Is there news of the return of a war party or will they celebrate some great festival?"
16458Is''t true?"
16458It was quite impossible for the child to have got away alone; yet who would take him away?
16458Lady Rebecca, when thou returnest thither?
16458Must thou, too, my Brother, stint thyself?"
16458Opechanchanough, still angry at the ridicule that a child had brought upon him, lingered to ask;"Wilt thou not punish her?"
16458Powhatan spoke sternly:"Dost thou claim him in earnestness, Matoaka?"
16458Princess?"
16458Ralph, he''s dead and buried,"they answered; and of another:"Christopher?
16458See, my son, think no evil of us; would we at one moment seek to harm and to help thee?
16458She knelt there still in silence, then she asked, hope and eagerness in her voice:"Thou wilt come back to us?"
16458Suppose he should throw in his lot altogether with this new country and take for wife this happy, free child of the aboriginal forest?
16458Then all is well with thee?"
16458Then as if a strange thought had just come to her:"Is there not food for all?
16458There she lay upon the ground, panting with emotion and passionately going over her arguments:"Why should I forsake the Okee of my fathers?
16458They are so like fire, like the blood of an enemy; why dost thou refer the white?"
16458Thou didst prevail with him, was it not so?"
16458Was he lying dead there in the forest?
16458Was it a star shining before them, that light that grew brighter and brighter?
16458Was it not merely a sudden impulse of anger that had led them to take what ought to have been given them?
16458Was she not as fleet as they in her element?
16458Was there any possible way of escape?
16458Were these savages then acquainted with pity, and what cause had she to feel it for him?
16458Were they gods enjoying a charmed life, against whom neither bow nor shaman''s medicine might avail?
16458What are those strange things that speed over the waves?
16458What boded it for them both and for their races?
16458What consideration after all did he owe to those who had not considered him?
16458What could he mean, she wondered, by first trying to kill and then to feast the white men?
16458What didst thou want with him?"
16458What had Wansutis meant?
16458What hast thou done with my son?
16458What meaneth this trick?"
16458What meaneth this?"
16458What meant this coming from the rising sun of beings whose ways no man could fathom?
16458What need have ye of arms who come upon such a peaceful purpose?
16458What news hast thou of him?
16458What sayst thou, Captain?"
16458What shall I become?"
16458What was she made of?
16458What will befall Jamestown?
16458What will it avail you to take by force what you may quickly have by love, or destroy them that provide you food?
16458When she had finished she threw herself down at his feet, asking:"Dost thou like my song, my brother?"
16458Whence come they-- from the rim of the world?"
16458Who knew what treatment she would receive away from her own people?
16458Why dost thou take pleasure in such things?"
16458Why doth that man sit with his legs before him?"
16458Why hast thou hair upon thy mouth?
16458Why should I hate what my brothers serve?
16458Why should I prefer this god of the strangers?"
16458Why should he let her go?
16458Why should he, an English gentleman, choose her instead of a woman of his own race brought up in the manner of his people?
16458Why should she go with them?
16458Why then didst thou give me strong arms and legs and a spirit that will not be still?
16458Why, thought the Englishman, did they delay striking so long?
16458Will he come again to us?
16458Will ye promise, men?"
16458Wilt thou continue to watch over it, to do all within thy power for its welfare?"
16458Wilt thou not stop at our lodge, Claw- of- the- Eagle, and bid them bring me food for him?"
16458Worship ye an Okee?
16458Would he give presents to them all; would they have the guns to carry back with them?
16458Would his strange medicine, which those who had ventured to Jamestown had much discussed, assist him in his peril?
16458Would the time ever come again, he wondered, when he would behold a white woman sewing or spinning?
16458[ Illustration: Decorative] CHAPTER IV RUNNING THE GAUNTLET"What hath happened?"
16458am I wasted with starvation or broken with torture?
16458asked Nautauquas,"and unharmed and well?"
16458asked her jealous sister of Pocahontas,"while I had naught of it all but the shouting?"
16458did he teach her to love him?"
16458he asked affectionately;"no fear of wild animals or of our enemies?"
16458he asked,"and is this their ceremonial lodge?
16458he asked,"and where be the guards?"
16458he queried;"what dost thou mean?"
16458how hast thou harmed thyself?"
16458she cried out in a tone that rang with disappointment,"didst thou too doubt me?
16458she said to herself: was he not an enemy of her tribe?
21258Whence do you come?
21258Whither do you go?
2125833 and the square of gold, which signify the supreme place in the world assigned to the liberty of gold"?
21258Does not the Englishman, consciously or otherwise, put a curse on everything he touches?
21258How came this red- tied scoffer so far on the road of religion as to be damned?
21258How did Leo Taxil become possessed of these rituals?
21258If the Eucharist be liable to profanation, why reserve the Eucharist?
21258Is that a Manichæan doctrine?
21258Is that diabolism?
21258Is that the cultus of Lucifer?
21258Need I say that Miss Vaughan''s first impulse was to fall in worship at his feet?
21258Some time subsequently to the third of August, our witness published a volume entitled"Are there Women in Freemasonry?"
21258Under what circumstances and why did it do that?
21258When the doctor subsequently drew her on the subject of this history, she replied, after the manner of the walrus,"Do you admire the view?"
21258Where is it practised?
21258Who are its disciples?
21258Why did Signor Margiotta abandon Palladism and Masonry?
21258Why has he changed the impeachment?
21258Why was the doctor privileged to be present at these proceedings?
21258_ A House of Rottenness._ Who would possess a lingam which was an_ Open Sesame_ to devildom and not make use thereof?
19876All right,agreed the Colonel,"are you sure you know how to cook it yourself?"
19876And you really think they will finally come in?
19876Are you Canadian officers?
19876But what is the matter?
19876But what''s the matter?
19876Ca n''t you identify that car?
19876Do you know how to cook that canned asparagus?
19876Do you mean to saycried Mac, jumping from his chair in a rage,"that we ca n''t get anything to eat?"
19876Do you really believe that people will change? 19876 Have you a cold?"
19876Have you been out there long?
19876Have you ever eaten asparagus?
19876So did everybody else; anybody who says he did n''t come out here for some such reason as that is a damned liar; do n''t you think so Doc.?
19876Some speech that-- eh, what?
19876The British fleet?
19876Then what?
19876We have notI replied,"what is the sense of having a number?"
19876Well how do you think you would cook it?
19876Well what would you have?
19876Well, if they do n''t see the desperate nature of the affair in England how can you expect them to realize it in Canada?
19876Well, what in thunder did you come for; what was the big idea?
19876Well, what is it?
19876Well, what is the end going to be?
19876Well, what is the matter with you?
19876What a mess- president?
19876What about that little chop house(''The Silver Grill'') which he had frequently lauded with fulsome praise?
19876What are we out here for anyway; what are we fighting for; what is the whole bally business about; that is what I would like to know?
19876What are you stopping for?
19876What did you come out for Colonel?
19876What did you come out for?
19876What did you tell him?
19876What do you mean?
19876What do you think? 19876 What do you want it for?"
19876What good did it do them? 19876 What have we done anyway?
19876What is the feeling over there anyway?
19876What is the matter?
19876What would you do with the tough part of the stalks?
19876What''s the matter with him? 19876 What?"
19876Where did the cop get hold of you, Rad?
19876Why did n''t you salute?
19876Why do you feel sore now because other fellows you know have n''t come out? 19876 Why should a government car have a number?"
19876Would n''t it?
19876Would you boil it, Sir?
19876You had a good position and a good future in your profession over in the States; something made you come; what was it?
19876( That is war, is it not?)
19876As one of them said to Rudyard Kipling when he was down visiting them,"What were trees for if they were not to be cut down?"
19876But will Englishmen see that?
19876Cawn''t you give me somethink to buck me up, Doc please?"
19876Could it be really true that I was there in Paris in the middle of the great war?
19876Could she, or could she not, save France from the invading hosts of Germany?
19876Do n''t you think so Doc.?"
19876Favorite questions were:"What does the corner of King and Yonge streets look like?"
19876Finally he asked"Are you going to turn or not?"
19876If not why worry, for the newspapers were full of the tremendous casualties inflicted on the enemy?
19876If so why will not ten or twenty times as many planes accomplish ten or twenty times as much?
19876If the British fleet failed to- day do you know how long it would take the Germans to get over to Canada?
19876Is he a jelly fish?"
19876Is there anything more you want?"
19876Shall we go?"
19876Should the theatres be kept open?
19876Supposing the Germans just kept on discharging gas?
19876The French army must be very good to be able to hold the German back like that, must it not?
19876The first question asked when you are introduced as a scientist to Frenchmen is,"Do you know our Pasteur and his work?"
19876The woman stared at me and at the retreating child and asked,"What did she do that for?"
19876Their usual question at first when they met another soldier was,"Have you been to war or in France?"
19876Then he added,"Have you been with my army in France?"
19876They told their stories simply and invariably finished with a shrug of the shoulders and the phrase"c''est la guerre n''est ce pas?"
19876To our"Bon jour"he replied, and added"Il fait bon temps n''est ce pas?"
19876Was it possible that the greatest battle of all time was taking place at the very moment not sixty miles away?
19876Was n''t it funny, Doc.?"
19876What have they done?
19876What more could be said?
19876What more would any soldier desire?
19876Where did you leave those prisoners?"
19876Why make a fuss about it?
19876Why should not Canada be doing the same?"
19876Why worry?"
19876Would I go down to the new camp at Valcartier and look after the purification of the water supply?
19876and"How is Tommy Church?"
19876asked,"Do you think you can make the field ambulance by the bridge?"
19876do you know, Colonel, nothing gives me greater pleasure than spending the afternoon looking at piles of boxes?"
19876examined the injured man and said to the lieutenant rather brusquely,"Is that your car?"
19876said the Captain,"Eh, what, Doc.?"
19876said the officer,"are you a Canadian?"
19876should German music be played at Queen''s Hall?
19876should German waiters be still allowed in the hotels?
19876what good are they?
12088''Claptrap''--''clap''is so( he struck his hands together);''trap''is for rats-- what is, then,''claptrap''?
12088A what?
12088And what the dev-- what can I do for you?
12088And who are you?
12088But where is the station?
12088Can you tell me where I can find''Rienzi''s Address''?
12088Have I said it so that it will be clear to the listener?
12088Have I said what I intended to say?
12088Have n''t you anything?
12088Have you any business to set foot upon my property?
12088Have, eh?
12088Is that all the proposin''you''ve done in the last five mouths, Hull Parsons?
12088Madame,he said,"please tell me why shall a man, like me, like any man, be a''bluenose''?"
12088Mr. Mountain, I believe?
12088Oh,said the lad;"turtles, are they?"
12088S''pose I had n''t oughter tell on''em, but-- er-- can you keep a secret, widdy?
12088S''pose all them women had n''t refused you, Hull Parsons, what then?
12088What are you doing? 12088 What business have you got with me?"
12088What''s that?
12088Who so base as be a slave?
12088Will, eh?
12088You ai n''t asked every old maid for miles around to marry you, have you, Hull Parsons? 12088 You see those marks?"
12088( 3) Adverb: What other grief is_ as_ hard to bear?
12088( 3) Interrogative Adjective:_ What_ game do you prefer?
12088( Are the facts you use true?
12088( Are your reasons true and pertinent?
12088( Are your sentences so arranged that the relation in thought is clear?
12088( Can you render the meaning more clear by uniting short sentences into longer ones, or by separating long sentences into shorter ones?
12088( Can you suggest any other comparisons which you might have used?
12088( Did you find it necessary to make use of any other method of explanation?
12088( Do the details bear upon the main idea?
12088( Do you need more than one paragraph?
12088( Do you think the reader will form the images you wish him to form?
12088( Do your specific instances really illustrate the topic statement?
12088( Have the repetitions really made the idea of the topic sentence clearer or more emphatic or more definite?
12088( Have you arranged your details with reference to their proper time- order?
12088( Have you introduced technical terms without making the necessary explanations?
12088( Have you made clear the correct use of the words under discussion?
12088( Have you made your meaning clear?
12088( Have you mentioned all important divisions of your subject?
12088( Have you proved possibility, probability, or actuality?
12088( Have you said what you intended to say?
12088( Have you said what you meant to say?
12088( Have you told exactly what was done?
12088( Have you used any method besides that of repetition?
12088( Have you used arguments from cause, sign, or example?
12088( Have you used comparison or contrast?
12088( Have you used particulars sufficient to make your meaning clear?
12088( How many series of events have you in your narrative?
12088( Is your definition exact, or only approximately so?
12088( Is your narrative told in an interesting way?
12088( Should_ all_ athletic exercises be abolished?)
12088( Where is the incentive moment?
12088( Which sentence gives the general impression and which sentences give the details?
12088( Which sentences state causes and which state effects?
12088( Will the reader form the impression of character which you wish him to form?
12088(_ Better_ for what purpose?
12088+ Theme CVI.+--_Write a debate on some question assigned by the teacher._( To what points should you give attention in correcting your theme?
12088+ Theme LXVI.+--_Write a description of some animal, bird, or fish._( What questions should you ask yourself about each description you write?)
12088+ Theme XXXII.+--_Write a paragraph about one of narrowed subjects._( Does your paragraph have unity of thought?
12088--Walter Camp:_ Winning a"Y"_("Outlook") In which of the preceding accounts were you more interested?
12088:[ What kind of man is he?
12088A barn| is a building|?
12088A better- trained pupil, on meeting such a term as_ serrated_, will ask himself:"Have I ever seen such a leaf?
12088A bicycle| is a machine|?
12088A circle| is a portion of a plane|?
12088A conclusion?)
12088A condition regarded as doubtful:[ If it be true, what shall we think?
12088A dog| is an animal|?
12088A hawk| is a bird|?
12088A lady| is a woman|?
12088A point?
12088A quadrilateral| is a plane figure|?
12088A sneak| is a person|?
12088Adverbs of_ manner_ answer the question How?
12088Adverbs of_ place_ answer the question Where?
12088Adverbs of_ time_ answer the question When?
12088Am I my brother''s keeper?
12088Am I not free?
12088An argument which aims to answer the question, Is it expedient?
12088An_ interrogative_ sentence is one that asks a question:[ Who wrote_ Mother Goose_?].
12088Are any facts necessary to the clear understanding of it omitted?)
12088Are any of them too short or too long?)
12088Are any unnecessary details introduced?)
12088Are not these outlines of American destiny in the near- by future rational?
12088Are the arguments sufficient to bring conviction to the reader that the hero decided rightly?)
12088Are the details arranged with reference to their position in space?
12088Are the details arranged with reference to their real space order?
12088Are the following propositions true or false?
12088Are the personal pronouns and pronominal adjectives used so as to avoid ambiguity?
12088Are there some sickly locust trees there that cast a tremulous and decrepit shade upon the mangy grass plots?
12088Are they arranged with reference to the principles of arrangement?
12088Are they pertinent?
12088Are they well connected?
12088Are your details arranged with regard to their proper position in space?
12088Arguments?
12088Assume that the reader understands the game._( Will the reader get the whole contest clearly in mind?
12088Assuming that they are true, are they pertinent to the proposition?
12088At what point in the following selection is the interest greatest?
12088Before writing it is well to ask, For whom am I writing?
12088But is this proposition true of pupils in the grades as well as in the high schools?
12088But my mind was sot all along, d''ye see, widdy?"
12088But where was Lang?
12088But with brightening eyes he caught up the sentence and continued:"And the people have blue noses, eh?
12088But, when shall we be stronger?
12088By changing the order of the sentences, can you improve the paragraph?)
12088Can I form an image of it?"
12088Can a single adjective or phrase be substituted for a whole sentence?
12088Can any be omitted?
12088Can any of them be improved by re- arranging them?
12088Can anything be omitted without affecting the clearness?)
12088Can the following selection be improved by reparagraphing?
12088Can the paragraph be improved by rearranging them?
12088Can the reader follow the thread of your story to its chief point?)
12088Can the reader follow the thread of your story?
12088Can you by the choice of suitable words show more plainly the way in which it was done?
12088Can you change any of those words?
12088Can you determine from the picture anything about the character of the person?
12088Can you give examples which do not follow the dictionaries so closely as do the illustrative reports above?)
12088Can you imagine the circumstances that preceded the situation shown by the picture?
12088Can you improve it?)
12088Can you improve the description by using a different point of view?
12088Can you improve the euphony by a different choice of words?)
12088Can you improve your choice of words?
12088Can you improve your theme?
12088Can you lead up to it without too long a delay?
12088Can you make the impression of character stronger by adding some description?)
12088Can you omit any words or sentences?
12088Can you omit any_ ands_?
12088Can you picture them all at the same time, or must you turn your attention from one image to another?
12088Can you restate the following propositions so that the meaning of each will be made more definite?
12088Can you rewrite them so as to give variety?)
12088Can you say anything that will make them want to know what the point is without really telling them?
12088Can you shorten the account?
12088Can you shorten the theme without affecting the clearness or interest?
12088Can you shorten your theme without weakening it?)
12088Can you state this proposition so that it will express your own belief on the subject?
12088Can you stop when the point has been made?)
12088Can you tell for what kind of an audience each of the following is intended?
12088Can you think of a better comparison or a better example?
12088Can you think of other illustrations?)
12088Can your meaning be made clearer, or be more effectively presented, by arranging your material in a different order?)
12088Could the same object be described for the purpose of giving information?
12088Did the writers of Charles''s faction delight in making their opponents appear contemptible?
12088Did you form clear mental images?
12088Did you make use of description in any place?)
12088Do all of the incidents in your story seem probable?)
12088Do men fail when they quit their own province for another?
12088Do they add anything to your picture?
12088Do they show that the proposition is always true or merely that it is true for certain cases?
12088Do you believe the affirmative or the negative?
12088Do you form complete images in every case?
12088Do you know of facts that would tend to show that your proposition is not true?)
12088Do you need to change the sentence length either for the sake of clearness or for the sake of variety?
12088Do you think that when the members of the class hear your theme, each will form the same images that you had in mind when writing?
12088Does each paragraph have a topic statement?
12088Does he dare blow into it and risk our jeers if it is dumb?
12088Does he draw conclusions or leave that for his listeners to do?
12088Does it fulfill the requirements of Chapter IX?
12088Does it read smoothly?
12088Does it read smoothly?
12088Does the definition apply to them?
12088Does the introduction of persuasion affect the order of arrangement?)
12088Does this definition apply to your paragraphs?)
12088Does this theme need to have an introduction?
12088Does your example really illustrate the topic statement?
12088Does your paragraph really explain the proposition?)
12088Does your pet dog differ from others of the same breed in appearance?
12088Does your story relate real events or imaginary ones?
12088Does_ then_ occur too frequently?)
12088EXERCISE Which of the following are exact?
12088EXERCISES Are the images which you form made more vivid by the use of the figures in the following selections?
12088EXERCISES What advantages and disadvantages can you think of for each of the following propositions?
12088EXERCISES What facts or instances do you know which would lead you to believe either the following propositions or their opposites?
12088EXERCISES What methods of paragraph development, or what combinations of methods, are used in the following selections?
12088EXERCISES Which of the following are incorrect?
12088EXERCISES_ A._ About which of the following subjects do you now possess a sufficient knowledge to enable you to write a paragraph?
12088EXERCISES_ A._ Can you tell which of the following are classifications?
12088EXERCISES_ A._ If you were to write three paragraphs describing a man, which of the following details should be included in each paragraph?
12088EXERCISES_ A._ To which of the two general classes of composition would each of the following belong?
12088EXERCISES_ A._ Which sentences make the general statements, and which furnish specific instances, in the following paragraphs?
12088Excuse me, then, but is a milksop a man from some state, or some country, too?"
12088Explanations?
12088Exposition answers such questions as how?
12088For example, in answer to the question, What is exposition?
12088For what class of people do you think it was written?
12088For which can you furnish different illustrations?
12088For your wishing to attend college?
12088For your wishing to go into business after leaving the high school?
12088Has anything been said in the beginning of any of them which suggests what the point will be, or which helps you to appreciate it when you come to it?
12088Has murder stained his hands with gore?
12088Has the story a point?)
12088Have historians been given to exaggerating the villainy of Machiavelli?
12088Have you been careful in your selection of facts and arrangement?)
12088Have you chosen the one best suited to your purpose?)
12088Have you developed the paragraph so that the reader will understand fully your topic statement?
12088Have you explained so many terms that your narrative is rendered tedious?
12088Have you expressed it clearly?
12088Have you expressed the transitions with the proper time relations?
12088Have you given undue prominence to any?
12088Have you included any minor and unimportant divisions?
12088Have you included enough to make your meaning clear?)
12088Have you introduced any of the other methods of development?
12088Have you introduced sentences which do not bear upon this topic statement?
12088Have you introduced unnecessary details?
12088Have you mentioned any unnecessary points?)
12088Have you needed to use figures?
12088Have you related what really happened, and in the proper time order?
12088Have you said what you intended to say?
12088Have you said what you meant to say?
12088Have you said what you meant to say?
12088Have you selected a subject which will be of interest to your readers?)
12088Have you shown that they are true?)
12088Have you told it so that the hearers will understand you?
12088Have you told the event exactly as it occurred?
12088Have you told what actually happened?
12088Have you used any unnecessary particulars?
12088Have you used arguments from cause, sign, or example?
12088Have you used comparisons or figures, and if so, do they improve your description?
12088Have you used the same expression too often?)
12088Have you used words that your reader will understand?
12088Have you used_ and_ or_ got_ unnecessarily?).
12088Have your paragraphs unity of thought?)
12088Have your paragraphs unity?
12088Have your paragraphs unity?
12088He is, then, in English a''clap- trapper,''is he not?"
12088How alike?
12088How came they to deserve that term, mamma?
12088How can you tell an oak tree from an elm tree?
12088How different?
12088How do two books that you have read differ?
12088How have you made its meaning clear?
12088How many of the sentences begin with the same word?
12088How many of them can you explain?
12088How many paragraphs would you make and what would you include in each?
12088How many substitutes for"He said"can you name?
12088If imaginary events are related, have you made them seem probable?)
12088If not, why not?
12088If so, have you used them in accordance with the suggestions on page 55?
12088If so, is each a group of sentences treating of a single topic?
12088If you ask yourself the question, What leads me to believe as I do?
12088If you have used the word_ only_, is it placed so as to give the correct meaning?)
12088In actions?
12088In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But, being season''d with a gracious voice, Obscures the show of evil?
12088In laying a railroad track, why is there a space left between the ends of the rails?
12088In religion, What damned error, but some sober brow Will bless it and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament?
12088In telling about a runaway accident, what points would you mention if you were writing a short account for a newspaper?
12088In what order shall they occur?
12088In what respect does the Methodist church in your city differ from the other church buildings?
12088In what way is the school like a factory?
12088In which of the following selections is the point of view merely implied?
12088In which of them are you interested?
12088Is a lie ever justifiable?
12088Is an action that is right for one person ever wrong for another?
12088Is it a trade, a commercial business, or a profession?
12088Is it introduced naturally?)
12088Is it necessary to add anything to the story?
12088Is its meaning clear?
12088Is life so dear, is peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
12088Is the main thought of the two paragraphs the same even though they begin with the same sentence?)
12088Is the mind held in suspense until the climax is reached?
12088Is there any appeal to his son''s feelings?
12088Is vivisection justifiable?
12088Is what I say precisely what I mean?
12088Is what I say so shaped that it can readily be assimilated by him who hears?
12088Is your argument deductive or inductive?)
12088Just what feature in each helps you in this?
12088Just which word or words in each of the following sentences keep you from understanding the full meaning of the sentence?
12088Likewise we feel that another has mastered the topic statement of a paragraph if he can answer the question, Why is this so?
12088Lismore._ You are quite breathless, Charles; where have you been running so violently?
12088Narration| is that form of discourse|?
12088Nay, he''s a thief, too; have you not heard men say, That time comes stealing on by night and day?
12088Notice that the following selection answers neither the question_ how_?
12088Or again, can you not begin with that situation and imagine what would be done next?
12088Or is it true only of the upper classes in the high school or only of college students?
12088Physiography| is the science|?
12088Plan of the Book.+--What is government?
12088Pronoun:_ What_ shall I do?
12088Scarcely drawing rein, Lord Blantyre shouted,"Which way?"
12088Shall I write a letter?].
12088Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
12088Should anything be added?
12088Should others be added?
12088Should some of them be united into a longer one?)
12088Should they be taught to_ all_ high school pupils?)
12088Should two pupils ever study together?
12088The Basis of Belief.+--If you ask yourself, Why do I believe this?
12088The implied question in the sentence, I know whom you saw, is, Whom did you see?
12088The second sentence causes us to ask, what was it?
12088Their understanding of it may be helped further by telling such of the attendant circumstances as will answer the question,_ Why_?
12088They may be classified into two kinds:( 1) those which answer the question, Is it right?
12088Thus the request for permission should be,"May I?"
12088To their curiosity?
12088To their gratitude?
12088To what extent does the descriptive matter help you determine his character?
12088To what extent have you shown character by action?
12088To what feelings have you appealed?)
12088To what feelings have you appealed?)
12088To what general theories have you appealed?
12088To what particular feeling or feelings would you appeal in each case?
12088Urge him to come to the high school._( What arguments have you made?
12088Was Shylock''s punishment too severe?
12088Was it possible that a hundred serpents could have surrounded the camp?
12088Was this ambition?
12088We may describe a particular lake; but if we answer the question, What is a lake?
12088Were you so interested in anything yesterday that you told it to your parents or friends?
12088What are two or three of the strong arguments in favor of woman suffrage?
12088What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force?
12088What can you say of the suitability of the words in the following selection, taken from an old school reader?
12088What colors?
12088What connection is there between occupation and height above the sea level, and why?
12088What did you notice most vividly?
12088What does The Government do?
12088What effect would it have on the interest aroused by the preceding story to begin it as follows?
12088What elements have you introduced which you did not have in the other?
12088What has the gray- haired prisoner done?
12088What is a journalist?
12088What is journalism?
12088What is the result in each case of the various appeals?
12088What kind of man is Silas Marner?
12088What leads you to think as you do?
12088What methods of development have you used?
12088What methods of development have you used?
12088What methods of development have you used?)
12088What methods of development have you used?)
12088What must you tell first in order to enable the hearers to understand the point?
12088What other methods of development have you used?)
12088What other questions should you ask yourself while correcting this theme?)
12088What patterns do you notice that you did not see at first?
12088What points would you add if you were writing to some one who was acquainted with the persons in the accident?
12088What qualifications should a good class president have?
12088What seems to be the purpose of it?
12088What three arguments does Antony advance to prove that Caesar was not ambitious?
12088What was I to do?
12088What words have you used to show the time- order of the different events?)
12088What would you select as its characteristic feature?
12088What, in your mind, is the strongest reason why you wish to graduate from a high school?
12088When asked to do something we should at once ask ourselves, Is it right?
12088When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force?
12088When you have written anything, it is well to ask yourself the question, Have I used words with which_ the reader_ is probably familiar?
12088Where is there an appeal to their pity?
12088Where?
12088Where?
12088Where?
12088Which are defective?
12088Which are important enough to become topic statements?
12088Which are partitions?
12088Which for a newspaper report?
12088Which items in the following should be omitted as not necessary to the complete treatment of the subject indicated by the title?
12088Which made the more vivid impression?
12088Which may be grouped together in one paragraph?
12088Which of the illustrations might be omitted from a recitation?
12088Which sentence gives the general outline?
12088Which way had she turned?
12088Which would be better suited for a school class composed of boys and girls?
12088Which would you need to"read up"about?
12088Who did you say_ is_ president of your society?].
12088Who has lost_ his_ book?
12088Who is the government?
12088Why did the American colonies revolt against England?
12088Why did the early settlers of New England persecute the Quakers?
12088Why do fish bite better on a cloudy day than on a bright one?
12088Why do n''t you say something?
12088Why do we lose a day in going from America to China?
12088Why do you believe or refuse to believe each?
12088Why does a baseball curve?
12088Why is the arrangement of your topics easy in this theme?)
12088Why is the expression,"before the fog had lifted,"used near the beginning of the story?
12088Why should trees be planted either in early spring or late autumn?
12088Why should we study history?
12088Why stand we here, idle?
12088Why was Pitkin mad?
12088Why?
12088Why?
12088Why?
12088Will he need to change the fundamental image as your description proceeds?)
12088Will it be the next week, or the next year?
12088Will it be when we are totally disarmed and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
12088Will it go?
12088Will the entire description enable the reader to form a clear and accurate image?)
12088Will the reader form a vivid picture-- just the one you mean him to have?)
12088Will the reader form at once a correct general outline?
12088Will the reader form the mental image you wish him to form?)
12088Will the reader get from it at once a correct general outline of the object to be described?
12088Will this combination of words or that make the meaning clear?
12088Will this order of presentation facilitate swiftness of apprehension or will it clog the movement?
12088With ill- suppressed laughter I asked,"Do you know Nova Scotia and Newfoundland?"
12088Would a description of the appearance of the house, the barn, or the persons add to the interest aroused by the story?
12088Would an ordinary account of a bicycle or automobile trip be interesting?
12088Would the effects which you have stated really follow the given causes?)
12088Would your argument cause another to believe the proposition?)
12088Write a theme appealing to both feeling and intellect._( Are your facts true and pertinent?
12088Write a theme on the subject chosen._( Have you made use of either general description or general narration?
12088You did n''t say that, now, did you, Hull Parsons?"
12088_ Adverbs of degree_ answer the question To what extent?
12088_ B._ Could a description be written for the purpose of entertaining?
12088_ B._ Where is the climax in the following selection?
12088_ Better_ for whom?)
12088_ C._ In the following paragraphs which sentences give the general outline and which give details?
12088_ C._ To which general class do narratives belong?
12088_ Interrogative_ adverbs are used to ask questions:[_ When_ shall you come?
12088_ Sounds or the use of sounds._ And the noise of Niagara?
12088_ Trees and plants._ How shall kinnikinnick be told to them who know it not?
12088_ Which_ book did you choose?].
12088_ Whose_ child is this?
12088and( 2) those which answer the question, Is it expedient?
12088but explains what journalism is:-- JOURNALISM What is a journal?
12088he said,"where''s my sister?"
12088nor_ why_?
12088not"Can I?"
12088or, What will result from this?
12088or_ how_?
12088what does it mean?
12088what is it used for?
12088what should such a fool Do with so good a wife?"
12088why?
1718A question? 1718 A woman?
1718All?
1718And is THIS, may I ask,he said,"the sanity that is spreading?"
1718And is this true?
1718And no shots hit the Warden, though they were fired quite close to him too?
1718And people in their senses?
1718And pray where in earth or heaven are there any prudent marriages? 1718 And who wrote that?"
1718But are you Smith?
1718But how do you know,cried Rosamund desperately,"that Mr. Smith is a known criminal?"
1718But was there in Smith''s taste any such variety as the learned doctor describes? 1718 But where is your husband taking you?"
1718But why do you bring in these people here?
1718Can the court now sitting throw any light on a truly singular circumstance? 1718 Catchin''flies?"
1718Do you mean to say,asked Inglewood,"that you still doubt the evidence of exculpation we have brought forward?"
1718Do you mean you want to marry me?
1718Do you, perhaps,inquired Pym with austere irony,"maintain that your client was a bird of some sort-- say, a flamingo?"
1718Doctor demandin''something? 1718 Does the aunt mind much?"
1718From what quarter?
1718Have you looked at it?
1718Have you noticed this about him,asked Moon, with unshaken persistency,"that he has done so much and said so little?
1718Have you,continued Moon,"identified the houses in Hoxton up which they climbed?"
1718How can poor Mr. Smith be so dreadful as he is by your account?
1718I''m all for lies in an ordinary way; but do n''t you see that to- night they wo n''t do? 1718 In the first place,"continued Moon,"have you the date of Canon Hawkins''s last glimpse of Smith and Percy climbing up the walls and roofs?"
1718Inglewood,said Michael Moon, with his blue eye on the bird,"have you any friends?"
1718Inglewood,said Michael Moon,"have you ever heard that I am a blackguard?"
1718Is my name Moon?
1718Is n''t the mere sight of him enough to banish all your morbid reflections?
1718Is that one of your jokes?
1718Is your name Hunt? 1718 It is impossible, then, to trace him?"
1718It will then be asked,` Why does Innocent Smith continue far into his middle age a farcical existence, that exposes him to so many false charges?'' 1718 Kites are all right, but why should it only be kites?
1718Knew what?
1718Let us what?
1718Matriculation?
1718Michael,cried Rosamund, wringing her hands,"how can you stand there talking nonsense?
1718My darling, what else is there to do?
1718O Diana,cried Rosamund in a lower voice and altering her phrase;"but how did you tell her?"
1718O lord, he is n''t a woman too, is he?
1718Oh, how can one explain a change in sun and moon and everybody''s soul?
1718Oh, what''s the good of talking about men?
1718Outlived it?
1718Perhaps a version of alive and kicking? 1718 Rosamund,"she cried in despair,"what shall I do with her?"
1718Shall I die in defence of this sacred pale? 1718 Silly?"
1718Snakes?
1718Symptoms?
1718The defence?
1718Well, hang it all,said Moon, in an injured manner,"if Dr. Pym may have an old friend with ferrets, why may n''t I have an old aunt with poplars?"
1718Well, really,cried Inglewood, left behind in a collapse of humour,"have I noticed anything else?"
1718Well,answered Moon,"that Beacon House is a certain rather singular sort of house-- a house with the tiles loose, shall we say?
1718Well,said Michael quietly,"will you tell me one thing?
1718Well,said Michael, cocking an eyebrow at him,"was there any burglary in that terrace that night?
1718Well,said the girl solidly,"what is there to wake up to?"
1718What am I to do now, I wonder? 1718 What do you mean?"
1718What do you mean?
1718What do you mean?
1718What is the matter?
1718What is the meaning of this queer coincidence about colours? 1718 What on earth am I to do with her?"
1718What other occupation is there for an active man on this earth, except to marry you? 1718 What was Dr. Warner talking about just before the first shot?"
1718What was this telegram?
1718What would be the good of gold,he was saying,"if it did not glitter?
1718What?
1718Who are you? 1718 Who is there?"
1718Why did n''t you get their evidence?
1718Why do n''t they make more games out of wind?
1718Why do you want us to go inside?
1718Why does everybody repeat riddles,went on Moon abruptly,"even if they''ve forgotten the answers?
1718Why not?
1718Why, did n''t you know?
1718Why, what bush do you mean?
1718With her?
1718Would it have much authority?
1718Yes,he said at last;"but how can I lean on this gate if you keep on opening it?"
1718You are sure it''s impossible?
1718You see all this,said Rosamund, with a grand sincerity in her solid face,"and do you really want to marry me?"
1718You''ve got the evidence of the Sub- Warden who heard some shots; where''s the evidence of the Warden himself who was shot at? 1718 ` And why is it dangerous?''
1718` But why?'' 1718 ` Do you believe in the gods?''
1718` Do you mean,''I demanded,` that the owner of this house approves of all you do?'' 1718 ` Do you really mean,''I cried,` that you have come right round the world?
1718` Does he drink too much, then?'' 1718 ` Have you no other house of your own?''
1718` I ca n''t express a millionth part of what I''ve thought of,''I cried,` but it''s something like this... oh, ca n''t you see it? 1718 ` Is it not even shorter,''I asked,` to stop where you are?''
1718` Mine,''said the burglar,` May I present you to my wife?'' 1718 ` Nora?''
1718` What do you mean?'' 1718 ` What do you mean?''
1718` What do you mean?'' 1718 ` What song do you mean?''
1718` What will do him good?'' 1718 ` Why does n''t he strike us dead?''
1718` Why, what is the matter?'' 1718 ` YOU have had an escape from death?''
1718` You know the house, then?'' 1718 `"The Doll''s House"?''
1718''Ow can we drop in and buy the` Pink''Un''at the railway station at Kosky Wosky or whatever it was?
1718''Ow can we go and do a gargle at the saloon- bar on top of the Sierra Mountains?
1718''Ow can we test all those tales?
1718Agreed?
1718An allegory, shall we say?
1718And this seemed to me a strange question to ask, for what should a man do except what men have done?
1718And when Inglewood broke through his native politeness so far as to say suddenly,"Is your name Smith?"
1718And will you kindly tell me what the deuce is the good of a jewel except that it looks like a jewel?
1718Are you Innocent?"
1718Are you mad?...
1718Are you, may I ask, a professional acrobat on a tour, or a travelling advertisement of Sunny Jim?
1718But does he want specially to be snapshotted by all the journalists~prostratus in horto~?
1718But how does this picking of holes affect the issue?
1718But if I followed the star, should I find the house?''
1718But is there any evidence of such variety here?
1718But we still ask whether they were ever born?"
1718But what do you expect?
1718But what else are all the trees and clouds for, you silly kittens?"
1718By the way, what was the Seal of Solomon?
1718By the way,"he cried out, pointing in quite a startling way,"where does that door lead to?"
1718Ca n''t you find that mandoline of yours, Rosamund?"
1718Can he produce it?"
1718Could a Greek tragedy be more gray and cruel than that daybreak and awakening?
1718Did it come direct from the prisoner?"
1718Did n''t I tell you I wanted to talk to Inglewood?"
1718Do I understand that you want to get back to life?''
1718Do n''t you know that?
1718Do n''t you know what it is to be all one family circle, with aunts and uncles, when a schoolboy comes home for the holidays?
1718Do n''t you see one only breaks the fence or shoots the moon in order to get HOME?''
1718Do n''t you see that everything in this garden looks like a jewel?
1718Do n''t you see there''s something sacred in the silliness of such things?''
1718Do n''t you think so?"
1718Do you know anything of him?''
1718Do you like being hanged upon nothing?
1718Do you notice that maniacs mostly try either to destroy other things, or( if they are thoughtful) to destroy themselves?
1718Do you see that fifth house along the terrace with the flat roof?
1718Do you,''he asked with a sudden intensity,` do you never want to rush out of your house in order to find it?''
1718Does he want to enter the court of justice on all fours?
1718Does it exist?
1718Dog- stealer, horse- stealer, man- stealer-- can you think of anything so base as a toy- stealer?''
1718Down what chimney from hell would come the goblin that should take away the children''s balls and dolls while they slept?
1718Duke?"
1718Eames, we''ve been to the brink of death together; wo n''t you admit I''m right?''
1718Have n''t you ever had a spring cleaning?"
1718Have n''t you ever noticed that Miss Duke never sits still-- a notorious sign?
1718Have n''t you ever observed that Inglewood is always washing his hands-- a known mark of mental disease?
1718Have n''t you noticed that we never saw him since we found ourselves?
1718Have we outlived it?"
1718Have you forgotten that only this afternoon we flew the flag of independence and severed ourselves from all the nations of the earth?"
1718Have you noticed anything odd about Smith?"
1718He must have justice; but does he want to ask for justice, not only on his knees, but on his hands and knees?
1718He''d throw off the doctor like the disease, do n''t you know?
1718How and why do you display all this energy for clearing walls and climbing trees in our melancholy, but at least rational, suburbs?"
1718How could he express his trust in us better than that?
1718How could he have shown it better than by escaping in the cab and coming back again?
1718How could he have shown it better than by standing quite still and letting us discuss it?
1718I asked,` should you wish to return to that particular doll''s house?
1718I asked;` what thing?''
1718I called out;` you are not going on with this blackguard?''
1718I ventilate the house, and you sweep the house; but what is going to HAPPEN in the house?"
1718If we ca n''t do a little thing like that, what right have we to put crosses on ballot papers?"
1718Inglewood lingered behind them, saying with a certain amicable exasperation,"I say, do you really want to speak to me?"
1718Innocent Smith is only the doctor that visits us; had n''t you come when he called before?
1718Into how many virginal ears has he whispered that holy word?
1718Is it anybody''s interest here to wash this linen in public?
1718Is it not at least a hypothesis holding the field that Dr. Warner is such a man?
1718Is not love a Hercules, Still climbing trees in the Hesperides?"
1718Is there any trace of a gigantic Patagonian in the story?
1718May I ask how the defence got hold of the letter from Curate Percy?
1718Miss Duke is rather--""I know,"cried the stranger, looking up radiantly from his bag;"magnificent, is n''t she?
1718Miss Duke, do you or your aunt want a sort of notice stuck up over your boarding- house--`Doctors shot here.''?
1718Moon is talking about?
1718No one moved of the groups in the garden except Mary Gray, who stepped forward quite naturally, calling out,"Are you ready, Innocent?
1718Now is there any one who doubts that our tale is true?"
1718Smith?"
1718Smith?"
1718Smith?"
1718Smith?"
1718Then he added,"Are there two maniacs here?"
1718Trip?"
1718Warner?"
1718Was Lady Bullingdon''s dressmaker a negress?
1718Was the typewriter an Eskimo?
1718We all see that for any thinking man mere extinction is the... What are you doing?...
1718Well, what abart this Mrs. Smith the curate talks of, with her blarsted shyness-- transmigogrified into a blighted sharpness?
1718What could be more powerful than the combination of Scientific Theory with Common Sense?
1718What other court dares to try one of our company, save only the High Court of Beacon?
1718What other term, it will be said, could be applied to such a being?
1718What should we feel if there were less?
1718What would you say if I called a man wicked on the word of two priests?"
1718What''s the alternative to marriage, barring sleep?
1718What''s the good of a Sovereign State if you ca n''t define a sovereign?
1718What( the undersigned persons ask themselves) is a puddle?
1718What, gentlemen, is the ethical position of marriage?
1718Which of us has ever tried it?"
1718Who the devil are you that you should n''t be unhappy, like the mother that bore you?
1718Who would have thought of that trapdoor?
1718Who would have thought that this cursed colonial claret could taste quite nice among the chimney- pots?
1718Why are children not afraid of Santa Claus, though he comes like a thief in the night?
1718Why do n''t you produce the evidence of the other clergyman, who actually followed the burglar and presumably was present at the crime?"
1718Why have you not got evidence of them?"
1718Why should we care for a black sovereign any more than for a black sun at noon?
1718Will you paint these blue railings red with my gore?"
1718Wot then?
1718Would you be so obliging as to tell me whose house this is?''
1718Would you read a book, or buy a dog, or go to a hotel on the advice of twenty such?
1718You and I have dawdled round each other long enough, and are we any safer than Smith and Mary Gray, who met last night?
1718You do n''t want last year''s hats there, do you, any more than last year''s leaves?
1718` Do you mean to kill me?''
1718` Well, of all the cheek--''"` Oh, do n''t you understand, do n''t you understand?''
1718` What did you know?''
1718` What is more immortal,''he would cry,` than love and war?
1718` What reason?''
1718asked the great doctor stiffly--"what discovery?"
1718cried Arthur Inglewood in a kind of agony,"are you going to get out of the way?"
1718cried Dr. Warner, fixing his former disciple with a stare,"are you mad?"
1718cried Rosamund;"Michael, what does it mean?"
1718demanded the exasperated Eames;` what song?''
1718he cried, stepping back from the steely glitter as men step back from a serpent;"are you afraid of burglars?
1718or when and why do you deal death out of that machine gun?"
1718the sooner this ugly business is over the better-- and how can we open the gate if you will keep leaning on it?"
1718what''s the funeral, gents?"
20281A_ what_?
20281At what hour?
20281Colonel Burr?
20281Do you know, sir, that the world is branding you a traitor? 20281 How?"
20281Is General Jackson at home?
20281SHOULD THE NATION OWN THE RAILWAYS? 20281 Which daughter do you refer to?"
20281Why do you protest,was written,"when you already know you are but a tyro in this phase of being?
20281And is the growth of such poverty, not retrogression?
20281And that Felix Grundy refused to drink your health in my house to- night?"
20281And where must this radical work begin?
20281And who is to settle as to what is"an intelligent public opinion,"that has the right to put down"bumptiousness"?
20281Are hours of labor lessening and possibilities increasing?
20281Are these ideas indefinite?
20281As to the practical means of carrying out conceptions that might daily be doomed to alteration?
20281But does this mean that our civilization is a failure, and the prime of life past for the Republic?
20281But just how is this"data"to be accumulated, so long as anybody who dares to have a new idea is to be arrested and imprisoned?
20281But was not that dying man the creator( if creator there had been) of the restored Teutonic state?
20281But was the work done?
20281But who is to decide what is"bumptiousness"?
20281Did not the revived empire spring from the races in which Prussia was incarnate?
20281Do they not mean"money at cost"?
20281Does this mean a proportionate enlightenment for the one below?
20281Has the average worker time or thought for self- improvement and larger life?
20281Have we not reason to believe that the reading, intelligent majorities of the western prairies are to bring us some light and benefit?
20281He knew he would never suffer Felix Grundy to outdo him in the simple matter of a bow; but how?
20281How about his intellectual standing?
20281How did they get it?"
20281How many American corporations are able to borrow money at such a rate?
20281I am heartily with him in being in favor of the millennium; but the practical question is,--_which way_?
20281If so, what remained to be achieved?
20281If the men who attain these positions remained private citizens, would passes be thrust upon them?
20281In France where were they who had ever heard the truth about"1806 and Jéna"?
20281Insult to the host, or insult to conviction?
20281Is it just possible that his nationalism, which is not of the military type even, is already manifesting some symptoms of the incipient disease?
20281Is it possible that the railway companies can legitimately use anything like$ 14,000,000 yearly in protecting their rights in the courts?
20281Is not truth, where human impulses and irrationalities are concerned, derived from sources lying higher than the regions sacred to"Blue Books"?
20281Mr. Bellamy himself lets out, in a most curious way, his own advanced(?)
20281Our educational theories, on paper and in text- books, are well- nigh perfect; in actual operation why should they fail?
20281Shall we have a separate school for every child?
20281Shall we have a special teacher for each mind?
20281Shall we not expect from this some good?
20281Supposing a creation according to both Heinrich von Sybel and the chroniclers of French vain- gloriousness, who was the creator?
20281Take passenger rates for instance; they are very low; but who benefits by the reduction?
20281The end was still a gigantic one, and one to which no true, brave patriot dared be false as an ideal,--but how as to the execution?
20281The first question asked was,"From your standpoint do you consider death the end of conscious existence?"
20281There was some delay in the answer, but soon reply came"On Madison St.""Whereabouts on Madison?"
20281To one who has watched these conditions, the question arises, does the general advance keep step with the special?
20281WHERE MUST LASTING PROGRESS BEGIN?
20281Was not the work of those who first evened the ground and laid the foundation- stones as important as of those who laid the capstones at last?
20281What can be done to mitigate the miseries of the masses?
20281What class has not?
20281What then?
20281What would have been thought of the famous Davy Crockett, if he had fired his gun after the coon had said,"Do n''t shoot, for I will come right down"?
20281What, then, is the defect?
20281What, then, may we expect on the part of the great mass of the people whose equal(?)
20281What?
20281When"eh?"
20281Who sets him, or anybody else, up on high to look down with"toleration"on other people?
20281Why is it that when a legislature is in session passes are as plentiful as leaves in the forest in autumn?
20281Would he be cried down to- day?"
20281Would he,_ could_ he, think of anything so delightfully graceful?
20281_ Ques._--"But we may apprehend what we do not fully understand or comprehend?"
20281_ Ques._--"Do you mean that comprehension is a word of wider significance than understanding?"
20281_ Ques._--"Is death expected on your plane as on ours, or do all understand that the next change is progressive?"
20281or who, after the 4th September,''70, were capable of realizing that the just retribution for Jéna was Sédan?
20281said he,"does n''t charity always mean''money''?
20281tolerance he does not undertake to guarantee?
20281was it not in good earnest the Hohenzollern line, the descendant of the Great Elector that answered for the regeneration?
16772And do you not think that the great Saints, on their side, seeing what they owe to all little souls, will love them with a love beyond compare? 16772 And how can that be done?"
16772And what attracts you?
16772And what do you say to Jesus?
16772And what is this_ little way_ that you would teach to souls?
16772Are not the river and the brook,they urge,"of more use than a dewdrop?
16772But have you not always been faithful to those favours?
16772But how could you have hidden your innocence from your Confessor?
16772But what do you think about?
16772But,she answered,"why cry at my death?
16772Holy Father,I repeated,"in honour of your jubilee, will you allow me to enter the Carmel when I am fifteen?"
16772How comes it,I said,"that you can be so patient?
16772How do you manage not to give way to discouragement at such times?
16772How is it, Mother, that Our Lord, knowing what was about to happen, did not say to him:''Ask of Me the strength to do what is in thy mind?'' 16772 If you love them that love you, what thanks are to you?
16772Is that how a child kisses its father? 16772 No-- they are not terrible: can a little Victim of Love find anything terrible that is sent by her Spouse?
16772O my Divine Master,I cried from the bottom of my heart,"shall Thy Justice alone receive victims of holocaust?
16772That is true,she replied,"but, do you know what gives me strength?
16772To enjoy such a privilege, would it suffice to repeat that Act of Oblation which you have composed?
16772We too would like to become all golden-- what must we do?
16772What are you doing?
16772What are you looking at, Thérèse, dear?
16772What are you thinking of?
16772What is it you see?
16772What would you do,said Thérèse to the impatient one,"if it were not your duty to mend these blankets?
16772Why are you so bright this morning?
16772Why do you think that, dear Mother?
16772Why?
16772Will the_ Divine Thief,_ some one asked,"soon come to steal His little bunch of grapes?"
16772Would you like me to fetch you thither soon, dear Mother?
16772You are suffering very much just now, are you not?
16772You see this little glass?
16772[ 11] After so many graces, may I not sing with the Psalmist thatthe Lord is good, that His Mercy endureth for ever"?
16772[ 13] For what joy can be greater than to suffer for Thy Love? 16772 [ 15] A few minutes after seven, turning to the Prioress, the poor little Martyr asked:"Mother, is it not the agony?
16772[ 18] But is this pure love really in my heart? 16772 [ 24]"Then death will come to fetch you?"
16772[ 3] And now, Mother, what more shall I say? 16772 [ 46] We know, then, what is this word which must be kept; we can not say, like Pilate:"What is truth?
16772[ 6] What will this old age be for me? 16772 [ 8] Is not Jesus your only treasure?
16772[ 8] One day she had not brought any-- what was to be done? 16772 ''[ 3]******"What would you do if you could begin over again your religious life?"
16772''And what does Almighty mean?''
16772''If I were in another convent,''I reflected,''what would it matter to me if the chestnut- trees of the Carmel at Lisieux were entirely cut down?''
16772''Oh, Mamma,''she answered,''then if I am not good, shall I go to Hell?
16772''Remaining little''--what does it mean?"
16772''Who dare glory in his own good works?''
16772******"Do you know which are my Sundays and feast- days?
16772******"What do you think of all the graces that have been heaped upon you?"
16772******"You will look down upon us from Heaven, will you not?"
16772A whole month has passed since we parted; but why do I say parted?
16772Alas, what will become of that poor little heart?
16772All was ready for my espousals;[17] but do you not think that something was still wanting to the feast?
16772And another time:"You have had many trials to- day?"
16772And in face of this folly, what wilt Thou, but that my heart leap up to Thee?
16772And now what science is He going to teach?
16772And our dear Father!--it is heartrending, but how can we repine since Our Lord Himself was looked upon"as one struck by God and afflicted"?
16772And so if holy Priests, whom Our Lord in the Gospel calls the salt of the earth, have need of our prayers, what must we think of the lukewarm?
16772And what shall I say of the Holy House?
16772Anyone but you, dear Mother, who know me thoroughly, would smile at reading these pages, for has ever a soul seemed less tried than mine?
16772Are not my boundless desires but dreams-- but foolishness?
16772Are there yet any rose- coloured joys on earth for your little Thérèse?
16772Are you much concerned at this moment as to what is happening in other Carmelite convents, and whether the nuns there are busy or otherwise?
16772Are you not afraid that I shall let your lambs stray afar?
16772Are you not ready to suffer all that God wills?
16772But a thought comes into my mind:"Why did God give this light to a child who, if she had understood it, would have died of grief?"
16772But does not her royal lover know better than she does, the extent of her poverty and ignorance?
16772But from whence comes their light?
16772But how shall I show my love, since love proves itself by deeds?
16772But no concert is complete without singing, and if Jesus plays, must not Céline make melody with her voice?
16772But of what avail to thee, my Jesus, are my flowers and my songs?
16772But on whom shall our poor hearts lavish this love, and who will be worthy of this treasure?
16772But suppose he heard the whole truth, would he not in that case love him still more?
16772But was it possible to be in Rome and not go down to the real Coliseum?
16772But what of that?
16772But what shall I say?
16772But what was I speaking of?
16772But where am I?
16772But, O my Spouse, why these desires of mine to make known the secrets of Thy Love?
16772But, what had I made ready?
16772Céline said the other day:''How can God be in such a tiny Host?''
16772Did He not permit Lazarus to die even though Mary and Martha had sent word that he was sick?
16772Did not God tell Adam of what he would die when He said to him:''Thou shalt die of death''?
16772Did not Jesus cry out:"My father, remove this chalice from Me"?
16772Do not creatures belong to Him who made them?
16772Do you not find, as I do, that our beloved Father''s death has drawn us nearer to Heaven?
16772Do you not know, dear Marie, that by acting thus you help him to accomplish his end?
16772Do you remember my telling you, dear Mother, how fond I am of snow?
16772Do you remember, dear Mother, the charming little book you gave me three months before the great day?
16772Does He not see our anguish and the burden that weighs us down?
16772Does not fear lead to the thought of the strict justice that is threatened to sinners?
16772Does not the Wise Man tell us--"Life is like a ship that passeth through the waves: when it is gone by, the trace thereof can not be found"?
16772Does that please you?
16772Does their work prevent you praying or meditating?
16772Earth''s air is failing me: when shall I breathe the air of Heaven?"
16772For is there anything more sweet than the inward joy of thinking well of our neighbour?
16772God has taken from us him whom we loved so tenderly-- was it not that we might be able to say more truly than ever:"Our Father Who art in heaven"?
16772Had not Thérèse asked Him to take away her liberty which frightened her?
16772Had she anything on her conscience?
16772Has He Himself told you so?
16772Has anyone ever reproached brothers who fight side by side, or together win the martyr''s palm?
16772Has not Our Lord said:"If the salt lose its savour wherewith shall it be salted?
16772Has not Thy Merciful Love also need thereof?
16772Have I not, then, good reason to say that your lot is a beautiful one-- worthy an apostle of Christ?
16772Have we not a glorious mission to fulfill?
16772Have we not learned all things from Him?
16772He looked at me attentively and smiling said:"Well, and how is our little Carmelite?"
16772He looked at me with indescribable tenderness, and, pressing me to his heart, said:"What is it, little Queen?
16772Here, during this silent visit, I found my one consolation-- for was not Jesus my only Friend?
16772How can I thank Him, how render myself less unworthy of so great a favour?
16772How can a soul so imperfect as mine aspire to the plenitude of Love?
16772How can anybody fear Him Who allows Himself to be made captive"with one hair of our neck"?
16772How can anything so contrary to our natural inclinations afford such extraordinary pleasure?
16772How can he who ignores the riches he possesses, spend them generously upon others?"
16772How can it be said that it is more perfect to separate oneself from home and friends?
16772How could He cleanse in the flames of Purgatory souls consumed with the fire of Divine Love?
16772How could I forget those souls they are to win by their sufferings and exhortations?
16772How could his little Queen talk of leaving him when he had already parted with his two eldest daughters?
16772How could my Mother''s absence grieve me on my First Communion Day?
16772How could my trust have any limits?
16772How could they stray away?
16772How did these three months pass?
16772How is it, dear Mother, that my youth and inexperience have not frightened you?
16772How reconcile these opposite tendencies?
16772How shall I describe the feelings which thrilled me when I gazed on the Coliseum?
16772How would it do if I wrote at Easter and described my dream, telling her that Jesus desires to have her for His Spouse?"
16772How, then, could I hope soon to be admitted to the Carmel?
16772How, therefore, can you expect me to be otherwise than filled with fear?"
16772I can not receive Thee in Holy Communion as often as I should wish; but, O Lord, art Thou not all- powerful?
16772I knew that Jesus was there asleep in my little boat, but how could I see Him while the night was so dark?
16772If the mere desire of Thy Love awakens such delight, what will it be to possess it, to enjoy it for ever?
16772If you fought only when you felt eagerness, where would be your merit?
16772Is God pleased with me?
16772Is He pleased with me?"
16772Is it for itself that He made it so sweet?
16772Is it not Thyself alone Who hast taught them to me, and canst Thou not unveil them to others?
16772Is it not clear that the constant remembrance of gifts bestowed serves to increase the love of the giver?
16772Is it not you who have taught me?
16772Is not Jesus all- powerful?
16772Is not such a choice worthy of God''s Love?
16772Is not the apostolate of prayer-- so to speak-- higher than that of the spoken word?
16772Is not your life made up of them?
16772Is there anyone who will understand it and-- above all-- is there anyone who will be able to repay?
16772Is there on the face of this earth a soul more feeble than mine?
16772It was through your hands that I gave myself to Our Lord, and you have known me from childhood-- need I write my secrets?
16772Jesus has drawn us to Him together, for are you not already His?
16772Life is full of sacrifice, it is true, but why seek happiness here?
16772Mamma laughingly said he always did whatever I wanted, but he answered:"Well, why not?
16772Must I die of sorrow because of my helplessness?
16772My companions remarked:"What an ugly thing!--of what use will it be?"
16772My companions were astonished, and asked each other afterwards:"Why did she cry?
16772My darling Céline, you who asked me so many questions when we were little, I wonder how it was you never asked:"Why has God not made me an Angel?"
16772Need I say that in the depths of my heart I felt certain my request would be granted?
16772Now,"we shed tears as we remember Sion, for how can we sing the songs of the Lord in a land of exile?
16772O Céline, how can I tell you all that is happening within me?
16772O my God, what shall we then see?
16772O my only Friend, why dost Thou not reserve these infinite longings to lofty souls, to the eagles that soar in the heights?
16772Of what avail is it?
16772Of what means, then, would He make use?
16772Of what, then, need I be afraid?
16772One evening, when we went to our prayers, I said to her:"Will you begin the_ Memorare?_ I am going to light the candles."
16772Our Beloved Himself fell three times on the way to Calvary, and why should we not imitate our Spouse?
16772Pauline put me to bed, and I invariably asked her:"Have I been good to- day?
16772Perhaps it is daring, but, for a long time, hast thou not allowed me to be daring with Thee?
16772Shall I eat the flesh of bullocks, or shall I drink the blood of goats?
16772She added further:"When misunderstood and judged unfavourably, what benefit do we derive from defending ourselves?
16772She replied:"Why seek to surmount it?
16772Should I run after those which were no longer in sight and so perhaps miss the train, or should I beg for a seat in the carriage of Father Révérony?
16772Since when has He lost the right to make use of one of His children, in order to supply the others with the nourishment they need?
16772So an act of humility was asked of the Apostles, and Our loving Lord called to them:"Children, have you anything to eat?
16772Tell me, Céline, is it for the peach''s own sake that God created that colour so fair to the eye, that velvety covering so soft to the touch?
16772The Jews asked Him:"Master, where dwellest thou?
16772The day after his execution I hastily opened the paper,_ La Croix,_ and what did I see?
16772The dew- drop-- what could be simpler, what more pure?
16772Then he turned to me and said:''Well, little Queen, would you like to learn painting too?''
16772Then why should I be troubled?
16772There is my sole treasure, dearest Godmother, and why should it not be yours?
16772To be Thy Spouse, O my Jesus, to be a daughter of Carmel, and by my union with Thee to be the mother of souls, should not all this content me?
16772To such folly as this what answer wilt Thou make?
16772Was He not supremely happy in the company of His Father and the Holy Spirit of Love?
16772Was it into the shell?"
16772Was it not by suffering and death that He ransomed the world?
16772Was it not right that this feast should be complete, since in it all other joyful days were reunited?
16772Was it not when I saw the Precious Blood flowing from the Wounds of Jesus that the thirst for souls first took possession of me?
16772Was not this ardour--"vanity and vexation of spirit"?
16772Was this not a sweet response?
16772Was this not touching?
16772We who live under the law of Love, shall we not profit by the loving advances made by our Spouse?
16772Well, you know what I will do-- I shall fly to you in Heaven, and you will hold me tight in your arms, and how could God take me away then?''
16772Were He in search of lofty ideas, has He not His Angels, whose knowledge infinitely surpasses that of the greatest genius of earth?
16772Were they not the very ones to help a timid child whom God destines to become an apostle of apostles by prayer and sacrifice?
16772What are the hidden treasures which Our Divine Master thus reveals to us through His chosen little servant?
16772What are we to think of a novice who must have a walk every day?"
16772What can I tell you, dear Mother, about my thanksgivings after Communion?
16772What does it matter if we get wet?
16772What does it matter, even if you are devoid of courage, provided you act as though you possessed it?
16772What have I done for God that He should shower so many graces upon me?
16772What is the key of this mystery?
16772What is this life which will have no end?
16772What is this sweet Friend about?
16772What is to become of me?
16772What matter if the routes we follow lie apart?
16772What matters a little toil upon earth?
16772What should I have become, if, as the world outside believed, I had been but the pet of the Community?
16772What was He doing during His sweet slumber, and what became of the ball thus cast on one side?
16772What was I to do in such a difficulty?
16772What will be our joy when we communicate eternally in the dwelling of the King of Heaven?
16772What would happen if an ignorant gardener did not graft his trees in the right way?
16772What, then, are His loving designs for our souls?
16772What, then, have we to envy in the Priests of the Lord?
16772What, then, have we to fear?
16772When I was only just learning to talk, and Mamma asked:"What are you thinking about?"
16772When a soul with childlike trust casts her faults into Love''s all- devouring furnace, how shall they escape being utterly consumed?
16772When will you learn to hide your troubles from Him, or to tell Him gaily that you are happy to suffer for Him?"
16772Where do you find all that you teach us?"
16772Where is the creature so mighty that he can make one flake of it fall to please his beloved?
16772Where, then, must we go?
16772Which Thérèse will be the more fervent?
16772Which of these two ways is more pleasing to Our Lord?
16772Who shall tell how many ripened ears have sprung forth since, how many the sheaves that are yet to come?
16772Why do I say I am beside myself with joy?
16772Why does He deign to say:"Pray ye the Lord of the harvest that He send forth labourers"?
16772Why does He not come and comfort us?
16772Why had I such a fancy for snow?
16772Why, then, come down on earth to seek sinners and make of them His closest friends?
16772Why?
16772Will He not soon come to fetch me?"
16772Will not the God of Infinite Justice, Who deigns so lovingly to pardon the sins of the Prodigal Son, be also just to me"who am always with Him"?
16772Will the Angels watch over me?"
16772With a heart like mine, I should have been taken captive and had my wings clipped, and how then should I have been able to"fly away and be at rest"?
16772Would you then be as the mediocre souls?
16772[ 8] How can a heart given up to human affections be closely united to God?
16772_ the chariots_--that is to say, the idle clamours which beset and disturb us-- are they within the soul or without?
16772______________________________ CHAPTER VIII PROFESSION OF SOEUR THÉRÈSE Need I tell you, dear Mother, about the retreat before my profession?
16772am I not going to die?"
16772if he did not understand the nature of each, and wished, for instance, to make roses grow on peach trees?
16772must Thy Love which is disdained lie hidden in Thy Heart?
16772she answered;"must I not profit of these small opportunities for penance since the greater ones are forbidden me?"
16772they were frightened themselves, but Marie, hiding her feelings, ran to me and said:"Why are you calling Papa, when he is at Alençon?"
16772what mother would not straightway clasp her child lovingly to her heart, and forget all it had done?
16772would not that prove its desire to be identified with the fire to the point of sharing its substance?
20318Brush?
20318Did you ever hear me do a storm?
20318Did you meet Michelangelo in Rome?
20318Did you see Michelangelo while you were in Rome?
20318Do I like music? 20318 Do you like music?"
20318Do you think God is proud of a work like that?
20318Does he play?
20318Does it not seem,said he,"as if he had the iron cross- pole still between his legs?
20318Grazia, dear, here is the little boy we saw the other day-- you remember? 20318 How much for your opera?"
20318How now, Dick Savage?
20318Me?
20318Shall I live to see the anniversary of her death?
20318Think''ee so?
20318Why do n''t they tune up at home, or behind the scenes?
20318Why do you play so fast, dear Johannes? 20318 Would you like to meet him?"
20318*****"Musicians?"
20318Am I a miserable egotist, possessed of stupid vanity?
20318And then, do you not remember that expression of Renan''s,"The unconscious coquetry of the flowers"?
20318And those tear- stained eyes-- have they not seen sights of which no tongue can tell, nor tongue make plain?
20318And why not?
20318And yet is that peculiarly wonderful?
20318As to the question,"Should women propose?"
20318Behold the face of Ludwig Beethoven-- is there not something Titanic about it?
20318But this afternoon we are playing Beethoven''s music-- will you oblige me?"
20318But who ever lived fuller and applied himself to hard work more conscientiously in order to make his point?
20318But wo n''t you tell us your name?"
20318Can you not close your eyes and see them-- the mighty giant of fourscore, with his whitened locks, and the slight, slender, handsome boy?
20318Did the young heart anticipate this?
20318Do you know that I am making great strides in water- colors?
20318Do you wonder that people go distracted over him?
20318Express what I think or feel, or what you feel?
20318H. R. Haweis_ GEORGE HANDEL"Did you meet Michelangelo while you were in Rome?"
20318Had a string of the violin really snapped?
20318Had he learnt these complimentary bows from an automaton, or a dog?
20318Have you never shared the mocking shame and biting pain of a drunkard''s household?
20318How shall I live?
20318In the time of the Crusaders, the tired children would ask at night- time, when the tents were pitched,"Is this Jerusalem?"
20318Is that a man brought into the arena at the moment of death, like a dying gladiator, to delight the public with his convulsions?
20318Is that the entreating gaze of one sick unto death, or is there lurking behind it the mockery of a crafty miser?
20318It was about this time that Zelter threw out the hint that he was going down to Weimar to see his friend Goethe-- would Felix like to go?
20318Knowing these things, do we wonder at the question of long ago,"Who is my mother, and who are my brethren"?
20318Lasting fame and a name that never dies?
20318No one ever asked this man,"Kind sir, are you anybody in particular?"
20318Or is it one risen from the dead, a vampire with a violin, who, if not the blood out of our hearts, at any rate sucks the gold out of our pockets?
20318Robert''s mother believed in her boy-- what mother does not?
20318Room for many passengers?
20318She kept to her bed merely to be warm; and then if one did n''t move around much, less food was required-- don''t you see?
20318Take it home to yourself-- haven''t the best things and the worst that have ever been said about you, been expressed by the same person?
20318The calamity of blindness did not much depress him--"What matters it so long as I can hear?"
20318This instinct that makes men long to live again in the lives of their children-- is it reaching out for immortality?
20318This is my busy night-- do you not see?"
20318Towards the exiled Heine, Mendelssohn had only a patronizing pity--"Why should any man offend the people in power?"
20318Was Irving''s action art?
20318Was that sphere the sun?
20318What could have been more complimentary to college striplings?
20318What finer than that the"Messiah"should give deliverance?
20318What if the critics were really right?
20318What more can any man desire?
20318Who shall expound the mystery of the lyre?
20318Who was it that I heard say once, that years ago he saw Clara Schumann sitting in tears near the platform during one of Liszt''s performances?
20318Why do you come to hear it?"
20318Without mother- love how would the cross- grained, perverse little tyrant ever survive the buffets which the world is sure to give?
20318Yet Achille always stoutly maintained the distinction-- but what boots it, since he could not play his father''s violin?
20318Yet for quite a number of years after their marriage, Madame Schumann was at times asked this question:"Is your husband musical?"
20318[ Illustration: JOHANNES BRAHMS] JOHANNES BRAHMS What is music?
20318your reverence?"
19199Are you not happy,writes Madame de Staël,"in your magical power of inspiring affection?
19199Formerly, I often thought, Why was I born? 19199 How can one who hates men love a woman without blushing?"
19199How could he think I should tarry in Germany, when, by leaving it, I had a chance of seeing him? 19199 I speak to others; but with whom do I converse, if it be not, O my God with thee?"
19199What will become of me, if ever I pass out of the light which beams on me from thine eyes? 19199 Yes; but is there cause of fear for what I have done?"
19199''Günderode,''I cried, may I come in?''
19199''What does this mean?''
19199After her return to Languedoc, we find her writing in her journal,"My Maurice, must it be our lot to live apart?
19199All school- days''friendship, childhood innocence?
19199And are there not a Saint Elizabeth and a Lady Godiva, capable of supernal deeds of self- denial and heroism for the sake of blessing the poor?
19199And have we not seen women whose hideous shape and fiendish spirit suggested an alliance with antediluvian monsters?
19199And is it not to be feared that many in our age die this death?
19199And is there not a Messalina, who would receive embraces in a bath of blood?
19199And now has not something been said to shake the current opinion, that the friendships of women are few and superficial?
19199And what of the enchantresses themselves, beneath whose wand these graces arose?
19199And what shall I do when thou art dead?''
19199And where do you find, purely shielded behind manners all frost, a heart all celestial fire?
19199And will you rend our ancient love asunder, To join with men in scorning your poor friend?
19199And yet, why is it not just as much his duty to be her servant, as it is her duty to be his servant?
19199And, in the outset, is it not obvious that the home affections flourish so scantily because scanty attention is paid to the cultivation of them?
19199Are the life and happiness of the poet, of the man of genius, a trifle?
19199Are the parties selfish, unfeeling, ungenuine?
19199Because one can do more than another, shall he compel the other to do nothing?
19199But is it not too dangerous to be cultivated?
19199But is this distaste a veracious instinct?
19199But would this really be an advance, or a retrogression?
19199Can any woman be too grateful that she stands on this side of that breadth instead of on the other side?
19199Can we not, then, love each other differently?
19199Come, come, dear friend: life is so short, why lose it thus?"
19199HAVE WOMEN NO FRIENDSHIPS?
19199Have we not seen women to whom death seems an indignity-- looking, in every feature and glance, as immortal as Pallas Athene?
19199Have your successes in London made you forget your friends in Paris?"
19199He asks,"What can be sweeter than to be so dear to your wife that it makes you dearer to yourself?"
19199He rose with the palm of victory out of this terrible struggle of nature and politeness; but who can tell at what a cost?"
19199How canst thou betray such devotion?
19199Is Jacobi, the German Plato, so stupid a metaphysician and so low a moralist that you can so easily teach him acumen and ethics?
19199Is it a new attachment which begins where an old one ends?
19199Is it a sound view?
19199Is it a state where each is content with the personal fruition of his own powers, in harmony with the same enjoyment by all others?
19199Is it a state where there is a universal contention for notice, power, and honor?
19199Is it her sole sphere, or is she also called to enter the other sphere?
19199Is it not as truly the peculiar mission of man to be a husband and father?
19199Is it not liable to go too far, and to work fatal mischiefs?
19199Is it not too well established in the authority of the most cultivated souls, to be so easily shaken?
19199Is it not, then, a sound claim which demands for women a full initiation into all the noble realms and interests of humanity?
19199Is not such a book especially needed at he present time?
19199Is one wise, aspiring, magnanimous?
19199Is there not a Fulvia, who takes the head of the murdered Cicero in her hands, and tears his dumb tongue with her bodkin?
19199Is there not a Volumnia, as chaste as that star seen in winter dawns shivering on the cold forehead of the morning?
19199Many persons forget that the highest question is, what ought to be?
19199My beloved one, can it be, shall we never see each other again on earth?"
19199My dear Charles, will you not reward me by being all that my wishes and my prayers would fain make you?
19199My friend, this moment I receive your letter: how can I thank you?
19199Now, is it not true that the intenser need naturally implies the keener search and the more copious finding?
19199Of what use is memory, if it does not perpetuate the beautiful and good?"
19199Safe in thy immortality, What change can reach the wealth I hold?
19199Shall I venture to depict the sad decay which love naturally suffers, and the redemptive transformation which it sometimes undergoes?
19199Shall the pulpit, the academic chair, the high court of the finer literature, alone be dumb?
19199TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION HAVE WOMEN NO FRIENDSHIPS?
19199The next morning, at prayers in the Mosque, Mohammed said,"Hast thou slain the daughter of Marwan?"
19199The question is not, What do women desire?
19199Wake up the countless dead; ask every ghost, Whose influence tortured or consoled the most?
19199Was he not one of the charmers, who are so much to others, but to whom others are in return comparatively so little?
19199Was it not natural, that they should, in the humorous phrase of Ballanche,"gravitate towards the centre of the Abbaye- aux- Bois"?
19199Well, in the name of God, to love, is it not to love?
19199What chance can mar the pearl and gold Thy love hath left in trust with me?
19199What element of romance or tragedy ever known, is not every day experienced, all about us, under the thin disguise of commonplace?
19199What has happened?
19199What is right and best for them?
19199What is the ideal of perfect society?
19199What presence hallows the place?
19199What profit could he draw from the reverence of those who would have ceased to understand him, had he shown himself as he was in truth?
19199What right hast thou to cast me off?
19199What woman who possessed a ring conferring invisibility on its wearer, would dare to put it on, and move about among her friends?
19199What would be the effect of female voting?
19199What would human society be without them?
19199What, then, is the will of God, so indicated?
19199When shall I see you again?
19199Where are the circles in which conversation is carried on as the loftiest and richest of the social arts?
19199Where are the famous talkers now?
19199Where do you find an exterior of politeness covering an interior of indifference or guile?
19199Who is this, shameless mixture of beast and fiend, with body of fire, heart of marble, brow of bronze, and hand hollowed to hold money?
19199Who so fills the air about him as to seem just ready to break into palpable vision wherever he turns?
19199Who up the lofty diapason roll Such sweet, such sad, such solemn airs divine, And let them down again into the soul?
19199Why is it less womanly to prescribe as a physician than to tend as a nurse?
19199Why so?
19199a beautiful show of nobleness and happiness, with a haggard reality of weariness and woe underneath?
19199a flaming demonstrativeness in front of a soul of ice?
19199and not, What has been or is?
19199but, What ought they to desire?
19199do you miss us?
19199do you think, then, that all the infinitely complicated minglings and windings of human feeling are so lucid and simple?
19199is all forgot?
19199looking from some heavenly hill, Or from the shade of saintly palms, Or silver reach of river calms, Do those large eyes behold me still?
19199or is it a fallacy and a superstition?
19199or is it a mixture of truth and error?
19199or is it a prejudice, owing to the ideal of feminine character and life, which they have been educated to admire?
19199remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old?
19199the other, foolish, vulgar, revengeful?
19199to find that this marriage, which I hoped would keep us so much together, leaves us more asunder than ever?
19199under conditions of unpretending simplicity, an experience ever fresh and serene, full of joy and dignity, and endlessly progressive?
19199what hand can touch the strings so fine?
19199when shall I see you again?"
21749What are you firing for?
21749What_ is_ the compass?
21749And if you lay it on the table the wrong end to the north, will it turn round of its own accord?"
21749And which end points to the north-- the eye or the point?
21749Can a_ Devastation_ or a_ Glatton_ ever inspire poetic thoughts and images?
21749Does not the epigram on our war- ships-- our"sub- marine fleet"--owe its point and sting, in a measure, to its truth?
21749If we were a maker of riddles, we would ask our reader,"Why is a ship like a human being?"
21749Is it a darning needle, or a knitting needle, or a drawing- through needle?
21749It may occur to the reader to ask, Why not have sea- going masted vessels at once?
21749The new sea- monster looks formidable enough in all conscience; but the question that arises the instant she quits the dock is, Is she sea- worthy?
21749The question, then, that immediately suggests itself is,_ Can_ a vessel be constructed to carry much heavier armour- plating than this?
21749What could such a crew do in a little open boat in so wild a sea?
21749What further evidence need we that the lifeboat is almost, if not altogether, indestructible?
21749What is now the state of matters?
21749Will a Dibdin ever arise to sing a_ Devastation_ or a_ Glatton_?
21749_ Why_ is it that the magnetising of the needle causes it to turn to the north?"
21749and having added,"D''ye give it up?"
22080Do they come from England?
22080How can a poor girl help the prince?
22080How goes the day with us?
22080What need ye, my masters?
22080What will they say to this in England?
22080When can their glory fade? 22080 Who are these boys?"
21909Can we not be reinforced by Pemberton''s army?
21909*** Where is Judge Evans and how is his health?
21909And even could the expedition have opened the river, was there any point on that river where a decisive blow could have been dealt the Confederacy?
21909Are our present laws and customs just toward women?
21909Are women ever preëminently fitted for high offices in the State?
21909Can America continue to be so unjust to women?
21909Can it continue to hold them down as a disfranchised class?
21909Could it open the Mississippi to its mouth?
21909Could it succeed?
21909I then asked him,"What about the Cumberland and Tennessee rivers;"whether they were fordable for gunboats?
21909We have spent I know not how many millions of dollars, and what have we done?
21909What more could any one want than such an endorsement as you have from Mr. O''Conor and other eminent men?
21909What one evidence of determined war or military skill have we exhibited to foreign nations, or to our own people?
21909When do you think the Legislature will rise?
21909Why did you not say"_ certain_?"
20055''Is not Charles,''asked Didier of Ogger,''with this great army?'' 20055 ''What do you suppose,''said he to me,''these fellows can do with all their outbreaks?
20055''What should we do, then,''rejoined Didier, who began to be perturbed,''should he come accompanied by a larger band of warriors?'' 20055 Am I then at liberty?"
20055And you deem this a bond of friendship? 20055 Art not thou the admiral?"
20055Behme,cried the duke of Guise from the court- yard,"hast thou done?"
20055Brother,he said,"I am safe, am I not, in your house and your country?"
20055Cardinal,broke out the king, in an abrupt tone,"you bought some diamonds of Boehmer?"
20055Do you believe in God?
20055Do you know me?
20055Do you know what the king is doing?
20055Does he mean to make game of me, that he offers such a sum?
20055Gentlemen,he called to the officers on the bridge,"are we bound for Spain or for Africa?"
20055Have those hounds lost heart, pray?
20055Have you any news from Paris?
20055Have you good spurs?
20055Have you your passports?
20055How could a prince of your house and my grand almoner suppose that the queen would sign,''Marie Antoinette of France?''
20055How have you got rid of so much?
20055How, then, do you forget Bertrand du Guesclin?
20055How?
20055I am very much inclined,said the king;"but what will my wife say?
20055In what language do the voices speak to you?
20055Is that all?
20055Is there any one here?
20055It is a bad business; but how are we to stop it?
20055Madame,said Romeuf, warningly,"do you wish that other eyes than mine should witness your anger?"
20055May I ask what you will do with it?
20055My dear, shall I really go?
20055See,cried Joan,"are the English turning to you their faces, or verily their backs?
20055Shall this man longer remain master of the Convention?
20055Sire,said the colonel,"is it not dangerous to act thus in presence of troops whose sentiments we do not know, and whose first fire may be so fatal?"
20055Soldiers of the Fifth,he cried, loudly,"do you recognize me?"
20055The king? 20055 Vatel,"said he,"what is this I hear?
20055Well, Bertrand, how are you?
20055Well, M. de Guitant, and what is your advice?
20055Well,he said,"since these drunken scoundrels are upon us, and are coming here to look for meat and drink, what ought we to do?"
20055What are you doing, soldiers?
20055What danger is there in this assault? 20055 What do you think of all this?"
20055What fancy is this of yours?
20055What have you done with them?
20055What is the matter, sir?
20055What is the meaning of this riot?
20055What is to be done?
20055What manner of man will this be,said the onlookers,"who as a boy is so firm of seat and strong of hand?"
20055What say you?
20055What shall be done with the ointment?
20055What sort of man is this?
20055Whence shall the money come?
20055Where are we?
20055Where are you bound?
20055Where will you go, fair sir?
20055Who gave you the commission to buy them?
20055Who is the commander of this rear- guard?
20055Who is your Lord?
20055Why, then, went you not straight, without stopping?
20055Will you not enter my house?
20055You have?
20055All?
20055And was it safe to attempt an arrest?
20055And what is the meaning of all these doings with jewellers, and these notes shown to bankers?"
20055And you?"
20055Are there not among you fifty gentlemen willing to die with their king?"
20055But a town was not enough; an army was needed; whence should it come?
20055But what then?
20055But will you not be pleased to swear to the treaty just as it is written?"
20055Civilization had swung downward into barbarism; was barbarism to swing downward into savagery, and man return to his primitive state?
20055Could St. Remy''s vial be found, or had it and its contents vanished in the whirlpool of the Revolution?
20055Could the fates fail him now, at this critical moment of his life?
20055Had the desecration of sans- culottisme proceeded so far as this?
20055Has there ever been a year in the world''s history more crowded with momentous events?
20055Have I not forced them to give up what they called their commune, for the whole duration of my life?''
20055Have you any commissions I can execute there?"
20055He had set the flood in motion; how far was he to be borne on its waves?
20055He stirred about in an unquiet and irresolute mood, saying several times to the queen,"My dear, shall I go or not?"
20055How came it about?
20055How is the Emperor?"
20055How would they receive him,--with volleys or acclamations?
20055If she become powerful, will not revenge be her first and only thought?
20055In this you injured your own blood and troubled me and my people, ruined your friends and famished your army, and for what?
20055Is this the power of your Christ?"
20055Napoleon looked at General Drouet, and said, in pensive tones,"Do you hear this, Drouet?
20055On whom besides could the Church rest, in its great conflict with paganism and unbelief?
20055Others might lie late abed, but there could be no such indulgence for him; for was not he the power behind the throne?
20055Should the Emperor declare himself and seek to gain over Andrieux?
20055So this was what lay behind the insinuations of Cinq- Mars?
20055The battle over, the question arose, what had become of the Duke of Burgundy?
20055The city was there, but where were the people?
20055The diamond necklace?
20055The question now arises, Who was the"man with the iron mask"?
20055These devils of square- caps, are they mad about bringing me either to commence a civil war, or to put a rope round their own necks?
20055These few fish all he had to offer his multitude of guests?
20055To attack his army?
20055Was this the stuff of glory?
20055What could this mean?
20055What diamond necklace?
20055What did this mean?
20055What part was he to play in the drama of retribution?
20055What shall I say concerning his boots?
20055What think you this woman is made of?
20055What was this disgraceful business?
20055What was to be done with the thief?
20055What was to be done?
20055What will you do?"
20055What would he do?
20055What would this grand fête be should his genius fail, his powers prove unequal to the strain?
20055What, after all, is the good of troubling the world in order to fill it with our name?"
20055What, these base peasants?
20055When will you set out?"
20055Where are your forces?"
20055Where is the Viceroy of Naples?"
20055Who was there besides him to act as Defender of the Faith?
20055Who was this Childebert, it may be asked?
20055Why?
20055Would they come?
20055what prayer can alter fate?
20055what was that, on the horizon, at the very extremity of the landscape, that small, faint cloud, which he had not seen before?
10037''A solil?''
10037''Clicks,''Penelope?
10037''How do we get them? 10037 ''Ravens,''"echoed Evadne bewildered,"what_ do_ you mean, Penelope?"
10037''Specs little Miss is powerful lonesum''thout Mass Lennux?
10037''The King''s corner?''
10037A knight?
10037A second Romeo and Juliet, eh?
10037Ah, but you can not understand-- how should you? 10037 An angel, Joseph?
10037And do you love him?
10037And does he make you happy all the time?
10037And if there should come a run on the funds?
10037And what do_ you_ think of life?
10037And what is that, Aunt Marthe?
10037And what is that?
10037And what will become of Evadne?
10037And who is Don?
10037And who should a man please but himself, I should like to know?
10037And you call this sport?
10037And your father, Rege?
10037Are the doctors quite sure that nothing can be done?
10037Are you afraid, Nansie?
10037Are you crazy?
10037Are you going crazy?
10037Are you looking down on this poor old world, and what do you think of it all? 10037 Are you mad, Lawrence, to let her take this step?
10037Are you on intimate terms with him? 10037 Are you quite sure about that?"
10037Are you there, Jesus Christ?
10037Are your eyes no better, Frau Himmel?
10037As sure as sure can be, dear,said Evadne with a kiss,"Where shall I find it?"
10037Aunt Marthe, what_ is_ culture?
10037Aunt Marthe,said Evadne, after a long silence, in which they had been tasting the sweetness of it,"I do not need to ask if you know Jesus Christ?"
10037Be you a''stayin''at Mis''Everidge''s?
10037Believe in him? 10037 Besides, does keeping one''s engagements constitute a prig, Isabelle?
10037But are we not to ask for what we want?
10037But do n''t you get dreadfully tired doing the same work over and over? 10037 But what did they say to her?"
10037But what if I do not have the Spartan strength, Horace?
10037But who will take care of Atalanta? 10037 But why does n''t he preach Jesus Christ?"
10037But why, oh, Aunt Marthe, why should not Uncle Horace learn it too?
10037But would that disgrace him?
10037But, Aunt Marthe, how does she stand it? 10037 But, Louis, have you looked everywhere?
10037Can we be that?
10037Can you help me to find him?
10037Can you_ ever_ forgive?
10037Dear Aunt Marthe,cried Evadne one afternoon,"what is love?"
10037Dearest, what_ is_ the matter? 10037 Did you ever love-- a woman?"
10037Did you ever think of the silences of God? 10037 Did you leave nothing behind you at Hollywood that day?"
10037Did you not know I had an E in my name also? 10037 Did you notice, Gretchen,"said Hans, after Evadne had left them,"how sweet our Fraulein was this afternoon?
10037Did you really know my father?
10037Do n''t you think Papa looks very badly, Isabelle? 10037 Do what?"
10037Do you believe that, Aunt Marthe?
10037Do you ever remember having any of my opinions in writing, President Peters? 10037 Do you hear what I say, John?"
10037Do you hear, Reginald? 10037 Do you know Jesus Christ?"
10037Do you know where I''ve been these last months? 10037 Do you learn a new trade every month?"
10037Do you never think about him, Louis?
10037Do you really mean that, little coz? 10037 Do you remember?"
10037Do you see anything wrong with that?
10037Do you think I waste much time in that way, Horace?
10037Do you think he finds it necessary? 10037 Do you think so?"
10037Doctor Randolph,Elise asked suddenly,"what is your conception of prayer?
10037Does n''t Pompey get enough to live on?
10037Dr. Danvers says your father told him some time ago that, in the event of his death, he wished you to make your home with your uncle in America?
10037Evadne?
10037Find whom, my dear? 10037 Halloo, Evadne, are you taking lessons in farriery?
10037Has it refreshed you, dearest?
10037Have you felt this too?
10037Have you never heard of eyes that speak and faces that tell tales?
10037How about the other life, Rege?
10037How are things going, Rege? 10037 How can you be so sure?"
10037How can you call God so, Pompey?
10037How did you get him into such a mess?
10037How do you do it?
10037How do?
10037How goes life with you now, dear friend?
10037How is Louis?
10037How is Uncle Lawrence, and all the others?
10037How is it possible for any one else to live our lives for us?
10037How is it to be taken then?
10037How is that?
10037How much more good will it do you to go there than to stay at home and hoe my corn?
10037How?
10037I am going for a long ride into the country, Evadne,said her uncle one morning,"would you like to come with me?"
10037I hope there is nothing out of the usual?
10037I hope you''re feelin''better sence you''ve cum?
10037I wonder if it really pays?
10037I wonder what it is about you, you dear Aunt Marthe?
10037I would like to send some of that currant jelly I made yesterday to old Mrs. Riggs, if you are sure you would like to take it?
10037If Evadne is so anxious to work, why does n''t she come and help mamma and me? 10037 If Jesus Christ is able to fill heaven do n''t you think he ought to be able to fill earth too?
10037If it were only you, dear, how delightfully easy it would be, but do you suppose it is possible for me to love Aunt Kate and Isabelle?
10037Is Louis right? 10037 Is it a strange question?"
10037Jesus Christ?
10037Knocking, knocking, who is there? 10037 Laws, chile, do n''t yer know de heart kin sing when de lips is silent?
10037Laws, honey, how kin I help bein''glad? 10037 Lincoln split rails,"said John with a smile,"why should not I pile them?
10037Louis, where are you? 10037 Miss Hildreth, I believe?"
10037Mrs. Reginald Hawthorne is very ill. Can you, will you come?
10037My dear, you have a great sorrow?
10037No turn for dollars and cents, eh? 10037 Oh, Uncle Horace, why did n''t you leave him among his tomes and his theories and let us be free to enjoy?"
10037Oh, will you let me be your sister and help you bear your burdens?
10037Oh, your wife, my good fellow? 10037 Pompey,"she said wistfully,"dear Pompey, is the pain terrible to bear?"
10037Shall I find Jesus Christ there?
10037Sister, Sister, wo n''t you sing before you go?
10037So camp- meeting is a privilege, is it?
10037So you do n''t take kindly to Marlborough? 10037 So, little coz, you did not coincide with the lady mother''s eulogium of our respected collateral last night?"
10037So, you''re going to turn preacher, John? 10037 That you have discharged Reuben?"
10037The Jews said the same about Jesus Christ,she said,"why should the servant be judged more kindly than her Lord?"
10037The under side of your shoe leather, Unavella?
10037Then what does it mean to worship God?
10037Then why do you not recognize it in your chimney- sweep? 10037 Two people, Evadne?
10037Was Paul mistaken then?
10037Was there one rule of honor for Louis, another for herself? 10037 We are in the world to help the world, else what were the use of living?"
10037Well, Evadne, does it please you?
10037Well, Evadne, how do you do, child? 10037 Well, John Randolph, can you picture to yourself Jesus Christ shooting a squirrel for sport?"
10037Well, Louis?
10037Well, Methusaleh, where are you off to now?
10037Well, Rege, how goes it?
10037Well, Unavella,said Miss Diana, with a pleasant smile,"you expected them, did you not?
10037Well, coz, what do you think of the situation? 10037 Well, see how hard Evadne has to work?
10037Were these the horses my father used to ride?
10037What about that turkey of mine that you stole last week? 10037 What are their names?"
10037What charm have you wrought?
10037What do you mean, Aunt Kate?
10037What do you mean, John?
10037What do you wish, Lawrence?
10037What has tumbled you, Penelope?
10037What if you did? 10037 What in the world has that to do with you?"
10037What in the world is the meaning of all this?
10037What is coming to you, John?
10037What is the news from the great world, Geoff? 10037 What is your favorite verse in all the Bible?"
10037What is, Evadne?
10037What makes you look so strangely, if it is all nonsense, Reginald? 10037 What other answer but''yes''can Petruchio make to''the prettiest Kate in Christendom''?"
10037What right had you to put yourself in the way of ruin?
10037What would a reception be without flowers, I should like to know? 10037 What?
10037What_ do_ you mean, Isabelle?
10037When can we go, John?
10037When will you learn that the Bible is not to be taken literally?
10037When, did she die, mamma?
10037Where are you off to?
10037Where did you come from?
10037Where have you been?
10037Where is Penelope?
10037Where is the Judge?
10037Where is your joy, little one?
10037Who has called you, pray? 10037 Who is that calf, Evadne, standing by the piano?"
10037Why ca n''t we just live on in the old happy way? 10037 Why do n''t you blacken their hoofs, Pompey?
10037Why do you give me that name, Dick?
10037Why do you keep calling me Dick True all the time?
10037Why do you work so hard?
10037Why not? 10037 Why not?"
10037Why should I choke my brains with musty law when his are charged to repletion?
10037Why should I? 10037 Why should they run the risk of offending you, by choosing a night they know you can not come?"
10037Why should you think so, Aunt Kate?
10037Why, Horace, can this be possible?
10037Why, John, hast thou walked far with this load? 10037 Why, John, what has come to you?
10037Why, Penelope, what are you doing?
10037Why, Pompey, do you know him?
10037Why, dearest, what has come to you? 10037 Why, how did you know me?"
10037Why, pray?
10037Will crying give me back my father?
10037Will you tell me how we''re going to do it?
10037Without faith in your fellow man-- and your wife-- you would have a poor time of it, Rege; why should you refuse to have faith in your God? 10037 You always meet the best people at the Joliettes'',--besides, why should we run the risk of offending them?"
10037You do n''t mean that he is dead, Rege?
10037You know him too, then? 10037 You will manage to make the time, Lawrence?"
10037You will never forget you are a Hildreth, eh?
10037Your Master, Randolph?
10037_ Are_ you happy, little one?
10037''The victory of our faith,''you know, and the''Overcomeths''in Revelation?
10037*****"Aunt Marthe,"said Evadne, when they had settled down for their evening talk,"what does it all mean?
10037*****"Why should you not come to''The Willows''?"
10037--Louis''laugh had a bitter ring,--"By the way, what is his name?"
10037A long, low, blood- curdling laugh, as if a dozen mocking fiends stood at his elbow,--or was it just the shrieking of the wind among the gables?
10037Ah, my soul, for such a wonder, Wilt thou not undo the door?"
10037Ai n''t dat enuff''cashun ter keep a poor cullered woman rejoicin''all de day long?
10037Am I never to know?"
10037Am I to be jealous of my old friend?
10037And why do n''t you smoke, Pomp?
10037Are Christians ashamed of the religion of Jesus?"
10037Are you awake, old lady?
10037Are you going to forsake your cherished books for a curry- comb?"
10037Are you very tired?"
10037Being a butcher, you know?
10037Branford?"
10037But Evadne-- how is she?"
10037But John,--""Well, Dick?"
10037But how are you going to make the wages spin out?
10037But how art thee going to manage it, lad?"
10037But what else is there for me to do?"
10037By what possible chance could a child of that age know how to manage money?
10037Can it be that I am a victim of it too?
10037Can it be that this drudgery, not to be escaped, gives''culture?''
10037Can not you take your Heavenly Father at his word as you would your husband?
10037Can not you treat God the same?"
10037Can you fancy anything more beautiful than a life clothed in such garments as these?
10037Can you let them take me away from this beautiful world and stay in it all by yourself?
10037Can you think of anyone nearer than that?"
10037Could any poor beggars be without a shelter on such a night as this?
10037Could it be possible she would come to- night?
10037Could life become that to her?
10037Could she be the same Evadne, or was it all a dream?
10037Could she call him"poor Louis"if she loved?
10037Dick, so you''re pining for frills, eh?
10037Did Christians and the Bible not agree?
10037Did God make no allowances for the nineteenth century?
10037Did it alter everything?
10037Did she see him cower in his chair?
10037Did you ever study that to see how perfect love would make us?
10037Did you see the president when he came into the office this morning?
10037Did your father never consult you about his affairs?"
10037Do I look more than usually mournful to- day that you should think I am pining away with grief?"
10037Do n''t you believe our Father loves his children?
10037Do n''t you care for me any more?
10037Do n''t you know Self is the god we worship, and the aim of our existence is to have it wear purple and fine linen, and fare sumptuously every day?"
10037Do n''t you know there is n''t a girl in Barbadoes who has been so thoroughly spoiled, and has found the spoiling so sweet?
10037Do n''t you think it is wicked for people to grumble the way she does, Evadne?
10037Do n''t you think you ladies would find it of advantage to copy them in this laudable abstemiousness?
10037Do the poor Christians always do the singing while the rich ones sigh?"
10037Do the shadows make it seem more weird and grand, or does midnight lose its awesomeness when one is upon four legs?"
10037Do you ever wonder who gave you life and what you are meant to do with it?
10037Do you find it a cross to talk to me about your father?
10037Do you suppose I will ever give you up now?
10037Do you suppose she had?"
10037Do you suppose there is any hope for me, Evadne?"
10037Do you think you would find them defined in Webster?"
10037Do you wonder why the cold winter comes and you have to be shut up in a stall with a different kind of fodder?
10037Doctor Randolph?"
10037Does Desus carry de little chil''en in his arms like oo do, Don?
10037Does money constitute business, Uncle Lawrence?"
10037Does nothing last?"
10037Does that sound as if he were far away, little one?
10037Does thee remember friend Randolph, Ruth?"
10037Does thee think I''d better cook another chicken?"
10037Give yourself the same ancestors and surroundings as your chimney- sweep and wherein would you be superior to him?
10037Had he detected a menace in the tone?
10037Had she been making idols of these things in her heart?
10037Has Caesar got a sand crack?"
10037Have n''t you read your Bible?
10037Have you a friend among the passengers?"
10037Have you any idea what it means to saddle yourself with a child like this?
10037Have you been on board yet?"
10037Have you seen that my vestments are in order, Charlotte?
10037Have_ you_ found him?"
10037He''s been on the go pretty steadily, but what''s a horse good for?
10037His church-- the inner circle of his chosen''hidden ones''--is his bride, and what can be more glorious than to be the bride of the King of kings?
10037How am I ever going to thank you for all you have been to me; and what shall I do without you?"
10037How are you going to maintain your position in society?"
10037How can I bear to have you subjected to this?
10037How can I when every one has a different coloring and a fragrance all its own?
10037How can life be worth living when you''re drivelling psalm tunes all day long?"
10037How can they when it is''the joy of the Lord,''and they reject him?"
10037How can they, when their lives are all duty?
10037How could her nature, sweet as light, ever be attuned to that of her cynical cousin?
10037How could it be if they loved him?
10037How dare you?"
10037How did such people live?
10037How did you manage there?"
10037How have you stood it, man?"
10037How is Aunt Marthe?"
10037How is Evadne,--and the Judge and the girls?"
10037How is Pompey?"
10037How long since the present devotion culminated?"
10037How shall I endure the cold reality of my waking?"
10037How will you like having such a novelty as that, Sis, to introduce among your acquaintance?"
10037I am dying, Reginald, why do n''t you help your wife to die as you mean to do?
10037I hez your permission, sah?"
10037I hope you left our Marlborough relatives in a pleasant attitude of mind?
10037I know there was good old Pompey,--the thought of that haunts me night and day,--but who else do you mean?"
10037I suppose you have an experience in common with the rest?"
10037I thought Christ got the victory for us?"
10037I wonder what will be at the end of this one?
10037If I can not realize my ideal I can at least idealize my real-- How?
10037If you do not have money now what are you going to do?
10037Is anything wrong, John?
10037Is he your friend?"
10037Is it just the veneer of education and travel and environment?"
10037Is it more serious then?
10037Is n''t he a pretty fellow?"
10037Is that too hard a gospel?
10037Is that your usual mode of procedure?"
10037Is this a specimen of West Indian manners?"
10037Is this a very hungry angel, Joseph?
10037Is this the pleasant little legacy which my respected ancestor has bequeathed to his only grandson?
10037Is your will tangible, and can you demonstrate the mysterious forces of nature?
10037Lady Di?"
10037Mamma, did you remember to order the tulle for our wings?
10037Mass Hildreff, do yer spose I''se goin''ter neglec''de Lawd fer one lil''turkey?"
10037Mrs. Greyson had always prided herself upon being thrifty, and, if God loved, would he let any real harm happen?
10037My father chose the law for his profession, why should he rebel if I choose dilettanteism?"
10037Of what special crime do I stand accused before the bar of your judgment?"
10037Oh, Louis, wo n''t you let Christ make your life grand?
10037Oh, my dear, my dear, how can you, do you bear it?"
10037Pompey, have you tightened that girth up to its last hole?
10037Primrose, have you any aspirations, or are you content simply to eat and drink?
10037Rich, I suppose?"
10037Riggs?"
10037Shall the devil have his own?"
10037Suddenly she turned towards her cousin and cried in desperation,--"Can_ you_ tell me where I shall find Jesus Christ?"
10037Suppose you take it to poor Mrs. Dixon?
10037Surely they must be thoroughbreds?
10037Take a tip, ca n''t you?"
10037Tell me, little coz, what makes you give up all your ease to make these people happy?"
10037That''s curious, is n''t it, Dick?
10037The Bishop''s lady sat back with the suddenness of the shock,"Are you in earnest, my dear?"
10037The eternal verities of our holy religion must ever be--""Do you believe in him?"
10037Thee does n''t mean he''s come back to breakfast with us?"
10037Then she asked gently,"Why should you worry about the future, dear Mrs. Greyson, when it is such a waste of time?
10037To whom, if you please?
10037Upstairs Evadne was saying wistfully,"Do n''t you think your life should be very precious, Louis, now that two people have died?"
10037Was Louis right?
10037Was it possible that Jesus Christ could be in this house,--this very room?
10037Was no thought of self ever permitted to enter that brave, suffering heart?
10037Was obeying the commands of Christ only an"experiment"after all?
10037Was that what it meant?
10037Was there any money in that?
10037Was this her Christ- likeness?
10037Was this the silent girl whom Isabelle had voted tiresome and slow?
10037We must water it a little, eh?"
10037Well, we ca n''t do anything for him now, poor fellow, but he left a boy I think?"
10037What are you going to bandage him for?"
10037What are your views of life now, Prim?
10037What can I do for you?"
10037What can it be?"
10037What comfort could there be if John was going away?
10037What could Reginald''s taunts affect him now?
10037What could it all mean?
10037What could it all mean?
10037What could you possibly want of her here?"
10037What did it matter if the devious turnings of life should lead them far apart, or the barring gate of circumstance forever separate them?
10037What did it mean?
10037What did women want to know about politics or the turf?
10037What do they care about our church concerns?
10037What do you suppose put Sultan in such a lather, John?
10037What does it all mean?"
10037What does that mean, Isabelle?"
10037What dost thee think, Ruth?"
10037What dress will you wear?"
10037What has changed you so?"
10037What has come to him?"
10037What has it all been about, dear?
10037What if she or Louis were to see her now?
10037What in the World do you mean?"
10037What in the world are you up to now?"
10037What is going to be the crowning satisfaction of heaven?
10037What is it makes you so glad?"
10037What is my life worth to me now?
10037What is the use, when one can not help in any way?"
10037What is''the light of life''?"
10037What kind of fellows are they?"
10037What mad thing will you be doing next, I wonder?"
10037What made his brows contract as if something hurt him in the sight?
10037What made the color flush her cheeks while her eyes fell beneath his gaze?
10037What meant that sudden start and then the blush which flamed up over cheek and brow?
10037What next, I wonder?"
10037What particular possibility do you refer to?"
10037What possible connection could there be between Judge Hildreth and that?
10037What price do you set, Randolph?"
10037What should she do?
10037What the mischief are you in such a hurry for?
10037What the mischief is to pay?
10037What was that they said was paved with good intentions?
10037What was that?
10037What was that?
10037What will Celeste Follingsby think?
10037What will you do when you have to attend to business?"
10037What''s the matter, Pompey?
10037What''s yours?"
10037Whatever put such an idea into your head?"
10037When a man has all he has prided himself upon swept away from him, and all that he longs for denied him, how can it be possible?"
10037Whence is it that the lines of river and meadow and hill and lake and shore conspire to- day to make the landscape beautiful?
10037Where is the poor boy to find another place?
10037Where was his boasted will power now?
10037Where were all the horses of Hollywood?
10037Where will you find so good a boy?"
10037Where''d you get such good pay, I''d like to know?
10037Why do n''t you go, John?
10037Why do n''t you strike, John?"
10037Why do you not help me now?
10037Why should I set myself up as knowing better than other people?
10037Why should not he?
10037Why should you die forever when he has paid your ransom and set you free?"
10037Why should you set yourself up on a pinnacle and despise everyone who is poor, when the father of us all hoed for a living?"
10037Why will you persist in disliking her so?"
10037Why, what do you mean, Marion?
10037Will Drewson have to go?
10037Will you come?"
10037Will you give it to me?"
10037Will you raise the blind, Mr. Hawthorne, that your wife may see for herself?
10037Will you vouch for like good results in my case?"
10037Would he not follow his grandfather''s example-- if he had the chance?
10037Would you like another drive, or do you feel too tired?"
10037Would''st thee be content to bide, John?"
10037You allers b''lieved your father?
10037You ca n''t fancy an Indian suffering from nervous prostration, can you, Dick?
10037You did n''t need ter see your father ter know he wuz in de house?"
10037You do n''t mean it, John?
10037You have a good time of it now, but what if you were kicked and cuffed and starved?
10037You never look at them, do you?"
10037You remember my fad for mathematics?
10037You would not like to live to be an old lady of two hundred and fifty?
10037and it does n''t strike you as probable that Robinson Crusoe had any predisposition to lung trouble?
10037cried Evadne, as she drove slowly under the trees,"shall I ever, ever learn to be like you?"
10037echoed the man,"and does n''t advice count in law?"
10037he asked,"when we are giving to a King?
10037he continued, as a calf like a young fawn approached the gate,"you ca n''t rest away from your mammy, can you?
10037said Evadne despairingly,"why can not I get below the surface?"
10037she cried in alarm,"what is the matter?"
10037she cried,"what shall I do?
10037she echoed,"to leave Nan an''Pwimwose an''the horsies?
10037she exclaimed passionately,"why can not we stand still and enjoy?"
10037she said,"if there were no writing there would be no books, and what would become of our beautiful evenings then?
10037the superintendent exclaimed one day,"how is it that you make the patients love you so?"
10037whom do you mean?"
10037why do you shut out all the sunshine and why is the house so still?
10609All at once,he says in_ Sartor_,"there arose a thought in me, and I asked myself:''What_ Art_ thou afraid of?
10609My Star,"Evelyn Hope,"Wanting is-- What?
10609....?)
1060911. Who are the minor prose writers of the Elizabethan Age?
106095. Who was George Herbert?
106098. Who are the minor prose writers of this age?
10609Among the translators of the Elizabethan Age Sir Thomas North( 1535?-1601?)
10609And he said,"What shall I sing?"
10609And love was the greatest thing in the world,-- How do I love thee?
10609Are any of the characters like certain men and women whom you know?
10609Are any of these plays still presented on the stage?
10609Are there any Puritan ideals in"Comus"?
10609As he says in"Lamia":... Do not all charms fly At the mere touch of cold philosophy?
10609Beginning of Hundred Years''War| with France|| 1340(?).
10609Beginning of Hundred Years''| War with France| 1340(?).
10609CHAUCER''S CONTEMPORARIES WILLIAM LANGLAND( 1332?
10609CHAUCER( 1340?-1400)''What man artow?''
10609Can you account for the remarkable success of the Ossianic forgeries?
10609Can you compare the Anglo- Saxon ideal of woman with that of other nations, the Romans for instance?
10609Can you describe from your own reading any of these works?
10609Can you explain his great influence?
10609Can you explain his great popularity at first, and his subsequent loss of influence?
10609Can you explain the continued popularity of his"Elegy"?
10609Can you explain the continued popularity of_ Gulliver''s Travels_?
10609Can you explain the difference?
10609Can you explain the popularity of_ She Stoops to Conquer_?
10609Can you explain the prevalence of melancholy in romanticism?
10609Can you explain the secret of Burns''s great popularity?
10609Can you explain what is meant by the inductive method of learning?
10609Can you explain what political conditions are referred to in Wordsworth''s"Sonnet on Milton"?
10609Can you explain why Blake, though the greatest poetic genius of the age, is so little appreciated?
10609Can you explain why Hobbes should call his work_ Leviathan_?
10609Can you explain why Shakespeare''s plays are still acted, while other plays of his age are rarely seen?
10609Can you explain why his work has been called literary poetry?
10609Can you explain why many thoughtful persons prefer him to Tennyson?
10609Can you explain why much of his prose seems like a translation from the Greek?
10609Can you explain why poetry is more abundant and more interesting than prose in the earliest literature of all nations?
10609Can you explain why such a crude poem as"Chevy Chase"should be popular with an age that delighted in Pope''s"Essay on Man"?
10609Can you explain why?
10609Can you quote any passages from Cædmon to show that Anglo- Saxon character was not changed but given a new direction?
10609Can you quote any passages from his poetry which show, the influence of Wordsworth?
10609Can you quote any passages or name any works which justify your opinion?
10609Can you quote or refer to any passages which illustrate these qualities?
10609Can you recall anything from the Anglo- Saxon period to justify your opinion?
10609Can you trace the influence of Burke''s American speeches on later English politics?
10609DANIEL DEFOE( 1661(?
10609Death?
10609Did any change occur in their ideals, or in their manner of life?
10609Did the classicism of Johnson, for instance, have any relation to classic literature in its true sense?
10609Do Jane Austen''s characters have to be explained by the author, or do they explain themselves?
10609Do they appeal to the intellect or the emotions?
10609Do they properly belong to literature?
10609Do you find more of thought or of emotion in his poetry?
10609Do you find the same qualities in his prose?
10609Do you know any later poets who made use of the verse forms which they introduced?
10609Do you know any modern books like it?
10609Do you know any social or political institutions which they brought, and which, we still cherish?
10609Do you recall any passage from his poetry which suggests his own heroism?
10609Do you recall any poems in which he writes of ordinary people or of ordinary experiences?
10609Does Keats ever remind you of Spenser?
10609Does he attempt to paint a picture in his sonnet on Westminster Bridge, or has he some other object in view?
10609Does he ever strive for ornament or effect in writing?
10609Does he show any marked appreciation of Burns''s power as a lyric poet?
10609Does it apply to any modern conditions?
10609Does she make any other observations on eighteenth- century novelists?
10609Does the poem teach any moral lesson?
10609Does the thought or the style of this poem impress you?
10609Footnote 229: This idea is suppported by Shelley''s poem_ Adonais_, and by Byron''s parody against the reviewers, beginning,"Who killed John Keats?
10609For what is Bede worthy to be remembered?
10609For what is Burke remarkable?
10609For what is Dr. Johnson famous in literature?
10609For what is Gibbon"worthy to be remembered"?
10609For what is Sackville noted?
10609For what is Wyclif remarkable in literature?
10609For what is the Prologue remarkable?
10609For what new object did he use poetry?
10609For what purpose did he write?
10609For what reasons is he considered the greatest of writers?
10609For what, beside his poems, is he remarkable?
10609From the literature you have read, what do you know about our Anglo- Saxon ancestors?
10609Has any text- book in history ever appealed to you as a work of literature?
10609Have they any historical foundation?
10609How are these changes reflected in literature?
10609How comes it then that thou art out of hell?
10609How did he do it?
10609How did his work affect our language?
10609How did it differ in its metrical form from modern poetry?
10609How did religion and politics affect Puritan literature?
10609How did the Conquest affect the life and literature of England?
10609How did the Moralities differ from the Miracles?
10609How did they help the drama?
10609How do Burns and Gray regard nature?
10609How do Dryden''s couplets compare with Chaucer''s?
10609How do her characters compare with those of Dickens and Thackeray?
10609How do the readers of this age compare with those of the Age of Elizabeth?
10609How do the two objects conflict?
10609How do these compare in form and subject matter with the Robin Hood ballads?
10609How do they compare in spirit and in expression with_ Beowulf_?
10609How do they compare with Anglo- Saxon literature?
10609How do you account for the coldness and sadness of his verses?
10609How do you account for the serious character of Anglo- Saxon poetry?
10609How do you explain the fact that satire was largely used in both prose and poetry?
10609How does Anglo- Saxon prose compare in interest with the poetry?
10609How does Jane Austen show a reaction from Romanticism?
10609How does Shakespeare sum up the work of all his predecessors?
10609How does Shelley describe himself in this poem?
10609How does each writer regard history and historical writing?
10609How does he reflect the critical spirit of his age?
10609How does he regard the commercialism of his age?
10609How does it compare in melody with the blank verse of Milton or Tennyson?
10609How does it compare with Scott''s romances in style, in plot, in interest, and in truthfulness to life?
10609How does it compare, as a picture of country life, with George Eliot''s novels?
10609How does it differ from classicism?
10609How does it differ from the early romance and from the adventure story?
10609How does it show the romantic spirit?
10609How does the prose of this age compare in interest with the poetry?
10609How does the sea figure in our first poetry?
10609How is nature regarded?
10609How is the personality of Lamb shown in all these essays?
10609How is their work a preparation for the novel?
10609How long did the struggle between Britons and Saxons last?
10609How was woman regarded?
10609How would Chaucer or Burns tell the story of the Rape of the Lock?
10609If you have read Milton''s_ Paradise Lost_, what resemblances are there between that poem and Cædmon''s_ Paraphrase?_ 10.
10609If you have seen any of Shakespeare''s plays on the stage, how do they compare in interest with a modern play?
10609In what does the charm of her novels consist?
10609In what important respect did the English differ from the classic drama?
10609In what important respects did they differ from those of Shakespeare?
10609In what kind of poetry does he excel?
10609In what respect did Percy''s_ Reliques_ influence the romantic movement?
10609In what respect does Landor show a reaction from Romanticism?
10609In what respect is Pope a unique writer?
10609In what respect is this poem romantic?
10609In what respects is Browning like Shakespeare?
10609In what respects is Macaulay typical of his age?
10609In what respects is Ruskin"the prophet of modern society"?
10609In what respects?
10609In what sense is he the creator of the historical novel?
10609In"Andrea"what is meant by the lines, Ah, but a man''s reach should exceed his grasp, Or what''s a heaven for?
10609Is Carlyle chiefly interested in Burns or in his poetry?
10609Is Chaucer''s attitude sympathetic or merely critical?
10609Is it fair to say that Byron''s quality is power, not charm?
10609Is it most remarkable for its thought, form, or imagery?
10609Is satire a poetical subject?
10609Is the moral teaching of George Eliot convincing; that is, does it suggest itself from the story, or is it added for effect?
10609Is the_ Diary_ a work of literature?
10609Is your personal preference for Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, or Keats?
10609Is your pleasure in reading Tennyson due chiefly to the thought or the melody of expression?
10609Is_ Hudibras_ poetry?
10609John Ford( 1586- 1642?)
10609John Knox in Edinburgh| 1562(?).
10609Matters of France, Rome, and Britain?
10609Name some of Shakespeare''s predecessors in the drama?
10609On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before; When will return the glory of your prime?
10609Once a lady asked him,"Dr. Johnson, why did you define_ pastern_ as the knee of a horse?"
10609Or whence this secret dread, and inward horror, Of falling into nought?
10609Press made free 1700(?)
10609Probably the most significant remark made by the ordinary reader concerning a work of fiction takes the form of a question: Is it a good story?
10609Punish a body which he could not please; Bankrupt of life, yet prodigal of ease?
10609Shall I ever sigh and pine?
10609THOMAS CAREW( 1598?-1639?).
10609THOMAS DEKKER( 1570-?).
10609THOMAS HEYWOOD( 1580?-1650?).
10609The Interludes originated, undoubtedly, in a sense of humor; and to John Heywood( 1497?-1580?
10609The dapper ditties that I wo nt devise, To feed youth''s fancy, and the flocking fry Delghten much-- what I the bet forthy?
10609The second question which we ask concerning a work of fiction is, How far does the element of imagination enter into it?
10609The two song writers best worth studying are Thomas Campion( 1567?-1619) and Nicholas Breton( 1545?-1626?).
10609They han the pleasure, I a slender prize: I beat the bush, the birds to them do fly: What good thereof to Cuddie can arise?
10609To what class of poems does"Adonais"belong?
10609To what kind of fiction was her work opposed?
10609To whom are we indebted for our first English hymn book?
10609Upon what does he depend to hold the reader''s attention?
10609What Celtic names and elements entered into English language and literature?
10609What French and what Saxon elements are found in the poem?
10609What accounts for the prevalence of prose?
10609What appeals to you most in the poem?
10609What are Ben Jonson''s chief plays?
10609What are Marlowe''s chief plays?
10609What are his chief poetical works?
10609What are his chief works?
10609What are his favorite types of character?
10609What are his principal works?
10609What are his romantic plays?
10609What are its chief characteristics?
10609What are its good qualities and its defects?
10609What are some of the precursors of the novel?
10609What are the Cynewulf poems?
10609What are the best qualities of each work?
10609What are the characteristics of Blake''s poetry?
10609What are the characters in"The Ancient Mariner"?
10609What are the chief benefits to literature of the discovery of printing?
10609What are the chief characteristics of Restoration literature?
10609What are the chief characteristics of Shelley''s poetry?
10609What are the chief characteristics of Victorian literature?
10609What are the chief characteristics of his novels?
10609What are the chief characteristics of his poetry?
10609What are the chief historical events of the fourteenth century?
10609What are the chief qualities of Bunyan''s style?
10609What are the chief qualities of the poem?
10609What are the chief subjects of his verse?
10609What are the chief works of Gray?
10609What are the defects in his collection of ballads?
10609What are the four periods of his work, and the chief plays of each?
10609What are the general characteristics of Coleridge''s life?
10609What are the general characteristics of De Quincey''s essays?
10609What are the general characteristics of Elizabethan literature?
10609What are the general characteristics of the literature of this period?
10609What are the literary qualities of these essays?
10609What are the main characteristics of the literature of this period?
10609What are the main qualities of Spenser''s poetry?
10609What are the personal and the universal interests in each poem?
10609What are the qualities of Herrick''s poetry?
10609What are the remarkable elements in Boswell''s_ Life of Johnson_?
10609What are the remarkable elements in his life and work?
10609What are the romantic elements in the story?
10609What are the three periods of his literary work?
10609What besides the Danish conquest caused the decline of Northumbrian literature?
10609What books of this period are, in your judgment, worthy to be placed among the great works of literature?
10609What brought about the remarkable change from Northmen to Normans?
10609What causes account for the lack of great literature in this period?
10609What causes led to its decline?
10609What classes of society are introduced?
10609What did the Northmen originally have in common with the Anglo- Saxons and the Danes?
10609What did they write?
10609What differences do you find in thought, in workmanship, and in poetic enthusiasm?
10609What differences do you note in their methods?
10609What do you find to copy in his style?
10609What does Jane Austen say about Mrs. Radcliffe, in_ Northanger Abbey_?
10609What does Shelley try to teach in"The Sensitive Plant"?
10609What does this suggest concerning Tennyson''s figures of speech in general?
10609What effect did Christianity have upon Anglo- Saxon literature?
10609What effect did the Royal Society and the study of science have upon English prose?
10609What effect did the discoveries of science have upon the literature of the age?
10609What effect did this have on literature?
10609What effect on civilization has the multiplication of books?
10609What elements did Fielding add to the novel?
10609What elements in the poet''s character are revealed in such poems as"To a Mouse"and"To a Mountain Daisy"?
10609What elements of Victorian life are reflected in Arnold''s poetry?
10609What elements of style do you find in these lectures?
10609What essential difference do you note between this book and_ Gulliver''s Travels_?
10609What excellent literary purposes did the classics serve in later periods?
10609What experiences in Dickens''s life are reflected in his novels?
10609What experiences of his own life are reflected in_ Sartor Resartus_?
10609What explains the profound sympathy for humanity that is reflected in his poems?
10609What fact in his life most impressed you?
10609What fine elements do you find in them that are not found in Anglo- Saxon poetry?
10609What foreign influences are noticeable?
10609What good work did Goldsmith''s_ Vicar of Wakefield_ accomplish?
10609What great objects influenced him in the three periods of his life?
10609What great work did Addison and Steele do for literature?
10609What great work did he do for the early novel, in_ The Vicar of Wakefield_?
10609What historical conditions account for the fact that most of the Victorian writers are ethical teachers?
10609What historical conditions help to account for the great literature of the Elizabethan age?
10609What important American documents show the influence of Locke?
10609What important work did she do for the novel?
10609What induced them to remain?
10609What influence did he exert on our literature?
10609What influence did the classics exert on the English drama?
10609What influence did the first newspapers exert on life and literature?
10609What is Browning''s creed as expressed in"Rabbi Ben Ezra"?
10609What is Butler''s_ Hudibras_?
10609What is Carlyle''s idea of history as shown in_ Heroes and Hero Worship_?
10609What is Layamon''s_ Brut?_ Why did Layamon choose this name for his Chronicle?
10609What is Layamon''s_ Brut?_ Why did Layamon choose this name for his Chronicle?
10609What is Tennyson''s idea of faith and immortality as expressed in_ In Memoriam_?
10609What is a ballad, and what distinguishes it from other forms of poetry?
10609What is his chief literary work?
10609What is its value in our language, literature, and history?
10609What is lacking in his poetry?
10609What is meant by Humanism?
10609What is meant by Macpherson''s"Ossian"?
10609What is meant by Marlowe''s"mighty line"?
10609What is meant by Miracle and Mystery plays?
10609What is meant by Northumbrian literature?
10609What is meant by a"Carlylese"style?
10609What is meant by cycles of Miracle plays?
10609What is meant by euphuism?
10609What is meant by realism?
10609What is meant by the Horton poems?
10609What is meant by the Puritan period?
10609What is meant by the Riming Chronicles?
10609What is meant by the Spenserian stanza?
10609What is meant by the dramatic unities?
10609What is meant by the exaggeration of Dickens?
10609What is meant by the heroic couplet?
10609What is meant by the modern novel?
10609What is meant by the optimism of his poetry?
10609What is meant by the scientific method of writing history?
10609What is meant by the term"romanticism?"
10609What is meant by the terms Cavalier poets, Spenserian poets, Metaphysical poets?
10609What is meant by the word"essay,"and how does Bacon illustrate the definition?
10609What is the central idea of the essay you like best?
10609What is the central motive in each?
10609What is the central teaching of the"Ode to Duty"?
10609What is the chief defect in Elizabethan prose as a whole?
10609What is the chief object of satire?
10609What is the difference between a tragedy and a comedy?
10609What is the essence of Keats''s poetical creed, as expressed in the"Ode on a Grecian Urn"?
10609What is the general character of Macaulay''s_ History of England_?
10609What is the general character of Swift''s work?
10609What is the general character of Thackeray''s satire?
10609What is the general character of his poetry?
10609What is the general character of his poetry?
10609What is the general character of his work?
10609What is the general character of the_ Essays of Elia_?
10609What is the general impression left by her books?
10609What is the importance of his book to later English literature?
10609What is the literary value of North''s Plutarch?
10609What is the meaning of the term"classicism,"as applied to the literature of this age?
10609What is the most significant thing about his"Gorboduc"?
10609What is the relation of history and literature?
10609What is the secret of this astounding spectacle?
10609What is the significance of_ Pamela_?
10609What is the story of"Faustus"?
10609What is the story or argument of the_ Faery Queen_?
10609What is the subject of the poem?
10609What is the sum total of the worst that lies before thee?
10609What is there remarkable in the style of this novel?
10609What is there to copy and what is there to avoid in his style?
10609What is there to copy in his style?
10609What is_ Mandeville''s Travels_?
10609What kinds of scenes does Shelley like best to describe?
10609What led historians of this period to write in verse?
10609What light does it throw on the mental condition of the age?
10609What light does it throw upon English life of the fourteenth century?
10609What light does the latter throw on the life of the age?
10609What marked change in social conditions followed the Restoration?
10609What marked contrasts are found in Herrick and in nearly all the poets of this period?
10609What marked contrasts do you find between the poetry and the prose of Arnold?
10609What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater?
10609What message does it contain for daily labor?
10609What modern poems suggest the old popular ballad?
10609What modern writers have used these legends?
10609What new and important element enters our literature in this type?
10609What new element is introduced in Cædmon''s poems?
10609What new tendencies were introduced?
10609What occasioned Milton''s prose works?
10609What part did Arthur play in the early history of Britain?
10609What part did they play in developing the idea of nationality?
10609What passages seem to you worth learning and remembering?
10609What personal element entered into the latter?
10609What personal reminiscences have you noted in_ The Traveller_,_ The Deserted Village_, and_ She Stoops to Conquer_?
10609What poem reveals the life of the scop or poet?
10609What poems show his sympathy with the French Revolution, and with democracy?
10609What poems show the influence of the French Revolution?
10609What poems show the influence of the classics?
10609What poet reflects the new conception of law and evolution?
10609What purpose did the harp serve in reciting their poems?
10609What purposes did they serve among the common people?
10609What qualities are found in his poetry?
10609What qualities have you noticed in his poetry?
10609What qualities make Landor''s poems stand out so clearly in the memory?
10609What quality strikes you most forcibly in Milton''s poetry?
10609What resemblances and what differences do you find in the works of Gray and of Goldsmith?
10609What resemblances do you find in these two contemporary writers?
10609What romantic elements are found in his poetry?
10609What side of human nature does he emphasize?
10609What similarities do you find between Burke and Milton, as revealed in their prose works?
10609What similarities do you find in their poems?
10609What similarity do you find between Pope''s poetry and Addison''s prose?
10609What social movement is noticeable?
10609What special literary interest attaches to the poem?
10609What striking difference do you find between his early poems and those of Shelley and Byron?
10609What subjects are considered in Bacon''s_ Essays_?
10609What subjects are considered in"Lines written among the Euganean Hills"?
10609What subjects does he choose for his poetry?
10609What two great elements did Malory combine in his work?
10609What two opposing tendencies are illustrated in the novels of Scott and Jane Austen?
10609What type of drama did they develop?
10609What type of literature prevailed, and why?
10609What types of drama did they develop?
10609What types of literature were produced after the Conquest?
10609What unusual elements are found in his life and writings?
10609What useful purpose did poetry serve among our ancestors?
10609What useful purpose does Macaulay''s historical knowledge serve in writing his literary essays?
10609What virtues did they admire in men?
10609What was Carlyle''s message to his age?
10609What was Dryden''s contribution to English prose?
10609What was its most valuable element from the view point of literature?
10609What was the chief literary influence exerted by Wyatt and Surrey?
10609What was the chief purpose of the Interludes?
10609What was the first effect of the study of Greek and Latin classics upon our literature?
10609What was the purpose of stories modeled after_ Don Quixote_?
10609What was the serious purpose of his novels?
10609What were our first plays in the modern sense?
10609What were the Metrical Romances?
10609What were the objects and the results of the Puritan movement in English history?
10609What work of this period had the greatest effect on the English language?
10609What work seems to you to express most perfectly the Elizabethan spirit?
10609What works of this period are considered worthy of a permanent place in our literature?
10609What writers reflect political and social conditions?
10609What?
10609When Faustus in the presence of Helen asks,"Was this the face that launched a thousand ships?"
10609Where did he find his plots?
10609Where did the Arthurian legends originate, and how did they become known to English readers?
10609Where did these stories originate?
10609Wherefore like a coward dost thou forever pip and whimper, and go cowering and trembling?
10609Which character do you like best?
10609Which do you prefer, and why?
10609Which has the healthier mind?
10609Which has the higher ideal of poetry?
10609Which has the more humor?
10609Which is the more brilliant writer, Byron or Wordsworth?
10609Which is the more inspiring and helpful?
10609Which method calls for the greater literary skill?
10609Which of Malory''s stories do you like best?
10609Which of his characters impress you as being the most lifelike?
10609Which of these two types of literature do you prefer?
10609Which play of Shakespeare''s seems to you to give the best picture of human life?
10609Which tale seems truest to life as you know it?
10609Who are the great Northumbrian writers?
10609Who shall say that Fortune grieves him While the star of hope she leaves him?
10609Why are both unreliable?
10609Why are they called one- man plays?
10609Why did the Anglo- Saxons come to England?
10609Why did the ballad, more than any other form of literature, appeal to the common people?
10609Why do the_ Lyrical Ballads_( 1798) mark an important literary epoch?
10609Why does he mark an epoch in historical writing?
10609Why does the"Shepherd''s Calendar"mark a literary epoch?
10609Why has he been called a romantic poet who speaks in prose?
10609Why is Byron called the revolutionary poet?
10609Why is Carlyle called a prophet, and why a censor?
10609Why is a poetical satire more effective than a satire in prose?
10609Why is he called a pioneer of modern science?
10609Why is he called our first national poet?
10609Why is he called the most human of essayists?
10609Why is he called the myriad- minded Shakespeare?
10609Why is he called the poet of common men?
10609Why is he called the poets''poet?
10609Why is he still popular on the Continent?
10609Why is he, like Chaucer, a national poet?
10609Why is it a work for all ages and for all races?
10609Why is it a work for all time, or, as the Anglo- Saxons would say, why is it worthy to be remembered?
10609Why is the poem called"the gospel of the poor"?
10609Why is this period called the Age of French influence?
10609Why is this period called the Augustan Age?
10609Why is this period of Romanticism( 1789- 1837) called the Age of Revolution?
10609Why is"Lycidas"often put at the summit of English lyrical poetry?
10609Why should any impractical scheme of progress be still called Utopian?
10609Why should both subjects be studied together?
10609Why should the ruin of noble families at this time seriously affect our literature?
10609Why was Shakespeare not regarded by this age as a classical writer?
10609Why was he called"the wizard of the North"?
10609Why, for instance, do you think Lamb was so haunted by"Rose Aylmer"?
10609Why?
10609Why?
10609Why?
10609Why?
10609Why?
10609Why?
10609Would the harp add anything to our modern poetry?
10609Would you call this a work of literature?
10609_ Sonnets_( 1600-?
10609and the"What then, sir?"
10609by formalism?
10609his chief educational work?
10609his chronicle or historical plays?
10609in his"French Revolution"?
10609in the poetry of Byron and Wordsworth?
10609of Elizabethan literature?
10609of literature?
10609or,"Sir, if you were shut up in a castle and a newborn babe with you, what would you do?"
10609wherein serve My nation, and the work from Heaven imposed?
10609why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
10609with Cædmon?
20297''Can you go on there?'' 20297 ''Daughter,''he asked,''do you think you can dress these wounds in my head?
20297And your mother?
20297Can you do nothing to nurse him back to health?
20297Do you intend to do it yourself?
20297He is not dead?
20297How many have you?
20297What is it, daughter?
20297What is it?
20297What next?
20297Where did you get them?
20297Which is the way to the Capitol?
20297Who did it?
20297Who is she?
20297Who towed him in?
20297You do not think I am going to be left behind when my dear daughter and her children are going to take such a journey as that, do you? 20297 ''Did you expect to find ink in him?'' 20297 ''He is n''t going to do it all over again-- out here, is he?'' 20297 ''How will you find him in the darkness?'' 20297 ''You wo n''t forget your promise about doubling the contract?'' 20297 A big boy on the corner yelled after me:''Sa- ay, sis, where''s the fire?'' 20297 A cold terror seized on me-- a terror of what? 20297 A permit? 20297 And how fared it with the Federal Spy during those hours of anguish for all true Southerners? 20297 And what do you suppose the first topic is to be?
20297And who could appreciate the great advantages of slavery to the slaves themselves better than one who owned them?
20297As a matter of course, the Judge was flattered, for who was a more eligible match than this rich and handsome young Bostonian?
20297As she sat watching the star came along and angrily demanded,"Why are you not drilling with the rest?"
20297As she signed her name, she paused so noticeably that he laughed, and said,"Do n''t you know your own name?"
20297As we were trying to decide on our next move, one of the men who was in the lead ahead stopped, turned, and called out:"''Is Mrs. Reed with you?
20297At first the coveted permission was denied her, for how could a girl so young take care of a dangerously injured man?
20297At last she asked Blanche:"Is everything only make- believe in a theater?"
20297Before that time the debate had been as to the abolishing of slavery, but the question now changed to"Shall slavery be extended?
20297Books were dropped on the table, and several voices exclaimed in eager question,"What?"
20297But what are compromises?''
20297Could anything save him now?
20297Could there be any truth in the statement, she wondered?
20297Do you want protection?"
20297Had he been killed by the Indians or perhaps died of starvation?
20297Have they blown you up for your didoes to- night?
20297His daughter, child of an Indian Werowance, to become wife of a white man,--the two races to be united?
20297His greeting was courteous, but he at once turned to Captain Smith and asked:"When are you going away?
20297How can I bear it?"
20297How could she make herself presentable for the interview?
20297I believed myself alone, and when the memory- haunted woman roared out:"''Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much_ blood_ in him?''
20297I thought, and why should I_ not_ make a favorable impression?
20297I wonder who caused it?"
20297Is n''t it wonderful?"
20297Is your father living, and why are you not in school?"
20297Let me go with you?''
20297Looking up, he exclaimed:"Tired?
20297Lots and lots of"calls,"dear, and, oh, is there anything to eat?
20297Oh, sir,"she cried,"why ca n''t people always be fair and square, I wonder?"
20297Patriotism, faithfulness, service-- who can reckon their value?
20297Presently an actor, noticing my eagerness, laughingly said:"''Well, what is it, Clara?
20297Run?
20297Shall it be allowed in the country purchased from Mexico?"
20297She roused and exclaimed:"''What do you mean, child?
20297She seemed to have grown fast to the floor...."''Are you going on?''
20297Should she begin to drop them, one by one?
20297So when Mr. Ellsler asked,"Do n''t you know your name?"
20297Somehow or other the months of vacation wore away; then the question was, what to do next?
20297The foe must be lurking in ambush dangerously near them, for who else would have set off the gun?
20297The reins were in the hands of the public, and it would drive me, where?"
20297Then Anna asked:"Who wrote it?"
20297Those beads were the favorite possession of Kings and Queens in other countries, why should they be sold to Powhatan?
20297Throwing herself into a chair with an indifferent air, she asked:"Want to hear a good story?"
20297Two women came in, and one said;"Why, what on earth''s the matter?
20297Was his brave hazard lost?
20297Was she right?
20297We were starving again-- where could we get food?
20297What can I do?
20297What can you do to prevent it?"
20297What could it mean?
20297What is her history?"
20297What shall we do with her?"
20297What should she do?
20297When she had made all but the final arrangements with the committee she asked,"What salary do you give?"
20297When the Judge decided to take refuge in Lancaster, the question was, should Dorothy go, too?
20297Who could be trusted to take it to the officer for whom it was intended?
20297Will you come and be a regular member of the company for the season that begins in September next?''
20297Will your father ever let you tend the light, do you think?"
20297With folded arms and intent silence he listened to her plea: For her sake would he not give up the Indians detained in the fort as prisoners?
20297Wo n''t it be fun?
20297Would his aunt not do this for him?
20297Would she take his Dolly under her protection until the state of colonial affairs should become more peaceful?
20297Would the noble_ Caucarouse_ not free them for the sake of that maiden who had saved his life?
20297Would they partake of a feast which he had sent?
20297Would we never reach it?
20297around the table, then some one asked,"Who is going to take the other side?"
20297asked the young speaker,''and what was laid down in these constitutions?
20954( But is not this an exception?
20954).--"Why does the sun, shining, on a fire, make it dull, and often put it out?
20954).--Has no person been appointed to fill that high office since the death of the Duc de Luynes, in 1621?
20954).--Is there such a thing; meaning, I presume, of the_ human body_?
20954):"Is there such a thing as spontaneous combustion?"
20954And if so, where is the best place for finding an account of it?
20954And is it not singular that a prior of a religious and military establishment should be qualified to sit as_ locum tenens_ of a judge in a law court?
20954Are any of them engraved?
20954Are any of them known, and where are they to be seen?
20954Are there many other instances of this?
20954Can any instances be given of white cats possessing the function of hearing in anything like perfection?
20954Can any one read this confession without thinking of Tartuffe, who subjected himself to penance for killing a flea with too much anger?..."
20954Can any person state who this_ Roger Outlawe_ was?
20954Can you, or any of your correspondents, explain this curious allusion?
20954Does MR. CROSSLEY ground his claim for Johnson merely upon a fancied resemblance in_ style_?
20954Does a priest''s surplice differ from that worn by a lay vicar, or vicar choral?
20954For Henry Duke of Gloucester, see p. 16.:"What doth Kingdomes happifie But a blesst Posteritie?
20954Is it of Christian origin; or is it derived from the Jews, or from the Greeks or Romans?
20954Is it to the emblem of the House of York, or the badge of the Pretender?
20954Is not this curious warning worthy of preservation in your columns?
20954J. W. S. R._ Tombstone in Churchyard._--Does any one know of a legible inscription older than 1601?
20954May there not be some connexion with the Town Plough?
20954My query is, Does this peculiarity obtain in any other portion of Scotland?
20954No date, circa annum 1770?
20954Philemon Mr. Jacobs?
20954Query: Which reading is the correct one?
20954Should I be wrong in asking correspondents to contribute towards a list of ladies holding the above honorable post?
20954Some of your correspondents can, no doubt, inform us whether any analogous words to_ pearl_ and_ margarita_ exist in the Sanscrit?
20954The apostrophe in the beginning must be understood as addressed to an ideal conception:"''And art thou nothing?
20954To which of these opinions should the historical inquirer give his assent?"
20954Was it always so?
20954Were not_ Jack_ the Giant- killer,_ Jack_ and the Bean- stalk, and Little_ Jack_, the intimates of our earliest days?
20954Were they mere portraits, or full- length?
20954What is the origin of Plough Monday?
20954What other sanction than custom is there for the use of bands?
20954Where can a copy of it be seen?
20954Where is there the slightest_ proof_ that Johnson wrote one line of it?
20954Who were the other two?
20954[?]
20954_ Amusive._--Is this word peculiar to Thomson, or is it made use of by other poets?
20954_ Do the Sun''s Rays put out the Fire?_( Vol.
20954_ How can we forward a letter to this Correspondent?_ M. C._ The answer to Mr. Canning''s famous riddle is"Cares-- Caress.
20954_ Lying by the Walls._--What is the origin of the phrase"Lying by the walls,"an euphemism for_ dead_?
20954_ Ring, the Marriage._--When and how did the use of the ring, in the marriage ceremony, originate?
20954assign the family names to these arms?
20954favour me with a decision or authority on the following point?
20954that the mysterious secret of the_ Masque de fer_ has ever been satisfactorily explained?"
20237Is he employed in the service of the Grand Cophte?
20237What else do you see?
20237''Are you not tired of those eternal robes?
20237''But did it make you laugh?''
20237''Do you think, sir, that I ought to be a pupil to anybody?''
20237''Hee zays zo, does hee?
20237''How can you talk such trash, Cosway?''
20237''How did you like the play?''
20237''Is English wet weather one of the things which we would desire to see art give perpetuity to?''
20237''Shall I give you an account of it?''
20237''The nose?
20237''True, sire,''answered the painter;''but does your Majesty keep an open table as I do?''
20237''Well, Verrio,''the king inquired,''what is your request?''
20237''Were the articles authentic?''
20237''What do you know,''he was asked,''of the Prince of Wales, that he so often speaks of you?''
20237''What has the Academy done for me?''
20237''Who''s to teach''ee here?
20237''Will hee?
20237''Yes,''Northcote answered;''but how am I to paint the sound of dump, dump, dump?''
20237''[ 25] But was Mr. Ruskin in any better plight?
20237''[ 26][ 25]''What can I say of the Napoleon of Mr. Turner?
20237A bystander inquires what has become of the nose of the bust?
20237And Macpherson?
20237And after painting all his Whig friends and associates, what was he to do?
20237And then the difficult question arises: when is he to assert his independence?
20237And then why, was indignantly asked, why had the artist arranged the portraits so cruelly?
20237And was he a male coquette?
20237And what claims upon society had the man who chose to conduct himself towards it after this manner?
20237And what did she think of his art?
20237And why do they assume these forms?
20237At this juncture his father abruptly entered the room, crying out,''You play Jaffier, Tom?
20237At what period in his career is he to cease leaning on his teacher, and to pursue his own devices unaided and alone?
20237Boswell?)
20237But is this for a moment sustainable?
20237But to live?
20237But what could he do?
20237Could one man only have art abilities and ambitions, and make for himself the opportunity to employ and gratify them?
20237Did_ she_ ever stand before his easel and contemplate his works?
20237Do you think he was overawed by_ they_?
20237Dr. Blair wrote in defence,''Could any man, of modern age, have written such poems?''
20237For when there arose a cry of''Who wrote Sir Joshua''s discourses, if not Burke?''
20237Harley?''
20237He was then asked which was his favourite recitation in Milton?
20237How the devil should we distinguish the works of the ancients if they were perfect?
20237How to live?
20237In short, I can think of no reason in the world against your going there but one:_ do you know his youngest brother?_?
20237In short, I can think of no reason in the world against your going there but one:_ do you know his youngest brother?_?
20237In society he was a power; for could he not by means of his pencil bestow, as it were, a certificate of beauty upon whom he would?
20237Is it well to watch them like Turner?
20237Is not the comparison impressive?
20237May, then, clouds be formed of minute hollow globules of water swimming in the air, balloon- like?
20237Messieurs ACADEMICIANS, when you''re dead, Where can your impudences hope to go?
20237Mr. Ruskin asks two questions only--''Are these works accurate renderings of nature, as I by education and study now know nature to be?''
20237Northcote, pray how long do you devote to the duties of the toilet?''
20237Patronized by the Prince of Wales, what could he do but imitate his patron-- who was nothing if not''dressy?''
20237Poor human nature, when wilt thou come to years of discretion?''
20237See what it is to gain a monarch''s smile, And hast thou missed it, REYNOLDS, all this while?
20237Should they submit, serve where they had once ruled, sink into simple Fellows, and thus, as it were, grace the triumph of their foes?
20237The diving[ divining?]
20237The plays performed were_ The Wedding Day_, and_ Who''s the Dupe?_ Lawrence represented Lord Rakeland in the one, and Grainger in the other.
20237These and a hundred other questions; and what is the use of asking them?
20237To be merely a foil?
20237To which did he incline?
20237Was n''t he the Prince''s painter?
20237Was_ he_ any nearer the painter''s meaning?
20237What are clouds?
20237What care I for the nose?''
20237What could have induced simple- minded Mr. De Loutherbourg to put trust in this arch- juggler?
20237What does he live upon?
20237What had a painter to do with politics?
20237What is a picture of Ramsay or Romney now worth?
20237What is he to do?
20237What need of further holocausts?
20237What says he of himself?
20237What was all this to Runciman?
20237What was now to be their course?
20237What zort of peinter?''
20237Who cares about Agandecca,''with red eyes of tears''--''with loose and raven locks?''
20237Who knows anything now about Catholda, and Corban Cargloss, and Golchossa and Cairbar of the gloomy brow?
20237Who reads Ossian now?
20237Who was Laguerre?
20237Who was Verrio?
20237Why is the soft, level, floating, white mist so heavy?
20237Why should you want to know what he did n''t?''
20237Will you be so friendly as to come and sit an hour with me in the evening?''
20237Will you have the kindness to lend me an umbrella?''
20237Would he be a player or a painter?
20237Your vather is n''t a moneyed man, is he?''
20237_ Was_ he unappreciated?
20237and next,''Are these high art in its purest, and most ideal, and most godly form?''
20237asks Hazlitt; and he answers his own question--''What matter?
20237cried Garrick,''was Shakespeare marked with mulberries?''
20237does Northcote keep a dog?
20237he exclaimed, afterwards telling the story,''what could I say?
20237he would ask petulantly;''they knighted Calcott, why do n''t they knight me?''
20237his favourite exclamation in his west country dialect,''what, is it_ you_?
20237or to neglect them with Claude, Salvator, Ruysdael, Wouvermans, never to look nor portray?
20237the long legs and the flying draperies?
20237what''s he tu du here?
20237who would give it?
21774And what, when you have come to it, do you suppose to be your own function in this vast twofold scheme?
21774Are there not here, as the French proverb has it, plenty of cats for you to comb?
21774CHAPTER I WHAT IS MYSTICISM?
21774CHAPTER III THE PREPARATION OF THE MYSTIC Here the practical man will naturally say: And pray how am I going to do this?
21774Dare you call them the least significant, moments of your life?
21774Did you not then, like the African saint,"thrill with love and dread,"though you were not provided with a label for that which you adored?
21774Do you remember that horrid moment at the concert, when you became wholly unaware of your comfortable seven- and- sixpenny seat?
21774Do your hours of contemplation and of action harmonise?
21774Has it never happened to you to lose yourself for a moment in a swift and satisfying experience for which you found no name?
21774How is it going to fit in with ordinary existence?
21774How often in each day do you deliberately revert to an attitude of disinterested adoration?
21774How shall I detach myself from the artificial world to which I am accustomed?
21774How, above all, is it all going to help_ me_?"
21774How, then, can a wholesale and uncritical acceptance of my sensations help me to unite with Reality?
21774Is it for nothing, do you think, that you are thus a meeting- place of two orders?
21774Is that a theophany too?
21774Is there not here, then, abundance of practical work for you to do; work which is the direct outcome of your mystical experience?
21774The ultimate question,"What is Reality?"
21774Then the guardian at the gate, scrutinising and sorting the incoming impressions, will no longer ask,"What use is this to_ me_?"
21774What about_ your_ life?
21774What changes, what readjustments will this self- revelation involve for you?
21774What form, then, shall this action take?
21774What is it that smears the windows of the senses?
21774What is it, then, which distinguishes the outlook of great poets and artists from the arrogant subjectivism of common sense?
21774What is that great wind which blows without, in continuous and ineffable harmonies?
21774What next?
21774What then, in the last resort, is the source of this opposition; the true reason of your uneasiness, your unrest?
21774When the world took on a strangeness, and you rushed out to meet it, in a mood at once exultant and ashamed?
21774Where is the brake that shall stop the wheel of my image- making mind?
21774Who has not watched the intent meditations of a comfortable cat brooding upon the Absolute Mouse?
21774Will you suggest that my terrier, smelling his way through an uncoordinated universe, is a better mystic than I?"
20420''God be with us,''said he, turning to Donald,''what was that?'' 20420 ''Surely,''said I to him,''you do n''t mean to say that this man is dead?''
20420Adrienne, are you still angry?
20420And Lucie?
20420And now?
20420And what about clothes?
20420And what about the shawl?
20420But that implies the possibility of a decaying ghost?
20420But what is a Thought Body?
20420But what is an astral body?
20420But, my dear friend, do you actually mean to say that you have the faculty of----"Going about in my Thought Body? 20420 But,"said I to my fellow- passenger,"how do you know that the story is true?"
20420But,said my friend, somewhat dubiously,"what paper are you going to?"
20420Come, Martin,said the man of the house"are you not going to tell a story, I am sure you know many?"
20420Do you hear me?
20420Do you hear this?
20420Excuse me, Mr. Morley,said I,"when will this new arrangement come into effect?"
20420Had ever had any hallucinations?
20420Had she ever seen a ghost?
20420He said to me,''Are my photographs ready?'' 20420 How do you account,"said I to my hostess,"for the change in colour of the silk front from grey to amber?"
20420How often?
20420How?
20420I asked him,''Were you here last night, John?'' 20420 I,"what am I?
20420No; what?
20420Nonsense,she said,"what made you think that?"
20420Not even at the Murder Stone of the Devil''s Punch Bowl?
20420Oh, some one else? 20420 Real Ghost Stories!--How can there be real ghost stories when there are no real ghosts?"
20420Then how do you manage?
20420Then the mummies in the Museum?
20420Then when your thought body appears?
20420Then you had no memory of where you had been?
20420Well,said I,"when are you coming to be photographed?"
20420What name will you have?
20420What was it that happened?
20420Who is it?
20420With F."Why?
20420With whom?
20420You? 20420 ''Not going? 20420 ''Oh, who is talking to me like that? 20420 ''What is that you hear?'' 20420 ''Where are you then, and what is the date of to- day?'' 20420 ''Why did n''t you keep it?'' 20420 And was its bow coming unpinned?'' 20420 Anxious to retain his good- will, I shouted after him,''Can I post what may be done?'' 20420 Are you there, Georgie?'' 20420 As I have two hemispheres in my brain, have I two minds or two souls? 20420 But are there no real ghosts? 20420 But how many are there of us within each skin who can say? 20420 But was she quite sure; had nothing ever occurred to her which she could not explain? 20420 Catherine de Medicis saw, in a vision, the battle of Jarnac, and cried out,Do you not see the Prince of Condà © dead in the hedge?"
20420Ghosts?
20420Have you something on a horse?''
20420He also asks,''Art thou satisfied?''
20420He asks,''Do you feel anything?''
20420He started, and said,''Who told you?''
20420His son replied,''I will, father; what is it?''
20420How far was it capable of reasoning and judgment?
20420How far was its attention alert?
20420How many of us have seen the microbe that kills?
20420How?"
20420I asked''What negative?''
20420I met this gentleman in the street, nearly opposite his office; he shook hands, and said,''How are you?
20420I pushed them very hard, and was led to say, without premeditation,''What hinders you?
20420I said to Mr. S----,"You look different to your usual; what''s the matter with you?"
20420I said,''Who are you?
20420I was here then, was I?
20420In other words, am I one personality or two?
20420In what way, by the aid of what nervous mechanism, was the startling monition conveyed?
20420Is my nature dual?
20420Is there any possible truth in it?
20420Mr. M. replied,''Father, I will; what is it?''
20420Mr. S---- said,"Do n''t you see I am in my_ deshabille_?"''
20420My friend looked at me in some amazement, and said,"And where are you going to?"
20420Now, may it not be that this supplies a suggestion as to the cause of the phenomenon of clairvoyance?
20420Now, what do you think of such a vision as that?
20420Or,''_ Georgie_, are you in?
20420Seeing that she did not seem to be attending to him, he went up to her and said,"Did you hear what I did just now?"
20420Shall we call her Blanche?"
20420She said,''Is there some trouble?''
20420She saw_ her_, and asked, When shall I be with you?
20420Shelley, while in a state of trance, saw a figure wrapped in a cloak which beckoned to him and asked, Siete soddisfatto?--are you satisfied?
20420Tell me, will you speak to me if I appear to you in my thought body?"
20420The clerk said,''Where?''
20420We ask, in amazement, how many more personalities may there not be hidden in the human frame?
20420What I want to know is whether you agree to the changes which I propose to make and which will somewhat affect your work in the office?"
20420What can have brought her out at this time?
20420What in the world do you mean, Angus?''
20420What is our Ego?
20420What proof, it will be asked impatiently, is there for the splitting of our personality?
20420When he was elected the question came as to what should be done?
20420Why do you not yield yourself to Christ?
20420Why should I always see something at three o''clock each day after the seance?''"
20420Will you_ speak_ to Irwin?''
20420You said"died,"and the day you mentioned has not come yet?''
20420was so frightened?"
18019Age?
18019And who gave you authority to call such a meeting?
18019Are n''t you well, miss? 18019 Are you hurt?"
18019Are you in for the mermaidens''fête?
18019But you could write for it, could n''t you?
18019But you do believe me?
18019By the by, will there be any field we can practice on out at the camp?
18019Ca n''t you read the trespass notices? 18019 Ca n''t you stay on another year?"
18019Can I be of any assistance?
18019Children, do you hear what I say? 18019 Come along over here, ca n''t you?"
18019Could you write to her?
18019D''you remember Jack Cassidy who was a pupil at the Vicarage? 18019 D''you want me to push you into the water, Winona Woodward?
18019Did I?
18019Did n''t you feel queer when he came up?
18019Did they say they would n''t have you at any price?
18019Do I understand that you''re all in favor? 18019 Do experienced people ever forget them?"
18019Do n''t you wish you were a kid again?
18019Do you mean that Winona would prefer to help with the juniors?
18019Do you realize that Seaton_ versus_ Binworth is on Wednesday week? 18019 Do you think so?
18019Do you think so? 18019 Got nerves?
18019Had you better tell, then?
18019Have you made yours, Aunt Harriet?
18019Have you practiced your hour daily? 18019 Have you settled up your fixtures?"
18019How about me?
18019How did you get on?
18019How do you think you''ve got on altogether?
18019How long have you lived in the county of Rytonshire?
18019How many will the hall hold?
18019Hunting for some one you know?
18019I say, old girl, were you really hurt?
18019I suppose Margaret might get some one else to do cataloguing?
18019I told you I had to see a specialist about my eyes? 18019 I wonder how the score''s going?"
18019I wonder who corrects the papers?
18019Is n''t that rather soon?
18019Of course you did-- and why should n''t you? 18019 Oh, Aunt Harriet, has he told you?"
18019Ought I?
18019Ought mother?
18019Ought we all to make wills?
18019Read what?
18019Residence?
18019Should I dare to suggest ices?
18019So you''re Winona Woodward? 18019 Suppose the Governors stop having the tennis courts cut, and say we may do it ourselves?"
18019Tell? 18019 The dragon''s sheathed her talons?
18019To Prestwick?
18019To the Red Cross Hospital? 18019 Usedn''t they to give the poor wretches anything they asked for?
18019What about the Vodax, though? 18019 What are you doing, Winona Woodward?"
18019What do you think of Winona Woodward?
18019What do you want to know for?
18019What happened to Freda?
18019What is it, Aunt Harriet? 18019 What is it?
18019What number did you say you took in the examination- room? 18019 What possessed you to go and say anything at all?
18019What shall we do if it rains?
18019What were you dreaming of?
18019What''ll you be at the rings, then?
18019What''s going to happen about Joyce?
18019What''s happened?
18019What''s the matter?
18019What''s this Symposium we''re to have after the meeting?
18019Where is this bomb?
18019Who are they?
18019Who feels inclined for tea?
18019Who wants to bother to hear the kids?
18019Who would ever have thought that that stupid- looking little Emily Cooper could beat Ethel March? 18019 Who''ll be General and Games Captain?"
18019Why do n''t you join a Club?
18019Why had you to stop?
18019Why may n''t you rub upwards?
18019Why should she know we''d had anything to do with it? 18019 Will all who are in favor kindly hold up their hands?
18019Will your cousin let you come to stay with us?
18019Winona Woodward,began Linda Fletcher,"are you responsible for this post- card?"
18019Would n''t it be setting a bad precedent?
18019Would that help you?
18019You do n''t feel sick, or head- achy, or sore- throaty, do you?
18019You do n''t think mother would really leave Highfield?
18019You know I had none of those horrible plans? 18019 You''ve not breathed a word about that?"
18019Your name?
18019_ You_ seem to get on all right?
18019( Who minds a few bruises or kicks?)
18019And herself?
18019And why a downward movement all the time?"
18019And why should you imagine I''m going to fail?
18019And you?"
18019Are n''t there a lot of us?
18019Are n''t you?"
18019Are you from that camp up the hill?"
18019Are you ill?
18019Are you prepared to try?"
18019Are you ready?
18019Aunt Harriet has n''t quite eaten you up yet, I see?"
18019Buck up, ca n''t you?
18019But how about the collection?
18019But what could a stupid- looking young boy do for her?
18019But what exactly is a sing- song?"
18019But will you believe that I shall never forget your kindness all the rest of my life, and will you accept this little ring and wear it for my sake?
18019Ca n''t you see her sitting up there in the gallery, holding her cheek?
18019Can you come home with me after school to- morrow for half an hour or so?
18019Can you keep a secret?"
18019Can you read well?
18019Clumsy, is n''t it?"
18019Come along, you slackers, do you want to be left standing on the platform with a couple of hours to wait for the next train?
18019Comprenez vous?
18019Could the School possibly do it?
18019D''you mean to let Binworth have a complete walk- over?
18019Did Aunt Harriet really feel like that?
18019Did Jane wish to leave her Plato for the bustle of a Court?
18019Did she care for the gay young husband forced upon her by her ambitious parents?
18019Did they compare notes about their tutors?
18019Did you bring your guitar with you?"
18019Did you ever hear of such grizzly luck in your life?"
18019Did you write for your guitar?"
18019Do I ever tell your secrets?
18019Do I look like the mainstay of a family?"
18019Do n''t give us much time, do they?
18019Do you happen to be anything extra special at singing, or reciting, or acting?"
18019Do you realize that when we go back in September they''ll both have left?
18019Do you realize what you''re undertaking?
18019Do you want to get your head bitten off?"
18019Does n''t it cost a lot?"
18019Does n''t want to go?
18019Does she think I''m going to elope in an aëroplane?
18019Easy?
18019Freda Long?
18019Go home?
18019Got toothache?
18019Have you brought anything else with you?
18019Have you heard the news?"
18019How am I going to get back to Seaton?"
18019How can we possibly have decent practice on such a rough old place?
18019How long do you take over your preparation?"
18019How many battles had it seen in the earth''s history, and how many still forms lying stiff and straight under its pale beams?
18019How many of them would she see again, she wondered, and which among all the number would have the luck?
18019I can allow you exactly five minutes, so choose quickly-- strawberry or vanilla?"
18019I conclude that you studied hard for the Scholarship examination?
18019I fail nine times out of ten, and do I take it to heart?"
18019I shall see you this afternoon, sha n''t I?"
18019I wonder how hard one ought to rub?
18019I wonder how the papers always get the aristocracy to write their Beauty Hints?
18019I wonder if there''s one here, too?
18019I wonder if they saw us get in?"
18019I''ll tell you what-- if you ca n''t or wo n''t play during the heat, will you all come back to school for an hour every evening, and practice then?
18019If those did n''t floor you, why could n''t you work these?"
18019In this lonely spot, with no help at hand, what was to be done?
18019Is n''t that rather stiff?"
18019Is this your handwriting?
18019It must be just at this notch-- do you see?
18019It seemed an excellent opening, if she could only continue in the same strain, but what ought to come next?
18019Last winter we did n''t quite know where we were with them, did we?
18019Look here, suppose we sneak off quietly this afternoon, and go on a water hunt?"
18019Marjorie Kaye?
18019May n''t I have a back- ache if I want?
18019Meanwhile two years at the High''s not so bad, is it?
18019Must n''t it be splendid to be head of the school?"
18019Now tell me, which do you really think is the prettier of these two shades?
18019Now, girls, are you ready?
18019Oh, Aunt Harriet, do you suppose they''ll let us see Percy?"
18019Oh, why could she not go and comfort her?
18019Scored no end?"
18019Shall I?
18019Shall we go and see?
18019She''s nice, but I wish they''d open a hostel; it would be topping to be with a heap of others, would n''t it?
18019Suppose her aunt were to faint-- die, even, before aid could be rendered?
18019Suppose she could do something wonderful for the school, and leave her name as a memory to others?
18019Suppose she were to meet a farm cart-- could she possibly pass it in safety?
18019Suppose you were in the trenches?
18019Ten?
18019The young pheasants must be all hatched, and running about by this time, so what harm could we do?
18019Was n''t it lovely?
18019Was n''t it the poet Herrick who had a pet pig?
18019Was n''t the Latin translation just too horrible?
18019Was she injured?
18019Was that a tear shining on her cheek?
18019Was that something coming in the distance?
18019We must tune them together, must n''t we?
18019We''ll all put ourr shoulderrs to the wheel, and win forr the school, wo n''t we?
18019We''ve been back now for a whole fortnight-- time for most of us to shake down into our places, is n''t it?
18019What are we supposed to give?"
18019What are you doing lounging about here, when you ought to be practicing for all you''re worth?"
18019What are you to do without her?
18019What did they talk about, she asked, as they stood on the paved terrace and watched the river hurrying by?
18019What do you mean by coming in here, disturbing the pheasants?"
18019What have you done with the lace collar Aunt Harriet gave you last Christmas?
18019What shall I do?
18019What was going to happen next?
18019What was that?
18019What was to be done?
18019What was your number?"
18019What were you thinking of to make that idiotic blind swipe?"
18019What would they give me a week to take Sam''s place here?"
18019What''s becomes of Stevens?"
18019What''s the damage?
18019What''s the label inside?
18019Where are you staying?
18019Where''s Margaret?
18019Which do I like best?
18019Who is it?
18019Who wanted chairs and chests of drawers and wash- stands?
18019Who''ll take their places?"
18019Whose field- glasses are those?"
18019Why should she not describe it?
18019Why was n''t I born a Raphael?"
18019Will all those in favor of electing Kirsty kindly stand up?"
18019Will any one have any more tea?
18019Will it be dropped in the next life, and shall we talk with our hearts?"
18019Will some one kindly propose that Winona Woodward shall be elected Games Captain?"
18019Will the doctor let you take the exams, at all?"
18019With an aunt?
18019Would help never come?
18019Would n''t you like to help?"
18019Would the chauffeur notice and understand her plight?
18019Would you like me to make you a cup of tea?"
18019You can manage this little two- seater, Jones?"
18019You do n''t really mean it?
18019You have n''t breathed anything, have you?"
18019You mean that girl in spectacles?
18019You understand, of course, what he has written to me about?"
18019You were ripping in everything else, I suppose?
18019You would n''t like to see me put into prison, would you?
18019You''ll do your best I know?"
18019You''ve never burnt Aunt Harriet''s will?"
18019did n''t he do it cleverly?
18019exclaimed Winona,"you''re never going to get small- pox again, and stop the athletic display?"
18019what should I do without you?
18019what''s that idiot doing?"
18019why could n''t mother have thought of some other way of economizing?
18019would n''t it be precious?"
21677Thou hast said much here,he remarked to Milton,"of_ Paradise Lost_; but what hast thou to say of_ Paradise Found_?"
21677What should a man say more to a snout in this pickle? 21677 Who now reads Cowley?"
21677Alas poore Maypoles, what should be the cause That you were almost banish''t from the earth?
21677Are his dreams and hopes for his own future an illusion?
21677Beauty the lover''s gift!--Lord, what is a lover, that it can give?
21677But all unawares she has answered the contention of Satan:--"O the vanity of these men!--Fainall, d''ye hear him?
21677But how if the hero subsequently fall out of vogue, and his name lose its power with a fickle populace?
21677But what then?
21677But what was Milton doing in this malodorous and noisy assembly?
21677By dimpled brook and fountain- brim, The wood- nymphs decked with daisies trim, Their merry wakes and pastimes keep: What hath night to do with sleep?
21677Can even a poet save him?
21677Can not thy dove Outstrip their Cupid easily in flight?
21677Come back, where will ye go?
21677Doth God or Venus reign?
21677Doth He not illustrate best things by things most evil?
21677Dwells in all Heaven charity so dear?"
21677Having sacrificed the use of his eyes to the service of the commonweal, he bates not a jot of heart or hope-- What supports me, dost thou ask?
21677His own coming to be as a thief in the night, and the righteous man''s wisdom to that of an unjust steward?"
21677How do you propose to describe him?
21677How hast thou dealt already?
21677If he had asked,"Who now reads Milton?"
21677Might he not with all confidence have left the Church to the oyster- women, and the State to the mouse- trap men?
21677O why Does that eclipsing hand of thine deny The sunshine of the Sun''s enlivening eye?
21677Or will thy all- surprising light Break at midnight?
21677Or, since thy ways are deep, and still the same, Will not a verse run smooth that bears thy name?
21677Shall it in the evening run, When our words and works are done?
21677Tel me, is Christe or Cupide lord?
21677Their song was partial; but the harmony( What could it less when Spirits immortal sing?)
21677Was there ever so learned a lyric as that beginning"Sabrina fair"--with its rich stores of marine mythology?
21677Was there nothing in common between them and Milton, and did they really borrow nothing and learn nothing from him?
21677What do I beg?
21677What if he die young himself?
21677What language can be low and degenerate enough?"
21677Yet did ever such beauty fall with night upon such peace, save in Paradise alone?
21677fill the sky?
21677of Chaucer?
21677what time will it come?
11325A headache?
11325A lady?
11325A young man?
11325About my new job?
11325Again?
11325Against what, then, is this unconquerable prejudice of yours?
11325All the advantages?
11325Am I to infer that she thinks mine the right sort? 11325 An announcement?"
11325And did you?
11325And do you know anything more about him than you did yesterday?
11325And has she a spell by which she tells real love?
11325And if it does?
11325And just what is the question?
11325And leave you alone, Mama?
11325And may I ask,said her father,"if you intend to let your daughter become engaged to a young man of whom you know nothing whatsoever?"
11325And she approves?
11325And they''re just as much in love?
11325And what did she say?
11325And who is he? 11325 And your hands are pretty full as it is?"
11325Anything wrong?
11325Are you angry? 11325 Are you fond of pictures, Burke?"
11325Are you going down- town, Vin?
11325Are you sure this is the number, Andrews?
11325Ask her not to practice the fox- trot, will you?
11325At their age?
11325Because you ca n''t get good servants?
11325Between us?
11325Between you and me?
11325But do n''t you think my mother is marvelous?
11325But do they, are they-- are sheltered women the strongest in a crisis?
11325But how can you turn her against him?
11325But how? 11325 But is n''t it wonderful, Pete,"put in Mathilde,"how Mr. Farron is always right?"
11325But is n''t that logical?
11325But it does n''t show, does it?
11325But to get engaged with no immediate prospect of marriage, with all our families and friends grouped about, that does n''t mean such a lot, does it?
11325But what could be more unusual?
11325But why are n''t you glad?
11325But why not?
11325But you mean there was no other?
11325But, Vincent, was that quite loyal?
11325But,he asked,"did you consult Adelaide?"
11325By four?
11325By the way, Mother, how did you happen to come to the Farrons at all?
11325By what you have given out?
11325Calling down five stories?
11325Can Vincent have been straying from the straight and narrow?
11325Can love be remembered,Pete was saying to himself,"or is it like a perfume that can be recognized, but not recalled?"
11325Come to dinner to- night, Pete,said Farron, and added, turning to his wife,"That''s all right, is n''t it, Adelaide?"
11325Come to lunch with me,she said;"or must you go home to your guest?"
11325Could n''t you? 11325 Dear Papa,"she asked,"since when have you become an admirer of painted shelves and dirty rugs?
11325Dear mother, do you think you can get him to use his influence over Mrs. Farron for me?
11325Did Pete tell you of our plan?
11325Did n''t I tell you life played strange tricks?
11325Did she appear like a lady?
11325Did the old boy kidnap you?
11325Did you go and see about having your pink silk shortened?
11325Did you understand what I said, Mama?
11325Do I talk like that?
11325Do n''t I?
11325Do n''t you know who it is? 11325 Do n''t you think there''s a look of my mother about it?"
11325Do n''t you think you could tone him down?
11325Do n''t you think you ought to consult Mrs. Farron before you offer it to me?
11325Do n''t you want to bring her to dine here to- night? 11325 Do you approve of marriage, Pringle?"
11325Do you call that a kiss?
11325Do you enjoy being humored?
11325Do you know whose it always reminds me of-- that lovely salon of Madame de Liantour''s?
11325Do you know, Vin, why it is that Pringle likes to make the room look as if it were arranged for a funeral? 11325 Do you mean to say there has n''t been any real danger?"
11325Do you suppose a pat to my pillow or an occasional kind word takes the place to me of what our relation used to be?
11325Do you think I love you?
11325Do you think Mr. Lanley is a snob?
11325Do you think she''d get off at the fifteenth or the seventeenth? 11325 Do you think that was wise?"
11325Do you think they are in love, Vin?
11325Does n''t your mother think so?
11325Does she think every one perfect?
11325Does this picture remind you of any one?
11325Even if I do n''t marry you?
11325For failing to see that I was a king among men?
11325Gone?
11325Haryer, Wilsey?
11325Has n''t that woman sent back any of my collars, Mother dear?
11325Has the doctor said not?
11325Have I anything left?
11325Have you been imagining I was going to come whining to you for a return of your love and respect? 11325 Have you known all along?
11325He left word not to be disturbed--"Who is there?
11325He''s not been taken ill?
11325Hear of him? 11325 How could you think that?
11325How do you know? 11325 How do you know?"
11325How long has this been going on?
11325How long have they been married?
11325How long have you known her?
11325How was your mother looking?
11325I persecuting them? 11325 I suppose I talked like Wilsey that night?"
11325I wonder what''s gone wrong?
11325I''d wait a day or two; but you might telephone him at once, if you like, and say-- or do you know what to say?
11325If all women are so, and she''s a woman?
11325If you put your mother before me, may n''t I put my profession before you?
11325In China?
11325In all love, quite indiscriminately?
11325In love?
11325In love?
11325In two weeks?
11325In_ drunkards_?
11325Indeed, Miss?
11325Irrevocably?
11325Is Burke in the outer office? 11325 Is a visit from a wife an excitement?"
11325Is anything wrong?
11325Is it?
11325Is n''t it funny? 11325 Is n''t it too bad he was taken ill just now?"
11325Is n''t she marvelous, the way she can make up for everything when she wants?
11325Is n''t this nice?
11325Is that his profession, too?
11325Is this a conference?
11325It is n''t honesty; but I could n''t stand having you change your mind when--"When my wife tells me to? 11325 It was n''t your proposal that you came to announce to us, though, was it, Papa?"
11325Late?
11325Like your work?
11325Mama,put in her daughter,"ca n''t you see how honest it was of Pete not to go, anyhow?"
11325Mama,she said,"if you had a son, how would you feel toward the girl he wanted to marry?"
11325Mathilde, do you still love your father?
11325Mathilde, what is the name of your young friend?
11325Mathilde,--Wayne spoke very gently,--"don''t you think you could stop crying?"
11325May I ask,she said with her edged voice,"if you have been disposing of my child''s future in there without consulting me?"
11325May I speak to you, Mama?
11325May I take the tray, miss?
11325May I tell him? 11325 May you speak to me?"
11325Mother,he said,"how much dependence is to be placed on love-- one''s own, I mean?"
11325Mrs. Wayne, is it because I''m richer than Pete that you wo n''t take me in?
11325My daughter came to me the other day,he went on to Mrs. Baxter,"and said,''Father, do n''t you think women ought to have the vote some day?''
11325My husband?
11325My influence? 11325 My tone?"
11325Near where we met my grandfather?
11325Never?
11325No one could help thinking of it who saw her there--"And you did n''t do it?
11325No?
11325Not from you, does she?
11325Now tell me, dear,said Mrs. Baxter, with a wave of a gloved hand,"what are those Italian embroideries?"
11325O Mama, have you been worried?
11325O Mama, was it very terrible?
11325O Mathilde, do you think any kiss will change the facts?
11325O Mr. Farron, what kind of job?
11325O Mr. Lanley,she wailed,"what have I done?"
11325O Mrs. Baxter,said Mrs. Wayne,"really you do n''t understand women--""I do n''t?
11325O Pete, would n''t your mother take me in?
11325Oh, Pringle,she said, in answer to his announcement that Mrs. Baxter was down- stairs,"you have n''t let her in?"
11325Oh, ca n''t Mr. Farron stay a few minutes?
11325Oh, no? 11325 Oh, that''s why he has a black eye, is it?"
11325Oh, why did_ you_ see him?
11325Oh, why not?
11325Oh, you have a prejudice against divorce?
11325On poor Joe?
11325Opposite?
11325Perhaps you did not even think of such a thing?
11325Persecuting them; what else?
11325Pete, you would n''t desert me?
11325Quietly?
11325Really, Mr. Wayne, do you feel yourself in a position to agree or disagree? 11325 Really?
11325Shall I take a message to Mr. Farron for you?
11325Shall we go up- stairs?
11325She makes her fours just like sevens, does n''t she?
11325Still working?
11325Still, as long as you''re here, what do you want?
11325The one in the hall?
11325The one who used scent and used to look so long at me?
11325The whole question is, Are they really in love? 11325 The women''s courts are places where no--"he hesitated a bare instant, and Mrs. Wayne asked:"No woman should go?"
11325Then why do n''t you eat it?
11325There is a governor''s meeting--"Two in a week, Papa?
11325There_ has_ been something, then?
11325They wo n''t hear of it?
11325Those?
11325To some case more interestingly dangerous?
11325Try,thought Adelaide,"and fail?"
11325Up- town at this hour, Wayne?
11325Vincent, what is it?
11325Was he in the Metropolitan?
11325Was n''t it queer? 11325 Was n''t it this?"
11325Wayne,said Benson,"how would you like to go to China?"
11325Well is it wise or kind to make such a demand on a young creature when we know marriage is difficult at the best?
11325Well, and what of it?
11325Well, dear,she said,"have you seen the church- warden part they have given your hair?"
11325Well, did she appear respectable?
11325Well, how did Marty treat you?
11325Well, then, shall we have a feud, Pete?
11325Well, then,said Adelaide,"you and I are in about the same position, are n''t we?
11325Well, what do you say?
11325Were n''t you even going to kiss me, Pete?
11325Were you in love with her?
11325What are you going to do to- night, Papa?
11325What became of him? 11325 What can they know of it for another ten years?
11325What do I care? 11325 What do I want?"
11325What do you know about him, Adelaide?
11325What do you know?
11325What do you mean by the word?
11325What do you mean?
11325What do you want to know about it?
11325What does she scrutinize?
11325What else is it? 11325 What is his name, Pringle?"
11325What is it you want, Adelaide?
11325What is it, then?
11325What is there for me to say?
11325What is what?
11325What is wrong about it?
11325What was his manner?
11325What was it kept you from going through with it just the same?
11325What was it you were going to say to me?
11325What was it?
11325What will your mother do without you?
11325What''s he like?
11325What''s that you have on? 11325 What''s that?"
11325What''s that?
11325What''s that?
11325What''s the matter with it?
11325What, dear?
11325What?
11325When did your mother say that?
11325Where did you hear of him?
11325Where does she get that lovely golden hair?
11325Where''s my mother, Pringle?
11325Who has the room above mine, Adelaide?
11325Who says so?
11325Who says so?
11325Who''s he?
11325Why ca n''t you, Mother?
11325Why do n''t you come and dine with us to- night, and,she added more slowly,"bring your son?"
11325Why do you smile?
11325Why do you think they are glad?
11325Why is it not suitable?
11325Why my hat, Mother dear?
11325Why not to him?
11325Why not, why not?
11325Why not?
11325Why should it be?
11325Why should she begin to abuse them?
11325Why were n''t you?
11325Why? 11325 Why?"
11325Why?
11325Why?
11325Will it be very difficult, Vincent, getting papa off?
11325Will you have some tea?
11325Will you take me in to dinner, Pete, or do you think I''m too despicable to be fed?
11325With your whole life before you?
11325Wo n''t you be late for dinner, darling?
11325Would n''t you know she''d say that?
11325Would n''t you like me to go out and get something to eat, Mother?
11325Would you be willing to go, Pete?
11325Yes, I do,he said; and then blurted out hastily,"Do n''t you believe in treating a woman as an equal?"
11325Yes?
11325Yet this morning you spoke-- as if--"But what is love such as yours worth? 11325 You can see no reason why she should love me?"
11325You did not know, I am sure, Mrs. Wayne, that your son intended to run away with my daughter?
11325You dislike my son?
11325You dislike them?
11325You do n''t know what I mean by that? 11325 You do n''t know what at, do you?
11325You do n''t like him?
11325You do n''t mean to say that you told Mrs. Farron you were going to elope with her daughter, and she did n''t take in what you said?
11325You do n''t miss people a bit, do you, Mother?
11325You do n''t think I care for those things? 11325 You employ him, but do you control him?"
11325You expect me to say I am indifferent to you?
11325You have great faith in those methods, have n''t you?
11325You hope? 11325 You intend always to treat her as an equal?"
11325You mean I''m not to see him?
11325You mean it is bad for your health to be worried, dearest?
11325You mean me?
11325You mean that what I am trying to express is wrong?
11325You mean you do n''t?
11325You mean you have never seen before?
11325You mean you really doubt my feeling for you? 11325 You mean,"said Adelaide, fiercely,"that Mr. Farron will live?"
11325You told me?
11325You want to see him?
11325You were going to treat me like that?
11325You''ll be up- town early?
11325You''ll come down, too?
11325You''ll come to dinner to- night, Papa?
11325You, too, think it unsuitable?
11325Your car, sir?
11325Your grandfather?
11325Your mother-- have you consulted her?
11325Your mother? 11325 _ Were_ there any points?"
11325Adelaide always resented his asking how things were going, but how could he help being anxious?
11325Am I really like her?"
11325And as to going to China with him, you know that''s impossible, do n''t you?"
11325And evidently glad to change the subject, she went on,"What will her family say?"
11325And this second marriage-- what about that?
11325And who have I?
11325And yet, she said to herself, he was ill, not insane; how could she conceal from him the happenings of every day?
11325And, Mother dear, you''re going to dress, are n''t you?"
11325Are they, really?"
11325Baxter?"
11325Baxter?"
11325Benson?"
11325But could they feel the same about their maternal relations?
11325But could this be accomplished by immediate action, or could she invite confidences and yet commit herself to nothing?
11325But even more immediate than this was the problem how could he contrive to greet Mrs. Farron?
11325But how can I help hesitating?
11325But how can we get time, Mrs. Wayne?
11325But she did n''t; she asked instead, with a tone of disarming sweetness,"Shall we be perfectly candid with each other?"
11325But what else?
11325But what has divorce to do with it?
11325But you''ll try and find out something about this young man, wo n''t you, Vin?"
11325By whom?"
11325Ca n''t I stay with you while we are waiting?"
11325Chandler?"
11325Could he hold a woman like Adelaide?
11325Could it be that his mother, that pure, heroic, self- sacrificing soul, was now thinking more about her liberty than her loss?
11325Could it be there was some other woman whose ghost- like presence she was just beginning to feel haunting their relation?
11325Could she stand that?
11325Could you?"
11325Did I say anything that should have wounded anybody''s susceptibilities?"
11325Did he go?"
11325Did he love her less?
11325Did he say anything more about him after you went up- stairs?
11325Do n''t you think you might as well come, too?"
11325Do you find it hard to get away from early prejudices, Vincent?
11325Do you know anything about his family?"
11325Do you know what his first name is?"
11325Do you mean as you love your Aunt Alberta?"
11325Do you remember the time you took me to West Point?
11325Do you see what I mean?
11325Do you suppose I''ve missed one tone of your voice, or have n''t understood what has been going on in your mind?
11325Do you want this persistent, cruel responsibility for him?"
11325Eh, Susan?"
11325Farron?"
11325Farron?"
11325Farron?"
11325Had he ever walked across the Blackwell''s Island Bridge?
11325Had not their relation always been peculiarly free?
11325Had she really dressed so badly or was it only the change of fashion?
11325Have I been keeping you awake?"
11325Have you a fur coat?
11325Have you lived with me five years and think me a forgiving man--""May I ask what you have to forgive?"
11325He does n''t say that just to please me?"
11325He looked at her for a second, and then opening the door into his bedroom, he said to Wayne:"Will you come in here?"
11325He preferred danger to oblivion; and turning to Mrs. Wayne, he said, with his politest smile:"How are the bridges?"
11325He said to me this morning at breakfast,''Well, Mathilde, was it a marvelous party?''
11325Honaton?"
11325How could any one rest content on a hillside who had once been blown up by a volcano?
11325How could he have left her so spiritually unprovided for?
11325How could she have doubted for an instant?
11325How long will you be gone?"
11325How much can one trust to it?"
11325How_ did_ one tell?
11325I do n''t have to tell you that, do I?
11325I do n''t think I should have the--""The chance?"
11325I mean, he really does like him, does n''t he?
11325I shall always hear her voice saying,''But why should Mathilde love you?''
11325If their places had been reversed, Adelaide would have raised her eyebrows and repeated,"Your child''s future?"
11325In fact, his brows showed a slight disposition to contract, and after a moment of silence he said:"Does your mother say that?"
11325Is he one of those, Adelaide?"
11325Is it too cold?
11325Is n''t he perfectly delightful?
11325Is n''t it nice that he likes Pete?
11325Is n''t that true, Vincent?"
11325Is n''t there somewhere I can wait while you have your interview?"
11325Is that it?"
11325It was he who presently went on:"Is n''t it strange to know so little about each other?
11325It was to Wayne he was speaking, when he said:"What does your mother think of it?"
11325It would give her a year''s occupation, her suffering over my disgrace, would n''t it, Adelaide?"
11325Live here with your father and mother?"
11325Marty made a strange grating sound in his throat, and Adelaide asked like a queen bending from the throne:"What seems to be the matter, Burke?"
11325Mathilde felt that it would be almost easier to die immediately, and was revived only when she heard Farron saying:"Oh, do n''t you like this?
11325Mathilde murmured to Pete:"Who are they talking about?"
11325Mathilde, my dear, how does one tell nowadays whether one is being proposed to or not?"
11325Never thought you were perfect just because you were mine?
11325Now, what was it you were going to say about love?"
11325O Grandfather, ca n''t you remember what it was like to be in love?"
11325O Pete, do n''t you think you could get Mr. Farron to use his influence over Marty about Anita?"
11325Oh, Mrs. Wayne, wo n''t you take me in?
11325Oh, why did you do this wonderful thing?"
11325Once she was aware of thinking:"Oh, why did he tell me to- night?
11325Or was the trouble only that she had done something to wound his aloof and sensitive spirit, seldom aloof to her?
11325Ought I to give it up because you are afraid of your mother?"
11325Ought he to ask Mathilde or ought he not even to hesitate about asking her?
11325Pete, did you ever ask any one else to marry you?"
11325Pringle had appeared in answer to her ring, and she asked him sharply:"Is Mr. Farron in?"
11325Shall I tell you about it?"
11325She asked after a moment:"But what was it that made you think at first that you did love him, Mama?"
11325She looked round her wonderingly, and said without a trace of wilful insolence in her tone:"Live here, you mean?"
11325She thought his indifference like the studied oblivion of the debtor who says,"Do n''t I owe you something?"
11325She was prepared to have him take it up and cry:"You still love me?
11325Should he consult any one?
11325Sometimes she had felt that there was something insulting in the promptness of her inquiry,"Has anything gone wrong, Joe?"
11325Telephone Pete Wayne, will you, and ask him to come and see her this evening?
11325Tell her, will you, that it''s done in some first- class fights?"
11325That bout you said you had with O''Hallohan--""Well, what of it?"
11325That is n''t the way one wants people to feel about one''s husband, is it?
11325That''s the same Farron, is n''t it?
11325The note of disappointment was so plain that Mrs. Baxter asked in answer:"What would you have wanted him to do?"
11325Then reflecting that Pringle was not in any way involved, he unbent slightly, and said something that sounded like:"Haryer, Pringle?"
11325Then suddenly remembering that her oracle had already spoken on this subject, she asked more humbly,"What was it made you say he was in love, Vin?"
11325Those children?"
11325Was he going to accept that challenge?
11325Was he new or one of the ones she had seen a dozen times before?
11325Was her whole relation to Vincent about to be put to the test?
11325Was it coming to hers?
11325Was it her fault if he excited pity and contempt instead of love and respect?
11325Was it just a_ politesse_, or does he actually imagine that you could?"
11325Was it to happen again?
11325Was n''t he any more an expert in her tones?
11325Was n''t it perfectly possible that his going would free her life, would make it easier instead of harder?
11325Was she losing her charm for him?
11325Was she to watch the dying down of his flame, and try to shelter and fan it back to life as she had seen so many other women do?
11325Was that what he was going to become in her eyes, too?
11325Wayne?"
11325Wayne?"
11325Wayne?"
11325Wayne?"
11325Wayne?"
11325Wayne?"
11325We have never thought the marriage a suitable one, have we, Papa?"
11325Were five years the limit of a human relation like theirs?
11325What arrangements would be made, what assumptions permitted?
11325What business had he to feel it?
11325What could be stranger than that?
11325What do you do, Mathilde?
11325What do you think of him?"
11325What does Mathilde say to you going off like this?
11325What does your mother think about it?"
11325What had these nights been to him?
11325What in similar circumstances could Farron do?
11325What is it?"
11325What reception would he meet at the Farrons?
11325What should I do without you?
11325What was the principle by which he infallibly guided her?
11325What weapons had he against Marty Burke?
11325What were she and Pete to do?
11325What would have happened to him if she had not brought Farron into the family to rescue and protect?
11325When do you think I can see Pete?"
11325When they are asked to underwrite a scheme--""Underwrite?
11325When they came out of the dining- room Pete said to Mathilde with the utmost clearness:"And what was that magazine you spoke of?"
11325When they were up- stairs, and she was tucking him up on his sofa, he asked gently:"What did that boy want?"
11325Which one would win?
11325Who are they?"
11325Who would not wish to exchange that for Mr. Lanley''s series of fresh, beautiful rooms?
11325Why do n''t you ask him yourself?"
11325Why do you suppose they do n''t come?"
11325Why should he be cross to me because he has had an unsatisfactory interview with the Wayne boy''s mother?
11325Why, he wondered, did she want to tease him to- night, of all nights in his life?
11325Will you go instead?
11325Will you tell him that I ca n''t see him to- day, but that I shall be down- town next week, and I''ll see him then?"
11325Wilsey?"
11325Wo n''t you come up- stairs with me while I undress?"
11325Wo n''t you stop me whenever I do?"
11325Would Vincent ever become like that?
11325Would he be able to?
11325Would n''t it be easier for all of us if you would just accept the statement that we think so without trying to decide whether we are right or wrong?"
11325Would n''t you like to go to my meeting?"
11325Years ago old Count Bartiani-- do you remember him, at Lucerne?"
11325You have heard, I suppose, that I have been married twice?"
11325You have worked three years with this firm and never suspected anything wrong?"
11325You know that I was going to San Francisco the day after to- morrow--""Oh dear,"said Adelaide, regretfully,"is it given up?"
11325You really think you are in love with this Wayne boy, do n''t you?
11325You thought she was not quite the right wife for your son?"
11325You wo n''t go away, no matter what they say?"
11325You''ll be here, wo n''t you?"
11325You''ll never desert me, will you?"
11325and she would question gently,"The theater?"
11325cried Adelaide, who wanted to add,"The only question is, does your wretched son possess it?"
11325do you feel none to me?"
11325not to that boy who was here to- day?"
11325she thought, how long would she continue to do so?
1805''And what is that?'' 1805 ''Can you do it, gents?''
1805''Can you work it, doc?'' 1805 ''Ever monkey with copper?''
1805''Fall off?'' 1805 ''Great Barnums?''
1805''Have you got a city license,''he asks,''to sell this illegitimate essence of spooju that you flatter by the name of medicine?'' 1805 ''Him?
1805''How do you come to have it?'' 1805 ''How is this, Rufe?''
1805''How long have you been sick?'' 1805 ''If you''ve got to get rid of your excess verbiage,''says I,''why not go out on the river bank and speak a piece?
1805''In New York?'' 1805 ''Jeff,''says he,''do you know that I''m a crater-- a living crater?''
1805''My young friend,''says Alfred E. Ricks, holding up his hands,''have you robbed this bank? 1805 ''Now, Bunk,''says the farmer,''do you begin to realize that agriculture has had a hair cut?
1805''Now, now,''says I,''what''s it all about? 1805 ''Now, what do you think of that?''
1805''On what special subject of the theorems and topics does your desire for vocality seem to be connected with?'' 1805 ''Pardner,''says I,''what has happened?
1805''Shall I keep some soup hot for Mr. Tatum till he comes back?'' 1805 ''Sir,''says I,''are you Cornelius T. Scudder?
1805''Then are you William Wilkinson?'' 1805 ''Then,''says Andy,''you do n''t think Mrs. Avery will land the Marshalship for Bill?''
1805''Trade, how much?'' 1805 ''Was that the idea you had,''says he,''when we started out with Murkison?''
1805''Well and then what?'' 1805 ''Well, boys,''says she after a bit,''what is it?''
1805''Well,''says I,''how is it that you seem to be biting your thumbs at good luck? 1805 ''Well?''
1805''What do you say, Jeff?'' 1805 ''What does this mean, sir?''
1805''What is this paraphernalia you speak of, Doc?'' 1805 ''What was it about?''
1805''What''ll we do?'' 1805 ''What''s that?''
1805''What''s this?'' 1805 ''Where''s the books?''
1805''Where?'' 1805 ''Who are you?''
1805''Whose house is that?'' 1805 ''Why not this one?''
1805''Why not, indeed?'' 1805 ''Why should n''t it be?''
1805''Why,''says he, in his kind of Southern system of procrastinated accents,''hain''t you heard tell? 1805 ''Will you treat my case?''
1805''Would n''t you like to go down and meet Mrs. Trotter once before we leave?'' 1805 ''You ai n''t going, doc?''
1805And is that Alexander, pa?
1805And, by the way, Jeff, what was the name of the little man who went to Denver-- the one you and Bill met at the station?
1805Been away a good many years, has n''t he?
1805Did I tell you I bagged a duck and a ground- squirrel at one shot last week over in the Ramapos?
1805Dress you up?
1805How far do you mean to carry it? 1805 How far is it to Edenville from here?"
1805I never told you about the time when me and Andy Tucker was philanthropists, did I? 1805 Is that an allusion?"
1805Know that man?
1805Me?
1805Me?
1805Now, would n''t you,said Jeff, with an emphatic nod--"wouldn''t you have imagined that?
1805On the ferryboat Andy says to me:''Is your conscience easy about taking the money now, Jeff?'' 1805 On you?"
1805One lady says to me:''How did that last venture of yours turn out, sir?'' 1805 Pennsylvania pinks?
1805Pick,says he, looking at me hard,"ai n''t this graft a little out of our line?
1805Sioux Falls?
1805That,said I,"sounds like one of those unintelligible remarks such as,''Why is a policeman?''"
1805Was that your team broke away and run just now?
1805Well, sir, when we got to the gate who do you suppose comes down the walk to greet us? 1805 What business have you got investing in bonds?
1805What did he want?
1805What is it now?
1805What more do you want?
1805What''s your graft these days?
1805What?
1805Who do you want to send to for the money?
1805Why should n''t they be?
1805''A professor of mathematics at more than$ 5,000 a year?
1805''Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, you whited sculpture?
1805''And how are they this morning?''
1805''And how shall we go about compelling him to make a voluntary purchase of it?''
1805''And now, Doc Waugh- hoo,''he goes on,''why do n''t you demonstrate?
1805''Are we any better than any other Holding Corporation?''"
1805''Are you the guinea pigs for the Asiatic python or the alfalfa for the sacred buffalo?''
1805''Can we do it?
1805''Could ye do it?
1805''Do you feel like you could eat some ham and eggs, Uncle James?''
1805''Eating too many pork chops last night?''
1805''Gimme something for it, doc, wo n''t you?''
1805''Give free grub to the poor or send a couple of thousand to George Cortelyou?''
1805''Have you found the other one?
1805''He''s got an appetite like a chorus girl at 1 A.M.''"''How''d you get this pipe?''
1805''How''s your conduct?''
1805''Is Burdick Harris alive yet, or Mr. Raisuli dead?''
1805''Is it a trade?''
1805''Is that the Regent Theatre?
1805''Is the buggy outside?
1805''Nothing wrong with the world- wide this morning, is there?''
1805''So we are up?
1805''Then why do the master minds of finance and philanthropy,''says I,''charge us$ 2 to get into a race- track and let us into a library free?
1805''Well, Mr. Riddle,''says I, when he opened the bedroom door,''and how is uncle this morning?''
1805''What do you want him for?''
1805''What else could it have been?
1805''What seems to be on your mind?''
1805''Why do n''t you go and get the doctor?''
1805''You ai n''t a Socialist, are you?''
1805''You ai n''t going away and leave me to die with this-- superfluity of the clapboards, are you?''
1805Ah, I see your eye growing moist, Colonel-- I have touched you, have I not?"
1805And how do you explain the pig?
1805And the oil?''
1805And then--''"''What then, Lieutenant?''
1805And what does it find there?
1805And what of merry Robin Hood?
1805And why should n''t it be the genuine other one, anyhow, that the old gypsy whittled out?''
1805Anything more up your sleeve?"
1805Bassett, you do n''t care to talk over my little business proposition?''
1805Bulls and bears and pigs-- what''s the difference?
1805Bunk?''
1805But how does it come out?
1805But if Harris was a Greek, on what system of international protocols did Hay interfere?"
1805But what do you say, Pick?"
1805But what else can you expect from a town that''s shut off from the world by the ocean on one side and New Jersey on the other?
1805But what will my duties be?
1805But what''s your graft, son?
1805But where,''he says,''could you hope to find a widow who would waste time on a matrimonial scheme that had no matrimony in it?''
1805But, kay vooly, voo?
1805Buy low and sell high-- do n''t Wall Street endorse it?
1805Ca n''t you do nothing for me?''
1805Ca n''t you pull the cork out of your magnetism with your teeth and hocus- pocus them handcuffs off?''
1805Could ye play the polar man and the little duke for the nice ladies?
1805Could you do it, Ricksy?''
1805Did he get in through the window and appoint himself?''
1805Did n''t you see Colonel Manna drop down right before your eyes?
1805Did the major man bring the money?"
1805Did you learn his name?''
1805Do I have to reject personally these 3,000 ramscallions you speak of, or can I throw them out in bunches?''
1805Do n''t you hear the rustling of General Raven''s wings?
1805Do n''t you think we would both feel better if we was to intervene in some way and prevent the doing of this deed?''
1805Do we want Jakey to marry Rosa Steinfeld?"
1805Do you call it good brain work when you propose to take in money at the door, too?
1805Do you guess I can get out my twenty- fi''?"
1805Does he return the sentiment according to the specifications and painfulness you have described?''
1805Does it excuse you?''
1805Does that satisfy you?''
1805Else why was we given brains?
1805Fiddle,''says I,''raise the window shade a bit, will you?''
1805Give me a gasoline lamp, a dry- goods box, and a two- dollar bar of white castile soap, cut into little--''"''Where''s your two dollars?''
1805Have you got him there?
1805Have you got the carving with you, Profess?''
1805He stepped up to a sickly looking woman and says:"Madam, do you own any of this stock?"
1805How about plunging into the fastnesses of the skyscraper country and biting some big bull caribous in the chest?''
1805How did this happen?
1805How do I work it?
1805How do you know,''says I,''that that green goods man has n''t a large family dependent upon his extortions?
1805How do you win out on the trick?"
1805How does it strike you?''
1805How much do you want?
1805How was Teddy when you left Washington?''
1805How''s he to get some of the remorse fund back into their overalls?
1805I asks,''that they were trying to skin you?
1805I know this is something like paternalism, but do n''t you think Opportunity has skinned its knuckles about enough knocking at our door?''
1805I reckon you better take''em off, and--''Hey?
1805I thought we came here to teach the millionaires business, instead of learning art from''em?''
1805Is dat straight?
1805Is n''t that the patrol wagon now?"
1805Is that distilling into the masses,''says I,''a correct estimate of the relative value of the two means of self- culture and disorder?''
1805It''s like''thimble, thimble, who''s got the naturalization papers?''"
1805Lady, will you please stop bleating?
1805Look at the rolls they''re pulling out of their pistol pockets?''
1805Me sell?
1805My dear Colonel Rockingham, was that chicken gumbo or cracked goobers on the bill of fare in your note?
1805No?''
1805Now you feel the pain that you did n''t have leaving, do n''t you?''
1805Now, have you got enough news for to- day, or do you want to interview us on etiquette and the best way to make over an old taffeta skirt?"
1805Now, how does that scheme strike you?''
1805Now, how long are you gentlemen going to be in the city?''
1805Now, what could either of you have done in the present emergency to set us on our feet again?
1805Now, will you be bad?''
1805Now, will you pick up your suit case and hurry?''
1805Now, you never regarded me as a man of special religious proclivities, did you, Jeff?''
1805Of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania?''
1805Peevy, ma''am, would you mind choking off that kid of yours so that honest people can get their rest?''
1805Pooh- pooh?''
1805Somebody sassed you or you getting homesick?''
1805Tapley?''
1805Tell me,''says I,''which is of the most value to mankind, literature or horse racing?''
1805Them States do n''t meet?
1805Then he says:''Jeff, do you mind my asking you a question?''
1805Tucker?''
1805Was n''t it you that put up the Great Cupid Combination package on the Southern States?
1805Was n''t it yours, too?''
1805Was that straight, colonel, about the plum pudding and pineapples and real store cigars?"
1805Well, would n''t it tickle your uncle?
1805What bait are you going to use for this Ezra thing?''
1805What could such a man do without a big capital to work with?
1805What did I do?
1805What did you do with your transfer?''
1805What do you consider the most edifying and casual in the way of a dinner?"
1805What does that lobster salad you mentioned taste like, Brother Jackson?"
1805What good is the art junk to us?
1805What had you intended doing with that pig, Rufe?''
1805What has a matrimonial ad got to do with a lady?''
1805What has your high moral, elevator- service system of pillage brought you to?
1805What town is this?''
1805What was it you said I had, doc?''
1805What''ll the managing editor say?
1805What''s hair, anyway, if you have to shake it off?"
1805What''s the use to go into details?
1805What?
1805When they sell a lot of watered stock on Wall Street would you expect to find a mermaid in it?
1805Which of us is the biggest fakir?''
1805Why do n''t you say''creature,''according to the rules and syntax of America?''
1805Why not bristles as well as horns and fur?"
1805Why should there be a lady?
1805Will ye do it?''
1805Would you commit aspersions on a equitable graft that the United States itself has condoned and indorsed and ratified?"
1805Would you mind telling us why we are at?
1805[ Illustration:"''Can ye do it, gents?''
1805[ Illustration:"''Well boys, what is it?''"]
1805[ Illustration:"''What''s this?''
1805[ Illustration:"Life began to look rosy again..."]"Fake?
1805_ Rurales_?
1805put in last night short and fat, with long black whiskers and a club- foot?''
1805says Bill,''had you forgot you was in the desert?
1805says Caligula to the landlord;"and why is he called great?"
1805says he, with a groan,''Ca n''t you rub something on it, or set it or anything?''
1805says the newspaper man, taking his pipe out;"do you think I could use this?
2045But,said the young clergyman,"my lord, what can a preacher possibly say in only ten minutes?"
2045Can you give me an instance?
2045Did you ever visit that capital?
2045Did you hear any remarks made about my play?
2045How about the Rothschilds?
2045How invested?
2045How much has she?
2045How so?
2045I am surprised,remarked the commodore,"but how much?"
2045Mr. Secretary, what do you desire?
2045Of Massachusetts Tech.?
2045Of the Stevens Tech.?
2045That is very fine,said Toucey,"but are you a graduate of the Troy Technical School?"
2045Well,I said to him,"my friend, did I lose anything before the arbitrator yesterday?"
2045Well,he said,"what is there about Peekskill?"
2045What are you going to do?
2045What do you think of him?
2045Who sent this?
2045Why, Mr. Depew,he answered,"what would be the use?
2045Why,Bissell asked,"boys, why do you ask for that now?"
2045Why?
2045''Well,''said Lincoln,''do n''t you think this was a mighty small crop of fight to raise on such a large farm?''
2045A delegate hurled at me the question:"How about Greeley signing the bail of Jefferson Davis?"
2045After a play at Kansas City Mansfield came into the car very late and said:"William, where is my manager?"
2045After several of these occasions, he asked:"What''s the next station, Chauncey?"
2045An excited man sitting alongside the guest of the playwright said:"Stranger, are you blind or deaf, or do you approve of the play?"
2045Are you going?"
2045As I stepped from the crowd in his reception- room, he said to me:"What do you want?"
2045As there were a number of American congressmen in London, I asked:"Was he a congressman?"
2045At the time when the most famous of British reviewers wrote,"Whoever read or reads an American book?"
2045Before doing this I asked:"How is he?"
2045But what did you do last night?"
2045By the way, were you down at the depot to- night when the audience from the suburbs were returning to take their trains home?"
2045Can I help you?"
2045Choate asked at one time when I was almost nightly making speeches at some entertainment:"How do you do it?"
2045Choate said:"Chauncey, are Aberdeen''s legs bare?"
2045Did you see Governor Andrew, of Massachusetts?"
2045Do n''t you think he ought to be encouraged?"
2045Do n''t you think that the contrast between you and us makes it difficult for us poor farmers to give you the welcome which we would like?"
2045Do n''t you think you had better cut it down?"
2045Do n''t you want to meet him?"
2045Doctor Buckley interrupted him hastily, saying:"Great heavens, are you going to build a cathedral?"
2045Does intense thinking affect you as it does me, by upsetting your stomach and making you throw up?"
2045Have you your pencil and note- book?
2045He called out:"Senator Depew, do you know that man going out?"
2045He fairly shouted:"Have I not proved to you all day that there is always a silver lining to the cloud, and that the darkest hour is just before dawn?"
2045He seemed laboring under considerable excitement, and said:"Why do the people in the United States want to break up the British Empire?"
2045He then said:"Well, how about it if I am re- elected?"
2045He turned suddenly to me and, in a loud voice, asked:"What was the matter with the custard- pie?"
2045His first greeting was:"Mr. Caldwell, do you drink?"
2045How do I know if that information would be so safeguarded as not to get out?"
2045How is this possible?"
2045How many have you invited?"
2045I asked him:"What brought you here?
2045I asked the reporter:''From what author is the poetry taken?''
2045I had the superintendent called before the board of directors, and said to him:"Why do n''t you immediately put on more trains and cars?"
2045I hailed the merchant and said:''What have you in your wagon?''
2045I heard him say to the captain:"How are you armed?"
2045I said to the farmers:"Will any of you take me up to General Garfield''s residence?"
2045In about an hour a staff officer stepped up to me and asked:"Are you the secretary of state of New York?"
2045In selecting an assistant, one of them told me that Toucey subjected him to a rigid examination and then said:"What is your railroad career?"
2045Is he staying at this house?"
2045Is it royal?"
2045Now, of what use is my five- dollar suit of clothes and my fifty- cent dinner for this crowd of butterflies?"
2045Now, what do you think?"
2045Now, will you take care of me while I am absent?"
2045On that inspiration I asked:"Mayor of the City of New York?"
2045One of the frequent questions put to me, both then and for years afterwards at English dinners, was:"What do you think of the German emperor?"
2045Running down Wall Street one day because I was late for an important meeting, a well- known speculator stopped me and shouted:"What about Erie?"
2045She appeared with a jug of molasses and said to the judge:"Will you have a trickle or a dab?"
2045Suddenly this lady, leaning over me, said to her sister:''Damn it, Fan, will this dinner never end?''
2045Thackeray said to his host:"What do I do with this animal?"
2045The Shah said to his host:"Who is that distinguished gentleman in the scarlet cloak at the other end of the table?"
2045The acute question was:"Should Governor Black be renominated?"
2045The commodore asked Tillinghast, after praising Mr. Richmond very highly,"How much did he leave?"
2045The constant appeal to me, as to other Americans, was,"When will you join us?
2045The cowboy ambassador asked the wife:"Are you the wife of----?"
2045The disgusted waiter remarked:"What is the matter with the custard?"
2045The general, after a while, could not restrain his curiosity any longer and said:"Governor, what is that you are drinking?"
2045The governor said to me:"How much of the gospel can these tenderfeet stand?"
2045The host said:"Your Royal Highness, could you oblige us with a sketch of your ancestry?"
2045The indignant owner said:''You infernal hog, why did you drink up all my apple- jack?''
2045The old lady asked excitedly:"Share meetings?"
2045Then I said to him:''I do not want any of those, but have you cigars, and how much?''
2045Then in a quizzical way he asked me:"Do you know this agent?"
2045What do you think of it?"
2045What is her special function in your scheme of government?"
2045What is the average rainfall in the United States and in New York?"
2045What is the dinner about?"
2045What is the matter with the radishes?"
2045When he is admitted to the bar, do you expect him to try to do what I have accomplished and make an independent position in life, or fail?"
2045When they were seated in the carriage Labouchere said to Mr. Gladstone:"Well, you have passed an evening with Mr. Lincoln; what do you think of him?"
2045Why did you cut me off?"
2045Will England help?
2045Will England help?"
2045Will the Seventh join that expedition?"
2045Will you accept the nomination?"
2045With whom are you studying law?"
2045Wo n''t you come out in the barn so we can show you some we regard as very fine specimens?''
2045You are a rich man, ai n''t you, hey?
2045You are the president of the New York Central Railroad, ai n''t you, hey?
19094Say, could somebody see to one of these trunks? 19094 A child? 19094 A shock? 19094 And I suppose, to the medical mind, seeing fairies means much the same as seeing snakes? 19094 And may I ask you, Professor Hocus Pocus, or whatever your name is, whom you are calling a schoolboy? 19094 And what a mass of harm may have come of not believing in Apollo? 19094 And what harm came of believing in Apollo? 19094 And what have I stolen? 19094 And what have I to do with that? 19094 And what is that? 19094 And what is that? 19094 And what is that? 19094 And what is the cruellest crime? 19094 And what''s that? 19094 And what_ are_ we to do with Morris? 19094 And why should n''t you tell me? 19094 And why? 19094 And you''ll say with me that the great business for a King is remembering people? 19094 Are there any developments? 19094 Are you interested in modern progress? 19094 Art for the people, eh? 19094 Believe in fairies? 19094 But do n''t you think there may be floating and spiritual stars which will last longer than the red lamps? 19094 But what are all those cries and gasps I hear? 19094 But what the devil are you for, if you do n''t believe in a miracle? 19094 But you come in the shape and size of a man? 19094 By the way, let me have a look at those goldfish of yours, will you? 19094 By the way, what is a Conjurer''s dinner? 19094 Ca n''t you believe in devils? 19094 Can I be of any use? 19094 Can I speak to the Doctor? 19094 Can I take your explanation to him now? 19094 Conjuring? 19094 Did they say so? 19094 Do n''t you have a newspaper or something? 19094 Do n''t you know the kind of man who, when you talk to him about the five best breeds of dog, always ends up by buying a mongrel? 19094 Do n''t you see? 19094 Do you believe it? 19094 Do you blame him very much if he, too, tried to have a holiday in fairyland? 19094 Do you call that a toy? 19094 Do you mean a toy? 19094 Do you really find that very unpardonable? 19094 Do you really mean I may say anything I like? 19094 Do you reckon that will take us in? 19094 Do you say you can make stones disappear? 19094 Do you want me to fight? 19094 Do you wish you had never been a conjurer? 19094 Does it never strike you that doubt can be a madness, as well be faith? 19094 Does it remind you of the French Revolution? 19094 Does my sister commonly select such evenings to take the air-- and the damp? 19094 Forgive me, but may I detain you for one moment? 19094 Got a lantern, Duke? 19094 Have I committed a worse crime than thieving? 19094 Have n''t you got a Cause or something? 19094 Have you told the Duke? 19094 He? 19094 How can the Church have a right to make men fast if she does not allow them to feast? 19094 How do you cook rabbits? 19094 How do you feel? 19094 How do you know he''s a wizard? 19094 How do you mean? 19094 How does the Conjurer sheath a sword? 19094 How''s that for Agnosticism, Dr. Grimthorpe? 19094 However damnable it is? 19094 However dark it is? 19094 However dreadful it is? 19094 I thought you yourself considered the family superstition bad for the health? 19094 If you may hide truth from the world, why may not I? 19094 If yours is a professional secret, is not mine a professional secret too? 19094 Indeed? 19094 Is she very anxious? 19094 Is the Doctor with him now? 19094 Is the Duke ill? 19094 Is there anything else? 19094 Is there no such thing as irreligious mania? 19094 Is there no such thing in the house at this moment? 19094 Killed a policeman? 19094 May I bring you back for a moment to the argument? 19094 May I say a word? 19094 May I speak to the Conjurer? 19094 Must move with the times, eh? 19094 Oh, then do you believe in fairies? 19094 Or a four- leaved clover, say? 19094 Room horrible? 19094 Shall I carry them for your Grace? 19094 Shall I fetch the Duke? 19094 Shall I take the programmes for your Grace? 19094 She is not singing those songs to him, is she? 19094 So drinking decently is a conjuring trick that you can do, anyhow? 19094 Suppose he said the bosh he was talking was the language of the elves? 19094 Suppose he said the silly circles he was drawing for practice were really magic circles? 19094 Suppose you had a son in such a position, would you not expect people to tell you the whole truth if it could help you? 19094 That asking questions may be a disease, as well as proclaiming doctrines? 19094 That is so, Professor? 19094 The answer to what? 19094 The question is, what kind? 19094 The-- er-- Daily Sword- Swallower or that sort of thing? 19094 Tricks of the trade, eh? 19094 Upon which has the curse fallen? 19094 Was that what first made you think he was a wizard? 19094 We had some good conversations, did n''t we? 19094 We old buffers wo n''t be too strict with you if your view of things sometimes gets a bit-- mixed up, shall we say? 19094 Well, Professor, what''s the news in the conjuring world? 19094 Well, and the journalist? 19094 Well, as old Buffle used to say, what is a man? 19094 Well-- what else is there to drink? 19094 Well? 19094 Well? 19094 Well? 19094 Well?... 19094 Were n''t there as many who believed passionately in Apollo? 19094 What am I saying? 19094 What are you saying? 19094 What are you? 19094 What did they do? 19094 What difference? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you mean? 19094 What do you want? 19094 What does he look like? 19094 What does he talk about? 19094 What does it all mean? 19094 What does your coat mean, if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as the supernatural? 19094 What does your cursed collar mean if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as a spirit? 19094 What is the definition of a child? 19094 What old apparatus do you want so much? 19094 What shall we do? 19094 What shock? 19094 What was your explanation, by the way? 19094 What''s his name? 19094 What''s that? 19094 What''s the matter? 19094 What''s what, eh? 19094 What''s what? 19094 Where are you going? 19094 Where is my brother? 19094 Which one is that? 19094 Who am I? 19094 Who are you? 19094 Who? 19094 Whose voice is that? 19094 Why are nice men such asses? 19094 Why ca n''t you leave the universe alone and let it mean what it likes? 19094 Why did you give it up? 19094 Why is that? 19094 Why not? 19094 Why not? 19094 Why not? 19094 Why should n''t the thunder be Jupiter? 19094 Why, really-- are you the...? 19094 Why, what does she do? 19094 You believed quite simply that I was a magician? 19094 You do n''t drink wine yourself? 19094 You do n''t think she''ll keep him awake all night with fairy tales? 19094 You do n''t think she''ll throw the medicine- bottle out of window and administer-- er-- a dewdrop, or anything of that sort? 19094 You know the Duke has two wards who are to live with him now? 19094 You mean that it''s really quite simple? 19094 You would really be willing to pay a sum like this to know the way I did that trick? 19094 [_ Abruptly._] And how''s Patricia? 19094 [_ Abruptly._] Why did you wear that cloak with the hood up? 19094 [_ After a silence, very suddenly._] What is that noise? 19094 [_ After a silence._] Where is Mr. Morris Carleon? 19094 [_ Almost nervously._] Why, what do you mean? 19094 [_ Angrily._] Well, what am I? 19094 [_ Astonished and angry._] Do you really mean that you take the cheque and then tell us it was only magic? 19094 [_ Becoming nasal again in anger._] That''s so, eh? 19094 [_ Breaking the silence in unusual exasperation._] Any what? 19094 [_ Dreamily._] Where shall wisdom be found, and what is the place of understanding? 19094 [_ Exasperated._] Why the devil do you dress up like that if you do n''t believe in it? 19094 [_ Genially._] And whereabouts is that? 19094 [_ Hastening forward._] You want the Doctor? 19094 [_ Humorously, as he puts in his head at the window._] See here, does a Duke live here? 19094 [_ In a lower voice._] What would you suppose? 19094 [_ Jumping up and bustling about, altering cards, papers, etc., on tables._] Room horrible? 19094 [_ Looking at him steadily._] Do you mean he is going mad? 19094 [_ Looking at him._] Do you believe in your own religion? 19094 [_ More and more thoughtful._] You would pay much more....[_ Suddenly._] But suppose I tell you the secret and you find there''s nothing in it? 19094 [_ More good- humouredly._] Well, what is a model public- house? 19094 [_ Pacing the room again._] Could it be done with mirrors? 19094 [_ Quietly._] I suppose you mean you knew something odd about the family? 19094 [_ Restrainedly._] Shall I take the programmes, your Grace? 19094 [_ Rising rather shakily._] And what are you going to do? 19094 [_ Rising, rigid with horror._] How I did that trick? 19094 [_ Sceptically._] Do you know the language of the elves? 19094 [_ Sharply._] Has it any inhabitants? 19094 [_ Smiling faintly._] And what did this friend of yours do? 19094 [_ Smiling._] Well, then, where''s Patricia? 19094 [_ Smiling._] Why? 19094 [_ Staring._] All what? 19094 [_ Starting._] Indeed? 19094 [_ Still dashing cards about the table._] Miss Carleon, might I speak to you a moment? 19094 [_ Still looking at him._] And do n''t you think you ask me a rather unfair question, Dr. Grimthorpe? 19094 [_ Swinging round suddenly on the table._] But do you blame a man very much, Miss Carleon, if he enjoyed the only fairy tale he had had in his life? 19094 [_ Turns to_ HASTINGS,_ who has gone over to a table with the papers._] You know Mr. Carleon is coming this afternoon? 19094 [_ With a sneer._] Will you disappear now? 19094 [_ With a sort of fury._] Well, does anybody believe it? 19094 [_ With amazement._] The_ conjurer_? 19094 [_ With violence._] Or perhaps you do n''t believe in devils? 19094 _ Enter_ PATRICIA CARLEON[_ Still agitated._] Patricia, where have you been? 19094 _ Was_ Joan of Arc a Vegetarian? 20363 ''And how can I tell but that you have met with him since?'' 20363 ''And when, and where? 20363 ''Are you deaf, you adder? 20363 ''But before that-- before I came to you-- can you say that no other eyes had ever looked lovingly into yours, and there met kindred response?'' 20363 ''Can a mother forget her children?'' 20363 ''Can you dare hint to me that I have ever been unfaithful to you, even in thought or word?'' 20363 ''Can you say that the greeting you gave me did not spring inadvertently from the real preoccupation of your mind?'' 20363 ''Harry, Harry,''she called again, in an excited whisper,''do you hear me? 20363 ''Have you the right to inquire into what may have happened before you met me? 20363 ''I thought-- that-- that--''''What, darling?'' 20363 ''Is it all a jest?'' 20363 ''Now is not this a singular thing,''he exclaimed,''that no man can ever let his eyes rest upon a pretty face without being accused of love for it? 20363 ''Now then,''she furiously demands,''did you ever cry after_ me_ when_ I_ went away and left you?'' 20363 ''Of the mind? 20363 ''Then, upon your own showing, you acknowledge that there was once another upon whom your eyes loved to look?'' 20363 ''To die? 20363 ''What made Harry think of coming to see ma to- day?'' 20363 ''What made you bawl after that woman-- that woman in the street?'' 20363 ''Why a''n''t you good to me always? 20363 ''You are not-- you must not feel offended at such a poor jest as that?'' 20363 ''You wo n''t be angry, dear mamma?'' 20363 A mother''s form was present to him day by day, but where was the maternal heart of love which should have beat within that bosom? 20363 A pause and a closer pressure-- then she questioned nervously:''What lady is it, Harry? 20363 About the trivial actions which you have mentioned I care little; but is there in your heart any real affection for that girl? 20363 Am I inconsistent? 20363 And have I not at length hit upon the exact truth? 20363 And what could I do, if she, perceiving it, were to succeed in drawing your love from me? 20363 And what has accomplished that object so often and so effectually as Reynard''s great principle? 20363 And who, then, is this fortunate one?'' 20363 Aunt Sarah, did you ever read the Declaration of Independence? 20363 But how is the case with De Quincey? 20363 But if, on the contrary, you say that you love her, I will--''''Will do what?'' 20363 But what shall we say of their_ morality_? 20363 Can Pallas e''er the loved and lost restore? 20363 Can it be done in this case? 20363 Can you look me in the eye and tell me that mine is the only voice you ever listened to with love?'' 20363 Charley, where is it? 20363 Did he ever publish a treatise on metaphysics? 20363 Did he ever write a poem? 20363 Did ma do that?'' 20363 Did you ever, when listening to it, consider that your interest in its enunciation of principles was merely incidental, not direct? 20363 Do I not love?_ The Celtic tongues have special modal forms to express these modifications of the Verb. 20363 Does God indeed bless only birds and flowers? 20363 For can any one be weak enough to believe that the ukase of emancipation originated in the magnanimity of Russia? 20363 For what is the highest consistency but correspondence with truth? 20363 Have our readers any true conception of what it is to be knouted? 20363 He could comprehend this woe in all its bearings, could measure the length, the breadth, the depth of the curse that had lighted upon him? 20363 How came you to know her, darling?'' 20363 How can heathen Pallas Faith of Christian tell? 20363 How could it bloom when she was in the grave? 20363 How is that? 20363 How is this to be got on with? 20363 How shall I escape? 20363 How so? 20363 If the credulity of believers is great, what shall we say of the credulity of Messieurs the philosophers, the unbelievers? 20363 In English:''What can our studies yield, where mind is weak; Or what a genius do, that''s not with discipline prepared?'' 20363 In pity answer!--shall we meet again?'' 20363 Is a lie as good as the truth? 20363 Is the lying devil, after all, supreme? 20363 Is there a home for Love beyond the skies? 20363 Is there a true God in heaven, or is Ahriman rightful lord? 20363 Is there any plain Christian who dreads a sneer at Christian credulity? 20363 Is there wrong in this? 20363 Is this a crime? 20363 Is this wonderful power, this omnipotent wisdom, a production of the''delicious''climate? 20363 Ma, if you must drink something, why would n''t_ tea_ do just as well?'' 20363 Of all the young Jews of His day, how came He by these powers and this omnipotent wisdom? 20363 Officers would reply,''Do you not know, sir, the proper method of addressing me?'' 20363 Oh, my lord, what have I done that you should thus strive to set your face against me? 20363 Perhaps she had not even heard all that had been said to her; though, if the words had really caught her ear, where, after all, could be the harm? 20363 Preoccupation?'' 20363 Private would exclaim,''Well, I guess now you''re puttin''on airs, a''n''t you?'' 20363 Privates would address their officer,''I say, Bill, have you got any tobacco?'' 20363 Time or chance alone could resolve the question, and meanwhile, what course could Ænone take? 20363 To the repentant mother''s ears what music so sweet as that? 20363 To what, indeed, could such poor, foolish pastime of the moment amount, that it should bring rebuke upon me?'' 20363 Was it thought of her that had impelled them thither? 20363 We ask where He gets His wondrous wisdom, this young carpenter, how_ He_ learned to speak''as man never spoke?'' 20363 We might answer by asking, What has Mr. Ricardo achieved in that department? 20363 What covert heresy is this, Lucy, with which you are endeavoring to mystify my old- fashioned notions? 20363 What credulity is like this? 20363 What did all this matter to the miserable possessor of wealth and name, the disgraced husband, the heart- broken father? 20363 What had sealed from the thirsting heart this purest fountain of earthly tenderness? 20363 What has Mr. de Quincey achieved for the science of political economy? 20363 What is involved in the term religion as used by a Christian? 20363 What knows chill Pallas of corruption''s doom? 20363 What miracle in the''Four Gospels''begins to be wonderful compared with this miracle of the modern thaumaturge? 20363 What mother had fathomed her shameful secret, and dared to send her child to her with a gift like that? 20363 What must she have done before the highest results can arise from literary effort, however immense the compass of our information? 20363 What shall a man do, whom this fine style of novel writing does n''t answer-- to whom, in fact, it seems just a bit of disgusting nonsense? 20363 What should we want of them when we get there? 20363 What then would there be for me to do, except to die?'' 20363 What young girl is there who, some time or other, has not modestly let her thoughts dwell upon innocent love? 20363 What, then, are the powers which nature alone can bestow? 20363 What_ makes_ her want to see me? 20363 Where does she live? 20363 Where is the place up yonder where they are good and happy? 20363 Where, then, lurks the transcendent power of Christianity as an organ of political movement? 20363 Where_ is_ ma, Charley?'' 20363 Whether Leta herself had any perception of all this, who could yet tell? 20363 Who shall combat the succession of Thomas de Quincey to this vacant throne? 20363 Who shall limit infinite mercy? 20363 Why this craving that he feels within him, this half- undefined, insatiable longing for maternal love and sympathy? 20363 Will it account for its effects? 20363 Will it explain its place to- day? 20363 Will it explain the facts? 20363 Will it explain the history of Christianity? 20363 Wo n''t there be plenty of houris there, with all their beauty and virtue, but without their extravagance and wilfulness? 20363 Would they approach her room? 20363 You have met him since?'' 20363 _ Is there any God at all?_ Are truth and good and God mere dreams, that a cunning fraud like this can so prosper and prevail under the white heavens! 20363 _ Why_ does she want to see me? 20248 I wonder,"mused the Martian,"did the grim spectre of death finally instill a grain of scepticism into his mind?"
20248Again Jerome Davis asks,"Is it possible that our Church leaders are to some extent blinded by current conventional standards?
20248Again, if witchcraft is given up, why not the chief witch of the Bible, the Devil?
20248Aloud he muses,"Is there no place on Earth which is free from this contradiction?"
20248And how well he must have rewarded his faithful servants, for was this not done in His name?
20248And then all Gods laughed and shook on their chairs and cried:"Is Godliness not just that there are Gods, but no God?"
20248And, behold, they cried out, saying,''What have we to do with thee, Jesus, Son of God?
20248Are not the wants of his family, the hunger, and ostracism torture?
20248Are they so busy sharing the wealth of the prosperous with others in spiritual quests that they fail to see some areas of desperate social need?
20248Art thou come hither to torment us before the time?''
20248Brahmanism, Jainism, Buddhism, Hinduism, Confucianism, Taoism, Zoroastrianism, Hebrewism, Mohammedanism, Christianity-- which is the true religion?
20248But actually who created this creator?
20248But does the Mohammedan or the Christian analyze as critically each his own belief?
20248But if the wife is displeased, is there any justice?
20248But what effectual check has Christianity contributed?
20248But, is the modern worshipper who is contemptuous of the ancients very different from them?
20248By what process of thought had Mohammed come to exalt Allah not merely above all Arabian gods, but above the gods of all times?
20248Can anything stronger be said to discourage research, investigation, experiment, and retard progress?
20248Did the clergymen stand firm when men with dollars talked?
20248Divine Justice?
20248Do certain diseases as yet remain to plague man?
20248Do certain diseases still baffle the physician?
20248Do they to some degree unconsciously exchange the gift of prophecy for yearly budgets and business boards?"
20248Does any one believe that Jew, Mohammedan, Catholic, and Protestant can long live in peace together?
20248Does not this apologist confuse his god with his devil?
20248For how much longer will man be a slave to his inferiority complex with regard to his own rational capacities?
20248Furthermore, why was he so certain of his own intimate association with Allah?
20248Good God-- surely in the face of all this sense of aliveness and motion, and this and that, there should be some intimation of WHY?
20248Has man profited by having remained in his mental infancy so long?
20248Has not his mind so co-*ordinated his movements that he has enslaved those forces of nature to be his aid?
20248How can we attribute these qualities to a being who is described to us as devoid of any nerve structure?
20248How can we know the actual number of earthlings that are sceptics?
20248How much longer before humanity can begin to build on a sound foundation?
20248How, then, could an omnipotent being permit wholesale and private murder?
20248However, the Martian argues,"Is it not a fact that in your earthly experience, you have created your gods in your own image?
20248If everything must have a cause, then the First Cause must be caused and therefore: Who made God?
20248If faith is vital to man, why not relate it to that which at least holds a promise of solution?
20248If men were possessed of devils in Jesus''time, what has happened to these devils now?
20248If the God of these earthlings bothers not about them, why should they trouble about God?
20248If the grocer, the butcher, the doctor, the lawyer, the scholar, the business man, were to boldly announce his scepticism, what would happen to him?
20248If this be God''s word, did God err when He said it?
20248In how many of the advanced ideas of our time has the Church taken the lead?
20248In this series of complications where may we discern a first cause?
20248Is He not rather a demon than a God?
20248Is anything so pitiful to behold as the firm grasp that the Church places on the mind of the youngest of children?
20248Is it necessary that you should salt your truth that it will no longer quench thirst_?
20248Is it not a fact that if the Christian nations of the world would only live at peace together, war would be impossible?
20248Is it not renowned for being a long way in the rear rather than in the vanguard of progressive thought and action?
20248Is religion, is church membership a help to virtue?
20248Is religion, is church membership, a help to virtue?
20248Is this all that is left to the theologian: that he must use the pitiful"Theology of Gaps"?
20248It is an absurd answer to reply that the creator created himself, yet, even if this is granted, may not the universe have created itself?
20248It is an excellent and comprehensive statement, but one is left wondering why the name"religious humanism"?
20248It was Lactantius who asked,"Is there any one so senseless as to believe that there are men whose footsteps are higher than their heads?
20248Must it take five hundred years for all mankind to come to a similar conclusion?
20248Now is it strange that Sinai should have excited reverence and dread?
20248Now it is the Martian''s turn to inquire of the Hebrew whether the latter had ever read this story to his own daughter?
20248Or did the Divine Father know that even a self- respecting germ could not inhabit the filthy floor of the Tabernacle?
20248Or, the story of Abraham''s affair with Hagar, his handmaiden?
20248Professor James T. Shotwell when speaking of paganism reminds us,"Who of us can appreciate antique paganism?
20248Surely, Jesus could not misinterpret his own words or deeds, if the religionists contend that we are now misinterpreting the Bible?
20248Surely, a man is not burned at the stake for his scepticism in this age; but is he not done to death?
20248That I have ten coats in my wardrobe while he goes naked?
20248That at each of my meals enough is served to feed his family for a week?
20248That the crops and trees grow downward?
20248That the rains and snow and hail fall upwards toward the earth?
20248The oft- repeated question still admits of no answer,"Who created the creator"?
20248Then again, has it not occurred to this apologist that he is in all futility attempting to prove something which is a contradiction within itself?
20248Then was heard the last despairing cry of the desolate, dying martyr,"My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
20248To confuse the evil spirit causing the disease?
20248Truly, Jehovah at that time must have loved them well, or did some other Deity form the Egyptians?
20248Was it the brotherhood of man that Christianity bestowed on the conquered Mexican and Peruvian nations, and on the Indians of our own country?
20248What could be more explicit?
20248What did the prophetic movement do with his sacred powers?
20248What effect has Christianity had upon our moral life, upon crime, drug- addiction, sexual immorality, prostitution, and perversion?
20248What immense structures have been founded on these shifting sands, on this morass of ignorance and childish fable?
20248What is the cause?
20248What is the value of a church that has claimed the moral leadership of the world when such things can happen?
20248What kind of brotherhood did Christians bestow on Jews or heretics in the Middle Ages?
20248What of those countless millions of men that died before Christ came to save the world from damnation?
20248What sort of person would be the father who would announce divine punishment or reward in order to obtain the love and respect of his children?
20248What supernatural in their deeds?
20248What wisdom poured forth from their lips which did not come from other philosophers?
20248When the minds of men are from infancy perverted with these ideals, how can mankind build a virile race?
20248Who does not feel the absurdity of the opinion that the lavish care for a sick child by a mother is given because of a belief in God and immortality?
20248Why do n''t the masses go to Church?''
20248Why does the ecclesiastic not leave off his advances until the child reaches a mature age, an age when he can reason?
20248Why, therefore, not give Allah, the leading icon in Arabia, an opportunity?
20248Why?
20248Wieman, Macintosh, and Otto:"Is There a God?
20248Will he endeavor to analyze it at all?
20248Years ago I was asked,''Why do n''t people accept religion?
21421''Pray, who is that?'' 21421 And what did you say to that?"
21421Are you sorry to leave us?
21421Before you ran off with your first husband,continued counsel,"were you not employed as a chambermaid?"
21421Did she say anything else?
21421Did you not,enquired counsel,"say''I am a woman of courage, and, if the meeting is in order, I will not stop it''?"
21421Did you see anything else?
21421Do I dance here, in this room, Your Majesty?
21421How dare you hint that I am the man to roll myself in the mud of the gutter? 21421 How many intrigues have you had during your career?"
21421In what way?
21421Is it an offence,enquired M. Duval,"for one man to avoid another?
21421Is it suggested,he demanded acidly,"that I should receive all these would- be ballerinas and put them through their paces?
21421Is not this a brand plucked from the burning?
21421Is the accusation true?
21421Lola Montez-- h''m-- what sort of man was he?
21421She said:''What on earth will the Royal Family say when they hear of this? 21421 To begin with, were you not the mistress of King Ludwig?"
21421Were you not,began the plaintiff''s counsel,"born in Montrose, the daughter of one Molly Watson?"
21421What Paphian cestus,was another sour comment,"does Lola wind round the blade of her poniard?
21421What are you thinking about?
21421What exactly did she say?
21421What has happened to me?
21421What if Europe has exiled her?
21421What is Lola Montez?
21421What is the reason?
21421What special services have you rendered Bavaria?
21421What was that?
21421What will she be up to next?
21421What''s the matter with you?
21421What,he once wrote to Lord Combermere,"are the Gold Sticks to do with that sink of smoking, the Horse Guards''guard and mess- rooms?
21421What,it demanded,"may be the precise article of the military code against which Mr. Heald is thought to have offended?
21421Who,she asked her hearers,"shall compute the stupefying and brutalizing effects of such religion?
21421A journalist, in a column account of her career, was ungallant enough to finish by enquiring"if she were the devil incarnate?"
21421And is she not bound for the East, where every man has four wives?"
21421But what expression can there be in a face bedaubed with white paint and enamelled?
21421But where are we to detect this especial source of power?
21421But where?
21421Can you imagine any girl in her senses turning up her nose at such a match?
21421Clarkson?"
21421Did her moral life in any way detract from her popularity as a woman of talent and of beauty, and an artiste of exceeding fascination and merit?
21421Had she made good, or not?
21421Happy days of Montespan, of Pompadour, of Dubarry, of Potemkin, of Orloff, where have you gone?"
21421Has not the''hypocrisy''been on the other side?
21421Have not almost all the royal family of England-- even those of the House of Hanover-- been notorious for their connection with celebrated women?
21421IV With Adrienne Lecouvreur, Lola Montez must often have asked herself,_ Que faire au monde sans aimer?_"Living without loving"had no appeal for her.
21421In what differs the King of Bavaria from these?
21421Is he ignorant of those of Napoleon himself and Mademoiselle Georges?
21421Is he ignorant that her theatre-- the Olympic-- was ever a resort of the most fashionable and aristocratic people of London?
21421Is it fair or generous of this Seekamp person to behave to me like this?
21421Is this the first time that a lady has had two husbands?
21421Now who shall compute the stupefying and brutalising effects of such a religion?
21421Now, this great deed recorded, Who would not dwell for choice Where heroes are rewarded As in the land of Reuss?
21421Of Arabella Churchill and Katherine Sedley, mistresses of James II?
21421Of the Countess of Kendal, mistress of George II, who was received everywhere in English society?
21421Of the Duke of Clarence and the amiable and respected Mrs. J----?
21421Of the Duke of York and Mary Anne Clark?
21421Or of George IV and the Marchioness of C----?
21421The question is, to what country does she really belong?
21421The question is, what?"
21421Thus, although there was not a scrap of evidence to connect her with the incident, a paragraph, headed"Lola Again?"
21421To descend still lower in the scale of social life, has the Marquis Auguste Papon ever heard of the celebrated Madame Vestris, now Mrs. Mathews?
21421Was prayer, she wondered forlornly, to fail her like everything else?
21421Well, might she not have had both, by the same amount of exercise and simple living?
21421What can be done for a human face that has a sluggish, sullen, arrogant, angry mind looking out of every feature?
21421What do you think?
21421What happened next?"
21421What must be the ultimate political and social freedom that we are discussing?
21421What next?
21421What ought I to do about it?
21421What was behind Lord Ranelagh''s cowardly attack on the débutante?
21421What were you thinking of, Alexandra Dumas, Beringer, Méry, and all my friends when you told me my fault lay in my too great kindness?
21421What will it all amount to?
21421What, she wonders, is the good of becoming fuddled with drunkards and wasting valuable time on half- civilized Asiatics?"
21421When, accompanied by a masculine escort, she entered the sacred edifice, the gentleman(?)
21421Where are Henry IV of France, Henry V, Louis XIV, and Louis XV, with their respective mistresses?
21421Who of their people ever presumed to interfere on the score of morality with the favours and honours conferred on those distinguished women?
21421Who represents anything in Europe to- day?"
21421Who suffers sorrow and pain with the most heroism of heart?
21421Who will dare tell me that this terrible Church does not lie upon the bosom of the present time like a vast, unwieldy, and offensive corpse?
21421Why am I troubled with such nonsense?"
21421Why did M. d''Ecquevillez tell us that the pistols belonged to him?
21421Why not go there and see for herself?
21421Why should our hard- earned money be lavished on her?"
21421With what grace can the public talk about virtue in a public actress, when they have followed in the wake of an ELSSLER?
21421and that he is keeping her at Munich( where he has bought her a house) in the quality of a favourite Sultanah?
21421demanded the journalist, astonished at the outburst,"it''s good publicity, is n''t it?"
19767Do you see that the gypsies have been here?
19767''And by what means do you possess such apparent influence over them?''
19767''And how are things going on at home?''
19767''And is it a language- master you''d be making of me?''
19767''And what do you call a river in Manx?''
19767''And what do you call the river in Manx?''
19767''And whom may it betide?''
19767''And you call a river a river?''
19767''And you''ll be lending them to me, I warrant?''
19767''Can you speak Manx?''
19767''Canst thou answer to thy conscience for pulling all those fish out of the water and leaving them to gasp in the sun?''
19767''Dereham,''I said,''is there a man in the world I should so like to see as Dereham?''
19767''Do you remember what I told you about the Eastern origin of these people?
19767''Does"monsieur"intend to be any time at Seville?''
19767''Find me up Brandt and Struensee by next morning, or--''''Have you found Brandt and Struensee?''
19767''For doing what?''
19767''Have you read my Snob Papers in_ Punch_?''
19767''How is my mother, and how is the dog?''
19767''How is this?''
19767''In_ Punch_?''
19767''Irish?''
19767''Surely that is a very cruel diversion in which thou indulgest, my young friend?''
19767''Then,''said the boy,''your son stole the pocket handkerchief?''
19767''What are thy reasons for thinking so?''
19767''What could have been the matter with the man to write such stuff as this?''
19767''What do you mean by respectable?''
19767''What do you see there, brother?''
19767''What does it all matter?''
19767''What does it look like, brother?''
19767''What dost thou read besides?''
19767''What is his name?''
19767''What''s that, Shorsha dear?''
19767''What, George Borrow?''
19767''When shall we hear,''he asks,''of an English rector instructing a beggar girl in the language of Cicero?''
19767''Where is Borrow?''
19767''Who is that man?''
19767''Who knows?''
19767''Why do you want so much to see him?''
19767''Why not?''
19767''Why so?''
19767''Why,''it was asked,''should the money go into a stranger''s pocket and be spent in London?''
19767''You do n''t call it owen?''
19767''You do n''t say so, Shorsha ma vourneen?--you do n''t say that you have cards fifty- two?''
1976728, 1846._ QUERIDO DON JORGE,--How are you getting on in health and spirits?
19767Am I to regret this?
19767And can I say more?
19767And then it was,''Where can we get a bite and sup?
19767And what was I myself?
19767And who can not excuse the honest pride of the old man-- the stout old man?
19767Are you inclined for a run up to town next week?
19767Ballet?
19767Becalmed, they were drifting somewhere down by Reedham, when suddenly Borrow said,"George, how deep is it here?"
19767Borrow been about?
19767Borrow humorously exaggerated?
19767Borrow''s answer to the query?
19767Borrow, who were they?''
19767But how shall I name them all?
19767But thou forgettest; they did not follow fishing as a diversion, as I fear thou doest.--Thou readest the Scriptures?''
19767But what had they to tell?
19767But what is Billin- ger?
19767But what more likely?
19767Can not you strew such criticisms through the sequel to_ Lavengro_?
19767Come here, my pretty child,''said he in Moultanee,''and tell me where are the rest of your tribe?''
19767Did Borrow''s father ever really fight Big Ben Brain or Bryan in Hyde Park, or is it all a fantasy of the artist''s imagining?
19767Did I thank you for your letter to her?
19767Do n''t you know that it is one of my temptations?
19767Do you know where you are?
19767Do you know who is handsome?
19767Do you mean my account books?
19767Do you see that?
19767Dost thou know Hebrew?''
19767Dost thou read aught beside the Scriptures?''
19767Has the improved English pointer been introduced into Spain?
19767Have you heard anything about the rent of the Cottage?
19767He asks me when_ Handbook_ will be done?
19767He replied in a tone of humorous petulance,''What is the good of your bringing me a letter when I have n''t got my spectacles to read it?''
19767How feel you inclined?
19767How is Dr. M.?
19767How is mother and Hen., and how are all the creatures?
19767How long before we are dust?
19767I miss very much my walks at Llangollen by the quiet canal; but what''s to be done?
19767Is it to be wondered that the people follow their every day pursuits on the Sabbath when they know not the unlawfulness of so doing?
19767Is this the characterisation which we have been used to see there?
19767It will scarcely have improved, for how could it be better than it was?
19767May I ask you, therefore, to inform us in which of Lope de Vega''s numerous works this same ghost story is to be found?
19767May we not say that an enthusiasm for Borrow''s_ Lavengro_ is now a touchstone of taste in English prose literature?
19767Moreover, had he not written a great book which only the Germans could appreciate,_ Twelve Essays on the Phenomena of Nature_?
19767Now is not that speaking very injudiciously?
19767Now, who can wonder that the children of that fine old city are proud of her, and offer up prayers for her prosperity?
19767On which he exclaimed,''Pray, what books do you mean, madam?
19767Once I was speaking of a lady who was attached to a gentleman, and he asked,''Well, did he make her an offer?''
19767R._ on Spanish Architecture; how gets on the_ Lavengro_?
19767Then hastily changing the subject he called out,''What party are_ you_ in the Church-- Tractarian, Moderate, or Evangelical?
19767Then he would ask,''Are n''t you afraid of me?''
19767To Mrs. George Borrow, 39 Camperdown Terrace, Yarmouth( Fragment?
19767To which Mr. Brandram, who was rector of Beckenham, replied''Cui bono?''
19767Was it because Yarmouth-- ten miles distant-- is in Norfolk that it was always selected for seaside residence?
19767Was not his God- fearing father a champion in his way, or, at least, had he not in open fight beaten the champion of the moment, Big Ben Brain?
19767We recall, for example, Lavengro''s interview with the magistrate when a visitor is announced:''In what can I oblige you, sir?''
19767Weare?''
19767Well, where are you now?
19767Were they Celts?
19767Were those words which I heard?
19767What age?
19767What could be more lyrical than this: Reader, have you ever seen a fight?
19767What do you think?
19767What does not my own poor self owe to thee?''
19767What had Borrow to do with science?
19767What his price?
19767What profession dost thou make?--I mean to what religious denomination dost thou belong, my young friend?''
19767What sort of a horse is your hack?--What colour?
19767When did this vile phrase arise?''
19767When he had gone, Mr. Burns asked:''Do you know who that gentleman was?''
19767When he had landed he continued his investigations, asking every peasant he met the Manx for this or that English word:''Are you Manx?''
19767Where''s the life of Farmer Patch?
19767Who can say?
19767Why did he not write_ Wild Scotland_ as a companion volume to_ Wild Wales_?
19767Why do you bring up that name?
19767Why dost thou not undertake the study?''
19767Will Mr. Murray have the book translated into French?
19767Will you be so kind as to send the MS. of the Russian Homilies to Mrs. Biller?
19767Will you?
19767Wo n''t you come?
19767Would he carry me?--What his action?
19767You wish to know something about him?
19767[ 155] But what of the boy who had thus passed the censorship?
19767[ 69] Did the poet, who had an interest in criminology, know of his father''s quite innocent association with the Fauntleroy trial?
19767[ 70] Another witness attained fame by her answer to the inquiry,''Was supper postponed?''
19767[ Illustration: FACSIMILE OF A POEM FROM_ TARGUM_ A Translation from the French by George Borrow My Eighteenth Year Where is my eighteenth year?
19767_ Mother._ But of what?
19767am I not after telling you that I have no money at all?''
19767and how has this absence of winter suited you?
19767ay, why not?
19767iv.?
19767said a mother to her son, as he lay on a couch under the influence of the dreadful one;''what ails you?
19767shall I name thee last?
19767there is no one can harm you; of what are you apprehensive?
19767were they Laps?
19767where''s the trial of Yeoman Patch?''
19767why not?''
22042''Why,"said I,"what, is he of that estate that seeketh no other means to warn his officers than with so terrible shot in so peaceable a country?"
22042''I then demanded,What province did he govern, that needed such an officer?"
22042And now who but Will Sommers, the King''s Fool? 22042 From what country do these slaves come?"
22042We may have a sermon on any other day,said the London apprentices, who did not always go to hear it,"why should we be deprived on this day?"
22042What meaneth this drum?
22042What things have we seen, Done at the Mermaid? 22042 _ Do n''t_ you like laurel gleaming under holly?"
22042***** Were they sick?
22042***** When_ brawn, with powdred wig_, comes swaggering in, And mighty serjeant ushers in the Chine, What ought a wise man first to think upon?
22042Ah, how many stood or sat around that camp fire that were never to see old England more?
22042And what is the name of their king?"
22042And why should fears for future years, Mix jolly ale with thoughts of tears When in the horn''tis poured?
22042And why should ghost of sorrow fright The bold heart of an English knight When beef is on the board?
22042And why?
22042Brand quotes the foregoing paragraph and asks:"Can this be what Aubrey calls the sport of''Cob- loaf stealing''?"
22042But who, that bears a mind matured to thought, A heart to feel, shall look abroad this day And speak of happiness?
22042But why do you feel so, then?
22042From what country come they?"
22042Gaze we down Yon crowded aisle?
22042Have I my Tools?
22042Have we not Burgundy in our blood?
22042Have we not joke, laughter, repartee, bright eyes, comedies of other people, and comedies of our own; songs, memories, hopes?
22042He lived-- for life may long be borne, Ere sorrow break its chain: Why comes not death to those who mourn?
22042I had horses, soldiers, arms, and treasures; is it surprising that I should regret the loss of them?
22042If it is thy will to command the universe, is it a reason we should voluntarily accept slavery?
22042It was asked in a''Hue and Cry after Christmas,''published anonymously at the end of the year 1645,''Where may Christmas be found?''
22042Shall we drain The cheerful cup-- a health to absent friends?
22042Tastes may differ even on a mince- pie; but who gainsays a fire?
22042The Boare is dead, Loe, here is his head, What man could have done more Than his head off to strike, Meleager like, And bringe it as I doe before?
22042The beautiful genius of domestic love has triumphed, and who can foresee the blessed results?
22042The poets have laurels-- and why not we?
22042Then what puddings have you?
22042Then wherefore in these merry days Should we, I pray, be duller?
22042Though other purses be more fat, Why should we pine or grieve at that?
22042What cost to good husband is any of this?
22042What must have been the credulity of the people in an age when an historian could gravely write, as Matthew Paris did in 1171?
22042What shall become of all my merriments, My ceremonies, shows of heraldry, And other rites?"
22042Where will you get holly to stick in your churches, or churches to stick your dried tea- leaves( that must be the substitute) in?
22042Which answer pleased him not a whit; but he said,''What do you tell me of the fashion?
22042Whom do we pledge?
22042Why are the trembling shepherds sore afraid?
22042Why should they be robbed of eleven days by a new Act of Parliament?
22042Why shrink they at the grand, the heavenly sight?
22042With this weird tale in his mind in the mystic stillness of midnight would an imaginative man be likely to deny the reality of the spirit world?
22042_ Counter._ Quem non delectant moderatè pocula sumpta?
22042_ Tenor._ Cujus non animum dulcia vina juvant?
22042is eating all you do At Christ- Tide?
22042or the making Sing- songs?
22042shall we have bread and cheese after a banquet?"
22042the living or the dead?"
22042to whom?
22042what then?
22042where should I stay?
22042who now shall grace my tournaments, Or honour me with deeds of chivalry?
21499But in the event of the complete ruin of the rest of Germany, would it not be to the advantage of Bavaria to accept the idea of a separate State?
21499But what does it matter whether Europe lives if her young daughter Hungary survives her?
21499But why not a Disraeli?
21499Do you not think Holy Russia will reassert herself? 21499 Do you think European civilization will fall?"
21499Do you think that what is left of Austria ought to be divided up between her neighbours?
21499Every one came in to win, but nearly every one is losing-- isn''t it like life?
21499Has Austria a national spirit? 21499 How much do you expect to get for this?"
21499How?
21499I suppose by the great secret you mean the love of God? 21499 Is that not similar?"
21499On foot?
21499Poland? 21499 Russia?"
21499So what do you say?
21499So you are all Bolsheviks here?
21499We often receive letters from our people in Roumania, Czecho- Slovakia and Jugo- Slavia, saying''Why do you not come over and protect us?''
21499Well, Count?
21499What do you think of the Patriarch of Moscow? 21499 What do you think?
21499What, no tips now?
21499Which of these rivers is the Danube?
21499Who is that?
21499Whom have you hope in now?
21499Why do you not take the step yourself?
21499Why is that?
21499Why''s that?
21499Would you like to have tea?
21499You are going back to your hospital camp-- how will you go?
21499You do compulsory communal labour in the fields every year, do you not?
21499You want a room very badly, do n''t you?
21499( Quo Vadis Europa?)
21499And have there not been many babies born whose nationality has remained long in doubt, pending plebiscites and decisions of the Supreme Council?
21499And if she embraces Croats and Slovenes why not Bulgars, too?
21499And then will he not come back and receive the greatest honour?
21499And what shall we say of the other clay sparrows?
21499And, in any case, who cares?
21499Are we then through with everything?
21499Ask anyone, Did we want the last war?
21499At last a hotel was found and located, and when the cabman had brought my things from the station and one asked timidly:"How much?"
21499But do rectors of theological academies have faith?
21499But if a new Germany, what will it be like and wherein will it excel?
21499But if we can shake hands with Bolsheviks why not with Germans?
21499But the after- thought was, when he went away-- What did he come for?
21499But these wars, what is the use of them: does anyone ever gain anything by them?"
21499But, having registered the whole Polish population, what then?
21499Can it be that Paris has become first- class and London has ceased to be first- class?
21499Davidson would query when he saw him, and smile cheeringly;"anything fresh?"
21499Do they look like flying?
21499Do we ever get anything out of wars?
21499Does not Switzerland exist by herself, and do very well, without half the natural advantages of the new Austria?"
21499Does the heart respond to its name?"
21499EUROPE-- WHITHER BOUND?
21499England is a democracy, but what is the virtue of a democracy which languishes in ignorance?
21499FROM PARIS EUROPE-- WHITHER BOUND?
21499How can we be mutually serviceable to one another?
21499How can we help one another to do more business?
21499How can youth understand those who are old?
21499How then about Poland with 4000 marks to the pound-- an Allied country with a close understanding with France?
21499I have all my travelling expenses in my pocket-- what if I get infected and put all on to a number?
21499If there is no progress why have a mission to civilize?
21499Is England going to develop a new caste system which the commonalty will have to fight?
21499Is it not a characteristic paradox of life that babies should keep coming into a world that can not find room for the parents?
21499Is the blood of all of us a little distempered?
21499It may be asked, had he lost his faith, too?
21499It might be asked what interest has France to support Poland-- is it sentiment?
21499On the other hand, is not France financing Hungary-- the eternal potential enemy of Jugo- Slavia?"
21499Perhaps they are paid for it?
21499Roumania?"
21499Says a lady,"Well, padre, can you tell us the great secret?"
21499Shall he expire And unavenged?
21499Should we present as brave a front?"
21499Such is modern travel in Europe, and I felt rather amused when the question was put to me,"Are you travelling for pleasure or on business?"
21499The question is, can Greece cut herself to fit-- ought she to?
21499Under such circumstances is it surprising that there is stagnation of peoples in Europe?
21499Was it not perhaps to flatter Serbia into undertaking a part in some new war, perhaps against the German, perhaps against the Soviets?
21499What does it matter about the public?
21499What does it matter now?
21499What is the matter?
21499What then, is the game in Europe?
21499What would happen if suddenly the familiar face of Wilhelm the Second confronted that gathering of Germans?
21499What''s human wisdom by the side of Chance?
21499When will she be disenchanted again?
21499When you come?
21499Who has?
21499Who was Nietzsche?
21499Why do you go on fighting?''
21499Why not try human action?
21499Why not, then, try love?
21499Why should she?
21499Why?
21499Would he show the Kaiser?
21499You come off a ship?
21499You know the famous lines of Solovyof:''O Russia, what sort of an East will you be, the East of Xerxes or the East of Christ?''"
14106After all,said Jimmy,"what_ did_ I do?"
14106All of them? 14106 And I suppose he thinks he made it come?"
14106And I''m to persuade them that that''s the best thing you can do, am I?
14106And Viola?
14106And do you care about-- this sort of thing, Viola?
14106And how do_ you_ know?
14106And the way she looked at me--I said,"D''you mean to say, Jevons, it did n''t happen?"
14106And till then--?
14106And what are you going to do when you get there?
14106And what,I asked,"is Miss Thesiger doing?"
14106And when you did get there,said Reggie,"were you in a funk?"
14106And who was it who brought Kendal into it?
14106And yet,I said,"you could think of leaving him?"
14106And you''re helping her to get away?
14106And you?
14106And_ our_ chivalry is to go down before yours?
14106Are n''t you glad to have more room to move about in?
14106Are you quite sure, Pavitt? 14106 Are you quite sure, sir, that Mr. Jevons is in that place?
14106Are you quite sure?
14106Are you sure?
14106Are you tired,she said,"of tramping up and down?"
14106But sha n''t you,I said,"be seeing her?
14106But what-- what did General Thesiger do?
14106But-- where are you going_ to_?
14106But-- where''s the black- and- white god?
14106Ca n''t you have both?
14106Ca n''t you see that I''ve burnt my boats?
14106Ca n''t you see,she cried,"that I shall never marry a nice man like Reggie?"
14106Ca n''t you see,she said,"that I''m waiting for the next train?"
14106Ca n''t you_ see_?
14106Come,she said,"what about Joan of Arc?"
14106D''you mean,he said,"that_ this_ room doesn''t-- er-- appeal to you?
14106D''you mind if I turn in, old man?
14106D''you notice that I did n''t speak a word to her-- not one blessed word the whole time? 14106 D''you remember the time, sir, when you would n''t let her out if there was a spot of rain?"
14106Did I do anything?
14106Did I? 14106 Did Norah tell you, after all?"
14106Did he say when he was coming back?
14106Did n''t I tell you?
14106Did n''t you know he''d gone, sir?
14106Did n''t you know?
14106Did you know he was going up to town?
14106Did you stand it?
14106Did you walk here from Amershott, or what?
14106Did_ you_ know,she said,"that Charlie''d gone?"
14106Do n''t you see_ now_,she said,"why I went out to him, and how beautiful it all was?"
14106Do they,I asked her,"at all realize Jevons?"
14106Do you believe that, Viola?
14106Do you know that Antwerp''s over there, a little way to the north? 14106 Do you live there?"
14106Do you mean to say,I said,"that she''s going to leave him?"
14106Do you mind giving me her address?
14106Do you realize,I said,"that those women and those little children are flying for their lives?
14106Do you remember him telling Reggie that he would n''t be in the war because he was a coward? 14106 Do you suppose I''m going to chivy Jimmy about without doing anything to help him?
14106Do you suppose,she said,"--if I''d known-- that I should be_ here_?"
14106Do?
14106Does_ he_ want to be asked down?
14106Dragged? 14106 Dragged?"
14106Furny, is that guns I hear, or thunder?
14106Furny,she said,"what does jaundice come from?"
14106Got the glasses there, sir?
14106Have n''t I told you that I ca n''t and wo n''t use Jimmy''s car?
14106Have you had coffee?
14106He saved Reggie''s life-- do you see? 14106 He told you?--What did he say exactly?"
14106He_ is_ going it, is n''t he?
14106How could you possibly know it, when I did n''t?
14106How do I know? 14106 How do you feel when you''re in the Tube?"
14106How do you know,I said,"that she''d have stopped you?"
14106How many people,she said,"know that Charlie was in that train?
14106How,I said sternly,"do you know what he wanted?"
14106I say, Furnival, do you remember that half- crown you borrowed from me?
14106I suppose you do n''t know,she said,"that Mummy and Daddy fell in love with you first?
14106I suppose you know my people would like me to marry you?
14106I suppose you mean for anything she may take it into her head to do?
14106I suppose you mean there was only one thing I wanted? 14106 I suppose,"she said,"I''m to think of your everlasting meddling with my affairs?"
14106I thought you said you could n''t afford her?
14106I? 14106 I?
14106If that''s so,I said,"do n''t you think you could try to do what you ought?"
14106If they do n''t,I said,"are you sure it wo n''t mean a lot of bother for_ them_?"
14106Is Mr. Jevons in this hotel-- Mr. Tasker Jevons?
14106Is it going to be a toss- up between them all over again, d''you think?
14106Is it?
14106Is n''t it better she should come to us?
14106Is she going too?
14106Is that what you came for?
14106Jimmy,he said,"did you run away with my sister, or did n''t you?
14106Jimmy? 14106 Keep what up?"
14106Let me see,I said;"it''s typing, is n''t it?"
14106Look here, old man, what made you say you were an arrant coward?
14106Look here,I said,"when you say you told him, do you mean that you and he have been seeing each other?"
14106Make them see what?
14106Me?
14106Mildred?
14106Much better in every way,I said,"than your youngest sister here, has n''t he?"
14106My dear child, however could he? 14106 My dear child, what on earth do you suppose they matter to me?
14106My dear child,I said( we were running out on the road to Ghent now),"do you realize that there''s a war?"
14106My dear fellow, how can I look after her if I''m not here?
14106My feelings? 14106 My leg?"
14106My safety is to be considered before everything?
14106Norah? 14106 Oh, Wally--_have_ they?"
14106Oh, come,I said,"surely I always knew?"
14106Oh, come,I said,"they''ve accepted it, have n''t they?"
14106Oh, it''s you, is it?
14106Oh, you-- haven''t I told you you''re always supposing things?
14106Oh-- don''t I?
14106Perhaps you do n''t, but what would you think of a man who did n''t want to defend you? 14106 Speed?
14106Speed?
14106Suffer? 14106 Suffer?
14106Supposing what?
14106Surely,I said,"if he had n''t the ghost of a chance, it was n''t necessary?"
14106Surely?
14106That isn''t-- Jimmy-- is it?
14106That their homes-- their_ homes_--are burned to ashes somewhere down there?
14106That''s all very well,I said,"but what are we to say to Jimmy when he comes back this afternoon?"
14106That''s all very well,said Viola,"but who explains to Jimmy?"
14106That''s how it strikes him?
14106The end--?
14106The wounded? 14106 Then how on earth,"I said,"did they find out?"
14106Then what the dickens,Reggie said,"were you doing together in Bruges?"
14106Then why the devil did n''t you say so?
14106Then why,I said,"did you laugh at Jimmy just now?"
14106Then--she was still puzzled--"what made you come?"
14106Then,I said,"why should he break loose like this now?"
14106Then--I said,"forgive my asking so many questions-- your people know you had this appointment with me?"
14106They-- they gave the anaesthetic to-- Reggie?
14106Viola?
14106Well,said Jimmy,"how do you like them?"
14106Well-- I''m sorry-- but the fact is--"Did you like what I sent you?
14106Were we as obvious as all that?
14106Were you looking for the Captain, sir?
14106What are you coming back here for?
14106What are you stopping for?
14106What did you do it for, Viola?
14106What did you do that for?
14106What did you go and see him for?
14106What do you mean by bringing her here at all? 14106 What do you suppose he''d do?"
14106What do you think he''ll do?
14106What do you think?
14106What does it mean?
14106What else have I been meaning ever since there was a war?
14106What excuse did you give to Kendal for following me in this way?
14106What harm did I ever do you? 14106 What has he done?"
14106What is it, then?
14106What made you think of Bruges?
14106What on earth are you doing?
14106What on earth,I said,"must your people think of me?"
14106What sort of age is he?
14106What sort of things?
14106What speed is it?
14106What time shall we have to start to- morrow?
14106What would you have done, then?
14106What, for carrying you off to Belgium? 14106 What_ does_ it matter,"she said,"so long as it makes him happy?
14106What_ were_ you doing, then?
14106When did he go?
14106When?
14106Where were you running to when you saw me sitting up here?
14106Whether,I said,"it''s in a dangerous place or not?"
14106Which hand?
14106Who could possibly have supposed,she said,"that Charlie would be such an ass?"
14106Who got in in time?
14106Who told you?
14106Who''s that girl?
14106Why could n''t you have wired in the morning, then? 14106 Why did he come?"
14106Why do you keep on saying that he did n''t want to go?
14106Why drag in Jevons?
14106Why lie about them if they did n''t matter?
14106Why not? 14106 Why poor little Norah?"
14106Why should n''t she?
14106Why should n''t they?
14106Why should n''t we? 14106 Why,"I asked,"counteract them?"
14106Why-- on earth-- should she have wanted that?
14106Why?
14106Will it matter if we go upstairs?
14106Withers?
14106Wo n''t it wear him out too?
14106You admit, then,he said,"that it appears more outrageous than it is?"
14106You did meet, did n''t you, Jimmy?
14106You do n''t know what to_ do_?
14106You do n''t mean,I said,"that you''re going out?"
14106You do n''t suppose I have_ really_?
14106You do n''t suppose he''ll eat her for running up to town?
14106You goose, where''s the fun of letting your right hand go to pieces?
14106You knew he was going, then?
14106You last diminutive purple embryo of an epileptic stock, do you suppose I do n''t know that? 14106 You mean you did n''t bring her?
14106You mean,he said,"it''s the only one I did n''t bother about?"
14106You mean,he said,"these things are comparative?"
14106You surely do n''t suggest,said Jevons,"that I''ve made you uglier?"
14106You''ve got a very tender little heart, have n''t you?
14106You_ knew_ this,she said,"you knew he was going and you never told me?"
14106You_ knew_--at what time last night?
14106You_ want_ me to tell you what I think of it?
14106You_ went_ to them? 14106 You_ were_ clever, were n''t you?"
14106_ I''m_ putting the slur on my daughter, am I?
14106( Was there ever any risk he had n''t taken?)
14106( What_ could_ it matter to her?)
14106And I asked him what he thought of Jevons?
14106And I have heard him say almost with bitterness:"Does_ that_ shock you?
14106And I wondered why she had drawn my attention to it just now?
14106And I,"Surely, sir, you believe her word?"
14106And Norah said,"What if he does?"
14106And at last she said:"Are n''t you glad now that you did n''t marry me?"
14106And did I know Canterbury?
14106And he put it to me: What other woman would look at him?
14106And if he did get a bit excited is it any wonder?
14106And it was then that the Canon asked him what his politics were?
14106And she,"It''ll be fine fun for me, wo n''t it, when you''ve killed yourself?
14106And so we heard Viola saying,"What do you do it for?"
14106And that they''ve dragged up the big guns from Namur for the siege of Antwerp?"
14106And then,"Did you know?"
14106And then: Did I know anything about the young man''s morals?
14106And then:"Is he-- is he_ very_ impossible?"
14106And what-- he asked Reggie--_could_ he do with a physique like his?
14106And when I said, How about my promises-- my word of honour?
14106And-- your boudoir?"
14106At that she asked us( but without any sign of perturbation) if we had got Jimmy there?
14106But all I said was,"You wrote from Canterbury, did n''t you?"
14106But did he think she''d stay?
14106But he must have suspected something was up, for he turned his head round and looked at her straight; and again he said,"Why?"
14106But how are they going to get out of it, and will he betray her?
14106But how can I?
14106But it was rather hard luck on him, was n''t it, that he should have gone and turned this beastly colour?
14106But supposing he had-- what then?"
14106But what can a man do in a case so desperate?
14106But where am I to find you here?"
14106But-- was I?
14106Ca n''t you see that I''m packing?"
14106Ca n''t you see that it''s worse for him?
14106Ca n''t you see that it''s you-- with your ridiculous suspicions-- that have given me away?"
14106Ca n''t you see them doing it?"
14106Ca n''t you see,"she said,"that he adores her?"
14106Chevons!_""I wonder,"said Viola,"what Jimmy has been up to?
14106Could I, at twenty- three hours''notice, take his place?
14106Could n''t she look at the Belfry without_ you_?"
14106Could they at least tell me whether he was or was not in England?
14106D''you mind, old man, if I go to bed?
14106D''you suppose, if I were to drive down Piccadilly in this car-- short of standing on my head-- I could attract the attention I''ve attracted to- day?
14106D''you suppose_ I_''d be such a damn fool as to muff it three times with the same woman?
14106Danger?
14106Danger?
14106Did I?
14106Did he ask me about Bruges?
14106Did she want to make me judge by the transparent innocence of this running the not quite so transparent innocence of that?
14106Did you mind awfully?"
14106Do n''t you remember I gave you six months?"
14106Do n''t you remember how he dished my game at dinner the first night you were here?"
14106Do n''t you wish Reggie could see him now?"
14106Do you know anything of this man Jevons she talks about?"
14106Do you know him?"
14106Do you know that if it had n''t been for you Norah would n''t have been allowed to come and stay with us?"
14106Do you know that the battlefields are down there-- no-- there-- to the south, where I''m pointing?
14106Do you know where Charlie is?"
14106Do you mind my going back to it?"
14106Do you suppose I do n''t understand?"
14106Do you understand?"
14106Does she really think I''m such a fool that I ca n''t live without lions on my staircase?
14106Even now, with all my lights, with that intense country light fairly beating on him, I can wonder: Am I saying these things because I think them?
14106First of all, she asked me what I was doing about a motor- car?
14106For a moment I wondered wildly what_ had_ she sent me?
14106For the moment, then, they are placated?"
14106Frightened her?"
14106Funny, was n''t it?"
14106Good Heavens, have you any idea what you may be let in for, supposing--?"
14106Had I ever known him turn back from any adventure that he had set out on?
14106Had he anything to say?
14106Had n''t he better leave it at that, anyhow, for the present?
14106Had n''t she told me she liked me better than anybody else, next to Reggie?
14106Had she actually taken rooms there?
14106Had they anticipated just such a sudden, disconcerting encounter?
14106Had they thought it all out and arranged with each other beforehand how they should behave?
14106Have n''t I told you I''m going to- morrow?
14106Have we any of us thought of it since?"
14106Have you come to look at the Belfry?"
14106Have you had any dinner?"
14106He asked him why he had chosen an ugly subject when he might have found a beautiful one?
14106He asked me if I thought that Norah and I could keep her with us, if necessary, for-- he hesitated-- for six months?
14106He asked me if I''d like to know what it was?
14106He asked me was I thinking of taking her back myself?
14106He asked me what I thought I was doing when I came out here?
14106He called to her,"Have you measured?"
14106He meditated, and brought out as the result:"Do you mind telling me how much she charges you?"
14106He said why should n''t she stay?
14106He said, Could n''t they ask Viola without him?
14106He said,"My dear boy, supposing-- supposing it is n''t all as innocent as you think?
14106He was to reserve a room for Monsieur?
14106Her voice came with the clear tremor of a bell:"And did they funk?"
14106How could I be?"
14106How could I have any feelings about a blanketty drawing- room suite?
14106How could I, when I was convinced that the best thing she could do was to marry_ me_?
14106How could I?
14106How could he have imagined that she wanted_ this_?
14106How could there be?
14106How do you think that''ll answer?"
14106How is he going to get across that tennis- ground?
14106However_ did_ you get here?"
14106I asked her did she think I''d ever doubted?
14106I asked her if it did n''t occur to her that some day she might want her boats?
14106I asked her if running away behind Jimmy''s back was her idea of straightness?
14106I asked her if she knew anything, anything whatever, about the people of the house?
14106I asked her then, Was_ she_ afraid?
14106I asked her what she was going to do?
14106I asked her, Had they said much?
14106I asked her,"How?"
14106I asked her: Was it the labels?
14106I asked him if it was n''t a mistake to put his best so early in the series?
14106I asked him,"How long?"
14106I believe I meditated on this before I asked her,"Why should it?"
14106I could only say,"My dear child-- have you saved_ yourself_?"
14106I do n''t care whether you did or not, but-- did you?"
14106I gave you your innings, did n''t I?"
14106I had just told him it was splendid of him going out like this, and he had smiled back at me and asked,"Like what?"
14106I had wondered: Are they going to let on that they''ve been out together?
14106I hear her crying out suddenly with no relevance,"Has n''t he got stunning eyes, Daddy?"
14106I looked at her, and she sent me a little sad interrogative smile that asked me why I walked the decks thus savagely and alone?
14106I never knew I was so nice, did you?"
14106I remember saying, in a startling manner as the idea struck me,"Supposing he comes by Victoria?"
14106I remember wondering whether deep down in her heart she meant that my marriage would knit her and Jimmy closer?
14106I reminded him:"Have n''t you always said you could get what you wanted?"
14106I said I did trust her, and that God knew I did n''t want to interfere, but was she quite sure she was doing a wise thing?
14106I said I had only known it last night-- how could I have told her?
14106I said I supposed he realized it after Withers had seen them?
14106I said it was for me to go into it, and if I did n''t, why should they?
14106I said then that though we were glad to have her we could n''t, of course, accept any responsibility-- He smiled slightly and asked,"For what?"
14106I said( Heaven knows why, except that I think I must have wanted Reggie''s opinion of Jevons):"D''you think he''s right about his own cowardice?"
14106I said,"Did we all meet together in Bruges?"
14106I said,"Do you want to marry him?"
14106I said,"My dear chap, why should n''t I be here?
14106I said,"What am I to say to that?"
14106I said,"_ Are_ you, sir?"
14106I shall just crumple up with the first sight of him-- with the first word he says--""Why not,"I said,"crumple up?"
14106I was thinking,"Whatever will she do if he cracks his knuckles?"
14106I was with them once when she was seeing him off at Euston, and I said to her,"Do you never go with him to see the poor old man?"
14106I wondered whether Jimmy, in his wisdom, had calculated on that, too?
14106I wondered,"_ How_ is she going to greet him?
14106I wondered: How on earth will he carry it off?
14106I wondered: Is she shivering all down her spine?
14106I''m afraid mine said:"What are you going to do_ now_?"
14106I''m afraid this room is a bit warm, is n''t it?"
14106If I believed in Viola, surely they might?
14106If I knew that she could do nothing and feel nothing that was not beautiful, was n''t my knowledge good enough for them?
14106If I thought you didn''t-- if I thought that you could go back on her-- and if you go back on Jimmy you go back on_ her_--""Well?"
14106If he said he was going to the war, why could n''t I have known that he would go?
14106If he were to take this kindness from a lady-- would it, in my opinion, or would it not, be cricket?
14106Is n''t he sweet?"
14106Is n''t it funny that I should be running away with you?"
14106Is n''t she going to see you off or something?"
14106Is n''t that what you wanted?"
14106Is she going to flinch?
14106It was as if he had said:"Who that loves as I love thinks only of himself?"
14106It was as if he looked at me and said,"See me swank just then?
14106It was as if she challenged me with:"Why not?
14106It was as if she had turned to say to me triumphantly,"Now, perhaps, when I''m running away with_ your_ precious perfection, at last you understand?"
14106It was as if she were asking me, Did I think he would keep on all his life doing these rather alarming things?
14106It was the thing, he said, that he had prophesied nine years ago-- didn''t I remember?
14106It was while we were walking that-- stung by a sudden fear, a reminiscence of the afternoon-- I asked her: Was there anybody else?
14106It''s enough-- isn''t it?--if I want to_ now_--if I want it more than anything else?"
14106It''s really awful for poor Jimmy now he''s on all the buses and in the Tube?"
14106Jimmy-- what_ did_ I mean?"
14106Look at him-- what woolly lamb could be more simple and innocent than he is now?"
14106My wife said, in her admirable, judicial way,"How an ass?"
14106No good?
14106Norah said,"Reggie, I think you know your brother- in- law?"
14106Now d''you see, sir?"
14106Of giving her what she wanted to that extent?
14106Of the war they said,_"C''est triste, nest- ce pas?
14106Only why could n''t she say so at the time?"
14106Or because I believe I must have thought them then?
14106Or if I''d thought he really wanted to?
14106Or poor Jimmy either?
14106Poor Jimmy asked innocently,"What did I do?"
14106See?"
14106She asked,"What day?"
14106She began at once,"Well-- did you make him understand?"
14106She followed you?"
14106She raised her eyebrows in delicate reproof of my rudeness and said,"Why not?"
14106She said out loud, so that everybody heard her,"Not with Vee- Vee?"
14106She said,"Are you going to do any work to- night?"
14106She said,"Daddy is beautiful, is n''t he?
14106She said,"Mr. Furnival, you''ve come from Belgium, have n''t you?
14106She said,"What are you going to do, then?"
14106She said,"What right?"
14106She said,"Whatever do you think you''re doing_ now_?"
14106She too must have been aware of this oddness-- for she stopped suddenly to say to me,"Do you remember when I ran away with Jimmy?
14106She wanted to know what that mattered when she had got out of the train?
14106She wanted to put off the dreadful moment that must come when he would ask her:"Where on earth did you pick up that shocking little bounder?"
14106She was silent so long that I was startled when she said,"Wally-- your nervous are n''t_ you_, are they?"
14106Sometimes he would catch himself doing them and say,"See me do that?
14106That they''ve come, doubled up like that, for miles-- from Termonde or Alost?
14106That they''ve lost everything they ever had?"
14106Then Norah said,"What happened?"
14106Then Norah, my wife, stood up beside her sister, flagrantly partisan, and said, Could n''t I see it was n''t any use trying to stop her?
14106Then he began to ask questions:"Where does he come from?
14106Then he fixed me with"Did Thesiger go up with her?"
14106Then she began again:"Would being unhappy-- very,_ very_ unhappy-- give it you?"
14106Then she said,"Have you come across Mr. Jevons yet?
14106Then, suddenly, as if intrigued by his silence, she said:"Who is the Heaven- afflicted idiot?"
14106They asked each other polite questions, all to the tune of:"What have you been doing since I last saw you?"
14106They have n''t started tampering, have they?"
14106They might go on ignoring for ever and ever, but who else would, with that marriage staring them in the face and perpetuating the disgraceful memory?
14106Untrained?
14106Victoria, in the absence of her parents, took me into a corner to inquire under her breath,"Is he really very awful?"
14106Viola said,"What_ have_ you been up to?"
14106Was n''t it?
14106Was there ever anything Jevons had made up his mind to do and did n''t?
14106What are you?"
14106What are_ you_ doing here?
14106What can it matter to you_ now_ whether I''m nice or horrid?"
14106What can it matter to you_ now_ whether I''m nice or horrid?"
14106What could she do?
14106What did I suppose she had wanted it for-- if it was n''t to go out with Jimmy if he went?
14106What do they do?"
14106What do you suppose I brought her here for?
14106What do you want me to do?"
14106What does one do things for?"
14106What earthly good can Jimmy do out there, with his poor little heart all dicky?
14106What have you done with my son?"
14106What made you think they mattered?"
14106What was his knowledge worth if he did n''t know what she would think and feel about it?
14106What was the sense, said Kendal, with his mouth full, of going to Selham when we had n''t got a wire?
14106What would you think of Furny and me if we wanted you to be here?"
14106What''s wrong with it?"
14106What_ does_ it matter?"
14106What_ makes_ you do these things?
14106When I saw Norah in the morning she asked me whether Jimmy had said he knew it was coming?
14106When it came to her turn, she said:"There are such a dreadful lot of us, are n''t there?"
14106When you asked him:"Then why ca n''t other people do it?"
14106When you think of the men-- men who can do things, who are dying to go and are being kept back--""You were helping him to go?"
14106When you''ve burst the top of your head off like the kitchen boiler?"
14106Where does he get it all from?"
14106Who are his people?
14106Who does?"
14106Who in the world would have dreamed that she would go off with Jevons?
14106Who was going to care what a beast like Withers thought or said?
14106Why ca n''t you see the beauty of all this?"
14106Why did you tell me that you_ liked_ all these abominations?"
14106Why on earth, I asked him, did n''t he?
14106Why should n''t one write from Canterbury?"
14106Why should poor little Jimmy go?"
14106Why, I asked her, had n''t she told them before she came?
14106Why, in Heaven''s name, did n''t you say so?
14106Why?
14106Why?"
14106Why_ are n''t_ you looking after him?"
14106Why_ will_ she_ look_ at the poor chap?
14106Will she lower her flag and kiss him, or what?"
14106Wo n''t it do if I see Jimmy as_ you_ see him?"
14106Would n''t it be more effective if he worked up to it?
14106Would she be flung backwards and forwards between fascination and repulsion?
14106Would she swing on a longer and more dangerous rhythm?
14106Would_ you_ have ever thought of letting her come with you?
14106You believe him?"
14106You do n''t believe him, do you?"
14106You do n''t mean she does n''t care about him?"
14106You do n''t mind, Furny dear, do you?
14106You do n''t suppose I''d have stopped him if I''d thought it was good for him to go?
14106You do n''t suppose she''d let me take her to the same hotel, do you?
14106You mean they saw you and Jevons?"
14106You saw those fellows come out and look at me?
14106You see?
14106You went to the War Office?"
14106Your brother?"
14106_ And_ the drawing- room?"
14106_ I_ shouted then,"What do you think you''re doing, you confounded fool?"
14106_ You_ do n''t know anything about me either, do you?"
14106_"What do you suppose, then, Reggie''d do?
11395A little waspish this morning, are n''t you, Josephine?
11395Ai n''t sore at me, are yuh, Buzz?
11395Ai n''t they fierce?
11395Ai n''t you afraid of bein''pinched?
11395All the girls do, do n''t they?
11395And why are you so afraid that I''ll spend some money?
11395Anything?
11395Are n''t you going to introduce me?
11395Are you a school- teacher, Emily?
11395Are you there?
11395Ashamed of your folks?
11395Away? 11395 Believed what?"
11395But did n''t he? 11395 But did n''t you like her?"
11395But how could you know? 11395 But the music?"
11395But why? 11395 But, Tweet,"argued Papa Gregg,"what''s the use?
11395But, my dear girl, have n''t you been round at all?
11395Ca n''t you hear good?
11395Ca n''t you make it five?
11395Ca n''t you take a joke?
11395Ca- a- an''t it? 11395 Clothes?"
11395Come on up and visit me, will you? 11395 Costume?"
11395Could you,he said, his tones dulcet,"could you oblige me with the name of that last piece you played?"
11395Did I keep you waiting a terribly long time?
11395Did you have a good time last night?
11395Did you say you''ve been fifteen years in Rome?
11395Did you sign to it?
11395Did you think I had a flat up on the Drive?
11395Do n''t I always pay you back? 11395 Do n''t be angry-- but have you ever been in love?"
11395Do n''t you care, Buzz?
11395Do you dance?
11395Do you like the navy?
11395Do you mean to tell me that you screeched like that because my-- because I moved my elbow?
11395Do you speak English?
11395Does he look like he knew French? 11395 Elbow?"
11395Enlisted-- for what?
11395Ernie, would you rather have a baked apple than the raspberry preserve? 11395 Everything serene, Miss Corn?"
11395Everything serene?
11395For the war; what do you suppose?
11395Fred?
11395Friend o''yours?
11395From where do I get such hands? 11395 Goin''to Chicago, kid?"
11395Got some good news, Miss Fifer?
11395Grey? 11395 H''m-- name?"
11395Happy?
11395Harold, can you ever, ever forgive me?
11395Have you been out in the evening? 11395 How about that?
11395How about to- morrow?
11395How did you get here? 11395 How did you know?"
11395How long does the show take?
11395How much did you say?
11395How much?
11395How''s my boy?
11395Huh?
11395Huh?
11395I beg your pardon, sir?
11395I suppose Mrs. Mooney''s going to call?
11395If I''m disturbed again on that woman''s account for anything less than murder--"Yesm''m?
11395Including hysterics in six- eighteen?
11395Is he still there, then?
11395Is my Joey tired? 11395 Is n''t that so, Rube?"
11395Is n''t, huh? 11395 Is she sick?"
11395Is that right, what he said? 11395 Is that so?
11395Is that too hot for you, Ma? 11395 Is that your usual method?"
11395It''s-- why, it''s Ruby Watson, is n''t it? 11395 Jo?"
11395Just run into my room and pick things up and hang them away, will you?
11395Kin a duck swim?
11395Last year''s, is n''t it?
11395Letters, Tina?
11395Like who?
11395Live at home, I mean? 11395 Live at home?"
11395Lookin''fo''de sailors''club rooms?
11395Lucky?
11395Matter?
11395May I sit here?
11395Me? 11395 Me?
11395Me? 11395 Mrs. Foote?
11395Name?
11395Neuralgy any better?
11395No?
11395Now?
11395Off watch?
11395Oh, Julia? 11395 Oh, you will, will you?"
11395Real? 11395 Ro, lend me a couple of dollars till Saturday, will you?"
11395Say, Mooney, is that right about Blanche Devine''s having bought the house on the corner?
11395Say, that pin''s real, ai n''t it?
11395Say, was that four steps and then turn- turn, or four and two steps t''the side? 11395 See wot wot''s like?"
11395Shall I sew it?
11395She says the thing she was singing is a Polish folk- song about death and sorrow, and it''s called a-- what was that, Anna?
11395She-- she left her folks, h''m?
11395Sight?
11395Singing?
11395Six- eighteen kinda ca''med down, did n''t she? 11395 Sleeping?"
11395Somebody of yours in it?
11395Something fine for supper?
11395Son?
11395T- to- morrow?
11395Tell me, do you always talk to men that way?
11395Tell me, little girl,she said,"What do you do round here?"
11395Tell me,she said,"what do they call those officers with the long pale- blue capes and the silver helmets and the swords?
11395That little trick is the biggest lace buyer in the country.... No, you would n''t, would you? 11395 That so?
11395That there was anybody left in the world who could look like that in a white shirtwaist at 6:30 A.M. Is that all your own hair?
11395That you, Jo?
11395Then no more stage for you-- eh, my girl?
11395Then tell me, is this ceiling by Raphael?
11395Then why in Sam Hill do n''t you go back to England?
11395Then you will not be here with them?
11395Thing? 11395 Think the five of us can pile into one carriage?"
11395This is better than playing for those bum actors, is n''t it, hon?
11395This the place where you enlist?
11395To whom?
11395Up?
11395W- what''s the matter?
11395Warm enough?
11395Was it romantic-- the Colosseum, I mean-- by moonlight?
11395Wednesday then? 11395 Well, I said,''Wo n''t I do instead?''
11395Well, and how''ve you been? 11395 Well, can you beat that?
11395Well, didja go?
11395Well, of all the big boobs,sneered Miss Kearney;"what did you go and do that for?"
11395Well, then?
11395Well, what?
11395Well?
11395Well?
11395Well?
11395Well?
11395Wha''d he say?
11395What about?
11395What about?
11395What are you doing here?
11395What d''you mean, screeching like a maniac? 11395 What did it get her?"
11395What did you think I was goin''to do? 11395 What do I care who you run with?"
11395What do people mean when they say they love Paris?
11395What do you think this is, anyway? 11395 What does a pretty girl like you want to do that for?"
11395What evening?
11395What is it that you do?
11395What kind of a hotel is this, anyway? 11395 What made you say you''d report me?"
11395What then?
11395What was it you said you''d do to me if you caught me talking to him again?
11395What was that? 11395 What you done, Ernie?"
11395What you home so early for?
11395What''d I just say to you?
11395What''d I just say?
11395What''d she wear?
11395What''d you and your husband quarrel about, Terry?
11395What''s she stalling for-- with that face?
11395What''s that got to do with it? 11395 What''s that?"
11395What''s that?
11395What''s the joke?
11395What''s the matter with it?
11395What''s the matter, Ernie? 11395 What''s the matter, Hertz?"
11395What''s the trouble between you and Jo?
11395What''s the trouble, Nellie?
11395What''s the trouble?
11395What''s the trouble?
11395What''s the trouble?
11395What''s wrong with Julia?
11395What''s wrong with your clothes?
11395What''s your name?
11395What?
11395When you get out of here,he said,"you come to New York, and up to my office; see?
11395When you goin''?
11395When you goin''?
11395When-- when do I go?
11395Where are you from?
11395Where do they live then?
11395Where do you suppose he can be?
11395Where last employed?
11395Where you goin''to- morrow?
11395Where you going, kid?
11395Where''s Miss Schwimmer?
11395Where''s this dance, huh?
11395Where''ve you been, girl?
11395Whereja get it anyway, kid? 11395 Which one?
11395Who gave you your job?
11395Who says he''s a simp?
11395Who says so?
11395Who was that?
11395Who''s she?
11395Who''s the old bird?
11395Who''s this you were invited out by?
11395Who? 11395 Who?
11395Who?
11395Why did you leave? 11395 Why do n''t I what?"
11395Why do n''t you?
11395Why not? 11395 Why not?
11395Why-- did I fall asleep?
11395Will there be anything else?
11395Wo n''t you sit here?
11395Wo n''t, eh? 11395 Would you like to dance?"
11395Y''are, huh? 11395 Yeh?
11395Yeh? 11395 Yes?"
11395You have heard of America?
11395You mean-- you mean Miss Eleanora will go to Tivoli and to the Colosseum alone-- with-- with Signor Caldini?
11395You will excuse me?
11395You''ll call me up or run into the office when you get to New York?
11395You''re only twenty, ai n''t you, Buzz?
11395You''ve danced before?
11395You-- you wo n''t forget me?
11395Your neuralgy again, dearie?
11395''Who''re you?''
11395''Will you meet me to- morrow night?
11395A Turkish bath?"
11395A hat?"
11395A human keyrack?
11395After dinner Mrs. Ladd said,"What would you boys like to do?
11395Ah, an artist too?
11395Al, go to the door, will you?"
11395An''what do you be hearin''from your boy, Mis''Phut, that''s in France?"
11395And I guess he loves it, huh?
11395And are n''t his kid gloves always beautifully white?
11395And how''s the little girl to- night?"
11395And how''s the old girl to- night?
11395And it''s sort of philosophical and everything, do n''t you think?"
11395And my makeup''s one of these av- iation costumes to go with the song, see?
11395And now-- and now-- what''s there in it?
11395And take a bath in a bathtub, with all the hot water I want?"
11395And the blue?"
11395And the ones in dark- blue uniform with the maroon stripe at the side of the trousers?
11395And wash my things?
11395And you ca n''t be funny, can you, when you''re hypnotised by three stony- faced females all doubled up over a bunch of olive- drab?
11395And you''ve never married, eh?"
11395And--?"
11395Are n''t you, Anna?
11395Are there any Spanish blondes?"
11395Are you out at the station or on one of the boats?"
11395Are you?"
11395At four o''clock, as she was in the chorus of"Is n''t There Another Joan of Arc?"
11395At her door in the Via Babbuino:"You mean to marry her?"
11395At supper he passed her things, and stared, until everybody laughed again, and Eva said acidly,"Why do n''t you feed her?"
11395Away from here, you mean-- to live?"
11395Babe used to say petulantly,"Jo, why do n''t you ever bring home any of your men friends?
11395Been over often?"
11395But a kind of an army camp room, see?
11395But even if they were n''t, who could stand that kind of torture?
11395But how to get back?
11395But how?
11395But if you could-- that is-- would you-- do you see your way at all clear to giving us a fairly cheerful story?
11395But why?
11395Ca- a- an''t it?"
11395Can you imagine any man at home letting a woman pay for his meals the way those shrimpy Frenchmen do?
11395Charley Lembke, from his porch across the street, called to him:"Goin''down town?"
11395Copy it?"
11395Could I-- would they-- do you mean I could clean up in there-- as much as I wanted?
11395D''you think she''d sell me those shoes?"
11395Did he go out with Rose?"
11395Did little sister tell you how flabbergasted I was when I saw her this morning?
11395Did n''t you say I could have it?
11395Did n''t you, Mr. Hahn?
11395Did you ask?"
11395Did you ever see him smile?
11395Did you say he was grey?"
11395Did you think I was going to meet him on the corner?
11395Do n''t you find a startling majority still clinging, sere and withered, to the family bush?
11395Do n''t you like pretty clothes?"
11395Do n''t you see?
11395Do n''t you think it smart?"
11395Do you dance?"
11395Do you feel like getting up and sitting out on the back porch, toward noon, maybe?"
11395Do you hear me?"
11395Do you live at home?"
11395Does n''t he?"
11395Even if she does wear a twenty- eight blouse she''s got a forty- two brain-- haven''t you, Belle?
11395Feel like you could get up and punish a little supper, eh?"
11395Finally:"You through?"
11395From not having enough to eat half the time and sleeping three in a bed?"
11395From the ground up, see?"
11395From the kitchen,"Do n''t you want to sit with ma a minute, first?"
11395Funny-- ain''t it?
11395Get it to- day?
11395Get me?"
11395Give a man time, ca n''t you?
11395Give me a chance, will you?
11395Give old Willie a swipe for me, will you?"
11395Got an oilstove?
11395Got any ipecac?"
11395H''m?
11395H''m?
11395Had he not sat through Parsifal the week before?
11395Have I told you that Josie Fifer, moving nimbly about the great storehouse, limped as she went?
11395Have you got something I can read out here-- something kind of lively-- with a love story in it?"
11395He balanced a moment thoughtfully from toe to heel, his chin lifted inquiringly:"Keep your eye on Two- eighteen and Two- twenty- three this morning?"
11395He just-- I-- it was-- Say, how did you know we''d quarrelled?"
11395He talked a lot about it at lunch, but I did n''t pay any attention, as long as he really has it a lot I care how--""At lunch?"
11395Here for a visit?"
11395How about my evenings?
11395How can I say on a blank that I''m leaving because I want to be where real people are?
11395How could he know that these very eggs were feeding the dull red menace in Terry Platt''s eyes?
11395How could he?
11395How could you?"
11395How did one go about attaining the same degree of realness?
11395How did she do it?
11395How did you happen--?"
11395How do I know you''ve quarrelled?
11395How do you like this dress?
11395How many tons you used this winter?"
11395How old do you think I am?
11395How old is the youngest?"
11395Huh?
11395Huh?
11395Huh?
11395Huh?"
11395Huh?"
11395I ca n''t bear-- Have you had your breakfast?"
11395I ca n''t help it, can I?
11395I do n''t suppose you... Well once a week, wo n''t you, dear?...
11395I got somethin''on my mind to- night and I ca n''t be bothered with no fool girl, see?
11395I said to Herb,''Is it real?''
11395I says to him,''Who you talkin''to?
11395If that is n''t nothing, what is?"
11395If the words-- what are the words?
11395In Chicago, Illinois, a city of two millions( or is it three?
11395Is it like they say?"
11395Is that good enough?"
11395It''s a song of mourning, you see?
11395It''s an aviation song, see?
11395Just run and open the door, will you, like a nice little thing?
11395Just turn out those lights, will you?
11395Kamps?"
11395Know you not Henri''s?
11395Learning-- but why go into detail?
11395Lembke?
11395Let me tell you--""How much?"
11395Let''s see-- ten-- fourteen-- about fifteen years, is n''t it?"
11395Let''s see-- you''re in the lingerie, are n''t you?"
11395Letters?"
11395Like a wild woman?
11395Listen, did you press my Georgette?
11395Listen, little one: are n''t you going to take dinner with me some evening?"
11395No Ben is going to buy my sister''s wedding clothes, understand?
11395Now Jevne--""Yes?"
11395Now?"
11395Of course you love this town?"
11395Oh, why ca n''t they talk as you do?"
11395On the stage, see?
11395Or could make a rhyme?"
11395Or do you want to stay here?
11395Or would you like to go to a matinée, or a picture show?
11395Perhaps Casey put his finger on that something when, at the recital''s finish he asked:"Did n''t he see you was goin''to hit him?"
11395Result?
11395Rose and I were chinning over old times, were n''t we, Rose?"
11395Rose, did you iron my Georgette crêpe?
11395Say, could n''t that hand sell silk and lace?"
11395Say, is that right that old Hatton''s goin''to send you to college?
11395Say, what do you think a floor clerk''s for?
11395See?
11395See?
11395Seen Jo to- day?"
11395She tell you?"
11395She''s a natural comedian, and she does more for me in the way of keeping the other girls happy and satisfied than--""What about me?
11395She''s travelled one way, and I''ve travelled in the opposite direction, and where has it brought us?
11395Show me the way?"
11395Sleep well?"
11395So what she said was,"Do n''t you think I ever get sick and tired of slaving for a thankless bunch like you?
11395Stop?"
11395Surely you remember the beruffled, rose- strewn confection in which the beautiful Elsa Marriott swam into our ken in"Mississipp''"?
11395Talkin''or playin''?
11395Telephone her, will you?"
11395Temporary or permanent?"
11395The application blank says--""Say, you''ve got clever hands, ai n''t you?"
11395The following Thursday Eva would say,"How did you like her, Jo?"
11395The press agent, the special writer, the critic, the magazines, the Sunday supplement, the divorce courts-- what have they left untold?
11395The room?
11395The story?
11395The theatre?
11395Then he was waiting on the depot platform, and Hefty Burke, the baggage man, was saying,"Where you goin'', Buzz?"
11395Then to the hotel porter:"Just grab a taxi for me, will you?
11395Then, as Sarah Haddon rose, dried her eyes, and began to straighten her hat:"Where are you going?"
11395Then, at a sudden sound from the front of the house,"He ai n''t home, is he?"
11395Then, at his silence:"You did n''t go and do a fool thing like that?"
11395Then, raising his voice:"Goin''home, Buzz?"
11395Then, to Julia, as he slunk off:"Why did n''t you answer the phone?
11395Then,"But you do love me, do n''t you, Emily?"
11395Then,"Like this, you mean?"
11395Then:"Floss, is-- is Henry going to call for you-- here?"
11395They must have been, else how could they have sustained this woman through fifteen years of drudgery?
11395Thursday?"
11395Upon perusal the second was returned with dignity and:"Is that supposed to be funny?"
11395Want to go slumming?"
11395Was it the call of a bird or a signal?
11395We would n''t have him stay home, would we?
11395We would n''t want him to do anything different, would we?
11395Well, what''s the answer to this, I wonder?
11395Well, whutya think I yam, anyway?"
11395Whaddyou mean, a couple?
11395What I want to know is can you play by ear?"
11395What are you paid for?
11395What chance has a girl got over there on the West Side?
11395What do I care?"
11395What do you mean?
11395What do you think this is?
11395What do you want to sell?"
11395What do you want?"
11395What is there in taking an old tub and flopping down that dinky stream?
11395What made you change your mind?"
11395What use to complain?
11395What was the name now?
11395What was the name of that little small- time house me and Jim used to play?
11395What you goin''to do about it?"
11395What''re you doing in this joint?
11395What''s a girl got her looks for if not to have a good time?"
11395What''s a woman like that want to come into a respectable street for anyway?
11395What''s that he''s sayin''?"
11395What''s that you''re playing?"
11395What''s that?
11395What''s there in it?
11395What''s there to cry about?
11395What?
11395When does your class begin?"
11395When he came out of the ether he said:"How did it go?"
11395When she quavered her next question,"What was he doin''in the mill?"
11395Whenever opportunity presented itself she would say:"Is''Splendour''still playing in London?"
11395Where do I come in?
11395Where is it?
11395Where should I get red cheeks from?
11395Where you been?"
11395Where''d you want it-- your head or your feet?"
11395Where''s McCabe?
11395Where''s my son that should have gone marching by to- day?"
11395Where''ve you been, child?"
11395Which one, Emily?"
11395Who cares?...
11395Who was it?
11395Who was that standing in the wings?
11395Who''s telling you that?
11395Who?
11395Why did n''t you let me know?"
11395Why do n''t you come to America?"
11395Why do n''t you get out?"
11395Why had n''t he learned to dance?
11395Why is it that kind of a face is always wearing the sables and diamonds?"
11395Why not?"
11395Why you askin''?"
11395Will I step down to six- eighteen and--?"
11395Will you come and have a little something with Ruby and me?
11395Will you let me tuck you away in it?"
11395Will you, Buzz?"
11395Will you?
11395Wo n''t you come in?
11395Would n''t they?"
11395Would you believe that woman is the cut- up of the top floor?
11395Would you like to drive around the city and see New York?
11395Y''see that walking stick he''s carrying?
11395Years ago?"
11395You ai n''t sick, are you?"
11395You do n''t expect to marry a girl, do you?
11395You quit traipsing up and down in front of my house, see?"
11395You remember that slinking black satin snakelike sheath that Gita Morini wore in"Little Eyolf"?
11395You will find them staring blankly at the stone walls; and their plaint is:"What do they find to rave about in this town?"
11395You''re not really the hotel housekeeper, are you?"
11395You''re the alderman of this ward, are n''t you?
11395You- all f''om--?"
11395in a dreamy falsetto from Al,"what_ did_ she wear?"
11395she said,"you carryin''water for me?"
15040Agnes, have we said anything that could hurt his feelings?
15040Ai n''t it, Nickleby?
15040And is mine one?
15040And now, I suppose, you will make her happy?
15040Are the soldiers loaded?
15040Are they going to fire upon the inhabitants?
15040As to that,said the dial,"is there not a window in your house on purpose for you to look through?"
15040But did he ever smile again?
15040But how are you off in the meantime?
15040But what good came of it at last?
15040Come, why do n''t we start?
15040Come,said Squeers,"let''s go to the schoolroom; and lend me a hand with my school coat, will you?"
15040Did you ever get up in a chair to look on some high shelf, so that your head was brought near the ceiling of a heated room, in winter? 15040 Did you ever hear of Beethoven?
15040Did you not know that you should not have fired without the order of a civil magistrate?
15040Did you tell anybody?
15040Do you hear that, my beloved Agnes?
15040Do you say that he is the friend''of virtue?
15040Had he any brother?
15040Have you a wife?
15040Have you any questions to ask me in the other branches, sir?
15040Have you not noticed that the little girl never comes without looking wistfully at the opening buds? 15040 His horsemen hard behind us ride; Should they our steps discover, Then who will cheer my bonny bride, When they have slain her lover?"
15040How does the water Come down at Lodore?
15040How far is it to G--?
15040Is it an auctioneer''s list of goods to be sold that you are hurrying over? 15040 Is it possible''?"
15040Know?
15040Now, who be ye would cross Loch- Gyle This dark and stormy water?
15040Now,resumed the dial,"may I be allowed to inquire if that exertion is at all fatiguing or disagreeable to you?"
15040Oh, speak, speak,said Agnes;"yet why need you speak?
15040Shall I feel that pleasure?
15040Shall I have naught that is fair?
15040Sir,he gasped,"is Martin Kroller on the engine?"
15040The man who found out so lunch about bees?
15040Then you think this iron is heavier than as much water as would fill the place of it, do you?
15040There was Nang- chung: what became of him? 15040 There, you saw that water rise to the top of the cup, did you?"
15040Third boy, what''s a horse?
15040To what branch of philosophy do you allude, sir?
15040Very well, what caused it to do so?
15040Was he your father, Madam?
15040Well, and what else?
15040Well, cousin, you know the little pale girl to whom we give sewing?
15040Well, what else?
15040What ails you?
15040What are you doing there?
15040What is it, my dear?
15040What is that?
15040What is the matter?
15040What makes you lie there?
15040Who dares--this was the patriot''s cry, As striding from the desk he came--"Come out with me, in Freedom''s name, For her to live, for her to die?"
15040Who''s that?
15040Whom can it be to? 15040 William Reed from Kingston, near Taunton?
15040William Reed?
15040You are somewhat nervous just now, are you not?
15040You do n''t understand what I mean, do you?
15040----------------- Did you walk into the city yesterday?
150401. Who has not heard of the rattlesnake or copperhead?
150401788?, d.1879) was born in Newport, N.H.
150408. Who next?
15040A body of soldiers came up Royal Exchange Lane, crying,"Where are the cowards?"
15040A greedy dog; why, what did he get he liked so well?
15040A look of intense delight broke over her countenance; she grasped my hand, drew me toward her, and exclaimed:"Dinna ye hear it?
15040A son?
15040Am I not named first in her will?
15040And do n''t you remember, the other morning she asked me so prettily if I would let her mother come and see it, she was so fond of flowers?"
15040And fix''d his eyes upon you?
15040And hast a family?
15040And if He were, art thou so lost to nature, as To send me forth to die before his face?
15040And if the war must go on, why put off the Declaration of Independence?
15040And so the active breath of life Should stir our dull and sluggard wills; For are we not created rife With health, that stagnant torpor kills?
15040And we are free?
15040And what is he more, if atheism be true?
15040And what of that?
15040And what will this poor Robin do?
15040And what''s my thanks?
15040And where is he, that tower of strength, Whose fate with hers for life was joined?
15040And where is she whose diamond eyes Golconda''s purest gems outshone?
15040And years have flown; but where are now The guests who round that table met?
15040Are they living/, or dead''?
15040Arm''d, say you?
15040Art married?
15040Art sure?
15040Ask you of all these woes the cause?
15040Besides, would not the murderer have carried off these things?
15040Both inflections are exhibited in the following question: Did you walk''or ride''?
15040But is that reason a sufficient one?"
15040But what is it you dread the most?"
15040But what is your affair in Elsinore?
15040But what, in faith, make you from Wittenberg?
15040But where was this?
15040But why did you tell me?
15040But why do you call him our friend?
15040But, madam,"said he, continuing,"do you not wrong your children by giving a part of your last mouthful to a stranger?"
15040Buy their lands of them?
15040Ca n''t you distinguish her any way?
15040Can I believe My eyes?
15040Can it more than kill?
15040Can your pure spirits fear The God ye never could offend?
15040Canst tell me any?
15040Canst thou fill his skin with barbed irons?
15040Cut off from all hope of royal clemency, what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws?
15040D''ye hear?
15040Dare they talk of that?
15040Darest thou not answer?
15040Darest thou question me?
15040Did I not lend her a new chaise every time she wished to ride?
15040Did he act properly'', or improperly''?
15040Did he behave properly'', or improperly''?
15040Did you RIDE''or did you WALK''?]
15040Did you say statute'', or statue''?
15040Did you say valor'', or value''?
15040Did you speak to it?
15040Did you walk into the city yesterday?
15040Did you walk into the city yesterday?
15040Did you walk into the city yesterday?
15040Do I hear?
15040Do You know for what?
15040Do let you rest?
15040Do n''t sulk away from our sight, Like a common, contemptible fowl; You bird of joy and delight, Why behave like an owl?
15040Do not these show that the human heart yearns for the beautiful in all ranks of life?
15040Do we mean to submit, and consent that we shall be ground to powder, and our country and its rights trodden down in the dust?
15040Do you hear those three half- plaintive notes, quickly and clearly poured out?
15040Do you laugh at me?
15040Do you shoot?
15040Do you understand philosophy?"
15040Does God, having made his creatures, take no further''care of them, or does he preserve and guide them''?
15040Does he consent?
15040Does he hear?
15040Does he take warning and reform?
15040Does he tremble?
15040Does the law condemn him''?
15040Does the law condemn him''?
15040Dost thou consent?
15040Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold; And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?"
15040Fierce Anger Burned Marmion''s swarthy cheek like fire, And shook his very frame for ire, And--"This to me?"
15040For what Hid you that arrow in your breast?
15040For what else would he have murdered her?
15040For what?
15040For what?
15040From heaven?
15040From ten to twenty boys came after them, asking,"Where are they?
15040From top to toe?
15040From whence?
15040Gay, guiltless pair, What seek ye from the fields of heaven?
15040Guessed it Instinctively?
15040Guessed the trial You''d have me make?
15040H. After what?
15040H. And why were they overworked, pray?
15040H. Did he?
15040H. Heard of what?
15040H. My father gone, too?
15040Had the old lady her senses when she departed?
15040Had you any hint from the Squire what disposition she made of her property?
15040Has he arrived''?
15040Has he arrived''?
15040Has she no Christian name?
15040Has she, good soul, has she?
15040Have I a friend among the lookers- on?
15040Have you attended to it?"
15040He is thy child?
15040He must needs strike out fire at once, with iron and flint; and did he die in his bed?
15040Here hung those lips that I have kissed'', I know not how oft'', Where be your gibes''now?
15040His beard was grizzled,--no?
15040His will, is it?
15040Hit a hair Of thee, and cleave thy mother''s heart?
15040Hit thee?
15040Hit thee?
15040How beats his heart, once honor''s throne?
15040How came he to die?
15040How came they on me?
15040How can it go up hill?
15040How do things go on at home?
15040How do you get on?
15040How does that appear?
15040How high has soared his daring mind?
15040How holds the chain which friendship wove?
15040How looks he?
15040How then will you get their lands?
15040How, man?
15040I do, what would you have me see?
15040I have found out what makes smoke go up-- is n''t it curious?"
15040I have sold you a noble province in North America; but still, I suppose you have no thoughts of going thither yourself?
15040I knew that country in my young days, What say you, Mr. Mayne?
15040I repeated, somewhat puzzled;"what do you mean?
15040I should like to know where were your buttons then?
15040I uttered,"are you an engineer?"
15040If thou canst bear it, should not I?
15040If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war?
15040Indeed, indeed, sirs, but this troubles me, Hold you the watch to- night?
15040Irony?
15040Is he rich'', or poor''?
15040Is he thy son?
15040Is it not plain as the sun in the heaven, that Lucy has been stolen by some wretched gypsy beggar?"
15040Is it not so, Francis?
15040Is it so you pick an arrow, friend?
15040Is my boy to hold it?
15040Is the line a true one?
15040Is there anything in the paper?
15040Is this your love so warm''?
15040Is''t mine?
15040It is this: what makes the earth freeze harder and deeper under a trodden path than the untrodden earth around it?
15040Jowler, did your worship ever have the gout?
15040K. C. I must say, friend William, that I should; how can I say otherwise?
15040Let me see; where was I?
15040Look upon My boy as though I guessed it?
15040Look upon my boy?
15040May I not speak with him before I go?
15040Mr. Shaw, a busy- looking gentleman, said,"How do you do, my dear?
15040Mrs. B. Cooke?
15040Mrs. B. Emma Cooke?
15040Mrs. B. Mr. Granby?
15040Mrs. B. Mrs. Nettleby?
15040Murder his child with his own hand?
15040My dear, what did I say that was like this?
15040My name?
15040NOTES.--What make you from Wittenberg?
15040No, indeed?
15040No?
15040Nobody ever knew so much of me?
15040Not one'', now, to mock your own grinning''?
15040Now, then, where''s the first boy?"
15040Now, whose work is this?
15040Of what?
15040Oh, do you?
15040Oh, you must get somebody else to sew''em, must you?
15040Or would you not rather suppose that their Father gave them something better to do than they had planned for themselves?"
15040Or, if thine eye escape, Mangle the cheek I''ve seen thy mother''s lips Cover with kisses?
15040Or, missing that, Shoot out an eye?
15040P. And why not among them as well as others?
15040P. No, friend Charles, no right; no right at all: what right hast thou to their lands?
15040P. The right of discovery?
15040P. Well, then, how can I, who call myself a Christian, do what I should abhor even in the heathen?
15040Pale or red?
15040Perhaps she wo n''t have any fine dresses in a week or so, eh?''"
15040Polly thought that a very odd speech, and could n''t help saying,"Are n''t Fan and Maud little girls, too?"
15040Pray, my dear, how came you to see so much of her?
15040REMARK.--Where or is used conjunctively, this rule does not apply; as, Will the law of kindness''or of justice''justify such conduct''?
15040Rises their sun as gloriously As on the banquet''s eve it set?
15040S. Horseflesh, sir; he died of eating horseflesh, H. How came he to get so much horseflesh?
15040Saw?
15040Say, where is she, the beauteous one?
15040Send The arrow through thy brain?
15040Shall we ask him now?"
15040Shall we try argument?
15040Sir, my good friend; I''ll change that name with you: And what make you from Wittenberg, Horatio?-- Macellus?
15040So the viper hath; And yet, who spares it for the mother''s sake?
15040Stay''d it long?
15040Steward, how are you, my old boy?
15040Tell?
15040Thank me?
15040That''s our system, Nickleby: what do you think of it?"
15040That-- that my father?
15040The Rising Inflection is that in which the voice slides upward, and is marked thus(''); as, Did you walk''?
15040The boy?
15040The court, my lord?
15040The hand I''ve led him, when an infant, by?
15040The roadside blackberries, growing ripe, And in the woods the Indian pipe?
15040The traveler drew near the board, but when he saw the scanty fare, he raised his eyes toward heaven with astonishment:"And is this all your store?"
15040The window vines that clamber yet, Whose blooms the bee still rifles?
15040Then saw you not his face?
15040Then, my dear, how could you decide that she was cut out for a good wife?
15040They come to you, straining their little eyes, and, clustering together and answering, seem to say,"Where is she?
15040Think upon my chains?
15040Thinkest thou he hath the courage To stand it?
15040This hand?
15040Thou wilt not fail thy master, wilt thou?
15040Thy name?
15040To a dungeon?
15040To die?
15040True or not, what is''t to thee?
15040Vengeance?
15040Was I not fortunate?
15040Was that, indeed, the secret of her power?
15040Was there magic in that touch?
15040Was there not an the father in that look?
15040Well days, sound nights-- oh, can there be A life more rational and free?
15040Well, whose was the other marriage?
15040What are you going to do?"
15040What boy?
15040What do they then?
15040What do you say?
15040What doth the poor man''s son inherit?
15040What doth the poor man''s son inherit?
15040What doth the poor man''s son inherit?
15040What else?"
15040What had her parents to fear?
15040What has he done''?
15040What have you got there, I say?"
15040What in the world can people in their circumstances want with flowers?"
15040What is all this?
15040What is his name?
15040What is there in human nature to awaken respect and tenderness, if man is the unprotected insect of a day?
15040What is your name?"
15040What is''t to me?
15040What matter whether to or from the sun?
15040What mean you?
15040What should I seem?
15040What speak I of?
15040What was to be done?
15040What was to be done?
15040What was your father''s name?"
15040What would become of those who carry burdens on their backs?
15040What would you?
15040What''s that you''ve done to me?
15040What, could it proceed from?
15040What, look''d he frowningly?
15040What?
15040Whattis sis sname?
15040When I consider thy heavens, the work of thy fingers; the moon and the stars which thou hast ordained; what is man, that thou art mindful of him?
15040When did he go''?
15040When he had finished his complaint, there was a pause, and his mother said,"Hugh, you have heard of Huber?"
15040Whence comest thou?
15040Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, That lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, A beauteous sisterhood?
15040Where has he gone''?
15040Where is it?
15040Where now is the picture that Fancy touched bright,-- Thy parents''fond pressure, and love''s honeyed kiss?
15040Where''s the second boy?"
15040Where''s thy abode?
15040Where, my lord?
15040Who did this''?
15040Who was she?
15040Who would have thought the old lady was so near her end?
15040Who would venture''?
15040Who?
15040Who?
15040Who?
15040Whose roseate lips of Eden breathed?
15040Why did you not make me guess?
15040Why do n''t I hold my tongue?
15040Why do n''t you smite him for that look?
15040Why do you keep the newspaper all to yourself, my dear?
15040Why perch ye here, Where mortals to their Maker bend?
15040Why so?
15040Why speakest thou not?
15040Why then should we defer the declaration?
15040Why, I could run an engine of my construction to the moon in four and twenty hours?"
15040Why, if once in your life a button''s off your shirt-- what do you cry"oh"at?
15040Why, man, what security have you that you will not be in their war kettle in two hours after setting foot on their shores?
15040Why, then, do we not change this from a civil to a national war?
15040Will he return''?
15040Will he return''?
15040Will you not save me, father?
15040William Tell?
15040Wilt thou do it?
15040Wonder?
15040Would they not feel their children tread With clanking chains above their head?
15040Would you now do me the favor to give about half a dozen strokes to illustrate my argument?"
15040Would you suppose that they were hardly treated?
15040Wouldst thou learn What news from thence?
15040You bird of beauty and love, Why behave like a goose?
15040You did n''t swear?
15040You do n''t mean that we are humbugged?
15040You grant him life?
15040You marked the boy?
15040You mean to get their hunting grounds, too, I suppose?
15040You must get somebody else to sew''em, must you?
15040You were not in a passion, wer''n''t you?
15040You''re not snoring?
15040Youths of America, would you know the name of this reptile?
15040[ 1] Is he sick'', or is he well''?
15040and did I not furnish her with my best small beer for more than six months?
15040and did you notice any difference between the air up there and the air near the floor?"
15040and have they netted my young fledgeling?
15040and how came it set on fire?
15040and the son of man, that thou visitest him?
15040and what were they carrying water for?
15040are they dead, too?
15040are you reciting a lesson in the elementary sounds?
15040asked the King;"do n''t you know how to read?"
15040but were they patient?"
15040but you must be eating fire, and I know not what?
15040can I forget The least of thy sweet trifles?
15040cried one of the guards, coming in at that moment,"what is that fellow doing?
15040d''ye hear?"
15040did n''t you know him?"
15040dinna ye hear it?
15040echoed the stranger:"William Reed?
15040he, so famed''bove all his countrymen, For guiding o''er the stormy lake the boat?
15040how will you avoid it?
15040i.e., what are you doing away from Wittenberg?
15040in winter dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go?
15040little Mary Stephens?
15040must I endure all this?
15040no right to their lands?
15040quite chopfallen''?
15040said he;"and a share of this do you offer to one you know not?
15040saith he;"Have naught but the bearded grain?
15040the image of her mother-- a sweet woman-- how is she, dear?"
15040they who had cruelly been made the laughingstock of the public, forget the wrong and favor the wrongdoer?
15040what fire?
15040what have we here, So very round, and smooth, and sharp?
15040what is that sound that now''larums his ear?
15040what may that be?
15040what torches?
15040what''s the use?
15040when is that?
15040whence is that flame which now bursts on his eye?
15040where are they?
15040where are they?"
15040which seemed their watchword, and,"Where are they?
15040who?
15040why do n''t you turn cut?"
15040will it catch?
15040you?"
15040your flashes of merriment'', that were wo nt to set the table on a roar''?
15040your gambols''?
15040your songs''?
22793Do you believe that it is Lawful and Laudable for us to change the customary way of singing the psalms? 22793 Is it possible for Fathers of forty years old and upward to learn to sing by rule; and ought they to attempt at this age to learn?
22793Whether you do believe that singing in the worship of God ought to be done skilfully? 22793 A dramatic scene ensues, composed of inquiries as to the Prophet''s mission by the People, a short chorus by the latter(What shall we do then?")
22793A tender and at times fervid solo("Lord, who hath believed our Report?")
22793Abraham rebukes him("How, Mortal, canst thou reach His Presence?").
22793And their reason is: Because it is not permitted to a women to speake in the Church, how then shall they sing?
22793As he looked over the pages of the''Requiem''for the last time, he said, with tears in his eyes:''Did I not tell you I was writing this for myself?''"
22793As the disciples ask,"Lord, is it I?"
22793Could it be possible that this man had dared to join my enemy, the director, and Cherubini''s friends, in plotting and attempting such rascality?
22793For the third time Jesus declares himself, followed by the stirring, furious chorus,"Why hear ye him?"
22793I did not add another word.... Had he done it on purpose?...
22793In answer to his question,"Which shall we first bewail, thy Bondage, or lost Sight?"
22793The Jews answer in a very dramatic chorus("Whence hath this Man his Wisdom?").
22793The celestial chorus above, accompanied by harps and trumpets, inquire,"But who is he, the King of Glory?"
22793The dialogue between Jesus and the Woman is then resumed, leading to a solo by the latter("Art Thou greater than our Father Jacob?").
22793The dialogue form is again renewed, this time by Elkanah and Hannah, leading to a beautiful duet between them("Wherefore is thy Soul cast down?").
22793The dramatic scene of the raising of her son ensues, comprising a passionate song by the mother("What have I to do with thee?")
22793The idea occurred to him after a sleepless night, during which, as he informed a friend, the words,"Will the night soon pass?"
22793The scene opens with the plaint of Mary Magdalene,"Where have they laid him?"
22793The tenor, who may be regarded as the Narrator, calls upon the Watchman,"What of the night?"
22793The voice from heaven("Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?")
22793The voices move on in stately manner until the words,"Simon, son of Jona, lovest thou me?"
22793The wondering chorus of the People,"Is not this he whom they seek to kill?"
22793Who will take the next step forward in the twentieth, and give to this noblest form of musical art still higher expression?
22793are not all these who speak Galileans?"
22793thou that didst declare"), and the mocking cries of the priests("Can he now save himself?
22793what shall we then be pleading?"
22793will the Night soon pass?"
23460If you come for a flower, Pray where is your_ sou_?
23460At Versailles, as perhaps you have heard, Countless pictures of fights Form the chief of the sights: Could so many great battles have ever occurred?
23460But Mabel said,"Why should we_ English_ care About that Rolf they say was buried there?"
23460Do they make them, I wonder, of frogs and of snails?
23460Or are these, after all, only travellers''tales?
23460Says Rose, to Dennis drawing nigher,"I think the wind is getting higher;""If a gale blows, do you suppose, we shall be wrecked?"
23460Then she ran on, not waiting for reply-- My little reader, can_ you_ tell her why?
23460Who will come for a ride?
23460Who will come for a ride?
23460Without drawings to follow, or patterns to trace, How can these poor cottagers fashion their lace?
23460[ Illustration][ Illustration] MUSÉE DE CLUNY Where shall we go to next?
23460_ Monsieur le Maître_, who rubs his hands And says,"What are_ Monsieur''s_ commands?"
23460pretty swan, Do you know, in our Zoo''The swans are not half So conceited as you?"
23460pretty swans, Do you know, in our Zoo''The swans of old England Are just like you?"
22553I suppose,observed Ward,"you mean to present Lady---- at Brandenburg House?
22553A very intelligent field- officer the other day said very truly, in speaking of the subscribers,"what are all these_ brown_ coats about?
22553All this, you will say, may be very true, but is no excuse to you; but again I must say, what could you have done?
22553But how can it be possible for that boat, as at present manned, I will not say to weather any breeze, but to swim through the smoothest water?
22553But, again, when will it ever come to the Commons?
22553Can you fancy such folly and such profligacy?
22553Could not you get Lord Torrington''s proxy?
22553Could you not write to Sir W. Knighton, and recommend to his attention your course of regimen,& c.?
22553Did you ever hear of anything half so absurd as the conduct of the Speaker?
22553Does Lord Buckingham remain in the country?
22553Does he think that that period would be sufficient for Opposition to pass the Catholic question?
22553Ever affectionately yours, C. W. W. What will my worthy colleagues in the Empire of the East do about this_ fracas_ at Canton?
22553Ever most affectionately yours, T. G. Miss Poyntz has just refused Lord Apsley; who the deuce will she marry?
22553Ever yours, C. W. W. Have you heard that a match is declared between Lord Dartmouth and Lady Frances Talbot?
22553Have you any ground for mentioning Harrowby as a decided opponent of C----''s admission?
22553How can all this end?
22553I begged to understand from the Duke whether any partial change-- such as the introduction of Mr. Canning or Mr. Peel-- would be considered change?
22553I said,"Do you think the present supporters of Government, and the members of the Cabinet whom you may remove, would or could oppose the new Cabinet?"
22553In short, there is nothing she does not say against him-- and what do you think for?
22553Is Wellesley a man likely to submit, like some of his predecessors, to be made a cypher in his Government?
22553Is the Chancellor submissive?
22553Is there a prospect of his being able to form with us an administration strong enough to carry on the public business advantageously and creditably?
22553Must they not shut up shop?
22553Perhaps they were subsequently inserted; but why, then, was"Cognoscunt mei me,"taken out and the tablet left blank?
22553Query, whether Lady C---- will oppose or promote a match?
22553Secondly, in which part of his administration did any power of Europe take out a licence for shooting from him?
22553Shall we see you on Monday?
22553The query then is, whether we should explain our vote?
22553What can it mean?
22553What could make the Government employ Lord H----, who seems to have committed himself and employers most lamentably?
22553What do you find in the language of Government since the division?
22553What hopes, then, could a third party entertain of doing this in opposition to both?
22553What is to result from this disheartening folly?
22553When do you expect your patent will be ready?
22553Who is there that can sufficiently adopt the thoughts and feelings and taste of another, to decide for him what is best for his own happiness?
22553Who is there to conduct the House of Lords?
22553Why, then, what would be the result?
22553Will it not be advisable that you should communicate Nugent''s letter and your answer to it to be written to Liverpool?
22553Will not this make a good novel for some future Walter Scott?
22553Would it not be as well to recommend Sir E. C. to Lord Liverpool for a Treasury seat as[ well as] Phillimore?
22553and does he still cling to the Purse, or will he surrender it?
22553and if we do, what should be the nature of that explanation?
20111''Aunt Rose,''he asked even before we embraced,''is there any one else stopping with you?'' 20111 ''Well then, Dubois, what''s all this nonsense?
20111''What? 20111 ''_ Eh bien, nos patés_?
20111And Vauquois?
20111And at Beausejour?
20111And mine, Madame, how about him?
20111And no one complains, Madame Dumont?
20111And that does happen often?
20111And you?
20111Are n''t you afraid you might miss forty winks?
20111Are n''t you going to mend my pick- axe, Maxence?
20111Bah, what difference does that make so long as they are happy and can live in peace? 20111 But how about_ their_ incendiary shells?
20111But the economical struggle?
20111But your husband?
20111But, Jules, why do you write such things?
20111But, was he educated for the career?
20111But,I suggested,"do n''t you realise what a risk you are taking?
20111Can you just see something happening to him with his father out there in the trenches?
20111Did you bring a letter?
20111Did you come across Lucien, and Bataille''s son?
20111Did you hear what I said? 20111 Gentlemen,"said he,"excuse me for interrupting, but do any of you know the exact depth to which an aeroplane bomb can penetrate?"
20111Good evening, mother; how''s your man to- day?
20111He''s at the front?
20111How about your regiment? 20111 How old are you?"
20111I say, Paul,he called out to him,"would you do us the honour of dining with us?
20111I''ve been saying to myself every day,he continued,"Is n''t it a pity that nobody should see them?
20111I? 20111 In four years?
20111In the trenches? 20111 Is Madame at home?"
20111Is he one of ours?
20111Is n''t mine at Verdun?
20111Is that so? 20111 Just look at them, are n''t they splendid?
20111Look here, Business, did I hear you say it wo n''t be over in four years?
20111Madame, you wo n''t mind if I come after them to- morrow, would you?
20111Now, then, how many of you are there in your trenches?
20111Oh, shut up, ca n''t you? 20111 One or two rooms?"
20111Over? 20111 Pistre?
20111That goes right to the spot, does n''t it?
20111That''s a good strong- box, is n''t it?
20111The Germans back here? 20111 The President of the Republic once asked General de Castelnau,''Well, General, what shall you do after the war is over?''
20111Then your father is coming later?
20111Three months? 20111 We thought we knew how much we loved them, did n''t we, Madame?
20111What are you doing there, Jules?
20111What are you looking for?
20111What are you writing?
20111What difference does that make?
20111What forces have we in front of us?
20111What have you got to kick about?
20111What time did you start out, child?
20111What''s become of Chenu, and Morlet and Panard?
20111Where did they fall? 20111 Where is your mother, dear?"
20111Where on earth did you get wool? 20111 Who is it?"
20111Who''s excited?
20111Who?
20111Why is n''t he at the front?
20111Why, Madame, what on earth would we do about the inventory when peace comes, if we were not to put a little order into our stock?
20111Why, what were you expecting?
20111With or without bath?
20111Would you prefer number six or number fourteen?
20111Yes, and what are you going to do if the letter carrier gets killed, or the Boche locate the mail waggon on the road every other delivery? 20111 Yes-- why?"
20111You mean old Père François who keeps the public gardens?
20111You wicked, wicked girl-- what made you tell such lies?
20111You''re as well off here as you were in the trenches of Bois Le Pretre, are n''t you?
20111You''ve all doubtless seen the sign that I put up in my window?
20111You''ve gotten used to this life?
20111Your son? 20111 Your what?"
20111''Who was leading, and who first cut the German barbed wire?''
20111Absinthes, bitters and their like have not only been abolished, but replaced-- and by what?
20111After all, I keep telling them there must be a few, otherwise who''s going to write history?
20111After all, could it be possible that this was the very midst of war?
20111After presentations and greetings:"You are not leaving town this Summer?"
20111And did they not witness the battles in the streets, all the horrors of the Commune, after having experienced the agonies and privations of the Siege?
20111And history''s got to be written, has n''t it?"
20111And the bombardment?"
20111And the dahlias I gave you?
20111And we who are going out to meet death have got to face it on empty stomachs?''
20111And when will it all be over?
20111And your papa?"
20111Are you ready?
20111Are you ready?"
20111Besides, the women gave up pastry, did n''t they?
20111But hold on a minute, is n''t Lorrain a friend of yours?"
20111But we''d never have realised how really deep it was if it had n''t been for this war, would we?"
20111But what''s the use of trying to shape your own destiny?"
20111But why do n''t you go and see''Père François''?
20111Can you blame him?
20111Cut it out, wo n''t you?
20111Cyprien,"his friends enjoined;"shut up a bit, ca n''t you?"
20111Did n''t Mr. Dumont who used to teach the third grade, draw it all out for us on the blackboard the last time he was home on leave?
20111Do you hear me?"
20111Do you know we found that monogram on an old 18th century handkerchief?
20111Does he still live where he used to?"
20111Fair Soissons, what is now your fate?
20111Follow in line-- what''s the use of crowding?"
20111For once again, to quote the laundress of the rue de Jouy--"Trials?
20111For what home did she thus pine?
20111He is n''t too awfully ugly, is he?
20111How about my eau- de- Cologne?''
20111How about them?
20111How can a fellow think if you all scream at once?
20111How did they turn out?"
20111How in the presence of such calm can we believe in war?
20111I remember a druggist who on greeting me exclaimed:"A pretty life, is it not, for a man who has liver trouble?"
20111I''d like to know what your wife would say if she caught you smoking a pipe in her hay loft?"
20111I''d like to know where you''d be then?
20111I''m so sorry, what''s the trouble-- nothing serious, I hope?"
20111In what state shall we find you?
20111Is it not on those same fertile fields so newly consecrated with our blood that every struggle for world supremacy has been fought?
20111Is n''t he the image of the Bacchus who forms the centre of the painting?
20111It used to be--''Popaul here-- Popaul there-- where''s my tobacco?
20111Leaving?
20111Now, with your mad idea, just suppose those who had a right foot all wanted tan shoes, and those who had a left could n''t stand anything but black?
20111Poor, melancholy_ Mireille_, what master was she mourning?
20111Ready to protest against this disfigured travesty of their war?
20111See that little fellow rolling his cigarette?
20111Shall I give Madame their address at Houlgate?
20111Should n''t you think their Officers would look after them?
20111So how is the brave little woman even to think of paying four years''rent, which when computed would involve more than two- thirds of her capital?
20111Sometimes when you would all start out for some excursion I''d see him coming back towards the gate:"''You''re not going with them then, Jacques?''
20111Stationary?"
20111Suppose the Germans were to get back here again before you sell it?
20111That''s an awfully bad sign, is n''t it?"
20111That''s no reason why you should mess up a house that belongs to your own people, is it?
20111That''s the principal thing, the one for which we''re all working, is n''t it?"
20111This one or that one?
20111Thus armed can they not look the horrid spectres square in the face?
20111To whom is this due?
20111Was it such a terrible thing, since the air fairly rung with merriment?
20111Well then, when a bombardment sets in how on earth could I get home quickly without my bicycle?"
20111Well, do you think that prevented the Parisians from fishing in the Seine, or made this café shut its doors?
20111What can one more or less mean now?
20111What could they do?
20111What did they all contain?
20111What do you take us for?
20111What good can that do them?"
20111What has become of those fifteen or sixteen hundred brave souls who loved you so well that they refused to leave you?
20111What on earth are you doing here?"
20111What shall I do?"
20111What ultimate destiny is reserved for your cathedral, your stately mansions, your magnificent gardens?
20111What will become of me now?
20111What''s a war cross more or less to me?
20111What''s artillery for, anyway?"
20111What''s the matter back there?"
20111When did you get here?"
20111Where have they gone?
20111Where''s mamma?"
20111Which way?"
20111Who were they?
20111Why did n''t Madame know that both Monsieur and Madame left for the seashore last evening?
20111Will Monsieur kindly give me the baggage check?"
20111Would they not be disgusted?
20111Would you mind walking around to the farms and telling them that Maxence will be here to- morrow morning?
20111You''re better off here than in the trenches, are n''t you?
20111_ Qui sait_?
20111and then turning to his mother,"I say, mamma, if one of them lands on our house, you promise you''ll wake me up, wo n''t you?
20111boys, who''s ready?"
20111exclaimed H."Do you hear the_ pompiers_?
20111he cried,"is it thus that you receive your sons who shed their blood for you?"
20111what terrors can lack of work, food shortage, or war hold for such people?
20111you''re surely not thinking of leaving your babies alone in the cellar?"
20083''And if they have been remiss?'' 20083 ''Does God show mercy to literary men?''
20083''What are they?'' 20083 ''Who lives there?''
20083''Would she leave?'' 20083 A ripping day, was n''t it?"
20083A war poem, I suppose?
20083After all,the other continued,"the regulations say that married men have to deduct sixpence for their wives, do n''t they?"
20083An unsettler?
20083And against whom have you given it?
20083And how long are you yourself to live?
20083And what happened?
20083Are n''t you?
20083Are you good?
20083But what is it?
20083But,remarked another of the guests, who had told us that she was looking for a_ pied- à- terre_,"there''s a catch somewhere, is n''t there?
20083Damn it,I said,"what are you doing?
20083Do n''t you believe in some women being as strong as men?
20083Do you often come here?
20083Enough? 20083 Have they written anything about you in the papers?"
20083How do you begin?
20083How do you mean-- extraordinary?
20083How long may I laugh?
20083How long should I weep?
20083How many did you have?
20083How?
20083I suppose,I said, indicating the various speakers with a semicircular gesture,"they do n''t do all this for nothing?"
20083Is n''t his face,she asked, in a deathless sentence,"like the inside of an elephant''s foot?"
20083It was n''t empty, then?
20083It''s a long time,he said,"since you saw any of my kind, I expect?"
20083It''s delightful,I said; adding, as one always does:"How_ did_ you get to hear of it?"
20083My what?
20083On whose evidence?
20083Only----Here they looked at each other, and Red Hair said,"Shall we?"
20083Shall I send them in?
20083The left, is it?
20083Then why did n''t you spot us before?
20083Then,said Ruh,"why not go forth and attack that enemy of God?"
20083There you are,he said;"and what do you see to- day?
20083Was it more than eight, anyway?
20083We''re very strong,Red Hair said,"only----""Only what?"
20083Well,said the prince,"I conjure thee by my own rights; wilt thou not tell it to me now?"
20083Well?
20083What about your patella?
20083What actions of mine should I conceal?
20083What are the actions which I should do openly?
20083What did he say about me?
20083What did you do before the war?
20083What do they want?
20083What do you accept?
20083What do you see?
20083What do you think I am?
20083What do you think the man said to that?
20083What happened?
20083What is it?
20083What use to the Army are weaklings who ca n''t stand the strain? 20083 What''s this rubbish about not seeing a doctor?"
20083When do you expect to leave?
20083When he died,says the Katib Imad Ad- Din,"I was in Syria, and I saw him one night in a dream, and said to him:''How has God treated thee?''
20083Where is it, anyway?
20083Which one is it?
20083Which,asked Abu Tammam,"does the Emir mean?"
20083Who are you, pray?
20083Who art thou?
20083Why do n''t you tell them that they must see the doctor and have done with it?
20083Why should I? 20083 Why so?"
20083Will you promise,said Red Hair,"that you will treat as confidential anything we say to you?"
20083Will?
20083Yes, what was done about it? 20083 Yes?"
20083Yes?
20083You do n''t mean----?
20083You''re from a man, I suppose?
20083''Do you mean to disobey me?''
20083''Do you really want to leave?''
20083''Tell me,''said I,''if I remain with thee and thou takest any game, wilt thou give me a share?''
20083''What,''said I,''could have induced thee to do so?''
20083''Why not?''
20083''Why?''
20083Abu''l- Aina immediately replied:"And why then do book- makers not relate such fables of you, O vizier?"
20083Adi Ibn Arta, who was blind, went to the kadi''s house one day, and the following dialogue ensued:"Where are you, kadi?
20083And how should I behave if I heard them round the corner?
20083And then, the Poilu continues, he became a soldier, which leads to the awkward question, had he always behaved himself as such?
20083And what is this new meaning?
20083And what of the notable phrase?
20083And who cares about little boys anyway?
20083As I was travelling in a certain desert, I beheld a man who had just pitched his toils to catch game, and I said to him:''Why art thou sitting here?''
20083As how could they not be?
20083Because, given wings, neither of which is broken, how would it have allowed itself to come into that posture at all?
20083But even if you got through, how do you think you would be helping your country?
20083But suppose some one else wanted it?
20083But was that his duty?
20083But why should we not say at once that it was the introduction of Pekingese spaniels into England from China?
20083But why, you ask, Gambogia?
20083But, how do you end?"
20083Can we possibly visit other cities in our sleep?
20083Could there be a more beautiful epitaph or a more poignant commentary on a world askew?
20083Could there be a much more fascinating name than"Clouds"?
20083Did I say I had been reading it?
20083Did he agree to send it?"
20083Do n''t you see any weak point?"
20083Do n''t you see that?"
20083Do you follow me?"
20083Do you mean to say the doctors did n''t talk about that?"
20083Do you remember when, in a life of misery, you said:''Where is death sold, that I may buy it?
20083Do you see it?
20083Do you see?"
20083Does the Church command you to obey the legitimate laws of your country?__ A.
20083Has each of us an_ alter ego_, who can really behave, elsewhere?
20083Hast thou then conferred a government upon me, since thou sendest me a spear to which a flowing mane serves as a banner?
20083Have you got your X- ray photograph?"
20083Have you thought for a moment what it would be like to find yourselves in barracks with the ordinary British soldier?
20083How could he eat?"
20083How could he pray?
20083How could it be enough, with all the complications?
20083How is that?"
20083How many operations did you have?"
20083How much should I eat?"
20083How to play the part of Paris where all the competitors have some irresistibility, as all have of either sex?
20083If so, why not Captain Macdonald should be the former?
20083If so, why not Mr. J. D. Ward would be the latter?
20083It has a sister beside it which is now on sale, and you have always money to bestow._"How much,"said Abu Dulaf,"is the price of that sister?"
20083Jaafar addressed him in these terms:"You pretend that the khalif is to die in the space of so many days?"
20083Just as Shakespeare''s orator,"when he is out,"spits, so does the funny man, in similar difficulties, if he is wise, say,"Do you call that a face?"
20083Long smoked, pondered, and thus delivered himself:"But is it not paramount that these gentlemen should have trousers?"
20083Might their melodies not strike freshly and alluringly on the ear to- day?
20083Now what is it that old ladies most dislike?
20083On whom do you count to assist you?__ A.
20083Perhaps we shall not have any more of these statues; but is it impossible to remove those that we have?
20083Presents have ceased and are not to be replaced?_''So the person he meant to praise would not give him anything nor even listen to his poem."
20083Should I run?
20083Sight?
20083Some one, horrified at the impiety, said to him:"Art thou not keeping a fast?"
20083That is excellent prose, is it not?
20083That is fine, is it not?
20083The first Mac would then express an overwhelming surprise, as he countered with the devastating question,"Was_ that_ her face?"
20083The iron laws of etiquette( or is it finance?)
20083Their graves had already received them when a voice was heard exclaiming:"Where are the thrones, the crowns, and the robes of slate?
20083There were wax- lights burning, at the time, before the prince, and this led him to say to the poet:"Canst thou recollect any verses on wax- lights?"
20083There-- won''t you find that useful?
20083These old nurses, the nurses of whom the older we grow the more tenderly and gratefully we think-- will no one give them a book of praise?
20083These stones are a little damp and moss- covered( for our ancestors insisted on building in a hole, or where would Friday''s fish come from?
20083This person expressed his desire to know how there could, in that case, be anything more exalted than the lowest heaven?
20083What about?"
20083What did the man mean?
20083What is the road to Heaven?__ A.
20083What is your ambition?__ A.
20083What life can now be pleasing after the loss of Bakr?_ When Sukaina heard these verses, she asked who was Bakr?
20083What life can now be pleasing after the loss of Bakr?_ When Sukaina heard these verses, she asked who was Bakr?
20083What would your people say?"
20083When Ibn Ar- Rumi had eaten it, he perceived that he was poisoned, and he rose to withdraw; on which the vizier said to him:"Where are you going?"
20083When he appeared before Adud Ad- Dawlat, that prince said to him:"What motive could have induced thee to compose an elegy on the death of my enemy?"
20083Where are now the faces once so delicate, which were shaded by veils and protected by the curtains of the audience- hall?"
20083Where the country folk for whom all these and smaller cottages were built now live, who shall say?
20083Who are your enemies?__ A.
20083Who would expect Sir Sidney Lee to have had so remote an exemplar?
20083Why do n''t you go?
20083Why was he just a private?"
20083are you in debt?''
20083exclaimed the khalif;"how could he then lean on his staff?
20083is posted up the notice,"Passengers to Lower Blinds"?
20083that little blackamoor who used to run past us?
20083what is most beautiful in the sky?"
20083why not cut it off by the wrist?"
15714''Cause do-- do_ nice_ people like pigs?
15714''Cause-- isn''t this a rain- drop on your face?
15714''Fraid to go barefoot?
15714A bird?
15714A once- upon- a- time story?
15714A solution?
15714A-- a walk?
15714Ah?
15714Ai n''t it to your likin''?
15714All I_ want_ to?
15714Am I seeing this, or is it just Pretend?
15714Ambitious?
15714And Potter, Madam?
15714And after the Den, what do we pass?
15714And cake,_ too?_ Splendid! 15714 And have a doctor come?"
15714And he?
15714And what is my daughter going to say about the rabbit in the cabbage?
15714And where''d you git''em?
15714And which little bird is it that tells things to-- to people?
15714And you ask me that, Miss? 15714 And, Rosa--""Yes, Madam?"
15714And, Thomas,went on the governess,"when would_ you_ like an hour?"
15714And, oh, Jane, some day may I go over to the brick house?
15714And-- and after we go by the Big Rock?
15714And_ what_ does Thomas say, darlin''?
15714And_ where_ do you think you''ll go?
15714Are n''t there kidnapers in the country, too?
15714Are there bears?
15714Are there doctors?
15714Are there p''liceman in these woods?
15714Are these Christmas trees?
15714Are-- are kidnapers worse than doctors?
15714Are-- are kidnapers worse than el''phunts?
15714Are-- are_ you_ grown- up?
15714Aren''t-- aren''t you afraid of him?
15714As much as that? 15714 Asia?
15714Bad as that?
15714Bears?
15714But do little_ birds_ ever talk?
15714But do you know who you_ are?_( The round eyes were full of tears!)
15714But why did n''t you turn the tables at first? 15714 But you wo n''t mind,_ will_ you, dear Gwendolyn?"
15714But, Jane,whispered Gwendolyn back,"which_ is_ my best foot?"
15714But, oh,breathed Gwendolyn, her bosom heaving,"why do n''t you feel_ her_ pulse?"
15714But,she began;"--but which_ is_ my sweet tooth?"
15714But-- but is n''t Johnnie coming with_ me?_she asked.
15714Ca n''t I even look out of the window?
15714Ca n''t I have a gentleman friend?
15714Ca n''t guess?
15714Ca n''t we run now?
15714Ca n''t you drive him away?
15714Ca n''t you let your feet come down? 15714 Ca n''t you_ never_ remember your manners?"
15714Call that a''English tongue?
15714Can you mend him?
15714Come?
15714Could n''t I take forty- one?
15714Did he have a bumpy forehead? 15714 Did n''t you know that?"
15714Did she ask?
15714Did you ask to go down to the library?
15714Did you do as I said?
15714Did you do errands for my fath- er?
15714Did you ever_ hear_ such a question?
15714Did your dolls like the merry- go- round?
15714Difference?
15714Do I have to play that old piece?
15714Do I have to take it now?
15714Do n''t you think I know that policeman''s heels over head?
15714Do n''t you think you''d better go and lie down for a while, and have a little rest?
15714Do we have to turn it?
15714Do we_ have_ to go that road?
15714Do you mean the soda- water They?
15714Do you think I''m goin''to trapse over the hard pavements on my poor, tired feet just because_ you_ take your notions?
15714Do you want me to send for a great black bear?
15714Do_ you_ know him?
15714Does she speak French?
15714Eh?
15714Eh?
15714Er-- why?
15714Excuse me,she said apologetically,"but are n''t you losing your pocket handkerchief?"
15714Funny?
15714Get rid of Thomas?
15714Go_ barefoot?_she repeated, small face flushing to a pleased pink.
15714Gwendolyn dear,said she,"you can have such a_ lovely_ long pretend- game between now and supper,_ ca n''t_ you?"
15714Gwendolyn?
15714Had n''t we better be st- starting?
15714Have the bears ever frightened_ you?_she asked, her voice trembling.
15714Have we any more of that quietin''medicine?
15714Honest?
15714How are you?
15714How can I help_ that?_demanded Jane.
15714How do you do?
15714How much of it did Jane give you? 15714 How was that?"
15714How would a glass of soda- water do?
15714How''s a body to git a child asleep with that old wheeze of yours goin''?
15714How''s the pulse now?
15714How-- how--?
15714How_ could_ you?
15714I s''pose that''s part of a mouth?
15714I think it''s the office, dear,he explained; and into the transmitter--"Yes?...
15714I wanted more, but Thomas held it''way up, and--"Do you want to be sick?
15714I was wondering has anybody scribbled on the General''s horse?--with chalk?
15714I''m not treatin''you fair? 15714 I?
15714If I had n''t one,answered the Policeman with dignity,"would I be able to stand up comfortably in this remarkable manner?"
15714If she stopped dancin''where would I come in?
15714If we want to save her--"Am I_ her?_interrupted Gwendolyn.
15714If-- if Thomas walked along with us,she began,"could-- could anybody steal me then?"
15714In the whole, whole big world?
15714Is Jane about, Miss Gwendolyn?
15714Is he coming?
15714Is it a sweet tooth that makes a face sweet?
15714Is it a_ rubber- plant?_Gwendolyn looked.
15714Is it far?
15714Is that the chewing kind?
15714Is the sun up?
15714Is there something wrong?
15714Is-- is always the same piece of Heaven right there through the window?
15714Is-- is he praying?
15714Is-- is this the Park?
15714Is_ that_ fair? 15714 Is_ that_ where my father is?"
15714Jane, what is a tongue- lashing?
15714Jane?
15714Jane?
15714Just where are we goin'', anyhow?
15714Made the money fly?
15714Mademoiselle,she began,"what kind of a bird owned these feathers?"
15714May I, Jane?
15714May we go into the Zoo, please?
15714Miss Royle, will you take Gwendolyn?
15714Most in the whole_ world?_she asked.
15714Moth- er,she half- whispered,"does the Doctor mean_ Johnnie Blake''s?_"The Doctor assented energetically.
15714Mr. Man- Who- Makes- Faces,she began timidly,"do you mean the Piper that everybody has to pay?"
15714Need any sharpening?
15714Now, Gwendolyn,she interrupted severely,"are you going to begin your usual silly, silly questions?"
15714Now, whatever do you think I was talkin''about?
15714Now,_ did_ you?
15714Of course the tables are turned,said Gwendolyn;"but what diff''rence''ll_ that_ make?"
15714Oh!--What''s it full of, please?
15714Oh, Jane,cried Gwendolyn,"when I blow like that,_ where_ do all the little lights go?"
15714Oh, but how''ll these help?
15714Oh, can a snake crawl backwards?
15714Oh, do you mean we need a_ Doctor?_Puffy was trembling weakly.
15714Oh, must you?
15714Oh, will she die?
15714Oh, you''ll pardon my having to desert you,_ wo n''t_ you?
15714Oh, you''re going to tell us how you got the lump?
15714Oh,_ wo n''t_ you stay?
15714Oh?
15714Oh?
15714Oh?
15714On_ week_-days?
15714Or-- or the woods across the River?
15714Please, who are They? 15714 Please,"she began, pointing a small finger,"what is this place?"
15714Policeman? 15714 Right_ away?_ Before I''m eight?"
15714Right_ away?_ Before I''m eight?
15714Robin Hood''s Barn?
15714Say, Miss Gwendolyn,he began,"_ you_ like old Thomas, do n''t you?"
15714See the h''s?
15714Seven?
15714Shall I fetch the cake?
15714Shall I fetch you?
15714Shall I telephone for--?
15714Shall I tell you?
15714She''s six, is n''t she, my dear?
15714She_ frightened_ you?
15714Singin''a duet with yourself?
15714So me and Thomas are to be thrown out of our jobs, are we?
15714So old Royle up and outed, did she?
15714So you''re goin''out?
15714So?
15714Some collecting on hand?
15714That? 15714 The King''s English?
15714Then he''s flown?
15714Then is n''t there a hill to climb?
15714Then,--advancing an eager step--"why do n''t_ you?_"He mopped his forehead.
15714They?
15714This? 15714 Trade?
15714Trade?
15714Trying to make some Club?
15714Was there something else my little girl wanted?
15714Well, Mr. Piper,she cried out,"what_ do_ They say?"
15714Well, how does our sharp little patient feel now?
15714Well, little daughter?
15714Well, then, what shall I do?
15714Well, what would you_ like?_queried Jane, catching up the small package and shaking it.
15714Well, who is it that tells people things?
15714Well--?
15714Well? 15714 Were they nice ones?"
15714What do you mean?
15714What has that got to do with it? 15714 What kind are those?"
15714What kind of a bird is it?
15714What makes his club shine so?
15714What other?
15714What wicked men?
15714What would kidnapers care about_ Thomas?_she demanded contemptuously.
15714What would the kidnapers do?
15714What''re you eatin''?
15714What''s likely to come out? 15714 What''s the Piper got beside him?"
15714What''s the matter?
15714What''s the trouble?
15714What''s true?
15714When did I come by_ this?_he demanded.
15714When did you come out from town?
15714Where am I going, Jane?
15714Where am I?
15714Where does he come?
15714Where?
15714Which is your best foot?
15714Which route, I wonder, had we better take?
15714Which?
15714Who are They''?
15714Who are''They''? 15714 Who is she, anyhow?"
15714Who is''he''?
15714Who knows?
15714Who told you about the bears, Gwendolyn?
15714Who told you where she was?
15714Who told you?
15714Who''ll help her?
15714Who?
15714Why do you always say forty?
15714Why, what were you doing there, darling?
15714Why,--why,she began hesitatingly,"is n''t it a_ bonnet?_"A bonnet it was-- a plain, cheap- looking piece of millinery.
15714Will a pebble- size do?
15714Will he be there now?
15714Will these--?
15714Will you come back?
15714Will you like that?
15714With the hand- organ man, too, fath- er? 15714 Wo n''t they be hunting_ you?_ Well, keep out of their clutches, I say.
15714Wo n''t_ you_ eat it?
15714Worse than a-- a p''liceman?
15714Worse than-- than bears?
15714Would another eye help me to find him?
15714Would n''t you like,said he,"to have a look at my establishment?"
15714Would you like to see the sky?
15714Would you mind just turning around for a moment?
15714Would you mind telling me what that is?
15714Yes, darling?
15714Yes, darling?
15714Yes, darling?
15714Yes, dear?
15714Yes, what?
15714Yes?
15714Yes?
15714Yes?
15714You dance, do n''t you, at Monsoor Tellegen''s, of a Saturday afternoon? 15714 You do n''t think your pig had anything to do with it?"
15714You have n''t heard the latest about him?
15714You mean the_ Bird?_Jane''s front face broke into a pleased grin.
15714You mean you have a solution?
15714You mean you''ve made plans?
15714You protect old people, eh? 15714 You protect''em?"
15714You see it''s this way:"Can you tell it like a story, fath- er?
15714You wo n''t mind if we do n''t start for a minute or two, will you?
15714You''ll help_ me_ to find my fath- er and moth- er, wo n''t you?
15714You''re going to walk?
15714You''re speakin''of-- er--?
15714You''ve heard of Hobson''s choice?
15714You''ve read that bees are busy little things, have n''t you?
15714You''ve seen stones in rings, have n''t you? 15714 You''ve_ seen_ him?"
15714You_ will_ go with me?
15714_ Afraid?_he echoed, surprised.
15714_ Ai n''t_ displeased?
15714_ All_ the time?
15714_ Attendez!_"Mademoiselle,persisted Gwendolyn, twining and untwining,"if I do my French fast will you tell me something?
15714_ Grows?_"Well, it''s where_ candle_-light grows.
15714_ Gwendolyn?_Jane held her with doubting eyes.
15714_ He?_she questioned.
15714_ How_ did he make faces, Jane?
15714_ Now_ who?
15714_ Now_, who''s goin''to pay?
15714_ Parlez- vous Francais?_"_ Oh, oui! 15714 _ Truly?_"Jane made big eyes.
15714_ What_ do you think I''ve got for you?
15714_ Who_ are Law and Order?
15714_ Wicked men?_Her mother suddenly straightened.
15714_ Would_ you, moth-- er?
15714_ You_ wo n''t mind showing me the way?
15714( Did he suspicion anything?)
15714( Or was it green?)
15714A fine crop?
15714A level head?
15714After a moment,"Recollect my speaking of the Piper?"
15714And I want_ you_, my precious baby.... How much do you love me, moth- er?...
15714And a- course, she does.... Jane, ai n''t it near twelve?"
15714And how many are there of''em?"
15714And how will you travel, darling?
15714And keep a''eye out, will you, to see that there''s nobody layin''in wait for us out in front?"
15714And later on, I suppose, Greek and Latin?"
15714And stones to roll--?"
15714And was the plaid gingham with the patch- pocket now hanging in the wardrobe?
15714And what do They look like?
15714And why did n''t we stay here?
15714And-- what are you here for_ anyhow?_"At the very boldness of it, Jane''s manner completely changed.
15714And_ why_ would Thomas not get through it?
15714Are n''t you always saying things?"
15714Are n''t_ they_ pebble- size?"
15714Are_ you?_"Somehow, she felt ashamed.
15714Better, are n''t we?"
15714Brave he might be, but what help was the General_ now?_ When Jane was ready for the drive, Gwendolyn took a firm hold of one thick thumb.
15714But now a voice-- her father''s-- broke in upon her happy chatter:"Without your_ mother?_"She had been sitting down.
15714But now, with herself hidden, was there not a likelihood of plain speech?
15714But she was in no mood to make herself agreeable to visiting friends of Miss Royle''s-- and who else could this be?
15714But was he ill to- night?
15714But what of the remainder of that visitor''s never- to- be- forgotten declaration of scorn?
15714But"a certain party"--"Leave?"
15714But-- would it help?"
15714But_ where?_""I do n''t know,"--in a flutter.
15714CHAPTER XIV Why had Miss Royle, sly reptile that she was, scuttled away without so much as a good- by?
15714Ca n''t we think of some way to get rid of her?"
15714Can you remember?"
15714Dear moth- er, may I eat at the grown- up table?...
15714Did it mean that he was in danger?
15714Did she dare?
15714Do n''t the rest of us get a smile?"
15714Do n''t you want to help dig worms?"
15714Do you hear that?"
15714Do you_ hear?_""But she takes care of a rich little girl.
15714Does a child get food that is simple and nourishing, and enough of it?
15714Finally,"Moth- er,"she plead,"will you please sing?"
15714For-- how''ll you ever find your father?"
15714Had he_ dared_ to harm her soldier with the scarlet coat?
15714Had_ Jane_ just heard?
15714Have n''t you heard what''s the matter with her?"
15714Hello?...
15714How did you manage it?"
15714In your sweet car?"
15714Instead,"Has anyone ever told you about that street, Gwennie?"
15714Is all exercise taken in the open?
15714Is it far?"
15714Is this the Doctor speakin''?...
15714Jane began to argue, throwing out both hands:"How was_ I_ to know to- day was her birthday?
15714May I look out at the Down- Town roofs?"
15714Murder?
15714Nice day,_ is n''t_ it?"
15714Now just let me ask you another question:_ Why are there bars on the basement windows?_"Gwendolyn''s lips parted to reply.
15714Now, what can I give you?"
15714Oh, where''s some money?
15714Oh, you like him,_ do n''t_ you?
15714Oh,_ why_ were the Zoo bears in her father''s street?
15714Oh?
15714Really?"
15714Recollect the Policeman?"
15714She lifted a face tense with earnestness"Is it_ true?_"she asked hoarsely.
15714So far had anything been really unexpected?
15714Still--"But-- but where could we-- er-- find-- a-- a--?"
15714The children!--_he?_"But,"she interrupted,"Jane''s always told me that you grab little boys and girls_ and carry''em off_."
15714The voice went on:"This is the first time you''ve met the mother, is n''t it?"
15714Then drawing the pink- frocked figure close,"And you_ did n''t_ tell him what them two ladies had to say?"
15714Then that musical voice began again:"Where do you suppose that young one is?"
15714Then to Gwendolyn:"You do n''t mind, do you, dearie, if Jane has a taste of gum as we go along?"
15714Then turning upon the Policeman,"Off your beat, ai n''t you?"
15714Then why do n''t you take her out with you?
15714Then, catching at the delicate square of linen in Gwendolyn''s hand,"How''d you git ink smeared over your handkerchief?
15714Then, making scared eyes,"What has that_ got to do_,"she demanded,"_ with the wicked men that keep watch of this house?_"Gwendolyn swallowed.
15714Then, plucking crossly at a muslin sleeve,"Well, what do you want?
15714Then, seeing that Gwendolyn was alone,"Would you mind tellin''her when she comes that I''m out takin''the Madam''s dogs for a walk?"
15714Then,"I''m thirsty,"he declared"Where''s--?"
15714Then,"Well-- er--""Is n''t it a fath- er- and- moth- er question?"
15714Then,"What_ about_ the nurse- maid, dearie?"
15714Then,"Why_ not?_"asked Gwendolyn, back against the door.
15714Then,"You do n''t mind telling me who''s going to have that?"
15714Then,"_ Sprechen Sie Deutsch?_""I-- er-- read it fairly well."
15714Was the speaker referring to_ her?_ Clasping her hands tight, she leaned forward a little, straining to catch every syllable.
15714We''ll help her get rid of it!--_if!_""If?"
15714Well, I have to have my money, do n''t I?
15714Well, ever hear of a sweet tooth?"
15714Well, how about old_ organ- grinders?_""You ought to know,"answered the Officer promptly.
15714Well?"
15714Were there not trees there?
15714What did Jane mean?
15714What do you suppose your mamma''d say if she was to come upon it?
15714What do you think you''re doin''?"
15714What do_ you_ guess, Gwendolyn?"
15714What does_ nouveaux riches_ mean?"
15714Where did it come from?
15714Where_ are_ you?"
15714Who was it got caught spyin''yesterday?"
15714Why had she not been asked to the great dining- room?
15714Why not make certain inquiries of Mademoiselle?
15714Why so much satisfaction all at once?
15714Why, if anybody was to steal the dogs what good would it do''em?
15714Why?"
15714Will I see him?"
15714With kidnapers about, was_ he_ a fit guardian for the front door?
15714Wo n''t you eat it?"
15714Would_ she_ ever let a young charge fall over a cliff?"
15714Yes, where?"
15714Yet-- was it not too good to last?
15714Your French doll?
15714_ The society bee in her bonnet?_"Ah!"
15714_ What_ Gate?
15714_ What_ difference?
15714_ What_ street?
15714_ Would_ we, Thomas?"
15714_ Yes!_""Than the p''liceman that''s-- that''s always hanging around here?"
15714_ You- know- what?_ Gwendolyn was troubled.
15714_ You_ have n''t boosted her, dear?"
15714and a lumpy tail?"
15714and rocks?
15714and,"Moth- er, have you_ really_ got a bee in your bonnet?"
15714continued the Doctor,"with your hat down your back on a string?
15714or hurt?
15714repeated Jane,"Who with?
15714said Gwendolyn;"which side are_ you_ on?"
15714she asked huskily;"my fath- er?"
15714she asked;"and hide?"
15714she cried;"did They make me that pocket?
15714the glade through which it flowed?
15714the shingled cottage among the trees?
15714what''s the price of that big braid?"
15714where was that stream?
22758And what would you do with that Battery?
22758Do n''t you see how she''s driven? 22758 Do you know me?"
22758Elizabeth,he said, as Archdale left them,"have you not had enough of it yet?
22758How much have I hurt Mistress Royal?
22758I may depend upon you?
22758I shot her, and he carried her out,--not the yellow- haired one, oh, no, but,--Did you see his face?
22758Is that Harwin?
22758Weapons?
22758What do you want? 22758 What would you do then?"
22758Where is he?
22758Where was that?
22758Who knows?
22758Who told you?
22758Why not allow our academy to decline? 22758 You think my sword arm will not be strong enough?"
22758You will certainly tell me?
22758And now must he go away starving within sight of food?
22758But I want to know why it is with you?"
22758But for Harwin what would not have been?
22758But how was the great empty house to be furnished?
22758Can it be necessary that society should sacrifice its brightest ornaments, and literally do itself to death, in order to maintain its existence?
22758Did you see what happened a minute ago?"
22758Do you know that I was to have married Mistress Royal?"
22758Do you think she would come here?"
22758Does Mr. Parnell himself know how much to ask, how little he ought to take, and where to draw the limit of compromise?
22758Dr. Joel Hawes received his first request to provide a missionary for that settlement, he asked a friend of mine,''Where is Kick- a- go?''
22758Edmonson seemed about to shout his answer, then, recollecting where he was, said with a passion more dreadful for its suppression,"Why?
22758Had he kept his appointment already?
22758He well illustrated this idea when he further said( and who that listened did not thrill with true patriotism?
22758If not himself for victim, who then?
22758It would be awkward, would n''t it, if the French ones came instead?"
22758Now will you fight with me?"
22758That''s what you mean?"
22758To- day his party is united, enthusiastic and strong, but when the hour for compromise and concession arrives, will the unanimity be maintained?
22758Twenty- five years after the Quitman persecution-- or any other acts, in any southern state, of like character-- what?
22758Was it for this that he had come from the fleet in the dispatch boat, and was braving all dangers?
22758Waters?"
22758What special reasons are there for giving a new impulse to it?
22758Where Grattan-- sagacious, eloquent, high- minded and sincere-- so signally failed, is Parnell likely to succeed?
22758Where and how can the remainder be obtained?
22758Where is it?
22758Where is the cabinet?
22758Where is the scientific apparatus?
22758Who wonders that he was a hero to those girls of fifty years ago?
22758Will he be equal to it?
22758You''ll fight?"
22758_ Jessie Cohen._ 3, 217.--Can College Graduates succeed in Business?
23642By what laws,asked Bacon,"shall this Britain be governed?"
23642We now enjoy God and Jesus Christ,he wrote to those at home,"and is not that enough?
23642Bacon''s shrewd question,"Under which laws is this Britain to be governed?"
23642Then he called out,"Is Mr. Pym here?"
23642she exclaimed;"is_ must_ a word to be addressed to princes?
15511A detective? 15511 A great tall girl like you my niece?
15511Allan-- you? 15511 Allan?
15511Am I awake, or not?
15511And Professor Sargent gave you this Lovely book?
15511And desert Cousin Louis and the university?
15511And did she go on believing in fairies?
15511And do you believe that things always come right in the Forest?
15511And her son?
15511And how about my position if I should take it? 15511 And how about the detective?
15511And how in the world did it get in the spinet?
15511And she asked for me?
15511And shell peas?
15511And the ring has never been heard of?
15511And they found their books in brooks, did n''t they?
15511And what are we to do there?
15511And, Maurice, do n''t you think it would be nice to choose a leaf for a badge? 15511 Are n''t you coming over to- day?"
15511Are n''t you glad to see me too?
15511Are the Fairs related to the Gilpins?
15511Are you crushed by sorrow or physical pain? 15511 Are you full of youth and hope and glad anticipation?
15511Are you going to have a picnic?
15511Are you going to live here?
15511Are you sure you ca n''t open it from the inside?
15511Are you sure you wo n''t forget us when you go away?
15511Because--she hesitated,"because--""Well?"
15511Belle, it is funny, is n''t it, that there is an imprisoned maiden after all?
15511Belle, you are n''t afraid?
15511But do you think she would be kind to some one she did n''t know?
15511But how was this to be done? 15511 But if it should be found?"
15511But she has n''t gone yet, so what is the use of thinking about something that is going to happen, when you are having a pretty good time now?
15511But where is the other ring?
15511But you do n''t want to believe things if they are n''t true, do you?
15511By the way, Betty,she continued,"what has become of the ring?"
15511Ca n''t who? 15511 Ca n''t you turn into a boy again?"
15511Care?
15511Celia Fair, do you realize what you have done?
15511Could n''t we open a window and call to Maurice? 15511 Cousin Betty; and she told us the story of Patricia''s ring, Uncle Allan, do n''t you wish we could find it?"
15511Did I really cheer you up?
15511Did n''t Miss Celia scold us that morning, Katherine?
15511Did n''t you know I was coming in?
15511Did she do that?
15511Did she live in Friendship?
15511Did you hear the joke on my Belle?
15511Did you know there was a girl next door?
15511Did you read what was in my book? 15511 Did you remember your oak leaf?"
15511Do n''t you know? 15511 Do n''t you want to see her?"
15511Do n''t you wish your uncle would give it to you if it is found?
15511Do they ever let you go into the bank part of your house?
15511Do you expect to bid on your cream- jug and sugar- bowl when they are put up, Betty?
15511Do you know Miss Betty?
15511Do you know any?
15511Do you know what we call him? 15511 Do you like to read?"
15511Do you mean you took supper with Morgan? 15511 Do you not care at all, Celia?"
15511Do you really think she would n''t?
15511Do you remember him, Allan? 15511 Do you remember the picture I told you about, Maurice?
15511Do you suppose he knows what it means?
15511Do you think it is polite to interrupt?
15511Do you think she can have a high opinion of my ability to keep order?
15511Do you think she is kind?
15511Do you, Charlotte?
15511Do you? 15511 Does Katherine know?"
15511Does Maurice know her?
15511Does he mean it really?
15511Does n''t Maurice ever snub you?
15511Does that make any difference, really-- because it is just chalk?
15511Does that mean you ca n''t join?
15511Does that mean you will no longer follow me blindly?
15511Does your head ache?
15511Even then you were thinking about it?
15511Father,Rosalind asked abruptly,"why was it you did not come to Friendship for so many years?
15511For me, Martin?
15511Golden Rule?
15511Gone?
15511Have they looked everywhere for it?
15511Have you been wronged, are you hard and bitter? 15511 Have you been wronged?
15511Have you ever noticed the resemblance between Uncle Allan Barnwell and the griffins?
15511Have you found that there is good in things invariably?
15511Have you had a pleasant time?
15511Have you seen anything of Katharine?
15511How about qualifications, then?
15511How about taking his picture?
15511How can there be good in bad things?
15511How can you be kind to people you do n''t know?
15511How can you say they do not exist unless you have seen one not existing? 15511 How did it happen?"
15511How did you find it out?
15511How do you come to be eating supper with Morgan, I''d like to know? 15511 How do you know it wo n''t make any difference?"
15511How old are you, father?
15511I am so glad you know Alice; but it was the White Queen, was n''t it?
15511I do n''t know; what are they?
15511I do n''t like that, do you?
15511I think it is a beautiful idea, do n''t you, boys?
15511I think it was about the will; was n''t it, Katherine? 15511 I wonder if she knew about the Forest?"
15511I wonder what they have told her about me?
15511I wonder what you did with your satin dress?
15511Is anything the matter?
15511Is it something for us?
15511Is it your motto?
15511Is n''t Dr. Fair dead?
15511Is n''t it a great bother? 15511 Is n''t she lovely?"
15511Is n''t she pretty?
15511Is n''t she sweet? 15511 Is n''t that dear of him?"
15511Is not that neighborly?
15511Is she coming to- morrow? 15511 Is she one of your teachers?"
15511Is she? 15511 Is that all?"
15511Is that what you have to tell? 15511 Is that you, Maurice?"
15511Is the world full of dark problems? 15511 Is this the party?
15511It is a little funny for her to sit down beside a boy the first thing, do n''t you think?
15511It is rather dusty, is n''t it?
15511It must have been Celia Fair, mamma, do n''t you think so?
15511Kit and Blossom; and what is your name?
15511Let''s appoint Rosalind and Maurice to draw up a-- what do you call it?
15511Like a story, is n''t it?
15511Maurice, Maurice, what are you doing? 15511 Maurice, are you going to promise to bear hard things bravely?"
15511Maurice, really?
15511Maurice,she said suddenly, lifting her eyes to the benevolent face of the bank president,"do you know Miss Celia Fair?"
15511May I ask why this sudden zeal?
15511May I come again this afternoon, Uncle Allan? 15511 May I come in, Miss Celia?
15511May I wait for him here? 15511 Miss Celia, are you going to join our society?"
15511Miss Celia? 15511 Miss Mary, did you know there was a''tective loafin''round town?"
15511Mr. Pat''s daughter?
15511Must you then be proud and pitiless?
15511No, I suppose not; but we can come back in the summer, ca n''t we? 15511 No; are you expecting them?
15511No; what is she like?
15511Not about the rose? 15511 Not any?"
15511Now, Belle,protested her mother,"why ca n''t you leave that book at home?
15511Now,said Maurice,"what is yours, Rosalind?"
15511Of course I do, do n''t you?
15511Oh, is it? 15511 Oh, mother, can''t--?"
15511Oh,she said,"was that what the will meant?
15511Perhaps you''d rather go with her and have me stay at home?
15511Really? 15511 Rosalind, what was it you were talking to Maurice about, here behind the arbor one day?
15511She is not obliged to hear him, is she? 15511 So far?
15511That sounds like Robin Hood, do n''t you think?
15511That will do, wo n''t it?
15511The Secret of the Forest? 15511 The illuminated manuscripts, you mean?
15511The magician? 15511 The magician?"
15511Then it is n''t for always? 15511 Then the idea is, that it is only when you stay in the Forest that you find the good in things?"
15511Then the property will have to be sold?
15511Then the question is, do you know what you are going to do with it?
15511Then why wo n''t''search''do?
15511There''s Morgan,said Belle;"you know him, do n''t you?"
15511To Uncle Allan?
15511True? 15511 Truly?
15511UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE"Must you then be proud and pitiless?
15511Uncle Allan, did you know my mother?
15511Uncle Allan, was it any harm for me to know her? 15511 Uncle Allan, what are you doing here?"
15511Was Matilda fond of him?
15511Was n''t she married? 15511 Was old Mr. Gilpin related to me, Cousin Betty?"
15511Was the horn to call the magician?
15511Was this your secret? 15511 We''ll have to do something,"Maurice agreed,"Do n''t you wish we could get inside the Gilpin house?
15511Well, Pigeon, how do you like your new friend?
15511Well, what do you think of me?
15511Were there fairies there?
15511What about?
15511What are they for?
15511What are we to do?
15511What are you smiling at?
15511What are you staring at?
15511What are you thinking about so soberly? 15511 What are you two doing?"
15511What brings Dr. Hollingsworth here?
15511What could I get for it?
15511What did she do to you, Belle?
15511What did the little girl think?
15511What do you find interesting about it?
15511What do you mean by belonging to the Forest?
15511What do you mean, my dear?
15511What do you think of your uncle, Rosalind?
15511What does it mean?
15511What does it mean?
15511What does this mean?
15511What forest?
15511What forest?
15511What is it about?
15511What is it?
15511What is she like, Katherine? 15511 What is the matter with you, Maurice?
15511What is the matter, little girl?
15511What is the matter?
15511What is your book, dear?
15511What is your name?
15511What kind? 15511 What made you think of it?"
15511What ring?
15511What shall we call our society?
15511What sort of a society?
15511What story?
15511What was the spiked collar for?
15511What''s that?
15511When are we to begin?
15511Where are you going to put it, Celia?
15511Where?
15511Who is Kit?
15511Who is going to Miss Betty''s?
15511Who knows it beside you?
15511Who says I was crying?
15511Who took the roof off when his tooth was pulled?
15511Who wo n''t?
15511Who''ll be gone? 15511 Why did you not come to me and tell me where you wished to go?
15511Why did you wish to see him?
15511Why do n''t you ask Cousin Betty who he is?
15511Why do n''t you come out, goosie?
15511Why do you think he is a detective?
15511Why in the world should a man from Baltimore want it?
15511Why not? 15511 Why should a detective go to Miss Betty''s?"
15511Why should he go if he was n''t a detective?
15511Why, Katherine, what is the trouble?
15511Why, what have you done that is so terrible? 15511 Would you tell him?"
15511Yes; do n''t you want to go up to the Gilpin place?
15511You are making a new departure, are you not? 15511 You are sure you wo n''t forget, Celia?
15511You must all come to our university,Rosalind said, with decision,"must n''t they, Dr. Hollingsworth?
15511You remember Celia Fair, Patterson?
15511You''ll tell her I''m going to the city to- morrow?
15511''R e c i p r o c i t y''; what is that?"
15511After a while Rosalind spoke:"Uncle Allan, do you know Miss Celia Fair?"
15511After talking for a while about other things, he asked,"Betty, is it true that Dr. Fair left his family with very little?"
15511Allan?"
15511And Miss Betty-- I mean Cousin Betty-- told us about the lost ring and-- was she my aunt?--Patricia?
15511And now, can we not meet, if only for a few minutes, on common ground?
15511And the cat-- did you see him?
15511And what do you mean by the''forest''?"
15511And what do you think?
15511And why did n''t he like Friendship?
15511And why should n''t boys shell peas?
15511And, oh, father dear, you''ll join the Arden Foresters, wo n''t you?"
15511Are you Uncle Allan?"
15511Are you disappointed in me, after all?"
15511Are you disappointed in me?"
15511Are you going to wear it always?
15511Are you struggling with poverty, perhaps?
15511Are you?"
15511At least she would find out who he was, and so, as she still held the tablet, she wrote,"What is your name?"
15511At the foot of Red Hill, at half- past seven P.M.""What tree does he mean?"
15511Belle, is n''t there a little catch at the side of the lock that moves up and down?
15511But does it mean that I may speak now and tell you that only a few weeks ago I first learned the cruel, the unwarranted, charge against your father?
15511But how came it in Morgan''s possession?
15511But how was she to know when he pinched her arm and looked sternly indifferent?
15511But what use had he for a fortune?
15511By what witchery did she divine that the shortest path to his boyhood was by way of the magician''s?
15511Can you clean it?
15511Can you do that?"
15511Celia exclaimed,"Who stayed with Belle?"
15511Colonel Parton, a tall, gray- mustached man, accompanied by two hunting dogs, hailed him:"Not going with the boys?
15511Coming home soon?"
15511Could he have had it all this time?
15511Could it be her rose?
15511Could it be that something displeased her?
15511Could this be the explanation?
15511Did Celia believe there was good in everything?
15511Did Morgan tell you?"
15511Did n''t Cousin Anne tell me dozens of times in his presence,''Betty, this is your cream- jug and sugar- dish, because they match your teapot''?"
15511Did n''t you know it?"
15511Did not grandmamma like my mother?
15511Did she see that?
15511Did you ever see her, grandmamma?"
15511Did you know your mother came to see me, Allan?"
15511Did you think he was coming to arrest Morgan?"
15511Do n''t you know how, in the story, the people who hated each other all came to be friends in the Forest?"
15511Do n''t you think it is going to be fun?"
15511Do n''t you wish we could go into the house and look for it?
15511Do n''t you?"
15511Do you know him?"
15511Do you know what Cousin Thomas meant, or was it one of his jokes?
15511Do you know, I had a vision that day, in the library of the old house?
15511Do you suppose he would care now?
15511Do you want to come back with me, and see the end of this adventure?"
15511Do you, Maurice?"
15511Does father know all this?"
15511Does it hurt much?"
15511Does one have to subscribe to that in order to join this society?"
15511First, wo n''t you let me give you a chair?"
15511Had any one ever known such a perplexing state of affairs?
15511Had not her father taken Patterson''s side in the family trouble over his marriage?
15511Had the reconciliation with her son come too late?
15511Has not all Friendship been speculating about the meaning of the Gilpin will?
15511Have you cared like that?"
15511Have you just found that out?
15511Have you seen her, Belle?"
15511He did not seem to understand, for he asked,"What ring?"
15511He had been lying here some time when a voice apparently quite near asked,"Have you hurt yourself?"
15511Her face was gentle; was it possible she could be unkind and disdainful?
15511His mother ignored the question, and in her turn asked,"Did Mrs. Whittredge ever see her daughter- in- law?"
15511How are we to keep Tom at the university another year?"
15511How are you, Patterson?"
15511How are you?"
15511How do you know it was unfounded?"
15511How do you know she did, Jack?"
15511How do you know?"
15511How old are you?"
15511How old do you think she is?
15511How old would Lily be now if she had lived?
15511How would it seem not to hate anybody?
15511How would you feel if Maurice some day should do a thing like that?"
15511How?"
15511I suppose you have heard the story of his wedding?"
15511I''ll tell you what she made me think of, that statue of Joan of Arc-- don''t you remember?
15511ILLUSTRATIONS"''How sweet the breath beneath the hill Of Sharon''s lovely rose''"( Frontispiece)"Do you know Miss Betty?"
15511Is n''t that a beautiful name?"
15511Is n''t that the argument in''Water Babies''?"
15511Is not everybody wondering what you are going to do with it?
15511Is there any more?"
15511Is there anything else?"
15511It brought a flush to her face, and yet why did she care?
15511MAKING FRIENDS"Is not that neighborly?"
15511Maurice wrote busily for a minute, looking up to ask,"What day shall we meet?"
15511May I come in?"
15511Miss Betty Bishop rustling out, bank book in hand, called,"How are you, Maurice?
15511Miss Betty?"
15511Mrs. Parton laughed to herself as she went back to the house,"Do you suppose that is why he is coming?
15511Mrs. Whittredge laughed, and Genevieve lifted her eyes to ask,"What is that?"
15511Now, what do you think of it?
15511Oh, where?"
15511On the still night air, in their clear treble, the words carried distinctly:--"Should auld acquaintance be forgot?"
15511Ought we to have that?"
15511Pat''s daughter?
15511Pat?"
15511Presently a soft hand stole beneath his chin, and Rosalind demanded merrily, as she tried to turn his face to hers,"What are you thinking about?
15511Rosalind summoned all her learning and spelled out carefully, with the aid of some very dainty fingers,"I- am- lon--""Lonesome?"
15511Rosalind thought a moment,"Why, did you hear us?
15511Say, what were you talking about?
15511See http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?
15511Should he go quietly out, or make one more appeal to be heard?
15511Should you like to have it?"
15511Suppose some one else had seen the ring in Morgan''s possession?
15511That for a village quarrel-- some unkind words, perhaps-- she could break the bond between them-- was this the Celia he thought he knew so well?
15511That is n''t part of the secret, is it?"
15511The object of this Society shall be, To remember the Secret of the Forest; to bear hard things bravely; to search for the ring--''Anything else?"
15511There was a general cry of,"Oh, Miss Celia, why not?"
15511These years which he has spent out in the world-- what have they done for you?
15511To be really at peace?
15511Two hundred dollars would be a great help toward Tom''s expenses, but to give up her grandmother''s spinet?
15511Was it because her grandfather was dead that everything had changed?
15511Was it her mother''s?"
15511Was n''t it sold?"
15511Was n''t it stupid of us?"
15511Was she dreaming still?
15511Was she going?
15511What could he do to obtain a hearing?
15511What could it mean?
15511What did he mean by"stuff"?
15511What did it mean?
15511What is its name and object?"
15511What is the meaning of this?"
15511What is there that is mysterious?"
15511What is your book?
15511What pleasanter way than this of spending the early summer mornings?
15511What shall I do?
15511What shall I do?"
15511What shall we do?"
15511What would have happened if Matilda had asserted herself?"
15511What''s that?"
15511When are you and Katherine coming to take tea with me?
15511Where did you come from?"
15511Where did you come from?"
15511Where had it come from?
15511Where have you been?"
15511Where is Katherine?"
15511Where shall we meet?
15511Where she is listening to the voices?
15511Where was the charm of her father''s stories of Friendship?
15511Whittredge?"
15511Whittredge?"
15511Whittredge?"
15511Who has told you about that?"
15511Why could n''t we put that in Article II?
15511Why could she not have listened quietly?
15511Why did everything seem wrong?
15511Why did it make any difference to Rosalind?
15511Why did n''t you speak to me?"
15511Why did she feel so unhappy in spite of the blue sky and the sweet summer air?
15511Why do you call him the magician?"
15511Why not go to see him?
15511Why should I dislike her because she belongs to them?
15511Why should she have any feeling against Patterson Whittredge''s daughter?
15511Why?"
15511Will you believe me when I say I regret the wrong I did, and that I want to interfere with no one''s happiness hereafter?"
15511Will you lend me a cup?"
15511With what result?
15511Wo n''t you come in and sit down while you wait?"
15511Wo n''t you tell me who you are?
15511Would Maurice declare he had already seen this girl?
15511Would n''t you, Rosalind?"
15511You agreed we were not to be enemies; ca n''t we go a step farther, and be friends?"
15511You perhaps remember the wording of the will?
15511[ Illustration:"DO YOU KNOW MISS BETTY?"]
15511and do you suppose she is going to live there?
15511are you bitter?
15511asked Belle, with some interest, adding,"Is it very bad, mother?
15511do you find it hard to forgive?
15511have you all this to do?"
15511was that your idea of me?
15511what are you going to do?"
21248Any mail for us?
21248But how is one to get the diamond leaf if he does n''t? 21248 But what will he think of you, if you do n''t?"
21248But why should she send it by special delivery if it is n''t impawtant?
21248Could n''t it be Success? 21248 Did you tell him the reason?"
21248Did you understand what I meant, Lloyd?
21248Do n''t you remember how long we talked about it to- day down in the clover- patch?
21248Do tell me, Miss Lloyd,he begged,"what is that wonderfully and fearfully made thing in the front of the pulpit?
21248Do you know it is almost that time now?
21248Do you know why?
21248Does_ she_ know?
21248Eugenia,asked Betty,"have you thought of that other rhyme that brides always consider?
21248For goodness''sake, what is it, then?
21248Have n''t you heard of the traditional charms that must be baked in a bride''s cake? 21248 How does it happen that Logan and Stanley are not going with Miss Bonham?"
21248How does that happen?
21248Is it any wondah that I''m neahly wild with curiosity?
21248Is n''t their time up, too, or ca n''t they tear themselves away?
21248Is that the wedding where you are to be maid of honor, Princess?
21248Is that what makes the fearsome discord?
21248It''s all over with that gown of yours, too, is n''t it?
21248Joyce,she whispered,"do you mind if I come over into your bed?
21248Miss Mary,asked her listener, solemnly,"do you girls really believe all these signs and wonders?
21248Nothing of Dickens or Scott or Irving or Cooper?
21248Now what does that make me think of?
21248Now why did n''t I ask him to take me and the snake on home in the cart with him?
21248Now, to be explicit, just what is it I shall see?
21248Oh, do you know a legend about it?
21248Oh, mamma, is it_ true_?
21248Oh,_ what_ did the postman bring?
21248Ornaments for the top?
21248Shall I open this, too?
21248So that''s why you are so happy over your sister''s good fortune, is it?
21248Speaking of farewells,said Rob,"who- all''s coming down to the station with me to wave good- by to Miss Bonham?
21248The name of the prince need not always be_ Man_, need it?
21248Then what did_ she_ say?
21248Then what have you read, may I ask?
21248Well, do n''t I know that?
21248Were the Indians after you again?
21248What are they?
21248What are we going to do now?
21248What are we going to do?
21248What are you laughing at?
21248What do you mean, Rob Moore?
21248What do you see?
21248What do you think I ought to do?
21248What hornet''s nest have I stirred up now?
21248What is it, Dora?
21248What made Bernice act so? 21248 What on earth do you suppose is the mattah with Bernice?"
21248What shall I do?
21248What''s that about warnings?
21248What''s that about yours truly?
21248What''s the matter, Mary?
21248What''s up now?
21248When is it to be?
21248Where are you going to take us, Miss Lloyd?
21248Where is the fair Elaine?
21248Where is your doll?
21248Who are her young ladies, and why?
21248Who else is going to help?
21248Who''ll keep an eagle eye on you?
21248Whose fault is it?
21248Why did n''t you ask somebody?
21248Why should you cut yourself off from a good time and a good friend by snubbing him? 21248 Will you all come over to the store and have some peanuts?"
21248Yes, but you did n''t stay happy, did you?
21248You would n''t call those three girls at that last table, Gibson girls, would you?
21248_ Why?_asked Lloyd again.
21248_ Why?_asked Lloyd.
21248_ Would n''t_ you?
21248And if you do n''t explain, what will he think of you?
21248And in the midst of showing us that she exclaimed:"''Oh, girls, what do you think?
21248And what part is it to play in the ceremony?"
21248Are those morning- glories artificial?"
21248Besides, if she feels slighted, why does n''t she keep it to herself, and not try to get even by giving Miss Bonham a false impression of her?
21248But Joyce would n''t fool me about anything as big as this, would she?"
21248Can you remember to say just that?"
21248Can you see all right, Bernice?"
21248Can you tell me where she has drifted?"
21248Do n''t you see how I care-- how I must have cared all this time, to let the thought of you make such a difference in my life?"
21248Do n''t you see it is somebody''s haid?''
21248Do n''t you see that it is Philip''s head with Mary''s on that shilling?"
21248Do n''t you see?
21248Do n''t you wonder who''ll get the charms in the bride''s cake?
21248Do n''t you?
21248Do n''t you?
21248Do you remember all that?"
21248Have you my silver yardstick with you to- night, dear?"
21248How about you, Bradford?"
21248How could I without making Bernice appeah ridiculous?"
21248I thought you were in college?"
21248I''ve been wanting to ask you for some time, why is it that she seems so down on the Little Colonel?"
21248I''ve talked to you as if I were your grandmother, have n''t I?"
21248If you have n''t any engagement for the afternoon will you go horseback- riding with me?"
21248Is it a doorway or a giant picture- frame?
21248Is it from Jack or Holland or Cousin Kate?"
21248Is n''t that enough?"
21248Is n''t that it?"
21248It was only the friendly thing to do, was n''t it?"
21248It will be quite neat and symbolical, do n''t you think?
21248Like a rose- leaf, is it not?
21248See the way the hole is punched, just between those two ugly old heads?
21248She had caught the question,"Then are you going to warn her?"
21248She made up a line:"''So what will Joyce Ware if she meets a great bear?''
21248Take it back, please; I promised Papa Jack--""Promised him what?"
21248Then Joyce asked:"Did n''t you see the way Bernice snubbed her last night at the gate, when we left The Beeches?"
21248Then Lloyd leaned over the banister to call:"What''s the mattah, Rob?
21248Then as the woman finished skewering her hair into a tight knot she relaxed into friendliness far enough to ask,"Going far yourself?"
21248Then, in a stage whisper, he asked,"Aunt Jane, can you tell me?
21248Tremont?"
21248Was n''t she, Malcolm?
21248Was there ever such a glorious morning?"
21248What are you up to now, Miss Stork?"
21248What did she do?"
21248What greater honor could she have than to be chosen as the confidante of the most brilliant pupil ever enrolled at Warwick Hall?
21248What is the mattah?
21248What makes girls do that way, Betty?
21248What makes you ask such a question?"
21248Where did I put that volume of Tennyson?"
21248Who ever dreamed of seeing_ you_ here?
21248Why would n''t Bernice come with you?"
21248Why, what''s the matter?"
21248Will they come true?"
21248Will you, if I give you a book?"
21248Would n''t you like me to read to you awhile every morning?"
21248Would n''t you like to see the place where those snow- rose garlands grow?"
21248Would the house- party at The Locusts join the house- party at The Beeches in giving a series of tableaux at their lawn fête that night?
21248Would you mind telling me what the measure was your father gave you that your prince must be?"
21248Writing to Alex Shelby, are you?"
21248You do bead- work, do n''t you, Mary?
21248You nevah in yoah wildest dreams thought of that combination, now did you?"
21248You''ll keep the turquoise if we count it merely a friendship stone, wo n''t you?"
21248_ Why_ must it be blue?"
21248and Betty''s reply,"What''s the use?
16556''Layin''down in de baid?''
16556After all, it was only my position they cared for,he reflected, bitterly;"without my father''s name what would I be to them?"
16556Ai n''t you heah me callin''you, boy? 16556 Ain''de chil''n been in dyah?"
16556Ain''you gwine finish eatin''?
16556Ain''you hongry?
16556All right now?
16556And just about when do you propose to become a director?
16556And she never was found?
16556And so that adorable Marquis was unreal?
16556And what convinced you that I was selfish, if I may ask?
16556And what was it while it lasted? 16556 And you are then sure, you will swear, my good Stump, that this are the same man?"
16556And,answered he, making a strong effort to appear calm,"if I follow your advice, will you allow me to see you once more before you go?"
16556And_ you_, Bertha?
16556Anything important? 16556 Are they firing toward our left?"
16556Are we winning?
16556Are you not afraid?
16556Are you the gentleman that got hurt?
16556Basil,said Reybold,"what trust do you leave to me in your family?"
16556Blame,muttered he,"why are you to blame?"
16556But Miles Breeze?
16556But how if they come down on our thin right wing?
16556But of the advertisement? 16556 But still,"persisted he,"would you not like to leave it-- to have a career of your own before you die?
16556But what?
16556But why this man?
16556But, Ralph,she cried, springing up from her seat, while her eyes flamed with indignation,"what does this mean?
16556By the way, what is your name?
16556Ca n''t I say what I like, here?
16556Can we not still be wholly our independent selves, even while doing, in the main, as others do? 16556 Can you not make it?"
16556Crombie, eh? 16556 Crutch,"he said one day to the little boy,"did you ever see your father?"
16556Did anybody fire a gun?
16556Did you tell him anything to quiet him? 16556 Did you want to see him on business?
16556Do n''t he ever come to see you when you are sick?
16556Do n''t you know that our would- be Brigadier sent all the commissary to the rear day before yesterday? 16556 Do n''t you remember Foster?"
16556Do you know German?
16556Do you visit any of your distress cases to- night?
16556Do you wish me to read them?
16556Do_ you_ mean to stay here, Colonel?
16556Does-- this man-- know of your intention?
16556Foster, what progress have you made?
16556Foster,quietly asked Sinclair,"do you know the Perry gang?"
16556Go over dyah quick-- don''t you heah me?
16556Got a heap of letters and telegrams there, ai n''t yer, Jim?
16556Has he?
16556Have you ever lost an old friend?
16556Have you found Miss Austin?
16556Him, sir? 16556 How are the air- brakes working?"
16556How can you tell, if I can not?
16556How do you suppose an officer is to have a drink, Lieutenant?
16556How he gwine help it? 16556 How he say he is?"
16556How is you, Ole''Stracted?
16556How old are you?
16556How you gwine raise eight hundred dollars at once? 16556 How, where?"
16556I so tired waitin'',he whispered;"done''mos gin out, an''he oon come; but I thought I heah little Eph to- day?"
16556I wonder if any one felt the exquisite beauty of the noon as I did to- day? 16556 I wonder if you enjoy life in community?"
16556I wonder whar Marse Johnny is?
16556If he wins this fight,thought Fitz Hugh,"how can I do him a harm?
16556In February?
16556Is Mr. Lit-- is your father at home?
16556Is it posseeble that he goes''imself to drown?
16556Is it posseeble that you do tell me of the Comte Siccatif de Courtray? 16556 Is it pretty tolerable bad?"
16556Is she not beautiful?
16556Is that good- lookin''wife of his''n a- comin''with him?
16556Is that the boy''s brother?
16556Is that the enemy''s position?
16556Is the Colonel hit?
16556Is the brigade commander all right?
16556Is there a telegraph station not far ahead, Sinclair?
16556Is there no boat?
16556Is you gwine in dyah?
16556It is for a lady-- very important business,said I, taking up the letter;"are you sure that there is no mistake?"
16556Jack,said Sinclair to the engine- driver,"is your hand steady?"
16556Know them?
16556Kyarn you teck it in de co''t?
16556Le''me see: I done wuck for it three years dis Christmas done gone; how much does dat meek?
16556Madame,said Reybold, in a quieter moment,"have you written to the Judge the fact of his son''s death?"
16556May I guess?
16556Mr. Watkins,cried she,"can I see you for a few moments where no one can interrupt us?
16556Nice- looking, ai n''t it, Major?
16556Oh, that was it, was it? 16556 Oh,"said Blanche, with a little blush at her own deception,"have n''t I seen you in the house before?
16556On hand where? 16556 Oon marster be glad to see me?"
16556Sergeant,called he,"do you hear me plainly?"
16556Sha n''t I relieve Gildersleeve if he gets beaten?
16556Shall I not introduce you?
16556So you are the Marquis who has been setting the town wild for the last week, eh? 16556 Something to do at last, eh?"
16556Tell me, my friend,said Reybold,"can I do nothing to assist you both?
16556The men I seek must exist: where are they? 16556 The second ravine to the left of the main drive?"
16556Them? 16556 Then, if you slowed down now, you could stop the train in a third of her length, could n''t you?"
16556Then,he broke out at last,"tell me before we part if I can do nothing to gain-- I will not say your love-- but only your regard?
16556Till I came in-- is that the idea?
16556Wa''al, Foster,said he,"kind o''''close call''for yer, warn''t it?
16556Wass I go home for?
16556Wass up? 16556 We''ll lick those rebs, wo n''t we?"
16556Well, honey- bee, what''s the matter?
16556Well, how is you, Ole-- What I gwine to call you?
16556Well? 16556 Whar he got any home to go to sep heaven?"
16556Whar you gwine?
16556What are you here for, Colonel?
16556What convinced me?
16556What de matter?
16556What did he say?
16556What did ye pray for his soul for? 16556 What did you say my name was?"
16556What did your papa seem like in that dream, my little boy?
16556What do you mean by that?
16556What do you want for carrying it out?
16556What has become of Van Twiller?
16556What he done do now?
16556What house is that?
16556What is the news to- day?
16556What is the use of this?
16556What then? 16556 What was you mammy name, Ephum?"
16556What was your last remark?
16556What would have been the end, had you really found me? 16556 What you got?"
16556When did you ever act from any generous regard for others? 16556 Where are your thoughts?"
16556Where is he?
16556Where shall we find you if we want a fresh order?
16556Where?
16556Who dat?
16556Who said I was hurt?
16556Who sent them?
16556Who was her father, the Judge?
16556Who you say you is?
16556Who''s Joyce?
16556Who''s seen Van Twiller? 16556 Who''s yo''sister, bub?"
16556Who? 16556 Who?"
16556Why should I come to seek you, after these many years, dearest, if I did not wish to make you my wife before God and men? 16556 Why that man?"
16556Why''n''t you come''long heah, boy, an''rock dis chile?
16556Why? 16556 Why?"
16556Why?
16556Would n''t it be well for me to ride up and say a cheering word?
16556Would you like to go along?
16556Would you like to wait?
16556Wuz he?
16556Yes, of course,nodded Waldron;"but have they occupied the woods which veil their right front and flank?"
16556Yes; how so?
16556Yes? 16556 You ain''see dat corn lately, is you?"
16556You desire to write? 16556 You have never met my father?"
16556You know we grewed up to- gerr? 16556 You reckon dee''ll git heah''fo''dark?"
16556Your name?
16556Abe, wha''s my julep?"
16556Ai n''t he been mendin''he shoes an''harness for rent all dese years?"
16556Ain''you got crap on it?"
16556All the way up the squalid and muddy avenue of that day he mused and wondered:"Who is Fitzhugh?
16556Am I mistaken in conjecturing that you wish to know my relation to the movement concerning which you were recently interrogated?
16556And I have some other horses that I want painted, and some dogs-- he paints dogs, I suppose?
16556And as for him, what did it matter?
16556And did n''t he just win in a canter?
16556And did n''t the slop- shop man put up the stakes?
16556And do you know that these enemies wear shakos, and are called gens d''armes?
16556And now, Captain, will you ride to the head of the column and order it forward?
16556And what started you in such a crazy performance, anyway?
16556And whom did you bet with?
16556And yet,"he added,"how can I help it?"
16556Are you ill?"
16556Are you staying here?"
16556Are you then sure that you do not make one grand meestake?
16556At a new"Windsor"( or was it"Brunswick"?)
16556At last he spoke, just as I was about to question him:"Are you afraid to die, Sebastian?"
16556At the best, even should he rise, what could he expect?
16556Basil:"Madame, how was the Judge, your husband, at the last advices?"
16556Basil?"
16556Breeze?"
16556But are any of them really any better?"
16556But if for her sake, why not for others?
16556But where did she come from?
16556But who_ was_ she?
16556But why the deuce-- what is the matter with you?
16556But with whom?
16556But, after all, as every young compatriot who went to Baden said, what the deuce and all did he live in Baden for?
16556CONTENTS-- VOLUME II THE BRIGADE COMMANDER J. W. DEFOREST WHO WAS SHE?
16556Can anybody hear anything of Stilton?"
16556Can we not assist you to leave them?"
16556Can you believe that I did n''t guess, immediately, what it all meant?
16556Can you, late this afternoon, go through the cars, and pick them out?
16556Come in again pretty soon; will you?"
16556Could it be possible, he thought, that fortune had smiled upon the young artist, and that he was about to purchase a new suit of clothes?
16556Could it have had anything to do with the treacherous holes in the bottoms of those old shoes?
16556Could this be so?
16556Did n''t he back his cleverness in disguise against the wits of the whole town?
16556Did n''t you know they came to him?
16556Did ye see us, though, Captin, whin we come in on their right flank?
16556Did you tell him that we were married?"
16556Do I put it right?"
16556Do n''t I tell you as me and him''s fust cousins?
16556Do n''t you see him?"
16556Do n''t you want some more?
16556Do n''t you?"
16556Do you know what it is to love?"
16556Do you know what it will lead to?"
16556Do you think this is what a man is created for-- to give away his chance to live?"
16556Does it strike you so?"
16556Every man who heard it swiftly asked himself,"Will it strike me?"
16556Finally, when some power of thought returned, I asked:"Of all things, my poor boy, why should you choose such a dreary life as this?
16556For his mother?
16556Girl went out there once?
16556Had he made for her a large life?
16556Had he not kept her too much to himself?
16556Has he another family?"
16556Has some irreparable mistake, some miserable controversy, alienated him from his wife?
16556Have n''t I knowed him ever since he was n''t higher''n a hoss''s fetlock?
16556Have n''t you got a wife or little girl, or nobody to work for?
16556Have we come to that?
16556Have you any scheme in view?"
16556Have you money enough?"
16556He advanced to the fire, toasted first one and then the other of the damp gaiters he had on?
16556He waited; and at noon Breeze came to him and said that there was a scarcity of men: would he go?
16556He was a West Pointer, was he?
16556He''s just got me work, which is the best thing to give; do n''t you think so, gentlemen?"
16556Hev yer heard about the young feller that come in a week ago from Laramie an''set up a new faro- bank?"
16556Him?
16556How could I best please her?
16556How could I speak?
16556How did she look?
16556How is the country about the--xth mile- post?"
16556How make an acquaintance, when one obsequiously bows himself away, as I advance?
16556How shall we reach it?"
16556I know you will-- won''t you?
16556I only ask what good will it do to_ her_?"
16556I say, gen''lemen, what do you think of that, heigh?"
16556I wonder whar he did come from?"
16556I wonder where he is?
16556I wucked night an''day forty year to save dat money for marster; you know dee teck all he land an''all he niggers an''tu''n him out in de old fiel''?
16556If he was nothing more than a minister, how did he know drill and tactics?"
16556If he went to the devil, who would care?
16556Is he at the head of the column?
16556Is he aware-- are you?--that Joyce Basil is in love with some one in this city?"
16556Is it''i m truly that you''ave seen?"
16556Is there never to be relief for him?
16556Is there such a person any more than a Judge Basil?
16556It is hard enough-- it is hard enough--""What is hard, beloved?"
16556Just then one of Waldron''s orderlies rode up and exclaimed:"What is the matter with the-- the boy?
16556Let me ask you: May I tell you something in confidence-- something which shall never pass your lips?
16556Miserable child, who can tell what depths of suffering she may be in this moment?"
16556Mr. Express Agent, what help do you want?"
16556Mrs. Pinckney smiled the more strongly and said-- not quite so terribly as Mrs. Amos Barton:"Have I made you happy, dearest Charles?"
16556No?
16556Of course, I was n''t clearly conscious of this at the time: who is?
16556Or was she still the same, and was it only he who had changed?
16556Ought n''t he, gentlemen?"
16556Plucky girl that give''em away, was n''t she?
16556Presently the woman said,"Don''you warn put you''shut on?"
16556Procurator said you were interested-- some woman in the case, parishioner of yours, eh?''
16556Reybold?"
16556Shall we share the possession, or will you banish me?"
16556Since her mother''s premature death, had he instilled into her sympathies, tastes, companionships that would make her existence the richer?
16556Suppose I oblige you by saying that the company has no further need of your services?"
16556Tell me, can we not do more for you?
16556The following conversation took place one night in the smoking- room:"Where''s Van Twiller?"
16556Then I heard the Director''s voice:"You are from Algiers?"
16556Then it is agreed, as the Chayman of yo''Committee, that I accede to the request of Mr. Reybold, of Pennsylvania?"
16556Wants me to appoint one U-- U-- U, what?"
16556Was I one of the men she sought?
16556Was he dreaming?
16556Was he in love?
16556Was he not a good man?
16556Was it possible that I had overlooked so much character and intellect?
16556Was the blame of his bad niece''s acts his?
16556Wass up, su''shine?"
16556Wasser maar, eh?
16556Wasser maar?"
16556We take it back, do n''t we?--we take_ them_ words back?"
16556Well, what is it?"
16556What about him?"
16556What are you driving at, Colonel?"
16556What attractions has it for you?"
16556What can that be?
16556What could it be but the triumph that follows ambitious toil-- the manifestation of all my best qualities as a man?
16556What did she know about indigence, real privation, and brave endurance, such as a hundred thousand fellow- creatures all around her were undergoing?
16556What did she know about old, used- up boots and all that pertains to them?
16556What did that bunch of wild flowers betoken?
16556What does a woman leave her husband for?
16556What good did you ever do to anybody?"
16556What had happened to him?
16556What have you done?"
16556What if she should end it all some night, by just unclasping that little hand?
16556What is it_?"
16556What is this mystery?"
16556What kind of creature can she be in private life, I wonder?
16556What possible reason led you to enter the community?
16556What shall I give you money to gamble away for?
16556What should I say?
16556What then?"
16556What was the one way to find her?
16556What was_ her_ position?
16556What would you do if you were in my place?"
16556What''ll you bet?"
16556What''s yore''s?"
16556What, in the name of all the gods, was the matter?
16556When I saw there was no danger there I ran back, and what do you think I found?
16556When a woman kept one o''them speckled veils over her face, turned her head away, and held her parasol between, how were you to know her from Adam?
16556When can I hunt with father, dear gentlemen?"
16556Where do you propose to remain meanwhile?"
16556Where ever did you get such a stunning rig?
16556Where had been my eyes?
16556Where have I seen that face?
16556Where have you been and what have you been doing?"
16556Where is Uriel''s father?
16556Where is he?"
16556Where is the Judge, your husband, at this moment?"
16556Where is the cavalry?
16556Whither had his own ruinous Congress gaiters gone?--to what destination which they would never have reached had he been in them?
16556Who is this lover of your daughter?"
16556Who knows?
16556Who shall I tell him?"
16556Whose are these that I''ve been wearing?"
16556Why Carlsruhe?
16556Why did n''t ye pray for his loife?"
16556Why did n''t you tell him so?
16556Why did n''t you think of it?"
16556Why do you ask, Major?"
16556Why does she separate from him over the grave of her innocent first- born?
16556Why is n''t Stilton here?
16556Why not?"
16556Why?
16556Will the Speaker turn me out if I play with the beach birds just once?
16556Will you act as my aid?"
16556Will you stay here?"
16556Wo n''t you take a bite of rebel chicken, Captain?
16556Would you be pleased to learn that it is a prison I escape by coming here?
16556You ain''know he comin''dis evenin'', is you?
16556You have a brother in Algiers?
16556You have never been at Wampsocket?
16556You look puzzled, I see: you do n''t catch the real drift of her words?
16556You marry an American woman, and what do you marry?
16556You notice the change in her tone?
16556You reckon dee is?"
16556You will take my boy?
16556_ Now_, will you hate me?"
16556and at length broke out, in a tone bordering on reproach:"So you are the owner, are you?
16556d''Antimoine, what''s the matter?
16556dee''ll know it-- dee''ll know me''dout any name, oon dee?"
16556have we come to that?''
16556of her hair?
16556she pursued,"an''what he sho''''nough name?
16556was she old or young?
16556what was the color of her eyes?
16556who dat out dyah?"
16556yes;''tain''nuttin''gwine hu''t you; an''you say Ephum say he be layin''in de baid?"
13883Afraid-- what of?
13883Am I-- spoiling it?
13883And may I stay to lunch if they ask me?
13883And where do I come in?
13883And you said if there was ever anything you could do for me-- You have n''t by any chance forgotten?
13883Anything interesting? 13883 Are n''t they?
13883Are those still your conditions?
13883Are you a little humbug?
13883Are you going as part of the Canadian contingent from overseas, or what?
13883Are you sure you''re not screening somebody else?
13883Are you thinking of another old engine?
13883As much as you and Daddy?
13883Because of Nicky? 13883 Being afraid of ghosts does n''t count, does it?"
13883But what bad news could she have had?
13883But what was it you did-- really did, Nicky?
13883But,said Michael,"how about Daddy''s idea?
13883But,she said,"what else could he do?
13883But-- if there''s anything in it-- why ca n''t I see it as well as you and Veronica? 13883 By whom elected?
13883Ca n''t you see he does n''t want you?
13883Ca n''t you see how you''re spoiling it all?
13883Ca n''t you see it''s not you, it''s this life we lead that I''m sick and tired of? 13883 Can I see you?
13883Can I see you?
13883Could I go to Ireland for you?
13883Darling-- what did I tell you?
13883Desmond-- what is it? 13883 Did I?
13883Did you ever smell anything like this lane? 13883 Did you know?"
13883Did you see that?
13883Did you take it seriously? 13883 Do I?
13883Do n''t you like him a little bit too?
13883Do n''t you mean,Anthony had said,"boys that will look like me?"
13883Do n''t you think John- John''s too beautiful for words?
13883Do they say what the doctor thinks?
13883Do you love_ me_?
13883Do you mean to say it''s Desmond''s child_ you_''re thinking of?
13883Do you mind talking about it?
13883Do you suppose any woman would go and get herself up like this if she was n''t going_ some_where?
13883Do you suppose they want you to see them?
13883Do you suppose_ I_ do n''t know how different it was? 13883 Do you think I''m bound by that-- now?"
13883Do you think,he said at last,"he really minded?"
13883Do you understand Veronica?
13883Does it count if I make that little noise, Mummy? 13883 Dorothy, do you understand Michael''s poems?"
13883Dorothy,he said,"do you want to go to that banquet?"
13883Dorothy? 13883 Ferdie?"
13883Germany-- a joke?
13883Give what up?
13883Go? 13883 Good Heavens, you''re not contemplating_ that_, are you?"
13883Good Lord, against what?
13883Had n''t I? 13883 Has she?
13883Have I made a mess of_ your_ life?'' 13883 Have I?
13883Have they taken you?
13883Have you ever seen me?
13883His death?
13883How are you mixed up in it?
13883How can he when he feels like that about it?
13883How do you know he''d have loathed it? 13883 How do you make that out?"
13883How do you mean,''say anything''?
13883How does she do it?
13883How is your singing getting on, Ronny?
13883How long,said Nicky,"is an hour and a half?"
13883How on earth could she know a thing like that?
13883How was I to know that? 13883 HÃ ¦ morhage?"
13883I did n''t see him nearly so distinctly as I saw Nicky-"Nicky? 13883 I do n''t mean for me-- for_ it_?"
13883I say, how about Shakespeare?
13883I say, who is Dorothea Harrison?
13883I say-- did you ever do it to me?
13883I say-- how are they? 13883 I suppose you_ know_ you have n''t got a hat on?"
13883I thought,said Michael,"you were to have been a thorn in England''s side?"
13883I wonder if you know how I feel about it? 13883 I''ve hardly a right to object to that, have I?
13883I? 13883 If you ca n''t be an ass at twenty,"said Frances,"when can you be?"
13883If you care so much, why do n''t you choose a better mother for your own children?
13883If you did? 13883 If you''d think less about me, Mother,"she said,"and more about Father--""Father?"
13883Irish? 13883 Is Miss Maud Blackadder here?"
13883Is it done?
13883Is she? 13883 Is that all you think about?
13883It did n''t satisfy you, darling, did it?
13883It has n''t come to anything,_ has_ it?
13883It has n''t made you feel that you do n''t want it?
13883It was a jolly sell for me, was n''t it?
13883Killed? 13883 Let you?
13883May I go round to Rosalind''s after lessons?
13883May n''t I stay?
13883May we not say one word?
13883Me? 13883 Me?
13883Mother got my letter, then?
13883Mother-- how do we know she is n''t right? 13883 My adventure?"
13883My dear boy, have you any idea of the amount you''ll have to pay her?
13883My dear boy,Anthony said,"do n''t you know I''ve lent the house to the Red Cross, and let the shooting?"
13883My dear, how can he? 13883 My poor dear child, what do you suppose I wanted?"
13883Nicky darling,she said,"why_ did n''t_ you tell me it was really aching?"
13883Nicky, do you understand Michael''s poems?
13883Nicky, what did you do it for?
13883Nicky,he said,"you filthy rotter, why on earth did n''t you tell me?...
13883Nicky,she said suddenly,"do you believe in ghosts?"
13883Nicky,she said,"is it true that Desmond''s been doing drawings for you?"
13883Nicky?
13883No, but_ really_ do?
13883No-- but how?
13883No? 13883 Not my business?
13883Not when Nicky and Dorothy are going?
13883Now? 13883 Now?"
13883Oh, Lord, what_ does_ that matter?
13883Oh, Nicky dear, if you''d only waited--"What do you mean?
13883Oh, Nicky, ca n''t you forgive poor Mr. Parsons? 13883 Oh, Nicky, do you think me a beast?
13883Oh, is he?
13883One out of four? 13883 Or is it,"said Vera,"that I do n''t look as if I were Ronny''s mother?"
13883Poor Mummy, did n''t you know? 13883 Poor Mummy, did you think you had to make up because you cared for them more than me?"
13883Ronny,he said,"did Michael say anything to you?"
13883Ronny-- if Nicky had been like me could he have kept you?
13883Screening somebody else? 13883 Shall We come into it?"
13883Supposing you had to choose between the Suffrage and Frank Drayton?
13883Sympathy? 13883 That''s all very well, but when Nicky is twenty- one and Ronny is seventeen what are you going to do?"
13883Then Ronny knows?
13883Then you do n''t want me to do any more drawings?
13883Then,he said,"you''ve given it up?
13883Then,said Dorothy,"there_ is_ a secret policy?"
13883Then,said Michael( he was still incredulous),"you do care?"
13883Think so?
13883This afternoon, when he made you come with him here?
13883To get me out of it?
13883Traitor? 13883 Ver- onica?"
13883Veronica?
13883Was Frank''s soul ever more real to_ you_, Dorothy?
13883Was it you who took Roger out this afternoon?
13883Was there nothing to be said for her?
13883Well then-- I wonder whether you''d very much mind going away?
13883Well, if anything should happen to me--"But, my dear girl, what_ should_ happen to you?
13883Well, then, what does Nicky do?
13883Well,said Anthony,"now that you have seen him, what is it exactly that you want to do?"
13883Well-- but what could I do?
13883Well-- you see--"You mean the baby? 13883 Well--?"
13883Were n''t you?
13883Were you ever afraid, Nicky?
13883Were you frightfully busy?
13883What Procession?
13883What are you driving at?
13883What are you going to do with me?
13883What are you thinking of,she said,"planting yourself out there and sneezing?
13883What are you to do,said Anthony,"with a boy like that?"
13883What can have happened to her?
13883What did I do it for? 13883 What did she say?"
13883What did you suppose he was doing?
13883What did you think?
13883What do you do,she said,"to keep your children with you?"
13883What do you know about it?
13883What do you mean by the right?
13883What do you think I ought to do about it?
13883What does it mean?
13883What for?
13883What have you got there?
13883What if I did?
13883What if they do? 13883 What is it, then?"
13883What is?
13883What kept you?
13883What makes you think I want to stop you?
13883What more could you want?
13883What more,said Nicky,"do you want?"
13883What regiment are they?
13883What sort of rooms has he got, Anthony?
13883What sort of woman,said Anthony,"is the Professor''s wife?"
13883What things?
13883What time is it?
13883What was''less than that''?
13883What will you do, sweetheart, all afternoon, without Nicky and Dorothy and Mary- Nanna?
13883What would you do about it if you were Daddy?
13883What would you do,she said,"if I followed you?
13883What would you like to do?
13883What''?
13883What''s a point of honour?
13883What''s changed you?
13883What''s the good of sending the best brains in the Army to get pounded? 13883 What''s the good of that as long as Bartie thinks it is?"
13883What''s the matter, Ronny? 13883 What?"
13883What_ did_ you do?
13883What_ of_?
13883Whatever for?
13883When is an ash- tree not an ash- tree? 13883 When?
13883When?
13883When?
13883When?
13883Where is he?
13883Where''s John- John?
13883Where''s Nicky?
13883Where''s he gone to? 13883 Wherever is the damned thing?"
13883Which of them took Roger out?
13883Who are you thinking of then? 13883 Who told you?"
13883Who would n''t? 13883 Why bother,"he said,"about Rheims Cathedral and Louvain?
13883Why did you ask me whether Mick had said anything?
13883Why did you do it?
13883Why did you say his ear''s aching when it is n''t?
13883Why do n''t you take him with you?
13883Why do you go to them?
13883Why indecent?
13883Why not? 13883 Why not?
13883Why not?
13883Why not?
13883Why on earth for my sake?
13883Why should I? 13883 Why should it be?"
13883Why wo n''t you divorce me?
13883Why worse?
13883Why would n''t he?
13883Why-- what else have I been doing for seven years? 13883 Why-- why-- if you want to fight in the civil war afterwards?"
13883Why? 13883 Why?
13883Why? 13883 Will he be very long?"
13883Will you come down to the office with me and tell Daddy that?
13883Without my help, you mean?
13883Would there? 13883 Would you be afraid of a ghost, now, if you saw one?"
13883Would you go down if you were he?
13883Yes, but are her people all right?
13883Yes, but how about Bartie?
13883You always have let me, have n''t you?
13883You did n''t think of that, did you, Mummy? 13883 You had no encouragement, then, no provocation?"
13883You know all sorts of people, do you know anything about her?
13883You know what it means?
13883You know what''s the matter with you? 13883 You know,"he said at last,"the old idea of the_ forteresse mobile_?
13883You mean I''ve got to stop it? 13883 You remember when I was afraid of ghosts, and you used to come and sit with me till I went to sleep?"
13883You think God''s made us all like that? 13883 You think he would n''t have gone of his own accord?"
13883You think it matters to Ireland whether Germany licks us or we lick Germany?
13883You think,she said,"I''d no business to find out?"
13883You thought of me?
13883You want it as much as I do? 13883 You women-- are you prepared to go against your men?
13883You would n''t? 13883 You''d have stayed at home rather than have dished me?
13883You''ve got leave?
13883You? 13883 You_ have_ got leave?"
13883_ Could_ he, Daddy?
13883_ Me_? 13883 _ Mick_?"
13883_ Nothing but?_ Are you quite sure of that? 13883 _ Nothing but?_ Are you quite sure of that?
13883_ Well?_he said.
13883_ What_ is?
13883_ You_, Mummy?
13883( Yet--_could_ you have shamed his indomitable impudence?)
13883*****"Do you love me?"
13883After all,_ why_ punish Nicky?
13883Altogether?
13883And RÃ © veillaud''s question:"Vraiment?
13883And all the time her mind was busy with one question:"Do you think Nicky knows?"
13883And as for that-- why go on worrying?
13883And does he suppose that Germany-- if we do n''t beat her-- will be deterred by his frightfulness?
13883And for the fifth time he asked,"When will it be time to go?"
13883And he heard himself saying:"Yes,"and Suzanne trying, trying very gently, to persuade him that it was perhaps only that Monsieur Nicky was wounded?
13883And how two times were going on, and you and Nicky were in one time, and Mother was in the other?
13883And if poor Ferdie wants to come and see us, you wo n''t turn him off your door- mat, will you?
13883And so the Aunties are working in the War Hospital Supply Depôt?
13883And still she seemed to be considering: Was it or was it not worth while?
13883And the slabs of tulip- wood and scented camphor- wood and sandalwood were saying to Anthony,"Why not?"
13883And then, with his mother''s eyes on him, he thought:"Does she think I was reckoning on that?"
13883And then:"Have you got all your things?"
13883And then:"Veronica, do_ you_ think I ought to enlist?"
13883And what have we got to do with Alsace- Lorraine?
13883And why should I?
13883And yet he never came home rather later than usual without saying to himself,"Supposing I was to find him there with her?"
13883And yet, supposing Anthony came home early?
13883Anthony looked up over the edge of his morning paper, inquired whether Michael could defend the destruction of Louvain and Rheims Cathedral?
13883Anthony?
13883Are n''t they a thousand times more likely to know than we are?
13883Are we not then to fight with our tongues and with our brains?
13883Are you aware that the yard of` Jack Straw''s Castle''is behind that wall?
13883Are you really going to Flanders?"
13883Aunt Louie''s would be well- shaped and firm, but erring a little on the hard side, do n''t you think?
13883Bartie growled:"Did you hear your mother telling you to say Good- night?"
13883But Bartie is n''t very easy to live with, is he?"
13883But Michael''s?
13883But do you?
13883But how can I?"
13883But on the first evening at Hampstead, as Frances kissed him Good- night, he said:"Shall I have to see Mr. Parsons to- morrow?"
13883But supposing_ now_ I ever did n''t, would it matter?
13883But was n''t it a ripping sell?"
13883But what?"
13883But who is he trying to frighten?
13883But would it be worth while?
13883But you-- of all Irishmen-- why on earth should_ you_ be in it?"
13883By letter?
13883By telephone?
13883By wire?
13883Ca n''t we do something with it?"
13883Ca n''t you see how awful it must be for them to be ghosts?
13883Ca n''t you see how pathetic they are?
13883Ca n''t you see it proves that I never meant to go at all?"
13883Ca n''t you see it''s different?"
13883Ca n''t you see that_ that''s_ the wonderful and beautiful part?"
13883Ca n''t you see"--her face was dark and hard with anger--"there''s money in it?"
13883Can anybody tell me where to find John- John?
13883Can you even say you want it till you know whether there are things you want more?"
13883Can you?
13883Did I ask you to go in?"
13883Did Nicky know I funked it?"
13883Did Ronny really choose it because it"looked as if it had been made out of Timmy''s tummy?"
13883Did he ask you to marry him?"
13883Did you ever drink anything like that divine coffee?
13883Did you ever eat anything like these buns?
13883Did you ever once think about me, Dorothy?"
13883Do n''t you want me to sing it?"
13883Do you know how much you want it?
13883Do you know how much you want to pay for it?
13883Do you know how you''re going to get it?
13883Do you know what you''re prepared to give up for it?
13883Do you mean some other fellow?"
13883Do you not bear our marching feet, From door to door, from street to street?
13883Do you really mean it?
13883Do you really mean that?"
13883Do you remember saying that I did n''t care?
13883Do you remember that morning I fetched you from Holloway?
13883Do you suppose I''ve got a chance of knowing one of them-- really knowing-- even if I had the time?
13883Do you think Daddy''d let me turn the hen- house into a workshop next holidays, as there are n''t any hens?
13883Do you think he''d let me live in it?"
13883Do you think they''d take me if I cut my hair off?"
13883Does he imagine that France, or England, or Russia or Belgium, or Serbia, will want to start another war when this is over?
13883Does it make you hate me?"
13883Does n''t it look as if danger were the point of contact with reality, and death the closest point?
13883Does that satisfy you?
13883Dorothy thought:"Supposing he has n''t got leave?"
13883Dorothy-- do you realize that you''re not eighteen?
13883Frances knew what Anthony was thinking, and Anthony knew it was what Frances thought herself: Supposing this time Morrie did n''t come back?
13883Frances thought: Was Grannie really stupid?
13883Frances, aroused at last to realization of the affairs of nations, asked, like several million women,"What does it mean?"
13883Frank Drayton?
13883Have I had any adventures"by myself"?
13883Have we got to go?"
13883Have you ever read the Psalms?
13883Have you got it here?"
13883He thought:"It''s all very well to say I''m going; but how_ can_ I go?"
13883He wondered if he could have done it if he had not loved his father?
13883He wondered if his father would ever understand that it was the hardest thing he had ever yet done or could do?
13883Honour bright?"
13883How am I ever to pay you back again?"
13883How can I?"
13883How can you bear to let other men fight for you?"
13883How could he have ended_ here_, with poor little Desmond?
13883How could he possibly go and leave Lawrence dead and forgotten?
13883How could the dear old Pater be expected to know that Paris is, spiritually speaking, no sort of way even to South Germany?
13883How_ can_ I keep you when I''m old and ugly?"
13883I say-- how about to- morrow evening?"
13883I should have thought--""You mean_ I_''ve no business to?
13883I should like to know what other way you ever want us to love you?"
13883I should like to know what we are and what we are here for?"
13883I thought, How would I like_ them_ to be forsaken like poor Ronny?"
13883If I thought_ you_ were knocking about anywhere there--""It would make it too hard?"
13883If she had known as much as all that, why should she have suffered so horribly that she had nearly died of it?
13883If they do n''t believe Lawrence or me, ca n''t they believe Nicky?
13883Is it fair to call for volunteers, for raw recruits, and not tell them precisely and clearly what services will be required of them?
13883Is n''t it all the more reason, when so much more has been done for you than was ever done for him?"
13883Is she leaving us anything but our bare fists?
13883Is that clear and precise enough?"
13883Is that what''s wrong with Nicky?"
13883Is the pain very bad?"
13883Is there any reason why she should n''t?"
13883Is there anything I can do?"
13883It looks as if it worked, then?"
13883It was as if she said:"If you care so much about Veronica, why do n''t you marry_ her_?"
13883It was this way, was n''t it?
13883It was when he asked himself:"On what, then,_ had_ he been reckoning?"
13883It''s a shame to laugh at Waddy-- but-- he_ has_ spread himself over Flanders, has n''t he?
13883It_ was_ Nickyish of you.... What if I did think of it first?
13883Killed?
13883Leaving the children in the burning house?"
13883Look here, you''d have thought me a rotter if I had n''t, would n''t you?
13883Me?
13883Michael said,"How about_ us_ when people imitate us?
13883Michael''s message was that Mummy sent her love, and would Grannie and Auntie Louie and Auntie Emmeline and Auntie Edie come to tea?
13883Mother and Father?"
13883Neither he nor Frances had wanted Nicky to go off to the West Indies and the Himalaya; but now, since clearly he must go off somewhere, why not?
13883Nine years-- ten years?"
13883No, the thing that got me, so far, more than anything was-- what d''you think?
13883Not after living with you seven years?"
13883One day Vera said to him,"Nicky, do you know that Desmond is going about a good deal with Alfred Orde- Jones?"
13883Or if he made it all up?"
13883Ought n''t Michael to have had the trumpet?
13883Ought we or ought n''t we?"
13883P.S.-How do you know I sha n''t be dead in ten or fifteen years''time?
13883Poor little Ronny, what would she do without Nicky?
13883She heard them saying:"Who are the two little boys in brown linen?"
13883She smiled at him with a sort of wonder, as if she thought:"Has he forgotten, so soon?"
13883She thought: Supposing Grannie knew all the time that Emmy was unhappy, and took a perverse pleasure in her knowledge?
13883She thought:"Why should n''t he?
13883She was going to have tea in the garden, and would they please come early?
13883She wondered whether Rosalind or the Blackadder girl could have done as much, supposing they had had a choice?
13883Shoot me?"
13883Since they were specializing in rare and foreign woods, why should n''t he specialize in rare and foreign trees?
13883Supposing I died in ten years''time, or even fifteen?
13883Supposing I sent Michael?
13883Supposing Michael became a morbid egoist, like Anthony''s brother, Bartholomew?
13883Supposing she could only have had Anthony as Vera had had Ferdie, could she have lived without him?
13883Supposing she had known it all the time?
13883Supposing she was not really soft and gentle?
13883Supposing, after all, the children should n''t grow up as she wanted them to?
13883Surely you can forgive Don- Don?"
13883Suzanne asked him then if he had had bad news?
13883That I never thought of you when you were in prison or wondered what you were feeling?
13883That is n''t a punishment, is it, Mummy?"
13883That is your game, is n''t it?
13883The children?
13883The cottage belongs to Uncle Anthony, does n''t it?"
13883The only awful thing is--""What?
13883Then-- Are you frightfully sleepy?"
13883There was to be civil war in Ireland then?
13883They had asked each other:"Are_ you_ going to fight for your country?"
13883They had taken each other aside, and it had been:"Anthony, do you understand Michael''s poems?"
13883To give up your men?"
13883To his"Well, Frances, what do you think?
13883To that she replied astonishingly,"Are you quite sure you understand about Ferdie?"
13883To- night Stephen said to him,"Did you know that RÃ © veillaud''s killed?"
13883Unless-- You have n''t forgotten the promise you made me two years ago, have you?
13883Unless-- supposing-- it had been his suffering that she had nearly died of?
13883Veronica said,"How do you know he got nothing out of it?
13883Veronica thought:"How can I tell her that I''ve got more than she thinks?
13883Vous n''avez jamais lu un seul vers de mes poèmes?
13883Was it because he was a man and knew that these things happened?
13883Was n''t she a nasty Auntie Louie?
13883Was she not, rather, clever, chock- full of the secret wisdom and the secret cruelty of sex?
13883Was she really innocent?
13883We have the right to ask_ how_ you know?
13883Well-- there''s such a thing as conversion, is n''t there?
13883What are you thinking of, Dorothy?"
13883What did he think?
13883What do they do?
13883What do you think you''re going to do there?"
13883What does it matter who''s wounded or who''s killed, as long as it is n''t one of your own kids?
13883What does it matter?"
13883What else could he say?
13883What else did you expect?"
13883What else do you imagine Alfred came for last night?
13883What else?"
13883What is it?
13883What makes you ask after Timmy?
13883What on earth could have made her do it?"
13883What right have I to say these things to him and make him cry, and send him to stupid parties that he does n''t want to go to?
13883What right have we-- sitting here safe-- to say it is n''t when they say it is?"
13883What was the good of telling them, of trying to make them realize it?
13883What''s he been up to now?"
13883What''s to prevent them bringing up five or six coppers and planting them there?
13883What''s wrong with it now?"
13883What_ could_ there be in it?"
13883When I did the drawings?
13883When he had left him Michael thought:"I wonder if he really does see?
13883When he was so unhappy?"
13883When you''ve lived in England all these years why should you go back to a place that does n''t want you?"
13883When?"
13883Where''s John- John?
13883Which?
13883Who would n''t tell one big, thumping, sacred lie, if it sends them off happy?"
13883Who would n''t?"
13883Who''s going to play with_ me_?"
13883Why ca n''t you take it as a rag?
13883Why ca n''t you tell me?"
13883Why could n''t he go to Ireland instead of Lawrence?
13883Why could n''t he have faith in Nicky too?
13883Why could n''t he say so and have done with it?
13883Why did n''t you keep quiet instead of forcing our hands?"
13883Why did n''t you two turn up before?"
13883Why not me?"
13883Why not the moment of safety?
13883Why not,"said RÃ © veillaud,"stay where you are?"
13883Why should I be?
13883Why should he?
13883Why should he?
13883Why should n''t I?"
13883Why should n''t he be a tree- expert?
13883Why should n''t he go into the places where the living trees grew and learn all about them?
13883Why should the moment of extreme danger be always the"exquisite"moment?
13883Why should they tingle at just that particular moment, the moment that makes_ animals_ afraid?
13883Why should you be so extraordinarily happy?
13883Why should you marry Headley Richards''mistress and take on his child?
13883Why?"
13883Why_ should_ you help me?
13883Will he be very long?"
13883Will she be good enough to be clear and precise herself?
13883Will she say whether she is with us or against us?
13883Will you come?"
13883Will you marry me on Friday if I get leave and a licence and fix it up tomorrow?
13883Will you walk up to Morfe with me?
13883Yet she asked continually,"Would England be drawn in?"
13883Yet surely there was the same fear in his eyes as he looked at her?
13883Yet, he wondered, after all, was it so unlike?
13883Yet, why not?
13883You are n''t afraid as long as I''m here, are you?"
13883You did n''t see him-- as you saw Ferdie?"
13883You do n''t imagine Desmond is as young as that, do you?
13883You do n''t mean to say she''s hard up?"
13883You do n''t suppose Veronica''d stop me if I wanted to go?
13883You do n''t want him to spoil it, Mummy ducky, do you?"
13883You had a brother or something with you, had n''t you?"
13883You have n''t come because you were ill or anything?"
13883You know that ripping white serge coat and skirt you sent me?
13883You never said to yourself,''Dorothy was in the big raid, I wonder what happened to her?''
13883You remember when you saw Nicky-- how everything stood still?
13883You still wo n''t agree to them?"
13883You wo n''t give the Home Secretary the tip, will you?
13883You''re corning out of it?"
13883You_ are_ going to drive me there?"
13883_ Do_ you?"
13883_ Have_ people got to understand each other?"
13883_ You_ are n''t going to try to stop me, Mother?"
13883or''Dorothy''s in prison, I wonder how she''s feeling?''
10404A picture of a Blackfoot?
10404After the buffalo-- what?
10404Ai n''t you got any sense a- tall? 10404 Am I proposing?"
10404Am I? 10404 An''who are you to tell me how to govern my ain hoose?"
10404And Tom Morse-- where, oh, where is he?
10404And West?
10404And if I wo n''t go?
10404Any luck?
10404Any particular reason?
10404Anything more on your chest?
10404Ask of the winds,''Oh, where?''
10404At what? 10404 Barney, too?"
10404But plumb pleased to see old Bully West again, eh? 10404 Can you arrest a fellow for slippin''?"
10404Can you let me have a horse for a few days and charge it to the Force? 10404 Can you see anything at all yet?"
10404Changed yore mind any? 10404 D''YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?"
10404D''you call? 10404 D''you think I do n''t know how you Americans talk?
10404Daughter of Angus McRae?
10404Dead or alive?
10404Did I do all that? 10404 Did I say I was blaming you?"
10404Did I say you were n''t?
10404Did McRae bust our barrels?
10404Did he say what he''d found out?
10404Did he send you to smash our whiskey- barrels?
10404Did it come in without a rider?
10404Did n''t I tell you I''d git you right some day? 10404 Did n''t Win tell you?
10404Did n''t you hear him make his brags about what he was gon na do to me? 10404 Did n''t you hear me callin''?"
10404Did n''t you know better than to let her do it?
10404Did they get him?
10404Did you hear yore master''s voice? 10404 Did you know he was traveling south with you-- had been since yesterday afternoon?"
10404Do I what?
10404Do n''t you think it bad for them?
10404Do you like Shakespeare?
10404Do you mean you destroyed our property for that reason?
10404Do you think he means to-- to--?
10404Do you want to be judge and jury as well as prisoner, my lad?
10404Do you?
10404Done what?
10404Ever hear the beat of that? 10404 Everybody all right?"
10404Father and Fergus-- if you want them--"Have I said I wanted them?
10404Figured I''d forget the ol''whiskey cache, eh? 10404 For me?"
10404For-- for him? 10404 Get him?"
10404Goddlemighty, d''ja mean to tell me a girl did it?
10404Gon na take away my six- shooter and handcuff me?
10404Got any idee what he was drivin''at?
10404Got me, did you?
10404Great Bear Lake-- wah- he- o- che( how far)?
10404Had breakfast?
10404Have n''t you heard? 10404 Have n''t you heard?
10404Have you seen Whaley yet to- day?
10404He did n''t hit you?
10404He is, eh?
10404He told you?
10404He wo n''t take it, will he?
10404Hell''s hinges, you ai n''t standin''there tellin''me that a Cree breed is too good for Bully West, are you?
10404Hell, what''s the use o''jawin''? 10404 His woman''s a Cree?"
10404How about it now?
10404How about this girl? 10404 How can I find out?
10404How can you watch him while you''re hunting?
10404How did you get away?
10404How do you know?
10404How done for?
10404How else can I talk? 10404 How goes it?
10404How long have you been blind?
10404How many more of you?
10404How many of these-- what is it you call''em, Mounted Police?--well, how many of''em are there in the country?
10404How''s the leg? 10404 Hurt?"
10404Hurt?
10404IS A''WELL WI''YOU, LASS?
10404If that Bully West finds me here, after he''s killed you, d''you think I can get him to let me go because it was n''t my fight?
10404If they get me, will you try to save Miss McRae? 10404 If you do n''t let me up--""You''ll do what?"
10404If you''re trying to tell me that you''re in love with some girl--"Have n''t I been trying to tell you for a year?
10404In business?
10404In what book did you read that?
10404Is Beresford?
10404Is a''well wi''you, lass?
10404Is he your rival?
10404Is he-- is he--?
10404Is it because she hates you that she wants you to come to supper to- night?
10404Is it that this iss your fight, Mistair Morse?
10404Is it the wrong night? 10404 Is it you, lass?"
10404Is n''t he?
10404Is she a half or a quarter- breed?
10404Is this a hold- up-- or what?
10404Is your wife worse?
10404It''s all very well to joke, but--"Shall I ask him?
10404Just what would I be doing?
10404Keep him in the States, will you?
10404Keep your brains whittled up, do n''t you? 10404 Kinda expensive to irrigate the prairie that way, ai n''t it?"
10404Like to crawfish, would you?
10404Looked that way to you, did it?
10404Mais-- pourquois? 10404 Man, can you never say twa- three words withoot profanity?
10404Meanin''--?
10404Meanin''?
10404Meaning?
10404No comments, son? 10404 No light at all?"
10404No what?
10404No, was he?
10404None of you other gentlemen noticed either, did you?
10404Not worth the powder, is he, sir?
10404Noticed any trouble among the Crees lately-- that is, any more than usual?
10404Now why this change of heart?
10404Of my rival?
10404Oh, I come in there, do I? 10404 Oh, she''s yours, is she?"
10404Oh, that''s it?
10404Onistah?
10404Plans? 10404 Question is, in what direction?
10404Quick on the shoot?
10404Red- coats? 10404 Scared, are you?"
10404Shall we talk of cats or kings?
10404Smashed''em with her own hands-- is that what you mean? 10404 So you took her home?"
10404Still sulky, eh? 10404 Studied the Indians any-- the effect of alcohol on them?"
10404Suits me if it does you,Tom answered cheerfully,"But where do I come in?
10404Tha''so?
10404That all?
10404That any o''my business-- or yours?
10404That so? 10404 The end of the Indian-- is that what it means?
10404Then Whaley''s dead?
10404Then you did n''t want him to go?
10404They was driftin''up the pass to say''How- d''you- do?'' 10404 Think I do n''t see yore game?
10404Think you can make a fool of Bully West? 10404 Thinks it''s bad business, does he?"
10404This yore put- in, Brad?
10404Thought you''d slip one over on the old man, eh? 10404 Took by surprise, ai n''t you?"
10404Took her back to camp, did you? 10404 Want it charged to the Force, I reckon?"
10404Was n''t it because you wanted him to?
10404Well, we gave him a chance to- night, did n''t we? 10404 West shot him?
10404West?
10404Wha''s the matter with me? 10404 Whad he mean when he said you could tell me how he''d settled with her?"
10404Whad you aimin''to do?
10404Whad you doin''here?
10404Whadjamean done for?
10404Whadjamean?
10404Whajamakin''?
10404Whajamean for me?
10404Whaley?
10404What aboot them?
10404What can any father do more than he has done for me? 10404 What church you been j''inin'', C.N.?"
10404What d''you reckon I better do? 10404 What did he do to you?"
10404What did you do?
10404What do you think?
10404What do you want?
10404What do you want?
10404What do you want?
10404What does this mean? 10404 What else can he do?
10404What for?
10404What for?
10404What good will he be if you find West? 10404 What in Halifax--?"
10404What in the devil was bitin''you, Morse? 10404 What picture in what locket?"
10404What was the real reason he did n''t come?
10404What you doin''here?
10404What you gon na do with me?
10404What''d I tell you about that boy? 10404 What''ll be the meanin''o''this?"
10404What''ll we do if-- if there''s a blizzard?
10404What''ll you do?
10404What''s ailin''you?
10404What''s doin''?
10404What''s it all about, McRae? 10404 What''s it matter among friends anyhow?"
10404What''s that? 10404 What''s that?
10404What''s that?
10404What''s that?
10404What''s that?
10404What''s that?
10404What''s this I hear about Bully West escaping from jail?
10404What''s wrong with him? 10404 What''s yore play?
10404What''s your rush? 10404 What?"
10404What?
10404When did I hire out as your flunkey, West?
10404When it''s finished who gets it?
10404Where are we?
10404Where are you taking me?
10404Where did you hear all that?
10404Where do they get it?
10404Where have you been?
10404Where in Heligoland you come from?
10404Where is Father?
10404Where is she?
10404Where were they? 10404 Where you at, Dawn?
10404Where you been all this time?
10404Where your snowshoes?
10404Where''ll I go?
10404Where''s the liquor?
10404Where''s your father''s camp?
10404Who do you think deserves it?
10404Why did n''t you knock?
10404Why did n''t you wake me, Win? 10404 Why did you do it?"
10404Why do n''t you send for your friend Morse?
10404Why do you say that? 10404 Why do you want to saw off an old maid on that two- fisted man you''ve knew ever since he was knee- high to a grasshopper?
10404Why make two bites of a cherry, sir? 10404 Why must n''t I?"
10404Why wo n''t she?
10404Why would she do that? 10404 Why?"
10404Why?
10404Why?
10404Why?
10404Why?
10404Will you accept?
10404Will you be responsible for him?
10404Will you leave my daughter oot o''your talk, man?
10404Will you show McRae too-- and all his friends, as well as the North- West Mounted? 10404 With-- without a trial?
10404Without food?
10404Wo n''t have a thing to do, will I?
10404Wo n''t talk, eh? 10404 Yes, but-- Do you mean that maybe it has something to do with me?
10404Yes?
10404You Jessie McRae?
10404You aimin''to-- to murder me?
10404You could n''t have done it better if you''d done it on purpose, could you?
10404You did come, then?
10404You do n''t know where they are, of course?
10404You do n''t mean you''re going up there alone to bring back that-- that wolf- man?
10404You do, eh? 10404 You figure on obeyin''orders and lettin''it go at that?"
10404You gave him your word on that, Jess?
10404You goin''too?
10404You gon na sleep all day? 10404 You mean-- about the whipping?"
10404You ready?
10404You smashed my whiskey- barrels?
10404You still intend to arrest me?
10404You tryin''to scare me?
10404You went to this trader''s camp and ruined his goods?
10404You will have yore li''l joke, eh? 10404 You will hide in the woods, wo n''t you, so they ca n''t find you?"
10404You will, wo n''t you?
10404You''re going home?
10404You''re here, eh? 10404 You''re not a demonstrative husband, then?"
10404You-- all well?
10404You-- you and he have n''t had any-- quarrel?
10404You?
10404You?
10404''M''stands for McRae, does n''t it?"
10404Ai n''t I jus''been tellin''you how he wrecked the whole show-- how he sold out to that bunch of spies the Canadian Gov''ment has done sent up there?"
10404Ai n''t I knowed him since he was a li''l''bit of a tad?
10404Ai n''t none of you got any guts?"
10404All that will take money, is it not so?"
10404Am I lying awake nights thinking about him, do you think?"
10404Am I to go up an''ask Bully West where he keeps his fire- water cached?
10404Am I?
10404An''what do they want?
10404And after that, where?"
10404And even if they had supplies, how could she live alone for days with this man in a cabin eight by ten?
10404And how did you get''em without a six- shooter?"
10404And how many?
10404And how was it possible that they would not find him?
10404And when did I do it?"
10404And why do n''t West ever stray a foot outa the path that''s broke?
10404Any advice you''d like to give?"
10404Any objections?"
10404Any one would''a''been now, would n''t they?
10404Anyways, after what Lemoine found out--""What did he find out?
10404Are ye talkin''havers, lass?"
10404Beresford?"
10404But how''d you like to be sitting down to one of Jessie McRae''s suppers?
10404But if she had n''t flown, what had become of her?
10404But not as bad as it did, does it?
10404But what of her?
10404But why should any one do such a foolish, wasteful thing as this, one to so little purpose in its destructiveness?
10404But why?
10404CHAPTER V MORSE JUMPS UP TROUBLE"Threw me down, did n''t you?"
10404CHAPTER XIX"D''YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?"
10404CHAPTER XXVIII"IS A''WELL WI''YOU, LASS?"
10404Can you do that if the trappers-- friends of McRae, nearly all of''em-- carry the word of what you did to this girl?"
10404Could he by sheer dominance of will change her opinion of him?
10404Could he have made a mistake?
10404Could n''t say fairer than that, could I?"
10404Could she do this dreadful thing, even to save honor and life, though she knew the man must be twice a murderer?
10404D''you s''pose I have n''t eyes in my head?"
10404D''you wonder she hates me?"
10404Did I bring you up i''the fear o''the Lord to slash at men wi''your dirk an''fight wi''them like a wild limmer?
10404Did he despise her?
10404Did he think she was an ordinary squaw, one to be whipped as a matter of discipline by her owner?
10404Did he?
10404Did n''t I promise Angus McRae I''d pay him back aplenty for kickin''me outa his hide camp?
10404Did n''t he drag him back with cuffs on''most a year later?
10404Did n''t he go up Peace River after Pierre Poulette?
10404Did n''t he make him smash the barrels?
10404Did n''t he take away his six- gun from him and bring him along like he had n''t any mind of his own?
10404Did there really live men so heartless that they would not lift a hand to snatch a child from a ferocious wolf?
10404Do I have to tell you all my plans?
10404Do I look peaked?
10404Do n''t hardly pay to hold grudges, does it?
10404Do n''t we get any grub?
10404Do n''t you know better''n to jump up trouble thataway?"
10404Do n''t you know you ca n''t catapult through a man''s tummy with a young pine tree and not injure his physical geography?"
10404Do n''t you think?"
10404Do you know what you''re up against?
10404Do you?"
10404Earned it, did n''t you?
10404Figured you could gimme the double- cross an''git away with it?
10404For what purpose?
10404Get me?
10404Great American Desert?
10404Guess you better go home an''cool off, had n''t you?
10404Guess you''re a little hot under the collar, ai n''t you?
10404Had he not seen her go straight to his arms after her horrible experience with West?
10404Has he gone crazy?"
10404Have I got ta starve while you pound yore ear?"
10404Have n''t you rather taken the poor fellow for granted?"
10404He could n''t very well resent that, could he?
10404He had n''t a thing to do with it, had he?"
10404He''s always happy, is n''t he?
10404He''s not Angus McRae''s son, is he?"
10404Hear me?"
10404How about it?"
10404How about you?"
10404How am I going to hang it on them?
10404How can it?
10404How could I have any objections?"
10404How did it happen?"
10404How far would the gambler go in opposition to the other?
10404How would they live if a blizzard blew up and snowed them in?
10404How''re tricks?"
10404How''s the programme suit you?"
10404Hungry?"
10404I said, what was yore squaw name?"
10404If he says so, is n''t that enough?"
10404If there''s shootin''I''m in on it, ai n''t I?"
10404Is he sick, d''you reckon?"
10404Is he-- is he killed?"
10404Is n''t that enough?
10404Is n''t that just fine?"
10404Is n''t this whiskey- smuggling bad business all round?"
10404Is that it?"
10404Is that why I''m asked this time?"
10404Is there a girl living that would n''t?
10404Is this what he wants?
10404Lemoine?"
10404Like to meet him?"
10404Malbrouck s''en va- t- en guerre, eh?
10404Morse, are n''t you?"
10404Morse?"
10404Nobody left but the Hudson''s Bay Company trappers, d''you reckon?"
10404Not soldiers, are they?"
10404Now have I, McRae?
10404Or did the big bully mean to manhandle him?
10404Or forward?
10404Or is n''t it?"
10404Or make a break for a getaway?
10404Or think her officious?
10404Or was his warning merely the snarl of one wolf at another?
10404Or what?"
10404Out of grub, d''you think?"
10404Passin''it up to Uncle Newt, eh?"
10404Question now is, do I get a gun?"
10404Shall we handcuff him nights?"
10404Since then-- well, you could n''t call him a cheerful traveling companion, could you?
10404Since when?"
10404Sneaked home to try to square yourself with the old man, did ya?"
10404Still, since she was his friend, ought she not to just drop an offhand hint that he was a more useful citizen where he was than in the Mounted?
10404Still--"What''s eatin''you?"
10404Talk about Porcupine Creek, eh?
10404That does n''t take us very far, does it?"
10404That the idee you''re figurin''on makin''me live up to?"
10404Then where was she?
10404Then, abruptly, he snapped out:"Who was responsible for that crazy business of you coming out into the open?"
10404Then,"D''you mean light out to- night?"
10404They sell liquor to Fergus and to--""Gin that''s true, is it your business to ram- stam in an''destroy ither folks''property?
10404Think I ca n''t see you?
10404Think I do n''t know?
10404Think I''d make a good deacon?"
10404Think I''m gon na leave her to mush out an''put the police on my trail?
10404Think you can bust up our cargo an''get away with it?
10404Think you can make out?"
10404Tough sleddin''?"
10404Un''erstand, Stomak- o- sox?
10404Un''erstand?"
10404Un''erstand?"
10404Un''erstand?"
10404Un''erstand?"
10404Understand?"
10404Understand?"
10404Understand?"
10404Was he playing a deep game of his own in which she was merely a pawn?
10404Was he sorry because he had forced her father to horsewhip her?
10404Was he, away down out of sight, the kind of man toward women that West and Whaley were?
10404Was it likely she would listen to any regrets, any explanations?
10404Was it possible for one to take such a terrific mauling and not succumb?
10404Was it to be a gun- play?
10404Was it to be now?
10404Was that the reason he had held himself so aloof from her?
10404Was there a mystery about his life?
10404Was there another way up from behind?
10404Was there any use in going out on such a wild- hare chase?
10404Was this lone traveler West?
10404Was this red- coat alone?
10404We''d better find out whose picture it is, had n''t we?"
10404Were all the fair skins mad?
10404Were n''t you expectin''me?"
10404Were they galloping into the Happy Hunting Ground the Indians prayed for?
10404Whaley?"
10404Whaley?"
10404What about you?
10404What are you dodgin''for, girl?
10404What are you driving at, Win Beresford?"
10404What are you hanging around for?
10404What assurance had he that he would find him still alive on his return?
10404What business we got monkeyin''with their scalping sociables?
10404What called him out of town on a hurry- up trip of a few hours?"
10404What could he do?
10404What could this woman of the picture be to me?"
10404What did he ever do to you that was so doggoned mean?"
10404What do ye put the damage at?"
10404What do you aim to do with yore friend Mighty- Nigh- Lose- His- Scalp?
10404What do you know about the smashing of our barrels?"
10404What do you say?
10404What do you want me to do-- go and thank him kindly for having me whipped?"
10404What for?
10404What had become of Jessie?
10404What in hell''d I ever do to you?"
10404What made you think so?"
10404What manner of girl was she?
10404What of the girl he had seen at her father''s camp, the heart''s desire of the rugged old Scotchman?
10404What right has he to interfere with me?"
10404What say?"
10404What should he do?
10404What trick did Bully have up his sleeve?
10404What was McRae''s girl doing at the camp of the officer?
10404What was he thinking?
10404What was the motive in the back of his mind?
10404What was there to say?
10404What was to be done then?
10404What white man had any business in these woods?
10404What would come of their flight?
10404What''ll we do?"
10404What''ll you do if I find I''ve got no time to go to Fort Macleod with you?"
10404What''s doin''?"
10404What''s eatin''you?"
10404What''s eatin''you?"
10404What''s in a name?"
10404What''s in the house?"
10404What''s my job in the firm?
10404What''s that mean?
10404What''s the use of foolin''yourself?
10404When I draw this gun I can put a bullet through your head and ride away?"
10404When the plains knew them no more, how would the Sioux and the Blackfeet and the Piegans live?
10404When you see him again-- if you ever do-- will you tell him I did exactly as he said?"
10404Where are you taking me, you damned spies?"
10404Where did Whaley go to- day?
10404Where do you figure you got a license to expect Bully West to listen to Sunday- school pap about being good to you?
10404Where do you want me to take you?"
10404Where had the two free traders taken the girl?
10404Where is this blind tiger you''re raidin''?"
10404Where was he taking her?
10404Where was he?...
10404Where you been for a year and heaven knows how many months?"
10404Where''s his camp?"
10404Where''s the McRae girl?"
10404Where''s the girl?
10404Where''s the girl?"
10404Which of the statues, laws, and ordinances of Queen Vic have I been bustin''without knowin''of them?"
10404Who could tell?
10404Who in all the North did not know of it?
10404Who is it?
10404Who said, it was a''W''?"
10404Who was he?
10404Who was it?
10404Who''s in charge of this outfit, anyhow, young fellow, me lad?"
10404Who''s it for?"
10404Who?
10404Why ai n''t I good enough for yore half- breed litter?"
10404Why did he do that?
10404Why did he not do this?
10404Why did n''t they try to explain?
10404Why did n''t you bring her to me?
10404Why had he brought her here?
10404Why had he done it?
10404Why had not the Blackfoot shot him from the tree?
10404Why not give him a chance to be friends?"
10404Why not?
10404Why should I take advantage of a hold I have on her generosity?
10404Why should he have to feel so long for that stick?
10404Why should he leave that business to overtake Jessie McRae?
10404Why should she interfere?
10404Why whine about what must be?
10404Why, where''s Barney?"
10404Why?
10404Why?
10404Why?
10404Why?
10404Will he be hidin''oot, do you think?"
10404Will you dance with me?"
10404Will you go with me or stay with him?"
10404Will you make''em all eat out of your hands?"
10404Will you no''drap in for a crack the nicht?"
10404Will you please tak the road?"
10404Wo n''t that satisfy you?"
10404Wo n''t you, please?"
10404Would she tamely accept Bully West for her master and go to his tent as his squaw?
10404Would the Lonesome Lands become even more desolate than they were now?
10404Would this man keep his parole or not?
10404Would you like that?"
10404Y''understand?
10404Yet if he''s not drunk, what''s got into him?"
10404You lookin''for better odds, Harv?"
10404You there?"
10404You wo n''t mind walking?"
10404You would n''t think any girl would object to that, would you?"
10404You''re Bully West''s woman, un''erstand?
10404You''re not by any chance lookin''for trouble?"
10404Your firm and his trade back and forth, do n''t they?"
10404on that case?"
18505),and to make things as smooth as possible for VA. Now, as I''m warden, may I propose that we have some fun before we go?
18505All? 18505 And I meant to do a hundred things; but what''s the use of talking about them now?"
18505And give ourselves up like lost children? 18505 And suppose the wind were to blow it away from you, what then?"
18505And why are n''t you all in bed?
18505And why should n''t you be?
18505And you''re not going to forget it, are you, Grandfather?
18505Another autograph album? 18505 Are Hereward and I to go in to Grovebury every day?"
18505Are n''t you coming, Ingred?
18505Are n''t_ you_ coming?
18505Are we all here? 18505 Are you staying here?"
18505Are you sure it''s Waverley over there? 18505 Bugle?"
18505But are we to gush over every bore?
18505But how are we hostelites going to manage our share?
18505But just for once----"What''s the matter, Doris?
18505But suppose they do n''t love you from a child?
18505But suppose you''re caught?
18505But surely the Red Cross cleared out ages ago, and the whole place has been done up? 18505 But, Egbert,"said Ingred, frankly puzzled,"could n''t you have got Miss Bertrand to tell Dad where you were?
18505But-- but-- where were you?
18505But_ why_ are n''t they going back?
18505By ourselves?
18505By the bye, will there be a''Strangers''Gallery, so that we can come and listen to you? 18505 Ca n''t we ask anybody?"
18505Could n''t we possibly stop here?
18505Could n''t we stow them into the car, and take them along with us?
18505Could n''t you do it in the morning? 18505 Dare I go and fetch it?"
18505Did you know that a ghost haunts the garden?
18505Do the Red Cross want it again?
18505Do you know,she announced,"that Miss Strong is engaged to Dr. Linton, and they''re to be married in the holidays?"
18505Do you think he''s still there? 18505 Even if we apologized?"
18505Has it ever struck you that the hostel would be a very easy place to burgle?
18505Have n''t you got your tickets?
18505Have you seen the class- rooms?
18505Have you suddenly gone mad?
18505How about English spelling?
18505How about Miss Bertrand?
18505How could we possibly get them?
18505How do you like it?
18505How will you guarantee she''s mild?
18505How_ did_ you manage it? 18505 How_ did_ you think of them?"
18505I wonder who''ll have her form next term?
18505I''m an idiot at dancing, but would you mind sitting out a few with me?
18505I''ve been wanting to ask you this-- are we going back to Rotherwood after the holidays?
18505If you had lived in the ancient Abbey, I should n''t have been able to walk about the garden with you, should I?
18505Ingred Saxon, what have you there? 18505 Is anyone dead?"
18505Is it as bad as all that?
18505Is music taboo?
18505Is n''t that a Teddy Bear in your pocket? 18505 Is n''t there a signpost?"
18505Is the man who loves you first always as good as gold?
18505Last year, when we had Lennie Peters and Sophy Aston, we did a thing or two, did n''t we? 18505 Lilas?"
18505May we butt in?
18505Might I? 18505 Not alone?"
18505Not say anything?
18505Now, how are we going to get out of this field?
18505Oh, Dr. Linton, may I ask you to do something for me?
18505Oh, please, is that Waverley over there?
18505Shall I go and complain to Miss Burd?
18505Shall I?
18505Shall we go to the police station?
18505So you like the house in its new dress?
18505So you want to hear what it''s like to play with an organ?
18505Somebody said just now that it''s beginning to snow, and you do n''t want to have it spoilt before you get it home, do you?
18505Sure you do n''t mind?
18505The White Nun, do you mean? 18505 Then which way_ shall_ we go?"
18505To go back there ourselves?
18505Verity, what was a courtier doing rambling about a forest in a blue dressing- gown? 18505 Want to telephone without paying?
18505Well, could n''t you do some during the Christmas holidays?
18505Were they allowed to take hot bricks to bed with them in their cells? 18505 What about me at that odious Grammar School?"
18505What about this election?
18505What are a few old bones to Red Ridge Barrow? 18505 What do_ you_ know about Miss Bertrand?"
18505What else have you inside that case? 18505 What have we got here?
18505What is it?
18505What is the meaning of this?
18505What possessed you to drop all your music, child?
18505What possessed you to go and lose the tennis- court for the form?
18505What sort of things do you mean?
18505What''s going to be done?
18505What''s that queer stone box thing on the wall?
18505What''s the meaning of all this, I''d like to know?
18505What_ are_ we to act?
18505What_ are_ we to do?
18505What_ are_ you doing, girls?
18505Whatever have we been and gone and done now?
18505Where are we going to live, then?
18505Where are you girls?
18505Where are you girls?
18505Which are we having first, the election or the tea?
18505Who are those?
18505Who is he?
18505Who says we''re no good at games now? 18505 Who was it ate my goldfinch?
18505Who''s afraid?
18505Who''s the girl? 18505 Why did she fly out like that?"
18505Why not? 18505 Why not?
18505Why should n''t I?
18505Why should we say anything about it?
18505Why, surely Father''s the very last person you want to know?
18505Would the Prioress kick up rough?
18505Would you rather go indoors?
18505Yes, did n''t you know_ that_?
18505You do n''t mean to say Egbert''s finished mending the motor bike? 18505 You''ll come and see me again?"
18505_ You!_ But why you?
18505''Will she pass the rival back safely?''
18505And a ball too?
18505And cusn''t ee zee''em burrn?
18505And may I ask Ingred to stay with us for the week- end?
18505And who is your friend?"
18505And who would have wheeled it?"
18505Are n''t you thrilled?
18505Are there any other impertinent questions you''d like to ask?
18505Are you all in your beds?
18505Are you game?"
18505Been killing chickens?"
18505Beethoven?
18505Betty too?
18505But who''s going to do the sallying business?"
18505But you''re not a doctor?"
18505By the by, I suppose you''ll be getting in Rotherwood soon?
18505By the by, now the war''s over, and we''ve all got our own again, I suppose you''re going back to Rotherwood, are n''t you?"
18505Can anybody get me any from anywhere?"
18505Can we ask anybody?"
18505Can you manage to get in?
18505Could a few short months have indeed effected so magnificent a change of front?
18505Could n''t you give some of us a lift?"
18505Did n''t that girl say:''Keep along to the left''?
18505Did n''t you, Dad?"
18505Do n''t I like him?
18505Do n''t you like the decorations in the corridor?
18505Do n''t you think it would suit me?
18505Do n''t you think that would sandwich things best?"
18505Do n''t you think they''re nice?"
18505Do you think, some day when you are in the Abbey, you could let her?
18505Does he only design houses, or does he go in for anything bigger?"
18505Down in Grovebury?
18505Have n''t seen her yet, but they say she''s nice, though I''d rather stick to Miss Strong, would n''t you?"
18505Have we been all that time feeding?
18505Have you asphalt courts here, and do you play in the winter?
18505Have you read the paper about the Rainbow League?"
18505He scared me quite enough sitting by my side and saying:''Shall we take this again now?''
18505Her schoolmates took her unwillingness for modesty, but in her heart of hearts her main thought was:"Why should_ I_ help this new girl to show off?"
18505How am I to know which is which?"
18505How could we possibly get some money for Athelstane''s books?
18505How could you?
18505How did my dress look?
18505How do you like our new diggings?
18505How is your cold, Hereward?
18505How long are you staying at Lynstones, Ingred?"
18505How_ can_ a fellow study in the midst of such a racket?
18505I expect when you''re back you''ll be giving all sorts of delightful parties, wo n''t you?
18505I say, are n''t you fearfully hungry?
18505I say, your Prioress never found us out, did she?
18505I suppose you''ll be motoring, Bess?
18505I told you Ingred was to be with us, did n''t I?
18505I wonder exactly what you mean by''equality?''
18505I wonder what the Dickens put it into his head?"
18505I''ve put my foot in it, have n''t I?
18505Ingred, old sport, are you coming to help me, or are you not?
18505Is n''t anybody in?"
18505Is n''t anyone here?"
18505Is n''t it glorious here?
18505Is n''t the Snark looking quite pretty this afternoon?
18505Is n''t there some legend or other about her?"
18505Is she still flying on, the ball before her?''
18505Is the first fascinating man I meet the true lover or the burglar?
18505Is there any bridge near?"
18505It will be rather sport to go to the new buildings at last, wo n''t it?
18505It''s a frightful business at the hostel to cram in all our practicing, is n''t it?
18505It''s been quite a ripping concert, and I''m sorry to break it up, but you understand, do n''t you?"
18505Look here"( in sudden compunction),"am I keeping you from a partner?"
18505M''Dowell?
18505May I read you some of the things it has done during the year?
18505Nice state of things, was n''t it?"
18505Now the strain of the war is over, are we going to let all this splendid spirit drop?
18505Now then, what d''you say to this?"
18505Now then,"( turning to the hostesses),"who else can do anything?
18505Of course you''ll ask me:''Well, and how are we going to help?''
18505Oh, I say, what are all the blinds down for?"
18505Oh, I say, where?"
18505Oh, would n''t it have been fun?
18505Or a subscription?
18505Or have you got already?"
18505Perhaps some of the Juniors had forced themselves in?
18505Rachmaninoff?
18505Self- heal?
18505Shall we have music, or games?
18505Shall we try?"
18505Shall you be very disappointed when I tell you''No''?"
18505She brought out a verse of it now with great effect:"Cusn''t ee zee the ca- akes, man?
18505So like her, is n''t it?"
18505Some removal, this, is n''t it?
18505Subscriptions?
18505Suppose each of us tries to let this be the best year we''ve ever had?
18505Suppose we fight our own battles as we fought our country''s?
18505Tell me, whatever''s the matter?"
18505That question was answered by Miss Giles, who beckoned to Ingred in the hall, and said briefly:"Ingred, will you fetch your hockey- stick and pads?"
18505That would be something worth doing, would n''t it?"
18505The Bourrée?
18505The one that haunts the College gardens?"
18505Then he demanded in withering tones:"May I ask what is the meaning of this?"
18505Violet, will you shut the door?
18505Was Bess to supplant her in everything?
18505Was it the verger returning from his tea?
18505Was that somebody moving about in the darkness of the hall?
18505Were they going to follow her into her retreat, and catch her?
18505Were they going to stay talking all night?
18505What about that bet?
18505What about that prize?"
18505What are we to do?"
18505What are you doing here?"
18505What have you got in that folio?
18505What is one to do with such a family?"
18505What made you think of''socman''?"
18505What was that sound coming up the stairs from the hall below?
18505What was that, stealing from under the shelter of the hawthorn tree?
18505What would you do?"
18505What''s that story about the ghost?"
18505What''s the use of my going to College if I have n''t the proper textbooks?
18505Where are we going to live?
18505Where''s the Mater?
18505Wherever have you taken yourself off to?"
18505Which were they to take?
18505Who knows?
18505Who went into the Abbey Church, I should like to know, and sat in a pew for ever so long, and looked tender nothings?
18505Who''d have thought he was just going to pop his head up?
18505Who''d have thought of seeing you?"
18505Who''ll play your accompaniment?
18505Who''s game to run six inches in front of a mild old cow''s horns, while somebody urges her on from behind?"
18505Whoever on earth is that?"
18505Why are you in such a panic to get rid of him?
18505Why ca n''t people tell the truth?"
18505Why could n''t you tell me so before?"
18505Why did n''t they send her away to a boarding school?
18505Why did n''t you keep with the rest of the school, as you ought to have done?"
18505Why does n''t somebody bring out a patent for sweet- scented glue?"
18505Why does n''t somebody invent one?
18505Why had her father let the vinery with the house?
18505Why not drop your work for once and come with us?
18505Why should n''t a footballer look gallant and present trophies?
18505Why should not we all wear fancy dress?
18505Why should we not_ all_ enjoy it some time?
18505Why should you look glad to see a person when you''re not?"
18505Will you come with me?
18505Will you give me power to do this on my own, or must I call a special committee on Monday to discuss it first, before I put it to the school?"
18505Wo n''t he look silly when I bring it out before the family?
18505Wo n''t you march with the family regiment, and keep the colors flying?"
18505You can remember that?"
18505added Cissie Barnes,"Do you remember playing''Oranges and Lemons''once with the Sixth?
18505has she lost the ball?''
18505will you swap with us for rock buns?"
23800But what self- respecting violinist could endure such profanation without striking a blow for his fanes?
23800Can he have referred to the limbo of classicism?
23800What would part- song writers do if the Vikings had never been invented?
23800Where is the piano- piece since Beethoven that has the depth, the breadth, the height of this huge solemnity?
23800Where would they get their wild choruses for men, with a prize to the singer that makes the most noise?
23800With the exception of a certain excess of dissonance for a love- song,"Wilt Thou Be My Dearie?"
21232Alive?
21232And so it was Ambrose who went back, eh?
21232And why were n''t you frightened, Ambrose?
21232And yet you went?
21232And you miss it?
21232Animals?
21232Are n''t you glad, Andrew,asked Nancy,"that Molly married the clown?"
21232Are you going to_ tell_ her we broke him?
21232But ca n''t we do anything?
21232But you wo n''t take her to the circus again, I should think?
21232Can she talk?
21232Davie,said Miss Grey,"where did you hear that word?"
21232Did''oo like it, Andoo?
21232Do n''t be naughty, Dickie,said Mrs Hawthorn reprovingly;"say,` How do you do?''
21232Do you all think that?
21232Do you suppose it''s ill?
21232Do you think Farmer Hatchard knows?
21232Do you want anything, Penelope?
21232Do you want it very much, Davie?
21232Guy Fawkes?
21232Had anyone seen Miss Dickie and the dorg that arternoon?
21232Has you ever seen a circus, Andoo?
21232How many other little pigs are there?
21232I say,interrupted Pennie, putting down her book,"what do you all like best when you go to Nearminster?
21232I think that sounds just the sort of place he would feel at home in,said their father;"and now, would you like me to tell you where I got him?"
21232I want to know just one thing,put in Nancy;"if it''s dark when she comes, how does she see to read the music?"
21232If it was not you, Pennie,she said gently,"who was it?"
21232If you please, ma''am,she said,"could Cook speak to you in the kitchen about the preserving?"
21232In the dark?
21232Is it alive? 21232 Is mammy at the circus?"
21232Is n''t he lovely?
21232Is there-- is there,asked Andrew hesitating,"two big` M''s''wrote just inside the linin''?"
21232Is you fool now, Andoo?
21232It means being kind, does n''t it?
21232Like that face Andrew made for us out of a hollow pumpkin, with a candle inside?
21232Might you''appen to have the feller one to this?
21232Please, Davie,she said humbly,"wo n''t you forgive me?
21232Should you call her very ugly?
21232So I went into the corner and moved away a harp which was standing there, and what do you think I saw? 21232 Then you''ve forgiven her?"
21232This is Pennie,said her mother, and Ethelwyn immediately held out her hand, and said,"How do you do?"
21232Truly and faithfully?
21232Well, Davie,said she,"what is this wonderful thing?
21232Well, but why does n''t she?
21232Well, do n''t I tell you I''m going to?
21232Well, little dear,she said,"an''what do you want?"
21232Well, what is it?
21232Well-- you know it''s Nancy''s birthday soon, and she has to choose what present I shall give her?
21232What does Dickie want?
21232What might be yer name, in case he should ax''me?
21232What shall we call him, Pennie?
21232What shall we do now?
21232What tune does she play?
21232What''s that?
21232When has you seen it?
21232Where is she, then?
21232Where is''oor''ittle gal?
21232Where is''oor''ittle gal?
21232Where''s Antony?
21232Where?
21232Where_ shall_ you put them, father?
21232Who did it?
21232Who''s Dickie?
21232Why did''oo lose her?
21232Why did''oo lose''oor''ittle gal?
21232Why do n''t you burn it?
21232Why do you call it the Antony pig?
21232Why do you keep a guy like that?
21232Why does n''t she go into the drawing- room and play the piano?
21232Why does she only play when the wind blows?
21232Why not? 21232 Why were they burned?"
21232Why, whatever can that be, father?
21232Why?
21232Why?
21232Why?
21232Wo n''t you run out, little master?
21232Would n''t it be a joke,said Ethelwyn laughing,"to pick them?
21232Would` Goblinet''do?
21232You are thinking of` hospital,''which is a different thing, though both words come from the same idea; can you tell, Pennie?
21232You might perhaps go two or three steps, and then you''d scream out and run away; would n''t he, Pennie?
21232You''re fond of Nancy, Davie? 21232 You''re not angry, are you, father?"
21232You_ will_ take care of him, wo n''t you?
21232And what was a circus?
21232And you look mournful; what''s the matter?"
21232At any rate it was useless to stand there in silence looking at that little bowed head; would it be better to sit down by him, perhaps?
21232Because you were careless and forgot David''s pig I shall give you nothing this year?''"
21232But I mean, what are you called for short?"
21232But having begun she felt she must go on, and taking advantage of a little lull she presently said:"Was it a nice pig, David?"
21232But she felt almost as low- spirited as ever, for what was the good of seeing Ambrose if she could not make him understand about the Goblin Lady?
21232But what_ took_ him there all alone?
21232Could it be the Goblin Lady?
21232Could she possibly have gone into the village alone?
21232Could this really be Miss Unity?
21232David, too, turned the general attention another way just then; he came gravely up to Ethelwyn and inquired:"Do you like animals?"
21232Do n''t you mean_ pug_?"
21232Do n''t you remember, too, how kind she was when Dickie was so rude to her?
21232Do you always wear pinafores?"
21232Do you know what that means?"
21232Do you know why you''re so unhappy just now?"
21232Does your mistress want all those umbrellas?"
21232Ethelwyn looked round, with her little pointed nose held rather high in the air:"Why do n''t you keep it neater?"
21232Ethelwyn made no answer; she was attentively observing Pennie''s blue serge frock, and presently asked:"What''s your best dress?"
21232Every morning she asked:"Is he better, mother?
21232He had been carefully warned not to excite Ambrose, and what_ could_ be worse than this sort of thing?
21232He was listening, and she felt encouraged to proceed:"But though it''s hard, there is something else that is much worse; do you know what that is?"
21232How could she,_ could_ she have done it?
21232How old is she?
21232How would you like to go about with just a shawl over your head, like them gypsies we saw the other day?"
21232Is he for me?
21232Is that a bargain?"
21232May I go and sit with him?"
21232May I really?"
21232Miss Unity stopped a moment to think; then she said:"Would you be happier, David, if Nancy were to be punished?"
21232Pennie soon left off listening to her, and bent her undivided attention to the matter-- how to buy seven presents with five pence halfpenny?
21232So I went back straight to where I left her with the woman, an''--""What does''oo stop for?"
21232So, though I had a job to finish afore that night, I said I''d take her, an''I left my work, an''put on her red boots--""Yed boots?"
21232Something alive?"
21232The circus was to stop two days-- might the children go to- morrow afternoon?
21232Then all at once they began to pour forth a torrent of questions:-- What is she like?
21232Then turning to her sister with an alarmed face,"Was it you?"
21232Then what could be more delicious than to make a snow man or a snow palace?
21232Was he brave, he wondered?
21232Were n''t you sorry?"
21232What can the child mean?"
21232What can you pretend?"
21232What could it mean?
21232What do you say, Davie?"
21232What for?
21232What for?
21232What is her name?
21232What was it?
21232What would David call the pig if he did get it?
21232Where are you taking it?"
21232Where does she live?
21232Where would it live?
21232Which was the circus?
21232Who could say that some careless hand might not leave the door of the sty open or insecurely fastened during his absence?
21232Would it_ always_ be twelve o''clock that morning?
21232Would n''t Dickie like to run upstairs now?"
21232Would the pig live?
21232You always fancied pigs, did n''t you now?"
21232_ Could_ he go on?
21232continued David, edging still closer up to her;"you wo n''t forget?"
21232exclaimed Ethelwyn wildly;"could n''t we stick it on?
21232exclaimed the vicar in a discouraged voice,"is that to go?
21232said Nancy;"must we call her all of it?"
21232she cried,"what_ shall_ I do?"
21232she said in a loud voice of surprise,"where''s the mandarin?"
21232she said;"what does he want them for?"
21232they wondered, and if it did, would their father let David have it?
21232what was that funny noise?
22095But Mildred,Nona asked, guessing at many details that her friend did not mention,"how did you finally get away at last?
22095But he has recovered?
22095But is n''t there anything I can do for you, Sonya?
22095But what connection have you with Sonya Valesky? 22095 But why are we to be sent back to Petrograd?"
22095But you do n''t mean that you continued inside the fort to the very end?
22095But you, surely you cherish no such ideas?
22095Did General Alexis agree to a new nurse for that reason, Mildred?
22095Did you accept him?
22095Do n''t you know me, Sonya?
22095Do you mean, Mildred, that our services as Red Cross nurses are not considered valuable?
22095Do you not suppose I have thought over all those things? 22095 Failed in your nursing?
22095For goodness''sake, Mildred, where did you get that magnificent garment?
22095Has Colonel Dalton ever married?
22095Have you pity only for wounded soldiers? 22095 I wonder if this General Alexis is more fond of Mildred than he would be of any nurse who might have cared for him?"
22095If you are returning to the fortress and will permit me, I should like to go back with you?
22095Knew my mother?
22095Lieutenant Hume? 22095 Then you have not forgotten me?"
22095Then you think Siberia a light punishment?
22095Then you will do nothing to help?
22095This is wonderfully kind of you, Nona?
22095What did one woman more or less count in times like these?
22095What is one woman more or less in times like these? 22095 What on earth do you suppose he can be saying to Mill?"
22095What reason was given; have we failed in any duty or service since our arrival at Grovno?
22095What then do you think will become of Sonya? 22095 Where did you come from?
22095Why, Lady Dorian, what has brought you to Russia? 22095 Will you wait a moment, please?"
22095Wo n''t either one of you say she is glad to see me?
22095You are just homesick, are n''t you, and longing for some one who shall be nameless? 22095 You care very much about this woman, this Sonya Valesky, Miss Thornton?"
22095You do n''t think, General, that there is anything that could be done to have Sonya Valesky pardoned, do you?
22095You mean about Sonya Valesky?
22095You mean,Nona asked quietly,"that you were invited to be a guest at the Czar''s own palace and you declined?"
22095You remember Monsieur Renay, whom Mademoiselle Barbara named''Monsieur Bebé?'' 22095 You say that she is a friend of yours and that it will bring you great distress if she must suffer the penalty of her mistakes?
22095You will come with me for a little?
22095All I ask is that I may write you and some day in happier times may I come to see my American friend?"
22095Also would it be possible for her to be spared from caring for the soldiers to look after her woman friend?
22095Am I to have a bed or the cot in this sitting room?"
22095And have you come directly here from Grovno?
22095And it is for that reason you believe I wish to have you sent away from my fortress?"
22095And why should the young Russian officer have warned her against his own friend?
22095Are you to go on nursing him or to see him again?"
22095But I ca n''t see why she should be punished because she has a higher ideal than other people?"
22095But how was she to know how much or how little an American girl understands of life and conditions in Russia?
22095But if he was n''t desperately ill, why did he have you stay so long in a position of such danger?"
22095But in any case how could their failures have reached General Dmitri Alexis''ears?
22095But is there not room enough here and peace enough for us both?"
22095But shall I tell our driver to stop?"
22095But tell me what brings you back to the fortress at this time?
22095But then what had become of her mother?
22095But what has become of your general, Mill?
22095But where was she to obtain the money for her expenses?
22095Can not you see that I care very much what becomes of you?
22095Could she ever feel so entirely an American again?
22095Did n''t you speak of this to Colonel Feodorovitch?"
22095Do girls and women never care to help one another?
22095Do you think it wrong to accept it, Bab?
22095Had Nona ever read of a great writer named Tolstoi, who wrote and preached of the real brotherhood of man?
22095Has Sonya grown worse or is she better?"
22095How can any human being be anything but wretched during this tragic war?
22095How could her history as a young American girl have any connection with it?
22095How could she then be satisfied with a western girl of no wealth or distinction?
22095How long did you remain at Grovno, and did the Germans ever capture you?
22095How much or how little should she take the Russian officer into her confidence?
22095How on earth did you manage about him?"
22095I am dreadfully hungry; ca n''t we have something to eat before I finish my story?"
22095I simply could n''t bear living in Russia always, could you, Mildred?"
22095If I can do even the least thing to help him at such a crisis, why, how could I refuse?
22095If so, what on earth should she say?
22095It is the custom of your country when a man cares for a woman to tell her so, is it not, or perhaps I should have written first to your father?"
22095It merely asked that if Sonya Valesky should ever find it possible to know her daughter, Nona Davis, would she be her friend?
22095Later, in recalling their conversation, she often thought of a phrase he used:"What is one woman more or less in times like these?"
22095May I sit down?"
22095Oh, Mildred, what have you been doing all this time?
22095She was very unhappy, but what else was possible for her to do?
22095Should she go in or not?
22095Should she reveal herself in the selfsame light again?
22095So with neither beauty nor charm, how could she ever even hope to gratify her mother by securing the distinguished husband she so desired for her?
22095Tell us where you received your information and why we are to be sent away so ignominiously?"
22095Was General Alexis actually saying that he was in love with her?
22095Was Nona aware that there were many girls and young men, oftentimes members of noble families, who believed in a new and different Russia?
22095Was it because she was too engrossed in her own life and her own mysterious mission?
22095Was there a chance that the young Russian lieutenant might be a possible connection?
22095Was there a spy or an assassin lurking in his church to destroy him?
22095What could she say, except that no word of any kind had since been received from Mildred?
22095What else was she to find out about this strange country before her work as a nurse was over?
22095What had become of Sonya and how was she ever to find her in the great and unknown city of Petrograd?
22095What had brought the old woman to Petrograd?
22095What has kept you at home?"
22095What must_ they_ do?
22095What punishment will she have to suffer?"
22095What secret could Sonya Valesky be concealing that forced even her friends to warn others against her?
22095What should she do?
22095What was she doing here near the Russian line of fortifications, living like a peasant with only two old peasants in attendance upon her?
22095What would become of Mildred Thornton, left behind with strangers in a besieged fortress that might fall at any hour?
22095When the two friends reached the hut, Nona Davis exclaimed in amazement:"What on earth has happened?
22095Why had she gone away?
22095Why had they always led her to believe by their silences that there was something to be ashamed of in her mother''s story?
22095Why should this man create such an atmosphere of trust and respect?
22095Why should you not be willing to leave her to her fate?"
22095Why, do you know what has become of him?"
22095Why, what would your mother and father and Dick think of my deserting you at such a time?
22095Would one of the hospital physicians come and see her?
22095Yet what was she to do?
22095You know I told you I had met him the day he came into my hospital ward to decorate the dying soldier?"
18545''Lest the pond murmur:Who is this stranger?"''"
18545''Terrible days, do you say, Aimeri? 18545 A bit used up, is n''t he?"
18545And Chevalier?
18545And since then he has never reappeared?
18545And the solid sort of person found by your mother, he, too, does not count any more?
18545And you, Monsieur Marc, do n''t you feel qualms in the stomach?
18545Are n''t you going to unfasten your cloak?
18545Are you crazy? 18545 Are you on good terms with her?"
18545Are you pleased with the play, Master?
18545Are you subject to attacks of dizziness?
18545Are you well up in the Revolution?
18545But,objected Trublet,"what do you want me to say?"
18545By the way, gentlemen, what say you to the Imperial decree concerning the actors of Paris, dated from the Kremlin? 18545 Can you,"she inquired;"guarantee that there is nothing after death?"
18545Chevalier? 18545 Chevalier?"
18545Come now, my darling, how can you suppose that a priest, a priest in his surplice, would show himself in a restaurant?
18545Did everything go off well to- night?
18545Do n''t you love your own Félicie? 18545 Do n''t you think there''s something queer about that cab?"
18545Do we rehearse to- day?
18545Do you know Nanteuil is engaged at the Comédie- Française?
18545Do you know anyone who knows the Minister?
18545Do you know,said Ellen Midi to Falempin,"that Nanteuil is going to join the Comédie- Française?"
18545Do you like those machines?
18545Do you sometimes feel as though you must laugh or cry for no apparent reason, about nothing at all?
18545Do you suppose that is easy in our profession? 18545 Doctor,"inquired Constantin Marc,"are you by chance one of those who do not admire War?
18545During your sleep?
18545Félicie, why on earth are you poking about in my wardrobe like that?
18545Félicie, you surely can not have forgotten our little room, in the Rue des Martyrs?
18545Had he any talent?
18545Have you seen Trublet? 18545 How are you getting on yourself, Meunier?
18545How are you, Doctor Socrates?
18545How did she manage it?
18545How do you expect me to know that?
18545I? 18545 I?"
18545In my wardrobe?
18545Is Nanteuil wounded?
18545Is The Hague a pretty place?
18545Is n''t it queer? 18545 Is n''t somebody following us?"
18545Is n''t that Baron Deutz?
18545It has not stopped here? 18545 It was not for that you came, was it?"
18545It''s ridiculous, is n''t it?
18545Mademoiselle Nanteuil, it''s your cue----Where has Nanteuil got to? 18545 May I?"
18545Monsieur Constantin Marc, have you read_ Les Soirées de Neuilly_?
18545Monsieur Girmandel? 18545 Montparnasse?
18545No more?
18545Oh, Monsieur Chevalier, why did n''t you stay till the end? 18545 Quite sure?"
18545Really?
18545Really?
18545So much the better?
18545So you approve of the morals of that gawk of a Perrin, do you? 18545 So you are making your début at the Comédie?
18545So you look after the job at night, old fellow?
18545Tell me, Monsieur Deutz, when you met me yesterday, were you in very bad company that you did not raise your hat to me?
18545That you, Chevalier? 18545 Then are you a believer?"
18545They say she is still very beautiful, your mother, is it so?
18545Was he dead when you saw him?
18545Well, then, in what way is his death deplorable?
18545Well, then? 18545 Well, then?"
18545Well, what would you have done, had you known it?
18545Were you wretched, Robert, when you were away from me?
18545What are you talking about?
18545What did you do there?
18545What do I see there at the back of the stage? 18545 What do we know about it?"
18545What else, my dear?
18545What has become of him?
18545What has come over you? 18545 What have you got in your glove- box?"
18545What is that,she asked,"that big dark ball on the poplar?"
18545What on earth do you mean?
18545What then?
18545What''s that? 18545 What''s the matter?"
18545What, Baron Deutz? 18545 What, you have not read_ Les Soirées de Neuilly_, by Monsieur de Fongeray?
18545What?
18545When do you make your début at the Comédie?
18545When you told me that you wanted me, I did n''t keep you waiting, did I? 18545 Whence do you obtain custom and tradition?"
18545Whence do you receive authority? 18545 Where are we going?"
18545Where is the stomach exactly?
18545Where?
18545Who, then?
18545Whom do you expect to follow us?
18545Why do they insist on my being nothing but an_ ingénue_?
18545Why does it stop here?
18545Why not? 18545 Why wo n''t you?"
18545Why?
18545Why?
18545Why?
18545Why?
18545Will Monsieur de Ligny be arrested?
18545Will you have some tobacco, old fellow?
18545You are not a Parisian?
18545You are sure you were not sleeping?
18545You ask me why it was he rather than another? 18545 You believe then, doctor, that Chevalier was fully and entirely morally responsible?"
18545You did not go with women, I should hope?
18545You promise?
18545You really think so, Madame Doulce? 18545 You think it witty, I suppose, to talk nonsense when anyone asks you a serious question?"
18545You think not?
18545You think then that one can be cured if one wills it?
18545You will excuse me?
18545You will prevent me? 18545 You would not care to go back to our house out there?"
18545You?
18545_So then, it is for Nanteuil''s sake that he blew out his brains?
18545_Tell me, Dutil, how could that little Nanteuil, who is pretty and intelligent, get herself mixed up with a dirty mummer like Chevalier?"
18545_Who is taking the part of Florentin?"
18545''The pistol?''
18545''The sabre, the knife?''
18545''Will you fight with the sword?''
18545Adolphe Meunier, the poet, laying his hand on his shoulder said:"Everything going well, Romilly?"
18545And she gave utterance to a general reflection:"Robert, have you noticed that people are never natural?
18545And she had replied indignantly:"Chevalier?
18545And what would become of me?
18545And you?"
18545And, while she was undressing, the lines surged to her lips, and she whispered them:"Moi, j''ai blessé quelqu''un?
18545Are we going to spend our lives staring at each other like this, wild with each other, full of despair and rage?
18545Are you sure of that?"
18545Are you well again now?"
18545As Robert, in the bed, listened in silence, she went up to him and shook him:"Then it''s all the same to you if I carry on with Pradel?"
18545At school his masters used to ask him:''Why are you laughing?''
18545At the mere mention of the name of Agnès, the doctor murmured delightedly from among his cushions:"Mes yeux ont- ils du mal pour en donner au monde?"
18545Awakened by the light of the candle and by the mouse- like noise made by the seeker, Madame Nanteuil demanded:"Who is there?"
18545Before leaving the house, Ligny asked Madame Simonneau:"Where have you put him?"
18545Besides, I am not particularly in love with Marivaux----What are you laughing at, doctor?
18545But it''s true-- what are we doing like this?
18545But see, Félicie, remember----"But she was losing patience:"Well, what do you want me to remember?"
18545But was Chevalier a man quite like all the rest?
18545But was he a medical man, able to judge with certainty?
18545But what did that prove?
18545But what if he had seen incorrectly?
18545But what is the good of a ridiculous and declamatory suicide?
18545But what would you have?"
18545But what''s the good of being a great artist if one is n''t happy?
18545Can we rebel against them?
18545Can you perhaps tell me?''"
18545Chevalier, following up his idea, inquired:"You would hardly say that Girmandel was still a young man, would you?"
18545Choking with astonishment and anger, he stammered:"Have n''t the right to?
18545Constantin Marc, appearing with Nanteuil, hastily exclaimed:"What about my scenery, Monsieur Pradel?"
18545Could n''t he, if his determination was irrevocable, have carried it out discreetly, with proper pride?
18545Could n''t the fellow have killed himself at home?
18545Did n''t she know how to behave?
18545Did she behave like a woman of the town?
18545Did she lack a certain sense of niceness which warns women as to what they may or may not do?
18545Did she not exercise a certain selection?
18545Do n''t you think that is so?"
18545Do you hear, Félicie?"
18545Do you know Claude Bernard?"
18545Do you know how Romilly would have me say:''I do not fear you''?
18545Do you know of anything more stupid or more odious than the sort of people we have seen demanding justice?
18545Do you mind?"
18545Do you still see him?"
18545Do you think he is faithful to her?
18545Do you think it never happens that actors, by their carelessness or clumsiness, ruin a work which was meant to reach the heights?
18545Do you think that sort of thing natural?"
18545Do you?"
18545Does a man retain his powers of judgment in the first moments of surprise and horror?
18545Does n''t it flatter your vanity to possess a little woman who makes people cheer and clap her, who is written about in the newspapers?
18545Does she think people have forgotten her adventures?
18545Fagette, my child, what the mischief are you doing at a ball given by the Minister of Police, if you have n''t any stockings with golden clocks?
18545Have I been brought up any worse than other women?
18545Have I less religion than they have?
18545Have I put my foot in it?
18545Have n''t the right to?
18545Have you heard what he did to Marie- Claire?
18545Having dismissed them, he inquired, as he signed some letters:"Well, Madame Doulce, what news do you bring?"
18545He asked himself anxiously, with a feeling of real uneasiness:"What in the world would he do if he came back, that dismal actor fellow?
18545He questioned her:"Then the others?"
18545He?
18545He?
18545Her gaze met the call to rehearsal lying open on the bedside table, and she sighed:"What is the use of my being a great actress if I am not happy?"
18545How are you, my friend?"
18545How can you expect Chevalier to get out through the dormer- window?
18545How does Madame Colbert make out that I owe her thirty- two francs?
18545How is it possible to relieve and console without lying?"
18545I must have the Revolution_ in_ me, do you understand?"
18545In your days, did actresses control their-- how did you put it?
18545Is it true what they say, that Jeanne Perrin gives money to women?
18545Is n''t it so?"
18545Is n''t_ La Mère confidente_ by Marivaux?"
18545It is kind of him, is n''t it?"
18545Madame Doulce was there, of course?
18545May we not therefore consider that their own responsibility is full-- like the moon?"
18545Maybe you''ve heard of the war of the Prussians, young man?"
18545Michon, do n''t my stays crease at the back, on the right?"
18545Nanteuil repeated:"''Terrible days, do you say, Aimeri?
18545Now why do you want this unfortunate Chevalier to go to church?"
18545Of what was he capable?
18545Only a fortnight ago he asked me, in the theatre,''Who is that little fair- haired woman?''
18545Pointing to a cab which had just passed them, she exclaimed:"Robert, did you see?"
18545Proclamation,''Do you understand?"
18545See?"
18545Seeing her so collected and serene, he said to her:"You yourself are not of a nervous temperament?"
18545She had stopped on the topmost step in front of the doors, and was chatting with Constantin Marc and a few journalists:"... Monsieur de Ligny?
18545She inquired:"Where do I make my entrance from?"
18545She raised her spiteful little face, and replied:"And if he is my lover?"
18545She was wo nt to ask herself:"Why is one made like that, with a head, arms, legs, hands, feet, chest, and abdomen?
18545She''s got a cheek of her own to show herself here, do n''t you think?"
18545So do not be astonished when you see----""Did you invent that precious story, doctor?"
18545So it''s you?
18545Subtle, intellectual, is n''t it?"
18545Suddenly she released herself:"Do n''t you hear the gravel creaking?"
18545Sur lui, sans y penser, fis- je choir quelque chose?"
18545Tell me, Robert, how many really well- made women have you ever seen?
18545That''s not too much, is it?"
18545The old man who did not understand, inquired:"Where is it, your works?"
18545Then, flitting off to another idea:"Tell me; Socrates, how comes it that you saw this sordid individual rather than another?
18545There are those who have asked, what was the cause of so cruel an end?
18545To whom could we apply for a certificate?"
18545Was he the sort of man to commit a crime, to do something dreadful?
18545Was n''t I right?
18545Was she pleased with Félicie?"
18545Was she wanting in taste?
18545We shall be blocking up the door?"
18545Well, Madame Doulce, what news?"
18545What are you doing there?"
18545What are you thinking of, my friend?"
18545What did he say?"
18545What did those words portend?
18545What does a generation of living folk amount to, in comparison with the numberless generations of the dead?
18545What does it matter, since I love you?
18545What else, indeed, will permit them to hope?"
18545What good did it do to him to torment her?
18545What harm is she doing us?"
18545What if he had taken a mere graze of the skin for a serious lesion of the brain and skull?
18545What is our will of a day before the will of a thousand centuries?
18545What is to become of him?"
18545What more can I tell you?"
18545What was he going to do?
18545What will you do with absolute power, you simpletons?"
18545What''s to- day?
18545What?
18545When the cab stopped, she said:"You will not be vexed with me, will you, my own Robert, at what I am going to say?
18545When the presiding judge of the court- martial asked him:''Who were your accomplices?''
18545Where are you going?"
18545Where is Romilly?
18545Where is the colonel of the 10th cohort?
18545Who could tell what she would say?
18545Why did she take lovers of that type?
18545Why indeed should not humanity abolish the law of murder?
18545Why is one made like that and not otherwise?
18545Why should I fear you?
18545Why should not humanity succeed in changing nature to the extent of making it pacific?
18545Why should not humanity, miserably puny though it is and will be, succeed, some day, in suppressing, or at least in controlling the struggle for life?
18545Will you?"
18545Would he once more have to see him prowling round Félicie?"
18545Would he return to the Odéon?
18545Would he stroll through its corridors displaying his great scar?
18545You are not ill, are you?
18545You do n''t feel like going back to the works yet?"
18545You do n''t want to go back to the works, eh?"
18545You hear me?
18545You know the Odéon?"
18545You tell me I have n''t the right?"
18545You''ll take a cup of tea, wo n''t you, Monsieur de Ligny?"
18545You?
18545inquired Dr. Hibry, who was a lover of the theatre,"Chevalier?
18545ma surprise est, fis- je, sans seconde; Mes yeux ont- ils du mal pour en donner au monde?"
18545qui pourrait, lui dis- je, en avoir été cause?
22800Can the sower sow by night, Or the ploughman in darkness plough?
22800Have you ever met with Mary Wollstonecraft''s''Letters from Sweden and Norway''?
22800What,she asks in righteous indignation,--"what were the outrages of the day to these continual miseries?
22800''Girls and boys still together?''
22800A change for the better must originate with them, and yet how was this possible, if they did not see their degradation?
22800And why should I mince the matter?
22800Are such prospects as these likely to heal an almost broken heart?
22800Are these the laws that it is natural to love, and sacrilegious to invade?
22800Are we ever to see this mother and her babe?"
22800Are you well?
22800But Mary asks, How far back are we to go to discover their first foundation?
22800But if he were to die how could she alone educate her children and manage her household with discretion?
22800But the vital question is: Would an acquaintanceship formed between them at that time have ever become more than mere friendship?
22800But why do I ask?
22800But why should I worry you?
22800Can he force her?
22800Do you fear to strike another blow?
22800Does Burke, she continues,--"... recommend night as the fittest time to analyze a ray of light?
22800Even if this be counted a praiseworthy end, and they succeed in it, to what or how long will it avail them?
22800For example, Mrs. Mason says to the two children:--"Do you know the meaning of the word goodness?
22800Have you anything of the kind?
22800Have you yet heard of an habitation for me?
22800Here, alone, a poor solitary individual in a strange land, tied to one spot, and subject to the caprice of another, can I be contented?
22800How are you?
22800How can I be reconciled to life, when it is always a painful warfare, and when I am deprived of all the pleasures I relish?
22800How, then, can the great art of pleasing be such a necessary study?
22800I ask impatiently what and where is truth?
22800I can not think of remaining any longer in this house, the rent is so enormous; and where to go, without money or friends, who can point out?
22800I saw not my wife die-- no!--they dragged me from her, but I saw Jacky and Nancy die; and who pitied me, but my dog?''
22800I write to you, my dear George, lest my silence should make you uneasy; yet what have I to say that will not have the same effect?
22800In the course of near nine and twenty years I have gathered some experience, and felt many_ severe_ disappointments; and what is the amount?
22800In what way could this be of the most use to you?
22800Is not this a good spring, my dear girl?
22800Is not this the witching time of night?
22800Is social slavery to be encouraged because it was established in semi- barbarous days?
22800May I venture to talk a little longer about less weighty affairs?
22800Nay, they talk of immortalizing Miss Wollstonecraft in like manner, but all end in damning all politics: What good will they do men?
22800Need I tell you that I am tranquil after writing thus?
22800Ought she to endure his indifference, or ought she to separate from him forever?
22800Pray did you know his motive for calling?
22800She abstains, it is true, without any great struggle, from committing gross crimes; but how does she fulfil her duties?
22800Was not my arrival providential?
22800Well, will you allow me to call this way of passing my days pleasant?
22800Were not their brethren in France purchasing their rights literally at the price of their three meals a day?
22800Were the rights of men understood when the law authorized or tolerated murder?--or is power and right the same?"
22800What am I to think?
22800What are you doing?
22800What had I got in them to render me so blind?
22800What say you?
22800When will a change of opinion, producing a change of morals, render thee truly free?
22800When will thy sons trust, because they deserve to be trusted; and private virtue become the guarantee of patriotism?
22800When will truth give life to real magnanimity, and justice place equality on a stable seat?
22800Where is Eliza?
22800Where is poor Eliza?
22800Who ever endured more anguish than Mr. Godwin endures?
22800Who fears the falling dew?
22800Who will deny that her fate was the more cruel?
22800Why is our fancy to be appalled by terrific perspectives of a hell beyond the grave?
22800Why should it be?
22800Yet in what respect can she be termed good?
22800_ Tuesday._--I return you the volumes; will you get me the rest?
22800and what rights have men that three meals a day will not supply?"
22800and yet, if I do not tell you my vexations, what can I write about?
22800but, my love, to the old story,--am I to see you this week, or this month?
22800or, to write very considerately, when will business permit you?
22800when do you think of coming home?
22800when will thy children cease to tear thy bosom?
22800when will thy government become the most perfect, because thy citizens are the most virtuous?"
22821''How do you men dare talk to me about going home? 22821 And what is that?"
22821But, officer, are n''t you going to give me a chance to enlist?
22821Children, what is the greatest country in the world?
22821How did I feel?
22821How did you feel, purser, when you heard that cannon roar this morning against that submarine?
22821Is drowning very painful?
22821Should there ever be, children, a vacancy in the Trinity, who is best fitted to fill the position?
22821What could be more wonderful than the heroism, the endurance of the British at Vimy Ridge? 22821 What did Sister Julie say?"
22821What is the greatest city in the world?
22821What is the trouble with the Emerald Isle?
22821Who are the chosen people of the good old German God?
22821Who is the greatest man in the world?
22821Why Are We Outmanned By the Germans?
22821Why Are We Outmanned by the Germans?
22821Why Did You Leave Us in Hell for Two Years?
22821Why Did You Leave Us in Hell for Two Years?
22821Why do you say that?
228214. Who Taught the Kaiser That a Treaty Is a Scrap of Paper?
228214. Who Taught the Kaiser That a Treaty Is a Scrap of Paper?
22821Aliens began to say,"What will come next?"
22821And this foul thing forced upon her a superior right?
22821And what about Dutch cities and seaports?
22821And what shall be the verdict then pronounced?
22821And where are young McConnell and Rupert Brooke and young Asquith?
22821And where is Shelley?
22821But since that time, all France and Belgium and the lands where there are refugees are discussing the question-- Where does the right lie?
22821But what if Ludendorff gets to Paris?
22821But who is at the head of it?
22821But who succeeded?
22821Can you see that they are at the station to meet him?
22821Each farmer began to ask himself:"Has any one quoted me?"
22821Every visitor to that ruined town asks himself this question:"Why did the Germans allow this building to remain?"
22821Has the French mother, cruelly wounded, no right?
22821How can I go home?
22821How did he find out that there had been a secret meeting of the Germans immediately after war had been declared against Germany?
22821How is it that he celebrates his ancestor, Frederick?
22821Macbeth killed Duncan and went to live in the palace of the dead king, but did Macbeth succeed?
22821Must German Men Be Exterminated?
22821Must German Men Be Exterminated?
22821Now why did the Kaiser over and over again proclaim his allegiance to Frederick the Great?
22821Of course, says Harden, at first that was good diplomacy, but now that we are successful,"Why say this any longer?
22821Or the steel door before your dungeon?
22821Or was it the bad air in your cell?
22821The heart of the question is, Has he any moral right to accept an exemption?
22821Thirty- nine years more to recover ruined France and Belgium, Poland and Rumania?
22821To be sure the old Romans had to become soldiers, but, later, did not each Roman soldier live in the rich gardens around Thebes, Ephesus and Corinth?
22821Two thousand years ago Cicero, sobbing above the dead body of his daughter Tullia, exclaimed:"Is there a meeting place for the dead?"
22821Was This Murder Justified?
22821Was This Murder Justified?
22821Was he a Secret Service man?
22821Was it the cold water or the corn bread?
22821Was not his palace a brief halting place in his journey towards remorse, insanity and the day when Duncan''s friends in turn slew Macbeth?
22821What becomes of our soldier boys who died on the threshold of life?
22821What chance has a babe born of a beast, abhorred and despised, when it comes into the world?
22821What could these things mean?
22821What has regenerated you?
22821What if Paris must decrease?
22821What if the Kaiser does boast of his successes to- day?
22821What illuminated manuscripts?"
22821Where also is that young Carpenter of Nazareth, dead at thirty years of age?
22821Where does the Lord of Right stand?
22821Where is that young Tullia so dear to that gifted Roman orator?
22821Where is that young musician Mozart?
22821Where is young Keats?
22821Which path for the bewildered girl leads to peace?
22821Who can be stupid enough to hesitate in answering this question?
22821Who can explain the obsession?
22821Who can praise sufficiently the heroes of Canada, Australia and New Zealand?
22821Who shall explain to us the reason why German barbarism is not barbarism to the Germans?
22821Who was this Attila who has captured the imagination of the Kaiser?
22821Who was this stranger who was coming into the community?
22821Why are we outmanned?
22821Why not tell the world that we will have failed in the one thing for which we set out if we evacuate Belgium?
22821Why not?
22821Why should n''t we?"
19032''And you?'' 19032 ''Do you dislike him?''
19032''Do you like him?'' 19032 ''Have you spoken with my father on this subject?''
19032''Is that all you have to say to me, Miss Bronson?'' 19032 ''Lost her mate, eh?''
19032''So might a tight- rope performer or a performing dog, I suppose?'' 19032 ''What is that, pray?''
19032''Why, what can I say? 19032 Am I not?"
19032And do not the parents force them to marry? 19032 And meet all sorts of people?
19032And of what nation are you?
19032And the handsome fellow, who is he? 19032 And what is your name?"
19032And what sort of a girl is this Miss Georgy?
19032And who are these young people?
19032And who is to have the benefit of all this?
19032And why must I go to the police?
19032And you?
19032Another what?
19032Any relation of George Lenox?
19032Are you notoriously helpless?
19032Are you sure you wo n''t change your mind?
19032Articled? 19032 As artists''model?"
19032Because of what we used to say about Horace, you mean? 19032 But do you forgive me now?"
19032But how? 19032 But what do you want to do?"
19032But who is the sweet creature with golden hair, who looks infused with fair ideals to her very finger- tips?
19032But who, then? 19032 But your aunt Edith must be much older than you?"
19032Come to say good- bye to me, Aunt Harriet? 19032 Cousin James does not know what good times we have, does he, Floyd?"
19032Did n''t you understand? 19032 Did you earn more money with the music or as model?"
19032Did you ever hear of his ride across the steppes from here to Kouldja? 19032 Did you return to Paris when you ennuied yourself so à © normement?"
19032Dislike? 19032 Do you become often as fatigued as you are now?"
19032Do you dislike to pose for male artists?
19032Do you happen to know if one has to pass much of an examination to qualify one for breaking stones on the roads now- a- days? 19032 Do you know what that is?"
19032Do you mean to say that you would not be glad to be trodden under foot by Georgy Lenox?
19032Do you think there is any danger?
19032Do you understand English, monsieur?
19032Do you want to see what I have said?
19032Englishwoman?
19032Fine fellow, is n''t he?
19032Floyd,called out Georgy,"ca n''t you show me another bird''s nest?"
19032Floyd,said Georgy, putting her hand on my arm,"do n''t you hear the door- bell?
19032Gentle, sir-- generous?
19032Getting tired, Jack?
19032Has she been injured at all by the somewhat exceptional circumstances of her family?
19032Has your mother often spoken of me?
19032Have you a wife?
19032Have you nothing to tell me, Floyd?
19032He had not: would I give him permission to do so? 19032 How do you do?"
19032How much do you earn by this wearisome business?
19032How much road- tax did you pay, and how?
19032How you mean, Chang- how? 19032 I may do what I please in everything?
19032I wonder if I shall ever see another?
19032I''m proud of having won her; and as to my having concealed it, I ask you, in common fairness, what else could I do? 19032 In one of_ his_ carriages?"
19032In the country, then?
19032In what way?
19032Is he, then, so poor? 19032 Is she gentle, generous and open in her ways?"
19032Is she married?
19032Is that the way you mean to apply for a situation? 19032 Is your aunt Edith, Edith Mack?"
19032It would be rather monotonous, would n''t it? 19032 Ladies,"cried Miss San Francisco, invisible among the easels,"has Professor Manley given out the subject of our composition for next week?"
19032Miss Lenox?
19032More priests?
19032Nearly done?
19032Nothing can alter it?
19032Nothing? 19032 Oh, Miss Shoddy, Miss Shoddy,_ will_ you pose for my Virgin Mother?"
19032Oh, my dear boy, why did n''t we know?
19032Oh, that''s impossible too, is it?
19032Oh,_ barin_("master"), says he in a voice like a fit o''chollerer,"whatever am I to do now?
19032Shall I give any message for you?
19032She will return presently?
19032She? 19032 Suppose you invite me in?"
19032That--Horace nodded at the will--"that makes me master here, eh?"
19032That? 19032 The music?"
19032Then he said,''Do you want me to tell you the truth, the out- and- out truth-- the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help me God?'' 19032 Upset the pail?"
19032Want to know where you can buy just_ h- e- a- venly_ cheese for a franc a pound?
19032War dat Chow- chow nigger?
19032What Grand Hôtel?
19032What are the average wages of a female domestic per week, without board?
19032What crops are short?
19032What do you call being''infernally proud''?
19032What do you mean to do?
19032What do you think roused us? 19032 What does Anarky know about the popular idea concerning the Chinese?
19032What is your name?
19032What will you write?
19032What?
19032What_ is_ it?
19032What_ was_ the Greek religion?
19032Where?
19032Who is going bail for you?
19032Who is that poor woman who has so mistaken her vocation?
19032Why do n''t you wait, and see if we ca n''t help you to something better?
19032Why do you not read your letter, mother?
19032Why not Lottie?
19032Why, yes,she says,"I''ll tell it: why not?
19032Why?
19032Wicked? 19032 With what affair, monsieur?
19032Would Brenthill do?
19032Yes, but how should you know?
19032Yes-- what?
19032You are going?
19032You are not ill, James?
19032You remember me a little, do n''t you?
19032You see dat again? 19032 Your Mas''Jim?"
19032''Ah,''he said,''you know why I have come?''
19032''Do you wish me to marry him, papa?''
19032''You are Miss W----?''
19032--"Do you really mean it, uncle?
19032--"Then you consent, after all, to help me in the matter?"
19032--''Then she is in the next room?''
19032All goes well at the castle?
19032And do you wonder at it?
19032And had not Percival plenty to live on?
19032And how could I go back to Fordborough, now that Sissy and I have parted?
19032And then I said again,''Why should I be angry?
19032And they are_ doctors_ even?
19032And what do they do if not marry?
19032And what do you hate us for?
19032And when they get old, what becomes of them?
19032And why does he neglect the communion?
19032And why not?
19032And why not?"
19032Are the native workmen good for much?
19032But his better sense questioned,"Will it be any more endurable when I have ruined my nerves and the coats of my stomach?"
19032But how am I to live through the winter in some horrible hole of a place without my darling?
19032But who is to do the reforming?
19032But who thinks of him when he has dropped it into the box and is going down the street?
19032Ca n''t we?
19032Can any of you recommend a place?
19032Come, you are not going to quarrel with me?"
19032Did he repent now that he was certain of the greatness of the sacrifice?
19032Did you ever see a woman- doctor?"
19032Did you see her new shoes?"
19032Do you know who I am?"
19032Do you mean that you are going to be married?"
19032Economic Monographs: France and the United States; Suffrage in Cities; Our Revenue System and the Civil Service-- shall they be Reformed?
19032Ef it ai n''t no rat, an''ai n''t a monkey, name o''Satan, what kin it be?
19032Enter Anarky:"Mis''Maud, how many hank''chers you sent out dis week?"
19032Few wives can do this and not be subjected to the humiliation of hearing the husband say,"My dear, are you not a little extravagant?
19032For God''s sake do n''t quarrel before her!--Horace, is this really true?
19032For her sake-- to- day-- Thorne, you will not break her heart?"
19032Had she not a thousand dollars at the Crà © dit Lyonnais?
19032Had she not at last reached the Enchanted Land for which she had labored and pined for half her life?
19032Had she not clothes enough to last her with patient mendings and persistent remakings for two years?
19032Harry Dart?
19032Have n''t you and Chang everything you want, and as much?"
19032He asked me for my answer: should he come and take me with him to his German home?
19032He remembered himself enough to ask again for one more song, but when, with a wistful tremor in her voice, she said,"This?
19032How can you love me, when you''ve known me only two days, and seen me always on my best behavior?
19032How could she be unconscious of the difference and of her triumph?
19032How is your father?"
19032How many go?"
19032How many socks for Mas''Jim?"
19032How muchee?"
19032How muchee?"
19032How was Sissy?
19032I do hope--""What Shang- doodle know''bout i''unin''?"
19032I had rung as usual for water, and just as I had finished my bath I heard a knock at the outside door, and asking''Wer ist da?''
19032I mean, are n''t you ashamed of yourself?
19032I will only say( which is more to the point, is n''t it?)
19032If you are so fond of the gospel, why do n''t you practise it?
19032Is Lottie your wife?"
19032Is all that money gone that I gave you last week?"
19032Is she watching for him on the oriel stair, Or cradling the babe on her silken breast In the hush of the drowsy chamber there?
19032It was very foolish?
19032It''s best as it is about Sissy, is n''t it, seeing how things have turned out?"
19032Kiss me and say good- bye: there is n''t much time, is there?
19032Leaving aside entirely the enamored state, do men as a rule seek the society of women and prefer it to that of men?
19032Let us see: will Your Highness stay in town?"
19032Look here: do you know a lawyer who would suit me?"
19032May I call myself"Your brother, H.T.?"
19032No?
19032Of what are we suspected?
19032Of what real value is the answer to the question,"Kind of motive- power?"
19032Oh, what have we done?
19032Only yesterday she said,''Ladies, who can tell me the costume of the Venus de Melos?
19032Over the lonely moor alone, Praying a prayer for the dearest life, Stifling a cry for the dead unknown, Child or wife: is it child or wife?
19032People ca n''t live_ very_ much longer when they are seventy- seven, can they?
19032Percival was thinking how seriously he had considered that important question,"Would he stand as the Liberal candidate for Fordborough?"
19032Percival winced:"That sort of thing is n''t easy to get into, is it?
19032Percival, do you want any?
19032Perhaps Horace has hardly had time to think yet, has he?"
19032Perhaps you would like to send her a message?"
19032Rooshia?
19032Said he,"Anarky is taking advantage of the popular idea that the Chinese are invariably dis--""Now, who ever heard anything like that?"
19032Scared at the wind, or the owlet''s flight?
19032She laid her fingers on his and said,"Now-- why not now?"
19032So Lisle has swindled you, has he?
19032Suppose I get worse instead of better, and die out there, and never see you again-- never once?"
19032Surely, Harry, you do n''t mind it that Georgy has gone on with Jack?"
19032That was what his letter was about, then?"
19032The Turkish officers asked, What more could people want?
19032Then he spread all his money on his open hand and eyed it:"What do you think of that for a fortune, eh, Godfrey?"
19032They inquired,"Was Oliver Cromwell justified in putting King Charles to death?"
19032They marshalled many arguments to decide the knotty and important question,"Does our Country owe most to the Warrior or the Statesman?"
19032Think dat yaller houn''ai n''t stole de biskit outen de ub''n?
19032Thus the questions,"Has this season produced average crops?"
19032WHY NOT LOTTIE?
19032Was it likely I was going to ruin my life for him?
19032We gamble and we swear; but what do you do, I should like to know?
19032Were I planting my mother''s flower- beds, were I writing my composition, it was all the same: the question was,"Will it please Georgy?"
19032What are you, then?"
19032What dat hangin''on to its head?
19032What did Hannah do?
19032What does Percival have?"
19032What does it mean, then?"
19032What shall I say?"
19032What should Mr. Smith want with a yellow rat?"
19032What would not Percival have given for the chance of doing some deed of reckless bravery?
19032When she had finished her song he said,"But you''ll sing me one more, wo n''t you?
19032Where spoonee go?"
19032Where was I?
19032Who goes there at the dead of night?
19032Why not?
19032Why should I with so fine a figure as this?"
19032Why should you be so hard on us?
19032Why so?
19032Why?"
19032Why_ did_ we ever come into this barbarous land?"
19032Will you not write it for me?"
19032Will you turn tutor?"
19032You are Miss W----?"
19032You know what the Bible says about brothers dwelling together in unity, and all that?"
19032You see dat?
19032You will like to go to The Headlands, Floyd?
19032[ Illustration:"DO YOU WANT TO SEE WHAT I HAVE SAID?"
19032[ Illustration:"H- E- A- VENLY CHEESE FOR A FRANC A POUND?"]
19032_ Would_ you be so kind as to go through the process a few thousand miles away, instead of just outside my front door?''
19032and upon what grounds suspected?"
19032came sputteringly from behind Concordia''s easel as she gasped,"Do n''t you understand?
19032cried Georgy to the alarmed bird, that circled about us with cries growing every moment more piercing.--"Is not that perfectly sweet?
19032d''ye want a bit o''grease to make yer beard grow?"
19032in relation to manufactures unless other details are given?
19032or, in good American accents, accompanied with a sniff of wrath,"Call_ him_ a good Christ?
19032spoil good cannon to make bells?
19032what had he done that it should be denied him?
19032what is it?"
19032what stirs by the Washing Well?
19032what would Godfrey have said?
19032when?
19032where?''
19032who is she?"
19032why should I believe him?
21468And if you are not worth your weight in paving- stones, I should like to know what you are worth?
21468And what is a boatswain on board ship?
21468And which way do you say it is?
21468Bluff, do you see her?
21468But I say, captain, what does that big ship want you to do?
21468But does n''t the wind sometimes shift in a hurricane, and blow more furiously from another quarter?
21468But how could you see, Mr Johnson?
21468But suppose you were all to get drunk, what would the Frenchmen do with us, I should like to know? 21468 But what if he is not?"
21468But what is the harm of getting drunk once in a way?
21468But why call that a dangerous habit?
21468But you''ll tell us the end of your adventures some day, Mr Johnson; wo n''t you now?
21468By the bye, Edkins, have you received any directions about this boy?
21468Captain R---,said he, addressing one of them,"how is your father?"
21468Did you ever see a polar bear, Mr Spellman?
21468Did you take your wife with you?
21468Do n''t you think a little more would do him good?
21468Edkins, is this what you call a storm?
21468Getting most kicks or halfpence, I wonder? 21468 How goes it with you, skipper?"
21468How had you the good fortune to be introduced to the Baroness?
21468How is the wind, Wise?
21468How was that, Mr Johnson?
21468I wish we had; why do n''t we keep some cows on board?
21468I wonder what they are saying about us?
21468I wonder what they think of us?
21468I wonder, Mr Johnson, whether any of us will have to change heads?
21468Is that all, every bit of it, true, Mr Johnson?
21468Joliffe, what is it all about?
21468May I ask what ship that was in?
21468My wife? 21468 Now, Merry, what''s to be done?"
21468Now, gentlemen,he said, turning round and attempting to be calm,"what is it you have to say?
21468Oh, Muster Merry, who be these people? 21468 Oh, is he?
21468Oh, is she? 21468 On what account?"
21468Ou allez- vous donc?
21468The captain''s what?
21468Then are you only a captain?
21468Then let me ask, young gentleman, why you should have any doubts as to the truth of my narrative?
21468Then you''d have those hung who killed their men?
21468Then, Commander Ceaton, you can not, of course, refuse to give Captain Staghorn the satisfaction he demands?
21468This is pleasant, is n''t it, young gentlemen?
21468Well, Edkins, have all the officers joined yet?
21468Well, dame, what is it you want this morning?
21468What are you now, then?
21468What business have you here? 21468 What can be the matter,"exclaimed Spellman,"Are we all going to be murdered?"
21468What can have become of them?
21468What can they be about?
21468What do you make of her? 21468 What do you say, Mary?"
21468What do you think?
21468What have you been about, Merry?
21468What have you got to say to us?
21468What is the matter, Bluff?
21468What is the matter, Mr Johnson?
21468What is the matter?
21468What is this about, young gentlemen?
21468What schooner is that?
21468What shall we do?
21468What ship? 21468 What would you feed them on?"
21468What''s all that about?
21468What''s his name, Edkins? 21468 What''s that?"
21468What''s that?
21468What, Mrs Bluff, do you wish him to be an officer?
21468What, wounded, my dear child? 21468 What, you there,` hop o''me?''"
21468What, youngster, and lose this magnificent opportunity of exhibiting my zeal?
21468Where have you been, youngster?
21468Whereabouts did this happen, Monsieur?
21468Which of you would like to become a midshipman?
21468Who is he?
21468Who put it there?
21468Who spoke?
21468Who''s that?
21468Why are you going down to Portsmouth, little boy?
21468Why, man, what are you about?
21468Why, that is the ship I am going to join,I exclaimed;"did n''t Captain Collyer tell you?"
21468Why?
21468Would n''t it be easier, stupid, to invent the story from beginning to end, if I wanted to impose on any one?
21468You do n''t mean to say that you captured all these heroes?
21468You think so, Mr Merry? 21468 You, Mr Merry?"
21468` Are you, indeed, my countrymen?'' 21468 As the boat returned and pulled up astern, the admiral shouted out,Have you got the poor fellow?"
21468At first, Bill never knew who was hailed, and used to sing out,` Which of us do you want?''
21468Be you really and truly alive?"
21468But is it yourself, squire?
21468But why do I say that?
21468But you ask me how this duel is to be prevented?
21468But, Mr Merry, how are you going to fight?
21468Come, youngster-- what''s your name?"
21468Could we possibly survive them?
21468Cut their throats and eat them?
21468Did I ever tell you how I was once blown up a hundred fathoms at least, right into the air?
21468Did he show you where the bullet grazed his head and took off the hair?"
21468Had he escaped; or had the duel been prevented?
21468He put down his book when I entered, and seeing by my countenance that something was wrong, said--"What is the matter now, Mr Merry?
21468He stopped once and said,"What''s your name, youngster?"
21468He was our companion and friend; we had no secrets from him,--why should we?
21468How can you tell what you will do, while you are thus once- in- a- way drunk?
21468I guessed this by hearing Macquoid say to Bobus--"Who can they be?
21468I''ve done right, I hope, sir?"
21468It was bad enough as it was, but it might come on worse, and then, would the boat swim?
21468It was n''t the way her poor father expected me to treat her, but I have done my best; what can a man do more?"
21468Let me recollect, where had I got to?"
21468Mr Merry, what-- have you come to see me?
21468Now some of my readers, perhaps, will exclaim,"Hillo, Mr Midshipman Marmaduke Merry, have_ you_ taken to preaching?
21468Now you will want to know, young gentlemen, why I was so anxious to come up with the sail?
21468Picking himself up from his undignified posture,"Hang the goat,"he exclaimed in a loud tone;"who let the creature loose?"
21468Poor Grey lifted up his head as he saw me placed by his side in the stern- sheets, and said--"What, Merry, are you hurt too?
21468Shall I tell you?
21468She proved herself so smart and active a seaman,( or sea woman,--I should say a mermaid, eh?)
21468Taking the matter up only in a personal point of view, how can a man tell how he will behave when he has allowed liquor to steal away his wits?
21468The louder they shouted the faster we ran, till we were brought up with the point of a bayonet, and the challenge of:--"Who goes there?"
21468The question was put indirectly to me,"Should I like to go to sea?"
21468Then which died first?"
21468Then, how is your mother?"
21468Vous comprennez, do n''t ye?"
21468Was I to go to sea again and leave Mary?
21468We are friends-- true friends-- why should we be otherwise?"
21468We were not recognised when we were hauled into the boat, and might not have been had I not said--"What, Spellman, do n''t you know me?"
21468Well, would you believe it?
21468What be they going to do to us?"
21468What can stand a man in good stead on an occasion like this?
21468What could I do?
21468What could be done?
21468What do you say on the subject?"
21468What do you think I was doing?
21468What encouragement is there for a spirited young woman to go and fight her country''s battles?
21468What shall I do?
21468What, have you been wounded?"
21468Where are all the wounds?
21468Where be they taking us to?
21468Where did you learn that trick?"
21468Which is the most manly person, he who yields to his foes, or he who, with his back to a tree, boldly keeps them at bay?
21468Which way is she standing?"
21468Who can tell where I left off?"
21468Who dare say we can do more?
21468Yet is not experience, or rather the good advice which results from experience, treated over and over again by worldly idiots exactly in that way?
21468You doubt what I am telling you, young gentlemen, do you?
21468You''d like to know who I am?
21468You''ve heard of it, I dare say?"
21468are you going to let the ship go down, and you not try to save her?
21468be these here fellows going to eat us?"
21468he exclaimed;"how did you tumble into the boat?"
21468is he?
21468what mischief he may do himself, what injury he may inflict on others?
21468what shall I do?"
21468whether you are laughing at me, or at my veracious narrative?
21468who told you to do that?"
23595Ai n''t you going home to kiss your wife good- by?
23595And you punched his ticket?
23595Ca n''t I have one of those to wear on my coat, too?
23595Go on with you,said H. H.;"am I not here?
23595I am-- wouldn''t you be?
23595Is it possible that you are nervous?
23595James, why are you wasting time? 23595 Nopody vould know I vas a Cherman-- aind''t it?"
23595One of what, my son?
23595That?
23595The Chosen People of God?
23595What have you there?
23595What''s it for?
23595Where would you like to begin?
23595Who is the sandy, freckled one?
23595Why did n''t he stay a blacksmith, if he was a good one, and let it go at that?
23595Why not?
23595Why, are n''t you Robert Collyer-- the Reverend Robert Collyer?
23595You are the man who puts your name on the package?
23595A family of ten children born and reared in a noisome Ghetto, and all strong and healthy?
23595And the answer was:"What''s the use?
23595But he continued,"I say, mother, if we did not have a dollar, we could still earn our living with our hands at just plain hard work, could n''t we?"
23595Could this freight be saved?
23595Has the world made head the past forty years?
23595He asked himself,"What would Franklin have done under these conditions?"
23595Here a listener puts in a question, thus:"What kind of a lookin''fellow is th''ol''man?"
23595How could they break the news to Papa Dale?
23595I do n''t look like a dominie, do I, Captain?"
23595In judging a man we must in justice to ourselves ask,"What effect has this man''s life, taken as a whole, had on the world?"
23595Is Farley a rogue and a varlet?
23595It was the captain, and before the lad could escape the man said,"Here, I want a cabin- boy-- will you go?"
23595Jefferson was a composite of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, and if Socrates was not the first Jeffersonian Democrat, then who was?
23595Let them run the streets?
23595No one ever asked him, any more than they did old Doctor Johnson,"Sir, are you anybody in particular?"
23595Once a woman asked a floorwalker this question,"Do you keep stationery?"
23595One of the men present asked,"Did n''t you feel sorry for the fellow, to turn him adrift on that frozen plain, without food or fuel?"
23595Opportunity and Peter Cooper met, or is the man himself Opportunity?
23595Or was it just a little harmless exercise of the lacrimal glands?
23595Or,"Which cow is it that gives the butter- milk?"
23595Second, what is he doing with it?
23595Such questions as,"Where would you get anything to eat if I did not provide it?"
23595That was poetry, but was it art?
23595The clerk smiled pleasantly and asked,"Do you want a razor to shave with?"
23595The gatekeeper challenges you thus:"Are you a clergyman?"
23595The loan-- you will not refuse me?"
23595The place had been sold, and they had gone with it-- how were they to be treated?
23595The reply brought forth another question, as his secretive and clever Excellency knew it would, namely,"Why?"
23595There are two things we want to know about a very rich man: First, how did he get his wealth?
23595Was the work worth the price?
23595Were wages to be lowered and hours extended?
23595What is a Businessman?
23595What is"middle life"?
23595What other man ever put forty millions of money and his lifeblood into a railroad?
23595What were these people who were thrown out, to do?
23595What would he work for?
23595What would you?
23595Where and how could he use his talent best?
23595Who are peculiar?
23595Why could not this example be extended indefinitely so that hundreds of such villages should grow instead of only one?
23595Would the Rappites sell?
23595did you know how great and wise was your scheme?
18588''And do you think that is the end of man?'' 18588 ''And how came the good woman not to tell me you were her husband?''
18588''And how should a man?'' 18588 ''And the chals and chies into radical weavers and factory wenches, hey, brother?''
18588''And the young girl I saw your daughter?'' 18588 ''And where will you take me?''
18588''And who has more right,''said I,''seeing that you live by them? 18588 ''And who is your brother, little Sas?''
18588''And why not cuckoos, brother?'' 18588 ''And you have spent it already?''
18588''And your hanner will give me a shilling?'' 18588 ''Are you a native of these parts?''
18588''But, your hanner, what shall we do for the words? 18588 ''But,''said I, after the landlord had departed,''I must insist on being[?
18588''Can you playCroppies Lie Down"?''
18588''Danger, brother, there is no danger; what danger should there be? 18588 ''Did I not say to you,''cried the bullfighter,''that you knew nothing of the crabbed_ Gitano_?
18588''Do you choose to get on?'' 18588 ''Do you hear that, sir?''
18588''Do you think so?'' 18588 ''Hanner bright, your hanner?''
18588''Have you then realized a large capital in Spain?'' 18588 ''How do you know it?''
18588''How much money did you bring with you to town?'' 18588 ''I suppose you are waiting to be paid,''said I;''what is your demand?''
18588''I suppose you live there as servant?'' 18588 ''I would, your hanner; and why not?
18588''In blindness, Jasper?'' 18588 ''In sickness, Jasper?''
18588''Is the good woman I saw there your wife?'' 18588 ''It is not possible, say you?
18588''Kosko Divvus, Pal,''said Mr. Petulengro, riding through the water;''are you turning back?'' 18588 ''O then you have been an Orange fiddler?''
18588''O, who can doubt,''thought I,''that the word was originally intended for something monstrous and horrible? 18588 ''On what grounds do you suppose me to be so?''
18588''Then why did you turn off the lord, and take up with me?'' 18588 ''Were you an author yourself,''replied my host,''you would not talk in this manner; once an author, ever an author-- besides, what could I do?
18588''What are ye doing with the dog of peace?'' 18588 ''What are you doing with the dog, the fairy dog?''
18588''What do you see there, brother?'' 18588 ''What does it look like, brother?''
18588''What family have you?'' 18588 ''What horse is that?''
18588''What is the name of this village?'' 18588 ''What, indeed, except in sleeping beneath a tree; what is that you have got in your hand?''
18588''What,''said I,''and give up Popery for the second time?'' 18588 ''Where do you live?''
18588''Which shall I have, brother?'' 18588 ''Who is staring at us so, and whose horse has not yet done drinking?
18588''Who knows, your hanner? 18588 ''Who knows?''
18588''Who knows?'' 18588 ''Why do you say so?''
18588''Would you take your oath of it, brother-- your bodily oath?'' 18588 ''Yes,''said I,''I eat meat sometimes; what should I eat?''
18588''You are a Roman Catholic, I suppose?'' 18588 ''You are a professor of music, I suppose?''
18588''You have been a soldier of the King of Spain,''said I;''how did you like the service?'' 18588 ''You have taken drows, sir,''said Mrs. Herne;''do you hear, sir?
18588''You hear what the young rye says?'' 18588 ''You speak the language of Spain very imperfectly,''said I;''how long have you been in the country?''
18588''Your hanner will give me a shilling?'' 18588 Belle looked at me for a moment in silence; then turning to Mrs. Petulengro, she said,''You have had your will with me; are you satisfied?''
18588Dear baby, what makes ye your countenance hide?
18588Do ye mean,Borrow says that he said,"that ye would wish to be hanged?"
18588My father, my father, and seest thou not His sorceress daughter in yonder dark spot?
18588Perhaps you will not mind reciting me something in the Persian tongue?
18588Spur, father, your courser and rowel his side; The Erl- King is chasing us over the heath;"Peace, baby, thou seest a vapoury wreath?
18588Then there was myself; for what was I born? 18588 What is truth?"
18588When a boy of fourteen,he says,"I was present at a prize fight; why should I hide the truth?
18588When may I look for thee once more here? 18588 _ Mother_.--''But of what?
18588''And by what means do you possess such apparent influence over them?''
18588''And do you keep them,''said I,''for the sake of making mead with their honey?''
18588''And do you live alone?''
18588''And do you support yourself entirely by means of your bees?''
18588''And have you always lived alone?''
18588''And whom may it betide?''
18588''Are you bound for Finisterra, cavalheiros?''
18588''Are you married?''
18588''But suppose all that were to happen, what would it signify to you?''
18588''By whom else?''
18588''Come, let us know what you ask for him?''
18588''Did he know them?''
18588''Do you call that a great price?''
18588''Do you remember what I told you of the Eastern origin of these people?
18588''Do you think my black pal ever rides at a leaping bar?
18588''Dost thou see that man in the ford?''
18588''Have you made a long journey to- night?''
18588''Have you many bees?''
18588''How do you know that?''
18588''I believe I heard you coming in my sleep,''said I;''did the dogs above bark at you?''
18588''If crocodiles,''thought I,''ever existed in Britain, and who shall say they have not?
18588''Kennst du das land wo die citronen bluhen?''"
18588''My father, why were moles made?''
18588''My father, why were you and I made?''
18588''Separate,''said I,''what do you mean?
18588''Then you were talking with her beneath the hedge?''
18588''Well,''said I,''and could he not make an honest penny, and yet give me the price I ask?''
18588''What are you thinking of?''
18588''What do you ask for him?''
18588''When and where was that?''
18588''Where do you get it?''
18588''Who are those people, and what could have brought them into that strange situation?''
18588''Who is that?''
18588''Why not?''
18588''Will you let me look in his mouth?''
18588''Yes,''said Isopel,''very violently; did you think of me in your sleep?''
18588''Yorkshire?''
18588*****"''What ails you, my child?''
18588And as to the_ time_ spent, hunting is inseparable from_ early rising_; and, with habits of early rising, who ever wanted time for any business?"
18588And yet I do n''t know; did n''t he write Childe Harold and that ode?
18588Are not all things born to be forgotten?
18588Are not all things subjected to the law of necessity?
18588Art thou, as leeches say, the concomitant of disease-- the result of shattered nerves?
18588Assuredly; time and chance govern all things: yet how can this be?
18588Batuschca,''he exclaimed the other night, on reading an article in a newspaper;''what do you think of the present doings in Spain?
18588Borrow asked:''Is that old Lyle I met here once, the man who stands at the door( of some den or other) and_ bets_?''
18588Borrow, that the Persian is a very fine language; is it so?"
18588Borrow, who were they?''
18588But could I, taking all circumstances into consideration, have done better than I had?
18588But how could I help him?
18588But how were indifferent people to distinguish between madness and this screaming horror?
18588But it is not fair or necessary to retort as Hindes Groome did:"Is the Man in Black then also a reality, and the Reverend Mr. Platitude?
18588But was I ever born?
18588Cheered with hope, we struggle along through all the difficulties of moor, bog, and mountain, to arrive at-- what?
18588Come, your hanner, shall I play ye"Croppies Get Up"?''
18588Dialogue with tall man Merddyn?
18588Did he?
18588Did you not hear me say that I would give a quart of ale to see a poet?''
18588Do you know where you are?''
18588Do you know where you will be this time to- morrow?''
18588Do you mean my account books?"
18588Flow on, beautiful one!--which of the world''s streams canst thou envy, with thy beauty and renown?
18588Good are our horses, and good our riders-- yea, very good are the Moslems at mounting the horse; who are like them?
18588Had I not better become in reality what I had hitherto been merely playing at-- a tinker or a Gypsy?
18588Had he not said, in his preface, that he had known the Gypsies for twenty years and that they treated him well because they thought him a Gypsy?
18588He calls the fatalist''s question:"Can an Arabian steed submit to be a vile drudge?"
18588He can also be precise and connoisseur- like, as when he describes the cataract at Llan Rhaiadr:"What shall I liken it to?
18588He is said to have stained his face to darken it further, and to have been asked by Valpy:"Is that jaundice or only dirt, Borrow?"
18588He said to the silent archbishop:"I suppose your lordship knows who I am?
18588His horses are magnificent:"What,"he asks,"what is a missionary in the heart of Spain without a horse?
18588His"Letter concerning the two first chapters of Luke"has the further title,"Who was the father of Christ?"
18588How did he stand?
18588How should a bird have a soul?''
18588I am glad to see you: how are you getting on?''
18588I grasped, I tore, and strove to fling it from me; but of what avail were my efforts?
18588I know you will give me one, pretty brother, grey- haired brother-- which shall I have, brother?''
18588I say, young man, will you warrant this horse?''
18588I was asking, brother, whether you believe in dukkeripens?''
18588I was living, it is true, not unpleasantly, enjoying the healthy air of heaven; but, upon the whole, was I not sadly misspending my time?
18588If beavers ever existed in Britain, and do not tradition and Giraldus say that they have?
18588If so, of what profit is life?
18588In other words, did Tractarianism exist in 1825, eight years before it was engendered by Keble''s sermon?"
18588In the earlier version of"Lavengro,"represented by a manuscript and a proof,"Ardry"is"Arden,""Jasper"is"Ambrose,"and the question"What is his name?"
18588In the same way, when he has told a man called Dafydd Tibbot, that he is a Frenchman--"Dearie me, sir, am I indeed?"
18588In what did I not doubt?
18588In what is man better than a butterfly?
18588Is it possible she can be singing?
18588Is not all that I see a lie-- a deceitful phantom?
18588Is not the word a fitting brother of the Arabic timsah, denoting the dread horny lizard of the waters?
18588Is there a world, and earth, and sky?
18588Is this invention?
18588James?"
18588L---?''
18588Life is very sweet, brother; who would wish to die?''
18588Moreover, have we not the voice of tradition that the afanc was something monstrous?
18588Now what am I to give you for the things?"
18588Now, madam,''said she, again taking Belle by the hand,''do oblige me by allowing me to plait your hair a little?''
18588O how from their fury shall I flee?
18588O who can read the stars like the Egyptians?
18588One the[ Clo---?]
18588Or was it really not long before the actual narrative was written in the''forties?
18588Petulengro?''
18588Petulengro_.--''How am I getting on?
18588Photo: W. J. Roberts: page27.jpg} CHAPTER IV-- WHAT IS TRUTH?
18588Reader, have you ever pored days and nights over the pages of Snorro?
18588Scraps like this from"Wisdom of the Egyptians,"are well enough:"''My father, why were worms made?''
18588Should I write another book like the''Life of Joseph Sell;''take it to London, and offer it to a publisher?
18588Thackeray tried to get up a conversation with him, his final effort being the question,"Have you seen my''Snob Papers''in''Punch''?"
18588That''s incomprehensible: yet is it not so?
18588The girl and water-- B---?
18588The same critic has remarked on"the Sterne- like conclusion of a chapter:''Italy-- what was I going to say about Italy?''"
18588This chapter now ends with the magistrate''s question to young Borrow about this man:"What is his name?"
18588Thou wouldst be joyous, wouldst thou?
18588To which Borrow answered:"In''Punch''?
18588Translated from the French[ by Borrow?].
18588Was it before his first escape from London, as he says in"Lavengro"?
18588Was it during his second long stay in London or after his second escape?
18588Was it not there that I introduced you to the sorcerer who tamed the savage horses by a single whisper into their ear?
18588Was it now, or when he was bookkeeper at the inn in 1825, that he saw so much of the ways of commercial travellers?
18588Was it possible that it was relaxing its grasp, releasing its prey?
18588Was it possible?
18588Was it the beauty of the scene which gave rise to these emotions?
18588Well, why not marry, and go and till the ground in America?
18588What beautiful object has not something which more or less mars its loveliness?
18588What danger is there?''
18588What does not my own poor self owe to thee?
18588What great work was ever the result of joy, the puny one?
18588What had been the profit of the tongues which I had learned?
18588What languages do you understand?"
18588What matters it then if the author professes the opinion that"the friendship of the unrighteous is never of long duration"?
18588What should I do: run to the nearest town or village, and request the assistance of my fellow- men?
18588What should I do: say my prayers?
18588What will you have for that nokengro?''
18588When he was only eighteen he was continually asking himself"What is truth?"
18588When roast the heifer and spice the beer?"
18588Where is there such a man who can not trace to this cause a very considerable part of all the mortifications and sufferings of his life?
18588Who associates Snowdon with Arthur, and what Arthurian stories have the valleys and passes of Snowdon for their scenes?
18588Who can lie down on Elvir Hill without experiencing something of the sorcery of the place?
18588Who could stand against such fellows and such whips?
18588Who have been the wise ones, the mighty ones, the conquering ones of this earth?
18588Who was it did all this for me?
18588Who was it did, at Suderoe, The deed no other dared to do?
18588Who was it flung the rope to me?
18588Who was it taught my willing tongue, The songs that Braga fram''d and sung?
18588Who was it, when the Boff had burst, And whelm''d me in its womb accurst, Who was it dashed amid the wave, With frantic zeal, my life to save?
18588Who when he thinks of Snowdon does not associate it with the heroes of romance, Arthur and his knights?
18588Why should a man with such a life invent for the purpose of only five books?
18588Will a time come when all will be forgotten that now is beneath the sun?
18588Will you believe her words?
18588Will you let me get into the saddle, young man?''
18588Would he have had recourse to them to draw out the little harmless beaver?
18588Years afterwards, when Mr. Watts- Dunton asked him,"What is the real nature of autobiography?"
18588all eyes are turned upon him-- what looks of interest-- of respect-- and, what is this?
18588and in another place referred to the time when he lived with the English Gypsies?
18588and who can read the lines of the palm like the Egyptians?
18588and who knows that I may not play the ould tune round Willie''s image in College Green, even as I used some twenty- seven years ago?''
18588but how is this?
18588do you think that the being before ye has any sympathy for the like of you?
18588had they ever assisted me in the day of hunger?
18588he answered in questions:"Is it a mere record of the incidents of a man''s life?
18588or is it a picture of the man himself-- his character, his soul?"
18588other things far more genuine-- how he had tamed savage mares, wrestled with Satan, and had dealings with ferocious publishers"?
18588return to my former state of vegetation?
18588said I,''was it you that cried danger?
18588said I;''surely you are not thinking of driving me away?''
18588said a mother to her son, as he lay on a couch under the influence of the dreadful one;''what ails you?
18588said he, a few moments after I had passed,''whose horse is that?
18588seeing that their remains have been discovered, why should they not have haunted this pool?
18588the great man exclaimed:"Pray, what books do you mean, madam?
18588the joyous?
18588there is no one can harm you; of what are you apprehensive?''
18588they are not of our blood, and shall that be shed for them?"
18588what"poets of modern Europe"have sung of it?
18588who''ll stay here?
18588why not?
18588why should a mortal worm be sitting in judgment over thee?
18588why should they not have existed in this pool?
19827A lesson to teach them all to go and do likewise, eh, Marlboro''?
19827Ah, Mr. St. George,said she, gayly,"this from you, for whom the disciples claim Calhoun''s mantle?
19827And now, Sir Joseph, could you oblige me with the name of the physician who attended your last sickness?
19827And what are the rooms opposite?
19827And what is that, pray?
19827And you have her no longer? 19827 And you want Vane?"
19827And you will, then?
19827Are you King Ahasuerus himself, to have lived so long in the house with Miss Changarnier, may I ask, and to have thrown no handkerchief?
19827Art thou a dumb, wronged thing that would be righted, Intrusting thus thy cause to me? 19827 Burge, you here?--and one of us?"
19827But can I?--may I?
19827But did the Levites unveil the sacred ark?
19827But it''s becoming to me, is n''t it?
19827But ought I to accept such a gift?
19827But what do they come_ there_ for?
19827But,says Grunnio, at this point,"how will you protect your ten- acre farms from invidious neighbors, from wandering guerrillas?"
19827Can she kiss Miss Turligood?
19827Can you give me the place?
19827Can you not imagine knights on horseback prancing over these stones, and alighting at the great hall- door beyond?
19827Consolidation? 19827 Could she kiss Colonel Prowley, or even pull his hair a little?"
19827Do n''t Russian women present the knout to their bridegrooms?
19827Do you think these people voluntary impostors?
19827Doctor Franklin, is that you?
19827Doctor Franklin, is that_ you_?
19827Gilding hell? 19827 Has it not been foretold that''in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of devils''?
19827Has your little nun taken the black veil?
19827Have you brought Pocahontas with you? 19827 How so?"
19827In pursuit of an_ ignis- fatuus_?
19827Is it I, Eugenia Turligood?
19827Is n''t he splendid?
19827Let me see, what was I to write about?
19827Let me see,--Cromwell was a terrible Catholic, was n''t he?
19827Me? 19827 Might not the kissing be done through a medium?"
19827My dear Chris,said my wife,"is n''t it time to be writing the next''House and Home Paper''?"
19827Now, Mr. Marlboro'',said Éloise,"shall we not turn back, victorious?"
19827Oh, there, is n''t he splendid? 19827 Play Undine and the Knight on the island?
19827Seeking danger for the pleasure of escape?
19827Should somebody call over the names of all mediums present, and would the table tip at the right one?
19827Should the alphabet be called?
19827Still ailing, Wind? 19827 Surrounded by his bank of silver- tunicked attendants?"
19827That is Hazel, then? 19827 That is just my purpose.--Sir Joseph Barley, can you give me the date of your death?"
19827The Apostle declares that his own immortal individuality alone controls his members,--and why? 19827 There?
19827Turn?
19827Very well, then, you will tip when I come to the name of the medium through whom you consent to kiss Miss Sarah Branly?
19827We part here, then?
19827Well, papa,said Jennie,"what are you meaning to make out there?
19827What are you talking about, politics or marriage?
19827What has that_ contrabandista_ been saying to you?
19827What is in them?
19827What is that, Auguste?
19827What would you do with the blacks?
19827What would you have had me do? 19827 What?
19827When did Sir Joseph die?
19827Which sigh wouldst mock, of all the sighs? 19827 Who claims our Shakspeare from that realm unknown, Beyond the storm- vexed islands of the deep, Where Genoa''s deckless caravels were blown?
19827Who would not be the Abélard to such an Éloise?
19827Why does he sign himself_ Sir_?
19827Why so?
19827Why, Bridget, what''s the matter?
19827Will Sir Joseph tip for us again?
19827Will he? 19827 Wo n''t he?"
19827Would Pocahontas appoint that medium?
19827Would the table tip towards the medium indicated?
19827Would you be plased, Ma''am, to suit yersilf with another cook? 19827 Would you like to see the family- plate?"
19827Yet you are said to be a believer in the possession which the mediums claim?
19827You are going out, Miss Changarnier?
19827You were about to impart some information?
19827You, who begin by assuming the impossibility of spirit- intercourse since Bible times, with what candor can you examine the facts we build upon?
19827Your way to what?
19827( she''most always comes with him)--and if so, can she kiss me to- night?"
19827A way to_ know_ of the doctrine has been revealed: it is by doing the will of the Father: who of us has fulfilled the condition?
19827About Vane?
19827After this, will you tell me that there is not such a thing as ill- luck?
19827And how better can we characterize this confused and distracting babblement which gives no good gift to man?"
19827And there is his"Sketch- Book,"--in blue and gold, in green and gold, in red and gold;--in what colors, and in what language, does it not appear?
19827And when we came back, they inquired, eagerly,--"How you like Edisto?
19827And why this digression?
19827Are you aghast at your own situation on the steep slope of a mule''s back, with a precipice above your head and your feet dangling over a gulf below?
19827Are you engaged to him?
19827As to the story of those dropped children being nursed by a she- wolf, had it not been established that wolves did sometimes suckle humanity''s young?
19827At last a hesitating voice came sliding towards him,--"Mr. St. George"----"I beg your pardon,--did you speak?"
19827But before he could have replied, she resumed,--"Well, Sir, Hazel is very pretty"----"It is Hazel, then?
19827But what were we to do?
19827But why not ask_ him_ the question?"
19827Can any one wonder at my early words,"A slapjack may be the last plank between the woodsman and starvation"?
19827Centralization?"
19827Colfodder?"
19827Colfodder?"
19827Comfortably?
19827Could I do better than accept this invitation to enter the humble cottage, with the prospect of an admittance also to an old woman''s heart?
19827Could it be that there was needed the hot- house heat of a carnal"success"to favor this exquisite flowering of the spirit?
19827Did I win the latter?
19827Did not the face of the medium wear an expression of earthly disappointment at this slender recognition?
19827Did the motherly creature believe me lost?
19827Direct examination by the widow:--"Have you brought your patent lyre here to- night?"
19827Do I not hear the voice of the stout baron mustering his retainers to bid me welcome?
19827Do we mean to leave it to the chapter of accidents, as we have done?
19827Do you really suppose that Mr. Marlboro''would give Vane to me?"
19827Do you really think it would be best for us all to try to go back to that old style of living you describe?
19827Does it not seem poor economy to pay servants for letting our muscles grow feeble, and then to pay operators to exercise them for us?
19827Does the good general expose his campaign?"
19827Does the scenery through which you are passing awaken emotions of sublimity?
19827Dost want to be disburthened of a woe, And can, in truth, my voice untie Its links, and let it go?
19827For what, then, do you contend?"
19827George?"
19827Has he carried his large faith with him into the great metropolis?
19827Have I, then, aided your purpose, Auguste?
19827Have we endured all these pains only to learn still deeper Life''s saddest lesson,--"Climb forever, and there is still an Inaccessible"?
19827Have we not aforetime been vexed with them in this very New England?
19827Have you spoken to your master about buying Vane?"
19827Her twofold Saint''s- day let our England keep; Shall warring aliens share her holy task?"
19827How Edisto stan''?"
19827How do you dare ask him to pass the butter?
19827How is this cheapness of administration gained?
19827How shall we explain this?
19827How should she dare disturb him?
19827How should Éloise contradict him?
19827In short,--"If all the world was apple- pie, And all the sea was ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink?"
19827Indeed?
19827Is it altogether genteel to live as we do?
19827Is not that distant rattling the clash of armor on the stones?
19827Is she not pretty,--Hazel?"
19827Mean to be?
19827Much that I have taken on faith from my childhood has already been realized since I touched English shores,--why not this?
19827No?
19827Not living was it?
19827Old Joe Eddings?
19827Or what should we do, if potato- roots had happened to be moistened with gin instead of water?
19827Should I have stood here, letting I dare not wait upon I would, like the cat i''the adage, while the oak caught and rushed you off to sea?
19827Simple?
19827So far as relates to early Roman history, want of faith is very natural; for what documents have we to go upon in making up an opinion concerning it?
19827Speak sweetly as they might, what one of her old gallants forgot her loss of wealth?
19827Stellato?"
19827The castle is a stern place, perhaps; but how can I ever think it grim, with such a jolly old flatterer as you stationed at its portal?
19827The wretched thraldom was over,--and what had it left?
19827Then, I declare----Suppose now, only just suppose, suppose he''d look at me?"
19827Truly indeed?
19827Used to slaves, would she have preferred a master?
19827Was I fool enough, then, to trust his professions?
19827Was I more philosophical than he?
19827Was it a mocking spirit that haunted the place?
19827Was it this which had awakened the ambition of the young Savoyard to share the spoils of the empire of which he had so suddenly become a member?
19827Was not Great Britain a genealogical hunting- ground where game of rarest plumage might be started?
19827Was she really, despite her poverty, ready to share her last crust with a stranger?
19827We are about to have a most interesting manifestation.--Pocahontas, do you wish me to call over the names?"
19827Well, there are moments-- why not confess it?
19827What do we mean to do with this strip, while it is in the special charge of the nation?
19827What hope for the race, then, if this were all?
19827What object had her lonely life?
19827What prevented this sheet of water from spreading east and west in Glen Spean?
19827What was now to be done?
19827Which needs the other''s office, thou or I?
19827Which of these two, think you, is the modern representative of King David''s"fool"?
19827Who else cared for it?
19827Who knew but the vital changes which were going on within its gritty cellular tissue were only imperceptible to us because silent and vastly secular?
19827Who knew but the_ débris_ at its foot was merely the cast- off sweat and_ exuviæ_ of a stone life''s great work- day?
19827Why not face it sensibly?
19827Why should she continue to live with Mr. St. George for her haughty master, when here was this man at her feet?
19827Why should she not give it to him?
19827Why, but that suddenly the conviction smote her that she loved the one and despised the other, that she adored the master and despised the slave?
19827Will he not?
19827Will he?"
19827Wilt be appeased or no?
19827With regard to these men the question is not,"What are you going to do with them when the war is done?"
19827Would she rise and let us see?
19827Would you like her to be made more distinctly yours, Miss Éloise?"
19827Yes, but how many nebulous ideas, think you, would it take to stuff out their hollowness?
19827Yes, that is all; but how many are there who can set such sweet currents of wind aflow?
19827You promise me?"
19827You say in your soul,"What shall we do?
19827and have I kept mine unshaken in spite of the storm that is raging in my native land?
19827and why should it be supposed that no lupine nursery had ever existed at the foot of the Palatine Hill?
19827but,"What will you do with them to- day and to- morrow?"
19827can it be that our unbelief is punished with this frightful manifestation?"
19827how dare you?"
19827is not that the sound of an answering horn?
19827or did I only fancy it?
19827or one of the old figures on the tapestry, started into life?
19827or was her astonishment only feigned?
19827or was the benignant glance which gave me in my loneliness the sense of adoption merely an eye to self- interest?
19827save a momentary sojourner in the bosom of a cyclic period whose clock his race had never yet lived long enough to hear strike?
19827they never can be contented to live as we do; how shall we manage?"
19827was n''t that a rap?"
19827Éloise laughed in her charming way, and said,--"But, Mr. Marlboro'', would it not be an admirable lesson to your people, if Vane were sold?"
17191A lady? 17191 Afraid of what?"
17191Am I to understand that you have done me the honor to bet on my movements?
17191And a clattering sound?
17191And he said nothing about squeezing my hand in the coach,asked she, hesitatingly,"when I showed so much fear of its overturning?"
17191And how did you get away at last?
17191And how far are we from Africa?
17191And how many months is it since we left Scotland?
17191And is she to remain here any time?
17191And now,suggested L''Isle, wishing to know the old man''s views,"election is for the Scotch nation, and reprobation for the Portuguese?"
17191And pray, Mr. Interpreter, how did you and your principal get through the evening?
17191And this superstition now prevails?
17191And what is a detour?
17191And why should they not be amused?
17191Are Christianity and idolatry one and the same?
17191Are there your hoary outlaws?
17191Are these people worth fighting for?
17191Are we on the road to Evora?
17191Because the Scriptures bid you?
17191Blunders?
17191But do you know that he is leading you to the land of the Moors?
17191But has the commissary,Lady Mabel asked,"a right to make the requisition with which he threatens him?"
17191But have you forgotten in what condition he came back with us from Evora?
17191But how do you happen to have a supper ready at this hour?
17191But how does this prevent your protesting against Rome?
17191But how will papa do without you?
17191But now the commissary has left us, do you not mean to go back to Elvas?
17191But what shall we do for Moodie?
17191But what was there left to fill their pockets with?
17191But when and where did you dine?
17191But where is the Portuguese part of your household?
17191But, Colonel Bradshawe, how did you become so familiar with Roman manners? 17191 By that ratio, what standard of cleanliness will you find in Morocco?"
17191Can it be for the commander- in- chief?
17191Can the river have risen and the bank caved in?
17191Can you hire me a messenger at the next place we stop at? 17191 Could our British population be brought down to as low a condition as these people?"
17191Did he escape by jumping out of the window, and you try to detain him?
17191Did he leap out of the window?
17191Did he, indeed?
17191Did the world ever before witness such complicated perfidy?
17191Did you see that?
17191Did you sing''Constant my heart''_ at_ him?
17191Dine?
17191Do they always add murder to robbery here?
17191Do we not give them a run at grass, to refresh their constitutions and renew their youth?
17191Do you know how many dogmas the Kirk and Rome hold in common?
17191Do you know,said L''Isle, laughing,"that this is, to me, quite a new version of that little affair?
17191Do you not hear the stamping of a horse across the water?
17191Do you not, sir?
17191Do you see those men in that field, with three yoke of oxen going round and round on one spot?
17191Do you see where the earth shows, by its color differing from the adjacent soil, that it has been turned up not long since? 17191 Do you seriously imagine that this war will last forever?"
17191Do you suppose that they are thinking of Badajoz?
17191Do you think black eyes the most expressive?
17191Do you think he got my order yesterday?
17191Do you think so? 17191 Do you think so?"
17191Do you think so?
17191Does quizzing make a man mad?
17191For Heaven''s sake, Colonel L''Isle, what are you dreaming of?
17191For Heaven''s sake, papa, what did he tell you?
17191Has such blind selfishness a parallel?
17191Have these people sunk so low? 17191 Have you ever been in Ireland?"
17191Have you not heard of them?
17191How can I help it?
17191How can you talk so, papa? 17191 How could I help it, papa, it came in so pat to the purpose?"
17191How did my lord take it?
17191How did you happen to find this lovely spot?
17191How far are we from it?
17191I am much obliged to you; where is he to be found?
17191I hope for the honor of human nature,interposed Major Conway,"that there are honest men among commissaries?"
17191I hope he writes on an agreeable topic, and in a suitable style?
17191I hope she is of a sociable temper?
17191I suppose you see in Portugal nothing but a land of rare and varied vegetation?
17191I will, but what is the matter?
17191I wonder where he got it?
17191I would like to know what you, my Lady, have to do with the opening of the campaign?
17191If the cowardly rascal will not come forward and lodge a complaint,said Lord Strathern,"what the devil can we do?"
17191In verse, child? 17191 Is he much hurt?"
17191Is it because Scotland is too poor to maintain paupers?
17191Is it in verse, Papa?
17191Is it not provoking?
17191Is it possible, Moodie,Lady Mabel retorted,"that you do not know that we are on the Pope''s side in this quarrel?
17191Is that for Sir Rowland Hill?
17191Is that my predestined road?
17191Is this disease prevalent in your brigade, my lord?
17191Let me first ask when you will be at home to- morrow-- at three?
17191My dear Lady Mabel, how do you know that my lord would trust you so far under my care? 17191 Now, my lads, without even stopping to wet my whistle,"said he,"I will but sharpen my spurs, saddle my horse, and then--""What then?"
17191Or in an English poor- house?
17191Or of his kissing it, after supper?
17191Or of my trying to hold him back?
17191Pray what are you then?
17191Pray, Bradshawe, who could have told Sir Rowland that we sit long and drink deep at Elvas?
17191Pray, L''Isle how came you to let your horse slip from under you, and measure your length in the road?
17191Pray,said Lady Mabel to L''Isle, while they were waiting for their horses,"what is a New Christian?"
17191Say you so? 17191 Shall I bruise the serpent''s head with my heel, or shall I draw my sword on a reptile?"
17191So you, yourself, are the Spanish master, whom you, yourself, would recommend?
17191Squeezing your hand?
17191Suppose he attends Lady Mabel, and neglects Sir Rowland?
17191That alters the case,said Lady Mabel;"but were we not beaten some years before that, at Almansa, here in Spain?"
17191Then he said nothing about my-- my singing--''Constant my heart''to him?
17191Then he said nothing of his leaping out of the window?
17191To Badajoz? 17191 To whom?"
17191Traveling is one way to grow wise; and as to danger, what did you leave Craiggyside for, if it was not to take care of me?
17191Was that_ all_ he told you?
17191Were its powers so great?
17191Were these Romans Christians?
17191Were they so numerous?
17191Were you ever clogged with sweet things?
17191Were you right?
17191What are the duties of atonement?
17191What are they?
17191What are you dreaming of, L''Isle? 17191 What beautiful mountain is that which trenches so close upon the border, as if it would join itself to the Serra de Portalegre?"
17191What carried him there?
17191What could this have been built for?
17191What do you allude to?
17191What do you think of that, Fox?
17191What is it, sir, shall I look for it?
17191What is more likely?
17191What is that black object across the water?
17191What is that?
17191What is that?
17191What is the burden of Sir Rowland''s verses?
17191What is the matter with Colonel L''Isle?
17191What is there in them,exclaimed one of the party,"that needs such close watching?"
17191What matters L''Isle''s being able to tell him whether or not they look like soldiers? 17191 What news has come?
17191What of that? 17191 What on earth was Lord Strathern dreaming of, when he brought his daughter out here-- and such a daughter-- to preside over his house and his table?
17191What says he about my language and_ Nossa Senhora de Nazareth?_said Lady Mabel.
17191What special part does this old man fill in your father''s household?
17191What the devil are you doing here?
17191What then are her faults?
17191What will you do there?
17191What,_ Ma Belle_, are you here? 17191 Where Lusitania and her sister meet, Deem ye what bounds the rival realms divide?
17191Where is she now?
17191Where were you then?
17191Who from?
17191Who is the offended saint?
17191Who is this fellow? 17191 Who told you this?"
17191Why L''Isle,said Lord Strathern,"has Shortridge brought his wife to Elvas?"
17191Why do you have him so much about you, then, and quote him so often?
17191Why do you not give him a hint?
17191Why not forever, or, at least, for a long life time? 17191 Why not?"
17191Why, Mrs. Shortridge,she exclaimed, with a well- feigned air of one deeply wronged,"do you mean to desert me?
17191Why, do you not see Moodie, that the people grow darker, each day, as we travel on?
17191Why, has not the colonel fighting enough before him,said Cranfield, laughing,"that he must go back so far for more?"
17191Why, my lord, what has L''Isle done?
17191Why, then, do you come from below so much heated and excited?
17191Why, were we not fighting their battles?
17191Why, where is he sending you now?
17191Why, will you not let me make a Christian confession of the sinfulness of my nature? 17191 Why,"asked Mrs. Shortridge,"do these people always build their towns on hills?"
17191Why,exclaimed Mrs. Shortridge,"is Moodie so much dissatisfied with our church?
17191Why,said L''Isle, in some surprise,"what have you heard of that occasion?"
17191Why? 17191 Would rendering it into English reconcile you to its length?"
17191Would they not assist in their own defence?
17191Would you have me go scolding and gesticulating at every foreign fellow I meet with, and become notorious throughout Elvas as the British virago?
17191You deal in mysteries; who in Elvas is so safe from L''Isle''s resentment?
17191A thousand tapers may gain light from thee: Is thy light less or worse for lighting mine?
17191Above all, what would L''Isle think of her?
17191After watching him in silent surprise, she exclaimed:"Why, Moodie, are you going too?
17191An English lady?
17191And pray, madam, what did you tell him?"
17191And the seven nations of Canaan, were they not swept off as utterly reprobate from the face of the earth?"
17191And what would they be when the exact truth- the whole plot-- was known to him?
17191And, now, I must bid you good- night; or shall I say good- morning?"
17191Are we to have private theatricals, with Lady Mabel for first and sole actress?
17191But how do you know, L''Isle, that this story is true?"
17191But how will it be six months hence?
17191But is the commissary able and willing to take charge of more than one lady, Mrs. Shortridge, who has a will of her own?
17191But what account did he give of his leaving the house?"
17191But what can she say?
17191But what is her misfortune?"
17191But what of them?"
17191But who shall measure, step by step, over conquered enemies and fallen friends, this long eventful road?
17191But will he listen, much less understand?"
17191Can she let him go without one word?
17191Can the brandy drinker cheer himself with draughts of small beer?
17191Colonel L''Isle, could not you ride there in a morning?"
17191Completely at his mercy?
17191Could L''Isle''s vanity be beguiling him?
17191Could he believe his eyes?
17191Could they exercise those hordes of little demons, lay a spell upon them and turn them out of doors?
17191Did Colonel L''Isle give you a full account of the party-- of all that occurred that evening?"
17191Did he think her still a child now, when she felt herself a woman?
17191Did you ever see a recruiting sergeant, in all his glory, among a party of rustics at a village alehouse?
17191Did you hear whether we did the French any damage, while they beset us so closely?"
17191Do I not know your opinions and my lord''s?
17191Do you expect them to go on making a series of blunders at headquarters, like that in the affair of that unlucky Spanish village?"
17191Do you forget how she yearns after the two little boys she left at home, that you venture to aggravate so her regrets at leaving England?"
17191Do you know what that means, Meynell?
17191Do you, like a great English philosopher, believe in election and reprobation by nature?"
17191Does any son of the church neglect the practice of charity?
17191Does he seek amusement from books?
17191Does he strive to forget his sins?
17191Does he take you for a Popish saint, endowed with pluripresence, and able to be in Andalusia, at Badajoz, Elvas, and Alcantara, all at one time?"
17191Especially when that friend is the pleasantest fellow in the brigade?
17191Every faculty hitherto engrossed in the part she was playing, until this moment she had never looked on this side of the picture?
17191From whence he came?
17191Had L''Isle forgotten also his appointment to- morrow morning at Alcantara?
17191Had he got on so far?
17191Had not God his chosen people of old?
17191Have you ever heard of our Scottish superstition of being_ fie_--that is, possessed by a preternatural excess of vivacity?
17191Have you never been to any of the churches in Elvas, to''assist''at the service and enjoy the music?"
17191He points out the dependent state of his country in Europe, and asks:''What is Portugal?''
17191He sayeth in his heart, who shall bring me down?"
17191How can you here couple fatality and will?
17191How comes it that you are always in the right?
17191How comes she to be your friend?"
17191How could L''Isle do this?
17191How could you think of putting such a part upon me?
17191How else could he judge, but by a comparison?
17191How much of history is embraced in this?
17191How the devil did you get away?"
17191How would it tell?
17191I suppose I can be spared from this post for a few days?"
17191If, wanting light, I stumble, shall Thy darkness not be guilty of my fall?
17191In great confusion, he rode up to Mrs. Shortridge, and asked,"Where are they going now?"
17191In truth, the tenor of your discourse calls up in my mind the involuntary doubt, did this people first desert God, or God them?
17191Is it not positive treason to aid and abet the king''s enemies?
17191Is it the Don Alonso Melendez you were telling me of?"
17191Is it true of every one--''His eyes are set on heaven, his heart on earth?''"
17191Is it true that you sent a special agent to Xeres de la Frontera, to select the best sherry for the regimental mess?"
17191Is it wonderful that many of these men are apostles only of ignorance and profligacy?"
17191Is not that the case with a character called Mephistophiles?"
17191Is not this your feeling?"
17191Is that enough?"
17191Is the papist so absurd in offering his masses for the dead?"
17191Is this the goddess Flora leading down a joyous train to the fields below?
17191L''Isle now asked him,"When and why he had put on St. Francis''frock?"
17191L''Isle reluctantly sat down, while Lord Strathern said:"Have you ever discovered, Sir Rowland, that L''Isle is a monomaniac?"
17191L''Isle''s flushed cheek and compressed lips, showed that he felt the taunt, while Sir Rowland exclaimed, in surprise:"Are they so unruly?
17191Make not thyself a prisoner, thou art free: Why dost thou turn thy palace to a jail?
17191Meanwhile, what was L''Isle doing?
17191Moodie followed them into the drawing- room, and said abruptly,"Well, my lady, will you have supper now?"
17191Moodie pricked up his ears at this astounding assertion, and scornfully asked:"What point is that, sir?"
17191Must I answer for it if a girl squeaks out, half in jest, and half in earnest?"
17191Must he persevere?
17191No exceptions?
17191No?
17191On what point?"
17191Or are you merely running a race with your man here?"
17191Or dark Sierras rise in craggy pride?
17191Or ere the jealous queens of nations greet, Doth Tayo interpose his mighty tide?
17191Or fence of art, like China''s vasty wall?
17191Or have you joined the dragoons?
17191Paul?"
17191Pray, Colonel L''Isle, how many robbers could you defend us from?"
17191Pray, what were those two tall trees near the farmer''s house, with bare trunks and feathery tops?"
17191Ralph.--Who looks to my lady''s wardrobe?
17191Resolved to make him speak, L''Isle asked,"What game have you killed to- day?"
17191Screw up his nervous energies to their accustomed tone with slops?
17191She bowed low, in suppressing a laugh at this elaborate compliment, and said,"Will spring be so soon upon us?"
17191Shorthose.--Will it not rain?
17191Sir Rowland is a sane man, and never writes verses?"
17191Sir Rowland presently looked at his watch, and raising his voice, inquired--"My Lord, has L''Isle come yet?"
17191So, falling back alongside of them, he said to L''Isle''s man:"Do you know any thing of the strange country we are going to now?"
17191So, turning to the groom, with grim sociability, he asked:"Can you speak the language of the people hereabouts?"
17191Stick- to- the- text?"
17191Tell me, recluse Monastic, can it be A disadvantage to thy beams to shine?
17191There is L''Isle now, who, after being pushed on as fast as money and family interest could shove him; what next happens to him?
17191This Colonel of yours has been growing more and more intolerable--"My Colonel, papa?
17191Thou art an eagle; and befits it thee To live immured like a cloister''d snail?
17191Was Mrs. Shortridge a simple gull or something worse?
17191Was ever man more embarrassed than L''Isle?
17191Was it not the first place in Alentejo to resist the French robbers, who were lording it over them?"
17191Was not Lady Mabel now disarmed and defenceless?
17191Was there any thing more to tell?"
17191Was there any thing more?"
17191Were these pleasant days over?
17191Were they ever otherwise?"
17191What are you dreaming of?
17191What blunder of mine have you heard of?"
17191What cared L''Isle for that?
17191What good will that do, Shortridge?"
17191What had she done?
17191What harm were they doing?"
17191What is Colonel L''Isle to me, that I should manoeuvre to keep him in Elvas, when Sir Rowland Hill expects him in Alcantara?
17191What made you chase them?
17191What must he do, then?
17191What sort of food was given it?
17191What special safeguard protected him?
17191What was L''Isle to do?
17191What were his feelings now?
17191When he would return?''
17191Whence originated the rapid degeneracy of the early Church?
17191Where are you going to now?"
17191Whether he was on a journey?
17191Whither he was going?
17191Who can equal her?"
17191Who can not be crushed with a plot?
17191Who ever heard of a Spaniard breaking a man''s head, when he could give him the blade of his knife?
17191Who is satisfied with seeing a Turk in London?
17191Who is she?"
17191Who would throw away a happiness because it is fleeting?
17191Why do you make him so often your guest?
17191Why not tell him, at once, never to kiss your hand when a third person was present?"
17191Why should she not, like any of her comrades, bring home a friend to sup with her?
17191Will you not tolerate him?"
17191With songs interspersed for her as_ prima donna_?
17191With what result?
17191_ Benedict_.--Shall I speak a word in your ear?
17191are you back again?
17191cut down my two yards of footman into a postillion?"
17191do the rascals talk of us in that way?
17191exclaimed Lady Mabel,"had they attained that perfection in the art of building?
17191or shall he abjure?
17191said L''Isle, suppressing a yawn,"where has he been?"
17191said L''Isle, with sudden interest,"is Mrs. Shortridge in Elvas?"
17191said Lady Mabel,"since you will view it in that light?
17191said Lady Mabel,"what is the use of a tomb- stone?"
17191said Mrs. Shortridge, with a puzzled air,"were the Romans a gigantic people?"
17191should not_ have taken_ Constantinople?
20513Ah, ha, you all finish?
20513And what have you been doing, Daniel?
20513As good a one as I know how?
20513Assistance-- work-- ah? 20513 But who will take care of you?"
20513By and by comes the miner, and with strong and repeated strokes he drills a hole in its top, and the rock says,''What does this mean?'' 20513 Can I do anything else for you?"
20513Did n''t I tell you so?
20513Did you ever hear of a man who had striven all his life faithfully and singly toward an object, and in no measure obtained it?
20513Do n''t you remember telling me it''s best to get used to a thing by degrees? 20513 Do you know, sir,"said a devotee of Mammon to John Bright,"that I am worth a million sterling?"
20513Do you know,asked Balzac''s father,"that in literature a man must be either a king or a beggar?"
20513Do you mean to say that those books cost no more than that? 20513 Do you want to know,"asks Robert Collyer,"how I manage to talk to you in this simple Saxon?
20513Do you wish to live without a trial?
20513Does he keep at it, is he persistent?
20513Five? 20513 Have you any use for it?"
20513How did you attain such excellence in your profession?
20513How do you manage it, Dick?
20513How is this, Dick?
20513How long did it take you to learn to play?
20513How,asked a man of Sir Walter Raleigh,"do you accomplish so much and in so short a time?"
20513How? 20513 I should like to know,"said a friend,"on what ground you selected that boy, who had not a single recommendation?"
20513If a man constantly aspires, is he not elevated? 20513 If a man has no regard for the time of other men,"said Horace Greeley,"why should he have for their money?
20513Is n''t it beautiful that I can sing so?
20513Is there one whom difficulties dishearten?
20513Is this the way you eat your dinner?
20513Mr. Girard, can you not assist me by giving me a little work?
20513Of what use is it?
20513Sir, you have been to college, I presume?
20513To- morrow, didst thou say?
20513Very well; how much money shall I give you?
20513Very well; you shall fetch and put them in this place; you see?
20513Well, what shall I give you for your secret?
20513Wh-- what did you say?
20513What avails all this sturdiness?
20513What do we mean? 20513 What do you do with all these books?"
20513What do you mean?
20513What have you been doing?
20513What is defeat?
20513What is the best thing to possess?
20513What is the secret of success in business?
20513What is the use of a child?
20513What property has he left behind him?
20513What was it, then?
20513Where would your work be,said the rivet to the scissors,"if I did n''t keep you together?"
20513Which of these vases weighs the most?
20513Who is the richest of men?
20513Why am I to stand here useless? 20513 Why do you repair that magistrate''s bench with such great care?"
20513Why do you tell that blockhead the same thing twenty times over?
20513Will the sheriff sell me?
20513Yet what is it? 20513 You are on the shady side of seventy, I expect?"
20513''But suppose he should fail, will you send me?''
20513--to glorify his stomach and enjoy it?
20513A hundred years hence what difference will it make whether you were rich or poor, a peer or a peasant?
20513After a few moments of silence the wife looked into his face and asked,"Will the sheriff sell you?"
20513All the world cries, Where is the man who will save us?
20513Am I not free?
20513Am I not without fear?
20513Am I not without sorrow?
20513And what do I want?
20513And what time do you think, as a general rule, I have devoted to study, to reading, and writing?
20513Any little chicks?"
20513Are his wife and children dead?
20513Are n''t you afraid of the situation?
20513Are we not, then, responsible for the inhabitants of our little worlds?
20513Ask the golden harvest waving above them if it feels the water flowing beneath?
20513But shall it therefore rot in the harbor?
20513But what are you willing to pay for"success,"as you call it, young man?
20513But what difference may it not make whether you did what was right or what was wrong?
20513But where could he get a grammar?
20513By any fascination of manner?
20513By eloquence?
20513By office?
20513By rank?
20513By talents?
20513By wealth?
20513By what was it, then?
20513CHAPTER V. WHAT SHALL I DO?
20513Call you this dying?
20513Could you make all the looms work as smoothly as yours?"
20513Did I ever accuse any man?
20513Did I ever blame God or man?
20513Did any of you ever see me with a sorrowful countenance?"
20513Did ever a man try heroism, magnanimity, truth, sincerity, and find that there was no advantage in them,--that it was a vain endeavor?"
20513Do I desire to hear eloquent speeches?
20513Do I feel indisposed, and need a little recreation?
20513Do I feel like hearing an eloquent sermon?
20513Do n''t you call those letters of recommendation?
20513Does competition trouble you?
20513Equipped?
20513HOW DID HE BEGIN?
20513Hamer,''I said,''will you appoint me to West Point?''
20513Has he lost his reputation through crime?
20513Has he lost who halts before the throne when duty calls, or sorrow, or distress?
20513Has it built any cities?
20513Has it built any steamships, established any universities, any asylums, any hospitals?
20513Has it invented any telephones, any telegraphs?
20513Have they had a quarrel, and are they separated from him?
20513Honors?
20513How Did He Begin?
20513How did the snail teach you, Tommy?"
20513How know we what lives a single thought retained from the dust of nameless graves may have lighted to renown?
20513How many Presidents of the United States or Prime Ministers of England are chosen within the working lifetime of a man?
20513How on earth do you contrive to do so much work?''
20513How to constitute one''s self a man?
20513How was this attained?
20513Is he struck through with disease?
20513Is his reason gone?
20513Is it not rather living?
20513Is n''t the tongue the organ of sociality, the organ of eloquence, the organ of kindness, the organ of worship?"
20513Is there no one to sing the pà ¦ an of the conquered who fell in the battle of life?
20513Is there one who will conquer?
20513On the other hand who shall say how many crimes were committed the past year by wicked men buried long ago?
20513Opportunities?
20513Out of Place, 49 V. What Shall I Do?
20513Speak, history, who are life''s victors?
20513That he has got the control of his lower instincts, so that they are only fuel to his higher feelings, giving force to his nature?
20513That his affections are like vines, sending out on all sides blossoms and clustering fruits?
20513That his moral feelings are so developed and quickened that he holds sweet commerce with Heaven?
20513That his tastes are so cultivated that all beautiful things speak to him, and bring him their delights?
20513That his understanding is opened, so that he walks through every hall of knowledge, and gathers its treasures?
20513The following departments and subjects will be given especial attention: The Progress of the World, Self- Culture, Civics,"What Career?"
20513The rivers of India run under ground, unseen, unheard, by the millions who tramp above, but are they therefore lost?
20513The servant replied,"I did; for is n''t the tongue the organ of blasphemy, the organ of defamation, the organ of lying?"
20513This is my world now; why should I envy others its mere legal possession?
20513Understandez?
20513Unroll thy long scroll and say, have they won who first reached the goal, heedless of a brother''s rights?
20513WILL YOU PAY THE PRICE?
20513Was Garrison heard?
20513Was there any chance in CÃ ¦ sar''s crossing the Rubicon?
20513What had chance to do with Napoleon''s career, with Wellington''s, or Grant''s, or Von Moltke''s?
20513What had luck to do with Thermopylà ¦, Trafalgar, Gettysburg?
20513What has chance ever done in the world?
20513What if a thousand young men resolve to become President or Prime Minister?
20513What infirmity have I mastered to- day?
20513What is a man, If his chief good, and market of his time, Be but to sleep, and feed?
20513What is the difference between taking a man''s hour and taking his five dollars?
20513What is the happiness of your life made up of?
20513What matter if they hang me, provided the rope with which I am hung binds this new Germany firmly to the Prussian throne?"
20513What more do I want?
20513What were impossibilities to such a resolute will?
20513What would you think of a man who would neglect himself and treat his shadow with the greatest respect?
20513When did any of you see me failing in the object of my desire?
20513When shall we learn that''a man''s life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth?''"
20513Who does not feel honored by his relationship to Dr. Franklin, whether as a townsman or a countryman, or even as belonging to the same race?
20513Who has not noticed the power of love in an awkward, crabbed, shiftless, lazy man?
20513Who keeps accounts by these?
20513Why not allow the schoolboy to erase from his list of studies all subjects that appear to him useless?
20513Why say anything about it?
20513Why should I scramble and struggle to get possession of a little portion of this earth?
20513Why should we wish to get rid of them?
20513Why waste time learning geometry or algebra?
20513Why, will that girl ever be done with the feast?
20513Will You Pay the Price?
20513Will there not be for him something more powerful than fame to comfort his sufferings and to sustain his hopes?"
20513With what earnest singleness of aim did Lincoln in the cabinet, Grant in the field, throw his whole soul into the contest of our civil war?
20513Would he not erase every thing which taxed his pleasure and freedom?
20513Would he not obey the call of his blood, rather than the advice of his teacher?
20513You got one vife?"
20513You see dem stone yondare?"
20513You want more work?
20513You want work?"
20513exclaimed the astonished friend, who knew that the showman had not a dollar;"what do you intend buying it with?"
20513heard of the death of Calvin he exclaimed with a sigh,"Ah, the strength of that proud heretic lay in-- riches?
20513how didst thou know that Hercules was a god?"
20513it exclaims as it falls,''why this rending?''
20513of the wounded, the beaten, who died overwhelmed in the strife?
20513or even falling into that which I would avoid?
20513people ask when a man dies; but the angel who receives him asks,"What good deeds hast thou sent before thee?"
20513what passion opposed?
20513what temptation resisted?
20513what virtue acquired?"
20513work away; what is your competitor but a man?
19717A radical? 19717 And Mr. Matthias Pardon?
19717And did she bring her back?
19717And do n''t you sympathise with such an aspiration?
19717And who in the world is Miss Tarrant?
19717And who is Miss Birdseye?
19717Apart--_apart_?
19717Are n''t you going on there to see----"To see whether Miss Tarrant''s mind is formed?
19717Are they very much united, the two young ladies?
19717Are you against our emancipation?
19717Are you going to let ten years elapse again before you come?
19717Are you really going? 19717 But did she bring them round, did she swell the host that is prepared to march under her banner?"
19717But we ca n''t pretend to be on the other side, just to start her up, can we?
19717Capacity for what?
19717Convince me of what, sir?
19717Dear me, what''s the good of being a Southerner?
19717Did n''t you fight once?
19717Did n''t you see her when she returned?
19717Did n''t you think her very reasonable?
19717Did you get in on purpose?
19717Do n''t you care for human progress?
19717Do n''t you want any promise at present?
19717Do you flee before the individual male?
19717Do you know that''s very cruel to me? 19717 Do you live here all alone?"
19717Do you make it a reproach to me that I happen to have a little money? 19717 Do you mean on account of the negroes?"
19717Do you mean the law- courts? 19717 Do you mean the-- a-- rather striking young lady whom I met in Boston a year ago last October?
19717Do you mean to say your sister''s a roaring radical?
19717Do you mean your voting and preaching and all that sort of thing?
19717Do you mean, to give_ you_ up?
19717Do you really believe all that pretty moonshine you talked last night? 19717 Do you regard us, then, simply as lovely baubles?"
19717Do you think she is very dreadful?
19717Do you understand German? 19717 Do you want me to give up----?"
19717Do you wish me to conceal----?
19717Does it, should you say-- our scheme of work?
19717Does n''t it look as if you had my sympathy, when I get into a car on purpose to see you home-- one of the principal agitators?
19717Does she give public addresses?
19717Does she speak often-- is there any chance of my hearing her now?
19717Does your scheme of work exclude all distraction, all recreation, then?
19717Fail you? 19717 For Miss Verena?
19717Have n''t you seen her? 19717 Have you been in Europe?"
19717Have you ever heard me? 19717 Have you forgotten that too?
19717Have you got money?
19717Heard you? 19717 How could I see her?
19717How much can we count upon them? 19717 How should I be?
19717I thought her home was in Charles Street?
19717I want to give myself up to others; I want to know everything that lies beneath and out of sight, do n''t you know? 19717 If she was not going to like me, why in the world did she write to me?"
19717If you thought I lived in New York, why in the world did n''t you come and see me?
19717In sympathy with what, dear madam?
19717Is it a party? 19717 Is it possible you do n''t sleep yet?"
19717Is it something terrible?
19717Is it something very Bostonian? 19717 Is she making a speech there?"
19717Is this a South End car?
19717Just as I am?
19717Look here, Miss Olive, what did you write to me to come and see you for?
19717Look here, Miss Tarrant; do you want to save Harvard College, or do you not?
19717Mrs. Farrinder, the celebrated----?
19717My dear madam,said Ransom,"does a woman consist of nothing but her opinions?
19717Of what kind?
19717Oh yes; where do you live?
19717Oh, indeed; and your subject, my dear young lady?
19717See her at home? 19717 So why should you make a distinction?"
19717That''s what they call in Boston being very''thoughtful,''Mrs. Luna said,"giving you the Back Bay( do n''t you hate the name?)
19717The ladies?
19717The truth? 19717 Thinks it?"
19717To whom do you mean, Olive? 19717 Verena-- is that her name?"
19717Want to try a little inspiration?
19717Well, did she convince you?
19717Well, now,_ is_ he to be respected?
19717Well, perhaps, after all, I have a general idea,he confessed;"but do n''t you see how this little reunion will give me a chance to fix it?"
19717Well, what is it, then, since she continues to remain silent?
19717What I mean is-- is your sympathy a sympathy with our sex, or a particular interest in Miss Tarrant?
19717What did I do?
19717What do you know about ladies?
19717What do you mean?
19717What do you want to make then?
19717What good will that do_ you_? 19717 What is it, then?"
19717What kind of meetings do you refer to? 19717 What the deuce does she want of me now?"
19717What_ have_ you got?
19717Where do you live?
19717Who is that charming creature?
19717Whom do you mean by''us''--your whole delightful sex? 19717 Why in the world?
19717Why, is it going to be a spiritual_ sà © ance_?
19717Why, you do n''t mean to say you do n''t believe in our cause?
19717With her grace and beauty, her general style, how could she help that?
19717You do n''t mean to say you ai n''t going to be supported?
19717You do n''t mean to say you are converted-- already?
19717You do n''t mean to say you are going already? 19717 You might have known what?"
19717You see, what I should like to know is this: do you consider that she belongs to you, or that she belongs to the people? 19717 You would stay if you liked it, would n''t you?"
19717Your work?
19717After this she added, with a friendliness more personal,"Ai n''t you going to see your cousin too?"
19717And I did n''t feel the want of a vote to- day at all, did you?"
19717And do they mean to go on living together for ever?"
19717And then-- won''t Verena tell her?"
19717And where, in Cambridge, do her family live?"
19717Are you going into that business?"
19717Are you going to show me some?"
19717Are you not going to pay your sister another visit?"
19717Are you not visiting?"
19717Are you very ambitious?
19717But for us?"
19717But he put out his hand to Verena and said,"Good- bye, Miss Tarrant; are we not to have the pleasure of hearing you in New York?
19717But they had been the happiest days, for when causes were embodied in foreigners( what else were the Africans?
19717Could anything, in effect, be less underhand than such an indifference to what she supposed to be the best opportunities for carrying on a flirtation?
19717Could n''t they run Miss Verena together?
19717Did n''t I tell you of the sensation she produced there, and of what I heard from Boston about it?
19717Did n''t I tell you that last summer?
19717Did n''t you know I had been to Europe?"
19717Did you come out on wheels?
19717Do n''t all the trouble of humanity come from our being pressed back?
19717Do n''t you recollect that?"
19717Do you know''Faust''?"
19717Do you mean to say I did n''t give you that"Transcript,"with the report of her great speech?
19717Do you really take the ground that your sex has been without influence?
19717Do you remember a party you gave, a year ago last October, to which Miss Chancellor came, and another young lady, who made a wonderful speech?"
19717Do you want to keep her all to yourself?"
19717Does Miss Chancellor like her as much as ever?"
19717Farrinder?"
19717Farrinder?"
19717Had Miss Chancellor no faith in her girlhood?
19717Had n''t she come out yet in public?
19717Had she not said that Verena often went back there for visits of several days-- that her mother had been ill and she gave her much care?
19717Has your sister?"
19717Have n''t you?"
19717He had n''t seen her there, and he had no recollection of having encountered any mention at the time( last June, was it?)
19717Her eyes charged him a moment with this perverse intention; then she exclaimed,"Basil Ransom,_ are_ you in love with that creature?"
19717How can I fail?"
19717How can I know?
19717How did the ladies on Beacon Street feel about the ballot?
19717How do you get on with Olive Chancellor?"
19717How long did you expect her to endure it?"
19717How much?
19717I have asked you before-- are you prepared to give up?"
19717If it gave one time, if it gave one leisure, was not that in itself a high motive?
19717If she belongs to you, why do n''t you bring her out?"
19717If they were all in all to each other, what more could they want?
19717Impressed too?
19717Influence?
19717Instead of answering this sally, Ransom said,"Are you not going one of these days to Boston?
19717Is n''t Miss Chancellor your cousin?"
19717It was her theory that Verena( in spite of the blood of the Greenstreets, and, after all, who were they?)
19717Miss Chancellor herself had thought so much on the vital subject; would not she make a few remarks and give them some of her experiences?
19717Moreover, he felt that any gentleman who should lead her to success would win her esteem; he might even attract her more powerfully-- who could tell?
19717Oh, you do n''t know?
19717Olive repeated;"in public?
19717Olive, why do n''t you take him to your female convention?"
19717Perhaps she should take a house in Washington; did he ever hear of that little place?
19717Ransom demurred to the implication that Miss Tarrant was famous; if she were famous, would n''t she be in the New York papers?
19717She turned an instant, glanced at him, and then said,"Do you think so?"
19717She was Miss Tarrant, the daughter of the healer; had n''t she mentioned his name?
19717She wished immensely to be generous, and how could one be generous unless one ran a risk?
19717That he should agree she did not in the least expect of him; how could a Mississippian agree?
19717The Abolitionists brought it on, and were not the Abolitionists principally females?
19717The stronger?
19717Then Olive exclaimed to herself,"Is it a plot?
19717Then she added:"Did you come here to meet her-- the inspirational speaker?"
19717Therefore, would Miss Chancellor just tell him this: How long did she expect to hold her back; how long did she expect a humble admirer to wait?
19717Thorough study of the question he cared for most-- was not the chance for_ that_ an infinitely desirable good?
19717To my parents?"
19717Was it not one''s duty to put one''s self in the best conditions for such action?
19717Was it possible she did n''t know the kind Verena was of, and with what vulgar aspirants to notoriety did she confound her?
19717Was it too much to ask whether he could tell her at least in what manner she had offended him?
19717We could n''t possibly make it worse, could we?
19717Well, is her mind formed?"
19717What do you call success?"
19717What do you say to Helen of Troy and the fearful carnage she excited?
19717What does it matter?
19717What have I done?"
19717What was her name?--Miss Tarrant?
19717What was the matter with him?
19717When Ransom approached her and, raising his hat with a smile, said,"Shall I stop this car for you, Miss Birdseye?"
19717When the great reforms should be consummated, when the day of justice should have dawned, would not life perhaps be rather poor and pale?
19717Whereupon Olive insisted"Will you come very soon?"
19717Why did n''t you show her to me?
19717Why do we talk of this?
19717Why had she made advances, if she wanted to pinch him this way?
19717Why in the world ca n''t they let her alone?"
19717Why should he share, and what was more natural than that the things which concerned her closely should not concern him at all?
19717Why should n''t tenderness come in?
19717Why should she be so insincere?
19717Why should she?
19717Why was she morbid, and why was her morbidness typical?
19717Why, what''s the use of that?
19717Why, you do n''t imagine that pure voice is to be hushed?"
19717Will you come and see me?"
19717Would Miss Chancellor be willing to divide a-- the-- well, he might call it the responsibilities?
19717You are under no obligation to tell Miss Chancellor everything that happens to you, are you?"
19717You do n''t think him plain?
19717You only stay to- morrow?
19717_ Must_ she go, Miss Olive?"
19717did n''t she know what a card that would be?
19717do n''t you know she took her to Europe?
19717have you forgotten that too?
19717he asked himself; five thousand, ten thousand, fifteen thousand a year?
19717her success at the convention was very great?"
19717in what numbers would they flock to our standard?
19717or an old monarchical_ à © migrà ©_ from the Languedoc?
19717was he not like a French_ gentilhomme de province_ after the Revolution?
19717was she not coming to stir them up in New York?
26195WHAT PROGRESS DO YOU MAKE?
26195*****"WHAT PROGRESS DO YOU MAKE?"
26195Who knows but that from this small beginning great good may grow?
25855Do n''t you know then,he asked after a moment''s silence,"what is to happen to- day?"
25855How much did the Archbishop give you?
25855How,a prelate, whose nearest relative had joined the Church of Rome, asked Archbishop Howley,"how shall I treat my brother?"
25855It is such fun, is n''t it, papa?
25855Well,replied Bonner,"you sent for me: have you anything to say to me?"
25855What do you look on as the greatest boon that has been conferred on the poorer classes in later years?
25855Where do you go to church?
25855Whom have you taken to wife?
25855Against whom do ye will to fight?
25855Against your brethren?
25855And yet was the abbot foolish in his generation?
25855Bonner turned laughingly round and addressed the Archbishop,"What, my Lord, are you here?
25855Then the Bishop, who was short- sighted, asked,''Those there: what walls be they?''
25855What is it which makes men in Alpine travel- books write as men never write elsewhere?
25855What was it that foiled alike the counsel of statesmen and the passionate love of liberty in the people at large?
25855What was it which drove Dante into exile and stung the simple- hearted Dino into a burst of eloquent despair?
25855Why does page after page look as if it had been dredged with French words through a pepper- castor?
25855Why is it that the senior tutor, who is so hard on a bit of bad Latin, plunges at the sight of an Alp into English inconceivable, hideous?
25855Why is the sunrise or the scenery always"indescribable,"while the appetite of the guides lends itself to such reiterated description?
25855[ 4]"Quibus Hector ab oris Expectate venis?"
25855[ 5]"Cur dextræ jungere dextram Non datur, ac veras audire et reddere voces?"
25855and"Why do n''t you go to church?"
2528Do you know why La Geoffrin comes here? 2528 Do you not think,"she said to her one day,"that if all which has happened to me, and the things relating to it, were told it would make a fine story?
2528How could I fail to love you? 2528 The body has graces,"writes Vauvenargues,"the mind has talents; has the heart only vices?
2528What more have we to desire when we can enjoy the pleasures of friendship and of nature?
2528What society does one find? 2528 What tiresome book are you reading?"
2528Where can she find such a friend, such society, a like sweetness, charm, confidence, consideration for her and her son?
2528Why not? 2528 Will the anger of the Marquise go so far, in your opinion, as to refuse me her recipe for salad?"
2528Again she assumes her position of mentor and writes:"How is it possible not to answer the kind and charming letter I have received from you?
2528Am I worthy of hell?
2528And how shall I go?
2528And man capable of reason, shall he be incapable of virtue?"
2528But is it my fault?
2528But who cares to dwell upon the shadows that scarcely dim the brilliancy of a genius so rare and so commanding?
2528Dedicate a grammar to me?
2528Do they want my money?
2528Do you remember the happy evenings we passed together?
2528Geoffrin she replied:"To me?
2528I have some, and what can I do with money better than to buy tranquillity with it?"
2528In what disposition: How shall I be with God?
2528Is there not here a trace of the quality she so despises?
2528Now what have I left?
2528Rulhiere?"
2528Seeing Wiart, her faithful servitor, in tears, she remarks pathetically, as if surprised,"You love me then?"
2528This nature, so complex, so rich, so ardent, so passionate, could it ever have found permanent repose?
2528Were not twenty- five years of suffering and penance an ample expiation?
2528What avails it to recommence every day the visits, to trouble one''s self always about things that do not concern us?
2528What can I hope?--Am I worthy of paradise?
2528What have I to present to him?
2528When did a Frenchman ever fail to write with facility upon this fertile theme?
2528When will it be?
2528Whence: By what door?
2528Why have I not still to suffer those moments of bitterness that she knew so well how to sweeten and make me forget?
2528de La Fayette, and a hundred ells of satin to line it, and two days ago her portrait, surrounded with diamonds, which is worth three hundred louis?"
2528de Scudery as he has done?"
26388And what of Henry number Three, 1216- 1272 The King who suffered poverty?
26388No information''s yet to hand Concerning Raleigh''s favourite brand; Tobacco Was it coarse- cut shag which burns The tongue, or birdseye or returns?
26388allowed At court a huge rapacious crowd To drain his coffers nearly dry Flattering with cajolery?
17241And''Rigo''? 17241 Are the stewards here all crazy?"
17241Are you annoyed?
17241Are you crazy?
17241Are you married?
17241Are you sure of it?
17241Because you were rescued from those men in the car?
17241Better here than down below, is n''t it, Miss?
17241But please explain how you hit upon''Rigo''? 17241 But what did you do on the ship?"
17241But you did n''t do any stoking?
17241By the way, what do you do for seasickness?
17241Did I hurt your feelings yesterday by telling you my story?
17241Did a boiler burst?
17241Did n''t you come over as a stoker?
17241Did you hear, gentlemen, that Newfoundland fishermen have sighted corpses and floating fragments of the_ Roland_?
17241Did you operate on the dancer,someone cried,"to remove that mole two inches from her backbone right over her left hip?"
17241Did you really do it?
17241Do n''t you know me, Doctor von Kammacher?
17241Do n''t you know me-- Captain Butor?
17241Do n''t you know there''s lots of money in that little witch just now? 17241 Do n''t you suppose that all the details of the sinking of the_ Roland_ have been telegraphed to New York from quarantine?
17241Do n''t you think that''s slander?
17241Do n''t you think,Frederick continued,"that Miss Hahlström may be annoyed by your constantly looking at her?"
17241Do you believe that? 17241 Do you know that tall, fair- haired man, Doctor von Kammacher?"
17241Do you know there are two priests on board? 17241 Do you know who is lying here?"
17241Do you know,said Frederick in his overflowing spirits,"do you know, I am actually one of the survivors of the_ Roland_?"
17241Do you mean to impugn my truthfulness, Miss Burns?
17241Do you people down there still keep up that tiresome business of''how- do- you- do''and''good- bye''?
17241Do you suffer from seasickness?
17241Do you take me for Joan of Arc?
17241Do you take your meals alone, Miss Burns?
17241Do you think anybody from the_ Roland_ beside ourselves will turn up dead or alive?
17241Do you think there is danger?
17241Do you want to become a farmer?
17241Doctor von Kammacher,Miss Burns asked,"have you ever done any work in sculpture?"
17241Does she hit Rosa?
17241Does she know the truth now?
17241Does that seem strange to you?
17241Easily said; but what''s the matter?
17241Excuse me,he said,"I presume this is Miss Hahlström?"
17241Fog?
17241For what does one need money?
17241Garry may really have been a hypocrite, yet was n''t Lilienfeld a hypocrite, too, when he spoke openly of Ingigerd Hahlström''s honour and chastity? 17241 Have threads been spun?
17241Have you been in the Metropolitan Opera House yet?
17241Have you studied the dance I told you to?
17241His model? 17241 How I come to be here?
17241How can I be of service?
17241How can people drink wine?
17241How did you sleep?
17241How do you account for it?
17241How do you do, Doctor?
17241How do you do?
17241How do you do?
17241How have you spent your time?
17241How is your daughter feeling?
17241How is your lady?
17241How many miles, Lieutenant, since we left the Needles?
17241How so?
17241How so?
17241How would you like to come to my room? 17241 How''s our little girl?"
17241How''s that? 17241 I am not your slave, do you understand?
17241I do not know,Frederick returned with an expression of cool astonishment, and added:"Whom do you mean?"
17241I exude talent?
17241I? 17241 I?"
17241If someone were to find you a good position on land,Frederick asked,"would you give up your position here?"
17241Immediate danger?
17241Indeed?
17241Indeed?
17241Is everybody in this cursed hole crazy? 17241 Is it making you nervous?"
17241Is it true that there is gold bullion on board for the treasury in Washington?
17241Is it true, Captain,somebody asked,"that last night we nearly collided with a derelict?"
17241Is life,Frederick asked himself,"meant to be nothing more than material for dreams?
17241Is n''t everything prettiest when the sun goes down? 17241 Is n''t it strange how suddenly the weather changed?"
17241Is n''t man''s courage utter madness?
17241Is n''t she a smart little body? 17241 Is there danger?"
17241Is this the sort of horse they usually have here?
17241May I present Mr. Achleitner? 17241 Mine?
17241Mr. Garry, do you hear I am an American citizen? 17241 Mr. Garry, do you hear I am an American citizen?"
17241Now, Miss Burns, do you see any sense in the Atlantic Ocean''s having refused to take me of all the persons on board the_ Roland_? 17241 Of course, of course,"said Frederick,"but what is to be done against it?"
17241Oh, then you have been in Berlin, Miss Burns?
17241Oh, why did you stop trying to revive Siegfried so soon? 17241 Perhaps I do,"said Miss Burns,"but"--"But what?"
17241Telepathy? 17241 Tell me, is there danger, Doctor von Kammacher?"
17241The first thing is, have you already engaged rooms, and shall I slip you past that damned lot of reporters? 17241 Then, what do you think of this plan, Miss Eva?
17241To whom does this refer?
17241Toilers of the Light, what are you doing?
17241Was I really on the_ Roland_?
17241Well, Doctor von Kammacher, how are you?
17241Well, do n''t you think we''re lost?
17241Were you making deep- sea researches?
17241What can a man do if his blood is on fire with that cursed poison?
17241What do you mean by being easy in our minds?
17241What do you mean by that? 17241 What do you need two for?"
17241What do you suppose will happen?
17241What do you think of that stuff, Doctor von Kammacher?
17241What do you think of the New York hotels? 17241 What does that mean--''greening''?"
17241What does''like''mean?
17241What else is to be got out of this damned country?
17241What else will be turning up? 17241 What else?"
17241What for?
17241What happened?
17241What have I done to you?
17241What have I done?
17241What have you got to do with our famous tenor of the Metropolitan Opera Company?
17241What is that on your arm?
17241What is that? 17241 What is the matter with my dear, sweet Siegfried?"
17241What is the matter with you?
17241What is the matter?
17241What is your opinion, Captain?
17241What little Hahlström do you mean?
17241What''s that boy doing in your room, Ingigerd?
17241What''s the matter, do you know?
17241What''s the matter, gentlemen?
17241What''s the matter? 17241 What''s the matter?
17241What''s the matter?
17241What''s the matter?
17241What''s the matter?
17241When did geniuses ever do anything morally? 17241 When shall we reach New York?"
17241Where are we now, Captain? 17241 Where were you?"
17241Where''s the carpet, where are the musicians, where is that good- for- nothing of a fellow who attends to the reflector? 17241 Where''s the flower?
17241Where''s the flower? 17241 Who are you, sir?
17241Who knows how this thing is going to end?
17241Why am I here? 17241 Why am I sitting here?"
17241Why are you crying?
17241Why could n''t you let me dance the first day under Webster and Forster, as Mr. Stoss and everybody else advised?
17241Why do you stay here, Achleitner?
17241Why in the name of sense does she wear those bronze slippers?
17241Why not?
17241Why not?
17241Why should a man keep himself intact when he has lost his ideals? 17241 Why should they be told anything?"
17241Why should you be sorry?
17241Why, Ella Liebling, where do you come from?
17241Why?
17241Why?
17241Why?
17241Why?
17241Why?
17241Wilke, is that you?
17241Will such a chrysalis ever really turn into a butterfly?
17241Will you make good to Miss Hahlström her financial loss?
17241Wo n''t you sit down with us? 17241 Would you believe,"Willy said to Frederick,"that that ox has been here over a year and does n''t know a word of English?"
17241Would you like me to stay near here?
17241Would you mind waiting here a minute?
17241Yes,said Wendler,"what is a man to do in a case like that?
17241Yes,said the steward,"but what would_ we_ do if_ we_ were so cowardly?"
17241Yes?
17241You mean, if a woman steps up to you in a crowded city street and asks you to hold her baby a moment, and never comes back for her baby?
17241You refer to vivisection?
17241You see those people over there getting into the car? 17241 _ Cosa vuole sentire?_"asked Brambilla.
17241A man tore the door open and indignantly cried, as if imputing to the poor barber the responsibility of a captain:"Why are we standing still?"
17241A very pleasant fact to be conscious of, is n''t it, Miss Burns, and have n''t I good reason to feel proud?"
17241And at this moment was he not farther removed than ever from what is considered immovable solid ground, from what is called reality?
17241And how can I face Siegfried''s father?
17241And please tell me, what sort of a business would the church do if all of us were moral?
17241And where was the power of eternal goodness, if it was incapable of hindering it?
17241And why was Stoss receiving such homage?
17241Are both of you out of your wits?"
17241Are n''t they magnificent?
17241Are n''t you feeling well, Doctor von Kammacher?"
17241Are n''t you feeling well?"
17241Are there dreams that are more than dreams?
17241Are we sinking?"
17241Arthur Stoss joined them, and said:"Do you remember when the_ Roland_ began to sink, were the bulkheads shut down?"
17241As for Lilienfeld, did not victory in the struggle to possess Ingigerd body and soul mean money to him?
17241As if casually, he drew near Frederick''s bench, touched his cap, and said:"Doctor von Kammacher?"
17241At whose bidding was he acting when he assailed his victim with inner storms and almost let him perish in a real storm on the seas?
17241But had his sleep actually meant peace?
17241But why was such a pitiful collection of men saved, while hundreds of others drowned?
17241By the way, can you tell me how I came to bring down on myself that shout when I entered the smoking- room and that man''s vulgar remark?
17241Ca n''t you make her understand that it is n''t right always to be going over and over such a thing and that she ought to forget it?
17241Can you-- can you become my comrade for life?"
17241Could Frederick believe his eyes?
17241Could any one, from captain to the lowest sailor, prevent the propeller- shaft from snapping at any moment?
17241Could you for my sake give up all that has until now filled your life, if I for your sake leave behind me everything that has wasted my existence?
17241Do n''t you know into what hands I have fallen?
17241Do n''t you know me?
17241Do n''t you know me?"
17241Do you intend to go on an ocean trip?
17241Do you intend to make an ocean trip?"
17241Do you know that the Grand Duke has made Botho his adjutant?
17241Do you remember with what an endless number of monotonous jokes the goldfinches that fairly overran the Heuscheuer Mountains used to furnish us?
17241Do you see any sense in my having fought like a madman for my mere existence?
17241Do you see any sense in my having struck some unfortunate creatures over the head with my oars because they nearly capsized our boat?
17241Do you think I left Odessa, where there is enough ordering about, to be ordered about by every stranger I meet?"
17241Do you think we five could end our days in peace in a little house with a studio, say, near Florence?"
17241Does n''t falsehood blossom everywhere?
17241Does n''t hypocrisy flourish equally on each side of every contest?
17241Does n''t what we went through give you a sense of expiation and purification?"
17241Else, how could he have discarded his arms?
17241Else, how could he have discarded his monk''s robes?
17241Even centuries before, had not Potiphar''s wife, from whom Joseph fled, resorted to certain successful slanderous means?
17241Franck,"he cried,"did n''t you come to America without a cent of money?"
17241Frederick asked him the same question he had asked each member of the_ Roland''s_ crew:"Would you rather be a seaman than anything else?"
17241Frederick did not fail to ask his stereotyped question:"Do you follow your calling because you have a decided preference for it?"
17241Frederick''s immediate thought was,"Where is Achleitner?"
17241Gentlemen, is n''t this a jolly place for little carousals?"
17241Had he ever lived with anything else than a spirit and spirits, that is, with ghosts?
17241Had he transgressed?
17241Had his friend, keeping his promise, chosen this way to make himself noticeable from the Beyond?
17241Had not everything arisen from the ocean?
17241Had not everything gone down into its depths again?
17241Had some power disclosed the submerged Atlantis to Frederick''s mental vision?
17241Has it enhanced happiness and increased the chances for happiness?
17241Has this age of machinery subtracted from the sum of human misery?
17241Have we to higher regions gone?
17241Have you come over to preside at a theosophical or spiritualistic meeting?
17241Have you the faintest idea of what it means to be a Jew in Russia?"
17241He must look straight in the face of his grotesque opponent-- Prospero or Caliban?
17241He started and said:"Rasmussen, where do you come from?"
17241How could a fat, immobile spider squatting on a flower be dangerous to a creature with wings?
17241How could a man find God''s ear here?
17241How could one possibly pursue one''s own affairs quietly amid that shrieking, that hammering, that clanging, that mad uproar?
17241How d''ye do, Doctor von Kammacher?
17241How do I know if I am suited to your needs and desires?"
17241How do you come to be here?"
17241How does that story concern me?"
17241How is a great big body with walls like a wafer to resist heavy seas for any length of time?
17241How was it possible for such a conflagration to be contained in the_ Roland''s_ interior without reducing the whole to ashes?
17241How was it possible that he had only occasionally and superficially remembered so magnificent a man, so dear a youthful companion?
17241How''s that?"
17241I said,''Angèle, what are you doing?''
17241IX"You here, Doctor von Kammacher?
17241If I did n''t, would I have been so obstinate in trying to win them from my husband?
17241If a boiler were to prove unequal to the uninterrupted strain put upon it?
17241If someone were to enter now, what would he think of him?
17241If the sea gives up its dead, why should not little Siegfried emerge from his death chamber?
17241If we were to take the commandment literally, how far should we get?
17241In his state of mind, did he not believe in fairy tales, sailors''superstitions, the Flying Dutchman, and hobgoblins?
17241Ingigerd turned and said quickly:"Why do you always fly into such a temper right away?
17241Ingigerd, shall we cling to each other?
17241Is Germany really the great, strong, united Empire?
17241Is it not rather the booty over which God and the devil-- I was about to say the Kaiser and the Pope-- are still wrangling?
17241Is it really true that you were in that awful shipwreck?"
17241Is it your intention to let Miss Hahlström dance at all again, or have you and she decided that she is to retire to private life?"
17241Is n''t New York a mad- house?"
17241Is n''t it a matter generally taken for granted?"
17241Is n''t it vile that I still cling to life and that I would rather do anything than give up this botched and bungled existence of mine?"
17241Is n''t there a certain advantage in not needing to dread April weather any longer?
17241Liebling?"
17241Lilienfeld disappeared, crying"Where''s the flower?
17241Miss Burns laughed and said:"A bankrupt?
17241Mr. Boabo, do n''t you think our civilisation is a fever of a hundred and six degrees?
17241Mr. Garry instantly silenced him with the old question:"Are you the girl''s brother?"
17241Mr. Garry, do you hear I am an American citizen?"
17241Of what avail a cry for help here?
17241Of what significance after all, is that little discovery of America?"
17241Or a great statesman, who would toe the chalk- line of your middle- class ten commandments?
17241Or do you want to be interviewed?"
17241Or was he mistaken?
17241Or was it Mr. Rinck''s cat miauing?
17241Or was it children whimpering in the hall?
17241Perhaps you have something special for him?"
17241Rinck?"
17241Rinck?"
17241Shall we both begin afresh, on a new basis, simply and without any false glamour, and live and die as plain country persons?
17241Should existence in the shining light possess lesser reality than existence in the dark?"
17241Should he express that thought by word of mouth or by letter?
17241So why should n''t we try it?
17241Stoss?"
17241Tell me frankly, was I right in doing what I did, and do you understand how a man feels when he is no longer in the chains of a senseless passion?"
17241The first question Frederick asked after the storm of greeting had subsided, was,"I say, old boy, do you believe in telepathy?"
17241The only question is, can she put up with Italian cooking?"
17241The question is, What were we saved for?"
17241The question is, am I to blame for the course that my wife''s mental suffering took, or may I acquit myself of all blame?
17241Then Miss Burns asked:"How did you come to lose your free will, as you say?"
17241Though this tone of his must have been new to her, it seemed agreeable to her, for she said very humbly:"Well, why did you stay away so long?"
17241Understand?
17241V"Do you know, Doctor von Kammacher,"Füllenberg said suddenly,"that little Hahlström is on board?"
17241Was Rasmussen dead?
17241Was he actually in New York, three thousand miles away from old Europe?
17241Was he deserving of punishment?
17241Was he really a person of so much importance before God that He visited him with such bitter, refined chastisements?
17241Was it not the mates of the dead stoker, Zickelmann, who were throwing it overboard?
17241Was not madness the leader of those men who first made the impossible possible and crossed the ocean, though they were neither fish nor fowl?"
17241Was not this his home?
17241Was the_ Roland_ no longer proceeding so calmly and steadily as before?
17241Was there fog last night?
17241Were those innocent men to blame if he happened to have rasped nerves?
17241What are you doing here?"
17241What business is it of mine?"
17241What could I do?
17241What could the applause have been intended to signify?
17241What do they mean by it?"
17241What do you mean?"
17241What do you think of a man like Achleitner?"
17241What do you think of the weather?"
17241What does it concern me, and how can I help it, if you have fallen into the hands of exploiters?
17241What does''Rigo''mean?
17241What has Berlin, or even Paris, to compare with it?
17241What is a miserable cur of an American millionaire, a dollar maniac, as compared with all those great men?
17241What is the captain thinking of?"
17241What knew they of the thing awaiting them, perhaps, out there on the ocean?
17241What of it, if after an hour like this, one should sink?"
17241What right have you to mix in this affair?"
17241What shall I do?
17241What was Ingigerd to him now?
17241What was that ocean hiding in its infinite waves rolling under the low, grey sky?
17241What was that?"
17241What was the sense of such a disaster if the eternal goodness ordained it?
17241What was this strange Ariel''s intention with him?
17241What was to- day compared with that past?
17241What would a historian be who, instead of making researches, would moralise?
17241What would a physician be who would stop to moralise?
17241What would happen if the engines were to break down?
17241What would happen if the might of the waves were to hurl that great lumped mass of wood and iron against the_ Roland''s_ side?
17241What''s the difference if it''s our turn to- day?"
17241What''s the matter with the captain?
17241What''s the matter with us, Friedericus?"
17241What''s the matter?
17241What''s the matter?"
17241What''s the matter?"
17241When he saw the lovely girl, dressed in light summer clothes, coming towards him with a smile, he realised that"Shall I?"
17241When was it?
17241Where are you?
17241Where did you get that beast?"
17241Where was his ring?
17241Where was there an adornment for the head, a queen''s diadem, which could exercise so powerful, so divine a charm?
17241Where''s the flower?"
17241Who could hope to avoid one of the many derelicts drifting in the fog almost submerged?
17241Who could sight a vessel in time to prevent the collision that would inevitably smash in the thin walls of the great hollow body?
17241Who does n''t fall under suspicion with her?"
17241Who will insist that he can stand upright when the ground beneath his feet is giving away?
17241Who would not find it humiliating to have his sublime meditations interrupted in such a tricky, brutal way?
17241Why and for what purpose was I myself saved?"
17241Why could he not rid himself of the idea of innocence, of chastity, of the uncontaminated while in the presence of this child fiend?
17241Why did Achleitner have to lose his life, and not somebody else?
17241Why did I escape?"
17241Why did I not stop to consider and summon all my rational will power to keep me from this senseless trip?
17241Why did all those splendid picked men of the crew of the_ Roland_ drown?
17241Why did great waves of pity keep sweeping over him?
17241Why did he cast its inseverable hempen cords about his throat and limbs?
17241Why did he prick Frederick''s flesh with this music?
17241Why did that splendid Captain von Kessel drown?
17241Why do you call him''Rigo''?
17241Why had he been in such a fever of impatience, in such dread of missing the boat and rushing into the open arms of doom?
17241Why had the powers revealed Judgment Day to him, not as a vision, but as an actuality?
17241Why had they showed such partiality as to let him and a few others escape perdition?
17241Why is n''t Achleitner here?
17241Why not?
17241Why prolong the death agony?"
17241Why should I deny that, like all silly children of between sixteen and twenty, I dabbled in painting, sculpture, and literature?
17241Why should I pack my things?"
17241Why so severe?"
17241Why was he lying there in the freezing cold instead of in bed?
17241With the indiscretion of intimacy, Schmidt asked:"Has it anything to do with the wooden Madonna?"
17241Within the past ten years in his own country had he ever felt even nearly so comfortable and at home as here?
17241Wo n''t you examine me?"
17241Would you be able to forego the payment of my debt?
17241Would you be responsible to Miss Hahlström for such an enormous loss?"
17241XXIV"What is to become of me?"
17241XXX"You are a doctor?"
17241Yes, I do like you, but whether my feeling for you is love, how can I tell?
17241You''re fond of nature, are n''t you, Doctor von Kammacher?"
17241into my cabin, like the shouting of a death sentence into the cell of a poor sinner by both the judge and the hangman?
17241or,"Shall I not?"
21686And is it for that you refuse me my handkerchief? 21686 And where,"said I,"is monsieur?"
21686And your friend who went by just now?
21686And,added the man,"what the devil have you done to be still here?"
21686Are you going to sleep alone?
21686Baronet?
21686Did I groan loud, or did I groan low, Wackford?
21686Do they speak_ patois_ in England?
21686Have you no remorse for your crimes?
21686His papers are in order?
21686I am an amateur of such wine, do you see?
21686If anyone is a failure in the world, is it not I? 21686 In short,"suggested the_ Arethusa_,"you want to wash your hands of further responsibility?
21686Little boy, would you like to play with me?
21686Mademoiselle Ferrario chantera-- Mignon-- Oiseaux légers-- France-- Des Français dorment là-- Le château bleu-- Où voulez- vous aller? 21686 Nothing?"
21686These gentlemen are pedlars?
21686These gentlemen travel for their pleasure?
21686Was it not you who passed in the meadow while it was still day?
21686What is Paris? 21686 What would I have done with the crew who were such compromising witnesses, and were butchered?"
21686Where are you going beyond Cheylard?
21686Who are Hyde and Jekyll, my brethren? 21686 Why are you called Spirit?"
21686Why?
21686You are not of this Department?
21686Your domicile?
21686Your donkey,says he,"is very old?"
21686Your father and mother?
21686Your name?
21686_ C''est bon, n''est- ce pas?_she would say; and when she had received a proper answer, she disappeared into the kitchen.
21686_ Comment, monsieur?_he shouted.
21686_ Comment?_ Gambetta moderate? 21686 _ Comment?_ Gambetta moderate?
21686_ Connaissez- vous le Seigneur?_he said at length.
21686_ Monsieur est voyageur_?
21686A Scotsman?
21686A flute at Fairmilehead?
21686After all, being in a Judge''s house, was there not something semi- official in the tribute?
21686Ah, an Irishman, then?
21686An Englishman?
21686And Clarisse?
21686And his soul was like a garden?
21686And if he fail, why should I hear him weeping?"
21686And indeed, for a man who has been much tumbled round Orcadian skerries, what scene could be more agreeable to witness?
21686And the_ Arethusa_?
21686And we, what had we?
21686And what although now and then a drop of blood should appear on Modestine''s mouse- coloured wedge- like rump?
21686And what should more directly lead to charitable thoughts?....
21686And when the present is so exacting, who can annoy himself about the future?
21686And where-- here slips out the male-- where would be much of the glory of inspiring love, if there were no contempt to overcome?
21686And which is to pocket pride, and speak the foremost word?
21686And yet had not he himself tried and proved the inefficacy of these carnal arguments among the Buddhists in China?
21686As a parting shot, we had"These gentlemen are pedlars?"
21686At what inaudible summons, at what gentle touch of Nature, are all these sleepers thus recalled in the same hour to life?
21686Black, black was the night after the firelit kitchen; but what was that to the blackness in our heart?
21686But do you not observe it is antique?
21686But life is so full of crooks, old lady, that who knows?
21686But to put in execution, with the heart boiling at the indignity?
21686But what crowd was ever so numerous, or so single- minded?
21686But what was the etiquette of Origny?
21686But where one was so good and simple, why should not all be alike?
21686But why, in God''s name, these holiday choristers?
21686But, after all, what religion knits people so closely as a common sport?
21686Come back?
21686Delicacy?
21686Do the stars rain down an influence, or do we share some thrill of mother earth below our resting bodies?
21686Do you give in, as Walt Whitman would say, that you are any the less immortal for that?
21686Do you remember the Frenchman who, travelling by way of Southampton, was put down in Waterloo Station, and had to drive across Waterloo Bridge?
21686Do you then pretend to support yourself by that in this Department?"
21686Do you think I regret my life?
21686Do you think I would rather be a fat burgess, like a calf?
21686Does a hard- working, greedy builder gain more on a monstrosity than on a decent cottage of equal plainness?
21686Durst I address a person who was under a vow of silence?
21686Et d''où venez- vous?_"A better man than I might have felt nettled.
21686For will any one dare to tell me that business is more entertaining than fooling among boats?
21686Had it been a country road, of course we should have spoken to them; but here, under the eyes of all the gossips, ought we to do even as much as bow?
21686How, or why, or when, was this lymphatic bagman martyred?
21686I advance, do I not?
21686I ask myself; caught up into the seventh heaven?
21686I knew well enough where the lantern was, but where were the candles?
21686I think I hear you say that it is a respectable position to drive an omnibus?
21686I was once asked; and when I told them not,"Ah, then, French?"
21686I wonder if my friend is still driving the omnibus for the_ Grand Cerf_?
21686I wonder was it altogether modesty after all?
21686I wonder, would a negative be found enticing?
21686If some benevolent genie, who understood Stevenson''s qualities and genius, could have directed his career, how would that spirit have educated him?
21686In what other country will you find a patriotic ditty bring all the world into the street?
21686Is it Torre del Greco that is built above buried Herculaneum?
21686Is the word Gaelic misspelled?
21686Is there any profit in a misplaced chimney- stalk?
21686May I remark, as a balm for wounded fellow- townsmen, that there is nothing deadly in my accusations?
21686Might he say that I was a geographer?
21686Might not this have been a brave African traveller, or gone to the Indies after Drake?
21686Morning?
21686My God, is that life?"
21686Nerli?"
21686Nobody in the field asked''How''s that?''"
21686Nor was the vision unsuitable to the locality; for after an hospital, what uglier piece is there in civilization than a court of law?
21686Now may some Languedocian Wordsworth turn the sonnet into_ patois:_"Mountains and vales and floods, heard YE that whistle?"
21686OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS_ I behold The House, the Brotherhood austere-- And what am I, that I am here?_ MATTHEW ARNOLD.
21686Of what shall a man be proud, if he is not proud of his friends?
21686People constantly ask men who have collaborated how they do the business?
21686Perhaps the Bazins knew how much I liked them?
21686Quoi?_"_ The Arethusa( perceiving and improving his advantage):_"Rob''rt- Lou''s- Stev''ns''n."
21686Read one of these songs-- read this one-- and tell me, you who are a man of intelligence, if it would be possible to sing it at a fair?"
21686Scott, like Stevenson, knew queer people, knew beggars-- but had not one of them shaken hands with Prince Charles?
21686So far I am at one with the Catholics:--an odd name for them, after all?
21686Suppose a dish were not to my taste, and you told me that it was a favourite amongst the rest of the company, what should I conclude from that?
21686The children who played together to- day by the Sambre and Oise Canal, each at his own father''s threshold, when and where might they next meet?
21686The picture may not be pleasing; but what else is a man to do in this dog''s weather?
21686There is matter enough, in 1750- 1765, for scores of romances, but who now can write them?
21686There is no discharge in the war of life, I am well aware; but shall there not be so much as a week''s furlough?
21686They had sought to get a_ Hollandais_ last winter in Rouen( Rouen?
21686To how many has not St. Giles''s bell told the first hour after ruin?
21686Voyez- vous, je suis un homme intelligent!_"( With that?
21686Was I going to the monastery?
21686Was I to pay for my night''s lodging?
21686Was it Apollo, or Mercury, or Love with folded wings?
21686Was not this a graceful little ovation?
21686Was there ever anything more wounding?
21686Was this the imperturbable_ Cigarette_?
21686What am I to say for my book?
21686What could I have told her?
21686What is he to say that will not be an anti- climax?
21686What right has he, who likes it not, to keep those who would like it dearly out of this respectable position?
21686What shall I say of Clarisse?
21686What the devil was the good of a she- ass if she could not carry a sleeping- bag and a few necessaries?
21686What was left of all this bygone dust and heroism?
21686What went ye out for to see?
21686What were his reflections as this second martyrdom drew near?
21686What would happen when the wind first caught my little canvas?
21686What would the genie have done for him?
21686Where was it gone?
21686Where were the boating men of Belgium?
21686While we were thus agreeing, what should my tongue stumble upon but a word in praise of Gambetta''s moderation?
21686Whither?
21686Who shall say?
21686Who was I?
21686Why should it be cheaper to erect a structure where the size of the windows bears no rational relation to the size of the front?
21686Why"shebeens"?
21686Why, did I not know, he asked me, that it was nothing but locks, locks, locks, the whole way?
21686Why, indeed?
21686Will you dare to justify these words?"
21686Would the wicked river drag me down by the heels, indeed?
21686You are to understand there was now but one point of difference between them: what was to be done with the_ Arethusa_?
21686_ Pour vous_?
21686_ The Arethusa:_"Would you like to hear me sing?
21686_ The Commissary( pointing to the knapsack, and with sublime incredulity):_"_ Avec ça?
21686_ The Commissary( taking a pen):_"_ Enfin, il faut en finir._ What is your name?"
21686_ The Commissary( with scorn):_"You call yourself an Englishman?"
21686_ The Commissary:_"Humph.--What is your trade?"
21686_ The Commissary:_"Why, then, do you travel?"
21686_ The Commissary:_"Why?"
21686_ The Commissary:_"You have no papers?"
21686_ The Commissary:_"You know, however, that it is forbidden to circulate without papers?"
21686_ Who hath loosed the bands of the wild ass?_ JOB.
21686and as homely an object among the cliffs and orchards of the Seine as on the green plains of Sambre?)
21686and if she did not sleep, how then?
21686and look so beautiful all the time?
21686and playing,"Over the Hills and Far Away"?
21686and where the graces of Origny?
21686he cried,"what does this mean?"
21686not to mention that, at this season of the year, we should find the Oise quite dry?
21686or come safely to land somewhere in that blue uneven distance, into which the roadway dipped and melted before our eyes?
21686or in part a sort of country provocation?
21686or perhaps a bit of fear for the water in so crank a vessel?
21686perhaps they also were healed of some slights by the thanks that I gave them in my manner?
21686said the foreman,"do you hear nothing?"
21686thought I; and is this whole mansion, with its dogs and birds and smoking chimneys, so far a traveller as that?
21686where the Judge and his good wines?
21686why these priests who steal wandering looks about the congregation while they feign to be at prayer?
21686why this fat nun, who rudely arranges her procession and shakes delinquent virgins by the elbow?
18707And whose words are you so gaily murdering?
18707Are there no other Catholics to do things?
18707Did he ever go down to the Grotto?
18707Do you see that fire?
18707How do you know,retorts Shaw,"it is not Herbert Spencer I have not read?
18707How tall are you and what do you weigh?
18707I must have left it behind, darling, but I brought back the ties, did n''t I? 18707 Is George Bernard Shaw a coming peril?"
18707Is a man proud of losing his hearing, eyesight or sense of smell? 18707 Of course you know,"Annie Firmin wrote to me,"that Aunt Marie never liked Frances?
18707Was it hard for him to walk?
18707Was it of widowhood?
18707What books?
18707What did Frances die of?
18707What did he say about my ear?
18707What did he talk to you about?
18707What has really happened during the last seven days and nights? 18707 What would you say if I turned the world upside down and set my foot upon the sun and the moon?"
18707Where did he go to church?
18707Why are you cutting out that one?
18707Why did n''t you buy some more?
18707Will you take care of me?
18707_ HIS LORDSHIP-- Did Mr. Chesterton charge the witness with being a traitor? 18707 ''Are they still-- all out at places?'' 18707 ''Hast thou sent the Rain upon the Earth?'' 18707 ''The what?'' 18707 ( 1) How am I? 18707 ( 10) How far is it to Babylon? 18707 ( 2) Am I going away at Easter? 18707 ( 6) Does my hair want cutting? 18707 (? 18707 )_ PRINCESS: Why should we patch this pirate up again? 18707 *** Wild: Can you point to one success except Marconi in the whole of your career? 18707 A MAN BORN ON THE EARTH Perhaps there has been some mistake How does he know he has come to the right place? 18707 A correspondence that seemed likely to drag on forever ended abruptly with Wells asking about the Fall,Tell me, did it really happen?"
18707A few of the lectures and debates of these years were:"Is Journalism Justifiable?
18707A picture cover like that of Punch might stand even that test if it were good enough; but where are you to find your Doyle?
18707After a lecture in Philadelphia a lady asked him,"Mr. Chesterton, what makes women talk so much?"
18707After all, what did such things matter?
18707After all, why should we object to be boiled?
18707Again I may submissively ask:"Whose is the Paradox?"
18707And anyhow what about Belloc?
18707And as to lost documents-- What of the ministers''dealings in shares?
18707And how can we put a fair price on what is at once a worry and a pleasure?
18707And if a mother can not trust her child easily to God Almighty, shall I be so mean as to be angry because she can not trust it easily to me?
18707And in another letter: A cosmos one day being rebuked by a pessimist replied,"How can you who revile me consent to speak by my machinery?
18707And is there any man who doubts that you will be sympathetic with the Jewish International?
18707And the essence of the difference was this: the modern Socialist is saying,"What will society do?"
18707And then you wonder-- is this illumination light on Blake or simply light on Chesterton?
18707And what was the remedy?
18707And, by the way, is ditchwater dull?
18707Are all who called the Chinese slaves to be sued by all who did n''t?
18707Are they henceforth to make game of everything that is said and done in the name of England in the affairs of Europe?
18707Are two Hypotheticals of the forms,_ If A, then B_, and_ If A then not B_ compatible?"
18707Are we to lose the War which we have already won?
18707Are we to set up as the standing representative of England a man who is a standing joke against England?
18707Are you quite mad?
18707As I turn to the story of the weekly paper rising again from its ashes I ask myself the question I have often asked: was it worth while?
18707As we waved goodbye after their departing train my mother said thoughtfully:"Frances did rather play off Jerusalem against Rome, did n''t she?"
18707At a debate with Dr. Horace T. Bridges of the Ethical Cultural Society on"Is Psychology a Curse?"
18707At question period he was asked:"Why is Dean Inge gloomy?"
18707Belloc also, in a letter extolling the Faith, asked"what else would print civilised stuff in Australasia?"
18707Belloc declares that everyone says to him"Who discovered Chesterton?"
18707But does not Mr. Blatchford see the other side of the fact?
18707But is there not for the thinker an asceticism of the mind, very searching, very purifying?
18707But it was in the newspapers that you were last month in Warsaw; why in Heaven''s sake did you not come to Prague on this occasion?
18707But much more fundamental was the constantly recurrent question: When is the League going to begin to do something?
18707But she sees a new element in your life, wholly from outside-- is it not natural, given her temperament, that you should find her perturbed?
18707But the question does recur; what is the good of being good in that way?
18707But were the shares his?
18707But were they as clear to the whole world?
18707But who would perform that illegal operation: the stopping of Stevenson?
18707But why do you say that Christ did it and has left no Christians who do it?
18707CHAPTER X Who is G.K.C.?
18707Can any human being read the record of this recurrent motif and reconcile it with Mrs. Cecil''s picture?
18707Can anything be more absurd than the idea of a man cheering alone in his back bedroom?
18707Can we imagine Gilbert cooking or even ordering sausages, getting beer to the flat, designing or discovering the studio?
18707Carson: And therefore you do not accuse him of anything dishonest or dishonourable?
18707Carson: Do you accuse the Postmaster General of dishonesty or corruption?
18707Carson: I must repeat my question, do you accuse the Postmaster- General of anything dishonest or dishonourable?
18707Carson: You have not that opinion now?
18707Charles Rowley of the Ancoats Brotherhood received a wire, reply paid, from Snow Hill Station, Birmingham:"Am I coming to you tonight or what?"
18707Chesterton?"
18707Damn it all( excuse me) what can one be but frivolous about serious things?
18707Deep in the tablets of our hearts he writes that yearning still, The longing that His hand hath wrought shall not his hand fulfil?
18707Did I ever quote you a sentence of Bernard Holland on the subject of Kenelm Henry Digby when the latter was received?
18707Did the tendency to find good in his opponents, did Chesterton''s universal charity deaden, as Belloc believes, the effect of his writing?
18707Did you see my letter in Tuesday''s_ Times?_ Magnificent!
18707Do I seem to be raving?
18707Do n''t you sometimes find it convenient, even in my case, that your friends are less touchy than you are?
18707Do not the words of Jesus ring Like nails knocked into a board In his father''s workshop?
18707Do you care to come and see the fun?
18707Do you have joy without a cause, Yea, faith without a hope?
18707Do you or do you not accuse him?
18707Do you realize that it is £250 at pre- war rates, and subject to heavy taxation: net £375--pre- war 182- 10- 0?
18707Do you think all this kind of thing frivolous?
18707Do you think it would be possible to make Belloc write a comedy?
18707Do you want her?"
18707First, in whose eyes but ours has the Party System lost credit?
18707Fourth,"Is Democracy compatible with Parliamentary Government?"
18707Gilbert had, as we have seen, originally intended to call the book_ What''s Wrong?_ laying some emphasis on the note of interrogation.
18707Gilbert repeated the phrase and said eagerly:"He would n''t say it unless he meant it, would he?"
18707Gilbert was fond of asking in the_ New Witness_ of people who expressed admiration for Lloyd George:"Which George do you mean?"
18707God sets the problem, God tells the story, but can those know Him who are characters in His story, who are working out His problem?
18707Had we anything to do with the making of this ardent, eager, indefatigable creature?
18707Had we known all this we should have been asking ourselves even more definitely: What will the experts say?
18707Has any Catholic ever explained the philosophic meaning of Transubstantiation to the Great old Irish Man of English Letters?
18707Has it ever occurred to you how much a good citizen would have to love you in order to tolerate you?
18707Have n''t I always shown a reasonable civility to you and your brother and Belloc?
18707Have n''t I betrayed at times a certain affection for you?
18707Have n''t I on the whole behaved decently to you?
18707Have we got that down?
18707Have you ever known what it is to walk along a road in such a frame of mind that you thought you might meet God at any turn of the path?
18707He had intended to call the book,"What''s Wrong?"
18707He only said,"But shall I not find in evil a life of its own?
18707He said"What shall I lecture on?"
18707He said,''Oh did you want tennis- balls?''
18707He uttered the pedantic reply,"Where do you want to go to?"
18707His own youngest son, a small boy, had left the room for a moment when Wells exclaimed:"Where''s Frank?
18707How and where can these two incommensurates find a meeting place?
18707How can I get hold of it?
18707How can it be broad to be the same thing to everyone, and narrow to be everything to someone?
18707How can money dig?
18707How could a real Tory co- operate in construction with a genuine Radical?
18707How if Christianity was yet more maddening because it was yet more precious?
18707How then could this indifference be thrown off: How could the returning manhood of the nation be given a true democracy: was there still hope?
18707How would you like it if she were to publish a magazine and call it Fanny''s First Paper?
18707How, the_ New Witness_ asked, could members of such families feel the same about the war as an Englishman?
18707I asked''Where?''
18707I feel in His mercy He will, even if death is the end of it-- or the beginning shall I say?
18707I feel like Elijah( was n''t it?)
18707I pointed it out to him, and he said:''Do you think it matters?''
18707I remember he asked Gilbert,"Do you like babies?"
18707I said,''Are these tennis- balls?''
18707I say: have you written to Thring yet?
18707If the Christian God really made the human race, would not the human race tend to rumours and perversions of the Christian God?
18707If the centre of our life is a certain fact, would not people far from the centre have a muddled version of that fact?
18707If we are so made that a Son of God must deliver us, is it odd that Patagonians should dream of a Son of God?
18707In October another meeting of the central branch was held in Essex Hall to debate"Have We Lost Liberty?"
18707In an article entitled_ Is It Too Late?_ he defined this pessimism as"a paralysis of the mind; an impotence intrinsically unworthy of a free man."
18707In the Notebook he had written: BOOTLACES Once I looked down at my bootlaces Who gave me my bootlaces?
18707In the Notebook he had written: NORTH BERWICK On the sands I romped with children Do you blame me that I did not improve myself By bottling anemones?
18707In the last part of the book,"Education or the Mistake about the Child,"he put the unanswerable question: How are we to give what we have not got?
18707Is God compatible with Church Government?
18707Is he in the house of his fathers or has he come unto a strange land?"
18707Is it a man or a woman?
18707Is it not a part of the most fundamental of all antinomies-- the greatness and the littleness of man?
18707Is it one long dead or yet to come?
18707Is not Shaw''s explanation at once fascinating and probable?
18707Is that all right?
18707Is that definite?
18707Is that plain?
18707Is there a Mincing Mind, of which a mincing voice is the outward and visible warning?"
18707Is there any man who doubts that the Jewish International is unsympathetic with that full national demand?
18707Is there anything you hold sacred?
18707Is there no pity due to those who undergo these?
18707Isaacs: In companies?
18707It was just at this time that she wrote to tell Father O''Connor that Gilbert said to her"Did you think I was going to die?"
18707It was not allowed to object to Mr. Herbert Gladstone( or is it Lord Gladstone?
18707Just how scandalous_ was_ the Marconi scandal?
18707Life is a problem: who sets it?
18707Life is a story: who tells it?
18707May he be forgiven for speaking of them at length and with pride?
18707Meanwhile, as not wholly unconnected with the serious things, could you possibly do me a great favour?
18707Meanwhile, what was Gilbert doing about his work at University College?
18707Mid darkening care and clinging sin they sought their unknown home, Yet ne''er the perfect glory came-- Lord, will it ever come?
18707Mr. Chesterton said it reminded him of an old Irishwoman:''Why do n''t you get out sideways?''
18707My life is a howling waste-- but what matter?
18707My necktie is on the wrong way up: my bootlaces trail half- way down Fleet St. Why not?
18707Now, however, I am becoming personal( how else can I be sincere?).
18707Oh who would not want such a wonderful thing As the pleasure of hearing the Eskimos sing?
18707Or Bentley?"
18707Or did they belong to the English Company?
18707PRINCESS: If you lay there, would he let you escape?
18707Please, would you be so kind to tell me, if it shall be possible for you to come next year to Prague?
18707Potatoes, for example, are better boiled than raw-- why should we fear to be boiled into new shapes in the cauldron?
18707Scene at Beaconsfield:"What on earth have you done with your dress- suit, Gilbert?"
18707Shall I say of him, to whom I owe so much, let the day perish wherein he was born?
18707Sister Madeleva:"Did he like the campus?"
18707Sister Madeleva:"Did he walk on the campus and see the students?"
18707Sister Madeleva:"What did he do for recreation?"
18707Someone asked,"Did he ever get grouchy?"
18707St. Theresa said the hardest penance was easier than mental prayer: was not much of Gilbert''s thought a contemplation?
18707Suppose you had your choice of not reading a book by Belloc and not reading one by Spencer which would you choose?
18707Surely Chesterton had this same inconsistency, as it were, in reverse?
18707THE COSMIC FACTORIES What are little boys made of?
18707That is n''t_ our_ Chesterton, is it?"
18707The boils that shine and burrow, The sores that slough and bleed-- The leprosy of Naaman On thee and all thy seed?
18707The bootmaker?
18707The gigantic figure of Sunday before whom they all tremble turns from the chief of the anarchists, chief of the destructive forces, into-- what?
18707The next question that arises is-- whom am I engaged to?
18707The question of my youth undoubtedly was: how far can a Catholic go on the road to Socialism?
18707The question was becoming insistent: when would there be enough money for Frances and Gilbert to get married?
18707The real problem is-- can the lion lie down with the lamb and still retain his royal ferocity?
18707The rebuke died on my lips: why get angry with the poor old aunts of Higgins demanding the destruction of their unconceived and inconceivable babies?
18707The_ Louisville Post_ reported that Henry James, being asked on a visit to his native country,"What do you think of Chesterton in England?"
18707There is a phrase used at the end, spoken by Sunday:"Can ye drink from the cup that I drink of?"
18707These things are easier written than said, but you know it is true, do n''t you?
18707Thou mirror of uprightness, What ails thee at thy vows, What means the risen whiteness Of skin between thy brows?
18707Thus, in this first instance, when learned sceptics come to me and say,"Are you aware that the Kaffirs have a sort of Incarnation?"
18707To Johnnie--"Did he take the lecture business seriously?"
18707True, nobody read them; but was that my fault?
18707Two of his intimate friends, finding at this time a notebook full of these horrible drawings, asked one another,"Is Chesterton going mad?"
18707Was Chesterton for once undertaking a task beyond his knowledge?
18707Was G.K. serious or merely posing, was he a great man or a mountebank, was he clear or obscure, was he a genius or a charlatan?
18707Was it Chesterton himself who christened it"Baring, Overbearing and Past Bearing?"
18707Was it accurately reported?
18707We do not feel that it is so beautiful now-- why?
18707Were St. Paul''s epistles an Apologia pro Vita Sua?
18707Were the Trades Unions, from lack of leadership and confusion of thought, beginning to accept the Servile State?
18707Were the people of England losing the appetite for freedom and for property?
18707Were they in now?
18707What about that play?
18707What and where and when is"Uncommon Sense about the War?"
18707What are these athletes worth if, after all their athletics, they can not scratch up such a thing as a natural appetite?
18707What are these laws?
18707What are we to say of those who have to take an anaesthetic before they can face pleasure?
18707What can be more fundamental than food, drink, and children?
18707What did I ever do that I should be given bootlaces?
18707What did a week mean for most of them?
18707What did it really mean?
18707What do you say to a severe course of Walt Whitman-- or will marriage make him see people?
18707What do you say?
18707What does it matter?
18707What happened to Swift''s Gulliver-- that most fierce attack upon the human race?
18707What is Incarnation?
18707What is man, that thou regardest him?
18707What makes a man essentially English?
18707What more can any man want?"
18707What more does man require?
18707What more natural than that they should think of me as a man not afraid to call himself an atheist and able to hold his own on the platform?
18707What must this pain of adjustment not have been to a mind almost continuously creative?
18707What of that?
18707What of the money?
18707What of those, who when faced with the terrors of mayonnaise eggs or sardines, can only utter a faint cry for brandy?
18707What price the first- hand?
18707What shall we say of him who prides himself on beginning as an intellectual cripple and ending as an intellectual corpse?
18707What was meant by the Servile State?
18707What was to be done about it?
18707What would be likely to be the effect of the sudden dropping into a dreadfully evil century of a dreadfully perfect truth?
18707What would happen if a star from heaven really fell into the slimy and bloody pool of a hopeless and decaying humanity?
18707What would happen if a world baser than the world of Sade were confronted with a gospel purer than the gospel of Rousseau?
18707What''s the reason?
18707When all their lights grow dark, their lives grow gray, What will those widows and those orphans say?
18707When one''s attempts at reformation are"not much believed in"what other course is open but a contemptuous relapse into liberty?
18707Where ought I to be?"
18707Who are we, to whom this cup of human life has been given, to ask for more?
18707Who gave the bootmaker himself?
18707Why am I allowed two?
18707Why are not all men aware of the uniqueness of Man among the animals and the uniqueness of the Church among religions?
18707Why did he do it?
18707Why do you say there is no chance for this normal property and liberty?
18707Why do you think of these things as small?
18707Why do you think of these things as small?
18707Why does no one say their wives dragged them away?
18707Why had he not asked to be heard sooner by the Committee?
18707Why had he not earlier asked the Committee to hear the story of the American shares?
18707Why is it an answer to say we must do that to make them Distributists?
18707Why is it possible for Mrs. Cecil to declare that he was the greater editor, to imply that he was the greater man?
18707Why is the memory of Cecil Chesterton alive today?
18707Why not a sermon on that?
18707Why not a whole comedy of cross purposes based on the notion of a priest with a knowledge of evil deeper than that of the criminal he is converting?
18707Why not do George Fox, who was released from the prisons in which Protestant England was doing its best to murder him, by the Catholic Charles II?
18707Why should He be?
18707Why should an evening waistcoat have four large white pearl buttons and why should he look that peculiar shape?
18707Why should you always win and win in vain?
18707Why was this possible?
18707Why, after all, should I charge more than sixpence for a work it was so exuberant to write?
18707Will you forgive me, dearest, if I reel off to the only soul that can be trusted to enjoy my enjoyment, a kind of report of the meeting?
18707Will you take care of me?
18707Would any human life have been long enough to develop them all?
18707Would you undertake six further fortnightly talks from January 16th onwards?
18707Yes?
18707Yet how many of the men who did learn seriously could have drawn those sketches, full of crazy energy and vitality?
18707You ask( in gruff, rumbling tones)"Who is Captain Webster?"
18707You might unite all High Churchmen on the High Church quarrel, but what authority is to unite them when the devil declares his next war on the world?
18707_ Ruler:_ Do you solemnly swear never to conceal a vital clue from the reader?
18707_ Ruler:_ Will you honour the King''s English?
18707_ What''s Wrong with the World?__ William Blake_.
18707and followed this with the question,"Does Father O''Connor know?"
18707are we observed?)
18707is it your firm desire to become a Member of the Detection Club?
18707they spake unto me by letter, saying,"Heard ye aught of him that is called Bentley?
18707while his prototype, as we read, said,"What shall I do?"
26151And so in all humility you ask,"How can you tell with a glance of the eye?"
26151Aniline?
26151Apart from repairs, what is being done in the present day?
26151Before their imperturbable jocundity what bad humour can exist?
26151But for how long is he monarch, with this flaming menace burning into his courage?
26151But what weaver of tapestry would be willing to confide his labour to the care of a dye that has not known the test of ages?
26151But when the cartouche appeared, what is the effect?
26151Could any modern indicate by sophistry of brush or brain so intoxicating a fairyland, so gracious a field of dear delights?
26151How did he happen upon it in these latter days?
26151How felt the artists about this domesticating of their art?
26151How shall we know the true from the false?
26151If the eyes gaze on Coypel''s gracious ladies, under fruit and roses, with adolescent gods adoring, what matters if the palate is chastised?
26151Italy had the artists, Brussels had the craftsmen-- what happier combination could be made than the union of these two?
26151Should one speak first of the cartoon or of the weave, of the artist or of the craftsmen?
26151The other says bluffly,"Tapestries?
26151This is well for the value of the tapestries, but is it not a providence too thrifty when the public is considered?
26151What can the trained eye and the cultivated taste do other than turn back to the products of other days?
26151What place had an acre of tapestry in these little rooms?
26151Who is she, the grand and gracious lady, bending like a lily stalk among the roses, with a man on either side?
26151Why not now resort to a similar method?
26151Will not the Twentieth Century see a restoration of its former prestige?
26151Yet why does it live?
22049Now many a man will think and inquire whence the devil came?... 22049 Truly, yes,"replies Ailill;"but, Conchobar, how shall he be carved?"
22049What more simple in this hall, where sit the glorious heroes of Erin?
22049What seith it? 22049 What shall I sing, then?"
22049Why, sir,the young lady replies,"wene you that I were a kelle( prostitute)?"
22049Wote I what thow art?
22049[ 124] Why are there no more miracles? 22049 [ 391]--("''What,''said Ponocrates,''brother John, do you swear?''
22049[ 530] Why lament long, or marvel at it? 22049 [ 716] But how can that be?
22049[ 729] How should popes be above kings? 22049 [ 801] Is there anything more touching?
22049_ The Maiden._--Would''st thou recognise him again if he returned? 22049 8vo; Hardyng( 1378- 1465? 22049 Ait puella:''Si cum jam videres, haberes notitiam ejus?'' 22049 Am I not pretty? 22049 And of what utility, nor what does it profit listeners to hear such horrible things?
22049And when sleep comes, of what will she think in her dreams if not of love?
22049As the shepherds walk in, Mak meets them with a cheerful countenance, and welcomes them heartily: Bot ar ye in this towne to- day?
22049At what precise moment does love begin?
22049Author said:"Why?
22049Be they the wers?
22049Be ye affrayed of me that am your freend?"
22049Besides, can I prevent his loving me?
22049But how long will this last?
22049But in the present case, what can be said, what excuse can be found, when so many have written, and so well too?
22049But then, says Pecock, we are greatly puzzled, for how should we dare to wear breeches, which the Bible does not mention either?
22049But where are the last year''s snows?
22049But''thinkest thou,''saith one,''that I shall leap upon him though I look at him?''
22049Can a reasonable woman expect more?
22049Can one be more"pitous"?
22049Dis- moi, par l''âme de ton père, Voit- il volentiers menestreus?
22049Do they observe, or fancy they observe, any diminution in the strength of England?
22049Do you not see that I am out of breath?
22049Does not every one need it?
22049Et à quel utilité ne à quoy proufite aux oyans oïr tant de laidures?"
22049Fight, say I?
22049Get into the ark and"leve the harde lande?"
22049He is awe- stricken, and shudders; he wonders at the boldness of his undertaking;"Qu''allait- il faire dans cette galère?"
22049He will speak in prose, as in church: Why sholde I sowen draf out of my fest, Whan I may sowen whete if that me lest?
22049Her decision is not taken; when will it be?
22049His love has nothing unflattering; is he not the first knight of Troy after Hector?
22049How came this young woman, as virtuous as she was beautiful, to love this youth, whom at the opening of the story she did not even know?
22049How could she, at these words, prevent her sparkling eyes from betraying her?
22049How could the passer- by not be touched by the idea that the stone is so hard?
22049How innovate when versifying for a society about to end?
22049How justify the use of clocks to know the hour?
22049Hwarof kalenges tu me?
22049Hwat heved heo ionswered?
22049If all lordship vanishes through sin, who shall be judge of the sin of others?
22049If he loves me, shall I be the only one to be loved in Troy?
22049Is it not nice?
22049Is it of Love?"
22049Is the case of this anchoress a unique one?
22049It is the impiety of Aucassin, who refuses( before it is offered him) to enter Paradise:"In Paradise what have I to win?
22049Le baroun ma dame, par ma foy.... Quei est le eve apelé, par amours?
22049Lo, here is al, what sholde I more seye?
22049Lo, nece myn, see ye nought how I swete?
22049Luard, Rolls, 1861, p. 118, year 1236(?).
22049Michelant, Stuttgart, 1846.--The romances of Hue de Rotelande( Rhuddlan in Flintshire?)
22049Must not, on the other hand, all men have"summe recreatioun"?
22049Now how fare ye?
22049Now some man will inquire whence came his[ own] soul, whether from the father or the mother?
22049Now wol ye vouche- sauf, my lady dere?"
22049On both sides fresh invaders threaten her; which will be the winner?
22049Out of this chaos how can a nation arise?
22049Pandarus is very proud of his; what could one reproach him with?
22049Petrarch, 166, 268, 285, 287 ff., meets Chaucer(?)
22049Por le cuer be, sire Ysengrin, Prendra ja vostre gerre fin?"
22049Que fera vostre suer la lasse?
22049Quid potuit melius?
22049Quy est toun seignour?
22049Romam in gremio suo non pro gloria, sed pro salute pugnare?
22049Shall we drink something?
22049Shall we not dance together?
22049Soppes in wyne, how love ye?
22049The elder mouse creeps out of her hole: How fair ye sister?
22049The history of Brutus, father of the Britons, is in Nennius, tenth century(?
22049The information sometimes is very peculiar; but Pliny is the authority: who shall be believed in if Pliny is not trusted?
22049The lady is not a whit pacified; why have made a secret of all this to her?
22049The name of summoner was held in little esteem, and no wonder:"Artow thanne a bailly?"
22049The porter of the prætorium struck Jesus saying:"Go on faster, go on; why tarriest thou?"
22049The silence is broken by the matin bell: Bot now, how trowe ye?
22049Thou art a fool, thy wit is overcome,"What would Donna Pampinea and Donna Filomena have said, hearing such words?
22049Truth?
22049Vos n''estes mie nes de France...--Nai, mi seignor, mais de Bretaing...--Et savez vos neisun mestier?
22049What book was it?
22049What could he eat?
22049What countries did thy war- ship visit?
22049What do the abettors of mysteries answer to this?
22049What is property, and what is the origin of the power whence it proceeds?
22049What is the subject of their talk?
22049What is then the matter?
22049What is ther in paradis Bot grasse and flure and grene ris( branches)?
22049What is there astonishing in his passion for me?
22049What others would have immigrated there of their own free will?
22049What sight can comfort us for these sad things?
22049What the deville is this?
22049What was the end of that life?
22049What will be the subject of this philosopher''s talk?
22049What will become of your poor unfortunate sister?
22049What wonder, with so many causes for a failure, that it failed?
22049What, then, were these ideas, and what was this literature?
22049Whence comes it that the instincts of this impetuous race are to some degree moderated?
22049Where are Paris, and Helen, and Tristan, and Iseult, and Cæsar?
22049Where are now the Anglo- Saxons?
22049Where does the Bible say that it should be translated into English?
22049Who had a more elevated mind than Aristotle, and who was wiser than Solomon?
22049Who has not cherished similar talismans?
22049Who were these Normans?
22049Why are the people preached to in a foreign tongue?
22049Why cling to this perishable world?
22049Why had he not consulted her?
22049Why lowtt ye nat low to my lawdabyll presens?...
22049Why make verses, why write, said Ymagynatyf to him; are there not"bokes ynowe?
22049Will God permit the confusion of the emperor of the Franks, however well deserved it be?
22049Will they ever know the real place where they might find St. James?
22049Will they suspect that St. James should be souht · ther poure syke lyggen( he) In prisons and in poore cotes?
22049Years have fled, death draws near; only a short time remains to live; how employ it to the best advantage?
22049[ 142] To the extent that England resembled then Jerusalem besieged by Titus:"Quid multa?
22049[ 179] Says the Wolf: Do nt estes vos?
22049[ 260] What can he do next?
22049[ 261] What then?
22049[ 31]"Innumerabiles et ferocissimæ nationes universas Gallias occuparunt.... Quis hoc crederet?...
22049[ 397] Was it not still, as in the time of Brunetto Latini, the modern tongue most prized in Europe?
22049[ 496] S''amor non è, che dunque è quel ch''i sento?
22049[ 516] What says Cressida?--What may"the sely larke seye"when"the sparhauk"has caught it?
22049[ 517] Were they happy?
22049[ 601] What if, after all, this ruinous war, the issue of which is uncertain, should turn out to be an unjust war as well?
22049[ 639] How is it possible to reconcile the teachings of theology with our idea of justice?
22049[ 745] Le roi demaund par amour: Ou qy estes vus, sire Joglour?
22049[ 753]"Ad quid illa vocis contractio et infractio?
22049[ 771]"Quem quæritis in præsepe, pastores?
22049[ 808] Every lord bows to my law, observes Tiberius: Is it nat so?
22049[ 817]"Interlude of the four Elements,"London, 1510(?
22049_ Clericus._ Wer esty( is thy) sire, wer esty dame?
22049a nation that may give birth to Shakespeare, crush the Armada, people the American continent?
22049and on Good Friday, what do we see?
22049can you not stay awhile?
22049cui meliori?
22049de quel païs?
22049quarrels with his barons, and whom does he select for an arbiter but his former enemy, Louis IX., king of France, the victor of Taillebourg?
22049quid majus?
22049quid meministi Ausa nefas tantum?
22049suete, are ye a warldly creature, Or hevinly thing in likenesse of nature?
22049wher wol ye gon?
22049which becomes in Chaucer the"Cantus Troili": If no love is, O God, what fele I so?
22049·"Thought,"seyde he thanne,"I have suwed( followed) the this sevene yere · sey thow me no rather( sooner)?
2582Did you read my pastoral letter?
2582Do you see that young man of twenty- five who will soon traverse the sanctuary to find the sinners awaiting him? 2582 What has proved of most use to you in behalf of religion in your diocese during the last fifteen years?
2582What works are deemed satisfactory?
2582Why is confession ordained?
2582( A speech by Father Ravignan, August 3, 1848)"What nation in the Roman church is more prominent at the present day for its missionary labors?
2582( And then, pointing upward:)"Who made all that?"
2582( If the soul dies with the body what happens to God?
2582( SR.)][ Footnote 5340: Like a central committee of the communist party?
2582--"Why again?"
2582And yourself?"
2582Between the two domains, between that which belongs to civil authority and that which belongs to religious authority, is there any line of separation?
2582Did Lenin and Stalin use this description of catholic brainwashing as their model?
2582Did Lenin have Taine translated?
2582Except for such beneficial generalities which may provide general hygienic guidelines, could M. Taine have suggested immediate remedies?
2582Have you seen the pastoral declaration of Boisgelin, archbishop of Tours?...
2582How could such a profound change in the condition of humanity fail to undermine everywhere the order of things which group men together?
2582How dare the Academy speak of regicides?...
2582How does the shrunken family come to live only for itself?
2582How does"this common factor combine with special factors, permanent and temporary,"belong to our system?
2582Is it through this-- is it through that?
2582Man?
2582On what lines must the metamorphosis be effected in order to arrive at a viable creations?
2582Philosophy?)
2582Quid homo?
2582Quid philosophia?
2582Quid societas?
2582Society?
2582The knowledge we have of our origins, of our psychology, of our present constitution, of our circumstances, what hopes are warranted?
2582Villagers, after listening to a sermon against the tavern and drunkenness, murmur and are heard to exclaim:"Why does he meddle with our affairs?
2582Were we good citizens?
2582What if he, like so many other highly talented and intelligent men, took his own superb intelligence and imagination for granted?
2582What if the talent of such men is inherited?
2582What is the priest?
2582What would this book have been?
2582While M. Thiers, with equal vivacity, in the parliamentary committee exclaimed:"Cousin, Cousin, do you comprehend the lesson we have received?
2582Who, then, can criticize a Government because it insists that all children be taught these basic skills?
2582Why in modern France does he give his thoughts to"pleasure and of excelling in his career"?
2582Why should not the new milieu at once attack all ancient forms of society?
2582[ 5282]"Ecclesiastical obedience is... a love of dependence, a violation of judgment.... Would you know what it is as to the extent of sacrifice?
2582[ Footnote 5117: What impression could this have made on Lenin?
2582[ Footnote 5132: Ibid., p.154:"Is it not better to organize worship and discipline the priests rather than let things go on as they are?"]
2582[ Footnote 6115:"Histoire du Collége Louis le Grand,"by Esmond, emeritus censor, 1845, p.267"Who were the assistant- teachers?
2582[ Footnote 6362: All this was in 1890, a long time ago, and if there was much to learn then, how much do we not have to learn now?
2582[ Footnote 6380: But what if Taine was mistaken?
25937If you have done, will you leave the house, or shall my servants turn you out? 25937 ''Do n''t,"replied that functionary;"I hope you''ve forgot nothink?
25937''"Is that all, sir?"
25937''"Will you redeem the bond?"
25937''And Dickens, with all_ his_ genius, but whose Men and Women act and talk already after a more obsolete fashion than Shakespeare''s?''
25937''How much of this behaviour goes on daily in respectable society, think you?
25937''I wonder shall History ever pull off her periwig and cease to be court- ridden?
25937Assuming that sixty years ago a Secretary of State was much the same sort of man that he is to- day, what are we to think of this spirited colloquy?
25937Before he could turn to run again a second horseman was on him, and with a grim"Hyun-- Would you?"
25937But is it a genuine delineation of the man himself, of his motives, of the working of his mind in speech and action?
25937But what''s the use?
25937Do you know what a scene it was?
25937In which category are we to place the letters of Keats, including those that have been very recently unearthed by diligent literary excavation?
25937Is it some yet imperial hope That with such change can calmly cope?
25937Is such minute matter- of- fact copying a virtue in the novelist?
25937Is this actually a true account of English thought?
25937London,? 1850.
25937Miss''Melia''s gownds-- have you got them-- as the lady''s maid was to have''ad?
25937Or dread of death alone?
25937Shall we see something of France and England besides Versailles and Windsor?
25937The force which is shaping the future, is it with the Ritualists or with the undogmatical disciples of a purely moral creed?
25937They are mainly irresponsible creatures: how could they be otherwise, when everything depends on the sword, and a woman can not wield it?
25937Turn out this fellow; do you hear me?"''
25937What has been the effect of this altered situation upon the writer of history at the present time?
25937What has been the upshot and consequence of this Turkish system?
25937What if the extra allowances have really no attraction?
25937What should we all be if we had not one another to check us and to be learned from?
25937What these crimes were he does not say; and how many of us could answer the question off- hand?
25937What will Europe say when you shed torrents of blood on a point of form?''
25937What, then, are the conclusions which we may draw from this brief survey of the more prominent and typical Indian novels?
25937When his friends urge him to study for the purpose of rising in the service, civil or military, he asks:''What then?
25937Why have these verses made such an effect that they are familiar to all of us, and fresh as when they were first read?
25937Why shall History go on kneeling to the end of time?
25937how vexest thou this man?''
25937or is it not rather a defect arising out of a misunderstanding of the principles of his art?
22285About Mrs. Bell''s letter to her? 22285 And that is?"
22285And that is?
22285And that is?
22285And what if it is?
22285Antecedent history?
22285Anything happened?
22285Are you going to obtrude your somewhat massive personality upon the scene?
22285Are you not going to the Ramseys''?
22285Are you quite sure there is nothing I can do for either of you to- day?
22285But Jack, dear, you will promise me never to see her again, will you not?
22285But if the anti- suffrage movement is growing as we have been told, ca n''t the anti- suffragists overcome those tendencies?
22285But is that the way to win?
22285But the break has united?
22285Carroll and spooks,he began, and then went on more seriously,"but where on earth did you hide yourself?
22285Carroll,he said, humbly,"would you mind if I proposed to you once more?
22285Certainly I''ll go,Carroll answered soberly,"but what do you expect to gain by it?
22285Could n''t the letter have been returned to Mrs. Bell''s apartment, through some error in the address? 22285 Could n''t you take it along?"
22285Dear old fellow,he said affectionately,"would you mind telling me what on earth possesses you to come down here to- night?
22285Did I not see you a year ago on the streets in London, the time I was arrested?
22285Did any of you people, aside from Jack, see the suffragette parade to- day?
22285Did not Dr. Earl also purchase a box of pecans at the time that he bought the fruit and is not this the box in which the pecans were packed?
22285Did the box have the name of the store, or any name of a manufacturer or dealer upon it? 22285 Did you use the Hindoo method of respiration that the Swami Bramachunenda gave an exposition of here two or three years ago?"
22285Do n''t I look as if I could say''Gentlemen of the jury''with sufficient gravity?
22285Do n''t you know anybody?
22285Do n''t you see that you are quite right? 22285 Do n''t you think the letter was mailed?"
22285Do you mean am I given to''seein''things at night''?
22285Does she not realize that it is a fatal evidence of weakness not to state a defense at the opening of the trial?
22285Dr. Morris? 22285 Has it indeed been a loving cup from which we have drunk?"
22285Has it? 22285 Have n''t we?
22285He has been very good to you, has n''t he?
22285How can you take it so quietly, Miss Renner?
22285How did you happen to come here?
22285How did you happen to forget about the nuts and remember about the candied fruit?
22285I hope the doctor will not mind; wo n''t he be back pretty soon?
22285I not trust my life to a woman? 22285 I thought you did not know the family?"
22285I-- how do you know I saw it?
22285If it is n''t any worse than that,she said hesitatingly,"do n''t you think you could do as she asks?
22285Is it a case of''mine own familiar friend''?
22285Is she afraid to state her defense after that terrific arraignment of the defendant?
22285It is a long story,he said;"have you time for it to- day?
22285Jack, dear, did you take Miss Holland home at one o''clock in the morning?
22285Might I ask why this sudden interest in the militant laboring ladies?
22285Miss Holland defend me? 22285 Must a fashionable lady be a listless parasite?
22285Oh, she has told you, then?
22285She is not the daughter of John J. Holland, the steel magnate?
22285Tell me what is the matter?
22285Then if I say the pursuit of the good, the true and the beautiful, you will not believe me?
22285Then it is a kind of new thought?
22285Then why not do it,she said,"and spare the mother all this protracted agony, and get the child home?"
22285Well, what is it?
22285Well?
22285Were you going, Dr. Earl? 22285 Were you in Providence on this trip, or have you been there recently?"
22285What did you do with the box of candied fruit you bought at Thompson''s candy store when you were in Boston?
22285What do you suggest?
22285What does it mean?
22285What is it?
22285What is the song?
22285What makes you think anything is?
22285What shall I send you from Boston, little Miss Alice?
22285What''s all the hullabaloo about, anyhow?
22285What''s the use of her wasting thoughts on a solemn dub like our brother?
22285Where have you been that you do n''t know about Earl?
22285Where in the world did you get it?
22285Why did n''t you go home with Miss Holland?
22285Why do n''t you comfort yourself with the thought that, no matter who else may be deceived, wherever she is, she knows the truth?
22285Why not?
22285Why not?
22285Why should n''t I go, if I wish to?
22285Will your highness deign to accept employment if it is offered you by his family?
22285You do believe in my innocence?
22285You know her very well, then?
22285You mean I ought to be willing to bear testimony to my beliefs whether they meet with acceptance or not?
22285You recognize it, of course?
22285You think because you may have a vote on the enfranchisement of women that it is very important what you think, but is it? 22285 You would n''t like me any better if I were unsuccessful?"
22285You''re not fretting because of the paltry little sum I advanced for your rent, are you?
22285Your machine is coming back, is n''t it?
22285''Oh, it is, is it?''
22285''Say, you do n''t like that bill?''
22285After all you''ve said, are you going to hesitate when it comes to crossing professional swords with a man?
22285Aloud she said,"Is n''t Dr. Morris one of the directors of this society?
22285Am I going to motor down to hear the protests of the proletariat to- night?
22285Besides, what more was there to say?
22285But are you?"
22285But first tell me, Carroll, are you timid-- nervous?"
22285By the way, Frank, are you going to motor down to that meeting of Miss Holland''s to- night?"
22285Can I set you down anywhere?
22285Could n''t we go home?
22285Dear Frank, when is there ever a time when man does not trust his fate to woman?
22285Did you see Dr. Morris?
22285Do n''t you intend to invite me in?
22285Do n''t you know that mamma is vice- president of the Anti- Woman Suffrage League?
22285Do you not think, Miss Holland, that it would be well for me to get a nurse to assist in taking the little one home?
22285Do you really think it is a plan to get you into some false position or to embarrass you with criticisms or queries not made in good faith?"
22285Earl?"
22285Even now, Dr. Earl, are you certain it would not be better to employ counsel eminent in this branch of the profession?
22285Has her health generally been good?"
22285He''s a fellow alumnus of yours; it does n''t seem as if he would be likely to show you an affront, does it?"
22285Her name is Carroll Renner; do you happen to know her?
22285Here, is n''t this your street?"
22285How does it strike you, Miss Holland?"
22285How in the world could you remember me?"
22285If he ca n''t gain a respectful hearing there, where will he gain it?"
22285Is it your desire that I shall cut their acquaintance also, or is it just Miss Holland you want me never to see again?"
22285Is that what you desire?"
22285Jack,"he asked, with a mixture of doubt and anxiety,"did you really have an affair with her?"
22285Now come along, or have I got to come over there and make you?"
22285Now you know my terms; shall I go to the district attorney?"
22285Now, what can I do for you?"
22285Setting a simple fracture is n''t a very complicated operation, is it?"
22285Shall it be Chopin to- night, or shall we begin with something lighter and finish with the Twelfth Nocturne, as usual?"
22285Silvia said to Dr. Earl, but he shook his head, and Frank answered,"It''s Olive Schreiner, is n''t it?
22285Suppose a little clique of them have arranged the meeting with the intention of heckling the speaker?
22285Suppose my sympathies are with them and my profession as well as my political predilections should carry me among them?"
22285That is n''t fair; have n''t you just said yourself that this would be a picked audience?
22285The question is,''What have Colorado women done with the ballot?''
22285The young man would drop back to barbarism but for her, and where would you and I be but for that dear, sweet sister of ours?
22285There was a moment''s pause and then Jack said,"And you go to this meeting because----?"
22285They exchanged greetings, and then the little Westerner said quietly,"You wanted me?"
22285This is the place, is n''t it?"
22285Was there ever anything more utterly unreasonable than that?
22285What brought you to New York, Frank?"
22285What did he do?
22285What did he tell you?"
22285What do you want me to do?"
22285What makes you want to go, anyhow?"
22285What reward for them is meet?
22285When she replied that he had character enough, and her only object in life was to be his wife, what more was there to say?
22285Where is the telephone?
22285Who are the people you are trying to snapshot for your lurid sheet?"
22285Who is she, Hilda?"
22285Who is she, Jack?"
22285Why not find one who can give you millions in money and the social position you need without taking a generation to create one?
22285Will she be able to hold her own?
22285Will she-- would she be willing to do it?"
22285Will you not let me present you for a few minutes during the informal discussion?"
22285Women are waking up, and getting to their feet and stretching out their hands-- to us?
22285You will forgive me?"
22285You''d never take him for Mrs. Ramsey''s brother, would you?
22285asked John, and his confused manner brought"Eh, Jack?"
26317All correct?
26317And do n''t you suffer with your limbs?
26317Are they not our brethren, the neighbors to whom the command applies,"Love thy neighbor as thyself"?
26317But do our statesmen or our clergy suggest this view?
26317Do they not all maintain the Christian religion( at least nominally) by all the power of their governments and public opinion?
26317Do they recoil from war or inspire the people with thoughts of peace?
26317Has the old spirit died out?
26317Have the syndicates too much influence?
26317Is Christendom the only dangerous portion of the world, where an honorable and peaceful nation can not exist in safety?
26317Is Col. Ingersoll too much of a pessimist to believe that American moral power will be sufficient in time to calm the world''s agitation?
26317Is all the civilization, statesmanship, and Christianity of the leading nations of the earth incapable of withholding them from such gigantic crimes?
26317Is all the genius and energy of the American people bound in fidelity to the Moloch of war?
26317Is it possible now?
26317Is it true?"
26317Is that all so?"
26317Is that so?"
26317Is there not among our politicians who sustained the Blair Education bill some one whose voice may be heard in behalf of peace?
26317Is this our Christian love, to spend a hundred and twenty millions for the assassination of our beloved brethren-- avowedly for that purpose?
26317Look even two centuries ahead, and what do we see?
26317May I not therefore ask his aid in relieving me of this burden by increasing the circulation of the Journal among his friends?
26317Shall we move onward toward humane civilization, or cling to a surviving barbarism?
26317W. H. Thomas of Chicago?
26317WHAT IS INTELLECTUAL GREATNESS?
26317What is the popular judgment, or even the judgment of popular leaders worth upon any great question?
26317Why is the metropolitan press silent?
26317Will editors who read these lines speak out?
26317Will the time ever come when nations shall be guided by wisdom sufficient to avoid convulsions and calamities?
26317Yet who among all the leaders of the people knew anything of these warnings, or was sufficiently enlightened to have paid them any respect?
26317when shall the demand for the supremacy of the moral law be anything more than"the voice of one crying in the wilderness"?
25897But at least, if the Greeks do not give character, they give ideal beauty?
25897Must we refuse every pleasant accessory and picturesque detail, and petrify nothing but living creatures?
25897Why?
25897_ So_ represented,we say; but how is that to be done?
25897--"What kind of power is the sight with which we see things?
258975) could represent to the noblest hearts of the Christian ages the power and ministration of angels?
25897And now, will you bear with me while I tell you finally why this is so?
25897Are any of these goddesses or nymphs very beautiful?
25897Are the Reptile things not alive then?
25897But do you suppose that is what an ordinary sculptor could either lay for his first sketch, or contemplate as a limit to be worked down to?
25897But if we may not put her into marble in rags, may we give her a pretty frock with ribbons and flounces to it, and put her into marble in that?
25897But now, may we not ask farther,--is it impossible for art such as this, prepared for the wise, to please the simple also?
25897But will you look again at the series of coins of the best time of Greek art, which I have just set before you?
25897Can they give divine sadness?
25897For all men, that is to say; but to what work did the Greeks think that her voice was to call them?
25897Is not this an edge- tool we have got hold of, unawares?
25897Is not this saying much?
25897May we not wisely judge ourselves in some things now, instead of amusing ourselves with the painting of judgments to come?
25897May we sculpture her so?
25897May you sculpture it where it hangs?
25897Mephistopheles in vain calls to them--"What do you duck and shrink for-- is that proper hellish behavior?
25897Next, why has it a rim?
25897Ought not that to disturb some of your thoughts respecting Greek idealism?
25897Shall we find in their art- work any of that pensiveness and yearning for the dead which fills the chants of their tragedy?
25897Stand fast, and let them strew"--"Was duckt und zuckt ihr; ist das Hellen- brauch?
25897The picture, if it is a good one, should have a deeper interest, surely on_ this_ postulate?
25897What mode or limit of representation may we adopt?
25897What was to be the impulse communicated by her prevailing presence; what the sign of the people''s obedience to her?
25897What-- having the gift of imagery-- should we by preference endeavor to image?
25897Why has it been made round?
25897Why should it not be represented, if possible, just as it is seen?
25897You may play with it, since it is false; and what a play would it not be, well written?
25897You think Pindar wrote that carelessly?
25897but"What possibly can you see_ in_ these?"
25897or that, if he had only known a little modern anatomy, instead of''reptile''things, he would have said''monochondylous''things?
23458And suppose it is not pallberry season, do we not have them tinted?
23458And the lady-- you-- you know her name?
23458Burslem?
23458Did the police molest you?
23458Do I look like it?
23458Does not a woman need a helpmeet, too?
23458Have you been reading?
23458He''ll vote with the b''hoys, so what difference does it make?
23458How do you spell it?
23458Oh, she, the lovely lady with the golden hair? 23458 Was it a big audience?"
23458What are you eating?
23458What book?
23458What name?
23458Why are you here?
23458Why do n''t they eat cake?
23458''Gone through it,''did I say?
23458A rebel?
23458All that remains is, how shall we announce the truth to the world?
23458And I run away, flee?
23458And Lassalle-- Lassalle-- where is Lassalle?
23458And has the Jew seduced you, too?
23458And now you are-- are friends?
23458And that time has not come?
23458And think you that women so loved, and by such a man, would not fetch and carry and run and find their highest joy in ministering to him?
23458At such a time do you think a man is revolving in his mind business arrangements with Barabbas?
23458Besides?
23458But Bailley Bodmer-- had he, too, been derelict?
23458But surely you, too, do not make genius exempt from the moral code?
23458Can you make your father believe that?
23458Could there be greater silliness?
23458Did not that trouble me?
23458Did they attack my honor-- my personal character?
23458Did you hear a carriage?
23458Do you trust me?
23458Do?
23458Does it not all depend upon the man and the woman?
23458For why should I conceal this weakness of my soul?
23458Have I not addressed a mob and won?
23458He had won renown, for had he not called down on his head the attacks of the envious?
23458He leaves that to you?
23458He would turn to her in his distress, to Madame Hanska-- where was that last letter from her?
23458He wrote to Madame Hanska:"I tremble as I write you: will this be only a new bitterness?
23458I answered her with my usual confidence,"God will assist us"; and did I not arrive, O my Lord, without being wetted?
23458I had once so desired to be a nun; why am I now married; and by what fatality is this happened to me?"
23458If Beatrice was indifferent to him, why should she be displeased when he had made eyes at another?
23458If any one asks, tell them my daughter is insane-- a maniac-- and a little force was necessary-- you understand?
23458If he were thrice blest in having them, as he continually avowed, how about them?
23458In all the realm of letters, where can be found anything more delightfully whimsical and deliciously humorous than James Barrie''s"Peter Pan"?
23458In half- apology for his turning upon Parnell, Gladstone once afterward said,"Home Rule for Ireland-- what would she do with it anyway?"
23458Is it bad to love one woman with all the intensity that was formerly lavished on ten?
23458Is it necessary that we should enter into details?
23458Is she handsome?
23458Is there a carriage at the door?
23458Is there no way, gentlemen, by which this unfortunate affair can be arranged?
23458It is a great disadvantage to be rich: jewels, furniture, servants, horses-- they own you, all: to take them or to leave them-- which?
23458It is often a good thing for the persecuted, provided he can spare the time-- how does that strike you, Herr Marx?
23458Jeopardized by love?
23458Jeopardized?
23458Just the religion of paying your way and being kind would be a pretty good sort of religion-- don''t you think so?
23458Listen, do you still think it possible that Lassalle has not forgotten me?
23458Lord Dufferin, late Governor- General of Canada, once said:"What is the spectacle presented to us by Ireland?
23458Madame Hanska understood him-- was that not enough?
23458Now, take Hamlet-- what man ever had more opportunities?
23458Of course, she was an exceptional person, for have I not intimated that she was a thinker?
23458Oh, so you protect her, do you?
23458Oh, why did she bring this disgrace upon us?
23458Once each day at exactly noon my father came and solemnly asked,"Do you renounce Lassalle?"
23458Or will it be necessary for him to lay siege to her heart at all?
23458Perhaps you have one in your pocketbook?
23458Running?
23458Shall I?
23458Shall we do it by the tongue of scandal?
23458So we have a legend concerning those Sabine women, where one of them asks impatiently,"How soon does this attack begin?"
23458Take away from man all that belongs to the land, and what have you but a disembodied spirit?
23458The fee?
23458The question has often been asked,"Who snatched Home Rule from Ireland just as she reached for it?"
23458The son questions her somewhat as follows:"What are you doing, mother?"
23458To you?
23458Twenty years ago she was a woman in distress?
23458Was ever a man so blest?"
23458Was it vanity that prompted Rossetti after seven years to have the body exhumed and recover the poems that they might be given to the world?
23458Was this the college spirit of which she had read so much?
23458Well, the fact is that Madame had a dream in which you played a part; she thought you had been-- what is that word, my dear?
23458What has that to do with literature?
23458What is a yearly tenancy?
23458What wrecked him?
23458Where is he, I say?
23458Where was such a model woman to be found?
23458Which has nothing to do with the publication of_ Das Kapital_--eh, Herr Marx?
23458Which means, I suppose, that I will be king of the Co- operative Commonwealth?
23458Whom?
23458Why ask me?
23458Why did she turn and look at him?
23458Will the Fraulein be so good as to go below and meet her mother?
23458Will the skies for me ever again grow bright?
23458Work has to be performed, even when calamity comes, and we stand by an open grave and ask old Job''s question,"If a man die shall he live again?"
23458You are sure then about your divinity?
23458You mean I may sing the Pilgrims''Chorus with Richard across the border?
23458You mean that your father or that little prince, Yanko, may do me violence?
23458You mean the priest and congregation?
23458You side with her?
23458You studied the time- table?
23458[_ Archly_] Shall I win her before we are married, or after?
23458[_ Calmly_] Well spoken, Helene, and now tell me, will you make a sacrifice-- a temporary sacrifice for me?
23458[_ Contemptuously_] Why do you not fight him?
23458[_ In terror_] What shall I do?
23458[_ Seating himself at a table opposite Helene_] You hear, my Goddess of the Dawn, Helene, that dangerous ideas are simply new ideas?
23458he once wrote to Sarah,"Burslem?
23458is that the person who passed for being clever?
23114A what?
23114Always?
23114And how fur is it?
23114And where art goin''?
23114And who, my dear child,said Mrs Hathaway, surprised at Penny''s vehemence,"is Mrs Dicks?"
23114Are you willing to work for your supper and a bed in the hay- loft to- night?
23114Ca n''t someone else take it?
23114Ca n''t you let the lad bide?
23114Can it be possible,thought Bridget,"that I really have n''t tried enough?"
23114Can yer sing` Home Sweet Home?''
23114Did they wallop yer?
23114Do n''t yer hear his reverence?
23114Do yer know any more?
23114Do you mean_ our_ Mrs Dicks?
23114Do you want a pal?
23114Does he know anything of the matter?
23114Dorg, eh?
23114Eh, my boy? 23114 From the country, I reckon?"
23114Hast taken the edge off, little chap?
23114How did he tackle the ploughin''?
23114How do they get''em down to Wickham?
23114How should I know where he is?
23114Hullo, boys,he said cheerily, for he knew Roger and Gabriel well,"what are you doing here?
23114I suppose he''s rare and''ungry?
23114Is he your brother?
23114Is he your dog?
23114Is that all?
23114Is the lad livin''? 23114 Is yer mother livin''?"
23114Late at work, Mrs Darvell, eh?
23114O please, father,said Gabriel,"may Roger and I have the cart and horse to- morrow?"
23114Oh, never mind,said the clergyman;"where''s Darvell?
23114Oh, you''re here, are you, young scamp?
23114Penny,said Mrs Hawthorne,"have you looked in the charity- box lately?"
23114Pigs, eh?
23114Please, sir,he said,"do you want a boy in the factory?"
23114Roger,he said in a small whispering voice,"why am I in this room?"
23114Shall I tell it,said Gabriel,"or you?"
23114Tell me,said the rector,"have your parents lived long at Green Highlands?
23114That sounds a good sort o''name too,said Barney;"sort o''name you see in gowld letters on a chany mug in the shop winders, do n''t it?
23114Then we may have it, father?
23114Then why do n''t yer bide at home,asked the woman,"and work there?"
23114Then,repeated Mrs Darvell, fixing her eyes sharply on him,"where_ is_ the lad?"
23114Tiring work marketing, eh?
23114Try what?
23114Up to snuff, ai n''t he?
23114Was it your companion who broke into this room this morning and stole my inkstand?
23114What are you considering, Penny?
23114What do you want, my lad?
23114What does she want clothes for?
23114What''s up, little un?
23114What, Nan?
23114What_ can_ have got him?
23114What_ can_ you be doing, nurse?
23114Where be the cheers?
23114Where is he?
23114Where is your companion, my boy?
23114Where was the boy, Andrew?
23114Where''s t''other?
23114Where''s yer boss?
23114Where''s yer carikter? 23114 Where?"
23114Whom would you like to see again?
23114Whose pigs are they?
23114Why did yer cut and run then?
23114Why must she bring up her six children on nothing?
23114Why not?
23114Why, that''s something new, is n''t it? 23114 Why?"
23114Wo n''t you have pity on me, and let me leave off too?
23114Wot can he do?
23114Wot''s his name?
23114Would he be likely to do it?
23114Would n''t he now?
23114Yer give it him?
23114Yon?
23114You''ve heard summat, sir?
23114_ Wo n''t_ they?
23114------------------------------------------------------------------------ And where was"our Frank"meanwhile?
23114And feeling it his turn to make some inquiries, he said:"What do yer carry them mice fur?"
23114And what do you think Penny found?
23114And where was Tim?
23114Are they well- known there?"
23114At last Gabriel put down his tea- cup with a deep- drawn sigh of contentment, and said to his brother mysteriously:"Shall we tell about the plan?"
23114But I tell you what; you know that little field of mine near the church, I''m wanting to let that off, how would that do?"
23114Cart and horse-- what for?"
23114Could he, ought he, might he take the dog home with him and have him for his own?
23114Could there be a duller, more unsatisfactory occupation?
23114Do n''t he preach fine?
23114For some minutes the group remained in silent contemplation, then the new- comer said inquiringly:"Fer dog?"
23114Gabriel tried to say,"How are the pigs?"
23114He hummed a tune in the intervals of conversation and presently asked:"Can yer sing?"
23114He looked round at the old woman, who was rocking herself to and fro with crossed arms, and said:"Shall you give him any supper to- night?"
23114He would sally out to the gate to meet them, and ask nervously:"Well, my lads, seen anything of him, eh?"
23114How could this strange boy possibly know that he had run away?
23114How did it come there?
23114How did the child get here?"
23114How old are yer?"
23114I think you wo n''t want to run away again?"
23114If your husband has driven Frank from home, does it mend matters for you to drive your husband to the public- house?"
23114In the vicarage garden?"
23114Indeed,"said Mrs Hathaway,"and why not?"
23114Is he livin''?"
23114Is n''t he back from work yet?"
23114Is n''t he home yet?"
23114Is n''t that it?"
23114Is your father in the town?"
23114Lies is wicked, eh?
23114Mr Darvell rose, stretched himself, glanced nervously at his wife, and suggested humbly:"Shall us go to bed?"
23114Roger,"cried Gabriel doubtfully,"do you think we shall ever bring them up?"
23114Should he venture back?
23114Suppose that he chooses an idle good- for- nothing life and his own pleasure, rather than to work hard and live honestly; what happens then?
23114Then I says,` Where''s yer carikter?''
23114Then glancing at the muddy boots on the hearth:"Bin ploughin''?"
23114Then he asked briefly:"Farm- work?"
23114There it stood still, with the horses''heads turned towards him; but what was that choking savage growl which met his ear?
23114Well, boy,"as he noticed Frank standing humbly in the background,"what do_ you_ want?"
23114What did it all mean?
23114What do yer want to go on fur?
23114What should he do?
23114What was her astonishment when the owl at once replied, in the same stifled voice:"What do you want?"
23114What''s your name, little un?"
23114What_ did_ she want?
23114Where dost come from?"
23114Where have you come from?"
23114Where was the use of having been such a good"scholard?"
23114Where''s the farm to be?
23114Who told him that, I wonder?"
23114Would he take a fancy to him?
23114Would she be frightened of Toto?
23114Would you like to join it?"
23114You''ve heard that?"
23114cried Penny in some dismay,"are we going to see Mrs Hathaway?"
23114said the rector,"it''s a fine thing to be a good workman, and to have earned a good name, is n''t it?"
23114she said,"and why are you looking at all those old things of mine and Nancy''s?"
26450Are you then recalled to Poland?
26450Art thou the admiral?
26450Do you pardon your enemies?
26450Good people of Paris,said the Constable on his arrival at their camp,"what meaneth this?
26450Good people,protested Marcel,"why would you do me ill?
26450Is it your will?
26450My cure? 26450 What do they take from me?"
26450What do you ask?
26450Who are you?
26450And of the strong city built on the little island in the Seine who could have been its founder but the ravisher of fair Helen-- Sir Paris himself?
26450As the duke hastened to spoil his victims, crying out--"Where is the archbishop?"
26450As we crossed the courtyard of the palace( in the Cité) he said:''Seest thou not what I perceive above this roof?''
26450At length he turned and said:"Know ye my faithful servants, wherefore I weep thus bitterly?
26450Do they turn to the right?
26450Does power descend from God, its primeval source; or does it ascend, delegated from the people?
26450He asked again,''Seest thou naught else?''
26450My life?
26450See you yon lights?
26450Soldiers of Italy, will you lack courage?"
26450Turning to the angels, Jesus said:"Know ye who hath thus arrayed Me?
26450We pass to Room IV., dominated by the most eminent sculptor of the French renaissance, Jean Goujon(?
26450When he entered Abbeville with the magnificent Duke of Burgundy, the people said"_ Benedicite!_ is that a king of France?
26450Where is the ancient prowess of France?
26450by the works of Michel Colombe(?
26450cried the latter,"what dost thou here at this hour?"
26450must I suffer new trouble every day?"
26450shall I never be in peace?
11372A big man like you? 11372 Address?"
11372Afterward? 11372 Age?"
11372Ai n''t he the limit?
11372Ai n''t it cute?
11372And I am forgiven?
11372And I''ve been sleeping, and you let me sleep?
11372And Mr. Blaine? 11372 And how goes it, Marty?
11372And how much will you charge for the paper?
11372And now?
11372And so you...?
11372And the Night Court?
11372And the men who mobbed him?
11372And the office?
11372And the press?
11372And the women?
11372And what are you doing now?
11372And what did the men do?
11372And what did they say?
11372And what do you know about editing a magazine?
11372And what happens to them if they are arrested?
11372And what may the Stove Circle be?
11372And when he''s unemployed you have a hard time, do n''t you?
11372And who''ll distribute?
11372And who''s to give it to him?
11372And you girls are n''t afraid?
11372And you go to- morrow?
11372And you understand... at last?
11372And you''ll get it then?
11372And you-- are you all right?
11372And you-- what did you do?
11372Any witnesses?
11372Are you glad to get back?
11372Are you perfectly satisfied down here? 11372 Are you sure,"Joe went on,"that you wo n''t be blacklisted?"
11372Are you working here?
11372Are you_ sure_ of that?
11372Bad business on the street a night like this, ai n''t it? 11372 But I have n''t fifty cents-- besides, a message does n''t cost fifty cents--""Are yer telling_ me_?"
11372But has n''t Mr. Cassidy a job?
11372But he''s-- better?
11372But how are they going to vote right?
11372But how can you stop her?
11372But is n''t there anything to do?
11372But what brings you here?
11372But what could you do?
11372But what happened afterward?
11372But who''ll get the paper to the newsmen?
11372But why is it allowed?
11372But why not, Joe? 11372 But,"he exclaimed,"was my diagnosis correct?
11372But_ why_ did you do that?
11372Ca n''t you feel the press going? 11372 Ca n''t you see why?"
11372Ca n''t you shut up?
11372Charity? 11372 Could it hurt you?"
11372Dark or light, Mike?
11372Democrat?
11372Did n''t she come, Joe?
11372Did you get a permit from the office?
11372Difference?
11372Do n''t you know? 11372 Do n''t you think I know,"said Joe''s mother,"that there is something precious in me that is n''t going to go with the body?
11372Do n''t you think there''s right on the other side, too? 11372 Do n''t you think,"she cried,"you ought to go off and take a rest and think it over?
11372Do they want union cards?
11372Do yer think we keep a telephone for the likes of ye?
11372Do you know him personally?
11372Do you know this Sally Heffer?
11372Do you think a man has any right to strike a girl?
11372Do you?
11372Do you_ mean_ it?
11372Do your own printing?
11372Do? 11372 End?
11372Even our honeymoon-- that ca n''t be repeated, can it?
11372Everything''s up-- I''m dying, Mr. Joe-- I need help-- I must get to the hospital--"Sick?
11372Exactly what do you mean?
11372Fifty cents too much?
11372For long?
11372For what?
11372From this house?
11372Girl or boy?
11372Going where?
11372Gone back?
11372Got the girls out?
11372Had n''t you better go back, Miss Craig? 11372 Had n''t you better send over and see?"
11372Hard?
11372Has_ that_ hit you, Nathan?
11372Have I been hibernating and is it springtime again?
11372Have many of the girls been arrested?
11372Have n''t I eyes?
11372Have they been disorderly?
11372Have they found you out? 11372 How about Rann and the men?"
11372How can we get it? 11372 How did it happen?"
11372How do you do it?
11372How have you been feeling, Myra?
11372How many are there?
11372How many copies?
11372How move them? 11372 How much do you get a week?"
11372How much help?
11372How much is it?
11372How old?
11372How so, Michael?
11372How so?
11372How so?
11372How so?
11372How so?
11372How so_ real_?
11372How''d you know my name?
11372How?
11372I did n''t mean--"Say,said the other,"ai n''t I the awful thing?
11372I may?
11372I must go away and rest... and think... and try to understand...."And may I write to you?...
11372I need-- Didn''t I say, no peanuts? 11372 I''m Joe Blaine....""Joe Blaine... of what?"
11372I?
11372I?
11372In this country if men only voted right... only had the right sort of government.... What are they gaining this way? 11372 In what way?"
11372Insurgent?
11372Is he in?
11372Is he still so busy?
11372Is it as bad as that?
11372Is it far?
11372Is n''t he in danger now? 11372 Is n''t it great, mother?
11372Is n''t there anything to be done?
11372Is n''t there some way I can help?
11372Is n''t this a public street? 11372 Is n''t this a whopper?
11372Is that all you got?
11372Is there no end to it? 11372 Is what the policeman says true?"
11372It''s hard for you, is n''t it?
11372It''s-- well, what is it?
11372Joe,he burst out,"how the devil is the printery going to run without you?"
11372Joe,she cried,"is n''t there any place where we can see-- the other people?"
11372Joe,she murmured,"what do you think you''ll be doing a year from now?"
11372Joe,she said, tremulously,"you''re not going to stay up with that committee?"
11372Jump your rent, eh?
11372Know her? 11372 Let''s see,"said Joe,"that''s eleven cents a week, is n''t it?
11372Lissner? 11372 Marrin?
11372Message? 11372 Miss Sally, what would I do without you?
11372Miss Sally,he said once,"what would I ever do without you?"
11372Mother,he said,"is n''t there something we can do together?"
11372Mr. Blaine in?
11372Mrs. Rann--Joe put down knife and fork--"do you want me to_ burst_?"
11372My mother?
11372My mother?
11372Named after you?
11372Needed?
11372Not a blooming anarchist?
11372Not-- lost your nerve? 11372 Not--_raisin pie_?"
11372Not... the loft?
11372Now? 11372 O God,"she sobbed,"when will all this be over?
11372Occupation?
11372Oh, Myra,cried Joe,"is n''t it great to know that we have it in us to go plumb loony once in a while?
11372Oh, do n''t you see,he went on, brokenly,"I ca n''t ask you to come with me?
11372Oh,she cried low,"is n''t it lovely?
11372Out? 11372 Permit?
11372Picketing?
11372Pinching me, John?
11372Plump took it to the Manufacturers Association, and they-- backed him? 11372 Police--?
11372Proud? 11372 Remember it?"
11372Rest? 11372 Retire--_you_?
11372Retire?
11372Rhona, have you seen the lawyer about?
11372Rhona? 11372 Rhona?"
11372Rhona?
11372Say-- what will the fellers say? 11372 Shall I write to him that we will not consider his offer, and tell him we refuse to compromise?"
11372She?
11372So it''s, here''s to good friends, is n''t it, John?
11372So we''re here, mother... and it''s ripping, is n''t it?
11372Striker?
11372Surely?
11372The editor?
11372The mine?
11372The news company?
11372The police came?
11372Then what did you do?
11372Then where did you go?
11372Then why did you go into it?
11372Then you heard how he was hurt?
11372Then you think your work is... of the wrong sort?
11372There''s nothing the matter?
11372They did n''t go in the kitchen?
11372To stay?
11372To who?
11372Understand?
11372Union man?
11372Vassar College?
11372Walking? 11372 We fellers never appreciated this here Joe Blaine, did we?"
11372Well, Joe,said his mother,"what do you expect?"
11372Well, what can I do for you?
11372Well,he muttered, trying to be careless,"how are you?"
11372Well,she said, brusquely,"what do you want?"
11372Well,she said, flushed, bending forward,"Joe Blaine, where have your eyes been these five weeks?"
11372West Tenth Street feller?
11372What about it?
11372What are scabs?
11372What are you going to do now?
11372What are you, then? 11372 What business?"
11372What can I do,he kept thinking,"with these people?"
11372What can I do? 11372 What can poor people do?"
11372What can we do? 11372 What d''ye call yourself, then-- Republican?"
11372What d''ye mean by helloing me?
11372What do most of the editors know?
11372What do they do in Germany?
11372What do you mean?
11372What do you mean?
11372What do you think of that for a pesky little animal?
11372What do you want?
11372What do you want?
11372What does that Joe Blaine mean? 11372 What if it''s you?
11372What is it, Joe?
11372What is it, Joe?
11372What is it, Marty?
11372What is it, Marty?
11372What is it?
11372What is it?
11372What is it?
11372What is it?
11372What kind of work is that?
11372What now?
11372What paper do you take?
11372What reasons?
11372What strike is this?
11372What to tell? 11372 What were you doing at the time?"
11372What will I ever do without you when the strike is over?
11372What''ll I call you?
11372What''ll yer have?
11372What''s good?
11372What''s picketing?
11372What''s that?
11372What''s that?
11372What''s the charge?
11372What''s the difference?
11372What''s the matter with this?
11372What''s the name of it?
11372What''s the news? 11372 What''s trimming hats?"
11372What''s up? 11372 What''s up?"
11372What''s up?
11372What''s your best?
11372What''s your name?
11372What, you one of them shirtwaist strikers?
11372What?
11372What?
11372What?
11372What?
11372What?
11372When did this happen?
11372Where are they?
11372Where are they?
11372Where is he?
11372Where''s mother?
11372Where''s the office?
11372Whereto?
11372Who are you?
11372Who do you love most?
11372Who do you think I am?
11372Who was that girl? 11372 Who''ll bind it, fold, and address?"
11372Who''s come, in particular?
11372Who? 11372 Who?"
11372Why a red?
11372Why are you going away?
11372Why could n''t she have come this morning?
11372Why did they run you in?
11372Why did you follow me? 11372 Why do you stop?"
11372Why is anything allowed?
11372Why not call my paper_ The Nine- Tenths_?
11372Why not?
11372Why not?
11372Why not?
11372Why, then, Mr. Joe, did you turn that woman away?
11372Why? 11372 Why?"
11372Will it be worth twenty- five thousand dollars when it''s rebuilt and business booming again?
11372With him? 11372 Wo n''t you see that this is a fight for the future-- a fight for all who work for wages-- a fight for freedom?
11372Would you like to see it?
11372Would you mind some candy, Annie?
11372Yer know who I am?
11372Yes, Fannie...."Are you going, too?
11372Yes?
11372Yes?
11372Yes?
11372Yes?
11372Yes?
11372You agree with its views?
11372You came here for_ that_?
11372You do n''t even know that? 11372 You feel the press in this house?"
11372You really think you''re all right, then?
11372You remember that morning?
11372You still here?
11372You swear your charge is true?
11372You understand now, do n''t you? 11372 You want to do something?"
11372You want to see Miss Heffer? 11372 You would n''t mind if I gave her a peppermint to suck?"
11372You''ll let me do it?
11372You''re cured, then?
11372You''re sure,she murmured,"I''m not needed here?"
11372You?
11372Your man belongs to a union, does n''t he?
11372Yours, Sally?
11372_ Got_ to go?
11372_ In the Ramble, Myra_?
11372_ Live_ here? 11372 _ Me_?"
11372_ Me_?
11372_ That night_?
11372_ Without forgiving me_?
11372_ You_ glad?
11372_ You_ help?
11372_ Yours_?
11372A slum girl to speak like this of Vassar students?
11372Against the careless and cruel world?
11372Ai n''t he the limit?
11372Ai n''t it a shame?"
11372Ai n''t you?"
11372And how can I refrain from going in myself?
11372And she laughed, and mused, and murmured:"How does the world manage to keep so new and young?"
11372And so here he was, thirty- eight years of his life gone, and what had it all been?
11372And then she replied: DEAR JOE,--Can''t I help you?
11372And what could one woman do with fifty or sixty children?
11372And what had he been after?
11372And who paid the rent?
11372And yet I must go?"
11372And you''re sure now you do n''t mind me-- the way I''m constructed in the cranium and all that?"
11372Anything else?"
11372Are n''t you going to rest, ever?"
11372Are we to cease now?
11372Are yer deef?"
11372Are you going back like weak slaves?"
11372Are you going to be fools now?
11372Are you going to help these girls_ win_ their fight?"
11372Are you going to let him get the best of you?
11372Be shut out like this?
11372Besides"--he screwed up his eye shrewdly--"come now, are n''t you hanging on to some capital?"
11372Blaine?"
11372Blaine?"
11372Blaine?"
11372But how are you going to circulate the paper?"
11372But how could she excuse herself, how withdraw, especially in the face of Joe''s challenging gaze?
11372But how?
11372But see the sweat- band?
11372But then, what is left?
11372But those who were sucked into the vortex of the rough world, what of these?
11372But what should he do, and how?
11372But what sort of a world will your children find when they grow up if you do not fight these battles for them?
11372But who could live in the heart of it all and be unaware of it?
11372But you... do you realize what a wonderful thing you''ve done?"
11372But-- what''s in a name?"
11372Ca n''t we sit down together and talk?
11372Ca n''t you open your hearts and minds?"
11372Ca n''t you see?
11372Call you Ronie?"
11372Cheap paper?"
11372Comes hard at first, does n''t it?
11372Could he leave her alone?
11372Could he sympathize with a young girl who was wrongly accused?
11372Could she depend on that Miss Craig, who had melted away at the first approach of peril?
11372Could she not measure to a little consumptive Russian?
11372Cut off from friends and fun-- and ai n''t the work beastly?
11372Did I care?
11372Did I really know the human muddle?
11372Did he still wear the same clothes, the same half- worn necktie, the same old lovable gray hat?
11372Did n''t I see you move in?
11372Did not Fannie Lemick tell him that Sally Heffer lived in Greenwich Village?
11372Did not the Woman''s League keep a lawyer in the court?
11372Did we do the right thing?"
11372Did you ever hear the likes?"
11372Did you hear that?"
11372Did you say this little piece?
11372Did you spiel it out?
11372Do I not know how you toil and slave and go hungry and wear out your bodies and souls?
11372Do I not know you?
11372Do n''t you know?"
11372Do n''t you love me any more?"
11372Do n''t you see that Marrin is ready to give in?
11372Do n''t you see?
11372Do n''t you think many of the employers are doing all they can under present conditions?
11372Do they come to you?"
11372Do you blame me?
11372Do you happen to know any one in this neighborhood who could take the job?"
11372Do you have to get a permit?"
11372Do you know anything of the working- class movement?"
11372Do you know the neighborhood?
11372Do you know what I see this morning?"
11372Do you know what they do in Germany?"
11372Do you mean the books you are reading?"
11372Do you think I''m worse off than Rhona?"
11372Doing what?
11372Dreaming?
11372Finally he spoke, easily:"True, Officer?"
11372For the cloak- makers?
11372Gettin''sporty, Joe, in your old age, are n''t you?
11372Had Miss Craig failed her?
11372Had he not lived just the average life-- blameless, cheerful, hard- working, fun- loving-- the life of the average American?
11372Had such a man any right to be placed over others, to be given the power over other lives?
11372Had they not a right then to go out in the open, to strike, to lead marches, to sway meetings, to take their places with men?
11372Has any man really mapped out civilization?
11372Have I not seen it a thousand times?
11372Have I not shared your struggles and your pain?
11372Have I not toiled with you?
11372Have n''t I a right to walk up and down with my friend?"
11372Have you forgotten?
11372Have you time?"
11372He felt her side of the case very vividly, and how could she ever understand?
11372He gazed at her warm- tinted cheek, almost losing himself, and then murmured, suddenly:"More school stuff?"
11372He looked at her, and then suddenly he asked:"But how did you come to hear of this?"
11372He looked down on the floor, and spoke in a whisper:"And... would you send me off, too?
11372He was a printer; why not then print a little weekly newspaper directly for the toilers, for his neighbors?
11372Her motion was unanimously carried, and when the chairman cried, in Yiddish:"Do you mean faith?
11372Hey, Officer?"
11372How are you?
11372How be downright woman?
11372How can I ask you to go into the peril, the dirt, and disease of this struggle?
11372How can you really serve the strike if you''re in this condition?"
11372How could he communicate what was bursting in his breast?
11372How could he from shabby Tenth Street send out a sheet of paper that would compete with these flashing avenues?
11372How could she help?
11372How did it come that these girls were more ready than any one could have guessed, and were but waiting the call?
11372How did it happen?"
11372How does she take it?"
11372How goes it, Marty?"
11372How had it happened?
11372How had the strike started?
11372How help Rhona?
11372How live in luxury without working?
11372How long?"
11372How much d''yer earn?"
11372How out of this emptiness was he to create something vital?
11372How touch them off?"
11372How would she greet him?
11372If the dead tree could blossom and put forth green leaves, what dead soul need despair?
11372If you let the bosses enslave you-- if you are cowards and slaves-- will not your children be slaves?
11372In what way?
11372Is n''t New York a great town?
11372Is n''t it great?"
11372Is n''t it wonderful?"
11372Is not earth the mating- place for souls?
11372Is not life the adventure of a man and a woman going forth together, toiling, and talking, and laughing, and creating on the road to death?
11372It''s been a long spell.... Good to see the old place again.... Bad weather we''re having.... How''ve you been?"
11372It''s so huge, complex, varied-- so many disorganized forces-- who can classify it-- label it?
11372It''s you who are suffering-- not I. I?
11372Izon reported to Joe, and Joe asked:"Do you think they''ll fight it out?"
11372Joe spoke slowly:"_ Are you Marty Briggs now or are you Martin Briggs_?"
11372Joe understood not a word, but the burden of the speech was:"Why should we strike?
11372Joe?"
11372Joe?"
11372Marrin?"
11372Marty Briggs and me are bad friends, see?"
11372Marty spoke sharply:"Why not?"
11372Marty spoke sharply:"You want to know what I really think?"
11372May I come?"
11372May I?"
11372May she stay with you?"
11372Might n''t there be another attack?"
11372Money?
11372None of the girls...""You did n''t know?"
11372Not care for the cloak- makers?
11372Nothing?"
11372Now we''re pals, eh?"
11372Now, what do you think of it?
11372Oh, Joe, will you never speak?
11372Oh, but can you understand?"
11372Oh, how did you get out?"
11372Oh, we that belong to Israel, have we not fought for freedom these bloody thousand years?
11372Oh, wo n''t you take a rest?
11372One of these bloody socialists?"
11372Or had something worse happened?
11372Or, would he be embarrassed?
11372Remember how I fired Tommy three times in one week?
11372Rhona spoke easily:"None of the men said anything or did anything, did they?"
11372Rhona''s voice sharpened:"_ Do you think a man has any right to strike a girl_?"
11372Say I get a hundred newsmen to distribute in their neighborhood?"
11372Say, Ronie, what''s your job in little old New York?"
11372Say, Sal, how did they treat you?
11372Say, do n''t you think Annie''d like to see the printing- press?"
11372See?"
11372Shall I break in on their peaceful lives?"
11372Shall I rouse''em with the bell?
11372Shall I tell you about it?"
11372Shall they starve for some foolish cloak-- makers?
11372Shall we go forward or be drawn backward?
11372She belonged to a past generation; how could she hear the far- off drums of the advance?
11372She found herself saying eagerly:"But what else can the people do?"
11372She heard Rhona speaking:"Do you think a man has any right to strike a girl?"
11372She was alone... alone.... Why had she allowed herself to be caught in this trap?
11372Should we not all live on the highest level possible?
11372Stuck up?"
11372Suddenly she turned:"What you looking at, kid?"
11372Suddenly then the door was flung open and a well- dressed girl rushed in, crying shrilly:"Say, girls, what do you think?"
11372Suppose I go off into another strike or something?"
11372Suppose that I know that the cucumber is inherently as good as any other vegetable, does that say I can digest it?
11372Tell me, Mr. Blaine"--he leaned forward--"what are you?
11372The fire?"
11372The guard, running down, Millie, leaping forward, both cried:"What''s the matter?"
11372The new war?"
11372The work will make you a hag in another year or two, and who will want you?
11372Then a man shouted:"Shall a woman tell us what to do?"
11372Then he muttered bitterly to Myra:"Why is n''t that fellow here to- night?
11372Then she rattled on:"First time in the workhouse?
11372Then she whispered:"I believe in you.... Is there anything else?"
11372Then softly the door opened, and a hoarse voice said:"Joe?
11372Then suddenly a loud voice cried:"What''s the matter?
11372Then there was a turning of a knob, a rustling of skirts, and a voice came sharp:"Where are you going?"
11372Then they stood a moment before the dirty door, and Joe said:"Shall I?
11372Then what hindrance?
11372This gave her strength, and, though it was painful, she began speaking:"_ Understand_?
11372This judge-- would he understand?
11372Understand?
11372Wait here?
11372Wait?
11372Want a peanut?
11372Want to see him?"
11372Was Joe in a strike?
11372Was he a fool or was he more noble than she could fathom?
11372Was he not merely a modern Don Quixote tilting at windmills?
11372Was he toiling or idling?
11372Was he with his mother?
11372Was it not foolhardy to raise a hand against such a mammoth system of iniquity?
11372Was there some other woman-- one who accorded with his ideals-- one who could share his life- work?
11372We''re not in this game for fun, are we?"
11372Well, we were out a week, and what do you think?"
11372Well, what if she did n''t go?
11372Were there friends waiting out in the tired audience, among the sleepy witnesses?
11372Were they not right in their attempts to organize, to rebel, to fight in the open, to secure a larger share of freedom and power?
11372What can I do?
11372What can we do with them?"
11372What could Joe''s mother say?
11372What could be done?
11372What could he do to spread the tidings, the news?
11372What could she do?
11372What could she do?
11372What could she do?
11372What could they do against this organized iniquity?
11372What did it mean?
11372What do you think of this?
11372What do you think?"
11372What does this mean?"
11372What for?
11372What had happened to the girl?
11372What had happened?
11372What harm, then, in easing her heart, in getting back into the warmth and stir of life?
11372What have I been doing?
11372What have we to do with cloak- makers?
11372What have you?
11372What if she did return to the city?
11372What if there were things in his life far more important than this meeting?
11372What kept him?
11372What more direct?
11372What more would you have me do?
11372What new touch of torture was she adding to the hard, sweated life?
11372What new trouble was she bringing to her family?
11372What sort of woman was this?
11372What war was more horrible than this Peace of Industry?
11372What was greater than the power of the press?
11372What was he doing?
11372What would I do without you?"
11372What would be done with her?
11372What would he say, how would he look, if she suddenly confronted him?
11372What yer doing in there, anyway, with that printing- press?
11372What yer mean by such carryings- on?
11372What''s her name?"
11372What''s the matter?"
11372What''s the news?
11372When are you returning to New York?
11372When will we get rid of this tragedy?
11372Where did this happen?"
11372Where did you come from?"
11372Where does she live?"
11372Where had Myra heard that name before?
11372Where have you been?"
11372Where was it leading her?
11372Where was the strikers''lawyer?
11372Where you been keeping yourself?
11372Where''s Mr. Joe?
11372Where''s my father?"
11372Where''s the lawyer?
11372Whereupon John Rann, blushing, rose to his feet, and began to stammer:"Say, fellers, do you mind if I put in a word?"
11372Who can do it?
11372Who could measure that swirl of life and whither it was leading?
11372Who listens to the poor?"
11372Who was the guilty one, if not he, the boss?
11372Who was to blame for such an accident?
11372Whose was the fault?
11372Why did n''t you listen to me this morning?
11372Why do n''t you stick to an honest business?
11372Why do you wear yourself out-- slave- work and strikes and silly business?...
11372Why had he thrown his life away and gone down into that foolish and shoddy neighborhood?
11372Why had she been born to suffer so?
11372Why had she ever left the peace and quiet of Fall River?
11372Why had she struck?
11372Why must she tingle now with pain, when in a few years she would be unfeeling dust again?
11372Why not a moment''s conversation?
11372Why should she go and meet him to be humiliated in this way?
11372Why should she not see him?
11372Why?"
11372Will I walk into the printery, and will you come in with the''Landing of the Pilgrims''?"
11372Will you handle it for fifteen a week?"
11372Will you never come to your senses?
11372Will you set up the paper yourself?"
11372Will you spend two cents more, and take_ The Nine- Tenths_?"
11372Will you take the old Jewish oath?"
11372Wo n''t you go away awhile?
11372Would he not be ready to defend her?
11372Would her eyes remember his part in the fire?
11372Would nothing in the world silence that sound?
11372Would she be able to understand?
11372Would she be kept in jail overnight?
11372Yet, what could he do?
11372You and he--?"
11372You do n''t mind the bed, do you?"
11372You know Jacob Izon?"
11372You see, Marty?
11372You there?"
11372You''re cleverer than I thought-- hide your scheme up, do n''t you?
11372You''re one of these strikers, are n''t you?
11372You?"
11372_ We_ wo n''t stand for such things, will we?"
11372_ Why_ do n''t you speak?"
11372from me, just for fun, to help the game along?"
11372she cried out,"what is life doing with us?"
11372what''s happened?...
18847''A priest?''
18847''Am I never to see you alone?''
18847''And in the same hope?
18847''And now?''
18847''And what right have I to ask you to keep your promise and marry me?
18847''And, after all, what harm can there be?
18847''Are you a Freemason?''
18847''Are you an utter scoundrel, after all?
18847''Are you angry with me, Mother?''
18847''Are you going to refuse me absolution for taking the will?''
18847''Are you sure?''
18847''Are you trying to frighten me?''
18847''Besides, how would you pick out the dull ones?
18847''Break my vows?''
18847''But are you going to call on the Minister in those clothes?
18847''But did you love me still, when I was dead?''
18847''But do you not think the Princess Chiaromonte may remember you when she hears your name?''
18847''But if it were a mistake,''he objected,''if the Pope offered you a dispensation, would you refuse it?''
18847''But not a letter?''
18847''By threatening me with that thing?''
18847''Can you be sure of yourself?''
18847''Can you tell me how to reach the nearest gate?''
18847''Conscience?''
18847''Dead?
18847''Dead?''
18847''Did I love another man, that you reproach me?''
18847''Did I not tell you to- day that no power could loose me from my vows?''
18847''Did he ever talk about me to you?''
18847''Did he speak, while he was conscious?''
18847''Did it occur to you, as it did to me, that he might be Giovanni?''
18847''Did she merely say,"No, I will not"?''
18847''Did she refuse to listen to your suggestion that she should leave her order?''
18847''Did you love me then?''
18847''Did you tell her that I am alive?''
18847''Did you"wait for ever,"Angela?''
18847''Do you know the Mother Superior?''
18847''Do you know what is happening?''
18847''Do you mean it just as you say it, my dear?''
18847''Do you mean that it can not be done?
18847''Do you mean to say that you do not even have a day''s rest after being on duty a whole week?
18847''Do you think I am afraid of poverty?''
18847''Do you think I wanted your fortune?''
18847''Do you think that only you are human, of us two?''
18847''Do?
18847''Does the thing take me for an hereditary enemy, Madame?''
18847''Does your head ache much?''
18847''Even if there is a paper somewhere, do you think the Marchesa will not be the first to find it and tear it to a thousand bits?
18847''Even then?''
18847''For what?''
18847''Giovanni, do you know me?''
18847''Had you seen much of him during the last months before he went to Africa?''
18847''Half- an- hour ago?''
18847''Has she taken permanent vows?''
18847''Have you come, like the others, to accuse me of committing suicide?''
18847''Have you forgotten the last words you said to me before I sailed for Africa?''
18847''Have you heard, Monsieur?''
18847''Have you heard?''
18847''How can I rest when it torments me day and night?
18847''How can I thank you?''
18847''How can I?
18847''How can one love a man who is dead?
18847''How long will that take?''
18847''I daresay you do not even know where you are going this evening?''
18847''I daresay you heard that story about an officer who is reported to be living in slavery in Africa?''
18847''I hope you have felt no ill effects from your illness?''
18847''I need not ask you,''Giovanni said,''whether you are absolutely sure that I must die if you do not take off my arm at the shoulder?''
18847''I suppose you have heard that he was in love with my poor niece, who went into a convent after he was lost?''
18847''If I am not generous, as you mean it, what then?''
18847''If I had come the very next day after, would you not have done your best to be set free?''
18847''If it is not good- bye, what is it that is so hard to say?''
18847''Indeed?''
18847''Is any one hurt?''
18847''Is he a son of the late general of that name?''
18847''Is he badly hurt?''
18847''Is he conscious?''
18847''Is it in the Pope''s power to release Sister Giovanna from her vows, or not?''
18847''Is it possible that you yourself do not yet understand?''
18847''Is it wrong to love him still?''
18847''Is it you?
18847''Is that all?''
18847''Is that the rule?''
18847''Is that your last word?
18847''Is the Captain there?''
18847''Is the young lady to have her meals here till she leaves?
18847''It is absolutely necessary, is it not?''
18847''May I take care of him to- night?''
18847''My dear Angela,''she said,''there is really no reason why we should keep up this absurd little comedy any longer, is there?''
18847''My father and mother not married?
18847''Near?
18847''No ground?''
18847''Not married?''
18847''Not see him once?''
18847''Nothing that I can say?
18847''Oh, what shall we do?
18847''Oh, you can, can you?''
18847''Out of the question?''
18847''Ready-- with whom am I speaking?
18847''Really, Monseigneur?
18847''Really?
18847''Rest?''
18847''Shall I ask the Count to come to- morrow at four o''clock, instead of to- day?''
18847''Shall I die any sooner if I am starved?''
18847''Shall I talk with him before you meet?''
18847''Shall we go up to your room at once?''
18847''Since you say it was a sin I repent, I will-- what?
18847''Sister Giovanna----''''Yes?''
18847''So you refuse to undergo the operation?''
18847''Something on your mind?''
18847''Such as my life has been, have I lived it as a woman lives who has forgotten?
18847''The novice said you wished to see me; can I be of any service to you?''
18847''The same life?
18847''The servant?
18847''Then why should the Church annul an obligation which is quite as solemn as marriage?''
18847''Then you do not think it can possibly be wrong for a nun to love some one who is dead?''
18847''Then, in the name of all that is just and right, what is the obstacle?
18847''To- night?''
18847''Was it that?''
18847''Well, Monsieur,''she asked, on the threshold,''has Donna Angela persuaded you that she is right?
18847''Well?
18847''Well?''
18847''Well?''
18847''Were there many killed?''
18847''What am I to do?''
18847''What are we to do?''
18847''What are we waiting for?''
18847''What are you going to do?''
18847''What do you mean?''
18847''What do you mean?''
18847''What do you mean?''
18847''What do you think it was, Mother?''
18847''What do you want?''
18847''What does that mean?''
18847''What does your own instinct tell you?''
18847''What has Freemasonry to do with morality?''
18847''What have I done to you?''
18847''What have I to do with my own particular case?''
18847''What have you been thinking of?''
18847''What intention?''
18847''What is a moralist?''
18847''What is it?''
18847''What is it?''
18847''What is the matter with all of you White Sisters?''
18847''What is the matter?''
18847''What is there left to say?''
18847''What is"good"?''
18847''What reason did she give for refusing?''
18847''What shall you do?''
18847''What sort of help do you want from me?''
18847''What then?
18847''What were you going to do just now, when I met you at the door?''
18847''When shall I see you again?''
18847''Where have you been all these years?''
18847''Who carried me?''
18847''Who has brought you this wonderful picture?''
18847''Who is dead?''
18847''Who is he?
18847''Who is he?''
18847''Who is it?''
18847''Why do you say, in my case?''
18847''Why do you wish to be a nun?''
18847''Why have you never written to your friends?''
18847''Why not here, in my office?''
18847''Why not ten, then?
18847''Why not, if we risk it that others may be safe?''
18847''Why?''
18847''Will nothing move you?''
18847''Will the Cardinal listen to you?''
18847''Will you brave mine?''
18847''Will you kindly go and tell Doctor Pieri that I am ready?''
18847''Will you not sit down, then?''
18847''Will you risk the operation on that?''
18847''With you, child?''
18847''Women, women-- who can understand you?''
18847''Would you break your vows for him?''
18847''You are a very good woman,''Angela continued, following her own train of thought;''do you think it is wrong for a nun to love a dead man?''
18847''You did not guess that a woman could be so persistent, did you?''
18847''You know, I daresay, that I am Secretary to the Cardinal Vicar, and that such cases as yours are to a great extent within my province?''
18847''You were never very intimate, I suppose?''
18847''You will not take it?
18847''You?''
18847''Your father?''
18847''Yourself?
18847A nun and a soldier?''
18847Am I right?''
18847Am I right?''
18847And if not that, can I pray to be free?
18847And you want to refuse to do it-- for what?
18847Are there hundreds of engineer officers on the General Staff?''
18847Are you alive?''
18847Are you at leisure?''
18847Are you going to tell me that I should take the letter to her?
18847Are you just?''
18847Are you quite certain that you understand that?''
18847Are you satisfied?''
18847Are you sure you understand the thing?
18847Are you sure?
18847As a reasoning being what is it my duty to do in life?
18847But I mean to do better now, and you will help me, wo n''t you?''
18847But I will not come unless you will let me work to help you, in some way-- I do not know how-- is there nothing I know well enough to teach?''
18847But could she stay with any of them longer than a week on such a footing?
18847But what loss could be compared with losing God?
18847By examination?''
18847By the bye, I had several nurses, had I not?
18847Could it be that she inherited a little of that rigid will that had made her father so like her idea of a Puritan?
18847Could walls or bars keep such a man from the woman he loves?
18847Did I give you mine for that?
18847Did the woman with the marble face think that she, too, was made of stone?
18847Did you hear his voice as I did when he called me?
18847Did you see his face?
18847Do n''t you see?
18847Do n''t you understand?
18847Do no officers marry on their pay?
18847Do you believe me?''
18847Do you find that in Saint Thomas Aquinas, or in Saint Augustine, or in Saint Jerome?''
18847Do you happen to know the place?''
18847Do you happen to know who that Sister Giovanna was, who looked so ill?
18847Do you hear me?''
18847Do you remember?''
18847Do you see?''
18847Do you still find fault with me?
18847Do you suppose I have changed my mind?''
18847Do you think I would have brought you to a place where you could get help merely by crying out for it?
18847Do you think it costs me nothing to keep my word with God?''
18847Do you think she will love you the more, or less, for keeping out of danger, if she is a true Italian as she thinks you are?
18847Do you understand?''
18847Do you understand?''
18847Do you?''
18847For what?
18847Free from what?
18847Free to do what?
18847Free?
18847Give the whole fortune to a nun?
18847Have you no honour left?
18847Have you?''
18847Having that certainty before his eyes, how could he ever be in danger of a fall?
18847How can I be expected to keep up our standard if this goes on year after year?
18847How can I pray?
18847How can I tell what I would have done?
18847How can you ask such an absurd question?''
18847How can you, when I say I am sorry for it?
18847I suppose they send for you?''
18847I suppose you have got your captaincy by this time?''
18847I think you were always away?''
18847If I had not been gone five years, if I had come back the day before you took the last vows, would you have taken them?''
18847If another woman tried to get your love, could you resist her?
18847If it were not, who could prevent any one from writing to a nun?''
18847If she was, why did she not answer now?
18847If that was the answer, what was there left?
18847If you admit that the intention is the one important point, and that it existed, what ground have you left?''
18847If you had really been dead and could have seen me, would you have wished that I were living differently?''
18847Is it all right?
18847Is it not?''
18847Is it possible?
18847Is that no reason?''
18847Is that nothing?''
18847Is that true, or not?''
18847Is that what you were going to say?''
18847Is that wrong?''
18847Is that your love?
18847Is there nothing in you to which a woman can appeal?
18847Is there nothing?''
18847It is all my husband''s and I can not touch it-- do you understand?''
18847It was going to be one of the hardest days in all her life-- would God not stay the dawn one hour?
18847It was plainly this: Should she kill him, of her own free will, for the sake of the solemn vow she had taken?
18847It was very clever of me was it not?
18847Make restitution?
18847May I ask you a question?''
18847May I see Donna Angela?''
18847May I walk a few steps with you, Monseigneur?''
18847Mother, go and tell her so, and bring me her answer-- will you?''
18847Not see the man she had loved, who had been suddenly, violently dead, who was alive again, and had come back to her?
18847Not the thought of what life will mean to me when you are gone?
18847Or should she save his life by breaking, even under permission, what she looked on as an absolutely inviolable promise?
18847Promise to marry me a year from to- day, and leave the rest to me-- will you?''
18847Reasons?
18847Rob my children of what would have been theirs even if I had not taken the will?
18847Shall I go away and leave you to die?''
18847She had never seen a powder magazine, she said; would he show the one at Monteverde to her and two or three friends, next Wednesday?
18847Should you like to see the Mother Superior?''
18847Such righteousness as his had venial sins to expiate, what hope was there left for men of ordinary earthly passions and failings?
18847That he may die again?
18847The great apostle of modern thought asked three questions: What can I know?
18847Though you may not believe in such things, do you at least understand me?''
18847To die?
18847To pray, yes; but for what?
18847To take the nurse who was wanted for Baroness Barini?
18847Wait?
18847Was I not?''
18847Was I wrong?
18847Was it really God who had taken her father from her in an instant, or was it a blind force that had killed him, striking in the dark?
18847Was the carriage from the Villino Barini?
18847Was there anything beyond?
18847Were they engaged to be married?''
18847What could I do?
18847What could I expect?''
18847What could it mean?
18847What could that wretched girl have done with the money, even if the lawyers had proved the will good?
18847What had she gained in the five years that had gone by since the beginning of her noviciate, if she could not even forgive an injury?
18847What had they to fill the void of their tremendous loss?
18847What harm was there in that?
18847What have I done that you should hate me?''
18847What have you to say?''
18847What is it?''
18847What is the matter with you?
18847What is the matter, Sister?''
18847What makes you think so?''
18847What may I dare to hope hereafter?
18847What more could any woman ask?
18847What must I do?''
18847What ought we to do?''
18847What right have I to ask you to keep your promise and marry me, since I have not enough for us to live on?''
18847What time do you go off duty, and at what time do you go to your new patient?
18847What was her answer?''
18847What will you do then?''
18847When did you leave your last case?''
18847Where?''
18847Who knows what may chance in a month, or what may happen to put out of reach what I could do to- day?''
18847Who would condemn such a just person?
18847Why did not my brother- in- law get civilly married, instead of leaving his daughter without so much as a name?
18847Why had he come back now, too late for earth, but a lifetime too soon for heaven?
18847Why is it that our Italy, which no one thought much of a few years ago, is coming to the front in so many ways now?
18847Why should she go?
18847Why should we let happiness pass us by and not take it when we may and can?
18847Why was she sitting there, with that strange look, silently wringing her hands?
18847Why?
18847Why?
18847Will it hurt much?''
18847Will that make much difference?''
18847Will you doubt our intention if I give you my word that it was mine, and if Sister Giovanna assures you that it was hers?''
18847Will you hear me quietly, whatever I say?''
18847Will you not sit down?''
18847Will you write for me, Mother?''
18847Will you?''
18847Work?
18847Would he or would he not consent to the operation which alone could save his life?
18847Would her daughter forgive her?
18847Would it have been just?
18847Would it have been wise to keep her back longer, because she seemed too perfect?
18847Would it not, indeed, have been very wrong to risk discouraging her, now that she was quite ready?
18847Would she be anything better than a waif, not knowing where she should sleep or get a meal a few days hence?
18847Would you, for love of me?''
18847You are not in earnest, Father?
18847You see Madame Bernard sometimes, do you not?''
18847You understand that, do you not?''
18847You will not allow her to ruin both our lives, will you?''
18847You will not refuse to speak to me, will you?''
18847he asked, more kindly--''some mental distress?''
26703And Jesus said,"Whose is this image and superscription?"
26703As the men talked, a traveler joined them and asked:"What is it ye talk about and are sad?"
26703But we do not deserve it, do we?
26703Did I not command you to depart?
26703Did you ever see a cuter little girl than this one in the picture?
26703Do you know I could live with that picture and feel that I always had something to make me happy?
26703Do you see the tower at the left in the picture?
26703Do you suppose that when he was famous as a painter he ever saw those boys?
26703Do you think that she can tell us?
26703Have you ever seen a flax wheel?
26703How could a good- for- nothing horse that could not plow do such a wonderful thing as fly?
26703I wonder if these willows make a harp or a lyre with their tall stalks reaching to the sky?
26703If she can not, who can?
26703Now what do you think of the"Sleeping Girl"?
26703She had the money-- her father''s money-- but why should she be troubled with her old father?
26703The angry farmer tried to make him work, but how could he when he had no courage?
26703The stranger said,"What things?"
26703These men are all asking,"Is it I?"
26703WORDSWORTH Can you not almost hear this girl singing?
26703Was anything ever more simple?
26703Was ever anything so silly?
26703Was ever anything so soft and velvety?
26703What do you think he did?
26703What do you think the authorities did?
26703When the boy proudly displayed his flag, every one asked:"Where did you get such a wonderful flag?"
26703When the picture was finished, and the people went to see it, many of them asked,"Where is the picture?"
26703Where did they go?
26703Why have you not obeyed?"
26703still here?
23650''Then,''said he,''where are the primers?'' 23650 And is that why mamma is crying, and will Louis never come back?"
23650But Colonel, you will not refuse our gift?
23650But suppose I do not do as you want me to?
23650But, mamma,he asked timidly--"why is it you all call me Dauphin to- day, when I am just your little Louis, who is called the Duke of Normandy?"
23650Does Jack vote?
23650Have you used people''s money, papa, without asking their leave?
23650How do you suppose,wrote Leopold Mozart, to a friend,"my wife and girl look in English hats, and the great Wolfgang in English clothes?"
23650I suppose then your mamma would dictate to me, and perhaps call some soldiers and order them to shoot the dreadful people?
23650Is he really mine now? 23650 Is he thrown to the ground?"
23650Is he wounded?
23650Is my son killed?
23650Little fool,roared the man,"what do you mean, and how dare you lay your puny paw in the claws of a lion?"
23650Mamma,asked the Dauphin,"is to- day going to be just like yesterday?"
23650Mamma,he asked,"shall I sing the prayer I sang this morning?"
23650Now, my Louis,asked the Queen,"did I guess right?
23650Oh, but papa,cried the Dauphin,"why did you do that?
23650Then why do we have to stay? 23650 Was that why they came to Versailles yesterday and were so wicked to us?
23650Well, Chevalier Bayard, what are you stopping for?
23650Well, what is it? 23650 Who can hinder me if I choose to do it?"
23650Work?--for me? 23650 A pretty long speech and a pretty decided statement to be made by a shepherd- boy-- was it not? 23650 Am not I a Philistine and ye servants to Saul? 23650 And he added with a pretty, playful bow,Will you allow it, my royal lady?"
23650And when the lad found the arrow that Jonathan had shot, Jonathan cried after him:"Is not that the arrow behind thee?
23650And who was his"tutor"?
23650And, oh papa, do your people have more money than you have yourself?"
23650As a result of that treatment, and of loneliness and cruelty, did he pine and sicken and die a natural death as some accounts say?
23650At once he asked Jonathan:"What have I done?
23650Behold my father will do nothing either great or small, but he will show it to me, and why should he hide this thing from me?
23650But David, instead of showing anger at such an unkind speech, merely answered:"What have I_ now_ done?
23650But he controlled his temper and merely said:"Wherefore shall he be slain?
23650But if they do, papa, then why do the people act so badly to you?
23650But to these commands Stephen turned a deaf ear, for was not he the Lord''s anointed?
23650But, mamma, tell me-- are there no good men in the world?"
23650Could there be any better proof of friendship than that?
23650Do you understand?"
23650Does he belong to my inheritance?"
23650Does not this encounter give a hint of the fearless courage that made David such a famous warrior in later life?
23650For those bad men and women were the people, were n''t they?"
23650For who is this Philistine that he should defy the armies of the living God?"
23650From whom comes this message?"
23650His father''s curiosity finally overcame him and he asked:"What are you doing, Wolfgang?"
23650How does that happen, papa?"
23650How was Stephen, all aflame as he was, to be supposed to penetrate the priest''s disguise, to realise his purpose, and throw off the thrill?
23650I do n''t see how anyone can leave you, and not come back?
23650I said''Tad, do you know you are making your father a great deal of trouble?''
23650In a single bound, the clergyman stood beside him exclaiming:"In the name of wonder, boy, what are you doing here?"
23650In writing to a friend at that time, Leopold Mozart said:"Would you like to know what Wolferl''s dress is like?
23650Is it an agreeable game?"
23650It stopped the trickling water for the moment, but, oh, what would happen when he took it out?
23650May I come and show it to you?"
23650One cheery lad made answer,"Are there no other cities which will give us shelter?
23650One of those present asked:"Do you sing, too, Prince?"
23650Pin it up, will you?
23650Reluctantly the artist went back to the room where the President sat and he at once asked:"Has the boy opened that door?"
23650The King sank into a chair, exhausted and agonised, and cried out:"Where is the queen?
23650The horrified question,"Does the President know it?"
23650Their leader, who had led them on to glory, where was he?
23650Then Samuel turned once more to Jesse and asked:"Are here all thy children?"
23650Then he asked,"do you understand that, little Louis?"
23650Then, reminded of state duties to be done, she was about to release him when he whispered:"Did my poor dear brother only leave me his title?
23650Was it wiser to stay and perhaps die in sunny Italy, than to lose their lives on the weary journey separating them from their homes?
23650Was n''t that what you wanted so much?"
23650What are the crowds watching so eagerly?
23650What could he do?
23650What could he do?
23650What could he do?
23650What did it mean that knives seemed to be cutting, and pins pricking him from head to foot?
23650What do_ you_ want?"
23650What does it mean, papa?"
23650What hath he done?"
23650What is my sin before your father, that he seeketh my life?"
23650What was a crown, a title-- even the throne itself?
23650What was he trying to do?
23650What would happen if no one ever found him-- no one ever came to help?
23650What would this all mean to him, the future king of France?
23650Where are the children?"
23650Where did it come from?
23650Which, think you, had the right to wear the emblem of the Holy Cross?
23650Who can say positively when so much has been affirmed on all sides of the much argued question?
23650Who could dictate to him, now that the Divine voice had spoken in accents clear and strong?
23650Who could say what the evening would hold of triumph or of failure?
23650Who would remain here, when there lies a path in the sea, between emerald walls, to the land where glory waits us?"
23650Why did you not take my purse and pay out of that?
23650Why have we come here, mamma, when we have such a lovely palace and garden of our own?"
23650Why think that Genoa was meant to be the place at which the way through the sea was to be made?
23650Will you love me any better if I am called the Dauphin?"
22182And is this also your handwriting?
22182And who is the gentleman in lace?
22182And why, sweetheart?
22182Day of the Preparation of Peace?
22182Did I say so?
22182Dirk Hatteraick, dare ye deny, with my blood upon your hands, one word of what my dying breath is uttering?
22182For what should I forgive thee, silly wench?
22182Has my madness offended you?
22182How is this, sir?
22182Hypocrisy?
22182I hope,said Nelson,"none of our ships have struck?"
22182Look at him,she said,"all that ever saw his father or his grandfather, and bear witness if he is not their living image?"
22182My dear sir,said I, when I had accepted of the invitation with thanks,"how could you possibly connect me with the stage?"
22182She is plainly related to the L----s, or what does she at their house?
22182The dirt and seaweed whence proud Venice rose?
22182Well, Hardy,said Nelson,"how goes the day with us?"
22182What may this mean?
22182What means this saucy intrusion?
22182What tempted you then?
22182What, with Mr. Wilkes? 22182 Who is that?"
22182Whom does your Grace mean?
22182Why, minion,answered the Queen,"didst not thou thyself say that the Earl of Leicester was privy to thy whole history?"
22182You graceless whelp, what have you got there devouring? 22182 [ 53]--and whither now have they and Farinelli danced?
22182( From the essay on Croker''s edition of Boswell) VIII Might Burns Have Been Saved?
22182--of none of the living certainly, and( taking all and all into consideration) of which of the dead?
22182A POET DEFINED[6] Taking up the subject upon general grounds, I ask what is meant by the word Poet?
22182A_ great_ man?
22182Acts of Parliament are venerable; but if they correspond not with the writing on the"Adamant Tablet,"what are they?
22182Alas, yes;--but as Cato said of the statue: So many statues in that Forum of yours, may it not be better if they ask, Where is Cato''s statue?"
22182Am I to be eternally subject to her caprice?
22182Am I to be goaded with insult, loaded with obloquy, and suffer my feelings to be outraged on the most trivial occasions?
22182Am I to call this woman mother?
22182And can I, my dear sister, look up to this mother, with that respect, that affection I ought?
22182And from what does the spear of Achilles derive its interest?
22182And then the''honor''?
22182And we call it"dissimulation,"all this?
22182And what does all this avail him?
22182And what language is to be expected from him?
22182And what then had these men which Burns wanted?
22182And why?
22182And yet withal this hypochondria, what was it but the very greatness of the man?
22182Apparently she will to Paris on some errand?
22182Ask the traveler what strikes him as most poetical-- the Parthenon, or the rock on which it stands?
22182Because by nature''s law she has authority over me, am I to be trampled upon in this manner?
22182But am I to be told that the"nature"of Attica would be more poetical without the"art"of the Acropolis?
22182But how, intrinsically, is not all this the inevitable fortune, not of a false man in such times, but simply of a superior man?
22182But in her present lethargic state, what would my attentions have availed?
22182But what then is the amount of their blame?
22182But where''s Henry Bertram?"
22182But who shall estimate her influence on private happiness?
22182But would it be a kindness always, is it a duty always or often, to disturb them in that?
22182But, if I were to come, wad ye really and soothfastly pay me the siller?"
22182Craigengelt,"he added, in an undertone,"d-- n ye, why do you stand staring as if you saw a ghost?
22182Did not Cervantes finish his work a maimed soldier, and in prison?
22182Dilly''s?"
22182Do men gather grapes of thorns?
22182Do you think I am so ignorant of the world as to imagine that I am to prescribe to a gentleman what company he is to have at his table?
22182Does it take warning; does it stand, strong in its three readings, in its gibbets and artillery- parks?
22182From of old was there not in his life a weight of meaning, a terror and a splendor as of Heaven itself?
22182Had they not their game to preserve, their borough interests to strengthen; dinner, therefore, of various kinds, to eat and give?
22182Hast thou looked on the Potter''s wheel,--one of the venerablest objects; old as the Prophet Ezekiel and far older?
22182Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man?
22182He then addrest himself to Davies:"What do you think of Garrick?
22182Her business is with Marat, then?
22182How came he not to study his words a little, before flinging them out to the public?
22182How indeed, could the"nobility and gentry of his native land"hold out any help to this"Scottish bard, proud of his name and country"?
22182How much does one of_ us_ foresee of his own life?
22182I DOES FORTUNE FAVOR FOOLS?
22182I Does Fortune Favor Fools?
22182I observed him whispering to Mr. Dilly,"Who is that gentleman, sir?"
22182I opposed, and will ever oppose, the robbery of ruins from Athens to instruct the English in sculpture; but why did I do so?
22182I was persuaded that if I had come upon him with a direct proposal,"Sir, will you dine in company with Jack Wilkes?"
22182II JOAN OF ARC[27] What is to be thought of_ her_?
22182If such is Pompeii, what was Athens?
22182In Gray''s"Elegy"is there an image more striking than his"shapeless sculpture"?
22182In what does the infinite superiority of Falconer''s"Shipwreck"over all other shipwrecks consist?
22182Is he happy, is he good, is he true?
22182Is it solely from the legs, and the back, and the breast, and the human body, which they enclose?
22182Is it the canal which runs between the palace and the prison, or the Bridge of Sighs, which connects them, that renders it poetical?
22182Is it towards the_ road''s end_?
22182Is that your handwriting, madam?"
22182It would have been inexpressibly moving to me as a stranger-- what was it then to the father and the husband?
22182Knowledge?
22182Many take off their hats, saluting reverently; for what heart but must be touched?
22182Mirabeau''s ambition to be Prime Minister, how shall we blame it, if he were"the only man in France that could have done any good there"?
22182Nay, have we not seen another instance of it in these very days?
22182Nay, withal, was he not a right brave and strong man, according to his kind?
22182Now what are the Traitors doing at Caen?
22182Of what man that ever wound himself through such a coil of things will you say so much?
22182Or coming down to our own times, was not August Kotzebue popular?
22182Or how do you explain the origin of the proverb, which, differently worded, is to be found in all the languages of Europe?"
22182Or throne of corses which his sword hath slain?
22182Place?
22182Poor devil, what will thy success amount to?
22182Shall we call this great?
22182Stand up, damsel: what wouldst thou have with us?"
22182Success will never more attend thee: how can it now?
22182Success?
22182The King was pleased to say he was of the same opinion: adding,"You do not think then, Dr. Johnson, that there was much argument in the case?"
22182The columns of Cape Colonna,[35] or the cape itself?
22182The islands and the Ægean Sea, the mountains of Argolis, and the peaks of Pindus and Olympus, with the darkness of the Boeotian forests interspersed?
22182The light which now rose upon them,--how could a human soul, by any means at all, get better light?
22182The rocks at the foot of it, or the recollection that Falconer''s ship[36] was bulged upon them?
22182The world- wide soul, wrapt- up in its sorrows;--what could ribbons in the hat, do for it?
22182There can be nothing more poetical in its aspect than the city of Venice; does this depend upon the sea, or the canals?
22182These calls upon the moral powers, which in music so stormy many a life is doomed to hear-- how were they faced?
22182Thy"success?"
22182To whom does he address himself?
22182Was Milton rich or at his ease when he composed"Paradise Lost"?
22182Was it his blame?
22182Was it not possible that her influence, in like manner, might prevail on Campbell to produce Rashleigh?
22182Was not the purpose so formed like to be precisely the best, wisest, the one to be followed without hesitation any more?
22182Were the nobility and gentry so much as able rightly to help themselves?
22182Were their means more than adequate to all this business, or less than adequate?
22182What care I for his_ patriotic friends_?
22182What could gilt carriages do for this man?
22182What do you take me for?
22182What else drove the executioner to kneel at every shrine for pardon to his share in the tragedy?
22182What energies did it task?
22182What is a poet?
22182What makes a regiment of soldiers a more noble object of view than the same mass of mob?
22182What say ye, man?
22182What scene was exhibited from the Acropolis, the Parthenon, and the temples of Hercules, and Theseus and the Winds?
22182What temptations did it unfold?
22182What then does the poet?
22182What trials did it impose?
22182What would become of the Earth did she cease to revolve?
22182What would you think of a law which should tax every person in Devonshire for the pecuniary benefit of every person in Yorkshire?
22182What would''st thou have a good great man obtain?
22182What, damsel, are you to him, or he to you?"
22182Where could it stop?
22182Where then does it lie?
22182Whither could it lead?
22182Who knows?
22182Why should we get up?
22182Why should we get up?
22182Why should we not wish to see it realized?
22182Why, and in what, do you crave our protection?"
22182Why?
22182Ye''ll no hae forgotten him, Robin?"
22182You disclaim"jealousies"; but I would ask, as Boswell did of Johnson,"of whom could you be jealous?"
22182Your Cromwell, what good could it do him to be"noticed"by noisy crowds of people?
22182[ 15]"Does Fortune favor fools?
22182_ Johnson_: And if Jack Wilkes_ should_ be there, what is that to_ me_, sir?
22182_ Johnson_: Well, sir, and what then?
22182_ Johnson_: What do you mean, sir?
22182_ Was_ it not such?
22182a gilded chain?
22182and of the still all Greek and glorious monuments of her exquisitely artificial genius?
22182and the helmet and the mail worn by Patroclus, and the celestial armor, and the very brazen greaves of the well- booted Greeks?
22182but you must be eating fire, and I know not what-- what have you got there, I say?"
22182my lords,"said Elizabeth, looking around,"we are defied, I think-- defied in the castle we have ourselves bestowed on this proud man?
22182of the temple of Theseus?
22182or shall we cut down our thorns for yielding only a_ fence_ and haws?
22182said Elizabeth;"for being the daughter of thine own father?
22182said the Queen, moved by a new impulse:"what hath he, this false knight, since such thou accountest him, done to thee?"
22182salary?
22182titles?
27293And do the devils dare to treat with neglect and contempt that little corps of gallant men who saved them from despair and slavery?
27293Will any such honorable testimony be erected to the memory of our departed heroes?"
21622And what is that?
21622Bennie? 21622 But how hast thou become a beggar?
21622But how,asked the duke,"came you by the knowledge of all these things?"
21622But what becomes of the American daughters,asked the English lady,"when there is no money left?"
21622But where shall I go?
21622But where will it end?
21622But who will take care of you?
21622Do you intend taking the dome of St. Paul''s for a gasometer?
21622Do you know him, then?
21622Do you know what God puts us on our backs for?
21622Do you know, sir,said a devotee of Mammon to John Bright,"that I am worth a million sterling?"
21622Do you understand geometry, Latin, and Newton?
21622Do you want anything?
21622Do you wish to live without a trial?
21622Do? 21622 Does one need to know anything more than the twenty- four letters, in order to learn everything else that one wishes?"
21622Fear?
21622Has Ali Hafed returned?
21622How did you acquire your great fortune?
21622How do you manage it, Dick?
21622How is this, Dick?
21622How shall I a habit break?
21622How shall I know when I have found the place?
21622Of what use is it?
21622Of what use?
21622Seest thou a man that is hasty in his words? 21622 Storms may howl around thee, Foes may hunt and hound thee: Shall they overpower thee?
21622Well, my child,said the President in pleasant, cheerful tones,"what do you want so bright and early this morning?"
21622Well, what shall I give you for your secret?
21622Well,said the commissary,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you?"
21622Wh-- what did you say?
21622What could you do?
21622What do you want of diamonds?
21622What does he know,said a sage,"who has not suffered?"
21622What is that you say, child? 21622 What is the use of a child?"
21622What is your business?
21622What name?
21622Who is Alexander?
21622Who is the richest of men,asked Socrates?
21622Who knocks?
21622Why charge me double?
21622Why do n''t you send in a bid?
21622Why do you lead such a solitary life?
21622Why does not America have fine sculptors?
21622Why not?
21622Why not?
21622Will any one explain how there can be a light without a wick?
21622Will he not make a great painter?
21622Will the sheriff sell me?
21622Will you give me ten years to learn to paint, and so entitle myself to the hand of your daughter?
21622Yours?
21622A hundred years hence what difference will it make whether you were rich or poor, a peer or a peasant?
21622A learned clergyman was thus accosted by an illiterate preacher who despised education:"Sir, you have been to college, I presume?"
21622After a few moments of silence the wife looked into his face and asked,"Will the sheriff sell you?"
21622After asking news of the battle the gentleman observed,"But you are wounded?"
21622All the world cries, Where is the man who will save us?
21622And of all heroes, what nobler ones than these, whose names shine from the pages of our missionary history?
21622Are n''t you afraid of the situation?
21622Are the results so distant that you delay the preparation in the hope that fortuitous good luck may make it unnecessary?
21622Are we tender, loving, self- denying, and honest, trying to fashion our frail life after that of the model man of Nazareth?
21622Are you an animal loaded with ingots, or a man filled with a purpose?
21622Arnold left only a few thousand dollars, but yet was he not one of the richest of men?
21622As Emerson says, Talleyrand''s question is ever the main one; not, is he rich?
21622As a rule, eccentricity is a badge of power, but how many women would not rather strangle their individuality than be tabooed by Mrs. Grundy?
21622Bruno was burned in Rome for revealing the heavens, and Versalius[ Transcriber''s note: Vesalius?]
21622But have these rivers therefore no influence?
21622But shall it therefore rot in the harbor?
21622But what difference may it not make whether you did what was right or what was wrong?
21622By any fascination of manner?
21622By eloquence?
21622By office?
21622By rank?
21622By talents?
21622By wealth?
21622By what was it, then?
21622Can anything be so elegant as to have few wants and to serve them one''s self?
21622Can he will strong enough, and hold whatever he undertakes with an iron grip?
21622Can you believe it?
21622Can you conceive anything more absurd?"
21622Compared with it, what are houses and lands, stocks and bonds?
21622Could you make all the looms work as smoothly as yours?"
21622Did Anna Dickinson leave the platform when the pistol bullets of the Molly Maguires flew about her head?
21622Did you ever see a man in anguish stand as if carved out of solid rock, mastering himself?
21622Did you ever see a man receive a flagrant insult, and only grow a little pale, bite his quivering lip, and then reply quietly?
21622Do you think yourself free?
21622Does any one wonder that such a youth succeeded?
21622Does competition trouble you?
21622Does it mean a broader manhood, a larger aim, a nobler ambition, or does it cry"More, more, more"?
21622Does it say to you,"Eat, drink, and be merry, for to- morrow we die"?
21622Does it speak to you of character?
21622Had he not been detained who can tell what the history of Great Britain would have been?
21622Has any scholar defined luck?
21622Has it built any cities?
21622Has it built any steamships, established any universities, any asylums, any hospitals?
21622Has it invented any telephones, any telegraphs?
21622Hast thou spent thy substance in riotous living?"
21622Have we no higher missions, no nobler destinies?
21622Have you a hot, passionate temper?
21622Have you never seen similar insensibility to danger in those whose habits are already dragging them to everlasting death?
21622Have you not seen one bearing a hopeless daily trial remain silent and never tell the world what cankered his home peace?
21622Hereditary bondsmen, know ye not Who would be free themselves must strike the blow?
21622Honors?
21622How came writers to be famous?
21622How can I develop myself into the grandest possible manhood?
21622How could I leave you?"
21622How could the poor boy, Elihu Burritt, working nearly all the daylight in a blacksmith''s shop, get an education?
21622How know we what lives a single thought retained from the dust of nameless graves may have lighted to renown?"
21622How many a round boy is hindered in the race by being forced into a square hole?
21622How many are fettered with ignorance, hampered by inhospitable surroundings, with the opposition of parents who do not understand them?
21622How many centuries of peace would have developed a Grant?
21622How many go bungling along from the lack of early discipline and drill in the vocation they have chosen?
21622How many have to feel their way to the goal, through the blindness of ignorance and lack of experience?
21622How many men would like to go to sleep beggars and wake up Rothschilds or Astors?
21622How many would fain go to bed dunces and wake up Solomons?
21622How many young men are weighted down with debt, with poverty, with the support of invalid parents or brothers and sisters, or friends?
21622How much do you think Homer got for his Iliad?
21622How to constitute one''s self a man?
21622How was this attained?
21622If he found abundant time for study, who may not?
21622If so, why does not luck make a fool speak words of wisdom; an ignoramus utter lectures on philosophy?
21622If such concentration of energy is necessary for the success of a Gladstone, what can we common mortals hope to accomplish by"scatteration?"
21622If this is so, why should not one be able, by his own efforts, to give this long- growing organ a particular bent, a peculiar character?
21622Is any argument needed to show the superiority of Pericles?
21622Is it a message of generosity or of meanness, breadth or narrowness?
21622Is it any wonder that our children start out with wrong ideals of life, with wrong ideas of what constitutes success?
21622Is it necessary to add that all difficulties yielded at last to such resolute determination?
21622Is it not large or small, stunted wild maize or well- developed ears, according to the conditions under which it has grown?
21622Is it, as has been suggested, a blind man''s buff among the laws?
21622Is luck that strange, nondescript fairy, that does all things among men that they can not account for?
21622Is there any man who would not have done the same?"
21622Is there no desirable thing left in this world but gold, luxury, and ease?
21622It is not a question of what some one else can do or become, which every youth should ask himself, but what can I do?
21622Like Horace Greeley, he could find no opening for a boy; but what of that?
21622Must not earth be rent Before her gems are found?
21622OPPORTUNITIES WHERE YOU ARE"How speaks the present hour?
21622Of what use is a man who knows a little of everything and not much of anything?
21622Opportunities?
21622Opportunities?
21622Poverty pinched this lad hard in his little garret study and his clothes were shabby, but what of that?
21622Shall we idolize our stomachs and our backs?
21622Shall we seek happiness through the sense of taste or of touch?
21622Shall we"disgrace the fair day by a pusillanimous preference of our bread to our freedom"?
21622The chief said,"Does the sun shine on your country, and the rain fall, and the grass grow?"
21622The chief then asked,"Are there any cattle?"
21622The corn that is now ripe, whence comes it, and what is it?
21622This is my world now; why should I envy others its mere legal possession?
21622Torture and death are awaiting me, but what are these to the shame of an infamous act, or the wounds of a guilty mind?
21622Was Garrison heard?
21622Was there any chance in Caesar''s crossing the Rubicon?
21622Were Beecher and Gough to be silenced by the rude English mobs that came to extinguish them?
21622What are the works of avarice compared with the names of Lincoln, Grant, or Garfield?
21622What brings the prisoner back the second, third, or fourth time?
21622What cared Christ for the jeers of the crowd?
21622What cared Wendell Phillips for rotten eggs, derisive scorn, and hisses?
21622What cares Henry L. Bulwer for the suffocating cough, even though he can scarcely speak above a whisper?
21622What chance had such a boy for distinction?
21622What chance had the young girl, Grace Darling, to distinguish herself, living on those barren lighthouse rocks alone with her aged parents?
21622What constitutes a state?
21622What could be more eloquent?
21622What could he do?
21622What does your money say to you: what message does it bring to you?
21622What good are powers, faculties, unless we can use them for a purpose?
21622What good would a chest of tools do a carpenter unless he could use them?
21622What had chance to do with Napoleon''s career, with Wellington''s, or Grant''s, or Von Moltke''s?
21622What had luck to do with Thermopylae, Trafalgar, Gettysburg?
21622What has chance ever done in the world?
21622What if a man should see his neighbor getting workmen and building materials together, and should say to him,"What are you building?"
21622What infirmity have I mastered to- day?
21622What is a man without a will?
21622What is luck?
21622What is more common than"unsuccessful geniuses,"or failures with"commanding talents"?
21622What is opportunity to a man who ca n''t use it?
21622What is the happiness of your life made up of?
21622What message does it bring you?
21622What more do I want?
21622What more glorious than a magnificent manhood, animated with the bounding spirits of overflowing health?
21622What power can poverty have over a home where loving hearts are beating with a consciousness of untold riches of head and heart?
21622What were impossibilities to such a resolute will?
21622What will she not do for the greatest of her creation?
21622What?"
21622When Stephen of Colonna fell into the hands of base assailants, and they asked him in derision,"Where is now your fortress?"
21622When does a man feel more a master of himself than when he has passed through a sudden and severe provocation in silence or in undisturbed good humor?
21622Where is that drum?
21622Where, thy true treasure?
21622Who can calculate the future of the smallest trifle when a mud crack swells to an Amazon, and the stealing of a penny may end on the scaffold?
21622Who can deny that where there is a will, as a rule, there''s a way?
21622Who can estimate the power of a well- lived life?
21622Who dares conduct his household or business affairs in his own way, and snap his fingers at Dame Grundy?
21622Who does not know that the act of a moment may cause a life''s regret?
21622Who is Bennie?"
21622Who is the favorite actor?
21622Who would not prefer to be a millionaire of character, of contentment, rather than possess nothing but the vulgar coins of a Croesus?
21622Why not economize before getting into debt instead of pinching afterwards?
21622Why should I scramble and struggle to get possession of a little portion of this earth?
21622Why should the will not be brought to bear upon the formation of the brain as well as of the backbone?"
21622Why should we wish to get rid of them?
21622Why were the Roman legionaries victorious?
21622You may leave your millions to your son, but have you really given him anything?
21622a ruse among the elements?
21622a trick of Dame Nature?
21622am I unable to perform a problem in algebra, and shall I go back to my class and confess my ignorance?
21622any chemist shown its composition?
21622any philosopher explained its nature?
21622but is he anybody?
21622does he stand for something?
21622exclaimed Rebecca,"how can they use it?
21622has he this or that faculty?
21622he asked, seeing that the youth was apparently thunderstruck,"is it you?"
21622heard of the death of Calvin he exclaimed with a sigh,"Ah, the strength of that proud heretic lay in-- riches?
21622is he committed?
21622is he of the establishment?
21622is he of the movement?
21622is he well- meaning?
21622or Dante for his Paradise?
21622said Aristides,"or has he in any way injured you?"
21622was he wise?
21622what passion opposed?
21622what temptation resisted?
21622what virtue acquired?"
21622work away; what is your competitor but a man?
20474A dillar, a dollar, a ten- o''clock scholar, Oh, why did you come so soon?
20474Am I?
20474An''will I tell her you was askin''for her, Miss?
20474And then what?
20474And what has J. Elfreda Briggs on her mind?
20474And you are going?
20474Are all the rooms taken?
20474Are n''t you a freshman? 20474 Are n''t you glad every one''s here, and things have begun to happen again, Ruth?"
20474Are n''t you going to chapel this morning, Grace?
20474Are n''t you pleased with us, Father, and wo n''t you feel inordinately proud of your theatre party?
20474Are you happy, Anne?
20474Are you sure you really want me? 20474 Are you the Chief of Police, and may we come into your office for a moment?"
20474Arline,Grace''s tone caused her friend to eye her sharply,"do you suppose we ought to ask Kathleen West to join our club?"
20474As there is no particular business to be transacted,announced Arline,"what is the pleasure of the class?
20474But to give Emma Dean and her wonderful ability as a playwright a rest, what is new?
20474But what of Miss West?
20474But where is Anne?
20474Can you realize, Anne, that we are almost at the end of our college days?
20474Did I say it would, my child?
20474Did Miss West ask for a single?
20474Did n''t I say so last year?
20474Did she leave word when she would return?
20474Did we ever tell you about it?
20474Did you imagine no one would miss you?
20474Did you know he had escaped?
20474Did you know that Anne could have gone with them if she had been willing to put off her graduation for another year?
20474Did you say this was your last year in college?
20474Did you see today''s paper?
20474Do n''t you approve of newspaper work for women?
20474Do n''t you suppose I noticed that you were worried about not hearing from Mabel? 20474 Do you believe that I would accept anything from you?"
20474Do you care if I do n''t wait for you in the telegraph office?
20474Do you hear? 20474 Do you mean that any member of the senior class may compete, not for a money prize, but for the honor alone?"
20474Do you really mean that, Grace?
20474Do you really mean that?
20474Do you really want to know who''Peter Rabbit''was?
20474Do you remember my saying when you asked me to go to the theater that I had a faint recollection of having another engagement last night?
20474Do you wish me to give you a piece of good advice?
20474Do you?
20474Does n''t Emma Dean look too ridiculous for words?
20474Does n''t it sound exactly as she talks?
20474Emma Dean? 20474 Even Sherlock is all at sea, are n''t you, Brother Holmes?"
20474Fairy godfather is a good name for Mr. Redfield, is n''t it?
20474From you?
20474Grace Harlowe, what has come over you?
20474Grace, Grace, you naughty girl, where have you been?
20474Grace, can you ever forgive me for all the trouble I have caused you?
20474Grace, what on earth have you been doing?
20474Have I transgressed the law lately, or had any arguments with Grace? 20474 Have you no respect for our feelings?"
20474Have you seen her since last night?
20474Hippy Wingate, when will you be sensible?
20474Hippy, how could you?
20474How are you getting on with your play, Emma?
20474How can you be sure he is the man if you have never seen him?
20474How could we blast such touching faith?
20474How did you guess it?
20474How did you know it?
20474How did you know?
20474How do I find out everything I know?
20474How do you happen to know so much about what counts on a newspaper?
20474How long has this unpleasant state of affairs been going on?
20474How many nights have you stayed quietly at home this week?
20474I could please the populace and myself at the same time by taking your advice, could n''t I?
20474I do n''t believe,began Emma doubtfully,"that we----What do you say, Grace?
20474I wonder what Mrs. Gray was talking about to Professor Morton, Miss Wilder and our fairy godfather?
20474I wonder what became of''Peter Rabbit''?
20474If David asked me to marry him?
20474Is it anything about lessons?
20474Is n''t he a perfect angel?
20474Is n''t he just too splendid for words, Anne?
20474Is n''t it a pity the Southards are n''t here this winter?
20474Is n''t it obliging of the weather to stay so nice and warm? 20474 Is n''t it too bad we never thought of doing this before?"
20474Is she at home, or not?
20474Is she sixteen or twenty- three?
20474It ca n''t be beaten, can it?
20474It is simply a case of good material going to waste, is n''t it?
20474It sounds like a discussion between the March Hare and the Mad Hatter, does n''t it?
20474It was a great honor for Mr. Southard to have such a flattering offer from that great English manager, was n''t it?
20474It was funny, was n''t it?
20474May I come to see you soon?
20474Oh, are we going to church this morning?
20474Oh, why was n''t I with you?
20474Shall I give you an imitation of Kathleen West''s return?
20474Shall I invite some of the other girls, or shall we four celebrate in solitary state?
20474Shall we meet here?
20474Since your curiosity has reached such a height, why do n''t you ask Miss Wilder to tell you the why s and wherefores of this startling affair?
20474Suppose you and Elfreda call on her, Miriam?
20474That sounded exactly like Hippy, did n''t it?
20474The announcement is to be made to- morrow is n''t it?
20474Then it did n''t turn out well?
20474Then we do n''t need to become alarmed, do we?
20474Then what made you look at me so strangely?
20474There is nothing like perfect frankness, is there?
20474There, what did I tell you?
20474This is from the much- worshipped Miss Ashe, is n''t it?
20474To what do I owe my good fortune?
20474Was Miss Rawle here?
20474We never have this kind of Thanksgiving weather in Oakdale, do we, Grace?
20474Well, what did she say?
20474Were you at the window?
20474What about Patience?
20474What are the latest developments in the campus mystery, Professor Holmes?
20474What are you girls going to do this evening?
20474What can I do for you, young ladies?
20474What did I tell you?
20474What did you do here on Thanksgiving?
20474What do I think of her?
20474What do you find so mysterious in the fact that Mrs. Gray held discourse with the powers that be?
20474What do you know about Campfire girls?
20474What great event?
20474What in the name of common sense is this illustrious combination?
20474What is a Famous Fiction masquerade?
20474What is it, my dear?
20474What is it?
20474What is it?
20474What is on your mind now?
20474What is the latest word from erring freshmen? 20474 What is the use in our calling ourselves Semper Fidelis and then going back on our principles?
20474What made you keep it a secret?
20474What on earth is the cause of all this jubilation?
20474What ought we to do? 20474 What seems to be the trouble here?"
20474What shall I do?
20474What style of entertainment do you prefer?
20474What was that?
20474What''s an''honor competition affair''?
20474When shall we give it?
20474Where is Grace?
20474Where is Patience?
20474Where is she?
20474Where''s Patience?
20474Which paper?
20474Which will you choose, to room together or alone?
20474Who are you, and what is the trouble?
20474Who is included in''we''?
20474Who is it?
20474Who is''Peter Rabbit''; or, the Mystery of the''Blue Jacket''?
20474Who knows what this night may bring forth? 20474 Who organized Semper Fidelis and who was the first person to think of our Christmas girls?"
20474Whose fault is it?
20474Why are you so bitter against Kathleen?
20474Why did n''t she unmask with the rest of us?
20474Why did n''t she?
20474Why did n''t you go to New York?
20474Why did they call themselves the''Meadow- Brook Girls''?
20474Why do n''t you finish?
20474Why do n''t you go down to the railroad yard and put in your application, then?
20474Why do n''t you speak plainly and say what you mean?
20474Why not give the Wonderland Circus just for her?
20474Why not give the four classes a chance, and make it a competition worth remembering?
20474Why not have the masquerade next Monday evening? 20474 Why not put off the evil day?
20474Why wo n''t you tell me what happened?
20474Why, how did you know that?
20474Will surprises never cease?
20474Will you girls go with me?
20474Will you kindly take your hands off my shoulders and attend to your own affairs?
20474Will you shake hands?
20474Would it surprise you to hear me say that I am inclined to endorse what you have just said?
20474Would n''t it be funny if it were the greatly desired freshman, Miss West''s other half?
20474Would you like a real news item for your paper?
20474You are on the play committee, are n''t you?
20474You are very fond of Miss West, are n''t you?
20474You could see that, could n''t you, Elfreda?
20474You have n''t given your class cause to admire you, have you?
20474You have no personal grievance against her, have you?
20474You knew what we liked, did n''t you, Emma?
20474You mean Miss Rawle?
20474You mean the night of the ghost party, do n''t you?
20474You never forget anything, do you, Miriam? 20474 You saw him?"
20474You wo n''t object if the editor of our paper knows, though, will you? 20474 A light knock on the door, accompanied by,May I come in?"
20474A moment later she heard the maid say:"Miss Harlowe?
20474Are all of you hungry?"
20474Are you going to stay until next Wednesday?
20474But first let me ask: Did you see that New York newspaper story?
20474But it would n''t hinder you from writing one, would it?"
20474But to go back to the object of our council, what are we to do in the case of Miss West?"
20474But what about your roommate?
20474But who is''Peter Rabbit''?"
20474But why did you ask me if I could write a play, Emma?"
20474CHAPTER III AN ACCIDENT AND A SURPRISE"Well, what do you think of her?"
20474CHAPTER VII WHEN FRIENDS FALL OUT"What has happened to the Semper Fidelis Club?
20474CHAPTER XXI WHO WILL WIN THE HONOR PIN?
20474Ca n''t you see?
20474Can you imagine me in tears?"
20474Could it be possible that Mabel had heard unkind, untruthful tales of her from the newspaper girl?
20474Could this be the antagonistic Kathleen West of a few weeks ago?
20474Did n''t you see the notice on the big bulletin board this morning?"
20474Did such a worthy organization ever exist, or did I merely dream?"
20474Do n''t you approve of my evening''s work?
20474Do n''t you imagine it will make a good newspaper story if the police capture him?"
20474Do n''t you remember my Hallowe''en party, and what a time we had squeezing in here?"
20474Do n''t you think we had better put our wraps away and convene?
20474Do you understand?
20474Does any one know from whence she came, and why?"
20474Does n''t she look beautiful?"
20474During the first part of Hugo''s famous novel, which had been filmed to perfection, Grace was obsessed with the question:"Where have I seen him?"
20474Has any one heard?"
20474How about chapel this morning?
20474How about you, Grace and Anne?"
20474How did you happen to think of coming to Overton?
20474How is that for a stunt?"
20474How is your father?"
20474I know that your intentions were good, above reproach, no doubt, but how many times have I cautioned you to go slowly?
20474I was hard at work on my Horace, when suddenly she said,''Oh, what''s the use?''
20474I wonder why Mother does n''t write?
20474Is n''t he the fairy godfather of Semper Fidelis and did n''t I give him that name after he sent us the first check?"
20474Is n''t it splendid to think you and Ruth can be together this year?"
20474Is n''t that a brilliant idea?
20474Is n''t that realistic?
20474Is n''t that true, Anne?"
20474Is there any reason why I ca n''t go?
20474It is going to be lots of fun, is n''t it?
20474It was a beautiful play, was n''t it?"
20474It would be simply splendid to glide peacefully through the rest of one''s senior year without a single hitch, would n''t it?"
20474It''s one of the vicissitudes of an actor''s life, is n''t it, Anne?"
20474Patience, will you accept me for a roommate?"
20474Put two and two together, what is the result?
20474Rather unkind in her, was n''t it?"
20474Shall I tell her?
20474Shall we head for Livingstone Hall?"
20474She is a delightful girl, is n''t she?"
20474She regarded Grace with an intent gaze that made the latter ask quickly:"What is the matter, Miriam?
20474Should she notify the Overton authorities of her discovery?
20474Suppose we ask that poor old woman who keeps the little shop just beyond the campus to order our masks?
20474Suppose we gather the club in, and go to see''Les Miserables''in a body?"
20474That''s what councils do, is n''t it?"
20474The Range and Grange Hustlers By FRANK GEE PATCHIN Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life or great ranches in the West?
20474The question is, ought I to make my discovery known to the police?"
20474Then, meeting Patience''s calm glance, she said slowly,"Do you mean that I force myself upon her?"
20474Then, turning upon Patience, she said in a voice shaking with sudden anger:"What do you mean by asking me such a question?
20474There, does that make you feel better?"
20474There, that is n''t very definite, is it?
20474They were born trouble- makers, were n''t they?"
20474Was it at Overton she had seen him?
20474Was n''t I a vandal?"
20474What about all newspaper assignments?"
20474What are you all laughing at?"
20474What did she say?"
20474What did you say?"
20474What do you know of the requirements of my paper, or of the style in which a story should be written?
20474What do you think?"
20474What garret is not full of antiques?"
20474What girl does not welcome the very idea of a real dance to the notes of a real orchestra?
20474What had wrought this marvelous and unlooked- for change?
20474What has happened to you to make you cry so?"
20474What is the object of this class meeting?"
20474When is the honor prize to be presented to her?"
20474When we organized this club, we did n''t make any conditions as to who should be helped and who should n''t, did we?
20474Where are your faithful three?"
20474Where was I?
20474Who Will Win the Honor Pin?
20474Who and what are you, Emma?"
20474Who could guess that Grace was representing a hearth?
20474Why could n''t you girls make up a party and spend Thanksgiving with me?
20474Why could you not have written a clever, interesting story without betraying my confidence?"
20474Why was the face of this man so familiar to her?
20474Will the person or persons responsible for the notice on the bulletin board please rise and enlighten the class as to why we are here?"
20474Will you all agree to help if I think of something startlingly worth while?"
20474Will you come into our room as often as you can and forgive me for staying away from yours?"
20474Will you come with me, Patience?"
20474Will you forget that I am Grace Harlowe and listen to me?"
20474Will you forswear business and help me entertain the girls to- morrow?"
20474Will you please begin?"
20474Will you please come downstairs and sign for it?"
20474Without raising her head, she faltered,"Is it you, Grace?"
20474Without stopping to choose her words, Grace cried out:"How could you do it?
20474Wo n''t you come in?"
20474Wo n''t you please be the''extra- delightful girl''and say you''ll go?"
20474Wo n''t you please tell me all about it?"
20474Would n''t she be angry if she knew?
20474Would you mind if I were to come and see you some time, and wo n''t you take luncheon with me some day at Vinton''s?"
20474Yet was it right to withhold her knowledge?
20474You wo n''t care if I go on upstairs, will you, Grace?"
20474You would not wish your daughter''s name to be used in police court news, would you?"
20474Your friends never forget to ask for you, and every day brings its,''Is Grace coming home for the holidays?''
22134''Can you not trust God?'' 22134 ''He wants our hearts, and wo n''t you trust Him, mamma?''
22134''What does He want?'' 22134 ''What?''
22134And bring others to know him?
22134And thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet?
22134And what shall I more say? 22134 Are you looking unto Jesus?"
22134Can you recall your prayer?
22134Dear Lord, and shall Thy Spirit rest In such a wretched heart as mine? 22134 He saith unto him again the second time, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me?
22134He saith unto him the third time, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me? 22134 How do you do, Mr. Gough?
22134I have just been to see poor Mr. H----, he can not live-- he does n''t seem to realize it; and then what will become of his family? 22134 Is your peace never disturbed, William?"
22134Mr. Phelps, can you attend the funeral of a child on---- Street? 22134 What book?"
22134What shall I render unto God for all his benefits? 22134 Who are these arrayed in white robes, and whence came they?
22134_ Wo n''t you trust Him?_the child asked.
22134''Do they go to Sabbath- school?''
22134''Have you not always been cared for?''
22134''How can you pray for one who has abused you so?''
22134''Will you read it,''she inquired,''if I give you one?''
22134''Will you send them if I call for them next Lord''s Day morning?''
2213412---- Street, and see a young man who is sick, and will have to go to the hospital?
22134After supplication in prayer and a hymn of praise, the minister asked mother:"Have you any word for me, sister?"
22134Amid all the busy scenes of life, is there no time for a cheerful word?
22134And Jesus stood still, and called them, and said, What will ye that I should do unto you?
22134And did I read His sacred Word, To make my life therewith accord?
22134And did I, when the day was o''er, God''s watchful aid again implore?
22134And so every one of us who are here to day in Christ can say humbly, but truly,"O death, where is thy sting?
22134Are all elders wise?
22134Are all ministers wise?
22134Are all these professing Christians wise?
22134Are not souls perishing around you for lack of knowledge?
22134Are not the opportunities great in this city for doing good?
22134Are there no tumultuous fears allayed in the breast of those two blind men as they sit by the wayside to Jerusalem?
22134Are we all who are here to- day to this funeral_ in the Lord_--"I in them and thou in me?"
22134Are you still slighting the Saviour?
22134But what is the object God has in view in thus breaking the family circle by death?
22134But what makes us to differ from each other?
22134Can the consolation of God be small with those who are His, when we are informed that He will ransom His people from the power of the grave?
22134Can we then withhold our alms to the poor?
22134Can you be engaged in a grander or nobler work?
22134Can you imagine a more heartrending scene than the one so graphically portrayed by this missionary woman?
22134Can you not save that young and precious life, so dear to us, so gentle, so loving, so kind, so sympathetic, so hopeful?
22134Dearly beloved, we may well ask,"Who are these arrayed in white robes?"
22134Did I for any purpose try To hide the truth and tell a lie?
22134Did I hear some one say,"But what of to- morrow, For my foes are so strong, and I''m sinful indeed?"
22134Did I my lips from aught refrain That might my fellow- creature pain?
22134Did I my time and thoughts engage As fits my duty, station, age?
22134Did I with care my temper guide, Checking ill- humor, anger, pride?
22134Did I with cheerful patience bear The little ills that all must share?
22134Does not the Holy Spirit work in this very same manner?
22134Dr. Guthrie asks:"Why should we not lie as calmly in the arms of God''s Providence, as we lay in infancy on a mother''s breast?
22134For all God''s mercies through this day Did I my grateful tribute pay?
22134For, has He not promised,"Ask, and ye shall receive?"
22134From him, who loves me now so well, What power my love can sever?
22134Have you heard of that wonderful city, Whose walls are of jasper and gold?
22134Have you heard of those emblems of vict''ry, That all of the glorified bear?
22134Have you not a word for Esther?
22134Have you still joy and peace?"
22134He could say, with Newton,"Christ''s way was much rougher and darker than mine, Did Christ, my Lord, suffer, and shall I repine?"
22134He looked up and said:"''Mamma, do you know what God says?''
22134He says:"If lusty love should go in quest of beauty, Where should he find it fairer than in Blanch?
22134Here?
22134His favorite hymn was: O land of rest, for thee I sigh, When will the moment come, When I shall lay my armor by, And dwell in peace at home?
22134How can I live without him?
22134How can we save the non- churchgoers?
22134How is it possible for a soul to be ready for death, and judgment, and a coming eternity, without conversion?
22134How is it possible for him to admit any to the Lord''s table, when he is but a judge himself?"
22134How is it possible to excommunicate, when he ought to be excommunicated himself?
22134How precious is this thought; though friend after friend depart,"For who has not lost a friend?"
22134I looked upon him with astonishment and exclaimed:"How is it, my friend, you can be so kind to me, as I am a comparative stranger to you?"
22134I was half sorry for the suggestion, which seemed somewhat to bewilder him, and said:"That is all you can do, is it not?"
22134If a man die, shall he live again?
22134If love ambitious sought a match of birth, Whose veins bound richer blood than Lady Blanch?"
22134If zealous love should go in search of virtue, Where should he find it purer than in Blanch?
22134Is it not that we may be like Him?
22134Is not the wickedness great?
22134Is not this the way that God deals with us?
22134Is there any purer pleasure in this world than the joy that is experienced in the heart when souls are converted to God?
22134Is there any wonder that the whole city was moved, saying,"Who is this?
22134Is there some idol that you are cherishing?
22134Is there some secret, darling sin to which you are clinging?
22134L., is Jesus precious to- day?''
22134Linked to the eternal, never broken chain of God''s goodness, what can affright?
22134Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?
22134Lovely as human friendships and fellowships are here below, what are they in comparison to the felicitous condition of society in heaven?
22134Many ask the question that Cain impudently put to the Lord,"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
22134May we not receive, at your convenience, particulars of their last illness and going?
22134My dear husband, how can I live without you?"
22134No Christian, however weak he may be, need fail to feel with Paul, and ask the same question,"Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?
22134O grave, where is thy victory?"
22134Of the star- bedecked crowns of rejoicing Which all of the ransomed shall wear?
22134Oh, God, can you not spare him?
22134Oh, are you ready?
22134Oh, if God should call for you to- day, where would your soul go?
22134Oh, what wilt thou do in the swellings of Jordan without an interest in the atoning work of Jesus?
22134Oh, who can fully estimate the excellency of a devotional temperament?
22134Oh, wilt thou let Him depart?
22134Or offer long and pharisaical prayers?
22134Peter was grieved because he said unto him the third time, Lovest thou me?
22134Salt therefore is good: but if even the salt have lost its savour, wherewith shall it be seasoned?
22134Say,"who is this that cometh from Edom with dyed garments, from Bozrah travelling in the greatness of His strength?"
22134Shall He come and find me standing From the worldling''s joy apart, Outside of its mirth and folly, With a true and loyal heart?
22134Shall He come and find me working In the vineyard full of love; Only working, till the glory Breaks upon me from above?
22134Shall life, or death, or earth, or hell?
22134Shall the Christian''s remembrance of these words be overlooked in the great day of reckoning?
22134She answered,''When I go to be with Jesus;''but she added,''Who will see to my little girl?''
22134She further asked me,''Have you any children?''
22134She said,''Excuse me, lady, will you accept a tract?''
22134She said,''I have often thought it might be wrong, but I am now convinced of it; but what shall I do for my living?''
22134She was one of those so graphically described by Jeremiah:"They say to their mothers where is corn and wine?
22134Still, we have to watch for souls and the bringing in of a brighter and better day, when one need not say to the other,"Know ye the Lord?"
22134Tarry, how?
22134The mother laughed, and said:''You can not take care of yourself; what will you do with him?''
22134The question has often been asked by the philanthropic men of the present day, How can we reach the masses?
22134The question will not be asked in the great day of account: Did you preach long, deep, and eloquent sermons?
22134Then shall the righteous answer Him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungred, and fed thee?
22134Therefore, take no thought, saying, What shall we eat?
22134To whom, save thee, Who can alone For sin atone, Lord, shall I flee?
22134Was it not the Holy Spirit in this woman''s heart, that, led her again and again to visit this home?
22134We read:"So, when they had dined, Jesus saith to Simon Peter, Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these?
22134What a blessing, indeed, is this holy book in these poor homes?"
22134What brought about this personal reformation in the habits and character of parents and children?
22134What does Christ say in the Apocalypse?
22134What impressed them?
22134What is God''s estimate of those who trust in Him?
22134What is faith?
22134What is light?
22134What is the ultimate design of Christ knocking at the door of the heart?
22134What thing shall I take to witness for thee?
22134What though the storm of bereavement and affliction howl without?
22134What victories for Christ and His Church have been achieved-- who can tell?
22134What was the secret of her power in eliciting this outside testimony?
22134What would become of the masses in the lower part of the city, were it not for our truly devoted Bible women?
22134When Jesus was here upon earth the question was asked,''Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?
22134Where can we find one so full of the spirit of her dear master?
22134Where can we find rest and refuge in a dying hour, but by thinking upon and trusting in_ Him_ who is''the shadow of a great rock in a weary land?''"
22134Where?
22134Whither, oh, whither can they fly as wretched wanderers from their homes?"
22134Who among our young men in this congregation will take the place of Elder Knowles?
22134Who are arrayed in white linen, pure and white?
22134Who are the true called to the marriage supper of the Lamb?
22134Who can estimate the value of a holy missionary woman''s work in this world of sin and sorrow?
22134Who can really estimate the power of such human affection?
22134Who is sufficient for these things?
22134Who is sufficient for these things?
22134Who will bear the sheaves away?
22134Whose inhabitants ever are happy, And never grow weary or old?
22134Why do you not pray to the Blessed Virgin?''
22134Why does it imply simply a change of mind?
22134Why not?
22134Why should we remain incredulous about God''s willingness to save sinners, after such a marvellous manifestation of Divine mercy?
22134Why this marvellous success?
22134Why; what does he mean?
22134Why?
22134Why?
22134Why?
22134Why?
22134Will the dear Lord not recognize even a cup of cold water given in the name of a disciple?
22134Will you run after Him?
22134Yonder?
22134You asked if I could use any of them?
22134_ God''s Word assures us that a little child shall lead them._--"Mamma, do you know what God says?
22134_ Seemed glad to see me, etc._--Why, dear Christian reader?
22134dear friends, are they not all ministering spirits sent forth to minister to them who are heirs of salvation?
22134or thirsty, and gave thee drink?...
22134or who describe what smile Of gratitude illumed the face of woe?"
22134or, What shall we drink?
22134or, wherewithal shall we be clothed?
22134shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?...
22134what shall I equal to thee, that I may comfort thee, O virgin daughter of Zion?
22134what thing shall I liken to thee, O daughter of Jerusalem?
1941And what right have you to this privilege?
1941Are you very fond of children?
1941Baronne de Macumer?
1941But how?
1941But what have you done to yourself?
1941But why despair? 1941 But why?
1941But,I said,"is that because you refuse to accept any help, or because the thing itself is impossible?"
1941But,I said,"you wo n''t interfere with my living in my own fashion and enjoying life if I leave you my fortune?"
1941But,said my mother,"Henarez must have met the Spanish ambassador on the steps?"
1941Come, come,I cried,"what has become of my excellent judgment?"
1941Do you mean equality in the amount of feeling on either side, or equality in rank?
1941Gaston,I said,"if love in absence had been possible for me, do you suppose I should ever have left the convent?"
1941How then,I said to myself,"about the deeper feelings?"
1941If debarred from love, why not seek for happiness?
1941In one word,I said,"are you a nobleman or not?"
1941In very truth?
1941May I ask how much I have?
1941May I keep it?
1941Shall I tell you, my child, which is the most destructive of all the consequences entailed by the Revolution? 1941 Strange, is n''t it, for a fallen minister?"
1941To Paris?
1941Was it for this you tortured me?
1941Was not the mistake excusable? 1941 What could he do but die?"
1941What do you mean?
1941What is it, little flirt?
1941What makes you think so?
1941What of that?
1941What will become of him, for he is condemned to death?
1941What would you have with me?
1941When will they be reconciled?
1941Where is yours?
1941Who in the world has put Fedelta in such a state?
1941Why these fine words, these grand resolutions?
1941Will mademoiselle allow me,he said in Spanish, in a voice full of agitation,"to keep this writing in memory of her?
1941You know him then?
1941A score of times it has been on my lips, when we rise in the morning, to say,"Then you love me better than the lady of the Rue de la Ville l''Eveque?"
1941A touching story, is it not?
1941A voice cries to me_ what?_ in my sleep.
1941Am I not always, in the presence of others, the wife who respects in him the authority of the family?
1941Am I not mistress for all time of this lion whose roar dies out in plaintive and adoring sighs?
1941Am I the kind of woman, do you suppose, to shirk such cares?
1941And Nais?
1941And finally, is not the Comte de l''Estorade a peer of this July semi- republic?
1941And for what purpose?
1941And is it not your own wish which has confined within the compass of a lover''s feeling so many varying forms of devotion?
1941And what of the monkey godson?
1941And what of you?
1941And where would you find a sailor bolder, more adventurous, more astute than my Rene will be a few years hence?
1941And will it never be mine to watch the unfolding of a precious life-- another Felipe, only more dear?
1941And yet, can you fancy me torn in two between you and the infant?
1941And you, my sweetheart( whom I dare no longer call my loved one), may you not cry,"I am losing a sister?"
1941Are there no aged peers?"
1941Are there to be no wheelmarks of a little carriage on the gravel, no broken toys littered about the courtyard?
1941Are these the promises we made each other?
1941Are you really and truly certain it is a child?"
1941Are you still in love with Felipe?
1941Are you sure that, after all, the price you ask for your toilets is not too high?
1941But did n''t you tell me you were going to make a genius of him?
1941But have you forgotten your former criticism on young men?
1941But if so, what?
1941But what is there to prevent me from launching on that boundless sea our familiar craft?
1941But what then of the heart?
1941But what was to be done?
1941But why?
1941By the way, why always"first?"
1941Can Heaven be jealous of our passions?
1941Can Hell have a worse torture?
1941Can joy be made lasting?
1941Can the man in whom we inspire love inspire it in us?
1941Can the two passions ever co- exist?
1941Can you be ignorant how you are loved?
1941Can you not read in this, my friend, a soul of noble temper?
1941Can you suppose that the incidents of your married life are without interest for me?
1941Could it be that my father, instead of spending this money in arranging a marriage for me, would have left me to die in the convent?
1941Dear Philip the Second in petticoats, are you comfortable in my barouche?
1941Dear friend, was not this a trial passing the strength of woman?
1941Did I ever feel my life thus bound up in the noble Spaniard, who adored me, as I adore this heartless boy?
1941Did he know her before our marriage?
1941Did n''t I tell you once that in Paris one must be as the Parisians?
1941Do I need any proof of your cleverness?
1941Do n''t you see, Renee, what they want with you?
1941Do you enter into each other''s thoughts?
1941Do you fancy you will convert me to matrimony by your programme of subterranean labors?
1941Do you know that many women would be highly flattered at having roused this passing pang in you?
1941Do you know what inspires a woman with all this arithmetic?
1941Do you know what that means?
1941Do you know, dear, that it is more than three months since I have written to you or heard from you?
1941Do you perceive the ultimate motive of my change of investment?
1941Do you see now how it is that my winter evenings never drag?
1941Do you see those velvet eyes, humble, yet so eloquent, and glorying in their servitude, which flash on me as some one goes by?
1941Do you suppose he could have written like this before?
1941Do you suppose that your Louis, who comes to see me almost every alternate day, makes up for you?
1941Does Louis continue his policy of madrigals?
1941Does everything prosper as you wish?
1941Does he still worship?
1941Does it soothe, or does it excite?
1941Does no one of the thousand prayers that I speed to you reach home?
1941Does not this show how little, unless by his impatient wishes, the father counts for in this matter?
1941Does she not carry you?"
1941Does this mean that you are at last happy?
1941For himself, why should he hesitate to draw from my purse?
1941For how make a confidant of him?
1941For what does a woman mean by it but perversion of feeling through calculation?
1941For what is holier and more precious than jealousy?
1941For whom, if not for her, are the luxury and wealth, the position and distinction, the comfort and the gaiety of the home?
1941Had n''t he taken me for a fool?
1941Had she been deserted by some rich man, whose mistress she was, and thus thrown back upon Gaston''s hands?
1941Has he a thought, a single thought, that is not of me?
1941Has my sweet lady professor taken offence?
1941Have I ever yet proved false to my promise in gesture or look?
1941Have I not known in turn two men, each the very pattern of nobility-- one in mind, the other in outward form?
1941Have we not both perhaps exaggerated feeling by giving to imagination too free a rein?
1941Have you lost the"complete independence"which you were so proud of, and which to- night has so nearly played me false?
1941Have you never, in the silence of the night, or through the roar of the town, heard the whisper of a voice in your sweet, dainty ear?
1941Have you no news to give of our mulberry trees, our last winter''s plantations?
1941Having sacrificed your first husband in the course of a fashionable career, would you now fly to the desert to consume a second?
1941He drew near, put his arm again round me, and said:"Why fear it?
1941He might have broken his neck; how many of our young men would do the like?
1941Here Gaston found me, apparently pale and fluttered, for he immediately exclaimed,"What is wrong?"
1941Hope than fruition?
1941How can I give him my orders to write every evening the particulars of the day just gone?
1941How can I have qualms with a friend at Court, a great financier, head of the Audit Department?
1941How can one order the destiny of a girl?
1941How comes it that Armande- Louise- Marie de Chaulieu must be like some peasant girl, who sleeps in her mother''s bed the very morrow of her death?
1941How could I not be sick-- sick unto death?
1941How could I tolerate my happiness if I knew you to be a wanderer, deprived of the comforts which wealth everywhere commands?
1941How could any woman defraud her children of such a possession?
1941How could she, who has made a paradise for herself within the two acres of her convent, understand my revolt against life?
1941How could the heart be kept out of the work?
1941How did it come about that this virgin heart has been left for me?
1941How far could I go in this direction?
1941How indeed should the victim proclaim them without injury to herself?
1941How is it possible to fall in love with legs and pirouettes?
1941How to be sure?
1941How will life be possible without that heavenly music, when one''s heart is full of love?
1941I am deserted-- for whom?
1941I am tempted to cry out to him as he passes,"Fool, if you love me so much as a picture, what will it be when you know the real me?"
1941I am the more guilty of the two, for I did not reply to your last, but you do n''t stand on punctilio surely?
1941I am very nearly happy now, but should I be so without a friendly heart in which to pour the confession?
1941I asked him point- blank,"Do I bore you?"
1941I burn to suffer for you"?
1941I die adored-- what more could I wish for?
1941I felt quite small and dazed as I said to myself,"What shall I do?"
1941I thought he would have paid me back in kind; had I not been magnanimous?
1941I watched Louis out of the corner of my eye, and put it to myself,"Has suffering had a softening or a hardening effect on him?"
1941If it is painful to see a man whom nature has made a nonentity, how much worse is the spectacle of a man of parts brought to that position?
1941If love be not the cage, what power on earth can hold back the man who wants to be free?
1941If love be the life of the world, why do austere philosophers count it for nothing in marriage?
1941If this be designed as chastisement, what can be the sweetness of your rewards?
1941In what proportion should love mingle tears with pleasures?
1941In what terms would a man like that express his love?
1941Is existence worthy the name, when a man can no longer die for his country or live for a woman?
1941Is he ashamed of taking money from me?
1941Is he not one of those pillars of royalty offered by the"people"to the King of the French?
1941Is he still pretty and a credit to me?
1941Is he, in very truth, the devoted slave he painted himself?
1941Is it a thing out of nature?
1941Is it not at once a passion, a natural craving, a feeling, a duty, a necessity, a joy?
1941Is it not ever the monarch of the forest which is eaten away by the fatal brown grub, greedy as death?
1941Is it not practically avowing that the senses count for three parts out of four in a passion which ought to be super- sensual?
1941Is it not she who reaps the benefit of all his care?
1941Is it not simple prudence to make provision beforehand against the calamities incident to change of feeling?"
1941Is it only a marriage of reason, such as yours, which is blessed with a family?
1941Is it possible that the name of duty has been given to the delicious frenzy of the heart, to the overwhelming rush of passion?
1941Is it some peculiar process in the brain?
1941Is it some youthful escapade for which he still blushes?
1941Is it still so after the heights of happiness are reached?
1941Is it teething?
1941Is it the rich who in very truth are the poor?
1941Is it thus with all our pleasures?
1941Is my ideal portrait, then, forgotten?
1941Is not such a man an enemy, whom I ought to trample under foot?
1941Is not the spirit of Sacrifice a power mightier than any of its results?
1941Is not your love strong enough to deceive me?
1941Is she alone with her independence?
1941Is she happy?
1941Is suspense always better than enjoyment?
1941Is there any trouble which you are hiding from me?
1941Is there something wrong with the nervous system of children who are subject to convulsions?
1941Is there, I wonder, a second love?
1941Is there, then, a law for the inner fruits of the heart, as there is for the visible fruits of nature?
1941Is this only a whim of my dear whimsical friend?
1941It is named Louise''s seat-- a proof, is it not, that even in solitude I am not alone here?
1941Let us go back to Paris, wo n''t you?"
1941Love makes my Louis happy, but marriage has made me a mother, and who shall say I am not happy also?
1941Love may be the fairest gem which Society has filched from Nature; but what is motherhood save Nature in her most gladsome mood?
1941May I not justly pride myself on this assured possession, rather than on a popularity necessarily unstable?
1941May I not swallow up the book itself?
1941May not Gaston come to loathe this too perfect bliss?
1941My father, mother, and Alphonse all burst out laughing, and Alphonse said:"Where in the world has she sprung from?"
1941My father?
1941My husband is a young man, prematurely old; why do n''t you marry some young- hearted graybeard in the Chamber of Peers?
1941My love, do you know I am seized sometimes with a horrible craving to know what goes on between my mother and that young man?
1941My mother, have you not a caress for your Felipe now that he has yielded to your favorite even the girl whom you regretfully thrust into his arms?
1941My mother?
1941No, dear, however sweet the memory of that half- hour beneath the trees, it is nothing like the excitement of the old time with its:"Shall I go?
1941Now, Louise, can you realize the torture to me of knowing that I had displeased you, while entirely ignorant of the cause?
1941Now, can you understand the meaning of my sudden journeys, my mysterious comings and goings?
1941Now, do you know whither those beautiful things, which the world supposes to be sold, have flown?
1941Now, for my part, I have resolved never to pardon a serious misdemeanor, and in love, pray, what is not serious?
1941Now, happiness in marriage depends largely on the first days--""Days only?"
1941Of what crime have I been guilty before my birth that I can inspire no love?
1941One calculation or a thousand, what matter, if the decision no longer rests with the heart?
1941Or could it be my brother?
1941Or is it the uncle''s legacy?
1941Our position will not be without its dangers; in a country life, such as ours will be, ought we not to bear in mind the evanescent nature of passion?
1941Perhaps you were afraid you would be less to your children in Paris?
1941Pray, do you spend your life writing him letters of advice?
1941RENEE TO LOUISE You complain of my silence; have you forgotten, then, those two little brown heads, at once my subjects and my tyrants?
1941Renee, how is it possible to fathom the heart of man?
1941Renee, tell me, do you think we could be betrayed by a man?
1941Renee, where are you?"
1941Renee, you burn my letters, do n''t you?
1941Shall I accept this last descendant of the Moors?
1941Shall I do less for the children who are all the world to me?
1941Shall I never hear baby lips shout"Mamma,"and have my dress pulled by a teasing despot whom my heart adores?
1941Shall I never visit the toy- shops, as mothers do, to buy swords, and dolls, and baby- houses?
1941Shall I not go?
1941Shall I not write?"
1941Shall I tell you why?
1941Shall I tremble then, as he does now?
1941Shall I write to him?
1941Shall we ever again let years pass without writing?
1941So you know all that lies before you; you have nothing left to hope, or fear, or suffer?
1941Supposing the nation went bankrupt?
1941Tell me, are you afraid that the political wisdom of the house of l''Estorade should seem to centre in you?
1941Tell me, dear be- furbelowed professor, how can one reconcile the two goals of a woman''s existence?
1941Tell me, did you not droop and sicken with your darling?
1941Tell me, to what point is calculation a virtue, or virtue calculation?
1941That proves, does it not, that the pain of losing you equals my love for Gaston?
1941The father?
1941The question is, Can you rise to the height of friendship such as I understand it?
1941The thought is enough to make one shudder; for if this being is found too late, what then?
1941Then a thought stayed me,"What can he have to say that he writes so secretly?"
1941To fasten him to our heart, need the nails be driven into the very quick?
1941To see a child leave its play and run to hug one, out of the fulness of its heart, what could be sweeter?
1941To whose hand and eyes, but one''s own, intrust the task of feeding, dressing, and putting to bed?
1941To you, who have known us both so well, what more need I say?
1941Was I not mother enough before?
1941Was it not a covert taunt at my wealth and his own nothingness in the house?
1941Was it not a duty to live on our salary and prudently allow the income of the estate to accumulate?
1941Was it so indeed?
1941Was she married?
1941Was she not, moreover, one of those mysterious beings who can hold converse with Heaven and bring back thence a vision of the future?
1941We are not certain of never quarreling with ourselves, how much less so when there are two?
1941We or the world?
1941Well, I would ask you, have you ever heard me contradict him?
1941What are his thoughts at this moment?
1941What can be awaiting me in this world for which I have so hungered?
1941What can be the cause of this terrible disease with children?
1941What can he be concealing?
1941What could I say?
1941What do you think the hairdresser proposed?
1941What does it all mean?
1941What does this mean?
1941What else is there in the world to care about?
1941What happy chance has given me such a destiny?
1941What has come to you, my dear?
1941What has passed within this enigmatic being?
1941What is a man, a Spaniard, and a teacher of languages to me?
1941What is he about?
1941What is he doing?
1941What is he thinking of?
1941What is she about?
1941What is there to say against such a situation for a woman who wishes to remain absolute mistress of herself?"
1941What is this but another name for a dozen crimes, a dozen misfortunes?
1941What joy the world can give would compare with such a moment?
1941What mighty edifice of fortune has he not overthrown?
1941What more gracious way of saying to a young girl that she fills your life?
1941What need have I for finessing?
1941What pleasure has roots so deep as one which is not personal but creative?
1941What restrains me?
1941What sense of duty can force from her these flowers of the heart, the roses of life, the passionate poetry of her nature, apart from love?
1941What soil produces these radiant flowers of the soul?
1941What will they do with the thinking being that is Armand?
1941What would you have?
1941What would you have?
1941What, pray, is yours?
1941What?
1941When choose the cambric for the baby- clothes?
1941When shall I embroider little caps and sew lace edgings to encircle a tiny head?
1941When they are reached, what then?
1941Where is the change, pray-- in them or in you?
1941Where should I be but for my breastplate-- the love I bear Felipe?
1941Which is wrong?
1941Who can say that she will not love a scoundrel or some man who is indifferent to her?
1941Who shall say which of us is right, which is wrong?
1941Who, then, has had bowels of mercy?
1941Why are our destinies so unequal?
1941Why did life animate this carcass, and when will it depart?
1941Why did you not take this opportunity of seeing Paris?
1941Why have you forced me by your rash act to commit another, and one which may lower me in your eyes?"
1941Why should I be false in the future?"
1941Why should I write?
1941Why should the loyalty of a Catholic be less supreme?
1941Why these horrors, these ghastly scenes, for a mother who already idolized her child?
1941Will he find out there are two?
1941Will not the sovereign master of this earth, Calamity, take umbrage if no place be left for him at your feast?
1941Will that satisfy you?
1941Will the day ever come when Felipe is my master?
1941Will you not come soon and soothe me with such promises?
1941With a crying baby and a soaked child, what mind has a mother left for herself?
1941Worn out with suspicions, which were fed by Gaston''s guilty silence( for, if he had helped a friend, why keep it a secret from me?
1941Would you believe it?
1941Would you give the name of vice to the prudence of the wife who guards her family from destruction through its own acts?
1941You prate of duty, and make it your rule and measure; but surely to take necessity as the spring of action is the moral theory of atheism?
1941You smile?
1941You think you know me?
1941You will come to Paris-- there, is n''t that enough?
1941You wo n''t say?
1941but is it possible?..."
1941de Maufrigneuse said to me:"Dear child, who can compete with you?"
1941de Stael?"
1941dear, what is going on now at La Crampade?
1941have I not been a mere will- o''-the- wisp, whose twinkling spark was fated to perish before it reached a flame?
1941he is young?"
1941is it fitting a Christian so to love mortal man?
1941may I never again speak of the natural pleasure I feel in the exercise of dancing?
1941must nature and society alike be in bondage to your caprice?
1941my dear friend, what can I say in answer except the cruel_"It is too late"_ of that fool Lafayette to his royal master?
1941my dear old preacher, do my love affairs amuse you as much as your dismal philosophy gives me the creeps?
1941my sweet, why do we speak a different tongue?
1941or has her independence gone the way of other dead and castoff independences?"
1941tell me, I implore you, what is happiness?
1941then Spain is the country of tombs as well as castles?"
1941what chance have I with the best of arguments against a fallacy which makes you happy?
1941what had he to say to me?
1941what torture of the damned can exceed the misery in that word?
1941what was he coming for?
1941will he suppose I left the window open on purpose?
23295''Canst hear,''said one,''the breakers roar? 23295 Ah, who would linger till bright eyes grow dim, Kind voices mute, and faithful bosoms cold?
23295All well, Grace?
23295And how could they ever get back again when their term of imprisonment was over?
23295Are there any relics of this wonderful saint still remaining on the islands?
23295Are you getting tired, my girl?
23295Are you ready to come home, Grace?
23295But how could he live if there was nothing on the island to eat and drink?
23295But it is not necessary to become a recluse in order to serve God?
23295But we? 23295 Can I speak to the captain?"
23295Can not you decide while I am here? 23295 Certainly you would, for you know what it is; you were one of those who were so anxious to rescue poor Logan, do n''t you remember?
23295Did you not feel worse still after he was gone?
23295Did you put your name at the bottom of the document without first reading it?
23295Did you speak to the men, Robert?
23295Do you mean to say, Grace, that you have passed through all this without having your heart touched by any man?
23295Do you not care, William, that you leave me a desolate widow, with none to provide for me? 23295 Do you not feel as if you are treading on hallowed ground, Grace?
23295Do you not make yourself known?
23295Do you say so,cried Grace,"who have seen the beautiful spots in so many countries?
23295Do you understand much about ancient architecture?
23295Father, can you spare me for a holiday?
23295Grieve not that I die young-- is it not well To pass away ere life hath lost its brightness? 23295 Had you no control over the vessel?"
23295Have you ever heard any of the legends of our neighbourhood,inquired Grace?
23295Have you really done it without your father''s permission?
23295How are we to get to the hermitage?
23295How did you feel, Grace,he asked,"when you found yourself alone with father out on the stormy water?
23295I have a little girl a few hours old, would you like to see her? 23295 I see nothing to laugh at, Grace,"she said;"and why do you mock me?
23295I suppose you often hear Grace spoken of in Newcastle, Robert?
23295Is it not a wonderful place?
23295Is not this East Indiaman a magnificent ship? 23295 Is there anything more that I can do for you, father?"
23295Let her alone; why trouble ye her? 23295 Miss Dudley has not sent a letter, I suppose, father?"
23295My name, Miss? 23295 My times are in thy hand, Why should I doubt or fear?
23295Nay, why should it be? 23295 Now, Grace,"said George, laughingly,"why are you so partial?
23295Oh, father, why do you lose time? 23295 Our destination is Warkworth, is it not?"
23295Say not my soul,''From whence Can God relieve my care?'' 23295 Shall I tell you the legend of the Wandering Knight of Dunstanborough Castle?"
23295The presence of Miss Dudley?
23295The rights of woman, what are they? 23295 Then dost thou sigh for pleasure?
23295There is but one to save, then?
23295There is some hope for me, then?
23295They were wonderfully persistent, were they not?
23295Thine eye onto the wreck is turned-- Thy hand is on the oar-- Where is that death- prolonging shriek? 23295 This is one of the canoes which they use,"he continued;"will you get in and endeavour to paddle yourself across the lake?"
23295To whom does it belong?
23295Well?
23295Were you then one of the volunteers who served under the command of His Grace?
23295What are these things?
23295What do you mean?
23295What do you mean?
23295What is it you want so particularly to know?
23295What is that?
23295What is the use of your talking like that, Grace? 23295 What sort of place is that, then?"
23295What will you hear about-- France and Paris, or Italy and Rome? 23295 What will your mother say, Grace?"
23295What wouldst thou be? 23295 Where are we now?"
23295Where does the Coquet rise?
23295Where, Grace? 23295 Who can find a virtuous woman?
23295Who can find a virtuous woman? 23295 Who is to be the first?"
23295Whose children are you?
23295Why do you want a holiday, Grace?
23295Why was this waste of the ointment made? 23295 With you?
23295Would you like to hear them read?
23295You are not pleased with me? 23295 And who does not see how much better she was than a useless fine lady, who could do nothing but pass her life in idleness? 23295 And who is there but would earnestly wish such women God- speed? 23295 And would not He say to her,Well done, good and faithful servant,"and of her,"She hath done what she could?"
23295And yet, why should it be so?
23295Are Mr. and Mrs. Herbert at home?"
23295Are there no wrecks as awful as those which are caused by ships crashing among rocks, or stranding upon dangerous sands?
23295Are there not lives yet to be saved?
23295Are they not right to step into vacant places, and stretch out their hands to help, when help is needed?
23295Are you ready?"
23295Are you sure it is they?"
23295Are you willing to try?"
23295But how could you bring yourself to go, Grace, in spite of our mother''s prayers and entreaties?"
23295But what has become of the remarkable verdure?"
23295But what of them who have always been His despisers?
23295But why prolong the tale, Casting weak words amid a host of thoughts Arm''d to repel them?
23295Can not you land now?
23295Can not you see them?"
23295Can we let our fellow creatures perish without making an effort to save them?
23295Could we have seen Grace Darling in more attractive guise?
23295Darling?
23295Did he know anything of the Longstone lighthouse?
23295Did not the Master of all faithful souls come to"seek and to save that which was lost?"
23295Did she know what fear was?
23295Do you like them, Grace?"
23295Do you not all think so?"
23295Does it seem that too much has been made of this little simple incident?
23295Does not the name of Grace Darling suggest to many parents, a contrast between her life and that of their own daughters?
23295Does not this, and every shipwreck, cry aloud to the sons of men to be wise?
23295Father, has he ever written to you?"
23295Florence Nightingale has answered the question, What is woman''s work?
23295Had he a sister?
23295Had not Bamborough Castle, and its brave inhabitants, witnessed it all, and could she not see the noble fortress from her own bedroom window?
23295Had she sisters, who cried out if a pain touched them, and who were always helplessly appealing to men for help?
23295Hear ye the shriek, the piercing shriek, Hear ye the cry of despair?
23295Heard ye the crash, the horrid crash?
23295Her Grace came quiet[ Transcriber''s note: quite?]
23295How can we remain quietly here, while our fellow creatures are crying out for help?"
23295How is it that so few women open their mouths with wisdom?
23295How is mother, and has the time seemed long to her as to me?"
23295How many women, the wives of soldiers, or sailors, or missionaries, have felt the same?
23295How old are they?"
23295How thrice a thousand- fold repaid My humble gift may be?
23295If there has been a shipwreck, and lives lost, what is the use of your adding your own death to the number?
23295In a word, can Grace Darling''s be trained?
23295In the days of their health they cried--"We will not have this man to reign over us;"and now, what could He be to them but a judge whom they feared?
23295In these words, we think we have an answer to the question, What is woman''s work?
23295Is it not because they are foolish, and not wise?
23295Is it not folly to remain unprepared?
23295Is it not time they had arrived?"
23295Is not the morning lovely?
23295Is there any way of making"the girl of the period"into a vigorously healthy, sensible, devoted, self- forgetful woman?
23295May I not say that we shall have the pleasure?
23295May a light- house- keeper put his own life and health first, and his duty next?
23295May not our women learn from her to open their mouths with wisdom?
23295Must he allow anxiety for a sick child, or sorrow for a dying wife, to withdraw him for one evening from his work?
23295Now, this is the seat of Henry Hotspur, what do you think of that?"
23295Oh, my beloved, will you not save me?"
23295Only think what it would be to save the lives of those poor half- drowned men and women?"
23295See ye not our willing hearts?
23295Shall I call father?"
23295Shall I describe to you my journey over the mountains, or my voyage up the Rhine?"
23295Strange, if true, was it not?"
23295Their feelings are angry, envious, and bitter, how can their words be healing and kind?
23295Was Elizabeth Fry an unwomanly woman?
23295Was Grace Darling less loving and obedient as a daughter, because she was so bold as not to be afraid to face death?
23295Was Mrs. Fry less a good wife and able mother, because she visited prisons, and saved many of her sex from desolation and death?
23295Was it not a pity that they had not thought of this before?
23295Was she, indeed, a girl?
23295Was the great Grace Darling any relation to him?
23295Was there ever a girl who did not feel delighted to attend a wedding?
23295What do you say to going over to Lindisfarne?"
23295What do you say, Tom?"
23295What is the matter?"
23295What is woman''s work?
23295What mortal girl could bear up against such rewards-- such flatteries?
23295What wonder that as she listened, and the other talked, the two young hearts were drawn to each other in trustful and admiring friendship?
23295Where is your father?"
23295Where shall this land, this spot on earth be found?
23295Who does not know the good that her"Notes on Hospitals"has done?
23295Who has been their teacher?
23295Who that has lived a country life for many years, does not remember with pleasure those merry feasts?
23295Who will help to swell the number?
23295Who will not own that King Solomon was right when he said that the price of a virtuous woman is far above rubies?
23295Why do you come here, telling such lies for the sake of a reward?
23295Why should not the labourers be allowed to proceed with their tasks without opposition and hindrance from those who look on?
23295Will not the women who read this history also take the wise words to heart?
23295Will you mind sharing mine?"
23295You are not offended with me, are you, Grace?"
22343Can two walk together, except they be agreed?
22343Has he an estimable character?
22343Is he respectable in himself?
22343Is there never a woman among the daughters of thy brethren, or among all my people, that thou goest to take a wife of the uncircumcised Philistines?
22343Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? 22343 No other brothers?"
22343Who were they?
22343Whose son art thou, thou young man?
22343Whose son art thou, thou young man?
22343Whose son art thou, thou young man?
22343Why, is n''t this sudden?
22343A sailor came slipping down the ratline one night, as though something had happened, and the sailors cried,"What''s the matter?"
22343After he ceases talking, and the wife has heard all in silence, she says:"Is that all?
22343Ai n''t she beautiful?"
22343Amid so many possibilities of fatal mistake, am I not right in urging you to seek the unerring wisdom of God, and before you are infatuated?
22343And I looked around, and I said;"Are we all here?"
22343And I went into the chapel of the great town, and I said:"Where do the poor worship, and where are the hard benches on which they sit?"
22343And as the Lord of Righteousness puts the crown upon your brow, angel will cry to angel,"Who is she?"
22343And father will say,"Mother, do n''t you see Joseph is yet alive?"
22343And how dare you hitch your imperfection fast on such supernatural excellence?
22343And whence comes all this scene?"
22343Are there ANXIOUS MOTHERS who know nothing of the infinite help of religion?
22343Are these proper pictures to put out for the public to look at, to say nothing of the propriety of females appearing in public dressed like that?
22343Are you making her happy?
22343Are you making no provision that they shall get grandfather and grandmother''s religion?
22343Are you sure of it?
22343As we stood there by the casket, we could not help but say:"Do n''t she look beautiful?"
22343Ay, my brother, do you not think it would be a wise and a safe thing for you to join her on the road to heaven?
22343Aye, to whom does the husband go when he has a business trouble too great or too delicate for outside ears?
22343Blessed mother, did you pray in vain for your boy?
22343But men and women do not reveal all their characteristics till after marriage, and how are you to avoid committing the fatal blunder?
22343But shall I ever forget that early home?
22343But where is that scene?
22343But you say he belongs to a worldly club, or he does not believe a word of the Bible, or he is an inebriate and very loose in his habits?
22343Can it be that in any of the comfortable homes of my congregation the voice of prayer is never lifted?
22343Can you imagine anything more dwarfing to the human intellect than the study of dress?
22343Can you tell me why a Christian woman, going- down among THE HAUNTS OF INIQUITY on a Christian errand, never meets with any indignity?
22343Did ever boy have such a mother as I had?
22343Did not Joseph''s brethren sell him to a passing Ishmaelitish caravan?
22343Did she believe I could ever neglect her precious Bible?
22343Did she play the butterfly?
22343Did she talk about the silks and the ribbons and the fashions?
22343Do you answer them just for fun?
22343Do you ask what is the need of a course of sermons on this subject?
22343Do you know how the Reign of Terror was introduced in France?
22343Do you know that Arnold of the Revolution proposed to sell his country in order to get money to support his home wardrobe?
22343Do you not realize you need divine guidance when I remind you that mistake is possible in this important affair, and, if made, is irrevocable?
22343Do you not see, in the first place, the danger of a poorly regulated INQUISITIVENESS?
22343Do you not then think that Protestantism needs some toning up on this subject?
22343Do you send them good news always?
22343Do you take a crabapple because there are no pomegranates?
22343Do you want to know WHAT THE LORD THINKS OF IT?
22343Does n''t she look beautiful?"
22343For whom do children cry out in the night when they get frightened at a bad dream?
22343From what port did He sail?
22343HOW IS IT NOW?
22343Had she a mission in the world?
22343Has he paid his board?
22343Have you ever thought of the homesickness of Christ?
22343He is asked in the household, again and again,"What is the matter?"
22343He says:"You do not mean Joseph, do you?
22343His wife said:"Where are you going?"
22343How long is he going to stay?
22343How much does he pay?
22343How will you take him with you?
22343How, my brother, my sister, will you answer God in the Day of Judgment, with reference to your children?
22343How?
22343I am often asked as pastor-- and every pastor is asked the question--"Will my children be CHILDREN IN HEAVEN, and forever children?"
22343I meet this delegate of a relief society coming out of the store of such a hard- fisted man, and I say,"Did you get the money?"
22343I said,"Can it be possible that you never meet with an insult while performing this Christian errand?"
22343I wonder if we shall die as well?
22343If a man proposes in such a place to be isolated and reticent and alone, they will begin to guess about him: Who is he?
22343If you die without Christ, what will you do with your mother''s prayers, with your wife''s importunities, with your sister''s entreaties?
22343Is any woman so high up that she can afford to plot for her own debasement?
22343Is he worthy her care and courage?
22343Is it not wonderful that the Lord does not strike the meeting- houses with lightning?
22343Is not that easy enough?
22343Is that not easy enough?
22343Is there never a woman among the daughters of thy brethren, or among all my people, that thou goest to take a wife of the uncircumcised Philistines?"
22343Is there not an old staff in some closet?
22343Is there such a dearth of lilies in our Israelitish gardens that you must wear on your heart a Philistine thistle?
22343It was right, was it not?
22343Men knelt down over the wounded and said:"On which side did you fight?"
22343Mr. Pitt said:"Is the young man of respectable family?"
22343My eyesight troubles me; how if my eyes should fail?
22343My head gets dizzy; how if I should drop under apoplexy?"
22343Need I go into history to find you illustrations?
22343No supplication at night for protection?
22343No thanksgiving in the morning for care?
22343Not being a Christian myself, how can I ever expect him to become a Christian?
22343Now, my brother, how ought you to treat her?
22343O woman, is your husband, your father, your son away from God?
22343O woman, what knowest thou but thou canst destroy thy husband?
22343Oh, are there not some of you who are freighting all your loves and joys and hopes upon a vessel which shall never reach the port of heaven?
22343Oh, ye who promised to love each other at the altar, how dare you commit perjury?
22343On this sea of matrimony, where so many have been wrecked, am I not right in advising divine pilotage?
22343Ought not a factory turned by the Housatonic do more work than a factory turned by a thin and shallow mountain stream?
22343Ought not a flower planted in a hot- house be more thrifty than a flower planted outside in the storm?
22343Ought not you of great early opportunity be better than those who had a cradle unblessed?
22343Ought not you to be better than those who had no such advantages?
22343Paul put it forcefully when he said:"How knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?
22343Seated by the register or the stove, what if on the wall should come out the history of your children?
22343Shall I ever be a Christian?
22343Shall I ever go to heaven?
22343Shall man, with his rough hand and heavy foot and impatient bearing, minister?
22343She said,"What shall I get?"
22343So that the text comes to- day with the force of a projectile hurled from mightiest catapult:"Whose son art thou, thou young man?"
22343Suppose you that the gigantic forgeries which have been enacted in this country would ever have taken place if the wife had been consulted?
22343The omnipotent God left His throne in heaven one day, and if the question was asked,"Whither is the King of the Universe going?"
22343The room may be very humble, and the faces that look into ours may be very plain; but who cares for that?
22343They begin to ask themselves anxiously the question:"How if I should give out, what would become of the folks at home?
22343To whom do the children go when they have trouble?
22343Was it not almost time for Jacob to forget Joseph?
22343Was not that a better thing to do?
22343What are the men to do in order to keep up such home wardrobes?
22343What did she say?
22343What do you mean in deceiving me about that Western property?"
22343What does that all mean?
22343What is my influence upon it?
22343What land, what street, what house has not felt the smitings of disease?
22343What makes you cry?"
22343What nice thing can I make for you to eat?
22343What shall we do with them?
22343What will be left of a woman''s intellect after giving years and years to the discussion of such questions?
22343What will you do with the letters they used to write to you, with the memory of those days when they attended you so kindly in times of sickness?
22343What would sashes and trains three and a half yards long do in a stock market?
22343What would you do with a perfect man who are not perfect yourself?
22343What, then, will become of thy poor soul?
22343Where are now all their sins and sorrows and troubles?
22343Where are the hands, and the necks, and the foreheads, and the shoulders, and the feet that sported all that magnificence?
22343Where are those gay streets?
22343Where did he come from?
22343Where is the old rocking- chair in which you were sung to sleep with the holy nursery rhyme?
22343Which of the wise men would know how to tie on that new pair of shoes?
22343Which of these directors of banks would know how many yards it would take to make that little girl a dress?
22343Which of these masculine hands could fit a hat to that little girl''s head?
22343Who are the industrious men in all our occupations and professions?
22343Who are they?
22343Who comes there?
22343Who has sinned against so much instruction as I have?
22343Who is he?
22343Why can not France come to a placid republic?
22343Why did you not have that put in the bond, O domestic Shylock?
22343Why is it that in some families they never get along, and in others they always get along well?
22343Why the notches of a fern leaf or the stamen of a water lily?
22343Why was this the place of His destination?
22343Why, when the day departs, does it let the folding doors of heaven stay open so long, when it might go in so quickly?
22343Why?
22343Why?
22343Why?
22343Why?
22343Will a buzzard dare to court a dove?
22343Will he ever go?
22343Women knelt down over the wounded and said:"Where are you hurt?
22343Would it not be a good idea to have that printed in tract form and widely distributed?
22343Would my children ever get their education?
22343Would my wife have to go out into the world to earn bread for herself and our little ones?
22343You are THE TRUSTEE OF PIETY in that ancestral line, and are you going to augment or squander that solemn trust fund?
22343You do n''t mean Joseph, do you?"
22343You say to your wife,"Well, what do you think of him?"
22343are you going to disinherit your sons and daughters of the heirloom which your parents left you?
22343how knowest thou, O man, whether thou shalt save thy wife?"
22343no home?
22343was there ever such a difference in estate?
22343where are you?"
22343whose life has been loose, to take under your care the spotlessness of a virgin reared in the sanctity of a respectable home?
27586How could Canada resist?
27004_--When was the lastTerræ filius"spoken at Oxford; and what was the origin of the name?
27004_--Who was the author of_ Elijah''s Mantle_? 27004 1822. WHO WAS JUNIUS? 27004 And are there any grounds for ascribing it to Canning? 27004 And, after mentioning others, he adds:Quid de Valerio Chimentellio, homine omni literatura perpolita, dicam?
27004Assuming this mountain to have been a volcano, are there any others in Great Britain?
27004Can any of your antiquarian contributors say why the sees of Canterbury and York bore originally the same arms?
27004Can any of your correspondents verify this anecdote, and supply a copy of the verses?
27004Can not the lens be made fast in the middle of the box, provided the frames can be adjusted for different- sized pictures?
27004Can this be proved?
27004Can you refer me to the king''s letter authorising such collections to be made?
27004Could he too soon escape this world of sin?
27004H. P._ A Scrape._--What is the origin of the expression"Getting into a scrape?"
27004Had it any relation to the struggle for precedence carried on for so many years between the two sees?
27004If I were disposed to conclude with a Query, I might ask where Q. found that_ wheale_ ever meant_ whey_?
27004If so, by whom is the ceremony performed?
27004Is this pronunciation known to prevail anywhere at the present day?
27004It is either hexameter or pentameter, according to the scansion?
27004Or could eternal life too soon begin?
27004Quid de Joanne Pricæo?
27004Then cease his death too fondly to deplore, What could the longest life have added more?"
27004Was there any family connexion?
27004Were the_ Celtic tribes_ acquainted with it_ previously_ to the arrival of the Phoenicians upon our shores?
27004Where was he secreted?
27004_ Canonisation in the Greek Church._--Does the Greek Church ever now canonise, or add the names of the saints to the Calendar?
27004_ Dictionary of English Phrases._--Is there in English any good dictionary of phrases similar to the excellent_ Frasologia Italiana_ of P. Daniele?
27004_ Is not the cracking of the albumen the result of the climate of Malta?_ F.( Manchester).
27004_ Life of Savigny._--Is there in French or English any life or memoir of Savigny?
27004_ When_ and_ by whom_ was tin first discovered in our island?
27004_ When_ did_ he_ live?
27004kindly furnish the undersigned with certain Letters, which have recently{ 294} appeared in_ The Times_, on"The Defence of Hougomont?"
27004page 290,"What were they?
27004set me right, or give me any information likely to solve the difficulty?
27004supply instances of the use of the divining- rod for finding water?
22061A boarder, mother!--What for?
22061All things ready for what?
22061Am I that?
22061And do n''t you wish for anything you have n''t got?
22061And do you feel so, Nettie?--that you have enough, and are satisfied with your life every day?
22061And what does she say then?
22061And you?
22061And,said Nettie, hesitatingly,"Mr. Folke, is n''t that one way of being a peacemaker?"
22061Are you quite well, Nettie, this morning?
22061Are you singing up there to keep yourself warm, child?
22061Are you there, mother?
22061But how can you pour it in, mother? 22061 But how was the garret full of the Bible, Nettie?"
22061But suppose I do n''t get well, father?
22061But where can he sleep?
22061Ca n''t I go home?
22061Ca n''t you strengthen that child up a bit?
22061Come where?
22061Could n''t there be a bed made somewhere else for Barry, mother? 22061 Dear,"she said,"just go in Barry''s room and straighten it up a little before he comes in-- will you?
22061Did I give you all this?
22061Did I? 22061 Did you ever ask him before?"
22061Did you pay for what you got, besides?
22061Do n''t it comfort you to read of Jesus being wearied?
22061Do n''t you know what makes machinery work smoothly?
22061Do you feel better now,_ mon enfant_?
22061Do you keep up hope yet, Nettie?
22061Do you know day after to- morrow is Christmas day?
22061Do you make it good?
22061Do you think of that city all the time?
22061Father, I''ll be home a quarter after ten; will you be ready then?
22061Father, will you come?
22061Father, you wo nt be displeased?
22061For myself, father?
22061Have you found out who are the happy people, Nettie?
22061Have you got anything you can put over her?
22061He gave his word there was to be oysters, warn''t it?
22061Here, Nettie, what ails you? 22061 Hey?--what was it for?"
22061How can a sinful man take such a promise?
22061How can you do that, Kizzy?
22061How do I look?
22061How do you do?
22061How do you feel, dear?
22061How do you know it, Nettie?
22061How do you manage the iron, mother?
22061How keep you always your face looking so happy? 22061 How soon do you think father will be home?"
22061How will you carry them, my child? 22061 How, child?"
22061I mean, to persuade people to be at peace with him?
22061If you want to put out a fire, you must not stick into it something that will catch?
22061Is Mr. Mat''ieson there?
22061Is he there to- day?
22061Is it good?
22061Is n''t it to stop people from quarrelling?
22061Is this for_ me_, father?
22061Mother, what is the matter with you?
22061Mother, what is there for supper?
22061Mother, wo nt you have something to eat?
22061Mother, wo nt you have supper, and let me see you?
22061Mother, wo nt you put on your gown and come to church this afternoon? 22061 Mother,"said Nettie, cheerfully,"how can you talk so?
22061Mother,said Nettie, slowly, still looking out at the sunlight,"would you be very sorry, and very much surprised, if I were to go there before long?"
22061Mr. Folke,said Nettie, timidly,"was n''t Jesus a peacemaker?"
22061My child!--What do you say, Nettie? 22061 My little peacemaker, what shall I do without you?"
22061Nettie!--Where is she?
22061Nettie!--what''s to pay, girl?
22061Now, mother, what sort of a way is that of talking?
22061Now, mother,said Nettie, when she had changed her dress and come to the common room,--"what''s to be for supper?
22061Ready for what?
22061Ready for what?
22061Shall I be that? 22061 Was I crying?"
22061Well, how did that make it?
22061Well, why ca n''t you go on doing it? 22061 Well, you know where the raising is?
22061Well,said he, meeting her grave eyes,"and what then, Nettie?"
22061What are you doing here? 22061 What are you doing, Nettie?"
22061What are you going to get?
22061What are you talking about?
22061What did you have for dinner, Nettie? 22061 What did you make me do it for, then?"
22061What do you want me to go to church for?
22061What do you want, Nettie?
22061What do you want, Nettie?
22061What do you want?
22061What does that mean, Nettie? 22061 What have you done with that pine log?"
22061What is it, mother?
22061What is the matter?
22061What is the promise, Nettie?
22061What made it pleasant?
22061What makes you so happy always? 22061 What makes you think so much about it?"
22061What on earth good will that do you?
22061What shall I do for you?
22061What shall I get, father?
22061What sort of a prayer would that be?
22061What was you crying for in church this forenoon?
22061What will_ you_ have?
22061What you got?
22061What? 22061 What?
22061What?
22061What?
22061When did you do it, Nettie?
22061When will you pay Jackson?
22061Where is she?
22061Where is she?
22061Where shall I sleep, mother?
22061Where would you make it? 22061 Which piece belongs here, to begin with?"
22061Who does think about you? 22061 Who is it, mother?"
22061Why ca n''t mother do it?
22061Why ca n''t you answer a plain question? 22061 Why did n''t she make''em another time,"grumbled Barry,--"when we were n''t going to punch and oysters?
22061Why did you, then?
22061Why should it, child?
22061Why, Nettie!--is it late?
22061Why, it''s just rice and--_what_ is it? 22061 Why, mother?"
22061Why, my Nettie,said the little woman,"what is this, my child?
22061Why, what have you been doing, child? 22061 Why, what of it, Nettie?"
22061Why, who put it up?
22061Will you come in? 22061 Will you give it to me, father, if I tell you?"
22061Will you give me what I choose, father, if it does not cost too much?
22061Will you have a cup of tea, father?
22061Will you tell me how I''m going to do that? 22061 _ Always?_""Yes, always."
22061_ What_ is it, ma''am?
22061_ You?_said Madame.
22061''Only believe''--don''t you remember Jesus said that?
22061''Whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him,_ shall never thirst_,''--don''t you see, mother?
22061Ai nt you as strong as ever you was?
22061Ai nt you gone?"
22061And ai nt you going to take the blanket for your New Year''s, and let me off, Nettie?"
22061And oh, mother, do n''t you love that tenth verse?--and the thirteenth and fourteenth?"
22061August?"
22061Barry did n''t think-- he didn''t"--"Why did n''t he?"
22061But she presently raised her head from his shoulder, where it had sunk, and kissed him, and said--"May I have what I want, father?"
22061But, Nettie, do n''t you want me to give you anything else?"
22061Could Mrs. Mathieson help it?
22061Could she be one?
22061Did Mr. Mathieson mean the blanket to take the place of his promise?
22061Do you find it so?"
22061Do you hear, Nettie?"
22061Do you like my_ riz- au- gras_?"
22061Do you think Mrs. Mat''ieson would like it?"
22061Do you think you would mind helping me put up this bedstead?"
22061Does she say she is cold?"
22061Feeling weak, and broken, and miserable, the thought came coldly across her mind,_ would_ the Lord not hear her, after all?
22061Folke?"
22061Go, father, and ask the Lord-- will you?
22061Had she done right?
22061Have you got no bread, Sophia?"
22061Have you had anything yourself?"
22061Have you had your supper?"
22061He was not a confirmed drunkard yet; but how long would it take, at this rate?
22061How did I come in here?"
22061How many journeys to and fro would it cost her?
22061I say,_ what''s_ to do?"
22061If only I was a little older, would n''t it be nice?
22061If they were not gone by already!--how should she know?
22061If you are only willing to be his servant-- if you are willing to give yourself to the Lord Jesus-- are you willing, father?"
22061Is your mother well?"
22061Lumber?"
22061Mat''ieson?"
22061May I?"
22061Might she keep and give to her mother what was over?
22061Nettie bore it-- how did she bear it?
22061Nettie watched for a chance, and the first time there was a lull of the voices of the two men, she asked, softly,"Shall I sing, father?"
22061Nettie-- I say, give us some of that, will you?"
22061Now, peoples''tempers are like wheels and hinges-- but what sort of oil shall we use?"
22061Oh, father, are n''t you willing to be reconciled to him?"
22061The first thing Nettie asked when she came home from school in the afternoon was, if the waffles were light?
22061The lesson that afternoon was upon the peacemakers; and Mr. Folke asked the children what ways they knew of being a peacemaker?
22061Then he said,"What must I do, Nettie?"
22061This week the question was,"Who are happy?"
22061What ails you, Nettie?"
22061What did the snow and the wet matter to Nettie?
22061What did you have for dinner to- day?"
22061What did you want me to do?"
22061What do you do when the hinge of a door creaks?"
22061What is it?"
22061What might Nettie do?
22061What more did Nettie want?
22061What must we have?"
22061What of you?"
22061What possible chance could she have?
22061What shall I do that you would like?"
22061What shall I get, father?"
22061What should Nettie do?
22061What should they do for supper?
22061What was it for, hey?"
22061What was she thinking of?
22061What would you like me to give you, Nettie,--hey?"
22061What''s Sunday good for, except to eat, I should like to know?"
22061What''s to do?"
22061What''s wanting from Jackson''s?"
22061When she had left the room, he stooped his head down to Nettie and said low--"What was that about your lip?"
22061Where is Jesus, mother?
22061Where is your father?
22061Where''s my kite?"
22061Who are they, Nettie?"
22061Why, mother, you know Jesus is there; how can I help thinking about it?"
22061Will you come?"
22061Wo nt you bake the waffles and have supper?"
22061Wo nt you come and have them with us?
22061Wo nt you go on and get dinner?
22061Would angry people mind your asking?"
22061Would her father understand any of those sweet words?
22061Would you let her work for you, when you are as strong as sixty?"
22061[ 1]"Do n''t that chapter comfort you, mother?"
22061burst in a rude boy of some fifteen years, opening the door from the entry,--"who''s puttin''my room to rights?"
22061he roared at her;"did n''t I tell you so?
22061he said,"if you ca n''t?"
22061is Mr. Mat''ieson there?"
22061said the Frenchwoman,--"where did you cut yourself, Nettie?
22061said the voice of the little French baker,"what ails you?
22061well, what about Sunday?
22061what is the matter with you?"
22061what?"
22061would he feel them?
22061would they reach him?
21498Pray why?
21498What is the use of that?
21498''And, pray, why not?''
21498''Are they Boulangists, or do they simply dislike Carnot?''
21498''Are you speaking seriously?''
21498''But how is it with the royalists?''
21498''But if this is the way in which they look at things, why do they clamour for Boulanger?''
21498''But the President is going on to Boulogne, is he not?''
21498''Did all this give the man any right to destroy and carry away a costly piece of artistic work, the property of the city?''
21498''Did he like this?''
21498''Do you know Lens?
21498''Do you remember,''he went on,''how Ferry went to Rome after his expulsion from power?
21498''Do you speak for the Government?''
21498''For having trouble with the Christian Brothers?''
21498''Had there been any disturbances anywhere?''
21498''He is beginning to stand out against the horizon, is he not?''
21498''How did he take it?
21498''How do you find the plan work?''
21498''How many years ago was it,''I asked,''when this Congregation began its work in the United States?''
21498''If there are many?
21498''Is it possible,''he said,''to mistake either the spirit or the object of such a law?
21498''Is not this charming?
21498''Is that legend of grandfather Carnot very strong in this region?''
21498''It is pleasanter, do n''t you think?''
21498''May I ask,''I replied,''what can possibly have given you such an impression as this?''
21498''More so than his nephew the Comte de Paris?''
21498''Perhaps it was not a bad thing for us,''he said,''that the Mexicans shot their first Emperor-- but was it a good thing for them?''
21498''President?
21498''That is to say,''I asked,''the law officer of the department?
21498''That journal, Monsieur?''
21498''That weighs more than a napoleon,''she said;''and who is the young lady?
21498''The other generals are not very fond of him, you say?
21498''Then they want war with Germany?''
21498''Then you would prefer to organise a pension fund in your syndical chamber?
21498''Ulysses bewailing the departure of Calypso is charming, is it not?''
21498''Was M. Grévy, then, popular with them?''
21498''Were there many people of Figaro''s mind in Laon and in the Department?''
21498''What has come of all that fury and folly?''
21498''What is the feeling of the people here on this question of clerical teaching?''
21498''What is the matter with the people here?''
21498''What legend had Bonaparte when Barras put him at the head of the home army, and Pétiet sent him to Italy?
21498''What right had they to do this?''
21498''What sort of a newspaper is this?''
21498''What then happened?''
21498''What would you think?''
21498''Where did all this money come from?''
21498''Why do you feel sure of this?''
21498''You want to see your War Minister made president, then?''
21498''[ 2] St.-Omer, then, not having been besieged in 1710, why should a statue be set up in honour of an Audomaraise dame for delivering it?
21498''_ Dame_, Monsieur,''she said to me,''if M. Boulanger is not the best General in France, why did they make him Minister of War?
21498= Archer.=--_MASKS OR FACES?_ A Study in the Psychology of Acting.
21498A project of a law to relieve the co- operative idea from the crushing weight of the Imperial law of 1867?
21498And doubtless you know what efforts he made there at that time to bring about a subterranean understanding between himself and the Vatican?''
21498And how did he become a Deputy?
21498And if not in the case of Artois, why in the case of any other French province?
21498And on what scale do you do this sort of thing?''
21498And this studious Committee eventually evolved-- what?
21498And to what use?
21498And what other end but Nihilism can there be of your"neutral"obligatory schools and your atheistic laws?
21498And whom had the elective principle put into his place, under the pressure of irreconcilable personal rivalries, and of a threatened popular outbreak?
21498And why should anybody in or out of France celebrate them?
21498Are they not paganizing the country?
21498Are they not trying to make a"great Frenchman"now of Carnot?
21498As for the eventual results, what mattered these to them?
21498Ask men to give you their votes, and what authority will be left to you?
21498But has the modern and scientific way of looking at the relations of capital and labour, so far, been what may be called a great success?
21498But he did not show you the correspondence about it between the bishop and this charlatan of twopenny Atheism?
21498But how is a workman in such circumstances to call upon the laws?
21498But how is anybody to fix and celebrate the''centennial''of a set of notions called''the principles of 1789''?
21498But in what way?
21498But really is it not grotesque to see such cotton- velvet senators as this mayor of Amiens going about to decide questions of fidelity to public duty?
21498But was there no pretence of constitutional authority for the passage of this law which you so strongly denounce?''
21498But what are the reasonable demands of Labour?
21498But, the window being barred, what should restrain him from walking rationally out of the doorway?
21498Can anybody fail to see what this means?
21498Can there be any mistake as to the meaning of this?
21498Can you ask for a more flagrant illustration of the state to which this Republic is bringing our public services?
21498Could labour reasonably demand more than this of capital?
21498Could such a law possibly have been passed in your republic?''
21498Did he ever earn 250,000 francs in his life?
21498Did the French Government intend to invite the monarchies of Europe to celebrate the destruction by a mob of the Bastille on July 14, 1789?
21498Do we seem to be in the way of organizing a solid modern society on the principles of the"struggle for life"and of the"survival of the fittest"?
21498Do you imagine that Christianity, if it be your enemy, is an enemy as terrible as Nihilism?
21498Do you know Bapaume?
21498Do you see that high chimney across the road some way off among the trees?
21498Do you wonder I am a pessimist?''
21498Do you wonder that thoughtful men look with horror on the current which is carrying us in such a direction as that?
21498Does not that take us a long way on towards savage life?
21498Does not the best old inn in the comfortable town of Châlons- sur- Marne to this day bear the name of''La Haute Mère de Dieu''?
21498Does that mean that the Carnots are of this country?''
21498For upon what does human society rest in the last resort if not upon the two great pillars of the rule of St. Benedict-- Obedience and Labour?
21498Furthermore, what sort of a republic is it in which a family of princes can not live without tempting the whole population to make one of them king?
21498Had I not seen the votes, the credits given to the Ministers for entertaining?
21498Has he not shown more firmness than people expected of him when this Boulangist business began?''
21498Have they been intelligently adopted and loyally carried out in that distracted country to- day?
21498He took it upon himself to issue a decree-- instituting what?
21498How can France hope to find liberty within her own borders, or peace with honour abroad, under the domination of such men?
21498How can an independent Executive ever be restored in France excepting in the person of Philippe VII.?
21498How can you ask me to forget that?''
21498How is he to face the organised hostility of men of his own class?
21498How is he to meet the legal cost of defending his rights?
21498How is that to be brought about without endangering the success of the enterprises?
21498How many are they?
21498How many young women applied?
21498I had surely heard of that?''
21498I should be glad to know what''employer''ever devised a more shameless plan than this for reducing workmen to slavery, moral and financial?
21498If General Boulanger for their own sake could not be allowed to represent them, why not M. Cercueil?
21498If they succeed in unmaking their legend of Boulanger, where are they?
21498Is it France alone which is thus threatened?
21498Is it not avowedly because they think this will stop the recruiting for the ranks of the clergy?
21498Is it not because the French magistrates stand between them and the rights of the French clergy as French citizens?
21498Is it not clear that, in losing the notion of duty to his employer, the workman has necessarily lost the idea also of duty to his fellow- workmen?
21498Is it possible that in the actual condition of France and of Europe such a system as this should last?
21498Is it transparent, that?
21498Is it"clericalism"which is stirring up Labour against Capital?
21498Is it"clericalism"which is transforming your literature into ribaldry and your theatres into brothels?
21498Is it"clericalism"which manufactures dynamite and blows up houses?
21498Is it"clericalism"which preaches and supports"strikes"?
21498Is it"clericalism"which shuts up your schools?
21498Is it"clericalism"which transforms all the actions and relations of life into matters of contract and of calculation?
21498Is not that liberty?
21498Is not this plain?
21498Is not universal suffrage a natural and easy weapon of capital in any"struggle for life"with labour?
21498Is that liberty I ask you?''
21498Is there any respect for equal rights-- for the rule of the majority, for freedom of conscience in such proceedings?
21498Is this a confirmation, I wonder, of the theory entertained by Mr. Emerson and other philosophers, that woman is not a''clubbable''animal?
21498It is not the Pucelle who would have put them out, do you think?
21498Jefferson had sense enough to decline the invitation; but what gleam of sense, political or other, had the blundering tinkers who gave it?
21498LUCK, OR CUNNING, AS THE MAIN MEANS OF ORGANIC MODIFICATION?_ Cr.
21498Le Royes and Jules Ferry?
21498Monsieur does not know him?
21498Moreover, our farmers say,"Why vote at all, for the Mayors and the Prefect throw our votes out and cheat us?"
21498Must not all taxes be paid by the ultimate consumer?
21498My son when he gets his stripes is to marry-- she is a very nice girl, an only child, do you know?
21498No?
21498Of all which let us say with Mr. Carlyle,''What should Falsehood do but decease, being ripe, decompose itself, and return to the Father of it?''
21498Of course the Chamber eagerly adopted it?
21498Of how many towns of twenty thousand inhabitants could the same thing be truly said in England or the United States?
21498Or the Convocation of the States- General at Versailles on May 5, 1789?
21498So-- what does he care?
21498Strike out of the theory of representative institutions the right divine of the people to choose the wrong men, and what is left of it?
21498The Comte de Chassepot told you the story, did he not, of the Calvary in the cemetery of the Madeleine?
21498This being her character, what did she do?
21498To what will the''civic duties''of man bring France, and, with France, the civilization of Christendom, in 1892?
21498Was I not right?
21498Was it natural?
21498Was it not my duty to see no favouritism shown to one commune at the expense of another?''
21498Was the new republic hailed with enthusiasm?
21498What Sister could resist such an appeal?
21498What are the''principles of 1789''?
21498What did it mean?
21498What did that signify?
21498What do you say to that?''
21498What followed?
21498What good has their exile done to Eu?
21498What harm did the Sisters do there?
21498What has been the result?
21498What is the difference in principle between such a declaration as this and the attempt of the third Napoleon to establish an empire in Mexico by arms?
21498What is the ordinary proportion between the house- rent and the income of a respectable tradesman or mechanic in New York?
21498What is the result?
21498What is the sanction of the measures ordered by such syndicates excepting the fear in which every member goes of his fellow- members?
21498What is to become of the 730 unsuccessful competitors?
21498What more and what less than this is there in the history of Alfred the Great?
21498What really happened?
21498What was to be done?
21498What we want is a man; where are we to find him?''
21498What will become of them?
21498What would the Egyptians, who paid their tribute in glass to Rome, have thought of a serious order to pave the Via Sacra with blocks of purple glass?
21498What would then become of M. Doumer?
21498What, in such a case, would become of a French President?
21498Where are they to find the balloon?
21498Where else can the country bring up?
21498Who actually fills that most important post?
21498Who knows how long he will be President?
21498Why are they attacking the foundations of the magistracy?
21498Why do they wish to force the seminarists into the service?
21498Why not?
21498Why should he be brought into the business?''
21498Why should not Anzin set up a statue of Pierre Mathieu?
21498Why should''horrors''have been committed at Arras in 1789?
21498Why?
21498Why?
21498Why?
21498Why?
21498Will France be a nobler and stronger country when the priests who train the children of her peasantry into this spirit are driven out of the land?
21498With Brother Allain- Targé as Prefect, what could be easier?
21498With such men as this in the French Senate do you wonder the country laughs at senatorial courts of justice?
21498With these short leases what can be done for the land?"
21498Would I object to their dining with me-- there was no other good room?''
21498Would not England necessarily stand by France in such a proposal?
21498Would you trust him with your pocket- book?
21498Yes?
21498Yet what did he say in 1888?
21498You can find the bottom of it if you keep on long enough-- and then?
21498You have seen, of course, his_ Catéchisme du Patron_?''
21498You saw at Chauny the building of the local journal there,_ La Défense Nationale_''?
21498You tell me people in England and America have no idea of what is going on in France?
21498_ INDIA, WHAT CAN IT TEACH US_?
21498_ PROSPERITY OR PAUPERISM?_ Physical, Industrial, and Technical Training.
21498and on what pretext?
21498and will they spend all this money on dinners and punches?
21498broke in M. de Mortillet;''pray, what is God?''
21498but what of that?
21498he replied with a kind of''sniff'':''that leaf?
21498he replied,''I do n''t think they care much about Boulanger, and why should they dislike Carnot?
21498he replied,''in those days what did they know about good wine?''
21498he said scornfully;''why should it be?
21498he said,"it is money out of pocket, and for what?
21498he said;''how can a sensible man think of such a thing?
21498liberty for all?''
21498no value of his own?
21498what does that signify?
27003What needeth this, when he hath got the worst of the cause, to defend himself like a_ pinece with a stink_? 27003 _--What is the meaning of the phrase,"I put a spoke in his wheel?"
270031822. WHO WAS JUNIUS?
27003Accept or reject this doggerel translation:"Is it hurrah?
27003Also, the date of erection of the church?
27003And where may any pedigree of the Osborne family,_ previous to Edward_, be seen?
27003And why?
27003But was Yarmouth ever called_ nova Gernemutha_?
27003Can any correspondent tell me when and why this was placed in the church; and also the inscriptions which appear thereon?
27003Can any more satisfactory locality be assigned it?
27003Can any of your correspondents explain the origin of this superstition, or favour me with any farther notices respecting it?
27003Can any of your correspondents refer me to the circumstance in question?
27003Can any of your readers furnish an explanation?
27003Can any of your readers inform me at what place in Yorkshire her father resided, and where the marriage with Mallet in 1742 took place?
27003Can any of your readers state where it is to be found?
27003Can any of your readers suggest any other or closer analogy between the name and device?
27003Can it have reference to the staple?
27003Can you, or any of your subscribers, inform me whereabouts in the town it is situated?
27003Do the figures merely determine the size of the picture to be taken?
27003Does not this almost come up to Lord Castlereagh''s famous metaphor?
27003Have any similar excavations been found in England?
27003How is one to be guided in their use and application to practice?
27003I would ask, if"gob,"used also in Devonshire for the stone of any fruit which contains a kernel, is not a cognate word?
27003Is it hurrah?
27003Is the song of"The Ivy Green"in_ Pickwick_ sufficient to justify this appellation?
27003Is this the_ customary_ and proper mode of using the phrase; and, if so, how can putting a spoke to a wheel impede its motion?
27003Is this way of dividing the arms a blunder of the painter''s, or can any of your readers point out a similar instance?
27003Is''t hoera?
27003Let us take, for example, what may be considered in its way as one of the most incomprehensible lines in Shakspeare--"Will you go,_ An- heires_?"
27003May I take leave to ask, are the above- mentioned books in existence, and where are they to be found?
27003Running down with the vowels from_ a_, we get at once an apparently plausible suggestion,"Will you go_ on here_?"
27003Scott?
27003The Dutch seem to have adopted it from the Russians,_ poeta invito_, as we see in the following verses of Staring van den Willenborg:"Is''t hoera?
27003The following is singular:"Quid est veritas?
27003To what passage in Virgil does Johnson here refer, and what is the point intended to be conveyed?
27003Was Sir Philip connected at all with Dr. Smith, or was he descended from Arthur Warwick, author of_ Spare Minutes_?
27003Was he of a Scotch family, and are any of his descendants now living?
27003Wat drommel kan''t u schelen?
27003What does that concern you, pray?
27003What reference have these nicely graduated points to the distance of an object from the instrument?
27003Where did she die, and what family did Mallet leave by his two wives?
27003Which is correct; and what is the authority?
27003Will C. endeavour to explain it in any other way?
27003Would rare Ben have uttered such a wish ignorantly and without cause?
27003_ Derivation of Celt._--What is the proper derivation of the word_ celt_, as applied to certain weapons of antiquity?
27003_ Waugh, Bishop of Carlisle._--What were the family arms of Dr. John Waugh, Bishop of Carlisle, who died October 29, 1734?
27003_"Solamen miseris,"& c._--Please to state in what author is the following line?
27003or what was the office alluded to?
19806Although you knew from Mother how I''d loved you, and searched for you?
19806And the dear old Governor-- you''re fond of him?
19806And you, Brian?
19806Another person? 19806 Are n''t you our daughter?"
19806Are you afraid of me?
19806Are you afraid?
19806Are you sure you_ want_ to?
19806Are you telling all this to disarm me?
19806Are you very rich?
19806Are you? 19806 Are you?"
19806But must we wait to hear the story? 19806 But the child will let us try to comfort her-- unless she has a father and mother of her own?"
19806But the wild boar?
19806But what--_what_?
19806But where is it?
19806But why-- why?
19806But,he blundered on,"do n''t you see it''s the only thing you can do-- anyhow, to marry me?
19806But-- we''re not to go without a glimpse of the Sammies, are we?
19806Can it be,he exclaimed,"that Mademoiselle has been treated by the Wandering Jew?
19806Cost you your voice?
19806Could n''t they tell you in the hotel at what time she went out?
19806Could n''t we meet him? 19806 Could n''t you use your old knowledge, and learn to paint without seeing?"
19806Dear Miss O''Malley, wo n''t you please sit down? 19806 Depends on me?"
19806Did I kiss you like this, in the dreams?
19806Did they say so?
19806Did you notice at dinner how I kept trying to get a good look at your left hand?
19806Do I look as if I were afraid?
19806Do moths specialize in sincerity in the insect world?
19806Do n''t you want to pour a little honest gold into poor old Madame Mounet''s pocket?
19806Do you call yourself a shorn lamb?
19806Do you really believe you can blackmail me into a partnership?
19806Do you remember my telling you we''d brought over to France the treasures out of his den at home?
19806Do you think he''d take your money to marry on? 19806 Do you think,"she asked me timidly,"we might call on the bishop?
19806Does one tin wild boar?
19806Had you not better go and take care of your sister?
19806Has your brother told you about the man we met at the Visitors''Château?
19806Have n''t I been clever?
19806Have you ever had one, I wonder, like mine, about Jim? 19806 He has been wounded in some bombardment?"
19806He-- made an accusation?
19806How could I mind? 19806 How did you know I avoided you?
19806How do you know that the monsieur is a millionaire, and what makes you think he would care about pictures?
19806Hullo, what have you been up to?
19806Hurt in the air raid?
19806I hope I did n''t disturb you?
19806I was wondering which is older, your_ Je Sais Tout_ or my_ Illustration_? 19806 If there were any killing along this_ secteur_ you would hear the guns boom,_ n''est- ce- pas_?
19806Indeed?
19806Is it true?
19806Is n''t it a comfort, Molly, to see a place again where there are_ whole_ houses?)
19806Is there any reason why you think it would be better for us not to go there?
19806Is there still another reason?
19806It''s rather wonderful, is n''t it? 19806 It''s this; have you ever had the feeling that Jim may be alive?"
19806Not Doctor Paul Herter?
19806Not the least bit for my sake?
19806Now we see you, we understand, do n''t we, Jenny?
19806Oh, have you been_ there_?
19806Oh, my dear, what_ did_ they think of us?
19806Only men? 19806 Only----""Only, you do n''t want to be friends?"
19806Or rather, what do you think of the man? 19806 Ought we to let the man and his sister go on with us, if that''s their aim?
19806She''s not with you?
19806Smart trick, eh?
19806So Jim found you again, after all?
19806Sure of Jim?
19806Surely there wo n''t be another raid for an hour or two? 19806 The finger?
19806The ring?
19806Was it a corner house of the Rue Princesse Marie?
19806Was that before he went to Paris with the O''Farrells? 19806 Was that man we saw the doctor who put you in your sling?"
19806Was that what he called himself?
19806Well, that''s queer she should speak of_ him_, is n''t it, Brian? 19806 Well, you see, France and Belgium together will be Everyman''s Land after the war, wo n''t they?"
19806Well-- you have had something better than potatoes? 19806 What about you, Mother?"
19806What about your brother? 19806 What are you sorry for?
19806What can have happened to turn her hair white?
19806What did he say about your eyes?
19806What did you do-- what did you_ dare_ to do?
19806What do you mean?
19806What do you think of those two?
19806What do you think, Jenny?
19806What happened at Lunéville?
19806What happened?
19806What have you done that Hilda should hate you?
19806What if I tell the old birds the whole story up to date?
19806What is that boy saying to his mama?
19806What is your pitch?
19806What were you doing close to our lines?
19806What''s that?
19806What? 19806 When is a door not a door?"
19806Where does the safety zone end?
19806Where is the message?
19806Who could help loving her?
19806Who taught you that?
19806Who told you I was beautiful?
19806Why did he run away? 19806 Why did n''t you ask the man to wait?"
19806Why did you do this-- thing? 19806 Why did you want to win Miss O''Farrell to my brother?"
19806Why do the O''Farrells want you to go with them?
19806Why not? 19806 Why not?"
19806Why should I be kind?
19806Why should you give yourself trouble?
19806Why the crowd?
19806Why wait a minute, then?
19806Will you forgive me?
19806Will you if I do n''t?
19806Will you walk on a little way with me? 19806 Yes, I did tell him that----""I mean, is it true that you''ve loved me?"
19806You destroyed the letter?
19806You do n''t believe me? 19806 You do n''t do your tramping on foot?"
19806You do n''t know where Von Busche got hold of the dog, do you?
19806You do n''t know? 19806 You do n''t like her, Molly?"
19806You knew our Jim?
19806You know him well?
19806You love her-- don''t you?
19806You loved the son of these rich people the girl told me about? 19806 You mean I lie?
19806You mean in a fortnight?
19806You mean, when Molly and I''ve finished putting out all his treasures in the den, just as he''d like to see them?
19806You think not?
19806You would n''t hurt the feelings of the saviours of France? 19806 You would n''t object to having that poor little girl stay with us, would you, dear?"
19806You''ll both have coffee with us, wo n''t you, Signor di Napoli-- or Mr. O''Farrell? 19806 You''re not sure?
19806You''re very non- committal, are n''t you? 19806 Your sister Mary?"
19806_ Was_ it he?
19806( Do I ever forget anything she says about Jim?)
19806A fourth time to- day?"
19806A little added disgust for me on Jim''s part, however, what could it matter?
19806Above all, what had happened since, to put him on my track, with a Red Cross flag and a taxi- cab?
19806After three years''Titanic battling, how could there be a road at all?
19806Also I said:"Why make it impossible for yourself to give Mother Beckett the care she needs, and can hardly do without yet?
19806Am I right about this chap?"
19806And I could n''t resist adding,"I thought your sister always did what you wanted?"
19806And he has_ no_ doubts of her---- That''s a beautiful timbered house, is n''t it, Mr. Beckett?
19806And if Monsieur and Madame have forgiven us----""Us?
19806And listen-- don''t you hear big guns booming now, along the front?
19806And now, you say, he has given his life for France?
19806And who knows but I shall find my dog?"
19806And your letter----""Do n''t you understand, I was testing you?
19806As for Julian-- would it be possible, Padre, to miss a person you almost hate?
19806Because you are you?"
19806Besides----""Besides-- what?"
19806But I suppose even you ladies have seen some of these shows before?
19806But could mist be thick enough entirely to hide a great mountain of a cathedral from eyes drawing nearer every minute?
19806But how can you sob without breath?
19806But maybe Miss-- Miss----""Will you call me''Mary''?"
19806But the question is Will_ you_?"
19806But what can you expect for eight francs a day, with_ pension_?
19806But what does he think, I wonder, about the prophecy?
19806But what of the millionaire monsieur?
19806But who was the man?
19806But why be hampered by details like that?
19806But why fly into a fury?
19806But why should he send word through you?"
19806But why should it not be so?
19806But----""But-- what?"
19806But----""You really expected that?"
19806By the way,_ are_ pots and kettles blacked with tar?
19806Ca n''t you just be wise and promise to let me alone on my''pitch,''whatever it is?"
19806Can I bear to go on deceiving Jim Beckett''s father and mother, or-- shall I take the other alternative?
19806Can it be a_ man_ singing?
19806Could n''t you beg him to sing some more?"
19806Could n''t you go next door and thank him?
19806Dare I speak to you of this?"
19806Did I ever deserve it?
19806Did n''t I sit tight, protecting you silently, letting you have all I''d expected to have for myself and Dare?"
19806Did n''t I waste those perfectly good snapshots?
19806Did n''t he want to be thanked?"
19806Did n''t you know I''d love you more, for such a proof of love for me?"
19806Do I know the price my brother has decided on?
19806Do n''t I look it?
19806Do n''t you agree?"
19806Do n''t you know, the men of the Marne say the men of the Ourcq did more than they to save Paris?"
19806Do n''t you think, sir, she might let me call her''Mary,''now we all know each other so well?
19806Do you get no comfort from him?"
19806Do you really believe I''d accept money from Jim Beckett''s parents, and-- marry you?"
19806Do you want it, or do n''t you?"
19806Does she need taking care of?"
19806Had n''t you better sit down?"
19806Had the monsieur and the dame given their name?
19806Has n''t my wickedness given them both to him?
19806Have n''t I always showed you my cards, trumps and joker and all?"
19806Have n''t I sacrificed my prospects and my sister''s prospects rather than throw you to the lions?
19806Have n''t you found that already, in other places you have visited in this journey of yours?"
19806Have n''t you shown us that, every day since we met?"
19806Have you forgotten already?
19806Have you seen my sister?"
19806He says,"May I really buy one of these sketches?"
19806He_ did_ look at your eyes-- didn''t he?
19806How can I be unhappy, if Brian need only wait, to see?
19806How did he expect to get me home-- if not by air?
19806How did you come to think of Herter?"
19806How should I guess what a dare- devil fool Gallieni would turn out?
19806I could n''t have dared hope for such a happy solution----""Could n''t you?"
19806I do hope, dear Doctor Paul, that you''re not going on a dangerous mission?"
19806I hope you do n''t mind my calling him by his Christian name?
19806I mean, shall I tell him about Doctor Paul''s message-- or_ supposed_ message?
19806I say that my brother has n''t fixed a price; but would six hundred francs seem_ very_ high?
19806I shall never forget it, or the circumstances of seeing it, shall you, Miss O''Malley?
19806I suppose each was wondering,"Am_ I_ the one the doctor did n''t want to meet?"
19806I told you about it, did n''t I, on our day together, when I thought I should come back in two weeks?"
19806I trust my feelings a good deal-- especially since this war, that''s made us all a bit psychic-- don''t you?"
19806I wonder if the Germans remembered this in 1914 when they came?
19806I''m not a monster, am I?
19806I''m not a screaming girl, but I''m afraid I did give a shriek, for Mother Beckett started up, and cried out:"What''s the matter?"
19806I_ heard_ myself thinking,"Why do n''t you go to see Mr. and Mrs. Beckett, and tell them you were engaged to marry their only son?
19806If I leave behind me thoughts of love, wo n''t they linger between those walls like the scent of roses in a vase?
19806If he brought such a letter, would it invite me to call and be inspected, or would it suggest that I kindly go to the devil?
19806If he did n''t give it to you, I wonder what''s become of the thing?
19806If it had been he the first time, would the dog have waited all those weeks for his revenge?"
19806If you did this in his name and his honour, could he have a better memorial?"
19806If you had n''t cared for me, what you did might have been--(only''might'', mind you, for what man can judge a girl''s heart?)
19806If you wo n''t marry me and if you wo n''t take money from the Becketts, what will become of you?
19806Instead, his sightless but beautiful eyes seemed to search the room, and he said,"Molly, you''re here, are n''t you?"
19806Is it a bargain?"
19806Is it an intrusion to tell you that your loss is mine too?
19806Is n''t that enough for you?
19806Is there nothing we can do?
19806Is your blind brother a prize worth squabbling over?
19806Is your brother''s case past cure?"
19806It never seemed real that you could care, in spite of all-- that you''d forgive me, if you should come back----""Did you want me to come?"
19806It was as if he''d put his finger to his nose and chuckled in impish glee:"You hope to get rid of us, do you, you minx?
19806It was when he heard how the trick had been played and won by sheer bravado, that he cried out in rage,"How could I count on such a_ coup_?
19806It would have been absurd to say:"How dare you call my nose a darling?"
19806Just how far would Jim have gone in keeping up the tragic farce?
19806La Grande Place-- La Petite Place?
19806May I call upon you?
19806May I pay for the picture in cash-- and may I come back here, or wherever you are on the fifteenth day from now, and introduce myself properly?
19806May I wish it on your finger-- with the greatest wish in the world?"
19806May n''t those thoughts influence Jim Beckett not to detest me as I deserve?
19806My Girl-- my lost, found love-- do you suppose it was of your own accord you came to my people and said you belonged to me?
19806Next I thought: Why not Dierdre?
19806Not women, too?"
19806Now do you begin to see light?"
19806O''Farrell?"
19806Oh, the_ ring_?
19806Oh, why did n''t I add another prayer to my last, and beg God to let me die that minute?
19806Or should I say Lieutenant or Captain?"
19806Or was it some other girl who had won him at first sight?
19806Ought I to accept?"
19806Ought I to let it be done?
19806Perhaps Mother told you?"
19806Perhaps it would fatigue you?
19806Rather a smart, cynical way of winding up those"exhibition pages"was it not, Padre?
19806Shall I grow callous as time goes on, and accept everything as though I really were what they call me-- their"daughter"?
19806Shall I tell it to you?"
19806She faints easily-- and what with the air raid-- maybe you''ll let us pay our respects before you leave to- morrow?
19806She says you did n''t love him, but she''s wrong-- isn''t she?"
19806She''s very pretty, is n''t she?"
19806Sure you wo n''t change your mind and bolt with me?--or do you count on your invincible charm,"_ über alles_"?"
19806Surely, they''re happier with us than they could have been without us?
19806Suzanne, why did you keep it from me that your hair had turned white with grief?
19806That looks horrible in black and white, does n''t it, Padre?
19806The Hôtel de Ville?
19806The Queen of Hearts, you remember-- and the Knave of-- Spades, was n''t it?
19806The arcades?
19806The beautiful belfry?
19806The charming old shops?
19806The fruit?
19806The little old lady''s, small, cool fingers were on mine,"My daughter, what do the words mean?"
19806The seller of Hearts?
19806The valuable(?)
19806Then I asked,"What do you want?"
19806Then he answered-- I remember as if''twas yesterday!--''Mother, you would n''t want her unless I could love her too, would you?''
19806There can be no doubt-- can there?"
19806Unless----""Unless-- what?
19806Was it the truth you told the O''Farrell man?"
19806Was that a true impression?
19806We can leave the room free, ca n''t we, Miss O''Malley?"
19806We might have missed them, we creatures with mere eyes, if Brian had n''t asked,"Ca n''t you see the trenches?"
19806We''re friends, are n''t we?
19806Were their chins more prominent?
19806Were their jaws squarer?
19806What answer could I give?
19806What did time matter to them?
19806What do you think they did when they were masters here?"
19806What does Mademoiselle say?"
19806What does it matter about my poor hair?
19806What does it matter what happens to me, if only Jack Curtis''s"feeling"comes true?
19806What had he meant by saying that his mission would be no more dangerous than a rat- trap for a bit of toasted cheese?
19806What have_ you_ done?
19806What if he knew the truth about that brother and sister?
19806What if there''d been some new bombardment we had n''t had time to hear of, and the Cathedral were_ gone_?
19806What is money for, except to be spent?
19806What is one flea on a blanket?
19806What is there I can do to prove our gratitude?
19806What next?
19806What picture was it of which they spoke?
19806What pleasure is like spending to do good?
19806What should I be doing at this moment, if I had yielded to their wish and stopped downstairs with them?
19806What will the next turn of their spiral bring, I wonder?
19806What would he think of civilization, he who held his dukedom against the star warrior of the century, Charles the Bold?
19806What''s his name?"
19806When a thing is already black, can it be painted blacker?
19806When can I see you alone?"
19806When he let me breathe for a second, I gasped that, of course, it_ could n''t_ be true, this wonderful thing that was happening?
19806Whether you got that message or not who knows?
19806Which hurt is worse, to love a man, and believe oneself forgotten, or to love and know one has been loved, and then become unworthy?
19806Who are you, please?"
19806Who can tell if he will ever get his sight again?
19806Who can tell?
19806Who had learned that we were at this hotel?
19806Who knows but he remembers our Jimmy?"
19806Who knows but they have been coming ever since 1532, when it was finished?
19806Who thinks nowadays of its powerful Cistercian Abbey, that dominated the country round?
19806Who thinks twice, when travelling this Appian Way which Germany has given France, of any history which began or ended before the year 1914?
19806Who told you he was good- looking?"
19806Who was your specialist in Paris?"
19806Who''s to say you did n''t meet?
19806Why am I''cruel,''simply asking if it''s true that you''ve loved me?
19806Why do you seem so different to me from other people?"
19806Why had he been singing in New York after Italy joined the Allies?
19806Why not Jim Beckett?"
19806Why not wait unless you hear again more definitely?"
19806Why not, when in return so much was to be done for France?
19806Why not?
19806Why not?
19806Why should n''t you have loved me a little bit-- say, the hundredth part as much as I loved you?
19806Why, did n''t that fairy- story king, Haroun al Raschid, send him from Bagdad the"keys of the tomb of Christ,"as Chief of the Christian World?
19806Why, do you suppose we forget Jim''s as much to you as to us?
19806Why, then, had he left England for Italy when the war broke out?
19806Will he turn away, I wonder, if I walk up to him and hold out my hand?
19806Will you give me your word that this whole quarter shall be safe?''
19806Would Herter operate?
19806Would he have kissed me?
19806Would he not balk?
19806Would he not refuse to be bothered?
19806Would he suddenly dash my sinful hopes by saying,"_ Pas de réponse, Mademoiselle_"; or would he bring me a letter from Father and Mother Beckett?
19806Would he----?
19806Would n''t he like to have a monument in_ Everyman''s Land_?"
19806Would you perhaps wish to avoid it?"
19806Yet who can tell when they may choose to wake us up with a bomb or two?"
19806Yet whom did I know in Paris?
19806You do n''t mind being called by the old name?
19806You do n''t mind my saying that, Brian, or taking it for granted you''ll consent-- or calling you Brian, do you?"
19806You do n''t really mind because I''m from the North and you from the South, and because we do n''t quite agree about politics?"
19806You have come to Meaux because of his letters?
19806You remember, Padre, my telling you that the Becketts were negotiating for a château, before they arrived in France to visit their son?
19806You remember-- the ring of my bet, that almost made me lose you?
19806You say it belongs only to blind people; but if I am blind-- with a different kind of blindness, and worse-- can''t I get there with you?
19806You see those flowers on their graves?
19806You understand now what I meant, when I said that one question from me and an answer from you, would smooth away all my difficulties at once?
14394A claim on you for what, pray?
14394A row? 14394 About Peter-- who?"
14394About my father''s affairs? 14394 All over-- how?"
14394Am I to understand, then, that you_ are_ half in love with him?
14394And are n''t you very much appalled?
14394And can you tell?
14394And did he give in?
14394And did you change anything more than your-- mind?
14394And do you mean to say that common sense requires that she shall give me up?
14394And do you suppose he would? 14394 And he is n''t offering us the money merely for the sake of getting rid of it, do you think?"
14394And how are you going to give him a show if he wo n''t take it?
14394And if I did n''t attempt it? 14394 And pray, what sort of a person is this Englishman to whom my niece has got herself engaged?"
14394And sit down under him, while he looms up into God knows where?
14394And so you''ve come back to Boston to work?
14394And the Compton heirs, and old Miss Burnaby, and the two Misses Brown, and--"Have n''t they anything left?
14394And this something to tell you? 14394 And what about the Guion family honor and all that?
14394And what about the suffering?
14394And what did you say to him? 14394 And what do you make of him?"
14394And what does Colonel Ashley look like, Drucie?
14394And what happened then?
14394And what has it all got to do with me?
14394And what_ is_ your opinion? 14394 And when I told her that-- the other day-- she said--""Yes?
14394And you believed him?
14394And you mean that your Colonel Ashley would be brave enough to walk up and have_ his_ head cut off?
14394And you took money from him?
14394And you''re not going to?
14394And you? 14394 And you?"
14394Are n''t there exceptions to that rule?
14394Are n''t you afraid of taking cold?
14394Are you-- are you--_sure?_She reflected a minute.
14394Been up to look at the great man?
14394Been up to see--?
14394Bored?--with all your money?
14394But did she know you were-- what shall I say?--negotiating?
14394But do n''t you think it''s what he''s working for? 14394 But how could there be worse?"
14394But if he did?
14394But if it was some one who could help you?
14394But since you ca n''t,he said, rather cruelly,"would n''t the next best thing be-- to marry the man you care for?"
14394But since you''re not me-- since you are yourself-- would you still rather that I went to Singville?
14394But supposing he was? 14394 But what the deuce--?"
14394But what''s it to be?
14394But when you_ do_ want to do it?
14394But you do n''t need the money-- in that way, papa?
14394But you''ve been uncommonly lucky, anyhow, have n''t you? 14394 Ca n''t anything be done?"
14394Ca n''t he do that and still leave things as they are?
14394Chance? 14394 Come and-- what?"
14394Concession to what, for pity''s sake?
14394Could n''t I--?
14394Could n''t you let me keep that as my secret?
14394Could n''t you?
14394Davenant? 14394 Did I ever tell you that he once asked me to marry him?"
14394Did Mr. Guion tell you so?
14394Did he ever say anything about that?
14394Did he make you think--?
14394Did he say I wanted anything?
14394Did he say-- anything in particular?
14394Did he say--He swallowed hard, and began again, more hoarsely:"Did he say she was-- in love with-- with_ him_?"
14394Did he use the word-- charity?
14394Did he, by Jove?
14394Did n''t I do something very rude to you-- once-- a long time ago?
14394Did n''t answer him?
14394Did n''t have-- you? 14394 Did n''t you know your old auntie would come to you?
14394Did you ask her?
14394Did you know I-- I loved you?
14394Did you think he''d fallen in love with you all of a sudden when he came that night to dinner?
14394Did you think that that was what I meant when I-- I opened my heart to you last night?
14394Did you-- did you-- refuse him? 14394 Do I look like that kind of a hunter?"
14394Do I understand you to be suspicious of my motives?
14394Do I understand,he asked, with a roughness assumed to conceal his agitation,"that you''re offering me my liberty?"
14394Do him good-- how?
14394Do n''t you love me? 14394 Do n''t you think we make more of suffering than there''s any need for?
14394Do n''t_ you_ think so?
14394Do you call that a fair way of putting it-- to say that I play you false because I refuse to involve you in our family disasters? 14394 Do you know what makes me think of him?"
14394Do you mean that you''d be willing to-- to-- to_ give_ it to me?
14394Do you mean that you''d rather do it if it was n''t for me?
14394Do you mean that you''d-- send in your papers?
14394Do you mean that, sir? 14394 Do you mean to say they''d make him give it up?"
14394Do you mean-- on your part?
14394Do you really want to marry him?
14394Do you suppose,she said, trying to speak casually,"that his wanting to help papa out has anything to do with that?"
14394Do you think I could?
14394Do you think I''ve found it now?
14394Do you think he would want to-- you must excuse the crudity of the question-- do you think he would want to back out?
14394Do you think it''s possible for a person to be in love with two people at the same time?
14394Does it?
14394Does my father owe money to_ them_?
14394Does n''t it strike you that it would be-- in order? 14394 Does n''t surprise you?"
14394Does that mean that there are conceivable conditions in which you might want to?
14394Does that mean that you''ll take him if you ca n''t do better?
14394Does that mean that you''re not coming home to- night?
14394Drusilla, did Mr. Davenant ever say anything to you about me?
14394Drusilla, do you remember Jack Berrington?
14394Eh, bien, monsieur?
14394Eh, bien? 14394 Even if it seems that it-- it_ could n''t_?"
14394Everything?
14394Forget what?
14394Fought what thing to a finish?
14394Going, too? 14394 Got a light?"
14394Had a claim on you? 14394 Had it been in the habit of happening?"
14394Had n''t you better talk to_ him_ about it?
14394Hallett, was it? 14394 Has anything happened?"
14394Has it got about-- generally?
14394Has my nephew, Henry Guion, been doing things-- that-- that would send him-- to prison?
14394Has_ she_ got anything to do with it?
14394Have I been hearing things? 14394 Have I ever been anything else with you?"
14394Have I? 14394 Have n''t you noticed it-- about Peter?"
14394Have n''t you noticed,he said, slowly, choosing his words with care,"that generosity consists largely in the point of view of the other party?
14394Have n''t you?
14394Have you any idea why I''m asking you now?
14394Have you enjoyed your evening?
14394He did n''t tell you? 14394 He does that well, does n''t he?"
14394He''ll be paid off, wo n''t he, if we return his loan at an interest of five-- I''m willing to say six-- per cent.?
14394How can he tell, then, that you''ll ever pay it back?
14394How could I, Cousin Rodney? 14394 How did you find papa to- day?"
14394How did you make the discovery?
14394How do you know he''s trying it?
14394How do you mean-- the circumstances?
14394How do_ you_ know? 14394 How is it different?"
14394How long have you known?
14394How many years would that be?
14394How so? 14394 How so?"
14394How so?
14394How''s that?
14394I ca n''t go on swallowing his beastly favors, do n''t you see? 14394 I might have said:''Why do n''t you give_ her_ a chance?''
14394I suppose I mean-- on everybody''s part?
14394I suppose it''s the Clay heirs and the Rodman heirs you owe the money to?
14394I suppose you have no idea of what that meant to me?
14394I suppose you never heard that he once asked me to marry him?
14394I suppose you''re not in love with any one over there?
14394I suppose,she ventured, after long thinking,"that that''s the money we''ve been living on all these years?"
14394I thought you did n''t want my help, if you could possibly get any other?
14394I wonder how much you know?
14394I wonder if you''d understand that I''m not speaking ungraciously if I said that-- I should n''t offer them anything at all?
14394I wonder,she said,"if you have any idea of the many things you''ve taught me?"
14394I''m not called on to go poking behind things to see what''s there, now am I?
14394I?
14394In spite of all I''ve said as to what I should feel?
14394In that case he''s got you on the hip, has n''t he? 14394 Is he as stiff as all that?"
14394Is he so very rich?
14394Is he-- is he-- coming to Stoughton?
14394Is it burglars? 14394 Is it the right way for you?"
14394Is it?
14394Is n''t he? 14394 Is n''t it conceivable,"he persisted,"that a man might like to do a thing, once in a way, without--""Without asking for an equivalent in return?
14394Is n''t it pretty nearly-- self- evident?
14394Is n''t it true--?
14394Is n''t it very serious-- when there''s anything wrong with estates?
14394Is n''t that a very queer way to lend money?
14394Is n''t that obvious? 14394 Is she in love with him?"
14394Is that because of any reason of--_his?_"It''s because of a number of reasons, one of which is mine. 14394 Is that necessary?"
14394Is that papa?
14394Is that true?
14394Is that true?--or are you saying it because-- because I put up the money?
14394Is that why you seem to have taken a fancy to him?
14394Is that your only reason?
14394Is there nobody with you?
14394Is this Irish linen or German? 14394 It isn''t-- it ca n''t be--?"
14394It might n''t be any harm; but would it be any good?
14394It''s perfectly lovely, is n''t it? 14394 It''s what we''re talking about, is n''t it?
14394Last night? 14394 Let-- who-- go to the deuce?"
14394Look here, Olivia,he cried, nervously, holding his chair by the back,"what does it all mean?
14394Look here,he said, with a sort of appealing roughness,"you''re quite straight with me, are n''t you?"
14394Make what-- anything?
14394Marry him? 14394 May I ask your motive in springing this on me, Marquise?"
14394May I ask-- just what you mean by that?
14394Need I explain?
14394Not going to back out, eh?
14394Of honor?
14394Off? 14394 Oh, Peter, ca n''t you do anything?"
14394Oh, Peter,_ wo n''t_ you do something?
14394Oh, do n''t you? 14394 Oh, indeed?
14394Oh, papa, what''s the matter?
14394Oh, so that''s the way it is? 14394 Oh?
14394Olivia and--_me_?
14394On me? 14394 On what grounds?"
14394On whose account? 14394 One of yourselves?
14394Only told you-- what?
14394Or the happiness?
14394Papa, are your troubles anything like Jack Berrington''s?
14394Papa, you would n''t let a stranger pay your debts?
14394Rum chap, is n''t he?
14394See this bit of jade?
14394Sell his estate and pay up? 14394 Sha''n''t you_ have_ to go?"
14394Shall I tell you a little story?
14394Shall we have to lose Tory Hill?
14394She does n''t like me, what?
14394Should n''t you like me to go back to the ladies? 14394 Should you say,"he asked, while doing it,"that I ought to attempt anything in that line?"
14394Since when?
14394So everything you undertook you pulled off successfully?
14394So he''s the Fairy Prince? 14394 So that if I feel that to go on and keep my word is the right thing-- or rather the only thing--?"
14394So that part of it is settled?
14394So the thing is out?
14394So what then?
14394Some of which might have been-- in particular?
14394Some one-- in England?
14394Square him?
14394Still,she persisted,"if I marry him you''d be sometimes in England; and you''d come to visit us, would n''t you?"
14394Surely it''s the only way to look at it? 14394 Take me, papa?
14394Temporary?
14394That is, you want to know what I should be pulling off for myself?
14394That you-- what?
14394That, of course, depends on what your idea of a good time may be; does n''t it, Rodney?
14394The big fellow who was here just now? 14394 Then for Heaven''s sake what_ have_ you asked for?
14394Then what the deuce is he up to?
14394Then what_ have_ you come on? 14394 Then what_ is_ he offering it to you for?"
14394Then why do n''t you break off your engagement?
14394Then why do n''t you tell him so?
14394Then you''re really so much in love that you''d be willing to throw up everything on account of it?
14394Then you''ve been-- hearing-- things?
14394Then you_ have_ drawn inferences?
14394Then, what is?
14394Then, what_ is_ the most important thing?
14394There? 14394 They ca n''t expect me to repeat it, now, can they?"
14394To his_ face_?
14394Twice round the world since you were last in Boston? 14394 Up to what point?"
14394Was n''t it for something of that kind-- something wrong with estates-- that Jack Berrington was sent to prison?
14394We''re going the same way, are n''t we?
14394Well then?
14394Well, for the Lord''s sake, Drusilla, what is it?
14394Well, if she''s told you, is n''t that enough?
14394Well, sir, suppose I allowed you to remain curious? 14394 Well, then, is n''t it true that there are things you''ve wanted-- wanted very much-- and never had?
14394Well, then, what more is there to it?
14394Well, then?
14394Well, what do you propose?
14394Well, what is it?
14394Well, what then?
14394Well, why should n''t I? 14394 Well, wo n''t it be we?
14394Well, would n''t that be your idea?
14394What about me?
14394What am I going to do?
14394What are_ you_ going to do, Henry, when the gallant stranger carries off Olivia, a fortnight hence?
14394What can he do, child? 14394 What did she say about him?"
14394What difference does it make to you?
14394What difference_ can_ it make to me?
14394What do you know about him? 14394 What do you mean by-- practically to give you?"
14394What do_ you?_"You know him,Ashley urged,"and I do n''t."
14394What for? 14394 What for?"
14394What is it that you ca n''t bear? 14394 What is it, papa?
14394What is it? 14394 What is it?"
14394What kind of a woman am I?
14394What made you think of it?
14394What made you think that?
14394What makes one think anything? 14394 What makes you ask that?"
14394What makes you think I should do that?
14394What of that? 14394 What put that into your head?"
14394What shall we see? 14394 What the dickens made him do that?"
14394What time is it?
14394What was too awful? 14394 What would be the use of telling you a thing that would make you unhappy and that I could n''t help?"
14394What would you do?
14394What''s he doing?
14394What''s he want a chance for? 14394 What''s the matter?"
14394What?
14394What_ could_ it have?
14394When people have done so much harm as-- as we''ve done, do you think it''s right that they should get off scot- free-- without punishment?
14394When you say that,he asked,"do you mean anything in particular?"
14394Where should you go?--to New York?
14394Which is to his discredit?
14394Which would be a good deal, would n''t it?
14394Who on earth should I be in love with? 14394 Who told you that?"
14394Who would n''t? 14394 Who''s Collins?
14394Who''s that?
14394Who? 14394 Who?
14394Who? 14394 Who?
14394Who? 14394 Whom did you hear it from?"
14394Why did n''t you tell me that this morning?
14394Why did you never tell me?
14394Why do n''t you write to her?
14394Why do you always say that with-- an''if''?
14394Why do you say we?
14394Why not to me?
14394Why should she find it difficult to speak of? 14394 Why should you be so bent on seeing your father follow Jack Berrington, when it could be avoided?"
14394Why should you care? 14394 Why?
14394Why? 14394 Why?"
14394Why?
14394Would he stand a big test?
14394Would it make any difference to_ you?_"It would make the difference--He stopped in confusion.
14394Would n''t that be rather soon?
14394Would n''t you rather?
14394Would you be very much hurt,she asked, without raising her head,"if I begged you to go back to England without our being married at all?"
14394Would you tell me if-- if you were?
14394Would you, or would you not?
14394Would_ you_ take him?
14394Would_ you_?
14394Yes, Miss Guion? 14394 Yes; that''s it, is n''t it?
14394Yes? 14394 Yes?
14394Yes? 14394 You can borrow what I''m willing to lend, ca n''t you?"
14394You do n''t mean to infer that this man Ashley might n''t come up to the scratch?
14394You do n''t see--?
14394You do n''t think I question that?
14394You have no objection, I presume, to that?
14394You know that everything will have to be sold?
14394You know what would happen, do n''t you?
14394You see that, Cousin Rodney, do n''t you? 14394 You thought I might be-- in love?"
14394You understood, then,Davenant stammered,"that he might have to-- to-- go away?"
14394You were n''t proposing to her yourself, were you?
14394You''re not-- you''re_ not_--saying all this,he pleaded,"because you think I''ve done anything that calls for a reward?
14394You''ve been to his office, then? 14394 You_ did n''t_ ask him for it?
14394Your duty to stand by me?
14394A woman''s eye sees those little things, do n''t you think?
14394Again some minutes went by before she said:"Is it as bad as all that?"
14394All she could say, however, for the moment was:"Wo n''t you sit down?
14394And I can''t-- I simply_ can''t_--let a chap like that make me a present of all his chances--""Did he have any?"
14394And do n''t you see what a fix he''s put me in?"
14394And what are they?"
14394And what has he said?"
14394And what would you scribble?"
14394And you had to take his money after all?"
14394And, besides, I''ve said I_ would_ marry him if he''d give up this wild project--""But you''re in love with him, are n''t you?
14394Any help there is very far in the future, so that--""Ashley, I take it, is a man of some means?"
14394Are n''t you going to drink your tea?"
14394Are n''t you well?"
14394Are there many more?
14394Are you the first or the second wife''s son?"
14394As he stood looking down at her his kindly eyes blinked for a minute longer, before he added,"Do you see the point?"
14394At the same time I wish--""You wish what?"
14394Aunt Vic has always made much of her-- and she''s very well off--""Is there nothing to be expected in that quarter for yourself?"
14394Back again?"
14394Banks do it, do n''t they?
14394Banks lend them money,_ do n''t_ they, Peter?
14394But I say, you''ll not tell Olivia, will you?
14394But I''m surprised to hear you commend it; are n''t you, father?
14394But he''s paid_ you_ off, has n''t he?
14394But if anything miscarried--""You do n''t_ expect_ anything to miscarry?"
14394But if my niece had n''t abandoned me--""Why should n''t you come home, madame?"
14394But is n''t it self- evident, or nearly, that we''re individuals, while you''re parts of an intricate social system?
14394But she said only:"Did Drusilla say it was to come to my aid?"
14394But what matters a little sooner or a little later?
14394But_ you_ ca n''t, can you?
14394By the way, how did you like the_ Louisiana_?"
14394Chance for what?"
14394Could I, Cousin Cherry?"
14394Did n''t you?"
14394Did you box his ears?"
14394Did you know Mr. Davenant had offered to pay our debts?"
14394Did you know him_ well?_""_ I_ did n''t think it was well; but apparently he did, because he asked me to marry him."
14394Did you send him away?"
14394Did you?"
14394Do n''t you love that expression?--''broken lights''?
14394Do n''t you see?
14394Do n''t you see?
14394Do n''t you see?
14394Do n''t you see?
14394Do n''t you see?"
14394Do n''t you think, Colonel Ashley?"
14394Do n''t you, Colonel Ashley?
14394Do n''t you?"
14394Do things happen by coincidence and chance?...
14394Do you know that she refused-- refused violently-- to help_ me_?"
14394Do you like him-- this Englishman?"
14394Do you mean to say he dropped out of a clear sky?"
14394Do you mean to say that what I''ve done for Mr. Guion would keep you from getting married?"
14394Do you mean?--No, you ca n''t mean!--it isn''t-- Drusilla?"
14394Do you mind telling me?
14394Do you see now how bad it is?"
14394Do you see?"
14394Do you see?"
14394Do you see?"
14394Do you think he''s ahead of you now?"
14394Fixed the date yet?"
14394Funny, is n''t it?
14394Going where?"
14394Got here only this afternoon, did n''t you?
14394Got you out of an orphanage, did n''t they, or something like that?
14394Had faith and prayer and God anything to do with it?...
14394Had he not challenged her two or three times to say she did n''t care for him?
14394Has n''t it struck you-- how much he was in love with her?"
14394Has n''t she told you about_ him?_""Not a word.
14394Has she told you so?"
14394Have n''t you any idea?"
14394Have you had any reason to change your opinion since?"
14394Having got out of a dull place like Waverton, why should you return to it?"
14394He contrived, however, to throw a tone of objection into his voice as he said:"Would n''t work?
14394He expected something cutting, but she only said:"What makes you ask that?"
14394He found himself asking the question,"Why should I try to make more money when I''ve got enough already?"
14394He grew red and stammered:"But, Miss Guion, you''re-- you''re-- in love with him?--the man you''d be going away with?"
14394He had made up his mind--""Do you mean that the decision to accept it rested with you?"
14394He lent it to us-- out of-- out of--""Yes; out of what?"
14394He stood by me during all my trouble, never letting me know that he''d changed in any way--""Oh, he''s changed, has he?"
14394He was lucky to get off with that; was n''t he, Peter?
14394He was silent so long that she asked, not impatiently:"It would make what difference, Rupert?"
14394He''s the type to which you can do justice only when you''ve a standard of comparison, n''est- ce pas?
14394Here Ashley said:"Has all this got anything to do with Olivia?
14394Home?"
14394How could I put myself under such an obligation to a man I hardly know?"
14394How do you mean?"
14394How should I know?
14394How so?
14394How was he to deal with this new, extraordinary feature in the case?
14394I asked for a miracle... and the next day it seemed to have been worked.... Was it the prayer that did it?...
14394I can see three good reasons why you should keep your word to her--""Indeed?
14394I could n''t let you do it for me--""But what about_ him?_ You let--_him!_""Oh, but that''s different."
14394I fancied that-- when I saw how things were with you-- you saw how they were with me-- and that--""Saw how they were with you?
14394I hope you''re not up to anything, Vic?"
14394I must tell you quite plainly that if the money had n''t come papa would have had to go to--""But the money did come?"
14394I really ca n''t do more, now, can I?"
14394I shall have my part in it, sha''n''t I?
14394I should be satisfied with that, now should n''t I?"
14394I suppose you''re one of Walter Davenant''s boys?
14394I?
14394If I draw any inferences--""Well?"
14394If he had n''t seen-- what?"
14394If he refuses it, I sha''n''t be offended; and if he does n''t refuse it--""You''d let him have it, just the same?"
14394If she had n''t he would never have shot off in that way, like a bolt from the blue-- But what''s the matter, dear?
14394In any case, they should have had the money some day-- when I-- that is, I''d made my will n''est- ce pas?
14394In what way did he get the better of you?"
14394Is dinner ready?"
14394Is he a confounded sentimentalist?--or is he still putting up a bluff?"
14394Is it any wonder that I look upon what''s done for my own niece as so much saved?
14394Is n''t it just as well to be in my power as in the power of other people?"
14394Is n''t it serious to you, too, to feel that you must be true to me-- and marry me-- after all that''s come to pass?"
14394Is n''t it, Cousin Henry?"
14394Is n''t it, Peter?
14394Is n''t that it?"
14394Is n''t that partly what they''re for?
14394Is n''t that the way you''d take it?"
14394Is n''t that what we''ve been saying all along, Cousin Rodney and I?
14394Is n''t that what you''ve wanted?
14394Is that his name?
14394Is that it?"
14394It implied that Drusilla had been better posted than herself; and if Drusilla, why not others?
14394It was a minute or two before Ashley said:"What''s the good of forgetting one thing when there are so many others to remember?"
14394It was almost over her shoulder that she called back:"Where are you staying?"
14394It was at the door, to which she accompanied him, that he said:"By the way, when are you coming home?"
14394It was some minutes before she ventured to say:"And suppose you discovered that you could n''t_ get_ all?"
14394It was then that he found the question raising itself within him,"Is that what''s wrong with me?"
14394It would afford an answer to the question,"What lack I yet?"
14394It would have taken you or me a long time to work that plan out, would n''t it, Henry?
14394It would have to be done through papa?"
14394It''ll all have to go to settle the claims of this Mr.--By the way, where is he?
14394It''s one of our wonderful, old- fashioned Octobers, is n''t it?
14394Landed on the-- let me see!--she sailed again yesterday!--landed on the 20th, did n''t you?"
14394Made some money out of that mine business, did n''t you?
14394Me?
14394Men have so much on their hands-- the great things of the world-- but the little things, they often count, do n''t you think?
14394Mine?"
14394N''est- ce pas?
14394N''est- ce pas?
14394Now, really?"
14394Or was it in sugar?"
14394Peter?"
14394Rupert Ashley arrives in three or four days''time, and then--""You do n''t think he''d want to back out, do you?"
14394See?"
14394She had only voice enough to say:"What makes you think so?"
14394She must say something, no matter what, and the words that came were:"Wo n''t you have another cup of tea?"
14394She said--?"
14394So it was-- that man?"
14394That''s downright sporting, is n''t it?"
14394That-- lumpkin?"
14394The idea was not new to Olivia, so she said, simply,"And are you going to?"
14394The minute a thing is in Peter''s hands--""Have you such a lot of confidence in him?"
14394The pain?"
14394The question is now whether I can take it, what?"
14394The sooner it''s over the sooner to sleep, what?"
14394The way she laid your wrapper on the bed?"
14394Then, after long silence, she asked:"Is it much?"
14394Then, stopping abruptly, he continued,"I fancy you know your way pretty well in any direction you want to go, do n''t you?"
14394There was a smile on his lips as he said:"Do n''t you infer anything?"
14394There''s no one else--""And has she sent you as her messenger?
14394There''s something about him that makes you think of a St. Bernard-- so big and true and loyal--""Did you ever think he might be in love with you?"
14394Things are so complicated already, do n''t you think?
14394Time and experience seemed both to pass over them before she uttered the one word:"Why?"
14394Tracked her like a bloodhound, what?
14394Was it any one''s faith?...
14394Was it any one''s prayer?...
14394Was it-- God?...
14394Was n''t he a foundling, or a street Arab, or something like that?
14394We should be worried over the effect on our trusteeships and the big estates we''ve had the care of--""What about the big estates?"
14394Well, I was n''t?"
14394What about_ him_?"
14394What are you leading up to?"
14394What are you looking at me for?"
14394What chance?
14394What difference does it make to you?
14394What difference_ could_ it make?
14394What difference_ must_ it make?
14394What do you call it?"
14394What do you call it?"
14394What does he expect to gain?"
14394What for?"
14394What good will it do?
14394What has he to do with her?"
14394What have you got so especially against Davenant, anyhow?"
14394What is it?
14394What is it?"
14394What kind of a row?"
14394What makes you think we ca n''t?
14394What more can you ask?"
14394What more could he ask?
14394What put that into your head?"
14394What should he do?
14394What sort of trip did you have, and how did you leave your people?
14394What then?"
14394What was the use?
14394What''s happened?
14394What''s that got to do with it?
14394What''s the matter with you, over here, that you all grow old at a minute''s notice, so to speak?
14394What?
14394What?"
14394What_ were_ we talking of?"
14394When a man has that--""But you''ll have to begin all over again, sha''n''t you?"
14394When did you ever see him?"
14394When''s the wedding?
14394Where are you off to?
14394Where should he go?
14394Where''s the professor?"
14394Where?"
14394Where?"
14394Who could venture to say how far?
14394Who else should it be?"
14394Who is he?"
14394Who''s to take care of it if I do n''t?
14394Who?"
14394Who?"
14394Who?"
14394Why ca n''t she come herself, if it''s so bad as all that-- or write?
14394Why did n''t they cable?
14394Why did n''t you cable?
14394Why do you ask?"
14394Why does n''t he come and be paid?"
14394Why not let everything be just as it is?
14394Why not trust me-- and let me have a free hand?"
14394Why not--?"
14394Why not?"
14394Why not?"
14394Why should Mr. Davenant be generous to us?
14394Why should n''t I pay yours, when I should like the job?"
14394Why should n''t I stay with you?
14394Why should you feel your way?
14394Will you please let me pass?"
14394Will you sit down on the step, or go in and bring out a chair?
14394Wo n''t it keep you awake?"
14394Would it be reasonable, would it be decent, to carry out rich and elaborate plans in a ruined house?
14394Would it make any difference to him?
14394Would it make any difference to you?"
14394Would she help you?"
14394Would there be any harm in it?"
14394Would you expect him to acknowledge it?
14394Would you marry me then?"
14394Would you mind waiting?"
14394Would you?"
14394XXI"What do you think of him?"
14394Yes?
14394You can''t--""Ca n''t what, Colonel?"
14394You did n''t_ ask_ him for it?"
14394You know that that happens sometimes, do n''t you?--without any one being to blame at all?"
14394You know what his kindness in helping papa has made people think, do n''t you?"
14394You see that, do n''t you?
14394You understand that what you''re proposing is immoral, do n''t you?"
14394You wo n''t come in just yet?
14394You would n''t call him a gentleman?
14394You would n''t shut me out from that?
14394You would n''t take his money now, papa?"
14394You''d do it, dear, would n''t you, if Aunt Vic were to leave the whole thing to you?
14394You''ll be back before spring?"
14394You''ll never be able to forget for an hour of the day that you treated a man like that-- and then took his money, will you?
14394You''re not ill?"
14394You''ve been so kind-- so noble-- when all the while--""We wo n''t discuss that, what?
14394Young Davenant?
14394_ Are_ we?"
14394_ Have_ you?
14394_ Were_ they vain?
14394are n''t you, Peter?"
14394man-- and a fellow-- dash it all, I might as well say it!--I''m a fellow they''ve got their eye on-- in the line of high office, do n''t you know?
14394or are you-- trying it on?"
14394or is there a Mind that directs them?...
14394to end with her asking herself:"What difference does it make to me?"
14394was followed by the question"Why should n''t it be true?"
14394was n''t he, father?"
17376''Are you going home?'' 17376 ''By what?''
17376''De Laurièr? 17376 ''Have you found a woman, at any rate?''
17376''So you are frightened?'' 17376 ''Where?''
17376''Who will lend his cloak? 17376 ''Yes; so you have come out?
17376''Your name, Christian name, and profession?'' 17376 A Hungarian?"
17376A head was put out of the litter:''What is the matter?''
17376A lady of his acquaintance?
17376A prophet? 17376 An honest man would not willingly give his hand to a liberated convict, would he, even if that convict were his own son?
17376And I may bring the sable cloak and the whip with me?
17376And has not that given you an idea?
17376And have they met again?
17376And how came the marquis to betray the secret?
17376And how is Mademoiselle Henriette?
17376And how is your friend?
17376And if she comes again?
17376And if she puts up with it?
17376And the astonished husband appeared in the door with a cigar in his mouth, and said:''What is the matter? 17376 And the lease that you signed at the lawyer''s, Monsieur Albin Calvert, in the_ Rue du Faubourg- Poissonnière_, is in your name, I believe?"
17376And the rest?
17376And then?
17376And this somebody was...?
17376And what about the other?
17376And what did you do?
17376And why not? 17376 And you are sure that you are not mistaken?"
17376And you do not see them any more?
17376And your mother?
17376Are they will- o''-the- wisps?
17376Are you in earnest?
17376Are you not an old school- fellow of mine?
17376Are you really capable of making such a sacrifice for me, to renounce luxury and to have my poverty?
17376Are you sleepy?
17376As long as I choose to permit it,she said;"but what will you do, if I bring her back to your arms?
17376But how can you manage it, Captain?
17376But supposing she comes to you?
17376But why did you not call for help?
17376But why, then, William,she asked, timidly,"have you changed your habits?"
17376But you are not fond of him?
17376By accident?
17376Can you do this?
17376Can you doubt it?
17376Can you find any other plea?
17376Certainly,he replied,"but what of that?
17376Did you love her?
17376Do n''t you like it, dear? 17376 Do you know those people?"
17376Do you know where he is hiding?
17376Do you know why I have sent for you?
17376Do you know, Madame,Sabina observed,"that he came back half an hour after he left?"
17376Do you love me?
17376Do you not belong to another man?
17376Do you not see, my good fellow, that by saying that, you throw suspicion on yourself?
17376Do you not want me any more, Tiennou?
17376Do you really wish it?
17376Do you remember those lines from some old poet, which you read to me last year? 17376 Do you think so?"
17376For whom do you take me, pray?
17376Gone away? 17376 Good evening, Glaizette, and everybody; there is room for two more, I suppose?"
17376Has that not already happened? 17376 Have I not let you beat me?"
17376Have they sent him already?
17376Have you ever been jealous? 17376 Have you not yet been delivered from purgatory by our prayers, and all the masses for your soul, which we have said for you?"
17376He came back? 17376 He is not a prince?"
17376How can I?
17376How can you condescend to make any excuses to me? 17376 How can you think that?"
17376How did you come by the picture of this Venus?
17376How did you come here?
17376How did you manage it at last?
17376How do you do it?
17376How do you manage it?
17376How is it possible? 17376 How?
17376How? 17376 How?"
17376I asked no questions, for what was the good of trying to understand? 17376 I have told you of my connection with that little woman, a tradesman''s wife, whom I met on the beach at Dieppe?"
17376I never gave the worn out old rake any hopes, and what does it matter to me, what bargain you made with him? 17376 I should much like to find out how you know who I am?"
17376I suppose this is some joke, Monsieur?
17376I was dumbfounded, and said:''Somebody really suitable? 17376 I was utterly done up, and how could I refuse?
17376I? 17376 If she looks after you?"
17376Is it possible? 17376 Is it possible?"
17376Is that all?
17376Is this the man?
17376Is your father in?
17376Is your husband very unkind to you?
17376Is your wine- growing a success?
17376It is, indeed, Madame,he replied;"do you often go into the country?"
17376Many other thoughts have struck me, but I have no time to note them down for you, and then, should I remember them all? 17376 May I beg you to do it with every possible consideration?"
17376May I beg you to introduce me to the young lady, Herr Löwenfuss?
17376Monsieur,she said,"will you do me a great, a very great pleasure?
17376No, thank you,she replied and turning to the young men again, and pointing to their arms asked:"Do you never feel cold like that?"
17376No, what idea?
17376Not here?
17376Of course, I accepted, for it was too fantastically strange to refuse; do you think so? 17376 Romanesco?"
17376She continued to sob, but stopping suddenly she said to me in broken words, and in a low voice:''Have you any children?''
17376So you will come and see my collection?
17376So you will not take my napoleon?
17376Supposing your husband had seen me?
17376That is a matter of course in your case; what I meant was, what is her name?
17376That is the way-- are you pointing straight?
17376That may be; but what shall we do in France without any arms?
17376The marquis is married to a charming Parisian woman, and was any married man, who loved his wife, ever known to keep a secret from her?
17376The wife of that head of the public office?
17376Then if I were to listen to you favorably, you would let me flog you?
17376Then you think him absolutely incapable of committing such a deed?
17376Then, turning to me, he said:''You are my son; will you come with me? 17376 They knew everything?"
17376Twenty, do you say?
17376Two women at once?
17376Well, Josine had already found somebody else...."And did she tell you her story?
17376Well, supposing I can do it, what shall I be then?
17376Well, what?
17376Well?
17376Well?
17376Well?
17376Were they alone?
17376Were you going to the hotel?
17376What are you laughing at? 17376 What are you talking about, when you say that there are no more adventures?
17376What are you thinking of?
17376What did you do?
17376What do you generally do at this time?
17376What do you mean? 17376 What do you mean?
17376What do you mean?
17376What do you pay for them in the market?
17376What do you want?
17376What does it mean?
17376What dost thou say to it, chaste moon?
17376What is her name?
17376What is it?
17376What is that noise?
17376What is the matter with you?
17376What kind of fishing?
17376What lesson?
17376What makes you say that?
17376What must he do besides?
17376What was it? 17376 What was that?"
17376What was the trick?
17376What? 17376 When may I come?"
17376When?
17376When?
17376Where are you going to?
17376Where is Pierre Benedict''s farm?
17376Where is he?
17376Where is your mother''s grave?
17376Who art thou?
17376Who is she?
17376Who told you his name?
17376Whom do you want?
17376Why did you go to Dieppe?
17376Why did you not tell me sooner? 17376 Why did you show her the preference?"
17376Why did you show her the preference?
17376Why go on a wild goose chase? 17376 Why had she told me a lie?
17376Why have we come?
17376Why lose these ten francs? 17376 Why not?"
17376Why, I should like to know?
17376Why, Madame?
17376Why? 17376 Why?"
17376Why?
17376Why?
17376Why?
17376Will she be back soon?
17376Will you answer all my questions?
17376Will you promise me to do this?
17376Will you really give me twenty?
17376Will you shoot?
17376Without arms? 17376 Women, or a woman?"
17376Would you like one, Monsieur Dufour?
17376You are afraid of a revolution?
17376You have been unhappy?
17376You have come from Fécamp?
17376You have only to command; and we do not know each other in future?
17376You take a great interest in me?
17376You were watching me?
17376You wish to punish me for having loved you, idolized you, I suppose?
17376You?
17376_ He used to say to himself:Who is she?
17376''And would you like to go home with a very pretty woman?''
17376''Is anyone up in your house?''
17376''What are you afraid of?
17376''What do you mean, my good woman?''
17376''What is done in Paris, that is not done everywhere else?''
17376*****"What is he like?"
17376... Had not she a lover?
17376... No danger?
17376... Speak!... Speak!... You will not?
17376AN ADVENTURE IN PARIS Is there any stronger feeling than curiosity in a woman?
17376An Austrian count, who had a loud and silly laugh, said:"Who has saddled you with that yarn?
17376And I did not care much if she was seventy and if she was a ghost or not; I only thought of one thing:''Has she really good limbs?''"
17376And after a moment''s silence, she continued:''Have you ever been in love, Monsieur Paul?''
17376And after all, what was I risking?
17376And as you want a story, eh?
17376And how is your headache?''
17376And may I ask his name?''
17376And then after a short silence he continued:"Have you any fowls you could sell us, every week?"
17376And then he added:"A little more rabbit, my dear?"
17376And then her eyes, her eyes beneath her smooth brow, were surely the eyes of an old woman?
17376And then, what could she have to do in that house?''
17376And thereupon, she, seized by a kind of mad audacity, came forward and said:"What shall you charge me for the figure?"
17376And what is that, I ask you?
17376Are you fond of fishing?"
17376Are you going already?"
17376Are you not afraid that she will have her revenge and pay you out in your own coin?"
17376Bah?
17376Because I am poor?
17376But how could she manage to get him to be present at such abominable orgies?
17376But how?
17376But if I were to tell you immediately by whom, there would be no story, eh?
17376But mastering his feelings, he added:"Whom was she married to?"
17376But then, how explain her perfectly white hair, not gray or growing gray, but absolutely white, as white as any octogenarian''s?
17376But we certainly talked, but what about?
17376But what do you mean by making me wear your livery?
17376But what was the use of his indignation?
17376But what?
17376Can one tell what goes on in such undeveloped brains?
17376Can we not get something to drink?"
17376Certainly, little Baron de Isombal would never have asked her in such a manner:"Do you want me to help you?"
17376Could he after all have wronged her?
17376Could she have had the strength and courage not to have yielded, as she loved him also?
17376Could she possibly have resisted, have refused to give herself?
17376D''Apreval, who had not the least idea, turned to his companion:"What are you paying for poultry in Fécamp, my dear lady?"
17376Did he see it when she threw ardent kisses from the tips of her fingers to her lover at a distance?
17376Did not everybody think that they were married?
17376Did she love him?
17376Did the shot that we had heard proceed from an enemy, and had he killed or wounded our leader, her husband?
17376Do you feel rather easier?"
17376Do you know how to break with a woman, when that woman has not wronged you in any way?"
17376Do you know what she had thought of?
17376Do you not think so?"
17376Do you sleep there?"
17376Do you suspect anybody?
17376Does it afford you any pleasure to humiliate me as well?"
17376Does the word marriage mean renouncing all liberty and independence?
17376Ernest asked boldly,"and what about the Marquis?"
17376Even allowing that she does not love him, that she pays no heed to her vows and promises, how can she give herself to another man?
17376From what remote superannuated, abolished period did they all spring?
17376Had she been in love with him?
17376Has not your husband disinherited his lost son, and made the Church his heir, in his place?"
17376Have not all of us the right of our little, innocent secrets, a kind of second, interior life, for which one ought not to be responsible to anybody?
17376Have you ever seen a woman going mad, Monsieur?
17376Have you not got over your intoxication yet?
17376He asked her whether it was really necessary to their happiness, as they had no children?
17376He remarked on it, and added with a laugh:"Do you put it with your soup?"
17376Her heart?
17376How can it be possible to love amidst lies and treason?"
17376How can she conceal the intrigue from other people''s eyes?
17376How could I wait so long?
17376How had it got there?
17376How is he?
17376How was I to manage?
17376How?
17376I could not help laughing, and said:"Why, as you come here?"
17376I did not understand her, and asked:"What do you mean?"
17376I did not understand her, and said:"What do you mean?"
17376I do not say that it was not disagreeable, but what was I to do?
17376I know what it is now; it is carbolic acid, is it not?"
17376I said to him, while my teeth chattered:"Did you kill her?"
17376I saw a priest, who said:''Your mistress?''
17376I suppose you want young ones?"
17376I want money....""How much?"
17376I was much surprised at hearing this, and asked:"But it is a civil funeral, is it not?"
17376If I give you twenty francs instead of ten, I suppose you could buy some flowers for her, as well?"
17376In a minute or two she continued:"''I suppose I have frightened you?''
17376In their twelve years of married life, he had honored her with twelve children, and could anybody decently ask anything more of a saintly man?
17376Is it possible to avoid certain attacks of fate, or can one escape from one''s destiny?
17376Is it possible?
17376Is not that a matter of course when one loves?"
17376Is she some old woman, who is terribly skillful at her business, but who yet does not venture to show herself any longer?
17376Is she young and pretty?
17376Is that you, Baron?"
17376It is not enough that I have been robbed of my happiness?
17376It serves him right; why did he not obey orders?"
17376It was unlikely, impossible.... A mere dream... and yet?
17376Just imagine the next day....""The same thing happened?"
17376Madame Dufour, will this suit you?
17376Madame de Cadour turned to her old friend and said:"Will you come with me, Monsieur d''Apreval?"
17376Monsieur Lelièvre, who was rather alarmed, said to me:''Do you think it is anything serious?''
17376Monsieur Varin, too dear?
17376Monsieur d''Apreval stood outside and called out:"Is anybody at home?"
17376Monsieur?"
17376Must this really be?"
17376Neither of them replied, and when the husband asked them rubbing his hands:"Well, I hope that at least you have had a pleasant walk?"
17376No, that did not suit me, but what was I to do?
17376Of a crowd on the stairs?
17376Of a scandal?
17376Of being arrested, perhaps?
17376Of his calling her back, if he did not understand?
17376On the eighth day she came back, stopped gravely at the door of my room, and said:"Are you coming to my house to- night?
17376Only once or twice a year, to get a little fresh air; and you, monsieur?"
17376Or is she some new beginner, who has not yet acquired the boldness of an old hand?
17376Ought one to fear what the world may say, in a case like this?
17376Shall I be indiscreet if I ask you to tell me the facts of the case?
17376Shall I tell you their names?
17376Shall I tell you what it is?
17376Shall I tell you?"
17376She certainly did her business bravely, and if I had not known about the matter, I should certainly not have gone away for some time... Well then?"
17376She interrupted him with a painful gesture, and putting her lips to his, she said:"What does that matter?
17376She seemed to be hovering over that vast extent of country like a mournful ghost, and I asked him abruptly:"What has become of the husband?"
17376Should I face his cudgel?
17376So it was really true, this story out of_ The Arabian Nights_?
17376So you do not know me?"
17376Some one of your own rank and position in society?''
17376Speak!... Confess!... You will not?
17376Suppose we leave them to themselves?"
17376That hid her face, but what about the rest, her dress, her bonnet, and her parasol?
17376That must be very nice?"
17376The Marquis rose, offered her his arm again, and said:"Where shall we go to?"
17376The cab stopped a little farther on, in the Rue de Châteaudun, and she said to the Baron:"Would you kindly get me a fifty centimes telegraph form?
17376The captain''s wife began to grow impatient; what could he be doing?
17376The doctor ceased, though he was still smiling, and the young woman, who was in a very nervous state, said:"Why have you told me that terrible story?"
17376The one in blue?''
17376There is nothing good except the bed, and are not some of our best moments spent in sleep?
17376They are a handsome couple, do n''t you think so?"
17376This band was only to receive a second- class medal, for one can not give first- class medals to everybody, can one?
17376Those men never have any soul, have they?
17376Vitreous?
17376WAS IT A DREAM?
17376Was I still drunk, like Ledantec, or was I mad?
17376Was he dead or a prisoner?
17376Was it friendship or love?
17376Was it not, perhaps, the work of devil?
17376Was not she everywhere called Madame de Saint- Juéry, and had their servants any doubt that they were in the service of respectable, married people?
17376Was she really sleeping?
17376Was that another lie?
17376Was the noise in my head in the impenetrable night, or beneath the mysterious earth, the earth sown with human corpses?
17376Well, it would surely be avenging morality, if this woman were forced to be faithless to that monstrous love?"
17376What are you thinking about?"
17376What could I do for him?
17376What could I do with myself?
17376What could I say to this savage who did not speak French?
17376What could it be then?
17376What could she have done better?
17376What demon has possessed you?
17376What did he want, I wonder?"
17376What did that mean?
17376What dost thou say to it, chaste moon?"
17376What had we to fear?
17376What have they seen during the three centuries since they were first put up?
17376What is the meaning of this?''
17376What is your name?"
17376What lessons and what subjects for moralizing could one not draw from it, for everyone?
17376What made him so sanguine and so calm, and incited him to take her suddenly into his confidences, and urged him on to resistless curiosity?
17376What of?
17376What secret forces had brought their grief in contact?
17376What strange affinity had thrown them together thus?
17376What was going on?
17376What was she doing in that house?
17376What was the meaning of this strange hallucination?
17376What were wre going to do?
17376What would a woman not do for that?
17376What would be the end of it?
17376What would be the good of it?
17376What would happen?
17376What would she gain if she bore it legitimately?
17376What?
17376When I arrived she was writhing and screaming, in a terrible crisis of pain, anger, passion, how do I know what?
17376When he said:"Do you want me to help you?"
17376Where could we find them now?
17376Where do you live?"
17376Where to?"
17376Where were we going to?
17376Where were we?
17376Who has been into the room, within the last few days?"
17376Why did he not call us?
17376Why did she go to see him?
17376Why does one love?
17376Why does one love?
17376Why had she begun it?
17376Why had she told me a lie?
17376Why inflict the disgrace of such a spectacle on me?"
17376Why not?
17376Why?
17376Why?"
17376Will you do this?"
17376Will you make up your mind at last?"
17376Will you still call me cruel?"
17376Yesterday, Monsieur Busnach bought a large, antique goblet of me, and the other day I sold two candelabra like this( is it not handsome?)
17376You are a scoundrel to deceive her; but when may we hope to see her?"
17376You are surprised, eh?
17376You do n''t understand why?
17376You have got on without seeing him for the last forty years; what is the matter with you to- day?"
17376You really plant?"
17376You think that you will do right in avenging your husband''s death, is not that so?''
17376deceive Julien?
17376he said to us,"does it not pain you to know that there is a number of Uhlans within two hours of us?
17376is that what you have made of him?"
17376my lover?"
17376she asked;''you are fighting?''"
17376while the remains of pity for the unfortunate woman forced me to say:--"What is the matter with her?
17376why?
18572''And you love the rat?'' 18572 ''What''s that for?''
18572''Why do I love him?'' 18572 ''Why, my poor man, do you love that rat?''
18572Am I to have no voice in disposal of myself? 18572 And I have been of use to you, have n''t I, Uncle Pat?"
18572And Miss Harley: who is she?
18572And do you suppose I have been thinking of that?
18572And does the puppy think that I''ll give my consent?
18572And how are you to show it?
18572And how did you dig that up?
18572And if I do?
18572And is it not strange? 18572 And is that all?"
18572And no more talk of-- of forgeries?
18572And so,observed Mr. Slater, following a statement of Storri''s errand,"you want to be put next to a''peter- man, what we call a box- worker?"
18572And the question is,concluded Richard,"can we by any chance get hold of those French shares?"
18572And what State do you intend to honor as its Senator?
18572And what is to be our course?
18572And what is to be the end of this intrigue?
18572And when should the committee report?
18572And you declare Count Storri a thief engaged in robbing your Treasury?
18572And you do not love Miss Harley?
18572And you-- are you of those?
18572Are we to permit the foolish girl to throw herself away?
18572Are you hurt?
18572Are you injured?
18572Be you Steamboat Dan?
18572Bess, do you think that fair?
18572But are you sure that Storri is dead? 18572 But how will you restrain her?"
18572But is money, that is, much money, so important?
18572But is there gold enough to furnish all the money required?
18572But really, Bess,persisted Dorothy,"to put it this way: if your mamma insisted, would you give way and marry a man you did n''t love?"
18572But why do we lose our self- control?
18572But you do n''t think it''s Storri?
18572But you go there?
18572But you said''others''?
18572But,remonstrated Storri uneasily,"are you sure of this Steamboat Dan?"
18572Ca n''t you see Bess is laughing at you?
18572Can we get those French shares?
18572Can you give me, sir, some notion of what Talon& Trehawke are to have?
18572Can you tell me the punishment for forgery?
18572Dear, when did you name the_ Dorothy Storms_?
18572Did you not tell me to write your name? 18572 Do n''t you think it might be Count Storri?"
18572Do n''t you think now you''re a bit of a come- on?
18572Do n''t you think you might better tell her?
18572Do you know what that black- bearded man wanted in your place?
18572Do you love her?
18572Do you mean the report of Senator Hanway''s committee that is investigating Northern Consolidated?
18572Do you remember,asked Inspector Val,"how several weeks ago we visited the drain?"
18572Do you see where you forged my name?
18572Do you see?
18572Do you see?
18572Do you think, dear heart, I would tell anyone before I had told you?
18572Does my daughter decline your love?
18572Duty?
18572Flight?
18572Has Mr. Gwynn any family in England?
18572Have you no kiss for your Storri, my San Reve?
18572He has n''t doused his glim, has he?
18572He wo n''t stay long,said Senator Hanway;"but while he''s here, dear, wo n''t you take Mr. Storms into the library?"
18572Here we be,he said;"now what''s it all about?"
18572How can I compel her?
18572How did you know Bill was goin''to- morrow? 18572 How did your men come to be outside the door?"
18572How do I stand with those Harleys, my San Reve?
18572How do you expect to get away with the swag?
18572How do you know what Mr. Gwynn has done for him?
18572How do you stand with the Harleys? 18572 How much of a fund will you require?"
18572How shall I go to her?
18572I do n''t find any of it about?
18572If I had a fortune equal to Mr. Harley''s, you would not object, madam?
18572If it come to that,retorted Storri spitefully,"why did you leave Ottawa?"
18572If you do not love Miss Harley,said the flushed but logical San Reve,"why do you go there?
18572Indeed; and what may be the plan which results so much to the advantage of this country?
18572Inflame what?
18572Is Mr. Gwynn your relative?
18572Is it?
18572Is n''t he utterly English, and therefore utterly admirable?
18572Is she?
18572Is the Russian inside?
18572Marriage with Storri?
18572May I ask what has moved you to propose this compliment for the United States?
18572May I have a rose?
18572Me?
18572Might I ask whether you have a safe to blow or a crib to crack on your own private account? 18572 Mr. Storms, I believe?"
18572My San Reve, how can you ask? 18572 My dear Dorothy,"cried the other, surprised into deepest concern,"your mother did n''t see him kissing your fingers, did she?"
18572Newspaper work? 18572 No?"
18572Not forgetting to hide my name?
18572Now, how should I know, Bess? 18572 One thirtieth?"
18572Richard,said Mrs. Hanway- Harley,"what took Mr. Gwynn abroad?"
18572Scoundrel?
18572See what?
18572Stawms,whispered Mr. Fopling, tremulous with agitation,"if I''m as weak as this at your wedding, what do you weckon I''ll be at my own?
18572Storri on his knee?
18572Storri on his knee?
18572Storri, tell me; do you love this Miss Harley?
18572Storri, why did you bring me from Ottawa?
18572Storri? 18572 Tell me, dear, what am I to do?"
18572That is all you require?
18572That proves me your friend, does n''t it?
18572Then I am to understand that, should a day come when I can measure wealth with Mr. Harley, I may claim Dorothy as my own?
18572Then, Mr. Storms,returned Mrs. Hanway- Harley,"I ask you whether I would be justified in wedding my daughter to poverty?"
18572This bein''a stool ai n''t no hit with me,sighed Dan,"but will any sport show me how to sidestep it?"
18572Was n''t he wretchedly bold, Bess?
18572Was n''t it Virgil who wrote''What cares the wolf how many the sheep be''? 18572 Well, s''ppose I be?"
18572Well, then,observed Senator Hanway, looking right and left, being no one to face an angry woman,"why do n''t you let them marry?"
18572What am I to answer? 18572 What can we do?"
18572What can you do?
18572What does this lead to?
18572What for?
18572What have I done?
18572What is it?
18572What is it?
18572What is that?
18572What is the question?
18572What makes you so gloomy, Dorothy?
18572What matters that?
18572What place will you head the boat for when the job''s done?
18572What shall I do?
18572What should you expect?
18572What sort of ground is this?
18572What was it?
18572What were the last quotations on Anaconda stock?
18572What will he do with it?
18572What would you have?
18572What yacht was that?
18572What''s become of him, Inspector?
18572What''s next?
18572What''s the row?
18572When are the President and General Attorney of the Anaconda to be here?
18572When will you appoint the wedding?
18572Where else can you get one million for ten weeks''digging and a six- months''cruise in a yacht? 18572 Where now?"
18572Where then?
18572Wherein would lie the harm? 18572 Who are you?"
18572Who is your friend Gwynn?
18572Who knows?
18572Who so blooming, who so lovely, who so glorious as Dorothy?
18572Whom then?
18572Whom would I kill?
18572Whom would you kill, my San Reve?
18572Whom would you marry?
18572Why did I bring you here to- night?
18572Why do you object to him?
18572Why do you tie yourself to that draughting? 18572 Why not on marriage and wives?"
18572Why should you care?
18572Why, my San Reve,protested Storri,"and what has stirred your anger?"
18572Why?
18572Why?
18572Will it be much of a play?
18572Will there be a duel?
18572Will you have some tea?
18572Will you mind,said Inspector Val,"if I call a man from across the street?"
18572Will you send home then the body of a thief overtaken in the crime?
18572Will you shake hands Russian fashion?
18572Will you try grips with me?
18572Would it not be as wise,he argued,"to claim the public''s attention with some new unusual proposition?
18572Would it not be wise to imitate the gentleman and set a spy to dogging him? 18572 Yacht?"
18572Yes,went on the vindictive Storri in an exultant crow,"did you little people believe you were to laugh at Storri and pass unpunished?
18572Yes?
18572You are an owner in Northern Consolidated?
18572You are not ill?
18572You are to see my daughter? 18572 You love him?"
18572You want something desperate, eh?
18572You will believe me, darling?
18572You will see me to- morrow?
18572You wo n''t mind,said Richard diffidently,"if I make an amended proposition?"
18572You would n''t have me marry him, mamma?
18572Your father dead,said Storri, pretending a perking interest,"your father dead, my San Reve, what then became of you?"
18572A woman, then?
18572After all, is it a destiny beneath his jowlish fat deserts, that an American pig should become slave to a Russian noble?"
18572After all, why not?
18572After rubbing his nose irresolutely with a pen- holder, he said:"What can I do?"
18572Am I a pauper that my San Reve should work?
18572And for what?
18572And if her mother objects-- as she does object-- why not cure the objection with a trifle of truth?
18572And that morning armful of roses?
18572And the cogitations of Richard, if written down in words, would have read like this:"Why should I defer a dà © nouement that will rejoice them all?
18572And what fetched you out so cold an evening?"
18572And yet who would think of questioning Storri, so heroically rescuing life?
18572As Richard landed her, light as a leaf, within her father''s portals, she said in remonstrance:"What made you do it?
18572Bayard?"
18572But how can it be done?
18572But is n''t there a hint in this?"
18572But what could Mr. Harley offer for defense?
18572But what do you figger this Russian''s goin''to burn?"
18572But what should you expect in one who all his life has had about him the best society of England?"
18572But who shall tell how and when and where his fate will overtake him?
18572By the way, I hope Count Storri did not meet him?"
18572Can you not exercise a paternal authority to have your daughter receive my respectful visits?
18572Can you tell me what the committee will report?"
18572Chastise him?
18572Come now; do you go with me?"
18572Could a nobleman chastise a toad-- a reptile?
18572Could his San Reve procure him a ground- plan of the Treasury Building?
18572Could it be that Richard was Mr. Gwynn''s secretary?
18572Could she break the hold?
18572Did it ever occur to you that it will take some time to carry the gold down to the drain''s mouth?
18572Did you hear how he spoke of his benefactor?
18572Did you not see that odious Storri coming?"
18572Did you think to insult him and escape his vengeance?
18572Do I ask much?
18572Do society, I suppose?"
18572Do you follow?
18572Do you imagine Dorothy does n''t see you every time you walk this street?
18572Do you know how much gold money it takes to make a ton?"
18572Do you know how they were obtained?
18572Do you know what it will require?
18572Do you know when the finding may be looked for?
18572Do you know why we do n''t find Storri?
18572Do you realize what its capital must be?
18572Do you think I would break in upon your dreams, else?
18572Dorothy was a woman; and what woman could resist Storri?
18572Dorothy, still transfixed, turned with round eyes to Richard:"What was it you did?"
18572Forbidding Richard the door might of itself appear a meager matter, but who was to say what results might not spring from it?
18572Gold?
18572Gold?
18572Gwynn?"
18572Gwynn?"
18572Gwynn?"
18572Had Mr. Storms any expectations from Mr. Gwynn?
18572Had Storri made some soft advance, and had Dorothy repulsed him?
18572Had her love of politics gone cooling?
18572Had she not fought a gallant war with her mother for love of him?
18572Harley?"
18572Has the cherished Fopling gone astray?
18572Have you got my plan?"
18572He tells you that I am to have the assistance of the Anaconda?"
18572He was no one to retire or to rise with the birds; why should he?
18572How would it advantage a world to hear that he took her in his arms and held her close?
18572I ask you, in candor, does a gentleman arrest his wife''s father on a charge of forgery?
18572I say, Stawms, why do n''t you go into Wall Stweet and bweak the beggah?
18572I, as a child, was not afraid of a lion under the lash; am I now to fear a bear, a Russian bear, I, who am a woman?"
18572If you owned a bed of flowers, would you build a fence about it?
18572Inspector Val, without wasting time, began to ask questions:"Who shoved this note under the door?"
18572Is Storri so miserly that the idol of his heart must be a slave?"
18572Is a Russian-- is a nobleman to be at the beck of such vile little people?
18572Is it your plan to make the town your permanent residence?"
18572Is n''t word of eye as sacred as word of mouth?
18572Is that disgrace?
18572Is this a time to talk of collaring, and we no further than the threshold of the job?
18572It ran thus: R. Storms, Washington, D. C. What''s the matter?
18572It was necessary to tame that householder to docility, and what should achieve this sooner than a great fright?
18572It would promote friendship, and what was better than friendship between countries?
18572Meanwhile, what was there he might save from the situation as it stood?
18572Might not the public, being wholly engaged thereby, forget finance?"
18572Mr. Bayard?
18572Mr. Fopling has often struck me as volcanic; who shall say that he will not some day erupt?"
18572Mr. Harley might be disgraced, destroyed; but what then?
18572Must his heart be broken, and he not learn the secret or know the author of the blow?
18572Now how could the lady who writes you benefit by that?
18572Now what should be less complex than to have Benzine Bob set fire to the Harley house an hour before the time to sail?
18572Now whom would he tell?
18572Now why could n''t she have sent Storri by the same route?
18572Of what avail would be a call upon the Harleys?
18572Of what avail?
18572Of what worth now to tell you those sweetheart things that Richard and his angel said and did?
18572On Mr. Harley''s account?
18572On that point let me ask: How long can we count on being undisturbed after we''ve got to the gold?
18572On that point of question- putting, might he, Senator Gruff, impart a word of counsel?
18572Or, to phrase it this fashion, What ought I to do?"
18572Russia?
18572Sands?"
18572Shall he never pause for love?
18572Should he, Storri, who had been sighed for by the fairest of a dozen stately courts, receive defeat from a little American?
18572Should she disclose herself to Miss Harley?
18572Somebody must go, and why not Patrick Henry Hanway?
18572Storms?"
18572Storms?"
18572Suppose I was to rap?"
18572Talk reason to the public?
18572That''s all, Dan; have you got your orders straight?"
18572The caitiff Storms must then wait, eh?"
18572The query is, Would Mr. Gwynn be so amiably disposed as to move in the affair?
18572The question now is: Are you going with me?
18572The real question I wanted to ask is, Have you told her?
18572Then pushing straight for the point after methods of his own, he continued:"What is it the Anaconda Airline can do?
18572Then, turning to Mr. Harley:"You, of course, speak for Senator Hanway?"
18572Then, turning to him who was for softly buying his way out:"Do you imagine that what has happened was accident?
18572This staggered Richard; was his idol laughing at him?
18572To what regions would the happy pair migrate, and for what space?
18572Was a White House to be lost by such tawdry argument?
18572Was a nobleman, wealthy, young, handsome, on terms of comradeship with his Czar, to be refused?
18572Was he not compelling the proud Dorothy to receive his compliments, his glances, his sighs, his love?
18572Was it not Mr. Harley?
18572Was it not to sustain your deal in sugar?"
18572Was not Richard, the detestable, excluded, and the Harley door closed fast in his face?
18572Was not here a chance to remove Mrs. Hanway- Harley''s objection?
18572Was there any reason why he, Senator Hanway, should refrain from such a step?
18572Wealthy, handsome, brilliant, bold-- who could refuse his love?
18572Well, Mr. Duff,"as that worthy was ushered in,"what did you learn?
18572Were not Americans mad after Counts?
18572What am I to do?
18572What could be his secret tipped with terror?
18572What could there be about Storri''s ascendency over Mr. Harley to which a woman who loves Storri would object?
18572What does he demand?
18572What else could come?
18572What forger or what forger''s daughter has made such terms?
18572What if he should come philandering after Dorothy?
18572What if he were tender, what if he were true?
18572What if he were to steal away your bride?
18572What if it were to prove serious?"
18572What is it?
18572What is to be my attitude towards your daughter, while I am searching for that fortune?"
18572What manner of mystery was this?
18572What of Storri?"
18572What shall I do with the half- million taken from him?"
18572What shall we call it?
18572What should be the ransom?
18572What should be those gems of price which the metal box protected?
18572What should she do-- she and her poor love?
18572What should she do?
18572What stock could support itself against such a flood as that?
18572What then: Is Storri to despair?
18572What was he?
18572What was written concerning the mouths of babes and sucklings?
18572What were his relations with Mr. Gwynn?
18572What were those two demands?
18572What woman was ever withheld from wedding a man by the word of that man''s mistress?
18572What would have been the good?
18572What, beyond mere compliance with Storri''s wishes, might avert those calamities that seemed swinging in the air above him?
18572What, may I ask, do you call your duty in the premises?"
18572What, then, did that casket of carved bronze contain?
18572When Mrs. Hanway- Harley had left the room, and Miss Marklin and Dorothy were alone, the former said firmly:"Dorothy, who sent them?"
18572Where did Mr. Storms live?
18572Where is your letter to- night?
18572Where should such crawling, footless creatures be?"
18572Who could have offered deeper proof of it?
18572Who first spoke of Northern Consolidated?
18572Who is to know when Satan-- or a more benevolent spirit-- will be hiding behind the hedge to play good folk a marriage trick?
18572Who shall measure my demands when I have conquered?
18572Who should come swinging up the way but Richard?
18572Who should escort him through that latter grim, gray edifice but an Assistant Secretary?
18572Who suggested the"bear"raid?
18572Who taught you to ignore formalities?
18572Who was he?
18572Who was to measure the road''s lumber robberies, or those thefts of land?
18572Who were they from?
18572Who would dream of stopping him who was only taking the rescued fainting one to safe shelter and medical help?
18572Who would hear of her after that?"
18572Why are you, who are among the world''s five wealthiest men, so anxious to pretend poverty and hide your money- light beneath a bushel?"
18572Why at any time?
18572Why did not Dorothy come down to dinner?
18572Why do I come so far with my dreams?
18572Why does she write this letter?
18572Why not put the question to Mr. Storms?
18572Why not?
18572Why once a month?
18572Why once a week?
18572Why should I so honor them?
18572Why should Storri object to that?
18572Why should he?
18572Why should she not?
18572Why should the world know of the splendid gopher work of London Bill?
18572Why would n''t it be well to talk to the people in the same manner even if one did not adopt the theories expressed?
18572Why?
18572Will not our Dorothy laugh?
18572Would Mr. Fopling permit him the favor of his name?
18572Would a complete copy, verbatim, of the coming report of Senator Hanway''s committee on Northern Consolidated be of any service to you?"
18572Would a tunnel reach this treasure?
18572Would n''t it work injustice to the debtors of the land?"
18572Would the President and the General Attorney of the Anaconda Airline call again in an hour?
18572You recall the San Reve?--she who wrote the letter about those French shares?
18572You remember what I told you as to the plans of our friends to''bear''Northern Consolidated?
18572You see the point?"
18572You still go there?"
18572You will correct this; eh, you Harley-- you John Harley?"
18572You would come to Europe, no?"
18572am I to be thwarted, affronted, undone by a girl?
18572and Mr. Storms is not to see her?"
18572asked Mr. Duff;"do we follow him in and collar him?
18572did Richard imagine that Dorothy had been weeks over a trousseau to have it extinguished in the narrow compass of Senator Hanway''s study?
18572e._, kisses, when Richard appeared and took Bess''s labor of congratulation off her hands-- or should one say her lips?
18572exclaimed Mr. Harley, starting up and growing apoplectic with anger,"do you imagine that I''ll force my child into your arms?
18572gasped Dorothy, who had stood throughout the duel like one planet- struck;"what was it you did?"
18572he exclaimed,"is it you, my San Reve?
18572or do we just wait here?"
18572said London Bill, after the gin had appeared and disappeared;"what''s the argument you want to hand me?"
18572shall Storri be forever at some grind of business?
18572that she did n''t see you come in?
18572that she has n''t seen you to- day?
18572that she wo n''t invent some pretext for running over?
18572who shall talk of forgeries then?"
18572yes; but why ask Mr. Sands, printer, and Inspector Val of the police?
18572you Harley-- you John Harley, is it you?"
26682Ah,thought he,"where can I get money for wine?
26682And for your private adviser?
26682And so you lived a whole month among us and we never knew you?
26682And whom would you name as your prime- minister?
26682Are you happy?
26682As you are now a king, Henry, which of your predecessors do you propose to imitate?
26682Is it possible? 26682 May I ask what command you belong to, sir?"
26682Very good, Henry,interposed his mother,"but what would you ask of God in order that you might be able to reign well?"
26682Well, sergeant, what can we do for you?
26682What did you say?
26682What is that you have got?
26682What is to become of them all?
26682What regiment is this?
26682What,cries Cock Robin,"Matters the weather, Since we can always Bear it together?"
26682What?
26682Where are you running to now?
26682Where does he live? 26682 Why did you not say so, Henry?"
26682Why, do n''t you know? 26682 You never cared for me?"
26682''And what should they be but floury-- seeing my father was a baker?''
26682''Well, what_ did_ he say?''
26682A voice inside asked,''Who wishes to enter?''
26682After the usual greetings, he began to question:"Now, tell me, how is religion in New Orleans?
26682And have you superior schools, so that children will have no excuse for going to the godless schools?
26682And how was it with the chief actor in the scene?
26682And where do you think they were found?
26682Are the people well instructed?
26682Are the priests zealous?
26682Are the public institutions well attended by priests and religious?
26682At last she asked a man what was the reason that she could not meet with any miserable people?
26682But, above and before all else, are your Catholic children all in Catholic schools?
26682Can Maryland say as much for our colored brethren?
26682Do many lead lives of piety?"
26682Do you understand, sir?"
26682For does n''t she hold the"Autocrat of the Breakfast Table"and Bunker Hill, Faneuil Hall, and Harvard College?
26682Have you a live bishop?
26682He could not sleep for joy at this intelligence, but during the night would frequently call for his attendant:"You heard what Don Mauro said?
26682How are the Masses attended?
26682How much more"unity"do the English want?
26682I can hardly hold it up; and how weak she is?
26682I can scarcely earn food enough for so many; and who will give me wine?"
26682Just meed for us, but He hath done no wrong; All seems so strange-- what means the gathering gloom?
26682May I ask your name?"
26682Shall they dominate the inheritors of the great names which have made Parliament illustrious?"
26682To one officer in front cheering, who had his cap on the point of his sword, I inquired:"What regiment is this, captain?"
26682Was it not mad Anthony Wayne, a Celt, who won Stony Point?
26682What do you think of that?"
26682What does it profit to gain the whole world and lose your soul?
26682What is there in that Form that moves me so?
26682What more can I do than deny it?
26682What remained was ruefully inspected a moment, when she asked:"Do you know, papa, how I can tell you are big without looking at you?"
26682What to do?
26682When do you suppose he developed all those admirable qualities?
26682When next he saw Father Tom, he said to him--''Do you know Monsabré reminded me very much of you?''
26682Where are the three opposing factions to- day?
26682Who fought so bravely at Brandywine?
26682Who is he of aged locks?
26682Why?
26682Will not others follow suit?
26682Would n''t you like something in the way of liquid refreshments?"
26682and what country is this?"
26682said Mat, in an audible soliloquy,"is Irish life?"
26682said Pet;"and wo n''t you come home with me now and settle with my Government?
26682she thought,"will you not come to my assistance?"
26682she would cry,"where are you now, and will you ever come back to me?"
26682who comes there?"
26682whose is that voice That sounds within me such a heavenly strain, And makes my being to its depths rejoice As if it felt creation''s touch again?
26682why should we not"tell truth and shame the devil"--doesn''t she bring us to the babies and the family doctor?
19488And what do you say if I have promised and sworn to our King not to put off these clothes? 19488 Are they indeed real?"
19488Are you a gentleman?
19488Are you a knight?
19488But inasmuch as you have been taken hath not the angel failed you with regard to the good things of this life?
19488But the year?
19488Did Saint Denys ever appear to you? 19488 Did he hold scales?"
19488Did not the angel who brought the sign speak?
19488Did the Angel come along the ground, walking from the door of the room?
19488Did the Angel who bore it come from above, or did he come from the earth?
19488Did the churchmen of your party behold the sign?
19488Did you actually behold Saint Michael and these angels in the body?
19488Did you ever kiss and embrace the Saints, Catherine and Margaret?
19488Did you know you were to be taken?
19488Did you not abjure, and promise not to return to this dress?
19488Did you not give them chaplets of flowers?
19488Did you not say that it should come to pass before Saint Martin in the winter?
19488Did you see a crown on the King''s head when you gave him this sign?
19488Did you touch it or kiss it?
19488Did your King and you make any reverence to the angel when he brought the sign?
19488Do you believe that your Voices and apparitions come from good or from evil spirits?
19488Do you believe that your Voices are Saint Margaret and Saint Catherine?
19488Do you know whether Saint Catherine and Saint Margaret hate the English?
19488Do you not trust in the Lord?
19488Do you not wish,she was asked,"that a fine and famous procession be ordained to restore you to a good estate if you be not therein?"
19488Do you still believe in your Voices?
19488Do you think and firmly believe that your King did right to kill or cause to be killed my Lord of Burgundy?
19488Does God hate the English?
19488Had he hair?
19488Had your King a crown at Reims?
19488Have you heard your Voices since Thursday?
19488Have you seen that richer crown?
19488How can he have failed me when he comforteth me every day? 19488 How can you,"they asked her,"set forth on such a journey when there are men- at- arms on every hand?"
19488How can you,urges Jean Beaupère,"see this light which you say appears to you, if it is on your right?"
19488How do you know this?
19488How far was it from the door to the King?
19488How?
19488In God''s name, was I ever in such a place?
19488In the good things of grace hath not your angel failed you?
19488In what form and semblance did Saint Michael come to you? 19488 In what manner did the Angel bring the crown?
19488In what semblance was Saint Michael? 19488 Is it of gold or silver, or of precious stones, or is it a crown?"
19488It had been in the contest, wherefore should it not share the prize? 19488 It is beautiful and honourable and very credible; it is the best and the richest in the world....""Does it still last?"
19488Know you aught of those who consort with fairies?
19488Must the King be driven from his kingdom, and must we become English?
19488Of what was the crown made?
19488On the first day that you saw the sign did your King see it?
19488On what day and at what hour?
19488Rascal,he said,"what possesses thee to allow an excommunicated whore to approach a church without permission?
19488Saw you any angel above the King?
19488Then why,asked Maître Pierre again,"if you thought it likely, did you not take better care on the day you were captured?"
19488To what place was the crown brought?
19488Was God on the side of the English when they prospered in France?
19488Was he clothed?
19488Was it through your counsel that I came hither on this side of the river, and that I did not go straight to where Talbot and the English are?
19488Was the angel, who brought the sign, the angel who first appeared unto you or another?
19488Were there jewels in it?
19488Were they of a sweet savour?
19488What did they say unto you?
19488What instruction did this Voice give you for the salvation of your soul?
19488What is it?
19488What is that man- at- arms saying?
19488What is the sign that was given to your King?
19488What is this peril or this danger?
19488What part did you kiss, face or feet?
19488What revelations were made unto your King?
19488When embracing them did you feel heat or anything else?
19488When shall this come to pass?
19488When you showed the King the sign was there any one with him?
19488Wherefore did you put it on and who made you?
19488Wherefore did you return to it?
19488Wherefore should he have cut it off?
19488Wherefore was your standard rather than those of the other captains carried into the church of Reims?
19488Which would you prefer, to wear a woman''s dress and hear mass, or to continue in man''s dress and not to hear mass?
19488Will she not come to- morrow?
19488Will you abjure all your deeds and sayings? 19488 Will you submit to the judgment of the Church?"
19488[ 752] But to the question:Wherefore do you come?"
19488[ 925] Is it possible? 19488 (?) 19488 274_ et seq._] How can the Maid have known the Seigneur de l''Ours? 19488 A damsel of sixteen, who is not weighed down by armour and weapons, even though she be bred to endure hardness, is not that a matter beyond nature? 19488 After an answer of such perfect simplicity how could these priests proceed to question her on her visions? 19488 After such a setting forth could there possibly remain a single doubt as to whether Pope Martin was the true pope? 19488 Almost at the same time Jeanne went down and asked:Where are my armourers?
19488And Olibrius said unto her:"How comes it that so noble and beautiful a girl as you can worship Jesus the Crucified?"
19488And could Jeanne fail to listen to them since she had always listened to them whenever they had counselled her to sacrifice and self- abnegation?
19488And finally, why did not the priests, the ecclesiastics of the realm, with one voice demand an appeal to the Holy Father?
19488And how could it be otherwise, seeing that Eve''s fall had effaced the divine likeness in this child?
19488And how could they look to exchange a man accused of treachery for a prisoner of war?
19488And how?
19488And is it not admirable and rare to find such heroism united to such innocence?
19488And now what becomes of those monkish tales of attempted violence related long afterwards by a registrar and two churchmen?
19488And of what miracles was she not capable when acting according to the impulses of her own heart, and the grace of her own mind?
19488And the Philistine said to David:''Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with a staff?''
19488And what business had he to doubt that Saint Catherine and Saint Margaret, who were on the side of the French, spoke French?
19488And what could have led him to suppose that the woman condemned by good Father Lemaistre and my Lord of Beauvais was not a bad woman?
19488And what use is it to deceive ourselves?
19488And who can say that they were not?
19488And why should the King reconquer so poor a province?
19488And why should the Lord Chamberlain and the Lord Archbishop have wanted to get rid of the Maid?
19488And you, my sweet son, will you have this virgin for your bride?"
19488And, seeing Goliath, he asked:''Who is this uncircumcised Philistine that he should defy the armies of the living God?''
19488Are they the fault of the Inquisitor or of the author of_ Le Journal_?]
19488Art thou going to keep us here to dinner?
19488At any rate, for that reason or for another, he asked:"Jeanne, in what place look you for to die?"
19488At what age did she become subject to these trances?
19488Basque, what did you promise me?"
19488Brother Jean Lombard asked:"Wherefore have you come?
19488But at heart what did they really think, those who employed her, those Regnaults de Chartres, those Roberts le Maçon, those Gérards Machet?
19488But did he wish her harm?
19488But had it been done on purpose?
19488But had they power to execute their sentence?
19488But how can we imagine that poor husbandmen had leisure to ponder on these things?
19488But how could she have failed to be well versed in deeds of war, since God himself led her against the English?
19488But how could this armed heresy be dealt with when it routed all the forces of the Empire and the Holy See?
19488But how many Norman nobles were like her in refusing to swear fealty to the former enemies of the kingdom?
19488But how was she to go to France?
19488But how?
19488But may the rest of the poem be assigned to 1435 or 1439?
19488But might they not be undeceived?
19488But was he not likely to lose them for ever on the morrow?
19488But was it impossible for seven or eight Armagnac horsemen to traverse English and Burgundian lands without misadventure?
19488But what can be thought of a historian who suppresses Jeanne''s trial because he finds it inconvenient?
19488But what was her substance?
19488But why should there be any?
19488Can they have suspected that this woman, who in France had been considered a saint, might after all have been inspired by the devil?
19488Canst thou be praised enough, thou who hast brought peace to this land laid low by war?
19488Cochard,_ Existe- t- il des reliques de Jeanne d''Arc?_ Orléans, 1891, in 8vo.]
19488Contrite and sorrowful she said to Maître Pierre Maurice:[2547]"Maître Pierre, where shall I be this evening?"
19488Could it be said that if she escaped she would incur excommunication and the spiritual and temporal penalties inflicted on the enemies of religion?
19488Could they say otherwise since they were the voices of her own heart?
19488Could they send her there?
19488D''Arbois de Jubainville,_ Merlin est- il un personnage réel?_ in the_ Revue des questions historiques_, 1868, pp.
19488Describing them by the word she herself used, he asked:"Is it your Council who speak to you of such things?"
19488Did Brother Seguin so understand it?
19488Did Jeanne suspect the Bishop of designing to poison her?
19488Did he not allow the child David to overthrow the giant Goliath, and did he not deliver into the hands of Judith the head of Holophernes?
19488Did he not intend to use her against the Burgundians?
19488Did he place it on your King''s head?"
19488Did not the Angel salute Gideon( Judges vi), and Raphaël salute Tobias( Tobit xii)?
19488Did she do great prowess?
19488Did she intend when the war was over to return to Orléans and pass a peaceful old age in a house of her own?
19488Did she say that an angel had saved her from the fire?
19488Did she suffer ill treatment at the hands of a Burgundian band?
19488Did she think of living in it?
19488Did she think that the entrenched camp, Saint- Laurent- des- Orgerils, commanded by Scales, Suffolk, and Talbot would be attacked immediately?
19488Did she want to show the document to some false friend, like Loiseleur, who was deceiving her?
19488Did they mean to carry out the two attacks simultaneously?
19488Did they renounce the project of their own accord or against their will?
19488Did they think her incapable of keeping a secret?
19488Did truces ever hinder Armagnacs and Burgundians from fighting when they had a mind to fight?
19488Did you see the hair on their heads?
19488Do you not remember that I promised your wife to bring you back safe and sound?
19488Does this amount to saying that the young saint had no part whatever in the work of deliverance?
19488Fair Duke, can you be afraid?
19488Fearing lest harm should come to her, he leapt on to his horse, spurred towards her and cried:"What are you doing, all alone?
19488Finding her still alive, in their amazement they could only ask:"Did you leap?"
19488For the first time the Vice- Inquisitor opened his mouth:[2358]"Have you promised and sworn to Saint Catherine that you will not tell this sign?"
19488Had he not need of her?
19488Had not Saint Geneviève turned away Attila and his barbarian warriors from Paris?
19488Had not a theologian of her own party said that she might be called an angel?
19488Had she abstained from food that morning and if so when had she last partaken of it?
19488Had they arms?
19488Had they no decision to submit to the Pope and to the Council?
19488Had they nothing to say in this matter?
19488Had they really intended to deceive her?
19488Had they rings in their ears?
19488He asked her:"Is it an angel''s voice that speaketh unto you, or the voice of a woman saint or of a man saint?
19488He gave her his hand as a sign that he pledged his word and asked:"When will you set forth?"
19488He went to her, greeted her and asked:''What are you doing in such great haste?''
19488Henri Lepage,_ Jeanne d''Arc est- elle Lorraine?_ Nancy, 1852, pp.
19488Holding the Child Jesus in her arms, the Virgin Mary appeared unto her and said:"Catherine, will you take him for your husband?
19488How could Brother Pasquerel, her chaplain, her steward, and the honest squire d''Aulon, have become the accomplices of so clumsy a jest?
19488How could a pious prince disdain so miraculous a source of counsel?
19488How could it be so before the Pope and the Council had pronounced judgment concerning it?
19488How could she have conducted them since she did not know the way?
19488How could the Maid and Blue Beard be associated in a heroic action?
19488How could the Maid have said of the English:"God sends them against us,"when they were fleeing?]
19488How did they speak?
19488How had Jeanne really expressed herself in her dialect savouring alike of the speech of Champagne and of that of l''Île de France?
19488How was she to associate with men- at- arms?
19488How, since she had shown him her angels, invisible to ordinary folk, could she for one moment have thought that he lacked faith in her?
19488If they were not imposed upon, then how can we account for their conduct?
19488In Orléans itself was it not by the mouth of a babe that he had caused to be named that shepherd who was to deliver the besieged town from Attila?
19488In the morning, when she awoke, she asked:"Did she come?"
19488In what part of the chapel had they found it?
19488In what peril do we stand, we, your judges, and others?"
19488In which case would it not be better to leave them to be dealt with by the_ Godons_?
19488Is it not in the weak things of the world that he maketh his power manifest?
19488Is it not still more wonderful that Samson should have slain so many Philistines with the jaw- bone of an ass?
19488Is it possible to discover these reasons?
19488Jean de Metz asked, as Sire Robert had done:"Who is Messire?"
19488Jean de Metz was filled with no such ardent faith in the prophetess, since he inquired of her:"Will you really do what you say?"
19488Jeanne replies that she had only fasted since the morning, and Maître Beaupère proceeds to ask:_ Q._"In what direction did you hear the voice?"
19488Know ye them one from another?"
19488Martin replied:"Since you know so much about it, why do n''t you perform your errand yourself?
19488May we not interpret as a subtle and delicate reproach the utterance in his presence of this wish, this complaint?
19488Maître Beaupère asked:"Do you know whether you stand in God''s grace?"
19488Maître Guillaume Erard asked Jean Massieu:"Well, what are you saying to her?"
19488Maître Jean Beaupère asked:"When you behold this Voice coming towards you, is there any light?"
19488Maître Jean Beaupère threw out the question:"How did your King come to have faith in your sayings?"
19488Maître Jean Érault, have you ink and paper?
19488Meanwhile, where were the clerks of France?
19488Might not the ceremony be performed in some other town than Reims?
19488Must the King be driven from his kingdom and we all turn English?
19488Must the disgrace of such neglect fall upon the whole Council and upon the Council alone?
19488Notwithstanding he pursued his interrogation:"Do you believe in God?"
19488Of what danger were you speaking?
19488Often she asked:"Will she not come?"
19488On the eve of Patay she had asked:"Have you good spurs?
19488One day he met the damsel and said to her:"Well,_ ma mie_, what are you doing here?
19488One of them, the Bastard of Granville, cried out to her:"Would you have us surrender to a woman?"
19488Or at least why did they not send their evidence?
19488Or is it God speaking without an interpreter?"
19488Or was it her intent to present it to her saints?
19488Ought they not to find their Maid in man''s attire, ready to put on her armour and fight with them?
19488Passing abruptly from Merlin the Magician, Maître Jean Beaupère asked:"Jeanne, will you have a woman''s dress?"
19488Quand le roy s''en vint en France, Il feit oindre ses houssiaulx, Et la royne lui demande: Ou veult aller cest damoiseaulx?
19488Shall we ever discern the true features of her countenance?
19488Shall we turn our backs on them?"
19488She adroitly made answer by asking another question:"Are there two?
19488She must obey them-- but how?
19488She replied:"Doubt ye that Messire lacks wherewithal to clothe himself?"
19488She replied:"How should she speak English, since she is not on the side of the English?
19488She was seditious, for are not all those seditious who support the opposite party?
19488Should he have offered to ransom the Maid?
19488Some peasant?
19488Straightway my Lord d''Harcourt responded:"Will you not here in the King''s presence tell us the manner of your Council when they speak to you?"
19488Taking her to mean the Count of Clermont''s spurs, the spurs of Rouvray, the Duke of Alençon exclaimed:"What do you say?
19488The King, perceiving, asked her:"My beloved, wherefore laugh ye so merrily?"
19488The citizens of a noble city shall be punished for perjury by defeat, groaning with many groans, and at the entrance[ of Charles?]
19488The examiner asked:"How know ye that they are these two saints?
19488The first question the examiner put Jeanne was:"What say you of our Lord the Pope, and whom think you to be the true pope?"
19488The interrogator asked her:"When the Voice revealed your King to you, was there any light?
19488The last question was:"Did you not say before Paris,''Surrender the town in the name of Jesus''?"
19488The men- at- arms inquired of her:"To- day being the Sabbath, is it wrong to fight?"
19488Then came the following subtle question:"Do you believe that if you were married your Voices would come to you?"
19488Then came this remarkable question:"Have you received letters from Saint Michael or from your Voices?"
19488Then recurred the same old questions:"When you went to the attack on Paris did you receive a revelation from your Voices?
19488Then what was her idea?
19488Then, taking the consecrated host in his fingers and presenting it to Jeanne, he said:"Do you believe this to be the body of Christ?"
19488Thereafter the following questions were put to her:"Do you not believe to- day that fairies are evil spirits?"
19488Think ye that ye will go unpunished?
19488Thus gifted, how could he fail to exercise a powerful control over the government?
19488To the question:"Were you addressing God himself when you promised to remain a virgin?"
19488To the question:"What language do your Voices speak?"
19488Was Jeanne able to communicate with the Carmelites of Melun?
19488Was he tall and how was he clothed?"
19488Was his mystery acted during the last thirty years of the century at the festival instituted to commemorate the taking of Les Tourelles?
19488Was it a revelation that caused you to go to Pont- l''Evêque?"
19488Was it a witch or the enemy of the English he was buying with his ten thousand gold francs?
19488Was it difficult to convict a witch in those days?
19488Was it in case the holders of them should be proceeded against by the French?
19488Was it revealed to you that you should go against La Charité?
19488Was one of those frequent truces ever kept?
19488Was she able to give the custodians of the chapel any signs by which to recognise the sword?
19488Was she not a chieftain of war?
19488Was she right or wrong?
19488Was their hair long and hanging?
19488Was there anything between their crowns and their hair?
19488Was there not something round?
19488Was this the token by which the nobles of Metz recognised her?
19488Were the captains and their men to go into this famine- stricken land?
19488Were these words suggested to him by the enemies of the Maid?
19488Were they her dupes or her accomplices?
19488Were they not all to meet at the Council?
19488Were they not sufficiently edified?
19488What Christian in those days did not hold the practice of saying masses for the dead to be good and salutary?
19488What did it profit King Charles to recognise his cousin''s rights over Paris?
19488What does this mean if not that she was subject to hallucinations of hearing, sight, touch, and smell?
19488What flatterers could better have gratified"the proud weakness of my heart?
19488What fury, what folly, what rage possesses you?
19488What is there strange in that, since he was a strong man?
19488What kind of voices had they?
19488What misfortune befell her at the gates of the town?
19488What ought King Charles to have done?
19488What use did she intend to make of this writing?
19488What was the object of these letters?
19488What was there to vex her in this?
19488What was to become of Orléans?
19488What were the true relations between the Royal Council and the Maid?
19488What were those letters from Saint Michael and her other saints, the existence of which she did not deny, but which were never produced by her judges?
19488What would the doughty La Hire have thought of them?
19488When had she journeyed to Rome?
19488Whence came she?
19488Whence came these copies?
19488Wherefore did the King''s men appear first before the northern walls, those of Charles V, which were the strongest?
19488Wherefore do you essay to make out that they are not one?"
19488Wherefore do you not retreat like the others?"
19488Wherefore had they contrary to their custom summoned her to the Council?
19488Whither did she go?
19488Who can ever be thankful enough unto thee?"
19488Who can say that, after having given credence to the tidings brought by Jean du Lys, the townsfolk did not begin to discover the imposture?
19488Who exalted her as a supernatural power?
19488Who knows?
19488Who ought really to have interfered?
19488Why did Holy Church exercise such severity towards a preacher endowed with so wondrous a power of moving sinful souls?
19488Why did they keep silence?
19488Why did they not demand a safe- conduct and come and give evidence at the trial?
19488Why did they not depart from France and go into their own country?"
19488Why did they not urge their opinions in opposition to those of the Faculties of Paris?
19488Why do you appeal to a poor man like me who knows not how to express himself?"
19488Why is she not English?
19488Why should Charles VII''s Councillors have ceased to employ her?
19488Why should not a like power be granted to a Christian?
19488Why should not another of the illuminated succeed?
19488Why should we imagine historical facts to be out of the ordinary run of things and on a scale different from every- day humanity?
19488Why were attempts made at Lagny to save this man alone of the one hundred and fifty Parisians arrested on the information of Brother Pierre d''Allée?
19488Will you abjure such of your deeds and sayings as have been condemned by the clerks?"
19488Will you appeal to the Church Militant?"
19488With this idea he went to the Basque and said:"If I were to enter there and go on foot up to the bulwark would you follow me?"
19488Would it not be better in this matter to act in concert with the ecclesiastics of King Charles''s party?
19488Would it not be good Christian charity to present them with fine canonical arguments?
19488Would it not have been madness after that to doubt the existence of witches?
19488[ 1347][ Footnote 1347: When the King set out in France, he had his gaiters greased; and the Queen asked him: whither will wend these damoiseaux?
19488[ 1512] Did not saints commonly receive crowns from angels''hands?
19488[ 1647] Then who represented her as a great war leader?
19488[ 1806] Was it Saint Catherine''s sword?
19488[ 1862] What was she doing there?
19488[ 1872] What became of all this artillery and of these brave folk?
19488[ 1897] What price did the Maid give for this house?
19488[ 1900] But what was her idea in taking this house?
19488[ 1916] Who but the mendicants directing her can have put these crusading ideas into Jeanne''s head?
19488[ 1955] Did she obtain him in return for money?
19488[ 2067] Why not have this Armagnac prophetess tried by the assembled Fathers?
19488[ 2096] But what power had this good dame against the Norman gold of the King of England and against the anathemas of Holy Church?
19488[ 2214] Fearless simplicity; whence came her confidence in her Voices if not from her own heart?
19488[ 2261] Or had she caught this manner of speech with the habit of dealing hard clouts and good blows from the men- at- arms of her company?
19488[ 2324] Did the judges of Rouen imagine that she wore a golden halo, like the saints, and that this halo had protected her?
19488[ 2330] Were the judges accusing her or her followers of having feigned to surrender in order treacherously to attack the enemy?
19488[ 2351] Was she a heretic or was she a saint?
19488[ 2482] Who better than they knew the injustice of these reproaches?
19488[ 262] And why should he not have favoured the French who worshipped him with peculiar devoutness?
19488[ 291] Who taught her this?
19488[ 528] But what about the rest of the defenders?
19488[ 621] But in those days who did not lend the King money?
19488_ Q._"Did you kiss or embrace Saint Catherine or Saint Margaret?"
19488_ Q._"Do you call these saints, or do they come without being called?"
19488_ Q._"In embracing them did you feel heat or anything?"
19488_ Q._"Was the voice accompanied by any light?"
19488_ Q._"Was this angel alone?"
19488_ Q._"Which part of Saint Catherine did you touch?"
19488dare you take in vain the name of Our Lord and Master?
19488she cried,"shall so terrible a fate betide me as that my body ever pure and intact shall to- day be burned and reduced to ashes?
21752''Ow d''you like grey tights an''buttons?
21752''Ow ever did you come for to find that hout?
21752''Ow should_ I_ know''er name?
21752''Ow so, sir?
21752A cove may do as he likes with his own, may n''t he?
21752A week''s leave of absence?
21752A week''s what?
21752Ai n''t there no pumps in London, stoopid?
21752An''I suppose,said Robin,"if it did n''t pay pretty well you''d cut it?"
21752An''wot principles may_ you_''old on by, my turnip?
21752And do you really advise him to go, granny?
21752And that is?
21752And who was this young lady?
21752Are you-- I beg pardon-- are you quite sure? 21752 But I say, Robin, if we do find that gal, you wo n''t split on me, eh?
21752But are you sure, Dr McTougall, that_ all_ the household is saved?
21752But have you not told me that you are obliged to part with him?
21752But what of the bobbies?
21752But where shall we find armour?
21752But why did you go there at all if you disliked it so much?
21752But,returned the Slogger, with a knowing frown,"seems to me as how you''d never get two keys into one lock-- eh?
21752But-- to change the subject-- has little Slidder been here to- day?
21752Can you read and write?
21752Cern''ly not,replied the boy, with the air of one who had been insulted;"wot d''you take me for?
21752Come in, Slidder-- that''s your name, is n''t it?
21752D''you mean my little Jenny by that dignified title?
21752D''you mean to say that you know the dog, and that his name is Punch?
21752D''you take me for a informer?
21752D''you think I stopped to inquire w''en I''elped to relieve''er of''er propity?
21752D''you think so?
21752Deary me, that''s very kind,said the old woman;"but I wonder why he sent such things to me, and who told him I was in want of''em?"
21752Did I, Robin? 21752 Do n''t it seem to you, now, as if it wor all a dream?"
21752Do n''t you think, now, that in a good cause a cove might:--` Take wot is n''t his''n, An''risk his bein''sent to pris''n?''"
21752Do you ever bite, Dumps?
21752Do you like it?
21752Do''e bite, sir?
21752Does a Mrs Willis live here?
21752Dr Mellon?
21752Dumps, what do you think of Mrs Miff?
21752Edie,said I abruptly,"_ is_ your name Blythe?"
21752For how much?
21752Has any one failed you to- day, granny?
21752Have another bit?
21752Have you any friends in London?
21752Have you not mentioned merely your objections and the disadvantages, without once weighing against them the advantages?
21752His name, sir? 21752 How can I know?"
21752How d''you know I''m taking on so?
21752How so?
21752How? 21752 I say, Dobson, where have you stowed my wife and the children?
21752I say, is he wicious?
21752I will,replied the boy, with decision;"but I say, all fair an''above- board?
21752In what light do you regard me, Miss Blythe?
21752Indeed,said I, somewhat amused by the humour of the fellow;"and what do you ask for him?"
21752Is it like Noah''s Ark?
21752Is not a recipient of charity a beggar?
21752Is that for your fare or a shake, Slogger?
21752Is that the blessing you refer to, Mrs Miff?
21752Is that what your` angel''teaches you, Robin?
21752Is the elderly gentleman safe?
21752Is this so?
21752Like it? 21752 Music-''alls and publics is meetin''-''ouses, ai n''t they?"
21752My dear,responded Dr McTougall,"you amaze me; surely the boy has not dared to be rude-- insolent to you?"
21752Nay, John, God forbid that I should say so; but am I not a beggar? 21752 No dodges?
21752Not hurt, I hope?
21752Of course I would,returned the Slogger, with a look of surprise;"wot''s the use o''stickin''to a thing that do n''t pay?"
21752Of course it is,she said, in startled surprise,"why should you doubt it?"
21752Of course, it ai n''t true, but wot o''that, if it relieves her mind?
21752Pretty griggy-- eh?
21752Saving up, have you?
21752Shall I read to you, granny?
21752Surely Dumps is not burning himself again-- eh?
21752Then it''s your own fault that you''ve not been taught?
21752Then the dog is yours?
21752There can be no doubt_ now_,I thought;"but why that name of Blythe?"
21752There''s nothing wrong, I hope?
21752Try away then-- who?
21752Vich is--?
21752Vy, ai n''t the shops full of''em? 21752 Vy, you''ve on''y got to go and marry the young lady, w''en, of course, all her property becomes yours, Punch included, do n''t you see?"
21752Vy? 21752 W''y, doctor,"said the boy, ignoring the question,"how could any boy attend on your''all- door w''en it''s burnt to hashes?"
21752Well, granny, how are you?
21752Well, granny,said I,"are you forsaken?"
21752Well, what more have you to say?
21752Were you praying with us, Slidder?
21752What are we to stop for?
21752What are you muttering about, Robin?
21752What are you saying, Robin?
21752What d''ee call''i m?
21752What d''you mean by ill- treating the little dog?
21752What d''you think it was?
21752What do you mean, boy?
21752What do your companions call you?
21752What dog is it?
21752What is the name, Edie, of the grandmother you have lost?
21752What were you going to say about being puzzled, granny?
21752What''ll we do to him now?
21752What''s Joan of Arc?
21752What''s his name?
21752When did you beg last, granny?
21752Where is your-- your( she looked young)_ sister_?
21752Where?
21752Which elderly gentleman? 21752 Who do you mean?"
21752Who''s Robin, granny?
21752Who?--the grandmother?
21752Whose tracks? 21752 Why, boy, how can you know whether the girl is good or bad?"
21752Why-- how-- ever-- did you come to guess it?
21752Why-- why do you call me Edie?
21752Why?
21752Willis-- but-- why do you start so? 21752 Wo n''t you sell''i m back?"
21752Wot about the wittles?
21752Wot''s that?
21752Wot''s wrong now?
21752Would you like to come?
21752Wy, wot''s all your''urry?
21752You are the soul of truth; tell me, is there any hope for me?--_can_ you care for me?
21752You could n''t introdooce me to him, could you, Miss Sunshine?
21752You do n''t know her name, do you?
21752You do n''t mean for to say, Robin, that the ladies ever holds you by the button-''oles?
21752You do n''t mean to say that the little rascal has been teaching them bad words or manners, I hope?
21752You know where the Slogger lives, do n''t you?
21752You, boy-- how?
21752_ Are_ you a beggar?
21752_ Will_ you be quiet, Robin?
21752` Well, what?'' 21752 ''Cause why? 21752 A thought suddenly flashed on me:--Will you sell your little dog?"
21752Ah, his name?
21752Ai n''t it the same identical street, an''the same side o''the street, and about the same part o''the street?
21752All right?
21752An''did n''t both him and me forgit to ask the name o''the people o''the''ouse, or to look at the number-- so took up was we with partin''from Punch?
21752An''ven I called''i m Punch did n''t he answer?--hey?"
21752And what of this boy who has come to live with her?
21752Are dogs mortal?
21752Are you open to a proposal?"
21752Are you very fund of that?"
21752But I say, all square?
21752But before I go would n''t it be better that you should make some inwestigations at the hospital?"
21752But why call me Robin?"
21752But, as I was agoin''to say, I''d bin away for a veek, an''w''en I comed''ome--""To which part of home?
21752But-- but-- you heard of my accident, of course?"
21752Can he read?"
21752Can you give her much of your time?"
21752Can you go?"
21752Can you wait patiently?"
21752D''ye think she''s bin drownded?"
21752D''you think I''m a genius as can read an''write without''avin''bin taught or d''you think I''m a monster as wos born readin''an''writin''?
21752D''you think he is steady-- to be depended on?"
21752D''you understand?
21752D''you understand?"
21752D''you''appen to know a young man of the name of Sl-- I mean Villum Bowls?"
21752Do n''t you know what sliding on the ice is?"
21752Do n''t you like Robin?"
21752Do n''t you like it?"
21752Do n''t you see?
21752Do you know that I am a doctor, sir, and must be obeyed?"
21752Do you suppose that nobody can find out things except Sloggers and pages in buttons?"
21752Doctor John Mellon?"
21752Edith is engaged to marry me.--Is it not so?"
21752From whom?"
21752Gittin''all square, eh?"
21752Gittin''better?"
21752Hain''t you got no genteel boys in the West- end to butt agin, that you come all the way to Vitechapel to butt agin_ me_?
21752Has he a vite spot on the bridge of''is nose?"
21752Have you had breakfast?
21752Honour bright?
21752Honour bright?"
21752How could she help it?
21752How then do you call him to you?"
21752How would such a situation suit you?"
21752How would you like the place?
21752How?
21752I say, Slid-- Robin, I mean--""Vell, Slog-- Villum, I mean; why do n''t you say wot you mean, eh?"
21752I say, doctor, that''s a rum go about that gal Edie-- ain''t it?
21752In coorse, I ca n''t throw up my sitivation, sir, can I?
21752Is it needful to say that when I mentioned what had occurred to Dr McTougall that amiable little man opened his eyes to their widest?
21752Is n''t it odd?
21752Is n''t that nice?
21752Is such overflowing wealth of affection extinguished at death?
21752Is the affections to count for nuffin''?"
21752Mellon, are you there?"
21752Need I say that I joined in the worship, and that Dumps and Robin followed suit?
21752No dodges?
21752No school- boardin''nor nuffin''o''that sort-- hey?
21752Now, wot can a feller do but drive''i m''ome with sticks an''stones, though it do go to my''eart to do it?
21752Robin an''Slidder''ave been united, an''a pretty pair they make, do n''t they?"
21752She would be sure to have made inquiries, would she not, at your old lodging, if she had felt disposed to return?"
21752Slog-- Villum I mean; how are you?
21752So I goes an''gets round the old''ooman, an''pumps her about the lost key, an''at last I finds it-- d''ye see?"
21752So_ that''s_ the reason w''y I''m goin''to recruit my''ealth in the north, d''ye see?
21752The noo''un would n''t let the old''un in, would it?"
21752Then aloud:"It is a pretty contraction for Edith, is it not?
21752Then, did n''t that six- footer say a terrier dog_ was_ reskooed from the lower premises?
21752There is nobody here but my little dog-- one that I have just bought, a rather shaggy terrier-- what do you think of him?"
21752To be sure there''s many a terrier dog in London, but then did n''t he likewise say that the gov''ness o''the family is a pretty gal?
21752To the same house.--And who are you?"
21752Vell, as I was agoin''to say w''en--""Excuse me once more-- what is your name?"
21752Was n''t that absurd, eh?
21752We asked a blessin''fust, now, did n''t we?
21752What do you mean?"
21752What do you mean?"
21752What is your father''s name?"
21752What was it that prevented you that day, eh?"
21752What''s that?"
21752What?
21752What?"
21752When did she die?"
21752Who d''ye think she is?
21752Who do you think is coming to stay with us-- to stay altogether?
21752Who''d make''er bed an''light''er fires an''fetch''er odd bits o''coal?
21752Who''d make''er gruel?
21752Who''d polish''er shoes every mornin''till you could see to shave in''em, though she do n''t never put''em on?
21752Why is it not Willis?"
21752Why?"
21752Will you come and see me at my own house the day after to- morrow, at eight in the morning?"
21752Will you give him this card, and tell him to call on me to- morrow morning between eight and nine?
21752Will you''ave it now, or vait till you get it?"
21752Wot more likely than that she''s_ my_ young lady?
21752Wot more nat''ral than for him to go round on''is way back to look at the''ouse-- supposin''he was too late to call?
21752Wot''s the use o''me an''Dr McTougall fetchin''you nice things if you wo n''t eat''em?"
21752Would a roll do you any good?"
21752Would n''t any cove with half an eye see that the dog knows me, an''so, in course, I must know_ him_?
21752Would she just run round an''see her?
21752You ai n''t a school- board buffer?"
21752You do n''t mean to say that you''re getting worse?"
21752You know him?"
21752You wo n''t mind his sitting at the door until I go?"
21752You wo n''t tell''er who I am or where I is?
21752You wo n''t think me selfish or tiresome if I go back to an early period of my history?"
21752You wo n''t wictimise your old friend?"
21752You would n''t mind comin''into this''ere grog- shop while I git change, would you?
21752a meetin''-''ouse''?"
21752asked Robin;"it was n''t Edie Willis, now, was it?"
21752did I say I was puzzled?"
21752eh, Slidder?"
21752exclaimed my landlady, as I entered the lobby,"was there ever a greater blessin''--oh!--""Why, what''s the matter, Mrs Miff?"
21752he replied, in a tone of the most insolent indignation,"wot ever do you mean by runnin''agin my''ead like that?
21752honour bright?"
21752how dare you come here, sir, without leave?"
21752interrupted Slidder, standing up with a look of intense surprise,"are you took bad?"
21752my good fellow, d''you think I''d be talking thus quietly to you if I were_ not_ sure?
21752or` Does your mother know you''re out?''
21752replied the man, with a smile-- for he was an amiable footman--"and I suppose you are young Slidder?"
21752said I, rather sternly;"how can I get over this very difficult matter if you go on interrupting me so?"
21752said I,"what possesses you to refuse so good an offer?"
21752said Slidder, with a look of pity,"no soap?"
21752they screamed, in delight,` what_ do_ you think we''ve had for supper?''
21752thought I,"why should the loss of a miserable dog-- a mere mass of shapeless hair-- affect me so much?
21752we never mention''im;--but, I say, w''en did you go into the genteel line?
21752where are you?"
21752who''d a thought it?"
21752wot''s your business?"
27015German beer?
27015What in the name of goodness is it?
27015What is its flower like?
27015At what particular phase in the embryonic series is the soul with its consciousness implanted?
27015At what step are we to be asked to suppose that the order of nature was stopped, and a non- natural soul introduced?...
27015But how many of them are really suited to the picture which they surround?
27015But what do they do?
27015But what must be the condition of the gases in the blood of a whale which suddenly rises from 400 fathoms to the surface?
27015CHAPTER XI KISSES"Among thy fancies, tell me this, What is the thing we call a kiss?
27015Can the fatherless brood be reared to maturity and again made to yield a fatherless generation?
27015Goodness( shall we say virtue and high quality?)
27015How did it come about that these pretty little button- like, drab- coloured fossil teeth were given such an erroneous history?
27015How did this utterly peculiar change in a Ruminant''s teeth come about?
27015How many millions of years did it take to form those rocks( many of them are stratified, water- laid deposits) in the depths of the ocean?
27015How many more to twist and bend them and raise them to their present height?
27015How often is such a frame seen?
27015How was the standard size determined, and how is it maintained?
27015How, then, we may now ask, ought an artist to represent a galloping horse?
27015Is it in the egg?
27015Is the literary critic of a prosperous journal employed to write the City article?
27015It used to be asked in classical times by ingenious puzzle- makers--"What is the size of the moon?"
27015Should we ask,"Why does this process exist?"
27015The questions that arise are: Where did the rat- goat come from?
27015Von Wissman said--"Can I have beer where we are going?"
27015WHAT IS THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN?
27015What have these thoughts to do with the New Year?
27015What is laughter?
27015What is the advantage to the individual or the species of"laughing"?
27015What is there for us to laugh at?"
27015What is this glory so remote yet impending over us?
27015What more probable than that such a creation should still be, here and there, at work?
27015What more, he asked, could you wish for?
27015What was the speciality of each, and how do they come to have to do with collections of works of art and specimens of natural history?
27015What, then, had become of it, and how did it come to England?
27015Who is there who has an adequate understanding of picture- frames as adjuncts to, or necessary accompaniments of, great pictures?
27015Who were these goddesses, the Muses, and what were their names?
27015Why did we laugh at the adventures of Mr. Penley in"Charley''s Aunt"?
27015Why do we laugh when a man on the stage searches everywhere for his hat, which is all the time on his head?
27015Why do we laugh?
27015Why do we"express"our pleasurable emotion and why in this way?
27015Why do you never laugh?"
27015Why?
27015in the foetus of this month or that?
27015in the new- born infant?
27015or at five years of age?''
27015that of the actual pose assumed instantaneously and simultaneously by the four legs of the galloping horse?
27015why and when did artists adopt the false but generally accepted attitude of the"flying gallop"?
25801All right, Lance, but why do n''t you come to the point? 25801 But if you have no faith in the letters, why do you seem so much happier and like your old self?"
25801But where is the olive branch I am to offer the girls to- night when we have our meeting to decide whether we are willing to make friends?
25801Care? 25801 Come down to the shore of the lake with me, wo n''t you Princess Nausicaa?"
25801Do come on down to the lake and let us sit there a half hour and talk if you have finished your work?
25801Do n''t you girls appreciate the fact this is to be a farewell serenade for Kara? 25801 Do n''t you know, Tory, darling?
25801Do n''t you think you had best open the letters and read what they say?
25801Do n''t you think, Evan, that if your mother is well she might be persuaded to come to your camp and teach us dancing?
25801Do n''t you? 25801 Do you miss Lucy?"
25801Do you remember about two weeks ago when Mr. Fenton talked to us about the Greek spirit? 25801 Do you remember, Kara?
25801Dot, does it ever occur to you that a fellow may have a right to his mistakes? 25801 Edith Linder has been a success as a Girl Scout this summer, has she not, Sheila?
25801Has n''t Dr. McClain told you?
25801Has this floor ever been taken up and a new one laid down?
25801How can you care for my poor efforts after the serenade?
25801How did you happen to walk over to camp and not be wearing your uniform? 25801 How in the world did you find this impossible place?
25801I am not tiring you too much? 25801 I wonder, Tory, why you think I enjoy seeing another person dance?
25801Intend? 25801 Is it very kind of you, Memory Frean, to refer to one''s past mistakes, especially when I am your guest?"
25801Is it your intention to sit up all night and keep guard over me? 25801 Is n''t Don one of the boys down there?
25801Is there anything else you could tell me, Mr. Hammond? 25801 Lance, why in the world do n''t you help Don out?
25801May I start with Kara to our dancing grounds? 25801 Memory Frean, what is it Miss Mason wished you to talk about to me?
25801Now I am through with my lecture, will some one give me a hammer? 25801 Promise me then not to expect too much or be too disappointed if things do not turn out altogether well?
25801Remember the tableaux your troop of Girl Scouts gave in Westhaven this spring? 25801 See here, Dorothy, what is the use?
25801See here, Miss Kara, I wonder if you would like me to tell you something? 25801 So you wish to be a dancing teacher?"
25801Sometimes I wonder if being Captain of our Girl Scout Troop has not helped her almost as much as the rest of us?
25801Suppose you tell us how you learned to dance in that beautiful fashion, Evan? 25801 Then you do care for Kara?"
25801Then, do n''t you suppose the other girls miss having you with them on some of their excursions? 25801 Tory Drew, are n''t you ever going to sleep?"
25801Want to save Don at my expense? 25801 Well, if I have, is it so wicked of me?"
25801What about the music? 25801 What are we to do when they have finished, Tory, to show our appreciation?"
25801What are you doing not in your Scout uniform, Lance? 25801 What are you talking about, Lance?
25801What in the world is the matter?
25801What is a crucible, Evan?
25801What is it you want, Teresa?
25801What is the matter, Tory? 25801 Who says one can not have beautiful things happen to one even if lost letters do prove disappointing?"
25801Why not, Lance? 25801 Why, Lucy, what in the world does this mean?
25801Why, Teresa, how can you ask what is troubling me? 25801 Wonder if I''ve got to make a clean breast of the whole business?
25801Would it not be difficult to persuade your mother to believe, Louise, that you and I are interested in our camp housekeeping? 25801 Would you mind thrusting your hand inside and seeing if there is anything stored away?
25801Would you really like to know about my dancing? 25801 Would your telling me how you know what we are doing at our Girl Scout camp involve some one else?"
25801You were not disappointed over our discovery, dear? 25801 You''ll come along with us, wo n''t you, Tory?
25801Am I reproaching you for too much all at once, Tory?"
25801Are you being nice to Edith as you promised me to be?
25801Are you by yourself?
25801Are you looking for Dorothy?
25801Are you sure you are not uncomfortable?"
25801But to take part in a Greek pageant which would require a sacrifice of time and energy from the routine of their camp life?
25801Ca n''t you appreciate that we are not all possessed of the artistic temperament and gifted with the power of seeing visions?
25801Could one week have altered Kara''s appearance and her nature?
25801Dear me, what is that commotion?"
25801Did you see them on their hike or did Dorothy tell you we were planning an all- day tramp?"
25801Do Mr. or Mrs. Hammond know where you are?"
25801Do try and forget it, wo n''t you?
25801Do you feel I am responsible for your accident?
25801Do you feel you will be equal to it?
25801Do you mean do I love Kara?
25801Do you mind?"
25801Do you recall, Kara, the little girl I discovered and who she afterwards turned out to be?"
25801Do you understand what I have been trying to explain, Lance?
25801Fenton?"
25801Had she been tactless again?
25801Has anyone or anything offended you?
25801Has no one told you or the other Girl Scouts of our Troop?
25801How am I failing as a Girl Scout?"
25801How did you happen to turn up here?
25801How long before she would speak a second time?
25801I wonder if bringing Katherine Moore here as an invalid to be cared for by us would not put our Scout principles into a crucible?"
25801I wonder if you will tell me where I can find her?"
25801I wonder what is the matter?
25801I wonder what they intend?"
25801If I have a secret source of information is n''t that my affair?
25801If there is time before Mrs. Phillips arrives why not attempt another sketch of Lucy?
25801If you do n''t know where she is will you ask Miss Mason?
25801In any case you would not have me betray another?"
25801In what fashion was she failing as a Girl Scout, that her Troop Captain felt compelled to ask some one else to lecture her?
25801Is n''t it hard enough to sit everlastingly watching you walking, swimming, doing whatever you wish, while I am more helpless than a baby?
25801Is one of us thinking any other thought?
25801Is there anything in the world more difficult to represent with its dignity, grace and beneficence than a tree?
25801Is this because you are preparing to spend your entire life out of doors?"
25801May I say that it was wonderful to see you?
25801May I write to you now and then, Miss Victoria?"
25801May we speak to Dorothy?
25801Now, was it her affection for Katherine Moore or the months of her Scout training that had given her a new spirit?
25801Please look for yourself, wo n''t you?"
25801Shall I go to my room while you receive them?"
25801Shall we or shall we not bury the hatchet and agree to forgive them?
25801The letters do mean something to you?
25801Then what was one to do but give Kara all that one possessed?
25801Then, if Kara wishes, perhaps you will dance for us again?"
25801There is n''t one chance in a thousand we should come across anything, but it would be worth while to try, would it not?"
25801Therefore, what did he actually mean?
25801Were the other Girl Scouts finding her a difficult member of their camp group?
25801Were they of the remotest interest or value?
25801What are we going to do, Tory?
25801What are you planning to do in quest of beauty, freedom and adventure?"
25801What could there be to object to in your wonderful dancing?
25801What do you mean?
25801What have you done of late to break the camp discipline?
25801What in the world are you doing here?
25801What in the world are you going to propose?
25801What is it?"
25801What time do you think it is?"
25801What was there in the present moment to amuse him, save her own intention to come immediately to Donald''s defense?
25801What would be her emotions if she knew that in this house, tumbled down and uncared for, she had been deserted as a baby?
25801When will you have money or time for lessons?"
25801Where could there be a more perfect opportunity than here in the heart of Beechwood Forest in their own"Choros,"or dancing- ground?
25801Who says I made any such suggestion, Dorothy?
25801Whose idea was it that you pretend to be Greek heroines as well as American Girl Scouts?"
25801Why did Lance fail to come to his brother''s rescue?
25801Why had she not told her wherein lay her fault?
25801Why not slip into her tent and find her sketch book?
25801Why was it not a portion of the work of the Scouts to bring fresh ideals of beauty and romance into their own environments?
25801Yet how can it be different?
25801Yet will either of these places alter Kara''s state of mind?
25801You are sure it will be best for her?
25801You did tell Teresa she was to be chosen for Penelope, did n''t you?"
25801You have the faith to believe that something important to_ you_ will develop from them some day?
25801You know you want to play what you have written for Kara, so why pretend otherwise?"
25801You need things to interest you these days, do n''t you?"
25801You were coming to camp to see us?"
25801You''ll think up a better line of argument, wo n''t you Dorothy?
25801who knows what Greek pictures should be like?
26800Is there any moment which can certify to its successor?
26800And besides, had not everything I could do or be of good belonged to her during the eighteen months we had been friends?
26800And was not Beethoven, in what some folk consider his mightiest era, as deaf as a post?
26800And what amusement, what material revelry can be compared with the great carouses of words in which the young can still indulge?
26800And who should that be but Apollo- Wolfgang- Amadeus, driving with easy wrist his teams, tandem or abreast, of winged, effulgent melodies?
26800And why not?
26800And, stoically speaking, does it much matter?
26800And, to go further still, what_ is_ the Past?
26800And, who knows?
26800Are we much surer of being alive to- morrow than of being dead in fifty years?
26800Besides, is it nothing that they should be amusing themselves once in their lives( we can not be sure of the future)?
26800But are we so absolutely sure of that?
26800But did they read them in the same way?
26800But do we look at them?
26800But... how put such transcendental facts into common or garden( for it is_ garden_) language?
26800Could it be Malibran-- or Catalani... and was my stage jewel bewitched, a kind of Solomon''s ring, conjuring up great spirits?
26800Do you advise that, like some tactful persons we-- you-- yes,_ you_--all know and detest-- we systematically let every subject drop as soon as raised?
26800Défendez- vous au sage De se donner des soins pour le plaisir d''autrui?
26800For to that unceasing question_ Why_?
26800For what compensated me after my lost train and all my worry and vexation of spirit?
26800For who can tell?
26800Get up?
26800Go to the play?
26800I lingeringly relished( why did not Johnson give us a verb to_ saporate_?)
26800Is not what we think of as the Past-- what we discuss, describe, and so often passionately love-- a mere creation of our own?
26800Not merely in its details, but in what is far more important, in its essential, emotional, and imaginative quality and value?
26800Not talking_ with them_( largely reiteration of the word"Why?
26800Open my eyes to the light?
26800Or would you confine talking to the weather or the contents of the public prints?
26800Painful facts?
26800Roughly, it may be expressed as follows:--Were old people ever young?
26800Should company necessarily mean the company of strangers?
26800Talk about?
26800The one she brought from Hanover and wore that winter in Paris?"
26800Then, would you never talk?
26800This is the secret of our intercourse with those persons of whom our friends will say( or think), What_ can_ you have in common with So- and- so?
26800What are the relations of the Past and Present?
26800What could be more deeply satisfactory to think upon?
26800What if an electric tram starts from the foot of Giotto''s tower, or if four- and- twenty Cook''s tourists invade the inn and streets of Verona?
26800What_ can_ you find to talk about?
26800Where does the Past begin?
26800Why is it not oftener so?
26800Why not deliberately aim at such effects?
26800Why, as we all try to be honest, and hard- working, and clever, and more or less illustrious, should we not sometimes try to be a little Castilian?
26800Would you have our ideas get hard and sterile for want of being moved?
26800Years gone by?
26800_ In company?_ Good heavens!
26800after these years of familiarity, we did not know each other fully?
26800is being with one''s wife, one''s brothers or sisters, one''s children, one''s bosom friends_ being in company_?
26800or, looking, do we see them, feel them?
26800to pretend that the gift we receive is the very thing we have been pining for for years?
27874Who would have thought that a nation would burn its own capital?
27874And finally whence does it come?
27874Is it because Nature is here so bountiful, so lovely, so prolific, that her children are sluggish, dirty, and heedless?
27874Is it possible that the moon, whose light renders objects so plain that one can see to read small print, shines solely by borrowed light?
27874We find ourselves asking, What is the real life of Italy to- day?
27874What causes a foreign population to circulate through its cities, constantly on the wing, scattering gold right and left among her needy population?
27874What keeps its tepid waters, in a course of thousands of miles, from mingling with the rest of the sea?
27874Where could money purchase such attractions as crowd the museum of Naples?
27874Where else can be found a city composed of over seventy islands?
27874Who can explain satisfactorily its ceaseless current?
27874_ Armado._ How hast thou purchased this experience?
28316Where? 28316 Where is he?
21759''What are you about, Charlie?'' 21759 Accidentally?"
21759Am I never to be more than a brother to you-- never to obtain a greater interest in you, a larger share of your regard than I have now? 21759 And in the meantime, Kate,"he urged,"you wo n''t allow yourself to be entangled with any one else?"
21759And oh, Mrs. Lumley,I exclaimed as I concluded,"how could I sleep a wink last night, with all this to harass and reproach me?
21759And so you leave town to- morrow, Miss Coventry?
21759And what has John got to do with it, I should like to know?
21759And you wo n''t forget me, Kate?
21759And you_ really_ leave town to- morrow?
21759Are you going to hunt all the season with the Heavy- top?
21759But what became of Lady Mabel?
21759By yourself?
21759By- the- way, what is your address in Wales, that I may forward your letters?
21759Ca n''t we_ do_ anything to put off horrid London and home and bed? 21759 Can you row, Miss Coventry?"
21759Come out for a lark too, my lady, hey?
21759Did I ever tell you what happened to me once, when I took it into my head to drive my own chariot home? 21759 Did you ever know a thoroughly unfeeling person in your life that did not prosper?"
21759Did you get my note?
21759Did you hear of her going to the bachelors''ball with three gentlemen in a fly?
21759Did you or did you not meet Captain Lovel this morning in Hyde Park?
21759Did you see her drop her bracelet, to make young Stiffneck pick it up? 21759 Did you see that article in to- day''s_ Times_ about Ministers?"
21759Do tell me, can that dog really_ catch_ a hare?
21759Do you believe I''m as bad as they give me credit for?
21759Do you believe that Welsh story, Kate?
21759Do you mean his name is''Baby''?
21759Do you think I have not been punished and humiliated enough? 21759 Driving-- hey?"
21759Fond of driving, Miss Coventry?
21759Good heavens, Kate, what is the matter? 21759 Goodness, Kate, what are you doing here?"
21759Has anything happened? 21759 Have I your permission to call upon Lady Horsingham to- morrow?"
21759Have n''t we known each other from childhood, and are you not like a brother to me?
21759Have you any objection to telling me who it was?
21759He''s a relation of yours, is he not?
21759How can I tell?
21759How could you do so, Captain Lovell?
21759How do you do, Kate?
21759How do you know he''s a bachelor, aunt?
21759How long do you stay at Dangerfield?
21759I''ll drive Kate as far as the station in the pony- carriage.--Kate, you''re not afraid to trust yourself with me in the pony- carriage?
21759Is n''t he the image of old Paleface? 21759 Is that killing''get- up''entirely for our benefit, John?"
21759It''s me is n''t it, that mamma wants?
21759John,said I,"what time do we dine?"
21759Kate,said he, in a grave, deliberate voice,"you know what I mean-- Yes or No?"
21759Kate,said he,"do you think I shall be married before Miss Horsingham?"
21759Looks a game''un, do n''t he, squire?
21759Nothing more, Kate,said John, looking as if he did n''t know whether he was pleased or annoyed--"nothing but_ esteem_?"
21759Once more, Lucy,he said, and his eye glared fiercely in the waning light--"once more,_ will_ you give me one word, or_ never_ set eyes on me again?"
21759Reading, aunt? 21759 Seen_ my_ team-- three greys and a piebald?
21759Think of you, my dear?
21759We came down in seven minutes under the hour from my aunt''s door in Lowndes Street; did n''t we, Kate? 21759 What are we waiting for now?"
21759What is it? 21759 What now?"
21759What o''clock is it?
21759What shall I do?
21759What''s o''clock?
21759What''s the matter, Kate?
21759What''s the matter, Kate?
21759Where can it be, Kate?
21759Where have you been, Kate?
21759Who introduced you to that horrid woman, Kate?
21759Who''s that girl on the chestnut?
21759Who''s the lady, John, my boy?
21759Whose horses are those, my man?
21759Why did you refuse Frank Lovell?
21759Why do n''t we begin?
21759Why not?
21759Why? 21759 Will you have some breakfast?"
21759You do n''t know how miserable I am sometimes( I wonder what he wanted me to say? 21759 You like our country, Miss Coventry; fine climate, excellent soil, nice and dry for ladies?"
21759You need n''t be so surprised, Kate,said she, laughing at my utter bewilderment;"do n''t you miss anybody?
21759_ Do_ you entertain regard and affection for me, Kate?
21759--"Can we render the lady any assistance?"
21759After all, I could not help liking Frank very much; and was not my cousin at the back of the coach, to witness all that took place?
21759After fighting one''s way literally step by step, and gaining a landing by assault, one looks round and takes breath, and what does one see?
21759And after all he got out nothing but,"Well, Kate?"
21759And did n''t I kick the dirt in his face?
21759And in another instant he had bounded to the earth, accosted my_ chaperon_ with a hearty"Jack, how goes it?"
21759And never turned a hair; did we, Kate?
21759And was this the end of all?
21759And where was Cousin Edward all the time?
21759And why are our sex so apt to cherish feelings of animosity towards those who are younger and better- looking than themselves?
21759And why should the world make this dead set at poor Mrs. Peony?
21759And why, do you think, she wo n''t pick and choose from such a trio?
21759And yet-- why did he send his horses down to Muddlebury?
21759Are grown- up people always so rational in their amusements or irreproachable in their demeanour?
21759Are men the only bipeds that can be at the same time brave and virtuous?
21759Are you ill, John?
21759As for his wildness and his debts, and his recklessness and many escapades, I liked him none the worse for these-- what woman ever did?
21759But how did you know we were going to London to- day, and how could you tell the ponies would run away?"
21759But what could I do?
21759But who would venture to speak a word against the decorum of Lady Straitlace?
21759By the way, the housemaids here are infernally officious; you have n''t_ seen_ a good specimen of the common house- spider anywhere about, have you?"
21759By the way, why is it that a party never can keep together at Vauxhall?
21759Can these be good reasons for running her down?
21759Could he summon courage to look into the future, or fortitude even to_ think_ of the past?
21759Could it have belonged to Mrs. Lumley?
21759Did I tell you how nearly drowned he was, crossing the moat?
21759Did he ever think of Damocles and the hanging sword?
21759Did he think to throw dust in my eyes?
21759Did you ever hear any good of me?"
21759Do n''t you find me very heavy?"
21759Do n''t you know all these cursed Frenchmen are dead shots?
21759Do n''t you see him, Miss Coventry, now whisking under the gate?"
21759Do you know that she takes morning walks with Colonel Chanticleer, and evening strolls with Bob Bulbul?
21759Do you know the difference between real diamonds and paste?
21759Do you like music by moonlight?"
21759Do you see that old, plainish woman, with such black hair and eyebrows-- something like Lady Scapegrace, only not so handsome as my favourite enemy?
21759Do you stay any length of time in town?"
21759Do you think I can_ stay the distance_, as you sporting people term it in your inexplicable jargon?"
21759Do you think I was not a reckless woman when I married Sir Guy?
21759Do you think I would marry her if she had half a million?
21759Do you think they are to be taken by storm, and, so to speak, bullied into admiration?
21759Do you think they like to see their ideal hot and dishevelled, plastered with mud, and draggled with wet?
21759Do you think you can be responsible?"
21759Do you think you could live in this part of the world?"
21759Do you think_ men_ appreciate a woman who, if she had but a beard, would be exactly like one of themselves?
21759Does nobody know her?
21759For my part, I never do what I am told, Kate; do you?"
21759Fox was_ back_, of course, and we never recovered him, but it was by far the best gallop of the season?''
21759Had it ever been home to Sir Hugh?
21759Have you any objections?"
21759Have you found out_ the rover_ transferring his adoration to Miss Molasses?
21759Have you got the old mare still?
21759Have you learned to loathe every tree and shrub and hedge- row in the dreary landscape?
21759He actually had the effrontery to propose that I should accompany him to the stable, and that he should then"show me_ his_ boudoir-- hey?
21759How am I to get back?
21759How came I there?
21759How could I be so clumsy?
21759How could my presentiments deceive me?
21759How far is it to the station?
21759How is it to be done?
21759How shall I ever apologize?
21759How she rattled on:"You do n''t know Lady Scapegrace, Miss Coventry, do you?
21759I ask him,"What is your principal object in going out hunting?
21759I asked;"or are you bound on some expedition that requires more fascinations than common?"
21759I can take care of her as far as the railway, if it''s not too great a liberty, and bring the ponies back to the Hall afterwards, my lady?"
21759I exclaimed;"whose, I should like to know?"
21759I quite missed him on the Derby day, when of course he was gone to Epsom( by- the- bye, why do n''t we go to the Derby just as much as to Ascot?
21759I replied, quite frightened,"what have I done?"
21759I was unmarried then, Mr. Waxy, and as innocent as a babe, d''ye see?
21759If I was disappointed in other things, could I not devote myself wholly to hunting, and so lead a happy and harmless life?
21759If you wo n''t have the carriage, I must walk back with you myself.--How far is it, Madge?
21759In the first place, how was I to get out of the room?
21759Is it Prince Albert?"
21759Is it that she wishes to resemble a King Charles''s spaniel?
21759Is it to learn the habits of the wild animal, or to watch the instinct of the hound that pursues him?
21759Jones?"
21759Just then Cousin John came back to me, with his sunny, laughing face, and I naturally asked him,"Had he won his money?"
21759Kate, did you ever hear I was a murderess?"
21759Kate, have you ever heard me talked about?
21759Kate, you''ve heard of my Cousin Latimer; would you like to see his picture?"
21759Major Ramrod is never out of the house; but what then?
21759Mischievous Mrs. Lumley, was this your doing?
21759Must pluck and piety be for ever divorced in the female character?
21759My dear, there were all his clothes, his hair- brush, his button- hook, his wig, and, would you believe it?
21759No bad news, I trust, from Aunt Deborah?"
21759Nobody hates flirting so much as myself, but what is one to do shut up in a country- house, with no earthly thing to occupy or amuse one?
21759Not mine, certainly, for I never gave him such a thing; Miss Molasses''?
21759Now, do n''t you think it would be far better to encourage her in domestic tastes and amusements?
21759Of course there was a note-- after all, where was the harm?
21759Point- blank, on your honour as a gentleman, I ask you,_ Are you_ or_ are you not_ engaged to be married to Miss Molasses?"
21759Reader, have you ever lived for weeks and weeks in a place which bored you to death?
21759Shall I confess that I was somewhat disappointed?
21759Shall I lend you an extra shawl?
21759Shall I never be able to keep the straight path in life because I can turn an awkward corner with four horses at a trot?
21759Should you like to live all your life haunted by one pale face?
21759So I have wavered and prevaricated, and behaved disingenuously, almost falsely; and what must he think of me now?"
21759So that was all, was it?
21759Strong language, Kate, is it not?
21759Though annoyed and hurt, he mustered a good- humoured smile as he said,''For the_ third_ and_ last_ time, will you dance with me?''
21759Was n''t it fun?
21759Was n''t there a pretty Miss Lloyd you used to dance with last season in London?
21759Was there no skeleton in Sir Guy''s mental cupboard?
21759Well, what do I care?
21759Were there no phantoms that_ would_ rise up, like Banquo''s ghost, to their seat, unbidden, at his board?
21759What could I do but think of Frank Lovell, and wonder when I should see him again?
21759What could I do?
21759What could I do?
21759What could she do?
21759What did he mean?
21759What do you think?
21759What has happened?"
21759What if he had obtained an insight into my character which had cured him entirely of any regard he might previously have entertained for me?
21759What if he should cast_ me_ off now?
21759What is ten years of common life, one''s feet upon the fender, compared to five such golden minutes as these?
21759What say you, Kate-- is it a bargain?"
21759What should you have done, Mr. Waxy?
21759What was she doing at Sir Montague''s wedding?
21759What would I have given to be seated, I had almost said_ enthroned_, by his side?
21759What would people think of_ me_?
21759What''s the use of horses if one do n''t ride?"
21759What?
21759What?"
21759What_ could_ he mean?
21759What_ shall_ I do?
21759When he got back there, and skulked into his own house like a midnight thief-- what would he do?--why was he galloping so fast?
21759When morning dawned, concealment could no longer be preserved, and what to do then?
21759When shall we meet again, and where?"
21759When shall we poor women be done justice to?
21759Where could he be?
21759Where did these queer- looking pedestrians come from?
21759Where does Captain Lovell sleep?"
21759Where is it?
21759Who can it be?
21759Who can tell the struggles that rent that strong, proud heart?
21759Who gave_ you_ authority to choose my society for me, or to determine where I shall go or what I shall do?
21759Who should feel for them, Kate, if I did n''t?
21759Who told you I was going to be married at all?
21759Who was there to whom I could apply?
21759Who would have guessed at the wild and stormy passions that could rage beneath so calm a surface?
21759Who would suppose that stately, reserved, majestic- looking woman had the recklessness of a brigand and the caprices of a child?
21759Who''s the woman, eh?
21759Whose could it be?
21759Why did he serenade me that night from the Park?
21759Why does a little woman with a turn- up nose always wear her hair in ringlets?
21759Why is it ladies have such a knack of making each other miserable equally by letter as by word of mouth?
21759Why, then, do you waste so much energy, and money, and civility, and''soft- sawder,''to preserve the vulpine race?
21759Why, they went so smooth Kate could n''t keep her hands off the reins; could you, Kate?
21759Would it be home to- night?
21759Would you wish never to enjoy a strain of music, a gleam of sunshine, a single, simple, natural pleasure, because of the phantom?
21759You see that distant castle, sufficiently badly painted, in the corner of the picture?
21759You walk out and ask every labourer you meet whether he"does not think we are going to have a change?"
21759_ Kate_.--"Can''t we put it off for an hour?
21759ca n''t you stop''em?
21759hounds never went any pace!--couldn''t shake off the crowd-- yes, we killed our fox; but the whole thing was dead slow?''
21759in love, Miss Coventry, do n''t you think so?
21759je ne contais pas là- dessus; mais, que voulez- vous?
21759may I call you Kate?
21759monks must n''t marry, you know!--wouldn''t he look well with his feet shaved, Miss Coventry, and his head bare and a rope round his neck?"
21759my team wo n''t get over it in a hurry-- the roads were woolly and the time short-- hey, Miss Kate?
21759or did_ mon cousin_ take advantage of the hour and the opportunity to lecture us last night on our love of admiration and general levity of conduct?
21759or what business is it of yours whether I am married or not?"
21759or"Wo n''t you?"
21759said I, much amused,"or that you call him so because he is such a child?
21759said he;"do you value my good opinion and consider me as your dearest and best friend?"
21759says the urchin, pouting his rosy lips,"why do n''t you play with me?--what are you thinking of?"
21759what is it?
21759what''s the matter?"
21759whispered a fat squire in a purple garment, with a face to match;"good seat on a horse, eh?
21759would you have such feelings as mine?
23609''And yet your husband loves you?'' 23609 ''Can you talk with him upon this subject?''
23609''Do you think so?'' 23609 AND YOU, MOTHER, knowing the danger that besets your daughters at this critical period, are you justified in keeping silent?
23609How can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit?
23609Think you that good seed sown will bring forth bitter fruit? 23609 This is up- hill work,"said Jenny;"So is life,"said I;"shall we Climb it each alone, or, Jenny, Will you come and climb with me?"
23609Thunderstorms clear the atmosphere and promote vegetation; then why not Love- spats promote love, as they certainly often do? 23609 WHAT IS IT, THEN, THAT USUALLY CAUSES distress to many women, whether a bride or a long- time wife?"
23609***** Shall Pregnant Women Work?
23609***** Why Bring Into the World Idiots, Fools, Criminals and Lunatics?
23609ADMIRED AND BELOVED.--Young lady, would you be admired and beloved?
23609Afraid of the girls, are you?
23609And why?
23609And, think you, that your son and daughter, later in life will make you their confidant as they ought?
23609Are jesters and buffoons your choice friends?
23609Are not such parents largely to blame?
23609Are the magistrates and the police powerless?
23609Are there not other hearts on earth just as loving and lovely, and in every way as congenial?
23609Are there not"as good fish in the sea as ever were caught?"
23609Are they not criminals in a high degree?
23609Are you a true, straightforward, manly fellow, with whose healthful and uncorrupted nature it is good for society to come in contact?
23609Are you able to make any return for social recognition and social privileges?
23609BRAINY ENOUGH.--What kind of women make the best wives?
23609Because you would rather be Mrs. Nobody, than make the effort to be Miss Somebody?
23609CHARACTER OF ILLEGITIMATES.--Wherein, then, consists this difference?
23609CONCLUSION.--Would you, then, secure the love and trust of your wife, and become an object of her ever- growing tenderness and reverence?
23609CONFIDENCE AND EXPOSURE.--I hear some of you say, can not some influence be brought to bear upon this plague- spot?
23609Can maternity be natural when it is undesigned by the father or undesired by the mother?
23609Can not many now unhappy remember them as the beginning of that alienation which embittered your subsequent affectional cup, and spoiled your lives?
23609Can you be held guiltless if your daughter ruins body and mind because you were_ too modest_ to tell her the laws of her being?
23609Do n''t say where are you stopping?
23609Do n''t say who may you be; say who are you?
23609Do women in all circles of society, when practicing these terrible crimes realize the real danger?
23609Do you blame me because I write so freely?
23609Do you know anything?
23609Do you love and seek the society of the wise and good?
23609Do you seek to be with the profane?
23609Do you, can you love me?
23609Does not this alone prove to us, conclusively, that there is a Divinity in the background governing, controlling and influencing our lives?
23609FATAL CONDITIONS.--What are all lovers''"spats"but disappointment in its very worst form?
23609FLIRTING JUST FOR FUN.--Who is the flirt, what is his reputation, motive, or character?
23609From what other source do or can they come?
23609George F. Hall says:"Why not pay careful attention to man in all his elements of strength, physical, mental, and moral?
23609God has ordained that children should thus be brought into the world, do you call the works of God silly?
23609Had you rather take the lowest seat among these than the highest seat among others?
23609Have they not fouled their own nest, and transmitted to their children predisposition to moral evil?
23609Have you a good set of teeth, which you are willing to show whenever the wit of the company gets off a good thing?
23609Have you, young man, who are at home whining over the fact that you can not get into society, done anything to give you a claim to social recognition?
23609He answers with ardent confidence:"Thy love I do adore, The stars live in the harmony of love, and why should not we, too, love each other?"
23609He who maims my person effects that which medicine may remedy; but what herb has sovereignty over the wounds of slander?
23609He who plunders my property takes from me that which can be repaired by time; but what period can repair a ruined reputation?
23609How can her own brothers and sisters associate with her?
23609How can you look an innocent girl in the face when you are degrading your manhood with the vilest practice?
23609How can you, my friend, secure for your person the loving care and respect of your wife?
23609How the mind speaks through the nerves and muscles,???
23609How the mind speaks through the nerves and muscles,???
23609How the mind speaks through the nerves and muscles,???
23609How to cook for the sick, 375- 379 Human magnetism, effects of,???
23609How to cook for the sick, 375- 379 Human magnetism, effects of,???
23609How to cook for the sick, 375- 379 Human magnetism, effects of,???
23609Human figure, a perfect, 99- 100 Hygienic laws, 406- 408 Ignorance, coarseness, etc., 24 Illustrations,???
23609Human figure, a perfect, 99- 100 Hygienic laws, 406- 408 Ignorance, coarseness, etc., 24 Illustrations,???
23609Human figure, a perfect, 99- 100 Hygienic laws, 406- 408 Ignorance, coarseness, etc., 24 Illustrations,???
23609I wonder if you are as impatient to see me as I am to fly to you?
23609IS IT EVER RIGHT TO PREVENT CONCEPTION?
23609In other words, as a return for what you wish to have society do for you, what can you do for society?
23609In short, do you possess anything of any social value?
23609In what other can they?
23609Is it not both unwise and self- destructive; and in every way calculated to render your case, present and prospective, still more hopeless?
23609Is it that one false step which now constitutes the boundary between virtue and vice?
23609Is not this the only proper method, and the one most likely to result happily?
23609Is the law and moral right to continue to be trodden under foot?
23609Is there no relief for helpless women that are bound by the ties of marriage to men who are nothing but rotten corruption?
23609Is this the order of nature?
23609Is this your habit?
23609Let echo answer, What?
23609MOTHERS, DOES GOD THUS PUT the endowment of your darlings into your moulding power?
23609May I hope?
23609Nature has no secrets, and why should we?
23609Now what think you of this"seeing life?"
23609Now, if in such conditions men beget their children, who can affect surprise if they develop licentious tendencies?
23609Now, what law has been broken, to induce this penalty?
23609Of the throng that struggle at the gates of entrance, how many may reach their anticipated goal?
23609Oh, Laura, can you love me in return?
23609On a sunny Summer morning, Early as the dew was dry, Up the hill I went a berrying; Need I tell you-- tell you why?
23609Or is this the way either to retrieve your past loss, or provide for the future?
23609Or rather, the discovery of that false step?
23609RETRIEVE YOUR PAST LOSS.--Do sun, moon, and stars indeed rise and set in your loved one?
23609SOCIETY OF THE VULGAR.--Do you love the society of the vulgar?
23609SUFFERING WOMEN.--Who can be astonished at the many unhappy marriages, if he knows how unworthy most men are of their wives?
23609Shall other animals rear nearly all their young, and shall man, constitutionally by far the strongest of them all, lose half or more of his?
23609TELLING THEIR LOVE.--The generality of the sex is love to be loved: how are they to know the fact that they{ 38} are loved unless they are told?
23609THE FIRST LESSONS.--Should you be asked by your four or five- year old,"Mamma, where did you get me?"
23609THE PENALTIES FOR LOST VIRTUE.--Can the harlot be welcomed where either children, brothers, sisters, wife, or husband are found?
23609THE SECOND LESSON.--The second lesson came with the question,"But_ where_ is the nest?"
23609TOO OFTEN THE HUSBAND thinks only of his personal gratification; he insists upon what he calls his rights(?
23609The corset more than any other one thing is responsible for woman''s being the victim of disease and doctors...."What is the effect upon the child?
23609The principle is the same; and if the principle is right, why not multiply methods?
23609The question is always asked,"Can Conception be prevented at all times?"
23609Then by what?
23609To whom can you introduce her?
23609WHAT ARE YOU GOOD FOR?--Are you a good beau, and are you willing to make yourself useful in waiting on the{ 67} ladies on all occasions?
23609What can you say concerning her?
23609What is the result?
23609What kind of coin do you propose to pay in the discharge of the obligation which comes upon you with social recognition?
23609What man is there who can not trace the origin of many of the best maxims of his life to the lips of her who gave him birth?
23609What plummet can sound the depths of a woman''s fall who has become a harlot?
23609What power shall blanch the sullied show of character?
23609What rendered him thus perfect?
23609What{ 99} rounded off his natural asperities, and moulded up his virtues?
23609When will mothers awake from their lethargy?
23609While now--(will God forgive me?)
23609Who can redeem it lost?
23609Who can tell how much this state of things is due to the enervation of maternal life forces by the one instrument of torture?
23609Who shall repair it injured?
23609Who will dare question that this mother''s effort to destroy him while in embryo was the main cause in bringing him to the level of the brutes?
23609Who will not confess the influence of a mother in forming the heart of a child?
23609Who{ 202} shall quarrel with the Divinely implanted instinct, or declare it to be vulgar or unmentionable?
23609Why have I found grace in{ 197} thine eyes that thou shouldest take knowledge of me, seeing I am a stranger?"
23609Why marry at all if not to found a family that shall live to bless and make glad the earth after father and mother are gone?
23609Why may not lying be as legitimately cured by blisters made with hot coals as by black and blue spots made with a ruler or whip?
23609Why should we do less?
23609Will she ask mamma whether it is ever proper to sit in her lover''s lap?
23609Will the legislature or congress do nothing?
23609Will you in matters thus momentous, head- long rush"Where angels dare not tread?"
23609Will you kindly favor me{ 40} with a testimonial as to my character, ability and conduct while at Boston Normal School?
23609Will you love her selfish, shirking, calculating nature after twenty years of close companionship?
23609Will you trifle with the dearest interests of your children?
23609Wilt thou, then, Spurn at His edict, and fulfill a man''s?
23609With assumed harshness the lady asks her lover:"Who are you, and what do you want?"
23609With what inherent repulsion do you look back upon them?
23609Would you be an ornament to your sex, and a blessing to your race?
23609and can you not catch them?
23609because she is pitiful to the sinful, tender to the sorrowful, capable, self- reliant, modest, true- hearted?
23609because you feel you can not live without him?
23609because you have a great empty place in your head and heart that nothing but a man can fill?
23609in brief, because she is the embodiment of all womanly virtues?
23609say where are you staying?
23609which think you is the most sensible and fraught with the least danger to your darling boy or girl?
23609{ 458}[ Illustration: THE TWO PATHS: WHAT WILL THE BOY BECOME?]
27250A man who takes a holiday at Trouville or Dieppe is not confronted on his return with the question,''When is your book on France going to appear?''
27250And if we did ask him to bring his wife, how many wives would he bring?
27250Are these the amiable and pacific relations which will unite England and America, when Englishmen can get to America in a day?
27250Are you an atheist?''
27250Assuming all the desperate composure of Slim Jim himself, I replied,''You mean you are connected with the police authorities here, do n''t you?
27250But because I know that Bilge is only Bilge, shall I stoop to the profanity of saying that fire is only fire?
27250But is my American critic really ready to treat the sacrifice of blood in the same way as the sacrifice of beer?
27250But perhaps a better answer would be that given to W. T. Stead when he circulated the rhetorical question,''Shall I slay my brother Boer?''
27250But right in what?
27250But the English are not always saying, either in romance or reality,''What''s to be done, if our food is being poisoned by all these baronets?''
27250But what are those rights?
27250But what did it write on Belshazzar''s wall?...
27250But what would be the good of imaginative logic to prove the madness of such people, when they themselves praise it for being mad?
27250Can it be possible that he brought it from Virginia, where the cigarettes come from?
27250Can we say in any special sense nowadays that clergymen, as such, make a poison out of the blood of the martyrs?
27250Can we say it in anything like the real sense, in which we do say that yellow journalists make a poison out of the blood of the soldiers?
27250I suppose most of your people are agricultural, are n''t they?''
27250If he was a lunatic who thought he was an astronomer, why did he have a badge to prove he was a detective?
27250If the police insist on his wearing clothes, will he recognise the authority of the police?
27250If there are no rights of men, what are the rights of nations?
27250If_ Martin Chuzzlewit_ makes America a lunatic asylum, what in the world does it make England?
27250In short, as in the American formula, is he a polygamist?
27250In short, as in the American formula, is he an anarchist?
27250Is Mr. Campbell content with a Prohibition which is another name for Privilege?
27250Is bloodshed to be as prolonged and protracted as Prohibition?
27250Is the Hairy Ainu content with hair, or does he wear any clothes?
27250Is the normal noncombatant to shed his gore as often as he misses his drink?
27250O, hidden face of man, whereover The years have woven a viewless veil, If thou wert verily man''s lover What did thy love or blood avail?
27250One of the questions on the paper was,''Are you an anarchist?''
27250Only, if war is the exception, why should Prohibition be the rule?
27250Shall I blaspheme crimson stars any more than crimson sunsets, or deny that those moons are golden any more than that this grass is green?
27250Take that innocent question,''Are you an anarchist?''
27250The inquisitor, in his more than morbid curiosity, had then written down,''Are you a polygamist?''
27250Then there was the question,''Are you in favour of subverting the government of the United States by force?''
27250To which a detached philosopher would naturally feel inclined to answer,''What the devil has that to do with you?
27250Was he a detective?
27250Was he a wandering lunatic?
27250Was he an astronomer?
27250What has become of all those ideal figures from the Wise Man of the Stoics to the democratic Deist of the eighteenth century?
27250Which has most to do with shekels to- day, the priests or the politicians?
27250Who and what was that man?
27250Why not wear his uniform, if he was resolved to show every stranger in the street his badge?
27250Why should the world take the chains off the black man when it was just putting them on the white?
27250Would etiquette require us to ask him to bring his wife?
27250_ Is the Atlantic Narrowing?_ A certain kind of question is asked very earnestly in our time.
27250or''Are you a philanthropist?''
27250which is intrinsically quite as impudent as''Are you an optimist?''
17259And I had almost got you back-- when Fanny Carr, with her nasty view of me and what I was doing, brought you those perfectly rotten reports? 17259 And as soon as I do,"she reflected,"and my husband makes a name as an architect doing great big things, what harm can Fanny do me?"
17259And have you found those friends you wanted?
17259And what in the world will she think of me? 17259 And why is one rich and the other poor?"
17259Another cup of coffee, Joe?
17259Are you so sure? 17259 Are you to be in charge?"
17259Business?
17259But how do I know they wo n''t turn me down?
17259But when you get them twinkling, what are you going to do with him?
17259But you''re young, you know--"Is that a crime?
17259Christian?
17259Did she come up?
17259Did she give her name?
17259Do I know poor Amy was anything bad? 17259 Do I want to go-- now that Dad is dead, and most of the girls have gone away, scattered all over the country?"
17259Do n''t I know how he is-- all tired and nervous and unstrung? 17259 Do n''t you believe what I''ve told you, Joe?"
17259Do n''t you think I look rather nice?
17259Do you know what I think?
17259Do you want to march with us?
17259Does he?
17259Doing what beautifully? 17259 Ever been inside of a church?"
17259Fanny?
17259For club membership?
17259For me?
17259Go back and marry, settle down? 17259 Go in and help her, will you?
17259Has he turned it down?
17259Hold on a minute, ca n''t you? 17259 How about this room?"
17259How dare you say that?
17259How did you make Amy take you for a friend? 17259 How has the work been going?"
17259How have things been going?
17259How long have you been in New York?
17259How long is it since you left?
17259How much can I get rid of without offending Joe?
17259How much of all this is coming to me? 17259 How much shall I tell them?"
17259How will you have your tea?
17259How? 17259 How?"
17259I have n''t said so, have I?
17259I wonder if I''ll ever feel like that about a child?
17259I wonder what''ll the winter be like?
17259If he what?
17259Is Mrs. Crothers at home?
17259Is every place I live in to be haunted?
17259Is he really too old?
17259Is n''t his touch amazing? 17259 Is she out tonight?
17259Is there a Paris in New York?
17259Is there any special cemetery? 17259 Is this real, Ethel Knight?
17259Joe never cared for it, did he? 17259 Joe, dear,"she said pleasantly, when he had come out for the week end,"why do n''t you ever bring your partner with you over Sunday?"
17259Ma''am?
17259Mr. Lanier still working hard?
17259Not yet--"Have you a list of the ones who were asked?
17259Now what will you do? 17259 Oh, ca n''t you understand what I mean-- and how I''m placed and what it''s like?
17259Oh, what could n''t I do, my dear, if I only had a chance? 17259 Oh, what''s the use?"
17259Oh, will it?
17259On the piano? 17259 One lump or two?"
17259Pretending? 17259 Sally Crothers?
17259Shall I ever live with a man like that?
17259Shall I go back?
17259She was, eh?
17259Should I?
17259Sorry to annoy you again-- but is there any God about?
17259Suppose I understand you better than you do yourself?
17259Sure of that?
17259That''s a bit snobbish, is n''t it?
17259Then what was the matter?
17259Then why do you want to get married here?
17259Then why,she asked herself in a daze,"if Bill is so against this business, does he keep at it day and night?
17259This doctor-- what do we know of him? 17259 Thought of what?
17259Was it you who taught him to play?
17259Was n''t it glorious?
17259Well, Fanny, what next?
17259Well, and why not?
17259Well, dear, did I live up to our bargain?
17259Well, what do I think of Amy''s home?
17259Well? 17259 Well?"
17259Were he and Joe together there?
17259What I wanted? 17259 What about?"
17259What are you so frightened about? 17259 What business had you letting her in?"
17259What do you mean? 17259 What do you mean?"
17259What do you think I really want?
17259What does_ that_ mean?
17259What for?
17259What for?
17259What good does it do?
17259What has happened?
17259What have I on?
17259What have you done?
17259What is it, Joe?
17259What is it?
17259What is there for me to do?
17259What kind of a life am I going to find? 17259 What man did you room with?
17259What on earth do you mean?
17259What was your hold on him? 17259 What''s in it?
17259What''s it all about?
17259What''s the difference between Mrs. Grewe and his own dear friend, Fanny Carr?
17259What''s the matter with me?
17259What''s the matter with me?
17259What''s the use of being so solemn and scared?
17259What''s the word? 17259 What''s to become of me and this child?"
17259What''s wrong with me? 17259 What''s your life to be, you poor little dear?
17259What?
17259What?
17259What?
17259Where are we going this evening?
17259Where did you get that idea?
17259Where did you learn to play like that, Joe?
17259Where has she been all this time?
17259Where has she gone? 17259 Where is she leading by that remark?"
17259Where''s Joe?
17259Who''s Fanny Carr?
17259Whose fault was it? 17259 Why be such a jealous cat?
17259Why could n''t you? 17259 Why did n''t you say it, you little fool?
17259Why is it?
17259Why not take it away?
17259Why not? 17259 Why not?"
17259Why not?
17259Why should she lie?
17259Why were you fighting them?
17259Why will it?
17259Why wo n''t she?
17259Why? 17259 Will you see her or shall I tell her the flat is already rented?"
17259Wo n''t you sit down?
17259Would n''t they do? 17259 Would you object,"he asked her,"if I do the talking for a while?
17259Yes, I marched--"With the gardeners?
17259Yes? 17259 You have no relatives living?"
17259You little goose,she exclaimed to herself,"why did you say,''how funny''?"
17259You mean that he-- your partner-- wants something more than money?
17259You mean this way of doing my hair?
17259You mean to say my husband could even consider such a plan?
17259You mean you''ll let her suffer because you have n''t shown me things? 17259 You mean your husband does n''t approve?"
17259You''ll take me, then?
17259You''re Joe Lanier''s wife, are n''t you?
17259You''re sure of that?
17259You, a friend? 17259 Your husband has made a fuss, has n''t he?
17259A mistake not to have asked them?
17259A voice within her, from underneath, was asking,"Or was it Amy?"
17259Abroad?"
17259All right, my dear, but who else can you go to?
17259All right, what next?
17259Am I a high- brow?
17259And am I sorry?
17259And are n''t you rather a snob, my love, to be so sure you hate the woman before you even know her?"
17259And as soon as she was quiet again:"What is there for me to do?
17259And as the exciting days wore on, uneasily in her room at night she would sit down with pencil and paper and ask,"How much did I spend today?"
17259And besides, if she did want to see him, could she, without being watched by some wretched detective?
17259And ca n''t you see, you little goose, this is just what may spoil everything?
17259And frowning in perplexity,"But if they are sisters,"she went on,"why is only one in mourning?"
17259And how do I know that among them all, as I go about, I wo n''t find a few that are n''t so tough?
17259And how do you feel?
17259And if he did, what would it mean?
17259And in dismay she would ask herself:"Are they all too old?
17259And looking at her sister she asked:"Shall I ever be like that?"
17259And she hastened to add,"And is n''t it perfectly silly for men to try to keep us from marching?"
17259And she wondered whether the city would ever be anything like that?
17259And suppose they do n''t care for me in the least?
17259And then he asks,''Why not Amy''s friends?''
17259And then solemn-- too solemn-- all music and art-- and education and-- how in the world do I know what I said?
17259And then, because that sounded too grateful, she added,"Wo n''t you sit down?"
17259And what do they do it on?
17259And what earthly good will it do poor Dad to have you go about in black?
17259And what were they saying?
17259And when will you go and see him?
17259And where shall I find her?
17259And why so soon?
17259And with it came the question, now ardent though still a little confused:"Shall I ever be like that?"
17259And wo n''t I take back Amy''s friends?
17259Another Amy, or Fanny Carr, or Sally Crothers or Mrs. Grewe?
17259Any one?"
17259Anything really witty, sparkling?
17259Are you still young?
17259Are you sure the car is at the door?"
17259Are you?"
17259As I grow older, all hemmed in, why not stop caring for anything else?
17259At such an hour?
17259Better?"
17259Black?
17259Business?
17259But am I?
17259But had that turned out so dreadful?
17259But his living, his home, what he did at night?
17259But how can I tell the sheep from the goats?
17259But how can I tell till I meet the man?
17259But in the meantime, what about friends?
17259But it does n''t sound very thrilling, does it?
17259But on the other hand, why not?
17259But quickly she remembered that he would answer,"Have n''t I tried?"
17259But safe?
17259But the voice retorted sharp and clear:"Why hide it then?
17259But was he-- altogether?
17259But what did"immoral"mean in this town?
17259But what is it going to mean to me?
17259But what was Joe doing all this time?
17259But what?
17259But what?"
17259But where shall I find them all of a sudden?
17259But why did n''t you treat it like that?
17259But wo n''t I be under Fanny''s thumb?
17259CHAPTER XVII What impression had she made?
17259Ca n''t you believe that I want in him exactly what you want yourself?
17259Ca n''t you give a few months to Amy now?"
17259Ca n''t you go and talk to them?"
17259Ca n''t you see it''s all lies?
17259Ca n''t you see the lines, the gray hairs, Joe?
17259Can you supply all the love she wants?"
17259Could n''t you call him up some day and get him to lunch with you?"
17259Could n''t you draw it?"
17259Did I comfort poor Joe?
17259Did I help in the funeral?
17259Did he do nothing but talk over there?"
17259Did he live alone or with somebody else?
17259Did n''t she give her name?"
17259Did n''t she?
17259Did these wives and divorcees do any good with their"moral"lives?
17259Did they all feel it, every one?
17259Did they never stop in one place and make it a home?
17259Did you know they had been friends for months?"
17259Different?
17259Do I want to?
17259Do n''t I know of his love affairs?
17259Do n''t you like it?
17259Do n''t you remember?"
17259Do n''t you see?
17259Do n''t you see?"
17259Do n''t you?"
17259Do you know any men who write plays or novels, or any musicians or painters-- or actresses?"
17259Do you know what I mean-- that kind of New Yorker?"
17259Do you know what I want to do with you?"
17259Do you know what you almost do to me-- you, the one friend I have in New York?
17259Do you mean to say this is what love is-- just this, just this?"
17259Do you think it has been happy here?"
17259Do you think so?"
17259Do you understand?"
17259Do you want to know where you and I are different, little Mrs. Grewe?
17259Fanny Carr?
17259Fiercely then she asked herself,"Why ca n''t you enter in and be gay?"
17259For what could she say to him about Amy?
17259Four years?
17259Friends?
17259Go back for them?
17259Go out on any street and call up,''Heigh there''at the windows?"
17259Had he ever shown tact in his whole life?
17259Had he ever talked of Paris before, or his dreams and ambitions or anything real?
17259Had n''t you better take Susette out to the Park?"
17259Had you or had n''t you?
17259Has n''t he been-- ever since?"
17259Has she offered to introduce me to a single friend of hers?
17259Have you let the people know?"
17259Have you taken the trouble to find out?"
17259He asked himself confusedly,"How''d I start in with a woman like her?"
17259He glanced at her with a weary dislike which gave her an impulse to say to him,"Is n''t this rather insulting?"
17259He turned and looked at her and asked, in a voice rather strained and husky:"Do you think Bill cares about money alone?"
17259He''s wondering if he has put it off too long?"
17259How about you?
17259How are you and I to be friends if you act like this, you silly boy?
17259How did all this bring trouble with Joe?
17259How do I know what she was at my age?
17259How far had she overcome the heavy weight of dislike and suspicion Amy had rolled up in his mind?
17259How in the world shall I talk to her?
17259How is it going?
17259How much of his promise would he remember?
17259How much of what he had said to her, the first night of his illness, had come only from a mind keyed up?
17259How much shall I mean to my husband-- and to other men and women?
17259How much was he seeing of Fanny Carr and her detestable money affairs?
17259How old are you?"
17259How were friends to be found in this city?
17259How would you like me to put up his name?"
17259I wonder if they''re all like that?
17259I wonder what I shall make of it?
17259I wonder what I shall say to Joe?
17259I wonder what we shall make of it all?
17259I wonder what you went through, poor dear?
17259I wonder when I''ll get to sleep?
17259I''ll have to take care of Susette myself--""You?"
17259If you stopped to think and ask yourself,"What are we all doing here?"
17259Immoral?
17259In love with her husband?
17259In what queer and funny old rooms?
17259Is Mrs. Grewe out?"
17259Is he married?"
17259Is he treating you better?"
17259Is n''t that just like New York?"
17259Is she married again?
17259Is she trying to eat us?
17259It asked,"Are you sure they are all so bad?
17259Jewish?
17259Joe looked at her sharply:"Who told you that?"
17259Joe loyal?
17259Mine?"
17259Mrs. Grewe?
17259Now tell me-- where did the fat man study?
17259Now what am I to do about it?"
17259Now why has she come here?"
17259Now you see?
17259Of being rich, you little fool?"
17259Of whom was she speaking, Mrs. Grewe or Amy?
17259Oh, dear-- I ca n''t exactly--""What kind of people?"
17259Oh, what difference does it make?"
17259Or are you like her?
17259Or was it just this ghastly time that had made them all appear so?
17259Over in Paris, was n''t it?"
17259Plainly?
17259See?
17259See?
17259Shall I send for him?
17259She asked,"Am I tied to this man for life?
17259She asked:"Do you know any suffragists?
17259She broke off and grew rigid, but her thought struck into Ethel''s mind:"Why am I the one?
17259She gave a strained little laugh at that and asked,"I wonder when I''ll cry?"
17259She looked around in a jealous way and asked,"I suppose you''ll want things as before?"
17259She seemed to be smiling now, with a good- humoured pitying air, and to be saying:"Now will you believe me?
17259She sent for Nourse and asked him,"What''s going on in the office?"
17259She shivered again, and he added,"Do n''t you know some older woman here?"
17259She shot a look as keen as a knife, which asked,"Do you really want a child?
17259She would be perfectly natural, and ask him,"Who are your friends over there?
17259She''d have got a long way up in the world, if it were n''t for her second husband--""Her second?"
17259Should she tell her the trouble she was in?
17259Some people Amy used to know?"
17259Still-- why not?
17259Strip him of friends and then treat him like this?
17259The Latin Quarter, the Beaux Arts?
17259The big building in which Ethel lived took on an impersonal air, as though saying,"What do I care?
17259The question,"Shall I ever be like that?"
17259Then do you intend to stay here?"
17259Then he telephoned,"Can I see you today at four o''clock?"
17259Then he whirled around in his chair, and as his eye lit on Ethel, he laughed, and in a harsh queer voice he cried,"Vell?
17259Then she had given a slight start, had knocked softly and asked,"May I come in?"
17259Then what?
17259Then why am I the one?"
17259Then why should n''t I?"
17259These people?
17259This sort of woman?
17259Thursday night?
17259Today or tomorrow?
17259Too bad, is n''t it?"
17259Vy do n''t you speak?
17259Was he going to stay away all night?
17259Was it a mistake?"
17259Was it all business, all of it?
17259Was my first feeling about her all wrong, or is it that I''m getting used to these New Yorkers?
17259Was n''t he at it way back in Paris?
17259Was n''t it glorious?
17259Was n''t she good to me?
17259Was that it?"
17259Was there no entering wedge to their lives?
17259Was this Amy''s best friend?
17259Was this really love-- this queer, leaping feeling, up and down, hot and cold, uncertain, tense, unhappy, hungry, undecided?
17259Wave my hair?
17259Well, what''s the word?
17259Were n''t you trying, when I came in?"
17259Were there only strangers here?
17259Were you there?"
17259What am I going to say to them all?
17259What am I here for?"
17259What are you afraid of?"
17259What are you to do about it?"
17259What can I do?
17259What could she do or say to Joe?
17259What did he do there, how did he live?
17259What did she really want to say?
17259What did you have before you met her?
17259What do I believe?
17259What do I know?
17259What do I know?
17259What do I mean?
17259What do I want in this city now?"
17259What do they know about God or where you go when you are dead?
17259What do you ever get in this world if you''re always saving every cent?
17259What do you mean?"
17259What does she want?
17259What good are_ you_ here?"
17259What had they to do with it?
17259What harm has she done?
17259What has she done that you wo n''t do when you''re as old as she is?
17259What is it?"
17259What is it?"
17259What is it?"
17259What is life?
17259What is she poking''round here for?
17259What kind of a woman?
17259What right had he to believe that of me?
17259What right had they, what hold on Joe?
17259What shall I be like ten years from now?
17259What should she say?
17259What time do you dine?"
17259What to say to stop him?
17259What was Paris really like?
17259What was he doing?
17259What was her visitor saying?
17259What was it Joe was playing?
17259What was it?
17259What was it?"
17259What was the matter?
17259What was worrying him?
17259What was wrong?
17259What were you saying?
17259What will it mean?"
17259What would Sally Crothers be like?
17259What''s the matter with me?"
17259What''s to be done?
17259When I marry somebody how will it be?"
17259When do you expect him back?"
17259Where am I going to find friends?"
17259Where have you gone?"
17259Where is God?
17259Where to find them?
17259Where was he today?
17259Which way will you have it?
17259Who is she?
17259Who is this Sally anyhow?
17259Who knows?
17259Who was moral?
17259Who was she but a stranger now?
17259Who was that on a bench nearby?
17259Who''s here?"
17259Why ca n''t Harry allow me a maid, a real clever one like that?
17259Why did n''t he come?
17259Why did n''t she ever go to Paris?
17259Why did you pretend, when I brought Dwight here, that you''d never laid eyes on him before?
17259Why did you try to make her keep quiet?
17259Why does n''t somebody see it at once-- notice me now, right here on the street?
17259Why had he allowed her to do those few little daring things, which looked so cheap and disgusting in the detective''s typed report?
17259Why had n''t she explained to him?
17259Why had n''t she simply told him her plan for giving him back his friends?
17259Why had not he told her of those other affairs of his that could rise in this way against herself?
17259Why had she entrusted so much to this man?
17259Why let this foolish dangerous habit of never mentioning Amy''s name keep growing up between you and your husband?
17259Why not join them, then and there?
17259Why was Amy so much stronger now?
17259Why?
17259Would I care to try to talk against her?
17259Would n''t I like her for a friend?"
17259Would you let that hold you back?"
17259You have any preference?"
17259You know how I mean?
17259You remember?"
17259You understand?"
17259have n''t you made money enough?
17259how could men be so easily fooled?
26948Did you ever see anything like that?
26948Is it possible that your Grace has ever heard of_ me_?
26948What is your husband''s name?
26948A gourmand?
26948And if fashion could make this practice feminine, why should it not some day do as much for husband- hunting?
26948And what else?
26948And what sort of a right mind is it?
26948Are we gradually tending towards an advanced stage of civilization in which woman will be formally recognized as the pursuer, and man as the pursued?
26948Besides, how are we to know how far one generation is worse than generations which have gone before it?
26948Besides, what is there about her that you or any one should love?
26948But how can there be any health with high eating, little exercise, above all, with the mind left absolutely vacant of all interests?
26948But how is this to be done?
26948But is that so?
26948But what can one say to them?
26948By what coercive machinery is Betsy Jane to be forced into the detested uniform?
26948Do we know anything about the Poor- laws or Education or Trades''-societies?
26948Does a"Clergyman''s Wife"suppose that the British housemaid is exempt from this little weakness common to her race?
26948Does he ever read Keble?
26948Does one flight of stairs transpose morality?
26948For what are coarse material mendings to the æsthetic soul yearning after the infinite, and worshipping at the feet of the prophet?
26948Has she the nerve to crush the secret plots of kitchen Fenianism?
26948Have we subscribed to Mr. Mill''s election?
26948If a certain number of men and women were not ambitious, what would become of the rest of us who possess our souls in patience and moderation?
26948If the girl of the period is fast and frivolous, is the young man of the period any better?
26948Is a married woman to be stinted of her"small pleasures"because prudes affect to think the means by which they are obtained unfeminine?
26948Is he musical?
26948Is it, therefore, to be inferred that the race of noble women is dying out?
26948Is she ready for an indefinite time to cook her own dinner, mend her own dresses, dust her own rooms, manage her own nursery?
26948Is there nothing, the Pretty Preacher asks us solemnly, to be said against our own?
26948It is a thing that will not bear reasoning on, being simply a form of the old"who will guard the guardian?"
26948Love you?
26948Now, is a"Clergyman''s Wife"prepared to face the consequences of such a strike?
26948Perhaps the anecdote was just a trifle doubtful; granted; but what does the wife take by her remonstrance?
26948Ritualistic?
26948She has her liberty; what will she do with it?
26948This is the sort of partner that plain girls may rationally hope to secure, and who can say that they ought not to be cheerful and happy in their lot?
26948Thoreau said,"Man is continually saying to Woman,''Why are you not more wise?''
26948Turfy?
26948WHAT IS WOMAN''S WORK?
26948What are its merits, in this respect, as compared with the old- fashioned theory that woman should be wooed, not woo?
26948What degradation, for instance, is there in cookery?
26948What do they hold themselves made for?
26948What does training do for the nimble- footed young beauties of the London ball- room?
26948What good in life does this kind of woman do?
26948What is the fashionable style of dress in Paris at the present moment?
26948What is there in practical housekeeping less honorable than the ordinary work of middle- class gentlewomen?
26948What woman has now any notion of the broad outline of history of human thought?
26948What worse example could be given to the young?
26948What would youth be without its imaginative emotions?
26948What, then, do they want?
26948When such a woman as this is one of the matrons, and consequently one of the leaders of society, what can we expect from the girls?
26948Who will direct the directress?
26948Why does not wife- hunting, the word which this theory entitles us to expect, take its proper place in society?
26948Why not go in for an Act of Parliament, having for its object the total suppression of the instinct of vanity in the female bosom?
26948Woman is continually saying to Man,''Why are you not more loving?''
26948Yet what is there in the nature of things to make a side- saddle more modest than any other?
26948Yet who is strong- minded enough to wish that the kindliness of a pretty woman should be dictated by simple benevolence, untinged by vanity?
26948and to whose interference will the interferer submit?
26948and why should women shrink from doing for utility, and for the general comfort of the family, what they would do at any time for vanity or idleness?
26948another glass of whisky?
26948marry you?
26948more wine?
26948or the pert, smart, trim little female, with no more biceps than a ladybird, and of just about equal strength with a sparrow?
27382A Socialist? 27382 And what now?"
27382Are you English?
27382But what was the game, Nap?
27382Can you blame a man whose wife is sinking and whose children cry for food, if he is willing to take a job at less than the wage you get? 27382 Can you hear those distant guns?
27382Did America buck up, Nap?
27382Do any of you wish to have the brand of shame those wastrels wear? 27382 Do n''t you think the days have gone when persons should''talk big''?
27382How?
27382How?
27382How?
27382Of course,said the Government,"you will give preference to unionists, the maximum wage, and all that?"
27382Shall we drop a''cough- drop''?
27382So you''re going to escape, eh?
27382The destiny of the Deutschland?
27382Then you are going back to Cologne?
27382Then,I ventured,"if a man''s contented and has nothing to growl about-- why worry?"
27382Was a Miss Goche among them?
27382We needed colonies, but all the colonies worth having were taken by-- whom? 27382 Well, old chap, shall we drop a''cough drop''?"
27382Well?
27382What was the reason of your aerial razzle?
27382Where is Helen?
27382Why this change?
27382Would not any man lower the wages scale and take another man''s job for less, in order to save the life of his wife and the new baby? 27382 As Kipling wrote:--What I ha''seen since ocean steam began Leaves me no doot for the machine; what, what about the man?"
27382But at what cost?
27382By whose sword should he perish except by that of the defender?
27382Do any of you wish to have broken that national independent spirit that made our brothers bravely hold the Gate at Liege?
27382Do you know Sydney?"
27382Five Taubes had flown over us the day before, going south, but-- what was doing?
27382For whom was he doing the work of the remaining nine hours?
27382Have we not proof?
27382How was Australia taking it?
27382Let me get on-- where was I?
27382Should any union principles stand between him and his wife''s life?
27382Then they took her,"and he bowed his head in his hands,"took her away----""Where, where?"
27382Was it any wonder then that they should consider they might as well take a hand in governing?
27382Was it, therefore, any wonder that they were blind to the developing danger?
27382What are they fighting for?
27382What of the North Sea Fleet?
27382What sort of man was this?
27382What was Nap doing?
27382What''s the difference between tearing out a fellow''s''innards''with a bayonet, and killing him by the gentler way of poisoning his liquor?
27382When that plan failed what had Germany done?
27382Where were the Allies?
27382Who was going to pay for this loss of £ 9,000,000,000?
27382Why should any one love a particular geographical district upon the face of the earth because there he happened to first see the light?
27382Will it be like the Tower of Babel, great in conception, great in execution, but overreaching in its greatness?
27382Will life be any harder for them what flag flies above their city?
27382Will our destiny be like the snowball, accumulating as it rolls till it becomes immovable in its immensity?
27382You English take it as what you call''a jolly sport,''with your battle cry,''Are we down- hearted?''
27382raid last February?
28209''Whist, or Bumblepuppy?'' 28209 Is it true,"enquired this lady,"that it is your intention to_ print books_?"
28209Is there a more mortal grief,she exclaims,"than to outlive, yourself, those who should have bloomed upon your grave?"
28209That is all very good and very fine, but I hope you are not going to put the name that I bear on the_ covers of printed books_?
28209--_Boston Journal._ WHIST, OR BUMBLEPUPPY?
28209But why does the_ bourgeoisie_ prevail, whilst the people is sovereign, and the principle of its sovereignty, universal suffrage, is still standing?
28209Conspire?
28209How, indeed, could so many- sided a nature as hers be truly represented in a single novel?
28209Is it possible you should have thought so much, felt so much, without anyone having any idea of it?"
28209On what, in the future, will the fame of George Sand mainly rest?
28209Pamphlets?
28209Theories?
28209What should I do if I relinquish my task, humble though it be?
28209What would become of me without this power of self- distraction?
27071Ah, my cousin, Mr. Dockerell,said Mrs. Manson,"you knew him, did you?
27071Am I? 27071 Are you going to the Humphreys to- morrow?"
27071But why ridiculous, Aunt Etta?
27071But, after all, what is that Teachers''Society that Hilda belongs to( Hilda was another niece)"but a Trade Union?
27071Ca n''t she be asked to give up meddling in the parish?
27071Ca n''t you manage to make them decently contented? 27071 Did I?"
27071Do n''t you want the gas lit,''m? 27071 Do you feel that you could tell me about them?"
27071Do you really? 27071 Do you remember you said Charles I. deserved to have his head cut off because he was so stupid, and all the others gushed over him?"
27071Ellen?
27071How are you getting on with your paper, dear? 27071 I just came to say, Why_ are_ you such an idiot?"
27071If there is any difficulty, could not my mother take one of you to- morrow night?
27071If you ca n''t remember, what does it matter?
27071Is it, dear?
27071Me?
27071Now you are happy, are n''t you, Miss Etta?
27071Oh, ca n''t you find anything better to do than that? 27071 Reading Italian, my dear?"
27071The lamp''m,said Annie;"but you do n''t want it for half an hour yet, do you,''m, it''s such a beautiful evening?"
27071Were they?
27071What is it?
27071Whatever I do, I fail; what is the use of my living? 27071 Who do you think has come to live here, Henrietta?"
27071Wo n''t they?
27071Yes, but I think we must leave them to judge what they like to wear; it is not our business really, is it? 27071 Yes, why do you lose your temper like that?
27071After the squalor of lodgings home was pleasant, and her father''s invitation was cordial:"Henrietta, why do n''t you stay with us?
27071And the canary, Miss Etta-- do you remember that?
27071As they said good- night, Louie whispered,"Have you forgiven me, Etty?"
27071Can I be of any help?"
27071Could n''t we call for you?
27071Do you remember Sarah?
27071Do you remember what you did for me in old days?
27071Do you, Etta?"
27071Dockerell?"
27071Edward?
27071Had any of the other Greek philosophers been more humane in their views on slavery?
27071Had she ever really been that queer little girl?
27071He was a commonplace young man, but what did that matter?
27071He''s dead, poor man, had you heard?
27071How can one be so foolish at nearly sixty?"
27071I crushed-- see, what did I crush?--a little teeny- tiny piece of flounce one terrible evening; did n''t I, Henrietta?
27071If her powers had already declined at forty, what was to happen in the twenty years of life that she might reasonably count upon as still before her?
27071If she did not go out to parties, what was she to do?
27071Nursing her mother?
27071Oh, how is it that we''ve got apart?"
27071One evening it came into her head, and she asked her sister,"By the by, who was Henrietta Symons?"
27071Shall I just scratch that out?
27071She was always saying,''Now, who shall we have to dinner?
27071She_ did_ want you so; every time there was a ring it was,''Is that from her?''
27071The first time this occurred Miranda opened her large eyes very wide and said,"What''s come over my young friend, has it got the hydrophobia?
27071The housekeeping?
27071Then, of course, she could not go alone, and who was to go with her?
27071They managed to construct a sentence for the priest, who was standing nodding by them:"Are there any pretty walks in the neighbourhood?"
27071We''ve always been special, we two, have n''t we, ever since I can remember?"
27071What was it you were going to say?"
27071What was the use of twelve years in which she had sincerely tried to do her best, if she had not built up some little memorial of affection?
27071What were they all so excited about?
27071When she could speak, she said:"Evelyn, do you ever think of our children?"
27071Where did she come from?
27071Where should she live?
27071Where was she to find relief?
27071Where would the church and the poor be without them?
27071Why had God sent her into the world, if she was not wanted?
27071Why should n''t she go for some visits?"
27071Why then, was she attending lectures on Aristotle?
27071Why was Evelyn to have everything and she nothing?
27071Why was I born?"
27071Why, when I was young we should never----""And you do n''t object to their joining Trade Unions?"
27071Why?
27071Would the English ladies and gentlemen care to go?
27071Would you care to talk them over with me after the class?"
27071You see my point, do n''t you?"
27080And what happened then?
27080Pilate asked,''What is truth?'' 27080 What is your wand?"
27080What the devil are you talking about?
27080Why should it not make lamp- posts fairer than Greek lamps, and an omnibus- ride like a painted ship? 27080 (_ O Mother, Mary Mother,__ Why laughs she thus between Hell and Heaven?_) The trouble about the latter variety is its extreme simplicity. 27080 A suggestive French farce may be a dirty joke, but it is at least a joke; but a play which raises the question Is marriage a failure? 27080 Ah, my brethren, what indeed?
27080And I suppose, to the medical mind, seeing fairies means much the same as seeing snakes?
27080And then the sudden obvious truth burst upon Chesterton, What if Christianity was the happy mean?
27080And what a mass of harm may have come of not believing in Apollo?
27080And what harm came of believing in Apollo?
27080And what have I stolen?
27080And what is that?
27080And what is the cruellest crime?
27080Art for the people, eh?
27080But what the devil are you for, if you do n''t believe in a miracle?
27080But who is Sunday?
27080Chesterton''s answer to this is:"I used to think so, but what about Lord Murray, Mr. Lloyd George, and Mr. Godfrey Isaacs?"
27080Could I not be grateful to Santa Claus when he put in my stockings the gift of two miraculous legs?"
27080Do n''t women help to pay the hangman''s wages with every ounce of tea or of sweets they buy?
27080Do n''t you know what it is to be in all one family circle, with aunts and uncles, when a schoolboy comes home for the holidays?
27080Do they, Smith?
27080Do they, fasting, tramping, bleeding, Wait the news from this our city?
27080Does it never strike you that doubt can be a madness, as well be faith?
27080Have I committed a worse crime than thieving?
27080He immediately raises the question, Can we dissociate beer from skittles?
27080He observed,"Well, little one, are n''t you going to show me any gratitude?"
27080He would have liked( as who would not?)
27080How is he able to deal with ideas and inventions stated in a more definite and particular manner?
27080I thought you yourself considered the family superstition bad for the health?
27080I understand that you appear here to give evidence on behalf of the average man?
27080If the voice of Cecil falters, If McKenna''s point has pith, Do they tremble for their altars?
27080Is it not desirable that Hampstead and Highgate should each have an opportunity of finding out independently what they like?
27080Is there no such thing as irreligious mania?
27080Is there no such thing in the house at this moment?
27080Juries may differ in their judgments; but why not?
27080May they not compete in taste one against the other?
27080Now what has become of Chesterton''s decencies?
27080Offering the Garter is no go-- BUT WILL YOU LEND ME TWO- AND- SIX?
27080Really, Smith?
27080Smith''s case is,"How can the Church have a right to make men fast if she does not allow them to feast?
27080Such as"But will you lend me two- and- six?"
27080Suppose that Chesterton is n''t a Socialist, is he more on the side of the Socialists or on that of the Free Trade Liberal capitalists and landlords?
27080Surely the Duke''s house would contain a spare room?
27080That asking questions may be a disease, as well as proclaiming doctrines?
27080The whole scene has been, so far, a discussion on Do Miracles Happen?
27080Then you think no one should question at all?
27080Upon whom has the curse fallen?
27080We must answer the questions; to what extent does he represent mere unqualified reaction?
27080Well now, are these indecencies sincere or simulated?
27080Were n''t there as many who believed passionately in Apollo?
27080What are his qualifications as a craftsman?
27080What does your coat mean if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as the supernatural?
27080What does your cursed collar mean if it does n''t mean that there is such a thing as a spirit?
27080What if he can not tell the time himself?
27080What, after all, has he done?
27080Where did the Conjuror go, at the end of the Third Act, in the small hours of the morning?
27080Where the Breton boat- fleet tosses, Are they, Smith?
27080Why ca n''t you leave the universe alone and let it mean what it likes?
27080Why should any man suppose that he pleases God by patiently hearing an Ignorant fellow render Religion ridiculous?"
27080Why should n''t the thunder be Jupiter?
27080Why should the Conjuror rehearse his patter out in the wet?
27080Will anybody revise his political views on this basis?
27080Yes, but, Mr. Chesterton, are n''t they just as responsible for it in any case?
27080["Are you interested in modern progress?"
27080[_ Exasperated._] Why the devil do you dress up like that if you do n''t believe in it?
27080[_ Looking at him._] Do you believe in your own religion?
27080[_ With violence._] Or perhaps you do n''t believe in devils?
27080_ Do Miracles Happen?_ Report of a Discussion at the Little Theatre in January, 1914.
27080_ Was_ Joan of Arc a Vegetarian?
27080_ What''s Wrong with the World?_ Cassell.
27264''Ha,''says one,''wilt out?''
27264( Who is the woman in the white dress?)
27264Alive again?
27264Bradley?"
27264But how can man be just, without the understanding of God?
27264But who, while the heart beats, can call himself safe from the temptation to this sin?
27264Cade, in that most awful scene of the mob in power, looks at two heads on pikes with the remark--"Is not this braver?
27264Can I make men live, whe''r they will or no?
27264Died he not in his bed?
27264Dost thou not see my baby at my breast, That sucks the nurse asleep?"
27264Hath your Grace ne''er a brother like you?
27264He calls in Lennox, with the words--"I did hear The galloping of horse: who was''t came by?"
27264He presents his point of view in a moment of pleasant poetry--"For where is any author in the world, Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye?"
27264If we find the lesson painful, how shall we face the event?
27264It is instructive to note how Bolingbroke takes the news--_ Bol._ Why, bishop, is Norfolk dead?
27264It is sufficient to say that the character of Ægeon is the best in the play_ Titus Andronicus.__ Written._(?)
27264It is very terrible, but how if he had not bitten?
27264Meanwhile, what duty does a man owe to a fine, free, fearless spirit dragged down to his by commercial bargain with a father who is also a fool?
27264Shall it be filled with study, or spent in society, or burnt in a passion, or tortured by strivings for style, or left as it is?
27264Shall worms, inheritors of this excess, Eat up thy charge?
27264The lyric,"Who is Silvia?"
27264The simple but telling means of giving reality is repeated a few lines later in Biron''s question--"What''s her name in the cap?"
27264Therefore_ paucas pallabris_; let the world slide:_ Sessa!__ Hostess._ You will not pay for the glasses you have burst?
27264Valentine''s words--"Who should be trusted now, when one''s right hand Is perjured to the bosom?
27264What business had sparks like Mercutio, and rebels like Tybalt, with Death?
27264What feast is toward in thine eternal cell, That thou so many princes, at a shot, So bloodily hast struck?"
27264What is she in the white?"
27264Who are his hearers?
27264Who is so faultless that he can sit in judgment on another?
27264Who so wise that he can see into the heart, weigh the act with the temptation and strike the balance?
27264Why should the boy rule?
27264Why so large cost, having so short a lease, Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend?
27264Will you revise it for me?
27264_ A Midsummer Night''s Dream.__ Written._ 1595(?)
27264_ All''s Well that Ends Well.__ Written._(?)
27264_ Antony and Cleopatra.__ Written._ 1607- 8(?)
27264_ As You Like It.__ Written._(?)
27264_ Benedick._ Were you in doubt, sir, that you asked her?
27264_ Coriolanus.__ Written._ 1608(?)
27264_ Cymbeline.__ Written._(?)
27264_ Don Pedro._ Will you have me, lady?
27264_ Julius Cæsar.__ Written._ 1601(?)
27264_ King Henry IV, Part I.__ Written._(?)
27264_ King Henry V.__ Written._ 1598(?)
27264_ King Henry VI, Part III.__ Written._(?)
27264_ King John.__ Written._(?)
27264_ King Richard II.__ Written._(?)
27264_ King Richard III.__ Written._ 1594(?)
27264_ Macbeth.__ Written._ 1605- 6(?)
27264_ Measure for Measure.__ Written._ 1603- 4(?)
27264_ Much Ado about Nothing.__ Written._(?)
27264_ Othello, the Moor of Venice.__ Written._ 1604(?)
27264_ Pericles, Prince of Tyre.__ Written._ 1607- 8(?)
27264_ Produced._(?)
27264_ Produced._(?)
27264_ Produced._(?)
27264_ Published._ 1600(?)
27264_ Published._(?)
27264_ Source of the Plot._(?)
27264_ The Merchant of Venice.__ Written._(?)
27264_ The Merry Wives of Windsor.__ Written._ 1599(?)
27264_ The Second Part of King Henry IV.__ Written._ 1597(?)
27264_ The Taming of the Shrew.__ Written._(?)
27264_ Timon of Athens.__ Written._ 1606- 8(?)
27264_ Troilus and Cressida.__ Written._(?)
27264_ Twelfth Night.__ Written._ 1600(?)
27264_ Written._ 1611- 13(?)
27264is this thy body''s end?
27264where should he die?
21964''We will suppose,''said the miser,''that his symptoms are such and such; now, doctor, what would_ you_ have directed him to take?'' 21964 A glass?
21964A likely stripling-- not ill- born-- and of her own choosing, too? 21964 A skull, you say!--very well!--how is it fastened to the limb?--what holds it on?"
21964About my door?
21964After all that you have heard?
21964Ah, have you been in love? 21964 Alas, can I do nothing to help you?"
21964Alone?
21964And do you, then, suppose me such a creature?
21964And grace?
21964And how is this to be done?
21964And how many people may you have told about it?
21964And now, Dupin, what would you advise me to do?
21964And pray how came you here?
21964And the paper on the walls?
21964And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition?
21964And what is the difficulty now?
21964And what is this?
21964And what, after all,_ is_ the matter on hand?
21964And what, sir,she demanded,"may be the meaning of all this?"
21964And why not to- night?
21964And why not?
21964And you did dream of it?
21964And you really solved it?
21964And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick?
21964And you?
21964And your father''s name?
21964Are you badly, badly hurted?
21964Are you fond of vis big girl, Coppy?
21964Are you going to carry us away?
21964Aylmer, are you in earnest?
21964But could not the cavity be detected by sounding?
21964But how did you proceed?
21964But how do you know he dreams about gold?
21964But is this really the poet?
21964But what is the meaning of it all?
21964But what purpose had you,I asked,"in replacing the letter by a_ fac- simile_?
21964But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades?
21964But who were the three that preceded him?
21964But why do we speak of dying? 21964 By yourself?
21964Danger? 21964 Did you call me?"
21964Did you say it was a_ dead_ limb, Jupiter?
21964Dighton,demanded the General,"what means this foolery?
21964Do you fancy,he went on,"that when I had made my little contrivance for the door I had stopped short with that?
21964Do you mean I am a prisoner?
21964Do you remember, my dear Aylmer,said she, with a feeble attempt at a smile,"have you any recollection of a dream last night about this odious hand?"
21964Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at last, sneak into heaven? 21964 Doing what?"
21964Fonder van you are of Bell or ve Butcha-- or me?
21964For what price?
21964Georgiana,said he,"has it never occurred to you that the mark on your cheek might be removed?"
21964Good gracious, child, what are_ you_ doing here?
21964Has the day begun already?
21964Have you not tried it?
21964Have you ridden all the way from cantonments, little man? 21964 Hey, Willie Winkie, Are you coming then?
21964Hey, Willie Winkie, Ca n''t you keep him still? 21964 How I know?
21964How far mus go up, massa?
21964How high up are you?
21964How is this known?
21964How much fudder is got for go?
21964How much was the reward offered, did you say?
21964How? 21964 How?
21964How? 21964 In any one?"
21964In the devil''s name what is this?
21964In what way?
21964Is it with this lotion that you intend to bathe my cheek?
21964Is this yer a d----d picnic?
21964It''s like ve sputter- brush?
21964Its susceptibility of being produced?
21964Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?"
21964Jupiter,said he, when we reached its foot,"come here; was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outward, or with the face to the limb?"
21964May I lead you thither, madam?
21964No, massa, I bring dis here pissel;and here Jupiter handed me a note which ran thus:--"MY DEAR---- Why have I not seen you for so long a time?
21964No? 21964 Not charitable?"
21964Nothing more in the assassination way, I hope?
21964Poor? 21964 Put our feet into the trap?"
21964Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worse, continue until the end to override the better? 21964 She is in a better frame of spirit?"
21964So far as his labors extended?
21964Still your uncle''s cabinet? 21964 That being so,"he said,"shall I show you the money?"
21964The what?
21964Then why did you take me from my mother''s side? 21964 To me?"
21964Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn?
21964Very true; but what are they doing here?
21964Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstance am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day?
21964Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?"
21964Well, now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you-- do you hear?
21964Well, then, was it this eye or that through which you dropped the beetle?
21964Well, then, what matter?
21964What are you driving at?
21964What are you?
21964What de matter now, massa?
21964What de matter, massa?
21964What have I said?
21964What in the name of heaven shall I do?
21964What is the meaning of all this, Jup?
21964What is the use of this talk? 21964 What is your name, my good woman?"
21964What mischief have you been getting into now?
21964What new jest has your Excellency in hand?
21964What will happen?
21964What worthies are these?
21964What, de bug, massa? 21964 What-- sunrise?"
21964Where am I? 21964 Where are you going?"
21964Where is the hurry?
21964Where''s Brom Dutcher?
21964Where''s Van Bummel, the schoolmaster?
21964Which way mus go now, Massa Will?
21964Who are you?
21964Who can do so? 21964 Why did you hesitate to tell me this?"
21964Why do you come hither? 21964 Why do you keep such a terrific drug?"
21964Why had that young man a stain of blood upon his ruff?
21964Why not a glass?
21964Why so?
21964Why,[ puff, puff] you might[ puff, puff] employ counsel in the matter, eh? 21964 Will not your Excellency order out the guard?"
21964Would you throw the blight of that fatal birthmark over my labors? 21964 Would your Excellency inquire further into the mystery of the pageant?"
21964You are not going, too?
21964You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think?
21964You ask me why not?
21964You explored the floors beneath the carpets?
21964You have, of course, an accurate description of the letter?
21964You include the_ grounds_ about the houses?
21964You know me?
21964You looked among D----''s papers, of course, and into the books of the library?
21964You looked into the cellars?
21964You mean, to punctuate it?
21964_ Out to the end!_here fairly screamed Legrand,"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?"
21964_ Very_ sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 21964 ) 4#);806*;48+ 8¶60))85;;]8*;:#*8+ 83(88)5*+;46(;88* 96*? 21964 ; 8)*#(;485);5*+2:*#(;4956* 2(5*-4)8¶8*;4069285);)6+ 8)4##;1(#9;48081;8:8#1; 48+ 85;4)485+ 528806* 81(#9;48;(88;4(#?34;48)4#;161;:188;#? 21964 Again; have you ever noticed which of the street signs over the shop doors are the most attractive of attention?
21964Ai n''t you ashamed ob yourself, nigger?
21964And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind?
21964And den he keep a syphon all de time"--"Keeps a what, Jupiter?"
21964And if the old gentleman was sane, what, in God''s name, had he to look for?
21964And then addressing Denis,"Monsieur de Beaulieu,"he asked,"may I present you to my niece?
21964And why did you insist upon letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?"
21964And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow?
21964Another short but busy little fellow pulled him by the arm, and, rising on tiptoe, inquired in his ear,"Whether he was Federal or Democrat?"
21964As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours:"Piney, can you pray?"
21964At length I said:--"Well, but G----, what of the purloined letter?
21964Be helped by you?
21964But can you not look within?
21964But here, within the house, was he alone?
21964But this discovery gives us three new letters,_ o, u, g_, represented by#?
21964But where are the_ antennæ_ you spoke of?"
21964Can not you remove this little, little mark, which I cover with the tips of two small fingers?
21964Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?"
21964Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any wilful sophistry although too often disregarded?
21964Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me?
21964Counting all, I constructed a table thus:-- Of the character 8 there are 33;"26 4"19#)"16*"13 5"12 6"11("10+1"8 0"6 92"5:3"4?"
21964Dear God, man, is that all?"
21964Did n''t Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney?
21964Did you mean it?
21964Do I say that I follow sins?
21964Do you know that Jupiter is quite right about it?"
21964Do you like to see it?
21964Do you remember the story they tell of Abernethy?"
21964Do you_ mind_ being called Coppy?
21964For Christmas?
21964For example, an arrant simpleton is his opponent, and, holding up his closed hand asks,''Are they even or odd?''
21964For-- Pray, do you think me beautiful?"
21964Had you a thought in your mind?
21964Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?"
21964Has n''t he told you what ails him?"
21964Have I ever seen you-- have you ever seen me-- before this accursed hour?"
21964Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?"
21964Have you found it?"
21964Have you no trust in your husband?"
21964He buried his freckled nose in a tea- cup and, with eyes staring roundly over the rim, asked:"I say, Coppy, is it pwoper to kiss big girls?"
21964Honestly now, Doctor, have you not stirred up the sober brains of some of your countrymen to enact a scene in our masquerade?"
21964How came it to shut so easily and so effectually after him?
21964How could he have foreseen that the flying sparks would have lighted the Colonel''s little hayrick and consumed a week''s store for the horses?
21964How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''''death''s- heads,''and''bishop''s hotels''?"
21964How many limbs have you passed?"
21964I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?"
21964I looked for much confusion; for how could I tell whether he was willing to take me for his wife on these sharp terms?
21964I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself?
21964I presume you have at last made up your mind that there is no such thing as overreaching the minister?"
21964If it is n''t pwoper, how was you kissing Major Allardyce''s big girl last morning, by ve canal?"
21964If the Goblins ran off with her as they did with Curdie''s Princess?
21964In the midst of his bewilderment, the man in the cocked hat demanded who he was, and what was his name?
21964Is Messire de Malétroit at hand?"
21964Is he confined to bed?"
21964Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it?
21964Is that all?
21964Is this beyond your power, for the sake of your own peace, and to save your poor wife from madness?"
21964Is this, then, your experience of mankind?
21964It looked like a snare, and yet who could suppose a snare in such a quiet by- street and in a house of so prosperous and even noble an exterior?
21964Legrand?"
21964Let us talk of each other; why should we wear this mask?
21964Look here, Jupiter, do you hear me?"
21964Monsieur de Beaulieu, how can I look you in the face?"
21964Now what is narration and what does it imply?
21964Now, this mode of reasoning in the schoolboy, whom his fellows term''lucky,''what, in its last analysis, is it?"
21964Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen-- who shall tell?"
21964Rip bethought himself a moment, and inquired,"Where''s Nicholas Vedder?"
21964Rip had but one question more to ask; but he put it with a faltering voice:"Where''s your mother?"
21964STOCKTON: The Lady or the Tiger?
21964Shall I help you-- I, who know all?
21964Shall I tell you where to find the money?"
21964She that used to wait on the table at the Temperance House?
21964Tapping at the window, Crying at the lock,"Are the weans in their bed, For it''s now ten o''clock?"
21964The orator bustled up to him, and, drawing him partly aside, inquired"on which side he voted?"
21964The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh?
21964Welcome home, again, old neighbor--- Why, where have you been these twenty long years?"
21964What absurd or tragical adventure had befallen him?
21964What ailed the door?
21964What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?"
21964What are you doing?"
21964What could be more natural than to mount the staircase, lift the curtain, and confront his difficulty at once?
21964What could he be dreaming of?
21964What countenance was he to assume?
21964What does he complain of?"
21964What for?"
21964What make him dream bout de goole so much, if taint cause he bit by de goole- bug?
21964What new crotchet possessed his excitable brain?
21964What shall I do?"
21964What was to be done?
21964What would Coppy say if anything happened to her?
21964What"business of the highest importance"could_ he_ possibly have to transact?
21964What, for example, in this case of D----, has been done to vary the principle of action?
21964When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?"
21964Who do you want to kiss?"
21964Who knows, we might become friends?"
21964Who will take my message to the Colonel Sahib?"
21964Why was it open?
21964Why, then, should Coppy be guilty of the unmanly weakness of kissing-- vehemently kissing-- a"big girl,"Miss Allardyce to wit?
21964Why, what more would the jade have?"
21964Will you take the glass?"
21964Would it not have been better, at the first visit, to have seized it openly, and departed?"
21964You did not take to pieces all the chairs?"
21964You might do a little more, I think, eh?"
21964You will not disfigure your last hours by want of politeness to a lady?"
21964You will, of course, ask,''where is the connection?''
21964ai nt dis here my lef eye for sartin?"
21964and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?"
21964aye, and then?
21964but stay, how long do you propose to be absent?"
21964cried Legrand, apparently much relieved;"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that?
21964cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?"
21964cried Markheim:"the devil?"
21964cried he--"Young Rip Van Winkle once-- old Rip Van Winkle now!--Does nobody know poor Rip Van Winkle?"
21964did you put anything particular in it?"
21964do you know your right hand from your left?"
21964in what way?"
21964muttered Sir William Howe to a gentleman beside him;"a procession of the regicide judges of King Charles the martyr?"
21964or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness?
21964remarked the visitor;"and there, if I mistake not, you have already lost some thousands?"
21964said Legrand;"but it''s so long since I saw you, and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night of all others?
21964settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?"
21964what I keer for de bug?"
21964what do you mean?"
21964what do you mean?"
21964what mus do with it?"
21964what shall we say to my uncle when he returns?"
21964what_ is_ dis here pon de tree?"
21964who ever heard of such an idea?"
23743And who could have ordered you to drain my mere?
23743Any English here?
23743Begging your pardon, it was never put at all; nor do I see--"What, not at the inquest?
23743But do n''t you think,said Jenny,"that something might be added and amended in the state of society our fathers established here in New England?
23743Culprit, how wilt thou be tried?
23743Did she get here in time? 23743 Did you get the letter?"
23743Drain the water? 23743 Excuse me,"said Houseman;"but would it not be better for me to go?
23743Fear?
23743For the wants of this period what safe provision is made by the Church, or by the State, or any of the boy''s lawful educators? 23743 From whom had you the black horse you ride?"
23743Get off with you, will you?
23743Hath he been seen since?
23743How many years must I rely on my aids?
23743I mean, when did you hear from him last?
23743I say, are these your Italian skies? 23743 If he is dead,"said she,"what matters it?
23743If she can find him? 23743 In love with her?"
23743In the boys''academies of our country, what provision is made for amusement? 23743 Is that credible?
23743No, what letter? 23743 She-- lies-- in Carlisle jail?"
23743Think you I can not tell? 23743 Was Janet here?"
23743Was it not then a victory?
23743What does she? 23743 What is that to_ me_?"
23743What provision is there for the amusement of all the shop girls, seamstresses, factory girls, that crowd our cities? 23743 What, at this time of night?
23743What, the minister, too?
23743Where is he, though?
23743Who was that other man? 23743 Why can not we Americans learn to amuse ourselves peaceably, like other nations?"
23743Why do I feel then as if something had happened,--something disagreeable? 23743 Why hate her?
23743You''re not sorry that I''ve found you out after such a hunt? 23743 [ B] Accepting this definition, can we say that Harvard College, as at present constituted, is a University?
23743_ Wo n''t_ you take a lady and children away from here?
23743***** But now what was to be done by Dr. Saunders?
23743-- Again upon the atmosphere The self- same words fell:"_ I Am Here._""Here?
23743An author has somewhere asked, What signify our telegraphs, our anà ¦ sthetics, our railways?
23743And did n''t you say you''d no objection to her visiting the wards?"
23743And do n''t we, after all?
23743And now, before him whose prerogative was Victory, what vision did arise?
23743And what might not patience, and better management, and gentler and more noble demeanor towards her, have done for her?
23743And where can she go?
23743And where was that bedroom?
23743Anglais?"
23743Are the hired nurses making a row?"
23743Are these governments republican in form?"
23743Are they not the countries where the people are most oppressed, most unhappy in their circumstances, and therefore in greatest need of amusement?
23743Are we any the more or less men?
23743As we approached, the lady had taken the child by the hand, with the words,"What is your address?"
23743Before he could recover this little facer, she said, quietly,"What is your name?"
23743But he was afraid to take her at her word; and yet what was the use to persist in what his own eyes told him was the wrong course?
23743But hope,--what had he to do with hope, especially with such a hope as this?
23743But how can there be a right to representation when there is nobody to be represented?
23743But how was I, in the beginning, to guess at the motives of the writers?
23743But presently she said, sternly,"What does that woman say for herself?"
23743But the question yet remained, What could be done for Nancy?
23743But what sort of parents can she have, do you think, twelve years old, and writing a thing like that?"
23743But what will not men risk when destruction is at their heels?
23743Can there be a doubt about duty?"
23743Can you help us?
23743Confounded thing this, ai n''t it?
23743Could we escape, or should we again have to seek refuge from the flames?
23743Did you know Ezra Cramer had come back?"
23743Do people go out of doors at one o''clock in the morning, to pray?
23743Do you know how great a work, you dingy old Dalton blacksmith?
23743Do you know where Mrs. Gaunt is at this moment?"
23743Does it ordain impartial suffrage?
23743Does it ordain universal suffrage?
23743Does it proscribe, disfranchise, or expatriate the recent armed enemies of the country, or confiscate their property?
23743For why?
23743HOW SHALL WE BE AMUSED?
23743Has the murderer fled?
23743He asked her would she come to the trial as a witness?
23743He comes for exercise and amusement,--he gets these, and a ticket to destruction besides,--and whose fault is it?"
23743I looked, around me, and above, And cried aloud:"Where art thou, Love?
23743If education in that direction were possible,--to what purpose?
23743If he could plead for himself the force and constraint of circumstances, should not the same defence be set up for her?
23743If their art were lost, does not the ideal of humanity remain the same so long as the nature of humanity endures?
23743Is Nice no better than this?
23743Is it because he desires to have the Federal debt repudiated?
23743Is it because he thinks it intolerable that a negro should have civil rights?
23743Is it because he wishes to have the Rebel debt paid?
23743Is it not for the future we live?
23743Is this the spirit to build up a"National Union Party"?
23743Is this the tone of pardoned and penitent treason?
23743It is the slave who dances and sings, and why?
23743May I ask you one?"
23743Men do not ride so hot with good tidings,--what need to make such haste with evil?
23743Mercy answered coldly,"How should I know where she is?"
23743Must, the angels show their wings before they shall have recognition?
23743Of the present chief lights of American literature and science, how many, if graduates of Harvard, took the first honors of the University here?
23743On his way to them he asked himself this question,"How many times must a man be born before he is fit to live?"
23743Shall a man attempt to extenuate his failures?
23743She had rightly calculated the chances; he did touch it, and started and said:"Who''s here?
23743Stop a bit, will you?
23743Surely the work of destruction would stop before it reached India Street?
23743That she might become his equal when the strength of his hope that he had done with her was lying merely in this, that they were unequal?
23743The Colonel knew his step, and said,"Doctor, look here; is this Lizzie?"
23743The pith of the whole amendment is in the last clause; and is there anything in that to which reasonable objection can be made?
23743The very changes in her character, which had made her not to be endured,--how far was he whose name she bore responsible for them?
23743Then there came a tap against our_ coupà ©_ window, and an unmistakably British accent was heard to say:"Anglais?
23743Then with a firmer grasp he seized the unresisting fingers, and exclaimed,"My God, am I dreaming?
23743These are:"Have these States organized governments?
23743To what end have we so much of Mr. Brock?
23743Was he endeavoring to deceive himself and others into the belief that he was a mourning man?
23743Was he the same man in Dalton that he had been in his youth?
23743Was it not out of the pit that he himself had been digged?
23743Was_ he_ the same man he was when he went away from Dalton?
23743What could I do with such a man?
23743What did they hear, gentlemen?
23743What family, what neighborhood, claimed him?
23743What for the thousands of young clerks and operatives?
23743What had become of her brown hair?
23743What had he to do with hope, who had come forth from Dalton as from a pit of despair?
23743What had the real Thomas Leicester on his feet that night?"
23743What heavenly angel turned her eyes away?
23743What is a university?
23743What is provided for their physical development and amusement?
23743What is the result?
23743What matter the myriad frets that then beset him in the flesh?
23743What matter?
23743What signifies our knowledge of the earth''s structure, of the stars''courses?
23743What to do?"
23743When I leave a town in the morning, some one is sure to enter the car and greet me in a loud voice:"How are you, Mr. Green?
23743When did you see him last?"
23743Where was this life a moment since?
23743Where were her red cheeks?
23743Whither will it fleet a moment hence?
23743Who ever saw the ghastly corpse of the victim weltering in its blood, and did not feel his own blood run cold through his veins?
23743Who went after her?"
23743Who wrote to me?"
23743Who''s in the ditch now, getting all the favor you used to show to me?"
23743Why should I not also"pursue the triumph and partake the gale"?
23743With such firm feet we have walked in the lighted way that we gaze back upon, how can we fear the Valley of the Shadow?
23743Wonderful?
23743Would the daylight never come?
23743do I seem so vain a creature as to believe all this?"
23743it was Miss Amey,--Amey?
23743madam,"said he, roughly:"why did you not tell me this before?"
23743what about him, I wonder?"
23743what''s_ he_ permoted to?"
23743when you are in love with her?
14172''And what do you want me to do with you?'' 14172 ''And what right, sir, have you to think it is wrong, or to judge the acts of your superiors?
14172''But the lugger?'' 14172 ''But what about the_ Hoboken_?''
14172''Glad to hear it; and what latitude does he hail in now?'' 14172 ''How d''ye do, old fellow?''
14172''How so?'' 14172 ''Is it underground, ye mane, yer honor?
14172''Is that all you have to tell me?'' 14172 ''Kathleen is dead, then?''
14172''Och, yer honor? 14172 ''Shoot a dead body,''said I,''where''s the harm?''
14172''Ten thousand What''s- a- names,''cried Sam,''where''s my steak?'' 14172 ''Then you will not allow me to join my captain in his adversity?''
14172''Then,''said he, quietly,''am I to understand you refuse?'' 14172 ''Well, commissary,''says I,''suppose I knock you down here on the spot, will that do?"
14172''Well, my good woman, what have you got down there?
14172''Well,''said the lieutenant,''I should like to take a share in waking the defunct-- what''s her name?'' 14172 ''Were you not aboard a Yankee cruiser some months back?''
14172''What_ Hoboken_?'' 14172 ''Where in all the earth did you hail from?''
14172''Yes, certainly,''''Is it possible?''
14172''You know something of Cork, my man, I believe?'' 14172 ''You wish me to do so?''
14172A blow in earnest?
14172A caboose and a nigger?
14172A cloud if you like, Willis; but do you know the weight of it you carry on your shoulders?
14172A habit that you contracted on board ship; eh, Willis?
14172A portrait of_ Notre Dame de Bon Lecours_, I should n''t wonder,said Jack;"but what had that to do with hot codlins: a codlin is a fish, is it not?"
14172A tiger?
14172A tribe of Southern Africa, is it not?
14172According to you, then,said Fritz, levelling his rifle at a petrel,"the misfortunes of the one constitute the happiness of the other?"
14172According to your story, then, that does not say very much in his favor?
14172After all,inquired Frank,"what is the wind?"
14172Ah, you think so, Jack, do you? 14172 Am I, then, to understand that you offer to risk your life in this forlorn hope?"
14172An admiral, Jack?
14172And across water?
14172And another interposition of Providence?
14172And by what sort of compasses has this speed been measured, Master Ernest?
14172And by whom?
14172And do you suppose that would be sufficient?
14172And does that state of matters continue any length of time?
14172And have you found a surgeon?
14172And how did you escape?
14172And how does sound operate with regard to solid bodies?
14172And if I gave you that right?
14172And if a vacuum be formed?
14172And if so, what shall we say?
14172And if some lightning tearing through the clouds were added?
14172And if the voyagers do not wish to go quite so far?
14172And it causes the simoon,persisted Jack,"that lifts the sand of the desert and overwhelms entire caravans; how can you justify such ravages?"
14172And mother? 14172 And not a bad one either,"continued Becker;"but how?
14172And not having that, you abandoned the idea?
14172And now, Ernest, what profession do you intend to adopt? 14172 And should there be only a few seeds?"
14172And suppose a fever was to break out in this ship whilst I am absent, what do you imagine is to become of the officers and crew?
14172And the Stoics?
14172And the ephemeride, that dies an instant after its birth, do you suppose that it dies of grief?
14172And the inhabitants of the planets,said Fritz,"what are they about?"
14172And the natives?
14172And the remainder of the crew?
14172And the room, where is that to be?
14172And the second steak disappeared like the first?
14172And the sloop?
14172And the wool for the carpet?
14172And their inhabitants?
14172And these young men?
14172And this friend, no doubt, sent him a couple of tigers all ready trussed?
14172And what are the principal islands between?
14172And what are they?
14172And what becomes of these minutes? 14172 And what causes this commotion in the elements?"
14172And what did Sam conclude from that incident?
14172And what did he say?
14172And what did it say, child?
14172And what did you do?
14172And what does that consist of?
14172And what if Cecilia''s father had been ruined instead of Herbert''s?
14172And what if there were?
14172And what if we refuse?
14172And what is a molusc?
14172And what is that, Master Frank?
14172And what is that, Miss Sophia?
14172And what is that, Willis?
14172And what is that?
14172And what shall we say to the ladies, father?
14172And what would you have said, child?
14172And when does our calendar begin?
14172And when there?
14172And when you took your hands away?
14172And who invented the calendar?
14172And who was One- eyed Dick?
14172And who was the inventor of the compass?
14172And why not? 14172 And with a young man?
14172And you say that Bill Stubbs has been trapped on board this ship by such means?
14172And you, Miss Sophia? 14172 And you, young ladies, what would you wish?"
14172And your mother consented to such a dangerous proceeding, did she?
14172And your mother?
14172And, when you see this, why not adopt so commendable a course?
14172Another Admiral?
14172Any thing else?
14172Are there not a thousand accidents to cause a ship to deviate from her route?
14172Are there not always plenty of poor and helpless human beings upon whom to bestow their love? 14172 Are you determined to follow up the profession of surgery, then?"
14172Are you really determined to turn the world upside down, Master Fritz?
14172Are you speak''ng to me, sir?
14172Are you sure of that, Willis?
14172Are you sure of your man?
14172At first he said, How d''ye do, Willis?
14172At what rate does the wind travel?
14172Because it has been refreshed on crossing the ocean that separates the two continents?
14172Both William and Harold were originally Danes, were they not?
14172But are you sure, Willis?
14172But could you carry over my kisses, Willis, and distribute them amongst my children every morning and evening, like rations of rice?
14172But do the laws recognize them?
14172But have you not determined to which of the muses you will throw the handkerchief?
14172But how did it get there?
14172But how did you obtain possession of her?
14172But how do you know it is for that?
14172But how do you manage for a lawyer to convey it?
14172But how is it, then, that the immense bulk of a seventy- four moves so easily in the water? 14172 But how?"
14172But how?
14172But how?
14172But if dismasted and leaky?
14172But if it is the_ Nelson_?
14172But now, my friends, what do you say to going down to the shore to meet the pinnace, and perhaps the_ Nelson_?
14172But surely you do not call such a poetical exordium a profession?
14172But the dogs?
14172But the fly- trap, father, what of that?
14172But the savages?
14172But the water?
14172But the year is now the unit, is it not?
14172But to acquire a profession, is not instruction and practice necessary?
14172But what became of Herbert?
14172But what has that to do with your pulse?
14172But what is the good of such an expedition?
14172But what is the use of exposing yourself here?
14172But what say you to Plato?
14172But what, in all the world, has that to do with the Pacific Ocean?
14172But where are the tables and chairs to come from?
14172But where would have been the evil?
14172But who is the great Rono?
14172But why do you ask such a question now?
14172But would the stickleback answer me, Master Fritz?
14172But,said Willis,"the parole can be given up, can it not?"
14172By land or water, Willis?
14172By the way, Mrs. Wolston, how does our worthy invalid get on? 14172 By the way, Willis,"inquired Jack,"do you ever recollect having lived without breathing?"
14172By the way, girls,said Mrs. Wolston,"have you forgotten your lessons in tapestry?"
14172By the way, talking about acquaintances, Willis, have you obtained any further intelligence from your friend Bill,_ alias_ Bob?
14172By what conveyance, then?
14172Can I come in now?
14172Can you describe the ceremony to which you refer?
14172Can you make it out?
14172Can you make it out?
14172Certain of what?
14172Certainly; it is impossible to become a proficient in any art or science by mere study alone; but before sowing a field, what is done?
14172Clever, very; but are you not wounded?
14172Curious how things do turn up, is n''t it, Willis?
14172Did she believe that?
14172Did the Pope manage to get entirely rid of the fraction?
14172Did you ever see a hare or a pheasant come and stare you in the face when you were going to shoot it?
14172Did you heave that sigh just now, Master Fritz?
14172Did you not say, brother, that the_ Nelson_ might hear our signals without our hearing hers? 14172 Did you observe the formidable dentilated horn?"
14172Divided?
14172Do the conductors not prevent the lightning from doing harm?
14172Do you believe in omens, Jack?
14172Do you feel feverish?
14172Do you know me, captain?
14172Do you know of any European settlements on these islands?
14172Do you know the latitude and longitude of this coast, Willis?
14172Do you know the nature of the disease?
14172Do you know what water weighs?
14172Do you observe how downcast my father looks?
14172Do you really mean me to believe that yarn?
14172Do you remember the answer you gave me?
14172Do you suppose that Toby has learned embroidery in the same way that the parrot learned grammar?
14172Do you think the pigeon will find its way with the letter from here to New Switzerland?
14172Do you think,inquired Ernest,"that plants and bushes are utterly without sensation?"
14172Do you think,whispered the captain to Fritz,"that Willis is all right in his upper story?"
14172Do you wish to leave us?
14172Do you?
14172Doctor,said he,"would you do myself and my brother a great favor?"
14172Does it displease you?
14172Does slavery and its horrors not still exist, for example, in Russia and the United States of America?
14172Does the creature speak?
14172Does the earth invariably pass the same point at that interval?
14172Dying, say you?
14172Fatherinquired Fritz,"shall we go any farther?"
14172For what purpose, my friend?
14172Foresight?
14172From what?
14172Good?
14172Had she no doubts as to their identity?
14172Have I not paid you a visit of this kind before, Willis?
14172Have any of you been at Falcon''s Nest lately?
14172Have not,continued Ernest,"six thousand three hundred and sixty- two eyes been counted in one beetle?
14172Have you been to sea since we saw you last?
14172Have you both made up your minds?
14172Have you composed a sonata yet?
14172Have you not sheep?
14172Have you seen the Flying Dutchman?
14172Have you, then, been desperately wicked, Willis?
14172He did not buy Cecilia a doll, did he?
14172He was let down from a window in a basket, was he not?
14172Heart or instinct, where is the difference? 14172 Holloa, sire,"cried Jack,"where are you off to?"
14172Holloa,exclaimed Fritz,"Polly loves everybody now, does she?"
14172How can that be?
14172How can you fancy such a thing, mamma?
14172How d''ye do, Bill?
14172How do they manage to grind their corn then? 14172 How far do you suppose we are from Sydney?"
14172How have you contrived to obtain so satisfactory a certificate in so short a period?
14172How in all the world did Willis contrive to get transported to Shark''s Island?
14172How is it, father, that the almanac makers can predict changes in the weather?
14172How is it, then,inquired Willis,"with this continual multiplication always going on, the inhabitants of land and sea do not get over- crowded?"
14172How is the letter to be sent on shore?
14172How old are you, Willis?
14172How so, Willis?
14172How so, Willis?
14172How so?
14172How stands the contest?
14172How, Willis?
14172How, then, do these companies make it pay?
14172How?
14172I am going to take a turn in the pinnace to- morrow,said Willis, quietly;"who will go with me?"
14172I am insensible, am I not?
14172I can not discredit the evidences of my own senses, can I?
14172I dare say, Willis, had there really been an accident, and you had been on board, you would not have felt yourself entitled to escape?
14172I do n''t know, Master Jack; are you?
14172I go a- hunting?
14172I may add,observed the sailor,"that, as we were steering for the plantation, myself on the starboard and Jack on the larboard--""On the what?"
14172I observed your thoughtful mother hang a sack on one of your shoulders, which appeared tolerably well filled-- where is it?
14172I suppose it rises in the air just as an empty bottle well corked rises in the water?
14172I think it is useless; what say you, Willis?
14172I wish you could think of some other sort of gift,suggested Willis;"what do you say to a couple of seal or shark skins?"
14172I wonder why God, who is so good, has not made houses grow of themselves, like pumpkins and melons?
14172If a balloon were allowed to ascend without hindrance where would it stop?
14172If you are determined to be a conqueror, let it be by the pen rather than by the sword-- or, what do you say to oratory? 14172 If you were not, captain, how could you come to my cabin every night and ask me questions?"
14172In a dream?
14172In that case, whom do you refer to yourself, Miss Sophia?
14172In the Pacific Ocean?
14172In the first place, I am in perfect health, am I not?
14172In the sea?
14172Is death, then, inevitable?
14172Is it a hyena or a bear?
14172Is it all over?
14172Is it not-- to speak of a young person of thirteen''s doll?
14172Is it very dreadful?
14172Is land dear in these parts?
14172Is she not dead, then?
14172Is that all?
14172Is that not rather long?
14172Is that, then, your secret?
14172Is the coast accessible?
14172Is the coast inhabited?
14172Is there any other influence that affects sound besides the wind?
14172Is there no trace of the_ Nelson_?
14172Is this the only savage you have seen?
14172Is your son in orders then, madam?
14172It does not, then, spring from a family feud, as Jack supposed?
14172Just when they are about to leave?
14172Keel- hauled?
14172Look there, Willis-- what do you see?
14172May I inquire,said he,"to what we owe this intrusion on our privacy, gentlemen?"
14172May I know what your knight- errant is saying to you, Mary?
14172May I request you, Master Ernest, to draw a conclusion from that as regards sowing the seeds of a future career?
14172May it not have been a large monkey,suggested Jack,"who has resolved to play us a trick for having massacred its companions at Waldeck?"
14172May not the warder discover our escape, and raise an alarm in time to retake us?
14172Might it not,she asked herself,"be egotism to imprison their young lives in the narrow limits of maternal affection?"
14172Might they not as well consist of multitudes of insects piled heaps upon heaps?
14172Might they not as well say they had forgotten a tool or a pocket handkerchief?
14172Miss Sophia,inquired he gravely,"are you rich?"
14172Miss Sus--"What?
14172Miss Wolston,said he,"did you not tell me that you had brought Toby up, and that you were very fond of him?"
14172My falling in with the_ Nelson_ astonished you, did it not?
14172My life, then, is nothing?
14172Naturally; and what then?
14172No, but suppose you were to plant it upside down, with the plantule above and the radicle below; do you think it would grow that way?
14172No, stop a bit; we were in hopes of falling in with Captain Littlestone, were we not?
14172Nor am I either, Willis; but let me ask you how it is that the waves do not carry you along with them?
14172Not even to the paroquette Fritz gave you?
14172Not from the ant, I presume?
14172Not in our time, I suppose?
14172Now, Jack, do you see how gallantly the wind behaves, prostrating the strong and sparing the weak? 14172 Of whom then, may I ask?"
14172Oh, father,cried Sophia,"how can you tease us so?"
14172Oh, is that all? 14172 Oh, then, you are an advocate for the birch, are you?"
14172Oh, then,cried Jack laughing,"it is another doll story, is it?"
14172Oh, then,said Jack,"the power of spinning depends upon the bulk of the spinner?"
14172On foot?
14172One of the_ Nelson''s_ crew?
14172Oviparous?
14172Perhaps not; but if I had fallen into the sea, you would have allowed the sharks to swallow me, would you not?
14172Pressed on board?
14172Right; I prefer that, do n''t you, Willis?
14172Shall I not have compensation in your daughters?
14172So it would appear,observed Jack;"but are you not aware the captain is asleep?"
14172So much?
14172So that to venture to sea in it would be to incur imminent danger?
14172So you are a pal of One- eyed Dick''s, are you?'' 14172 So you wo n''t give me your gazelle?"
14172So, then,objected Willis,"if two persons were to talk in what you call a vacuum, they would not hear each other?"
14172Still, it is my idea that the Pope was not much smarter at taking a latitude than Mr. Julius Cæsar-- but what are you laughing at?
14172Suppose you met Ernest or Frank in the street to- morrow, pale, meagre, and in rags, would you recognize them?
14172Thanks, Willis; but what right have I to expect courage from them, if I exhibit weakness myself? 14172 That he does not smoke here,"remarked Becker,"I can easily understand; but why conceal it?"
14172That, of course; and I presume another ship anchored in Safety Bay?
14172The inhabitant of the moon?
14172The islands to the west are those discovered by Cook, Vancouver, and Bougainville, are they not?
14172The navigation along shore, then, is extremely perilous?
14172The probabilities of another vessel touching here are small, are they not?
14172The remedy is certainly simple; but are your figures perfectly square? 14172 The steak had really disappeared then?"
14172The wood, yes; but the cannon, the cargo, and the crew?
14172Then I promised to come and talk to you about your Susan every day; and did I not keep my word?
14172Then he disappeared, did he not?
14172Then how did France get mixed up in the affair?
14172Then it occurred to you that you had neither a printer nor readers, and you broke your lyre?
14172Then my sweetheart will be alone on his island, like an exile?
14172Then the coral reefs, that render navigation so perilous in unknown seas, are the work of insects?
14172Then was your honor present when I was christened? 14172 Then you have been in Spain, papa?"
14172Then you have stumbled upon a miracle, have you, Willis?
14172Then you think it is a terrific affair to kill a tiger or two? 14172 Then,"said Jack,"you do not admit the claims of the Chinese and Hindoos, who assert priority in the discovery?"
14172There are no hopes of the_ Nelson_, are there?
14172There is the gallery, is there not?
14172They are a sort of trap set for the lightning, are they not?
14172They are not acquainted with the use of fire- arms, are they?
14172To have found whom?
14172To no one?
14172True, Willis, but did you suppose I had no heart? 14172 True; but do you not see that I am sick of dry land, and that I am getting rusty for the want of a little sea air?"
14172True; but might not these bars have been sawn through before? 14172 Very good,"observed Willis;"this Malebranche, as you call him, must have been an admiral?"
14172Very good; but how is it that these ponderous waves, coming down upon you, do not crush you to atoms by their mere weight?
14172Very good; but if, on the other hand, there is a continual increase, how can the population continue the same?
14172Very likely; and if such be the case as regards water, may it not be so also as regards air?
14172Was it going round the corner of a street that you stumbled upon it, Willis?
14172Was it taking a walk, Willis?
14172Was it wrapped up in a white sheet?
14172Was that not going a little too far, Willis?
14172Was the pipe alone, brother?
14172Was this right ever enforced?
14172We have always been dutiful sons, have we not, mother?
14172We have never caused you any uneasiness, have we?
14172We were disappointed, were we not?
14172Well, Willis, you that are so fertile in ideas, what would you have done in such a case?
14172Well, admitting these necessities, what profession will each of you select? 14172 Well, but how does it move?
14172Well, can you tell me why the same wind is cooler on the east coast of America?
14172Well, did you catch him?
14172Well, how did he manage about the fish?
14172Well, look here; Captain Littlestone is either dead or alive, is he not?
14172Well, what about the plank?
14172Well, what is to be done?
14172Well, will you embark with us for New Switzerland?
14172Well, you see, Willis, we want for nothing on board the pinnace, not even a what- do- you- call- it?
14172Well,he inquired, on landing,"was I wrong?"
14172Well,inquired Willis,"was I not right in wishing to have the cage of Sir Marmaduke here?"
14172Well,inquired the child,"have you seen them?"
14172Were you very sorry when Frank and Ernest were going to leave us?
14172What about that? 14172 What about?"
14172What are they, mother?
14172What are your Majesty''s commands?
14172What becomes of it when it is caught?
14172What becomes, in the presence of these facts, of the metaphysics and cosmogonies that have succeeded each other for two thousand years? 14172 What business had the laws to interfere with these things, I should like to know?"
14172What character do the inhabitants bear?
14172What continent is nearest us?
14172What could I do? 14172 What country?"
14172What did he say to you?
14172What did the Englishman do then?
14172What did you say?
14172What do you say to a ton or so, old fellow?
14172What do you say, Master Jack?
14172What do you think of this boat?
14172What else could it be for? 14172 What else could you take in your hand for such a purpose, O Rono?"
14172What for?
14172What had he to do with it?
14172What if I wanted to know it to- night?
14172What if you should fall in with a ship?
14172What is England and France always fighting about, Willis?
14172What is a Lama, father?
14172What is all this signalling about?
14172What is it, then?
14172What is more natural than to reckon the fraction, if we are desirous of obtaining absolute precision? 14172 What is that you call Blinky?"
14172What is that?
14172What is the matter?
14172What is the matter?
14172What is the matter?
14172What is the name of your craft?
14172What is the subject of your principal work in this line?
14172What is the_ Times_?
14172What is this?
14172What islands do you suppose are nearest us, Willis?
14172What makes you think so?
14172What objections have you to the others?
14172What planets do you mean?
14172What relation is there, for example,inquired Jack,"between an oyster and a horse?"
14172What shall I call him?
14172What sloop?
14172What sort of vegetable is the bread- fruit?
14172What then do you say to pottery?
14172What then? 14172 What things?"
14172What was your father saying when you shut up your ears?
14172What would you have?
14172What wreck?
14172What, Willis?
14172What, do you admit fear to be one of your accomplishments, Miss Sophia?
14172What, father, am I not then to go alone, and so bear the penalty of my own fault?
14172What, motive, then, did you urge, Willis?
14172What, the Union Jack?
14172What, then, became of the pistols and the French horn?
14172What, then, do these shoals of creatures live upon?
14172What, then, is sound, that the wind can blow it about, most learned brother?
14172What, then, is the thunderbolt?
14172What, then, is the use of military schools?
14172What, then, is to become of adventures by the way, road- side inns, and banditti?
14172What, then, is to become of the boys? 14172 What, then, will you do, my poor friend?"
14172What, then?
14172Whatever can he be driving at?
14172Whatever can he mean?
14172Whatever can we think, Willis?
14172Whatever hove you up then, Willis?
14172Whatever is the matter, Willis?
14172Whatever is the matter?
14172Whatever the distance?
14172When did he find out that Cecilia was married?
14172Where are the top boots to come from?
14172Where are you going, Willis?
14172Where are you going?
14172Where away?
14172Where away?
14172Where do you come from?
14172Where do you hail from?
14172Where is Willis?
14172Where is he then?
14172Where, then, are the skins to come from? 14172 Where?"
14172Where?
14172Where?
14172Where?
14172Whether it moves or not, we shall all see by and by; but do you not observe this monster''s young ones gambolling by its side?
14172Which you would like to prove to us by caging ourselves, eh?
14172Who are all these personages?
14172Who are you?
14172Who knows, Master Jack?
14172Who? 14172 Who?"
14172Whoever would have thought of trusting the staff of human life to such slender support as stalks of straw?
14172Whom?
14172Why February?
14172Why did he stay away five years without writing?
14172Why do a people that call their county a refuge for the down- trodden nations of Europe suffer such abominations?
14172Why not, if it is polite and well bred?
14172Why not?
14172Why so, Master Frank?
14172Why so, madam?
14172Why so?
14172Why threadbare?
14172Why, Willis?
14172Why, then, are these men held up as models for our imitation?
14172Why, then, do they make you an exception?
14172Why? 14172 Why?"
14172Why?
14172Why?
14172Why?
14172Will you promise not to speak of it?
14172Will you tell me,inquired she,"what happened whilst I had my ears closed up, Jack?"
14172Will you, Master Jack?
14172Willis, to reach Europe from here, what course do you think would be best?
14172Willis,inquired Jack,"what difference is there between a mist and a cloud?"
14172Willis,said he,"have you any objections to state what the engagements are, that require you to leave us at pretty much the same hour every day?"
14172With what sort of magic wand did he propose to do that?
14172Would it not be offending Providence,hazarded Mary Wolston,"for one of God''s creatures to abandon himself to certain death?"
14172Would you not have acted, under similar circumstances, precisely as we suppose Captain Littlestone to have done?
14172Wrong about what?
14172Yes, what about the rascal?
14172Yes; but what then?
14172You are about to announce to your sons their departure?
14172You are not angry with us, Willis, are you?
14172You are not sufficiently up in arithmetic to do that, Willis?
14172You are safe and sound, I hope?
14172You are well pleased with us then?
14172You asked me just now what course I should steer for Europe, did you not?
14172You believe in visitations from the other world then, Willis?
14172You did not break any of the commissary''s bones, did you?
14172You do n''t happen to mean that the_ Flying Dutchman_ has appeared on the Scotch coast, do you, Willis?
14172You have been over the way again, then?
14172You surely do not call sitting down there being on your way to meet us, do you?
14172You think I am mad, no doubt, do you not?
14172You want to color a popular outbreak, do you not?
14172You wilful boy, may I ask where, in all the world, you have been?
14172You will at least return before night?
14172You will not attempt to embark in weather like this?
14172You will spin yarns for us, Willis, will you not?
14172You will, at all events, be free to try, will you not?
14172''Did she require water?''
14172''I thought you were dead and gone?''
14172''Is that you, Bill Stubbs,''says I,''at last?''
14172''Provisions?''
14172''Then Willis has deserted?''
14172''Will you have a mouthful of grog to warm your inside?
14172And when that course is cleared off, what do you think is produced next?"
14172Are not falcons, hawks, and other birds used in the chase, types of foxes and dogs?
14172Are they allowed to run up another score?"
14172Are they not somewhat behind in cookery?"
14172Are thirty minutes more or less on the dial of your watch of no signification to you?"
14172Becker?"
14172Besides, if the project were divulged, might not Frank and Ernest insist upon their right to share its dangers?
14172Besides, what is that salt there for?''
14172But do you think it is safe to land amongst such a set of barebacked rascals, Willis?"
14172But how is it done?"
14172But to return to plants, Ernest; you say they have nerves?"
14172But what did you say to him?"
14172But where have you all come from?"
14172But who could have dreamt of any one being foolhardy enough to attempt the rescue of a ship in a nutshell that scarcely holds two persons?"
14172But why not three- quarters or six- eighths, they would do as well?"
14172But, by the way, do you recollect the chimpanzee?"
14172But, to return to the pigeon, supposing it is possible for it to find its way, how long do you suppose it will take to get there?"
14172By the way, is there anything the matter with my nose?"
14172Can you say you bought them at the furrier''s?
14172Can you tell me what causes lightning?"
14172Commissary?''
14172Did I not tell you not to come ashore?"
14172Did Providence will, exact, or pre- ordain all these calamities?
14172Did you ever see a windmill?"
14172Do not peacocks, turkeys, and the common barn- door fowl bear a striking affinity to oxen, cows, sheep, and other ruminating animals?"
14172Do you know when I feel most happy?"
14172Do you recollect it, Fritz?"
14172Do you want to be handed over to the drummer, and to cultivate an acquaintance with the cat?''
14172Does it blow?
14172Does somebody go behind and push it, or is it dragged in front by sea- horses and water- kelpies?"
14172Everybody asked, what would the Emperor do with him?
14172Fritz re- established order, enjoined silence, and said,"I am determined this time to follow the affair up; who will accompany me?"
14172From what fathomless reservoirs do the Amazon and the Mississippi receive their endless torrents?"
14172Had she not waited long enough for him?"
14172Had some of the peep- o''-day boys been burning down farmer Magrath''s ricks again?
14172Has nobody told you of it?"
14172Have I ever complained?
14172Here Becker thought it necessary to interfere; and, summoning all the courage he could muster to the task, said--"Why should they not go?
14172How could I look on quietly whilst you were surrounded by a mob of ferocious- looking men?"
14172How is it that the petrel you are aiming at does not come and perch itself quietly on the barrel of your rifle?"
14172How is this?
14172How is this?"
14172How often does it not happen, in our pilgrimage through life, that we have the wind against us?
14172How, then, could such wishes be met in a way to satisfy all?
14172I have not seen him lately, however-- how goes it with him now?''
14172I on board?"
14172I trust, if it be so, that when he gets into port he will report me keel- hauled?"
14172If it is done in the case of grape- shot, why may it not be done when the artillery is a thousand times more effective?"
14172If it is night, the moon should be introduced; and if it is day, the sun-- and so on?"
14172If you add a day every four years, do you not overleap the earth''s fraction?"
14172If you dream about it during the night, you will not be angry with me for telling you?"
14172If you had wings, would you not fly straight off in the direction of the Bass Rock or Ailsa Craig, to hunt up your old arm- chair?"
14172If you were to lose Knips, would the first monkey that came in your way replace him in your affections?"
14172If, for example, I were to ask you what air consists of?
14172In the first place, it requires no interpreter between itself and the public;--what, for example, remains of a melody after a concert?
14172Is it finished?"
14172Is it for eating?
14172Is it not so, Miss Wolston?"
14172Is mortal power capable of overcoming every difficulty?
14172Is pain and suffering not our lot from the cradle to the tomb?
14172Is six months of your time of no value?
14172Is the owl, which prowls about only at night, not a type of the cat?
14172Is this the first expedition they have undertaken?"
14172Let me ask if there is any one here who regrets his present position?"
14172Lucullus, Nero, Achilles, Peter, Paul, Tyre and Sidon, Semiramis and Elizabeth-- queens, saints, and philosophers, are all passed in review, and why?
14172May I not like them?
14172May my sufferings not be agreeable to me?
14172Might not the wish be father to the thought, and the thought produce the fancy?
14172Mr. Wolston and the captain?"
14172Now do you believe in miracles?"
14172Now, can you calculate the weight of the water that is on your back and pressing on your sides when you swim?"
14172Shall I run for some brandy, Willis?"
14172That has not made you ill, has it?"
14172The cormorants and herons, that live upon fish, are they not the otters and beavers of the air?
14172The dummies will, of course, not condescend to reply, and then-- but what matters?
14172There might have been a reason for the death of Mary Wolston-- who knows?
14172They do not carry an almanack in their pockets, do they?"
14172Trace the cause to its source, and what think you is invariably found?
14172Very likely the passer- by has asked himself, Why is this house not as neglected, tattered, and dirty as its wretched neighbors?
14172Very provoking, is it not, when all the other animals in the house talk?"
14172Was Willis also dreaming with his eyes open?
14172Was he on his way to the Capitol or to the Gemoniae?
14172Was it necessary that Mary Wolston should be thrown into the sea, and that she should afterwards die in consequence of the accident?
14172Was this a common mode of welcoming strangers?
14172Were they happier in consequence?
14172Were we going to besiege Paddy, in his own peaceable city of Cork?
14172What are the obstacles?
14172What could it all mean?
14172What could you do then?"
14172What do you mean to do with the chimpanzee?"
14172What is it made of?
14172What is the good of useless regrets?"
14172What is the use of that disaster?
14172What reason have you for supposing that the_ Nelson_ may not return with colonists?"
14172What right have you to impose a remedy upon me that is a thousand times worse than the malady?
14172What say you, minister?"
14172What system do you pursue in educating him-- the Pestalozzian or the parochial?"
14172What would he not have given for the power to bid them one last adieu?
14172What would you think of Jenner, with his finger on his brow, searching for a means of preserving humanity from the scourge of the small- pox?"
14172What, then, is to prevent us paying a visit to some of Ernest''s friends in the skies?"
14172What, then, would they have governed?
14172Whativer d''ye want wid an old woman, and niver a livin''sowl in the house''cept meself and Kathleen in her coffin?''
14172When it is found that I had been left on shore, the questions will be,''Was the_ Nelson_ in want of repairs?''
14172When shall we start?"
14172When the lightning flashes, the electric spark is discharged, is it not?"
14172When they pass the perihelion--""The what?"
14172When we had secured the whole lot of them in this way--"''Lieutenant,''said I, winking,''will you permit me to send a ball into that coffin?''
14172Which eye is opened first after fainting?"
14172Who built the first ship?"
14172Why are the just oppressed?
14172Why this evil?
14172Why, they ask, do the wicked triumph?
14172Will you accept the office?"
14172Will you commission me to whisper a few words in their ear?"
14172Willis, are all the old crew on board?"
14172Willis; you have bathed sometimes?"
14172Wolston?"
14172Wolston?"
14172Wolston?"
14172Would he be imprisoned or banished?
14172Would he go to New Switzerland?
14172Would you like to air yourself in Paris a bit?"
14172Would you like to hear something about how the system is carried out?"
14172You recollect my comrade, Bill,_ alias_ Bob, of the_ Hoboken_?"
14172You smoked at sea, did you not?"
14172You, who modestly call yourself the best horseman on the island, how would you do, if you had nothing to ride upon?"
14172a pilot on horseback?"
14172again without water?"
14172amongst dried peas and preserved plums?"
14172and as many as thirty- four thousand six hundred in a butterfly?
14172and at what?
14172and is not this coquetry an indication of something more than mere instinct?"
14172and the ladies?"
14172are there not orphans and homeless creatures whom they might adopt?"
14172are you sure?''
14172brave this storm in a wretched seal- skin cockle- shell like that?"
14172can it be possible?"
14172cried Fritz, laughing,"what, to shut up the game first and shoot it afterwards?"
14172cried Sam, like to burst his sides with laughing,''they expect to frighten me with bones, do they?
14172cried Willis,"so you have come to your senses at last, have you?
14172cried Willis,"you are not going to get up such another scene as we witnessed an hour or two ago?"
14172cried she, pushing aside the hair from their brows, the better to observe their features,"you thought to deceive your mother, did you?"
14172cried the landlord,''Dick in a schooner off the Irish coast?''
14172cried the officer through a speaking trumpet,"who are you?"
14172croaked the voice,''whativer are ye kicking up such a shindy out there for?
14172do you call bears and tigers game?"
14172exclaimed Becker,"what do you call a hurricane then?"
14172exclaimed Ernest,"is the Pilot a triton then, that he could dispense with the canoe?"
14172exclaimed Jack;"what use has a pilot for oars?"
14172exclaimed Sophia angrily;"when did Jack find out that I had a doll?"
14172exclaimed Sophia,"did they not arrest and drag him to prison?"
14172exclaimed the captain in passing,"do n''t you intend to take part in the skirmish?"
14172exclaimed the missionary, starting up;"you come then from the Pacific Ocean?"
14172have they no forks?"
14172how do you make that out?"
14172in Havre?"
14172inquired Jack--"Phil Doolan?"
14172is it on the starboard or larboard?
14172or was there a private still to be routed out and demolished?
14172roared the lieutenant,''what has honor to do with it, sir?
14172said Becker,"you have been able to make something of him, then?"
14172said Ernest, parodying Jack''s witticism about the oars,"what does a pilot care about surf and breakers?"
14172said the lieutenant,''and where is Phil Doolan?''
14172says he,''is that you, Pilot?''
14172she cried with an air of alarm,"what horror is that?"
14172sixteen thousand in a fly?
14172take you prisoner?''
14172than you are dead?''
14172that is the way you insure your lives, is it, trusting to the priests rather than to Providence?
14172the captain of the_ Hoboken_?"
14172the commander- in- chief of cavalry on an island?"
14172the man who had both his legs shot off, and died in consequence of his wounds?"
14172the sloop?"
14172what are these?"
14172what is your dream of the future?"
14172you can speak, can you?
14172you here?"
14172you think that her Majesty''s blue jackets can disappear in that way, like musk- rats?
26433''And your terms?'' 26433 ''But why conceal these imperfections?''
26433''Mrs Bullfrog, upon your honour,''demanded I, as if my life hung upon her words,''is there no mistake about these five thousand dollars?'' 26433 ''Now, my love, are you not a most unreasonable little man?''
26433And what on earth did tempt you to buy such a brute?
26433But Units, what of him?
26433Do n''t you play, Meynell?
26433I had plenty,he says,"in the midst of want; was happy though surrounded by dangers; how should I be melancholy?
26433I told you,said I, taking advantage of a momentary pause,"that I had a great interest in the horses: pray tell, me, can you make any use of him?"
26433Perhaps she does; but tell me what is that contrivance in the ceiling right above him? 26433 Perhaps you are aware that Miss Vernon has a large fortune?"
26433Why need I paint, Charmion, the now disenchained frenzy of mankind? 26433 Why should I have any secret from you, mother?"
26433''Is it possible that you view that affair in an objectionable light?
26433''Ought a woman to expose her frailties earlier than on the wedding day?
26433''The jury gave me every cent the rascal had; and I have kept it all for my dear Bullfrog?''
26433( If Mrs Fuller wrote in the language of the conventicle this would be intelligible; but she does not; what does she mean?)
26433A pulley, is it not?"
26433Admit that his flesh tints are most natural, that they are beautiful; has he not sacrificed too much to make them so?
26433And can any thing be more steady than''Tens?''
26433And have not combinations of them effects similar to certain combinations in sounds?
26433And here we may fairly ask the question, why those gentlemen should have appeared in"dingy shooting- jackets and soiled trousers?"
26433And if not, what other measures are to be taken against this insidious enemy?
26433And now would I not look excessively foolish, when it appeared that"imperative circumstances"were turned into moonshine by a moonlight walk?
26433And, after, all, what is this great boast of_ nationality_ in literature?
26433Are the highest truths_ national_?
26433Are there no steady sure principles of colour?
26433Are you ill?
26433As the"who is he?"
26433But I would ask, is there one_ important_ picture by his hand, wherein the colour is of a sentiment?
26433But a national literature-- will it come for any calling to it?
26433But how did you get the horse to Craigduff?"
26433Can any one recognise in this elaborate nonsense about ideal perfection, any approximation to the feeling which a man has for the wife he loves?
26433Can they not feel the passage--"Who maketh the clouds his chariot?"
26433Could one so fair and good be without heart, and indifferent to the unworthiness of him to whom she had given her troth?
26433Could she mistake the handwriting?
26433Do n''t you see, my dear fellow, that if you ever hooked a gudgeon, you have as certainly caught the republisher?
26433Do you suffer?"
26433Enamour''d of all mysteries, in love With doubt itself, and fond to disbelieve, We ask not,"if realities be real?"
26433Has not every colour its own character?
26433How can Niebahr rob_ him_ of any thing-- who looks not for truth in history, but for novel and romance?
26433How do you know that a legal protection against destitution must necessarily weaken moral restraint?
26433How would imagination colour it in the page of history?
26433I apprehend it can only be by begging; and of whom are they to beg?
26433I knew I would probably see her in London when her brother returned; but how many things might happen in the mean time?
26433If Mr Sims makes his escape into the woods, and sits there naked and ignorant as a savage, will inspiration visit him?
26433Is it a startling assertion to say, that this does not depend upon its naturalness?
26433Is it an objection, that I have triumphantly defended myself against slander, and vindicated my purity in a court of justice?
26433Is there any trace of_ locality_ in the purest and noblest of sentiments?
26433It has been said, and intended as praise, that the flesh looks as if it had fed upon roses; but is it a praise?
26433Let him tell his marvels, and welcome; a ghost story is just as good now as ever it was; but why usher it in with this didactic folly?
26433Need I say that I formed any exception?
26433Now to speak of Rubens; what are his characteristics as a colourist?
26433Or do you complain, because your wife has shown the proper spirit of a woman, and punished the villain who trifled with her affections?''
26433Or has some old speech of Mr O''Connell''s on the repeal of the union got shuffled amongst his papers?
26433Others were for pushing on after the Mic- Macs to pray for a share of their spoil-- but how could they reach them?
26433Shall any one pretend to say that it gathers nothing from being true?
26433To waive my astonishment at the_ Benthamism_ of the phrase, pray what is"International Copyright"to Godfrey, that he should weep for such a Hecuba?
26433WAS RUBENS A COLOURIST?
26433WAS RUBENS A COLOURIST?
26433Was this real or unreal?
26433We are to suppose that he braves the risk of the experiment-- it succeeds for a moment, then proves fatal, and destroys her-- for what?
26433Well, what did you expect?
26433What can our own circulating libraries be about?
26433What cared he for news?
26433What could be the meaning?
26433What think you of the bay?"
26433What was the importance of a flock of sea fowl in the heart of the Pacific to the human race for the last four thousand years?
26433What would be the result of_ a total extraction of the nitrogen_?
26433When a regiment could not subdue him, who could?
26433Wherein lies his excellence?
26433Who ever rose from the_ Inferno_ of Dante without looking back to the story of Ugolino and of Francesca?
26433Who ever saw Corregio''s backgrounds in nature, or indeed the whole colour of his pictures, including figures?
26433Why do the shadows fall so quickly?
26433Why does dark night chase away this gentle twilight, and the murmur of the brook grow loud and hoarse, as all other sounds are sinking into silence?
26433Why is it absurd to suppose that, if given up to such teachers, the next generation of educated Americans will be less democratic?
26433Why should it be culpable to steal from a resident, and laudable to do the same thing with a stranger?
26433Why should modern painters be afraid of thus venturing into the ideal of colouring?
26433Why with unnatural tameness comest thou thus, Offering in fealty thy sweet simple songs To the abode of man?
26433Will it come the sooner for the banishment of all other literature?
26433With regard to the first, the question should be asked-- How would memory have coloured it to the spectator in his after vision?
26433Yet, what is Java, to the islands almost within her view?
26433and is that the rub?''
26433or what may it ever be?
26433whose pure eye, Like an archangel''s, over the dim Earth, With such ineffable effulgence shines?
16366''And camped together?'' 16366 ''And travelled together?''
16366''But you''ve worked together?'' 16366 ''Then if you''re not mates what is mates?''
16366''What do you want, my good woman?'' 16366 Ai n''t you fellows going to bed to- night?"
16366And he wanted to get rid of you, eh?
16366And how are you again?
16366And how are you? 16366 And if the other said no?"
16366And me?
16366And so you''re at your old tricks again, are you? 16366 And that Purpose; what is it?"
16366And the other half, what''s that?
16366And they''d all publish my poetry?
16366And what can we do?
16366Anybody particular here?
16366Anybody with him?
16366Are many people as hard up as that in Sydney, Nellie?
16366Are n''t you coming it a little too strong? 16366 Are n''t you coming to bed yet?"
16366Are there many?
16366Are they dangerous?
16366Are you afraid? 16366 Are you an Anarchist?"
16366Are you busy to- morrow afternoon?
16366Are you stumped then?
16366Ask what?
16366But how can one do it best?
16366But how does it come? 16366 But if there is trouble, Ned?"
16366But is it more barren- sounding than utter Negation? 16366 But suppose a man would n''t work fairly and did n''t want to share?"
16366But they have good board and lodging, as well as wages, do n''t they?
16366But true Socialism? 16366 But what is''freedom of contract?''
16366But why?
16366But you will be good now, will you not, Ned?
16366Ca n''t what?
16366Ca n''t you get work?
16366Ca n''t you give it up? 16366 Ca n''t you wait for dinner?"
16366Ca n''t you wait two minutes before you begin your sub- editing tricks? 16366 Can you put me up to- night?"
16366Could n''t you girls form a union?
16366Did he? 16366 Did her husband die?"
16366Did you deem to alter the unalterable?
16366Did you ever read''David Copperfield?''
16366Did you ever try it?
16366Did you hear that Mrs. Hobbs had a son this morning?
16366Do I?
16366Do n''t dance on champagne, like many of the society gems?
16366Do n''t husbands die like other people?
16366Do n''t what?
16366Do n''t you know the name? 16366 Do n''t you know?
16366Do n''t you know? 16366 Do n''t you think, Ned, that you might see a little bit of real Sydney?
16366Do n''t you understand?
16366Do they go to church?
16366Do they take you here on tick?
16366Do we?
16366Do you care what happens to us?
16366Do you know what I''d do if I were him?
16366Do you mean that unions and political action and agitations do n''t do any good?
16366Do you really think that we should leave our individual rights to be decided upon by an ignorant mob?
16366Do you really think you''re better for it?
16366Do you recollect how he used to stand outside the cookshops? 16366 Do you take water with your wine?"
16366Do you think I forget anything about you, Nellie?
16366Do you think it possible?
16366Do you think it''s any good living?
16366Do you think it''s really that sort of thing that makes people better?
16366Do you think they will?
16366Do you want me to talk straight?
16366Does he print them?
16366Does he still do any printing?
16366Does it need standing up for?
16366Does she have to work?
16366Everybody''ll be out of work and then what''ll we all do?
16366Fair dues, my boy, fair dues?
16366For others, too?
16366For the past, who would not choose it? 16366 Friends?
16366Geisner?
16366Has he got it as bad as that?
16366Has he got much influence?
16366Has he seen it?
16366Has she any children?
16366Have we the pleasure of more company, Jack?
16366Have we time?
16366Have you a match?
16366Have you had enough of Sydney?
16366He''s not on the make like most of them and he fancies he''s very patriotic, I imagine, but what does he know of us or of the squatter? 16366 Hello?"
16366How about a union now?
16366How about equality?
16366How about me?
16366How about the land? 16366 How are the children?"
16366How can it be better? 16366 How can it be fair?
16366How can it come then? 16366 How can it help making them better if their hearts are good?
16366How can they get it?
16366How can they?
16366How can we hire him?
16366How can you expect them to be?
16366How can you get what you want by unionism? 16366 How d''ye do, Miss Lawton?"
16366How did you know the Strattons?
16366How do I know who you are?
16366How do you know all these jokers, Nellie?
16366How do you know? 16366 How do you mean?"
16366How do you mean?
16366How does one know a religion?
16366How else should we look at it? 16366 How ever did you recollect my colour?"
16366How is that?
16366How many hours do you work?
16366How old are you?
16366How sound him?
16366How was that?
16366How would you get your daily?
16366How would you like never to be able to get out of it?
16366How''s mother, Johnny?
16366How''s that?
16366How''s that?
16366How''s that?
16366How''s that?
16366How? 16366 How?"
16366How?
16366How?
16366I do n''t know that you''d call this a pleasant place,he commented, adding with the frankness of an old friend:"Why do you live here, Nellie?"
16366I suppose the Strattons are happy?
16366I suppose the boss victimised afterwards?
16366I suppose they''re pretty well off, Nellie?
16366I suppose you are French?
16366I think so, too, Nellie, but can everybody be as well off as they are?
16366If you wo n''t for the sake of your wife and your children and yourself and everybody, will you do it to please me?
16366In the harbour? 16366 Is he still carrying on?"
16366Is he the one who draws in the Scrutineer?
16366Is it by playing music in fine parlours that good is to be done? 16366 Is it fair?"
16366Is it good?
16366Is n''t Nellie coming to- night?
16366Is n''t it a pity that we ca n''t co- operate right through in the same way?
16366Is n''t this a blank of a time you''re having?
16366Is the New Unionism really making its way in England, Geisner?
16366Is your name Hawkins?
16366It''s a beautiful country, is n''t it?
16366Just talk to the other girls about a union, will you?
16366Knowing it''s useless, just to throw your life away?
16366Lots who would n''t dream of doing it if there was plenty of work to be had?
16366Not gone to bed yet?
16366Now, where do we differ?
16366Of course, this is Mr. Hawkins, Nellie?
16366Only, if your mates were in trouble you''d be a cur if you did n''t stand by them, would n''t you? 16366 Phwat d''ye mane, ye blayguard, indaycently exposing yersilf in this parrt av th''doomane?
16366Plenty of work this week?
16366See?
16366Shall I see you again?
16366Shall we go to Manly or Bondi or Watson''s Bay, or do you know of a better place?
16366Shirt and all? 16366 Should one give up the Cause for a woman?"
16366So he''s the man who does all the mischief, is he?
16366Supposing it does start?
16366Take the baby, dear?
16366That''s all right to talk, Nellie, but what can we do?
16366That''s strange, is n''t it? 16366 The men are organising fast up that way, are n''t they?"
16366The only thing is what do they call contemptible? 16366 The whole dispute, no matter what it was?
16366Then Anarchists are n''t wicked men?
16366Then Socialism is co- operation?
16366Then how do I know you have tried to do fairly?
16366Then it''s all make- up that''s in the papers? 16366 Then she is in the movement?"
16366Then there''ll never be a Labour press, you think?
16366Then why confer at all, under any conditions, oven if unionists admitted all this?
16366Then why for you any more than anybody else?
16366Then why not leave''freedom of contract''to arbitration?
16366Then why not put it down?
16366Then, roughly speaking, the amount of work you do has n''t got very much to do with the pay you get for it?
16366There,he went on,"will that suit you?"
16366They do n''t believe anything, do they?
16366They''ll get a lot to go then?
16366They''re all clever, are n''t they?
16366They''re not religious then?
16366They''re to be married, I suppose?
16366Things are pretty bad everywhere, are n''t they?
16366Things are pretty bad in those old countries, are n''t they?
16366Those Strattons are immense-- what''s that noise, Nellie?
16366Too quiet? 16366 Try a cigar, Hawkins?"
16366Was he the priest?
16366Was it Griffith?
16366We part friends, do n''t we? 16366 We would be free under Socialism?"
16366Well, are you hard up?
16366Well, do you?
16366Well, what do you object to in it?
16366Well?
16366What am I?
16366What are we now,she went on,"in most cases?
16366What are we to do then if we ca n''t get what we want by unionism?
16366What are you getting at, Nellie?
16366What became of him?
16366What can we women do?
16366What did he do?
16366What did he get the run for?
16366What did he say?
16366What did n''t he do? 16366 What did she say?"
16366What did they do then?
16366What difference does all this make between you and me?
16366What do I think? 16366 What do they believe?"
16366What do they pay?
16366What do you call an artist?
16366What do you call religious?
16366What do you call the Old Order?
16366What do you call''her proper sphere?''
16366What do you mean by your sound system, George?
16366What does he want with me, I wonder?
16366What does it matter, after all, Ned?
16366What does it matter, after all?
16366What does that Josie do?
16366What does the Sphinx mean?
16366What is Death that we should fear it so? 16366 What is Life that we should covet it?"
16366What is Socialism?
16366What is a true woman? 16366 What is it to you whether women are good mothers or not?
16366What is it, Ned?
16366What is rich? 16366 What is to be the end for me?"
16366What makes you so sure the men will stick, Ned?
16366What on earth is the matter?
16366What other living nations?
16366What other objections have you to the agreement?
16366What sort was that?
16366What time do you get away on Thursdays?
16366What will you pay?
16366What work?
16366What would my women be like? 16366 What would your women be like?"
16366What''s going to become of the innocent little baby? 16366 What''s that?"
16366What''s the good of spluttering?
16366What''s the good of that?
16366What''s the matter?
16366What''s''specks?''
16366Where are they to get them from, supposing they want them and naturally the chaps want them when they hear of military coming to''shoot''em down''? 16366 Where are you taking me, Nellie?"
16366Where is Geisner?
16366Where was her husband?
16366Where was that?
16366Where would you like to go, Ned?
16366Where?
16366Which county?
16366Which is the way to the park?
16366Who can tell? 16366 Who else?
16366Who is Nellie?
16366Who is it from?
16366Who is that brute?
16366Who is to say? 16366 Who shall say?
16366Who wants to brutalise them?
16366Who''d own the papers, though, after the unions had subsidised them?
16366Who''d think it to look at him? 16366 Who''re you, anyway?"
16366Who''s Melsom?
16366Who''s Mrs. Stratton? 16366 Who''s Strong?"
16366Who''s that?
16366Who''s the other, I wonder?
16366Why afraid?
16366Why do n''t you ask me if you''re alive?
16366Why do n''t you go up to Queensland?
16366Why do n''t you open the door?
16366Why do n''t you sit down and have a rest?
16366Why do n''t you?
16366Why do you say such things to Geisner? 16366 Why do you stand it?
16366Why have them work at all?
16366Why is it?
16366Why not, if it is sound? 16366 Why not?
16366Why not? 16366 Why not?
16366Why not? 16366 Why not?"
16366Why not?
16366Why should it be, if all true music is n''t? 16366 Why should we be mothers, unless it pleases us to be mothers?
16366Why wo n''t you let a man stay blue when he feels like it?
16366Why, they transport a man for shooting a rabbit or a hare, do n''t they? 16366 Why?
16366Why? 16366 Why?
16366Why?
16366Why?
16366Will it not come then?
16366Will you come on Monday too, Ned?
16366Will you hand me my cloak, please? 16366 Will you have a cigarette?"
16366Wonderful? 16366 Would they?
16366Would you go up with them for the union?
16366Would you take what you call a''living salary''on such a paper?
16366Yes, is n''t it? 16366 Yes; you know his work?"
16366Yet you''d work for your board?
16366You are all very kind and mean well, but do you know how people live, how they exist, what life outside is?
16366You came out to Sydney?
16366You did n''t get on with Nellie last night?
16366You do n''t agree with it?
16366You do n''t mean that a man working in England or France earns more than a man working in Australia?
16366You do n''t suppose a lot of the people we saw this morning get over well fed, do you? 16366 You had n''t any friends?"
16366You have been an officer of the shearers''union, you say?
16366You heard she died? 16366 You know what being a Socialist means, Ned?"
16366You know what is in front?
16366You mean of dirty streets, stuffy houses and sloppy clothes?
16366You mean that you''ll help me to get rich?
16366You mean to come out again?
16366You never drink anything, Miss Lawton, do you?
16366You prefer to be left uninterrupted to preach this new socialistic nonsense?
16366You recollect my sister?
16366You remember her, Ned? 16366 You think land and stock and machinery should be nationalised, then?"
16366You think things will last a long time?
16366You understand me?
16366You understand me?
16366You will excuse my familiarity, wo n''t you?
16366You will never have children?
16366You wo n''t touch me?
16366Your folks come?
16366''Poor man''s digging,''you call it, eh?
16366''So you wo n''t take Tom back,''says I,''not for the sake of his eleven children when it''s their poor heart- broken mother that asks you?''
16366''Well,''he said,''if you live like this when you''re hard up, how on earth do you live when you''ve got money?''"
16366''Who was it that sacked you?''
16366*****"Is there not a curse upon us and our people, upon our children and our children''s children, for every little one we murder by our social sins?
16366*****"What had its mother done for it?
16366*****"You''re not allowed to talk either?"
16366After a pause:"What do you think of things, Ned?"
16366After all, what did it matter?
16366Ah, comrade, do you recollect how you breathed soul into them when they shrank back that day?
16366Ai n''t it a wonder their insides do n''t poison''em?"
16366All the loneliness of his longing spoke in that hoarse whisper:"Nellie?"
16366Am I?"
16366And Nellie?
16366And for the life of"that girl downstairs"who had given up in despair?
16366And he, who had thought in his miserable folly that at least he was as much Man as she was Woman?
16366And how could I find Mary?
16366And if it is n''t sound, why not?
16366And if she does that does she not do all that we have a right to ask of her?
16366And pretty he''d look with the holy bible in his hand repeating what I said to him, would n''t he now?"
16366And what can we expect from a government that did such a thing?"
16366And what do we find?
16366And when my sister Mary ended so, who is safe?
16366And who is it like the little angel that came straight from heaven this blessed day?
16366And why should it not be for his mates as well as for himself?
16366And why should not this be the best rendering?"
16366And why, most of all, why not for the wretched dwellers in the slums of Sydney, the weary women, the puny children, the imbruted men?
16366Are our virtues, our woman instincts, so weak and frail that you ca n''t trust us to go straight if the whole of life is freely open to us?
16366Are you ready?
16366As far as music goes what has France got if you take away the Marseillaise?
16366As he looks more like a man it wo n''t be as bad though, will it?"
16366Besides, how did it happen that she was so at home in this house of well- to- do people, and so familiar with this man of a cultured class?
16366Besides, what did it matter?
16366Besides, where do we differ really?
16366Besides----""Besides what?"
16366Brother and sister?
16366Brother and sister?"
16366But I suppose I''m horrifying you, Mr. Hawkins?
16366But he went on, talking at Geisner:"What do you do for the people outside?
16366But what are you driving at?"
16366But where are the men, now, who will strike a blow for the babies?
16366But why did they laugh and joke and play tricks?
16366CHAPTER V. WERE THEY CONSPIRATORS?
16366CHAPTER V. Were They Conspirators?
16366Ca n''t ye find anither place to unthdress yersilf in, ye low vaygrant?"
16366Ca n''t you see that it is because we have been degraded into machines that Society is what it is?"
16366Ca n''t you see?
16366Complimentary, is n''t it?"
16366Could Labour papers afford to pay managers and editors what the big dailies do?"
16366Did you come straight through?"
16366Did you think I was n''t coming?"
16366Do n''t you know that we have been machines too long?
16366Do n''t you remember her, Ned?
16366Do n''t you see how it''s done already?"
16366Do n''t you think that Love would come then as it could in no other way?
16366Do n''t you think that women, who even now are good mothers generally, would be good mothers to children whose coming was unstained with tears?
16366Do you know him?"
16366Do you know that''s a word I like?"
16366Do you know the union officials in Brisbane?"
16366Do you know the way out?"
16366Do you suppose for a moment, Mr. Strong, that ideas spring up with nothing behind them?
16366Do you tell us now that you wo n''t have our help in the movement?
16366Do you thing there will be any trouble?"
16366Do you think Egypt would have lasted 20,000 years if her priests had been like my parson, and her slaves like my people?"
16366Do you think for a single moment that the average rich man has courage enough or brains enough to drive the people to despair as this Strong will do?"
16366Do you think that many here will regret it?"
16366Do you understand it?"
16366Do you wonder that our chaps get hot and talk wild and act a little wild now and then?"
16366Eh, Nellie?
16366Eh?"
16366For the miserable, the wretched, those, weary of life?
16366For what end, what aim?
16366For what was in front?
16366Geisner''s firm voice answered:"And is there one of us who does not know what a blessing living might be?
16366Gives the natives such pretty pink skins, eh, Geisner?"
16366Has any other people anything to compare?
16366Has she been here?"
16366Has she developed?"
16366Have n''t I told you she said on Thursday that she would come and bring the wild untamed bushman with her?
16366Have n''t you dropped that unpleasant trick of yours after all these years?
16366Have you got us all ticketed away like that?"
16366Have you heard what they did here during the maritime strike?"
16366He can take it all if he wants it,''cos it stands to reason, do n''t it, mister?''
16366He does n''t look a bad sort, does he?"
16366He was not sorry when George again rested on his oars to say:"Will you land at the point this time, Nellie?"
16366How about France even-- Flaubert, Zola, Daudet, Ohnet, a dozen more?"
16366How about Russia?
16366How are we to know?"
16366How can he when she does n''t even understand herself?
16366How can there be?"
16366How can we?
16366How can you wonder if a few fires start or expect the chaps to be indignant if they do?
16366How dare you speak to him like that?"
16366How did you know him?"
16366How do you fellows here feel about things?"
16366How was it?"
16366How would I be hearing when I just came through the back, and Tom only just gone out to wear his feet off, looking for work?
16366How''d they look here, trying to serve dinner with a lot of green hands?"
16366How''s that?"
16366I shrank from asking aunt, for she''d only offered to help me to come back and what could I do in Toowoomba if I got there?
16366I suppose I can leave my portmanteau with you?"
16366I suppose they can do anything they like, Ned, but surely they wo n''t dare to really enforce that old George the Fourth law they''ve resurrected?"
16366I think it sounds cold and distant; do n''t you?"
16366I would-- oh, what would I not do?
16366I''ve shorn with him out at the--""What sort of a man is he?"
16366If anything happens can I have it sent down to you so that you can give it to her if she needs it?"
16366If it was like this soon after ten, what would it be at noon?
16366If they wanted to hang men what was to stop them?
16366If we have n''t a right to employ whoever we like at any terms we may make with any individual we employ what rights have we?"
16366If you were the other sort do you think I''d be bothering you?"
16366In the strength of that impulse, do not millions grow so?
16366Into the pit which we have left digged for the children of others shall not our own children fall?
16366Is happiness safe for any while to any happiness is denied?
16366Is he back again?"
16366Is it equality to grow coarse and rough and unsexed in the struggle for existence?
16366Is it equality to scramble with men in the search for knowledge, narrow hipped and flat- chested?
16366Is n''t it chilly?
16366Is n''t that fair?"
16366Is n''t that honest and fair?
16366Is n''t that it?"
16366Is she dressmaking still?"
16366Is that him?"
16366Is the day''s work done by a poorly- paid man less than that done by a highly- paid one?"
16366Is there one of us who does not feel what a curse living is?"
16366It''s not being in gaol but what you''re in for that counts, is n''t it?"
16366It''s not too late for you?"
16366It''s the devil''s own luck the dear creature has, is n''t it now?
16366Jolly nice hour for a chap that''s to be up at six, ai n''t it?"
16366Mates?
16366Mates?
16366Measure for measure, pang for pang, what torture, what insults, what degradation, could atone for the life that was suffered in this miserable room?
16366Need we ask her to earn her own living and bear children as well?
16366Not bad for a dress- making girl who lives in a Sydney back street and sometimes works sixteen hours a day, is it?"
16366Not bad, eh, Ned?"
16366Now what would you say?"
16366Oh, why not?"
16366Ought n''t that to be owned by the people too?"
16366Shall we make her a toy and a slave, or harden her to battle with men?
16366She came here once or twice when you were here before, I think, and for the last year or so she''s been our-- our-- what do you call it, Harry?
16366She looked at Ned questioningly:"Well?"
16366So long as we know that what does the rest matter?"
16366Somerville?"
16366Stand up now, wo n''t you?"
16366Stratton?"
16366Suppose the first man you sounded said no?"
16366Suppose you ca n''t get work no matter how often you ask, what do you do?"
16366Surely you would n''t injure them?"
16366Tell Jones you saw me when you write, and remember me to him, will you?
16366That''s sweating, is n''t it?
16366The Future, what did it matter to him?
16366The best she could, indeed, but what was that?
16366The freed and victorious female will put her foot on abject man some day?
16366The garbage of the rich sold as a feast to these poor little ones?"
16366The scaffold or the gaol might come or go, what did it matter to him?
16366The selector, the digger, the bushman, as the townman, what has life for them?
16366The smile said plainly:"It really does n''t matter, does it?"
16366The women were all feeling hurt about the reduction, and one girl did start talking strike, but what''s the use now?
16366Then, looking at it more closely:"Do you know that somehow, although it''s not like her, this reminds me of Nellie?"
16366Then:"What do they believe?"
16366There ai n''t much room to stand though, is there?"
16366They hardly spoke till Ned asked Nellie:"I do n''t see what men can get to do but ca n''t single women always get servants''places?"
16366Twenty- four and six, was n''t it, Nellie?
16366Was it a hard time she had with it?
16366Was it for this that Nellie had brought him here?
16366Was not that Art, Nellie?"
16366We are friends, are we not?
16366Well, what does all this do for it?
16366What could be fairer?
16366What could be?
16366What could n''t we do, you and me?
16366What did that matter?
16366What do you do for it?
16366What do you mean by equality?
16366What do you think of this oration of Geisner''s?"
16366What does that matter to you?"
16366What does that matter?
16366What has the world to offer that we should swerve to the right hand or the left from the path our innermost soul approves?
16366What have you been doing to yourself?"
16366What is Socialism?"
16366What is Socialism?"
16366What is her other name?"
16366What is it this time?"
16366What is there to look forward to?"
16366What objections can you have to our rivalling men in the friendly rivalry that would be under fair conditions?
16366What should she do if she should see him again nevermore?
16366What should she do?
16366What should she do?
16366What then?
16366What was this Cause?
16366What were not there?
16366What were the little man''s thoughts?
16366What were there?
16366What were they all coming to?
16366What were they?
16366What will you do instead?"
16366What would you do?"
16366What''s the sense of your saying that if we do n''t like the agreement we need n''t take it?
16366Where shall we go, Nellie?"
16366Where was even the relaxed caution of the shopping- day?
16366Where was the gay chaffering, the boisterous bandying of wit?
16366Where was the"fair"to which of old the people swarmed, glad- hearted?
16366Where''s that flask?
16366Wherefore?
16366Which was the truth?
16366Who else would it be?
16366Who is Ford?"
16366Who says wine?"
16366Who were the nostrum vendors?
16366Who were they?"
16366Who would not, if they could, drop civilisation from them as one shakes off a horrid nightmare at the dawning of the day?
16366Who''d ever do that but Griffith?
16366Who''d work for less than another man if he need n''t, easily?
16366Who, could do this as the bushmen could, as he and his houseless, homeless, wandering mates could?
16366Whose rose is that?"
16366Why are we ever born?
16366Why are we ever born?"
16366Why could n''t I have died instead?
16366Why could n''t I?
16366Why do n''t we all die?
16366Why do n''t you say''rushes''for''wanders''in the last verse, Arty?"
16366Why do we live?
16366Why do you not play that music in the back streets or to our fellows?"
16366Why not arbitrate?"
16366Why not consult us first I should like to know?"
16366Why not join hands with us in theory as you do in fact?
16366Why not let us be women, true women, first, and whatever it is fitting for us to be afterwards?"
16366Why not?"
16366Why not?"
16366Why not?"
16366Why should n''t they buy straight papers sooner than these sheets of lies that are published?"
16366Why should not men like Strong and Geisner join hands?
16366Why should not the republican kiss pass from one to another till loving kindness reigned all the world round?
16366Why, have n''t you understood?
16366Why?"
16366Will it never end, I wonder?
16366Will these men live as the English writers live, think you?
16366Will you refuse us the fruit of victory when the fight is won?
16366Will you take a drink?
16366Wo n''t he, Nellie?
16366You did n''t hear that my Tom got the run yesterday, did you?"
16366You do n''t think much of a reefing field?"
16366You understand me?
16366You understand me?
16366You understand me?
16366You understand me?"
16366You understand me?"
16366You understand me?"
16366You understand me?"
16366You understand me?"
16366You understand me?"
16366You understand me?"
16366You were talking of Mr. Stratton, too, just now, were n''t you?"
16366You''d talk to anybody, would n''t you?
16366You''d think it fair to leave it all to the arbiter?"
16366You''ll be sure to be there?"
16366You''re not ill?"
16366asked Ford,"Where do I come in?"
2553Ah, Sieur Pierre,she said to Morice,"where shall I be to- night?"
2553And who is your Seigneur?
2553Are you a knight?
2553Are you noble?
2553Are you the Bastard of Orleans?
2553Did you know by revelation that you should break prison?
2553Did you never hear that France should be made desolate by a woman and restored by a maid?
2553Do they think themselves immortal?
2553Do you believe,he said,"that this is the body of Christ?"
2553Have you not good faith in the Lord?
2553How,she cried,"could God let them perish who had been so good and loyal to their King?"
2553If we shall say: From heaven, he will say, Why then believed ye him not? 2553 Is it you who have had me led to this side of the river and not to the bank on which Talbot is and his English?"
2553Is the King to be driven out of the kingdom, and are we all to be made English?
2553Jeanne, why will you die? 2553 Jeanne,"he said,"in what place do you expect to die?"
2553Noble Dauphin,she cried,"why should you hold such long and tedious councils?
2553Shall I be believed if I speak?
2553Shall I be believed?
2553The blood of our soldiers is flowing,she said;"why did they not tell me?
2553What are you doing here,_ ma mie_?
2553What is this Council of Bâle?
2553What would you say,she answered as with a momentary doubt,"if I had sworn to my King never to change?"
2553When will you go?
2553Which way are their heads turned?
2553Will you swear to answer truly all that concerns the faith, and that you know?
2553( it is difficult to translate the words, for_ brave_ means more than brave)--"why was she not English?"
2553A hoarse cry burst forth:"Will you keep us here all day; must we dine here?"
2553And Alençon, Dunois, La Hire, where were they and all the knights?
2553And Jeanne herself, the one strange figure that nobody understood; was she a witch?
2553And if her own party did not stir on her behalf, why should he?
2553Are you afraid?
2553As for the appeal of Jeanne, what was the letter of that mad creature to a prince and statesman?
2553Asked, if St. Margaret did not speak English, answered:"How could she speak English when she was not on the English side?"
2553Asked, if he had hair, she answered,"Why should it have been cut?"
2553Asked, if he was naked, she answered,"Do you think God has nothing to clothe him with?"
2553Asked, if her voices forbade her to speak the truth, she said:"Do you expect me to tell you things that concern the King of France?
2553Asked, if she had said to St. Catherine and St. Margaret,"Will God leave the good people of Compiègne to die so cruelly?"
2553Asked, if the angel had not failed her; answered,"How could he have failed me, when he comforts me every day?"
2553Asked, in what place this mandrake was, and what she had heard of it?
2553Asked, to whom she promised?
2553Asked, what was that danger?
2553Asked, why she did not enter the city as she had the command of God to do so, she replied:"Who told you that I was commanded to enter?"
2553At least it would appear that Charles thought so: for how should this peasant maid know the secret fear that had gnawed at his heart?
2553At the end of so long and bitter a struggle she had thrown down her arms-- but for what?
2553Could any one stand and answer like that hour after hour and day by day, inspired only by the devil?
2553Could it indeed be saints and angels who ordained a step which was outside of all the habits and first duties of nature?
2553Could no one go on?
2553Could she still trust them?
2553Did she kneel and thank them?
2553Did the Inquisitor break down here?
2553Did the Maid mean that her work was over, and her divine mission fulfilled?
2553Did this in Cæsar seem ambitious?
2553Did you observe how she hesitated on this?
2553Go to Rheims to be crowned?
2553God''s promises are great, but where is the fulfilment?
2553Had he any right to that sustaining confidence which would have borne up his heart in the midst of every discouragement?
2553Had it failed?
2553Had she proclaimed a promise from St. Catherine, of victory?
2553Had she refused, might it not have been alleged against her that after all her impatience it was she who was the cause of delay?
2553Had the Maid become a great and honoured lady should not we all have said as Satan says in the Book of Job: Did Jeanne serve God for nought?
2553Had they but persevered, as she had said, a few hours longer before Paris, who could tell that the same result might not have been obtained?
2553He asked her, a question equally unnecessary,"do you believe in God?"
2553He had been long a prisoner in England, and had lately been ransomed for a great sum of money;"Was not that a sufficient sacrifice?"
2553He was a prisoner of war: what was it the Maid''s duty to do?
2553How could they keep still outside, Dunois, Alençon, La Hire, the mighty men of valour, while they knew that she was being racked and tortured within?
2553How should there have been in that partisan province, more English than French?
2553If she had broken out into open rebellion who would have followed her?
2553In those long hours, amid the noise of the guards within and the garrison around, how she must have thought, over and over again, where were they?
2553Is it here truly that I must die?"
2553It had no doubt been hard for her to leave her father''s house; but after that disruption what did anything matter?
2553It was all ready; and where then was the great victory, the deliverance in which she had believed?
2553Jeanne had relapsed; the sinner escaped had been re- caught; and what was now to be done?
2553Jeanne, will you not save yourself?"
2553Monseigneur might well be on his mettle; that very pity, was it not stealing into the souls of his private committee deputed for so different a use?
2553No one but Jeanne knew at what cost she had kept her perfect purity; was it good for nothing but to be burned, that young body not nineteen years old?
2553One man most reasonably asked why she should be put to torture when they had ample material for judgment without it?
2553Or in the other case did her inspiration fail her, or were the intrigues of Charles and his Court sufficient to balk the designs of Heaven?
2553Robert then asked her who was this Lord?
2553She called specially-- was it with still a return towards the hoped for miracle?
2553She cried, weeping and helpless, terrified to the bottom of her soul-- What was she that she should do this?
2553She was then asked how they were dressed?
2553She was then asked what she had done with her mandragora( mandrake)?
2553She was then asked whether, when first she saw her King, he asked her whether it was by revelation that she had assumed the dress of a man?
2553She was then asked, if what she did in respect to the man''s costume was by command of God, why she asked for a woman''s chemise in case of death?
2553Should the army march by, taking no notice of it and so get all the sooner to Rheims?
2553The only question was, Was it Heaven in this instance?
2553The place of sacrifice was ready, everything arranged-- for whom?
2553The saints?
2553Then this brother said to Jeanne:"Do you believe as fully in your voices?"
2553They bade her be strong and of good courage: is not that the all- sustaining, all- delusive message for every martyr?
2553They were now her familiar friends guiding her at every step; and what was the commonplace burly Seigneur, with his roar of laughter, to Jeanne?
2553This is what she said; does that look like a deceiver?
2553This man asked him:"What do you think of her answers?
2553To risk once more a husband so costly was naturally a painful thing to do, and why could not Jeanne be content and stay where she was?
2553To this she answered quietly,"Are there two?"
2553To wait for fifteen days and receive the prize without a blow struck, would not that be best?
2553Was he indeed the heir of France?
2553Was it a direct message from God in answer to his prayer, uttered within his own heart, without words, so that no one could have guessed that secret?
2553Was it not rather the evil one?
2553Was it only a perception, too late, of the danger?
2553Was it possible that she had been deceived and really hoped for mercy?
2553Was it sorcery and witchcraft, or was it the agency of God?
2553Was it the pity of heaven that the archangel reported to the little trembling girl, or only that which woke with the word in her own childish soul?
2553Was it treachery?
2553Was it true that this standard had been carried into the Cathedral at Rheims when those of the other captains were left behind?
2553Was not she herself one of the strongest and purest threads of gold to draw that broken race together and bind it irrevocably, beneficially, into one?
2553Was she a witch, as had been thought?
2553Was she afraid of being wounded; or was she assured that she would not be wounded?
2553Was she an angelic messenger?
2553Was that what the voices had called deliverance?
2553Was there no meaning in them?
2553Was this all that she believed herself to be appointed to do?
2553Was this the keenest irony, or was it the wandering of a weary mind?
2553Were her first triumphs accidents merely, were her"voices"delusions, had she been given up by Heaven, of which she had called herself the servant?
2553Were the men- at- arms perhaps less amenable?
2553Were they mere unaccountable delusions, deceptions of the senses, inspirations perhaps of mere genius-- not from God at all except in a secondary way?
2553Were they whispering to each other that Jeanne had promised them Paris yesterday, and for the first time had not kept her word?
2553What did that mean?
2553What did the voice say?
2553What did they mean?
2553What else could it mean?
2553What he said was spoken with authority and he came in all seriousness, may not we believe in some kindness too?
2553What her visions and her voices were, who can say?
2553What is there indeed the same in the two ages?
2553What more could an archangel, what less could the peasant mother within doors, say?
2553What she had changed her dress again?
2553What was he to do?
2553What will happen?"
2553What would happen?
2553When Alençon asked Jeanne what was to be the issue of the fight, she said calmly,"Have you good spurs?"
2553Where was Dunois?
2553Where was La Hire,(1) a soldier bound by no conventions, a captain whose troop went like the wind where it listed, and whose valour was known?
2553Where was La Hire?
2553Where was she to be taken?
2553Where was young Guy de Laval, so ready to sell his lands that his men might be fit for service?
2553Who can answer so dreadful a suggestion?
2553Who can tell?
2553Who could have kept the girl so cool, so dauntless, so embarrassing in her straight- forwardness and sincerity?
2553Why should she be so determined to resist her only chance of safety?
2553Will she be burned?
2553Without this form the execution was illegal: what did it matter?
2553Would she be burned?
2553Would you have me speak against myself?"
2553You mean we shall turn our backs on our enemies?"
2553could the devils inspire that steadfastness, that constancy and quiet?
2553for her?
2553had all the signs come to nothing, all those divine words and ways, to our minds so much more wonderful than any miracles?
2553or did she expect, as she sometimes said, to_ bouter_ the English out of France altogether?
2553or should they pause first, to try their fortune against those solid walls?
2553or was it mere human incompetence to feel the divine touch?
2553or was it not rather the angels, the saints as she said?
2553or was it possible----?
2553she said;"am I to die here?"
2553was not she indeed the messenger of God?
2553was that the grand victory, the aid of the Lord?
2553what did they mean?
2553when were they coming?
2553would it not be better to say anything, to give up anything rather than be burned at the stake?
27569''Then why did you refuse to eat it?''
27569''What''s wrong with the World?''
27569***** Is there any particular characteristic in this record of Chesterton''s visit to Jerusalem?
27569***** What, then, is the essential part of Chesterton''s study of Charles Dickens?
27569But I wonder if he did really know?
27569But is it a false idealism?
27569But is it that the prisons are wrong, or is it that society makes criminals?
27569But the fact remains, do they wish to be so, and, if they do, is it necessary to them, or even congenial, that it shall be in Palestine?
27569Can not he see that very often the ideal is nothing less than the real?
27569Does Chesterton think that people who hate one another are going to live together as though they were the most ardent lovers?
27569Does he consider that ill- assorted couples will make happy nations?
27569Does he consider that it would be better to have no divorce and no marriage as a consequence?
27569Does he consider that the newspapers print the divorce cases because they have no other copy?
27569Does he really consider that divorce can destroy marriage?
27569Has he thought what the state of the country would be if no marriage could ever be broken or a fresh matrimonial start made?
27569Has right proportion been given to the most important events?
27569I wonder whether Chesterton hangs up his socks on the eve of Christmas?
27569I wonder whether Chesterton would write a''Philosophy for the Unthinking Man''?
27569Is he laughing at anarchists that they are but policemen in disguise?
27569Is he saying that policemen are really only anarchists?
27569Is it as a critic?
27569Is it as a historian?
27569Is it as a novelist?
27569Is it as an essayist?
27569Is it not the significance of how love can bridge time?
27569Is there any justification for the crimes of Henry?
27569Or does he mean that the Devil masquerades as the spirit of the Holy Day of the week''Sunday,''or is''Sunday''really Christ?
27569Should Herod have broken his vow that laid the head of John the Baptist on a charger?
27569Should Jephthah have broken the vow that sacrificed his daughter?
27569Should history be made popular in the modern sense of this much misinterpreted word?
27569Should two people remain together when( if they have not broken their actual vows) they have lost the spirit of them?
27569The opponents of divorce, who are so eager over the keeping of the marriage vow, are they as eager that it shall be but a miserable skeleton?
27569The question in regard to our inquiry is: Is the marriage vow entirely binding even when the other party to the contract has broken it?
27569The wild epitaph of Mrs. Sapsea,"Canst thou do likewise?"
27569Turning round at my entrance he said, without any asking who I was,''Have a cigarette?''
27569Was it eternal?
27569Was it material?
27569Was it spiritual?
27569Was it temporary?
27569What are the general impressions that a stranger visiting Chesterton would get?
27569What does Chesterton mean by this strange weird tale that is almost like a romance of Oppenheim and is yet like an old- world allegory?
27569What is Chesterton''s position as a poet to- day?
27569What is its meaning?
27569What is the explanation of this poem?
27569What is the future of Dickens likely to be?
27569Wherein lies its soul?
27569Whether this is so is a question that opens up a broader one: Has the history of England ever received the attention it deserves?
27569Which is the best possible definition of a heresy?
27569Why is it a something against him that he chooses to be an idealist?
27569Why should our policy be dictated by a celibate priesthood?
27569Why, then, should man dislike it that his anatomy without flesh is inelegant?
27569Would the great classic poets of the last century have been as great if they had not written so much poetry?
23605''Ad a rough time in the box, Luba?
23605''Scuse my shirt- sleeves, wo n''t you, sir?
23605But look here, sonny, why not come home and have a bit of supper with us? 23605 D''you know what you done, Italiano?
23605Do n''t no one know which way?
23605Eh?
23605Ever bin had?
23605How''s''self?
23605Laddie,cried my friend, dramatically,"is this the apartment for the Young People''s Society In Connection With The Falcon Road Miss----?"
23605Makes you feel... kind of rummy, you know, do n''t it? 23605 Niff it?"
23605Oh, Mr. Maulever, may I introduce my friend, Miss Redgrove?
23605Oo''s''e?
23605Say, do n''t mind me, do you? 23605 Say,"said the doctor, with a chuckle,"you''re standing rather close, are n''t you?
23605Stanback, Stinkpot, cancher? 23605 Steady on my feet, ca n''t yeh?
23605Well, boys,he said, jingling his three half- crowns which had just been paid him,"what about it?
23605Well-- shall we stroll''cross the Common?
23605Well... er... she looks it, do n''t she?
23605Whaffor?
23605Whaffor?
23605What about a song?
23605What''ll we have, then?
23605What''s that?
23605What''s the matter now, Freddie?
23605Where are they?
23605WhichWAY?
23605Whichway, whichway, whichway?
23605Who-- me?
23605You here to- day? 23605 ''Ave a banana?
23605''Dream of Eugene Aram''?
23605''Kissing Cup''s Race''?
23605..."Not bad, eh?"
23605A CHINESE NIGHT LIMEHOUSE_ AT LIMEHOUSE__ Yellow man, yellow man, where have you been?
23605A short one at''The Falcon''--what?"
23605A shriek of horror?
23605Ai n''t I answered enough damsilly questions from ev''body without you?
23605Ai n''t a ruddy Russian, am I?"
23605Ai n''t nobody bin asking for me?
23605And Clarence... Clarence was fairly all out that night-- what?
23605And how are you?"
23605And in reply to Victor''s inquiry:"I hope you''re well?"
23605And nearly flung bricks through the windows-- what?
23605And next morning-- when they met Jimmy coming down the steps of the Garrick Club--_what?_ To all of which Dusty replied:"Ah, yes, sir.
23605And now-- was this Paris or London or Tuan- tsen or Taiping?
23605And then,"Where you off to in such a hurry?"
23605And why, oh, why are these places run by white- faced men and elderly, hard women?
23605And ye''ll ha''a drink?"
23605Another woman''s voice wailed across the unhappy water in the mournful accent of Belfast:"Fr- r- rank, Fr- rank, where arrre ye?
23605Anything wrong?"
23605Bin on the randy?"
23605Bransby Williams?
23605But come round, and gnaw the old hambone-- what?
23605But is she?"
23605Can one imagine a modern Duchess with a modern poet as secretary?
23605Can you conceive a more bitter mind than that which calls a girl of the streets a Fallen Sister?
23605Come?"
23605Did Dusty remember the show at Willie''s about-- how many was it?--twenty years ago?
23605Did I know old Jumbo?
23605Did he remember how Phil May had squirted the syphon down poor old Pitcher''s neck?
23605Did we know the story-- story about a fellah-- fellah who had an aunt, you know?
23605Did you''ear what he called me?
23605Did you''ear?
23605Do n''t they, though?
23605Do you know those delightful London children, the tailors''collectors, who"fetch it and bring it home"?
23605Does a duck know the water?"
23605Does careful feeding and tending poison the roots of loveliness?
23605Does that terrifying process called Good Breeding kill all beauty?
23605Eh?
23605Ethel asks Lucy,"Shall we?"
23605Ever walked down it at the end of a day without a meal and without a penny?
23605FOLLOW_ Golden Roll_; and this, capped by a pint of hot tea, for sevenpence, when he burst into my words with--"The South London Road, laddie?
23605Feel all choky, like, do n''t you?
23605For she spoke and said--"Funny- looking little guy, ai n''t you?"
23605Getting copy?
23605Had I better not go?"
23605Has he read in you the riddle of our living?
23605Has he seen in you the world''s one yearning, All the season''s message, all the heaven''s play?
23605Have they not added incalculably to the store of human happiness, and helped many thousands over the waste patches of the week?
23605Have you ever smelt Irish stew after being sixteen hours without food?
23605He called me a-- a-- what was it he called me?"
23605He hailed me in Oxford Street, and cried:"Where now, laddie, where now?"
23605He knew a place, quite near, where some of the boys were sure to be; what about it?
23605He said he had n''t much money, so what about it?
23605He said,"Laddie, doing anything to- night?"
23605He said:"Like to help your old uncle?"
23605He said:"Well, what about it?"
23605He said:"What is it?"
23605He said:"Would you marry your aunt?
23605He went and wiped it out in beer--"Well, dammit, why should I stick here, By a dark house in a dark street?
23605How can you deal scientifically or religiously with that?
23605How shall I give you the sharp flavour of it, or catch the temper of its streets?
23605I am not a Jew myself, but how can I serve what you order?
23605I called to one of the boys--"What''s the joke?
23605I had heard other singers, English singers, the best of whom are seldom better than the third- rate Italians, but Caruso.... What is he?
23605I have watched the nuts and the girls, and what have I seen?
23605I said,"No; what''s on?"
23605I wonder what the moral is?
23605If not... m''I see you home?"
23605Imitations of Robey, Formby, Chirgwin-- what?"
23605It smelt-- how shall I give it to you?
23605Landlady said she was sorry; did n''t know it annoyed me; but you could n''t keep food from smelling, could you?
23605Let''s see-- how do they go?
23605Nah then-- what say to six- and- a- arf?"
23605One heard the creak of opening windows, and voices:"Why doncher separate''em?
23605One of the boys asked casually,"What''s up?"
23605Oo''s got a fag?"
23605Or is it that the ragtime kings have gone to the antiquities of the Orient for their melodies?
23605Or perhaps as a literary man you come here for Keats... Coleridge... and all that?"
23605Or where a panorama like those that sweep before you from Highgate Archway or the Islington Angel?
23605Or where shall you find a sweeter pastoral than that field of lights that thrills the midnight sojourner in lower Piccadilly?
23605Other people wanter have a see, do n''t they?"
23605Please, Mr. W. D. Howells, will you write it for us?
23605Put you through it, din''''e?"
23605See?
23605See?
23605See?
23605See?"
23605Shakespeare-- what?
23605She given you notice?
23605She said to the anarchist:"Where''s mine?"
23605Some cried"Whassup?"
23605Some one came and shoved a fuzzy head through the door, asking lazily,"Whassup?"
23605Suppose we had just one more?
23605Tell me-- how can I do it?
23605The girl at the door spoke in a hoarse whisper:"''Ere-- you better go-- you first?"
23605The next moment she seemed to repent the nod, for she flared up and snapped:"Oh, shut up, for Christ''s sake, cancher?
23605Their cheeks were of velvet, their kisses were fire, I looked at them boldly and had my desire.__ Yellow man, yellow man, what do you know?
23605Then ev''body''ll get something they like, see?"
23605Then, at about ten o''clock, he said it was rather dull; and what about it?
23605There is a mass of the best work that is suitable for quartet or quintet, or has been adapted for small orchestra; why is it never heard?
23605There seemed to be trouble.... One heard a querulous voice:"I said TIME, din''I?"
23605They got a big handful of applause, and then Freddie asked:"Ready, sir?"
23605They look helpless; they have an air expressive of:"Well, what the devil shall we do_ now_?"
23605They say,"Is n''t it cold?"
23605They shamelessly broke into his periods with"_ Is n''t_ he IT?"
23605Those who were strangers approached deferentially, and said:"You got a friend, miss?
23605Up the Pacific, so glamorous and gay, Where night is of blue, and of silver the day.__ Yellow man, yellow man, what did you there?
23605Want to take something away with you?"
23605Was there ever a lovelier piece of colour than Cannon Street Station at night?
23605We got a fire going, and it''s sort of turning chilly out, eh?"
23605What I said was:"Ca n''t you keep that damn stink out of my room?"
23605What d''you fancy?
23605What d''you think''ll go best; you know''em better than I do?
23605What is that?
23605What is there to say about him?
23605What would you have done?
23605What''s best-- and damn the expense?"
23605What''s good and what do I get most of for tenpence?"
23605What?"
23605When I had smoothed my nose and dusted my trousers, I said:"Well, what about it?"
23605When a young man of that district has been bitten by the serpent of love, what does he do?
23605When was she tuned last?
23605Where are the empty seats?
23605Where are the entertainers of 1895?
23605Where are the snows of yesteryear?
23605Where is the hall packed to suffocation?
23605Where, too, are the song- writers?
23605Whither do they go?
23605Who composed"Hot Time in the Old Town to- night"--the song that led the Americans to victory in Cuba and the Philippines?
23605Who composed"Let''s all go down the Strand,"a song that surely should have been adopted as The Anthem of London?
23605Who composed"Tipperary"?
23605Who is there to replace that perilously piquant_ diseur_ Harry Fragson?
23605Who knows so well as Little Elsie the exact spending value of twopence- halfpenny?
23605Why ca n''t we have one place in London where one can get drinks, or coffee if desired, and listen to really good music?
23605Why cancher shut that plurry row?"
23605Why d''you go back on Billie, eh?"
23605Why do n''t I wanter fight?
23605Why do n''t some one do somethin''?"
23605Why do n''t they urge them not to uncover themselves?
23605Why do people overeat themselves on Sunday?
23605Why does the horse- faced lady, with nice clothes, go to church on Sunday?
23605Why does the submerged man get drunk on Sunday?
23605Why does the young clerk hang around the West End bars, and get into trouble with doubtful ladies?
23605Why may not the girls talk in certain rooms?
23605Why may they not read anything but the books provided?
23605Why may they not talk in bed?
23605Why must they fold their bed- clothes in such- and- such an exact way?
23605Why must they let the Superior read their letters?
23605Why must they not descend from the bed- room as and when they are dressed?
23605Why should a lighted window call with so subtle a message?
23605With a Models''Club, the Four Arts Club, the Mary Curzon Hotel, and the Lyceum Club, why on earth should they?
23605Wonder what it feels like to sing like that, eh?
23605Would myself and honourable companions smoke, after all?
23605Would n''t think they''d venture into a place the size of ours, perhaps?
23605You are all so-- what is the word?--matey, is n''t it?
23605You ask_ me_ if_ I_ know the South London Road?
23605You do n''t know?
23605You remember the siege of Sidney Street?
23605_ Do_ I know the South London Road?
23605and Victor said he was, and Freddie said,"What is it?"
23605and received reply--"Owshdiknow?
23605observing, I suppose?
23605pulled up short and said there we were, and what about it?
14054A baby? 14054 A bedroom?
14054A challenge? 14054 A kettle, Jacqueline?"
14054A physic?
14054A pity--?
14054A sufficiency of light?
14054Afraid? 14054 Ah, and that is your country?"
14054Ah, she married?
14054Ah, you love him?
14054All your life?
14054Alone? 14054 Am I, then, the sun, monsieur?"
14054Am I?
14054And I ought to have a studio across the river? 14054 And I, monsieur?
14054And Monsieur Édouard? 14054 And do you know how long I give you to defy the world, the flesh, and the devil?
14054And for me,_ bonne mère_?
14054And how am I to trust you?
14054And how many others have had this-- instinct? 14054 And if I should need you?"
14054And is not that-- pardon me!--a little improvident?
14054And may I ask, monsieur, whether you have ascertained the figure of the rent?
14054And now you would solve me?
14054And now, boy, a cigarette?
14054And now, liege lady-- where?
14054And now, monsieur, where are the cups?
14054And now, what next? 14054 And now, what''ll you eat?
14054And now?
14054And reduce me to kisses and folly and tears?
14054And so madame desired to strangle the evil spirit with her beautiful hair?
14054And so, madame, it was a grand success?
14054And tell me, madame? 14054 And that capacity-- what is it?"
14054And the girl?
14054And the illustrated weekly papers are an excellent substitute for Blue- books?
14054And the others?
14054And the tip of a tiny finger?
14054And the world,_ mon cher_? 14054 And this beast-- where is he?"
14054And was she easily dismissed?
14054And what do they pay him?
14054And what do you see?
14054And what does that mean-- in the abstract?
14054And what have you observed?
14054And what is it I shall be doing all the morning?
14054And what of the heart, monsieur? 14054 And what will happen?
14054And which is he-- the knight who shall succeed?
14054And who wants less emotion? 14054 And who was the man she married?"
14054And why are you here-- to play or to work?
14054And why does it fail you-- to- day?
14054And why impossible?
14054And why not, in the name of God? 14054 And why not?
14054And why not?
14054And why not?
14054And why should I be angry? 14054 And why?
14054And why? 14054 And why?"
14054And you disbelieve?
14054And you have made no new friend?
14054And you think the right woman will be content to take you-- after all that?
14054And you think we ought to go to school?
14054And you, monsieur, are materialistic?
14054And you, monsieur?
14054And you, then, wait for this woman? 14054 And your beliefs?"
14054And your sister? 14054 And, madame, he played last night?
14054And, now, what can we find to substitute? 14054 And-- and what is the view?"
14054And-- because of that-- you are disappointed?
14054And-- when you meet?
14054Anything wrong?
14054Apropos?
14054Are n''t we citizens of a free world? 14054 Are you going to drive or walk?"
14054Are you perfectly sure? 14054 As a student?"
14054Because of my spoiled picture?
14054Because--"Yes?
14054Boy,he said at last,"let me come up sometimes when you''re messing with your paints?
14054But even if I were weak, Jacqueline,she added,"how could I banish Max?
14054But have we not power over our senses, monsieur? 14054 But if it comes to pass-- your miracle-- you will forget me?
14054But now? 14054 But the man-- the husband?"
14054But why did you speak to me? 14054 But why?
14054But why?
14054But you believe that the creature of temperament-- of egoism and originality-- may spring up in a lawful atmosphere as well as in a lawless one?
14054But you do not think I possess a soul?
14054But you will come, monsieur?
14054Can you not understand without explanation-- you, who comprehend so well?
14054Comfortable?
14054Cups?
14054Dead?
14054Dear one?
14054Did n''t you know I was coming with you?
14054Did she love him?
14054Do n''t you know what this is? 14054 Do n''t you see him?"
14054Do n''t you think there are men who can do without either the depths or the one woman?
14054Do you find me sympathetic?
14054Do you imagine I can live in this town-- climb these steps-- stand on that balcony, that breathes of her?
14054Do you want a porter?
14054Does Lucien know?
14054Does it serve any purpose to relate? 14054 Does that mean good-- or does it mean bad?
14054Extraordinary? 14054 For a thing like that?
14054For neighbor, monsieur? 14054 For so little?"
14054God bless my soul, why not? 14054 Granted your full permission, monsieur, I would say--""You would say--?"
14054Happy?
14054Hate you?
14054Have I misjudged you?
14054Have you observed,_ mon ami_? 14054 He died, then?"
14054He is dead?
14054He is not without appreciation-- this little brother of mine?
14054He seemed of a greater interest, madame?
14054Here?
14054His first? 14054 How am I interesting?"
14054How am I to thank you?
14054How long?
14054How old, monsieur?
14054How shall I say? 14054 How shall it be spent?"
14054How will it end, you say? 14054 Hungry, boy?
14054I am forgiven?
14054I am not sufficient to you?
14054I am only interested, then, in the crude facts? 14054 I am, then, a good comrade?"
14054I amuse you?
14054I know at last that he loves me?
14054I may speak from the heart, madame?
14054I say again, why filth?
14054I say, boy, it has n''t got on your nerves-- this place? 14054 I shock you?
14054I suppose you think I am happy in all this?
14054I suppose you think I find this heaven?
14054I suppose you''re going to tub before those fat Belgians in the sleeping- car, Billy? 14054 I talk as if you were a child, do I?
14054I was watching that young Russian stalk away into the unknown, and I was wondering--"What?
14054I wonder if she would, boy?
14054If I drive the nail here, boy, will you be satisfied? 14054 If-- if she should need you?"
14054In the_ Quartier_?
14054In what manner, madame? 14054 Is it not like him to invite me to criticise my portrait, and leave me to receive his friend?"
14054Is that the truth?
14054It is dim, here in this room, but you know me? 14054 It is done then-- the great work?"
14054It is the suggestion of me that intrigues you?
14054It''s true? 14054 It''s what you wanted, is n''t it?"
14054Jacqueline, is she beautiful?
14054Jacqueline, what are your thoughts?
14054Jacqueline,she said, after a silence,"what do you consider the highest thing?"
14054Know? 14054 Let''s have a look?"
14054Love him? 14054 Love him?"
14054Loves me? 14054 Madame, a cigarette?"
14054Madame, can one truly give the soul and refuse the body? 14054 Madame, have you a liqueur brandy-- very old?
14054Madame, how did you guess?
14054Madame, you have an_ appartement_ to let?
14054Madame, you know at last, then, that he loves you?
14054Madame, you will dismiss it?
14054Max,he said,"do you remember the famous night when we went to the Bal Tabarin, and saw much wine spilled?
14054Maxine, this is some dream?
14054May I speak?
14054May you? 14054 Missed you, boy?"
14054Monsieur desires_ déjeuner_?
14054Monsieur is interested?
14054Monsieur, it has been happy to- night?
14054Monsieur, you care for Max?
14054Monsieur,he said in French,"have the goodness to inform me how many persons have passed through the turnstile this morning?"
14054Monsieur,she whispered,"if you were to die to- night, would you die satisfied?"
14054Monsieur?
14054My dear chap, what in the world are you doing? 14054 Ned, I am the same friend-- the same comrade?"
14054Ned?
14054Never loved? 14054 Nice?"
14054No soup for me to- night, Jacqueline? 14054 No, madame?"
14054No, madame?
14054No?
14054Not everything? 14054 Not mine?"
14054Not mine?
14054Not true, madame? 14054 Now?"
14054Of my sister? 14054 Oh, why the''monsieur''?"
14054Oh, why? 14054 Oh,_ mon cher_, and was it not your day-- our day?
14054On religion?
14054Perhaps, princess--?
14054Princess, do you know my country?
14054Sad, madame?
14054Satisfied?
14054Say, Ned, ought we to wake our unsociable friend?
14054Shall we go into the gardens?
14054Shall we mount?
14054She intrigues you, then-- Maxine?
14054She loves you, boy?
14054She understands you? 14054 Since the morning we met upon this doorstep?"
14054Since the morning you made the coffee for M. Blake and me?
14054Since when? 14054 Sixteen?--seventeen?"
14054So that is love?
14054So you doubt the endurance of my philosophy?
14054Something more? 14054 Strange?
14054That I should hate you, because I have been a fool? 14054 That fair girl, for example, sitting at the table with the hideous, untidy little man in the brown suit?"
14054That you could see it?
14054That, madame? 14054 The girl, and the brute, and the man with the clever head?
14054The highest thing?
14054The man? 14054 The man?"
14054The mystery? 14054 The old days?
14054The people who live here? 14054 The principle on which it offers you a living?"
14054The rent? 14054 The rue Ronsard, then?
14054The tares among the wheat, eh?
14054The view? 14054 The woman who disappeared on the eve of her marriage?"
14054Then she turned to art?
14054Then they dislike this song?
14054Then they do not know?
14054Then what is she like-- the woman you would kiss?
14054Then what? 14054 Then why fear to see it?"
14054Then why?
14054Then you are leaving me?
14054Then you are sorry for me, mademoiselle?
14054Then you have never loved?
14054Then you have not known the highest?
14054Then you hold that man should be alone?
14054Then you will leave me to contend alone against who can say what villain-- what_ apache_?
14054This is the fifth floor, madame?
14054To- day, mademoiselle?
14054To- night?
14054True that she''s gone-- vanished? 14054 Truth, eh?"
14054Was n''t it? 14054 Was there never a little dancer,"he added,"never a little model in all these years-- and you so very ancient?"
14054We are not wholly a trouble to you-- Max and I?
14054We can give you a most excellent room at--he raised his eyebrows in tactful hesitation--"at five francs?"
14054We''re getting on, eh?
14054Welcome? 14054 Well, and are we girded for the heights?"
14054Well, and what do you think of it? 14054 Well, messieurs, and what of our new one?
14054Well? 14054 Well?
14054Well?
14054Well?
14054What about the coffee, Mac? 14054 What are those steps?"
14054What are you doing?
14054What are you going to do with me?
14054What are you reading, my son? 14054 What are you?"
14054What are your thoughts, Jacqueline?
14054What brings you to the rue Müller, mademoiselle?
14054What days, mademoiselle?
14054What did I say? 14054 What did they see?"
14054What do you expect? 14054 What do you mean?"
14054What do you say,_ mon ami_, to_ poulet bonne femme_?
14054What do you think of this picture?
14054What do you wonder, monsieur?
14054What does a woman do when she is thrown up like wreckage after the storm?
14054What for me?
14054What in God''s name are you raving about?
14054What in God''s name is the matter with you?
14054What is all this? 14054 What is it I have taught you?"
14054What is it he plays? 14054 What is it she says?"
14054What is it you find in me?
14054What is it, boy?
14054What is it? 14054 What is it?"
14054What is it?
14054What is the picture to be, monsieur?
14054What is this? 14054 What place is this?"
14054What troubles you, boy? 14054 What would you substitute?"
14054What? 14054 What?
14054What?
14054When would you show it to me?
14054When? 14054 Where are we?"
14054Where are you going to take me?
14054Where will I take you?
14054Where will you go? 14054 Who are the people living in these houses?"
14054Who has been putting notions into your head? 14054 Who is it?"
14054Who will dance it?
14054Who? 14054 Who?
14054Why are you so absurd, boy?
14054Why are you so anxious to know my sister?
14054Why did you do it?
14054Why do you ask, monsieur?
14054Why do you call me that?
14054Why do you speak like that, madame? 14054 Why filth?
14054Why filth?
14054Why must I? 14054 Why not?"
14054Why not?
14054Why not?
14054Why not?
14054Why the''princess''?
14054Why, in God''s name, should I hate you?
14054Why, then, was madame adorning herself with her beautiful hair when I had the unhappiness to enter? 14054 Why?
14054Why? 14054 Will I come?
14054Will we go?
14054Would you not beat your life out against a cage?
14054Yes, but what woman?
14054Yes, monsieur? 14054 Yes,_ mon ami_?
14054Yet a thing like that can demolish Monsieur Max, and leave in his place--"What?
14054You admit that there is something of the beast in every man?
14054You also live here in the rue Müller? 14054 You are alone, Jacqueline?"
14054You are cold?
14054You are disappointed, Ned-- in me?
14054You are displeased, monsieur; I intrude?
14054You are displeased, princess? 14054 You are going-- to confess?"
14054You are quick of decision, monsieur?
14054You are quite alone?
14054You care for your country?
14054You doubt it?
14054You have a visitor, then, Jacqueline, to this fifth floor of yours?
14054You have always known-- that I am a woman?
14054You have always known?
14054You have parted with your friend, eh?
14054You have people-- friends to meet you?
14054You have sent for him-- at last?
14054You have somebody to meet you?
14054You know Montmartre?
14054You know of this?
14054You know the contents?
14054You know this?
14054You know? 14054 You know_ Louise_, princess?"
14054You like the_ appartement_, monsieur?
14054You mean it, monsieur?
14054You mean--? 14054 You think so?"
14054You think you understand?
14054You will dismiss it, madame?
14054You will go away?
14054You will promise?
14054You, a slip of a boy, to ignore the softer side of life and set yourself up against Nature? 14054 You?"
14054You?
14054Your father, I take it, was a personage of importance?
14054_ Mon ami!_"I''m right, eh? 14054 _ Mon ami?_"he said, irrelevantly.
14054_ Mon ami_,she said, in a toneless voice,"do you remember that Jacques is ten years dead?"
14054_ Pierrot_ seeking the moon, eh?
14054''At what hour?''
14054''But after all, what would you?''
14054''But monsieur was anxious to retire?
14054''But not for a certainty?''
14054''But the_ concierge_ would return?''
14054''Could monsieur conceive anything more grotesque?
14054''Did monsieur desire coffee?''
14054''How old would madame suppose?''
14054''It had, perhaps, been a journey from England?
14054''Light?''
14054''Might he venture to ask if it was pleasure alone that had brought madame to the capital-- or had business--?''
14054''Now that they were alone, would it be an unpardonable liberty to ask how old monsieur really was?''
14054''The second floor?
14054''This afternoon?''
14054''This morning?''
14054''Was it not open to the skies-- with those two windows in front, and that balcony?''
14054''Well, then, to begin with, should they say_ Sole Waleska_?''
14054''What could she have the pleasure of offering monsieur?
14054''What could the Hôtel Railleux offer?''
14054''What did monsieur desire?''
14054''What had he said?
14054''What would you, indeed?
14054''What would you, indeed?''
14054''What would you?''
14054''Why not?''
14054''Would madame permit him to sit at her table?
14054107, across the corridor-- at five francs--?''
14054A dream-- or a lifetime?
14054A trifle dull, perhaps, but still--""Dull?
14054Afraid?"
14054Am I beautiful?"
14054And I wonder who painted that?"
14054And are men not children?"
14054And how do you think that power is to be developed?"
14054And how was life treating them both?''
14054And it is a good_ appartement_?"
14054And must every one I''ve known since childhood be my friend?
14054And now, how was this good husband?
14054And now, perhaps, you would wish to pass back into the_ salon_ and step out upon the balcony?"
14054And now, tell me, shall it be the highways or the byways-- Montmartre or the Quartier Latin?"
14054And now, what is the meal to be?
14054And sometimes my weaker self-- the primitive, barbaric self-- cries out against the limitation; sometimes--""Sometimes--?"
14054And what about a certain picture we once looked at-- when I was swept off the face of the earth for using that same word?
14054And where will it be spent-- madame?"
14054And why did you speak to me?"
14054And why?
14054And you a student of Paris?
14054And, in the mean time, Paris is awake, is she not?"
14054Another inspiration?"
14054Are they not men?
14054Are you disappointed?"
14054Are you perfectly sure that''tisn''t I-- my presence here--?"
14054Because your silly little wings have begun to sprout?
14054Blake?"
14054But doubtless monsieur had noticed that?''
14054But if I was angry, where''s the wonder?
14054But sufficient for the day, eh?
14054But was he not seeking the unknown?
14054But what am I that I should possess the kingdom of heaven?"
14054But what circumstance in his relation to the boy had lent itself either to formality or justification?
14054But what road do you follow-- music?
14054But who is it?
14054But who is it?"
14054But, my God, are we going to split hairs?
14054CHAPTER XXXV Who shall depict the soul of woman?
14054Ca n''t you see your picture- books?
14054Ca n''t you see?
14054Ca n''t you see?"
14054Ca n''t you understand?
14054Can I give you a lift?"
14054Can we not shut our eyes, even if the light does break forth?"
14054Cartel''s?"
14054Cartel?"
14054Come, little monsieur, what have you to say?"
14054Did I, now?
14054Did he admire madame''s velvet cloak?"
14054Did n''t those loafers in the dining- car promise us coffee somewhat about this time?"
14054Do n''t you think we ought to steer for shore?
14054Do you grasp it?"
14054Do you hear me?"
14054Do you imagine Paris can hold me now she is gone?"
14054Do you realize it, at all?
14054Do you remember how angry you were when he used to kiss you, and the grape juice used to run into your hair and down your neck?
14054Do you see?"
14054Do you suppose me to be affected because you sit somewhere in the background, smoking over the fire?
14054Do you think I have not known what it is to kiss?
14054Do you think I possess a spark of the great fire-- a spark ever so tiny?"
14054Do you think I shall succeed?
14054Doubtless monsieur would sleep until_ déjeuner_?
14054Dragon''s wings_ en casserole_?
14054Extraordinary?"
14054Fat and short and negligent of his figure?
14054For instance, what do you think my two friends saw in you last night?"
14054For us it must be the highways and the byways, eh?"
14054Good?"
14054Had he not himself put clean sheets on it that day?''
14054Had not Jean mentioned that fact last night?''
14054Has Max described his neighbor, M. Cartel?
14054Has he ever told you how we met?"
14054Has not madame already waged her war-- and conquered?"
14054Has she brought us nearer together-- my sister Maxine?"
14054Have you a handkerchief?"
14054Have you ever heard of the Bal Tabarin?"
14054Have you faith in me?"
14054Have you never seen a man dealt a mortal blow?"
14054He had come-- when was it--?''
14054He has gone upon business, you say?
14054He play his part gallantly-- Monsieur Édouard?"
14054He played last night between the hours of ten and eleven?"
14054He was not going?
14054He was very charming, very accomplished; how was my sister, at eighteen, to know that he was also very callous, very profligate, very cruel?
14054His sister?"
14054How can you separate an atom from the universal mass?"
14054How could I know?"
14054How did you know me again?
14054How do you arrive at that conclusion, monsieur?"
14054How else could he have treated Monsieur Max so sacredly-- almost as he might have treated his own child?"
14054How must this place appear to her?
14054I also told them--""What?"
14054I am Maxine?"
14054I am a bad companion to- night?"
14054I am not asleep?
14054I believe I, too, was falling into a dream; and the dream comes after, the work first, is it not so?
14054I did not think--""--That I smoked?
14054I do not wish even to think; the world is so-- how do you say-- enchanted?"
14054I have given you my friendship-- my heart and my mind, but I am not sufficient to you?
14054I say''I am not sufficient to you?''
14054I shall see you again?
14054I shall see you again?"
14054I''d like to think I would, but--""You imagine you would hesitate?
14054If I have but one sister, may I not guard her as a secret?"
14054If it is bad?"
14054If she were your sister--?"
14054If you insist upon having antique brass coffee- pots, your neighbors must expect to suffer, eh, Jacqueline?"
14054In seriousness you wait, and believe that out of nothing she will come to you?"
14054In the old days when the world was religious and people observed Lent, there was always_ Mi- Carême_, was there not?
14054In what way more?"
14054Into what_ milieu_ was he about to be hurled?
14054Is he cold?
14054Is he sane, I wonder?
14054Is he welcome?"
14054Is it amusing?"
14054Is it my place to make life harder for you?"
14054Is it not a picture?"
14054Is it not so, Monsieur Max?"
14054Is it not so?"
14054Is it pleasure, or money, or what?"
14054Is it seventeen-- or is it sixteen?"
14054Is it so criminal to repeat a little comedy-- once, or even twice-- in a good cause?
14054Is it-- what do you say-- a bargain?"
14054Is n''t emotion the salt of life?
14054Is n''t the sun everything to a frozen world?"
14054Is n''t water everything in a parched desert?
14054Is not the instinct of love to give all?"
14054Is not woman always compassionate?"
14054Is that self- possession?
14054Is the evil spirit one lightly to be dismissed?"
14054It had been a long journey, had it not?''
14054It has been kind to you?"
14054It is all bad?"
14054It is all wrong?
14054It is not a dream?"
14054It is true-- all this?
14054It was anomalous, but it held happiness; and who, equipped with youth and health, starting out upon life''s road, stops to question happiness?
14054It was only--""What?"
14054It was since that morning?"
14054It was to Jacqueline''s credit that she did not smile, that she simply murmured:"Who doubts it, madame?"
14054Just out of bed, I suppose?"
14054Looks?
14054M. Cartel?
14054Max?"
14054Max?"
14054May I mount now-- at once?"
14054May I?"
14054May there not be sad stains upon the heart-- even if no eyes see them?"
14054May we go?"
14054Monsieur has discovered that there is-- how shall I say?--less atmosphere in a blue sky than in a gray one?"
14054Monsieur was a new arrival?
14054Monsieur was not French, although he had so charming a fluency in the language?''
14054Must I know a man for years before I can call him my friend?
14054My child, what is wrong?"
14054No?"
14054Not bad?"
14054Not day- dreaming with the mercury at thirty?"
14054Not even tea?"
14054Not everything?
14054Not the thought of the picture?"
14054Now it is all forgiven?
14054Now, is n''t that gospel truth?"
14054Now, suppose you set yourself a task like that, how would you begin?"
14054Now--""Now?"
14054Oh, but have we glasses, though?"
14054Oh, why was that?"
14054Or Moonbeams_ surprise_?"
14054Remember the rue Fabert?"
14054Repulsive, are they?
14054Shall I say the things for you that you want to say?"
14054Shall I see you any more?"
14054Shall we climb?"
14054Shall we go and seek the Sleeping Beauty?"
14054Share the provender, wo n''t you?"
14054She loved him so that all her pride left her-- all the high courage of my father left her--""And he-- the man, the husband?"
14054She shows you''the higher things''?"
14054Since the night at the Bal Tabarin?"
14054So that''s what they call you?
14054Something different?"
14054Suppose it is of no use-- my picture?"
14054Tell me what you are seeking here in Paris?
14054Tell me, is it done?"
14054Tell you you are yourself?"
14054That I ca n''t find her?
14054That meal from its first morsel was raised above common things, for was it not the first time Blake had broken bread with Maxine?
14054That sketch at the_ cabaret_ is meant to grow?"
14054That you ca n''t find her?
14054The everlasting Duma business?"
14054The long, spider man who disliked me?"
14054The music grew in meaning; she heard Julian''s ardent question:''Tu ne regrette rien?''
14054The points of the affair are so slight and yet so tremendous; for are they not sacramental-- a typifying of things unspeakable?
14054The same round, is it not so?
14054The two smiling into each other''s eyes?
14054The_ appartement_ is not occupied?"
14054Then, covered with confusion, he reddened furiously and stammered,"For-- for so much, I mean?"
14054They could not hurt her, for was she not impervious to pain?
14054Think I do n''t know you?"
14054This is not good- bye?"
14054This is your work?"
14054To Ireland?"
14054To begin with, why the name?
14054To- day was the first day; was it wise to bring into it anything from yesterday?
14054To- morrow?
14054To- night?"
14054Try to see it with me?"
14054Upon what point was Blake speculating?
14054Was monsieur making a long stay at the Hôtel Railleux?''
14054Was n''t I right?
14054Was not that so?''
14054Was this, then, not magnificent-- wonderful?''
14054We both follow the chase, but who can say if we mark the same quarry?
14054We can dispense with anything save the being we love-- is it not so?
14054What about the work?
14054What am I?"
14054What are you going to do with me?"
14054What are you, you incomprehensible being?"
14054What are your thoughts?"
14054What brief emotional past lay in the mists of the unknown, linking this woman to this man?
14054What compels me?"
14054What do you say to turning in?"
14054What do you say?
14054What does it all mean?"
14054What gave you that idea?"
14054What has happened?"
14054What have they all to do with each other and with her?"
14054What is it to- night?"
14054What is it you''re doing?"
14054What is it, when all''s said and done, but a point of view?
14054What is it?
14054What is the rent of the_ appartement_?"
14054What marvellous power was this that could smile secure at poverty and oblivion-- that could cast a halo of true emotion over a Bal Tabarin?
14054What mattered the future?
14054What mattered the past?
14054What must he do?
14054What sordid morning scene was he about to witness?
14054What time is it at all?"
14054What were the thoughts at work behind his silence?
14054What will be the end?"
14054What will you drink?"
14054What would Billy be without one?
14054What would he be like, this M. Cartel, when he came to know him in the flesh?
14054What would she be like-- this sister of Max?
14054What would they say to supper?''
14054What would you know of twenty years ago?
14054What''s the matter?"
14054What, all things reckoned, stood between him and this alluring study?
14054When can I see the_ concierge_?"
14054Where did she go-- what did she do?"
14054Where is he?
14054Where is it?"
14054Where is the_ salle- à- manger_?"
14054Where must it begin?
14054Where now were the subtle ways, the divers interlacing paths wherein Maxine was to pursue her chase, delivering her quarry into the hands of Max?
14054Where shall we wander-- left or right?"
14054Where was that second coffee- cup?''
14054Where was that waiter?
14054Where were the barbed and potent shafts whereby that capture was to be achieved?
14054Where?"
14054Who can say where the light may not break forth again?"
14054Who could talk of politics, when the overthrow of nations would not stimulate the mind?
14054Who could talk of work, when work was as an evil smell in the nostrils?
14054Who is it?"
14054Who is it?"
14054Why are you angry?"
14054Why are you torturing yourself?
14054Why did I choose Lucien, who is nothing to look upon-- who is an artist and penniless?"
14054Why did n''t you give in sooner?"
14054Why do you look so cold?"
14054Why is it?"
14054Why may I not know your sister?"
14054Why not-- when this boy sees reason?
14054Why on earth did n''t you tell me you could do it?"
14054Why should it not flourish and lift its head among the weeds?"
14054Why should you cry like this?
14054Why, in the name of God, would you destroy your canvas like that?"
14054Why?
14054Why?
14054Why?
14054Why?
14054Why?"
14054Will a man turn back from the gate of heaven when Saint Peter uses his key?"
14054Will you be patient a little longer?"
14054Will you grant it?"
14054Will you not offer me a cigarette?"
14054Will you not stay and keep me company?"
14054Will you take me to the corner of the rue Ronsard?"
14054Wo n''t you smile upon him?"
14054Words?"
14054Would you have marred it with other thoughts?"
14054Yes?
14054You admire her, then?"
14054You are an artist?
14054You do n''t think I''d desert you when you''re seedy?
14054You have put life behind you; yet what is life but a will- o''-the- wisp?
14054You jog their memories, while I go and wash. What about calling Ned?"
14054You knew I''d come?"
14054You knew him once?"
14054You know Paris well?"
14054You know me?
14054You know that I am a woman?"
14054You know that, your sister has left Paris?"
14054You know what I''m going to ask?
14054You know what I''m wanting with all my heart and soul?"
14054You missed me in these weeks?"
14054You never doubted that I''d come?
14054You take my meaning?"
14054You think you would shrink?"
14054You understand?"
14054You will live here?"
14054You will no longer have need of me, is that not so?"
14054You will not cast away your little book because-- because the wind came and fluttered the pages?"
14054You''d care?"
14054You?"
14054Your sister?
14054Your soul sees me?"
14054he said,"why must you misjudge me?
14054literature?
14054or lean and pathetic, as though dinner was not a certainty on every day of the seven?
14054you are n''t alone in Paris?"
23409A fortnight?
23409A peck?
23409All serene?
23409And left your husband behind in Maryland?
23409And this is Halifax?
23409And what did you do?
23409And what is it called here?
23409And which place do you like the best-- this or Maryland?
23409And why not the Bermudas?
23409And why not? 23409 And why not?"
23409And yonder beautiful lake-- what is the name of that?
23409And you always eat it, whenever you can get it, I suppose?
23409Are all the negro settlements in Nova Scotia as miserable, as this?
23409Are those the mountains of Canseau?
23409Are we then so near shore?
23409Because they are not niggers, what is the use of wasting sympathy upon a rat- hole full of white British subjects?
23409Bill, did you catch any trout?
23409But which place do you like the best-- Nova Scotia or Maryland?
23409But which place do you like the best?
23409But which place do you like the best?
23409But why,said I,"do you prefer Nova Scotia to Maryland?
23409But you have plenty of trout here in these streams?
23409But, surely,said I,"they do not live in those airy nests during your intensely cold winters?"
23409But,said I, taking out the bottle of precious fluid,"here it is, corked up tight, and what is to be done for a cork- screw?"
23409Can we sit down and rest in one of your houses?
23409Can you give us anything in the way of refreshment? 23409 Cheh, Cheh''z''ncook?
23409Cheh, cheh, at home, sah? 23409 Cheh, cheh, father?
23409Cheh, cheh, sir? 23409 Did you get him ashore?"
23409Did you run away?
23409Did you see the light?
23409Do you know the particulars of that history?
23409Do you know,said I,"Picton, what we would do if we had such a devil''s pit as that in the States?"
23409Do you like this as well as the oat- cake?
23409Do you remember any farther particulars of the siege of Louisburgh?
23409Eh?
23409GOED bless ye, what took ye to Chizzencook?
23409Get him ashore?
23409How do you like this?
23409How far are we from breakfast, driver?
23409How far down?
23409I say, do n''t you fishermen often lose your lives out there?
23409I thought it was likely,quoth Picton, drily;"look sharp, will you?"
23409Is it Louisburgh light, captain?
23409Is it a clear day overhead?
23409Is it a good harbor, Bruce?
23409Is your father at home?
23409Kwat?
23409Lend us your horse and wagon to go down to the schooner and get our luggage; we will be back this evening, and then go on to Sydney, eh? 23409 Never mind''what for,''will you go?"
23409No white sugar?
23409Nor coffee?
23409Nothing but mere white people, Picton?
23409Now, here we are,said Malcolm, triumphantly,"and wha d''ye thenk o''the Micmacs?
23409Perhaps the gentlemen wad like a glass of milk after thae long walk? 23409 Picton,"said I,"did you ever hear''Annie Laurie?''"
23409Rowed him ashore?
23409Sah?
23409Then you like oatmeal better than this?
23409Then,said Picton,"we can sleep while you struggle?"
23409This is Halifax? 23409 This is the forest primeval; but where are the hearts that beneath it Leaped like the roe when it hears in the woodland the voice of the huntsman?
23409Twenty- four miles of such foot- travel will do pretty well for an invalid, eh, Picton?
23409Wad ye send me away without my honest airnins?
23409Well, then,said Picton,"look sharp, will you?"
23409Well?
23409Well?
23409Well?
23409Well?
23409Well?
23409Were you married then-- when you run away?
23409What are we to do?
23409What are you after?
23409What are you thinking about?
23409What d''ye want?
23409What did you do then?
23409What do you suppose the old file was doing over here?
23409What for?
23409What for?
23409What for?
23409What for?
23409What is that sound, Bruce?
23409What is that?
23409What is that?
23409What is the matter with you, Bill? 23409 What is the matter?"
23409What now, captain?
23409What place?
23409What prevented him getting his head around?
23409What the---- is government prisoner to me?
23409What was the name of his leddy in the old country?
23409Where are we?
23409Where did you live?
23409Where did you reside before you came to Nova Scotia?
23409Where?
23409Who was in command here, Wolfe or Amherst?
23409Why did n''t you say so, then?
23409Why do n''t you turn the elbow of the pipe the other way?
23409Why do you not try change of air?
23409Why not?
23409Why the devil,said Picton,"did n''t you measure all of it?"
23409Would ye?
23409Would you like to go down?
23409Yes, is your father at home?
23409Yes, your father?
23409Yes,answered Picton, hastily,"rains like blue blazes: I say, get us a drop of whisky, will you?"
23409Yes,said Picton, nodding at the boy,"and if he don''t"----"I''m pullin''an''t I?"
23409You do not mean to say those wretched hovels are occupied by living beings?
23409You have, no doubt, still many relatives left in Maryland?
23409_ Religious(? 23409 A few of the most indignant bursts(?) 23409 A fortnight upon salt water? 23409 And echo answered:Why not?"
23409And what of all this?
23409And where is Picton?
23409Bill, what you laughing at?
23409But had not poor Paddy made such blunders in all times?
23409But let me ask you,"I continued,"what is the moral condition of the Acadians?"
23409But who can help it?
23409But who says this who is a judge of the times?
23409But why should I feel so much for Cuffee?
23409Can any man draw such a breath here amid these buried walls, as he can upon the humblest sod that ever was wet with the blood of patriotism?
23409Can any man, of any nation, stand here and say:"This work was wrought to my profit?"
23409Closing quotation marks added after..."Canada?
23409Deer,"said I,"how long have you lived here?"
23409Deer,"said I,"is that your husband''s portrait on the back of the sign?"
23409Deer?"
23409Do you remember it, my transatlantic traveller?
23409Does not the Duchess of Sutherland entertain the authoress of Uncle Tom''s Cabin, and the Black Swan?
23409Does the world- renowned story of William Penn alone merit our encomiums, except that we have forgotten this earlier but not less beautiful example?
23409For wherefore should any one feel sad to see the temples of dissipation laid in the dust?
23409Had we not better abstain from blowing our Puritan trumpets so loudly, and wreathe with crape our banners for a season?
23409Has any benefit resulted to mankind from this brilliant achievement?
23409Has he not enlisted in his behalf every philanthropist in England?
23409Here am I again; but where are the familiar faces?
23409How does it go, Picton?
23409How stands the glass around?''"
23409I asked them what they were doing?
23409I asked what house?
23409I hope, Mr. McGibbet,"said Picton, with imperturbable coolness,"you keep clear of the bots, and that sort of thing, you know?"
23409Indeed, where was the ocean, or anything?
23409Is he not within ten miles of either the British flag or Acadia?
23409Is it worth living for?
23409Is there not something glorious in such a spectacle?
23409Is this fairy land?
23409It had rained all the morning; but what did that matter when a hundred years since was in one''s mind?
23409It was a great disappointment, to be sure, after such brilliant anticipations-- but what is life without philosophy?
23409John Ormond, do you not think le Bras d''Or sounds much like Labrador?"
23409Of what use are these satellites, except to watch the building and keep it from running away?
23409Oh?
23409Reader, were you ever hungry_ at sea_?
23409Repose, forsooth?
23409Shall I add that her besieger, D''Aulney, died soon after, leaving a bereaved but blooming widow?
23409Shall I stop here and write_ finis_, or once more trim the lamp of history?
23409Something new, I take it, this illumination?
23409That indeed these simple Indians, who knew no arts except those of peace and war, should have looked up to him as their tutular god?
23409That mysterious, geological coast is only four days''sail from Sydney, I take it?
23409The land''s lap, or the water''s breast?''
23409The little yellow spot that greets you so far out at sea, and bids you welcome to the western hemisphere?
23409The next questions are, how will the arranged documents be preserved?
23409The strokes of the oars are louder and quicker; they are approaching us, but where?
23409The sun was already risen when I came out on the deck of the"Balaklava;"but where_ was_ the sun?
23409Then he brought from his bed- room a coarse sort of worsted horse- blanket, and with a"Ye''ll may- be like to sleep an hour or twa?"
23409Then how expansive the view, the calm ocean in its solitude, the receding land, the twinkling lighthouse, the"----"Ever been sea- sick?"
23409This the capital of Nova Scotia?
23409This the city that harbored those loyal heroes of the Revolution, who gallantly and gayly fought, and bled, and ran for their king?
23409Were you ever on deck, upon the measureless ocean, four hours earlier than the ring of the breakfast- bell?
23409Were you ever upon"the blue, the fresh, the ever free,"under these circumstances?
23409What a tale those old arches could tell?
23409What are these dykes for, if the enemy is so far off?
23409What but that wonderful clement of genius,_ intuitive perception_, could have produced such a book?
23409What does this mean?
23409What is the use of staying here in the rain after you have seen all that can be seen?
23409What is to be done, Picton?
23409What might have come of it, had either admiral again planted the_ fleur de lis_ upon the bastions of Louisburgh?
23409What of the flash of artillery, and the shattered wall that answered it?
23409What of the prisoners that mourned, and the captors that triumphed?
23409What of the ships that were sunk, and those that floated away with the booty?
23409What of the soldiers that fell by hundreds here, and those that lived?
23409What say, captain?"
23409What shall I say in conclusion?
23409What then?
23409What then?
23409What would they want to enter the British Navy for, when they can enter the United States of America?"
23409Where is the thatch- roof village, the home of Acadian farmers-- Men whose lives glided on like rivers that water the woodlands?
23409Where the Colonel, with his little meerschaum pipe he was so intent upon coloring?
23409Where the brave soldier of Inkerman and Balaklava?
23409Where the jolly old Captain of the native rifles?
23409Where the party of salmon- fishermen, the Solomons of piscatology?
23409Where the passengers by the"Canada?"
23409Whither?
23409Who can help repeating the familiar words of the idyl amid such scenery, and in such a presence?
23409Who that knows them would wish such ages to return?
23409Why is it that the captain''s lady has high cheek- bones, and speaks the pure Hibernise?
23409Why is this, O Picton?
23409Why is this, O traveller of the''Balaklava?''"
23409Why should I sorrow for Cuffee, when he is in the midst of his best friends?
23409Why should I steep their swaling snows in blood, Or bid her think of battle''s grim array?
23409You know it was_ the_ song in the Crimea?"
23409_ ¿ Quien sabe?_ Who knows?
23409_ ¿ Quien sabe?_ Who knows?
23409a glass of ale, or a glass of milk?"
23409did n''t the water boil when he come up?
23409echoed Red- Cap, with another contemptuous smile under the brown hand;"rowed him ashore?"
23409he asked; and then briskly added,"You could spare a couple of weeks or so, could you not, to go to the Springs?"
23409replied Picton,"what do you want to be bothering with the sun for?"
23409replied the traveller, sitting up on his locker;"what is the matter now?"
23409said a voice within me;"the enchanted Islands of Prospero, and Ariel, and Miranda; of Shakspeare, and Raleigh, and Irving?"
23409she''s a pretty creature,"said the mate;"look there,"nodding with his head at the compass,"did''na I tell you?
23409what are you laughing about?"
23409who does not know him?
23409who knows to what results this trifling error may lead?
23409who will have them in charge?
23409will they be allowed to be scattered about in the hands of privileged persons, to be lost wholesale?
23409with its auks and puffins, its seals and sea- tigers, its whales and walruses?
28027All rye? 28027 Any trout in it?"
28027Are you a pretty good boy, Lazarus?
28027Been sick?
28027C''u''d ye give a man a bite to eat fer some worrk, now?
28027Can you tell us where we are? 28027 Can you tell us where we are?
28027Can you tell us where we are?
28027Do you know a man named William Deegan?
28027Do you know of any place called the Glen?
28027Do you understand gardening and taking care of a horse and cow?
28027How would you like to come up here for a while?
28027Is-- is this Connecticut?
28027Oh, yassah-- is-- is yo''goin''to le''me shoot yo''gun ef I come?
28027So you want a summer job, at general farm- work?
28027The-- the spinning- wheels and the-- the chairs?
28027W''u''d ye let me lie a bit on the hay?
28027What do you do?
28027What do you get for your work where you are now?
28027What is your name?
28027Where are you going, Lazarus?
28027Where would you go from here?
28027Yeh did n''t pay more''n nine hundred, did yeh?
28027You think this beats city life?
28027Ai n''t it, Ed?"
28027And, after all, if they had no plates, what need of cutlery?
28027But what had those old people ground in it?
28027Do you want to redeem him?"
28027Had the seed germinated after all those years?
28027He had his eye on my target- rifle as he replied,"Yassah, I''d like it-- what sort o''gun yo''got?"
28027How did those long- ago people manage?
28027It was true that we seemed to be following the general course of the river, but was it the right river?
28027Later on, when our furniture and pictures were in place, visitors used to say,"_ Wherever_ did you get that wonderful paper?"
28027Strawberries and trout-- how is that for a breakfast combination in June?
28027That was a big, big,_ big_ one?"
28027V_ Was it the spirit of our garden?_ Summer found us back in the old house, almost as if we had not left it.
28027Was it the spirit of our garden, sprung up there to tell us good- by?
28027Was this a proposition to rob the house and murder us in our beds?
28027What happens if you''re not good?"
28027What other land is like it?
28027What''s the matter with planting a little Scotch?"
28027Where did they get those names, I wonder?
28027Where had such pretty feet found floors on which to dance?
28027Where''d you folks come from, anyway?
28027Who can answer?
28027Why did n''t you catch him?
28027Will the world, I wonder, ever be so happy and golden again?
27726----Be my horses ready?
27726Because they are not eight?
27726But,I shall be asked,"what do you understand by the word''s religious essence of the drama?
27726Canst tell how an oyster makes his shell?
27726What Thing Should be Done First?
27726Who Are the Most Important Persons?
27726Why?
27726--"How canst thou know this without knowing her?"
27726--"If thou be as poor for a subject as he is for a King, thou art poor enough-- How old art thou?"
277262_ et passim_), and shall we forget the inimitable Falstaff?
277263), and again he says to the crowd:"What''s the matter, you dissentious rogues, That rubbing the poor itch of your opinion Make yourself scabs?
27726= Three Questions.= A quaint folk- lore tale answering the three questions of life:"What is the Best Time?"
27726And do you mark me, sir?
27726And who shines now but Henry''s enemies?"
27726At this suggestion, Lear gets into a strange and unnatural rage, and asks:"Doth any here know me?
27726But Shakespeare?--Shakespeare?--where is there a line in Shakespeare to entitle him to a place in this brotherhood?
27726CONTENTS Biography of Tolstoy| Introduction to"The Slavery Tolstoy''s Teachings| of Our Times"An Introduction to"What| The Tsar''s Coronation Is Art?"
27726Dainty 12mo, Cloth, Frontispiece, Ornamental Cover, 40 cents, Postpaid FUNK& WAGNALLS COMPANY, Publishers NEW YORK and LONDON***** What Is Art?
27726Does not the king have to lie awake and take thought for his subjects?
27726False justice, why hast thou let her''scape?"
27726He persuades them not to favor CÃ ¦ sar, and when they leave him he asks his fellow tribune, Flavius,"See, whe''r their basest metal be not moved?"
27726How dost thou understand the Scripture?
27726How has he portrayed them?
27726In answer to the question,"Who is killed?"
27726In what, then, consists this indisputable authority of the most select leader in the world and in life?
27726Is it unfair to take the misshapen"servant- monster"Caliban as his last word on the subject?
27726Is there anything approaching this exquisite scene in Shakespeare''s drama?
27726Is there anything in his plays that is in the least inconsistent with all that is reactionary?
27726Is this a holiday?
27726Is your name Goneril?"
27726Lear curses Goneril, and, when Regan tells him he had better return to her sister, he is indignant and says:"Ask her forgiveness?"
27726May not what you are demanding for the drama, religious instruction, or didactics, be called''tendency,''a thing incompatible with true art?"
27726No marrying''mong his subjects?
27726One of the popular songs in Tyler''s rebellion was the familiar couplet:"When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman?"
27726Speaker of Prolog:"What do you mean, sir?"
27726The King asks,"What crowns shall they be?"
27726The Scripture says, Adam digged; could he dig without arms?"
27726The preface to my"Three Plays for Puritans"contains a section headed"Better than Shakespeare?"
27726This is not Lear: Does Lear walk thus?
27726Thus the fool asks the King whether he can tell why one''s nose stands in the middle of one''s face?
27726Trust ye?
27726Wantest thou eyes at trial, madam?"
27726Was he a gentleman?
27726What then signifies the great fame these works have enjoyed for more than a hundred years?
27726What would you have, you curs, That like not peace nor war?
27726What, art a heathen?
27726Where are his eyes?
27726Who is it that can tell me who I am?"
27726speak thus?
27726why liest thou with the vile In loathsome beds?"
27726you know not, Being mechanical, you ought not walk Upon a laboring day without the sign Of your profession?"
23690And what steps do you intend to take?
23690But the Bishop?
23690Did Mr Bull meet with any of_ our_ literary characters at Boston?
23690How can I tell?
23690Is there no sacredness, then, any longer in the miraculous tongue of man? 23690 No,"he replied,"Why should I?
23690Surely,said Gratian,"he did n''t say quite that?"
23690Well, he was very much pleased of course?
23690Were there ever such things as vampyrs?
23690What do you think of our baths?
23690What is it, dear Arnod, that makes you sad? 23690 Which are the finer mountains sir,"was my inquiry--"the Pyrenees or these of Auvergne?"
23690''Corrupt, unjust persons, scandalous to the profession of the Gospel:''how can you be a Parliament for God''s people?
23690''No?''
23690''Twixt the tempter and the rogue, Then began the dialogue:--"Master-- shall I rob the state?"
23690--"Master,_ must_ I then escape?"
23690--"Shall I job in Parliament?"
23690--"Shall I truckle, or talk big?"
23690--"Shall I try my hand at law?"
23690--''Will you?''
23690--Well, what next?
23690AQUILIUS.--Have you not translated it?
23690AQUILIUS.--What nose would a Roman wish to have?
23690Amos Snooks of Pisgah?
23690And how is this day passed?
23690And if the fact be so, why should we sport with it?
23690And may not all his rhapsodies upon his"sword- in- hand"Puritans be little more than an amplification of this one passage?
23690And now, my dear Eusebius, when you publish it in Maga, as you did my last, folk will say--"Why, what is all this about?
23690And shall I be the first to suffer it to be undermined, perhaps overturned?
23690And shall we, after all these our prayers, fastings, tears, expectations, and solemn appeals, call these bare''events''?
23690And what is like to come upon this, the enemy being ready to invade us, but even present blood and confusion?
23690And what is the cause of this decline in the home market?
23690And what was the presbytery, that to him it should be so distasteful, and an object of so great animosity?
23690And when shoes were scarce, what cared they?
23690But how could it be otherwise?
23690But how could they, you ask, be alive after an interment of days or weeks?
23690But is_ currency_ equally abundant?
23690But what Protestant can have a doubt upon the subject?
23690But what is it that, at any time, makes the church ineffective?
23690But what, then, was the pathological condition in which these persons continued to exist, after they had ceased to appear alive?
23690But, on the other hand, what a gap, what a void, does this disclose in the mind of our hero?
23690Cease, then, your untimely wooing, Steel your purpose, and be strong; If she flies you, why, pursuing, Make your sorrow vain and long?
23690Charles Fox, then standing beside the chair, told him that Wilkes once asked the Speaker, Onslow, what would be the consequence of his naming names?
23690Darest thou we d the Heaven''s lightning, then; and say to it, Godlike One?
23690Dear Archy.--On what subject shall I next address you?
23690Did he never conceal the ambition and domineering spirit of the soldier under the humility of the saint?
23690Did not God find him out there?
23690Did not we do so too?
23690Did you ever in your life hear or see any thing French to which the epithet of_ Grand_ had not been, by some means or other, tacked on?
23690Did you hear Snooks lecture, sir?
23690Did you then fear to die?"
23690Do you want more than this?
23690Does Monsieur prefer Burgundy or claret?
23690Does n''t Shakspeare say so?
23690Elves, goblins, ghosts, real and unreal; dreams, witchcraft, second- sight?
23690Even when the tale was fresh, what was it but superstition?
23690For think you, false one, to what pass, Your wretched days will come?
23690For what has the famine done?
23690GRATIAN.--What are we to have next?
23690Has the increased activity of our manufacturing cities compensated for the sterility of so large a part of our fields?
23690Have I been rash In word or deed?
23690Have you translated this?
23690History reports with a shudder that my Lord General, lifting the sacred mace itself, said,''What shall we do with this bauble?
23690How came she to foresee the path she was destined to follow?
23690How came this superstition to arise?
23690How could Cromwell, who was no great rhetorician, be otherwise than palpably confused, and dubious and intricate?
23690How on earth shall I ever get them fairly laid?
23690How should it be otherwise?
23690How was Charles to learn what manner of being was a Puritan, and how it struck its prey?
23690How was he repaid?
23690How, on any other supposition, is it possible to account for the effects which we know it to have produced?
23690I have read Lord Wellington''s last despatch, and he says the Portuguese fought as well as the British; and I suppose you wo n''t contradict him?''
23690I involuntarily exclaimed,"what is the use of being a genius?
23690If a sheep''s ill, do n''t he lick chalk or salt if he can get it?
23690Indeed, dear Robin, not to multiply words, the query is,--Whether ours be such case?
23690Is he honest, and in earnest?
23690Is his head become a wretched cracked pitcher, on which you jingle to frighten crows, and makes bees hive?
23690Is it a case of conversion?
23690Is it an outpouring merely, by a strange vent, of certain acrid humours?
23690Is it really scandalised by such trifles as the repudiation of our debts, and the enslavement of our fellow creatures?
23690Is there any genuine conviction at the bottom of all this rant and raving?
23690Lost to every sense of duty, Say, what can you, will you do?
23690Must we give up our playful duels, and our convenient spittoons, before we can hope to pass muster as Christians and gentlemen beyond our own borders?
23690On some one''s asking General Fitzpatrick, in the midst of one of the hottest periods of the debates on the French war-- Where is Fox?
23690Once the suns shone on you clearly, When it was your wo nt to go Seeking her you loved so dearly,-- Will you e''er love woman so?
23690One day, as our path lay along the banks of the Rhine, his conversation took this turn:--"Do you believe in spirits?"
23690Prateapace, Gadabout, and Brazenstare-- there are characters enough for episodes; and a hero-- but what, you will say, are we to do for a heroine?
23690Saw he in his tortured sleep, Things that make the heart- veins creep?
23690Shedders of blood?
23690Should we have had a Shakspeare without the smiles of an Elizabeth, and the generosity of a Southampton?
23690So in a letter to the Wirtemburg prelate, Oetinger, dated November 11, 1766, he uses the following words:--"If I have spoken with the Apostles?
23690Swept he through the world of flame, Chased by shapes that none may name?
23690The Curate''s door is chalked, and adjacent walls--"No Kissing,""The Clerical Judas,""Who Kissed the School- mistress?"
23690The abstraction of the precious metals is not to be dreaded under such a system, for how are the precious metals got but in exchange for manufactures?
23690The question naturally follows, how is this malady, viewing it as one in these cases, propagated?
23690The resumed debate,''shall the army remonstrance be taken into consideration?''
23690The wind of adversity has blown, and where are these menaces now?
23690Then why did Arnod shrink from meeting her?
23690Then, in any case, what more natural than to disinter the body of a supposed visitant, to know why he is unquiet in the grave?
23690Thinkest thou in thy heart that the glorious dispensations of God point out to this?
23690To men, to the people who sent you hither?
23690To whom could he commit them?
23690Unhappy condition, did I say?
23690Was Cromwell, then, always sincere in his utterances?
23690Was he philosopher, statesman, lawyer, orator, historian?
23690Was it because they were certain of a dance that these barrack- yard minstrels came provided with music, sure, in any case, to have the piper to pay?
23690Was it likely that the populace would accept of this in lieu of the crowned and jewelled royalty which was wo nt to fill its imagination?
23690Was not my family seated on the throne for that express purpose?
23690Was this attended, as we were constantly told it would be, by a corresponding impulse given to our fabrics?
23690We must have been asked at least six times a- day during our visit at Washington,"How Congress compared with the British Parliament?"
23690We saw little of him, and when he did appear,"his talk was of bullocks;"so how could he"have understanding,"at least for Catullus?
23690What are fine ladies and gentlemen to him, that he should stand in awe of them?
23690What are these mountains?
23690What benefit has it produced to Ireland?
23690What chance is there that he should ever learn the nature of his new and terrible enemy?
23690What does he mean?
23690What has the introduction of Papists into parliament occasioned to England, but political confusion?
23690What is a deficiency of £2,000,000 in such a mass?
23690What should we say of one who had plunged heart and soul into the French Revolution, conducted only by his rage against the Roman Catholic hierarchy?
23690What were bishops personally to him?
23690What!--yet another question?
23690When Hardy and Horne Took, were the priests, what must be the worshippers at the Jacobin shrine?
23690Who acts, if he resolve not through God to be willing to part with all?
23690Who has not observed the strange mixture of petulance and_ mauvaise honte_ which distinguishes so many of our English travellers on the Continent?
23690Who in the village is stronger and healthier than you?
23690Who knows, but that the peace of the world may be owing to it?
23690Who of those who hugged its sympathetic terrors by the Christmas fireside, thought they could be true on the bright frosty morning of the morrow?
23690Who shall answer for these things to God or to men?
23690Who''ll be loved in turn by you?
23690Who''ll find out that you have beauty?
23690Whom will you have to kiss,--be kiss''d And bind your names, in true- love twist?
23690Whom will you have to love-- to hear Yourself called by_ his_ name,_ his_ dear?
23690Whom will you in future kiss?
23690Whose will you be called of right?
23690Why did Cromwell interfere at this juncture between the two parties, in such a way as entirely to destroy both?
23690Why have we not a Boswell in every city?
23690Why not transfer the office to a Boswell?
23690Why, then, did he avoid the fascination of the pretty Nina, who seemed a being made to chase from any brow the clouds of gathering care?
23690Will you betake yourself to cleanly, and well- ordered ways at the bidding of this scribbler?"
23690Yet less and less resolutely; for he felt the charm of her presence; who could have done otherwise?
23690You feared no danger when you were a soldier; what danger do you fear as a villager of Meduegna?"
23690_ After your own heart_, did I say, Eusebius?
23690_ First_, Whether_ Salus populi_ be a sound position?
23690_"Quis Separabit?
23690a Buckingham- palace Boswell?
23690a Windsor Boswell?
23690and how could he at last resist-- he didn''t-- the impulse of his fondness for the innocent girl who often sought to cheer his fits of depression?
23690are you coming down, then?
23690art thou come To greet again thy gods of home, And brethren that so well agree Together, and in loving thee-- And come to thy sweet mother, too?
23690do you think Mr Pitt would go to hear me?"
23690inventor of steam- engine, of spinning jenny, of gunpowder, or of gun- cotton?
23690or is he making sport of those hapless Englishmen whom he pronounces"in human stupidity to have no fellow?"
23690said I,--"what could that be?"
23690said they,"wo n''t you go to hear Mr Pitt?"
23690say they,"does the Old World in truth judge us thus harshly?
23690veut- il dà © jeuner au salon?_"said the slip- shod_ garçon_ of the hotel, tapping me on the shoulder.
23690was there no ca nt,_ no_ hypocrisy?
23690who looked for refreshment from you; who looked for nothing but peace and quietness, and rest and settlement?
23690why not establish a Cabinet- dinner Boswell?
27430And how many were in the streets?
27430Has a man in Virginia,exclaimed Paterson,"a number of votes in proportion to the number of his slaves?
27430May it please your worships,he exclaimed,"what did I hear read?
27430What cause is there,said Lowndes,"for jealousy of our importing negroes?
27430Will Mr. Adams kindly say that again?
27430257 Were slaves to be reckoned as persons or as chattels?
27430A country willing to redress your wrongs, cherish your worth, and reward your services?
27430Again and again it was asked, If taxes could thus be levied by any power outside the state, why had we ever opposed the Stamp Act or the tea duties?
27430Against this obstinate and exasperated military force what superior force can you bring?
27430And as to Washington, he was doubtless a good soldier, but what did he know about politics?
27430And if negroes are not represented in the states to which they belong, why should they be represented in the general government?...
27430And why not also consult with these states about a uniform system of duties?
27430But how was it with the federal government?
27430But what need of a standing army at all?
27430Could a state once adopt the Constitution, and then withdraw from the Union if not satisfied?
27430Did not this open the door for a Cromwell?
27430Fox?"
27430Give the large states an influence in proportion to their magnitude, and what will be the consequence?
27430Had it not conducted a glorious and triumphant war?
27430Had it not set us free from the oppression of England?
27430Had they already forgotten the Boston Massacre, in spite of all the orations that had been delivered in the Old South Meeting- House?
27430If a meeting of the people were to take place in a slave state, would the slaves vote?
27430If so, is it not probable there may be collections for the same accursed purpose nearer home?"
27430If the New England people were thus ready to barter away the vital interests of a remote part of the country, what might they not do?
27430If the ratable property of A was to that of B as forty to one, ought A, for that reason, to have forty times as many votes as B?...
27430If two states can agree upon these matters, why not four?
27430If, to please the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterward defend our work?
27430May we not rationally suppose that the persons we shall choose to administer the government will be, in general, good men?"
27430Or is it rather a country that tramples upon your rights, disdains your cries, and insults your distresses?
27430Revere?"
27430Shall we throw the Constitution overboard because it does not please us all alike?
27430The conference of itself can settle nothing; and if four states can take part in it, why not thirteen?
27430The cry is, Where is the danger?
27430To whom did it belong?
27430Was it right or proper for Congress thus to have a hand in signing its own death- warrant?
27430Was not she the lordly"Old Dominion,"out of which every one of the states had been carved?
27430What confidence could be placed in a man who did not know his own mind any better than that?
27430What hinders our state legislatures from abusing their powers?...
27430What more could you ask?
27430What remedy, then?
27430What shall I do for my child?''
27430What was Congress, any way, but a roomful of men whom nobody heeded?
27430What was the matter with the old confederation?
27430What, then, would the convention have said to the preposterous notion that this work might safely be left to the presiding officer of the Senate?
27430When Adams had read the paper, he asked of Paul Revere,"How many mechanics were at the Green Dragon when these resolutions passed?"
27430Who was James Wilson, any way?
27430Why confine us to twenty years?
27430Why limit us at all?
27430Why not, since the independence of the United States was the sole avowed object for which France had gone to war?
27430Why should not these wretches, it was sarcastically asked, be driven at once from the country?
27430Why then should they be represented in a federal government?"
27430Would it not be sure to provoke needless disorders?
27430Would they ever stop at anything so long as they could go on building up their commerce?
27430[ Sidenote: One nation or thirteen?]
27430[ Sidenote: Were slaves to be reckoned as persons or as chattels?]
2234''Are you there, dear?'' 2234 ''Oh, so it''s come to you, has it?''
2234''Oo''s cheated''oo out''o fourpence?
2234''See what?'' 2234 ''Then in Jefferson,''said the mother,''it would be still earlier, would n''t it?''
2234''What time is it now in New York?'' 2234 ''What''s this?''
2234About what?
2234An''I give''er--he pointed towards the younger lady--"fourpence, did n''t I?"
2234And I gave you sixpence and two pennies, did n''t I?
2234And about coming home?
2234And are not you men every bit as foolish?
2234And did Mr. Hodskiss make a noise in the vestry?
2234And did Pyramids discourage him?
2234And did the countess take the matter quietly?
2234And does she insist on your going to church every Sunday morning?
2234And have you given up the old business?
2234And how are you getting on?
2234And how is father?
2234And how long are you going to remain here?
2234And is she willing to marry you?
2234And it was really you who wrote that clever book?
2234And mother?
2234And the little one?
2234And what became of Clementina?
2234And what became of her lover?
2234And who do you think will receive you?
2234And who''s keeping you all?
2234Are you happy?
2234Are you happy?
2234Are you sure you made it clear to him?
2234But have you no notion of the sort of street or the kind of house it was?
2234But how did she manage about her travelling frock?
2234But where am I to go, nurse?
2234But why did you take it?
2234But, my dear Blake,urged Mr. Eppington,"for your own sake, is it wise?
2234Ca n''t you make believe to have one?
2234Ca n''t you see he is?
2234Can you forgive me? 2234 Can you forgive me?"
2234Can you hear me?
2234Cart upset?
2234China?
2234Did I really say''Julia''?
2234Did I take Hallyard with me in the cart to Richmond this afternoon?
2234Did it hurt you?
2234Did n''t it bring you luck?
2234Did the naval lieutenant, while the others were at church, dash up in a post- chaise and carry her off?
2234Did you ever hear the story of the marriage?
2234Do you know of any cure for it?
2234Do you like her?
2234Do you mind throwing me back my ball?
2234Do you often drink it?
2234Do you think Pyramids would come and stop with me for a week?
2234Do you think she knows enough?
2234Does it matter very much what they think?
2234Entirely your own inspiration, or suggested?
2234Feeling bad?
2234Fool of a cabman took me to Alfred Place instead of--"Well, what do you want now you are come?
2234Had an accident?
2234Have n''t you any money?
2234Have you heard the news,he said,"about young Harjohn?"
2234Have you no sense of shame?
2234Have you tried any of the lodging- houses?
2234How could I be happy having lost you?
2234How did I get Friday fixed in my mind?
2234How did it come about?
2234How did it happen?
2234How did that impress you?
2234How do you know she does n''t care for you?
2234How much did you give the fellow, my dear?
2234I can not agree with you,replied the Minor Poet,"if we were simply automata, as your argument would suggest, what was the purpose of creating us?"
2234I suppose it could be fifteen-- twenty years ago that strangers to you lived in this room?
2234I suppose,he said,"you would n''t care to pretend you were ill, and stop in bed just for the day?"
2234In this room?
2234In which case it''s just as well to have a note of the advance down in black and white, eh?
2234Is he ill?
2234Is he married?
2234Is he weaker, nurse?
2234Is it all right?
2234Is she married?
2234Is that you, old man?
2234Is_ he_ in love?
2234It''s a fact,said the doctor,"though she does not suggest the shop- girl, does she?
2234My God, what am I saying? 2234 My dear fellow,"he replied,"what would people say?"
2234Never mind,I said,"supposing someone did?"
2234No,I replied,"whose marriage?
2234None of them can what?
2234Oh, but who would shoot Renshaw?
2234Oh, do_ you_ know her?
2234Playing tennis?
2234Put my--?
2234Seen whom?
2234Suppose someone killed the lot, should we hear less of Renshaw?
2234Tell me about it?
2234The North Pole?
2234The horse did n''t make you drink, did he?
2234The one with the curls?
2234Then what do you intend to do?
2234Tried Central Africa?
2234Was it a sudden conversion?
2234Was this the canary young lady?
2234What are you doing?
2234What are you fellows going to do this afternoon?
2234What are you going to do?
2234What ball?
2234What did it do to you?
2234What did she leave here?
2234What did you do with it?
2234What do they say?
2234What do you mean, girl?
2234What do you think the animal is?
2234What do you want me to do with it,I heard her asking an excited lady on one occasion;"cook it?"
2234What else?
2234What happened then?
2234What have you come about?
2234What is it?
2234What made you call him''Pyramids''?
2234What makes you think so?
2234What the devil do you mean?
2234What were you doing with it?
2234What would you do?
2234What''s she like?
2234What''s the confounded cat got to do with it?
2234What''s the matter with him?
2234What, Bessie, sir?
2234When are you going to get to the ones we all know?
2234When did the story appear?
2234Whereabouts?
2234Who shall be judge?
2234Who''s she?
2234Why do I lie to myself? 2234 Why do n''t you go home?"
2234Why do n''t you save him? 2234 Why have you followed me?"
2234Why is it,asked the Philosopher,"that women are such slaves to fashion?
2234Why not?
2234Why talk love or any other kind of sentiment before old Pyramids here?
2234Why the devil ca n''t she be careful?
2234Why, has anything given way?
2234Why?
2234Will you be at Leightons''to- morrow?
2234Wo n''t he ever eat any dinner till he''s got over it?
2234Wo n''t you read it?
2234Would you have refused him if you had?
2234You are sure,I said, after thinking a while,"that this Maria is a good Spirit?
2234You do love me, Jack?
2234You fish?
2234You have been letting lodgings for a long time?
2234You think I must, nurse?
2234You''re surely not going to church a fine day like this? 2234 A CHARMING WOMANNot_ the Mr.---_,_ really_?"
2234A dozen sentences later Dick stopped me again with:--"Who''s Julia?"
2234After a few minutes Dick interrupted me with:--"I thought you said her name was Naomi?"
2234And are you content with this marriage?
2234And how about myself?
2234And this woman that was like me-- she could have made a man''s life?
2234And what am I?
2234Are n''t you coming, Marion?
2234Are not the stones of our streets red with the blood of wife and child that they have slain?
2234Are you going to leave Harry alone with two pairs of lovers?
2234As for his good name, what could that matter?
2234At the third he said--"Whatever have you done to her feet?
2234Between the leer of the man and the smile of the girl, where lay the difference?
2234Born and bred in the atmosphere of the Reform Club, what gentleman could go wrong?
2234But whether she was our enemy, and we were to fear her, or whether we had to fear her enemies( and, if so, who were they?
2234Ca n''t you do it in the daytime?"
2234Could life after all be ruled by maxims learned from copy- books?
2234Curious to hear old Leman talking like that, was n''t it?"
2234Did n''t she tell you what for?"
2234Do men let the wolf go free when they have trapped him with meat?
2234Do n''t you remember, finding me one Saturday afternoon all alone, stuffing myself with cake and jam?"
2234Do you know what I am, and have been for two years?"
2234Do you know what this house is for me, with its gilded mirrors, its couches, its soft carpets?
2234Do you know who it is?"
2234Do you really care for Harry, Marion?
2234Do you remember the first night at old Fauerberg''s?
2234Does it matter that one keel should slip through the grip of the Polar ice?
2234Does it matter whether a Union Jack or a Tricolor floats over the turrets of Badajoz?
2234Does it matter whether one star more or less is marked upon our charts?
2234Does it matter?
2234Had she dealt with these questions wisely?
2234Had she many faults?
2234Harjohn?"
2234Has_ he_ written anything?"
2234Have I no shame, no strength?
2234Have you no influence over him?
2234Having rescued him, the teacher said:"Why do n''t you keep with the little boys?
2234He was an artist-- was ever story of this type written where the hero was not an artist?
2234He wo n''t object to a few inquiries?
2234Her slender stock of money would soon be gone; how could she live?
2234I allus promised the old lady as she should ride behind her own''oss one day,"he continued, turning to me,"did n''t I, mother?"
2234I answered somewhat sharply,"or are you joking?"
2234I asked with a laugh,"an evil spirit"?
2234I exclaimed,"what are you doing here?
2234I forgot,"he explained;"she never would tell her name before you, would she?
2234I heard her calling shrilly after me,''Who stole the goose?''
2234I interrupted, looking perhaps a little sternly at him,"who''s Maria?"
2234I picked it up and hit him back with it, and a policeman came up with the usual,''Now then, what''s all this about?''
2234I said,"and what''s that?"
2234I said,"are you doing here?
2234If I came down in red she would say,''Why do n''t you try green, dear?
2234If in the courses of evolution they grow bigger in brain and body, they may become powerful rivals, who knows?''
2234Make me weep?
2234May I ask you a question?
2234Might it not have been better had she thought for herself?
2234Might it not have been better to have treated them more seriously?
2234O God, why are you so good to me?
2234Of course, it''s absurd, but--""But what?"
2234Of what use was it?
2234Oh, mother, tell me, what is life?"
2234Presently he said:--"Have you ever tried drinking beer?"
2234Shall I go abroad?"
2234She scribbled the name down, and then said, looking the boy squarely in the face:"Tell me frankly, Jack, do you want to marry me, or do you not?"
2234Should not one be glad to know one''s friends better?
2234Society is so hollow and artificial; do n''t you find it so?
2234The earl''s?"
2234The first breakfast bell rang, and then he said,"You have n''t got any proper clothes with you, have you?"
2234The question is, how much will compensate you for your natural disappointment?"
2234The stone age, the iron age, the age of faith, the age of infidelism, the philosophic age, what are they but the passing fashions of the world?
2234Then an evil voice arose in the town, and said:"Who are these that have come among us to share our land?
2234Then it was he who spoke:"Do you think I have n''t told myself all that?"
2234Then she could do nothing?
2234Waller''?"
2234Was the man completely under his wife''s thumb; or, tired of her, was he playing some devil''s game of his own?
2234What about him?"
2234What are you doing along with him?"
2234What argument could I show stronger than that he had already put before himself?
2234What do you say?"
2234What do you think of this one?"
2234What happened to her?"
2234What has happened?"
2234What is a photographer?
2234What is the latest scandal?
2234What is the world doing?
2234What questions has it been asking you?
2234What right have they to bully you into paying what you do n''t owe?"
2234What saint has been discovered sinning?
2234What shall I talk to you about?
2234What should it do?
2234What the devil''s the good of talking about it?"
2234What was she like?
2234Where do you think I am you old fool?''
2234Where had I seen her, and when?
2234Where on earth did you get the idea from?"
2234Whibley would amuse himself of an evening asking it questions, being careful to choose tolerably simple themes, such as,"Are you there?"
2234Which philanthropist has been robbing the poor?
2234Who did it?"
2234Who has been found out?
2234Who has been swindling whom?
2234Who has run away with whose wife?
2234Why am I a useless, drifting log upon the world''s tide?
2234Why did I let them persuade me to send that lying letter?
2234Why did n''t you?
2234Why do I deceive myself?
2234Why had I never seen her again?
2234Why had she passed so completely out of my mind?
2234Why have all the young men passed me?
2234Why should I put my shirt on Mrs. Waller?
2234Why should she die, never having known what it was to live?
2234Why should she prostrate herself before this juggernaut of other people''s respectability?
2234Why should you pay for water you have never had?
2234Why?
2234Wo n''t you tell me about her?
2234Would it amuse you?
2234You know Canon Whycherly, the great preacher?"
2234You''re sure this is n''t the spirit of some deceased lunatic, playing the fool with you?"
2234and what is everybody saying about it?
2234and what is it they have been doing?
2234do you think I do n''t know what that woman will do for me?
2234every one says you look so well in green''; and when I wore green she would say,''Why have you given up red dear?
28921/ And are not men asham''d of dismal wars?"
28921A stander- by took me to task In some such words, I think, as these:"Are n''t you ashamed, be who you may, To mourn the burial of this plague?"
28921Again, what is harsher than this epigram?
28921For example, in this epigram to what point are so many trite similes piled up?
28921For example, what could be more resourcefully developed than this epigram?
28921For example, who can tolerate this German epigram?
28921For what is our aim in reading books except to nourish and fashion judgement?
28921How shall your honors fail?
28921I sighed and said,"What is the point Of such expense?
28921Or than this distich?
28921Or when you read the line_ Quadrupedante putrem sonitu quatit ungula campum_,[2] does n''t the sound of running horses strike your ears?
28921T. Hanmer''s(?)
28921That no one meets you willingly, That where you come they go, that vast Areas of silence circle you-- Why so?
28921They say... A drink?
28921What''s there in Bacchus''ivy?
28921When you hear, for example, the well- known_ procumbit humi bos_, do you not seem to hear the blunt sound of the falling bull?
28921Who would put up with what I do?
28921Why do you dream of Cirrha, bare Permessis?
28921Why, then, title an epigram_ To Gargilianus_ or_ Cecilianus_, which gives no idea of what the epigram is about?
28921With every last hair lost behind, ahead, What has the bald man left to lose?
28921You want them short?
28921You want to know what harm you do?
28921[ 27] Similarly, why in another well- known epigram is the same idea repeated again and again?
28921[ 46] and in this: Though you send presents to old men and widows Why should I call you, sir, munificent?
28921[ 49] And what would the following epigram be if it had not been perfected and prepared for by the handling?
28921and by Thomas Pecke,_ Parnassi puerperium_, London, 1659:"Can there be many strings; and yet no Jars?
15228''Housekeeper,''do I say? 15228 ''Ovid''--he''s Latin, is he not?
15228''Sir Oliver''? 15228 --Of what you have left to her, you mean?
15228A canary? 15228 A clergyman?"
15228A debt, Oliver? 15228 A guinea?
15228A lodge?
15228A while ago, you say? 15228 About Dicky?"
15228Afraid?
15228Afterwards?
15228Age?
15228Ah, you too think of him?
15228Ah,she said,"I was wondering--""Wondering?"
15228Ah?
15228All right?
15228All very well-- but where? 15228 Am I?"
15228And I am not to see it?
15228And a lady?
15228And is it thus,she went on,"that the great ones love and beget noble children?"
15228And the gentlemen, Manasseh-- they will have taken a great deal of wine by now?
15228And what are you doing here?
15228And whom, then, would you have reproached?
15228And why not, Mr. Trask? 15228 And you admired my courage?"
15228And you?
15228And-- on the way?
15228Are you here-- because-- of me?
15228Are you ill?
15228Are you--doubtfully--"by any chance Mr. Wapshott, the Surveyor?"
15228As a clergyman-- and to some extent a boon companion of Oliver''s-- he would be likely to know--"--And to tell? 15228 As men go, I am well- to- do: but, dear, has it never occurred to you to wonder what this place and its household cost me?"
15228As well as a mason? 15228 At this hour?"
15228Awkward, hey? 15228 Back to it?"
15228Bastard?
15228Bootjack, ma''am?
15228But a Grand Jury deals sometimes with matters of life and death, does it not?
15228But about''Captain Harry,''as we call him? 15228 But are you not riding also?"
15228But are you sure? 15228 But at the end of this what becomes of her?"
15228But if the mark had been a scratch only-- and the scratch had healed-- might she not be as good a horse as ever?
15228But old Hichens?
15228But since he_ is_ my lord?
15228But we''re friends, eh?--you and I-- just as before?
15228But what harm can she do you?
15228But what is it, dear?
15228But what is it?
15228But what is the meaning of it?
15228But what is your question?
15228But what on earth brings you to this terrible Lisbon, of all places?
15228But where is the sea?
15228But who can it be, or have been? 15228 But why?"
15228But will you?
15228But would you like to come too, sir?
15228But you do n''t tell me they would put a young girl in the stocks, merely for firing a gun on the Lord''s Day, as you call it?
15228But, my good sir, the House?
15228But--she hesitated, and then went on rapidly in the lowest of low tones--"if your Honour would n''t mind giving me silver instead of gold?
15228By the way,he added, sinking his voice,"one is permitted to congratulate a debutante?"
15228Can I do nothing?
15228Can you not see, my dear lord, that I ask for no such triumph? 15228 Captain Vyell succeeds?"
15228Clothes too, ye''ll say? 15228 D''ye hear, M''ria?
15228Dare? 15228 Dear Tatty,"--she kissed her--"were they so very dreadful?"
15228Dears, where did you leave her last?
15228Dicky?
15228Did Andromeda not love Perseus, think you?
15228Did I?
15228Did mamma tell you he was escorting us?
15228Did you? 15228 Did your Excellency not know that its beggars are the eyes of Lisbon?
15228Diplomacy?
15228Do I? 15228 Do I?"
15228Do you ask as a magistrate, sir, or in curiosity?
15228Do you call that an answer?
15228Do you fear death?
15228Do you mean that it would actually break them?
15228Do you think that, or anything like that, was in the mind of the man who wrote it?
15228Do you think,he asked at length"that papa was not properly married to my mother?"
15228Does it matter what they said?
15228Does it?
15228Does my lord truly suppose me so dull of wit? 15228 Does that make so much difference?"
15228Eh? 15228 Eh?
15228Eh? 15228 Eh?"
15228Eh?
15228Eh?
15228Eh?
15228Eh?
15228Eh?
15228Excuse me; we brought it in''attempted wounding,''I believe? 15228 Fie,"you will say,"the site is savage, then, like all else in this New World?"
15228Food be sure, and a bed, deary: for you''ll be sleeping here, of course?
15228Food?
15228For what are you seeking?
15228Going to sea, is he? 15228 Good, old boy-- is it not?"
15228Guarda- costas? 15228 Harry-- is it Harry?"
15228Have I been, then, so listless a scholar?
15228Have they been bullying you, dear?
15228Have you not finished yet?
15228Have you the coat I wore?
15228He guesses, at least?
15228He''sends word,''do you say? 15228 Her teeth must have torn it?"
15228Hey, what is it?
15228Hey?
15228Hey?
15228Hey?
15228Honoured madam--"They said-- what?--quoting whom?
15228How can that be-- since you are not his first love?
15228How do you know that I do n''t believe in them?
15228How does it go?
15228How is she? 15228 How so?
15228How, otherwise, should I be here?
15228Hungry?
15228I am prompt on your call, eh? 15228 I am sure you harbour some grudge-- some reservation?"
15228I beg your pardon?
15228I beg your pardon?
15228I do n''t want to be ordered out of the house-- must I repeat that I adore her? 15228 I have not the pleasure of knowing Mr. Wapshott, but may I attempt to describe him to you?
15228I know; and yet--"I meant only that you are not used to handling money or calculating it-- as why should you be?
15228I mean, do n''t you wish that you, and not I, were sailing for England? 15228 I suppose now,"he said after a pause,"you think you are doing a fine thing, and doing it handsomely?"
15228I understood that he died of a jail fever, caught at the Assizes, where he was serving on-- what do you call it?
15228I''m askin''you,he said,"how you came by it?"
15228I, Oliver?
15228In the child? 15228 Indeed?
15228Indeed?
15228Indeed?
15228Is it a great deal of money?
15228Is it a toast, gentlemen?
15228Is it altogether kind to the girl?
15228Is it not enough that he condescends-- that you have found favour in his sight-- you, that asked but to be his slave?
15228Is it on my account?
15228Is it so bad a trick?
15228Is it that you still doubt me-- or yourself, perhaps?
15228Is it three years, now? 15228 Is it true they whipped_ that_, naked, through the streets?"
15228Is it worth while?
15228Is it you?
15228Is it?
15228Is my love content with her home- coming?
15228Is one, then, to be considerate with cowards?
15228Is that the way of geese?
15228Is that your naval code? 15228 Is there a portrait of her?"
15228Is this what you mean?
15228Is this-- er-- gentleman his tutor?
15228Is_ he_ here?
15228It would seem that you know me?
15228Italy?
15228Like papa?
15228Ma''am?
15228May I ask it-- one question?
15228May I ask what punishment I have probably escaped by that advantage?
15228May I beg to be told exactly what has happened, sir?
15228May I use your words,said Ruth, with a shy smile,"and say that you have no need?"
15228May I?
15228Me, sir?
15228Mr. Hanmer managed, then, to discover you? 15228 Mr. Trask,"she said,"do you believe in hell?"
15228Must I say anything?
15228Must I?
15228Must I?
15228Must a woman give all her reasons? 15228 My good fool,"he said,"did n''t I call to you not to be alarmed?
15228My own? 15228 My slave?"
15228Natchett?
15228No? 15228 Not love you?"
15228Not love you?
15228Nothing else?
15228Of what use is a wife if she may not contrive for her husband''s good-- take thought for his household? 15228 Oh papa, what has happened?"
15228Oliver Cromwell?
15228On the whole? 15228 Only, as I guess, in so far as she accuses you of having played the devil with her plan for marrying me up with my cousin Di''?
15228Or even quite fair to her?
15228Papa,he asked with a sudden flush,"did you ever stand up to a King on the poor people''s side, and fight-- and all that?"
15228Papa,he asked, still pondering the problem of rich and poor,"do n''t some of the old families die out?"
15228Passing over your derogatory language, I am at a loss to understand--"Are you? 15228 Rods?"
15228Ruth, dear-- what is a bastard?
15228Ruth, will you give me up?
15228Ruth, will you marry me?
15228Satisfactory, I hope?
15228See her, do you? 15228 Setting aside last night-- when I was disgustingly drunk-- have you a single excuse for using that word?"
15228Shall I continue, sir?
15228She has a right, naturally, to concern herself--"Does_ he_ know?
15228She shall smart for it-- if that console you?
15228Silk?
15228Sir Oliver? 15228 Sir Oliver?"
15228Sir, why do you ask these things?
15228So I put it to you, why not?
15228So that is why you called me to witness? 15228 Something about me, was it not?"
15228Something has happened? 15228 Sorry?"
15228Suppose we try a breather of it?
15228Surely,protested Mrs. Harry,"they must mean Lady Vyell?"
15228Taken your eye, has she? 15228 Tell me about Dicky?"
15228Thank you, Manasseh; and now will you step down to the Inn, order the horses back to stable, and bring George and Harry back with you? 15228 That would heal, surely?"
15228The cabin?
15228The clergyman?
15228The evil of his past life? 15228 The faintness is over?"
15228The meaning? 15228 The outfit?"
15228The truth is, then,he confessed,"that before she saw you I thought fit to tell Miss Quiney what you had suffered--""She has known it from the first?
15228Then at any rate you have read my letters?
15228Then what do you make of this?
15228Then what''s to be the end? 15228 Then where''s your hook?"
15228Then why did you not tell me?
15228Then you are writing to him? 15228 This Ishmael was his own son, eh?
15228Tired?
15228To England?
15228To confront them with her? 15228 To- day-- did you know that I was in Bath?"
15228To- morrow we will explore; and when this place tires us-- but my lord has not praised it yet--"Must I make speeches?
15228Told you that, did he?
15228Tongues? 15228 Up the road?
15228Urgent? 15228 Was I pretty bad?"
15228Was he riding?
15228Well, and is n''t it so?
15228Well, and what do you say?
15228Well, how could he be serving on a Grand Jury if his head was affected as you say?
15228Well?
15228Well?
15228Well?
15228Were all men beasts, then?
15228Were those his words?
15228What a group to startle!--Cupid extracting a thorn from the hand of Venus-- or( shall we say?) 15228 What are you reading?"
15228What can we do with them?
15228What did I ever say but that''twas a chance, if you used it? 15228 What does that mean?
15228What does that mean?
15228What else_ could_ ye say?
15228What guests is Sir Oliver entertaining?
15228What happened to him?
15228What happened, then?
15228What happened? 15228 What has happened?
15228What is it?
15228What is your name?
15228What matter? 15228 What matters the degree?
15228What of that?
15228What seems fine?
15228What''re you reading?
15228What''s the use, any way?
15228What''s this? 15228 What, then?"
15228What,_ another?_"The bird- seller up the road had no change about him. 15228 What?
15228What? 15228 What?
15228What? 15228 What?"
15228What?--asking old Hanmer to come with us? 15228 When must you start?"
15228When you were careful to keep in hiding?
15228Where have you seen me before?
15228Where was she to be taken?
15228Where would you lead me?
15228Where''s my Oliver?
15228Who am I, to forgive?
15228Who are you?
15228Who has annoyed you? 15228 Who in the world-- at this hour?"
15228Who is Shadbolt?
15228Who is it?
15228Who was she?
15228Why is she turning you out?
15228Why not?
15228Why should I need it?
15228Why should what I am saying break your heart? 15228 Why, Ruth?"
15228Why, what is the matter?
15228Why, what is the matter?
15228Why, what''s the matter?
15228Why, you ha''n''t quarrelled, ha''you?
15228Why? 15228 Why?
15228Why? 15228 Why_ are_ you here?"
15228Will my lord come into his house?
15228Will they have their nest in the cliffs?
15228Will you come into the house?
15228Will you explain?
15228Will you make way, please,he ordered,"while I fetch a cover to hide your blasted handiwork?"
15228Woman, if you will stop yo''cacklin''and yo''crowin''? 15228 Worth while?"
15228Would it alter your devotion at all to know that he was with another woman?
15228Would you be jealous of this dead woman? 15228 Would you, before taking a seat, oblige me by throwing a log on the fire?
15228Wounding?
15228Wreckwood, eh?
15228Yes,said Ruth; and added,"Why did you bring her?"
15228Yes?
15228Yes?
15228Yet Captain Harry is recklessly brave?
15228Yo''Hon''ah will bathe befor''shaving?
15228Yonder?
15228You are afraid of these people?
15228You are hurt?
15228You are in trouble?
15228You are not meaning to walk all the way home, surely?
15228You are taking her back to the Court- house? 15228 You blaspheme thus to me, that honestly tried to save your soul?"
15228You could not love me? 15228 You could not marry her?"
15228You d----d fool, did you ever know me do_ any_thing before shaving?
15228You despise these people?
15228You do love me? 15228 You do n''t see yourself as a parson''s wife, eh?
15228You do not mean this?
15228You guess, of course, what has brought me?
15228You have been discussing me with Lady Caroline?
15228You have never found that need?
15228You have seen a strange clergyman to- day?
15228You have written to him?
15228You honoured me with your observation this morning?
15228You knew that I was here, then?
15228You mean to say you like it?
15228You mean--Ruth smiled--"that I am talking like a book?
15228You mean,the Collector asked slowly,"that he is not, in fact, unwell, but has asked you to convey an untruth?"
15228You note, at least, that the handwriting is a woman''s?
15228You ran away with her? 15228 You really think my marrying you would make a difference?"
15228You remember the promise? 15228 You sent for me?"
15228You tell me to go? 15228 You were looking for clams?"
15228You were the wench that pulled off my boots?
15228You will pardon my abruptness? 15228 You worried yourself about me?"
15228You''ve not heard?
15228You, who came to me as a god-- to me, a poor tavern drudge-- who lifted me from the cart, the scourge; lifted me out of ignorance, out of shame? 15228 You-- er-- suggest that she stole it?"
15228Your Honour spoke with them?
15228Your Uncle Harry is not married? 15228 Your father would call it setting a bad example, I doubt?"
15228Your mother lives in Bath?
15228_ Did_ I say that?
15228_ How is it possible for people, beholding that glorious Body, to worship any Being but Him who created it?_Right-- word for word!
15228_ We_ do n''t mind it, hey? 15228 _--Who can find a virtuous woman?
15228''Is there-- can there be-- such a thing as a natural born lady?''
15228''Then you are older than I-- but how long have you been married?''
15228( How, he reasoned, could any one be tempted to sell wares so nasty unless by prodigious profit?)
15228( grunt)"Grass?
15228("But why do I hope it?"
15228("D----n me,"says he,"what can you look for, in ten months?")
15228--"Have I then so far worsened him?
15228--"Or did the curse but delay to work in him?--in him, my love and my hero?
15228--And the child?
15228--And why not?
15228--And why not?
15228--Are they_ here_, under this?"
15228--What had become of it?
15228._"Her children?
15228A man- child?
15228A race?"
15228A riot, up the street?"
15228Ah?
15228Aloud she asked,"Why are the noblest, birds and beasts, so few and solitary?"
15228Am I coarse?
15228Am I next to be expelled, as a part of it?
15228Am I not right?"
15228Am I not, even now, talking of these things among Lutherans?
15228And can a mere child stand by it so proudly?
15228And could you not read in the action some earnest that the girl would be looked after?
15228And even if that were so, what difference could it make to my loving you?"
15228And how is your good gentleman?"
15228And if papa died, should I get one?
15228And now, Tatty dear, do you still bid me to go?"
15228And suppose that it were true, sir?"
15228And what do you suppose she wants?"
15228And what is his reward to be?--another glance of these bright eyes?
15228And where''s the money to come from?
15228And which shall it be sir?
15228And who should that be, here, but the hostess?"
15228And why should he allow it to oppress him?
15228And you prate to me of not being affected by that?
15228And your own?"
15228And, moreover, in any event was she not his slave?
15228Any of you got the change for a golden guinea about you?"
15228Are we not happier missing them?
15228Are you going inside for a last look around?"
15228Are you spending the night yonder, by- the- bye?"
15228As they shook hands Sir Oliver asked,"Do n''t you envy me, Batty?"
15228Aunt Carrie and Di''?
15228Banner, how it comes that you have a nicer sense than your superior of what is due to His Majesty''s Service?"
15228Beyond the death of the thing itself what sanctity could live in its husk?
15228But England?
15228But I dare say my good brother Silk has been detaining you in talk?"
15228But did we want these people in our forest days?"
15228But how will it end?
15228But not serious, I hope?"
15228But of course,"he went on in a cheerfuller voice, the worst of his confession over,"if Uncle Harry can be married, why should n''t we?"
15228But possibly you do not remember me?"
15228But their talk shall not be reported: for with what do you suppose it dealt?
15228But there are the stables, too, to be seen; and the gunroom--""Stables?
15228But to what end?
15228But what about Oliver?
15228But what brings you to Bath?
15228But what could the future hold?
15228But what did they say?"
15228But what have we yonder?
15228But when is it to be?"
15228But where is he?
15228But where''s the money to start it?"
15228But where''s the use of talking?
15228But why this sense of urgency?
15228But"bastard"?
15228But, indeed, was ever such a thing heard of?"
15228By the way, Mr. Leemy, where is the weapon?"
15228Can I hoe turnips, or poke a knowledgeable finger into the flanks of beeves?
15228Can titles, as you call them, be passed on like that?
15228Can you understand_ that?_""If you love him--""Oh, for pity''s sake spare me!"
15228Can you?"
15228Captain Vyell''s boy, are you?
15228Captain Vyell, I believe?"
15228Champagne?
15228Clams, is it?
15228Could n''t a poor girl be born so that she had it from the start?
15228Could there( you''ll say) be a fairer betrothal?
15228Craze for the sea?
15228Did I not keep my word?
15228Did he further commission you with a verbal one?
15228Did she forgive you easily?"
15228Did you not bid me remove a mountain?"
15228Dismissed, you say?
15228Do I quote immodestly, my lord?"
15228Do n''t the sound of it, more''n their voices, call me to door a dozen times a day?
15228Do you say that he is worth it?"
15228Do you understand firearms?"
15228Does Captain Vyell give us to understand that his interest in this young woman is of older date than this morning''s encounter?"
15228Does it, after all, matter how-- if only we get it right?
15228Drive her off in your coach indeed!--and what then becomes of her reputation?"
15228Eh, what''s this?"
15228Eh?
15228Eh?
15228Eh?
15228Er-- how shall I put it?
15228For assurance he asked her,"How old are you?"
15228For how should_ he_ be in Bath?
15228For what are women made but for motherhood?
15228Forgive me if I do you wrong, but was it by any chance that you might play the spy upon this girl?"
15228Guess why she likes me?
15228Guests?
15228Ha''n''t ye never caught your breath an''felt the tears swellin''when ye saw a regiment swing up the street?
15228Had he brought the woman in defiance?
15228Had he done this to defy her?
15228Had he not been her friend from the first, taking her in perfect trust, and in the hour that had branded her and in her dreams seared her yet?
15228Had he not stooped to her as a god, lifted her from the mire?
15228Had not she, also, cause to know what cruelties men will commit in the name of religion?
15228Had she not crossed her arms and told him she was his slave?
15228Had there been an accident?
15228Has Miss Quiney ever told you about Oliver Cromwell?"
15228Has Vyell married you yet?"
15228Has she turned you out?"
15228Have I mentioned this Mr. Manley in former letters?
15228Have you asked pardon of Tatty?"
15228Have you not seen him yet?"
15228Have you thought of the responsibilities?"
15228He is, perhaps, a gentleman of somewhat stunted growth, but of full habit, and somewhat noticeably red between the ear and the neck- stock?"
15228He may be strong- willed, but-- did mamma happen to talk at all about the''Family''?"
15228Heh?
15228Her daughter and our Collector being cousins-- eh?
15228Hey?
15228His family?
15228His papa is detained on business-- you understand?
15228How came he here?
15228How had she ever come to utter coin that rang with so false and cheap a note?
15228How long ago?
15228How should you?
15228I forget the number of the Psalm?"
15228I mean no harm by these questions, and you will not mind answering them, I hope?
15228I put it plainly?"
15228I suppose he, as next of kin, is most concerned of all?"
15228I wish a word in private with Lady Vyell-- if you will forgive me, ma''am?"
15228I wonder why?"
15228I-- I-- shall we say that I just cast myself on fate?
15228If he were unfaithful now-- would that alter your desire to find and save him?"
15228Influential, am I?
15228Is it like that?
15228Is it serious?"
15228Is it too high a price?"
15228Is it too late for partridge?
15228Is it true, by the way,"she asked mischievously,"that to talk with a woman distresses you?"
15228Is it up to_ this_ he would lead?
15228Is n''t that a prettier prospect than to end as Sir Oliver''s cast- off?"
15228Is that what you mean?"
15228Is the blame mine?"
15228Is this not best, after all?
15228Langton?"
15228Lives in a hovel with a wood pile beside it, and a daughter that looks out for wreckage?"
15228May I offer you my arm?"
15228Maybe-- for I had meant to make you paymaster in my absence-- you''ll also forgive me for having changed my mind?"
15228Might we have sight of it from the top of the hill?"
15228Mother, wo n''t you give me food, at least?
15228Mr. Hanmer, will you be that friend?"
15228Must I ride on a side- saddle?"
15228Nay, how shall I scold you, who do what your betters teach?
15228Nevertheless, shall we try?"
15228Newly married man-- if some one will be good enough to pass the decanter?
15228No?
15228No?
15228No?
15228Noll?--find Noll?
15228Not him as came an''took the rooms for ye?
15228Not when the world is so quick to cast one out?"
15228Now, sir, will you whip_ me_ through your town?"
15228Oh, I forgot: your Honour thinks that, with all this money, some one will try to rob me?"
15228Oh, my dear, will you not see that I have been a mother, too, and understand?
15228On whom else can I practise to please?
15228Or peradventure in displeasure?
15228Or perhaps_ he_ was commanding them to release her?
15228Or to sound her suspicions?
15228Or was it merely to discover how much, if anything, Ruth suspected?
15228Or would it go to Uncle Harry?"
15228Plenty of talk about bathing; but diving?
15228Promise?"
15228Rather, did I not promise you in the market- square that, her chastening over, my cart should fetch her?
15228Remember the parrots in that old fellow''s shop in Port Nassau?"
15228Ruth had a mind to ask"Who, then, had brought them?"
15228Ruth''s asked,"And if I do not, will you?"
15228Ruth, is it?
15228See?"
15228See?"
15228Shall I come down to you?"
15228Shall I send Selina to you?
15228Shall I signal to him?"
15228Shall I sit here, at my lord''s feet?"
15228Shall I tell you where, unless fancy played me a trick, I last proved its quickness?"
15228Shall she, within her breast, thank God?
15228Shall we begin with our repetition?
15228Shall we go back and face them?"
15228Shall you come to me as less by an inch when you stoop to love me?"
15228She?
15228Should she keep him waiting-- keep him even a long while?
15228Should she tell him?
15228Should she tell him?
15228Silk drive you over?"
15228Silk here?
15228Silk''s horse?
15228Silk?
15228Sir, twice in this half- mile you have prompted me to ask, What, here on this meadow, prevents my killing you?
15228So you guessed that I made one of the party?
15228So your Excellency did not attend the Mass?--not approving of it, maybe?"
15228Squeal?
15228Strongtharm and Miss Quiney ask him together, under their breath_--Well?
15228Sure?"
15228Surely you did not doubt_ that?_""No."
15228Tell me, when you knitted his little boots, was n''t it different from all the rest?"
15228That Dance woman, perhaps?
15228That I am here-- is it not enough?"
15228That infernal aunt of mine--""Lady Caroline?"
15228The boy''s position here must be undesirable in many ways; and at sea a lad stands on his own feet-- eh, Mr.--I did not catch your name?"
15228The fact is--""Excuse me; but would you mind taking your hands out of your pockets?"
15228The old fellow did not guess what was amiss; as how should he?
15228The sooner the better-- eh, darling?"
15228The truth?
15228The very man who had sentenced her to degradation-- was there not dramatic triumph in summoning him to behold her exalted?
15228Then I woke up, and you were beside me--"She would have added,"How could I doubt, then?"
15228Then why not declare himself, leap the last easy fence and in a short while make her his?
15228Then why should he cast out one son more than another?"
15228This could not be the end?
15228This girl resisted your ruffian in the discharge of his duty?
15228Those women?"
15228Understand?"
15228Wapshott?"
15228Wapshott?"
15228Warts?
15228Was I not right?"
15228Was it carelessly or in delicacy that he withheld his face?
15228Was it foreordained to come to this, though I would at any time have given my life to prevent it?"
15228Was it not mere manliness to bear( as, to do him justice, he had borne) ill- health with fortitude, and face dissolution with courage?
15228Was it on you?"
15228Was it possible that Mr. Hichens had ever gathered roses in his youth?
15228Was it possible, then, that after all she did not love him?
15228Was this fair to him, who desired to heap honours upon her and would stretch for them even beyond his power?
15228Well and again, why not?
15228Well, an''how''s the gentleman keepin''?
15228Well, and what can I do for you, young gentleman?"
15228Well, what d''ye say?
15228Were they not heretics, serpents, enemies of the true Faith?
15228Were they releasing her?
15228Were you looking on?"
15228What did it mean?
15228What else mattered?
15228What grounds have you for imputing this misconduct to Lady Vyell?"
15228What has Miss Josselin to say?"
15228What has become of it?"
15228What has she done, to be so naughty?"
15228What is it?"
15228What is talk, after all, to compare with music?
15228What kind of debt?"
15228What man could remedy it?
15228What of yours?"
15228What say they?
15228What was he doing?
15228What was the sneer in it?
15228What''s this?--a rush- light?
15228What''s to the left?"
15228What''s your name?"
15228What?
15228What?"
15228When I asked,''What becomes of her at the end of this?''
15228Where is Dicky?"
15228Where is Lady Vyell?"
15228Where is mamma?"
15228Where is your Court- house?"
15228Where''s the bootjack?
15228Whereas I, my lord--"''Being your slave, what should I do but tend Upon the hours and times of your desire?''"
15228Whither?
15228Who gave it ye?"
15228Who knows?"
15228Who said-- what right have you to assume-- that she would have been left to lie there?
15228Who''s the gentleman?
15228Why does Tatty never talk to me about God and religion and such things?"
15228Why had she not pleaded against rite of any kind?
15228Why not send her away?
15228Why not?
15228Why should she tie him a day beyond the endurance of his love?
15228Why should she?
15228Why to a Christian more than to another?
15228Why was she dismissed?"
15228Why would he persist in talking thus?
15228Why?
15228Why?"
15228Why?"
15228Why?"
15228Will the smell of tobacco distress you, or bring the faintness back?
15228Will you make way, please?"
15228Will you tell me her name?--her Christian name only?"
15228With your leave, which is the more symbolical?"
15228Wo n''t these content ye, bating the shame?"
15228Would not ten thousand women-- would not a hundred thousand-- have counted it heaven to stand in her place?
15228Would you really choose to be cumbered with all this business?"
15228Would_ you_ value a horse by its selling price?"
15228Yes?
15228Yet he got so far as to say,--"The people here do n''t like us-- do they, father?"
15228Yet, if he repented, why did he continue to wrap her around with kindness?
15228You anticipate it with delight, I doubt not?"
15228You are in pain?"
15228You are less shy with children, I hope?"
15228You do n''t believe me?"
15228You do n''t mind my spitting on my hands?
15228You do n''t suppose I want my pupil to break her neck?"
15228You do n''t tell me you manage it all yourself?
15228You hear what I offer?"
15228You mean that Sir Oliver will be angry when he gets wind of our little expedition?
15228You probably do not guess who the bride was?"
15228You recall our last conversation?
15228You received it?"
15228You see it, with its line of elms?
15228You should have told him all that was good; and that was not little, I think, if you had loved her?"
15228You think it will be?
15228You understand?"
15228You were his friend, I think?"
15228You were saying?"
15228You will oblige me?
15228You''re as pretty a piece of flesh as a man could find on this side of the Atlantic, and what''s a sharp tongue but a touch of spice to it?
15228You, in whose eyes I have found grace, and in that my great, great happiness?
15228You, in whose light my life has moved?
15228You, who saved me?
15228Your cousin-- what is her name?
15228Your good lady, for instance?"
15228_ How is it possible_--how went the words?"
15228_ Was_ there a fire?
15228_ What s_ he saying?"
15228_ You_ have done me evil?
15228_ You_, my lord, my love?
15228have you ever heard a horse scream?"
15228or will he fence with my question instead of answering it?"
15228she repeated, pointing with her riding- switch; and then, still keeping the gesture, she sank her voice and asked quickly,"Why are you here?
15228that''s your question, hey?"
15228why should I despise them?"
15228you remember-- the eagles?"
15228you''re thinking of Sir Oliver?"
19614A cigarette, then?
19614Across that field?
19614After the war? 19614 Alexei?"
19614And John? 19614 And Semyonov?"
19614And Semyonov_ let_ her?
19614And her family?
19614And the Vengerovsky... they''re to the right, are they?
19614And what if the wagons have left for Mittövo?
19614And why do you all talk of being happy? 19614 And you''ll stay?"
19614And your other thoughts?
19614Any wounded?
19614Apologies, Ivan Andreievitch( myself), to your country... but really... what''s he going to do with us?
19614Are those ours?
19614Are you going to remain with us?
19614Are you still angry with me?
19614But I thought you hated her?
19614But if I command you?
19614But who would bother? 19614 But you forgive me now?
19614Can you sleep?
19614Did n''t you hear what Nikolai said? 19614 Disappointed in what?"
19614Do I think it likely?
19614Do n''t you see that you must n''t? 19614 Do you love me?"
19614Do you really want me?
19614Do?
19614Everything?--What?
19614Except herself?
19614Frightened?
19614Go back? 19614 Gone?"
19614Have you any wounded?
19614Have you liked that?
19614Hit here-- on this road?
19614How can you, Sofia Antonovna?
19614How could I know that he would hold such opinions? 19614 How did Trenchard die?"
19614How exactly was she killed?
19614How is he?
19614How long are you going to be with us, do you think?
19614If I tried could I touch it or would it fade from under my hand?
19614Is it the forest? 19614 Is n''t it strange?"
19614Is your friend badly wounded?
19614Is your leg hurting you?
19614It''s terribly hot, close-- smell.... Are you going to sleep?
19614Ivan Andreievitch, you will always be my friend?
19614Lovely view, is n''t it?
19614My place?
19614Never mind, Mr.,he said smiling at me,"twenty- two misfortunes, are n''t you?
19614Nikolai,I said,"why is there no one here?"
19614No more tea?
19614No restlessness in her face? 19614 No wounded?"
19614No, but have you?
19614Nobody?
19614Now which Sister will come with me? 19614 Of course you think me very bad-- that I have treated--John-- shamefully-- yes?...
19614Of use?
19614One of these cutlets?
19614Semyonov?
19614Sure you can manage?
19614Tell me frankly,Andrey Vassilievitch said at last,"am I of any use here?"
19614This is scarcely what you expected a conquered country to look like, is it?
19614To- morrow I shall think otherwise-- and yet this is part of the truth that I have told you.... And your Englishman? 19614 Well, and how have things been, Nikolai, busy?"
19614Well, it''s rather like that now, is n''t it?
19614Well,I said at last to break a long pause that followed his last words,"what did you think about all that time you were alone?"
19614Well,I said to Trenchard,"what''s to be done?"
19614Well,I said,"what did you find?"
19614Well,said Molozov,"and what of your Englishman?"
19614Well,said the Feldscher to the soldier,"where''s your man?"
19614Well?
19614What are you doing here?
19614What are you doing there? 19614 What did he do?"
19614What did he say?
19614What did you come for?
19614What did you think war was?... 19614 What do you know or I know?"
19614What do you mean?
19614What does he come for?
19614What has he come for? 19614 What have you been doing to the looking- glass?"
19614What is it?
19614What is it?
19614What is it?
19614What is it?
19614What is it?
19614What is it?
19614What is the matter with you?
19614What is the use?
19614What? 19614 When are they going to begin doing something on the other Front, do you think?"
19614Where are they?
19614Who are they, and will they not mind her marrying an Englishman?
19614Why ca n''t you leave him alone?
19614Why did he come? 19614 Why did n''t they take you for a soldier?"
19614Why did you come?
19614Why did you say it?
19614Why do n''t you go back to England? 19614 Why do n''t you want to?"
19614Why does n''t he go back to his own country?
19614Why not now?
19614Why should I know?
19614Why were n''t there more wagons? 19614 Will you come and see?"
19614Will you mind if, sometimes, I tell you things? 19614 Will you please set off at once with Mr. to Vulatch?"
19614You are not to go-- Marie, do you hear? 19614 You ca n''t marry me?"
19614You ca n''t sleep, Mr.?
19614You do n''t think it will rain?
19614You miss your wife very much?
19614You will not be staying here?
19614You''re depressed about something?
19614You''re not hurt, are you?
19614You''ve found your seat?
19614You''ve got your things?
19614_ Noo tak._ Fine, our hospital, do n''t you think? 19614 _ Tak totchno._""How are things down there just now?
19614_ Tak totchno._"Who said you were to drive us?
19614''Why, Georg Georgevitch,''I say,''do you hate him?
19614--how are you?
19614... her face?..."
19614All of us, with our little private histories like bundles on our backs, are venturing out to try our fortune.... What are we going to find?
19614All the time I was saying to myself:"Why am I so happy?
19614Also Meester?...
19614Also, what would he think of Trenchard?
19614Am I doing only what any one else can do as well?
19614Am I right?
19614An Englishman?...
19614And Nikitin?...
19614And how is one to give any true picture of the confusion into which we flung ourselves at O----?
19614And in France... how many soldiers had we now?
19614And so we were drawn together.... Now... is he my friend?
19614And so, Mr., you thought that_ you_ understood her?"
19614And to Trenchard and myself?
19614And war?
19614And what do you think of Andrey Vassilievitch?"
19614And why can not he leave me alone?
19614And why make a scene now before Semyonov when he obviously could do nothing?
19614And why?...
19614And yet this life-- so ordered, so disciplined, so rational, and THAT life-- where do they join?...
19614And, of all these persons, who now stands out?
19614And-- may I tell you something, Ivan Andreievitch?
19614Are they coming down?...
19614Are we kind to him?
19614At this moment, how can we?
19614Before what gate had I stood?
19614Borjà © moi!_""What is it?"
19614Brought food with you?
19614But did she know anything about him?
19614But for the rest of that tale, do you remember how it goes?"
19614But for us not to talk-- for one of us to be silent-- do you know how hard that is?...
19614But he continued:"He knew the tall doctor-- Nikitin-- before, did n''t he?"
19614But how can we?
19614But now, who cares?
19614But then how should I act?
19614But what to do?
19614But you like John, really, do n''t you?"
19614CHAPTER IV FOUR?
19614Can it be that such a man-- such men, I should say, as either I or he-- will ever be given such happiness?
19614Can you conceive what it is doing to Russians?
19614Can you wait for tea until we return?
19614Could he have supposed for a single moment that she would remain?
19614Could it be possible that he knew her so little as that?
19614Death, perhaps?
19614Did I hear it?
19614Did I say that she would laugh?
19614Did that little picture of the other evening show me at my best?
19614Did you hear it, Ivan Andreievitch?"
19614Do n''t I know?
19614Do n''t you remember Sister Anna Maria?
19614Do n''t you think he is?"
19614Do you know Glebeshire?"
19614Do you know how houses and streets of which you have observed nothing, afterwards, called out by some important event, leap into detail?
19614Do you think I''d ever be engaged to an ordinary Englishman?
19614Do you think Semyonov''s forgotten us?
19614Do you think it was easy for me?
19614Does any one at home or away from this infernal strip of fighting realise what flies are?
19614FOUR?
19614Find some other body, or go wandering, searching for me?
19614For a moment his love had given him a new confidence but now how was that same love deserting him?
19614Frightened of what?...
19614Get in there, you... with your head out like that, do you want another?"
19614Had happiness ever lasted?
19614Had n''t some one better go to meet him?"
19614Has it happened to you yet that your life that has been such and such a life is in the moment of a heart- beat all another life?
19614Have you talked to the new Sister?"
19614He could not understand.... Was this a continuation of the nightmare of the afternoon?
19614He does n''t speak Russian very well, does he?
19614He had some plot, some hidden surprise?
19614He muttered some woman''s name:"Sasha... Sasha... Sasha....""Ca n''t you keep still?"
19614He said:"Do you remember that first drive-- ages ago, when we saw the trenches and heard the frogs and I thought there was some one there?"
19614He thought, I suppose, as he had thought about Nikitin:"How can a man with his wits about him be at the same time such a fool?"
19614He was silent for a little; then with a sudden jerk he said:"Where has she gone?"
19614He was too ill... he could tell us nothing, but he was so excited by something... something he was in the middle of.... Who was it?
19614He would catch us unawares?
19614He would say to me:"There''s a tale?
19614He''d be so happy?..."
19614He''s not happy here, is he?"
19614He''s splendid, is n''t he?
19614Here,_ golubchik_, this way.... Finger, is it?
19614How bad is it?"
19614How can he?
19614How can one wait when one is n''t allowed to wait?
19614How can she do otherwise?
19614How can you?
19614How could he, who knew nothing at all of women, hope to manage that self- willed, eager, independent girl?
19614How could that Russian passionate longing for justified idealism be realised?
19614How could we be happy together when we are both so ignorant?
19614How had he taken it?
19614How many Sisters were there then already?
19614How many versts?
19614How was I to discover Nikitin again?
19614However...."Truly it''s not far?"
19614I called again:"Who''s there?"
19614I do n''t want you, do you hear?...
19614I remembered that I repeated stupidly, again and again:"What?
19614I turned, looked back, and for my very life could not hold myself from calling out:"Who''s there?"
19614I want them to like him but how can they when he wo n''t talk to them and runs away if they come near him?
19614I was going into battle, was I?
19614I was not sure of several things in the room and as I lay there I said to myself,"Is that really a looking- glass or no?"
19614I was to have to- night the supreme experience of my life?
19614I wonder whether Nikitin sees it still in his visions?
19614If Semyonov were to be here and I not.... And yet what was it that I wanted?
19614Is Andrey Vassilievitch right?
19614Is Semyonov right, or are Nikitin, Andrey Vassilievitch and I?...
19614Is it right to be so happy at such a time as this and in such a place?...
19614Is n''t it, Mr.?"
19614Is not that so?"
19614Is there any place in the globe hot and suffocating quite as this Forest is?
19614It is n''t what he expected to find it, but then is n''t that the same for all of us?
19614It was difficult for him, of course, but what did he expect the girl to do?
19614It''s a lovely evening-- only thirty versts.... Will you wait and come with me?"
19614It''s getting late, is n''t it?
19614It''s not very good, his Russian, is it?
19614Ivan Andreievitch, do you know whether Mr. had friends or relations to whom we can write?"
19614Meanwhile... he hoped he might ask without offence... what was our Navy doing?
19614Might he speak to me sometimes about her?
19614Mr.''s clever, are n''t you, Mr.?
19614Must it not be hard, when before we have not been able to be silent about women and vodka, to be silent now about the dearest wish of our heart?
19614Nevertheless how are we to be assured that these others, Anna Petrovna, Sister K----, Goga, the Doctors had not their own secret view?
19614Nikitin and Semyonov or Andrey and Trenchard?
19614Nikitin, splendid on his horse, shouted to Semyonov:"What of Mr.?
19614No English girl would, would she?
19614No anxiety?"
19614No,_ durak_, under the knee there.... Where''s the lint?...
19614Not very much, but enough?...
19614Now is n''t that_ all_ incredible after the day that I''ve had?
19614Once he said abruptly:"They''ll give me... wo n''t they... work to do?
19614Petrogradsky Otriad?
19614Semyonov?...
19614Shall I ever know a more beautiful night?
19614Shall I feel fear or no?
19614She cried to him:"Well, what''s the truth?
19614She was busied over some piece of luggage, and half- turned her head, smiling at him:"Ah, do go, John-- yes?
19614So how should you know if I do not?
19614Something definite that you could meet and say to yourself:''There, Andrey Vassilievitch, you''re not frightened of_ that_, are you?
19614Sometimes she used a word in its wrong sense; she had one or two charming little phrases of her own:"What a purpose to?"
19614Sometimes, getting out of bed, he would cry:"Have you heard the latest scandal?
19614That is n''t a very English thing to have said, is it?"
19614That you, Ivan Leontievitch?
19614Then Marie Ivanovna''s voice:"I''ve finished this, Alexei Petrovitch.... That''s all, is n''t it?"
19614Then at last he said:"Suppose we play for it?"
19614Then he added, quite without apparent connexion,"Well, you''re more at home amongst us all now, are n''t you?"
19614Then in Truxe, at Garth, at Rasselas, at Clinton-- but why should I bother you with all this?
19614Then quite suddenly Trenchard said to me:"Did she say anything before she died?"
19614Then, as though he had waked from sleep, he said to me, his voice trembling a little:"Am I talking queerly, Durward?
19614Then, if you do n''t mind, I would like you to wait until dusk when we shall go out to fetch the wounded.... Is that clear?"
19614There was General Polinoff and the whole Staff.... What to do?
19614There was a pause, then he said:"Where is everything?"
19614There was the yard, the bandaging- room, the long faded wall of the house, the barn, but where?
19614There where the road turns?"
19614They''ll give me a chance, wo n''t they?
19614This is really war, is n''t it, being so uncomfortable as this?
19614Trenchard and Semyonov... does it mean anything to them, where they now are?
19614Trenchard?"
19614Was Molozov, the head of the Otriad, an agreeable man?
19614Was he kind, or would he be angry about simply nothing?
19614Was it only weariness the other night?
19614Was it pain?
19614Was it terror?
19614Was it that?
19614Was it this?
19614Was she his key?
19614Was this"romantic war?"
19614We are doing what we can to prevent them, but what can we do?
19614We have to retreat to- day, but who knows what will happen to- morrow?
19614We would defeat him?
19614Well, that''s the Alliance in very truth... yes.... How''s London, gentlemen?
19614Well, what about the Second''Rota''?
19614Were the officers of the Ninth Army pleasant to us?
19614Were they also summoning some figure?
19614Were they"sympathetic"?
19614What a purpose not to say if he wants something?"
19614What am I to do after all this?
19614What are we both to do?
19614What business is it of theirs?
19614What can he do with us?"
19614What can you do?...
19614What can you expect from a country like Russia?
19614What could I do all at once?
19614What could have happened?
19614What could we understand of war when we might, if we pleased, return home at any moment?
19614What defeat to his proud spirit was working now in him?
19614What did he come for?"
19614What did he expect to see?
19614What did we want here now?"
19614What do I feel?
19614What do you advise?"
19614What do you make of it??
19614What do you make of it??
19614What do you say to every house in your village at home like that?
19614What do you say?..."
19614What do you think, Durward?"
19614What does_ that_ matter?
19614What else is there?
19614What fierce determination to secure even now his ends?
19614What had occurred since that night in the train, when I had felt, during the greater part of the time, nothing but irritation?
19614What have I done to Semyonov that he should hate me?
19614What have they done, leaving you?
19614What is it now beside the wonder as to whether I have lost her after all, the consciousness of pursuit, the longing to_ know_?...
19614What is there to be frightened of?...
19614What is there to defend?
19614What longing?
19614What regiment?
19614What should we find when we met him?...
19614What sort of a time?..."
19614What was I to do?
19614What was it?
19614What was the use of coming with so few?
19614What was there I could have said?
19614What was there, in those days in Petrograd, that could blind me?"
19614What was to be the issue of all of it?
19614What will happen when I meet it?
19614What would he do?
19614What would my soul do then?
19614What would she make of him?
19614What''s it wet for?
19614What''s that-- bullet or shrapnel?...
19614What, after all, was he doing here?
19614What-- afterwards-- when you saw her-- what?
19614What_ could_ we say?
19614When?
19614Where are the scissors?...
19614Where do the things join?
19614Where to?
19614Where was the other doctor, some one or other who ought to have relieved him?"
19614Where''s all your army we heard so much about?"
19614Where?
19614Who can say?
19614Who can tell what that may mean?
19614Who is it next?"
19614Who is there now in England?"
19614Who would bandage and who would feed the villagers and who would bathe the soldiers?
19614Who would be taken and who left?
19614Who''s that?...
19614Who?
19614Why am I so happy?"...
19614Why ca n''t he be agreeable to every one?
19614Why ca n''t you say at once that you have n''t made up your mind about him-- because that''s the truth, is n''t it?
19614Why could he not keep quiet?
19614Why did I love her?
19614Why need I be shy now about her?
19614Why should I hesitate, under the fear of my own later timidity, of saying exactly now what I feel?
19614Why should I not give it you?
19614Why should he laugh always?
19614Why should they be?
19614Why should we be?
19614Why was it wet, indeed?
19614Why was the doctor so happy and the little canon so unhappy, the doctor so successful, the canon so unsuccessful?
19614Why were n''t our submarines as active as the German submarines?
19614Why, why, why had she engaged herself to him?
19614Will you come?"
19614Will you understand me?
19614With this mad earthquake of a catastrophe?
19614Would it be better perhaps if another were here?"
19614Would she not, in a week, be irritated by his incapacity?
19614Would there be plenty of work, and would we_ really_ see things?
19614Would we be close to the Front?
19614Wounded, do you think?"
19614You believe, I suppose, that she is with us here in the room?"
19614You blame me for her death?"
19614You do n''t understand Russia, do you?
19614You knew him before?"
19614You know Vladimir Stepanovitch?
19614You remember that morning before S----?"
19614You''re curious and sympathetic, inquisitive and, perhaps, a little sentimental about it.... Am I right?"
19614You''re under fire.... Red Cross?
19614Your friend speaks Russian?
19614_ Bojà © moi_, ca n''t you get your arm under?
19614_ Had_ I?
19614_ Where''s_ the permanent thing in us that goes on whatever life may do to us?
19614and_ bulki_( white bread) and sausage?"
19614bullet or shrapnel?"
19614he seemed to say,"of helping these poor wounded soldiers when Russia is in such a desperate condition?
19614instead of:"Why?"
19614the familiar patient faces of the soldiers, sitting up, waiting for their turn, the familiar sharp voice of the sanitar:"What Division?
19614what a night that was-- shall I ever forget it?
19614what?
19614what?"
19614what_ polk_?"
19614where?...
19614you''re going down to the_ Vengerovsky Polk_?
28476).--Is not this what we term a garden engine?
28476610.?
28476And if so, what is its history?
28476Are there not numerous instances elsewhere in which this example might be copied with propriety?
28476Can any of your correspondents throw a light upon the subject?
28476Dr. Harwood of Lichfield, author of a History of that city, and other works, died?
28476From all this, is it too much to conclude that_ ea- land_ is the same as_ eye- land_?
28476Has it ever been engraved?
28476Have any of your correspondents met with it?
28476How can the expressions I have Italicised be reconciled with the creation of the Archiepiscopal See of Westminster?
28476In what publication can the description of this fête, or fair, be found?
28476Is anything farther to be met with on this curious subject?
28476Is not the bell- tower at Hackney detached from the church?
28476Is this piece one of rarity and value?
28476Its origin is involved in obscurity: but may it not be a corruption of the Latin_ ambages_, or the singular ablative_ ambage_?
28476May I ask if he is aware of the three very fine large paintings in the Church of St. Mary, Redcliffe, Bristol?
28476May I ask the value of the following?
28476May I inquire at what time, and under what circumstances, blue was substituted for the old favourite green?
28476May not Bale( or_ Baal_, according to Pits) be suspected to have been the composer of the Bonnerian Preface?
28476Query: Can it be from the Latin_ pluma_?
28476The first settlers of Marshfield having been Englishmen, may I ask if this custom ever did, or does now, exist in the mother country?
28476What is the origin of the word?
28476What more natural term, then, to apply to a spot of land standing alone in the midst of an expanse of water than an_ eye_ of land?
28476What was the nature of it?
28476Where is this portrait?
28476Who first thought of table- turning?
28476With these examples, and many more like them, before us, why should we ignore an_ eye_ of land as unlikely to be the original of our word_ island_?
28476_ Lord Byron._--What relation to the poet was the Lord Byron mentioned in the_ Apology for the Life of George Ann Bellamy_?
28476_ Scotch Newspapers,& c._--What are the earliest publications of Scotland giving an account of the current events of that kingdom?
28476and whence has it suddenly risen to celebrity?
28476point out examples of such misapplication?
20727A ship means something to you?
20727And Conn Maxwell, I suppose, will be an influential non- office- holding stockholder?
20727And if we do n''t, how long do you think civilization will last here, if it blows up all over the rest of the Federation?
20727And what am I, if it''s a fair question?
20727And what''ll you do for supervisors?
20727And who is this with you?
20727And you talked to him?
20727Anse, you remember those scows we saw, in the big room before we came to the broad passage? 20727 Anything been done to that normal- space job we started since I saw it last?
20727Are any of the officers of the_ Andromeda_ where you can contact them? 20727 Are n''t you coming, Colonel?"
20727Are they completely crazy?
20727Are you going nuts, too?
20727Are you going to come along, Conn?
20727Arms? 20727 Blew the whole place up, did n''t you?"
20727But do n''t you think Merlin''s important?
20727But has n''t it ever occurred to you or your dad that this fellow that calls himself Leibert might be mixed up with the gang that did that?
20727But it''s still here on Poictesme, is n''t it?
20727But what,Conn asked,"are the sane people doing?"
20727Ca n''t some of you get things started again?
20727Conn, I know this Lucas is going to marry your sister,he began,"but how much do you know about him?"
20727Conn, can you come back here to Poictesme for a while?
20727Conn, do you really believe there is a... that thing?
20727Conn, from what you''ve learned of computers generally, how big would Merlin have to be?
20727Conn, what did you find out?
20727Conn, when Flora comes home, you wo n''t argue with her, will you?
20727Could n''t they all have been fitted with Dillingham hyperdrive engines and used in the evacuation?
20727Did you hear from Anse?
20727Did you tell Flora?
20727Do n''t you? 20727 Do n''t you?"
20727Do you believe that?
20727Do you know where it is?
20727Do you really believe in it? 20727 Do you really know where it is, Conn?"
20727Dolf, what did your people find in the Library?
20727Ever hear the name Blackie Perales?
20727Excellent suggestion, Conn. Judge, will you preside?
20727Find out anything definite?
20727Flora''s not a True Believer, then?
20727Fred, how are you and Charley fixed for counter- missiles?
20727General Shanlee, would you describe General Foxx Travis as a man of honor and integrity? 20727 Good heavens, why?"
20727Good melon crop this year?
20727Great Ghu, are those all ships?
20727Great Ghu, are you beginning to think Merlin is the Devil, or Frankenstein''s Monster?
20727Had breakfast yet?
20727Ham, where are you? 20727 Has the jury reached a verdict?"
20727Have they found a ship?
20727Have you an extra viewscreen, fitted for recording?
20727Have you any real reason for thinking that Merlin might be on Koshchei?
20727Have you done anything with those audiovisuals of Leibert?
20727Have you people started on another hypership yet?
20727Have you questioned him yet?
20727Have you screened my father yet?
20727He certainly does n''t believe there is a Merlin, does he?
20727Here? 20727 Hey, what''s going on?"
20727How about arms? 20727 How about one of those hospitals?"
20727How are we going to get that stuff on a ship?
20727How are you fixed for arms on Koshchei?
20727How can we stop?
20727How close are you to digging that thing out?
20727How could that be Merlin? 20727 How did Flora come to meet him, anyhow?"
20727How did that happen, by the way?
20727How did you get in?
20727How long will it take?
20727How long''s he been like that, anyhow?
20727How many pirates are there here?
20727How much stock do I have, by the way?
20727How much will it cost us?
20727How the dickens did you wangle that?
20727How''d you get that?
20727How''s Mother taking things now?
20727Huh? 20727 I take it they are n''t friends of yours?"
20727If it was n''t for Conn Maxwell, you know where we''d be? 20727 If we send the_ Lester Dawes_ in, do you think you might talk them into letting you come out here?"
20727Is anything anything else? 20727 Is that Merlin up there, or is n''t it?"
20727Is that so, now? 20727 Is there anything you want in the meantime?"
20727Jerry still inside? 20727 Just how much prize- money do you think you''re entitled to for this wreck?"
20727Labor trouble?
20727Let Merlin put itself on trial, and sentence itself to destruction?
20727Lorenzo, what are you going to be paying for wine?
20727Made on Terra? 20727 May I use your screen, Kurt?"
20727Me? 20727 Meeting?"
20727Merlin predicted that?
20727Mr. Mayor, do you think you could set up some kind of a public- works program here in Litchfield? 20727 Need help?
20727No more Federation?
20727Noncombatants and all?
20727Nothing, Conn?
20727Now what did you do?
20727Now, what are you going to do with it?
20727Of the_ Harriet Barne_?
20727Pirates?
20727Regiment? 20727 Rod, you''re not leaving are you?"
20727See that little pink spot over there? 20727 She looks a little ragged now, but--""You helped these pirates do this to her?"
20727Still think it''s worth the price, son?
20727Tell them the truth? 20727 That a motion?
20727That gang up in Fawzi''s office? 20727 That was in''51, was n''t it?
20727The System States Alliance to business again?
20727Then why did he act the way he did at the meeting? 20727 Then why in blazes did n''t he screen us about it?"
20727They did n''t pirate her, did they?
20727They did n''t take it away with them?
20727They let you out on bail?
20727They were looking for the plant that fabricated the elements for Merlin, were n''t they?
20727They would n''t do it, would they?
20727They''re giving her to us, are n''t they?
20727Think I ought to go to her?
20727This computation on the future of the Federation is still in the back- work file?
20727This our stuff?
20727Two weeks? 20727 Well how do you explain the absence, after forty years, of any mention, in any history of the War, of Merlin?
20727Well, are we going to make the whole trip in free fall?
20727Well, could you get one down that hole?
20727Well, do you think it would be a good thing to find it?
20727Well, great Ghu; is n''t the Government doing anything about it?
20727Well, how about engineering and construction equipment? 20727 Well, how did you get up here?"
20727Well, she could n''t blame it on herself, could she? 20727 Well, what''ll I do with them when the fighting starts?
20727Well, where do these outlaws and pirates who are looting whole towns come from?
20727Well? 20727 Were n''t you, General Shanlee?"
20727What are you?
20727What did he tell you?
20727What do I do with these people, anyhow?
20727What do we do about it?
20727What do you expect, with General Headquarters thirty parsecs from the fighting?
20727What do you mean, Conn?
20727What do you think''s going to happen when the Stock Exchange opens?
20727What happened?
20727What kind of a bomb?
20727What kind of a ship?
20727What meeting?
20727What will we call this company?
20727What''ll we call this company? 20727 What''s Mother''s attitude on Merlin?"
20727What''s been going on here in the last month?
20727What''s going on topside?
20727What''s going on?
20727What''s the dope on this statement that was on telecast a few minutes ago?
20727What''s this about the ship?
20727What? 20727 When are you going to get the ship finished?"
20727When''ll we have our wedding, Sylvie?
20727Where are you going to sell that stuff?
20727Where did you dig it?
20727Where did you dig it?
20727Where do you suppose it is?
20727Where is he, Sis?
20727Where would you get a mind- probe?
20727Where''s your father?
20727Where?
20727Who are you?
20727Who is this Blackie Perales? 20727 Who is this Leibert?"
20727Who showed you where Force Command was?
20727Who the blazes are they?
20727Who''s going to be in this company?
20727Who''s going to be the president of this new company?
20727Who''s she belong to?
20727Why are you certain it does n''t?
20727Why did n''t I just grab a couple of pistols and shoot the lot of them?
20727Why did n''t they use Merlin to save the Federation?
20727Why did n''t you people blow Merlin up?
20727Why did n''t you tell them the truth, son?
20727Why did n''t you?
20727Why did the pirates bother with them?
20727Why did you lie to Kurt Fawzi and the others and tell them there was a Merlin? 20727 Why do n''t you join us, Conn?"
20727Why do n''t you steer them onto Wade Lucas?
20727Why has n''t your father gotten those detectives of his to work on this fake preacher?
20727Why not?
20727Why?
20727Worse than it is now, you mean? 20727 Would you mind letting me have one of those?"
20727Would you take the chair, Judge Ledue?
20727Yash''m?
20727You admit you could n''t learn anything about this so- called Merlin, but you''re still certain it exists?
20727You did find out where Merlin is, did n''t you?
20727You did n''t have a gun, did you, Conn?
20727You do n''t anticipate any trouble about getting the charter?
20727You do n''t mean to tell me you believe in that thing?
20727You do n''t want to bother coming out to the dig with me this morning, do you?
20727You getting it, Klem?
20727You have n''t found any passage leading into it?
20727You heard about the_ Harriet Barne_, did n''t you?
20727You heard me talk about the stuff I found out on Terra? 20727 You know the old Tenth Army Headquarters, over back of Snagtooth, in the Calders?
20727You know this hyperspace freighter, the_ Andromeda_? 20727 You know what I think?"
20727You know what a mind- probe is? 20727 You know what happened?"
20727You know what it''ll cost? 20727 You know what that gang who took the_ Andromeda_ to Panurge found?"
20727You know where I''d have put it?
20727You know why these people here at Storisende are rioting? 20727 You mean she''s in danger?"
20727You mean there''s another place like this?
20727You mean with the farm- tramps? 20727 You mean you categorically state that that computer actually exists?"
20727You mean you''d litigate about this?
20727You mean, ask Merlin to tell us whether it ought to be destroyed or not?
20727You mean, you''re going to have Merlin judge itself and decide its own fate?
20727You still think this is worth what it''s costing us?
20727You suspect him, too?
20727You telling me?
20727You think he''s lying? 20727 You think it would be all right with Mother and Flora if Sylvie stayed with us?"
20727You think it would make all that trouble?
20727You think so?
20727You think we really need that, Rod?
20727You want to do that, Conn?
20727You willing to leave it up to Merlin, Kurt?
20727You''re Captain Nichols?
20727You''re sure of it?
20727_ Huh?_Lucas was startled.
20727After all, he should know what it was; was n''t that why he''d gone to school on Terra?
20727And are you sure this thing you''ve found is Merlin?"
20727And do you know what a fifteen- cc liqueur glass of Poictesme brandy sells for on Terra?
20727And is there anything about those mining machines or the cutter that would be damaged by space- radiation or re- entry heat?"
20727And what does he do here?
20727And who does he get engaged to?
20727And would you so describe yourself?"
20727And you know how it was to be fired?
20727Another one?"
20727Are you coming here?"
20727Are you still alive?"
20727But Merlin''s just a big fake, is n''t it?
20727But does n''t he believe in Merlin?"
20727But how soon are you going to get that ship built?"
20727But look here; you''re not going to let these people waste time looking for this alleged computer, this thing they call Merlin, are you?"
20727By the way, has she a name?"
20727Can you find engines for it?
20727Captain Poole, will you please make ready aboard your ship?
20727Conn took advantage of the pause to ask,"Why do you want to find Merlin?"
20727Conn, did you see all that engineering equipment, down on the bottom level?"
20727Conn, is my father going back to Koshchei?"
20727Conn, would you please repeat what you told us?
20727Did you think that if you got them started on that it would take their minds off Merlin?"
20727Do you know a good supply depot or something like that, say over on Acaire, or on the west coast?
20727Do you?"
20727Ever since Dad and I came to Poictesme, I''ve been hearing about it, but it''s just a story, is n''t it?"
20727Finally, somebody from the long table interrupted:"Well, Conn; how about Merlin?
20727From the radio, his father was asking:"Can you see it, yet?"
20727General, will you explain things till I get back?
20727Have you cleaned the bloody murderers out?"
20727He laughed, and said,''Great Ghu, is that thing still around?
20727Here, will you sit here?"
20727How are we fixed for blasting explosives?"
20727How are you going to get it started?"
20727How big would you say it is?
20727How do you get around it?"
20727How do you get around that?"
20727How do you think they fought a war around a perimeter of close to a thousand light- years?
20727How many men and vehicles does Klem have for defense?
20727How much do you think a settler on Hoth or Malebolge or Irminsul would pay for a good rifle and a thousand rounds?
20727How soon can you attack?
20727How soon can you get your ships in?"
20727How would that be?"
20727I do n''t suppose it''s advisable to send any more ships in to Storisende for a while?
20727I wonder what the next one''s going to look like-- a flying sky- scraper?"
20727If anybody from the press calls you, what are you going to tell them?"
20727In his place, would you have done that?
20727Is anything wrong?"
20727Is n''t that true, General?"
20727Is that it?"
20727Is there anything else to discuss, or do I hear a motion to adjourn?"
20727Is there no Great Computer?"
20727It''s a machine, is n''t it?
20727Just what are you going to do, after you get it organized?"
20727Know anything about him?"
20727M M), 1120 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10036"Is there really a Merlin?"
20727Merlin Rediscovery, Ltd?"
20727More than ten miles in radius?"
20727Not many passengers left aboard, are there?"
20727Now would n''t you?"
20727Now, why did n''t they export this tobacco?
20727Oh, you mean why the fight?
20727Oh; you remember how I insisted on absolute secrecy about our Merlin objective?
20727Remember those big wire baskets, down at the mass- energy converters?
20727Remember what I told you about the older and wiser heads?
20727Remember?"
20727Say I chuck one out to him; what would he do?"
20727Sylvie, do you want to come with us?"
20727Tell me, are they having labor trouble now?"
20727That''s why they all chipped in to send me to school on Terra; remember?"
20727The Armageddonists and the Cybernarchists and Human Supremacy bought all you had on hand?"
20727The only thing Conn could distinguish was Leibert''s-- Shanlee''s-- voice, screaming:"Can it be a lie?
20727The snooper''s all right, is n''t it?"
20727Then he and Flora got acquainted...."She asked, anxiously:"What did you think of him, Conn?"
20727There never was anything called Project Merlin....""Hah, who''s a liar now?"
20727There''ll be an election about this time next year, wo n''t there?"
20727They would n''t really?"
20727This company your father''s talking about organizing?"
20727Want to bet that I wo n''t be the working girl''s Joan of Arc by this time next week?"
20727We came here to fix things up and start them, did n''t we?"
20727We have a Federation Supreme Court ruling--""What''s legality to the Federation?"
20727We have no right to take it away from them, have we?"
20727We soldiered together on Barathrum; remember?"
20727We want her for a cargo ship, do n''t we?"
20727What are we going to tell them?
20727What can you do where you are?"
20727What did you tell them?"
20727What did you turn on?
20727What do you think I went to Terra to study robotics for?"
20727What do you think all this is about?"
20727What do you want me to do?"
20727What is a bedbug, anyhow?"
20727What kind of armament?"
20727What kind?"
20727What''s happened, has Carl Leibert had another revelation?"
20727What''s the matter with the radio in here?
20727What''s wrong?
20727When Anse turned and climbed into the jeep, he asked Yves Jacquemont:"Why does this Perales want an interplanetary ship?"
20727When did you last see an Air Patrol boat around here, or even a Constabulary trooper?
20727Where are you, and how is everything?"
20727Where''s the Colonel?"
20727Who''s city engineer now?"
20727Why could n''t they grow tobacco like this on Terra?
20727Why do you need the full- time services of the biggest private detective agency on Poictesme?"
20727Why should I repeat his lies and discourage everybody that much more?
20727Why would he lie to me?"
20727Why?
20727You all right?"
20727You heard about the robo- bomb somebody launched at us the day we brought the ships in, did n''t you?"
20727You know anything about this stuff?"
20727You know those old ships on Mothball Row, back of the old West End ship docks at Storisende?"
20727You know what it was like here, just before the War?
20727You know what you''ve done?"
20727You need a whole regiment?"
20727You remember the old Force Command Headquarters, the one the Planetary Government took over?
20727You think that little thing could be Merlin?"
20727You think this is going to be worth a price like that?"
20727You were just plain indecent, yesterday.... You know Fred Karski, do n''t you?"
20727You''re about ten miles south of that?
20727You''re going to be at the meeting at the Academy this afternoon, are n''t you?"
20727You''re using it to make these people do something they would n''t do for themselves, are n''t you?"
20727_ The fountains are dusty in the Graveyard of Dreams; The hinges are rusty, they swing with tiny screams._ Was Poictesme a Graveyard of Dreams?
29820How many have really noticed that none of the diagrams, which show the ground- plan of this cathedral, indicate the existence of any transepts?
29820What, say you, can we praise?
29820Who thinks to- day of Coutances as of being a"cathedral town?"
22720About what? 22720 About what?"
22720And now, what about this person Botkine?
22720And pray what is that, Father?
22720And probably the colonel has never yet seen this typewritten document?
22720And that is-- what?
22720And the Bishop Teofan? 22720 And the Procurator?"
22720And the price?
22720And then?
22720And who is this Mademoiselle Pauline?
22720And will you go?
22720And you are His Majesty''s valet, eh?
22720And you arrested him?
22720And you think you can obtain it for me?
22720And you will call at half- past nine to- night, eh?
22720Are you Herr Koster?
22720Are you absolutely confident of that?
22720Are you not better rid of her, my friend? 22720 Are you quite certain of all this?"
22720As a decoy, you mean?
22720As spy of Kokovtsov-- eh?
22720Bagrov?
22720But what can I do if he suspects me? 22720 But what can I do to avoid the scandal?"
22720But why all this mystery? 22720 But you wo n''t do that?"
22720Can I be of service, Father, before you have audience?
22720Can he suspect, do you think, Féodor?
22720Can not this man Mac-- an Englishman, I suppose-- be suppressed?
22720Can you suggest any way? 22720 Canst thou not place thy trust in those I recommend?
22720Did I not say that I had been doing some good business, Gregory?
22720Did he not inquire?
22720Did he openly say that?
22720Do n''t you agree, friend Rouchine?
22720Do you really think so?
22720Does Klouieff know?
22720Does she wish to enter our circle?
22720Forgive-- why?
22720Has Her Majesty spoken to you concerning her fears that Stolypin has discovered something?
22720Has the girl Nada Tsourikoff failed us, then?
22720Have you anything to report?
22720Have you brought me here to Berlin to reprimand me? 22720 Have you forgotten the Meadows affair, and how they betrayed me and very nearly caused a scandal by their bungling?
22720Have you put it to Protopopoff?
22720He, of course, denies it?
22720Her devotion is that of a fanatic-- I take it?
22720His Majesty the Tsar permits the presence of my secretary, therefore why should your Emperor object? 22720 How can I prevent it?"
22720How can I tell? 22720 How can I?
22720How can he?
22720How do you propose to infect it?
22720How do you wish me to act towards him?
22720How?
22720I suppose we had better pretend to do something-- eh, Peter?
22720I understood from your report to Steinhauer that you were arranging that the Tsar should hush up the inquiry?
22720I? 22720 Is he guilty of murder?"
22720Is it her doing?
22720Is she worth troubling about?
22720Is that what is intended?
22720It is a little present for somebody, eh?
22720Mademoiselle wishes for money-- eh?
22720My dear husband----"Well, what of your husband?
22720Of what is he in fear?
22720Of what other use is a woman?
22720One that, I take it, must be removed?
22720Our Father will apparently take no notice of her save to glance into her face, for why should he recognise in her the Empress?
22720Refusal-- how can I refuse my Empress?
22720Scent?
22720Shall we drop our conversation when she returns?
22720So you are a friend of His Excellency-- when he was Governor of Samara, I suppose?
22720Surely it is not wise that thou shouldst be known to have granted favour unto a traitor?
22720Surely, Féodor, you are not hesitating to perform this service for the Fatherland? 22720 The Perfume of Death?"
22720The dancer was a friend of yours, eh? 22720 The great banker, eh?"
22720Then Stolypin may know that Alexandra Feodorovna is behind the traitorous dealings of Colonel Miassoyedeff on the frontier-- eh?
22720Then how shall we get it?
22720Then it is in the papers-- eh?
22720Then the fellow really intends evil?
22720Then there will be a court- martial?
22720Then this money- bag has really formed an influential syndicate in London to exploit our country-- eh?
22720Then why should I trouble to see her?
22720Then you believe that Germany is at work actively arming in preparation for war?
22720Then you denounce Yakowleff as a traitor-- eh?
22720Then you do not trust the woman?
22720Then you think that war is really coming?
22720There is an agent of yours in Berlin named Ostrovski, is there not?
22720They are doomed cities, eh?
22720Thy name?
22720Well, my friend Hardt?
22720Well, that difficulty can be overcome, surely?
22720Well,said the monk,"what do you wish me to do?"
22720Well?
22720Well?
22720What are the views of Alexandra Feodorovna?
22720What do you desire of me, my dear young lady?
22720What do you mean, Father? 22720 What do you mean?"
22720What do you suggest?
22720What does he want?
22720What does this mean, woman?
22720What else does she say?
22720What else?
22720What harm can come to him when, being sent to us by God, he is immune from any harm that can befall us who are merely human? 22720 What has happened?
22720What has happened?
22720What has really happened in Vilna?
22720What is that woman saying?
22720What is that you have there?
22720What means?
22720What?
22720What?
22720What?
22720When didst thou see the Virgin?
22720When do you leave?
22720When does Yakowleff return from Paris?
22720When will the Holy Father''s pilgrimage end?
22720Whence do you come?
22720Where is he?
22720Who is Heckel?
22720Who is he?
22720Who is obnoxious?
22720Who is this person Alexander Klouieff?
22720Why allow these revolutionary deputies to criticise thy policy and undermine thy popularity with the nation? 22720 Why did you arrive at the Frantsiya and await the coming of the two ladies?"
22720Why do you still hesitate?
22720Why do you suspect?
22720Why does he require your influence?
22720Why should this woman make such charges?
22720Why should you speak to me like this?
22720Why?
22720Why?
22720Why?
22720Will you please take a confidential message to Boris Stürmer for me?
22720Would not such a course be deeply patriotic? 22720 Yes, but how?"
22720Yes-- and what did he say?
22720You denounce him-- eh?
22720You have a letter for me, I believe, Father, from the Minister Protopopoff, have you not?
22720You have already received instructions through another channel?
22720You know little Xenie, who married the Councillor of State, Kalatcheff, last year? 22720 You know me-- Madame Svetchine-- eh?"
22720You will call here at noon, eh?
22720You will let me see him-- won''t you?
22720You wish for something? 22720 You wish me to write out the order now-- eh?"
22720You wish to close his mouth-- eh?
22720Your husband does not know that spy? 22720 A minute later the man Aivasoff straightened himself and, pointing to a door on the opposite side of the room, asked:Are you both ready?
22720And as far as I can discern the swifter Stolypin leaves the Court, the easier it will be for Her Majesty and ourselves-- eh?
22720And pray why not?
22720And----""But the woman-- Isembourg, I believe you say-- she is a friend of his, eh?"
22720Answer me?"
22720Are we not returning to the days when political prisoners were walled up alive?
22720Are we not, all of us, his best friends?"
22720Are you patriots?
22720Are you really blind?"
22720Besides, was it not part of his clever plan to place the Empress beneath his influence by bringing her to the brink of despair?
22720Besides, when we do strike we must not blunder-- eh, General?"
22720But a pretty woman, Féodor-- very pretty woman, eh?
22720But how big were the results of their half- century of labour?
22720But on no account must he return to Russia before going to Japan-- you understand?
22720But ought not we to know what is in progress in London-- eh?
22720But what had Rasputin decided should be the fate of the latter?
22720But you do confess to me, and surely you can trust me, a servant of Heaven, with your secret?
22720But,"he added suddenly, after a pause,"is it not time, Féodor, that I saw another vision?"
22720Can not I have the names of those of the Church who are seeking my downfall?
22720Can not he be advanced?"
22720Can not you see that Stolypin is violently anti- German and openly disapproves of the Germanophile party at Court?"
22720Did he not promise to use the tube?"
22720Did not the"saint"eat at the Emperor''s table, and did he not prompt His Majesty in fighting the Germans?
22720Did you notice them?"
22720Do n''t you know?
22720Do you happen to know if there is any truth in this rumour?"
22720Do you now understand?"
22720Dost thou know that, with thy Rasputin fellows, thou art going to thy doom, that thou art gambling away thy throne and the life of thy child?''"
22720Had the attempt been successful?
22720Have you any firearms?"
22720Have you heard them?"
22720He knows that you are a''disciple,''I suppose?"
22720He visits your house-- what more easy-- than----""Than what?"
22720How can you help me?
22720How do we not know that the girl Bauer purposely removed the valet in place of his master?
22720How fortunate, eh?"
22720How shall I describe Rasputin?
22720How?"
22720I do not know them?"
22720I see, madame, that you are an enemy-- eh?"
22720If not, there might very easily have resulted a serious contretemps-- eh?"
22720If so, could she not invite him to take tea with her-- and then?"
22720In a moment Rasputin, recognising him, locked the door and, turning quickly, asked in Russian:"Well, how do things go?
22720Is it any wonder therefore that I accepted it, little knowing in those days of peace that I was a pawn in the great game of the Hun?
22720Is it, then, any wonder that Holy Russia has fallen?
22720Is not Protopopoff continuous in his declaration that the Church is against me?
22720Is not that so?"
22720Is that true?"
22720It failed her at the last moment-- or----""Or what?"
22720It is well that we know this, my dear Rogogin-- eh?"
22720May Féodor invite her in?
22720Miliukoff, in his speech, said, regarding Manuiloff''s liberation:"Why was this gentleman arrested?
22720Now do you understand?"
22720Now tell me,"he added,"how is Stürmer?
22720Now, what can you gain by endeavouring to belittle the efforts of our dear Father for the salvation of Russia?
22720One telegram from Alexandra Feodorovna read as follows:"Father and Protector of our House, why do you refuse to come and give us comfort?
22720Or would they consider that having served their purpose it would be to their advantage if my lips were closed?
22720Perhaps a sister- disciple?"
22720Shall we get Protopopoff to send instructions to his agents in England?"
22720She is one of your''sisters,''is she not?"
22720Suddenly he turned to Rasputin and asked:"Well Father, what do you understand in all this?"
22720Surely he is not a traitor?"
22720Surely it is but just to myself if thou wouldst furnish them to me?
22720The Police Director, after a few minutes''silence, asked:"Has he sold the documents in question?"
22720Then I may hope for your pity and indulgence, eh?"
22720Then he may be arrested at any moment-- eh?"
22720These are the words I read for the delectation of the dissolute quartette:"HOLY FATHER,--Why have you not written?
22720These he handed to the monk, saying:"I will use your telephone, if I may?
22720Was it any wonder that it was already tottering preparatory to its fall?
22720We were agreed that he must be suppressed at all hazards, eh?"
22720Well, how goes it, eh?"
22720Well, what have you done?"
22720What can I do in order to induce you to come?
22720What can I do?
22720What could I reply?
22720What do you think has happened?"
22720What is the truth?"
22720What shall I reply to Berlin?
22720What then?"
22720What will he think of his wife''s betrayal when he knows of it?"
22720What will they say?"
22720What, I wonder, will be the fate of the English when he is able to send an army of invasion across the North Sea?"
22720When will he return?"
22720Where are your miraculous powers?
22720Who is he?"
22720Who is this enemy in a high position who is determined upon my arrest?"
22720Who knows?
22720Why are you here?"
22720Why didst thou refuse to come to us even though the Empress sent thee so many commands?"
22720Why do you not come to audience?"
22720Why does Bethmann- Hollweg want to be present, I wonder?"
22720Why not utilise her again?
22720Why not, as expiation of your sin, travel to Gothenburg and avenge those hundreds of poor people who were his victims at Obukhov?
22720Why should it be so?
22720Why should you not go, Féodor?"
22720Why this long dead silence when my poor heart is hourly yearning for news of you and for your words of comfort?
22720Why?
22720Why?"
22720Why?"
22720Would any of the conspiring trio, whose tool I had been, raise a finger to save me?
22720You are not suspected?"
22720You know what I mean-- eh?"
22720You understand-- eh?"
22720You want some documents introduced into the furrier''s house incriminating both him and his wife?"
22720You will be back here next Friday, and is it not wise to hold another séance next day, eh?"
22720_ Anything but that!_""Not for the sake of the one sent by God as saviour of our dear Russia?"
22720if they knew all that we know-- eh?
22720in how many cases, I wonder, was it used by the mock"saint"to stifle the truth and to sweep his enemies of both sexes from his path?
22720inquired the monk, adding with his usual avariciousness:"Has she money?"
22720surely he can have no apprehension?"
22720you will show mercy, wo n''t you?"
28455''Is this indeed true, foster- father?'' 28455 And our preaching, father?"
28455For what purpose have you come to France?
28455Will you give your faith and service, and receive from him gifts and honor?
28455Will you submit to King Charles?
28455''Art thou a son of Eric the Red, of Brattahlid?''
28455''But what is thy name?''
28455According to this, Charles, Goring, and a mysterious Comte de la Luze( Marshal Keith?
28455And the voice resumed:"Why, then, leavest thou God, who is both rich and the Master, to run after man, who is only the servant and the pauper?"
28455But as soon as he was fully awake the first clear thought that came into his head was:"Why am I lying here?
28455But who are you?
28455But, seeing a flash in the eyes of a young Macdonald, of Kinlochmoidart, Charles said,"You will not forsake me?"
28455By GERTRUDE VAN RENSSELAER WICKHAM( 1738- 1789) Was Ethan Allen a hero or a humbug?
28455Do you not see anything out of the common?''
28455Have I struck thee, brother, forgive it me?''
28455He sternly demanded how she had dared to oppose the power of Rome?
28455How came Marco Polo to be drawn so far into the vague and shadowy East?
28455How could he dream of the divine and superhuman powers that had descended upon her from a higher world?
28455How could he think otherwise than that his little girl was losing her senses?
28455How is it that you speak our tongue?"
28455How much does any boy or girl thoroughly know of any one thing at sixteen?
28455Is it a general to lead me?
28455Is it surprising, then, that she found it difficult to steer her course between the rocks of Scylla and the whirlpools of Charybdis?
28455Now, wilt thou hand me over to the Danes, or smash my head against the floor, as just now thou seemedest minded?"
28455Roland who loves thee so dear am I. Thou hast no quarrel with me to seek?''
28455The friend of Olivier is astonished, but soft and low he speaks to him thus:"''Hast thou done it, my comrade, wittingly?
28455The question is thus narrowed to the points, was he present at the battle, and did he then perform the deed commonly attributed to him?
28455Then Francis cried:"Ah, Lord; what willest Thou I should do?"
28455Then came other Cyclops running at the noise from their distant caves, and called to him,"Who has hurt thee, Polyphemus?"
28455There were also those trees which are called_ masur_( maples?).
28455To the young Umbrian, half asleep, the voice said:"Francis, which can do thee most good; the master or the servant, the rich one or the pauper?"
28455What am I waiting for?
28455What did he accomplish by all this?
28455What did it mean?
28455What manner of man, then, was this Columbus, with whose name the trump of fame has been busy so long?
28455Why should they not be jealous of him who came to take away their immemorial privilege?
28455Why should they not conspire to kill him and destroy his fleet?
28455Will you reject Him like His servants?"
28455a patriot or a pretender?
28455and where is he?
28455or till I am myself of riper age to command?
28455shouted Hasting, from afar,"what is your chieftain''s name?"
28455wherefore art thou here on earth?"
26924''But do they drown the girl babies now?'' 26924 ''But who usually kills the girl babies?''
26924''Do they bury it then?'' 26924 ''How many passengers have we on board?''
26924Ah, he was a soldier?
26924And that boyish American was----"Who?
26924And what are they protesting against?
26924And what do you think of that way? 26924 And what is Mr. Bear doing all that time?"
26924And what is that may I ask?
26924And you would not tell him their names?
26924Are they like our American Indians in looks, since their history is so much like them?
26924But how do you live yourselves; how are you training your children?
26924But there must have been some men to start it?
26924But what has that to do with us?
26924But why do they do it?
26924But why may we not sing''Rock of Ages''?
26924But you; you know better? 26924 Did he eat it himself?"
26924Did he really mean it?
26924Did the old man eat that one?
26924Did the old man, whom we had decided was more of an animal than a human being, eat that one?
26924Did they do it?
26924Did twenty millions of people all get together then, and plan?
26924Do they often indulge in that little friendly game with the Devil?
26924Do you know about the Independence Movement?
26924Do you know him?
26924Do you live in American fashion or Japanese fashion?
26924Do you see these needles?
26924Does he say so?
26924Even though your father married a Scotch woman?
26924Fear of what?
26924From whence did it spring?
26924Had they been tried?
26924Have they a history?
26924Have you a family?
26924Have you a mother?
26924Have you seen Korean kiddies with flags painted on their stomachs?
26924How could you stand it?
26924How did you feel?
26924How did you guess it, my friend?
26924How do they worship bears and kill them at the same time?
26924How long will they stay with us?
26924How many children?
26924How old are they?
26924How?
26924Is it getting better or worse?
26924Is n''t it just a sort of an appendix of China, after all? 26924 Is there no one who had charge of this movement from the beginning?"
26924My God man; you do n''t mean that they let the dogs eat their babies because they are afraid of the devil?
26924Now what are you going to do?
26924Now will you refrain from yelling''Mansei?''
26924One dog he a great, what you call him-- Coolie? 26924 Perhaps the good Christian God is lighting the fires for you?"
26924Perhaps? 26924 Sauci,"said he to her, recognizing her for an intelligent Korean girl,"why do not the Koreans like us?"
26924Since when was it begun?
26924So that''s what they''re waiting for; to undress us?
26924Sun''s got who, fool? 26924 The big dog say,''Little dog, for why you have your tail all bandaged up like that?
26924The old idea of a fear religion, a fear social life, a fear family life and a fear surgery prevails in Korea as it does in China?
26924Then what will your children do when they grow a bit older and go out on the streets and yell this cry?
26924There is what?
26924What are you doing in Japan?
26924What are you doing, my boy?
26924What did you do?
26924What do you mean?
26924What do you mean?
26924What do you most need?
26924What do you want?
26924What do you want?
26924What does Japan most need to learn?
26924What had happened?
26924What is his name?
26924What is it?
26924What is your occupation?
26924What kind are you looking for?
26924What was that for?
26924What would be the worst of it?
26924What would have happened if somebody in a fit of patriotism had shouted''Mansei''?
26924What''s the matter, Pop?
26924What? 26924 Where did you find them?"
26924Where is it that fear holds sway?
26924Who tells you to do these things; you students? 26924 Why are they making all this fuss over Shantung?"
26924Why are you leaving a good position and going to Java?
26924Why did he beat you?
26924Why did n''t you fire him?
26924Why do they kill girl babies?
26924Why do you not sit down and eat with us?
26924Why is that strange wall built in front of every household door and even before the Temples?
26924Why is that? 26924 Why should you not give them?"
26924Why will you not marry James?
26924Why?
26924Why?
26924Why?
26924Why?
26924Why?
26924Why?
26924Will I not get to meet her before I go?
26924Will there be any Japs in Heaven?
26924Will they get it?
26924You speak good English?
26924''Surely not the mother?''
26924Are you here again?
26924But why such a thought at this ungodly hour?
26924Can this scene be duplicated in Formosa and Korea, where the Japanese hold sway?
26924Despise the mother?
26924Do you not like that way better than the Korean way?"
26924Does that sound as if it might be China''s appendix?
26924Hate the Priest?
26924He did it in the following language as nearly as I can remember it:"I feel like a cartoon I see in your peculiar paper-- what you call him--_Puck_?
26924Her lover?"
26924I said to a high official of the Government,"Does that painting represent the way you Filipinos feel to- day?"
26924I said to him"Are things better or worse in Korea?"
26924I said to this missionary, who had just arrived from Korea,"Is it true that the cruelties have stopped in Korea?"
26924I took dinner in Shanghai with one of the foremost merchant princes of China and said,"Are you selling any Japanese- made goods?"
26924Mr. Choi said,''What do you want me to confess?
26924No-- he bin in that peculiar paper,_ Life_?
26924One Korean child said,"Do we have to put in that little group of islands east of the coast of China?"
26924Pug?
26924The missionary woman said to the Korean when the Jap ran;"Why do you not report this to the Japanese police?"
26924Then much to my astonishment this Kansas man turned to me, and said,"Did it ever occur to you that these fields of Shantung look just like Kansas?"
26924Was it something like our''button, button, whose got the button?''"
26924What a painting they would make?"
26924What about your children, when they take sick?"
26924Who but a group of insane foreigners would drop into a town at three o''clock in the morning with a blizzard blowing?
26924Who could pass up that group of a dozen little rascals who followed us through the ruins of the old Summer Palace?
26924Who could resist their imitations of everything one did?
26924Who teaches you to treat your Japanese teachers in that manner?"
26924You have an accident?''
26924You have been in an American School?"
26924_ Judge_?
26924asked the Japanese official,"Did the visitor tell you how to run your house?"
30257Was Champlain''s dream of the great city of Ludovica to come true after all?
30257What was to hinder them from bombarding Quebec?
30257With such a magnificent opportunity, why was the result so meagre?
28016But,said her friends,"suppose she dies?
28016Can a mosque be admired near Jews?
28016Might n''t he keep it there? 28016 Read?
28016She does n''t enjoy life now much, does she?
28016Who has eaten this?
28016Would she enjoy being with the Lord much more than living on like this?
28016A slave appeared once and said,"I have a mistress: she''s very old, is n''t she?"
28016After all, argues the Moor, who could wish to alter Morocco?
28016After all, who and what are to blame except the people themselves?
28016Almighty Potter, on whose wheel of blue The world is fashioned, and is broken too, Why to the race of men is heaven so dire?
28016And how is foreign labour to be had?
28016And who can wonder at it?
28016And who knows what lies at the bottom of those quiet pools?
28016And yet, how much does one know of them?
28016But why?
28016But would S`lam trouble to prevent that?
28016CHAPTER V Why curse?
28016Could S`lam possibly see?
28016Did it grumble to itself, that vessel of the more ungainly make?
28016Even then one would turn round at the door and say,"Then I am to eat this ointment?"
28016If it was water, why did S`lam keep it wrapped up, and why did Tahara think it was poison?
28016If told to be silent, they reply that they must talk to keep awake; for if they fell asleep, how could they guard?
28016In what, O wheel, have I offended you?
28016Is anything better, anything better?
28016Private matters are public property: the man in the street chats with the Minister of Finance-- for are not all men equal?
28016Query: have many artists been lost to the world in fourteen hundred years among a sect numbering a hundred millions?
28016The other wanderers in Tangier filter through the land from their own countries: who can tell why or wherefore?
28016Was it not certain to be shut when we wanted to return?
28016Was it to end in death or release?
28016Was there to be more rain?
28016What are the twelve uncomfortable days by sea to Jeddah?
28016What is time to an Arab?
28016What is, is good; why"civilize"and"progress"?
28016What shall we get for our money then?"
28016What was the use of reading?
28016Who can tell what a day may not bring forth?
28016Who could tell?
28016Who knows?
28016Why should he read?
28016Why should they give themselves the fatigue of walking?
28016Why should they strike out a line of their own, these"cattle"and"beasts of burden,"as they call themselves?
28016Why should they?
28016Why should we want to learn anything?"
28016Would the city gate still be open when we reached it?
28016Would we give him a sheet of paper and envelope?
28016cried the poor, discomfited loser;"did you not receive the mirror?"
28016did the Hand then of the Potter shake?
28016do you see any one coming?"
27881And is_ that_ all, Zelphine, and do n''t you think it about time that they should learn better; and who is the_ he_ in question, anyhow?
27881And pray who is this M. La Tour that you are all quoting? 27881 And what have we done to deserve such an opinion?"
27881And where did you come across them?
27881And why did Louis, the Father of his people, the good King Louis, imprison Ludovico all those years?
27881Are they crows''nests?
27881But how do they manage to sleep with the ghosts of all these good men who have been murdered here haunting the place at night?
27881Chenonceaux being Diane''s château and this her own room, what more natural than that her cipher should be here, as Rousseau says? 27881 Do n''t be_ too_ comforting, Walter, and why did n''t you tell me before that M. La Tour could not go with us to- morrow?"
27881Gentle Dauphin,she said to him one day,"Why do you not believe me?
27881How could I help asking him,this in Walter''s most persuasive tone,"when he has taken the trouble to come over here to dine with us?
27881How is Archie ever going to find out whether Lydia cares for him, Zelphine?
27881Pourquoi lui avez- vous coupé la gorge?
27881Then why have you added to Archie''s troubles by urging M. La Tour to go with us to- morrow?
27881Well, and even if she had been more than ordinarily nice to La Tour why do you trouble yourself about it, Zelphine? 27881 What became of her after Catherine turned her out of her château?"
27881What does it all mean?
27881What have we to do with St. Peter and his body? 27881 What is the little black- eyed woman talking about?"
27881Where the deuce does the fellow get them?
27881Why did you kill the Emperor Maximilian?
27881Why not tell him yourself, Zelphine? 27881 Why_ my_ friend?"
27881Yes, of course, how could I forget that evening? 27881 [ B]"And does he bring his family with him?"
27881And darest thou then To beard the lion in his den, The Douglas in his hall?
27881And hopest thou hence unscathed to go?
27881And what do you think that heartless Lydia said between her laughter and her sobs?
27881Angela immediately looked up trains and finding that the next train would be one hour too late for the boat, what do you think she did?
27881At first he looked perplexed and then indignantly turned to us for an explanation:"What ailed the lady, and why was she displeased?
27881Can you imagine anything more picturesque, or, as Miss Cassandra says, anything more unhealthy?
27881Did he kill the beasts with his big stick?"
27881Did you ever hear of anything so delicious?
27881Do n''t you think so yourself, Miss Cassandra?"
27881Do you remember how Angela and the Doctor trotted off to see the ruins at Exeter by moonlight?"
27881Do you remember what he said about having a tree planted over his grave?
27881Do you wonder that Lisa calls this a fairy journey?
27881Have you seen Chaumont, which she so unwillingly received in exchange?
27881I can hear you say,"Why not take them to Tours, for the French there?"
27881If her means were equal to her charitable intent, what would she not do for the benefit of mankind in all quarters of the globe?
27881It is quite evident that Brantôme''s eyes were bedazzled by the glitter of royalty, or was it the glitter of royal gold?
27881Not even when Miss Cassandra asked her favorite question in royal palaces,"How many in family?"
27881Now what is it to pass away, is it not to die, to vanish from the earth?"
27881Philippe is my name; why not Philippe?"
27881Polly has learned some English phrases from the numerous guests of the house, and cordially greets us with"Good- by"when we enter and"How do you do?"
27881Pourquoi avez- vous tué l''Empereur Maximilian?"
27881Walter calls it a piece of American effrontery, but I call it quickwitted, do n''t you?
27881We asked"Why?"
27881What did the good priest do when he landed on the island?
27881What do you think we have been doing this evening?
27881When she exclaimed with fervor,"Have you ever seen any one to be compared with the King?"
27881Why do many of the people, who do the châteaux so conscientiously, skip Angers?"
27881Why do n''t you and Mr. Leonard come too?"
27881You remember that her only reply was,''Is the King yet dead?''
27881no, we do n''t spoil sport; do we, Zelphine?"
26215''Was n''t it all romantic? 26215 Am I growed up?"
26215And Lloyd?
26215And give up all your good times at home?
26215And may Betty and I be bridesmaids?
26215And miss Katie Mallard''s pah''ty?
26215And the date down among the garlands is the queen''s birthday, is n''t it? 26215 And what do you think?
26215And where have I seen that man befoah?
26215And why did n''t she?
26215Are n''t you the one the freshmen are going to elect class editor for their page of the college paper?
26215Are you playing Santa Claus this early?
26215But is n''t she something to be afraid of when you break the rules?
26215But what is it about them-- there is such a startling resemblance?
26215Ca n''t you take us down an alley?
26215Could n''t I give Miss Bartlett this line where there''s nothing but G. M. scrawled on it?
26215Could n''t you make the sentence a little easier, doctor? 26215 Did n''t you know better than to put stove- blacking on that stove?
26215Do n''t you know that since you''re''growed up,''as Aunt Cindy says, she swears by you? 26215 Do n''t you know you had to weah little long- sleeved aprons when you came ovah to play with me, to keep yoahself clean?
26215Do n''t you remembah? 26215 Do n''t you remember how sore I made my arm, trying to tattoo an anchor on it with a darning- needle and clothes bluing?
26215Do n''t you remember the day that we went down to Mammy Easter''s cabin, and her old black grandmother was there, and told our fortunes? 26215 Do n''t you see?
26215Do you know his brothah Keith, too?
26215Do you know whether it''s true or not? 26215 Do you see that pergola stretching along the highest terrace?
26215Do you think that Lloyd really cares for your cousin?
26215Does n''t Gay play splendidly?
26215Does n''t it take every bit of pleasure out of your good times, thinking that you''ll have to write all about it afterward? 26215 Has she sent for Lloyd and Allison, too?"
26215Have n''t you been giving her anything, Dick? 26215 How long has it been since we used to ride this thing?
26215How much farthah is it?
26215How much longah will you make it? 26215 How shall we keep the King''s birthday?"
26215If just a piece of a day is so hah''d to drag through as this has been, how can I stand all the rest of the wintah?
26215In the conservatory?
26215Is she pretty?
26215Is that so, Lloyd?
26215Is that you, Lloyd?
26215Is there anything I can do for you befoah I go?
26215Kitty Walton,exclaimed Gay, as she bent over the grotesquely decorated programme,"where do you keep this book o''nights?
26215Kitty Walton,she exclaimed,"are n''t you_ glad_ that the old Lloydsboro Seminary burned down?
26215Little daughter, are you going to let that poor child of yours be imposed on by that creature?
26215May I ask what?
26215Misses''white shirt- waists?
26215Mothah, it is n''t so, is it? 26215 Now what could be jollier than this?"
26215Now where would you look if that cah''d were for you?
26215Oh, keep still, ca n''t you?
26215Oh, will they let you do things like that?
26215Oh, would you tell me about it?
26215Promised whom?
26215See? 26215 That big man?"
26215That''s something new, is n''t it? 26215 Then what''s the matter with your telling it to me?"
26215They make you forget the calendar, do n''t they?
26215This is Juliet''s Princess, is n''t it?
26215We think so, do n''t we, Juliet? 26215 Well, has it been a happy day for grandpa''s little Colonel?"
26215What are you smiling about, Betty, all to yoahself?
26215What can I do, mothah? 26215 What did she say about Betty?"
26215What do you suppose has happened?
26215What excursion are you talking about?
26215What gifts shall we bring? 26215 What if we ca n''t find anything to fit,"suggested Maud,"and it should take such a long time to alter them that we''d be too late to meet you?"
26215What is Madam Chartley herself like?
26215What is a Christmas hunt?
26215What kind of a performance is this one on the programme for to- night?
26215What makes you so quiet?
26215What new pose is this, you goose?
26215What on earth are you doing with that wagon- top ovah you?
26215What would you do if you were in my place?
26215What would you like to do?
26215What''s that?
26215What''s that?
26215What''s the matter with grandpa''s little girl?
26215What''s the matter, Kitty?
26215What''s the matter, child?
26215What''s the matter?
26215What''s the odds so long as you''re happy?
26215What''s the use?
26215What''s this?
26215What? 26215 What?"
26215When you have midnight feasts and pillow- case prowls and all that?
26215When?
26215Where does she live?
26215Where is she?
26215Where on earth did she ever meet him?
26215Where''s Ranald?
26215Where''s mothah, Mom Beck?
26215Who wrote''Little Rivers''?
26215Who''s this? 26215 Who?"
26215Whose initials are these?
26215Why ca n''t you come down here and make it in my kitchen?
26215Why could n''t it have happened to some girl who did n''t care?
26215Why do n''t people invite her out and give her a good time?
26215Why do n''t you go if you wish it so much?
26215Why not try facial expression? 26215 Why should Eugenia be sending me this?"
26215Why undah the sun have you saved this tea leaf?
26215Why, Lloyd, child, what''s the matter?
26215Why?
26215Will she be very terrible?
26215Would n''t you love to jab the old lady herself with an umbrella?
26215You are new pupils for Warwick Hall, are n''t you?
26215You do n''t care, do you? 26215 You''ll come again to- morrow to make that lemon pie, wo n''t you?"
26215_ How_ did I lose it?
26215''Dost like my song?''
26215''Is there no other way?''
26215''SAY THAT AGAIN, WON''T YOU PLEASE?''"
26215A week?
26215And did you see that poah little Minnie Crisp?
26215And what was it old Bishop Chartley said at the carol service?"
26215Are n''t they, Rob?
26215Are you sure your mother wo n''t object?"
26215But how can I give Hawkins his just due_ if_ I do?
26215But tell me, prithee, is it possible for such as_ I_ to gain the title of a knight?
26215But to- morrow night, is n''t the whole affair for us?
26215But what can_ I_ do in a big house like this moah than I''ve always tried to do?
26215But what has that to do with the rhyme?"
26215But why, oh,_ why_ was she forced to make such a choice?
26215Could n''t she go back and take one study, just to be with the girls?"
26215Did n''t I hear a certain young lady wishing the other night that she could stretch hers out indefinitely?"
26215Did n''t she, Betty?"
26215Did n''t she, ma?"
26215Do I get the thought?
26215Do either of you remember hearing her say anything that would throw any light on the subject?"
26215Do n''t you remember how Mom Beck used to sing it to you?
26215Do n''t you remember that?
26215Do n''t you remember this?
26215Do n''t you suppose that I know when I''m hit?
26215Do n''t you?"
26215EXCLAIMED ROB, IN A TEASING TONE,''SAY THAT AGAIN, WON''T YOU PLEASE?''"
26215Emily, you can tell Lloyd some things about Gay, ca n''t you?"
26215For what hast such as thou to do with great ambitions?
26215For what will she be at twice fifteen?"
26215Gay laughed at the imitation of the old coloured woman, then asked:"But does n''t your cousin come up to her standard?
26215Have n''t I told you a thousand times that it does n''t go that way?
26215How doth one win such honours and acclaim and reach the high estate that thou dost laud?''
26215How is this for transcendent joy?"
26215In the midst of this reverie, Agnes came up all a- flutter, saying, shyly:"Lloyd, would you mind if I did n''t go back in the carriage with you?
26215Is my hair white?
26215Is n''t it great?
26215Is n''t it strange that we should all be so linked together?
26215Is that so?"
26215Is that where you live?"
26215Is that your idea?"
26215Looking pretty in it and having good times in it seems a bettah way to use it as a remembrance of her than putting it into a quilt, does n''t it?"
26215No?
26215Now could I?"
26215Oh, do you suppose she would be offended?"
26215Old woman, said I, O whither, O whither, O whither so high?
26215Perkins?"
26215See?"
26215See?"
26215She was disappointed?
26215That is an appropriate motto for a memorandum- book, is n''t it?
26215That''s the trouble in keeping a journal, do n''t you think so?
26215Then, as Lloyd assured her it was properly buttoned, she added, in an undertone:"Have you met Maud Minor?
26215Thursday?"
26215Was it true?
26215Was n''t Cora Basket funny?
26215What else have you buried in that old trunk?"
26215What have you been doing?
26215What was it her mother used to sing to her?
26215What will keeping up with the other girls amount to if the strain and the overtaxing makes an invalid of you for life, perhaps?
26215What would people think of the school if they saw three of the girls there with a strange young man without a chaperon?"
26215When do you suppose I did it, and where?
26215Where would you go if you had this card?"
26215Where''s Betty, Mom Beck?"
26215Why did n''t I think to look among the books?"
26215Wo n''t he be teased when I tell him what you said?
26215You do n''t mind, do you, if I walk around and look at your pictures?"
26215You would n''t make me, would you, when you know how I love it?
26215Your mother would n''t think it strange, would she?
26215_ Does_ a peacock stop strutting if it happens to see its feet?
27246''Where shall I take''em, sir?'' 27246 Are they ships at all?
27246Can you remember names, like some of us remember the_ Mermus_, the_ Blackadder_, and the_ Titania_? 27246 Well, what''s the good of''em, anyway?"
27246What are ships nowadays?
27246What is the noise like?
27246What was the good of the money? 27246 What''s in a word?"
27246What''s that?
27246What''s up?
27246Where''s that old''bus come from?
27246Yes, of course, but what''s the matter with her?
27246You know Poperinghe? 27246 ''Ow long will this ruddy war last, sir?
27246And is it not surprising to find the spring has come again to this world?
27246And those Nobodies of Mons, the Marne, and the Aisne, what were they?
27246And what are we thinking of him?
27246And what do I look for in these War books?
27246And what happened to him?
27246And what is poetry?
27246And where were we?
27246And who but an ingrate would find fault with Ruskin, or would treat him lightly?
27246And who on earth can now inveigle that terrific portent safely under lid and lock again?
27246And yet how much has been written of it?
27246Are they real, or is the dream?
27246Are we awake in such dawns as we now witness?
27246But did such men feel the shame of it?
27246But had they not been preparing to retire?
27246But how should we know?
27246But is he?
27246But is it possible to help them?
27246But their relationship to literature?
27246But was he?
27246But what about your old''bus?"
27246But what are now these books?
27246But what is it now?
27246But what is the good of cold reason?
27246But what is the test, and would it be of any use to those likely to mistake limelight for daylight?
27246But where are their thoughts?
27246But why did I bring them?
27246Can a Chinaman talk to an Arab?
27246Could a man have done less?
27246Did Gilbert White imagine he was bequeathing light to us?
27246Did it belong to this earth?
27246Did the others who were passing see that by- way?
27246Did their appearance depend on the way we looked at them?
27246Do we even know his name?
27246Does he now know more than brigadiers?
27246Have you seen,"he said,"our bookshop, our cinema, and the new memorial porch of our church?"
27246His father was not communicative; and what could I say?
27246How is one to convey that to ladies?
27246How often, like another tortoise, has the mind come out of its winter to sun itself in the new warmth of a long- gone Selborne April?
27246If Kipling had not given us_ My Sunday at Home_ and_ The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney_, how should we have got them?
27246If our illusions go, what is left to us?
27246If they do not wish to know what is there, when that is what it is like, is it right, is it gentlemanly, to show them?
27246Is it surprising that catalogues of old books do not come our way?
27246Is there any doubt still of the superiority of imagination over hard- headedness?
27246It is useless to pretend that Roget is of material assistance then; for what remedy is there under heaven for the slow and heavy mind?
27246Might it not vanish altogether if enough of us could be found to laugh at it?
27246Most of them have no names for me, but I count them as old friends of mine; and where should I meet them again, at night, but amid the scenes we knew?
27246Of course, does not the test for sunlight distinguish it at once from insincere limelight?
27246Or has there been no dawn yet because we are only restless in our sleep?
27246Or was Ruskin only an impossible idealist?
27246Or was he a terrible jest?
27246Peace?
27246So how can I stay by the quay all the golden day long?
27246The guns had ceased?
27246Then did they imagine the well- meaning leopard would oblige by changing his spots if spoken to kindly while he was eating the baby?
27246Then why did it not sound as if it were meant for me?
27246Then why hurry over it?
27246To what was the world changing?
27246Was he also drunk?
27246Was he one of the malicious familiars who are at work amongst us, disguised, and who playfully set us by the ears with divine traps for boobies?
27246Was it a sward between them?
27246Was it really wrong to make children do that?
27246Was that street really there?
27246Was there more to be said?
27246Was this new light ours?
27246Was this porter an agent of the gods for whose eternal leisure our daily confusion and bad temper make an amusing diversion?
27246Were these bleak and obdurate circumstances an imposture?
27246What could they tell me?
27246What did it want?
27246What did that smell of?
27246What did they call the Nobodies?
27246What did they know about it?
27246What did we pay him for?
27246What does any of these old books know about me, in the midst of those portents of a new age?
27246What does it want with us?
27246What is it that balks a soldier''s judgment when he begins to write about the War?
27246What is more confident than the innocence of youth?
27246What is prose?
27246What is that figure now?
27246What is the test for such a book?
27246What is wrong with our statesmen?
27246What now is even that book which is perfect and unwritten?
27246What''s the good of figger-''eds?"
27246When did they last listen to reason?
27246Where are the criteria?
27246Where had it been in the meantime?
27246Where is it, and what happy man is doing it?
27246Where should we find people more likely to be quick and responsive?
27246Where, if not with youth, could be found such willing and generous reliance in noble legend?
27246Which is the real world?
27246Who can chronicle what Nobody does?
27246Who won the War for us?
27246Who would not retire into the near past, and stay there, if it were possible?
27246Whose work was all this?
27246Why did fate tip the beam in the way we know?
27246Why did it not accord, as once it did, with the coming of a new day, when the renewed and waiting earth was veritably waiting for us?
27246Why should not the War go on till the earth in final victory turns to the moon the pock- scarred and pallid mask which the moon turns to us?
27246Why should only such as he know of those shocks to affability?
27246Why should the best instincts of loyal folk be thus embarrassed?
27246Why should they get the evil which their elders, who will it, take so much care to avoid?
27246Why was Lord Haldane reading Hegel when there was Daniel?
27246Why was the left side of a ship called the port side?
27246Why were we not told so before?
27246Why, for a wonder, did the sound of gunfire recede from Paris, and not approach still nearer?
27246Yet for what reason?
27246Yet how if those young men are not bellicose like their wise seniors?
27246Yet when luck comes to us, does it ever look quite as we had imagined it when it was not ours?
27246Yet who now can look squarely at the present, except officials, armament shareholders, and those in perambulators?
23572''And why do you prevent our pumping?'' 23572 ''In the same place?''
23572''What means this?'' 23572 ''Why have you upset our pump?''
23572And may I inquire what your great- grandfather was?
23572And now?
23572And see ye not that bonny road That winds about the fernie brae? 23572 And see ye not that braid, braid road, That lies across the lily leven?
23572And that is all?
23572And what are they?
23572And what flower, my gallant young gentleman, do you best love?
23572And what was your answer?
23572And where is that singular man?
23572And why not? 23572 And why not?"
23572And yet, Federico, best beloved, why should I feign indifference, or conceal that my heart is wholly yours?
23572And you call that a serious affair?
23572And you think he is in danger?
23572And you,said the Doctor with a piercing look,"have you ever fought a duel?"
23572And your father?
23572And your grandfather?
23572Are they gone?
23572Are we secure from listeners?
23572Are you ready,he said,"to appear before your Supreme Judge?"
23572At your old flame, Madame Bouchereau? 23572 Ay, certainly; but what reform?
23572Beautiful she certainly is,was the reply;"but what is woman''s beauty?
23572But do you think it will benefit me?
23572But first, how goes it yonder?
23572Can you swear to that?
23572Certainly: what is life worth, without love to sweeten it? 23572 Dare you risk every thing?"
23572Did she appear to notice you?
23572Do you know her?
23572Do you know me, Señor?
23572Does not Bouchereau look very ill? 23572 For heaven''s sake, her name?"
23572Her husband''s fortune is secured to her, then, by marriage contract?
23572How goes it?
23572How have you slept? 23572 I, Excellency?
23572If Bouchereau died, his wife would be rich?
23572In short, you have no very strong desire to enter the lists?
23572Into the palace?
23572Is it all true? 23572 Is it thus you repay my confidence?"
23572Is not your wedding- day fixed?
23572Is that all you will say?
23572Is this the time and place?
23572Love_ you_, Excellency? 23572 Loves me?
23572May I venture out?
23572O see ye not yon narrow road, So thick beset with thorns and briers? 23572 Of the palace?"
23572Salcedo, what have you to tell?
23572Shall I tell you the strange, I might say the monstrous idea that has just come into my head?
23572She loves you, then?
23572So that when you sent him to Nice----?
23572So you meddle with duelling, Doctor? 23572 The captain on the staff?
23572The rest?
23572Then what is the cause of your agitation? 23572 Was all that given me that I might love woman?"
23572Well?
23572What colour was the carriage?
23572What do I hear, Excellency?
23572What do you advise?
23572What do you here?
23572What is it, Señor Castillo?
23572What is that? 23572 What is that?"
23572What is too good?
23572What is your plan?
23572What more could there be?
23572What shall you do?
23572What was that?
23572What''s the matter?
23572Where is it?
23572Where is the paper? 23572 Which of you will buy me a new coat when you have torn mine?
23572Who is Mademoiselle Nanteuil?
23572Who is it you have been looking at for the last quarter of an hour?
23572Who is there?
23572Who is there?
23572Who is there?
23572Who knows of the document? 23572 Who questions me?"
23572Who would have thought it?
23572Who, and what?
23572Why have you a heart in your bosom, blood in your veins, strong limbs, and bright eyes?
23572Why so?
23572Why?
23572Will you see him?
23572Without me?
23572Would you have such an angel throw flowers at me, or appoint a rendezvous? 23572 You advise me, then, to let the matter be arranged?"
23572You are laughing at me?
23572You dismiss me thus?
23572You do not know him?
23572You had something to communicate?
23572You know Pelletier?
23572You love me not?
23572Young man, which of Doña Rosaura''s handmaidens did you seek? 23572 Your colleagues are agreed?"
23572_ Voudriez- vous qu''il mourût?_ Would you have him die?
23572_ Voudriez- vous qu''il mourût?_ Would you have him die?
23572''My bairnies,''quo''the mother then,''That I have kist sae aft, Canna we save them frae their death, But sic a pryce we coft?
23572''To turn the rein were sin and shame, To fright were wondrous peril: What would ye do now, Roland Cheyne, Were ye Glenallan''s Earl?''
23572''To whom shall I yield?''
23572''What would ye do, my squire so gay, That rides beside my rein, Were ye Glenallan''s Earl this day, And I were Roland Cheyne?
23572''Who is the scoundrel who dares to give that advice to your Majesty?''
23572A dagger was found in the closet: did you come to assassinate me?"
23572A sensation clothed in space!--is this intelligible?
23572Admirers of the ancient ballad-- what do you say to that?
23572And if it is impossible to restore the king to consciousness, I fear----""What?"
23572And why is it, that on a subject of this nature the manifest facts witnessed in the whole animal creation are to be overlooked?
23572And with what sauce does he propose to eat me-- sword or pistol?"
23572Are you going to fight him?"
23572BELISARIUS,--WAS HE BLIND?
23572Before God and his saints, did all pass as you have said?
23572Belisarius, enraged at the insolent boldness of his proceeding, exclaimed,"Are you not bound to obey me?"
23572But are you quite sure?
23572But if you kill me, who will arrange your marriage with Mademoiselle Nanteuil?"
23572But in the mean time did you ever hear of the Wynyard ghost?
23572But what if the lap refuse to receive the luckless engineer?"
23572But what then?
23572But what, then, is the true relation between consciousness and the living brain, in connexion with which it is manifested?
23572But who is he?
23572But why Nice, rather than any other town?"
23572But why open drawers belonging to your wife?"
23572But, Archy, do dreams never come true?
23572But, how long would this feeling last under the new bill?
23572Can you guess his answer?"
23572Clever, was n''t it?
23572Come, how can I serve you?"
23572Did he tell you the cause of our quarrel?"
23572Did the lady visit you or not?"
23572Do you belong to a secret society?
23572Do you see yonder door?"
23572Does Señor de la Rosa mean such reform as he helped to bring about?
23572Dumas?"
23572Federico stood for a minute in silent expectation, then, groping around him with extended arms, he said in a low voice--"Am I at my journey''s end?
23572Ha, Tadeo!--you there?
23572Has she never appeared to your Excellency, cold and pale, and with sightless eyes?
23572Have I so long withstood the fascinations of the black- eyed traitresses, to be thus at last entrapped and unmanned?
23572Have we listeners here?"
23572Have we not said enough to support our thesis?
23572How came you hither?"
23572How could it be otherwise?
23572How do we thus meet?
23572How long, think you, may he still live?"
23572How may we defeat the machinations of our crafty foes?"
23572How possible?
23572How was it obtained?
23572If these preventives be taken away, what protection remains?
23572If you do not speak, how am I to tell what passes in yours?
23572Indeed, what idea of nationality or love of country could be formed by the privileged classes of Constantinople?
23572Is it true that Bouchereau was never in danger?"
23572Is not that what you want?"
23572Is our aspect so very sickly?
23572Is the book hastily smuggled under sofa- cushions, or stealthily dropped into the neglected work- basket?
23572Is there a place free from the echoes of the curses that martyred Liberals have heaped upon you?
23572M. Bouchereau thirsts for my blood?"
23572No word too much or too little?
23572O what''ll she do in heaven, my lassie?
23572O what''ll she do in heaven?
23572Of what nature is that of which he so marvellously evinces the possession?
23572Or was it in each case mere coincidence?
23572Poets of the Isle of Muck, did ye ever listen to such a strain?
23572Returning to the table, she took up the open volume, which she had been reading five minutes before, and said,''What book is this?''
23572Saw you the document with your own eyes?
23572Señor Alvaro, said I, are you not ashamed to be so joyous at such a time?
23572Señor Regato, how goes it?
23572Shall we go to Bouchereau?"
23572Surely Madame Bouchereau is not ill?"
23572Surely it can not be; and yet-- my friends, what say you?
23572The Count stepped up to her, and said, with his sullen smile,"You rejoice not at it, Rosaura?"
23572The mind, say you?
23572Then turning to the butcher with an air of defiance--"''Now,''he said,''are you ready?''
23572Therefore, as Bouchereau, according to all appearance, has not a year to live----""What''s the matter with him?"
23572To invest sensation with space, is it not as if we spoke of a_ pleasure_ that was_ square_, or of a_ circular pain_?
23572Toussaint Gilles,''said the baron, smiling ironically,''when an officer gives an order, and is not obeyed, do you know what he should do?''
23572Was he not about fighting you?"
23572We wonder whether"Robin Hood, that archer good,"is as great a favourite in the nursery now as he was in our younger days?
23572Were you sent as a spy?
23572What ails me?
23572What audacious slander is this?"
23572What brings you to this gloomy church door?
23572What can I do?"
23572What can be said against that?"
23572What did the arch- schemer?
23572What did you, concealed in yonder closet?
23572What do you here at this hour of the night?"
23572What has cast you down, since we last met?''
23572What have you to tell me?"
23572What heads the column?
23572What heard you there?"
23572What is meant by one substance producing another?
23572What say you, Mexas-- and you, Salcedo?
23572What say you, our masters and mistresses, to this proposal for a summer ramble?
23572What says his Grace of San Lorenzo, and our discreet friend, Martinez de la Rosa?
23572What think you, Duke of San Fernando, and you, Marquis of Santa Cruz?
23572What took you to the house in which you were found hidden?
23572When shall you set out for the south?"
23572When will it end?
23572Where are sheep to be found who would be tended by that ensanguined hand?
23572Where could_ you_ find repose?
23572Where have you passed this night?
23572Where is the paper you robbed me of?
23572Where is the paper you stole?"
23572Whither away?"
23572Who admitted you into the house?
23572Who can doubt that scenes of this kind are not unlikely to occur under such a change of the law?
23572Who introduced you into that apartment?
23572Who is the fellow?"
23572Who says that?"
23572Who would miss him, the humble and friendless student; who inquire where or how he had met his fate?
23572Why has this been kept from me?"
23572Why have I not heard this sooner?
23572Why not pass the winter in the South: at Nice, for instance?"
23572Why should we suppose that its vision is regulated by different laws merely because it obtains the perfect use of its eyesight somewhat later?
23572Why then, in the name of Orpheus, did he not set about it incontinently?
23572Will that do?"
23572Would you go if the rose- coloured lady bid you stay?
23572_ Santa Madre!_ Is it possible?
23572and a capital story?"
23572and then how could I reappear before Virginia?
23572cried Rosaura, greatly astonished--"not know----?"
23572cried Toussaint Gilles, with a furious glance at his friends;''are you all afraid of one man?''
23572groaned the sick man, with painful effort;"the document, where is it?
23572he had the effrontery to tell you that?"
23572is it by any means an account of the matter?
23572is that the happy future you would compel me to share?
23572laughed the officer,"have you been gulled by the story of the decline?
23572said he,''what has become of you?
23572she cried,"where is the document?
23572she exclaimed--"what is that?
23572what have you done with it?
23572what is new in our fair city of Madrid?"
23572where is it?
30374Aye, and why am I left-- Why among these young, green leaves am I the only withered one?
30374But will she come back today as she promised?
30374DO you know where you got your black hair?
30374FROM what strange nightmare was he awakening?
30374HER gift-- was it dead or only sleeping?
30374Had her dreams come true and was she on the stage in this great city of the world?
30374Had some strange fate transplanted her to Paris in the year 18--?
30374How came her book here among these old volumes?
30374SHE went on-- Do you know who you are?
30374The music swept around her-- military-- a call-- to what?
30374They look at me as if to say Why this one dried leaf of another year left on this tree?
30374Was it all some phantom?
30374What right ever had she to be playing Russian music?
30374Why were no companions left to cheer me?
28475(?)
28475(?)
28475), from any other author?
28475A. C._ Snail Gardens._--What are the continental enclosures called snail gardens?
28475And are there any other letters employed as numerical than the M, D, C, L, V, and I?
28475And what are the other curious carvings?
28475Besides the editing of these MSS., who is so well qualified as Dr. Green to give us a good biography of Coleridge?
28475But, perhaps, the authenticity of the_ Poems_ may at once be boldly denied?
28475Can any of your correspondents contribute other examples?
28475Can any of your correspondents inform me why so called?
28475Can he give me any more communication concerning them?
28475Can it be that_ iris_, not the pupil, is taken to represent an apple?
28475Can the present representative of the family of Roberts give any farther information respecting Thomas Lord Lyttelton''s manuscripts?
28475Did he do so?
28475Does he think cyanide of potassium would do as well as the iodide, to redissolve the iodide of silver, iodide of potassium being at present so dear?
28475Does not this look much like the_ suppressio veri_ which follows close on the footsteps of the_ assertio falsi_?
28475For whom?
28475From what event or occasion?
28475Has any light been thrown on the Anglo- Saxon term?
28475How can it be addressed to him?_ W. W.( Malta)_ has our best thanks for his letter of the 25th of June.
28475I now ask MR. COLLIER, on what authority were these emendations adopted?
28475I would ask, therefore, Why carved?
28475In what publication or in what form did the executors of Thomas Lord Lyttelton disown the_ Letters_ and_ Poems_?
28475Is it known who was the editor of the_ Poems_ published in 1780?
28475Is the print of old Jacob Bobart, by W. Richardson,_ valuable_?
28475Is there any collection extant?
28475Is there any pedigree of the family?
28475Is there anything in this, or is it fortuitous?
28475Is this the case?
28475J. Craig._"The Query I would more particularly ask is( presuming the accuracy of the assertions), What is the prophecy so wonderfully fulfilled?
28475Lastly, Is any letter known to exist in the public journals of the years 1770, 1771, under the signature of ARUSPEX?
28475Query, How is this made out?
28475The duke, somewhat surprised, asked what that meant?
28475The important Query therefore at once arises,_ what became of these manuscripts, and were they destroyed or preserved_?
28475Theobald says,''But why_ shoes_, in the name of propriety?
28475There is a portrait of Jacob Bobart the younger in_ Oxford Almanack_ for 1719; can I procure it?
28475WAS THOMAS LORD LYTTELTON THE AUTHOR OF JUNIUS''S LETTERS?
28475Whence did Mr. Teale get these lines?
28475Where can I pick up a print of him by Loggan del., Burghers sculp.?
28475Why called"Tom Thumb''s House?"
28475Why does he prohibit_ washed_ ether?
28475_ A Scale of Vowel Sounds._--Can any correspondent tell me if such scale has anywhere been agreed on for scientific purposes?
28475_ George Wood of Chester._--Of what family was George Wood, Esq., Justice of Chester in the first year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, 1558?
28475explain the meaning of the following inscription?
28475or may not the word be a corruption of_ Maghrabee_, which is, I think, a foreign name given to this wandering race?
28475tell me where I can see Hupfeld,_ Von der Natur und den Arten der Sprachlaute_, which is quoted by several German authors?
29352And what carries you so suddenly?
29352But you will not walk the whole way?
29352Has he?
29352Is it your brother that has gained the medal?
29352Is this his birthday?
29352See you nothing beyond that?
29352Seven years absent?
29352Well, then, what do you say to fauns and dryads?
29352What does the public like?
29352What has he come for?
29352What if I should paint men mowing or winnowing?
29352What shall I do, then?
29352Where now?
29352Who in Paris cares for fauns and dryads?
29352You are a Jewess?
29352Your name is Sarah?
29352A hand?
29352But what is the nature of artistic memory, and how does it perform its task?
29352He was dressed for the part of Jaffier in Otway''s play,"Venice Preserved,"when some one said to him"You look like Hamlet, why not play it?"
29352Need I say more?
29352Other composers would do it by the yard, why not he?
29352To Doré, what was necessary was to express himself anyhow-- who cared if the style was defective, the drawing bad, the color crude?
29352Was his heart, then, no longer open to love since his first departure from Copenhagen?
29352What do you mean, sir?
29352What shall we say of Doré the painter and sculptor?
29352Where have you learned to do anything like that?''"
29352Who is it that stops him on the dark stairs?
29352Why might not she, Rachel, receive as much?
29352Why thus deprived thy prime decree?
29352Why was not this the very character I wanted?
29352asked his friend;"whither art thou going so hastily?"
29352thought he,"what is the_ philosophy_ of Perugino, compared to the_ faith_ of which this is the emblem?"
29352wrote Rubens to his mother,"how is it possible I have lived so long away from you?
25865A Millennium plate? 25865 A dog?"
25865A lady?
25865All of''em?
25865All right, Kate, fix her some, wo n''t you?
25865And were you out in it this afternoon,continued the stranger,"driving rapidly between here and North Point?"
25865And_ will_ you look at this? 25865 Anything I can do for you to- day, Puss?"
25865Are you staying long in Philadelphia, Miss Fairfield?
25865Borrow this house?
25865But has n''t a lady been here in the last hour, to look at costumes for a play?
25865But how can I set them off?
25865But what would become of our family?
25865But where are they, Hopalong?
25865Ca n''t I make the garlands for you?
25865Ca n''t you make her come, Hilda?
25865Can you wait until nine o''clock or thereabouts for your dinner? 25865 Do n''t you think it would be better,"she went on, hoping to make a helpful suggestion,"if we should put in to some house until the storm is over?
25865Do n''t you think, Roger dear, that you had better get a new belt and be done with it?
25865Do you own a large black racing automobile?
25865Do you think I ought to have given up the matinà © e, and stayed at home to study?
25865Earthquake swallowed our house?
25865For what offence?
25865Have you any more of them?
25865Hello, Hopalong,said Patty,"where are all the people?"
25865How could she say so? 25865 How could you get that belt mended so quickly?"
25865How did you know that?
25865How do you finally induce it to move?
25865How much do you want for them?
25865How old is he?
25865I ca n''t go away and leave her here,said Patty,"the dear little thing, what shall we do with her?"
25865I do n''t know,said Elise,"where does she live?"
25865I do n''t wonder,said Mr. Farrington,"and now, my man, can you ring your people up, and is there anybody to take care of the car?"
25865I know it,said Patty,"but what can we do?
25865I will surely make this up to you in some way, and now, will you just show me about the house a bit, as I''ve never been here before?
25865I''m awful hungry,said Patty,"and I am pretty tired, but the play is over, is n''t it, Nan?
25865I''m not really ill, am I, Dr. Martin? 25865 Is Miss Sinclair here?"
25865Is n''t it funny?
25865Is n''t it nice?
25865Is there company for dinner, Miss Patty?
25865Is this Mr. Richard Phelps?
25865Is your quilt nearly done, Miss Bender?
25865It is; what can I do for you?
25865It''s all over, is n''t it?
25865It''s quarter of two,he said,"do you suppose we can get in at this hour?"
25865Just shut us up in some room by ourselves, and we''ll stay there, and not bother you a bit; unless perhaps we can help you?
25865Never mind, Patty, darling,she said,"and try to forgive me, wo n''t you?
25865Now is n''t this nice?
25865Now, how are you going to catch your father and Nan?
25865Of course I will,said Bertha,"but will there be time?"
25865Of course I will,said Patty jumping up,"what is the secret you have to tell me?
25865Oh, Miss Bender,cried Bertha,"then wo n''t you quilt it?
25865Oh, Patty,cried Elise Farrington, as she met her in the cloakroom,"what do you think?
25865Oh, is this a real present then? 25865 Oh, my dear, is that so?
25865Only this one,said Patty, laughing,"what do you think she ought to eat?"
25865Patty Fairfield, are you crazy? 25865 Patty,"called Nan''s voice from the hall,"you''ll go with me this afternoon, wo n''t you?
25865Shall we go on, Mother?
25865She''s your stepmother, is n''t she?
25865So that''s your name, is it?
25865Tell a straight story, Patty,said her father,"is it one of the neighbour''s children, or did you kidnap it?"
25865That''s almost finished, is n''t it, Bertha?
25865That''s better yet,said Patty;"where''s the book?"
25865The Fenwick house?
25865There''s no fine for running over a cloud, is there, Dad?
25865Well, Pattikins,he said,"can you feel at home in this big house, after living so long in our apartment?"
25865Well, then, where is it?
25865Well, what else could it be?
25865What are you going to do with them all, Nan?
25865What are you laughing at?
25865What did you do?
25865What do you mean by running away in this fashion, and upsetting the whole bazaar, and driving all your friends crazy with anxiety about you?
25865What do you think will happen, Patty? 25865 What do you think, grandma?"
25865What is it, young ladies?
25865What is it?
25865What is the matter?
25865What is your number?
25865What makes you think we kidnapped a baby, my friend?
25865What time is it, and how soon shall we reach the Warners''?
25865What''s it all about?
25865What''s that?
25865What''s the matter?
25865What''s the matter?
25865Whatever would I do without you? 25865 When do you think it will begin any such performance as that?"
25865When is this play of yours to come off?
25865Where are they, then?
25865Where are you bound?
25865Where are you?
25865Who is she?
25865Who''s going with you, Patty, to the costumer''s?
25865Whom did you expect?
25865Why do you look so shocked and scared to death?
25865Why does n''t it go?
25865Why, what was the matter with it?
25865Winthrop and I fixed up that quarrel record, just for fun; is n''t it a good one?
25865Would n''t it be fun to dress him up as one?
25865Would you care to part with them both?
25865Yes, is n''t she a beautiful cat? 25865 Yes, ma''am,"said Patty demurely,"what''s the use of having an imagination, if you ca n''t make it work for you?"
25865Yes; why? 25865 You can make it obey your will, ca n''t you?"
25865You know how it is, do n''t you, Ken? 25865 You think so, do you?"
25865You''re sure you know the way, are n''t you, Roger?
25865Your prescription sounds attractive,said Patty,"but where shall I go?"
25865Your school keeps very late, does n''t it?
25865Are you passing those, Roger?
25865Are you sure your parents wo n''t mind?"
25865As they passed him, Patty smiled pleasantly, and paused, saying,"We''re all going to have supper in the Dairy, and of course you''ll be with us, Ken?"
25865Banks?"
25865But be you goin''her way?
25865But what''s the matter?
25865CHAPTER XIX ROSABEL"Rosabel who?"
25865CHAPTER XXII THE BAZAAR OF ALL NATIONS"How did you know where we were?"
25865Ca n''t we telephone to them?"
25865Ca n''t you play at dressin''up?"
25865Can I help you in any way?"
25865Can you send somebody after me in a carriage?
25865Come on over to the orchard, will you?"
25865Come on, girls, are you ready?"
25865Did you ever see such a brightness in your life?"
25865Do n''t we, Roger?"
25865Do you never get tired of parties and dancing, Patty?"
25865Do you remember the little bag, that always held everything that could possibly be required?"
25865Do you suppose we''ll have to stay here all night?"
25865Do you suppose,"she said, turning an indignant face to Mr. Phelps,"that anybody deliberately put this child here and deserted it?"
25865Do you want to borrow them too?"
25865Elise, do you suppose whoever keeps this little store would sell that plate?"
25865Farrington?"
25865For I do n''t suppose you intend to keep Miss Rosabel, do you?"
25865For gracious goodness''sake, Patty, what have you got there?"
25865Go and get her, wo n''t you?
25865Has your car been cutting up jinks?"
25865Has your cook left, or is the house on fire?"
25865Have you any punk?"
25865Have you had your luncheon?"
25865Have you no more respect for your elderly and antiquated Stepmamma than that?"
25865How did I know but that you''d buy pink or blue ones, and so spoil my whole gypsy costume?"
25865How do you do, Mrs. Farrington?
25865How do you do, Patty?
25865How do you like the prospect?"
25865How much is it, please?"
25865How old be you?"
25865I ca n''t seem to see any?"
25865I do n''t suppose it''s to be a monologue, is it?"
25865I thought ef I was a horse whar would I go?
25865I''ll be all right in a day or two, wo n''t I?
25865I''m so glad to see you, Elise; and this is Patty Fairfield?
25865I''m so sorry, for I do love hothouse peas, do n''t you?"
25865If I see any sort of a place where we can turn in for shelter, I think we''d better do it, do n''t you?"
25865Is it new?"
25865Is n''t it_ great?_""I do n''t like it as well as the sparkling, shiny things.
25865Is n''t this house great?
25865It will never occur to them that we''re over here, and why should it?"
25865May n''t I come often to see you?
25865Mother, will you get something ready for a feast?"
25865Now I''d like you to explain, sir, if you did n''t kidnap that child, what you do call it?"
25865Now what would you people rather do?"
25865Oh, Nan, may n''t I make it work, sometimes?"
25865Oh, Nan, wo n''t we be happy all here together?"
25865Oh, do have the party, will you?"
25865Oh, do you suppose your people will let you go?"
25865Oh, what shall I do?"
25865One morning at breakfast, her father said,"Patty, child, what is the matter with you?
25865Or shall we stop at some farmhouse, and so keep ourselves from starvation?"
25865Patty felt sorry for the old lady, who seemed in such a bewildered state, and she said,"No matter about the card, Mrs. Roland, what can I do for you?"
25865Patty rubbed her eyes and blinked, as Nan pulled the book away from her, and said,"Why, what time is it?"
25865Phelps?"
25865S''pose we say a week from to- day?"
25865She had an aversion to speaking her own name before her present hearers, so when Mr. Hepworth responded she merely said,"Do you know who I am?"
25865So Patty said,"What about the servants, Mrs. Roland?
25865So wo n''t you promise me a dance or two, when the time comes for that part of the programme?"
25865Some plan for to- night?"
25865Thank you ever so much, Roger, but why did n''t you put it on the tree for me?"
25865The driver of a passing hansom called out,"Cab, Miss?"
25865The judges awarded the prize to Roger, who calmly remarked to Patty, afterward,"I told you I''d get it, did n''t I?"
25865This is Patty Fairfield, is it?
25865Turning around to face the occupants of the motor- car he bawled out:"Whar do ye wanter go in Hartford?"
25865Want to go with me, Nan?"
25865What have you been doing?
25865What shall I do?"
25865What shall I wear, Nan?"
25865What shall we do with her, Papa?"
25865What time does Uncle Ted come home, Aunt Grace?"
25865Who are going?"
25865Who could it have been?
25865Who''s that you''ve got with you this time?
25865Why do you call it that?
25865Why do you do it, Patty?"
25865Will you come with me?"
25865Will you go, Patty?"
25865Will you have us?"
25865Will you promise me that?"
25865Will you, Patty?"
25865Will you?"
25865Wo n''t it be lots of fun?"
25865Wo n''t you have a quilting party while my friends are here?"
25865You were n''t up late last night?"
25865a room will get musty if it''s shut up, and what earthly good is a parlour except to keep shut up?"
25865asked Kenneth,"me?"
25865asked Patty,"are they outdoors, down by the brook?"
25865asked one of her girl friends;"shall you exchange any of your duplicate gifts?"
25865cried Patty, picking the little one up,"what are you doing here all alone?"
25865exclaimed Miss Aurora,"is that the best you can do, Bertha Warner?
25865exclaimed Mr. Farrington,"why, how are you, old man?
25865exclaimed Patty;"but can you paint silver?"
25865he cried,"you would n''t let a little thing like a tornado stop your progress, would you?
25865said Dick Phelps, in his straightforward way,"he''s mad at you, is n''t he?"
25865said Patty,"what for?"
25865she asked,"can I sell you anything to- day?"
2618And I''m the only man who can tow it, eh?
2618And Shawmut was the Boston microbe, was it?
2618And the snakes of the present day?
2618And who, pray, may you be?
2618And why should I not tell you that?
2618And you want me to be Janitor on a salary of what?
2618Any one here to- night?
2618Are you any relation to Burns the poet?
2618Are you aware, sir, that I am on the programme?
2618As-- er-- Shixpur or Shikespeare?
2618Betting, eh?
2618Boy, is Adam in the club- house to- day?
2618But how do you account for its disappearance?
2618But how?
2618But what''s the use of killing off your audience that way? 2618 Ca n''t something be done to keep these younger members quiet?"
2618Ca n''t this boat be moved without towing?
2618Can it be that I can ever be out of date?
2618Did anybody at this board ever have as much canvas- back duck as he could eat?
2618Did n''t she?
2618Did you make it yourself?
2618Did you send for me, William?
2618Do you believe that story yourself, Baron?
2618Do you imagine for a moment that she was four miles on the water- line, with a mile and three- quarters beam? 2618 Do you mean to say that she lived and died an old maid from choice?"
2618Do you mean to say that you could acquire the monkey accent?
2618Does n''t it take brains to make a pair of shoes?
2618Does n''t it take brains to write a poem?
2618Does n''t the_ Gossip_ want a report of the debate?
2618Eh, Will? 2618 Etiquette?
2618Exclude poets altogether? 2618 Excuse me,"put in Doctor Johnson,"but where do you find that suggestion?
2618Favorable?
2618Have monkeys Boswells?
2618Have n''t you got that poison out of your system yet?
2618Have they done anything to hurt you?
2618How about your temper?
2618How do you do, Charon?
2618How the deuce could you?
2618How''s our little Swanlet of Avon this afternoon?
2618I should like to ask,he said, mildly,"if this is supposed to be an audience of children?
2618I? 2618 If a man''s wife ca n''t borrow some of her husband''s clothing to reduce her peril to a minimum, what is the use of having a husband?
2618If monkeys, why not donkeys? 2618 In behalf of what?"
2618In the complaint- book, eh?
2618In what pursuit?
2618Indeed?
2618Is he through?
2618Is it likely they would dispense with such a useful adjunct?
2618Is it persecution, or have you deserved it?
2618Is there anything improbable in it? 2618 It was a Yankee invented that tale about your not being able to prevaricate, was n''t it, George?"
2618It was bad enough with the elephants, was n''t it, papa?
2618It was n''t Columbus, was it?
2618Of course you feel badly, but, after all, what''s the use? 2618 Oh, of course, I did n''t write anything, did I?"
2618Pool, eh? 2618 Shall I send for a physician?"
2618Shall I tell''em, Shakespeare?
2618She had; but what of that?
2618So why repine? 2618 Spelt with a P, I suppose?"
2618Still sore on that point?
2618Talking politics?
2618The ladder-- on which I climbed? 2618 The wha- a- t?"
2618Then it is n''t a new- fangled scheme to drive me out of business?
2618Then why do n''t you begin it the second night?
2618Then you believe that jackasses talk, too, do you?
2618Then you eliminate the serpent?
2618Then,said Shakespeare,"in the opinion of you gentlemen, we old- time lions would appear to modern eyes to be more or less stuffed?"
2618Thereby showing their conceit, eh?
2618They''re great, are n''t they?
2618Very different-- in fact, different enough to make a conundrum of the question-- what is the difference between a shoemaker and a poet? 2618 Was n''t he invited, General?"
2618Was this the Bay of Biscay, Baron?
2618Well, what if he does?
2618Well, what of it?
2618Well, why should you have read them?
2618What became of Fido?
2618What can I do for you?
2618What did I tell you?
2618What do you mean by raw material for poems?
2618What do you mean my attributing those words to Bacon?
2618What do you want?
2618What does a Janitor have to do?
2618What for?
2618What fun is there in writing a play if you ca n''t come out and show yourself at the first night? 2618 What if you did?
2618What is the average weight of a copy of_ Punch_?
2618What is your theory?
2618What kind of a boat do you suppose I had?
2618What on earth is a club for if it is n''t to enable men to get away from their wives once in a while? 2618 What shall we call it?"
2618What was the sight that greeted your eyes, Confucius?
2618What would you have us do, then?
2618What''s that?
2618What''s the blooming thing for?
2618What''s the matter with you?
2618What''s the matter? 2618 What''s the objection to class clubs, anyhow?"
2618What''s the odds where you died?
2618What''s the scheme?
2618What''s the trouble?
2618Where is the house?
2618Where''s Shakespeare to- night?
2618Who are the house committee?
2618Who discovered Boston, anyhow?
2618Who suggested any such night as this, anyhow?
2618Why come out at all?
2618Why come out at all?
2618Why do n''t you sue the sculptors for libel?
2618Why do you always want to make our entertainments commonplace? 2618 Why not?"
2618Why not?
2618Why should n''t the ladies want to see the inside of this club- house? 2618 Why, Phidias, is that you?"
2618You know Burns, do n''t you?
2618You never ate one, did you, Ptolemy?
2618You want a captain, eh?
2618You would n''t have us call a mastodon like that Fanny, would you, or Tatters?
2618You''d look well going up to a man and saying,''Excuse me, sir, but-- ah-- were you ever a monkey?''
2618You''re not going back on the ladder by which you have climbed, are you, Samuel?
2618You''ve eaten fried pyramids in Africa, too, have n''t you?
2618You?
2618''And why should you?''
2618And who cares about them or their opinions?"
2618Are they not rather to be reprehended, whether I am a Chinaman or not?"
2618Bonaparte cried,''Have n''t time?
2618CHAPTER II: A DISPUTED AUTHORSHIP"How are you, Charon?"
2618Ca n''t you and I pretend to quarrel?
2618Did n''t somebody once say he''d rather ride fifty years on a trolley in Europe than on a bicycle in Cathay?"
2618Do you believe I have n''t been telling the truth?"
2618Do you hear?"
2618Does Nero play pool?"
2618Eh, Burns?"
2618Eh, Sir Walter?"
2618Eh?"
2618For instance, would n''t it be awkward for our good friend Henry the Eighth to encounter the various Mrs. Henrys here?
2618Gold?
2618Had he, Charon, owned the exclusive right of way on the Styx all these years to have it disputed here in the closing decade of the Nineteenth Century?
2618Had not he dealt satisfactorily with all, whether it was in the line of ferriage or in the providing of boats for pleasure- trips up the river?
2618His work is known because he puts his name to it; but this poor devil of a cook-- where is he?
2618How many purely mortal beings, do you think, would have come out alive?"
2618How we fooled''em on_ Hamlet_, eh, my boy?
2618I saw a life- size statue of the inventor of a new kind of lard the other day, and what do you suppose the material was?
2618I wonder who it was that cooked this fowl originally?"
2618If they should catch in one of the pedals, where would I be?"
2618Is there any one here who knows more about truth than he does?
2618Ivory?
2618Marble, even?
2618Men lose their hair and their teeth; why might not a man lose a tail?
2618Next thing you fellows will be saying that I did n''t write my own autographs?"
2618Now I ask you, gentlemen, if these things are to be tolerated?
2618Now, if I believed in envy, I suppose you think I''d be envious of people who live in brownstone fronts with back yards and mortgages, eh?"
2618See?"
2618She did n''t have absolute sway over England, then?"
2618So why repine?"
2618So why should I be jealous of the brownstone- house dwellers?
2618Socrates tells me that their amusements are of a most innocent nature, but how do I know what he means by that?
2618That''s what I ca n''t understand in your selections; with Megatheriums to burn, why save leopards and panthers and other such every- day creatures?"
2618There is n''t any money in Shakespeare these days, so what''s the use of quarrelling?
2618They''d mysteriously disappear, and we never knew what became of''em until one morning we surprised Fido in--""Surprised who?"
2618Was there, Emperor?"
2618We want a-- er-- what the deuce is it they call the functionary, Cassius?"
2618Were you ever disappointed in love?"
2618What are they but unattached tails?"
2618What boat is this, anyhow?"
2618What business has etiquette to stand in the way of human knowledge?
2618What difference does it make to you if they have n''t made an Adonis of you?
2618What do you propose to do-- throw open the house to the wives of members, or to all ladies, irrespective of their husbands''membership here?"
2618What else?"
2618What has become of them all?"
2618What have I been doing all this time?
2618What sort of treatment is that for a man of royal lineage?"
2618What''s bothering you, Dryden?
2618What''s the use of putting on nonsense with us?"
2618When I was a boy--""Excuse me,"said Solomon, rising;"about how long is this-- ah-- this entertaining discourse of yours to continue?"
2618When I was what they call alive, how did I live?"
2618When do people go to clubs?
2618When shall you be ready to begin work?"
2618Where are they?"
2618Where on earth do we find his equal to- day?"
2618Where would they be now if they had been cast in lard instead of in bronze?"
2618Where_ is_''here''?"
2618Whereupon, with a great show of heat, he roared out,"You?
2618Why discriminate against me?
2618Why may it not be that through causes unknown to us we are similarly deprived of something our forefathers had?"
2618Why not use it?
2618Why should I be jealous of him?"
2618Why should you disbelieve it?
2618Would it not likewise be awkward for them to meet each other?"
2618You do n''t expect people to write serial stories or dialect poems in them, do you?"
2618You?
2618_ Do you see_?"
2481-in particular,Why read books?
2481Did Gideon know how to read Hebrew? 2481 Do you ever read any of the books you burn?"
2481How can we know?
2481Is this the price we pay for democracy?
2481To get the information you need... do you need to go on- line or open a manual? 2481 What can I do?"
2481What can it do?
2481What can we expect of its economic and social consequences? 2481 ( Today the Earwig, Tomorrow the Man? 2481 (Would anyone call surgery knife science"?
2481), consistency( is it contradictory?
2481A Mouthful of Microwave Diet Have you ever ordered a pizza over the Internet?
2481All set?
2481Among them: What, if anything, should replace literacy?
2481And how could coordination with others using such new products take place?
2481And what for?
2481And what for?
2481Another example: What is the reason for a president to be at the funeral of a deceased head- of- state?
2481Are 12 or 13 years of schooling sufficient?
2481Are n''t we captive to language and literacy, and thus to the philosophic and scientific explanations based on them?
2481Are they a product of new human relations required by the new pragmatics?
2481Are they read?
2481Are they replaced by miniature tape recorders or pocket computers, by integrated miniature machines that themselves integrate the wireless telephone?
2481Are they replaced by the computer, the Internet browser, and digital television?
2481As exaggerated and imprecise( communication between whom- the couple or their representatives?)
2481As we know, the traditional camera came with the implicit machine- focused conversation: What can I do with it?
2481At the threshold of the civilization of illiteracy, how many books are printed?
2481At this point, one question naturally arises: Is philosophy relevant after all?
2481Auguste Compte: Qui êtes- vous?
2481Book Four Language and the Visual How many words in a look?
2481But are they voting?
2481But are we really equipped with the means of exploration and evaluation of this wide- ranging change?
2481But even if we manage to establish methods for successful replication, have we captured the characteristics of human self- identification?
2481But how do dictatorships come about in literate populations?
2481But who made God?
2481By whom?
2481Can a mother continue working outside the home?
2481Can literacy lead politics to failure?
2481Can we be good without God?
2481Can you understand the language they are using?
2481Carbon paper?
2481Chemistry?
2481Child rearing is the result of pragmatic considerations: What does a couple, or single parent, give up in having a child?
2481Could a written report of the operation substitute for the real- time event?
2481Did Deborah?"
2481Did lawyers create this situation?
2481Do literacy, language, or sign systems affect this basic equation of life?
2481Do structural changes bring about a new scale, or does scale effect structural changes?
2481Do they understand the language of the officer who decides when they are to be fired?
2481Do weapons speak and write and read?
2481Does a discovery or invention predate a change in scale, or is the new scale a result of it or of several related phenomena?
2481Does education henceforth become a generic trade school?
2481Does it result from our involvement with the environment of our existence and from the limits of our experience?
2481Does the civilization of illiteracy herald the end of the book?
2481Does the power of a mathematical expression rely on mathematical notation, or on aesthetic quality?
2481Does the pragmatic perspective negate explanations originating from other, relatively limited, perspectives?
2481Done?
2481Even more important is the"Why?
2481Food and expectations How does one connect food to literacy?
2481Foreward Introduction Literacy in a Changing World Thinking about alternatives Progressing towards illiteracy?
2481Future and past Do we need to be literate in order to deal with the future?
2481He asks rhetorically:"How else should one identify a force that debases language, drains thought, and undoes dignity?
2481How Much is that Baby in the Window?
2481How about something in neurosurgery?
2481How are these two aspects integrated?
2481How can a country have a consistent political system?
2481How did we get here?
2481How do we free ourselves from the choking grip of bureaucracy?
2481How does a recent immigrant, or a visitor from abroad, perceive the people of the country he has landed in?
2481How far are we from such an objective?
2481How is it influenced, if at all, by the increased illiteracy of the new condition of human activity?
2481How literate should an athlete be?
2481How long should the state support a student in the university?
2481How many are sold?
2481How many words in a look?
2481How much space do they occupy on the shelves of bookstores, libraries, and homes?
2481How primitive the future A God for Each of Us But who made God?
2481How should they study?
2481How should we care for the elderly?
2481How this takes place is a longer story, starting with the example given: What happens to a lifetime warranty when the manufacturer goes bankrupt?
2481How was water supply handled?
2481How were the dead disposed of?
2481How would an illiterate interact with them in order to get the most out of each artifact?
2481How would such an ideal world function?
2481How?
2481If indeed philosophy is absorbed into science, what can its purpose be?
2481In blunter terms, can we live without it?
2481In modern jargon, one can say that until education is re- engineered( or should I say rethought?
2481In seemingly simpler contexts, what do individuals understand today when they understand a written instruction or conversations, casual or official?
2481In which medium?
2481Is design the cause of this, or is it something else, expressed through design, or to which designers become accomplice?
2481Is drawing natural?
2481Is it enough to say that language expresses the biological and the social identity of the human being?
2481Is it given to humans by some perceived superior force?
2481Is there a moment when the balance was tilted towards the means of expression of and the communication specific to engineering?
2481Is this predictive rationality?
2481Is validation of this type of experimentation a subject of language?
2481It begs the question"Why do n''t we?"
2481It seems that everyone involved is talking the same language, but who understands what?
2481Language?
2481Late Upper Paleolithic Calculator?
2481Lotfi Zadeh introduced fuzzy logic: a logic of vague though quantified relations among entities and of non- clear- cut definitions( What is young?
2481Math?
2481Moreover, is it a prerequisite for understanding the present?
2481Moreover, what will the status of community be?
2481Or is the problem the solution?
2481Or is the problem the solution?
2481Or is this another prejudice we carry with us from the pragmatic framework of literacy- defined self- constitution?
2481Or will it be, as it was considered in the culture of a Romantic ideal, humanity''s self- consciousness, as expressed in Hegel''s philosophy?
2481Or will we generate more inclusive symbols, or some form of preprocessing, before information is delivered to human beings?
2481Orality and Writing Today: What Do People Understand When They Understand Language?
2481Oraltity and Language Today: What Do People Understand When They Understand Language?
2481Our indexical signs serve as indicators for various forms of filtering calories( how many do we really need?
2481Ours is a world of brief encounters in which"How are you?"
2481Paleolithic human calendars: a case of wishful thinking?
2481Philosophy?
2481Political tongues Can literacy lead politics to failure?
2481Progressing towards illiteracy?
2481Quo vadis philosophy?
2481Quo vadis science?
2481Real Presence: Is There Anything in What We Say?
2481Reciprocally: Is history, as many believe, the offspring of writing?
2481Reformulated as"Why ca n''t Asians tolerate alcohol?"
2481Remember when new model automobiles came out in October, and only in October?
2481Should Japan be considered a model?
2481Should education compete with the news media?
2481Should education give up any sense of foundation?
2481Should it become an Internet address for unlimited and unstructured browsing?
2481Should square dancing, Heavy Metal music, bridge, Chinese cuisine be taught?
2481So, is the USA the epitome of the civilization of illiteracy?
2481Some of these have practical implications: What were the plants used in primitive societies?
2481Some people still decide for others on certain matters: How should children play?
2481Space( where does the food come from?)
2481Still, understanding every word the musicians use, do you understand what is taking place?
2481The End of Bookishness?
2481The End of Bookishness?
2481The Polaroid concept changed this to a different query: What can it do for me?
2481The concreteness of pictorial representation, along with the encoded elements( what is the experience behind a letter?
2481The dilemma is obvious: where to invest, if at all, unless someone has insider information( What is hot?).
2481The educated faithful- a contradiction in terms?
2481The end of bookishness?
2481The language of wisdom In scientific disguise Who needs philosophy?
2481The meaning of such a question can be conjured only if articulated with its pendant: Is literacy unnatural or artificial?
2481The mechanical eye and the electronic eye Who is afraid of a locomotive?
2481The more often they divorce, the less they marry or have children?
2481The plurality of religious experiences The educated faithful- a contradiction in terms?
2481The question posed about all the characters introduced is a simple one: Who is more ignorant, Melanchton or Zizi?
2481The question posed at the beginning of this section,"Why do n''t we?"
2481The''ornamental?
2481Their skill was to formulate questions, especially the very probing questions-"What is what?"
2481There is a real sense of artistic glut and a feeling of ethical confusion: Is anything authentic?
2481These savages asked,''Before you came to the lands where we live, did you rightly know that we were here?''
2481They prepared us for electronic media, but not before generating those strange books( or are they?)
2481Tired of science?
2481To what extent does the desire to have a family reveal characteristics of human self- constitution in the current context?
2481To which extent do they reflect pragmatic reintegration in the global economy or safe isolationism?
2481Under which circumstances is language''s mediating function assumed by other sign systems?
2481What about alternatives?
2481What about alternatives?
2481What about the technology of literacy?
2481What are Masterpieces?
2481What are acceptable rules of behavior in family and society?
2481What are the causes of this phenomenon, which is paralleled by diminishing interest in religion, art, and solidarity?
2481What bigger disappointment is there than discovering that years of pursing a promise bring no result?
2481What breaks down when family fails?
2481What constitutes a family in an age whose pragmatics is not defined by the values perpetuated in and through literacy?
2481What could replace democracy?
2481What do human beings look like to a whale, a bee, an ant, a shark?
2481What does it mean to become used to something- environment, family, acquaintances- when this something is changing fast, and with it, we ourselves?
2481What does reading give us that is of some social advantage that can not be obtained through other media?
2481What does this have to do with literacy?
2481What is of interest today?
2481What kind of practical experiences does language make possible?
2481What should be taught?
2481What we neglect to ask is what kind of world does language bring to them in the process of learning language?
2481What would an illiterate do with products, such as new typewriters, books, more sophisticated household appliances?
2481What''s Eating William Gass?, in Mississippi Review, 1995.
2481What, if any, explanation can one find in the dissolution of Yugoslavia?
2481When faced with a list of courses that a university requires, most students ask,"Why do I need...?"
2481When is medical intervention justified?
2481When the question"Why are there fewer alcoholics in China, Korea, Japan, and India?"
2481Where and how does intuition affect mathematical thinking?
2481Where are the fountain pens, the Gestetner machines?
2481Where does life end and biological survival become meaningless?
2481Where should somebody place himself in order to maintain some degree of objectivity?
2481Who are we kidding?
2481Who is afraid of a locomotive?
2481Who judges the legal system in order to determine that its activity meets expectations?
2481Who needs philosophy?
2481Who would be responsible for implementing laws?
2481Who would read their elegant prose?
2481Who would represent the country if the function of head of state were abolished?
2481Whose freedom?
2481Whose freedom?
2481Whose market?
2481Why do n''t people read books?
2481Why strange?
2481Why, at a certain moment in human evolution, does literacy become the main mediating instrument?
2481Will business cooperate?
2481Would literacy be a stronger force than the demand for efficiency in bringing about the justice discussed in tomes of literature?
2481Yet a rhetorical question deserves to be raised: Does anyone know everything about sex?
2481[...] Is it impossible to conceive of a generation that has received its knowledge of the world and itself through television?"
2481a certain way of writing?
2481a number?
2481and time( to which season does it correspond?)
2481and"How can we explain?"
2481and"Why?
2481bold?
2481good?).
2481tall?
2481Ça va, la famille?
28703And my sweet little Kate, did you too stand up for kindness to servants?
28703Are the fishes always hungry?--does the water make them hungry too?
28703Are you going to put me into the water now?
28703Both asleep in the great chair?
28703Brothers?--where?
28703But what happened after that?
28703Can it be a brother, a real live brother?
28703Dear Grandma,said the little girl,"will it hurt me_ very_ much?"
28703Dear Mother, may I help you take care of my little brother?
28703Dear Mother,said he,"will Jesus let my brother come to me?
28703Did you hear me, Emma? 28703 Do you know,"said her Mother,"that it was naughty for you to say that?"
28703Emma,replied her Mother,"do you know that I ought to punish you, because you do not mind?"
28703Grandma,said Emily,"may I look at the books on the table?
28703Grandma,said Willy,"I hung up my stocking last night, and what do you thing I got in it?"
28703Have I a brother?
28703I wonder who she will choose for her King?
28703Is it alive?
28703It ca n''t be mended at all, can it, brother?
28703James,said his Father,"do you know where my wig is?"
28703Master Henry,said she,"what do you think happened last night?"
28703Mother,said Frederick Stanley,"is it not wrong to treat servants unkindly?"
28703She_ looks_ like a Queen, do n''t she?
28703That''s a great deal too much; but what_ did_ you find to quarrel about?
28703Well, Susan,said her Father,"do you like the monkeys?"
28703What are their names, Father?
28703What can have put that into your head?
28703What did the tiny bit of a bear do for his dinner?
28703What did?
28703What makes you ask that question?
28703Who did it?
28703Whom will you have for King?
28703Why, what has Julia been doing?
28703Annie said she was glad it meant such good things, and added,"Mamma, will you play I am a lady, coming to see you, if you are not too busy?"
28703Browne?"
28703But what was that in the middle of the room?
28703But who was to have the little house under the table, I wonder?
28703Dear Father, what is the matter with her?
28703Did they buy new play things for her every day?
28703Did they give her plenty of candy?
28703Did they take her very often to the Museum, or the Circus, or the Menagerie?
28703Did you ever hear of such a naughty boy before?
28703Do n''t you see that I am making a mouse?"
28703Do n''t you think Annie was a happy little girl?
28703Frisby?"
28703He looked very much offended, indeed; and asked in a stern voice,"Which boy went into the play- room with fire?"
28703He rang the bell, and said to the servant,"Do you know any thing about my wig?"
28703Her Mother kissed her, and said,"I am very weak, my dear child; but do you not want to see your little brothers?"
28703I would rather lose twenty vases than have you tell a lie; but you knew it was wrong to play in the parlors, did you not?"
28703Is that right?"
28703Mamma, do n''t they duck us?"
28703May I go in to her if I will step very softly?"
28703Now was not this thoughtful and good, in a little girl, only seven years old?
28703One day when Charles was about four years old, he said,"Dear brother, will you ride me on your back?"
28703Presently the teacher said,"James, do you know your lesson?"
28703Pretty soon she said to herself,"I wonder what I shall have for dinner?
28703She began to sing softly this little song, that she had learned in school--"What is it shines so very bright, That quick dispels the dusky night?
28703She began:"What is the reason that your little Scottish friend Jessie has not been here lately?
28703She knit eight times round the stocking, and then she said to herself,"I wonder if the dumpling is done?"
28703She knit six times round the stocking, and then she said to herself--"I wonder if the dumpling is done?"
28703She knit twice round the stocking, and then she said to herself--"I wonder if the dumpling is done?"
28703She went to her and said--"Dear Mother, are you sick?
28703The room was black with smoke, and they looked on dismayed, as they heard the popping and banging of their precious fireworks, while"Who did it?"
28703Then the great big bear said--"''Who is this in the bed?''
28703WHICH IS THE WISER?
28703WHO SHALL BE GREATEST?
28703What could it be?
28703What do you think it was?
28703What have you been doing?"
28703What is diligent, Mamma?"
28703What is the name of my ship?"
28703When she came home, her Mother kissed her, and said--"Have you been a good little girl in school to- day?"
28703Would you like to know what they had for dinner?
28703do n''t it make it bright, Edward?"
28703for shame,"said his Mother;"why, which is the biggest-- the spider or you?
28703how could a boy of your politeness be so rude to a young lady?
28703how it hurts me-- will it kill me, Mamma?"
28703said Henry, sitting up in the bed;"is my Mother better?"
28703what little monkey is this in the bed?"
28703wo n''t it be a grand play?"
28703wo n''t it be nice?
14382''Echo anfers fere?''
14382''Fraid o''what? 14382 ''Nothing?''
14382''Out of the family''--out of what family?
14382''Was I saying anything to you, Aunt Nancy?'' 14382 A gentleman?"
14382A what?
14382Alas, how can I throw them off, dear Paul?
14382And Thurston?
14382And afterward?
14382And breaking her heart-- who knows? 14382 And do you really take so much interest in my fate, sweetest lady?"
14382And if I do not?
14382And now, I ask you, how you could prevent it?
14382And see me die, my child?
14382And she has not returned? 14382 And the whole affair blown all over the country-- how would you appear?"
14382And those French letters give no indication of the writer, either?
14382And what are they, dear Miriam? 14382 And what proof can you have?"
14382And what should a young man like you have to make him feel low- spirited, I should like to know? 14382 And what was it about?
14382And when do you leave here?
14382And when will that be, fairest?
14382And where are now those letters, Miriam? 14382 And where is Miriam?"
14382And whither away this morning, fairest Marian?
14382And will you,he asked, gathering her form closer to his bosom,"will you redeem that pledge when I demand it?"
14382And wo n''t he come?
14382And you can now caress and weep over my hands, believing them to have been crimsoned with the life- stream of your first and best friend?
14382And you really do n''t know what it is? 14382 And you think that the only capacity in which you will be called upon to act?
14382And you will denounce me, Miriam?
14382And you would not prevent her?
14382And you, my dear child,she said,"you were Michael Shields''sister?"
14382Answer me, you little vixen!--what does all this mean?
14382Anything else in my line this morning, Dr. Grimshaw? 14382 Are you Marian?"
14382Are you crazy?
14382Are you going to be a nun, Lina?
14382Are you not coming?
14382Ay, ay? 14382 Beauty sells by the weight, does it?
14382But do you know-- oh, do you know how happy it has made me? 14382 But for what purpose have you to return?"
14382But how long is it since my poor Edith has been so awfully widowed?
14382But in spite of all your warnings, were such an event about to take place?
14382But what was your thought, my dear girl, in bringing her here?
14382But where are you going to go, Miss Edith?
14382But why?
14382But you will let me attend you home?
14382But, dear Thurston, of what are you talking? 14382 But, my dear girl, did you not know, had you never heard that her uncle disowned her for marrying against his will?"
14382Cloudy, my dear fellow, we have been like brothers all our lives; now wo n''t you tell me what has brought you to this pass? 14382 Colonel Thornton, you remember Miss Mayfield, and the manner of her death, that made some stir here about seven years ago?"
14382Currents and counter- currentsof stormy passion, where is the pilot that shall guide the understanding safely through them?
14382Dear Thurston,she said,"if you are seen waiting upon me to church do you know what the people will say?
14382Dearest Edith, where have you been so long?
14382Did she promise to come back? 14382 Did she suspect it?"
14382Did she tell you where she was going?
14382Did you know or suspect it?
14382Did you make any impression on her mind?
14382Do I understand you to charge Mr. Willcoxen with the death of Miss Mayfield?
14382Do you ever see her?
14382Do you imagine that vague warnings would have any effect upon her?
14382Do you kiss me?
14382Do you know that Fairy Land is not obsolete, dearest Marian?
14382Do you understand its solemnity-- its obligation, its inviolability?
14382Do you?
14382Does he know that you have the packet?
14382Dying? 14382 Edith, do you see that young woman?
14382Edith,he asked, as he took the chair near her head,"do you feel stronger this morning?"
14382Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?
14382Go?
14382Has he, minion? 14382 Has she no friends, no relatives?
14382Have you any idea whether your trial will come on early in the session?
14382Have you dined, Cloudy?
14382Have you ever seen her since?
14382How do I know it? 14382 How do you do, Miss Thornton?
14382How do you know it, then?
14382How is Thurston? 14382 How like my Marian?"
14382How much would such a girl as myself bring in the slave market of the Sultan''s city?
14382How say you-- is the prisoner at the bar''Guilty or not guilty?''
14382How should I? 14382 How?
14382How? 14382 I disappoint him?
14382I heard a scream, Marian, dear-- what was it?
14382I pledge you my word of honor that I will"Without mental reservation?
14382I promised my dying mother, and sealed the promise with an oath, never to be a bride until I shall have been--"What, Miriam?
14382I say, aunty--"Well, Lapwing?
14382I wonder what it is all about? 14382 I wonder what these dark streaks can be?
14382I wonder what''s out now?
14382I wonder whether the professor will wait and join us when we return home?
14382In the fiend''s name, what''s the matter? 14382 Is he fully competent?"
14382Is it that promise that weighs upon your mind, Miriam? 14382 Is it you, my dear?"
14382Is that the note of which you speak?
14382Is the carriage ready?
14382It was of him, then, you were thinking, minion? 14382 Let me ask you, then, why you volunteer to prosecute?"
14382Marian-- dearest Marian, will you let me attend you home? 14382 Miriam, did your mother know this handwriting?"
14382Miriam, what do you mean?
14382Miss Thornton, what do you mean? 14382 Mr. Jenkins, will you follow me to my library?"
14382My own Miriam, what mean you? 14382 No more of that, dear Edith, it will overcome us both; but tell me if you will give me your little girl?"
14382No, I never looked at the writing?
14382No, Paul, I do not know it-- do you?
14382Not when you put it in my hand, just now?
14382Nothing?
14382Now, how am I expected to live with such a wife as this girl would make me? 14382 Now, why in the world do n''t you ask me for my secret?
14382Now, why''heaven forbid?'' 14382 Now?"
14382Of what, Mimmy?
14382Oh, it''s you, is it, you little termagant you? 14382 Oh, yes, I know that; but, my dear boy, what of it?
14382Paul,she asked,"was n''t it just eight years this spring since your brother went to Scotland to fetch you?"
14382Perhaps you have never recovered the disappointment of losing Miss Le Roy?
14382Really? 14382 Ruptured an artery?
14382Sad? 14382 Shall I bring you my drawer full of minerals?
14382Shall not?
14382Tell me, Jacquelina; will you do as the old man wishes you?
14382That is it, hey? 14382 The marriage, young gentleman?"
14382The very day that we shall set out-- why ca n''t we travel in company?
14382Then, I believe, we also are-- is it not so?
14382There are such strange resemblances in-- in-- in-- What are you looking at me so for, Miriam?
14382Thurston, do you know where she has gone? 14382 True to whom, Jacquelina?
14382Uncle pleases nothing, and will have nothing to do with it, except to advise as early a day as possible,he blurted out;"what says the bride?"
14382Uncle, in all your voyages around the world did you ever stop at Constantinople? 14382 Was n''t it to Glasgow that he went?"
14382Was-- did-- I wonder if my brother knew her intimately?
14382We spoke of the world of nature, Miss Mayfield; but how is it with the world of man? 14382 Well what next?"
14382Well, but, cap''n,said the speaker, still hesitating,"if so be that''s the case, why do n''t she strike her colors to her rightful owner?
14382Well, doctor-- your patient?
14382Well, then, would you like the dried bugs? 14382 Well, would you like to see my pictures-- two volumes of engravings, and a portfolio full of sketches?"
14382Were not you there together in March and April, 182-?
14382Were we? 14382 Were you saying anything to me, Aunt Nancy?"
14382What can be the meaning of this?
14382What can it mean? 14382 What cause, young lady, can you possibly have for making such a monstrous and astounding accusation?"
14382What caused her illness?
14382What did he ask you? 14382 What do you mean now, minx?"
14382What do you mean to do with that parcel?
14382What do you mean, Lapwing?
14382What do you mean, my love? 14382 What do you mean, sir?"
14382What do you mean, then? 14382 What do you mean?"
14382What do you propose to do with her?
14382What do you think of the testimony?
14382What does that mean? 14382 What does this mean?"
14382What for, Miss Edith, for goodness sake?
14382What has brought you here, Miriam? 14382 What has happened to your master?
14382What have I said? 14382 What have you now to say, Miriam?"
14382What have you taken, then, unfortunate child?
14382What in the d----l''s name are you running after me for?
14382What in the name of common sense do you mean, my dear?
14382What is it to you? 14382 What is it, Edith?"
14382What is it, Miriam?
14382What is it, then? 14382 What is it, then?
14382What is that?
14382What is the matter with the fool?
14382What is the matter, dear, sister?
14382What is the matter, love? 14382 What is the matter?"
14382What is the meaning of all this?
14382What is this? 14382 What is, then, you blockhead?"
14382What makes you shiver and shake so, my dear? 14382 What the foul fiend do you mean now?
14382What would people say if you were to marry your niece of fourteen to a man of thirty- four?
14382What''s the use of putting it off? 14382 What''s this?
14382What, sir? 14382 What, sir?"
14382What, then, can you do, fair saint?
14382What-- what-- what''s all this? 14382 What?
14382When Satan turns saint, suspicion is safe, is it not?
14382When do you set out on your long journey, dear Thurston?
14382When does the court sit?
14382When shall I say, dearest Edith?
14382When was the next occasion upon which you saw the prisoner?
14382When will she be back, do you know?
14382When?
14382Where are you going, Miriam?
14382Where could the distracted girl be? 14382 Where is Marian?"
14382Where is he, Edith? 14382 Where is the lady, sirrah?
14382Where is uncle? 14382 Where?
14382Where? 14382 Where?
14382Who is committed? 14382 Who is the poor, dear creature, Edith, and what has reduced her to this state?"
14382Who will prevent me?
14382Who''s that?
14382Who, poor girl?
14382Who? 14382 Why did n''t you show them to the gentlemen, dear mamma?
14382Why did you ask, Paul?
14382Why do you say reputed murder?
14382Why should I?
14382Why, dearest Marian?
14382Why, do you know her, Edith?
14382Why, uncle, I want to know if you''ll please to give orders in the stable to have the carriage wheels washed off nicely? 14382 Why, what is the matter with my fairy?"
14382Why, you little tragi- comic enchantress, you!--what do you mean? 14382 Why?
14382Why? 14382 Why?
14382Why? 14382 Will I not?
14382Will nothing induce you to abandon this wicked purpose?
14382Will you administer the usual oath?
14382Will you see me safely through the woods, Thurston?
14382Will you speak, idiot? 14382 With me?"
14382Would n''t she have a strong cup of tea? 14382 Would you release a lunatic, bent upon setting the house on fire?"
14382Yes-- I always do in the forenoon"Do you feel well enough to talk of Miriam and her future?
14382Yes; why?
14382Yes; why?
14382Yet you will not refuse to let me attend you? 14382 You are a friend of my poor girl''s?"
14382You are not going to leave us, sir?
14382You are sure you know the spot?
14382You are the young lady who wrote to me?
14382You do not seem to have an appetite, dear; what is the matter?
14382You do?
14382You do?
14382You find it charming?
14382You have? 14382 You know poor little Jacquelina has fallen into very bad health and spirits?
14382You know that-- you feel it?
14382You put the case gently and delicately, dear Edith, but the hard truth is this-- is it not-- that he will disinherit you, if you consent to be mine? 14382 You remember the time and manner of her death?"
14382You think this hand a blood- stained one?
14382You were never here before?
14382You will go, then?
14382You will let me love you?
14382You will love me?
14382You will not be a moment behind hand?
14382You will write her an anonymous letter, possibly?
14382You would?
14382You''re going to stay all day with me, Marian?
14382Your grandfather--"He has no grudge against you, personally, sweet girl; he knows nothing, suspects nothing of my preferences-- how should he? 14382 _ Ave Maria, Mater Dolorosa!_ Was ever a mother so sorrowful as I?
14382Ai n''t we- dem got to go back to de house and stay dar by our two selves arter we see you safe?"
14382Ai n''t you, too?
14382Am I not in earnest?"
14382Am I right?"
14382And Mrs. Waugh found herself in a small, half- darkened room, where, reclining in an easy chair, sat-- Edith?
14382And can any one be surprised that her illness was increased, and her fever arose and her senses wandered all night?
14382And did you ever visit a slave mart there?"
14382And even if you could find a home, who would give shelter to your poor, sick mother for the rest of her life?"
14382And how should he prevent her coming to the beach and waiting for him there?
14382And how was it with Marian?
14382And if he wants Grim to be his successor, why, as I have heard aunty ask him, does he not make him his heir?"
14382And now, Miriam, do you know the nature of a vow?"
14382And then she would nearly finish him by asking:"If hell was so horrible to hear of for a little while, what must it be to feel forever and ever?"
14382And what did the young ensign do?
14382And what shall we say in taking leave of Thurston and Marian?
14382And whatever befalls me, Edith, will you remember that?"
14382And why not?
14382And why?
14382And yet-- who knows?
14382And you?"
14382Answer, did the palms lie?"
14382Any parishioner ill, dying and wanting your ghostly consolations?"
14382Are you bewitched?
14382Are you cold or nervous?
14382Are you drunk, or mad?
14382Are you frantic, then?
14382Are you going?"
14382Are you men?"
14382Are you my own, as I am yours?"
14382Are you ready?
14382Are you such that stand before me now?"
14382Are you sure there will be no opposition?"
14382Are you sure?
14382Are you to be foiled by a girl?
14382At last she repeated:"You say he left you in his widow''s charge?"
14382Be explicit; what would you have me to do, Miss Mayfield?
14382Before breakfast?"
14382But could Sans Souci do this?
14382But could her distress escape the anxious, penetrating eyes of affection?
14382But do you think Mrs. Waugh did not cry about it for two weeks, and ever after speak of him as the poor, dear commodore?
14382But he slid his arm around her lightly, bending his head and whispering eagerly:"What mean you, Marian?
14382But how can I help you?
14382But how is this, my child?
14382But how would Thurston meet her?
14382But if it should be otherwise, still--""Well?--still?"
14382But suppose now that I should prefer to marry her and take her with me?"
14382But tell me, do you think what I have advanced trivial and unimportant?"
14382But the same expression of cunning came again into the poor creature''s face, as she said:"In the house?
14382But when did the elf ever stop to think?
14382But where is he, then?"
14382But your method, Marian?
14382But, Thurston, would it not have been wiser to prevent her going out?"
14382But-- is Grim in the house?"
14382By the way-- when do you give your answer to that lady?"
14382By what rare fortune was it that I ever found you in these Maryland woods?
14382Ca n''t you be plain, sir?"
14382Can I be permitted to do so?"
14382Can I do so?"
14382Can nothing help him?
14382Can nothing soothe or cheer him, Paul?
14382Can we do him no good at all?
14382Can you divine how my heart-- yes, my soul-- burns with the joy it has given me?
14382Can you share the soldier''s wandering life?
14382Come, what is it now?"
14382Could he be trifling with poor Jacquelina, too?
14382Could her hand be raised to hurl him down from his pride of place to shame and death?
14382Could it be Edith?
14382Could she prosecute her benefactor, her adopted brother, for murder?
14382Could that man be guilty of the crime she had dared to suspect him of?
14382Could these consequences console or benefit Edith or Miriam?
14382Did either dream how many suns would rise and set, how many seasons come and go, how many years roll by, before the two should meet again?
14382Did he not suffer?
14382Did he really wish to win Angelica''s heart?
14382Did the horse run away?"
14382Did the palms lie, Edith?
14382Did the palms lie?
14382Did you ever hear of a subpoena, dear Mother?"
14382Did you ever, in all your life, see such a beautiful, bewitching, tantalizing, ensnaring face as mine is?"
14382Did you ever, in the midst of nature''s liberal ministrations, feel your spirit absorbing, assimilating, growing?
14382Did you have to keep any of the girls in, or was it a visit from the trustees that detained you?"
14382Do I leave you at ease?"
14382Do n''t you know me?"
14382Do n''t you know that there is a wedding on hand?"
14382Do n''t you know, wretched child, that you are committing deadly sin?
14382Do n''t you see that that maniac is as jealous as a Turk?"
14382Do n''t you see?
14382Do n''t you see?"
14382Do you dare?
14382Do you feel a burning in your throat and stomach?
14382Do you hear?
14382Do you intend to stand there all day, to hear the wench declaim?
14382Do you know what is the meaning of these afternoon fevers and night sweats and this cough?"
14382Do you oppose me?
14382Do you recollect the plan?"
14382Do you see that door?
14382Do you suspect the handwriting?"
14382Do you think I am going away on my own business, or amusement, while you are here?
14382Do you think it possible that Mr. Willcoxen could have meditated such a crime?"
14382Do you understand?
14382Do you understand?
14382Do you want me to send you to Constantinople, pray?"
14382Do you want to hear, or do n''t you?
14382Do you, Paul?"
14382Dr. Grimshaw, how can you have the heart to stand there and not go?
14382Edith, where is your husband?"
14382Ef people''s sponsors in baptism will gib der chillun such heathen names, how de debbil any Christian''oman gwine to twis''her tongue roun''it?
14382Every time I come home I expect to be presented to a Mrs. Willcoxen, and never am gratified; why is that?"
14382For mercy''s sake, tell me, has anything happened?"
14382For what?
14382For who had been Jacquelina''s educators?
14382Foremost entered the commodore, shaking his stick in a towering passion, and exclaiming at the top of his voice:"What the devil is all this?
14382Going to hear him?
14382Good heavens, where?"
14382Grimshaw?"
14382Grimshaw?"
14382Had the frolicsome fairy sufficient integral strength and self- balance to resist the powerful influences gathering around her?
14382Happy was she?
14382Has anything happened at home?"
14382Has no fair maiden been able to teach you to forget your boy- love for Jacquelina?"
14382Have I read that angel- smile aright?
14382Have you heard anything of the circumstances that led to this?"
14382He answered:"And if I do, fairest Marian, shall I, too, hear my own Christian name in music from your lips?"
14382He came up and intercepted her:"Where are you going so early, Miriam?"
14382He commit a crime?
14382He did not hear her-- how should he hear her low tones, when he heard not the cannonading of the storm that shook the house to its foundations?
14382He lightened his clasp about her waist-- he bent and whispered:"Beloved Marian, is it to bind me only that you hesitate?"
14382He overtook and caught her by the arm, and shaking her roughly, exclaimed, under his breath:"Where is it?
14382He saw it in the changed expression of her countenance; and what light or shade of feeling passed over that beautiful face unmarked of him?
14382How are they all at Luckenough?"
14382How can you discharge such an obligation?
14382How can you have the heart to stand there and not go for a physician?"
14382How can you possibly doubt it?
14382How could I, when I only saw her behind a grate, with the prioress on one side of her and the portress on the other?
14382How could he swear to the handwriting unless he had actually seen the hand write it?
14382How could it have been?"
14382How dare you talk so?"
14382How did it happen?
14382How did it happen?
14382How did it happen?"
14382How do you feel?
14382How do you like them cooked?
14382How do you travel?"
14382How have I offended, that you should treat me so?"
14382How is Miriam?
14382How is it with you, Cloudy?
14382How is that?
14382How long has it been since, this happened, my dear girl?"
14382How much would I sell for in Constantinople?"
14382How shall I overcome her repugnance?
14382How should I help it?
14382How upon Luckenough?
14382How would it all end?
14382I am anxious to hear?"
14382I ask you how you dared to make love to my niece?"
14382I ask you where is the lady?
14382I do wonder what can ail you?
14382I know it; why do you speak of it, since I can do no otherwise?"
14382I protest, sir, I do not in the least understand you?"
14382I say, aunty, I sniff a plot, do n''t you?"
14382I should think it the funniest kind of fun?
14382I was a wretch, a beast to think--""What, Paul?"
14382I was asking you what''s the matter?"
14382I wonder if it is a''crowner''s''quest''case?
14382I wonder what Mr. Willcoxen has done with his Marian?
14382If he had sinned, had he not repented?
14382If not remorse, what then was the nature of his life- long sorrow?
14382If so, what would be done?
14382In another instant he sprang upon the poor boy and shaking him furiously, cried in a voice of mingled grief, rage and anxiety:"Where was she thrown?
14382In the meantime, how had the morning broken upon Dell- Delight?
14382In the meanwhile, where was he whose headlong passions had precipitated this catastrophe?
14382In what, Paul-- strange resemblances in what?"
14382Is he quite gone?"
14382Is it the blessed herald of a happy answer to my prayer?"
14382Is my brother-- is your master a barn- door chicken- cock, that you call him''Rooster?''"
14382Is that my business?"
14382Is the house on fire again?"
14382Is the love upon which my life seems to hang so offensive to you?
14382Is the mist lifting?"
14382Is this luck enough?"
14382It is incredible-- impossible-- how could it have happened?
14382It is my own-- why can I not give it to whom I please, I should like to know?"
14382It was not conviction in the court he thought of-- he would probably be acquitted by the court-- but what should acquit him in public opinion?
14382It was now Marian''s turn to change color, and falter in her tones, as she asked:"You-- you are not going away?"
14382Jacquelina, my dear, do you begin to feel sick?
14382May I inquire-- are your friends in town, or are you here alone?"
14382May I know?"
14382May I now call you mine?
14382May I now sit down?"
14382Miriam would have nothing, and old Jenny reluctantly left her-- to repose?
14382Miriam, do you hear-- do you hear and understand me?"
14382My child, do you follow and understand me?"
14382Now I wonder--(Can''t you stop that caterwauling out there?"
14382Now, I do wonder what it all means?"
14382Now, she spoke in a tremulous voice:"That is all-- is it not, uncle?
14382Oh, blindness and frenzy; why had he not thought of these dangers so likely to beset her solitary path?
14382Only Marian said:"What will become of the poor old creature?"
14382Or is it only a fantastic action of mine that beauty is the food of soul?"
14382Ordered away somewhere, upon some distant service?
14382Poor Jacko was wondering"If I be I?"
14382Presently he asked:"Thurston, have you engaged counsel?"
14382Say, Edith, can you trust your child to me?"
14382She blamed herself for having ventured out; yet could she have foreseen this?
14382She can believe me guilty of such atrocious crime-- she can aim at my honor and my life such a deadly blow?"
14382She says that her husband is dead, poor child-- how came it about?
14382Sir, have I trusted in vain?
14382So the precious business is concluded, is it?"
14382Surely you were never in love with little Jacko?"
14382Tell me-- do you think anything can be done for him?"
14382Tell us instantly what were the contents of that note?"
14382That fair phantom of a girl to whom the black ringlets and black dress alone seemed to give outline and personality?
14382The lady and the prisoner met-- a few words passed between them-- of which he, the deponent, only heard"Thurston?"
14382The storm would soon burst forth upon the earth; where was Thurston?
14382The young girl was shy and silent, but Marian drew to her bosom, saying:"Has my''baby''forgotten me?
14382Then recovering herself, with a deep breath she said:"Now I ask of all the''powers that be''generally, what''s the meaning of that?
14382Then she did not know him, but inquired:"Who is that, Marian?"
14382This was not right of me?
14382Though I do n''t believe you''d break a solemn pledge once given-- hey?"
14382To seek her?
14382Was it Edith?
14382Was it possible that instead of being merely impulsive and erring, he was deliberately wicked?
14382Was she not upon the beach?
14382Well, some men are a mystery-- don''t you think so, Miriam?"
14382Were you afraid of the storm?
14382Were you afraid to look at it?
14382Were you near falling?
14382What ails Grim?"
14382What ails you?
14382What apology could you possibly make for such an unwarrantable interference?"
14382What are they like?
14382What are you all standing like you were thunderstruck for?
14382What are you raising all this row for, you infernal little hurricane?"
14382What are you talking about, Paul?"
14382What are you talking about?"
14382What brother ever loved a sister as I have loved Lina from our infancy?
14382What brother ever would have done and suffered as much for his sister as I have for Lina?"
14382What brought my baby out this bitter night?"
14382What can it mean when found in a girl''s?
14382What could Thurston mean?
14382What could be the reason of his strange behavior?
14382What could detain him at such a time?
14382What could have caused the failure now?
14382What could he mean?
14382What did he do?
14382What did he mean?
14382What did he turn Fair Edith away for?
14382What did you send Mother Ettienne away for?"
14382What did you tell him?"
14382What do you see in my future?"
14382What do you think of my explanation?"
14382What do you want?"
14382What does this mean?"
14382What find you in those letters?
14382What has frightened you so?
14382What have I done to deserve to be made miserable?
14382What have you been doing now, Imp?"
14382What have you been doing?
14382What have you done with it?
14382What home?
14382What if it were in the person of an old man, very infirm, and over- ripe for the great reaper?
14382What if it were not in his own person?
14382What is it now?
14382What is it?
14382What is the matter?
14382What is the matter?
14382What is the matter?
14382What is their purport?
14382What mean you, rascals?
14382What must you board her like a pirate in this way fur?
14382What of Marian?"
14382What right had she, his ward, his_ protà © gà ©_, his child, to punish him?
14382What right had you to make such a''demand?''"
14382What should her trials be to me?
14382What the d----l''s broke loose?
14382What the deuce are you dreaming of?"
14382What then?
14382What troubles you so much?
14382What was it you had, you little hussy?"
14382What was it?
14382What weights are they that I have not power to lift from your heart?"
14382What''ill everybody say to a young gal a- doin''of anything like dat dar?
14382What''ill old marse say?
14382What''s broke loose now?
14382When did she leave home?
14382When he had concluded the strange story, Cloudy started up, took his hat, and was about to leave the room,"Where are you going, Cloudy?"
14382When is the proceeding to come off?"
14382When shall we meet again?"
14382When the prisoner was placed at the bar, and asked the usual question,"Guilty or not guilty?"
14382When was it?"
14382When would Miriam return?
14382Where could the commodore be?
14382Where did she get it?
14382Where did you ever pick up such a phrase, and what upon earth does doing any one''dirt''mean?"
14382Where do you think it is now, Mimmy?"
14382Where have you been?"
14382Where is she?
14382Where is uncle?
14382Where is uncle?"
14382Where is your husband, Edith?
14382Where was he?
14382Where?
14382Who can be writing from furrin parts to Marian Mayfield?
14382Who cares about reading that?
14382Who did it?
14382Who do you think has come?"
14382Who procured it for her?
14382Who will take a child''s part, if her mother do n''t?
14382Who?"
14382Why are you in such a hurry?
14382Why ca n''t she come out of that?
14382Why did he not answer her?
14382Why did he not speak to her?
14382Why did he stand so motionless, and look so strange?
14382Why did n''t you?
14382Why did not Thurston come?
14382Why do n''t you answer me?"
14382Why do n''t you take command in open daylight, with the drums a- beating, and the flags a- flying?
14382Why do you deny me that small consolation, Lina?
14382Why do you inquire?"
14382Why do you wish to leave me?"
14382Why do you yield so?
14382Why had he so recklessly exposed her to them?
14382Why have you never spoken of it before?"
14382Why wo n''t you take him, since your uncle has set his heart upon the match?"
14382Why, Cloudy, are you one of those who credit''raw head and bloody bones''fables about convents?
14382Why, ca n''t I pretend to lose it, just as Marian lost it, and drop it where he''ll find it?
14382Why, he asked himself, why should he not perjure his soul, and lose it, too, to save his brother''s life and honor from fatal wrong?
14382Will you bind your soul by such an obligation?"
14382Will you enter, and wait till she returns?"
14382Will you follow my advice?"
14382Will you leave your orphan daughter to me?
14382Will you meet me on the beach to- morrow afternoon?"
14382Will you not let me and my servants retire in peace?
14382Will you permit me to take you to her?"
14382Will you promise me one thing?"
14382Will you?
14382Would Thurston sleep in his own house or in a prison that night?
14382Would he persist in his present course?
14382Would her report be received and acted upon by the magistrate?
14382Would n''t she have a bowl of nice hot mulled wine?
14382Would n''t she have a hot bath?
14382Would n''t she have her bed warmed?
14382Would she ever return, after having assumed such a task as she had taken upon herself?"
14382Would she-- could she now abide by its obligations?
14382Would you have used force with Miriam-- restrained her personal liberty?"
14382Would you like to go?"
14382Yet, what could be his intentions?
14382You exasperating, unprincipled little wretch, where is it?"
14382You have heard, dear Marian, that after my father''s death my mother married a second time?"
14382You have not seen her since?"
14382You remember Marian Mayfield?"
14382You will be off Pine Bluff just at dusk, captain?"
14382You will meet him again, dear?
14382You will not deprive me of any portion of your love; will you, uncle?"
14382You will not-- will you?
14382a difficulty with the commodore?"
14382ai n''t you a proud and happy man to be married?"
14382and how at Old Field Cottage?
14382and when?"
14382answer me-- do you know the handwriting?"
14382are you mad, sir?
14382are you satisfied?
14382asked Thurston, impatiently;"is your hire insufficient?"
14382cried the brutal Thorg,"what care I whether she pull the trigger or not?
14382dear child, are you hurt?"
14382did any of our people strike you?"
14382did you see anything of the professor while I was gone?"
14382did-- was-- do you know whether there was any one in particular on familiar terms with Miss Mayfield?"
14382do n''t it look so to you?"
14382do n''t you think so?"
14382do you do this to make me love you ten thousand times more than I do?"
14382do you love me, believing me to be guilty?"
14382do you not see?"
14382drive Dr. Grimshaw to hang himself?"
14382for Marster in heaven''s sake what''ll come o''you?"
14382has a doctor been summoned?"
14382he said, lowering his voice, and slipping the note for Marian into her hand,"may I ask you to deliver this to Miss Mayfield, when no one is by?"
14382how came you to do such a rash act?"
14382how shall I tell you without offense?
14382how should I?
14382how?"
14382is he dead?
14382is there mischief enough to amuse you?
14382is this the end of years of suffering and probation?
14382it''s you, is it, Sol?
14382lookin''as glum as if I owed him a year''s sarvice, an''nebber so much as a- sayin'',''Jenny, you poor old debbil, ai n''t you a- cold?''
14382make love to Jacquelina?"
14382my child, why are you so perverse?
14382not one word or glance for me?
14382now what in the world do you mean by this?
14382now, is your memory as good as your sight?
14382oh!--""Do n''t talk so wildly, Jacquelina, you make me ill.""Do I, Mimmy?
14382or content?
14382or where he hides her?
14382or whether she died or whether she lives?
14382pray Heaven for fortitude?"
14382pretty mistress, has your larder the material to supply my men with a meal?"
14382she said, with a wild laugh,"is there a deeper pit in perdition than that to which you urge me now?"
14382should you?"
14382since I am forever bound to you; will you pledge yourself to become my own dear wife?"
14382tell me that you have lied?
14382that such is your condition, that if you were to die now your soul would go to burning flames?"
14382the holy church would refuse you its communion?"
14382this morning?"
14382to feed de cattle and de poultry?
14382vociferated the commodore, seeing that no one else spoke;"what''s all this about, Nace Grimshaw?"
14382well?"
14382well?"
14382what can I say to you?
14382what did you say, Henrietta?"
14382what do you come here to disturb my thoughts so for?
14382what do you mean?
14382what do you mean?
14382what do you mean?"
14382what have I done?"
14382what have I said?
14382what in the name of Heaven has happened?"
14382what is the matter?
14382what is the reason the professor is such a favorite with uncle?"
14382what is this?"
14382what mean you?
14382what of Marian?"
14382what shall I do?"
14382what she intends to do?"
14382what was it?"
14382what will everybody say?"
14382what''s this?
14382what?
14382what?
14382when did you see her last?
14382when?
14382where are those letters you wished to show me?"
14382where are you, Marian?"
14382where have you been?
14382where is Marian?"
14382where is uncle?"
14382where was Thurston, and why did he not come?
14382where was Thurston?
14382why do you turn away your head?
14382why should you think so?"
14382why, do you think that in such an hour as this I care for myself?
14382will no one attempt to save him?"
14382will none even try to save him?"
14382will you give it up?"
14382you are compassionate by nature; how can you keep me in the torture of suspense?"
26146All right,said Gustave,"but who is to go ahead of the show?"
26146Am I?
26146And how long,faltered Frohman, thinking of his play--"how long would it take to learn them?"
26146And how''s your own play getting along?
26146And the play does n''t matter?
26146And then?
26146And with whom?
26146Are there any of those country fairs around here, where they have side shows and you can throw balls at things?
26146Are there no men in your audiences?
26146Are there rules of painting, sculpture, music? 26146 But ca n''t you give me Monday or Tuesday night?"
26146But how about my mustache?
26146But is a playwright,I asked,"more highly reputed than a theatrical manager?"
26146But what do the critics say?
26146But who will write you your Terror and Pity?
26146But why did you permit yourself to lose so much money on a play that seemed bound to fail?
26146By the way, Smith,called out Frohman,"how much do you want me to pay you for taking him off my hands?"
26146Ca n''t we do it?
26146Did you forget all about the supper?
26146Did you see that man outside?
26146Do you spell high- ball with a hyphen?
26146Do you think there is any danger?
26146Do you think you can get me a job as programmer with your show?
26146Do you want a contract?
26146Have they a daughter named Barbara?
26146Have you got the whole week?
26146How about her costume?
26146How did it go?
26146How go the rules?
26146How is it going?
26146How would you like to go under my management?
26146How''s that?
26146How''s that?
26146How''s that?
26146How''s the house, Tommy?
26146How?
26146Is he the bailiff?
26146Is it as easy as that?
26146Is n''t it enough to be a theatrical manager?
26146May I wait for him?
26146Miss Who?
26146Now what would you like to do this evening?
26146Rules?
26146Shall I take it home and read it?
26146Then you hold,said I,"that even in a French farce the events should be reasonable?"
26146Then,said the manager,"what else could you do?
26146This is terrible, is n''t it? 26146 To what do you attribute such a state of affairs?"
26146WHY FEAR DEATH?
26146Was it interesting?
26146Well, then, I may have him?
26146Well,said Frohman,"you sent matter to all the papers, did n''t you?"
26146What are they talking about?
26146What are you doing here, Charley?
26146What are you doing here?
26146What are you laughing at?
26146What do you consider the biggest thing that you have done?
26146What do you mean by leading actor?
26146What do you think?
26146What have you to do?
26146What is it?
26146What is that?
26146What is the name of the book?
26146What is wrong with it?
26146What salary do you want?
26146What would a literary man like to do in Paris?
26146What would you like to do?
26146What''s his name?
26146What''s that?
26146What''s the matter with the torrent?
26146What''s the matter, Lionel?
26146What''s the matter?
26146What''s up?
26146What, you here again?
26146When do you want to go?
26146Where are you going?
26146Where did you get your cockney dialect?
26146Where do they come from?
26146Where do you want to go?
26146Where to, Governor?
26146Where?
26146Which part?
26146Who are you?
26146Who is it?
26146Who is that man?
26146Who is that?
26146Who''s Shakespeare? 26146 Who''s that?"
26146Whom do you consider the greatest American dramatist?
26146Why all this fuss?
26146Why ca n''t Ongley pretend to be a crank and appear to be making an attempt on Miss Marlowe''s life?
26146Why ca n''t you make it into a long play?
26146Why did you do this play?
26146Why do n''t you do it under my management?
26146Why do n''t you stop in down- stairs and see''Rosemary''?
26146Why not give a magnificent pageant?
26146Why not have a real negro play Uncle Tom?
26146Why not make him stage- manager?
26146Why split and separate a good acting combination?
26146Why?
26146Why?
26146Why?
26146Why?
26146Will she be able to do it?
26146Will you take charge of the company?
26146Wo n''t I play with Uncle John?
26146Would you like to play in''Alice''?
26146Would you like to play with me?
26146You do n''t expect,I said,"to pick up another''Two Orphans,''a second''Ticket of Leave Man''?"
26146You know I have an agreement to deliver you the manuscript of a play?
26146You mean the candelabrum?
26146You mean to say that you want me to change Mr. Thomas''s lines?
26146''What are you going to give us next season, Frohman?''
26146''Who in thunder is Sardou?''
26146( Turning to Miss Pringle),"England, why should I stay in England?
26146After all, what is melodrama?
26146After an interval of a few moments a dulcet voice came through the door, saying,"Wo n''t you see me?"
26146Approaching the treasurer at the box- office, he said:"Will you please let me have a hundred dollars on account of the show?"
26146At lunch that day Frohman remarked to the agent:"Why did you send me that note about the papers?"
26146At the end of this meeting Lestocq said in jest,"What do I get out of this?"
26146But you''ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?"
26146Charles borrowed a quantity of it and also from the"Whose Baby Are You?"
26146Collier, who had been playing bridge until dawn, showed up at the appointed time, whereupon Frohman said:"How did you do it?"
26146Did n''t Augustin Daly make splendid adaptations of German farces?
26146Did n''t Lester Wallack write''Rosedale''and''The Veteran''?
26146Do n''t you think it is a pretty good life''s work?"
26146Do n''t you think we had better warn him?"
26146Do we walk?"
26146Does he want me?"
26146Does n''t Belasco turn out first- class dramas?
26146Each public asks,''What have you got?''
26146Every now and then he would chirp up with the question:"How do I get out of town?"
26146F.?"
26146F.?"
26146Fine part.--First act--_you_ know-- romantic-- light through the window... nice deep tones of your voice, you see?...
26146Frohman jumped up from his chair, saying, eagerly,"What''s the verdict?"
26146Frohman looked up with a start and said:"Is that so?
26146Frohman now got Ditrichstein to adapt"Are You a Mason?"
26146Frohman thought a moment and said:"Can you be at my office to- morrow morning at eight o''clock?
26146Frohman thought a moment, and suddenly flashed out:"Why not rewrite''The Taming of the Shrew''with a new background?"
26146Frohman turned to Dillingham and said:"What in the name of Heaven is that?
26146Frohman, who was just walking through the side door on his way to William Faversham''s dressing- room, turned to the star and said:"Who is calling?
26146Frohman,_ you''_ve got London by the neck, have n''t you?"
26146Frohman?"
26146Frohman?"
26146He had five different plays going at the same time--"Sherlock Holmes,""Are You a Mason?"
26146He had hardly repeated the first three words--"Why fear death?"
26146He kept on saying,"Will it never come?"
26146He nagged at his brother:"Gus, when do we start for Chicago?
26146He slapped Collier on the back and, turning to his companion, said:"Was n''t that a bully scene that Willie put into the play?"
26146Heimley_, do n''t you?"
26146His first greeting to Gustave was:"Well, when do we start again?"
26146How about my fee?"
26146How would you like to go on?"
26146If he saw an impressive bit of scenery he would say,"Would n''t that make a fine background?"
26146In London they say,''How long will the play run even though it is a failure?''"
26146Instead, Frohman whispered:"Charley, I wonder if they have any more of that famous apple- pie over at Hueblein''s?"
26146May I?"
26146More than one actor, on entering the shop, asked the question:"Where is Charley?
26146Much to her surprise Frohman said:"Well, Ethel, what can I do for you?"
26146Often in discussing a business arrangement with his representatives he would say:"Did I say that?"
26146On going into the adjoining dressing- room the great actor said to her:"Would n''t you like to stay in England?"
26146On this same occasion he was asked,"What seat in the theater do you consider the best to view a drama or a musical comedy from?"
26146Once he was asked the question:"If you had your life to live over again would you be a theatrical manager?"
26146Once he was asked this question:"What is the difference between metropolitan and out- of- town audiences?"
26146One day in 1909 he said to Frohman:"Why do n''t you establish a Repertory Theater?"
26146One day, a year later, Frohman remarked to Potter in Paris,"What do you say to paying Ouida a visit in Florence?"
26146One night, just before Gustave started out, the lad said to him:"Gus, how can I make money like you?"
26146Quick as a flash Chambers said to him:"Why do you keep His Grace waiting?"
26146She became indignant, called him to the footlights, and said:"I want you to know that I am an artist?"
26146Shoving the money at him, Frohman said,"How far will this take us?"
26146Some years afterward a well- known English playwright asked Stephen Gatti:"What is your contract with Frohman?"
26146Sometimes he would say,"Try it my way first,"or"Do you like that?"
26146Summoning a waiter, he asked:"What''s all that noise about?"
26146The most extraordinary plays succeed, and many that deserve a better fate fail; so how are we to know until after we test a play before the public?
26146Then he said to Germon:"You''re a member of the well- known Germon family, are n''t you?
26146Then he said, eagerly:"When shall we do it; whom do you want for star?"
26146Then why not I?
26146Then why not go to a young country where all is life and gaiety and sunshine and joy and youth-- the land of promise, the land for me?"
26146Then, as always, she asked herself the question:"What will this character mean to the people who see it?"
26146Then, with all the terror of destruction about him, Frohman said to his associates, with the serene smile still on his face:"Why fear death?
26146They came to his mind as he stood on that fateful deck and said:_ Why fear death?
26146This was discussed for a little while, when Sir Charles said,"What do you say, Frohman?"
26146To Arthur he said:"What do you think about my taking the Wallack successes out on the road?
26146What comes next on the American stage?
26146What do you say?"
26146What does this result in?
26146When Charles saw them he said,"How much do you want?"
26146When Haverly replied that he had not, Gustave immediately spoke up:"Why do n''t you hire my brother Charley?
26146When Lestocq told Frohman these terms over the telephone, all he said was this:"Did you tell her not to slam the door?"
26146When do artists eat?"
26146When he was able to talk Thomas said to him:"Why in Heaven''s name did n''t you use the elevator?"
26146When he was told he said:"I want to see it, but do I have to look at anything else in the gallery?"
26146When he went to see Frohman to hear about the third, this is the way the manager expressed it to him:"New play-- see?...
26146When the curtain went down his new star said to him:"How did it go?"
26146When the play went into rehearsal, Frohman, who sat in front, spoke to Miller from time to time, asking,"Where is that line you spoke in my office?"
26146When the terms had been agreed upon, Frohman said to Crane:"Are you sure this is perfectly satisfactory to you?"
26146Where can you find a more human theme than that?"
26146Who shall we have in the cast?"
26146Why do n''t you give him a chance?"
26146Why do n''t you go as my understudy and tell the doctor what is the matter with you?
26146Why throw away your money on it?
26146Will you help me put her out in a piece?"
26146Will you let me have her, and in that way do another great wrong by doing me a favor?
26146Will you speak to your father about it?"
26146Would you like to adapt a French farce for me?_ Dillingham accepted this commission and thus met Frohman.
26146XIX"WHY FEAR DEATH?"
26146or"Does this give you a better feeling?"
26146was the query?
26146you know?''
18569And who are these fine patriarchs whom I see sad and motionless at the end of these green walks? 18569 But do you not know quite well that a man who is impotent does not make children?"
18569But who is that lady coming out of the room?
18569But, once again,persisted the European,"what state would you choose?"
18569By the way,said the European,"do you consider that there should be more honour in a despotic state, and more virtue in a republic?"
18569Do n''t you see that''s his dagger?
18569How can you expect a state to be happily governed by the Tartars? 18569 I knew nothing about it: and the popes?"
18569In what state, under what domination, would you like best to live?
18569Is it possible?
18569Is it your oven? 18569 Little Pic,"said the Pope,"who do you think is my grandson''s father?"
18569Must our poems, then,he says,"be like our wines, of which the oldest are always preferred?"
18569Pilate saith unto Him, What is truth? 18569 Tell me what merit one can have in telling God that one is persuaded of things of which in fact one can not be persuaded?
18569What do you find beautiful there?
18569What do you mean by your fatherland?
18569What do you there, idolator?
18569What do you think of the government of the Great Mogul?
18569What incredulous fellow,adds the secretary,"will dare deny all these evident facts which happened in a corner before the whole world?
18569Where is that country?
18569You are doubtless on your way to comfort some sick man, Monseigneur?
18569Your master? 18569 _ As for me, I always made little journeys from town to town._""Is it necessary for me to take sides either for the Greek Church or the Latin?"
18569_ Have I not already told you? 18569 _ I have never been in that country._""Is it necessary for me to imprison myself in a retreat with fools?"
18569_ No, without a doubt._"Why then did they put you in the condition in which I now see you?
18569_ That was always my practice._"Can I not, by doing good, dispense with making a pilgrimage to St. James of Compostella?
18569_ To the wicked everything serves as pretext._"Did you not say once that you were come not to send peace, but a sword?
18569''s council was composed of the most virtuous men?
18569( 10) Why does a child often die in its mother''s womb?
185699):"Art thou in health, my brother?
18569A: Do you want this gun to carry off your head and the heads of your wife and daughter, who are walking with you?
18569A: There is a battery of guns firing in your ears, have you the liberty to hear them or not to hear them?
18569A: Well, do storms stop our enjoyment of to- day''s beautiful sun?
18569A: What do you mean by that?
18569A: Where, if it was not in the notions of natural law, did you get the idea that every man has within himself when his mind is properly made?
18569A: Who is this Jean- Jacques?
18569A: With your permission, that has no sense; do you not see that it is ridiculous to say, I wish to wish?
18569A: You have consequently taken some thirty steps in order to be sheltered from the gun, you have had the power to walk these few steps with me?
18569After the assertions of the ancient philosophers, which I have reconciled as far as has been possible for me, what is left to us?
18569An honest man asks him--"What is the cardinal virtue?"
18569And as regards moral and physical ill, what can one say, what do?
18569And do not Cicero and the whole senate surrender to these reasons?
18569And what do you ask of Him?
18569And what is instinct?
18569And what will become of that other proverb:_ Sit pro ratione voluntas_; my will is my reason, I wish because I wish?
18569And where did the Tyrians get this corn?
18569And you, why have you done harm so many times?
18569And your divine virtues, which are they?
18569And, further, what is it which instructs very feebly about these emigrations?
18569Answer me, machinist, has nature arranged all the means of feeling in this animal, so that it may not feel?
18569Are they worthy or unworthy?
18569Are you always active?
18569As for charity, is it not what the Greeks and the Romans understood by humanity, love of one''s neighbour?
18569B: And what is that reason, if you please?
18569B: But all the books I have read on the liberty of indifference.... A: What do you mean by the liberty of indifference?
18569B: But if I tell you that I want neither the one nor the other?
18569B: But, I repeat, I am not free then?
18569B: What are you talking about?
18569B: What do you call just and unjust?
18569B: Why are there so many one- eyed and deformed minds?
18569B: You embarrass me; liberty then is nothing but the power of doing what I want to do?
18569Barbarian, who has told you there is a God?
18569Besides, how would one have arrested the Duc de Beaufort surrounded by his army?
18569But I ask if Queen Anne of England is not her husband''s chief?
18569But does our Arab believe in fact in Mohammed''s sleeve?
18569But have we a crucible in which to put the soul?
18569But how imagine that stone and mud are emanations of the eternal Being, potent and intelligent?
18569But how shall things have always existed, being visibly under the hand of the prime author?
18569But is that which is the principle of our life different from that which is the principle of our thoughts?
18569But shall only those that are useful to one''s fellow- creature be admitted as virtues?
18569But the schoolmasters ask what the soul of animals is?
18569But was there ever an empire of the Gauls?
18569But what country would a wise, free man, a man with a moderate fortune, and without prejudices, choose?
18569But what is matter?
18569But what is spirit?
18569But what matters all that has been said and all that will be said about the soul?
18569But what proof of it have you?
18569But what reason did the credulous have for refusing a soul to this woman''s children?
18569But what was absolutely essential to him with all his talents?
18569But what will become of the cardinal and divine virtues?
18569But what will happen?
18569But whence comes this expression_ common sense_, unless it be from the senses?
18569But where is the Eternal Geometer?
18569But who has told you that the first principles of matter are divisible and figurable?
18569But who were these Gauls?
18569But who will ever compare the land of the Iroquois to England?
18569But why?
18569But would one have pleasure in enjoying?
18569But, my dear reader, will it be the same with the works of nature?
18569But, you will say, can I not resist an idea which dominates me?
18569By what strange singularity do sensible men resemble Don Quixote who thought he saw giants where other men saw only windmills?
18569Can He give me what He has not?
18569Can I call virtue things other than those which do me good?
18569Can I do more with the character which nature has given me?
18569Can he know by himself if this intelligence is omnipotent, that is to say, infinitely powerful?
18569Can one blame Scipio to have availed himself of it?
18569Can one change one''s character?
18569Can one give oneself anything?
18569Can there exist a people free from all superstitious prejudices?
18569Could he form without destroying?
18569Could he make it longer?
18569DONDINDAC: How should I know?
18569DONDINDAC: Not in the least: of what use would it be to me?
18569DONDINDAC: What does it matter to me whether it exists from all eternity or not?
18569Did nature wish compassion to be born in us at sight of these tears which soften us, and lead us to help those who shed them?
18569Did not your religion begin in Asia, whence it was driven out?
18569Did she ever have Demosthenes, Sophocles, Apelles, Phidias?
18569Did the Celts have kings?
18569Did the earthquake which destroyed half the city of Lisbon stop your making the voyage to Madrid very comfortably?
18569Did this prime author produce things out of nothing?
18569Do we not often pronounce words of which we have only a very confused idea, or even of which we have none at all?
18569Do we want to take a step beyond?
18569Do you know enough of this power to demonstrate that it can do still more?
18569Do you not eat, sleep, propagate like him, even almost to the attitude?
18569Do you not feel an itching to thrash this cruel, impious fellow?
18569Do you not know that there is an infinite art in those seas and those mountains that you find so crude?
18569Do you think that men will be satisfied to believe in a God who punishes and rewards?
18569Do you want an idea of love?
18569Do you want the sense of smell other than through your nose?
18569Do you wish to be married; yes or no?
18569Does He see the future as future or as present?
18569Does a father know how he has produced his son?
18569Does anyone know how his limbs obey his will?
18569Does n''t one say every day, wishes are free?
18569Does not the idea of justice subsist always?
18569Does the canary to which you teach a tune repeat it at once?
18569Does this being, who possesses intelligence and power in so high a degree, exist necessarily?
18569Erotic philosophers have often debated the question of whether Heloïse could still really love Abelard when he was a monk and emasculate?
18569Finally, why give him an Italian name?
18569For if they ask me who told me that God punishes?
18569Fugitive phantoms, what invisible hand produces you and causes you to disappear?
18569Had you then proved to them, as Socrates did, that the Moon was not a goddess, and that Mercury was not a god?"
18569Has a necessary being, of sovereign intelligence, created them out of nothing, or has he arranged them?
18569Has anyone ever been able to divine how he acts, how he wakes, how he sleeps?
18569Has he the least notion of the infinite, to understand what is an infinite power?
18569Has not Virgil himself quoted the predictions of the sibyls?
18569Have we not already examined together this lovely proposition which is so useful to society( Discourse on Inequality, second part)?
18569Have you no laws in your country?
18569He answered with much courtesy--"_Yes._""And who were these monsters?"
18569He asks what is the exact measure of deformity by which you can recognize whether or no a child has a soul?
18569He draws you aside and says to you:"Sir, do you want some books from Holland?"
18569He had this fortune; but was he happy?
18569Here on one side the soul of Archimedes, on the other the soul of an idiot; are they of the same nature?
18569How can I admit any others?
18569How can Rollin, in his history, reason from this oracle?
18569How can you prove by your reason that this being can do more than he has done?
18569How could these Indians suppose a revolt in heaven without having seen one on earth?
18569How does the air carry sound?
18569How has this strange mental alienation been able to operate?
18569How have I received it?
18569How is it possible for the rest of the world to laugh at you and your Brahma?
18569How is it that he does not let the young idea know that it was pure charlatanry?
18569How is reason so precious a gift that we would not lose it for anything in the world?
18569How is the organ of this Arab, who sees half the moon in Mohammed''s sleeve, vitiated?
18569How shall this animal be defined?
18569How should combinations"which chance has produced,"produce this sensation and this intelligence( as has just been said in the preceding paragraph)?
18569How should the Hebrews have had maritime terms, they who before Solomon had not a boat?
18569How should we have?
18569How then are we so bold as to assert what the soul is?
18569How then is it that nearly the whole world is governed by monarchs?
18569How were you born to be king and to bear witness to the truth?
18569How, if I were Christian, should I say mass in my province where there is neither bread nor wine?
18569I am not free to wish what I wish?
18569I ask if it is just, and if it is not evident that the laws were made by cuckolds?
18569I can not wish without reason?
18569I once saw one of your temples; why do you depict God with a long beard?
18569I said to him,"is it possible for a just man, a sage, to be in this state?
18569If Attila was a brigand and Cardinal Mazarin a rogue, are there not princes and ministers who are honest people?
18569If they think by their own nature, can the species of a soul which can not do a sum in arithmetic be the same as that which measured the heavens?
18569If you are born gentle, will you not run with all your might to the west when this barbarian utters his atrocious reveries in the east?
18569If you had to choose between the destiny of the father and that of the son, which would you take?
18569In all conscience, does a financier cordially love his fatherland?
18569In these matters that are inaccessible to the reason, what do these romances of our uncertain imaginations matter?
18569In truth, what does it matter to him that people say he is not in the world?
18569In vain have they been asked what a material soul is; they have to admit that it is matter which has sensation: but what has given it this sensation?
18569In what does a society of atheists appear impossible?
18569In what sense then must one utter the phrase--"Man is free"?
18569Is God in one place, beyond all places, or in all places?
18569Is God infinite_ secundum quid_, or in essence?
18569Is He immense without quantity and without quality?
18569Is a vigorous young man, madly in love, who holds his willing mistress in his arms, free to tame his passion?
18569Is it because I speak to you, that you judge that I have feeling, memory, ideas?
18569Is it because matter is divisible and figurable, and thought is not?
18569Is it love?
18569Is it not better to say that probably the necessity of His nature and the necessity of things have determined everything?
18569Is it of His own substance that He has arranged all things?
18569Is it possible for what has been not to have been, and can a stick not have two ends?
18569Is not the word_ soul_ an instance?
18569Is that the best of all possible worlds?
18569Is the first principle of the movement of the heart in animals properly understood?
18569Is there a greater charlatanry than that of substituting words for things, and of wanting others to believe what you do not believe yourself?
18569Is there another life for this creature, or is there none?
18569Is there any truth in metaphysics?
18569Is this Indian anecdote taken from the Jewish books?
18569Is this light matter?
18569It is thus that a great part of the world long was treated; but to- day when so many sects make a balance of power, what course to take with them?
18569John?"
18569LOGOMACOS: But, is He corporeal or spiritual?
18569Let us go further: this liberty being only the power of acting, what is this power?
18569Let us suppose that all wines are excellent, will you have less desire to drink?
18569Listen to other brutes reasoning about the brutes; their soul is a spiritual soul which dies with the body; but what proof have you of it?
18569MAUPERTUIS''OBJECTION Of what use are beauty and proportion in the construction of the snake?
18569Many teachers have said--"What do I not know?"
18569Montaigne used to say--"What do I know?"
18569My sect is extravagant, therefore it is divine; for how should what appears so mad have been embraced by so many peoples, if it were not divine?"
18569NATURE: My poor child do you want me to tell you the truth?
18569NATURE: Since I am all that is, how can a being such as you, so small a part of myself, seize me?
18569NEW OBJECTION OF A MODERN ATHEIST[4] Can one say that the parts of animals conform to their needs: what are these needs?
18569No, for what would be the cause of your resistance?
18569OSMIN: Are there notions common to all men which serve to make them live in society?
18569OSMIN: Are these necessary things in all time and in all places?
18569OSMIN: But since it exists, God has permitted it?
18569OSMIN: How does it happen then that men are born lacking a part of these necessary things?
18569OSMIN: That is to say that it was necessary to the divine nature to make all that it has made?
18569OSMIN: What do you mean when you say"God permits"?
18569OUANG: Do you not see that you are perverting these poor people?
18569Of what use to you would be a power which was exercised only on such futile occasions?
18569On what ground do you imagine that this being, which is not body, dies with the body?
18569One asks still further what would be a soul which never has any but fantastic ideas?
18569One questions every day whether a republican government is preferable to a king''s government?
18569Persecutions make proselytes?
18569SECTION II Let us say a word on the moral question set in action by Bayle, to know"if a society of atheists could exist?"
18569SECTION II What is virtue?
18569SELIM: Is it not a great deal to recognize people who deceive you, and the gross and dangerous errors which they retail to you?
18569Shall the soul that was ready to lodge in this woman''s foetus go back again into space?
18569She answers:"Do you think our Lord had nothing to clothe him with?"
18569Should not a thinking being who dwells in a star in the Milky Way offer Him the same homage as the thinking being on this little globe where we are?
18569Should not the judge say to himself:"I should not dare punish at Ragusa what I punish at Loretto"?
18569Should not this reflection soften in his heart the hardness that it is only too easy to contract during the long exercise of his office?
18569Should not this tribute be the same in the whole of space, since it is the same supreme power which reigns equally in all space?
18569THE HONEST MAN: Is it a virtue to believe?
18569Tell me, my friend, do you think that matter can be eternal?
18569Tell me, what was that you were singing in your barbarous Scythian jargon?"
18569That great orator, in his harangue for Cluentius, says to the whole senate in assembly:"What ill does death do him?
18569That hunting- dog which you have disciplined for three months, does it not know more at the end of this time than it knew before your lessons?
18569That is to ask-- Can there exist a nation of philosophers?
18569The officer and the soldier who will pillage their winter quarters, if one lets them, have they a very warm love for the peasants they ruin?
18569The world can exist only by contradictions: what is needed to abolish them?
18569Their superstitions were quite different from those of the Greeks._""You wanted to teach them a new religion, then?"
18569There are pious men among us; but where are the wise men?
18569There is much evil in this village: but whence have you the knowledge that this evil is not inevitable?
18569There is not there a distinct soul in the machine: but what makes animals''bellows move?
18569There was at that time( who would believe it?)
18569These questions appear sublime; what are they?
18569These questions seem sublime; what are they?
18569They cite Lacedæmon; why do they not cite also the republic of San Marino?
18569They will say:"Who will assure me that God punishes and rewards?
18569Under which tyranny would you like to live?
18569Up to what point does statecraft permit superstition to be destroyed?
18569Was it+ psychê+, was it+ pneuma+, was it+ nous+, with whom one had conversed in the dream?
18569Was there not a little charlatanry in Socrates with his familiar demon, and Apollo''s precise declaration which proclaimed him the wisest of all men?
18569We can not give ourselves tastes, talents; why should we give ourselves qualities?
18569Well now, is it better for your fatherland to be a monarchy or a republic?
18569Well, to what dogma do all minds agree?
18569Well, who shall judge the suit?
18569What Thomist or Scotist theologian would dare say seriously that he is sure of his case?
18569What cause detached the north of Germany, Denmark, three- quarters of Switzerland, Holland, England, Scotland, Ireland, from the Roman communion?
18569What conclusion shall we draw from all this?
18569What connection, I ask you, between a goat and a man''s crime?
18569What does it matter that Tertullian, by a contradiction frequent in him, has decided that it is simultaneously corporeal, formed and simple?
18569What does it matter that the Fathers of the first four centuries thought the soul corporeal?
18569What does it matter to me that you are temperate?
18569What does this phrase signify?
18569What even is this Time of which I speak?
18569What fatherland have you, Cardinals de La Balue, Duprat, Lorraine, Mazarin?
18569What good did Sparto to Greece?
18569What have all the philosophers, ancient and modern, taught us?
18569What idea have you of God?
18569What is God?
18569What is His nature?
18569What is it?
18569What is one to think of a child with two heads?
18569What is sensation?
18569What is the consequence?
18569What is the good of all that, Nature?
18569What is the meaning of this phrase"to be free"?
18569What is the precise degree at which it must be declared a monster and deprived of a soul?
18569What is this soul?
18569What is thought?
18569What is to be done?
18569What more beautiful rule of conduct has ever been given since him in the whole world?
18569What pleasure can that give God?
18569What then should I have said to Zarathustra?
18569What tribute of worship should I render Him?
18569What will decide then?
18569What would be the true religion if Christianity did not exist?
18569What would they have said if they had seen us enter our temples with the instrument of destruction at our side?
18569When I play at odds and evens, I have a reason for choosing evens rather than odds?
18569When is it that this young man can refrain despite the violence of his passion?
18569Whence can come so many contradictory errors?
18569Whence comes evil, and why does evil exist?
18569Whence comes it that loving truth passionately, we are always betrayed to the most gross impostures?
18569Whence comes this form of modesty?
18569Whence comes this universal competition in hisses and derision from one end of the world to the other?
18569Whence does this come?
18569Where then is the fatherland?
18569Where was the fatherland of Attila and of a hundred heroes of this type?
18569Where was the fatherland of the scarred Duc de Guise, was it in Nancy, Paris, Madrid, Rome?
18569Where will be liberty then?
18569Which is the Christian who, in a battle against the Turks, will not address himself to the Holy Virgin rather than to Mohammed?
18569Who can deny the fulfilment of their prophecies?
18569Who had made this present to the Greeks?
18569Who has bestowed these gifts?
18569Who leads the human race in civilized countries?
18569Who produces them in me?
18569Who will judge this great matter?
18569Who would believe that this word originally signified only a game of bowls?
18569Why and how has it been possible that of a hundred thousand million men more than ninety- nine have been immolated to this mania?
18569Why assemble here all these abominable monuments to barbarism and fanaticism?"
18569Why debate original sin with Zarathustra?
18569Why did the priests of Egypt imagine circumcision?
18569Why discuss our mysteries beside Zarathustra''s?
18569Why do the stars move from west to east rather than from east to west?
18569Why do we exist?
18569Why do we often come across minds otherwise just enough, which are absolutely false on important things?
18569Why do you pray God?
18569Why do you want to be married?
18569Why do you want to go further than him, and in foolish arrogance plunge your feeble reason in an abyss into which Spinoza dared not descend?
18569Why do you want to have liberty otherwise than your dog has?
18569Why does a little whitish, evil- smelling secretion form a being which has hard bones, desires and thoughts?
18569Why does so much evil exist, seeing that everything is formed by a God whom all theists are agreed in naming"good?"
18569Why has the source of life been poisoned all over the world since the discovery of America?
18569Why have the beautiful passages in"The Cid,""The Horaces,""Cinna,"had such a prodigious success?
18569Why have you been a persecutor?
18569Why in antiquity was there never a theological quarrel, and why were no people ever distinguished by the name of a sect?
18569Why in half Europe do girls pray to God in Latin, which they do not understand?
18569Why is a bond that has rotted indissoluble in spite of the great law adopted by the code,_ quidquid ligatur dissolubile est_?
18569Why is another who has had the misfortune to be born, reserved for torments as long as his life, terminated by a frightful death?
18569Why is liberty so rare?
18569Why is the half of Africa and America covered with poisons?
18569Why is there no land where insects are not far in excess of men?
18569Why not deign to instruct our workmen as we instruct our literati?
18569Why not?
18569Why should the wicked Ahriman have had power over this little globe of the world?
18569Why then do the same men who admit in private indulgence, kindness, justice, rise in public with so much fury against these virtues?
18569Why, alone of all animals, has man the mania for dominating his fellow- men?
18569Why, as we are so miserable, have we imagined that not to be is a great ill, when it is clear that it was not an ill not to be before we were born?
18569Why, since we complain ceaselessly of our ills, do we spend all our time in increasing them?
18569Why?
18569Why?
18569Wicked priests and wicked judges poisoned him; is it by priests and judges that you have been so cruelly assassinated?"
18569Will he congratulate himself on his economy?
18569Will it be reason?
18569Will you be disgusted if all the maids are so beautiful as Helen; and you, ladies, if all the lads are like Paris?
18569Would he have said:"Truth is an abstract word which most men use indifferently in their books and judgments, for error and falsehood?"
18569Would you like to be a philosopher?
18569You ask me what will become of liberty?
18569You ask why the snake does harm?
18569You wish to mount the horse; why?
18569[ 3]"There are two porters at the door of a house; they are asked:''Can one speak to your master?''
18569_ ANTIQUITY_ Have you sometimes seen in a village Pierre Aoudri and his wife Peronelle wishing to go before their neighbours in the procession?
18569_ BEAUTY_ Ask a toad what beauty is, the_ to kalon_?
18569_ BRAHMINS_ Is it not probable that the Brahmins were the first legislators of the earth, the first philosophers, the first theologians?
18569_ EZOURVEIDAM_ What is this"Ezourveidam"which is in the King of France''s library?
18569_ NAKEDNESS_ Why should one lock up a man or a woman who walked stark naked in the street?
18569_ NATURAL LAW_ B: What is natural law?
18569_ NATURE_ DIALOGUE BETWEEN THE PHILOSOPHER AND NATURE THE PHILOSOPHER: Who are you, Nature?
18569_ NECESSARY_ OSMIN: Do you not say that everything is necessary?
18569_ THE IMPIOUS_ Who are the impious?
18569_ TOLERANCE_ What is tolerance?
18569_ TRUTH_"Pilate therefore said unto him, Art thou a king then?
18569_ WHY?_ Why does one hardly ever do the tenth part of the good one might do?
18569_ WHY?_ Why does one hardly ever do the tenth part of the good one might do?
18569and how has this reason served only to make us the most unhappy of all beings?
18569and if she would not have him condemned by the court of peers if the little man''s infidelity were in question?
18569and why do these beings always persecute each other?
18569and why is no one shocked by absolutely nude statues, by pictures of the Madonna and of Jesus that may be seen in some churches?
18569and why should he have been put in prison, and why this mask?
18569are you always passive?
18569are you dead?"
18569at what age it came to settle between a bladder and the intestines_ cæcum_ and_ rectum_?
18569between this body and the sensation of colour?
18569can nothing happen without His order?
18569did he produce this order in Time or before Time?
18569did your elements arrange themselves, as water deposits itself on sand, oil on water, air on oil?
18569do we not receive everything?
18569do you not spend a considerable time in teaching it?
18569do you want me to walk otherwise than with my feet, and to speak otherwise than with my mouth?
18569does a mother how she conceived him?
18569does it not exist near the Baltic Sea, where it was unknown?"
18569does one know clearly how generation is accomplished?
18569has anyone discovered by what art ideas are marked out in his brain and issue from it at his command?
18569has it nerves in order to be impassible?
18569has one guessed what gives us sensations, ideas, memory?
18569have not all the others perished of necessity?
18569have the Jews copied it from the Indians?
18569have you not seen that it has made a mistake and that it corrects itself?
18569he was the man who perhaps did most honour to the Roman Republic; but why did the gods inspire him not to render his accounts?
18569how are animals formed?
18569how can you believe such folly?"
18569how could a man repair a homicide by bathing himself?
18569how do some of our limbs constantly obey our wills?
18569how do they treat those who have another worship than theirs?
18569how does He draw the being out of non- existence, and how annihilate the being?
18569how is it formed?
18569how would one have transferred him to France without anybody knowing anything about it?
18569how, you mad demoniac, do you want me to judge justice and reason otherwise than by the notions I have of them?
18569if Cæsar, Antony, Octavius never had this disease, was it not possible for it not to cause the death of François I.?
18569if after animating us for a few moments, its essence is to live after us into eternity without the intervention of God Himself?
18569if being spirit, and God being spirit, they are both of like nature?
18569if her husband the Prince of Denmark, who is her High Admiral, does not owe her entire obedience?
18569if it brought ideas with it or received them there, and what are these ideas?
18569if one loves God, one can eat meat on Friday?"
18569if the partridges, pheasants, pullets are common at all times, will you have less appetite?
18569inclusive?
18569is He in one place or in all places, without occupying space?
18569is it by virtue of my will that I think?
18569is it friendship?
18569is it not matter?
18569is it not then that the religion in which one was born acts most potently?
18569is it simply a memory?
18569is it the instinct for lighting desires by hiding what it gives pleasure to discover?
18569is it the same being?
18569is it the street where dwelled your father and mother who have been ruined and have reduced you to baking little pies for a living?
18569is it the town- hall where you will never be police superintendent''s clerk?
18569is it the village where you were born and which you have never seen since?
18569it was then to have these riches that these dead were piled up?"
18569my archangel,"said I,"where have you brought me?"
18569nature is only art?
18569of the misfortune to which one is reduced when one lacks the necessary?
18569of what is necessary to an honest man that he may live?
18569or can one say that both wrote it originally, and that fine minds meet?
18569permit, will and do, are they not the same thing for Him?
18569questions of blind men saying to other blind men--"What is light?"
18569should I be a better husband, a better father, a better master, a better citizen?
18569should I be more just?
18569that is Jesus Christ, doubtless?"
18569that it has been thought universal, uncreated, transmigrant, etc.?
18569the other animals will have the same liberty, then, the same power?
18569these wretches could not even reproach you with swerving from their laws?"
18569to what charter do you owe your liberty?
18569we reject all the inept fables of the nether regions: of what then has death deprived him?
18569were they Berichons and Angevins?
18569what are they?
18569what connection is there between the air which strikes my ear and the sensation of sound?
18569what does it matter that it has been called entelechy, quintessence, flame, ether?
18569what is to be done with their pure spirit?
18569what is your mission?
18569what miracle have you performed that I may believe you?"
18569whence do they come?
18569where are the resolute, just and tolerant souls?
18569where does it dwell?
18569where is the proof of it?
18569whither do they go?
18569who gives me thought during my sleep?
18569who has given these faculties?
18569who shall decide between these two fanatics?
18569who would command all their passions as they did?
18569who would impose on himself their frugality?
18569who would sleep as they did on the ground?
18569who, as they did, would march barefoot and bareheaded at the head of the armies, exposed now to the heat of the sun, now to the hoar- frost?
18569why is there anything?
18569why since all time have bladders been subject to being stone quarries?
18569why since the seventh century of our era does smallpox carry off the eighth part of the human race?
18569why the plague, war, famine, the inquisition?
18569with what innumerable properties can it be endowed?
18569without deformity apart from this?
18569would you have everything at the pleasure of a million blind caprices?
18569you are in the pay of a cardinal?
18569you believe that one can teach the people truth without strengthening it with fables?
18569you do n''t know what a spirit is?
18569you keep account of your kisses?"
23373An''have_ you_ killed lions, and tigers, and elephants?
23373An''sure, are n''t thim the very words I said, sor?
23373And have we made no progress during the night?
23373And is not that equivalent to saying that you are a man of your word?
23373And she is still of the same mind-- not shocked or shaken by my appearance?
23373And we set sail to- morrow, early?
23373And what does my reckless Milly intend to do with herself?
23373And what is the` hoose''called?
23373And who told the cracker?
23373And you are sure that mother has no idea that you are the man?
23373Any other cottages or houses near this?
23373Are the rats then so numerous?
23373Are they white?
23373Are ye laughing, you rascals?
23373Are you quiet now?
23373Ay, but have you spoken since she has seen me-- since this morning?
23373But I was not aware that_ you_ were married?
23373But do you really know nothing at all about boats and ships, Giles?
23373But how comes it, Captain, that you plead so earnestly for_ total_ abstinence?
23373But surely they have not left you all by yourself?
23373But what''s come of MacRummle?
23373But why was n''t you killed?
23373But, I say, do n''t you think it may give the old lady rather a shock as well as a surprise?
23373By the way, how did you get on with your photographing yesterday afternoon, Archie?
23373Come far to- day, sir?
23373Contemptibly it may have been, but not in cold blood, for did you not say you were roused to a state of frenzied alarm at the sight of the bobby? 23373 Could you not gif us a discoorse yoursel'', sir, from the prezenter''s dask?"
23373D''ee know how to fish for salmon?
23373D''you mean Ivor Donaldson, the keeper?
23373D''you think that quite safe, so soon after her ducking?
23373Did I hear you ask about Archie''s work, Mabberly?
23373Did I not warn you to stay no longer than an hour? 23373 Did Ivor say it was true?"
23373Did he_ not_ say he was sorry?
23373Did n''t I bid ye hau''d your tongue?
23373Did you ever see walruses?
23373Did you ever turn a tiger outside in?
23373Do n''t you smell a smell, Tonal''?
23373Do n''t you think that that was an answer to our prayer?
23373Do you believe in presentiments, Giles?
23373Do you know, Junkie, that this is the very spot where your Cousin Milly fell?
23373Do you think you could eat any more?
23373Explanation simple enough,returned Jackman;"are we not constantly reading in the papers of ships being run down in fogs?
23373Glass of bitter, sir?
23373Had we not better ring the bell, Captain?
23373Had we not better take in a reef, Ian?
23373Has Archie''s photography turned out well?
23373Has any one thought of bringing a bottle of water?
23373Has it been like this long?
23373Has your mother, then, decided to come?
23373Have I not heard you defend the idea of moderate drinking, although you consented to sail in a teetotal yacht?
23373Have they given you a good place?
23373Have we come half- way yet, Donald?
23373Have you any idea, Captain, where we are now?
23373Have you been in India, too?
23373Have you never tried?
23373Have you seen Jackman?
23373Have you shot them?
23373He has said all that, and more to me--"To_ you_?
23373How can you ask such a question? 23373 How could he mean that,"demanded Junkie,"when he said it was a_ tiger''s_ tail-- not a_ fairy''s_ at all?"
23373How do we treat it? 23373 How do you know that, puss?"
23373How is Milly this morning?
23373How many shots will it fire without reloading?
23373How old are you now, Miss Milly?
23373How old are you, Aggy?
23373How was it, Archie?
23373I am so glad of that, because-- because--"Well, why do you hesitate, Miss Moss?
23373I did, but did not you promise to show me how to manipulate oils-- in regard to which I know absolutely nothing? 23373 I mean, what danger threatens us?"
23373In coorse they is,said Tips;"do n''t you see they''re a- heavin''up their tails as well as their''eads?"
23373Is Drumquaich the little village close under the pine wood, that we see on doubling Eagle Point?
23373Is everybody safe? 23373 Is it difficult to find the rest of the way from this point?"
23373Is it to the north, south, east, or west we''re bound for, captain?
23373Is it? 23373 Is n''t that the place where they shoot lions and tigers and-- and g''rillas?"
23373Is that Eagle Cliff I see, just over the knoll there?
23373Is that all, Ivor? 23373 Is that considered a necessary part of the process of fishing?"
23373Is that sick girl your daughter, Ian?
23373Is that so, captain?
23373Is that the Cove down there?
23373Is that the sick gamekeeper, Junkie?
23373Is there any one inside?
23373Is there no other elder who could do it?
23373Is your brother better to- day?
23373Iss it goin''back you''ll be?
23373Iss it shelter ye''ll be wantin''? 23373 Iss it to fush, ye''ll be wantin''?"
23373It is,answered the laird;"do n''t you see the eagle himself like a black speck hovering above it?
23373It iss under the Eagle Cliff where ye came to laund, I make no doot?
23373It wass awful amusin'', Junkie, wass it not?
23373It''s to_ somewhere_ that coorse will take us in the ind, no doubt, if we carry on?
23373Man, who would have thought you could have grown into such a great long- legged fellow?
23373Milly,said Mrs Moss, severely, when they met a few minutes later in the drawing- room,"what were you two and Mr Jackman laughing at so loudly?
23373Milly,said the invalid, taking her small hand in his,"have you mentioned it yet to your mother?"
23373Mother,exclaimed Flo, who was a good but irrepressible child,"what d''ee t''ink?
23373Mr MacRummle, are you not a Highlander?
23373Mr MacRummle,he said firmly,"will you do me a favour?"
23373No, I wo n''t do it again; but first, tell me, is it true?
23373No; why?
23373Noo, shentlemen, ye''ll tak a tram?
23373Now, Barret, have you finished?
23373Now, are you ready? 23373 Now, is n''t that awful?"
23373Oh, do n''t I? 23373 Pray, who is this laird?"
23373Shall I run down and see what he wants?
23373Shall we leave it where it lies, or drag it further up on the beach?
23373Strange, is it not, that the very thing we have been talking about should happen?
23373Tell me about it,she said confidentially;"has he given way again, after all his promises to Mr Jackman?"
23373That must indeed have puzzled him; how did he manage?
23373The Eagle Cliff?
23373The matter?
23373Then what for are ye always poonishin''me, an''tellin''me to be coot, when ye say it wo n''t make me coot?
23373Time, Dick?
23373Tonal'', poy, what iss it that Muster Archie wull pe doin''?
23373Tonal'',he said, when ragged head stood at the open door,"hev we ony pait?"
23373Was n''t you frightened?
23373Wass it not funny?
23373Well, Donald, my lad, what want ye with me this fine morning?
23373Well, Ivor, are ye not better to- day, man?
23373Well, McGregor said to the captain,` What would you think if we wass to sit still an''co into the pictur''?''
23373Well, of course you remember about that young man-- that-- that_ cowardly_ young man who--"Who ran you down in London? 23373 What are ye laughin''at, honey?"
23373What are you going to photograph?
23373What caused the bruise, Maggie?
23373What d''you mean by a cracker, my boy?
23373What do you fear?
23373What do you mean?
23373What makes you think so, Ian?
23373What nonsense do you talk? 23373 What say ye to bomb stanes at''um?"
23373What think ye o''the keeper_ this_ time, Rodereek?
23373What''s to be done noo, Junkie?
23373What''s to be done now, Junkie?
23373What''s to be done? 23373 Where is he just now?"
23373Where''ll I put it, sor?
23373Where?
23373Which is--?
23373Why do you laugh so much, child?
23373Why so, Captain?
23373Why, Bob, do you suppose I would have offered him as cook and steward if I had not felt sure of him?
23373Why, what''s the matter with you?
23373Why?
23373Will ye have the other wan too, sor?
23373With a bicycle?
23373Would it do any good, Molly, if I were to go and speak to him, think you?
23373Would it not have been better to have flung the evil thing itself into the sea? 23373 Would you like some, Cousin Milly?"
23373Yes, perfectly; but is that all? 23373 Yes; but at what part of the hunt?"
23373You are not hurt, I trust?
23373You are quite sure, I hope,said the youth,"that it does not disturb you to be overlooked?
23373You can steer, of course?
23373You do n''t really mean it?
23373You mean, I suppose, the reckless youth who, after running her down, had the cowardice to run away and leave her lying flat on the pavement? 23373 You want to speak with me privately, I think, skipper?"
23373You''ll not have been in these parts before, sir?
23373` Where away is he?'' 23373 Ai n''t he bin and squashed''er?
23373And MacRummle-- where shall we place him?"
23373And how about Captain McPherson and McGregor?"
23373Are there not hundreds of men of whom the same may be said, yet they are not delivered from drunkenness, and do n''t seem likely to be?"
23373Are ye ready wi''the halyards, Muster Airchie?"
23373Are you fond of sport?"
23373Are you sure the arm is broken?"
23373As to what you say about some voices appearing to be familiar, do n''t you think that has something to do with classes of men?
23373But are you quite sure you are not hurt?"
23373But how came you to know about it, John?"
23373But how does it happen, Mr Barret, that you have been left behind?
23373But how is Government to remedy that?"
23373But it was not the Saviour who told you to lock that bottle in that cupboard-- was it?"
23373But they do n''t come into the rooms, do they?"
23373But where have you come from, sir?
23373But why are you so glad that Joan set the house on fire?"
23373But why do you speak in such pitiful tones of Aggy?"
23373But why not do it yourself, man?"
23373But wo n''t you tell about the elephants to_ us_, Mr Jackman?
23373But-- but how will I ever know how many I''ve let off?"
23373Can we have your boat to- day, Mr Anderson?"
23373Can you believe it?
23373Come now, Barret, do you think yourself strong enough to go out with us in the boat to- morrow?"
23373D''you hear, Blackie?
23373D''you mean the isles of the Western Pacific?"
23373D''you see the group of alders down in the hollow yonder, where the little stream that runs through the valley takes a sudden bend?
23373D''you see?"
23373D''you understand?"
23373Did not Milly say you were noble, and that it would be worse than murder to kill you?
23373Did the prophet give no indication how the stories were to end, or who the murderer is to be, or the murdered one?"
23373Did you feel a draught where you were?"
23373Did you?"
23373Do n''t you think we may as well turn now?"
23373Do you expect her soon?"
23373Do you know that she is exceedingly fond of flowers?"
23373Do you know, I had a meeting on the day of my arrival here which surprised me very much?
23373Do you not relax your teetotal principles a little on an occasion like this?"
23373Does your father give you leave to go wherever you please, and stay as long as you choose?"
23373Duncan, man, where are ye?"
23373Has it given you much pain?"
23373Have n''t you heard them yet?"
23373Have you a good crew?"
23373Have you been running?"
23373Have you had breakfast?"
23373How can the want of a thing be a_ quality_?"
23373How is that?"
23373How many did you get, Ivor?"
23373I believe I have the pleasure of addressing Mr MacRummle?"
23373If so, may they not be said to have fallen in love botanically?
23373In what direction do your tastes point?"
23373Is it not so, Ivor?"
23373Is n''t she, Archie?"
23373Is n''t that a comfort?
23373Is she likely to stay long?"
23373Iss it not so, Shames?"
23373Iss that not so, Shames?"
23373Junkie, did you hear the gong?"
23373May I ask if she resides permanently with you at Kinlossie?"
23373May she go?"
23373Milly-- where''s Milly?"
23373Must the pace be checked here?
23373My dear, what have you got there?"
23373My wife and Milly make three, myself four; who else?"
23373Need I say that he took advantage of it?
23373No one lost, I hope?"
23373Not a bad beginning, eh, Junkie?"
23373Now, Aggy, have you had enough?"
23373Now, what could be simpler-- we might even say, what could be easier-- than this?
23373Pray, may I ask why you have forsaken your favourite weapon, the gun, and taken to the rod to- day?"
23373Shall we reveal the multitude of absurd remarks made by the pupil, in his wild attempts at criticism of an art, about which he knew next to nothing?
23373She wound up with the question,--"Now, what you think of_ zat_, Blackie?"
23373Surely you did not tell them what we had been speaking about?"
23373The elder gave the laird a look which, if it had been translated into words, would probably have conveyed the idea--"Is he orthodox?"
23373This may sound selfish to some ears, but is it really so?
23373This was broken at length by Jackman saying, to the surprise of his companions,"What d''you say to reading a chapter before turning in?
23373Voyages always do to sick Anglo- Indians, do n''t you know?
23373Was n''t it generous of him?
23373Well, what says our Guide- book in regard to what is called` getting on''?
23373What about him?"
23373What do you intend to do?"
23373What fisher does not know the charm, the calm delight, of a quiet day by the river- side, after, it may be, months of too much contact with society?
23373What is it?"
23373What more natural, then, than that they should attribute their condition to botany?
23373What say you, Captain?"
23373What say you, gentlemen?
23373What say you?"
23373What then?"
23373What was he like?"
23373What was the surprise about?
23373What''ll you have, Mr Mabberly?
23373Whatever shall we do?"
23373Where did you pick him up?"
23373Where is this white rock that I have to go to?"
23373Where was I?"
23373Who can describe that meeting?
23373Who did it?"
23373Why do you change your seat, my love?
23373Why does everybody like her so much?"
23373Why, I ask, does not Government see to this?
23373Will he be fit to go with us?"
23373Will you kindly fetch me a glass of water?
23373Wo n''t you be''ad up before the beaks?
23373Would n''t we have a jolly hunt if they did?
23373You are living somewhere in this neighbourhood, I suppose?"
23373You came, I suppose, in search of my uncle?
23373You have heard from your mother about that young rascal who ran into her with his bicycle in London some time ago?"
23373You know Kinlossie House, I suppose?"
23373You know the waterfall at the head of Raven''s Nook?
23373You remember him, do n''t you?"
23373You say it is a very good spot, Ivor, I understand?"
23373You see it?"
23373You were not hurt, I hope?"
23373You will hev noticed, sir, that Ivor Tonalson iss raither fond of his tram?"
23373` Would you steer, sir?''
23373can imagine the sensations that the cry evokes, and who that really has experienced those sensations can hope to explain them to the inexperienced?
23373does that vigorous, handsome, powerful fellow, in the flush of early manhood, drink?
23373eh?
23373exclaimed Junkie, who happened to be in the room,"he has n''t told you yet about the elephant hunt, has he?"
23373for nobody else at all?"
23373have a special committee appointed to investigate, find out the best plan, and compel its adoption?
23373he said grasping her little head, and kissing her forehead,"what brings ye here?"
23373it''s_ you_, is it?"
23373man, are''ee shot?"
23373my puss, is that you?"
23373no putting in of cartridges anywhere?"
23373sixteen?
23373then, you mean to have your very select picnic on the hills?"
23373was he killed?"
23373where''s Milly?"
23373you do n''t drink?
26044''Also, I hope you said that he might have the loan of your disabled one till he had had it thoroughly repaired?''
26044''And I am sure you would like your own servant,''said Miss Abingdon;''I suppose you have some one over at Hulworth for whom you could send?''
26044''And you positively have no recollection of having seen him?''
26044''And you say you never saw the man until you met him out here?''
26044''Any letters?''
26044''Any reason why he should not have communicated with his friends all these years?''
26044''Are there any such remaining in his old home who would know anything about the man?
26044''Are you in the police out here?''
26044''Are you quite sure that you need tell me anything at all?''
26044''Are you there?''
26044''Can you see who is leading?''
26044''Can you tell me if it resembles any of your family?''
26044''Do you believe it?''
26044''Do you ever feel quite old, Jane?''
26044''Do you think the rabbits will lick on the paint and be sick, Peter?''
26044''Does he know?''
26044''Got leave again, have you?
26044''Hallo, Purvis, where have you come from, and when do you get any sleep?''
26044''Has it?''
26044''Has the usual acute financial crisis come?''
26044''Have a drink?''
26044''Have n''t my letters gone?''
26044''Have you also got a country seat?''
26044''Have you seen Toffy''s new motor- car yet?''
26044''He has a mixed lot of men on his estancia, has he not?''
26044''How are the Amalekites and Hittites and Girgashites?''
26044''How do you feel?''
26044''How do you think she is looking?''
26044''How is Peter?''
26044''How is it that everything she wears seems to be in such perfect taste?''
26044''How is your cold?''
26044''How often have I told you not to work when you are tired?''
26044''How on earth were they forgotten?''
26044''How would it do?''
26044''How''s Toffy going to afford a motor?''
26044''How- do- you- do, Peter, how- do- you- do?''
26044''I do n''t suppose she was able to tell you anything?''
26044''I say,''he said,''did n''t you mean these letters to go?''
26044''I should like to know where you have heard of the man?''
26044''I suppose we could n''t go in a yacht?''
26044''I suppose you know,''said Jane,''that you are extraordinarily pretty, Kitty?''
26044''I thought you must be lost,''he said;''what kept you, Jane?
26044''I want to know if you think you can care for me a little?''
26044''I wonder if he would be of any use to us in the way of finding out about my brother?''
26044''I wonder what they found to amuse them at Lawrence''s place?''
26044''I wonder,''he said,''if you could tell me exactly the year and the month when you first met Mrs. Ogilvie?
26044''If it is anything bad,''said Ross kindly,''why not put it off until to- morrow?
26044''If you have n''t one in your pocket or under your pillow, will it do if I kiss your account- book?''
26044''Is Kitty there?''
26044''Is any one here?''
26044''Is he going to drive it himself?''
26044''Is it going to be"the cheapest thing in the end,"like all Toffy''s extravagances?''
26044''Is it quite near Bowshott?''
26044''Is it really still Christmas Day?''
26044''Is it true?''
26044''Is it?
26044''Is n''t it lovely?''
26044''Is that Purvis?''
26044''Is the man married?''
26044''Is there anything else?''
26044''Is there such a thing as bad luck?''
26044''Kitty amuses me,''she said, with one of her characteristic shrugs,''and most people are so dull, are they not?''
26044''Master your health,''he said in a tone of muscular Christianity,''and it wo n''t master you-- eh, mamma?''
26044''May I ask a favour?''
26044''May I read it?''
26044''May we have it?''
26044''Meanwhile,''he said,''my expenses in this matter have been considerable; perhaps you would kindly look at my account before starting?''
26044''No English people?''
26044''Of course,''went on Peter,''you understand that all the evidence that you bring before me will have to be thoroughly investigated by lawyers?''
26044''Oh, are you sure?
26044''Oh, what is the use of it all?''
26044''Perhaps you will allow me to write to your son?''
26044''Presuming,''he went on,''that the_ Rosana_ foundered, was E. W. Smith the man to go down in her, or was he not?''
26044''Ross is not at home, I suppose?''
26044''Shall I tell her you are here?''
26044''She''s some one''s niece, is n''t she?''
26044''Something in one of your mother''s notes?''
26044''Surely she gets tired too easily?
26044''Talking of that,''said Lady Falconer,''I wonder if the maid who was with her during the time I was there could be of service to you?
26044''That would be?''
26044''Then how,''said Peter keenly,''has the story leaked out?''
26044''Then it was n''t your own machine that you smashed up?''
26044''Then why did n''t your idiot of a housekeeper air them?''
26044''Those notes and things which were on her writing- table?''
26044''What I want to know is, can you put off this tiresome business until after my son''s wedding?''
26044''What can it mean?''
26044''What can we do?''
26044''What did you hear?''
26044''What harm can it do to find out what he knows?''
26044''What is one to do with so wilful a woman?''
26044''What is the trouble on the estate?''
26044''What is to be the next move?''
26044''What is wrong?''
26044''What on earth for?''
26044''What souvenir would they give each other if they had to part?''
26044''What were we talking about?''
26044''When is the wedding to be?''
26044''When will the fraud be discovered?''
26044''When will you get the train?''
26044''When, in the name of the Prophet, does that fellow sleep?''
26044''When?''
26044''Where is your Bible?''
26044''Who would not be tired?''
26044''Who''s that, do you know?''
26044''Why did n''t you come to Bowshott, you ass, if you are ill?''
26044''Why did n''t you sleep in your bed like a Christian?''
26044''Why did she tell none of us?
26044''Why does she look at me like that?''
26044''Why has not Toffy got a good wife to look after him?
26044''Why not have burned the letters before our boat got up?''
26044''Why not send a wire to Buenos Ayres and wait here until you can get a reply?
26044''Why should people take themselves seriously?''
26044''Why should they sit together under the cedar tree like that unless they are making love?''
26044''Why should you put it off?''
26044''Why were such people born?''
26044''Why?''
26044''Wife alive?''
26044''You are quite sure you have got them?''
26044''You ca n''t believe,''said the other,''that this man Smith went off in the boat by himself?''
26044''You do n''t think anything can have happened to him?''
26044''You have no idea who those friends were to whom Mrs. Ogilvie had lately said good- bye, and who were starting on a voyage?''
26044''You say that Tranter and this man Purvis, or Smith, escaped from the wreck, and that Purvis could not row?''
26044''You should not be standing, should you?''
26044''You think these friends of hers whom you speak of would not be able to do so either?''
26044''You were ill, were you not?''
26044''You will at least know whether the man was dark or fair?''
26044''You will let me hear from you as soon as you know anything?''
26044''_ Como no?_''said Peter lazily, in the formula of the country.
26044A footman was sent for this thing and that, for lemons and boiling water-- the water must boil, remember?
26044Also, may I say this to you in confidence?
26044And that makes it all the more unfair, does n''t it?''
26044And what in Heaven''s name was the use of rescuing a man from one difficulty when he would fall into something much worse at the next opportunity?
26044And what was the reason for his disappearance?
26044And why did the rooms which he had seen through the windows wear such a shut- up and dismantled appearance?
26044Are you getting any rent at all for Hulworth?''
26044But suppose the man turned out to be an impostor after all?
26044CHAPTER XV''First of all,''said Peter,''who is E. W. Smith, and why the dickens should you imagine he is here?''
26044Cyprian, my boy, where are the old newspapers kept?
26044Did I mention,''said Dunbar,''that he could not row, though, of course, Tranter could?
26044Did you ever hear how he was killed in his veranda in India by a tiger?''
26044Did you overtake Purvis?''
26044Did you want him?''
26044Do n''t you see how absurd the whole thing is?
26044Do they write verses, or exchange valentines, or even give each other flowers?''
26044Do you mind, Jane?
26044Do you remember poor Cranley, who was in Pitt''s house at Eton?
26044For a moment Jane could only weep, and they clung to each other, saying, with the helplessness of the suddenly bereaved,''Is n''t it awful?''
26044Had she begun to write a confession to her son, and stopped short in the middle?
26044Had the other man in Rosario paid him well to do his work for him, or was Purvis withholding information until a certain price was stipulated?
26044He came back presently as noiselessly as he had left the room, and whispered,''I am looking for a tin box; is it anywhere about?''
26044He is a fair man now with a beard, is n''t he?
26044His face was white, however, as he turned to the servant and said,''Who brought this?''
26044How do these things happen?
26044How does she think it is all going to end?
26044How much coal, for instance, do you find it consumes?''
26044I do n''t suppose I ought to have asked him if he wanted partners, or anything of that sort?
26044I know she has eaten horrid food and trimmed parasols, and been faithful and good, but will she ever let him care for any one else?''
26044I would rather not leave Dick, if you could have him-- Dick will be a good boy-- no?''
26044If Purvis gave them the slip what was to be done in the future?
26044If so, when was the marriage to be?
26044May I give you my company so far?''
26044May we?
26044Now, how has Purvis found out about the man what he does n''t know himself?
26044Now, what in the name of wonder do they want here?''
26044Now, why should this boat have been found half- burnt on the coast, but with a piece of her name in gold leaf still partially visible?''
26044Ogilvie was not there when you knew her?''
26044Ogilvie?''
26044Or have they ever lain sleepless for an hour because of a loved one''s absence, or because of a cold word from him?
26044Or is it fate, I wonder?''
26044Or will you mind being alone?''
26044Semple?--This is a very sad house to come to, Mr. Semple, is it not?''
26044That ca n''t be he coming back now?''
26044The fire, I take it, was accidental?''
26044The first man who comes along helps himself just because you''ve two of a thing, so you''re not a bit better off than you were before, are you?''
26044Therefore, why meet in somebody else''s most probably hideous room, and eat impossible dishes and talk to impossible people?
26044They had known each other all their lives; why postpone the happy time when they should be married?
26044This room is all right, is n''t it?
26044Was perfect healthiness ever very interesting, and must sentiment always be connected with an embroidery frame, a narrow chest, and round shoulders?
26044What could be cheaper than that?
26044What if Jane were to prolong the six months which it had been stipulated she should spend with her father''s relations in London?
26044What will Sir Nigel have, do you think?''
26044What, in point of fact, was the force that could be brought to bear upon the case?
26044Where has he got his clue?
26044Who went in there just now?
26044Who''s got your motorcar at home now?
26044Why did none of us know?''
26044Why did you stay so long?''
26044Why does one go to these out- of- the- way places?''
26044Why had he not detained the man last night, even if he had had to do it by force, until he had given him all the evidence he possessed?
26044Why should he hate her?
26044Why should it be postponed for more than a brief period of mourning?
26044Why should not some one else suffer as well as I?''
26044Why should one sit on the ground and eat indifferent food out of one''s lap?
26044Why should she have written anything else on another piece?''
26044Why was it that youth could never be contented without incidents?
26044Why, if this little brother of his had not died, had he disappeared?
26044Will you have some tea?''
26044You see, if my brother is alive---- Well?''
26044are you sure?''
26044he went on, his wrath increasing as he spoke,''or are you letting it slide for a bit because your tenants are hard up?
26044said Miss Abingdon,''and that he regards this matter quite lightly?''
26044said Peter, leaning forward in his chair;''and Purvis, who has been here for some time past, is the hero of the story?
26044said Peter,''why ca n''t you lie still?''
26044said the lawyer,''you knew her in Spain?''
26044she cried,''and what is to be the end of it?
26044she said,''to have a little crape on the body and not on the skirt?''
26044there are heaps of things I want to do; must I really go into them all?
22667An injunction?
22667And argument wo n''t bring to you any sense of reason and decency, will it?
22667And if he gives his orders to blow hell out of the bottom of the river, I suppose you''ll obey, eh?
22667And live in those beehives of yours, paying big rent, competing with the riffraff help you hire from employment agencies? 22667 And now may I go along?"
22667And ran and tattled to Flagg, eh?
22667And the conditions are?
22667And what''s he saying of particular interest to us?
22667And what''s that?
22667And you know about it, do you, because you are one of the detective gang?
22667And you prefer to boss rough men and endure hardship rather than to come with me?
22667And you''re starting back to- day for the drive?
22667Another case of David and Goliath, eh?
22667Are Comas men guarding Skulltree dam?
22667Are there more notes? 22667 Are you afraid of the truth, Mr. Latisan-- scared to meet it face to face in a showdown?"
22667Are you from the north country?
22667Are you holding an especial grudge against him?
22667Are you sure?
22667Ask him what?
22667Brophy, what''s her own business in these parts?
22667Business-- with me?
22667But what about it?
22667But what has become of Kennard?
22667But where is she? 22667 But your men will keep on working, wo n''t they, sir?"
22667But-- but----"But what?
22667Ca n''t you see that I''m placing a double- crosser in the enemy''s camp?
22667Ca n''t you see that you''re driving me insane with your girl''s folly? 22667 Can you start back at once?"
22667Could n''t there have been another reason why he was chosen for such an honor?
22667Craig, let me ask you, are you moving along the lines of the law we have behind us in those special acts I steered through?
22667Crowley, wo n''t you leave it all to me?
22667Did he say what he proposed to do?
22667Did she promise to marry you as soon as the Flagg drive was down?
22667Did you note where the main bunch is, miss?
22667Did you say what ought to be said to that conductor?
22667Do I understand that the Flagg crew is breaking up?
22667Do any of you like to back him up?
22667Do n''t you value your reputation among men?
22667Do n''t you want to please me?
22667Do our logs go through Skulltree by your decent word to us?
22667Do you agree, Latisan?
22667Do you believe that?
22667Do you give up the fight?
22667Do you hear that, Latisan? 22667 Do you know any good reason why you ca n''t deliver?"
22667Do you live here in New York-- handy by?
22667Do you mean that you''re going away?
22667Do you propose to be captain?
22667Do you see what he did to me in New York?
22667Do you speak of me?
22667Do you think I am a complete fool? 22667 Do you think I can get the job?"
22667Do you think it will do us any good to bring up what has happened? 22667 Do you think the landlord would hire me as a waitress?"
22667Do you want to hire a waitress from the city?
22667Does that fresh news scare anybody?
22667Does that make any difference in your stand here to- day?
22667Echford Flagg?
22667Excuse me, Latisan, but is it true that Mr. Flagg has suffered a stroke of paralysis?
22667Flagg dead?
22667For what?
22667For your conveyance? 22667 Got her?"
22667Has he delegated to you any authority to compromise?
22667Have n''t you any wit in you?
22667Hey, Martin, is n''t there a gad in the cultch under your office desk?
22667How about bumping him on his soft spot?
22667How come?
22667How do I know what your scheme is? 22667 How long have you been acquainted in these parts?"
22667How many times, and where, did you hit him? 22667 How many?"
22667How the hell can they come singing? 22667 I beg your pardon,"put in Crowley,"But ca n''t the three of us step inside and have a little private talk?"
22667I suppose you hold a grudge against this agency, do n''t you?
22667I take it that you''re well acquainted with this region?
22667I''m putting it up to you again-- will you and your father sell to the Comas?
22667If I get to own timberlands, who knows?
22667If you''re going to look the place over, wo n''t you allow me to go along?
22667Is any man afeard?
22667Is his mind clear for business?
22667Is it well to let the Comas know that you are here or what you are going to do? 22667 Is n''t the hotel a fit place for a woman who is unaccompanied?"
22667Is n''t there a village in the Noda called Adonia?
22667It rather puts strangers at their ease, do n''t you think, a little tobacco haze in the room?
22667Just what?
22667Just who is this young Latisan?
22667Just why did she urge you so strongly to go back to the drive?
22667Just why do you want to see Miss Jones?
22667Look here, Crowley, what kind of a yarn is this?
22667May I ask what you mean by taking chances? 22667 May I have your company to the dam?
22667May I not exchange my hospitality for your courtesy?
22667Now you''re talking of violence to Latisan, are n''t you?
22667Pretty uppish, ai n''t he?
22667Ride?
22667Same room for me?
22667Shall I repeat the order?
22667She told me so, but how can she have any affection for such a man as I have shown myself to be? 22667 She works for you?"
22667Sis, where did ye learn the twist of the Flagg wrist when ye set that staff?
22667So that''s more of your devilish business, is it, sending gunmen to fight honest workers?
22667So that''s what you are, is it?
22667Suppose I slip a picked crowd of my operatives into his crew?
22667That you, Latisan?
22667That''s her real name, is it? 22667 That''s straight talk, is it?"
22667Then it has settled into a personal fight between you and me, has it?
22667Think so?
22667Think?
22667To report? 22667 Ugly?"
22667Ward Latisan, be ye?
22667Was, eh? 22667 Well, how will I know when I meet up with him in the woods?"
22667Well, what can I do for you, sir?
22667Well, what say, old boy?
22667Well, what then?
22667What are you going to saw, Latisan?
22667What do you call it, what has been happening upriver?
22667What do you expect me to do?
22667What do you mean-- my end?
22667What does a legislature know about conditions up here?
22667What does it get anybody to tell the truth?
22667What does she tell you?
22667What especially?
22667What for?
22667What have you got to say about it?
22667What in the name of the horn- headed Sancho do you think you can do all alone against guns?
22667What is it going to be-- a fight to a finish?
22667What is it, Mr. Flagg? 22667 What is it?"
22667What is this, a singing school or a driving crew?
22667What names did he call you?
22667What sort of talk is she giving him?
22667What''s his particular failing?
22667What''s the matter with Ken?
22667What''s the newfangled idea of shedding whiskers before the drive is down?
22667What''s your system? 22667 When are you leaving?"
22667Where are ye headed, Dick?
22667Where are you from, right now?
22667Who are you?
22667Who did you think she was?
22667Who in the crowd has got an ox or two in his pocket?
22667Who is she, Mr. Latisan? 22667 Who would n''t?"
22667Who''s the nut?
22667Whose?
22667Whose?
22667Why are n''t you on your way?
22667Why did n''t you tell me before?
22667Why have n''t you said something about such letters or such an heir?
22667Why the blazes did n''t you smooth it? 22667 Why?
22667Will you come back here after you have escorted me to the tavern?
22667Will you go back?
22667Will you go with me?
22667Will your headquarters back up my operatives?
22667Wo n''t you let me talk to you alone?
22667Wo n''t you try our beans-- just once? 22667 Would n''t haul our dynamite?"
22667You are worried about how you are to travel, is it not so? 22667 You do n''t expect to find the Three C''s mentioned by name in Holy Writ, do you?
22667You do n''t intend to come ramming against these guns, do you?
22667You fell in love with her, did n''t you?
22667You have been in Adonia?
22667You have been the drive master here for a long time-- that''s why you can not be spared?
22667You have told me straight, have you, about his being a bad actor when he''s riled?
22667You remember Operative Crowley, do you?
22667You saw''em start for a walk, did you? 22667 You vow and declare that you''re an ox, do you, before all in hearing?"
22667You''re making a fool of yourself-- and what for?
22667A boss, are you?"
22667And even now----""You do n''t believe it, eh?
22667And now it''s all tipped upside down, eh?
22667And then what did you say?"
22667And what makes you think I want that kind of a quitter in my crew?"
22667And where''s that funeral, I ask you again?"
22667And who knows?
22667And you''re sorry, eh?
22667Are you one of''em, too?"
22667Brophy?"
22667But how can he fight them all single- handed?"
22667But if the old man were kept away from Adonia----"Do I understand that you''re to stay north until I''m ready to go back?"
22667But what I want to know is this, does the girl love you?"
22667But what''s her name?"
22667But will you allow me to speak to them?"
22667But you have something to tell Mr. Flagg, have n''t you?"
22667Ca n''t you do him up, and then let Flagg have half a show for this season-- probably his last?"
22667Ca n''t you see how it is?"
22667Ca n''t you understand that I''m on the case, too?"
22667Can I be any more honest than that?"
22667Can we afford to take chances?"
22667Can you furnish''em?"
22667Can you govern yourself accordingly?"
22667Can you start north with me in the morning?"
22667Chances on being something more to each other than we are now?"
22667Could she stop these men from going on to violent battle?
22667Could the daughter of Alfred Kennard repay in some degree for the sake of the father?
22667Craig?"
22667Did he name his price, Dawes?"
22667Did he pull himself out of the jacket whilst you were clinging to his collar?"
22667Did n''t I understand you to say, Buck, that Miss Kennard had gone chasing Latisan?"
22667Do I understand you to say that the Latisans have failed in their business?"
22667Do n''t you have any idea what men are up these woods?
22667Do n''t you think so?"
22667Do you get action by feeding an ox lollypops, kissing him on the nose and saying,''Please,''and''Beg your pardon''?"
22667Do you hear?"
22667Do you know it, Felix?
22667Do you know many folks over in the Noda region?"
22667Do you know who said that?"
22667Do you still think I''m not what I say I am?"
22667Do you think for one minute you can stop the Comas development?"
22667Do you think it is folly?
22667Do you understand?"
22667Do you want to get the Big Laugh when you show yourselves downriver?"
22667Flagg?"
22667Gossip up here is easily started, is n''t it?"
22667Grabbing for the coin because you are afraid the job is n''t going to stay put?"
22667Had he not been sent up there to watch-- or watch over-- no matter which-- Miss Elsham?
22667Have n''t we found them out already?
22667Have n''t you the same kind of loyalty where my grandfather is concerned-- after all your years with him?"
22667He drew a long breath; he inquired with anxious solicitude;"Did you overhear him saying anything about Latisan?
22667Hey?"
22667How about logs for your mills?"
22667How about what''s underneath, provided the cover is ripped off, Craig?"
22667How did it happen that you fell for Lida Kennard so suddenly?"
22667How do you happen to be over in the Noda country?"
22667How does the thing look to you as a proposition?"
22667How many of''em are there?
22667How much do you know about teaming oxen?"
22667How''ll ye ever get there, Miss Lida?"
22667I mean I''m glad-- no, what I mean is I do n''t understand why-- why----""Why I have come away up here for such a job?"
22667I reckon you''ll leave it to me, wo n''t you?"
22667I suppose that makes Mr. Latisan pretty nigh indispensable, does n''t it?"
22667I thought I''d step in----""Well?"
22667I''m still working alone-- understand that?
22667If love should by any possibility develop in her and she should allow him to see it, what would become of his man''s appetite for fight and danger?
22667If she did what she had in her mind to do, what was it except the confirmation of a pledge and the carrying out of a promise?
22667If you and your men come onto this dam----""There''s only one kind of a fight up here among honest men-- and you wo n''t stand for it, eh?"
22667If you''re going only a little way in that direction wo n''t you take me along in your canoe?"
22667Is it more detective work?"
22667Is there any way in which I can be a mediator-- as his friend?"
22667It is all very fine, eh, mam''selle?"
22667It ought to be good enough for you and me, had n''t it?
22667It''s something of a fix you''ve got yourself into, eh?"
22667Know him?"
22667Latisan?"
22667Lida Kennard, why ai n''t ye home?"
22667May I ask what you are right now?"
22667May I borrow the horse?"
22667Maybe you know what put the wire edge onto it?"
22667Nice kind of dame, eh?
22667Now that''s some story, ai n''t it?"
22667Now who the blazes is this Miss Jones?"
22667Putting out of your mind all this foolish sex matter-- as I have explained my man- to- man theory-- will you go with me?
22667Sapgagging with a girl?"
22667Shall I come back?"
22667So he''s here in town?"
22667So that''s young Latisan''s latest move, eh?"
22667Special acts, hey?
22667That right?"
22667The talk will be all friendly, I take it?"
22667Was he what old Flagg had so inelegantly stated-- a sapgag where a girl was concerned?
22667We can make that our own business, ca n''t we?"
22667We''d better get ashore----""And let him wreck this dam?"
22667What are you doing here on this dam?
22667What are you going to say about her when you write up your report to- night?"
22667What better proof of my humble position in life do you want?"
22667What do you say to him?"
22667What do you want of me?
22667What do you want?"
22667What have you thought out about the details of a plan to let your logs through?"
22667What have you to say?"
22667What is she?
22667What is the matter?"
22667What kind of a she wildcat did you hand me, anyway?
22667What made you sore on the whole proposition up there?
22667What right has it got to tamper with a landbreak that God Almighty has put between waters?"
22667What say, boys?"
22667What shall I tell her from you when I take in her pie?"
22667What was she, anyway?
22667What was the caller''s business?
22667What was the confidential secretary doing up there?
22667What will you have?"
22667What woke you up?
22667What''s old Eck Flagg to- day?
22667What''s that?
22667What''s the matter, Mern?
22667What, boys?"
22667What?
22667When do you think of leaving?"
22667Where are they?
22667Where''s Latisan?
22667Where''s your pay coming from when Eck Flagg goes broke?"
22667Who are you, anyway?"
22667Who is she?
22667Who is that girl?"
22667Who''ll take orders from me after this?
22667Why are you pitching into me?"
22667Why did he not come to her and lift the dreadful burden in her extremity?
22667Why do n''t you congratulate me?"
22667Why do n''t you say something?"
22667Why do n''t you sell out to our company?
22667Why had he waited until the cut was landed?
22667Why in the blue blazes does n''t she report in?"
22667Why is n''t that better than a fight?"
22667Why should Lapierre come north in the Flagg interests?
22667Why wo n''t you do as I ask?"
22667Why would not a waitress marry him, one of the Latisans of the Tomah?
22667Why?
22667Will you marry me?"
22667Wo n''t it put heart in you if I''m your wife, standing by you through everything?"
22667Wo n''t you do it?"
22667Would Echford Flagg''s own crew stand by a stricken master or hearken to the appeal of Flagg''s kin?
22667Would it not be well to take those men fully into her confidence?
22667Would not the known granddaughter of Echford Flagg be able to exert that compelling moral influence over the crew?
22667Would she be honest with her grandfather and Latisan if she did try to prevent them from winning their fight?
22667You are going home to the north soon?"
22667You are very busy on the drive, are you?"
22667You do n''t think I''m coming after you with fists or a ca nt dog, do you?"
22667You still think, do you, you''d better not tell me?"
22667You''re not going back to the drive right away, are you?"
22667You''re sure about his weakness for dames, are you?
22667why ai n''t I out and around?"
21962Do you understand me?
21962What,we exclaim,"shall Tom, Dick, and Harry have as much weight in the scale as I?"
21962Who''s there, in the name of Beelzebub?
21962Why would witness not go into the workhouse?
21962Why, in the name of all former experience, does n''t he ride to the Devil?
21962_ Do you forgive me?_Madam and sweetheart, so far as I have gone in life I have never yet been able to discover what forgiveness means.
21962_ Is it still the same between us?_Why, how can it be?
21962_ Is it still the same between us?_Why, how can it be?
21962_ Is that all?_All?
21962_ Is that all?_All?
21962''How can I help it,''says the Doctor,''if the courtiers give me a watch that wo n''t go right?''
21962--Can prostration fall deeper?
2196210, 11,"Woman, hath no man damned thee?
21962A hard fate: but would she have changed it?
21962Am I asked for my conception of the dignity of a human being?
21962Am I asked, whether I expect the laborer to traverse the whole circle of the physical sciences?
21962And are they, then, to be doomed to spiritual inaction, as incapable of useful thought?
21962And can Stella read this writing without hurting her dear eyes?"
21962And do not new circumstances, if they make us fearful, at the same time keep us from despair?
21962And the application is a powerful one; made by a man of vigorous understanding, and( need I say?)
21962And what is that but saying that we too, all of us, as individuals, the more thoroughly we carry it out, shall make the more progress?"
21962And what is the result?
21962And what shall we say of government by a majority of voices?
21962And what, if cheerful shouts at noon, Come, from the village sent, Or songs of maids, beneath the moon With fairy laughter blent?
21962And what, if in the evening light, Betrothèd lovers walk in sight Of my low monument?
21962And who is authorized to set bounds to this progress?
21962Are Dryden and Pope poetical classics?
21962Are all these great men mistaken, or are we?
21962Are my pickaxes and shovels in good order, and am I in good trim myself, my sleeves well up to the elbow, and my breath good, and my temper?"
21962Are the favourite poets of the eighteenth- century classics?
21962Ascend and walk round the walls; what do you look down upon?
21962At the portières of that silent Faubourg St. Germain, there is but brief question, Do you deserve to enter?
21962Back I turned; Thou following criedst aloud,''Return, fair Eve; Whom fly''st thou?''"
21962But Swift?
21962But are we weak enough to hope to rise without toil?
21962But can any thing be plainer than that the present condition of the world is peculiar, unprecedented?
21962But do not you see that to fulfill this, she must-- as far as one can use such terms of a human creature-- be incapable of error?
21962But how can they know?
21962But how, you will ask, is the idea of this guiding function of the woman reconcilable with a true wifely subjection?
21962But in slighter intimacies, and for a less stringent union?
21962But is it democracies alone that fall into these errors?
21962But is it really a new ailment, and, if it be, is America answerable for it?
21962But is our knowledge, because so little, of no worth?
21962But is this consequence sure?
21962But what teachers do you give your girls, and what reverence do you show to the teachers you have chosen?
21962But where is it?
21962But would this alone be a sufficient safeguard?
21962But, again, I ask you, do you at all believe in honesty, or at all in kindness?
21962But_ do_ you wish it?
21962But_ what_ power?
21962By the rule of grammar and the course of conjugation, does n''t_ amavi_ come after_ amo_ and_ amas_?
21962Can a site be healthier or more pleasant?
21962Can he circumstantially explain to us how Bill got into the habit of beating Nancy about the head?
21962Can not a strong interest turn difficulty into pleasure?
21962Can not the laboring class refuse to measure men by outward success, and pour utter scorn on all pretensions founded on outward show or condition?
21962Can this be needed to social order?
21962Can we imagine that God''s highest gifts of intelligence, imagination, and moral power were bestowed to provide only for animal wants?
21962Coleridge, indeed, discovered profound mysteries in the last; but in what could not Coleridge find a mystery if he wished?
21962Could a war be maintained without the ordinary stimulus of hatred and plunder, and with the impersonal loyalty of principle?
21962Could there be a greater candour?
21962Did you ever hear or read four words more pathetic?
21962Did you notice that I missed two lines when I read you that first stanza; and think that I had forgotten them?
21962Do the mass of men stand where they did a few centuries ago?
21962Do those words indicate indifference or an attempt to hide feeling?
21962Do we not degrade it by making it a mere feeling?
21962Do you ask me whether Dryden''s verse, take it almost where you will, is not good?
21962Do you ask me whether Pope''s verse, take it almost where you will, is not good?
21962Do you ask to be the companion of nobles?
21962Do you know, if you read this, that you can not read that-- that what you lose to- day you can not gain to- morrow?
21962Do you long for the conversation of the wise?
21962Do you not see how ignoble this is, as well as how unreasonable?
21962Do you think it is a hard thing to write poetry?
21962Do you think these are harsh or wild words?
21962Does any man, laborer or not, expect to invigorate body or mind without strenuous effort?
21962Does not Swift think so?
21962Does not conscience include, as a part of itself, the noblest action of the intellect or reason?
21962Does not life without difficulty become insipid and joyless?
21962Does not the child grow and get strength by throwing a degree of hardship and vehemence and conflict into his very sports?
21962Does not the wonderful and delightful variety smooth the brow and soothe the mind?
21962Down in that back street, Bill and Nancy, knocking each other''s teeth out!--Does the bishop know all about it?
21962Elevation of soul, in what does this consist?
21962Elevation of soul, this is to be desired for the laborer as for every human being; and what does this mean?
21962Else to what end does the world go on, and why was America discovered?
21962First, how much of this depression is to be traced to intemperance?
21962For the question is no longer the academic one,"Is it wise to give every man the ballot?"
21962For who, I would ask, can go to the bottom of anything?
21962Had it body enough to withstand the inevitable dampening of checks, reverses, delays?
21962Had she a brother?
21962Had she a sister?
21962Has he his eye upon them?
21962Has he_ had_ his eye upon them?
21962Has not the trial of democracy in America proved, on the whole, successful?
21962Have any of you, at this instant, the least idea what either thought about it?
21962Here I am, says he, and what say you to Stella this morning fresh and fasting?
21962Here some one will interrupt me with the remark:"By the bye, where are we, and whither are we going?--what has all this to do with a University?
21962His"Fair Ines"had always, for me, an inexpressible charm:-- O saw ye not fair Ines?
21962How are we to mark them off one from the other?
21962How could Athens have collected hearers in such numbers, unless she had selected teachers of such power?
21962How did it ever cross his brain to betake himself to Athens in search of wisdom?
21962How do we define nationality in such cases as these?
21962How if it could be true?
21962How is it that I get my ideas of God, of my fellow- creatures, of the deeds, suffering, motives, which make up universal history?
21962How much do you think we spend altogether on our libraries, public or private, as compared with what we spend on our horses?
21962How much more improving is the original, did we know how to read it?
21962How then do we define the nation, which is, if there is no especial reason, to the contrary, to fix the limits of a government?
21962I wonder whether it ever struck Temple, that that Irishman was his master?
21962I would ask, What is to be the effect of bringing the laboring classes of Europe twice as near us as they now are?
21962If it had not, would the Old World be vexed with any fears of its proving contagious?
21962If the Apostle could not suffer it,"he naturally remarks,"into what mold is he mortified that can?"
21962Indeed, is it worth while?
21962Is human nature always to be sacrificed to outward decoration?
21962Is it fair to call the famous"Drapier''s Letters"patriotism?
21962Is it not a wise discernment of the right, the holy, the good?
21962Is it not founded on, and does it not include clear, bright perceptions of what is lovely and grand in character and action?
21962Is it not something more?
21962Is it not somewhat important to make up our minds on this matter?
21962Is it not the best security for anything to interest the largest possible number of persons in its preservation and the smallest in its division?
21962Is n''t that line in which grief is described as putting the menials into a mourning livery, a fine image?
21962Is nobleness of sentiment never to spring up among us?
21962Is not high virtue more than blind instinct?
21962Is not the intellect as universal a gift as the organs of sight and respiration?
21962Is not the mind adapted to thought, as plainly as the eye to light, the ear to sound?
21962Is not thought the right and duty of all?
21962Is not truth alike precious to all?
21962Is not truth as freely spread abroad as the atmosphere or the sun''s rays?
21962Is not truth the natural ailment of the mind, as plainly as the wholesome grain is of the body?
21962Is the historic estimate, which represents them as such, and which has been so long established that it can not easily give way, the real estimate?
21962Is the outward always to triumph over the inward man?
21962Is there no danger of a competition that is to depress the laboring classes here?
21962Is this accent felt in the passages which I have been quoting from Burns?
21962Is this evil without remedy?
21962Is this only a little power?
21962It is instructive doubtless; but still how much has it to do with your subject?"
21962May I ask you to consider with me what this idea practically includes, and what it should include?
21962May not a country be rich, and yet great numbers of the people be wofully depressed?
21962May not a reform in this particular begin in the laboring class, since it seems so desperate among the more prosperous?
21962May not the laborer study and understand the pages which he is writing in his own breast?
21962Might it not be better somewhat for both French and English?
21962Milton was no Bishop- lover; how comes St. Peter to be"mitred"?
21962My friends, do you remember that old Scythian custom, when the head of a house died?
21962Nay, was not the Church herself the first organized Democracy?
21962Now what is the value of such a doctrine?
21962Now, secondly, we ask, What kind of education is to fit her for these?
21962Of what may this not be said?
21962Or is it unimportant how many foggy days there are in his life?
21962Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other?
21962Power to destroy?
21962Quot_ feet I am high?
21962Right or wrong, the people will think; and is it not important that they should think justly?
21962Satan, besides, takes issue on the fact:--"That we were formed then, say''st thou?
21962Shall it ever be again?
21962Suppose I had asked you, for instance, to seek for Shakespeare''s opinion, instead of Milton''s, on this matter of Church authority?--or for Dante''s?
21962Suppose kings should ever arise, who heard and believed this word, and at last gathered and brought forth treasures of-- Wisdom-- for their people?
21962Swift_ comes down from his master with rage in his heart, and has not a kind word even for little Hester Johnson?
21962Take away thought from virtue, and what remains worthy of a man?
21962That Holyhead mountain is your Island of Aegina, but where is its Temple to Minerva?
21962That Snowdon is your Parnassus; but where are its Muses?
21962The charm of Addison''s companionship and conversation has passed to us by fond tradition-- but Swift?
21962The mind is more essential to human nature, and more enduring, than the limbs; and was this made to lie dead?
21962The singer can easily move us to tears or to laughter, but where is he who can excite in us a pure morning joy?
21962They do not come from thinkers, and how can they awaken thought?
21962This act of patronage was not popular at court; and why should it have been?
21962This grand reform, which I trust is to come, will bring with it a happiness little known in social life; and whence shall it come?
21962This you would think a great thing?
21962This, then, I believe to be,--will you not admit it to be,--the woman''s true place and power?
21962WHAT IS A UNIVERSITY?
21962WHAT IS A UNIVERSITY?
21962Was it kindled by a just feeling of the value of constitutional liberty?
21962Was it that with men born to misery ye might have sorrow?''
21962We come now to our last, our widest question,--What is her queenly office with respect to the state?
21962We hear it said sometimes that this is an age of transition, as if that made matters clearer; but can any one point us to an age that was not?
21962Well, and is it not so in matter of fact?
21962Were the mass of men made to be monsters?
21962Were there no bonny dames at home, Or no true lovers here, That he should cross the seas to win The dearest of the dear?
21962What avails intellectual without moral power?
21962What business have I in the woods, if I am thinking of something out of the woods?
21962What could I do But follow straight, invisibly thus led?
21962What do we, as a nation, care about books?
21962What do you think I meant by a"vulgar"person?
21962What do you yourselves mean by"vulgarity"?
21962What does he care for office or emolument?
21962What food for the intellect is it possible to procure indoors, that you stay there looking about you?
21962What had this man done?
21962What has a better claim to the purest and fairest possessions of nature, than the seat of wisdom?
21962What have philosophers to do with festive celebrities, and panegyrical solemnities with mathematical and physical truth?
21962What have we publicly done for science?
21962What is it that makes it so hard sometimes to determine whither we will walk?
21962What is it, what is it, But a direction out there, And the bare possibility Of going somewhere?
21962What is the Greek?
21962What is to be understood by the elevation of the laboring class?
21962What king Did the thing, I am still wondering; Set up how or when, By what selectmen, Gourgas or Lee, Clark or Darby?
21962What need they?
21962What position would its expenditure on literature take, as compared with its expenditure on luxurious eating?
21962What recks it them?
21962What should such a fool Do with so good a wife?"
21962When we walk, we naturally go to the fields and woods: what would become of us if we walked only in a garden or a mall?
21962When you come to a good book, you must ask yourself,"Am I inclined to work as an Australian miner would?
21962Whence come my conceptions of the intelligence, and justice, and goodness, and power of God?
21962Where is he to lodge?
21962Where is the literature which gives expression to Nature?
21962Where it is so simple if not so easy a thing to hold one''s peace, why add to the general confusion of tongues?
21962Which of the three caskets held the prize that was to redeem the fortunes of the country?
21962Which of us, in brief words, is to do the hard and dirty work for the rest-- and for what pay?
21962Who can hope that the storms which have howled over past ages have spent all their force?
21962Who dares to withhold it from its natural action, its natural element and joy?
21962Who does not love her?
21962Who has n''t in his mind an image of Stella?
21962Who has not betrayed his master many times since last he heard that note?
21962Who has not seen in imagination, when looking into the sunset sky, the gardens of the Hesperides, and the foundation of all those fables?
21962Who is it, think you, who stands at the gate of this sweeter garden, alone, waiting for you?
21962Who is to do no work, and for what pay?
21962Who is to do the pleasant and clean work, and for what pay?
21962Who of us has fathomed the depths of a single product of nature or a single event in history?
21962Who of us is not baffled by the mysteries in a grain of sand?
21962Who was her father?
21962Who was her mother?
21962Who will not approve the decision?
21962Who would ever think of a_ side_ of any of the supple cat tribe, as we speak of a_ side_ of beef?
21962Who would not give something to pass a night at the club with Johnson, and Goldsmith, and James Boswell, Esq., of Auchinleck?
21962Whose"draughts"of knowledge are not"shallow"?
21962Whose"learning"is not"little"?
21962Why do we not forbid the renting of rooms in which putrid, damp and noisome vapors are working as sure destruction as the worst food?
21962Why stop within your lodgings counting the rents in your wall or the holes in your tiling, when nature and art call you away?
21962Why, you will ask, need we go up to knowledge, when knowledge comes down to us?
21962Will not man grow to greater perfection intellectually as well as physically under these influences?
21962Will those who think that duty is generally the first, and love of praise the second, motive, hold up their hands?
21962Will you not covet such power as this, and seek such throne as this, and be no more housewives, but queens?
21962Will you pardon me if I pause for a moment to put what I fear you may think an impertinent question?
21962Would the meanest among us take it, think you?
21962Would this fervor of the Free States hold out?
21962Would we have liked to live with him?
21962Would you do it?
21962Would you have had one of them forgive the other?
21962Would you have liked to be a friend of the great Dean?
21962Would you take the offer, verbally made by the death- angel?
21962Yes; but do you suppose that is national work?
21962Yet what book is really greater?
21962You have heard as much before;--yet have you measured and mapped out this short life and its possibilities?
21962You think I am rushing into wild hyperbole?
21962[ 17]"Christian"did I say?
21962[ 3] Is such an artificial body as this to be called a nation?
21962[ 4]''Ah, unhappy pair, why gave we you to King Peleus, to a mortal?
21962against the character of Cranmer?
21962and do we not pay thousands of pounds for single pictures?
21962and have we not Art schools and institutions, more than ever nation had before?"
21962and the work Of secondary hands, by task transferred From Father to his Son?
21962and who may not study it?
21962and_ in one spot_; else, how can there be any school at all?
21962are they not necessarily acquired, where they are to be found, in high society?
21962art thou also become one of us?"
21962at least what has it to do with education?
21962but rather the practical one,"Is it prudent to deprive whole classes of it any longer?"
21962could a slave bow lower?
21962do you think to read there?
21962he enters a query of Stella''s--"What do you mean''that boards near me, that I dine with now and then?''
21962or do you think there is never any honesty or benevolence in wise people?
21962or were they made to put forth all the powers of men, especially the best and most distinguishing?
21962or, if he came thither by accident, how did the love of it ever touch his heart?
21962so would these kings, with their undimmed, unshaken diadems, meet us, saying,"Art thou also become pure and mighty of heart as we?
21962that abuses, once thought essential to society, and which seemed entwined with all its fibres, have been removed?
21962that new powers and new principles are at work?
21962that the application of science to art is accomplishing a stupendous revolution?
21962that the condition of the laborer is in many places greatly improved, and his intellectual aids increased?
21962that they should be inspired with the love of truth, and instructed how to seek it?
21962the lion''s limb, and the dragon''s breath?
21962to be denied the natural means of growth, which is action?
21962to be starved by drudgery?
21962to grow only in a few organs and faculties, and to pine away and shrivel in others?
21962to mankind?
21962what fever was boiling in him, that he should see all the world blood- shot?
21962what secret remorse was rankling at his heart?
21962what was love made for, if''tis not the same Through joy and through torment, through glory and shame?
21962where are your books?
21962who can be ignorant that woman was created for man, and not man for woman?
21962whom is he to attend?
21962you again answer,"have we not Art exhibitions, miles long?
21962you exclaim,"are we not foremost in all discovery,[9] and is not the whole world giddy by reason, or unreason, of our inventions?"
27603Ah, Monsieur,was their answer,"what cause have you to complain?
27603And what news will you give me? 27603 ''And did you see nothing,"said Orthon,"when you leapt from your bed?"
27603''"And have you wings?"
27603''"And how far is it from Prague to this?"
27603''"And when did he die?"
27603''"And whence do you come?"
27603''"And you have come so quickly?"
27603''"And you, who are so faithful a messenger,"inquired the Chevalier,"what is your name?"
27603''"How far?"
27603''"How, then, do you fly so fast?"
27603''"Is it you who gave counsel that I should come hither by that bank of the stream, and not go straight where Talbot and the English are?"
27603''And who is your Lord?''
27603''Have you no work to do?
27603''In what language do your Voices speak?''
27603''Is he a prophet, or has he messengers who ride at night with the wind?
27603''My lord,''she cried,''have I given you cause to wish my death?
27603''Now, the knight was pleasing to Orthon, so he answered,"Is this truly your will?"
27603''One of us asked"Where is the column?"
27603''Then asked the Chevalier,"By whom are you sent here?"
27603''Traitor, why dost thou not eat?''
27603''Well, my lass,''said he,''is our king to be driven from France, and are we all to become English?''
27603''What did they say?''
27603''What has he done?''
27603''What have I or my children done,''he said to Pizarro,''that I should meet such a doom?
27603''What is there that a man does_ not_ dare?''
27603''When do we start?''
27603''Wilson came to me and said,"Burnham, can you follow back along the vlei where we''ve just come?"
27603''You did not expect this in the morning?''
27603Again asked King Olaf:''Who lies there out beyond with so many ships?''
27603Against 30,000 men what could 5,000 avail?
27603Ah, gentle duke, are you afraid?
27603All agreed that she had some strange help given to her; but who gave it?
27603And Olaf Tryggvason asked his men:''Who is chief over this force that lies here nearest to us?''
27603And after the body of Don Alonzo was carried from the ground, he said to the second,''Don Diego, my lord, have I done enough?''
27603And chiefly pressed he on where Hacon''s banner was, crying,''Where is the Norsemen''s king?
27603And the Chevalier leaped out of his bed and demanded,"Who is it that rocks my bed at this hour of the night?".
27603And the Sieur de Corasse hid it in his heart and answered,"No; what have you heard?"
27603And they said:''Is it true that Rolf Stake and his Berserks flee neither fire nor iron?''
27603And were the fires that I saw those of friends or enemies?
27603And yet again asked King Olaf Tryggvason:''Who owns those large ships that lie out beyond the other squadrons?''
27603Besides, how could one land on the opposite bank among willows which would scuttle the boat, and with a flood of unknown extent?
27603But how was the Maid to find the English?
27603But was she partially insane?
27603But what did that mean which he said about the under- payment, wildgoose for goose, little pig for old swine, half clay for gold?''
27603But who was the Man in White?
27603Catherine?''
27603Charles caught sight of the eager young face, and, turning suddenly towards him cried,''Will_ you_ not assist me?''
27603Cruel and cowardly deeds are done in all wars, but when was there ever such a general as the Maid, to comfort the dying?
27603Did Joan look forward to her end, did she know that her days were numbered?
27603Did he notice, one wonders, that his gay anticipations were received in ominous silence by the chiefs?
27603Do n''t you know a wolf''s howl when you hear it?"
27603Don Alonzo on his side came forward to meet him, and asked,''Señor Bayardo, what do you want of me?''
27603Echo answers"Who?"''
27603Has anyone done you any harm, and have you not been well paid for your services?"
27603Have you no work to do?
27603Have you no work to do?'']
27603He drew near, unable to see the boat, but perceiving that the agitation of the branches increased, he called out,''Who goes there?''
27603How did a woman defeat the hardy English soldiers who were used to chase the French before them like sheep?
27603How did it happen that a girl of seventeen, who could neither read nor write, became the greatest general on the side of France?
27603How many men were with him?
27603IV HOW THE MAID RODE TO PARIS WHAT was to be done after the crowning of the king?
27603Know you not that I promised your wife to bring you back safe and sound?"
27603On horseback or on foot?
27603One day she went to Charles and said,''Gentle Dauphin, why do you delay to believe me?
27603Our army would doubtless go forward at daybreak, but was it already occupying this place?
27603Said the King:''Skald, what news?''
27603Said the archbishop:''Oh, Jeanne, in what place do you hope to die?''
27603She asked how she, a girl, who could not ride or use sword and lance, could be of any help?
27603She had saved his life at Jargeau, but where was the duke when Joan was a prisoner?
27603She, therefore, prayed for counsel to her Saints; might she leap from the top of the tower?
27603Should it be in Highland or English dress?
27603So the Sieur de Corasse awoke with a start and inquired,"Who is there?"
27603The King answered:''Great tidings these, and worth telling; but what is thy errand hither?''
27603The King asked:''What is it of which thou wouldst complain?''
27603The King asked:''Who are the leading men in this counsel to take the land from me?''
27603The cold is increasing: shall I be able to bear it till to- morrow, seeing that I feel my naked limbs stiffening already?"
27603The judge asked her if her Voices had been with her again?
27603Then asked the King,''Against whom is aimed this cut?''
27603Then said King Olaf:''What means that which Emund told of Atti the Silly?''
27603Then said the King:''What expedient can we find?
27603Then said the King:''What wouldst thou say, boy, that thou lookest at me so?''
27603Then spake the King:''Tell me this, noble lords, whereto pointed that law question of which Emund asked yesterday?''
27603Then up stood Gudbrand of the Dales and spake:''Where is now thy God, O King?
27603They were more surprised than ever when one of the young men in it cried out in English as they came alongside,''Wo n''t you heave us a rope, now?''
27603They were now again on Scottish ground, and the question was, whither were they to go next?
27603To this the white figure only answered coldly,"What does that matter, as long as you are well paid?"
27603Was it safe and wise to obey the Maid?
27603What are we to think about these visions and these Voices which were with Joan to her death?
27603What did Joan say to the king, and what was the sign?
27603What is thy judgment herein, sire?''
27603What reward, then, was Joan to choose?
27603When the rite was done, Joan asked:''Do they face us, or have they turned their backs?''
27603Whence come you?"
27603Where were Dunois and d''Alençon, Xaintrailles and La Hire?
27603Who can point me to him?''
27603Who could be lazy or a coward when a girl set such an example?
27603Who hang so fiercely on the flying Gaul, Foiled by a woman''s hand before a battered wall?''
27603Who was the cause of the blunder?
27603Who, then, was to be King of France?
27603Why dares he not come forth and show himself?
27603Why doth he hide him?
27603Would the boat, however, resist more shocks of this kind?
27603Would they not bear her up in their hands?
27603[ Illustration: Robert thinks Joan crazed]''And who is your Master?''
27603and put out the flame'']''"Are you the Bastard of Orleans?"
27603but with men faint and dispirited by hunger?
27603have the children of my tribe forsaken me?''
27603have you never seen a ship amongst breakers before?
27603said I to the Squire, who was telling me his tale,''and how could the Count know or guess what befell?
29145Amontillado? 29145 And ez that the kind o''chirpin''these critters keep up?"
29145And the motto?
29145Died?
29145Do I understand you that he''s been bucking agin faro with the money that you raised on hash? 29145 Do you mean to say that you''ve been givin''all the money you made here to this A1 first- class cherubim?"
29145How about the doctors?
29145How long have you had that cough?
29145How?
29145How?
29145Niter?
29145Say?
29145Well?
29145Well?
29145What can she want here?
29145What servants,says Jeremy Taylor,"shall we have to wait upon us in the grave?
29145Whither?
29145Who,says Sir Thomas Browne,"knows the fate of his bones, or how often he is to be buried?
29145You? 29145 A mason?
29145A pipe?
29145And what did she do?"
29145And, after all, why not?
29145Are they not partly right?
29145Are, then, the sculptured urn and storied monument nothing more than symbols of family pride?
29145But is it not getting late?
29145But who else?
29145Can it break down the distinction of virtue and vice?
29145Can it confound the good with the bad?
29145Coleridge, Samuel Taylor; biographical note on, V, 70; articles by-- does fortune favor fools?
29145Did I talk all this off to the schoolmistress?
29145For what are the classics but the noblest recorded thoughts of man?
29145Have his powers been wasted?
29145How could they seem other than vulgar and hateful?
29145How much new thought have we contributed to the common stock?
29145How shall I explain or understand?
29145I OF DOCTORS, LAWYERS, AND MINISTERS[9]"What is your general estimate of doctors, lawyers, and ministers?"
29145If not, how explain the charm with which he dominates in all tongues, even under the disenchantment of translation?
29145If the bell rings, why should we run?
29145If the tone of the uncultivated American has too often the arrogance of the barbarian, is not that of the cultivated as often vulgarly apologetic?
29145Is his life therefore lost?
29145Is it a pretty shell?
29145Is it a satisfactory shell?
29145Is it certain that we shall be ashamed of a bankruptcy of honor, if we can only keep the letter of our bond?
29145Is it not the highest art of a republic to make men of flesh and blood, and not the marble ideals of such?
29145Is that a cemetery coming into view yonder, with its ghostly architecture of obelisks and broken columns and huddled headstones?
29145Isabel, does it take all this to get us plain republicans to Albany in comfort and safety, or are we really a nation of princes in disguise?
29145No?
29145Prue says that brides are always beautiful, and I, who remember Prue herself upon her wedding- day-- how can I deny it?
29145Sez I,"Fair youth, do you know what I''d do with you if you was my sun?"
29145Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day?"
29145Suppose what I''d said to you was the frozen truth, and you knowed it, would that have been the square thing to play on you?"
29145The roar of laughter that greeted this frank confession was broken by a quiet voice asking,"And what did you say?"
29145The_ Edinburgh Review_ never would have thought of asking,"Who reads a Russian book?"
29145Was it that they expected too much from the mere miracle of freedom?
29145What company has that lonely lake, I pray?
29145What did I say to the schoolmistress?
29145What had wealth to do there?
29145Who hath the oracle of his ashes, or whither they are to be scattered?"
29145Why should it crowd the dust of the great?
29145Why should we knock under and go with the stream?
29145Will they not be awaiting us at the palazzo, the Lady Fortunato and the rest?
29145Would she not be looking, by the morrow''s night, upon a subjugated England, a reenslaved Holland-- upon the downfall of civil and religious liberty?
29145You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word?
29145You hear me?"
29145You keep school, do n''t you?
29145all that is truly great, and pure, and godlike, with all that is scorned, and sinful, and degraded?
29145and you makin''the hash?"
29145the noble with the base?
29145what friends to visit us?
29277And have you seen it?
29277And pray how has the Church dealt with the war?
29277And why is he dead,said the mother to me,"and where is he?"
29277Better?
29277But do you know what I did?
29277Can it be lawful to handle the sword,asked Tertullian,"when the Lord Himself has declared that he who uses the sword shall perish by it?"
29277Can you deny,she asks,"that nothing exists for you but that which you allow to enter your mind?"
29277Can you tell me,said a charming but agitated old lady from Bath one day,"of a hotel where there are no foreigners?"
29277Did you grasp what I said?
29277Do you believe you have a brain?
29277How can people be so blind?
29277I mean, do you believe there is real progress-- that we are better than we used to be?
29277Lor a bun, ma pettit fille, eh?
29277What is the good of all your struggle and your agitation?
29277A confused series of faces flash through my mind-- Abraham, Tolstoy, Jesus Christ?
29277And what is the British Empire?
29277And, if not, is it not time we found other guardians and promoters of high conduct?
29277Are nations made by war and conquest?
29277Are peoples amalgamated by oppressive legislation?
29277Are we not all goats before the gaze of more finely organized creatures?
29277But is it done?
29277But is it true?
29277Can anything be more soul- satisfying than a community of those who think alike, who feel alike, and who work for the same end?
29277Can anything be more sweeping?
29277Can anything be more untrue?
29277Did kind Fates design it as a guarantee of peace and stability?
29277Do not the civilizations of the past with their perfection of knowledge and art mock our faith in the permanency of human achievement?
29277Do political alliances between States create international unities?
29277Does he feel and remember?
29277Does he know?
29277Education-- can any one deny the overwhelming need of proper concentration on its possibilities?
29277Have I the right to believe that the landscape was designed for him-- the cretin, and the irony for me-- the chance visitor?"
29277Have they had, or used, a particle of moral influence throughout the whole bloody business?
29277Here I must check myself: what does"educated"mean?
29277His ways may be crotchety and his temper irritable-- what does it matter so long as he is carrying out his appointed task in the cosmic order?
29277How could it be otherwise?
29277How do you respect life and the teaching of Jesus Christ?
29277I again quote Mr. McCabe: What did the clergy do to prevent the conflict?
29277If these things are possible, we are told, why not here, now, anywhere, in broad daylight?
29277In which country did they denounce the preparations for the conflict, or the incentives of the conflict?
29277Is any one great outside Germany?
29277Is any one so dense as not to perceive the all- pervading importance of the guidance we give to the young?"
29277Is it, then, all a matter of change and recurrence?
29277Is life then really still worth living?
29277Is the human soul more remote and inscrutable?
29277Is there an eternal gulf of silence between us?"
29277Love, marriage, procreation, can not these be purged from the base and degrading obsessions of sex?
29277Supposing all humanity could be withdrawn, every precious brand snatched from the burning and the whole made into a vast monastery?
29277Surely this is better than the strife and the sordid cares of the camp; surely one may walk apart and enjoy the fruits of tranquillity?
29277The war has made it paramount, and only second in importance to the crucial query: Do they live?
29277This explains why, Churches and missionary effort notwithstanding, we have always savages, cannibals, and barbarians( and Prussian militarists?)
29277To be able to read and write, and say"Hear, hear"at public meetings?
29277To have a pretty idea of the positions of Huxley and Haeckel by which to confound the poor old Bible?
29277Was not France invigorated by the wild Northmen who overran her territories and settled wherever they found settlement advantageous?
29277We do not want Leslie Stephen''s reminder of metaphysical riddles,"Where does Mont Blanc end and where do I begin?"
29277Were we, then, really so bad that"this visitation"was needed to save us from voluntary sterility( by imposing compulsory?)
29277What could be the significance of this mysterious contrast?
29277What guarantee is there that his voice would not be drowned in the general clamour of the truth- mongers of the marketplace?
29277What have they done since it began to confine the conflict within civilized limits?
29277What have they done to prevent the conflict?
29277What is a crank?
29277What is the exact relation of religion to civilization?
29277What was the sense of this irony in a solitude?
29277What, then, is this mysterious power which seems to master the Old World, whilst it is mastered by the New World?
29277Who can deny that nations have been made by conquest?
29277Who can deny that reformers are more interesting than preservers?
29277Who says God must only be worshipped in creeds and churches?
29277Who says we are prisoners of darkness?
29277Who says we are puppets of the devil?
29277Why do they climb?
29277Why have their intellectual giants failed to impress upon mankind the folly of war?
29277Why mystifying circles, cabinets, and subdued light?
29277Why should a new world- teacher be more successful?
29277and the other delinquencies enumerated by the Dean?
29277net._ What is the true Shaw?
29277rude, bare, and high, Ghastly, and scarred, and riven.--Is this the scene Where the old Earthquake- dæmon taught her young Ruin?
23689''Against any slave?''
23689''Against my fifty sestertia he will stake any of his slaves excepting this Greek page?''
23689''And are you one of those who believe that there can be no forgiveness for repentant woman?''
23689''And you will not postpone this trial?''
23689''Are they fools?
23689''Art weary, or afraid to continue?''
23689''But, Leta, only strive to think that--''''Nay, what is the use?
23689''Could I foresee that it would come to this?''
23689''Dies?
23689''Do we care to listen to your miserable dactyls?
23689''Do you command this battalion?''
23689''Do you not see that he shakes his head?
23689''Have you never before known such a thing as a master giving up his slave for the public amusement?
23689''How knew you that I had gold-- or this signet ring; or that there was a ship to sail from Ostia?''
23689''How was I to identify Mr. Moore with''George''s friend from the army''?
23689''How was I to know that my trivial transgression would have ended so sorrowfully for you?
23689''I may keep this?''
23689''I would like well once more to see her and bid her farewell, and utter my thanks for all her kindness; but to what purpose?
23689''Is that a horse?''
23689''Is there aught wonderful in that?''
23689''Is this a threat?''
23689''Like them?
23689''Marguerite, will you die here with me, or go back again to the life that will separate us?''
23689''Nay, as much as that?''
23689''O Clement, dear old fellow, do you know me?''
23689''O''Malley, is that you?''
23689''Say, Bulger,''I ask of one of them,''who''s ahead of you?''
23689''The same as of old?''
23689''Then you are not satisfied with the New England mean of perfection, in everything, mentally, morally, and meteorologically?''
23689''Was it in the bond,''he said,''that one should await the convenience of the other?
23689''We have to hold territory in inclement and sickly places; where are the Democrats to do this?
23689''What can he say,''interrupted the proconsul,''but that he sold his Rhodian to me, the day thereafter?
23689''What dispute can there be?
23689''What''s that?''
23689''Where?''
23689''Whether male or female?''
23689''Will you offer the same to me, Sergius?''
23689''Will you, then, take up with an offer to play off that Rhodian against ten of my slaves?
23689''Would you still win it back, Sergius?
23689''Yes,''says the captain,''and who the devil are you?''
23689''You hear?''
23689''You will not take me with you, then; is it not so?''
23689''[ 5][ Footnote 5:''Des Droits des Nations Neutres,''t. I., p. 301] Can language be clearer?
23689Against twenty, then?
23689Am I not the same Leta as of old?''
23689And am I to trust it blindly?
23689And do we not know that no warrant has ever been given to you to recite a single line before the emperor, either in or out of the arena?
23689And do you not know his obstinacy?
23689And do you suppose I did not know your aims, cunningly as you may think you veiled them?
23689And have the community given you for it these jewelled rings, these chains of violet amethysts?...
23689And how, when he would have beaten you, I stood before you, and prevented him?
23689And if he should put me in chains or order me to be hung?
23689And is n''t that, as everyone knows, the highest result of strategy?
23689And the sesteria also?
23689And then?
23689And when your powder and ball shall be utterly exhausted?
23689And will nothing take place to- morrow?
23689And with the training I have given him, who, indeed, could overcome him?
23689Are not the words convincing proof that President Lincoln is honest and faithful and capable?
23689Are we in extremity, that this example of Napoleon should be suggested in support of the Chicago platform?
23689Are we less determined than they were?
23689Are we not willing to be Abolitionists for the sake of saving the Constitution and the Union?
23689Are we such degenerate sons that we are willing to give up the legacy they left us, at half its original cost?
23689But how, in fact, could he tell it?
23689But is this a description of Washington?
23689But was this great material gain of the people to be accompanied by a corresponding spiritual advancement?
23689But what if they already knew it?
23689But what is the Constitution?
23689By commanding officers?
23689Can it progress no farther in the path in which he stands to oppose me?
23689Can they not hear?
23689Can we not approve it?
23689Canst thou not deceive_ thyself_ as thou hast deceived others?...
23689Citizen Leonard, is the thing really to come off to- morrow?
23689Citizen general?
23689Concluding finally with--''And you did n''t fall in love with''the princess''?''
23689Did n''t we save our wagon train?
23689Did she not love him, and he her?
23689Do you know Count Henry?
23689Do you not see the knife glittering upon his breast?
23689Do you really believe that, to save a dishonored life, I would suffer myself to be enslaved and dragged about, chained to your car of triumph?
23689Do you remember, Cleotos, how once, when children, we went together and stole the grapes from Eminides''s vine?
23689Do you think that I would deny my word?
23689Does anybody deny it?
23689For does not''a cessation of hostilities''presuppose parties of equal sovereignty on both sides?
23689For they concern themselves with what?
23689For what is the purport of them?
23689From whence did it come?
23689Had n''t we been a month in service, and been through one great invasion already?
23689Had she not brought it all upon herself?
23689Has it been the United States Government?
23689Has my spirit for the first time encountered its equal?
23689Has the contribution from the shoemakers been received?
23689Has there not been time enough for each to procure his man?
23689Have I not won fifty sestertia from you?
23689Have not better men submitted to that inevitable lot?
23689Have not thousands like yourself thus gone on, until at last, becoming old and worthless, they are left to die alone upon some island in the Tiber?
23689Have we not in that moment, and in that thing, then recognized the Southern Confederacy as a separate and independent Power?
23689Have you already explored all the paths in the dark and unknown country of the Future?
23689Have you collected the provisions for the carousal of the millions?
23689Have you forgiven me, citizen?
23689Have you heard nothing of Count Henry?
23689Have you no regard for my rights over him?
23689Having him, I felt safe, for who could you obtain to stand up against him?
23689His resistance is the last obstacle to be overcome-- he must be overthrown-- and then?
23689How can one avoid his destiny?''
23689How could he sit and pledge them in deep draughts, and all the time suspect that each one knew his secret, and was laughing about it in his sleeve?
23689How is it that this man, Count Henry, still dares to resist and defy_ me_, the ruler of millions?
23689How many men will you send with me on this embassy?
23689How old are you, Count Henry?
23689How, then will I get this money, if you now strip him of all that he owns?''
23689If we propose to the rebels''a cessation of hostilities,''does not the question immediately become one of negotiation between separate Governments?
23689If woman deceives, was that a reason why man should mourn and grow gray with melancholy?
23689In the arena?''
23689In the first place, how are hostilities to cease, unless the power that controls the Southern armies so wills it?
23689Is any among us so base he would have peace with dishonor?
23689Is he not the famous Bianchetti, a condottiere employed by the people, as the condottieri once were by the kings and nobles?
23689Is he who speaks these words of patriotism a tyrant and usurper?
23689Is it condemnation of a rebellion that has''rent the land with civil feud, and drenched it in fraternal blood''?
23689Is it joy, or is it grief?
23689Is it, then, for the United States Government to propose to the authors of this usurpation to cease seeking its total overthrow?
23689Is that a reason for giving up now?
23689Is there anything unconstitutional in that?
23689It is strange, is it not?
23689It will be hard to take, will it not?
23689Mr. Moore, I can manage a boat; will you go with me?''
23689No?
23689Of whose murder can you yourself boast?
23689Oh woe!--(_Aloud._) How do you mean to conduct the siege, citizen general?
23689Old Eagle of glory, is it not true that my hour is not yet come?
23689Pancratius, why this delay, these half measures, these contracts, this strange interview?
23689Please to remember that this was in May, 1861( or was it 1851?
23689Remember_ Punch''s_ advice to young persons about to be married?
23689See the smoke?
23689Shall we play for him?''
23689Shall you say that when you are rested again?
23689She will then deceive you, of course; but what of that?
23689Should she try to fly?
23689Smallweed, where in the h-- have you been?
23689Tell me, O man without ancestors, where is your natal soil?
23689That one question is, Shall we maintain the integrity of the nation?
23689The priests chant the praise of freedom; why do you not hasten forward?
23689The question recurs, moreover, what''cessation''have we to propose?
23689There are no spies here; and what if some one should hear us?
23689Thinks?
23689This brings us face to face with the question, Who began the war?
23689This, with good luck, you may do-- a little here and a little there-- who knows?
23689To which party in this terrible strife of brothers does''liberty''look for protection to- day?
23689To- morrow or the next day they must fall, what matter which?
23689Vanished?
23689Was he not master in his own house?
23689Was it merely to eat and drink that we have assembled?
23689Was it not partly for this purpose that he had assembled them?
23689Was it only an echo, or an army of ghosts crossing a dim field, long since fought over-- the steady tramp, tramp, the pendulum of time?
23689Was she infatuated?
23689Was there one among them who would not, while openly commiserating him, laugh at him in the heart?
23689We shall never again together see Eminides''s vineyard, shall we?''
23689Well; and is it known to you that I am appointed to read a dedicatory ode before the emperor and in honor of that occasion?
23689What and whom do you fear, and why do you delay?
23689What demon had possessed the Fates that they should have brought this lot upon her?
23689What do you demand, Herman?
23689What do you mean by the title,''madame?''
23689What do you say, citizen?
23689What do you seek from me, redeemer of the people, citizen- god?
23689What does he say?
23689What else will tempt you?
23689What is General Bianchetti considering with so much attention?
23689What is it you wish me to do?
23689What is the worth of that quarry of yours to the south of the Porta Triumphalis?''
23689What kind of a dance is that?
23689What ladies are those dancing before him you call Leonard?
23689What more is needed as a warrant for extraordinary power?
23689What of our mistress?
23689What say you, therefore?''
23689What were games and combats of that kind to her?
23689What, then, have I been able to do for myself since?
23689What, therefore, consists with the perpetuity and strength of the Union?
23689Where are now your words and promises; the equality, perfectibility, and universal happiness of the human race?
23689Where are the arms and provisions for your soldiers?
23689Where are the lords, where are the kings, who lately walked the earth with crown and sceptre, ruled with pride and scorn?
23689Where are your soldiers?
23689Where is our God; where is His church?
23689Where is your artillery?
23689Where?
23689Whither?
23689Who are these sleeping beauties on the draw?
23689Who are you with that haughty face, citizen, and why do you not join in the solemnities?
23689Who can complain if the basis of their rebellious scheme is annihilated?
23689Who can oppose us?
23689Who could achieve them?
23689Who has attacked the''public welfare''?
23689Who is that man hiding himself in the folds of your mantle?
23689Who is there?
23689Who is this young man standing in front of us, mounted upon the ruins of the shrine?
23689Who knows, too, with what zeal she may worm herself into your affection, under the guidance of her ambition?
23689Who will begin it?
23689Who will end it?
23689Who would then have thought that, in a few years, we should be here in Rome-- slaves, and parting forever?
23689Who, in this contest, has assailed the principles of''justice, humanity, and liberty''?
23689Whom do you think of killing?
23689Whose voices are those I hear so harsh and wild from that little mound on our left?
23689Why did n''t you tell me, Leu?''
23689Why do you drag me on through mist, through thorns and briers, through ashes and embers, over heaps of ruins?
23689Why does not the Chicago platform suggest a way of avoiding this difficulty?
23689Why has it left the country in uncertainty on a question so vital?
23689Why not yield with a pleasant grace to the current, when we know that, in the end, struggle as we may, it will surely sweep us under?''
23689Why should she?
23689Why, indeed, had he called these men around him?
23689Why, then, do I long to see him, long to win him to our side?
23689Will not any other slave answer, Emilius?''
23689Will you play any other slave than this page against fifty sestertia?''
23689Will you plunder him entirely?
23689Will you throw or not?''
23689Wo n''t you please ride back and send my battalion forward?
23689Would I have given up Leta to you, if she had been of any further value to myself?
23689Would not the lieutenant Plautus now rejoice to make retaliatory odes?
23689Yet what sort of peace would that be which we should thus begin by seeking?
23689You all heard that he gave the choice of his slaves, whether male or female?''
23689You are young, and the blood mounts rapidly into your brain; but will the hour of combat find you more resolute than myself?
23689You pledge your word to me for the honorable treatment of him who will visit you at midnight?
23689You reject too all hope for him?...
23689You remember Lois Berkeley?
23689You watch, I see, and whet your swords for to- morrow.--(_Approaching one of the men:_) What are you making here in this corner?
23689You will forbear that advantage, and will consent to postpone our trial to another time?''
23689You, Pancratius, and your followers, what do you deserve?
23689and what dependence can you place on the few you still retain?
23689and what_ could_ come between them?
23689have you considered what you are resolved upon encountering?
23689hear you not that wailing chant?
23689under those hoary trees drooping with the night dew, and through this curdling, whitening vapor, see you not the giant shadow of the dead Past?
23689what are you doing under this tree, and why do you look so pale and wild?
23689what hell of flame is this throwing its crimson light into the gloom, and leaping through these heavily fringed walls of the forest?
23689what will become of us?
23689when I offer to undo my work and set you free, you will surely forgive me?''
23689why, in the name of the immortals, will you, why will you present flags?
23689yes-- don''t you?
26550A pretty dangerous place, is n''t it?
26550A reason why you should permit yourself to be imposed upon?
26550Ah, Harboro, must you be going, too?
26550Ah, you mean-- you did?
26550And I suppose,said Harboro finally,"that if I''d telephone to you any day it would n''t take you long to get a horse ready for me, would it?
26550And Runyon, Sylvia-- Runyon?
26550And then--?
26550And those other kisses?
26550Antonia, where did you see my father?
26550Are you enjoying yourself, Sylvia?
26550Are you getting chilly?
26550Are you the sort of man who would talk about-- about this sort of thing?
26550Blame you? 26550 But do n''t you suppose he''d rather be the proprietor of a wine- shop, or something of that sort, if he had had any choice?"
26550But if the wife has sinned?
26550But is he?
26550But is n''t that-- doesn''t that seem rather neglectful?
26550But shall I need it?
26550But why should n''t there be a clock?
26550But your marriage to me, Sylvia?
26550Come to what?
26550Could a kitten look at a king?
26550Did it seem very long?
26550Did you find him?
26550Did you find your father very ill?
26550Do n''t they believe in their own gods?
26550Do n''t you like me to be a kitten?
26550Do you always do things-- that way?
26550Do you like it?
26550Do you suppose that''s it?
26550Does he want me to come to see him?
26550Driving at...?
26550Eh?
26550Enjoying a holiday?
26550Have n''t I? 26550 Have you many friends?"
26550He? 26550 How many are you?"
26550I believe you send a horse around for Mrs. Harboro occasionally?
26550I suppose you are willing to marry her?
26550I wonder why?
26550If people feel that they ought to give a certain length of time to worship, and then go back to their work again, why should n''t they have a clock?
26550In just a word or two, I suppose?
26550Is it time to go?
26550Is n''t Antonia ready?
26550It does seem chilly, does n''t it?
26550More kisses?
26550Mrs. Harboro, I believe?
26550My father? 26550 No; but why?"
26550Perhaps you''re not altogether at home in Eagle Pass: I mean, this is n''t really your home?
26550Poor fellow-- it seems he''s been ill. Sylvia, how long has it been since you visited your father?
26550Should you like it, Sylvia?
26550The guest- chamber?
26550The_ rebozo_?
26550They? 26550 Three?
26550Well, Sylvia?
26550What can he have to write to you about?
26550What do you call it? 26550 What do you say, Runyon?"
26550What does a man do in such a case?
26550What else could it be?
26550What is it, Sylvia?
26550What is it?
26550What is it?
26550What were you driving at, Sylvia?
26550What''s the matter with you, Sylvia?
26550What''s up?
26550When does he wish me to come?
26550Who brought it?
26550Why not?
26550Why, those ladies... they did n''t seem quite the type you''d expect to see here, did they?
26550Why?
26550Will you dance with me?
26550Would you like me to be a kitten?
26550Would you like to be Samson?
26550Would you like to go with me, Sylvia?
26550Would you mind going into the church a minute?
26550Yes, but Harboro is.... Say, Blanchard, did you ever know another chap like Harboro?
26550Yes, prisoners.... Are n''t we all prisoners, somehow? 26550 You did n''t go to the house?"
26550You know women have moods, do n''t you?
26550You live here, then?
26550You mean I ought to tell you what''s gone wrong?
26550You watched him go?
26550You would n''t have done that?
26550You''re Fectnor, are n''t you?
26550You_ would_ think so, would n''t you? 26550 A profession... but is n''t that all the more reason why we should give him a little help?
26550And Peterson, that day they had gone across the river together-- why had Peterson behaved so clownishly, following his familiar greeting of Sylvia?
26550And Sylvia?
26550And how can a man go away from himself?
26550And now you ask me:''What''s gone wrong?''
26550And some of those young fellows-- the soldiers and railroaders-- I do n''t suppose any of them have got anything on you, either?"
26550And then...?
26550And when the boy nodded without enthusiasm, he added:"By the way, I suppose it''s usually your job to get horses ready when people want them?"
26550And why had she been so reluctant to tell him about the thing that had happened in her father''s house?
26550And yet... what did he know against Sylvia?
26550As if she were still holding to some thought that had been in her mind, she asked:"What_ do_ you mean to do, then?"
26550As if there had been actual contact?
26550As she nestled against him, he whispered:"Is the sandman coming?"
26550But could she forget her old father?
26550But how?
26550But surely you do not blame me?"
26550But take the world as a whole, does n''t it ride over the man who''s got nothing?
26550But was n''t it a fine ride?"
26550But what if they had been right, and his had been the offense against them?
26550Did you ever see a poor man-- a really poor man-- who was respected?
26550Do n''t you see that?
26550Do you know him?"
26550Do you know the old Aztec legends?
26550Do you suppose I ever felt like a_ bad woman_--until now?
26550Do you understand what that means where a hard- working devil is concerned?
26550Does it matter so much to you that they should invite us?"
26550Good God!--what had become of her?
26550Had Harboro decided to accept the inevitable, the irremediable, without a word?
26550Had Harboro returned during that brief interval of unconsciousness?
26550Had he been mad to wander away from her?
26550Had she done wisely?
26550Had she ever known him, really?
26550Happy?"
26550Harboro supposed the matter did not interest her; but she asked at length:"You know him, then?"
26550Harboro would begin to ask why?
26550Have you been paying out of your own pocket?"
26550He sat down and asked abruptly in a voice strangely high- pitched for his own:"Is a man ever justified in leaving his wife?"
26550He turned to Antonia, and with an air of pride and contentment, asked the old woman, in her own language:"Is n''t she a beautiful child?"
26550How are you, Harboro?"
26550How can a part of a man go away and leave the other part?"
26550How does that strike you?"
26550How?
26550I am helpless?"
26550I ca n''t imagine what there was in this description which gave Sylvia a hint as to his meaning, but she said:"A boudoir?"
26550I mean, if they were people we really cared for?"
26550I suppose the best milliners are across the river, are n''t they?"
26550If a man and a woman do not love each other, would n''t it seem wiser for them to rectify the mistake they had made in marrying?
26550If you had asked old Antonia about these movements of her mistress she would have said:"Does not the señora need the air?"
26550In the dimly lighted hall she whispered:"Are you sure nobody saw you come?"
26550Ingomar?
26550Is n''t he a kill- joy?
26550Is n''t he dreaded like a plague?
26550Is n''t he giving his manhood?
26550Is n''t he giving the things that are his for only a few years, and that he ca n''t get back again?
26550Napoleon?
26550Or was it that Sylvia was looking at him with new eyes?
26550Perhaps you know that now?"
26550Remember Peterson?
26550Samson?"
26550Shall we look for him?"
26550She had once said to him, commiseratingly:"You work very hard?"
26550She lifted her eyes like one who hears a signal- cry when he said casually:"Have you gone riding any more since that other time, Sylvia?"
26550Still, the question recurred: Why had she avoided even the most casual mention of these outings?
26550The song of a woman alone, and then another,"A Warrior Bold,"and then"Alice, Where Art Thou?"
26550There had been a nest of scorpions... would he believe it?
26550Was He there in reality, and was this one of His angels, strayed a little distance from His side?
26550Was he the sort of man who would place discretion first and pocket an insult?
26550Was it because she had given a coin to the beggar?
26550Was she that kind of a daughter?
26550Was that the course an innocent woman would have pursued?
26550Was the world cruel by choice to a girl against whom nothing more serious could be charged than that she was obscure and poor?
26550Was there a refuge there for such as she?
26550We should n''t want them to go to a hotel, should we?
26550Well, what had he done that people who formerly had gone out of their way to be kind to him should ignore him?
26550Were men and women created to suffer, to bear crosses which were not of their own making, to suffer injustices which seemed pointless?...
26550Were not unfaithful wives always eager to send their husbands away?
26550What did it mean?
26550What has he got besides the few pennies he earns?
26550What if she, Sylvia, were to go on past her own house, on up to the ridge, and appeal to that unworldly woman for succor?
26550What sort of lover was he?...
26550What was it you said once about a man and woman becoming one?
26550What was it?...
26550What was the explanation of these things?
26550What was the meaning of human life, he wondered?
26550What''s the meaning of it; there being whole neighborhoods of people who are hungry half the time?
26550When he gives his money, is n''t he giving his strength and his youth?
26550Where had the goatherd hidden himself?
26550Where was he going?
26550Where_ could_ he go?
26550Who could ever have thought of such a meaningless word as''blame''?
26550Who?"
26550Why did n''t she come to see him?
26550Why did you marry me, if you did n''t love me?"
26550Why had Eagle Pass ceased to know him, immediately after his marriage?
26550Why had Sylvia prevented him from knowing anything about her home life?
26550Why had she kept him and her father apart?
26550Why not this evening?"
26550Why should n''t she hope that the future was hers, to do with as she would-- or, at least, as she could?
26550Why should n''t we be?"
26550Why should the fact that the river was there make any difference?
26550Why?"
26550Why?"
26550Will you remember?"
26550Would the señora have the roast put on the table now, or would she wait until the señor came down- stairs?
26550You know how you imagine things sometimes?
26550You would n''t_ blame_ an apple for being deformed, would you?--or the hawk for killing the dove?
26550You''ve seen Antonia-- occasionally...?"
26550he inquired huskily,"you''re not afraid of me?"
26550just as you might ask,''What time is it, Sylvia?''
26550or,''Who is it coming up the road?''
26550she cried,"do you need to ask me that?"
26550she mused...."What''s between the wings?"
16317Americans or Aliens?
16317And do you know that man Jones that lives in that city?
16317Are they all out, firemen?
16317But what can I do about it?
16317Did you expect me to give you a chance to destroy me and poison Jacqueline''s mind? 16317 Do you really believe that there is such a river?"
16317Even if it does mean that,said Mr. Duthie, with impatience,"what was the need of being so particular?
16317Is that so? 16317 What book?"
16317What do you read, my lord?
16317What is Congress going to do next? 16317 What think ye of Christ?"
16317When are you going to be great?
16317Who was General Grant?
16317Who wrote it? 16317 Why do they lie about me the way they do?"
16317Why not?
16317Yes, why not?
16317_ Why_,asks a critic,"_ do n''t you move FOR ALL WORKINGMEN?"
16317''"[ 6] What did this preacher do with his final consonants?
16317(_ a_) What elements of appeal do you find in the following?
16317(_ a_) What is an allegory?
16317(_ b_) Are the cases parallel at the vital point at issue?
16317(_ b_) Are the signs that point to the inference either clear or numerous enough to warrant its acceptance as fact?
16317(_ b_) Are they truths of general experience?
16317(_ b_) Are they weighty enough in character?
16317(_ b_) Do the facts agree_ only_ when considered in the light of this explanation as a conclusion?
16317(_ b_) Does it include too much?
16317(_ b_) Does the law or principle clearly include the fact you wish to deduce from it, or have you strained the inference?
16317(_ b_) Have you been guilty of stating a conclusion that really does not follow?
16317(_ b_) Is confusion likely to arise as to its purpose?
16317(_ b_) Is he mentally competent?
16317(_ b_) Is it too florid?
16317(_ b_) What constitutes him an authority?
16317(_ b_) shame?
16317(_ c_) Are the signs cumulative, and agreeable one with the other?
16317(_ c_) Are they in harmony with reason?
16317(_ c_) Are they truths of special experience?
16317(_ c_) Can your syllogism be reduced to an absurdity?
16317(_ c_) Does the importance of the law or principle warrant so important an inference?
16317(_ c_) Has the parallelism been strained?
16317(_ c_) Have you overlooked any contradictory facts?
16317(_ c_) How could a short allegory be used as part of a public address?
16317(_ c_) Is he morally credible?
16317(_ c_) Is his interest in the case an impartial one?
16317(_ c_) Is it stated so as to contain a trap?
16317(_ c_) Is this style equally powerful today?
16317(_ c_) hate?
16317(_ d_) Are the contradictory facts sufficiently explained when this inference is accepted as true?
16317(_ d_) Are the sentences too long and involved for clearness and force?
16317(_ d_) Are there no other parallels that would point to a stronger contrary conclusion?
16317(_ d_) Are they mutually harmonious or contradictory?
16317(_ d_) Are they truths arrived at by experiment?
16317(_ d_) Can the deduction be shown to prove too much?
16317(_ d_) Could the signs be made to point to a contrary conclusion?
16317(_ d_) Does he state his opinion positively and clearly?
16317(_ d_) Is he in a position to know the facts?
16317(_ d_) formality?
16317(_ e_) Are all contrary positions shown to be relatively untenable?
16317(_ e_) Are they admitted, doubted, or disputed?
16317(_ e_) Is he a willing witness?
16317(_ e_) excitement?
16317(_ f_) Have you accepted mere opinions as facts?
16317(_ f_) Is his testimony contradicted?
16317(_ g_) Is his testimony corroborated?
16317(_ g_)"The Effects of the Magazine on Literature;"(_ h_)"Does Modern Life Destroy Ideals?"
16317(_ h_) Is his testimony contrary to well- known facts or general principles?
16317(_ i_) Is it probable?
16317(_ i_)"Is Competition''the Life of Trade?''"
16317(_ m_)"Does Woman''s Competition with Man in Business Dull the Spirit of Chivalry?"
16317(_ n_)"Are Elective Studies Suited to High School Courses?"
16317(_ o_)"Does the Modern College Prepare Men for Preeminent Leadership?"
1631712. WHO IS THE TRAMP?
16317A dust- cloth is a very useful thing, but why embroider it?
16317A young man came to me the other day and said,"If Mr. Rockefeller, as you think, is a good man, why is it that everybody says so much against him?"
16317ARE COLLEGES GROWING TOO LARGE?
16317All you who are here, are you not tempted to envy him?
16317And even then, would it not partly disarm your antagonism?
16317And if so, how?
16317And is it practicable?
16317And is this all that is left of him-- this handful of dust beneath the marble stone?
16317And our food, must we understand it before we eat it?
16317And what have we to oppose to them?
16317And who will measure the consolations of the hour of prayer?
16317And why take ye thought for raiment?
16317And why?
16317And will you give me leave?
16317And you met her-- did you tell me-- down at Newport, last July, and resolved to ask the question at a_ soirà © e_?
16317Animal instinct say you?
16317Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
16317Are the engines coming?
16317Are the following points well considered?
16317Are the people of the United States more devoted to religion than ever?
16317Are there any other words here that long falling inflections would help to make expressive?
16317Are there any others you would emphasize?
16317Are they too high to be pleasant?
16317Are ye not much better than they?
16317Are you poor?
16317As you recall a walk you have taken, are you able to remember better the sights or the sounds?
16317Ask yourself-- or someone else-- such questions as these: What is the precise nature of the occasion?
16317At first a quick contemptuous interrogation--''We fail?''
16317But an effect of what?
16317But can the memory be trained to act as the warder for all the truths that we have gained from thinking, reading, and experience?
16317But how shall he be able to criticise himself?
16317But how shall we get the milk?
16317But in what does a speaker''s reserve power consist?
16317But is it more important than the amazing, imposing and perhaps disquieting apparition of Japan?
16317But suppose I go into the High School to- morrow and ask,"Boys, who sunk the Merrimac?"
16317But the enemies of tyranny,--whither does their path tend?
16317But what followed?
16317But what has been the experience of those who have been eminently successful in finance?
16317But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon?
16317But what of the problem itself?
16317But when shall we be stronger?
16317But_ how_ can I relax?
16317By what analytical principle did you proceed?
16317By what fair rule shall the stigma be put upon one section while the other escapes?
16317By what spells, what magic, did Marius reinstate himself in his natural prerogatives?
16317CAN MY COUNTRY BE WRONG?
16317Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
16317Can suggestion arise from the audience?
16317Can we solve it?
16317Can you feel the forward tones strike against your hand?
16317Can you feel the nose vibrate?
16317Can you feel the vibration there?
16317Can you imagine the average group becoming a crowd while hearing a lecture on Dry Fly Fishing, or on Egyptian Art?
16317Can you suggest any combination of methods that you have found efficacious?
16317Can you suggest any improvement?
16317Choose an attitude toward your subject-- shall it be idealized?
16317Come, for here he rests, and On this green bank, by this fair stream, We set to- day a votive stone, That memory may his deeds redeem?
16317Conwell, tell me frankly, what do you think the American people think of me?"
16317Could the subject be more effectively handled if somewhat modified?
16317Could we dispense with either?
16317Did it lose in effectiveness?
16317Did n''t you ever see any of them astray at Atlantic City?
16317Did not the pause surprisingly enhance the power of this statement?
16317Did you ever know a really great man?
16317Did you ever notice how hollow a memorized speech usually sounds?
16317Do I speak first, last, or where, on the program?
16317Do n''t you hear distant thunder?
16317Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning?
16317Do they really select the best men?
16317Do we express the following thoughts and emotions in a low or a high pitch?
16317Do you ask me to support a government that will tax my property: that will plunder me; that will demand my blood, and will not protect me?
16317Do you ask_ how_ to concentrate?
16317Do you feel it strike the lips?
16317Do you feel the lips vibrate?
16317Do you remember Elbert Hubbard''s tremendous little tract,"A Message to Garcia"?
16317Do you say a_ bloo_ sky or a_ blue_ sky?
16317Do you set down your name in the scroll of youth, that are written down old with all the characters of age?
16317Do you shudder at the thought of velvet rubbed by short- nailed finger tips?
16317Do you suppose I would go ahead of my men to be shot in the front by the enemy and in the back by my own men?
16317Do you think we would have gained a victory if it had depended on General Grant alone?
16317Do you want to know how to express victory?
16317Do you want to plead a cause?
16317Do your words come freely and your sentences flow out rhythmically?
16317Does a direct question always require a rising inflection?
16317Does conviction always result in action?
16317Does effective persuasion always produce conviction?
16317Does equal suffrage tend to lessen the interest of woman in her home?
16317Does not that record honor him and vindicate his neighbors?
16317Does that exclude those whose blood and money paid for it?
16317Does the merit of the course have any bearing on the merit of the methods used?
16317Does the reading of magazines contribute to intellectual shallowness?
16317Does"dispose of"mean to rob the rightful owners?
16317Finally, in preparing expository material ask yourself these questions regarding your subject: What is it, and what is it not?
16317From what source do you intend to study gesture?
16317From what walks of life do they come?
16317HOW TO ACQUIRE THE IMAGING HABIT You remember the American statesman who asserted that"the way to resume is to resume"?
16317Has Al Hafed returned?"
16317Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
16317Has Labor Unionism justified its existence?
16317Has he completely done?
16317Has manner?
16317Has posture in a speaker anything to do with persuasion?
16317Has voice?
16317Have any been less successful than others?
16317Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
16317Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love?
16317Have you carefully considered all the qualities that go to make up voice- charm in its delivery?
16317Have you ever heard such an address?
16317Have you ever read a book on the practise of thinking?
16317Have you ever seen a speaker use such grotesque gesticulations that you were fascinated by their frenzy of oddity, but could not follow his thought?
16317Have you ever stopped to analyze that expression,"a ready speaker?"
16317Have you not a moist eye?
16317Have you used reference books in word studies?
16317He awoke that priest out of his dreams and said to him,"Will you tell me where I can find diamonds?"
16317He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar seem ambitious?
16317He is_ WHITE_"than it would be by hearing you assert merely that your horse is white?
16317He said to the old man:"Why do n''t you make it that way and sell it for confectionery?"
16317He was watching the ladies as they went by; and where is the man that would n''t get rich at that business?
16317His neighbor said to him:"Why do n''t you ask your own children?"
16317His second duty is what?
16317How are you trying to correct them?
16317How can grace of movement be acquired?
16317How can hatred be the law of development when nations have advanced in proportion as they have departed from that law and adopted the law of love?
16317How can resonance and carrying power be developed?
16317How could I have written songs of hate without hatred?"
16317How do you intend to correct them?
16317How does conviction affect the man who feels it?
16317How does it build a watermelon?
16317How does it collect its flavoring extract?
16317How does moderate excitement affect you?
16317How does my hair look?
16317How does personality in a speaker affect you as a listener?
16317How does the voice bend in expressing(_ a_) surprise?
16317How important is the occasion to the audience?
16317How is it now?
16317How is it today?
16317How large an audience may be expected?
16317How large is the auditorium?
16317How large will the audience be?
16317How long would a play fill a theater if the actors held their cue- books in hand and read their parts?
16317How many quotations that fit well in the speaker''s tool chest can you recall from memory?
16317How much daily practise do you consider necessary for the proper development of your voice?
16317How much did you miss?
16317How much information, and what new ideas, does it contain?
16317How much time does it require?
16317How shall it be divided?
16317How shall we account for Him?
16317How shall you concentrate?
16317How would you increase the fighting- effectiveness of a man- of- war?
16317Humor was used in some of the foregoing addresses-- in which others would it have been inappropriate?
16317I approached him and said,"Do you think it would be possible for me to see General Robert E. Lee, the President of the University?"
16317I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
16317I ask this audience again who of you are going to be great?
16317I can imagine him out there, as he sits by his fireside, and he is saying to his friends,"Do you know that man Conwell that lives in Philadelphia?"
16317I fear that some have accepted it in the hope of escaping from the miracle, but why should the miracle frighten us?
16317IS CLASSICAL EDUCATION DEAD TO RISE NO MORE?
16317IS MANKIND PROGRESSING?
16317IS OUR TRIAL BY JURY SATISFACTORY?
16317IS THE PRESS VENAL?
16317If Virginia is condemned because thirty- one per cent of her vote was silent, how shall this State escape, in which fifty- one per cent was dumb?
16317If a man knows more than I know, do n''t I incline to criticise somewhat his learning?
16317If a storm should come and awake the deep, What matter?
16317If that were meant, why this chapter?
16317If you say,"My horse is not_ black_,"what color immediately comes into mind?
16317In how far are we justified in making an appeal to self- interest in order to lead men to adopt a given course?
16317In moods of bitterness, of doubt and despair the heart cries out,"How could a just God permit such cruelty upon innocent Belgium?"
16317In the following passage, would you make any changes in the author''s markings for emphasis?
16317In what sense is description more_ personal_ than exposition?
16317In what ways does personality show itself in a speaker?
16317In your own opinion, do speakers usually err from the use of too much or too little force?
16317Is David dead?
16317Is Eugenics a science?
16317Is Hampden dead?
16317Is Mankind Progressing?
16317Is Profit- Sharing a solution of the wage problem?
16317Is Washington dead?
16317Is a minimum wage law desirable?
16317Is a strongly paternal government better for the masses than a much larger freedom for the individual?
16317Is all this unsympathetic, do you say?
16317Is any man dead that ever was fit to live?
16317Is emotion without words ever persuasive?
16317Is feeling more important than the technical principles expounded in chapters III to VII?
16317Is he an eye- witness?
16317Is it any wonder that reversing the process should reverse the result?
16317Is it because she expects them to pay her back?
16317Is it desirable that the national government should own all railroads operating in interstate territory?
16317Is it desirable that the national government should own interstate telegraph and telephone systems?
16317Is it easier to persuade men to change their course of conduct than to persuade them to continue in a given course?
16317Is it fair for counsel to appeal to the emotions of a jury in a murder trial?
16317Is it not true, my hearers, such tombs as this demonstrate immortality?
16317Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
16317Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
16317Is that the way to teach history?
16317Is the Open Shop a benefit to the community?
16317Is the Presidential System a better form of government for the United States than the Parliamental System?
16317Is the church losing its hold on thinking people?
16317Is the hope of permanent world- peace a delusion?
16317Is the national prohibition of the liquor traffic an economic necessity?
16317Is there a desk?
16317Is this question debatable?
16317Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
16317It does not ask, What shall I say?
16317It turns the mind in upon itself and asks, What do I think?
16317Let a man stand in a pulpit and preach to thousands, and if I have fifteen people in my church, and they''re all asleep, do n''t I criticise him?
16317Living in Philadelphia and looking at this wealthy generation, all of whom began as poor boys, and you want capital to begin on?
16317Might gestures without words be persuasive?
16317My life?
16317Notice the contents of the show windows on the street; how many features are you able to recall?
16317Now why do you not apply this principle in speaking a sentence?
16317Of what sort are the men who can not be bought?
16317Oh, gentlemen, am I this day only the counsel of my client?
16317On what do you base your decision?
16317One gentleman said to the other:"Is your wife entertaining this summer?"
16317One of the richest men in this country came into my home and sat down in my parlor and said:"Did you see all those lies about my family in the paper?"
16317Or deceive them, when we are educating them to the utmost limit of our ability?
16317Or have robbed a people who, twenty- five years from unrewarded slavery, have amassed in one State$ 20,000,000 of property?
16317Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent?
16317Or outlaw them, when we work side by side with them?
16317Or shall we say that most definitions hang between platitude and paradox?
16317Or that we intend to oppress the people we are arming every day?
16317Or were you ever"burned"by touching an ice- cold stove?
16317Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?
16317Or, happier memory, can you still feel the touch of a well- loved absent hand?
16317Ought it not to be so?
16317Ought the judge use persuasion in making his charge?
16317PARENTAGE OR POWER?
16317Precisely how long am I to speak?
16317Precisely how much time am I to fill?
16317Precisely what is the object of the meeting?
16317Recently a book- salesman entered an attorney''s office in New York and inquired:"Do you want to buy a book?"
16317Rejected-- you rejected?
16317Render the following passages: Has the gentleman done?
16317SHALL WOMAN HELP KEEP HOUSE FOR TOWN, CITY, STATE, AND NATION?
16317Said he,"What is the use of doing that?
16317Say each aloud, and decide which is correct,_ Noo York_,_ New Yawk_, or_ New York_?
16317Shall I descend?
16317Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
16317Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
16317Shall we try argument?
16317Should all church printing be brought out under the Union Label?
16317Should all colleges adopt the self- government system for its students?
16317Should all corporations doing an interstate business be required to take out a Federal license?
16317Should all men be compelled to contribute to the support of universities and professional schools?
16317Should arbitration of industrial disputes be made compulsory?
16317Should college students who receive compensation for playing summer baseball be debarred from amateur standing?
16317Should daily school- hours and school vacations both be shortened?
16317Should equal compensation for equal labor, between women and men, universally prevail?
16317Should football be restricted to colleges, for the sake of physical safety?
16317Should home- study for pupils in grade schools be abolished and longer school- hours substituted?
16317Should marginal trading in stocks be prohibited?
16317Should ministers be required to spend a term of years in some trade, business, or profession, before becoming pastors?
16317Should national banks be permitted to issue, subject to tax and government supervision, notes based on their general assets?
16317Should our government be more highly centralized?
16317Should our legislation be shaped toward the gradual abandonment of the protective tariff?
16317Should public utilities be owned by the municipality?
16317Should teachers of small children in the public schools be selected from among mothers?
16317Should the Initiative and Referendum be adopted as a national principle?
16317Should the Powers of the world substitute an international police for national standing armies?
16317Should the Recall of Judges be adopted?
16317Should the United States army and navy be greatly strengthened?
16317Should the United States continue its policy of opposing the combination of railroads?
16317Should the United States maintain the Monroe Doctrine?
16317Should the United States send a diplomatic representative to the Vatican?
16317Should the amount of property that can be transferred by inheritance be limited by law?
16317Should the eight- hour day be made universal in America?
16317Should the government of the larger cities be vested solely in a commission of not more than nine men elected by the voters at large?
16317Should the honor system in examinations be adopted in public high- schools?
16317Should the national government establish a compulsory system of old- age insurance by taxing the incomes of those to be benefited?
16317Should the present basis of suffrage be restricted?
16317Should the same standards of altruism obtain in the relations of nations as in those of individuals?
16317Should woman be given the ballot on the present basis of suffrage for men?
16317Soon the night will pass; and when, to the Sentinel on the ramparts of Liberty the anxious ask:"Watchman, what of the night?"
16317Students of public speaking continually ask,"How can I overcome self- consciousness and the fear that paralyzes me before an audience?"
16317Telling means communicating, and how can he actually communicate without making every word distinct?
16317Telling?
16317The egg is the most universal of foods and its use dates from the beginning, but what is more mysterious than an egg?
16317The miracle raises two questions:"Can God perform a miracle?"
16317The next morning when his boy came down the stairway, he said,"Sam, what do you want for a toy?"
16317The priest said,"Diamonds?
16317The words may be golden, but the hearers''(?)
16317Then why is there a tomb on the Hudson at all?
16317Then, what motives would be likely to appeal to_ your_ hearers?
16317Think I''ll wander down and see you when you''re married-- eh, my boy?
16317This is the whole question: Do you see a need?
16317This right of equality being, then, according to justice and natural equity, a right belonging to all States, when did we give it up?
16317To get a natural effect, where would you use slow and where fast tempo in the following?
16317To some extent you do, in ordinary speech; but do you in public discourse?
16317To think alike as to men and measures?
16317To what faction do I belong?
16317To what is the success due?
16317Too little?
16317Too much pathos?
16317WHAT IS A NOVEL?
16317WHAT IS HUMOR?
16317WHAT IS IMAGINATION?
16317WHAT IS THE THEATRE DOING FOR AMERICA?
16317WHY HAVE WE BOSSES?
16317WHY IS A MILITANT?
16317Was it suppression in Virginia and natural causes in Massachusetts?
16317Was this ambition?
16317We asked him,"When do you think the time will come that these people can be placed in a position of self- support?"
16317We do teach it as a mother did her little boy in New York when he said,"Mamma, what great building is that?"
16317Well, why did you not say middling full-- or fell mask?"
16317Were such experiments special or general?
16317Were the experiments authoritative and conclusive?
16317Were these changes in pitch advisable?
16317Were they the best that could be used to bring out the meaning?
16317Were they the best that could have been used?
16317Were they well made?
16317Were they well made?
16317What advantages has the fluent speaker over the hesitating talker?
16317What are its causes, and effects?
16317What are some of the gestures, if any, that you might use in delivering Thurston''s speech, page 50; Grady''s speech, page 36?
16317What are the best methods for acquiring reserve power?
16317What are the causes of monotony?
16317What are the four special effects of pause?
16317What are the motives that arouse men to action?
16317What are the other speakers going to talk about?
16317What are the prime requisites for good voice?
16317What are the two fundamental requisites for the acquiring of self- confidence?
16317What are their ideals and interests in life?
16317What are they to speak about?
16317What are you going to do?
16317What are your voice faults?
16317What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force?
16317What causes a phrase to become hackneyed?
16317What conclusion is to be drawn from the life, the teachings and the death of this historic figure?
16317What constitutes pretentious talk?
16317What could be more true?
16317What difference do you notice in its rendition?
16317What do the rebels demand?
16317What do these things mean?
16317What do we ask of you?
16317What do you do mentally with the time you spend in dressing or in shaving?
16317What do you understand by"the historical present?"
16317What do you understand from the terms"reasoning from effect to cause"and"from cause to effect?"
16317What do you want with diamonds?"
16317What does he know about the subject and what right has he to speak on it?
16317What does the flag stand for?
16317What effect do habits of thought have on confidence?
16317What effect do his own suggestions have on the speaker himself?
16317What effect do such habits have on the audience?
16317What effect does confidence on the part of the speaker have on the audience?
16317What effect does personal magnetism have in producing conviction?
16317What effect does reserve power have on an audience?
16317What effects are gained by it?
16317What examples illustrate it?
16317What exercises did you find useful?
16317What experiences does it recall?
16317What faction, since the beginning of the Revolution, has crushed and annihilated so many detected traitors?
16317What fitness is there in these people?
16317What gestures do you use for emphasis?
16317What good habit does not?
16317What have I to gain from you?
16317What have you done with the hundred thousand Frenchmen, my companions in glory?
16317What in your opinion are the relative values of thought and feeling in a speech?
16317What inferences may justly be made from the following?
16317What influences, within and without the man himself, work against fluency?
16317What invites the negro to the ballot- box?
16317What is a"figure of speech"?
16317What is emphasis?
16317What is his relation to the subject at issue?
16317What is it like, and unlike?
16317What is it that gentlemen wish?
16317What is it that, having, we live, and having not, we are as the clod?
16317What is meant by a change of tempo?
16317What is meant by"elastic touch"in conversation?
16317What is our duty?
16317What is progress?
16317What is so hard as a just estimate of the events of our own time?
16317What is the cause of self- consciousness?
16317What is the danger of too much reading?
16317What is the danger of using too much humor in an address?
16317What is the derivation of the word_ vocabulary_?
16317What is the effect of a lack of emphasis?
16317What is the effect of over- persuasion?
16317What is the effect of too much force in a speech?
16317What is the effect on the emphasis?
16317What is the effect?
16317What is the first requisite of good gestures?
16317What is the nature of the auditorium?
16317What is the police power of the States?
16317What is the purpose of American institutions?
16317What is the result?
16317What is the result?
16317What is the result?
16317What is the testimony of the courts?
16317What is the type of persuasion used by Senator Thurston( page 50)?
16317What is the use of stopping to prime a mental pump when you can fill your life with the resources for an artesian well?
16317What is their probable attitude toward the theme?
16317What is there to commend in delivering a speech in any of the foregoing methods?
16317What is your observation regarding self- consciousness in children?
16317What kinds of selections or occasions require much feeling and enthusiasm?
16317What matters it whether he shares in the shouts of triumph?
16317What method did Jesus employ in the following: Ye are the salt of the earth; but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted?
16317What methods of description does he seem to prefer?
16317What methods, according to your observation, do most successful speakers use?
16317What next?"
16317What other methods of persuasion than those here mentioned can you name?
16317What people, penniless, illiterate, has done so well?
16317What principle did Richmond Pearson Hobson employ in the following?
16317What profiteth it the people if they do only the electing while the invisible government does the nominating?
16317What proportion of emotional ideas do you find in the extracts given in this chapter?
16317What reasons can you give that disprove the general contention of this chapter?
16317What reasons not already given seem to you to support it?
16317What relation does pause bear to concentration?
16317What relation does this have to the use of the voice?
16317What shall I read for information?
16317What shall our action be?
16317What solution do they offer?
16317What solution, then, can we offer for the problem?
16317What sort of figures do you find in the selection from Stevenson, on page 242?
16317What sort of people are they?
16317What states of mind does falling inflection signify?
16317What steps do you intend to take to develop the power of enthusiasm and feeling in speaking?
16317What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted?
16317What tyrant is my protector?
16317What word?
16317What words come from the same root?
16317What would be the effect of adhering to any one of the forms of discourse in a public address?
16317What would be the effect of shifting the viewpoint in the midst of a narration?
16317What would happen if you should overdraw your bank account?
16317What would have been the fate of the church if the early Christians had had as little faith as many of our Christians of to- day?
16317What would they have?
16317What would you gather from the expressions:_ descriptive_ gesture,_ suggestive_ gesture, and_ typical_ gesture?
16317What, according to your observations before a mirror, are your faults in gesturing?
16317What, cries the skeptic, what has become of all the hopes of the time when France stood upon the top of golden hours?
16317What, in your own words, is personality?
16317What, then, is the progressive answer to these questions?
16317What, then, must we do to make American business better?
16317What, then, shall we Americans do?
16317What, then, shall we do to make our tariff changes strengthen business instead of weakening business?
16317What, then, will you take?
16317When are you going to be great?"
16317When comes such another?
16317When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force?
16317When in doubt about a gesture what would you do?
16317When is it permissible to emphasize every single word in a sentence?
16317When the honeymoon is over and you''re settled down, we''ll try-- What?
16317When will he have the civil rights that are his?"
16317When will the black man cast a free ballot?
16317When will the blacks cast a free ballot?
16317Where does it find its coloring matter?
16317Where does that little seed get its tremendous power?
16317Where is there ground for any hope of peaceful change?
16317Where would you pause in the following selections?
16317Where, on thy dewy wing Where art thou journeying?
16317Where?
16317Wherein hath CÃ ¦ sar thus deserv''d your loves?
16317Which in your judgment is the most suitable of delivery for you?
16317Which in your opinion is the most important of the technical principles of speaking that you have studied so far?
16317Which is the more important?
16317Which may be expressed in either high or low pitch?
16317Which method do you prefer, and why?
16317Which of the following do you prefer, and why?
16317Which one do you like best?
16317Which parts of the selection on page 84 require the most force?
16317Which require little?
16317Which words should be emphasized, which subordinated, in a sentence?
16317Which, in each instance, is the more effective-- and why?
16317Who am I that I should attempt to measure the arm of the Almighty with my puny arm, or to measure the brain of the Infinite with my finite mind?
16317Who am I that I should attempt to put metes and bounds to the power of the Creator?
16317Who are the great inventors?
16317Who are the great inventors?
16317Who are the great inventors?
16317Who are the great men of the world?
16317Who can say?
16317Who can tell the new thoughts that have been awakened, the ambitions fired and the high achievements that will be wrought through this Exposition?
16317Who else is to speak?
16317Who else will speak?
16317Who ever can forget the brazen robberies forced into the Payne- Aldrich bill which Mr. Taft defended as"the best ever made?"
16317Who has forgotten the tariff scandals that made President Cleveland denounce the Wilson- Gorman bill as"a perfidy and a dishonor?"
16317Who knows the people''s needs so well as the people themselves?
16317Who recognizes him as authority?
16317Who says it will?
16317Who selects the speakers''themes?
16317Who so long suffering, who so just?
16317Who so patient as the people?
16317Who so wise to solve their own problems?
16317Who speaks before I do and who follows?
16317Who will estimate the peace which a belief in a future life has brought to the sorrowing hearts of the sons of men?
16317Who would have credited a century ago the stories that are now told of the wonder- working electricity?
16317Why are animals free from it?
16317Why are you free from it under the stress of unusual excitement?
16317Why do speeches have to be spoken with more force than do conversations?
16317Why do we move for this class?
16317Why do we teach history in that way?
16317Why do we use this principle everywhere except in the communication of ideas?
16317Why is a continual change of pitch necessary in speaking?
16317Why is it Mr. Carnegie is criticised so sharply by an envious world?
16317Why is it impossible to lay down steel- clad rules for gesturing?
16317Why is monotony one of the worst as well as one of the most common faults of speakers?
16317Why is range of voice desirable?
16317Why is this?
16317Why not charm men instead of capturing them by assault?"
16317Why not take me?"
16317Why or why not?
16317Why plunge a pump into a dry hole?
16317Why should Germany be permitted to fight France, or Bulgaria fight Turkey?
16317Why should humor find a place in after- dinner speaking?
16317Why stand we here idle?
16317Why stand ye here idle?
16317Why this restraint?
16317Why wait for a more convenient season for this broad, general preparation?
16317Why was he the hero?
16317Why was it appropriate?
16317Why was this Republic established?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Why?
16317Will it be the next week, or the next year?
16317Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
16317Will you please get the text- book and let me see it?"
16317Will you stay awhile?
16317With what other recognized authorities does he agree or disagree?"
16317With what subjects is it correlated?
16317Wo n''t you learn the lesson, young man; that it is_ prima facie_ evidence of littleness to hold public office under our form of government?
16317Would circumstances make any difference in such grading?
16317Would not such an introduction give you confidence in the speaker, unless you were strongly opposed to him?
16317Would the triumph of socialistic principles result in deadening personal ambition?
16317Would this amendment interfere with any State carrying on the promotion of its domestic order?
16317Yet how can we induce an effect if we are not certain as to the cause?
16317You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you then to mourn for him?
16317You may"make a fool of yourself"once or twice, but is that too great a price to pay for success?
16317_ 3 Ple._ Has he, masters?
16317_ 4 Ple._ Mark''d ye his words?
16317_ Ant._ Will you be patient?
16317_ Ant._ You will compel me then to read the will?
16317_ Can Force be Acquired?_ Yes, if the acquirer has any such capacities as we have just outlined.
16317_ Deductions_(_ a_) Is the law or general principle a well- established one?
16317_ FROM NAPOLEON''S ADDRESS TO THE DIRECTORY ON HIS RETURN FROM EGYPT_ What have you done with that brilliant France which I left you?
16317_ Facial Expression is Important_ Have you ever stopped in front of a Broadway theater and looked at the photographs of the cast?
16317_ How are We to Acquire and Develop Enthusiasm?_ It is not to be slipped on like a smoking jacket.
16317_ Inductions_(_ a_) Are the facts numerous enough to warrant accepting the generalization as being conclusive?
16317_ Inferences_(_ a_) Are the antecedent conditions such as would make the allegation probable?
16317_ Is it a debatable question?_ 4.
16317_ Is it clearly stated?_(_ a_) Do the terms of statement mean the same to each disputant?
16317_ Is it clearly stated?_(_ a_) Do the terms of statement mean the same to each disputant?
16317_ Is it fairly stated?_(_ a_) Does it include enough?
16317_ Is it fairly stated?_(_ a_) Does it include enough?
16317_ Parallel cases_(_ a_) Are the cases parallel at enough points to warrant an inference of similar cause or effect?
16317_ Syllogisms_(_ a_) Have any steps been omitted in the syllogisms?
16317_ The authorities cited as evidence_(_ a_) Is the authority well- recognized as such?
16317_ The facts adduced as evidence_(_ a_) Are they sufficient in number to constitute proof?
16317_ The principles adduced as evidence_(_ a_) Are they axiomatic?
16317_ The witnesses as to facts_(_ a_) Is each witness impartial?
16317_ To secure confidence, be confident._ How can you expect others to accept a message in which you lack, or seem to lack, faith yourself?
16317_ What are the subordinate points?_ II.
16317_ What is Force?_ Some of our most obvious words open up secret meanings under scrutiny, and this is one of them.
16317_ What is the pivotal point in the whole question?_ 5.
16317_ Why Use Force?_ There is much truth in such an appeal, but not all the truth.
16317a decreasing leg?
16317a dry hand?
16317a white beard?
16317a yellow cheek?
16317an increasing belly?
16317and every part about you blasted with antiquity?
16317and will you yet call yourself young?
16317and, saddest of all, that lovely and sorrowing empress, whose harmless life could hardly have excited the animosity of a demon?
16317and,"Would He want to?"
16317caricatured?
16317defended?
16317exaggerated?
16317is not your voice broken?
16317losing its spiritual power?
16317or described impartially?
16317reliable and unprejudiced?
16317ridiculed?
16317that brave and chivalrous king of Italy who only lived for his people?
16317that enlightened and magnanimous citizen whom France still mourns?
16317what, weep you, when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar''s vesture wounded?
16317your chin double?
16317your wind short?
16317your wit single?
30982Was this a face To be opposed against the_ warring_ winds?
30982+ Holinshed+.--Raphael Holinshed( died 1580?)
30982But even if we admit these two points, what then?
30982Has he been bored by some stupid old adviser?
30982Has he been thrilled by some beautiful landscape?
30982Has he been unjustly treated?
30982Has he felt the pride of a great deed bravely accomplished?
30982Has he felt the shame and remorse of a duty unperformed?
30982Has he had a bosom friend?
30982Has he had a friend for whom his love was mixed with shame?
30982Has he had a parent whom he loved and admired?
30982Has he loved?
30982Has he shuddered at the mystery of death?
30982Or has he been racked, as all good men are in practical life, by the doubt as to what is his duty?
30982SONG Who is Sylvia?
30982The princess is pretty and clever on dress parade; but how does the real princess feel when parade is over and she is alone in her chamber?
30982Was this a face To be opposed against the_ jarring_ winds?"
30982Will''t please you, sir, be gone?
30982what is she, That all our swains commend her?
30982{ 131} CHAPTER X THE PLAYS OF THE FIRST PERIOD-- IMITATION AND EXPERIMENT 1587(?
30982{ 72} Is she kind as she is fair?
18907''Can such anger dwell in celestial souls?'' 18907 After such a generous offer, who would n''t be tempted?"
18907Agreed, we are all ready to listen; but who shall tell the tale?
18907Alice, are you not almost tired of this game?
18907Alice, why was he like a_ sigh_?
18907All? 18907 Amy, are you not almost roasted in that hot corner of the chimney?"
18907Amy, why was he like a_ cat_?
18907And Daucus-- was he a carrot?
18907And can not I make you happy?
18907And how is it about the verses, Amy?
18907And is it really the wonderful Rose of Hesperus which you seek?
18907And may I really go? 18907 And may she not sleep with me to- night, mother?"
18907And now,said Amy,"are n''t you all tired of potentates?
18907And shall I falsify my motto?
18907And who is the poet that has immortalized Sydney''s sister, in the following lines? 18907 And who was the good aunt?"
18907And you, Amy?
18907And you, Amy?
18907And you, Ellen?
18907And you, George?
18907And you, Gertrude?
18907And you, Harry?
18907And you, Harry?
18907And you, Louis?
18907And you, Sister Ellen?
18907And, Louis, how do you make him like a_ flower_?
18907And, uncle, is not the custom of hanging up the stocking derived from Germany?
18907And, when we notice these coincidences, is it not an argument for a superintending Providence?
18907Animal, vegetable, or mineral?
18907Anna,said Tom,"how do you like it?
18907Are not these kings near relatives of''the good grandmother?''
18907Are you quite sure?
18907Are you sure that you have not embellished it?
18907Are you sure there was no cheating?
18907Are you sure, Mary,said Mrs. Wyndham, laughing,"that you are not taking any liberties with my name?"
18907Aunt Lucy, how was he like a_ fire_?
18907Aunt Lucy, what shall be our story to- night?
18907Before or after the year 1500?
18907Bright Fairy Queen, shall mortal dare On beauty gaze beyond compare; Shall one of earth unpunish''d see The mazes of your revelry? 18907 But do you think him as ancient as he pretends to be?"
18907But how long have you known him?
18907But how to break the meshes? 18907 But is n''t this rather silly-- all this about love and marriage?"
18907But meanwhile, what about Willing, and the very mixed accounts of Stewart& Gamble? 18907 But perhaps some of you can tell me who her very lovely mother was?"
18907But pray, why not?
18907But what about that ghost?
18907But what are you putting into it? 18907 But what can you mean, Uncle?
18907But what''s the moral of your story?
18907But, Cousin Mary, what''s your improvement? 18907 But, my child, you must have a home; why are you out on such a stormy night?"
18907But, uncle, do you not know that I have an idea? 18907 But, uncle,"said Charlie Bolton,"could n''t you put off Sunday as Dean Swift, or somebody or other, put off the eclipse?
18907Can it be, that the vile rabble dare to think of revolt-- against_ me_? 18907 Can you tell us where that piece of wisdom may be found?"
18907Charlie, are you fond of mince- pie?
18907Charlie, are you tired from your long walk this morning?
18907Charlie, why was he like a_ vine_?
18907Cornelia, have you finished your crochet purse?
18907Cornelia, why was President Taylor like a_ sunset_?
18907Cousin Mary, did n''t you enjoy the clear- up to- day?
18907Did I not tell you that he would never predict aught but evil of me?
18907Did he live about a thousand years before the Christian era?
18907Did this bird live in ancient or modern times-- before or after the Christian era?
18907Did you ever see a sweeter, gentler countenance?
18907Did you not hear the plunge into the sea? 18907 Did you say, father, that Eclipse would go over the_ moon_?
18907Do n''t know his name, do n''t you? 18907 Do you feel any thing?"
18907Do you feel much better?
18907Do you know how to play''Consequences?''
18907Do you love her?
18907Do you love her?
18907Do you perceive the smell of smoke? 18907 Do you remember the anecdote about Frederic the Great, of Prussia?"
18907Do you see any thing in it?
18907Do you think they can be the banditti they talk of?
18907Do you, who are fresh from school, remember the names of the four generals and kingdoms who succeeded him?
18907Does she love you?
18907Does she love you?
18907Does this ancient bird belong to the goose, duck, chicken, peacock, or turkey tribe?
18907Ellen, why was he like an_ umbrella_?
18907Even so, Charlie: now, what have you got to say for yourself?
18907George, how did he resemble_ cream_?
18907George, you are so fond of skating, do n''t you hope to enjoy the sport to- morrow?
18907Gertrude, do n''t you think_ the mice will play_ to- night?
18907Gertrude, how did he resemble the_ Alps_?
18907Had it any thing to do with Columbus?
18907Had your brother no family, sir? 18907 Harry, how did you make him out like a_ laugh_?"
18907Has not any one wit enough to think of a game at which we can all assist?
18907How can I possibly please the taste of both?
18907How can people live in the city,they exclaimed,"when such a free and happy life is before them?
18907How could he wish to leave such a charming place, where there was every thing that was lovely on earth?
18907How could you, when you are stone- blind? 18907 How do those lines of Milton run, Ellen, in L''Allegro?
18907How do you like it, John?
18907How do you prefer it, Charlie?
18907How does he resemble a_ carpet_?
18907How does he resemble_ Cousin Mary_?
18907How is he like a_ lion_?
18907How is he like a_ tree_?
18907How is that played? 18907 How is that?
18907How long have you been in his service?
18907How many servants will you keep?
18907How much is the lady worth?
18907How soon does this auspicious match come off? 18907 How then do you account for my finding myself on top of my bed, and dressed?
18907How would you like Bible stories?
18907I am glad to see that she makes herself so useful; is she any relation to you?
18907I apprenticed my daughter to a dry- goods store, and the first thing she sold was ten yards of L."Lace?
18907I apprenticed my daughter to a milliner, and the first thing she sold was a yard of R. R."Red ribbon?
18907I apprenticed my son to a cabinet- maker, and the first thing he sold was a S."Sofa?
18907I apprenticed my son to a grocer, and the first thing he sold was a B. of R."Box of raisins?
18907I never heard of it,replied Cornelia;"how do you play it?"
18907I''ll take charge of her; have you got her ticket?
18907I''m sure I''m very sorry; what are you going to do with me, sir?
18907I? 18907 I?
18907In New York, is he? 18907 In its natural or prepared state?"
18907In its natural or prepared state?
18907Is all the power, and the grandeur, and the wisdom, and the beauty you see in Fairy Land, insufficient to satisfy that foolish heart of yours? 18907 Is any gentleman here willing to take charge of this little girl?"
18907Is it Punch?
18907Is it a German wine, highly prized by connoisseurs?
18907Is it a bean?
18907Is it a collection of sheep?
18907Is it a common weed, and also the place where ships are built?
18907Is it a large receptacle used in the brewery and tannery?
18907Is it a manly covering for the head?
18907Is it a part of a tree, a shrub, a vine, or is it of the grass kind?
18907Is it a rap at the door?
18907Is it a very gentle slap, indicative of love?
18907Is it an article of infants''clothing?
18907Is it an important part of woman''s attire?
18907Is it an ornamental way of dressing the hair?
18907Is it biped or quadruped, fish, flesh, fowl, or insect?
18907Is it one of the wooden pieces of which blinds are composed?
18907Is it out yet?
18907Is it possible it was only an hour ago? 18907 Is it possible you have not read the Arabian Nights?
18907Is it possible?
18907Is it that covering for the head occasionally worn by young misses, and also a frequent quality of their conversation?
18907Is it that sly animal of the tiger species which is domesticated by man, and delights to steal the cream and to torture poor little mice?
18907Is it that word sometimes applied to a disagreeable child?
18907Is it that word, which followed by head, shows what we all are, for not guessing it sooner?
18907Is it the opposite of leanness?
18907Is it the root, stem, leaf, flower, or fruit?
18907Is it the species you think of, or one individual of it?
18907Is it the thing that brokers buy and sell?
18907Is it the whole, or only a part of the plant?
18907Is it used for food?
18907Is it used for the table?
18907Is she pretty?
18907Is that all?
18907Is that you, Russell?
18907Is there any thing else in the jar?
18907Is this fruit pulpy like the grape, or mealy like the bean?
18907It ca n''t be a tree-- how do you like it, Mary?
18907It could not be, Charlie!--how could it?
18907Job''s turkey?
18907John, how many miles did you walk to- day?
18907John, why was he like a_ brick_?
18907Just from college, is n''t he?
18907Let us see-- California? 18907 Linen?
18907Lucy, do you see it, dear I do you see the moon getting dark?
18907Man, monkey, or bird?
18907May I go now, and play, pretty lady? 18907 Much obliged; what was that?"
18907My little girl, what are you doing out of doors on a night like this? 18907 No one else; but what on earth are you doing with such a heap of trunks?
18907No: do you all give it up?
18907No; and I declare I have no more than half a dollar with me-- can you advance the money? 18907 No_ what_?"
18907Not even the ice- bath at the pond, George?
18907Now tell us whose speech gave you the first impression of being Milton?
18907Now, I apprenticed my son to a hardware man, and the first thing he sold was a P. of S."Pair of skates?
18907O, I forgot; but if Clara lays the uneasy spirit of Don Pedro, then will you not remove here?
18907Oh dear, what_ shall_ I do? 18907 Oh, sir, if you ca n''t find my uncle, wo n''t you send me on to Boston again?
18907Optics, is it? 18907 Pray, tell us the name of your rival?"
18907Pray, what can be the difference between Joan of Arc and Noah''s ark?
18907Prayer- book? 18907 Pretty well, with your coal- black eyes and hooked nose: but what is that notion?"
18907Quadruped or biped, fish, snake, or insect?
18907Rudolph, would you like to play at soap- bubbles?
18907Shall I call next week?
18907Shall I make a sailor''s knot, or how shall I fix it?
18907Shall we be so ungrateful, because a glimpse of the earthly paradise has been vouchsafed us, as to sink into idle, repining dreamers? 18907 Simply this-- if he had not, what would have become of my story, I''d like to know?
18907Steam engines and locomotives?
18907The_ horse_? 18907 Then why will you not take me to my uncle?
18907Then you will not buy my lead?
18907Then, how does Anna make him resemble a_ tear_?
18907Then, why is he like_ ink_?
18907There appears, then, to be no prosecution in this case? 18907 There are many funny stories told of him,"answered Mr. Wyndham;"which is the one you refer to?"
18907To bury them at seven, and dig them out at seventeen; how do you like it?
18907Tom, do you like to ask questions?
18907Tom, why was he like a_ cow_?
18907Was it Columbus''egg?
18907Was it very thin?
18907Was it''rare Ben Jonson?''
18907Was this bean an ancient or modern one?
18907We''ll see: does it belong to the animal, vegetable, mineral, or spiritual kingdoms?
18907Well, am I right in my explanation?
18907What can it be?
18907What clergyman will marry you?
18907What do people think,said Charlie,"about my waking up my daughter, instead of taking the trouble to write down my poetry myself?"
18907What do you make of this? 18907 What do you say to''Who can he be?"
18907What do you say, Gertrude?
18907What do you think was the reason?
18907What game shall we play to- night?
18907What has father got?
18907What is her height?
18907What is that? 18907 What is the color of her hair?"
18907What is the gentleman''s name, can you tell me?
18907What is the matter, my little Ellen?
18907What is your preference, George?
18907What means this riotous assembly?
18907What say you, John?
18907What sort of a story will you have?
18907What time is it-- before or after the Christian era?
18907What''s to be done with her when we get to New York?
18907When do you like it, Alice?
18907When do you like it, Anna?
18907When do you like it, Mary?
18907When do you prefer it, Charlie?
18907When is it in a passion?
18907When was it?
18907When will my trunks come?
18907Where did this interesting event take place?
18907Where does she live?
18907Where will you live?
18907Which of us has a hole in her stocking?
18907Which of us is the old maid of the company?
18907Who but Chaucer?
18907Who comes down last to breakfast?
18907Who is the prettiest person present?
18907Who is to be bridesmaid at this happy wedding?
18907Who is your sympathizing confidante?
18907Who loves mince- pie the best?
18907Who shall be appointed to tell the story to- night?
18907Who will wait upon her?
18907Who''s afraid? 18907 Whom will you marry?"
18907Why are pens, ink, and paper like the fixed stars?
18907Why is Trusty like_ paper_?
18907Why is he like a_ bed_?
18907Why is he like a_ table_?
18907Why is he like_ Aunt Lucy_?
18907Why is it that in all Bibles some words are put in Italics? 18907 Why must they go?
18907Why should you want to go? 18907 Wild or tame?"
18907Will he be satisfied upon this point to- morrow?
18907Will the spirit condescend to signify, in writing, in what way he shall act to obtain this end?
18907Will you be so kind as to take me with you?
18907Will you take this man to be your lawful husband?
18907Will you walk into my parlor?
18907Wo n''t we get there a little sooner than we came?
18907Yes, actually; and if only some such process could be applied to children, would it not save trouble?
18907Yes-- but from whom did you take the idea? 18907 Yes: how could she help it?"
18907You do? 18907 You recognize this countenance?"
18907You remember your speech, at least-- eh, Will?
18907You think not, Ellen? 18907 You will not?
18907''And did you know his family?''
18907''Do I, indeed?
18907''Have you indeed, Miss Caterina?
18907--"How do you like it?"
18907A blue ribbon, worn upon his arm, shows that he has not enlisted himself among the admirers of the Lady Clotilda: in whose honor can he wear it?
18907Amy, will you buy any lead?"
18907And he said,''Who shall persuade the Lord of Israel to go up against Ramoth- Gilead to his destruction?''
18907And how do you make out these purple marks?"
18907And how had they been kept?
18907And may Bruno, and Saladin, and old Fritz come too?"
18907And my papa and mamma, and dear little Bertha, can they live here too?
18907And now, shall we not vary the scene by having a story?"
18907And shall he go, unscath''d, away?
18907And the father?
18907And was the memory of the past blotted out from her mind?
18907And what became of the imperious Clotilda?
18907And what did they do then?
18907And when he is a man, and has become under my teaching a perfect specimen of what a man should be, what then?
18907And who was her brave preserver?
18907And why not?
18907Animal, vegetable, mineral, or spiritual?"
18907Are you boys made of different stuff from us, I want to know?"
18907Are you such an eternal fool as to think I''ll pay your passage again?
18907At last, out of patience, he burst forth:''Tell me, did n''t he break his leg?''
18907Before, did I say?
18907Brown?
18907But do you know any one of that name, Alice?
18907But how dare to reveal their affection?
18907But is it true?"
18907But what cavalier is this, with closed vizor, whose head towers above the rest like the cedar of Lebanon above all the trees of the forest?
18907But what could be wished for beyond?
18907But what do George and John say?"
18907But what shall we do?
18907But who altered it?
18907But who are these two other Asiatics, as they appear by their dress, fashioned in Oriental magnificence?
18907But who was she?"
18907But who was the selfish queen, unwilling to have her noblest subject exalted beyond her control?"
18907But why should you weep?
18907But would she not, herself, merely add another to his list of slaves?
18907But, meantime, what was to be done for Mrs. Norton?
18907By the way, what have you found in your slippers?''
18907Cats?
18907Charlie, to whom did you make your first offer?"
18907Could he do less than soothe her fluttered nerves, guide her horse, and make himself as agreeable as possible?
18907Could she do less than feel ardently grateful, and manifest it in every look and accent?
18907Could you alter that, Will?"
18907Cousin Alice, how do you like it?"
18907Cousin Mary, are you too much engaged with your book to help us poor souls?"
18907Dear father, will you not give up your offices at court, and live henceforth at Alcantra?"
18907Did I say without a pilot?
18907Did not animal magnetism, containing so many things which could not be explained away, plainly prove it?
18907Did they fight?"
18907Do n''t you see that Ellen is ready to begin?"
18907Do you give it up?"
18907Do you know, I thought I was in Fairy Land?
18907Do you not love me?"
18907Do you not see, comrades, how she resembles her mother, Ellen Buckingham?
18907Do you remember the story of Dr. Samuel Johnson, when writing his''Lives of the Poets''?"
18907Do you see any other moral?"
18907Do you see that big fellow, how he shines in the sun, and shows all the colors of the rainbow?
18907Does no one have compassion upon him?
18907Don Alphonso, however, was not quite such a bloody- minded tyrant as Don Pedro: how could he be, as he was one of our ancestors?
18907Enraged at her insolence, her enemy, looking up, asked,"Who in the palace is on my side?"
18907For hearest thou not the subdued sound of horses''hoofs scattering the snow?
18907Full of awe as he was, the little man still wished to gratify his curiosity as to the manner of his kinsman''s death: could that be done?
18907Go to my own dear, sweet mamma?
18907Have none a plea to offer for his pardon?
18907Have they any particular mode of training?"
18907Have you any objection to being my servant, Ned?"
18907Have you ever rubbed a cat''s fur the wrong way, in the dark?"
18907Have you not well considered the matter?"
18907Have you the direction?"
18907He is not one of those who hold the creed of impious Cain,"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
18907He remarked,''Do you like the last style of bonnets, Madam?''
18907Horrified, the little girl ran up to Smith:"these are my things,"she said;"how dare you put them into the shop?"
18907How came he there?
18907How can she please you all?"
18907How can they prefer brick and stone to the everlasting hills, the soft green turf, and the majestic forests?
18907How could that be?"
18907How do you like my plan?"
18907How do you think I could pass for a Jew?"
18907How long since?"
18907How shall we manage it though, my fine fellow?"
18907How stood they in their accounts?
18907How to retrieve himself?
18907How would you like that?"
18907I apprenticed my daughter to a dressmaker, and the first thing she made was a V. M.""Velvet mantilla?"
18907I apprenticed my son to a carpenter, and the first thing he sold was a T.""A table?"
18907I apprenticed my son to a tinman, and the first thing he sold was a N. G.""Nutmeg- grater?"
18907I call it''Who can he be?''"
18907I have a thousand pretty things I want to teach you: do you not wish to learn them?"
18907I hope so indeed; for do you know, my dears,"said Mrs. Wyndham,"that it is past eleven o''clock?
18907I must use the words of that sensible''Coon, who has earned immortality by meeting his death like a philosopher--''Is that you, Captain Scott?''
18907I remember the question was once put to him,''What is the Latin name of the earth?''
18907I shall not forget that passage, uncle, as long as I live: who wrote it?"
18907In asking the girls, I merely reverse the questions:''From whom did you receive your first offer?''
18907In five minutes, the farmer returned, having concluded his bargain; but where was his cart, and horse, and load of wood?
18907In the morning, when the Professor was ready for his usual ride, where was his horse?
18907Indeed, what woman should be ignorant of them, if she wishes to be helpful to herself and useful to others?
18907Is any one too grave and too wise to approve of such conduct?
18907Is it the western sun, tinted by the colored glass of the bay- window, or is it the ruddy hickory fire?
18907Is it wonderful that Don Fernando escorted her to the gate of the castle?
18907Is it wonderful, that Rudolph was the idol of his parents, the favorite of his playmates, and the cherished darling of the whole castle?
18907Is n''t it fine?"
18907Is n''t it right and proper for the boys to take their equal share?"
18907Just then, young Rudolph, brave and fair, Perceived my urgent need; He risk''d his life in saving mine-- And shall that kind heart bleed?"
18907Magdalena clasped her father''s hand:"O, may we not always live here?"
18907Mary, will you be kind enough to read it?"
18907May I be allowed a word in private?"
18907Norton?"
18907Now will you let me fly a kite?"
18907Now, do you understand about oxygen and nitrogen, which chiefly make up the atmospheric air?"
18907Now, who can be this poet, warrior, and king?"
18907One of the games this evening was"What is my thought like?"
18907Secluded within his palace, with many rivals to counteract her, would she not gather thorns, as well as blossoms, in the Flowery Land?
18907Shall I attempt to describe the grief of the child, deprived of all she loved?
18907Shall I lap my soul in indolent ease while the work of life is before me?
18907Shall I let him return to earth?
18907Shall we allow the visions of fancy, or the charms of nature, to steal away our hearts from human sympathy?
18907Surely, it can not be Mr. Roscoe, the retired merchant, who is so prominent for his benevolence and liberality?"
18907Surely, you do not believe in ghosts?
18907THE GATHERING.--CHRISTMAS EVE.--CONSEQUENCES.--HOW DO YOU LIKE IT?
18907The arrows of the Almighty have pierced us-- shall we any longer strive against our Maker?
18907The medium asked,"Whether the inquirer should recover his rights, and obtain a copy of the deed?"
18907Their town was, indeed, admirably fortified; but since Tyre, the Queen of the Sea, had been subdued, how could they hope to escape?
18907They continually received-- did they also dispense the goodness of God?
18907They owed debts to their Maker and Redeemer, and to their fellow- men: how had they paid them?
18907They would kill me if they thought I had betrayed them;--will you protect me?"
18907Tom, do n''t you hope we''ll have a story to- night?"
18907Was all deception, illusion?
18907Was he ever to be alone, consumed by vain longings for affection he was destined never to receive?
18907Was it Hood?"
18907Was there nothing real, naught to satisfy the heart?
18907Was your_ spook_ polite enough to bring your lamp, as well as yourself, into your room?"
18907We ca n''t play to- day, and a fellow like me does n''t want to read the whole time: what on earth can we do?
18907What could have put the notion into your head that I was ill?"
18907What do you think of our turning astrologers?"
18907What have you to answer, Cornelia?"
18907What is the meaning of that?"
18907What is this I hold in my hand?"
18907What relationship was there between them?"
18907What shall they do next?
18907What was there upon earth to revive the spirit of the little orphan, so utterly deserted, so ready to perish?
18907What was to be done?
18907What words can describe the sights of beauty that awaited him?
18907What, madam, is the reason of this change of purpose?
18907What, meantime, had been Malcom''s lot?
18907What, meantime, had been her fate?
18907When Cornelia entered, Mary said to her:"Does your majesty feel very sore from your fall?"
18907When that year had begun, what resolutions of improvement had been formed, what vows of greater fidelity had been made?
18907Who are the most immoral of manufacturers?
18907Who can he be?"
18907Who can he be?"
18907Who can he be?"
18907Who can he be?"
18907Who let that cat out of the bag?"
18907Who was the true prophet, and who the false?"
18907Who would stoop to be a duchess, when the diadem of an empress was placed at her disposal?
18907Why are you not at home with your father and mother?"
18907Why is it that this desirable accomplishment, which promotes so much the happiness of the home circle, is not more cultivated?
18907Why is the clock the most humble of all things?"
18907Why not?
18907Will she, can she accept him?
18907Will you be the lead- merchant?"
18907With ardent gratitude and passionate love and admiration, Rudolph embraced the beautiful Queen, and said,"Is this really true?
18907Would she accept from him an annuity, which, after all, was only a small return for her kindness to his brother''s child?"
18907Would you like to try it?"
18907Would you run off, Amy, if he were?"
18907You are not so weak?"
18907You do n''t think I am going to keep you without receiving board, do you?"
18907You see this jar?
18907allow me to ask, reverend sir, or venerable madam, as the case may be, how many centuries are pressing their weight upon your silver locks?
18907and is this splendid place to be my own home?"
18907and when, for the first time, the young heir followed him to the chase, who so happy as he?
18907are you not almost perished?"
18907asked the monarch:"that magic flower hitherto unplucked by mortals?
18907do you mean our tell- tale faces?"
18907exclaimed Barrington,"how do you stand it?
18907felt by young as well as old-- how, in trouble, could we dispense with it?
18907has a friend arrived?"
18907is that all the thanks I get for the pains I have taken to make a man of you?"
18907mourn, and weep, and give herself up to melancholy?
18907no wife or child?"
18907or had it fallen upon hard, unfeeling hearts, which it could not penetrate?
18907said his sister Ellen,"you do n''t really think the dinner the best part of the day?"
18907shall we tell her of our hopes?"
18907sons of*** and****, do you say?
18907the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof?''
18907were you, really, such a_ green_ child as that?"
18907what do you mean, child?"
18907what words can describe them?
18907why, can that be true?"
18907with so many little ones, could you take another?"
18907would not our hearts sink under their load?
18907would not our spirits be crushed within us?
20612A Clive? 20612 A friend, did my brother say?"
20612A silly favour, ma''amzelle-- but why not? 20612 A snug little shelter for the backwoods-- eh, M. a Clive?
20612An Englishwoman?
20612An atheist? 20612 And did the Beau- man find her and fetch her back?"
20612And how,John managed to make him hear,"did the Seigneur come to command Fort Amitie?"
20612And if you reached? 20612 And in the interval they have been tracking_ us_, belike?"
20612And the rest of your garrison? 20612 And the tracks around the tree?"
20612And they had lost their boat in the Cedars?
20612And what will my brother do?
20612And what will my brother tell them?
20612And what will you do now?
20612And where is your brother Dominique just now?
20612And why not?
20612And will you grant one thing more?
20612And yet you love Netawis?
20612And you and he have come by way of the Wilderness? 20612 Are you so simple, Netawis?
20612Are you sorry at all? 20612 Are you stark mad, Dominique Guyon?"
20612As for fortification, do I not know already what additional defences we need? 20612 Boats?
20612Business? 20612 But again, how shall they tell this to the English and hope to be believed?"
20612But how is it possible to mistrust God?
20612But if she should resist?
20612But suppose that I had missed my shot?
20612But that is not your true reason?
20612But what, then, of the girl yonder, whom you wanted to marry? 20612 But who will assure my people of that?"
20612But why?
20612But why?
20612Can I grant it easily?
20612Death?
20612Did I ask you to help me?
20612Did I ever suppose that you would? 20612 Did I not always tell you that your heart would be lighter, with this shadow gone?
20612Did ever man have such luck?
20612Did mademoiselle send the canoe?
20612Did you kill him?
20612Do I ever cease thinking of Bateese? 20612 Do I not know why you said it?
20612Do we cross over?
20612Do you know him, sir?
20612Do you suppose, then, that I would retire?
20612Does my brother ask why? 20612 Dominique, how many men can you spare me from Boisveyrac, now that the harvest is over?"
20612Eh, my child? 20612 Eh?
20612Eh? 20612 Eh?
20612Eh? 20612 Eh?
20612Eh? 20612 Eh?
20612Eh?
20612Eh?
20612English? 20612 For God''s sake, Chameau, what kind of milk is this to turn a man''s stomach?"
20612For what did you bring me this long way from Michilimackinac?
20612For what purpose do you wish men, Monseigneur?
20612Has it? 20612 He fought for France?"
20612His name, Father?
20612How have you managed it so quickly?
20612I see,said John, picking up the short twig and bending it into an arch,"we are now climbing up this side of the slope, eh?
20612If M. le Commandant will excuse me--"Eh, eh?--an awkward question, no doubt, to put to many a young man of family now serving with the colours?
20612If our general had only used his artillery--"Eh, what is that you''re singing? 20612 If so?"
20612If these Indians on the ridge are Iroquois, why should I run? 20612 In what way can I help you, mademoiselle?"
20612Iroquois? 20612 Is Monseigneur proposing to pay me the interest on his bonds?"
20612Is it the noise I made? 20612 Is it well done, Menehwehna?"
20612Is papa sending you to Montreal?
20612Is that you, Bateese?
20612Is that you, Captain Chabot?
20612Is there any more bad news?
20612Is there no hope for me, ma''amzelle?
20612Is this the same story?
20612It must be weary work for him, whiling away the hours in this contemptible fortress?
20612It was a duel, then?
20612Ma''amzelle, you will leave the Fort? 20612 Man alive, were you clean mad?
20612Matter? 20612 Menehwehna,"said he at length,"what is all this talk of English vengeance?
20612Monsieur did not know, then? 20612 Montreal?"
20612My Father, must I go?
20612My Father, you do not understand--"Who told you that I do not understand?
20612My daughter,he asked, they two being left alone,"has Ononwe a cause of quarrel against Netawis?"
20612Netawis,said she,"when will you be leaving us?"
20612Now what can be the meaning of that?
20612Of what did he talk?
20612Of whom is mademoiselle speaking?
20612Quarrel, brother? 20612 Resist?
20612Said I not how it would happen?
20612Said I not that Netawis would become a hunter and bring us luck?
20612Said I not that Netawis would bring us good luck?
20612Said I not that he would bring us luck? 20612 Sergeant McQuarters, sir?
20612Shall I tell you what I think, Bateese? 20612 She believed me dead, of course?"
20612Should_ you_ have believed it right?
20612So that was more than Amherst could bring himself to stomach?
20612Stadacona?
20612The girl? 20612 The scissors?
20612Then you, too, Dominique, find your guest a strange fellow?
20612Then, since he has not shot you, I presume you are now restored to the Forty- sixth, and become the just pride of the regiment?
20612Thirty- eight, did you say?
20612Through some careless push of Dominique''s, was it not?
20612Two years?
20612Was he also coming in search of me?
20612Was he, too, of the regiment of Bearn?
20612Was it not to speak at need for you and your nation?
20612Was she an Englishwoman then?
20612Was that her name?
20612Were you afraid that I might wish to go back? 20612 What can it matter to you, mother?"
20612What did I tell you?
20612What did I tell you?
20612What happened, ma''amzelle?
20612What is her word, Bateese?
20612What is it, Dominique?
20612What is the matter with the man?
20612What is the matter, mademoiselle?
20612What matters it?
20612What matters noise more or less, when_ he_ is anywhere near?
20612What matters that to your people, though it be true? 20612 What news is this?"
20612What news, my children?
20612What the devil care I for Bateese?
20612What''s wrong in front?
20612Where are the scissors, Felicite?
20612Where did you get this? 20612 Who are these newcomers?"
20612Who is working these?
20612Who the devil was Manabozho?
20612Who told you that, Jo Lagasse?
20612Who''s killed?
20612Whose fault was it, Netawis? 20612 Why do you fear then, Menehwehna,"he demanded,"if not for me?"
20612Why do you shiver?
20612Why should I not answer him, papa?
20612Why should you think I am troubled? 20612 Why?"
20612With twenty odd men against as many hundreds? 20612 Would that not content any man, Bateese?"
20612Yet he must be intending to strike at the English coming from Quebec?
20612You are sure that the sergeant, your comrade, carried no message?
20612You do not seriously urge me, monsieur, to withdraw my men and renew the bombardment?
20612You guessed that? 20612 You had audience, then, of the Governor?"
20612You have heard of Bateese? 20612 You have met none, you mean?"
20612You have n''t heard?
20612You knew me, then?
20612You mean it?
20612You mean that you are unwilling to spare me a single man? 20612 You mean to live your life out in Canada?"
20612You prefer to give him his answer alone?
20612You see?
20612You told him all, of course?
20612You were close to him?
20612You will come again?
20612You will come again?
20612You will come with me now, brother?
20612You will only kill your friend-- and to what purpose? 20612 You wish me to carry this dispatch, monsieur?"
20612Your crew all right, captain?
20612_ Sale_, you dog? 20612 ''On what do the dead feed themselves?'' 20612 ''She is loving enough now,''I said;''but how will it be when other young men are around her?'' 20612 ''What like is he?'' 20612 ( Why should he feel ashamed? 20612 ?
20612A Power that had made the mountains yonder?
20612A loving Power-- an intimate counsellor-- a Father attending all his steps?
20612Again, to whom do I turn now to steer me down the worst fall in the river?
20612Also he started from Fort Carillon with two wounds; and who would entrust special service to a wounded man?"
20612Am I not grateful?"
20612And Barboux?
20612And Dominique?"
20612And a fine dream it seemed to you, eh?"
20612And how did it stand with Fort Amitie?
20612And how was I to have known?
20612And on the other there will likewise be a river?"
20612And this Indian of yours-- how does he call himself?"
20612And who are these your comrades?"
20612And who was that firing?
20612And why?
20612And would it ever end?
20612And yet-- was it not better to dote thus, needing no pity, happy as a child, than to live sane and feel the torture?
20612And you, dog of an Indian, at what are you rubbing your hands?"
20612And, being bitten, did they bite, my brother?"
20612And, once more, was not this war?
20612Answer me, Menehwehna-- By whose wish am I here at all?"
20612Are you blind, that you can not see how I suffer?"
20612At what price was the Government redeeming its paper there?"
20612Bradstreet was a glutton for work-- but would he be in time?
20612Brother, have you never loved a friend so that you felt his friendship worthless to you unless you owned it all?
20612But Love, not John a Cleeve, was the master to grant her remission-- and who can supplicate Love?
20612But after such a defeat, who cares?"
20612But again, why?
20612But by and by, and a short while before I left Boisveyrac to go to school with the Ursulines, Dominique began to be-- what shall I say?
20612But he had cut himself adrift; and now the world, too, had cut him off, and where was he with his doubts?
20612But how could this be, when the boat was left behind on the other side of the mountain?
20612But might he not escape back and show himself without lessening his comrades''chances?
20612But of course you will not know him?"
20612But what avails it to administer drubbings which but leave your foe the more stubbornly aggressive?
20612But what had become of the flag?
20612But what had been La Corne''s answer?
20612But what of the Buisson?
20612But what then brings him across the Wilderness?
20612But where is any mark on the path behind us?
20612But why should you think me afraid to touch_ this_?
20612But why, again?
20612But( thought John again) who could help loving him?
20612Can I help you?"
20612Can one ever forget?"
20612Can you forgive me such a thought as that?"
20612Did I not tell you that I would get Jeremie to find me a tunic from the stores?
20612Did he believe in God?
20612Did he break his word, then?"
20612Did his country, indeed, require this of him?
20612Did it hurt?
20612Did you expect me, then, to miss?
20612Did you kill him?"
20612Do I ever cease fighting with myself?"
20612Do n''t you see what cards you held?
20612Do we go forward then, or back?"
20612Do you accept this coat- of- arms he assigns to you?"
20612Do you grumble, then, that the Seigneur knows it?
20612Do you think he is strong enough?"
20612Down the river?
20612Eh, brother?"
20612Eh, monsieur?"
20612Eh?
20612Eh?
20612For suppose now that I were a devil?"
20612For were they not undergone in just such a shining atmosphere as this?
20612For what else had we dragged them up the Hudson from Albany and across the fourteen- mile portage to the lake?
20612From what province should our friend derive?"
20612Guns?
20612Guns?
20612Guyon?"
20612Had Menehwehna discovered it and placed it here for him to discover?
20612Had he passed into a world where time was not, that all these things were happening together?
20612Had the explosion blown it to atoms?
20612Had they passed so quickly?
20612Has life been so bitter for you?"
20612Has she married another man, or is she dead?
20612Have I not guessed?"
20612Have you never felt the need on you to test him, though the test lay a hundred leagues away?
20612Have you seen Amherst?"
20612Have you the tapes?
20612He flung a leg over the parapet and glanced down?
20612He has seen her, has he not?"
20612How came they here?
20612How could he explain that he abhorred this lying?
20612How could he make this clear?
20612How could she explain the secret of her bitterness-- that she despised herself?
20612How did you guess?
20612How do you know that it was English?"
20612How long had the day lasted, then?
20612How many lies had Menehwehna told?
20612How many lies had Menehwehna told?
20612How often, my children, must I ask you to judge a brother by his virtues?
20612Howe-- dead?
20612I hope for this, because it is painful to lie upset and empty; and I do not wish to be broken, for that must be even more painful-- at the time, eh?"
20612If Fort Frontenac has fallen--""Why should you believe that Fort Frontenac has fallen?"
20612If in truth you intend this folly, where is Mademoiselle Diane?
20612If so, how came the two Indians here?
20612If we are what you all insist we should be, what right have we to be born in these times?
20612Is Menehwehna a coward, that he spoke with thought of saving himself?"
20612Is it better, now, to return to your people as a ghost or as a man who has found himself?"
20612Is it not much better when folks speak to one another frankly?
20612Is it true, corporal, that they have faces like devils, and that he who has the misfortune to be killed by one will assuredly rise the third day?
20612Is it useless they are as they lie upturned, reflecting-- what?
20612Is she dead?"
20612It appears we have not heard the end of him, then?"
20612It is unknown to me, and yet it has a good sound, and should belong to_ un homme Men ne_?"
20612It will be news you bring from Boisveyrac-- more news of the great victory, perhaps?
20612M''sieur is, perhaps, in love?
20612M. de Vaudreuil must be meaning to attack them instantly, and therefore he can not spare a detachment-- You follow me?"
20612May I have his permission to return at once to Boisveyrac?--at least, as soon as we have discussed certain matters of business?"
20612Monsieur has heard of the Intendant Bigot-- is perhaps acquainted with him?
20612Monsieur, was this man a coward?"
20612Nay, is that not evident to you, seeing what mischief it has already worked in your life?
20612Next he had to ask himself, Could the fort be defended?
20612No?
20612No?"
20612Now why should this one boat have turned aside?
20612Of what avail is my friendship, brother, when you will give me none in exchange?
20612Of what worth would his return be?
20612Oh, when would the boats push off?
20612Only-- what would the flag carry on its white ground?
20612Or has been?"
20612Or is it in revenge that you force me to tell?
20612Putting aside the insane risk, ought he to bring death-- and such a death-- down upon these three men, two of whom he looked upon as friends?
20612She had fallen on her knees-- but what had happened to her?
20612So here''s five pounds on it, and let it be a match-- Wolfe against Howe, and shall J. a C. or R. M. be first in Quebec?
20612So you know me, McQuarters?"
20612Something may be hidden which seems of no importance, and yet for lack of knowing it we may misjudge utterly, may we not?"
20612Something prompted him to add,"Has it to do with Dominique Guyon?"
20612Still, supposing that one occurred, ought he to take it?
20612Surely my father has heard him?"
20612That is your calling, brother, is it not?"
20612That was no small exploit, my friend, and it puzzles me how you came to attempt it; for you were severely wounded, were you not?"
20612The Highlander saluted in the darkness,"Any word from up yonder, sir?"
20612The angles, you say, were boldly advanced?"
20612The breastwork will never be carried in this way-- haven''t the troops charged it again and again?
20612The red cross?
20612They had fought to gain time?
20612This love of women, now?"
20612To which of you did it occur, when these men came, to send''Polyte and Damase up to Fort Amitie with their news?
20612To- morrow, by taking these men to Fort Amitie, you may ease her heart of its fears: and will you fail in so simple a devoir?
20612Was Barboux his enemy?
20612Was he a prisoner?
20612Was he dead?
20612Was he not their prisoner?
20612Was her face so white then?
20612Was the General sending a force down to clear La Corne out?"
20612Was this murder?
20612Was this not war, and he a prisoner tricking his captors?)
20612Was this the question Mademoiselle Diane desired you to ask me?"
20612Was_ that_ what they had to carry?
20612We could do so much if only M. de Vaudreuil would send us men!--but, as it is, on what are we relying?
20612Well, but have we, on our part, no_ vexillum?_ Brother Romulus presents his compliments to Brother Remus, and begs leave to answer''Wolfe!''
20612What can you expiate?
20612What could M. de Vaudreuil be dreaming of?
20612What did I tell you?
20612What did her eyes seek beneath the pall, the plumes, the flag?
20612What did it all matter?
20612What did she see?
20612What else do you suppose?
20612What had New France done for these that they were cheerful to die for her?
20612What has he seen?
20612What kept him silent then?
20612What mattered it if they died now-- together-- he and she?
20612What more was needed?
20612What new mystery was here?
20612What nonsense was this of M. Etienne''s?
20612What the devil''s wrong with you all?"
20612What voice was that, screaming?
20612What was he saying?
20612What was his name?"
20612What was that?
20612What was that?"
20612What were they like, those regions ahead?
20612What wickedness has come to me that I should be so cruelly selfish?"
20612What would you do?"
20612What, after all, was the difference?
20612When Bateese fell between the logs, was it because Dominique had pushed him?"
20612When the Iroquois overtook you, could he have passed on a message, had he carried one?"
20612When the sergeant begins his talk-- c''est bien sale, is it not?
20612Where are the Forty- sixth?
20612Where now was the prospects of his soul''s deliverance?
20612Where was the General?
20612Where were his faculties?
20612Where''s your artilleryman?"
20612Whereabouts is the General?"
20612Whither have you sent her, and in whose charge?"
20612Who has been about the field all day, as though to have missed a night''s sleep were no excuse for shirking the daily task?
20612Who sat up, the night through, with this wounded stranger?
20612Who wants guns on this trip?
20612Who was this girl whose eyes he avoided lest they should weigh him, as a sister''s might, in the scales of honour?
20612Why could not M. de Vaudreuil order me to fight?"
20612Why did this twilit riverside persist in seeming unreal to him, and the actors, himself included, as figures moving in a shadow- play?
20612Why had he been fool enough to take the gun?
20612Why had he not thought of this before?
20612Why had she chosen to tell him this story?
20612Why not?
20612Why on earth should the Iroquois meddle with this man, by the dress of him a_ coureur de bois_?"
20612Why should I quarrel with you?
20612Why should not the regimental bands strike up?
20612Why was the man making such a noise?
20612Why were they hanging back and refusing to come to grips with the crisis?
20612Why, after all, should that tunic frighten him?
20612Why, what is the matter with you, Ononwe?"
20612Why?
20612Why?
20612Why?
20612Will you be an Englishman again?"
20612Would she come again?
20612Would their comradeship help him at the end of the journey?
20612Would you care to hear a sentence or two?
20612Yet I do not think it, for why should they be expecting us?
20612Yet why should he wish to return?
20612You are clever enough, doubtless; but you do n''t think you can question and cross- question a man the way that Father Launoy does it?
20612You can not be intending--""Eh?
20612You can only die; and are you so much afraid of death that you think it an atonement?
20612You do n''t mean to tell me that your luck stepped in once again?"
20612You really wish me to sing, then?"
20612You remember, Dominique?"
20612You saw nothing of them?"
20612You told him of Fort Frontenac, I presume?"
20612You were a whole boat''s party then, at starting?"
20612You will excuse me, M. a Clive?"
20612You will let Bateese carry you out of danger?
20612You wish to expiate?
20612Young men were ambitious in my day-- eh, M. a Clive?"
20612Your heart is cracked and can not hold love, like your brother''s; but what of that, while God is pouring love into it all day long and never ceases?
20612Yours or hers?"
20612_ Oui- da_, if your general had only used his artillery?
20612a Clive?
20612and of the Roches Fendues?
20612but it will save us all the trouble in the world with the measurements-- eh, mademoiselle?"
20612but monsieur did not know it was her brother?"
20612interposed the girl gently, laying a hand on her father''s sleeve;"ought we not to get him ashore before troubling him with all these questions?
20612or the golden fleurs- de- lys?
20612the stonework was noted throughout New France, and every inch of timber( would M. le General observe?)
20612what is that you carry?
20612why should I ask_ you_ to think, who have bled for her?
20612you have heard of Armand?"
2984And the children-- Miss Susie and little Clara?
2984Cable,he said,"do you know anything about this book, the Arthurian legends of Sir Thomas Malory, Morte Arthure?"
2984Did you ever hear of Mark Twain?
2984Do you expect to pay extra fare?
2984Do you mean to say that you''re not going to vote for him?
2984George,he said,"what pictures are those that gentleman left?"
2984Hain''t we all the fools in town on our side? 2984 I said,''Who the h-- l are you?
2984M.--What does it mean? 2984 MAMA-- What did you say?
2984Oh, Youth, have you done anything?
2984Well,he said,"who told you you could go in this car?"
2984What are you doing here?
2984What would you give for a copy?
2984Which way did he go, Youth?
2984Who is he, George?
2984Who-- who in the world is that?
2984And what the flavor can surpass Of sugar, spirit, lemons?
2984As Annie was about to kiss it he suddenly withdrew his hand and said,"And will you, a little Protestant, kiss the Pope''s ring?"
2984At one meal-- or, if you prefer, during one day-- how many men will he eat if fresh?"
2984By and by this investor, returning from Europe, dropped in and said:"Well, did anything happen?"
2984By the way, third''s a lucky number for length of days, is n''t it?
2984Can Clara and I have it all for our own?"
2984Can you conceive of a man''s getting himself into a sweat over so diminutive a provocation?
2984Clemens?"
2984Clemens?"
2984Curious, but did n''t Florence want a Cromwell?
2984Did I ever tell you the plot of it?
2984Do n''t you feel well?"
2984Do n''t you know it''s Mark Twain and that he''ll talk all night?"
2984Do n''t you know they are calling for you?"
2984Have you been secreted in the closet or lurking on the shed roof?
2984He had never had a lesson, she said; if he could only have lessons what might he not accomplish?
2984He said to himself:"Why did n''t I go now?
2984He said:"''You thought you were playing a nice joke on me, did n''t you?
2984He seemed surprised and said:"Oh, but he does n''t like that sort of thing, does he?"
2984He went in with his best,"Well, what can I do for you?"
2984He wrote, asking Howells: Will the proposed treaty protect us( and effectually) against Canadian piracy?
2984Here he paused a moment:"Mr. Clemens, will you tell me where Mr. Charles Dudley Warner lives?"
2984How can a body help it?
2984How do I account for this change of view?
2984How do you explain this?"
2984How do you run Plum Point?"
2984How many Bibles would he eat at a meal?"
2984How should he?"
2984I naturally said,"What do you mean?
2984If base music gives me wings, why should I want any other?
2984If we made this colonel a grand fellow, and gave him a wife to suit-- hey?
2984In February he addressed the Monday Evening Club on"What is Happiness?"
2984In the accompanying note he said: Say, Boss, do you want this to lighten up your old freight- train with?
2984Land sakes, Livy, what can I do?"
2984Livy screamed, then said,"Who is it?
2984Mama said,"Why do n''t you try''mind cure''?"
2984Mrs. Clemens looked at him gravely:"George,"she said,"did n''t I discharge you yesterday?"
2984Next day he asked,"Katie, did you see my pipe- cleaner?
2984Now what is it?
2984Now, young men, if any of you were in command of such a fortress, how would you proceed?''
2984On another: Have you seen any portion of the second volume?
2984One day Clemens sand to him:"Cable, why do you sit in here?
2984Rose Terry Cooke wrote: Horrid man, how did you know the way I behave in a thunderstorm?
2984Shall we think this over, or drop it as being nonsense?
2984She ran breathlessly to her aunt:"Can I have it?
2984She said,"Are you hunting for it with a club?"
2984She said,"Why, Jean, what''s the matter?
2984The inspector asks:"Now what does this elephant eat, and how much?"
2984The other letter mentioned was written to the''Christian Union'', inspired by a tale entitled,"What Ought We to Have Done?"
2984Then he asked solemnly:"And is he never serious?"
2984Then he says: Why do I offer him the play at all?
2984They shook hands; there was a pause of a moment, then Grant said, looking at him gravely:"Mr. Clemens, I am not embarrassed, are you?"
2984This is my work, and I know that I do very wrong when I feel chafed by it, but how can I be right about it?
2984Thomas Hardy said to Howells one night at dinner:"Why do n''t people understand that Mark Twain is not merely a great humorist?
2984To a woman who wrote, asking for his opinion on dogs, he said, in part: By what right has the dog come to be regarded as a"noble"animal?
2984Twain expect the public to credit this narrative to his clever brain?
2984Was hast du gesagt?"
2984What did you do with him?"
2984What do you think the General wanted to require of me?''
2984What does it mean, Susy?
2984What is the matter?"
2984What nationalities would he prefer?"
2984When we entered, and Mrs. Clemens read on Shakespeare''s grave,''Good friend, for Jesus''sake, forbear,''she started back, exclaiming,''where am I?''
2984Where did you ever see it before?"
2984Who knows?
2984Why did n''t I go with her now?"
2984Why do n''t you come here and take a foretaste of Heaven?"
2984Why should Darwin have gone to them for rest and refreshment at midnight, when spent with scientific research?
2984Why, in fine, should an English chief- justice keep Mark Twain''s books always at hand?
2984Will you return those proofs or revises to me, so that I can use the same on some future occasion?
2984You hold her, will you, till I come back?''
2984You note that position?
2984and ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town?"
2984do you realize, Mark, what a symposium it is to be?
2984presenting a theory which in later years he developed as a part of his"gospel,"and promulgated in a privately printed volume,''What is Man''?
2984where is he?
21689''Up from the meadows rich with corn''?
21689Against myself?
21689Altered it-- why?
21689Am I too much of a fossil?
21689An intermediary?
21689And am I the spirit of that picture, too?
21689And for the east?
21689And his high courage has prevented him from admitting this to me and facing my just wrath?
21689And now shall we have a little music?
21689And now?
21689And this makes for unconscious hypocrisy?
21689And this morning?
21689And this one?
21689And what immunity makes a denial unnecessary?
21689And you call this predisposition to looseness and license a thing to be condoned, to be mixed with the blood of one''s own posterity? 21689 And you will not feel that you have proven a traitor-- to the memory of your father?"
21689And you''re not afraid of the opal''s ill- luck?
21689And you?
21689Are n''t you going in?
21689Are we going to swim before breakfast to- morrow?
21689Are you ambitious to come into the firm and have your name on the door?
21689Are you through questioning me, Stuart? 21689 As for instance?"
21689At least you''ll be back-- next summer?
21689But a young wife will rejuvenate him and keep him young, wo n''t she?
21689But this changed attitude-- this positive urbanity where there used to be utter intolerance-- how do you account for that?
21689But what, exactly, did you fear, Doctor?
21689But where in the world did you and Mrs. Holbury meet? 21689 But why did he ask me here, if he thought there was danger?"
21689But why should n''t you go?
21689But why, in God''s name, did you come here? 21689 But why,"whispered a small voice of inner mockery,"did you just now turn the key in your door?
21689But your Broadway opening does n''t take place until October? 21689 Ca n''t you admit that for the moment your sense of right may be clouded?
21689Conscience, dear,she demanded,"was it anything you should have known?"
21689Conscience,he asked slowly,"you have used a diplomacy worthy of a better cause, in devising ways to keep me from talking with you alone-- why?"
21689Could n''t it still be satisfying, dear?
21689Did he find her?
21689Did he?
21689Did n''t you-- have another paper, Stuart?
21689Did you ever have any_ fun_ in your life?
21689Did you know, Stuart, that-- that Mrs. Holbury came to see me?
21689Did you mail my letter?
21689Did you rewrite that scene in the third act?
21689Do I look like a victim of despair?
21689Do I mean as much as that to you?
21689Do n''t you know that I can hold you here, without a word, without a touch? 21689 Do n''t you realize that all strength is relative?
21689Do n''t you see that all that is finest and most vital in you, is that part that''s in protest? 21689 Do n''t you see, dearest, that you are utterly deluding yourself?"
21689Do n''t you want to take me for a stroll on the beach?
21689Do you know where he lives-- or anything else about him?
21689Do you like poetry?
21689Do you mean that you believe that?
21689Do you mean the Virginian? 21689 Do you mean... that you really fancied... that you loved me?"
21689Do you mind my going with you?
21689Do you really mean it?
21689Do you really mean that I may do what I like with the place?
21689Do you really regard it as so important?
21689Do you suppose you have to tell me,she asked,"what is lacking in my life or how hungry I am for it?
21689Do you think I''d show them how I felt?
21689Does it hurt as badly as that?
21689Does n''t interest you yet? 21689 Eben,"she hazarded,"why ca n''t I make myself useful?
21689Face just what, Conscience?
21689For God''s sake,he begged,"tell me what I did or said?"
21689Hagan, Hagan?
21689Hardly possible? 21689 Has he only one arm?"
21689Has n''t the doctor warned him that he must n''t excite himself?
21689Have I done that?
21689Have I ever seemed to prefer small dogs to children?
21689Honor my benefactor? 21689 How about this mission that you speak of?
21689How am I firing on Fort Sumpter?
21689How did the play go?
21689How do we know we wo n''t change our minds?
21689How is that?
21689How long has Mr. Farquaharson been here now?
21689How long have you known this?
21689How much shall I give? 21689 I beg pardon, sir,"he said,"but are you ill?
21689I have n''t said I was n''t willing to wait, have I?
21689I have only recently been promoted to the high office of''Master of my fate''--but before we get to that-- where are you stopping?
21689I suppose you get the fact that these guileless kids over here are our venerated chaperons?
21689I suppose your business here is soliciting that-- is it not?
21689I wonder who it can be-- on such a night?
21689I would like to kiss you good- night,he said with a queer smile,"but--""But what?"
21689I''m afraid I''ll have to-- and--"And what?
21689Indeed?
21689Is n''t it nearer two months?
21689Is there any question?
21689Is this man to be shown up? 21689 It might even alter matters altogether-- but do n''t you think that even for a reunion we seem to have shaken hands almost long enough?"
21689It strikes you that way, does it? 21689 It would mean a good deal to you, would n''t it, to have her know the truth?"
21689Just what does that mean to you, Doctor-- too much the New Englander?
21689Let me go-- don''t you see?... 21689 Mary,"she asked,"just exactly when did this message arrive?"
21689Must it always be only that? 21689 Must one be distracted to enjoy an occasional moment of solitude?
21689My dear fellow, you are much more fully dressed than when you go bathing; both of you-- and how can I celebrate alone?
21689Never reached him? 21689 No, you do n''t understand yet... must you still have the whole truth... even if I tell you that you can serve me best by not asking it?"
21689Not even''The Beautiful Night of Love''?
21689Now that your story is ended, what is the real matter that brought you here?
21689Prefer being alone? 21689 Reproaching yourself--"the husband arched his brows--"for what?"
21689Running down for a day or two? 21689 See that boat over yon in the norrer channal?
21689Separate apartments?
21689Shall I recite you something?
21689She did that?
21689So now-- it is over?
21689So she followed him across the world, did she?
21689So?
21689Stuart,he demanded suddenly,"what''s happened to you?
21689Stuart,she began slowly,"who is there to take my place, even for a few weeks?"
21689That is a very extraordinary story, but you are n''t letting things that happened so long ago trouble you, are you, my dear?
21689That?
21689Then what in Heaven''s name do you mean?
21689Then why not finish out your vacation?
21689Then you do n''t like poetry?
21689Then you knew I was on the sandbar?
21689Then you mean-- that I must fight you, too-- as well as myself?
21689Then you think--?
21689Then your attitude of last night was not just moon madness, after all?
21689Then-- then,he spoke with a new note of misgiving,"your decision is not final after all?"
21689There will be no turning back?
21689We have both had some troublesome times, but is n''t there a great deal we can remember of each other with pleasure? 21689 Welcome you?
21689Well, now, Mr. Farquaharson,he suggested,"I ca n''t say as to that, but why do n''t you come and investigate for yourself?
21689Well, suppose that I have tried to change myself, why should n''t I? 21689 Well, what did you find out about this job?"
21689What animals have you captured this time? 21689 What are you doing here-- and alone?"
21689What are your sentiments,he inquired,"regarding a cup of tea?"
21689What can you get out of your car?
21689What did General Breckinridge say?
21689What did he say?
21689What do you mean?
21689What do you mean?
21689What do you mean?
21689What does he do with his time?
21689What does he want done?
21689What else does he do?
21689What experiment?
21689What has that to do with Eben and the phonograph?
21689What has worked out?
21689What have you got on this Farquaharson party?
21689What in heaven''s name do you mean?
21689What in the world has happened to you?
21689What is it, dearest?
21689What is our first port of call, and when do we reach it?
21689What is this room, my dear?
21689What reports do you mean?
21689What time is it?
21689What was it that General Breckinridge said, Stuart?
21689What were you saying?
21689What will they think of you?
21689What would you have me do?
21689What''s the matter with his type?
21689What''s the matter with you?
21689What''s wrong with her?
21689What, indeed, to you were mere questions of right or wrong? 21689 When did you see Conscience Williams last?
21689When did you think of this?
21689When the Newmarket cadets made their charge?
21689Where do you think you''re going in such hot haste?
21689Wherefore this burst of prophecy?
21689Which lead you to what conclusion?
21689Who is the girl with the red- brown hair and the wonderful complexion and the dissatisfied eyes?
21689Who is the lady?
21689Who''s out there?
21689Why are all the Cape Cod wagons painted blue and all the barn doors green?
21689Why are you sending me away?
21689Why could n''t Harry Merton come?
21689Why did you come?
21689Why do n''t he?
21689Why do you ask?
21689Why does one ever ask a vital question? 21689 Why else?"
21689Why should I care what gossips thought? 21689 Why should it come to an end, Father?"
21689Why should it mean anything to Mr. Farquaharson now-- my opinion?
21689Why should n''t you call on me? 21689 Why so solitary?"
21689Why were you crying, Conscience?
21689Why, my dear boy, you''re a member of the family, are n''t you? 21689 Why,"she asked faintly,"should he be your enemy?"
21689Why?
21689Why?
21689Will you tell me what it was? 21689 Will you?
21689Yes, but how can we tell him that?
21689Yes, does n''t he?
21689Yes, one does happen to hear of these things, does n''t one? 21689 Yes; does n''t it?
21689Yes?
21689Yes?
21689Yes?
21689You are Mrs. Eben Tollman?
21689You are ready to repudiate, for all time this life... Eben Tollman... the undertow? 21689 You are surprised?"
21689You have chosen-- finally?
21689You have something to say to me?
21689You mean back- tracking over the route we''ve come?
21689You mean, then,Conscience seemed a little frightened now and her utterance was hurried and fluttering,"that you are mad and are going?
21689You see, do n''t you, that it''s impossible?
21689You think our host is of the type most susceptible to such a danger?
21689You wo n''t go away and leave me here alone, will you-- even if nobody else likes you?
21689You wo n''t go out and join any Newmarket cadets or anything and get killed meanwhile, will you?
21689You''ll be all right here for a while, wo n''t you?
21689You''re wondering why I''m going outside the lines and filling the ranks with a nobody? 21689 Your mind is-- definitely-- made up?"
21689_ Can_ you go?
21689_ Could_ you make that promise?
21689After a little she asked him with a direct reading of his thoughts which made him start uncomfortably,"You find me changed?"
21689After weeks of patient silence, Tollman asked once more,"Conscience, is there still no hope for me?"
21689All right, but why did n''t you know?
21689An unspeakably ancient letter from home mentioned your spending a summer up there on Cape Cod?
21689And what have you to say of the trust of a husband who accepts you in his house as a member of his family-- without suspicion?"
21689And when you''ve done that are you going to carry the same policy of high- minded reform through the rest of your property in New York find Boston?
21689Are n''t we incessantly cudgeling our brains for novelty of entertainment?
21689Are n''t you fighting about me?"
21689Are n''t you sick of it?"
21689Are the rest of them rushing to the office to cane the editors?
21689Are you going to give him references?"
21689Are you going to let the flame of our honorable line flicker out with your own death?"
21689Are you, by any chance, Mr. Tollman''s daughter?"
21689At last the man asked softly,"What did the doctor say?"
21689But how?
21689But that she swiftly stifled into a less self- revealing demeanor as she demanded with recovered dignity,"What are you doing here?"
21689But the bag, dear-- what was that?"
21689But, until to- night, have I in any manner assumed the guise or asked the prerogatives of a lover?"
21689By selling it, at a profit, to somebody else that''ll go on getting rich on other Minnie Rays?
21689By the by, will you swim out here with me to- morrow morning?"
21689By the way, how much sleep did you get yourself?"
21689By the way, who invented week- ends, do you suppose?
21689Ca n''t I get a nip of brandy?"
21689Ca n''t it be a memory which we need not avoid?
21689Ca n''t you delegate some part of your work to me?"
21689Ca n''t you make allowances for me?"
21689Ca n''t you put off leaving until to- morrow?"
21689Conscience set down the coffee cup and looked at him as she quietly asked,"Is there any reason why it should n''t?
21689Could Eben Tollman, whom he had always distrusted, have engineered the thing?
21689Could he do it again with the sight of her in his eyes and the sound of her voice in his ears?
21689Did I wake you both up?
21689Did n''t it help her?"
21689Did n''t we both admit that it was too much for us-- unless we separated?"
21689Did n''t you tell us that?"
21689Divorce him because we find too late that we still love each other?
21689Do n''t this feller ever take a drink or play around with any female companions?"
21689Do n''t you know that any boiler ever made will explode if you give it enough pressure?"
21689Do n''t you realize that I can stretch out my arms and force you, of your own accord, to come into them?"
21689Do n''t you see how greatly he would covet an honorable discharge?"
21689Do n''t you see that I must know why I am being banished?"
21689Do n''t you see that you are just reacting in every crisis to the cramped puritanism you once denounced?"
21689Do you fancy your husband''s jealousy wo n''t tell him where you went?"
21689Do you imagine that Stuart Farquaharson could willingly retire in that fashion?
21689Do you know him?"
21689Do you mean that, after last night, you would trust yourself here... with me... and no one else?
21689Do you mind?"
21689Do you remember?"
21689Do you think I''m not willing to fight for you?"
21689Do you think that story will stand scrutiny with the public or with your wife?"
21689Do you think you can spare me ten minutes and reserve hostility of judgment until you hear what I came to say?"
21689Do you want to hear the unfalsified story of how I was discovered by my husband in his cottage and in his arms?"
21689Do you want to turn business woman, my dear?"
21689Does a hungry lion scorn striking down its prey?
21689Does a thief repudiate an unwatched treasury?
21689Does n''t that have to be seen to early?"
21689Had Conscience, after all, through these months and years, deceived him?
21689Had Conscience, by the sunlight of her spontaneity and love wrought this miracle of change?
21689Had she been letting memories kindle fires in her which all his faithful love had left unquickened?
21689Had she surreptitiously kept in touch with the erstwhile lover who had already wrecked one home?
21689Hagan?"
21689Hagan?"
21689Have I failed to share anything except the business part of your life-- which you closed to me?"
21689Have n''t you a kiss for me, my dear?"
21689Have n''t you seen it everywhere?
21689Have you anything to take?"
21689Have you forgotten?
21689Have you overcome it in these three years?
21689Have you promised to exile me?"
21689Have you read his book?"
21689He beat it back to inquire what in the Sam Hill Haymond wanted with her?
21689He could n''t speak at first and when he could... he whispered in absolute agony,''Has she gone?''
21689He felt the figure in his arms flinch at the words,"There''s no question of_ that_, but how am I to keep him from raging himself to death?"
21689He steadied himself against its agitation to demand,"And you are-- afraid that I might?"
21689He was gazing into her face with such a hypnotism of undisguised admiration that she smilingly inquired,"Well, have I changed much?"
21689His question came vaguely and uncomfortably,"What do you mean, Marian?"
21689How could Eben have achieved such an end?
21689How could I tell?"
21689How could he have done such a thing-- he the martinet of business caution?
21689How did you find out yourself, dear?"
21689How do you expect to rid yourself of the Van Styne?
21689How long could he hold it?
21689I am only your overgrown playmate-- but realization will come-- and then--""You think that he will change?"
21689I did n''t listen when I told him that if you went, I went, too, did I?"
21689I did n''t listen when I told him that if you went, I went, too, did I?"
21689I hate him-- hate him; do n''t you understand?
21689I mean somethin''that was a part of yourselves-- somethin''that was just tore out by the roots, like?"
21689I told you that my love was always yours... have you forgotten that?"
21689I was geographically near and--""You really thought that?"
21689I''m willing to cancel all the previous chapter, except that I sha''n''t forget it.... Can_ you_ forget it?"
21689I''ve helped you spoil your life and if I can help you mend it--"He broke off there and then abruptly he said:"Marian, will you marry me?"
21689If you''re already married-- why, it might complicate matters, do n''t you think?"
21689In a final investigation she walked to the village and inquired at the hotel desk,"Is Mr. Farquaharson here?"
21689In their cold depths Eben could fancy the question sternly put,"Where are your sons?
21689Is n''t that true?"
21689Is that eel pot still there?"
21689Is that such a serious fault?"
21689Is that what you mean?"
21689Is there greater nobility in the dull existence of a barnacle that hangs to one spot than in the flight of a bird?
21689Is there no hope for me?"
21689It was as if the bow were being drawn across the rawness of his own taut nerves.... That dish is ready for me, is n''t it?"
21689It was when he rose to go and she walked to his car with him that he asked with seeming irrelevance,"Has this Mr. Tollman ever-- made love to you?"
21689May I try to paint_ that_ picture for you?"
21689Mr. Hagan nodded, and inquired,"Is it with a view to criminal prosecution, now, that this case is to be worked or--?"
21689Must he sit here constrained to silence, while another confounded his teachings?
21689Now, what''s the nature of the case?
21689Once he voiced something of this to Conscience herself in the question,"How long do you think your father will continue to welcome me here?"
21689One evening in the garden Conscience asked him,"Do you think I over- painted the somberness of the picture?
21689One likes to think well of an old friend, but how did you learn?"
21689One lump, is n''t it?"
21689Or did you know Mrs. Larry Holbury?
21689Punish-- but how?
21689Shall I send him in?"
21689She was fear- ridden by ghosts that struck at her normality and she whispered,"Suppose he died by my fault?"
21689So he inquired with a reserved and indulgent suavity,"Are you particularly fond of that poem, my dear?"
21689Stuart Farquaharson noted these things vaguely and at last he inquired,"How did you get here?"
21689Stuart asked, ignoring alike her question and the rebuke in her voice, but she reiterated,"What are you doing here?"
21689Teasingly the man inquired,"Does n''t your husband trust you with the combination?"
21689The Virginian''s face paled, and his question came with an irritable quickness,"In what fashion have I changed?"
21689The day was hot enough, heaven knows, but the night has turned raw-- Do you mind if I light the fire?"
21689The man who does n''t serve where he''s put is n''t much good...."He paused and then went on calmly,"What is this thing that haunts you?"
21689Then Conscience said in a changed and very gentle voice,"You would n''t have me until I could be utterly, unmistakably sure of myself, would you?"
21689Then in a voice of naïve emphasis he demanded,"Did either one of you ever lose anything that belonged to you?
21689Then with the force of a climax, a climax for which even he was unprepared, Conscience said,"Will you be using the car Monday?"
21689They sat together on the after- deck which, as it chanced, they held in monopoly and the woman said musingly:"To- morrow we part company, do n''t we?"
21689To what was all this a preamble?
21689Until to- day you have, under fire, proven true to your code of knighthood, and to- day I could forget-- but could you?
21689Was n''t that unusual?"
21689Was not her feeling, after all, if only she had the courage to admit it, one of aversion for him?
21689Was that true?
21689Was there no key she could turn against him, whom it was her duty to shut out?
21689Were they, after all, dead?
21689What am I to do?"
21689What are we to do?"
21689What do you mean?"
21689What do you think?"
21689What has this travesty of a hopeless marriage given you, but a pallid existence of curbed emotions and a stifled life?"
21689What note?"
21689What of Dame Grundy?"
21689What put such an absurdity into your head?"
21689What was the use of reopening the perilous issues?
21689What was_ that_ but an impulse of withdrawal-- a barrier?"
21689What would be the emotions of the recipient?
21689What, after all, were these cushion- footed sleuths but blackmailers of a legalized sort?
21689When she did speak it was to repeat blankly,"My note?
21689Where is it?"
21689Where was Eben?
21689Why did n''t you go to''The Crags''?"
21689Why did you do it?"
21689Why should I?
21689Why should n''t he?
21689Why should n''t she want life''s fullness instead of life''s meagerness and its breadth instead of its bigotries?
21689Why should n''t we let them rest in peace?"
21689Why should she write except to tell him he might come back?
21689Why should these thoughts of Stuart Farquaharson always obtrude themselves on every revery?...
21689Why would n''t you let me?"
21689Why?"
21689Why?"
21689With a somewhat rueful smile, she continued:"When things became unendurable at home and I fled to your cottage, what did you think of me?"
21689Wo n''t you be seated?"
21689Would God himself remain silent and unavenging under such insult?
21689Would Stuart see the initials or would they escape his notice?
21689Would he assume that Conscience, fearing discovery, had sought to cover their plans under this excusing subterfuge?
21689Would he imagine that the husband had possessed himself of the guilty secret and meant to confront him with an accusation?
21689Would there be time?
21689Would there be time?
21689Would you like me to make you some coffee?"
21689Yet to- night he''s younger than either of us, is n''t he?"
21689Yet, how could he without utter gracelessness decline?
21689You could of known, could n''t you, if you had n''t taken damned good care_ not_ to know?
21689You do n''t want only the culture of reading the_ Atlantic Monthly_ at a village fireside?"
21689You feel confident, of course?"
21689You remember what the bulls did for Big Finnerty, when Finnerty was threatening to squeal to the District Attorney''s office about police graft?"
21689You will be big enough and strong enough to break these shackles?"
21689You will write to me, wo n''t you?"
21689You would n''t never suspicion that a one- armed man was sailin''her now, would you?"
21689You''ll be back, of course?"
21689You''ll come in, of course?
21689asked the man, and Conscience demanded in return,"Why does everything that man controls in New England follow a fixed color of thought?"
21689she asked, and in his bewilderment he found himself answering excitedly:"Why?
21689was her mild and seemingly placating suggestion,"just to see if it is real poetry?"
22287''Family?'' 22287 ''In the city?''
22287''Louisville? 22287 ''Old, ai n''t I, and ugly?''"
22287A child? 22287 Accept?
22287After all, what is it to me?
22287Air hit... air hit_ bad_, doctor?
22287Air she loaded? 22287 Air the trouble''Aunt''... what the other doctor said hit was?"
22287An''what would this hyar old pine do without the rosebush blossomin''close beside him? 22287 And I?
22287And Jesus? 22287 And deep in your inner consciousness you do n''t regret the change, do you?"
22287And does she go about helping poor, lonesome city people, and the dear little poor children? 22287 And have him believe that I ran away from him again?
22287And her hearing? 22287 And that is...?"
22287And the doctor? 22287 And then?"
22287And you? 22287 And yourself?"
22287Angina pectoris? 22287 Are you going to kiss him?"
22287Away? 22287 But I thought that she was your granddaughter?"
22287But ca n''t I give him some medicine?
22287But haint... are n''t you going to do up your hurt finger, too?
22287But how do you know that it_ is_ brain tumor, doctor, or that there is either any chance of saving the child''s life, or any real need of a surgeon? 22287 But how is one going to get behind a plain statement of what is apparently meant to be fact, such as the description of the creation in Genesis?"
22287But how? 22287 But the trouble... is it... is it dangerous?"
22287But what air yo''reckonin''ter do? 22287 But why did n''t you come, Donald?
22287Did you ever burn your hand?
22287Did you shoot any bears?
22287Do Rose know hit?
22287Do n''t we?
22287Do we?
22287Do yo''think thet I''d be beholden ter_ thet_ man, after what I done ter him? 22287 Do you mean, Rose,"his words came slowly,"that you sent for me without a doctor''s suggestion and advice; that you did it on your own hook?"
22287Do you really think that I''m... shallow? 22287 Do you really want me to?"
22287Do you remember what Paul said, in his wonderful epistle to the Corinthians? 22287 Do you think a little thing like wet feet would stop me from getting into the game?"
22287Do you think that I can ever feel lonesome in the forest and fields, with living things always about me which are ready to share themselves with me?
22287Do you want to see the growth? 22287 Do?
22287Donald, how_ can_ you? 22287 Donald, what... what do you mean?
22287Five minutes? 22287 Good God, child, where did you come from?"
22287Good Lord, do I look as bad as that?
22287H- m- m- m. What are the symptoms?
22287Hain''t yo''ergoin''ter tote yo''r rifle- gun?
22287Haint we a- goin''ter hev no breakfast this mornin''?
22287Happy? 22287 Has n''t He?"
22287Have you any baking soda-- saleratus, Rose?
22287He knows that? 22287 He''s convicted out of his own mouth, is n''t he, Rose?
22287Her brother? 22287 Hit haint ergoin''ter hurt her much, air hit?"
22287How kin I?
22287How shall I sign it? 22287 How the dickens did I do that?"
22287I am just back from a journey into the wilderness, like John the Baptist''s, and... Why, what''s wrong? 22287 I think that... would it be all right if I wore that pretty white woollen one?"
22287I''m afraid that I do n''t quite underst..."But you_ do_ understand, Miss Treville, why do you say that you do n''t? 22287 I_ wanted_ you to?"
22287If they do n''t concern me-- as I am willing to admit-- why waste a bullet?
22287Indeed? 22287 It is logical enough, is n''t it?
22287It was not strange that I began... that he became very dear to me, was it, Donald?
22287Judd,he began, almost kindly,"you know why I came here this time?"
22287Kin yo''make hit well ergin?
22287Lou Amos?
22287Lou? 22287 Married?
22287Married?
22287Mis''Andrews he s come over fer ter stay with ye and Lou, now haint thet kind uv her? 22287 Miss... Webb, is n''t it?
22287Not five thousand?
22287Now how the deuce did she come to use that stereotyped response?
22287Old and ugly?
22287Perhaps you will, some day, who knows?
22287She seemed to understand, eh?
22287Shot him? 22287 Smiles, are you still greatly afraid of the sea?"
22287So, that is the reason, the only reason, for your coming to me with your impertinent question?
22287Startin''home? 22287 Tell me, what has happened, my dear?"
22287The doctor? 22287 Then fer what did yo''put yer arms erbout her an''kiss her, like I seen ye through the winder awhile back, I wants ter know?"
22287Then why ca n''t_ I_ be? 22287 Then you think, doctor...?"
22287There is n''t anything more to be said, is there?
22287Trouble ahead? 22287 Well, but how could the Good Book say that God created man in His own image?"
22287Well, what do you say, are you coming?
22287Well? 22287 Wha... what do''equivalent''mean?"
22287What does she do?
22287What does she look like?
22287What does''comatose''mean, Doctor Mac?
22287What happened to him?
22287What is the matter with my Rose?
22287What lesson?
22287What the devil do you mean by that?
22287What war yo''ershootin''at, Judd?
22287What''s the matter?
22287What''s the sense in exaggerating like that, Ethel? 22287 What''s up?"
22287What, doll babies thet open an''shet thar eyes, an''say''maw''an''''paw''like weuns, Smiles?
22287What... what do hit mean?
22287What? 22287 What?"
22287Where do we go from here?
22287Where... where is she?
22287Where_ is_ Judd?
22287Where_ is_ Juddy?
22287Wherever did you come from?
22287Which caused you the most suffering, your conscience or your hand?
22287Why could it not have been I?
22287Why haint hit possible?
22287Why not, I should like to know?
22287Why, what is the trouble?
22287Would you ask a real soldier if he wanted to quit, or keep on fighting, after he had been in one battle, and seen men killed and wounded? 22287 Yes, I remember, an''oak,''was n''t it?
22287Yes, but... how am I going to explain? 22287 Yes, she''s a wonder, is n''t she?
22287Yes,supplemented the minister,"''Whence cometh my help?
22287Yo''... yo''means yo''shot him, Judd?
22287Yo''... yo''think I would accept yo''r charity?
22287Yo''think I would take money gifts from any man? 22287 You have n''t?
22287You know? 22287 You wanted me to... to marry him, Don?"
22287You... you have n''t told her... yet... that you love her?
22287You?
22287Your heart? 22287 _ You_ did?
22287------------------------------------ I wonder how much I really have changed in the year?
222878:30 P.M. Are you getting it?"
22287Air yo'', er haint yo'', a- goin''ter leave hyar, an''keep erway?"
22287Am I still trying to discourage you?
22287And I do n''t take orders from you in the matter, understand?"
22287And tell him that she is nearly blind and''comatose''....""That word''s a new one to me, how do you spell it?"
22287And the girl?
22287And what do you think she has named it?
22287And who do you think was one of my pupils?
22287And wo n''t she make a wonderful one?
22287And you heard what...?"
22287And,"What is the matter with_ my_ Rose?"
22287Are you going to help her as she asks?
22287Are you in pain?"
22287Are you really pleased?
22287Are you... are you going to get married before you go?"
22287Besides, it wo n''t be the first time that she has stayed up twenty- four hours at a stretch, will it?"
22287But Rose was not to be teased, and answered,"Kiss him?
22287But how, Phil?''
22287But how...?"
22287But what''s to be gained in taking the chance?
22287But you?
22287But, before I start, I want to ask you about my little niece, Muriel?
22287But, say, has n''t she been a brick?"
22287But, tell me, why that woe- begone expression on this, of all days?
22287But, why do you ask that now, Donald?"
22287By the way, Amos, how long has she been a- goin''on like that?"
22287CHAPTER IV"SMILES""''Not by birth?''"
22287Can it really be you?
22287Can you imagine me doing anything useful?)
22287Can you imagine me hitched with that proud and classic beauty?
22287Can you picture_ me_ acting as chauffeur for a magnified bath tub for Belgian babies?
22287Can you remember all that?"
22287Can you see that neoplasm under the membrane?
22287Come, did you have any''hairbreadth''''scapes or moving accidents by field and flood?"
22287Could you see from your boat?
22287Could you see, Don?"
22287Dear Dr. McDonald: How many letters do you guess I have written to you so far this month?
22287Dear, when did you first realize that it was so?"
22287Did that fail?"
22287Did that uncouth young mountaineer really mean something to her after all?
22287Did you enjoy it, and find anything of especial interest in the mountains of the feud country?"
22287Did you ever read a poem called''The Reaper''?
22287Did you get it?
22287Do I see the ghost of a sorrow sitting amid this group, which should be so happy?"
22287Do I sound like a school- mar''m?
22287Do n''t you feel proud?
22287Do n''t you know your own Smiles?"
22287Do n''t you think I ought to be a very happy little girl?
22287Do n''t you think so, too, Don?"
22287Do n''t you think so, yourself?"
22287Do yo''think thet I''d accept even my sister''s life et his hands?
22287Do you know what has happened?
22287Do you know what this snow reminds me of?
22287Do you still think that you want to go ahead and give your life to such work?"
22287Do you think that you can understand that, Rose?"
22287Do you want me to- night?"
22287Do you wonder that, with this thing pressing more and more into her brain, Lou was robbed of her power to talk and act?"
22287Does Smiles smell like that?"
22287Donald nodded, then asked slowly,"Does... does Smiles love you, Phil?"
22287Ethel( I wonder if Donald will be pleased to know that his_ real_ sister has asked me to call her by her first name?)
22287Great Scott, ca n''t you guess what I''m driving at?
22287Had Marion Treville''s faithlessness struck so deep?
22287Had she not accepted him as a brother, and given him the frank affection of such relationship, which precludes love of the other sort?
22287Haint thet a wonderful thing fer ter do?
22287Has it changed your mind?
22287Have I got to_ ask_ you to marry me?"
22287Have you done it?
22287Have you the saline solution, and the gauze head- covering ready?"
22287He will be happy in my happiness, I know,"she murmured, half aloud, and her roommate awoke and answered with a sleepy,"What, dear?"
22287Her face suddenly glowing with light, Rose turned to Donald eagerly, and said without hesitation,"Oh, Doctor Mac, do n''t you see?
22287Heroes and martyrs; what are they, after all, but the creatures of that whimsical goddess?
22287Hev ye seen my pappa an''mamma?''
22287How can I explain heaven as a spiritual condition?"
22287How can any one live if his head is cut open like that?"
22287How could any one use it about anything so awful?
22287How could he be?
22287How did yo''come ter know''twar him?"
22287How does he feel?"
22287How is she, Rose?"
22287I never did a better one... another sponge... excellent... Are the sutures ready?...
22287I wonder if Donald has, too?
22287I wonder if I can really ever leave him?
22287I wonder if he regards me as still a child?
22287I''m well_ now_; where are my clothes?"
22287I''ve often worried about it, for I did n''t know anything about my parents, and heredity counts for so much, does n''t it?
22287If we ca n''t ever see God, even in Heaven, how can we be sure that He_ is_?"
22287Is Don going to be a Mormon, then?"
22287Is he flesh and blood, and responsible for the marauding thefts in the neighborhood?
22287Is he ready to receive it?"
22287Is he responsible for Prince Kassim''s murder?
22287Is he the ghost of the ancestral portrait, that hangs in Sir Robert Grainger''s strange library?
22287Is it that you want to go to France again, to renew the saving work there,--and want me with you?"
22287Is it very bad?"
22287Is n''t he good?
22287Is n''t he my brother, and is n''t he home again after being away two and a half years?"
22287Is n''t it odd?"
22287Is n''t it pretty?"
22287Is n''t that wonderful?
22287It has been a mighty lucky thing for her that the Red Cross was ready to take it off her shoulders, and she has turned to_ us_( How does that sound?
22287It was heard by a passing nurse, who hurried to him with the question,"Did you call, doctor?
22287It''s got to be done, has n''t it, if the poor sick babies and grown- up people are to be made strong and well again?
22287Judd Amos, war hit yo''thet paid me ther extry price on them baskets?"
22287Kaint he... kaint we- all hev jest a drap o''white liquor?"
22287Kin I take Mike?"
22287Little Donny?
22287Look, Rose,"he added, as though explaining to a clinic,"see how the blood is thickening up into a clot?
22287Louisville?''
22287Love is an awful thing, is n''t it?"
22287May I be so bold as to inquire what interest you may have in my personal affairs, Miss Webb?
22287May I?"
22287Must he hear this girl, in her simplicity, talk on and on about the man she loved, and had promised to marry?
22287My dear little Smiles: This is going to be a very short letter, and can you guess why?
22287My, are n''t we vain?"
22287No, how can you ask it, Rose?"
22287Not... not Dr. MacDonald?
22287Nothing has happened...?"
22287Oh, Donald, is n''t it too wonderful?"
22287Oh, did you read what it says?"
22287Oh, do n''t you remember?
22287Oh, it has n''t been a happy day at all...."I wonder if Donald could have saved him?
22287Oh, little Rose, do n''t you understand?
22287Oh, what can we do?"
22287Oh, woman, what do you know about love?
22287Once more his accustomed bluntness of manner returned, and he snapped,"Oh, why in the devil did n''t I have sense enough to bring another assistant?"
22287Opening it, she read:"My dearest Smiles: Will you be the bearer of a message from me to your kind hostess?
22287Or is it only coincidence that one of the guests at the masked ball happened to wear the costume of the Red Cavalier?
22287Philip''s sister?
22287Rose, you did n''t tell him?"
22287She started and stepped back, crying,"''To give?''
22287Smiles, will you marry me?"
22287Smiles?
22287So I said,''What is it, Philip?
22287So how can I take any credit for succeeding?
22287Some wild animal there, old boy?"
22287Supposing I admit that I love her, what is it to you?"
22287Supposing that Ethel_ does n''t_ go wild about her, what of it?"
22287Talmadge?"
22287Tell me, does the picture mean anything to you?''
22287That does n''t look much as though I loved him... in the way you insinuate, does it?
22287The black silk that we bought in New York?"
22287The picture is not as pretty as the one I painted the night I told about how fine it was to be a nurse, is it?
22287The reason?
22287The sinking sensation within Rose''s breast increased, and she stepped forward, saying faintly,"What is it, Dolly?
22287Then Donald asked, softly,"And Philip?
22287Then I am still making my baskets, and what do you think?
22287Then he added, with some hesitancy,"I''ve been thinking... Would you like to go over there, too, Rose?
22287Then she lifted her face, bathed in tears, and whispered,"You understand, do n''t you, Don?
22287Then there came a little laugh, for these two were excellent friends now, and the query,"Another record- breaking fee?"
22287There, feel that breeze?
22287V.''?"
22287Was He His son in the same way?"
22287Was it a basket, too?"
22287Was it merely a guess, based on what I had explained to you?"
22287Was it really Rose?
22287Was it... was it as much as a... a thousand dollars?"
22287Was n''t he a splendid man, Don?
22287Was n''t that what you did for that other little child?"
22287Was that the account of real happenings, think you?"
22287Was that_ lèse majestà ©_?
22287Was this the simple mountain girl, whose voice was now so suave and who was smiling so icily?
22287We''re glad ter hev ye with us, an''what fer air friends ef hit haint ter be an excuse fer a leetle extry celebration?
22287Well,"he laughed again,"say something, ca n''t you?
22287Were n''t the Thayers dear to have me as their guest at beautiful Manchester- by- the- Sea?
22287What about your promise to Big Jerry?"
22287What answer could she make to this pertinent question?
22287What are you waiting for?
22287What do you mean, Philip?''
22287What does the Bible say that God is, Rose?"
22287What happened?"
22287What is the matter with her?"
22287What is the matter?
22287What on earth was it to him if this mountain child''s color heightened a shade at a familiar call in a masculine voice?
22287What sort of a case is it?"
22287What would the leetle wild mountain flowers hyarabouts do without thar Smiles ter take keer o''them?"
22287When do you calculate to get married to her, Doctor Mac?"
22287When his last call was answered he asked,"Is Miss Merriman registered with you now?
22287Where is he?"
22287Where is she staying now?"
22287Where?"
22287Wherever did you come from; are you going to make us a visit?
22287Which of them is the Red Cavalier?
22287Who is the little buttercup?"
22287Who is the mysterious Red Cavalier?
22287Why not complete the ceremony and make it an adoption by blood; the way they used to do in some of the Indian tribes, you know?"
22287Why should he, a man as reserved as he was, and one who had little time to spend on the romantic embellishments of life, ask for more?
22287Why, I wonder, must we always hide our true feelings under a mask?
22287Will it, doctor?"
22287Will you help do it?"
22287Wo n''t it, Don?
22287Would you like to hear about her and her playthings?
22287Yes?
22287Yet what chance has reason in competition with moonlight?
22287Yo''guessed rightly, she_ air_ one er my flower children, ai n''t ye, honey- sweet?"
22287Yo''promise, too?"
22287You dare attempt to curry favor with her by lyingly claiming credit for the additional money her work brought, you cur?
22287You did n''t know that I bought every one of those baskets, and told the storekeeper what price to pay for them, did you?"
22287You did n''t know that I held the cards to call that outrageous bluff, too, did you?
22287You see that, do n''t you?"
22287You told me, first?"
22287You understand that, do n''t you, dear?"
22287You understand, do n''t you, old man?"
22287You wished to see...?"
22287You wonder, perhaps, why I have n''t written this direct to her?
22287You would n''t throw him over, when he is so far away, and... and sick?"
22287_ You_ do, do n''t you, Mike?"
22287_ first_?"
22287gasped the girl in astonishment, while Donald said bluntly,"Do you really believe that you know Him, now?"
22287love?"
22287true?"
2982Ah,said Clemens, as he mopped his face,"do you know that little devil waded all the way across?"
2982Are you Horace Bigsby''s cub?
2982But do you realize, ma''am, how tired and hungry we are? 2982 Can he do it again?"
2982Did it knock him down?
2982Did you do that?
2982Did you ever do any steering?
2982Did you follow it up? 2982 Did you pound him much-- that is, severely?"
2982Do n''t I deserve one yet?
2982Do you chew?
2982Do you drink?
2982Do you gamble?
2982Do you know the Bowen boys?
2982Do you swear?
2982Do you use terbacker?
2982Does it?
2982Hard?
2982Here, where are you heading for now?
2982Here, why did n''t you tell me we had got to land at that plantation?
2982Here,he would shout,"where are you going now?
2982How big was it, Uncle Ned?
2982How do you follow a hall at home in the dark? 2982 How far off was it?"
2982How much do you think it ought to be, Mark?
2982How on earth am I ever going to learn it, then?
2982How would you like a young man to learn the river?
2982Is n''t that a guitar over there?
2982Nobody could have done it better; and did you see how those cats got out of there? 2982 Pounded him?"
2982Sam said,''Dan, did you know, when you invited me to make that speech, that those fellows were going to give me a bogus pipe?'' 2982 Steve, what is that d-- d noise?"
2982Tell us, Mark, why are you like the Pacific Ocean?
2982Very well, I''ll try it; but, after I have learned it, can I depend on it? 2982 Well,"he sand,"why am I like the Pacific Ocean?"
2982What are you reading, Sam?
2982What did you do?
2982What do you charge?
2982What in nation are you steerin''at, anyway? 2982 What is your name?"
2982What makes you pull your words that way?
2982What will you have, Sam?
2982What with?
2982What''s the matter, Sam? 2982 Who did that?"
2982Why did n''t you mention it before? 2982 Why do n''t you get up and light it yourself?"
2982Why, Sammy, what in the world has happened?
2982Yes, sir, it is; what of it?
298223--and a lawyer?
2982A gentleman standing on the pavement said to my wife,"Miss, do you go by this stage?"
2982A tall, bony woman came to the door:"You''re secesh, ai n''t you?"
2982And what is a man without energy?
2982At first he looked at the culprit thoughtfully, then he made some inquiries:"Did you strike him first?"
2982Can not the''Californian''afford to keep Mark all to itself?
2982Did you do anything further?"
2982Do n''t you hear me?
2982Do n''t you know that I have expended money in this country but have made none myself?
2982Do n''t you know that I have never held in my hands a gold or silver bar that belonged to me?
2982Do n''t you know that I have only talked, as yet, but proved nothing?
2982Do n''t you know that it''s all talk and no cider so far?
2982Do n''t you know that undemonstrated human calculations wo n''t do to bet on?
2982Do you hear?"
2982Give him a good sound thrashing; do you hear?
2982Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways?
2982Have n''t you got a bite for us to eat?"
2982He opened on me after this fashion:"How much water did we have in the middle crossing at Hole- in- The- Wall, trip before last?"
2982His chief was a constant menace at such moments: One day he turned on me suddenly with this settler:"What is the shape of Walnut Bend?"
2982His mother said:"What''s the matter, Sammy; are you sick?"
2982How could he, with a fortune so plainly in view?
2982How did you ever think of it?"
2982How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that?"
2982I gave her a conundrum, thus:"My dear madam, why ought your hand to retain its present grace and beauty always?
2982If they want letters from here-- who''ll run from morning till night collecting material cheaper?
2982It always snows here, I expect"; and the final heart- sick line,"Do n''t you suppose they have pretty much quit writing at home?"
2982It may have materialized out of the unseen-- who knows?
2982Klinefelter turned to Sam:"Did n''t you hear him?"
2982L. C.''Which was?
2982Maguire, why Will you thus skyugle?
2982Now is n''t she the devil?
2982One day, soon after, he said to me:"''Steve, do you know that I think that that bogus pipe smokes about as well as the good one?''"
2982Sam said:"What''s that, Steve?"
2982Sam;"he said,"what do they mean by that?"
2982That is to say, is n''t she a right smart little woman?
2982The company rose, drank the toast in serious silence; then Goodman said:"Of course, Artemus, it''s all right, but why did you give us Upper Canada?"
2982W- h- a- r- r''s my g- o- l- den arm?"
2982W- h- a- r- r''s my golden arm?
2982What a child he always was-- always, to the very end?
2982What are you going to do?"
2982What did it matter to him?
2982What name do you want to use''Josh''?"
2982What noise?
2982What the devil does a man want with any more feet when he owns in the invincible bomb- proof"Monitor"?
2982What was the greatest feature in Napoleon''s character?
2982When the children came for eggs he would say:"Your hens wo n''t lay, eh?
2982Where is it Orion''s going to?
2982Why curse and swear, And rip and tear The innocent McDougal?
2982Will it keep the same form, and not go fooling around?"
2982Wo n''t you please stop it?
2982You could n''t possibly teach music with a company of raw recruits drilling overhead-- now, could you?
2982You think that picture looks old?
2982You will continue upon the water for some time yet; you will not retire finally until ten years from now.... What is your brother''s age?
2982and in pursuit of an office?
2982he asked--"pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade?"
2982he said, triumphantly;"you know dose vord?"
30287''And who on earth might Tom Edison be?'' 30287 ''Kin we take our clothes off?''
30287''Say, Mister, kin we holler?'' 30287 ''Who are you?''
30287But say, Huck, how do you cure''em with dead cats?
30287The superintendent eyed him from head to foot, and said:''Who are you?''
30287You''ve heard the story about my traveling all over the state as a blind sign- painter? 30287 ''Why not''? 30287 A bad boy? 30287 A sentry walking up and down in front of the camp, says to a soldier:Ai nt it fierce?
30287A thief?
30287About all rich men two questions are always asked: How did they get their money, and what did they do with it?
30287And George Washington replies:"Yes, ai nt it fierce?"
30287And the soldier replies:"Yes, ai nt it fierce?"
30287And to whom are these changes due?
30287And what is Wanamakers?
30287And, after all, does n''t true greatness lie in giving to others rather than in gathering to one''s self?
30287As a result of our war with Spain these islands came into our possession; but what were we to do with them?
30287But he was guilty; what was to be done with him?
30287But how can he do this?
30287But how many ever do in later life just what they had thought of doing when in the fourth grade of the public school?
30287But what could a boy so small do?
30287But where should he go and what should he do?
30287But where should he go?
30287But why argue?
30287But why do we all claim Luther Burbank?
30287But would you not like to know something about the man, who could write so understandingly of boys?
30287But, I hear you ask,"How could he earn so much money?
30287But, you ask, how did he learn to be a telegraph operator?
30287But, you ask, what is a self- made American?
30287But, you ask, what marvelous things has this modest man done that should make his name a household word the world over?
30287By what principle, then, does he accomplish these marvelous feats?
30287Can you guess the nicknames the other boys gave him?
30287Can you guess what he did with it?
30287Can you guess what his first wages were?
30287Can you guess what they did for him?
30287Can you imagine him as he enters that great University?
30287Could a University President make a good governor?
30287Did he mean what he was saying?
30287Did n''t you see him fall over a box and spill all his paints?''
30287Do you know what the answer would have been?
30287Had the prisoner at the bar done it?
30287Have you ever heard a scout say bad things about his scout master or about his fellow scouts behind their backs?
30287Have you ever seen the scouts salute the flag?
30287Have you ever wondered who put up the thousands of posters asking the people to save food and buy bonds?
30287How did he get the money to start these great enterprises?"
30287How long will it be Before I shall be free, And not fear friend or foe?
30287How old, then, is he?
30287How should you like to eat a peach that had, instead of the ordinary stone, a fine almond in the center?
30287How should you like to hunt walruses?
30287I have often been asked,''Do not people bore you?''
30287In this poem Darius, a country boy says,"The birds can fly and why ca n''t I?"
30287Is it not a fine thing to be able to develop such spirit and energy among thousands of persons?
30287Is it not because he was able to reach our hearts as few have done; because he was able in all his poems to speak the word that we needed most?
30287Justice?
30287LUTHER BURBANK To whom does Luther Burbank belong?
30287Now that young Edison had lost his job as newsboy, and could no longer print the_ Grand Trunk Herald_, what was he to do?
30287Second act: The same soldier appears before George Washington and says:"Ai nt it fierce?
30287Should you like to hear the life story of one who is so truly great?
30287Should you like to know how Mr. Peary felt at this eventful hour?
30287Should you like to know how he looked when he was a young fellow?
30287Should you like to know how the young men who had once been scouts fared?
30287Should you like to know the Scout Laws that they learn and practice?
30287Should you not like to hear Helen Keller, for that is the name of the little girl, tell about herself?
30287Since he was once a newsboy, is it any wonder that he understood newsboys?
30287The father, while in Yale, had won honors, and why should n''t his son?
30287The law?
30287Then they said,"Do you want to tie up the work down here, Colonel"?
30287There were two questions that she kept always before her pupils:"What are you going to be in the world, and what are you going to do?"
30287Third Act: George Washington went to call on Betsy Ross, who lived on Arch Street in Philadelphia, and said:"Mistress Ross, ai nt it fierce?
30287Very sincerely yours, JANE ADDAMS Is it not wonderful what Miss Addams has done for the people who had no comfort or care?
30287We ai nt got no flag for this here Revolution,"and Betsy Ross replied:"Yes, ai nt it fierce?
30287What are his methods?
30287What caused him to succeed?
30287What college should he attend?
30287What do you suppose was told the oftenest?
30287What had he done that had made the people so eager to see and hear him?
30287What is it called?
30287What should the judge do under the circumstances?
30287Where could he play and exercise?
30287Where did he come from, and what has he done that should merit the confidence thus placed in him?
30287Where did it come from?
30287Where was a man big enough to bring order out of confusion and mould these widely divergent tribes into a unified colony?
30287Who should be assigned this task?
30287Who then is Jack Pershing?
30287Why all the excitement?
30287Why do we love him so?
30287Why is his name a household word in every country?
30287Why the difference?
30287Why, then, is n''t it well to acquaint the children with present- day heroes?
30287Why?
30287Would n''t it be fun to start the phonograph and watch them stare in astonishment as"the wooden box"talked to them?
30287You use the telephone often, do you not?
30287[ Illustration: ANDREW CARNEGIE Founder of Many Libraries] ANDREW CARNEGIE Have you a library in your town?
30287[ Illustration: BEN B. LINDSEY"The Kids''Judge"] Would sending the three boys to prison protect the old man and his pigeons?
30287[ Illustration: HELEN KELLER"Hearing"Caruso Sing] Are you wondering why the little girl did not talk and tell what she wanted?
2985And you''ve filled that order, have you?
2985Come, do you mean to say that you do n''t know who the hero of that sketch is?
2985Great guns, what is the matter with it?
2985Promise what?
2985Shall you take your tomahawk with you?
2985The placard that says''Furnished rooms to let''? 2985 Was he always really tranquil within,"he says,"or was he only externally so-- for effect?
2985Was this rebuke studied and intentional? 2985 Well, what does he have that sign up for?"
2985What makes you think so?
2985What will it cost?
2985What will you give?
2985Why not leave them all to me?
2985Why, yes,said Tufts;"are n''t you?"
2985Why,he said,"have we met before?"
2985Why?
2985With pleasure-- where is she?
2985Wo n''t you please say something funny?
2985Yes, Mark, what is it?
2985--[Clemens himself had attempted to make a play out of his story"Is He Dead?"
2985America?
2985And could we now?
2985And do you think that you have added just the right smear of polish to the closing clause of the sentence?
2985And shall we see Susy?
2985And why should n''t I be?
2985And will Mark Twain never write such another?
2985At forty what do you do?
2985B.--Look here, are you charging storage?
2985But ca n''t I get it in anywhere?
2985But in the mean time what do you do?
2985But what is the use of remembering all these bitter details?
2985But what were you doing on the inside?
2985Clemens answered,"Mr. Rogers, do you think there is anything I could do for you that I would n''t do?"
2985Clemens looked at the egg portion and asked:"Boy, what was my order?"
2985DEAR PAMELA,--Will you take this$ 15& buy some candy or other trifle for yourself& Sam& his wife to remind you that we remember you?
2985Did n''t you know that?
2985Do n''t you realize that you ought not to intrude your help in a delicate art like that with your limitations?
2985Do n''t you see it''s Herr Mark Twain?"
2985Do they live in----""In this street?
2985Do you know any one who does know him?"
2985Do you know that shock?
2985Do you know that shock?
2985Do you see the big, plain house over there with the placard in the third floor window?
2985Do you think you know how to behave?"
2985Does he keep boarders?"
2985Dreaming of what?
2985Familiar?
2985Have n''t you read anything at all about Joan of Arc?
2985Have you developed any novelties of conduct since you left Mr. Murray''s,& have they been of a character to move the concern of your friends?
2985Have you ever been like that?
2985He said:"What will you complete the machine for?"
2985How do you reckon he accomplished that miracle?
2985How in the world did you ever come to locate there?"
2985I sha''n''t say a word against it, but she will find it a difficult& disheartening job,& meanwhile what is to become of that miraculous girl?
2985I wonder if it is?
2985If you should be passing this way to- morrow will you look in and change hats?
2985Introducing him, President Frank Lawrence said:"What name is there in literature that can be likened to his?
2985Is n''t that valuable?
2985Is there some way, honest or otherwise, by which you can get a copy of Mayo''s play,"Pudd''nhead Wilson,"for me?
2985It would be jolly good if some one should succeed in making a play out of"Is He Dead?"
2985Italy?
2985Later he wrote:"Put''Is He Dead?''
2985My business brothers?
2985Now the old Duke of Backofenhofenschwartz not the present Duke, but the last but one, he----""Does he live over the sausage- shop in the cellar?"
2985Now, do n''t you see what a world of confidence that must necessarily breed?
2985One of them said, hesitatingly:"Are you Mr. Mark Twain?"
2985Or at least why was n''t something creditable created in place of it?
2985Semi- acquaintances said,"Ah, yes, Kornerstrasse"; acquaintances said,"Dear me, do you like it?"
2985Shrunk how?
2985Since I wrote my Bible--[The"Gospel,"What is Man?]
2985That they are in London, the metropolis of the world, Post- office District, N. W.?
2985The coachman sent in for him at 9, but he said,"Oh, nonsense!--leave glories& grandeurs like these?
2985The door was ajar and he heard Mrs. Clemens say:"Youth, do n''t you think it will be a little embarrassing for him, your being in bed?"
2985To Twichell Clemens wrote: Joe, do you know the Irish gentleman& the Irish lady, the Scotch gentleman& the Scotch lady?
2985To her sister she wrote: Do you think we can live through the first going into the house in Hartford?
2985Venice?
2985Was n''t it a rattling good comedy situation?
2985Well, then, what is he to do?
2985What is biography?
2985What is it that we want in a novel?
2985What is romance?
2985What night will you come down& smoke?
2985What other humorist could have refrained from hinting, at least, the inference suggested by the obvious"Gas Works"?
2985What should we do and how should we feel if we had no bright prospects before us, and yet how many people are situated in that way?
2985What they want----""The nobility?
2985When the Duke first moved in here he----""Does he live in this street?"
2985When you get an exasperating letter what happens?
2985Where was your remedy?
2985Who is his nearest friend?"
2985Who is it?"
2985Who is it?"
2985Who might this late comer be?
2985Whose heart is broken by this murder?
2985Why was the human race created?
2985Why, Tufts, do n''t you know that the soldiers in the theater are the same old soldiers marching around and around?
2985Will anybody contend that a man can say to such masterful anger as that, Go, and be obeyed?
2985Will healing ever come, or life have value again?
2985Will that answer?
2985With a rent- roll of twelve hundred thousand marks a year?
2985Wo n''t you talk awhile?
2985Yes, he is here; and the question is not-- as it has been heretofore during a thousand ages-- What shall we do with him?
2985Yes, you know that, and confess it-- but what were you to do?
2985have you noticed that?
2985how have you written this miracle?
2985or shall I send it to the hotel?
2985the tropics?
28336''Karl, are you deaf? 28336 All but one,"she answered tremulously;"I brought then because you bade me-- but you were so angry_ then_--let me take them back?"
28336And how long do you think she should stay away from home?
28336And pray, what_ kind_ of youth--_boy_ as you are pleased to call him-- was this nabob then?
28336And this little packet contains my letters--_all_, does it?
28336And what do you know of this sweetheart of hers? 28336 And why so loudly is he singing?"
28336Are there no furnished houses in this neighbourhood, at all?
28336But what do they all live upon?
28336But why should I say so? 28336 But you_ will_ leave me the little lock?
28336Can you take us in for a few weeks?
28336Did not I hear you swearing in good English at a_ Saesyn_( Englishman or Saxon) yesterday?
28336Do you go to any hotel near the quay where the Chepstow steamers start from?
28336Does the Duke often come to Reading?
28336For Chepstow, sir?
28336Is it furnished?
28336My good friend, have you seen the whole party?
28336Nothing more than his name; how came you in his company?
28336Well?
28336Which? 28336 Who is that young woman?"
28336_ What he is to you?_ Why, what then is he, Winifred?
28336_ What he is to you?_ Why, what then is he, Winifred?
28336(''Twas thus that idiot mob replied,)"His music in our ears is ringing; But whither flows that music''s tide?
28336A question, therefore, naturally arose in several people''s curiosity-- Where was this house situated?
28336A sweetheart in the case there, is n''t there?
28336Above all, was Dame Bevan to see that home of her heart''s hope, the permanent home of the harsh supplanter of her husband?
28336And is Eve here taken strictly-- the night before May- day, like the_ Pervigilium Veneris_?
28336And our friend John Dryden?
28336And was n''t poor dear old John Bevan the man who would lend every farmer in the parish a help in money or any way, only for asking?
28336And what should we have known of Alexander himself more than of Attila or Genghis Khan, but for the fascinating pages of Quintus Curtius and Arrian?
28336And where was her father-- mother?
28336And yet, need there be asked a stillness or a silence more profound than is felt at this present noon of day?
28336Are all mankind to us so reasonable?
28336Are there no other names ye count no more?
28336Are they aware what a disagreeable association of ideas is produced in the students of Lemprière''s classical dictionary by the two last names?
28336Art_ thou_ too seated in the friendly ring, O restless Pilgrim?
28336But was there not something treacherous in gaining a man''s approbation under a mask to a satire upon himself?
28336But when, their robes with ordure staining, Altar and sacrifice disdaining, Did e''er your_ priests_ ply broom and spade?
28336Could any person fail to be aghast at such a demand?
28336Could it have been requisite with pure female dignity to plead any thing, or do more than_ look_ an indisposition to fulfil them?
28336Did he seem displeased?
28336Did you not hear me ask for warm water?''
28336Do you go to Chepstow straight?"
28336Dov''è, dov''è, gran Dio, l''antico vanto Di tua alta possanza?"
28336E fino a quanto Dei barbarici insulti Orgogliosa n''andrà l''empia baldanza?
28336Five years ago in Vienna, amongst the rose- groves of Laxenburg;''& c. Who cares in what places the Countess has been?
28336For he was literary; admired literature; and, as a lawyer, he wrote on some subjects fluently; Might he not publish_ his_ Confessions?
28336Free as the breeze his music floweth, But fruitless, too, as breeze that bloweth, What doth it profit, Poet, tell?"
28336Has our good custom been betray''d by others?
28336He took an early opportunity of paying his respects to me-- saying,"You little devil, do you call this writing your worst?"
28336How can you be so ruthless?
28336In the first place, what is it that so much removes the language from us?
28336Is he her_ first_, think ye?
28336Is it possible?
28336Is it_ not_, Winifred?"
28336Is the approaching visitation of the power more strongly felt than the power itself in presence?
28336Is this hypercriticism?
28336Is this the description of an early youth passed in the shades of gloom?
28336Needs he not night As well as day?
28336No, you will not?"
28336Now, instead, he presented the unused money-- would she retain the image of a sweetheart in the home of her stern and lordly husband?
28336Or is it intended for a happy innovation?
28336Or is it saying that Wordsworth has not done his work as well as it was possible to be done?
28336Or loosely, on the verge of May, answerably to''ayenes May''afterwards?
28336Or would he have always understood me?
28336Or, which would be worse, a supplement to mine-- printed so as exactly to match?
28336Round that bright board, say, are ye_ all_ assembled?
28336Shall we, then, after an interval of nearly two years has passed over the young lady in the boudoir, look in again upon_ her_?
28336Tasso-- is it not another name for the_ Jerusalem Delivered_?
28336The Danes were approaching, and one of their bishops asked--"How many men the province of Dalarna could furnish?"
28336To hide our blushes, will no maiden for a moment lend us her fan?
28336Were other people to have no rest for me and my verses, which, after all, were horribly bad?"
28336What about David?"
28336What can be done for them?
28336What common feeling Can e''er exist''twixt ye and me?
28336What dimm''d thy reason''s piercing light, That Russian hearts thou understoodst not, From thine heroic spirit''s height?
28336What doth it teach?
28336What had Linton to show in opposition to charms like these?
28336What hope was there of being able to make head against them both, united under such a head as Louis XIV.?
28336What is it?
28336What is it?
28336What is that torn paper lying at their feet?
28336What is to be thought of such rhymes as these?
28336What need was there to argue the case of_ such_ engagements?
28336What should this mean?
28336What the devil''s she going down to the river for at this time of night, else?"
28336What was become of the wicker chair?
28336What, then-- after all we have written about him-- we ask, can, at this day, be done with Chaucer?
28336Where is our rose, friends?
28336Who does not see the propriety of the customary contraction,_ King Will._?
28336Who else is there at her call?
28336Who is not come?
28336Who is not with you?
28336Who is the downcast child of sixteen?
28336Who is the elderly lady with her eyes flashing fire?
28336Who is the writer?
28336Who is this distinguished- looking young woman with her eyes drooping, and the shadow of a dreadful shock yet fresh upon every feature?
28336Whom does the paper concern?
28336Whom hath the cold world lured from ye away?
28336Whose voice is silent in the call of brothers?
28336Why ca n''t the directors have more Christianlike names for their moving power?
28336Why did Mr Horne not mention his_ Temple of Fame_?
28336Why do n''t you come to Linton?
28336Why exaggerate so?
28336Why had the law been allowed by this eccentric lover to violate the humble sanctuary of home, at the desolate Llaneol?
28336Wordsworth has rendered,"But most his might he sheds_ on the eve of May._"Why so?
28336Would you like to go and see it?
28336Yet who knows but that, on looking round and about, he might himself be frightened out of his senses?
28336You know his name, then?
28336_ Will_ you take it from me, David, my heart, my soul?
28336and can he be summoned up in our memory without bringing with him the shades of Godfrey and Tancred?
28336and sleep as well as waking?
28336could I refuse_ my_ part, shocking part though it be?
28336did you ever see a sight like that?
28336do n''t you know me?"
28336do n''t you see the sign- board on the wall?
28336of the couple in the Pear- Tree?
28336or the Charon or Atropos?
28336or would she not have prayed to be taken from the evil to come-- to be taken away one evening at least before this day''s sun arose?
28336what?
15534And do n''t we want to see her arrive? 15534 And my father''s grave?"
15534But what has that to do with this? 15534 Can every one set himself up as a judge of the laws and disobey them if he chooses?
15534Can we see the farm?
15534Did n''t Mr. Brooks tell you?
15534Did you know,he said,"that the early Puritans in New England were the progenitors of one third of the whole population of the United States by 1834?
15534Do n''t you see how clearly Douglas''compact mind stands out against all this folly?
15534Do you know what happened right here in New York?
15534Do you love me?
15534Do you really love me?
15534He loves you?
15534He wants to marry you?
15534How about Seward being too radical?
15534How about the War of 1812, and the Hartford convention?
15534How can I send you money?
15534How can I tell you how to be my friend? 15534 How can that be in your country?"
15534How could that be?
15534How did they get there?
15534How is this?
15534If all men are created free and equal how about the negro?
15534If you do n''t nominate Seward, where will you get your money?
15534Is your life not a waste?
15534Perhaps he was my father... did you know my father?
15534So they are debating, are they?
15534That was three, was n''t it?
15534That, you mean?
15534There was a will then?
15534Was he kind to you?
15534Well, now do n''t you see,I asked,"that Douglas is against all these people and that he has all these influences to fight?
15534What do you think about gold being discovered in California? 15534 What do you think now?"
15534What do you think of Barnum?
15534What do you wish me to do?
15534What if the Southern States secede?
15534What new arguments could you advance?
15534What sort of country is this?
15534What?
15534Where am I?
15534Where do you get all these things?
15534Where do you work?
15534Where is Fortescue?
15534Where is Zoe?
15534Where?
15534Who is Abraham Lincoln?
15534Who is it?
15534Who lives there now?
15534Who painted it?
15534Who was Douglas?
15534Who was Pinturicchio?
15534Why ca n''t these agitators leave the states as they were made by the fathers, slave and free?
15534Why make the two inconsistent?
15534Why pursue Douglas with arguments like these?
15534Why who can depend on him? 15534 Why, is n''t there something to tell?"
15534Why,she asked,"does every one say here''how''s your health''instead of''good morning''as they say in England?
15534Why?
15534Wo n''t that ensure his reelection?
15534Yes, but do we not need the harbors?
15534Yes,said Yarnell,"but how is Douglas going to stand out against it?
15534You do not like Douglas, do you, Reverdy?
15534You have been reading and thinking, have n''t you, Reverdy?
15534You remember him?
15534A heckler asked him:"Are not the provisions of the Constitution respecting the return of a fugitive slave a violation of the law of God?"
15534A slumbering nature?
15534A voice:"How about Kansas and Nebraska?"
15534After a few minutes of silence I asked her about my father: what were his spirits; his way of life; where did he live; did she live with him?
15534After all had not Douglas been starved in the finer part of his genius by the life to which he was wedded?
15534After all, what of the law?
15534After all, what was humanly possible?
15534After that what, anyway?
15534All the while, where did God come in?
15534Also, how and when was I to get to Jacksonville?
15534Am I to be President?
15534And I was thinking, what better way to forget Isabel?
15534And if I had, could I win her back?
15534And if an advertisement should be published in the local newspaper where would it reach?
15534And if it had come to that, what could I do with Zoe, if I found her?
15534And if territory is property, who owns the property?
15534And if you could have been a friend of Pinturicchio in the noblest sense, why not of me?
15534And now, what was Zoe?
15534And that lets in all the kings of Europe, and where''s your Monroe Doctrine?
15534And the first asked:"Was n''t your name on the draft?"
15534And was not Jefferson prophetic when he wrote that the extension of this divisional line in 1820 alarmed him like a fire bell at midnight?
15534And what I say is: where did he get his eddication?
15534And what can I say to you now?
15534And what do you think of Douglas now?
15534And what does England want them for?
15534And what does young Douglas do?
15534And what happens?
15534And what would this growing hostility lead to?
15534And when could they be freed and cleaned of it?
15534And who can tell what will come of that?
15534And who was Douglas in spirit?
15534And why is n''t that best?
15534And why not now?
15534And why not speak my heart?
15534And why?
15534And will South Carolina secede from the Union on account of the unjust and lawless tariff?
15534Anything of Douglas''?
15534Are not men free?
15534Are we like two people who are kept from each other by circumstances that they do not control, like friends whom a war separates?
15534Are you willing to violate the Constitution for the negro?
15534As Zoe''s brother, or as her unnatural lover?
15534As for human love, what was it but the feeling evoked by consideration?
15534At least what, but a sentimental reason, could I set up against the enforced servitude of Zoe?
15534Back of me was nearly a quarter of a century in America and before me what?
15534Besides was I ever much of an adventurer after all?
15534Besides, what''s to hinder new work being found for the slaves?
15534But I was his friend, and why not?
15534But after all, what was to be done?
15534But after the liquor was in Kansas or the slave in Nebraska could they flourish?
15534But as Zoe was my sister why should she not have some of the land that my father left?
15534But did I really care for Abigail?
15534But even if Dorothy only knew that Zoe was my sister, what would she think of me?
15534But finally as they paid for their dinner, lighted cigars, and became less energetic of mood, one asked the other:"Have you ever heard from the girl?"
15534But for the rest, what did it all come to?
15534But how about America, if the colored people were given freedom, not of the franchise merely, but in civil rights of property and free activity?
15534But how about slavery?
15534But how could this man win against an old soldier?
15534But how had I come to this household?
15534But how was he to escape a derivative gain?
15534But if Dorothy had heard of it would she continue to receive me?
15534But if Zoe had been remembered in the will what was the danger now?
15534But if Zoe should run away what would become of her?
15534But if she had met foul play how could that be discovered?
15534But if she had not found these circumstances a reason for turning from me could she tolerate the rest of my difficulties?
15534But now how to find Dorothy again?
15534But then what should the explanation be?
15534But was he happy?
15534But was life nothing but money making?
15534But was not Lincoln so too?
15534But was that home to be?
15534But was there enough moral depth to him?
15534But what good was the land?
15534But what had I to say?
15534But what has he to carry against them that will be a loss to the world, if he fails?"
15534But what is strength?
15534But what need?
15534But what of England?
15534But what of the field hands, the heavier workers?
15534But what one of them would give back Texas, New Mexico, California, to Mexico?
15534But what one of them would not have done the same thing if he could?
15534But what right have I to talk?
15534But what will the future be?
15534But what?
15534But where do you see outdoor sports?
15534But where now was Dorothy''s body?
15534But where was Douglas?
15534But who should be the candidate?
15534But why also desist?
15534But why change the subject?
15534But why had Reverdy not warned me against taking Zoe to live with me?
15534But why not a chimney of stone?
15534But why not a formal marriage?
15534But why"poor fellow"?
15534But why, after all?
15534But why?
15534But why?
15534But why?
15534But, after all, was not Webster cribbed by his New England environment?
15534By not admitting any more slave states?
15534By what authority was his right challenged to come to this state to make his home; and to this town to follow the profession of the law?
15534CHAPTER LX Who should call upon me the next morning after my arrival in Chicago but Yarnell?
15534CHAPTER VIII What were my thoughts after all?
15534CHAPTER XLI What was the result?
15534CHAPTER XXXVI But what of Douglas?
15534Ca n''t we use our will and our thought to assist climate and soil, about anything?
15534Can I help that?
15534Can he throw it to any one?
15534Could Dorothy, bred in Tennessee, look with favor upon my attentions?
15534Could I enforce the will after all?
15534Could I rely upon the hope of her staying away, and that she would not figure in my life in the future except as to the land, the money?
15534Could I take care of myself entirely?
15534Could anything lift him out of his complication to honor and freedom?
15534Could it be possible that this Captain Brown should have his Pinturicchio?
15534Could it be true?
15534Could n''t I say that Congress could prohibit slavery in the territories under the power it has to regulate commerce between them?
15534Could not a liquor dealer from Chicago take his stock to Kansas?
15534Could she have an interest in a man with a family relationship of this sort?
15534Could she sense that my heart was beating, but with terror?
15534Could such a theme be dramatized now?
15534Could we wait until the house was rented, or at least placed with an agent, the furnishings stored if necessary?
15534Did Congress have to pass favorable legislation?
15534Did I begrudge her the interest which she had, of right, with me in our father''s estate?
15534Did I know that Miss Martineau had stopped in Chicago and had described Chicago as it was then?
15534Did I know the Ridgeway family there, of which Edward Ridgeway, the founder, had been prominent in the affairs of Illinois, now dead some five years?
15534Did I know what I was getting into?
15534Did I not see it with English eyes used to tranquillity and order?
15534Did I really know myself?
15534Did I want a wife who had such definite opinions about masculine questions such as these?
15534Did I wish to?
15534Did Mrs. Brown do it?
15534Did Zoe meet that fate, and not violence?
15534Did a territorial legislature have power to pass favorable legislation?
15534Did any one of them dream of a sectional party as long as the North was the weaker section and the South the stronger?
15534Did he get my letter, or was he consoling himself in convivial ways?
15534Did he keep her in his heart?
15534Did he reckon enough with the forces which made for culture, enlightenment?
15534Did he smile, approve?
15534Did it not prove Lamborn''s interest in Zoe?
15534Did loneliness ever come over him?
15534Did moral ideas have strength, or did war?
15534Did my father suffer for this marriage?
15534Did one have her and one lose her?
15534Did she know that Zoe and I had the same father?
15534Did she love me?
15534Did she receive my attentions on account of the relations between him and me?
15534Did the North have strength, or the South?
15534Did these words have any definite meaning to Webster?
15534Did they disapprove his leaving England?
15534Do I speak fantastically when I ask you to try out a marriage of the mind?
15534Do n''t you need money?
15534Do n''t you see the point?
15534Do you appreciate these figures?
15534Do you know...?"
15534Do you promise me that?"
15534Do you realize who is living in it to- day?
15534Do you think that I am only a shadow or a registering machine, and that Dorothy is not flesh and blood?
15534Do you think, if we once get it that there will be any whining that we should give it up?
15534Does it understand; does it but partly divine these secrets; does it for any of these reasons cease to be sensitive?
15534Does the heart of age become deadened?
15534Douglas took up this challenge by saying:"Yes, but who is to decide what is right and what is wrong; or what is to decide it?
15534Douglas was left to me, but what could he do for me or I for him?
15534Douglas, in bronze, looks over the lake to the east-- to what?
15534Drinking?
15534Even if I did, what was her life to be?
15534Everybody had used it for more than eighty years-- why not this platform?
15534For here was Isabel dissolved in my arms and how could I continue this futile demonstration?
15534For it was beauty of life that Isabel and I shared, and who can not know between whom this secret exists, if he have eyes to see?
15534For should I ever come this way again?
15534For the rest, what did it all come to?
15534For what could be between us?
15534For why would I surrender so much when I did not have to?
15534From what clause flowed the duty and the power?
15534Had Dorothy heard them?
15534Had Douglas gone forth to bring this about in realization of his dream of America''s greatness?
15534Had I awakened all of her nature?
15534Had I been living a neutral life all these years?
15534Had I contracted it from the oysters, or from food on the steamer?
15534Had I gone too far in dividing the estate with Zoe?
15534Had I killed Lamborn for jealousy, or in self- defense?
15534Had I made a god of a poor piece of clay?
15534Had I not seen them together on the lake front in Chicago?
15534Had I wounded her?
15534Had Reverdy and Sarah kept this relationship from Dorothy?
15534Had anything just like this ever occurred in England?
15534Had he been kind to my mother?
15534Had he had a fair chance in such a brief period to do anything?
15534Had he had a hand in this-- the young judge of the Supreme Court?
15534Had he heard of Douglas?
15534Had he not acquired brusqueness, vulgarity since coming west?
15534Had he not been driven from position to position by Douglas in the debates?
15534Had his pride been wounded, his spirits dampened?
15534Had not Douglas stood for this too?
15534Had not Zoe then hidden herself behind a suspicious reticence?
15534Had not the Whigs, marching through these streets of Chicago, captured all the effective thunder of the Democratic party?
15534Had not the young man given away too much?
15534Had not this crowd caught up the Democratic platform which congratulated the republicans of France?
15534Had some one else told her?
15534Had the Declaration of Independence been approved at the polls?
15534Had we accomplished anything?
15534Has he not been a Whig with all the humbuggery of that party, of log cabins and imperial practices?
15534Has it not been for lack of some one better to whom you could give your heart?
15534Have you read Emerson or Lowell yet?
15534He ca n''t go away from the plantation, but why go away?
15534He closed with these memorable words:"Why can we not thus have peace?
15534He had married again, but was he happy?
15534He sees me, but what am I?
15534He was much out of breath and looked definitely ill. How had they found us?
15534He went on:"How do you dare to yell for negro freedom and then deny me the freedom of speech?
15534He''s a country jake, is n''t he?"
15534Hence this long freight train with coal, oil, and iron-- all very well, but where are the free men and the free soil that Reverdy''s son died for?
15534How about the tariff and South Carolina in 1832?
15534How can they play with things in this way?"
15534How could I approach that?
15534How could I comfort her?
15534How could I go into explanations with Dorothy?
15534How could I help but make comparisons between Isabel and Dorothy?
15534How could I return to the house in Chicago?
15534How could I stand the loneliness?
15534How could I?
15534How could a woman, fair and high- bred, become the wife of a sooty creature like Othello?
15534How could constables and sheriffs in the surrounding counties be notified?
15534How could he do it?
15534How could it be?
15534How could posters be sent around, how phrased?
15534How could she establish herself?
15534How could such a locality ever be the seat of a city?
15534How could that be?
15534How could their devotion to a liberty, bring liberty to him?
15534How far up did the city extend?
15534How had I dared to make this proposal to Dorothy?
15534How long is it since these ambitious northern men wished for a sectional organization?
15534How long would it take?
15534How should I find the home that I had left?
15534How should the whole people be at peace?
15534How should this examination be managed?
15534How was Douglas taking it?
15534How well had they known each other?
15534How would Douglas face these great men?
15534How would Douglas react to these world movements?
15534How would I unravel this tangle with him?
15534How would Lincoln abolish slavery?
15534How would he interpret them?
15534How would her fate tangle itself with mine?
15534How would the two pieces be connected?
15534How, for example, can you stop the railroads on Sunday if you let communities, states, control the matter?
15534How?
15534I could get richer, but why get richer?
15534I could not marry Isabel; and what could be?
15534I followed this by asking:"Are you very good friends?"
15534I had never seen anything remotely approximating Lake Erie...."How large is it?"
15534I have developed this power of concentration and self- denial; but would you bring me to live over again what I lived with Uncle Tom?
15534I liked it, but would it take me to Chicago?
15534I shall never forget my feelings, but how shall I describe them?
15534I turned to her and asked:"Would you and Mr. Winchell like to join me?"
15534I was rich to be sure, but what had I done?
15534If Dorothy should be dead, or Mother Clayton, or Mammy or Jenny?
15534If I went to her with the same will that I took up the matter of the farm, could I not win her?
15534If Lamborn wanted Zoe and I had her in my house and kept him from seeing her, was it for a good or a selfish reason?
15534If he should die to- day what would the world lose?
15534If he was right, why condemn him unheard?
15534If he was wrong, what harm to hear him through, the better to see the wrong?
15534If labor conditions presaged slavery for white men were they freed by negro slavery?
15534If not real, what was Shakespeare trying to do?
15534If now he could not win the prize, what would be his future as against the growing power of the Republican party?
15534If one man says it does not mean a negro, why may not another man say it does not mean another man?
15534If she knew about it would not the present association of ideas bring it to mind and bespeak it to me by change of color or expression?
15534If she was dealt with justly as to her property what more could I do?
15534If so, why not recognize the great principles of self- government and state equality as curatives?"
15534If the general government was one of granted powers, where did it get the right to prohibit slavery in the territories?
15534If these things could be done with honor and applause, did Douglas deserve the hostility which was rising up against him?
15534If this Constitution is to be repudiated for the law of God, who is to be the prophet to reveal the will of God and establish a theocracy for us?"
15534If this be true, why must you change toward me?
15534If we did assume such a position it would be a very pertinent inquiry, why do you not adopt this institution?
15534If you can rule the territories arbitrarily as to slavery, why not as to anything else?
15534In a word, was wealth everything?
15534In such case had I married Dorothy?
15534In what soil had Zoe moldered into the earth?
15534Is he not for the tariff and loose construction?
15534Is he scoring?
15534Is it the same way out in Chicago?"
15534Is it wrong?
15534Is n''t slavery traffic?
15534Is slavery the only wrong in the country?
15534Is there a Republican in Galesburg who can travel into Kentucky and carry his principles with him across the Ohio?"
15534Is there a statesman in Europe or one in America with a cleaner record?
15534Is there anything more desperate at times?
15534Is this a campaign of the log cabin, hard cider, and war records?"
15534It has changed its base, but is there more of it?
15534It may not be a pleasing sight to see a slave returned to its master, but what are you going to do with the law?
15534Just be good to me as you have been-- don''t you understand?
15534Might not Dorothy come back to me if she knew that Zoe had wholly vanished from my life?
15534Might she not have been sold for her loveliness to some man desiring a mistress?
15534Now that I was separated from him how should I follow him day by day?
15534Now, let me inquire, where are you to find the slave territory with which to balance these seventeen free territories, or even any one of them?"
15534On the other hand, if you give it breathing space what will become of the country?
15534Or had Douglas''oratory swept them off their feet?
15534Or is it against northern interests?
15534Or was he drowning disappointment, the tragic sense of life''s inadequacy, in abandoned diversions?
15534Otherwise what is the future to be?"
15534Sarah''s mother was my pride and she''s dead a long time too, but I do n''t get over that.... What''s the matter, Jimmy?
15534Shall I ever return?
15534Shall we have a glass of wine together?"
15534She seemed to say:"What difficulty in this boy''s life is he trying to mingle with my daughter''s life?"
15534She wailed incessantly:"What is free territory to me?
15534She was beginning to think of the ordeal herself, of the fate of the child, what it was being born to.... What, indeed?
15534Should I attempt to argue down her misgivings?
15534Should I keep her in my household and let the tongues wag, as they were doing, or clatter if Zoe should have a child?
15534Should I not carry the sword to defend and establish them?
15534Should I not go there for her?
15534Should I not see something of the city?
15534Should I not write to Dorothy and tell her of Zoe''s disappearance?
15534Should I remain silent?
15534Should I send Zoe away?
15534Should I tell her that I would return to Jacksonville and send Zoe away?
15534Should I tell what I knew?
15534Should I urge Dorothy to a marriage with me?
15534Should I write Dorothy that I relinquished any hope of making her my wife?
15534Should I write Dorothy?
15534Should her dark skin deprive her of that?
15534Should slavery, polygamy, rum, be driven from the land?
15534So we sat until I broke the silence by asking:"When was the baby born?"
15534Some one at our side says:"This railsplitter Lincoln, who carries the purse for him?"
15534Still would it be known?
15534Still, if it came to a question of law, what law was to be observed?
15534Still, would I not be kind enough to arrange it?
15534Still, would he like to know that the public have no access to the lake at any place where the tracks lie between the shore and this wall?
15534Suppose this vote grew and an Abolitionist President should ultimately be elected?
15534The laws that were written, the laws relating to the progress of the country, the laws that worked for peace among the American people?
15534The motley elements that Douglas had derided as anti- Masonics, Know- nothings, Abolitionists, Spiritualists, where were they?
15534The progress of the country or the opinions of fanatics?"
15534The question was: Are the Whig policies best for the country?
15534The thought went through my mind, why not take Dorothy and go in order to give her the benefit of this summer climate through the winter?
15534The young woman asks her companion:"Who is that monument to?"
15534The young woman says:"I wonder who that old man is?
15534Then recalling what Isabel had said I asked her:"Where is the face, Isabel, you wished to show me?"
15534Then she said:"Are n''t you best alone?
15534Then should we be free and happy, and just and noble?
15534Then why should England be tolerated in this Western Hemisphere?
15534There were always my growing enterprises-- and yet to what end?
15534These are issues between him and Douglas still; but is this the real issue after all?
15534These questions about Texas and Oregon, about tariffs, about Whigs and Democrats, what are they but the cackle of the moment?
15534This being the case why should I not go to Dorothy and tell her so?
15534This boy is mine, but am I better off than Isabel?
15534To what darker waters has she been towed by some creature of prey?
15534To what depths has Dorothy sunk?
15534To what extent, then, the associate on a basis of equality with Zoe too?
15534To what there?
15534Turning to the octoroon she said:"Will you feed him, Zoe?"
15534Under that roof the most priceless heart I had found in life was beating-- but was it in sleep or in wakefulness?
15534Upon what basis could I seek to regain Zoe, if she did not wish to return?
15534Very well?
15534Virginia had been bought, why did n''t she deliver?
15534Was America in the business of pirating around the shores of Europe to pick up islands, or promontories like Gibraltar?
15534Was America so immaculately free that Douglas''subordination of the negro to the welfare of the republic at large should be so severely dealt with?
15534Was Dorothy happy?
15534Was Douglas a youth?
15534Was Douglas turned against me?
15534Was Douglas unmoral?
15534Was England safe against such innovation?
15534Was I ashamed of my kinship with Zoe?
15534Was I drawn to her?
15534Was I free?
15534Was I happy?
15534Was I in some sort a negligible character, without magnetism, of unfulfilled passion?
15534Was I investing Dorothy with my own thoughts, putting into her mouth the objections that I could make against myself?
15534Was I not resolved to be rich myself?
15534Was Jenny kidnapped?
15534Was Lincoln any more radical than Douglas?
15534Was every one corrupt, people and legislature?
15534Was he greatly interested?
15534Was he not a log roller in the Illinois legislature of 1836?
15534Was he really high- minded?
15534Was he rising to a purer height, had a glory begun to dawn on America?
15534Was he syllogistic, analytic, intellectually hard?
15534Was he to lose them?
15534Was he, too, becoming uncertain of mind?
15534Was it Zoe; Dorothy''s knowledge of Zoe?
15534Was it fair?
15534Was it more than a mile?
15534Was it my mother?
15534Was it not a pure makeshift, an expedient in the breaking up of her life, the first step in an accommodation to Dorothy''s loss?
15534Was it possible that my father''s mind was disturbed?
15534Was it real?
15534Was it so warm?
15534Was it some dream?
15534Was it the life going out of me, or the life clinging to me in spite of the airs of eternity?
15534Was it to prove his lasting triumph, or his undoing?
15534Was not one half of her blood English blood?
15534Was not this America hailing Europe?
15534Was not this marriage as valid as any?
15534Was not this roar outside of the house a part of the tumult in Germany and France?
15534Was nullification right?
15534Was she not closer to me, as temperate genius of the North, than Dorothy, out of the languor and the romanticism of the South?
15534Was she not sublimating the materials of our thwarted relationship?
15534Was she only my friend?
15534Was she perhaps ill?
15534Was the town dividing as to me?
15534Was there a home for me?
15534Was there a trace of Zoe in him?
15534Was there any one present who did not wish him to strive for these achievements for this western country?
15534Was there anything in all of Europe to equal it?
15534Was there reality in Isabel''s words?
15534Was there something lacking of depth, of genuineness, in Dorothy''s nature?
15534Was this new- found acquaintance before me a friend of my father''s?
15534Was this not perfectly unreasonable?
15534Was to- day her day of destiny?
15534Was trade everything?
15534We had the ballot but did we have freedom?
15534Webster and Douglas had lost the nomination, how could a gentleman win the election?
15534Well now, is n''t that better than calling the territories property and subject to the arbitrary rule of Congress as merely inert matter?
15534Well, are climate and soil any more nature than thought?
15534Well, but can this plan of mine be carried out?
15534Well, if he had not had the gifts and the energies to do such things, how could he have served the country and maintained himself?
15534Well, might it not be so since Victor Hugo, living in exile, had also given Brown an apotheosis?
15534Well, was not Douglas a martyr too?
15534Well, were there not then the usual consequences?
15534Well, what of it?
15534Well, why does n''t he go farther and let Congress at one stroke emancipate the slaves?
15534Well, why should he not return to Chicago with me and help with the investigation?
15534Were merchants to be permitted to do what they chose in order that they might create wealth for themselves, or even the nation?
15534Were the merchants the leaders of civilization?
15534Were we not rivals for the same favor?
15534What about this observance of the law, the higher law included?
15534What after all was art to me except a diversion?
15534What are Lincoln and Jeff Davis thinking of?
15534What are their speculations as to whether this ridiculous old document called the Constitution goes into a territory or not?
15534What better field for making money?
15534What can I do for Douglas?
15534What could I say, to what could she listen?
15534What could it mean?
15534What did Douglas know of law?
15534What did I know of Mrs. Stowe?
15534What did he want?
15534What did it matter in point of justice and civilization that the South could not carry on her commercial interests without slavery?
15534What did it mean?
15534What did it mean?
15534What did our kindred blood have to do with the matter of my desire?
15534What did they do?
15534What divided the American imagination?
15534What does he care whether I admire him or not, or whether any one loves him or not?
15534What does one derive from love?
15534What else could I do?
15534What follows from all of this?
15534What fraud could have been wrought upon him?
15534What great fish started at the splash, the white apparition; and then returned to nibble?
15534What had Clay to offer as a counteractant, as an equal inspiration to the pride of this lusty nation?
15534What had Douglas to gain with popular sovereignty?
15534What had I to do with Rome, with art; what with a woman like Isabel?
15534What had all this to do with Dorothy and me?
15534What had become of Fortescue?
15534What had been accomplished?
15534What had been the delay thus far?
15534What had come over Lincoln?
15534What had created nullification?
15534What had happened in my absence?
15534What had he accomplished?
15534What had he done?
15534What had my generosity, foolish and boyish, come to after all?
15534What has Douglas written or said that will live?
15534What has done it?
15534What has he done that will carry an influence to a future day?
15534What have I to gain by favoring them?
15534What have the Whigs to offer?
15534What have you done with prohibition of slavery in the North by Federal law?
15534What heart could withhold itself from Mammy and Jenny?
15534What if I fell ill again and in the middle of the winter, when the ways were snowbound?
15534What in the Constitution forbade slaves from being taken into the territories?
15534What is any earthly thing to him?
15534What is honest about him above other men?
15534What is it like?
15534What is left for Seward, for his supporters?
15534What is my friendship now to him?
15534What is stirring there?
15534What is the danger of a contest, even if Zoe could be brought to make one?
15534What is the end of slavery to me?
15534What is the matter with Seward?
15534What is the matter?
15534What is this matter of freedom after all?
15534What is this sanctimonious talk in prose and verse in England about Texas?
15534What is this talk of Old Abe Lincoln, Old Uncle Abe, Honest Abe Lincoln?
15534What is this vote of Virginia,--fourteen votes out of her twenty- three for Lincoln?
15534What is this?
15534What kind of a soul was he giving it?
15534What light was falling on those soft and tender cheeks in the Vatican?
15534What nominated Lincoln?
15534What of American progress in such a contingency?
15534What of Fortescue?
15534What of Pennsylvania and her tariff?
15534What of a wrecked republic before the greedy eyes of England, the envious hands of kings?
15534What of her property, her interests?
15534What of the Whigs?
15534What of the right of revolution?
15534What of the steam engine, what of machinery, what of unknown developments?
15534What of the unmorality of taking Kansas and Nebraska from the Indians?
15534What one of us saw that we could not make an ocean- bound republic without a supremacy of wealth, even if it was brought about by a plebiscite?
15534What other use have I for money but to give it to this war, or to Douglas?
15534What public man has become so rich?
15534What rights did England have to the Mosquito Coast?
15534What shall we obey at all, and where shall we resist?
15534What should I do?
15534What should I say?
15534What should I say?
15534What soil could be richer than that south of Madison Street?
15534What state had greater natural riches?
15534What then of the law of God?
15534What then?
15534What was American liberty?
15534What was Great Britain doing?
15534What was I now to do?
15534What was I to do?
15534What was I to do?
15534What was a quarter of a dollar more a day to me?
15534What was giving it strength but some form of materialism?
15534What was growing up, and from what source, which should be the master of the destiny of the country?
15534What was he accomplishing for the real greatness of his country by giving it territory and railroads?
15534What was he doing in Congress now?
15534What was he doing?
15534What was he that he could do such a thing with the prospect that he would injure you, his son by another marriage, in so many ways and so deeply?
15534What was he thinking?
15534What was his secret?
15534What was it all about?
15534What was it?
15534What was now stirring in his restless imagination?
15534What was really before the country?
15534What was she after all?
15534What was the attitude of mind in allowing this free association between Isabel and me?
15534What was the difference between this and girding the slave states around with freedom?
15534What was the explanation of Fortescue''s trick?
15534What was the law business in this community, divided, as it was, by eleven lawyers, shared in by visiting lawyers?
15534What was the subject?
15534What was this visit to a sister?
15534What was thought of Washington in America?
15534What was to be done by a man who had the burdens of leadership?
15534What went into the Union?
15534What were politics but the interpretation of business?
15534What were the colored people but the shadows of the white people, following them and imitating them in a childlike, humorous, innocent way?
15534What will my life be?
15534What will they teach in it?
15534What would Douglas do?
15534What would Douglas now do?
15534What would England do?
15534What would England say to this?
15534What would Lincoln do about the fugitive- slave law?
15534What would Lincoln do?
15534What would Serafino think if he could hear this?
15534What would a ride of more than 200 miles on a pony do to me?
15534What would become of her?
15534What would come of arraying section against section?
15534What would future inventions do to exacerbate it?
15534What would it all come to?
15534What would life have been to me if I had met Isabel when I first knew Dorothy?
15534What would the German vote do, the Irish vote, all the foreign vote?
15534What would the Titans-- iron, coal, gold, copper, wheat, corn-- do to the Giant of cotton?
15534What would the Whigs do?
15534What would this hot blood, seeking opportunity and freedom from old world restraints, do for the new country?
15534What would this mature Zoe do to me?
15534What would this strange creature now rising to six feet four inches of awkward angularity say in reply to this wonderful oration?
15534What''s all this talk anyway about Honest Old Abe?
15534What''s the difference?"
15534What?
15534What?
15534When had Douglas had time to master its simplest principles?
15534When should I start west?
15534Where could I begin, what words could I select to express briefly my experiences?
15534Where does sovereignty reside under our system?
15534Where is Hyer the prize fighter?
15534Where the song out of the flesh, but too subtle for the ears of flesh?
15534Where was I stopping?
15534Where was I to stand amid all this confusion and contradiction?
15534Where was Jenny; in whose hands; what fate had she met?
15534Where was he now on that flattened, negligible map called America?
15534Where was it that Dorothy sank?
15534Where was such evidence?
15534Where were Abigail and Aldington, Reverdy, Sarah, this night?
15534Where were the flames that had sung to me ethereally before?
15534Where would Seward''s strength be thrown now that he can not use it for himself?
15534Who concluded a treaty of peace with Great Britain after the Revolution?
15534Who could not see through Douglas''thin scheme to attach his fortunes to the chariot of the great but misguided Jackson?
15534Who could stand against this world- wide avalanche?
15534Who formed themselves into the Confederate States, each retaining its sovereignty?
15534Who had brought into this remote and peaceful town that copy of Garrison''s_ Liberator_?
15534Who had done more for his country?
15534Who in this time was giving America a soul?
15534Who is so bold as to do it?...
15534Who is trying to nullify these inestimable principles and safeguards?
15534Who left that union and formed the present Union?
15534Who said so?
15534Who was Franklin Pierce?
15534Who was this Mr. Buchanan?
15534Who wished to part with Texas, New Mexico, California, or Oregon?
15534Who would be my friends here?
15534Who would dare accuse him of subserviency to Jackson or to any man, for bread or for position?
15534Who would trust his interests to a lawyer so inexperienced?
15534Why a nomination on the strength of a deceiving nickname?
15534Why all these advertisements of quack remedies, why all this calling on God?
15534Why all these sharp- faced, lantern- jawed, lean, sallow, hard- handed people?
15534Why ca n''t they dig coal and gold like peons?
15534Why ca n''t they farm?
15534Why could Douglas not have been nominated?
15534Why could it not be arranged and for Dorothy too?
15534Why could she not see that Douglas had always done his best?
15534Why did I not come over?
15534Why did I not travel in the splendid forties and the leisurely fifties?
15534Why did I not try my hand?
15534Why did n''t Ohio yield?
15534Why did not Seward honor the requisition of the Governor of Virginia for the return of a fugitive slave?
15534Why did not these banners make free men and a free soil?
15534Why does Pennsylvania deliberate, why does she retire so often to consult her wishes?
15534Why does he not settle to the solid study and experiences of the law?
15534Why does n''t the machinery work?
15534Why except negroes?
15534Why had Douglas leaped to the defense of Jackson in this community, like a fice coming to the aid of a mastiff?
15534Why had Polk fulminated first for 54:40 and faded off to the 49th parallel?
15534Why had my grandmother said nothing to me of this?
15534Why had not Dorothy seen in me a practical, courageous heart, who took his fate and made the best of it?
15534Why have n''t you sent for money?"
15534Why leave Mammy and Jenny behind, who had served nearly the whole of their lives in this household?
15534Why not South Carolina, then, if she chooses?
15534Why not a constitutional amendment establishing a state religion?
15534Why not a state religion under the present constitutional clause which makes provision for the general welfare?
15534Why not come here to live?
15534Why not come to Chicago with us, make her home with us?
15534Why not include some other slaveries for condemnation?
15534Why not take her with me?
15534Why not talk to Mrs. Clayton?
15534Why not?
15534Why not?
15534Why separate Dorothy from her?
15534Why should she not come with me?
15534Why should such folly be?
15534Why then could not a planter from Louisiana take his slaves to Nebraska?
15534Why this catching at this and the other opportunity?
15534Why this contempt of his for the idealist, the reformer?
15534Why this depression of spirits?
15534Why this ingratitude?
15534Why try?
15534Why was I here after all?
15534Why would any one murder Zoe?
15534Why would not all statesmen rise with him in the assertion of a title to the whole of North America?
15534Why"poor fellow?"
15534Why, after all, need Zoe have affected her so profoundly?
15534Why, after all?
15534Why, how could anyone say anything about you?
15534Why, if not to get a bone for his own hungry stomach?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Will I come to hear him speak?
15534Will I write it out for him?
15534Will Rhodes pay for his lust?
15534With a rough hand he brushed them away, then asked me:"What do you think?"
15534With this human being who had nursed me so tenderly through my illness?
15534With whom, and where?
15534Would Clay win the Whig nomination?
15534Would Dorothy see me again?
15534Would Hale?
15534Would I be the honored guest of yesterday?
15534Would I be there?
15534Would I like to come to their house?
15534Would Mexico sell them without a fight?
15534Would Webster?
15534Would he ever return?
15534Would it be a patchwork?
15534Would it ever be a whole, well- fitting garment to his great genius?
15534Would it not be best for me to have a woman in the house with Zoe?
15534Would the Abolitionists put up a ticket?
15534Would they have changed at any age to which they might have lived?
15534Would you like something to eat?"
15534Yes, and what Englishman would not resent with tears an insult which he could neither deny nor punish?
15534Yet may not Greeley''s Bates still come in?
15534exclaimed Dorothy,"does it have to be by so many words?
31278And who will deny,adds a Protestant classic,"that the fault was partly owing to them?"
31278What boots it,he exclaimed,"to condemn errors that have been long condemned, and tempt no Catholic?
31278What remains of Christianity,exclaimed Beza,"if we silently admit what this man has expectorated in his preface?...
31278[ 313] Two generations later Salvianus exclaims:Quid est aliud paene omnis coetus Christianorum quam sentina vitiorum?
312786):"Miramur si terrae... nostrorum omnium a Deo barbaris datae sunt, cum eas quae Romani polluerant fornicatione, nunc mundent barbari castitate?
31278And for all this, what have they gained?
31278But how can a view of policy constitute a philosophy?
31278Connaissez- vous un roi qui mérite d''être libre, dans le sens implicite du mot?...
31278Darf ich andre verurtheilen_ in eodem luto mecum haerentes_?"
31278Depuis la révolution il semble que ces sortes de différences s''évanouissent.... Les Bostoniens ne sont- ils pas fort dévots?...
31278Dr. Martineau attributes this doctrine to Mill:"Do we ask what determines the moral quality of actions?
31278Et George IV., croyez- vous que je serais son ministre, s''il avait été libre de choisir?...
31278Et non è questo peggio che heretica dottrina?
31278For what is the Holy See in its relation to the masses of Catholics, and where does its strength lie?
31278Has God gone to sleep and let the house be destroyed, or let in the enemy through want of watchfulness?
31278How can the stranger understand where the children of the kingdom are deceived?
31278How could these principles be favourable to them?
31278If the end be not religion, is it morality, humanity, civilisation, knowledge?
31278Is it a process of renovation or a process of dissolution in which European society is plunged?
31278Is she therefore to deny or smother it?
31278Is she therefore to say that his right is no right, or that all intolerance is necessarily wrong?
31278Me déclarer contre l''Italie parce que ses chaînes tombent mal à propos?
31278Numquid( Dominus) dormitando aedificium suum perdidit, aut non custodiendo hostes admisit?...
31278Oubliez- vous que les rois ne doivent pas donner des institutions, mais que les institutions seules doivent donner des rois?...
31278People used to know how often, or how seldom, Washington laughed during the war; but who has numbered the jokes of Lincoln?
31278Quand un roi dénie au peuple les institutions do nt le peuple a besoin, quel est le procédé de l''Angleterre?
31278Qui aurait pu même songer à un développement dogmatique?"
31278Quid expavescis quia pereunt regna terrena?
31278St. Augustine, after quoting Seneca, exclaims:"What more could a Christian say than this Pagan has said?"
31278The question was not, what crimes has the prisoner committed?
31278The religious world has been long divided upon this great question: Do we find principles in politics and in science?
31278To a friend describing Herder as the one unprofitable classic, he replied,"Did you ever learn anything from Schleiermacher?"
31278Was Rome herself tainted with Gallicanism, and in league with those who had conspired for her destruction?
31278Welcher Entschluss, ich möchte sagen, welche Unverschämtheit ist es, nach Ihnen und bei Ihren Lebzeiten, Kirchengeschichte in München zu doziren?
31278What but a schism could ensue from this inexplicable apathy?
31278What is matter?
31278Where was their liberality in one case, or their catholicity in the other?
31278Why fearest thou when earthly kingdoms fall?
31278[ Footnote 181: Crudelitatisne tu esse ac non clementiae potius, pietatisque putas?
31278[ Footnote 189: Quo demum res evaderent, si Regibus non esset integrum, in rebelles, subditos, quietisque publicae turbatores animadvertere?
31278[ Footnote 204:"Quid hoc ad me?
31278[ Footnote 314:"What is well- nigh all Christendom but a sink of iniquity?"
31278[ Footnote 387: Quid enim expedit damnare quae damnata jam sunt, quidve juvat errores proscribere quos novimus jam esse proscriptos?...
31278but, does he belong to one of those classes whose existence the Republic can not tolerate?
31278was in the hands of the Whigs?
31278why wait for five months?
22568''Told everything?''
22568A down on her? 22568 A few other people, including Sarle and myself, might have been dead in the meantime, but what would that have mattered?"
22568Ah, one of the early pioneers? 22568 And filled it?"
22568And how are they going to catch the confederate? 22568 And how can I read you the letter I have for you with one hand?"
22568And is the snake still in the box?
22568And never come back to it again?
22568And the bright stones? 22568 And very rich?"
22568And why? 22568 And yours?"
22568Anything else?
22568Are you as merciless in all your dealings?
22568Are you coming for that ride or not, Berlie? 22568 Are you mad?"
22568Baby very sick, missis?
22568Besides, what are you on that mine for, Emma? 22568 But ca n''t we escape afterwards?
22568But has the missy had her dinner?
22568But if I think you are?
22568But if she went away, how is it that she is buried here, Roddy?
22568But she? 22568 But the children?"
22568But what about that five- hundred- ounce clean- up you handed him?
22568But what is all this about Dick, dear?
22568But where do they come from?
22568But where else could she be? 22568 But why did you wait for me?"
22568But why? 22568 But why?
22568But, Roddy, how could you be so disobedient, dear? 22568 Ca n''t we come and picnic there, Lundi?
22568Ca n''t you look in her face and see there is no touch of treachery or darkness there? 22568 Ca n''t you see,"she said violently,"that we have sticks here ready to kill the thing, and a revolver if necessary?
22568Can you imagine any one who has a living to earn being so unwise? 22568 Carol?"
22568Colonel Liscannon is an old service- man----"May I beg for one of those delicious cigarettes you were smoking after lunch?
22568Could n''t I? 22568 Could n''t you do something?"
22568Dearest, it is a little more than a sore throat, is n''t it? 22568 Did you mean it when you cut me in that brutal manner just now-- or was it an accident?"
22568Did you pull in the pot?
22568Do n''t you know the little riding girl?
22568Do n''t you know? 22568 Do n''t you think so?"
22568Do you know that I have killed a man tonight?
22568Do you mean the young lady whose baggage got mixed with yours at the beginning of the voyage, my lady?
22568Do you need me?
22568Do you realize that you are known from one end of the ship to the other as the April Fool?
22568Do you think I would live and let you link your clean, upright life with my dark one?
22568Even if we have to pretend to say good- night? 22568 Foot it?
22568Gang?
22568Has any one told you, Miss Connal, about the girl who committed suicide on the_ Clarendon Castle_?
22568Has he got his arm round her?
22568Has my boy been here with petrol for the car?
22568Has there ever been anything between them?
22568Have n''t you known her all your life? 22568 Have you any explanation to offer?"
22568Have you any other business?
22568How can I trust you any longer? 22568 How can we?
22568How could it have been? 22568 How could you be such a fool?"
22568How dare you follow me?
22568How did he do it?
22568How do you feel, old man?
22568How long ago did Roddy go?
22568How many ounces?
22568How much longer do you expect to be?
22568How my baby getting along, missis?
22568How very interesting,she stammered,"and what else?"
22568I am sorry to bother you, but will you please open the door for a moment?
22568I suppose it was that cat Stanislaw who started the search for me?
22568I suppose you never realized that trouble has been boiling up for her ever since you disappeared?
22568I thought it was a promise-- some sort of a compact-- to do what was best--_for her_?
22568I trust you left Lord Vernilands well?
22568I wonder if Kitty Drummund can do any good if I send for her?
22568Is he holding her hand?
22568Is it you, Lundi Druro? 22568 Is not love enough for you, Rosanne?"
22568Is that Sophy''s grave?
22568Is that better? 22568 Is that what is making me prickle all over and feel as though I want to commit murder?"
22568Is that you, Emma Guthrie?
22568Is the file- past of the Decrepits over? 22568 Is there anything to do besides standing there smirking?"
22568It must be nearly two years since we met?
22568It''s Burral, is n''t it?
22568Kick the nigger instead, tomorrow,laughed Gay, adding in the Rhodesian spirit,"what does it matter, anyway?"
22568May one ask what you intended to do to put things straight?
22568May we come and sit with you for a little while? 22568 My dear Kerry, do you suppose that it gives me any pleasure to cause you pain, or to distress this charming lady?
22568My dear fellow,he expostulated gently,"do n''t you realize there is a south- easter blowing?
22568No matter how long it takes to get rid of him?
22568No?
22568Nothing wrong, I hope, Rosie?
22568Oh, Miss Chaine,she said, with her pretty, child- like air,"would it be too much to ask you to take down these letters to the store presently?
22568Oh, do n''t we?
22568Oh, may I? 22568 Oh, surely much longer than that?"
22568Oh,_ can_ you tell whether the Falcon Hotel is far from here?
22568Only-- be kind to my child, wo n''t you?
22568Safe?
22568Save my soul alive?
22568Seen anything of Lundi?
22568Shall I get your cloak?
22568Shall I send your nurse?
22568She depresses me so terribly, and what good can I do her, poor soul?
22568She even has old Lundi Druro crumpled up-- what do you think of_ that_?
22568She no use those gifts I give her? 22568 She very pretty?"
22568Suffer torment for a year?
22568Sure you do n''t mind my leaning on you? 22568 Surely the Kafir was able to describe him, if he had been in the habit of meeting him every three months?"
22568That old bleak beast?
22568That you, Dick?
22568The Falcon Hotel, madam?
22568The question is how long would it have stayed in that condition?
22568The reef gone?
22568Then it was_ not_ you following me?
22568Then you think it could have nothing possibly to do with my poor child?
22568Then you_ were_ following me?
22568There is not much hope?
22568Tired?
22568Want to come?
22568Well, what would a Kafir do with thousands of pounds, anyway?
22568Well, will you promise me, darling?
22568What I want to know,pursued Kenna sombrely,"is-- why, if Diana Vernilands jumped overboard, does this girl go masquerading under her title?"
22568What about Sir Denis, Nan?
22568What about his own mine?
22568What about sending someone to remind him?
22568What are mines compared to jack- pots?
22568What ca n''t she do?
22568What do you mean by bringing your devilish good spirits here? 22568 What do you mean by this?
22568What do you mean, dear?
22568What do you mean? 22568 What do you mean?
22568What do you mean? 22568 What does Sir Charles think of his chances?"
22568What gifts were those, Rachel?
22568What good will it do us? 22568 What happened after you had been to the outhouse?"
22568What happened then?
22568What in God''s name----?
22568What is it mother?
22568What is it, darling?
22568What is the meaning of this intrusion, Miss Chaine? 22568 What is the use of youth and good looks when one is poor and lonely?"
22568What is this new African horror?
22568What is this wine- woman- and- song stunt you are on now, Lundi?
22568What worse?
22568What''s that funny little patch of white on your hair?
22568What''s the use of standing there stuffing up my view?
22568What--_what_?
22568When did you get back? 22568 When was it, Roddy?"
22568When?
22568Where are Ghostie and the others?
22568Where are we?
22568Where is Roddy?
22568Where is the hotel?
22568Which one?
22568Who are you? 22568 Who could it possibly be?"
22568Who is it? 22568 Who is it?"
22568Who told you?
22568Who was Carol?
22568Who was it, then? 22568 Who''d have thought to find you here, Lady Di?"
22568Whose house is this? 22568 Whose then is the Babylonian litter with trappings of scarlet and gold?"
22568Why are they searching? 22568 Why are you here, Rosanne?"
22568Why are you hiding from me? 22568 Why do n''t you keep your wretched little mongrel at home?"
22568Why should n''t she know at once? 22568 Why should you have such a down on her?"
22568Will never be able to marry, mother?
22568Will you go to the Mount Nelson Hotel?
22568Will you take me away from this cruel country, Lundi-- as soon as we are both better?
22568Would n''t it be cooler out where we were sitting this afternoon?
22568Yes, is n''t it a pity? 22568 Yes,"he assented eagerly;"but how did you know about my real mammie being dead?"
22568Yes; is n''t it? 22568 Yes?"
22568You appear to suffer from curiosity?
22568You are Lady Diana Vernilands, I think?
22568You come see me die, missis?
22568You come see me, missis?
22568You do n''t happen to own a mine, I suppose?
22568You do n''t mean to say you fellows came in a thing like that?
22568You do n''t think I tracked you down? 22568 You have news?"
22568You said that?
22568You see that, do n''t you?
22568You surely can not suppose Roddy was in any danger from his mother, Miss Chaine-- or that I would harm him?
22568You take my baby?
22568You think, then, it is_ my_ name that should be left with the smirch on it?
22568You want me to return to England?
22568You will allow a natural curiosity in me to demand why you should wear the name and retain the possessions of my friend Lady Diana Vernilands?
22568You_ were_ frightened, then?
22568Your nannie?
22568_ What?_"She has been waiting to speak to you all the afternoon; they all have, but they could not face the crowd.
22568_ You live here?_she faltered, and sat down suddenly, trembling from head to foot.
22568("Is it possible that she has so much grace in her?"
22568A decoration?
22568A rhyme of her childhood came unsolicited into April''s mind: How many miles to Banbury?
22568After that, who could tell?
22568All good things run in threes, do n''t they?"
22568And if they did not,_ why did n''t they_?
22568And please would you like your big trunks from the hold brought here, or will you pack in the baggage- room?"
22568And why does one hurt you?
22568And you remember what your mother said this morning?"
22568Are you looking for a place?"
22568Are you sick, Rachel?"
22568Are you strong enough physically and well- enough off financially to undertake such a burden?"
22568Besides, how can she go at once?
22568But could he be trusted?
22568But do you love me more than certain other things?
22568But if he chose not to go his ways----?
22568But instead-- what?
22568But tell me, where are you going, all prinked out in your walking- things?"
22568But what booted it to Sophia Ozanne to triumph over other mothers when her mind was filled with forebodings and unhappy problems?
22568But what mother''s heart could ever comfort its pain for the loss of one loved child by thinking of those that are left?
22568But, first drive to the''Falcon,''will you?
22568But----""But?"
22568Can you imagine any one running such awful risks for the sake of diamonds, Nan?
22568Can you see now?"
22568Can you two fellows carry her?
22568Could he, then, have gone to the cemetery?
22568Dared he offer it to her?
22568Did n''t I come straight down here and tell her?
22568Did that devil get you, too?
22568Did you not meet as old friends?"
22568Did you read of that awful case of suicide in yesterday''s paper-- that man, Syke Ravenal, who has been robbing De Beers?
22568Do be a sport and consent, wo n''t you?"
22568Do you know her?"
22568Do you mean walk through this wild bush?
22568Do you think I do n''t know what you were doing that you forgot?
22568Do you think I would_ purposely_ miss such a keen pleasure as it is to dance with you-- and the honour of having your first waltz given me?"
22568Do you think Mrs. Hading is badly wounded?"
22568Do you think you ought to go out?"
22568Does it hurt like this when the soul is trying to escape from the body?"
22568Druro said casually:"How are we going to sit?"
22568From what, may I ask?"
22568Had she the right to disclose the secret before first consulting the other girl, or at least telling her what she meant to do?
22568Had their last hour come?
22568Hading?"
22568Have you come to tell mother that we love each other?"
22568Have you no bowels?
22568Have you, Miss Chaine?"
22568He''s a born reformer-- aren''t you, Tobe?
22568He''s the only man for you-- the only man who can----""Can what?"
22568How can poverty- stricken wretches like us contend with that kind of thing, I''d like to know?"
22568How dare you come bursting into Mr. Saxby''s house like this?"
22568How dare you make that abominable noise?"
22568How dare you?"
22568How dared Diana Vernilands do this thing to her?
22568How dared he?
22568How do you do, Ronny?"
22568How far is it?"
22568How had it come there?
22568How long am I to stay?"
22568How should they?
22568How, then, should she love Bernard van Cannan''s children?
22568I am tormented with the thought that she may have known something of him-- yet how could she?"
22568I chose Africa, because it sounds so nice and racy in novels, does n''t it?
22568I do n''t think you and I had better know each other too well to begin with, do you?
22568I hope everyone has their letters ready?
22568I hope you do n''t mind?"
22568I think you promised?"
22568I thought you lived at the club?"
22568I will see you through the Customs, and drive you up afterwards, and make all arrangements-- shall I?"
22568I would kill any one I could who stood in my way-- do you understand?
22568If it had been_ you_, now----""Do you mean that I should have been forgiven by reason of my position?"
22568If when he heard all he still wished to stay?
22568Is it a new fashion?"
22568Is the engagement still going on?"
22568Is this the way you keep faith?
22568It was too horrible to think that she had been sitting there all this time, wasting precious moments, while Roddy was-- where?
22568It''s the same pair you danced to the dawn in last week-- why should it hurt you now?
22568Like to have a go at him?"
22568Lucky, was n''t it?
22568May I go to her now?"
22568May one now sleep for a while?"
22568O God, where, and in what cruel hands on this night of fierce storm and stress?
22568Oh, Diana, how can you?
22568Oh, Miss Chaine, am I a coward?"
22568Oh, Rosanne, how could you?
22568Oh, how dared he come to her with gifts of flowers in his hands straight from a guilty intrigue with another man''s wife?
22568Oh, why had she not looked in?
22568Or do you think you are my wet- nurse?
22568Or for her opinions on my ways of living?
22568Or shall we say that we were at school together?"
22568Perhaps if I could wipe the blood out of my eyes, Gay-- where the deuce is my handkerchief?"
22568Perhaps the beautiful stranger would solace him for the wound Gay''s hand had dealt?
22568Perhaps you heard it and that made you come?"
22568Pomegranates, nectarines, and bananas began to roll in every direction, to the inconvenience of the passers- by, but what did that matter?
22568Promise me you wo n''t draw back, if the worst comes?"
22568Put a trap- parcel, I suppose, and pounce on him when he comes to fetch it?"
22568Saltire?"
22568Saltire?"
22568Saxby?"
22568Shall you be married in bright colours, as you always said you would?
22568She no use them?"
22568She not get all she want without buy?"
22568She only fixed her sad and lovely dark eyes on his and said quietly:"Is that all you have to say to me, Lundi?
22568Should he go and fetch it?
22568Some were marked with slabs of lime- worn[ Transcriber''s note: time- worn?]
22568Still, a blind man without means of his own----""_ What?_"She fired the word at him like a pistol- shot.
22568Still, what was the use of caring?
22568Tell me, how are your own affairs, darling?
22568That Diana was not overboard seemed certain; but what new folly had she committed?
22568That not so?"
22568They have no inkling, of course, that it was you who met Hiangeli and paid him?"
22568They walked awhile in a silence that had hopelessness in it; then Christine asked:"Did you search every outhouse and barn?"
22568They were all by way of being captains and colonels, were n''t they?"
22568Thought you meant to turn up and dance tonight?"
22568Was the ship on fire, or wrecked?
22568We will turn it into a garden, and make it blossom like the rose-- shall we?"
22568Were n''t you one of the hounds on my track?"
22568What are you?
22568What booted it if he were blind?
22568What brought you here?
22568What did you bring a crowd for?
22568What do you want?"
22568What foolishness had she herself been guilty of to put it in another''s power to thus injure her?
22568What had made her turn white, then, if she were not afraid?
22568What must he think of her, slinking guiltily away without a word of explanation or farewell?
22568What on earth could be wrong?
22568What on earth could it be that was so much more ravishing than to be at peace with the world, respected by it, liked by it, and yet independent of it?
22568What other place?
22568What shall we do?"
22568What was Vereker Sarle thinking of her?
22568What was at the bottom of it all?
22568What''s the matter with a nice mule, even?"
22568When was it that he had gone?
22568When-- when?"
22568Where are you hurt?"
22568Where could the unhappy, distraught creature have been hiding while the trial of Roddy was in process?
22568Where do you think of going?"
22568Where else, then?
22568Where shall I be at the end of the voyage with the frivolous reputation you are building up for me?"
22568Who asked her to take me, I wonder?
22568Who could she be?
22568Who have you got with you?"
22568Who is she?"
22568Who will bet that it wo n''t stop hurting after this dance?"
22568Who would understand him as she did, and protect him?
22568Who''s going to mind what they say?"
22568Who''s hurt here?"
22568Who''s that, I wonder?"
22568Why ca n''t people use horses, like gentlemen?
22568Why did n''t you come before?
22568Why had not Meekie been at her post as usual?
22568Why had two of the van Cannan sons died sudden deaths?
22568Why not call in the district man?"
22568Why not two?
22568Why should a_ Thing_ come and tell her to mind the children?
22568Why was she not coming to this watchful land frankly and with clean hands, instead of in the coils of a foolish pretence?
22568Why was the lure of a pink palace at the bottom of the dam fostered in the third?
22568Will I be there by candlelight?
22568Will you forgive me?"
22568Will you not believe me?"
22568Wo n''t I?
22568Would he go from the Cape to his home up north without trying to see her again?
22568Yet how could she leave the children, leave Roddy, desert the father''s trust?
22568Yet, could she?
22568You do n''t mean to give me away?"
22568You do not think me mad, I hope?"
22568You giving it to that old bush?"
22568You remember, Gay?
22568You wo n''t be sick of it half way and want to change back, I hope?"
22568and was this the result?
22568they inquired of one another,"and who is the man it is hurting for?"
22568you''ll come?"
29903But this can not be a man? 29903 But what do I see?
29903''Who are these three ladies?''
29903(_ b_)_ Objective_: Is the work very good, good, mediocre or bad, compared with the normal human average?
29903(_ d_) A heavily tainted couple, desperately enamored of each other, came to me in great distress to ask:"May we get married?"
29903= Civil Marriage.=--What then is civil marriage, and what ought it to be?
29903= Conclusions.=--What are the principal conclusions to which we are led by this short study of the ancestral history or phylogeny of man?
29903= Definition of Morality.=--How can we define morality or ethics?
29903= Human and Religious Morality.=--What then constitutes ethics or true human morality?
29903= The Fate of Prostitutes.=--What becomes of prostitutes in the course of time?
29903According to the legend, sodomy was a vice of the inhabitants; is this why it is punished at the present day?
29903All State regulation of prostitution is to be absolutely condemned; but what position should civil law take up with regard to free prostitution?
29903And we should sit still and witness our civilization go into decay and fall to pieces without raising the cry of warning and applying the remedy?
29903But has confession been specially instituted for this type of character?
29903But of what use is it to be jealous?
29903But this is hardly explicit, for what do we understand by good and evil?
29903But what else?
29903But what is charity but the synthesis of the social sentiments of sympathy, devotion and self- denial, for the benefit of humanity?
29903But what is the use of being blind to such patent facts?
29903But when suddenly freed from all pain she immediately replied:"How could it hurt me, Theophilus?
29903But why should they be hidden?
29903Can it be conscientiously said that hygiene has benefited?
29903Can not it, therefore, be established on another basis than that of cheques to be drawn on paradise?
29903Can not man also be more happy in giving than receiving?
29903Can we pretend that they are properly prepared for it?
29903Do they imagine that they have done anything that will improve these children?
29903Does a normal man ever marry without knowing what he is doing?
29903Does not this account to a large extent for the great number of unhappy marriages recorded nowadays?
29903Does the whole duty of the doctor consist in dissuading the patient from marriage?
29903Have they punished the real culprit?
29903How are we to begin?
29903How can it be otherwise in a species which has lived for thousands or perhaps millions of years as small hostile tribes, separated from each other?
29903How can one judge and condemn one''s neighbor without having the least idea of the state of mind of these pariahs of society?
29903How could I prove the matter before a tribunal?
29903How does the law obtain the right to punish an act which does no harm to any one, nor to society, nor even to an animal?
29903How is it possible for a young girl to remain pure in mind after such conversations with an unmarried man?
29903How is it that such a brave and industrious woman can feel repulsion toward her own child?
29903If no mystery is made of these things in the case of plants and animals, why should not instruction be given in human reproduction?
29903In order to prepare our daughters for marriage, is it not logical to begin by telling them what it is, what it involves and what it exacts?"
29903Is he conscientious?
29903Is it necessary to say that any self- respecting doctor who is aware of this state of affairs should never countenance such marriages?
29903Is it not a ridiculous and cruel irony to call_ natural children_ those born apart from marriage?
29903Is it surprising that love in such cases becomes replaced by bitterness and despair?
29903Is it to be wondered that they have recourse to prostitution?
29903Is not the quality of dogs improved by breeding from the good and eliminating the bad?
29903Is she not more prepared for the depths of vice than for conjugal life?"
29903Is that morality?
29903Is the man less guilty than the woman in procreation apart from marriage, if we can use the term guilt in such cases?
29903Is the pupil worthy of trust?
29903Let us return to our example: why does the idea of my wife call to mind that of the journey?
29903Must husband and wife, who love and esteem each other, be separated?
29903Nudity.=--What is the origin of the fact that man is ashamed of his genital organs?
29903On the other hand, are not cowardice, falseness and meanness, etc., reproduced with quite as much certainty in other families?
29903Or should they abandon sexual intercourse all together and live like brother and sister?
29903Sexual continence in wedlock?
29903Should the law punish artificial abortion?
29903Starvation?
29903Then her terrestrial lover, Theophilus, forcing his way through the crowd, burst her bonds and said with a sad smile,"Does it hurt you, Dorothea?"
29903There is one question, however, which arises: Can prostitution in itself be regarded as a misdemeanor punishable by law?
29903This traffic is formally prohibited by most laws; but what are laws made for, if not to be broken?
29903Well, how is it to be done?
29903What are the effects of this state of things on the sexual life of modern society?
29903What can one reply to such logic?
29903What can we expect from the descendants of a population so completely degenerate?
29903What happens when two persons live exclusively for each other, if one of them dies?
29903What is human right?
29903What is the use of procreating healthy and robust children if they are vain, egoistic, impulsive, crafty, wanting in will power, or perhaps criminal?
29903What is the use of prosecuting inverts?
29903What is the use of the theoretical belief in free- will in this case?
29903What is to be done when law and religion forbid the application of preventive measures and even prosecute the person that recommends them?
29903What is to be done?
29903What standpoint are we to take in the sexual domain, which is free from prejudice, with regard to true human morality?
29903What then are the types of men which we should endeavor to produce?
29903What was she to do?
29903What will be the consequences of such a state of things?
29903What will marriage be like?
29903Who then can decide where art ends and pornography begins, or how far eroticism may without danger be expressed in art?
29903Why can not the same means of existence which allow concubinage suffice for marriage?
29903Why did you bring me into this world?
29903Why not teach them?
29903Why should a more and more international union between men be impossible?
29903Why should men be the only ones to perform obligatory social service?
29903Why should that be so?
29903Why should the common use of an international language and the suppression of war between civilized countries be Utopias?
29903Why should the mother conceal the fact that it is nearly the same in man as in animals?
29903Why should the suppression of the use of narcotic substances such as alcohol, opium, hashish, etc., which poison entire nations, be Utopian?
29903Why that of the trunk?
29903Would it not be wiser to take things in time and warn them of the dangers ahead?
29903_ Fecisti fornicationem contra naturam, i d est, cum masculis vel animalibus coire, i d est, cum equo, cum vacca vel asina, vel aliquo animali?_( vol.
29903_ Fornicationem fecisti cum masculo intra coxas; ita dico ut tuum virile membrum intra coxas alterius mitteres, et sic agitando semen funderes?_ 3.
30542About two, I suppose?
30542According to what canons of beauty, I wonder?
30542And now?
30542And why?
30542But have you forgotten-- what you came for?
30542By the bye, what was your college?
30542Could not a friend there do some good for you?
30542Dearest, can you take a short holiday? 30542 Did he love you?"
30542Did he pay you back?
30542Did you ever tell-- your husband that you loved him?
30542Do I count for no one?
30542Do n''t you know that I am almost ruined? 30542 Do you know that man is driving me slowly mad?
30542Do you know that you made me wretchedly nervous? 30542 Do you mean to say that you are offering me the principal part in a play of yours-- at the Pall Mall-- with Fergusson?"
30542Do you mind opening the window?
30542Do you think a woman is like that?
30542Have you come, Mr. Matravers,he asked coldly,"to make your peace?"
30542Have you no friends then, or relations who will help you?
30542How could I?
30542I believe you doubt my ability, but you need not"143Do you know that man is driving me slowly mad?"
30542I have scarcely said''thank you''yet, have I?
30542I want to know whether you have arranged with your friend?
30542I was surprised,he answered;"how could I help it?
30542If we can love and be pure,he said hoarsely,"what is sin?
30542If you do n''t want to wake Mr. Matravers, will you take me up to bed, please?
30542Is it true,she asked him,"that you did not intend your play for the stage-- that you wrote it from a literary point of view only?"
30542Is it worth while recalling all these things?
30542It was unusual, perhaps,he admitted;"but who is not weary of usual things?
30542May I come in with you?
30542May I come in?
30542Must you really go? 30542 Shall I tell him home?"
30542The little boy''s mother?
30542This is your writing, is it not?
30542Was not this Lady Truton''s night?
30542Watching me?
30542What can I do?
30542What do you mean, sir?
30542What is Art but Truth? 30542 Who is there that cares?"
30542Why do n''t you speak to me? 30542 Why not?
30542Why not? 30542 Why should I lose anything?"
30542Why?
30542Will you come too?
30542Will you forgive me now,he said,"if I hurry away?
30542Will you lunch with me at my rooms on Sunday and meet her? 30542 Will you tell him?
30542Will your father be at home now?
30542Wo n''t you see me home?
30542Yes?
30542You admit her talent, then?
30542You are an invalid, too, are you not?
30542You did see his face, then?
30542You have not forgotten me, then?
30542You know Mr. Thorndyke, do n''t you? 30542 You mean it?"
30542You want what?
30542You will come and see me again-- very soon?
30542You will not bear me any ill will?
30542You wish for no more rehearsals, then?
30542After all, what good had he done?
30542Am I correct?"
30542And Matravers, why did he not speak?
30542And, I wonder,--do you take a morning paper?
30542But I can not help my views, can I?
30542But then you had very little choice, had you?"
30542But will you forgive me if I say so-- I am very sure that some day you will be a deserter?"
30542Can one do anything for women like that?
30542Can you understand me, I wonder?
30542Do n''t you hear?
30542Do n''t you regret your handiwork a little?"
30542Do n''t you understand?
30542Do n''t you?"
30542Do you doubt your love or mine?"
30542Do you realize that only the day before yesterday we passed one another here with a polite stare?"
30542Does that mean that you will not listen to me, that you mean to judge me unheard?
30542How are they to tell between the true love and the false?"
30542How is it that you are altogether alone in the world?"
30542If it was true that his pen had done her this ill turn, did he not owe her some reparation?
30542If so, will you bring it when you''ve done with it, or an old one will do?
30542If thirty seemed old to her, what must she think of him?
30542Is he asleep?
30542Is it indeed only a few hours since we parted?
30542Is my face very buggy?
30542It is a brilliant piece of satirical writing, of course, but need you have been quite so severe?
30542It is best to be truthful, is it not?
30542Matravers interrupted him with a question,--"Wo n''t your mother be frightened to see you like this?"
30542May we-- can I,"he added, glancing down the stone passage,"show you to your carriage?"
30542Oh, why do you make me humble myself so?"
30542Shall I give it up?"
30542Shall I give up Bathilde-- and the stage?
30542Shall I tell you what I have been vain enough to think sometimes?
30542Shall you mind a tiresome railway journey?
30542Should we be sinless then?"
30542Tell me, are those pure women who willingly give their souls and their bodies in marriage to men who have sinned and who will sin again?
30542That would have been worse than this, would it not?
30542To live and die old maids, whilst men became regenerated?
30542What did she require, then, of her sex?
30542What did you think of my writing to you, of my persistence?
30542What have I done to be humbled like this?"
30542What is it that you fear?
30542What is that?"
30542What is there to keep me?
30542What on earth has kindled the destructive spirit in you to such an extent?
30542What was he like?"
30542What will you have?"
30542What----""These gentlemen will bear me witness that you did say so?"
30542Why do I say these things to you, I wonder?
30542Will you come and see me?
30542Will you leave me?"
30542Will you not help me to keep it?"
30542Will you read to me for a little?
30542Will you-- shake hands?"
30542You are not in a hurry, are you?"
30542You will come and see me again-- very soon?"
30542[ Illustration:"Do you know that man is driving me slowly mad?"]
30542and if my book be not true, how can it know anything of art?
30542he murmured,"you are sure?"
30542what do you say to a walk down through the Park?
30542you did not spare it, did you?
30235And will your mother pity me, Who am a maiden most forlorn?
30235Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades?
30235Dost thou not mind, old woman,he said,"How thou madest me sup and dine?
30235Is she not passing fair?
30235O wha is this has done this deed, And tauld the king o''me, To send us out, at this time of the year, To sail upon the sea? 30235 O where will I get a gude sailor, To take my helm in hand, Till I get up to the tall top- mast, To see if I can spy land?"
30235O, have they parishes burnt?
30235O, what have they done?
30235O, who are these,the sheriff he said,"Come tripping over the lee?"
30235Vaine glorious Elfe,( saide he)"doest not thou weet,{21} That money can thy wantes at will supply?
30235What lets but one may enter?
30235What news? 30235 What news?
30235What secret place( quoth he)"can safely hold So huge a masse, and hide from heaven''s eie?
30235_ Must we quote all these good people who have nothing to say? 30235 ''Our work,''said I,''was well begun: Then, from thy breast what thought, Beneath so beautiful a sun, So sad a sigh has brought?'' 30235 ( Said Christabel,)And who art thou?"
30235--_Leigh Hunt._"Has any one, since Shakespeare and Spenser, lighted on such tender and such grand ecstasies?"
30235= Arm''d with thunder, clad with wings.= What do these expressions mean?
30235= Sounds, not arms.= Does the poet allude to the cultivation of oratory and poetry among the Romans and the neglect of military affairs?
30235= as women men.="As women value men,"or"as women by men are valued"--which?
30235= hurled them.= Hurled what?
30235= thrice he slew the slain.= How could he slay the slain?
30235And what can ail the mastiff bitch?
30235And what will you give to a silly old man To- day will your hangman be?"
30235Are all the Aonian{1} springs Dried up?
30235Are honor, virtue, conscience, all exiled?
30235As to be heard where ear is none; As lead to grave in marble stone, My song may pierce her heart as soon; Should we then sing, or sigh, or moan?
30235But who can hope his line should long Last, in a daily- changing tongue?
30235Can she the bodiless dead espy?
30235Death is the end of life; ah, why Should life all labour be?
30235Does she steer the tissued clouds"with radiant feet,"or does she steer herself down the tissued clouds?
30235Fled is that music:--do I wake or sleep?
30235Fond,{39} impious man, think''st thou yon sanguine cloud, Raised by thy breath, has quenched the orb of day?
30235He rolleth in his Recordes; He saith,"How say ye, my lordes?
30235Heard ye the din of battle{26} bray, Lance to lance, and horse to horse?
30235Hovered thy spirit o''er thy sorrowing son, Wretch even then, life''s journey just begun?
30235How do the barges differ in appearance and movement from the shallop mentioned two lines below?
30235How happens it, that amongst the least, in spite of pedantrie, awkwardnesses, we meet with brilliant pictures and genuine love- cries?
30235How happens it, that when this generation was exhausted, true poetry ended in England, as true painting in Italy and Flanders?
30235How schal the world be servëd?
30235How will she be enthroned?
30235How wilt thou now the fatal sisters move?
30235I have said elsewhere:''A simple child That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death?
30235In this wild maze their vain endeavors end: How can the less the greater comprehend?
30235Is it the lay sung in memory of mild Llewellyn?
30235Is not my reason good?"
30235Is the night chilly and dark?
30235Is the sable warrior{23} fled?
30235Is there any peace In ever climbing up the climbing wave?
30235Is there anything in honest poverty to cause one to hang his head, etc.?
30235Is there confusion in the little isle?
30235Is there no pity, no relenting ruth, Points to the parents fondling o''er their child?
30235Is there, for honest poverty, That hangs his head, and a''that?
30235Martinmas wind, when wilt thou blaw, And shake the green leaves off the tree?
30235Milton elsewhere says:"Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine, enchanting ravishment?"
30235O gentle death, when wilt thou come?
30235O wherefore should I busk{6} my heid, Or wherefore should I kame my hair?
30235On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I had stood before, When will return the glory of your prime?
30235Or at the casement seen her stand?
30235Or finite Reason reach Infinity?
30235Or have they robbed any virgin?
30235Or is it the lay which soft Llewellyn sang?
30235Or is she known in all the land, The lady of Shalott?
30235Or other men''s wives have ta''en?"
30235Or swynkà « with his handës, and laboure, As Austyn bit?
30235Or where hast thou thy wonne,{31} that so much gold Thou canst preserve from wrong and robbery?"
30235Perhaps it is the owlet''s scritch: For what can ail the mastiff bitch?
30235Said Christabel,"How camest thou here?"
30235Say, heav''nly muse, shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant God?
30235Say, may I be for aye thy vassal blest?
30235Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, or may be again?
30235The lovely lady, Christabel, Whom her father loves so well, What makes her in the wood so late, A furlong from the castle gate?
30235The night is chill; the forest bare; Is it the wind that moaneth bleak?
30235The taverner tooke me by the sleve,"Sir,"sayth he,"wyll you our wyne assay"?
30235Thy beauty''s shield, heart- shaped and vermeil dyed?
30235To what do they refer?
30235Waking or asleep; Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream-- Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream?
30235We shall become the same, we shall be one Spirit within two frames, oh wherefore two?
30235What are_ radiant_ feet?
30235What does the word_ sweet_ modify?
30235What fields, or waves, or mountains?
30235What is it breathes life into their books?
30235What is it that will last?
30235What is the meaning of= rains=?
30235What is the meaning of_ humor_?
30235What is this condition which gives rise to so universal a taste for poetry?
30235What kind of glories will Mercy wear?
30235What love of thine own kind?
30235What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain?
30235What picture is presented to the imagination in the first five lines of this stanza?
30235What pleasure can we have To war with evil?
30235What sees she there?
30235What shapes of sky or plain?
30235What thou art we know not;-- What is most like thee?
30235What though the greedy fry Be taken with false baits Of worded balladry, And think it poesy?
30235What was the character of his education and of the other influences which shaped his life and distinguished his works?
30235What were the conditions under which he wrote this piece?
30235What woful stuff this madrigal would be, In some starv''d hackney sonneteer, or me?
30235Where dost Thou careless lie Buried in ease and sloth?
30235Where is it now, the glory and the dream?
30235Where will she sit?
30235Whither is fled the visionary gleam?
30235Who has not felt the same aspirations as regards the world of his mind?
30235Who is this?
30235Why are Mercy''s feet radiant?
30235Why are the Cherubim"helmed,"while the Seraphim are"sworded"?
30235Why are we weighed upon with heaviness, And utterly consumed with sharp distress, While all things else have rest from weariness?
30235Why should we only toil, the roof and crown of things?
30235Why stares she with unsettled eye?
30235Why will the opening of Heaven''s high palace wall be"as at some festivall"?
30235Why_ alien_ corn?
30235[ FROM"WHY COME YE NOT TO COURT?"]
30235and the brook, why not?
30235and what is here?
30235he said,"Or have they ministers slain?
30235lies Thespia waste?
30235of= rain= in the next stanza?
30235thou silly old man, What news, I do thee pray?"
30235thou silly old woman, What news hast thou for me?"
30235we have all that can be performed by elegance of diction or sweetness of versification; but what can form avail without better matter?
30235what ails poor Geraldine?
30235what ignorance of pain?
30235what news?
30235what news?
30235what solemn scenes on Snowdon''s height Descending slow their glittering skirts unroll?
30235what traitor could thee hither bring?
30235when I learnt{3} that thou wast dead, Say, wast thou conscious of the tears I shed?
31511Hath shee done it?
31511Old Alice[ Norrington?]
31511Was this woman fitting to live?... 31511 You have foure Imps, have you not?
31511''Did you not send such an Impe to kill my child''?
31511''Yes''....''Are not their names so and so''?
31511***** Justice.-- Come, come: firing her thatch?
315111674?
31511And the keeper of the wardrobe, what was the part that he played?
31511And was I not there enjoyned by a necessity to the discoverie of this Brood?"
31511And why?
31511And, supposing these narratives were true, would they prove anything?
31511But is it not possible to believe that the social grouping of these men had an influence?
31511But what were the rector of Stanford Rivers and the keeper of the great wardrobe doing there?
31511But why go into details?
31511But why should we trace out the confessions, charges, and counter- charges that followed?
31511Can we doubt that their decisions were influenced by that fact?
31511Did he write soon after the events, when they were fresh in his memory?
31511Did that detection of fraud never occur to the judges, or had they never heard of the famous boy at Bilston?
31511Did the pamphleteer himself hear and see what he recorded, or was his account at second hand?
31511Did the parties that were said to have been killed by witchcraft really die at the times specified?
31511Does his narrative seem to be that of a painstaking, careful man or otherwise?
31511Given a personal Devil who is constantly intriguing against the kingdom of God( and who would then have dared to deny such a premise?
31511Had Doctor Cole been appointed in recognition of the claims of the church?
31511Had her sister perhaps suggested that the justice was offering mercy to those who confessed?
31511How are we to account for these phenomena?
31511How did it happen that just at this particular time so drastic a measure was passed and put into operation?
31511How was it known that she went half a mile?
31511How, then, were real cases of bewitchment to be recognized?
31511I?
31511I?
31511If this were true, what would become of all those bulwarks of religion furnished by the wonders of witchcraft?
31511Is it not likely that there were in England itself certain peculiar conditions, certain special circumstances, that served to forward the attack?
31511Is this the Joan Baker of Exeter mentioned a few lines above?
31511Katherine Earle struck a Mr. Frank between the shoulders and said,"You are a pretty gentleman; will you kisse me?"
31511Mrs. Crosse had once kept a girls''school-- could it be that there was some connection between teaching and witchcraft?
31511Now, the problem that arose at once was this: How can the souls of witches leave their bodies?
31511Or did the assize courts, which resumed their proceedings in the summer of 1646, frown upon him?
31511Or was he meeting with increased opposition among the people?
31511Shall we, they asked, discredit all human testimony?
31511That, of course, he was not; and his leaning towards superstition on these points makes one ask, What did he really believe about witchcraft?
31511The Tryal, Examinations, and Confession... before the Lord Chief Baron Wild.... By James[ Edmond?]
31511The attorney then asked,"When dyd thye Cat suck of thy bloud?"
31511The practical question is, not how would the law operate, but how did it operate?
31511The question naturally arises, What was the occasion of this law?
31511Then arose the problem: How does this process differ from death?
31511This brings us back to the point: What had the conjurers to do with witchcraft?
31511Was it because the men of the law possessed more of the matter- of- factness supposed to be a heritage of every Englishman?
31511Was it because their special training gave them a saner outlook?
31511Was it not their province to overcome the machinations of the black witches, that is, witches who wrought evil rather than good?
31511Was the attorney- general acting as presiding officer, or was he conducting the prosecution?
31511Was there a falling off in interest?
31511Was this the Christiana Weekes of Cleves Pepper, Wilts, who in 1651 and 1654 was again and again accused of telling where lost goods were?
31511Well neighbour, sayth one, do ye not suspect some naughty dealing: did yee never anger mother W?
31511Were they harmless beings with malevolent minds?
31511Were they not good witches?
31511What is witchcraft?
31511What was the nature of the delusion seemingly shared by eight people?
31511What was to be done with it?
31511What was to be done with the witches?
31511What were these witches, then?
31511When all the fraud and false testimony and self- deception were excluded, what about the remaining cases of witchcraft?
31511Who knew that it was seven minutes?
31511Why did they leave out the very essential of the witch- monger''s lore?
31511Why did they not speak at all of the compacts between the Devil and witches?
31511Would he have stood by this when pushed into a corner?
31511[ 17] Can we wonder that a student at such pains to discover the fact as to a wrong done should have used barbed words in the portrayal of injustice?
31511[ 22]_ Ibid._, 5; John Darrel,_ An Apologie, or defence of the possession of William Sommers..._( 1599?
31511[ 50] What, then, were they?
23441''I suppose we shall be seeing your brother, the Duke, over here before long?'' 23441 ''What opinion have you formed of our society women and clubmen, on board the Willie?''
23441A sunshade? 23441 Accept anyone?"
23441Afraid of you?
23441Are n''t you afraid to leave so many things outside on the verandah?
23441Are n''t you now?
23441Are you Brett, or is Brett you, or is he somebody else?
23441Are you going on journalistic business?
23441Are you sure it is n''t a private hansom?
23441Are you_ sure_?
23441Are you_ sure_?
23441But I thought you were n''t going to leave the hotel till I wrote?
23441But do n''t you miss him?
23441But how was it you went away from Newport?
23441But so is all America, is n''t it?
23441But what is going to be done for the one who saved the little boy''s life?
23441But why is a handle needed?
23441But would they have me?
23441Ca n''t he be stopped?
23441Ca n''t you trust me?
23441Can you be ready in twenty- five minutes? 23441 Change?"
23441Could n''t they, though? 23441 Dear me, are you really proposing, and it is n''t in joke?"
23441Dear me, who and what does a lord serve?
23441Did n''t even give them a wee mite of hope?
23441Did you never see any before?
23441Do n''t you know? 23441 Do n''t you think Cousin Katherine knows more about such persons than you?"
23441Do n''t you think she might? 23441 Do n''t you think you are just as_ good_?"
23441Do you happen to know, miss, what''s the income- tax in your country?
23441Do you know if a telegram came for Miss Woodburn yesterday?
23441Do you like hops, Lady Betty?
23441Do you remember Margaret Taylour telling anecdotes of Cora? 23441 Do you suppose he-- minds?"
23441Do you think so?
23441Do you think that will bring them?
23441Do you truly need to have me answer that question?
23441Do you wish it may give me what I want most in the world?
23441Do you, an English girl, a daughter of the aristocracy, tell me that?
23441Great, strange, factories of some sort?
23441Had you a good time?
23441Has Madame gone down?
23441Has she been ill?
23441Have you fed the squirrels yet?
23441Have you?
23441Hops?
23441How about divorces?
23441How are you going to manage?
23441How are you, Duke? 23441 How can you tell?"
23441How can you tell?
23441How did Mrs. Ess-- I mean, Mrs. Stuyvesant- Knox happen to ask for a visit from me?
23441How do you do?
23441How do you know?
23441How do you propose to escape?
23441How have you got along, you poor, deserted darling?
23441How long does it take an English girl to get fond of a man?
23441How_ dare_ they?
23441How_ did_ you know?
23441How_ do_ you do?
23441I daresay, you can guess what it''s about?
23441I guess it depends more on the man, in your climate, does n''t it?
23441I hope you forgive me?
23441I was wondering about-- class distinctions in America?
23441I''ve finished my business in Chicago, already, and----"What, while I was away?
23441I?
23441If it got out that I had run away, would there be a scandal?
23441In Society?
23441In what way?
23441In what?
23441Is Miss Woodburn stopping here?
23441Is it a fancy dress for a little girl?
23441Is it a sad story, dear?
23441Is it anything to do with the Customs? 23441 Is it invidious to be a daisy?"
23441Is n''t Rosemary a pet?
23441Is n''t it extraordinary that he should be in the steerage?
23441It''s Jameson B. Harborough, is n''t it?
23441It''s something, is n''t it? 23441 It_ is_ late, is n''t it?"
23441It_ is_ you, is n''t it? 23441 Lady Betty, is that you?"
23441Lady Betty,remarked Mr. Brett,"I wonder if there''s another girl like you in the world?"
23441Lady Bulkeley?
23441Let you do what?
23441Let''s join them, shall we?
23441Look here, Betty, are you going to be a good little girl, and do what you''re bid, without making a fuss?
23441May I go and get some peanuts?
23441May Sally and I go and see the horse with you?
23441My room?
23441Not come? 23441 Not even in Newport?"
23441Now, little girl, do you understand, and have you forgiven me?
23441Now,said Mrs. Ess Kay, slipping her arm into mine,"I wonder, dear child, if you would mind being left alone to deal with the custom- house people?
23441Now,said Sally, coaxingly,"you might tell me if he''s one of the three who proposed?"
23441Oh, Katherine, do you think even Letter B, which sounds so like a warning to young men, a proper chaperon for a Duchess''s daughter?
23441Oh, Sally, Sally_ Woodburn_, will anybody believe I said such things as these?
23441Oh, Sally, are they_ all_ for me?
23441Oh, Sally, how came you to think of such a thing? 23441 Oh, is_ that_ the reason you pretended to be only Jim Brett?"
23441Oh, no, can one do that?
23441Oh, were you one, too?
23441Oh, what are Plebs, if you please? 23441 Oh, why not?"
23441Oh, wo n''t there? 23441 On purpose for what?"
23441Or is it a sort of governing body like-- like the Council of Three?
23441Patty?
23441Poor fellow, it does n''t look much like it now, does it? 23441 Regret?
23441Seem''s to me that''s somebody''s birthday, is n''t it?
23441Shall I call you Lady Betty then?
23441Shall I? 23441 Something from me?"
23441Still-- it_ is_ romantic, is n''t it? 23441 Suppose a lot of the people you want refuse you, so that they can be fresh for the ball?"
23441Suppose they should be stolen?
23441Surely you do n''t bob to them?
23441That''s not a bad trick, is it?
23441The new San Francisco millionaire?
23441The question is, what is to be done with Betty?
23441The question is,she was saying,"what''s to be done with Betty?"
23441The_ smell_?
23441Then I wonder if I might ask a little favour of you?
23441Then could you find me a Chicago one?
23441Then why is n''t he happy?
23441There was n''t anything else for me to do, was there?
23441To have the one you love best on earth love you?
23441To have the world at your feet?
23441To see me?
23441To- night?
23441Too?
23441Us?
23441Violets?
23441Was n''t it? 23441 Was that the thing you thought would change me toward Cora Pitchley?"
23441We?
23441Well, and if you did? 23441 Well, how are you feeling about things now?"
23441Well? 23441 What Great Disappointment are you talking about?"
23441What Harborough is your friend?
23441What about Vivace?
23441What about the Duchess?
23441What about your friend whose business you''ve come to attend to?
23441What about your own?
23441What are the Four Hundred? 23441 What are they?"
23441What can that have to do with it? 23441 What could Cora Pitchley say that would have any particular effect on me?"
23441What did I tell you about my friend in San Francisco? 23441 What did the women do?"
23441What did they do about the Banns?
23441What difference can a hundred or so years make?
23441What do you mean by home?
23441What do you mean?
23441What do you think of her?
23441What do you think of him now?
23441What do you think of that?
23441What do you want most? 23441 What do you wish mine may give me?"
23441What for?
23441What have my traditions got to do with it?
23441What kind of fun?
23441What of it? 23441 What time is breakfast?"
23441What was the gentleman like?
23441What would your mother the Duchess think of them-- now, honour bright? 23441 What''s a pity?"
23441What''s deevy?
23441What''s the good of wasting time?
23441What''s the matter with the horse?
23441What, at the first go? 23441 What_ is_ it?"
23441Where are the other shops, and the houses, and the people?
23441Where did you spring from?
23441Where do you find that?
23441Where''s the rest of it?
23441Where, where?
23441Who has dared to make you cry?
23441Who_ has_ sent it to you, Betty?
23441Why Suffer? 23441 Why do you think England is such a wicked country?"
23441Why do you want to queer the show?
23441Why extraordinary?
23441Why should n''t she have dared, when you come to think of it?
23441Why, I supposed it would be ever so much more than five pounds to get to Chicago, which is almost in Central America, is n''t it?
23441Why, is n''t that partly what you come to Newport for?
23441Why, this is n''t friendship, is it? 23441 Why, what do you think she did, when I mentioned that the huge bells on Mr. Jacobsen''s cows kept me awake nights?
23441Why, what will they_ do_ with him?
23441Why?
23441Will you forgive me?
23441Will you have to say good- bye soon?
23441Will you-- shall we change?
23441Will you?
23441Would I propose to Lady Betty Bulkeley in joke?
23441Would n''t let you bathe?
23441Would n''t they be delighted to keep you?
23441Would n''t you really mind seeing me hanging around-- sometimes? 23441 You do n''t think they''ll send for you to come home at once?"
23441You gave him my note? 23441 You have as much faith as that in me?"
23441You mean I''ve tried his temper?
23441You mean all this, Lady Betty?
23441You mean, he can''hustle,''as the saying is with us, and get rich, so as to stand on an equality with millionaires?
23441You think of me as your friend?
23441You''re English, are n''t you?
23441_ Could n''t_ we go some other way round?
23441_ Do_ you think there is anybody who could drive me?
23441_ May_ I walk with you?
23441_ Would_ I? 23441 ( Did n''t an executioner braid the hair of some queen whose head he was going to chop off? 23441 Am I_ quite_ out of it now, or can it be true that you care for me-- just a little, little bit?
23441And I asked where the place was, and if it was far off?
23441And I was sure she would add,"How much has he got?"
23441And if she has n''t got her heart too much set on anybody else, could you try to use your influence for me?
23441And is it all decided, whether I like or not?"
23441And my dear little dog that_ somebody_ sent me, does seem to take an extraordinary fancy to you, does n''t he?"
23441And sha n''t I be proud to show you around?
23441And shall you bow?"
23441And wo n''t you keep the big one too?
23441Are n''t you delighted?"
23441Are they Republicans or Democrats?"
23441Are they a kind of Light Brigade, like the Six Hundred?"
23441Are you allowed valets?"
23441Are you sure you wo n''t regret anything you may have to give up?"
23441As for the why s and wherefores, Mother''s been telling you, has n''t she?"
23441Betty, ca n''t you do something?
23441Brett?"
23441Brett?"
23441But I ca n''t help not being in love with Mr. Parker, can I?"
23441But I did n''t; and what I should like to know is, what does a girl do, if she''s poor and has to live in New York?
23441But am I asking too much?
23441But at last she said,"Penny for your thoughts, deah?"
23441But how could I help it?
23441But how could you pass the day?
23441But how did you know that-- and how did you know me?"
23441But is n''t it_ too_ extraordinary?
23441But now you understand, will you forgive me?"
23441But then, were n''t they-- and was n''t he-- part of my dream?
23441But what about you?"
23441But who would have thought of a lake being like that?
23441But why should anything be done with me?
23441But you know I did drop hints sometimes, did n''t I?
23441But you know that without my telling you, do n''t you, my Lady Witch?"
23441But-- but of course we''re not likely to meet him again, are we?"
23441But----""Ever been on this side?"
23441But----""Have n''t you met any man you could imagine yourself caring for, deah?
23441But----""He''ll come some day, wo n''t he?
23441Cora just looked at the things, and said:''What makes you think so?''
23441Could n''t I make it Countess, to show my respect?"
23441Could n''t you find out for me, as she thinks such a lot of you?
23441Could n''t you see my agony?"
23441Could you imagine yourself marrying without first being in love?"
23441Did he talk to you?"
23441Did he thank you prettily?"
23441Did n''t that maid of my sister''s take you something a little better from me?"
23441Did you ever hear of him?"
23441Do get mine like yours, wo n''t you?"
23441Do n''t you like the bathing dress?"
23441Do you ever have trained nurse- maids in England?"
23441Do you know how to find it?
23441Do you mind if I introduce you to each other?"
23441Do you recognise him?
23441Do you remember?
23441Do you think she looks delicate?"
23441Do you think so?
23441Do you think we might walk for a few minutes-- and get cool?"
23441Do you want a Perfect Complexion?
23441Great wealth?"
23441Had you any proposals?"
23441Have you a box or basket you can let down with string, if I toss a ball of it up to you?"
23441Have you ever thought about what it would be like to be in love?"
23441Have you never been to Trouville or Ostend?"
23441He is rather wonderful-- considering his station-- isn''t he?"
23441He''s coming to us?"
23441How did Mrs. Stuyvesant- Knox ever have the poor Wrong Setters for acquaintances, though?"
23441How does he know Lady Betty likes dogs?
23441How lovely it is in this pergola, is n''t it?
23441How old is she?"
23441How shall I describe the sensation it gave me, as Mrs. Ess Kay''s electric carriage smoothly spun me up town?
23441I could hear her saying:"Who_ is_ he?"
23441I do n''t know whether it''s a verb or adjective, do you?"
23441I do wonder, by the way, why one always has an innate sense of contempt for trippers, and longs to be sniffy and show one''s own superiority?
23441I guess that kind of evens things up, do n''t it?"
23441I guess, now, you think that Florida is in South America?"
23441I have heard so much about Newport, do n''t you know?
23441I never talked like this to you before, but you see what I mean; and now, is n''t what I''ve said any inducement?"
23441I tell you what it is, Honourable, I wo n''t have much use for some of our fellows if they let her go back, eh?
23441I wonder if Mr. Brett knew?
23441I wonder if you have ever met her brother, the Duke of Stanforth, and her cousin, the Marquis of Loveland, over in London?"
23441Is Vic engaged yet?"
23441Is it Miladi''s wish that I untie the ribbon, and take out one or two for her to carry?"
23441Is it a suburb of New York?"
23441Is it so with you, too?"
23441Is n''t it?"
23441Is that all?"
23441It''ll be rather_ conducive_, wo n''t it?"
23441It''s almost terrible when they say"Who_ Is_ she?"
23441Just at meals, you know-- or to take you a drive once in awhile?"
23441May I thank you for your goodness on shipboard?
23441Might n''t word be sent by messenger at once?
23441Mighty hot day, is n''t it?
23441My first thought was:"Can it be really true or is it only a dream that I''m engaged to Jim?"
23441Oh, I am sorry for everybody who is n''t in love, are n''t you?
23441Oh, how_ could_ you think such a thing of me?
23441Oh, what_ shall_ we do?
23441People felt aggrieved if they had to go away without at least a hearty"How do you do?"
23441Perhaps you''ve heard of it?"
23441Promise you''ll let me be the first one to introduce you to both?"
23441Say, Lady Betty, if you_ are_ going in with us, can I make out your card?"
23441Say, Lady Betty, let me, wo n''t you?"
23441Say, do you mean it, honour bright?"
23441Say, wo n''t you just_ play_ we''re engaged, anyhow, and see how you like it?"
23441Shall I have some caught and dragged here?
23441Smart, was n''t it?
23441Soon I forgot all about the letter, for the puppies were the dearest ducks on earth( can puppies be ducks, I wonder?
23441Stuyvesant- Knox?"
23441Surely it is n''t your double?"
23441That would show appreciation, would n''t it?"
23441The great man only laughed, but a lanky customer who overheard drawled out:"What, steal from Whit Walker of Hermann''s Corners?
23441The only question is, would_ you_ be happy?
23441The wedding would be in ten days, and surely, I had n''t been thinking of going back to England as soon as that?
23441Then she went on,--irrelevantly, it seemed at first:"What day of the month is to- morrow?"
23441They did n''t follow him towards us, but lifted their heads and stared complacently, as much as to say,"Is n''t he a splendid fellow?
23441This is the young Lady Bulkeley, is n''t it?
23441To their"How do you do?"
23441Vivace was very much surprised, and jumped up with his paws in my lap, as if he were saying,"What_ is_ the matter?"
23441We all thought we were going to be afraid of you, but I guess we wo n''t, will we, Patty and Ide?"
23441We can live in a sweet little cottage somewhere, ca n''t we?
23441What can the scenery have done to Americans, that they should do their best to spoil it?
23441What do men over on your side of the water do to convince you girls that they think you''re as beautiful as you really are?"
23441What do you think about love, Betty?"
23441What do you think of them as compared with Englishmen?"
23441What is it?"
23441What''s that got to do with it?"
23441What''s your opinion on the subject-- as you seem to be rather interested in Harborough?"
23441What_ is_ your idea, anyway?"
23441When I excused myself, Mrs. Ess Kay laughed, and said,"Then what about that sherry cobbler?"
23441When we went back, the first thing that Mrs. Ess Kay asked, was:"Well, what about Lord Mohunsleigh?"
23441Where on earth did you spring from?"
23441Why should n''t he, since I''d given him up for the reasons I had?
23441Will they allow him to sleep and eat too?"
23441Will you make a lengthy visit?"
23441Wo n''t you have a cocktail?
23441Would my other boxes_ never_ come?
23441Would n''t you like to see it?"
23441Would n''t you rather be near Miss Woodburn than anything else, until your future plans are settled?"
23441Would you like to see it?
23441Would you object to my being in the same train?
23441Would you-- let me show you the sights of Chicago?"
23441You know how prompt she is, once she''s made up her mind?
23441You remember Miss Woodburn, do n''t you?"
23441You saw her happy family?
23441You wo n''t be offended?"
23441You''d like to please her-- and your sister and brother, would n''t you?
23441You''ll help me, wo n''t you?"
23441You_ do n''t_ regret asking me, do you?"
23441Young and unmarried, is n''t he?"
23441Your brother''s the Duke of Stanforth, is n''t he?"
23441_ Now_ do you understand why my cousin Katherine makes narrow eyes for some people, and broad smiles for others?"
23441_ This_ is n''t unlike that arbour, is it?
23441_ Why_ am I going?
23441she would respond"How do you do?"
32248Art thou not it that hath cut Rahab and wounded the dragon? 32248 Eli, Eli, lama sabacthani?"
32248*****"Then Jessie said,''The slogan''s dune, But can ye no hear them noo?
322486, quartet("Who hath seen the Troubadour?
32248And let the Prince of Ill Look grim as e''er he will, He harms us not a whit; For why?
32248And why prefer Acis to my embraces?"
32248Are you Christian monks or heathen devils, To pollute this convent with your revels?"
32248As it comes to an end he continues his song("Heavenly Tones, why seek me in the Dust?
32248Before she enters she sings an aria, of a tranquil, dreamy nature("Whither away, my Heart?
32248Do you not think that this might develop into a new style of cantata?
32248For why, rejecting the Cyclop, dost thou love Acis?
32248Huntsman, who gave thee the Diamond Ring?
32248In the next two numbers, an adagio("To whom can I turn me?
32248Is this a tavern and drinking- house?
32248It is followed by Mephistopheles''serenade("Why dost thou wait at the Door of thy Lover?
32248It is followed by the tenor recitative and aria,"Why hast Thou, O my God, in my sore Need so turned Thy Face from me?"
32248Know ye not it is forbidden By the edicts of our foemen?"
32248Mazeppa( 1862); The Page(?).
32248O dinna ye hear The slogan far awa?
32248Say, who can lift the deathly blight That covers king and lord and knight, To give them back to life and light, And awake them?"
32248The MacGregors?
32248The Queen appeals to him,"What seest thou, O King?"
32248The cantata has no overture, but opens with a choral introduction("Where is the Maiden of Mortal Strain?").
32248The catastrophe accomplished, the work closes with the sad lament of Galatea for her lover("Must I my Acis still bemoan?")
32248The chorus intervenes with a reflective number("What thinks she now?
32248The chorus,"Why, my Soul, art thou vexed?"
32248The last scene opens with a joyous chorus of the people("Say, have ye heard the Tidings of Joy?
32248The musical setting of the question,"What sought they?"
32248The next melody, an_ allegro vivace_,--"What see I?
32248The next number is an effective alto solo("Art thou not it which hath dried the Sea?")
32248The second part opens with the curse of the prefect, a very passionate aria for bass("What mean these Zealots vile?
32248The second("Thou Delphic Rock, who can he be?")
32248The sentiment of the latter is expressed by the following verse:--"What mean this revel and carouse?
32248Then follows a full chorus beginning with male voices in unison("Why, my Soul, art thou cast down?
32248Then who shall call the branches bare, When gems like those are sparkling there?"
32248Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?''"
31072And what has all this to do with the Iroquois?
31072Bruised by the rough mail?
31072Whose ghost?
31072Will Horace Walpole''s tongue never stop scandal?
31072''Is the coach gone?''
31072''The coach?
31072''Then she came to the question, which I knew was awaiting me, and asked how I_ spelt_ my name?
31072--_À la bonne heure_; but wo n''t they come back again, think you?
31072A reader may say-- by no means in his haste, but after consideration-- not merely"Where is the slightest sign of insanity in these?"
31072And I pray thee thank thy kind uncle and aunt for her(?)
31072And must n''t it be acting favourably on the morality of the country?
31072And what less trite-- except to tritical tastes and intellects-- than this letter?
31072Are they good letters as such, and of how much goodness?
31072Besides, can an absent man make any observations upon the characters, customs, and manners of the company?
31072Book- keeper?''
31072But I have been sitting half an hour by the poor young lady''s sofa, and talking stuff and nonsense, have n''t I?
31072But Lockhart?
31072But when the further questions are raised,"What_ is_ that kind?"
31072Can anything be more full of pathos?
31072Could I doubt about protecting the daughter of Corellius?
31072Dear old b.h., shall I see it again soon?
31072Did I not tell you to leave off that beecely jimnayshum?
31072Did you ever see it?
31072Do not you hear the fountain?
31072Do not you smell the orange flowers?
31072Do you remember the servant''s joke in the farce of"High Life Below Stairs"where the cook asks,"Who wrote Shakespeare?"
31072Do you think, in earnest, I could be satisfied the world should think me a dissembler, full of avarice or ambition?
31072For what can they be supposed to be about?
31072For what else would my feeling be, born and bred as I am, and with the not ignoble tombs of my fathers before my eyes?
31072Has anyone ever tried"breaking up"a letter( such as those to be given hereafter) into a conversation by interlarded comment, questions, etc.?
31072Have I not been on my knees to her these three weeks, and are n''t the poor old joints full of rheumatism?
31072Have I not reason then to desire this from you; and may not my friendship have deserved it?
31072Have they been presented as letters should be presented for reading?
31072Have you no room at Court?
31072Have you read the_ New Bath- Guide_?
31072He cocked his hat, clapped his hand to his sword, asked which of the gentlemen was it that was maligning his family?
31072How should I know?
31072Howls, my dear Mrs. Harris?
31072I do not doubt but I shall be better able to resist his importunity than his tutor was; but what do you think it is that gives him his encouragement?
31072I feel it, of course, the more deeply, in proportion to the painful disappointment in other quarters.... Am I bitter?
31072I was told that it was the devil who was bound in that style-- but who can make anything of four saints?
31072If I were to come there now, I wonder should I be allowed to come and see you in your night- cap-- I wonder even do you wear a night- cap?
31072In other words,"Is this_ persona_ or_ res_?"
31072Is Paris more agreeable than London?
31072Is it in earnest that you say your being there keeps me from the town?
31072Is there anything thought so indiscreet, or that makes one more contemptible?
31072Is there going to be always Somebody sick at the brown house?
31072LADY MARY SIDNEY(?
31072Myrmidons at your tents, ant- born, or only a mob on the Gillies''Hill?
31072No, I long to be rid of you, am afraid you will not go soon enough: do not you believe this?
31072Not my ugebond?"
31072Now is n''t it a comfort to your old bones to have written such a book, and a comfort to see that fellows are in a humour to take it in?
31072Pray, tell me how you like her, and what fault you find in my Lady Carlisle''s letter?
31072She is a nice woman, Madam Fish, besides; and did n''t I abuse you all to her?
31072Should I attempt to do this, might I not condemn the greater part of our Liturgy,& c.?
31072Sir,-- Who would be kind to one that reproaches one so cruelly?
31072Suppose, after being so long virtuous, I take a fancy to cakes and ale, shall your reverence say nay to me?
31072TO SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE Sir,-- You say I abuse you; and Jane says you abuse me when you say you are not melancholy: which is to be believed?
31072Time fifty- five minutes, falls plentiful, started thirty, and came in eight, and did n''t the old mare go?
31072Was it his fault that he did not associate with everybody in the house as well as with me?
31072Was n''t I dead drunk with a whole pint of lemonade I took at White''s?
31072Well, now about the duel?
31072What are we thinking of?
31072What did I say?
31072What kind of servant do you want?
31072What shall I say to you about the Ministry?
31072When do you return?
31072When is L^d Str:[111] to be married?
31072Where are you going to?
31072Who is a-''owling?
31072Why did I call Lockhart a cad?
31072Why do you go at all?
31072Will she really?
31072Will you have clansmen for your candlesticks, or silver plate?
31072Would n''t she have been a nice lady''s- maid for your mother and Miss Bally Saxter?
31072Would you mind handing it to Rudyard Kipling with the enclosed note?
31072You do n''t believe in such things as ghosts, do you?"
31072[ 23] It is no business of ours here to embark on the problem,"What was the dram of eale"that ruined all this and more"noble substance"in Cowper?
31072[ 87]"About"?
31072_ Quoi!_ May I not have my rattle as well as other elderly babies?
31072and remarks on a greenhouse?
31072and should I not stand self- condemned for so doing?
31072and to ask them also to meditate a little over the two beautiful epitaphs on Epictetus and Zosima, quoted in the last paper of the_ Idler_?
31072and"Is it the best, or even a very good kind?"
31072but"How on earth did it happen that the writer of these_ ever_ went mad?"
31072how do those that live with them always?
31072stop it, can not you stop it?''
31072xxii.,"Am I not thine ass?"
2986A vocabulary, then, is sometimes a handicap?
2986But what in hell is an oesophagus? 2986 Do you believe the things you say?"
2986How long did you keep your pilot- memory?
2986How many?
2986I suppose you still remember some of the river?
2986Man adapted to the earth?
2986Oh yes, that is it, I thought it was--(naming a name which has escaped me) wo n''t you write it down for me?
2986Reporters?
2986Still you-- are going to publish it, are you not?
2986Was n''t that the courteous thing to do?
2986What is the one- third extra-- the odd melon-- the same?
2986What would you do?
2986What''s an oesophagus, a bird?
2986What''s it all mean, anyway?
2986Why in nation did you offer him your cue?
2986A critic with a sense of humor asked:"Please excuse seeming impertinence, but were you ever adjudged insane?
2986Am I right?
2986And ignorantly& unthinkingly?
2986And what is the appendix for?
2986Are our morals so inadequate that we have to borrow of niggers?"
2986Are the Blue and the Gray one to- day?
2986Are there in Sir Walter''s novels passages done in good English--English which is neither slovenly nor involved?
2986Are there passages which burn with real fire-- not punk, fox- fire, make- believe?
2986Are there passages whose English is not poor& thin& commonplace, but is of a quality above that?
2986Are you sure it was clams?
2986As concerns the man who has gone unpunished eleven million years, is it your belief that in life he did his duty by his microbes?
2986Better lo''ed ye canna be, Will ye no come back again?
2986Blasphemy?
2986But what of that?
2986By searching?
2986CCXLVIII"WHAT IS MAN?"
2986CCXXVI"WAS IT HEAVEN?
2986Can you read him and keep your respect for him?
2986Clara, dear, after the luncheon-- I hate to put this on you-- but could you do two or three little shopping- errands for me?
2986Could she feel the wrinkles in my hand through her hair?
2986Could you lend an admirer$ 1.50 to buy a hymn- book with?
2986Did he know how to write English,& did n''t do it because he did n''t want to?
2986Did you get wet?
2986Did you want to saddle that disaster upon us for life?"
2986Do n''t you care more about the wretchedness of others than anything that happens to you?''
2986Do serenity and peace brood over you after you have done such a thing?
2986Does he ever chain the reader''s interest& make him reluctant to lay the book down?
2986Does he keep him in mind years and years and go on contriving miseries for him?
2986Does man regard the difference?
2986Does one build a boarding- house for the sake of the boarding- house itself or for the sake of the boarders?
2986For 6 days now my story in the Christmas Harper''s"Was it Heaven?
2986Goodness, who is there I have n''t known?
2986Has he funny characters that are funny, and humorous passages that are humorous?
2986Has he heroes& heroines who are not cads and cadesses?
2986Has he heroes& heroines whom the reader admires-- admires and knows why?
2986Has he paused& taken thought?
2986Has he personages whose acts& talk correspond with their characters as described by him?
2986He asked:"Have you heard the news about San Francisco?"
2986He did not suspect what had happened until he heard one of the daughters ask:"Katie, is it true?
2986He probably referred to the Monday Evening Club essay,"What Is Happiness?"
2986He said:"Is it your idea, then, that man is perfectly adapted to the conditions of this planet?"
2986He wished to receive the full value( who does not?)
2986Helen Keller wrote: And you are seventy years old?
2986Hereafter if you must write such things wo n''t you please be so kind as to label them?
2986How could that impress Adam?
2986How could you do it?
2986How much money does the devil give you for arraigning Christianity and missionary causes?"
2986Howells, startled for a moment, whispered:"What in the world did he wear that white suit for?"
2986I was greatly pleased and asked:"Who gets the extra one?"
2986II L. Is it true the human race thinks the universe was created for its convenience?
2986If he ca n''t get renewals of his bric- a- brac in the next world what will he look like?
2986If we are going to be gay in spirit, why be clad in funeral garments?
2986If you can play that way left- handed what could you do right- handed?''
2986Interest?
2986Is it a joke or am I an ignoramus?"
2986Is it one prayer?
2986Is the Rebellion ended and forgotten?
2986L. Am I not, to a man, as is a billion solar systems to a grain of sand?
2986L. And the air?
2986L. Do you know what a microbe is?
2986L. Does he forget him?
2986L. Employs himself with more important matters?
2986L. Has she been out to- day?
2986L. He commits depredations upon your blood?
2986L. How many men are there?
2986L. In ten days the aggregate reaches what?
2986L. In that costume?
2986L. Now then, according to man''s own reasoning, what is man for?
2986L. Then what?
2986L. Then why punish him?
2986L. To what intent are these uncountable microbes introduced into the human race?
2986L. What am I to man?
2986L. What is he for?
2986L. What is the sea for?
2986L. When was this?
2986L. Who is it?
2986L. Why?
2986L. Why?
2986L. You took a cab both ways?
2986Man kills the microbes when he can?
2986May I send you the constitution& laws of the club?
2986Now then, with this common- sense light to aid your perceptions, what are the air, the land, and the ocean for?
2986Now, will that do you?"
2986OR HELL?"
2986Oh, Katie, is it true?"
2986Once, writing to Jean, he asked: What is your favorite piece of music, dear?
2986One paper celebrated him in verse: Who killed Croker?
2986Opening one of the papers, a telegram, he read:"In which one of your works can we find the definition of a gentleman?"
2986Or a gullet?
2986Or is it a gull?
2986Or is the report exaggerated, like that of your death?
2986Out of this grew the story,"Was it Heaven?
2986Put a trap like that into the midst of a tragical story?
2986Reverence for what-- for whom?
2986Said Clemens: Do you notice?
2986Shall we ever laugh again?
2986She kept her contract to the letter; but when she rose to go she said, in a voice of deepest reverence:"May I kiss your hand?"
2986She said,"What is the name of your sweet sister?"
2986She was determined to go out again, but---- L. How did you know she was out?
2986Speaking as a member of it, what do you think the other animals are for?
2986The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story,"Was it Heaven?
2986The two sums aggregate- what?
2986Then he broke out:"Why ca n''t a man die when he''s had his tragedy?
2986Then he was likely to say:"Why did n''t you stop me?
2986Then if Satan should come, he would slap him on the shoulder and say,''Why, Satan, how do you do?
2986Then who is it, what is it, that they worship?
2986Then:"What does he call it?"
2986To Twichell he wrote, playfully but sincerely: Am I honest?
2986Was it Grady who killed himself trying to do all the dining and speeching?
2986What are deciduous flowers, and do they always"bloom in the fall, tra la"?
2986What are his tonsils for?
2986What are you going to do, you poor soul?
2986What are your plans for getting left, or shall you trust to inspiration?
2986What is Jean doing?
2986What is his beard for?
2986What is it?
2986What is there to say?
2986What more could be said of any one?
2986What would it be for the whole human population?
2986When I brought him the prints, a few days later, he expressed pleasure and asked,"Why did n''t you make more?"
2986When did larches begin to flame, and who set out the pomegranates in that canyon?
2986When shall I come?
2986When the dictation ended he said:"Have you any special place to lunch to- day?"
2986When we reached the entrance of the dining- room he said:"Is n''t there another entrance to this place?"
2986Who is to decide what ought to command my reverence-- my neighbor or I?
2986Who lit the lilacs, and which end up do they hang?
2986Who so poor in his ambitions as to consent to be God on those terms?
2986Why did n''t you take thirteen?"
2986Why did you let me go on making a jackass of myself when you could have saved me?"
2986Why does he affront me with the fancy that I interest Myself in trivialities-- like men and microbes?
2986Why should not China be free from the foreigners, who are only making trouble on her soil?
2986Why, Clara, are n''t you going to your lesson?
2986Will Kanawha be sailing after that& can I go as Sunday- school superintendent at half rate?
2986Will ye no come back again?
2986Wo n''t you come back and do that again?"
2986Would you like me to come out there and cry?
2986Writing to MacAlister, Clemens said: Florentine sunshine?
2986You say,"Is this it?--this?
2986after all this talk and fuss of a thousand generations of travelers who have crossed this frontier& looked about them& told what they saw& felt?
2986can a body do it to- day?
2986or Hell?"
2986or Hell?"
2986or Hell?"
19855''And that is medicine for him?'' 19855 ''Oh, Mr. Salisbury,''said she,''I''ll speak with you presently,--will you be so good as to wait there a minute?''
19855A good suggestion,said Trevannion, laughing;"will you pay for me, Hamilton?"
19855A great deal of use it is giving you any information, is it not, sir? 19855 A lecture?"
19855About what?
19855After what you saw yourself? 19855 Ai nt they beauties, Louis?"
19855Am I to conclude from your silence that you have no excuse to make?
19855And Churchill?
19855And do you imagine that your brains will be edified by coming in contact with these books?
19855And he found it out-- and did n''t he tell of it?
19855And how came you to give it to him?
19855And so you bore the blame-- and did you not try to clear yourself?
19855And so you did it out of revenge?
19855And so, Louis, you are the hero,said Vernon;"and what is the drama in which you have been acting so much to your credit?"
19855And to whom is this promised?
19855And what did he say about your brother that chafed you so much?
19855And what might that be?
19855And what was your motive?
19855And what?
19855And who is Kenrick-- one of the masters?
19855And why did you not put it away?
19855And why need I prevent it?
19855And why put off till to- morrow what may be done to- day so well?
19855And will you say you can do nothing? 19855 And you are ignorant of the party?"
19855And you could n''t help yourself? 19855 And your feelings are quite changed now?"
19855Any one else?
19855Apologies can do little good-- eh, Norman?
19855Are Hamilton and Trevannion invited?
19855Are the histories alike?
19855Are we going to the downs?
19855Are we to be prepared with a choice quotation from Thucydides, or is it a hint that we are to remember duty first and pleasure afterwards?
19855Are you coming with the candle there?
19855Are you engaged this afternoon?
19855Are you going immediately, sir?
19855Are you going to Bristol, Frank, for I''m off?
19855Are you going to be a clergyman?
19855Are you going to make a martyr of yourself for a set of bad fellows who are a disgrace to the school?
19855Are you going to turn Paladin for her ladyship?
19855Are you inclined for a walk, Trevannion?
19855Are you not pleased?
19855Believed what?
19855But I may help him to do it for himself, may I not?
19855But Louis, will you?
19855But are the stones there?
19855But does Fudge know any thing about his old pranks?
19855But how came your perfect Mr. Hamilton to choose such a friend?
19855But how is it that you want to learn your lesson now,asked Louis?
19855But how, Hamilton?
19855But is that any reason you should forget that you are a gentleman?
19855But suppose I make your possible requirements a condition of my engagements,said Louis, archly;"you have no objection to that, have you?"
19855But what shall we do, Reginald? 19855 But where is the poem?"
19855But will he not mention what has passed?
19855But, father, how can I? 19855 Ca n''t you get somebody else to show you?"
19855Ca n''t you get under the form?
19855Ca n''t you let him alone?
19855Can you be so inexorable?
19855Can you spare me a few minutes?
19855Churchill, sir,replied Louis, in great agitation;"you did, Churchill, did you not?
19855Coleridge''s_ Ancient Mariner_; I was going to read it,replied Louis;"but now Alfred has come we shall talk: shall we not, Alfred?"
19855Come, Salisbury, what is it?
19855Dear Hamilton,he said, at length,"I have a very great favor to beg of you-- would you let me come in a little every morning to read with you?
19855Did Casson seem sorry, Hamilton?
19855Did Ferrers come to fetch any thing, Alfred?
19855Did I not desire that none of those desks should be touched at present?
19855Did Mortimer ask you for it?
19855Did he wish for it?
19855Did he?
19855Did n''t he put it into your head, and help you to do it?
19855Did n''t you tell him of his mistake?
19855Did no one stay at home? 19855 Did she ever get to the king of the peacocks, Louis?"
19855Did you know him then, sir?
19855Did you not see it come in through the half- open door just now?
19855Did you speak?
19855Did you?
19855Did your brother know you were there?
19855Do n''t you think so?
19855Do n''t you think this looks very much like treating resolution?
19855Do you believe it?
19855Do you know Mr. Fraser has invited me to his musical parties?
19855Do you know any thing of this matter?
19855Do you know of any thing, Hamilton?
19855Do you know that God is very angry when we call each other bad names, and surely you do not wish to revenge yourself? 19855 Do you know where he is, please?"
19855Do you like it better?
19855Do you like to spend your money in cakes?
19855Do you mean to tell him you have given away any?
19855Do you recognize the figure? 19855 Do you remember learning that hymn?"
19855Do you think I''ve forgotten?
19855Do you?
19855Does any one know where Louis Mortimer is?
19855Does he deny it?
19855Does your majesty concede, or not?
19855Dr. Wilkinson''s is a very nice place, I believe, is it not?
19855Found me out, sir?
19855From home, Reginald?
19855Fudge has a dinner party to- night, has n''t he?
19855Hamilton,said Louis, gently laying his hand on Hamilton''s,"may I ask one thing?"
19855Has he been here before?
19855Have you any idea how your bag came there?
19855Have you found all out, sir?
19855Have you never left your pencil- case about lately, nor lent it to any one?
19855Have you never used it at all?
19855He did n''t do so, surely?
19855He may look on them, may he not?
19855He said you had taken it, I dare say?
19855Henry, will you remember the address?
19855How am I to know what people think, if they do n''t speak, or if I do n''t see them?
19855How are you, foolish boy, this morning?
19855How came that about?
19855How came the doctor to begin this rigmarole?
19855How could I forget? 19855 How could I have put it here without knowing?
19855How could we?
19855How could you commit such a what- do- you- call it? 19855 How dare you talk in such a manner?
19855How did Gruffy get hold of them?
19855How did this happen?
19855How did you come by this?
19855How did you do it?
19855How did you get it?
19855How do you do, Mortimer?
19855How do you do, lady Louisa? 19855 How do you do?
19855How do you know it was a first- class exercise book, Alfred?
19855How do you like our new- comer, Trevannion?
19855How does he stand for the prizes?
19855How is it you prefer Casson to your friend Clifton?
19855How much paper did you leave there?
19855How shall we get a light?
19855How should I know? 19855 How so?"
19855How so?
19855How so?
19855How will he ever get out of it?
19855How? 19855 I am not arguing on the possibility of such an event, I simply wish to know if you did it?"
19855I appeal to you, Digby-- did you see me touch his book?
19855I have brought you a new school- fellow, gentlemen,said the doctor;"where is Mortimer?"
19855I presume you do not include yourself in the fraternity yet?
19855I sha n''t forget;--oh, Hamilton, you have n''t such a thing as another top, have you? 19855 I suppose you''ll clear up the matter instanter, Hamilton?"
19855I tell you what,cried Reginald, fiercely,"I wo n''t have Louis tormented-- who has taken his book?
19855If I had done it, why did he not accuse me at once, instead of remembering it all of a sudden?
19855If you do not know who has done it, then,said Hamilton,"I am sure your_ guess_ is a very accurate one-- whom do you_ guess_?"
19855Is he a friend of yours?
19855Is it likely?
19855Is it_ really_ nonsense?
19855Is that M._ Ferrar_ or_ Ferrers_ there still?
19855Is that a key?
19855Is that the young gentleman who had charge of you the other day?
19855Is that your brother?
19855Is the paper the same as you used?
19855Is there any moral or physical impossibility in your lessons being learned in the school- room?
19855Is there any thing then to be found out, Louis?
19855It is very likely that I should believe you, is it not? 19855 It''s Gruffy, is n''t it?
19855Let me see-- where are my spectacles?
19855Louis Mortimer,cried a little boy, very smartly dressed,"mamma wants to look at your medal-- will you come and show it to her?"
19855Louis Mortimer-- it is all true-- but what shall I do?
19855Louis, are you coming out this afternoon; what''s the matter?
19855Louis,_ you_ have n''t been telling tales and making mischief?
19855Mathter Louis, you wo n''t be going and making mithchief?
19855May I ask where?
19855May I write to mamma?
19855Mrs. Paget will be so much disappointed,said Mrs. Norman;"are you anxious about your class, too, Master Louis?"
19855Nay,said Mrs. Norman, smiling;"why should you grudge the poor boys their pleasure?"
19855News?
19855No, no,said Salisbury, who had been foremost in the rioting;"cheer up, Louis-- what''s the matter?"
19855Not I; and if she were, what''s the odds? 19855 Not she; she knows better-- don''t you, Sally?"
19855Not to my brother, sir?
19855Nothing?
19855Now, how did this happen?
19855Now, sir, answer directly-- is this impossible?
19855Oh, I see-- a sort of translation-- well, he stole this from Dr. Wilkinson, and said you''d done it?
19855Oh, why?
19855One of your party?
19855Perhaps I may be allowed to profit by the second part of it,said Trevannion, turning to Louis;"will you be kind enough to edify me?"
19855Peters, is that you?
19855Please, Mr. Digby,said the little boy,"will you just show me this?"
19855Pray do n''t think it?
19855Reginald, dear Reginald, tell me,cried Louis, almost frantically;"surely you believe me?"
19855Reginald?
19855Shall man, the great master of all, The only insensible prove? 19855 Shall you be in our class?"
19855Sweet little innocent; of course he do n''t know-- no, in course he don''t-- how should he? 19855 Tell me, Casson, truly, did you mean nothing just now?"
19855Thank you, Louis, you''re a capital fellow; I know it now, do n''t I?
19855That would n''t hinder you from doing what is right, would it? 19855 The doctor is sure not to believe me, and there will be-- oh, who could have left it there?"
19855Then how was it you let them go without you?
19855Then you do n''t think she seemed vexed with me?
19855There they are-- they''re hid; now, there they are again!--now look, who is it? 19855 They are kind, are they?
19855To be sure; what do you suppose I''ve done with them? 19855 To whom were you engaged in default of my sufferance?"
19855To- day, sir?
19855Unless,said Dr. Wilkinson, quietly,"some one has imitated your writing?"
19855WHAT?
19855Was any one with you?
19855Was he tall?
19855Well then, I did not,said Ferrers, turning round with a violent effort;"will that satisfy you?"
19855Well, Louis, how did you get on?
19855Well, and the doctor says,''Who''s this, Mrs. Guppy? 19855 Well, dear it''s a very nice thing that you are wise enough to see it,--and you are happy?"
19855Well, have you forgotten all about it?
19855Well, my dear-- what, is my life in peril from you again? 19855 Well, what is it, madcap?"
19855Well, what now?
19855Well, what then, Frank?
19855Well, what''s the matter?
19855Were you alone?
19855Were you in Bristol this morning, Meredith?
19855Were you learning your lessons in the school- room yesterday afternoon, Mr. Ferrers, at the same time with Louis Mortimer?
19855Were you the only one concerned in this business?
19855What a shame it is!--you do n''t suspect_ us_, Hamilton?
19855What absurdity is Frank about to perpetrate now?
19855What are you doing there?
19855What are you doing?
19855What book did Mr. Hamilton see? 19855 What business have you to question me?"
19855What can I have done with it? 19855 What can he mean, Norman?"
19855What can keep the doctor?
19855What did Fudge say?
19855What did he say?
19855What did he say?
19855What did you do that for, Frank?
19855What do you mean by_ saw a book_?
19855What do you mean, Frank?
19855What do you mean?
19855What do you mean?
19855What do you mean?
19855What do you say, Hamilton?
19855What do you think yourself would be best?
19855What do you want with me?
19855What good is it? 19855 What have I done with it now?"
19855What have we here?
19855What have you there?
19855What have you to do?
19855What have you to say against this, Churchill?
19855What is he after?
19855What is it?
19855What is it?
19855What is the grace of God, my boy?
19855What is the matter with him, Hamilton?
19855What is the matter, Louis? 19855 What is the matter?"
19855What is the seal?
19855What is the will of royalty?
19855What is this, Hamilton?
19855What is your name?
19855What matter?
19855What powerful auxiliary are you depending on?
19855What rubbish have you been talking, you little impostor?
19855What should I want with it? 19855 What should you say if I were to tell you Casson was gone?"
19855What things, Louis?
19855What was strange?
19855What was the matter, my darling?
19855What were you doing at the gate?
19855What were you doing here, sir?
19855What will the fair Louisa do?
19855What will you give me for my news?
19855What would Ferrers want with the Key to The Greek Exercises sir?
19855What''s all this about?
19855What''s been the matter, Frank?
19855What''s his name?
19855What''s in the wind?
19855What''s that, Frank?
19855What''s that, Frank?
19855What''s that, Salisbury?
19855What''s that? 19855 What''s the fun, Frank?"
19855What''s the matter with you?
19855What''s the matter, Frank?
19855What''s the matter, Louis?
19855What''s the row?
19855What''s to be done now?
19855What, for letting his name slip out by accident?
19855What, not the poor little things, Reginald? 19855 What?"
19855When did you come?
19855When did you come?
19855Where are papa and mamma? 19855 Where are you hurt?"
19855Where can the doctor be?
19855Where did you get it?
19855Where have you been, Louis?
19855Where is Frank, I wonder?
19855Where is Louis Mortimer?
19855Where is your companion, sir?
19855Where is your poem?
19855Where? 19855 Where?
19855Where? 19855 Which is yours?
19855Which of you is first now?
19855Who are they?
19855Who did this?
19855Who did, then? 19855 Who do you mean by Oars?"
19855Who do you think would fash themselves about such a little hop- o''-my- thumb?
19855Who is Alfred Hamilton?
19855Who is it that has made us to differ from another?
19855Who is that?
19855Who left the book?
19855Who put such a thing into your head, Louis?
19855Who''s that, Mortimer?
19855Who, indeed?
19855Whose was it?
19855Why ca n''t she come and speak to me? 19855 Why did you not go on, Frank?"
19855Why did you not put it away?
19855Why did you not tell me, at least, that you had taken it, Louis,said Hamilton,"when I was inquiring for it?
19855Why do n''t you tell your friend Hamilton of it, and ask his advice?
19855Why not? 19855 Why not?"
19855Why not?
19855Why not?
19855Why, how old are you?
19855Why, what''s the harm?
19855Will you go?
19855Will you hear only this one thing, sir? 19855 Will you read a little of this with me first?"
19855Will you try to be the same as you were before? 19855 Will your brother know this?"
19855Wo n''t the evening do?
19855Worried to death with that old bore Danby, who''s been going backwards and forwards for the last hour, with''What is your name?'' 19855 Yes,"said Louis, laughing;"how did you know that?"
19855You always talk of the_ money market_, Frank,said little Alfred:"what do you mean by the money market?"
19855You are not angry with me, are you?
19855You are sure that is your writing?
19855You know he would, Sally, or why did you say I was to hide it?
19855You know it?
19855You know, Harry, that I asked you to put it away-- did I not?
19855You mean the''Key,''I suppose?
19855You read your Bible a great deal, Louis, do n''t you?
19855You wo n''t, wo n''t you?
19855You would not check such impressions?
19855Your mother taught you to sing, Louis?
19855_ About_ half a quire; then, I suppose, you do not know whether any of that paper was taken while you were away?
19855_ Clear up the matter?_ How! 19855 _ Only!_ I wonder you could have done it for so long; Ferrers, that was the name, was it?"
19855_ To be sure_,replied the young gentleman addressed:"when did you know a master otherwise the first week?
19855_ Too lazy to find another?_repeated Mrs. Paget.
19855_ Who?_said Louis.
19855''And what''s this at the bottom?''
19855''Hem,''said the doctor,''and who''s this?''"
19855''_ Conticuere_--What''s that, Frank?''
19855''_ It''s Sunday, grandpapa._''Do n''t you suppose I know that?"
19855A thought flashed across Louis''mind, and he asked quickly--"Were you shut up in our class- room that holiday, Alfred?
19855After all that was seen by others?
19855Alfred, why do n''t you move?"
19855All believed him guilty-- and how_ could_ Ferrers act so?
19855And are you not far happier?"
19855And is it not the case around us generally?
19855And pray what else have you forgotten?"
19855And pray why has your weather- cock mind changed?
19855And pray, when might you have accomplished that adroit and praiseworthy feat?"
19855And what hindered him?
19855Are you really fourteen on the 27th?
19855At length he turned his face up to his father, and said--"What would you advise me to do?"
19855Besides, who is to know what''s likely to be safe with such a tell- tale-- a traitor-- in the camp as you are?"
19855But how-- why was it so sudden?"
19855But where is Master Reginald?"
19855Can you recommend us a good milliner, ma''am?"
19855Casson?
19855Danby?"
19855Danby?"
19855Do n''t you think I shall be a most useful character?"
19855Do you choose to go quietly, or to be turned out, eh?"
19855Do you know what you''ll get if you give it back?"
19855Do you not wish it were here?
19855Do you remember cousin Vernon''s laughing at our embrace at Heronhurst?
19855Do you remember the ladies at grandpapa''s?"
19855Does it not seem to you, mamma, as if we see something of heaven in these lovely nights?
19855Dr. Berry, will you be kind enough to attend to these for me, this afternoon?
19855Dr. Wilkinson desired Louis to be silent, and continued his questions--"Did you try to persuade him to use it?"
19855Ephraim shall say, What have I to do any more with idols?"
19855Ferrers, what have you been doing with Kenrick''s Exercises-- I mean the key to it?"
19855Ferrers?"
19855Ferrers?"
19855Guppy?''
19855Hamilton begged one of the boys with him to fetch a light, and taking advantage of the momentary lull, he called out,"Is this Bedlam, gentlemen?
19855Hamilton, I am sure you believe that Louis only intended a joke?"
19855Hamilton, am I not right?"
19855Hamilton, where is your eye- glass?
19855Hamilton, who''s that?"
19855Hamilton,"he added, with a faltering voice, laying his hand on Hamilton''s shoulder--"you do n''t believe I did it?"
19855Has Dr. Wilkinson told you that he has any doubts?"
19855Have you ever been at school before?"
19855Have you heard them ma''am?"
19855Have you not some idea who put your bag there?"
19855He has been remarkably affectionate these few mornings-- hasn''t he, Meredith?"
19855How came it there, and why was it there?"
19855How could it ever be found out?
19855How did it come there?"
19855How did you find it, Hamilton?"
19855How do you do?
19855How long have you been here?''
19855How was it I never guessed?"
19855How-- what''s the matter with you?
19855How?
19855How_ did_ you get them?"
19855I ca n''t understand about the_ keys_--I heard your brother saying something about them-- what keys?
19855I know you are making yourself miserable about this church- going, and what need is there?
19855I only see a little bit, but of course you know the rules and all the rest,--well, was that all?"
19855I say, Louis, did you ever see the inside of the stable over the way?"
19855I see, it is Clifton, is it not?--how do you do?"
19855I shall leave at the holidays, and then I will tell Dr. Wilkinson; will you-- can you-- to save a fellow from such disgrace, spare me a little longer?
19855I suppose you are very fond of music, Louis?"
19855If there were an errand to be run among the seniors, it was,"Louis Mortimer, will you get me this or that?"
19855If you will not believe me, who will?"
19855Is it likely?"
19855Is n''t that a love of a silk, Louis?
19855Is the boy moon- struck?
19855Is this the way you are going to cheat your masters?"
19855It may be said, How can school- boys be expected to have so much consideration?
19855Louis felt a wish to prolong those gracious words,"Ephraim shall say, What have I any more to do with idols?
19855Louis, are you not ashamed of yourself?"
19855Louis, as I have mentioned, felt very deeply for Ferrers; for, besides their late close connection, had he not known what it was to suffer for sin?
19855Louis, will you, can you do this very great favor for me?
19855Louis?"
19855Mr. Ferrers, on your word of honor, am I to believe your statement?"
19855Mr. Louis Mortimer, who''s right?"
19855Norman, will you hold him back?
19855Norman?"
19855Norman?"
19855Now, Hamilton, did you ever see such a guy?"
19855Now, Louis Mortimer, who gave you this book on the day Mr. Hamilton discovered it in your possession?"
19855Oh-- you see how it was; I dared not tell about it-- how can I hope you can forgive me?"
19855Paget?"
19855Pray can you tell me what was in this envelope?"
19855Pray, what are you going to do with cock- sparrow now you have got him?"
19855Reginald, does it not make you feel very pleasant to see the heap of boxes in the hall?
19855Salisbury, will you have the kindness to put the door between us and his impertinence?"
19855Salisbury?"
19855Secretary?"
19855Shake hands, will you?"
19855Such, and many more, were the deep heart- breathings of the dear boy, and who ever sought for guidance and grace, and was rejected?
19855Suddenly the doctor remarked,--"Have you heard nothing of your poem, Hamilton?"
19855That''s it,--isn''t it, maister?"
19855The question is now, who took it?"
19855Then she stormed out;''Ay, sir, who is it, indeed?
19855WHICH IS THE WISER?
19855WHO SHALL BE GREATEST?
19855Was he ill?
19855We have been treating him very ill, Digby, but next half- year we shall understand him better-- shall we not, Louis?"
19855Were any of your class with you?"
19855Were they the keys of the boy''s desks?"
19855Were you ever at an ordination, Meredith?"
19855What I dislike most is, that he says so often,''What_ did_ Mr. Daunton teach you?
19855What Lady Louisa are you speaking of?"
19855What did he say of your brother that irritated you?
19855What difference need she make in your happiness?
19855What do you mean to do with it?"
19855What do you want in my desk, Hamilton?"
19855What does it matter what such fellows as those think or say?"
19855What good could I get by it?
19855What if he should have sent his cousin unprepared into eternity?
19855What is the matter?"
19855What is your name?"
19855What must I do?"
19855What new wind has blown you round now, eh?"
19855What satisfaction can it be to any one to get that boy into such a mess?"
19855What shall I do next half without you?
19855What shall I do?"
19855What was the matter?"
19855What was the matter?"
19855What will you say to Harris going, too?"
19855What''s all this long story that everybody talks of and nobody knows?
19855What''s that, Trevannion?"
19855What''s the matter, Mortimer?"
19855What''s the matter?"
19855What''s the meaning of these late hours, sir?"
19855What''s the meaning of this, sir?"
19855What, behind you?
19855When?
19855Where are you now?
19855Where have you come from?"
19855Where is Reginald?"
19855Where is the soul- refreshing view Of Jesus and His word?
19855Where''s Ferrers?"
19855Where''s Reginald?"
19855Which of you is it?"
19855Who goes there?"
19855Who is it that speaks?"
19855Who sat with you?"
19855Who will help me?"
19855Who would leave it, eh?"
19855Who''s that long fellow?
19855Whose business is it, I should like to know-- if I choose to throw that unhappy thing on the fire, who is the loser but myself?
19855Why, it''s Harris, is n''t it?
19855Wilkinson?"
19855Will the lady Louisa take my arm?
19855Will you answer me?"
19855Will you forgive me, and be my friend again?
19855Will you let me ask one thing of you?"
19855Will you not believe I am innocent?"
19855Will you not believe me?"
19855Williams?"
19855You ca n''t play, Sir Piers, can you?"
19855You have not been here long, have you?"
19855You have not seen your brother, I suppose?"
19855You remember the parable of the withered hand?"
19855_ expelled_, Reginald?"
19855and Louis, too, I presume-- where is he?
19855and why not?"
19855as Salisbury would say; only, more properly we might ask, in your case, what do the tranquillity and genteel pensiveness of your demeanor denote?"
19855asked Louis;"and dressed in black, with a light waistcoat?"
19855cried Churchill,"who do you think would do it now?
19855cried Ferrers, reddening violently;"what-- what do you mean, Mortimer?"
19855cried Ferrers:"but will Alfred tell?"
19855cried Salisbury;"Fudge a dinner party?
19855cried all at once, and there was a laugh--"Do you hear, Ferrers?"
19855exclaimed John Salisbury;"have you had a box, Louis?
19855exclaimed Mr. Witworth,--"done, indeed: what are you doing there?"
19855exclaimed Norman,"may I ask what your words meant just now?"
19855exclaimed Norman,"whom do you mean?"
19855exclaimed Reginald,"what''s the row?
19855for-- your-- own-- especial-- gratification?
19855he said, in a terrified tone:"what have I done?"
19855is it impossible?"
19855is it not clear enough already?"
19855is this some passion of yours that has so nearly caused the death of your cousin?
19855no, surely not, Frank?
19855of what old boy?"
19855said Dr. Berry,"what did you leave there?"
19855said Frank;"do you mean to say you do n''t believe me?
19855said Hamilton, contemptuously;"you were not talking to him just now?"
19855said Hamilton, scornfully;"you heard how he let out Casson''s just now-- you would n''t blame him for that, I imagine?"
19855said Hamilton;"keeping watch?"
19855said Louis,"what am I that I should not bear you?
19855said Meredith:"why do n''t you learn?"
19855said Mr. Mortimer, laying his hand on Louis''shoulder;"tell me, what is the grace of God?"
19855said the doctor:"how came you to put that Key among Louis Mortimer''s books?"
19855surely you wish it, do you not?"
19855thou art a bat of the most blind species,"said Frank;"did n''t you see them both just now in all their best toggery?
19855uttered in the doctor''s most magnificent anger--''What is the meaning of this?''
19855what do you want?"
19855what shall we do?
19855when?"
19855where are you?"
19855where, Louis?"
19855who is THIS, then?''
19855who''s been putting that nonsense into your head?"
19855you WILL have it, will you?"
30729A man? 30729 But where, and how, and when did you come by it?"
30729Do I contradict myself?
30729Do you fancy,he asks, in a lively ballad,"that I had not enough philosophy under my hood to cry out:''I appeal''?
30729Do you know him, Doctor?
30729Do you want to do anything? 30729 Do?"
30729Have you been out alone? 30729 He?"
30729Noble cousin,said he,"how are you?"
30729Pay you for that?
30729Shall we not dare to say of a thief,asks Montaigne,"that he has a handsome leg?"
30729To oblige me?
30729Well, and why not?
30729Well, what should I do?
30729What in the universe is all this? 30729 What is his name?"
30729What?
30729Where are the snows of yester year?
30729Who?--not the doctor?
30729Why should I?
30729Why should we ever go abroad, even across the way, to ask a neighbour''s advice?
30729Why then do you neither eat nor drink?
30729[ 71] Now, what of the real sentiments of these loyal subjects of Elizabeth? 30729 A pardon necessary for Des Loges and another for Montcorbier? 30729 After he had avowed the authorship in his usual haughty style, Mary asked:You think, then, that I have no just authority?"
30729And I shall shudder to think that the next question will be,''What did you do while you were warm?''"
30729And again, hinting at the explanation:"Who that has heard a strain of music feared lest he should speak extravagantly any more for ever?"
30729And for the matter of that, had not every one else done the like?
30729And lastly, how does it happen that the sea was quite calm next day?
30729And the upshot?
30729And what else had he to expect when he would not, in a happy phrase of Carlyle''s,"nestle down into it"?
30729And what work, among others, was he elaborating at this time, but the notorious"First Blast"?
30729And who could be better suited for the business?
30729At last one will say:''Let us see, how much wood did you burn, sir?''
30729But how, where that is not the case?
30729Did you ever see the lads play knife?
30729Did you think I was dead too?
30729Do you want a thousand a year, a two thousand a year, or a ten thousand a year livelihood?
30729Does not he who spares the wolf kill the sheep?"
30729Emerson mentions having once remarked to Thoreau:"Who would not like to write something which all can read, like''Robinson Crusoe''?
30729Had not he himself made anti- national treaties almost before he was out of his nonage?
30729He died of being Robert Burns, and there is no levity in such a statement of the case; for shall we not, one and all, deserve a similar epitaph?
30729He had just helped his brother with a loan of a hundred and eighty pounds; should he do nothing for the poor girl whom he had ruined?
30729Here is the first:"I suppose I have burned up a good- sized tree to- night-- and for what?
30729How can a man repent, he asks, unless the nature of his transgression is made plain to him?
30729How did you manage?"
30729I wish I could believe he was quite honest with us; but, indeed, who was ever quite honest who wrote a book for a purpose?
30729If Doctor Johnson, that stilted and accomplished stylist, had lacked the sacred Boswell, what should we have known of him?
30729If the trumpet gave so ambiguous a sound, who could heartily prepare himself for the battle?
30729If they had fallen into bad odour at Geneva, where else was there left to flee to?
30729If time had only spared us some particulars, might not this last have furnished us with the matter of a grisly winter''s tale?
30729If you may say Admiral, he reasons, why may you not say Hatter?
30729If, therefore, political and religious sympathy led Knox himself into so grave a partiality, what was he to expect from his disciples?
30729Is it not Clough who has remarked that, after all, everything lies in juxtaposition?
30729Is it possible that Monsieur Hugo thinks they ceased to steer the corvette while the gun was loose?
30729Is there no actual piece of nature that he can show the man to his face, as he might show him a tree if they were walking together?
30729Is there nothing better to be seen than sordid misery and worthless joys?
30729Is this great hurricane a piece of scene- painting after all?
30729It is easy enough to pick holes in the grammar of this letter, but what are we to say of its profound goodness and tenderness?
30729Now, how is the poet to convince like nature, and not like books?
30729Suppose I got into trouble, where would you be?
30729Tell me, landlord, is he old?"
30729That enigma was this:"Can a good action be a bad action?
30729The question is, Why did he choose us two for his assistants?
30729There was nothing to gain on the one side but disturbance, and on the other I could count on your gratitude, do n''t you see?"
30729This is a long way that we have travelled: between such work and the work of Fielding is there not, indeed, a great gulf of thought and sentiment?
30729To be made a class assistant-- in the name of reason, where''s the harm in that?
30729Was it always one woman?
30729Was not King Arthur come again?
30729Was not Richelieu in disgrace more idolised than ever by the dames of Paris?
30729Was she dark or fair, passionate or gentle like himself, witty or simple?
30729What does he care for office or emolument?
30729What harm_ can_ come to you if you hold your tongue?
30729What harm_ has_ come to you?
30729What is Quasimodo but an animated gargoyle?
30729What is the whole book but the reanimation of Gothic art?
30729What need?
30729What would he not have given to wet his boots once more with morning dew, and follow his vagrant fancy among the meadows?
30729Where are now the two lovers who descended the main watershed of all the Waverley Novels, and all the novels that have tried to follow in their wake?
30729Where does old K---- keep his money?"
30729Who is this Wolfe Macfarlane?"
30729Why, man, do you know what this life is?
30729Will you go to glory with me?
30729You would think I was some good, old, decent Christian, would you not?
30729and can you afford the one you want?
30729and how should we have delighted in his acquaintance as we do?
30729and lastly, in the heat of the moment, a fourth name thrown out with an assured countenance?
30729and one or both of them known by the_ alias_ of Villon, however honestly come by?
30729and these two the same person?
30729and when did I begin?
30729and when was the highwayman most acclaimed but on his way to Tyburn?
30729and who does not see with regret that his page is not solid with a right materialistic treatment which delights everybody?"
30729had he not a family to keep?
30729he cried,"but what have I done?
30729or are there a dozen here immortalised in cold indistinction?
30729or what if we had been taken sick?"
30729where the hatter is simply introduced, as God made him and as his fellow- men have miscalled him, at the crisis of a high- flown rhapsody?
30178And how old are you?
30178And what did you say?
30178But who, then, was that woman who was presented to me as his wife?
30178Do we love our husbands?
30178Do you think it will be a good thing for Fatimah?
30178Does He not love us, too, this gracious Master? 30178 Have we wandered in the dark for centuries, misled by blind leaders of the blind, and missing the good things offered us by the God of Ishmael?"
30178Have you any children?
30178How can she be your mother?
30178How can they hear without a preacher?
30178How old is she?
30178Is it a boy or a girl?
30178Master,I said, as from a dream awaking,"Is this the service Thou dost show to me?
30178She? 30178 WHAT WILT THOU HAVE ME TO DO?"
30178What are we to do?
30178What else could be done?
30178When the learned ones ascribe such characteristics to women, is it any wonder that they have come to regard themselves as mere beasts of burden? 30178 Why did that man take another wife when he was happy and had children?"
30178Why do you do that when you are so happy as you are? 30178 Why do you take your wife out to walk with you?"
30178Why then judge so severely those who are all suffering under these troubles? 30178 Why?"
30178Would it not be better to eat together?
30178Yes,she said,"but never mind, was n''t Jesus beaten for me?"
30178--"What can be the matter with Kaleela?"
30178--"Where is Tantaweyah to- day?"
30178A father engaging his daughter was asked,"What does the girl think of it herself?"
30178ARE they the faces of a dead people?
30178And God heard the voice of the lad, and the angel of God called to Hagar out of heaven, and said unto her, What aileth thee, Hagar?
30178And down beyond these outward capacities, how about their spirit- nature?
30178And he wept aloud and cried out:"Wo n''t you pray for me?"
30178And men still find out even among Moslems:"What man on earth hath power or skill To stem the torrent of a woman''s will?
30178And their powers of feeling: do their faces look as if these have been crushed out by a life of servitude?
30178And what is the price of a goodly pearl?
30178And what is the price of a human soul?
30178And why should they not be, who always sit behind a curtain wrapped in a veil?
30178Are they lovable?
30178Are they pretty?
30178Are we to leave these, our sisters, alone to their fate?
30178Are you not responsible to God for a part in the evangelization of Arabia in this generation?
30178But what does he care as long as he_ is_ master and reigns supreme?
30178Can there be any real happiness for a Mohammedan woman?
30178Can we say as much for any other system of education or religion?
30178Could one blame her?
30178Do we act as if we believed it?
30178Do we believe that each heaven- sent prayer brings the cloud- burst nearer?
30178Do you like them?
30178Do you see no material for Christ if they had a chance of the Water of Life?
30178Do you wonder that we do not consider it an elevating creed?
30178Does the speaker think we are all blind, and deaf, and ignorant?
30178Does this little description stir your pity?
30178Doors, doors, but how can we enter them?
30178Dost Thou to me entrust Thy bread for breaking To those who cry for Thee?
30178Hath not God said:"Look unto Me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else.... Unto Me every knee shall bow"?
30178Here they know the bitterness of being one of two or three wives, why then should they wish to be"one of seventy"?
30178His last and oft repeated words to his new- found Christian friends, as they rode away, were:"Wo n''t you continue to pray for me?"
30178How can she consent to see her given in a marriage to which her approval has not even been asked, or possibly where it has been refused?
30178How can women, brought up as she was, have healthy children?
30178How could they brave its publicity?
30178How do they bring up their children?
30178How do they keep their homes?
30178How for a single day this pathway trace, And feel no loving arm thrown round about me, No all- sustaining grace?
30178How long must I put up with these evil doings?''
30178How shall she escape the name which her own family perhaps give her--"a cow"?
30178I need you now, can you teach me how to die?
30178If thou sayest, Behold we knew not this, doth not He that weigheth the hearts consider it and He that keepeth thy soul, doth not He know it?
30178Is it right to marry her?"
30178Is it surprising that I almost accused my fellow- missionaries of misrepresenting the home life of the people?
30178Is it then strange that women believe in written prayers, fortune telling, and the_ istekhara_?
30178Many more, no doubt, feel all these things, but what can they do?
30178Once after the others had gone she caught hold of me, saying,"Do you think I walk all these miles, with my blind eyes, to learn nothing?
30178One difficulty haunted her, she was ignorant, could not even read, and her teachers told her Jesus was not the Son of God;--must they not know best?
30178One is led to ask, what is the cause of this dark cloud of evil which casts its terrible shadow over so many homes?
30178Perhaps she would come to her?
30178Perhaps you say,"Why does her husband not protect his wife from unkindness, does he not care for her?"
30178Poor they certainly are, but what of that when they have enough to eat such as it is and can spend their whole lives in sunshine and fresh air?
30178Said a mother,"Why should I not weep over my baby girl, who must endure the same sorrows I have known?
30178Shall we give ourselves to hasten it?
30178She said nothing-- what could she say?
30178Some one has asked:"What happens to the cast- off wives and divorced women among the Moslems?"
30178That one last cry of faith, somewhere, will set it free?
30178The old woman had worked the works of Satan over him, and how could he escape?
30178The wife asks,''What is this business in which you have been engaged?
30178The wives with tears streaming down their cheeks say,"How can his small wages support three or four wives?"
30178The woman knew that her end was near, but how could she die?
30178The work in the hands of those workers already in the field can scarcely allow any addition, and yet we PRAYED for these; and now who shall feed them?
30178The younger man replied with indignation,"Is she not a human being, and shall I not treat her as such?"
30178These few particulars showing the indifference and ignorance among the men, what can be expected of the women?
30178They worship the God who has Mohammed for his prophet and_ who is he_?
30178To suffer not only in this life but also in the life to come?
30178Was Jesus married?"
30178Was there no one to stretch out a helping hand?
30178We are shocked at the coarse questions:"Can God have a Son?
30178We know that mothers- in- law even in England have not always a good name, but what may they be to a young girl completely under their power?
30178What am I to do with them?
30178What are the women like?
30178What did I find?
30178What is he to do?
30178What is likely to be the future of that child?
30178What is the legal and social position of woman?
30178What must we do?
30178What of the moral and spiritual?
30178What of the poor temporary hired ones, who come for a longer or shorter period, and a specified wage?
30178What opportunity is there before the little mother but fourteen years old herself?
30178What uplifting or educating influences does the bare windowless abode( opening only to the central court of the home) exercise?
30178When I asked,"What will become of her when she is old and perhaps cast off again?"
30178When a child is born in a family the first question asked is,"Is it a boy or girl?"
30178Where are they now?
30178Where was she going?
30178Who could tell her?
30178Who will come to help to find them and to bring them in?
30178Who will go to teach them how to die and how to live?
30178Who would teach her to read?
30178Why so sad on this joyous occasion?"
30178Why then reproach the women?
30178Why, then, should they desire it?
30178Will not many Christian women give themselves to such work as this?
30178Will you come and put your hands on my head and bring down God''s blessing upon me?
30178Will you not ask yourselves, our brothers, can these things be?
30178Will you not pray for them?
30178Will you spend five minutes of your hours to- day in looking-- just looking-- at them, till they have sunk down into your heart?
30178XXV"WHAT WILT THOU HAVE ME TO DO?"
30178Yet one can hardly wonder at their condition, what chances have they had?
30178and shall not He render to every man according to his works?"
30178she said,"what_ has_ become of me?
30178the people are ripe for education-- but is there not a serious danger in giving them education and education_ only_?
30178who will dive to the lowest depths, To gather these hidden pearls?
29517And did n''t I just say as much?
29517And did n''t that American, Pettitt, play here?
29517And see there where those branches touch the water,she soon continued;"might not that have been the very place where poor Ophelia lost her life?
29517And then,broke in Betty, her face literally radiant,"do n''t you know how Little John finally robbed them?
29517Are n''t the trains funny, John?
29517Are n''t we glad we came, and are n''t Mrs. Pitt and Barbara and Philip good to us?
29517Are you sorry you proposed coming here?
29517Are your vans any bigger?
29517But did n''t they have any services at all in St. Paul''s Cathedral?
29517But how----?
29517But, Mother, is that really the same bench, and did Anne truly live here?
29517Can we have some?
29517Did Shakespeare fall over that stile when he was trying to climb it with the deer, and did they catch him then?
29517Did n''t Dr. Johnson live near here, too, Mother?
29517Did n''t I? 29517 Did n''t she die propped up on the floor in all her State robes?"
29517Did n''t you say that this was where King Alfred had them write the''Anglo- Saxon Chronicle''?
29517Did that stool belong to anybody?
29517Do n''t these trains seem different from ours, Betty?
29517Do you children remember those quaint little verses about Bow Bells?
29517Do you see that the walls are entirely of cedar wood from floor to ceiling? 29517 Do you suppose that jewels were sewn into the dress where those round holes are?"
29517Do you think you will like London?
29517Does n''t that describe it exactly?
29517Have Kew Gardens any story or history to them, or are they just famous because of their flowers?
29517Have n''t we time to walk in the gardens a little longer?
29517Have you ever seen Faneuil Hall Market in Boston?
29517He did pay him back after all, did n''t he? 29517 He lived here, did he?
29517Here we are, Mother; did they come?
29517Honor bright, do n''t you have many fires over here?
29517How do they ever find names enough to go around?
29517How in the world could they see to cook in such a dark place?
29517Is Dorothy at home?
29517Is n''t the''Tumble- down Stile''near here, Mother?
29517Is n''t there a proverb,''A loyal heart may be landed at Traitor''s Gate''?
29517Is n''t there any of it remaining?
29517Is n''t there any upstairs?
29517It could n''t be, could it? 29517 It is n''t any wonder that she looked like that, is it?
29517It was here in Nottingham that Will Stutely had his narrow escape, was n''t it?
29517It''s like Leicester''s Hospital at Warwick, only this is really more quaint, is n''t it? 29517 Let''s see,--that would be twenty- five dollars, would n''t it?
29517Oh, do you see that little river flowing through the meadows?
29517Oh, is that the John Gilpin in Cowper''s poem?
29517Oh, what''s this place?
29517Shall I point out the different flowers?
29517The fellow who burnt the cakes?
29517The name is curious, is n''t it?
29517This one here pictures the Seven Ages of Man, which Shakespeare describes in''As You Like It,''Do you see? 29517 Was it because so many monks went up there?"
29517Was there a real palace in the Tower?
29517Well, what do you think of it all, John?
29517Well, what do you think of that?
29517What did they do to those three Normans?
29517What for? 29517 What in the world does she mean?"
29517What in the world''s that?
29517What is that iron bar for?
29517What others?
29517What should you like to see first, Betty?
29517What sticks? 29517 What was it?"
29517What was that you said?
29517What went on here?
29517What''s that, Mother? 29517 What''s the use?
29517Where are we going now?
29517Where can one see such a scene?
29517Where do you mean to go, Philip?
29517Where was King Alfred buried, Mother?
29517Who was it that the guide told us was imprisoned near the Round Tower, and who fell in love with a lady whom he saw walking in the gardens? 29517 Whose keys?"
29517Why do they always stand there?
29517Why, do n''t you believe it, John?
29517Why, we ca n''t all get in there, can we?
29517Why, what can it be?
29517Why, what do you mean?
29517Why, what in the world''s the matter?
29517Will they put King Edward here, too, when he dies?
29517Will you please tell us what that was? 29517 Winchester has a cathedral, has n''t it?"
29517Would n''t you just know to look at her that she had been in the family all her life?
29517Would you rather be a Horse Guard, or a bus- driver, John?
29517Yes,said Mrs. Pitt, understanding at once;"do n''t you remember that in Scott''s''Ivanhoe''?
29517''There is a willow grows aslant a brook, That shows his hoar leaves in the glassy stream;''Is n''t that a perfect description of this very spot?
29517--_Page 184._]"Do you see that high mound?"
2951712"DO YOU REMEMBER THOSE QUAINT LITTLE VERSES ABOUT''BOW BELLS''?"
29517140"DID ANNE TRULY LIVE HERE?"
2951720"THERE''S THE ABBEY RIGHT AHEAD OF US"26"WHAT''S THE USE OF HAVING SO MANY DOORS?"
2951784"YOU REMEMBER, DON''T YOU, HAVING THE GUIDE POINT OUT LONDON BRIDGE?"
2951788 THE MOSS- GROWN SAXON PORCH 96 JOHN MILTON LIVED THERE AFTER HE FLED FROM LONDON 106"OH, HERE''S THE OLD CORONATION CHAIR, ISN''T IT?"
29517Am I right?
29517And where did he ride to?"
29517Anne Hathaway''s cottage is even more picturesque than its neighbors, or does this only seem so because of the associations which it has for all?
29517Are n''t they attractive?"
29517Are n''t they interesting?
29517Are you getting plenty of history, Betty, my dear?"
29517Ca n''t we?"
29517Ca n''t you fix her?
29517Ca n''t you imagine the two sitting over at that table, with Boswell not far away, patiently listening, quill in hand?
29517Come, shall we go in?"
29517Did I tell you that Guy and his faithful wife were buried together in the cave?"
29517Did they make it that way on purpose, do you think?"
29517Did you look in some of the tiny windows as we passed through?
29517Did you see the busts of Wellington and Marlborough in one of the other rooms, Philip?
29517Do all the boats have names like that?
29517Do n''t you agree that this square has had about as varied a history as is very well possible?"
29517Do n''t you all approve that plan?"
29517Do n''t you ever have bigger fires?"
29517Do n''t you know the story which is told in the''Spectator Papers,''about the boy who accidentally tore a hole in this curtain?
29517Do n''t you remember that one brother was very tall and thin, and the other very short and stout?
29517Do n''t you remember, John?
29517Do n''t you think we can go on with our trip here after Switzerland?"
29517Do you know the story?
29517Do you know this?
29517Do you notice all the streets leading out from this great square?
29517Do you notice the fine carving, and the pictures,--some of Van Dyck''s best works?
29517Do you notice?
29517Do you remember him?
29517Do you remember, Betty?
29517Do you see them, John?"
29517Do you see?
29517Do you suppose he guessed that you''d lost yours?"
29517Do you, Barbara?
29517Each time this conversation follows:--"Who goes there?"
29517Have you never read it, John?
29517Have you noticed those little oriel windows of the gatehouse?
29517Have you the guidebook, Philip?
29517He must have fine stories to tell, does n''t he, Philip?
29517How carefully and how often do you suppose she swept?
29517How did you like the State Apartments?
29517How many have ever read Dickens''s''Tale of Two Cities''?
29517How would you like that?"
29517How would you like that?"
29517I always wish that we could see the King or Queen''s private rooms, do n''t you?
29517I never ran faster in my life, did you, Philip?
29517I should probably go up and say''How do you do?''"
29517In spite of this, she insisted that she was quite happy, for she had her"good feather bed,"--and what more could she need?
29517Is n''t the effect rich, and does n''t it smell good?
29517Is that the tale?"
29517Is that the trouble, Jo?
29517Is this where we take the tram, Mrs. Pitt?
29517It was the wedding night of Dorothy''s sister, was n''t it?
29517It''s a quaint place, is n''t it?
29517It''s curious to think of, is n''t it?"
29517Just for one little hour we are going to know that Anne did live here,--that Will said''Will you?''
29517May we go up, please?"
29517Now, how do you like that story?"
29517Oh, do you suppose it is the same place?"
29517Oh, here''s the old Coronation Chair, is n''t it?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517That''s an odd expression, is n''t it?
29517There they halted and imagined him standing beside his booth, and calling out:"Now who''ll buy?
29517They called it the Waterloo Room, did n''t they?
29517They do n''t know just where he went, do they, Mother?"
29517They do n''t make much fuss about it, do they?"
29517Was n''t she a singer?
29517Was n''t that absurd?
29517Was n''t there one more, Barbara?
29517What are you thinking, Mrs. Pitt?
29517What do you all say?"
29517What does it mean?"
29517What for?"
29517What of the sight- seers whose automobiles go tearing along, uttering weird and frightful sounds?
29517What would ye have of me?''
29517What''s wrong?"
29517What''s your favorite part of the castle, Barbara?"
29517Where will you go, Betty?"
29517Who was she?
29517Why did they call it the White Tower?
29517Why, what is it, Barbara?"
29517Why, what''s the matter, John?"
29517With all his money, could n''t he even have a horse?"
29517Would you like to hear?
29517Yes, what''s that you have found, Barbara?"
29517Yes?
29517You certainly like that in him, John?"
29517You remember, do n''t you, having the guide point out London Bridge to you, from the top of St. Paul''s, day before yesterday?
29517[ Illustration:"DO YOU REMEMBER THOSE QUAINT LITTLE VERSES ABOUT BOW BELLS?"
29517[ Illustration:"OH, HERE''S THE OLD CORONATION CHAIR, ISN''T IT?"
29517[ Illustration:"OH, WHAT''S THIS PLACE?
29517[ Illustration:"WHAT''S THE USE OF HAVING SO MANY DOORS?"
29517[ Illustration:"YOU REMEMBER, DON''T YOU, HAVING THE GUIDE POINT OUT LONDON BRIDGE?"
29517who''ll buy?
32758What( says the preface to the 1704 edition of_ Pi- Pa- Ki_)"do you find there?
32758( 2) Who were the Dorian invaders, and in what relation did they stand to the rest of the population of Greece?
32758( 3) How far do the Dorian states, or their characteristics, represent the descendants, or the culture, of the original invaders?
32758); Ennius,_ Ambracia_; Pacuvius,_ Paulus_; Accius,_ Aeneadae_(_ Decius_?).
32758);"Jeremiah";"Habakuk"(?
32758--"With the Moor, sayest thou?"
32758Again, can we substitute church authority for that which is always the background of"dogma"as interpreted from inside-- divine authority?
32758And that raises the question whether the church has not a further part to play?
32758But can a_ historian_ separate the opinions which rose to authority in the church from the other opinions which succumbed?
32758Doon had twelve sons: Gaufrey de Dane Marche( Ardennes?
32758F. Turrianus-- one of the papal theologians at the Council of Trent,--_Dogmaticus( liber?)
32758On the 11th of September he made the Island of Terceira, and on the 26th of September(?)
32758Or the accepted modifications of a theory from those which were rejected?
32758What is to be done?
32758[ 22] Or, again, can we say definitely which doctrines_ are_"enforced"in Protestant communions and so_ are_"dogmas"?
32758[ 61] Id.,_ Phoenissae_; Aeschylus,_ Persae_(_ Persae_-trilogy?).
32758[ 81] Naevius,_ Clastidium_(_ Marcellus_?
32758_ De immaculato B. V. Mariae conceptu; an dogmatico decreto definiri possit?_( 1847).
32758the definite Gallican theory?).
30087And what did you see at the fair?
30087Aw, can''ee? 30087 But is n''t he ugly?
30087But what did I do? 30087 But where is he?"
30087Can I help''ee?
30087Care I for the thews and sinews of a man?
30087Do you see the Lamp?
30087Flowers bean''t no use on; such trumpery as that; what do''ee want a- messing about arter thaay? 30087 Gone-- wur?"
30087Has anyone ever been able to write with free and genuine appreciation of even the later novels?
30087Has he sent anything? 30087 Have n''t I told you how to cut bread twenty times?
30087How can you eat such a quantity of salt?)
30087How dare you say such a thing? 30087 How dare you speak of your grandfather like that?
30087How ever could I do such a stupid thing?
30087How many voters now?
30087Indoors-- at least-- I think-- no----"Have n''t you got no sewing? 30087 Is it not full of digressions?
30087Is it not noble?
30087Is n''t he ugly?
30087Is n''t he ugly?
30087Is your father coming?
30087It be, bean''t it?
30087Only think, to open in all this wind, and so cold-- isn''t it beautiful? 30087 Perhaps you would like to dine with me?"
30087Perhaps you''d have a seat?
30087Really I should have liked you to have seen the house-- will you sit down a moment? 30087 Richard?"
30087Shall you be going presently?
30087Should you like a little more?
30087Thought there was nothing but lies and rubbish in them, according to you?
30087Thought you despised the papers?
30087Want any wood for the fire-- or anything?
30087Well, and when am I going to have the boots?
30087Well, when will he be in?
30087What bean''t you going to yet( eat) up that there juicy bit, you?
30087What do other people go for?
30087What has he been talking to you about?
30087What''s the use of his going out to work for half an hour?
30087Whatever_ are_ you going to do now?
30087When_ are_ they going to be finished?
30087Where be this yer flower?
30087Where is it? 30087 Where is your mother?"
30087Wherefore come ye not to court? 30087 Who have you brought in with you now?
30087Why ca n''t you do like other people? 30087 Why ca n''t you eat your cheese at the table, like other people?"
30087Why ever could n''t you pass it on the tray?
30087Why would n''t thaay a''done for he as well as for we?
30087Will you get us some ale?
30087You going, m''m? 30087 You had plenty of fun, did n''t you?"
30087You''re not gone, then?
30087Your family do n''t drink, then, I suppose?
30087A bold and adventurous man in his youth, why did he gossip at the stile now in his full and prime of manhood?
30087A robin came into the court, and perching on the edge of a tub, fluttered his wings, cried"Check, check,""Anything for me this morning?"
30087And if this is so, how can the book be so fine an achievement?"
30087And what does he Do, when he''s out of Sight?
30087Are n''t they_ all_ ugly?
30087Are not these ghastly figures?
30087At last a man cured me; and how do you think he did it?"
30087Awful this, was it not?
30087Because extremes meet?
30087Because the boys bawl do you suppose they are happy?
30087But Iden is a personal portrait, the reader may object, Well, what about Uncle Toby?
30087But the"mouse,"--what was the"mouse?"
30087But what caused the most"wonderment"was the planting of the horse- chestnuts in the corner of the meadow?
30087But what is a novel?
30087But you may ask, how do_ you_ know, you''re not a doctor, you''re a mere story- spinner, you''re no authority?
30087Ca n''t you help her?
30087Call they swede tops?
30087Could any blundering Sultan in the fatalistic East have put things together for them with more utter contempt of fitness?
30087Could anything be more nauseous?
30087Did ever anyone have a beautiful idea or feeling without being repulsed?
30087Did he not?
30087Did not Benvenuto design fortifications?
30087Did not Michael Angelo build St. Peter''s at Rome?
30087Did you ever read Al Hariri?
30087Did you ever see the Giant Quaritch in the auction- room bidding for books?
30087Does that sound like an echo of the voice that ceased on the Cross?
30087Does the butcher, or the baker, or the ironmonger, or the tallow- chandler rely on personal merit, or purely personal ability for making a business?
30087Dreadfully, horribly wicked, is it not, in an age that preaches thrift and-- twaddle?
30087Duck?"
30087Except an author, or an artist, or a musician, who on earth would attempt to win success by merit?
30087From what void did he spring?
30087Hardly credible is it?
30087Have you brought anything for me?
30087Have you ever ascended the dirty, unscrubbed, disgraceful staircase that leads to a famous barrister''s"chambers"?
30087Have you ever seen the dingy, dark china- closets they call offices in the City?
30087He made his money in a waggon-- a curious place, you will say; why so?
30087He was a peer at such moments; a grandee-- the grandee who can wear his hat or sit down( which is it?
30087How can that be?
30087How can you draw life itself?
30087How could this be?
30087How dare you insult my mother?
30087How should such a chant as this enter a young man''s heart who felt himself despicable in the sight of his mistress?
30087How_ can_ people pass without seeing them?
30087I just come up to ask if you''d ride in my dog- trap?"
30087If a man asks for bread, will ye give him a stone?
30087If life be not a dream, what is the use of living?
30087If you can not even make a horse, do you think you are likely to_ make_ a woman do anything?
30087In short, is not the book a disquisition on life from the standpoint of Jefferies''personal experiences?
30087Is not that description of Iden''s dinner a little-- well, a little unusual?
30087Is not this an age of humanity indeed?
30087Look about you: Are the prosperous men of business men of merit?
30087Looking for a thunderstorm?"
30087Mrs. Iden then had her turn at him: the old story-- why did n''t he do something?
30087Now, do n''t you think you could talk to him, and persuade him to be more practical?"
30087Taste it?
30087Telling you about the old people?
30087The good turn from them with horror-- Are they not sin made manifest?
30087To come back to"Amaryllis at the Fair,"why is it so masterly, or, further, wherein is it so masterly, the curious reader may inquire?
30087What are the sayings of the seven wise men of Greece compared to_ that_?
30087What do_ he_ want wi''such geates?
30087What does it matter whether a revelation of human life is conveyed to us by pictures or by action so long as it is conveyed?
30087What good be you on?"
30087What is Mahomet''s Paradise to_ that_?
30087What is it?"
30087What is life?
30087What matter?
30087What on earth can a tramp find to please him among all this?
30087What use to care for him?
30087What will you take?"
30087What would have been the value of their lives between a finger and thumb that could crack a ripe and strong- shelled walnut?
30087What would you like to show her?"
30087What''s the use of digging?
30087What''s the use of talking of people who have been dead all this time?
30087What''s your family then, that you should be so grand?
30087Whatever did he want with horse- chestnuts?
30087Whatever_ can_ morning seem like to the starved and chilly wretches who have slept on the floor, and wake up to frost in Fleet Street?
30087When will he send it up?"
30087Where''s Upper Court?
30087Where''s the Manor?
30087Whoever could tell what they were talking about?
30087Why ca n''t you mind your business?
30087Why did he gossip at the stile with the small- brained hamlet idlers?
30087Why did he work in the rain under a sack?
30087Why did n''t you say so?
30087Why do n''t you make some money?
30087Why do they break out of reformatory institutions?
30087Why does n''t he do something himself?
30087Why does n''t he go in to market and buy and sell cattle, and turn over money in that way?
30087Why not set up the Apparatus?
30087Why so very,_ very_ still?
30087Why then do they set fire to training ships?
30087Why was he so poor?
30087Why, Measter Duck, what''s up?
30087Would her father see it if she used it, or might he, perhaps, fail to notice?
30087Would n''t I put a thou on the Middle Park Plate?
30087You ca n''t eat''em, can you, like you can potatoes?"
30087You have a recollection of the giant who sat by the highway and devoured the pilgrims who passed?
30087and what about the Widow Wadman?
30087are n''t you going to change your dress?"
30087are they all clever?
30087are they geniuses?
30087bean''t you a- going to fair?
30087how did she suppose they were to keep her, and she not earn the value of a bonnet- string?
30087what would her grandfather say?
30087where''s_ The Standard_, then?"
3195( How does that make you feel?
3195And did you question the propriety of it?
3195And it seemed to me that now that the fourth act is so successfully written, why not go ahead and write the 3 preceding acts?
3195And why not write Howard?
3195And why should n''t it be?
3195Are you in the new house?
3195But what I am coming at, is this: wo n''t you and Mrs. Howells come down Saturday the 22nd and remain to the Club on Monday night?
3195Ca n''t you let him fall in the canal occasionally?
3195Ca n''t you let him feed the doves?
3195Ca n''t you let him find peace and rest and fellowship under Pere Jacopo''s kindly wing?
3195Ca n''t you let his good- natured purse be a daily prey to guides and beggar- boys?
3195Can you and Hay go?
3195Can you conceive of a man''s getting himself into a sweat over so diminutive a provocation?
3195Clemens said that when he took the Jumping Frog book to Carlton, in 1867, the latter, pointing to his stock, said, rather scornfully: “ Books?
3195Could n''t you come now and mull over the alterations which you are going to make in your MS, and make them after you go back?
3195Could you?
3195Did I ever tell you the plot of it?
3195Did that break up the enterprise?
3195Did the report go, nevertheless?
3195Did you ever see the grotesquely absurd and the heart- breakingly pathetic more closely joined together?
3195Did you?
3195Do n''t you see, the book( 1800 MS pages,) may really be finished before I ever get to Switzerland?
3195Do not you believe that if Mr. Edmunds would consent to run for President, on the Independent ticket-- even at this late day-- he might be elected?
3195Drop me an immediate line about this, wo n''t you?
3195Earl of Onston-- is that it?
3195Fred Grant? ” “ Yes.
3195Good excitable, inflammable material?
3195Has n''t he had any lessons? ” No.
3195Have I got the dates and things right?
3195How does Washington promise as to that?
3195If this is so, suppose you meet Osgood and me in New Orleans early in May-- say somewhere between the 1st and 6th?
3195If you have n''t used Orion or Old Wakeman, do n''t you think you and I can get together and grind out a play with one of those fellows in it?
3195Is n''t human nature the most consummate sham and lie that was ever invented?
3195Is n''t man a creature to be ashamed of in pretty much all his aspects?
3195Livy screamed, then said, “ Who is that?
3195MY DEAR HOWELLS,--.... Who taught you to read?
3195MY DEAR HOWELLS,--I shall reach Boston on Monday the 8th, either at 4:30 p.m. or 6 p.m.( Which is best?)
3195MY DEAR HOWELLS,--When and where?
3195Maybe you think I am not happy?
3195Mrs. Clemens says, “ Maybe the Howellses could come Monday if they can not come Saturday; ask them; it is worth trying. ” Well, how''s that?
3195Now what is it?
3195Now wo n''t you put Orion in a story?
3195Our Susie is still “ Megalops. ” He gave her that name: Can you spare a photograph of your father?
3195Poor old Methusaleh, how did he manage to stand it so long?
3195Pray offer my most sincere and respectful approval to the President-- is approval the proper word?
3195Should the language be altered?--or the hyphens taken out?
3195Suppose you do n''t need him there?
3195That is-- is he your father? ” “ No, he is my husband. ” So this child was married, you see.
3195Then why do you try to get to Heaven?
3195To nominate Edmunds the 1st of November, would be soon enough, would n''t it?
3195Was it that it was too personal?
3195Was n''t it a good audience to get up an excitement before?
3195We can do that ca n''t we?
3195Weekly with my apprentice sketches?
3195What do you think?
3195What does possess strangers to write so many letters?
3195What of that?
3195What would you have done?
3195When and where shall we meet?
3195Why how could they?
3195Why should we assist our fellowman for mere love of God?
3195Will you return those proofs or revises to me, so that I can use the same on some future occasion?
3195Will you?
3195Wo n''t you please fix it the way it ought to be, altering the language as you choose, only making it bitter and contemptuous?
3195Would it mar the flow of the thing too much to insert that devil?
3195Would you and Mrs. Howells like to invite Mr. and Mrs. Aldrich?
3195do you realize, Mark, what a symposium it is to be?
3195where is he?
31186Am I a man?
31186Are we all ready?
31186Can I have a room to- night? 31186 Did you walk here this evening?"
31186Do n''t we make a pretty picture?
31186Have I been dead long?
31186Have n''t you anything fresher?
31186Have you been reading anything interesting lately?
31186Have you read_ David Balfour_?
31186How do you like it?
31186How do you like it?
31186Is it a chemist?
31186Is it a draper?
31186Is it a fruiterer?
31186Is it a goldsmith?
31186Is it a lawyer?
31186Is it a small loaf of bread?
31186Is it something you burn?
31186Is it something you eat bread and milk from?
31186Is it that?
31186Is it the armchair?
31186Is it the carpet?
31186Is it the clock?
31186Is it the curtain- rod?
31186Is it the fireplace?
31186Is it the sideboard?
31186Is it this?
31186Is it this?
31186Is it this?
31186Is it vegetable?
31186Is this for the complexion?
31186May I come with you?
31186No; who''s it by?
31186The Grand Mogul does not like E''s,says one player;"what will you give him for dinner?"
31186The name of the captain?
31186The name of the cargo?
31186The next letter?
31186The place she is bound for?
31186The port she comes from?
31186What else did he write?
31186When do you like it?
31186When will that be?
31186When will you pay me?
31186Wo n''t you have some?
31186Yes, and what has it brought?
31186Yes, and what has it brought?
31186Yes,is the reply,"and what have you bought?"
31186_ C_ome now, was it this book?
31186_ H_ow about this hearth- rug?
31186_ L_ook, was it the armchair?
31186_ O_r the piano?
31186( What does y- e- s spell?)
31186A horse?
31186A sun flower?
31186A wild rose?
31186About how many petals has a common daisy?
31186And how soon will_ supper_ be ready?
31186And where do you think I found it?
31186Any one can begin by giving either a prophecy or a characteristic-- thus:"Who will inherit a fortune inside a year?"
31186As he is supposed for the time being actually to be the thing thought of, he ought to frame his questions accordingly:"Am I living?"
31186But perhaps he will now venture to ask for a consonant( which is much more risky than a vowel), and will say,"May I have an''s''?"
31186By this time"Cloche"has been spelled, so that the next question is,"Was it the bell?"
31186Do n''t you think so, Miss Pitters?"
31186Each of the party writes at the top of a piece of paper a question of any kind whatever, such as"How old was CÃ ¦ sar when he died?"
31186His first question therefore is,"Is it animal?"
31186His questions must take the form,"How do you like it?"
31186How big do you think a postage- stamp is, in inches-- a five dollar bill?
31186How does a cow lie down?
31186How high from the ground is a street- car?--a railway car?
31186How many holes are there in a high laced shoe-- your own?
31186How many legs has a fly?
31186How many toes has a cat, a dog?
31186How tall do you think a man''s silk hat is, a derby?
31186If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled pepper, where is the peck of pickled pepper Peter Piper picked?"
31186If you found yourself in a strange city, where you did n''t know a soul, with no money and nothing you could pawn, what would you do?
31186If you should be in a foreign country, not able to speak the language and wanted to order a room and breakfast, what would you do?
31186If you should look out of your school- room door and see smoke and fire in the hall, what would you do?
31186If you should wake up in the night and see a burglar just entering the room, what would you do?
31186Is it a grocer?"
31186Is it the piano?"
31186Oh, do you know the muffin man who lives in Drury Lane?
31186One stands in a corner and the other calls loudly,"Ebenezer, do you hear?"
31186Perhaps he will say,"Miss A, do you think it will rain to- morrow?"
31186Perhaps it will be,"Did you get very wet this evening?"
31186Perhaps this question will be,"I hope your cousin is better?"
31186Pray what shall be done to the owner of this pretty thing?"
31186Pray, who will you gather for nuts in May, on a cold and frosty morning?
31186Pray, who will you send to fetch her away, on a cold and frosty morning?
31186Shall I get a---- instead?"
31186Suppose you was to feel faint-- what then?
31186The Hen: What do you want a bag for?
31186The Hen: What do you want a needle for?
31186The Hen: What do you want a saucepan for?
31186The Hen: What do you want salt for?
31186The Hen: What is the water for?
31186The Hen: Where will you get it?
31186The answer is"Yes, and what has it brought?"
31186The captured player is then asked in a whisper which he will be, oranges or lemons?
31186The duty of the player is to treat them as a riddle, and, asking the question either as"Why is a school- teacher like a pair of skates?"
31186The first one then asks the next,"How shall my lady be dressed for the ball?"
31186The fox replies,"Making a fire"; and the conversation goes on like this:-- The Hen: What for?
31186The next in turn gives a characteristic,"Who has the worst temper?"
31186The next,"_ Wo n''t_ you change the subject,_ please_?"
31186The next,"_ You_, I suppose, agree with_ that_?"
31186The one that acts as schoolmaster asks sharply, beginning at one end,"The name of the letter?"
31186The other row then ask-- Pray, who will you send to fetch her away, fetch her away, fetch her away?
31186The others have to guess what the word is, yet not bluntly, as,"Is it mole?"
31186The player in the middle calls out to the crowd of players,"What''ll you do when the black man comes?"
31186The questions and answers may run something like this:--"Are you feeling pretty well to- day?"
31186The schoolmaster turns to the next player,"the name of the ship?"
31186The secret is that the article touched is always signified by"Is it that?"
31186Then one player starts the game by suggesting some predicament and asking the company"What would you do in such a case?"
31186Then they leave go of each other and stand round the fox, and the leader, the hen, says,"What are you doing, old fox?"
31186They then fall back and the other row advance to them singing in reply-- Pray, who will you gather for nuts in May, nuts in May, nuts in May?
31186Thus in the present instance the first player would announce that the question was,"I hope your cousin is better?"
31186Thus, if it were the bell, he might say,"_ C_ome now, was it the table?"
31186Thus, the original question may be,"Do you like mince_ pies_?"
31186To the next,"When do you like it?"
31186To the next,"Where do you like it?"
31186To the next,"Where do you like it?"
31186To which the blindfolded one replies by asking,"Is it fine or superfine?"
31186WHAT SHALL WE DO NOW?
31186Was it the clock?"
31186What do you think we shall need?"
31186[ Illustration: A PUEBLO SETTLEMENT(_ Frontispiece_)] WHAT SHALL WE DO NOW?
31186_ The second player writes_:--Can you give me any information about suitable songs for our village choir?
31186and"Where do you like it?"
31186but like this:"Is it a little animal that burrows?"
31186meaning, Does it belong to a boy( fine) or a girl( superfine)?
31186or"What is the difference between a school- teacher and a pair of skates?"
31186or"What is your favorite color?"
31186or"Who has the most unselfish disposition?"
31186or"Who will be the first in the room to wear false teeth?"
32318But if his wife were better than your own, would not you choose your neighbor''s?
32318But,said Aspasia,"if she had a husband of more merit than your own, would not you choose the former?"
32318If he had an estate or a farm of more value than your own, which would you choose?
32318If she had a gown, or any of the female ornaments, better than yours, would not you choose them rather than your own?
32318If your neighbor, Xenophon, had a horse better than your own, would you not choose him preferably to your own?
32318Tell me, Philesia,said Aspasia,"whether if your neighbor had a piece of gold of more value than your own, you would not choose it before your own?"
32318Then are we to impose all our enactments on men and none on women?
32318What should we expect the pupils of such masters to be? 32318 A Spartan mother who has lost her boy in battle exclaims:Did I not bear him that he might die for Sparta?"
32318Am I, then, a bastard?"
32318And is it wonder- worthy then That ye train not your women to be chaste?"
32318And where may this person come from?
32318And why must thou needs run the risk of sea battles?
32318Art thou overfond of sleep?
32318At last, Cleomenes venturing to tell her, she laughed aloud, and said:''Was this the thing that you had so often a mind to tell me, but were afraid?
32318Being asked:"Who is the happiest of men?"
32318But how was it with the sombre and melancholy Euripides?
32318Come now, tell me, what sign didst thou get of him?''"
32318Dear Gorgo, what will become of us?
32318Do you pretend to command ladies of Syracuse?
32318Does anyone abuse Clytemnestra?
32318Dorian women may lawfully speak Doric, I presume?
32318Eunoe, you foolhardy girl, will you never keep out of the way?
32318For she was but a girl of nineteen years:-- Yet stronger far than what most men can write: Had death delayed, what fame had equalled hers?"
32318GORGO(_ to an old woman_).--Are you from the Court, mother?
32318Gorgo, one of the ladies, goes by appointment to the house of her friend Praxinoe, where the dialogue begins:***** GORGO.--Is Praxinoe at home?
32318Have you not observed what pity people show to those who are punished by being sentenced to pour water into sieves until they are full?
32318How fares my country?"
32318How much truth is there in Semonides''s views on the women of his time?
32318How on earth are we ever to get through this coil?
32318How, then, are we to bridge over the gulf which separates us from the Greeks?
32318Is not Aspasia worthy of the laurel wreath for the results of her life on"the city of the violet crown"?
32318Of these attractive figures, who should first merit our consideration, if not the heroine of the poem?
32318Or hast thou drunk too deep When thou didst fling thee to thy lair?
32318Or hast thou leaden- weighted limbs?
32318PRAXINOE.--Is it easy to get there?
32318Question me smiling-- say to me,''My Sappho, Who is it wrongs thee?
32318She therefore says:"Dear Ischomachus, tell me, is not the business of the mistress bee what you ought to do rather than myself?
32318Tell me, how much did the stuff cost you just off the loom?
32318The following, translated by Symonds, shows the intensity of his love:"What''s life or pleasure wanting Aphrodite?
32318The gods themselves yielded to the impulses of love; why should not men?
32318The young wife, in her astonishment at such words, asks:"How can I help you in this, or wherein can the little power I have do you any good?
32318They naked stood: look well at them, my youth,-- Do not deceive yourself; are n''t you well off?
32318Thus Hippolytus engages in a lengthy tirade beginning:"Why hast thou given a home beneath the sun, Zeus, unto woman, specious curse to man?"
32318WIFE.--And what are those things, dear husband?
32318WIFE.--And what do you see in me that you believe me capable of assisting in the improvement of your fortune?
32318Was Sappho''s beauty a myth?
32318What are our sources of knowledge of Greek woman and her manner of life?
32318What insight does he give us into the social life of the times?
32318What is the cause of this long struggle?
32318What was it made me madden in my heart so?''
32318Where can one find phrases sufficiently subtle, expressions sufficiently delicate, to reproduce the sweet picture of Nausicaa?
32318Where found she him?
32318Where is the key of the big chest?
32318Who has set my bed otherwhere?
32318Why are you wetting my dress?
32318or have you not a share in it?
32318what spinning women wrought them, what painters designed those drawings, so true they are?
32318when you court concealment, will you tell The matter to a woman?
32892''And I?'' 32892 Oh,_ ça!_"replied the charming South American, with a shrug:"Is that all?
32892But what can I do?
32892Can the stern patriot Clara''s suit deny?
32892Did you not bid me tempt God and die?
32892For instance, what could be more suggestive of utter simplicity than the diary of Abigail Foote, to which reference has just been made?
32892How oft have you eaten and drunk your own damnation?"
32892If in the history of these people a Queen Esther stands forth as a cruel monster, did not proud Rome produce a Messalina?
32892If the cold Puritans were not guiltless in this wise, what could be expected from the Cavaliers or the warm- blooded sons of France?
32892Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone?
32892Or need we go beyond the records of a later date of the people of one of the most cultured nations of Europe?
32892They were imperative in their instant demands; they must be satisfied; but how?
32892What symptoms of the workings of the devil could seem surer to a man of Mather''s prejudices and sympathies?
32892Where shall we place the blame?
32892Who could refuse a fairy, and above all the Blue Fairy?
32892Will they lay out their hair, and wear their false locks, their borders, and towers like comets about their heads?"
32892or have they none?
19869''All very well, Henry,''says Joe to me,''but who''s to do all this? 19869 ''Bout where, now?"
19869''Do, Joe?'' 19869 ''Except for that''?"
19869''What''s the good,''says I,''of calling yourself a friend, if you ca n''t run a little risk? 19869 ( Will you see that child turn his head just like a grown person?
19869A bridge prize?
19869A thorough job, was n''t it?
19869Ah, but when are you going to decide that they_ have_''turned out''?
19869Ai n''t it grand?
19869All right so far,she muttered;"I wonder if that old gray cat with the new kittens is fussing around here?"
19869All went to Yale?
19869Am I going to get them?
19869An''you ca n''t be a day over nineteen, can you?
19869And can you buy all that devotion for twenty, thirty, or is it forty dollars a month, I wonder?
19869And how did you get in, now? 19869 And how in-- how did you know that?"
19869And if any one should ask you, could you-- oh,_ could_ you say you came in by the gate?
19869And is she going to live at the place, too?
19869And so you expect to avoid all this by running away?
19869And what did Ethel do?
19869And you have a trained nurse all the time,Caroline mused, stroking the glistering velvet,"is n''t that funny?
19869And your uncle objects?
19869And-- excuse me, but I''m really interested,he asked,"could you be Mrs. Walter Walbridge?"
19869Are n''t we ever going, Lin?
19869Are n''t you glad we''ve got it?
19869Are n''t_ you_ respectable?
19869Are you a queen, then?
19869Are you goin''to take her home?
19869Are you trying to escape?
19869As how?
19869Babe? 19869 Bad?
19869Be sure to put''em back where you got''em, wo n''t you?
19869Burglars?
19869But I do n''t think that was right, do you, Lin, even for a joke?
19869But how did she get here? 19869 But what_ did_ you do when you were a youngster?"
19869But where were you brought up, child? 19869 But where''s the place?"
19869By the pond?
19869Ca n''t you tell us a little about Italy, while we''re waiting?
19869Can I get something to eat here?
19869Can you find out?
19869Can you keep a promise?
19869Come in, wo n''t you?
19869Come on, Tina, what did_ you_ play?
19869Could you put it back so nobody would know?
19869Cut it short-- what the hell do I care?
19869Did Edith get rested after the moving?
19869Did he die?
19869Did n''t you have any dog?
19869Did n''t, eh?
19869Did she know about all this?
19869Did she live here, too?
19869Did you care to go out with the brougham, to- day, dear?
19869Did you ever go to Atlantic City?
19869Did you put those silver things back?
19869Did you want to see him? 19869 Discussed you with aunty?
19869Do I know Uncle Joe?
19869Do n''t be a fool-- how''s it going to?
19869Do n''t you like it?
19869Do n''t you like me?
19869Do n''t you want to go?
19869Do n''t you want to speak to the children, Tina, dear?
19869Do you feel better now? 19869 Do you know Aunt Edith, too?"
19869Do you know it?
19869Do you know what she means?
19869Do you know whether he went to Harvard?
19869Do you like''Klondike Jim''any better? 19869 Do you mean it?"
19869Do you mean that you go in and out of this hole as you like? 19869 Do you mean to say that Jim never asked you what your business was?"
19869Do you really think I look like one?
19869Do you suppose I would ever,the girl stormed,"unless I-- oh, dear, will somebody understand?
19869Do you suppose there really are regular roads through the trees, like the monkeys took Mowgli on?
19869Do you think I''m a baby?
19869Do you think a child would invent that?
19869Do-- do you want a job?
19869Does not that make your feelings a little-- only a little more tender--"What did you say?
19869Dorothy and I think precisely the same in everything,he said proudly,"do n''t we, my dearest one?"
19869For heaven''s sakes, Car''line, wha''do you mean?
19869General want it?
19869Get me a glass of water, please,she said,"and what may I give you-- milk, perhaps?
19869Goin''as far as my place?
19869Goin''far up my way?
19869Have any luck?
19869Have you been married long, may I ask? 19869 Have you been to Italy?"
19869Have you got it? 19869 Have you sold many eggs this morning?"
19869Here it is,she remarked, holding out the pipe,"how do you do?"
19869His name Barker, too?
19869Holy Bridget, who are you?
19869How are you the one?
19869How d''ye do?
19869How did you get here? 19869 How do you f- feel, Delia?"
19869How old is it?
19869How old is it?
19869How particular?
19869How''d you get here?
19869Hush, now, General, do n''t begin to hold your breath? 19869 I am all alone; the rest have gone-- where have they gone!--where_ could_ they go?
19869I do n''t believe so, my dear,he said briskly;"is this your nurse?
19869I do n''t know what''s the matter with you to- day-- why are you so different? 19869 I found her conversing with Marie Antoinette,"she went on easily,"and she seems to have slipped in with an automobile party-- was there one?
19869I guess I wo n''t see Jim again, then,he said,"will I?
19869I hate to hear you talk like that, Christine,he began,"it''s not fair to yourself--""How''d you know I was Puck?"
19869I looked out for_ her_ well, did n''t I?
19869I suppose they do n''t know very much, do they, so young?
19869I suppose you understand that, do n''t you?
19869I suppose you want me to lose my temper?
19869I think it smells awfully good here, do n''t you?
19869I think this castle is lovely, though, do n''t you, Joan of Arc?
19869I wonder if you''d help me with these dishes, Madeline?
19869I''d no business to leave, I know--_will_ you h''overlook it for once, Miss, and keep mum?
19869I''ll bet there''s no better fellow there than Jim-- none of the big bugs?
19869I''m looking for Hunt,Caroline answered,"does n''t he live here?"
19869I-- are you really angry with me, Rob? 19869 I-- you don''t-- you''re not angry, Rob?"
19869If you''ve quite finished, Caroline, will you go home?
19869If_ you_ had prisoners in_ your_ fortress, and they wrote letters to their friends to come and get them out, would_ you_ mail the letters?
19869Is Marie Antoinette a prisoner, too?
19869Is Mr. Barker sick, Lin?
19869Is Old Grumpy bad to- day?
19869Is he sick?
19869Is it possible you have remembered that I still exist?
19869Is my lunch ready?
19869Is she-- is she dead?
19869Is that man gone? 19869 Is that the automobile?"
19869Is that the truth?
19869Is that you, Mimi?
19869Is-- is your heart weak?
19869It seemed the best thing only this morning-- is that what you meant this morning, Dorothy, when we-- when we-- when I went away?
19869It wo n''t seem so nice alone after this, will it, William Thayer?
19869It''ll come pretty hard on her, doin''her own work, wo n''t it?
19869It''s all right-- Henry D. never bites-- do you feel bad?
19869Just a little more o''the huckleberry bread, dear?
19869Keep along? 19869 Keep him?
19869Known well, is n''t he?
19869Look here, Ferris,said one voice,"is she really dippy-- that one?"
19869Look here,he said, his eye again on the man,"do you know where all that silver belongs?"
19869Me? 19869 Me?
19869Mr. Williston, do you believe that child?
19869Nice dog,he suggested,"what''s his name?"
19869Niece about twenty- one, I take it?
19869No?
19869No?
19869Not a bit?
19869Now if you''ll step out and call your husband, Miss-- I did n''t just get the name?
19869Now run along; what are you going in there for?
19869Of course; why not?
19869Oh shut up, wo n''t you, Henry D.?
19869Oh, I''ll wait and go with you, Lin,she returned, almost assured, now,"why do I have to go first?"
19869Oh, let it go at that; ca n''t you?
19869Oh, no,he assured her, with a loyal glance at the girl,"I-- I had a good breakfast, did n''t I, dear?"
19869Oh, we''ll get a housekeeper for Lorenzo,Madeline said lightly;"he''ll do very well, wo n''t he?
19869Oh, what''s the sense of anything, anyway?
19869Oh, yes,she answered him,"and the-- things from the bureau, too?"
19869Oh, yes,she cried angrily, pushing back her chair and facing them;"all very well, but who are we?
19869Oh,she cried passionately,"why do girls have to do_ all_ the missing?
19869One moment, please,she said,"but are you going to the village?"
19869Ought n''t one to rock it?
19869Proof?
19869Rather hot for history, dear?
19869Really?
19869Should you think,Graycoat demanded, after a pause,"that this incipient melancholia was likely to last long-- speaking, of course, professionally?"
19869Shut up and come on, will you?
19869Since we''re neither of us children and neither of us ready to settle down on account of old age, suppose we stick to town, Bob?
19869Small?
19869So you find our grounds attractive?
19869Something to eat?
19869St. Petersburg, Russia?
19869Startin''out early, ai n''t you?
19869Steal?
19869Step out this way,said Bluelegs, when the sounds of struggle had died away,"and take the child through the grounds, will you, please?
19869Suppose we put it all back and-- oh Lord, what''s the use?
19869Tell me,she demanded eagerly, her voice low and hurried,"how did you come here?
19869Tell me,she said, earnestly,"have you ever been in this place before?
19869Ten years? 19869 Thank you, Peter,"she murmured, half asleep,"and you''ll see Aunt Edith, wo n''t you?"
19869That seems hard,he said;"what''s the reason?"
19869That will be very pleasant,she said,"I trust your majesty is quite well?"
19869That''ll do,he said,"what does this child mean?
19869That''s a fine college, I s''pose?
19869That''s not very old, now, is it?
19869That''s not-- that''s not--"Not one of your''jokes''?
19869That''s where Lenox is, the Berkshires, is n''t it?
19869The last of''em?
19869Then it was your folks?
19869Then why do n''t you?
19869Then, oddly enough,he continued,"here''s my old friend in the big house up yonder-- and she_ is_ old-- and what do you think she''s worried about?
19869There''ll be-- won''t there be me?
19869They did n''t treat you well?
19869They had a quarrel, did n''t they?
19869This is my favorite room, Duchess,said Caroline,"is n''t it yours?"
19869Those are fine names, all of them,he declared, picking himself up with great solicitude for the pipe,"but why did the canary get two?"
19869Uncle any business-- besides trusteeship?
19869W''ere was you, Miss, for goodness''sake?
19869Want a ride?
19869Want it? 19869 Want to come?"
19869Want to pat him?
19869Was his nice bottle all ready? 19869 Was it a bridge prize?"
19869Was n''t it funny he had one of your pins?
19869Was n''t there a man in here? 19869 Was that_ all_ you had?"
19869Was the brother''s epilepsy hereditary?
19869Was this the''thousand''?
19869Well, he_ is_ a buster, is n''t he? 19869 Well, last month?"
19869Well, of all the cute ones... so you''ve seen this before?
19869Well, then,said Caroline briskly,"why do n''t you adopt one?
19869Well, well,Luella shook her head whimsically,"she''s pretty well wrought up, is n''t she?
19869Well-- can I?
19869Well?
19869Were n''t there any girls?
19869Were you ever in chains?
19869Were you lookin''for any particular party?
19869Wh- why ai n''t you married, then?
19869Wha tee?
19869What are we waiting for, please, Gleggson? 19869 What are you doing here, little girl?"
19869What are you doing?
19869What became of the Babe?
19869What difference does it make to you, eh, how this part of the job gets done? 19869 What do you mean?"
19869What do you mean?
19869What do you sing to him?
19869What do you want here?
19869What do you want? 19869 What does your mother sing?"
19869What have you to do with my flag? 19869 What is he, really?"
19869What made you play burglars? 19869 What proof have you got that what you said in there is true?"
19869What should he tell me about his troubles for, and ask me to help him, if I did n''t know him? 19869 What was his name?"
19869What was the matter?
19869What were you sneaking about so soft for?
19869What were you?
19869What''s he want, I wonder? 19869 What''s the good of lying like that?"
19869What-- hell?
19869What-- who-- what is the meaning of this?
19869What? 19869 What?"
19869What_ did_ we want to get to this nasty hot road for, Rose- Marie?
19869When will that be?
19869Where are you going now?
19869Where did you get that pin?
19869Where is Marie Antoinette?
19869Where is she?
19869Where is the place? 19869 Where you going?"
19869Where''s General?
19869Where''s Thea?
19869Who is it?
19869Who is she?
19869Who''ll there be to eat our dinner with us to- morrow, William Thayer?
19869Who''s he?
19869Who''s there?
19869Why did n''t this kind uncle put his nephew with the doctor?
19869Why do n''t you write to him?
19869Why-- why, how_ can_ you be?
19869Why? 19869 Why?
19869Will the fairy queen hand one to her brother-- the big brother-- and one to-- to the angel?
19869Will you prove what you say? 19869 Wortley?"
19869Would he like it?
19869Would you like to stay?
19869Yes, I''d like to-- can you take care of babies, too?
19869Yes-- do you know him? 19869 You are fond of children?"
19869You aren''t-- you aren''t-- What is your real name, dear?
19869You did get it all over, did n''t you?
19869You do n''t mean you''d rather live here--_here_?
19869You do n''t mind, darling?
19869You do n''t say,said the man, bending forward in genuine interest,"I guess it''s a pretty good college, eh?"
19869You do n''t think I could sing well enough for him-- as well as your mother?
19869You get in first,she said,"and then I can hold him a little while, ca n''t I?"
19869You going home?
19869You mean to say you were out in that little back hall and I never heard you?
19869You ought n''t to-- had you-- that is n''t just right for you to say, is it?
19869You said Cousin Joe was well-- and Edith?
19869You were probably looking out of the window? 19869 You''ll keep him, wo n''t you, now?"
19869You''ve been to New York, have n''t you?
19869You''ve got''em, have n''t you?
19869You-- you do n''t want''em to say I-- I took''em?
19869You_ are_ a gentleman, are n''t you?
19869_''Twas_ queer about all those things your cousin wanted, was n''t it?
19869''Bout a year, is n''t she?"
19869''Now what would you do, Henry,''says Joe to me, that''s my name, Henry Barker,''what would you do with a woman like that?''
19869''Peter, what''ll I do?''
19869''Tis your husband, is n''t it, or is it your brother?"
19869''Would you advise me to, Peter?''
19869''You do n''t?''
1986974"What are you doing here, little girl?"
19869And as for any o''the cottage people-- heavens an''earth, Car''line, will you get up an''go home?
19869And how good-- does it never cry?"
19869And if they do, will you say that you slipped in at the gate with a party that came in an automobile?
19869And if you do n''t want_ them_--oh, what''s the use talking?
19869And what should I be doing, eating my lunch here, if I did n''t?"
19869And will you lock this window after me and go out the same way you came?"
19869And you''re very fond of children, are n''t you?
19869Anything in that line yourself, ever?"
19869Are you a queen?"
19869Are you hungry?"
19869Are you trying to tease me?
19869Are you with friends?
19869At the moment of Caroline''s timid knock he was saying over and over again,"Is n''t that so?
19869Barker?"
19869But I could n''t see him much-- was I going to drag him down, just as I''d got him started right?
19869But I mean other things--""Where did you do the Pirates?"
19869But do n''t tell any one, will you?
19869But for a steady diet-- I''m afraid I''d get a bit tired of you, eh?"
19869But surely your Majesty has not been here long?
19869But what is yours?
19869But what was it?
19869But what''s the use of running away?
19869But wo n''t you kiss it once before-- before it''s too late?
19869Can you buy children-- nice children like this one-- to play with your children?
19869Can you sit up and take him?"
19869Can you walk now?
19869Caroline cried excitedly;"what place did Uncle Joe pick out?
19869Caroline cried, indignantly,"did she tell?"
19869Caroline ran to her: how could she have loved that cruel woman?
19869Corners and turns and short- cuts-- why not?
19869Could I have a little boiling water to heat it, if you please?"
19869Cryin''right out loud, was she?
19869Did I have any pull?
19869Did dogs drag milk carts for white- capped women?
19869Did he like the red one best?
19869Did it-- were you-- are you hurt, dear?"
19869Did n''t we have just the same thing in the family, ourselves?"
19869Did n''t you use to do that, Tina?"
19869Did soldiers, red- coated, demand passports?
19869Did they think I would n''t know my baby?
19869Did you ever see anything as smart as that?)
19869Did you know the doctor was going to print my pamphlet?"
19869Did you want him?"
19869Did your cousin mention anything else?"
19869Do n''t tell him about the hole, will you?
19869Do n''t you ever to go bed?"
19869Do n''t you know that my-- that Frank has studied this question very deeply, that it''s a matter of principle with us?
19869Do n''t you mind, will you?"
19869Do n''t you see she''s lost?"
19869Do n''t you want your pipe?"
19869Do n''t, do n''t tell Hunt on me, will you, Miss?
19869Do they know of it?
19869Do you know where you left the automobile?"
19869Do you know why?"
19869Do you like it?"
19869Do you like it?"
19869Do you like the new masseuse?"
19869Do you live in that chestnut?"
19869Do you mind?"
19869Do you mix it here?"
19869Do you remember Joe''s bull fight?"
19869Do you remember?"
19869Do you see?
19869Do you stay here in the winter, too?"
19869Do you think my mother''ll let me keep this pin?
19869Do you want me to push you frontwards, so you can see me?
19869Do you want to escape, too?
19869Does Delia''s baby want it?"
19869Does he know I''m here?"
19869Does she sing, I wonder, a song about-- Oh, something about''my heart''?"
19869Does-- does she sing yet?"
19869For God''s sake, what''s the meaning of it?"
19869For a moment a chill fear struck to the bottom of her little heart: was some weird spell aimed at her, some malignant eye spying on her?
19869G.''?"
19869G.?"
19869General, darling,_ wo n''t_ you sit still, please?
19869Got a little burnt, did n''t it?
19869Had her guest seen the snow tops of green slopes?
19869Had it ever happened?
19869Had n''t you better go?
19869Has your uncle any other animals?"
19869Have I made you any trouble yet?
19869Have a cake?"
19869Have they got the ambulance?"
19869Have you any you''re worried about?"
19869He looks like somebody in one o''those novels, do n''t he, now?"
19869He was silent:"Do n''t you?
19869He''s the real thing, is n''t he, now?"
19869He''s very polite, is n''t he?"
19869Her voice faltered, she choked.... Had Uncle Joe really asked this man to get the emeralds?
19869Here, gardener--"and she waved her little parasol at the man in gray, who was already walking rapidly towards them--"is that flag in my honor or not?"
19869Hey?
19869Hey?"
19869Hey?"
19869How could one have an auction in such a place?
19869How do you suppose I''m to get anywhere, placed as I am, Mr. Armstrong, unless I''m pretty careful?
19869How far do you have to go?"
19869How long d''ye suppose it would take a husky man to back you into one closet and Missy into another and walk off with the stuff?
19869How long do you think I''d stay in that convent?
19869How''s that?"
19869How''s that?''
19869How''s this for a surprise?
19869Hurt you?
19869I ask it as a favor--""Hush, wo n''t you?"
19869I can go back and be foreman again at the works-- we''re bought up, chewed up and spit out like a wad o''paper?''
19869I cut some sassafras root; want some?"
19869I do n''t mean if they''re sick, but can you wash them, and cook the milk in that tin thing, and everything like that?"
19869I guess you''re lost all right, ai n''t you?"
19869I never had a dream like this-- it seems so real, does n''t it, Rufus?"
19869I s''pose he''s tame?"
19869I s''pose they''re real rich-- regular swells?
19869I suppose you were surprised to see all that stuff in the suit- case?"
19869I suppose,"respectfully,"you know more than those three, yourself?"
19869I used to read my geography book till I wore it out nearly; the exports and the imports, you know?
19869I was bridesmaid-- why ca n''t I?
19869I''ll go right out with you, and see that the police--""Oh, is there a baby?
19869If it was anybody else-- but in my uncle''s house-- and the community-- and-- well, will you come?"
19869If you really want to know what the matter with me is, let me ask you if you saw anything out of the way before your friends there interfered?"
19869Is it big enough for-- for anybody?"
19869Is it far from here?"
19869Is it here?"
19869Is it likely I''d be packing his silver in my suit- case if I did n''t know him?"
19869Is n''t that funny-- Alice got in by a rabbit- hole, too, did n''t she?
19869Is n''t that so?
19869Is n''t there enough to go''round, perhaps?"
19869Is that one?"
19869Is-- is she prepared, too?"
19869It ca n''t go-- or back, or anything, can it?"
19869It makes me feel-- oh, well, what''s the odds?
19869It seems a jolly little rat-- they''re not all like that, are they?
19869It seems the stars are lower, there, and look bigger; did you ever see the Southern Cross?"
19869It''s only fifty years,... shall I come now, Jemmy?"
19869Keep him?"
19869Look at Delia, darlin''; where''s Delia?"
19869Luella''s voice shook with scorn,"what''s money?
19869May I ask who you are?"
19869May I?
19869Me?"
19869My dear young lady, did you think we are all brutes because we must obey orders?"
19869My friend, what is this?"
19869My mother tried again and again-- could I take that blue ring a minute?
19869Near here?"
19869Not at all?"
19869Not through the house surely?"
19869Now it was the woman who echoed,"Me?"
19869Now, I suppose you''re wondering what all this means, are n''t you?
19869Oh, do n''t you?"
19869Oh, what shall I do?
19869Oh,"as she remembered,"where_ is_ the General?"
19869One man ca n''t be much to take care of-- you have n''t any children?"
19869Or shall we discuss it at the station- house?"
19869Perhaps the young person in the-- the not- too- long skirts, waved her wand over the bird and he jumped in and the hole closed up?"
19869Pretty cross himself, was he?
19869Pretty easy, were n''t we?"
19869Say it''s private for me, will you?"
19869Shall I go get her?
19869She changed her mind, she says--""Are you talking about Joe Holt?"
19869So you thought I was a burglar, did you?"
19869Surely no children come here?"
19869Take my advice, and wait-- will you?
19869That''s a fine cat, ai n''t it?
19869That''s why I-- that''s the reason I don''t-- good Lord, do n''t you know you''ve given me a half a dozen chances, if I''d had the nerve for the risk?
19869The thousand wo n''t make any difference with graduatin'', will it?"
19869Their clothes: was it true that the French wore wooden shoes?
19869Then you_ do_ know Uncle Joe?"
19869There was a castle for Germany, with the moon behind it and the Rhine-- do you know''Bingen on the Rhine''?
19869There''s a hundred things.... Where were you brought up?"
19869There''s no need to tempt Car''line and your husband, is there?
19869This is private property-- didn''t you see the sign?"
19869To- day you hear a great artist-- hey?
19869Was it the express you wanted, Miss?
19869Was that pin a bug once?"
19869Was that ruby ring a''ngagement ring?"
19869Was there any favoritism?
19869Was there water in the streets, and were boats really their carriages?
19869We have n''t made much lately, because William Thayer hurt his leg, and I''ve been sparing of him-- haven''t I, pup?
19869We''re friends, are n''t we?
19869What are you doing, Caroline?"
19869What are you quarreling about, Rob?"
19869What did you cry for, Luella?
19869What do you say?
19869What do you think?"
19869What is that?"
19869What is the matter with you, anyway?
19869What shall I do?''
19869What was it he said to you?
19869What was it she was trying to remember?
19869What were you saying to that queen woman?"
19869What''s going on_ now_ behind my back?"
19869What''s the party to you, anyway?
19869What''s the use of traveling if you ca n''t come home?
19869When you were married, were there telegrams about it in the papers, up here?"
19869Where are they?
19869Where did he go?"
19869Where did we come from?
19869Where did you come from-- the big house?"
19869Where did you find it?"
19869Where do they haul the wood from, if there is n''t some place at the end?
19869Where do you live?
19869Where do you live?
19869Where do you live?"
19869Where do you sleep?"
19869Where does he live?"
19869Where is Hunt?"
19869Where is the hole you got through?
19869Where you picked it all up at your age--""What''s that, Luella?
19869Where?"
19869Who are all those other people in the castle?"
19869Who are the ones that get caught?
19869Who does J. G. know?
19869Who is talking out there?
19869Who is your cousin?
19869Who knows us?
19869Who named him?"
19869Who was my grandfather?
19869Who was my mother?
19869Who was she to associate with a dog like William Thayer?
19869Who would n''t have done the same?
19869Why do n''t you go out with the little girl and see if you can find her automobile?
19869Why do n''t you?"
19869Why do they always put it into the papers the first thing, Luella?
19869Why should n''t I?
19869Why?"
19869Will a sapphire bracelet answer me that, do you think?
19869Will anybody?
19869Will it come to me?"
19869Will you excuse us?"
19869Will you forget it?
19869Will you promise not to leave for an hour?
19869Will you wait here till I come back and not let anyone see you if you can help it?
19869Will you?
19869Winterpine?"
19869Wo n''t that be fine?"
19869Wo n''t you tell me?
19869Wortley?"
19869Wortley?"
19869Would n''t he help you?"
19869Would you care to try a cut pie?
19869Would you like it?
19869Would you mind getting up and''coming along with me''as they call it, I believe?"
19869Would you wish for me to go and look''i m up, Miss?"
19869You can potter around better there when you''re old, do n''t you think so?
19869You do n''t mind if it costs a little to get settled, do you?''
19869You have n''t got any idea who I am, have you?
19869You know about her, do n''t you, dear?"
19869You know how badly Joan of Arc''s friends felt when she was in prison?
19869You know what I''ve got to do, of course?"
19869You may have heard your uncle say something about it being kind o''careless, leaving the house so much alone?
19869You say yes to whatever I say, will you?
19869You wo n''t blame me for changing, after all I''ve said?"
19869You''re just a regular little chum, are n''t you?"
19869You--"with a look at the woman,"you know him, of course?"
19869[ Illustration:"What are you doing here, little girl?"
19869a woman''s voice interrupted,"was n''t that a knock?"
19869cried she of the chair,"did n''t I tell you he do n''t care for travel?
19869he begged her earnestly,"you believe I am doing it for the best?
19869he demanded, trotting angrily beside her,"tell me that, will you?
19869he gasped,"honest?"
19869he repeated;"do I_ know_ him?"
19869he said coldly,"I was a''good provider,''as they say up there, was n''t I?
19869he said softly;"well, why not?"
19869he said vaguely,"what about Jim?
19869he said,"how''s it going to help you?"
19869he says,''what''ll I do?''
19869said the girl,"and how did you come?
19869she admonished him, adding quickly,"Does he know you''re here?"
19869she assured him, flushed with importance,"and tell''em not to open it, will you?
19869she called cheerfully,"ma want anything?"
19869she cried eagerly;"how long,''you been here?"
19869she cried,"with a dog like that?"
19869she said huskily,"I did n''t know you cared as much as-- oh, what is that?"
19869she said, looking straight at Miss Honey,"do I sing as well as your mother?"
19869she urged him indignantly,"do you want to take that fat old tiresome lady around our nice mountain?
19869she whispered,"when did we come here?
19869the man inquired eagerly,"there''s no cleverer scholar there, much cleverer, I mean, is there?"
19869the man repeated,"proof?"
19869what''s that?"
19869where are you?"
19869you''re Caroline, are you?"
29637Among our ancient texts,says M. J. Bédier, referring to French mediæval literature,"which ought we to publish?
29637Is it possible to do work in the provinces?
29637( 1) Who were the persons invested with authority?
29637( 1)_ General Organisation._--What object should historical instruction aim at?
29637( 2) Did he believe what he said?
29637( 2) What were the official rules?
29637( 2)_ Choice of Subjects._--What proportion should be observed between home and foreign history?
29637( 3) Was he justified in believing whatever he did believe?
29637( 3)_ Order._--In what order should the subjects be attacked?
29637( 4)_ Methods of Instruction._--Should the pupil be given general formulæ first or particular images?
29637(_ a_) Is the fact stated manifestly prejudicial to the effect which the author wished to produce?
29637(_ c_) Was the fact stated_ indifferent_ to the author, so that he had no temptation to misrepresent it?
29637A general question then presents itself: How are we to criticise an anonymous statement?
29637Again, in virtue of their very detachability, the slips, or loose leaves, are liable to go astray; and when a slip is lost how is it to be replaced?
29637And, consequently, what principles ought to guide the choice of subjects and methods?
29637And, if it come to the worst, what does it matter if there is a certain amount of work wasted?
29637Are there no contradictions, no gaps in the sequence of ideas?
29637Are there not still collections of documents of which it would be hard to justify the separate existence?
29637Are these authors thought any the less of on this account?
29637Are they of any more importance when we know the authors''names?
29637Are we to admit it after examination of the documents, or are we to pass on and shelve the question?
29637Are we to choose the economic or the political organisation of the groups, or their intellectual condition?
29637Before we argue from silence we should ask: Might not this fact have failed to be recorded in any of the documents we possess?
29637Besides, is not research, in the present condition of its material aids, difficult enough whatever the experience of the researcher?
29637But do we not see historical writings whose authors have more or less seriously violated the rules?
29637But how is it to be had?
29637But how was it to be replaced?
29637But, it will be asked, are we not already staggering under the weight of documents?...
29637Can exercises be organised in which the pupil may do original work on the facts?
29637Can not tact supply the place of knowledge?"
29637Could not the centralisation of documents, with its evident advantages for researchers, be carried still further?
29637Do we possess documents of different classes or of one single class?
29637Do we possess several traditions of different bias, or a single tradition?
29637Does it appear that the author had sufficient data to work upon?
29637Does it not occur to you that the advice you give me resembles that of a man who should wish to marry his friend to a shrew?
29637Does our knowledge come originally from direct observation, from written tradition, or from oral tradition?
29637Does the book breathe one and the same spirit from cover to cover?
29637General knowledge?
29637Has it deteriorated since?
29637Have these copies been made directly from the originals?
29637How are documents to be treated with a view to historical work?
29637How are facts to be localised?
29637How are images of historical facts to be produced in the pupils''minds?
29637How are the episodes of an event to be chosen?
29637How are they to be grouped to make history?
29637How are we to choose?
29637How are we to construct a formula for an event?
29637How are we to make our imagination of facts of this kind harmonise with the reality?
29637How are we to organise into a common whole, items of knowledge which differ so widely in point of precision?
29637How are we to proceed in order to construct the best possible text?
29637How are we to represent to ourselves these elements of difference for which we have no model?
29637How could we study the institutions or the evolution of France if we ignored the conquest of Gaul by Cæsar and the invasion of the Barbarians?
29637How do they differ from the materials of other sciences?
29637How do we ascertain, in respect of the past, what part of it it is possible, what part of it it is important, to know?
29637How is it to be turned to account, unless it be first understood?
29637How is it to be verified that the pupil has understood the terms and assimilated the facts?
29637How is the interconnection of facts and the process of evolution to be made intelligible?
29637How is this conflict to be decided?
29637How should school- books be compiled, with a view to giving the pupil practice in original work?
29637How, then, is it possible to imagine facts without their being wholly imaginary?
29637In putting forward a statement has the author been led to distort it unconsciously by the circumstance that he was answering a question?
29637In respect of each class of men concerned in the government we shall ask: How were they recruited?
29637In the exposition of each period, should the chronological, geographical, or logical order be followed?
29637In the ocean of universal history what facts is he to choose for collection?
29637In what cases?
29637In what does it consist?
29637In what order?
29637In what species of activity did they differ?
29637In what, then, does the technical_ apprenticeship_ of the scholar or the historian consist?
29637Indeed, what questions have not been asked?
29637Is it a good thing in itself that some workers should, voluntarily or not, confine themselves to the researches of critical scholarship?
29637Is it always the most conscientious writer who enjoys the highest consideration?
29637Is it any wonder that it was not solved at a stroke?
29637Is it now in the same state as when it was produced?
29637Is it to the man who possesses scientific culture?
29637Is it to the mass who have no scientific culture?
29637Is not the House of Fame, as the poet tells us, a more wonderful and quaintly wrought habitation than_ Domus Dedali_ itself?
29637Is our information vague or precise, detailed or summary, literary or positive, official or confidential?
29637Is the style uniform throughout the document?
29637Is there any need to prove the capital importance of Heuristic?
29637Knowing what the author of the document has said, we ask( 1) What did he mean?
29637Lastly, where are the existing catalogues to be consulted?
29637Of what larger group did it form a part?
29637On what scheme?
29637Or should it be expounded in a single continuous course, beginning with the commencement of study, as in France?
29637Ought history to stop at this point?
29637Ought the instruction to be spread over the whole duration of the classes, or should it be concentrated in a special class?
29637Pedagogic capacity?
29637Should formulæ be learnt by heart?
29637Should it be given in one- hour or two- hour classes?
29637Should the professor give a complete course, or should he select a few questions and leave the pupil to study the others by himself?
29637Should the professor state the formulæ himself or require the pupil to search for them?
29637Should the teacher begin by describing conditions or by narrating events?
29637Should we profit by the opportunities afforded by legends to arouse the critical spirit?
29637Technical knowledge and the capacity of doing original research( as at the École des chartes and the École des hautes études)?
29637That is, what reason have we for assuming that the characteristic discovered in these cases will occur in the remaining thousands of cases?
29637The first questions, then, which we ask when we are confronted with a document is: Where does it come from?
29637To what extent ought words and formulæ to be quoted?
29637To what extent should concrete, abstract, and technical terms be used?
29637Was he accurate, or the reverse, in his use of the data he had?
29637Was the author in one of those situations which cause a man to make mistakes?
29637We have therefore to ask the question: In this period and in this group of men was it customary to commit to writing facts of this kind?
29637We have, in such a case, several documents, several statements-- have we the same number of observations?
29637We have, then, to ask: How was a given group sub- divided?
29637We must accurately determine the nature and extent of the group, asking: Of what men was it composed?
29637We next put to ourselves the general question: Was the author in the habit of altering his sources, and in what manner?
29637Were the events they proposed to relate recent, so that all the witnesses of them were not yet dead?
29637What are historical facts?
29637What are the liberties which it is legitimate to take in reproducing autograph texts?
29637What are we to do with an improbable or miraculous fact?
29637What are we to understand by a tribe, an army, an industry, a market, a revolution?
29637What are we to understand by the group of those who speak Greek, the Christian group, the group of modern science?
29637What bond united them?
29637What facts ought it to enable him to understand?
29637What habits had they in common?
29637What influence can it have upon his conduct?
29637What instruments of study should the pupil have?
29637What is a document?
29637What is the way to make comprehensible the character of events and customs?
29637What is their form and their nature?
29637What meaning are we to attach to this term?
29637What place should be assigned to proper names and dates?
29637What qualifications?
29637What right have we to generalise?
29637What services can it render to the culture of the pupil?
29637What style of language is to be employed?
29637What use can we make of it if we can not read it?
29637What use is to be made of chronological tables?
29637What use is to be made of comparison?
29637What use is to be made of engravings?
29637What use is to be made of narratives and descriptions?
29637What was the mode of application( procedure)?
29637What was their content( rules of law)?
29637What was their form( custom, orders, law, precedent)?
29637What was their official authority?
29637What were their real powers?
29637What, pray, is the criterion of utility in these matters?
29637Where are the_ problems_ in history, and what schoolboy is ever trained to gain by independent effort an insight into the interconnection of events?"
29637Which great models?
29637Who are the persons that in our own day have discovered, published, and annotated the greatest number of documents?
29637Why should he hurry?
29637Why should not things go in these matters as they do in life, where it is not necessarily the best men that get on best?
29637[ 108] Would it not be preferable that workers in the field of history should specialise?
29637[ 180] But how are the questions to be chosen in a science so different from the others?
29637[ 248] Now that most of what we objected to has been abolished, what is the use of reviving old controversies?
29637[ 53] What exactly are we to understand by this"incommunicable knowledge,"of which we speak?
29637and the examples of a custom?
29637between ancient and contemporary history?
29637between institutions or usages, and events?
29637between the evolution of material usages, intellectual history, social life, political life?
29637between the special branches of history( art, religion, customs, economics) and general history?
29637between the study of particular incidents, of biography, of dramatic episodes, and the study of the interconnection of events and general evolutions?
29637of authors''texts?
29637of geographical sketches?
29637of historical novels?
29637of imaginary scenes?
29637of reproductions and restorations?
29637of statistical and graphic tables?
29637of synchronical tables?
29637or should it begin with the periods and the countries which are nearest to us so as to proceed from the better known to the less known?
29637or should we avoid legends?
29637that the cases chosen resemble the average?
29637the conditions of customs?
29637the motives of actions?
29637what is its date?
29637who is the author of it?
26152N''est- ce pas de ton coeur que viennent les graces de ton enjouement? 26152 Who shall decide when doctors disagree?"
26152''Tis very justly thought, and very politely quoted, and my best courtesy is due to him and to you:--but now will you listen to me?
26152--to some wild and beautiful melody, such as some shepherd boy might"pipe to Amarillis in the shade?"
26152Against the dangers of romance?--but where are they?
26152Almost every one knows by heart Lady Percy''s celebrated address to her husband, beginning, O, my good lord, why are you thus alone?
26152And again:-- What is this maid?
26152And do you think, like some interesting young lady in Miss Edgeworth''s tales, that"women have nothing to do with politics?"
26152And have you nuns no further privileges?
26152And is it I That drive thee from the sportive court, where thou Wast shot at with fair eyes, to be the mark Of smoky muskets?
26152And is it true that I must go from Troy?
26152And when goes hence?
26152And why have you not chosen your examples from real life?
26152And you have written a book to make them better?
26152Apropos to the historical characters, I hope you have refuted that_ insolent_ assumption,( shall I call it?)
26152Are not these large enough?
26152Are there many such, think you, in the world?
26152Are they to serve as examples or as warnings for the youth of this enlightened age?
26152Are you a comedian?
26152Are you a man?
26152Art thou afeard To be the same in thine own act and valor, As thou art in desire?
26152Art thou gone so?
26152As warnings, of course-- what else?
26152Ay, madam, twenty several messengers: Why do you send so thick?
26152Ay, who doubts that?
26152Be these sad signs confirmers of thy words?
26152Be your tears wet?
26152Beautiful lines!--Where are they?
26152Both are ill- judged and odious; but did you ever meet with a woman of the world, who did not abuse most heartily the whole race of men?
26152But do you thence infer that both are good for nothing?
26152But had he died in the business, madam?
26152But how are we to arrive at the solution of this glorious riddle, whose dazzling complexity continually mocks and eludes us?
26152But how could you( saving the reverence due to a lady- authoress, and speaking as one reasonable being to another) choose such a threadbare subject?
26152But how many hath he killed?
26152But how tell in words, so pure, so fine, so ideal an abstraction as Hamlet?
26152But seriously, do you think it necessary to guard young people, in this selfish and calculating age, against an excess of sentiment and imagination?
26152But shall she weakly relinquish the golden opportunity, and dash the cup from her lips at the moment it is presented?
26152But since by reason I can not persuade ye to it, to what purpose do I defer my last hope?"
26152But to proceed: I allow that with this view of the case, you could not well have chosen your illustrations from real life; but why not from history?
26152But to what do you attribute the number of satirical women we meet in society?
26152But wherefore could not I pronounce, amen?
26152But why are they mischievous?
26152COUNTESS Nay, a mother; Why not a mother?
26152Can Fulvia die?
26152Can this be true?
26152Can we believe that the mere tardy acknowledgment of her innocence could make amends for wrongs and agonies such as these?
26152Day, night, Are they not but in Britain?
26152Did I, Charmian, Ever love Cæsar so?
26152Did ever dragon keep so fair a cave?
26152Did it ever fail to charm or to interest, to seize on the coldest fancy, to touch the most insensible heart?
26152Did you ever talk with a man of the world, who did not speak with levity or contempt of the whole human race of women?
26152Did your letters pierce the queen to any demonstration of grief?
26152Do not you love him, madam?
26152Do we not fancy Cleopatra drawing herself up with all the vain consciousness of rank and beauty as she pronounces this last line?
26152Do you allow no distinction between the romance of exaggerated sentiment, and the romance of elevated thought?
26152Do you believe his tenders, as you call them?
26152Do you believe this?
26152Do you love me?
26152Do you love my son?
26152Do you not remember, lady, in your father''s time, a Venetian, a scholar, and a soldier, that came hither in company of the Marquis of Montferrat?
26152Do you think I will?
26152Do_ you_ bring cold water to quench the smouldering ashes of enthusiasm?
26152Dost thou think, though I am caparisoned like a man, that I have a doublet and hose in my disposition?
26152For instance:-- Why holds thine eye that lamentable rheum?
26152For the very expressions of Lear-- What can you say to draw A third more opulent than your sisters''?
26152For them?
26152For what good turn?
26152Force me to keep you as a prisoner, Not like a guest?
26152From its truth perhaps?
26152Ha!--Portia?
26152Hath he ask''d for me?
26152Hath that poor monarch taught thee to insult?
26152Have I let slip a second vanity That gives thee hope?
26152Have I not cause?
26152Having waste ground enough, Shall we desire to raze the sanctuary, And pitch our evils there?
26152He has almost supp''d: why have you left the chamber?
26152He''s speaking now, Or murmuring, Where''s my serpent of old Nile?
26152Hear''st thou, Pisanio?
26152His service?
26152How all the other passions fleet to air, As doubtful thoughts, and rash- embraced despair, And shudd''ring fear, and green- eyed jealousy?
26152How could''st thou drain the life- blood of the child To bid the father wipe his face withal, And yet be seen to bear a woman''s face?
26152How do you, women?
26152How does my royal lord?
26152How dost thou like this tune?
26152How fares your majesty?
26152How now?
26152How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are?
26152How''scap''d I killing when I cross''d you so?
26152I can not do it to the gods; Must I then do''t to them?
26152I do beseech you,( Chiefly that I might set it in my prayers,) What is your name?
26152I must then to the Greeks?
26152I only wished I might have died With my poor father; wherefore should I ask For longer life?
26152I pray you, how many hath he killed and eaten in these wars?
26152I wrong''d you, fair?
26152If Antony Be free and healthful, why so tart a favor To trumpet such good tidings?
26152If Cordelia reminds us of any thing on earth, it is of one of the Madonnas in the old Italian pictures,"with downcast eyes beneath th''almighty dove?"
26152If he chose to make the Delphic oracle and Julio Romano contemporary-- what does it signify?
26152If ill, Why hath it given me earnest of success, Commencing in a truth?
26152If it appeared to the Grecian sage so"difficult for a man not to love himself, nor the things that belong to him, but justice only?"
26152If now I have answered all your considerations and objections, and sufficiently explained my own views, may I proceed?
26152If one of mean affairs May plod it in a week, why may not I Glide thither in a day?
26152If sleep charge nature, To break it with a fearful dream of him, And cry myself awake?--that''s false to his bed, Is it?
26152If this is not mere masculine indifference to blood and death, mere firmness of nerve, what is it?
26152If this observation applies at all, it is equally just with regard to characters: and in either case can we admit it?
26152In such a case, as she says herself-- What should Cordelia do?--love and be silent?
26152Is it but this?
26152Is it fair to bring a second- hand accusation against me, and not attend to my defence?
26152Is it not exquisite-- irresistible?
26152Is it not rather a whiting of the sepulchre?
26152Is it possible Disdain should die, while she hath such meet food to feed it as Signior Benedick?
26152Is it possible?
26152Is it so nominated in the bond?
26152Is she the goddess who hath severed us, And brought us thus together?
26152Is there then no sanctuary for such a mind?--Where shall it find a refuge from the world?--Where seek for strength against itself?
26152Is this Antony''s Cleopatra-- the Circe of the Nile-- the Venus of the Cydnus?
26152Is this your christian counsel?
26152Is''t lost,--Is''t gone?
26152Is''t not a kind of incest to take life From thine own sister''s shame?
26152It is easy to_ say_ this; yet who but Shakspeare could have expanded the last line into a Falconbridge?
26152It is not lost-- but what an''if it were?
26152It is not so expressed-- but what of that?
26152Keeping in view the peculiar character of Hermione, such as she is delineated, is she one either to forgive hastily or forget quickly?
26152Know you not, he has?
26152Love you my son?
26152Macbeth reigned over Scotland from the year 1039 to 1056--but what is all this to the purpose?
26152Met''st thou my posts?
26152Must I With my base tongue give to my noble heart A lie, that it must bear?
26152Must I go show them my unbarb''d sconce?
26152My husband, then?
26152No: not to be so odd, and from all fashions, As Beatrice is can not be commendable: But who dare tell her so?
26152Nor I your mother?
26152Now Iras, what think''st thou?
26152Now our joy, Although the last not least-- What can you say to draw A third more opulent than your sisters''?
26152Now would it not be well, if this common and comprehensive word were more accurately defined, or at least more accurately used?
26152O insupportable and touching loss-- Upon what sickness?
26152O temperance, lady?
26152O, my pardon?
26152Of her subsequent madness, what can be said?
26152Past grace?
26152Pr''ythee speak, How many score of miles may we well ride''Twixt hour and hour?
26152Say you?
26152Shall I endure?
26152Shall I not live to be avenged on her?
26152Shall she cast away the treasure for which she has ventured both life and honor, when it is just within her grasp?
26152Shall they hoist me up, And show me to the shouting varletry Of censuring Rome?
26152She I kill''d?
26152Sir, do you know me?
26152Speak, is it out of the way?
26152Speak, is''t so?
26152Speakest thou from thy heart?
26152Stand I condemned for pride and scorn so much?
26152Stands he, or sits he, Or does he walk?
26152Such giddiness of heart and brain Comes seldom save from rage and pain, So talks as it''s most used to do?
26152Sweet, who has anger''d you?
26152That honor, saved, may upon asking give?
26152The moral!--of what?
26152Then is it sin To rush into the secret house of death Ere death dare come to us?
26152Then wav''d his hankerchief?
26152Then, in a few words, what is the subject, and what the object, of your book?
26152Think you there was, or might be, such a man As this I dream''d of?
26152Think you, I am no stronger than my sex Being so father''d and so husbanded?
26152Think you, I pray you, my lords, will any Englishmen counsel, or be friendly unto me, against the king''s pleasure, they being his subjects?
26152Think''st thou it honorable for a nobleman Still to remember wrongs?
26152This great moral retribution was to be displayed to us-- but how?
26152Thus when the victory of Coriolanus is proclaimed, Menenius asks,"Is he wounded?"
26152To lie in watch there, and to think of him?
26152To weep''twixt clock and clock?
26152True it is, that the ambitious women of these civilized times do not murder sleeping kings: but are there, therefore, no Lady Macbeths in the world?
26152Upon the rack, Bassanio?
26152Upon what ground can we read the play from beginning to end, and doubt the angel- purity of Isabella, or contemplate her possible lapse from virtue?
26152Using those thoughts, which should indeed have died With them they think on?
26152Was the hope drunk, Wherein you dress''d yourself?
26152What angel shall Bless this unworthy husband?
26152What beast was it then, That made you break this enterprise to me?
26152What do you mean?
26152What do you mean?
26152What dost thou mean by shaking of thy head?
26152What earthly title could add to her grandeur?
26152What have they to do more upon this earth?
26152What is Cleopatra but the empress and type of all the coquettes that ever were-- or are?
26152What is between you?
26152What is it, then, which lends to Cordelia that peculiar and individual truth of character, which distinguishes her from every other human being?
26152What is your pleasure, madam?
26152What lady would you choose to assail?
26152What mean you, madam?
26152What means that hand upon that breast of thine?
26152What must I do?
26152What name, sweet lady?
26152What offence, sweet Beatrice?
26152What say you?
26152What says the married woman?
26152What shall be said of her?
26152What shall we answer to such criticism?
26152What should I do, I do not?
26152What should I think?
26152What sum owes he the Jew?
26152What then?
26152What was the last That he spake to thee?
26152What was there to check the ardor of hope, of faith, of constancy, just rising in her breast, but disappointment, which she had never yet felt?
26152What will become of me now, wretched lady?
26152What would she have thought and felt, had some soothsayer foretold to her the fate of her own children, whom she so tenderly loved?
26152What would you do?
26152What''s his service?
26152What''s his will?
26152What''s that?
26152What''s the matter That this distempered messenger of wet, The many- color''d Iris, rounds thine eye?
26152What''s this?
26152What, and from Troilus too?
26152What, i''the storm?
26152What, what?
26152When I have spoken of you disparagingly, Hath ta''en your part?
26152When I said a mother, Methought you saw a serpent: what''s in mother, That you start at it?
26152When he urges her to revenge, she asks, with all the simplicity of virtue,"How should I be revenged?"
26152When shall we see again?
26152When she bursts into that outrageous speech-- Is he not approved in the height a villain that hath slandered, scorned, dishonored my kinswoman?
26152When will the reign of Constance cease?
26152Where am I?
26152Where art thou, death?
26152Where be the sacred vials thou shouldst fill With sorrowful water?
26152Where have I been?
26152Where think''st thou he is now?
26152Where, but in heaven?
26152Wherefore, gentle maiden, Do you neglect them?
26152Who ever knew a Hamlet in real life?
26152Who is it thou dost call usurper, France?
26152Why do you hate them?
26152Why do you make such faces?
26152Why do you speak so startingly and rash?
26152Why dost not speak?
26152Why dost thou look so sadly on my son?
26152Why dost thou stay?
26152Why holds thine eye that lamentable rheum, Like a proud river peering o''er his bounds?
26152Why should I think you can be mine, and true, Though you in swearing shake the throned gods, Who have been false to Fulvia?
26152Why should excuse be born, or e''er begot?
26152Why should there be competition or comparison?
26152Why should you frown?
26152Why!--why are they mischievous?
26152Why, after all, should we be offended at what does not offend Juliet herself?
26152Why, methinks by him This creature''s no such thing?
26152Why, what would you do?
26152Why?--that you are my daughter?
26152Wil''t please you hear me?
26152Will poor folks lie That have afflictions on them, knowing''tis A punishment or trial?
26152Will you go yet?
26152Will you have her?
26152Will you not eat your word?
26152Will''t please, you Sir, be gone?
26152Wilt thou be made a man out of my vice?
26152With thin helm?
26152Would Imogen have done so, who is so generously ready to grant a pardon before it be asked?
26152You are a spirit, I know: when did you die?
26152You laugh when boys, or women, tell their dreams Is''t not your trick?
26152You remember too the famous nativity by some Neapolitan painter, who has placed Mount Vesuvius and the Bay of Naples in the background?
26152You will not listen to me?
26152You''re not angry?
26152[ 81] The corresponding passage in the old English Plutarch runs thus:"My son, why dost thou not answer me?
26152a tardiness of nature, That often leaves the history unspoke Which it intends to do?--My lord of Burgundy, What say you to the lady?
26152and how beautifully he has exemplified it in Juliet?
26152are ye gone, And leave me here in wretchedness behind ye?
26152are you yet living?
26152daughter and mother So strive upon your pulse: what, pale again?
26152does it curd thy blood, To say, I am thy mother?
26152e che altro mi resta verso te se non colla mia morte seguirti?
26152for wot''st thou whom thou mov''st?
26152happier therein than I!-- And that was all?
26152hath it slept since, And wakes it now, to look so green and pale At what it did so freely?
26152have I not ever said, How that ambitious Constance would not cease, Till she had kindled France and all the world Upon the right and party of her son?
26152how shall this be prevented?
26152how then?
26152i''the night?
26152is''t I That chase thee from thy country, and expose Those tender limbs of thine to the event Of the none- sparing war?
26152is''t true?
26152like a corse?
26152obedience?
26152or Desdemona, who does not forgive because she can not even resent?
26152or heal a heart which must have bled inwardly, consumed by that untold grief,"which burns worse than tears drown?"
26152or is he on his horse?
26152or to prove that the mention of Proteus and Pluto, baptism and the Virgin Mary, in a breath, amounts to an anachronism?
26152quite unmann''d in folly?
26152she replies with a kind of half consciousness-- No more but so?
26152think''st thou we shall ever meet again?
26152what human record or attestation strengthen our impression of her reality?
26152what poor ability''s in me To do him good?
26152what then?
26152what wicked deem is this?
26152when will_ her_ power depart?
26152where are now your fortunes?
26152where are ye?
26152which of ye drew from the other?"
26152who was it that thus cried?
26152why do you keep alone, Of sorriest fancies your companions making?
26152why how now, Charmian?
26152will you not lend a knee?
26152yet if genius, youth, and innocence could not escape unslurred, can I hope to do so?
26152yet who, ideal as the character is, feels not its reality?
31752''Do you wish it?'' 31752 Above all,"added the traveler,"who is to pay for all those provisions?"
31752And have they like us brave fighting cocks?
31752And her name?
31752And how was that brave wife clad, friend guest?
31752And it is with such unconcern that you speak of the Roman invasion of Gaul?
31752And the bucklers?
31752And the cattle, are they as fine as ours?
31752And the marriages, how are they celebrated?
31752And the second sacrifice?
31752And the third sacrifice, dear child?
31752And their head- gear?
31752And what becomes of the body that is thus mutilated, Joel?
31752And what else?
31752And what is it you saw at Vannes?
31752And what is left of those senseless battles, undertaken by the pride of the kings who then reigned over the Gauls?
31752And what is the reason of it all, children?
31752And what is the wide maw that is to swallow up those bags of wheat, those muttons, those heads of beef and those barrels of hydromel?
31752And what say you, dear child, you who are a saint,inquired Joel,"a saint of the Isle of Sen?
31752And why not? 31752 And, of course, the fattest-- What else?"
31752Are they like ours?
31752Are they not, like yourself, the sons of the same god, as the druid religion teaches you? 31752 Are they white and cut square like our own?"
31752Are we to have supper soon, Margarid?
31752Are you to depart so soon from us? 31752 But should I not, at this moment when I am to leave you, know the name of the brave man who sat at my hearth?
31752But,asked Joel,"is that trial one of the customs of the Gauls along the Rhine?"
31752By what right can we curse the people of Marseilles? 31752 Did I not tell you, friend,"said Joel,"that Syomara, Margarid''s grandmother, was the peer of your Gallic woman of the Rhine?"
31752Did she wear a tunic like ours?
31752Do not my father and mother know that to- night, when the moon rises, there will be three human sacrifices at the stones of the forest of Karnak?
31752Do they pay, as we do, the money they owe the dead?
31752Do you know that the ewaghs watch day and night?
31752Friend Joel,inquired the stranger,"who are those two young fellows?
31752Friend traveler, did you not hear me?
31752Have not the distant conquests slipped from us? 31752 Have you not also in your country the belt of agility?"
31752His large black horse does not seem to stumble in the descent.... Where can he be going in such a hurry?
31752Is it a story that you want of me?
31752It is nearly a year I have not seen her.... She is surely still the pearl of the Isle of Sen? 31752 Of course,"said the brenn laughing louder,"they must also drink-- and what else?"
31752Oh, my daughter, if Hesus is angry, how are we to appease him?
31752One story?
31752The sacrifices of to- night?
31752These are, no doubt, the heads of enemies who have been killed by your fathers, friend Joel? 31752 Truly... you will come?"
31752Well, Joel,the unknown traveler remarked,"do you still think that it is a long way from Touraine to Britanny?
31752Were you at that terrible battle?
31752What are you laughing about?
31752What did I see? 31752 What has happened that you come at so late an hour and in such hurry?
31752What is going on while we are here telling stories? 31752 What?
31752When the best regions of the country shall have been invaded by the stranger, what will then become of the rest of Gaul? 31752 Where can he be riding to in such a hurry?
31752Who is dead?
31752Will you allow yourselves to be vanquished? 31752 You say''We saw''?"
31752Your daughter?
31752Your daughter?... 31752 ''Do you wish it?'' 31752 And does not the subjugation, does not the blood of a brother cry for vengeance? 31752 And what is the purpose of that big old trunk? 31752 Are you unconcerned because the enemy is not at the very gates of your own homestead? 31752 As Deber- Trud looked over and smelled the traveler with a doubtful air, Joel said to the animal:Do you not see he is a guest whom I bring home?"
31752But now tell me, what is that brass belt for that I see hanging yonder?"
31752But where is the gentle Meroë?"
31752But who are the people that are to be sacrificed and will be pleasing to Hesus, dear daughter?"
31752Did he kill him, like a brave man face to face with equal weapons?
31752Did you see that famous Julius Cæsar?
31752Do the other provinces at last take alarm at these ominous invasions of Rome that push ever forward and threaten the very heart of Gaul?
31752Do you know it, daughter?
31752Do you know which is his native province?"
31752Draw your oxen aside.... Do you not see that the rocks leave me no passage either way?...
31752Hardly had he ascended the pyre, when again the harps and cymbals struck up, and the bard chanted:"Who is this?
31752Have not our implacable and ever more powerful enemies, the Romans, raised all the peoples against us?
31752Have we not been compelled to abandon those useless possessions-- Asia, Greece, Germany, Italy?
31752If that is so, are not all the Gauls your brothers?
31752If they begin to issue orders, why stop at all?"
31752Is he the Chief of the Hundred Valleys?"
31752Is she one of the nine druid priestesses of the Isle of Sen?"
31752Is she one of the virgins of the Isle of Sen?"
31752Is that all, my boy?"
31752Is your inquisitiveness satisfied, Joel?
31752Joel( why should I not say so?)
31752Leave us so soon?...
31752Must not also those provinces be cursed which, since the decline of the republic, thus allowed one of their sisters to be overpowered and subjugated?
31752One story only?
31752Our Hena?...
31752Stumpy, who was among the crowd of relatives, put in:"But who is that third human sacrifice, that is to appease Hesus and deliver us from war?
31752That he is subject to epileptic fits?...
31752The name of the wise man who speaks with so much soundness and loves his country so warmly?"
31752Thus mutilated and dismembered, how will she defend herself against her enemies?"
31752What better can we do at the corner of our hearth during an autumn evening?"
31752What has happened?
31752What kind of a looking man is he?"
31752What must we do to appease the wrath of the All- Powerful?"
31752When they stopped speaking she calmly said:"As to those Roman officers, my sons, were they not sent back to their army-- after a thorough caning?"
31752Whence did it come, to fill the vast solitudes that to- day are so populous?
31752Who is it, Hena, who is it to be sacrificed this evening?"
31752Who, Hena, is the third to be sacrificed this evening?"
31752Who, Hena, is to be sacrificed this evening?"
31752Why do you journey away?"
31752Will you deliver to them your wives, your sisters, your daughters and children, ye Gauls of Britanny?"
31752Will you submit to such disgrace?
31752Would you want more details about Cæsar''s infirmities?
31752Your daughter?
31752asked Mamm''Margarid;"Who is it?"
31752asked the brenn;"which are they?"
31752his wife... who remained on the bank?--""But what was the reason of such a barbarity, friend guest?"
31752to- morrow?"
32363''Pray, where are your pistols, Tilly?'' 32363 ''Who, all of us?''
32363And how attained you,he asked,"to this true knowledge of pleasure?
32363Have all of you good spurs?
32363How is that? 32363 Nay,"retorted Lady Jane,"but did not the baker make him?"
32363The woods echoed with,''Which way did he go? 32363 Then why do you curtsey?"
32363Well, Miss Sally, what would you do if the British were to come here?
32363What are you going to do with that?
32363What is to be done now?
32363Who are you?
32363Who goes there?
32363--Ah, yes, little coquette, who knows?
32363And what did chiefly allure you to it, seeing that few women and not many men have arrived at it?"
32363Are we not born into life to suffer adversity and even disgrace if necessary?
32363Are you willing to do the same?"
32363At once he asked her why she relinquished such pastime as was then going on in the park for the sake of study?
32363But the Princess had no intention of being stopped, so she merely turned her head as she ran, and asked,"What''s slape?"
32363Cornwallis surrendered?
32363Could such things be?
32363Everything was in order, a sentinel was on each bastion, the enemy had been held at bay-- what man could have done better work?
32363Flying from what?
32363For a moment Baudricourt sat staring at her, wide- eyed, then he asked:"Who is your Lord?"
32363For one moment the King hesitated,--was it because of a thought of his unworthiness, or because of the great responsibilities wearing it would impose?
32363How do we know what the white man''s code of honour about such matters is?
32363How many girls would have been as thoughtful as that, I wonder?
32363I ca n''t help forbear exclaiming to the girls,''Now are you sure the news is true?
32363In a moment his ears were saluted with,''Is there any rebel officer here?''
32363Is it not true that you will always love me?"
32363Jeanne a prisoner?
32363Lady Jane, looking up, asked if"the Princess were present in the chapel?"
32363Lafayette_ at home_, and waiting for her?
32363Looking coldly from her to Croelius, the Count asked:"How old is she?"
32363My mother in the next room, hearing the music, thought Jenny''s half sister was at the piano, and called out,''Amalia, is that you?''
32363Nay, who could have more nobly defended the garrison?
32363Now are you_ sure_ they have gone?''
32363Shall we run away?"
32363She must raise the siege of Orléans, but how?
32363She was now blindfolded and, trying to feel for the block, asked,"What shall I do?
32363The Maid of Orléans taken by the English?
32363The Marquis de Lafayette at home?
32363The Virginia campaign brought to a successful end?
32363The man, quick to do her bidding, ran to a point of vantage, stood beside her again, and what was it he said?
32363Then their spokesman asked:"Do you wish peace or war?"
32363Then with another glance at Jenny he asked coldly,"What should we do with such an ugly creature?
32363Tilly?''
32363Was there ever a more charming example of girlish enthusiasm combined with executive ability, and artistic feeling than this?
32363Were they planning to cross the river and invade the Red Man''s stronghold?
32363What had come over Adrienne?
32363What was it they said?
32363What was to be the next move of these strangers?
32363What will become of us, only six miles distant?
32363When Jeanne heard this she cried out impatiently,"To Poitiers?
32363When has the time been that the innocent were not exposed to violence and oppression?"
32363Where in the annals of history can be found a greater proof of devotion than this?
32363Where is it?"
32363While they stood there ready to start, a man asked Jeanne:"How can you hope to make such a journey, and escape the enemy?"
32363Who knows what mischief I may yet do?"
32363With eyes full of tears she asked,"Have you nothing to say in behalf of this man?"
32363Would you ever guess it to be a shrimp nett?
32363You call these strangers unworthy of confidence because they demand the presence of my mother?
32363which showed that the Maid, for all her saintliness had also a very normal human degree of impatience to do as she had planned, and who can blame her?
30527And what can you do?
30527And what,he asked,"do you propose to call this?"
30527Are you willing to work?
30527Château X----?
30527Do you want a match?
30527Ex- cuse me, sir,he said,"but do you happen to be going on?"
30527Have you been to sea?
30527I think you will be better at engineering?
30527Is it a trade?
30527Is it metaphysics?
30527Is it one of the crew?
30527Is it some language?
30527Is n''t it handsome, now?
30527Is not this the hour of the class? 30527 No?"
30527Oh, why,I remember passionately wondering,"why can we not all be happy and devote ourselves to play?"
30527Surprised? 30527 That was a low thing for a man to do now, was n''t it?
30527That?
30527The first? 30527 They say they send us beef from America,"he argued:"but who pays for it?
30527To what do Cæsar and Alexander owe the infinite grandeur of their renown, but to fortune? 30527 Was it one of the crew?"
30527Well, and who is he?
30527Were you surprised?
30527What do you call your mither?
30527What have you got to say for yourself?
30527What''s this?
30527What, are you afraid of marriage?
30527Where are ye when the moon appears?
30527Where are you going?
30527Who first found the forest?
30527Who was that?
30527Why, have you found a job?
30527Why, then, what is''t?
30527You are a Scotchman, sir?
30527You want to know why Californian wine is not drunk in the States?
30527_ Do you forgive me?_Madam and sweetheart, so far as I have gone in life I have never yet been able to discover what forgiveness means.
30527_ Do you understand me?_God knows; I should think it highly improbable.
30527_ He_ do n''t care-- ain''t it?
30527_ Is it still the same between us?_Why, how can it be?
30527_ Is it still the same between us?_Why, how can it be?
30527_ Is that all?_All?
30527_ Is that all?_All?
305272 and 3?
30527Above all, in these last we may look to see some singular hybrid-- whether good or evil, who shall forecast?
30527After that adventure of my friend with the policeman, you would not have cared, would you, to publish that in the first person?
30527After what fashion, I pray thee?
30527Am I left to the daily papers?"
30527And again:"O why did ever I come upon this miserable voyage?"
30527And if it were not, what the better was Rufe?
30527And suppose Ronalds came?
30527And the forest itself?
30527And the son to whom he was going, I asked, was he not able to support him?
30527And then with a moan that went to my heart,"O why did I come upon this miserable journey?"
30527And what have we in place?
30527And what is the result?
30527And what would it be to grow old?
30527And what, in God''s name, is all this pother about?
30527And what, pathologically looked at, is the human body with all its organs, but a mere bagful of petards?
30527And where is that peaked forehead which according to all written accounts and many portraits, was the distinguishing characteristic of his face?
30527And why not extend the same allowance to imperfect speakers?
30527And, meantime, in the car in front of me, were there not half a hundred emigrants from the opposite quarter?
30527Are there no more definite rules than are to be found in the Prayer- book?
30527As for the rabble who have nothing but personal property, what hold has the nation of them?
30527Besides, was this mass of heavy mining plant worth transportation?
30527But how about an odd bit?
30527But how can they know?
30527But in slighter intimacies, and for a less stringent union?
30527But what is to be said of the Nebraskan settler?
30527But where was the use of argument?
30527Do the old men mind it, as a matter of fact?
30527Do you really fancy you should be more beholden to your correspondent, if he had been damning you all the while for your importunity?
30527Do you think it is a hard thing to write poetry?
30527For how many years did Mr. Pepys continue to make and break his little vows?
30527For what cause do they embitter their own and other people''s lives?
30527Had all these return voyagers made a fortune in the mines?
30527Had any of us ever seen giant powder?
30527He first proposed that we should"camp someveres around, ai n''t it?"
30527How are you to put aside love''s pleadings?
30527How if there were no centre at all, but just one alley after another, and the whole world a labyrinth without end or issue?
30527How many, who think no otherwise than the young painter, have we not heard disbursing second- hand hyperboles?
30527How then, seeing we are driven to the hypothesis that people choose in comparatively cold blood, how is it they choose so well?
30527How to conduct individual citizens about the burgess- warren, when once heaven had withdrawn its leading luminary?
30527How would you have people agree, when one is deaf and the other blind?
30527How, then, in such an atmosphere of compromise, to keep honour bright and abstain from base capitulations?
30527How?
30527How?
30527I do not even know if I desire to live there; but let me hear, in some far land, a kindred voice sing out,"Oh, why left I my hame?"
30527I was reminded of the song which I had heard a little while before in the close, tossing steerage:"O why left I my hame?"
30527If Benbow had lived in the time of this annalist, do you suppose his name would not have been added to the glorious roll?
30527If a tree a hundred feet high were to fall a foot a day, how long would it take to fall right down?
30527If all he wanted was the wood and iron, what, in the name of fortune, was to prevent him taking them?
30527If it be romance, if it be contrast, if it be heroism that we require, what was Troy town to this?
30527If it was, why had not the rightful owners carted it away?
30527If it was, would they not preserve their title to these movables, even after they had lost their title to the mine?
30527Indeed, is it worth while?
30527Is he, or is he not, to look out for magicians, kindly and potent?
30527Is it mathematics?"
30527It was, he said, his principle not to tell people where they were to dine; for one answer led to many other questions, as what o''clock it was?
30527It will not do to delay until we are clogged with prudence and limping with rheumatism, and people begin to ask us:"What does Gravity out of bed?"
30527It''s a pretty fair start, is it not, for a political trial?
30527Lastly, was it at all credible that Ronalds would forget what Rufe remembered?
30527Let them agree to differ; for who knows but what agreeing to differ may not be a form of agreement rather than a form of difference?
30527My question is,''Can I drive a nail?''"
30527No offence, I hope?"
30527Now what should this principle be?
30527One piped, in feeble tones,"Oh why left I my hame?"
30527Pennsylvania, Maine, Iowa, Kansas?
30527Put up the horses?
30527Rufe had been consumptive, and was now quite a strong man, ai n''t it?
30527Seeing he was a very honest fellow, I consulted him upon a point of etiquette: if one should offer to tip the American waiter?
30527Stay to dinner?
30527That was fairly successful indeed; yet a man of his superiority, and with a less obtrusive policy, might, who knows?
30527That was precisely the weak point of his position; for if he could get on in America, why could he not do the same in Scotland?
30527The young man might be very honest, but how was he to know that?
30527There is another question which seems bound up in this; and that is Temple''s problem: whether it was wise of Douglas to burn with the_ Royal Oak_?
30527They were only going to stay ten minutes at the Toll House; had they not twenty long miles of road before them on the other side?
30527This the Toll House?--with its city throng, its jostling shoulders, its infinity of instant business in the bar?
30527To board from April 1st, to April 30$ 25 75"""May 1st, to 3rd 2 00------ 27 75 Where is John Stanley mining now?
30527To what tune does the fisherman whistle, as he hauls in his net at morning, and the bright fish are heaped inside the boat?
30527Unattainable?
30527Upon what food does it subsist in such a land?
30527Was she dead now?
30527Were there ever such unthinkable deities as parents?
30527Were they all bound for Paris, and to be in Rome by Easter?
30527What can they think of them?
30527What could Mr. Darwin have done for these sick women?
30527What did I know about petrifactions-- following the sea?
30527What followed?
30527What is it the birds sing among the trees in pairing time?
30527What livelihood can repay a human creature for a life spent in this huge sameness?
30527What means the sound of the rain falling far and wide upon the leafy forest?
30527What should be the result of such a course?
30527What was he afraid of?
30527What woman would ever be lured into marriage, so much more dangerous than the wildest sea?
30527What would I be surprised about?
30527When I had done my scrivening, Hanson strolled out, and addressed Breedlove,"Will you step up here a bit?"
30527When nature is"so careless of the single life,"why should we coddle ourselves into the fancy that our own is of exceptional importance?
30527Where is S. Chapman, within whose hospitable walls we were to lodge?
30527Where were they to go?
30527Who would find heart enough to begin to live, if he dallied with the consideration of death?
30527Who would project a serial novel, after Thackeray and Dickens had each fallen in midcourse?
30527Who, if he were wisely considerate of things at large, would ever embark upon any work much more considerable than a halfpenny post- card?
30527Why, if this be not education, what is?
30527Why?
30527Why?
30527Worldly Wiseman accosting such an one, and the conversation that should thereupon ensue:--"How now, young fellow, what dost thou here?"
30527Would you not suppose these persons had been whispered, by the Master of the Ceremonies, the promise of some momentous destiny?
30527You can not run away from a weakness; you must some time fight it out or perish; and if that be so, why not now, and where you stand?
30527You may think you had a conscience and believed in God; but what is a conscience to a wife?
30527You''re a musician, I guess?"
30527and does not life go down with a better grace, foaming in full body over a precipice, than miserably straggling to an end in sandy deltas?
30527and shouldst thou not be plying thy Book with diligence, to the end thou mayest obtain knowledge?"
30527and that this lukewarm bullet on which they play their farces was the bull''s- eye and centre- point of all the universe?
30527and"Do you call that hiding, anyway?"
30527cried the young fellow, in consternation,"is there no more Carlyle?
30527for who knows what a rough, warfaring existence lies before them in the future?
30527or, after all these years, had he broken the chain, and run from home like a schoolboy?
30527or, how soon should we be there?
30527or-- since we live in a scientific age-- when once our spinning planet has turned its back upon the sun?
30527they would say;"still writing?"
30527what can they make of these bearded or petticoated giants who look down upon their games?
30527when some of your own sweet adjectives were returned on you before a gaping audience?
30527who move upon a cloudy Olympus, following unknown designs apart from rational enjoyment?
2987But what has become of Caesar''s gold, Brother, big brother?
2987But you read it?
2987Could a man live on a world so small as that?
2987Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while? 2987 Does He send all of them, mama?"
2987How about a disguise?
2987How about dematerialization?
2987How big is he?
2987How can you be so positive?
2987How do you mean, m''lord?
2987How long have you been with Barnum and Bailey?
2987How many more are there?
2987Is it He that sends them?
2987Is n''t it strange?
2987Is there any evidence that he did n''t?
2987Oh, how high is Caesar''s house, Brother, big brother?
2987Strange? 2987 Suppose you divide the drop?"
2987Suppose you remove a drop of it? 2987 Suppose you separate the hydrogen and the oxygen?"
2987Tell me, Franklin[ a microbe of great learning], is the ocean an individual, an animal, a creature?
2987The fourth what?
2987The times are bad and the world is old--Who knows the where of the Caesar''s gold? 2987 Then it does not matter where the truth, as you call it, comes from?"
2987Then water-- any water- is an individual?
2987Then you make your own Bible?
2987What do you think it was, mama?
2987What for?
2987What for?
2987What is your little bonfire of Vesuvius to this?
2987What manner of men are these?
2987What reason, mama?
2987Where are the rest of the Innocents?
2987Where are you going to put him?
2987Where is the Ascot Cup?
2987Where is the elephant?
2987Who first thought of it like that, mama? 2987 Who taught you so, mama?"
2987Why do you think so?
2987Would you have it in the schools, then?
2987Yes, the wee creatures that inhabit the bodies of us germs and feed upon us, and rot us with disease: Ah, what could they have been created for? 2987 You admitted its literary art?"
2987APPENDIX K A SUBSTITUTE FOR RULOFF HAVE WE A SIDNEY CARTON AMONG US?
2987After a pause:"Did He make the roof fall in on the stranger that was trying to save the crippled old woman from the fire, mama?"
2987Am I saying that the pulpit does not do its share toward disseminating the marrow, the meat of the gospel of Christ?
2987Am I to go away and let them have peace and quiet for a year and a half, and then come back and only lecture them twice?
2987And when the man draws them well why do they stir my admiration?
2987And whence and whither?"
2987Anything left of Hoffman?"
2987Are the two things identical?
2987Are you?"
2987As we drove into the lane that led to the Stormfield entrance, he said:"Can we see where you have built your billiard- room?"
2987Bright?
2987But to cease teaching and go back to the beginning again, was it not pitiable-- that spectacle?
2987But what if it produce that in spite of you?
2987CCLXXVII"IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD?"
2987Ca n''t you give me enough of the hypnotic injunction to put an end to me?"
2987Clemens said:"Trowbridge, are you still alive?
2987Clemens said:"What is it?"
2987Clemens sand:"Is that so?
2987Clemens?"
2987DEAR CHAMP CLARK,--Is the new copyright law acceptable to me?
2987DOES THE RACE OF MAN LOVE A LORD?
2987Did He give Billy Norris the typhus?"
2987Did I know jean''s value?
2987Did it?
2987Do they even resemble each other?
2987Do you admire the race(& consequently yourself)?
2987Do you comprehend?
2987Do you remember?
2987Do you think I wrote the second one to give that man pleasure?
2987Do you think you could teach it arithmetic?"
2987Do you want to bring the lightning?"
2987Does he take an oath or make a promise of any sort?--or does n''t he leave himself entirely free?
2987Does this sound like shouting?
2987Had we no moral duty to perform?
2987Have n''t I told you so, over and over again?"
2987Have you forgotten early twitterings of your own?
2987He commended man to multiply& replenish- what?
2987He said, very gently:"How beautiful it all is?
2987He says:"A billion, that is a million millions,[??
2987He says:"A billion, that is a million millions,[??
2987How can you ask such a thing of me?
2987How does a soul like that stay in a carcass without getting mixed with the secretions and sweated out through the pores?
2987Howells, did you write me day- before- day- before yesterday or did I dream it?
2987I bent down over her and patted her cheek and said:"I do n''t seem to remember your name; what is it?"
2987I noticed that Jean was listening anxiously, and when I finished she said:"Is that a true story?"
2987I said,"How do you account for the changed attitude toward these things?
2987I said,''Jean, is this you trying to let me know you have found the others?''
2987I suppose I ought to defend my character, but how can I defend it?
2987I was ashamed again, and confessed it; then:"How old are you, dear?"
2987I was naturally astonished, and immediately wrote: I did fall and skin my shin at five o''clock yesterday afternoon, but how did you find it out?
2987If a life be offered up on the gallows to atone for the murder Ruloff did, will that suffice?
2987If so is she extinct and can never attend a third?
2987In a dictation following his return, Mark Twain said: Who began it?
2987Is it a regular army?
2987Is it an army of volunteers who have enlisted for the war, and may righteously be shot if they leave before the war is finished?
2987Is it less humiliating to dance to the lash of one master than another?
2987Is it possible for human wickedness to invent a doctrine more infernal and poisonous than this?
2987Is n''t it curious?
2987Is n''t it interesting?
2987Is n''t that a brewery?"
2987Is n''t that a brewery?"
2987Is that it?"
2987Is that true, mother--because if it is true why did Mr. Hollister laugh at it?"
2987Is there imaginable a baser servitude than it imposes?
2987Is what is left an individual?"
2987It only costs the public a dollar apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for?
2987It was not wrong?
2987MR. MARK TWAIN-- DEAR SIR,--Will you start now, without any unnecessary delay?
2987Mark Twain''s own book on the subject--''Is Shakespeare Dead?''
2987Must he prove that he is sound in any way, mind or body?
2987Must he prove that he knows anything-- is capable of anything-- whatever?
2987Not much of it all is left to me, but I remember Howells saying,"Did it ever occur to you that the newspapers abolished hell?
2987Now you all know all these things yourself, do n''t you?
2987Now, therefore, why should I withhold it?
2987OR HELL?
2987Of course you can save money by denying yourself all these vicious little enjoyments for fifty years; but then what can you do with it?
2987Once, half roused, he looked at me searchingly and asked:"Is n''t there something I can resign and be out of all this?
2987One day she said:"Mama, why is there so much pain and sorrow and suffering?
2987Ought we to allow this war to begin?
2987Replying to the question( put to himself),"Are you pleased with the marriage?"
2987Says I,''Hold on there, Evangeline, what are you going to do with them?''
2987Shall I ever be cheerful again, happy again?
2987Shall you also say that it demands that a man kick his truth and his conscience into the gutter and become a mouthing lunatic besides?
2987Shall you say the best good of the country demands allegiance to party?
2987She?
2987Take a man like Sir Oliver Lodge, and what secret of Nature can be hidden from him?
2987That''s closed in, is n''t it, for the winter?
2987The autumn splendors passed you by?
2987The letter itself consisted merely of a line, which said: Wo n''t you give your friends, the missionaries, a good mark for this?
2987The property has got to fall to some heir, and why not the United States?
2987The question is, if she attends two doe luncheons in succession is she a doe- doe?
2987The sensational head- lines in a morning paper,"Is Mark Twain a Plagiarist?"
2987There was such a mingling of yells and calls and questions, such as,"Have you brought the jumping Frog with you?"
2987They give us pain, they make our lives miserable, they murder us-- and where is the use of it all, where the wisdom?
2987To Howells, on the same day, he wrote: Wo n''t you& Mrs. Howells& Mildred come& give us as many days as you can spare& examine John''s triumph?
2987Toward the evening of the first day, when it grew dark outside, he asked:"How long have we been on this voyage?"
2987U. E. WAS IT HEAVEN?
2987U. E. WHY NOT ABOLISH IT?
2987Very well, then, what is the use of your stringing out your miserable lives to a clean and withered old age?
2987Very well, then- what ought we to do?
2987WHAT IS MAN?
2987WHICH WAS WHICH?
2987Was it R. U. Johnson?
2987Was it an illusion?
2987Was it both together?
2987Was it not our duty to administer a rebuke to this selfish and heartless Family?
2987Was it not our duty to stop it, in the name of right and righteousness?
2987Was it the Authors''League?
2987Was it to discipline the church?"
2987Was it to discipline the hog, mama?"
2987Was it you?"
2987Was that right?"
2987Well, is it?
2987Well, suppose you combine them again, but in a new way: make the proportions equal-- one part oxygen to one of hydrogen?"
2987Well, they have invented a heaven, out of their own heads, all by themselves; guess what it is like?
2987What do you take me for?
2987What is it all for?"
2987What is it you want?"
2987What is the essential difference between a lifelong democrat and any other kind of lifelong slave?
2987What is the process when a voter joins a party?
2987What is the use of your saving money that is so utterly worthless to you?
2987What kind of a disease is that?
2987What mother knows not that?
2987What ship is that?
2987What ship is that?"
2987What slave is so degraded as the slave that is proud that he is a slave?
2987What use can you put it to?
2987What would become of me if he should disintegrate?
2987What, sir, would the people of this earth be without woman?
2987When he had read a number of these he said:"Well, why does He do it then?
2987Where was ever a sermon preached that could make filial ingratitude so hateful to men as the sinful play of"King Lear"?
2987Why do I respect my own?
2987Why do we respect the opinions of any man or any microbe that ever lived?
2987Why does He give Himself the trouble?"
2987Why should his life be taken away for their sake, when he was n''t doing anything?"
2987Why should they have declined?
2987Will you remember that?
2987You do not think me wrong?
2987You notice that?
2987You notice the stately General standing there with his hand resting upon the muzzle of a cannon?
2987and when England''s Prime Minister- Campbell- Bannerman-- came forward some one shouted,"What about the House of Lords?"
2987impostors, were they?
2987said I;"who were the others?"
28375Comes then the power of man''s art to this? 28375 ''Tis well, I seek no more; but tell me how This took his friends? 28375 104 What can the man do that succeeds the king? 28375 12 And do they so? 28375 175 See you that beauteous queen, which no age tames? 28375 209 For shame desist, why shouldst thou seek my fall? 28375 214 What though they boast their riches unto us? 28375 295 What planet rul''d your birth? 28375 302 Can any tell me what it is? 28375 302 Peace? 28375 306 Shall I complain, or not? 28375 59 Have I so long in vain thy absence mourn''d? 28375 A tax? 28375 All this thou hast within thyself, and may Be made thy own, if thou wilt take the way; What boots the world''s wild, loose applause? 28375 All this-- thou''lt say-- in private might have pass''d But she''ll not have it so; what course at last? 28375 And are not streams at the spring- head More sweet than in carv''d stone or lead? 28375 And is the bargain thought too dear, To give for heaven our frail subsistence here? 28375 And is''t not just to leave those to the night That madly hate and persecute the light? 28375 And must I then from Rome so far meet death, And double by the place my loss of breath? 28375 And shall I then forsake the stars and signs, To dote upon thy dark and cursèd mines? 28375 And wilt Thou let Thy creature be, When Thou hast watch''d, asleep to Thee? 28375 And, strangely eloquent, thyself divide''Twixt sad misfortunes and a bloomy bride? 28375 Are there no objects left but one? 28375 Be generals of armies and colleague Unto an emperor? 28375 Blam''st thou the sages, then? 28375 But envy ruins all: what mighty names Of fortune, spirit, action, blood, and fame, Hath this destroy''d? 28375 But hath steel''d Mars so ductible a soul, That love and poesy may it control? 28375 But now what Nature hath those laws transgress''d, Giving to Earth a work that ne''er will rest? 28375 But stay: what light is that doth stream And drop here in a gilded beam? 28375 But there is no redemption? 28375 But thou hast plots; and will not the Kirk strain At the designs of such a tragic brain? 28375 But thou wilt say what hurt''s a beauteous skin With a chaste soul? 28375 But thy spruce boy must touch no other face Than a patrician? 28375 But what care I to whom thy Letters be? 28375 But what doth life when most serene afford Without a worm which gnaws her fairest gourd? 28375 But what needs this? 28375 But what''s all this unto a royal test? 28375 But what''s the end? 28375 But what''s the event? 28375 But where Are now those trim deceits? 28375 But wilt have money, Og? 28375 Came the crime from me That wrought this change? 28375 Can Starkey have stolen the poems and published them as the_ Marrow of Alchemy_? 28375 Can any tell me what it is? 28375 Can those blind plots we here discuss Please Thee, as Thy wise counsels us? 28375 Can you That wind your thoughts into a clue To guide out others, while yourselves stay in, And hug the sin? 28375 Does she which once inspir''d thee, now renew, Bringing thee back those golden years which Time Smooth''d to thy lays, and polish''d with thy rhyme? 28375 For how canst thou an aux eternal miss, Where ev''ry house thy exaltation is? 28375 For shame desist, why shouldst thou seek my fall? 28375 For what did ever Rome or Athens sing In all their lines, as lofty as his wing? 28375 Goods in sight Are scorn''d, and lust in greedy flight Lays out for more; what measure then Can tame these wild desires of men? 28375 Hath she no quiver, but my heart? 28375 Have I obey''d the powers of face, A beauty able to undo the race Of easy man? 28375 Have I so long in vain thy absence mourn''d? 28375 Have you observ''d how the day- star Sparkles and smiles and shines from far; Then to the gazer doth convey A silent but a piercing ray? 28375 How careful of myself then should I be, Were I neglected by the world and thee? 28375 How could that paper sent, That luckless paper, merit thy contempt? 28375 How couldst thou, mur''d in solitary stones, Dress Birtha''s smiles, though well thou mightst her groans? 28375 How many scenes are done? 28375 I ask not why he did remove To happy Mamre''s holy grove, Leaving the cities of the plain To Lot and his successless train? 28375 I ask not why the first believer Did love to be a country liver? 28375 I call''d it once my sloth: in such an age So many volumes deep, I not a page? 28375 I fear not famine; how can he be said To starve who feeds upon the Living Bread? 28375 If sever''d friends by sympathy can join, And absent kings be honour''d in their coin; May they do both, who are so curb''d? 28375 If thou wilt say thou didst not love me, then Thou didst dissemble: or if love again, Why now inconstant? 28375 Intelligences shall I leave, and be Familiar only with mortality? 28375 Into what place now all alone Naked and sad wilt thou be gone? 28375 Is Nisa still cold flint? 28375 Is he gone from us, And stoln alive into his coffin thus? 28375 Is not fair Nature of herself Much richer than dull paint or pelf? 28375 Is''t best To be confin''d to some dark, narrow chest And idolize thy stamps, when I may be Lord of all Nature, and not slave to thee? 28375 Know''st not that Fortune on a globe doth stand, Whose upper slipp''ry part without command Turns lowest still? 28375 Look''d I so soft? 28375 MS. 1741? 28375 Must I know nought, but thy exchequer? 28375 Must all her arrows hit that part? 28375 No tears? 28375 Nor in my last of hours on my own bed--In the sad conflict-- rest my dying head? 28375 Nor is this all: what matters it, where he Sits in the spacious stage? 28375 Nor my soul''s whispers-- the last pledge of life,-- Mix with the tears and kisses of a wife? 28375 O what year will bring back our bliss? 28375 Of all he meets, he asks what is the cause He liv''d thus long; for what breach of their laws The gods thus punish''d him? 28375 Or from thy Muse does this retrieve accrue? 28375 Or in what forest did a wild boar by The tusks of his own fellow wounded die? 28375 Or is''t the drawer''s skill? 28375 Or is''t thy piety? 28375 Or who can such hard bondage brook To be in love, and not to look? 28375 Or who shall live, when God doth this? 28375 Or wilt thou the succeeding years should see And teach thy person to posterity? 28375 Peace? 28375 Qui dum spumosi fremitus et murmura rivi Quæritat, hamato sit cita præda cibo, Quam grave magnarum specimen dant ludicra rerum? 28375 Quid celebras auratam undam, et combusta pyropis Flumina, vel medio quæ serit æthra salo? 28375 Quos Deus coniunxit quis separabit?
28375Resolve me now, had Silius been thy son, In such a hazard what should he have done?
28375Say, witty fair one, from what sphere Flow these rich numbers you shed here?
28375See you that beauteous queen, which no age tames?
28375Sees not my friend, what a deep snow Candies our country''s woody brow?
28375Shall I believe you can make me return, Who pour your fruitless prayers when you mourn, Not to your Maker?
28375Shall I complain, or not?
28375Shall I then only-- wretched I!-- Oppress''d with earth, on earth still lie?"
28375Shall the dull market- landlord with his rout Of sneaking tenants dirtily swill out This harmless liquor?
28375Should he For enforc''d shades, and the moon''s ruder veil Much nearer us than him, be judg''d to fail?
28375Since both but ruin, why then for the nonce Didst husband my afflictions, and cast o''er Me this forc''d hurdle to inflame the score?
28375So steel''d a forehead Vice hath, that dares win, And bribe the father to the children''s sin; But whom have gifts defiled not?
28375Sweet Paulinus, and is thy nature turn''d?
28375The Interlocutors, Damon, Menalcas.__ Damon._ What clouds, Menalcas, do oppress thy brow, Flow''rs in a sunshine never look so low?
28375The works of Eirenaeus Philoponos Philalethes( George Starkey?)
28375These dates are much too early for the poet''s son and daughter- in- law; but whose are the wills?
28375This portion thou wert born for: why should we Vex at the time''s ridiculous misery?
28375To change our mortal with immortal homes, And purchase the bright stars with darksome stones?
28375To please a servant all is cheap; what thing In all their stock to the last suit, and king, But lust exacts?
28375To such great mercies what shall I prefer, Or who from loving God shall me deter?
28375W[illiam?]
28375Was Thomas Vaughan a Rosicrucian?
28375What coral can her lips resemble?
28375What greater good had deck''d great Pompey''s crown Than death, if in his honours fully blown, And mature glories he had died?
28375What heart-- think''st thou?--have I in this sad seat, Tormented''twixt the Sauromate and Gete?
28375What is''t to me that spacious rivers run Whole ages, and their streams are never done?
28375What length of years, wealth, or a rich fair wife?
28375What man more bless''d in any age to come Or past, could Nature show the world, or Rome, Than Marius was?
28375What news of Brutus at this day, Or Fabricius the just?
28375What planet rul''d your birth?
28375What sadder end than his, whom Athens saw At once her patriot, oracle, and law?
28375What savage breast would not be rapt to find Such jewels in such cabinets enshrin''d?
28375What should he do?
28375What smiling star in that fair night Which gave you birth gave me this sight, And with a kind aspect tho''keen Made me the subject, you the queen?
28375What store of lace was there?
28375What then should man pray for?
28375What though I had not dust Enough to cabinet a worm?
28375What though they boast their riches unto us?
28375Whenever did, I pray, One lion take another''s life away?
28375Whither, O whither didst thou fly When I did grieve Thine holy eye?
28375Who can hear you cry, But to the fabled nymphs of Castaly?
28375Who hath not heard of Cr[oe]sus''proverb''d gold, Yet knows his foe did him a pris''ner hold?
28375Who notes the spindle- leg or hollow eye Of the thin usher, the fair lady by?
28375Who, doubly dark, all negroes do exceed, And inwardly are true black Moors indeed?
28375Why any more cast we an eye On what may come, not what is nigh?
28375Why at Salmoneus''thunder do I stand?
28375Why dost hide Thy reasons then?
28375Why dost thou tempt me with thy dirty ore, And with thy riches make my soul so poor?
28375Why from frail honours, and goods lent Should he expect things permanent?
28375Why nurse I sorrows then?
28375Why should I longer be Rack''d''twixt two evils?
28375Why then, my friends, judg''d you my state so good?
28375Why to unwelcome loath''d surprises Dost leave him, having left his vices?
28375Why vex ourselves with fear, or hope And cares beyond our horoscope?
28375Will not the Ears assemble, and think''t fit Their Synod fast and pray against thy wit?
28375Will they themselves think safe, when they shall see Thy most abominable policy?
28375Wilt bury there thy purple, and contemn All the great honours of thy noble stem?
28375Wilt rob an altar thus?
28375Wonders my friend at this?
28375Would you be as Sejanus?
28375Would you be rich as he?
28375[ 21] Is this the inn of that name once in the Gray''s Inn Road?
28375[ PAULINUS(?).
28375] um formosa dies et sine nube perit[65]?
28375_ Menalcas._ What voice from yonder lawn tends hither?
28375_ thy aged sire._ Is this an allusion to the story that Davenant was in reality the son of William Shakespeare?
28375all friends and foes?
28375and but him, none?
28375and couldst thou think Cato alone Wants courage to be dry?
28375and must we Give an advantage to adversity?
28375and sweep at once What Orpheus- like I forc''d from stocks and stones?
28375and thank heav''n Thy courtship hath not kill''d me; Is''t not even Whether we die by piecemeal, or at once?
28375and to all the world?
28375and to all the world?
28375at what rate Would I have bought it then; what was there but I would have giv''n for the compendious hut?
28375because the one Would still be laughing, when he would be gone From his own door; the other cried to see His times addicted to such vanity?
28375break or make a league?
28375breath''d I such base desires, Not proof against this Lybic sun''s weak fires?
28375by what Platonic round Art thou in thy first youth and glories found?
28375can silence bring Thy saint propitious?
28375command, dispose, All acts and offices?
28375could I Suspect fate had for me a courtesy?
28375hath he no arts To blind us so we ca n''t know pints from quarts?
28375how great an ill Is that which doth but nurse more sorrow still?
28375how have we sued For a few scatter''d chips?
28375how oft pursu''d Petitions with a blush, in hope to squeeze For their souls''health, more than our wants, a piece?
28375how shall I truly love Thee?
28375is it not just We bear our stars?
28375must I dispurse Will nothing serve thee but a poet''s curse?
28375must all His glory perish in one funeral?
28375must there be No other penance but of liberty?
28375must we In gaining that, lose our variety?
28375no private murmurs now?
28375no solemn mourner seen?
28375nor stand Enslav''d unto a little dirt, or sand?
28375not to discern the ill These vows include; what, did Rome''s consul kill Her Cicero?
28375or have thy lambs Met with the fox by straying from their dams?
28375or shall I mask Thy hateful name, and in this bitter task Master my just impatience, and write down Thy crime alone, and leave the rest unknown?
28375or will Cupid fling One arrow for thy paleness?
28375or with a kind Persuasive accent charm the wild loud wind?
28375pleasing grace Betrays itself; what time did Nero mind A coarse, maim''d shape?
28375quæ me fortuna fatigat,[ C?D?
28375shall My purse and fancy be symmetrical?
28375shall our fear Or grief add to their triumphs?
28375shall they knock and beat For sack, only to talk of rye and wheat?
28375that give to men Such boundless appetites, why state you them So short a time?
28375to what dark sphere Are all those false fires sunk, which once so shin''d, They captivated souls, and rul''d mankind?
28375to whate''er aspire, So throughly bless''d, but ever as we speed, Repentance seals the very act, and deed?
28375what blemish''d youth confin''d His goatish pathic?
28375what calms can be So fair as storms, that appease Thee?
28375what cross more sad Than misery of years?
28375what did bewitch My frantic hopes to fly so vain a pitch, And thus outrun myself?
28375what do I here?
28375what good face Did ever want these tempters?
28375what hearts and eyes Can one day''s fortune change?
28375what is''t that he Can beg of Heaven, without impiety?
28375what is''t to thee, Who canst produce a nobler pedigree, And in mere truth affirm thy soul of kin To some bright star, or to a cherubin?
28375what laws can lovers awe?
28375what state can be so great or good, As to be bought with so much shame and blood?
28375what though thy viler dust enrolls The frail enclosures of these mighty souls?
28375what time of day?
28375what time wilt Thou come?
28375what witty star?
28375what witty star?
28375what, must I buy Guiana with the loss of all the sky?
28375what[ can] Frail, perilous honours add unto a man?
28375whence then flow these joys Of a fair issue?
28375where is Ovid now, our banish''d friend?
28375where is''t yonder that my love doth lie?
28375why dost Thou weep?
28375why should it be said We drink more to the living than the dead?
28375why should we start To see these tyrants act their part?
28375why these desires Of changing Scythia for the sun and fires Of some calm kinder air?
28375would you have, So you might sway as he did, such a grave?
28375|||_______|___| Richard= Mary----?
33427''s for the preservation of the eggs of wild fowl, shall we now throw away a law of more consequence and import?
33427Force and reconciliation seeming equally difficult, could an alternative be found in toleration?
33427In these circumstances a problem of charity such as the following may arise:--"Am I to starve, while my sister has children whom she can sell?"
33427The questions"How?
33427To Didier''s repeated question"Is this the emperor?"
33427by whom?
33427on what plan?
33427with what object?
33427with what result?"
33020''A heart near the eye--_l''assassine_, eh?
33020''All''s Well that Ends Well'':''Why dost thou garter up thy arms o''this fashion?
33020''And how are we to know that all this is true?''
33020''And what,''says country dame to country dame lately from town--''what is the mode in gentlemen''s hair?''
33020''But you have seen the new hoop?''
33020''Hay yee any kitchen stuff, maids?''
33020''What will be the next wear?''
33020''Will you buy any straw?''
33020A message to whom?
33020All this, for what purpose?
33020And the second gentleman in green and red, with heels of red on his shoes?
33020And what are we doing to help modern history-- the picture of our own times-- that it may look beautiful in the ages to come?
33020And what had you in your mind''s eye when you wrote''liefer than a gown though it were of scarlet''?
33020But is it adornment?
33020Do I revile the time if I say that the men had an air, a certain supercilious air, of being dukes disguised as art students?
33020Does a great procession go by the window of your mind?
33020Dost make a hose of thy sleeves?''
33020From the splendid pageant of history what figures come to you most willingly?
33020High collar, low collar, short hair, long hair, boot, buskin, shoe-- who wore you first?
33020How did the gentle whispers of love ever penetrate those bosses of millinery?
33020How is a fashion born?
33020How, they and we ask, are breeches, and slop- hose cut in panes, to be lined?
33020I wonder did they drink it all themselves?
33020Must I wear a_ galante_ on my cheek, an_ enjouée_ in my dimple, or_ la majestueuse_ on my forehead?''
33020Need one say more?
33020Or a star near the lips--_la friponne_?
33020Shall we imagine that it is night, and that the lady is going to bed?
33020Should I write''The Ladies''?
33020THE WOMEN''What fashion will make a woman have the best body, tailor?''
33020That lucky sixpence with the hole in it that you gave to a cabman, Beau Brummell, was that loss the commencement of your downward career?
33020The Carpenter in''Julius Cæsar''is asked:''Where is thy leather apron and thy rule?''
33020The first, whose clothes are of white silk sewn with red and blue, whose trunk hose have clocks of silk sewn on them, reminds us of whom?
33020The sporting man had his own idea of dress, even as to- day he has a piquant idea in clothes, and who shall say he has not the right?
33020Was history ever better dressed?
33020Where,''they ask,''are the venerable anecdotes which are given a place in every respectable work on your subject?''
33020Who last condemned you to the World''s Great Rag Market of Forgotten Fads?
33020Who mothers it?
33020Who nurses it to fame, and in whose arms does it die?
33020Who would suspect it?
33020Will ye buy any new brooms?''
33020how did you ever hear the soft speeches of gallantry?
324795 Well, what shall we do?
32479America wanted to protect her interests, but does it follow that she should protest against atrocities which do not menace her interests?"
32479And we men who wear uniform, does not our individuality manage to attract?
32479Are there any special female tendencies?
32479Are they?
32479Blister we not for_ bursati_?
32479But why does it fare so ill?
32479But, honestly, does this amount to anything?
32479Case 8:"How can you be so mean?"
32479Does any one doubt that a visit to the minister, say, in the autumn, might have altered the complexion of things?
32479For labor makes woman less attractive and to be attractive is rather a trap: how much higher can a woman rise?
32479Given that we glimpse what distinguishes man from the beast, is there anything that distinguishes woman from man?
32479Heat and heroism, what could be more romantic?
32479Her offspring do not say:"What is home without a mother?
32479How does the$ 63 coat and skirt compare with a man''s lounge suit, price$ 36 by anybody save Poole, and by him only$ 52.50?
32479How?
32479I( attempting to get a straight answer):"Do you accept war?"
32479I:"How would this have affected the trade question?"
32479I:"Then do you accept war?"
32479I:"Why should she?"
32479In the eighteen- sixties the customary proposal was,"Will you be mine?"
32479Is it so normal as to deserve to continue in a state of civilization?
32479Is not brown paint in the dining room worse than pink paint on the face?
32479Is that quite right?
32479It is a pity, but thus it is; so what is the use of thinking that the modern family must endure?
32479It is no longer property, for how can one prevent a child from pulling down the window sash at night when it knows something of ventilation?
32479It may well be that, where woman does not exhibit jealousy, she is with masterly skill suggesting to the man a problem: why is she not jealous?
32479It seems to me that the chief reply is,"Why did you have that child?"
32479It will be asked,"Why should a parent pay for the support of a child who will not live in his house?"
32479Not follow a fashion?
32479Or give it an iron tonic when it realizes that full- blooded people can not take iron?
32479Strictly, they already do wear a uniform, for what is a fashion but a uniform?
32479The Investigator:"But why should he go if he did n''t want to?"
32479The child has changed; it is no longer the creature that, pointing to an animal in the field, said,"What''s that?"
32479The child is a little like the supersoul of Mr. Stephen Leacock, and is developing thoughts like,"Why am I?
32479The judge has set this jury several questions: Is marriage a normal institution?
32479The nineteenth century was better for woman than the eighteenth, the eighteenth better than the seventeenth: what could be more significant?
32479The parent, confronted with the question,"Why must I do what you order?"
32479There is another, too:"By what right should this creature for whom you are responsible be tied to a house into which it has been called unconsulted?
32479They do not die, they live; but how?
32479Very faintly signs are showing that men will yet say,"May I be yours?"
32479We have heard of celebrated impostors, of celebrated politicians, but who has ever heard of a celebrated housekeeper?
32479What is the conclusion to be drawn?
32479What objection can you have to my getting engaged?"
32479What one will no longer be able to tell is a rich woman from a poor one; and who is to complain of that?
32479When did the rebellion begin?
32479Who could be a queen by the cradle when more august thrones were tottering?
32479Who would to- day wear the crinoline?
32479Who would wear the gigot sleeve?
32479Why am I what I am?
32479Why do so many marriages persist when the love knot slips, and bandages fall away from the eyes?
32479Why is it that when we see in a restaurant a middle- aged couple, mutually interested and gay, we say:"I wonder if they are married?"
32479Why should he jilt the woman,--make a stir?
32479Why should it submit to your moral and religious views?
32479Why should one preserve an old house?
32479Why should there be when jam and pickles come from the grocer, and few men have more than twelve shirts?
32479Will they not be worn in an adapted form some time within the next generation?
32479_ Case 33_ Case 33:"Why did n''t America interfere with regard to German atrocities in Belgium?"
32479and the reply being,"A cow", asked"Why?"
32479and why how?"
32479to your friends?
32479to your wall- paper?"
32479yes, that reminds me, did you go to the library and get me Roosevelt''s book on the Amazon?"
10322''Shall he not much more clothe you?'' 10322 A thousand years ago?"
10322About you?
10322About your father''s offer?
10322Am I interrupting you?
10322Am I?
10322And Josie Grey-- you see I''ve been studying the difference in the girls since I came home--Had he been studying_ her_?
10322And Mother Carey''s chickens?
10322And Prue, Aunt Prue; what do you know about her?
10322And are n''t you glad he is safe through it all, and God his forgiven him?
10322And are you willing to lose your precious childhood and girlhood?
10322And did you think I was dreadful not to confess before?
10322And go home?
10322And how old are you?
10322And must n''t we get up? 10322 And now, what do you intend to do?"
10322And study and go around and do good and never be married?
10322And the Arithmetic?
10322And the little girl?
10322And there was nothing else to hurt you?
10322And what did he say?
10322And what will happen then?
10322And where is Linnet? 10322 And you do n''t go to school?"
10322And you do n''t know where to find a dictionary?
10322And you do not sigh for beauty?
10322And yourself?
10322And_ did_ one?
10322Any one else?
10322Are n''t you bright?
10322Are n''t you sorry, do n''t you want to?
10322Are n''t you well enough acquainted with me? 10322 Are n''t you woman enough to understand that?"
10322Are n''t you_ glad_, Marjorie?
10322Are you acquainted with me?
10322Are you comfortable?
10322Are you fond of the study-- of languages? 10322 Are you fully satisfied that punctuation has its work in the world?"
10322Are you going to church, to- night?
10322Are you listening, Marjorie?
10322Are you sure of me, now?
10322Are you sure you are on tight? 10322 Are you waiting for anything?"
10322Are you? 10322 Are you?"
10322Are your boys like_ you_, father?
10322At what age? 10322 Before I go to school, so the books wo n''t seem hard and dry?"
10322Better for you?
10322But does n''t Harold feel badly not to have a ship, too?
10322But now can we act, until we wait and see?
10322But what do you do nowadays?
10322But you gave the diamonds up?
10322But, Aunt Prue, what ought I to do now? 10322 Ca n''t I help?"
10322Ca n''t I know the reason?
10322Ca n''t you speak, child?
10322Ca n''t you think and tell me?
10322Can I help Deborah now? 10322 Can you not, Marjorie?"
10322Dear child, you have had trouble in your life, have n''t you?
10322Did he die?
10322Did he join the Church?
10322Did he know that the North American Indians would be blessed in him? 10322 Did his sins_ hurt_ Christ?"
10322Did mother tell you about Will?
10322Did n''t Esther''s?
10322Did n''t she go to school with you?
10322Did n''t the Israelites live on the same food that the Philistines did?
10322Did n''t things happen afterward?
10322Did n''t you have all the things we have? 10322 Did n''t you know I would come?"
10322Did n''t you want him to?
10322Did nothing else trouble you?
10322Did you bring a letter from him?
10322Did you ever hate him?
10322Did you ever have any trouble?
10322Did you ever hear about Pompeii, the city buried long ago underground?
10322Did you ever see a homely girl with plenty of friends? 10322 Did you ever think that you did wrong in writing to her so many years and then stopping short all of a sudden, giving her no reason at all?"
10322Did you ever wish that you had been his wife and might have shared his exile?
10322Did you expect it?
10322Did you fall? 10322 Did you go through that delusive period?"
10322Did you know the master gave me leave to take as many of his books as I wanted? 10322 Did you love him?"
10322Did you never read about him?
10322Did you quarrel with him?
10322Did you set the sponge for the bread?
10322Did you show it to mother?
10322Did you think I would leave you anywhere but with your friends? 10322 Do I?
10322Do I? 10322 Do n''t you ache_ anywhere?_"questioned her mother, as they led her to the lounge.
10322Do n''t you believe I_ can?_"Oh, yes.
10322Do n''t you know how it all came about?
10322Do n''t you know how you used to read in Maple Street?
10322Do n''t you know the way yourself?
10322Do n''t you know what that is?
10322Do n''t you know whether you are willing or not?
10322Do n''t you like my business?
10322Do n''t you remember I promised before you came?
10322Do n''t you think it is about time? 10322 Do n''t you think--"Marjorie''s face had a world of suggestion in it--"that''The Swan''s Nest''is bad influence for girls?
10322Do n''t you want Marjorie to stay and help you?
10322Do n''t you want a copy of my little pocket dictionary? 10322 Do n''t you want me to be like her?"
10322Do n''t you want to be lighted up yet, Miss Marjorie?
10322Do n''t you want to go into that house and sell something?
10322Do n''t you want to go upstairs and see Morris''mother? 10322 Do n''t you want to tell me?
10322Do n''t you wish you could tell us about every_ body_ and every_ thing_, Miss Prudence?
10322Do people?
10322Do silly people always hide in blackberry vines?
10322Do they talk differently from us-- from country girls?
10322Do yon know how old he would be?
10322Do you believe I will, mother?
10322Do you find many happy people?
10322Do you find the cottage so charming?
10322Do you have it all the time?
10322Do you have to be_ good_ enough?
10322Do you intend to feed me on that?
10322Do you know of anything else that should have troubled me?
10322Do you know the French for Stephen?
10322Do you know, Morris, that man has no idea how Linnet loves him?
10322Do you know_ when_ it was buried?
10322Do you like school as well as you thought you would?
10322Do you like your life?
10322Do you mean that I ought to read only one verse and think that enough? 10322 Do you mean_ that_ has changed her, and hurt her?"
10322Do you remember our walk together from your grandfather''s-- how many years ago?
10322Do you remember the last time he was here?
10322Do you remember what Luther says?
10322Do you think Mr. Holmes, will ever come home?
10322Do you think she is the girl to say so?
10322Do you wander off in reading the Bible, too?
10322Do you want to meddle?
10322Do you want to send me off again?
10322Do you?
10322Do you?
10322Do you_ have_ to be?
10322Do_ you_ know?
10322Does Marjorie know?
10322Does Marjorie like him pretty well?
10322Does Nurse teach you a Bible verse every night as I asked her to do?
10322Does he always? 10322 Does he know all about it?"
10322Does he like that?
10322Does he look so?
10322Does it concern_ us?_asked Marjorie.
10322Does it not make all the difference? 10322 Does n''t God care for the other part?"
10322Does n''t St. Paul''s''everything''include your''_ ever_ so many things?''
10322Does n''t that belong to the royal line?
10322Does n''t your head ache?
10322Does she buy you things, too?
10322Does she buy_ everybody_ things?
10322Does she know?
10322Does the time when we desire make any difference?
10322Does their fortune depend upon their beautiful faces?
10322Does your mother look over them?
10322Dreadful?
10322From where?
10322Genius makes a difference; is it rather hard not to be a genius? 10322 Has it_ got_ to be so, then?"
10322Has n''t God things laid up for us better than we can ask or think or build castles about?
10322Has n''t she always been happy?
10322Has she_ said_ so?
10322Has the tall man gone?
10322Have I changed, Marjorie?
10322Have I eyes?
10322Have n''t you been home all this time?
10322Have we arranged everything?
10322Have you any idea?
10322Have you forgotten your errand?
10322Have you had any comfort to- day?
10322Have you regretted that decision since?
10322Have you seen a whale?
10322Have you seen an iceberg?
10322Have you taken more time than that would require for other things to- day?
10322Have you written to him?
10322Have you?
10322Have_ you_?
10322He sent his love to her; did Hollis tell you?
10322How are you going to get to feel at home with each other five hundred miles apart?
10322How can she care, if she thinks I have trifled with her?
10322How did he do?
10322How did it happen?
10322How did you know I was troubled?
10322How do you know the difference? 10322 How do you know you do n''t?"
10322How do you know?
10322How is Miss Prudence?
10322How is the fire? 10322 How many acres?
10322How much board does the master pay?
10322How much? 10322 How much?"
10322How often do you write to Hollis?
10322How old is he? 10322 How old is she?"
10322How wrong? 10322 How?"
10322I do n''t like to, now I must, but I will, papa, and I''ll tell Aunt Prue you liked her name best, shall I?
10322I do n''t mean collecting coins or things; I mean what do you care for_ most_?
10322I do n''t see why,continued Marjorie, unconvinced, turning an apple around in her fingers,"is n''t the other part of the story worth anything?"
10322I know it; but do you like me better than Hollis?
10322I like old people, do n''t you? 10322 I may not know the name of the bank then?"
10322I never would know what the''Cry of the Children''meant, or anything about Cowper''s grave, would I? 10322 I suppose we would,"said Linnet"Would n''t you?"
10322I think it''s rather impertinent, do n''t you?
10322I wish I had some; how do you get it?
10322I would n''t be afraid,said Marjorie;"because you want to do as Christ commands, do n''t you?
10322If I am West and you are East--"Do you want to keep her with you?
10322If you knew something about Jerome that I do not know, and it would disturb me to know it, would you tell me?
10322In New York? 10322 In some instances, yes?"
10322In the church?
10322In the way of collections? 10322 Is Deborah to go with us?
10322Is Flyaway in existence still?
10322Is Linnet homesick?
10322Is he a hermit?
10322Is he a sailor?
10322Is he a_ good_ boy?
10322Is he before the mast?
10322Is he very ill?
10322Is he your brother?
10322Is it a secret?
10322Is it about going to school?
10322Is it like cutting your nails on Saturday without thinking of a fox''s tail and so never have the toothache?
10322Is it like this? 10322 Is it something_ dreadful?_ Your voice sounds so."
10322Is it true? 10322 Is it wrong to build castles for any other reason than for making disappointments?"
10322Is n''t it a good city to be a rich woman in?
10322Is n''t it late to come from school? 10322 Is n''t it lovely?
10322Is n''t that enough?
10322Is n''t that in the Bible?
10322Is not my reason sufficient?
10322Is she a relation?
10322Is she ill? 10322 Is somebody-- dead?"
10322Is that all we have to do with it-- submit to it?
10322Is that all you know about him?
10322Is that all?
10322Is that all?
10322Is that all?
10322Is that an original proverb?
10322Is that as far as you got in your prayer?
10322Is that proud heart satisfied now?
10322Is that true?
10322Is that why girls are good?
10322Is that why your friend wants the plate, because she knows about Holland two hundred years ago?
10322Is that your mamma up there?
10322Is the bark named yet?
10322Is there a horse in the stable?
10322Is there so much difference?
10322Is there?
10322Is your heart in buying and selling laces?
10322It is easier for girls to be good than for boys,rejoined Hollis in an argumentative tone,"Is it?
10322Jerrie, what have I told you about Uncle John who lives near the other ocean?
10322Just come to board awhile, I suppose?
10322Like to come over to your grandfather''s, eh?
10322Marjorie, I do n''t see the_ need_ of your going to school?
10322Marjorie, I have come to ask you what to do?
10322Marjorie, are you awake?
10322Marjorie, dear,Morris''mother said,"can you not feel that God loves you?"
10322Marjorie, what_ is_ the matter?
10322Marjorie, where shall I put all this jelly? 10322 Marjorie, why do n''t you talk?"
10322Marjorie, will you read to us?
10322Marjorie,_ do_ you like Hollis better than you like me?
10322Marjorie,_ is_ he?
10322Miss Prudence, will you use your things on me?
10322Miss Prudence,_ do_ we have right desires, desires for things God likes, while we are praying?
10322Morris, what do you want to be a sailor for?
10322Mother, do you want to know? 10322 Mr. Onderdonk?
10322Mrs. West, I want to come to see you a little while-- may I?
10322Must I always be joyful?
10322Must I tell his mother?
10322Must n''t I ask you questions when I can find the answer myself?
10322Must you keep on writing to Hollis?
10322No sir; I''m too big for that"Does n''t school dismiss earlier?
10322No, I will not,promised Prue;"and when that thing does n''t happen any more you will take me?"
10322Not genuine enough? 10322 Now how many persons are there inside this coach?"
10322Oh, Marjie, what happened to you?
10322Oh, Miss West, who was that lovely little creature with you in Sunday school Sunday?
10322Oh, ca n''t you tell us?
10322Oh, dear,_ dear_,exclaimed Marjorie,"have dreadful things been always happening?
10322Oh, does he?
10322Oh, have you a class?
10322Oh, have you heard it all?
10322Oh, is it_ me?_clinging to her.
10322Oh, no; why should there be?
10322Oh, will you?
10322Oh,_ do_ you think it''s storming?
10322Oh,_ is_ he coming home?
10322Our''boy,''--Morris Kemlo,--don''t you think it''s a pretty name? 10322 Papa is dying-- he will soon go away, and his little daughter will not promise the last thing he asks of her?"
10322Papa said I must not say my name was''Jeroma,''shall I write it_ Prue_ Holmes, Aunt Prue?
10322Papa, what became of the man that hurt Aunt Prue and made her father die?
10322Perhaps you will some day, who knows? 10322 Prudence, if I regain my strength out there, I am coming home to tell you something, may I?"
10322Shall I get out now?
10322Shall I read to you now?
10322Shall we have some music? 10322 Shall you tell him about it?"
10322Shall you?
10322She is n''t like a little girl now, is she?
10322Something the matter? 10322 Tell Uncle John and Aunt Prue that that was the last thing I taught you, will you?"
10322Ten days to where?
10322That is why you so suddenly chose California instead of Minnesota for your winter?
10322That you will die soon; and then where shall I go?
10322Then I can not explain to you, Marjorie is n''t hurt any; I do n''t believe she cares half as much as you do?
10322Then it is rather hard not to be beautiful, is n''t it?
10322Then what becomes of the children?
10322Then what did you do?
10322Then what makes you go?
10322Then you do not know how long after the Crucifixion?
10322Then you mean that beauty goes for a great deal with the world and not with God?
10322Then-- for the same reason why did n''t he tell them about chloroform and printing and telegraphing and a thousand other inventions?
10322To me?
10322To sell,said Hollis, as seriously,"Marjorie, what do you want to be yourself for?"
10322To- night? 10322 Troubled about_ what_?"
10322Visited? 10322 Was I not a girl?"
10322Was he ever in this room?
10322Was it something so bad?
10322Was n''t he sorry?
10322Was papa in this room a good many times?
10322Was she a slave?
10322Was she glad?
10322We are two rather dangerous people, are n''t we?
10322Well, Marjorie?
10322Well, deary, what shall I tell you about? 10322 Well, do n''t you see the reason now for studying punctuation?"
10322Well, what does it mean?
10322Well, what is the rest, then?
10322Were there giants, too?
10322Were you true?
10322What are you getting ready for?
10322What are you going to do next?
10322What could I do with her? 10322 What did Buckle_ do_ with all his learning?"
10322What did your mother say?
10322What did your mother say?
10322What do girls want to_ do_?
10322What do they look like?
10322What do you do it for?
10322What do you do nowadays?
10322What do you feel like listening to?
10322What do you know about the Milky Way?
10322What do you mean?
10322What do you mean?
10322What do you see?
10322What do you think of my short prayers? 10322 What do you think?"
10322What do you want money for?
10322What do you want to be a salesman for?
10322What do_ you_ care for most, Miss Prudence? 10322 What does Nurse say?"
10322What does any man want it for? 10322 What does that mean to you, Marjorie?"
10322What does the master learn you about?
10322What else can you mean by''ready''?
10322What else? 10322 What happened after you said good- bye to Hollis?"
10322What has changed you?
10322What has happened to him?
10322What has happened to you?
10322What is it that tires you so to- night? 10322 What is it?"
10322What is the highest secret of victory and peace? 10322 What is the house like inside?
10322What is? 10322 What kind of beauty?"
10322What kind of stories do you like best?
10322What makes him look so sorry, Morris''mother?
10322What makes lovable beauty?
10322What new gossip now, girls?
10322What now?
10322What right had you to think that?
10322What unsettled you now?
10322What was his name?
10322What will they all think?
10322What will unsettle me?
10322What will your mother do?
10322What would you choose for me to do?
10322What would you choose?
10322What-- for example?
10322When I appealed to your sympathies and enlisted you in my behalf?
10322When did you have yours?
10322When is Mr. Holmes coming here?
10322When is she coming to see us?
10322When is your Speller coming out?
10322When may we know?
10322Where is Mr. Holmes going?
10322Where is he-- now?
10322Where is he? 10322 Where is he?"
10322Where shall I begin?
10322Where shall I read?
10322Where? 10322 Which of your cousins do you like best?"
10322Which one of the things, for instance?
10322Which? 10322 Who told you?
10322Who was it that stood on London Bridge and did not throw his manuscript over? 10322 Whom hast them pitied?
10322Whose son?
10322Why did n''t he stay to breakfast?
10322Why did n''t he study Webster?
10322Why did n''t papa tell me?
10322Why did n''t you come before?
10322Why do n''t she adopt a little girl?
10322Why do n''t you jump up and take another climb?
10322Why do we always groan over''Thy will be done,''as though there never was anything pleasant in it?
10322Why do you think he will?
10322Why not? 10322 Why not?
10322Why not?
10322Why not?
10322Why should I not know about sorrow?
10322Why should he tell you that?
10322Why should n''t he?
10322Why, do you know all about them?
10322Why, ever so much? 10322 Why, in half an hour?"
10322Why?
10322Why?
10322Wife and children going back to Boston, too?
10322Will Morris let you help pay her board?
10322Will Rheid,teased Marjorie,"or anybody?"
10322Will he make me do what I do n''t want to?
10322Will it hurt you to- day?
10322Will it make any difference to you-- my decision? 10322 Will she like that?"
10322Will the plate do, do you think? 10322 Will you have to pay for it?"
10322Will you stay long?
10322Will you think and answer me when I come home?
10322Will you write to me? 10322 Will you, Marjorie?"
10322Will you?
10322Will, how_ can_ I let you go?
10322Wo n''t God?
10322Wo n''t you go, too?
10322Wo n''t you please decide now to let me go to- day?
10322Wo n''t you please stay home with me and make molasses candy, or peppermint drops?
10322Wo n''t you take me instead-- no, not instead of Morris, but_ with_ him?
10322Would I like it, Marjorie, at your school?
10322Would n''t you like to see her, Mousie?
10322Would you give that all up?
10322Would you like to know where you will go?
10322Would you like to see the letter?
10322Would you want to kill him-- the man that hurt me?
10322Would_ you_ like that life better?
10322Yes, and is that all?
10322Yes, we are living, why should he not be alive?
10322You are going with Miss Prudence when Linnet is through, I suppose?
10322You can not change for the better, so why should you change at all?
10322You expect to finish this year?
10322You know when the Crucifixion was, of course?
10322You mean that God will not accept my excuse for not feeling like reading to- night?
10322You were in trouble, were n''t you? 10322 You would n''t enjoy a book very much written in that style, would you?"
10322_ Ca n''t_ I go, Marjorie?
10322_ Is_ mother troubled about something?
10322_ When_ were you satisfied?
10322_ Who_ is?
10322''History of the Reformation,''is n''t it?"
10322''Why could she not pray about it without telling me?''
10322A rejection daunted him no more than a poor recitation in the schoolroom; where would be the zest in life if one had not the chance of trying again?
10322A whisper from Miss Parks reached her:"Is n''t it a poky subject?
10322AND WHAT ELSE?
10322AND WHAT ELSE?
10322About Morris?
10322After a moment Miss Prudence read aloud:"''And if ye offer the blind for sacrifice, is it not evil?
10322After a moment she asked:"What is it?"
10322Ah, poor Morris, if you had known about next time, would you have spoken to- night?
10322Am I so big?
10322And I have n''t missed one plate with a bouquet, have I?
10322And I wonder what it is in you( do you know?)
10322And I''m to sit up until you go to bed, and you are to sleep with me; and_ wo n''t_ it be splendid for me to go to school and take my lunch, too?
10322And are wives always beautiful?"
10322And dared she recite to a teacher who had made a book?
10322And did not he need the social life?
10322And did people mix bread with lukewarm water in summer as well as winter?
10322And had not her father looked over her examples last night and pronounced them correct?
10322And he had said:"May I fight for you, too, Marjorie?"
10322And he says we must remember him by taking the bread and wine for his sake, to remember that he died for us, do n''t you know?"
10322And how could she ever pass the next house?
10322And how could she go down with such a face to hear the rest about punctuation?
10322And how do you spell_ resurrection_?
10322And how many other lives, who knew?
10322And how would you write two_ r''s?_ Would punctuation teach you that?
10322And how would you write two_ r''s?_ Would punctuation teach you that?
10322And if I do n''t teach, how shall I use my knowledge?
10322And if I pounded and screamed would n''t she be frightened and run away?
10322And if I say that Richard the Third was baptized by St. Augustine, can you contradict it?
10322And if she could earn the money, where could she find the pitcher?
10322And if she should write two sheets this time would her mother think it foolish?
10322And if ye offer the lame and sick, is it not evil?
10322And if_ she_ were, what then?
10322And now what further remains to be told?
10322And she was a member of the church?
10322And that Jesus Christ was descended from him?"
10322And then the question came up, what should Linnet and Marjorie do with their father''s home?
10322And was n''t it queer-- why how had she got there?
10322And was n''t the one at Laodicea lukewarm?
10322And was n''t there a story about the Seven Sleepers?
10322And was not the leaning tower of Pisa in Italy?
10322And were n''t the churches in Revelation in Asia?
10322And were n''t there Seven Wise Men of Greece?
10322And when did you get in?
10322And when the ship was almost overwhelmed and the frightened disciples came to him-- but why should I go on?
10322And where''s Will?
10322And who does as much good as Miss Prudence?
10322And why did n''t Linnet come with you?"
10322And why should a little girl live in a woman''s world?"
10322And why should girls have, who have good mothers and the Old and New Testaments?
10322And would Mr. Holmes certainly go to hear that lecture?
10322And you are sixteen, are n''t you?
10322And, if not, what?
10322And, then, was there not a face"marred"?
10322Any books to take?"
10322Are mine too long?
10322Are you Prue, or Jeroma?"
10322Are you afraid of spoiling your dress?
10322Are you ready to try that?
10322Are you satisfied?"
10322As big as a sea lion?"
10322As necessary as that Peter and John and Martha and Mary and his mother should be comforted one little instant sooner?
10322As necessary as that their terrible suspense should be ended?
10322As the sleigh containing Linnet, her father, and Marjorie sped away before them, Captain Rheid said to Hollis:--"How shall I ever break it to them?
10322At the same time with Petrarch and Galileo, and Tasso and-- did she know about any other Italians?
10322But first, shall we have family worship, together?
10322But had it helped her?
10322But have you enough of this?
10322But how can I tell?"
10322But is n''t this a long letter?
10322But then, would Aunt Prue want her to go?
10322But there was something familiar in the voice; or was she thinking of somebody?
10322But was it not all selfishness, after all?
10322But was it not befitting her gray locks?
10322But were n''t they in Asia?
10322But what kind of a feeling have you?"
10322But who was accountable for her frame of mind?
10322But who?
10322But why did you ask?"
10322But with Marjorie would be the difficulty; could he manage her?
10322But would she tell_ her_ the reason?
10322But would she want it to be such a"together"as certain of her friends shared?
10322But, have you promised?"
10322But, would he keep looking back?
10322But-- Miss Prudence came back from her dreaming over the past,--would Linnet go home with her and go to school?
10322But_ do_ you think so much depends upon beauty?"
10322Can you sing that?
10322Christ could do it, and he did do it, but can you?
10322Could her mother understand, when she had lived in the very sunshine of faith for thirty years?
10322Could it be Morris?
10322Could n''t I?"
10322Could she be human and not grow old?
10322Could she do a part of it?
10322Could she earn money to buy another hundred- years- old yellow pitcher?
10322Could you make anything of your astronomy now?"
10322Could you or I wait to fold a napkin and lay it away if we might fly to a friend who was wearying for us?
10322Did Linnet like the handkerchief and scarf?"
10322Did Miss Prudence mean that she must decide about that before Prue could come to school?
10322Did Mr. Woodfern ask you questions?"
10322Did he know about France and England and America, the Empire of Russia and populous China?"
10322Did he know they would learn that the Great Spirit had a Son, Jesus Christ?
10322Did he live his life upon the earth with no sign of it in his face?
10322Did n''t somebody in the Bible toss a roll into the fire on the hearth?
10322Did n''t you know your lessons to- day?"
10322Did n''t you undress?
10322Did n''t your mother help you any?
10322Did not he love books, and why then should he quarrel with Marjorie?
10322Did she die with a broken heart?"
10322Did they expect again to hear his footfall or his voice?
10322Did you ever see him, Aunt Prue?"
10322Did you have to pay money for it?"
10322Did you know that_ pusheen_ is Irish for puss?
10322Did you learn it before I was born?"
10322Did you miss it?"
10322Did you notice that?"
10322Did you play on the way home?"
10322Did you see how it comes right?"
10322Did you succeed in French?"
10322Do n''t you care for what Livingstone says or Humboldt?
10322Do n''t you know any better?"
10322Do n''t you know how girls look?"
10322Do n''t you know the artist who did kill himself, or wanted to, because he had done his best?"
10322Do n''t you know--"She colored and stopped,"Know what?"
10322Do n''t you remember our motto?
10322Do n''t you want papa and mamma instead of Uncle John and Aunt Prue?"
10322Do n''t you want to go down and see his mother?"
10322Do n''t you want to know the four proofs in support of unity of origin?
10322Do people have_ that_ kind of a prayer answered?"
10322Do people know you in Aunt Prue''s city?"
10322Do the little girls come in your room, Marjorie?"
10322Do you hear that grand child of yours asking who it was that sat by his hearth and did not toss his manuscript into the fire?
10322Do you know all about Buddha?"
10322Do you know all about Holland when that plate first came into existence?"
10322Do you know how many nations Abraham knew about?
10322Do you know what you want?
10322Do you know who Louis XVI was?"
10322Do you like school as well as you expected to?"
10322Do you remember one a long time ago who had half an answer, only a glimmer of light on a dark way?
10322Do you remember telling Hollis about your dark time, that night he met you on your way from your grandfather''s?"
10322Do you remember the day I came?
10322Do you remember what the Lord said about that?"
10322Do you see how fidgety he is?
10322Do you see many people that write books?"
10322Do you still believe that he is living?"
10322Do you suppose you_ could_ make it as interesting as punctuation?"
10322Do you think God keeps a book up in Heaven to put down every time you fail to read the Bible through in a year?
10322Do you think he ought to be punished?"
10322Do you want the bride to forget her attire and her ornaments?"
10322Do you want to go?"
10322Do you want to tell me what you pray about on your wedding day?"
10322Do you, Marjorie?"
10322Do you?"
10322Does he like the life?"
10322Does it trouble you?"
10322First, will you go and see my mother as soon as you get well, and go often?"
10322For whom had he in all the world to love save little Prue and Aunt Prue?
10322Got them all right, did you?"
10322Had any confession that she had made touched him anew?
10322Had he cared so very much?
10322Had he come to her to- night in the storm to have his youth thrown up at him?
10322Had he forgotten it?
10322Had he not said that Marjorie was his"boy"as well as her mother''s girl?
10322Had he spoken last, or had she?
10322Had his wretched days and wakeful nights been for nothing?
10322Had n''t she waited, and did n''t she know?
10322Had not her face been moulded by her life?
10322Had she a right to go to the communion?
10322Had she been"spoiling"Linnet, too?
10322Had she done a dreadful thing that Helen would not think of doing?
10322Had she effected anything?
10322Had she ever known anything that was not peace?
10322Had she lost something, therefore, in not thus finding out God?
10322Had she made the changes herself by fretting and worrying; had she taken life too hard?
10322Has n''t she spoken of them?"
10322Has our traveller had his supper?"
10322Has she been ill?"
10322Has something happened?"
10322Have n''t I been three times through the Arithmetic and once through the Algebra that I may support myself and somebody else, sometime?"
10322Have n''t you had anything but that quilt over you?"
10322Have n''t you proved me long enough?"
10322Have you any opening here?"
10322Have you been praying for a head wind?"
10322Have you brought her picture back?"
10322Have you forgotten me so far as that?"
10322Have you had time to watch the light over the fields?
10322Have you read his book?"
10322Having only each other, it was natural, was it not?"
10322He believed-- what did he believe?
10322He has written on his slate,''Will you play crambo?''
10322He knew now how much he loved her-- and she?
10322He was half dozing over the_ Agriculturist_; he raised his head and asked sharply,"Why?
10322He was like that hero she had read about-- rather were not all true heroes like him?
10322Her father was a missionary there, and she wrote in her journal how she felt and I felt so, too,""Did you put it in your journal?"
10322Her lips were curving into a smile; would n''t it be fun to ask him?
10322Hollis, do you pray and read your Bible, regular?"
10322Holmes, may I hand my arithmetic to somebody?''
10322How I did ask God to let me out in some way, to bring somebody to help me?
10322How about the tumble down now?"
10322How can one person know how a truth may affect another?
10322How can you?"
10322How could he ever write"Dear Marjorie"again, with this face in his memory?
10322How could he stay his feet?
10322How could she ever enter that schoolroom again?
10322How could she help them to be what she was not herself?
10322How could you?
10322How could you?"
10322How did I come to be here at night?
10322How do I know she will ever be put in any furnace?
10322How do you think it happens that I am alone?
10322How large is your primary class, Marjorie?"
10322How long have you been here?
10322How many Bible verses could I repeat?
10322How many could I count?
10322How many have you that are unconverted?"
10322How many persons are in the coach?"
10322How many things could I do in an hour?
10322How splendid,"exclaimed Marjorie,"Wo n''t it look grand in the_ Argus_--''Bark LINNET, William Rheid, Master, ten days from Portland''?"
10322How would she say it?
10322How would that do?"
10322How would you like that?"
10322I am glad of your question, Marjorie,''What did Mr. Buckle_ do_ with his knowledge?''
10322I asked''Why did they continue enemies, then?''
10322I can wait on Morris''mother, ca n''t I?
10322I counted eleven, but had I missed one stroke?
10322I did n''t think of that?"
10322I do n''t believe it is Robin Hood or any of his merry men, do you?
10322I do n''t see how it was wrong?"
10322I have no home for her; what am I to do?
10322I want to see the swallow''s nest again; I meant to have fed the swallows last night""Where are they?"
10322I was busy every hour in those days, I did not have to rest as often as I do now, and how could I spare the hour her prayer was demanding?
10322I went down with some inward quaking but much outward boldness as the pounding increased, and did not even ask''Who''s there?''
10322I''m glad I have n''t a daughter to run away and get married?"
10322If I say that Queen Elizabeth wrote a letter to Cleopatra, do you know whether I mean it or not?
10322If I should die to- night would I be as safe as Helen is?
10322If I wore diamonds that Linnet''s money purchased, are n''t you willing she shall eat bread and butter my money purchases?"
10322If it did not, where would it come in, pray?
10322If it were not for his love, Marjorie, what would keep our hearts from breaking?"
10322If the Holy Spirit dwelt in the temple of the body were not the lines upon the face his handwriting?
10322In London, or at home?"
10322In what age of the world had Michael Angelo lived?
10322Is Clarissa Parks more loved than any one in your class?"
10322Is it anything-- about--""Jerome?
10322Is it handsome enough?"
10322Is it possible that she was forgetting?
10322Is it years and_ years_ since I began this letter?
10322Is it_ all_ true?"
10322Is n''t it most time to put the kettle on?
10322Is n''t it queer how I always have a little girl provided for me?
10322Is n''t it queer that one of the proverbs should be like the Bible?
10322Is n''t it queer that we will not let him clothe us as he did the lilies?
10322Is n''t she another mother to Linnet and me?
10322Is n''t that Miss Prudence coming?"
10322Is n''t that selfish?
10322Is n''t there some new impulse toward the things he loves to give us every time we go near to him?"
10322Is n''t there work for you as a citizen and as a Christian in our little town?
10322Is she a Puritan maiden?"
10322Is that it?"
10322Is there chocolate enough?
10322Is_ that_ why you always read before you do anything else in the evening?"
10322It becomes us all to be humble?"
10322It belonged to her friend and how could she remedy the loss?
10322It was wonderful, Marjorie thought, and beautiful, but she could not say that; she asked instead:"Did he write about it himself?"
10322It''s hard for you to be a sailor''s wife, is n''t it?"
10322It''s the shock?
10322Jerrie thought a moment:"That he is good and will love me dearly, and be ever so kind to me and teach me things?"
10322Just let me keep my hand on your arm( will you?)
10322Kemlo?"
10322Like this house?"
10322Linnet came in softly once in a while to look at her with anxious eyes and to ask,"How do you feel now?"
10322Linnet had never had spiritual conflicts; what should she do with this too introspective Marjorie?
10322Linnet lay on her mother''s bed and wept, and then slept from exhaustion, to awake with the cry,"Oh, why did n''t I die in my sleep?"
10322Little Miss Dodd ran up laughing, and Marjorie could say no more; what more could she say than"good- bye"?
10322Marjorie hoped the opportunity to do that something had come at last; but what could it be?
10322Marjorie went to the master and standing before him with her cheeks blazing and eyes downcast she asked:"May I go home?
10322Marjorie wished Hollis would begin to talk about something pleasant; there were two miles further to ride, and would Captain Rheid talk all the way?
10322Marjorie, do you know what makes waves?"
10322May I see up stairs, too?"
10322May I walk with you?
10322Might he not stop there and be somewhere on the watch for her?
10322Might she dare ask him?
10322Miss Prudence did not mean to sigh, she did not mean to be so ungrateful, there was work enough in her life, why should she long for a holiday time?
10322Miss Prudence had written to her once that some time she would tell her a story about herself; but could she mean this story?
10322Miss Prudence was not usually so strict, she reasoned within herself; why must she wait for another quarter?
10322Miss Prudence wrote to her last week""Does she ever reply?"
10322Miss Prudence, is it so about praying, too?"
10322Money makes a difference; is it rather hard not to be rich?
10322Mr. Holmes is n''t rich, is he?
10322Mr. Holmes is not as strict as he used to be, is he?"
10322Mr. Holmes was always"writing up"something, and one of Mr. West''s usual questions was:"What have you to tell us about now?"
10322Must she also give the fresh hour of her morning to God?
10322Must the faithful, hopeful old father die with his hope deferred?
10322Next time?
10322No, she demurred, not a baby''s face, but-- then she laughed aloud at herself-- was not her fate the common fate of all?
10322Nobody could come there to hurt me, that was certain, and I could stamp the rats away, and there were apples and potatoes and turnips to eat?
10322Not think about dress or what we eat or drink?
10322Now I wonder if you understand Marjorie well enough to understand all she does and all she leaves undone during the coming fifteen or twenty years?
10322Now do n''t you like to know that?
10322Now was n''t that humiliating?
10322Now what can help her?"
10322Now what is this little girl thinking about?"
10322Now what was she to do next?
10322Now, are you comfortable?
10322Now, is n''t that adventure enough for the first volume?
10322O, mother, mother, how could you?"
10322Offer it now unto thy governor; will he be pleased with thee, or accept thy person?
10322Oh, why must things happen all together?
10322Oh, why_ did n''t_ you speak to me or touch me?"
10322Or counted too many?
10322Or is it too poor a sight after gazing at the sunset on the ocean?"
10322Or is n''t there something for me to do upstairs?
10322Or was it some other time?
10322Or was it sorrow afresh at the mention of her disappointments?
10322Or was it sympathy for the friend who had given her up and gone away without her?
10322Position makes a difference; is it rather hard not to be noble?"
10322School?
10322Sha n''t we be late?"
10322Shall I go down or let them pound?
10322Shall I publish it myself?
10322Shall I put it under this stone so that you will have to stoop for it?"
10322Shall I run and ask her, papa?"
10322Shall I tell you?"
10322Shall we go everywhere some day?"
10322Shall we need her in our Italian palace, or are we to dwell amid ruins?"
10322Shall we, Marjorie?"
10322She began by asking somewhat severely:''Whose life do you want to live?''
10322She cared to have it now more than she cared last night; what was the matter with her last night that she cared so little?
10322She could not believe it when the postmaster handed her only her father''s weekly paper, she stood a moment, and then asked,"Is that all?"
10322She could not make anything happen?
10322She even remembered one of her own childish questions, and his brief, stern affirmative:"Mr. Holmes, were you ever in a prison?"
10322She opened it as the train started, and was soon so absorbed that she was startled at a voice inquiring,"Is this seat engaged?"
10322She was afraid her thoughts would wander to the unlearned lesson: in such a frame of mind, would it be an acceptable offering?
10322She was hardly a radiant vision as she flew down to the gate; in those few minutes what could have happened to the child?
10322She will not work about the house, she will not sew or help in anything, she says she can not read the Bible--""How long since she has felt so?"
10322She would never feel sorrowful or disappointed about any little thing again, for what had she so longed for as this?
10322Should he toss it away, that circlet of gold with_ Semper fidelis_ engraved within it?
10322Silvio Pellico,--wasn''t he in prison and did n''t he write about it?
10322Suppose God says:''Fold that napkin and lay it away,''do we do it cheerfully and submissively, choosing to do it rather than to hasten to our friend?
10322Suppose I tell you that Martin Luther read_ Pilgrims Progress_ with great delight, do you know whether I am making fun or not?
10322Tears were so near to Marjorie''s eyes that they brimmed over; could she ever thank God enough for this?
10322That sounds grand, does n''t it?
10322The houses were closer together a mile further on, but how dared she pass that mile?
10322The question was:"What general reigned at this time?"
10322They lived here when they were first married, before they built their own house; the house does n''t look like it, does it?
10322Through the open kitchen door Marjorie heard her ask,"Is anything the matter?"
10322Vesuvius?
10322Vesuvius?"
10322Was Hollis one of them?
10322Was Miss Prudence taking care of her?
10322Was he glad or sorry?
10322Was he so bright because he was French?"
10322Was he troubled at that acknowledged hardness towards his brother?
10322Was her father so poor, or was this old dress and broad hat her mother''s taste?
10322Was it Miss Prudence?
10322Was it Saturday afternoon?
10322Was it all a mistake?
10322Was it her trouble?
10322Was it necessary that the napkin should be wrapped together in a place by itself?
10322Was it not a part of his human nature to grow older?
10322Was it possible that Miss Prudence suspected?
10322Was it possible that she herself did not belong to"the present generation,"but to a generation passed away?
10322Was it such a very sad story then?
10322Was it to take tea?
10322Was n''t there anybody to come?
10322Was not God taking care of her through the love of Miss Prudence?
10322Was not Mary on her way to him?
10322Was not Miss Prudence''s shame and sorrow her own?
10322Was she afraid of the cold for Prue?
10322Was she bearing it like this?
10322Was she going home and expecting a letter from Morris?
10322Was she not also one of her little sisters that were in the world and not of it?
10322Was she not living a lie?
10322Was she not the bosom friend of somebody''s grandmother to- day?
10322Was she so weak that she sank under grief?
10322Was somebody dead?
10322Was that Miss Prudence''s story?
10322Was that one of the Seven Wonders of the World?
10322Was that sorrow-- and the blessing with it-- the secret of her lovely life?
10322Was that the word that had one_ s_ and two_ r''s_ in it?
10322Was that why she loved poor little Prue so?
10322Was the child enduring any spiritual conflicts again?
10322Was there ever so much to tell before?
10322Was there nothing for him to be grieved about?
10322Was_ B_ a word and could you spell it?
10322We are in the world where the temptations are; what temptations do_ you_ have?"
10322We will rent Linnet''s house this summer-- or board with her, and superintend the building of our own, Do you agree to that?"
10322Well, now, taking it for granted from the Lord''s own words, what then?"
10322Were not Peter and John running towards him?
10322Were they interesting?"
10322What are you reading now?"
10322What can I do to make it right?"
10322What can school do for her when I give her up to you?
10322What could happen?
10322What did he have to do with it?"
10322What did you ask me to come home for?"
10322What do you do to get rested from your thoughts?"
10322What do you think of her as a school girl triumph?"
10322What do you want to send Marjorie to school for?
10322What else should I do?"
10322What excuse could she make to the child?
10322What girl ever had a white dress of the texture and whiteness and richness of the lily?"
10322What had her mother meant?
10322What has she done now?"
10322What if Hollis did not want to answer that last letter of hers, written more than two months ago, just after Linnet''s wedding day?
10322What is the good of anything a girl does if it does n''t help her to be a woman?"
10322What is the good of studying if it does n''t make you more a perfect woman?
10322What made our sins hurt him so?"
10322What made you ever call me Jerrie, papa?"
10322What shall I say to his mother?
10322What then?"
10322What troubles you this morning?"
10322What was her life worth if not to help such as Marjorie live a worthier life than her own two score years had been?
10322What was the last remark?
10322What was there to know any better about?
10322What will she do?"
10322What would Miss Prudence think of?
10322When Marjorie opened the parlor door to call them to tea she heard Mr. Woodfern inquire:"Do all your children belong to the Lord?"
10322When we go back let us try another chase, shall we?"
10322When you are so weary, do n''t you see that your brain refuses to think?"
10322When_ shall_ I go?
10322Where did he come from?
10322Where did you fall?"
10322Where is he?
10322Where''s Marjorie?"
10322Where''s your hood, Mousie?
10322Where?"
10322Where_ is_ Morris?"
10322Which will you have?"
10322Who ever knew Marjorie West to miss in spelling?
10322Who says so?"
10322Who was saying"dead"?
10322Who would have anything to live for if they did not believe in the love of God?
10322Who, among her friends, at forty years of age, was ever taken, or mistaken, for twenty- five or thirty?
10322Why ca n''t you wait and take her life as patiently as she did?
10322Why did n''t he stay home and take care of his old father?"
10322Why did you not go with him, Prudence?
10322Why do n''t you talk to me?"
10322Why do n''t you toss me overboard?
10322Why do you suppose he gets up in winter before daylight and splits wood-- when he has a pile that was piled up twenty years ago?"
10322Why do you write such short letters to me?
10322Why not?
10322Why should I?
10322Why should he do it in remembrance of his own death?
10322Why should he not speak to me first?"
10322Why, did I frighten you?
10322Will he accept an excuse that you are ashamed to give your teacher?"
10322Will it do if it is n''t a pitcher?"
10322Will you share my life-- any way?"
10322Will you tell me something out here among the wood?
10322Will you write to me again?"
10322Will you write to me every two weeks?"
10322Wo n''t somebody tell me all about it?"
10322Would Evangelist talk to him?
10322Would Hollis?
10322Would I add to my cold, and have quinsy sore throat again?
10322Would I faint away and never''come to''?
10322Would I frighten them by screaming and pounding?
10322Would I have to stay till Josie came?
10322Would I?
10322Would Miss Prudence have been burdened as she never had been burdened before could she have known that he had lost a long- cherished hope for himself?
10322Would Prue grow up to ask questions and need just such comforting, too?
10322Would going out among the children hasten that day?
10322Would he dare speak the words he had planned to speak?
10322Would he find her grown up when he came back next time?
10322Would he kiss him, and give him a smile, and bid him God speed?
10322Would he make an excuse for not noticing it?
10322Would her work be worth more to the world?
10322Would it be better for Prue, for Aunt Prue, to know or not to know?
10322Would it give her something else to shake off in the sunshine?
10322Would n''t I have been dreary here alone?
10322Would n''t you like to know how many languages there are?
10322Would not Captain Rheid come back again?
10322Would not Morris change his mind and come home to dinner?
10322Would not her life be a success, then?
10322Would she ever again forget_ amateur, abyss, accelerate, bagatelle, bronchitis, boudoir_ and_ isosceles_?
10322Would she ever have to tell the child her father''s story?
10322Would she have cared very much if he had refused those handkerchiefs she had marked for him?
10322Would she live a woman''s life and adorn herself with a baby''s face?
10322Would she stay home and be ignorant and never be or do anything?
10322Would the angels encamp about her more faithfully or more lovingly?
10322Would you like to know about Hollis''success as a Christian and a Christian citizen in his native town?
10322Would you like to see Marjorie in her new home, with Linnet''s chimneys across the fields?
10322Would you like to see the proud, indulgent grandmothers the day baby Will takes his first steps?
10322Would you?"
10322Would your desire be according to his will, his unselfish, loving, forgiving will?"
10322Writing in one''s turn?"
10322Yes, she had spoken last; she had said Morris was-- Would he speak of her long unanswered letter?
10322You do not quite know how to interpret the circumstances that seem to be in answer to your prayer?
10322You have told me all?"
10322_ Do n''t_ you think he might?"
10322_ Do_ you think you can find me a yellow pitcher, with yellow figures-- a man, or a lion, or something, a hundred or two hundred years old?"
10322_ May_ I go to- day, Aunt Prue?"
10322_ Morris!_ Had they not just heard from Will?
10322and can I play on the beach and see the lions?"
10322and what does he look like?"
10322and you should see a rude cross carved on it, what would you think?"
10322asked Marjorie,"and didn''t--""Are you getting ready to refute him?
10322began the dreamy, cracked voice,"as far back as I can remember?"
10322cried her mother, falling on her knees beside the bed,"must you wake up to this?"
10322exclaimed Linnet,"is_ that_ it?"
10322exclaimed Marjorie,"do n''t you think we country girls are away behind the age?"
10322exclaimed Prudence, and then:"Why should he think that?"
10322near the sea?
10322or at night?
10322she said, turning around to face her, and leaving the spoon idle in the steaming pot,"do you know, I think there''s something the matter?"
10322suppose it is fair to- morrow, will he make you sail on Sunday?"
10322that he had lived his lonely life year after year waiting until he should no longer be bound by the promise made to his brother at their parting?
10322that inclines you to hurry along and skip a little now and then, that you may discover whether Marjorie ever married Hollis?
10322to find the Wicket Gate, but would she dare ask any questions?
10322when did you see them?"
10322wo n''t that do?
28164After making these discoveries what did you do?
28164Ah, good afternoon, Mr. Cantercot,he said, rubbing his hands, half from cold, half from usage;"what have you brought me?"
28164Always one shadow?
28164And if he did, why did n''t they prove it the first time?
28164And if they want to arrest him, why could n''t they leave it till the ceremony was over? 28164 And if you have n''t been murdered what have you been doing?"
28164And what''s the name of the paper?
28164And when the Beautiful was not gossiping with her landlady, did she gossip with you as you passed the door?
28164And you could n''t write with your left?
28164And you still call Nature beautiful?
28164And, while occupying this front bedroom, did not the prisoner once lose his key and have another made?
28164Another lady of your acquaintance?
28164Are n''t you going to earn it, you beggar? 28164 As yours, for instance?"
28164But suppose she had n''t?
28164But what are you doing in this miserable spot, so far from home?
28164But what is Ugliness but a higher form of Beauty? 28164 But what was the use of breaking your head to save him?"
28164But why do n''t you give him up to justice?
28164But why should you arrest me?
28164By whom?
28164Ca n''t remember any more? 28164 Can you ask?
28164Dead? 28164 Dead?"
28164Did Mortlake tell you he was jealous?
28164Did n''t I tell you so?
28164Did she live alone?
28164Did you know a Miss Dymond?
28164Do you really think he was murdered, Tom?
28164Do you recognize it?
28164Do you still hope to discover the Bow murderer?
28164Does he care if my children are hungry?
28164Eh?
28164Fifty?
28164Good- looking, I suppose?
28164Have you any fresh concrete evidence?
28164He always struck you as a thorough gentleman?
28164He might have done it without your noticing it, I suppose?
28164How can I help Tom hanging?
28164How did he behave when he read it?
28164How did she appear?
28164How did we get on to it? 28164 How do you account for the extra sleepiness?"
28164How do you know?
28164How do you mean?
28164How has the prisoner behaved since the murder?
28164How much money do you want?
28164How should I know what became of you? 28164 How-- how do you know that?"
28164How? 28164 Indeed?"
28164Is Mr. Grodman in?
28164Is that what the paper will be devoted to?
28164It was n''t the dull, foggy weather?
28164Mortlake knew nothing of their meetings?
28164Mortlake of course knows where she is?
28164Murder? 28164 My dear Denzil, how often am I to point out that I went through the experiences that make the backbone of my book, not you?
28164No; how could that be? 28164 Of course it is about Mortlake?"
28164Oh, ai n''t I?
28164Oh, yes; how do you do, Tom? 28164 On the night of December 3d, you gave the prisoner a letter?"
28164Only once or twice, you say?
28164Par,said Wilfred Wimp,"what''s a alleybi?
28164Peter, do you want to drive me from the house? 28164 Portraits?
28164Pray do not consider me impertinent, but have you ever given any attention to the science of evidence?
28164Ready, Mr. Templeton? 28164 Really?"
28164She might have been out with Tom?
28164So that is the reason?
28164Templeton,said the Minister,"have you got down every word of Mr. Grodman''s confession?"
28164That is not your usual time?
28164That was Cantercot just went in, was n''t it, Grodman?
28164The others carried the cups on their feet, I suppose?
28164Then how did you know they were quarreling?
28164Then, when was he murdered?
28164Those were his very words?
28164Was the prisoner the sort of man who, in your opinion, would commit a murder?
28164We now come to the second alternative-- was the deceased the victim of homicide? 28164 Well, shall I say unpleasant, then?"
28164Well, what have you been doin''all this time?
28164Well, where was the justice for Arthur Constant if he, too, was innocent?
28164What about Jessie-- I mean Miss Dymond? 28164 What did he go there for?"
28164What do I mean?
28164What do you mean?
28164What do you mean?
28164What do you think,said Crowl,"of Republics?"
28164What do you want me to write?
28164What happened then?
28164What in the devil''s the matter?
28164What paper, sir?
28164What should you say if prisoner dropped something in it to make you sleep late?
28164What sort of a paper?
28164What time did you get up the next morning?
28164What was she?
28164What''s the Good of Society? 28164 What?"
28164What?
28164When am I to have that new dress, dear?
28164Where did she meet him?
28164Where is that sweetheart now?
28164Where, indeed?
28164Who else keeps him I should like to know?
28164Who then should I be alludin''to, Mr. Cantercot? 28164 Who wants to hear Gladstone?
28164Who''s fribbling now, you or me, Cantercot? 28164 Whose book?"
28164Why have you come to give fresh evidence?
28164Why not?
28164Why, was he not dead?
28164Why, what should I be doing?
28164Why, where have you been all these days?
28164Will you come up and see him?
28164Will you have the goodness to explain how the trick was done?
28164Will you tell the jury what followed?
28164Wo n''t you come under my umbrella? 28164 Wrong you?
28164Yes; how did you get it? 28164 You did n''t go in?"
28164You did n''t hear what they said?
28164You do n''t mean anything more than that?
28164You drink something before going to bed?
28164You found out whose? 28164 You knew her then?"
28164You know Mr. Cantercot, I suppose? 28164 You know about her disappearance?"
28164You mean to say you found Arthur Constant alive?
28164You really believe him innocent?
28164You were the last person to see him, Tom, were n''t you?
28164A Juryman: How do you know it was not somebody else?
28164A Juryman: Is n''t Shoppinhour one of the infidel writers, published by the Freethought Publication Society?
28164A little?
28164A marble?"
28164Am I not the most copious correspondent of the Press?"
28164And can you also explain how the prisoner could have bolted the door within from the outside?"
28164And this Madame Blavatsky''s book-- what is that?
28164And what should you think was the condition of Arthur Constant when the door yielded to my violent exertions and flew open?"
28164And when did she leave?"
28164And yet, had not Mrs. Wimp let out as much at the Christmas dinner?
28164And, after all, is it not enough to have been an influence for good over one or two human souls?
28164Brown- Harland, Q. C.( sarcastically):"And locked the door from within with it on leaving?"
28164By a Juryman: Did the news concern him?
28164CHAPTER V."Yes, but what will become of the Beautiful?"
28164Can a mother see her babe''s ugliness, or a lover his mistress''shortcomings, though they stare everybody else in the face?
28164Can we see ourselves as others see us?
28164Constant and the prisoner''s sweetheart?"
28164Constant might have the two rooms on the same floor?"
28164Constant spoke about on the night of December 3d?"
28164Constant took her off his hands?"
28164Constant''s bedroom with the key you found?"
28164Constant''s rooms?"
28164Constant?"
28164Constant?"
28164Coroner: And did you wake him?
28164Coroner: And that was the last you saw of the deceased?
28164Coroner: And what did you do then?
28164Coroner: Are you sure that you shut the street door?
28164Coroner: Could you show the jury the letter you received?
28164Coroner: How was he when you left him?
28164Coroner: I mean did he seem afraid of being robbed?
28164Coroner: Otherwise you saw nothing unusual about him?
28164Coroner: There had been no quarrel with Miss Brent?
28164Coroner: Was the deceased left- handed?
28164Coroner: Was the toothache very violent?
28164Coroner: Was there any private trouble in his own life to account for the temporary despondency?
28164Coroner: What time did you leave him?
28164Coroner: What time did you leave the house on Tuesday morning?
28164Crowl?"
28164Crowl?"
28164Denzil gasped,"What for?"
28164Did she not always remind the poet of Joan of Arc?
28164Did you do that?"
28164Do our friends appear to us as they appear to strangers?
28164Do our rooms, our furniture, our pipes strike our eye as they would strike the eye of an outsider, looking on them for the first time?
28164Do you think Kitty has any secrets from me?
28164Drinking again?"
28164Evidently the sole performer of my experiment must be myself; the subject-- whom or what?
28164First, did the deceased commit suicide?
28164Grodman?"
28164Grodman?"
28164Had the prisoner ceased to care for Miss Dymond?"
28164Has it ever struck you, sir, that we never see anyone more than once, if that?
28164Have n''t I taken the chair at all the meetings?
28164Have n''t touched a drop since----""The murder?"
28164He entered one way or another into the lives of a good many people; is it true that he nowhere made enemies?
28164How do you expect me to think of these details?"
28164How do you know it was a murder?"
28164How is he then to get out without attracting the attention of the now roused landlady?
28164How is he to go away and yet leave the doors and windows locked and bolted from within?
28164How is she, Tom?"
28164How much have you let him in for?"
28164How''s that for alliteration?
28164I could invent hundreds of such crimes, and please myself by imagining them done; but would they really work out in practice?
28164I mean anything beyond the current misconceptions?
28164I mean did you try to wake him?
28164I was very sorry to do this, as I rather liked that particular person, but when one has such ingenious readers, what can one do?
28164I''m only a plain man, and I want to know where the fun of anonymity comes in?
28164I''m only a plain man, and I want to know where''s the sense of givin''any one person authority over everybody else?"
28164If England dropped its fad of Monarchy and became a Republic to- morrow, do you mean to say that----?"
28164If Jessie had wrongs why should she not have avenged them herself?
28164In short, sir, what guarantee have we that the whole tale is not a cock- and- bull story, invented by the two persons who first found the body?
28164In view of this letter, are the relatives of the deceased justified in entrusting him with any private documents?
28164In which hand did you have this cramp?"
28164Is he not a secularist, who has lectured at the Hall of Science?
28164Is it likely that if he had chosen it, he would not have left letters and a statement behind, or made a last will and testament?
28164Is it likely that this was the night he would choose for quitting the scene of his usefulness?
28164Is n''t that rather a proof that it was suicide?
28164Is that all?
28164Is that also pheelosophy?
28164Is that too fast for you, Mr. Templeton?
28164Might not that have been due to the disappearance of his sweetheart?"
28164Mortlake''s, perhaps?"
28164Mr. Wimp was convinced by it, too, were n''t you, Edward?"
28164Mrs. Drabdump( breaking down): Oh, my lud, how can you ask?
28164Not bad, those old times, eh?"
28164Not bludgeoned by the police at the meeting this morning, I hope?"
28164Now, what are the facts?
28164Or is it likely he would have concealed the instrument?
28164Or was there no such place?
28164Perhaps you would like to inspect the book?
28164Seen the''New Pork Herald''lately?
28164Shall I send you on her book?
28164She sat in her room reading, and cast a shadow--""On your life?"
28164She was engaged to Mortlake?"
28164Should you say I was quarreling?"
28164The Coroner: Was deceased at all nervous?
28164The Juryman: Were you not shocked to find the friend of a meenister reading such impure leeterature?
28164The answer, then, to our first question, Did the deceased commit suicide?
28164The man had his moments of despondency-- as which of us has not?
28164The only uncertain link in the chain was: Would Mrs. Drabdump rush across to get me to break open the door?
28164To have learnt to know of such, to have been of service to one or two of such-- is not this ample return?
28164To what do you think I''ve been devoting my days and nights but to the cultivation of the Beautiful?"
28164Was I to be disappointed after all?
28164Was it a prophecy?
28164Was it the mention of Lucy Brent that had moved him to his depths?
28164Was not Grodman, too, on the track?
28164Was there any reason why the deceased should wish to take his own life?
28164Were n''t you on your oath?
28164What does he want with all that money and those houses-- a man with no sense of the Beautiful?
28164What had you been doing to bring it on?"
28164What shall one man''s life-- a million men''s lives-- avail against the corruption, the vulgarity and the squalor of civilization?
28164What the devil have you been doing with yourself since the inquest?
28164What was it to do with him that he could see no way by which the wound could have been inflicted by an outside agency?
28164What was the matter with the clock?
28164What wonder if the shrewder sort divined that the indomitable detective had fixed his last hope on the girl''s guilt?
28164What would the great labor leader have to say at this supreme moment?
28164What''s put salt on your wounds?"
28164What''s that ticket you''re looking so lovingly at, Peter?"
28164When was the last time you saw the two together?"
28164When''s your next show?"
28164When?
28164Where were you when the prisoner told you he was going to Devonport?"
28164Where''s the justice of it, where''s the justice of it?"
28164Where?
28164Which, then, got to heaven?
28164Who wants more polish and refinement than that showed?"
28164Who?"
28164Whose corns did he tread on?
28164Whose was the second shadow?"
28164Why does all the world watch over barbers and conspire to promote their interests?
28164Why have n''t you been to see me since the murder?
28164Will a sovereign get you out of it?"
28164Wimp said"Yes?"
28164Writing what?"
28164You did n''t leave it a shadow of doubt?"
28164You follow me, sir?"
28164You tried to rouse him?
28164did n''t I tell you so?"
28164do you call Queen Victoria visible?"
28164said Denzil,"and shall I write the story for you?"
33584Oh, are you? 33584 And can anyone doubt the effect which the emergence of women into politics will have, eventually, on politics? 33584 And what of Miss Duncan-- what is her part in the woman''s movement? 33584 But one may profitably inquire, What will be the effect of the emergence of women into politics upon politics itself? 33584 Can anyone doubt this? 33584 Has a new world, bounded by factory walls and noisy with the roar of machinery, grown up about us, to keep women from their heritage? 33584 Who is your doctor? 33584 Why, she asks, is it so important that women should bear and rear children to live lives as empty and poor as their own? 33584 Why, then, have men appeared hostile to the woman''s rebellion? 32768 Are you a child of God?
32768Do you mean to say that we ca n''t have a service of song and prayer on these grounds?
32768How many do you think can be depended on to carry on such a course as is proposed?
32768What do you mean?
32768What were the last words of Admiral Nelson?
32768What would you think of a course of reading in history?
32768What?
32768With what words did Oliver Cromwell dismiss the Long Parliament?
32768Also Dr. Hamilton Wright Mabie, editor and essayist, spoke on"The East and West, Friends or Enemies?"
32768Are you a partaker of the divine nature?
32768As we stood in a building which we had named"Normal Hall,"I asked a lady by the window,"Is this a cyclone?"
32768Beard please explain the difference between a natural consequence and a miracle?"
32768But Chautauqua is a great place, is n''t it?"
32768But the boys shouted,"Ca n''t we stamp it down now?"
32768But there must be some good books of other kinds-- can''t you tell me of them?"
32768C.?"
32768Ca n''t you give me the names of some such books?"
32768Can we wonder that Chautauqua is a sacred and blessed name to multitudes of Americans?
32768Could members and leaders be found for four separate clubs in one locality?
32768Could the multitudes from every State and from foreign lands be attracted from Philadelphia five hundred miles to Chautauqua Lake?
32768Dr. Stuntz led him to a window, pointed to the American flag flying over the castle, and said;"Do you see that flag?
32768E. B. Bryan"Who are Good Citizens?"
32768Had the quest of the American people for new interests been satisfied by two years at the Assembly?
32768He looks like a good man, does n''t he?"
32768How should the requisite dollars by the thousand be raised?
32768How would the grounds appear when forty classes should have little headquarters-- a C. L. S. C. village?
32768How would the regular constituency of Chautauqua feel at this innovation?
32768I paused in the lesson and said:"I am somewhat of a stranger here-- how long does it take a thunder storm to arrive?"
32768Is Chautauqua great enough, original enough, sufficiently beneficial to the world to have its history written?
32768Is another story of Frank Beard on that evening beneath the dignity of history?
32768Is there no statement in print of the views that must or must not be expressed by the different speakers?"
32768It was noticed that in the very opening the Amphitheater was filled;--what would it become at the height of the season, the first two weeks in August?
32768Let us endeavor to answer the question-- Why does the mother- Chautauqua still stand supreme?
32768May we not find here the germ destined to grow into the Palestine Park of the Chautauqua Assembly?
32768Some of his evening callers said,"What have you got back there?"
32768THE CHAUTAUQUA SALUTE BY MAY M. BISBEE Have you heard of a wonderful lily That blooms in the fields of air?
32768That put an end to any prospect of songs and speeches, for who could command silence to such a din?
32768The Recognition Address this year was by President E. B. Bryan of Colgate University, on the all- important question:"Who are Good Citizens?"
32768The first one is a very old struggle: It is, how shall we get any leisure?
32768The first question on the paper was,"What is your name and address?"
32768The girls looked at her in surprise and asked"Is this your birthday?"
32768The minister thought a moment, and then said slowly,"Well, what kind of books do you want-- religious books, for instance?"
32768The one most notable was that entitled,"Does Death End All?"
32768The question might be asked, Why have none of the ten thousand rivaled the first, the original Chautauqua?
32768There were books enough in the world, but how could he choose the right ones?
32768Twenty years afterward I met a prominent Methodist minister at a Conference, who said to me,"Do n''t you remember me, Dr. Hurlbut?
32768What had wrought the change?
32768What shall you do with your leisure?
32768What would you recommend for me?"
32768Who are you?
32768Who are you?
32768Who otherwise would have thought of songs for Chautauqua, and called upon a poet to write them?
32768Why try to rival the high schools and arouse the criticism of the colleges?
32768With never a stem or a pale green leaf, Spotless, and white, and fair?
32768Would not the circle break up into fragments from the weight of the machinery needed to keep the wheel in motion?
32768or a Roosevelt?"
32768what is a king?
17272A perfectly reasonable decision,he agreed, without the slightest change of expression,"but am I really to be blamed for this unfortunate incident?
17272Am I to look upon you as a traitor?
17272Am I to speak to you?
17272An interesting interview?
17272And Europe?
17272And I?
17272And how does that affect the matter?
17272And if they did,he asked quickly,"is n''t it possible that their rule over the people might be better than the rule of this stubborn generation?"
17272And now the desire for them has all gone,she asked,"have n''t you any personal hopes or dreams in connection with life?
17272And now-- what now?
17272And the end of it?
17272And they let you go-- those Americans?
17272And what about us?
17272And what have you got to say about it?
17272And what is the real philosophy of living?
17272And what is your uncle''s point of view?
17272And what was that? 17272 And why is it impossible?"
17272And why is that? 17272 And why not for you?"
17272And why?
17272And you, Mr. Culvain,he enquired,"you represent no particular industry, I believe?
17272And you?
17272And you?
17272And your object,Maraton added,"is to benefit through our loss of trade?"
17272And, by God, why have n''t I?
17272Anonymous?
17272Any letters of consequence?
17272Anything else?
17272Are any meals being served in the restaurant?
17272Are n''t we for the people? 17272 Are n''t you exaggerating that sentiment just a little?"
17272Are n''t you fat now?
17272Are there any terms at all connected with this little subscription?
17272Are there no police left?
17272Are you Henry Selingman,he enquired--"I mean the fellow who has been writing about Maraton?"
17272Are you Maraton?
17272Are you afraid of that?
17272Are you an Englishman?
17272Are you one of those soft- hearted fools who go about doing this sort of thing?
17272Are you satisfied?
17272Are you serious, sir?
17272Are you speaking of Maxendorf?
17272Are you that man?
17272Aye, why not?
17272Been spending the week- end with Foley, have n''t you?
17272But do you do nothing but work?
17272But do you never speak there?
17272But how are we to get into London?
17272But is n''t that a little unreasonable?
17272But surely,Elisabeth protested,"you make some excuse for those who have really no opportunity for finding out?
17272But then politicians are rather like that, are n''t they? 17272 But what was it first inspired you with this-- well, would n''t you call it a passion-- for championing the cause of the people?"
17272But you are an Englishman, are you not?
17272But you?
17272By- the- bye, Aaron, is n''t there a meeting to- night at the Clarion?
17272By- the- bye, is it true that Dale and all of them are coming up to- night?
17272Ca n''t you look a little way into the future?
17272Ca n''t you see why? 17272 Ca n''t you see,"Aaron continued irritably,"that the coming of Maraton has changed many things?
17272Ca n''t you see,Maraton continued,"that Society can easily deal with one strike at a time?
17272Can not I help you towards the further accomplishment of your duty, then?
17272Come back with me now, wo n''t you?
17272Come to support us, sir, I hope?
17272Come, do I understand you properly? 17272 Confess,"he said,"that there are some things about me and my surroundings which have surprised you?"
17272Could any one,he demanded,"stand in the position I stand in to- day and not have doubts?"
17272Declined without conditions?
17272Did I say that?
17272Did n''t I see something yesterday about Lady Elisabeth Landon having won the scratch prize at Ranelagh at a ladies''golf meeting?
17272Did you hear that?
17272Did you send for a doctor?
17272Do n''t you ever think of yourself,she asked,"what your own life is going to be?
17272Do n''t you think that it may lead to disappointment?
17272Do tell me,she asked,"you are the Miss Thurnbrein who has written so much upon woman labour, are n''t you?"
17272Do you find that after being so plaguey independent you need our help after all? 17272 Do you hear-- you-- Maraton?"
17272Do you imagine,she demanded, her voice trembling,"that you will be permitted to repeat in this country your American exploits?"
17272Do you mean,Mr. Foley asked,"that you have no impulse of affection for your own country?"
17272Do you seriously believe, Mr. Foley,he asked in an undertone,"in the possibility, in the imminent possibility of war?"
17272Do you suppose the people will listen to you preaching peace and contentment? 17272 Do you take life seriously, Lady Elisabeth?"
17272Do you think that you are discreet in the sense of being wise? 17272 Do you think that you are?"
17272Do you want a vote?
17272Does one think now of the sea of blood through which France once purged herself? 17272 Faint- hearted?"
17272For the people of the world,Maraton persisted slowly--"for humanity?
17272Got another job, eh?
17272Granted that I had the power, do you think that I had the right to stir up a civil war here in the face of the help I was promised for our people?
17272Has anything happened?
17272Have n''t been overworking, I hope?
17272Have n''t my Government done their best to prove it?
17272Have n''t you a single gleam of patriotism?
17272Have n''t you been my girl for six years before he came? 17272 Have n''t you discovered it?"
17272Have you any objection,Maraton asked,"to the people''s cause being represented in the Cabinet?"
17272Have you finished?
17272Have you finished?
17272Have you no hobbies?
17272Have you told her?
17272He is not up yet, of course, but might we come in and wait?
17272He makes love to you, eh? 17272 He spoke of the great things?"
17272He will keep to it, you think? 17272 Help?
17272How are the accounts lasting out?
17272How are they in the north?
17272How are you going to get it back, eh? 17272 How are you going to get it?"
17272How can you fire their blood if there are doubts in your heart? 17272 How can you look at her, hear her speak, watch her, without wanting to marry her?
17272How did you come to see the truth-- to know that you had been misled by Maxendorf?
17272How do you account for it?
17272How long will he be?
17272How long will those fellows be?
17272However, you came here to be entertained, did n''t you? 17272 I am content to obey my guide,"he remarked,"but why this abrupt flight?"
17272I belong to a Working Man''s Club and what we ca n''t see is what''s the bally use of a job like this? 17272 I hope there was nothing disturbing in your letters?"
17272I hope you approve?
17272I may approach you again,Mr. Beldeman asked,"if circumstances should change?
17272I often wonder,she went on,"is there nothing else in your life at all except this passionate altruism?
17272I want to know,he went on obstinately,"why you have n''t been to work lately?"
17272I wish,she said,"that you would tell me more about yourself-- what you did in America, what your life has been?
17272I?
17272If I am a Labour man,Maraton said,"why did you put up a candidate to oppose me at Nottingham?"
17272If there is,Maraton asked easily,"to whom am I responsible?"
17272In other words,she laughed,"you are discontented because you have been successful?"
17272In what it said about me?
17272In what respect am I different?
17272Including the railways?
17272Indeed? 17272 Is everything going well, Aaron?"
17272Is he to be bought?
17272Is it a confession?
17272Is it a maze?
17272Is it an arrangement with Mr. Foley that you''re speaking of?
17272Is it true,he asked,"that Boulding''s wo n''t pay the advance?--that they are going to close the doors to- morrow if we insist upon it?"
17272Is it wise?
17272Is it you who speak,Maxendorf asked grimly,"or is this another man-- a sophist living in the shadow of Maraton''s fame?
17272Is it?
17272Is n''t it your theory,she whispered,"to destroy for the sake of the future?
17272Is that all?
17272Is that eleven o''clock?
17272Is that for me?
17272Is the country at war?
17272Is there wine in the place?
17272Is this true?
17272It is to threaten me that you have come?
17272Jew or Christian-- what does it matter?
17272Just another question, Mr. Maraton: Why have you kept this secret from us?
17272Look here, young man,Peter Dale expostulated,"what''s it all about?
17272Man, ca n''t you see the glory of it?
17272Manchester?
17272Miss Thurnbrein,Maraton begged,"will you see Mr. Foley and Lady Elisabeth out?
17272Miss Thurnbrein,he said,"can I have a word with you?"
17272Mr. Maraton,he enquired,"are you a bad- tempered man?"
17272Mr. Maraton,he enquired,"are you an Englishman?"
17272Mr. Maraton,she begged,"please will you promise that before you go away, you will talk to me again for a few minutes?"
17272My dear Catharine,he asked, a little reprovingly,"was it necessary to have such a crowd here-- at any rate until after Monday?
17272My friends,he protested,"why do we bandy words like this?
17272Need we discuss these things, Lady Elisabeth?
17272Need you go into that gloomy chamber again, my friend?
17272No fresh trouble?
17272Not that awful man Maraton?
17272Now how will you come? 17272 Over there?"
17272Pretty close fit, was n''t it?
17272Say, what''s wrong with you, Freddy? 17272 Schemes of friendship or of enmity?"
17272Shall I dare to argue with you, I wonder?
17272Shall I go?
17272Shall I say a sense of the fitness of things?
17272Since when,he asked,"have I been the proud possessor of two secretaries?"
17272Slap up, ai n''t it? 17272 So Foley''s been getting at you, has he?"
17272So long as it is my conviction, why not proclaim it? 17272 So you would hear my little story?"
17272So you''re looking after Aaron, are you?
17272Supposing there were still a way by which even this present generation could reap the benefit? 17272 Tell me about Ernshaw?"
17272Tell me about to- night?
17272Tell me about your wonderful journey north?
17272Tell me about yours?
17272Tell me about yourself?
17272Tell me honestly, Aaron,she asked presently,"what do you think of it all?--of him-- of his methods?
17272Tell me what it is?
17272Tell me what you are doing here?
17272Tell me what you see there?
17272Tell me why?
17272Tell me?
17272That''s all very well,Maraton remarked, a little grimly,"but where do I come in?
17272The Houses of Parliament, eh? 17272 Their own fault, eh?"
17272Then are you sure that it is your star?
17272They are no use to me,he declared,"unless they''re political?"
17272They did not quarrel?
17272They do not understand what?
17272They have gone?
17272They were friends? 17272 Those men who were murdered in Chicago, murdered at your instigation because they tried to break the strike-- what of them?"
17272Thought it was some one else, eh?
17272To gloat over your work?
17272Too beautiful? 17272 War or peace, Mr. Maraton?
17272We are strangers, I believe?
17272Well,she asked,"have you converted Sir William?"
17272Well?
17272Well?
17272Well?
17272Were you satisfied with it?
17272What about Dale and his friends?
17272What about the mob?
17272What about the potteries?
17272What about this strike?
17272What am I, man,Selingman retorted, striking himself on the chest,"but a humanitarian?
17272What are you bothering about?
17272What can I do for you?
17272What could I do?
17272What could they do but vote for you, with Manchester staring them in the face?
17272What did he want?
17272What do they say on the Continent about his coming?
17272What do you expect?
17272What do you mean?
17272What do you mean?
17272What do you want with me, Maraton?
17272What do you want, boy?
17272What do you want?
17272What does it matter? 17272 What does it matter?
17272What else is there but civil war?
17272What has he to do with it?
17272What have you to gain by this?
17272What have you to hope for but legislation?
17272What help do you make of women? 17272 What is an anarchist?"
17272What is he made of, that man?
17272What is it, anyway?
17272What is it?
17272What is my share? 17272 What is that?"
17272What is the foreign news?
17272What is the use?
17272What is there that is hidden from the eye of genius?
17272What is your answer, I wonder, to the oft quoted question? 17272 What matter?"
17272What shall I order?
17272What shall I say to them?
17272What sort of a Socialist is a man with five thousand a year who keeps his pockets tightly buttoned up, I should like to know?
17272What sort of an Englishman does he call himself, I wonder? 17272 What was I to do?"
17272What will the end of it be?
17272What''s going on here?
17272What''s it all about?
17272What''s the good of them? 17272 What, in God''s name, has happened, man?"
17272What, the anarchist fellow?
17272What, the tailoress?
17272When do you go to Sheffield?
17272When you speak of fusion,Maraton asked,"you mean conquest?"
17272Where am I going to sit?
17272Where are we going?
17272Where is Maxendorf?
17272Where was I? 17272 Who can tell?
17272Who can tell?
17272Who is that strange- looking person?
17272Who knows that the millennium would be so long delayed?
17272Who''s that?
17272Why are you here?
17272Why did n''t you go out?
17272Why do n''t you marry her yourself?
17272Why do you ask for it?
17272Why do you mention his name?
17272Why do you worship Maraton? 17272 Why have you come to me?"
17272Why not come to me?
17272Why not? 17272 Why not?
17272Why not?
17272Why not?
17272Why not?
17272Why not?
17272Why not?
17272Why should I subscribe to your Party funds?
17272Why should a man, with great things in his brain, waste a moment in thinking of women?
17272Why should he?
17272Why should you? 17272 Why?"
17272Why?
17272Will their coming make any real difference?
17272Will you give me until to- morrow to think it over?
17272Will you go to the Clarion? 17272 Will you put me in a cab?"
17272Will you smoke, Mr. Maraton, or drink anything?
17272With regard to me?
17272Would n''t that rather rest with you?
17272Yet what does that matter? 17272 You are going to break away?"
17272You are still working at the tailoring?
17272You believe that Foley will keep his word?
17272You came alone?
17272You can dare to admit that here-- to me?
17272You could n''t manage to walk in with me, I suppose? 17272 You do n''t mean-- that he is a gentleman?"
17272You do n''t want to buy me? 17272 You do not know many people here?"
17272You have heard?
17272You have it with you?
17272You here? 17272 You know that they sprang a Labour candidate upon me at the last moment?
17272You know? 17272 You mean it?"
17272You mean that you''re breaking away from us?
17272You mean?
17272You permit?
17272You remember who I am, Mr. Maraton? 17272 You think, perhaps, that I should not be permitted here at all as a guest?"
17272You were against it, were you not?
17272You will forgive me?
17272You will let me help?
17272You will not even try to tell me, then?
17272You will not let yourself be discouraged?
17272You will not-- you will not let them call you a deserter? 17272 You''d like her to protect you, would you?"
17272You''re a Labour man, are n''t you?
17272You''re living here-- under this roof?
17272You''re secretary of the Women''s Guild, are n''t you? 17272 You''ve no objection, I hope?"
17272You? 17272 You?
17272You?
17272Your name and address, please?
17272''Are you not,''he cried,''the representatives of the people?''
17272--do you think that she would not put her hand in mine?
17272A matter of courage?"
17272A sense of duty brought you, perhaps?"
17272A thousand, say?
17272Am I doing wrong if I go to her and give her money for a night''s lodging?"
17272Am I improving?"
17272American Review you declared that a war and conquest were the inevitable prelude of social reform in this country?"
17272And as for your fifty- nine thousand, Borden, what about our hundred and thirty thousand?
17272And then for yourself--""For myself,"he interrupted,"for myself-- what?"
17272And there''s a young woman--""A what?"
17272And what of the rest of the evening?
17272And yet, even with this contingency in view, I want you to ask yourselves: What have the people to lose?
17272And yet, with the end of the struggle, with the end of the fierce fighting, comes something-- what is it?--disappointment?
17272Answer me honestly-- do you see any change in me?"
17272Are there more laws to be made-- more speeches?"
17272Are they, then, to suffer as you have suffered?"
17272Are you for the strike?"
17272Are you going in to supper?"
17272Are you going to marry me or are you not?"
17272Are you going to tell them that it is for posterity they must strike?
17272Are you great enough, Maraton, to listen to me, I wonder?
17272Are you never going to amuse yourself, to take holiday, to draw some of the outside things into your scheme of being?"
17272Are you one of us or are n''t you?"
17272Are you still in employment?"
17272Are you sure that to- day you have not put on the poisoned spectacles?
17272Are you sure that you are using your gifts for the best purpose, for yourself-- and other people?"
17272Are you that man?"
17272As for you, Selingman,"Maraton went on, as they turned back towards New Oxford Street,"why do you stay here?
17272As to my house, is it really mysterious, I wonder?
17272Before I go, perhaps you will give me ten minutes more to discuss them?"
17272Bollington- Watts?"
17272But Lady Elisabeth--?
17272But are you sure about the others-- Ernshaw and his Union men?
17272But are you sure you wo n''t go on the platform, sir?"
17272But do n''t you think for his first few days in England it would be better to leave him alone, so far as I am concerned?"
17272But tell me-- we have both agreed to be frank-- why have you changed your attitude towards me so completely?
17272But why should I?
17272But will she go?
17272But with so many objects in common, it is surely possible for us to be friends?"
17272But you, Mr. Maraton-- are you really the man who mur-- who was associated with all that trouble in Chicago?"
17272By the bye, have you ever met Selingman?"
17272CHAPTER V But were they free, after all, these thoughts of hers?
17272Ca n''t you bear to strike a blow for the great things?
17272Ca n''t you come down and talk?"
17272Ca n''t you see what it is that I am aiming at?
17272Ca n''t you see, Maraton-- can''t you see, my prophet who gropes in the darkness, that I am showing you the only way?"
17272Can you sit at table with these people and wear their clothes, and not feel like a hypocrite?"
17272Come, what are you afraid of?
17272Could he himself pass out of life with the memory of it all in his mind, and feel that his life''s work had been good?
17272Could n''t you just drop in for an hour?
17272Dare you?"
17272Did he mean it all, do you think?"
17272Did n''t you hear how they talked to him at Manchester?"
17272Did you read Foley''s speech?"
17272Did you think they had any?
17272Did you think you could draw a single spark of fire out of dull pap like that?
17272Do n''t you ever look a little way beyond the actual wants of your own constituents?
17272Do n''t you ever peer over the edge and realise that the real cause of the people is no local matter?
17272Do n''t you know in your heart that you''ve done what''s best?"
17272Do n''t you know that it is because they have n''t heard the word-- the one great word?
17272Do n''t you know the end of these spasmodic reforms?
17272Do n''t you yourself feel that you have done the right thing?"
17272Do they know what it is to go hungry, I wonder?
17272Do they seem slow to you, our methods, David Ross?
17272Do you believe that you are justified?"
17272Do you believe, Mr. Maraton, that a war would hurt your own people?"
17272Do you greatly care?
17272Do you hear that?"
17272Do you know that your strongest allies were Mr. Peter Dale and his men?"
17272Do you know what Boulding''s put on one side for distribution to their shareholders last year?--what they put to their reserve fund?
17272Do you know what they are saying?"
17272Do you know why Peter Dale was late here this afternoon?
17272Do you know,"he went on, turning towards her,"that I have scarcely seen anything of you since Manchester?"
17272Do you mean to tell them this?"
17272Do you never look forward into the future?
17272Do you think he''s for marrying a girl who works for her bread?
17272Do you think he''s one of our sort?
17272Do you think that she would come and see me, or let me come and see her?
17272Do you want any papers?"
17272Does he look strong enough for the work?"
17272Foley?"
17272Foley?"
17272Foley?"
17272For a man like Maraton, what does it matter?
17272For what?
17272Freddy!--why, Freddy, what''s the matter?"
17272From whom would come the mammoth war indemnity we should have to pay?"
17272Give me your name and address, please, at once, the cost price of your car, and how long it has been in your possession?"
17272Grant me this, at least; that it is possible to reach the end at which you are striving, by milder means?"
17272Graveling?"
17272Half- a- crown a week extra, and a minimum wage-- what more do you want?
17272Has Peter Dale been here?"
17272Have n''t they a right to their lives?
17272Have n''t you ever any doubts?"
17272Have you a home, young man?"
17272Have you any amusements or have you been working all the time?"
17272Have you been trying to get at their brains, Maraton?
17272Have you no personal ambitions or hopes?"
17272Have you read my''Appreciation''in the_ Oracle?_""I have,"Maraton admitted, smiling.
17272Have you seen Maxendorf to- night?"
17272Have you seen him, Aaron?
17272Have you seen the papers?"
17272He''s stopped the railways and the coal, and even you can tell what that means, I suppose, sir?
17272He, too, is a theorist, is n''t he?
17272How do I do it?
17272How do you expect to make a living, fiddling about here all day with pencil and paper, and talking Socialist rot at night?
17272How have you been spending your time?
17272How many are there of you?
17272How many more letters, Aaron?"
17272How''s Richard?"
17272I go to fetch it now, eh?"
17272I have n''t spoken a single selfish word, have I?
17272I hear you speak, perhaps?
17272I may talk to you now really from my heart, may n''t I?"
17272I presume I shall see you again one day before the month is up?"
17272I suppose there is no chance of his having slipped in without our having noticed him?"
17272I wonder why?
17272I''ll ask you, Mr. Maraton, to explain to us just what you meant down at the Clarion the other night?
17272If I acceded to all the others, what would your position be?
17272If I keep your money, do you know what I shall do with it?
17272In England there is nothing of the sort, eh?"
17272In your younger life, for instance, were n''t there ever any sports or occupations that you cared for?"
17272Is he behind?"
17272Is he strong?
17272Is it a promise?
17272Is it assassination, or anything of that sort, you''re talking about?"
17272Is it because you are an ambassador that they must house you so splendidly?"
17272Is it conversion, bribery, or poison that you have in your thoughts?"
17272Is it in this way that the freedom of a country can be gained?
17272Is it worth while to drag down the pillars, to bring so much misery into the world for the sake of a dream?"
17272Is n''t it better to release her slowly and gradually, than to destroy her altogether by trying more violent means?"
17272Is n''t it great to save what is, rather than to destroy for the sake of those who have neither toiled nor suffered?
17272Is n''t that something to the good?
17272Is n''t that what we''re in Parliament for?
17272Is n''t that why we are called Labour Members?"
17272Is n''t there anything you look forward to or desire for yourself?"
17272Is one responsible for their birth and instincts?
17272Is she going to stop here?
17272Is that agreeable to everybody?"
17272Is that possible?"
17272Is that so really?"
17272Is that what it is?"
17272Is the sword sheathed?"
17272Is there any difference in your mind, Maxendorf, between the people of one country and the people of another?"
17272Is there any justice in the world, I wonder?
17272Is there anything of the truth, anything of the great compelling truth in this piecemeal legislation?
17272Is there nothing I can do?"
17272Is your country great enough, Maxendorf, to follow where your finger points?
17272It does n''t really matter, does it?
17272It is easy enough to play chess, but when the pawns are human lives, who would not hesitate?"
17272It is engrossing, is n''t it?
17272It is on Monday you go to Manchester, is n''t it?"
17272It was because you went north that it was ended?"
17272It was because-- shall I tell you?"
17272It''s a very natural feminine impulse, is n''t it?
17272It''s co- operation over again, you say?
17272Just to continue the dull, hopeless struggle-- to fight without hope of reward, to fight with oneself as well as with the world?
17272Like a royal suite, eh?"
17272Maraton asked, a little abruptly--"your work?
17272Maraton is here?"
17272Maraton, where shall I find you to- night?"
17272Maraton?"
17272Maraton?"
17272Maraton?"
17272Maraton?"
17272Maraton?"
17272Maraton?"
17272Maraton?"
17272May I ask whether you have conferred with your friends about the matter?"
17272Men or women, Jews or Christians, infidels or believers-- what does it matter?
17272Miss Julia, do you know where I shall go when I leave here?
17272Mr. Foley has n''t been looking for me, has he?
17272Mr. Maraton, grant, will you not, that I am a man of some experience?
17272Mr. Maraton, have you been a great traveller?"
17272Mr. Maraton, you, of course, are in favour of Universal Manhood Suffrage?"
17272Name your terms?"
17272Never mind, what did we call about, Elisabeth?"
17272No one is the worse off for hearing every point of view, is he?
17272No?
17272No?
17272No?
17272Now shall we go back into the gardens or into the drawing- room?
17272Now what''s this business about a universal strike?"
17272Now where does this universal strike come in?"
17272Of what use would you be?
17272One needs a will, perhaps, but then, what is life without will?
17272Only an hour ago, my brother comes to me and tells me that I am to send Elisabeth in to dinner to- night with-- with whom do you think?"
17272Only it is a little late for a visit, is n''t it?
17272Or shall I, for a change, be silent and let you talk?
17272Or what of the river?
17272Or, better still, if you could dine?
17272Perhaps what?"
17272Piecemeal legislation-- what can it do?"
17272Shall I rob you, my friend?"
17272Shall we go down Birdcage Walk, or if you are in a hurry, perhaps you would prefer a taxi?"
17272Shall we now proceed to the subject of our discussion?"
17272Shall we sit at his feet?"
17272Shall you speak?"
17272Since then, is it my fancy-- since you came back from Manchester-- are you a little disappointed''with life?
17272Sit down, wo n''t you?
17272So you wo n''t come?
17272Surely it must be good for one to be surrounded by inspiring things?"
17272Surely you must feel that everything has gone your way since you came to England?"
17272Tell me about Sheffield?
17272Tell me about yourself a little, wo n''t you?
17272Tell me about yourself?
17272Tell me now what is going to happen?"
17272Tell me quickly, what is he like?"
17272Tell me what he is like, Julia?
17272Tell me what he looks like?
17272Tell me what is in your mind?"
17272Tell me what it is-- at once?"
17272Tell me where this house of his is?
17272Tell me, is it a personal bribe you have brought?"
17272Tell me, on behalf of the people, Mr. Maraton, what is it that you want?
17272The approach of a crisis had driven their thoughts into one narrow focus: what would it mean for them?
17272The figures in there are real enough, are n''t they?
17272The next is, where are you going to sit in the House?"
17272Then I will tell him how you have longed for his coming, and perhaps--""Perhaps what?"
17272Then what if the Germans get over here?
17272They stick at it all right, do n''t they?
17272They took to one another?"
17272This time you believe that he has made up his mind?"
17272To- day is Friday, is n''t it?
17272Unless I myself am at my best, what have I to give the world?
17272Until then, what is it you want?
17272Was he indeed so small, so insignificant?
17272Was n''t it you who, in one of your speeches, pointed out that a war in your country would be welcome?
17272Was the man indeed right, his philosophy sound?
17272Was the moment propitious for a blow on behalf of their rights?
17272Was there indeed wisdom in the loosening of the bonds?
17272Was this indeed to be the disappointment of her life?
17272We are all coming with you, are n''t we?
17272We ca n''t divide our lives, can we?
17272Were you at the Ritz Hotel one night about two months ago, with the ambassador of a foreign a country?"
17272What a sacrifice?
17272What about all the rest of us?
17272What about the coal?"
17272What about your British Empire then?"
17272What about your responsibilities to the present one?
17272What are you doing, man?"
17272What are you made of?"
17272What chance have you under present conditions?
17272What chance was there?
17272What concern have you for other things save only for the welfare of the people?"
17272What did I care?
17272What did one live for, after all?
17272What did you expect from them?
17272What difference can it make?
17272What do you know of him?"
17272What do you know or care about the people?
17272What do you say?
17272What do you suppose, in the course of three or four generations, produces men of different mental and physical calibre?
17272What do you think of his commission on your Manchester strike?"
17272What do you think of that, Julia?"
17272What do you think of your Labour Members, honestly, Aaron?
17272What do you want from us?
17272What do you want to do, then?"
17272What do you want?"
17272What do you want?"
17272What does it matter that you can not hear their spoken voices?
17272What does it matter?
17272What does it matter?
17272What does it matter?
17272What does it matter?
17272What good do you suppose could come of this?
17272What has my religion done for me?
17272What have you promised them in return?
17272What if he should be wrong?
17272What if he should bring misery and suffering upon millions upon millions, for the sake of a generation which might never be born?
17272What instinct, he wondered, had led her to place her finger upon the one poison spot in his thoughts?
17272What is your opinion?"
17272What matter if there are troubles outside?
17272What more can you ask for?
17272What more can you do for the people than fight for them side by side with me?"
17272What of the omelette, I wonder?
17272What shall I say?"
17272What should you say to me, my friend Maraton, if I were indeed to rob you of her?
17272What time is the meeting?"
17272What was there left?
17272What will it amount to?
17272What words of his could take them into the further land?
17272What would she say, he wondered?
17272What would they say here in Manchester, expecting fire and thunder from his lips and finding him hold out the olive branch?
17272What would they say themselves, do you think?
17272What''s England, or France, or any other country in the world, by the side of humanity?
17272What''s that to make a man like you depressed?
17272What''s the matter with your doing the same?"
17272What''s to become of us, I''d like to know, with a revolution in the country?"
17272What''s wrong with you, man?
17272Where is Aaron?"
17272Where is the first move?"
17272Where was it one read of footsteps that sounded amongst the hills like footsteps upon wool?
17272Where, in your opinion, ought I to sit?"
17272Which is it to be?
17272Which of you will talk the more, I wonder?
17272Who are you?"
17272Who can tell the thoughts which his brain has conceived?
17272Who gives us a mandate to sweep them away for the sake of the unborn?"
17272Who is faint- hearted?
17272Who would listen to you?
17272Who''s going to feed the people?
17272Who''s going to keep them from pillaging and rioting?"
17272Why are people so noisy nowadays, I wonder?"
17272Why are you so interested in my nationality?"
17272Why can I not get up and put my arm around your waist and whisper in your ear as we float round and round in a waltz?
17272Why did n''t you do it?"
17272Why do n''t you fall in love with her, Maraton?
17272Why do n''t you send your poor little secretary out for a walk?
17272Why is it that to- night you have awakened?
17272Why not before?
17272Why not marry, Maraton?
17272Why not you?
17272Why not?
17272Why not?"
17272Why should we judge?
17272Why to- night?
17272Why wo n''t you come down with me?"
17272Why?
17272Why?
17272Why?
17272Will you come this way?"
17272Will you come?"
17272Will you forgive me if I make you no answer at all to- night?
17272Will you lie down and rest for a time here?"
17272Will you treat the prick of a pin like a mortal wound?
17272With her splendid womanhood, her intense consciousness of life, how was it possible for her to escape?
17272Wo n''t you come and see me one afternoon-- any afternoon-- and tell me all about it?
17272Wo n''t you sit down, and may I not order some refreshment for you?
17272Would he, like those others, feel the inertia of it, the slow decay of his ambitions, the fatal tendency towards compromise?
17272Would one in a hundred be content to sacrifice himself for a principle?"
17272Would she think that he had sold his soul if he chose the more peaceful way?
17272Would the people still believe in him when the blow fell?
17272Yet what was I to do?
17272Yet what was he?
17272You and I may believe in immortality, but who can be sure?
17272You are a reasonable man; you can not deny the right of an enemy to demand your terms before you declare war?"
17272You are a woman, are n''t you-- I mean a real woman?
17272You are rather a mysterious person, are n''t you?"
17272You are sure you wo n''t mind my sister coming with us, sir?
17272You can start at once, I hope?"
17272You do n''t think I''m a ghost, do you?
17272You go down to the House tonight?"
17272You got our telegram at Liverpool?"
17272You have been with Maxendorf?"
17272You have breakfasted?"
17272You have had some conversation already, have n''t you?"
17272You have heard of Selingman, is it not so?"
17272You have n''t attempted to commit us to anything, I hope?"
17272You have seen Mr. Foley and talked with him?"
17272You have seen him?"
17272You have the rare gift-- has any one ever told you that you are beautiful?"
17272You hear that?"
17272You know Maxendorf?"
17272You know him?"
17272You know of me, you pale- faced child?
17272You know that my uncle is expecting to see or hear from you this afternoon?"
17272You may redistribute wealth, but how do you propose to keep it in a state of equilibrium?"
17272You read of the Lancashire strike?"
17272You think that my interest in the people is an amateurish affair, half sentimental and half freakish, do n''t you?
17272You think that she would not come?
17272You understand, I am sure, that that commits me to nothing?"
17272You were a journalist, were you not, before you entered Parliament?"
17272You were at Manchester, were n''t you, and at my house with the others?"
17272You were n''t at Lyndwood, were you?
17272You will be at the Clarion to- morrow?"
17272You wo n''t keep me long, will you?
17272You wo n''t mind a very feminine room, will you?
17272You wo n''t object to my saying that we''re expecting something from you in the way of initiative, not to say leadership?"
17272You''ll be in the House this afternoon?"
17272You''ve got all the papers I''ve sent you about the cotton workers?"
17272You''ve seen it, perhaps?"
17272You, Beldeman?"
17272You?
17272Your husband is the steel millionaire, is n''t he?
17272he asked, without looking up"You, Franz?
17272how many of you have walked by day and night in the wilderness and felt your heart die away within you?
17272she exclaimed.."Why, Freddy, what on earth are you doing here?
17272the Prime Minister replied,--"a sense of proportion, perhaps?
17272was I not right?
21327''Come, come, Marchas, what are you thinking of?'' 21327 ''Is he very ill?''
21327''Well, Rose, you know why you have come here?'' 21327 ''Where are you taking us to?''
21327A religious book, uncle?
21327An old bent, wrinkled, horrible, peasant woman appeared and said:''What do you want?'' 21327 And do you catch all whom you please, like that?"
21327And he ate meat?
21327And now?
21327And she refused?
21327And then?
21327And yet you complain?
21327Are you happy?
21327Are you out of your mind? 21327 Bitterness?
21327But one thing troubled me strangely; where was my triumph to be accomplished? 21327 But you are sure you do not mind my being in your room with you?"
21327Can you show it me?
21327Did he tell you so himself?
21327Did she not say anything more?
21327Did you go right off?
21327Did you keep him long after that?
21327Did you not have orders to have the diligence ready by eight o''clock?
21327Do you believe it?
21327Do you remember that Doctor Parent sent you to sleep?
21327Does she make you unhappy? 21327 From what?"
21327He has written to you?
21327How I do it?... 21327 How can you think of such a thing in this snow-- and with our wives?
21327How did I manage it?... 21327 How did you manage it?"
21327How do you manage it?
21327How free? 21327 How many have you?"
21327How much are you going to ask to stop with her till the end? 21327 How should I know?"
21327How was she punished? 21327 How was that, uncle?"
21327How?
21327I am quite willing; but where do you want to go to? 21327 I asked myself: How does she manage to make herself understood so quickly, so well and so completely?
21327I did not understand, and repeated:''What scent?'' 21327 I got up at last and asked:''Where is the parsonage?''
21327I got up, for it was too hot in front of the fire, and Marchas went on:''Do you want an idea?'' 21327 I really think that the Creator showed Himself to be too much of a naturalist... too... what shall I say?
21327I stood up in rage, ready to jump at his throat, and shouted:''What the deuce are you doing in my room?''
21327I suppose they were Government matches, then?
21327I suppose you will give me a glass of_ the special_?
21327I? 21327 If you would care for any, Monsieur--?
21327In what? 21327 Is n''t it?...
21327Is not that so?
21327Look here,he said,"you are really very ridiculous-- what difference can it make to you?"
21327Mademoiselle Elizabeth Rousset?
21327May I take the liberty of asking the reason for this refusal?
21327Meanwhile, I daresay you would like to arrange your dress a little?
21327No more?
21327Of your husband''s mistress?
21327Sentenced to what?
21327She stole--"Who-- Châli? 21327 Should you like to go to bed at once?"
21327So you are quite alone?
21327So you confess it?
21327So your husband runs into debt?
21327Supposing we do the same?
21327That is all very well, but when there are no men, like here, for instance?
21327That is all...."You did not faint more than that once?
21327The affair began to amuse me, and I said:''Suppose I go in first? 21327 The fat servant ran out and said:''What do you want, Mademoiselle Claire?''
21327The man looked extremely astonished, and said:''Do you require a maid of an irreproachable character, Madame?'' 21327 Then the fat woman in the cotton dress said in turn:''Do you mean to call us thieves, Madame?''
21327Then, Sister,she inquired,"you think God approves of every pathway that leads to Him, and pardons the deed if the motive be a pure one?"
21327Then... then... you do not live together... in Paris?
21327Then?... 21327 This fellow always astonished me, and I replied with a laugh:''I shall post my sentinels at the country approaches and I will return to you here?''
21327To me? 21327 To me?"
21327To tell the truth,said the Count,"I do not feel quite myself either-- how could I have omitted to think of bringing provisions?"
21327To what hotel shall we go?
21327Two twenty franc pieces?
21327Well, then,I said,"may I offer you a little wine?
21327Well,you will say to me,"what on earth did you get married for?"
21327Well?
21327What are you talking about?
21327What are you thinking of doing?
21327What box are you talking about?
21327What could I do, just tell me? 21327 What did she say?"
21327What do you know about her? 21327 What do you mean?"
21327What do you want me to tell you?
21327What do you want with her?
21327What does she say?
21327What does your doctor say?
21327What have you to say in your defense?
21327What is he doing?
21327What is his attitude in this portrait?
21327What is it, cousin?
21327What is it? 21327 What is it?"
21327What is that?
21327What is the matter with you, that you have come so early?
21327What is the matter with you? 21327 What is your name?"
21327What is your name?
21327What makes you think that? 21327 What was I saying just then?"
21327What were his claims?
21327What were you doing in the wood?
21327What''s the matter with her?
21327What, you?
21327What-- Châli? 21327 What?"
21327When is your Jesuit coming back?
21327When pray? 21327 When the schoolmaster heard the whispering, he continued:''Why, you are not by yourself?''
21327When was that?
21327Where did you meet her?
21327Where did you meet the partner in your misdemeanor?
21327Where is he?
21327Where must I come to?
21327Wherever you like; what does it matter to me?
21327Who can doubt it, Madame? 21327 Who can it be?"
21327Who gave you that order?
21327Whose photograph is it?
21327Why do n''t you get inside the carriage?
21327Why do n''t you speak to her?
21327Why do n''t you tell your wife?
21327Why not escape on foot?
21327Why, uncle,I said,"you in bed still?
21327Why? 21327 Why?"
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327With us? 21327 Yes-- defending oneself, of course, that is quite another thing; but would n''t it be better to kill all these kings who do this for their pleasure?"
21327You allow yourself to be looked at?...
21327You are divorced?
21327You are quite sure that you do not want to sell your farm?
21327You bait the hook?
21327You have travelers, then, at the present time?
21327You make your choice?
21327Your father, uncle? 21327 Your mother?"
21327Your name is Francesca?
21327Your occupation?
21327Your wife?
21327''A servant?...
21327''Are you Madame Mélani?''
21327''But where the devil do you expect me to find any women?''
21327''Can I see him?''
21327''Covers for how many?''
21327''Do you think so?''
21327''Does he seem disposed to receive a visit from a priest?''
21327''How many man men are you going to take?''
21327''It is nothing; François has wounded an old peasant who refused to answer his challenge:"Who goes there?"
21327''Real women?''
21327''The priest?
21327''Very good, my girl... and that will not... be too much bother for you?''
21327''Very well, Madame, and where?''
21327''What young ladies?''
21327''Where are you going to dine then?''
21327''Where did you find this wood?''
21327''Where did you pick her up?''
21327''You are sure not to fail?''
21327***** What is the matter with me?
21327Above all, a man must be discreet, rich and generous; is not that so?"
21327After all, is n''t it an abomination to kill anybody, no matter whether they are Prussians, or English, or Poles, or French?
21327Am I going mad?
21327And I repeated like an echo:''It is annoying, but what do you want me to do in the matter?''
21327And he replied with a laugh:"What did you expect?
21327And his wife would be surprised, and ask:"What is the matter with you to- day?"
21327And if you do not obey me, I will let you die like a dog, when you are ill in your turn; do you hear me?"
21327And is he in love with you still?"
21327And is that all?..."
21327And supposing it did, what would it matter, since I do not believe in it, and know that it is nothing?
21327And then she suddenly asked:"Would you like me to come with you?"
21327And then, seeing Raoul''s photograph on the chimney- piece, he asked me:''Is that your... your husband?''
21327And then?...
21327And what did you say to him?"
21327And what did you say to him?"
21327And what scent?''
21327And who is this?
21327And why offend a person on whom one was utterly dependent?
21327And why, why, you wretch?
21327And you?"
21327Anything else does not matter, does it?
21327Are we wrong?''
21327Are you asking for some kept woman?''
21327Are you ill?"
21327Are you in pain?"
21327Are you not well?"
21327Are you quite alone, this year?"
21327Are you satisfied, you great fool?''
21327Are you still intimate with her?"
21327Are you sure that he commissioned you to ask me for them?"
21327As an adventuress, or by chance meetings?
21327As much as that?"
21327As soon as I have got in I double lock, and bolt it: I am frightened... of what?
21327As we went along, arm- in- arm, I could not help saying to him, for I was determined to know how matters stood:"I say, what has happened?
21327At Roqueville, my dear?
21327At last after some moments waiting he said:"Vat do you vant?"
21327At last he said hurriedly:"I say, Mother Magloire--""Well, what is it?"
21327At nightfall Honoré returned, and when he went up to the bed and saw that his mother was still alive, he asked:"How is she?"
21327Because he is excessively timid, or because he is... how shall I say it?
21327Because of her natural impiety?
21327But I must ask you, Madame, whether you have discovered his favorite perfume?''
21327But I want her to be here within an hour, do you hear?"
21327But I would not give up my idea; I wanted to know how matters really stood, so I asked:"Do n''t you remember what you told me six months ago?
21327But Rose, the bride- elect, was surprised and asked,"Why should they object, I should like to know?
21327But he grew angry, and turned pale:"I want to know how this overcoat comes to be here?
21327But how?
21327But is he dead?
21327But is it I?
21327But it was too late, for the gentleman came back, and said, bowing:"What can I do for you, Madame?"
21327But it would see me mix it with the water; and then, would our poisons have any effect on its impalpable body?
21327But suddenly the Italian asked me, in that tone of discontent which seemed habitual to her,"Do you know at what time we shall get to Genoa?"
21327But was it a hallucination?
21327But what can one do, Monsieur?
21327But what could I know?
21327But where?
21327But where?"
21327Butter- colored?
21327Ca n''t you guess who she is?"
21327Can anyone understand these things?
21327Can not we love each other with a spiritual love only?...
21327Can not you give me an idea?
21327Can not you imagine it?
21327Can you also tell me, Madame, whether Monsieur''s mistress wears silk underclothing and nightdresses?''
21327Chicot?"
21327Dead?
21327Did you say, four ladies?''
21327Do n''t you see that he is robbing you of your fish?
21327Do not dogs occasionally bite and strangle their masters?
21327Do you know anything more wretched than when it is getting dark on such an occasion?
21327Do you really believe?..."
21327Do you think that you will catch anything?
21327Do you understand me?
21327Do you wish to ruin us outright?"
21327Does not one catch the man one wants to catch, without their having any choice?
21327Does she add a sign of the head or a motion of the hands to her looks?
21327Eh?"
21327For his own sake?
21327From time to time she would say to me,"May I touch it?"
21327Guess what I did then?"
21327HE?
21327Had he been dreaming?
21327Had my uncle died in a fit when he saw him, or had he killed the cassocked gentleman?
21327Had not he, perhaps, kept a glass hidden in his hand, which he showed to the young woman in her sleep, at the same time as he did the card?
21327Had she any plan or idea?
21327Had she left no friends, no relations behind her?
21327Had she recognized him?
21327Have him arrested?
21327Have you ever heard it said of certain women,''She has just married a third time?''
21327Have you never fished with a hook and line?"
21327He felt rather out of countenance, and stammered:"I?
21327He got up, bowed, and said:"Bertha, do you want anything I could bring you?..."
21327He had one single wish left, one sole pleasure; why not grant him that last solace constantly, until he died?
21327He put a visiting- card into her hands, and said to her:"This is a looking- glass; what do you see in it?"
21327He replied:"Do we see the hundred thousandth part of what exists?
21327He shrugged his shoulders as much as to say,"What can you expect?
21327He stammered:"With us?
21327He turned on his heels and went, and the little Baroness asked nervously:"But what shall you say to your maid?"
21327He was just going out, and he listened to me with a smile, and said:"Do you believe now?"
21327He was so utterly struck dumb at the sight of it that he could only stammer out:"What-- what is it?
21327He went on:"As you have acceded to my first request, shall we now talk without any bitterness?"
21327Her decided opinion was that the old woman would not last out the night, and he asked:"Well?"
21327Her husband replied quietly, without looking at it:"What is it?
21327Hers said:''Will you?''
21327His body?
21327His life?
21327Hochedur?"
21327Honoré saw them pass in the distance, and he asked:"Where is our priest going to?"
21327How can you expect it to be different?
21327How could he possibly have doubted?
21327How do you mean?"
21327How is it that I have not seen them?"
21327How is it then that since the beginning of the world they have never manifested themselves in such a manner precisely as they do to me?
21327How long are you going to wait?
21327How many days?
21327How should I know?
21327How should he address her?
21327How stupid such things are, do n''t you think so?
21327How was I to know anything, as I was unconscious?
21327How?
21327How?"
21327I am not going to get into another carriage, so do n''t you think it is preferable to talk as friends till the end of our journey?"
21327I am terribly frightened.... You have no idea how tenacious he is and obstinate.... What can I do... tell me... what can I do?"
21327I ca n''t stand this any longer-- the fortune of war, is it not, madame?"
21327I can not the least remember?"
21327I continued:"Do you remember what took place at your house last night?"
21327I do n''t suppose you intend to offer me your love?
21327I expect to have my house respected, and I will not have it lose its reputation, you understand me?
21327I knocked at the door with my fist, as there was neither bell nor knocker, and a loud voice from inside asked:''Who is there?''
21327I listen... to what?
21327I looked at him in surprise, and asked myself:"Can it possibly be he?"
21327I looked at him so obstinately that he evidently felt uncomfortable, so I went on:"So-- now-- you are-- completely cured?"
21327I really felt a little disconcerted, but I regained my self- possession, and asked:"Where is she now?"
21327I said:"Well, Madame Lecacheur, have you a room for me?"
21327I suppose he is sleepy?"
21327I suppose-- I-- eh-- suppose you resist now?"
21327I then asked, in order to see what she would reply, and also, perhaps, to embarrass her:"What have you come here for?"
21327I was extremely amused; it was one of the most delightful summers I ever spent....""And then?..."
21327I was seized with pity for this saddening and ridiculous Tantalus, and I interposed on his behalf:"Please, will you not give him a little more rice?"
21327I will have it, do you understand me?
21327I wonder how many I shall meet going back?"
21327I wonder what_ I_ should have done?
21327I would ask Mother Lecacheur:"Well, what is our demoniac about to- day?"
21327I?
21327If I give them the sign, will they understand me, who am a respectable woman?
21327If he was not dead?...
21327In Alsatian- French and stern accents he invited the passengers to descend:"Vill you get out, chentlemen and laties?"
21327In about a minute I managed to say, indignantly:"And you received him, uncle, you?
21327In his astonishment M. Moreau asked:"What are you talking about?
21327In which?
21327Is it I?
21327Is it a cold shiver which, passing over my skin, has upset my nerves and given me low spirits?
21327Is it not possible that one of the imperceptible keys of the cerebral finger- board has been paralyzed in me?
21327Is not that so Mélie?"
21327Is not that true, Monsieur Beaurain?"
21327Is she dead?"
21327Is the world coming to an end?
21327Is there a God?
21327Is there not a married Mayor, or a married Deputy- Mayor, or a married Municipal Concilor or schoolmaster?''
21327It could surely only be I?
21327It is very stupid, it is dreadful; but what am I to do?
21327It is very terrible, is it not, to be like that?
21327It is your father and mother''s fault more than yours.... How are they?''
21327It was Marchas, and I called out to him:''Well?''
21327It would be the height of folly to believe in the supernatural on the_ île de la Grenouillière_[15]... but on the top of Mont Saint- Michel?...
21327Just explain... whose overcoat is it?
21327Just listen how he is crying; he will wake up the nurse, and what should we do if she were to come?
21327Just look at what she sent me; they are very pretty, are they not?"
21327Let us see; what shall we do to- day?"
21327Loiseau, who thoroughly took in the situation, suddenly broke out,"How long was this fool of a girl going to keep them hanging on in this hole?"
21327My cousin, who is also very incredulous, smiled, and Doctor Parent said to her:"Would you like me to try and send you to sleep, Madame?"
21327My heart beat, and the perspiration stood on my forehead, and Mélie said to me:''Well, you sot, did you see that?''
21327No... no... no doubt about the matter... Then?
21327Now I remember the words of the monk at Mont Saint- Michel:"Can we see the hundred- thousandth part of what exists?
21327One day, however, she plucked up courage:"I would like to see how you paint pictures?
21327One of them asked her:"What do you want, Madame?"
21327One of your friends?''
21327Otherwise, why should she thus have concealed herself, fled from the face of the others?
21327Paul motioned to me to get out, and as soon as we had done so, he said:"I wonder who on earth she can be?"
21327Perceiving that she had hurt his feelings, she said:"How old are you now?
21327Perhaps they had mutually devoured each other?
21327Poison?
21327Premature destruction?
21327René gave her a brotherly kiss on the forehead and said:"Has not Lucien come yet?"
21327Rondoli live here, please?''
21327Seeing how well and hearty she seemed, he very soon got into his tilbury again, growling to himself:"Will you never die, you old brute?"
21327She already smelt strongly of verbena, and in five minutes she left the room, and he immediately asked me:''Who is that girl?''
21327She opened her black eyes wide with vague surprise, and said,"_ Che mi fa_?"
21327She repeated her_ Che mi fa_?
21327She repeated, looking more and more furious:"Would you like me to go with you now, as soon as we get out of the train?"
21327She replied with her eternal_ Che mi fa_?
21327She turned her head round to look at him, and said:"Fairly well, fairly well, and you?"
21327She was already laughing herself, and at last she asked:"What have you been doing now?"
21327Should he be polite or importunate?
21327Should he speak as if he were her master?
21327So he deceived you?"
21327So there are some who resist?"
21327So this is a photograph of your husband''s mistress?''
21327Some women,''''Women?...
21327Somebody had drunk the water, but who?
21327Still lively, witty, light hearted and enthusiastic, or in a state of mental torpor through provincial life?
21327Suddenly she asked:"Have you received the last sacraments, Mother Bontemps?"
21327Suppose it were not he, but a thief?
21327Ten, twenty, fifty, or a hundred?
21327The Captain exclaimed, ardently:"What does it matter, Matilda?
21327The Countess approached the innkeeper with a whispered"All right?"
21327The children shook with delight at the spectacle, while their father, who was also amused, said:"Is not the old man funny?"
21327The good woman, at once surprised and troubled, replied in a quivering voice:"My dear sir, what is it I have just heard you say?
21327The little Baroness looked stupefied, and stammered out:"What do you say?
21327The manager had taken his clue, and asked her:"What do you estimate the damage at?"
21327The old peasant woman said"no"with her head, and la Rapet, who was very devout, got up quickly:"Good heavens, is it possible?
21327The old woman took her hands out of the water and asked with sudden sympathy:"Is she as bad as all that?"
21327The wise man says: Perhaps?
21327Then Monsieur Beaurain was seized with rage, and turning to his wife, he said:"Do you see to what you have brought us with your poetry?
21327Then at last she asked:"Is it you, Alexander?"
21327Then he called me names, overwhelmed me with reproaches, and exclaimed:"Where do you think I can go to now?
21327Then, after a moment''s hesitation, he said uneasily:"We must know, however, with whom she wants to go-- with you or with me?"
21327Then, after thinking for a few moments, he went on:"Do you really care about taking this creature with you?
21327Then, as I was getting up to go, she exclaimed:"But would you not like Carlotta to go with you?
21327There was somebody there, near the house, there could be no doubt of that, and he opened the door and shouted:"Is it you, Gaspard?"
21327They called it magnetism, hypnotism, suggestion... what do I know?
21327They were grateful enough to him for this sentiment-- besides, who knew when they might not be glad of his protection?
21327This rather upset me, but I answered, nevertheless:"Very well, uncle; and what did you do after breakfast?"
21327This unknowable being, this rover of a supernatural race?
21327Turning to Madame Carré- Lamadon, she said,"You know Madame d''Etrelles, I think?"
21327Under what pretext?"
21327Velé vô?
21327Was it his wife, or somebody else who was as like her as any sister could be?
21327Was it not on my account that she wished to be laid to rest in this place?
21327Was it one of those strange appeals which cross the dreams of disquieted minds?
21327Was not his body, which was transparent, indestructible by such means as would kill ours?
21327We do not distinguish it, like all the others created before us?
21327We look them over from morning till night, and when we have selected one, we fish for him....""But that does not tell me how you do it?"
21327We stake our lives every moment, have we not, therefore, the right to amuse ourselves freely?
21327Well then, I bait the hook....""How do you do it?"
21327Well?"
21327Were they to be kept as hostages?--but if so, to what end?--or taken prisoners-- or asked a large ransom?
21327What afterwards?"
21327What am I to do with that money?"
21327What are we to do with this woman, who looks like I do n''t know what?
21327What are you thinking of?
21327What can happen to me?
21327What can they do more than we can?
21327What could I do, tell me?
21327What could I know?
21327What could be more simple than to teach universal history, natural history, geography, botany, zoology, anatomy,& c.,& c., thus?
21327What could be simpler, and, after all, who would have been any the wiser?
21327What could it be?
21327What did she steal?"
21327What did she think was going to become of her, or whom was she waiting for?
21327What do they see which we do not know?
21327What do those who are thinkers in those distant worlds, know more than we do?
21327What do you mean?"
21327What do you mean?"
21327What does it matter to you if people do not eat any meat?"
21327What for?
21327What for?''
21327What forms, what living beings, what animals are there yonder?
21327What had been her life?
21327What had happened?
21327What had her infancy been?
21327What has become of her?
21327What have I done to displease you?
21327What have its occupants been doing in it the night before?
21327What have you been doing since I last saw you?"
21327What have you done to deserve it?"
21327What is it?
21327What is it?"
21327What is the matter with him this evening?
21327What is the matter with me?
21327What is the matter with you?...''
21327What is the reason?
21327What is their object?
21327What is to be done?
21327What matter He or She?
21327What should he do now?
21327What was I saying?
21327What was I to do, for he was right after all?
21327What was I to do?
21327What was done to her?"
21327What was going to happen?
21327What was he to do?
21327What was it that I heard behind me?
21327What was she doing?
21327What was she going to do?
21327What was she going to say, and what reply would she get?
21327What was she to do, however?
21327What would he be like when I met him again?
21327What would he do with it, inert and trembling wreck that he was?
21327What wretch?"
21327When I went back home yesterday, I noticed his singular paleness, and I asked him:"What is the matter with you, Jean?"
21327When Paul saw that I was alone he stammered out:"Where is Francesca?"
21327When his head appeared at the brink, I asked:"Well, what is it?"
21327When they got near the house, Honoré Bontemps murmured:"Suppose it is all over?"
21327Whence do these mysterious influences come, which change our happiness into discouragement, and our self- confidence into diffidence?
21327Whence had she hailed thither thus, all alone, wanderer, lost like a dog driven from its home?
21327Where are you staying?''
21327Where did she come from?
21327Where did she live?
21327Where is she?"
21327Where shall I take you to?"
21327Where to?
21327Wherefore did I suddenly loose my grip of her?
21327Which of us two will you take for your_ patito_?"
21327Who and what is HE?
21327Who can tell?
21327Who could it be?
21327Who inhabits those worlds?
21327Who is the culprit?
21327Who was she?
21327Who will save me?
21327Who will understand my horrible agony?
21327Who?
21327Why did I at once experience a shock?
21327Why did I come?
21327Why did she love everything so tenderly and so passionately, everything living that was not a man?
21327Why did she remain with me, with us, who seemed to procure her so little pleasure?
21327Why did they not come themselves?''
21327Why not one more?
21327Why not other elements besides fire, air, earth and water?
21327Why not, also, other trees with immense, splendid flowers, perfuming whole regions?
21327Why not?
21327Why should I have sent him away?
21327Why should there not be one more, when once that period is accomplished which separates the successive apparitions from all the different species?
21327Why should this terror hang over these low plains covered with water?
21327Why should we be the last?
21327Why should you manifest?
21327Why this transparent, unrecognizable body, this body belonging to a spirit, if it also had to fear ills, infirmities and premature destruction?
21327Why, however, am I so persistently possessed with this idea?
21327Why, seeing that he is uglier than I am?"
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Why?
21327Will it take you long to succeed?''
21327Will that arrangement suit you?"
21327Will that suit you, Monsieur?"
21327Will that suit you?
21327Will you?
21327Would any one believe it?
21327Would the Touchards consent?
21327You are going to Nice, are you not?"
21327You did not have him thrown out- of- doors?"
21327You do n''t understand?
21327You think I am going mad?
21327You understand me, I suppose?
21327You understand?''
21327You want to know with what I bait?
21327You will take something or other, surely?"
21327You, a Freethinker, a Freemason?
21327[ 3]_ Jevôdre voir vô comment vô faites le painture?
21327[ 7] What does it matter to me?
21327_ August 10._ Nothing; what will happen to- morrow?
21327_ August 20._ How could I kill it, as I could not get hold of it?
21327_ Che mi fa_?"
21327_ July 5._ Have I lost my reason?
21327a servant?...
21327all that?"
21327and in India?
21327and she raised her voice still more,"you do n''t see why?
21327and what could he say to her?
21327and what would be the issue of the situation which my uncle''s indignation would render more tragic still?
21327decorated?"
21327for it is not very easy?
21327he contrived to utter in his joy;"he has obtained the decoration for me?
21327he looked after you all night?
21327in what?"
21327perhaps?...
21327so these are the others?"
21327then?...
21327they were very simple: first of all a glance, then a smile, then a slight sign with the head, which meant:''Are you coming up?''
21327well?...
21327what am I doing?
21327when one has worked all one''s life?
21327who... who... can it be?
21327yes, that is true; well?..."
21327you are going to leave us, after I have become so much accustomed to you?"
21327you have tried already?''
21327you must be mad?''
32326''And who are you?''
32326''And who is Sinis, and why does he bend pine trees?''
32326''But who was to be sacrificed?
32326''But, my son, who shall defend me, who shall guide me, when I have lost thee, the light of mine eyes, and the strength of my arm?''
32326''Can not you cross, mother?''
32326''Did you find him asleep?''
32326''Did you meet or hear of the man who killed the Maceman and slew the Pine- Bender, and kicked Sciron into the sea?''
32326''Do you dread the Pine- Bender?''
32326''Even so much?''
32326''How can any man bring out that bedstead?''
32326''Is it a god?''
32326''Is it even so?''
32326''Is it so?''
32326''Is not that the Ship of Death, and must we not cast lots for the tribute to King Minos?''
32326''Is the king weeping alone, while the fathers and mothers of my companions have dry eyes?''
32326''Look at yourself in your shining shield: can you see yourself?''
32326''My lord,''said he,''wherefore come you with the Fourteen?
32326''Shall I fear a lame man?''
32326''So shall you carry the fleece to Iolcos, far away, but what is it to me where you go when you have gone from here?
32326''Tell me pray,''said Ulysses,''what land is this, and what men dwell here?''
32326''Then you will try a fall with me?
32326''Unhappy that you are,''cried Theoclymenus,''what is coming upon you?
32326''Was it fairly done?''
32326''We are friends?''
32326''What is your name?''
32326''What news, thou beggar man?''
32326''What shall be done, oh king,''she cried,''to the man who speaks words of love dishonourable to the Queen of Argos?''
32326''Where am I?''
32326''Where are you, Hesperia, where are you hiding?''
32326''Where is our eye?
32326''Where is your own country?''
32326''Wherefore?''
32326''Whither art thou going, unhappy one,''said the youth,''thou that knowest not the land?
32326''Who are you, maiden?
32326''Who?
32326''Whose side would you two take,''he asked,''if Ulysses came home?
32326''Why be so fierce?''
32326''Why do you raise a glad cry, my children?''
32326''Why do you wake us out of our sleep?''
32326''Why hast thou slain Deiphobus and robbed me of my revenge?''
32326''Why have you brought a great shield, Hermes?''
32326''Why make so much trouble about one girl?
32326''Why not?''
32326''Will nobody go as a spy among the Trojans?''
32326''You guessed the token?''
32326''You never helped me in my dangers on the sea,''said Ulysses,''and now do you make mock of me, or is this really mine own country?''
32326''You swore to give me a gift,''said Ulysses,''and will you keep your oath?''
32326''You walked from Troezene?''
32326But Hector said,''Have ye not had your fill of being shut up behind walls?
32326But Ulysses drew his sword, and Circe, with a great cry, fell at his feet, saying,''Who art thou on whom the cup has no power?
32326But a mortal man we have never seen, and wherefore have the gods sent you hither?''
32326But how was he to find out whether he should have children or not?
32326But she kept hoping that Ulysses was still alive, and would return, though, if he did, how was he to turn so many strong young men out of his house?
32326But will you not abide with us awhile, and be our guests?''
32326But, tell me, do the Trojans keep good watch, and where is Hector with his horses?''
32326But, when he came to himself, he sighed, and said:''How shall we meet the feud of all the kin of the slain men in Ithaca and the other islands?''
32326Calypso said to him:''So it is indeed thy wish to get thee home to thine own dear country even in this hour?
32326Can they be fairies of the hill tops and the rivers, and the water meadows?''
32326Can you resist King Minos?''
32326Did I not slay Sinis and Sciron, Cercyon and Procrustes, and Periphetes?
32326Do they practise wrestling at Troezene?''
32326From your legs and shoulders, and the iron club that you carry, methinks you are that stranger?''
32326Have_ you_ got it?''
32326How hast thou borne to be thus beaten and disgraced, and to come within the walls of Troy?
32326Is there bad news from home that your father is dead, or mine; or are you sorry that the Greeks are getting what they deserve for their folly?''
32326Know you to what end they are sailing?''
32326On the threshold he sat down, like a beggar, and Polydectes saw him and cried to his servants,''Bring in that man; is it not the day of my feast?
32326She alone of the three Gorgons was mortal, and could be slain, but who could slay her?
32326Soon they saw the light shining up from the opening in the roof of the hall; and the wife of Dictys came running out, crying:''Good sport?''
32326The dream was in the shape of a girl who was a friend of Nausicaa, and it said:''Nausicaa, how has your mother such a careless daughter?
32326Then Achilles rose again, and cried:''What coward has smitten me with a secret arrow from afar?
32326Then Calchas----''here he stopped, saying:''But why tell a long tale?
32326Then Oenone answered scornfully:''Why have you come here to me?
32326Then Ulysses thought that his heart would break, for how should he, a living man, go down to the awful dwellings of the dead?
32326Then his men said to each other,''What treasure is it that he keeps in the leather bag, a present from King Aeolus?
32326This man has slain many of my sons, and if he slays thee whom have I to help me in my old age?''
32326Thou hast not the strength to fight the unconquerable son of Peleus, for if Hector could not slay him, what chance hast thou?
32326Thus she spake, and called to her maidens of the fair tresses:''Halt, my maidens, whither flee ye at the sight of a man?
32326We may ask, Why did Ulysses pass through the narrows between these two rocks?
32326What cruel men have bound you?''
32326What do you here?
32326What want you?''
32326When Perseus heard that word, he asked,''Where is King Polydectes?''
32326When they were alone he said to Danae:''Who is the father of this child?''
32326Where is Diomede, where is Achilles, where is Aias, that, men say, are your bravest?
32326Where is your ship?''
32326Will none of them stand before my spear?''
32326Would you fight for him or for the wooers?''
32326Ye surely do not take him for an enemy?
32326Yet, tell me, how does Minos treat the captives from Athens, kindly or unkindly?''
32326You will come thither now and again, Hesperia?
32326answered the nymphs,''how shall you slay her, even if we knew the way to that island, which we know not?''
32326have we not here among us many Trojan prisoners, waiting till their friends pay their ransom in cattle and gold and bronze and iron?
32326he said to himself;''is this a country of fierce and savage men?
32326how shalt thou free thy friends from so great an enchantress?''
32326said Theseus,''and is it not easy, even if he be so terrible a fighter, for me to pass him in the darkness, for I walk by night?''
32326said Ulysses,''did I not make it with my own hands, with a standing tree for the bedpost?
32326why did he not steer on the outer side of one or the other?
32326Ã � geus determined to go to Delphi to ask his question: would he have sons to come after him?
31540An island?
31540And found there?--De Pontbriand-- is he still alive?
31540And saw you the vessels leaving the harbour?
31540And what do you propose to do, now that you have warned me?
31540And what then?
31540And where are your fellows, since you are here to put an end to my career?
31540And where did Donnacona get it?
31540Are you ready to risk your life in this enterprise?
31540Before I answer that question, Monsieur, I must know whether your last remark has reference to my having left my post without your orders?
31540But what thinks the Duke of Guise?
31540But what was the result? 31540 But why need he have taken so long to decide upon entering?
31540But you will tell him to- night?
31540But, Monsieur,he exclaimed,"will you not come with me?
31540But,interrupted La Pommeraye,"have you forgotten that De Pontbriand is lying ill on board that vessel?
31540Can there be two of the same name? 31540 Can you not hear their fierce voices clamouring after us?"
31540Could it be a ship?
31540Dare you threaten me?
31540Dead, is he? 31540 Dead?"
31540Does he expect me to meet him?
31540Have I asked for your advice? 31540 Have I not just told you,"said Cartier,"that no one can see him?
31540Have I the honour to cross swords with Jules Marchand?
31540Have you forgotten, or were you not present the other day when M. de Pontbriand was lamenting the death of his friend in Paris? 31540 Have you told him of my presence here?"
31540He is dead?
31540How came you here?
31540How found you your way hither?
31540Ill, and in danger?
31540Indeed; and what concern of mine is that?
31540Mademoiselle is uninjured, I trust?
31540Marie de Vignan?
31540Monsieur has an interview with the Sieur de Roberval to- morrow morning?
31540Monsieur,she said at last,"will you add one more to my sorrows?"
31540Neither, neither, Claude? 31540 No; what fresh scrape has he been getting into?
31540That man''s name La Pommeraye?
31540The daughter of Aubrey de Vignan who was killed in action five years ago?
31540They are dead then?
31540We can not have reached Charlesbourg Royal?
31540What are you doing here?
31540What brings you here?
31540What do you know of La Pommeraye?
31540What do you mean?
31540What makes you think that, honest Jean?
31540What mean you? 31540 What means this?"
31540What watch did you take?
31540Where are we, dearest?
31540Where are your companions?
31540Where in Heaven''s name did you spring from?
31540Where is Charles de la Pommeraye?
31540Where is Marguerite?
31540Where is he?
31540Who are you, and what brings you here?
31540Whom do you mean?
31540Why did I submit to him for so long? 31540 Why loiters a son of France in the paths of peace when the foe, who presses down upon us, calls for every sword in the kingdom?"
31540Why was I not there to behold this prodigy? 31540 Why, what has he done?
31540Will you bring dishonour on your name, and murder an innocent man without a trial?
31540Would he let you pass without doubting your word?
31540Would it not be a glorious chance, Marguerite? 31540 Would it not be possible to return for a short time, and leave Charlesbourg before winter sets in?
31540You have been at the Isle of Demons?
31540You have seen the man to- day, and you know his strength?
31540You, Marie? 31540 And even if we succeeded in doing so, would it not be only a postponement of the issue? 31540 And to himself he added:Back so soon?
31540And what could have happened to cause you-- you, whose courage has never been known to flinch at the sight of blood-- to be borne home in a swoon?
31540And with what materials?
31540Are all my brave fellows dead?
31540Belleau is your name, you say?
31540But Monsieur will not speak to the Sieur de Roberval of these things?
31540But for your timely appearance, what would have become of three defenceless women when my uncle fell?"
31540But her friend, her only support and comfort, must she lose him too?
31540But how does the fair one on whose account we meet?
31540But how?
31540But tell me, what did this gallant, who proved himself so mighty a swordsman, look like?
31540But what do you know of De la Pommeraye?
31540But what good can you do by remaining?
31540But what great enterprise have you on hand?
31540But what has brought you out, my darling?
31540But what have we here, to the north of this ocean?"
31540But what is it that you would have?"
31540But what is that?
31540But what is this?
31540But what means that shouting?"
31540But when,"he added,"do you expect to start for the New World?"
31540But where is our old friend, De Pontbriand?
31540But where,"and he checked himself suddenly, and threw a piercing glance round him,"is the woman whose scream you heard?
31540But why borrow trouble that is years and leagues away from us?
31540But why borrow troubles?
31540But why have you left Charlesbourg?"
31540But why waste words?"
31540But, by the way, did not your adversary act in rather a strange way for a lover?
31540Can it be that a De Roberval has sunk to so ignoble a breach of honour and faith?
31540Cartier deserting his post?
31540Could I, as a just ruler, spare my own?
31540Could he have escaped?
31540Could his approach, when they were on the verge of the grave, have served only to tantalise them, and make the end the harder?
31540Could the end have come already?
31540Could there be another world as cruel as this?
31540Could they have grown tired of the life here, and started further up the stream-- to Hochelaga, perhaps?
31540Could they have perished in the storm?
31540Could we possibly manage to prevent a catastrophe?
31540De Pontbriand wounded?"
31540De Roberval refused me that privilege, and think you that he will grant you permission?
31540Dear God, why is life created only to be destroyed?"
31540Demons,"he went on, raising his voice so that all could hear,"what care I for demons?
31540Do you suppose I noticed his features?
31540Had King Francis repented of his generosity, and sent a fleet to recall him?
31540Has there been any one else here?"
31540Have you brought any attendants with you?"
31540Have you further information about the mineral wealth of the New World?
31540Have you not brought him with you?"
31540Have you not heard the last news of him?"
31540He allowed you to carry the fair one, did you say?"
31540How can you expect the blessing of God upon this enterprise if you wilfully do this great wrong?
31540How long have you been in St Malo?"
31540How long have you endured the loneliness of this dreary spot?"
31540How long is it, Claude, since you have had such a poor opinion of me?
31540How should she meet him?
31540How was I so stupid as not to recognise him?
31540If Monsieur is not tired with the contest, would he be pleased to measure swords with me?
31540In two minutes he was fully dressed, and, turning hastily round, exclaimed:"Who is the lookout to- night?"
31540Is anything wrong?
31540Is there bad news?
31540Is there no brave man in all this throng who will help me to resist this tyrant?"
31540La Pommeraye lowered his weapon, and exclaimed:"What brings you here at this hour?
31540May I be permitted to ask her name?"
31540My friend, do you understand_ now_?"
31540Saved indeed, but for what?
31540The next world-- what of that?
31540Then, too, how came she so suddenly upon the scene of the conflict?
31540This is the protection you extend to that other fatherless and motherless girl so lately left in your charge?
31540This, then,"and she turned her clear gaze upon her uncle,"is the father''s care you show an orphan child?
31540Unhappy woman that I am, how shall I render an account of all the deaths of which I have been the cause?"
31540Was he then to be baulked of his revenge?
31540Well, what good will that nugget do us?"
31540What are you thinking of?"
31540What are your intentions towards these helpless women who have no other protector but yourself?
31540What can you mean?
31540What care I for all the demons in hell?
31540What could be the meaning of this?
31540What could their strange appearance mean?
31540What have you heard?"
31540What is it?"
31540What is to be done?"
31540What next will you have to offer?
31540What woman?"
31540What would he have to say to her, whom he doubtless believed long dead?
31540Where did you ever meet him?"
31540Who commands the guard to- night?"
31540Who would have thought, after the glorious moon of last night that we should have such a day as this on the morrow?"
31540Whose could the ships be?
31540Why have you left Charlesbourg Royal?"
31540Why should the world be told?
31540Will you grant my request?"
31540Would it not be well to have all on board witness this meting- out of justice?"
31540Would it not be well to marry them to noble ladies, and give them dukedoms in France to govern?"
31540Would you call his conduct of last night noble?"
31540Your uncle did not kill the villain, did he?
31540and whither had she disappeared?
31540de Roberval?"
31540de Vignan?
31540de Vignan?"
31540exclaimed he,"what brings you here?"
31540he cried,"can this be permitted?"
31540he exclaimed in an excited voice,"did you get this?"
31540said Marie, with a half- suppressed yawn,"will this fog never lift?
31540she exclaimed,"how did you get here?"
21883A light that was never on sea or land?
21883A month?
21883A week?
21883A year, Archie?
21883A year?
21883Again? 21883 Am I to see Lucy again-- before the year begins?"
21883And John does n''t know?
21883And besides,she said in a startled sort of way,"I might fall out of love with you, might n''t I?
21883And if you ca n''t?
21883And my unconscious prattle helps to fill it? 21883 And not notice any other ladies?"
21883And we''d just be wonderful friends?
21883And what''s in your heart, Hilda?
21883And who has done that?
21883And you ca n''t with John?
21883And you think I ought to live on with John, as-- as his wife?
21883And you think that?
21883And you would be faithful to me?
21883And you''re getting a divorce?
21883Any news from the man of the house?
21883Any twinges this morning?
21883Are they happy now, Hilda-- the way they used to be?
21883Are we playing truths, or shall I let you down easily?
21883Are we riding?
21883Are you serious, Lucy?
21883Are you trying to get this room all to yourself?
21883Been sitting by your window lately,I asked,"looking at the moon?"
21883Bully, is n''t it?
21883But I thought you-- didn''t want to hurt me?
21883But if I want to? 21883 But if you had to choose one or the other?"
21883But now that your husband has had to cut his salary in half, you''ll simply have to be good, wo n''t you?
21883But what,exclaimed John,"has all this to do with the high cost of living?"
21883But why did she look frightened? 21883 But you do n''t know?"
21883But you feel tenderness?
21883But you''ll see me through?
21883But, Hilda,I interrupted,"why did n''t he tell me that it was all over, when I saw him in New York-- just before Christmas?"
21883Can you meet me at ten o''clock tonight?
21883Caring is supposed to thrive on opposition, is n''t it?
21883Could n''t I wait a few days? 21883 Could n''t we just tell John that we had decided to go-- and go?"
21883Could she see?
21883Did Evelyn tell you you had to?
21883Did I-- mention the lady''s name?
21883Did he embroider the theme at all?
21883Did what?
21883Divorce? 21883 Do I have to tell you that you are one of the smartest looking people I know, Hilda?
21883Do n''t I?
21883Do n''t they count for anything?
21883Do n''t you ever say no?
21883Do you always do what you''re told?
21883Do you believe in post- mortems?
21883Do you believe that or do you say it to be amusing?
21883Do you care so much that no argument will change you?
21883Do you know what I think about myself? 21883 Do you mean that?"
21883Do you mean that?
21883Do you remember when Hilda came to us?
21883Do you still----?
21883Do you think it wise for him to go, Lucy?
21883Do you think it wise?
21883Do you think that''s quite fair?
21883Do you want Archie and me to vanish, too?
21883Do you want to?
21883Do you,I asked,"hurry like mad?"
21883Do you?
21883Do_ you_ want to get married?
21883Does she care two straws about me?
21883Does you want to know any mo''?
21883Evelyn saw you, did n''t she? 21883 Even if the train is on time,"she said,"I do n''t think I ought to go chasing off, do you?
21883Ever been to California?
21883Gathering strength in romantic byways to see you through the prosy thoroughfares? 21883 Glad to be back?"
21883Going to be warm enough?
21883Good Lord,I thought;"has living without her, already begun to be easier?"
21883Had n''t we better cross that bridge when we come to it?
21883Hallo, who is it? 21883 Has Favver come back?"
21883Have I what?
21883Have a good time?
21883Have n''t you noticed?
21883Have the heavens fallen?
21883Have you been bewitched? 21883 Have you looked,"I asked,"diligently and with patience?"
21883Hear you''ve given up California,he said bluntly;"do you think that''s wise?
21883Hilda,I said,"you-- you do n''t still-- that way-- about me?"
21883Hilda?
21883Home?
21883Honest to Gospel?
21883How about breakfast?
21883How about me?
21883How about the other thing, the promise to obey? 21883 How about you, Lucy''?
21883How can I know that, John?
21883How did you get to know?
21883How do you mean he is n''t a fool?
21883How do you mean?
21883How long is your young people''s infatuation for each other going to last? 21883 How long''s this been goin''on?"
21883How long,I asked,"has it been like this?"
21883How many times do you ring if you want a cocktail?
21883How much did you drop, as a matter of fact?
21883I do n''t think it would be much fun to ride with a man who could n''t bring his mind along with him, do you? 21883 I do n''t think she''ll tell,"I said,"and after all what does it matter?
21883I do n''t understand the importance which lovers attach to love? 21883 I have been honest with you, Evelyn,"I said;"will you be honest with me?
21883I have n''t more than glanced at them in a week,he said,"but there''s nothing new, is there?
21883I need n''t say, need I, that I feel like hell about your position, your end of it?
21883I suppose you regale her from time to time with episodes from your past life? 21883 I want to know if you have still a sort of right to be in this house?"
21883I wonder what I did to have that wonderful thing? 21883 I''d like to know what_ you_ were doing up so late?"
21883I''m hanged if I know,I said;"but what makes you think I got started?"
21883If they love each other like that,I thought,"why does n''t he always ride with her, or why does n''t she always play golf with him?"
21883If we are really hard up,she said,"what does a few hundred dollars matter one way or the other?"
21883If,she said presently,"people find out that things in this house are at sixes and sevens I wonder if they wo n''t find fault with you and Lucy?
21883In short,said John,"if I refuse to be divorced you care enough to run away together into social ostracism?"
21883Is I a beas''o''de fiel''?
21883Is he for you or against you?
21883Is it a real name? 21883 Is it manners for a man to say he is n''t interested in a girl?"
21883Is it my turn?
21883Is it very necessary?
21883Is n''t it about my turn, Lucy?
21883Is n''t losing faith in oneself real trouble?
21883Is n''t whiskey bad for you when you''re so nervous?
21883Is that because of your natural virtue or because you have never wanted to?
21883Is there anything peculiarly good about the Fulton cartridges, or is Europe just out to gather up all the ammunition she can?
21883It is n''t fair to you and Lucy? 21883 It is n''t our war,"she said;"and what use will one more enlisted man be to_ them_?
21883It would be so different if only-- if only----"If only I loved you?
21883It''s not the first time you''ve_ said_ that you really cared, is it?
21883Just now,she said,"when you and Lucy went outside, I heard someone say to someone else----""Had n''t they any names?"
21883Kids all right? 21883 Know more about what?"
21883Last night, after you had gone,she said,"John said,''Are n''t you seeing a good deal of Archie Mannering?''"
21883Look here, Archie, do n''t you know what''s wrong?
21883Love? 21883 Lucy and you?"
21883Lucy, is there someone? 21883 Lucy,"I said,"have you thought out anything since I saw you last?"
21883Must I have a reason? 21883 Must I really tell you what I think you ought to do?"
21883Must all human beings have sorrows?
21883No pressure of opposition?
21883No, do you?
21883No, sir-- it''s----"It''s_ what_?
21883Not for another half- dollar?
21883Not with money? 21883 Not----?"
21883Oh, is it? 21883 Oh, it has been a sort of romance, has n''t it, Mrs. Mannering?
21883Oh, will you?
21883On me?
21883Pretended?
21883Pretty well,he said;"and you?"
21883See those two, Archie?
21883Shall we go out in the sun?
21883She told you that she tried to make me?
21883So you got no mo''use for me, nigger?
21883Still undecided?
21883Suppose we find that we ca n''t stand a life of love-- with renunciation?
21883Tell me,I said,"how is the great compromise working?"
21883Tell me,she said,"why you married her?
21883That you, Lucy? 21883 Then you do n''t want me?"
21883There are reservations?
21883They would n''t have told me I was being given up right and left, would they? 21883 This settles everything, does it?"
21883This?
21883Thrashed all what out?--Oh, I remember-- your attentions to Lucy Fulton, or hers to you, which was it?
21883To help?
21883Trying to_ cure_ himself?
21883Was I ever unkind to you?
21883Was I very brazen,she said,"to ask you to go with me, when I did n''t want to be alone?"
21883Was it very bold of me to come to the Club for you? 21883 Was it when you-- heard about me?"
21883We do n''t go back to New York?
21883We were just going in to lie down, were n''t we?
21883We-- Oh, it''s lucky we had parents and guardians, is n''t it? 21883 Well, Hilda, what about it?"
21883Well, I shall have to tell him all about us, wo n''t I? 21883 Well, tell them you''re going for a motor ride with another friend, and to dine somewhere along the Sound, will you?"
21883Well, then, yours for her? 21883 Well, they could n''t know how you felt, could they?
21883Well, what came of it? 21883 Well, why could n''t you say so?"
21883Well, you know the trouble she made for John, would n''t be his wife and all that? 21883 Well,"she cried,"I''m not doing it because I want to, am I?
21883Were you in the Spanish War?
21883What became of the man?
21883What can I say or do to thank you?
21883What did I talk about?
21883What did he say about me?
21883What did you say?
21883What do you mean by that?
21883What else can you do?
21883What have you been doing?
21883What in thunderation started_ you_ last night?
21883What is that?
21883What sort of a sorrow, Auntie?
21883What time is it?
21883What was that you were playing a while ago?
21883What was that?
21883What''s the matter with my giving a dance?
21883What''s the matter, Hilda-- have I forgotten to brush the back of my hair?
21883What''s your idea-- for England? 21883 What, dear?"
21883When are you going to tell him?
21883When did you first become a snake in the grass?
21883When do you give it?
21883When is a day not a day?
21883When that baby was asleep in my lap-- did I tell you about that?
21883When you say that the women are good, you mean they are technically good?
21883When,said Lucy at last,"would you go, if you go?"
21883When?
21883When?
21883Where do you think_ this_ road goes?
21883Where shall I drop you-- at the Club?
21883Where will you give it? 21883 Where''s your pony?"
21883Where?
21883While you are still ostensibly his wife? 21883 Who did?"
21883Who is technically good?
21883Who is this Evelyn?
21883Who was it?
21883Why are you_ Miss_ Coles?
21883Why did n''t you do this to me when I was proposing? 21883 Why else would I lie awake to hear Mr. Fulton go swimming?
21883Why indeed?
21883Why not come in?
21883Why not let me give it? 21883 Why not pack up your duds and move on?"
21883Why not,said he,"ask me to ride with you?"
21883Why not?
21883Why not?
21883Why not?
21883Why should n''t I?
21883Why take it for granted that we''d stop caring?
21883Why the Russian? 21883 Why would n''t it be a fine beginning of economy to cut that dance out?"
21883Why, Lucy?
21883Why, Lucy?
21883Why, what else was there for her to be ashamed about?
21883Why,said Harry,"should n''t all you good people dine with me?"
21883Why?
21883Why?
21883Why?
21883Why_ Hurry_?
21883Will you ride again tomorrow?
21883Will you tell him right away?
21883Will you? 21883 Will you?"
21883With_ me_?
21883Wo n''t they work it out best by themselves?
21883Wonder what made''em change their minds?
21883Yes,I said,"I think you have, but I do n''t have to accept, do I?
21883Yo''ai n''t goin''ter make trouble, Frank?
21883Yo''got to have yo''fling?
21883You ai n''t? 21883 You always maintained that love was its own justification, Schuyler?"
21883You are still fond of him, Lucy?
21883You got er nice home''n nice lil''babies,''n you goin''to leave''em fo''a yaller man-- is you?
21883You got fifty cents, boss?
21883You knew Lucy when she was a little girl, but you did n''t see her often when she was growing up, did you? 21883 You mean beautiful Evelyn Hope, do n''t you?"
21883You mean if you wo n''t? 21883 You really think that?"
21883You were very fond of Schuyler, were n''t you?
21883You will take me away?
21883You''d forgotten, had n''t you? 21883 You''d not want to get me all shot up, would you, Hilda?"
21883You''ll be in New York a while?
21883You''ll not talk, Hilda?
21883You''ll tell me everything the minute you can?
21883You_ are_ that?
21883You_ did_?
21883You_ do n''t_? 21883 You_ know_ that it would last a week?"
21883_ Are_ you interested in Evelyn?
21883_ Are_ you?
21883_ Could_ go?
21883_ Do n''t_ you, Lucy?
21883_ Now_ do you realize that I''m in earnest?
21883_ Think_--don''t you_ know_?
21883_ You''ve_ never been married, have you? 21883 .? 21883 A line from theBrushwood Boy"kept occurring to me,"But what shall I do when I see you in the light?"
21883A man like you, in good health, with an incompletely developed moral sense?"
21883A moment later,"Going to Aiken?"
21883Am I afraid of him?
21883And I thought,"Why should you, you who are so friendly, so frank, and so kind?"
21883And all the others?"
21883And do you know what those servants think of her, and what I think of her for the way she''s treated him?
21883And finished with,"So do n''t tell John, will you?"
21883And how many men can she graft on?
21883And really just be good friends and live their own lives?"
21883And she answered:"Am I?
21883And so you thought you could lead two lives at once, Lucy?"
21883And what was Lucy doing?
21883And would n''t it be better if we were cured?
21883And you, mother, with your face of a saint, have n''t I always poked fun at you?
21883And-- you have n''t?"
21883Anybody mind if I talk shop?"
21883Are we three the only ones who know of this sensational development?"
21883Are you able to support a wife?"
21883Are you prepared to swear that you will love her and no other all your days?"
21883Are you ready?"
21883Are you sick?
21883Are you threatening to cut me off?"
21883At Wilcox''s?"
21883At last I said:"How are the Fultons?"
21883But do n''t you think fascinating is rather a strong word?
21883But do we really know what a butterfly is?
21883But do you care_ enough_--either of you?
21883But does this fact automatically make me glad that the Germans banged the great cathedral to pieces?
21883But how could I?
21883But if any of your friends----?"
21883But is it my fault if they do n''t count_ enough_?"
21883But she loved people, she simply could n''t be happy without them, and( was n''t it fun?)
21883But still we looked each other in the eyes, and she said:"What are we going to do about it?"
21883But we know better, do n''t we?"
21883But what can I say definitely that he_ is_?
21883But what could she do?
21883But what does that matter, if I never let you find out the difference?
21883But why?"
21883But you have n''t told me if you said anything to Lucy?"
21883But you were in love with me the night I went away, were n''t you?
21883Ca n''t he?
21883Can you?"
21883Cartridges still looking up?"
21883Children?
21883Could I endure that separation?
21883Could he have something serious the matter with him?"
21883Cut the Gordian knot and get right down to bed rock?
21883Did I hope so?
21883Did it occur to you to be great friends, and not see each other?"
21883Did n''t I_ think_ they lived nicely?
21883Did n''t you mean to keep these promises when you made them?"
21883Did n''t you-- even a little?"
21883Did she see for herself?
21883Did she still love me, or had the dark night brought council and a change of heart?
21883Did you land a contract?
21883Did you want to see me about something special?"
21883Do I often talk in my sleep?"
21883Do I torture myself?
21883Do n''t I, mother?"
21883Do n''t we know dozens of cases?
21883Do n''t you really remember at all?"
21883Do n''t you see that I am speaking with every ounce of sincerity there is in me?
21883Do n''t_ you_?"
21883Do you remember?"
21883Do you sail, fly, entrain, or row-- and when?"
21883Do you think I''m such a fool as to throw away the love you''ve got for me?
21883Do you think it''s any pleasure to have hurt him so?
21883Do you?"
21883Fancy?
21883For we feel that we are paying him an immense compliment when we say,"Would you ever suspect that he was an author?"
21883Going to the club?
21883Had I really and truly liked the teagown she wore the other night?
21883Had Lucy''s impulse to precipitate frankness already started any machinery of opposition into action?
21883Had she told her husband?
21883Had their intuition made the discovery?
21883Had we?
21883Halfway up the steps of the house she turned, and said a little wearily,"How many lives do you think_ I_ have to live?"
21883Has anything happened?"
21883Has he started anything?"
21883Has that occurred to you?"
21883Have a drink?"
21883Have n''t I done him enough harm to make him hate me?
21883Have n''t I had enough to bear?"
21883Have n''t you ever felt that if the whole world was yours to give you''d give it gladly?
21883Have you been bewitched?
21883Have you considered that a passion for something forbidden is not a natural, not a respectable passion?
21883Have you eaten something that has made you forget?
21883Have you read this Overman business?"
21883Have you?
21883Have you?"
21883He is called to the telephone, hears a hospitable voice that says,"Will you come to lunch tomorrow at one- thirty?"
21883Her fantastics[ Transcriber''s note: fantasies?]
21883How about crossin''the bridge and findin''him on the other side with a big bang- stick in his hand?"
21883How are you all?"
21883How can I go on living with a man I do n''t love?
21883How can anybody suddenly stop caring the way you have?
21883How can you ask me to be so false to myself and to Archie----""And to Jock and Hurry?"
21883How did you reach the conclusion that you could go?"
21883How do I feel?
21883How is Lucy?"
21883How is everything?
21883How long could you let that power rest without experimenting to see if you still had it?
21883How long do you_ know_ that your love for her will last?"
21883How long does a pure- minded, good- looking woman keep off the streets if she ca n''t raise the wind any other way?
21883How many teetotalers let their wives spend them into ruin and disgrace?
21883How many wronged husbands are there who swallow their trouble and endure to one who shoots?"
21883How much of the tragedy am I responsible for?
21883How should_ I_ know?"
21883How soon did you and Lucy find out that absence_ does n''t_ make the heart grow fonder?"
21883How then?"
21883How was she bearing it?
21883How would you live when his money was gone-- keep on borrowing?"
21883How you goin''ter fix fo''ter keep me?"
21883How?
21883I am not doubting the intensity of your inclination, but I ca n''t help asking, Will it last?
21883I do n''t believe I''m ever going to feel the same way about you, and so----""Oh, I know that, but---- Oh, do you still think I''m pretty?"
21883I know this, because when Jock and Hurry had been sent away, I said:"Did you know what I was thinking of just then?
21883I said lamely:"Which window?"
21883I was ashamed too?
21883I wish to heaven I had her address-- a little cream?"
21883I wonder what I''ve done to deserve to lose it?
21883I wonder why?"
21883If a girl loves a man, and proves it and keeps on loving him, how is it possible for him to pay her back short of ruining himself?
21883If she was n''t how could she ever put over the things she does put over?
21883If two people like to ride together, for no worse reason than that they like riding and are good friends, what earthly business is it of Aiken''s?
21883If we are to forgive the Power that sets him on, why not the murderer himself who does the real dirty work?
21883If you forbid me to see him, why I suppose I''ll obey you, but I''d have to explain to him, would n''t I?
21883In that eventuality what could you do?
21883Is John in the Club?"
21883Is it anything I''ve done, anything I''ve failed to do?
21883Is it likely, considering your records, that you and she will be an exception?
21883Is it what you_ want_ me to do?"
21883Is it worse to starve your family for love of liquor than for love of art?
21883Is n''t it all a beastly shame?
21883Is n''t it in my face, too-- isn''t it?"
21883Is n''t that so, Lucy?"
21883Is n''t there?"
21883Is that it?"
21883Is the buggy outside?"
21883It looks, does n''t it, as if somebody had decided to change the map of Europe, and as if others suspected the design?"
21883It was on that same night that he said to Lucy:"Are n''t you seeing a good deal of Archie Mannering?"
21883It was time I settled down, why not with Evelyn-- if only to prove to her that the truths she had told me about myself were n''t true?
21883Jesting aside, do n''t you think that what you and Lucy want to do to Jock and Hurry and me is_ wrong_?
21883Kill herself?
21883Knowing something of Lucy''s history, how long do you think her fancy for you will last?"
21883Lovely night, is n''t it?
21883Lucy, I think you''d better telegraph John to come home, do n''t you?"
21883Lucy, damaged goods?
21883May I praise them now?
21883Never mind the other things, just tell me that?
21883Now tell me what''s wrong with me?"
21883Now what''s to be done?
21883Now you would n''t take me for a praying man, would you?"
21883Now, how are we going to communicate?"
21883Of course it''s mostly my fault; but I ca n''t help it if the Democrats are in power and business is bad, can I?"
21883Oh, Lucy, this is such a humiliating confession to make, but what_ can_ I do?"
21883Oh, do please, will you?"
21883Oh, why had that pansy face and those great praying eyes come into my life again?
21883Ought n''t you to have a hat or something?
21883Remembering this how can I believe that this is the best of all possible worlds, and that everything in it is for the best?
21883Say he_ wo n''t_ give her a divorce?
21883Shall we take the plunge?"
21883Shall we?"
21883She started to speak, hesitated, and then said, very quietly,"Why did you make love to me just now?"
21883Should I convey an erroneous impression and one derogatory to a charming companion if I said that she chattered along like a magpie?
21883So I said:"Harry, why do n''t_ you_ marry Evelyn?"
21883So she knew, did she?
21883So what''s the use?"
21883So wo n''t you please say what you are going to do?"
21883So you do n''t know what the modern woman can spend when she gets going, do you?"
21883Stamford?
21883Still----""Still what?"
21883Suppose I had fled away the moment I learned that Lucy no longer loved her husband?
21883Suppose Lucy still cares, and as a reward for her faithfulness and her patience there is nothing but your grave''somewhere in France''?
21883Suppose she had told him?
21883Tell me, dear, who has done this thing to you?"
21883That sounds as if-- Oh, as if he was going to step out, Lucy, does n''t it?"
21883The cocktails came, and when the man who brought them had gone, I said:"It''s for her sake that I''m staying, father; will you listen a little?
21883The new hotel?
21883The young gentleman?
21883Then he had come back to the house still laughing, and one heard him shouting,"Where are you, Lucy?
21883Then his frame relaxed and his eyes twinkled, and he said,"Die?
21883There must be a reason?
21883There was n''t anything the matter, was there?"
21883To be a nurse-- or what?"
21883To begin with, why should John give Lucy a divorce?
21883To me he has been always a faithful friend and a charming companion, but of his career, what can I say that is really pleasant?
21883Upon what grounds did I found the hope that Fulton would not soon find out about Lucy and me?
21883Was n''t it a pity that John had to work so hard, and miss so many lovely days?
21883Was she an old flame?"
21883Was there not still time to turn a new leaf-- to be somebody, to accomplish something?
21883We had warned Fulton we had played the game, why should we lose time to do so?
21883We see too much of each other?"
21883Well, then, why do n''t I want to see him?
21883What are you going to do about it?"
21883What are you planning to do this summer?"
21883What did I say about the lady?"
21883What do we do next?"
21883What do_ you_ think?"
21883What does everybody think?"
21883What else can you tell me, Auntie?"
21883What has become of the first poor fellow to whom you were unable to say no?
21883What has happened?"
21883What has that to do with it?
21883What have I done?"
21883What is it?
21883What is my horse''s name?"
21883What is your idea?
21883What should I do, what would Lucy do?
21883What sort of life was she leading, the poor, abused child?
21883What then?"
21883What time is it?
21883What would I do when I knew I''d hurt you?"
21883What''s the idea anyway?"
21883What_ can_ I do?
21883What_ ought_ I to do?"
21883When did you come to the end of your rope?"
21883When is your husband coming back?"
21883When there is a crash in Wall Street how many well- to- do married men go to smash to one well- to- do bachelor?
21883Where are you going to drive me?"
21883Where are you going_ now_?"
21883Where are you?"
21883Where do you keep your bell?"
21883Where is he?"
21883Who is it?"
21883Why ask that?"
21883Why be so sure then that something we do n''t understand, and which may not even exist, is absolutely right and beautiful?
21883Why complain then when afterwards you are only asked to give that infinitesimal portion of the world that happens at the moment to be yours?
21883Why did you let me?"
21883Why did you wait till I was stone broke and worried half sick, with everything going from bad to worse?
21883Why do n''t I want to see him?
21883Why does he want me to die?
21883Why else would I be wanting to go with the Red Cross to the front where the bullets are?"
21883Why have you changed so?
21883Why not give yourselves a year to think it all over, as John Fulton so sanely and generously suggests?"
21883Why not say frankly that if I keep on I''ll end by making Lucy Fulton conspicuous?"
21883Why not take your family to a cheap boarding- house for a year or two?
21883Why not,"his face brightened into a sort of cheerfulness,"why not test yourselves a little?
21883Why should men?"
21883Why should so many men marry the wrong girls, so many girls the wrong men?
21883Why should so many people be poor and sick and uncomfortable?
21883Why?
21883Will anyone believe me?
21883Will you drive around a little?"
21883Will you tell me now what it is that''s gone all wrong?"
21883Will you tell me why you think it is n''t wise?"
21883Will you?"
21883Wo n''t we?"
21883Wo n''t you come in?"
21883Women often say_ ca n''t_ when they mean_ wo n''t_, do n''t they?"
21883Would I believe it, the golf course was crowded all day?
21883Would I cross my heart to that effect?
21883Would it be always so when we met, the heart leaping, and the brain swimming, and the body shaken with tenderness and desire?
21883Would it please you if I took your advice?
21883Would n''t I?"
21883Would n''t it be funny if people only existed for us when they were actually present?
21883Would n''t she give me a word of warning so that I could be prepared for anything he might say to me at our first meeting?
21883Would there be people about or would we have the good luck to meet alone?
21883XX"Mother, are you very busy with those letters?"
21883XXVII"What did he say?"
21883You believe that?"
21883You saw Mrs. Fulton and me in the hall?"
21883You''ll be my friend, wo n''t you, and not tell?
21883You''ll come?"
21883You''re just doing it so''s not to hurt my feelings, are n''t you?
21883You''ve gotten to like someone else?
21883You, Evelyn, do you want to ride with me or with Dawson?"
21883Your love has cooled and, even if Lucy''s hasn''t-- there could never be anything between you now?"
21883Yours and Lucy''s?"
21883_ Do_ we?"
21883_ Were n''t_ you?"
21883_ What_ has he done to deserve it?
21883_ Why_ has it happened?
21883all the long time will you take care of yourself?"
21883she exclaimed indignantly,"or is I a humanous bein''?"
32839Fool at one end and worm at the other?
32839Was it not a success, then,_ Before the Dawn_?
32839What business had he to attack me?
32839Wot do_ you_ think, Miss B.?
32839(_ Aloud._) Hang it, man, what has that to do with it?
32839(_ Here you seem to detect a lurking doubt in the Sandwich- man''s eye._) Hightoned, Sir?
32839(_ Initials as before._)_ Eleventh Minute._ What is being done about that missing sixpence?
32839(_ Initials as before._)_ Fifteenth Minute._ Has the sender no other address?
32839(_ Initials as before._)_ Fourth Minute._ Who sent the Telegram originally?
32839(_ Initials as before._)_ Sixth Minute._ Can not the address of the sender be ascertained?
32839(_ Official Initials._)_ Second Minute._ Who re- directed the Telegram, and why was it not paid for before delivery?
32839(_ The Sandwich- man here makes another attempt to escape_;_ you put out two detaining fingers._) Come, you ai n''t going yet?
32839(_ With a kindly curiosity._) Say, what was it--_drink_?
32839All our chicest stock- jokes and pet patter they mops up, like mugs as they are, For they_ might_ cut their own chaff, eh, CHARLIE?
32839And you mosey along with the posters-- wa''al, now, do ye find the job_ pay_?
32839But how about this boot?
32839Ca n''t ye stay for awhile-- Till I''ve opened my head?
32839DEAR CHARLIE,''Ow are yer, my arty, and''ow does this Summer suit_ you?_ Selp me never, old pal, it''s a scorcher!
32839Does the Palace want repapering?
32839Had not these geniuses, watched, waited and suffered?
32839Has that missing sixpence been recovered?
32839Has that missing sixpence been recovered?
32839Here our hopes centre: Who is our WATT?
32839Hurt you, m''Lord?
32839If you ca n''t do it----_ Shoemaker( hastily).__ Ca n''t_, m''Lord?
32839Is there no substitute Which we may quaff For tea with milk dilute, Or shandy- gaff?
32839It give''i m the needle in course, being left in the lurch in this way, But the petticoats know wot is wot, and so wot''s your true dasher to say?
32839Rekerlek that old buffer at Richmond, and''ow we shoved foul of his swim, And lost him a middlin''-sized barbel and set his straw tile on the skim?
32839Shall we send an Officer to inquire?
32839Should spirits tempt you, Need it be said Nought can exempt you From a racked head, Just like poor SISERA?
32839So he''s bin an''struck ile?
32839Soda''s a snare?
32839Stanley Brown._"VERY WELL, THANKS,_ DEAR MRS. CORMORAN._ HOW ARE YOU?"
32839Then what right had she to be impatient?
32839WHY, in this clever age, So"point- device,"Is there no beverage Cool, cheap, and nice?
32839Was n''t there a Margarine of Hesse?"
32839Were you at the Guildhall Ball?
32839What can be done?
32839What do you mean?
32839What sort of a place is Sofia?
32839What''s the style of your show?
32839Where d''yer think as I spent my last bust up?
32839Who can be placid When sixpence is paid For sweet citric acid Dubbed lemonade?
32839Will no inventor Try a new shot?
32839Will the Prince''s cab- hire, on the occasion of his attending Official banquets, be forthcoming from the same source?
32839Will the Royal Salary touch £ 300 a year, and will it be paid regularly in cash, and not in promissory notes at uncertain intervals?
32839Will the great Sobranje vote an additional sum to the civil list for boot- cleaning and the expenses of a weekly charwoman for the Royal household?
32839You turn upon him savagely, with an irritation assumed to conceal deep feeling._) What on airth do_ you_ mean?
32839[_ Hand to chin, dubiously._ A mistake?
32839_ A._ To meet Lord HERSCHELL, his friends, and the Prince and Princess?
32839_ Customer( irritably)._ What are you muttering and murmuring about?
32839_ Customer._ Hurt?
32839_ Customer.__ Outgrown_ them?
32839_ Q._ And if you do get back to the country, when shall you again visit town?
32839_ Q._ And the Review at Aldershot?
32839_ Q._ And the Volunteer Review-- how did you like that?
32839_ Q._ And they?
32839_ Q._ And who did you see there?
32839_ Q._ Are you at all confused?
32839_ Q._ Did they all pass you?
32839_ Q._ Did you go to the Abbey?
32839_ Q._ Did you go to the Lincoln''s Inn Garden Party?
32839_ Q._ Did you go to the Naval Review?
32839_ Q._ Did you see the QUEEN?
32839_ Q._ Have you been to many Garden Parties?
32839_ Q._ Have you done anything else?
32839_ Q._ How did the LORD MAYOR get through it?
32839_ Q._ Was it very beautiful?
32839_ Q._ Was the_ Maske of Flowers_ a success?
32839_ Q._ Were you at the Royal Academy_ Soirée_?
32839_ Q._ What did you see of it?
32839_ Q._ Why?
32839_ Question._ So you have conscientiously done the Jubilee?
32839_ Shoemaker( aside)._ How shall I put it so as not to huff him?
32839_ Shoemaker._ Murmuring, m''Lord?
32839_ Shoemaker._ Well, m''Lord, you see, you''ve a bit-- ahem!--_outgrown_''em like, do n''t you see, m''Lord?
32839_ Times( loquitur-- to S- l- sb- ry and B- lf- r)._"NOW THEN, WHAT ARE YOU AFRAID OF?
32839you thought''twas a_ tear_ As I''ve got in my eye?
15265A love affair--she paled with something like fear--"and I"--she started to speak, but could not--"I want to know what you think about Zora?"
15265About darky schools?
15265About how much?
15265Ai n''t you got no money?
15265All the truth?
15265Always-- tell-- the truth?
15265Am I? 15265 And Sanders?"
15265And Zora?
15265And cotton?
15265And criticise the party?
15265And culture and work?
15265And do the people believe that?
15265And how long have you been buying it?
15265And if that strong influence were found?
15265And is--she struggled at the word madly--"is she pure?"
15265And kill the plantation system?
15265And leave a pa''cel of niggers behind to shoot your lights out? 15265 And let your neighbor sell them poison at all hours?
15265And more beautiful?
15265And no appointment? 15265 And now,"he said,"Miss Wynn, what can I do for you?"
15265And part of the price is putting the colored schools of the District in the hands of a Southern man and depriving us of all voice in their control?
15265And say,as Easterly was turning away,"you know Congressman Smith?"
15265And so you ca n''t leave?
15265And the Board of Education abolished?
15265And the other planters?
15265And then?
15265And these Cresswells today?
15265And throw the rest of our capital after the fifty thousand dollars we''ve already lost?
15265And what brings you to town afoot this time of day?
15265And what shall you do?
15265And what were you to pay for it?
15265And what''s beyond the swamp?
15265And where do you live, Buddy?
15265And who is Elspeth?
15265And why do you hate it?
15265And why does she hold a lily?
15265And will they all be represented?
15265And with the teachers of it?
15265And yet you will stay?
15265And yonder to the west?
15265And you are still friendly with him?
15265And you?
15265And, Zora, what way do you seek? 15265 Any witnesses?"
15265Any witnesses?
15265Are kisses illegal here?
15265Are they honest and kind?
15265Are they not hard working honest people?
15265Are you going back there when you finish?
15265Are you happy?
15265Are you men fools, or rascals? 15265 Are you sure of the path, Zora?"
15265Are you sure?
15265Are you the-- er-- the man who had a letter to the Senator?
15265Are you walking?
15265Are you-- in a hurry, Miss Smith?
15265As Treasurer?
15265Aunt Rachel?
15265Back, is she? 15265 Behind where the sun comes up?"
15265Bigger?
15265Black or white?
15265Bles,she began didactically,"where are you from?"
15265Bles,she cried,"how can I grow pure?"
15265Bles,she said impulsively,"shall I tell you of the Golden Fleece?"
15265Bles,she said primly,"have you absolutely no shame?"
15265Brethren,he began,"the plan''s good enough for talkin''but you ca n''t work it; who ever heer''d tell of such a thing?
15265But could n''t you hire some good workers?
15265But did n''t you say they were engaged?
15265But did n''t you settle at Christmas?
15265But how about your raw material? 15265 But how can I know?"
15265But how do they hope to make Mr. Alwyn blunder?
15265But how shall we help him?
15265But how''s cotton?
15265But if she escapes, why not you?
15265But if we can not trust to the justice of the case, and if you knew we could n''t, why did you try?
15265But in the tenth case-- suppose he should stick to it?
15265But is it necessary? 15265 But others-- a man''s a man, is n''t he?"
15265But surely you did n''t join her in advocating that ten million people be menials?
15265But that''s been decided, has n''t it?
15265But the other gown?
15265But the seed?
15265But the unselfish work she does-- the utter sacrifice?
15265But what do Teerswell and Stillings want?
15265But what_ can_ turn up?
15265But where are the houses?
15265But where have you sent them?
15265But where is it?
15265But where is it?
15265But who gave it to you?
15265But why do n''t the planters do something?
15265But why is lies evil?
15265But why prolong the thing?
15265But you believe in some education?
15265But you mean to say you ca n''t even advise her?
15265But, Mrs. Vanderpool,she protested,"is it right?
15265But, Zora, must you folk ape our nonsense as well as our sense?
15265But,--presently,--"how can we sell it without the Cresswells knowing?"
15265But-- I do n''t understand, Miss Smith-- why ca n''t you accept my offer?
15265But-- but I thought they had already started to work a crop on the Tolliver place?
15265But-- but how are-- all?
15265But-- but, dear Mrs. Vanderpool, you would n''t want your children trained that way, would you?
15265But-- will he?
15265By the bye, I met some charming Alabama people last winter, in Montgomery-- the Cresswells; do you know them?
15265Ca n''t I have the girl Zora?
15265Called?
15265Can I go?
15265Can I speak with you a moment, Colonel?
15265Can it be, Bles Alwyn,she said,"that you do n''t know the sort of girl she is?"
15265Can you not stop and see some of the classes?
15265Can you put trust in that sort of help?
15265Can you?
15265Cash?
15265Colton,he asked,"are you sending any of your white children to the nigger school yet?"
15265Come, is you? 15265 Cotton is a wonderful thing, is it not, boys?"
15265Could I buy a lunch from the dining- car?
15265Could I help?
15265Could I trust you with a human soul?
15265Could she pass?
15265Did Helene attend the ball four years ago?
15265Did he say he meant to sign such a contract?
15265Did n''t I tell you there was lots to learn?
15265Did n''t you know that this Child Labor business was opposed to my interests?
15265Did you get that novel for me, Harry?
15265Did you know that he is to be invited to make the principal address to the graduates of the colored high- school?
15265Did you make that pin?
15265Did you see Colonel Cresswell sign this paper?
15265Did you suggest anything?
15265Do crazy folks forget?
15265Do fools like the American people deserve salvation?
15265Do n''t white folks make books?
15265Do n''t you hate the deception?
15265Do n''t you know that Colonel Cresswell will attach our cotton for rent as soon as it touches the warehouse?
15265Do n''t you know that is a wicked, bad habit?
15265Do n''t you know we''re not going to interfere with Colonel Cresswell''s tenants?
15265Do n''t you see,he said angrily,"that that will ruin our plans for the Cotton Combine?"
15265Do n''t_ you_ want to be different?
15265Do they get that-- ten cents an hour?
15265Do you ever tell lies, Zora?
15265Do you go to school?
15265Do you happen to have any whiskey handy?
15265Do you hear the bodies creaking on the limbs? 15265 Do you know how?"
15265Do you know me?
15265Do you know my people? 15265 Do you know no one in town?"
15265Do you live about here?
15265Do you live in Washington?
15265Do you mean it?
15265Do you mean to intimate that Mr. Alwyn''s appointment is held up because he is colored?
15265Do you mean to say he''s actually slated for the place?
15265Do you mean to say that you are going to keep in this school a girl who not only lies and steals but is positively--_immoral_?
15265Do you s''pose mammy''s the witch?
15265Do you stay there now?
15265Do you work for pay?
15265Does he furnish you rations?
15265Does he?
15265Does she think them immodest?
15265Does you own the land?
15265Does you want-- a collection?
15265Does, eh? 15265 Dreams?"
15265Enough to marry me?
15265Even if it hurts me?
15265Except who?
15265First, there''s England-- and all Europe; why not bring them into the trust?
15265For what? 15265 General philanthropy?"
15265Gentleman is asking if you forgits it''s Saturday night, sir?
15265God is the father of all the little babies, ai n''t He, Bles?
15265Goobers?
15265Good white folk?
15265Got my letter?
15265H''m, they''re way behind, are n''t they? 15265 Harry, will you do me a favor?"
15265Hate what?
15265Have I shocked you?
15265Have n''t I a right to have a gun?
15265Have you been in your sitting- room?
15265Have you got the deed?
15265Have you had the civil- service examinations?
15265Have you heard of the Vanderpools?
15265Have you hired a maid?
15265Have you many settlements?
15265Have you never heard of the Golden Fleece, Bles?
15265Have you seen Senator Smith yet?
15265Have you seen the Easterlys?
15265He deserved it, did n''t he?
15265He''s a fair God, ai n''t He?
15265Heavenly Father, was man ever before set to such a task?
15265Helen?
15265Helps folks that they love? 15265 Here you, Jim, take the big mules and drive like-- Where''s that wench?"
15265Hired?
15265How about fighting for exercise?
15265How am I to know this is true?
15265How dare you?
15265How do you do, Miss Smith?
15265How do you mean?
15265How do you spell that?
15265How does_ you_ know He does?
15265How is my sister?
15265How long before the stalks will be ready to cut?
15265How much is that?
15265How much of it?
15265How much-- farther will it drop?
15265How much?
15265How so?
15265How you know?
15265How''s his cotton?
15265How''s the school getting on?
15265How?
15265How?
15265How?
15265I beg pardon, does the Miss Wynn live here who got the prize in the art exhibition?
15265I beg your pardon?
15265I do hope the thing can be managed, but--"What are the difficulties?
15265I do n''t suppose you know any one who is acquainted with any number of these Northern darkies?
15265I hate it, Bles, do n''t you?
15265I mean, what work?
15265I mean, would the Cresswells approve of educating Negroes?
15265I see-- everybody is raising his price, is he? 15265 I suppose my salary would stop?"
15265I suppose you hear from the school?
15265I think they are; but-- well, you know Carrie Wynn better than I do: suppose, now-- suppose he should lose the appointment?
15265I thought it was the lazy, shiftless, and criminal Negroes, you feared?
15265I wonder what I shall make out of her?
15265I''m driving round through the old plantation,he explained;"wo n''t you join me?"
15265I''ve gambled-- before; I''ve gambled on cards and on horses; I''ve gambled-- for money-- and-- women-- but--"But not on cotton, hey? 15265 I-- er-- came; that is, I believe you sent a group to the art exhibit?"
15265I-- er-- meant to ask if Colonel Cresswell, in signing this paper, meant to sign a contract to sell this wench two hundred acres of land?
15265If not I, who?
15265In your dark lives,he cried,"_ who_ is the King of Glory?
15265Inclined to be a little nasty?
15265Indeed? 15265 Indeed?
15265Indeed?
15265Indeed?
15265Is it off?
15265Is it ready, Zora?
15265Is it wrong,asked Zora,"to make believe you likes people when you do n''t, when you''se afeared of them and thinks they may rub off and dirty you?"
15265Is it? 15265 Is it?--is it?"
15265Is it?--is it?
15265Is n''t Bles developing splendidly?
15265Is n''t it so-- anywhere?
15265Is n''t the census building wretched?
15265Is she very sick?
15265Is that all?
15265Is that so?
15265Is that wrong?
15265Is that you, Smith?
15265Is the Congressional business very heavy?
15265Is there any water near?
15265Is there anything in Washington that the South does not already own?
15265Is this a new gag?
15265Is this about this?
15265Is you afeared, honey?
15265Is-- is anything the matter?
15265It is so late and wet and you''re tired tonight-- don''t you think you''d better sleep in your little room?
15265Jim Sykes?
15265Just begun?
15265Just what is your plan?
15265Know dem? 15265 Like it?
15265Look like a fool, do I?
15265Mary, has that Alwyn nigger been here this afternoon?
15265Me? 15265 Mean?
15265Miss Smith''s school?
15265Miss Smith, how much money have you?
15265Miss Smith, is yo''got a speller fo''ten cents?
15265Miss Smith, is yo''got just a drap of coffee to lend me? 15265 Miss Smith, who do you think has been here?"
15265Miss Smith, would Jim do to drive?
15265Miss-- Wynn?
15265Mr. Cresswell would be their local representative?
15265Mr. Taylor, have you any money in this?
15265Mr. Taylor,said the lawyer carelessly,"were you present at this transaction?"
15265Mrs. Grey talked to you much?
15265Must you do as he wants?
15265My God-- it walks-- like my wife-- I tell you-- she held her head so-- who is it?
15265My people?--my people?
15265Never?
15265Never?
15265No,he pressed her,"with your bargain?"
15265No-- well, what can I do for you?
15265No-- what?
15265Now what the devil does this mean?
15265Now, Bles,she began,"since we understand each other, can we not work together as good friends?"
15265Now, about the niggers,the chairman had asked;"how much more boodle do they want?"
15265Now, what do you know,she asked finally,"about Negroes-- about educating them?"
15265Now, what have you got there?
15265Now, what''s his game?
15265Of Colonel Cresswell?
15265Oh, you''ve noted it, too?--his friendship for that impossible girl, Zora?
15265Ought I to tell? 15265 Our success?"
15265Promise you wo n''t tell?
15265Really, now, you do not mean to say that there is a danger of-- of amalgamation, do you?
15265Robert, where is the land Cresswell offers you?
15265Said that, did he?
15265Sam, is it? 15265 Say, Harry, how about that darky, Sykes?"
15265Say,he whispered another time,"do n''t you want to buy these gold spectacles?
15265See those boys over there? 15265 Sell it?
15265She gets a salary, does n''t she?
15265She lives in the swamp-- she''s a kind of witch, I reckon, like-- like--"Like Medea?
15265So''m I,answered the boy, fumbling at his bundle; and then, timidly:"Will you eat with me?"
15265So? 15265 So?
15265Some time you''ll tell me, please, wo n''t you?
15265Something political?
15265Still thinking of going, are you, Sam?
15265Stillings?
15265Stuff?
15265Surely there must be many friends of our race willing to stand for the right and sacrifice for it?
15265Taylor, what does this mean?
15265The Cresswells?
15265The Silver Fleece?
15265The Tolliver place?
15265The brotherhood of man?
15265The snake-- what is he?
15265The world?
15265Then what''s the use of seeing the world?
15265Then why do they go?
15265Then you can leave the place, Zora?
15265Then you care-- for me?
15265Then you lies sometimes, do n''t you?
15265There are so many ahead of me and I am in a hurry to get to my school; but I must see the Senator-- couldn''t I go in with you? 15265 There''s something in it,"he admitted,"but what can we do?
15265They are-- wealthy people?
15265They may accommodate you-- how much would you want?
15265They want us to revive the Farmers''League?
15265This is a great cotton country?
15265Tickets?
15265Tightening up on the tenants?
15265To be sure,she murmured,"but what sort of folks?"
15265Todd asks: Who is Vanderpool, anyhow? 15265 Todd just let fall something of a combination against us in Congress-- know anything of it?"
15265Tolerable, how are you?
15265True; but ca n''t we force them to it?
15265Two hundred acres? 15265 Want to go?"
15265Was n''t what I said true?
15265Was she pretty?
15265Was the child born dead?
15265We wo n''t work any more today, then?
15265We''se both crazy, ai n''t we?
15265We''ve cornered the market all right-- cornered it-- d''ye hear, Cresswell? 15265 We?"
15265Well, I wants to see Mr. Harry very much; could I wait in the back hall?
15265Well, Uncle Jim, why are n''t you at work?
15265Well, Zora, what have you there?
15265Well, all right, if--"Harry, I feel a little-- hysterical, tonight, and-- you will not refuse me, will you, Harry?
15265Well, are you all moved, Aunt Rachel?
15265Well, are you getting things in shape so as to enter school early next year?
15265Well, did he intend so far as you know to sign such a paper?
15265Well, nigger, what are you going to do about it?
15265Well, sir?
15265Well, what do you want?
15265Well, what do you want?
15265Well, what is it?
15265Well, what then?
15265Well, who''d have dreamed it?
15265Well, why do n''t you go to the office?
15265Well,asked Cresswell, maintaining his composure by an effort,"how are things?"
15265Well,shortly,"now for that talk-- ready?"
15265Well?
15265Were they kind to their slaves?
15265What Smith?
15265What about Johnson?
15265What are prospects in March? 15265 What are you going to do with it?"
15265What bargain?
15265What can I do for you?
15265What can I do to help you?
15265What can I do?
15265What can be done with Negroes?
15265What damned mummery is this?
15265What did you disagree about?
15265What do the colored people want, and who can best influence them in this campaign?
15265What do you do?
15265What do you mean?
15265What does Miss Wynn do for a living?
15265What does it amount to a year?
15265What does she intend to do?
15265What else?
15265What for?
15265What for?
15265What for?
15265What is Todd''s bill?
15265What is it?
15265What is it?
15265What is planted over there?
15265What is the matter, Bles?
15265What is the matter, Zora?
15265What is the matter, Zora?
15265What is the world like?
15265What is your plan?
15265What kinds?
15265What of it? 15265 What of it?"
15265What of them?
15265What pin?
15265What shall we offer him?
15265What sort of people are the Cresswells?
15265What the hell are you going to do?
15265What was the trouble?
15265What will you say in your speech?
15265What would the interest be?
15265What would you expect as pay?
15265What would you have? 15265 What you run for?"
15265What!--and no appointment?
15265What''s a shame?
15265What''s over there?
15265What''s that got to do with it?
15265What''s that?
15265What''s that?
15265What''s that?
15265What''s that?
15265What''s that?
15265What''s that?
15265What''s the charge here?
15265What''s the matter, Rob?
15265What''s the matter?
15265What''s the use, Miss Smith-- what opening is there for a-- a nigger with an education?
15265What''s this nigger charged with?
15265What''s this stuff about the Civic Club?
15265What''s this?
15265What''s your name?
15265What-- what did you do?
15265What?
15265What?
15265What?
15265What?
15265When we cry they mock us; they ruin our women and debauch our children-- what shall we do? 15265 When?"
15265Where can we buy them?
15265Where did this come from?
15265Where did you get it?
15265Where did you get these facts?
15265Where does it go?
15265Where does this road come out?
15265Where have you been?
15265Where is it?
15265Where is she now?
15265Where is she?
15265Where is the deed?
15265Where now, Zora?
15265Where shall I put these?
15265Where to, Madame?
15265Where you going?
15265Where''s Zora?
15265Where''s that?
15265Where''s your lawyer?
15265Where''s-- Nell''s?
15265Where?
15265Where?
15265Where?
15265Which would the South prefer-- Todd''s Education Bill, or Alwyn''s appointment?
15265Who is dis what talks of doing the Lord''s work for Him? 15265 Who is he?"
15265Who is he?
15265Who is it, and what do you want?
15265Who is it?
15265Who''ll be the committee?
15265Who''s John Taylor?
15265Who''s a- feared of the dark? 15265 Who''s going to get what''s made on this land?"
15265Who''s going to tend this land?
15265Who''s going to work on the place?
15265Who''s running it?
15265Who''s speaking?
15265Who''s that?
15265Who''s that?
15265Who''s that?
15265Who''s that?
15265Who''s this?
15265Who?
15265Whom?
15265Whose child is this?
15265Whose is that?
15265Whose work is this, Senator?
15265Why did n''t you tell me?
15265Why did you send your exhibit when you knew it was not wanted?
15265Why did you speak so to Miss Taylor?
15265Why do you say these things?
15265Why is it yours?
15265Why not bigger?
15265Why not make a speech on the subject?
15265Why not, then, admit that you draw the color- line?
15265Why not?
15265Why not?
15265Why should it be?
15265Why should n''t people do anything they wants to?
15265Why should we trust him?
15265Why, Aunt Rachel, how are you?
15265Why, Bles, what''s the matter?
15265Why, Zora?
15265Why, certainly,Mrs. Vanderpool agreed, and then curiously:"What?"
15265Why, dangerous?
15265Why, how do you do, Robert?
15265Why, it''s civil- service, is n''t it?
15265Why, one must live; and why not be happy?
15265Why, what''s there?
15265Why, yes--faltered Miss Taylor;"but-- wouldn''t that be difficult?"
15265Why,he said at length,"are n''t you promoting it?"
15265Why,in abrupt recognition,"it is our Venus of the Roadside, is it not?"
15265Why? 15265 Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Will it take long?
15265Will you come to hear me?
15265With his bargain?
15265With that hair?
15265Wo n''t you come in?
15265Wo n''t you try?
15265Work? 15265 Would Bles care if I told?"
15265Would it not be worth a fight?
15265Yes, but ought you to tell them?
15265Yes, this is it-- good- bye-- I must--"Wait-- what is your name?
15265Yes-- but back of it all, what is it really? 15265 Yes?"
15265You are a stranger?
15265You are interested in bronzes?
15265You are worse, father?
15265You can depend on Taylor, of course?
15265You do n''t mean that any one can advise a black man to vote the Democratic ticket?
15265You had quite forgotten what you were waiting for-- isn''t that so, Sis?
15265You know the Cresswells, then?
15265You know the people pretty well, then?
15265You mean it will stand in law?
15265You mean the Smiths of Boston?
15265You mean you can pay what we ask?
15265You mean youse gwine to git yo''livin''off it?
15265You remember our visit to Senator Smith?
15265You wished to see-- Caroline Wynn?
15265You would not like me to act dishonestly, would you?
15265You''d let a nigger vote?
15265You''ve found some things worth knowing in this world, have n''t you, Zora?
15265Zora,he said,"sometimes you tell lies, do n''t you?"
15265Zora,she faltered,"will you leave me?"
15265Zora,she presently broke into the girl''s absorption,"how would you like to be Ambassador to France?"
15265Zora,she said evenly,"why did n''t you come to class when I called?"
15265Zora--he gasped,"how-- how did you do it?"
15265Zora? 15265 Zora?"
15265_ The_ problem, you mean?
15265A horror crept over Mary Cresswell: where had she lived that she had seen so little before?
15265After all why should he care?
15265After all, he kept saying to himself, what guarantee, what knowledge had he that this was not a"damned Yankee trick"?
15265After all, which was worse-- a Cresswell or an Alwyn?
15265After all, why should n''t it be?
15265Ai n''t that all?"
15265Always before she had been veiled from these folk: who had put the veil there?
15265Alwyn?"
15265Alwyn?"
15265And Bles-- was Miss Taylor deceived?--or was he chuckling?
15265And Carrie Wynn-- poor Carrie, with her pride and position dragged down in his ruin: how would she take it?
15265And how much have you paid a year?"
15265And if it were?
15265And suppose I had?"
15265And then, brightening, he asked gayly:"And we''ll be friends always, wo n''t we?"
15265And who could furnish that illumination better than Zora, the calm, methodical Zora, who knew them so well?
15265And why are you afraid for her?"
15265And why not?"
15265And yet, once in the hands of these past- masters of debt- manipulation, would her school be safe?
15265And yet, why should she hesitate?
15265And you graduated, I suppose, and all that?"
15265And, Sam, ca n''t you find us a sandwich and something cool?
15265Anything on?"
15265Are you blind?
15265Are you dumb?
15265Are you willing to try?"
15265Are you?"
15265As the black porter passed her she said gently:"Is smoking allowed in here?"
15265As the two white riders approached the buggy one said to the other:"Who''s that nigger with?"
15265At any rate, who was better?
15265At last, however, she said happily to Zora:"Well, the battle''s over, is n''t it?"
15265Aye, face it boldly-- what?
15265Bles, where was he?
15265But Bles asked coldly:"Why did n''t you have him arrested?"
15265But before?"
15265But could she do it?
15265But could she live?
15265But did he desire her as a wife?
15265But do you know I like the girl?
15265But do you know that we''re encountering opposition from the most unexpected source?"
15265But how about the Smith School?
15265But how had it been saved?
15265But if she talked again of mere men would these devotees listen?
15265But if she went there what would she see and do, and would it be possible to become such a woman as Miss Smith pictured?
15265But if she were especially invited?
15265But it does n''t, does it?"
15265But these are not my children, they are the children of Negroes; we ca n''t quite forget that, can we?"
15265But to Miss Taylor:"I beg pardon-- er-- Miss Smith?"
15265But what did I say so funny?"
15265But what does it matter?
15265But what of that?
15265But who?
15265But why lonely?
15265But would she make a satisfactory maid?
15265But, pshaw!--he poured himself a glass of brandy-- was he not rich and young?
15265By the way, what did that letter say about a''sister''?"
15265Ca n''t we keep wages where we like by threatening to bring in nigger labor?"
15265Can you be ready by eleven?"
15265Child?
15265Could it be possible that all unconsciously she had dared dream a forbidden dream?
15265Could it be that this Negro had dared to misunderstand her-- had presumed?
15265Could she be brought back to a useful life?
15265Cresswell?"
15265Cresswell?"
15265Cresswell?"
15265Did God ask that, too?
15265Did John think she had nothing else to do?
15265Did colored people attend the ball?
15265Did he know of the mortgage, too?
15265Did he understand?
15265Did n''t you see her while she was here?
15265Did she intend to exhibit?
15265Did she want him to find her?
15265Did you notice how unhealthy the children looked?
15265Do n''t they ever get there?"
15265Do n''t we own the mill?
15265Do n''t you remember those fine bales of cotton that came out of there several seasons ago?"
15265Do n''t you see the two schemes ca n''t mix?
15265Do n''t you see you''re planning to cut off your noses?
15265Do n''t you want to come up and help me look?"
15265Do you dance and laugh, and hear and see not?
15265Do you expect to buy that land for five dollars an acre?"
15265Do you know the man that stands ready to gobble up every inch of cotton land in this country at a price which no trust can hope to rival?"
15265Do you know-- I''ve wondered if-- quite unconciously, it is you?
15265Do you think the plantation system can be maintained without laborers?
15265Does n''t Cresswell know this?"
15265Does one"appeal"to the red- eyed beast that throttles him?
15265Dr. Boldish, naturally the appointed spokesman, looked helplessly about and whispered to Mrs. Vanderpool:"What on earth shall I talk about?"
15265Ever met him?"
15265Faith without works is dead; who is you that dares to set and wait for the Lord to do your work?"
15265Fight?
15265Find out for us just what this revolt is, how far it goes, and what good men we can get to swing the darkies into line-- see?"
15265From the other side the words came distinctly and clearly:"--other children, doctor?"
15265From these Southerners?"
15265Glad?
15265Had Mrs. Stillings heard of the new art movement?
15265Had Zora thought of them?
15265Had he dreamed?
15265Had he seen a haunt?
15265Had it been real?
15265Had she herself hung it before her soul, or had they hidden timidly behind its other side?
15265Had she met this stately ceremony with enough breeding to show that she too was somebody?
15265Had you heard?"
15265Harry Cresswell laid his hand on his father''s arm and said quietly:"And where do we come in?"
15265Harry Cresswell was not a bad man-- are there any bad men?
15265Has John written you?"
15265Have I got a little of the year''s wage coming to me?"
15265Have I made my clothes and food?
15265Have I paid my old debts to you?
15265Have you a young man named Alwyn on your eligible list?
15265Have you seen this?"
15265He bent to her fiercely:"Who?"
15265He frowned as he noted the footprints pointing to Elspeth''s-- what did Mary Taylor want there?
15265He had not thought that white people had such troubles; yet, he reflected, why not?
15265He leaned against his hoe and talked half dreamily-- where had he learned so well that dream- talk?
15265He watched her silently, till, waking from her daydream, she abruptly asked:"Where you from?"
15265Helen regarded her brother through her veiling lashes: what meant this sudden assumption of warmth and amiability?
15265Her heart answered back:"What is impossible to youth and resolution?"
15265Her little hands groped and wandered over his close- curled hair, and she sobbed, deep voiced:"Will you-- marry me, Bles?"
15265His voice came slow and firm:"Emma?
15265Hit''s hot, ai n''t it?
15265How could she find out?
15265How dares the black puppy to ignore a Cresswell on the highway?
15265How goes the great battle for black men''s rights?
15265How is she, and where?"
15265How is you?"
15265How large is your place?"
15265How much had Mrs. Cresswell ever known of Zora?
15265How much?
15265I do n''t like work-- do you?"
15265I found''em and I dassen''t sell''em open, see?
15265I hope John''s well?"
15265I said:"''Judge, a friend is expecting me at two,''it was then half- past one,''would I not best telephone?''"
15265I wanted to go in the trap-- take me?"
15265I was so afraid he would miss it and think that Right did n''t win in Life, that I wrote him--""You wrote him?
15265I wonder if I''m selling my birthright for six thousand dollars?"
15265I''d marry Carrie-- but how can I help you?"
15265I''ll put stuff into him that''ll make him wave the bloody shirt at the next meeting of the Bethel Literary-- see?
15265If his intense belief happened to be popular, all right; but if not?
15265If it failed, would not they fail?
15265If she was not careful--"But what is it you want?"
15265If the former, how far could they trust him; if the latter, what was his game?
15265If this went on, the day would surely come when Negroes felt no respect or fear whatever for whites?
15265If, now, you could drop a word here and there--""But why should I?"
15265In that time what had happened?
15265In the parlor and have the servants astounded and talking?
15265In town?"
15265In vain her shrewd New England reason asked:"What can a half- taught black girl do in this wilderness?"
15265Is it fair-- to the children?"
15265Is it fair?
15265Is it yo''s?"
15265Is it you, little wife, come back to accuse me?
15265Is n''t that your idea, Miss Smith?"
15265Is that an excuse for saying it?"
15265Is that woman''s brother going to spend this money?
15265Is that you, Mr. Cole?
15265It might rain only an hour or so, but, suppose it should rain a day-- two days-- a week?
15265It occurred to her that she had heard that name before-- but where?
15265It seemed to her that every breeze and branch was instinct with sympathy, and murmuring,"What''s the use?"
15265It was all right, and yet why so suddenly had the threads of life let go?
15265Mary?"
15265Mr. Cresswell says they own almost no land here; think of it?
15265Mrs. Vanderpool was right: culture and-- some masses, at least-- were not to be linked; and, too, culture and work-- were they incompatible?
15265Must I study five years?"
15265Must she live?
15265My father writes me that they are showing signs of expecting money right off-- is that true?
15265New York?"
15265No spontaneity either-- rather languid, did you notice?
15265Nothing?
15265Now here,_ every_thing seems to be happening; but what is it that is happening?"
15265Now, I wonder where they got the music?
15265Now, have n''t you a girl about here who would do?"
15265Now, if I get the job, how would you like to be my assistant?"
15265On the porch and have Mr. Maxwell ride up?
15265Or had it been some witch- vision of the night, come to tempt and lure him to his undoing?
15265Or was it simply a brute fact, regardless of both of them?
15265Or was the elf- girl real?
15265Or, was he happy?
15265Our?--was_ our_ right?
15265Perhaps a mortgage on the strength of the endowment?
15265See?
15265Senator Smith regarded him again: was Cresswell playing a shrewd game?
15265Shall I make him an enemy?
15265Shall I resign and beg, or go tilting at windmills?
15265Shall I try in addition to reform?
15265She answered dully, groping for words, for she was tired:"Who is it?"
15265She continued after a pause:"May I venture to ask a favor of you?"
15265She did not expect this, but she asked the porter:"Do you know where I can get a lunch?"
15265She dreamed and sang over that dark field, and again and again appealed to him:"S''pose it should n''t come up after all?"
15265She felt impelled to go forward and ask-- what?
15265She had thought of him as a boy-- an old student, a sort of confidential servant; but what had he thought?
15265She held her burning head-- was not everything plain?
15265She helped herself to a chocolate and called out musically:"Pa, are you going to town today?"
15265She must be sent to boarding- school, somewhere far away; but the money?
15265She must offer this unsullied soul up unto God in mighty atonement-- but how?
15265She rang the bell, asking the trim black maid:"Is there a person named Caroline Wynn living in this house?"
15265She seemed to feel rather than hear his presence, and she inquired softly:"Who''s it, Bles?"
15265She smiled and said sweetly,"Wo n''t you sit?"
15265She tried to think it out: what could have happened?
15265She was thinking rapidly-- Was this the Way?
15265She wondered how she had done her part-- had she been too eager and school- girlish?
15265She''ll be reasonable, wo n''t she, and placate the Cresswells?...
15265She''s planning to call some day-- shall you be at home?"
15265Should he be one?
15265Somewhat to Miss Taylor''s surprise Miss Smith said nothing until they were parting for the night, then she asked:"Was Miss Cresswell at home?"
15265Successful?
15265Suppose Mr. Alwyn should take this occasion to make a thorough defence of the party?"
15265Suppose he asked Caroline Wynn to help him in this case?
15265Suppose such a conjunction should come to pass?
15265Teerswell nodded and said:"Well, what do you think of last night?"
15265That''s the way it is now, see?
15265The Negroes are not, then, very efficient?"
15265The Silver Fleece, how was it?
15265The Sun, the Swamp?
15265The World, the great mysterious World, that stretched beyond the swamp and into which Bles and the Silver Fleece had gone-- did it lead to the Way?
15265The lagoon had been level with the dykes a week ago; and now?
15265The swamp, the eternal swamp, had been drained in its deepest fastness; but, how?--how?
15265The teacher in Miss Taylor strove to rebuke this unconventional greeting but the woman in her spoke first and asked almost before she knew it--"Why?"
15265The way where?"
15265Then Mary Taylor, whose conscience was uncomfortable, said:"But, Mr. Cresswell, you surely believe in schools like Miss Smith''s?"
15265Then Miss Taylor said, absently:"Zora, what do you propose to do when you grow up?"
15265Then after a pause:"When will you go, Zora?"
15265Then faint and fainter whisperings: what could be worse than death?
15265Then he said:"Colonel Cresswell, who drew this contract of sale?"
15265Then in sudden fury,"Ye generation of vipers-- who kin save you?"
15265Then she said dreamily:"We''se known us all our lives, and-- before, ai n''t we?"
15265Then there was Zora; what had she said and hinted to Mary?
15265Then what?
15265Then with a puzzled look:"I wonder why?"
15265They ca n''t concentrate; notice how some slept when Dr. Boldish was speaking?
15265Treat Alwyn well and call on Miss Wynn as usual-- see?"
15265Used to be one of our servants-- you remember?
15265Usually, while he played at loving, women grovelled; for was he not a Cresswell?
15265Was Cresswell back of Taylor?
15265Was Death the Way-- the wide, dark Way?
15265Was Elspeth now at peace?
15265Was it all straight, or did the whole move conceal a trick?
15265Was it not a rather dangerous experiment?
15265Was it not the King''s Highway?
15265Was it possible that the price of Alwyn''s manhood would be her husband''s appointment to Paris?
15265Was not everything clear?
15265Was there a change, sudden, cataclysmic?
15265Was there, after all, some"nigger- loving"conspiracy back of the cotton combine?
15265Was this rain beating down and back her love for him, or had she never loved?
15265Was this--"Nell''s"?
15265We''ll get this committee which Taylor suggests appointed, and send it on a junket to Alabama; you do the rest-- see?"
15265We''ll put the cotton inspection bill through in the last days of the session-- see?
15265Well, I''m going to give you some money-- do you know why?"
15265Well, why has he no appointment?
15265What a world it was, and after all how far was this black boy wrong?
15265What did he care?
15265What did he ever do?
15265What did she think?
15265What do you propose?"
15265What does de good Book say?
15265What does it look like?"
15265What else could she have dreamed?
15265What for?"
15265What good will it do?"
15265What had happened?
15265What had happened?
15265What kind of a woman was Zora now?
15265What must he pay for success?
15265What new force was he loosening against his black folk-- his own black folk, who had lived about him and his fathers nigh three hundred years?
15265What of the morning?
15265What school?"
15265What should she do?
15265What time?"
15265What was Washington, and what was this fine, tall, quiet residence?
15265What was he to her?
15265What was she doing?
15265What was the use of trying for anything?
15265What was"Nell''s"?
15265What would Elspeth do?
15265What would happen to her?
15265What would they say if he failed to get the office?
15265What''s a maid?"
15265What''s your name?"
15265What?
15265When shall I begin?"
15265Where can we get land, with Cresswell owning every inch and bound to destroy us?"
15265Where had Mrs. Cresswell seen her before?
15265Where had she known him?
15265Where is it?
15265Where should she receive him?
15265Where was that black and flaming cabin?
15265Where was the girl-- the soul that had called him?
15265Where was the poor spoiled woman?
15265Where was the use of imagining?
15265Where was"Nell''s"?
15265Where, Zora?
15265Where, and what mark?"
15265Who ever heer''d of such working land on shares?"
15265Who had rushed the news to this woman?
15265Who was caring for her, and what was she doing?
15265Who was doing it?
15265Who was he to falter when she called?
15265Who was he to stand and judge this unselfish woman?
15265Who was putting her to bed and smoothing the pillow?
15265Who would win-- the witch, or Jason?
15265Who''s responsible?"
15265Who, then, should be nominated?
15265Whom do you think that''s for?"
15265Why had he not known?
15265Why had he not stood his ground?
15265Why had it not occurred to her before in her blindness?
15265Why had neither Mary nor John Taylor mentioned this?
15265Why had she asked for her?
15265Why had she asked for this girl?
15265Why had she not bound him to her?
15265Why had they not let her see the child-- just one look at its little dead face?
15265Why had they stolen from her?
15265Why is you trying to make dis ole world better?
15265Why not go back to the South where she had gone?
15265Why not go see him?
15265Why not send Zora?
15265Why not take this young man in hand and make a Negro leader of him-- a protagonist of ten millions?
15265Why not?
15265Why should he be elbowed into the roadside dust by an insolent bully?
15265Why should he not be as other men?
15265Why should he pose as better than his fellows?
15265Why should not he go back, too?
15265Why should we who have sacrifice the substance for the shadow?"
15265Why should you spoil this black girl and put impossible ideas into her head?
15265Why was it?
15265Why was she drifting in vast waters; in uncharted wastes of sea?
15265Why was she restless and vaguely ill at ease so often these days?
15265Why were her eyes wet today and her mind on the Silver Fleece?
15265Why worry with more?"
15265Why, are you daft?
15265Why?
15265Why?
15265Will you go South with Mr. Cresswell?
15265Will you go?"
15265Will you hear?
15265Will you marry me?"
15265Wo n''t you take a stand on some of these progressive matters-- this bill, or the Child Labor movement, or Low Tariff legislation?"
15265Would Rob become a tenant when she asked?
15265Would Uncle Isaac help her build a log home?
15265Would Zora make one or would this blow send her to perdition?
15265Would he be amenable to her training and become worldly wise?
15265Would not comradeship on the basis of the new friendship which she insisted on, be the death of love and thoughts of love?
15265Would she go?
15265Would she, could she, lay aside her pride and cynicism, her dainty ways and little extravagances?
15265Would the boys help her some time to clear some swamp land?
15265Would they fall?
15265Would this woman recognize that fact and respect him accordingly?
15265Would you like it?"
15265Yes-- how about Mrs. Grey''s education schemes?...
15265Yes?"
15265Yet how should she do it?
15265You can wheel the planters into line-- will you do it?"
15265You do n''t really expect to keep the darkies down forever, do you?"
15265You never had a witch for a mammy-- did you?"
15265You remember that day when Mr. Easterly called?"
15265You see?
15265You surely remember that awful scarlet dress?
15265_ Eleven_ THE FLOWERING OF THE FLEECE"Zora,"observed Miss Smith,"it''s a great blessing not to need spectacles, is n''t it?"
15265_ Thirty- one_ A PARTING OF WAYS"Was the child born dead?"
15265bang!_"Who''s that?"
15265do n''t you love to be frank and open?"
15265inwardly commented Miss Taylor--"literally born in cotton, and-- Oh, well,"as much as to ask,"What''s the use?"
15265it is n''t as bad as that all over the world, is it?"
15265now where is that paper?"
15265on Saturday?"
15265vaguely--"dreams?
15265was not all her life simply the want of him?--why had she not bound him to her when he had offered himself?
15265where do you teach?"
15265where is she?
28314''And can you make such a ship?''
28314''And how can I do that?''
28314''And what besides?''
28314''Are you mad?''
28314''Are you warm, maiden?''
28314''Are you warm, maiden?''
28314''Bread?
28314''But how did you get those splendid cattle?''
28314''But how in the world,''he added,''am I to collect all the wolves of the kingdom on to that hill over there?''
28314''But what am I to give you, old Witch; for surely you are not going to do this for nothing?''
28314''But where is he to find the Witch- maiden?''
28314''But why did you come up to us again?''
28314''Ca n''t you see that my hands and feet are nearly frozen?''
28314''Can I get a place here as servant in the castle?''
28314''Can I survive my misfortunes?''
28314''Can he conjure up the Devil?''
28314''Could you not protect me?''
28314''Did n''t I kill him?
28314''Did you pay attention to everything?''
28314''Do n''t you hear?''
28314''Do n''t you think that a desperate errand?''
28314''Do you call that enough?''
28314''Do you hear?
28314''Do you mean to say there is no straw in the village?''
28314''Do you really believe that it was just for the pleasure of talking that I gave you the advice you have neglected so abominably?''
28314''Do you see that great tree there?''
28314''Do you think I should also get some cattle if I went to the bottom of the river?''
28314''Do you think we have money by the bushel?''
28314''Do you think,''the Prince Gnome was saying,''do you think that I would not break my chains if I could?
28314''Fellow, what are you puffing at up there?''
28314''Good woman,''he said to her,''can you not show me the way out of the wood?''
28314''Have n''t I drowned you?''
28314''Have you a passport?''
28314''Have you come to take me?''
28314''Have you got the tinder- box also?''
28314''Have you nothing to say about it?''
28314''Have you quite forgotten me?''
28314''How can one get to see her?''
28314''How comes this?''
28314''How do you like them?''
28314''I hope that this, at least, is not real?''
28314''I must fly away to warmer lands: will you come with me?
28314''Is anybody up there?''
28314''Is it not a beautiful piece of cloth?''
28314''Is that all?''
28314''Is that all?''
28314''Is that what vexes you?''
28314''Is the woman out of her mind?''
28314''May I be allowed to ask if you are gold?''
28314''No doubt you are a diamond?''
28314''Now what can he want with it?''
28314''Oh,''said he,''why is faithlessness so great in the world?''
28314''Shall I sing once more for the Emperor?''
28314''Stop,''cried Martin;''where are you dragging that poor cat?''
28314''Surely for a hundred florins you''ll sell it?''
28314''The Blue Mountains?''
28314''Then why in the world are you going?''
28314''Through the wood?''
28314''We know who is going to have soup and pancakes; we know who is going to have porridge and sausages-- isn''t it interesting?''
28314''Well, maiden,''he snapped out,''do you know who I am?
28314''Well, my good old dame, what can I do for you?''
28314''Well, now, where did you get all this money?''
28314''Well, there''s a whole lake in front of you; why do n''t you drink some of that?''
28314''Well, what does he say?''
28314''Were they of noble birth, then?''
28314''What are you in need of, or what has sent you here?''
28314''What are you thinking of, my son?''
28314''What can that commotion be by the pigsties?''
28314''What do you say?''
28314''What does he say now?''
28314''What does he say?''
28314''What does this mean?''
28314''What harm has the poor beast done?''
28314''What has a bird, in spite of all his singing, in the winter- time?
28314''What have you found now?''
28314''What is that?''
28314''What is that?''
28314''What is that?''
28314''What is that?''
28314''What is the condition?''
28314''What is there odd about it?''
28314''What shall I do down there?''
28314''What sort of a riddle is it?''
28314''What sort of wood is it, then?''
28314''What was the child''s name?''
28314''What will you take for the pot?''
28314''What would be the good of my taking a near shot?''
28314''What would become of a dolt like you?''
28314''What''s the meaning of this?''
28314''What''s this?''
28314''What''s this?''
28314''Where am I to look for them, then?''
28314''Where are you off to?
28314''Where are your brothers?''
28314''Where can I be coming now?''
28314''Where did you come from, my lad?''
28314''Where did you get so much money from?''
28314''Where else should I be going,''he said,''than through the wood?''
28314''Where have you come from, then?''
28314''Who can not escape you?''
28314''Who is it, and how did you get it?''
28314''Who knows who this girl is?''
28314''Who knows?''
28314''Who told you to do that?''
28314''Who''s there?''
28314''Whom do you take me for?''
28314''Why are you lying there?
28314''Why are you standing there looking so sad?''
28314''Why can not you marry someone in your own rank?
28314''Why not?''
28314''Why not?''
28314''Will the youth have the sense not to let himself be caught in her toils?''
28314''Will you help me to hold him?''
28314''With the crow?
28314''You will take care of the cattle, wo n''t you?''
28314211_ The Sun- hero guards the Apples of the Sun_ 214''_ Who''s there_?''
28314A voice came from within and asked her,''Where do you come from, and where do you want to go?''
28314Again, if there are really no fairies, why do people believe in them, all over the world?
28314All his colour had disappeared; whether this had happened on his travels or whether it was the result of trouble, who can say?
28314All round it were little bells, and when the pot boiled they jingled most beautifully and played the old tune--''Where is Augustus dear?
28314Am I not fit to be Emperor?
28314Am I stupid?
28314And going where this pathway goes, You too, at last, may find, who knows?
28314And he went into his kingdom and shut the door in her face, and she had to stay outside singing--''Where''s my Augustus dear?
28314And how had all this been done?
28314And immediately he knew her again, and said:''Do you remember how I told you that day that you would betray me?
28314And the witch returned to see how the children were getting on; and she crept up to the window, and whispered:''Are you weaving, my little dear?''
28314Are you come to visit our king?''
28314Are you going to send that, too, to the Princess?''
28314Are you still warm, little love?''
28314Are you warm, you beautiful girl?''
28314At last she said to the King that he ought to ask his daughter whether she would not like to have another husband instead of the Crab?
28314But she had only gone a few steps when the bells rang out so prettily--''Where is Augustus dear?
28314But the witch answered,''My dear husband, what do you mean?
28314But what shall I give you as a reward to begin with?''
28314But where was it to be found?
28314Can I be not fit for my office?
28314Can I be of any help to you, and thus repay your great kindness to me?''
28314Can I be of any help to you?
28314Can I not manage to see her somehow?
28314Do n''t you know what is known throughout all the country side?''
28314Do you think she will see that young man sitting under the tree?''
28314Do you think you can undertake this?''
28314For who can fetch them?
28314He awoke instantly, and the first word he said was,''Have you seen her?''
28314He collected a heap of gold, but at last he thought to himself,''What good is all my gold to me if I stay at home?
28314He opened the big gate leading into the courtyard, and was just going to walk in, when seven dragons rushed on him and asked him what he wanted?
28314He said to him,''Will you be my servant and travel with me?''
28314He stopped the Prince and asked him in a harsh voice:''Are you the man who has just fed my body- guard?''
28314He turned once more to the two brothers and said,''His diabolical magic has helped him again, but now what third task shall we set him to do?
28314How can I reward you?''
28314How shall we travel about together without being odious the one to the other?''
28314How was he ever to appear before her with this tale?
28314In a few minutes King Frost came past, and, looking at the girl, he said:[ Illustration:"Maiden are you Warm?"]
28314In a minute the grateful fish swam towards the bank on which Iwanich was standing, and said:''What do you command, my friend and benefactor?''
28314In a moment the bird swooped down beside him and asked:''What do you wish me to do?''
28314Is it in your family?''
28314Is it you?''
28314Is n''t that true?''
28314Is there such a bird in my empire, and so near as in my garden?
28314It kept coming nearer and growing bigger, and what was this after all but the Eagle?
28314Must I take this order to my poor son?''
28314No sooner had he done so than the wounded Giant limped up to him and whispered softly,''Herd- boy, where are you?''
28314Now it was certainly a little audacious of him to venture to say to the Emperor''s daughter,''Will you marry me?''
28314Now tell me, O King, plump and plain, will you give your daughter to my son as wife?''
28314Now the poor old woman was mortally afraid and, in a trembling voice she asked:''Is that really your royal will, O King?
28314Now, if_ you_ had been the Prince, would you not rather have stayed with the pretty witch- maiden?
28314One of them said to the others,''If we are caught, we shall be hanged on the gallows; how shall we set about it?''
28314Overcome with pity, Martin spoke to the butchers, saying:''Friends, why are you beating the poor dog so cruelly?''
28314People would like to have heard it again, but the Emperor thought that the living Nightingale should sing now-- but where was she?
28314Shall we go and see how it is she does it?''
28314Shall we not seek our own pleasures, and forget the little one?''
28314She asked him,''Why have you come here?''
28314So one day she went to an old Witch and said to her:''I should so much like to have a tiny, little child; can you tell me where I can get one?''
28314So they stroked her, and fed her with ham, and said to her:''Pussy, grey pussy, tell us how we are to get away from the witch?''
28314Suddenly a little old woman appeared before her, holding an apple in her hand, and said,''Why do you weep, my Queen, and what makes you so unhappy?''
28314The Dragon made a face, and growled again three times,''Hum, hum, hum,''and said to the third,''Do you know what your wineglass shall be?''
28314The Dragon was much annoyed, and hummed and hawed a good deal, and asked the second,''But what shall be your spoon?''
28314The King asked,''Who are you?
28314The Prince asked him,''Do you not know where the Dragon lives who keeps the daughter of the Flower Queen prisoner?''
28314The Prince then forced himself to ask,''What is your name?''
28314The Serpent glided over the clothes which were spread for him, came to the Lake, and asked it who had strewed those soft things on the path?
28314The first word he said to the lad was,''Have you seen her?''
28314The giants came up, and the first pushed him with his foot, and said,''What sort of an earthworm is that?''
28314The master said to him,''Hunter, what are you aiming at?''
28314The next morning, when the King awoke, what do you think he saw?
28314The one was saying to the other as the weary youth lay down,''Is there anything the least wonderful or remarkable about this neighbourhood?''
28314The other said,''Do you see that large cornfield there?
28314The witch asked,''Countryman, who are you, and what is your business?''
28314The wounded Giant remained behind to the last and called out,''Herd- boy, where are you?''
28314The youth pretended to have forgotten what to do, and asked what finger he must put the ring on so that no sharp weapon could hurt him?
28314Then her mother flew into a passion, gave her a box on the ear, and cried out,''Does not even that prince please you, you fool?''
28314Then she grew frightened, and thought,''What can a young lassie do with an iron stove?''
28314Then the little sister cried and said,''Can you not be freed?''
28314There were hundreds of princesses who would gladly have said''Yes,''but would she say the same?
28314They all say she is very pretty, but what''s the use of that if she has to sit for ever in the great copper castle with all the towers?
28314They called to her and said''Who are you?''
28314They said at last,''What use was it our deserting?
28314This only happens once in two years, so you will let me go out?''
28314Was the sleep he had last night not enough for him?
28314Waska, being very agile, climbed up by the outside to the grated window, and called in an anxious voice:''Are you alive, master?''
28314Waska, my faithful little cat, is that you?''
28314What are you doing up that tree?''
28314What are you thinking about all alone by yourself?
28314What can it mean?''
28314What do you intend to be?''
28314What does he look like?''
28314What punishment shall be dealt to her?''
28314What shall I do with them?''
28314What was to be done now?
28314What will become of me?
28314When Martin got home, his mother met him with the question:''Well, what have you bought?''
28314When he had eaten and drunk as much as he could he thought to himself,''Why should n''t I put a loaf of bread in my pocket?
28314When he handed his mother the comb that his aunt had given him, she was much amazed and asked him,''But how did you manage to get back so quickly?''
28314When he reached his home his mother greeted him with the question:''Well, what have you brought back?''
28314When she came home the Mouse asked,''What was this child called?''
28314Where are you carrying that straw to?''
28314Where do you live?''
28314Where have you been all these years?''
28314Where is my tinder- box?''
28314Where is the harm?
28314Whither are you going?''
28314Who knows if, after all, help may not be sent to you?''
28314Who knows that_ he_ is n''t in there still?''
28314Who knows where she may be, and what fairy may have her in his keeping?
28314Who will buy skins?''
28314Who will buy skins?''
28314Why did you not scratch their eyes out?''
28314Why has no one ever said anything to me about it?''
28314Will you not give her a glass of mead?
28314Will you stay here with me till that time is over?''
28314Would you like to have the most beautiful woman in the world for your wife?''
28314Would you not like to bathe in it, fair Queen?''
28314You can speak, can you, you ridiculous crab?''
28314You must get it away from her at whatever cost; do you hear?
28314You stole my most precious jewel from me, and do you expect to live happily as the King''s son- in- law?
28314[ Illustration: The Irishman Arives at the Blue Mountains]''Where are you going to?''
28314[ Illustration: The Soldier Fills his Knapsack with Money]''What do you want to do with the tinder- box?''
28314[ Illustration: The Young Man Gives the Donkeys to the Miller] The miller replied,''Why not?
28314[ Illustration: Who''s There?]
28314are those the great people?''
28314he called out,''what are you doing down there?''
28314he cried to him,''what are you seeking?''
28314he cried;''shall I never see my lovely Princess again?
28314he cried;''what am I to do now?
28314he exclaimed;''what is to be done?
28314he shouted to him,''what are you aiming at?
28314he shouted to him,''why are you carrying wood through a forest?''
28314he sighed;''what in the world shall I do?
28314how could you help me?
28314replied Blockhead- Hans;''then can I roast a crow with them?''
28314said his brothers,''what are you going to do with it?''
28314said the King,''seeing they are so dangerous, and no one has ever yet ventured to go against them?''
28314said the Princess;''but have you anything you can roast them in?
28314said the Princess;''but where shall we get the soup from?''
28314said the blower,''we are prisoners?
28314said the old man;''and what are they doing there?''
28314the rainy day was close at hand, for their meal was all consumed, and who is prepared to face starvation with two hundred florins at their disposal?
28314thought he,''can I be stupid?
28314what am I coming to?''
28314what are you doing, hopping on one leg?''
28314what have you got in your sack?''
28314what have you to do with it?
28314where are you going?''
34162( Vienna, 1878), and"Quid faciamus nos?"
34162Der Gott, der Eisen wachsen liess_, and_ Was blasen die Trompeten?_ were on all lips.
34162Does not your Grace hear the news from Stirling about the liturgy?"
34162The elector, when appealed to for protection, could but answer,"Que faire?
34162The first point for consideration, therefore, is, what is the ultimate, and what is the proximate, authority supervising the administration?
34162echoed Arnauld,"when you have all eternity to rest in?"
2231A soldier boy?
2231Abner is your second?
2231All your millions of Socialists, what were they up to? 2231 Am I very like her?"
2231And if he ca n''t?
2231And suppose we do?
2231And then did your feelings towards him change suddenly?
2231And they are with you now?
2231And this new journal of his?
2231And those that have gone before?
2231And were there any children?
2231And you do n''t forget our compact, do you?
2231And you,she asked,"did you think it had the Stevensonian touch?"
2231Are they going to make room for him in the Cabinet? 2231 Are they yours?"
2231Are you going to take up socialism?
2231Are you never coming again?
2231Are you on the stage?
2231Are you sure it is?
2231Are you thinking of taking it?
2231Are you two concluding a bargain?
2231Are you, too, a Christian?
2231At my thinking you beautiful?
2231But I may lend it?
2231But are you sure it''s your particular duty?
2231But ca n''t you see yourself, you wicked child, without stripping yourself as naked as you were born?
2231But could n''t you have done anything to stop it?
2231But do not all our Isms work towards that end?
2231But he''s quite common, is n''t he?
2231But surely you do n''t believe it?
2231But was n''t that the Lord''s idea,he said;"when He gave Eve to Adam to be his helpmeet?"
2231But what about Old Mother Nature? 2231 But what''s his object?"
2231But where are your clothes?
2231But why should n''t the good newspaper proprietor hurry up and become a multi- proprietor?
2231But why should you give up your art?
2231But you have n''t married her-- or have you?
2231But you still loved her, did n''t you, Dad?
2231But you''re surely not suggesting any other kind of Press, at this period of the world''s history?
2231Ca n''t you reconcile it to yourself-- to go on with your work of mercy, of saving poor folks''lives?
2231Can you see him bustling up?
2231Come up to my rooms, will you?
2231Could I, as a child, have known an old clergyman?
2231Could n''t marry him I suppose?
2231Could n''t we go somewhere and dine under a tree?
2231Could n''t you have saved a bit, Daddy?
2231Dad,she cried,"are you here?"
2231Did I laugh?
2231Did he send you?
2231Did he, Carlyle, ever come to this church?
2231Did n''t she wish it?
2231Did n''t you love him?
2231Did no other voice speak to you?
2231Did you ever see her act?
2231Did you ever see her again, after her marriage?
2231Did you ever try, Dad?
2231Did you give it her?
2231Did you have a good house?
2231Did you talk it over with her?
2231Do I pose?
2231Do n''t you see it for yourself?
2231Do the women really crush their feet?
2231Do you mind, Dad, if we go straight back?
2231Do you mind?
2231Do you really think she''ll get over it?
2231Do you still go to the chapel?
2231Do you suffer from gout? 2231 Do you think it''s all true?"
2231Do you think you will go on doing it?
2231Does it matter what we call it?
2231Does n''t agree with you?
2231Does she know about Richmond Park-- and the other places?
2231Does suffering entitle a man to be regarded as divine? 2231 Enough for the two of them?"
2231Ever spent a day at the Home for Destitute Gentlewomen at East Sheen?
2231Has Mam''selle ever seen a bull fight?
2231Have I got to pass all this crowd, I wonder?
2231Have you got any?
2231Have you heard from Arthur?
2231Have you heard him?
2231Have you known Mary Stopperton long?
2231Have you seen her?
2231Have you thanked Miss Lessing for a pleasant evening?
2231Have you thought about him?
2231He had some shares in it himself, had n''t he?
2231He was a landscape painter, was n''t he?
2231He''s worth reading, is n''t he?
2231Helpful to the poor? 2231 How about being quite frank?"
2231How are you?
2231How can we pledge the future? 2231 How can you?"
2231How did he feel?
2231How did it all happen?
2231How did she come to fall in love with you?
2231How did you come across them?
2231How did you do it last time?
2231How do you know that my being with him helps him?
2231How do you mean''in his way''?
2231How does one know when one is serving God?
2231How else do you think you are going to attract their attention?
2231How far are you going?
2231How is she?
2231How is the dear fellow?
2231How long have you been married?
2231How many, do you think?
2231How would you like it done?
2231I am getting thin, ai n''t I?
2231I have n''t been rude, have I?
2231I mean, how will you?
2231I mean,she continued,"to what fundamental rule of conduct do you attribute your success?"
2231I wonder how one can?
2231I wonder how the papers will take it?
2231If he gain his end, what do the means matter?
2231If it had been the photo of a woman with a bony throat and a beaky nose would you have read them?
2231In what way?
2231In what way?
2231Interviewing?
2231Is he brainy?
2231Is it impossible, then, to combine duty and success?
2231Is it settled yet?
2231Is n''t it rather dangerous work?
2231Is n''t it the pale- faced young clergyman with the wavy hair and the beautiful voice that you all flock to hear? 2231 Is there no hope?"
2231It comes to the same thing, does n''t it, dear?
2231It is part of it, dear, is n''t it?
2231It was a pity, was n''t it? 2231 It''s difficult to tell, is n''t it?"
2231It''s got to be published in London, has n''t it?
2231May I talk it over with a friend?
2231May I?
2231Much of a one?
2231Must God''s servants always remain powerless?
2231Must you, dear?
2231Not Liverpool?
2231Oh, may I?
2231Or is it one of those things one has to say?
2231Paper going well, sir?
2231Protection?
2231Rather late in the day for you to worry yourself about that, is n''t it?
2231Save her from what?
2231Shall I shut the door?
2231Shall I write out a hundred lines of Greek? 2231 Shall we join the others?"
2231She never got over it?
2231Stop press column?
2231Surely you''re not one?
2231Tell me,asked Joan,"am I likely to meet with much of that sort of thing?"
2231Tell me,she said,"what interfered with it?"
2231That he will succeed?
2231That tells him to talk all that twaddle?
2231The Cyril Baptiste?
2231The child?
2231The old story?
2231They were His last words, too,he answered:"''My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?''"
2231This young man of yours,he asked,"what is he like?"
2231To the poor?
2231Was it very beautiful, in the beginning?
2231Well, have you two settled the affairs of the kingdom? 2231 Well, what does Beauty think about it?"
2231Well, you ca n''t expect''em to like it, can you?
2231What about the other people irritating us?
2231What are you doing now?
2231What are you doing?
2231What are you going to do when it''s over?
2231What are you making?
2231What are your principles?
2231What can we do? 2231 What caused your mother''s illness?"
2231What did he preach about?
2231What did stop you?
2231What do they say?
2231What do you advise me?
2231What do you gather is the general opinion?
2231What do you mean by got to do it?
2231What do you mean by the whole hog?
2231What do you think of him?
2231What do you think you can do?
2231What does Madge think of him?
2231What does he think,she asked,"about your illness?"
2231What does it mean in reality: Germania, Italia, La France, Britannia? 2231 What else is any woman?"
2231What has become of Him, Dad?
2231What has become of them?
2231What have you been doing?
2231What is God?
2231What is he like?
2231What is it in us that''inspires''men? 2231 What is it you want me to do?"
2231What on earth induced Helen to bring that poor old Dutch doll along with her?
2231What sort of things ought I to talk to him about, do you think?
2231What was his name?
2231What was my mother doing in Paris?
2231What was my mother like? 2231 What was the occasion?"
2231What were you thinking of when I came in?
2231What will you do if you fail? 2231 What will you sign yourself?"
2231What''s Carleton got to do with it?
2231What''s become of it?
2231What''s he like in himself?
2231What''s he like to- night?
2231What''s put all that into your head?
2231What''s that like?
2231What''s the matter with my tie?
2231What''s your line?
2231When shall I know that you are old and decrepit?
2231Where are you going now, dearie?
2231Who among you is the more honoured? 2231 Who is the true soldier?
2231Who is the veiled woman that Phillips goes about with?
2231Who told you I persuaded him?
2231Who was it said that woman would be the last thing man would civilize?
2231Who was there for me to marry?
2231Who''s making him do it, except himself?
2231Whose boy?
2231Why ca n''t you help him in his own house, instead of wandering all about the country?
2231Why could n''t the old man have set about it himself, instead of wasting thirty precious years?
2231Why could n''t you have married?
2231Why did n''t they want them?
2231Why did n''t we all kiss and be friends after the Napoleonic wars?
2231Why did the apple fall?
2231Why did we all like him?
2231Why did you give it up?
2231Why did you listen to it?
2231Why do n''t you let Arthur live here,she said,"instead of going back to his lodgings?
2231Why do n''t you persuade Lord Sutcliffe to buy up three or four papers, before they''re all gone?
2231Why do you come?
2231Why do you do it?
2231Why has n''t it done it before?
2231Why have you come back?
2231Why is the Press always so eager for war?
2231Why must you preach?
2231Why not?
2231Why not?
2231Why should n''t it come true?
2231Why should n''t she?
2231Why should we shun one another, as if we were both of us incapable of decency or self- control? 2231 Why, when it escapes from its bonds, does n''t it soar upward?
2231Why?
2231Will it shock you, Dad?
2231Will you be coming alone?
2231Will you serve me and fight for me against all my enemies?
2231Wo n''t you help me?
2231Would n''t that train of argument lead to nobody ever doing anything?
2231Would n''t you have helped him?
2231Would that be your text?
2231Would there not still be the diamond dog- collar and the motor car left to tempt us?
2231Wrong colour?
2231You are sure of yourself?
2231You can ask that,he said:"you, a soldier?
2231You can face it,she said:"the possibility of all your life''s work being wasted?"
2231You do n''t mean a party?
2231You do n''t think it even worth considering?
2231You do not think I would have permitted any power on earth to separate them from me, do you?
2231You know what I mean, dear, do n''t you?
2231You mean it?
2231You mean my friendship is going to be of no use to you?
2231You mean she was killing herself?
2231You think I ought to?
2231You think it would prove a useful alliance?
2231You were dining there on Friday night, were n''t you?
2231You were n''t asleep, were you?
2231You will be honest with me, wo n''t you?
2231You will help?
2231You will let me make one for you, dearie, wo n''t you?
2231You will promise, wo n''t you?
2231You wo n''t give up the fight, will you, whatever happens?
2231You wo n''t give up''Clorinda''?
2231You wo n''t mind if anybody drops in?
2231You would n''t care to come home and have a bit of supper with me, would you, dearie?
2231You''ll be able to get along without me for a little while?
2231You''ll come again soon?
2231You''ll look after him if anything does happen, wo n''t you?
2231You''re not a Christian Scientist, by any chance?
2231You''re not angry with me?
2231You''re not busy, are you?
2231You''re not offended?
2231You''re sure?
2231You''ve been seeing something of him, have n''t you?
2231''What''s the cunning old rascal up to now?
2231A marriage founded on a lie-- no matter for what purpose!--mustn''t it degrade a woman-- smirch her soul for all time?
2231After all, had she the right to interfere?
2231After all, was it exaggeration?
2231Am I divine?"
2231And herself?
2231And what would Hilda''s eyes say when they looked upon that_ recherche_ drawing- room suite?
2231And why had God allowed him to call her"Carrots"?
2231Are you living alone?"
2231Are you strong enough to fight him?"
2231Are you?"
2231As Town Halls, Assembly Rooms?
2231As they say, no man can be his own solicitor, can he?
2231Beauty, that mysterious force that from the date of creation has ruled the world, what does It think?
2231Because a girl''s features are classical and her colouring attractive, surely that has nothing to do with the value of her political views?
2231Besides, if He hated naughty children, why did He make them naughty?
2231Besides, what could have put the idea into her head?
2231Besides, what would be the use?
2231But for what?
2231But is n''t there danger of your devotion to your father leading you too far?
2231But the remaining tenth?
2231But what had Madge exactly meant by those words: that she could"see her doing something really big,"if she thought it would help him?
2231But you wo n''t go gadding about, so that people can talk?"
2231Ca n''t you see their swelling paunches and their flabby faces?
2231Can you wonder at it?
2231Carlyle?"
2231Could good ever come out of evil?
2231Could not Mrs. Denton and her party do something to hasten it?
2231Could one be sure of"getting used to it,"of"liking it better?"
2231Could we ever hope to eradicate it?
2231Did Flo give them to you?"
2231Did he tell you?"
2231Did it ever do anything but add to the world''s sum of evil, making God''s task the heavier?
2231Did she speak to you?"
2231Did she tell you?"
2231Do they answer you?"
2231Do you jeer at him?
2231Do you often see him?"
2231Do you say he is a fool for his pains?
2231Do you think if she had contented herself with writing stirring appeals that Orleans would have fallen?
2231Does a father lay snares for his children: leading them into temptation: delivering them unto evil?"
2231Does he think I am going to be a party to the putting of the people''s neck again under their pitiless yoke?"
2231Drag the woman back to life against her will-- lead her back to him to be a chain about his feet until the end?
2231Even a Labour Government-- supposing that in spite of the Press it did win through-- what would be its fate?
2231Ever read it?"
2231Flossie?"
2231For what do you toil and strive but that you may give to your children, to your loved ones, reaping the harvest of their good?"
2231Go back to China?"
2231Had it not been somewhat selfish of her?
2231Had love and life no claims, but only weakness?
2231Had n''t she better make a few inquiries first-- feel her way?
2231Had n''t she better think things over, in the clear daylight?
2231Had n''t she better wait till she could collect and arrange her thoughts?
2231Had not Joan noticed it?
2231Had they never heard of Waterloo and Trafalgar?
2231Had they no need of patience?
2231Had this also been temperament again, keeping them apart?
2231Have you anything that you could send him?"
2231Have you been long in London?"
2231Have you met him?"
2231Heard my opinion of the middle classes?"
2231His wife rather handicaps him, too, does n''t she?"
2231How about putting it that way?"
2231How can you doubt it?
2231How can you help men''s souls if their bodies are starving?
2231How could it be otherwise?
2231How did she account for David and Solomon, Moses and the Prophets?
2231How do I know which of us is right?
2231How long will they keep clean?
2231How would Protection accomplish that?
2231If God has ordered all things, why has He created evil, making His creatures weak and sinful?
2231If I had been a free man, could I have won you?"
2231If it''s only advice and sympathy he''s after, what''s wrong with dear old Mrs. Denton?
2231If we could but see ourselves, as in some magic mirror?
2231Is he really very ill, her husband?"
2231Is it all decided?"
2231Is it for us to lay aside the sword that they bequeath us because we can not hope any more than they to see the far- off victory?
2231Is n''t it worth my price?"
2231Is that going to end his political career?"
2231Is that the argument?"
2231It may be lies or it may not; what is one to do?
2231It''s been tried and what''s been the result?
2231May I kiss you?"
2231May I try?"
2231Might it not be as good an explanation as any other of the mystery surrounding us?
2231Might n''t there be arguments, worth considering, against her interference?
2231Might not something of the sort be possible?
2231Might not the success of Christianity in responding to human needs be evidence in its favour?
2231Mrs. Denton''s great empty house in Gower Street?
2231Must one never go forward because another steps out of one''s way, voluntarily?
2231Of what use are such as we?"
2231Of what use these prophets without self- control; these social reformers who could not shake the ape out of themselves?
2231Of what use was such a religion as that going to be to the world of the future?
2231One topic that never lost its interest was: Who made wars?
2231Or do you think it will be sufficient if I promise never to do it again?"
2231Or only on your head?"
2231Or would it upset him, do you think, if he knew?"
2231Or would she, on this occasion, get in-- or rather, get off, first?
2231Ought n''t the thing to be thought over as a whole?
2231Perhaps an historical novel in the Thackeray vein?
2231Right or wrong, who shall dare to harm her?
2231Shall I take off my boots and show them to you?
2231Should she fail them-- turn deaf ears to the myriad because of pity for one useless, feeble life?
2231Should she write to him-- see him again?
2231Sir William had often said to himself:"What can I do for God who has done so much for me?"
2231Still, what was to be done?
2231Suppose I''d married you?"
2231Suppose she had been mistaken?
2231Suppose we do knock Militarism out of Germany, like we did out of France, not so very long ago?
2231Tell me,"he said,"are you getting your way?
2231The miser or the giver: he who heaps up riches for himself or he who labours for others?"
2231The people who only live for making money: how long do you think they will remain silent?
2231The statesman-- should he abide by the faith that is in him and suffer loss of popularity, or renounce his God and enter the Cabinet?
2231Then leave him to fight the battle alone?
2231Then, and not till then, would they be able to make their power felt?
2231They have n''t kicked you, have they?"
2231Those drawing- rooms?
2231Until, at last, one cheeky ragamuffin had piped out:"Please, Miss, have you got red hair all over you?
2231Was it to be utterly wasted?
2231Was it wrong of the woman to perform this act of self- renunciation, yielding up all things to love?
2231Was not her America here?
2231Was not the survival of this fighting instinct proof that war was still needful to us?
2231Was she happy?"
2231Was the cry never wrung from their lips:''How long, oh Lord, how long?''
2231Were we to be led hither and thither like blind children?
2231What about Hilda?
2231What about our children?
2231What am I going to do then?
2231What are you making of him but a beast?
2231What could Flossie want to see her about that was so important?
2231What could be done with them?
2231What cunning devil had flung open this door, showing her all her heart''s desire, merely that she should be called upon to slam it to in her own face?
2231What did Joan think?--did she think there was any real danger?
2231What did he mean by a"noble marriage"--to a Duke, or something of that sort?
2231What did he mean by cross- examining her in this way?
2231What do you think, yourself?"
2231What father, loving his children, would see them suffer wrong, when by stretching out a hand he could protect them: turn their tears to gladness?
2231What happens?
2231What has been his teaching to the poor?
2231What help could she give him when the time should come that he should need it?
2231What is the harm if he does admire me-- if a smile from me or a touch of the hand can urge him to fresh effort?
2231What mattered the colours, so that one followed the flag?
2231What more had she any right to demand?
2231What more was the woman capable of understanding?
2231What of my life?
2231What on earth is she up to?"
2231What right had this poor brainless lump of painted flesh to share his wounds, his triumphs?
2231What right had this poor, worn- out shadow to stand between them, to the end?
2231What shall I have to do, do you think?"
2231What sort of Democracy is that?
2231What used you to talk about before he became a great man?"
2231What was plucking at her sleeve-- still holding her?
2231What was right-- what wrong, but what our own God- given judgment told us?
2231What was she to do?
2231What was she underneath her artificial niceties, her prim moralities, her laboriously acquired restraints, her unconscious pretences and hypocrisies?
2231What was the matter with her?
2231What was the meaning of it?
2231What was there to stop him?
2231What went wrong with the Internationale, the Universal Brotherhood of Labour, and all that Tra- la- la?"
2231What would Phillips think?
2231What would her own future be?
2231What would life leave to her?
2231What would you have done-- even if you could have done anything?"
2231What''s he going to say when I tell him, later on, that his father and myself have had all the war we want, and have decided there shall be no more?
2231What''s his little game?''
2231What''s that matter, if he''s willing to give you a start?"
2231What''s to be done?"
2231What''s your idea?"
2231What''s your regiment?"
2231When one of the horses goes down gored, his entrails lying out upon the sand, you know what they do, do n''t you?
2231Who could make us fight each other, if we did n''t want to?
2231Who does?
2231Who has need of such as I?''
2231Who hounded the people into them, and kept them there, tearing at one another''s throats?
2231Who is happier than the lover, thinking only how to serve?
2231Who is the more joyous: he who sits alone at the table, or he who shares his meal with a friend?
2231Who makes a dog fight?
2231Who takes any notice of them?
2231Who were they whose teaching moved the world more than it has ever yet been moved by the teaching of the wisest?
2231Who''s going to stop for a moment to read about somebody''s blacking?
2231Whose fault had it been?
2231Why are you afraid of love?
2231Why are you afraid to let Him in?
2231Why ca n''t He speak?"
2231Why choose you death instead of life?
2231Why did n''t He smash the Devil?
2231Why do my''principles''interest you?"
2231Why do n''t we pray to God not to withhold from us His precious medicine of pestilence and famine?
2231Why does n''t he get her to''inspire''him?"
2231Why had he always been so just and kind and patient with her?
2231Why had he let her go away, leaving him lonely in his empty, voiceless house?
2231Why had he never made any claim upon her?
2231Why had he never scolded her and bullied her and teased her?
2231Why had he never"brought her up,"never exacted obedience from her, never even tried to influence her?
2231Why had reason been given to us if we were not to use it-- weigh good and evil in the balance and decide for ourselves where lay the nobler gain?
2231Why had she never done so?
2231Why had she never fallen in love like other girls?
2231Why had she never thought of it?
2231Why had she only been amused at them?
2231Why have we done away with it?
2231Why must love be always assumed to make us weak and contemptible, as if it were some subtle poison?
2231Why not carry it to its logical conclusion, and insist that she should be paid for her embraces?
2231Why seek it further?
2231Why should all questions be left to the politicians and the journalists?
2231Why should n''t I have mine?
2231Why should n''t it strengthen and ennoble us?"
2231Why should she hesitate?
2231Why should she listen?
2231Why stop her?
2231Will you be at home to- morrow afternoon at tea- time?"
2231Without a good Press he is helpless; and where is he going to get his Press backing if he turns me down?
2231Wo n''t you send them a message?"
2231Would it be such excruciatingly bad form for us to be intelligent, occasionally; say, on one or two Fridays during the season?
2231Would she have given up a life of ease, shut herself off from society, if these had been her standards?
2231Would the higher moral law compel him, likewise, to leave the poor lady saddled with another couple of children?
2231Would the reapers of the harvest remember them?
2231You do love me, do n''t you?"
2231You do n''t mind, do you?"
2231You have never thought of going on the stage yourself?"
2231You know French pretty well, do n''t you?"
2231You know that, kiddy, do n''t you?"
2231You live in the same house with him, do n''t you?
2231You look forward to your Sunday evening parties, do n''t you?"
2231You remember the scene where the spirits of the children are waiting to go down to earth and be made into babies?
2231You think that, do n''t you?"
2231You were n''t educated there?"
2231You will come again, soon?"
2231You will come?"
2231You wo n''t forget your promise?"
2231You wo n''t mind, will you?"
2231You''re not angry with me?"
2231he answered with a laugh;"organizing himself into a body, and working the thing out from the point of view of the public weal?
2231like Miss Allway?"
2231she asked,"of all that wealth of youth-- just enough to live on?"
2231she demanded,"instead of getting up Peterloo massacres, and anti- Corn Law riots, and breaking the Duke of Wellington''s windows?"
2231the paint washed off and the golden hair all turned to drab?
33767*****(_ Tune_:"How You Goin''to Keep Them Down on the Farm?")
33767Are your friends too few?
33767Are your tables ready?
33767But closely allied is your second problem,"What can we afford?"
33767Did you ever work to become a member of the Women''s Life Saving Corps of the American Red Cross?
33767Did you know there were Girl Scouts in Czechoslovakia?
33767Did you sleep last night, When the officers had passed your tents?
33767Did you sleep last night, When the officers had passed your-- The officers had passed your-- The officers had passed your-- tents?
33767Do n''t you know your Country''s waiting?
33767Do n''t you think they might Show a little more common sense?
33767Do the stars rain down an influence, or do we share some thrill of mother earth below our resting bodies?...
33767Have you heard her call?
33767Have you seen this booklet?
33767Her knots and her signalling, first aid and drill, Show regular practice-- say, ai n''t that some skill?
33767How will we remember, when we eat, Not to wipe out plates?
33767How''re we going to live in a civilized town, After we''ve been to Camp?
33767How''re you going to keep us happy at home, After we''ve been at Camp?
33767How''re you going to keep us inside the house, After we''ve slept in the dew and the damp?
33767If such things as these can be learned by living in the open, have we not sufficient reason for providing the means to the end?
33767MARCHING SONG(_ Tune_:"Where Do We Go from Here, Boys?")
33767Menstruation: Established Any disturbance?
33767THE LONG, LONG LINE(_ Tune_:"The Long, Long Trail") Recruiting Song Do you feel a little lonely?
33767The first problem is:"Who will teach it?"
33767Where do we go from here, girls, where do we go from here?
33767Which group has the most mail-- are there any packages?
33767Who should be more interested in doing this work and in doing it well than the Scout herself?
33767Would you like to join some jolly girls In the things you think and do?
33767_ Eyes_: R L Glasses?
2851''And for what,''says I,''do ye smoke be night in dark places widout even a cinturion in plain clothes to attend ye?'' 2851 ''Did you get what you wanted?''
2851''Did you see Venice?'' 2851 ''Have one, Michob?''
2851''Have ye ever heard, Michob,''says the Imperor,''of predestinarianism?'' 2851 ''Have you got a mother?''
2851''Have you the usual and necessary requisition papers from the governor of your state?'' 2851 ''How did ye fancy the shoot the chutes?''
2851''Is it trouble you are in, now, Miss,''says I;''and what''s to be done about it?'' 2851 ''Say,''says he, kind of disappointed,''was that heaven?
2851''Shall we eat?'' 2851 ''They are,''says Norah, with her eyes shinin'';''and do ye hear the bands playin''?
2851''Was you ever in Texas before?'' 2851 ''What kind of a contractor?''
2851''Who was this gang of stout parties you took this trip with?'' 2851 ''Why''n''t you telegraph to San Antone,''he asks,''and have the bunch arrested there?''
2851A White Orpington hen?
2851A chicken?
2851A great deal?
2851Afraid the cow would hook?
2851Almost?
2851And how did you know we were in Washington?
2851And may I ask who you are?'' 2851 And now where does the trouble come in?"
2851And tell me this, so that my last shred of doubt will be cleared away; why did you decide that he was from Virginia?
2851Another battle?
2851Any mail for us this morning, Lydia, dear?
2851Been in the city long?
2851But why did you say I was responsible?
2851By the way,he asked,"how do you feel?"
2851Come now, Mr. Ader,I said, soothingly;"what is the matter?"
2851Did Mike O''Bader ever have a great loss or trouble of any kind?
2851Did it have a-- a-- a--?
2851Did it say anything?
2851Did n''t you never attend''em? 2851 Did n''t you scream?"
2851Did you ever hear of Michob Ader?
2851Did you say your_ three_ daughters?
2851Do n''t you''member Cindy''s Mose, Mars''Pendleton, what''migrated''mediately after de war?
2851Do n''t your clothes fit you?
2851Do you know that I have only one chance in a thousand to live?
2851Do you think that picture is fairer than the one you saw of Colonel Calhoun last night?
2851Do you want to advertise the copy by exhibiting the original coat?
2851Do you want to marry him?
2851Ever try rattlesnake oil?
2851Father,she said, somewhat timidly and doubtfully,"have you a great deal of money?"
2851Found New York rather different from the Panhandle, did n''t you, Bud?
2851Have you a pain in the back of your head?
2851Have you observed the expedition with which new buildings are being run up in New York? 2851 Here?"
2851How did it look?
2851How did you manage it?
2851How does that sound, major, for a first nighter?
2851How long has it been since you took any alcohol into your system?
2851How long have you had it?
2851How was it dressed?
2851How was that, General?
2851I did, did n''t I?
2851I give you every credit; but how did you know he was leaving for the South to- night?
2851I''ll admit that,I said;"but, now, why two daughters?
2851If you''ve come to burgle why do n''t you do it? 2851 Inflammatory?"
2851Is or are it or some or any of them necessarily fatal?
2851Is that you, Miss Diana? 2851 Is yours worse in the morning or at night?"
2851It''s marvellous,said I,"but do you think it a sufficient test?
2851Know? 2851 May I ask why I am selected for the honour?"
2851Me?
2851No money?
2851Notice that''la, la, la,''Aunt Liberty? 2851 Now,"I went on,"how can you expect us to act square with you when you try to deceive us in this manner?
2851Oats for him?
2851Oh, Father Abram,she cried,"would n''t it be grand if I should prove to be your daughter?
2851Oh, what is it-- what is it, Brother John?
2851Owe me?
2851Rattled chains,suggested Terence, after some thought,"or groaned?
2851Rubber parties?
2851Say, it''s a shame, ai n''t it, to give you the worst end of it?
2851Say, old man,he said, constrainedly,"ever try opodeldoc?"
2851Tell me before we fly,he urged, in a voice thick with some inward turmoil,"do any of your daughters contemplate going on the stage?"
2851That is all very well,I said,"but why did you insist upon daughters-- and especially two daughters?
2851That old chap with the big feet?
2851Then, why,said Mrs. Bellmore, looking the young man gravely in the eye,"should that ghost have kissed me, as I''m sure it did?"
2851There was an ancestor who fought against the Britishers, was n''t there? 2851 This-- is-- King-- James-- you speak-- of?"
2851Was I there before? 2851 We talk awhile about the sundries of life and then he says:"''What are you going to do about that shooting?
2851Well, I awoke just as-- oh, ca n''t you understand what I mean? 2851 Were n''t you frightened?"
2851Were you listening to a confession?
2851What can it be?
2851What did it do?
2851What do you mean?
2851What doctor?
2851What else could I mean? 2851 What is his history?"
2851What is it this time?
2851What right have you got to do it? 2851 What talk is this?"
2851What''s the matter with it?
2851What''s the matter, Billy?
2851What''s the matter?
2851Where is it?
2851Who is Juggins?
2851Who thinks of others more than you do?
2851Why does n''t she do it by writing another one instead?
2851Why have you that string on your finger?
2851Will you give me a piece of your wrapping cord?
2851Will you kindly open the door for me?
2851Will you please tell me,I said, in surprise,"how you knew that?
2851Would it cost very, very much,asked Aglaia, who had always counted her dimes so carefully,"to send a telegram to Atlanta?"
2851Yes?
2851You do n''t understand? 2851 You ever been in a banana grove?
2851You know him, then?
2851You like- a smoke while we wait?
2851You ordered it to wait?
2851You see that knot? 2851 You see''em rallyin''round The Pump?
2851You think it is a good picture?
2851You think- a him a nice- a man?
2851You were there? 2851 You''re that old snoozer that''s running sheep on this range, ai n''t you?"
2851You''ve heard of old Ben Kirkman, the cattle king? 2851 ''And did ye observe the Durbar, Miss Flynn?'' 2851 ''But what are you eating? 2851 ''Cawn''t you tell a member of the British upper classes when you see one?'' 2851 ''Do you remember when he was toddling around on the porch and fell down on a pair of Mexican spurs and cut four little holes over his right eye? 2851 ''Now there was just one more-- are you doing right well with the caffy, now?'' 2851 ''What''s money for?'' 2851 After ten minutes he said:Are you going to stand there looking at that chicken all day?
2851Age!--what was it to come between him and the one he loved?
2851And as Bud was something of a Territorial talking machine he made oration as follows:"How did I know he was from New York?
2851And how are you going to get out of the overalls?"
2851And how did the incubators and the helter- skelter and the midgets suit the taste of ye?''
2851And how, in the name of all the prophets, did you guess that one was adopted when he told you he had three?"
2851And if I were your little girl I would remember it, would n''t I?
2851And is that where you go every day-- is it he who takes you on these long walks and climbs that have brought back your health and strength?
2851And then the romping Edith May dancing up with sisterly jealousy to add her rosebud to the adornment?"
2851And would n''t you like to have me for a daughter?"
2851Are ye quite sure, sir, that ye have n''t a drop of whiskey convenient?
2851Are you forgivin''me, Denny, for the words we had?''
2851Are you so far reduced?''
2851Are you the pound- master of this burg?
2851As it was a happy idea, why not perpetuate it?
2851Be ashamed to walk on Fifth Avenue with her, would n''t you?
2851Been a long ride for ye, ai n''t it, ye old antediluvian handful of animated carpet- tacks?
2851Been up for a jaunt in the Maine woods, eh?"
2851Bein''an editor, sir, do ye happen to know where Solomon s Temple stood?"
2851But do n''t you think,''says I,''that''twas a little cool early in the morning; and ai n''t there a feeling of rain in the air to- night?
2851But how is it now?
2851But you look kind of fagged out, Uncle Ben-- ain''t you feeling right well this evening?"
2851But, seriously, did he-- did it-- how do you--?"
2851Can not you see the lovely Adele fastening the carnation to the lapel so that papa may be gay upon the street?
2851Can you give me a room with one of those tall folding beds in it, and a relay of bellboys to work it up and down while I rest?"
2851Can you guess in what manner that ghost awakened me last night?"
2851Corrigan?"
2851Could n''t the lawyer man have made it a strike for you?''
2851Did I see the sights?
2851Did he actually kiss you?"
2851Did me and you have a search warrant or a posse comitatus when we rounded up them six Mexican cow thieves down in Hidalgo?
2851Did n''t you get my letter?"
2851Did you ever know a woman like that who was n''t paying weekly instalments on an enlarged crayon portrait of herself?
2851Do n''t they carry bricks in hods?
2851Do n''t you think that would be respectable enough?"
2851Do you call that a dog or what?"
2851Do you dine at seven at Clifftop, Mrs. Kinsolving?
2851Do you know him?"
2851Do you own any land, or lease any?"
2851Does the blame thing know you from anybody else?"
2851Does yours come in paroxysms or is it a steady pain?"
2851Ever try one of them, Jim?"
2851Ever try witch hazel and oil of wintergreen?"
2851Had she been too bold?
2851Have much trouble in bringing me''round?"
2851Have ye seen the sights of this new Coney Island, then?
2851He had plenty to eat, plenty of tobacco, and a tyrant to curse; so why should not he, an Irishman, be well satisfied?
2851Hey?
2851How did I play Uncle Mose?
2851How does any one know?
2851How does it taste?"
2851How is Missis Telfair?"
2851How would it work to see the same ghost again, minus the overalls, and have gold bricks in the hod?
2851How''s all up to the house?
2851How''s your finances?"
2851I exclaimed;"already?"
2851I fancied that it was in-- in Persia?
2851I reckon playing a guitar as much as I do must kind of limber a fellow''s trigger finger up a little, do n''t you think, Uncle Ben?"
2851I say, now, Theo, reconsider your answer, wo n''t you?"
2851I thought; but how?
2851I turned a doubtful eye upon his dust- stained shoes, and concluded with a newspaper phrase,"I suppose that you reside in our midst?"
2851I wonder what she thinks of the performances of that peculiar class of people which she has been taught to worship-- the Southern gentlemen?
2851I''ve got a sack of new oats in the kitchen-- shall I bring out a feed for your hoss?"
2851If there is to be a family ghost, why could n''t it have been his, instead of a bricklayer''s?"
2851Is it-- is it--?"
2851Is that you, Felice?
2851Is there anything doin''up in the city, Miss Diana, dear?"
2851Is there anything left in the pharmacopoeia?"
2851It would n''t do for me to submit a counter story of a desirable, aristocratic shade, would it?
2851Jolnes addressed him at the door:"Pardon me, sir, but are you not Colonel Hunter, of Norfolk, Virginia?"
2851Law and order, you say?
2851Liberty?"
2851Look at the lights, Norah,''I says, turning my back to the sea--''ain''t they pretty?''
2851Maybe you are Aglaia,"he continued, falling in with her playful mood;"ca n''t you remember when we lived at the mill?"
2851Montmorency?''
2851Never in Topaz City, was you?"
2851Now what do you think of that?"
2851Now, what did you shoot Mr. Johnson, of Bildad, for?''
2851Say-- you''re a swell, ai n''t you?
2851Seems to me I asked you about your family?''
2851She''s a poor girl, is n''t she?"
2851Such a lovely morning, is n''t it, Terence?"
2851Thas''h why the''nfuriated smoked guys do n''t attack us-- see?
2851The major stepped to the door and called:"Lydia, dear, will you come?"
2851The shoemaker struck Jesus with his fist, saying:''Go; why tarriest thou?''
2851There''s old Bill Withers and Colonel Metcalf and--""Have you seen Broadway at night?"
2851VI ULYSSES AND THE DOGMAN Do you know the time of the dogmen?
2851Was Captain Kinsolving a very brave man, do you know, Terence?"
2851Was he right?"
2851Was there any way to do it?
2851Was there ever a troubadour of old who struck upon as royal a castle in his wanderings?
2851We can hold him on that, ca n''t we?
2851Well, you dinged old married man, how are they coming?"
2851What do you suppose the doctor meant by that?"
2851What else could I do?''
2851What if the books did say he owed Corrigan?
2851What more do you want?"
2851What''d I tell you?
2851What''ll you have to drink?"
2851What''s the use,''says I,''of smokin''when ye''ve not got the ghost of a chance of killin''yeself by doin''it?''
2851What''s the youngest kid''s name?''
2851Where else but in those circles can one see life in its primitive, crude state unhampered by the conventions that bind the dwellers in a lower sphere?
2851Where is valuable jewellery lost the oftenest, Mr. Meeks?
2851Who cares for your money?
2851Who is this tall, dignified gentleman leaning against the horizon, with one arm on the Corinthian column?"
2851Why could n''t a wife alone have taken him shopping?"
2851Why do you act so?"
2851Why do you say you have no name?
2851Why had he pitched upon his perpetual, strange note of the Wandering Jew?
2851Why his unutterable grief during his aberration?
2851Why need she have been so cruel and malicious?"
2851Why should a ghost bring bricks into a villa built of marble and stone?
2851Would he take offense?
2851Would he think of the hand that placed it there as he ate?
2851Would n''t it be romantic?
2851Would not his love, his tender care, and the advantages he could bestow upon her make her forget the question of age?
2851Would ye be for murderin''your benefactor, the good man that gives ye food and work?
2851Would ye lay contrivances against the enlightened races of the earth, ye instigator of illegal crimes?
2851Would ye seek to persuade Martin Burney into the dirty tricks of an indecent Dago?
2851You ai n''t going to haul cement or establish branches or work on a railroad, are you?''
2851You can count two, ca n''t you?
2851You do n''t''member Uncle Mose, child?"
2851You doing right well with the caffy, now?''
2851You remember the description of Mrs. Snyder?
2851You say she''s fifty- two?"
2851You see this hatpin?
2851You''member dem colts, Mars''Pendleton?"
2851You''re not in the business of robbing women, are you?"
2851You''ve been in rookus before, have n''t you?''
2851Your mother does n''t really take it seriously, does she?"
2851Yours swell any?"
2851and use it?
2851did you ever try Blickerstaff''s Blood Builder?"
2851is that all?"
2851says he, through his blue spectacles,''is it as bad as this?
2851see?
2851what''s the matter down there?"
27575A great deal?
27575Am I not a member of the consulting commission?
27575And give me----"Will he never go?
27575And how do you think I can ride when I have n''t got a habit?
27575And how''s the little woman?
27575And since when?
27575And who would be surprised at it, gentlemen? 27575 Are we ready?
27575Are you a Christian?
27575Are you deaf?
27575Are you going?
27575Are you ill? 27575 Are you in love?"
27575Are you looking for anything?
27575Are you sure?
27575Are you the doctor?
27575Are you waiting for him for your gentlemen''s dinner?
27575At any rate, you have some walks in the neighborhood?
27575But is it ever found?
27575But what can I do?
27575But where are we going?
27575But why,asked Bovary,"does that gentleman persecute her?"
27575Can I see the doctor?
27575Can he suspect anything?
27575Can you not guess?
27575Dancing?
27575Did I know I should accompany you?
27575Did you think you''d got a virgin?
27575Do I love you-- love you? 27575 Do you feel unwell?"
27575Do you feel unwell?
27575Do you know what your wife wants?
27575Do you love me? 27575 Do you not know that there are souls constantly tormented?
27575Do you think so?
27575Does this amuse you?
27575Everything is ready?
27575For,said he to Emma,"what risk is there?
27575From your husband? 27575 Have n''t they tortured you enough already?
27575Have you any business to attend to?
27575Have you been to the opera?
27575Have you carefully weighed your resolution? 27575 Have you given her warning for good?"
27575Have you your pistols?
27575How are you?
27575How are you?
27575How could that be possible?
27575How have I displeased her?
27575How much are they?
27575How so?
27575How will he live at Paris? 27575 I?
27575If I told her all my fortune is lost? 27575 In what way?
27575Is it because you are going away?
27575Is she making fun of me?
27575It is at the Hôtel de Provence, is it not, that you will wait for me at mid- day?
27575It is indigestion, no doubt? 27575 Léon?"
27575Music? 27575 No; why?"
27575Now how am I to sign?
27575Oh, what does that matter?
27575So you are at Rouen?
27575The doctor is not here?
27575Then you are giving it up?
27575These first warm days weaken one most remarkably, do n''t they? 27575 Thus we,"he said,"why did we come to know one another?
27575To be sure,replied Homais;"but what can you expect?
27575Unless,he added, turning to his wife,"you would like to stay alone, pussy?"
27575Well, is she there?
27575Well, what the deuce do I care for that?
27575What are you looking for?
27575What can I do for you, Monsieur le Curé?
27575What cheese?
27575What does it matter?
27575What does it matter?
27575What is a Christian?
27575What is it?
27575What is that for?
27575What is the matter with you?
27575What is the matter?
27575What is to become of me? 27575 What news?"
27575What recreation?
27575What surprises you in that? 27575 What''s the matter with Père Tellier?
27575What''s the meaning of that?
27575What, indeed?
27575What?
27575What?
27575What?
27575Where is Catherine Leroux?
27575Where is the curé?
27575Where were you brought up?
27575Wherever are you? 27575 Who told you?"
27575Why did he go back to the Bertaux now that Monsieur Rouault was cured and that these folks had n''t paid yet? 27575 Why did n''t you bring her?"
27575Why do n''t you tell master?
27575Why these festoons, these flowers, these garlands? 27575 Why, do you smoke?"
27575Why, have n''t you ever seen anything?
27575Why, what?
27575Why,asked the chemist,"should she excommunicate actors?
27575Why,he went on,"allow oneself to be intruded upon by others?
27575Why? 27575 Why?"
27575Why?
27575Why?
27575Why?
27575Why?
27575Will you leave me alone?
27575Will you take something? 27575 Would you be so good,"said the lady,"as to pick up my fan that has fallen behind the sofa?"
27575Yes, I am a Christian?
27575You are forgetting nothing?
27575You are going on a journey?
27575You have n''t loved any others?
27575You here? 27575 You play?"
27575Your music subscription is out; am I to renew it?
27575Yours devotedly?'' 27575 ''Your friend?'' 27575 A glass of wine?
27575A thimbleful of_ cassis_?
27575After this, what do the names"romanticism"or"classicism"signify?
27575Again, is it not the agriculturist who fattens, for our clothes, his abundant flocks in the pastures?
27575And as soon as they were alone,"Why do n''t you accept Monsieur Boulanger''s kind offer?"
27575And coming closer to him:"What ill could come to me?
27575And for what?
27575And for whom?
27575And how is Monsieur Bovary?"
27575And if he confessed that he had not thought of her, there were floods of reproaches that always ended with the eternal question:"Do you love me?"
27575And what about Monsieur Binet?
27575And what else was there?
27575And what importance has it in sculpture, for example, or in painting?
27575And where?
27575And who knows?
27575And why had he come back?
27575And why not?
27575And yet, why should my heart be so heavy?
27575And you?"
27575And, gentlemen, is it even necessary to go so far for examples?
27575Are they not the one beautiful thing on the earth, the source of heroism, of enthusiasm, of poetry, music, the arts, of everything, in a word?"
27575As he was to finish reading there, why not set out at once?
27575But how tell an undefinable uneasiness, variable as the clouds, unstable as the winds?
27575But the tradesman cried out that she was wrong; they knew one another; did he doubt her?
27575But what does Monsieur Bovary think of it?"
27575But what does agriculture matter to you?
27575But what, then, made her so unhappy?
27575But, inversely, if all art is concentrated upon the representation, what matters the subject?
27575By what means?
27575CRITICISMS On Romantic Literature in France MISCELLANY Quidquid volueris?
27575Can it be?
27575Did not love, like Indian plants, need a special soil, a particular temperature?
27575Do n''t I know all about it?"
27575Do they think the prefect will be glad to dine down there under a tent like a gipsy?
27575Do you know me?
27575Do you know that I count the hours?
27575Do you know to what an abyss I was dragging you, poor angel?
27575Do you think about it?
27575Do you understand anything about it?"
27575Does a name matter?
27575Emma continued,"And what music do you prefer?"
27575For he certainly is her father, is n''t he-- the ugly little man with a cock''s feather in his hat?"
27575For how should we clothe ourselves, how nourish ourselves, without the agriculturist?
27575For whose sake, then, was she virtuous?
27575Had she not suffered enough?
27575Had they nothing else to say to one another?
27575Has form indeed all the importance in literature that Flaubert claimed for it?
27575Have I any?
27575Have I done right?
27575Have I not my house to look after, my husband to attend to, a thousand things, in fact, many duties that must be considered first?"
27575He added,"Shall I pick some?
27575He asked himself--"Where shall we meet?
27575He continued:"And what should I do here, gentlemen, pointing out to you the uses of agriculture?
27575He rose to go; and as if the movement he made had been the signal for their flight, Emma said, suddenly, assuming a gay air--"You have the passports?"
27575He said:"What was the matter with you?
27575He went on--"And you''re out so early?"
27575Her husband, was he not something belonging to her?
27575Hippolyte looked at him with eyes full of terror, sobbing--"When shall I get well?
27575Homais went on:"Do you think that to be an agriculturist it is necessary to have tilled the earth or fattened fowls oneself?
27575How had she lost it?
27575How many years is it since you approached the holy table?
27575How then had he been able to explain, and in such language, the number of things that he could not have said so well before?
27575How was it that she-- she, who was so intelligent-- could have allowed herself to be deceived again?
27575How weak I am, am I not?
27575How?
27575How?"
27575I ask myself, where is he?
27575I give to humanity what it gives to me--_indifference!_"Is not the link between Flaubert''s"indifference"and his conception of art evident here?
27575I have been ill.""Seriously?"
27575I love you so that I could not live without you, do you see?
27575I may count on you, may I not, and quickly?"
27575I shall be something in your thought, in your life, shall I not?"
27575Is he not in love?"
27575Is it dread of the unknown?
27575Is it my fault?
27575Is it not the agriculturist?
27575Is it not time to cry that the blind shall see, the deaf hear, the lame walk?
27575Is one animal or plant more interesting than another to the naturalist?
27575Is there a single sentiment it does not condemn?
27575It is extremely curious, is it not?"
27575It is oxalic acid, is n''t it?"
27575Monsieur Boulanger, you are deserting us?"
27575No, you do not, do you?
27575Of what had they spoken when it lay upon the wide- manteled chimneys between flower- vases and Pompadour clocks?
27575Oh, why had not she, like this woman, resisted, implored?
27575Or did she wish by a sort of voluptuous stoicism to feel the more profoundly the bitterness of the things she was about to leave?
27575Or later, when he studied medicine, and never had his purse full enough to treat some little work- girl who would have become his mistress?
27575Or rather----?
27575Rodolphe had drawn nearer to Emma, and said to her in a low voice, speaking rapidly:"Does not this conspiracy of the world revolt you?
27575Shall we ever have the means to send him to a public school, to buy him a practice, or to start him in business?
27575She even asked herself why she detested Charles; if it had not been better to have been able to love him?
27575She nodded her head in assent; then a quarter of an hour later--"Are you going out to- night?"
27575She repeated:"Where are the horses?
27575She said to her child,"Is your stomach- ache better, my angel?"
27575Should we not change the name of this to"egotism"or"insensibility?"
27575That''s a good sign is n''t it?"
27575The Viscount''s?
27575The chemist went on--"Who asked you to come?
27575The effect of habits left?
27575Then he asked himself what would become of her-- if she would be married, and to whom?
27575Then he attacked him through his vanity:--"Are n''t you a man?
27575Then she would have to be sent to a boarding- school; that would cost much; how was it to be done?
27575Then suddenly--"So you love him?"
27575Then turning on his chair:"Any news at home?"
27575Then, bethinking himself,"But you were asking me something?
27575Then, do n''t you think that perhaps her imagination should be worked upon?"
27575Then, when he was at the door,"By the way, do you know the news?"
27575Thus, as a precaution, what is to prevent you from saying morning and evening a''Hail Mary, full of grace,''and''Our Father which art in heaven''?
27575To- morrow, at six o''clock?"
27575Until now what good had he had of his life?
27575Was it for this, however, that his visits to the farm formed a delightful exception to the meagre occupations of his life?
27575Was it the better to deceive them both?
27575Was this a good, and in this discovery was there not more of injury than of gain?
27575What chance willed it?
27575What do you think?"
27575What do you wish?"
27575What does it matter?
27575What friends?
27575What help is to be hoped for, what consolation, what solace?"
27575What prevented him?
27575What prevented it?"
27575What restrained her?
27575What should they decide?
27575What was it that thus set so far asunder the morning of the day before yesterday and the evening of to- day?
27575What was it?
27575What was the extraordinary catastrophe that had transformed her?
27575What was the good of playing?
27575What was the good?
27575What was this Paris like?
27575What was to be done since she rejected all medical treatment?
27575What were they doing now?
27575Where are the horses?
27575Where are the horses?"
27575Where could she find it?
27575Where should he go to practise?
27575Where the devil does she come from?
27575Where, indeed, is to be found more patriotism than in the country, greater devotion to the public welfare, more intelligence, in a word?
27575Wherever did this fat fellow pick her up?"
27575Whither hurries this crowd like the waves of a furious sea under the torrents of a tropical sun pouring its heat upon our heads?"
27575Who cares for me?"
27575Who is to prevent me?"
27575Who provides our means of subsistence?
27575Who supplies our wants?
27575Who would hear her?
27575Whose was it?
27575Why cry out against the passions?
27575Why did I ever know you?
27575Why did he always offer a glass of something to every one who came?
27575Why did the doctor''s wife give the clerk presents?
27575Why had she not seized this happiness when it came to her?
27575Why not end it all?
27575Why not have kept hold of it with both hands, with both knees, when it was about to flee from her?
27575Why were you so beautiful?
27575Why, for example, should not your husband relieve poor Hippolyte of the''Lion d''Or''?
27575Why?
27575Why?
27575Why?"
27575Will he get used to it?"
27575Will you promise me?"
27575With me?"
27575Would any one believe that a simple sternutation could produce such ravages on a quadrupedal organism?
27575Would she never issue from it?
27575Would they not have a right to apply to the police if the librarian persisted all the same in his poisonous trade?
27575Would this misery last forever?
27575Yes; but how get rid of her afterwards?"
27575You here?"
27575always busy at what?
27575and through what deplorable madness had she thus ruined her life by continual sacrifices?
27575and your friends?"
27575for what?
27575he repeated,"How did you manage to come?
27575replied the good fellow, quite astonished,"does n''t he prescribe something for you?"
27575she answered,"what does it matter?"
27575she asked herself;"but with whom?
27575she went on;"because you are leaving what is dear to you-- your life?
27575what was the good?
27575what would you have done if you had had to go into the army, to go and fight beneath the standard?
27575who knows?"
27575who knows?"
27575why did I marry?"
27575will you leave off?"
27575you did n''t know it?
27575you here?"
27575you think so?"
27903''Am I to take this as a refusal?''
27903''Am I to try to tame it_ now_?''
27903''And how much do you understand of this?''
27903''And if I say that, I shall turn into a cat?''
27903''And leave you pinned by the hand all night?
27903''And teach him my magic?
27903''And then will you turn into a Princess, and shall I have to marry you?''
27903''And what are you doing there?''
27903''And what is this stone?''
27903''And what should I be doing while you were hitting me?''
27903''And you''ve taken an axe to help you carve your way to glory?''
27903''And you,''she asked,''is yours quite incurable?''
27903''Are you going to see what''s in the mantelpiece panel, mother?
27903''Are you_ really_?''
27903''But how are you going to cook?''
27903''But s''pose you turn into a giant?''
27903''But what did you do that was wrong?''
27903''But what was_ the_ dreadful thing you''d done?''
27903''But where did I put them_ h_eggs?''
27903''But where have you been?
27903''But why,''asked the Princess in tears,''why do n''t I look like that in the Sunday looking- glasses?''
27903''But why?''
27903''Ca n''t I come too?''
27903''Ca n''t you get out?''
27903''Ca n''t you see I can?--hear I mean?''
27903''Can you do magic?''
27903''Can_ I_ do magic with it?''
27903''Come,''said he,''what do you say to this young man?''
27903''Could n''t it be the last?''
27903''Could n''t we get a prince to agree to a"Sundays only"marriage-- not let him see her during the week?''
27903''Could n''t you stick her together again?''
27903''Crowded?
27903''Do n''t you know,''the mother went on,''how wrong it is to be cruel?''
27903''Do n''t you think you might as well be a conjurer as a burglar?''
27903''Do n''t_ you_ answer when you''re spoken to?''
27903''Do you like reading?''
27903''Do you mean it?''
27903''Do you mean that I''ve got to_ go on_ being a fish?''
27903''Does n''t everybody?''
27903''Dragon dear,''she repeated,''do you like sugar?''
27903''Eh?''
27903''Fighting?''
27903''For my very own?''
27903''From the temple where the gold statue is, with the twelve sea- horses in gold?''
27903''Had n''t you better go in and lie down a bit?''
27903''Has anything been done?''
27903''Heavy, is n''t it?''
27903''How can I find him?''
27903''How did you become invisible?''
27903''How do you know one human being from another?''
27903''How do you know who is a princess and who''s not, if you''re all crows?''
27903''How extremely tiresome,''said the Prince,''but ca n''t you be cured?''
27903''How?''
27903''Hullo, boy of my heart,''she said,''very busy?''
27903''Hullo?''
27903''I know I am,''said Quentin,''but if I''m not here by magic what am I here by?''
27903''I mean,''said Quentin hastily,''the sun will still shine the same way even when the temple is in ruins, wo n''t it?''
27903''I say,''said Edward,''did you see any one move these stones?''
27903''I shall be able to go, then?''
27903''I''ll try not to again,''said Kenneth humbly,''but how can I get out?''
27903''I-- told you?''
27903''If you think cats have such a jolly time,''said Lord Hugh,''why not_ be_ a cat?''
27903''If you think that why do n''t you treat me as a stowaway?''
27903''If you would be so kind,''said the Queen,''as to bandage us with our table napkins?
27903''If you''ve quite finished,''said the King politely,''and if you''re sure you wo n''t take any refreshment, may I wish you a very good afternoon?''
27903''Is Crow- what''s- its- name a nice place?''
27903''Is he dead?''
27903''Is it only one night?''
27903''Is n''t it?''
27903''Is n''t there a third thing, Erinaceus?''
27903''Is that all?''
27903''It''s very good of you to tell me all this,''said Belinda,''but what am I to do?''
27903''Magic?
27903''May I touch you?''
27903''May I?''
27903''May n''t I see Alison?''
27903''May we?''
27903''Must I?''
27903''Now I land, do n''t I?''
27903''Now how shall we amuse ourselves?
27903''Now then,''said the Carp testily,''have n''t you any better manners than to come tearing a gentleman''s bed- curtains like that?''
27903''Now, James,''she said,''you''d like to be apprenticed, would n''t you?''
27903''Now,''it said, pointing with the longest of its long black wing- feathers,''you see this beautiful city?''
27903''Oh, Auntie,''said Amabel among hugs,''This is such a lovely place, come and see everything, we may, may n''t we?''
27903''Oh, Baker''s Boy,''said she, for she knew him too,''how can I cheer up?
27903''Oh, Ozymandias, do n''t you sometimes wish we''d been poor people?''
27903''Oh, can you talk?''
27903''Oh, mother, what is it?''
27903''Oh, was that my life- wish?''
27903''Oh, where are you?''
27903''Oh,''said Sep.''Yes,''said the wind,''and now, old chap, when will you go out and seek your fortune?
27903''Oh,''said the Princess, a little disappointed,''then you knew that I loved you?''
27903''Please,''said some one, who was of course the Princess,''is Professor Taykin at home?''
27903''Please,''said the Princess,''can I have a looking- glass?''
27903''Quentin,''she said,''darling, what is it?''
27903''Quick what?''
27903''Ruins?''
27903''So now we know,''said the Prince,''is n''t that glorious?''
27903''Stop?
27903''Suppose you got one so stupid he_ could n''t_ learn?''
27903''That''s rather unkind, is n''t it?''
27903''The journey did n''t take long, did it?
27903''The new boy?
27903''Thed i d wasnd''t true?''
27903''Then if I get out of the water, shall I be a boy again?''
27903''Then you''ll come?''
27903''Then... oh you dear... were you crying because you thought I''d gone?''
27903''They''ve killed my only friend,''said the Princess,''at least.... Shall I pull out the arrows?''
27903''Think so?
27903''Think so?''
27903''Too beautiful, eh?''
27903''Too proud?''
27903''Want any more?''
27903''We?''
27903''Well?''
27903''Well?''
27903''What boy?''
27903''What cheer?''
27903''What do I do now?''
27903''What do you say now?
27903''What do you want now?''
27903''What does the dragon_ like_ to eat?''
27903''What is it?''
27903''What is the other thing that you remember of your hedge- pig wisdom?''
27903''What shall I do?
27903''What shall we do?''
27903''What sort of thing is it you want me to tame?''
27903''What word?''
27903''What''s all that?''
27903''What''s balmy?''
27903''What''s that about_ Atlantis_?''
27903''What''s the matter wiv everyfink?''
27903''What''s this?
27903''What?''
27903''What?''
27903''Where does your father keep his money?''
27903''Where''s my father?''
27903''Where''s my girl?''
27903''Where''s my girl?''
27903''Who are you, and where are you off to so bright and early?''
27903''Who are you, anyway?''
27903''Who are you?''
27903''Who are you?''
27903''Who is the little girl?''
27903''Who said you would n''t?''
27903''Who''re you a- kiddin''of?''
27903''Who''s dhere?''
27903''Whoever_ what_?''
27903''Why did n''t you own up, you sneak?''
27903''Why not for ever?''
27903''Why not uglier every day, and a double dose on Sunday?''
27903''Why not?''
27903''Why should n''t I believe you?''
27903''Why the blue monkeys could n''t you say so?
27903''Why, my good cat, do n''t you see that if you are I, I must be you?
27903''Why, silly lad,''she said, sitting down on the straw- bed beside him and putting the candle on the floor,''what are you crying for?''
27903''Why, whatever is the matter?''
27903''Will your wing ever get well?''
27903''Yes, Your Majesties?''
27903''Yes, very, but where''s the Enchanter of the Ringing Well?''
27903''You can speak?''
27903''You did n''t say that to him?''
27903''You have n''t seen nothing of that there runaway boy by chance?''
27903''You must be very fond of each other?''
27903''You see the great square down there?''
27903''You silly cuckoo,''said Gustus, bitterly,''now you''ve turned that great thing loose on the country, and how''s his keeper to manage him?''
27903''You silly dear boy,''said Queen Belinda, cuddling the baby princess close under her chin,''we_ are_ lovers, are n''t we?
27903''You want me to kill it?''
27903''You will, ducky, wo n''t you?''
27903''You wo n''t go away?''
27903''You''ll take a glass of wine?''
27903''You''re sure you like me,''she asked suddenly,''now you know that I''m only pretty once a week?''
27903''You''ve come to play with me, have n''t you?
27903''_ Eh?_''said the dragon, in tones of extreme astonishment.
27903''_ Never?_''said Kenneth''Then... oh!
27903''_ That?_''said Bellamant.
27903''_ Why_ would n''t you be married on a Sunday?''
27903*****''But how_ did_ you come to be there, darling?''
27903Accidental magic?
27903After a moment he said,''Salisbury?
27903Alison always began by saying''What shall we do?''
27903And Hugh said,''Do you like England or India best?''
27903And as he swung in the air the dreadful thought came to him,''Suppose I do n''t turn into a boy again?
27903And every five minutes a very little voice whispered:''Who stole the kingdom?
27903And not in anger, he noticed curiously, but with surprise and... could it be that they were afraid of him?
27903And the wind came bustling in and clapped him on the back, crying,''Well, my boy, and what can I do for you?
27903And then suddenly he ran into something hard and very solid, and a voice above him said crossly:''Now then, who are you a- shoving of?
27903And under that in still smaller letters--''_ You had better go now._''What would you have done?
27903And what did Elsie feel after being so brave?
27903And what have you done with the amethyst ring?''
27903And, oh, Tavy, would you like some pound- cake and ginger- wine, dear?''
27903Are you?
27903At last I said,''Do you like games?''
27903But how do we go?''
27903But how, but why?
27903But then, how do you account for his dreaming so much that his mother had never told him?
27903But this offends all the good fairies, and then where are you?
27903But what do you want her for?
27903But what was the use of saying so?
27903But why pursue the painful theme?
27903But... where did it come from?''
27903Ca n''t you keep your eyes open, and keep your nose out of gentlemen''s shirt fronts?''
27903Ca n''t you undo the patent lock of that door?''
27903Can I now?''
27903Can we trust him?''
27903Did you ever hear crows cheering?
27903Did you want me?''
27903Do n''t you remember how you cured the King and Queen of all the wounds the hedge- pig made by rolling itself on to their faces in the night?''
27903Do n''t you think, darling, perhaps you were a little hard on him?''
27903Do you know why you wear a veil every day except Sundays?''
27903Do you think you could put it on my fin with your snout?''
27903Eh?''
27903Ever see any conjuring?
27903Got a bit thin or somethink, ai n''t he?''
27903Have some nuts?''
27903Have you all these?''
27903Have you ever noticed how very amused people always are when you''re not there?
27903Have you high courage and determination?
27903Have you patience?
27903He had read about magic, but he had not wholly believed in it, and yet, now, if this was not magic, what was it?
27903Her great- uncle, whom she passed in the hall on her way to her own room, did indeed, as he smoothed his hat, murmur,''Sent to Coventry, eh?
27903Hilda did say,''How old are you?''
27903How came you here?''
27903How can I thank you?''
27903How was I to know it was turnips?
27903How_ could_ you?''
27903I laid it down somewhere-- and----''''Ai n''t that it over there?''
27903I said:''Is there anything you''d like to do?''
27903I suppose you do n''t care for sport-- mousing, I mean?''
27903I wonder how you''d like being a boy?
27903I wonder what that is?''
27903If he should move, what would that thing that was tied to his tail do?
27903If so, will you kindly translate it for us?''
27903Is it a jolly story?''
27903Is there any girl you''d like to marry?''
27903Is there any recipe in the French books for bringing shot princesses to life?
27903Is there anything my Lord needs?''
27903Just a few friends dropped in, eh, what?''
27903Let''s have a doll''s tea- party_ now_, shall we?''
27903Need I say more?
27903Now what do you advise?''
27903Now what would you have done?
27903Now when shall we start?''
27903Oh whatever shall I do?''
27903Poor dragon, what''s the matter?''
27903Rubbed your eyes and thought you were dreaming?
27903Rudel, is it indeed thou?
27903Ruins?''
27903See?''
27903See?''
27903See?''
27903Shake hands, wo n''t you?''
27903Shall we start to- night?
27903She said,''What''s that?''
27903So he said, getting hot to the ears,''You do n''t suppose I''ve stolen your beastly ring, do you, Auntie?''
27903So of course all the others said,''What?''
27903So what is a poor monarch to do?
27903Suppose I keep being a fish?''
27903That is so, Your Majesty, is n''t it?''
27903The Carp shuddered and went on solemnly,''Have you strength?
27903The St. John''s wort perhaps?
27903Then I shall see Stonehenge?''
27903Then Rupert-- which is me-- remembered that about being a visitor, and he said:''Wo n''t you come into the drawing- room?''
27903Was he Kenneth Fish lying on a stone at the bottom of the moat, or Kenneth Boy lying somewhere out of the water?
27903Was it magic?
27903What about the elephant, my emernent scientister?
27903What about your putting the hen in the oven?''
27903What could he do?
27903What could they do with it?
27903What have you been doing all night?''
27903What shall I do without my hedge- pig?''
27903What shall I do?''
27903What was on the shelves?
27903What will your father say?''
27903What''s the word, again?''
27903Where were they journeying?
27903Which is the way to the palace?''
27903Who began it?''
27903Who could have carried him all that way without waking him?
27903Who killed the Princess?''
27903Who put you in?''
27903Who told you?''
27903Who will volunteer?''
27903Why could n''t the beastly cat have held his tongue and sat still?
27903Without whiskers, how can you judge of the width of the places you go through?
27903Wo n''t you come with me?
27903Wo n''t you take a chair?''
27903You are n''t burned, Hilda, are you?''
27903You see the difficulty, Sire?''
27903You wash yours anywhere-- I wonder what they''d say to me if I washed my ears on the drawing- room hearthrug?''
27903You wo n''t hurt me if I bring it to you?''
27903You_ do_ love me, do n''t you?''
27903You_ will_ be married on a week- day, wo n''t you?''
27903[ Illustration:''If you think cats have such a jolly time,''said Lord Hugh,''why not_ be_ a cat?'']
27903[ Illustration:''Who are you?''
27903_ Atlantis_?
27903_ Have_ I got my Sunday face?''
27903_ Me?_ Nonsense!
27903ca n''t I?''
27903his mother almost sobbed,''how_ can_ you?
27903said Sep.''Are you going with me?''
27903said Sep.''Have n''t you any friends in the forest?''
27903she said,''well?''
27903what shall I do?
27903would ye?''
26277...._ I could not sleep at night after that wicked letter of how you love him-- how dare you, a vowed nun, write such sinful words? 26277 ...._ What good can such a marriage do?
26277America?
26277And does he know it now?
26277And that is a very beautiful thought, my dear,she concluded,"is it not?"
26277And the last name?
26277And the trunk, sir? 26277 And where is Mr. Bradley stopping?"
26277And who are the other two, my dear?
26277Anywhere else?
26277Are you hungry?
26277Are you mad?
26277Are you not willing to do that much for me, then?
26277Are you sorry?
26277Are you sorry?
26277Beautiful?
26277But Roger loves me, too,says_ la Margarita_--"why does he not give up what_ he_ likes because he loves me?"
26277But how could she have, dear Miss Jencks?
26277But someone knows?
26277But why?
26277But you have another still?
26277But your servants must have called him something?
26277But, Jerry dear, nothing can be that someone--_Someone_--don''t know, can it? 26277 But, my dear, are you sure it will be good for Mary not to nurse her?
26277By the way,I tried to say easily,"do you want me to-- to begin any explanations?"
26277Can you get me a lantern, Margarita?
26277Can you hold on five minutes, with his weight gone?
26277Could you for ten? 26277 Dead?"
26277Did Hester get you a breakfast?
26277Did you bring some one who knows how to marry people? 26277 Did you ever go to Broadway?"
26277Do you dine alone?
26277Do you hear me, Margarita?
26277Do you think,I asked,"that people really talk the way Mr. Micawber talks?
26277Does Caliban?
26277Does he understand?
26277For heaven''s sake,Roger cried sharply,"are you human, child?
26277Give Roger?
26277Had you thought of taking her to your mother and marrying her there, Roger?
26277Has Roger got a change for me?
26277Has she been dead long, do you think?
26277Have I been ill long?
26277Have you been married?
26277Have you no parents or friends to protect you from the consequences of this crazy performance? 26277 He looked to be well enough yest''day,"said the insomniac indifferently,"big feller, ai n''t he?"
26277He was an Englishman, I suppose?
26277Heavens, child, what can I think? 26277 How about the baby?"
26277How about the name, Roger?
26277How can I marry a young sprig, when I am going to marry you?
26277How did I get here?
26277I beg your pardon, madam,he said,"I trust I have not hurt you?"
26277I can sing it if it is here,said Margarita placidly,"why not?"
26277I do n''t want for a moment to meddle, but on the chance that you have n''t thought of it, may I suggest one thing?
26277I see,he said,"it''s an extraordinary situation, is n''t it?"
26277I suppose, Tip,he said,"you''re wondering why you''re here, eh?"
26277I told you we lived by the sea-- did you forget?
26277I wonder if Caliban will make my breakfast, now?
26277If you are ready, then?
26277In heaven''s name,I cried,"how am I to get a sensible parson in fifteen minutes?
26277Is her voice injured?
26277Is it all right, Jerry?
26277Is that yours?
26277Is the woman dead?
26277Is there more than one sea, then?
26277Is this the man that will marry us?
26277It did n''t do, then?
26277It never happened, then? 26277 It''s absurd,"I went on,"perhaps he meant''person,''though what''s the point in that?
26277Jerry, you extravagant old donkey, what do you mean by this?
26277Jerry? 26277 Listen to me, Miss Margarita,"he said slowly and with exaggerated articulation, as one speaks to a child,"what was your father''s name?
26277Marrying people is a business like any other, Miss-- I did not hear your last name?
26277Near here?
26277No bad news, I hope?
26277Others like me?
26277Put it under his arms, can you?
26277Put your back into it, man; get along, ca n''t you?
26277Shall I read it, sir?
26277Since when?
26277Surely that sees itself?
26277That is all there are,she assured him,"surely three different names are sufficient for one person?
26277That''s crazy, Richard,I stammered finally,"bring what?
26277The_ signore_ sleeps?
26277Then why do you not nurse her, dear Miss Jencks?
26277To Broadway?
26277To show yourself on it?
26277Two weeks, Mr. Jerrolds,she said promptly,"quite long enough, was n''t it?
26277Upstairs?
26277Was-- is Mr. Bradley well?
26277We do n''t talk that way over here,he admonished me shortly,"go ahead without any sirs, ca n''t you?"
26277Well, well, what about the tide?
26277What can I do for you, Mr. Jerrolds? 26277 What do you find so absorbing out of the window, my dear?"
26277What do you mean by such a performance?
26277What have I been?
26277What is Hester''s name?
26277What is that, Jerry?
26277What is that, Jerry?
26277What is that?
26277What is your name?
26277What is your name?
26277What must you think of me?
26277What was it?
26277What''s all this? 26277 What''s your name, anyhow?
26277Where do you dine when you dine out?
26277Where''s the ring?
26277Which do you like best?
26277Who''s to tell her?
26277Why did n''t you send her to me and go yourself?
26277Why do I think he has to be there, Jerry? 26277 Why has that woman a beard, Sue?"
26277Why not?
26277Why?
26277Will he not know me for a minute, a little minute, Harriet?
26277Will you be good, you absurd little wildcat? 26277 Will you let me examine your bag?"
26277Will you not do as this man asks you, Caliban?
26277Will you tell me the quickest way to Broadway?
26277Will you?
26277Wo n''t that be a little awkward? 26277 Wo n''t you give us a song, lieutenant?"
26277Wo n''t you offer me anything to eat and drink?
26277Yes, I understand you, Jerry,she said, dropping her voice that haunting third,"but I would rather----""Are you going?"
26277You are not going to leave me, Roger Bradley?
26277You are not, I take it, accustomed to dining out, Miss Margarita?
26277You do n''t know, Jerry dear?
26277You do not love me, do you, Jerry?
26277You do not mean that I must be polite to Jerry?
26277You have another name, however,he said gently,"and what do you mean by the sea?
26277You have given up a great deal for those handsome heads, Margarita,I go on, under the spur of some curious impulse,"did you never regret it?
26277You have lived a great deal, since, have you not, Margarita?
26277You know very well-- you ca n''t have forgotten? 26277 You must wake, now,"she said gravely,"and tell me if you are Jerry-- are you?"
26277You speak when you sleep do you not, Jerry?
26277You''re not alone, I hope?
26277You''re not really French, are you?
26277_ Is_ there a single_ joy_ or pain That I may_ never_ know?
26277_ Un mari complaisant, alors?_said the baritone lightly.
26277), what had we done that he should take away one whom we and the world-- her world-- could so ill spare?
2627710th., 189-- JERRY DEAR: What must you think of me for delaying so long to write, after the few curt words I found for you that night?
26277Ah, faithful Caliban, what hours of terrible tuition made thy task clear to thee?
26277Ah, well, the Way is a Mystery, as Alif said, and who am I that I should expect to solve it, when kings and philosophers have failed?
26277Ah, who knows?
26277All faults, doubtless-- but who would have or love a faultless woman?
26277And Margarita''s?
26277And Roger, in spite of the fact that he was forty and a conspicuously practical person( or was it, perhaps just_ because_ of this fact?
26277And do you know, I''m not sure she was wrong?
26277And is it I that my hair must bind?
26277And money laid by, too, but is she idle?
26277And mostly artists: dramatic, musical-- how should I know?
26277And tell him to have plenty of breakfast, will you?"
26277And the third?
26277And then he said that mine was worse, because there was some on my chin-- why do you scowl so, Jerry?
26277And then what good has it done?
26277And what had this wicked foreigner done?"
26277And who can explain its extraordinary effect upon the voice?
26277And yet who but me who knew her can ever have heard from the lips of any woman such absolute naïvetà ©, such crystal frankness?
26277And you are----?"
26277Any special denomination?"
26277Anyhow, you''ve got it, old fellow, whether you need it or not, have n''t you?
26277Are only the stupid and unoriginal, unattractive ones to have this responsibility?
26277Are we all more clear- sighted than we suppose-- or more sentimental?
26277Are we nearly in?
26277Are you braced solid?"
26277Are you cold, too?"
26277Are you not hungry, Mary?"
26277Are you planning to live there after you are married?"
26277Are you ready, lieutenant?"
26277But I do n''t believe you or I would be in Roger''s shoes for a good deal, would we?"
26277But I must say what I think) but if she sees a career open to her of fame, money and satisfaction, why should the fact of her marriage prevent it?
26277But I was telling you about the tide, was I not?
26277But a real soul?
26277But then, what does it matter?
26277But why did Roger do it so suddenly?
26277But why do you call it a lesson, Miss Jencks?"
26277But why, oh why, must equality produce such bad manners?
26277But you understand?"
26277But-- not to have known Margarita?
26277Ca n''t one o''yer sing?"
26277Ca n''t you pipe up, some o''you?
26277Can any bugle''s screaming cover those anguished cries, or any scarlet stripes soak up the spreading blood?
26277Can you imagine anything more extraordinary?
26277Can you not do it, either?"
26277Can you not tell me the name of one?"
26277Can you write to me, Bob?
26277Child, perhaps, of some sprig of nobility, caught by a pair of cool, grey English eyes?
26277Could anything be simpler?
26277Did they fly, helpless, to their death, bound by some fatal certainty?
26277Did they?
26277Did you not see what he gave me?
26277Do I wish he had?
26277Do people fight for it like that?
26277Do you hear?"
26277Do you know anybody better?
26277Do you know him, too?"
26277Do you like this little room?
26277Do you not remember, I told you how he carried the blueberry pie and the milk out there and we ate them?
26277Do you not want to talk to me, Jerry?"
26277Do you remember Frederick''s diatribes on the subject?
26277Do you remember our talks?)
26277Do you think I have been blind for three years?
26277Do you think she has any soul, really?
26277Do you understand me?"
26277Do you understand?"
26277Do you?
26277Does that mean it''s final?
26277Does_ Someone_, indeed, know why, my sweetheart Peggy?
26277For I am very seriously busy, and how, do you think?
26277God knows the poor devils need something-- is it that, then?
26277Had anyone been in the house?
26277Had she thrust herself upon him, enticed him, challenged him?
26277Have they even strength to cut their own timber?
26277Have you ever read Ibsen''s play, the"Doll''s House"?
26277He would kill them all, if he could, I know, and yet no one there would hurt a hair of her head-- and does she not belong to the public?
26277How about the license in this state?"
26277How can a woman be so good and yet so horrid?
26277How could I?
26277How could he take this girl to a town that neither he nor she knew the name of?
26277How dared you risk your life so?
26277How do you see, Jerry?
26277How should I know?
26277How, on the other hand, could he fling such a projectile as Margarita into any respectable hotel?
26277I am sorry, because----""Sorry?"
26277I echoed stupidly,"how''give Roger''?"
26277I gasped,"what is it?
26277I had learned better when you came, had I not?
26277I hear hansoms jingling up-- what will Roger say?
26277I heard in a round- about way from Roger''s brother- in- law Carter( Yale''8--, is n''t he?)
26277I know it is hard to be a good man, but will you try?"
26277I questioned curiously,"if you want to go so much?"
26277I should enjoy helping Roger''s wife with her trousseau-- how did he happen to go to the island she lives on?
26277I should like to live there, should not you?
26277I suppose you could n''t wait till you found it out?"
26277I wonder if that is the reason I love this place so?
26277I wonder if we do well in despising these small thrills as we do?
26277I wonder if you know what you are losing?
26277I wonder if you realise how many women marry to get away from home?
26277I wonder what that woman''s real name was?
26277If we find it-- the major and I-- shall we bring some apples back to Peggy?
26277Is he swimming?"
26277Is he unconscious?"
26277Is it a bargain?"
26277Is it a real thing?
26277Is it likely God did not know I would bring him?
26277Is it superstition?
26277Is n''t that so?"
26277Is n''t that strange?
26277Is n''t the world small?
26277Is she one of the Devonshire Prynnes?
26277Is that a wrong thing to tell?"
26277Is that where he will do it?"
26277Is the circle nearly complete?
26277It was shocking, Miss Buxton-- surely you could have done something?"
26277Je n''en reviens pas!_""And why, Monsieur?"
26277Jerrolds?"
26277Jerrolds?"
26277Jerry dear, my best friend now, for I must not count on Roger any more, do you think I am blind?
26277Jerry?"
26277Let him alone and hang on, do you hear?
26277Let us eat it on the rocks, Roger Bradley, will you?"
26277M----i, with a glance at Roger,"Monsieur is not artiste, then?"
26277Many a time have we discussed it since, with a curious, frightened wonder: why should that furnace have seemed so all- important to me?
26277Miss Bradley is a good woman, but not much like Roger, is she?
26277Mother of God, does the_ signore_ think any woman born hereabouts would have blood enough for that?
26277Must you always have the doing and I the telling?
26277Nay, Harriet of the true heart, Harriet of the tender hand, could we have been three without you?
26277Nor anyone crossing themselves?
26277Nothing could be more certain than this bare fact, and can you show me anything more productive of human uncertainty?
26277Now, Jerry, what do you make of that?
26277Now, since this is so of both of us, do n''t you see, dear, that things are better as they are?
26277Now, where did you come from?"
26277Of course he did n''t either-- would he ever have known the difference, I wonder, if we had married?
26277Oh, Bertie, the Right Honourable now, the always honourable then, do you know that there were tears on your pink cheeks?
26277PART SIX IN WHICH YOU ARE SHOWN THE RIVER''S VERY SOURCES, FAR UNDERGROUND And is it I that must sit and spin?
26277Paris can never forget her, for did she not invent an entirely new_ Marguerite_?
26277Perhaps the_ signore_ will believe that?"
26277Perhaps,"hopefully,"you do live there?"
26277Roger echoed in consternation,"are you certain?"
26277Shall I call you a cab, sir?"
26277Shall we go back?"
26277She can not have seen a crucifix, can she?
26277She has lost her voice-- do you know it?"
26277She says that I said,"Where are they, old fellow?
26277She stole a son o''the church to hell, And out of hell shall the church steal me?
26277Sister Lisabetta suspects me already, and asked me last week why I should talk with the baker''s daughter so secretly?
26277Some fisher girl, whose father had won an English lady''s- maid with his flashing smile?
26277Some little shopkeeper''s daughter?
26277Suppose he had depended on me for it?
26277Suppose he needed me?
26277Tell me once again-- you do not know of any friends or relatives of your father''s or Hester''s?"
26277That Aquarius, drawn by him, had imposed himself, too, and affected the very Moon in her courses?
26277That is, if it is necessary for a woman to develop herself fully in any but the physical sense-- and is n''t it?
26277The darling imbecile-- could anything have been so hopelessly enchanting as Margarita?
26277The magic of the Golden Voice-- ah, what magic can cope with it?
26277Then why to her?
26277Then why was the bed there?
26277There must be_ Some one_?"
26277They are not true, are they?
26277They were no longer mine-- why should I care to view them?
26277Three only?
26277To think of my running against Dodge again after all these years-- you remember our famous duel?
26277Was Alif right, and is it written for us all?
26277Was he a scientist, a lecturer, a magazine writer, a schoolmaster?
26277Was he to stroll out of the waiting- room and leave her abandoned, like some undesirable kitten, in the corner?
26277Was not that a dreadful thing to do?
26277Was she impish, or only ingenuous, I wonder?
26277Was she really dead?
26277Was she teasing me?
26277Well, it was banal enough, heaven knows-- how else could it have been popular?
26277Well, seriously-- will I do?
26277Were you quite fair to that lovely, high- spirited creature you married, all those years ago?
26277What a beautiful voice she has-- have you ever heard it drop a perfect minor third?
26277What are you up to?"
26277What caught at your heart and worried you, Colonel, and stabbed a little under your D. S. O.?
26277What could I do?
26277What did the people in the town you live in call him?"
26277What do you know of the private life of the man in the next house?
26277What do you mean?"
26277What do you suppose she meant?
26277What do you think of it?
26277What do you want of it?"
26277What had he been doing all the afternoon?
26277What his necessity?
26277What in the world is the matter with the women, nowadays?
26277What is it, that strange, lasting charm that wins every woman- thing of every age and colour?
26277What is that for?"
26277What must that woman''s soul have been?
26277What sea?"
26277What should be said of a person who lived on a nameless shore, served by Hester Prynne and Caliban?
26277What was I?
26277What was Margarita''s mother?
26277What was the secret he had concealed so perfectly, and what had been his motive?
26277What was there for me to do with it?
26277What will people think?
26277What would she do-- or say?
26277What would the Governor- General have thought of that girl?
26277Where do you live?"
26277Where shall we be if the finest specimens of them have no leisure to perpetuate the race?
26277Where was Hester''s body?
26277Who can know?
26277Who in the devil was he?
26277Who is she?"
26277Who keeps the shop, I wonder?
26277Who sang the grey monk out o''the cell?
26277Who sends the wild duck, for that matter?
26277Why are you here?"
26277Why did he?
26277Why did she do it, I wonder?
26277Why do you not ask Caliban?"
26277Why do you pull the blanket up to your chin so?
26277Why is it, by the way, that God has hidden so many things in these latter days from the prudent and revealed them unto spinsters?
26277Why must he be there?"
26277Why not let us meet her first?
26277Why will women play Chopin, by the way?
26277Why, why were you not teaching your simple code of honour to some sturdy, kilted Harry?
26277Why?
26277Will no one stop her?
26277Will you come out with me?"
26277Will you come, too?"
26277Will you look out and tell me if you see one?"
26277Will you promise me?"
26277Will you tell me, Jerry, why, if Margarita really is an artist and has a great gift, she should not use it?
26277Will you?"
26277Will you?"
26277Would the_ signore_ follow her?
26277Would you rather stop here a while?"
26277You came very near being born there, did you know it?
26277You have heard, I suppose, that Margarita is actually in training for the opera?
26277You know Mrs. Paynter well, Jerry-- do you think there is any chance for me there?
26277You see what I mean, do n''t you, Jerry?
26277You should have said so before-- why did n''t you?"
26277You told him to try to kill me?"
26277[ Illustration: HE SKETCHED HER IN CHARCOAL, DRESSED( HE WOULD HAVE IT) IN BLACK]"Then what would you say to the Prodigal Son?"
26277_ Her children?_ Four sons, all dead now, and their souls with Christ-- one, of the Sacred College.
26277_ Is it religion?_"I_ need_ Thee-- oh, I_ need_ Thee!"
26277_ Je m''en doute._"Of course I love Roger, Sue,"she said to me,"but why should I not do what I want to just because I love him?
26277_ Not so much as one?_ Why should there be?
26277_ Not so much as one?_ Why should there be?
26277_ Que faire alors?_ It is really rather complicated, I think, Jerry, though you will probably not agree with me, when I explain what I mean.
26277_ Then why cut it?_ How should she know?
26277_ Then why cut it?_ How should she know?
26277a drink, perhaps?"
26277and admit that I was just a little hurt that Roger had not told me?
26277he repeated sternly,"and why do you want to do that?"
26277he said with compunction,"you''ll think me an awful bore, Jerrolds, but I''ve been more or less practising on you, have n''t I?
26277her lips barely formed the words,"do you know?"
26277says the speaker suddenly,"pipe h''up there, friends-- many a sinner''s saved his soul with a song-- w''y not some o''you?
26277she cried,"where am I going?"
26277she repeated,"what matters?"
26277ça va bien-- vous vous amusez, n''est- ce pas?_"or such like, and with an equal and unconscious amiability that I replied in like manner.
33540Of what avail are statutes,says Walsingham,"since the king with his privy council is wo nt to abolish what parliament has just enacted?
33540A feudal principle was surely the more ancient; and what could be more alien to this than a baron, a peer, an hereditary counsellor, without a fief?
33540And therefore it was demanded of the said lords by way of question what aid would be sufficient and requisite in these circumstances?
33540And was his son really illegitimate, as an usurping uncle pretended?
33540But did any hold of the king in socage, except on his demesne lands?
33540But is there sufficient evidence of their genuineness?
33540But who were these, and how distinguished?
33540But why is it asserted that this jurisdiction was inherent in the council?
33540Can anything be lower than this, if nothing is omitted more valuable than what is mentioned?
33540Et dato, quòd_ nullus omnino tortor inveniri valeat_ in Angliâ, utrum pro tortoribus mittendum sit ad partes transmarinas?
33540Et si torquendi sunt, utrum per clericos vel laicos?
33540Even if the book were Charlemagne''s own, might he not have dictated it?
33540How could a villein in gross be lower than this?
33540How, they said, can you procure them?
33540Hæc[ etiam?]
33540It has been observed, that Quid mores sine legibus?
33540Or did the crime of Richard, though punished in him, enure to the benefit of Henry?
33540The former epithet can not, I think, be possibly applicable in the face of statute law; for what else determines our constitution?
33540These of course were Normans; but what inference can be drawn in favour of parliamentary representation in England from the behaviour of the rest?
33540What way shall we make this commensurate to the present value of money?
33540Who then was king after the death of Edward IV.?
33540Why are we to interpret Magna Charta otherwise than according to the natural meaning of the words and the concurrent voice of parliament?
33540[ 32] What can one who adopts this opinion of Dr. Brady say to the following record?
33540and afterwards had been knighted at Crecy and Poictiers?
33540and his successors, such means of enforcing the execution of law as left no sufficient pretext for recurring to an arbitrary tribunal?
33540claim a book against Luther, which was not written by himself?
33540de l''Italie, t. i. p. 55, would be more to the purpose: Quid dicamus columnarum junceam proceritatem?
27400''If I-- if I ask you if you-- if you-- think Miss Gibson the most beautiful girl you ever saw?'' 27400 ''If you_ what_, Miss Royce?''
27400''Il est dix heures, savez- vous? 27400 ''Oh, have I?
27400''Why did you refuse? 27400 ''You ask me why I look so pale?''"
27400A disembodied conscience?
27400A painter? 27400 Ah, I suppose he helps you with your Euclid also?"
27400And Barty?
27400And Leah?
27400And how''s the north pole this morning?
27400And is he very sincere?
27400And the pretty girl in blue with the fair hair?
27400And what do you think? 27400 Are you dumb, Josselin?
27400Arma virumque cano--"Tityre tu patulæ?"
27400As- tu vu? 27400 Bonzig?
27400Brave cavalier, off to the war, What will you do So far from here? 27400 But what_ do_ you feel when you feel the north, Barty-- a kind of tingling?"
27400C''est le ciel, tout bonnement-- et tu vas m''apprendre l''allemand, n''est- ce- pas, m''amour?
27400Caillard, avez- vous chanté?
27400Comme c''est bête, de s''battre, hein?
27400Do you remember father Jaurion''s old angora cat?
27400Do you remember that knock at the door? 27400 Do you remember?
27400English, of course?
27400Est- ce_ toi_?
27400Est- ce_ toi_?
27400Et toi, Maurice?
27400Et vous ne cantez pas du tout-- du tout?
27400He''s not a bit romantic,_ is_ he?
27400How about that toss?
27400I bet you do n''t know why they all stare so, Uncle Bob?
27400I wonder why he let off Josselin and Maurice so easily?
27400Il est dix heures, savez- vous?
27400It''s all over?
27400It''s heaven, pure and simple-- and you are going to teach me German, are n''t you, my dear?
27400Josselin, avez- vous chanté?
27400Josselin?
27400Lipmann, avez- vous chanté?
27400Listen,said the signore;"why not arrange to live together, you and we?
27400Maurice, avez- vous chanté?
27400Moi aussi, je fumais quand c''était défendu; que voulez- vous? 27400 Moi, m''sieur?"
27400Moi, m''sieur?
27400Moi, m''sieur?
27400Moi, m''sieur?
27400Moi, m''sieur?
27400Not of the Grenadier Guards?
27400Not one of the Berkshire Bletchleys, eh?
27400O celestial hate, How canst thou be appeased? 27400 Oui, toi!--comment dirais- tu,''_ je pourrais vouloir_''?"
27400P. S.--You remember pretty little Kitty Hardwicke you used to flirt with, who married young St. Clair, who''s now Lord Kidderminster? 27400 Palaiseau,"said Monsieur Bonzig,"si vous vous serviez de votre mouchoir-- hein?
27400Pourquoi, alors?
27400Qu''est- ce que vous avez donc, tous?
27400Qu''est- ce que vous regardez?
27400Que me voilà donc bien contente, mon petit Barty-- et toi? 27400 Quoi, quoi, quoi?"
27400Qué''q''çà veut dire?
27400Rapaud, comment dit- on''_ pouvoir_''en anglais?
27400Talking of beauties, whom do you think I met yesterday in the Park? 27400 Te rappelles- tu cette omelette?"
27400Te rappelles- tu l''habit neuf de Berquin, et son chapeau haute- forme?
27400Te souviens- tu de la vieille chatte angora du père Jaurion?
27400Thanks-- anything else?
27400Then why are you called Josselin?
27400Voulez- vous bien vous en aller bien vite?
27400Vous allez à Blankenberghe, mossié?
27400Was n''t he called Lord Runswick?
27400Well, you had a fair field and no favor, old boy, did n''t you?
27400Well-- what do you think of Leah Gibson?
27400What book have you got there, Josselin-- Cæsar or Cornelius Nepos?
27400What have you got in your mouth, Josselin-- chocolate?--barley- sugar?--caoutchouc?--or an India- rubber ball?
27400What on earth_ can_ be the matter?
27400What''s that,_ circenses_? 27400 Who am I, indeed?
27400Who are your uncommonly well- dressed friends, Barty?
27400Who helps you in your Latin, my boy?
27400Who is she? 27400 Why can I not go where the roses go, And not await The heartbreaking regrets which the end of things Keeps for us here?"
27400Why not?
27400Why, you do n''t mean to say_ you''re_ an Englishman?
27400Will you give up all this for a pair of bright black eyes and a pretty white skin? 27400 Will you take yourself off at once?"
27400Your father''s French, I suppose?
27400_ Comme c''est bête, de s''battre, hein?_--"How stupid it is to fight, eh?"
27400_ Esker voo her jer dwaw lah vee? 27400 _ Est- ce toi?_"--"Is it thou?"
27400_ Et toi, Maurice_--"And you, Maurice?"
27400_ Et vous ne cantez pas... comme je pourrai._"And you do not sing at all, at all?
27400_ Il est dix heures... dans votre chambre?_--"It''s ten o''clock, you know?
27400_ Moi aussi, je fumais... n''est ce pas?_--"I too smoked when it was forbidden; what do you expect?
27400_ Moi, m''sieur?_--"I, sir?"
27400_ O tempo passato, perchè non ritorni?_--"O bygone days, why do you not return?"
27400_ Oui, toi-- comment dirais- tu,''je pourrais vouloir''?_--"Yes, you-- how would you say''I would be able to will''?"
27400_ Pourquoi, alors?_--"Why, then?"
27400_ Pourquoi, m''sieur?_"_ Parce que ça me plaît!_"What for, sir?
27400_ Pourquoi, m''sieur?_"_ Parce que ça me plaît!_"What for, sir?
27400_ Qu''est- ce que vous avez donc, tous?_--"What''s the matter with you all?"
27400_ Qu''est- ce que vous regardez?... 27400 _ Que me voilà.... Ôte ton chapeau!_""How happy I am, my little Barty-- and you?
27400_ Qué''q''çà veut dire?_--"What''s that mean?"
27400_ Rapaud, comment dit- on''pouvoir''en anglais?_--"Rapaud, how do they say''to be able''in English?"
27400_ Sur votre parole d''honneur, avez- vous chanté?_--"On your word of honor, have you sung?"
27400_ Te rappelles- tu cette omelette?_--"Do you remember that omelette?"
27400_ Te rappelles- tu... du père Jaurion?_--"Do you recall Berquin''s new coat and his high- hat?"
27400_ Vous allez à Blankenberghe, mossiê?_--"You go to Blankenberghe, sah?"
27400_ très bel homme... que joli garçon hein?_--"fine man, Bob; more of the fine man than the handsome fellow, eh?"
27400''I''ll show you_ my_ children presently; and you, have you any children?''
27400( If you were to use your pocket- handkerchief-- eh?
27400( What does it call itself, your marquis?)
27400( What would Père Brossard say at this?
27400( Why do n''t you like shooting?
27400( vous donnez votre langue aux chats?).
27400*****_ Leah._"Who is he?"
27400127 THREE LITTLE MAIDS FROM SCHOOL( 1853) 139 SOLITUDE 149"''PILE OU FACE-- HEADS OR TAILS?''"
274002), who said, in his sulky, insolent, peasantlike manner:"Et comment q''ça s''appelle, vot''marquis?"
27400A great master would not be above painting a small child or a big dog separately-- why should he be above putting them both in the same picture?
27400All that sounds odd now, does n''t it?
27400All those new hotels and lodging- houses and smart shops-- what can they have been turned into?
27400And Veronese tuned his guitar and said:"Jé vais vous canter couelquécose-- una piccola cosa da niente!--vous comprenez l''Italien?"
27400And finding her very much to my taste, I said to my sister, just for fun,"Oh--_that''s_ Leah Gibson, is it?
27400And that beauty, health, and strength are a part of that fitness, and old age a bar to it, who would dare deny?
27400And that''s better than being handsome,_ is n''t_ it?
27400And the lovely, tall, black- eyed_ damigella_--who''s she?"
27400And what on earth do_ I_ want a fortune for?
27400And what was love?
27400And whenever they spoke French to you, these good people, they said"savez- vous?"
27400And where would Barty himself have been without his wife, who came from that very class?
27400And you let yourself go before him, and so do your family, and so do your old friends; is_ he_ not also a friend, though not an old one?
27400And,"Mon Dieu, comme il a bonne mine, ce cher Barty-- n''est- ce pas, mon amour, que tu as bonne mine?
27400And,"Si nous allions à l''Hippodrôme cette après- midi voir la belle écuyère Madame Richard?
27400Are you_ me_?
27400At what o''clock is he coming, your Monsieur Paroly?"
27400Barracks?
27400Barty had a passion for gazing at very tall men; like Frederic the Great( or was it his Majesty''s royal father?).
27400Barty went up to Madame Jean:"Will you forgive me for giving you with my seal an empty envelope?
27400But how is it you never fell in love with the fair_ Ida_?
27400But next morning I said to him at breakfast, in English,"Was n''t your father killed in a duel?"
27400But to think of it again Will you ever care?
27400But when he came to each of_ us_( Josselin and me) he just mumbled his"Est- ce toi?"
27400But why did you not come with us?
27400But would I live it all over again?
27400Ca n''t you speak?"
27400Did n''t you know_ that_?"
27400Do n''t you adore pretty women, you naughty little Barty?
27400Do n''t you like crumpets, my dear?
27400Do n''t you remember?
27400Do n''t you think so?"
27400Do they take in each other''s washing, or review each other''s books?
27400Do you not see that the night is dark, And that the world Is only care?"
27400Do you see the name of the street at the corner?
27400Do you think you could carry me home?"
27400Eh?
27400En veux- tu?
27400Even the best of it?
27400For would I care, twenty years hence, to re- live these coming twenty years?
27400Have you ever been presented to her Grace, O reader?
27400Have you seen it?
27400He has a peculiar way of saying"_ oê, vô!_"instead of"_ oui, vous!_"to any boy who says"moi, m''sieur?"
27400He informally winked at me and said:"Esker voo ker jer dwaw lah vee?
27400How could Beauty guess the Beast was a Prince in disguise?
27400How do they live, I wonder?
27400How else am I to live?"
27400I suppose I am going blind?"
27400I suppose you''re very fond of him?
27400Il faut bien que jeunesse se passe, n''est ce pas?"
27400Is it because no high artist-- except Briton Riviere-- will stoop to so easily understood a subject?
27400Is it only on account of their pretty manners that my titled friends are such favorites with these highly intellectual guests of mine-- and with me?
27400Is it still Skinner who builds for you?
27400Is it the lost"s,"and the heavy"^"that makes up for it, which lend such a mysterious and gloomy fascination?
27400Is it_ all_ my doing?
27400Is n''t Julia white enough for you?
27400It is but a humble sort of triumph to crow over-- and where does Barty Josselin come in?
27400It is quite lovely, and begins:"Beau chevalier qui partez pour la guerre, Qu''allez- vous faire Si loin d''ici?
27400It sticks in the memory, and it''s as simple as"How d''ye do?"
27400Leah''s girlish instinct was a right one when she said me nay that afternoon by the Chelsea pier-- for how could she see inside me, poor child?
27400Lequel de nous deux est volé, petit coquin?"
27400Love or grief?
27400MON JEUNE AMI...''"251"''YOU ASK ME WHY I LOOK SO PALE?''"
27400Maintenant, comment dirais- tu en anglais,''_ je voudrais pouvoir_''?"
27400Mais de vous en souvenir Prendrez- vous la peine?
27400Mais de vous en souvenir, Et d''y revenir?
27400May I ask you to accept my card, with my sincere excuses?..."
27400May I ask your name?"
27400Might n''t they try it?
27400Need I say they have all risen to fame and fortune-- as becomes poetical justice?
27400Next day Tescheles came up to an English student called Fox and said:"Well, old stick- in- the- mud, how are_ you_ getting on?"
27400Now, how would you say,''I would like to be able''in English?"
27400O human suffering, Who can cure thee?
27400Oh, would he not be generous as he was great and be one of them for a few days, and take half the profits-- more-- whatever he liked?"
27400Once outside the Church, the Army and Navy, or a Government office, what on earth did it matter_ who_ or_ what_ one was, or was n''t?
27400Or was it those maternally ancestral Irish Blakes of Derrydown stirring within me?
27400Où avions- nous donc la tête et les yeux?
27400Part Fifth"Ô céleste haine, Comment t''assouvir?
27400Qué vilaine langue, hein?
27400She started violently, and turned round, and cried:"Oh, Barty, Barty, where have you been all these years?"
27400So he puts all in a row and begins:"Rubinel, sur votre parole d''honneur, avez- vous chanté?"
27400So round he went, from boy to boy, deliberately fixing each boy with his eye, and severely asking--"Est- ce_ toi_?"
27400So why do n''t I give up at once?
27400Suddenly my mother exclaimed:"Bartholomew Josselin?
27400Take the greatest of them; what have they ever really mattered?
27400The fact is, I''m rather fond of noble lords: why should n''t I be?
27400The reminiscence of some antenatal incarnation of his own soul?
27400The soul of some ancestor or ancestress-- of his mother, perhaps?
27400The"forty year"?
27400Then, suddenly:"Pourquoi q''tu n''aimes pas la chasse?
27400This she did n''t mind on her own account, but when he said, quite casually:"By- the- way, I forget if I_ know_ your good husband;_ do_ I?"
27400Voulez- vous votre café dans votre chambre?''
27400Vous ne voulez pas vous en aller?_""What are you looking at?"
27400Vous ne voulez pas vous en aller?_""What are you looking at?"
27400Voyez- vous pas que la nuit est profonde, Et que le monde N''est que souci?"
27400Was I a happy man?
27400Was I delighted to grasp his hand at St. Katharine''s wharf, after so many months?
27400Was it because I knew French?
27400Was it because I was a friend of Barty the Guardsman, who had never been supercilious towards anybody in his life?
27400Was it because I was very tall, and dressed by Barty''s tailor, in Jermyn Street?
27400What a beastly language, eh?
27400What am I to you?
27400What children and grandchildren of my own could ever be to me as these of Barty Josselin''s?
27400What could I do?
27400What did_ I_ care about his father''s name?
27400What does a girl of that age really know about her own heart?
27400What must it be like now?
27400What on earth could the dear boy have to write about?
27400What success of his own would he ever hope to achieve, handicapped as he would be by all the ease and luxury she would bring him?
27400What was she?
27400When have I had time to trouble about French?
27400Where are they now?
27400Who and what could Martia be?
27400Who ever hears of decadents nowadays?
27400Who is she?
27400Who is this demure young black- eyed witch that has come between us, this friend of Ida Maurice''s?
27400Who was Martia?
27400Who was Martia?
27400Who''s your friend?"
27400Whose?
27400Why are you so bent on worldly things?"
27400Why do n''t I?
27400Why do you love me, as you say you do, with a love passing the love of woman?
27400Why should I take such pains about all this, and dwell so laboriously on all these minute details?
27400Will you come once more?
27400Will you have your coffee in your room?"
27400Will you think of it again?
27400Would it be right and honest and fair to her?
27400You know her well, I suppose?"
27400You remember dear M. Durosier at the Pension Brossard?
27400You''ll tell me what you think of her; and you, my friend, do you also adore pretty women?"
27400You''ve become très bel homme, Bob, plutôt bel homme que joli garçon, hein?
27400Youth must have its day, musn''t it?"
27400[ Illustration: AM RHEIN"LED WE NOT THERE A JOLLY LIFE BETWIXT THE SUN AND SHADE?"]
27400[ Illustration:"''DOES SHE_ KNOW_ YOU''RE VERY FOND OF HER?''"]
27400[ Illustration:"''PILE OU FACE-- HEADS OR TAILS?''"]
27400[ Illustration:"''YOU ASK ME WHY I LOOK SO PALE?''"]
27400[ Illustration:"A LITTLE WHITE POINT OF INTERROGATION"]"And was he always like that-- funny and jolly and good- natured?"
27400[ cut along] no thanks!--but look here-- are you coming with us à la chasse to- day?"
27400_ Barty._"Why should n''t he come just for the pleasure of making my acquaintance?"
27400_ En veux- tu?
27400_ I_ won that toss--_didn''t_ I?"
27400_ Is n''t_ that a happy coincidence?
27400_ Leah._"What is he when he''s at home?"
27400_ Ou avions- nous donc la tête et les yeux?_--What were we doing with our minds and eyes?
27400_ Quis custodiet( ipsos custodes)?_--Who shall guard the guards themselves?
27400_ Quis custodiet?_..."You''re mistaken about Malines.
27400_ Why_ was she so anxious he should marry Julia?
27400_ savez vous?_--do you know?
27400aller?"
27400are you the spirit of my mother?
27400comment allez- vous?"
27400eh, my wife?"
27400eh?
27400en voilà!_--Do you want some?
27400et tu n''as jamais vu Madame Richard?
27400et vous, mon ami[ this to me], est- ce que vous adorez aussi les jolies femmes?"
27400for peccadilloes To scold those little loves?
27400forgive me-- are you very_ fond_ of her, as I''m sure she deserves, you know?''
27400have n''t I been fortunate in my sister Leah?
27400hein, ma femme?"
27400hein?
27400hissed an angry male voice in my ear--(which of us two is sold, you little rascal?).
27400how do you do?"
27400how do you like_ Sardonyx_?"
27400la jolie ville, hein?"
27400military hospitals and sanatoriums?
27400n''est- ce pas, mon chou, tu aimes bien les crompettes?
27400n''est- ce pas, méchant petit Barty, que tu adores les jolies femmes?
27400off?"
27400on being found fault with; and perceiving this, Barty manages to be found fault with every five minutes, and always says"moi, m''sieur?"
27400or that touch of nature that makes the whole world kin at about 1 P.M. on Sunday?
27400or, perhaps, some occult portion of himself-- of his own brain in unconscious cerebration during sleep?
27400pour des peccadilles Gronder ces pauvres amours?
27400prisons?
27400qu''as- tu fait de ton frère?_"he shrieked again and again, in a high voice, like a small child''s-- like the hare''s.
27400quand donc qu''y s''ra_ ônze_ heures, q''nous allions nous_ coû_cher?"
27400quel bonheur!_"--"Is it that you that I must wash?
27400said little Frau outside--"voulez- vous votre café dans votre chambre?"
27400says Maurice, in English or French, as the case might be,"why do n''t you like Monsieur Dumollard?
27400some internal knowledge of the anatomy of his own eye which was denied to him when awake?
27400vill you not zing zomzing?
27400what a pretty town, eh?"
27400what better sport can there be, or more bloodless, at my time of life?
27400what does it mean?"
27400what hast thou done with thy brother?"
27400what matters it how faultlessly we paint or write or sing if no one will care to look or read or listen?
27400what was she-- that he should take her for a guide in the most momentous business of his life; and what were her credentials?
27400what will you do without your poor devoted unknown Martia to keep watch over you and ward-- to fight for you like a wild- cat, if necessary?
27400what would have become of all those priceless copyrights and royalties and what not if his old school- fellow had n''t been a man of business?
27400what would he have done without us all, and what should we have done without Barty?
27400whenever will it be eleven o''clock, so that we can go to bed?"
27400who knows that innocence better than I?
27400why do n''t_ you_, O middle- aged reader-- with all the infirmities of age before you and all the pleasures of youth behind?
27400wo n''t you even speak to me?"
27400you give it up?"
27400Ô souffrance humaine, Qui te peut guérir?
34031__ Tommy to prisoners after Neuve Chapelle:Were n''t they heavy?
34031And even Grey will tremble As falls each iron word;"God punish England, brother?
34031Are you physically fit?
34031Are you too old?
34031Do you suggest you can not leave your business?
34031Potsdam?
34031The young Englishman, his mind wandering, said,"Is it you, mother?"
34031What is the reason?
34031What is the secret of this man''s appeal to men and women in all stations of life, to people of every creed and nationality?
34031[ Illustration]_ KREUZLAND, KREUZLAND Ã � BER ALLES__"Where are our fathers?"
34031_ February 28, 1915._[ Illustration]_ The Crown Prince:"Is n''t it an enjoyable war?
34031_ From"Is War Civilization?
34031_ London Daily Mail._[ Illustration]_ MY SON, GO AND FIGHT FOR YOUR MOTHERLAND_ IS YOUR CONSCIENCE CLEAR?
34031was your boy among the twelve this morning?
29485''Ai n''t thar no rel''tives on the mother''s side?'' 29485 ''Ai n''t thar no steps which can be took?''
29485''Ai n''t you actin''some niggardly about that hearse?'' 29485 ''Ai n''t you- all made no try,''asks Nell,''sech as writin''letters, or some game sim''lar, to cl''ar things up?''
29485''An'', Nellie,''continyoos Texas,''my idee is you''ll want to change in say a thousand dollars?'' 29485 ''An''ca n''t you give no guess,''says Enright,''at why old Parks digs up the waraxe so plumb sudden?''
29485''An''now?'' 29485 ''Any papooses?''
29485''As how?'' 29485 ''As how?''
29485''As how?'' 29485 ''As when an''whar?''
29485''Be thar any feachures,''says Enright to the Turner person,''calc''lated to offend the y''ears of innocence?'' 29485 ''Be they many of that Woman Suffrage brand?''
29485''Be you- all alloodin''to me?'' 29485 ''Be you- all tryin''to blink out this yere young lady?''
29485''But about them Frenches?'' 29485 ''But be they competent?''
29485''But he learns in time, of course?'' 29485 ''But how about its mother?''
29485''But is this yere inebriate worth the worry?'' 29485 ''But is this yere surrender feasible?''
29485''But s''ppose,''argues Tutt,''these Red Dog crim''nals wakes up to it that this yere Spellin''Book Ben''s a ringer?'' 29485 ''Ca n''t some of you- all,''he says, plenty peevish,''head this yere mushy old tarrapin off?
29485''Could I lie? 29485 ''Did you ever hear the Jedge talk?''
29485''Do I go? 29485 ''Do n''t some folks have nigger luck, Dan?''
29485''Do n''t this make you sick?'' 29485 ''Do n''t this pore Rattlesnake get no hearin''?''
29485''Do you- all know a addle- pated an''semi- eediotic young party,''says he,''who''s named Oscar Freelinghuysen?'' 29485 ''Do you- all reckon, Ma''am, that I ca n''t trust my eyes none?''
29485''Does it go as it lays?'' 29485 ''Even so,''reemarks the Red Dog chief indulgently,''would that of itse''f, I asks, be reckoned any setback?
29485''Folks,''he says,''I asks, in all hoomility, is thar anythin''I can say or do in this yere camp without throwing away my life?'' 29485 ''Gents,''he says,''am I to stand mootely by an''see this tavern, the best j''int ondoubted in Arizona, insulted?''
29485''Go on,''he says to Dead Shot;''you- all wants us to do-- what?'' 29485 ''Him?''
29485''How about lettin''her in on the play,''says Boggs,''an''typ''fyin''Jestice, that a- way?'' 29485 ''How are you, sports?''
29485''How often has I told you, Dan,''asks Texas, after they gets headed for Boot Hill, an''Texas has regained his aplomb,''that women is a brace game?'' 29485 ''How old be you?''
29485''How soon, Missis Freelinghuysen,''says Peets,''do you- all reckon on lettin''this Oscar husband out?'' 29485 ''How would it do,''asks Texas,''if we takes them marts seeriatim, an''one after another yootilizes all their signs?''
29485''Is thar any objections,''asks Enright,''to our visitin''this modern pris''ner of Chillon? 29485 ''Is thar anything we- all can he''p you to, Miss?''
29485''Is thar time,''asks Nell of Enright,''for me to round up Missis Rucker an''Tucson Jennie? 29485 ''Is that remark to be took sarkastic?''
29485''Is your Peggy sweetheart pretty?'' 29485 ''It''s licker, ai n''t it?''
29485''It''s that locoed Digger Injun, ai n''t it?'' 29485 ''Jack,''he says, appealin''to Moore, who happens to be present,''does that thing look like me?''
29485''Jedge Beebe?'' 29485 ''Learns, Nellie?''
29485''Me marry him?'' 29485 ''Me?
29485''Me? 29485 ''No one mentions Jackson,''says Mike, who''s becomin''frightened an''fretted;''whatever''s the idee of any one talkin''about Jackson, anyhow?''
29485''Now I do n''t see why none?'' 29485 ''Now, you onwashed drunkard, will you surrender?''
29485''Oh, he wo n''t, wo n''t he?'' 29485 ''Pol''tics?''
29485''Pole or Dutchman, what''s the odds? 29485 ''Sam,''says Boggs, his voice reproachful,''you notes how she makes invidious compar''sons between me an''that b''ar, an''how she beefs the b''ar?
29485''Sammy,''he says to Enright,''you was old enough to rec''llect when I has that location over on the upper Hawgthief? 29485 ''So water''s all you samples?''
29485''So you''d sooner die?'' 29485 ''Thar''s French an''his wife?''
29485''Thar,''he says, danglin''them gewgaws in the sun,''you do n''t notice no actresses flittin''about the scene arrayed like that, do you? 29485 ''That Miss Bark mentions she''s Woman Suffrage, Sam?''
29485''That match- makin''catamount? 29485 ''That''s one way of bein''locoed, ai n''t it?''
29485''Till Dave wakes up?'' 29485 ''Was you afraid of this yere Jenks?''
29485''Whar do you- all get your licence, Doc,''he demands, when Peets tells him how it''s spelled,''to jam in that misfitc"?
29485''Whar to?'' 29485 ''Whar''s this sufferer at?''
29485''Wharever is this Oscar party?'' 29485 ''What am I eager to say?
29485''What be your dem''crats like, Dave?'' 29485 ''What do you reckon''s wrong with that party?''
29485''What stuffed anamile sharp,''says Tutt, craftily directin''himself at Black Jack,''mounts that bobcat up thar?'' 29485 ''What''s that?
29485''What''s that?'' 29485 ''What''s the finish of this interestin''crim''nal?''
29485''What''s the limit?'' 29485 ''What''s the malady?''
29485''What''s the subject?'' 29485 ''What''s these yere slanders,''shouts Rucker,''you- all is levelin''at my wife''s hotel?
29485''What, that Dutch galoot with the long ha''r?'' 29485 ''Whatever be you- all tryin''to do to me, Sam?''
29485''Whatever difference does it make?'' 29485 ''Whatever do I think?''
29485''Whatever do you make of it, Doc?'' 29485 ''Whatever does he turn to?''
29485''Whatever does it show?'' 29485 ''Whatever does that jim- crow sp''ile- sport of a marshal mean?''
29485''Whatever is his subject?'' 29485 ''Whatever kind o''capital?''
29485''Whatever''s an ideal, Doc?'' 29485 ''Whatever''s the matter with you?''
29485''Whatever''s the meanin''of this midprandial excitement?'' 29485 ''Whatever''s the meanin''of this?''
29485''Which I trusts,''he says,''that no one''ll mind much if I takes water?'' 29485 ''Who orig''nates spellin''schools, anyway?''
29485''Who you talkin''about?'' 29485 ''Who you talkin''to?''
29485''Who?'' 29485 ''Whoever do you reckon that is, Bug?''
29485''Whoever he is?'' 29485 ''Whoever''s bringin''up this yere baby, you or me?''
29485''Why not introdooce him,''breaks in Rucker, who''s nosin''about,''to that aflickted shorthorn who comes groanin''in on the stage last night? 29485 ''Wrong?''
29485''You ai n''t been long hooked up?'' 29485 ''You ai n''t goin''to t''ar into him for that, be you?''
29485''You dad- binged Siwash,''I yells down at Steve,''whyever do n''t you- all stay in that hole, ontil the bull forgets whar you''re at?'' 29485 ''You think so?''
29485''You thinks not?'' 29485 ''You?''
29485About that weddin''he goes east to consummate? 29485 About this Bernilillo business?"
29485After a spell, nothin''bein''spoke on either side, Washington Boggs calls out:''Is this yere Gen''ral Cornwallis?''
29485After a while he looks up an''says:''Which you do n''t notice no swirlin''drifts of snow outside, do you?
29485Ai n''t I in this?'' 29485 Ai n''t you met up frequent with that form of horned toad?
29485An''why not? 29485 But about your Wolfville- Red Dog Fourth of July celebration?"
29485Do I myse''f ever lie? 29485 Does Mike''s kickin''the bucket leave the little Joolie broke?
29485Does Miss Bark go proselytin''''round concernin''them Rights of Women? 29485 Does Monte snore?
29485Does he resent it? 29485 Enright?
29485Her beauty? 29485 Is the Mexican hurt?
29485Is the Turner person p''isened? 29485 Miserable wretch,"says he,"do you- all want to get yourse''f tarred an''feathered?"
29485Monte? 29485 Nacherally, what could any se''f- respectin''bull do but wheel an''chase Steve back?
29485No? 29485 Old man Parks back at Sni- a- bar?
29485So you do n''t regyard it as the proper caper to go deceivin''the little Joolie girl? 29485 The Votes For Women S''loon?
29485The hearse? 29485 The professor?
29485This yere exile comes wanderin''into the talk by askin''--his voice as thin as a curlew''s:''Who is this old Monte you''re alloodin''at?''
29485Was Peets any good as a med''cine man? 29485 What cares the Bernilillo pop''lace, wolf hungry for blood?
29485What does Enright do? 29485 What time does Boomerang make?
29485Whatever be you leerin''at?
29485Whatever can he do more''n mootely arch his back, same as a mule in a storm of hail, an''stand it? 29485 Whatever is the difference?
29485Which, that?
29485Whoever is that rhoomatic? 29485 Wolfville''s whiskey?
29485''Ai n''t a workin''man got no rights?
29485''Ai n''t he drinkin''that time he weds Tucson Jennie?''
29485''Ai n''t we goin''a little fast?
29485''As long as he gives you cause, an''you can shoot like you says, why ever do n''t you down him?''
29485''Now, is thar anything else?''
29485''What care I, who am destined for immortality, that barbarians should hail me as Red Mike?
29485''Whatever be you- all talkin''about?
29485''Whatever do I care about pol''tics?
29485''Whatever prompts you to blow out this Spellin''Book Ben''s candle that a- way?''
29485''You ai n''t so locoed as to s''ggest we- all t''ars person''ly into this Jack Moore marshal none I hopes?''
29485222"What''s the subject?"
29485336 FARO NELL AND HER FRIENDS I DEAD SHOT BAKER"Which you never knows Dead Shot Baker?"
29485Ai n''t that your view, Doc?''
29485Ai n''t you people got no ice?''
29485An''at that I do n''t precisely ketch what you offensive ground- owls is observin''about Thomas Jefferson?''
29485An''how can any outfit expect to do this, an''said outfit shy that greatest evidence of modern reefinement, a hearse?
29485An''is it for a houseless sot like you to take to minglin''with him malignant?
29485An''whatever do you think?
29485As for you yellin''like a pig onder a gate, who is it, I asks, that beguiles this indigent artist party into camp, an''leaves him on our hands?
29485Be they, as guests, to go dictatin''terms to us?''
29485But how about the camp?
29485But what else would you expect?
29485But you- all knows how it is, Sam?''
29485Ca n''t you see their names yere up in the corner?''
29485Could I lie, you asks?
29485Could even the revenge of a fiend ask more than simply seein''him a married man?''
29485Do I overstate the trooth, Dave?''
29485Do n''t you agree with me, Doc?''
29485Do you or do you not surrender your mis''rable blade?''
29485Do you reckon Monte hooks up with him?
29485Do you- all murderers still insist on hangin''this yere boy, or be you willin''to see''em we d an''live happy ever after?''
29485Do you- all want her to blow her head plumb off?''
29485Doc Peets?
29485Does any one figger I''ll allow some fly- by- night charl''tan to go reeflectin''on me?
29485Does anybody get killed about it?''
29485Does he reckon this yere camp''s a church?''
29485Does he remain in Wolfville long?"
29485Does one of your onparalleled tarrapins say something deerog''tory about George Washin''ton?''
29485Ever since little Enright Peets is born Tutt has conducted himse''f in a downhill manner towards all of us, an''been allowed to do so; as why not?
29485Final, he roars:"''Who cuts loose that personal''ty?''
29485For a starter, then, takin''your say- so for it, you''re a Southern man?''
29485How old is Annalinda?''
29485How''s she goin''to cock that gun, an''the mainspring fifteen pounds resistance?''
29485However do you- all manage?
29485I asks ag''in, whatever is your reason for shovin''this yere expert in orthography from shore?''
29485I takes it you- all do n''t want the shack all smoked up with Dan''s six- shooter?
29485I wonder if Peets, or some of them other Wolfville sports, puts him up to come bully- raggin''round yere about ice to insult us?''
29485IX RED MIKE"Mebby you- all recalls about that Polish artist person?"
29485If a gent''s to be compelled to spell scenery with a fool"c,"I asks you why was Yorktown an''wharfore Bunker Hill?''
29485Is it for the manhood an''civic virchoo of Bernilillo to leave a widow of its own construction broke an''without a dollar?
29485Is this yere a snare you''re settin''for this innocent child?
29485Little Joolie?
29485Lovely?
29485Monte asks, after listenin''mighty dignified to the spook''s excuses;''you begs my pardon?
29485Now what is it you''re so plumb eager to say?''
29485Now whoever do you reckon would look for sech a oncooth outfit to go onbeltin''in any reefined racket?
29485On the back of sech a warnin''you do n''t figger none I''ll go givin''sugar- rags an''strings of spools to Annalinda, do you?''
29485Oscar Joonior?
29485Otherwise, whatever is the use of callin''this a free country?
29485Pendin''which, do you- all see this?''
29485S''ppose the Bug downs Mike, or Mike does up the Bug?
29485Shore, Rucker do n''t know what ptomaines is, but what then?
29485Some of you- all sports must have crossed up with him-- Jedge Beebe of Phoenix?''
29485Sweet?
29485The committee surrenders this culprit into the hands of you- all ladies, an''what more is thar to say?''
29485V HOW THE MOCKING BIRD WAS WON"Myst''ries?
29485VII PROPRIETY PRATT, HYPNOTIST"Do I ever see any folks get hypnotized?
29485Was you aimin''to down, or to simply skeer this Oscar?''
29485Whar does Wolfville come in?
29485Whar''s that coyote at?''
29485Wharever does Dave come in to get insultin''action at sech a prop''sition?
29485What guarantee have I got that old Parks wo n''t lay for me with that bootcher knife of his''n?
29485What''s our impressions?
29485Whatever do you think, Doc?''
29485Whatever''s wrong?''
29485Whatever, Doc, do you- all say?''
29485Which one of you cheap prairie dogs makes that low- flung statement about old Andy Jackson?
29485Whoever''d be that hardened as to go harrowin''up the sens''tive soul of a artist, even if his work do n''t grade as corn- fed?
29485You ai n''t been swallowed up in no blizzard, be you, comin''into town?
29485You do n''t figger thar''s a chance that Red Dog gets the notion, Sam, an''takes to holdin''them tournaments of learnin''itse''f?''
29485You sports see that, do n''t you?
29485You- all savvys where it says that Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do?
29485[ Illustration:"WHAT''S THE SUBJECT?"
29485asks Enright,''or is that gun play in the way of applause?''
29485asks the Bug, layin''for to ketch Monte;''what''s the Jedge talkin''about?''
29485chirps Nell, her elbow on the lay- out, an''her little round chin in her fist;''thar''s the Frenches, over to the corrals?
29485he asks at last,''or shall we call it nothin''more''n a brainless effort to be funny?''
29485he exclaims;"however does that jack- rabbit get himse''f mixed in with them sheep?"
29485repeats Texas;''whoever but that postmaster?
29485says the Bug;''him we corrals, that time, livin''on ants an''crickets, an''roots an''yarbs, over in Potato canyon?''
29485she says;''ca n''t you see he''s only coaxin''you to bump him off?''
29485suggested the old cattleman, tentatively;"him I speaks of former?"
33755And the Briton himself-- what became of him?
33755But how is one to describe the confused play of forces in a cyclone which has centres within centres?
33755But it could not be much, he thought, as he had all the nobles, and how could there be a rising{ 262} without nobles?
33755Could anything else have been expected?
33755Dismayed at the swiftness of the movement, England hesitated; but how could she{ 235} deny her colony the right of self- defence?
33755Had this people the right, or had they not the right to plant a State bearing a foreign flag, which should effectually bar the path to the north?
33755If engines could be made to plough through the water, why might they not also be made to walk the earth?
33755If such was the condition of the honest{ 153} working poor, what was that of the criminal?
33755Is England richer or poorer for this outpouring of blood and treasure?
33755Is it a wonder that there was always disorder and violence from a chronic tithe- war in Ireland, which it is said has cost a million of lives?
33755Is it strange that Sydney Smith said no abuse as great could be found in Timbuctoo?
33755Is it strange that the plantation in Massachusetts had fresh recruits?
33755Is not every type of English manhood explained by such an inheritance?
33755Or did the splendid heroism of Wallace, and the spirit it evoked in the people, awaken a slumbering patriotism in his own romantic soul?
33755Should the English Government allow a people fiercely antagonistic to itself to build up an unfriendly State on its border?
33755Then Banquo said,''How is it ye gaif to my companyeon not onlie landis and gret rentis, bot Kingdomes, and gevis me nocht?''
33755Was it not from their impious hands, that this new knowledge of the physical universe had been received?
33755Was it through a complicated struggle of forces, in which ambition played the greatest part?
33755Was it worth seven{ 271} years of such struggle to emancipate the land from a foreign tyranny, only to have it fall into a degrading domestic one?
33755Was the man mad?
33755Was there a man dismay''d?
33755What are we to conclude?
33755What did death matter, in form however terrible, to one who was to be so remembered nearly five centuries later by Scotland''s greatest bard?
33755What sort of a race were they?
33755What would be the need of a Parliament, if he did not require money?
33755Whether it was premeditated, or in the heat of passion, who could say?
33755Who was the Lady Cæsair, who fled with her household to Ireland from the coming deluge after being refused shelter by Noah?
33755With king so false, and with justice so polluted at its fountain, what hope was there for the people but in Revolution?
33755and who Nemehd, the next colonist from the East, who heads the royal procession of one hundred and eighteen kings?
25869A dozen? 25869 A gift?
25869All right; how much do you want?
25869All right; shall we call it the Wednesday Club, then?
25869And I?
25869And if I do?
25869And now, Mrs. Van Reypen, I''m sure there''s nothing more of interest in the paper; what shall I do next?
25869And now,said Mr. Fairfield,"when can I make my offer good?
25869And suppose I bring it back unfinished, or only part done?
25869And that is your ultimate offer?
25869And the occupation?
25869And were they glad to get your gifts?
25869And you do n''t allow that?
25869Are they elaborate pieces?
25869Are you going to stay?
25869Are you sure they''re all right? 25869 At what salary?"
25869Becoming?
25869But do you need an invitation to a house where you seem to feel so much at home?
25869But does she know who you are?
25869But have you time to play, yourself, Ken? 25869 But, first, will you not go out for your lunch?"
25869Ca n''t she manage to do this, in some way?
25869Can nothing be done in the matter?
25869Can you do a minuet?
25869Can you embroider? 25869 Can you not bring her to see me when she comes, and perhaps I may be of use to her in some friendly way?"
25869Can you persuade her to do that?
25869Caught on, didjer?
25869Come in? 25869 Come now, do you want a dozen, or two dozen, or what?"
25869Could n''t work as fast as you thought?
25869Could n''t you have coaxed fifteen dollars a week out of her?
25869Did I drive off your young friends, Patty?
25869Did n''t you hear the luncheon gong?
25869Did you talk like that to Mrs. Van Reypen? 25869 Did you trim the one you have on?"
25869Do it yourself?
25869Do n''t I do it nicely?
25869Do n''t you like to have the boys devoted to you, Patty?
25869Do n''t you want a little mustard?
25869Do you agree to that?
25869Do you doubt my honesty?
25869Do you go to business to- day, Miss Fairfield?
25869Do you like it? 25869 Do you like that?"
25869Do you love them all?
25869Do you think so?
25869Do you think so?
25869Do you tie up your presents in tissue paper and holly- ribbon?
25869Do you want a bath thermometer?
25869Do you want me to subscribe to some charity? 25869 Do you want to reform the world, and in what way?"
25869Do you?
25869Does a cat like cream? 25869 Does he live there?"
25869Does that prove her good luck?
25869Elise,said Patty, somewhat suddenly,"do n''t you think we have too much riches and things?"
25869Father Fairfield,she said,"what are you going to give me for a Christmas gift?"
25869Fired?
25869For assistant milliner? 25869 For twelve, then?
25869Fresh start?
25869G?
25869G?
25869Getting saucy, is he?
25869Go where?
25869Going to tell me now?
25869Have you ever tried,she went on,"wearing it in a coronet braid?"
25869Have you really a dozen of those things to do, Patty?
25869Have you some silver hatpins, Miss O''Flynn?
25869Here, Miss Fairfield?
25869How can any one help wanting you there?
25869How can you?
25869How did you know that?
25869How did you know?
25869How did you like Venice? 25869 How do you do, Kenneth?"
25869How do you do?
25869How do you get her out? 25869 How is it progressing?"
25869How long?
25869How many?
25869How much do you pay?
25869How_ did_ you get it into the house?
25869I hate to tell you,--but----"Oh, what is it, Nan? 25869 I love to sit on a staircase at a party, do n''t you?"
25869If you owned a white elephant, Patty, you''d get a kimono for it, would n''t you?
25869Is anybody''s now- a- days?
25869Is it done right?
25869Is it one o''clock already?
25869Is it?
25869Is n''t it glass?
25869Is n''t it lovely to have so many friends?
25869Is n''t it queer how one can be mistaken?
25869It''s a gem of a pen; Patty, you know my weakness for fine desk appointments, do n''t you?
25869It''s not finished?
25869Jolly, is n''t it?
25869Let''s get up a party, shall us?
25869May I ask what you intend to attempt next?
25869May I be excused long enough to telephone?
25869May I come round Thursday afternoons and take you out?
25869May n''t I come to see you?
25869May n''t I do that, aunty?
25869Nan,she said, looking in at the library door,"what time do you want the motor?"
25869No one else in the family?
25869Not even the part that made you acquainted with me?
25869Not one dance left?
25869Occupation all right?
25869Of course it is,said Kenneth;"get some hot water, wo n''t you?"
25869Oh, Nan, what shall I do? 25869 Oh, dear,"said Mrs. Allen,"must we wait for all this custom- house botheration?
25869Oh, do you? 25869 Oh, father, will you?"
25869Oh, how do you do?
25869Oh, is that what made her so sulky?
25869Oh, it is n''t a crime to call on one''s own aunt, is it?
25869Oh, soup- kitchens and bread- lines?
25869Oh, that''s so,said Bobby;"ca n''t we have it now, mother, and skip these flummerydiddles?"
25869Oh, will they do that?
25869Oh, will they learn to do that? 25869 Old Hepworth?"
25869Patty, are you crazy?
25869Patty, child,said her father,"you do n''t know much of social economics, do you?
25869Patty,called Nan, as she whisked upstairs to her own room,"come here, wo n''t you?"
25869Patty,_ will_ you be serious? 25869 Really, Elise?
25869Shall I ask Miss Farley to come to visit us? 25869 Shall I jolly them up a bit?"
25869Shall I sing hymns to you?
25869She is like a Madonna, is n''t she?
25869She was willing to arrange it that way?
25869She''s a beauty, is n''t she?
25869Skate with me, Patty, will you?
25869Skating this afternoon?
25869Take seats, wo n''t you? 25869 That''s too obvious; we will call it the Thursday Club, because we meet on Wednesday; see?"
25869Then if I take a dozen, I''m to work just that little corner on each one; is that it?
25869Then it is n''t as easy as you thought it was?
25869Then may I select my own work for the afternoon?
25869Then what am I to do? 25869 Then why do n''t you pay them twelve dollars a week?"
25869Then you''ve been only masquerading as a companion?
25869Then, Jane, bring in those two boxes I left in your charge, will you?
25869Then, where is Department G?
25869They''re Spode, Roger; why do you want to know? 25869 To fill up what?"
25869Wait a minute,said Patty;"how much do you pay?"
25869Want them? 25869 Want work?"
25869Well, Clem, if I should have some money left me unexpectedly, is it too late to buy some toys for the Tree?
25869Well, Puss, how goes the''occupation''?
25869Well, what luck?
25869Well,she went on,"who''s your lovely lady?"
25869Well?
25869Were n''t you sorry to give up hair- ribbons?
25869Were you born here?
25869What about your promise?
25869What are you going to wear, Patsy?
25869What are you two talking about?
25869What are your duties?
25869What did he mean?
25869What do you mean?
25869What do you mean?
25869What do you mean?
25869What experience have you had?
25869What for?
25869What sort of a club?
25869What''s it for?
25869What''s the Thursday Club? 25869 What''s the matter with you two?"
25869What''s the matter with you, Elise? 25869 What''s the matter?"
25869What?
25869What?
25869What?
25869What_ are_ you doing?
25869What_ are_ you doing?
25869Where did that hat come from?
25869Where do you live?
25869Where is Department G, please?
25869Where is Department G?
25869Which do you like better?
25869Who catches these?
25869Who does know?
25869Who works the rest?
25869Who''s here?
25869Who''s there?
25869Why are you doing this?
25869Why ca n''t I write a kind and tactful letter?
25869Why do you want to do such a thing?
25869Why not?
25869Why not?
25869Why not?
25869Why play hide- and- seek?
25869Why, waits,said Patty,"do n''t you know what waits are?
25869Why?
25869Why?
25869Will you come now, and talk to Madame?
25869Will you give it to me now, and how much will it be?
25869Will you trim another hat?
25869Wo n''t it be fun?
25869Would you come for ten?
25869Yes, Aunty Van; are n''t you as glad to see me as I am to see you? 25869 Yes, are n''t they beautiful?"
25869Yes, just about; do you work fast?
25869Yes,he replied;"are you sure, mother, these are Spode?"
25869Yes,said Mr. Hepworth,"but how is she to pay the board for the hall bedroom?
25869Yes,said the woman,"but ca n''t you understand?
25869Yes; do you like it?
25869Yes?
25869You do n''t want to go, do you? 25869 You do n''t, eh?"
25869You have trimmed hats before, Miss Fairfield?
25869You wo n''t have to buy many Christmas presents, will you, Patty?
25869You wo n''t need many frocks, will you?
25869You''re going to the Farringtons'', are n''t you?
25869You? 25869 _ Because_ you gave it to him?"
25869_ What_ was that fearful word you said, Ken? 25869 ''The Young Maiden''s Own Ruskin,''or''Look Up and Not Down''?
25869A nephew, eh?
25869Am I entitled to pay for my day''s work?"
25869And now, Mrs. Van Reypen, may n''t I read to you, or something?
25869And they''re done neatly, are n''t they?"
25869And was London smoky,--foggy, I mean?"
25869And we''ll have carols and waits----""What are waits?"
25869And what do you think?
25869And what else can we teach them?"
25869And, you do n''t need a stenographer, anyway, do you?"
25869Any one been here?"
25869Are these Sunshine people all babies?"
25869Are you going to back out?"
25869Are you happy there?"
25869Are you quite sure you know what you mean?"
25869Are you suddenly becoming interested in China?"
25869Are you taking lessons?"
25869Are you tired?
25869As there was no indication of a cessation, Patty grew impatient, at last, and said:"Can you attend to my business soon?
25869Aunty Van, what''s the matter with you, anyway?
25869But I say, aunty, she''ll come down to dinner, wo n''t she?"
25869But I succeeded, did n''t I?"
25869But Mr. Fairfield ignored the girl''s embarrassment, and said, cordially but quietly:"How do you do, Miss Farley?
25869But Patty was in no mood for confidences, and with a shade of hauteur in her manner, she said again:"Is it done right?
25869But Patty----""What?"
25869But are you going to work that whole centrepiece?"
25869But do n''t you think we ought to have more than four members?"
25869But how are we all going to get into this taxicab?
25869But is n''t it hard for poor girls to put up that deposit?"
25869But is this a Campanile, father?
25869But now that you''ve said it to me, wo n''t you go away and stay away?"
25869But sit down, wo n''t you?
25869But what about this club we''re organising?"
25869But where is your sense of proportion?
25869But will they give you fifteen dollars for that piece?"
25869But, Ken, how did you know where to find me?
25869But, Patty, where are you going?"
25869But, in your law office, where you''re studying, are n''t there some papers I can copy, or something like that?"
25869But, wo n''t you send for some more water?
25869Buy stock?"
25869By the way, Puss, did you ever get your forty drums?
25869Ca n''t you spend Christmas with me, instead?"
25869Ca n''t you understand?"
25869Can you be ready?"
25869Can you be ready?"
25869Can you do that?"
25869Can you think of any way?"
25869Can you trim hats?"
25869Come on, help me train them, wo n''t you?
25869Come round Thursday night, ca n''t you, and welcome me home?"
25869Could n''t that be done, Hepworth?"
25869Did you ever know such an ungrateful wretch?"
25869Did you have a good time in Europe?"
25869Did you say a dozen?"
25869Did you think I''d come to your dance in one I''d worn before?
25869Did_ she_ think a girl could earn fifteen dollars a week?
25869Do I make myself clear?"
25869Do n''t you think we ought to give away more?"
25869Do n''t you want me to wind silks, or something?"
25869Do take off your things and sit down, and do n''t mind if I go on sewing, will you?
25869Do you care what they are?"
25869Do you like fancy work?
25869Do you like to play cards?
25869Do you require music?"
25869Do you suppose Roger would care for a penny?"
25869Do you want to come home?
25869Do you?"
25869Does he, Patty?"
25869Does it suit you?"
25869Get Darby and Juliet, wo n''t you please, Ken?"
25869Have you a pleasant room?
25869Have you ever been a lady''s- maid?"
25869Have you heard from her or of her lately?"
25869Have you samples of your work?"
25869How are all the girls?"
25869How are you all?
25869How are you?
25869How can we induce the rising young artist to come to the metropolis to seek fame and fortune?"
25869How did you know enough to trim it like this?"
25869How did you like Paris?
25869How do we begin?"
25869How many lumps, please?"
25869How much are they going to pay you?"
25869How''s that for quick action?"
25869How''s this?
25869How_ did_ you know I wanted furs?
25869How_ did_ you know I was here?"
25869I fancy the young woman could board properly for about twelve or fifteen dollars a week; eh, Hepworth?"
25869I mean how much work do you want?"
25869I wonder why he does n''t?
25869I''ve something I want to do, and----""Mind?
25869If I stay away a week will you persuade aunty to invite me to dinner next Friday night?"
25869If you could untrim this first one, and transfer these plumes, and then add these roses-- what do you think?"
25869If you have Mr. and Mrs. Fairfield, wo n''t you let me take Patty?"
25869Is father well?
25869Is it really four o''clock?"
25869Is it very horrid?"
25869Is n''t he, stepmother?"
25869Is n''t it awful to have everything you want?"
25869Is n''t it gay?
25869Is n''t that gay?"
25869Is n''t that lovely?"
25869Is n''t this the fourth floor?"
25869Is she kind to you?
25869Is she patronising?
25869Is the material wrong side out?"
25869Is_ that_ your''occupation''?"
25869It was so unusual, that Miller hesitated a moment and then said, deferentially:"This is''way downtown, Miss Patty; are you sure the number is right?"
25869Like me?"
25869Look at Clementine; is n''t she graceful?"
25869May I come to see you?"
25869May I do such things as that?"
25869May I have an evening hat, please?"
25869May I take your hat off, Christine?"
25869May I try?"
25869May n''t I belong?"
25869May n''t I get you a glass of water?"
25869Miss Fairfield, will you please finish putting up my hair?"
25869Myers?"
25869Not really?
25869Not_ the_ Mrs. Van Reypen?"
25869Now, go on; what have you in mind?
25869Now, this afternoon, I want to do a lot, so if any one asks for me, wo n''t you gently but firmly refuse to let them see me?
25869Now, what would you do in a case like that?"
25869Oh, Patty, do you remember the day we got lost in Paris?"
25869Oh, Patty, why did n''t you let me help you?
25869Oh, child, how_ can_ you?"
25869Oh, what is it?
25869Oh, would you put this scarlet velvet on the spangled lace,--or save it for this white chiffon?"
25869Oh,_ do n''t_ lose all your fortune, will you, father?
25869On a sudden impulse, she said:"Do you like to see dancing?
25869Patty felt like saying,"Do you know I am Patricia Fairfield, and it is I who confer an honour when I accept an invitation?"
25869Patty''s sense of humour got the better of her resentment, and it was with difficulty she repressed a smile, as she answered:"Indeed?
25869Patty, dear, I want you, too, if you care to come; but----""Oh, Mrs. Allen,"broke in Elise,"divide the family with me, wo n''t you?
25869Pipe de guy wit''de goggles?"
25869Polly want a cracker?"
25869Roger led her across the room, and with a smiling face, and in tones of glad welcome, she said:"Oh, Mr. Hepworth, how do you do?"
25869Shall us?
25869She caught a red- headed boy, as he passed, whistling, and said:"Do_ you_ know where Department G is?"
25869She passed the red- headed boy again, and feeling almost as if she were meeting an old friend in a strange land, she said:"Where is Department B?"
25869She seemed puzzled at what she saw, and said, inquiringly:"Miss----?"
25869So give me the money like a duck of a daddy, wo n''t you?"
25869Stay to dinner, ca n''t you?"
25869Suppose I should go on the stage, what would become of all these devoted swains who are worshipping my feetsteps?"
25869The man seated there looked at her over his glasses, and said:"To embroider?"
25869Then, turning to Clifford Morse, she said:"Skate with me, wo n''t you, Cliff?
25869There, how''s that?"
25869These are the real Japanese ones, are n''t they?"
25869They tried it over together, and then Patty said:"Would you mind, Ken, if I ask you not to stay any longer, to- night?
25869Things are unevenly divided in this world, are n''t they, Nan?"
25869Was Naples very dirty?
25869Was it lovely by moonlight?
25869Was it very gay?
25869Well, what are you going to do next?
25869What about yourself?
25869What are Sunshine Babies?"
25869What are briefs, anyway?"
25869What are you going to do on Christmas, Patty?"
25869What can I do for you?"
25869What do they eat?"
25869What do they use this year, Elise?
25869What do you want of money in the bank?"
25869What foolishness are you going to fly at next, trying to earn a dishonest penny?"
25869What have you been reading?
25869What is she like, Mr. Hepworth?
25869What is the salary?"
25869What matter, then, whether I have been taught or not?"
25869What shall I wear?"
25869What were you saying?"
25869What would you like?"
25869What''s father going to give me, Nan?"
25869What''s three failures to a determined nature like mine?"
25869What_ are_ you doing with all these dolls?"
25869What_ are_ you doing?
25869What_ is_ a Campanile, pure and simple?"
25869When she saw another man writing in another coop, she said politely:"Will you please direct me to the elevator?"
25869Where did you learn it?
25869Where''d you get these crazy notions about devotion and worship?
25869Wherever have you been all this time?"
25869White tissue paper?"
25869Who is she?"
25869Who sticked the fur upon your breast?
25869Who teached you how to fly?
25869Why do they always tack unpleasant stories on poor old Whistler?
25869Why do you suppose I have you here, if not to make my time pass pleasantly?"
25869Why have n''t you been to call on me?"
25869Why not?"
25869Why, Patsy, what are you going to do?
25869Why, how much would such board cost?"
25869Why, my dear child, how could you?"
25869Will you agree to come to me every day?"
25869Will you dance again?"
25869Will you go skating to- morrow?"
25869Will you go, too?"
25869Will you show me to the forewoman?"
25869Will you?"
25869With a hook and line?"
25869With your''Oh, how do you do?''
25869Wo n''t she think that rather queer?"
25869Wo n''t you be a circus- rider, dear?
25869Wo n''t you give me the money instead, and let me spend it as I like?"
25869Wo n''t you other people wait till I see how it works?"
25869Wo n''t you play with Darby and Juliet a little, so they wo n''t get lonesome?"
25869Would it be indiscreet to inquire the nature of said occupation?"
25869Would you?"
25869You are not afraid of him?"
25869You do n''t suppose we let everybody walk off with our materials, and never come back, do you?"
25869You here?"
25869You know my crystal ball?"
25869You''re coming to the Christmas Eve dance, of course?"
25869Your idea of relative values?
25869_ Did_ she, indeed?
25869_ Do_, will you, Patty?
25869_ What''s_ the matter?"
25869cried Mrs. Allen eagerly;"do you see Nan?"
25869he cried;"come one at a time, ca n''t you?
25869said the surprised young man;"have you learned to dislike me so cordially already?"
25869went on Patty,"and do you mean to say that this girl could n''t earn fifteen dollars a week, and attend her classes, too?"
25869went on Roger,"and skate till dusk, and then all come back here and have tea under the Christmas tree?"
33169A what?
33169Amasa, how came you to let Cosy Pringle go into the workshop?
33169And how is your dear friend Tony Bronson?
33169But where is he now? 33169 Child, where is he?
33169Could you have helped him in any way? 33169 Did he, really?"
33169Did n''t I tell you not to do this, Jimmieboy?
33169Did you say''mamma''?
33169Do n''t you see anything? 33169 Do you want her?"
33169Embark in private warfare? 33169 Had n''t we better open fire on her?"
33169Has she shown any flag yet?
33169He nearly killed Edith; what did he do to himself?
33169How are you getting on with your music lessons, Harold?
33169How did he get so scratched up?
33169I do n''t see any flag-- do you, sir?
33169I fear we shall,said Bouchardy;"but what is that building a mile or so to the south?
33169In that case, what''s to become of me?
33169Indeed?
33169Is n''t it splendid to have him safe back again, and are n''t we just the happiest fellows in the world at this minute? 33169 It''s the time of war now, is n''t it?"
33169Now we wo n''t have to go home after all, will we?
33169Oh, Cynthia, why did n''t you tell me? 33169 Oh, ye have, have you?"
33169Poor little things, are they at all happy?
33169Was it? 33169 What do you mean?"
33169What has a chronometer got to do with the weather?
33169What in the world are they doing now?
33169What on earth is she up to now?
33169What''s happened?
33169Where away?
33169Where did you find him?
33169Where has he been all this time?
33169Where is he now?
33169Why ca n''t you give me permission to go ahead on my own hook?
33169Why, Bobbie?
33169You are sorry about the drive, Edith; is that it? 33169 You do n''t mean to say, Jackie, that not one of these hens ever had any mother but that heartless box in the cellar?
33169= Do you think we are going to buy this paper to tell you the story?
33169And continuing, it asks:"Why should not the Oakland High- School be this school?
33169Are you sure you feel perfectly warm?
33169Boys, Have we again to shout"Rugby"Watches are made purposely for you?
33169But I say, Captain, we wo n''t have to go back to Berks, after all-- that is, not until our cruise is finished-- will we?"
33169By- the- way, have you seen him lately?"
33169Did you ever see a Quaker?
33169Do n''t you think yourself that it was outrageous of him not to find out more about Edith before he went?"
33169Has he come back?"
33169How can we tell her?"
33169How did Josephus arrange his men?
33169How do I know what she''s doing?
33169How many can we hear from?
33169I wonder if he has any money, Cynthia?"
33169Is he here?
33169Is he here?
33169Is there one of you who has not sent for the"Rugby"Catalogue?
33169It''s rather curious, though, that he should be cruising in these waters at a time like this, is n''t it?"
33169Not a sign?"
33169Not much, is it?
33169Now do n''t you really think so, Gertrude?
33169She wants you to forgive her for going to drive, and you will, wo n''t you?"
33169Suppose we hear from three or four persons in one town?
33169Was he born free?
33169Was it worth while to go on the river such a morning as this?"
33169Was n''t any of it true?"
33169What do you think of this as a hint for a useful little gift?
33169What was the good turn that he would not do for Cosy on those terms?
33169What was the score?"
33169Where would you get it?
33169Where''s the little one?"
33169Who knows?
33169Why did n''t you tell me?"
33169Why do you look so odd, Cynthia?"
33169Why has nobody seen him?
33169Why may not there be held, at or near the holidays this year, say early in December, a great number of fairs?
33169Will you please tell every one there is no truth in it, at all?"
33169Will you send him a Patent, please?
33169Wo n''t you write another just as good morsel as this one?
33169You knew he was coming yesterday?
33169You want mamma to forgive you?"
33169You, you-- what do you mean by playing tricks like this on your grandfather, eh?
33169[ Illustration] Oh, curious, prying Mary, Why was it you would try To peep in every bundle, In every box to pry?
33169[ Illustration] See that= hump=?
34405There''s my position, and now what do you say?
344051772-?
34405BATARNAY, IMBERT DE(?
34405Contemporary lives of Bayard are the following:--"_Le loyal serviteur_"(?
34405If affected, what then?
34405If unaffected, what is to be thought of them as keys to character?
34405What was the man who, in such a society and with political aspirations to serve, could thrive by such vagaries as these, or in spite of them?
31804''God knows,''says he,''but what is your interest in Lisa Embden, the niece of a servant, and little more than a servant herself?'' 31804 A man of God do you call him, Madame?
31804A ridiculous consequence to the creature my husband left me to be my friend and companion during his absence? 31804 Against your wish Madame?"
31804Ah,replied Count Saxe, coolly,"may I take you as a fair representative of Courland?"
31804And Gaston Cheverny, sir?
31804And Mademoiselle Capello and Gaston Cheverny?
31804And Mademoiselle Capello?
31804And are you willing to do penance for it?
31804And did she say anything of my brother? 31804 And do you not love Monsieur Regnard?"
31804And he has not again spoken of it?
31804And how do you stand with her?
31804And how shall Madame Cheverny be informed?
31804And if we reach the palace, there will not be a price put upon our heads?
31804And if you happen to have any money about you, do you not hand it over to Jacques Haret?
31804And nothing to me?
31804And when Madame Riano finds it out?
31804And whenever you find one of the other sex who seems to know what friendship is, does he not also resolve himself into a lover after a while?
31804And why does not Madame Riano keep a closer watch over her?
31804And why not to- night?
31804And why?
31804And you are not hungry?
31804And you have gone away and left the field to your brother and rival?
31804And you, Monsieur?
31804Beauvais,cried Count Saxe,"what think you of giving up the game now?"
31804But at least you are not happy now?
31804But why should you choose to get rid of him? 31804 Come,"said I,"tell me what particular folly brought you to this pass?"
31804Did I?
31804Did he then, remember me?
31804Did you see Mademoiselle Francezka?
31804Do you believe all you say, Babache?
31804Do you mean to tell me,thundered the bishop,"that you were happy in the society of your partner in guilt?"
31804Do you mean, Monsieur,asked Francezka,"you think we shall be suffered to walk quietly from the market- place to the palace?"
31804Do you really wish to know why?
31804Do you think,she said, after a pause,"that in taking care of me Monsieur Cheverny is running a greater risk than any of you?"
31804Do you wonder that I am a wretched woman?
31804Do you wonder that I am always in terror of something, I know not what? 31804 Do you wonder, Babache, that I am a miserable woman?"
31804Except what, Madame?
31804Good Babache, was I not clever to get rid of him?
31804Has anything been heard of Monsieur Regnard lately?
31804Have not I, too, loved you and sought you? 31804 Have you heard the great news?"
31804Here was a predicament, was it not? 31804 How can you think that?"
31804How did you get him?
31804Is it not trying, Babache, to have one''s lightest word taken seriously? 31804 Is that ground for ill- treating a man?"
31804It is hard-- is it not-- that I should see so much of Regnard, whom I ever hated, in Gaston whom I ever loved? 31804 Monsieur, to touch upon things in which the ladies probably take little interest-- what is the news from Count Saxe in Courland?
31804Now, what have I done to offend the ladies?
31804Or what?
31804Perhaps it is known to you,she said, blushing more deeply,"for Regnard Cheverny made no secret of it--""That he wished to marry you?"
31804Quite so,I answered,"and what did Mademoiselle Capello say when she heard of it?"
31804Since when have you eaten, Gaston Cheverny?
31804Then, will your Grace say it here?
31804Think you, Madame, that I could remain long in Paris and fail to pay you my devoirs?
31804Was I?
31804What could one say to that, from a broken- hearted poor old creature? 31804 What do you call a hint?"
31804What has your brother to say to your going with us?
31804What is his name?
31804What think you,said she,"of my nephew Gaston Cheverny?"
31804Why did you not tell me at the time? 31804 Would not you have done the same?
31804Would you leave me now?
31804Would your Grace recommend me to that?
31804And Jacques Haret-- what has become of the creature?"
31804And being practical in the purchase of wine and the management of affairs should be so impractical concerning her missing husband?
31804And can you ask me-- his wife, who adores him-- to believe him dead unless I have proof of it?
31804And do you suppose I care that idle people wonder at me?
31804And does your Grace see yonder harpsichord?
31804And how did he employ himself?
31804And how is my lord?
31804And shall not our happiness swallow up our misfortune, and the crimes committed against us, after those crimes are avenged?"
31804And then I suddenly began to feel frightened at being frightened-- do you know that feeling?"
31804And was not Bold the only living thing, except yourself, who gave me any comfort in these last seven years?
31804And what would he live on?
31804Babache, can you imagine the exquisite rapturous pain of seeing the woman you love weeping at the thought of parting from you?"
31804Bold thinks so, too,--don''t you, my dog?"
31804Brothers often grow the more alike as time goes on, but why could not Regnard have grown like Gaston, instead of Gaston like Regnard?"
31804But at last, I said to him:"''And your brother, Monsieur?''
31804But was Francezka happy?
31804But was that all he did?
31804But was this to be wondered at?
31804But we were not troubled with governesses or masters, were we, Babache?"
31804But who cares for offending Jacques Haret?
31804But, it must be kept quiet, you understand?
31804By the way, Gaston, has it ever occurred to you that your brother may be dead, and that his properties may be yours?"
31804CHAPTER XVII AN IMPATIENT LOVER Why do I always call Mademoiselle Capello beautiful?
31804Can I do more?"
31804Come now, Babache, do you not love Monsieur Gaston?"
31804Could any wife give up hope after that?
31804Do you hear me, good Babache?"
31804Do you hear me?"
31804Do you recollect how the old dog, Bold, saw the change in Gaston?
31804Do you remember how they flocked there when Gaston came home?
31804Do you see yonder brick wall to the left where the Russians have just tethered thirty or forty horses?
31804Do you see yonder stars?"
31804Do you suppose, Monsieur, that the oxen did not laugh when the poor toad swelled and burst?"
31804Does not that shine bright even in the light of the stars?"
31804Francezka turned sweetly to her accomplice, and said:"You hear that, Father Benart?
31804Has Regnard been notified of Gaston''s disappearance?"
31804He began, in a pleasant tone of old acquaintanceship, to Gaston:"I suppose, Gaston, you and Madame Cheverny travel often to Versailles?"
31804He called out as he stalked forward in his bed coverlet:"Do you know anything else about it?"
31804His eyes kindled as I spoke, and at last he filled my heart with rapture by asking, eagerly:"Do you think Count Saxe would take me with him?"
31804How am I ever to stand her?"
31804How came it, that she, a woman, should have so good a head?
31804How many of God''s creatures, think you, can say as much?"
31804How many times has this province changed sovereigns?
31804How shall I describe what followed?
31804I fancied he was saying in his mind-- Was there ever so vexatious a creature as this Francezka?
31804I remained to the last, so as to avoid the appearance of running away-- but where are the horses?"
31804I said:"''And Jacques Haret?''
31804I stepped up to him and said:"Where will you take it?"
31804If you do, what will become of me?
31804Is not that high praise?
31804It was the first time she ever spoke to me-- and can I ever forget it?
31804Lisa-- poor old Peter''s niece--""Has he carried off the old man''s one ewe lamb?"
31804Madame Riano opened the action by saying sternly:"What are you doing here, Jacques Haret?"
31804Madame Riano, giving no attention to this speech, scrutinized Jacques Haret, and then said abruptly:"How comes it that you are so well dressed?
31804Now, Babache, was there any indiscretion there?"
31804Now, what am I to do?"
31804Now, what answer is a man to make to such things?
31804Oh, what will madame say to you?
31804Ought I not to be the happiest creature on earth?"
31804Perhaps you have heard later?"
31804Shall I read to you my last letter from the King of Prussia, and my reply?"
31804Shall we make it in an hour?"
31804She stopped suddenly and asked me:"Have you noticed how much alike Gaston and Regnard have become?"
31804So I went up to Jacques Haret and said:''Rascal, where is Lisa Embden?''
31804Suppose he should turn against me in the same way?
31804Suppose we quarrel about Count Saxe?"
31804The bishop calling up his sternest accents said:"I know what your sin has been-- are you truly penitent for it?"
31804The prospect does n''t alarm you, does it?
31804Then he asked, in a cool voice:"Do you think it time, Babache, to beat the chamade?"
31804Then, after I had expressed my everlasting thanks, what do you think she said?
31804This had given her an exultant air, pretty and charming enough, but after all, what is so becoming to a woman as humility?
31804Was it possible that Francezka had not told Gaston the story of Lisa?
31804Was it strange I loved this man?
31804Was it strange that after this she should trust to no one''s efforts but her own?
31804Was it to be expected that with his beauty, his figure, his voice, his charm, and above all, his genius, he should be an anchorite?
31804Were any of Count Saxe''s loves among them?
31804What did she mean by saying,"When I am gone?"
31804What do you think of this?"
31804What do you think-- now, will you promise me to keep this a secret?"
31804What shall I say concerning the splendors of that place?
31804What will she do to you?"
31804When I had finished, she said to me in a steady voice:"And you say, Babache, there is not the smallest evidence that my husband is dead?"
31804When do we depart?"
31804When he had finished repeating the lines, with great beauty of voice and meaning, I asked him:"Did not Mademoiselle Capello send me a message?"
31804When you are not actually fighting, will you not lend me Babache, to help me search until I find my husband?"
31804When, at last, we turned our steps toward the house, Gaston stopped for a moment on the threshold, and said:"But what if misfortune befall?
31804Where was she at this moment?
31804Who was more likely to live than Francezka?
31804Who will make the world believe I can write plays, if Adrienne can no longer act them?"
31804Why should she be contemplating the end of all things?
31804Why were you so severe with him?"
31804Will you not endeavor to reconcile Francezka to me for receiving him?"
31804Yet, had not these eyes seen him?
31804You can always spell victory-- and what matters the rest?"
16435Dave Keeney what boasts he''s the best whalin''skipper out o''Homeport comin''back with a measly four hundred barrel of ile?
16435Do n''t I look it?
16435Have n''t you sometimes noticed that is what bitterness to another means: a failure within oneself?
16435Me? 16435 ''Ave you missed me, Daise? 16435 ''Be you color sergeant?'' 16435 ''I m as is n''t reeght in''is yead? 16435 ''Indle,''Indle? 16435 ''Oo are you, Pompey? 16435 ''Oo is''e, Daise? 16435 ''What be you laughin''for?'' 16435 ( AUNUND''S_ head sinks_; THORGEIR''S_ rises in the same place._) How many heads have you? 16435 ( HALLGERD''S_ women are huddled together and clasping each other._) ODDNY What can these women be who sleep like horses, Standing up in the darkness? 16435 (_ A pause._)_ Well?_(_ In a rage_)_ WELL?_ THE BEGGAR. 16435 (_ A pause._)_ Well?_(_ In a rage_)_ WELL?_ THE BEGGAR. 16435 (_ A_ VOICE_ sings in the distance._) MARIE BRUIN Did you hear something call? 16435 (_ Again he cries out, beseechingly_) My God, why do You keep on marchin''and leave him settin''here? 16435 (_ Again in the distance a bugle sounds._ LINK_ starts._) What''s that? 16435 (_ At phone_) Who? 16435 (_ Calling_) Hast tha wiped thy boots on scraper? 16435 (_ Calls out_) Why did n''t you tell me that before, Shawn Early? 16435 (_ EMMA crosses left and opens door._) May A coom in? 16435 (_ Excitedly_) What is it he thinks he''s goin''to do? 16435 (_ Exit_ EMMA_ with teapot._) Now, Sam Horrocks, what''s the matter wi''thee? 16435 (_ Exits, calling off to the cause of the trouble._) Are ye in yer bed yet, Alexander? 16435 (_ Glancing sharply at the_ MATE) You ai n''t turnin''no damned sea lawyer, be you, Mr. Slocum? 16435 (_ Going out_) Did anyone see Bartley Fallon? 16435 (_ He points to the window._) Well? 16435 (_ He thrusts with the bill through the casement._) A MAN''S VOICE(_ far off_) Is Gunnar within? 16435 (_ He turns to the hound by the fire._) Samm, drowsy friend, dost scent a prey in dreams? 16435 (_ He walks up to BARTLEY, folds his arms, and stands before him._) Here, my man, do you know anything of John Smith? 16435 (_ Laying the hoe down, she approaches_) The yoke done? 16435 (_ More kindly_) Where was it ye''ve been all o''the time-- the fo''c''s''le? 16435 (_ Pondering_) D''ye ken whit I''m thinkin'', John? 16435 (_ Quickly, over her shoulder._) What''s your name? 16435 (_ Rises from the box._) Is theer owt else? 16435 (_ She does n''t answer him._ KEENEY''S_ voice trembles._) Do n''t you know me, Annie? 16435 (_ She enters angrily, looking backward through the doorway._) Must I shut fast my doors And hide myself? 16435 (_ She goes over to the table with the bundle._) Shall I open it now? 16435 (_ She holds ready for him the blue coat and hat._) LINK(_ looking up_) What''s thar? 16435 (_ She looks at him in surprise._) Why, Will, you surely do n''t envy him his comfort, do you? 16435 (_ She looks at him, as she holds his hand._) What could these frail hands do? 16435 (_ She looks through some clothes hanging in the corner_) It''s not with them, Cathleen, and where will it be? 16435 (_ Shouts_) Did you hear that news, Mrs. Tarpey? 16435 (_ Sits up and wipes her eyes._) I suppose they''ll wake him the same as another? 16435 (_ Stops her ears._) Oh, is n''t he the treacherous villain? 16435 (_ Suddenly_) What''s the most important thing in life, John? 16435 (_ Takes a revolver from the pocket of his coat and examines it._) Got yourn? 16435 (_ The outer door is heard to bang._) Listen: was n''t that the front door? 16435 (_ They go out by the dais door._) GUNNAR(_ as he enters hastily from the left_) Where are those women? 16435 (_ To MRS. TARPEY, raising her voice_) What was it rose the dispute at all, Mrs. Tarpey? 16435 (_ To_ ORMILD) Have I sat down in comfort by the fire And waited to be told the thing I knew? 16435 (_ To_ PASTRY COOKS) When one cooks one becomes so disheveled, does n''t one? 16435 (_ To_ SHAWN EARLY) Was it you? 16435 (_ To_ THE CHILD) Child, how old are you? 16435 (_ To_ TIM CASEY) Was it you said it? 16435 (_ Trying to control his chattering teeth-- derisively_) Who d''ye think it were-- the Old Man? 16435 (_ Turns and sees him._) What in the earthly world do I see before me? 16435 + Oscar M. Wolff+ WHERE BUT IN AMERICA? 16435 A Poet Laureate has no social position, has he? 16435 A clear passage? 16435 A little sooner than you lads? 16435 A new quilt, Sam? 16435 A prisoner? 16435 A remedy, O king? 16435 A rope is it? 16435 A rope, is it? 16435 A''God''s name, what is it that you''re meaning? 16435 ASTRID Whence came these mounds of dread to haunt the night? 16435 About how long is it? 16435 Agrarian crime, no doubt? 16435 Ah, but then it''s hardly in your line, is it? 16435 Ai n''t that truth? 16435 Ai n''t we, boys? 16435 Am I late? 16435 Am I still rare enough to be your mate? 16435 And I was right, was n''t I, Phelimy Driscoll? 16435 And I''ve never asked for much from you, have I, David? 16435 And are n''t I fond of you? 16435 And d''you s''pose any of''em would believe that-- any o''them skippers I''ve beaten voyage after voyage? 16435 And d''you think you''re tellin''me somethin''new, Mr. Slocum? 16435 And did you beat him? 16435 And do you, then, indeed wend alone? 16435 And father? 16435 And is n''t it a pitiful thing when there is nothing left of a man who was a great rower and fisher, but a bit of an old shirt and a plain stocking? 16435 And it is your strength I''m relying on now that Wallace-- Shall I call him? 16435 And then, what does it matter, when one does n''t know? 16435 And this was your toothpick, eh? 16435 And what about me? 16435 And what are these? 16435 And what did he want killing Jack Smith? 16435 And what have you to say now, Bartley Fallon? 16435 And what have you told him? 16435 And what is it you yourselves are talking about? 16435 And what kind of an American has he been in times of peace? 16435 And what time would a man take, and he floating? 16435 And what will he get but his death if he stay here, Captain Talbot? 16435 And where is Hugh Talbot with the aid he promised? 16435 And who could blame her? 16435 And who knows what eyes may be watching? 16435 And who might your commander be? 16435 And why should the gentleman not hang him if it pleesure him? 16435 And you never thought, maybe, that in that keg there was powder enough to blow the bridge of Cashala to hell? 16435 And you''re going to let me go, Dad? 16435 Any dispute about land? 16435 Are any of them important to the story-- for instance, in_ The Beggar and the King_? 16435 Are n''t I been in the fightin''--earned all I could get? 16435 Are n''t you glad, Chancellor? 16435 Are n''t you going home? 16435 Are there nails with them? 16435 Are there other forces in the play besides the people-- storm or accident or fate? 16435 Are these the next? 16435 Are yo'', now, Emma? 16435 Are you going to allow this? 16435 Are you gone mad? 16435 Are you lowerin''the boats? 16435 Are you stark crazed? 16435 Art askin''me to we d thee? 16435 Art thou deaf? 16435 Art thou dumb? 16435 Art thou the beggar who has been crying aloud in the streets for bread? 16435 Art thou the king? 16435 Art tongue- tied? 16435 Art too proud to tak''a gift from me? 16435 At his request? 16435 At what price would ye be selling their safety? 16435 Aye, where_ is_ Captain Talbot? 16435 Aye? 16435 Aye? 16435 Aye? 16435 Aye? 16435 BIARTEY Oddny, when you are old Would you not be proud to be no man''s purse- string, But wild and wandering and friends with the earth? 16435 BIARTEY She is a fair free lady, is she not? 16435 Because we are ugly must we be bewitched? 16435 Beg pardon, Your Majesty; before summoning the Pages, should not the Lady Violetta be here? 16435 Besides, does n''t his attitude seem natural? 16435 Big, or little chap? 16435 Boycotting? 16435 Business, is it? 16435 But have n''t we radicals been too intolerant of compromise? 16435 But no more redcoats? 16435 But none spied ye? 16435 But then I''ll tell ye a stane will na answer ye back, an''a clod of earth will na try to withstand ye, so how can ye argue them down? 16435 But what are you doing? 16435 But what''s''appened to thy looms, lass? 16435 But when his time comes what will he do? 16435 But why should he no''get into the habit if there''s nae harm in it? 16435 But ye want them a'', do ye no''? 16435 But you did n''t like it-- coming from him? 16435 But you do n''t mean you think you could actually_ see_ Fame? 16435 But you do, do n''t you, David? 16435 But you will make him understand? 16435 But, my dear fellow, you do n''t mean that you think there really is such a person? 16435 But-- but--(_She breaks a bit, then controls herself._) You are quite sure you''re doing what''s right? 16435 But... it is not possible... are you she that knew Homer? 16435 By compromising with the beliefs of a lifetime? 16435 By fighting one? 16435 Ca n''t bear what, Annie? 16435 Ca n''t tha quit mawlin''yon bit o''waste an''tell me what''tis tha wants? 16435 Ca n''t you hear''em laughin''and sneerin''--Tibbots''n''Harris''n''Simms and the rest-- and all o''Homeport makin''fun o''me? 16435 Came you from the West or the sky- covering North Yet saw no thin steel moving in the dark? 16435 Can A help thee, Mrs. Ormerod? 16435 Can I do nothing for you? 16435 Can it be that you are anxious, that you are afraid? 16435 Can not you wait this time? 16435 Can that be true? 16435 Can you always put any one character altogether on one side? 16435 Can you go on picturing these events? 16435 Canst thou hear what I am saying to thee now? 16435 Cat- nappin''was I, Polly? 16435 Colleen, what have you got there in the book That you must leave the bread to cool? 16435 Comin'', sir? 16435 Common assault? 16435 Could I not take the hearts of generations, Walking among their dreams? 16435 Could there be aught but love between us after all these years? 16435 Could we hurt you? 16435 D''ye mark the high tone of him, Dick? 16435 D''you really think he''s crazy? 16435 D''you remember that last night in the wood? 16435 D''you think I''m as mean as that? 16435 D''you think I''ve not seen their ugly looks and the grudgin''way they worked? 16435 D''you want anything, Annie? 16435 Dae ye expect him to gae on after he''s got it? 16435 Daise, which of us will you''ave? 16435 Dick, you''ve your pouch under your hand? 16435 Did Bartley overtake him? 16435 Did he say what way they were found? 16435 Did it no''occur to ye then that there ought to be some sort of dispensation to look after the auld yins who were past it? 16435 Did n''t the young priest say the Almighty God would n''t leave her destitute with no son living? 16435 Did not our fathers and our grandfathers before us judge the dishes of the previous queens of hearts? 16435 Did she say anything before she left? 16435 Did ye hear any talk in the fo''c''s''le? 16435 Did ye hear ever of a man who was n''t crazy do the things he does? 16435 Did you ask him would he stop Bartley going this day with the horses to the Galway fair? 16435 Did you forget jam? 16435 Did you go out of this room? 16435 Did you hear a noise in the northeast? 16435 Did you hear him? 16435 Did you hear that, Cathleen? 16435 Did you hear, Morag Cameron, did you hear? 16435 Did you notice were there many people going by to- day? 16435 Did you play a game of checkers with him, Chancellor? 16435 Did you see Bartley? 16435 Did you see him riding down? 16435 Didst want to see me private to tell me that, lad? 16435 Do I know the town? 16435 Do I look like it? 16435 Do I not know? 16435 Do ghosts eat bread? 16435 Do n''t I look it?
16435Do n''t you remember?
16435Do n''t you see how worried we are?
16435Do n''t you see my appointment is an acknowledgment of the rising tide of radicalism in the world?
16435Do n''t you see that''s all dead wood?
16435Do n''t you see the Government is beginning to realize it ca n''t do without us?
16435Do n''t you think it might just happen that they turned out all right?
16435Do n''t you understand why he had you appointed on that committee?
16435Do they say what way did he die?
16435Do ye hear him?
16435Do you actually believe you will have any power with your_ own_ people when you have compromised them for a temporary expediency?
16435Do you always do that?
16435Do you believe for a moment that Senator Bough has anything but contempt for you, too?
16435Do you hear that, Shawn Early and James Ryan?
16435Do you hear that, Tim Casey?
16435Do you know this town well, my good woman?
16435Do you like that better?
16435Do you like them crumbly, Pompdebile, darling?
16435Do you make any money by it?
16435Do you mean me?
16435Do you tell me so?
16435Do you think that they will be good for anything, Knave?
16435Do you think the play has merely temporary, or genuine and permanent, appeal?
16435Do you think will he come?
16435Doan''t tha tak''thy cap off in''ouse, Sam Horrocks?
16435Does he have a prejudice against any one of them?
16435Does he?
16435Does it go any farther than that?
16435Does not the light change on me as I breathe?
16435Does that puzzle your bonny head?
16435Does the author sympathize with any special character?
16435Does the ending satisfy you?
16435Does the interest mount steadily from beginning to end, or does it droop and fail somewhere?
16435Doon the hill?
16435Dost know my''ouse, Emma?
16435Dost mean it, Mrs. Ormerod?
16435Dost mean it, Sam Horrocks?
16435Dost mean tha''ll coom?
16435Dost mean to tell me tha''s bin clemmin''all this time?
16435Dost say tha''s got business''ere?
16435Dost tha know what tha''s sayin'', or is tha foolin''me?
16435Dost thou hear the impudence he is offering me?
16435Dost thou not command me to fling him just one small crust from the window?
16435Dreams?
16435Easy to have you misunderstand?
16435Easy to know my friends will jeer and say I''ve sold out?
16435Eating a tart, did you say?
16435Eh, what''s that, lass?
16435Even thou, Dick?
16435FATHER HART I never saw her read a book before; What may it be?
16435FATHER HART Whose child can this be?
16435Firing into houses?
16435Five?
16435For example, in_ Campbell of Kilmhor_, where is your sympathy?
16435For th''time o''th''year?
16435For the last time: will you surrender you?
16435Fortunate?
16435Fortune, my foe, why dost thou frown on me, And will thy favors never greater be?
16435Four million people or so made him Lord Mayor, did n''t they?
16435GIZUR We''ll never do it: Let no man lift a blade or finger a clout-- Is not this Gunnar, Gunnar, whom we have slain?
16435GUNNAR Forth?
16435GUNNAR(_ as he ascends to the loft_) O spendthrift fire, do you waft up again?
16435GUNNAR(_ parrying the blows with the bill_) Ay, Asbrand, thou as well?
16435Garlanded with flowers?
16435God bless thee, wilt tha try, lad?
16435God forgive you; is n''t it a better thing to raise your voice and tell what you seen, than to be making lamentation for a thing that''s done?
16435God help us, Mrs. Fallon, what happened your basket?
16435Good Lord, where are you from?
16435Good cooks make good tempers, do n''t they?
16435Good, now: whar''s your marker?
16435HALLGERD Am I a wandering flame that sears and passes?
16435HALLGERD Does ought lie on it?
16435HALLGERD Heroes, what deeds ye compass, what great deeds--- One man has held ye from an open door: Heroes, heroes, are ye undefeated?
16435HALLGERD Mother, what will you do?
16435HALLGERD What, are you there again?
16435Hallgerd, what riot of ruinous chance will sate you?...
16435Hang me if I''d shake a whip at birch, for ox- yokes.--Polly, are ye thar?
16435Hate?
16435Have I ever neglected or forgotten any of your commands, Your Majesty?
16435Have I?
16435Have n''t I given up my days for her?
16435Have n''t you sometimes noticed that is what bitterness to another means: a failure within oneself?
16435Have the facts of war changed, or is it you?
16435Have you anything to suggest-- a plan?
16435Have your ideals only been old clothes you change to suit the weather?
16435He fears I will?
16435He is safe from hanging now?
16435He means-- we mean-- on what terms, sir, do we surrender?
16435He surveys the room, and then the face vanishes as he knocks at the door._) Who''s theer?
16435He''ll let us pass free now, sir, will he not?
16435Here, here-- What has happened?
16435Here, what have you got in here?
16435Here, what''s this?
16435Hi, and what''s this?
16435Hilda, has n''t it ever struck you that we may have been all wrong?
16435Himself is there then?
16435Homer?
16435How can a mere rhyme serve to keep this affair in the minds of the people?
16435How can he take charge of her?
16435How could I figger on this ice?
16435How could I make terms that you would hear to?
16435How could I make terms?
16435How could that be?
16435How could we poor little King Canutes halt this tide that has swept over the world?
16435How do you know I''m going to see a musical comedy?
16435How does a lad take the boots off a redcoat?
16435How else can we commemorate, for future generations, this event?
16435How is it with you, Mrs. Ormerod?
16435How long a time will it take for your creation to be thoroughly done, so that it may be tested?
16435How long would it take us to reach home-- if we started now?
16435How would he go the length of that way to the far north?
16435How would it be washed up, and we after looking each day for nine days, and a strong wind blowing a while back from the west and south?
16435How would the like of her get a good price for a pig?
16435How would they be Michael''s, Nora?
16435How would you know it?
16435How''s everybody?
16435I ask thee, wilt thou throw thy crown from yonder window?
16435I ask you, for the third time, where is he?
16435I been always first whalin''skipper out o''Homeport, and-- Don''t you see my meanin'', Annie?
16435I believe ye, wumman--(_with a faint twinkle_)--but it''s turned oot luckily, has it no''?
16435I ca n''t turn back now, you see that, do n''t ye?
16435I do n''t jest like t''talk about my legs.-- Be you a- goin''to take your young school folks, Polly?
16435I mean what trade have they?
16435I say-- what have you been doing all day?
16435I say-- why do n''t you chuck it?
16435I suppose it''s because he stands in one position so long he-- Why, Pompy dear, what''s the matter?
16435I suppose there is a good deal of disorder in this place?
16435I suppose ye understand, woman, how it will go wi''your son?
16435I wanted to be with you, David, do n''t you see?
16435I washed my hands, as one always does after cooking;(_ to the_ PASTRY COOKS) does n''t one?
16435I will soon put on my womanhood and marry The spirits of wood and water, but who can tell When I was born for the first time?
16435I will tell no lie; where would be the use?
16435I wonder now who will take the expense of the wake for poor Jack Smith?
16435I, just now?
16435I-- I-- Will they let us keep our swords?
16435I?
16435I?
16435If A''d said tha might tak''me for thy moother, what wouldst ha''done?
16435If it was a hundred horses, or a thousand horses you had itself, what is the price of a thousand horses against a son where there is one son only?
16435If that is so, then why do I hear his voice?
16435If ye had yer ain way ye''d hae them a'', eh?
16435In my''ouse?
16435Intoxicating, Your Majesty?
16435Is everything ready for this great event?
16435Is everything ready?
16435Is he asleep?
16435Is he dead?
16435Is he not big enough To fit the songs about him?
16435Is he not thinking death would ride with him?
16435Is he now?
16435Is it Bartley it is?
16435Is it Patch, or Michael, or what is it at all?
16435Is it a long one?
16435Is it about my man Bartley Fallon you are talking?
16435Is it alive you are, or is it dead you are?
16435Is it back from the grave you are come?
16435Is it dead he is?
16435Is it easy to pull out of the rut and habit of years?
16435Is it killed he is?
16435Is it letting on you were to be dead?
16435Is it lies about him you are telling, saying that he went killing Jack Smith?
16435Is it not law?
16435Is it to put trouble on me and to destroy me you want?
16435Is it well done?
16435Is it you think I have the gift, girl, that you ask me that?
16435Is it you, William White, speaking?
16435Is it your wits you have lost, or is it I myself that have lost my wits?
16435Is it yourself at all that''s in it?
16435Is n''t it a hard and cruel man wo n''t hear a word from an old woman, and she holding him from the sea?
16435Is n''t it a queer hard thing to say if it''s his they are surely?
16435Is n''t it better if we try to direct the current to our own ends rather than sink by trying to swim against it?
16435Is n''t it fortunate?
16435Is n''t it sorrow enough is on everyone in this house without your sending him out with an unlucky word behind him, and a hard word in his ear?
16435Is n''t it turf enough you have for this day and evening?
16435Is n''t that a great tune?
16435Is n''t that an acknowledgment of my power?
16435Is n''t the deafness the great hardship?
16435Is she coming to the pier?
16435Is she gone round by the bush?
16435Is that a fact, Emma?
16435Is that a fact?
16435Is that it, Bartley?
16435Is that what you are saying, Bridget Tully, and is that what you think?
16435Is that why your feelings are hurt?
16435Is the Lady Violetta ready to produce her work?
16435Is the play stupidly and falsely cheering because it presents untrue"happy endings"or other distortions of things as they are?
16435Is the sea bad by the white rocks, Nora?
16435Is the snow still coming down?
16435Is there any use opposing anybody or anything these days?
16435Is there not a foot, A stealthy step, a fumbling on the latch Of the great door?
16435Is there time?
16435Is this constant throughout the play, or do you feel a change at some point in it?
16435Is this the Secretary speaking?
16435Is this your faith, Hugh Talbot?
16435Is-- is it private?
16435It is cold out there; Who would think to face such cold on a May Eve?
16435It is likely you do n''t know that the police are after the man that did it?
16435It was hard to get through, Dugald?
16435It was on the twenty- fifth of August we were married, David, was n''t it?
16435It''s a fine day, is n''t it?
16435It''s fonder she was of Michael, and would anyone have thought that?
16435It''s the life of a young man to be going on the sea, and who would listen to an old woman with one thing and she saying it over?
16435Jim, do you love me true?
16435Jim, you wo n''t go fightin'', wi''the sun out and the birds all callin''?
16435KEENEY(_ in amazed embarrassment at this outburst_) Love you?
16435Keep us all up here after our time is worked out till the last man of us is starved to death or frozen?
16435Knave, will you?
16435LINK Map?
16435LINK Scart?
16435LINK So,_ do_ ye?
16435LINK Sure ye do n''t want to jine the celebratin''?
16435LINK What''s that I used to sing ye?
16435LINK Willoughby Run: whar''s that?
16435Let me at him, ca n''t you?
16435Link done that: Link-- the spry boy, what they call Chipmunk: you ai n''t forgot his double- step, have ye?
16435Living?
16435Long Distance?
16435Long Distance?
16435Lord God, you ai n''t forgot the boys, have ye?
16435MAURTEEN BRUIN Oh, who would think to find so young a child Loving old age and wisdom?
16435MAURTEEN BRUIN Who was she?
16435Maiming of cattle?
16435Maire, have you the primroses to fling Before the door to make a golden path For them to bring good luck into the house?
16435May I have an apron, please?
16435May I have my handkerchief, Pompy?
16435May I sit here, Chancellor, in this seemingly humble position at his feet?
16435May it not become so terrible that men-- the workers, I mean-- will throw down their worn- out weapons of their own accord?
16435Maybe he was asleep?
16435Maybe you do n''t hold with the clergy so?
16435Mercy, feyther, whit''s wrang wi''ye?
16435Michael is after being found in the far north, and when he is found there how could he be here in this place?
16435Mother has told you?
16435Mother, where are the women?
16435Mothers have got to believe in it; or else how could they stand the thought of bayonets stuck into the bodies they brought forth in their own blood?
16435Mr. Slocum, did you ever hear o''me pointin''s''uth for home with only a measly four hundred barrel of ile in the hold?
16435Must I wear up the rags Of mortal perished beauty and be old?
16435Must not the queen set an example for the other women to follow?
16435Mutiny?
16435My bow-- where is my bow?
16435My colleen, have not Fate and Time and Change Done well for me and for old Bridget there?
16435My room at Eton?
16435Naw, but tha does mind ma''ouse, Emma, as it were when she were alive?
16435Naw?
16435Ne''er fash aboot my mind: what has a soldier to do with ony mental operations?
16435Needs you?
16435Never since I.... What was that?
16435No matter what happens?
16435No, of course not-- er-- The mule-- Is that-- did you--?
16435Nor you, Dick Fenton?
16435Now tha''s sure that''s all?
16435Now, what is your special office in this work?
16435O Bartley, Bartley, what did you do at all at all?
16435O Will, do you remember when he was born?
16435ODDNY You''ll not part it?
16435ORMILD(_ tucking up her skirts_) Then are we out of peril in the darkness?
16435Och, now you''ve stairted, have you?
16435Of what possible use to the people--?
16435Oh, Knave, dearest, sweetest Knave, could you, I mean, would you?
16435Oh, what''s the use, Will?
16435Oh, where could they have gone?
16435Oh, widows''manes are priceless.... Off, mean wimple-- I am a finished widow, why do you hide me?
16435Oh,''tis you, is it?
16435Oh-- Mr. William White?
16435Old mother, have you no sweet food for me?
16435On the throne, Your Majesty?
16435Only what?
16435Or is there power left upon my mouth Like colour, and lilting of ruin in my eyes?
16435Or would it be too great a strain on you to keep from beating him twice in succession?
16435Our five?
16435POLLY Have I learned''em right?
16435POLLY What did the span- new mister say to that?
16435POLLY(_ goes to the work- bench, where the box is steaming_) Uncle Link, you want that I should steam this longer?
16435Packin''yon box?
16435Perhaps it''s the maid?
16435Poetry?
16435Proud and aloof and cold as marble, what does Fame care for us?
16435RANNVEIG Be still, my daughter.... HALLGERD And then?
16435RANNVEIG Cease: are you not immortal in shame already?
16435RANNVEIG How shall I stir?
16435RANNVEIG Is an old woman''s life desired as well?
16435RANNVEIG Only for two?
16435RANNVEIG Think you that men are yonder?
16435Rather a pretty one, is n''t it, Pompy?
16435SAM is behind corner table and backs a little before her._) What''s tha gettin''at, Sam Horrocks?
16435STEINVOR Arrh-- do not touch me, unclean flyer- by- night: Have ye birds''feet to match such bat- webbed fingers?
16435STEINVOR But women are let forth free when men go burning?
16435STEINVOR What is a wonder less?
16435Say ye so?
16435Say, what''s your favourite color?
16435Seen anything?
16435Senator Bough is chairman?
16435Shall I obey the orders of a beggar?
16435Shall I pray with you?
16435Shall I wake up the First and Fourth, sir?
16435Shall we not roost in her bower yet?
16435She grabs his arm and turns him around to face her-- intensely._) And I''ve always been a good wife to you, have n''t I, David?
16435She kens what would save her son-- the very babe she nursed at her breast; but will she save him?
16435She means that I shall fight until I die: Why must she be put off by whittled years, When none can die until his time has come?
16435Should I not perhaps fling him a crust from the window?
16435Sisters, that is a fair fierce girl who spins.... My fair fierce girl, you could fight-- but can you ride?
16435Sixth?
16435So-- they made you prisoner?
16435Sorry for me, is it?
16435Speaking of their neglect of neighborly kindness, one says,"That''s a crime too, and who''s going to punish that?"
16435Stop a minute, Shawn Early, and tell me did you see red Jack Smith''s wife, Kitty Keary, in any place?
16435Sure you do n''t think he''d turn souper and marry her in a Protestant church?
16435Surrender?
16435Surrender?
16435Sweet voice, tell us, was that verily Gunnar?
16435THE CHILD Come, tell me, do you love me?
16435THE CHILD(_ to_ MAIRE) And do you love me?
16435THE SILVER Box:"Jones: Call this justice?
16435Tell him-- Is he there-- with you?
16435Tell me is herself coming, Nora?
16435Tell us, was it Gunnar?
16435Ten years''work and what have I to show for it?
16435Terms?
16435Tha great fool, what does mean?
16435Tha''ll tak''care on''t, lass, wo n''t thee?
16435Tha''s got a tongue in thy faice, has n''t tha?
16435Tha''s not coddin''a feller, art tha?
16435Thanks._) What?
16435That makes forty-- don''t you remember?
16435That would be August, the latter part of August, would n''t it?
16435That''s strange, is n''t it?
16435The Emmetsburg road''s thar.--Whar was I,''fore I fell cat- nappin''?
16435The Lady Violetta, though trying at times, we have found-- er-- shall we say-- er-- satisfying?
16435The admiration of men who care for poetry, and how many of_ them_ are there?
16435The last ship has not gone: why will he tarry?
16435The motive, is it?
16435The passport and credentials?
16435The police after them?
16435The sixth man-- where will the sixth man be standing?
16435The sun do n''t shine in your inside, do it?
16435Then is that no''what ye want: yer ain way?
16435Then why fight them?
16435Then you ai n''t goin''--to turn back?
16435Then you think that there is nothing to be done-- I shall have to be banished?
16435Then you wo n''t tell my real age, or interfere?
16435Then you''d believe in nymphs and fauns, and Pan, and all those kind of birds?
16435There''s nothing the matter?
16435They are good, then?
16435They are not where you said now?
16435They come, they come, old mother: Are you not blithe and thirsty, knowing they come And can not be held back?
16435They made it hard for you at college?
16435This is Decoration mornin'': you ai n''t forgot?
16435This is high praise; but who, after studying the play, will doubt that it is deserved?
16435To Fame?
16435To adopt me?
16435To no''th''rd?
16435To you?
16435To- night?
16435To_ VIOLETTA) Are you willing, dear, to ride the white palfrey garlanded with flowers through the streets of the city?
16435Volunteered?
16435Wa''n''t you never scart and wished you''d stayed t''home?
16435Was I no''richt?
16435Was I not worth it?
16435Was anybody''ere, Emma?
16435Was it money?
16435Was there no''?
16435Washington?
16435Well, Annie?
16435Well, Emma?
16435Well, lads?
16435Well, now, had n''t Bartley Fallon great venom in him?
16435Well, soldier?
16435Well, what do you make of it?
16435Well, what dost want?
16435Well, what is it then?
16435Well, what?
16435Well, where would you go?
16435Well, which do you like best, green or blue?
16435Well, while A''m''ere, Mrs. Ormerod, is theer nought as A can do for thee?
16435Well?
16435Well?
16435Well?
16435Well?
16435Well?
16435Well?
16435Were you?
16435Wert ever in it?
16435Whar did Ye git my legs?
16435What about''i m?
16435What an if I had been dead?
16435What are the men goin''to do''bout it?
16435What are you after?
16435What are you doing in London?
16435What are you going to do, Pompy, dear?
16435What are you reading?
16435What are you saying, Mary?
16435What business would the people here have but to be minding one another''s business?
16435What can th''lad be after now?
16435What did he do at all, or is it bewitched I am?
16435What did poor Jack Smith ever have in his pockets unless it might be his hands that would be in them?
16435What did you say she was doing?
16435What do the fools want to go home fur now?
16435What do ye seek?
16435What do ye seek?
16435What do you make of it?
16435What do you mean?
16435What do you want?
16435What do you write?
16435What dost want?
16435What dost want?
16435What effect has the play on you?
16435What else should I see, and the night as black as the mouth of hell?
16435What happened since?
16435What happens_ after_ the curtain falls?
16435What has that woman on her stall?
16435What have we here?
16435What have yer had on this one?
16435What have you to tell?
16435What is it ails you, at all?
16435What is it that you see?
16435What is it the whole of the town is talking about?
16435What is it ye''re wantin''a''the time?
16435What is it you have?
16435What is it you seen?
16435What is it you''re seeing?
16435What is it, Mrs. Tarpey?
16435What is it?
16435What is its chief business?
16435What is that man doing?
16435What is the matter with thee?
16435What is the matter?
16435What is there now-- are terrors surging still?
16435What is this?
16435What is your purpose?
16435What like is he?
16435What made you think it was Wallace?
16435What meanest thou by saying thou dost not understand?
16435What men send ye here?
16435What more can we want than that?
16435What more, Myles Butler?
16435What on earth is the matter?
16435What prompted you to commit this dastardly crime?
16435What say ye, James?
16435What say ye?
16435What see you, Fenton?
16435What shall I do?
16435What should I see but Cromwell''s watch- fires along the boreen?
16435What sixth?
16435What sort o''things, this lovely day?
16435What stick?
16435What terms will they grant us, sir?
16435What was God a- thinkin''of, t''allow the created world to act that awful?
16435What was it?
16435What was it?
16435What was that he said?
16435What was that?
16435What was that?
16435What was the motive of this crime?
16435What way was he drowned?
16435What way will I live and the girls with me, and I an old woman looking for the grave?
16435What were you doing in the garden?
16435What wert doin''when A coom in?
16435What will they do?
16435What will ye here with us?
16435What would be your objections, now?
16435What would my wife want bringing Bartley Fallon to America?
16435What''ll''e be like, I wonder?
16435What''n hints?
16435What''re ye shiverin''''bout?
16435What''s Pegasus?
16435What''s a blighter like that to old Fritz''s shells?
16435What''s a life, anyway?
16435What''s color?
16435What''s come over you these last weeks?
16435What''s that to do wi''thee?
16435What''s that to do wi''thee?
16435What''s that?
16435What''s the good o''stayin''?
16435What''s the matter?
16435What''s the time, Jim?
16435What''s thy''ouse an''thy quilt to do wi''me?
16435What''s your pledged word to men that know not honor?
16435What, are you there?
16435What, not son to Robert''Indle,''i m as used to be overlooker in th''factory till''e went to foreign parts to learn them Roossians''ow to weave?
16435What-- eat raspberry jam?
16435What?
16435What?
16435What?
16435Wheer is it?
16435Wheer''s Mrs. Ormerod?
16435Whence come ye?
16435Whence?
16435Where am I?
16435Where are her ladies?
16435Where are you at all, Bartley, till I bring you out of this?
16435Where are you?
16435Where did you get it, soldier?
16435Where has she gone?
16435Where have you been?
16435Where is Bartley Fallon, Mrs. Fallon?
16435Where is Jack Smith?
16435Where is he itself?
16435Where is he, indeed?
16435Where is he, is it?
16435Where is she?
16435Where is the author''s, apparently?
16435Where is the bit of new rope, Cathleen, was bought in Connemara?
16435Where is your mistress?
16435Where''s Captain Talbot, then?
16435Where''s herself, Jack Smith?
16435Where''s the harm in my giein''him a bit story before he gangs tae his bed?
16435Where?
16435Wherefore should I touch my forehead to the floor?
16435Which door?
16435Which door?
16435Whit was I tellin''ye, John, about weans gettin''their ain way if the neighbors had ears an''they lived close?
16435Whit wey is it no richt if there''s nae harm in it?
16435Whit wey should ye no''gie in to him if there''s nae harm in it?
16435Whit''s it gaein''to be-- eh?
16435Whit''s that?
16435Whit?
16435Whit?
16435Who are ye?
16435Who are you kiddin''?
16435Who can tell?
16435Who gives commands here?
16435Who goes there?
16435Who is dead?
16435Who is he, now?
16435Who is it says it?
16435Who is responsible for this carelessness?
16435Who is that crying in the street for bread?
16435Who is there?
16435Who is there?
16435Who let them in?
16435Who taught ye to leave your powder uncovered, where lighted match was laid?
16435Who was telling you?
16435Who was telling you?
16435Who''s talkin''o''yer deein'', feyther?
16435Who''s tha keepin''coompany with?
16435Who''s theer?
16435Who''s theer?
16435Who''s to speak fur ye?
16435Who?
16435Whose charge is that?
16435Why ca n''t you?
16435Why d''you ask me such a question, Annie?
16435Why did the author stop before telling us these things?
16435Why does he cry for bread?
16435Why does that proverb make you cry, My Lady?
16435Why does the author begin just here, and not earlier or later?
16435Why dost thou not call the guards?
16435Why dost thou not seize him?
16435Why not?
16435Why not?
16435Why not?
16435Why should Fame come to me?
16435Why should he no''expect them?
16435Why should you be doing that?
16435Why then should I sail Upon a voyage that can end but here?
16435Why will he break the atonement that was set?
16435Why will his manhood urge him to be dead?
16435Why would anyone be sorry for me?
16435Why would he have made an end of him if he had not?
16435Why would n''t he get a wake as well as another?
16435Why would n''t he injure him?
16435Why would n''t you give him your blessing and he looking round in the door?
16435Why, dost thou not know I can have thee slain for such words?
16435Why, what have you got?
16435Will Cromwell spare us, an we yield ourselves now?
16435Will I be in it as soon as himself?
16435Will I be putting the light in the window?
16435Will I?
16435Will he spare us?
16435Will she see it was crying I was?
16435Will the men turn to willin''or must we drag''em out?
16435Will ye give me to drink, lads?
16435Will you run for it?
16435Will you shut your mouth and hear me speaking?
16435Will you yourself take it, James Ryan?
16435Will you, mother?
16435Will you?
16435Will, do n''t you see, I must understand?
16435Wilt tha try, Sam Horrocks?
16435Wilt tha''ave me, Emma?
16435Wilt thou throw thy crown from yonder window?
16435Wilt thou, I say, forever breed me pain, And wilt thou not restore my joys again?
16435With them?
16435With what side or what character are you in sympathy?
16435Without a man a woman can not rule, Nor kill without a knife; and where''s the man That I shall put before this goodly Gunnar?
16435Without the raspberry jam?
16435Wo n''t permanent peace come through bitter experience rather than talk-- talk-- talk?
16435Wo n''t you please turn back?
16435Woman, what foolish mockin''is this?
16435Would I have been willing to hurt you like this?
16435Would n''t understand?
16435Would n''t you?
16435Would what?
16435Would you be opening the door with a light like that shining from the house?
16435Would you begrudge him that much?
16435Would you believe it?
16435Would you mind doing it again just for me?
16435Would you not shout to be riding in a storm?
16435Writing?
16435Wud ye?
16435Ye admit this then?
16435Ye hear that, John?
16435Ye mind whit I was saying aboot the dispensation o''Providence to help weans till they could try for theirselves, John?
16435Ye wo n''t be staying with us?
16435Ye''ll no''can stop the night?
16435Yea, has he mouthed ye?...
16435Yes, dear?
16435Yes?
16435Yo''never''ad no childer, did yo'', Mrs. Ormerod?
16435Yon lad of ould Sal Horrocks as died last year?
16435You agree with me, do n''t you, Pompy, that imagination will work wonders-- will do almost anything, in fact?
16435You ai n''t mad, be you?
16435You ai n''t out of your mind--(_anxiously_) be you?
16435You ai n''t, ai n''t you?
16435You are going to be part of this war?
16435You believe in the Lord Mayor of London, do n''t you?
16435You can say that?
16435You did not dream of giving up the Bridge of Cashala-- eh, Myles Butler?
16435You do n''t believe in a winged horse, do you?
16435You do n''t know he was followed and that he was laid dead with the stab of a hayfork?
16435You do n''t know that yourself, I suppose, Bartley Fallon?
16435You do n''t know, I suppose, that the body was found in the Five- Acre Meadow?
16435You do n''t know, maybe, that he was made away with for the sake of Kitty Keary, his wife?
16435You doubt my sincerity?
16435You give orders?
16435You hate them as much as that?
16435You have more ears, yet are you not my sister?
16435You have no call to be leaving the fair for a while the way I have, and how can I go till I''m rid of this fork?
16435You have not heard his call(_ turns eagerly_), have you?
16435You heard the same story from everyone you asked?
16435You know that, do n''t you, dear?
16435You love me, do n''t you, David?
16435You mean the fall of the Holy Roman Empire?
16435You never thought on that, eh?
16435You still command, Jack?
16435You were ashamed?
16435You will give him back to me?
16435You will promise that he will not be hanged?
16435You wo n''t blame him?
16435You wo n''t?
16435You''d not give up the bridge?
16435You''ll hold the bridge?
16435You''re not afraid, Kit?
16435You''ve had trouble at college?
16435You-- you dare-- you call me-- coward?
16435Your promise?
16435_ The Beginning and the End._ What events important to this play occurred before the curtain rises?
16435_ The Forces in the Play._ What is the"passion"--that is, what exactly do these people desire who"want their ain way"?
16435_ The Playwright''s Purpose._ What was the author trying to do in writing the play?
16435_ You_ ask me to aid you in what I do n''t believe?
22495A captain?
22495A great tease?
22495And go naked? 22495 And that is, sir?"
22495And what is marriage?
22495And what is the plural of child?
22495And what part is that?
22495And what the dickens do Oi be after wantin''a thrunk?
22495And what''s S.D.?
22495And when was that, pray?
22495And you?
22495But could n''t you get anything to eat on the train?
22495But how about the dew?
22495But suppose I undertake to dig a well?
22495By death or marriage?
22495Ca n''t realize on what?
22495Can I give it to you?
22495Can I go with you, my pretty maid?
22495Can you think of another?
22495Cash a draft? 22495 Did n''t what?"
22495Did n''t you? 22495 Did she give it to you?"
22495Did you have any pale ale?
22495Did you shoot him?
22495Divorce?
22495Do I think so? 22495 Do n''t need what?"
22495Do n''t you think, dear, we had better wait until we get home?
22495Do you really think so?
22495Do you suppose we can squeeze in here?
22495Do you take children''s pictures?
22495Eh? 22495 Everything?"
22495For what reason?
22495Good work, is n''t it?
22495Happily? 22495 Have you never observed a man working on a warm day?"
22495Have you sold it?
22495He never touched her?
22495His business? 22495 Hot air?"
22495How can that be?
22495How did you know it was my sister?
22495How do I strike you?
22495How does she do it?
22495How is business?
22495How much do you charge?
22495How so?
22495How was she looking?
22495How was that?
22495How was that?
22495How will the planting of violets upon my grave prevent them from digging me up?
22495How''s that?
22495How''s that?
22495How?
22495I do n''t know, what does he weigh?
22495I''m not sure, ma''am,replied the careful domestic,"but I think they are in the wash."*****"Have you much room in your new flat?"
22495In what way?
22495Is he a Mormon or a Chicago man?
22495Is his rheumatism done gone?
22495Is that a fact?
22495Is that what you do at home?
22495It''s merely a cuckoo clock, is n''t it?
22495Large or small head?
22495Marriage?
22495May I go with you, my pretty maid?
22495No?
22495No?
22495Of what, dear?
22495Oh, indeed; and may I inquire what they are?
22495Oh, then its all right?
22495Refused again?
22495Star? 22495 Tandem or simultaneously?"
22495That depends,he answered at last"Is my wife in the room?"
22495That''s very fortunate, is n''t it,said his wife innocently,"but how?"
22495Then how is it you do n''t own it?
22495Then what is a Panama woman?
22495Then you did not see her on that occasion?
22495Three aces, jedge, and----"What did Jim do?
22495Vell, what you tink?
22495Was it well discussed?
22495Well, is n''t that what I said?
22495Well, what is he?
22495Well, what sort of a book would you like-- a book of poems, for instance?
22495Well, what''s the charge of the light brigade?
22495Well?
22495What did he draw?
22495What did you bet?
22495What did you have?
22495What do you mean?
22495What does your father do on a right hot day?
22495What grounds?
22495What has he done?
22495What is all right?
22495What is he, a commodore?
22495What is it?
22495What is the cause?
22495What is your father''s business?
22495What kind?
22495What made you think of that?
22495What possible connection is there between the two?
22495What relation?
22495What story did he fall from?
22495What''s that?
22495What''s that?
22495What, a judge?
22495What?
22495What?
22495When was it?
22495When?
22495Where did he get that idea?
22495Where did you learn?
22495Where is your brother?
22495Where''s your father?
22495Where''s your mother?
22495Where?
22495Who took him up?
22495Who''s all write?
22495Who?
22495Why how is that?
22495Why not?
22495Why not?
22495Why should n''t he be proud?
22495Why so?
22495Why so?
22495Why, dear?
22495Why, how does that make any difference?
22495Why,they asked him,"do you have such a large number of court jesters in constant attendance on your royal person?"
22495Why?
22495Why?
22495Why?
22495Will you take it now?
22495Would you bet on it?
22495Yaas, and a good deal better, for one can kiss a miss, when one could n''t kiss a mile, don''cher know?
22495Yes, I''d look well, would n''t I? 22495 Yes, sir; can we write you some insurance?"
22495You mean a lawyer?
22495You swear that this is true?
22495You''re not?
22495***** A lady one day being in need of some small change called down- stairs to the cook and enquired:"Mary, have you any''coppers''down there?"
22495***** A lady was looking for her husband and inquired anxiously of a housemaid,"Do you happen to know anything of your master''s whereabouts?"
22495***** A prominent man called to condone with a lady on the death of her husband, and concluded by saying,"Did he leave you much?"
22495***** A wag who thought to have a joke at the expense of an Irish provision dealer said,"Can you supply me with a yard of pork?"
22495***** ALGY--"Charming widow, is n''t she?
22495***** AMERICAN--"You have noticed, I suppose, that the balance of trade, so far as your country and ours are concerned, is still in our favor?"
22495***** ASKIT- What is a convenient fall trip for me to take?
22495***** At a West End hotel one of the party asked:"Have you got any celery, waiter?"
22495***** Attorney for the Defense-- Have you ever been cross- examined before?
22495***** BACON-- What''s that thread tied about your little finger for?
22495***** BIGGS--"I hear the jail was afire this morning?"
22495***** BOY( with new gun)--"Pa, has a cat got nine lives?"
22495***** BROWN-- What kind of a cigar is that, old man?
22495***** Broker--"Don''t you find it easier to shave some men than others?"
22495***** CALLER-- Wonder if I can see your mother, little boy?
22495***** CITYMAN-- Do they keep a servant girl?
22495***** CONDON-- Have you been cured of that last attack of malaria?
22495***** COURTNEY-- When you proposed to Miss Dexter did you get down on your knees?
22495***** CUSTOMER-- Why do you call this electric cake?
22495***** Customer( to the coal dealer):"Have you got any name for those scales of yours?"
22495***** DAME RUMOR ought frequently to have her named spelled without the e.*****"Where are you working now?"
22495***** DICK--"Do you think you''ll have much trouble in popping the question?"
22495***** FANNIE-- Why do people always apply the name of"she"to a city?
22495***** FIRST COMEDIAN--"Did you score a hit with your new specialty?"
22495***** FIRST FLY-- Did it ever occur to you the baldheaded men have a keener sense of humor than others?
22495***** FIRST SENIOR-- Heard about Exsheff?
22495***** FRANKLIN--"Do you know, I started in life as a barefooted boy?"
22495***** FRIEND-- Do you permit your wife to have her own way?
22495***** For years she''d heard her husband sadly say:"Ca n''t we have pies like mother used to bake?"
22495***** GROCERYMAN--"Pat, do you like apples?"
22495***** GUARD-- I suppose when you were in the army you often saw a picket fence?
22495***** GUEST-- What have you got?
22495***** GUEST--"Look here, waiter, do you call this a spring chicken?
22495***** HAUGHTY LADY--(who has purchased a stamp)-Must I put it on myself?
22495***** HE-- Did you ever see anything at so- called bargain sales that was really cheap?
22495***** HE-- Don''t you think Miss Plainly is the very image of her mother?
22495***** HE-- How does it happen that none of you women have come forward with a new currency plan?
22495***** HE-- Then I am to understand that you have given me the mitten, as it were?
22495***** HE-- You saw some old ruins while in England, I presume?
22495***** HE--"Didn''t you promise to love, honor and obey me?"
22495***** HUSBAND-- My dear, how would you like a book for a present?
22495***** HUSBAND--"Where''s your mistress?
22495***** He-- Why has he put her picture in his watch?
22495***** I asked a young lady living on her pa''s farm what they did with all their fruit?
22495***** IKEY-- Fader, is"imbegunious"undt"inzolvent"der same?
22495***** ISAACS-- Undt suppose dey did send us a message from Mars, how could dey tell if we got it?
22495***** If Pearl Street is crooked; Is Union Square?
22495***** If t- o- u- g- h spells tough, And d- o- u- g- h spells dough, Does s- n- o- u- g- h spell snuff?
22495***** If the devil lost its tail, where would he go to get another one?
22495***** Irish foreman, to gang of men in a sewer:"How many men is down in that hole?"
22495***** JACK--"Are you a suitor for Miss Juliet''s hand?"
22495***** JIM--"Why do you wear your stocking wrong side outward?"
22495***** JIMSON-- Now, you would n''t marry me, would you?
22495***** JOHN-- Say, do you want to get next to a scheme for making money fast?
22495***** JOHNNY-- What makes you look so tired?
22495***** Jenks-- Why on earth did you laugh so heartily at that ancient jest of Borem''s?
22495***** KICKSY-- Wife, can you tell me why I am like a hen?
22495***** KID-- Did the dogs ever bite you?
22495***** LADY-- Why do you remove your sword, Lieutenant?
22495***** LITTLE WILLIE-- Papa, why does the railway company have those cases with the ax and saw in every car?
22495***** Lawyer:"Have you conscientious scruples against serving as a juror where the penalty is death?"
22495***** Little Mary, quite contrary, How does your appetite grow?
22495***** Lovett-- You do n''t believe in divorce, then?
22495***** MASHINGTON-- What''s the matter with your clock?
22495***** MAUD-- How do you define love?
22495***** MAY-- I wonder what the men do at the club?
22495***** MEDIUM-- Do you believe in spirits?
22495***** MILLIE--"I wonder what the holes in a porous plaster are for?"
22495***** MISTRESS( to cook who has fallen down stairs)--I hope that you did not hurt yourself, Mary?
22495***** MOSES SCHAUMBURG( to his son Jackey)--"How many are twice two, Jackey?"
22495***** MOSES--"How did you make your money, Ike?"
22495***** MOTHER--"What did your father say when he saw his broken pipe?"
22495***** MR. BIXBY-- Have you noticed how much better I rest after a day''s fishing?
22495***** MRS. SWELLERY-- What is the matter with my husband, doctor?
22495***** MRS. TILFORD OF SOROSIS--"It must have taken Daniel Webster a long time to compile the dictionary; do n''t you think so?"
22495***** NEWLYWED-"What do bachelors know about women?"
22495***** Now comes the question which will make This life a bitter cup.... How many hoopskirts will it take To fill a trolley car up?
22495***** OLD LADY( at a ball game)--"Why do they call that a fowl?
22495***** PAT-- Who is being lowered into a well;"Sthop, will ye, Murphy?
22495***** PETERS--"Are you not sick of hearing everybody sing that popular song?"
22495***** SHE( approvingly)--You won her hand, then?
22495***** SHE-- Why do they call it an arm of the sea?
22495***** SHE--"Are you fond of tea?"
22495***** SHE--"You say your automobile has been acting strangely all day?"
22495***** SILLICUS-- Do you think we shall know each other in the hereafter?
22495***** STRANGER--"Boy, can you direct me to the bank?"
22495***** STUDENT-- Professor, which is the logical way of reaching a conclusion?
22495***** SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER-- What is meant in the parable by a"house built upon a rock?"
22495***** She heard the fog- horn blowing,"And what is that?"
22495***** TEACHER-- Johnny, can you tell me what a section boss is?
22495***** TEACHER-- Thomas, can you tell me which battle Nelson was killed in?
22495***** TEACHER-- When does suicide become a crime?
22495***** THE BARBER-- Did I ever shave you before?
22495***** THE DOCTOR--"You regard society as merely a machine, do you?
22495***** THE MAN-- Edison''s a wonder, is n''t he?
22495***** THE SPINSTER-- How many lodges did you say your husband belonged to?
22495***** TOMMY-- Pa, did you really mean it when you said you''d spank anyone that broke that vase?
22495***** TRAMP--"Can''t you give a poor man something to eat?
22495***** The Governess-- What happened when the man killed the goose that laid the golden egg, Margie?
22495***** The judge asked an Irish policeman named O''Connell,"When did you last see your sister?"
22495***** VISITOR-- I suppose you have a great deal of poetry sent into you for publication?
22495***** WEEKS-- Well, how are things over in Boston?
22495***** WIFE- Will you see that my grave is kept green, my darling?
22495***** WIFE--"Got a dollar?"
22495***** What do you think of Windig?
22495***** What kind of essence does a young man like when he pops the question?
22495***** When a couple are about to elope the young man asks,"Does your mother know your route?"
22495***** Why is a railroad train like a bedbug?
22495***** YANKEE--"I say, Britisher, can you spell horse?"
22495***** YEAST-- Did you ever try to dye eggs?
22495*****"And did you never kiss a girl under the mistletoe?"
22495*****"And you really believe that Friday is an unlucky day?"
22495*****"And you really think that a miss is as good as a mile?"
22495*****"Anything new in your neighborhood?"
22495*****"Are any of the colors discernible to the touch?"
22495*****"Are n''t you afraid, dear, you''ll catch cold in the scanty bathing robe?"
22495*****"Are you an amateur photographer?"
22495*****"Are you engaged?"
22495*****"Are you intimate with any of the nobility?"
22495*****"Are you the photographer?"
22495*****"Are your folks well to do?"
22495*****"Betty, why do you sit up at this hour of the night darning your stockings?"
22495*****"Boss, hab you got any ob dem confound cavortic pills?"
22495*****"Can I sell you a nice cheap trunk to- day?"
22495*****"Can you give me a front room on the first floor?"
22495*****"Can you swim, little boy?"
22495*****"Curious, is n''t it?"
22495*****"Dear,"said the physician''s wife,"when can you let me have ten dollars?"
22495*****"Did any of you ever see an elephant''s skin?"
22495*****"Did the fisherman have frog''s legs, Bridget?"
22495*****"Did the minister say anything comforting?"
22495*****"Did you ever catch your husband flirting?"
22495*****"Did you ever consider the case of the boy who stood on the burning deck?"
22495*****"Did you ever hear about the two holes in our back- yard?"
22495*****"Did you go into any of the New York restaurants?"
22495*****"Did you have any trouble with black ants in Ireland, Bridget?"
22495*****"Did you hear about Miss Jones?"
22495*****"Did you hear the story about the peacock?"
22495*****"Did you know that Xanthippe, wife of one of the greatest of ancient philosophers, was a great scold?"
22495*****"Did you shoot anything, Henrick?"
22495*****"Did your sweetheart receive you warmly last night?"
22495*****"Do I bore you?"
22495*****"Do you believe in luck?"
22495*****"Do you believe in transmigration of souls?"
22495*****"Do you go to church to hear the sermon or the music, Maude?"
22495*****"Do you know the nature of an oath, ma''am?"
22495*****"Do you think that as a rule people who attend theaters are superstitious?"
22495*****"Do you think the elevator boy stole your watch?"
22495*****"Do you think the things one eats have a direct effect on one''s disposition?"
22495*****"Doing anything now, Bill?"
22495*****"Have n''t I told you before,"he cried,"to sing out the names of stations clearly and distinctly?
22495*****"Have you ever met my sister, Louisa?"
22495*****"Have you received last month''s gas bill, dear?"
22495*****"He''s quite a star as an after dinner speaker, is n''t he?"
22495*****"Hey, boy, where''s your brother?"
22495*****"How about the lazy man who hurt his eye looking for work?"
22495*****"How are you to- day?"
22495*****"How could you endure talking so long with that ugly old woman with that frightful costume without laughing in her face?"
22495*****"How did that fight between the bridge tenders end?"
22495*****"How did you cure your boy of swearing?"
22495*****"How is Uncle Mose coming on?"
22495*****"How is your house heated?"
22495*****"I got your fare, did n''t I?"
22495*****"I hope they do n''t give my little boy any naughty nicknames in school?"
22495*****"I suppose Barnum went to heaven when he died?"
22495*****"I wonder why blondes are always anxious to be wedded?"
22495*****"If a guest at a restaurant ordered a lobster and ate it, and another guest did the same, what would the latter''s telephone number be?"
22495*****"If you should die, what would you do with your body?"
22495*****"Is a howling dog a sign of death?"
22495*****"Is it raining, girls?"
22495*****"Is the proprietor in?"
22495*****"Is this a fire insurance office?"
22495*****"Is your friend the dentist a society chap?"
22495*****"John, can you tell me the difference between attraction of gravitation and attraction of cohesion?"
22495*****"Kind lady,"remarked the weary wayfarer,"can you oblige me with something to eat?"
22495*****"Let me see,"said the minister, who was filling out the marriage certificate and had forgotten the date,"this is the fifth, is it not?"
22495*****"Ma, what is a Panama man called?"
22495*****"Mike, d''I ever tell ye the story about the dirty window?"
22495*****"Mother, may I go out to wheel?"
22495*****"My dear, what makes you always yawn?"
22495*****"My friend,"said the long- coated old man, solemnly,"have you made preparation for the day of judgment?"
22495*****"Now, why,"remarked the little dog, in speaking to the tree,"Would you say that the heart of you is like the tail of me?"
22495*****"Pa, what branches did you take when you went to school?"
22495*****"Pa, what does Sioux Falls, S.D., mean?"
22495*****"Pa,"said little Willie, who had been reading a treatise on phrenology,"what is a bump of destructiveness?"
22495*****"Pat,"said one Catholic friend to another,"how would you like to be buried in a Protestant graveyard?"
22495*****"Paw, can an honest man play poker?"
22495*****"Say Dad, what is an expert accountant?"
22495*****"Say, did you ever feel as if you wanted to''hit the pipe?''"
22495*****"Say, pop, do people take snuff nowadays?"
22495*****"So Maude is happily married?"
22495*****"So her second husband is a tenor?"
22495*****"So you were bound and gagged by bandits while in Italy, were you?"
22495*****"That was a pretty good dog story, was n''t it?"
22495*****"Well, Pat, and how is that bull- pup of yours doing?"
22495*****"Well, have you anything to say?"
22495*****"Were you attached to the place?"
22495*****"What are you going to do with your boy?"
22495*****"What are you writing such a big hand for, Pat?"
22495*****"What became of that girl you made love to in the hammock?"
22495*****"What did de lady do when yer asked her for an old collar?"
22495*****"What did you wear last night?"
22495*****"What do you mean by referring to Miss Elderly as a pall- bearer?"
22495*****"What do you think of the statement that there are three hundred haunted houses in New York?"
22495*****"What have you got to say for yourself?"
22495*****"What have you here?"
22495*****"What in the world shall I do with the baby, John?
22495*****"What is a swell affair, Jim?"
22495*****"What is love?"
22495*****"What is the best way to raise cabbage?"
22495*****"What is the difference between the admission to a dime museum and the admission to Sing Sing?"
22495*****"What is the meaning of the saying that a man shall earn his bread in the sweat of his brow?"
22495*****"What is the plural of man, Johnny?"
22495*****"What is the secret of success?"
22495*****"What is there about betting on horse- races that is so bad for the health?"
22495*****"What is your idea of happiness?"
22495*****"What kind of hen lays the longest?"
22495*****"What makes so much froth in a glass of beer, pa?"
22495*****"What makes your sister so stout now, she used to be very thin?"
22495*****"What man in the army wore the biggest hat?"
22495*****"What must a man be that he shall be buried with military honors?"
22495*****"What relation is a door- step to a door- mat?"
22495*****"What sort of labor is best paid in this country?"
22495*****"What was the subject of your debate this evening?"
22495*****"What''s the matter here?"
22495*****"What''s the matter here?"
22495*****"What''s the matter with Smith?"
22495*****"What''s the matter, John?
22495*****"When was money first invented?"
22495*****"When were walking- sticks first invented?"
22495*****"Where are you going, my pretty maid?"
22495*****"Where are you going, my pretty maid?"
22495*****"Where did you get that hair on your coat?"
22495*****"Why are pugilists like chickens?"
22495*****"Why are you sad, Bill?"
22495*****"Why do all bank cashiers run to Canada?"
22495*****"Why do n''t you demand$ 50,000 instead of$ 5,000?"
22495*****"Why do they make those Oriental pipes with bowls as big as water pitchers?"
22495*****"Why do you call your dog hardware?"
22495*****"Why does a donkey eat thistles?"
22495*****"Why is Miss B---- wearing black?"
22495*****"Why is a kiss like the three graces?"
22495*****"Why should a young man never raise his straw hat to a lady?"
22495*****"Why so glum, Blumly?
22495*****"Will the coming man use both arms?"
22495*****"Would you,"said the reporter who gets novel interviews,"tell me what book helped you most in life?"
22495*****"Yes, he''s got a flying- machine ready for a trial now and he''s trying hard not to be proud?"
22495*****"You are absolutely certain about your statement?"
22495*****"You have been losing flesh lately, have n''t you?"
22495*****"You never bought a gold brick, did you?"
22495*****"You own your own house, do n''t you?"
22495*****"You say his wife''s a brunette?
22495*****"You want a divorce from your wife, do you?"
22495*****"You were thrown out?"
22495*****"Young man, do n''t you know you ought to lay something by for a rainy day?"
22495*****--"That Jersey murderer was clever to get off as he did, was n''t he?"
22495--"What was his plea-- insanity?"
22495--That is terrible, how did it happen?
22495--_Life._***** Tom-- What''s that?
22495--_Puck._*****"Why did you insist on only$ 99,000 a year as your salary?"
22495APPLICANT-- Will I have a chance to rise?
22495And why do they call you that?"
22495Anything gone wrong?"
22495B.--"You wo n''t want that new novel now that you have the new baby, will you?"
22495B.--Have you seen the new dance called"The Automobile?"
22495B.--No; sort of breakdown, I suppose?
22495BOARDER--(musingly)--But what do you do with the hash that''s left over?
22495Barber--"Yes; do n''t you?"
22495Because I am"so sweet?"
22495Boy or girl?"
22495But as soon as one leaves they engage another.--_Philadelphia Press._***** If a woman would change her sex, what would her religion be?
22495But got up with a happy smile, And to the young man said:"Please, sir, How many laps are to the mile?"
22495Ca n''t they get nothing to take it off?"
22495Clara-- What did she do?
22495Comedy taken his departure yet?
22495DICK-- What for?
22495Did n''t he start the races?
22495Did you win?
22495Do n''t four pecks make a bushel?"
22495Do n''t the good book tell us that Noah came forth?
22495Do n''t you expect her father to kick you out?"
22495Do n''t you think that was a good deal?"
22495Do you hear?"
22495Do you really do that?"
22495Do you want them plain or coated?"
22495ED--"You do n''t mean it?
22495ENGLISHMAN--"''Orse?
22495Ever been to Cork?"
22495GENT-- What dogs?
22495GRUFF HUSBAND-- You did, eh?
22495Gimlet?''
22495HAROLD-- What was that you wrote to her the last time?
22495HE-- And is this all?
22495HE-- Run down eh?
22495HUSBAND--"Where''s the last dollar I gave you?"
22495Haggerty?"
22495Has n''t she been speaker of the house for the last fifteen years?"
22495Have n''t you ever seen him?"
22495Have they named any new pie"Aristotle"yet?
22495He appeared to have only one arm; is that all he has?"
22495He died by inches, then?"
22495He went down to the paddock, called out the jockey who had ridden him and said:"In hivin''s name, young man, phwat delayed you?"
22495He-- Did you look among the Vs, dear?
22495How about the industrious safe breaker doing time for making money?"
22495How can you stand it?"
22495How much?"
22495ISAAC ISAACS-- Vy?
22495Innocent--"Shall I leave out the swear words, mother?"
22495Is it true?"
22495Is n''t that high pay?"
22495Is she engaged?
22495Is she engaged?"
22495Is there anything you can match?
22495JONES-- What''s that?
22495Jenks-- in self- defence?
22495LITTLE BOY-- Engaged?
22495Lawyer:"What, is your objection?"
22495Lovett-- What has that to do with it?
22495MANAGER-- Indeed; What now?
22495MAUD--"What kind is that?"
22495MAY--"Perfume?
22495MISS SEARS-- Most certainly not; but why do you ask such a question?
22495MOSES--"Vatt, not bedding?"
22495MRS. CAMERON( spitefully)--"Yes, so Justin tells me, but he sometimes indulges too much, does n''t he?"
22495MRS. KICKSY-- No, dear, why is it?
22495MURPHY-- Still letting him down,"Phat for?"
22495Mrs. Casey--"An''phwy?"
22495Mrs. Casey--"Phwat did he say?"
22495Now, who''s out that dollar?
22495OLD M.D.--What do you mean?
22495Or, simply snow?
22495Pat-- What did he die of?
22495Polly want a cracker?"
22495SECOND COMEDIAN--"Did I?
22495SECOND DOCTOR-- What was it, please?
22495SHE--"And what are you putting the oil on it for?"
22495SHE--"How do you make that out?"
22495SHE: Why?
22495SMITH--"Did he have a rough voyage?"
22495SMITH--"You do n''t say so?
22495STRANGER-- How can you tell?
22495See that fat woman with the red hat over there?"
22495She''s rather stout, is n''t she?"
22495Soft?
22495TILFORD--"Daniel?
22495TIRPIE-- Why should n''t he?
22495TOMMY--"He is; but what is the matter with Clara?
22495The wife exclaimed, her temper gone,"Is home so dull and dreary?"
22495WIFE-- Why?
22495WIFE--"Where in the world can you buy them?"
22495WIFE--"Who put such nonsense into your head?"
22495What am I?
22495What are you doing?"
22495What book?
22495What did he hit?"
22495What do you mean?
22495What do you suppose he weighs?"
22495What draft?"
22495What is he?"
22495What is he?"
22495What is it?"
22495What more do you want-- a pair of socks?
22495What part of the machinery do you consider me, for instance?"
22495What was it?
22495What''s his name?"
22495What''s the answer?
22495What''s the matter with him?
22495What''s up?"
22495What?"
22495Whatcher givin''us?
22495When was it?"
22495Where did he find it?"
22495Where did you fall?"
22495Where, where is your telephone?"
22495Which one did the clock strike?"
22495Who is conferring?"
22495Why did n''t they close up Adam?
22495Why do n''t you call him a liar?"
22495Why do you ask?"
22495Why do you ask?"
22495Why is it?
22495Why is suicide a crime?"
22495Why the deuce did n''t you stay there?
22495Why, how is that?
22495Why?
22495Why?"
22495Wo n''t even death stop that man''s lying?"
22495Woman-"Where was you shot?"
22495You do n''t like them, do you?"
22495You here again?
22495You mean Noah, do n''t you?"
22495a wild one?"
22495are you in this line, too?"
22495asked the garrulous person;"regular comic- opera bandits, eh?"
22495did n''t me ould mother die av apple plexy?"
22495interrupted her husband;"is that so?
22495said mother, sharply;"do n''t you know it''s 12 o''clock?"
22495snorted the man who had been up against it,"you mean''plucking,''do n''t you?"
22495waiter, where is that ox- tail soup?"
29655''Eh, Tronchon, another bullet in thy old carcass; want a furlough to get strong again, eh?'' 29655 ''Slow work, too,''said he, laughing,''ai n''t it, Charles?''
29655Ah, that''s easily said, but suppose they_ did_?
29655Anan--"Will you give us leave to go in and rest ourselves a little? 29655 And as a swordsman, what are you?"
29655And does thy lord love thee? 29655 And hast heart to go back there, boy,"said the corporal,"and live the same life again?"
29655And have I not?
29655And so thou art going to ask for thy grade, Maurice?
29655And then?
29655And thy father and mother, child-- what will they say to thee on thy return home?
29655And what is to become of him?
29655And what troops are coming to join us?
29655And where may that be, young slip of the galleys?
29655And who was it,she asked,"that wept on the hill- side until the tears dropped through, staining my palace walls?"
29655And why should I not be as fair as she? 29655 And why so, Tronchon?"
29655And you say I must write a petition, Tronchon?
29655Answer me,''Gamin,''where didst find that old tawdry jacket?
29655Any thing else? 29655 Are you quite Sure?
29655Ay, but,said Edgar, shaking his head,"but what is that something?
29655Ay, does n''t he? 29655 But, Mrs. Lawson, dear, have you seen old Mr. Lawson since he came home?"
29655Child, why didst thou linger under the tree?
29655Did n''t I tell you so?
29655Did you ever hear what became of them?
29655Did you hear his name?
29655Did you? 29655 Do I?
29655Do n''t you think it is the duty of all to exert themselves in a family party, to make conversation circulate in an agreeable manner?
29655Do you think they''ll refuse me, Tronchon?
29655Edgar, do you know what was meant by the term, one meets with in old books about manners, of''led captain?'' 29655 Edgar, what can we do for this man?"
29655For my part, I''m glad, indeed, to see serious ways taken up in this house; but how will it suit the rest of you? 29655 He is asking to what corps thou belong''st?"
29655Henry, my son, will you let me have the money?
29655Henry,said the father, abruptly,"I want some money; there is a poor woman whom I wish to relieve-- will you give me some money for her?"
29655How is this-- have I an acquaintance here?
29655How shall I do it?
29655I ask you only this once more-- give me the few shillings?
29655I have experienced more, perhaps, than most girls of my age have done, through my poverty and misfortunes; but what is that?
29655If he asks thee''Canst ride?'' 29655 In the name of wonder, boy,"he exclaimed,"what are you doing there?"
29655In what regiment, boy?
29655Irish? 29655 Is Esbern coming?"
29655Is that their livery, then?
29655Is the boy hurt?
29655Let us hear it, then-- you mean Pichegru, perhaps, or Massena?
29655May we go in, good man, and rest ourselves a little while?
29655My lord, who art thou, and what is thy will with me?
29655No matter, I''ll-- eh-- what? 29655 Nor of''Mons,''either, I''ll be sworn?"
29655Not always here?
29655Papa,she ventured to say,"have you heard all I have been saying?"
29655Really--''What say you, Mrs. Melwyn?
29655Then, what''s to be done, Tronchon? 29655 To be sure,"said the little fellow, who, I now perceived, wore the dress of a"tambour;""and is it a disgrace to be the first to face the enemy?"
29655Well, Thomas, how do_ you_ like these new ways of going on?
29655Well, mamma, suppose he should-- where would be the dreadful harm of that?
29655Well, sister,said Resa,"what art dreaming of now?
29655Well,said the rest,"go on-- is there any more?"
29655Were the dark ages poetical?
29655What ails you, my dear husband?
29655What can we do for this man?
29655What effect? 29655 What have you discovered?"
29655What is the sentence?
29655What is to be done?
29655What is to be done?
29655What operations?
29655What place is this?
29655What regiment?
29655What''s thy mess, boy?
29655Where from?
29655Where hast thou been?
29655Where is Crewe?
29655Where to?
29655Who ever heard,he demanded,"of the wives of a true believer being shown to a stranger, and that stranger an Infidel and a Frank?"
29655Who is he? 29655 Who would like such a stupid old drone?"
29655Why must the pleasure come so soon to an end, Edgar?
29655Why so? 29655 Why so?
29655Why, what would become of you all?
29655Will you give me the money at once, and let me go?
29655You really think so, Tronchon? 29655 You will not give it me?"
29655Your first question, dear girl-- always your first question-- what can be done?
29655About three centuries and a half before the Christian era, the question, Are sponges animal or vegetable?
29655An honorable vocation?
29655And did not the Hyldemoer waft me the wish, so that I came to meet and welcome thee under the hill?"
29655And especially you, my fine young gentleman?"
29655And hast thou young children dancing about thy feet, and a little blue- eyed one to creep dove- like to thy heart at nights, as mine does?
29655And stayest thou here thy lot to deplore?
29655And then what_ would_ become of us all?
29655And then, suppose they got tired of the plan, and longed for a house of their own?"
29655And was she as happy herself as she made others?
29655And was there ever a true mother''s breast, that while life yet throbbed there, was not a refuge for a repentant child?
29655And what is the moral of what we have written concerning Galileo?
29655And what was it all about?
29655Any one attribute that constitutes the citizen?
29655At last the clergyman asked,"What could have induced you to commit such a crime?"
29655But do you mean to say that young man is literally in distressed circumstances?"
29655But that''s not quite generous, is it, to throw the whole burden upon me now I_ am_ come, instead of sharing it?
29655But what are you doing in this place?
29655But what_ could_ we do without Lettice?
29655Camest thou not of thyself in at my door?"
29655Can not we do something for this good creature?"
29655Can you think of nothing?"
29655Come here, boy,"said she, addressing me,"hold the bridle: what''s thy corps, lad?"
29655Could a young being like_ her_ be_ very_ happy, living with two old people, and without one single companion of her own age?
29655Did Galileo yield?
29655Did Galileo yield?
29655Did I ever hint?
29655Did I ever say?
29655Did he ever forget it?
29655Didst thou not of thyself wish for a palace and a lord like me?
29655Directing my followers''attention to the spot, I remarked,"I see the lion;"to which they replied,"Whar?
29655Do I not lead her every Sunday, winter and summer, in storm, sunshine, or snow, to the chapel in the valley?
29655Do you know whether he is so or not?"
29655Do you know, Lettice, I began to wonder what had become of you?"
29655Do you love reading?"
29655Do you recollect what I was talking to you about this very morning?
29655Does he belong to this neighborhood?"
29655Does he cause confusion?
29655Does he enforce moderation?
29655Does he evidence great principles?
29655Does he sit beside thee at eve, and let thee lean thy tired head on his breast, as Esbern does with me?
29655Dost thou not hear them too, little Resa?
29655For what''s he to get of it, but the satisfaction of his merciful and generous spirit, when he sees his poor creatures happy?
29655HAVE GREAT POETS BECOME IMPOSSIBLE?
29655Has any thing happened?
29655Has he the most unerring of judgments?
29655Has the press become less an object of wonder or terror since it was worked by steam?
29655Have I not kept her heart from evil?
29655Have you any friends in the service?"
29655Have you one quality of father, friend, brother, husband, or relative?
29655Have you stumbled upon an unparalleled youth-- by mere accident as I did?
29655He started as if suddenly awakened when she spoke; but he only said,"Will you?
29655How call''st thou the place?"
29655How could she be so ungrateful?
29655How many miles to Brainford?
29655How much the rather if we are not sure to enjoy it one day to an end?"
29655I say, my lad, what''s thy name?"
29655If theology, then, can command such an advantage, on what principle should it be kept back from her?...
29655Is he a popular tribune?
29655Is he earnest?
29655Is there any sense in the young lady''s suggestion, or is there not?
29655Is there nothing else?"
29655It had been open to her even when she came in her pride; how would it be closed against her sorrow and humility?
29655It is no longer,''Where have you served?
29655It was night, and all were housed, Talking long and late; Who is this that blows the horn At the castle- gate?
29655It was the clergyman''s wife, he kissed her as she asked how he had succeeded with the wicked man in the jail?
29655May I tell you of it?"
29655May I venture to ask were you intending to visit that poor bed- ridden creature?
29655Mayhap, thou hast heard of Cambray?"
29655Melwyn?"
29655Mrs. Saunders liked the looks of the young man much-- and who did not?
29655My darling mother would not hear of me relinquishing my happiness upon her account-- and ought Lettice to be allowed to make such a sacrifice?"
29655Mère Madou, hast got curaçoa there?"
29655Next it was,"Nay, rather than that, I will go into the library too; why should I not?"
29655Nor relations, nor connections?"
29655Oh, what must I do?
29655On whom he had wished to bring ruin and perhaps death?
29655Or was no head then covered with the snows of a hundred winters, through one midnight despair?
29655Pert?"
29655Presently a head peered in at the door, inquiring,"All here for the Liverpool line?"
29655Say, dear sister, art thou as happy as I?"
29655She then appeared to say to herself,"Does this fellow know who he is after?"
29655Silence again for a few minutes, then--"Catherine, did you ever know me do a good action in your life?"
29655Suppose Lettice and Mr. St. Leger_ were_ to form an attachment for each other, what should hinder them from marrying?"
29655Suppose he should fall in love with Lettice?"
29655That kind, frank, manly, courageous man of genius, whom no one approached but to find help and comfort?
29655The bounding heart?
29655The elastic frame?
29655Thou art not one of the Municipal Guard, surely?"
29655WHAT BECOMES OF ALL THE CLEVER CHILDREN?
29655Was James Watt an automaton?
29655Was it a snare spread for him to lead to a confession?
29655Was it that able and benevolent man whom the world has so lately lost?
29655Was it the first time you ever heard grace said, you booby?"
29655Was no arm during the dark ages bared aloft in defense of outraged innocence?
29655Was she any the better for it?
29655Was the mighty heart of man-- the throbbing of which is just poetry, then utterly silent?
29655Was the voice of prayer then stifled throughout Europe''s hundred lands?
29655Was this the man whose house he had tried to burn?
29655Well, and did she improve under this good discipline?
29655Well, did any thing come of it?
29655Well, what is he like?
29655What could he do?
29655What could the slim beak of the swallow do against the redoubtable pincers of the sparrow, armed with a double and sharpened point?
29655What do we want with more verse?
29655What had you on?
29655What have I been thinking of?
29655What is Dante''s work but a beautiful incarnation of the spirit of the Middle Ages?
29655What says Miss Arnold?
29655What would be_ done_?"
29655What''s o''clock?"
29655What_ can_ you mean?"
29655What_ would_ become of us all?"
29655When he opened them again it was broad daylight; and his first thought was, had he overslept himself?
29655Where could you be?
29655Where hast thou been, lad, not to hear of places that every child syllables nowadays?"
29655Where hast thou been?"
29655Where shall poetry, if sent forth like Noah''s dove, fail to find a resting- place?
29655Where should''st thou have had thy baptism of blood, boy?
29655Where was I?
29655Where were the high- strung nerves now?
29655Who is this that blows a horn Which none but Wallace hears?
29655Who knows?
29655Who should be sent for?"
29655Who wert thou watching so eagerly?"
29655Who would have thought it would have made such a change?
29655Why all this bustle to- day?
29655Why did America not embark in such enterprise?
29655Why is it, sister?"
29655Why should they not?
29655Why will you not talk now?"
29655Will that do?
29655Will you come, too?
29655Will you excuse me for saying she is in great necessity?"
29655Will you listen to me?"
29655With the utmost coolness, my friend replied,"Certainly not: how could he while His Highness''s wives continued vailed?"
29655Without prospect, without interest in that coming life, which the young imagination paints in such lovely colors?
29655Would he save the nation?
29655Would the magician pay a visit to his house, recover the ring, and expose the delinquent?
29655Would you pull down all her little edifice of happiness, by taking Lettice away from her?"
29655Yet why do I recall it?
29655You are surely ill?"
29655You can ride well, of course?"
29655You hear that?''
29655You think that I shall be something yet?''
29655Your heart, perhaps?"
29655and did he-- did he pick up your hat?"
29655and did you not see the carriage go by?
29655and dost thou not--?"
29655and how does he look?"
29655and what is virtue but a name, if she may be betrayed whenever she demands an effort?
29655and why not?
29655art not thou the artillery- driver I spoke to at the barrack?"
29655but where shall I begin?
29655but,''Can you read glibly?
29655can you write faster than speak?
29655do these Germans need another lesson,"said the cannonier,"I thought Fleurus had taught them what our troops were made of?"
29655does not the holy cross lie on her pure breast day and night?
29655he said:"of what?"
29655how_ can_ you talk so?
29655is n''t this garden yours, and that house, and all the grand things that are in it yours?
29655is there no painter of English history bold enough to immortalize himself by painting this trial?
29655reiterated the woman in surprise;"is n''t it all yours, then?
29655said he, interrupting,"what of that?
29655said she laughing, and pointing at me with ridicule,"or is it a family dress made after thy father''s?"
29655whar?
29655what have I done?
29655what have you seen?''
29655what must I do?"
29655when you wished to play tyrant over us, did we not raise one Washington who chastised you?
29655where is he?
29655where should he go?
29655who would heed these elfin tales on such a lovely day?
29655why not live on here?"
30894''Do I love?'' 30894 ''Shall I?''
30894Are we to have no sleep at all for that_ drunken brute?_I said.
30894Clarify and strain,indeed?
30894I have it here,he said;"would you like to see it?"
30894Is that him?
30894Que voulez- vous? 30894 Shame had a fine bed, but where was slumber?
30894Where is the new guard coming from?
30894Where the devil did you read all these books?
30894_ Quoi? 30894 ( 14) Do you like Jonson''sloathed stage"?
30894( 3rd) A radiant notion begot this morning over an atlas: why not, you who know the lingo, give us a good legendary and historical book on Iceland?
30894( 7) Is the_ Royal George_ an ode, or only an elegy?
30894( Is Marvell''s Horatian Ode good enough?
30894( Is this not sad, Weg?
30894A propos, did you ever read him?--or know any one who had?
30894And I ask myself why I ever leave this humour?
30894And besides, if he does not like himself, whom he has seen, how is he ever to like one whom he never can see but in dim and artificial presentments?
30894And the end of life, you will ask?
30894And then you have the brass to ask me_ why_"my steps went one by one"?
30894And who knows?
30894Any party in London or Cambridge who thinks well enough of my little books to back me up with a few heartfelt words?
30894Are there no cheap and nasty imitations?
30894Are you coming over again to see me some day soon?
30894Are you not my first, my only, admirer-- a dear tie?
30894Are you not well that you do not write?
30894As for"C. Baxter, Esq.,"who is he?
30894At last Lloyd remarked, a blue mouth speaking from a corpse- coloured face,"You seem to be the only one with any courage left?"
30894But if you are retiring, may I ask if you have promised your support to any successor?
30894But is there not a hitch in the sentence at foot of page 153?
30894But is there not an irritating deliberation and correctness about her and everybody connected with her?
30894But just might I delete two words in your testimonial?
30894But what can you give?
30894But what care I?
30894But what, my Dew, in idle mood, What prate I, minding not my debt?
30894But when will that be?
30894But who wrote the review of my book?
30894Can it be that this bright- haired innocent has found the true clue to the mystery?
30894Can you find a better name?
30894Can you think of any other for this worthy man?
30894Comment le trouvez- vous?
30894Could your recommendation introduce me to an American publisher?
30894Did I ever tell you my skit on my own travel books?
30894Did not the national vanity exclaim?
30894Did you ever read them?
30894Did you see I had joined the band of the rejected?
30894Do keep me posted, wo n''t you?
30894Do you hear_ that_, you evildoer?
30894Do you imagine I could ever write an essay a month, or promise an essay even every three months?
30894Do you know one of the tragedies-- a Bible tragedy too--_David_--was written in his third period-- much about the same time as Lear?
30894Do you know what Shairp thought?
30894Do you know, I think yesterday and the day before were the two happiest days of my life?
30894Do you know, my dear sir, what I like best in your letter?
30894Do you know, you have had about a Cornhill page of sermon?
30894Do you know, your sunset was very good?
30894Do you like Sally Barnes?
30894Do you notice how for some time back you have had no descriptions of anything?
30894Do you remember Brash?
30894Do you think I can cut it?
30894Do you think you could prepare the printers for a possible breakdown this week?
30894Does it not seem as if things were fluid?
30894Does it not seem surprising that I can keep the lamp alight, through all this gusty weather, in so frail a lantern?
30894Does not this deserve remuneration?
30894Eh, boy?
30894Franklin-- do you want him?
30894Give me your advice?
30894Granton?
30894Haussmann, Friday, February 21, 1878._ MY DEAR PEOPLE,--Do you know who is my favourite author just now?
30894Have I lived thus long and have you known me thus long, to no purpose?
30894Have you had any thought about Diana of the Ephesians?
30894Have you read_ Mademoiselle Merquem_?
30894Her mother demanded the other day"_ À quand les noces?_"which Mrs. Stevenson will translate for you in case you do n''t see it yourself.
30894How about carving and gilding?
30894How are Baron Payn, Sir Robert de Bob, and other members of the Aristocracy?
30894How could_ noster amicus Q. maximus_ appreciate a storm at Wick?
30894How goes Gray?
30894How goes your Gray?
30894How has the cruising gone?
30894How much may now fairly become public of that which had been held sacred and hitherto private among his friends?
30894How would_ Tales for Winter Nights_ do?
30894How''s that for cut and dry?
30894How''s that for genuine American wit and humour?
30894How, and why, do you continue to exist?
30894I am even thinking of finishing up half- a- dozen perhaps and trying the publishers?
30894I cry,"where do you find that?
30894I make my baths; and then we go to Franzensbad; will you come to see us?"
30894I may mention that Robinet has never heard an Englishman with so little accent as I have-- ahem-- ahem-- eh?--What do you say to that?
30894I remember Sir John Millais, a shrewd and very independent judge of books, calling across to me at a dinner- table,"You know Stevenson, do n''t you?"
30894I say, is there any chance of your coming north this year?
30894I should get less coin than by going into magazines perhaps; but I should also get more notice, should I not?
30894I suppose I may at least hope for eight pic''s?
30894I suppose you know and remember Charles Lamb''s essay on distant correspondents?
30894I think I let him down gently, did I not?
30894I wait with perfect composure for farther news; I can do nothing; why should I disturb myself?
30894I wonder if a fruiterer from some place else-- say Worcestershire-- would offer the same phenomena?
30894I wonder if it''s old age?
30894I wonder if my revised paper has pleased the Saturday?
30894If Chatto should take both,_ cui dedicare_?
30894If I am, it''s for good this time; you know what"for good"means in my vocabulary-- something inside of 12 months perhaps; but who knows?
30894If that should be too dear, or anything, Mr. Mowbray would be able to tell you what is the best substitute, would he not?
30894Is Cummy struck dumb about the boots?
30894Is anything interesting known about him?
30894Is it Keats, hope you?
30894Is it not a wonderful odour?
30894Is it true that the_ Donkey_ is in a second edition?
30894Is n''t that a good dormitive?
30894Is that all?
30894Is that not right?
30894Is that not well said?
30894Is the sky blue?
30894Is the thing lost?
30894Is there a boy or a girl?
30894Is there any news in Babylon the Great?
30894Is there no shame about the easy classes?
30894Is there no_ news_?
30894Is this a blacksmith''s?
30894Is this a dream altogether?
30894It is not, I hope, from ill- health?
30894Je la trouve méchante.--Yours affectionately, R. L. S. Did I say I had seen a verse on two of the Buccaneers?
30894Last Friday I went down to Portobello, in the heavy rain, with an uneasy wind blowing_ par rafales_ off the sea( or"_ en rafales_"should it be?
30894Listen to Herbert--"Is it not verse except enchanted groves And sudden arbours shadow coarse- spun lines?
30894Lloyd then prints''em: are they not fun?
30894Moreover, I have my thesis given out now, which is a fifth( is it fifth?
30894Must it not be so, my dear friend, out of the depths I cry?
30894Must purling streams refresh a lover''s loves?
30894My dear Baxter, a word in your ear--" DON''T YOU WISH YOU WERE A FOOL?"
30894My dear Charles, is the sky blue at Mentone?
30894My dear mother, how can I keep up with your breathless changes?
30894No women in the story, Lloyd''s orders; and who so blithe to obey?
30894Now can you come to see us for a little while?
30894Now, do you understand why I protested against your depressing eloquence on the subject?
30894Now, should I not?
30894Now, what is to take place?
30894O peace, peace, whither are you fled and where have you carried my old quiet humour?
30894O why did you tell me about that cloak?
30894O, and look here, why did you not send me the Spectator which slanged me?
30894Of course, it is rougher than hell upon my father, but can I help it?
30894Only why do n''t you tell me if I can get my_ Spring_ printed?
30894Only, frankly, Colvin, do you think it a good plan to be so eminently descriptive, and even eloquent in dispraise?
30894P.S.--In fact if ever you see anything exceptionally fine, purchase for R. L. S. I owe you lots of money besides this, do n''t I?
30894Really, you know it is the only thing you have, since Dryden, where that irregular odic, odal, odous(?)
30894Rogues and rascals, is that all you are worth?
30894S. C. is down on me for being bitter; who can help it sometimes, especially after they have slept ill?
30894Shall I ever learn to do anything_ well_?
30894Suppose I could jerk you out 100 Cornhill pages; that would easy make 200 pages of decent form; and then thickish paper-- eh?
30894TO MRS. SITWELL_[ Barmouth, September 1874], Tuesday._ I wonder if you ever read Dickens''Christmas books?
30894TO SIDNEY COLVIN[_ Edinburgh, Autumn 1875._] MY DEAR COLVIN,--_Fous ne me gombrennez pas._ Angry with you?
30894The air which pleased Madame Zassetsky the most was"Hey, Johnnie Cope, are ye waukin yet?"
30894The aunt was very anxious to know who that strange, wild man was?
30894The company?
30894The end of life?
30894The letter bears no sign of date or place, but by the handwriting would seem to belong to this year:-- 1871?
30894The place?
30894The_ Moonstone_ is frightfully interesting: is n''t the detective prime?
30894This is not a gay way to pass Christmas, is it?
30894Une petite amour comme ça, qu''on ne pourrait pas baiser?
30894Was it Pheidias?
30894Was that your question?
30894What I have gained?
30894What about Ferrier?
30894What am I doing?
30894What do I talk of bad or good?
30894What do you think of Henley''s hospital verses?
30894What have I been doing?
30894What is my life to be at this rate?
30894What is your news?
30894What shall I find over there?
30894What, you rascal?
30894When may I hope to see the_ Deacon_?
30894When shall I be able to pay it back?
30894When shall I be able to return to England?
30894When shall I be married?
30894When shall I join the good and blessed in a forced march upon the New Jerusalem?
30894Where is it to go?
30894Where''s Murra?
30894Which would you read first-- Shakespeare''s autobiography, or his journals?
30894Who knows, Colvin, but I may thus be of more use when I am buried than ever when I was alive?
30894Who made them?
30894Whom did he marry?
30894Why did n''t you buy it?
30894Why did not one lie still in the grave?
30894Why do n''t they stamp their foot upon the ground and awake?
30894Why do n''t you write?
30894Why else could it be?
30894Why have you not sent me a testimonial?
30894Why rise again among men''s troubles and toils, where the wicked wag their shock beards and hound the weary out to labour?
30894Why?
30894Why?
30894Will you kiss your little daughter from me, and tell her that her father has written a delightful poem about her?
30894Will you remember me most affectionately to your wife?
30894Will you remember me to everybody?
30894Will you think it mean if I ask you to wait till there appears a promised cheap edition?
30894With this moralist maxims meant actions; and where shall we easily find a much manlier spirit of wisdom than this?
30894Would"daring"be better than"courage"?
30894You know I was a story- teller ingrain; did not that reassure you?
30894You know what I mean, do n''t you?
30894You talk of my setting to a book, as if I could; do n''t you know that things must_ come_ to me?
30894You understand, and you see that I am right?
30894You understand?
30894[_ San Francisco, April 1880._] My dear Sir,--Will you let me offer you this little book?
30894[_ Swanston, Summer 1874._] MY DEAR COLVIN,--Am I mad?
30894_ Ah nom de dieu!_ What do you think of all this?
30894_ Et puis_, is it not one''s own fault?
30894_ Friday._--"My dear Stevenson how do you do?
30894_ Jerry Abershaw_ should be good, eh?
30894_ Monday, August_(_ 2nd_, is it?
30894_ Must all be veiled, while he that reads divines Catching the sense at two removes_?"
30894_ Qu''en dis tu?
30894_ Saturday._--I can not tell how I feel, who can ever?
30894_ The Dying Christian?_ or one of his inimitable courtesies?
30894_ The Dying Christian?_ or one of his inimitable courtesies?
30894_[ Swanston, Summer 1874], Tuesday._ MY DEAR COLVIN,--What is new with you?
30894_______________________________ That bit of childishness has made me laugh, do you blame me?
30894a page of 4500 words; that''s not noble, is it?
30894almost incredulously; and then quite a long while after:"Do you know the noise of the water astonished me very much?"
30894and how is your wife?
30894because I had been rude?
30894but was it not overdone, even for a coronation-- almost a vulgar luxury?
30894do you annoying yourself or no?
30894have I done the like?
30894is it not something incredibly subtle and perishable?
30894or do they not know?
30894or what?).
30894the compass near the sign of the_ Twinkling Eye_?
30894the night I lay on the pavement in misery?
30894the night at Bonny mainhead?
30894the sheet of glass that we followed along George Street?
30894think you to go naked and unashamed this winter?
30894were my dress boots withheld?
30894what do I hear in my lug?
30894what do you say?
30894what had it?
30894will it paddle, think you?
30894would that do?
31454Adaly, my child, I trust you do not let this bawble bear any part in your devotions?
31454And do you refuse, Reuben?
31454And you are Virginian? 31454 Are you not softened now, my son?"
31454But did the newspaper man know this?
31454But why could n''t you have stayed at home, pray? 31454 Cross the river to- night, Ma''am?
31454Did you ask that question when you betrayed your country?
31454Do you want anything?
31454Gone?
31454How is Adèle and Phil and Rose and, the others? 31454 How?"
31454I said then,''When it comes, if it isNo,"will you just say,"No, Ellen,"and no more,--not one word more, please?''
31454I suppose you have n''t much of a kit?
31454Is that true?
31454It is not exactly the thing,said Colonel De Land;"had you not better pay your addresses at the lady''s house, like a gentleman?"
31454My brother, Sir?
31454My poor Reuben, do you know where such badness will lead you?
31454My son, do n''t you know that will be an offence against God?
31454The Twenty- Fourth Ohio? 31454 To where?"
31454True; but what must be done?
31454Twenty- Fourth Ohio? 31454 Was it, Sir?"
31454What can she mean,said he, musingly,"by talking such stuff to me?"
31454What is the matter?
31454Where are you going?
31454Where did you say he had gone?
31454Where were you going, Ellen?
31454Who cared for wet feet or a scratch? 31454 ''Ca n''t you see what the girl is? 31454 ''What did you put on that dress for? 31454 ''Who is your letter from? 31454 --Can''t you find out from Marmaduke?"
31454--''Is there a pimple coming on your nose?
31454--''What did you do this for?
31454--''What made you buy such a dreadfully unbecoming dress?
31454--''What makes you wear that pair of old shoes?''
31454--''Where did you go yesterday?
31454--''_He_ writing to you?
31454And Adèle?
31454And Rose?--and Adèle?
31454And after all, what possible good or benefit it?
31454And do n''t we, all of us, Mrs. G., take out our French Grammars, and learn, at some period of our lives, to translate that Gallic phrase?
31454And his all- accomplished rival and adversary, Alexander Hamilton,--is he not substantially the same at twenty- five as at forty- five?
31454And in respect to the wars which grew out of the French Revolution, what are they but the record of old generals beaten by young generals?
31454And there is your friend, Miss Free- manners,--you are shocked that I mention her name to you, are you?
31454And whom could he not abjure?
31454And, how say you, give_ you_ shackles and a dungeon?"
31454And, why, whom have we here?
31454Are there any remains of that clear, pure light which once looked out innocently from those bloodshot eyes?
31454As for Rose, what does she know of sloops and the world?
31454As he concludes, Hines turns to the new comer,--"Well, my boy, what do you say?
31454But are not republics grateful?
31454But if he went home,--what then?
31454But since Adam courted Eve, who ever heard of wooing going on in a prison?
31454But the question arises, Can not this youth be preserved, or, at least, perpetually renewed?
31454But what does Miss F. care for this?
31454But what said Chicago, when it awoke in the morning?
31454But who in creation would know him?
31454But who is this son of Anak, approaching from the corridor?
31454But who was to light the outside bonfire?
31454But why enumerate?
31454But would it be weakened, if the loftiest meditation issued in deeds instead of thoughts?
31454By- and- by, when she thought she had washed it well out, and when Sm----,( was I going to say Smith?
31454Can I do that in honor?"
31454Can he be the Texan?
31454Could it be young Spooney, who was ruined in that Rotten- Iron affair?
31454Did he love his State better than he loved his affianced wife?
31454Did not Cæsar have a candle that he bought of Brutus?
31454Did not meanness, falsehood, fraud, tyranny, treason, find in them, not apologetic critics, but terrible and full- armed foes?
31454Did not one give a mansion to General McClellan?
31454Did the old fox scent the danger?
31454Did you ever hear from them that contented ignominy was Christian peace?
31454Did you ever read it, Mrs. Grundy?
31454Did you quarrel with the little French girl?
31454Do n''t we all get that old saw down and try its teeth on our tender flesh?
31454Do you know them?"
31454Do you know what is burning?
31454Do you know what strain of music came sadly on my ear, and how I felt when I saw that the horrible old saw was keeping time to it?
31454Do you know what you have been doing all this time?
31454Do you see any signs of a mother''s tender caress on his sullen brow?
31454Do you think S.''s candle is really worth the price?
31454Does Sister Mabel wear her ermine cape this winter?
31454Does Skinflint ever think his candle is snuffy or burns dimly?
31454Does he like that great red eye which gleams out of the flame, as though it foretold an unwelcome guest?
31454Does he see in his hand the paltry metal which he has secured, and hear his own hurried, flying steps?
31454Does he see the gigantic shadows cast on the walls around by the miserable candle he holds?
31454Does it look as though it had ever been held up close and lovingly to a fond woman''s heart?
31454For the wild man of the sea, and the half- man and half- fish, what have we?
31454Has he any money about him?
31454He holds the ace of trumps,--but shall he risk the game upon it?
31454He is assured that his name will be all the better for dieting a few weeks in a dungeon, and-- did not the same thing make Harvey Birch immortal?
31454He walked the room for a time in silence, then, turning to the detective, said,"Do you know where the other leaders are?"
31454How do you know how Jones lights his house?
31454How far did you say you had come?
31454How is it, Mrs. Grundy?
31454I hope old Whiteface did n''t lose a shoe when you drove out on the river road?
31454I inquired, in amazement,--"keep a cow in the kitchen?
31454I said to them,''Do you know Joseph Carrol?''
31454In parting, however, with what it derides as illusions, does not age part with the whole of joy and by far the most important element of wisdom?
31454Is Reuben whimpering as the memory of this last tender episode comes to his memory?
31454Is he acting over the dark deed which brought him into this uninviting sleeping- place?
31454Is it gas, or oil, or kerosene, or spermaceti, or wax, or tallow?
31454Jinny came in, and opened the window, and said,''Is n''t such a clear day a good omen?''
31454Michigan?
31454Might it be the dying glare of his friend Needy, who hung himself after the Greenipluck_ exposé_, which reduced him to beggary?
31454Now I think they''re too dear,--don''t you?''
31454Now are you not ashamed to waste your time in this disgraceful manner?"
31454Now, how stand the facts?
31454Or if he was wrong in this particular, is not the whole question as to the right or wrong of Arianism opened again?
31454Or is he counting the cost of that light which showed him where to strike?
31454Or is it the eye of Society which he knows looks on his span, and his Newport house, and his wife''s jewels, with the flash of contempt?
31454Recognizing the Commandant by the eagle on his shoulder, he said,"Can I see you alone, Sir?"
31454Smith!--Did I mention any such name?
31454Smith?--My dear Madam, I mentioned no names, did I?
31454Strange, is n''t it, that Jones, a rich man, with plenty of servants, should humble himself to such a menial occupation?
31454There are many such lighted windows; and who knows the game that is going on behind the curtain?
31454This has happened in other countries, and why should it not happen here?
31454Transient defeat,--what did it but add new fiery stimulants to energies bent on an ultimate triumph?
31454Want to ruin our business, do you, and have strawberries of your own to sell to our customers?
31454Was ever a king more cleverly told that he was a liar?
31454Was ever idleness so productive before?
31454Was it, perhaps,( the thought flashed upon him,) because it was a godless home?
31454Was n''t the gate bolted?"
31454What are you going to do with it?''
31454What can resist such balls?
31454What did you buy?
31454What did you give for it?
31454What does he think of now?
31454What else should irradiate the loving tenderness which unites Mr. and Mrs. Jones on such occasions?
31454What else should she do?
31454What is the Commandant doing with such a dandy?
31454What more could feminine heart wish?
31454What more would you have?
31454What saved the nation from being drawn into this whirlpool of ruin?
31454What wonder, if the solemn utterances from the old pulpit should be lost in the roar of the new voices?
31454What wonder, if, in the surrounding din, the tranquillity of Ashfield, its scenes, its sounds, should seem a mere dream of the past?
31454What would Phil or the rest of the Ashfield fellows say to a runaway boy sniffling under the edge of the wood?
31454What would he not give for twice as many?
31454What''s he writing about?''
31454What''s the matter with you?''
31454What, in consequence, was his career?
31454What, to them, is the assured possession of fame, compared with that direct perception of truth and that immediate consciousness of power?
31454Where''s your money, Ellen?''
31454Who are you, my girl?''
31454Who cared for a rough scramble through the bush, or a wade( if it came to that) through ever so big a brook?
31454Who cared for old Brummem and his white- faced nag?"
31454Who cut it?''
31454Who is there, indeed, who has not heard the most atrocious measures recommended by the most convincing arguments?
31454Who would cook for Joe, or keep his clothes straight, if she did not go?
31454Why did n''t you do that?''
31454Why did n''t you wear that?''
31454Why should n''t Atticus be the happiest man in the world?
31454Why, is it not very inconvenient?"
31454Will ships or guns prove the stronger at last?
31454Will you take the post of honor and of danger?"
31454Would the assembling of the Convention be such a crisis?
31454Would you ever suppose that man was once a smooth- faced, bright little fellow like you?
31454Would youth depart, if the will acted on the same high level that the mind conceived?
31454You see a light there, do n''t you?
31454You''ve seen Columbus, Sir?"
31454and does he hear the smothered groan and the bubbling sigh?
31454and whether she does not ask herself if the play is worth the price of those real wax candles?
31454and whether they will shed light and cheer upon her as they burn down, and she might not have been happier with tallow and purity?
31454cries Asmodeus, Jr."What does that mean?"
31454eh, Reuben?"
31454is that your party- rig?
31454or what is that spot?''
31454she exclaimed, with animation,"tired of strawberries?
31454the still face of the sleeper?
31454was he not the"people''s candidate"for Governor?
31454what does this mean?"
31454which candle is best to sit beside,--Mr. Skinflint''s, or the one you thought shone on a Godiva I was spying?
34772And where more appropriately could a French king, who loved glass, have been christened?
34772At what date then, shall we make our beginning?
34772But why a frame of architecture?
34772How will this be done?
34772It is to provide an answer to the question,"Where does one find good stained glass in France, and how can it most conveniently be seen?"
34772Since à Becket was having the new Gothic of Sens copied, why not also its admirable glazing?
34772What if you have already visited every nook and corner of this picturesque land?
34772Who, then, could better tell us their stories or more delightfully revive by familiar anecdote the originals of their glass portraits?
26560Afraid, are you?
26560All dressed, fellows?
26560All ready? 26560 And how much would a Massachusetts smack pay you for''em?"
26560And if they wo n''t?
26560And that big box with its top just above water?
26560And they had no brand on their buoys?
26560And those?
26560Any lobsters to sell, boys?
26560Any trouble with lobsters?
26560Anybody got a match? 26560 Anybody here got a wireless?"
26560Anybody here want to put on a mitt and stop a few fast ones?
26560Anybody hurt?
26560Anything broken?
26560Are n''t dogfish good for anything?
26560Are n''t we likely to be picked up before morning?
26560Are n''t you going out with me to haul those traps?
26560Are n''t you going to take the gun?
26560Are n''t you other fellows going to eat anything?
26560Are you much hurt, Dad?
26560Better haul the trap?
26560Boys,he concluded,"what do you say to asking him to come down with us to Tarpaulin?
26560Boys,jeered Pike,"what do you suppose I found this modest, salt- water violet-- or barnacle, I should say-- doing?
26560Budge, can the four of you handle this man if I let go?
26560But how can you stop them from setting traps?
26560But what are they doing on the_ Cassie J._? 26560 But where do we sleep?"
26560But where''s here? 26560 Ca n''t I smoke just one?"
26560Ca n''t we help her somehow?
26560Ca n''t you steer?
26560Can I do anything for you?
26560Can you hold on a minute, Perce?
26560Can you play''The Campbells Are Coming''?
26560Carry me? 26560 Conditions, eh?
26560Did he get his watch back?
26560Did n''t you shoot him?
26560Did you hear that, Jabe? 26560 Did you say this all comes from the Bay of Fundy?"
26560Do n''t you feel well, son?
26560Do n''t you hear it?
26560Do n''t you want me to row awhile?
26560Do you mean it, Percy?
26560Do you mean to say I''d do anything crooked?
26560Do you mean to tell me I lie?
26560Do you often catch as many as that?
26560Do you remember the two fellows we caught stealing sheep the first night we were on Tarpaulin? 26560 Do you think that two such farmers as Throppy and I could make much of a fist at fishing?"
26560Do you think they tried to run us down?
26560Does everybody throw the little ones away?
26560Does he fish?
26560Enemy?
26560Feel that? 26560 Feeling better, old man?"
26560Going to be here long, boys?
26560Going to begin making''em up?
26560Going to take the dog?
26560Got a good fire, Filippo?
26560Got any lobsters, boys?
26560Got enough?
26560Gun? 26560 Had n''t I better row a little longer?"
26560Have a bottle of lemon, Dad?
26560Have a perfecto? 26560 Honestly, between us, how has the boy done this summer?"
26560How about those college conditions, Percy?
26560How about those conditions, Whittington?
26560How can I tell a shark from a swordfish?
26560How can you tell? 26560 How did you ever manage it, Filippo?"
26560How do you know? 26560 How do you like it?"
26560How do you like the looks of your hotel, Whittington?
26560How far is it to the mainland?
26560How long''ve you fellows been hanging on here?
26560How many fish have you got there?
26560How many hooks can you bait in a minute?
26560How many of these did you bring out?
26560How many''shorts''will you probably get a week?
26560How often do you get the mail?
26560How soon will it calm down?
26560How''d you come to know my name?
26560How''ll you do it? 26560 How''s everything here, boys?"
26560If you wo n''t set us over yourself, what''ll you sell that sloop for? 26560 Is it all right to shut the signal off altogether?
26560Is n''t he good to eat?
26560Is n''t this Captain Higgins?
26560Is n''t using you right? 26560 Is that all?"
26560It''ll be hot up in the granite quarries to- day, hey, Filippo? 26560 Keep him?
26560Knocked off, eh, Percy? 26560 Licked him at last, did you?
26560Looking for some way out? 26560 Many craft go by here?"
26560Must seem rather pleasant to have a bank- account you ca n''t touch the bottom of, must n''t it? 26560 Needs salting, does n''t he?
26560No? 26560 Not half bad, is it?"
26560Not looking for trouble, are you?
26560Odd stick, is n''t he?
26560Oso?
26560Pretty fresh, is n''t he?
26560Pretty poor stick, is n''t he?
26560Pretty rough, is n''t it?
26560Remember how delighted you were when you got your first sight of it, three months ago?
26560Runs fast, does n''t it?
26560Say that again louder, will you?
26560Say, Jim, how far south''s the nearest land?
26560Sea''s making up a bit, is n''t it, Jim?
26560Seasick, old man? 26560 See that dreadnought jaw on his father?
26560Shall I keep him?
26560Shark, Jim?
26560So the gale blew you down from Tarpaulin, eh? 26560 So you''re Cap''n Tom''s nephew?
26560Something different from what you felt three months ago, eh, Percy? 26560 Suppose they''ll pick us up?"
26560Taken the cream off the summer, would n''t it? 26560 Then you expect to throw more than fifty dollars a week over the side, just to obey the law?"
26560Then you''re alone most of the time?
26560Thicker''n a dungeon, is n''t it?
26560Think he''s a man- eater?
26560Tired, Jim?
26560To- night?
26560Try it again, Budge?
26560Want a tow in to the island?
26560Want to lend a hand, Whittington?
26560We drink... all together, eh?
26560Well, Whittington,remarked Spurling as they once more crept into their bunks,"how do you like your first night on Tarpaulin?
26560Well, what d''you think of the outlook?
26560Well, what do you say? 26560 Well, what do you think now?"
26560Well, whose fault has it been?
26560Well, will you go to the island?
26560Well,said Lane,"what shall it be?
26560Were you ever down here before?
26560What about his father?
26560What are you about, Whittington?
26560What are you going to do about it?
26560What are you going to do with all that wealth, Percy?
26560What are you going to do with that?
26560What are you staring at?
26560What are you waiting for, you numskull?
26560What d''you make of him?
26560What d''you say to trying your hand at it?
26560What d''you suppose was the matter with him? 26560 What did I tell you?"
26560What did you throw him away for?
26560What do you do with those?
26560What do you do with your''shorts''?
26560What do you mean by making such talk to me?
26560What do you mean by round fish?
26560What do you mean by saying they do n''t''shed''?
26560What do you mean, whoever you are, by jumping on us this way? 26560 What do you mean, you lubber?"
26560What do you say, Budge?
26560What do you say, Perce? 26560 What do you say?
26560What for, Filippo? 26560 What for?
26560What for?
26560What for?
26560What hit me?
26560What is it?
26560What is she? 26560 What keeps one man from pulling another man''s traps?"
26560What makes you so late, Perce?
26560What of it? 26560 What shall it be, boys?"
26560What shall we do?
26560What should you say they were?
26560What supports him?
26560What team have you been catching on?
26560What time is it?
26560What was your college?
26560What will you do, then?
26560What would he have done if he''d found any''shorts''?
26560What would you do if you were alone, Jim?
26560What you masquerading for? 26560 What''ll you have, Roger?"
26560What''ll you take for''em just as they are? 26560 What''ll you take to set the crowd of us over on the mainland near Owl''s Head before daylight?"
26560What''re those for?
26560What''re those half- barrels, full of small rope?
26560What''re you maulin''my brother for?
26560What''s that coming? 26560 What''s that pile of chicken- coops near it?"
26560What''s that white spot?
26560What''s that? 26560 What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s that?
26560What''s the best way of handling our catch?
26560What''s the biggest one you ever saw?
26560What''s the brand?
26560What''s the harm? 26560 What''s the matter, Cap?"
26560What''s the matter?
26560What''s the matter?
26560What''s the trouble here?
26560What''s the trouble here?
26560What''s the trouble out there, Herb? 26560 What''s the trouble out there?"
26560What''s the trouble?
26560What''s the use chasin''round over this pasture all night? 26560 What''s the use of beating round the bush?
26560When did you get here?
26560When did you reach the_ Pollux_, Throppy?
26560When do you plan to start?
26560Where am I?
26560Where are you from, boys?
26560Where can I get a drink?
26560Where did you get that rope?
26560Where did you say the island is?
26560Where do you think the_ Silicon_ is?
26560Where you from?
26560Where''s that lamb?
26560Where''s the island?
26560Where''s the lamb?
26560Where''s your regimentals, Whittington?
26560Where? 26560 Who''s Aries?"
26560Why did n''t you shoot? 26560 Why did n''t you step where I told you?"
26560Why do n''t you fight, you coward?
26560Why so distant, Whittington?
26560Why''s that?
26560Will the gale last as long as that?
26560Will you give''em to me or shall I have to take''em? 26560 Will you go, if it''s thick as it is now?"
26560Will you have_ caffè_? 26560 Will you pay rent?"
26560Wo n''t you come''board?
26560Wo n''t you stop ashore with us?
26560Wonderful, is n''t it?
26560Would n''t those men who were burnt like to come aboard the sloop?
26560Would n''t you take five hundred for her?
26560You do n''t mean to say that five of us have got to live in this hole?
26560You do n''t suppose I''d have a monthly check deposited to your account without arranging to know something about it, do you? 26560 You have drink?"
26560You hear that?
26560All friend, eh?"
26560Are they countrymen of yours?"
26560Are you afraid to support your home team?"
26560Are you all dead?
26560Before either Budge or Throppy had a chance to express an opinion Percy spoke out decidedly:"Take that little Dago with us?
26560But after that what?
26560But what if he kept on?
26560But what if you''d never run across Jabe again?
26560But what odds does it make about the cars?"
26560By the way, Throppy, did you raise the cutter before the captain smashed your instrument?"
26560Ca n''t I help you somehow in money matters?"
26560Can you beat that for luck?"
26560Catch this game for Camden, will you?"
26560Come, now, just between ourselves, what kind of a fellow is he?
26560Could he do it?
26560Did n''t he make that violin talk?
26560Did you hear what Dolph said to the captain about making money?
26560Do n''t you know me, Captain Greenlaw?"
26560Do we have it?"
26560Do we trade?"
26560Do you hear that?"
26560Ever hear the story of the Penobscot Bay captain who started out on a voyage round the world?
26560Feel better?"
26560Fisherman?"
26560For how long?"
26560Get me some breakfast, will you?"
26560Go back?
26560Good friend, eh?"
26560Got any gun?"
26560Guess I''d better go out to''em in the other dory, do n''t you think?
26560Have this mess cleared away and I''ll fix up with you later at the hotel; and get my suit- case over to my room, will you?"
26560Hiding from the sheriff?"
26560Hold a watch on me, will you?
26560How could Dolph fail to hear him coming?
26560How could any of those on board escape?
26560How could they cope with the bullets in the automatics?
26560How could they fail to notice there were only four prisoners in the camp?
26560How does that hit you, Whittington?"
26560How does that hit you?"
26560How far off was Tarpaulin?
26560How large a check shall I write?"
26560How long can a man stand it without eating and drinking?"
26560How long since you''ve had anything to eat or drink?"
26560How long would you stand it?
26560How much shall we pay you?"
26560How you like that, eh?"
26560How''ll we play?"
26560How''s lobsters?"
26560Hungry, old man?"
26560If Spurling''s strength should give out, what would happen to the dory?
26560Isle au Haut or Tarpaulin Island, which should it be?
26560It was broken by Brittler''s sneering voice:"So we might as well give up, had we, eh?
26560Jam something into the mouth of the whistle?"
26560Juggling food again at the Beachmont?"
26560Might n''t some vessel strike the shoal if she does n''t hear it?"
26560Mystery?
26560Nailed to the mast three months out on a rock like that?
26560No?
26560No?
26560No?
26560Not a bad old camp, is it, Perce?"
26560Now what about the sheep?"
26560Out of the spring?"
26560Overtaken?
26560Percy, old man, what do you mean by hiding yourself away offshore in a lonesome spot like this?
26560Pretty afternoon''s work, is n''t it?"
26560Remember our talk at Graffam Academy, Commencement night?"
26560Remember that stranger who made you a call a couple of weeks ago?"
26560Remember the_ Barracouta_, that old power- sloop we''ve taken so many trips in?
26560Return to two months more of the uncongenial drudgery from which he had been so glad to escape?
26560S''pose you''re sorry not to be there?"
26560Say, do you know what this Main Street reminds me of?
26560See anything, Budge?"
26560Shall we keep on or stop here with Pliny?
26560Shall we take a chance and surprise the rest of''em?"
26560Should he keep on or go back?
26560Should he keep on or should he go back?
26560Should he let himself go with it?
26560Should they fight or run?
26560So they intend to build a camp here and spend the summer?"
26560Some life out here, after all, eh?"
26560Some speed-- what?"
26560Somehow they must be thwarted; but how?
26560Something on your mind, eh?"
26560Steamer?"
26560Tarpaulin lay southwest; but which way was southwest?
26560The sun?
26560The surf?
26560Things might have turned out a good deal worse, eh, Perce?
26560Thunder?"
26560Tutors, private schools, summer camps, trainers, travel, automobiles-- and what have they all amounted to?"
26560Was everybody aboard hard of hearing?
26560Was it an invitation or a warning?
26560Was the risk worth taking?
26560We''ll be as snug as if we were in Sprowl''s Cove, hey, Perce?"
26560Well, who cares for''em?
26560What about him?"
26560What answer could be made to such an argument?
26560What are you afraid of?
26560What d''you say to a last game of tennis?"
26560What d''you say, Filippo?
26560What d''you say?"
26560What d''you say?"
26560What did it all amount to?
26560What do you have for amusement?"
26560What do you say, Budge?"
26560What do you say, boys?"
26560What do you say?"
26560What had come over the millionaire''s son?
26560What had made his arms and back so lame and raised those big blisters on his hands?
26560What have you to say for yourselves?"
26560What shall it be?"
26560What should they do next?
26560What was that?
26560What will your address be?
26560What''d we want of that?
26560What''s that?"
26560What''s the matter with you, anyway?
26560What''s the matter, Whittington?"
26560What''s the name of your vessel?"
26560What''s this?"
26560What?
26560When it comes to catching lobsters, have n''t Filippo and I got the rest of the bunch beat to a frazzle?"
26560Where do these sheep drink, anyway?
26560Where is it?"
26560Where was the_ Barracouta_?
26560Where''s that camp?"
26560Where''s that flash- light?"
26560Where''s the thing going to end?
26560Where''s your Latin?"
26560Where?"
26560Whittington?"
26560Who besides themselves was astir at so late an hour on that lonely island?
26560Who''ll be cook?
26560Who''ll spend it, if I do n''t?"
26560Who''s next?"
26560Who''s reading Virgil?"
26560Who''s that pale- faced fellow with the tow head?"
26560Who''s that?"
26560Whose money bought that ticket?"
26560Why ca n''t you use a man''s smoke if you''re going to smoke at all?
26560Why do n''t you speak?"
26560Why not?
26560Why should n''t we?
26560Why so still, Jim?
26560Why were they so eager to reach the mainland that night, and why did the twenty have no voice in the discussion?
26560Why?
26560Why?
26560Will two be enough?"
26560Will you cook for us?"
26560Will you go?"
26560Will you sell her?"
26560Would his arms stand the strain?
26560Would it not be better to hurry back to the cabin, warn Filippo and Throppy, and escape up the bank into the woods?
26560Would n''t that jar you?
26560Would n''t think they were almost a hundred feet above water, would you?
26560Would n''t you have felt that you''d thrown away your time?"
26560Would the captain discover his absence?
26560Would you be willing for me to see if I can recall anything?
26560You get me?"
26560You live on dis island... yes?
26560yes?"
34751All substances which possess colour are not necessarily dyestuffs, and the question may be again asked, Why?
34751DUQUE DE ESTRADA, DIEGO( 1589-?
34751De Houssaye tells us that in Paris when friends met the first question was,"Who fought yesterday?
34751Dundee asked"How goes the day?"
34751Is not this the modern point of honour, by which to be given the lie is an insult which can only be wiped out by blood?
34751The chevalier, offended by Voltaire''s free speech, insolently asked the marquis,"Who is that young man?"
34751What is this but the modern challenge?
34751What is_ arga_ but the_ dummer Junger_ of the German student?
34751Why this difference?
34751Why, it may be asked, is this so?
34751den Hertog,_ Waarom onaannemelyk?_( Groningen, 1893).
34751who is to fight to- day?"
31719All we Southerners believe in it, do n''t we, Sam? 31719 Am I right, David?
31719Are you much hurt?
31719Are you sure you would like it, Miss Betsey?
31719But what have we done?
31719But why should I try to shield_ them_, Miss Morton?
31719Ca n''t you coax her, Phil?
31719Can you fix my saddle girth, Harry?
31719Could n''t you find my fan, Tom? 31719 David, do n''t you hear me?"
31719David,interposed Tom Curtis,"come put your hand on this engine for me, wo n''t you?
31719David? 31719 David?"
31719Did n''t you hear me, David?
31719Did n''t you help pull me out from under the buggy the other day? 31719 Did some one give this to you?"
31719Do n''t you hear Miss Morton, Brewster?
31719Do n''t you think this a good place to eat the luncheon Mrs. Preston has given us?
31719Do you suppose they have run away?
31719Do you suppose we could face Miss Jenny Ann and the girls if we retreat before we even know there is an enemy? 31719 Does Miss Taylor suspect any one?"
31719Going driving all alone, David?
31719How came you to Virginia? 31719 How can I bear it?
31719How can you fail to believe that I stole them?
31719How did you get in here?
31719How many boys will Tom have on his motor boat while he has us in tow?
31719I wonder if I might not wear this dress to the party?
31719I wonder what can have happened?
31719If he is n''t up to something he has no business doing, what harm is there in our chancing to run across him-- quite by accident, of course? 31719 If you are going to drive alone and I wo n''t be in the way, wo n''t you take me with you?"
31719Is David Brewster going for a walk with Jack and Harry?
31719Is it you, boy?
31719Is n''t it just too sweet for anything?
31719Is there anything the matter, Madge?
31719Is your mother better?
31719It does n''t concern any one but him, does it?
31719It is rather strange that we have n''t picked them up yet, is n''t it?
31719Joan of Arc, you mean, do n''t you?
31719Let''s get some fruit, Jack?
31719Look in the barn, wo n''t you?
31719Lost what?
31719Miss Alden--a woman in the uniform of a professional nurse appeared at the door--"your mother says do you know where the twins are?
31719Miss Betsey, will you do me the honor to dance this reel with me?
31719Miss Betsey,called Miss Jenny Ann from the berth above,"what is the matter?"
31719Miss Morton,David''s voice was unusually gentle,"do n''t you think I might carry your cousin, Miss Butler, downstairs?
31719Mr. Brewster,Eleanor''s voice was still a little weak from her illness,"where were you the night I was lost?
31719Now, Mr. David Brewster, having arranged the costumes of four important members of the Preston household, what character will you represent?
31719Of course Tom had to''fess up''after that, did n''t he? 31719 Oh, dear me, is n''t it awful?"
31719Please,began Madge timidly,"will you tell me where I am?"
31719Say, get off of Sears, Brewster, ca n''t you?
31719Sit down, wo n''t you, David?
31719Stand up just a moment longer, wo n''t you, darlings? 31719 Take David with us?"
31719The Randolphs?
31719The same work that you do every afternoon?
31719The young ladies had better come up to my ole missus''s place?
31719Thinking of your houseboat, eh, Madge?
31719Want a drink, Miss Betsey?
31719Want your fortune told, honey?
31719We have the time and the place all right, have n''t we, fellows? 31719 What Randolphs?"
31719What answer did you make to him, William?
31719What do you mean by spying on me like this? 31719 What has become of Nellie, Madge?"
31719What has gone, Miss Betsey?
31719What have Harry''s Massachusetts ghosts to do with us way down here in''ole Virginny''?
31719What have you there?
31719What is a hoodoo, Sam?
31719What is it now?
31719What on earth happened to you, child?
31719What on earth have you there, Miss Betsey?
31719What shall we do, Eleanor?
31719What''s that sticking out on the front pocket of your coat?
31719What''s that? 31719 What''s the matter now?"
31719What''s the matter, little girl?
31719What''s up? 31719 Where are you going, David?"
31719Where did it come from, Miss Betsey?
31719Where is he, Granny?
31719Where is that little rowboat that you girls call the''Water Witch,''that is always hitched to the stern of this houseboat? 31719 Who among us has the courage to find out whether David Brewster''s''spooks''are real?
31719Who is it, and where am I?
31719Who will be the old maid?
31719Whom do you mean, Madge?
31719Whose place is that over there?
31719Why do you think we are going to the''ghost house,''Mammy?
31719Why not, Auntie?
31719Why, Mammy Ellen,protested Mrs. Preston, smiling kindly at the old woman,"you do n''t tell me that you believe in ghosts?
31719Why?
31719Will you give me some coffee?
31719Wo n''t you try to find me an oar?
31719You ai n''t a- goin''near the house of''ha''nts,''is you? 31719 You do n''t mean that you girls saw David Brewster enter my room this afternoon?
31719You do n''t suspect David, do you, Phil?
31719You mean this theft?
31719You saw the ghosts?
31719You think that thief is my father, because I look like him, and because I am willing to bear the burden of his guilt?
31719You tumbled into a big hole, did n''t you, dears?
31719Your automobile boat''s busted, ai n''t it?
31719A few minutes later Phil exclaimed:"Madge, is that one of the fires from the corn roast over there?
31719And was n''t it funny?
31719But I wonder why you wish to disturb an old man''s last retreat?"
31719But how was he to save himself?
31719But once the boy had vaulted the fence into the field, Madge called after him softly:"David, please stop a minute, wo n''t you?
31719But what about poor me?
31719But where are the girls?"
31719But where are those children?"
31719But where else should he seek for them?
31719But which road should they take?
31719But who and why and how?
31719But who could tell what they might stumble against in a house that was supposed never to have been entered in nearly forty years?
31719CHAPTER IV THE SEARCH"Where can they be, David?"
31719CHAPTER XVI THE BETTER MAN"Eleanor, dear, do you know who the two Indian Chiefs were who appeared so mysteriously at our''Feast of Mondamin''?
31719CHAPTER XXIV"GOOD LUCK TO THE BRIDE""Do you think it is very funny, Tom?"
31719Ca n''t you send David and stay here with us?"
31719Could Madge have walked in her sleep and fallen over into the water?
31719Could she not be allowed to risk herself to save them?
31719Could this poor, white, exhausted little creature be her Nellie?
31719Did you hear anything or see any one enter my room at any time?"
31719Do I hear any dissenting voices?
31719Do n''t you know that getting themselves lost and frightening people nearly out of their wits is the thing that Dot and Daisy love best in the world?"
31719Do n''t you know that the rules of the game wo n''t let you hit a man when he is down?"
31719Do n''t you?"
31719Do you feel that you would be willing to speak to me now?"
31719Do you recall your speaking of him to me a few days ago?"
31719Does n''t it sound like Madge?"
31719Good gracious, what was that?"
31719Had no one lighted the lamps?
31719Had she any right to burden Tom with a disagreeable helper?
31719Had the room been locked against intruders for nearly half a century?
31719Has any one caught them?"
31719Have n''t I always said so?"
31719He is very good looking, is n''t he?"
31719How are you?"
31719How could they ever have any fun with her on board?
31719How did you guess it?
31719How do you do it?"
31719I hope he has n''t disappointed you?"
31719I hope you do n''t mind?"
31719I wonder how I will ever be able to pay you back?"
31719I wonder how she will take the old lady?"
31719I wonder if there is any way that she can manage to get it?"
31719I wonder if you girls wish the holiday on your boat badly enough to work for it?
31719I_ did_ steal Miss Betsey''s money and Mr. Preston''s silver''?
31719If not David, who else?
31719If you are not up to mischief, why do you care if we do happen to come up with you?"
31719Is n''t Mrs. Preston a dear?
31719Is n''t it cruel to make the poor fellow responsible for his father''s sins?
31719Is n''t she a quaint child?
31719It is unpleasant for everyone, is n''t it?"
31719It looks like her, does n''t it, girls?"
31719It''s after twelve o''clock; ca n''t we have a little feed?"
31719Of course, it is only fair for him to have the time, but why does he wish to go off by himself?"
31719Of what was the woman talking?
31719Oh, if you would only let me go away from this place?"
31719Preston?"
31719Shall I go, or will it be better for me to draw up the basket?
31719Suppose we should see something queer?
31719The Range and Grange Hustlers By FRANK GEE PATCHIN Have you any idea of the excitements, the glories of life on great ranches in the West?
31719They have their things back, so they are not hurt, except by----""By what?"
31719Tom leaned over to whisper in Miss Dolly Varden''s ear,"You''ll dance with me, wo n''t you, Madge, for old time''s sake?"
31719Trust her life?
31719Was he dreaming, or had he and his friends strayed into the wrong house?
31719Was it a branch that stirred behind the tangle of evergreen bushes?
31719Was this resolute, self- contained young man the surly, unapproachable boy she had always disliked to encounter when calling upon Miss Betsey?
31719What business is it of yours how I spend my time?
31719What can we do?"
31719What could he say if anybody demanded to know where he had been?
31719What could we do?"
31719What do you mean?
31719What do you think happened?"
31719What do you think of my plan, Miss Alden?"
31719What have you got there?"
31719What is your honest opinion?"
31719What time is it, old Witch?"
31719What was to be done?
31719What wind or wave has her delayed?
31719What would Miss Betsey think later on, when the little captain had one of her attacks of high spirits?
31719What would they think if a day, as well as a night, passed with no sign of her?
31719When she is quite well, ca n''t you come to visit Nellie and me at''Forest House''?
31719When, before, had the boy ever called her"Cousin Betsey"?
31719Where is_ he_?"
31719Where''s your tug?"
31719Who had betrayed him?
31719Who is that boy named David?
31719Who knows what kind of tug the girls have had to hire to get them here?
31719Who was this lovely apparition that had opened the old farmhouse door for him?
31719Who would n''t rather stay at home than go walking with two tiresome boys on an afternoon like this?"
31719Whom is she going to marry?
31719Why did n''t you tell me before?"
31719Why did not some one speak?
31719Why should the burglar take pity on me and return me my poor little jewelry?
31719Why was it so dark in the hall?
31719Wo n''t you take, me out?"
31719Won''t-- you-- make-- David explain-- it to-- you?"
31719Yet could he face the suspicion which he felt sure would fall upon him?
31719Yet, unless she kept near the shore, how could she ever spy either the houseboat or the motor launch?
31719You and I have distinguished ourselves by getting lost on this houseboat trip, have n''t we, Nellie, dear?
31719You and Miss Betsey wo n''t be frightened about us?"
31719You remember those small sums of money that I vowed I had lost when we were first aboard the houseboat?"
31719You wo n''t say you saw us, will you?"
31719all the time at the donkeys that she feared were going to ruin her lawn?
31719are the young people following us?
31719asked David obstinately,"and how could I have the stolen goods if other people took them?"
31719how can I bear it?"
31719she cried,"what are you doing way off here?
31719what does it mean?"
35236Is hospitality due to assassins? 35236 Ought the right of asylum to protect such a state of things?"
35236And can it continue to shelter persons who by these flagrant acts place themselves beyond the pale of common rights?"
35236Did not Sir William Stanley, the best paid of those who betrayed Richard III., afterwards lose his head for a deliberate plot to betray Henry VII.?
35236If such a man as the Conqueror did not overawe it, what was to be expected in the reigns of his successors?
35236Ought the British legislature to continue to favour their designs and their plans?
35236The peers a year before could acquit Lord Dacre; would they have condemned the queen without some show of evidence?
35236What could Pitt do but surrender?
35236What use was there in rewarding a friend who might become an enemy to- morrow?
35236What was to be the attitude of England towards the Reformation?
35236and why were four other victims sacrificed when one would have been enough?
31138And the Irish?
31138And three pounds of rice?
31138And to- day is the Witch''s holiday?
31138And what are_ you_ doing here?
31138And who governs while he is away?
31138And you-- may I ask whither you are bound?
31138Are we to be a wholly lady- like nation?
31138Can it be that the Columbia Mills people are ashamed of something?
31138Child, what does this mean?
31138Did I know him?
31138Did you ever,said he,"read Edward Everett''s address at Gettysburg?"
31138Do you, indeed?
31138Does your arm hurt you again?
31138God help me, where''ll I hide myself away and my long neck naked to the world?
31138Grandmother, what has become of your diamond- filled teeth?
31138Has he ever caught you, little one?
31138How is everything in Rainbow''s- End?
31138How long have yez had Home Rule?
31138I beg your pardon,she said,"but are n''t you the father of two of my children?"
31138Is a wheeze about the seat of learning too obvious?
31138Is it like the land of the musk- ox in summer, when the mist is on the lakes, and the loon cries very often?
31138Is n''t it perfectly mean, Mowgli?
31138Is there a beautiful Princess, with many suitors for her hand?
31138Is this a roof garden?
31138My dear,she said,"why do n''t you put your skill and energy to some use?
31138Oh, did Waverly write that?
31138Oh, is that a fruit store?
31138One can never really grow tired of it, can one?
31138Ten pounds of flour?...
31138Unless I have entire power,said he,"how can I make this a democratic college?"
31138Was n''t Beethoven deaf?
31138Well,said the lady petulantly,"what do you suggest?"
31138What are you whaling that cur for?
31138What do they manufacture here?
31138What do you know about that?
31138What has become of Mary MacLane?
31138What is the matter, Abner?
31138What is the pineapple ice?
31138What lies yonder?
31138Where is he?
31138Which used it first?
31138Whither are you going?
31138Who''s there?
31138Why do n''t the Cartoonlanders have machines that_ can_ go?
31138Why does he have to do that?
31138Will it hold us?
31138Would you like to come along?
31138_***Are we all to shudder at the name of Rabelais and take to smelling salts?"
31138(_ Lord Dunsany._) What is it to hate poetry?
31138*** A frequent question since the war began is,"Why are there so many damn fools in the faculties of American universities?"
31138*** A man will sit around smoking all day and his wife will remark:"My dear, are n''t you smoking too much?"
31138*** As a variant for"loophound,"may we suggest"prominent hound about town"?
31138*** BUT WOULD IT NOT REQUIRE A GEOLOGIC PERIOD?
31138*** By the way, has any candid merchant ever advertised a Good Riddance Sale?
31138*** Did you think"I''ll say so"was new slang?
31138*** How could the teacher rebuke Emil when she read this excuse from his father?
31138*** In considering additions to the Academy of Immortals shall Anna Quaintance be forgot?
31138*** Is there another person in this wicked world quite so virtuous as a chief of police on the day that he takes office?
31138*** LAME IN BOTH REGISTERS?
31138*** MY LOVE, DID YOU KNOW THERE WERE SO MANY KINDS OF MAIDS?
31138*** May we again point out that pessimism is the only cheerful philosophy?
31138*** OH, DON''T YOU REMEMBER SWEET MARY, BEN BOLT?
31138*** Overheard in an osteopath''s office:"When does it hurt you most, when you set or when you lay?"
31138*** THE G. P. P. Sir: What is the gadder''s pet peeve?
31138*** WHAT DO YOU SUPPOSE HE WANTS?
31138*** WHYNOTT?
31138*** Was there ever a character more delightfully detestable than Mrs. Norris?
31138*** What could be more frank than the framed motto in the Hotel Fortney, at Viroqua, Wis.--"There Is No Place Like Home."?
31138*** What do they mean"industrial unrest"?
31138*** What do you mean"prosperity"?
31138*** What is a story?
31138*** What is the use of expositions of other men''s philosophic systems unless the exposition is made lucid and interesting?
31138*** Why is it that in nearly all decisions of the Supreme court the most interesting opinions are delivered by the dissenting justices?
31138*** Why is it that when a woman takes the measurements for a screen door she thinks she has to allow a couple of inches to turn in?
31138*** William Benzine, who lives near Rio, Wis., was filling his flivver tank by the light of a lantern when-- But need we continue?
31138*** YES?
31138***"After submitting a contribution, how long must one remain in suspense?"
31138***"Are we going crazy?"
31138***"Do you not know,"writes Persephone,"that with the coming of all this water, all imagination and adventure have fled the world?"
31138***"In fact, I''ve finished-- would you say a sonnet?"
31138***"What is art?"
31138***"What, indeed?"
31138***"What,"queries R. W. C.,"has become of the little yellow crabs that floated in the o. f. oyster stew?"
31138***"Why care for grammar as long as we are good?"
31138***"Why not make room for daddy?"
31138***_ BLAKE COMES BACK.__ Little Ford, who made thee?
311381, which runs:"First Comedian:''Well, what made you get drunk in the first place?''
31138A LINE- O''-TYPE OR TWO_ Quicquid agunt homines nostri est farrago libelli._--_Juvenal._ Question: Who is this Juvenal wheezer?
31138A question to be matched by that of the superintendent of Cook county''s schools,"Why should n''t a man say''It''s me''and''It do n''t''?"
31138After ascertaining the amount the receiving teller asked,"Did you foot it up?"
31138After the"Confessions"and the"Memoirs"what in the world is there left for the man to avow?
31138Ah, yes, why not make room for daddy?
31138And Villon starved and Keats, Keats-- Where am I?
31138And What''s- his- name''s pig sausage?
31138And is there any more uncongenial club than the Human Race?
31138And it is pacific, is n''t it?"
31138And speaking of Mill, do you remember the library catalogue which contained the consecutive items,"Mill on Liberty"and"Ditto on the Floss"?
31138And yet how come That Myra Tinkelpaugh, of Cobleskill, New York, conducts therein The Music Shop?
31138And you used to print so many of the beautiful things they wrote?"
31138Anybody want them?
31138B. C.:"Large or small?"
31138Balfour?"
31138But did you know that it originated in Columbus, O.?
31138But hoonel, as Orpheus asked Eurydice, wants to be a camel?
31138But ought a Bostonian to split his infinitives in public?
31138But what is romance?
31138But why mar the pleasure of a journey by taking notes?
31138But why multiply instances?
31138But why not have one on a grand scale?
31138Can Al have added a little hard water to the mixture?
31138Can it be a sanitarium?
31138Can not they be signed for an entertainment in the Academy?
31138Can you ask?
31138Can you whittle a wheeze out of that?
31138Can you write?
31138D. K. M.*** Just what does the trade jargon mean,"Experience essential but not necessary"?
31138Did you ever see an engine like that outside Cartoonland?
31138Do n''t you mean"consequently"?
31138Do you expect us to get stuff That is clear over our bean?
31138Do you fancy_ that_ is easy?
31138Do you remember what Henry Ward Beecher said of the Chinese?
31138Do you think she was bawling me out or was she paying me a compliment?
31138Do you wonder, my dear?
31138Do you?
31138Does that coincide with your experience, my dear?
31138Dost thou know who made thee?__ Little Ford, I''ll tell thee, Little Ford, I''ll tell thee.
31138E. P. P.***"Will the Devil complete the capture of the modern church?"
31138Give us a line on the geezer-- What is he trying to say?
31138Have you not received courage?
31138Have you not received endurance?"
31138Have you not received magnanimity?
31138Have you seen my garden, Henry?"
31138He replied,"Ai n''t it hell?
31138Hint for Briggs:"Wonder what Henry Ford thinks about?"
31138His subject for Sunday night will be"Is There a Hell?"
31138How absurd was Prof. McCoosh of Princeton, who, having answered"It''s me"to a student inquiry,"Who''s there?"
31138How did we manage it?
31138However, everybody will be crazy as a hatter before long, so what does it matter?
31138I ask you, ai n''t women funny?
31138If you should ask,"Who was with he?"
31138In the woodshed?
31138Is he not?
31138Is it eeen that box on the platform at the depo?
31138Is it not a marvelous invention, father?
31138Is it not?
31138Is she on the floor?"
31138Is the whale, then, superior to, say, Senator Johnson?
31138Is this merely luck, or is evolution modifying the human coco?
31138It do n''t make you writhe, do it?
31138It is?
31138It''s a plant that live on air, Could you find an odder fodder if you hunted everywhere?
31138L. A. H. To continue, the Scotchman said:"Well, Pat, what are we going to have to- day?
31138Little Ford, who made thee?
31138Maecenas?
31138May I not suggest that the Congress be petitioned to make the move by degrees instead of inches, and thus avoid great suffering?
31138May we not hope that the w. k. infinitive also may be preserved intact?
31138Must we tell?
31138Nor is it necessary to inquire,"Are we on time?"
31138O Mores!_-- What do they ever get from you-- Your Laura, Pan, Dolores?
31138One of the questions is:"Can you read?
31138Or did you stop at the woodchuck hole?
31138Or five hundred?
31138Or was it Huysmans?
31138Rain or snow?"
31138Reply: If you''re too lazy to look for Juvenal''s name in the Dic, Why should_ I_ go to the book for Such a cantankerous kick?
31138Said B. L. T. to F. P. A.,"How shall I end the Line to- day?"
31138Shall we trust our intelligence or our senses?
31138She was continually at war, and what did the Grecians do for art?
31138She... but how compare her?
31138Should he not have given another twenty- four hours to so large an opus?
31138Sir: Did you ever ride on a street car in one of those towns where no one has any place to go and all day to get there in?
31138Sir: How long do you suppose the Snow Ball Laundry will last in Quinter, Kansas?
31138Sir: Last night I disturbed the family catawollapus-- née Irish-- with,"Are you asleep, Maggie?"
31138Sir: Overheard at the Studebaker:"What''s put him off his nut?"
31138Sir: Remember the story about Theodore Parker and Emerson?
31138Sir: Should G. E. Thorpe''s typewritten communications carrying the suggestion GET/ FAT precede or follow our communications which carry EAT/ ME?
31138Sir: What position in your letter file, respecting the suggestions of GET/ FAT, will my typewritten letters land, as they end thusly:"HEL/ NO"?
31138Sleepy weather, is n''t it?
31138Sounds like Lope de Vega, does n''t it?
31138That is a simple proceeding: Why not adopt it?
31138The Wolf pitched his voice as high and unpleasant as he could, and called out,"What is it, Hawkins?"
31138The doctor cuts him down to three cigars a day, and his wife remarks:"My dear, are n''t you smoking too much?"
31138The question is, how shall we set about it?
31138This is all clear to you, I suppose?"
31138This young ash, robed all in yellow-- what can the sun add to its splendor?
31138Topsy- turvy world, did you say?
31138Unless obliged to, why should anybody write when he can read instead?
31138V."And how is the Princess Aralia?"
31138Voice:"Is the elevator ready?"
31138Votes for women?
31138Was there ever another character presented, so alive and breathing, in so few pen strokes?
31138Wer is the thing you seet on?
31138What brought them there?
31138What do they ever get for these?
31138What do you advise?"
31138What do you make of that, Watsonius?
31138What do you mean"and yet,"Stephen?
31138What does the gibberish mean?
31138What drives a historian to write history?
31138What has happened to their sense of humor?
31138What if we do n''t have palaces, With damp and musty walls?
31138What is a politician?
31138What is the"S"for?
31138What literary acid do_ you_ apply?
31138What of it?
31138What say they?
31138What traveler can better that?
31138What''s in a name?
31138When the lad came to he looked around( ruined church on one side, busted houses, etc., up stage, and all that):"Where am I?"
31138When the train halts you do not have to ask,"What place is this?"
31138When they asked,"Are you well?"
31138Where am I now?
31138Where is he?
31138Which E?
31138While more humorous than perhaps was intended, they fall short of the forms suggested by Max Beerbohm, in"How Shall I Word It?"
31138Who''ll contribute a buggy?
31138Why do n''t the men propose, mama, why do n''t the men propose?
31138Why does not some pianist give us a really popular recital programme?
31138Why is it assumed that the Old Boy is attempting to capture it?
31138Why leapest thou, Why leapest thou So high within my breast?
31138Why prose?
31138Why?
31138Will a few other trades acquaint us with their classics?
31138Will that be all?"
31138Will you can it or no?
31138Wonder how he explained it to the Prof?
31138Would he add anything to the landscape gardening surrounding the Academy of Immortals?
31138Would you buy such an ark for a child?
31138Yes or No?"
31138Zazzo?
31138_ Our favorite Brahms?
31138_ You?_ So as I quaff my spectral wine, At ease beside the Styx, Would I contribute to the Line?
31138_ You?_ So as I quaff my spectral wine, At ease beside the Styx, Would I contribute to the Line?
31138and P.), Or the second piano quartette?_ Sardi.
31138becomes"Dieu m''aide, où vais- je me cacher et mon long cou tout nu?"
31138he exclaimed, taking the spaniel by his shaggy ears,"did you dream_ all_ that wonderful dream?
31138stuff?
33123''Is mademoiselle,''he asked me,''is mademoiselle as disdainful of the heart as she is of gold?'' 33123 Ah, I am wrong, am I?
33123And what of your word, Don Ruis?
33123And whom is the missive from?
33123And you say we leave to- night?
33123But how?
33123But if you refuse the gold, what,he asked, almost piteously,"what can I give?"
33123But will you not take them?
33123Could you not stay longer?
33123From whom is it then? 33123 From whom is it?"
33123Good- bye? 33123 Got my traps up?"
33123H''m, let me ask you, did you write to my daughter this morning?
33123H''m, well-- er-- did you, did you begin the letter with a term of endearment?
33123Have you understood me?
33123He was a lightning calculator, was n''t he?
33123How do you know my name?
33123I frightened her, did I not?
33123In the States, I fancy, you have nothing like it?
33123Is Liance never coming?
33123Is there any baccarat going on upstairs?
33123It is late, is it not?
33123It would hardly do for the button- hole, would it?
33123May I not accompany you?
33123May I trouble you?
33123Oh, you were, were you? 33123 Painful?
33123Ruis,he said, leisurely, with the air of one engaging in conversation solely for conversation''s sake,"you know the House of Sandoval?"
33123Sentimental? 33123 Supper is ready, sir; will you come?"
33123Tell me,he added,"do you live here always?"
33123The general''s compliments, sir, and are you ready?
33123The what?
33123To what?
33123Was he bald?
33123What do you think of it there?
33123What do you think of it?
33123What does he mean by saying that my jest is ill- timed? 33123 What shall I do?"
33123What the dickens can have become of him?
33123What was it?
33123Where is Atcheh?
33123Who is it?
33123Why, what has he to write to you about?
33123Why, what is the matter with him? 33123 Why?"
33123Will you order anything before the bar closes?
33123Will you smoke?
33123You are to be with us some time, are you not?
33123You will not be in haste to go, then?
33123You''re an American, are n''t you?
33123''And how do you like the States?''
33123''Does he speak English?''
33123''No, your Excellency,''I answered,--you see, I made a dash at Excellency; Prince seemed sort of abrupt, do n''t you think?''
33123''Very much,''he answered;''and you?''
33123''What shall I do?
33123''Will you let me love you?''
33123After all, it was my own suggestion, and, if unconventional, in what does the criterion consist?
33123Am I correctly informed?"
33123And Ruis, the road is not always safe; are you armed?
33123And then, with the appreciation of a gourmet, Tancred added:"It is excellent; may I have another?"
33123And, besides, how was it possible for me to have any doubts about a man who fought as he had over the percentage?
33123Besides, what does he mean by boring every one to death?
33123But do n''t you know that you are absurd?
33123But for what were rupees coined and tips invented?
33123But how is it possible, I asked myself, how can a girl pledge her life to a man of whom she knows absolutely nothing?
33123But how?"
33123But in New York they are more beautiful still, are they not?"
33123But see, what would you?
33123But was it the claret?
33123But was n''t it stupid of him?
33123But what are they when she is not?
33123But what does get into men?
33123But what opportunity is given to the girl whom a man happens to take in and out at dinner, or whom she sees for an hour or two now and then?
33123But why do you not dismount?
33123But why do you not speak to me?
33123But why does he insist on my attention?
33123Did you ever see a child asleep-- a child to whom some wonderful dream has come?
33123Eh, my son?
33123Fairbanks, you do not make a hundred- thousand- dollar sale every day, do you?''
33123For, practically speaking, what does the average girl know of the man whose name she takes?
33123Had he not understood--?
33123Has she not every opportunity of judging?
33123He laughed, and put it down--""His throat?"
33123I wonder what his sister thought of him?
33123I wonder what that fellow is staring at me for?"
33123In leap- year, perhaps, and in jest, such a thing may occur, but--""They are well behaved, then?"
33123Is it a jest you call it, sir, or did I misunderstand your words?"
33123Is it not exquisite to speak of love when all else is still?"
33123Is it the night?
33123Listen to it, will you?
33123May I ask how you are called?"
33123Now, gentlemen, now--""Have you got a camera concealed about your person?"
33123Now, if the grand duke purchases these rubies, what will my commission be?''
33123Painful to whom?
33123Suspicious?
33123The Fausta is it?"
33123There, now,_ will_ you be quiet?
33123They might be timid, but is not the surge of the sea a call that stirs the pulse?
33123Through their silence the breeze would have whispered, and who does not know what a breeze can say?
33123Very good; then perhaps you will tell me that the marriage contract is less important than the conveyance of real estate?
33123What do I care?"
33123What is a good synonym for an editor, anyway?"
33123When your husband bought this property did you think him suspicious because he had the title searched?
33123Where did I leave off?"
33123Where was I?
33123Where were you?
33123Where''s that waiter?
33123Whether she had been aware of Mrs. Lyeth''s approach, who shall say?
33123Who is she?"
33123Why do n''t you come when you''re called?"
33123Why should they think that, because a girl is liberal with odd evenings, she is pining for the marriage covenant?"
33123Will his Imperial Highness pay cash for the rubies?''"
33123Will you pay me if I wager and I win?
33123Will you pay me?
33123Yes, sir, I said details,--d- e- t- a- i- l- s. Now wait a minute, will you?
33123Yet, if he did, might not five hundred be as easily borrowed as two hundred and fifty?
33123You call it a jest to surprise a girl in the dark"--"To what?"
33123You do not imagine, do you, that I regret it?"
33123You go there often, do you not?"
33123You were down with the measles, eh?
33123You will like that, will you not?
33123You will like to be back there, will you not?"
33123he continued,"what is the use in being irritated at a beggar who is as ugly as a high hat at the seashore?"
33123the Fausta?
33123what shall I do?''
33200But what of all that?
33200But who?
33200Does that seem odd to you? 33200 Fellow citizens,"said the colored orator, reported by Dr. Paul Monroe of Columbia,"what am education?
33200Have you read the Home Economics books? 33200 Hello, Fannie, did you get Ned?"
33200Him?
33200I got him all right, but what do you think? 33200 Is that radical?
33200May not required courses be added to the college curriculum to inculcate business power and sense in all women?
33200Not so clever as the ore- boat, is it?
33200Say, Fannie, why do n''t you tell your friend Ned to cut in here and pay a little attention to Marge?
33200Should not the oversupply of teachers be reduced by directing many of our graduates into other pursuits than teaching? 33200 Well,"she said,"why do n''t you ask me to help you a bit?
33200Will not woman have a_ particular_ part in it? 33200 A real paradox? 33200 Are there no men''s tailors, gents''furnishing shops, luncheons, clubs, banquets, athletics, celebrations? 33200 Are there no vats in Milwaukee, no stills in Kentucky, no factories wrapping paper rings around bunches of dead leaves at Tampa? 33200 Are there so many more righteous women along the Gulf of Mexico than along the Atlantic Coast? 33200 But are n''t there thousands and thousands of cases which, while less advanced, are pointed in the same direction? 33200 But how is their singleness occupied? 33200 But is this a matter for women alone? 33200 But was luxury the_ start_? 33200 But what can you do about it? 33200 But what is the modern home? 33200 But what of the women who are directing that work? 33200 But what, in this case, is the training proposed? 33200 But who are you, you that now control Living? 33200 But why? 33200 But why? 33200 Can anything be done to dam the stream of dependent and delinquent children which flows through the children''s building so steadily? 33200 Can they be staunched? 33200 Could anything be more womanly? 33200 Did you ever read Havelock Ellis''s book calledA Study of British Genius"?
33200Did you ever see a school of salesmanship for department- store women employees?
33200Do not men also consume?
33200Does it astonish you that they matured young?
33200Does it astonish you that they were soon ready for the duties of adult life?
33200Dreamy?
33200FOR MARIE?
33200FOR MY DAUGHTER?
33200For those 151 persons, is it human volition?
33200Have we lost anything?
33200How about that?"
33200How can the barber support the manicurist who has had twelve?
33200How can the clerk support the cloak saleswoman who has had eighteen dollars a week of her own?
33200How much money would John want to spend on her before he would take her?
33200How were they to be occupied?
33200I said,"who are you?"
33200In other words, is it strange that the topic of woman''s suffrage is now tolerated on the floor of the Chicago Woman''s Club?
33200Is he not her husband?
33200Is it a perverse aversion to the other sex?
33200Is it not strange that among the twenty- one members of the Chicago Board of Education only one is a woman?
33200Is n''t it their purpose to give their pupils discipline and culture, pure and broad, unaffected by commercial intention?
33200Is n''t that what colleges are, and ought to be, for?
33200It ended up with:"Do you mean to tell me that after all the reducing and dieting I''ve been doing I ca n''t wear under a twenty- seven?
33200Just the sort of thing woman''s club women would do?
33200May she not even have a_ dominant_ part in it?
33200May we observe that they were not taken in marriage out of a conscious sense of duty to the Commonwealth and to Population?
33200Must the girl learn two, be twice a specialist?
33200Now is Right Living to be only for girls?
33200One hundred and fifteen more out of every thousand?
33200Question: Are they in public life?
33200Seems strange to- day, does n''t it, that there should have been any hesitation at all?
33200Shall I not?"
33200Shall we ever again, from the most favored of homes, see a William Pitt, Chancellor of the Exchequer, by merit, at 23?
33200So on the fifth of December, 1883, the long- apprehended question arose:"Shall Our Club Do Practical Work?"
33200Something exquisitely gratifying in being certain,_ certain_, that it is n''t just necessity that keeps her a home woman?
33200The broader question is,''Will that interest grow?''
33200The cloak saleswoman may talk flippantly about it, but, at heart, is n''t she seriously right?
33200They''re abstracted from the world, are n''t they?
33200Trifling?
33200Was n''t it only the means to the_ finish_?
33200We then ask"Who need to know about Foods, Textiles, Hygiene?"
33200What are the subterranean sources of that stream?
33200What did Wyatt get out of it?
33200What does a course of study like that of Mr. Harvey''s Homemakers''School attempt to add to academic education?
33200What does it all mean?
33200What of the women who are directing the other enterprises I have mentioned?
33200What''s the matter?
33200Where in history shall we find men the world took more from, gave less to?
33200Which one of these two revulsions will be the stronger?
33200Who has thus postponed maturity?
33200Who has thus prolonged infancy?
33200Will they?
33200Would n''t it have been remarkable if the human race had been able to carry so large a part of itself on its back?
33200Would n''t it have been remarkable if their families had been able to support them all at home?
33200Would they make good citizens?
33200[ Illustration: WORK?
33200to such and such other purposes"?
34071If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen?
34071If it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France?
34071No government without the consent of the governed, eh? 34071 And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was he doing to save her? 34071 And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate-- while the_ Faubourg St. Germain_"stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his brand- new aristocracy?
34071And then what did it mean to Frenchmen to be suddenly lifted to dazzling ascendancy in Europe?
34071And where was"His Majesty"while this work was being done?
34071And while France was thus weaving her future, what were the other nations doing?
34071Are we sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years,_ without_ our consent?"
34071Business suspended, private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life, treasure, all eagerly given-- for what?
34071But how could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread?
34071But may one not suspect anything of a woman capable of a St. Bartholomew?
34071But what availed it for Abelard to lead an intellectual revolt against corrupted beliefs in the North, or the Albigenses a spiritual one in the South?
34071But what could he do?
34071But what if he ceased to be ornamental?
34071But where was his knighthood, where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest against her fate?
34071But, was there not equal opportunity for every man in the Empire?
34071Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly?
34071Charles abandoned hope; how could he struggle against such a combination?
34071Could any scales weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been endured?
34071Could the upper ranks fall lower than this?
34071Did Madame du Barri think of it, did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged shrieking and struggling to the guillotine?
34071Did she hasten them?
34071Did she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his heads?
34071Did they recall this time?
34071Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it?
34071Every soldier''s knapsack, might it not hold a Marshal''s baton?
34071Had not monarchy given them life and hope?
34071Had not the kingdom reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour?
34071Had she been, not set free, but simply annexed to the realm of the Barbarian across the Rhine?
34071Had she exchanged one servitude for another?
34071How was it with Catharine?
34071How would a barefooted, rope- girdled monk, however inspired and eloquent, fare to- day in New York, or London, or Paris?
34071Is it strange, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled, that Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages?
34071Now, Marie would be Queen, and who so natural advisers as her uncles of the house of"Lorraine"?
34071Of all miracles, is not this the greatest?
34071THE EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE A BRIEF HISTORICAL SKETCH OF FRANCE BY MARY PARMELE_ Author of"Evolution of Empire Series, Germany;""Who?
34071That thrones, empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before his name?
34071Was not the Emperor himself a living illustration of what a man from the people might become?
34071Was this not an embodiment of their dreams?
34071Was this the equality they expected when they cried"Down with the Aristocrats"?
34071What sort of a ruler would he be-- this dark, mysterious, unmagnetic man?
34071What would they do with it?
34071What?
34071When an Assembly is at war with the President because it desires to restrict the suffrage, and he to make it universal, can any one doubt the result?
34071When has our consent been asked, the consent of twenty- five million people?
34071When?
34071Where were the pale- faced, determined patriots who sat in the"National Assembly"?
34071Who could be good, with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with Catharine de Medici as preceptress?
34071Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the most regenerative force the world had ever known?
34071Why had Henry of Navarre been spared?
34071Why should the simple- hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see: that victory or failure were alike full of peril for France?
34071the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what miracle could he produce the other?
35075Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?
35075''Prudent?''
35075''s Consul at Brussels?
35075--"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
35075A great victory?
35075Besides, what news is there to tell, and who has the heart to gossip?
35075But is it possible that there is one young man in England to- day who will sit still under this monstrous wrong?
35075I wonder what Nelson would have said if he had been told that an Englishwoman had been shot in cold blood by the members of any other nation?
35075Is it that insufficient blood has been shed during this past year that men should hunger after one harmless life?
35075The close of a great campaign?
35075Why did you help them to cross the frontier, when they would have been perfectly free and safe in staying here?''
35075Why now, when another woman has met the death to which she knowingly exposed herself, as did her comrades in battle?
35075Why was she murdered?
35075Why was she put to death?
34179And will you be willing to deny it upon oath of the gods?
34179Are you not aware,he is presumed to reason,"that the dog is the Anubis of Egypt, the Sirius of the skies; and in hell is the keeper Cerberus?"
34179By what then do you swear?
34179Does not that book concern females?
34179How is it,asks La Comtesse,"that you have contracted this horrible habit; you, a scion of an old stock, one of our first Gascon gentlemen?"
34179What gods?
34179Where learnt you that oath, fool?
34179Who, then, do you fear?
34179_ Clot._ And the last is that I should not swear; how make you that good? 34179 _ Clot._ Ca n''t you lend it me now and then, brother?"
34179''tis genteel, is n''t it?
34179And again, how else explain the exuberance of the Duchess of Marlborough''s language when calling at Lord Mansfield''s lodgings?
34179And if the monumental record of their virtues be a just one, why did they heirloom on posterity this bitter heritage of swearing?
34179D''ye hear?"
34179Do you remember the comfortless morrow that brought the first contact with your boy associates?
34179For why?
34179How could these be depicted upon the stage in the face of Mr. Colman''s new ordinance?
34179How should one understand that the tones which seemed so harsh and jarring belonged in truth to a very code of sprightliness?
34179In the course of dinner, one of the party, looking round the board, happens to inquire,"Where''s the damned mustard?"
34179Is it love that makes you prate to me so fondly?"
34179Men soon began to ask themselves where first they could have met with this undignified expression?
34179No particular notice is taken of this remark, until presently one of the legal gentlemen solemnly observes,"Where''s the damned salt?"
34179Que te fault- il, beste saulvaige?"
34179So much for swearing when in grim earnest; how are we to account for it in its transition to sport and play?
34179Stay; food for the mind was not neglected, as how should it be?
34179To which Satan replies:--"Que veulx tu, mauldict Lucifer?
34179Was this then the pæan or war- song of the Scufflers''Club?
34179Were they sparkling and festive, tellers of rare stories, dealers in racy jokes?
34179What do we find?
34179What does it mean?
34179What manner of men were they?
34179What possible objection could be uttered against so innocent a tale?
34179What_ can_ it mean?
34179Whence has it arisen, and whither does it tend?
34179Who knows but that at that moment we may have thought our friend little better than a fool, and his words the drivel of idiotcy?
34179[ 26] The question has frequently been asked who was intended by the cognomen Saint Gris?
34179art there, true- penny?
34179asks Strepsiades;"by the iron money, as they do at Byzantium?"
34179of those that admit it into the most familiar questions and assertions, ludicrous phrases and works of humour?"
34179say''st thou so?
34179this fellow is worse than me; what, does he swear with pen and ink?"
34179you''ve taken notice of it--''tis genteel, is n''t it?
28234A chance in life? 28234 Ai n''t it nice, Sarah Emily?"
28234Ai n''t you goin''to read it?
28234An''d''ye think ah''d do yon?
28234An''hoo''s the pair bit lamb the day?
28234And Mr. Huntley? 28234 And how can you bear to leave it all to come away with me-- and to a foreign land, too?"
28234And how is Queen Elizabeth this afternoon?
28234And what for would he be shouting out my name?
28234And what would you do then-- even if you should turn into a P.D.H., or whatever you call him?
28234And what''ll you be?
28234And where have you been?
28234And who''ll be the Squire?
28234And why should n''t she? 28234 And you''ll give it to Annie when there''s no one around?"
28234Are n''t you sorry just to be a sheep, Ann? 28234 Are there no girls amongst those you meet who have a purpose in life?"
28234Are ye goin''to take him in?
28234Are you expelled or are you off for a holiday, you mean thing? 28234 Are you glad to have me home, father?"
28234Are you sick, Lizzie?
28234Are you the Pretender?
28234Aunt Jarvis,he said in a wheedling tone,"we''re coming out here to visit Lizzie''s place some day, ai n''t we?
28234Because what?
28234Been picking berries, eh?
28234Bows?
28234But I wonder what new trouble you''ll get into?
28234But boys do n''t like me,Elizabeth explained dolefully,"and Horace is awfully tiresome; now, Stella, is n''t he?"
28234But did they though?
28234But how on earth?--what in the world?--John Gordon, are you telling me the truth or is it a joke?
28234By the way, what is your brother going to do when he graduates next spring?
28234Ca n''t they be exposed?
28234Charles Stuart?
28234Come along, which of you is n''t too hungry to see me home?
28234Could n''t help what?
28234Did aunt get a letter?
28234Did the Oliver boy say anything about Mr. Huntley-- or-- or anyone else?
28234Did you ever see the old log- house at the first jog in the Ridge Road?
28234Did you forget it''s Saturday?
28234Did you see that man that was here when you came?
28234Do I understand you to say that you-- you insulted Mrs. Jarvis-- and left her?
28234Do n''t you want this?
28234Do what?
28234Do you do much of this sort of work, Miss Kendall?
28234Do you hear what Mrs. Jarvis is asking you?
28234Do you often get it as bad as that, Lizzie?
28234Do you really truly like it, John?
28234Do you study very hard?
28234Do you want to find Jesus Christ?
28234Do you, Ann; now, really?
28234Do you?
28234Does Sarah Emily still think he''s pining for her?
28234Does n''t this room look as if I were?
28234Dr. Harrison is such a clever speaker, is n''t he?
28234Eh, Sarah Emily?
28234Eh, eh, it''s little Lizzie? 28234 Elizabeth,"she said despairingly,"how is it possible that you can act so strangely?
28234Elizabeth,she said gently,"what were you writing on your slate this morning when I was speaking?"
28234Elizabeth,she said in a despairing tone,"how is it that I can never trust you for even a few minutes out of my sight?
28234Elizabeth,she said with a dreadful calm,"what is this you are telling me?"
28234Eppie? 28234 Glad?"
28234Has Mr. MacAllister turned into an intelligence office? 28234 Has it a soul?"
28234Have n''t you got home yet?
28234Have you lost your hold on Him? 28234 Have you no ambition at all, Betsey Bobbett?"
28234Have you one, Rosie?
28234He does n''t know a finely turned phrase from a dissecting- knife; does he, Stuart? 28234 He''ll be all right so long as your grandpa do n''t see him; eh, Eppie?"
28234Hear that, Blake? 28234 Horace, did you hear me telling you to put on your overcoat?
28234How did you come to be here?
28234How did you?
28234How do you get one?
28234How do you like my new frock, Johnny?
28234How is it she always has so much attention from boys?
28234How old are you?
28234How will you feel when you have been to hundreds of such affairs, all exactly alike, I wonder?
28234How''ll you explain your Dr. Jekyll- and- Mr. Hyde existence next time you meet Miss Kendall at a Green Tea?
28234How''s everybody?
28234Huntley''s a gentleman all right, is n''t he? 28234 I suppose Stella''ll turn it into a garden- party, wo n''t she?"
28234I suppose you go to church regularly?
28234I suppose you would n''t like to hammer a typewriter in my office? 28234 I-- I-- what''ll I do?
28234Is anybody sick, John Coulson? 28234 Is it a trouble I could be helping?"
28234Is it?--Is it you-- Lizzie?
28234Is n''t that the dandiest luck?
28234Is your head aching, Aunt Margaret?
28234Is yours Hector McQueen?
28234It''ll be good practice for my first year, do n''t you think?
28234It''s been very warm for November, has it not?
28234Jean and-- and what?
28234Jean?
28234Lizzie Gordon, who was Zaccheus?
28234Lizzie Gordon?
28234Lizzie, could you go downstairs and interview the owner of this?
28234Lizzie? 28234 Love it?
28234Miss Mills?
28234Mr. Coulson would do, would n''t he?
28234My chances of what, for instance?
28234Not the bone man?
28234Of course aunt thinks Mrs. Jarvis may take me away and make a lady of me, but I do n''t really see how she could; do you, Mother MacAllister?
28234Oh, Charles Stuart, you wo n''t hurt him?
28234Oh, John, John Gordon, you dear old sneak; why did n''t you tell me you were coming to- day?
28234Oh, Miss Hillary,she whispered again,"do you think you could let me pass?
28234Oh, Sarah Emily, do n''t you hate dishes?
28234Oh, are you, Charles Stuart? 28234 Oh, he ai n''t going''to hurt anybody; are you, little doggie?"
28234Oh, how can I thank you?
28234Oh,_ do_ you think so? 28234 Read what, the candy?"
28234Remember The Rowdy, Lizzie?
28234Sarah Emily,she said, rather hesitatingly,"did anybody-- I mean any young man ever-- kiss you?"
28234Say, Lizzie, did anybody ever-- ever see you home before?
28234Say, Lizzie?
28234Say, it did n''t taste much like boarding- house hash, did it?
28234Sick? 28234 Stuart?
28234The place will be ours, anyway; wo n''t it, grandaddy?
28234Then Stuart is going to be a minister after all, is he?
28234Then why do n''t you make an effort to overtake them? 28234 They could n''t be turning us out, could they?"
28234They do n''t all belong here, do they?
28234They will not be turning me off?
28234This is better than putting up my shingle in Forest Glen and living in old Sandy''s house, eh?
28234Trip?
28234Until you died?
28234Was there ever such a monkey?
28234We''ve nothing to take off, young woman,she declared at last;"ca n''t you see that?
28234What about church, Auntie Jinit?
28234What about it, you poor little mite?
28234What are they going to have them for?
28234What are you going to be?
28234What are you saying?
28234What are you talking about, you absurd child? 28234 What d''ye do it for?"
28234What did Mrs. Jarvis say?
28234What do you think you would like to be?
28234What do you want most in the world, little Elizabeth?
28234What has he to do with my affairs?
28234What is Lizzie best at?
28234What is she talking about?
28234What is the fun about?
28234What is your name?
28234What is your name?
28234What on earth has happened between you and Aunt Jarvis?
28234What was it your aunt was saying? 28234 What was the reason?"
28234What were you at to- day, a tea?
28234What''ll you do with him?
28234What''s the matter?
28234What''s the matter?
28234What''s troublin''?
28234What''s up now? 28234 What, what?"
28234What?
28234What?
28234What?
28234When did he tell you?
28234When did you take to rhyming, Lizzie?
28234Where did he live?
28234Where is Lizzie Gordon?
28234Where''s Lizzie?
28234Who did n''t pay you?
28234Who was Zaccheus?
28234Who''s the little brown thing with all the eyes and hair?
28234Who''s the poor woman?
28234Whose youngsters?
28234Why not?
28234Why, Aunt Margaret, I never dreamed we''d have to stay home, and I''d just love to go-- and Annie wants to go, too; do n''t you, Ann?
28234Why, I-- what makes you think so? 28234 Why, Lizzie,"said her older sister,"how did you come here?"
28234Why, what does he do there?
28234Why?
28234Why?
28234Will they put me out of Sunday school? 28234 Will you come upstairs and lay off your wraps?"
28234Would he be saying that to you, lovey?
28234Would they make this way of holiness accessible to someone?
28234Yes, why not? 28234 You did n''t see that Mrs. Oliver on your way down, did you?"
28234You do n''t mean that Jake''s beginning to''take notice,''surely?
28234You have n''t a pain or an ache anywhere, have you?
28234You love this place, do n''t you,''Lizbeth of The Dale?
28234You mean that committee of Miss Kendall''s? 28234 You wo n''t lose it, Lizzie?"
28234You would be thinking of that?
28234You''re a little better to- day, are n''t you, dear?
28234You''re not sick, are you, old man?
28234You''re sure nobody else saw?
28234You?
28234Young man,she said severely,"where''s your manners?
28234--Miss Gordon had got back some of her severity--"you did n''t tell an untruth?"
2823415 and tell John the good news?
28234A dapper little man in a dress- suit, the only man anywhere in sight, popped out from behind a great palm and demanded,"Name, please, madam?"
28234Am I to go home with you?"
28234An''Mrs. Jarvis says,''Why, how''s my little namesake?''
28234And Charles Stuart looked at her with undisguised admiration in his eyes, and said,"Aw, you goose, what did you go and tell for?"
28234And Mother MacAllister said, as her arms went around her,"Hoots, toots, and did the lamb do it to save the little dog?"
28234And as Cousin Griselda often remarked privately, Who were more able to discourse with ease upon such themes?
28234And ca n''t you see I did n''t mean to do wrong?
28234And did n''t he think she looked fetching in this cap and apron?
28234And did n''t little Lizzie want to do something for Him?
28234And having got it there, where did he get the courage to propose?
28234And her neck''s longer than ever, is n''t it, John?"
28234And if Madeline goes I''ll-- Oh, Beth, whatever did happen to make you act so?"
28234And speaking of Madeline, what did Beth think?
28234And was it possible a right act could bring such dire results?
28234And what did he do with Mary and Aunt Margaret?
28234And what did he mean by leaving Baby Bet at home?
28234And what will become of me and my little Eppie?"
28234And where was it now?
28234And why did he come alone?
28234And you know I would n''t ever, ever tell, do n''t you?"
28234And you wo n''t tell what I said, will you?"
28234Any letters from home?"
28234Are they waiting for you?"
28234Are ye scared o''the master?"
28234But if she found her dull and far behind her classmates, how could she be expected to offer anything in the way of higher education?
28234But is n''t there something you''d like better than anything else?"
28234But you''re not quite sure she''s coming, are you?
28234CHAPTER XV WHAT OF THE NIGHT?
28234Ca n''t I go, too?
28234Ca n''t we do it yet?"
28234Can ye no wait to be introduced to a body?"
28234Could it be Eppie she had seen on Newton Street, and could that old man be her grandfather?
28234Could n''t she just cancel their names anyway?
28234Could she be going fishing, too?
28234Did n''t I tell you Mr. Huntley is just back from the West?
28234Did you ever meet Blake Huntley in Cheemaun?"
28234Do n''t you remember me?"
28234Do you know me?"
28234Do you know that light streak in it has almost disappeared, has n''t it?"
28234Do you remember my papa?
28234Do you want us to undress and go to bed?"
28234Elizabeth,--do you at all comprehend what a disastrous thing you have done?"
28234First, how long could she remain at home?
28234For Jessie had reported no letter that morning, and who knew what might happen?
28234For how could anyone hope to live up to it when she was possessed of a wild streak?
28234For of course Annie would marry-- perhaps a rich gentleman from the town-- who knew?
28234For what was the use of vanquishing a husband if one could not display the evidence of one''s triumph?
28234For which of her misdemeanors was she to be arraigned this time?
28234Had n''t Aunt Margaret hinted it again and again?
28234Had she?
28234Have ye made up yer mind to be a preacher yet?"
28234How dared they try to turn old Sandy away?
28234How is baby?"
28234How shall we ever live it down?"
28234How''s the wild streak behavin''?"
28234Huntley?"
28234I came here with my niece, I am sure an[ Transcriber''s note: line missing from source book?]
28234I suppose I would n''t need to, though, if I married Charles Stuart, would I?"
28234I suppose yous two did n''t hear anything o''poor Sandy and the wee girl in Toronto, did ye?"
28234I would n''t stoop to the means she employs not if a boy never spoke to me again, would you?"
28234If you dislike it all so thoroughly, why do you do it?"
28234Is n''t it wicked to eat three meals a day and be well dressed, when people are starving right at one''s door?"
28234Is that really another new dress, Lizzie?"
28234Is the daylight not good enough that you must shut yourself up here?
28234Is the house on fire?"
28234Is there a Miss Turner boarding here?"
28234Is there any reason why I should n''t run over and have dinner with Jean and the boys to- night?"
28234It emitted in sepulchral tones:"I say, Gordon, will you lend me your bones?"
28234It has come at last, has n''t it?"
28234It meant something deadly-- but what shameless depths might not be revealed by"reprehensible"?
28234It would not be very wicked, for was she not always pretending?
28234It would seem that Nemesis was after Jake Martin all right; but suppose she caught Susie too, and the younger one still at home?
28234Jarvis?"
28234Jarvis?"
28234Lizzie Gordon, where did you get him?"
28234Martin?"
28234May I come in, Eppie?"
28234Miss Gordon hung her proud head, and Mrs. Oliver exclaimed quite audibly,"Dear me, how did that poor child ever come to be chosen to take part?"
28234Mr. Coulson sprang into the seat opposite, and he was no sooner in his place than Mother MacAllister cried out"Why, father, where are the girls?
28234My hair?"
28234Now, do n''t you wish you could pass the entrance next summer with John and Charles Stuart?"
28234Now, what on earth had she done with that picture?
28234Now, would n''t you rather I''d go there than to those giddy theatricals?
28234Oh, Lizzie, do n''t you think rich people ought to pay folks that work for them?"
28234Oh, Lizzie, do you mind yon Mr. Huntley that put grandaddy and me off our farm?
28234Oh, do let me go?"
28234Oh, is it baby?"
28234Oh, what''ll I do?
28234Or did he come stumbling into Jean''s study and inquire in awful tones,"Miss Gordon, will you lend me your heart?"
28234Or is he squire of domestic dames?"
28234Or was it Estella?
28234Or was it dark?
28234Pshaw, what does it matter anyway?"
28234Say, what are twin stars, Annie?"
28234Shall I inquire?"
28234She had bidden him go, because her aunt had commanded her, but, oh, how could she have suspected that he would obey?
28234She hoped Mrs. Jarvis did not want her to return immediately?
28234She must expect your return any day?"
28234So how could one find time to worry over vulgar fractions?
28234So she slipped up to her and whispered,"Do you like it?"
28234So ye heard me singin''now?"
28234Stephen''s?"
28234Suppose someone had dropped it and Mr. Kelly had found it?
28234That is Huntley''s story too, and who cares that a hundred or so Chinamen were blown to pieces?
28234The lady looked both amused and interested, and Elizabeth rattled on:"You see, I got my ice- cream in a mould-- a little chicken; what was yours?"
28234This one said:"Is n''t this a dreadful shame?
28234WHAT OF THE NIGHT?
28234Well, Horace promised to come anyway, but what makes you think she''ll come soon?"
28234What about him?"
28234What are ye gawkin''there aboot?
28234What does Jean say?"
28234What excuse shall I make?"
28234What had brought him out here at this hour?
28234What had put it into the bone- collector''s shaggy head?
28234What had they to do with his place, anyway?
28234What has he to do with them?"
28234What in the world had possessed her?
28234What is it I have n''t got, Jean?"
28234What is it?"
28234What makes you ask such a fool question?"
28234What of him?"
28234What was he doing at The Dale?"
28234What was he that dared to enter such a holy calling as the ministry?
28234What was the matter with her little verses?
28234What was the use trying to solace a broken heart with such trifles?
28234What were those men doing?
28234What would become of Baby if his mother----""Turned goat?
28234What would become of Elizabeth if she were left unguided?
28234What would become of Susie if her stepmother secured her"rights"?
28234What''ll I do?"
28234Whatever has happened, Beth; was the old crank nasty to you?"
28234When did you come?
28234When those two stars had fallen from the firmament, how could she expect to shine with Mrs. Jarvis sitting there in front of her?
28234Where did you get it, Miss''Lizbeth Jarvis Gordon?"
28234Where had she heard that soft Highland accent before?
28234Where''s our little''Lizbeth, Margaret?"
28234Who knew them as well as she, when each one was a reproach to her?
28234Who''s out there?"
28234Who?"
28234Why did n''t she sit still and read books, the way Jean did?
28234Why do n''t you come and call on aunt, and bring her?"
28234Why do you persist in ignoring what is patent to everybody?
28234Why had she let all this happen, when she could have prevented it with a word?
28234Will Mother MacAllister be angry?
28234Will they wear them on their hair?"
28234Will you never grow up, I wonder?"
28234Would n''t John and Charles Stuart be good and mad when they found her following them?
28234Would you care about that?"
28234You promised now, do n''t you remember?"
28234You said there was n''t a Miss Turner here?"
28234You''re not going out, are you?"
28234and then dash out and fall downstairs?
28234asked Charles Stuart,"the fellow that used to sing in the hawthorn bush?"
28234cried her aunt in dismay,"what are you saying?"
28234cried her sister in distress,"what will aunt say?"
28234she cried,"where have you been this long, long time, my dear?"
28234then added that which always attached itself to Elizabeth''s misdemeanors,"What would Mrs. Jarvis think if she were to come to- day?"
34613''Do you really think so?'' 34613 ''I am certain of it; or would you always give up your opinion to that of persons in a superior state, however inferior in their understanding?
34613''I?'' 34613 ''Why, here is provision enough for all the people,''said Henry;''why should they want?
34613But,they asked,"did Evelina represent the woman''s point of view of life?
34613Wentworth? 34613 ''Is there ane, think ye, aboot this hoose, that would be at sic a fash?'' 34613 And have they fixed the where and when? 34613 And shall Trelawny die? 34613 And what dost thou take a_ democrat_ to be? 34613 And what is man? 34613 And what is_ benevolence_? 34613 Are there many heroes and heroines for whom we dare predict a happy married life? 34613 But have you read the_ Rights of Man_? 34613 Can you see at all with the eye that is knocked out?
34613Did Henry Tilney ever know why he married Catherine Morland?
34613Does no part of the earth, nor anything which the earth produces, belong to the poor?''"
34613Fielding with the scenes he has described for his readers?
34613How could a woman have behaved more virtuously than Geraldine?
34613If I spoke all I think on this point, if I gave my real opinion of some first- rate female characters in first- rate works, where should I be?
34613So how can they ever be equal in that particular line?"
34613These lines evoked the following tribute from Matthew Arnold:----she( How shall I sing her?)
34613We''ll cross the Tamar, land to land, The Severn is no stay, All side to side, and hand to hand, And who shall say us nay?
34613What is it to be_ an enlightened people_?
34613What would Addison or Steele have seen in the same place?
34613When he sees Bourke, a pugilist of his own country, overcome by an Englishman, he cries to him excitedly:"How are you, my gay fellow?
34613Where do they expect to go to when they die, I wonder?
34613Who can forget the scene where he watches Frankenstein at work making for him the companion that he had promised?
34613Who could remain silent with Elizabeth Bennet urging her to utterance?
34613Who that reads their story will say that Miss Austen''s maidens are without passion?
34613Who will linger over the teacups while knights in armour are riding the streets without?
34613Who would have believed the rejected professor would have grown into that scholar of middle age?
34613Who would not have expected them to be insipid likenesses of each other?
34613Would Mr. B. and Pamela have written such long letters to each other about the training of their children if conversation had not been a bore?
34613why do not they go and take some of these things?''
33107And this? 33107 Besides, what have we to do with setting the world at defiance?
33107But admitting that matters were now made up, what would be the event? 33107 But where, say some, is the king of America?
33107But where, say some, is the king of America? 33107 But, admitting that we were all of English descent, what does it amount to?
33107Why is the nation sickly?
33107Ye that tell us of harmony and reconciliation, can ye restore to us the time that is past? 33107 ''Doest thou well to be angry?'' 33107 ***** Now, what have I shown? 33107 Again:Welbore Ellis, what say you?
33107Aloof from party, unknown to the public, writing for neither fame nor favor, what is the meaning of this literary adventurer?
33107And who shall decide at this late day on forgeries?
33107And why?
33107Are there any certain limits, in fact or theory, to inform you at what point you must stop-- at what point the mortification ends?
33107Are your wife and children destitute of a bed to lie on, or bread to live on?
33107But could Francis have forged the hand of Junius?
33107But how shall it be obtained?
33107But if you say you can still pass the violations over, then I ask, hath your house been burnt?
33107But in order not to be too hasty we ought to ask: Is there not_ one_ fact in the whole life and character of Mr. Paine incompatible with Junius?
33107But what will all their efforts avail?
33107But where is John Adams, who said that Jefferson had stolen his ideas from him to put into the Declaration of Independence?
33107But where is the man who has on hand the_ business of a world_?
33107But who shall now take it to France, and in person represent the situation and demand assistance, as set forth in this letter?
33107But why this subterfuge, if Mr. Paine was not Junius, and he had not yet a work to perform in England?
33107Can the great life to come rest on nothing?
33107Can ye give to prostitution its former innocence?
33107Did Junius write falsely when he said:"This edition contains_ all_ the letters of Junius?"
33107Did Mr. Jefferson study this production of Thomas Paine''s so closely as to get the_ exact order_, without transposing an article?
33107Do you ask how I know this?
33107Does he go there to satisfy his taste for learning, or to get rich?
33107Hath your property been destroyed before your face?
33107Have they firmness enough to meet the fury of a venal House of Commons?
33107Have they fortitude enough not to shrink at imprisonment?
33107Have they spirit enough to hazard their_ lives and fortunes_ in a_ contest_, if it should be necessary, with a prostituted legislature?
33107Have you lost a parent or a child by their hands, and yourself the ruined and wretched survivor?
33107How many more may have to go the same way?
33107How, then, was the exact order followed, in writing the Declaration, which Mr. Paine laid down in Common Sense?
33107I am now prepared to ask: What, then, was the object of Junius?
33107I do not ask whether this is Christianity or morality, I ask whether it is decency?
33107I therefore ask: Who was Junius?
33107If not Junius, what is the meaning of it?
33107If the majority can disfranchise ten boroughs, why not twenty-- why not the whole kingdom?
33107In short, Jefferson was peculiarly attached to the Scotch, and why?
33107Is there no child of America among all the sons of Freedom equal to the task?
33107Is there no merit in dedicating my life to the information of my fellow- subjects?
33107Is this the law of Parliament, or is it not?
33107May there not be many more such cases?
33107More than once my pen has refused to set about this work, but I now ask: Who wrote the original Declaration of Independence?
33107Mr. Paine asked, in the last sentence quoted above in the parallel column:"Why is the constitution of England sickly?"
33107Now, is the positive evidence of the_ genuine_ Letters to be set aside by this fugitive note and letter of_ Scotus_?
33107Paine exclaims:"Why is man afraid to think?"
33107Query: Can a person forget about something which never was?
33107Query: Did not the experts depend largely on the manuscript of this spurious Scotch epistle to make out a case of identity in handwriting?
33107The President inquired of him,"Did you write this piece?"
33107They both declare_ Law to be king_:_ Paine._"But where, say some, is the king of America?
33107Thus also Junius:"Is there no merit in dedicating my life to the information of my fellow- subjects?
33107To bring the matter to one point, is the power who is jealous of our prosperity a proper power to govern us?
33107To this end I subjoin Lord Macaulay''s five reasons why Sir Philip Francis was Junius:"Was he the author of the Letters of Junius?
33107To what_ Cause_ has he"_ dedicated his life_"?
33107Was he a man of fortune or of humble means?
33107Was he a peer, or the leader of a party or faction, or was he one of the common people?
33107Was he too_ modest_ to affirm it till he had got into his dotage?
33107We acknowledge the piety of St. James'', but what has become of its morality?"
33107We are already greater than the king wishes us to be, and will he not hereafter endeavor to make us less?
33107Were he a member of this House, what might not be expected from his knowledge, his firmness, and integrity?
33107What could be more like Junius than this?
33107What does he mean by"The_ Cause_ and the_ People_"?
33107What must be the result of this religion?
33107What public question have I declined?
33107What shall now be done?
33107What though he riots in the plunder of the army, and has only determined to be a patriot when he could not be a peer?
33107What villain have I spared?
33107What was the position of Junius in society?
33107What, then, was he?
33107When all others fail, both in council and in war, who shall be able to cheer the heart and lift up the head of the nation?
33107When will the humility of this country end?
33107When you propose to cut away the rotten parts,_ can you tell us what parts are perfectly sound_?
33107Whence came that mighty pen, which has often been acknowledged to have done more for human freedom than the sword of Washington?
33107Where are the committeemen who took the Declaration of Independence into Congress?
33107Where art thou thyself?
33107Where is the chief representative from New England, this"Colossus"of debate, this chief of the war committee?
33107Where is the god of battle, that he has deserted America?
33107Where now are the hopes of America?
33107Why did he say it?
33107Why may there not be a scientific criticism?
33107Why should not they make their own seats in parliament for life?
33107Why this dumb silence of history?
33107Why this great zeal and disinterested benevolence?
33107Why was he thus explicit if he had been writing continually over other signatures?
33107Will they go up with remonstrances to the king?
33107With what color of truth, then, can he pretend''that I am nowhere to be encountered but in a newspaper?''
33107[ A] How comes this JUNIUS to have broke through the cobwebs of the law, and to range uncontrolled, unpunished, through the land?
33107_ Where is John Adams_ in this darkest hour of his country''s trial?
33107and this?"
33107and which, if he should desert, would be the"_ vilest prostitution_?"
33107by what mysterious gift of divination hast thou found thy man?
33107what is he?
33107whether it is proper language for a nation to use?
33107| Can ye give to prostitution its former innocence?
33107| Have they firmness enough to meet the fury of a venal House of Commons?
33107| Have they fortitude enough not to shrink at imprisonment?
33107| Have they spirit enough to hazard their lives and fortunes in a contest,| if it should be necessary, with a prostituted legislature?
33107| Will they go up with remonstrances to the king?
33107| Will they grant you common halls when it shall be necessary?
33107|"Ye that tell us of harmony and reconciliation,| can ye restore to us the time that is past?
33345''But you did not bring your American friend''s picture?... 33345 ''Was it in the Western country?''
33345All to what end?
33345And the emotion itself-- what is it? 33345 Do you think well enough of me to try to get me employment at a regular salary, somewhere in the United States?"...
33345I asked myself:''If it was I?'' 33345 Is it possible you do not know?"
33345Of course we shall never see each other again in this world, and what is the use of being unkind after all?... 33345 So you read my translation of''Sylvestre Bonnard?''"
33345Surely you are joking?
33345That set me thinking,Hearn adds,"if Kazuo feels like his father about pretty girls,--what shall I do with him?
33345The fairy was altogether Japanese-- don''t you think so? 33345 Well, young man, what ambition do you nourish?"
33345What had I known of strangers''hands all through my childhood? 33345 What will you do with your little man when he grows up?
33345Why such beauty, to be blighted, By the swarm of foul destruction? 33345 ''I am certainly stronger than you,''she said;''now shall we wrestle?'' 33345 --Will I ever see you? 33345 Above all, where was the photograph of theLady of a Myriad Souls,"and the one of Mitchell McDonald that he mentioned as hanging on the ceiling?
33345Absurd?...
33345After a while, Amenomori goes on, he held up his head,"and what did I see?
33345Am I right or wrong?
33345And do n''t you feel just a little bit ashamed?''"
33345And do n''t you think that one gets all the benefit of travel only by keeping away from fashion- resorts and places consecrated by conventionalism?
33345And is there not something of the serpent in the beauty of all graceful women?
33345And will he be like you?
33345And will he ever see the little cousin who has just entered the world?
33345Army, or Civil Service?
33345But is it not pleasant to observe that the members of the broken circle have been mounting higher and higher to the Supreme Hope?
33345But what_ were_ you,--long ago?
33345But who is not bewildered by the gods?
33345But who made his eyes blue and his hair brown?
33345But who was she?
33345But--"_ Must I believe that I really exist?..._"Out of this idea he weaves a chapter of thrilling possibilities, and ends,"I am awake, fully awake!...
33345Can you not tell me some of yours when you are feeling very, very well, and do n''t know what to do?
33345Can you run?''
33345Do n''t you know that you are very happy to be able to live in England?
33345Do you hear the voices of the frogs and the Uguisu singing?"
33345Do you know that terribly pathetic poem of Robert Bridges'':''Pater Filio''?"
33345Do you remember that splendid Creole who used to be your city editor-- John----?--is it not a sin that I have forgotten his name?
33345Does a portrait of an ugly man make one desirous to read his books?
33345Forgot to put it into the valise?...
33345Have you tried Southern Italy?
33345How about the Continent?
33345How about the real compound race- soul, though?
33345How can we pity the folly of Urashima after he had lived so long alone with visible gods?
33345How could the little woman guess that his busy brain was weaving the fine Essay on"Ants,"published under the heading of"Insect Studies"in"Kwaidan"?
33345How could you think that I have got even half way to the bottom?
33345I am sorry not to see you-- but since you live in Hell what can I do?"
33345I wish one would come-- and stay: the one I saw that night when we were looking at... what was it?
33345If it is beautiful in art, why should it not be beautiful in nature?
33345Illusion?
33345Is not the serpent a symbol of grace?
33345Is not the so- called''line of beauty''serpentine?
33345Marry him at seventeen or nineteen?
33345Newspapers, forsooth!--why not collect and store the other things that wise men throw away, cigar- ends and orange- peelings?
33345No was said to everything, softly; but if he had accepted, how could he exist, breathe, even have time to think, much less write books?
33345Or send him to grim and ferocious Puritans that he may be taught the Way of the Lord?
33345Or that the universe exists for us solely as the reflection of our own souls?
33345Or the old Chinese teaching that we must seek the Buddha only in our hearts?"
33345She would ask him,"Did you finish your last story?"
33345Symbolising what?
33345They were of use in the world, but of what use was he?...
33345Thus did Lafcadio Hearn lose his inheritance, but if he had inherited it would he ever have been the artist he ultimately became?
33345To her he turned for advice and guidance, for"did she not represent to his imagination all the Sibyls?
33345What can you think of me?
33345What had I known of other men''s voices?
33345What is Life itself but a bewilderment?
33345What matter a heavy heart and an empty stomach, when you are stuffing your brain to repletion with new impressions and artistic material?
33345What memories most haunt you of places and people you liked?
33345What wild Arabic blood may he not, therefore, have inherited on his mother''s side?
33345What would you do if you were me?
33345When he was dying he had said to her:''Sally, you know what to do with the property?''
33345When she saw the picture, she clasped her hands in delight, but how was she ever to repay the master?
33345Why such innocence delighted, When sin stalks to thy seduction?
33345Will they be preserved in vain?
33345Would n''t this be the best advice?
33345Would that be very, very naughty?
33345Yet, is it not most probable that this aloofness and seclusion from the world invested his Tokyo work with its unique and original quality?
33345and was not her wisdom as the worth of things precious from the uttermost coasts?"
33345something of Lilith and Lamia?"
33345something of undulating shapeliness, something of silent fascination?
33345what have you dared to say?
34195If all our vessels ran''a, If none but had a crack''a; If Spanish apes eat all the grapes, How should we do for sack''a? 34195 If all the world were sand''o, Oh then what should we lack''o; If as they say there were no clay, How should we take tobacco?
34195If all things were eternall, And nothing their end bringing; If this should be, then how should we Here make an end of singing?
34195If fryers had no bald pates, Nor nuns had no dark cloysters; If all the seas were beans and pease, How should we do for oysters? 34195 If there had been no projects, Nor none that did great wrongs; If fiddlers shall turne players all, How should we doe for songs?
34195_--Can any of your readers explain the following extract from the Council of Ancyra, A.D. 314? 34195 _--Who was the author of this short poem, to be found in all the earlier collection of poetry for the use of schools?
34195''And pray, Mr. Macklin,''said Pope,''do players in general take such pains?''
341951852?
341954., in which he replies at some length, and not unamusingly, to the Query,"Why are sneezers saluted?"
34195And if it is, what is the amount of that compensation?
34195And if so, is there any representative, and where, at the present day?
34195Any particulars regarding his history?
34195But, Query, are not the_ printed_ sermons of these divines merely outlines, to be filled up by the preacher_ extempore_?
34195Can you inform me of the names of these_ first_ members of that Heraldic body?
34195Deo displiceat?
34195Did the scholars of Italy know more of what was done by Englishmen in Sicily in Brydone''s day than they do at present?
34195Did this"monstrous man"leave any descendants?
34195Do the Jews at present, in any country, practise polygamy?
34195Does any such_ wappenschau_ occur in England on such occasions now?
34195Has this view of our literature been taken, and exhibited in all its aspects, by any English writer and if so, by whom?
34195How are the dates reconciled?
34195How does this stand?
34195How many marquisses were there, and were any of them men of any note in their day and generation?
34195I would farther ask why twenty- one was the number fixed for a royal salute?
34195If not, when and why was that practice discontinued among them?
34195In whose possession are they now?
34195Is it merely nominal?
34195Is there any religious sect which forbids polygamy, besides the Christians( and the Jews, if the Jews do forbid it)?
34195Is there such an order in existence?
34195J. Cawley was a son of the regicide?
34195John Pocklington._--Can any of your correspondents oblige me with information respecting the family, or the armorial bearings of Dr. John Pocklington?
34195On what ground has polygamy become forbidden among Christians?
34195Query, What is Dorset?
34195Reprinted in 1796 and 1800?
34195Was Polygamy permitted among the early Christians?
34195What could be done with the Spanish chesnut?
34195What is meant by"vanitatem observare?"
34195When and where did he die?
34195When and why was Lochwood, the family residence, abandoned?
34195_ Carronade._--What is the derivation of the term_ carronade_, applied to pieces of ordnance shorter and thicker in the chamber than usual?
34195_ Halcyon Days._--What is the derivation of"halcyon days?"
34195_ Irish Legislation._--I have met with the following statement: is it to be received as true?
34195_ Original Words of old Scotch Airs._--Can any one tell me where the original words of many fine old Scotch airs are to be found?
34195_ Soomarokoff''s_"_ Demetrius._"--Who translated the following drama from the Russian?
34195_ Teddy the Tiler._--Who was Teddy the Tiler?
34195and is there any likelihood of the folk story being true?
32502A plaything? 32502 And now what about unmasking?"
32502Are there many dances in the town nowadays-- young ladies?
32502Are you Tartars both of you?
32502Are you afraid?
32502Are you cold?
32502Are you coming here?
32502Are you crazy, you two?
32502Are you dead, Inger Johanne?
32502Are you going to bring sorrow to your father and mother?
32502Are you going to put us ashore?
32502Are you up here again?
32502But are n''t there plenty of splendid things to see, Ellef?
32502But how came she in church?
32502But is it worth while to have all that hub- bub in our barn?
32502But, Inger Johanne,said Father,"what is that?"
32502Can the circus- riders keep their horses in our barn?
32502Can you imagine why such folks travel?
32502Can you tell us the way to Goodfields?
32502Did Noah have berries with him in the ark?
32502Did the five crowns blow away?
32502Do you hear it, Karlie boy?
32502Do you know what time it is, Inger Johanne?
32502Do you want anything?
32502For you----"How did you know I was here?
32502Give up? 32502 Has God a knife?"
32502Have you any white velvet for sale?
32502Have you gone altogether crazy?
32502Have you got a new umbrella?
32502Have you something to sell, perhaps? 32502 How do you think you would get along if I did n''t?"
32502How old are you?
32502How old are you?
32502How will you get down again?
32502Indeed,--is your mother sick?
32502Inger Johanne, will you be so good as to go to school? 32502 Is he dead?
32502Is it a silk one?
32502Is it that spindleshanks again?
32502Is n''t there any one that will help me?
32502Is n''t there any one that will help me?
32502Is she in the church?
32502Karsten,said I the next day,"what should you say if I became a circus- rider?"
32502Korea lies where, Minka?
32502Little girl,she said,"you''re a good girl, are n''t you, and will help me a little?"
32502May I ask where these three elegant ladies come from?
32502May I lay him on your bed?
32502Oh, are you crazy? 32502 Oh, here you are, are you?
32502Pooh-- do you think I mind that?
32502See what?
32502Shall I dance a little for you?
32502Shall we hide up on the top of the hill here all day?
32502Thora Heja, where are you going?
32502Was he after you? 32502 Was it, perhaps, the only one you had?"
32502Well, have I found you at last? 32502 Well, may I tell about it now?"
32502Well, will you give me that red- and- blue pencil of yours then?
32502Well?
32502What are you traveling for?
32502What did he do when you were alone, Munda?
32502What did he say?
32502What do you want, children?
32502What example are you doing?
32502What is all this, Inger Johanne?
32502What is this I hear? 32502 What is this, Inger Johanne?"
32502What kind of weather do you think we''ll have, Ola Bugta?
32502What shall we do?
32502What''s that? 32502 Who is this disturbing the peace of the church?"
32502Who knows what danger Munda is in?
32502Who knows?
32502Why is that?
32502Will you condescend to help yourself to a cake?
32502Will you stop your laughing, Karsten? 32502 Wo n''t you have a ticket?"
32502Would you dare sing right out loud in his class?
32502Yes, and was n''t she funny when she said,''Out of my shop this instant''?
32502Yes-- but how shall we go to get there?
32502You think you are smart, do n''t you?
32502_ Do_ I_ remember_?
32502*****"Would n''t you like to have a nice new plaything, Octavia?
32502And I, just a little girl down here on earth, was I to be allowed to sit beside the baby until the angels came for him?
32502And is it here you are?
32502And what do you think of my having to pay for the pane of glass I broke in the vestry?
32502And where may these pretty little ladies be from?"
32502And, would you believe it?
32502Are you crazy?
32502Are you crazy?
32502But do you suppose that Peter heard?
32502But what do you think happened?
32502But, would you believe it?
32502CHAPTER XVI TRAVELLING WITH A BILLY- GOAT Would you believe it?
32502Ca n''t you hear how angry Soren, the mason, is?"
32502Ca n''t you help me?"
32502Can you think of anything more exciting than to meet a bear on the road?
32502Can you use your fists like an Englishman?"
32502Did something crash then?
32502Do you hear something?"
32502Do you remember that they were playing that air the evening you asked me to marry you?"
32502Ferdinand, what was its object?
32502Have you drowned two young pigs of Soren''s?"
32502Have you walked out of the corner without permission?"
32502He is n''t exactly right in his mind-- and do you know what he did once?
32502How far is it to Sand Island now?"
32502How in the world had we come here?
32502How long did we sit there?
32502I ask you, Ferdinand, what was it thinking of, when it burrowed in under my arm?"
32502If you ask,"What about?"
32502Is he calling me a monkey?
32502Just think-- if I never got my head out?
32502Karl looked uncertain as he gazed at me and asked:"Are you afraid?"
32502Make a fool of me in my own lawful business, will you?
32502Mina had seen a little slender boy, with rough black hair and gold earrings-- and had n''t I myself seen the director of the whole concern?
32502Now can you see anything to laugh at?
32502Oh, how would they manage?
32502Oh, what if he should die of terror?
32502Then she said:"Do you remember, Mack?
32502Then, what do you suppose happened?
32502Then-- wasn''t it queer?
32502They are not street children, do n''t you see?"
32502They do n''t make butter in the Land of Fantasy, do they?"
32502Was n''t that outrageous?
32502What could I do?
32502What do you mean?"
32502What do you mean?"
32502What do you say?"
32502What in the world had become of Carolus?
32502What in the world should I do?
32502What in the world should I give him?
32502What in the world was happening?
32502What in the world would happen to me?
32502What of it?
32502What should we do?
32502What was happening to her?
32502What would Mother think?
32502What''s that?"
32502What?
32502Where is Inger Johanne?"
32502Where is Petter?"
32502Whoever knew such a pickle as this?
32502Why in the world had n''t she come out?
32502Why should I have that clock?"
32502Will you come with me and make a waterfall?"
32502Wo n''t it be jolly?"
32502Would n''t he be strong enough for that?
32502Would we do this?
32502Would you believe it?
32502Yes, would n''t Nils Heia have done it that way?
32502You know Uncle Ferdinand?
32502You wo n''t be afraid, will you?"
32502really a charming plaything, my dear?"
32502what shall we do?"
33273Are you mad?
33273Come, Lucretia; what color will you wear to- night?
33273Does your lordship think my oath would be better, if I swore on your translation, which I disbelieve?
33273Had I not my books?
33273How is this? 33273 Is it possible,"said Josephine,"to be more amiable?
33273Is it to- night? 33273 Is the question,"she says,"to be whether we have one tyrant or a hundred?"
33273Is this the far- famed woman?
33273Shall I close the windows?
33273That child never walks,said the lady; then turning to her, she said,"Margaret, where are you flying now?"
33273What shall Lucy wear?
33273Where have you been, Lucretia?
33273Where, where is he?
33273Where? 33273 Where?"
33273Who are those persons?
33273''And do you wish me to write, mamma?
33273''Do you discover traces of happiness, or misfortune?''
33273''How many hearts have you?''
33273''Is that all?''
33273''Well, then, it must be Mademoiselle de Crequi?''
33273''What do I read?
33273''What is it affects you now, my child?''
33273''Why do you not at once name the persons of your household?''
33273''Why give it away?''
33273''Why not?''
33273''Why, do n''t you love walking?''
33273''Why,''said he, yesterday,''does not Madame de Stael attach herself to my government?
33273***''Well,''methinks I hear you say,''what is your daughter''s dress?''
33273Adams, have you got into your house?
33273And do the tuneful nine then touch the lyre, To fill each bosom with poetic fire?
33273And must I bid a long adieu, My dear, my infant home, to you?
33273And shall I never see thee more, My native lake, my much- loved shore?
33273And what, return you, has this to do with Picard?
33273And why on thy bosom reclines the bright tear?
33273B. is come with cheese, turnips,& c. Where are they to be put?''
33273But do you know what haymaking is?
33273But from a height whence all other dignities appear mean, how shall I distinguish real poverty?
33273But of what avail are intentions?
33273But wit and parts if thus we praise, What nobler altars shall we raise?
33273Can you picture to yourselves the palpitation of our hearts as we approached his mansion?
33273Come, good woman, what am I to hope or fear?''
33273Did I not warn you, my children, that it would come to this?
33273Did ever any kingdom or state regain its liberty, when once it was invaded, without bloodshed?
33273Do n''t you think Ludre resembles Andromeda?
33273Do you make the dresses first, and then write the play to suit them?"
33273For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?''
33273Has he not a right to kill me, if he suspects me of doing wrong?''"
33273Hast thou e''er felt a father''s warm embrace?
33273Hast thou e''er seen a father''s flowing tears, And known that thou couldst wipe those tears away?
33273Having ceased to be your wife, dare I felicitate you on becoming a father?
33273Her feelings on this occasion are thus made known by letter to her sister:"What think you?
33273How is dear father getting on in this rattling world?"
33273I forgot to ask the girl how she was;"and returned to the room, exclaiming,"How are you to- day, my poor child?"
33273I give you a trial of three times; do you give it up?
33273I have been brought up in this religion, and who might credit me in any thing if I should show myself light in this case?
33273I laughed at her grimaces, and allowed her to proceed, saying,''So you discover something extraordinary in my destiny?''
33273I looked over her shoulder, and read the following lines:--''What heavenly music strikes my ravished ear, So soft, so melancholy, and so clear?
33273I proposed several, among others M. de Schomberg; but, none of them meeting his favor, I said, with a laugh,''Well, then, what do you think of me?''
33273In short, what does she want?''"
33273In what does that talent consist?
33273Mother, do n''t you think I displayed some courage?
33273My curiosity was now awakened, and I said to her,''But tell me, what read you in futurity concerning me?''
33273My dear, I am a wicked creature; I was in a state of delight; and indeed what could have been better done?
33273O, say, amid this wilderness of life, What bosom would have throbbed like thine for me?
33273O, what shall I do?"
33273Or does some angel strike the sounding strings, Who caught from echo the wild note he sings?
33273Percy, dost thou know The cruel tyranny of tenderness?
33273Pray, how do you like the situation of it?''
33273Say, lovely one, say, why lingerest thou here?
33273Say, why, sweetest floweret, the last of thy race, Why lingerest thou here the lone garden to grace?
33273Shall I not see thee once again, My own, my beautiful Champlain?"
33273She calmly replied,''Is he not my husband?
33273She thus writes to her mother:"I am very wretched: am I never to hear from you again?
33273That look I never shall forget; it said,''Tell me, mother, is this death?''
33273The ambition of founding a new dynasty had found a place in the breast of the_ consul_: would not this increase in strength in that of the_ emperor_?
33273The following are the verses:--"And does a hero''s dust lie here?
33273The payment of the money due her father?
33273The poor man stared at her in astonishment, and she went on, yet louder,"Have you not heard, I say, that I am a woman of genius?"
33273To remain in Paris?
33273Was Mrs. Hemans designed but to serve her surly and unappreciating lord?
33273Well, and what then?
33273What course could the government have adopted of a milder character?
33273What does she want?
33273What have I done which can benefit one human being?"
33273What is their resource?
33273When will you get them?"
33273Where is the smile unfeigned, the jovial welcome, Which cheered the sad, beguiled the pilgrim''s pain, And made dependency forget its bonds?
33273Who would have fondly pressed my fevered lip, In all the agony of love and woe?
33273Who would have guarded, with a falcon eye, Each trembling footstep, or each sport of fear?
33273Who would have hung around my sleepless couch, And fanned, with anxious hand, my burning brow?
33273Who would have marked my bosom bounding high, And clasped me to her heart with love''s bright tear?
33273Who would have smiled responsive?
33273Who, in grief, Would e''er have felt and, feeling, grieved like thee?
33273Why lingerest thou here, when around thee are strown The flowers once so lovely, by autumn blasts blown?
33273Why must I torment you with these rhapsodies?
33273Will any one pretend that these persons would have better fulfilled their destiny, if confined to the quiet precincts of the fireside?
33273Will you proceed and say,''What wilt thou?''
33273You are aware that haymaking is going forward?
33273You know the queen''s toilet, the mass, and the dinner?
33273and will it be right that I should do so?''"
33273and will papa approve?
33273and''What is thy request?
33273did n''t I get angry?
33273how could you treat me so?
33273or could any thing be better calculated to soothe whatever might be painful in my thoughts at this moment, did I not so ardently love the emperor?
33273said Madame de D."What, is it possible that you do not know the Viscountess Beauharnais?"
33273said the duchess eagerly:''is, then, Madame de Beauharnais to have a better?''
33273she says;"was I no longer myself?
32240A message from the enemy; p''raps he''s goin''to Surrender unconditionally-- ain''t that the way they always put it?
32240Ai n''t you goin''to get me out?
32240Am I correct, Bob?
32240An''yuh kim''way down this away jest tuh climb the mountings, an''see wot yuh cud do acampin''out without ary tents er blankets, did yuh?
32240And I hope you read what we wrote, Phin Dady?
32240And did he tell you; could he speak still, and explain?
32240And does she know about you coming down here?
32240And if it_ should_ turn out to be my poor father, wo n''t you try and help me get him free? 32240 And so that''s the way old hunters tell the time at night, do they?
32240And unless I miss my guess, Polly here is going to give you another pleasant little surprise; ai n''t you, Polly?
32240And was you arunnin''like fun all the while?
32240And will you help me find out?
32240Are we getting anywhere close to the place you said old Reuben lived at, Bob?
32240Are you going to let me go free, Phin Dady?
32240As what?
32240But I hope you''re not going so far, Thad, as to keep us from having our regular camp- fire?
32240But Polly, you_ could_ see him if you tried real hard, could n''t you?
32240But did you get close enough to him to say a single word, Polly-- just to ask him who he was?
32240But how in the wide world c''n I tell whose hat it is, Thad?
32240But surely you would n''t think of changing your mind now?
32240But what did you do; do n''t tell us you beat a big dog runnin''?
32240But whoever started it rolling?
32240Ca n''t a feller-- just stroll around camp-- without some silly putting out a foot, and tripping him up? 32240 Could it have been Old Phin?"
32240D''ye mean thet ye do n''t hold no grudge agin me foh what I done tuh ye?
32240D''ye reckon he''ll take our word for it; or believe it''s only one more clever dodge of the revenue men to get him when he''s napping?
32240DID anybody happen to see my knapsack around?
32240Did she do what you asked her?
32240Did you hear what Nate called the wounded man, Thad, Allan?
32240Did you see how many times I bowled the thing over, and only to have to defend myself again? 32240 Did yuh git him?"
32240Do you know who he was?
32240Do you live near here; and will you be able to limp home?
32240Do you think you could hold on with one arm, and get the other through the loop?
32240Got off pretty slick that time, eh, Davy?
32240Had you done anything to the cat; or was it just crazy for a fight?
32240He do n''t know what to make of us, seems like?
32240Hey, would you see how fine a fire- tender that Giraffe is; it''s gone clean out, that''s what?
32240How about that, Bob?
32240How about that, Bumpus; was he an old man with a gray beard?
32240How about that, Mr. Scoutmaster; is Step entitled to wear his badge that way, on account of helping that silly little bug climb his mountain?
32240How are you, boys?
32240How is it, Davy?
32240How''d it do for Giraffe here to stay behind, and watch to see if that feller back of the rock pile gets the letter?
32240I ca n''t find my hat, and that''s what?
32240I hope that foot wo n''t keep you from walking?
32240I leave it to the crowd if I was n''t only obeyin''orders? 32240 I reckon you stayed so long tryin''to convince her, Bob, that you clean forgot how you''d promised to get back here as soon as you could?"
32240I see; and of course you jumped to the conclusion that it might be your own father, alive and well, though held a prisoner of the moonshiners?
32240I wonder now, what is being carried along the lines? 32240 I wonder, now, just how far down I''d have had to go, if you had n''t been clever enough to grab me just in time?"
32240If a bobcat jumped in on us right now, we''d think of using our gun, would n''t we? 32240 If it do n''t just beat the Dutch what happens to me?"
32240If these mountaineers begin to get bothersome it might interfere some with that other little affair you spoke about?
32240If you''d care to see how it''s done, why, we can walk out, and watch the scout who has the lantern?
32240Is that the way you obey orders?
32240It may work for good, who knows?
32240It must be after the time we set, is n''t it, Thad?
32240It_ was_ great luck, our running across Polly; and then the chance to do her a favor, could you beat it? 32240 Just hear how that sucks, will you, when I work my foot up and down?
32240Look at Thad, would you?
32240Look at the crowd, would you?
32240My father?
32240Never knew me to miss doin''that, did you, Step Hen?
32240No relation of yours, I hope, then, Bob?
32240Nothing could be easier, if only you''d put your mind to it, and think, Bob?
32240Now, what in the wide world d''ye think they''re going to do?
32240Put yourself in my place, and tell me what you would do if it was your own father who was held a prisoner, and you had long believed him dead? 32240 SHALL we go back the same way we came up?"
32240Say, is that the way to treat a fellow you all have known so long? 32240 Say, what kind of natives do you have down here, Bob White?"
32240Shall we take this kind advice, and go back, boys?
32240So far we have n''t seen the first sign of a living thing?
32240So you made pretty warm time of it over here, eh?
32240So, thet''s it, younker, is it?
32240Suppose you look in that bunch of grass, and find out if the little evil spirit that''s playing all these pranks on you is lying there?
32240Suppose, then, she brings you that paper, and it turns out to be all you hope for? 32240 Sure you saw a man, are you, Bumpus?"
32240Thad, you say?
32240That''s across the valley, Bob?
32240Then I take it that this Reuben Sparks does not live a great way beyond where we happen to be camped right now?
32240Then you did talk with Bob?
32240Then you saw your cousin, and got the paper?
32240There, Step Hen, what did I tell you?
32240Twa''n''t a rolling stone, now, I take it? 32240 Was your cousin at the place you told her about?"
32240Well, what d''ye think I''ve got eyes for, if I do n''t know a biped when I see one?
32240Well, will wonders ever stop happening?
32240Well, would you blame him, when he was listening to such an interesting story as the one I had to tell?
32240Were you and your mother living near here all that time, Bob?
32240What are you thinking about, Bob White; you look as sober as though you did n''t just like the looks of things any too much?
32240What can be done for him, Allan?
32240What did Bob have to tell?
32240What did I tell you, fellows, about not missing Dr. Philander Hobbs, our regular scoutmaster, on this hike? 32240 What did you learn?"
32240What did you think of him, Thad?
32240What does she say, Thad?
32240What had I ought to do, Allan?
32240What happened to him? 32240 What sort of-- horse play d''ye call that-- I''d like to know?"
32240What wonderful stunt did you manage to carry through so early in the day, down in this forsaken country?
32240What you goin''to do to me?
32240What''s an old hat after all, to kick up such a row over it? 32240 What''s gone this time?"
32240What''s he taking out of that crack in the rock?
32240What''s that up yonder; looks to me like a torch moving?
32240What''s that?
32240What''s the matter now, Step Hen?
32240Whatever are you looking for now, you poor silly thing?
32240Whatever loosened it, d''ye s''pose?
32240When can I see you again, Polly?
32240Where''s Bob?
32240Where?
32240Who strapped that to my back?
32240Who''ll go down, and yank him on to that tree?
32240Why not?
32240Will you take a little stroll around with me before lying down?
32240Will you tell your father about this, Polly?
32240Wonder how our real scoutmaster, Dr. Philander Hobbs''d like to take the job?
32240Yes, I guessed that the first thing; and I suppose you mean he''d feel angry some if he saw two fellows in uniform following his trail?
32240Yes, and was he pleased when he heard that, Polly?
32240Yes, as modest as a spring violet,sang out Step Hen;"but how about that President Cornelius Jasper Hawtree business?
32240Yes?
32240You can see, Thad, that from where he lies he has a splendid view of the road we came over?
32240You could see that too, could you, suh?
32240You do n''t really think he''d go as far as to strike her, do you?
32240You do n''t think now, do you,demanded the other,"that Old Phin might take a notion to waylay him, just to have a look at the eighth scout?"
32240You hear what they say, Bob White?
32240You mean part of the hillside caved away?
32240You mean that Bertha has looked, and made a discovery among the papers in her guardian''s safe; is that it, Thad?
32240You say you feel thankful that we happened along in time to drive that cat off; and you''d be willing to do something for us in return?
32240Yuh war sayin''right now, thet these hyar byes hain''t never''xpectin''ter be sojers; an''thet they do n''t kerry arms; air thet a fack?
32240Ai n''t it lucky he c''n stretch his neck so far?
32240An''he''vited yer pal over ter see him, did he, so''s ter tell him a heap more?"
32240And I guess you''ve heard it before, judging from the way you act?"
32240And Smithy, will you hand me that stick yonder?"
32240And say, do I limp when I walk, because I''m feeling a little sore?"
32240And what''s supper, without a cup of coffee?"
32240Anybody got two hats on?"
32240Anybody seen my cap around; my hair stood up on end with the scare, and I must have dropped it?
32240Besides, did they not know that both Bob and his father would be fairly wild to hasten to the waiting mother and wife in that Northern home?
32240But I see you''ve got your badge right- side up to- day, all to the good, Step Hen; what wonderful stunt have you been pulling off now?"
32240But I wonder what they_ do_ mean to do?"
32240But Polly, you talked with him, did n''t you?"
32240But how were they going to get down to the faraway camp?
32240But if it should, perhaps you''ve seen how I did the job, and you could fix it up again?"
32240But may I ask why you put that question to me, Bumpus?"
32240But what under the sun was it hit us?"
32240But will it go straight; that''s the question?"
32240D''ye think now, he could have said all that one- half as good as Thad did?
32240Did n''t you call out to me to come down?
32240Do you know if that is so?
32240Do you see him now, Bob?"
32240Do_ you_ know anything about my knapsack, Giraffe?"
32240Does it pay to try and make speed at such a terrible risk?"
32240Eight thar was; whar be the other right now?"
32240Had he then determined to wait for the return of the eighth scout?
32240How about that, Bob?"
32240How about that, Davy?"
32240How about that, fellows?"
32240How could it be done, Allan?"
32240How''re you goin''to fix it, Allan?
32240How''s that, Thad?"
32240I wonder if this meeting is only an accident; or was guided by the hand of fate?"
32240I wonder what it was, fellows?"
32240I''m hungry, fellers; who says grub?"
32240If it was Giraffe now--""Here, you just let up on Giraffe, and pay attention to what Allan''s goin''to tell you; hear?"
32240Is that it, Bob?"
32240It''d be a great stunt, Thad, if we could read the signs, and listen to the talk, would n''t it?
32240Now do you see?"
32240Now, are we going on again, since we''ve left our wonderful message for Old Phin?"
32240Or it could n''t have been a frisky little''coon''or''possum,''I suppose?"
32240Perhaps you have heard your father speak of them?
32240Polly, however can I thank you?"
32240Ready to make it again?
32240Remember that man we saw sitting on the rock with his gun between his knees?
32240Savvy?"
32240Shall we go back to camp now, Thad?"
32240Some of you scouts ought to take pattern from the smartness of that little girl; do n''t you think so, Thad?"
32240Take a drop, wo n''t you, please?"
32240Tell me that, now?"
32240Thet''s what I went up thar fur, ai n''t it?"
32240They get more and more interesting the deeper you dip in; ai n''t that so, Thad?"
32240Was he shot?
32240We''ve never had a President Hawtree; but that ai n''t no reason we never will, is it?
32240Well, did n''t I?"
32240What d''ye s''pose they could find to shoot at in the dark?"
32240What d''ye suppose makes a smart scamp like that ever do such a silly thing?"
32240What if Polly should n''t be on hand?
32240What ye want me to do?"
32240What''s the need of carrying such a thing, if it ca n''t help us out in a pinch?"
32240Where would Reuben have been if he''d stayed there?
32240Where''d you get this old thing, anyhow, Giraffe?"
32240Who would n''t make an extra effort for that?"
32240Whoever heard of a Southern boy unwilling to act in similar circumstances?
32240Will Phin Dady let him go free if he makes that promise, Polly?"
32240Will you help me do it?"
32240Wonder what they find to talk about?"
32240Would Bertha meet him; or might she have been shut up in the house by her guardian, stern Reuben Sparks?
32240Would Mr. Quail, who must be weak on account of having been kept in the cavern so long, be able to stand the rough trip?
32240Would he never go?
32240Would you blame me, Polly?"
32240You have n''t forgotten that terrible time, Polly, have you?"
32240You''ve heard more or less about this, too, have n''t you, Polly?"
32240ai n''t that the moonshiner we heard so much about over in Asheville?"
32240are you there, old sobersides?"
32240did you see him kick his heels at us as he went down?"
32240is he smashed flatter''n a pancake?"
32240listen to that, would you?"
32240shouted Giraffe, waving his long arms;"do n''t you hear what Allan says?
32240tell me you''uns, whar be the other one?
32240what d''ye think that means?"
31125Christ''s message,''Peace on earth, good will to men''--what has it done and what does it mean after nineteen centuries?
31125Could n''t the employers of the bricklayers have bribed the editors?
31125Did they ridicule and denounce the bricklayers?
31125Do you know the world is a blank to me?
31125Do you pray?
31125Does Wifehood Preclude Citizenship?
31125How many less children have you now than ten years ago?
31125In love?
31125Like the Howard Mission?
31125Now ca n''t you come to our Kansas City Inter- State Convention? 31125 Redeem it from what?"
31125The Evolution of the Home;"The Family and the State;"Shall We Co- operate?
31125Then you do n''t find life tiresome?
31125What could have made the difference? 31125 What did they say about you?"
31125What do I think of marriage? 31125 What do you think the new woman will be?"
31125What is most needed to ensure the future greatness of the empire?
31125What is your favorite hymn or ballad?
31125What thanks did you receive for the stand you made?
31125What then do you think made this difference?
31125What would you call woman''s best attribute?
31125What''s your favorite motto, or have you one?
31125Why has it been so understood? 31125 Why, Miss Anthony, do you mean that you would actually turn the home of this old family into an orphan asylum?"
31125Would it not be a practical work, then, to make it possible for every mother to support her own children? 31125 You saw the Queen, I suppose?"
31125A.?"
31125Again one inquired,"Did you not grow discouraged in those olden times?"
31125All we ever have asked is simply,"Do you believe in perfect equality for women?"
31125And is not this the precise condition of what men call the"better half"of the human family?
31125And later:"Do any of my wails reach you?
31125And then a few days later:"Have I killed you outright?
31125And what was his offense?
31125And who can give the reason why the sister''s opinion should be ignored and the brother''s honored?...
31125Anna?
31125Are you going to leave your mothers, wives and sisters in that category?
31125At the close of Mrs. Hooker''s verses entitled"Should Auld Acquaintance be Forgot?"
31125Bless the Republicans for slapping us in the face, and blast the Populists for giving us a helping hand?
31125But how could they without finding themselves, as a result, penniless and homeless?
31125But should the Republicans refuse to insert the plank on June 6 and the Populists put a good solid one in their platform on June 12, what then?
31125But suppose there were plenty of money, and there could be a most thorough fall campaign, what then?
31125But who should do it?
31125But, you say, why do you not go to your several States to secure this right?
31125Can it be that she is gone in the very prime of her womanhood?
31125Can we get 5,000 or 10,000 to send on their postals?
31125Can we summon the women from the vasty deeps-- or distances?
31125Could any pen give an adequate idea of the amount of work accomplished by that tireless brain and those never- resting hands?
31125Did the law of supply and demand regulate work and wages in the olden days of slavery?
31125Did we banish Mrs. Rose?
31125Do n''t you see that for Anthony to head the fray, preside and be general master of ceremonies, would reduce it to a mere mutual admiration affair?
31125Do the petitions still come in?
31125Do you mean so satisfy me that I would work, and recommend all women to work, for the success of the Third party ticket?
31125Do you mean to repeat the experiment of 1867?
31125Do you see that they are all Mrs. John and Mrs. George and Mrs. William this and that?
31125Do you suppose all the women in the State would shout for the Republicans and against the Populists?
31125Does any lawyer doubt my statement of the legal status of married women?
31125Dying?
31125Finally a gentleman asked,"Do n''t you want those children taken out?"
31125For instance, a man charged some twenty francs for a shell comb, then came down to seven, six, five, and finally asked,"What will you give?"
31125For what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
31125For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
31125Had we the right to vote, do you suppose we should have to plead in vain before the two parties to place women in nomination for the school board?
31125Have I told you that I have a new dark garnet velvet?
31125Have you ever spoken in Albany before the legislature?
31125Have you ever spoken in Washington before Congress?
31125Have you formed any resolutions for the coming year, and what has been the fate of former New Year''s resolutions?"
31125How are we going to reach the other five- sixths of the men who never come to women''s meetings?
31125How can the State deny or abridge the right of the citizen, if the citizen does not possess it?
31125How could_ four_ million negroes be made voters if two million out of the four were women?
31125How does the plan strike you?
31125How is that by the side of our old farm harvest of 1,000 trees?
31125How long do you think our streets would be infested with men walking up and down seeking whom they might devour, and with women doing the same?
31125How many lectures delivered?
31125How many people would you think you had addressed in your lifetime?"
31125How many thousands of appeals and documents have you had printed and how many have you sent out?
31125I almost would be willing to postpone the enfranchisement of women to see Cuba free....""Do you believe in immortality?"
31125I ask you, therefore, for the sake of your own question, do you think it wise to pick my apples now?
31125If her presence is comforting, why do n''t you ask her to stay with you till the wee one arrives?
31125If men possessing the power of the ballot are driven to desperate means to gain their ends, what shall be done by disfranchised women?
31125If no one writes up his own times, where are the materials for the history of the future?"
31125If such civil government as we have was made by God, what reason is there to expect any improvement in the future?
31125If they could, do you for a moment believe they would take the subordinate places and the inferior pay?
31125If this is true of a naturalized woman, is it not equally true of one who is native born?
31125In an interview in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle she is thus reported:"Did you have anything to do with the new Bible, Miss Anthony?"
31125In the oft- repeated experiments of class and caste, who can number the nations that have risen but to fall?
31125Is a woman both great and good?
31125Is a woman great?
31125Is anything further needed to prove woman''s condition of servitude sufficient to entitle her to the guarantees of the Fifteenth Amendment?
31125Is it not a little remarkable that no matter who the class may be that it is proposed to enfranchise, the objections are always the same?
31125Is n''t it discouraging?
31125Is n''t such a position humiliating enough to be called"servitude?"
31125Is n''t that fair?
31125Is not that slavery under a new form?
31125Is not that your intention?
31125Is not the only amendment needed to Article 1, Section 3, to strike out the exceptions which follow"respective numbers?"
31125Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens?
31125Is there an example in all history of either man or woman who devoted half a century of the hardest, most persistent labor for one reform?
31125Is there any hope?"
31125Letter after letter came asking,''Is there no way by which we can get Miss Anthony?''"
31125Many said, as they grasped her hand:"You''re going to be a Populist now, ai n''t you?"
31125Now what have we?
31125Now, since this is the"long session,"will you not take hold of this work, and with the same earnestness that you do other questions?
31125Now, will you not set about in good earnest to secure the enfranchisement of woman?
31125October 2.--Reached St. Louis at 8 A. M. As I was looking for my trunk I heard some one cry out,"Is that you, Susan?"
31125On what principle, then, do you deny her representation?
31125On whose shoulders will fall the mantle of Wendell Phillips?
31125Or do you mean the least that I think it should say for its own sake?
31125Our audiences have been five- sixths women, and the one man out of the six, who was he?
31125Please ma''am, why did I know nothing of your reception till it was all over?
31125She answered him politely but at length he asked:"If the negroes do n''t like it in the South, why do n''t they leave and go North?"
31125She laughed as she took off her glasses, leaned back in her chair and asked,"Where shall I begin?"
31125Should we not wonder, rather, that so many escape the sad fate?
31125Stanton?''
31125The man good- naturedly replied,"Where will you have it sent?"
31125The only question left to be settled now is: Are women persons?
31125The people tried to hush him, but soon he broke out again with,"We''ve had''nuf of England; ca n''t you tell''s somethin''''bout our grand republic?"
31125The tree- trunks were not larger than my arm and I exclaimed,"How many peaches can you get off these little trees?"
31125The women who have come into the work in late years continually ask,"How have you borne it so long?"
31125The''Woman''s Bible''a hindrance to organization?
31125This being the case, why did Mr. Goodelle not favor its being submitted to the voters of the State in order that they might decide?
31125Time?
31125To this Miss Anthony replied: What is the full significance of"would satisfy you?"
31125Under this in her scrap- book Miss Anthony wrote,"Does n''t this cap the climax?"
31125Was it because the honorable gentlemen had no respect for those women or their demand?
31125Were you ever in love?"
31125What can I say to the women who have the franchise?
31125What could she write?
31125What does the good Book say?
31125What is a slave?
31125What is servitude?
31125What is woman''s ideal existence and what woman has most nearly attained it?
31125What is''gospel suffrage?''
31125What of it?
31125What privilege or immunity has California or Oregon the right to deny them, save that of the ballot?
31125What then could the women infer but that such action meant political help in carrying this amendment?
31125What was the result of all this expenditure of time, labor and money?
31125What will be its next message to us?"
31125What wonder men despise us as a shallow lot of simpletons, if we are deceived by so thin a pretense as this?
31125What would my mother have said?
31125What would our friends have had us do?
31125When will the children of men ever listen to such a matchless voice?
31125When you propose legislation so fatal to the best interests of woman and the nation, shall we be silent until after the deed is done?
31125Where else could they go to get that balance?
31125Where would you ever expect to find a majority more ready to grant to women equal rights than among those old Free State men?
31125White labor and the freed black men had their champions, but where are ours?"
31125Who are the men that come to our women''s meetings?
31125Who came this day?
31125Who can tell now whether these commentaries may not prove a great help to woman''s emancipation from old superstitions which have barred its way?
31125Who is to draw the line?
31125Who will send the next$ 100?
31125Why can not we keep with us the brave and beautiful souls; why can not the weak and wicked go?
31125Why do not the Republicans push this question?
31125Why is it that you never set yourself about some practical work?"
31125Why not describe its initiative steps?
31125Why was their prayer unheeded?
31125Why were they treated with ridicule and contempt?
31125Why, or why not?"
31125Why?
31125Will it now attempt to sneak out of the responsibility and go back on its past record?
31125Will you come?
31125Will you please tell me what is your highest ideal of the woman of the future?"
31125Will you, as my friend and Mrs. Eddy''s, ever feel free to suggest and advise me as to a wise use thereof?
31125Would n''t that tell the story of the interest in this question?
31125Would she accept a"reception"from the Scribblers''Club of Buffalo?
31125Would she please reply to the following questions, from various newspapers:"Have not women as many rights now as men have?
31125Would she send a package of documents to the girls of Vassar College, who were going to debate woman suffrage?
31125You remember the petition of 18,000 of the best women of Chicago, a year ago, asking the common council not to repeal the Sunday Liquor Law?
31125[ 109] One number of the program is,''What is woman''s part in this larger synthesis,''or''What can woman do for liberal religion?''
31125[ 131] Neither was there any limit to the newspaper requests for opinions, such as,"Do you favor the use of birds for personal adornment?
31125after all these years has it come to this?
31125for the New York World;"If you had$ 1,000,000 what would you do with it?"
31125for the Y. M. C. A. paper of Chicago;"What Should the President''s Message Say?"
31125how can we reform the world æsthetically?"
31125how soon must that be?
31125party but has laid no straw in way of negro, 315; tribute by Mrs. Livermore, at New York Press Club speaks on"Why do n''t women propose?"
31125to mother, love of family,"shall we meet the dead?"
35243Ca n''t I keep score just as well without paper?
35243Do n''t you think Wiltse looks just like my brother?
35243Has n''t that Indian got a fine face?
35243How can we tell, when it''s over, who wins?
35243Is n''t she sweet?
35243Is n''t that Matty, that little boy there? 35243 Is n''t this grand?
35243Is this where Mathewson lives?
35243Know Ty Cobb? 35243 What do they mean when they yell at each other?"
35243What is the matter? 35243 Which is the umpire?
35243Why do they throw to that man on first base?
35243Why does that man wear those things on his shins?
35243As in the sun she serenely basked A rooter sitting beside her asked:"How did you come to get away?"
35243Did he falter and flinch?
35243Do you think you will play when your hair turns gray?
35243Is he dead?
35243Is it over so soon?"
35243Matty a pitcher?
35243Matty a pitcher?
35243Matty a pitcher?
35243Now I''m released-- you hear me?
35243One day when a hit meant a pennant Our"Yellow"came up to the bat; Did he quit in the pinch?
35243POLO IN ARIZONA"How are you, pal?"
35243THE BIG LEAGUE You want to play in the Big League, boy?
35243Tell me, George, please, And what do they mean when they call him a cheese?"
35243The captains used to toss a bat, and then, hand over hand-- But why repeat a story every boy must understand?
35243Well, yes, he may be, But where in the world is a pitcher like me?
35243Well, yes, he may be, But where in the world is a pitcher like me?
35243Well, yes, he may be, But where in the world is a pitcher like me?
35243What-- that''s the bat boy?
35243Where does an umpire live?
35243Why do n''t you fire this Marquard?"
35243Yankees?
35243You ask me that?
35243You ask me that?
35243You want to play in the Big League, boy?
35844Nicholas of Guildford),_ The Land of Cockayne_(?
35844Richard Poor, died 1237),_ The Owl and the Nightingale_(?
35068Are the trains going to be stopped?
35068Has Germany declared yet?
35068How about money? 35068 How can I send a letter to my husband in Germany?"
35068Is England going into it?
35068Is there going to be a war?
35068Let me in this, will you?
35068Will all Americans be ordered home?
35068Will we be safe in Switzerland?
35068Will we have to have passports?
35068_ Encore?_I said.
35068And the Swiss prosperity, and the medical practice, and the sciences?
35068And the old car-- that to us had always seemed to have a personality and sentience-- had it been dreaming, too?
35068And what of the rest of Europe?
35068And what of their positions in America?
35068And why a dog?
35068Any questions, please?
35068Are the Swiss banks going to stop payment on letters of credit?"
35068But what would be done with them later?
35068Could they ship all those cherries north and sell them?
35068Do their occupants have traditional rights from some vague time without date?
35068Do they pay rent, and to whom?
35068Furthermore, concerning the color chosen for profane use-- why blue?
35068He looked intelligent, too, and as a last resort I said:"''Could you, by any chance, tell me the name of the Swiss President?''
35068How can the French afford those roads-- how can they pay for them and keep them in condition?
35068How can they afford to keep it here?
35068How can they afford to maintain such a road through that sterile land?
35068How could Bonny, a mere village, ever have built a church like that-- a church that to- day would cost a million dollars?
35068How could they give a dinner like that, and a good bed, and coffee and rolls with jam next morning, all for four francs-- that is, eighty cents, each?
35068Keats( I think it was Keats, or was it Carolyn Wells?)
35068Mistral[ sa mère] eut une idée._"''_ Si nous faisons tapisser et plafonner ta chambre?''
35068Narcissa asked,"How would you get the car up there?"
35068Often we said as we drove along,"What little hotel do you suppose is waiting for us to- night?"
35068So I picked out a bright- looking subject, and said:"''What is the name of the Swiss President?''
35068What did the barbarians do there-- those hordes that swarmed in and trampled Rome?
35068What would you do then?"
35068Will the ships be running then?"
35068Would I go again, under the same conditions?
35068[ 11] The German Kaiser, once reviewing the Swiss troops, remarked, casually, to a sub- officer,"You say you could muster half a million soldiers?"
34938Who''s there?
34938You know old Farmer Simpson out on the Plank Road?
34938''Why not?''
34938''Why,''he asks,''have they thus taken possession of the citadel?''
34938Ambassador Bryce was asked, two years ago, to deliver an address before Phi Beta Kappa at Harvard, and took for his subject"What is Progress?"
34938And the brother pathologist on the left side:"Well, and what shall we say of intestinal auto- intoxication?"
34938Are your blandishments more seductive in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than your own?"
34938But what concern, her opponent asks, can women have with war, who contribute nothing to its dangers and hardships?
34938Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home?
34938Do you agree with me thus far?"
34938For reflect if women are not to have the education of men some other must be found for them, and what other can we propose?"
34938For reflect-- if women are not to have the education of men some other must be found for them, and what other can we propose?"
34938How is it actually?
34938How is it that America was discovered at least twice, probably oftener, before Columbus''time, and yet his was a real discovery?
34938How is it, indeed, that there are many discoveries and rediscoveries of the same principle in science?
34938Is it any wonder that the ordinary non- New- England American"gets hot under the collar"for his countrymen under such circumstances?
34938Is it any wonder that this breeds discontent?
34938Is it possible that he knew something of the physical, or let us rather say, the pathological dangers of the vice?
34938Is there anything that we know about them that will help us to account for them?
34938Now it is with regard to this period that it is fair to ask the question, What was the attitude of the Church toward education?
34938She puts the question, however, just as we have all seen it put by a modern actress,--''will this house agree to it?''
34938Stobaeus relates the story of a student who, having learned the first theorem, asked"but what shall I make by learning these things?"
34938The dear old Mother Superior, who had known me for many years, ventured to ask me afterwards,"Did you say that she was young?"
34938What about feminine education at the time of this great new awakening of educational purpose throughout Europe?
34938What is it that hath been done?
34938What is the reason for these waxings and wanings?
34938What is to be said, then, of a nation that erects public buildings that are to be merely useful?
34938What was the standard of admission to the medical schools, how many years of medical studies were required?
34938What will they not attempt if they win this victory?
34938What, then, must have been the hospital buildings of centuries ago?
34938Whence, then, comes the idea of progress?
34938Why, then, should he not have done things in the olden time just about as he does them now?
34938Will you give the reins to their untractable nature and their uncontrolled passions?
34938Will you remember that when you, too, have a puzzling case?
34938and I said yes, according to the tradition;"and handsome?"
34938{ 60}{ 61} THE FIRST MODERN UNIVERSITY{ 62}"What is it that hath been?
33451Am I the only passenger?
33451And the King?
33451And what becomes of all these that he drops into the basket?
33451But does he not read the poems before he rejects them?
33451But were you not aware--"Of what?
33451But what do you want with her? 33451 Ca n''t you say, God be merciful to me a sinner?"
33451Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased?
33451Dare, is it, De Berniers? 33451 Did you ever,"said the cicerone after we had left the building,"hear such music as that?"
33451For ten louis?
33451How can we manage to get an impartial judgment?
33451I ask no ampler skies than those His magic music vaults above me, No falser friends, no truer foes,-- And does not Doña Clara love me? 33451 In what respect?"
33451Is all this from real life?
33451Is he mad?
33451Is it a wager, then?
33451Is it possible?
33451M. de Montalvan, you love my niece?
33451O yes, but do you call that praying?
33451Shall I try the other publishers?
33451Tell me, how does she look?
33451Tell me,said Gifted,"what are these papers, and who is he that looks upon them and drops them into the basket?"
33451That I was ordered to accompany M. de Richelieu to Port Mahon?
33451Then why not leave off your fighting dress?
33451These buttercups shall brim with wine Beyond all Lesbian juice or Massic; May not New England be divine? 33451 What boot your many- volumed gains, Those withered leaves forever turning, To win, at best, for all your pains, A nature mummy- wrapped in learning?
33451What disposition had you thought of making of them?
33451What light is here, in what new beauty drest?
33451Why should I stay longer below? 33451 Will you leave us here to die?
33451You decline?
33451_ What_, Mr. Gridley? 33451 Am I to understand, Monsieur,said the Count, addressing De Montalvan,"that my niece has indicated a preference for you over this gentleman?"
33451An imploring cry comes up from the hearts of thousands,"What shall we do to be saved-- from work?"
33451And the Pompadour?"
33451And the theatres?"
33451And what kind of work is the least irksome and the most respectable?"
33451And what was their reward for this forward and spirited enterprise,--for the reduction of this American Dunkirk?
33451Are you on the watch for adventure?"
33451As we gazed at his little form in the coffin, with the flag he died for laid across his snowy shroud, that impressive, mysterious"Why?"
33451By and by, perhaps, we can work you into our series of poets; but the best pears ripen slowly, and so with genius.--Where shall I send the volumes?"
33451Ca n''t I do everything for you?"
33451Did their compensatory advantages balance to any extent the rude and stern conditions of their existence?
33451Did you ever think of that?
33451Do you eat a cheese before you buy it?"
33451Do you know a good article of brown sugar when you see it?"
33451Do you know the reality?
33451Do you see that sluggard, wasting this beautiful day in a lazy_ brouette_?
33451Festive,--hey?
33451Gifted Hopkins?
33451Gridley?--Professor Byles Gridley,--author of''Thoughts on the Universe''?"
33451Had not a new epoch arrived in the relative position of the United States toward Europe, which Europe must acknowledge?
33451Have you the means to pay for your journey and your stay at a city hotel?"
33451Her curiosity being excited, she inquired,"What have you here, John?"
33451Here brothers, sons, and husbands, Poor and hopeless, captured lie: O ye who yet can save them, Will you leave us here to die?
33451How could she meet M. de Montalvan in that dress?
33451How much dress and how much light can a woman bear?
33451If France occupied Spain, was it necessary, in order to avoid the consequences of that occupation, that we should blockade Cadiz?
33451If it is so perfect,--is the natural inquiry,--why not let it alone?
33451If, on the other hand,--do you see?"
33451Is he really as gallant in the field as in the boudoir?"
33451Is there no reward to be imagined for a delightful book that can match Browning''s fantastic burial of a tedious one?
33451Is this the way that genius is welcomed to the world of letters?"
33451It was only in 1787 that Clarkson obtained the prize for the best Latin essay on the question,"Is it right to make men slaves against their will?"
33451Just as I closed his eyes, and while he ceased to breathe, the band struck up the strain,"Do they miss me at home?"
33451K.?"
33451Let_ me_ see him!--Hopkins?
33451Make him declare his passion, if you can; and perhaps we may bring him to the point-- who knows?
33451Mariotte, do me justice; do you think it was for nothing that I used to dress with such double, triple care for the last few court balls at Paris?"
33451May I take the liberty to ask your-- profession?"
33451My ode to ripening Summer, classic?
33451No?
33451Now, in prisons drear we languish, And it is our constant cry, O ye who yet can save us, Will you leave us here to die?
33451Or that,"Where shall we keep the holiday, And duly greet the entering May?"
33451Others might have wealth and beauty, he thought to himself, but what were these to the gift of genius?
33451Shall I read you the poems referred to in the one you have just heard, sir?"
33451The Queen?"
33451The cicerone was not to be silenced even with such a tribute, and he went on:--"Perhaps, as you are Americans, you know Moshu Feelmore, the President?
33451Then, checking himself, he added, more composedly:"But why should I quarrel with Fronsacquin?
33451There seemed to be remarks and questionings going on, which he supposed to be something like the following:-- Which is it?
33451Trust my poems, some of which are unpublished, to the post- office?
33451Virginie?"
33451Was nothing then to be done?
33451Was their destruction a foredoomed conclusion, a calculated purpose, an acknowledged necessity from the first?
33451We do not know where we should match that strain beginning,"Why chidest thou the tardy spring?"
33451We have tried to do our duty In the sight of God on high: O ye who yet can save us, Will you leave us here to die?
33451Were the Indians in the way of self- development, working upwards to intelligent improvement in their means and ways of life?
33451What are titles, where things themselves are known and understood?
33451What could add to this?
33451What title did the Republic of Rome take?
33451When will this fruit be ripe?
33451Where now is that old man?
33451Which is it?--Why, that one, there,--that young fellow,--don''t you see?--What young fellow are you two looking at?
33451Who is he?
33451Why ca n''t you go over to the shop and make''em trot her out?"
33451Why ca n''t you make her acquaintance and be civil to her?
33451Why can I not float with thee at thy call?
33451Why do n''t you send your manuscript by mail?"
33451Why should not the coming question announce itself by stirring in the pulses and thrilling in the nerves of the descendant of all these grandmothers?
33451Why should one so pure and innocent be called to offer his young life in a struggle for which he was in no manner responsible?
33451Why was she silent then, why dropped my hand Ere those delicious tones could quite avail To bid my mortal soul in heaven remain?
33451Will you come?"
33451With the world thus young, beauty eternal, fancy free, why should these delicious Italian pages exist but to be tortured into grammatical examples?
33451Would Ma''m''selle wish to put them on?"
33451Would they have retained their heritage here up to this day, had the white man never come among them?
33451You are in independent circumstances, perhaps?
33451_ Gray._"Shall I read you some of the rhymed pieces first, or some of the blank- verse poems, sir?"
33451_ Was_ this the steamer for Venice?
33451said M. de Montalvan in some surprise, which, however, the other did not observe;"do you know her?"
31507''What is the most important of the United States?'' 31507 Ai n''t there?"
31507Amy, not really? 31507 And I think we''re beginning to see daylight, do n''t you?"
31507And at home, too? 31507 And did you really pick them all to- day?"
31507And what about me?
31507And what had he stolen?
31507And what if I should drive into a gully and spill them out? 31507 And you mean that you''ve been in the garret all these hours?"
31507And you''ll come to- morrow?
31507Are n''t they any better?
31507Are n''t you coming, Amy?
31507Are you Jerry Morton?
31507Are you responsible for all this? 31507 As long as it''s Fourth of July, would n''t it be nice to sing some patriotic songs?
31507As long as this is a sort of Betsy Ross flag, why not have thirteen stars, just as she had?
31507Aunt Peggy, if I should see a bear up in the country, do you s''pose I''d be''fraid? 31507 Aunt Peggy, what makes you call a mousie a goose?"
31507Aunt Peggy,she inquired gravely,"did you ever see a mousie with an umbrella?"
31507But I really hope-- Why, Peggy, what''s the matter?
31507But where can they be?
31507But where could we give it, Peggy?
31507But, Aunt Peggy, what d''you s''pose those little angels have done now? 31507 But, Jerry, what would gypsies want with an old lady like Aunt Abigail?
31507But, Peggy, what could we do?
31507But, do n''t you see,Claire leaned toward her and spoke rapidly,"it ca n''t take the place of strolling through the woods just with you alone?
31507Ca n''t you smell the blackberry jam cooking on Friendly Terrace day after to- morrow?
31507Dare? 31507 Did Peggy call?"
31507Did n''t she bring it back?
31507Did she act very cross?
31507Did you get it?
31507Do n''t you hear Peggy calling you, Ruth?
31507Do n''t you think it''s nice to have little souvenirs of such good times? 31507 Do you know Mrs. Sidney Dillingham?"
31507Do you know what she means? 31507 Do you like it?"
31507Do you suppose she could have got tired of staying here all day by herself, and tried to find us in the pasture and lost her way?
31507Do you suppose that the wind blowing through it could make a noise like that?
31507Dorothy, how often have you and Annie done what you did to- day?
31507Girls, are you awake?
31507Girls, if you all keep talking at once, how can I ever tell you the rest? 31507 Girls, where does the time go to?
31507Go?
31507Going to get these doors open any time to- day?
31507Has n''t Dorothy come yet, girls? 31507 Has she come?"
31507Have n''t we done splendidly?
31507Have you been hearing things, too?
31507Have you missed anything that belongs to you, lately?
31507He can go with you to- morrow, ca n''t he? 31507 He knows I''m his friend, do n''t you, poor old fellow?"
31507How are they going to let their folks know, ma?
31507How did you ever come to think of looking for them?
31507How in the world did shavings get scattered over this room from one end to the other?
31507How many are there, anyway?
31507How many times my great- grandmother was she, Aunt Abigail? 31507 How much do you think we''ve made, Joe?"
31507How much was it?
31507How old are you, Jerry?
31507Hungry?
31507I thought my pride would n''t let me, but what''s the use of my being proud? 31507 I wonder if Aunt Abigail has missed us?"
31507I-- I do n''t suppose they''re likely to run away, are they?
31507Is anybody ill? 31507 Is breakfast nearly ready?"
31507Is it time to wake up?
31507Is it? 31507 Is that a wig you''ve got on?"
31507Is this it? 31507 It''s all right, is n''t it?"
31507Jerry, how far is Cherry Creek?
31507Jerry,remarked Peggy, breaking the brief pause that had fallen between them,"did you ever hear of Audubon?"
31507Lucy, are you angry with me?
31507Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont--"What''s the use?
31507Maple sirup?
31507Me? 31507 Naps are a kind of fun you can have almost anywhere, ca n''t you, dear?
31507Now, what about''The Star Spangled Banner?'' 31507 Now, what are we going to do?
31507Oh, Amy, what have you there?
31507Oh, Amy,exclaimed Ruth, half admiringly, and half in remonstrance,"do you really dare?"
31507Oh, I wonder-- What day is it, anyway?
31507Oh, Peggy, what has happened?
31507Oh, dear, what in the world am I going to do with Hobo? 31507 Oh, do you suppose you''ll be blind?"
31507Oh, the flash- light picture is here, is n''t it?
31507Oh, what is the matter?
31507Oh, why are we wasting time?
31507Oh, why did I let her do it?
31507Peggy Raymond, do you think you''re coming down with anything?
31507Peggy, how much longer are you going to wait?
31507Peggy,Priscilla inquired suspiciously,"have you fed that dog again this morning?"
31507Performance of what?
31507Quadrupeds have to have four legs, do n''t they? 31507 Really?
31507Ruth,called Peggy from the pantry,"just help me with these sandwiches, will you?"
31507Ruth,she exclaimed in a frightened whisper,"what was that?"
31507Seeing''s believing, is n''t it?
31507She is n''t outside, is she?
31507Spoiled the picnic? 31507 Sure they''re not waiting for a circus train?"
31507Take the part?
31507That your dog?
31507The Cherry Creek crowd?
31507Then you''ve lived here always?
31507There''ll be room enough, wo n''t there, if Dorothy sits in my lap?
31507This is Thursday, is n''t it? 31507 Turned out pretty well, did they?"
31507We could roast apples, could n''t we?
31507Well, he got there, did n''t he?
31507Well, what do you want?
31507Well, what of it? 31507 Well, what of it?"
31507Well?
31507What are we going to do?
31507What are you making such a fuss about?
31507What are you waiting for?
31507What battle of the Revolution is like a weather- cock?
31507What can be the matter?
31507What d''ye mean?
31507What did they say, Aunt Abigail?
31507What do you make of this? 31507 What do you suppose it is?"
31507What does she do in the winter time?
31507What folks do you mean?
31507What is it?
31507What is it?
31507What is it?
31507What is the next, anyway?
31507What on earth does she mean?
31507What on earth is the matter now?
31507What sort of looking chaps were they?
31507What sort of story do you want?
31507What was it you were going to borrow, Aunt Abigail?
31507What was it? 31507 What was it?"
31507What was what?
31507What''s happened?
31507What''s that? 31507 What''s this?
31507Where have you been?
31507Where''d_ you_ get stung?
31507Who could?
31507Who counts the stars on the flag, anyway? 31507 Who ever heard of such a thing?"
31507Who is it that I love better than my native land? 31507 Who''s there?"
31507Who? 31507 Who?
31507Who? 31507 Who?
31507Why did I ever listen? 31507 Why did n''t you tell Aunt Peggy what you and Annie were playing?"
31507Why is Peggy like Betsy Ross?
31507Why not sit down? 31507 Why, Peggy,"Priscilla repeated in real consternation,"what is it?
31507Why, how do you do?
31507Why, what''s wrong with it? 31507 Will you walk in?"
31507Yes?
31507You carry in the coffee,--will you, Ruth?
31507You designed the chicken for the butcher, did n''t you? 31507 You do n''t like''sploring either, do you?"
31507You do n''t suppose I''d sell fish on the Fourth, do you?
31507You''ll go over with the rest of the men in the morning, wo n''t you, Jerry?
31507You''re pretty near dry, are n''t you?
31507Your money''s gone?
31507And She says--"Jerry did not find the pronoun ambiguous--"She says will you drive''em?"
31507And as she was hurriedly saddled, Jerry added,"You''ll get''em home as soon as you can, wo n''t you?
31507And the other half wanted to know,"Whose benefit?"
31507And would you like him?
31507And, even if she suspects the truth, what difference does it make?"
31507Are n''t you ever going to get up?"
31507At the top of the paper are the letters W. P. H. and underneath is the question''Why are these letters like the Father of his country?''"
31507But who would have supposed that there was such a current in this lazy old river?"
31507But-- but what are you going to bury?"
31507Can my dearest Priscilla guess?"
31507Can you bring us some more fish Saturday?"
31507Can you get along without it, Peggy?"
31507Can you play that, Jerry?
31507Claire?
31507Cole?"
31507Did I ever show you the rattle I got off that big snake I killed?
31507Did n''t she come?"
31507Did you ever hear of anything so dreadful?"
31507Do n''t you remember how I spilled the ink on that rug when I was getting over the measles?
31507Do n''t you think I''ve had good luck?"
31507Do n''t you think that is pretty clumsy?"
31507Do n''t you think that''s better than being afraid of being laughed at, and settling down to be an ignorant laborer all his life?"
31507Do n''t you want a tiny bit of a nap?"
31507Do n''t you want to come with me, Amy?"
31507Do they know?"
31507Do you know how to drive?"
31507Do you suppose it is the maple- tree back of the window?"
31507Do you suppose she''s gone away?"
31507Does n''t he look dirty though, like a regular tramp?"
31507Dorothy''s answer was a grieved whimper,"Aunt Peggy, when are they coming for us?"
31507Dorothy, are n''t you glad we''re not sleeping away our chance to see all this?"
31507Give it up?"
31507Going to ask a quarter, be you?
31507Has anything happened to Freckles?"
31507Have n''t you found her?"
31507Have n''t you got a home and folks, child, or what is it that''s druv you into this dog''s life?"
31507Have you found anything?"
31507He chuckled gleefully over this thunder- bolt of wit, and bethought himself to add,"How''s your chickens coming on?"
31507How do you pick up so much about that sort of people?"
31507How does cornbread and fried fish strike the crowd?"
31507How''s that for a late start?
31507I guess you''d know it to look at him, would n''t you?
31507I wonder if you could lend me a loaf of bread?
31507Is anything wrong?
31507Is it very deep?"
31507Is she trying to punish one of the chickens, or is it only a game?"
31507It_ is_ funny, ai n''t it?"
31507Jerry drummed a few further chords, and broke off to demand,"What''s the matter?"
31507Not Jerry Morton?"
31507Not Mrs Snooks?"
31507Now what are you all laughing at?"
31507Now where''s that other box cover?"
31507Oh, Jerry, how came it to be you?"
31507Old Home week?"
31507Peggy''s gone after a little ginger, you say?"
31507Quite a feather in her cap, ai n''t it?"
31507Ruth and I will start here in the living- room, and Amy-- where is Amy, anyway?"
31507Say, Aunt Peggy, which would you rather have, wings or roller- skates?"
31507Snooks?"
31507Then I realized that some one was knocking and I went to the window, and called,''Who is it and what do you want?''
31507Then do n''t you want to go on a picnic with us to- morrow and drive the horses?
31507Then, without waiting for an answer,"Aunt Peggy, do you s''pose those hornets have eated up all that nice gingerbread?"
31507Think you can manage him, son?"
31507Watch these cakes, will you, while I see to the hash?
31507What are we going to do with a day as long as this?"
31507What are we going to do?"
31507What can I fight them with?
31507What did Mrs. Snooks ever return that we did n''t send for?"
31507What did she say her name was, Claire?"
31507What did you see, Elaine?"
31507What do you say to landing and exploring?"
31507What do you think of that?
31507What has become of the clubs and packs?"
31507What has happened?"
31507What has she heard?"
31507What has she spoiled?"
31507What must you think of me?"
31507What were the girls thinking of?
31507What''s made all the difference since Wednesday?"
31507What''s that?"
31507What''s the matter with a picnic?"
31507What''s the reason it''s no use?
31507What''s the use of killing him over again?''"
31507When I got in he was saying to the operator,''Rush this, will you?''
31507Where d''you want this hen?"
31507Who''s got any red ribbon?"
31507Why ca n''t they stay to home and get up their own shows,''stead of coming all this way to spoil ourn?"
31507Why should you miss two or three hours of sleep for the sake of saying good- by to- morrow morning, when you can just as well say it to- night?"
31507With obvious reluctance she asked,"Wo n''t you come in?"
31507You can play''America,''ca n''t you, Jerry?"
31507You were at one of our rehearsals last spring, were n''t you?
31507You?"
34012Did I belong to the A. R. U.? 34012 Did I?"
34012Say, Gene,he continued, still holding me with both hands,"I am pretty well down, ai n''t I?
34012And could I call him brother without insulting him?
34012And if not, who is entitled to any part of it?
34012And then what happened?
34012And when you are out of a job what can your union do for you?
34012And who shall say that they were not right; or that they forfeited their brave lives in vain?
34012And why is this awful battle raging and human beings murdering each other as if they were wild beasts?
34012Are their interest not diametrically opposite?
34012Are they not entitled to all of it?
34012At the same time Cook said,''Stop a minute-- where is Edwin''s hand?''
34012Because the Mine and Smelter Trust had kidnaped three citizens of the republic?
34012Boodle drawn from the veins of labor?
34012But even if you do find a master, if you have a job, can you boast of being a man among men?
34012But how about the working class?
34012But how is it at present?
34012But how is it in this outgrown capitalist system?
34012Can a door be both open and shut at the same time?
34012Can you increase both the workers''and the capitalist''s share at the same time?
34012Can you read this without being moved to tears?
34012Dared I call him brother?
34012Debs?"
34012Debs?"
34012Did Mr. Bryan utter a word?
34012Did he not know at the time that his man Cortelyou was holding up the trusts for all they would"cough up"for his election?
34012Did, or did not, the men known as trust magnates put up this boodle?
34012Do they not all alike stand for the private ownership of industry and the wage- slavery of the working class?
34012Do you endorse the supreme court decision making it lawful for a corporation to discharge a man because of his membership in a labor union?
34012Do you know how long you are going to have one?
34012Do you know whether you have a job or not?
34012Does not this brand the president with the duplicity of a Tweed and the cunning of a Quay?
34012Have the mill- owners gone stark mad?
34012Have they in their brutal rage become stone- blind?
34012He is marked as an agitator, he is discharged, and then what is his status?
34012How can any intelligent, self- respecting wage- worker give his support to either of these corrupt capitalist parties?
34012How is it with the average workingman today?
34012How many of their detractors and persecutors were animated by motives so pure and exalted?
34012If the man who produces wealth is not entitled to it, who is?
34012If you find yourself in a party that attacks your pocket do you not quit that party?
34012If you increase the share of the capitalist do n''t you decrease the share of the workers?
34012In other words, why do not the Republican and Democratic parties perform at Washington instead of promising at Chicago and Baltimore?
34012Is not that a fact?
34012Is there any doubt in the mind of any thinking workingman that we are in the midst of a class struggle?
34012Is there any doubt that the workingman ought to own the tool he works with?
34012Now why should not just these things come to pass and why should not you children help us speed the day when they_ shall_ come to pass?
34012Now, is it possible to be for the capitalist without being against the worker?
34012Now, what is class- consciousness?
34012Oh, my brothers, can you be satisfied with your lot?
34012U.?"
34012Was Jesus divinely begotten?
34012Was Roosevelt also"horrified"?
34012Was ever anything in all the annals of heartless persecution more monstrous than this?
34012What assurance has he that he is going to keep it?
34012What assurance has he that it is his in twenty- four hours?
34012What can the present economic organization do to improve the condition of the workingman?
34012What difference is there, judged by what they stand for, between Taft, Roosevelt, La Follette, Harmon, Wilson, Clark and Bryan?
34012What earthly difference can it make to the millions of workers whether the Republican or Democratic political machine of capitalism is in commission?
34012What is a party?
34012What is it that is responsible for their exploitation and for all of the ills they suffer?
34012What is it that keeps the working class in subjection?
34012What is politics?
34012What is the key to their ability as masters of language?
34012What right has Theodore Roosevelt to prejudge American citizens, pronounce their guilt and hand them over to the hangman?
34012What school subjects, or what kinds of training have entered into their lives that have given them power to express themselves effectively?
34012What, I ask, has any of these capitalist parties, or all of them combined, for the working and producing class in this campaign?
34012Who finances them?
34012Who is it that is so fearful you will discuss politics?
34012Why did not Mr. Byran speak?
34012Why forced to surrender to anybody any part of what his labor produces?
34012Why should a union man be afraid to discuss politics?
34012Why should any workingman need to beg for work?
34012Will Mr. Roosevelt deny it?
34012Will he dare plead ignorance to intelligent persons as to who put up the money that debauched the voters of the nation?
34012Will you insist that life shall continue a mere struggle for existence and one prolonged misery to which death comes as a blessed relief?
34012Would a president who is honest with the people clandestinely consort with the villain he characterizes as a liar and all that is vicious?
34012You do n''t unite with capitalists on the economic field; why should you politically?
34012You may, at times, temporarily better your condition within certain limitations, but you will still remain wage- slaves, and why wage- slaves?
31365''How?'' 31365 ''Re- what?''
31365''Twas sommat''bout you and Adam, warn''t it?
31365''Wickedness?'' 31365 ''You think I''d go to one of those Homes?''
31365An''this one? 31365 And do you care for Adam, then?"
31365And pray what should make you alter your opinion? 31365 And when I heard he was claiming a promise, I--""What promise?"
31365And why could n''t you tell me that before?
31365And why not now?
31365And you can not return the love I offer you?
31365Another life?
31365Awh, Eve, is it?
31365But Tabithy always scrubs the tables, Joan: why should you do it?
31365But do you think you have exhausted the catalogue of animal pests?
31365But how? 31365 But how?"
31365But where will the handmaiden sleep?
31365But why, because?
31365Can any of the signorine do_ that_?
31365Could I help it?
31365Did he?
31365Did n''t''ee never feel no sorrow for t''other poor chap that wanted to have''ee-- he to London, Reuben May?
31365Did the child die?
31365Do n''t they always do so when they blossom?
31365Do you hear?
31365Do you know that he is rich?
31365Do you mean to say you eat such things as that?
31365Do you think I shall give it up so?
31365Eh, Eve, would you?
31365Free?
31365Friend?
31365Good- night?
31365Have you looked at the peas, lately, Hope?
31365Her father and mother? 31365 How''s all with you, Sister Lucindy?"
31365How''s that, Spafford?
31365I thought the farm was to be self- supporting?
31365I wonder how many oranges that tree has borne?
31365If our thousand do as well in fourteen years, Hope, we may give up planting cabbages, eh?
31365Is it any relation to the gryphon?
31365Is n''t it almost time for those cabbages to begin to head?
31365Is that really true?
31365Joan, you ai n''t hurt with me, are you?
31365May I ask, then, where you_ do_ propose to reside?
31365No reason?
31365Not since yesterday: why?
31365Of course you will live at the hotel?
31365Oh, what is it?
31365See''em?
31365Some time when I''m away at sea?
31365Somebody in London?
31365That negro hut, Hope? 31365 Then answer: have I got your love, or have n''t I?"
31365Then wo n''t they bear?
31365Then you refuse to be my wife?
31365Think?
31365Too late? 31365 What could he do?
31365What do I ask you for?
31365What do you ask me for?
31365What do you mean about somebody I''ve left in London?
31365What do you wish?
31365What does he mean?
31365What have I now that I had n''t before?
31365What if we should have them gathered and sold?
31365What is a gopher?
31365What made''ee change yer mind so suddent, then?
31365What makes them look so yellow?
31365What may your office be, then, uncle?
31365What promise did you give him?
31365What sort are they?
31365What sort of an animal do you call him?
31365What''s the trouble with the cucumbers, Spafford?
31365What, not from-- where he was?
31365What, under the sun, are collards?
31365Which? 31365 Who could he mean?
31365Why are you a fisherman now?
31365Why did you tremble that day?
31365Why do n''t you plant cabbages, then? 31365 Why do you leave your arena?"
31365Why do you stay, then?
31365Why not, uncle? 31365 Why not?"
31365Why should n''t''ee? 31365 Why, how long''s t''wind veered round to your quarter, my maid?
31365Why, is it so very improbable, then?
31365Why, is it too late now?
31365Why, what''s the matter?
31365Why, whatever can you have to say of so much importance?
31365Why, whatever put such as that into your head?
31365Why, would you mind if I did?
31365Why,''tis my son Adam, ai n''t it?
31365Will you, indeed?
31365You do n''t believe it? 31365 You promise to be sensible and quiet, Pippo?"
31365You refuse to do this thing?
31365You say I gave him a promise: I ask what that promise was?
31365You would fly with me?
31365You? 31365 ''I''d believe it if I could,''she said,''but why should I? 31365 A monk? 31365 A priest? 31365 Ai n''t he a rough? 31365 Ai n''t he just fit for the Rogues''Gallery, an''nowhere else? 31365 All I want to know is, can you give me the love I ask of you?
31365And nothing will come: why should it?
31365And you would not wish it?
31365Are they more likely to"capture"the party with which they connect themselves or to be captured by it?
31365Be you two sweetheartin''then, eh?"
31365But can a bird promise not to fly when it feels in its instincts the coming of spring?
31365But she was a member of the Mott Street Church, an''when she said,''Where is she now?
31365But tell me( you can not tell me) where shall I begin?
31365But the question arises, Is their present action consistent with their principles and suited to advance their purpose?
31365But what have you in this seven- acre lot?"
31365But when the testimony is carefully viewed, what does it amount to?
31365But you do n''t go out in very bad weather, do you, Adam?"
31365But you were very late, Joan, were n''t you?"
31365Can a young colt promise not to fling out his limbs when he feels the yielding turf beneath his hoofs?
31365Can there be justice and righteousness in a plan that requires the lifelong martyrdom of a few?
31365Deserve her?
31365Did they miss one word or more?
31365Do you know what I mean?
31365Do you remember those pictures of Vittorio Carpaccio and of Gentiléo?
31365Do you think I''d be pointed at an''talked over the way those women are?
31365Does one anywhere come oftener in from wet streets,"a dem''d moist, unpleasant body,"to more tomblike rooms?
31365Drink my health?"
31365Ennybuddy dut e tummuck- ache?"
31365Enough for what?
31365Enough to deny heaven, to defy hell, to brave death and torment, to do all that a man could do: who could do more?
31365Enough to--?"
31365Enough?
31365Every day she thought I should wander again; every day she knew my savings shrank in their bag; every day she heard her neighbors say,"And your Pippo?
31365For have not their feet wandered where the Caesars''feet have trod, till that famous ground has become common earth to them?
31365Give him up?
31365How can I?
31365How could it, coming up the way they had?
31365How not mane''em?"
31365How?
31365How?"
31365I cried to my comrades fiercely; and in my own soul I said to myself,"Could I help it?
31365I doan''t fancy I could ha''said much amiss-- did I?"
31365I loved her: what use was that to her-- a man who had naught in all the world but the strength of his sinews and muscles?
31365I suppose you have n''t forgot_ him_?"
31365I will not answer the question now-- I will only ask it: What is the present speech?
31365I''m agoin''in here to drink your good health, Adam lad, and all here''s a- comin''with me-- ain''t us, hearties?"
31365I''ve told you I love you: now I ask you if you love me, and, if so, whether you will marry me?
31365I, young and strong as I was, and his wife''s lover?
31365If He loved, an''people think about it as they pretend, how dare they let there be such places for us to come up in?
31365If they give their aid to the Democrats, will they expect the Democrats in return to give aid to the cause of Reform?
31365In this seven- acre lot, for instance?"
31365Is he not just as correct as he who writes_ no_ when he means_ know_?
31365Is the individual not to be considered, but only the good of the mass?
31365Is there any city in the universe where fleas dwarf more colossally and fiendishly Blake''s famous"ghosts"of their kind?
31365It is n''t too late, I''m sure.--We''ll use it for top- dressing, eh, Spafford?"
31365Kill an old and feeble man?
31365Kill him?
31365Marietta looked up quickly:"What would I be, signorina?
31365Must some hearts be denied all their lives long in order that a possible good may come to others in the future?
31365Must the old story be repeated over and over again?
31365Nan says, sort of bewildered--''repent?''
31365No, no, you would not wish it?
31365No?
31365Not Reuben May: how should he know about him?"
31365Now, what kind of a school system have we in the United States?
31365On the road we passed a colored woman, who greeted us with the usual"Howdy?"
31365Raising her eyes defiantly to his, she said,"Forgotten him?
31365Rather puzzled as to what had vexed his parishioner, Dr. Peters said blandly,"You heard my prayer for a shower, Deacon Smith?"
31365Said Lady Diavoletta afterward to the Cherubim sisters,"Would you believe it?
31365See my arm?
31365So you and Adam''s courtyin'', be''ee?
31365So you ring the bell, do you?"
31365Suddenly and abruptly she said only,"You are a droll creature: you love me, really-- you?"
31365The major promptly availed himself of the shelter offered by the bank of the stream; but once there, how was he to escape unseen?
31365The old man?
31365The thought of having to confront her caused him to hesitate: should he go in?
31365Then a shot or two, a growl, and the doctor gasping,"Do you think I left my practice to let that bear die in his bed?"
31365Then my heart beat and my knees shook, and I thought, If she is dead?
31365Then there was a pause, which Eve broke by first giving a nervous, half- suppressed sigh, and then saying,"It''s very dark to- night, is n''t it?"
31365Then, after a minute''s pause, she added,"What be''ee goin''to do''bout the poor sawl to London, then-- eh?
31365Throwing her arms round her, she cried out,"Oh, Joan, why did n''t he choose you?
31365Wa- al, there''s nuffin''to be said agen that, I s''pose?"
31365We''m all goin''to cast anchor to the same moorin''s-- eh, mates?"
31365Were they as deficient in other branches as in spelling?
31365Were they more deficient in spelling than in other branches?
31365Were they not my brothers all?
31365What character shall I choose as a typical Iowan?
31365What could I bring in dower?
31365What could I say to her?
31365What else could he do?
31365What had I to do with a monkish frock and a whitewashed cell?
31365What had become of Adam?
31365What have I done more than anybody, after all?
31365What is meant by"tolerable ease and expression"and"tolerable accuracy"?
31365What should she do?
31365What should she do?
31365What was she like?
31365What was the extent of the failures by the candidates for civil service?
31365What were the newspaper passages selected for trial?
31365What will be the scaffold to- morrow to me, since I have lived through that moment?
31365What will you do without a Saviour?
31365What would Professor March have?
31365When a man really and sincerely asks himself the question,"Do I pronounce_ lashed_ as though written_ lasht_?"
31365When a woman''s eyes are always looking downward on a grave, how should their tear- laden lids be lifted to see a fresh lover?
31365Where could she go?
31365Who is to determine that?
31365Who shall say whence it comes?
31365Who was she?
31365Whom?
31365Why has n''t anybody ever told me before?''
31365Why wo n''t they grow?"
31365Why, what''ud be the manin''o''that?
31365Will any nomination they may obtain by such means bring the question squarely before the nation?
31365Will le signorine see?"
31365With our limited vision, our blind and short- sighted judgment, how can we presume to say what is harsh or what is kind in the discipline of life?
31365With what expression of regret shall I take leave of my happiness?
31365Wo n''t you?''
31365Would a President elected by their aid be recognized by the country as the champion of Reform?
31365Would you mind crossing over to the cliff?
31365Yes, you love me, but how?
31365You ca n''t think how they could be the heathen they were?
31365You never can be in earnest?"
31365You thought I loved you?
31365You wo n''t feel cold here, shall you?"
31365a clerk?
31365a minister?"
31365and do you wonder even when I know better?
31365and why do n''t she come herself?''
31365are you coming for me?''
31365can you deny that that is beautiful?"
31365did he not beat your fish down, give you watered wine, the rinsings of the barrel, yesterday?
31365he said, in a tone of satisfaction,"this is n''t so bad, is it?
31365how shall I put an eternal period to a correspondence which has given me so much comfort?
31365of the public- school pupils who failed, what is the class composing those pupils?
31365of the school population are in constant and habitual attendance?
31365or he who writes_ filosofer_ when he means_ philosopher_?
31365repeated Zebedee:"how good- night?
31365replied George,"who''s been warming your shots?"
31365said the Pessimist:"who cares what it is?
31365somebody I gave a promise to?
31365the man or the horse?"
31365what?
31365where had he to go?
31365where shall I end?
31365while we two are sitting here?"
31365will he not quiet down and take a wife and a calling?"
31365wouldst thou for his dear sake Frankly rejoice, or with self- pity break?
354731 and 2), the language of which offers remarkable resemblances to Etruscan, especially in the phrase_ sial[ch]veiz aviz_(?
35473341?
35473A day''s journey beyond Salahiya, on a bluff on the Mesopotamian side of the river, are the conspicuous ruins Of el-''Irsi(_ Corsote_?).
35473And could she resist the continued aggressions of France on her western frontier?
35473And might not the less cultivated part of the audience at least enjoy a thrilling plot, especially if taken from the home- legends of Attica?
35473Are we stronger than he?"
35473But with what power or powers should an alliance be made?
35473Doth not experience teach us that in the most curious sepulchre are enclosed rotten bones?
35473From Birejik the river runs sluggishly, first a little to the east, then a little to the west of south, over a sandy or pebbly bed, past Jerablus(?
35473If it were so, how have they descended?
35473If we assume that man existed on the earth in remote geological time, the question arises, was this pleistocene man specifically one?
35473In the 4th century A.D. the state of Meroë was ravaged by the Nubas(?)
35473May we not even reasonably doubt whether we have received those masterpieces by which their highest excellence should have been judged?
35473Or do we provoke the Lord to jealousy?
35473This, however, was itself merely a reprint of a still older English edition( 1518?
35473Till the end of the century Europe was faced with two serious problems: Could she successfully cope with the Turks on her eastern frontier?
35473UNATTACHED**?
35473What evidence is there that he represented in his different habitats a series of varieties of one species rather than a series of species?
35473[ 57]|..|| Spain|..|?
35473[ 60]|..|?
35473_ Zathrum_ appears to be the corresponding ten(?
35473_ ceal[ch]-_ beside_ ci_(?
35473_ ceal[ch]us avils_(?
35473in the clearest water the ugliest toad?
35473that in the greenest grass is the greatest serpent?
35473that the cypress tree beareth a fair leaf, but no fruit?
35473that the ostrich carrieth fair feathers, but rank flesh?"
35473to its junction with the Tigris below Korna, through an unbroken plain, with no natural hills, except a few sand( or sandstone?)
35473| 90|| Bulgaria[f]| 37,323| 2,008[2]| 3,154[10]| 3,733[14]| 100|| Crete| 3,328|..| 302[9]| 304[16]| 91|| Thasos| 152|..|..| 12?
35473|?
35611And have you heard them speak of the bright light that shone at midnight from the church?
35611And, after all,one of them was saying,"what is it all about?
35611Then where do you think it was ringing?
35611What makes you talk nonsense your self?
35611What sort of things? 35611 Where did it sound from?"
35611You have made some alterations in the service since I was here last? 35611 ***** But as to thephenomena,"the occurrences for which, in ordinary talk, we should reserve the word"miraculous"?
35611***** But for the other experiences?
35611And at this very point of the sailors''stories I remember saying:"Now what do you make of that?
35611And these poor men are often hurried; but what did those"lights"mean?
35611But at the last, what do we know?
35611But has the memory of all this persisted in the church- going and chapel- going people of Wales at the present day?
35611But you think there really is something a little queer?"
35611Did it shine at last from the old chapel on the headland?
35611Do n''t you think it''s extremely curious?"
35611Do you hear what nonsense she talks?"
35611I said then:"What does your cousin mean by that?
35611If a number of people all see( or think they see) the same appearances, can this be merely hallucination?
35611In other words, did the people"see"and"hear"what they expected to see and hear?
35611Men that he had never seen in Llantrisant?
35611Still; what do we know?
35611Well, what do we know?
35611What men?"
35611What strange matters had the vehement blue pencil blotted out and brought to naught?
35611You use incense now?"
36104659?).
36104But who was to be her husband?
36104Could the crown of the eldest daughter of the Church be allowed to devolve upon a relapsed heretic?
36104FOX MORCILLO, SEBASTIAN( 1526?-1559?
36104Had not Bodin, Hobbes and Bossuet taught that the force which gives birth to kingdoms serves best also to feed and sustain them?
36104How was France to be governed?
36104I can not yet see him... Where is he?
36104Separating the two questions which were so closely connected, and despite the sensational brochure of the abbé Sieyès,"What is the Third Estate?"
36104Should it be the uncles of the king, or his followers Clisson and Bureau de la Rivière, whom the nobles called in mockery the_ Marmousets_?
36104The archduke Ernest of Austria, Guise or Mayenne?
36104The provocations of Talleyrand and England strengthened the illusion: Why should not the Austrians emulate the Spaniards?
36104Was the day won for the House of Capet?
36104Who should have possession of the royal person, and, consequently, of the royal power?
36104Who would support her in this?
36104Why should he not be the heir of their Caesars?
36104Why was this king at once so easygoing and so capricious?
34907A close shave,he adds;"but what matter?
34907And how did you know they were Army Service officers?
34907And tell us now, have ye left us a Gerry at all alive to get a pelt at, and we new at the game?
34907And where''s the good, sir?
34907Hello, Irish,they cried;"how is King Carson getting on?
34907Hello, there; what are you up to?
34907How deep is it with you?
34907How many?
34907If we brained them on the spot, who could blame us? 34907 Is it bad news ye bring, crying in that way?"
34907Tell me what happened,said the commanding officer, when the sergeant came to make his report;"were you surprised?"
34907Well,said the dentist to a Munster Fusilier,"where''s this bad tooth that''s troubling you?"
34907What have you there?
34907What struck me most?
34907What would you call unusual?
34907What would you do if you saw five battleships steaming across the field?
34907Where''s that blessed village we''ve got to take?
34907Where''s the machine''s belt and ammunition?
34907Who will now say that the Germans are not sportsmen?
34907Why do you beat the poor animal so much?
34907Why should the man lose a day?
34907Why so, sir?
34907Will no one come to me?
34907''Would you like some Irish rebellion?''
34907A Connaught Ranger, back from such an expedition, related that, hearing the Gerrys talking, he called out,"How many of ye are there?"
34907And in which category must be placed the equally amusing retort of another Irish sentry to his officer-- the naïvely simple, or the slyly jocular?
34907And what of the men as they waited in the assembly trenches for the word?
34907And why not?
34907But can it really?
34907But instead of that the chorus of their song, set to a hymn tune, was this--"Will you fight for England?
34907But were n''t the Dublins in the divil of a hurry back to billets?
34907But, to round off the story, what motive of a material kind would impel the Welsh Regiments to greater military exertions?
34907Did n''t I see their swords stuck behind their ears?"
34907Did n''t the officers tell us before we left the trenches that there was to be no going back?"
34907Even if death should come, what is it but the shadowy gate which opens into life everlasting and blissful?
34907How can you tell that these laughable things are said and done by Irish soldiers without any perception of humour or absurdity?
34907How could it be with stern, black- visaged Death always watching with wolfish eyes to see men die?
34907How could it possibly be repeated?
34907If it was crying they were, would n''t they be roaring and bawling?
34907If they were shot in the attempt, what matter?
34907Is he alone in the whole wide world, the solitary survivor of this terrible war?
34907Is it not better to be funny without knowing it than to suffer the rather common lot of attempting to be funny and fail?
34907Is n''t a miss as good as a mile?"
34907Oh, holy mother of God, where''s my arm?"
34907Shall we say any one of the three inducements mentioned-- pay, grub or grog, or, better still, all of them together?
34907So he wrote,"May we take our wounded man in?
34907Some of them would"get the beck"--the call from Death-- but what matter?
34907The sentry looked so shy and inexperienced that the officer put to him the question,"What are you here for?"
34907There is an ancient Gaelic proverb which says:"What is there that seems worse to a man than his death?
34907Were their comrades slain only a moment since to go unavenged?
34907What could you do in that case, but what I did?
34907What more can one do, it may be asked, than one''s duty?
34907What the mischief was the matter with them, anyway?
34907Whence came these shells?
34907Where was the enemy?
34907Why should He not work also through the agency of the religious emblems of His angels and saints?
34907Will you face the foe?
34907Would any of ye be so kind as to lend me the loan of a hammer?"
34907Would it be possible for them to extricate themselves from the fearful labyrinth in which they were involved?
34907Would there be any of them left for the final dash at their objective?
34907and have you got Home Rule yet?"
34907says he;''what the divil are ye doin''there beside my officer?
34912''Fear of what?'' 34912 ''Of Indians?''
34912Of what use,they asked,"was geometry to a girl?"
34912[ 228] And what shall we say of those exquisite creations of woman''s brain and hand-- needle- point and pillow lace? 34912 [ 259] All this is true, but what does it prove?
34912And was not the school of Pythagoras at Crotona continued after his death by his daughter and his wife, Theano?
34912And, in reality, is it the personal element alone that is in the long run perennial?
34912But aside from what she achieved indirectly through the habitués of her salon, what has this supremely clever woman left to the world?
34912But shall we affirm that she will never give to the world imperishable works like_ Paradise Lost_,_ Don Quixote_ or the_ Immaculate Conception_?
34912But who was the originator of the idea of utilizing the atmosphere for the production of nitrates?
34912By what process can uranium furnish the same rays without expenditure of energy and without undergoing apparent modification?
34912Did not Themista philosophize with the sages of Greece?
34912Does not Plato have Aspasia speak in his dialogues?
34912Does not Sappho hold the lyre at the same time as Alcæus and Pindar?
34912For was not the learned and eloquent Aspasia her contemporary?
34912Has any woman writer ever received higher praise, and from one so competent to express an opinion as the scholarly divine of Auxerre?
34912How many men are there who give more advanced mathematical courses than these?
34912How much of the literary work of the women of to- day will receive recognition twenty centuries hence?
34912IX, 79. which have been rendered as follows: Despiteful pedant, why dost me pursue, Thou head detested by the younger crew?
34912If we leave half the race in ignorance, how shall we hope to lift the other half into the light of truth and love?
34912Is it supposed that such felicitous thoughts do not occur to women?
34912Is uranium the only body whose compounds emit similar rays?
34912O Lord, how long?
34912Parlerons- nous des femmes du monde?
34912Quelle impression produirait aujourd''hui l''annonce d''une encyclopédie qui aurait pour auteur une simple, religieuse?
34912Shall I speak now of the illustrious women among the heathen?
34912Swetchine-- full two centuries-- bequeathed to us that is worth preserving?
34912The mystery, then, is, what were the sources of_ Physica_?
34912The passage is''His disciples came and wondered that with the women he was_ standing and talking_''...."Why was our Lord standing?
34912Was not it women to whom our Lord first appeared after His resurrection?
34912Was she excluded from this list for the same reason that Agnesi was ineligible to membership in the French Academy-- because she was a woman?
34912What was to be done?
34912What, then, must have been the total amount used through the world for cereals and other crops that need constant fertilizing?
34912Who took out the first patent for a process for making nitrates by using the nitrogen of the air?
34912Yet stronger far than what most men can write; Had death delayed, whose fame had equaled hers?"
34912[ 120] M. Rebière, in_ his Les Femmes dans la Science_, p. 13, Paris, 1897, writes,"Ne pourrait- on aller plus loin et canonizer notre Agnesi?
34912[ 138] D''ou vient qu''elle a l''oeil troublé et le teint si terni?
34912[ Illustration] Que e piu bella in donna que savere?
362992) Did the defendant commit the disseisin?
36299As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool?
36299For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life?
36299Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood?
36299Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor?
36299What am I?
36299What am I?
36299What is this, if not to be mad?
18056''If you think,''she said,''that you suffer-- what in God''s name will you think before the war is over? 18056 About what?"
18056Afraid?
18056Am I fine enough for an evening like this?
18056Am I stuffy?
18056And Jean?
18056And as for Jean,her quiet voice analyzed,"what do you know of her, really?
18056And he is n''t a slacker?
18056And he wears mistletoe, because mistletoe is the Christmas bush, and red caps do n''t really mean anything, do they?
18056And if they did n''t where should we be?
18056And if they do n''t lay them, who does?
18056And it''s Thanksgiving morning?
18056And me?
18056And she admitted that it was-- true?
18056And you ask me like that? 18056 And you do to Hilda?"
18056And you think that she cares?
18056And you thought I was poor-- and I thought you were just the girl in the shop?
18056Anything the matter?
18056Are n''t there any flowers?
18056Are n''t they a bit-- uncanny?
18056Are n''t you going to wish me happiness?
18056Are they very rich--?
18056Are you fond of it-- nursing?
18056Are you going alone, son?
18056Are you going to Fwance?
18056Are you going to spoil my ride?
18056Are you taking Hilda''s part, Daddy?
18056As late as this?
18056Bless my soul,said the old gentleman,"why should I?"
18056Brave, like my Daddy?
18056Break it?
18056But Bronson--? 18056 But after all, you did n''t really care for Daddy--""What makes you say that?"
18056But deliberately to disobey my orders-- what could have been her object?
18056But having asked--?
18056But if I come-- what of Hilda?
18056But marriage,_ marriage_, Emily-- why in Heaven''s name should they be in such a hurry?
18056But the rain--?
18056But we are learning to be sure, are n''t we, over here? 18056 But what time is it?"
18056But why all this air of mystery?
18056But why is n''t he Santa Claus?
18056But why not the''Star Spangled Banner''?
18056But why the green ducks and the amethyst cows?
18056But why,she probed daringly,"do you want my picture?"
18056But why?
18056But why?
18056But why?
18056But wo n''t I wead them when I grow up, Mother?
18056But you love the busy- ness, do n''t you? 18056 But you-- you--?"
18056But,Miss Emily gasped,"did he make them?"
18056But-- Jean--?
18056But-- why--?
18056But--?
18056Ca n''t God make it stop?
18056Ca n''t I go with you?
18056Ca n''t it wait until morning?
18056Ca n''t she? 18056 Ca n''t we all go to a play tonight?"
18056Ca n''t you see? 18056 Ca n''t you tre- ust-- leopards-- General Drake?"
18056Can God stop it, Mother?
18056Changed your mind, sir?
18056Could n''t be what, my dear?
18056Could n''t you do anything with him, Bronson?
18056Cousin Derry, that is the funniest clown--"The little one?
18056Crying?
18056Dad, who is that big man down there-- with the red head-- the one who bowed to you?
18056Daddy?
18056Darling,she said,"there are only six days-- What shall we do with them?"
18056Dawson Hewes?
18056Dead?
18056Dearest, dearest,Derry said,"what is life doing to me?"
18056Derry Drake, Daddy, and may I bring him home to dinner?
18056Derry, pull down the shades; what will people think?
18056Derry, why are n''t you fighting?
18056Deserve what?
18056Did Bruce McKenzie tell you that my Captain has-- gone West?
18056Did I scold?
18056Did he tell you that? 18056 Did he?
18056Did n''t it nearly break your heart?
18056Did n''t you know that I''d want to be worried with anything that pertained to you? 18056 Did she ask you to plead her cause?"
18056Did she say that, Mrs. Connolly, really? 18056 Did the General know that you tried them on?"
18056Did you ever know a man who wanted to go back to slavery? 18056 Did you ever stop to think what it means to a man over there when a woman says''I''m going to knit socks''?"
18056Did you have anything to eat?
18056Did you hear him roar?
18056Did you like the Jean of yesterday better than the Jean of to- day?
18056Did you like your dinner?
18056Did you think that I was marrying you for your money?
18056Did your ears burn?
18056Do n''t I give you money enough?
18056Do n''t you believe that nice things will happen?
18056Do n''t you get dreadfully tired?
18056Do n''t you know her well enough to understand that she''ll pluck only the little lovely blooms?
18056Do n''t you like this dress, Teddy?
18056Do n''t you try to please your patients?
18056Do people drown kittens?
18056Do their souls really shine?
18056Do what, dear?
18056Do you hate the Germans, Mother?
18056Do you know that it''s almost time for dinner, and that the General will wonder where I am?
18056Do you know that my money has always been more important to some people than I have been? 18056 Do you know what day it is?"
18056Do you know what she is doing, Drusilla? 18056 Do you know what they used to say to me when I was a little boy?
18056Do you know you are the nearest, thing to a mother that I''ve known since I lost mine?
18056Do you like me, Daddy?
18056Do you love me, Daddy?
18056Do you mean to say that Hilda was giving him-- wine?
18056Do you mind, my dear?
18056Do you remember the night of the Witherspoon dinner? 18056 Do you remember, Daddy, that I was six when I first saw her, and she''s as young as ever?"
18056Do you see their faces, Derry?
18056Do you think I care? 18056 Do you think I might?"
18056Do you think I want him dragged to defend the honor of his country? 18056 Do you think I was going to tell her that?"
18056Do you think a man like that goes begging for invitations? 18056 Do you think it did, really?"
18056Do you think it is his money?
18056Do you think of her only as a-- good nurse?
18056Do you think she loves him?
18056Do you think she will?
18056Do you think that anyone could make up to your little Jean for the loss of her father?
18056Do you think that some day we could have a little house?
18056Do you think there''s the least hope of it? 18056 Does she have to take your orders or mine, McKenzie?"
18056Does she like it?
18056Does that sound harsh? 18056 Drake goes in three days?"
18056Drake? 18056 Drink?"
18056Drusilla,he said before them all,"do you care as much as that?"
18056Drusilla?
18056Dus a''itte''tory?
18056Edith--?
18056Emily wo n''t mind-- darling-- will you, Emily?
18056Emily, my dear girl--"Let them marry, Bruce, ca n''t you see? 18056 Emily,"Jean asked, as she showed one of the pictures to her friend,"do such women come because it''s fashion or because they really feel--?"
18056Emily--"What does Emily know of love?
18056For me, my dear?
18056For telling me the truth? 18056 For what?"
18056From the first?
18056Get married--"Before he goes?
18056Glad to see me, Dad?
18056Glad? 18056 Good morning, Miss Bridges,"he said;"did you think I was never coming?"
18056Good news?
18056Has Derry come in?
18056Has he been left in charge?
18056Has it gone as far as that? 18056 Has the Doctor come?"
18056Has young Drake arrived?
18056Have n''t you been thinking of going?
18056Have we a cup like this anywhere in the house, Bronson?
18056Have you ever thought that, missing her, you might want to marry her?
18056Have you forgiven me?
18056Have you read it, Doctor?
18056Have you thought that it would make her your Jean''s-- mother--?
18056He cometh not, she said?
18056He is always that, Nurse, is n''t he? 18056 He was here this afternoon for tea, and Ralph, and Emily-- only Emily was late, and the tea was cold--""So you''ve made up?"
18056He''s-- gone West--"Dead?
18056Heavens, has it come to that? 18056 Hilda,"he said, sharply,"where did you get those diamonds?"
18056Hilda?
18056Hilda?
18056Him? 18056 How are you going to cook them?"
18056How can he want to marry Hilda? 18056 How can people shut themselves away from the world?"
18056How dare you go on with it? 18056 How did you get in?"
18056How different?
18056How do you do? 18056 How do you know that he has told me anything?"
18056How do you know?
18056How do you know?
18056How do you know?
18056How does it happen that you are here alone?
18056How is your father, Derry?
18056How long can you stay?
18056How long, Daddy?
18056How soon?
18056How soon?
18056How would they stop, Mother?
18056How would they stop?
18056I always keep at things when I begin them, do n''t I?
18056I have forgotten, which is better, is n''t it?
18056I know I''m not much of a fellow, but you''ll be sorry for me a little, wo n''t you, Emily?
18056I see-- how old are you?
18056I should like it anywhere-- with you--"Well,she drew a deep breath,"Daddy says we may--""We may what, Jean- Joan?"
18056I should n''t have asked it, Derry?
18056I suppose it is all right if she comes straight up Connecticut Avenue, Hilda?
18056I think it was from the first--"In the Toy Shop?
18056I wonder how father stands it to be always with people who are sick? 18056 I wonder if Margaret feels as I do about it all?
18056I wonder if a big house is ever really a home?
18056I wonder what the fellows do who have n''t any wives to anchor themselves to in a time like this? 18056 I wonder why he did n''t stop and speak to us?"
18056I''ll put a garden in front--"How can you put in a garden, Derry, when there is n''t one?
18056I''m not sure-- it''s nice to think that they do lay eggs-- blue ones and red ones and those lovely purple ones, is n''t it?
18056I''ve found out things--"What things?
18056If I could only believe that--"Why not? 18056 If I let them marry, what then?"
18056If Santa Claus has joined the Allies what will the little German children do?
18056If she puts her word against mine, who but you will believe me? 18056 If they re- pyent will they stop fighting?"
18056If we were to wait ten years do you think I''d love her any more than I do now?
18056If you had, where would I be? 18056 In an hour, then?"
18056In love?
18056Is Margaret- Mary coming down?
18056Is he all right, Miss Merritt?
18056Is he very ill?
18056Is he-- going away,--Emily?
18056Is it Win-- is he-- hurt?
18056Is it a little thing to sacrifice our appetites?
18056Is it a party, Mother?
18056Is it about Derry, Daddy?
18056Is it because Hilda is away?
18056Is it you?
18056Is it?
18056Is it?
18056Is n''t a white cat pink and puffy in the firelight? 18056 Is n''t he-- wonderful?"
18056Is n''t it a wonderful day, Daddy?
18056Is n''t it glorious?
18056Is n''t it wonderful?
18056Is n''t that wonderful?
18056Is n''t there? 18056 Is she crying now?"
18056Is she glad to have him go to Paradise?
18056Is that all?
18056Is that what she called you-- a Tin Soldier?
18056Is there any danger?
18056Is there anyone else?
18056Is what--?
18056Is-- is it because I am going to marry Derry?
18056It ca n''t be Hilda Merritt?
18056It is I,he said, very low,"who should be on my knees-- do you know what it means to me to have you tell me this?"
18056It is because my heart is singing--"Do you feel like that?
18056It is like yours?
18056It is not easy to get them any more?
18056It seems rather appropriate, does n''t it?
18056It seems rather queer, does n''t it, on our last day?
18056It was be- yeutiful-- but Cousin Jean cwied---"Cried?
18056It was there for the whole world to see, was it not? 18056 It was valuable?"
18056It will be heavenly, Daddy, to have Emily--And how was he to know that there were other heavenly things to happen?
18056It''s about your father--"Father?
18056It''s rather dangerous,slowly;"why did n''t you take the collar off?"
18056Jean, if I had been that shabby boy that you first saw in the shop would you have been happy with me, in a plain little house? 18056 Jean--""Jean?"
18056Jean?
18056Let''s talk about it, and plan it, and put dream furniture in it, and dream friends--"More Lovely Dreams?
18056Life has a way of spoiling our plans, has n''t it? 18056 Like it?
18056Like what?
18056Like what?
18056Make-- elephants?
18056Makes toys?
18056May I come in?
18056May I come now?
18056May I come tomorrow?
18056May I dance with her?
18056May I dance with your daughter?
18056May I have it now?
18056May I have your prayer- book in exchange for mine?
18056May I live with you always-- to the end of my days?
18056McKenzie?
18056Mind what, Emily--?
18056Miss Merritt? 18056 Miss it?"
18056Mother, if the Germans get to Paris what will happen?
18056My dear girl, why?
18056My dear girl,he said,"what did you mean when you spoke of going away?"
18056My dear, why?
18056My dear-- what is it?
18056My mother''s room?
18056My precious, do n''t I know? 18056 No, but Mother--""Yes?"
18056Of these?
18056Oh, Bruce, what would you gain if I held you? 18056 Oh, Daddy--""Would you like it, dear?"
18056Oh, Emily,said the girl behind the counter,"do n''t you think we might--?"
18056Oh, I say, do you call him that?
18056Oh, am I? 18056 Oh, did you hear?
18056Oh, did you?
18056Oh, do you know him?
18056Oh, do you--?
18056Oh, does she?
18056Oh, look here, Doctor,he said, desperately,"wo n''t you and your daughter take pity on me-- and join me at supper?
18056Oh, must I give her something?
18056Oh, my dear, ca n''t you see?
18056Oh, on such a night as this, Daddy? 18056 Oh, really, Derry?
18056Oh, with your father?
18056Oh, yes-- how soon?
18056Oh, you Babes in the Wood--"By Jove,the Captain ejaculated, much taken by the little scene,"do you mean that they are going to be married?"
18056Oh, you are going back?
18056Oh, you are with him, then?
18056Oh, you saw that?
18056Oh,--she had a feeling that she was not being quite candid with her father--"he''s rather swank, is n''t he, Daddy?"
18056Oh,he was more pleased than he was willing to admit,"did you hear that, Jean?"
18056Oh,she said, under her breath,"how can she say things like that?
18056Oh,she said, with her cheek against his rough coat,"are you proud of me because of my green ducks and my pink pussy cats?"
18056Oh-- did she know of the engagement?
18056Oh-- how do you know?
18056Oh--"And when yon wear it I shall call you-- Friend Wife--CHAPTER XIII ARE MEN MADE ONLY FOR THIS?
18056Really? 18056 Restless, sir?"
18056Shall I always have to sit so far away from you, Derry?
18056Shall I read to you?
18056Shall you go before Christmas?
18056Shall you hate to kill them?
18056Shall you miss me, Emily?
18056Shall you miss me?
18056Shall you?
18056She wo n''t miss me, then?
18056She''s Dr. McKenzie''s daughter, is n''t she? 18056 She-- she tells the children?"
18056Should n''t I have said that? 18056 Should n''t I, Derry?"
18056Should n''t you?
18056So it is the lady of the elephants, Ulrich? 18056 So that was it?
18056So that was it? 18056 So that''s it?
18056Some day I shall put on a uniform and pass for a boy--"Why not go over as you are?
18056Sometimes--"Do n''t you believe that the war will stop?
18056Teddy, dearest,she asked,"can you take care of Margaret- Mary until Cousin Derry comes back?
18056Tell you what?
18056Tell you what?
18056That men can live on star- dust?
18056That''s the cruelty, the sadness of it, is n''t it?
18056The best side?
18056The elephants? 18056 The robber--""Do you really feel that way about it?"
18056The wine? 18056 The worst?"
18056Then he will marry her?
18056Then is it-- pity?
18056Then why do n''t you go and fight?
18056Then why do n''t you go?
18056Then why does n''t He stop it, Mother?
18056Then you defend her?
18056Then you think he''s better?
18056Then you think that Derry ought to break his promise?
18056Then you wo n''t go to France with me?
18056Then you wo n''t sell him?
18056Then you''ll go?
18056Then you''ll miss me, dearest?
18056There?
18056They do n''t weally lay eggs, do they?
18056They''ll never get to Paris,were the words on their lips, but in their hearts they were asking,"Will they--?"
18056Tired, dearest?
18056To France? 18056 To go?"
18056To me?
18056To see you? 18056 To the circus?"
18056Told her what?
18056Tomorrow--?
18056Tonight? 18056 Two days?"
18056Was n''t he in the draft?
18056Was n''t there any sense,said little Jean from the hearth rug,"in Bunker Hill and Valley Forge?"
18056Was that what you were telling him on the balcony stairs?
18056Was that why she was crying?
18056We did n''t have to make up much, Daddy, did we?
18056Well, I said I''d come, did n''t I? 18056 Well, did n''t you like my smiling letters?"
18056Well, do you want me to congratulate you, Drusilla?
18056Well, is n''t it better to know?
18056Well, not exactly that--"There is n''t much difference, is there?
18056Well, they''d just stop, dear--"Would they say they were sorry?
18056Well, what if it is?
18056Well, what of it? 18056 Well, why not?"
18056Well, why not?
18056Well--?
18056Well?
18056Well?
18056What am I to do? 18056 What are de- yethless ages, Cousin Derry?"
18056What did they say?
18056What do you mean, Daddy?
18056What do you think of it, Emily?
18056What do you think, Daddy?
18056What do you think, sir?
18056What does Jean say?
18056What does the doctor say?
18056What game''s this? 18056 What good would it do me to cry?"
18056What has Derry Drake been telling you?
18056What has that to do with it?
18056What have you been doing to yourself, dearest? 18056 What have you been thinking, Jean- Joan?"
18056What if I stayed out of it now? 18056 What is it?"
18056What is troubling you, dear woman?
18056What made you change your mind?
18056What made you say--_was_--?
18056What makes you say that?
18056What makes you say that?
18056What news?
18056What should I do with things like that?
18056What time is it, Derry?
18056What was she doing there, Bronson?
18056What will she care for her professional reputation when she is my father''s wife?
18056What''s the matter with you this morning? 18056 What''s the matter, daughter?"
18056What''s the matter?
18056What''s the matter?
18056What''s''magination?
18056What''s''nopt''mistic?
18056What?
18056What?
18056What?
18056When I was a little girl,she said, softly,"I used to cry-- because I was so sorry for the-- tin soldier--""Are you sorry for me, Drusilla?"
18056When are you going?
18056When did you make up your mind?
18056When is Hilda coming back?
18056When?
18056When?
18056When?
18056When?
18056Where are we going?
18056Where are you going, Cousin Derry?
18056Where is it?
18056Where''s Dad?
18056Where?
18056Who are the others?
18056Who are you?
18056Who knows? 18056 Who told you that?"
18056Who told you that?
18056Who told you that?
18056Who told you?
18056Who told you?
18056Why are n''t you fellows fighting?
18056Why are n''t you knitting?
18056Why are you crying?
18056Why are you giving it to him against the Doctor''s orders?
18056Why did n''t you tell me?
18056Why did you give the Marseillaise last?
18056Why do n''t you go and fight like other men?
18056Why do n''t you take a girl?
18056Why do you call me that?
18056Why must n''t we, Mother?
18056Why must you?
18056Why not now? 18056 Why not pray in your own kirk?"
18056Why not that as well as any other?
18056Why not? 18056 Why not?
18056Why not? 18056 Why not?
18056Why not? 18056 Why not?"
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?
18056Why should n''t I wear it?
18056Why should n''t he be radiant? 18056 Why should n''t he like my Jean?"
18056Why should n''t it come to you?
18056Why should n''t she?
18056Why should they wait, and miss the wonder of it all, as I have missed it-- all the color and glow, the wine of life? 18056 Why should we wait,"Ulrich had said,"you and I?
18056Why should you torture yourself with that? 18056 Why?"
18056Why?
18056Why?
18056Why?
18056Will you come to the wedding? 18056 Will you drink to my happiness, General?"
18056Will you eat your soup? 18056 Will you remember?"
18056Will you ride with me this morning?
18056Will you sell me your elephant, Fräulein?
18056With frostin''?
18056With whom?
18056With you?
18056Wo n''t you have a cup of tea,she said impulsively,"and take off your cloak?
18056Wo n''t you have some tea?
18056Would a doll do?
18056Would n''t it be dreadful if we had loveless days, Daddy, as well as meatless ones and wheatless?
18056Would n''t you be, under the same circumstances? 18056 Would n''t you want it, Derry?"
18056Would n''t you want me to-- cry?
18056Would you give me up?
18056Would you want me to let you go like that, Derry?
18056Yes, but how did you know it?
18056Yes, desperately-- at first sight?
18056Yes, do you like them?
18056You and Miss Bridges and the two of us?
18056You are feeling it like that?
18056You are sure that you wo n''t mind being left, sir?
18056You do n''t mind having me here, do you, Hodgson?
18056You do n''t mind?
18056You feel-- that way--?
18056You have never felt it?
18056You know better than to feed a man on stardust, do n''t you?
18056You like it then, sir?
18056You little bundle of-- ecstasy-- what am I going to do with you?
18056You mean he has been drinking?
18056You mean that they might think I had stolen it? 18056 You remember Mr. Drake, do n''t you, Emily?"
18056You see, the purple camels belonged to the Three Wise Men, the ones who journeyed, after the Star-- do you remember? 18056 You think then it is his-- money?"
18056You think then she wo n''t be able to see me for several days? 18056 You think then that I am going to lose her?"
18056You wo n''t be here for the wedding--?
18056You wo n''t leave me, Jean?
18056You would n''t have me not go, would you?
18056You''ve got on your spangly dwess, and it makes you pwetty--"Oh, Ted, is it just my clothes that make me pretty?
18056You-- you are-- wet-- won''t you take cold--?
18056You? 18056 You?"
18056Your Captain--?
18056Your mother''s picture--?
18056_ An elephant_?
18056''If anything should happen to Derry,''I said,''do you think that all the money in the world would comfort me?''
18056''Where is she?''
18056Alma, cold as ice, challenged him:"Why should they call to us?
18056And I want Lady- bread- and- butter, and oh, Ellen, will you have time for little pound cakes?"
18056And a man''s respect after all is rather a cold thing, is n''t it?
18056And are we quarrelling, Hilda?"
18056And found the little baby who was the Christ?
18056And have n''t I seen the clash of those ideals with the reality of your father''s fault?
18056And he-- loves you--""Where is he?"
18056And how could he know that she was at that very moment following other beckonings?
18056And how could they know that Derry was envying them their cavalry yellow and their olive drab?
18056And is n''t the snow-- wonderful?"
18056And my own father has gone-- to France-- and I wanted a father--""Did Derry tell you to come?"
18056And people keep asking me-- why?"
18056And then--?
18056And what would the little lady do then?"
18056And why should not women know women better than men know them?
18056And why should you make him lie?"
18056And would they come back after that and expect her to love them and live with them?
18056And you are to have lunch with us?
18056And you have n''t any stupid patients, have you?"
18056And you knew that when they were gone you would n''t get any more?"
18056And you sit here like this?"
18056And you''ll take care of sister?"
18056And, after all, had she really been frank?
18056Are men made only for this?"
18056Are you coming in?"
18056Are you going to deny your daughter that?"
18056Are you lucky, Derry?
18056As she met his smiling eyes, she smiled back,"Do you mean that I am a cheerful thing?"
18056Bronson, following Derry, came back in a half hour with a dry,"Is there anything I can do for you, Miss Merritt?"
18056Bruce McKenzie, coming in, asked,"Where did you get them?"
18056But Emily wo n''t, will you, Emily?"
18056But I have n''t heard from him, have you?"
18056But I think if you would like to take Jean--""Alone?"
18056But Jean?
18056But he might not come, so what was the use of being premature?
18056But how could that old pussy- cat be glad, how could she be anything but frightened and hungry and begging my help?
18056But how could you expect me to remember?
18056But how in the world did she know where the diamonds were?"
18056But if he had not been his father''s son?
18056But if you stood under a tree and a great ripe peach hung just out of your reach, could you be blamed for shaking the tree?
18056But if you would come and see him?
18056But now, my dear, my dear, do you love me enough not to keep me, but to let me go?"
18056But of what earthly use was an ancestor in uniform to the present situation?
18056But was it sophistry?
18056But what could I do?
18056But what if I stayed out of it now, Jean?
18056But what way?
18056But would you ever have offered me ease and rest from hard work?
18056But you''ll get me a glass of wine?"
18056But, Jean, will you always remember this, that when I am at my best, I come back to the things my mother taught her boy?
18056Ca n''t you see our men and the lilies of France?"
18056Can you hear him?"
18056Can you tell them, Derry?
18056Connolly?"
18056Could he come for Jean and her father?
18056Could you be very brave if you went down, and told her not to be sorry?"
18056Derry asked,"a rose- colored cat?"
18056Derry had a whimsical sense of the meeting of the white cat and this leonine gentleman-- would she purr or scratch?
18056Derry, do you hear?
18056Derry, would n''t you like a honeymoon here?"
18056Derry?"
18056Did n''t they wait and weary like Mariana of the Moated Grange--?
18056Did nice girls ask men to come and see them?
18056Did she remember"Peter Pan"?
18056Did you get my letter?"
18056Did you know that Derry may be over now at any time, and that Jean is to stay with the General?"
18056Do n''t I know it?"
18056Do n''t you feel that all the things you have ever done are little compared to this?
18056Do n''t you see?"
18056Do n''t you think that would be fun?"
18056Do n''t you?"
18056Do you blame me for shaking the tree?"
18056Do you know him?"
18056Do you know him?"
18056Do you know what that means, to march?
18056Do you mean to tell me that you like to be muddy and dirty and live in a place like this?"
18056Do you realize that if she goes, there are things that the world will say?"
18056Do you really think she intends to go, Daddy?"
18056Do you remember''Sherwood,''where Blondin rides through the forest singing:''"Death, what is death?"
18056Do you remember, Drusilla?
18056Do you suppose that the wives and mothers of France ever dreamed that it would be their fortitude which would hold the enemy back?"
18056Do you think I am going to let Hilda Merritt stand between my child and happiness?"
18056Do you think I am going to take orders from McKenzie-- or from you?"
18056Do you think I should have stayed out of it for a moment if it had n''t been for you?
18056Do you think for as instant that you can meet her eyes?"
18056Do you think that I do?
18056Do you think that Père Marquette cared for what smaller minds might think, or Frances Willard?
18056Do you think that the Drusilla of the old days would have built an altar?"
18056Do you think you have to tell me that?
18056Do you want to go, Jeanie?"
18056Doctor McKenzie tapped a finger on the table thoughtfully,"Oh, does she?
18056Does n''t Mother want him here?"
18056Embarrassment?
18056Frankly?
18056Had she liked the play last night?
18056Had the days of peace held no dangers that they should be so afraid for them now?
18056Has it ever crossed your mind that if you had been half a man I might have acted like a whole one?
18056Have n''t I known it all along?
18056Have n''t I seen you a little shining knight ready to do battle for your ideals?
18056Have the years in which you sacrificed yourself, in which you sacrificed your son, counted no more than this?
18056Have you ever looked back at the years and seen me going out into the night to follow you and bring you back?
18056Have your prayers availed no more than this?
18056He blazed,"What do you mean, Hilda?"
18056He does n''t look it, does he?
18056He had a fleeting sense of what Emily would be like with some big thing in her life-- how far would it swing her from her sedate course?
18056He is an old man, Fräulein, and his mind goes back to the Germany which sang and told fairy tales, and made toys; do you see?
18056He is the biggest and finest man I have ever met, but--""But what?"
18056He looks brave, does n''t he?"
18056He was at the wedding--""Old Bronson?"
18056He was made in Germany?"
18056He wo n''t leave anything to sell, and then what shall I say to the people who want to buy?"
18056Her father noticed her lack of appetite,"Why do n''t you eat your dinner, dear?"
18056Her father, twinkling, teased her,"You see--?"
18056Her name is''Maisie,''would n''t you know a girl like that would be called''Maisie''?
18056Hilda knows better, do n''t you, Hilda?"
18056How can I, Hilda?"
18056How can we laugh over there when they are crying here?
18056How could Drusilla go on, like Werther''s Charlotte,_ calmly cutting bread and butter_?
18056How could I meet them?
18056How could he bring Jean here?
18056How could he let her clear young eyes rest on that which he and his mother had seen?
18056How could he set, as it were, all of this sordidness against her sweetness?
18056How could he speak to her of the things he had seen in his father''s shadowed house?
18056How could she care as much?
18056How did that happen?"
18056How do you know that I can make it convenient?"
18056How fill that delicate mind with a knowledge of that which seemed even to his greater sophistication unspeakable?
18056How is Dad?"
18056How many of you would dare cut the fellow who will inherit his father''s millions?"
18056I adore your laugh, Derry, though I should n''t be telling you, should I--?
18056I did n''t think--""I am glad you did n''t think--""Oh, are you?"
18056I heard a dear old bishop ask the other day why we should see only the ash cans and garbage cans in our back yards when there was blue sky above?
18056I want to get into the war--""Why do n''t you?"
18056I wonder if Joan of Arc was afraid-- in her heart as the rest of us are?
18056I wonder if, after all, Kipling is n''t right, and that the hump and hoof and haunch of it all is n''t obedience?
18056I-- I do n''t know why I am telling you all this-- only it does n''t seem quite fair, does it?"
18056If I am too black to herd with the white sheep, what of you; are n''t you tarred with the same brush--?"
18056If I do, can you stay with Jean?"
18056If I was not born here, can I help that?
18056If all the world were like these men, what kind of world would it be?
18056If all women defended men who would n''t fight, what kind of a world would it be?
18056If anything should happen, you will remember?"
18056If it is not enough to buy pink parasols, will you let me give you another?"
18056If it were, for example, surgical instruments-- anaesthetics--?
18056If she should have a child?"
18056If you take her with you, will your Jean be proud of her Daddy in France?"
18056Is n''t it better to fight than to sit here?
18056Is n''t it comfy with Emily?"
18056Is n''t jealousy pardonable?"
18056It began,"Boy dear--""I wonder if I shall make you understand what it is so necessary that you should understand?
18056It has been a prop to lean on--""Only that--?"
18056It poured forth, with now and then an offending phrase,"Gott in Himmel, do they think we have forgotten?
18056It''s a bit hard for the rest of us fellows to understand why he keeps out--""Does n''t he ever try to-- explain?"
18056Jean, dear, I must go to France--""To France?"
18056Jean, dear, may I tell Drusilla?"
18056Just because a barbarian had brought his hordes into Belgium?
18056Just one page in Jean''s firm, clear script:"Dear Mr. Drake:--"Could you spare me one little minute tomorrow?
18056Lacking those fifty years in which to grow towards the thought of dissolution, what ought one to do?
18056Marion, do you hear?
18056May I turn them over to you, Derry?"
18056Miss Emily had flared,"Do you think I shall buy toys of Germany after this war?"
18056Miss McKenzie, your father says you may dance with me-- I hope you have something left?"
18056No platitudes?"
18056Not slavish obedience, but obedience founded on a knowledge of one''s place and value in the pack?"
18056Now do you see?"
18056Nurse, what made you put on your cap?
18056Of late many women had said to her,"Was my son born for this, to be torn from my arms-- to be butchered?"
18056Oh, Daddy, did he tell you?"
18056Oh, lovely painted lady on the stairs, has it come to this?
18056Oh, lovely, lovely, lovely Cinderella, could your godmother do more than this?
18056Oh, why had she sung at all?
18056Rain or shine?
18056Ralph Witherspoon wants to marry her, Hilda, what do you think of that?"
18056Recruitin''?"
18056Shall I call Dr. McKenzie if we need someone--?"
18056Shall I follow in a taxi?"
18056Shall it be roses or violets, to- day, my dear?"
18056She does n''t mean all that she says, do you, Hilda?"
18056She had slighted him, she had listened while others slandered-- why should she care what other women had done?
18056She hated the thought that she and Hilda were alone in the empty house--"Hilda, if you go to France, shall you see Daddy?"
18056She is looking pale, do n''t you think she is looking pale?"
18056She knew Drusilla?
18056She knew the things against which he had struggled, and she had rebelled hotly,"Why should he be sacrificed?"
18056She stopped long enough to ask,"Is Hilda still in town?"
18056She was half- delirious all night, and begged and begged--""She does n''t want you to go?"
18056She was shaking with the dread of it, and Bronson had said,"Had n''t you better wait, ma''am?"
18056She would laugh a little, and write back:"Are you any better than I?
18056Should a man make himself fit in some special fashion?
18056Should they thank the Lord for that?
18056So that they will think of him as fine and splendid, and going up to Heaven because God loves brave men--?"
18056So that was it?
18056So what''s the use of wasting breath?"
18056So you young people have met, eh?"
18056That I am a sort of Dr. Jekyll, with the Mr. Hyde part of me asleep--""And you let her scare you like that?"
18056That men and women are better and bigger than you have believed?"
18056That sounds a little like a hold- up, does n''t it?
18056The big box had followed-- how_ dear_ Daddy had always been-- but had she ever wanted to eat like that?
18056The man propped up beside her murmured,"My Captain liked that-- he used to sing it--""Yes?"
18056The one for the benefit of the Eye and Ear Hospital?
18056The steak was there, why not eat it?
18056Then Derry asked,"Shall I tell you the story of How the Purple Camels Came to Paradise?"
18056Then came the inevitable question: why was n''t Derry Drake fighting?
18056Then her clear voice,"Is n''t it a wonderful night to walk, Daddy?"
18056Then she said,"Is it his money or his father''s?"
18056Then when she had finished, Mary Connolly asked the thing which everybody asked--"Why is n''t he fighting?"
18056Then, out of the darkness, came a shivering old voice,"Derry, are you there?"
18056There is n''t any harm in that, is there?"
18056They were little French soldiers, flat on their backs, bright with paint--"I wonder how they feel about it?"
18056This has always been the place of happiness?"
18056This is our hour, is n''t it?"
18056Torture and mutilate?
18056Was Jean McKenzie''s room behind the two golden windows above the balcony?
18056Was he going to propose to her again, in this room which she had set aside so sacredly for Derry Drake?
18056Was n''t it remarkable that his father knew her father?
18056Was n''t some of it true?
18056Was she going to the dance at the Willard?
18056Was she there, or in the room below, where shaded lamps shone softly among the shadows?
18056Was that what the war made of men?
18056Was the world''s pageant of horrors and of heroism thus unseen by the eyes of the unthinking?
18056Was this the Derry whose supply of cheerfulness had seemed inexhaustible?
18056We wo n''t quarrel with her, will we, Hilda?"
18056Well, when I go over, will you pray for me, my dear?"
18056Well?"
18056Were they mad, these mothers, to want to hold their boys back?
18056Were they planning to go North in the summer and South in the winter?
18056Were they still care- free and comfortable?
18056What are you going to give her?"
18056What could have become of him?
18056What did it all mean?
18056What do you mean, Emily?"
18056What does he care about public opinion?
18056What does the Prussian know of play?
18056What more could a woman ask-- than love like that?
18056What other woman would have done it?
18056What other woman would have kept her love for him through it all?
18056What then?
18056What was the matter with him?
18056What would Jean say if she heard you talking like this?"
18056What''s a husband for, dearest, if you ca n''t tell him your troubles?"
18056What''s the matter with that?"
18056What, after all, was he that she should worship him?
18056Whatever made you walk in the rain?"
18056When Miss Emily discovered the plant, she asked Derry,"Who put it there?"
18056When at last the Doctor laid the letter down, Derry said very low,"Do you blame me?"
18056When the old man had left them, she said to the General,"Do you know that your son is falling in love?"
18056Where had she seen him?
18056Where''s Miss Jean?"
18056Whom?"
18056Whose persistent optimism had been at times exasperating to his friends?
18056Why did n''t you call me?"
18056Why do n''t you make up your mind?"
18056Why explain what he was feeling to Hilda?
18056Why not, Derry?"
18056Why not, Emily?"
18056Why not, indeed?
18056Why not, when Adventure beckoned, go to meet it?
18056Why not?
18056Why not?"
18056Why should Daddy and Derry be blown to pieces-- or made blind-- or not come back at all?
18056Why should she do such a thing?
18056Why should they fight?
18056Why?
18056Why?
18056Why?"
18056Why?"
18056Why?"
18056Will the time ever come, Derry?"
18056Will you be afraid to stay alone, or shall I wake up Ellen and have her sleep on the couch in your dressing room?"
18056Will you dine with us tonight?"
18056Will you have your lunch up now, sir?"
18056Will you write to him?"
18056Would Daddy and Derry, when they went over, do that?
18056Would anybody laugh if Derry had been dead only fourteen days?
18056Would do?
18056Would n''t there be moments when in spite of me you would swing back to women like Hilda?
18056Would she forget?
18056Would she have been so frank if she had not felt its stimulus to a man of his type?
18056Would she remember?
18056Would they, would they?
18056Would walking with me break the spell of the wind and wet?"
18056Would you ever have thought that I might some day be your daughter''s equal in your home?
18056Would you have the nation stand with its hands in its pockets?"
18056Would you?"
18056X A MAN WITH MONEY XI HILDA WEARS A CROWN XII WHEN THE MORNING STARS SANG XIII ARE MEN MADE ONLY FOR THIS?
18056Yankee Doodle and your heads up, flags flying?
18056Yet Emily had said--?
18056Yet it really was n''t so very sad-- was it?"
18056Yet what am I but that?"
18056Yet, perhaps if I should tell you?"
18056You ca n''t be too careful, Jean--"The girl, touching the old man''s shoulder, asked,"Where do you live?"
18056You can see that, ca n''t you, sir?"
18056You know Dr. McKenzie, Derry?"
18056You know the attitude?
18056You see, he knows that people are asking questions, and you hear what they are calling him?"
18056You will bring them then?
18056You wo n''t mind?"
18056You would n''t want to get me into trouble, would you?"
18056You''ve kept her shut away from the things that could hurt her, but how do you know what will happen when you open the gate?"
18056[ Illustration:"If anything should happen, you will remember?"]
18056_ Do you believe in fairies?_ Of course she did.
18056_ Frontispiece_"I have n''t anything left-- for you""If anything should happen, you will remember?"
18056_ Tonight_, Jean?"
18056_ What indeed_?
18056_ Why?
18056_ Would William of Prussia ever be sorry_?
18056entendez vous?
18056she asked,"what do you think of them?"
18056which was rather nice and human of her, was n''t it?
36321''Tis more persuasive and as sure As( shall we say?)
36321( How could she so forget good breeding?)
36321Accept these verses then, I pray, Disarming press and public too, For what can hostile critics say?
36321And how he put his life to stake, For Principle and Country''s sake?
36321Footnotes:[ A] NOTE.--"_Lors, dit- on, quand il jouait Handel Le jeu ne valait pas la chandelle._"[ B] PUBLISHER''S READER--"_Pied- a- terre_"?
36321Most fortunate shall I be then Of mortal men; For what more happiness ensures Than work in service such as Yours?
36321What else is left for them to do, Because of You, But view with kindness this collection, Which bears the seal of Your protection?
36321_ Joan of Arc_ From Pimlico to Central Park, From Timbuctoo to Rotten Row, Who has not heard of Joan of Arc, His tragic tale who does not know?
35681A blind man can tell the difference between pepper pods and apple dumplings, but who can tell where tweedle- dee ends and tweedle- dum begins?
35681A reed shaken by the wind?
35681ALEXANDER HAMILTON What do the clouds on the social horizon predict?
35681And the reason?
35681Are the people astonished?
35681Are they waiting until they can spy the enemy through field glasses?
35681But what gives expression?
35681But what kind of an end?
35681Can you wonder that the country is being hypnotized by the sight of so many cantankerous cataleptics?
35681Centers will soon be formed in Atlanta, Nashville, Cleveland, Boston, Hartford, Philadelphia and Washington, D. C. What is causing so much crime?
35681Did he do it on tannic acid released from tea leaves?
35681Do the authorities believe that when the day of trial arrives the friends and relatives of these veterans will hurry to volunteer for active service?
35681Do your sins of omission merit such a punishment?
35681For without food what avails your steel, your oil and your gold?
35681Has anyone ever witnessed automatic acting that left a profound impression?
35681Has anyone taken the trouble to find out just what distinguishes the minority from the majority?
35681How, then, can you undertake to insure the future by contracts signed and sealed by elderly gentlemen with good intentions and poor judgment?
35681If so, is it sealed or open?
35681If we say that a statesman represents Americanism, the question arises what kind of Americanism?
35681In what way are we superior to Irish politicians?
35681In what way can we be said to excel in probity of conduct the people of Ireland?
35681Is Nature a book of fate?
35681Is our planet revolving toward a second edition of puritanism?
35681On the other hand, where did Bryan get the"cross of gold"inspiration in the old days?
35681Was it a gentleman with owl spectacles from the oil fields of Texas?
35681Was no one in America aware that the French Premier is a fluent speaker in English?
35681What is dramatic acting?
35681What is music?
35681What went they out for to see?
35681What were his favorite drinks?
35681What will be the result in the long run?
35681When leading business men commit such folly what can you expect of the nation at large?
35681Who was his adviser?
35681Who will ever know?
35681Will it be one of victory or one of ignominy?
35681You think it strange?
32053A_ real_ party?
32053Afraid, honey? 32053 Ai n''t ever been to Freedom before?"
32053And did n''t He just bring you poor souls here out of the storm?
32053And had the Indians gone then?
32053And is n''t it the funniest little house?
32053And what is it? 32053 And who''s Liz?"
32053Are n''t they the cutest pair?
32053Are n''t you afraid-- sitting there?
32053Are n''t you any relation to us-- up at Happy House?
32053Are you B''lindy?
32053Are you Davy''s sister?
32053Are you Miss Sabriny''s niece?
32053Are you going to help Judson with his harvesting?
32053Are you_ really_ both Anne Leavitts?
32053Aunt Milly, what was the Leavitt trouble?
32053B''lindy-- what-- what is it? 32053 But Dad?"
32053But ca n''t you see that that explains_ everything_ and that he_ was n''t_ impertinent, after all? 32053 But is n''t this-- queer-- and out of date?
32053But, Aunt Milly, I have a-- a right to know, have n''t I? 32053 But_ why_ are they trash, B''lindy?
32053But_ you_ do, do n''t you? 32053 Ca n''t I do something?
32053Can I go, too, Liz?
32053Claire, what if I can_ never_ get away? 32053 Dast we?"
32053Dear me, how can I tell? 32053 Dear me, where_ is_ B''lindy?
32053Did n''t you mean it, Nancy?
32053Did she-- die?
32053Did you see Thelma King''s sister at the class- day exercises? 32053 Do any dreams ever come true?
32053Do n''t you know the Queen likes tidy gardens when she comes here? 32053 Do you always have to be beautiful to do beautiful things?"
32053Do you know what I pretended then?
32053Do you mean you do n''t care-- a bit?
32053Do you two live here all alone?
32053Does Liz-- punish-- you much?
32053Does n''t Happy House look beautiful?
32053Everybody? 32053 Everything_ ready_, my dear?
32053Freedom? 32053 Goin''to Freedom you say, Miss?"
32053Going_ away_?
32053Has n''t it been fun? 32053 Have I frightened you?
32053Have I time to run up and tell Miss Nancy?
32053Honest, what_ did_ you say? 32053 Honest?"
32053How can anyone hurt them?
32053How can_ anyone_ be cruel to children?
32053How d''you do, Miss Buttercup? 32053 How did you_ dare_?"
32053How far are we from Freedom?
32053How you goin''to get over that stone fence?
32053I know-- I think-- that-- that----"What, Nancy?
32053I wonder if you will understand, Nancy?
32053If you please, can you tell me in what way I can reach Freedom?
32053In what room, B''lindy?
32053Is it a very old place?
32053Is it because the Muse will not come?
32053Is it-- going to be-- very bad?
32053Is n''t that rapturous? 32053 Is n''t the world funny, Claire, how the sins of the fathers and the grandfathers are visited upon the children-- at least in places like this?
32053Is n''t this exciting? 32053 Is that orchard ours?"
32053Is there anything you want done? 32053 Is this summer night as perfect where you are, Claire?
32053It-- is-- dreadful, is n''t it, Aunt Milly? 32053 Love letter?"
32053May I come in?
32053May I go to my room? 32053 Now, Janie, is n''t it nice to have folks come here out of the storm?"
32053Oh, Nancy, you_ darling_, will you? 32053 Oh, Peter-- why ask me?
32053Shall I give you one of my fairy gifts? 32053 Silly-- haven''t you seen enough of me for one day?"
32053Sounds more to_ me_ like a conspiracy, and ca n''t they put people in jail for doing things like that?
32053Tell me-- I am haunted by a thousand memories-- who in the world is this strange little creature?
32053Then wo n''t you come up?
32053Then you wo n''t need me anymore?
32053Then you_ do n''t_ know? 32053 There''s going to be a gorgeous sunset to- night-- won''t you come into the orchard-- just for a little while?"
32053Wal, bless me, are ye one o''Miss Sabriny''s folks? 32053 Was it_ dreadfully_ silly, Peter?
32053Was n''t it funny? 32053 Was there_ ever_ anything so funny?"
32053What are you all about?
32053What are you doing?
32053What can it be?
32053What do you mean, B''lindy?
32053What do you pretend, Miss Nancy?
32053What is it, Nancy?
32053What will you do?
32053What--_what_ did you say to him?
32053What_ does_ she mean, Aunt Milly?
32053Where is Aunt Sabrina?
32053Who is he?
32053Who was Eric?
32053Who''s the other fellar?
32053Who_ called_ it Happy House first?
32053Who_ is_ it? 32053 Why did you come here, Pet-- Barry?"
32053Why do they call the Leavitt place''Happy House''?
32053Why, ca n''t I join anyway?
32053Why, yes, why not?
32053Will it make you unhappy to tell it, Aunt Milly?
32053Will you ask the child''s guardians if they will allow her to come to my school at Tarrytown for a few years? 32053 Wo n''t we miss that bell, though?
32053You did?
32053You''re_ different_, are n''t you?
32053_ What?_"Do n''t look as though you thought I''d gone mad. 32053 Ai n''t it just_ wonderful_, Milly Leavitt?
32053Ai n''t there any_ better_ folks she can take up with on this Island than a hired man_ and_ the Hopworths?"
32053And a- goin''to Happy House when ye ai n''t ever seen it?"
32053And could_ you_ look haughty with every hair pin dropping out of your head?
32053And did you think the express would wait fer you?"
32053And have jolly fires and roast potatoes and weiners and corn?"
32053And if it kicked and squirmed, might she not drop it?
32053And is the grass real green?"
32053And may we not know who it is that has given us shelter?"
32053And was n''t she really acting a lie?
32053And what interest had Parsnips, the queer old farmer, in the"ghost"tower?
32053And why does not something happen quickly?
32053And why this magnificence?
32053And why was she so desperately anxious to earn money?
32053And why, when they seemed such good friends, could he not tell her?
32053And will you_ please_ tell me why she had to debate with her conscience?"
32053And you, Milly Leavitt, how_ dare_ you meddle with the ways of God?"
32053And, Peter-- do you hate people that-- act lies?"
32053And, please, Aunt Milly, will_ you_ call me Nancy?
32053Are the trees big, dear?
32053Are you soaked?"
32053Are you stark crazy, Anne Leavitt?"
32053As the years went by, though, I grew afraid-- what was I going to do with this earthly wealth I possessed?
32053B''lindy, can you knit?"
32053Besides, what can I tell?
32053Breathlessly, Nancy whispered,"What happened then?"
32053But, tell me, are those two funny little Leavitt sisters any relation of--_ours_?"
32053But_ why_ in the world should the other boys have to sneak away?"
32053CHAPTER XVII NANCY PLANS A PARTY"What are you doing, Nonie?"
32053Ca n''t I?"
32053Ca n''t Webb and I round''em up at the point of a gun?"
32053Can the car make it?"
32053Can you find anywhere a more wonderful picture than that waving field of oats-- pale green against that sky?
32053Could I do beautiful things and-- look like this?"
32053Could you, if you had just been running a race which included vaulting a stone wall?
32053Could you_ see_ their faces when they watched Nonie?"
32053Did I dream, when I took Anne''s shoes( to speak in figures) and put them on, where they''d lead me?
32053Did I?"
32053Did Miss Leavitt or anyone_ else_ think she''d go anywhere where those Hopworths were?
32053Did Nancy imagine that she heard a rustling, as though Aunt Sabrina had suddenly straightened in her chair?
32053Did he know?
32053Did n''t you know the poor soul dropped right off in her sleep last night and left Timothy Hopkins with those ten children to care for?
32053Did you see that automobile?
32053Do n''t those frosh days seem ages ago?"
32053Do n''t you know that you''re not a bit old?
32053Do n''t you think that''s the worst?"
32053Do n''t you_ know_ what I want to tell you?
32053Do you ever pretend, Miss?"
32053Do you know what I told Sabrina?
32053Do you know why?
32053Do you suppose this is a cloudburst?
32053Do you think that worth while?"
32053Does it torture my artistic soul?
32053Does n''t Nonie look darling to- day?"
32053Goin''to Freedom?"
32053Had that Anne Leavitt, like poor old Aunt Sabrina, worried and fussed over Leavitt traditions?
32053Had the engaging circus family that Carol befriended anything to do with the mystery?
32053Had they forgotten anything?
32053Have n''t all those people come to see one of us graduate?
32053How did you ever get down?"
32053How had she, Nancy, betrayed Sabrina''s trust?
32053Hyde?"
32053I ca n''t let you go without knowing it-- and-- and-- Nancy,_ could_ you ever-- ever love a fellow-- like me-- enough-- to-- want-- to marry him?"
32053I know she enjoys having dear little Aunt Milly around, but do you think she''d say so?
32053I mean the kind of things you sit and think about and want?"
32053If I go, will you promise me to go straight to bed?"
32053If Peter Hyde_ had_ gone there was nothing in any act or word that signified it; if he had_ not_ gone, why not?
32053Is it something in which I can help?
32053Is n''t it all like some nightmare-- all the aunts and things mixed up the way they were?
32053Is n''t it the most ridiculous mystery?
32053Is n''t it_ nice_?
32053Is n''t that a silly notion, especially when I''m just here acting Anne''s part so that she can go off to Russia?
32053Is n''t that absurd?
32053Is n''t that heavenly?
32053Is n''t that interesting?
32053Is n''t that tragic and exciting?
32053Is n''t the Lord watching over us just like all folks?"
32053Is n''t there a short cut home?
32053Is the play ready?"
32053It was n''t much to want, was it, dear?
32053It''s too warm for velvet, but how would you like to wear a white dress of mine that''s dreadfully small for me?
32053Let me see, it was either John or Jacob was killed in the war of 1812, was n''t it, B''lindy?"
32053Like I''d like to share mine?"
32053Look at that lake over there-- can''t you picture it covered with the canoes of the Indians?
32053May we come again sometime?
32053Nancy watched her with angry eyes-- what_ was_ there about her that had killed that precious glow in poor little Miss Milly?
32053Nancy, will you listen to a plan I''ve been making?
32053Now come here, Miss Fairy, and tell me who you are?
32053Now is n''t that some Hired Man?
32053Of course she could not be offended at his deception, had she not, herself, been masquerading?
32053Oh, Claire,_ were n''t_ we happy, though?
32053Only-- how did he know about my tree?
32053She had taken a fancy to the children, she explained-- would Miss Hopworth permit Nonie and sometimes Davy, to come often to Happy House?
32053She looked at the thin body-- was poverty starving the physical being while neglect starved the spirit?
32053THE WILD WARNING What power did the strange, wild warning in the woods have over Polly Flinders?
32053Tell me-- you said you''d always care more for your work than for anything or anyone else-- couldn''t you share your work?
32053That''s hard for you to believe, is n''t it, dear?
32053Then, at B''lindy''s"What''s that?"
32053Then, to Nancy, with a questioning look that said such fortune seemed too good to be true:"''_ Honest?_''''Bout the swimmin''."
32053Then, to Nancy:"Do you think we can venture now?
32053There was Davy, too, and all she had planned to start for the Club and Nonie-- What must Nonie think?
32053There''s some places, ai n''t there-- aren''t there-- that''s so big folks would n''t know we were Hopworths?
32053Was n''t that justified?"
32053Was n''t that silly?
32053Was she not, indirectly, the cause of the humiliation that threatened them?
32053Was there any noise anywhere on the whole Island?
32053Was there ever anything in the world as strange as this?
32053Was_ that_ what he was hiding?
32053We''ll come here every afternoon-- shall we?"
32053Webb?"
32053Well, well, well, now ai n''t it a nice storm that brings folks here for shelter?"
32053What did Aunt Sabrina mean-- that_ this_ silly little affair ended her stay at Happy House?
32053What do they do?
32053What do those pieces of sheepskin reposing somewhere in the mess on yonder bureau stand for?
32053What do you pretend?"
32053What do you say-- shall we be honery members?"
32053What would Aunt Milly say when she knew?
32053What would she do if it wakened suddenly?
32053What would you_ think_, Aunt Sabrina, if you''d seen her take a whip and lash those children across their bare bodies?
32053What would_ they_ say?
32053What-- what-- wrong-- have I done?
32053What_ was_ the mystery concealed behind that pleasant mask?
32053What_ would_ Anne think?
32053What_ would_ Aunt Milly''s life be if she went suddenly out of it?
32053Who are you?"
32053Who ever heard of North Hero Island and where in goodness is it?"
32053Who has the limping man''s lost package-- the gypsies, the oriental or the neighbor''s boy who ran away?
32053Why could n''t she stem that flood she knew was coming?
32053Why could n''t_ some one_ in Happy House act natural and kind and jolly?
32053Why should n''t she mention Anne''s father or her grandfather?
32053Why, you can do so many things down there-- drill and-- swim, ca n''t you?
32053Why_ should_ Miss Sabrina make such a singular command and_ why_ should she be so agitated?
32053Will you forgive me?"
32053Will you love me any more?
32053Will you show me the book that tells all about it?
32053Wo n''t it be wonderful to see Aunt Milly''s face when she knows about it?
32053Would n''t it be_ funny_ if I took to talking to myself in this dreadful stillness?
32053You do n''t know her, do you?
32053You say the child''s head is full of this sort of thing?
32053You will forgive me, wo n''t you, when I seem ignorant?
32053_ Are_ you a fairy come from the Village of Tall Grass in yonder field?"
32053_ Did_ you know he was coming to- day?"
36344And how is it possible for him to satisfy the conflicting demand?
36344But how can he suit them all in one locality on a single day?
36344THE OPEN LETTER"What is lightning and what causes it?"
36344The question then,"What is lightning and what causes it?"
36649The Birth- Day Oracle; or, Whom shall I Marry?
36649What saith the Master?
2369A hundred and seventeen?
2369About how far back would you say it was?
2369About what, Mother? 2369 Ai n''t he the complete bonehead?
2369Ai n''t it a turrible storm, Mr. Claude? 2369 All right are you, Wheeler?
2369And he walked you all over the field in the hot sun, I suppose?
2369And the Bavarian?
2369And the others-- just pitch them over, do n''t you think?
2369And what about Dan and Jerry? 2369 And what about you?"
2369And you believe those prayers will accomplish nothing, son?
2369And you got cut up, you say?
2369Any message?
2369Anything wrong, Mother?
2369Are any of you fellows alive?
2369Are n''t you going to change?
2369Are n''t you going to put a stop to them?
2369Are there many of your records?
2369Are those the sweet peas you were planting that day when I came back from the West?
2369Are you feeling better?
2369Are you packed?
2369Are you quick with your French?
2369Are you sure they''re too small?
2369Are you trying to tangle me up?
2369At the Marne?
2369Bath?
2369But Milton could n''t have got along without the wicked, could he?
2369But how can there be any serious study where they give so much time to athletics and frivolity? 2369 But unless there''s some reason, why are we dragging our wheat over to Vicount?
2369But what do you expect? 2369 But why, Claude?"
2369But why? 2369 But why?
2369Butcher them?
2369By the way, you''re pals with the doctor, are n''t you? 2369 By the way,"said Victor while the soup plates were being removed,"what do you think of this wine?
2369Ca n''t Mahailey tend to things for you this morning?
2369Ca n''t we have the car? 2369 Ca n''t you go home?"
2369Ca n''t you keep that long- legged ass who bunks under you quiet?
2369Can I keep it myself, sir?
2369Can I see Claude, Mrs. Wheeler? 2369 Chessup?
2369Claude, are we over?
2369Claude, you have n''t really become a free- thinker, have you?
2369Claude,she said in a low voice,"would you mind getting a berth somewhere out in the car tonight?
2369Claude?
2369Could n''t you have got exemption, one way or another?
2369Did n''t you slap him?
2369Did you ever try washing this damned thing yourself?
2369Did you find everything?
2369Do I?
2369Do n''t these French people eat cheese, anyhow? 2369 Do n''t you think so?
2369Do you always sleep like that? 2369 Do you believe him?
2369Do you know that? 2369 Do you like it better than Paris?"
2369Do you like the water?
2369Do you mind letting me drive for awhile? 2369 Do you suppose Claude relished having that preacher visiting them, when they had n''t been married two months?
2369Do you suppose she was hurt, or abused in some way?
2369Do you suppose they are going to hand their city over to the Germans, like a Christmas present? 2369 Do you, Claude?
2369Does n''t it make you tired, the way they are always nagging at Gladys?
2369Does the light hurt your eyes? 2369 Draft?"
2369Du fromage?
2369Edith Cavell? 2369 Ever study chemistry?"
2369Exactly what do you require?
2369Explain to the girl that I do n''t play, will you? 2369 Fanning?
2369Father, could you take your bath now, and be out of the way?
2369First time you''ve been up, is n''t it?
2369For London?
2369German helmet, is n''t it? 2369 Get it away from you?"
2369Guess we''ll have to take our medicine,Claude said dryly,"There was n''t anywhere to duck, was there?
2369Has that got anything to do with our being friends?
2369Have I your permission to go to the Chief Steward?
2369Have a nip?
2369Have we got all the corn in, Mother?
2369Have you and Enid taken tickets for the lecture course in Frankfort?
2369Have you any one there you can send over to tell him?
2369Have you been flying in France?
2369Have you forgiven me?
2369Have you got your railroad tickets in here? 2369 Have you heard Claude Wheeler got hurt day before yesterday?"
2369Have you received notice that there are no more eggs and oranges on board? 2369 Have you seen Ernest Havel?
2369Have you tried him on malted milk?
2369He seems a little gone in the head, do n''t you think?
2369Hello, are you farming?
2369Hello, where are you off to?
2369How did you come to change?
2369How did you ever get home? 2369 How did you happen to get these?"
2369How do you boys feel about it?
2369How do you feel about it, Evangeline?
2369How do you know it is?
2369How long have you been out, Claude? 2369 How many are in there, Bert?"
2369How many were there?
2369How much? 2369 How the devil can I pack it when I do n''t know what I''m going to put on?"
2369How, look strange?
2369I could go to her,he complained,"but what good would that do?
2369I do n''t see how we can stay out of it much longer, do you? 2369 I guess a Yankee can do it as quick as a Scotchman, ca n''t be?"
2369I suppose French girls have n''t any scruples?
2369I suppose you acquitted her on the evidence?
2369I suppose you have friends in London?
2369I wonder how it will look to people here if you go off and leave your husband?
2369I wonder if you''d take it all right if I told you a joke on Bayliss?
2369I wonder why the Spanish dagger grows so thick on this hill, Enid? 2369 I''m the only one left, then?"
2369I''ve brought plenty of lime, but where''ll you get your concrete?
2369I? 2369 If it''s as bad as that, why are the Belgians putting up a fight?"
2369If there''s anybody left alive in this hole, wo n''t he speak up? 2369 In the spring?"
2369In what?
2369Is he going?
2369Is he very bad?
2369Is it any one I know?
2369Is it? 2369 Is n''t Mr. Wheeler there?"
2369Is that a joke?
2369Is that all?
2369Is that the Doctor? 2369 Is there an epidemic of some sort?"
2369Is this heather?
2369Is this the Wheeler farm? 2369 It is rather so in English, is n''t it?"
2369It''s not winter yet; whatever are you getting your bed for?
2369Kamerad, eh?
2369Know anything about that light over there, Wheeler?
2369Let me see that a minute, will you? 2369 Looking for any one, soldier?"
2369Louis? 2369 Mr. Claude,"she asked,"how comes it all them Germans is such ugly lookin''people?
2369Mr. Claude,she would say as she stood at the sink washing the supper dishes,"it''s broad daylight over where Miss Enid is, ai n''t it?
2369Mrs. Wheeler,Mahailey whispered,"ca n''t I run down to the cellar an''git some of them nice strawberry preserves?
2369My God, Claude, what do you want of a cellar as deep as that? 2369 No pickled peaches?
2369Nor Sergeant Hicks, the fat fellow?
2369Now be honest, Susie; did you ever know hens would keep on laying without a rooster?
2369Now may I sit down with you for a few minutes?
2369Now what do you think of that? 2369 Now, Leonard, if Claude likes it--""Likes it?"
2369Now, do you want me to darken the room again?
2369Now, have I told you what you want to know about my case?
2369Now, just what is a Pal Battalion?
2369Now, which way?
2369Oh, wo n''t you? 2369 Old eyes,"she cried,"why do you betray me?
2369Only one rooster? 2369 Parents both living?
2369Perhaps you have come to see the ladies?
2369Read aloud, wo n''t you? 2369 Really?"
2369See here, are n''t you ashamed of yourself?
2369She''s a German, and we''re fighting the Germans, ai n''t we?
2369So your High School boys are feeling war- like these days?
2369Something disagreeable?
2369Strange? 2369 Suppose there was some mistake at Headquarters?"
2369Sure you''ve forgotten nothing?
2369Sure, eh?
2369Take a turn outside?
2369Tame? 2369 That the kind of uniform you''re accustomed to?"
2369That was one of your records they played tonight, that violin solo, was n''t it?
2369That''s enough, if it turns out right, is n''t it?
2369The baby?
2369The future, eh?
2369Them leather leggins is to keep the briars from scratchin''you, ai n''t they? 2369 Then I suppose he never got his leave?"
2369Then who''s to be up and around? 2369 There''s no danger of the steers getting snowed under along the creek, is there?"
2369They must love their country so much, do n''t you think, when they endure such poverty to come back to it?
2369This Scotch mist gets into one''s bones, does n''t it? 2369 Vous avez quelque chose à   manger?"
2369Vous savez le tank Anglais? 2369 Wait a minute, where''s your helmet?"
2369Well, I suppose you''ll let me have clematis for the front porch, anyway? 2369 Well, about how long will it take us to walk it?"
2369Well, are n''t you free, too?
2369Well, is it good- bye?
2369Well, it will decide about Paris, anyway, wo n''t it? 2369 Well, now, what would they think of you, back there?
2369Well, we ca n''t arrive any too soon for us, boys?
2369Well, what do you hear from Claude?
2369Well, what do you make of it, Ernest?
2369Well, why did n''t you get them big enough?
2369Were you at Vera Cruz?
2369Were you thinking of going up to Lincoln, for a little?
2369What air you gittin''up for a- ready, boy? 2369 What are these blue flowers that grow about everywhere?"
2369What are you doing down there, Mahailey?
2369What are you going to do after a while, Ernest? 2369 What are you reading, Mother?"
2369What can he do, poor kid? 2369 What can you do for him, Doctor?"
2369What did you call me off for?
2369What do you mean?
2369What do you think of this match, anyway? 2369 What do you, think, Mother?
2369What does?
2369What for?
2369What is it, Enid? 2369 What is it, Lucien?"
2369What is the matter with that child?
2369What is the number of the cabin?
2369What made you so pig- headed? 2369 What subject?"
2369What the devil are you talking about, boy?
2369What were you studying?
2369What would he be in here for? 2369 What''s Fritz''s temper up here, generally speaking?"
2369What''s the matter with Mother, Lieutenant? 2369 What''s the matter with him?
2369What''s the matter with you? 2369 What''s the matter, Blackie?
2369What''s the matter, Captain Brace?
2369What''s the matter, Mrs. Voigt? 2369 What''s the matter?
2369What''s the matter? 2369 What''s the news?"
2369What''s wanted?
2369Wheeler,he said when Claude''s turn came,"you know your map?
2369When are you going over to the timber claim with me?
2369When will you want your bath? 2369 Where are you hurt?"
2369Where did you get your picture?
2369Where did you lose your arm?
2369Where do these wounded men come from?
2369Where do you suppose the other is?
2369Where is Captain Brace, Lieutenant?
2369Where is your bill- book, son?
2369Where''s Gerhardt?
2369Where''s she goin''to, anyways? 2369 Where''s the Virginian?"
2369Who were they? 2369 Who''s there?"
2369Who, Bird?
2369Why Bayliss, are you in earnest? 2369 Why did n''t you keep me from making a fool of myself?"
2369Why do n''t you ask him not to?
2369Why has n''t some one bought that house long ago and fixed it up?
2369Why in hell did n''t you bring up the rest of him? 2369 Why not drop it?
2369Why not? 2369 Why not?"
2369Why not?
2369Why should I?
2369Why to him in particular?
2369Why, are n''t we going to the circus today?
2369Why, have you seen her? 2369 Why, what made you think I had?"
2369Why, what-- what for?
2369Will I be in the way?
2369Will you get out of here,he shouted,"and let me alone?"
2369Will you make a call with me after dinner?
2369Will you tell me where I can come and see you, if we both get through this war?
2369Wo n''t you come in?
2369Would it really be as much as that? 2369 Ya?
2369You ai n''t goin''off there where Miss Enid is?
2369You ai n''t told your mudder yit?
2369You always avoid that subject with me, do n''t you?
2369You are a musician?
2369You are farming this year, Claude? 2369 You do n''t believe we are going to get out of this war what we went in for, do you?"
2369You feel it''s coming nearer every day?
2369You get all the loot when you bring down a machine, do you?
2369You have found a flower?
2369You have n''t been over very long, have you?
2369You have seen our poor trees? 2369 You mean that Paris is not the capital of France any more?
2369You mean to say Bayliss was in a fight?
2369You mean you could n''t make up for the time you''ll lose?
2369You mortal fool kid, what would I be telling you all this for, if I did n''t know you were another breed of cats? 2369 You remember in the old mythology tales how, when the sons of the gods were born, the mothers always died in agony?
2369You saw Bayliss today? 2369 You think it''s necessary for some one to go?
2369You used to go to school to Gladys, did n''t you, Irv?
2369You were hit yourself?
2369You''ve come up from Frankfort together this beautiful day?
2369You''ve got a good deal out of your course, altogether, have n''t you? 2369 You''ve had about enough theology, I presume?
2369You''ve told Ernest Havel, I suppose?
2369Your grandparents were English people, were n''t they?
2369Your thesis? 2369 A moment later he said suddenly,Can you parlez- vous?"
2369A present from somebody you like, is n''t it?"
2369After a moment of mastication he said,"You figure on going tomorrow?"
2369Ai n''t she here to sell goods?"
2369All them foreigners works hard, do n''t they, Mr. Claude?
2369And Mrs. Wheeler is quite well?"
2369And he?
2369And her father?
2369And if you took all the great sinners out of the Bible, you''d take out all the interesting characters, would n''t you?"
2369And may I ask what these hens do?"
2369And was the heather in bloom?
2369Any news?"
2369Any other damage?"
2369Are you a college graduate?"
2369Are you ready?
2369Are you sure he''s got everything in?
2369Bert held the ring out to Hicks, but the Sergeant threw down his revolver and broke out:"Think I''d touch anything of his?
2369But we''re happy as we are, are n''t we?"
2369But what does a husky boy like Claude want to pick out a girl like that for?
2369But where was he to get it from?
2369But who is ever going back to anything?
2369But you do n''t know our names yet, do you?
2369Ca n''t I get you something?"
2369Can I do anything for you?"
2369Can I go along?"
2369Can that be true?"
2369Can the Belgians do anything?"
2369Can we get onto one of your trucks till this lets up?"
2369Claude explained in his best French that an American battalion had just come in; might they sleep in his field if they did not destroy his stacks?
2369Claude put down his hammer and said coaxingly:"Have you ever seen a gourd vine when it had something to climb on, Enid?
2369Claude said he had a friend in the air service up there; did they happen to know anything about Victor Morse?
2369Claude?"
2369Come up early tomorrow morning and go over with me, wo n''t you?
2369Could it really be he, who was airing his opinions in this indelicate manner?
2369Could n''t they carry the officers''equipment on the march?
2369Did They understand?
2369Did he get cut bad?"
2369Did he hurt the horse much?
2369Did he tell you how he got it?"
2369Did n''t I tell you there was missionary work to be done right here?
2369Did n''t they know that mustard got into wheat fields and strangled the grain?
2369Did n''t you sleep?"
2369Did you enjoy working on it?"
2369Did you want to frighten me?
2369Do n''t you feel that at this rate there is n''t much in it?"
2369Do n''t you know Bayliss?
2369Do owls always hoot in graveyards?"
2369Do you know anything about him?"
2369Do you mean to farm all your life?"
2369Do you realize, Claude, you and I are the only men in the Company who have n''t got engaged?
2369Do you reckon your father would be willing to work on Sunday, if I helped you, to let the machine off a day earlier?"
2369Do you suppose it''s some scheme the grain men are hiding under a war rumour?
2369Do you suppose it''s still snowing?"
2369Do you suppose our cattle could be buried?"
2369Do you suppose you could strip a coat off one of those poor fellows?
2369Do you suppose your cherubims are still there?"
2369Do you think you could marry me, Enid?"
2369Do you think you two boys could manage it with a hundred men?
2369Do you want a lower?"
2369Do you?"
2369Does he have poor health?"
2369Does mother know?"
2369Even if a raw army could do anything, how would we get it over there?
2369Exactly so; had n''t he been trying to say this ever since he was born?
2369Farmer?"
2369Feeling shellshock again?"
2369Get one?
2369Going?"
2369Had David doubted his nerve?
2369Had he, then, packed his suitcase?
2369Had n''t he always known it, and had n''t it made life both bitter and sweet for him?
2369Had n''t he heard?
2369Had they anything to eat?
2369Has he said anything?"
2369Have n''t they done well to blossom so early?"
2369Have n''t you heard her?
2369Have the financiers and the press ever deceived the public like this before?"
2369Have you been over- doing?
2369He ai n''t big like you, is he?
2369He ai n''t mad about nothin'', is he?"
2369He began:"Paris, the capital city of France and the Department of the Seine,--shall I skip the history?"
2369He disengaged himself, not very gently, and stalked grimly away to the dressing shed.... What was the use, if you were always with the wrong crowd?
2369He tried to be careless:"Then you wo n''t get to London soon?"
2369He would like to say something, but out of so much... what?
2369Here, do you want these birds, Dick?"
2369His watch said 12:10; could anything have miscarried up there?
2369How can he celebrate mass when his hands quiver so?"
2369How could he know what hard moulds and crusts the big guns had broken open on the other side of the sea?
2369How did he seem, all right?"
2369How did they come here?
2369How had they come to be worth the watchfulness and devotion of so many men and machines, this extravagant consumption of fuel and energy?
2369How had they found things up there, anyway?
2369How long do you figure we''ll be at sea?"
2369How long do you suppose it takes to make an army?"
2369How long have you been in the army?"
2369How long would their bodies toss, he wondered, in that inhuman kingdom of darkness and unrest?
2369How many days from the sea, what did it look like?
2369How many divisions?"
2369How was it possible for a baby to have such definite personality, he asked himself, and how was it possible to dislike a baby so much?
2369How would you like it yourself, to be marched into a peaceful country like this, in the middle of harvest, and begin to destroy it?"
2369I ai n''t got no boys mein own self, so I got to fix up liddle tings for dem boys, eh?"
2369I did n''t see the young fellow''s name in the notice of incorporation, Julius, do they call him?"
2369I do n''t see how we could have prevented it, do you?"
2369I have n''t been hinting that you ought to jump any harder, have I?"
2369I hope you do n''t smoke before breakfast?"
2369I may want the piano moved yet; you could do that for me, eh?"
2369I never lose things on the train,--do you?"
2369I reckon poor Mr. Ernest wo n''t git over tonight, will he?
2369I''m going off to play with some girls tonight, will you come along?"
2369If I put your company in there, do you think you can do the Battalion credit in case of a counter attack?"
2369If he wanted to change the crop on that field, why did n''t he plant oats in the spring, and then get into wheat next fall?
2369If we agree to withdraw that aid, where are we?
2369Indeed, Miss Enid?"
2369Interesting material, is n''t it?"
2369Is n''t it lovely?
2369Is n''t there plenty of missionary work to be done right here?"
2369Is n''t this fine for hot nights?
2369Is that why you''ve been so stand- offish with me the last few years, because you thought I was an atheist?"
2369Is there a smoking car?"
2369Is there anything I can get you for the present?"
2369Is you the gen''leman from the stateroom in fourteen?
2369It is n''t as if a person had been hurt, is it?"
2369It seems like a long way to go to hunt for trouble, do n''t it?
2369It was possible their air scouts had seen the Texas men going back,--otherwise, why were they holding off?
2369It''s big enough, is n''t it?
2369It''s forward?"
2369It''s going to be a glorious day, is n''t it?"
2369It''s quite a comfortable little hole, is n''t it?"
2369Leonard said he had come to town alone in his car; would n''t Claude ride out with him?
2369Looking the old woman in the eye, he steadily articulated:"Avez- vous du fromage, Madame?"
2369Madame Joubert came over and stood beside him, looking at him and at the rosier,"Oui, c''est joli, n''est- ce pas?"
2369Mahailey, you wo n''t let my vinegar burn, will you?"
2369May I come in for a moment?"
2369Maybe you are, but you ca n''t help it, can you?"
2369Mice getting scarce in the barn?
2369Morse, the American ace?
2369Mr. Royce went over to old man Dawson''s car and said rather childishly,"It ca n''t be that Claude''s grown taller?
2369Nebraska-- What was it?
2369No ambition to be a preacher?
2369Non?
2369Notice anything queer about him, one eye a little off colour?
2369One whispered to the others:"Do you suppose Gladys will come out tonight with Bayliss Wheeler?
2369Or was it hideous only for him?
2369Our fellows got up, did n''t they?"
2369Perhaps Bayliss will go, too?"
2369Qu''est que c''est?"
2369Royce?"
2369See here, Claude, how soon do you figure you''ll be able to let me have the thrasher?
2369Shall I pull the dark blind again for you?"
2369She does n''t object to these diversions?"
2369She once stopped Mrs. Wheeler in a dark corner of the cellar to whisper,"Mr. Claude''s wife ai n''t goin''to stay off there, like her sister, is she?"
2369She would murmur on, half to Claude and half to herself:"They ai n''t fightin''over there where Miss Enid is, is they?
2369She''ll get your records, and it will sort of bring the whole thing closer to her, do n''t you see?"
2369Sitting on the front porch in a white necktie every day, while Claude was out cutting wheat?"
2369Suppose we go on there a day early, and get them to take us in?
2369Suppose we''ll draw ham and eggs, Lieutenant?"
2369Suppose you could make her understand?"
2369Surely you do n''t believe such a thing could be practicable?"
2369That must be the new doctor; was n''t his dressing station somewhere down here?
2369That''s where they did get you, did n''t they?"
2369The Boches polite and agreeable as usual?
2369The Texas orderly remarked to Claude,"In the beginning that one only had a finger blown off; would you believe it?"
2369The boys begin to moan and shout; what is the matter now?
2369The farmer stuck his head out and demanded gruffly what was wanted;"What now?"
2369The fine weather held, and every morning when Claude got up, another gold day stretched before him like a glittering carpet, leading...?
2369The next question is, who put''em here, and what''s the good of it?"
2369The point was, and she made it over and over, that her mother wished to die chez elle, comprenez- vous?
2369Their fertility of phrase, too, astonished him; how could people find so much to say about one girl?
2369There they were in five pathetic little heaps; what should be done with them?
2369There,"he said as he put down his glass,"do n''t you feel better with a drink?"
2369These people have had an awfully rough time; ca n''t you admire their pluck?"
2369They are all intelligent and industrious; why should n''t they get on?"
2369They do n''t get them at home, do they?"
2369This field finishes your fall work?"
2369Troops much rawer than they were being rushed to the front, so why fool around any longer?
2369Try again-- what was there to try?
2369Was he a swellhead?
2369Was it because he had gone in with Willy?
2369Was it, after all, his fault?
2369Was n''t her mother"trop malade à   marcher?"
2369Was the harvest always a month later than at home, as it seemed to be this year?
2369Was the new officer a dude?
2369Was there no way out of the world but this?
2369Was there nothing in the world outside to answer to his own feelings, and was every turn to be fresh disappointment?
2369Was there something repellent in him?
2369We were a good deal excited; I suppose you were?"
2369Were they quite young when you were born?
2369What HAVE I ever done, except make one blunder after another?"
2369What about you?"
2369What are you doing with my trousers, Bruger?"
2369What are you planting?"
2369What can happen to you, except in your own mind?
2369What could this country do?
2369What did it mean, that verse in the Bible,"He shall not suffer His holy one to see corruption"?
2369What did the farmers mean by raising patches of mustard right along beside other crops?
2369What did they want first,--supper, perhaps?
2369What do we get out of it?
2369What do you think?"
2369What does he mean?
2369What does he suppose we are doing?"
2369What for?
2369What had become of those first days of golden weather, leisure and good- comradeship?
2369What happened back here?"
2369What have you got up there?"
2369What in the world could sensible women like his mother and Enid Royce find to admire in this purring, white- necktied fellow?
2369What makes you ask that?"
2369What makes you want to?"
2369What other age could have produced such a figure?
2369What was it that made life seem so much more interesting and attractive here than elsewhere?
2369What was it-- what WAS the matter with him?
2369What was the gold dome, dully glinting through the fog?
2369What was there to hope for now?
2369What was this country like, anyhow?
2369What were they, and what was he, doing here on the Atlantic?
2369What would it mean to be able to do anything as well as that, to have a hand capable of delicacy and precision and power?
2369What would you give to be out of it all, and safe back on the farm?"
2369What''s a thousand years to a cherubim?
2369What''s left of men if you take all the fire out of them?
2369What''s she fussing about?
2369What''s the matter with him?"
2369What''s the matter, ai n''t this good money?"
2369What''s the use of sending an orphan asylum out to be slaughtered?
2369What''s the use?"
2369What''s their word for it, Lieutenant?
2369What?"
2369Whence had they come, and how had it fared with them, up there?
2369Where are all your roosters?"
2369Where are the wounded?"
2369Where are you from?"
2369Where are you going to have yours?"
2369Where are you?"
2369Where did they get you?"
2369Where shall I put my cigars?
2369Where were those summer evenings when he used to sit dumb by the windmill, wondering what to do with his life?
2369Where were you before you came here?"
2369Which of those pale giants was the Singer Building?
2369Which one was it?"
2369Which the Woolworth?
2369Who are you?
2369Who could ever make him understand how far it was from the strawberry bed and the glass cage in the bank, to the sky- roads over Verdure?
2369Why could n''t they spend these last hours quietly in the house, instead of dashing in and out to frighten her?
2369Why did n''t you fellows pull out the splinters?"
2369Why did the farmers have rows of trees growing along the edges of every field-- didn''t they take the strength out of the soil?
2369Why do n''t we stop for her tonight?
2369Why do n''t you come?
2369Why do n''t you go and talk it over with Chessup?
2369Why do you always laugh about that girl, anyhow?"
2369Why do you ask?"
2369Why had n''t he?
2369Why have you come?"
2369Why should I be here?
2369Why was it so gratifying to be able to say"our hill,"and"our creek down yonder"?
2369Why was life so mysteriously hard?
2369Why, at least, could he not stop feeling things, and hoping?
2369Why, he used to ask himself, would n''t Claude"spruce up and be somebody"?
2369Will you go down with me to look at that new meningitis case?"
2369Will you just go over to Leonard Dawson''s and get that wrench he borrowed?
2369Will you leave my cabin?"
2369Will you make over the house, and live there some day?"
2369Will you see our house?"
2369Wo n''t we get dreadfully into debt at this rate?"
2369Wo n''t you come along and help me?"
2369Wo n''t you come in and see Mother while I get my things on?"
2369Would n''t that be a nice way to have your wife coming in?"
2369Would n''t you feel better in town to be dressed?"
2369Would there be room for my car in your father''s garage?
2369Would you mind asking him if he can put up this prescription?
2369Yet, if this were true, why did he continue to live with the tiresome Chapins?
2369You did n''t see Lieutenant Gerhardt among them?"
2369You do n''t have trouble with the business people here, do you?"
2369You feel better already, do n''t you?"
2369You goin''to the circus before breakfast?
2369You have your clothes in your suitcase, have n''t you?"
2369You remember dat?"
2369You''re feeling better about it, are n''t you?
2369You''ve been dissatisfied with the way the place is run for some time, have n''t you?
2369You''ve heard of Claude''s accident?
2369You''ve no objection?"
2369de Courcy?
2369or to show me how well you could drive?"
2369to feel the crunch of this particular dried mud under his boots?
3200Ah,--Ferguson-- what did I understand you to say the gentleman''s name was?
3200Ah-- did he write it himself; or-- or how?
3200Ah-- is-- is he dead?
3200Ah-- which is the bust and which is the pedestal?
3200And now?
3200And when he knew that it was Jesus that spoke to him he trembled, and was astonished, and said,''Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?''
3200Are you going through Spain to Paris?
3200As how?
3200But what did they do with the wicked brother?
3200Do you wis zo haut can be?
3200Do you?--no, but do you think it will, though? 3200 Ferguson, how many more million miles have we got to creep under this awful sun before we camp?"
3200Fifteen, is it? 3200 How far is it to the Lloyds''Agency?"
3200How far is it to the lower bridge?
3200How is this?
3200How is-- what did I understand you to say?
3200How many departed monks were required to upholster these six parlors?
3200It ai n''t mentioned in the Bible!--this place ain''t-- well now, what place is this, since you know so much about it?
3200It took a long time to get enough?
3200Leave him there?
3200Measles, likely?
3200NE- VER?
3200Not anywhere whatsoever?--not any place on earth but this?
3200Now,he said,"observe my face-- what does it express?"
3200O Solitude, where are the charms which sages have seen in thy face?
3200Parents living?
3200Shall we ever lunch?
3200Small- pox, think?
3200The good Lord Luigi?
3200What are you going to do with that pile of books?
3200What did he die of?
3200What did you come here for? 3200 What do I want to see this place for?
3200What do you find to put in it, Jack?
3200What''s a swindle?
3200What''s this?
3200Where are you going with that lamp?
3200Who is that smooth- faced, animated outrage yonder in the fine clothes?
3200Who is that spider- legged gorilla yonder with the sanctimonious countenance?
3200Who is this? 3200 Who were these people?"
3200Why what in the nation does----why I never heard of such a thing? 3200 Yes, but what did he say?"
3200*********"And they took him and brought him unto Areopagus, saying, May we know what this new doctrine whereof thou speakest is?
3200A bowing, aproned Frenchman skipped forward and said:"Que voulez les messieurs?"
3200Acknowledged that you were afraid, and backed shamefully out?
3200Again:"Michael Angelo?"
3200Ah, where is that lucky youth to- day, and where the little hand that wrote those dainty lines?
3200Alexis du Caulaincourt?"
3200And do I not include Church every time I abuse the pilgrims-- and would I be likely to speak ill- naturedly of him?
3200And for what crime?
3200And moreover, how about three oyster beds, one above another, and thick strata of good honest earth between?
3200And the King said, What aileth thee?
3200And the citizen answered and said, Whence come ye that ye know not that great Laertius reigns in Ephesus?
3200And they said, with great excitement, while their hearts beat high, and the color in their faces came and went, Where is my father?
3200And what was it and why did they choose it, particularly?
3200And what wonder, when there are twelve hundred pictures by Palma the Younger in Venice and fifteen hundred by Tintoretto?
3200And who painted these things?
3200And why should it be otherwise?
3200And yet what are these things to the wonders that lie buried here under the ground?
3200And, besides, is it not the inborn nature of Street Commissioners to avoid their duty whenever they get a chance?
3200Are not his brothers named so and so, and his sisters so and so, and is not his mother the person they call Mary?
3200Are you never going to learn any sense?"
3200Beautiful?
3200Born here?"
3200But at the same time the thought will intrude itself upon me, How can they see what is not visible?
3200But his heart said, Peace, is not thy brother watching over thy household?
3200But is n''t this relic matter a little overdone?
3200But that would n''t do, would it?
3200But was not that a singular scene for a city of a million inhabitants?
3200But what object could they have had in view?--what did they want up there?
3200But what was this Venice to compare with the Venice of midnight?
3200But what were their troubles to us?
3200But what would a volcano leave of an American city, if it once rained its cinders on it?
3200But when did ever self- righteousness know the sentiment of pity?
3200But when lived there a holy priest who could not set so simple a trouble as this at rest?
3200But who says a word in behalf of poor Mr. Laura?
3200But who shall tell how many ages it seemed to this prisoner?
3200But why should not the truth be spoken of this region?
3200But why?
3200But with the horses at the door and every body aware of what they were there for, what would you have done?
3200Can it be possible that the painters make John the Baptist a Spaniard in Madrid and an Irishman in Dublin?
3200Can the curse of the Deity beautify a land?
3200Can those other uninspired visitors do it, or do they only happily imagine they do?
3200Christopher Colombo--pleasant name-- is-- is he dead?"
3200Curse your indolent worthlessness, why do n''t you rob your church?"
3200Did the goose- merchant get excited?
3200Do they think we are communing with a reserve force of rascals at the bottom?
3200Do you want to run away, you ferocious beast, and break your neck?"
3200Does the Emperor Napoleon live here now, Ferguson?"
3200EXTRACTS FROM ADAM''S DIARY EVE''S DIARY A HORSE''S TALE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE EXTRACT FROM CAPTAIN STORMFIELD''S VISIT TO HEAVEN IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD?
3200Est- ce que vous pensez I will steal it?
3200Frenchman, I presume?"
3200Good, is n''t it?
3200Has it ever needed to hide its face?
3200He asked how much we supposed this Jupiter was worth?
3200He says:"Are not Abana and Pharpar rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel?
3200He was restive under these victories and often asked:"What did that pirate say?"
3200How charmingly situated!--Venerable, venerable pile--""Pairdon, Doctor, zis is not ze Louvre-- it is--""What is it?"
3200How could he stand against the three- legged woman, and the man with his eye in his cheek?
3200How do you suppose he liked the state of things that has given the world so much pleasure?
3200How else are these marvels of symmetry, cleanliness, and order attained?
3200How is that for a recommendation?
3200How is that, for a specimen?
3200How long have ye dwelt here, and whither are they gone that dwelt here before ye?
3200How would he blush in presence of the man with fingers on his elbow?
3200However, had not we the seductive program still, with its Paris, its Constantinople, Smyrna, Jerusalem, Jericho, and"our friends the Bermudians?"
3200I asked the good- natured monk who accompanied us, who did this?
3200I could believe in one restaurant, on those terms; but then how about the three?
3200I do n''t do you any harm, do I?
3200I do not know what"Que voulez les messieurs?"
3200I heard the doctor say impressively:"Dan, how often have we told you that these foreigners can not understand English?
3200I said at last:"Who is this Renaissance?
3200I said to a deck- sweep-- but in a low voice:"Who is that overgrown pirate with the whiskers and the discordant voice?"
3200I said-- who speaks of money at a time like this?
3200I sighed and said:"This is charming; and now do n''t you think you could get me something to read?"
3200If he had got a Bedouin, what would he have done with him--shot him?
3200If it were a man, why did he not now drop me?
3200If some of the others were set apart, might not they be beautiful?
3200If this were set in the midst of the tempest of pictures one finds in the vast galleries of the Roman palaces, would I think it so handsome?
3200In Constantinople you ask,"How far is it to the Consulate?"
3200Is any man insane enough to imagine that this picnic of patriarchs sang, made love, danced, laughed, told anecdotes, dealt in ungodly levity?
3200Is it not possible that the reason I find such charms in this picture is because it is out of the crazy chaos of the galleries?
3200Is it not so?
3200Is it the province of Mr. Grimes to improve upon the work?
3200Is n''t it an oriental picture?
3200Is that a grisette?"
3200Is the estate going to seed?
3200Is the truth harmful?
3200Is, ah-- is he dead?"
3200Is-- is this the first time this gentleman was ever on a bust?"
3200It is impossible to travel through Italy without speaking of pictures, and can I see them through others''eyes?
3200It meant, do you wish to go up there?
3200Later, cast them from the battlements-- or-- how many priests have ye on hand?"
3200Marble?--plaster?--wood?--paper?
3200May I not wash in them and be clean?"
3200Maybe the Poet Lariat ai n''t satisfied with them deductions?"
3200Monsieur le Landlord-- Sir: Pourquoi do n''t you mettez some savon in your bed- chambers?
3200Name him over again; what had we better call him?
3200Nearly seven hundred years ago, that castle was the property of the noble Count Luigi Gennaro Guido Alphonso di Genova----""What was his other name?"
3200Not g---- well, then, where in the nation are you going to?"
3200Now did it take a hundred years of patient toil to carve the Sphynx?
3200Now how did those masses of oyster- shells get there?
3200Now, do n''t you know, there ai n''t a watch in the ship that''s making better time than she is, but what does it signify?
3200OR HELL?
3200OSTEOPATHY WATER- SUPPLY MISTAKEN IDENTITY CATS AND CANDY OBITUARY POETRY CIGARS AND TOBACCO BILLIARDS THE UNION RIGHT OR WRONG?
3200Oh, I do n''t think a journal''s any use-- do you?
3200One of the boys said:"Hello, doctor, what are you doing up here at this time of night?--What do you want to see this place for?"
3200Presently they spake unto a citizen and said, Who is King in Ephesus?
3200She said:"Bless you, why did n''t you speak English before?
3200Singular, is n''t it?
3200Tangier is clear out of the world, and what is the use of visiting when people have nothing on earth to talk about?
3200The Seven said, How, you know them not?
3200The commandant said the punishment would be"heavy;"when asked"how heavy?"
3200The display was exactly according to the guide- book, and were we not traveling by the guide- book?
3200The doctor asks:"Michael Angelo?"
3200The doctor put up his eye- glass-- procured for such occasions:"Ah-- what did you say this gentleman''s name was?"
3200The doctor said:"Avez- vous du vin?"
3200The governor would say,''Hello, here-- didn''t see anything in France?
3200The hill might have been the bottom of the sea, once, and been lifted up, with its oyster- beds, by an earthquake-- but, then, how about the crockery?
3200The question intruded itself:"Which bore the blessed Saviour, and which the thieves?"
3200They assembled by hundreds, and even thousands, in the great Theatre of San Carlo, to do-- what?
3200They buy, they sell, they manufacture, and since they pay no taxes, who can hope to compete with them?
3200They do n''t have none of them things in our parts, do they?
3200They looked one at the other, greatly perplexed, and presently asked again, Where, then, is the good King Maximilianus?
3200They were trying to keep from asking,"Is-- is he dead?"
3200They will say it when they get home, fast enough, but why should they not?
3200They''re only a bother, ai n''t they?"
3200This morning at breakfast he pointed out of the window and said:"Do you see that there hill out there on that African coast?
3200Tired?
3200Was ever such a contrast set up before a multitude till then?
3200We asked"Why?"
3200We have not sailed, but three swims are equal to a sail, are they not?
3200We look at it indifferently and the doctor asks:"By Michael Angelo?"
3200Well, twenty little centuries flutter away, and what is left of these things?
3200Well, what did he do?"
3200What Joseph that ever lived would have thrown away such a chance to"show off?"
3200What am I to do with my feet?
3200What am I to do with my hands?
3200What can ye do?
3200What could any oyster want to climb a hill for?
3200What did he say he wants with those books?"
3200What did we care?
3200What do you want to harm him for?
3200What does this express?"
3200What has he done?"
3200What have I arrived at now?
3200What in the world am I to do with myself?
3200What is it that confers the noblest delight?
3200What is that which swells a man''s breast with pride above that which any other experience can bring to him?
3200What is there for me to feel, to learn, to hear, to know, that shall thrill me before it pass to others?
3200What is there for me to touch that others have not touched?
3200What is there in Rome for me to see that others have not seen before me?
3200What is this?"
3200What may be left of General Grant''s great name forty centuries hence?
3200What next?
3200What next?
3200What next?
3200What on earth can he want with that lamp?"
3200What should you say, Jack?"
3200What should you think?"
3200What was grammar to a desperado like that?
3200What was there lacking about that program to make it perfectly irresistible?
3200What were a few long hours added to the hardships of some over- taxed brutes when weighed against the peril of those human souls?
3200What wonder that the sordid lights of work- day prudence should pale before the glory of a hope like theirs in the full splendor of its fruition?
3200What would one naturally wish to see first in Venice?
3200What would the prophecy- savans say?
3200What, more?
3200Where are Dionysius and Serapion, and Pericles, and Decius?
3200Where did he come from?
3200Where is my mother?
3200Where would he hide himself when the dwarf with seven fingers on each hand, no upper lip, and his under- jaw gone, came down in his majesty?
3200Wherefore, why should we worry?
3200Who bedews him with tears?
3200Who could read the program of the excursion without longing to make one of the party?
3200Who gave him permission to cram the Republic with his execrable daubs?"
3200Who glorifies him?
3200Who prates of the tame achievements of Aladdin and the Magii of Arabia?
3200Who speaks of the wonders of romance?
3200Who talks of the marvels of fiction?
3200Who writes poetry about him?
3200Why ca n''t a man put his intellect onto things that''s some value?
3200Why shall we not say a good word for the princely Bedouin?
3200Why try to think at all?
3200Why were we ever told to bring navy revolvers with us if we had to be protected at last by this infamous star- spangled scum of the desert?
3200Why will people be so stupid as to suppose themselves the only foreigners among a crowd of ten thousand persons?
3200Why will you not depend upon us?
3200Why will you not tell us what you want, and let us ask for it in the language of the country?
3200Would he have quartered him--flayed him?
3200Would he have stabbed him?
3200Would you send us out among these desperate hordes, with no salvation in our utmost need but this old turret?"
3200Written by whom?
3200Yet who really knows the story of Abelard and Heloise?
3200You can not tell any of these parties apart, I suppose?"
3200am I a dog that I am to be assailed with polysyllabled blasphemy like to this?
3200and"Why do n''t you pad them shanks?"
3200horror what would he have done?
3200will you?
14579''Padre,"he said,"how_ does_ Christ save us?"
14579''E is-- how do you say?--shocked?
14579''Ow should I say?
14579''Said I:What exactly do you mean by that, corporal?"
14579''When I had done, he walked on for a bit in silence, and then he said,Do you think the men understand that?"
14579A fool, mother? 14579 A friend,"he said:"May I come in?"
14579A pity? 14579 Ah, non?
14579Ah, would n''t you like to know?
14579All laws are made to be broken, which is all that laws are good for, do n''t you think?
14579Always?
14579Am I to appear like this? 14579 Am I?"
14579Am I?
14579Am I?
14579Am I?
14579And Julie?
14579And how did the festivities go off at Christmas?
14579And how''s Peter?
14579And if I do n''t?
14579And if he came from south of the Tweed, and found himself in France?
14579And if the car breaks down?
14579And in the end thereof?
14579And it doth, doth it not? 14579 And now, monsieur?"
14579And now?
14579And see Marie, eh? 14579 And then you came back to Julie, eh, Peter?"
14579And then?
14579And then?
14579And what in the world is the Rubicon?
14579And why not? 14579 And why so different from last night?"
14579And will monsieur not take my card? 14579 And you have a curà © here-- how do you say, a chapelain?"
14579And you put the cork in my stocking?
14579And you really_ want_ to see these things?
14579And you?
14579Another bottle of Chianti, sir?
14579Any extra pay?
14579Anything more?
14579Are you Captain Graham? 14579 Are you ready, Pennell?"
14579Are you sure?
14579Are you, Peter? 14579 Arnold,"said Peter,"what about yourself?
14579At this hour of the evening? 14579 Bit cramped after church, eh?"
14579Breakfast, gentlemen?
14579But I suppose at a hospital like this you''re always hearing decent music?
14579But ca n''t I do anything I like, Peter?
14579But first, what is your name, mon ami? 14579 But how can you tell lust from love?"
14579But it''s got to be, has n''t it? 14579 But one never knows, does one?
14579But they do n''t really believe all that, do they, padre?
14579But what are we going to do?
14579But what do you mean?
14579But what do_ you_ think of it all?
14579But what in the world is it? 14579 But what''ll I do now?"
14579But why in the world''Solomon''? 14579 But you will marry me, Julie, wo n''t you?"
14579But, look here, what about Travalini''s? 14579 By all that''s wonderful, what are you doing here?"
14579Ca n''t I go and get drunk if I like, Peter, or sit still, or dance down Regent Street, or send you off to bed and pick up a nice boy? 14579 Ca n''t I?"
14579Ca n''t you feel that there is something?
14579Can I come in?
14579Can it?
14579Can not you trust me, Julie? 14579 Captain Graham, sir?"
14579Captain Saunders?
14579Cold?
14579Come in to luncheon with us, will you, Graham?
14579Damned pretty girl, eh?
14579Darling boy, do n''t you think you are over- strained and over- worried? 14579 Did you lock the door?
14579Do n''t I? 14579 Do n''t know where they get to, then, do you, Bevan?"
14579Do n''t like being ordered, do n''t they? 14579 Do n''t you feel really different?"
14579Do n''t you know anywhere to go?
14579Do n''t you love France in the evening?
14579Do n''t you understand? 14579 Do n''t you?
14579Do you go now?
14579Do you hear what I say? 14579 Do you know the Professor?"
14579Do you know the time? 14579 Do you know the way?"
14579Do you like Langton?
14579Do you live here?
14579Do you mean it, Julie?
14579Do you mean you''d like to keep me?
14579Do you mean, Hilda, that if he persists in this-- this madness, if he gives up the Church, for example, you will not break off the engagement? 14579 Do you mind, Pen?"
14579Do you mind? 14579 Do you mind?"
14579Do you play auction, padre?
14579Do you really, Julie? 14579 Do you remember ducking Pockett?"
14579Do you think Tommy worries about his sins? 14579 Do you?"
14579Do you?
14579Does that often happen?
14579Drop in some evening, wo n''t you? 14579 Eh?"
14579Engaged, are you? 14579 Excuse me, will you?"
14579Feel better?
14579First time over?
14579Four- twenty,she said--"double bedroom, sitting- room, and bathroom, how would that do?"
14579Gaudy, sir? 14579 Glad rags make all that difference, old boy?
14579Going to put him there, padre? 14579 Going to take a taxi?"
14579Good Lord, padre,he said,"where are your eyes?"
14579Good shows on? 14579 Got any cards?"
14579Got any grub?
14579Got some really decent chocolates?
14579Half an hour before lunch,said his new companion, and then, catching sight of someone:"Hullo, Jack, you back?
14579Has he?
14579Have I?
14579Have a drink, Graham? 14579 Have a pipe?"
14579Have a sandwich?
14579Have we?
14579Have you an orderly to spare?
14579Have you ever been in love?
14579Have you ever been round?
14579Have you much to do up there?
14579Have you seen any more of that Australian chap lately?
14579Having a dinner somewhere to- night?
14579Here?
14579How can anyone speak to them? 14579 How can you save her, Graham?"
14579How did you do it?
14579How do you do, Miss Raynard? 14579 How do you do, ma chà © rie?"
14579How do you do?
14579How is he different from Donovan?
14579How much do you want?
14579How will that do?
14579How''re you getting on now, padre?
14579How''s that?
14579How?
14579However did you find the place? 14579 Hullo, Chichester, what are you doing here?"
14579I beg your pardon,said Peter,"but is there a place vacant for one?"
14579I can not save myself: how can I save you?
14579I did n''t notice the telephone,he said;"I suppose it is installed?"
14579I do n''t suppose he''d have minded-- would you, Peter?
14579I know the way,And to her:"Is n''t it topping?
14579I say, Tommy, did you get to the Alhambra last night, after all? 14579 I say,"he said,"could n''t you dine with us to- night?
14579I say,he said,"did n''t you_ know_ it was my afternoon at the hospital?"
14579I suppose Captain Graham has gone?
14579I suppose I must n''t drink it?
14579I''m game; but where are we going?
14579I''m getting cheap, am I?
14579Idolatry?
14579If it''s stopped raining, let''s go for a walk, shall we?
14579If you can stay out later at Havre,he said,"why not here?"
14579Is he hurt?
14579Is it his own business only?
14579Is it?
14579Is n''t it?
14579Is n''t that chic?
14579Is she ill-- dying?
14579Is that better?
14579Is that final, then, George?
14579Is that the effect of the theatre?
14579Is there a chapel in the camp?
14579Is there a single thing you have n''t thought of, you old dear?
14579Is there any news, Sir Robert?
14579Is there anything we can do?
14579Is there much of that?
14579Is there?
14579Isobel,he said,"I say, come here-- no, I really want to see it-- tell me, when do you get out next?"
14579It''s clean agin regulations, but could you send for it?
14579It''s your fault, I''ve never been introduced, and I must call you something, so why not the name your friend called you? 14579 Jack, here, is taking me, are n''t you?"
14579Jack?
14579Jolly good band, is n''t it?
14579Julie, do you love me as I love you? 14579 Julie,"he said,"whatever did you think of that sermon?"
14579Julie,said Peter,"are you ever serious?
14579Know it?
14579Leave you?
14579Let me see, you were at the play, so I need n''t talk about that; but you thought it good, did n''t you?
14579Let us have one little glass here, and then we will go on to an''otel I know, and hear the band and see the dresses, and talk-- is it not so?
14579Lieutenant Frazer?
14579Lieutenant Morcombe?
14579Look here, Pen,he said,"what the deuce are we going to do?
14579Lor'', Peter, are you back? 14579 Lor'', Peter, was I tragic?
14579May I go and see it?
14579May I have a warm by the fire?
14579May I see her?
14579Meaning what exactly?
14579Milk and sugar for you, Peter? 14579 Must I mean everything I say, Solomon?
14579Must, Peter?
14579Nice? 14579 No corsets?"
14579No parade services? 14579 No,"he said;"why should I be?
14579No? 14579 No?"
14579Nor spoke in the Sermon on the Mount?
14579Not for once?
14579Not wanted, eh?
14579Now we are, as you say, comfy, is it not so? 14579 Now, then,"she said,"what did I do wrong to- night?"
14579Now,he said,"what do you make of all that?"
14579Of course you can,he said lightly;"but you do n''t really want to do those things, do you-- especially the last, Julie?"
14579Of your fiancà © e-- is it not so? 14579 Oh, Hilda,"he said,"do you really care all that?
14579Oh, Julie,he cried,"what can I say or what can I do?
14579Oh, Peter, do n''t you know even yet?
14579Oh, Peter,she said, and took him by the arm as the door closed,"why did n''t you tell me about Jack?
14579Oh, Peter,she said,"did you have to leave me to see that?"
14579Oh, go on,said Peter;"what is it?"
14579Oh, he''s broad- minded I know, are n''t you, padre? 14579 Oh, immensely-- why?
14579Oh, monsieur, where have you been for so long? 14579 Oh, my dear,"he said,"was there ever anyone like you?"
14579Oh, sergeant,he said,"give Captain Graham a Movement Order Application Form, will you?
14579Oh, sir,she said,"is madame up?
14579Oh, well, what can you let me have? 14579 Oh?
14579Pen,he called across the room,"what about that drink?"
14579Perhaps one day-- who can say? 14579 Peter, we must dress early and dine early, must n''t we?
14579Peter,said Julie softly,"do you remember Caudebec?"
14579Peter,she said--"there, am I not good?
14579Poor old boy,she said softly;"is it as bad as that?"
14579Porridge, gentlemen?
14579Protestant?
14579Quai de France?
14579Queer, is n''t it? 14579 Rather neat, is n''t it, padre?"
14579Rather,she said;"I come here for tea about once a week, do n''t I, Jack?
14579Rhymes with nighty,put in Tommy coolly;"do n''t you remember, Julie?"
14579Rouen, eh? 14579 See her home?"
14579Settle up, Graham, will you? 14579 Shall I arrange them for you?"
14579Shall I, mother?
14579Show this officer four- twenty, will you?
14579So you frequent this poison- shop, do you?
14579So you mean nothing all the time?
14579So? 14579 So?"
14579Solomon, are we married? 14579 Solomon, what''s made you so glum to- night?
14579Surely our honour is engaged there?
14579Taxi, sir?
14579Tell me,he said,"do you like this sort of life?"
14579Thanks,she said as she took it;"but why did n''t you bring two cups?"
14579That all right?
14579That all?
14579That''s better,said the old fellow;"must be a man, what?
14579The Prayer Book''s not much use here, eh? 14579 The natural or the artificial?"
14579The question is,went on the other,"that if we are carried into war, what is the best policy?
14579The very thing,said Peter;"and send the wine- man over on your way, will you?
14579Then you''ll remember our talk in the car?
14579Then, God is not almighty?
14579Then, what are you going to do?
14579There''s a lorry going up to town that has just brought a batch of men in: would you care to come? 14579 They are a queer people, the French.... Well, is this going to do?"
14579They''re beginning early,she said;"but I suppose the rest of us had better follow the general example-- eh, Peter?"
14579Think I shall get stolen?
14579This band is just back from touring the front, is n''t it? 14579 Tit for tat,"he said to her under his breath, holding her arms;"do you remember our first taxi?"
14579To- morrow?
14579To- night, chà © rie?
14579Topping, is n''t she?
14579Vermuth? 14579 Was n''t he the King who thought Paris worth more than a Mass?"
14579Was n''t it gorgeous, Peter?
14579We can manage another bottle, Julie? 14579 Well, how''s town?"
14579Well, my dear, I was sad, was n''t I?
14579Well, now you''ave come, what do you want?
14579Well, philosopher,he demanded,"what do you make of that?"
14579Well, skipper, what about the firewood?
14579Well, that''s all right, is n''t it? 14579 Well, then, what is it?"
14579Well, what do you say, dear?
14579Well,said Pennell, who was there,"on the peg all right?"
14579Well,she demanded,_ sotto voce_,"what of the arrangement?
14579Well?
14579Well?
14579Well?
14579What about Belgium?
14579What about an appetiser?
14579What about candle- shades?
14579What about dinner?
14579What about taxis?
14579What about the Ten Commandments?
14579What about the chocolates?
14579What about you?
14579What about your stuff, though?
14579What am I made for, then?
14579What am I to call you, then?
14579What are you doing?
14579What are you talking about? 14579 What are you thinking of?
14579What can I bring you, Monsieur le Capitaine le Curà ©?
14579What can I do for monsieur?
14579What can I do for you? 14579 What did she say?"
14579What did you think of her?
14579What did you?
14579What do the fools know about it? 14579 What do you believe, you English?
14579What do you feel?
14579What do you mean? 14579 What do you mean?"
14579What do you mean?
14579What do you mean?
14579What do you suggest?
14579What do you think of my rig?
14579What do you think of that?
14579What do you think?
14579What do you want me to read, Julie darling?
14579What do you?
14579What had I best do?
14579What he has to give? 14579 What is it to be?"
14579What is it you say,''How''s things''?
14579What is it, Peter?
14579What is it, dear?
14579What is it, then?
14579What is it?
14579What is it?
14579What is love, Langton?
14579What is the good of flinging a handful of troops overseas, even if we can? 14579 What part of Africa?"
14579What the dickens is the matter with you, padre?
14579What time are you ordering the ambulances?
14579What time is the Rouen train?
14579What time ought we to start in the morning?
14579What was that?
14579What will you give for this officer''s badge?
14579What will you give? 14579 What will_ you_ do?"
14579What wo n''t matter?
14579What would Peter say?
14579What would be the subject, then, you Solomon, or the title, anyway?
14579What would one do?
14579What''ave I said? 14579 What''s brooding over it all, Julie?"
14579What''s he doing with all that lump- sugar?
14579What''s in the wind now?
14579What''s next?
14579What''s that?
14579What''s the next move?
14579What''s to- day? 14579 What''s up now?"
14579What''s up now?
14579What''s up?
14579What''s your new one?
14579What''s your particular subject?
14579What''s yours?
14579What, padre? 14579 What?
14579What?
14579Whatever shall I do? 14579 When do you go?"
14579When''ll I have to go, do you think?
14579Where are we, Peter? 14579 Where are we?"
14579Where are you going after this?
14579Where are you going now?
14579Where are you hit, Jenks?
14579Where do I come in, Solomon?
14579Where have you been, old Solomon?
14579Where have you been? 14579 Where have you been?"
14579Where have you been?
14579Where have you got it, old man?
14579Where have you sprung from?
14579Where in the world are you taking me?
14579Where in the world are you taking me?
14579Where in the world have you brought me?
14579Where next?
14579Where to?
14579Where were you?
14579Where would you like to go?
14579Where you for now, Mac?
14579Where you for, padre?
14579Where''s my powder- puff?
14579Where''s that, now?
14579Where?
14579Wherever is that maid? 14579 Which is, Peter?"
14579Which train are you going by, sir?
14579Who says you''re a rotten one?
14579Who was with you when you tried the experiment?
14579Who wo n''t?
14579Who''s that?
14579Who''s to be asked?
14579Whose else should it be?
14579Whose fault would that be?
14579Why did you do that?
14579Why especially?
14579Why not? 14579 Why not?"
14579Why not?
14579Why not?
14579Why not?
14579Why, dear?
14579Why,he said excitedly,"do n''t you see that it''s a fraudulent exchange?
14579Why? 14579 Why?
14579Why?
14579Why?
14579Why?
14579Why?
14579Will madame follow me? 14579 Will you light a fire, please?"
14579Will you please follow me, sir?
14579Will you please put my stuff in a first?
14579Wonder if we shall meet again?
14579Would n''t the management wait if you telephoned, Peter dear?
14579Would n''t you like a cab?
14579Would n''t you like your nails manicured?
14579Would n''t you love to see me in it?
14579Would n''t you prefer a whisky?
14579Would you really?
14579Would you?
14579Would you?
14579Write, anyway, wo n''t you? 14579 Yes, but what can we do?"
14579Yes,said Langton to himself,"what is a fool, anyway?"
14579Yes? 14579 You are Graham of Balliol, are n''t you?
14579You do n''t fear God at all, then?
14579You do n''t say?
14579You do, do you?
14579You in town for long?
14579You know Malta? 14579 You know what he is, and you do n''t mind then?"
14579You promise? 14579 You there, Graham?"
14579You there, padre?
14579You think me a bad girl? 14579 You will come again?"
14579You will,he said,"whatever I say.... Have another drink?
14579You wo n''t get up, wo n''t you?
14579You would n''t speak to one?
14579You''ll be coming to the club, padre?
14579You''re booked to take us to tea, I suppose?
14579You''re both dears, are n''t they, Tommy? 14579 You''re from South Africa?"
14579You''re lucky in love, are n''t you?
14579You''re sure you''re not bored about to- night?
14579Young Graham?
14579''s name is-- what is it, Martin?"
145791 Base?"
14579420, will you, please?"
14579A blouse, a camisole, or worse?"
14579A boy in uniform questioned him:"Taxi, sir?"
14579A briar?
14579A farm?
14579A little more wine?"
14579A man''s face appeared in the opening,"Four whiskies, Hunter-- that''s all right, padre?"
14579A taxi?
14579About eleven?
14579After all, this war will give you a bit of a chance, eh?
14579Always on leave or in Paris, and doin''nothing in between.... Got those returns, sergeant?...
14579Am I to have the wild beast prowling up and down in my place?"
14579Am I worth having, Peter?
14579And I ask you, what is there to prevent it?
14579And Peter, shall we say anything about our-- our love?
14579And bring me more flowers?
14579And bring on the dessert now, will you?
14579And come in to tea soon, wo n''t you?"
14579And do tell me how things go, darling, wo n''t you?"
14579And if he were not discovered?
14579And if it comes-- Good Lord, Hilda, do you know what it means?
14579And in any case Donovan is all right, is n''t he?"
14579And last, but not least, have you promised to forsake all other and cleave unto me as long as we both shall live?
14579And not so very nice to kiss, eh?"
14579And one leetle glass of this-- is it not so?"
14579And perhaps a little aperitif before?"
14579And she said-- he only just caught the sentence of any of their words, but there was the world of bitter meaning in it:"Quite alone, I suppose?
14579And she saw that he saw, and she whispered:"_ Do_ you hate Him, Peter?"
14579And the boy-- one must say''boy,''I suppose?
14579And then order breakfast, will you?
14579And there will be no necessity for me to sit up?"
14579And what do you think?
14579And what was the text?"
14579And what will the poor do?
14579And what''ll you do for a four at bridge?"
14579And what''s that little hotel near the statue of Joan of Arc, Jenks, where they still have decent wine?"
14579And when you saw this-- this love, Peter, how did you feel?"
14579And who was he, after all, to set aside all that for which both those things stood?
14579And why?
14579And yet she''s not the sort of woman you''d choose to run a mother''s meeting, would you, Solomon?"
14579And, besides-- forgive me, but I must put it so-- if_ He_ had compassion on the multitude, ought we not to have too?
14579Are n''t they heavenly?"
14579Are n''t you going heaps out of your way?
14579Are n''t you going soon?"
14579Are n''t you pleased?"
14579Are n''t you tired?
14579Are not St. John''s, and the Canon, and my people, and myself, real?
14579Are the boats running now?"
14579Are the men in our mess miserable?
14579Are there many like that about?"
14579Are those the books?
14579Are we going to be pushed into war by a mob and a few journalists?
14579Are we quite alone, we two, at last, with all the world shut out?"
14579Are you in the habit of taking tea here, Julie?
14579Are you mad too?
14579As Langton?
14579As they walked:"Where did you go to church this morning, Peter?"
14579Ask me another day, Louise, will you?"
14579Been out, eh?
14579Before he could speak, the other said cheerily:"Well, padre, and what can I do for you?"
14579Besides, do you think your description applies to that girl?"
14579Besides, why ca n''t a family group be made artistically, and so keep both art and love?
14579But I''ve got my new shoes and silk stockings on,"she added, sticking out a neat ankle,"and my skirt is not vastly long, is it?
14579But Julie?
14579But bacon and eggs first, eh?
14579But come on, what are the details?"
14579But did he want the old days?
14579But do n''t you think they''re rather gaudy?"
14579But do n''t you think we had better get a move on, and not stop here talking all night?"
14579But he must speak,"Am I?"
14579But if he ruins his prospects-- surely, Hilda, you are not going to be a fool?"
14579But if the old plan was so good, why not go down to the beach and get on with building operations of the same sort?"
14579But if you feel nervous, do you know the best cure?
14579But meantime, what was to be done?
14579But perhaps you know?"
14579But still, when they did get old, his work would seem more important, and what was it to be?
14579But there is another thing: if a man sins, how is he to get forgiveness?
14579But this love waits,_ waits_, do you understand?
14579But what are you doing?"
14579But what do you do there?"
14579But what do you think of all this, Graham?"
14579But what does he mean?
14579But what in the world has he to give?
14579But what would she like?
14579But what''s this about no parade services these days?"
14579But what, then, would she say to this?
14579But why do you see one thing, and I another, my dear?"
14579But you do n''t play tricks, do you, Peter?
14579But you guess now, do n''t you?
14579But you like the girls of France the best, mon ami; is it not so?"
14579But, Peter, do you think there''s likely to be anyone there that we know?"
14579But, oh, Peter, was n''t_ Carminetta_ a dream?"
14579But, still, they were_ not_ ancient Romans, were they?
14579But:"What has it to do with me?"
14579By the way, I do n''t believe you have any idea how old I am-- have you, Peter?
14579By the way, I wonder what they''ll make of different initials on all our luggage?
14579By the way, did you ever meet old Drennan who was up near Poperinghe with the Canadians?
14579By the way, where''s your camp?
14579Ca n''t I, Peter?"
14579Ca n''t you come in for a little?
14579Ca n''t you feel it running through you and electrifying you?
14579Ca n''t you see it?
14579Ca n''t you see this?
14579Ca n''t you, wo n''t you?"
14579Can he be emotionally conjured up by''Yield not to temptation''or''Dare to be a Daniel''?
14579Can we get one easily?"
14579Can you?
14579Carminetta was great, was n''t she?
14579Cognac?"
14579Colonel Lear has had the matter under consideration?
14579Colonel Lear?
14579Come on, will yer?
14579Come, little girl, what''s worrying you?
14579Coming, skipper?"
14579Coming?"
14579Coming?"
14579Commonly men and women more or less restrain themselves because of to- morrow; but what if there be no to- morrow?
14579Could I come out on the lorry and hold one?"
14579Could he don the clerical frock coat and with it the clerical system and outlook of St. John''s?
14579Could he go back to them?
14579Could n''t you possibly be in England when I am?
14579Could they offer that which should seize on his heart, and hold it?
14579Could they?
14579Could you come, Tommy?"
14579Could you possibly get a taxi?
14579Did n''t Christ have compassion on people like that?
14579Did n''t He eat and drink with publicans and sinners?"
14579Did you ever see_ Kismet?_ That was worse even than this.
14579Did you hear him, Julie?
14579Did you hear of those German submarine officers who lived in an hotel in Southampton?"
14579Did you see Haig''s last order to the troops?
14579Did you see how that old fossil in front kept looking round?
14579Do n''t begin now, will you?
14579Do n''t say you''re going to lecture as well?"
14579Do n''t you know I love you?
14579Do n''t you know I want to make you the very centre of my being, Julie?"
14579Do n''t you like her?"
14579Do n''t you think so, Julie?"
14579Do n''t you think so, Peter?"
14579Do n''t you want tea?"
14579Do they sell teas in London, Peter, or have you taken a leaf out of my book?"
14579Do you feel gloriously exhilarated?
14579Do you feel this sort of thing at all, and, if so, what''s your solution?"
14579Do you forget what I am?"
14579Do you know I went to Paris when I came up here from Boulogne?
14579Do you know that I''m about to quote Scripture?
14579Do you know that, Solomon?"
14579Do you know what I did?
14579Do you mind my asking?
14579Do you mind?
14579Do you mind?"
14579Do you mind?"
14579Do you not know how He loved us?''
14579Do you remember, I hinted that a big thing might come along-- do you remember?"
14579Do you remember, Julie, that once I said I thought I loved you more than God?
14579Do you see that girl in the big droopy hat and the thin hands?
14579Do you see that, Julie?
14579Do you smoke?"
14579Do you suppose she has anything on underneath?
14579Do you think I''d have a chance?"
14579Do you think I''d tell you if I had been?
14579Do you think it''s worth it, Peter?"
14579Do you think nobody has anything else to do except to arrange things to suit your convenience?
14579Do you want me to start at once?"
14579Do you want more than me?"
14579Does it hurt?
14579Does n''t Graham say anything about it, Hilda?"
14579Does she, Arnold?"
14579Donovan, can you give me some tea?
14579Eh, Hilda?"
14579Eh, Sir Robert?"
14579Eh?
14579Eighteenth?
14579Eleven o''clock''s all right for you, is n''t it?"
14579Ever hear of her again, Julie?"
14579Finished?
14579Five- thirty?"
14579For one thing, Hilda was so sensible...."What is it?"
14579Give me your ticket, will you?
14579Give us a bottle of wine in that little room at the back, will you?"
14579Give us a hand, padre; I reckon I''ll just lie down a bit.... Jolly good sort of padre, eh, skipper?
14579Good thing he''s your Bishop, Graham: you can leave it to him easily?"
14579Got a book, padre?"
14579Got it, old bean?"
14579Got that?
14579Got that?"
14579Graham?"
14579Graham?"
14579Graham?"
14579Had long to wait?"
14579Had she anything in common with it?
14579Had they ever had another?
14579Had young ladies ceased from tempting offers that seemed to include more than manicuring?
14579Has he forgotten that he is a clergyman?
14579Has the world realized that in a modern war a nation but moves in uniform to perform its ordinary tasks in a new intoxicating atmosphere?
14579Have a cigarette?"
14579Have n''t you got a blessed department to do your own damned dirty work?"
14579Have you a small suite over the week- end?"
14579Have you any idea where it is?
14579Have you finished?
14579Have you finished?"
14579Have you kissed that girl?
14579Have you-- got-- a cigarette?"
14579He did not understand altogether why she quibbled; how should he have done?
14579He got up more slowly, half- smiling, for who could resist Julie in that mood?
14579He had known her in France, in uniform, when he was not sure of her; but now, what would she be like?
14579He had n''t a chance?
14579He heard Langton say,"Hit, anyone?"
14579He is your fiancà ©, is n''t he?
14579He remembered reading in a novel how some newly married wife said to the fellow:"You''ll come up in half an hour or so, wo n''t you, dear?"
14579He smiled:"Provided somebody is there with the necessary, I suppose?"
14579He told himself her tears were simple emotion, her laughter simple reaction, but he knew it was not true.... And for himself?
14579He was out?
14579He would look in to- morrow?
14579He''s a fine chap, Tommy; do n''t you think so?"
14579He''s a terrible person for a padre-- don''t you think so, Captain Langton?"
14579He''s begun well, has n''t he?"
14579Her mother hardly needed one,"Has he met another woman, Hilda?"
14579Here I do well-- you understand?
14579Here, padre, ca n''t you keep him in order?"
14579Hiding the old gentleman, are you?
14579Hilda?
14579His late Vicar?
14579How about Sunday?
14579How are you different from either of them?"
14579How are you?
14579How can a clergyman expect_ them_ to help_ him_?
14579How dare you?
14579How did she come to be there?"
14579How do you do it?
14579How do you do, my dear?"
14579How in the world do you think we shall end up if you do?
14579How long will you stay on here?"
14579How will that do?"
14579How will you like that?"
14579How would Sunday do?"
14579How would that suit him?
14579How would you like that?
14579How''s that, padre?"
14579How''s yours, Scottie?"
14579However, we swore revenge, and we had it-- eh, Julie?"
14579However, you never know''among the multitude,''do you?"
14579Hullo, is this the place?"
14579I am distressed and terrified, I think, but underneath it all I am very glad...."You will say,''What are you going to do?''
14579I ca n''t, though, so if ever you get a chance do it for me, will you?"
14579I forgot that patch on my left cheek-- or was it my right, Solomon?
14579I presume you will be willing to go?
14579I saw you first on the boat coming over-- remember?
14579I say,"he said to the waitress in a confidential tone and with a smile,"do you think you can get us stuff in ten minutes all told?
14579I see you''ve no stays on, but have you a bathing costume?''"
14579I shall not be long, and when I come out you will come to see me again, will you not?
14579I think one ought to take one''s pleasure when one has the chance, do n''t you?
14579I want something now; what''s yours?"
14579I''m going out immediately after breakfast to buy her the best silver photo- frame I can find, see?
14579I''m sure I kiss very nicely-- plenty of men think so?
14579I''m very sorry, but ca n''t I go to- day instead?"
14579If Donovan met him with Julie?
14579If it was anything I might have seen, you were a beast not to come back for me, d''you hear?"
14579In England?
14579In le bon Dieu?
14579In love?
14579In what, then?
14579Is Peter in trouble?"
14579Is anyone about?"
14579Is it because he feels snubbed?
14579Is it not so?"
14579Is it safe?"
14579Is n''t he?"
14579Is n''t it a heavenly day?
14579Is n''t it like''em?"
14579Is n''t that so?"
14579Is n''t there any clergyman you can go and talk to?
14579Is that it?"
14579Is the hospital full?"
14579Is there a Christian monument anywhere about?"
14579Is there a Commandment against it?
14579Is there anything else you might be wanting, sir?"
14579Is there no difference between this flat and that miserable old hotel in Caudebec?
14579It was as one woman to another, and not as mother to daughter, that she continued lamely:"Well, Hilda, what do you make of it all?
14579It was easy to see how they had come to be in London; it would have been more remarkable if they had not so come together; but now, what now?
14579It was human passion, perhaps, but where was higher love or greater sacrifice?
14579It would n''t do much good if he sat down and cursed the blessed sea and the sands and the currents, would it?
14579It''s human nature, and you must allow for it; do n''t you think so?"
14579It''s less than half an hour, is n''t it?"
14579Jimmy, the idealist, what would Jimmy do?
14579Jimmy-- what would Jimmy do, now?
14579Julie, I thought, to- night-- was it anything to do with East Africa-- those tropical nights under the moon?
14579Julie?
14579Know it now?"
14579Langton?
14579Let them see what''s needed, and then let them choose their men, eh?
14579Let''s go on, Graham, shall we?"
14579Let''s have a last spot, eh?"
14579Light all right?"
14579May I ask what you are doing in it?"
14579May I have another cup of tea?"
14579May I see you home?"
14579May I write it here?"
14579May I?"
14579Meanin''''ighly painted?
14579Meantime, go on liking me, will you?"
14579More in your line than mine-- don''t you think so?"
14579Mr. Lessing?
14579No, he would marry; and then?
14579No?
14579No?
14579No?
14579No?
14579Not to- day?
14579Not too hot?"
14579Now, dear, what is it?"
14579Now, what about your traps?"
14579Of course, you''ll dine at the club?"
14579Oh, Lord, Solomon, what do you mean?"
14579Oh, Lord, how it brings the war home, does n''t it?
14579Oh, Peter, what do you think?"
14579Oh, how can you doubt that?
14579One feels so beastly when one wakes up, does n''t one?"
14579One?
14579Only, Julie, there comes an hour when down sinks the sun, and what of the mayflies then?"
14579Only, we sha n''t change, shall we, whatever happens?
14579Or of Peter?
14579Otherwise all our preparations will be wasted-- won''t they, Peter?"
14579Our love wants something, does n''t it?
14579Pennell, will you?"
14579Pennell,"he called through the open door,"what''s the next room to yours like?
14579Perhaps at home; but would Julie stop at home?
14579Peter Graham?"
14579Peter answered quickly,"Whose fault?
14579Peter had a mind to tell her several, but he refrained, and they grew silent,"Do you think we shall have another day like this?"
14579Peter looked puzzled,"Where''s Donovan?"
14579Peter walked to the bell and rang it,"Where do I come in?"
14579Peter, what do you mean?
14579Peter, what have you been doing to- day?"
14579Really?
14579Remember him?"
14579Say at three, eh?
14579Say, skipper, what about that run out into the forest you talked of?"
14579See if you can get me some and send them over, will you?"
14579See you before you go, Graham, I suppose?
14579See, are they not beautiful here?"
14579See?
14579See?"
14579See?"
14579See?"
14579Sentiment is wishy- washy, is n''t it?
14579Shall I bring up the tea, madame?"
14579Shall I make one?"
14579Shall I take a flat, or shall we go to an hotel?
14579Shall we tram or walk?"
14579She did not preach at all-- how could she?
14579She dived into her pocket, and produced a tiny satin beaded box,"Is n''t it chic?"
14579She got up"Go and find that maid, will you?
14579She is in England; I am here-- is it not so?
14579She jumped up and stretched out her arms,"Am I not good- looking, Peter?
14579She opened, the door, and switched on the light,"Shall I light the fire, madame?"
14579She passed out and closed the door gently"I wonder why I ca n''t cry to- night?"
14579She walked to the floor,"Of course, this is just between us two, is n''t it, dear?"
14579She was standing half- dressed in front of the glass doing her hair,"Oh, it''s you, is it?"
14579She would tell him what: where was he staying?
14579Should I be paid for a kindness?
14579Simple words, the preacher had said, but how when one realised Who had had compassion, and on what?
14579Sir Robert Doyle?
14579Sit down, wo n''t you?
14579Snow up in the hotel all the time?"
14579Solomon, where do you live?
14579Special work, eh?
14579Suppose matron came round?
14579Suppose they''re decent girls after all; what would you say?"
14579Supposing you did have to wait, what about it?
14579Sure you want to walk, darling?"
14579Surely our Church''s teachings in the Catechism and the Prayer- Book is Christian teaching, is n''t it?
14579Surely, Peter, our love is real, is n''t it?
14579Take a seat, wo n''t you?
14579Take me upstairs, will you?
14579Teanie, how dare you do it?"
14579Tell me, what does your father think of it all?"
14579Ten a.m.?
14579Ten minutes ago you were a bored curate, and now you''re-- what are you?"
14579That 10th Group Headquarters?
14579That all right?
14579That night at Abbeville, after we left Langton, what was it you would n''t tell me?
14579That''s curious, is n''t it, mother?...
14579The Capitaine has his fiancà © e, then?
14579The Colonies, South Africa; he would get a job schoolmastering?
14579The Julie of Friday night had been his, but of this night...?
14579The atmosphere was warm and genial, but Peter wondered inwardly why he liked it, and he did not like it so much that Pennell''s"Well, what about it?
14579The gentlemen will have dà © jeuner?
14579The old Major''s well away, and the girl''ll have a job to keep him in hand, I wonder where they''re from?
14579The older and fatter, a Colonel, looked out of window, and remarked ponderously:"''By the way, was n''t Joan of Arc born about here?''
14579The other cut him short:"Oh, you''re the chap who failed to report, are you?
14579The street runs up to the cathedral: rather jolly sometimes, but nothing doing now.... What''s that?
14579Then he asked:"But is that all?
14579Then he played up:"You''re pretty enough to knock that last out, anyway?"
14579Then she said:"What are you going to do?
14579Then we might walk back: London''s so perfect at night, is n''t it?
14579Then what the deuce are they there for?
14579Then, what lay ahead-- what, after this, if he were discovered?
14579Then:"And love?"
14579Then:"What about the menu- cards, Peter?
14579There are plenty of trains, and you''re all alone, are n''t you?
14579There he cogitated: ought one to knock, or, being in uniform, walk straight in?
14579There''s no mud and cinders here, is there, Donovan?
14579There''s no use in sadness, is there?"
14579They know me in that place: I can do nothing unless I will go to an''otel-- to be for the officers, you understand?
14579Think I could work it?"
14579Three and three make six; what do you think of that?"
14579To begin with, if we''re found, here, there''ll be a row, and if you''re caught kissing me, who knows what will happen?"
14579Tommy, do you hear that?
14579Trust Him, will you?
14579Undress me, will you?
14579Was he in your service to- night?
14579Was he?
14579Was it because he was a good priest that the men liked him, or because they had discovered the man in the parson?
14579Was it so?
14579Was this not worthy of all his careful preparation, worthy of the one centre of his being?
14579Wat''s old England comin''to, Joe?"
14579Wednesday?
14579Well, padre, and what do you think of the Army now?"
14579Well, sir, what''s the meaning of this?
14579Well, what about it, Peter?"
14579What about a hot toddy?
14579What about a luncheon?
14579What about being late?"
14579What about it?
14579What about it?"
14579What about this afternoon?"
14579What about you, Graham?
14579What about your luggage?
14579What are we going to see?"
14579What are you doing?
14579What are you doing?"
14579What are you going to do?"
14579What arrangements have you made?
14579What can I do for you?"
14579What can I do?"
14579What did He wait for?
14579What did he want to do?
14579What did you say?"
14579What do they think of the war over there, Jenko?"
14579What do you make of that, old Solomon?"
14579What do you make of the woman taken in adultery, and the woman who wiped His feet with her hair?
14579What do you mean?"
14579What do you say to a really sporting dinner at the New Year?"
14579What do you say to martinis?"
14579What do you say?
14579What do you see?"
14579What do you suppose your engineer would do when he got down to the new sea- beach and found the conditions you described?
14579What do you think he said about you?"
14579What do you think of that?"
14579What do you think of that?"
14579What do you think of the girl?"
14579What do you think, Scottie?"
14579What do you think?"
14579What do you think?"
14579What do you think?"
14579What do you think?"
14579What else does he say?"
14579What else have you to do?
14579What else?
14579What had he better do, Mallony?"
14579What had she meant at the play?
14579What have you?
14579What hospital are you in?"
14579What if Louise, with her pitiful story and her caged, earthy life, had after all found what the other had missed?
14579What if the dice are heavily weighted against it?
14579What in hell are you waiting for, padre?"
14579What in the world do you mean?"
14579What is a fool, anyway?
14579What is the matter with you, Julie?
14579What is the meaning of it?"
14579What is the play, by the way?
14579What is there about you that I do n''t know?
14579What place had His Beauty in Travalini''s, in the shattered railway- carriage, in the dinner at the Grand in Havre with Julie?
14579What shall I call him, Elsie?"
14579What shall we do?
14579What shall we do?"
14579What sort do you like?
14579What sort of a God is it Who will wipe the whole blessed thing out because in a moment of enthusiasm the sinner says he is sorry?
14579What the devil''s up?"
14579What the dickens shall I do?"
14579What time can you get off?"
14579What time did your office receive it?...
14579What time must you be in?"
14579What time?
14579What was it you thought he would have known about you, but not I?
14579What was the name?
14579What will you have?
14579What would he do, d''you think?"
14579What would he do?
14579What would he do?
14579What would she have made of the story he had just heard?
14579What would she want?
14579What you for, padre?"
14579What you got to do?"
14579What''s that they''re playing?"
14579What''s the club like here?"
14579What''s the matter?"
14579What''s the matter?"
14579What''s the plan?"
14579What''s the time?
14579What''s worth seeing?"
14579What''s your camp, you fool?"
14579What''s your news, Captain Graham?"
14579What''s yours, old son?"
14579What''s yours, skipper?"
14579What, then, was she?
14579What, then?
14579What?
14579What?
14579What?
14579What?
14579What?
14579What?"
14579What_ would_ Julie do?
14579Whatever will your girl say to you to- night if you have hands like this?"
14579When did you hear that?
14579When do we go?"
14579When he had had his hair cut previously, for instance, had people made faces behind his back?
14579When was this order applied for at your end?...
14579When will you send up?"
14579Where and what was Christ?
14579Where are we going to get it?
14579Where are we off to?"
14579Where did I place Captain Graham, Martin?"
14579Where have you been?"
14579Where have you sprung from?"
14579Where the hell were our machines, I''d like to know?"
14579Where to?"
14579Where''s the practice?
14579While there''s life there''s hope, eh, Graham?"
14579Whitehall?
14579Who''ll come down the river to La Bouille, or whatever it is called?"
14579Who''ll come?
14579Why ca n''t you saunter through it like I do?"
14579Why did n''t you come?"
14579Why did n''t you tell me?
14579Why do anything else?
14579Why do n''t people pray all over the church, as they do in France in a cathedral, Peter?"
14579Why do you spoil it all?
14579Why do you suppose I keep moderately moral?
14579Why do you think she turned away, Peter?
14579Why does Jenks do the opposite?
14579Why does it always rain on Sundays in London?
14579Why does one call Robinson Crusoe sort of islands_ desert_?
14579Why is n''t there a good mirror in this horrid old bathroom?
14579Why should He master me?
14579Why should n''t I travel on them?
14579Why you give me money, the flowers, if you do not want me?
14579Why, what''s the matter?
14579Why?
14579Why?
14579Why?"
14579Will it please you to come round here?"
14579Will it, sir?"
14579Will that do?
14579Will that do?"
14579Will you come out somewhere?"
14579Will you come?
14579Will you forgive me?
14579Will you not stroll about Paris with me for an hour or two, and talk?"
14579Will you?"
14579Wish to God I were a padre, eh, Mallony?
14579Wo n''t that do?
14579Wo n''t you have another with me?"
14579Would Donovan be deceived for a minute?
14579Would such days fill his life?
14579Would you care to go, padre?
14579Would you fetch my coat, Captain Graham?"
14579Would you fill the glasses and get me a few more?
14579Would you like me to help you choose them?"
14579Would you like to whip me?"
14579Would you pull the blind up?
14579Yet has the truth been told, after all?
14579You are angry with me-- is it not so?"
14579You can trust him, ca n''t you?"
14579You do n''t think I suggested it for your benefit?
14579You do see that, do n''t you?
14579You game to try the hospital?
14579You give to other men-- why not to me, Louise?"
14579You have a fiancà © e,''ave you not?
14579You have n''t got one here?
14579You knew?
14579You know little Jimmy, that kiddie who came in the other day who''s always such a brick?
14579You know what she is?"
14579You love me, Julie, do n''t you?"
14579You meant that, did n''t you?"
14579You must say''Yes,''Why do n''t you, Julie?"
14579You never thought I could be like that, did you?
14579You read Political Science and Economics a little at Oxford, I think?
14579You remember that sermon of his?
14579You think I do not know; I, how should I know?
14579You were at St. Thomas''s, were n''t you, down by the river?"
14579You will never forget that, will you?
14579You wo n''t forget to put it in orders, will you?
14579You write the damned thing-- any old thing, in fact-- and what happens?
14579You''ll give her one for a kiss, wo n''t you, Solomon?"
14579You''re not married by any chance?"
14579You''ve still got some leave, have n''t you, dear; what are you going to do?
14579You_ do_ love me, do n''t you?
14579Young Graham grousing?"
14579Your pocket?
14579_ And_ you said that you''d always allow your husband complete liberty-- now, did n''t you?"
14579_ He_ showed it by death; ought we to fear even that too?"
14579_ Want_--that was it; how did he want to spend his life?
14579_ Zigzag?_ Oh,_ Zigzag_"( She mimicked in a French accent.)
14579anyway, and if there is nothing in that sort of kiss, why not kiss?
14579at Oxford, were n''t you, Graham?"
14579before he was fairly on his legs with the remark:"Beggin''your pardon, sir, but as this is an informal conference, does anyone mind if I smoke?"...
14579begged to ask a question: Were there to be questions and a discussion?
14579can not a girl have friends without that, eh?
14579could you not have asked?
14579do you dine at five- thirty?"
14579do you think the whole British Army is arranged for your benefit?
14579exclaimed Peter,"What: are you doing here?"
14579had a down on that Colonel What''s- his- name, or it would have taken you another month to get here, probably-- eh, Donovan?"
14579he called to Peter,"and where have you been?"
14579he exploded;"why did you do that, you fool?"
14579how did it go?
14579is Thy love indeed A weed, albeit an amaranthine weed, Suffering no flowers except its own to mount?
14579must Thou char the wood ere Thou canst limn with it?
14579oo''d''ave thought it?
14579or P.C.?"
14579or of Judas?
14579said Julie,"where are my keys?
14579said the Australian, getting up too,"what in the world do you mean?"
14579she exclaimed suddenly,"you are n''t the new padre?"
14579she exclaimed,"do you know what the time is?
14579she exclaimed,"to what_ are_ you bringing me?
14579she exclaimed;"you''re awake at last, are you?
14579that was it, when he was away?
14579you do n''t say so?
33883''Are you quite sure?'' 33883 ''Is your father worse?''
33883Are ye growin''a moustache on the top o''your heid?
33883But do n''t you know, my dear fellow,they exclaimed,"that it is only by means of a pickaxe that you can get a joke into the skull of a Scotchman?"
33883But your wood is damp,she exclaimed;"how can ye expect it to burn?
33883But, minister, have you not often told us that we ought to love our enemies?
33883But,I added,"do you never use your violin?"
33883Can I assist you, my dear?
33883Could n''t you suggest me something to say?
33883Do n''t you hear anything?
33883Do you mean to say you have a Literary Society here?
33883Do you take your porridge after your meat?
33883Have you anything on your mind, Donald? 33883 His name, what is his name?"
33883How shall I know the stone? 33883 Is it because there are no Jews in Aberdeen?"
33883Is this your first visit to Scotland?
33883It is a manufacturing town, I suppose?
33883It may be, I dinna say no; but wha''ll gie me back my Janet?
33883Janet,he says,"it must be verra sad to lie on your death bed and hae no ane to houd your han''in your last moments?"
33883Janet,says Jamie, without accompanying his words with the slightest chalorous movement,"wad ye be that woman I was speakin''of?"
33883May I assist you to a slice of ham?
33883Nonsense,said my host kissing his old nurse,"who told you that?
33883Oh, my poor Janet,he lamented,"why have ye left me?
33883Really?
33883Shall I dance?
33883Shall I preach?
33883Shall I sing?
33883Well then?
33883Well,I said,"what have you been up to in this country?
33883Were you ever wounded, yourself?
33883What do you think of the illiterate parvenus that are for ever rattling their money bags? 33883 What do you want the evening for?"
33883What is it?
33883What is the number of your room, sir?
33883What mysterious stone?
33883What would I do? 33883 What would I do?"
33883What, noo, at once?
33883Which do you like best, England or Scotland?
33883Who could hope to compete with them?
33883Who is the lady?
33883Why are you going?
33883Why dinna ye ask her, Jamie?
33883# WHOSE HAND?# or, The Mystery W. G. WILLS and The Hon.
33883( All one wool?)
33883( All wool?)
33883( Wool?)
33883***** The Scotch themselves are fond of telling the following: Dugald--"Did ye hear that Sandy McNab was ta''en up for stealin''a coo?"
33883***** Why does the Scotchman succeed everywhere?
33883-- Is Dancing a Sin?
33883-- Is Dancing a Sin?
33883-- Is he a Gentleman?
33883-- Is he a Gentleman?
33883-- Where are the Scotch?
33883-- Why did not the Scotch buy the ancient Parthenon of the modern Greeks?
33883-- Why did not the Scotch buy the ancient Parthenon of the modern Greeks?
33883-- Why should not France possess such Societies?
33883-- Why should not France possess such Societies?
33883-- Why?
33883-- Why?
33883--"Can I assist you?"
33883A Scotchman, who looked ill at ease, whispered in my friend''s ear:"What must I do?"
33883After all, what had I done to draw down such thunders?
33883Again, why do you find in almost all the factories of Great Britain that the foreman is Scotch?
33883And for dinner?
33883And for supper?
33883And true enough,"tak''awa''Aberdeen, and twal''miles round, and faar are ye?"
33883And, indeed, what is there to be done in Glasgow but work?
33883As who should say:"Enough of that; you are a man, are you not?
33883But how can one speak of Scotland without devoting a few words to Robert Burns?
33883But what did Wellington do for Scotland?
33883But what is this in comparison with that which still goes on in Ireland in our day?
33883But whom do we find there?
33883But why destroy the edifice?
33883Can he mean it?
33883Could not you use this one and worship God in it after our own manner?"
33883D''ye think I might take one, my bonnie lass?"
33883Did I exaggerate when I told you the Scotch expect to find places specially reserved for them in Heaven?
33883Did he say this to pass on to a neighbour that which seemed to him a disgrace to his own country?
33883Do n''t you know you are breaking the Sabbath?"
33883Do you wish Jamie to be chief mourner?"
33883Family Life--"Can I assist you?"
33883Have you any special request to make me?
33883He has a way of giving you your change which seems to say,"Is it the full change you expect?"
33883Here is a specimen of Scotch conversation, given by Dr. Ramsay: A Scot, feeling the warp of a plaid hanging at a tailor''s door, enquires:"Oo?"
33883How can they know if they are really good sailors before they have encountered a storm?
33883How can two affianced people know each other, even if for years they try ever so hard?
33883How hope to give a description of the Scotch Sabbath?
33883How is that?"
33883I am quite willing to admit that Wellington did exist, and that he rendered his country service; but is that a reason for turning him into a bore?
33883I like the idea of thanking Heaven for its favours, but why the frown?
33883I wad like to ken whether there''ll be whisky in heaven?"
33883If a man struck you on the right cheek, now what would you do?"
33883In a country so Christian, so philanthropic, can it be that childhood is abandoned thus?
33883Is it the climate that so stirs the Scotch up to action?
33883Is there any question you would like to ask me?"
33883Is this due to chance?
33883It seems impossible to beat that; but what do you think of the following, which at all events runs it close?
33883Let me trace you out a programme?"
33883Modest, is it not?
33883My host arms himself with his carving knife and fork and, without relaxing a muscle of his face, says to me:"Can I assist you to a little beef?"
33883Now, to come at once to the sense of the matter, will you allow me for once-- for once only-- to pay myself a compliment that I think I well deserve?
33883Pointing with his finger to one of the graves, this lover says:"My folk lie there, Mary; wad ye like to lie there?"
33883The syllable?
33883These are two who will not have much to fear on the Day of Judgment-- eh?"
33883They will attack you with the question, whether you are not too fond of the things of this world?
33883Were the two volumes fixed together?
33883Wha''ll gie me back my Janet?"
33883What am I talking about?
33883What are you going to do to earn it?"
33883What could he say to the unhappy parents?
33883What could the poor laird say?
33883What do I say, walks?
33883What do I say?
33883What will they be like?
33883What will this cost to Print?
33883When would her turn come to play her part in these thanksgivings?
33883Where are the Scotch?
33883Where are the days when Donald considered it shocking to introduce music into divine service?
33883Where is the time when Scotch cooks refused to use a roasting- jack on Sunday because it worked and made a noise?
33883Where is the time when a Scotchman almost found fault with his hens for laying eggs on the Sabbath?
33883Whom would you like invited to your funeral?
33883Why is this?
33883Will he pay or go to jail?
33883Would not one think that this excellent Caledonian imagined that God had been made in his image?
33883_ Customer_--"A''ae oo?"
33883_ Customer_--"A''oo?"
33883_ Mieux vaut souffrir que mourir C''est la devise des hommes._ By the bye, dear reader, how do you like the expression_ special place_?
33883and"What of that?"
33883he began,"are you not ashamed of yourselves?
33883one transgression more or less whilst I am at it, what does it matter?
33883or else, whether you have made your peace with God?
33883or were they stuck by accident?
23623A certain lady would fain wit of you, Master, if you have at this present dwelling with you a daughter named Amphillis?
23623After what fashion? 23623 Ah, it is den you, fair maid?
23623Alexandra? 23623 Amphillis, canst thou keep a secret?"
23623Amphillis, who chose you to come hither?
23623An attack?
23623And I reckon he might be better, eh? 23623 And an old uncle belike?"
23623And could he find no better reward for her than this?
23623And he cometh?
23623And he wist it?
23623And if he refused?
23623And my La-- I would say, Mistress Perrote?
23623And my Lady Basset, what saith she?
23623And no compassion?
23623And she is near death?
23623And that I could order your head struck off in yonder court?
23623And the device, what is it?
23623And this?
23623And thou wouldst endeavour thyself to be meek and buxom[ humble and submissive] in all things to them that should be set over thee?
23623And thy name?
23623And what canst thou do?
23623And what else would you?
23623And what like shall the jousting be, Clement?
23623And what other tidings be there, pray you, holy Father?
23623And what price be they?
23623And when shall she wait on the said gentlewoman?
23623Anentis what should she list, good Mistress?
23623Anentis what, my maid?
23623Are n''t we all satisfied?
23623Are you aweary with your journey?
23623Art avised o''that? 23623 Art thou Englishman?"
23623Assuredly, dear Uncle; but I pray, how came you hither?
23623Aught that was worth them?
23623Ay, she doth at this present, sithence my sister, her mother, is departed[ dead]; but--"You have had some thought of putting her forth, maybe?
23623Be all foreigners nasty?
23623Be monks the sole men that love God?
23623Be they so? 23623 Be your garments not warm enough, Matthew?"
23623Because I had no kin?
23623Believe what?
23623Brother to my Lord Neville of Raby; but what hath he done, trow, to be advanced thus without merit unto the second mitre in the realm? 23623 But how for the women, Mistress Regina?
23623But if she ask?
23623But is that true Catholic doctrine?
23623But may we not go withal, Father?
23623But what be such like folks to thee?
23623But what became of the naughty man who did n''t want to come and see his poor mother when she was so sick and unhappy, Mother?
23623But what good should it do you that people wanted your money?
23623But what hindereth that you go withal yourself?
23623But what more can she lack? 23623 But wherefore doth he so?"
23623But wherefore, my son? 23623 But whom hath mine uncle we d, that is thus unbuxom[ disobedient] to him?"
23623But you wot, surely, whom you go to serve?
23623But, pray you, if I may ask-- seeing I know nothing-- is this lady that I shall serve an evil woman, that you caution me thus?
23623Can not I please God and myself both?
23623Can not the stupid thing take them forth by herself?
23623Canst be patient when provoked of other?
23623Canst dress hair?
23623Canst hold thy peace when required so to do?
23623Could he ne''er have put up with a little less of it? 23623 Dame, were it not well your Grace should essay to sleep?"
23623Dame, will you take for your son the Lord that died for you? 23623 Dame,"said she,"if I may have leave to ask at you, wherefore is this lady a prisoner?
23623Dear my Lady, should it be better with you than now?
23623Did I not bid you alway to lock the door when you should enter? 23623 Did thine uncle learn thee nought, then?"
23623Did we not come, all, from von man and von woman? 23623 Did you ever this before?"
23623Does my Lord Duke of Brittany know his mother''s condition?
23623Dost await here for man to pass?
23623Dost call thyself a jeweller?
23623Dost look for me to know?
23623Dost thou commonly merit the gifts given thee? 23623 Dost thou serve God?"
23623Doth it so? 23623 Doth she so?"
23623Fair Sir, may I entreat you of your courtesy, to send this letter with all good speed to my Lady Basset of Drayton, unto Staffordshire?
23623Father Jordan, Mistress?
23623Father, is that sin?
23623Followeth my Lady this manner?
23623For what, Mistress? 23623 Forget?
23623From your father and mother, Matthew?
23623Go to, then: will you suffer me that I endow my young kinswoman with the like sum, and likewise find her in an horse for her riding?
23623Good Master Packman, do of your grace tell me how a maid should earn that jewel?
23623Has thine uncle, then, had part in this wicked work?
23623Hast alway done thy duty, Amphillis?
23623Hast any gold cloths of tissue, not over three pound the piece?
23623Hast brake some pottery, Kate, or torn somewhat, that thou fearest thy dame''s anger?
23623Hast no cheaper?
23623Hast not seen that she laboureth to catch Master Hylton into her net?
23623Hath he used it all?
23623Hath she her health reasonable good? 23623 Have you a goose?
23623Have you taken any thought for her disposal?
23623He hath given you back--"My son?
23623Help thee? 23623 How am I to send to him, trow?"
23623How comes it thou wist no more?
23623How fares my Lady and mother?
23623How fareth she in the body?
23623How if I forbid it?
23623How shall man help to laugh if you say so comical words?
23623How? 23623 I speak, as I have been told, to the Lady Marguerite, Duchess of Brittany, and mother to my Lord Duke?"
23623I thought thou saidst she led him an ill, diseaseful[ Note 1] life?
23623I, Uncle?
23623If it might please you, holy Father, would you do so much grace as tell me where is my Lord Duke at this present?
23623If it please you, Dame, was her lord never set free?
23623If my Lord Duke be now in England, should he not know that his mother is near her end?
23623Is all well? 23623 Is it needful, holy Father?"
23623Is it so?
23623Is it soothly thus?
23623Is it surely he? 23623 Is she sick?"
23623Is that the jewel?
23623Is the gentlewoman here, Mistress Regina?
23623Is this mine ancient nurse, Perrote de Carhaix?
23623It could not be compassed, Phyllis; and granting it so should, to what good purpose? 23623 It is,"said Perrote;"and thou art Ivo filz Jehan?"
23623Kate, what aileth thee?
23623Lady Marguerite, if you lost a penny and gained a gold noble, would you think you were repaid the loss or no?
23623Mademoiselle considers herself, then, an inspired prophetess?
23623Mademoiselle de Carhaix, do you know that you are my subject?
23623Margaret, what lackest thou?
23623Master Altham the patty- maker, I take it?
23623Master Altham, as I guess?
23623May Breton damsels not tarry in strange lands, as well as Breton pedlars? 23623 May I go withal, Father?"
23623Mine?
23623Mistress Perrote, are you ill at ease?
23623Mistress Perrote, may I ask a thing at you?
23623Mistress Perrote, wit you how my cousin came hither?
23623Mistress Regina, wot you who is the lady I am to serve?
23623Mistress, I pray you tell me, if man know of wrong done or lying, and utter it not, hath he then part in the wrong?
23623Mistress, did you mean there was some other fashion of believing than to think certainly that our Lord did live and die?
23623Mistress, wherefore is it that this poor lady of ours is kept so secret? 23623 Must you needs wit?
23623My Lady answered me not; will you? 23623 My Lady his mother, then, hath no fire in her?"
23623My Lady is in her bower?
23623My Lord my brother refused to go to my mother?
23623Nay, now; do you?
23623Nay, what is it, trow?
23623O Clement Winkfield, is that you? 23623 Of what Nevilles comest thou, my maid?"
23623Oh, Amphillis, where hast thou dwelt all thy life? 23623 Oh, ay?
23623One of whom sold yon violet twist, the illest stuff that ever threaded needle? 23623 Our Lord, then, paid not the full price, but left at the least a few marks over for us to pay?
23623Phyllis, how shouldst thou like to go forth to serve a lady?
23623Poor? 23623 Pray you, good Aunt Regina, came Ricarda home safe?"
23623Pray you, holy Father,said he,"have you in your abbey at this season any of them called the poor priests, or know you where they may be found?"
23623Prithee, what good should that do thee?
23623Said you a_ lady_, Father? 23623 Say you so?
23623Saying thy prayers to the moon, Hylton? 23623 Sent to mine uncle?"
23623Shall she never be suffered to come forth?
23623Shall we ask our Lord for it?
23623She is a most terribly injured-- What say I? 23623 She?"
23623Should you count a mark[ 13 shillings 4 pence] by the year too much?
23623Signify you our blessed Lord, Mistress Perrote?
23623Sir Godfrey Foljambe, is this the manner in which you think it meet that one of your household should address a Prince?
23623Sir, I pray you, for our Lord''s love, to tell me what word came back from my Lord Duke?
23623So you thought Master Norman had a satisfied look, trow? 23623 Soothly, who is he?"
23623That dwelleth with you?
23623That is, they should pay much respect to the blue velvet and the gold buttons? 23623 That''s a pity, is n''t it?"
23623The Lord King, then, showeth him no great favour?
23623The which should come in a year to-- how much?
23623Then God is punishing me?
23623Then Master Norman is of this fashion of thinking?
23623Then he loved the Damoiselle very dearly?
23623Then man may live as he list, and cover him with Christ''s righteousness?
23623Then my Lady Foljambe is she that I must serve?
23623Then seest not for thyself that there is a manner of belief far beside and beyond the mere reckoning that man liveth? 23623 Then thy cousin, Mistress Winkfield?"
23623Then under your leave, may I deliver the letter to her?
23623Then who is to bear the same?
23623Then, if I go and ask at Him--?
23623Think you not the fathers and mothers might reasonably ask, Where''s the good of sons and daughters? 23623 Thinkest thou we can do that, my Phyllis, any better than now?"
23623Thou canst cook, I cast no doubt, being bred at a patty- shop?
23623Thou wouldst not reckon, then, that he counted Master Matthew as a fabled man that was not alive?
23623To do what?
23623Verily, but-- And how do my good master mine uncle, and my good cousin Alexandra?
23623Warm enough? 23623 Was she his own mother?"
23623Was the tale true, think you?
23623Well, for how much look you? 23623 Well, what now, Avena?"
23623Well, what so? 23623 Well?
23623Well? 23623 Well?"
23623Were it so?
23623What ado is there?
23623What advantage should gold buttons be to you? 23623 What ails me?"
23623What ails thee, forsooth? 23623 What bought you with your holy relic and your ear- rings, Ivo?"
23623What caused yon bruit in the night?
23623What charge?
23623What does Amphillis want of jousts?
23623What else?
23623What fashions of needlework canst do?
23623What for the jousting?
23623What for? 23623 What good should that do her?"
23623What hast thou done, Kate?
23623What have ye?
23623What manner of folks be they?
23623What manner of man is Master Hylton?
23623What manner of man is he, holy Father, by your leave?
23623What manner of tumblement?
23623What matter, so I had its better?
23623What matter?
23623What may I lay before your Ladyship? 23623 What mean you, woman?
23623What now? 23623 What price is that by the yard?"
23623What said he?
23623What shall I say, Mistress?
23623What signifiest thereby?
23623What was it so diverted Agatha at supper?
23623What widow lady, trow?
23623What wist thou? 23623 What would you?
23623What wouldst? 23623 What, all for threepence?"
23623When shall the jousting be?
23623Whence gat you the same?
23623Where be they to be found?
23623Where''s the good of talking to thee? 23623 Wherefore came He?
23623Wherefore? 23623 Wherefore?
23623Wherefore?
23623Wherefore?
23623Wherein did she seek to let him, wot you?
23623Who is Avena Foljambe, that she looketh to queen it over Marguerite of Flanders? 23623 Who is he, this Father Neville?"
23623Who told you so much? 23623 Who was it?
23623Who whispered to the earth,` Midas has long ears''?
23623Whose is that empty place on the form?
23623Why for the dead, who are at rest? 23623 Why, what aileth thee?
23623Why, whatso? 23623 Will none deliver an unhappy soul in Purgatory?"
23623Will they smooth your pillows when you are sick? 23623 Will you sit?"
23623Will your Ladyship look? 23623 Wilt thou so do, for the love of God and thy Lady?
23623Would he come, if he were asked yet again, and knew that a few weeks-- maybe days-- would end his mother''s life?
23623Would it like your Grace,asked Lady Foljambe, rather stiffly,"to speak in plain language, and say what you would have?"
23623Would it please you to say if King Edward letteth his coming?
23623Would she obey?
23623Would you tell me, an''it please you?
23623Would your Grace anything that I can pick forth to your content?
23623Wouldst thou fain not keep the Ten Commandments, Rica?
23623You are not knights, dat you joust?
23623You be uncle, I count, of my cousin Amphillis here?
23623You can tarry a little longer? 23623 You have father and mother?"
23623You know not?
23623You know your duty?
23623You left your friends well?
23623You never worshipped any other God?
23623You never, surely, signify that any decent maid could set herself to seek a man for an husband, like an angler with fish?
23623Your Grace hath mind of the two pedlars that came hither a few days gone?
23623Your name, I think, is Amphillis Neville?
23623_ She_ done?
23623------------------------------------------------------------------------"On what art thou a- thinking thus busily, Phyllis?"
23623Ah, when such mothers die and go to God, be there no words writ on the account their sons shall thereafter render?
23623Am I meek pigeon to be kept in a dovecote?
23623Amphillis asked only one question-- Would the lady be pleased to tell her the name and address of her future mistress?
23623Amphillis, whenas you dwelt in London town, heard you at all preach one of the poor priests?"
23623And I may choose, may I, whether my bed shall be hung with green or blue?
23623And art happy here, my maid?
23623And did I not meet the English Lords and kiss them every one[ Note 1], and hang their chambers with the richest arras in my coffers?
23623And dost think a war- charger should be well a- paid to have an old woman of his back?"
23623And for plenishing, what must she have?"
23623And how comes it, den, if a poor man may ask, dat I find here, in de heart of England, a Breton damsel of family?"
23623And if the night were back, where is the knight?
23623And what good when done?
23623And when shall it be, Clem?"
23623And wherefore?
23623Any that had been there?"
23623Are you thus one with Jesu Christ our Lord?"
23623Art feared lest the old eagle bite, or canst trust the hooked beak for a week or twain?"
23623At length, as the horse checked its speed to walk up a hill, the man in front of Amphillis said--"Know you where you be journeying, my mistress?"
23623Ay: well?"
23623Ay?"
23623Be they all good?"
23623Be wrong and cruelty and injustice what He would?
23623But do you suppose I should be silent for that?
23623But how shall our Lord make thee safe?"
23623But must I conceive that Master Winkfield''s diseaseful life, then, is in thine eyes, or in his own?"
23623But suppose the relish does remain?
23623But what is the Church?
23623But what should best like thee?"
23623But wherefore doth not God compass it?
23623But wherefore tarrieth thy brother away?
23623But you-- would you have me perfect saint, without sin?
23623But, Ivo, were you wise to tell the lady you came from Hennebon?"
23623Call you this guarding a prisoner?
23623Can He not do what He will?
23623Can I have it settled?"
23623Can it have occurred without his knowledge and sanction?
23623Can my said Lord Duke be Christian man?"
23623Can you do this?"
23623Can you see aught from here?
23623Can''st love a new aunt, thinkest?"
23623Canst not conceive what I mean?
23623Canst not say a two- three times the Rosary of our Lady to ease it?"
23623Canst thou pay a debt without cost?"
23623Cared you alway more for His glory than for the fame of Marguerite of Flanders, or the comfort of Jean de Bretagne?"
23623Come, now; what should I tell you?
23623Could I see my way thereto, trust me, I would not say you nay; but--""But how, Master Hylton, if she carried her pocket full of nobles?"
23623Could a woman be wedded to a man, and not know it?
23623Could any other answer thereto?"
23623Could he find means to prevent it?
23623Could that be?
23623Could they be aught else?"
23623Could two knights enter into covenant, to live and die each with other, and be all unsure whether they had so done or no?
23623Dame, what means your Grace?"
23623Dame, will you hearken to your old nurse, and grant her one boon?"
23623Dat is Monday night, trow?"
23623Daughter, art thou a happy woman, or no?"
23623De man you see, shall he be de hundert man, or one von de nine and ninety?
23623De porter, he is what of a man?--and has he any dog?"
23623Den here are--_Bon saints, que vois- je_?
23623Did it ever any good and pleasure to thee to believe that one Julius Caesar lived over a thousand years ago?"
23623Didst grow like a mushroom?"
23623Didst have half my message, or the whole?"
23623Didst thou believe that?"
23623Do I err, Father?"
23623Dost know?"
23623Dost reckon I mean to work mine own broidery, trow?
23623Dost thou know that I am dying?"
23623Dost thou marvel if her words be bitter, and if her eyes be sorrowful?
23623Doth He hate me, that He leaveth me thus to live and die like a rat in a hole?
23623Doth Master Norman look satisfied?
23623Doth thy dame entreat thee well?
23623For if we truly loved God, and perfectly, should we commit sin?--could we so do?
23623Good Shepherd, wilt Thou not go after this lost sheep until Thou find it?"
23623Had he not sown his wild oats, and become a reformed character?
23623Had he spoken out his thoughts, he would have said,"What on earth does this bothering old woman want?"
23623Has your mother bought a new kerchief, or the cat catched a mouse?"
23623Hast an access[ a fit of the gout], that thou canst not walk?"
23623Hast ever meditated, Amphillis, what it cost God to forgive sin?"
23623Hast thou a good man to thy baron, child?"
23623Hast thou never heard the saw, that` they be ill folks that dogs and children will not go withal''?"
23623Hath he lost his wits or his tongue?"
23623Hath he not built churches with the moneys of his mother''s dower, and endowed convents with the wealth whereof he defrauded her?
23623Have you always paid all your dues to Him that is above men?"
23623Have you driven anybody else out o''her seven senses beside me wi''yon foolery?"
23623Have you kept, to the best of your power, all the commandments of God?"
23623Heard you ever her story?"
23623Honoured you no man nor thing above God?
23623How can I be still, unless I were still in death?
23623How could I, wid de blessed relic in mine hand?
23623How could he, when he was taught that they were unclean creatures with whom it was defilement to converse?
23623How could she?
23623How doth it like thee?"
23623How ever chanceth it?"
23623How had her cousin come there?
23623How much have you cost yours, Matthew, since you were born?"
23623How then can I look to keep a wife?
23623Howbeit, if so be, what then?
23623I am in the Church: what more lack I?
23623I may speak my pleasure if I would have to my four- hours macaroons or gingerbread?
23623I put in de rings in your ears?
23623I taught you the Ten Commandments of God; have you forgotten them?
23623I trust you can do your duty, and not giggle and chatter?"
23623If he were comfortable, what did it signify if everybody else were uncomfortable?
23623If it may suit with your reckoning, what say you to breaking your mind to him thereupon, and seeing if he be inclined to entertain the same?"
23623If thou hadst in thine hand an hundred pound, what should''st do withal?"
23623If you wist not what I mean, can you be thus joined?
23623Is He thy King, Amphillis Neville?"
23623Is His temple built well of broken hearts, and His altar meetly covered with the rich tracery of women''s tears?
23623Is everything His will?--the evil things no less than the good?
23623Is it God''s will when man speaketh a lie, or slayeth his fellow, or robbeth a benighted traveller of all his having?
23623Is it this priest or that bishop?
23623Is it thus?"
23623Is it thy baron, or thy childre?"
23623Is my Lady, then, deceived thereon?"
23623Is not Father Jordan a priest?
23623Is she verily nigh death, or may she linger yet a season?"
23623Is that plain enough?
23623Is there here some wrong- doing?
23623Is there news abroad, may man wit?"
23623Is this the reward you pay her for her mother- love, for her thousand anxieties, for her risked life?
23623Is this your allegiance and duty?
23623Is yet any successor appointed?"
23623It is a young lady, de shild?
23623It were not in thy writ of matters allowable, I reckon, that the pedlars should come up and open their packs in my sight?"
23623Lady, will the sheep answer His voice?
23623Lead her horse with thy bonnet doffed, and make a leg afore her whenever she spake unto thee?"
23623Love you mirth and jollity?"
23623Madame, would it please your Ladyship to regard de alners?"
23623Master Foljambe, go you after this crack- brained dame of mine, or tarry you here with me and drink a cup of Malvoisie wine?"
23623Might one of your own sons be trusted herewith?"
23623Mr Altham hesitated a moment, murmured a few words of thanks, and at last came out openly with--"What sayest, sweetheart?"
23623Must I never see my little child again, the baby lad that clung to me and would not see me weep?
23623Now, whatever shall man do?"
23623Old Perrote, hast thou forgot it all?"
23623Or is it rather, that thou art willing to please God in such matters as shall not displease Amphillis Neville?"
23623Or was his will so much dearer to him than his mother?"
23623Or was it-- oh, was it possible!--the Duke of Bretagne?
23623Perrote, was it that man essayed once more to free me?
23623Phyllis, dost thou trust Christ our Lord?"
23623Phyllis, what''s come o''er thee?"
23623Pray you, be not troubled: if so were, should you be any better off than now?"
23623Prithee, who is the Rector of Ludgarshall, that we must all be at his beck and ordering?
23623Said I not the lad should never forsake his old mother?
23623Said I not to you, De mans is bad, and de womans is badder?
23623Said I well, fair maid?"
23623See you?"
23623See you?"
23623Seest not that folks should pay me a deal more respect, thus donned[ dressed] in my bravery?"
23623Set in case that she came forth this morrow, a free woman-- whither is she to wend, and what to do?
23623Shall a maid ne''er have a bit of fun, quotha?"
23623Shall his Grace come hither?"
23623Shall they not love Him back, though they be not in cloister?"
23623Shall we look along the Strand?
23623She hath, I take it, none other guardian than you?"
23623She is well?"
23623She said-- or that inward monitor said through her--"Is it settled for thee, Amphillis?"
23623Should we speak falsely in His ears who is the Truth?
23623Should we suffer pride to defile our souls, knowing that He dwelleth with the lowly in heart?
23623Should we then bear ill- will to other men who love Him, and whom He loveth?
23623Sir Godfrey at home?"
23623Sir Godfrey is away, is it not?"
23623So I am to confess my sins, forsooth?
23623Soothly, our Lord died for us: but--""But-- yet was it not rightly for us, thee and me, but for some folks a long way off, we can not well say whom?"
23623Surely it was not possible that Mr Altham had known, far less shared, the dishonesty of his daughter?
23623Tell me, has God no treasury whence He pays compensation for such wrongs as mine?
23623That He shall make me safe at last, if I do my duty, and pay my dues to the Church, and shrive me[ confess sins to a priest] metely oft, and so forth?
23623The blood of an hundred kings is thrilling all along my veins, and must I be silent?
23623Then she said to Amphillis--"Is it thou whom I came to see?"
23623There was no troubling"May I do this?"
23623Think you God, that is up in Heaven, taketh note of a white lie or twain, or a few cross words by nows and thens?
23623Thou wouldst fain ask, Whither should I go?
23623To King Edward?
23623To her daughter?
23623To her son?
23623To my Lady Princess?
23623To what end?
23623Vat lack you, my young maids?
23623WHO CAN SHE BE?
23623Was it a party of visitors coming to the Manor, or, more likely, a group of travellers on their way to Chesterfield from Derby?
23623Was it by reason God loved or hated us?
23623Was it not for this Thou earnest, O Saviour of the world?
23623Was there no truth in the whole Church Catholic, these thirteen hundred years, that this Dan John must claim for to have discovered it anew?
23623We have nothing to pay; and if we had, how should our poor hands reach to such a purchase as that?
23623Well, Avena, what has moved thee to bring a fresh face into this my dungeon, prithee?
23623Well, I would not so much care-- should it serve you if I gave her strict forbiddance for to go?"
23623Well, little brown nightingale, what sayest?
23623Well, what wages should content you?"
23623What anentis me, my maid?"
23623What became of her?
23623What befell him?"
23623What could man do better?
23623What did her anxiety matter to my Lord Abbot of Darley?
23623What else is she good for?"
23623What for, trow?
23623What has been your god, my daughter?"
23623What hath our Lady done to be thus shut close in prison?"
23623What hath satisfied him, trow?"
23623What hath she done?"
23623What have I done?
23623What is sin?"
23623What lady, I pray you?"
23623What matters it if the caged eagle have his perch gilded or no?
23623What right hath your King thus to use me?
23623What say you to a goodly tournament at the Palace of the Savoy?"
23623What sayest?"
23623What was that bruit I heard without, an half- hour gone?"
23623What wist any man thereabout?"
23623What would the foolish maid?"
23623What wouldst?"
23623What wouldst?"
23623What you tink?"
23623When comes Sir Godfrey back?"
23623When the one is need longing for love, and the Other is love seeking for need, what can they do but come close together?
23623Where is the sermon?"
23623Where''s the good of fathers and mothers, save to crimp and cramp young folks that would fain stretch their wings and be off into the sunlight?
23623Wherefore have you a key apart from mine, but that you should so do?"
23623Wherefore is all this come upon me?"
23623Wherefore played he at see- saw, now aiding me, and now Charles, until none of his knights well knew which way he was bent?
23623Wherefore should I catch Master Hylton, and wherewith, and to what end?"
23623Whereof is Phyllis guilty?"
23623Which of you three is de maiden dat go shall?"
23623Whither, then, is she to go for whom there is no room on middle earth[ Note 2], and whose company all men avoid?
23623Who is it, thinkest?"
23623Who reigns in thine inner soul, Phyllis?"
23623Who so bravely apparelled as I, trow?"
23623Whose servant art thou?
23623Why did everybody who seemed to know anything make such a secret of the affair?
23623Why dost thou not kiss me?
23623Why tarry the wheels of His chariot?"
23623Why, hast forgot all those weeks at Hennebon, that we awaited the coming of the English fleet?
23623Will not God give me back_ one_?"
23623Will you not send to my Lord?"
23623Will you not yet once entreat of my Lord Duke, being in England, to pay one visit to his dying mother?"
23623Will your Ladyship choose?
23623Would God, some day, in that upper world, say that to_ him_?
23623Wouldst thou fain be put forth?
23623You know de duties of de bower- woman?
23623You left unanswered my question, Lady: what has been your god?"
23623You see?"
23623You sleep in de prisoner''s chamber?--yes?"
23623You take it?"
23623You wist, doubtless, that my Lord of York is departed?"
23623You''ll come, my mistresses?
23623You''ll not forget that crespine?"
23623and be thy fellows pleasant company?
23623and how?
23623and is that all they told you?"
23623but if a maid can work, and dress hair, and the like, what would they of such weary gear as that?"
23623can not a maid be fair and discreet belike?"
23623foes?
23623may it not be a messenger only?"
23623must she die without deliverance?"
23623not to name a mere wish that passeth athwart man''s heart and is gone?"
23623or I tell dem you?"
23623or comfort you when your heart is woeful?"
23623or do you call such words as you have spoken honouring your mother?
23623or to the White Lady?"
23623or wouldst have it rougher hewn?"
23623or you are very busy?
23623or"How far is it allowable to enjoy that?"
23623robbers?
23623said Lady Basset, when the letter had been read to her;"and now what is that you are to tell me?"
23623said her cousin, suddenly,"hast learned to hold thy tongue?"
23623say thou lovest me?"
23623shall we not go round by Derbyshire, to see Amphillis, and sail from Hull?''
23623so they went off in grand array?
23623that I told him no more?"
23623the kinswoman of a wretched traitor, that met the fate he deserved-- why, hath she ten drops of good blood in her veins?
23623the perches are fine wood, sayest thou?
23623they know she is well treated; why should they harry them over her?
23623thieves?
23623to what end?
23623what for poor?
23623what matter, so I had it?"
23623when I ask Thee for nought costlier than death, canst Thou not grant it to me?"
23623will it bleat again and again, until He find it?
23623wilt hold thy peace, and let man be?
23623you go, and not your cousin?
23623you shall every eye charm!--She is here no more-- yes?"
3463Are you Horace Bigsby''s cub?
3463Can I have it-- can Clara and I have it all for our own?
3463Did I ever tell you the plot of it? 3463 Did it knock him down?"
3463Did n''t Henry tell you to land here?
3463Did n''t you hear him?
3463Did you do that?
3463Did you ever do any steering?
3463Did you follow it up? 3463 Did you pound him much-- that is, severely?"
3463Do n''t you know I have only talked as yet, but proved nothing? 3463 Do n''t you understand, Youth?"
3463Do n''t you understand? 3463 Do you chew?"
3463Do you drink?
3463Do you gamble?
3463Do you know the Bowen boys?
3463Do you swear?
3463George,he said,"what pictures are these that gentleman left?"
3463Hard?
3463Have n''t you any other friend that you could suggest?
3463How do you follow a hall at home in the dark? 3463 How much do you think it ought to be, Mark?"
3463How on earth am I going to learn it, then?
3463How would you like a young man to learn the river?
3463If they want letters from here-- who''ll run from morning till night collecting material cheaper? 3463 Oh Youth, have you done anything?"
3463Pounded him?
3463Some one you know?
3463Was it Grady that killed himself trying to do all the dining and speeching? 3463 What are you reading, Sam?"
3463What did you do?
3463What do they mean by that?
3463What do you know?
3463What in the nation you steerin''at, anyway? 3463 What is your name?"
3463What makes you pull your words that way?
3463What will you have, Sam?
3463What with?
3463What''s the name of the next point?
3463What-- do you-- charge?
3463Who was it?
3463Whose name was that we were just applauding?
3463Why do n''t you light it yourself?
3463Why,he said, holding out his hand,"you did not tell us you were coming?"
3463You''re Secesh, ai n''t you?
3463A man with him asked:"Who''s Mark Twain?"
3463And the final heartsick line,"Do n''t you suppose they have pretty much quit writing at home?"
3463Are you?"
3463As we turned into the lane that led to Stormfield he said:"Can we see where you have built your billiard- room?"
3463At a party one night, being urged to make a conundrum, he said:"Well, why am I like the Pacific Ocean?"
3463Brown said, fiercely,"Here, why did n''t you tell me we had got to land at that plantation?"
3463Clemens asked,"You''ve heard from those gentlemen out there?"
3463Clemens, just then coming to say good- night, saw a little group gathered about her bed, and heard Clara ask:"Katy, is it true?
3463Did you do anything further?"
3463Did you have any bets on us?"
3463Do n''t you know I have never held in my hands a gold or silver bar that belonged to me?
3463Do you hear me?
3463Do you realize, Mark, what a symposium it is to be?
3463Favored by fortune, beloved by millions, honored now even in the highest places, what more had life to give?
3463Give him a good, sound thrashing, do you hear?
3463He wrote, too, now and then, and finished the little book called"Is Shakespeare Dead?"
3463Helen Keller wrote:"And you are seventy years old?
3463How do you run Plum Point?"
3463I think he added one or two other remarks, then all at once, turning upon me those piercing agate- blue eyes, he said:"When would you like to begin?"
3463It only costs them$ 1 apiece, and, if they ca n''t stand it, what do they stay here for?"
3463Livy, what can I do?"
3463Mark Twain, in the"Mississippi"boot remembers them as follows:"Did you strike him first?"
3463Oh, Katy, is it true?"
3463Once, when his lecture was over, an old man came up to him and said:"Be them your natural tones of eloquence?"
3463Or is the report exaggerated, like that of your death?
3463Summoned to go at last, he chided himself for staying so long; but she said there was no harm and kissed him, saying,"you will come back?"
3463Tell us, Mark, why are you like the Pacific Ocean?"
3463That morning when the dictation ended he said:"Have you any special place to lunch, to- day?"
3463Then Mr. Goodman said:"Of course, Artemus, it''s all right, but why did you give us Upper Canada?"
3463Then he would be likely to say:"Why did n''t you stop me?
3463Then:"Look here, what do you suppose I told you the names of those points for?"
3463Waiting his turn at the booking- desk, he heard a newspaper man inquire:"What notables are going?"
3463Was it fate or Providence that suddenly placed it in his hands?
3463Was it swept out of a bank, or caught up by the wind from some counting- room table?
3463What do you start from, above Twelve Mile Point, to cross over?"
3463What name do you want to use Josh?"
3463What was its origin?
3463Where are you going now?
3463Where is it Orion''s going to?
3463Where you headin''for now?"
3463Who knows?
3463Why did you let me go on making a donkey of myself when you could have saved me?"
3463Would you like a series of papers to run through three months, or six, or nine-- or about four months, say?"
3463he asked,"pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade?"
34856After all, is not a woman''s life, is not her health, are not her limbs more valuable than panes of glass? 34856 But you do not confine the case to the latter way of putting it?"
34856Did Mr. Asquith return no message, no kind of reply?
34856Did Mr. Horace Smith tell you in sentencing you that he was doing what he had been told to do?
34856Did you instruct Mr. Horace Smith to decide against Miss Brackenbury, and to send her to prison for six weeks?
34856Everything?
34856Has Mr. Asquith received my letter?
34856How do I know?
34856How do you know?
34856I think, Mrs. Pankhurst, you now understand the way it is put?
34856Is it not a fact,asked Christabel,"that you yourself have set us an example of revolt?"
34856Not in the Welsh graveyard case?
34856Poor souls,I thought, and then I said suddenly,"Are none of you_ men_?"
34856The doctor would think, as I should think if I saw a woman lying there,''What has been this woman''s offence?'' 34856 Then why do n''t you do something to give votes to women?"
34856What about next year?
34856What happened, father?
34856What is the other?
34856You did not tell them to break down a wall and disinter a body?
34856And what right had I to step in and ruin the good impression they had made?
34856As soon as order was restored Christabel stood up and repeated the question:"Will the Liberal Government, if returned, give votes to women?"
34856At this there were cries of"Where to?"
34856Autocratic?
34856But Mr. Lloyd- George evaded this by the counter query:"Why do n''t they go for their enemies?
34856But what good did that do the cause?
34856Can you throw the first stone?
34856Did they think that any doctor would go on with such action, or that we should be able to retain medical men under such conditions in our service?
34856Do you wonder that we gained new members at every meeting we held?
34856Does justice gain?
34856Does not Mr. Asquith think that women should have the right to control their children''s education, as men do, through the vote?"
34856Have you the right to judge women?
34856How can she save?
34856I said to the inspector:"Shall I have to do it again?"
34856I say the right was destroyed, for of how much value is a petition which can not be presented in person?
34856In almost every one of my American meetings I was asked the question,"What good do you expect to accomplish by interrupting meetings?"
34856Is it possible that the time- honoured, almost sacred English privilege of interrupting is unknown in America?
34856Is there anything more marvellous in modern times than the kind of spontaneous outburst in every country of this woman''s movement?
34856It had been urged, said he, that this bill was better than none at all, but why should that be the alternative?
34856May I just try to make you feel what it is that has made this movement the gigantic size it is from the very small beginnings it had?
34856Now why have they not put the Union in the dock?
34856Said the clerk:"Do you find Mrs. Pankhurst guilty or not guilty?"
34856Shall us have the vote?
34856She quoted Lord Morley as saying of the Indian unrest:"''We are in India in the presence of a living movement, and a movement for what?
34856The inspector, whom I knew personally, stepped forward and demanded officially,"Are you Mrs. Pankhurst, and is this your deputation?"
34856Then Annie Kenney arose and asked:"If the Liberal party is returned to power, will they take steps to give votes for women?"
34856There is no doubt of that, but most important of all, does not the breaking of glass produce more effect upon the Government?
34856They wrote:"Will the Liberal Government give votes to working- women?
34856Was there, I reflected, any difference between trying for the vote and getting it?
34856We could not believe him, and when, two months later, I was asked in America:"When will English women vote?"
34856We threw away all our conventional notions of what was"ladylike"and"good form,"and we applied to our methods the one test question, Will it help?
34856What answer do you think Sir Henry Campbell- Bannerman made us?
34856What became of those girls, and what became of their hapless infants?
34856What can be gained?
34856What do we find?
34856What does all this mean?
34856What good did it do?
34856What is the good of a country like ours?
34856What is the obvious lesson to be drawn?
34856What words could have breathed a prouder defiance, a more implacable resolve?
34856When the remnants of the armies return, when the commerce of Europe is resumed by men, will they forget the part the women so nobly played?
34856When we made the inquiry,"Are all our women now transferred to the first division?"
34856Who asked me to say anything?
34856Why do n''t they go for their greatest enemy?"
34856Why not?
34856Why should women go to Parliament Square and be battered about and insulted, and most important of all, produce less effect than when we throw stones?
34856Why?
34856Will Sir Charles M''Laren tell us if any member is preparing to introduce a bill for women''s suffrage?
34856Will he tell us what he and the other members will pledge themselves to_ do_ for the reform they so warmly endorse?"
34856Would n''t I please have a meeting especially for them?
27864Ah,she said, softly,"did he-- did he say that?"
27864Ai n''t you ashamed to face us two?
27864Ai n''t you kind of working a friend to the limit and a little plus?
27864Am I not an old friend?
27864And do you still take conversation lessons?
27864And look at his ears and his hands-- was there ever anything so exquisite?
27864And that,Miss Herron asked, for once caught unawares, as it appeared,"is what?"
27864And the last touch about St. Francis, was n''t that a trifle overdone? 27864 And what''s most lovable in it?"
27864And where is your first port-- Rio? 27864 And who furnished you with the hat?"
27864And why not Simeon, pray?
27864And,he went on, lightly,"why should not one try to make the world pleasanter by making it more satisfied with itself?
27864Anything I can do-- ma''am-- sir?
27864Anything more?
27864Anything specific-- as about the Heathflower thing?
27864Are there no cables to Magellan?
27864Are you quite ready?
27864Are you running away_ from_ or_ with_ anybody, that you suddenly annex an ocean steamer? 27864 Ben,"he cried, almost joyfully,"what''s the title of Helen''s play?"
27864Brown?
27864But how are you going to prove I was married? 27864 But is it a safe one?"
27864But what will it bid you say to- morrow morning, as we drive down crowded Fifth Avenue, after a night in this brougham?
27864But where have you been?
27864But you have seen a specialist, surely?
27864Can he live?
27864Can it be,I fretted aloud,"that Joe''s racing round looking for an Episcopalian preacher, when there was a Methodist at hand?"
27864Can not a professor of zoology like music, or do you object to a bachelor owning an aunt?
27864Chilly?
27864Conceited little beggar, though, I suppose?
27864Could he get leave of absence right in the beginning of the term?
27864Dear, what is it? 27864 Deena,"he said, and his tone was kind,"if I should go away for six months, do you think you could manage without me?"
27864Deena,he said, not even knowing he had used her name,"do you really want me to go on this hopeless errand?
27864Did n''t he tell you that they were all going guanaco hunting?
27864Did you forget something, Rob? 27864 Did you,"Miriam panted,"when you said what you did to Mr. Leeds?
27864Do n''t that beat tophet and repeat?
27864Do n''t you believe me?
27864Do n''t you exaggerate?
27864Do n''t you know?
27864Do n''t you like her singing?
27864Do n''t you like me in my new clothes?
27864Do n''t you see the family likeness?
27864Do n''t you see-- the favorites have got so much on their backs, the longer they wheel and turn, the more they take out of themselves?
27864Do n''t you think that you are rather overvaluing my modest achievements?
27864Do you know I thought it had fallen flat? 27864 Do you know your way to the library?"
27864Do you mean lost at sea?
27864Do you want me to talk to these people?
27864Do you want to hear me say my little speech over again?
27864Do you want to lose? 27864 Do you want to take these grapes home with you,"asked Stephen,"or shall I send you a basket of them tomorrow?"
27864Does it kill him?
27864Dropped what?
27864Give up?
27864Give you millions against-- just one word,Hilary whispered; then aloud:"Is it a bet?"
27864Had n''t you just as soon tear pickets off''n the fence there, or something like that?
27864Has n''t he a beautifully shaped head?
27864Has n''t he told you about the mob at Valladolid? 27864 Have I become a snob in this Relentless City''?"
27864Have you Friday evening disengaged?
27864He has said something?
27864Helen Bentnor Penn''s a great girl, is n''t she, Rob?
27864Honestly?
27864How am I?
27864How d''ye do, Miss Herron?
27864How dare you make a jest of other people''s misfortunes? 27864 How did it happen?"
27864How do you get your three squares nowadays?
27864How far off is the nearest church?
27864How fast_ can_ the automobile go?
27864How is your culture class?
27864How late''s the train?
27864How long has Mrs. Ellersly been with my wife?
27864How long since?
27864How much for that bunch of stuff?
27864How soon can you be ready? 27864 How soon?"
27864I am altogether a monster?
27864I am cruel,she said,"selfishly cruel to you, who have been so good to me-- but whom can I turn to except to you?
27864I beg pardon?
27864I ca n''t have her?
27864I ca n''t have her?
27864I forgot to ask you to come in,she said,"or whether you want anything I can get you?
27864I say, Mr. French, must n''t she have been sort of loony to wear a dress like that, and she sixty- five?
27864I say, Mr. French, who is that old cove over the door, with a frill on his shirt and a ribbon to his eyeglass? 27864 I think I heard you had married a naturalist-- prehistoric bones, is it not?
27864I''m sure that Archie----"Eh?
27864I?
27864In spite of his kindness, ca n''t you understand that I am proud to be a worker? 27864 Indeed?"
27864Is anything coming behind us, Lucy?
27864Is it bad luck,she asked,"for me to be the first to drink my own health?"
27864Is it coming?
27864Is it?
27864Is n''t he silly?
27864Is n''t he the limit?
27864Is n''t this heavenly?
27864Is that thing yonder green?
27864Is there a hostelry near by?
27864Is there any reason why I should n''t go?
27864It was in a canoe, was n''t it?
27864Just tell your sister what I have said, will you?
27864Last all the way-- eh, Miss Allys?
27864Lucy----"Is that machine really broken?
27864May I come in?
27864May I pass you?
27864McTorture has me fast in his clutches; and for how long do you suppose? 27864 Me with fifty thousand in the bank and letting a guest of mine graft for a living?
27864Mrs. Brewster, how do you do? 27864 Mrs. Ponsonby,"he said, boldly,"if Simeon had a chance to do this very thing-- free of expense-- would you be unhappy at his desertion?
27864Mushroom or toadstool?
27864Must I go, Deena?
27864Must I leave you when I know you love me? 27864 My dear,"said Miss Herron,"will you be good enough to hold your parasol over me?
27864My dear,she asked, resignedly,"what was that noise I heard?"
27864My dear,she said,"why should your charming sister be treated as a prisoner over whom somebody must perpetually keep watch?
27864No urging is necessary to persuade me to go to New York-- why should you and Ben suppose I do not like to do pleasant things? 27864 No?
27864Not ever again?
27864Of course she wo n''t mind; why should she?
27864Oh, were they?
27864Oh,she said, feeling as if she were speaking in a dream,"is it-- where did you come from?"
27864Percy, have you seen the show at the Gaiety?
27864Really-- as I have undertaken to be perfectly frank with you-- how can your going or staying make the least difference in the world to me?
27864Really?
27864Rosie? 27864 Rosie?"
27864Shall I bring Monson?
27864Shall I get a glass of brandy? 27864 Shall I go with you to your sitting room?"
27864Shall I send him away, sir, or do you wish to see him?
27864Should you feel it pleasanter if I went away?
27864Smashed?
27864So there you must-- remain? 27864 So you''re bound to go to court?"
27864Suppose you can keep a secret? 27864 Tell me,"the old lady asked, after they had driven some distance along the shady road,"are you really enjoying your stay here?"
27864That is what you thought from the first?
27864The Holland, is n''t it?
27864The other house?
27864Then why do you?
27864Then you do n''t think I am altogether contemptible?
27864Then you think I am-- nothing?
27864Think of whom?
27864Think so? 27864 Think so?
27864This is Steven''s Forks, is n''t it? 27864 Toward home, then?"
27864Want one?
27864Was he sent for? 27864 Was there ever a man so wise that a woman could n''t make a fool of him?"
27864We''ll do what?
27864Well, now I''ve happened in, might n''t I have some tea?
27864Well,said I,"and why did n''t you go?"
27864Were you going into town, or did you come for the walk?
27864Were you not in Africa?
27864What Rosie?
27864What are you going to do?
27864What become of Her, Brick Avery?
27864What did you steal her for, Brick Avery?
27864What do you mean?
27864What do you mean?
27864What has he told you?
27864What have you heard?
27864What is so wonderful in my being in my aunt''s opera box?
27864What makes you so suddenly avaricious, Billy?
27864What was that stuff you were reeling off to my cousin? 27864 What, ma''am?"
27864When did you give up the road?
27864When do you move to your mother''s?
27864When,she asked once, in a timid voice, of Mrs. Gunnison,"does Mr. Leeds go?"
27864Where are your Moravian grandparents?
27864Where did you get''em?
27864Where have you been?
27864Where is Simeon? 27864 Where is your hat?"
27864Where will you live in Paris?
27864Where''s Betty?
27864Which direction shall we take?
27864Which is that, cousin?
27864Who are''they''? 27864 Who asked him?"
27864Who be I?
27864Who can have been so unfair-- so cruel? 27864 Who is your aunt?"
27864Who, for instance?
27864Who?
27864Why ca n''t_ you_ take Miss Herron over, Mr. Fraser-- hey? 27864 Why did n''t you ask her?"
27864Why do n''t you and she get married and we''ll all live here, happy, hereafter?
27864Why do n''t you ease down, Blacklock?
27864Why have you not been to see-- us?
27864Why in thunder should I want brandy? 27864 Why not confess frankly that, so far as you are concerned, I belong to the''no name''series?"
27864Why not?
27864Why not?
27864Why?
27864Why?
27864Why?
27864Why?
27864Will you dine with me to- morrow if I can get Mrs. McLean to chaperon us?
27864Would n''t a farm wagon leave those marks?
27864Would you wish to marry a woman who does not love you, who loves some one else, and who tells you so and refuses to marry you?
27864Wrong? 27864 Yes, Miss Herron?"
27864Yes,_ Jack_ will what?
27864Yes-- it_ was_ sudden, was n''t it?
27864Yes?
27864Yes?
27864You advise me to destroy it?
27864You ai n''t so unprofessional as to remember all that silliness against me, are you? 27864 You are going to give up everything?"
27864You are not lonely, then, poor little lady?
27864You are stopping_ at_ my house, of course, Stephen? 27864 You did it?"
27864You do n''t know? 27864 You do n''t think, do you, that I''m going to lap my thumb and finger and peel her off ten thousand dollars?"
27864You do not like him?
27864You got my note-- have you done it yet?
27864You have never married?
27864You have really come to that conclusion?
27864You meant what you said then, did n''t you?
27864You think there''ll be no danger?
27864You will see the president to- morrow?
27864You''ll be careful?
27864You''ll take ever so good care, of her?
27864You''re not scared, I suppose?
27864You''re sure?
27864You''ve a very bad memory, cabby, have n''t you?
27864You''ve boxing gloves, have n''t you, Jack?
27864Your wife is at home?
27864''The Heathflower thing, did you say?''
27864A street, do we call this?
27864Allys nodded to them gayly, as she asked:"Tim, have you come up to break New York?
27864And I''d like to know what the mischief_ you''re_ crying for, anyhow?"
27864And yet what difference did it make?
27864Are n''t we?"
27864Are other people secretly disappointed, too, because they ca n''t get a peep behind those closed doors?
27864Are they coming?
27864Are you afraid to be left alone with me?
27864Are you engaged to my cousin?"
27864Are you so free From any ties but those new days may bring?
27864At the end, when I kissed her cheek, she said:"Is it over?"
27864Beck?"
27864Bet your whole fortune on the Heathflower thing at a hundred to one?"
27864Boston, you brute, why did n''t you mention this at luncheon?"
27864But how do you manage with Emmeline?"
27864But it does n''t matter, does it?
27864Ca n''t I bring a chair for you?
27864Ca n''t you believe-- even that?"
27864Ca n''t you hear-- can''t you see, now, that I am speaking the truth?"
27864Ca n''t you stand a little teasing from your old aunt?"
27864Ca n''t you understand?
27864Can you give me six minutes to scratch off this gown and bundle myself into another?"
27864Clawing my shoulder, he remarked:"Say, old man, what do you think of her?"
27864Could anything be worse?
27864Could it be possible that she was leading a double life, like that other woman?---a life to which he had no latchkey?
27864Could that leggy bay really stay the route?
27864Could this blankness on Dickie''s face be genuine?
27864D.''s?"
27864Deena?"
27864Did he think, she wondered, that she could forget her duty to Simeon at such a moment, that he surrounded himself with this impenetrable reserve?
27864Did n''t you know she had died and left us things?"
27864Did n''t you know_ our_ story-- the one you made me rewrite-- sold at once, and, besides that, I have placed a number of fugitive poems?
27864Did you ever see so much light, so much life?
27864Did you know he may be here any day?
27864Did you make my blackness less black than it should be-- did you concede to me any saving light?"
27864Did you observe it?"
27864Did you sling in any names like that, Ivory?
27864Do n''t she look queer?
27864Do n''t you think it enough?"
27864Do n''t you?"
27864Do you suppose I should dare admit to Polly that Deena is as handsome as she is?
27864Do you suppose no one has ever met with this experience before?"
27864Do you want more detailed biographies, or is your acquaintance sufficiently extended?
27864Does she know it?
27864Fraser?"
27864French?"
27864Had Dickie''s courage failed him, had he taken to the woods, or was he upbraiding her of the gatepost for the sin of conceit?
27864Had Simeon lost himself in the Patagonian wilds or was he drowned?
27864Had he realized how much that meant?
27864Have n''t you any pity?"
27864Have you lived so long in the companionship of New England women without appreciating their reserves of energy?
27864He does n''t talk of himself-- he never did-- even to you, I suppose?
27864He opened the front door with his latchkey as usual, and as usual called out:"Helen, where are you?"
27864He stuck blindly to his point:"Lucy?"
27864He wrote: May I come back?
27864Her eye lit upon a short poem at the end of a page; it seemed to her poor to banality-- did it please the public or the editor?
27864Her soul cried out for warmth, for life, for breathing room; was not one''s first duty to one''s self after all?
27864Hilary bent toward her, saying, with a hard smile:"You seem to be on Mr. Wickliffe''s side-- I wonder will you back his judgment?"
27864How can we abandon Simeon without raising a finger to save him?
27864How can you pay when you have no money except what I give you?
27864How could she have forgotten for so long?
27864How does that strike you?"
27864How is it that at rehearsal a dozen presumably sane people can"pass"such an effort, he must have asked himself?
27864How much is it?"
27864How was it she had committed this crime against her own nature?
27864I used to know your husband-- did you know?"
27864If I remember right, you threw up your side- show privilege with me pretty sudden, did n''t you?"
27864If evil was drawing near to her, why push her toward it?
27864If he were king of Deena Ponsonby''s life, Stephen thought, would he write letters that another chap might read?
27864If you disapprove of me as the nephew of my aunt, how do you suppose I feel about you?
27864If you have any influence with Deena Ponsonby, will you urge her to spend the winter with us?
27864If you will accept it?"
27864Indeed, what alternative had I?
27864Instead of using my key, I rang the bell, and when Sanders opened, I said:"Is Mrs. Blacklock in?"
27864Interesting news for me, was n''t it?
27864Is life so rich without me?
27864Is my sister ill?"
27864Is n''t it marvelous?
27864Is n''t it only fair to give back in pleasant speeches the admiration and adulation that the world gives you?
27864Is n''t it wonderful?
27864Is n''t that the part of a public benefactor?"
27864Is n''t there anything you want to tell me about your work-- your book?"
27864Is the attraction going to bolt with you, Stevie?"
27864Is there so little decency among your associates that you no longer recognize it when you see it?"
27864It being so long ago, when you was having your spell, I do n''t suppose you remember just what you wrote to her, do you?"
27864It was Mr. Shelton''s turn to flush, but he only said, irritably:"And why the devil should they think you want to go to her funeral?"
27864Janet, what can I do?"
27864Little wonder, was it?
27864My dear, have you ever been visited by neuralgia?"
27864No sudden sting Of loss-- of longing?
27864No-- at the Savoy?
27864No?
27864Now are you satisfied?
27864Now what say?
27864Observing that Dickie wrapped the picture carefully in a sweater before tucking it away in his trunk, I asked:"Who is that, Dickie?"
27864Oh, love that does not love me, will there come No time when I am all too dear to leave?
27864Oh, you mean the one who gave you the cherries?"
27864Once he turned to Jack with a chuckle and said:"This is a jossy bit of luck, ai n''t it, each of us out with the other man''s better?"
27864One young man in particular-- Mr. Leeds----""Did he say he wished to know me?"
27864Or about San Juan?"
27864Or do you really care to win?"
27864Ponsonby?"
27864Ponsonby?"
27864Ponsonby?"
27864Ponsonby?"
27864Ponsonby?"
27864Really, she has n''t any looks-- but see her run, will you?"
27864SONG I gave to love the fairest rose That in my garden grew; And still my heart its fragrance knows-- Does he remember, too?
27864Say, now, what shall we back?"
27864Scared?"
27864Sha n''t I lay this coat more about you?
27864Shall I offer the chance to your husband?
27864Shall we go to the right?"
27864She appeared to treat her costume as a usual and prosaic affair, and said to Stephen, almost coldly:"You have something to tell me?"
27864She bears his absence surprisingly well, does n''t she?
27864She laughed back at him:"Have you done it yet?
27864Should you like to really know them?
27864Somewhat too thickly laid on?
27864Speak to Jack?
27864Surely that was not bad?"
27864The Langdons?"
27864The hunt had not taken place when he wrote, had it?
27864The only difficulty is, what are we going to do when these resources are used up?
27864The under- toned remark of one of the footman came to me:"A bit behind schedule time to- night, eh, Charley?"
27864Then I added, anxiously:"And what of Rosie?"
27864Then I said:"What time will you have dinner?"
27864Then to Anita, with a simple friendliness there was no resisting:"Would n''t you like to come up to my room for a few minutes?"
27864Then, after a pause, he asked:"Why do you want to write?"
27864Then, after a pause:"But I thought you were fond of cherries?"
27864Then, with studied carelessness and devilish abandon:"I say, old man, toss me a cigar, will you?
27864There must be a reason-- tell me, does it wear frocks?"
27864Those things?
27864Two miles from any assistance?"
27864Want to take a tramp?"
27864Was it chance or the immutable workings of fate which took us in time past the house of the cherry tree?
27864Was it her sin or her parents''that she had been so blind?
27864Was there any reason for the Wickliffe boy''s unreason?
27864Watcher think I got here?"
27864We did n''t say claret; we called out:"Where''s my red ink bottle, Maria?"
27864What Rosie?
27864What Rosie?"
27864What can you two old fools say to a country jury to block my bluff?
27864What did he do?"
27864What did it mean?
27864What did she mean to do?
27864What did ye do with her?"
27864What do you suppose I heard a mother say to her own servant the other day:''Please, nurse, may I take the baby up?
27864What have you been doing to yourself?"
27864What is the use of going down into history as one thing, if you are to be bobbed up on the stage, after the passage of centuries, as another?
27864What is wrong?"
27864What proof of anything are you going to find after all these thirty years?
27864What the devil was there to do?
27864What wonder that an hour should slip away before they realized the flight of time?
27864What would your wives have said?"
27864What, then?
27864Where are you going to hunt for witnesses?
27864Where did you get it-- if I may ask?"
27864Where do you keep your shirt- waists?
27864Who but me could decide for her now?
27864Who could have abandoned you to such a fate?
27864Who is the Wickliffe boy?
27864Who said wrong?
27864Who was he?
27864Who would have the courage, not to speak of the desire, to live his life, if he knew his own future?
27864Who, after viewing"Nancy Stair"as a play, would tackle it as a novel?
27864Why add this kind of labor to a life that is sober enough already?
27864Why did n''t you telephone?
27864Why is it that in a theatrical venture that costs a great deal of money, there are no misgivings?
27864Why is love like a mushroom?"
27864Why not exercise the imagination upon some original creation, instead of straining it around a type that lurks in the libraries?
27864Why not invent a good new character, instead of revamping a bad old one?
27864Why not?
27864Why should n''t she have been, having created it?
27864Why trifle with it?
27864Why were people never content to let well enough alone?
27864Will there be No ache of loneliness?
27864Will you kiss me before you ring?"
27864Will you pray God to send you back the man who loves you?"
27864Will you tell Mr. French when he comes home what an old puddin''head he''s got to look after his horses?
27864Will you wait?"
27864Will you wait?"
27864Will your memory Dwell on no passionate, sweet, familiar thing, Soft touch or whispered word?
27864Would he dwell upon the shape of an albatross, when there must be memories-- beautiful, glowing memories-- between them to recall?
27864Would you feel that the man who sent him to Patagonia was doing you an unkindness you could not forgive?"
27864Would you let me get out a cup of tea?
27864Yes or no?"
27864You are a rich man-- why under the sun do you want to work?
27864You buy without even asking the price?"
27864You have been walking, have n''t you?"
27864You think he would not care to go?
27864You were not offended?"
27864did you?"
27864do you want to rob us poor fellows?
27864in the fall, with the prospect of playing quarterback on the''varsity eleven?
27864what would Simeon say?"
27864who on earth else?--the editor?"
27864you say?"
16408''Why not, Ingeborg?'' 16408 ''Why?''
16408A Cabinet Secret?
16408A great country? 16408 A shaky what?"
16408A soda and whisky, Colonel? 16408 About your asking me to marry you?"
16408After making these discoveries what did you do?
16408Ah, do they? 16408 Ah, good afternoon, Mr. Cantercot,"he said, rubbing his hands, half from cold, half from usage;"what have you brought me?"
16408Ah, is Honor still there? 16408 Ah, you''ve been away from London?"
16408All? 16408 Always one shadow?"
16408Am I in the way?
16408Am I not your mother- confessor?
16408And I suppose the men like it?
16408And did he come up through the window by a pulley?
16408And did you ever get a reform in the hours of washing the floor?
16408And do you believe that?
16408And do you mean to say that a musician in this God- forsaken country must have no chords but tonics and dominants?
16408And do you really talk it with the other dons?
16408And how about your Socialism?
16408And how did you like what I was playing just now?
16408And how old are you now?
16408And how would you go back-- an old woman, alone in these dark November nights, with the papers all full of crimes of violence? 16408 And if he did, why did n''t they prove it the first time?"
16408And if they want to arrest him, why could n''t they leave it till the ceremony was over? 16408 And if you have n''t been murdered, what_ have_ you been doing?"
16408And is n''t it beautifully repaired he''s having it for you? 16408 And my career would content you?"
16408And my saying it was impossible?
16408And nobody knows you are Eileen O''Keeffe, I mean Nelly O''Neill?
16408And she has not written?
16408And so you are quite alone in the world?
16408And this is what? 16408 And wear your heart on your shawl when your friends come?"
16408And what have I done and said worse than other men?
16408And what have you been doing since you came into the title?
16408And what is the true God, pray?
16408And what was the answer you found out? 16408 And what would be his reward?"
16408And what''s the name of the paper?
16408And when the Beautiful was not gossiping with her landlady, did she gossip with you as you passed the door?
16408And when will my friend''s wig be ready?
16408And where will you sleep?
16408And why should n''t life be fuller of the Beautiful?
16408And why should we trust you with one hundred francs?
16408And why then? 16408 And why will he not pay?"
16408And you could n''t write with your left?
16408And you kept this from me all through dinner?
16408And you never did go_ any_ more since you were a_ girl_?
16408And you never had any brothers or sisters?
16408And you still call Nature Beautiful?
16408And you will learn me?
16408And, while occupying this front bedroom, did not the prisoner once lose his key and have another made?
16408Another lady of your acquaintance?
16408Any answer, miss?
16408Are n''t you going to earn it, you beggar? 16408 Are they not?
16408Are you foolish?
16408Are you interested in bees?
16408Are you so sure of that?
16408Are you so sure of that?
16408As yours, for instance?
16408Because they are so much away?
16408Because we read Plato together? 16408 Because--""Because what?"
16408Been to a theatre, Miss O''Keeffe?
16408Blind? 16408 Bringing the Plato and the folios--?"
16408But did n''t you forget something you had to do, Mary Ann?
16408But did n''t you tell me people ca n''t get power without money?
16408But have you got a piano of your own?
16408But his name does n''t sound Irish?
16408But how can you bear strange men staring at you?
16408But suppose a really fine song was published, and the publisher refused to pay this blood- money?
16408But suppose she had n''t?
16408But to whom?
16408But was there ever a more madcap expedition than ours?
16408But what about the Black Hole-- I mean the works?
16408But what are you doing in this miserable spot, so far from home?
16408But what became of the thousand votes?
16408But what can you get for a sovereign?
16408But what did you have to cry about now? 16408 But what good does that do?"
16408But what has all this to do with the Cabinet Secret?
16408But what have you got there?
16408But what is Ugliness but a higher form of Beauty? 16408 But what made you send them back at all?"
16408But what put you on the track of the music- halls?
16408But what was the use of breaking your head to save him?
16408But what''ll missus say?
16408But when will she be home?
16408But where is the Major?
16408But who has told you of the Princess?
16408But who said two hundred francs?
16408But whom else?
16408But why are you waiting on me, then?
16408But why could n''t you come in and give them to me instead of behaving in that ridiculous way?
16408But why do n''t you give him up to justice?
16408But why should a grey wig cost more than any other?
16408But why should_ you_ arrest me?
16408But why? 16408 But you did to- night?"
16408But you must understand,he said, colouring again,"how painful all this has been for me--""Not seeing me?"
16408But, Winifred, what made you come here?
16408But, man, I owe you the money; and if it will enable you to hold out a little longer-- why, in Heaven''s name, should n''t you--?
16408But--he began, and ended,"is that honest?"
16408By whom?
16408Ca n''t remember any more? 16408 Ca n''t the vicar wait?"
16408Ca n''t you marry me, then?
16408Ca n''t you marry me, then?
16408Can you ask? 16408 Coffee?"
16408Could n''t you just play Good- night and Good- by, for the last time? 16408 Dead?
16408Dead?
16408Dear heart, is this another offer from the castle?
16408Deceived you, eh?
16408Did Mortlake tell you he was jealous?
16408Did ever any man get such a chance?
16408Did n''t I see the scrawl of the Honourable Tolly?
16408Did n''t I tell you so?
16408Did n''t I tell you? 16408 Did n''t you forget that I told you to come to me and get my answer to your question?"
16408Did n''t you recognise me on the stage?
16408Did she live alone?
16408Did she set you right in any other particulars?
16408Did you ever hear the like?
16408Did you imagine we called a spoon a spade?
16408Did you know a Miss Dymond?
16408Did you ring, sir?
16408Did you see how she tossed her pretty head?
16408Did you study art in Copenhagen?
16408Did your mother know?
16408Do I look an object for ambulances?
16408Do I understand myself?
16408Do n''t you see that everything is altered?
16408Do n''t you think so, Mary Ann?
16408Do n''t you?
16408Do n''t you_ hear_ a bell ringing?
16408Do you know in what direction she''d have gone?
16408Do you know it, Colonel?
16408Do you like learning, then?
16408Do you mean I am not grown enough?
16408Do you mean it, sir?
16408Do you mean that you, too, are neglected?
16408Do you mean to say he--?
16408Do you mean to say--?
16408Do you realise this is the first time we have been alone together this month?
16408Do you really think he was murdered, Tom?
16408Do you scorn that?
16408Do you still hope to discover the Bow murderer?
16408Do you think we need him? 16408 Does any one ever find them in?"
16408Does he care if my children are hungry?
16408Does it amuse you?
16408Does one wear a high- necked dress to conceal the traces of chess, or lawn- tennis?
16408Eh?
16408Eileen, why do n''t you hanser?
16408Every Sunday?
16408Fifty?
16408Going to dig?
16408Gone out where?
16408Good- by? 16408 Good- looking, I suppose?"
16408Grey? 16408 Has n''t he a name, too?"
16408Have n''t you got half a dozen young men?
16408Have you any fresh concrete evidence?
16408Have you forgotten I live at Hampstead?
16408He always struck you as a thorough gentleman?
16408He beats you-- at chess-- or at lawn- tennis?
16408He might have done it without your noticing it, I suppose?
16408He told you he was going away to Liverpool very early the next morning?
16408Here?
16408How about the-- the milkman-- and the-- the other gentlemen?
16408How are you, now, Mercy?
16408How can I help Tom hanging?
16408How can I take you with me?
16408How could I forget it?
16408How could you think that, if you read the programme, as you say? 16408 How did he behave when he read it?"
16408How did she appear?
16408How did we get on to it? 16408 How did you know?"
16408How did you stumble on this place?
16408How do they know?
16408How do you account for the extra sleepiness?
16408How do you know Socialism is n''t a return to Him?
16408How do you know what a wife should feel?
16408How do you know?
16408How do you mean?
16408How do you mean?
16408How has the prisoner behaved since the murder?
16408How is one ever to govern the country, if every man is a party unto himself?
16408How is your mother?
16408How is your wife feeling now?
16408How much money do you want?
16408How often am I to tell you to leave my matches on the mantel- shelf?
16408How should I know what became of you? 16408 How so, sir?"
16408How will I harm myself?
16408How would you like a pair of gloves, Mary Ann?
16408How-- how do you know that?
16408How? 16408 I beg your pardon-- you will have some whisky?"
16408I sing patriotic songs and drinking- songs--"Are n''t they the same thing in England?
16408I suppose then_ you_ went to church regularly?
16408I suppose they have invited you down for the wedding?
16408I suppose you''ve_ seen_ a piano-- you''ll know it from a kangaroo?
16408I suppose, though, you''d be willing to lend a hand occasionally?
16408I think so; are n''t you well, Miss O''Neill?
16408I used to say,''Gie I thek there broom, oo''t?'' 16408 I-- I meant to say,"she corrected herself,"what have you done with your clothes?"
16408I? 16408 I?
16408In Huntingdonshire, before the property went to Algy--"No, no, Lady Chelmer; I mean, where is poor Walter Whatsaname now?
16408Indeed-- how old were you when you left the village?
16408Indeed?
16408Indigestible, do you mean?
16408Is Mr. Grodman in?
16408Is anything wrong?
16408Is he blind then?
16408Is it true--his emotion choked him--"is it true you''ve come into two and a half million dollars?"
16408Is it? 16408 Is it?"
16408Is n''t it in the Bible?
16408Is n''t it lucky he has himself drawn a red- herring across the track? 16408 Is n''t it time she took her dose?"
16408Is n''t that the chap that''s always getting chucked out of Parliament?
16408Is not this the end of the terrible twelve- month?
16408Is that all you feel about-- about our friendship?
16408Is that all you know of Plato?
16408Is that at Oxford?
16408Is that our carriage?
16408Is that strictly honourable, Peter?
16408Is that what the paper will be devoted to?
16408Is that your chivalry to the dead? 16408 Is the translation in the library?"
16408Is there anything in the room?
16408Is there nothing you admire but Force?
16408It be growin''dark, Tom,she said hoarsely,"''haint it time to call the cattle home from the ma''shes?"
16408It is not this one?
16408It was n''t the dull, foggy weather?
16408It''s missus that has corrupted you, is it? 16408 Lancelot what?"
16408Less than anybody?
16408Lord, miss,she said,"did n''t you recognise me on the stage?"
16408Madame Valière is not returned?
16408Mary Ann leaving you?
16408Mary Ann,he said gravely,"do n''t you see that when I did that I was-- like your brother Tom?"
16408Mary Ann,he went on,"how would you like me to take you with me?"
16408Merely Mary Ann?
16408Might I present two friends of mine? 16408 Mortlake knew nothing of the meetings?"
16408Mortlake of course knows where she is?
16408Mortlake''s upstairs,he said;"will you come up and see him?"
16408Murder? 16408 Must n''t tell me about him?
16408My dear Denzil, how often am I to point out that_ I_ went through the experiences that make the backbone of my book, not_ you_? 16408 My dear Lancelot, when did I ever set up to be a gentleman?
16408My dear sir,said the great man,"what is the use of bringing quartets and full scores to me?
16408No; do they?
16408No; have you?
16408No; how could that be? 16408 No?
16408No? 16408 Nobody else?"
16408Not even the miniature of her sister?
16408Not gone to bed yet?
16408Now, Mary Ann, why did you return me those gloves?
16408Now, do n''t you call life amusing?
16408Of course it is about Mortlake?
16408Of her sister?
16408Of me?
16408Oh, I dream-- what do I not dream? 16408 Oh, ai n''t I?"
16408Oh, but why not?
16408Oh, come,said Lancelot laughingly;"is this your country simplicity?
16408Oh, did n''t you know my poor father was made a Baronet, after we entertained Royalty?
16408Oh, gracious, are you hurt?
16408Oh, has he? 16408 Oh, has n''t your wife told you, then?"
16408Oh, is that it? 16408 Oh, is_ that_ what you were thinking of?"
16408Oh, now you''re here, ca n''t you put her second for once?
16408Oh, poor old chap; is it so bad as all that?
16408Oh, yes; how do you do, Tom?
16408Oh, you are not Miss Leadbatter?
16408On the night of December 3rd, you gave the prisoner a letter?
16408Only once or twice, you say?
16408Ought n''t I to ha''liked it?
16408Our slang name?
16408Par,said Wilfred Wimp,"what''s a alleybi?
16408Perhaps what?
16408Peter, do you want to drive me from the house? 16408 Please, miss, would you mind giving it to him yourself?"
16408Portraits? 16408 Pray do not consider me impertinent, but have you ever given any attention to the science of evidence?"
16408Promise you what?
16408Ready, Mr. Templeton? 16408 Really?
16408Really?
16408Royalty? 16408 Satan''s Secretary?"
16408Seen the_ New Pork Herald_ lately? 16408 Several times a day?"
16408Shall we say merely because the public changes? 16408 She comes in and feeds it?"
16408She has stolen your brooch?
16408She might have been out with Tom?
16408She told you so?
16408So it''s missus, is it, who''s taught you Cockneyese? 16408 So that is the reason?"
16408So this is Miss Simpleton, is it?
16408So you are the great Keeley Lesterre, eh?
16408Somebody else?
16408Soon?
16408Still?
16408Supper, Sir Robert?
16408Suppose I wanted to go away from_ you_, Mary Ann?
16408Templeton, have you got down every word of Mr. Grodman''s confession?
16408That is not your usual time?
16408That was Cantercot just went in, was n''t it, Grodman?
16408That''s all very well,said the publisher;"but how do you suppose I''m going to sell a thing with an accompaniment like that?
16408The Royalty-- how did that go off?
16408The interest I should take in it-- wouldn''t that be sufficient interest on the loan?
16408Then I am not responsible for my dreams anyhow?
16408Then I suppose she''s in the kitchen now?
16408Then how did you know they were quarrelling?
16408Then it is sometimes he who puts the extinguisher on?
16408Then what do you give by going? 16408 Then what do you mean by desertin''them now?"
16408Then what were you crying about?
16408Then why did you take them off again?
16408Then why do you listen?
16408Then why do you put up with it?
16408Then why do you say''''er''?
16408Then why not be happy together?
16408Then you are a farmer''s daughter?
16408Then you do n''t think any of us move of ourselves?
16408Then you had no difficulty in getting published?
16408Then you wo n''t marry me?
16408Then your father has retired from--"He is dead,--didn''t you hear?
16408Then, when was he murdered?
16408Those were his very words?
16408To what end?
16408To whom else? 16408 Was I rude?
16408Was ever any man in such a dilemma?
16408Was it Tom''s death?
16408Was prisoner the sort of man who, in your opinion, would commit a murder?
16408Well, and what else did you do?
16408Well, are you ready to come to supper?
16408Well, shall I say unpleasant, then?
16408Well, what have you been doin''all this time?
16408Well, where was the justice for Arthur Constant if he, too, was innocent?
16408Well, which shall it be?
16408Well; but how is your Rosie to practise? 16408 Well?"
16408What about Jessie-- I mean Miss Dymond? 16408 What about Rosie?"
16408What are you hiding there?
16408What are you thinking of?
16408What did he go there for?
16408What do I mean?
16408What do you insinuate?
16408What do you mean? 16408 What do you mean?"
16408What do you mean?
16408What do you think,said Crowl,"of Republics?"
16408What do you want me to write?
16408What does that matter to you? 16408 What else?
16408What else?
16408What happened then?
16408What have I missed now?
16408What in Heaven''s name were you putting on gloves for, my girl?
16408What in the devil are you talking about now?
16408What in the devil''s the matter?
16408What is a half- and- half place?
16408What is his pretext?
16408What is it?
16408What is it?
16408What is the matter, then?
16408What is? 16408 What of it?"
16408What paper, sir?
16408What should you say if prisoner dropped something in it to make you sleep late?
16408What show?
16408What song? 16408 What sort of a paper?"
16408What time did you get up the next morning?
16408What was she?
16408What wedding?
16408What''s altered? 16408 What''s that?"
16408What''s that?
16408What''s the difference?
16408What''s the good of Society? 16408 What''s the matter with you?"
16408What''s the use of a man?
16408What''s this I hear, Miss Hirish Himpudence, of your goings- on with my son?
16408What-- what is this address?
16408What-- what were you crying about before?
16408What? 16408 What?"
16408What?
16408What?
16408What?
16408Whatever are you talking about?
16408Whatever put that into your head?
16408When am I to have that new dress, dear?
16408When has he been kind to your mother?
16408Where did she meet him?
16408Where do you hang out?
16408Where is that sweetheart now?
16408Where shall we go?
16408Where shall we go?
16408Where, indeed?
16408Where?
16408Where?
16408Where?
16408Which is your husband?
16408Which of you?
16408Who are you?
16408Who can refine what Fortune has gilded?
16408Who else keeps him, I should like to know?
16408Who feeds it then?
16408Who goes first to- night?
16408Who shall I say you are?
16408Who then should I be alludin''to, Mr. Cantercot? 16408 Who wants to hear Gladstone?
16408Who''s Irish, you or I? 16408 Who''s fribbling now, you or me, Cantercot?
16408Whose is it?
16408Whose? 16408 Why d''ye stand there like a tailor''s dummy?
16408Why did I tell you?
16408Why did n''t you answer my letter, you impolite old bear?
16408Why did you let her run down so low?
16408Why do I put up with that Christmas number supplement over the mantel- piece? 16408 Why do n''t you find"--she smiled nervously--"a millionaire of means?"
16408Why do n''t you hunt her?
16408Why do n''t you say you were thinking of America-- yellow journalism, and all that? 16408 Why do n''t you teach him, then, to wag his tail like the pendulum of a metronome?
16408Why do you go out without gloves, Mary Ann?
16408Why does he call you that?
16408Why does n''t she go to the hospital, your Princess?
16408Why have you come to give fresh evidence?
16408Why is he called Fossy?
16408Why is it impossible?
16408Why is it impossible?
16408Why is it impossible?
16408Why is it impossible?
16408Why is it impossible?
16408Why is it impossible?
16408Why is it sordid? 16408 Why is that horrible for me to believe?
16408Why more now than before?
16408Why not? 16408 Why not?
16408Why not? 16408 Why not?
16408Why not?
16408Why not?
16408Why not?
16408Why not?
16408Why will they talk about me? 16408 Why would n''t I?"
16408Why, is Rosie going away?
16408Why, was he not dead?
16408Why, what can be worse?
16408Why, what do you mean?
16408Why, what has he done?
16408Why, what should I be doing?
16408Why, where have you been all these days?
16408Why, where will you be?
16408Why?
16408Why?
16408Why?
16408Why?
16408Why?
16408Why?... 16408 Will he ask me to stick it out?"
16408Will you have the goodness to explain how the trick was done?
16408Will you not come into my room and eat a fig? 16408 Will you tell the jury what followed?"
16408With which?
16408Wo n''t you come and have tea with me to- morrow? 16408 Wo n''t you come under my umbrella?
16408Wo n''t you have another kind?
16408Wo n''t you tell me about it?
16408Wrong you? 16408 Yes, miss?"
16408Yes-- what you liked best?
16408Yes; but what do you call a lady?
16408Yes; did I never tell you of her? 16408 Yes; how did you get it?
16408Yes; what is that?
16408Yessir, and I said,''Why is it impossible?'' 16408 Yessir; but ca n''t you ring for me again?"
16408You are leaving us?
16408You are not staying over the night?
16408You are thinking of my mother?
16408You believe that?
16408You can jest about what breaks my heart?
16408You did n''t go in?
16408You did n''t hear what they said?
16408You do n''t kiss anybody but me?
16408You do n''t mean anything more than that?
16408You do n''t suppose if I could do you a turn I''d hesitate for fear of excommunication? 16408 You do n''t think there''s enough religion?"
16408You drink something before going to bed?
16408You found her impossible to live with?
16408You found out whose shadow? 16408 You have been making inquiries on your own account apparently?"
16408You knew her, then?
16408You know Mr. Cantercot, I suppose? 16408 You know about her disappearance?"
16408You know it already?
16408You mean to say you found Arthur Constant alive?
16408You really believe him innocent?
16408You think it''s_ vice versa_?
16408You think so? 16408 You were the last person to see him, Tom, were n''t you?"
16408You will give me your answer this afternoon?
16408You wo n''t mind my going soon?
16408You wrote_ Criminals I have Caught_?
16408Your nephew is marrying? 16408 _ Comment!_ It was your wig?"
16408_ Do_ you understand?
16408_ I_ told you one franc fifty? 16408 _ Qu''avez- vous donc?_"said the good creature in vexation.
16408_ Whose_ book?
16408''Arten thee goin''to?''
16408''But what can be expected of a woman beater?'')
16408( sarcastically):"And locked the door from within with it on leaving?"
164089 come?"
16408A JURYMAN: How do you know it was not somebody else?
16408A JURYMAN: Is n''t Shoppinhour one of the infidel writers, published by the Freethought Publication Society?
16408A little?
16408A marble?"
16408A piano?"
16408A servant knocked at the door, stuck her head in, and said,"Mrs. Lee Carter''s compliments, and would you like some tea?"
16408A sob came into her throat, but she managed to say coldly,"Was I very bad?"
16408Ah, God, was she worthy of him, of his simple manhood?
16408All those Indian escapades?"
16408Am I not the most copious correspondent of the Press?"
16408And am I to sell myself for her money-- I who have stood out so nobly, so high- mindedly, through all these years of privation and struggle?
16408And can any one hear the word heiress without immediately thinking of matrimony?
16408And can you also explain how the prisoner could have bolted the door within from the outside?"
16408And did he stand there, in his immaculate evening dress, posing as an English gentleman?
16408And did you board with her all the time?"
16408And if he could stoop to her, why should he not stoop to popular work, to devilling, to anything that would rid him of these sordid cares?
16408And is n''t it the duty of parishes and millionaires to supply light?"
16408And pray what used you to say?"
16408And the Herr Professor-- is he still a bachelor?"
16408And the Major dragged me--""Through all that mud?
16408And this Madame Blavatsky''s book-- what is that?
16408And was it not precisely to the Half- and- Half that honour should have invited him?
16408And were they all wasted?"
16408And what do you think it has been for me?"
16408And what of his noble relatives?
16408And what should you think was the condition of Arthur Constant when the door yielded to my violent exertions and flew open?"
16408And what would Peter say, and my brother( not that I care what_ he_ says), and my acquaintances?"
16408And when did she leave?"
16408And when the marketwomen or the beggarwomen respectfully inquired of her,"How is your good provider?"
16408And who was it that now stood over her like a fuddled accusing angel?
16408And why did n''t you want to see me again?"
16408And why did nobody speak of him?
16408And would he continue proposing, if she told him she was Nelly O''Neill?
16408And would n''t you rather look grand for me than for anybody else?"
16408And yet, had not Mrs. Wimp let out as much at the Christmas dinner?
16408And yet, was he dreaming?
16408And, after all, is it not enough to have been an influence for good over one or two human souls?
16408And, after all, sir, it''s an hour, and an hour is sixty minutes, ai n''t it, sir?"
16408Are n''t you the luckiest girl in the world?"
16408Are you a little infant?
16408At least,"he stammered and coloured again,"I do n''t pose as a hero but simply--""As what?"
16408Beethoven is worth two of me, are n''t you, Beethoven?"
16408Behind the patriotic, the national note,''How can a people be civilised that eats jam with its meat?''
16408But I ca n''t come back after--""Who asks you to come back?"
16408But I''m thinking-- Nelly O''Neill-- doesn''t it give you away a bit?"
16408But Lieutenant Doherty, what of him?
16408But are you quite sure?"
16408But could they expect her to starve herself for a whole year?
16408But did she tell you of her mother, too, and the fruit- barrow?"
16408But did you think, selfishly engrossed though I have been with the Fight for Power, that this love- labour of yours was lost on me?
16408But do you not feel cold?
16408But for dinner?
16408But had n''t we better go somewhere and lunch?"
16408But how can I help the colour of my soul any more than the colour of my hair?"
16408But how had he managed to escape her?
16408But how if he became Mayor?
16408But how should a poor old woman ever accumulate enough for a new wig?
16408But the coroner swallowed a mouthful of water and went on:--"We now come to the second alternative-- was the deceased the victim of homicide?
16408But then was she not the"Mother- Confessor"?
16408But was it her fault?
16408But what can one do?
16408But what does_ my_ governor do?
16408But what has that to do with your speech at Highmead?"
16408But what made you chuck up your studies so suddenly?"
16408But where_ is_ solid footing to be found?
16408But who''s proposing to you a wife on the Halls?
16408But why did you not tell me?"
16408But wo n''t it be slow?"
16408But you''re not going to convert me to Socialism?"
16408By a JURYMAN: Did the news concern him?
16408CORONER: And did you wake him?
16408CORONER: And that was the last you saw of the deceased?
16408CORONER: And what did you do then?
16408CORONER: Are you sure that you shut the street door?
16408CORONER: Could you show the jury the letter you received?
16408CORONER: How was he when you left him?
16408CORONER: I mean did he seem afraid of being robbed?
16408CORONER: Otherwise you saw nothing unusual about him?
16408CORONER: There had been no quarrel with Miss Brent?
16408CORONER: Was the deceased left- handed?
16408CORONER: Was the toothache very violent?
16408CORONER: Was there any private trouble in his own life to account for the temporary despondency?
16408CORONER: What time did you leave him?
16408CORONER: What time did you leave the house on Tuesday morning?
16408Ca n''t I persuade you to write rot?
16408Can a mother see her babe''s ugliness, or a lover his mistress''s shortcomings, though they stare everybody else in the face?
16408Can we see ourselves as others see us?
16408Constant and the prisoner''s sweetheart?"
16408Constant might have the two rooms on the same floor?"
16408Constant spoke about on the night of December 3rd?"
16408Constant took her off his hands?"
16408Constant''s bedroom with the key you found?"
16408Constant''s rooms?"
16408Constant?"
16408Constant?"
16408Could I marry a man who had told me smoking- room stories?
16408Could he make an"honourable"she told herself her?
16408Could such things be?
16408Could this uncrippled, rather good- looking person be Bob?
16408Crowl?"
16408Crowl?"
16408Denzil gasped,"What for?"
16408Did I never tell you I am descended from the kings of Ireland?"
16408Did I not tell you so?"
16408Did n''t you notice that the chapel is being white- washed afresh and how clear the Angelus bell rings?
16408Did n''t you undertake to teach me golf?
16408Did she not always remind the poet of Joan of Arc?
16408Did she not know by what appointment-- on what errand-- he had come?
16408Did they want to sell her, to exchange her for a castle, as if she were a chess- piece?
16408Did you do that?"
16408Did you say the niblick?"
16408Do n''t I know too well that''s what keeps you back?
16408Do n''t you hear our keel cutting the shimmering waters?"
16408Do n''t you know you gave me a pair of black eyes?
16408Do n''t you think we might run to the house?"
16408Do n''t you understand?"
16408Do our friends appear to us as they appear to strangers?
16408Do our rooms, our furniture, our pipes strike our eye as they would strike the eye of an outsider, looking on them for the first time?
16408Do you know how long it will be before I make two million dollars, Mary Ann?"
16408Do you know what next Monday is?"
16408Do you mean the man that bought our Castle at the auction?"
16408Do you never have a stout person in the house, I wonder?"
16408Do you owe me nothing?"
16408Do you recognise it?"
16408Do you remember my going one day over the works with your poor father?
16408Do you suppose Plato is in hell?"
16408Do you think Kitty has any secrets from me?
16408Do you think they could turn you out?
16408Do you understand how rich you are?"
16408Do you understand?"
16408Does he use a stick or a fist?"
16408Does it never strike you that if I were to marry you now, it would be only for your two and a half million dollars?"
16408Does she always carry on like this?"
16408Drabdump?"
16408Drinking again?"
16408Dry your eyes now, will you?"
16408Eileen O''Keeffe or Nelly O''Neill?
16408Elegant harmonies are all very well, but who''s to play them?"
16408Evidently the sole performer of my experiment must be myself; the subject-- whom or what?
16408Fifty pounds?"
16408First, did the deceased commit suicide?
16408For, was Mary Ann as innocent as she looked?
16408Grodman?"
16408Grodman?"
16408Had he not been just thinking of her as a Satan in skirts?
16408Had he not written to her mistress a week ago that he would present himself that afternoon?
16408Had not even her favourite nuns told her things about their early lives, even when there was no moral to be pointed?
16408Had she failed him again?
16408Had she forgotten-- had her husband locked her up?
16408Had she the right to sacrifice him, too?
16408Had the prisoner ceased to care for Miss Dymond?"
16408Has it ever struck you, sir, that we never_ see_ any one more than once, if that?
16408Have n''t I taken the chair at all the meetings?
16408Have n''t touched a drop since--""The murder?"
16408He entered one way or another into the lives of a good many people; is it true that he nowhere made enemies?
16408He invented Platonic love, did n''t he?
16408He said,"By the way, Susan, tell your mistress-- or is it your mother?"
16408He smiled mysteriously, then went on softly,"Amber, do you remember our honeymoon?"
16408He threw open his door and said,"Is there anything the matter?"
16408Hell?
16408How can a people be civilised that eats jam with its meat?"
16408How can you believe anything so horrible?"
16408How could I take her about as my wife?
16408How could he live till Sunday afternoon?
16408How could she receive my friends?
16408How dare he be so gay and debonair?
16408How dared the girl stare at him so impassively?
16408How dared you change our lives without a word of consultation?"
16408How do you expect me to think of these details?"
16408How do you know it was murder?"
16408How does that fact affect this particular sabot?"
16408How had it all come about?
16408How had the trick been done?
16408How is he then to get out without attracting the attention of the now roused landlady?
16408How is he to go away and yet leave the doors and windows locked and bolted from within?
16408How much have you let_ him_ in for?"
16408How much longer are we to lie here, dusty in death?
16408How on earth did we get on this tack?"
16408How should she endure the long years of loneliness and social ignominy?
16408How should she know that his indifference was often a victory over himself, as his amativeness was a defeat?
16408How should you?
16408How to see her again?
16408How was it possible a girl of that class should escape the sordid attentions of street swains?
16408How''s that for alliteration?
16408How_ is_ she, Tom?"
16408I could invent hundreds of such crimes, and please myself by imagining them done; but would they really work out in practice?
16408I dare say you know he polished up my book?"
16408I felt I should never trust myself again, if I turned welsher-- that''s the word, is n''t it?"
16408I heard the deeper, the oligarchic accent,''How can a people be enfranchised that eats meat with its fingers?''
16408I just sent this cable to your mother:''Is Eileen free?
16408I mean anything beyond the current misconceptions?
16408I mean did you try to wake him?
16408I suppose I could n''t go on with the lessons after you leave here?"
16408I suppose you have mastered them all, eh?"
16408I suppose you kept bees?"
16408I was right not to scold_ monsieur le coiffeur_ too much, was I not?"
16408I''m only a plain man, and I want to know where''s the sense of givin''any one person authority over everybody else?"
16408If England dropped its fad of Monarchy and became a Republic to- morrow, do you mean to say that--?"
16408If I buy you a nice pair of gloves, will you promise to put them on every time I ring for you?"
16408If Jessie had wrongs why should she not have avenged them herself?
16408In short, sir, what guarantee have we that the whole tale is not a cock- and- bull story, invented by the two persons who first found the body?
16408In view of this letter, are the relatives of the deceased justified in entrusting him with any private documents?
16408In what country is it that the bridegroom breaks a glass in the marriage ceremonial?
16408In what then?
16408In which hand did you have this cramp?"
16408Is all sin artificial, and do people sin so zestfully only because they are cramped?
16408Is he not a secularist, who has lectured at the Hall of Science?
16408Is it God who sends these bad dreams, too?"
16408Is it likely that if he had chosen it, he would not have left letters and a statement behind, or made a last will and testament?
16408Is it likely that this was the night he would choose for quitting the scene of his usefulness?
16408Is it so with everything they say is wrong?
16408Is it that you are doing a penance together?"
16408Is n''t Beethoven jealous?
16408Is n''t Mrs. Lee Carter happy?"
16408Is n''t it beautiful?"
16408Is n''t she wonderful?
16408Is n''t that rather a proof that it was suicide?
16408Is that all?
16408Is that also pheelosophy?
16408Is that the death spider?"
16408Is that too fast for you, Mr. Templeton?
16408Is there no reduction on taking a quantity?"
16408It only shows''ow right I was to send for my Rosie, though quite the lady, and where will you find a nattier nursemaid in all Bayswater?"
16408It was all I could do not to cable to you:''Will you marry me?
16408Lancelot put his hand on her shoulder, and turned her face towards him and said in an imperious whisper:--"Now then, what''s up?
16408Lancelot?"
16408Let me see, what did Peter say?
16408Look at that little gypsy- girl dancing the can- can; is n''t she fresh?
16408MRS. DRABDUMP( breaking down): Oh, my lud, how can you ask?
16408Might not that have been due to the disappearance of his sweetheart?"
16408Mine or Nelly''s?"
16408Mr. Wimp was convinced by it too, were n''t you, Edward?"
16408Mrs. Maper corrected the Irishism by saying,"Do you mean dismiss?"
16408Nay, why should he teach Rosie at all?
16408Not bad, those old times, eh?"
16408Not bludgeoned by the police at the meeting this morning, I hope?"
16408Not even the new?"
16408Now she knew what her life had lacked-- to be caught up into another''s personality, to lose one''s petty individuality in-- in what?
16408Now, what are the facts?
16408O''Flanagan?"
16408Oh, Fossy, it''s an amusing Show, is n''t it?"
16408Oh, John Lefolle, why did we not meet when I had still my girlish dreams?
16408Oh, why was he so stupid?
16408One night I dreamt the missus was boxin''my yers and askin''me if I was deaf and I said to''er--""Ca n''t you say''her''?"
16408Or is it likely he would have concealed the instrument?
16408Or is it that they all want the same thing of her?
16408Or is there a residue of real wickedness?"
16408Or was it his big simplicity, in which she could bury all her torturing complexity?
16408Or was it she who had been stupid?
16408Or was it simply that she had changed the city of refuge from Paris to Homburg?
16408Or was there no such place?
16408Or-- a thought still more dizzying--_had_ he been dreaming?
16408Perhaps you would like to inspect the book?
16408Put me out of my agony as soon as you can, wo n''t you, dearest Eileen?
16408Really?"
16408Really?"
16408Remember now for the future, will you?"
16408Robert?"
16408Send me the child''s heart, and I will light a hundred candles to you.... Or do you now prefer electricity?
16408Shall I send you on her book?
16408She sat in her room reading, and cast a shadow--""On your life?"
16408She was always observing, imitating, caricaturing, but what was_ she_?
16408She was engaged to Mortlake?"
16408Sherry?"
16408Should she send another on its heels?
16408Should she take to a wig, or to character songs in appropriate costumes?
16408Should you say I was quarrelling?"
16408Since Providence had been good enough to rescue them, why should they fly in its face?
16408So you see you must n''t go away with me now-- you do n''t want everybody to talk of you as they did of your brother Tom, do you, dear?
16408That bedroom of yours, it is still to let?"
16408That was platonic enough, was n''t it?"
16408That would n''t annoy you, sir, would it?
16408That''s candid, is n''t it?"
16408That''s what you mean by Bismarckism, is n''t it?"
16408The CORONER: Was deceased at all nervous?
16408The JURYMAN: Were you not shocked to find the friend of a meenister reading such impure leeterature?
16408The answer, then, to our first question, Did the deceased commit suicide?
16408The answer, then, to our second inquiry, Was the deceased killed by another person?
16408The man had his moments of despondency-- as which of us has not?
16408The only uncertain link in the chain was, Would Mrs. Drabdump rush across to get_ me_ to break open the door?
16408Then by what name must I ask for you next time?
16408Then to brighten her up again he asked cheerily,"And what else did you do on the farm?"
16408Then what are you thanking me for?"
16408Then when you decide yourself-- Is it not so, monsieur?"
16408To amuse the gross adult, to instruct the innocent child-- what did it all mean to her own life?
16408To have learnt to know of such, to have been of service to one or two of such-- is not this ample return?
16408To what do you think I''ve been devoting my days and nights but to the cultivation of the Beautiful?"
16408Unless, indeed, the lottery--?
16408V"Yes, but what will become of the Beautiful?"
16408Was I to be disappointed after all?
16408Was ever hero in such a comic plight?
16408Was he really awake?
16408Was it a prophecy?
16408Was it because you scribbled inaccurate sonatas and I had myself a talent for knocking tunes off the piano?
16408Was it possible he could have made such an ass of himself?
16408Was it the mention of Lucy Brent that had moved him to his depths?
16408Was n''t I silly?"
16408Was n''t it actually two thousand votes less than last time?"
16408Was n''t it clever and economical of me to think of the word''free,''meaning such a lot-- not married, not a nun, not even engaged to another fellow?
16408Was not Grodman, too, on the track?
16408Was not this shamefaced pawning as vulgar, as wounding to the artist''s soul as the turning out of tawdry melodies?
16408Was she not the innocent heroine entrapped by the villain?
16408Was she only a governess?
16408Was there a God in the world at all?
16408Was there a son lying_ perdu_ in the house all this while?
16408Was there any reason why the deceased should wish to take his own life?
16408Well, and how did you leave Frau Sauer- Kraut?"
16408Well, but how could you do that?"
16408Well, why not murder what lay between one and happiness?
16408Were n''t you on your oath?
16408What are men made of?"
16408What are our winnings?
16408What are you crying about?"
16408What are you saying there?
16408What are_ you_?"
16408What could have happened?
16408What did it mean?
16408What do you do?"
16408What do you mean?
16408What do you offer me?
16408What do you say?"
16408What does he want with all that money and those houses-- a man with no sense of the Beautiful?
16408What had become of her passive personality?
16408What had happened?
16408What had happened?
16408What had you been doing to bring it on?"
16408What harm shall I do them?"
16408What has then happened to both of you?
16408What is the Half- and- Half, a place where they drink beer?"
16408What is the matter?
16408What more could poet ask?
16408What must I say?"
16408What shall one man''s life-- a million men''s lives-- avail against the corruption, the vulgarity, and the squalor of civilisation?
16408What the devil have you been doing with yourself since the inquest?
16408What was I talking about?"
16408What was it to do with him that he could see no way by which the wound could have been inflicted by an outside agency?
16408What was the matter with the clock?
16408What will she do with all her riches?
16408What wonder if the shrewder sort divined that the indomitable detective had fixed his last hope on the girl''s guilt?
16408What would the great labour leader have to say at this supreme moment?
16408What''s put salt on your wounds?"
16408What''s that ticket you''re looking so lovingly at, Peter?"
16408What''s the matter?"
16408What''s your name-- I suppose you change it?"
16408What_ are_ you?
16408When was the last time you saw the two together?"
16408When''s your next show?"
16408When?
16408Where did she take the funds for a grey wig?"
16408Where did you pick it up?"
16408Where had she heard this bleat before?
16408Where were you when the prisoner told you he was going to Devonport?"
16408Where''s Mary Ann?"
16408Where''s the justice of it, where''s the justice of it?"
16408Where?
16408Which of you is the Colonel?"
16408Which, then, got to heaven?
16408Who are_ you_?
16408Who can do penance for a whole year?
16408Who has put such dreadful thoughts into your head?"
16408Who is it puts the extinguisher upon me?"
16408Who is my censor?"
16408Who should receive him when he called?
16408Who wants more polish and refinement than that showed?"
16408Who was he to talk of dying for art?
16408Who would dream of Plato''s dialogues?
16408Who would hever a- believed it?"
16408Who?"
16408Who_ are_ you?
16408Whose corns did he tread on?
16408Whose was the second shadow?"
16408Why d''ye think I ever took to you as a boy at school?
16408Why did he give her more than the pair that could always be kept hidden in her pocket?
16408Why did n''t she feel anything about Robert Maper except a mild irritation at the destruction of so truly platonic a converse?
16408Why did n''t you speak?
16408Why do n''t you go on the stage?"
16408Why do n''t you tell her to cheer up?"
16408Why do n''t you want to know?"
16408Why do you never come and let me show them you?"
16408Why does all the world watch over barbers and conspire to promote their interests?
16408Why had n''t she resigned her situation?
16408Why had she been so unkind as to leave, and without ever a good- by to him?
16408Why have n''t you been to see me since the murder?
16408Why not?"
16408Why should I bother now?"
16408Why should I change?"
16408Why should I put out a hand to stop you?"
16408Why should he give her up?
16408Why should he not?
16408Why should he teach only Rosie?
16408Why this imprudence of Winifred''s?
16408Why wo n''t you?
16408Why, what have you to be ashamed of?
16408Will a sovereign get you out of it?"
16408Will it be in the new volume?
16408Will you carry my bouquet?"
16408Wimp said,"Yes?"
16408With her warm hand still in his, how could he hesitate?
16408Wo n''t you be a light to England?
16408Wo n''t you come and see what beautiful woods there are behind the house?
16408Wonder if it''ll have that effect on me?
16408Woodham has lent us his yacht--""In the middle of a Cabinet Crisis?"
16408Would he never take"no"for an answer?
16408Would it not be a crime against the future to draggle your wings with sordid cares, to sink to lower aims by refusing this Heaven- sent boon?"
16408Would n''t it be fun to wear them at supper here?
16408Would they clap a grey wig upon her, or expose her humiliation even in death?
16408Would they give you a bad name and hang you?
16408Would you-- please, sir, would you mind?"
16408Writing what?"
16408XVII Would she ever get through her three Halls?
16408Yes, here it is; wo n''t_ you_ try one?"
16408You asked which I was?
16408You ca n''t have been long in London then?"
16408You could devote your life to the highest art-- nay, is it not a duty you owe to the world?
16408You did n''t leave a shadow of doubt?"
16408You do n''t mind giving me one day''s option of your hand?"
16408You follow me, sir?"
16408You have n''t been lying to me all these months?"
16408You said I owed you myself, and it''s true, but you do n''t suppose I could_ marry_ a man I did n''t respect?
16408You surely would n''t suspect_ me_, of all people in the world, of meaning anything personal?
16408You tried to rouse him?
16408You will say cling to the cross, but is not my whole life also a crucifixion?
16408You''re not really allowed to smoke in a theatre?"
16408You''re not really on the Halls?
16408Your hotel also?"
16408_ À demain_, is it not?"
16408and I''ve been calling you Jane all along, Mary Ann what?"
16408at Rackstraw''s afore the sale closes,''and with that I shoves the suvrin into''er hand instead o''the scrubbin''brush, and what does she do?
16408cried Mary Ann, bursting into tears at last,"why do you talk like that?
16408did n''t I tell you so?"
16408do n''t you hear her going on?"
16408do you call Queen Victoria visible?"
16408enough?
16408how could we marry?
16408said Denzil,"and shall I write the story for you?"
16408said Lancelot, a little staggered;"what did it come there for-- to buy a new pouch?"
16408said Peter, suddenly;"I can almost fancy we''re back in our German garret, up the ninety stairs, ca n''t you?"
16408the Princess travelled far?"
16408what is that?"
16408you called him Peter?"
36543''And_ where_ are the Police?''
36543''My_ husband_?''
36543''What_ is_ the Government about?''
36543As from his breast the Bill he drew,''Shall this be borne,''he asked,''by you?''
36543I shall never eat it again, for at Princes''If I cry for it there, will they understand?
36543In the street the slime may spatter Ev''ry wretched passer- by; Hail and sleet and snow may batter On my window- pane-- what matter?
36543My friend, why did you hold your hand, Why falter, why desist, When there are treasures in the land That never would be missed?
36543Or that ev''ry one should mention-- proud and humble, poor and rich-- That a vote for Mr. Johnson is a vote for Little Tich?
36543RHYMES FOR THE TIMES''WHAT''S IN A NAME?''
36543What on earth care I?
36543Where would Mother England be?
36543Who would be a Man of Letters, Ink on paper daily dribbling, In a fashion which his betters Scornfully describe as''scribbling''?
36543Who would practise a vocation So unlucrative and painful, To deserve a designation Cruelly disdainful?
36543Who would term Lord Claud''s directors''Guinea- pigs''or''fee collectors''?
36543xi RHYMES FOR THE TIMES''WHAT''S IN A NAME?''
35632''Bill,''said coachee to I, very down like,''who de think that is?'' 35632 ''Well, who be''t, Jem?''
35632And do you never work?
35632And this is all that is to be seen here?
35632But the ruins you promised to show me,--where are they?
35632How long have you been begging?
35632How long is it since you used soap and water?
35632Is that a''? 35632 Knaw''d Wadswuth?"
35632Now, yer honor, where''d_ I_ get soap, when I ca n''t get bread? 35632 Shure,"quickly replied the Moville wit,"does n''t yer honor know that ye ca n''t use soap in salt water?
35632What are ye wantin''here?
35632Work, is it? 35632 Are not all these vines rooted in the lava and ashes of the volcano- side?... 35632 Are the rooms prepared? 35632 But is not all Scotland a picture- poem of stirring romance? 35632 God Save Ireland? 35632 God Save Ireland? 35632 God Save Ireland?
35632God Save Ireland?"
35632How can we ever be sure on this point, when we admire what has prestige and sanction, not to admire which is an argument against ourselves?
35632Is that the mystic cry of the cuckoo we are hearing for the first time?
35632More cucumbers?
35632Or, let me speak it more boldly, what other long- enduring fame can exist?
35632Poor antique architecture, what is it doing in such a climate?
35632The answer is,--"What hab ye?
35632The question arises, Lay the virtue in the stone, or in the pilgrim''s faith?
35632Was I painter or poacher?
35632What city in the world can compare with thee?
35632What could not Herr Diogenes Teufelsdröckh say about such a pandemonium of rags as are to be found here?
35632What hab ye?
35632What hab ye?"
35632What has he got in his hand now?
35632What is art?
35632What of it?
35632What other fame is worth aspiring for?
35632What parent was ever far from home that did not espy in every group of children his own little ones,--his Mary or his Nellie, his Henry or Charlie?
35632What woman could resist such an appeal?
35632What would such an expanse of land be in any other country?
35632Who shall tell the influence of this mingling of kindred peoples, the moral and national worth of all they bring and all they take?
35632Who wants water?
35632Why is it so difficult to get at the truth about Ireland?
35632Why not Dublin legs?
35632Why not on the Seine as well as on the Thames?
35632Would you like to realize a dream of some magnificent pageant, in which the great notabilities of all the earth take a share?
35632Ye''ll give me a few pennies for luck, yer honors, wo n''t ye?
35632and what can it do?
35632quien quiere a''ua?
26154A relation?
26154A thousand pounds?
26154About you and me?
26154Against Jean and myself?
26154Ah, my little Zette, my little Zette, will you ever pardon me?
26154Ah, that is the trouble, is it?
26154All? 26154 An American gentleman?
26154And Zette? 26154 And did they accept the Corot?"
26154And her name?
26154And how is our dear old friend, Jules Dancourt?
26154And is he not breaking mine? 26154 And it will be all for me?"
26154And little Jean-- a beautiful child about four years old?
26154And now that you''ve seen it with your own eyes, what do you think you might ask me for it? 26154 And now,"said I, as soon as we had started on the right- hand road,"will you have the kindness to explain?"
26154And shall I not have the pleasure of seeing the charming Miss Betty again?
26154And since you''ve ordered me so charming a_ déjeuner_, perhaps you''ll do me the honour of helping me to eat it?
26154And so that''s how it happened?
26154And so you''re going to get married to- morrow?
26154And the confession?
26154And the good Aunt Léonie? 26154 And the name of this thrice- blessed mortal?"
26154And the result? 26154 And then?"
26154And there is nothing to be done?
26154And there you found consolation?
26154And this gentleman here to whom I have not had the pleasure of being introduced?
26154And waste time? 26154 And what about their honeymoon visit to Languedoc?"
26154And when you win?
26154And where do the two Miss Honeywood live?
26154And why not? 26154 And with you?"
26154And you, madame,said Aristide;"are you going to sacrifice the glory of God''s sunshine to the manufacture of woollen socks?"
26154And you?
26154And you?
26154And your exquisite daughter, Madame?
26154And, by the way, who is your husband?
26154Are you Poiron, or is he?
26154Are you happier now, little doubting female St. Thomas that you are?
26154Are you thinking of going to the Madeleine, Bartholomew?
26154Baggage? 26154 Bartholomew, will you come out?"
26154Beg pardon?
26154Better than Great Coram Street, is n''t it?
26154Beverly Stoke? 26154 But I thought, Baron,"said he,"that you lived all your life shut up in that old château of yours?"
26154But have we seen it all?
26154But he''ll pay three thousand, which is the principal, is n''t it? 26154 But how?
26154But if I want to call her good old Flossie, why should she object? 26154 But what am I going to do?"
26154But what''s the matter with him?
26154But when this six feet of muscle and egotism is absent, surely other poor mortals can glean a smile?
26154But who are you?
26154But why are you not looking for him?
26154But would it meet the wishes of madame?
26154But would n''t you?
26154But your Christian name? 26154 But, after all, what is the matter with her?"
26154By the way, what is Reginald''s business?
26154Can I have a bedroom?
26154Can I take him? 26154 Can you tell me the druggist''s where that can be procured?"
26154Did I not tell you when I saw you last in Paris?
26154Did n''t I tell you I should see you again?
26154Did you also make pickles?
26154Did your husband put you in my charge or did he not? 26154 Do n''t you see?
26154Do n''t you think, monseigneur,she asked, archly,"that M. Pujol should give me the four thousand francs as a wedding- present?"
26154Do n''t you understand? 26154 Do you know the_ jeux de règle_?"
26154Do you know what has happened? 26154 Do you know,"said Miss Christabel,"that when men pay such compliments to English girls they are apt to get laughed at?"
26154Do you like it, dear?
26154Do you mean that you have ever been homeless?
26154Do you remember whether they had a baby?
26154Do you think I want you to kiss them and cover them with roses? 26154 Do you think of no one who brings you good fortune?"
26154Do you want the marriage of your daughter with the rich and Honourable Harry broken?
26154Do?
26154Eh?
26154Engaged? 26154 England is the only place, is n''t it?"
26154French? 26154 Genuine Corot, is n''t it?"
26154Good morning, Monsieur Pujol, what do you think of this?
26154Has he seen the picture?
26154Have I been too bold, mademoiselle?
26154Have n''t I told you, and have n''t you seen for yourself, that I never lose an opportunity? 26154 He can wait for five minutes, ca n''t he?"
26154How always?
26154How are we to make her happy?
26154How can I find out?
26154How can I tell you? 26154 How can you be certain of that?"
26154How can you endure it?
26154How can you part with it? 26154 How come back?"
26154How did I get it? 26154 How did you get this?"
26154How do I know? 26154 How do you like this, old girl?"
26154How goes it, Père Bracasse?
26154How long can you give me to produce him?
26154How long have you known Monsieur de Lussigny, madame?
26154How much more of your round have you to go?
26154How much will you take to go out? 26154 How old is he?"
26154How on earth,I asked,"did you come by the Duke of Wiltshire''s visiting- card?"
26154How should I know?
26154How the blazes did you get here?
26154How was I to know?
26154I beg your pardon?
26154I betrayed you?
26154I hope you were a success?
26154I live here? 26154 I suppose the Louvre is the next place?"
26154I thought you were a connoisseur?
26154I wonder what my fiancé would say if he heard you?
26154I wonder when you last tasted food? 26154 If I were, do you think I would have agreed to your absurd proposal?
26154If he appreciates nothing at all, why on earth does he travel?
26154Is he, too, developing a soul?
26154Is it not,_ cher ami_?
26154Is n''t he the most fascinating thing of the twentieth century?
26154Is n''t it a stunner?
26154Is that all you can tell me?
26154It is the room opposite Jean''s-- not so?
26154It was in Monte Carlo the winter before last, was n''t it, Betty? 26154 It was my husband who wrote this?"
26154Janet, do you hear that?
26154Let you see her?
26154Madame Bidoux,said he with a flourish, and the air of a prince,"why did n''t you tell me before?"
26154Madame, have I the honour of speaking to Madame Ducksmith? 26154 Madame, may I have the privilege of showing you the moon of Touraine?"
26154Madeleine?
26154Mademoiselle,said he,"will you deign to accept these flowers as a token of my respectful homage?"
26154May I be permitted to join you?
26154Miss Anne,said he, smoking a cigarette, at her urgent invitation,"is there a poor woman in Beverly Stoke with whom I could lodge?"
26154Miss Honeywood? 26154 Miss Honeywood?"
26154Missus? 26154 Monsieur Pujol, is there anything against the Count?"
26154Monsieur,said he,"I suppose it''s useless to ask you whether you have any milk and a feeding- bottle?"
26154My dear friend, how can I----?
26154No letter for_ ce cher Reginald_?
26154Not sell it? 26154 Not your child?"
26154Now are you satisfied?
26154Now, will you go out, or will you be thrown out?
26154Of course, if you formally forbid me to do so, mademoiselle, and if you do n''t want to see me----"How can you say a thing like that? 26154 Oh, Monsieur Pujol, what can I do?
26154Pardon, my friend,said he,"what are you doing there?"
26154Really?
26154See whom?
26154Shall we find a spot where we can mingle the overflow of our exquisite natures?
26154She calls it a misunderstanding?
26154She''s not what we in French call_ jolie, jolie_; but what of that? 26154 So it''s blackmail, eh?"
26154Stay in?
26154Stop an automobile like this on such a pretext----?
26154Strand?
26154Tell me what are you doing?
26154That was why you called me''monseigneur''?
26154That''s all?
26154The Chislehurst, where else?
26154The Hotel of the Beautiful Star? 26154 The kitchen-- it is this way?"
26154The luggage?
26154The what?
26154Then I do not get my twenty- five thousand francs?
26154Then,said I,"why on earth did n''t you go and fetch Mrs. Ducksmith and leave them together?"
26154They were two ladies, were n''t they? 26154 Unfortunate?"
26154Was he always like that?
26154Well, Baron?
26154Well, what about this Paris of yours?
26154Well,said he, suddenly,"what do you think of my_ fiancée_?"
26154Well?
26154What can I do with you,_ mon petit Jean_?
26154What can I do?
26154What did I tell you?
26154What did you do?
26154What do you mean by''nothing to be done''?
26154What do you say?
26154What do you say?
26154What do you want me to do?
26154What does it matter what it costs? 26154 What does it matter, since it is sewn up there all secure?"
26154What dowry will satisfy your parents?
26154What has happened?
26154What has he done?
26154What has love to do with spelling and grammar? 26154 What in the world would you do with him there?"
26154What is all this noise about?
26154What is it?
26154What is the Empress doing now?
26154What is the good of looking at moonshine? 26154 What is to become of me?"
26154What is to become of me?
26154What shall I do, sir?
26154What shall we drink?
26154What time did you get to bed, last night?
26154What would I do with him?
26154What would you do, Mr. Ducksmith, if you were King of England?
26154What''s going to become of anyone? 26154 What''s that muck?"
26154What''s your idea?
26154What? 26154 When will it arrive at Carcassonne?"
26154Where are they?
26154Where are you off to?
26154Where are your words?
26154Where did they go to?
26154Where did you get this, Mère Bidoux?
26154Where did you learn your perfect English?
26154Where have they gone to?
26154Where is he to be found?
26154Where is she? 26154 Which one do you mean?"
26154Who could help being good to you, little Fleurette?
26154Who does live here?
26154Who is he?
26154Who is little Jean?
26154Who would have thought it?
26154Who would have thought she was like that?
26154Who,said he,"is the wretch that has dared to make you so?"
26154Who?
26154Whom do you suspect?
26154Why almost?
26154Why are you not wearing your ring?
26154Why did n''t I meet someone like you when I was young? 26154 Why did n''t you write?"
26154Why did n''t you? 26154 Why do you insult me like this?"
26154Why not Aristide when we are alone? 26154 Why should not I be the shepherd, the official shepherd attached to the Hôtel du Soleil et de l''Ecosse?"
26154Why, indeed?
26154Why?
26154Will you come, monsieur?
26154Will you excuse me for a moment?
26154Will you have the kindness to tell me who the devil you are?
26154Will you post this for me, Aristide?
26154Will you sign?
26154Would it cost very much to get a new one?
26154Would n''t you like,said he,"to be lying on that white burnished cloud with your beloved kissing your feet?"
26154Would you care to hear about it?
26154Write? 26154 You are not coming?"
26154You are not ready?
26154You do n''t want to go to Montpellier?
26154You have a clue, Monsieur?
26154You lodge in Beverly Stoke?
26154You love her, your beautiful Finnish orphan brought up in France and romantically met in London, with the adorable name?
26154You permit me then?
26154You talk of discomfort to an old client of_ L''Hôtel de la Belle Étoile_?
26154You think it time I restrained my imagination?
26154You think one is made of money, eh? 26154 You will permit me?
26154You''re going?
26154You''re the French gentleman from Manchester?
26154You? 26154 You?"
26154Your beautiful ring?
26154Your first visit to Paris?
26154Your----?
26154_ Bien sûr._ And it''s quite settled?
26154_ Ce vieux Roulard!_"_ Ce sacré Pujol._"And what are you doing?
26154_ Comment?_"I must. 26154 _ Eh bien?_"said M. Bocardon.
26154_ Eh bien_?
26154_ Est- ce qu''on sait jamais?_ That was n''t her real name-- it was Marie- Joséphine; but people called her Fleurette. 26154 _ Hein_?"
26154_ Moi je suis papa._ And you, mademoiselle?
26154_ Mon Dieu_, M. Pujol, what can have happened?
26154_ Mon Dieu_, what is all this?
26154_ Monsieur désire?_Aristide waved him away absently.
26154_ Pauvre petite femme!_ And is it love she is pining for?
26154_ Pécaïre!_said Aristide to himself,"how can I galvanize these corpses?"
26154_ Qu''est- ce qu''il y a?_Aristide paused in his demonstrations of merriment.
26154_ Qu''est- ce que vous chantez là?_ I want more than five hundred pounds.
26154_ Tiens!_said he, when he had recounted his success in the office,"it is four years since I was in England?"
26154''What is the Empress Josephine doing now?''"
26154("That was devilish good, was n''t it?"
26154A lady from London?"
26154After all, why not?
26154All she said was:--"Oh, Janet, why could n''t he have told us?"
26154Allowing for the baby''s portmanteau to have gone astray, what, she asked, had become of the clothes he must have been wearing?
26154Am I responsible for what I know nothing more about than a babe unborn?
26154Am I your legal guardian, or am I not?
26154And after all to a wealthy Englishwoman what was a thousand pounds?
26154And does she still make her_ matelotes_ of eels?
26154And his buffetings and grievances and wearinesses?
26154And now you''re Mrs. Reginald Batterby, living at your ease, eh?"
26154And now, in my turn, may I ask to whom I have the honour of speaking?"
26154And now, may I be permitted?"
26154And she is here, in this hotel, your wife?
26154And she is young, pretty?"
26154And then--_voyons_--didn''t I tell you I never lost a visiting- card?
26154And what was a mere laughing, crying child of a man like Aristide Pujol in front of a Ducksmith volcano?
26154And where is my historic château in Languedoc?"
26154And why had he gone on wearing the pig''s head after Aristide had told him of his suspicions?
26154And your frying- pan?"
26154And your professions this afternoon?
26154And, meanwhile, what would become of him severed from her and little Jean?
26154Are you M. Pujol?
26154Besides, did I not say that the Café de l''Univers was the most prosperous one in Carcassonne?
26154Besides, what could they do?
26154Besides, who having before him the firelight gleaming through Miss Christabel''s hair could waste his time over painted canvas?
26154Bidoux who sells cabbages?"
26154Bidoux, what is to be done?"
26154Bidoux, who, as she herself maintained, would have cut herself into four pieces for Aristide-- did he not save her dog''s life?
26154Bocardon, will you have madame''s trunks sent to that address?"
26154Bocardon?"
26154Bocardon?"
26154But for how many of them have you really cared?"
26154But might he be permitted to come back later in the afternoon?
26154But my dear young friend, do you know anything of ecarté?"
26154But what could be done?
26154But what did it matter?
26154But what does that matter?"
26154But what is that great vast town of London to me who know nobody there?
26154But what was he to do?
26154But what''s worrying me is-- how is she going to stick it?
26154But when hunger drives--_que voulez- vous_?
26154But when was Aristide otherwise than rash?
26154But where to find an apostle?
26154But who was Mr. Smith?
26154But why Baron?
26154But why, thought Aristide, did he not at once consent to sell the papers on the stipulation that he should be paid in notes?
26154But would they jump?
26154But you see, do n''t you, that you must leave Beverly Stoke?"
26154But, Mr. Pujol, why did n''t you take us into your confidence?"
26154But, after all, what did it matter whose papa he was?
26154But, would you believe it?
26154But,"I added, amused by a humorous idea,"why should two lovers separate even for a few hours?
26154But_ que voulez- vous?_ It was not my fault.
26154Can you understand this?"
26154Congleton?"
26154Could he not fill him up with conflicting alcohols, and see what inebriety would do for him?
26154Dangerously ill?"
26154Did he not marry her daughter to the brigadier of gendarmes(_ sale voyou!_), who would otherwise have left her lamenting?
26154Did n''t Brauneberger tell you of the Lancret we planted on the American?"
26154Did n''t I say she was a little witch?
26154Did n''t I tell you I''ve never lost an opportunity?
26154Did n''t Solomon say that a virtuous woman was more precious than rubies?
26154Do you think the united efforts of the whole lot of them, from the good Mr. Blessington to the office boy, could produce a hero like this?
26154Do you want proofs?
26154Do you want us to bring him up an orphan?
26154Do you want your neck broken?"
26154For whom do you take me?"
26154Funny place for people to come from-- Finland-- isn''t it?
26154Gougasse''s train-- your getting on to Carcassonne?"
26154Gougasse?
26154Gougasse?"
26154Had Aristide been robbing the Bank of France?
26154Had he not in jest claimed paternity?
26154Has it a fosse and a drawbridge and a Gothic chapel?"
26154Has the poor child any other papa in the whole wide world?
26154Have n''t I shown you to- day that you are welcome?"
26154Have you ever been really in love in your life?"
26154He cleaned me out of twenty- five hundred dollars----""How?"
26154He could stay with him for a week-- or a month-- why not a year?
26154He is here, actually here, in this house?"
26154He is very ill.""Ill?
26154He turned to Miller, and said haughtily in his imperfect English,"Did you see the cheat, you?"
26154He was an_ agent d''affaires_, extremely rich-- had he not two thousand francs and an American millionaire in his pocket?
26154How could he give so fascinating, so valiant a mite over to the Enfants Trouvés?
26154How could it be?
26154How could she abandon her home at a moment''s notice?
26154How could she help it?
26154How did the baby get there?
26154How do you come to be here?"
26154How does a man set about trying to subsist on nothing at all?"
26154How is she to answer?
26154How is she?"
26154How was it?"
26154How was the boy?
26154How?
26154I crumble and decay in Aigues- Mortes?
26154I mean, where are they?"
26154I suggested something between two and three thousand-- shall we say three?
26154I swear it--_tiens_--what can I swear it on?"
26154I think he''s charming, do n''t you?"
26154If I am your legal guardian, what right have you to question the arrangements made by your husband?
26154If the_ bon Dieu_ could have given her to him then and there to be his wife, what bond could have been holier?
26154Is n''t that enough,_ hein_?"
26154Is n''t that so?"
26154Is she well?
26154Is there no other way?"
26154It was a knightly errand,_ parbleu!_ Was he not delivering a beautiful lady from the dragon of calumny?
26154Jean-- what could he do with Jean?
26154Lambert?"
26154Let me see?
26154Look at this?"
26154May I ask for one of your excellent cigarettes?"
26154My dear friend,"said he, with a change of tone,"when did you go to bed last?"
26154No?
26154No?
26154Oh, Monsieur Pujol, do you think he would take money for them?"
26154Oh, les sales bêtes, elles ont du poil aux pattes_, which, being translated, is:"Have you any lobsters?
26154Perhaps you would like to be shown your room?"
26154Poor Miss Anne Honeywood with her ninety pounds a year, what can she do?
26154Pujol?"
26154Pujol?"
26154Remember-- at the what- you- call- it-- the little shanty at Versailles----?"
26154Ruefully Aristide asked himself the question: why had the Mayor not taken him into the confidence of his masquerading escapade?
26154SHOUTED BOCARDON, FALLING ON ARISTIDE;"I MUST EMBRACE YOU ALSO"]"Then that letter was not for my wife?"
26154Shall I get out at Tarascon and return to Nîmes and tell you, or shall I go on?
26154She added with a change of tone:"You tell me you saw our dear home at Chislehurst?"
26154She smiled-- she had caught the trick at last-- and said, in happy submission:"What would you have me do?"
26154She''s looking better already, is n''t she, Pujol?"
26154Should he commit the extravagance of taking a cab or should he go forth, valise in hand, into the pouring rain?
26154Should he fire off pistols behind them, just to see them jump?
26154So look here, old man, you''re my pal, are n''t you?"
26154Stéphanie, will you accompany me?"
26154Suddenly, before dealing the cards, Aristide asked,"_ A qui la main?_""_ C''est à Monsieur_,"said the croupier, indicating Lussigny.
26154Surely five hundred pounds is worth one little night of discomfort?
26154The Enfants Trouvés, after all?
26154The Quai Sadi- Carnot( is there a provincial town in France which has not a_ something_ Sadi- Carnot in it?)
26154The bear at the wheel raised his cap and asked courteously:--"What can we do for you, monsieur?"
26154The best of three games?"
26154The great grim_ cité_, with its battlements and bastions and barbicans and fifty towers on the hill looking over the rubbishy modern town?
26154The phrase,"How do you do, dear?"
26154The wind blew a confounded_ mèche_--what do you call it----?"
26154Was anything the matter with Jean?
26154Was it my fault?
26154Was it right to disturb those placid depths?
26154Was it right to fill this woman with romantic aspirations that could never be gratified?
26154Was not the headache better?
26154Well, she fetched me, did n''t you, old girl?
26154Were you really in earnest when you said you would like me to come and see your collection?"
26154What baggage?"
26154What can have happened to him?"
26154What could be done?
26154What could he do to stir their vitality?
26154What did it mean?
26154What did you do?
26154What did you see when you looked into Mr. Ducksmith''s bedroom?"
26154What do they say?"
26154What do you generally do with thieves in Perpignan?"
26154What do you mean?"
26154What do you say to four hundred pounds?"
26154What do you think of that, eh?
26154What do you think would be your fair commission?
26154What does she say to it all?"
26154What else are pretty women for?
26154What else can I do?"
26154What had happened?
26154What is_ pervenche_ in English-- that little pale- blue flower?"
26154What need to look to right or left when you are swallowing up free mile after mile of dizzying road?
26154What the-- what do you mean?"
26154What was Fleurette doing now?
26154What would he say when he returned and learned the tragic story?
26154What would man be without the unattainable?
26154What would they say in your own country?"
26154What''s the good of marrying a pretty face for other men to make love to?
26154What?
26154When?
26154Whence came they?
26154Where is my wife?"
26154Where is she?"
26154Where is she?"
26154Where is that?"
26154Where was Monsieur le Maire?
26154Who can foretell what will happen in a minute''s time?
26154Who could be angry with the vivid and impulsive creature?
26154Who said it was n''t?"
26154Who should know it better than I?"
26154Who was I to go tearing through peaceful towns with my execrated locomotive and massacring innocent people?
26154Who was this hospitable Mr. Smith?
26154Why could n''t he have slipped quietly round to the railway station and taken a ticket to any haven of refuge he might have fancied?
26154Why did I not think of this before?
26154Why had he not told him of the pretty widow, whom, unknown to his mother, he was courting?
26154Why had he permitted her to wear the ring which he had given her so as to spite his sainted Aunt Philomène?
26154Why not by the side, where it would have been out of the track of thundering automobiles?
26154Why not fix a date?
26154Why not, Henriette?"
26154Why should love of the helpless and the innocent be denied him?"
26154Why should n''t I live in it?"
26154Why should not Aristide, past master in drumming, find an honourable position in the orchestra of the Tournée Gulland?
26154Why should not madame accompany us to Montpellier?
26154Why should not the thief have simply entered by the window of the study, which like the kitchen, was on the ground floor?
26154Why should they not use the automobile to advertise and sell the cure about the country?
26154Will that suit you?"
26154Will there be room?"
26154Will you come in?"
26154Will you cut?"
26154Will you have a whisky and soda?
26154Will you join me?"
26154Will you never understand?
26154Will you undertake for me this delicate and difficult business?"
26154Will you write it down?"
26154With my heart"--he thumped his heart--"with my heart hurting like the devil all the time?"
26154Wo n''t you read the letter and correct my mistakes?"
26154Would you like to see him?
26154You agree, then, monseigneur, to my giving the whole of the four thousand francs to Amélie?"
26154You are a hero, Jean, are n''t you?"
26154You are married, my dear Reginald?"
26154You do n''t believe I am speaking the truth?
26154You have my address?
26154You know Carcassonne?
26154You married, old man?
26154You played ecarté with Lussigny?
26154You suffer so much?"
26154You think women are angels all wrapped up in feathers and wings beneath their toggery, do n''t you?
26154You would love to put him on top of the pinnacle of fame, would you not?"
26154You, who are as fragile as a cobweb, how could you go to Patagonia or Senegal or Baltimore, those wild places where there are no comforts for women?
26154Your daughter and your servants know me as M. le Baron-- by the way, what is my name?
26154Your wife?
26154[ Illustration: MR. DUCKSMITH SEIZED HIM BY THE LAPELS OF HIS COAT]"You swear that?"
26154_ Au revoir, mon vieux._""But,"I objected,"why do n''t you write?
26154_ Bah!_ Did you ever hear of a Provençal writing when he could talk?"
26154_ C''est un peu moi, hein?_ Anyhow, I showed the Duke''s card to Amélie."
26154_ En avez- vous des- z- homards?
26154_ Enfin_, what woman could resist him?
26154_ Ma foi!_ When a lady asks a_ galant homme_ to marry her, what is he to do?
26154_ Mais enfin, que veux- tu?_ It was life, a dog''s life, but life was like that.
26154_ Qu''importe?_ But the shower is necessary-- Ah!
26154_ Que voulez- vous?_ If people ask you for the history of a pair of Louis XV.
26154_ Voilà!_""Oh, a duel?
26154_ sacré gredin_, when will you comprehend?"
26154cried Aristide,"is it I, then, that give you a headache?"
26154mon Dieu!_ what is to become of me?"
20117Why Should We Wait Till To- morrow?
20117''A good idea, my boy, but do you think that you could carry it out?
20117''A stranger here?''
20117''Ah, a grand age, is n''t it?''
20117''Ah, now, which way?''
20117''Ah, you think so, do you?
20117''All that is stolen property, I suppose?''
20117''All what?''
20117''Am I free?
20117''Am I speaking to Mistress Millicent Basset?''
20117''And Captain Knowlton was your guardian?''
20117''And like it?''
20117''And none of these have been traced?''
20117''And now you get on very well?''
20117''And the coins-- were they also your father''s?''
20117''And the pay which you owe me?''
20117''And then they will not be able to refuse to take me because I am no good, will they?''
20117''And what can you do, play football and cricket?''
20117''And what does the Duke say to that?''
20117''And what for, young stranger, may I ask?''
20117''And what?
20117''And who can tell where the others may be?''
20117''And who is Dicky?''
20117''And you have no money left?''
20117''And you think that Chin Choo can not discover that the idol contains precious stones?''
20117''Are the Boxers coming quickly to kill the foreigners?''
20117''Are they good?''
20117''Are they human heads?''
20117''Are they on their way, then?''
20117''Are they taking those things to give to their ancestors''ghosts?''
20117''Are you a Grimsby man?''
20117''Are you certain you remember where we buried the rest of the collection?''
20117''Are you going back to- night?''
20117''Are you going straight on?''
20117''Are you ready?''
20117''Are you sure, though, that they are all there?''
20117''Are you walking to Hazleton?''
20117''Are you young Everard?''
20117''Are you, who have faced death so often, afraid of an operation of a few minutes?''
20117''Aunt Marion?''
20117''Barton?
20117''Better?''
20117''Better?''
20117''But I mean, were you ever in a shipwreck?''
20117''But I thought you said you were going to London?''
20117''But do you know what was on that poster?''
20117''But do you mean to say that he can prevent my leaving the ship at Grimsby?''
20117''But do you think it possible to get into Chin Choo''s house and remove the idol without being discovered?''
20117''But how about your sou''-wester last night?
20117''But how about your studies?''
20117''But how are we going to sew the pigtail to the cap?''
20117''But how do they fix it to their head?
20117''But how do you know that Chin Choo still possesses the idol with the secret drawer?''
20117''But it is left to some one else, is it not?''
20117''But suppose somebody speaks to us?''
20117''But suppose war were to break out-- would you be a soldier again?''
20117''But what about provisions?''
20117''But what are we going to do now?
20117''But where are we to swim to?
20117''But,''I asked,''how about the school?''
20117''But,''I asked,''what shall I do in the holidays?''
20117''But,''I continued,''why did Captain Knowlton call father"poor Frank Everard?"
20117''But-- but,''I suggested with an effort,''wo n''t you want them?''
20117''By- the- bye, I suppose you know several boatmen who work up the river?''
20117''By- the- bye, do your colleagues know how to handle their rifles?''
20117''Ca n''t I get a job on her?''
20117''Ca n''t you find any work to do?
20117''Ca n''t you find out?''
20117''Cab, Madam?''
20117''Can I bring you anything more, Sir?''
20117''Can I have a candle?''
20117''Can he do this?''
20117''Can tellee me how lightee fire?''
20117''Can you read it?''
20117''Can you speak Chinese?''
20117''Can you tell me how far it is to Hazleton?''
20117''Can you tell me which is the road?''
20117''Cook,''I said,''where do you keep the boot- brushes?''
20117''Could n''t I bribe one of them to stay away, and let me go aboard in his place?''
20117''Could n''t I take out a broom and sweep a crossing?''
20117''Could n''t we buy something there?''
20117''Could you save yourself if I let go?''
20117''Cut?''
20117''Dick,''suggested Jacintha,''do n''t you think we ought to go in to tea?''
20117''Did Captain Knowlton tell you the news?''
20117''Did ever you set eyes on a nicer, genteeler- looking lad?
20117''Did n''t you hear anything?''
20117''Did not my honourable brothers steal a horse that belonged to the foreigners?''
20117''Did she not call herself Mah Kloo, and had not Maung thought she was a Karen woman?''
20117''Did you ever see a shipwreck?''
20117''Did you get the twenty- five shillings?''
20117''Did you know my father?''
20117''Did you not tell me that one must do something for a living?''
20117''Did you really paint it yourself?''
20117''Did you see Hugo yesterday?''
20117''Did you see his hair?''
20117''Did you think she was a revenue cutter?''
20117''Do n''t see much sign of it, do you?''
20117''Do n''t want it, eh?
20117''Do n''t you think so, Ping Wang?''
20117''Do n''t you think,''said Charlie,''that we ought to hurry back to warn Barton and his friends of the threatened rising?''
20117''Do n''t you think,''suggested Jacintha,''it would be best to try to get as far as the farrier''s we passed opposite the footpath to Barton?''
20117''Do n''t you understand?''
20117''Do the fellows ever want pudding?''
20117''Do you doubt my word?''
20117''Do you know what this ship is?''
20117''Do you like a fisherman''s life?''
20117''Do you live at Barton?''
20117''Do you live in London?''
20117''Do you live near here?''
20117''Do you mean it?''
20117''Do you really mean it?''
20117''Do you see that soldier''s steel helmet on yonder wall?''
20117''Do you think I am going to pick up these pieces?
20117''Do you think they will take you in?''
20117''Do you think work is disgraceful to you?''
20117''Do you think you could give me something to eat?''
20117''Do you think, ma''am, we might use that beautiful ribbon for our garland?
20117''Do you think,''suggested Jacintha,''that Father will bring Mr. Turton with him?''
20117''Do you want a berth?''
20117''Do you, my lad?''
20117''Does Miss Everard live here?''
20117''Does he think Captain Knowlton is dead?''
20117''Does he think that the rising will spread?''
20117''Dog?''
20117''Ever ridden on a step?''
20117''Father,''here broke in George,''I thought_ you_ were to have Vale Place when old Mr. Pelham died?''
20117''Feel better?''
20117''Five miles, is n''t it, Uncle?''
20117''For yourself?''
20117''From school?''
20117''Got any money to pay for it?''
20117''Hail a craft like that?''
20117''Hallo, youngster, have you caught your swallow- tail yet?''
20117''Hardy,''said Nelson,''how goes the day?''
20117''Has he a living?''
20117''Has he got astray?''
20117''Has he run away from school?''
20117''Has he, though?''
20117''Has n''t Captain Knowlton any money either?''
20117''Has n''t the wretched man got any weapons aboard?''
20117''Has the motor- car gone?''
20117''Have I not promised you?''
20117''Have n''t you got any smaller change?''
20117''Have n''t you got anything smaller?''
20117''Have some more tea?''
20117''Have you a knife?''
20117''Have you any English friends living in China?''
20117''Have you brought us the clothes which we left on the_ Sparrow- hawk_?''
20117''Have you come out of your way just because you thought it was mine?''
20117''Have you given the skipper any?''
20117''Have you got a handkerchief?''
20117''Have you got the chocolates, Dick?''
20117''Have you no people of your own, my dear?''
20117''Have you received your medal?''
20117''Have you told him, then?''
20117''He can tell me where he comes from, anyhow-- can''t you, new kid?''
20117''He may have sold it?''
20117''He said that, did he?''
20117''How about_ me_, though?''
20117''How am I to reward you for your goodness?''
20117''How came you to be so careless, May?''
20117''How can I take you back if you do n''t tell me where you have come from?
20117''How can it be if I did n''t bring one?''
20117''How can they have got money since last night?''
20117''How can you hope to keep your friends if you bring disgrace on them?''
20117''How can you tell?''
20117''How could I do it?''
20117''How could the Bà © bà © Ingalay have got into the jungle?''
20117''How did you get in this fix?''
20117''How did you manage to catch the coper?''
20117''How did you manage when you first came here?''
20117''How do you know that I am wrong, Monsieur le Duc?''
20117''How do you know that, you foolish fellow?''
20117''How do you know?''
20117''How far are you going?''
20117''How far is it to Hazleton?''
20117''How far shall we have to walk before we reach the first village?''
20117''How long ago did it start?''
20117''How long for?''
20117''How long will they keep us in these things?''
20117''How many European men have you, and what weapons?''
20117''How many acres?''
20117''How much are eggs?''
20117''How much do you think I shall get?''
20117''How much do you want for it?''
20117''How much has he taken?''
20117''How now, my friend?''
20117''How was it?''
20117''How would you spend it?''
20117''How you savvy we Englisheeman?''
20117''How''s that?''
20117''How?''
20117''Hullo,''said he,''You think to play your tricks on me?
20117''Hungry, eh?''
20117''I am as English as you are; how dare you call me that name?''
20117''I do n''t find Captain Knowlton-- didn''t you say that was the name?''
20117''I hope,''said Nelson,''none of our ships have struck?''
20117''I say, Everard,''he exclaimed as soon as he reached me,''how much do you think?''
20117''I say, where are you going to sleep to- night?''
20117''I say,''I exclaimed,''do you know where I could get a lodging?''
20117''I say,''said Dick, presently, for his manner had now become all that I could desire,''how much money have you got left?''
20117''I suppose that they did not offer so much for her as you are asking from me?''
20117''I suppose there is n''t a book I could have?''
20117''I suppose you can make the boy up a bed somewhere?''
20117''I suppose you have n''t succeeded in getting that treasure?''
20117''I suppose,''I cried a little angrily,''he would think I was begging?''
20117''I wonder if we have taken a wrong track?''
20117''I wonder if you would mind,''said he, growing very red,''if we looked into that case of yours?''
20117''I wonder now if you would be allowed to come along with me in my little sailing- boat?''
20117''I wonder what made you do it?''
20117''I wonder,''I said, a little hesitatingly,''whether you could tell me where to find a lodging?''
20117''I wonder,''he suggested, soon after the train had restarted,''whether you would object to changing sides with me?''
20117''I_ must_ descend sooner or later,''thought the aeronaut,''so why not now?''
20117''If he does n''t spoil my floor,''she answered, and as I took Patch up in my arms she added,''What is it you want?''
20117''If he had been rescued,''I asked,''do n''t you think we should have heard news of him before now?''
20117''If we can not dig now, what are we to do?''
20117''In which direction do you intend to travel when we reach Tien- tsin?''
20117''Is Major Ruston here?''
20117''Is it, indeed?''
20117''Is it, then, such a wonderful story?''
20117''Is n''t it a dear little boat?
20117''Is n''t it really yours, then?''
20117''Is that his name?''
20117''Is the trawler a sound boat?''
20117''It is a curious name for your dog,''said the Doctor;''how do you spell it, B- e- a- u?''
20117''It''s about six feet,''I said,''I suppose one could fly it-- both feet together, eh?''
20117''It''s all very well, but what are we going to do?''
20117''It''s no good talking about Uncle Harry,''said Geoff;''the question is, Can_ we_ help Father?''
20117''It''s splendid,''Charlie declared, as he surveyed himself in the glass;''do n''t you think so, Fred?''
20117''Jacky, my lad, you have n''t forgotten the story I told you about the boy who was too clever?''
20117''Katie, Katie, have n''t you got a kiss for your own Clare?''
20117''Like a lift, doggie?''
20117''May I inquire how much money you possess?''
20117''May I offer you one?''
20117''May I send it home?''
20117''My locket?''
20117''Nice sort of place if one had skated up to it at dusk, eh?''
20117''No one can come near us without our seeing him,''Ping Wang said, and continued at once:''Could you swim a mile in a sea like this?''
20117''Not about Captain Knowlton?''
20117''Not more?''
20117''Not so bad,''he continued,''is it?
20117''Now where did you think of sleeping to- night?''
20117''Now, I wonder,''he said, when we were on the way again,''if you are able to oblige me?''
20117''Now,''he continued,''how did you get yourself into such a state, and how is it you are wandering about the country alone?''
20117''Now,''he said,''the question is what''s to be done with the youngster?''
20117''Oh, Mother, need I go?
20117''Oh, Rudel,''said Grandmother, sobbing,''will you always be a good boy?
20117''Oh, sir,''said the invalid, looking up, his face lit up with hope and expectation,''are you the captain, and will you take me?
20117''Oh, what shall I do-- what shall I do?''
20117''Oh, you do, do you, Jacky?''
20117''Oh, you do, do you?''
20117''On a barge, eh?
20117''On the tramp?''
20117''Once more-- will you tell?''
20117''Pay for it, will you?
20117''Perhaps you studied hard-- read a good deal?''
20117''Poached or boiled?''
20117''Pretending that you are he?''
20117''Shall I bring him up?''
20117''Shall I cut your hair?''
20117''Shall I cut your hair?''
20117''Shall I go to Grimsby and discover the truth?''
20117''Shall I run and take it, auntie?''
20117''Shall I see you again?''
20117''Shall we carry him down the garden, and pitch him in the duck- pond?''
20117''Shall we go out and hurry off to Barton?''
20117''Shall we have another race?''
20117''Shall we open the gate?''
20117''Shall we?''
20117''Should you mind if I were to sleep in one of those barns?''
20117''So do I,''Charlie replied;''but how can I prove it?
20117''So soon?
20117''So you have come to London to try your fortune?''
20117''Still,''said Mr. Baker,''you have not done much good for yourself to- day now, have you?''
20117''Suppose I do n''t want him to pay me back?''
20117''Suppose I were to give you the medal now?''
20117''Suppose the skipper thinks we have fallen overboard and sends a boat to rescue us?''
20117''Suppose you do n''t return, sir?
20117''Supposing you got to London,''she suggested, turning to me,''what did you think of doing?''
20117''Tea and bread and butter?''
20117''Tea or coffee?''
20117''Tell me all about it, and what you are going to do with the money?''
20117''Tell me, then,''cried the aeronaut at last, in fun,''what the inhabitants of these stars are like?''
20117''That''s good,''the skipper replied,''but why did n''t you tip me the wink that you were coming over to us?
20117''The question is,''he said slowly,''where did you get him?''
20117''Then may I, Grandfather?''
20117''Then suppose we try Oxford Street?''
20117''Then the skipper intends to swindle the man over the sale of her?''
20117''Then we shall be there to- morrow night, I suppose?''
20117''Then what is this?''
20117''Then who has Vale Place now?''
20117''Then why are you aboard this ship?''
20117''Then why are you sticking here?
20117''Then why did you not accept one of the offers?''
20117''Then why did you not tell me so?
20117''Then why do n''t you guard what you have captured?''
20117''Then why do n''t you jump overboard and save it?
20117''Then why do you stand staring there?
20117''Then why give him an opportunity?''
20117''Then will no one ever come up it in future?''
20117''Then-- then, what am I to do?''
20117''There is not room,''she said at last;''where is my desk to go with that great plant blocking up everything?
20117''Think my hayrick is a proper place to sleep on?''
20117''Think that''s all right?''
20117''Think you could wear that?''
20117''This grand road to be left to decay?
20117''Till Monday morning, you say?
20117''To settle there?''
20117''Venerable uncle,''Ping Wang exclaimed as soon as the old man reached them,''why are your dogs of servants placed in the wooden collars?''
20117''We must n''t walk three abreast, I suppose?''
20117''We shall have to eat our food with chop- sticks I suppose?''
20117''Well, Everard, what is it now?''
20117''Well, Jack, are you ready?''
20117''Well, Lucy, how have you been getting on since I saw you last?''
20117''Well, boys, how are you getting on?''
20117''Well, have you found it?''
20117''Well, how are you feeling now?''
20117''Well, lad, have you done aught before?''
20117''Well, my boy,''Charlie''s father said to him, after Ping Wang had been introduced,''have you had a good time?''
20117''Well, my man, where are you going?''
20117''Well, tell me now, what can you do?''
20117''Well, who am I to believe?''
20117''Well,''Charlie said, when they were alone,''what do you think of my rig- out?''
20117''Well,''Charlie said,''has the skipper said anything more to you?''
20117''Well,''I answered,''who wants to stay?
20117''Well,''Williams exclaimed, cheerfully, as he shook hands with Charlie,''do you still wish to come with us?''
20117''Well,''asked Mr. Westlake,''what is it?''
20117''Well?''
20117''Were you the only one saved?''
20117''What about getting home?''
20117''What about it?''
20117''What are they?''
20117''What are you doing here?''
20117''What are you going to do?''
20117''What brings you here, Mark?
20117''What did it matter whether I cleaned the boots or not?''
20117''What do you mean?
20117''What do you mean?''
20117''What do you think is in the chest?''
20117''What do you think of their disguise?''
20117''What do you want, Everard?''
20117''What does he do with himself all day?
20117''What else do you think I can do with you?''
20117''What for wantee catchee us?''
20117''What harm is there in sneezing?''
20117''What if I am?''
20117''What is her name?''
20117''What is it, Father?''
20117''What is it?''
20117''What is our next move?''
20117''What is that?''
20117''What is that?''
20117''What is the good of my having a pigtail?''
20117''What is the matter with him?''
20117''What is the matter?
20117''What is the use of fagging like that on a hot day?''
20117''What is the use of wasting paint over an old thing like that, Grandfather?
20117''What is your pleasure, little Milord?''
20117''What kind of beds do they have here?''
20117''What made you run away?''
20117''What on earth has happened to you?''
20117''What shall we do?''
20117''What sort of work can you do?''
20117''What was he like?''
20117''What was the name of his vessel?''
20117''What was your reason for attacking my son?''
20117''What were you doing there?''
20117''What''s amiss?
20117''What''s he got so carefully wrapped up?
20117''What''s that?''
20117''What''s the matter, old boy?''
20117''What''s the matter, skipper?''
20117''What''s the meaning of that?''
20117''What''s the row?''
20117''What''s up?
20117''What''s your name, old chap?''
20117''What?''
20117''What?''
20117''What?''
20117''When do you mean to start?''
20117''When does the_ Sparrow- hawk_ sail?''
20117''When you reach London,''he asked after I had become silent,''what are you going to do?''
20117''Where am I to go?''
20117''Where are the fish?''
20117''Where are we going?''
20117''Where are you bound for?''
20117''Where are you going to take us?''
20117''Where are you going?''
20117''Where are you going?''
20117''Where are you going?''
20117''Where are you?''
20117''Where did he expect to be?
20117''Where did you row?''
20117''Where do your people live in London?''
20117''Where from?''
20117''Where is it?
20117''Where is that?''
20117''Where is that?''
20117''Where is the ammunition?''
20117''Where is the chest, father?''
20117''Where is the mate?''
20117''Where to?''
20117''Where to?''
20117''Where were you wounded?''
20117''Where''s your father, boy?''
20117''Where, my lad?''
20117''Where?''
20117''Which is the cook''s bunk?''
20117''Which is the way?''
20117''Which shall we take this time?
20117''Which way are we going?''
20117''Who are you?''
20117''Who are you?''
20117''Who broke her brother''s boat?''
20117''Who is Dick?''
20117''Who is Fo?''
20117''Who is it from?''
20117''Who is that?''
20117''Who is there?''
20117''Who would have thought it indeed?''
20117''Who would have thought it?
20117''Who''s the kid?''
20117''Who''s there?''
20117''Whom are you going to shoot?''
20117''Why am I an ass?''
20117''Why did n''t one of you go in after him?
20117''Why did n''t you take the train?''
20117''Why did n''t you tell me you had the revolver?''
20117''Why do n''t you drive on to Barton?''
20117''Why have you come?''
20117''Why is that?''
20117''Why not try kicking me instead?''
20117''Why not, my lad?''
20117''Why not?
20117''Why not?''
20117''Why not?''
20117''Why, what do you think?''
20117''Why?''
20117''Why?''
20117''Will half- past three be early enough?''
20117''Will he come aboard to- morrow do you think?''
20117''Will it matter if I nurse him?''
20117''Will there be any difficulty about getting into the town?''
20117''Will they keep it?''
20117''Will this make good the mischief I have done?''
20117''Will you kindly tell us which is the better animal?''
20117''Will you pay in advance?''
20117''Will you tell me your name?''
20117''Wo n''t he do beautiful?''
20117''Wo n''t the skipper discover me before we get out of the river?''
20117''Would it not be a good idea if we went for a short stroll?''
20117''Would my honourable brother rob his slave?''
20117''Would not little Milord like to fish?''
20117''Would some gentleman kindly call me a cab?''
20117''Would you like some flying fish for breakfast, gentlemen?''
20117''Would you not like to go in your native dress?''
20117''Would you take a message of importance for me?''
20117''Yes, that was so, but Bà © bà © could not have been her child; had she not said he was Ingalay?''
20117''You can not see any one moving the stool; is it not alive?''
20117''You dear child, have you come all alone?
20117''You did n''t mind my bringing Dick?''
20117''You do believe it, then?''
20117''You have n''t another aunt, have you?''
20117''You looked about you, then?''
20117''You mean Etons?''
20117''You thought she was a mission ship, did you?''
20117''You''re-- you are not going to take him back?''
20117''Your luggage is in the van?''
20117''_ Dare_ you?''
20117( How had he forgotten the secret chamber?
20117(_ Continued from page 79._)''Hullo, new kid, what''s your name?''
20117(_ Continued on page 12._)[ Illustration:"''Does Miss Everard live here?''
20117(_ Continued on page 138._)[ Illustration:"''May I offer you a lozenge?''"]
20117),''or are they alive and laugh?
20117165''How it tasted-- well, I''ve never heard''204''How would you like to earn twenty pounds reward?''
20117208''Wootton stood quite upright on the pinnacle of the steeple''73''Would you take a message of importance for me?''
20117236''Who''ll buy?''
201173) and millipede come to be examined?
20117A great fear entered his mind, and, as his mother turned and looked at him, all he could say was''Father?''
20117ANSWER TO''WHAT AM I?''
20117About 11 a.m. he was again on deck, and turning to Captain Blackwood he asked him''if there was not still a signal wanting?''
20117After all, what was to prevent him?
20117An order to kill all foreigners, was it not?''
20117And Mary, what was she doing?
20117And he?
20117And how did you get him out?''
20117And if I could prove it, what good would it be while we are on his ship?
20117And who would begrudge such protection to our fishermen?
20117Antony here, and did not tell me?''
20117Are you a journalist?''
20117Are you any good with them?''
20117Are you hurt, dear?''
20117Are you ready?
20117As a matter of fact, I have, but how did you know it?''
20117As for the Government, how should I know anything about it, since I can neither read nor write?
20117As the men sprang over the gunwale on to the deck, the skipper greeted each with a hearty''What cheer, sonny?''
20117Barton was about to send him back to the kitchen when Charlie suddenly exclaimed,''What''s that, just over there?''
20117Brethren of Mbamba, how are ye without a hen to buy stamps?''
20117But how could I obtain a bed without money?
20117But how does a bee sting?
20117But look here, if you are tee- totalers, what did you come aboard the_ Lily_ for?''
20117But was he powerless?
20117But what bird or animal could have wondered if, after that 19th of September, they had quacked, and crowed, and bleated with more pride than before?
20117But what is this?
20117But what''s all this,''he asked,''about twenty pounds reward?
20117But what, he thought, were the summer holidays without cricket?
20117But, I hope,''he continued,''you have not suffered from the wooden collars?''
20117By- the- bye, do you feel hungry?''
20117By- the- bye, how do you pass the time away before hauling the trawl?''
20117By- the- bye,''demanded Captain Knowlton,''I should like to hear just why you did run away?''
20117Can I go home?''
20117Can you show us the right way to Schustadt?
20117Chase that wretched horse all the way to Kwang- ngan?''
20117Could he not by its means purchase safety for his city?
20117Could he not pray?
20117Could we have it to go for a row?''
20117Did not this sensible fellow''s mouth become a splendid makeshift hand, and his glance an excellent speech?
20117Did you see a boy, Jacintha?''
20117Do any of the other fellows want to come aboard?''
20117Do n''t he take the cake?''
20117Do pigeons carry watches?
20117Do the police want you?''
20117Do you accept my conditions?''
20117Do you accuse me of robbing you?''
20117Do you care about draughts?''
20117Do you recognise that?''
20117Down this they called,''Jenny, are you living?''
20117E. D. WHAT AM I?
20117For who amid their chatter Could understand such patter?
20117Going to try another midnight swim?''
20117Got a bit of grub to give me?''
20117Got a mug of tea handy?''
20117Had I succeeded or not?
20117Had the clock lost five minutes, or not?
20117Had they not tied round its neck the metal charm, and it had worked no cure yet?
20117Hallo, what''s Ping Wang saying to the old man?''
20117Has aught befallen Antony?''
20117Has he business here?
20117Has the invalid any representatives here?
20117Have I not also the coins of invulnerability bound in the flesh and blood of my arm?''
20117Have you anything that you wish to say in your defence, or will you go at once?''
20117Have you ever heard of a white negro?
20117He added:''If you have little faith, what will you do then?''
20117He glared at Charlie for a moment as if he had committed some terrible offence, and then shouted fiercely''What did you do that for, you idiot?''
20117He opened the window gently, and was about to speak when he heard the clockmaker''s voice saying cautiously,''Is that you, Captain?''
20117He thought it had, but could he trust his eyes in such a terrible situation?
20117He whispered to his bedfellow( for all schoolboys slept at least two in a bed in those days),''Master George, can you put on your shirt?
20117He''s in the dining- room now, with Father, and----''''Oh, is he?''
20117Here I''m waiting; is it any use?
20117His answer came without anger, and as brave as true,''_ Yes, and did I not do it well?_''THE BOY TRAMP.
20117How did you get your medal back?''
20117How do London pigeons, for instance, tell the hour, and turn up punctually at the feeding- places?
20117How far is that?''
20117How is it with the little people of the insect world in this matter?
20117How long have you been up?''
20117How many can tell how an insect smells, and where its organs of taste and hearing lie?
20117How old are you?''
20117How were the little cubs to be secured?
20117I asked, ignoring the rest of his speech;''and what made you bring it?''
20117I felt that I had fallen among thieves-- if these people were not thieves, what could they be?
20117I remember your face now; are n''t you the grandson of old Peter Klinger, who holds yonder farm?
20117I should answer''Speak in English,''would n''t you?
20117I suppose it''s some joke of yours, young gentlemen?''
20117I suppose you know it?''
20117I thought that regiment prided itself on never being ill?''
20117I will just have done with brush and comb, soap and water, and go in rags, and will leave it for the young folks to be smart and tidy?"''
20117I will speak to her, and arrange that you shall have some supper and a bed and breakfast, and then I think we can cry quits, eh-- what do you say?''
20117I wonder what this useful purchase will be?''
20117I. I wonder if you who read this are a Londoner, and, if so, whether you have ever sailed paper boats on the Serpentine?
20117If I were to take the locket----''''What would you say when he asked you where you got it?''
20117If the second was,''What is its place amongst the rocks of our earth?''
20117If they were to take that path do n''t you think they would get to Barton more quickly?''
20117If you got washed overboard, should I lose my three pounds?''
20117In a few minutes the tea was ready, and as soon as the skipper tasted it he made a grimace, and exclaimed,''Beastly wash!--Do you hear?''
20117In its dark shadows who could say what dangers lurked?
20117In jail?''
20117In some land of faery where fires never die, And wind always freezes?
20117In the meanwhile, are either of you hungry?''
20117Invent more cyphers?''
20117Is he going to pay me double wages?''
20117Is he thinking of the family cares of the last season, or considering where the next meal is to come from?
20117Is it right?
20117Is it to be the Tower of London, or the river, or the Monument?
20117Is n''t that better than being dragged through a dark tunnel, boxed up in a stuffy train?''
20117Is that right?''
20117It''s cruel, is it not, sir?''
20117Know we not well that he will come again and reign over us?
20117Locked in the drawing- room, were you, Sam, old chap?
20117M. H.[ Illustration:"''Who''ll buy?''"]
20117May I call Boh now?''
20117Nelson, however, was confident of success, and asked Captain Blackwood''what he should consider as a victory?''
20117Nicolo asks the most awkward questions, such as:''Who stole his sister''s sweets last week?''
20117Now what was I to do?
20117Now, will you grant me my favour?''
20117Of course, Patch must on no account be left behind; but, on the other hand, how was I to get him along?
20117Of what use, it may be asked, are the three little eyes in the middle of the head of insects which have these wonderfully complex eyes?
20117Oh, ruddy flames leaping, Say, where were you sleeping?
20117On Sunday afternoon we again see the young curate; we hear his stern voice as he asks a group of six stalwart men,''What are you doing here, men?
20117One of the passengers asked him afterwards,''How could you stop at such a moment to light a cigar?''
20117Or have you seen your toy ships driven by fierce winds on to a lee shore bristling with cruel crags and yawning clefts?
20117Or heard you the breezes That fanned our sweet roses through June and July?
20117Ping Wang, shall we have any difficulty in obtaining food to- morrow?''
20117Possibly you can save us the trouble of hunting for his liquor and tobacco?''
20117SPY OR GUIDE?
20117See, Jacky?''
20117Shall we escape?''
20117Shall we jump overboard, and swim to the nearest ship making for the Humber?''
20117She is in India, I believe?''
20117So you''re his substitute?
20117Something greater?
20117Stick it on to their bald pates with gum?''
20117Supposing the first question put to us was,''What is slate?''
20117Surely Chinamen do n''t wear false pigtails?''
20117Surely we have no such people about now?''
20117Take your hands off those lads at once; what right have you to drag them away?''
20117The doctor had said he needed change of air and nourishing food; but how could the doctor''s orders be obeyed when money was so scarce?
20117The master starter yielded to the request,''May we have our caps off?''
20117The master, no less a person than the great Sir Christopher himself, now came up, and catching sight of the lad, said sternly:''Who is that youth?
20117The question is, how am I to get out?''
20117The question is, how are we to carry our treasure?''
20117Then off with a rush went brave Tom, His heart beating loud with dismay; While Charlie, and Peter, and Fred Cried,''Is n''t Tom valiant to- day?''
20117Then, plucking up her courage, she added,''How did you come here, and what right have you to take the panel out of the wall?''
20117Then, with a little laugh, she said,''Ah, M. Montgolfier, why do you not tie the fire to the bag?''
20117There was n''t a moment for shelter, And what could we possibly do?
20117There will be no objection to that, I suppose?''
20117These are troublous times, but if I live I will see you again some time, and meanwhile, as a remembrance, may I have these?''
20117Tiger found him out-- didn''t you, Tiger?''
20117To- day was his fifteenth birthday, and were not boys of fifteen allowed to take their places in the council?
20117Turton?''
20117Turton?''
20117Understand, Jack?''
20117Unless somebody had been shut in by mistake, how had he or she obtained admission?
20117Was Duck Lane, Smithfield, damp enough to be attractive to ducks?
20117Was I not Theebaw''s chief"Boh"?''
20117Was he really poor?''
20117Was it not a dreadful state of affairs for a small girl at the beginning of her first visit?
20117Was it the cry, perchance, of some robber luring him to destruction, or was it really a fellow- creature''s cry for help?
20117Was not the bell of the Cathedral the loudest in the town, and was it not used as an alarm in cases of fire?
20117Well, Polly, and where do you come from?''
20117Well, if it isn''t----Why, what does it all mean?''
20117Were they a party of skaters?
20117Were you molested by the brigands?''
20117Westrop?''
20117What are you going to drink?''
20117What are you thinking of?
20117What can be the use of such a large mouth and tongue, and such large bars of whalebone to a creature which has so small a throat?
20117What could have put such a ridiculous idea into your head?''
20117What could he do?
20117What did he want?
20117What do you think about it, Sam, old chap?''
20117What does that matter?
20117What has he done to be so happy, or I to be so unhappy?''
20117What if Oscar heard him?
20117What is a coper?''
20117What is it?--a fire?
20117What is that?''
20117What is the Teal?
20117What must we do this afternoon?
20117What shall it be?''
20117What shall you do?''
20117What should he do?
20117What sort of a world is it that they look on?
20117What time to- morrow shall I have to be aboard?''
20117What time will they come aboard?
20117What was the best thing to do?
20117What was the last thing you carved?''
20117What was to be done?
20117What''s that Chinee doing here?''
20117When birds and bees and blossoms Invite us out to play, Oh, who could well refuse them Upon so bright a day?
20117When do we return to Grimsby?''
20117When he returned to his seat on the coil of rope, Ping Wang said to him suddenly,''Have you any Chinese friends?''
20117When shall we start?''
20117When you have a oven each side of you----''''Are you a cook, then?''
20117Where did you find him?
20117Where else could I go unless I returned to Mr. Turton?
20117Where shall I meet you to- morrow afternoon?''
20117Where''s the ladder?''
20117Which way did he go, Dan, when he left you?''
20117Who among us does not love the hum of the bee?
20117Who can help admiring the beautiful Lady Fern, which seems to be most at home when growing near a streamlet or pond?
20117Who could it be?
20117Who do you think turned up ten minutes ago?
20117Who does not know the Street Toy- man?
20117Who is my friend?
20117Who is my friend?
20117Who is my friend?
20117Who is your skipper?''
20117Who was to be obeyed, the people or the King?
20117Who''ll buy?''
20117Why did you?
20117Why do n''t you pretend that you are ill?
20117Why is it to be given up?
20117Why not ask him to return the idol to you?''
20117Why should I go to bed at eight, If I desire to sit up late?''
20117Why should Mr. Turton want me back at Castlemore, unless, indeed, for the sake of taking revenge for my flight?
20117Why''s Aunt Christy got a new pail?
20117Will you come out and choose a place for them?''
20117Will you have Vale Place after all?''
20117Will you object to that?''
20117Wonder what''s in it?
20117Would Antony have seen him in London?
20117Would he remember?
20117Would you like to have it?''
20117Would you like to serve your country now?''
20117You agree, do n''t you?''
20117You are not frightened, old chap, are you?''
20117You are very thin; do they give you enough to eat?''
20117You do n''t complain that he treated you brutally?''
20117You do n''t mean that she has been wrecked?''
20117You start, Captain Ferrers?''
20117You will not be wanting a boy to help on your farm, will you, sir?''
20117[ Illustration:"''Can he do this?''
20117[ Illustration:"''How dare you strike me when you know God can see you?''"]
20117[ Illustration:"''How would you like to earn twenty pounds reward?''"]
20117[ Illustration:"''The question is, where did you get the dog?''"]
20117[ Illustration:"''What is it?--a fire?
20117[ Illustration:"''Would you take a message of importance for me?''"]
20117all the people who knew us, have they finished to die''( that is, are they all dead?
20117and what could they want at that hour?
20117and what is the sting like?
20117asked one;''was there a river?''
20117can you give me a lift down to the quay?''
20117changed to''You looked about you, then?''
20117cried Jane,''do you know if your aunt has come down yet?''
20117do you want to earn a copper?"
20117exclaimed Nell;''but_ how_ are we to earn it?''
20117exclaimed poor, weak- witted Hetty, as soon as they had attended to the sufferer,''Father went for scalps himself, and now where is his own?
20117exclaimed the philosopher; and now turning to the other pupil, he said,''Well, friend, and what have you bought?''
20117he cried, as soon as he saw me,''do you want a job?''
20117he exclaimed, suddenly,''what''s this I see?
20117is n''t it nice?
20117repeated Millicent in surprise;''is there then another?--where is he?''
20117said he,''what''s wrong?''
20117the master would like to secure the little ones alive; but how?
20117what became of them?''
20117what have you done to- day, Except to romp and run and play?''
20117what''s that I see Hanging asleep upon the old ash- tree?
20117what?''
20117who could give them wings?''
34257If I buy thee,asked one of a Spartan captive,"and treat thee well, wilt thou be good?"
34257Why trouble ourselves,asks Professor Huxley,"about matters of which, however important they may be, we do know nothing and can know nothing?
34257Above all, where is the Catholic whose heart is not enlarged by such contemplation?
34257And are not intellectual delights akin to those religion brings?
34257And does not this make the world lean to the side of those who would eliminate God from nature?
34257And in what way shall we best accomplish this task?
34257And is not religion itself a kind of celestial education, which trains the soul to godlike life?
34257And is not the Bible God''s word?
34257And is not the Blessed Saviour the Eternal Word?
34257And is not the Gospel the Word, which, like an electric thrill, runs to the ends of the world?
34257And what has been the issue of all their disputes but hatreds and sects, persecutions and wars?
34257And what passion gives better promise of blessings to one''s self and to one''s fellow- men?
34257And who shall so clothe it, if not he who has the freest, the most flexible, the clearest, the best disciplined mind?
34257And yet, since man''s heart is the home of contradictions, is it not also true to say that he is naturally religious?
34257Are corn and beef and iron the only good and useful things?
34257Are not the primal virtues, those which make life good and fair and which are a woman''s glory,--are they not humble and quiet and unobtrusive?
34257Are we but cattle to be stalled and fed?
34257Are we not human because we think and admire, and are exalted in the presence of what is infinitely true and divinely fair?
34257But is it feasible?
34257But what true believer thinks himself excused from effort, because Christ has declared that the gates of hell shall not prevail against His Church?
34257Can the worm at thy feet recognize thy superiority?
34257Could it by any chance make them as bad as it makes men?
34257Do not public men, like public women, sell themselves, though in a different way?
34257Do women themselves, those, at least, in whom the woman soul, which draws us on and upward, is most itself, desire that the vote be given them?
34257Does not political life, as it exists in our democracy, tend to corrupt both voters and office- seekers?
34257Does this system include moral training?
34257Had none of them lived, how should we see and understand that man is Godlike and that God is truth and love?
34257Have not those who mistake their crotchets for Nature''s laws invaded our schools?
34257How often in the history of nations and of religions is not outward splendor the mark of inward decay?
34257How shall he who cares not for his better self care for his country?
34257How shall we find the secret from which hope of such success will spring?
34257How then is it possible to look with complacency on a world in which multitudes of human beings are condemned to the work of the ox and the ass?
34257If I am not pleased with myself, but should wish to be other than I am, why should I think highly of the influences which have made me what I am?
34257If all sufferings, sorrows, and disappointments had been left out of thy life, wouldst thou be more or less than thou art?
34257If men could be persuaded that the unconscious is the beginning and the end of all things, what good would have been gained?
34257If they rush into the arena of noisy and vulgar strife, will not the evil be increased?
34257Is it conceivable that a thinker, or a believer, or a scholar, or an investigator should wrangle in the spirit of a pothouse politician?
34257Is it not always the same story?
34257Is it not easy to believe that to a loving soul in an all- chaste body the unseen world may lie open to view?
34257Is it not enough that thou hast truth and justice?
34257Is it not largely a life of ca nt, pretence, and hypocrisy, of venality, corruption, and selfishness, of lying, abuse, and vulgarity?
34257Is it not the very bloom and fragrance, not only of the highest religious faith, but also of the best culture?
34257Is it right?
34257Is it true?
34257Is not his father a divine man, whose mere word drives away all fear and fills him with confidence?
34257Is not reverence a part of all the sweetest and purest feelings which bind us to father and mother, to friends and home and country?
34257Is not the love of excellence, which is the scholar''s love, a part of the love of goodness which makes the saint?
34257Is not this the glory of the founders of religions, of the discoverers of new worlds?
34257Is the professional politician, the professional caucus- manipulator, the professional voter, the type of man we can admire or respect even?
34257Is there need of stronger evidence that the power within, which is our real self, is spiritual?
34257Is this our ideal?
34257May not the meanest flower that blows bring thoughts that lie too deep for tears?
34257May we not take this for a principle,--to believe that God does everything, and then to act as though He left everything for us to do?
34257Now, if this is the attitude of wise and strong men, how much more should it not be that of a wise and strong people?
34257Or this: Since grace supposes nature, the growth and strength of the Church is not wholly independent of the natural endowments of her ministers?
34257Read the history of controversy and ask thyself whether there is in it the spirit of Christ, the meek and lowly One?
34257Reason and conscience are God''s most precious gifts; and what does He ask but that we make use of them?
34257Shall our Chautauquas and summer schools help to foster this superstition?
34257Shall we abandon God because His world is full of evil, or Christ because there is corruption in the church?
34257Shall we profess to believe in Him, and yet forbid His name to be spoken in the houses where we seek to train the little ones whom He loved?
34257Should women vote?
34257They have taken upon themselves the office of teacher, and yet what have they taught that is worth knowing and loving?
34257To what better use can we put life than to employ it in ameliorating life?
34257What converts the meaningless babbling of the child into the stately march of oratoric phrase or the rhythmic flow of poetic language?
34257What could be more delightfully human?
34257What does truth need but to be known?
34257What gain would self- delusion bring him or her he loves?
34257What has developed the rude stone and bronze implements of savage and barbarous hordes into the miraculous machinery which we use?
34257What has she the right to do?
34257What hast thou learned to admire, to long for, to love, genuinely to hope for and believe?
34257What is forbidden her?
34257What is her work?
34257What is history but examples of success through knowledge and righteousness, and of failure through lack of understanding and of virtue?
34257What is our Christian faith but the revelation of the supreme and infinite worth of love, as being of the essence of God himself?
34257What is the best education for woman?
34257What is the great aim of the primary school, if it is not the nutrition of feeling?
34257What is the pulpit but the holiest teacher''s chair that has been placed upon the earth?
34257What need is there of a hollow phrase when the appeal to truth is obvious?
34257What passion can be more innocent than the passion for knowledge?
34257Whence do we derive strength of soul but from the uplifting of the mind and heart to God which we call prayer?
34257Where is the man who does not feel a kind of religious gratitude as he looks upon the rise and progress of this nation?
34257Wherein lies the superiority of civilized races over barbarians if not in their greater knowledge and superior strength of character?
34257Which were the greater loss for England, to be without Wellington and Nelson, or to be without Shakspeare and Milton?
34257Who in such a presence, can abate hope, or give heed to despondent counsel, or send regretful thoughts to other days and lands?
34257Who shall speak ill of bodily health and vigor?
34257Why desire to have force and numbers on thy side?
34257Why is it remembered?
34257Why should the flowers and the fields, the hills and the heavens, be beautiful, and man hideous, and the cities where he abides dismal?
34257Why should the sorrow or the sin or the loss of any human being give me pleasure?
34257Will not the political woman lose something of the sacred power of the wife and mother?
34257Would you have an ox admire the sunrise or the pearly dew, when all he feels the need of is grass?
34257_ Numquid omnes doctores?_ asks St. Paul.
14126''Good''--''loving''?
14126''Ruy Blas''in Italian? 14126 A hard fight?
14126A parcel of idiots, nurse, are n''t we?
14126A touch of the_ folie des grandeurs?_"Well, who escapes it?
14126A touch of the_ folie des grandeurs?_"Well, who escapes it?
14126A very ineffective statement Ashe made to- night-- don''t you think so?
14126About America? 14126 About that silly affair with Prince Stephan?"
14126About the ministry? 14126 About what?"
14126About your literary work?
14126Adelina, need we wait any longer?
14126Afraid of her? 14126 Ah!--what have you been discovering?"
14126Ah, then,she said--"_then_ he could n''t have suffered-- could he?
14126Alice?
14126All the novels that are written about politics nowadays-- except Dizzy''s-- are such nonsense, are n''t they? 14126 Also I gather,"said Cliffe, with a smile,"that Lady Parham has her say?"
14126Am I henceforth to live and die on Lady Parham''s ample breast?
14126Am I not to the minute?
14126Am I?
14126Am I?
14126Am I?
14126And Ashe?
14126And Fanchette is to make it?
14126And I understood that I was to be taken into respectable cousinly counsel?
14126And Lady Kitty is flirting with him at this particular moment? 14126 And Lady Kitty, I understand, is a scandal to gods and men, and the most fashionable person in town?"
14126And Lord Parham?
14126And Mr. Ashe-- do you know if he is going, after all?
14126And a most brilliant writer?
14126And cruelty?
14126And do you include me among the wolves?
14126And if it does n''t give me pleasure?
14126And in fact they are rare-- and detested? 14126 And it always amuses people-- doesn''t it?"
14126And it''s all so awkward, is n''t it?
14126And it''s in that spirit you''re going back into the House?
14126And may I tell her, too,he said, pausing--"that you forgive her?"
14126And meanwhile Lady Kitty has no dealings with her step- sister?
14126And shall I tell you what mother said?
14126And some day you will be Lord Tranmore?
14126And take his seat this evening?
14126And that-- you are not prepared to do?
14126And the devils?
14126And the goal?
14126And the party?
14126And then?
14126And this,said the Dean,"is all?
14126And who lives there?
14126And you knew he was coming home?
14126And you remember the green garibaldi-- last week? 14126 And you scorn success?"
14126And you want sympathy?
14126And you-- are you horribly tired?
14126And you?
14126And you?
14126And your mother?
14126And-- and you start to- morrow morning?
14126And-- you know what I told you about my bad temper?
14126Are n''t the true Church the people who are justified by the event?
14126Are n''t they?
14126Are n''t you as sorry for her as I am?
14126Are n''t you dining out somewhere to- night?
14126Are n''t you wandering too far, Lady Kitty?
14126Are there many parties like this in London? 14126 Are they in the library?"
14126Are we?
14126Are you a Catholic?
14126Are you coming, Markham?
14126Are you going back?
14126Are you going to marry her at last?
14126Are you going to tell me about them also?
14126Are you going with Lady Parham?
14126Are you going with the Crashaw''s party?
14126Are you quite determined I sha''n''t get_ any_ joy out of my holiday?
14126Are you soon shutting up?
14126Are you very tired, my lady?
14126Are you, perhaps, interested in the Ricci? 14126 Are you?
14126Are you?
14126As much as a_ friend_ cares to know?
14126Because, you mean, of Tranmore''s condition? 14126 Because,"he hesitated,"your own life has been so happy?"
14126Before Lord Parham said-- what annoyed you?
14126Besides, William never minds being abused a bit-- does he?
14126Between the past and the present? 14126 But I ca n''t have no more--""No more ructions?"
14126But I came to find--"Miss Lyster? 14126 But as for the tales that people who hate her tell of her, and will go on telling of her--""They are merely the harvest of what she has sown?"
14126But ca n''t you see that-- just now especially-- you ought to think of nothing--_nothing_--but William''s future and William''s career?
14126But if I do mind it?
14126But if I tell nobody who wrote it-- and you tell nobody?
14126But if you buy it up-- and stop all the papers that matter,she faltered--"why should you resign, William?
14126But is there really any truth in it? 14126 But why did you throw at all?"
14126But you wo n''t go, Blanchie, will you?
14126But you_ ca n''t_ mean that-- that you''ll resign because of that book?
14126But-- you wo n''t resign your seat?
14126But--She considered--"Would you like to see the Palazzo Vercelli?"
14126By- the- way, do you know that Geoffrey Cliffe is in Venice?
14126By- the- way-- where is Lady Kitty?--and are there many people here?
14126Ca n''t Lady Tranmore do anything?
14126Can I have an answer to this note?
14126Can he?
14126Can they hear the balls?
14126Chère madame, will you present me to your daughter?
14126Courage to break rules? 14126 Did I give you any advice?"
14126Did I? 14126 Did I?
14126Did I?
14126Did William say he forgave me?
14126Did Wilson feed him?
14126Did he? 14126 Did it never occur to you,"said Ashe, interrupting,"that it might get you-- get us both-- into trouble, and that you ought to tell me?"
14126Did n''t I throw straight?
14126Did n''t I?
14126Did n''t her ladyship try to persuade you to stay?
14126Did n''t you get the message about dinner?
14126Did she give you any explanation,said Ashe, presently, in a voice scarcely audible--"of their meeting at Verona?
14126Did she really do such dreadful things?
14126Did she see Geoffrey?--and does she mean me to understand that she did? 14126 Did she tell Lady Tranmore anything of Lady Kitty''s state of mind?"
14126Did she? 14126 Did you believe me?"
14126Did you ever tell William you were corresponding with him?
14126Did you guard her as you might?
14126Did you have a pleasant walk?
14126Did you have any breakfast, William?
14126Did you hear what I said?
14126Did you like it?
14126Did you put me into your book?
14126Did you? 14126 Did you?
14126Did you?
14126Did you?
14126Do I?
14126Do I?
14126Do n''t you agree, Polly?
14126Do n''t you think I''m old enough by now to have a man friend?
14126Do n''t you think that jealousy will soon be as dead as-- saying your prayers and going to church? 14126 Do you ever lie down-- alone-- and read a book?"
14126Do you ever see So- and- so?
14126Do you forbid me, William?
14126Do you know that mother is convinced Mary Lyster has made up her mind to marry Cliffe?
14126Do you know what that phrase-- that name of abomination-- always recalls to me?
14126Do you know? 14126 Do you like it?"
14126Do you never think that you have it in your power to help me or to ruin me?
14126Do you often go to San Lazzaro?
14126Do you remember that you promised to see me home?
14126Do you remember the mask in the''Tempest''? 14126 Do you remember the night when I told you those things, Kitty?"
14126Do you see that?
14126Do you want me to be nice to her?
14126Do you?
14126Does Ashe generally study the Scriptures of an afternoon?
14126Does Lady Kitty like society?
14126Does it? 14126 Does it?"
14126Does mother expect me to chaperon her?
14126Does she ever rest?
14126Does she love him?
14126Does she mean me to understand that she is not happy?
14126Does she see much of anybody?
14126Does she? 14126 Does she?"
14126Does that mean you chaps are going to win at the next election? 14126 Does that mean-- that you still think of him-- still wish to see him?"
14126Does the Ricci hire them?
14126Duty?
14126Eighteen-- or eighty?
14126Est- il possible? 14126 Even when he mocks at missionaries?"
14126Extraordinarily bewitching!--unlike other people?
14126Fanchette can make your dress?
14126Find yourself?
14126For Lady Kitty? 14126 For me?"
14126For their party next week?
14126Geoffrey? 14126 Good Heavens!--if this was their decay, what was their bloom?"
14126Gracious, Kitty, where do you get all these stories from?
14126H''m, sir-- So you did n''t believe a word of your own speeches?
14126Had you?
14126Half the county-- that kind of thing?
14126Has William ever interfered?
14126Has he got it in him?
14126Has he?
14126Has she seen it?
14126Has there been a row?
14126Have I lost much of you?
14126Have n''t I?
14126Have you another volume on the way?
14126Have you been fretting?
14126Have you been worried?
14126Have you heard anything more about Tuesday?
14126Have you seen William? 14126 Have you seen the babe?"
14126Have you seen your letters, my lady?
14126Have you? 14126 Have you?"
14126He proposed to you to throw me over?
14126Her ladyship says, my lady, would you please go up to her room?
14126Her mother!--what, that disreputable woman?
14126Home? 14126 How are you, madame?"
14126How are you?
14126How can I tell? 14126 How can such a child know or guess anything?
14126How did you know I wrote it?
14126How do you do, Cliffe?
14126How do you do, Kitty? 14126 How do you do, Lady Kitty?
14126How do you do?
14126How do you expect me to dress for dinner?
14126How do you know that, Lady Kitty?
14126How do you know what he used to tell her?
14126How does she get all those people together? 14126 How is he?"
14126How is she?
14126How long has it taken?
14126How long have you known-- that woman?
14126How long must I wait?
14126How many years left-- to enjoy it in-- before one dies-- or one''s heart dies?
14126How old are you?
14126How will she punish us?--and why?--for what?
14126How_ could_ you remember it all?
14126How_ dare_ we mention his name here at all?
14126However, I imagine Lady Kitty-- by- the- way, how much longer shall we give her?
14126Hullo, what''s that?
14126I ca n''t do it here, can I?
14126I did n''t admit that I was,said Kitty,"but if I am, why are you sorry?"
14126I do n''t know what you mean, Kitty-- but we must n''t stay arguing here any longer--"No!--but-- don''t you remember? 14126 I hope I talked some sense--""Oh, but why?"
14126I must find him-- but-- what shall I say to him?
14126I should have thought-- from my old recollections of her-- she would have been a match for twenty?
14126I suppose you mean Geoffrey Cliffe?
14126I suppose you mean for the successful?
14126I suppose you-- everybody-- thinks her very agreeable?
14126I suppose your English dining- rooms are all like this? 14126 I think you know,"began the Dean, clearing his throat,"why I asked you to see me?"
14126I understand she passed as his wife?
14126I want you to come and see my mother?
14126I went to the Alcots''this morning, and--"--the butler told you Madeleine was in bed? 14126 I wish I knew what could have been your possible object in writing it?"
14126I wonder if he''ll come?
14126I wonder why you want to please us?
14126I? 14126 I?"
14126If I wrote and told him it was all my doing, William?--if I grovelled to him?
14126If you make me speeches,said Kitty,"I must reply, must n''t I?
14126If you were in Ashe''s position, would you rather your wife neglected or supported your political interests?
14126In October? 14126 In any case,"said Ashe,"it''s your duty to please us?"
14126In any case,said Cliffe,"I suppose our friend here is sure of one or other of the big posts?"
14126In half an hour?
14126In the way of literary material?
14126Including Lady Kitty?
14126Is Lord Parham behaving well to you-- now-- William?
14126Is Mrs. Alcot at home?
14126Is he cross about William''s letter?
14126Is he worth it?
14126Is he? 14126 Is it all right?"
14126Is it settled?
14126Is it the Parhams? 14126 Is it to be a large party?"
14126Is it true that Lord Parham may possibly give him an appointment?
14126Is n''t it better to forget old griefs? 14126 Is n''t it fun?"
14126Is n''t it horrible?
14126Is n''t it piteous?
14126Is n''t it strange?
14126Is one allowed to find out?
14126Is she a friend of yours?
14126Is that man going to marry her-- at last? 14126 Is that one of the inventions going about?"
14126Is the gap filled?
14126Is the gondola there?
14126Is there a quiet corner anywhere?
14126Is there anything in the world that he really cares about?
14126Is there anything in which Lady Kitty or I could help you?
14126Is there no hope of Lady Kitty?
14126Is there?
14126It gives one such an unfair advantage, though, does n''t it? 14126 It seemed to me it was the end--""The end of what?"
14126It''s so true, it''s hardly worth saying-- isn''t it? 14126 It''s the other thing that''s hard-- isn''t it?"
14126Je vous demande--_who_?
14126Jolly, is n''t it?
14126Kitty!--- you regret--"That man? 14126 Kitty!--what do you mean?"
14126Kitty!--why did you do this?
14126Kitty, do you know that I had a letter from your mother, this morning?
14126Kitty, what are you about?
14126Kitty, why did you say that?
14126Kitty-- what do you mean?
14126Lady Kitty not arrived?
14126Lady Kitty, do you ever rest?
14126Lady Kitty,he said, taking a seat beside the pair,"have you forgotten you promised me some French?"
14126Lady Parham told me yesterday-- you do n''t mind my repeating it?
14126Lady Tranmore was dreadfully anxious--"Lest she should cut us at the last?
14126Lord Parham being the end and aim? 14126 Lord Parham would pass you over?"
14126Lord Parham!--coming here?
14126May I ask-- stop me if I seem impertinent-- how much you know of the history of the winter?
14126May I be allowed to see it?
14126May I have that?
14126May I look?
14126May I speak to you a moment, Kitty?
14126May I speak to you-- with a full frankness? 14126 May I?
14126May n''t one play the piano here on Sundays?
14126May we come in, Kitty?
14126May we go back into the garden a little?
14126Meanwhile, have you put him up in my dressing- room? 14126 Might I walk with you a little, or do you forbid me?"
14126Miss Lyster?
14126Must he go?
14126Must you?
14126My dear Kitty!--why talk about it?
14126My dear Miss Lyster,he said, presently, finding himself near that lady,"did you ever hear anything better done?
14126My dear, what did you look at me like that for? 14126 My dear-- do you know that William has been for eight years-- since he left Trinity-- one of the idlest young men alive?"
14126My own family at least, do n''t you think, might omit that?
14126My sister Alice? 14126 My sister?"
14126My sister?
14126Natural!--when she knows--"How can she know?
14126Nobody thinks of the book now, do they, William?
14126Not much shyness left in that young woman-- eh?
14126Not strong? 14126 Now tell me, Lady Kitty"--he roused himself to look at her with some attention--"what do you want me to do?"
14126O my God, what matter that I should grow wise-- if Kitty is lost and desolate?
14126Object?
14126Of course you did n''t mean that, William?
14126Of what importance is it to anybody that Geoffrey Cliffe should telegraph his doings and his opinions every morning to the English public?
14126Oh!--the Grosvilles complain?
14126Oh, Harry; is he there?
14126Oh, you mean that nonsensical thing last night?
14126On Sunday--_here_?
14126Or government by country- houses-- which? 14126 Oui?"
14126Perhaps I ought to talk to him?
14126Playing the great lady? 14126 Pray, is he not a great traveller?--_a very_ great traveller?"
14126Really?
14126Scarcely his repose?
14126Scotland?
14126Shall I open it?
14126Shall I take him up- stairs?
14126Shall I?... 14126 Shall we draw out and come to you?--or will you just join on where you are?"
14126Shall we order lunch?
14126Shall we try our dance?
14126Shall you-- shall you go and see Lord Parham?
14126She is not ambitious?
14126She is trying to run too many horses abreast?
14126She''s left school? 14126 She_ is_ better?"
14126Should I? 14126 Should n''t I?
14126So you admit you did it?
14126So you got my note?
14126So you worship nonsense, Lady Kitty?
14126So you would prevent me from taking the only honorable, the only decent way out of this thing that remains to me?
14126So you''re in? 14126 Some nonsense, was n''t it?
14126Some-- some--she cudgelled her memory--"some Théophile Gautier?"
14126Spirit? 14126 Tell me, are you with Lady Tranmore?"
14126That hardly seems time enough-- does it?
14126That magnificent place on the Grand Canal? 14126 That was hardly what caused the tears, was it?"
14126That was marvellous, that light on the Salute, was n''t it?
14126That''s my extravagance, is n''t it? 14126 That''s not generally expected of Under- Secretaries, is it?"
14126That''s what I want to know-- worth the fuss that some people make?
14126That''s what you meant, is n''t it? 14126 The Parhams?"
14126The Ricci? 14126 The Vicomtesse D---, the lady of the poems?
14126The brother who has had an operation? 14126 The doctor declares there is no danger, unless--""Unless what?"
14126The government?
14126The old passions, you mean?
14126The way Lord Parham recommends?
14126The weather?
14126Then suppose you take the boy-- and Margaret French-- to Haggart till I can join you?
14126Then? 14126 These domesticities should be kept out of sight, do n''t you think?"
14126They are greater brutes than she thought?
14126They seem to have reached Marinitza in November If I understood aright, Lady Kitty had no maid with her?
14126To what do you allude, Lady Kitty?
14126To whom?
14126To you? 14126 Very plain, is n''t it?
14126Vous parlez Français?--vous êtes Française? 14126 War?
14126Was it her wish that you should come to me?
14126Was it?
14126Was our''great- great''the same person?
14126Was there anything to forgive? 14126 We must allow everybody their own ways of doing things, must n''t we?
14126We wo n''t talk any more about it now, Kitty, will we?
14126We''ll manage him between us, wo n''t we?
14126We''re such a happy lot, are n''t we? 14126 We''re very old friends, are n''t we?"
14126Well!--and what else?
14126Well!--how have the speeches gone? 14126 Well, Kitty, how''s the bruised one?"
14126Well, anyhow, we''re going to sample the garden to- morrow morning, are n''t we?
14126Well, mother, are you pleased?
14126Well, now, I suppose to- morrow will see your ship in port?
14126Well, what can I do for you, Lady Kitty?
14126Well, who does?
14126Well, you know the story of Madame d''Estrées''step- daughter-- old Blackwater''s daughter?
14126Well-- anybody else?
14126Well-- you do n''t object?
14126Well?
14126Well?
14126Well?
14126Were you very unhappy when you were a child, Kitty?
14126Were you?
14126What Endymion are you calling?
14126What are we doing it for?
14126What are you waiting for?
14126What are your deserts? 14126 What can I do?"
14126What did he reply?
14126What did that mean?
14126What did you think of her?
14126What do you mean, darling?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you mean?
14126What do you think about it, eh, Blanche?
14126What do you want for William?
14126What does it matter to you?
14126What does it matter,cried Ashe, angrily,"whether he were a blue- faced baboon!--for two nights?
14126What does it matter? 14126 What does it matter?
14126What does that matter? 14126 What does that matter?"
14126What does that mean?
14126What else should I think?
14126What has happened to them?
14126What have I done?
14126What have the Bishops been doing, my lord?
14126What have you to do with Ashe, Kitty, any longer? 14126 What in the name of fortune are you doing, Kitty?"
14126What is it in me,he thought,"that has made the difference between my life and that of other men I know-- that weakened me so with Kitty?"
14126What is really wrong with Lord Parham, William?
14126What is she?
14126What is the matter with you?
14126What is the matter?
14126What is the subject?
14126What kind of things did you say?
14126What note?
14126What obligation?
14126What on earth have we got into this beastly conversation for? 14126 What possible excuse can you invent?"
14126What right had I to expect anything?
14126What time?
14126What will she do?
14126What would have been the good?
14126What''s he been doing now, Kitty?
14126What''s his name?
14126What''s the good of being mealy mouthed about it? 14126 What''s the good of trying?"
14126What''s the matter with her?
14126What''s the matter with you, miladi?
14126What''s the matter?
14126What, indeed?
14126What, not a match for one Lady Parham?
14126What-- that they''re thinking of giving me Hickson''s place? 14126 What-- there were no pretty girls-- not one?"
14126What?
14126What_ is_ the matter with me?
14126What_ is_ the matter? 14126 When I wrote to you, I was at death''s door-- wasn''t I?"
14126When did you arrive?
14126When did you have the first idea of this book, Kitty?
14126When did you invent that? 14126 When did you know?"
14126When do you lunch there?
14126When do you see Lord Parham?
14126When will you be ready?
14126Where are the limits there?
14126Where are we?
14126Where are you? 14126 Where can I find a doctor?"
14126Where can we talk?
14126Where else would you expect to find Madame d''Estrées?
14126Where have you been-- all the time-- before America?
14126Where have you been? 14126 Where have you been?"
14126Where have you been?
14126Where is Kitty?
14126Where is William?
14126Where is the_ Times_?
14126Where shall we go?
14126Where were you going to?
14126Where were you?
14126Where-- if I may ask-- is the poet?
14126Whether I''m worth knowing?
14126Which means that you wo n''t tell me anything more?
14126Who are my victims?
14126Who are you?
14126Who is it?
14126Who is that?
14126Who made your English Sunday?
14126Who was Madame d''Estrées?
14126Who was it you saw last night in that ridiculous singing affair?
14126Who''s going to separate between maman and me? 14126 Who?"
14126Whose tales have you been listening to, Lady Kitty?
14126Why are n''t you at the Foreign Office?
14126Why are there no ladies?
14126Why are we so early?
14126Why are you so ill?
14126Why did you attack William so fiercely?
14126Why did you come in to visit me, Kitty?
14126Why did you say those foolish things to me yesterday?
14126Why do n''t you come, too?
14126Why do n''t you read the French papers, papa? 14126 Why do you see so little now of Elizabeth Tranmore?"
14126Why is he here? 14126 Why not now?
14126Why not? 14126 Why should I?"
14126Why should anybody be good?
14126Why should n''t I?
14126Why should n''t she be happy?
14126Why should we talk of forgiveness? 14126 Why should you be in despair?"
14126Why should you deign to ask?
14126Why should you do anything dreadful, please? 14126 Why should you torment yourself so?"
14126Why''poor child''?
14126Why, I thought that Lady Kitty--"Had vowed vengeance? 14126 Why, indeed?
14126Why? 14126 Why?"
14126Why?
14126Why?
14126Why?
14126Why_ did_ you bring him, Kitty? 14126 Will it?"
14126Will you call on maman to- morrow?
14126Will you come a walk with me to- morrow morning?
14126Will you show this signor the way out?
14126William Ashe? 14126 William, is the list out?"
14126With Ashe''s sanction?
14126Without our hostess?
14126Wo n''t she always be in his way?
14126Working as hard as usual, Lady Parham?
14126Would you damn me?
14126Would you like to know-- who is the best-- the noblest-- the handsomest-- the most generous-- the most delightful man I have ever met?
14126Yes, but--"But what?
14126Yes, my lady?
14126Yes-- isn''t it bad luck?
14126Yes?
14126You are very rich, are n''t you?
14126You brazen it out,said Ashe;"but how are you going to appease Lady Grosville?"
14126You ca n''t wait for your newspaper?
14126You discussed it with the Bishop?
14126You do n''t believe it? 14126 You do n''t mean-- that-- you hear from him?"
14126You do n''t mind him?
14126You find it in the tragedy of your sex?
14126You foolish child,he answered, slowly,"do you think I could forget you for an hour, wherever you were?"
14126You know how I abused you about my hair, Blanche? 14126 You know the French word_ panache_?
14126You like it?
14126You mean he has grown ambitious?
14126You mean people are tired of her?
14126You mean the man who distinguished himself in the Crimea? 14126 You mean the traveller?"
14126You mean your public duty stands in the way?
14126You mean,said Kitty, calmly,"that I am not to talk so much to Geoffrey Cliffe?"
14126You mean-- to leave me alone?
14126You mean?
14126You remember about my mother-- about Alice?
14126You remember that fellow at Univ.?
14126You remember the tales of old Lord Blackwater?
14126You remember? 14126 You shall have the whole of it before you go-- Friday, is n''t it?"
14126You think I am not worthy to know?
14126You think I have made a failure of it?
14126You think so?
14126You think society is the better for shocks?
14126You think they''ll last till Whitsuntide?
14126You were at the serenata?
14126You wo n''t come down and see me take my seat?
14126You''d like to see the Palazzo?
14126You''ll be home early?
14126You''ll buy it all up? 14126 You''re going, of course?
14126You-- you really and actually-- want to marry me?
14126Your cousin? 14126 Your cousin?"
14126Your_ taste_, Kitty!--where was your taste? 14126 ***** Ah!--could he have done such a thing himself? 14126 *****How do you do, my dear Dean?"
14126*****"What are you three gossiping about?"
14126*****"Will the signora have her dinner outside or in the_ salle- à- manger?
14126--Ashe hesitated--"that her own position is too doubtful?"
14126--he turned his head--"are we not forgotten, or just remembered-- which?"
14126A better prayer, do n''t you think?"
14126A faithless wife, blotted from her place?--made infamous forever by the veil which hid from human eye the beauty she had dishonored?
14126A great future?
14126A letter?
14126After it?
14126Ah, Mary!--how do you do?"
14126An accident?
14126An injury?
14126And all this time had he been the mere spectator and reporter, or fighting, himself?
14126And as to interest, when was it ever to serve him if not now-- through his old friendship with Ashe?
14126And had she not only checked or ruined his career-- was he to be also dishonored, struck to the heart?
14126And how could_ he_ doubt the love shown in this clinging penitence, these soft kisses?
14126And meanwhile what new and dolorous truths had Lady Kitty been learning as to her mother''s history and her mother''s position?
14126And now--?
14126And she is to act something, is n''t she, with that young De La Rivière from the embassy?
14126And the book''s worth some money, is n''t it?"
14126And then?
14126And what in Heaven''s name was the reason why old friends like Lady M---- were beginning to look at him coldly, and avoid his conversation?
14126And what on_ earth_ is the matter?"
14126And who comes worst off?
14126And why not?
14126And yet-- yet?
14126And-- in the distance-- the slender figure of a woman walking-- stopping often to gather a flower-- or to rest?
14126Any commissions?
14126Anything else?"
14126Anything else?"
14126Are n''t you going home-- because of politics?"
14126Are the ladies asked, and do n''t come?
14126Are you difficult to know?"
14126Are you happy in your marriage?"
14126Are you staying in Venice?"
14126As for loftier things,"self- reverence, self- knowledge, self- control"--duty-- and the passion of high ideals-- who was he to prate about them?
14126At Haggart?"
14126At his inn, some few hundred yards away, between her and the Piazzetta, was Geoffrey Cliffe waking too?--making his last preparations?
14126At last she said:"So you think, William, I had better leave Kitty alone?"
14126At last!--was she going to bed?
14126At the bottom of her soul was she, indeed, afraid of the man beside her?
14126Be kind to her-- won''t you?"
14126Between six and seven weeks ago, was it?
14126Both were tired, and their talk drifted into the characteristic male gossip--"What''s---- doing now?"
14126But I thought there was good news?"
14126But Kitty''s mother?
14126But at Haggart-- in seclusion?"
14126But does one find Ashe himself in the middle of the day?"
14126But his mother?--his friends?--his colleagues?
14126But look here, Kitty, do n''t you think you''ll come home?
14126But now-- how can any individual, he asked himself, with political work to do, affect to despise the opinions and prejudices of society?
14126But short of resignation how was it to be done?
14126But this something-- does it really exist-- or am I only cheating myself by fancying it?
14126But this you probably know?"
14126But we have let enough be known--""Enough?--enough to damn Madame d''Estrées?"
14126But what does it matter?
14126But what encouragement had been given him to play so Quixotic a part?
14126But what good will that be to me if you are to use my absence for that purpose to bring us both to ruin?
14126But what is the use?
14126But what''s the use?
14126But where?
14126But will your cousin be there?"
14126But you do n''t believe I shall carry my point?"
14126But you have other children?"
14126But you mean that_ Lord_ Parham is to be allowed to make his peace?"
14126But you''ll help me through, wo n''t you?"
14126But"--she shivered--"but yet-- if he were sitting there--""You would be once more under the spell?"
14126But, after all, to what may not general ability aspire-- general ability properly stiffened with interest?
14126But, after all, what did such garbage matter?
14126By- the- way, I suppose you have already seen her-- at that woman''s?"
14126By- the- way, did you hear your son''s speech the other night?
14126By- the- way, have you found out where they are?"
14126By- the- way-- the glass here seems to be at''Set Fair''?"
14126Ca n''t you go to sleep, you little whirlwind?--What''s to be done?
14126Can we go to the Lido?"
14126Can you deny that?"
14126Can you help me?"
14126Can you not persuade-- Kitty"--he looked up urgently--"to accept her offer?"
14126Can you stay for dinner?"
14126Cliffe?"
14126Cliffe?"
14126Come for a stroll before dinner?"
14126Conveyed by mademoiselle?
14126Could I lift a finger to harm a mother that has lost her child?
14126Could anything be more pathetic-- more touching?"
14126Could he without cruelty impose upon her such a daughter as Kitty Bristol?
14126Could she carry him off-- trouble Mary''s possession there and then?
14126Could she love no one, cling faithfully to no one?
14126Could she, must she face it?
14126Could you ever teach me how to behave?"
14126Did Kitty''s lips move?
14126Did he know, she asked him, that three more guests were coming that afternoon-- Mr. Darrell, Mr. Louis Harman,_ and_--Mr. Geoffrey Cliffe?
14126Did it all point merely to some mental state-- to the nervous effects of her illness and her loss?
14126Did not all intelligent people read and admire?
14126Did nothing-- did no one warn you-- if you were determined to keep such a secret from your husband, whom it most concerned?"
14126Did she also avoid him, shrink from speaking out her real mind to him?
14126Did you come out-- may I ask-- determined to talk nonsense?"
14126Did you mean to put me to a last test?--or did your hard little heart misgive you at the last moment?
14126Did you take your task seriously enough?--did you give Lady Kitty all the help you might?"
14126Do I?"
14126Do n''t you think her very pretty?"
14126Do you help him?"
14126Do you know him?"
14126Do you know that Pitt once wrote a speech in the library?"
14126Do you know why I was such a wild- cat at school?
14126Do you know, Kitty, how clever you are?"
14126Do you know, William, she was awake all last night thinking of her brother?"
14126Do you mind telling me-- have there been special difficulties just lately?"
14126Do you remember my hurrying you and Margaret into the garden?
14126Do you think-- he suffered?"
14126Does n''t all the world?"
14126Federigo must have shut the great gates by this time-- as she had bade him?
14126For if the creature to be saved had not possessed such a pair of eyes-- so slim a neck-- such a haunting and teasing personality-- what then?
14126For who that had known her could think of such a being, alone, in a world of strangers, without a peculiar dread and anguish?
14126Get a doctor''s certificate and go away?"
14126Had he been still writing during the summer for the newspaper which had sent him out?
14126Had he dealt with it as he ought-- made Kitty feel the gravity of it?
14126Had he had time to feel despair-- the thirst for life?
14126Had he really been in love with that French woman?
14126Had he really liked her, in those boy- and- girl days?
14126Had he seen and recognized her-- slipping away afterwards into the mouth of a side canal, or dropping behind in the darkness?
14126Had he, perhaps,_ doubted the soul?_ He groaned aloud.
14126Had he, then, no right to speak?
14126Had n''t you better put down the dog and come and be introduced to Mr. Rankine, who is to take you in to dinner?"
14126Had she any idea of the sort of fold towards which Warington-- at once Covenanter and man of the world-- was carrying his lost sheep?
14126Had she designs-- material designs-- on behalf of Miss Amy or Miss Caroline?
14126Had she indeed been making a foolish fuss about nothing?
14126Had she, indeed, been confiding all her home secrets to this stranger?
14126Had the French cousin with whom she rode stag- hunting ever seen her like this?
14126Had the passion any reference to her?--or was it merely part of the man''s nature, as inseparable from it as flame from the volcano?
14126Had there been a quarrel?
14126Had there not been rumors of his being wounded-- or attacked by fever?
14126Had they not both trifled with the mysterious test of life-- he no less than she?
14126Has she?"
14126Have you seen him?
14126Have you--""Did maman ask her to come to- night?"
14126He died last year-- at Naples, was n''t it?"
14126He tried to comfort her; but what comfort could there be?
14126His political future?
14126How can they?
14126How could she have cared so much?
14126How do you do?"
14126How do you know?
14126How much money did he offer you, Kitty?"
14126How old was he?"
14126How shall I get a copy?"
14126How was he to deal with it-- he, William Ashe, with his ironic temper and his easy standards?
14126How was it possible to take an important share in steering the ship of state, and to look after a giddy wife at the same time?
14126How would she ever maintain her faith against William-- William, who knew so much more than she?
14126How would the Turk theory of marriage, please, have done any better?
14126How''s it to be done?"
14126However--""However, what?"
14126I have hardly slept at all-- since we talked-- you remember?
14126I suppose it was the way I behaved to Lord Parham?"
14126I suppose she thought that for her boy''s sake she''d better keep a bad business to herself as much as possible--""Wensleydale-- Wensleydale?"
14126I suppose you promised them everything they wanted-- from the crown downward?"
14126I suppose-- the nearest you could get to buskins?
14126I wonder whether it''s hardship I''ve been thirsting for all my life-- even when I seemed such a selfish, luxurious little ape?
14126I''ll just tell you everything in a lump, and then that''ll do-- won''t it?
14126I''ve put myself in, and--""And Ashe?"
14126IX"Was n''t I expected?"
14126If I had only known we were to have had the pleasure of meeting you-- Do you know, I think she is looking decidedly better?"
14126If William had cast her off, was there still one man-- wild and bad, indeed, like herself, but poet and hero nevertheless-- who loved her?
14126If he had already turned homeward?
14126If not, then I shall be--""Kitty''s husband?"
14126If so, was it just?
14126If they were going sight- seeing, might he not come with them?"
14126If we did n''t like clothes, if we did n''t like being admired-- where would you be?"
14126If what she madly dreamed were true, had she herself been seen-- and recognized?
14126If you and I are taken by surprise, what will the public be?
14126If you support us in this-- as I gather you will-- this walk will have been worth a debate-- now wo n''t it?"
14126If you would just put me in communication?"
14126In the first place, would she not let his mother be of use to her?
14126Ineffable beauty, offering itself-- and in the human soul, the eternal human discord: what else makes the poignancy of art-- the passion of poetry?
14126Is it as good as you expected?"
14126Is it getting late?"
14126Is it libellous?"
14126Is it possible even that you have seen her before?"
14126Is it true?"
14126Is it, as all the sages have said, the pursuit of some eternal good, the identification of the self with it-- the''dying to live''?
14126Is n''t it delightful?"
14126Is n''t she a darling?
14126Is n''t she pretty?"
14126Is she a bore?
14126Is that a bargain, Blanchie?"
14126Is there any woman in England who would not do her best to be civil to him under the circumstances?"
14126Is there anything left of you?
14126It is all so singular,--isn''t it?"
14126It simplifies things so-- doesn''t it?"
14126It was merely the effect of a hot summer, surely, and of a constant nervous fatigue?
14126It was that fellow Cliffe with whom the scandal was last year, was n''t it?"
14126It was what I deserved, of course; only just at that moment-- If there is a God, William, how could He have let it happen so?"
14126It''s a humbugging world-- isn''t it?"
14126It''s wild, and it''s also-- I beg your pardon--""In bad taste?"
14126Kitty, have you no heart-- and no conscience?
14126Lady Parham came closer, apparently, and said, confidentially:"What on earth made that man marry her?
14126Lady Tranmore''s eyebrows went up, and she could not restrain the word:"Alone?"
14126Lady Tranmore, are you or are you not a Christian?"
14126Loraine?"
14126Margaret French, perhaps?
14126May I call?"
14126Might n''t a man dare-- on that guarantee?"
14126More fools they, do n''t you think?"
14126My dear mother, what''s the good of paying any attention to what people like Lady Grosville say of people like Kitty?
14126Nobody could blame you, could they?
14126Nobody knows--""Not even William?"
14126Now, shall we go down?"
14126Oh, Kitty, have I ever failed you?--have I ever been hard with you?--that you should betray our love like this?
14126Oh, by- the- way, what''s Mary going to be?
14126On the other hand, what favor did he want of anybody?
14126Or a beloved mistress, on whom the mourning lover could no longer bear to look-- the veil an emblem of undying and irremediable grief?
14126Or is it mere gossip?"
14126Or"--she made a quick step in pursuit of her aunt--"shall I come and sing, Aunt Lina?"
14126Otherwise, who would condescend to politics?
14126Ought Mr. Ashe to have left her, and left her apparently in anger?
14126Ought she to have opposed it more strongly?
14126Partly, no doubt, a childish love of excitement-- partly revenge?
14126Perhaps she''ll tell William-- or write home to mother?"
14126Political?"
14126Poor child!--it all came back to that-- poor child!--what was to be done with her?
14126Presently, however, she looked up, to ask, in a voice that tried for steadiness:"What do you mean to do-- exactly-- William?"
14126Query, will Cliffe take the leap to- night?
14126Shall I find you?"
14126Shall we call this afternoon?"
14126Shall we go down to lunch?"
14126Shall we go on?
14126She has the art to perfection-- hasn''t she?
14126She has told one or two other relations and friends, and--""And the relations and friends have told others?"
14126She laid an emphasis on the last name, which made Ashe say, carelessly:"You want to meet him so much?"
14126She made no answer, but she was conscious of a sudden movement-- was it of terror?
14126She was going back to town-- to the Holland House party--""Where she probably met mother?"
14126Should she hear, perhaps, in a week or two that he had been seized with some mysterious illness, like the witch- victims of old?
14126Should she tell William she had seen him?
14126Should she?
14126Since when do they take young girls to see that kind of thing in Paris?"
14126So to allow her to share your life again-- however humbly and intermittently-- is impossible?"
14126So you saw Mademoiselle Ricci?"
14126So you-- believe evil things-- of Madame d''Estrées?"
14126So, in this French world the child had found time for other things than hunting, and the flattery of her cousin Henri?
14126Some Alfred de Musset?"
14126Somehow Ashe winced before the wreck of the handkerchief; what need to ruin the pretty, fragile thing?
14126Stones which the builders of life reject-- do they still avenge themselves in the old way?
14126Surely it depends on something infinitely more primitive and fundamental than Christianity?--something out of which Christianity itself springs?
14126Surely it was incredible that she could in any way blame Mary for the incident at Verona?
14126Surely-- though as to this he had his qualms-- she could not have spoken with this abandonment to any other of her new English acquaintances?
14126Tell me!--did you ever hunt in France?"
14126That first night, at Madame d''Estrées'', was not her madness written in her eyes?
14126That man behaved to you like a villain?"
14126That would be a kind of separation, would n''t it?"
14126The worry was over; why think of it again?
14126Then for a few minutes her mind surrendered itself wholly to the question,"Will he be here?"
14126Then the optimist in him asked impatiently what was"the good of exaggerating the damned business"?
14126Then they both fell into reverie, from which Darrell emerged with the remark:"I gather that last year some very important person interfered?"
14126Then, after a pause--"Do you still wonder why I should have chosen her society?"
14126Then, as the butler departed--"How''s father, mother?"
14126Then, with another tone of voice--"How long, William, do you give the government?"
14126Then-- as to politics?
14126There was silence a moment, then Lord Grosville inquired:"What do you think of her?"
14126This is, in fact, your answer to me?"
14126Though my boy-- you remember my boy?
14126Though, of course, you must know--""That I flirted with him abominably all the afternoon?
14126Three years, was it, since the marriage?
14126Till, with a sudden movement, she turned to him and said, smiling, quite in her ordinary voice:"Do you know why I shall never be happy?
14126To whom?
14126Was I hard when we parted-- a month ago?
14126Was Lady Kitty amenable?"
14126Was Lady Tranmore there?"
14126Was he a villain to have taken advantage of it?
14126Was he ashamed to face her-- or angered by the reminder of her existence?
14126Was he in love with her?
14126Was he prepared now to make the statement with the same simplicity, the same whole- heartedness?
14126Was it Ashe''s fancy, or had she grown pale?
14126Was it a hard fight?"
14126Was it because she had no intellectual disinterestedness?
14126Was it because some one else had come between you?
14126Was it fancy, or was the gathering itself aware of the change which had passed over it?
14126Was it really recovery?
14126Was it rouge?--or was it the strong air?
14126Was it so that she went through her pious exercises?--by- the- way, she was, of course, a Catholic?--said her lessons, and went to her confessor?
14126Was it the mere advancement of his fortunes-- or something infinitely subtler and sweeter?
14126Was it the perception of this pity beside her that drove Kitty to solitude and flight?
14126Was it true, as she knew was said, that William had no high sense of honor, that he failed in delicacy and dignity?
14126Was it true, indeed, that his natural indolence could not rouse itself even to the defence of a young wife''s reputation?
14126Was n''t it an extraordinary, an indelicate thing to do?"
14126Was n''t it hellish of me?
14126Was n''t it like William?"
14126Was n''t that justification enough?
14126Was that astonishing young lady in truth identical with the pensive figure of the morning?
14126Was there a signal?
14126Was there any good to be got out of apologizing?
14126Was there, indeed, some unsound spot in Kitty?
14126Was your sister unkind to you?"
14126Well"--addressing herself to Cliffe--"are you come home to stay?"
14126Well, at any rate, let''s_ be_ cousins-- whether we are or no, shall we?"
14126Well, it was her own affair; but while there was a Greek play, or a Shakespeare sonnet, or even a Blue Book to read, who could expect him to listen?
14126Well, then, what would be his future?
14126Well, what can you expect of such a temperament-- such a race?
14126Well, what was he to do?
14126What are the men about, not to marry her?"
14126What consideration had Ashe shown for_ him_?
14126What could be done for this poor child in her strange and sinister position?
14126What course of action remained to me?
14126What did William do for her?
14126What did the child mean?
14126What did the girl''s expression mean?--what was she thinking of?
14126What did you think of your father?"
14126What do you do with yourself?"
14126What do you mean, Kitty?"
14126What do you mean, Polly?
14126What does that mean?"
14126What else could have induced him to burden himself with a woman on such an errand and at such a time?
14126What else, what better_ could_ she have asked of him?
14126What good can she be to him now?
14126What had Kitty, indeed, been doing with herself this six weeks?
14126What had he to do with her any more?
14126What had moved him to such an act?
14126What had old Lady Grosville been about?
14126What had she been plotting?
14126What had she been talking of all these hours to mademoiselle?
14126What harm?
14126What has Kitty got hold of now?"
14126What has he done with himself all these eight years?
14126What have I done?
14126What have you been doing with yourself?"
14126What have you been doing?--dancing-- riding, eh?"
14126What if he tempted Kitty to this escapade-- and the rough life killed her?
14126What if she tried religion?--recalled what she had been taught in the convent?--gave herself up to a director?
14126What other characteristics have they?"
14126What part, however, could he-- Darrell-- play in such a transaction?
14126What shall I say?
14126What sort of man ought she to marry-- what sort of man could safely take the risks of marrying her-- with that mother in the background?
14126What tragedy was passing between them?
14126What was he going to say?
14126What was he to say?
14126What was she to do with her half- sister, stranded and dishonored as she was?--How content or comfort her?--How live her own life beside her?
14126What was the net result of those years?
14126What was the real truth of Madame d''Estrées''situation?
14126What was there vile in that?
14126What was to be done with a temperament and a disposition like this?
14126What was wrong with her and with himself?
14126What was wrong with it?
14126What''ll you do?
14126What''s he got to do with other people''s quarrels?"
14126What''s wrong with her?"
14126What''s wrong with me?"
14126What-- what did you do-- last night?"
14126What_ reality_ has all that?
14126What_ really_ were her motives?
14126When did she ever see Kitty except with a jaundiced eye?
14126When did you come?"
14126When did you show it him?"
14126When it came could William save her?
14126Where are the castanets, I wonder?"
14126Where are you staying?
14126Where shall we go?"
14126Where shall we sit it out?"
14126Where was Geoffrey?
14126Where was Kitty?
14126Where was he?
14126Where was she, and with whom?
14126Where''s William?"
14126Whither were he and Kitty going?
14126Who knows?
14126Who was the lady?
14126Who_ had_ sent that message?
14126Why are we made so?
14126Why could he not deal with that fellow Cliffe as he deserved?
14126Why could n''t he have taken it with a laugh, and so turned the tables on Kitty?
14126Why did n''t his mother interfere?
14126Why did you hide from me?"
14126Why did you never come and talk to me this afternoon?
14126Why did you send her, William?
14126Why do you want to know, madame?"
14126Why had Cliffe been invited by these very respectable and straitlaced people the Grosvilles?
14126Why had she given it?
14126Why had she treated Lord Parham so?
14126Why have we people dining?
14126Why have you never spoken in the House, or written anything?"
14126Why not leave her to her French friends and relations?--or relinquish her to Lady Grosville?
14126Why not try the opposite?"
14126Why on earth should he?
14126Why should England be agreeable to you?"
14126Why should I spoil or hamper it?
14126Why should he take any particular thought for Ashe''s domestic peace, or Ashe''s public place?
14126Why should he wince so at the girl''s name?--in that hard mouth?
14126Why should n''t I?"
14126Why should n''t Kitty spend it?
14126Why should n''t Lady Kitty spend the summer with her in Scotland?
14126Why should n''t she?
14126Why should n''t the government make use of him?
14126Why should not Lady Kitty be left at Haggart when the next session began?
14126Why should one go to bed?
14126Why such a panic!--such a hurry to leave her!--when she was ill-- and sorry?
14126Why were n''t you at the embassy last night?"
14126Why, I was a mere school- boy then, and I had a passion for their society, and their books-- for their_ plays_--dare I confess it?"
14126Why, at any rate, was_ he_ in this chafing irritation and discomfort?
14126Why-- why should we speak at all?
14126Why?
14126Why?
14126Will madame have a_ thé complet_ as before?"
14126Will you bring disgrace on that little grave?
14126Will you dig between us the gulf which is irreparable, across which your hand and mine can never touch each other any more?
14126Will you kindly take a seat?"
14126William, do you know what that child has been doing?"
14126Would Lady Kitty meet him in the old garden at eleven- thirty, or would she not?
14126Would Lord Parham venture it?
14126Would he come home?
14126Would the cabinet be reconstructed without a dissolution, or must there be an appeal to the country?
14126XIV"What does Lady Kitty do with herself here?"
14126XVIII The following morning, early, a note was brought to Kitty from Madame d''Estrées:"Darling Kitty,--Will you join us to- night in an expedition?
14126Yet how could he himself go to young Helston?
14126Yet how induce her to go with any one else?
14126You can sympathize with these things?"
14126You confided in him?"
14126You do n''t imagine I should try and write like Thackeray, do you?
14126You have only_ one_ poet, have n''t you-- one living poet?
14126You have the letter?"
14126You have tried life together and what have you made of it?
14126You know her old friendship for us, William?
14126You know very well it would be much better for you if--""If what?"
14126You know, of course, she is close to you to- day-- just the other side the park-- with the Sowerbys?"
14126You promise?
14126You remember that poor cousin of mine who died at Tokio?
14126You see, you tell the public so much--""That you think you have the right to guess the rest?"
14126You think she looked ill?"
14126You went there, did n''t you?"
14126You wo n''t go to their dinner?
14126You would have preferred ankles_ au naturel_?
14126You would n''t like a great gawk to dress, would you?"
14126You''ll soon care--""More for politics than for you?
14126You''ll stop it, William?"
14126You''re not fit for this mincing, tripping London life-- nor am I?
14126You, I hear, are to be Diana?"
14126Your gardens, Ashe-- is there time?"
14126_ He''d_ never pay out his enemies, but he could n''t help enjoying it if some one else did-- could he?"
14126_ May_ he sit on my knee?
14126_ Panache_?
14126_ We_--you and I-- are a little bit cousins too-- aren''t we?
14126answer me-- I wo n''t tell tales-- now do you--_really and truly_--believe in God?"
14126are we governed by the proper people, or are we not?"
14126by his first marriage?
14126cried Ashe,"why ca n''t you behave like a reasonable woman?"
14126cried Ashe--"what are you about?"
14126dear Lady Grosville, why should n''t they?"
14126does he?"
14126he said to himself--"must you put a woman through her theological paces at this time of night?
14126he said, bending forward with a sudden alertness--"who is that lady?"
14126he said, in a low voice--"and with whom?"
14126he said, standing still-- then in the kind voice which endeared him to the servants--"I am afraid your brother is worse?"
14126how d''you do?"
14126it''s come?"
14126must we all talk like this at last?"...
14126my dear Lady Kitty, let Renan alone,"cried the Dean-- then with a change of tone--"but are you speaking truth-- or naughtiness?"
14126or was he merely the scribe carelessly binding on other men''s shoulders things grievous to be borne?
14126said Cliffe, raising his eyebrows--"do I want to know?"
14126said Kitty, impatiently--"what do you think?
14126said Kitty, still frowning--"eh, Blanche?"
14126save what work and"knowing more than the other fellows"might compel?
14126she asked--"or up- stairs?"
14126she gasped--"what note?"
14126she said, quietly--"or may I join your conversation?"
14126telegram to Worth?"
14126tell me--"--Lady Tranmore gripped Miss Lyster''s hand with some force--"are you going to marry him?"
14126what-- what will Lady Tranmore say?"
14126when did it come?"
14126where was she now?
14126you are interested in these things, Lady Kitty?
14126you mean Kitty?
35211Are you pleased?
35211Do not stay there,he shouts to us;"do you not see that they are going to bombard?"
35211Madame,he said, in a very small, beseeching voice, already half- asleep,"Madame, is anyone going to put us to bed?"
35211Oh indeed, is it with freaks like those that their dirty Kaiser invites us to breed for beauty? 35211 Were they friends of yours, my child, those two who are sleeping there?"
35211Where is your man wounded?
35211Would you not imagine it a site in the Sahara?
35211And the inn?
35211And where else, in what scene of desolation similar to this, have I noticed before other little placards such as these?
35211And who can be the simpletons whom they hope to deceive?
35211Are we not men and brothers?
35211Before what God?
35211But against shrapnel, which strikes downwards from above?
35211But as for our own soldiers, does not everyone love them already?
35211But how comes it that death is so frequent among these limpid streams, in a region where the air is so invigorating and so pure?
35211But how could I venture to contradict this Queen, born among them, like a beautiful, rare flower among stinging nettles and brambles?
35211But the plateau itself, where is it situated, in which country of the world?
35211But who would not be amused at that instinct which causes the majority of mankind to hunch their backs against hail of whatever description?
35211But why is there this heat, in which it is almost impossible to draw a natural breath, pouring out from those stoves?
35211By what arts have they been blinded, these nations; by what slanders, or by what bribe?
35211By what miracle does it still hold together?
35211By what wonderful organisation of the commissariat are these men housed and fed?
35211Can it be that there is artillery concealed almost everywhere throughout the forest?
35211Can it be that they still dare to go on living, these creatures of darkness?
35211Can this be the cemetery we are seeking?
35211Can you not see that they are still shelling us?
35211Civilised?
35211Could a king worthy of the name have acted in any other way?"
35211For instance, did he not lately offer as a pledge to that insignificant King of Greece his word of a Hohenzollern?
35211Girls from the nearest villages?
35211How can it ever be repaired?
35211How could they have unfurled their flag in that unparalleled conflict since in those days they still had none?
35211How is it that there is no atmosphere of sadness about this half- empty town?
35211Indeed how does it all still hold together?
35211Indeed what could better prepare them for the supreme sacrifice and for a death nobly met than these prayers, this music and even these flowers?
35211Is it a mother in skilfully fashioned draperies of crape?
35211Is it a mother in the homely weeds of a peasant woman?
35211Is it logically possible for anyone, not of their accursed race, to love the Germans?
35211Is it prehistoric, or merely very remote?
35211Is it to keep away robbers or to warn off shells?
35211It is surprising, is it not, in such health- giving air?
35211Lowly child of our peasantry, little ephemeral being, of what is he dreaming, if indeed he still dreams?
35211Moreover, who would refuse pardon to that gallant Serbian nation for the excesses they may have committed?
35211Ought I not, on the contrary, to set an example?"
35211Sons of peasants, of simple citizens, of aristocrats?
35211The exercise of two professions places me as an officer in a somewhat exceptional position, does it not?
35211The world will not breathe freely until these ultimate barbarians have been completely crushed; how is it that you have not felt this?
35211Those heavy- witted Boches, for whose benefit these apish antics were performed, were even they able to restrain their wild laughter?
35211Those savages yonder( who might perhaps arrive here on the morrow-- who could say?)
35211Through which door will she enter?
35211To- day who indeed remembers the scurrilities of the past?
35211Twenty short months ago, who would have imagined such scenes?
35211V ANOTHER SCENE AT THE BATTLE FRONT_ October, 1914._ Whereabouts, you may ask, did this come to pass?
35211What a long, black record of carelessness to- day; where is my head?
35211What can have fallen here from the sky, leaving such scars on the level surface?
35211What can this country be?
35211What else can be necessary to open your eyes?
35211What on earth can all this mean?
35211What, have we only come as far as this?
35211When they found themselves alone, how was it that they understood that if they would escape death they, too, must climb into that train?
35211Whence can they be coming to us, these bullets?
35211Who can say what little childish tale it may have been?
35211Who has undertaken this labour of love?
35211Who weeps for them?
35211Who were they?
35211Who would believe it?
35211Whosoever holds back to- day, will he not be ashamed to keep his place in the sun of victory and peace when it once more shines upon us?
35211Why should I stoop down?
35211Will it not, then, be a bad example in our dear country, where everyone is doing his duty so splendidly, if Pierre Loti is to serve no useful end?
35211Will they have time?
35211said my comrade, the English commandant,"and what about those excellent loaves over there standing up against the door?"
354Are n''t you ashamed of yourself,she demanded,"to stop just because you have been laughed at once?
354Are you going to pretend,he demanded,"that it was n''t a put- up job?"
354But how can I promise that?
354But why in Heaven''s name does any sensible Englishwoman want a lot of heathen to prostrate themselves as she goes up the street?
354But why?
354But,I insisted,"if you really believe in polygamy, why is it that some of your husbands have not taken more than one wife?"
354Do n''t you know what a right bower is?
354Do you want me to repeat my promise?
354Have n''t I done any good?
354Have you ever tried?
354Her sermon?
354Hev you got anything agin Miss Shaw?
354How did you get here so soon?
354How far up and down?
354How many of you,I then asked,"are polygamous wives?"
354Oh, did you?
354Oh,he said,"why should I go?
354Say, Miss Shaw,he yelled,"do n''t you want these children put out?"
354Suppose your husband should refuse to allow you to preach? 354 Then may I tell him?"
354Think she''s right, do you?
354To New York?
354Was n''t he very much surprised,demanded Miss Anthony, with growing interest,"to discover that he was not dead?"
354Well,I said,"ca n''t you put your finger on that?"
354What d''ye mean?
354What has happened, Anna?
354What must they think of me?
354What''s that?
354What''s the matter with you?
354What?
354When your aura goes visiting in the other world,she asked, curiously,"does it ever meet your old friend Charles Bradlaugh?"
354Why should they mob me?
354Why, did n''t you whistle before her?
354Why, in that case,she said, cheerfully,"you''ll have to give us two boxes, wo n''t you?"
354Will you agree to arrest the men only?
354Would n''t I?
354Would you like to have a son of yours go to Buffalo Bill''s Wild West Show on Sunday?
354You are proud of your family, are you not?
354You are proud of your great line?
354You think you know me, do n''t you?
354You''re not saying that merely to please me?
354A few of them could sing, and we began with a Moody and Sankey hymn or two and the appealing ditty,"Where is my wandering boy to- night?"
354And do n''t you see how ill she is?
354And he demanded, triumphantly,"How is it possible for you to be the husband of a wife?"
354And she added, scornfully,"What event have you got to reckon from?"
354Anthony?"
354But I added:"I hear you said I have n''t done a thing in seven years that any one can lay a finger on?"
354Could she not select one more person, at least, to share the secret and act with me?
354Do you all believe in it?"
354Do you think I want to talk to you?"
354Has that been charged against any other minister here?"
354How can I preach to any one?"
354I asked,"Can the Ethiopian change his spots or the leopard his skin?"
354I had worked my way in the Northwest; why could I not work my way in Boston?
354I was touched by this artless compliment, and anxious to know how I had won it, so I asked,"What did I say that the boys liked?"
354In the old days, when we nominated a candidate we asked,''Can he hold the saloon vote?''
354Is it the desire of suffragists to force upon us the social equality of black and white women?
354Is that it?"
354Livermore''s husband''?"
354Moreover, if it is unnatural, why did Jesus send a woman out as the first preacher?"
354Now we ask,''Can he hold the women''s vote?''
354One day at luncheon Miss Thomas asked me, casually:"By the way, how do you raise the money to carry on your work?"
354Shall I bring some books and read to you?"
354She listened to his words with surprise, and then whispered to"Aunt Susan":"How CAN he say that?
354So I arose and said:"I would like to ask how many men there are in the audience who intend to vote for the amendment to- morrow?"
354Was there, perhaps, some lack in me and in my courage?
354What had I said to give him such an impression?
354What have you got there?"
354What then?"
354What was I doing in that rough country, he demanded, and why was I alone with him in those black woods at night?
354What was he doing in the other world?"
354What would you do to me if I came on board your ship and started a mutiny in your crew, or tried to give you orders?"
354What, then, were we to do?
354When this announcement had produced its full effect, he straightened up in his chair and asked, solemnly,"Will ye have me?"
354When will men learn that what we ask is not praise, but justice?"
354Where DID you get that subject?
354Who knows?
354Why should we not talk all night?
354Why, then, do n''t they deserve as much credit for his election as the women?"
36292Are them your mules? 36292 Do you remember how Lieutenant Baxter and Sergeant Dobbs got those seventy- sevens by outflanking and surprising them?"
36292Exercise, is it, sir? 36292 Get back in time all right?"
36292My lord, Major, why are n''t you the Seventh Field Artillery?
36292Qui est la?
36292See your family?
36292Sergeant Murphy?
36292Sir,asked Johnson,"when do we hit''em?"
36292Sor- r?
36292What are you doing here? 36292 What is it, Bill?"
36292What is it, sergeant, are n''t you getting enough exercise?
36292What was it you said?
36292When, sir?
36292Why not try Roosevelt?
36292Why should you go rather than me?
36292After Donovan had gone, the Frenchman remarked to me,"Buffalo is very wild, is it not?"
36292After talking for a half an hour he would ask confidentially,"Major, what is a switch line?"
36292An officer who talked with these men on their return said that conversations ran much like this:"Cipiloni, have a fine time on your leave?"
36292And what did ye look, they should compass?
36292Can you get the food forward to them?
36292Can you get the food to them hot?
36292Did n''t I tell you to stay with the kitchens?"
36292Hannibal is not there?
36292He challenged,"Who is there?"
36292He described to me on his return how on the way down all the men would talk about was:"Do you remember how we got that machine- gun nest?
36292He explained,"But it is the place where you hunt that great animal, is it not?"
36292How did they impress each other?
36292How heavy is the gassing to be?
36292How quickly will the wind carry it away?
36292I bowed to the girdle and said,"Will they come in?"
36292I knew him to be a good sort and said to him,"What is the matter, how did this come about?"
36292I said to him,"Captain, where is your company?"
36292I said,"Had n''t you better go to the first aid, sergeant?"
36292Lieutenant Van, my supply officer, would reply from the other side,"Hello, hello, is this the King of Essex talking?"
36292Now that the work of fighting was over, uppermost in everyone''s mind was the thought,"When do we get home?"
36292One lieutenant called out to me,"How far have you gone?"
36292One man asked in all solemnity once,"Does blood rust steel more than water?"
36292The Yankee in the British Zone By Captain Ewen C. MacVeagh and Lieutenant Lee D. Brown How did Tommy Atkins and the Yank get on?
36292The conversation would be something like this:"What is light artillery?"
36292The men got so they thought a good deal of it, and frequently when marching through towns the troops would call out,"How about that band?"
36292The question now is, what''s up?
36292The question was so intelligent and so well thought out that the lieutenant said to him:"What were you before the war?"
36292Warcraft learned in a breath, Knowledge unto occasion At the first far view of death?"
36292Well, what do you mean by leaving them loose by the road?
36292What did they learn about each other?
36292What has happened?
36292What is it?
36292Where are you going with those mules?"
35017A what?
35017And do you men think for one single moment,cried the Landlady,"that all this would be honest business?"
35017And do you suppose the President could find any self- respecting American in or out of jail who would be willing to wear such a costume as that?
35017And for what purpose, pray?
35017And have women?
35017And is not a man''s word to be taken as a guarantee of the accuracy of his return?
35017And then?
35017And then?
35017And where do I come in?
35017And you really think such brutal methods would work, do you?
35017Anne Hathaway?
35017As a transient?
35017Bully good title for a story that--''Psychling with a Psychrobe''--eh? 35017 But how are you going to get the facts over to Dickens and Thackeray?"
35017But what''s this new society going to do?
35017Ca n''t you gentlemen imagine, for instance, what those two men could do with little old New York as it is to- day? 35017 Do n''t I get any of these plums of prosperity your Telephonic Aid Society is to place within the reach of all?"
35017Do you think a household of that sort would be satisfied with you?
35017Doctors being engaged in Inter- State Commerce--"Doctors? 35017 Editor-- How does Champ Clark stand on this thing?
35017Editor-- Then I am to understand just what, Mr. President? 35017 Him?"
35017How about women getting crushed?
35017How are your ribs--"Know better?
35017How was I to know any better? 35017 I''ve known many a stronger man than you made a fool of--""What of it?"
35017If you want a good lawyer, what''s the matter with me?
35017Is it possible for the Idiot to have a headache, Doctor?
35017Me-- Everybody pulling it, I suppose? 35017 Oh, well, what of it?"
35017Oh, well-- what of it?
35017Perquisites?
35017Ready to trot in double harness?
35017Reddymun-- Hurt? 35017 Reddymun-- Send him around, will you?
35017Reddymun-- What''s that? 35017 Reddymun-- When?
35017Reddymun-- Who did it? 35017 Sarcasm?"
35017Sike what s?
35017Strictly up- to- date and reliable?
35017That''s rather promiscuous, is n''t it?
35017Then what?
35017Unarmed?
35017Well, are n''t they?
35017What are they, coupon bonds?
35017What do you suppose the attendant would be doing all this time? 35017 What has awakened this sudden interest of yours in things psychic?"
35017What of it? 35017 What was that?"
35017What would you carry, a Gatling gun?
35017What, again?
35017What?
35017Who''s Binks?
35017Why not devote that massive brain of yours to the working out of the idea?
35017Why, Doctor,grinned the Idiot,"why ask me to steal candy from a baby?
35017Why, my dear fellow, I was n''t sarcastic, was I? 35017 You call yourselves the stronger sex, and plume yourselves on your superior physical endurance, and yet when it comes to a test, where are you?"
35017You could afford to write real poetry all the time, instead of only half the time, eh, old man?
35017You do n''t mean to say that the law so provides, do you?
35017You do n''t really think, do you, that we have any women Immortals?
35017You think the public would stand for that, do you?
350171 eighteen- karat psychrobes among your patients that you could introduce me to?
35017Acting in that capacity I would ring up Mr. John D. Reddymun, and you''d hear something like this:"Me-- Hello, Reddy-- is this you?
35017And you had to go through it all over again to escape finally?"
35017But suppose they do sue you?
35017Do you approve of these sanitariums, Doctor?"
35017Do you suppose for one minute that I am going to get well under those circumstances?"
35017Got any more of that new Freedom stuff on hand?
35017He marries the little songbird, and then what happens?"
35017How about that, Doctor?
35017How does the law of supply and demand work in cases of that kind, Doctor Squills?"
35017How''s the leg this morning?
35017I ask the question-- what''s the answer?"
35017Idiot, when the Hyperion man does n''t get the Ambassadorship, wo n''t he sue me to recover?"
35017Idiot, you do n''t mean to insinuate that there is graft in ill health, just as there is in everything else, do you?"
35017Idiot,"cried Mrs. Pedagog, as the Idiot entered the breakfast room in a very much disheveled condition,"what on earth has happened to you?
35017Idiot?
35017If I want a good lawyer, Brudder Bones, what IS the matter with you?
35017If I want a good lawyer, what is the matter with you?
35017Interstate Commerce?"
35017Pedagog?"
35017What are they to us?"
35017What are you, anyhow, Mr. Bib, but the ultimate result of a highly variegated international complication in the matter of ancestry?
35017What is more simple, then, than that a composite people should go in for a composite architecture to express themselves in marble, stone, and brick?
35017What on earth did she ever produce?"
35017What?"
35017While eating those cakes the victim speculates on that old problem, Is Suicide a Sin?
35017Who are you?
35017Who''s this?
35017Why do n''t you give us a constructive notion once in awhile?"
35017Would that be done by the Ambassadors themselves, or would the President have to call a special session of Congress to tackle the job?"
35017You do n''t really mean to tell me that I have got to give a statement of my receipts to some snoopy- nosed old government official, do you?"
35017You never heard of a magazine recovering anything from a poet, did you?
35017me?
35576And who is that?
35576Are you so sure, Edward, that she will be a sovereign?
35576But could it perhaps be unpacked?
35576But is it not the day of the military review on Hounslow Heath?
35576But what of our English and Egyptian garrisons in the Soudan?
35576But which of us shall be Sunday?
35576But would the Emperor Alexander be pleased?
35576Can you bear to play on the piano yet?
35576Can you not save him?
35576Did ever you see a man so fond of his child as the Duke?
35576Did you ever see such bright blue eyes? 35576 Do the English like him?
35576Do you say that?
35576Do you think that my people will be pleased?
35576Does anyone know exactly what Peel wants,queried another,"and how many ladies he demands shall be removed?"
35576Does n''t she look like a queen?
35576Does your doll have a red dress?
35576Have n''t you any playroom?
35576Have n''t you any sister FÃ © odore?
35576Have you any means of speaking to these chaps?
35576Have you not heard the news from London? 35576 Have you written any new songs?
35576I have no small talk,he said,"and Peel has no manners?"
35576I''ll be good, mamma,the little girl promised,"but wo n''t you please give me the box first?"
35576If he is to be godfather, ought she not to be named for him?
35576Is it as your Majesty would have it?
35576Is it right for me to neglect my duties in Bavaria?
35576Is it the will of your Majesty that the word''obey''be omitted from the promise that you make to the Prince?
35576Is that the way every father behaves with his first baby?
35576Is there another ward that I have not visited?
35576It would give me the greatest pleasure,she wrote,"if you would come over for the wedding in our village church, but I fear you wo n''t do that?
35576Should you like to hear her play?
35576They ask many questions,he replied,"but perhaps the one I hear oftenest is,''Is your Queen very rich?''
35576To do?
35576What do the people in the wilderness ask you?
35576What has she to do,grumbled one,"but to wear handsome clothes, live in a palace, and bow to people when she drives out?"
35576What is her name?
35576What shall it be?
35576What will the Princess do for you?
35576What''s that thing ye''ve got on?
35576Will the Duchess go back to her own land, think you?
35576Will you give me those pretty flowers?
35576Will you not play something for me?
35576With what message does he come?
35576Wo n''t you allow me to ride down the line,he asked the Queen,"so I can see my old comrades?"
35576Wo n''t you let me have her?
35576Yes,replied the Duke,"and where else should a soldier''s daughter be but at a review?
35576You ought to sing one for him?
35576You understand, and you will wait?
35576A little later, he wrote again of his hope that he should soon hear the children say,"Do you know, papa, that the Baron is in his room below?"
35576Are n''t they naughty?"
35576But what do you want, Alix?"
35576Does your Captain Wilkes do this on his own responsibility or on that of your government?"
35576Does yours have a bonnet?"
35576Ernie asked,''Why ca n''t we all die together?
35576Everyone was longing to do something for her, but what should it be?
35576For half a century England had been ruled by elderly men; how would it fare in the hands of a young girl?
35576Have n''t you any ship or any doll- house?"
35576He could not have held a review to save his-- What''s that?"
35576He read them the Queen''s letter, and asked,"What shall we advise?"
35576He was hardly over the threshold on his return before he called,"Where''s my daughter?
35576If I should be proclaimed king, would you and your troop follow me through London?"
35576If she only asked"Where were you wounded?"
35576One day he asked the Duchess:"Was the Princess good while she was in the nursery?"
35576Seven years earlier, she had said,"Trials we must have, but what are they, if we are together?"
35576Shall I neglect Charles to care for Drina''s interest?"
35576She wrote to Tennyson,"Was there ever a more terrible contrast, a wedding with bright hopes turned into a funeral?"
35576Should you like to hear her?"
35576The pursuivant entered, and the Lord Mayor demanded:"With what message do you come to the gates of the city of Dublin?"
35576The story is told of the young girl''s taking some dainty from one of the pockets of her jacket and asking,"Ca n''t he eat this?"
35576There is a story that the Queen had promised the little Beatrice a present, and that when she asked,"What shall it be?"
35576There is a story that when she once went to visit the Duchess of Clarence, her aunt asked:"Now, Victoria, what should you like to do?
35576What will be the greatest treat I can give you?"
35576When she was saying farewell at the close of the three- days''visit, he asked,"What have you enjoyed most during your visit?"
35576When the reading of the paper was finished, the Lord President asked:"Have we your Majesty''s permission to publish this declaration?"
35576Where''s my queen?"
35576Will he be popular?"
35576Wo n''t you change them first?
35576Would not England, then, help the seceders, put an end to the war, and have all the cotton that her mills wished to use?
35576You have put down''Uncle King''as reigning, and you have written''Uncle William''as the heir to the throne, but who should follow him?"
35576and when I say''Yes,''they ask,''How rich is she?
35576begged Mendelssohn of the Prince, and added,"so I can boast about it in Germany?"
35576how many cows does she own?''"
35576questioned the Duchess;"to give up the regency of Leiningen?
35953Am I not their spiritual father?
35953And who is Jesus Christ?
35953But how will you get the money?
35953But who will serve?
35953Can I believe you?
35953Come,he said,"did he not allow that after all I was a good priest?
35953Did not I tell you?
35953Do you accept outwardly and in the sincerity of your heart what she commands in the name of Christ? 35953 Do you never go to bed, Don Bepi?"
35953Do you really think,continued the canon,"that I can manufacture banknotes?"
35953Do you remember the silver one which was always going to the pawnbroker at Tombolo?
35953Does God declare Himself distinct from us? 35953 He_ is_ ill,"interposed Rosina vehemently,"but what can you expect?
35953How old is he?
35953In making his decision, has not the pope appealed from the French parliament to the French people?
35953Is it not rather a large sum?
35953May we not hope that your Holiness will do for the world what you have already done for Venice?
35953Not even a couple of eggs?
35953Really?
35953Well?
35953Well?
35953What are you thinking of?
35953What can I do for the Church?
35953What can I do for you?
35953What can we do for you in return?
35953What is the matter?
35953What kind of a pope will he be?
35953What name will you take?
35953What of that? 35953 What of that?"
35953What was the bishop thinking of,they asked one another when Mass was over,"to leave a man like that buried all these years at a place like Tombolo?"
35953Where is Don Giovanni?
35953Where is your trust in God''s Providence?
35953Who is that delightful priest?
35953Who is to preach?
35953Whom do you receive in holy communion?
35953Why do you want to be cured?
35953Why not?
35953Why should n''t he teach the alphabet?
35953Yes or no, do you believe in the divine authority of the Church?
35953You think so?
35953Your Eminence is an Italian archbishop?
35953And did He not choose from their ranks the Apostles who were to carry His message throughout the world?
35953Antony?"
35953Did he ask for the strength of the warrior and the humility of the friar, to be loving like the Christ and pure like His Mother?
35953Do you consent to obey her?
35953Nothing, it was answered, had been laid down as to the necessary dispositions for receiving communion; and how were they to know that they had them?
35953One truth is at stake: was the Church founded by our Lord Jesus Christ or not?
35953Some day he will wear the mitre-- of that I am certain-- and afterwards?
35953The child loves Jesus Christ; it wishes to have Him; why, then, not give Him to the child?
35953The next step was obviously the seminary; but who was to pay the expenses?
35953To preach love was henceforward to be his mission, for what is devotion to the Sacred Heart but love of the love of Christ?
35953Was conciliation possible?
35953Was it not the"man in the street"for whom our Saviour came?
35953Were not the crowds who followed Him mostly composed of"men in the street"?
35953What really happened?
35953What was to be done?
35953What_ is_ Modernism?
35953Who knows?"
35953Will you do your best?"
35953Would a child of seven understand the reverence due to the Sacrament?
35953Would it not then be better for the world, not only to allow her freely to fulfil her mission, but to help her to do so?
35953You hear?
35953and is it not the teaching of Jesus Christ again that inspires in proud man the lowliness of mind which is the origin of all true glory?
35953he exclaimed, smiling,"do you imagine that a prelate of my rank does not know how to serve Mass?
35953he would ask in his cheery way--"another bad night?"
35953pleaded the people,"who knows if you will ever come back?"
35953suggested the almoner respectfully,"considering the actual state of things?"
35953was the answer,"can you not trust your bishop?"
35953who gave their lives for the truth, and won for Great Britain her title of the Island of Saints?"
28490Are there any corrections?
28490Of course I should,you reply,"but what can I do about it?
28490Will the Secretary call the roll? 28490 Will the Secretary read the minutes of the last meeting?"
28490Will the Treasurer give her report?
28490Will the meeting please come to order?
28490( 4) Officer addresses candidate in low tone:"What does your honor mean?"
284901. Who is responsible for the cleaning of the streets?
284907. Who makes the law for you in your State?
28490Adjournment:"Will some one move that the meeting be adjourned?"
28490After the old business has been attended to, the Chairman calls for new business, saying,"Is there any new business to be discussed?"
28490And if they have not learned to manage their own money sensibly, how can they expect to manage other people''s?
28490And the bar of sun- warmed shingle where a man may bask and dream To the click of shod canoe- poles round the bend?
28490And the middle finger, from the end to the knuckle on the back of the hand?
28490And will the Treasurer collect the dues?"
28490Answered correctly the following questions: How do you care for your teeth properly?...............
28490Any colds during period?..............................
28490Are luncheons served in your school free, or at low cost?
28490Are there any laws for your bakeries?
28490Are there plenty of playgrounds, so that the children are off the streets?
28490Are there school clinics for eyes and teeth?
28490Are they big enough?
28490Are they in the right place?
28490Are you prepared to pay this back in generous service, when and where you can?"
28490Are you ready for the question?"
28490At what age may a child be given solid food with safety?
28490At what season of the year is it best to prepare the soil?
28490At what time of day is it best to pick flowers and vegetables?
28490Brown?"
28490Bulbs and tubers?
28490But do you know where it comes from?
28490But, you may say, as yet, I am too young to vote, anyway; what can I do?
28490Can one afford to carry so much water from home when there is plenty of it at camp?
28490Can the shape of a felt or straw hat be materially changed?
28490Can time be saved by doing it in a better way?
28490Can we wonder that she is known as the Joan of Arc of Roumania?
28490Can you discover a plant whose seeds are carried by water?
28490Can you discover any place where they can be traced back in their native ledge?
28490Can you do what you please?
28490Can you find a tree that has naked buds?
28490Can you notice any peculiarity in the Rabbit''s track?
28490Can you step out after school and have a couple of hours on a well kept tennis court?
28490Can you tell what the woodchuck does in midwinter and on what day?
28490Can you tell what walked around your tent on the thirtieth night of your camp- out?
28490Can you tell why the rabbit puts his hind feet down ahead of his front ones as he runs?
28490Can you tell why the squirrel buries every other nut and who it was that planted those shag- barks along the fence?
28490Constipation during period?...........................
28490Could you get along without it?
28490Did you ever notice how few people know how to tie bundles and packages securely and neatly?
28490Did you ever stop to think that no matter how much money a man may earn, the women of the family generally have the spending of most of it?
28490Did you plan for one in your house?
28490Do all seeds germinate?
28490Do the Hummingbirds cross- pollinate some flowers?
28490Do these boulders increase or decrease in size as we go south over the glaciated area?
28490Do these plants produce nectar?
28490Do you agree to this?"
28490Do you know that racing stream With the raw, right- angled log- jam at the end?
28490Do you know the blackened timber?
28490Do you know the umbrella that stands up spread to show that there is a restaurant in the cellar?
28490Do you know the vine that climbs above the sedge to whisper on the wind"There are cocoanuts in my basement"?
28490Do you know the wonderful medicine that is in the sky?
28490Do you realize that the Girl Scout Organization credits you with a good foundation and trusts to you to continue to build upon it intelligently?"
28490Do you see that if you make up your mind now about the village improvements you want, you can vote for them later and get them?
28490Do you see what a wonderful power an intelligent woman can be in the community she lives in?
28490Do you think you can apply your knowledge, if the occasion should arise?"
28490Does either parent care for the young after they are hatched?
28490Does either parents guard them?
28490Does your community control the marketing of milk to any degree?
28490Dry or wet method used?
28490Duncan?"
28490During what month should seed be sown in the ground in your locality?
28490Has the fish any natural weapons of defense?
28490Has your library one?
28490Have you ever made a blanket roll, put it across your shoulder, hiked through the woods or over the hills for a sleep in the open?
28490Have you ever seen a forest fire?
28490Have you learned to know the pale villain of the open woods-- the deadly amanita, for whose fearful poison no remedy is known?
28490Have you learned to overcome the poison ivy that was once so feared-- now so lightly held by those who know?
28490Have you proved the balsam fir in all its fourfold gifts-- as Christmas tree, as healing balm, as consecrated bed, as wood of friction fire?
28490Have you seen it?
28490Herbaceous plants, annuals, perennials and biennials?
28490How about the little knots that held the rope in place-- did you ever think of them?
28490How and why should milk be strained and cooled before being bottled or canned?
28490How are Girl Scouts particularly fitted to help in this?
28490How are a ringer and a mangle used?
28490How are canned goods best stored?
28490How are flannels washed?
28490How are mosquitoes dangerous?
28490How are salads kept crisp?
28490How are starfish destroyed?
28490How are the Hickory- nuts and Walnuts scattered?
28490How are the bed and room prepared?
28490How are the eyes rested?
28490How are they built?
28490How can I save labor?
28490How can a baby be encouraged to move itself and take exercise?
28490How can a person not a citizen become a citizen?
28490How can anyone tell how you vote?
28490How can both be kept away?
28490How can jars be tested within twenty- four hours after filling?
28490How can they be distinguished?
28490How can you care for your feet on a hike so that they will not become blistered or over- tired?
28490How can you cook without a fire?
28490How can you distinguish Poison Ivy from Virginia Creeper?
28490How can you help make your Government better?
28490How can you help to keep your neighborhood clean?
28490How can you rest them?.................................
28490How can you soften hard water?
28490How could Girl Scouts assist such a nurse?
28490How could it have happened?"
28490How did it ever effect you?
28490How do the flower- buds of Flowering Dogwood differ from the leaf- buds?
28490How do the various plants scatter their seeds?
28490How do they live?
28490How do you care for feet on a hike?....................
28490How does the flight of a Bat differ from that of a Flying Squirrel?
28490How does the lack of them affect the grown people of a town, in the end?
28490How fast does light travel?
28490How is a child prepared for bed?
28490How is cream separated from milk?
28490How is it best done?
28490How is it kept clean?
28490How is it made?
28490How is it made?
28490How is it prepared for use?
28490How is starch made?
28490How is straw braid for hats sold?
28490How is the head measured for ascertaining the head size for a hat?
28490How is the respect due the American Flag expressed?
28490How long does it take to do it?
28490How made?
28490How many cupfuls make a quart?
28490How many rooms must you have?
28490How many tablespoonfuls to a cup?
28490How may fire be prevented, and what should a Scout do in case of fire?
28490How may mosquitoes be exterminated?
28490How may the fly be exterminated?
28490How may they be eliminated?
28490How much responsibility in this line has your family?
28490How much work is to be done?
28490How much would it cost to furnish the house for which you have drawn the plans: to furnish the kitchen, the living room, the bedrooms?
28490How often should a child under one year be fed?
28490How should all utensils and jars, glasses, rubbers, be prepared before using?
28490How should rugs, mattresses, pillows, upholstered furniture, paper walls, and windows be cleaned?
28490How should the bath be given to a little baby?
28490How should they be kept in the house?
28490How should winter clothes and blankets be stored during the summer?
28490How will it be ventilated?
28490How will the house be lighted?
28490How will water be furnished?
28490How will you care for these things in the house?
28490How would it benefit your community if there were?
28490If growth is shown what rate is this per month?.......
28490If he can not have this food, what can take its place, and how should it be given?
28490If it is necessary to continue to care for a child in spite of your cold?
28490If none of these things are to be found, or not enough of them, would n''t you like to have them?
28490If not air tight what should be done?
28490If not, why not?
28490If so, what are they?
28490If so, why?
28490If the Girl Scouts could save such wonderful sums as we know they did in war, why can they not keep this up in peace?
28490If the motion is not seconded at once, the Chairman says:"Will anyone second the motion?"
28490If there is a public park in or near the town; what privileges does it offer, especially for young people?
28490If there is more than one method of exposing a film what determines the method to be used?
28490If there is no law what will you do with them and why?
28490If three families are willing to live in three rooms in your town, may they do so?
28490If you enroll in a political party must you vote the straight ticket of that party?
28490In planning a house and choosing a site for it what things should be considered?
28490In what plants is the pollen scattered by the wind?
28490In what way is the fish protectively colored?
28490Is it well taken care of?
28490Is its work followed up in the home?
28490Is moistening the surface of the ground sufficient?
28490Is n''t it nearly four and one- half inches or one- eighth of a yard?
28490Is there a district nurse?
28490Is there a good golf course reasonably near, with convenient trolley service?
28490Is there a public clinic?
28490Is there a public hospital in your town?
28490Is there a public laboratory?
28490Is there a school nurse?
28490Is there any medical inspection in your schools?
28490Is there any place in your town where young or ignorant mothers can ask advice and instruction in the care of infants?
28490Is there any practical use for garbage?
28490Is there anything to prevent your erecting a building of any size and material you wish in any place?
28490Isolated?
28490It is as follows: Two shots in rapid succession, an interval of five seconds by the watch, then one shot; this means,"where are you?"
28490Keep saying to yourself:"If this knife slips, can it cut my fingers?"
28490Look at your thumb-- how long is it from the end to the first joint?
28490Of what diseases should the local authorities be notified?
28490Of what is milk composed?
28490Officer:"Will you on your honor, try: To do your duty to God and to your Country; to help other people at all times; to obey the Scout Laws?"
28490Official:"What badges does Scout---- offer?"
28490On the other hand, if she is going to spend the week out, why not be as comfortable as possible?
28490One nap?
28490Or have you pulled a sled up a long hill over and over again for the sake of the slide down?
28490Or the sea- trout''s jumping crazy for the fly?
28490Posted?
28490Reported?
28490SECTION IV WHO ARE THE SCOUTS?
28490Save money?
28490Save time?
28490Should a child be picked up or fed every time he cries?
28490Should a shutter be operated slowly?
28490Should table linen be starched?
28490So also on the plains, the old folks would ask the children at night,"Can you see the papoose on the old Squaw''s back?"
28490Standard?...........................................
28490State how the walls and floors will be finished and why?
28490TWELVE SECRETS OF THE WOODS Do you know the twelve secrets of the woods?
28490Teaspoonfuls to a tablespoon?
28490The answer given at once and exactly the same means"Here I am; what do you want?"
28490The buds of what tree are protected by a natural varnish?
28490The point is how can we learn the trick?
28490To an older child?
28490To bake?
28490To broil?
28490Under what conditions do germs thrive and vermin infest?
28490Up to what age should a child have two naps a day?
28490WHO ARE THE SCOUTS?
28490WHY"GUIDES"?
28490Weight in pounds at beginning of period............... Standard weight for height and age?...................
28490Well patronized?
28490What are milk stations?
28490What are points to remember about light for work?......
28490What are some necessary characteristics of a game- fish?
28490What are some of the results of neglecting to do these things?
28490What are tender and hardy plants?
28490What are the Scout Promise and the Scout Laws?
28490What are the Scout Slogan and the Scout Motto?
28490What are the dangers of moving about or standing in a boat?
28490What are the duties of a caller, dinner or party guest as concerns time of arrival, length of stay and leaving?
28490What are the duties of a hostess when entertaining a house guest for a few days or more?
28490What are the duties of the President of the United States and of each of his Cabinet?
28490What are the essential things to be considered when selecting vegetables to be canned, fruit to be preserved or made into jelly, jam or marmalade?
28490What are the general rules for preserving fruit?
28490What are the general rules for prevention and treatment of tuberculosis?
28490What are the important things to remember in lifting and handling children?
28490What are the laws concerning the public collection and disposal of garbage?
28490What are the laws of your State concerning forest conservation?
28490What are the most necessary things to be considered when caring for a child under three years of age?
28490What are the necessary things to be considered before starting a garden?
28490What are the other names for living and non- living objects?
28490What are the points to remember about light for work?
28490What are the principal qualifications for the vote in your State?
28490What are the principal things to remember concerning the ingredients and preparation of this food, and the care of utensils?
28490What are the regulations as to the storage and protection of meat in local markets?
28490What are the results of failing to take the proper camera distance, having improper light and allowing the camera to move?
28490What are the results of under exposure and over exposure?
28490What are the rules for feeding and watering a horse, and how do these vary according to conditions?
28490What are the rules for feeding, watering and pasturing cows?
28490What are the rules for sowing seed as regards depth?
28490What are the rules of the road as to turning out?
28490What are the sixteen points of the compass?
28490What are the sky and water conditions that denote the approach of the latter?
28490What are the words of the first and last stanza of The Star- Spangled Banner?
28490What are your height and weight, and how do they compare with the standard?
28490What care should be given cows to keep them in perfect condition?
28490What care should be given garden tools?
28490What causes an eclipse?
28490What causes buildings in a picture to look as if they were falling?
28490What clothes should be boiled to make them clean?
28490What constitutes a good picture?
28490What constitutes a swarm of bees?
28490What devices are there among the Orchids to bring about cross- pollination?
28490What difference will it make?
28490What diseases must be guarded against in cows?
28490What diseases must be quarantined?
28490What do you consider the main points to remember about Health?
28490What does it mean then?
28490What does it mean to boil a food?
28490What does it mean to cultivate?
28490What does it mean to make a portage?
28490What does it mean to thin out and to transplant?
28490What does it mean to"trim ship?"
28490What does the fish feed upon?
28490What elements are needed to clean soiled clothes?
28490What exposure is best for the garden?
28490What feed is best for cows?
28490What foods are best and how should they be prepared?
28490What governs the tide?
28490What implements are used for grooming a horse?
28490What invertebrate was eaten by the Indians and its shell used in making wampum?
28490What is a calm?
28490What is a comet, a shooting star, a sun spot?
28490What is a constellation?
28490What is a film?
28490What is a morning star?
28490What is a negative?
28490What is a news item?
28490What is a squall?
28490What is a"bread and butter"letter?
28490What is an editorial?
28490What is an enlargement?
28490What is an evening star?
28490What is blueing?
28490What is essential regarding the heat?
28490What is felt and how is it made into hats?
28490What is meant by a secret ballot?
28490What is meant by low and high voltage in electric current?
28490What is meant by tacking?
28490What is meant by the Solar System?
28490What is meant by"a hand made hat?"
28490What is soap powder?
28490What is soap?
28490What is straw and how is it prepared for millinery purposes?
28490What is that which the breeze, o''er the towering steep, As it fitfully blows, now conceals, now discloses?
28490What is the Aurora Borealis?
28490What is the Milky- Way?
28490What is the advantage of this?
28490What is the best food for a child up to nine months?
28490What is the best way to care for your teeth?
28490What is the difference between a keel and centerboard type of boat?
28490What is the difference between registering to vote and enrolling in a political party?
28490What is the difference in effect between a hot and a cold bath?.....................................
28490What is the difference in effect between a hot and cold bath?
28490What is the difference in the external appearance of a salamander and a lizard?
28490What is the food of the starfish?
28490What is the full name of the Governor of your State?
28490What is the full name of the President of the United States?
28490What is the full name of the highest city, town or village official where you live?
28490What is the history of the American Flag, and for what does it stand?
28490What is the importance of regularity in care, to child, to mother, or nurse?
28490What is the infant mortality rate?
28490What is the law in your community concerning the disposition of trash, ashes and garbage?
28490What is the most economical way to buy flour, sugar, cereals, butter and vegetables?
28490What is the only poisonous Lizard in the United States?
28490What is the result of so doing?
28490What is the rule as to registering births?
28490What is the source of your local water supply?
28490What is the wisest thing to do first if a child is ill?
28490What is your pleasure in regard to this,"or"Will anyone make a motion?"
28490What kind of fertilizer will you use in your garden, and why?
28490What kind of jars are considered best for preserving?
28490What kind of thread is best for sewing trimming on to a hat?
28490What other materials are used for making holders besides glass?
28490What other plants can you find that have explosive fruits?
28490What other plants can you find whose seeds are scattered in the same way?
28490What part of Jimsonweed is poisonous?
28490What part of Pokeweed is poisonous?
28490What part will you have in making that law?
28490What peculiar instinct or habit has the Opossum developed?
28490What position in relation to the sun should a photographer take when exposing a film?
28490What precautions must be taken when purchasing seed?
28490What precautions should always be taken about the water supply and why?
28490What precautions should be taken when reloading a camera and taking out an exposed film?
28490What should be done if there is carelessness about garbage?
28490What should be done to all jars, tumblers, etc., before storing?
28490What should be done to clothes after drying before they are ironed?
28490What should be done when preparing a baby''s bath?
28490What should be done with pulled weeds?
28490What should be done with soiled laundry prior to washing?
28490What sorts of things are included in Nature Study?
28490What things are important in connection with their sleeping, either in or out of doors?
28490What time should a child be put to bed?
28490What will you do with it?
28490What would you do about it?
28490When and why are both done?
28490When are the flower- buds formed?
28490When do Scouts use the Salute?
28490When entertained as a house guest what are some of the necessary things to be remembered?
28490When feeding a child either from a bottle or a spoon, what precautions should be taken?
28490When invited to a party, luncheon, dinner, or to make a visit, how should the invitations be acknowledged?
28490When is the proper time of day to water a garden?
28490When suffering from a cold what precautions should be taken?
28490When using triangles where shall a Scout place the points?
28490Where and how should a canoe be placed when not in use?
28490Where does the water come from that supplies your city or town?
28490Where have you seen this animal?
28490Where would all your necessary articles have been if you had not tied them snugly in the roll?
28490Which breed gives the most milk?
28490Which breed gives the richest milk?
28490Which planet is nearest the earth and give its distance?
28490Which track belongs to which bird?
28490Which would you get first if you were planning carefully?
28490Who has a right to use it?
28490Who hath lain alone to hear the wild goose cry?
28490Who hath seen the beaver busied?
28490Who hath smelled the birch log burning?
28490Who hath smelled wood- smoke at twilight?
28490Who hath watched the black- tail mating?
28490Who hath worked the chosen waters where the ouananiche is waiting?
28490Who is a citizen?
28490Who is quick to read the noises of the night?
28490Who pays for it?
28490Who takes care of it?
28490Whose business is it to see that the laws are enforced?
28490Why are common towels and drinking cups forbidden?
28490Why are some cities providing such clinics?
28490Why are squalls dangerous?
28490Why can not a farmer raise a good crop of clover- seed without the bumble- bees?
28490Why do the front teeth of the Squirrel and the Beaver continue to grow?
28490Why do we run clothes through blueing water?
28490Why does it pay the community to employ one?
28490Why is care for the eyes especially necessary?
28490Why is forest conservation important?
28490Why is it important to care for your eyes?.............
28490Why is it necessary to fertilize the soil for a garden?
28490Why is it not advisable to fry food?
28490Why is it so imperative to have a cow barn, all implements, workers and cows scrupulously clean?
28490Why is it very important?
28490Why is the milk question so important?
28490Why must stains be removed before laundering?
28490Why not have one of these in your town?
28490Why should a motor boat never be left without turning off the gas?
28490Why should there be regulations about spitting in public places?
28490Why should there be?
28490Why were the following ferns so named: Christmas Fern, Sensitive Fern, Walkingleaf Fern, Cinnamon Fern, Flowering Fern?
28490Why?
28490Why?
28490[ Illustration: Lame Horse Walking: Which leg is he lame in?
28490[ Illustration: THE CITIZEN*** SYMBOL-- EIGHT- POINTED STAR] 1. Who is responsible for the government of your country?
28490_ Has She Got Pep?
28490_ This is repeated to each Tenderfoot._ Captain:"Are you ready to make your Promise with your Troop?"
28490c. What is the advantage of being a citizen?
28490from one to two years?
28490if so by what process?
28490say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave, O''er the land of the free, and the home of the brave?
28490when the eve is cool?
33285''Am I the man as wants a gentleman to drive him?''
33285''Am I the man as wants a gentleman to drive him?''
33285''And what have you read?''
33285''Before I go, ca n''t you say something nice about matrimony?''
33285''But if a wife makes a man happy, that alone surely helps him?''
33285''But who is going to keep the dear fellow while he is painting in Paris?
33285''But,''she said,''you do not answer my question-- Does marriage help a man?''
33285''Can you imagine, for instance, a respectable woman submitting to an examination by a man?''
33285''Did I not tell you so?''
33285''Do n''t you want to read it yourself?''
33285''Do you see,''she was saying to me one day,''I have renounced all my worldly ideas?
33285''Have n''t you a grandma?''
33285''I take it,''said my lady interlocutor,''that you do not advocate marriage for the rising poet, painter, dramatist, or novelist?''
33285''If you please; but are there not cases----''''And cream?''
33285''Must I?''
33285''My sister,''I said,''sweet and beautiful as you are, how is it that you never married?''
33285''N''est- ce pas que c''est bon d''être ensemble?''
33285''No?
33285''Surely women can do much to inspire, to encourage a man, whatever his work may be?''
33285''Thank you, with pleasure; but does marriage----''''Do you take sugar?''
33285''Then you do not admit the existence of the man who needs the quiet sympathy of a good domestic wife before his art becomes fully articulate?''
33285''Well, a doctor, for instance?''
33285''Well,''I said,''yes, I see what you mean, but how do you know that the girl would have cared to marry a blind man?
33285''What do we do?''
33285''What is a lady?''
33285''What''s that you have on?''
33285''Will you always love me?''
33285''Will you have a cup of tea?''
33285''You want to be learned?
33285***** How long should a widow mourn the loss of her husband?
33285***** Which is better for a man and a woman to possess in matrimony-- similarity of tastes or similarity of temperaments?
33285***** Why are women far less indulgent than men for the faults of women?
33285--_Academy._''Have you read"Her Royal Highness Woman"?
3328580 CHAPTER XIX DO WOMEN DRESS TO PLEASE MEN?
33285After all, what is beauty, considered as an incentive to love?
33285After that, how is it possible to feel any security about him?
33285An English mother has no authority over her son: how could she dream of having any over a son- in- law?
33285And now, where is that New Woman to be found?
33285And on this subject another question might be put: Should a woman prefer to marry a man to whom woman is an enigma?
33285And then, what will become of the human race?
33285And who better than a grandmother will submit to the tyranny of a child?
33285And who is the man who is such a strict monogamist that he can not admire-- in a platonic way, of course-- other women besides the one he loves?
33285And who is the woman who is not aware of that?
33285And why?
33285And, besides, between ourselves, do you not practically make your husbands vote pretty much as you please in all the parliaments of the world?
33285And, you will say, at what age should a man marry?
33285At last the husband one day received the following telegram:''Mother dead; shall we have her embalmed, cremated, or buried?''
33285Beauty, then?
33285But are you not satisfied with knowing that it was a woman who was the cause of the fall of the human race?
33285But how can she?
33285But what about the good, worthy masses of the people, say, at least nine- tenths of the populations of America and England?
33285But, some people will say, is not an artistic temperament conducive to unfaithfulness?
33285By the way, what is that stuff they make in England which you told me is so good for the skin?''
33285CHAPTER X SORE TRIALS FOR PEOPLE IN LOVE-- WILL LOVE TRIUMPH OVER THE AFFLICTIONS OF THE BODY?
33285CHAPTER XIV WHAT DO WOMEN ADMIRE MOST IN MEN?
33285CHAPTER XIX DO WOMEN DRESS TO PLEASE MEN?
33285CHAPTER XL SHOULD PEOPLE REMARRY?
33285CHAPTER XV CAN GRATITUDE ENGENDER LOVE?
33285CHAPTER XVI DOES MARRIAGE HELP A MAN?
33285CHAPTER XVIII DOES JEALOUSY COME FROM TRUE LOVE?
33285CHAPTER XXXV WHAT IS A PERFECT LADY?
33285Cheerful?
33285Clever?
33285Did I admire that girl?
33285Did I hear you ask me which I prefer?
33285Did I love her?
33285Did you have that made in this town?''
33285Did you hear that woman talk and talk about her child?
33285Do you know why?
33285Does marriage hamper a man?''
33285Does marriage help a man?
33285Expecting gratitude is asking for the price of a service-- Love keeps out of it 64 CHAPTER XVI DOES MARRIAGE HELP A MAN?
33285Frivolous?
33285Good figure?
33285Has love anything to do with gratitude?
33285How can any man answer it?
33285How can you ask such a question?
33285How could I form opinions worth repeating?
33285How could I imagine for a single moment that you were not?''
33285How do you account for your existence?
33285How is the art of ruling a husband to be learned?
33285How old was Sister Gabrielle?
33285I thoroughly believe that the French women are the most charming and certainly the most sensible women( where would France be now but for the women?
33285If his wife has been good to him and she is still young when he dies, why should he condemn her to solitude for the rest of her days?
33285If you doubt it, listen to what they say, and you will constantly hear them repeat:''Do you love me?''
33285In a clever article, Lady Violet Greville recently asked,''What is a lady?''
33285In a melodrama he would, but will_ he_?
33285In other words, does gratitude engender love?
33285Is it not the ambition of every French provincial mother?
33285Is it that the fashion of the day requires the train to be so long that there remains no material to make a corsage with?
33285Is it the white lawn, or is it a beauty that the self- denying life lends to them which makes the faces of so many of those women look so lovely?
33285Is there any other country where you see so many women''s clubs?
33285Is there any other country where you will find women able to enjoy life without the companionship of men?
33285Malo?''
33285May I come to see you and the old place if ever I find myself in these latitudes again?''
33285Money?
33285Now, ladies, what do you want?
33285Now, tell me----''''What I think of the Paris Exposition?''
33285Now, what have they done that they should be the butts for the jokes that are made at their expense?
33285Now, what should be done by sensible parents to such a wicked little boy?
33285Now, what should influence him most in that choice?
33285Now, what will especially help a man and woman to find happiness in love?
33285Now, which is right?
33285Now, you understand, I was not allowed to stop; but I took breath, and I said to her:''Does not your papa tell you long stories on Sundays?''
33285Of a scientific turn of mind?
33285Of an artistic nature, then, with literary tastes?
33285On the other hand, an English author who had failed to be appreciated by the public might say:''What can you expect from the British public?''
33285Only I must warn you that if a man put this question to his wife, she would probably say to him at once:''Jack, which of the two are you guilty of?''
33285P.S.--Did I hear you ask whether I have been married?
33285Pretty?
33285Punctual?
33285Quite true; but could you find many men who would have been happy by taking to wife any one of the ladies I have just mentioned?
33285Serious?
33285Should a woman marry a woman- hater?
33285Should couples study each other''s characters during a long period of engagement?
33285Should she be beautiful?
33285So they should; but how many of them would behave in the same manner if such a letter from a woman came to their husband?
33285Still, why not?
33285That is just what you would expect, now, do n''t you think so?
33285To the question, Do women dress to please men?
33285Ugliness?
33285Was he not an advocate, and could he not always return to his profession if painting should fail him?
33285Was it not in America that I heard the following story?
33285What does it matter?
33285What endless chats we will have, wo n''t we?''
33285What good does it do to him, when he is under the grass, to have his wife lonely and miserable?
33285What has become of the old motto_ Noblesse oblige_?
33285What is that new supreme desire to pass for a lady?
33285What more does she want?--the Victoria Cross or the Legion of Honour?
33285What, then?
33285When friends said to her,''Why not travel a little?
33285When, finally, that minister says to her,''Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband?
33285Who knows?
33285Who says that the world is sad?
33285Who shall be the first to do it?
33285Who would dare?
33285Why should they provoke the sarcasms and excite the scorn of men instead of their pity or, at all events, their kind sympathy?
33285Why?
33285Will he be able to behold her with the wig off, and say to her:''I love you just the same?''
33285Will he love her still when he sees her, or will he go away from her?
33285Will he marry her?
33285Will his love be powerful enough to overlook the loss of woman''s best ornament on his sweetheart''s head?
33285Will not a man with an artistic temperament, for example, constantly have new''artistic''aspirations, and constantly fall in love with beauty?
33285Wilt thou obey him and serve him, love, honour him?''
33285Women''s clubs?
33285Would any of you deny that the American women are the most beautiful women in the world?
33285Yes, but how many will remain married?
33285You come from that part of the country, do n''t you?
33285You say to yourself,''Will it be Yes or No?
33285You want to be free?
33285You want to have more influence in the higher councils?
33285You want to make the laws?
33285You would like to get transferred to St. Malo, would you not?
33285and what is it the Yellow- Ribbon Army do?''
33285and why not?
33285how could they be hopeful of success when, after ten years of married life, they often discover they were not made for each other?
33285is it, though?
33285is that all?''
33285or rather, which of the two began?
33285or''How long will you love me?''
33285said the first young girl,''does your mother allow you to read French novels?
33285that a woman has been the cause of every great catastrophe, from the Siege of Troy down to the Franco- Prussian War?
33285that, in a word, woman has ever inspired our noblest actions and our foulest crimes?
33285who would have thought so?"''
3725And who,asked the wondering people,"may Siegfried be?"
3725Is my son dead or unhorsed or so wounded that he can not help himself?
3725To be master of the Roman Empire,he said to himself,"that is indeed worth trying for; and why should I not try?
3725Where is the traitor, Thomas Becket?
3725Are you willing to take charge of my caravans and give your whole time and service to me?"
3725Pepin cried out to his companions:"Will one of you separate the beasts?"
3725The Dane started in amazement and exclaimed:"You, then, King Alfred, were the wandering minstrel?"
3725The knight answered,"I am awake, but who art thou that bringest such brightness?"
3725Then he exclaimed:"Elected me king?
3725What could the nobles do but kneel at the feet of Edward and promise to be his vassals?
3725What did this mean?
3725When the question was asked by the Archbishop,"Will you have William, Duke of Normandy, for your king?"
3725While he was wondering about what had happened, a man in shining garments appeared before him and said,"Rodrigo, art thou asleep or awake?"
30612A cat may look at_ a_ king,it is said; but how about looking at_ the_ Queen?
30612Do you know whose place you have just taken?
30612How long ago is that?
30612How old is he?
30612Is it?
30612Is this your man?
30612Now, Mr. Rogers,said I,"what did I do to deserve that you should say that to me?"
30612Now, is n''t that strange?
30612Now,said I,"what shall I do?
30612Oh, but how did you live?
30612Oh, would n''t you, ma''am?
30612Really,said I, hardly able to utter for suppressed laughter;"and may I ask, may I inquire what language it does use?"
30612Well,said I to Anne,"is not this a fine house, Anne?"
30612What does she eat, pray?
30612What was his name?
30612Where is he?
30612Where is it?
30612Where is your father?
30612Where is your husband?
30612Where,I suppose you exclaim,"were the civil authorities and military force?"
30612Who? 30612 ( A woman that Mrs. Siddons was engaging as cook, replied to the question,Can you make pastry?"
30612( Does n''t that sound like a child who does n''t want to go to church, and says it has got a stomach- ache?
30612( Oh, Harriet, ought n''t you to be ashamed of yourself?)
30612( Who says that early risers always have a Pharisaical sense of their own superiority?)
30612( is n''t that an odd term of endearment to one''s mistress?)
30612), but shall be glad to fall back, in my less delightful ones, upon the devoted affection of-- you?
30612--when from history, science, literature, art, nature, one receives every impression with the child''s yearning query,"But is it true?"
30612Adelaide said she felt an almost irresistible inclination to twitch it from her hand, throw it on the ground again, and say,"Did you?
30612After a few minutes''silence, she pursued her unceremonious catechism with"Married woman?"
30612After this, how could he paint anything less than a countess?
30612Am I honest?
30612Am I right in your opinion and that of dear Dorothy?
30612And is it in the Christian Revelation that you find your doctrine of partial immortality and partial annihilation?
30612And now, dear Lady Dacre, what message will you give your kind and good husband from me?
30612And now, what shall I tell you?
30612And shall it be that I have crossed that terrible sea, and am to pass some time here, and to return without seeing you?
30612And so, my dear T----, you are a"tied- by- the- leg"( as we used, in our laughing days, to call the penniless young Attachà © s to Legations)?
30612And think nae mair on the braes of Yarrow"?
30612And what are you doing with"Boz"?
30612And what sort of a laugh, moreover, is it that you offer that unfortunate Dorothy for her feeble participation?
30612And where are you, my dear Mrs. Jameson?
30612And where will you be next spring, wanderer?
30612And yet what can they be, that may give you the slightest pleasure?
30612Are there two kinds of positive goodness?
30612Are we to suppose He did not mean what he said?
30612Are you becoming saturated with sulphur, or penetrated with iron?
30612Are you chilling your inside with draughts from some unfathomable well, or warming your outside with baths from some ready- boiled spring?
30612Are you not sure that I do?
30612At any rate, what number of women is ever likely to be found so organized or so principled as to resist the pressure of this tremendous power?
30612At length Caroline accompanied the footman to the scene of the dog- astrophe( you would n''t call it_ cat_-astrophe, would you?
30612But are not Hayes''s comments on your character comical?
30612But as for enough, is there such a thing as enough sleep?
30612But do n''t you know that one reason why I appear to you to have positive mental results, is because I have no mental processes?
30612But how come people''s nations so inside out and so upside down?
30612But perhaps you are none of you there?--perhaps you are in Dublin?--on Mr. Taylor''s new estate?--or where-- where, dear Harriet-- where are you?
30612But what are the rulers and guides of the people doing in England?
30612But what have I to tell you of myself, or anything belonging to me?
30612But why-- oh, why am I giving you a dissertation on her and her gifts, for a purpose which will never again challenge her efforts or their exercise?
30612But, after all, is it not always thus?
30612By whom?
30612By- the- by, did you ever hear a whisper of a suggestion that Joan of Arc was_ not_ burned?
30612Ca n''t you help me to some lords?"
30612Can anything be stranger than to think of Cecilia trotting over the length and breadth of North America at the heels of a lecturing philosopher?
30612Can folly go beyond that?
30612Can one say worse of a man who is not?...
30612Can you conceive, after such a spectacle, trying similar experiments upon one''s ignorant self?
30612Chi sa?
30612DEAREST H----, Are you conjecturing as to the fate of three letters which you have written to me from the Continent?
30612Dearest Harriet, I shall soon see you again, and will not that be a blessing to both of us?
30612Did I ever_ not_ answer your letters, you horrid Harriet?
30612Did I tell you that one place where we dined was Cowdenknowes?
30612Did I tell you what a nice long visit I had from Thackeray the other day?
30612Did anyone ever say there was not a"soul of good even in things evil"?
30612Did she write the words as well as the music of"The Spirit of Delight"?
30612Did you do as much?
30612Did you ever get it?
30612Did you ever see Correggio''s picture of the Gismonda?
30612Did you ever see Taglioni?
30612Did you ever see a humming- bird?
30612Did you ever see her in the"Sylphide"?
30612Do explain to me what Sydney Smith means by disclaiming Peter Plymley''s letters as he does?
30612Do n''t you find people have got to think and talk about nothing else?
30612Do n''t you know I never send for any book, and never_ read_ any book, but such as I am desired, required, lent, or given to read by somebody?
30612Do n''t you perceive it in the nobility of my style?
30612Do n''t you see me undergoing such a process, and submitting to such"manipulation"?
30612Do n''t you think that was nice?
30612Do n''t you think we should have good houses?
30612Do we not all three love each other dearly?
30612Do we not, in some sense, possess mentally that which we most earnestly think of?
30612Do you ever see Lady Francis Egerton nowadays?
30612Do you hear of this horrid murder in Paris[ that of the Duchesse de Praslin, by her husband]?
30612Do you know Schiller''s exquisite poem of the"Division of the Earth"?
30612Do you know it by that name in Ireland?
30612Do you know old South?
30612Do you know, Harriet, that I have more than once seriously thought of never writing any more to any of my friends?
30612Do you not think it is time I should begin to think of growing old?
30612Do you not think that an ignorance, unbroken even by the slightest tincture of these, would be rather a fine thing for one''s original powers?
30612Do you not wonder, too, that they should fail in self- denial, charity, mercy, all the virtues of their Divine Model?
30612Do you remember that delightful negro song, the"Invitation to Hayti,"that used to make you laugh so?
30612Do you remember what Sydney Smith says of Francis Horner?
30612Do you remember what infinite difficulty I told you I had had in rescuing that poor little wretch out of the streets of Glasgow?
30612Do you remember your admiration of philanthropy because I blew the dirty nose of a little vagabond in the street with my embroidered handkerchief?
30612Do you suppose I imagine that the sudden violence of a national convulsion will make people Christians who are not so?...
30612Do you suppose_ I_ sent for Paul de Kock?
30612Do you think if I talk to them they will be sharpened?...
30612Does Dorothy write better about nothing than I do?
30612Drinking of queer- tasting waters, and soaking in queer- smelling ones?
30612Faith in God, according to my understanding of it, my dearest Hal, implies faith in man; and have we not good need of both just now?
30612For if"all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy,"what does the reverse do for him?
30612Give my kindest love to S----.... How is Master C----?
30612Had you a vision of us this morning, by the comfortable fire in my room, I reading, and she listening to, your letter?...
30612Has he worked out that problem yet about that vexed question on which he threw so much light at your house, and about which you were so tiresome?
30612Have they them in Italy?
30612Have you looked into Marryatt''s books on this country?
30612Have you none made yet?...
30612Have you read Charles Murray''s book about America?
30612He looked at me for a moment with a beaming face, and then said,"Do you know, I have never read a word of that thing?"
30612He was always near to God, and who can doubt that, in that scene of apparent horror and despair, God was very near to him?
30612Here are two of your questions answered; the third is-- whether I let the slave question rest more than I did?
30612Hero has been used to luxury, both in his lodging and board; but human hearts have to do without their food, and shall not his dog''s body?
30612How is his voice?
30612How is it that the fable ever originated of God''s having cursed man with the doom of toil?
30612How is she?
30612How shall I feel, you say, acting that part again?...
30612How shall I tell you of my satisfaction in Rome?
30612How?
30612I am about, therefore, to return with them to the Farm, where I shall pass the remainder of the winter,--how, think you?
30612I asked her if she had ever heard, or read, the remark as applied to the southern people?
30612I can not believe happiness to be the purpose of life, for when was anything ordained with an unattainable purpose?...
30612I did so at first by accident( is there such a thing?
30612I have minded what you said( as when did n''t I?
30612I know that the soul may be about its work( does not George Herbert say"Who sweeps a room, as for Thy laws, Makes that and the action fine"?)
30612I shall be grievously disappointed.... Was there ever such a to- do as that woman Lola Montez is kicking up?
30612I suppose there was something to like in Mr. Webster''s speech, since you are surprised at my not liking it; but what was there to like?
30612I was obliged to go out, however, and the skies in the interim have cleared; and where do you think I have been?
30612I wonder by whom?
30612I wonder why poor dear Lord Lansdowne ca n''t be asked five shillings?
30612If you begin your letter with such questions as"What do you think of me?"
30612In the useless struggle you persist in making to be reasonable( why do n''t you give it up?
30612Is it not Goethe who says:"Thought expands and weakens the mind; action contracts and strengthens it"?
30612Is it not all one, let us parcel it out as we will into hours, days, months, years, or lifetimes?
30612Is it not horrible that we should make Christian prayers of Jewish imprecations?
30612Is it not strange that Charles Greville and you should both be writing to me just now upon this same subject, of life after death?
30612Is it not very brave?
30612Is it only singing histrions who appear to you objects of compassion?
30612Is it to be supposed that a man will work more for fear of the lash than he will for the sake of an adequate reward?
30612Is n''t it a pity that he can no longer be my agent?
30612Is n''t it a shame?...
30612Is n''t that funny?
30612Is not Shakespeare_ true_ to human nature?
30612Is not her face handsome; and her manner and deportment fine?...
30612Is not that definition of thought after my own heart, and just as I should have written it?
30612Is not the position of the Emperor of Russia awful in its singularity-- the solitary despot of the civilized world?
30612Is she accomplishing a great deal with her life?
30612Is that a quotation from himself or some one else?
30612Is that the way you say it, whereabouts you are?
30612It is in this respect a far more aristocratic( should I not say democratic?)
30612It is perfectly true that the clay has no right to say to the Potter,"Wherefore hast Thou fashioned me thus?"
30612Let their way be dark and slippery: and let the angel of the Lord persecute them"?
30612MY DEAR HAL, How did you get through that dreary time after we parted?
30612MY DEAREST HARRIET, Why do you ask me if I would not write to you unless you wrote to me?
30612Madame de Staël, I suppose, might have said to Rocca,"If my brains are indeed yours, why do n''t you write a book like''Corinne''with them?"
30612May I ask why it is to be considered incumbent upon you, either by yourself or others, to dress and speak like an Englishman?"
30612May I, with"one foot on land and one on sea,"send him word that I love him almost as well as I do you?
30612Moreover, if evil have its inevitable results, has not good its inseparable consequences?
30612My paper is at an end: do I tell you"nothing of my mind and soul"?
30612Now, as Shylock says,"Are you answered yet?"
30612Now, ladies, what would you have said?
30612Now, my beloved and best Dorothy, have n''t you enough to do with that most troublesome soul, Harriet, without being my"good angel"too?
30612Now, will you tell me that Providence_ intended_ that this man should so labor and so suffer?
30612Of myself, my dear friend, what shall I tell you?
30612Oh, have you read that"Vanity Fair"of his?
30612Pilate wished to know what is truth-- or rather pretended that he did-- and I have a very general conviction that"What is truth?"
30612Pray, did you ever pity me as much as you do Adelaide in the exercise of her profession?
30612Pray, my dear, did I ever attempt to meddle with your constitution?
30612Pray, what is the meaning of this want of feeling on your part for_ us others_, or your excess of it for Adelaide?
30612Revelation, you say, alone gives any image of God to you; but which Revelation?
30612Rogers?"
30612Shall I stay with you till you begin, or shall I go, and leave you alone to collect yourself?"
30612She came, too, with her hands full of flowers( my"good angels"brought to me by your"good angel,"which seemed to me pretty and proper, was it not?
30612Should this be true, I do not wonder at my lord''s croaking, for what will the people do?
30612Should you know him again?"
30612Sojourning in Bohemian castles; or wandering among the ruins of old Athens?
30612Surely the spontaneous, or promiscuous( which did you call it, you Irishwoman?)
30612The beginning-- and whence come we?
30612The end-- and whither go we?"
30612The last question in your letter, which nevertheless heads it, having been added on over the date,"How is your health?"
30612The universal cry and question is,"What is the news?"
30612There, Hal, what do you think of that?
30612They will be free assuredly, and that before many years; why not make friends of them instead of deadly enemies?
30612This is melancholy, is it not?
30612Those passages that Emily has marked I do not understand-- does she?
30612Upon my refusing it for her, he exclaimed in astonishment--"Why, madam, do n''t you allow the little girl cake?"
30612Was n''t it a pity that Mrs. Grote was taken ill this morning?
30612Was not that courtly and kind of her?
30612Was not that nice and kind and good- natured of her, dear old lady?
30612Was not that really quite touching and nice of him?
30612Was this right?
30612Were you not struck with his great resemblance to your idol, John Kemble?
30612What can I tell you of myself?
30612What can her point have been?...
30612What do you think I am reading?
30612What do you think of our fine ladies amusing themselves with giving parties, at which they, and their guests, take chloroform as a pastime?
30612What have you done with Lord Morpeth?
30612What is she doing?
30612What shall I do-- what shall I say about her_ tiff_ with Adelaide?
30612What, then, is all this that I have been writing?
30612When did God begin, or when has He ceased, to reveal Himself to man?
30612Where are you, my dearest Harriet; and what are you doing?
30612Which of your many plans, or dreams of plans have you put into execution?
30612Who can say the world does not move some forward steps?
30612Who invented and who suggested the expression the"poetry of motion"?
30612Why did you not make_ him_, instead of the stage, the subject of our discussions together?
30612Why do n''t you?
30612Why does he never disgust one with it?
30612Why does one feel comparatively clean in spirit after living with his creatures?
30612Why is it that people do perpetually live below their own pitch?
30612Why not give them at once the wages of their labor?
30612Why should I write to you, when I hate writing, and yet nevertheless_ always_ answer letters?
30612Will it not be a pity if I ca n''t come and be spoilt any more by you and Dorothy at St. Leonard''s?
30612Will you not come back from the ends of the earth that I may not find the turret- chamber empty, and the Dell without its dear mistress at Ardgillan?
30612Will you not come over and spend the summer with me, now that the sea voyage is only half as long as it was?
30612With what?
30612Would n''t it be a nice world if one could live all one''s time with none but the best good people?
30612Would n''t it be odd to wake at the end, and find one had not lived at all?
30612Would n''t it have been nice if I had said_ Yes_, and you and Dorothy had still been there?
30612Would n''t one think she had had the Vatican for her second- best house, and St. Peter''s for her private chapel, all the days of her life?
30612You ask me if I think letters will go on to be answered in eternity?
30612You ask me if you can"do anything"about my play?
30612You ask me why Mrs.----, who is undoubtedly a clever woman, is also undoubtedly a silly one?
30612You enter no room that is not literally_ strewed_ with queer- looking prints of costumes; and before you can say,"How d''ye do?"
30612You say I am ungrateful to it: is it because I owe many of my friends( yourself among the number) to it that you say so?
30612You say our goodness and benevolence are not those of God: in_ quantity_, surely not; but in_ quality_?
30612Your letter is dated July-- how many things are done that you then meant to do?
30612_ Imprimis_, will you and Dorothy fasten your dinner- napkins with these things, or rings, which I have made for you?
30612_ So_ what shall I do with your scissors?
30612am I just?
30612and are not unexpected pleasures and enjoyments furnished us quite as often as the trials which render them doubly welcome?
30612and at which end of Rome, or my satisfaction, shall I begin?
30612and how do you like it?
30612and is not everything, no matter how trifling, of interest in that case?
30612and is the offence a wife commits against her husband the one exception to the universal law of the forgiveness which Christ taught?
30612and was anybody ever known to have had it?
30612and what do you think I said?
30612and who was he or she?
30612and would n''t_ you_ come and see us?...
30612come si ha da far?"
30612how you do, massa?
30612is it not the possession over which earthly circumstances have the least power?
30612my dear Hal, the money?
30612my fine fellow,"said the actor to the thief,"is that you?
30612no butter?
30612no tea or coffee?"
30612or a blister on your heel?
30612or a corn on your toe?
30612or a grain of dust in your eye?
30612or do you think that I forget that circumstance?
30612or do your nieces do anything more juvenile than this, with all their ball- going?
30612or is it only idiotical?...
30612or was it an impromptu?--a seer''s vision, and friend''s warning?
30612or will they be permitted to say that they are"tempted of God"?
30612or"Why am I a man, and not a beast?"
30612remonstrated I,"cependant quelque chose?"
30612said I, almost breathless, and with a queer quaver in my voice, that I could hardly command,"may I ask why, pray?"
30612sure this is never I,"136;"What for you work, Missus?"
30612what shall we do?
30612what?
30612who ever dreamt of such vagaries?
30612who ever heard the like?
30612you?
20033A farm? 20033 A job?"
20033A tea?
20033About what time did she leave here?
20033Ah, my friend,said Mr. Martel, shaking his head and smiling,"what can be avoided whose end is purposed by the mighty gods?
20033All ready, Nellie?
20033Am I going to get a commission for all this?
20033Am I too old and decrepit to be consulted any more? 20033 Am I?"
20033And I suppose they''ve got a rabbit hutch, and a monkey, and some white mice?
20033And I suppose you propose to go back and tell her so?
20033And Queen Vic wo n''t hear of it?
20033And do you think I am going to sit here, and do nothing while all this is taking place?
20033And since then you have been a soldier of fortune, eh? 20033 And the silver one in the middle?"
20033And this is final? 20033 And what about you?"
20033And what if I do?
20033And who are you, pray?
20033And you actually believe that I will get to New York to study?
20033And you ca n''t even sit up to eat?
20033And you have no people in America?
20033And you mean you''d be willing to come out here and live four months in the year?
20033And you?
20033And_ have_ you written a part especially for me?
20033Anything you wanted, sir?
20033Are n''t they too little for the buttonholes?
20033Are n''t you coming home to supper?
20033Are n''t you going to ask me to the party?
20033Are these the ones?
20033Are they going to try to move her?
20033Are they really sending you away on my account?
20033Are we going to have a fire in the sitting- room?
20033Are you Mrs. Randolph Bartlett?
20033Are you a doctor?
20033Are you cold?
20033Are you coming with me, or are you going to stay here?
20033Are you going to do as I advise?
20033Are you joshing me?
20033Are you lying?
20033Are you out for keeps? 20033 Are you ready for dinner?"
20033Are you sharing my unpopularity with the family?
20033Aw, what you tryin''to put over on us?
20033Awkward? 20033 Backer?"
20033Bartlett_ versus_ Martel, eh?
20033Being asked to spend the winter at Mrs. Ranny''s? 20033 But I thought the orchid king was in Chicago?"
20033But ai n''t you going to finish this dance with me?
20033But before you go in would you mind doing something for me? 20033 But do n''t you expect me to meet the young ladies?"
20033But do n''t you see, Miss Nell, you are in honor bound not to go on with this?
20033But do n''t you want any supper?
20033But have n''t you told her what you know about him?
20033But how can we? 20033 But how?
20033But it is beating the railroads, is n''t it?
20033But suppose I''m a failure?
20033But what can we_ do?_ The more people talk about him, the more she''s going to take up for him. 20033 But what could she have told?
20033But where is she now? 20033 But who will tell her?"
20033But why ca n''t we sit here?
20033But why did you have to see him?
20033But why do you go, then?
20033But you surely do n''t_ like_ it?
20033But you surely wo n''t be going now?
20033But you''ll be joining some other company, I suppose?
20033But you? 20033 But, my boy, where would_ you_ turn?
20033But-- but-- Miss Eleanor?
20033Ca n''t they get another doctor?
20033Ca n''t you say he''s sick?
20033Can you keep a secret?
20033Can you tell me where I can find Miss Eleanor?
20033Captain Phipps? 20033 Cold?"
20033Commercial or professional?
20033Cosmopolitan? 20033 Could n''t you have pushed up the stroke and got there on time?"
20033Could you find it again?
20033Did Uncle Ranny tell you the way we shocked the aunties?
20033Did grandmother send you up here to see if I was keeping my word?
20033Did grandmother send you?
20033Did he? 20033 Did n''t she say where she was going?"
20033Did n''t the Captain call it on the porch?
20033Did one of them get a telegram in the night or this morning?
20033Did you ever see such bully old trees? 20033 Did you hear me?"
20033Did you know they were smoking in the dining- room, Nellie? 20033 Did you really see all that in me the first night?"
20033Did you see Rose''s telegram?
20033Did you see him?
20033Did you see much actual service?
20033Did you want to see me about something?
20033Do I look like a cripple? 20033 Do n''t you love the feel of wings everywhere?
20033Do n''t you suppose I''ve exhausted every possible argument? 20033 Do n''t you think you had better give it up?"
20033Do n''t you think you might try a different tack with the old lady?
20033Do n''t you want some grub?
20033Do n''t you- all like me?
20033Do you believe I could pull it off, Quin? 20033 Do you have to lie flat on your back like that, with no pillow or anything?"
20033Do you know that?
20033Do you know what time she left the car?
20033Do you know where she was last night?
20033Do you know where-- the-- Aristo Apartments are?
20033Do you know,he said, gaining time by presenting a grievance,"you never have danced with me but twice in your life?"
20033Do you mean he is to be here in New York?
20033Do you mean it?
20033Do you play chess?
20033Do you really think I could act if I got the chance?
20033Do you really think that? 20033 Do you remember the first time you came here?"
20033Do you remember,she began ponderously,"a check I gave you the day of Enid''s wedding?"
20033Do you suppose I spend my time talking about my precious family?
20033Do you take me for a landlady?
20033Do you think she would like me?
20033Do you want me to put a splint on it?
20033Do you want to know, honest?
20033Do you-- do you-- still feel about me the way you-- you did-- that night on the bus?
20033Does Papa Claude know?
20033Does anybody know where Papa Claude is?
20033Does he know who I was with?
20033Does the traffic manager have to classify the exports?
20033Does your grandmother know?
20033Does-- does Miss Eleanor know about all this?
20033Dr. Vaughn, then?
20033Flower in the buttonhole, or anything like that?
20033For me?
20033Friday?
20033Give who a dance?
20033Got an appointment?
20033Graham,said Mr. Bangs,"what salary are you drawing?"
20033Had n''t you any better studs than those, my boy?
20033Has anybody telephoned Ranny?
20033Has he give up?
20033Has somebody sent for Randolph?
20033Has the plumber come?
20033Have n''t I asked you to drop the''Captain''? 20033 Have n''t I got enough to stand without that?"
20033Have n''t I written enough for the family?
20033Have n''t you a kiss for me?
20033Have you been sick?
20033Have you got enough money?
20033Have you got the ticket?
20033Have you spoken to mother yet?
20033He does n''t answer?
20033He''s terribly rich, is n''t he?
20033Headway? 20033 Hello, Quinby; what are you doing here?"
20033Honor bound? 20033 How about your heart disease, Graham?"
20033How are you going to get on your feet until you get your strength back?
20033How can I?
20033How did they ever get her consent?
20033How did you know my name?
20033How did you know?
20033How do these ends buckle up?
20033How do they expect me to know what they are all about?
20033How do you know he''s ashamed to be seen with her?
20033How do you know you can?
20033How do you know? 20033 How do you know?"
20033How do you know?
20033How do you know?
20033How do you know?
20033How do you mean?
20033How do you mean?
20033How do you mean?
20033How do you mean?
20033How is Miss Isobel taking it?
20033How long have you been at the factory?
20033How much do you want?
20033How much will this put us behind?
20033How much?
20033How''s the leg coming on?
20033I suppose you are trying to frighten me off from engaging you?
20033I suppose you mean I do n''t?
20033I suppose you mean this?
20033I think he might go up and speak to mother, do n''t you, Isobel?
20033I want you to have three months at the Kendall School, and then do you know what I am going to do?
20033I wonder how he ever managed it?
20033I wonder how it would do,she said,"for you to telephone that we are both out of town for the night, spending the week- end in the country?"
20033I wonder if I could get word to the Captain to- night?
20033I wonder if you could?
20033I wonder if you would care to use one of my tickets for the Symphony Orchestra next week?
20033I wonder if you''d do something for me?
20033I''d just as leave put him to bed for you if you like?
20033I''d like to know if you did n''t take me in and treat me like one of the family? 20033 I''ve spent thousands of dollars on that girl''s education,"Madam continued,"and what do you suppose she elected to specialize in?
20033I? 20033 If that''s the case,"said Quin, with his jaw thrust out and his nostrils quivering,"what do you want me to do?"
20033If you are going to send me away, why not send me to New York and let me do the one thing in the world I want to do?
20033If you mean my mother,she said with reproving dignity,"she has asked me to tell you-- that is, we all think it best----""For me to go?"
20033Interested in you? 20033 Is Queen Vic mad at me?"
20033Is anybody dead?
20033Is n''t that absurd?
20033Is n''t that exactly like her?
20033Is she living?
20033Is that all the family?
20033Is that better?
20033Is that the doctor?
20033Is the house very grand?
20033Is there a house on it?
20033Is there a part I could play?
20033Is there any sign of clearing?
20033Is this the Hotel Kington?
20033Is this the sort of thing you get let in for often?
20033It''s Rose?
20033Like you?
20033Madam Bartlett? 20033 May I come on later?
20033May I have the next dance, Miss Eleanor?
20033Meaning, I suppose, that he understands you?
20033Meaning, I suppose, that your standards are so much higher than those of the rest of us that you can not trade in the market- place?
20033Mind?
20033Miss Nell,he blurted out,"if I stay and get a job and make good, will you marry me?"
20033Miss Nell,said the persistent voice beside her,"do you know what I intend to do while you are away?"
20033More than when you left Kentucky?
20033Next July Miss Nell will be of age and have her own money to do as she likes with, wo n''t she?
20033Next Sunday?
20033No; do you?
20033No; what?
20033No; where is she?
20033Not Myrna?
20033Not in_ his_ play?
20033Not_ really!_ When will it be produced?
20033Now what were we talking about?
20033Now,she said, when he had got a cushion at her back and a stool under her foot,"tell me: where''s Ranny-- drunk as usual?"
20033Of course-- why not?
20033Office- boy? 20033 Oh, Sergeant Slim?
20033Oh, would you?
20033Ought you to dance again?
20033Perhaps you would prefer an office job?
20033Quin Graham, have you had a drink?
20033Quin,--her voice dropped so low he could scarcely hear it,--"have you ever forgiven me for the way I behaved in New York?"
20033Quin,she said,"did you know I am not going back?"
20033Quinby,she said,--it had been"Quinby"ever since the discovery of his grandfather,--"I wonder if you can help me?
20033Really? 20033 Right through here,"said Quin, holding back the branches,"Now, ai n''t that a nice old place?"
20033Rose,she was asking,"what''s the first thing you notice about a man?"
20033Saturday afternoon? 20033 Say, Miss Eleanor,"Quin blurted out unexpectedly,"do you like me?"
20033Say, would you mind stopping a bit?--just for a second?
20033Say, you have n''t got a pin, have you?
20033School?
20033See here, is this a frame- up?
20033Serving here to- night, are you?
20033Serving?
20033Shall I go or will you?
20033Shall I really tell him to send the letters to you?
20033Shall I see you again before you go?
20033Shall I take it?
20033Shall I tell you?
20033She ca n''t collect what you have n''t got, can she?
20033She-- she-- hasn''t married him?
20033Silver fox?
20033So he is the-- backer?
20033So it''s the parlor instid of the pantry, is it? 20033 So you are actually going to leave me next week?"
20033So you were the chap that played the good Samaritan? 20033 Tell me honestly, not what you want me to do, or think I ought to do, but what would you do in my place?"
20033That sounds mighty fine; but who is going to take two children to board for nothing?
20033That''s perfect nonsense; and besides, what can I do? 20033 The little gold slippers?"
20033Then I take it you sympathize with the strikers?
20033Then he has been writing to you? 20033 Then it is n''t_ me_ that you remember?
20033Then it''s just_ you_ who do n''t trust me?
20033There, is that comfy?
20033They''ve succeeded in working me through you, have they? 20033 Thrown together?
20033To China?
20033To leave you? 20033 To- morrow night?"
20033Tom? 20033 Uncle Ranny?"
20033Was he at the office to- day?
20033Was n''t that what you wanted?
20033We wo n''t mind being a bit crowded in the motor, will we?
20033Well, I could n''t tell her Mr. Bartlett was stewed, could I?
20033Well, it is n''t especially gay for her here, is it?
20033Well, when you come back, then?
20033Well, where is the bag you bought with it?
20033Well, you do n''t think I am going to let Miss Nell in on a deal like that, do you?
20033Well,said Madam,"what about you?"
20033Well,said the Captain, who had been lazily observing her,"are n''t you about through with your mental monologue?"
20033Well,she said, addressing her at last,"why did n''t you make it midnight?"
20033Well?
20033What I want to know is whether you are home to stay?
20033What about Queen Vic?
20033What about Sunday afternoon?
20033What about those that want to go on a farm? 20033 What are you all standing around like fools for?
20033What are you doing here?
20033What are you going to do with them?
20033What are you going to say when I tell you I''ve sold him a farm?
20033What are you two ragging about, anyhow?
20033What can you do?
20033What did he do?
20033What did he say to that?
20033What did you come for?
20033What difference does it make if it_ is_ invested? 20033 What do all those stars on the rainbow ribbon mean?"
20033What do they mean by sending me this jumble of stuff?
20033What do they say?
20033What do you know about wild flowers?
20033What do you mean by that?
20033What do you mean to do?
20033What do you mean? 20033 What do you mean?"
20033What do you mean?
20033What do you mean?
20033What do you mean?
20033What do you want to be going back to school for?
20033What does she mean?
20033What does the Captain know about it?
20033What farm? 20033 What good would that do?
20033What has happened?
20033What in the devil are you up to?
20033What is her line?
20033What is she like?
20033What is the joke?
20033What is the matter?
20033What made you tell her?
20033What of that?
20033What on earth did he mean?
20033What on earth shall I do?
20033What play?
20033What question?
20033What shall I do if grandmother refuses to send me?
20033What sort of compromise? 20033 What time is it?"
20033What time is the officers''mess?
20033What time shall I be ready?
20033What time shall I come Saturday afternoon?
20033What was your object?
20033What would you do?
20033What would you say if I told you I had written a rôle especially for you? 20033 What would_ you_ do, Quin?"
20033What''ll I have to wear?
20033What''s Dr. Snowden''s telephone number?
20033What''s all the racket about?
20033What''s all this fuss about?
20033What''s all this nonsense you are talking?
20033What''s got into you lately? 20033 What''s he doing there?"
20033What''s he like, Rose?
20033What''s that got to do with it?
20033What''s the matter with Valley Mead?
20033What''s the matter with me beginning now?
20033What''s the matter, Hannah? 20033 What''s the matter?"
20033What''s the matter?
20033What''s the shindy?
20033What''s the trouble?
20033What''s up?
20033What?
20033What?
20033What_ made_ you come?
20033When are you coming home?
20033When can I see you?
20033When did Mr. Bartlett give you these letters?
20033When do you have to give an answer?
20033When do you have to have the money?
20033When is the wedding to be?
20033When shall I come?
20033When_ are_ you coming back?
20033Where are Aunt Isobel and Aunt Enid?
20033Where are the papers?
20033Where are we going?
20033Where are we? 20033 Where did I come in?"
20033Where did you see him?
20033Where else could I go? 20033 Where in the devil have you been?"
20033Where was she?
20033Where''d you ever git to know a girl like that?
20033Where''s the house?
20033Where?
20033Where?
20033Which leg is hurt?
20033White gloves, I suppose?
20033Who are?
20033Who is Nell?
20033Who is he?
20033Who is that talking so loud downstairs?
20033Who is this nice boy?
20033Who knows but this time next year she will be playing in''Phantom Love''?
20033Who moved my desk out like this?
20033Who said so? 20033 Who said so?"
20033Who would n''t have been? 20033 Who?"
20033Who?
20033Why are n''t you?
20033Why did n''t he write me?
20033Why do n''t you ever come around and see the folks?
20033Why do n''t you give her a dance?
20033Why do n''t you let their standards go to gallagher and live up to your own?
20033Why do you think he is out of town?
20033Why not ship''em both to the country? 20033 Why not?
20033Why not? 20033 Why not?"
20033Why on earth are you so late, sweetheart? 20033 Why should I mind leaving you?
20033Why turn round?
20033Why, your time''s up Saturday, is n''t it? 20033 Why?"
20033Will you dance it with me?
20033Will you dance this with me, Miss Enid?
20033Will you please go down and tell Mr. Pfingst that I am not coming to his party?
20033Will you please page the dining- room, and if he is not at breakfast send a bell- boy up to waken him? 20033 Will you please try again to get Mr. Phipps-- Harold Phipps?
20033Will you wait for me here just a second?
20033Will you?
20033Would Mr. Bangs agree?
20033Would you by any chance have time to leave a package of papers at Bartlett& Bangs''for me the first thing in the morning? 20033 Would you go on with it?"
20033Would you go with me?
20033Would you know him if you saw him again?
20033Would you like me to?
20033Yes; why?
20033You are Mr. Bartlett, I believe?
20033You are all ready to start on Monday? 20033 You are not actually in earnest, Flo?
20033You are not going in yourself?
20033You ca n''t deny that you love me just a little bit, can you?
20033You could n''t hold it up for half an hour, could you?
20033You decline the promotion?
20033You do n''t happen to have a job for me?
20033You do n''t love Mr. Phipps very much, do you?
20033You do n''t mean that you''re going to act for_ pay_?
20033You do n''t see a very cross- looking Captain charging around near the door, do you?
20033You heard what she said, did n''t you?
20033You look like going to work, do n''t you?
20033You mean a one- step?
20033You mean he''s traveled a lot, knocked around in queer places, like me?
20033You mean that you will dare to stop me from getting out of my own car? 20033 You mean you are going on seeing Mr. Phipps and letting him send you flowers and things?"
20033You never did try letting her have her head, did you?
20033You still have the money?
20033You surely are n''t_ tired_?
20033You surely do n''t imagine that I would get out on the floor with all this hoi- poloi?
20033You surely remember the Easter party?
20033You want it straight?
20033You want to know? 20033 You wo n''t speak to him,"she implored,"and you wo n''t tell Cass?"
20033You''ll be there every Sunday?
20033Young lady? 20033 _ Do n''t_ she?
20033_ Will_ I?
20033_ Would_ I? 20033 ''They reach the ground,''he said;''what more can you ask?''
20033A return, perhaps, to your native city?"
20033After all, what did the plaudits of hundreds of unknown people count for, when the approval and affection of those nearest and dearest was withdrawn?
20033Ai n''t Cass the best friend a man ever had?
20033And now for her to turn against me like this----""Why do n''t you wait till you hear her side of it?"
20033And now?
20033And we could get him interested in fixing the place up, and he could keep dogs and cows and things----""But what about his mother?"
20033And were n''t they all silly and make- believe?"
20033And what did he think little old Myrna had done?
20033And what have I got?
20033And what is the result?
20033And why should she care for a fellow like him, with no education, or money, or position?
20033And would n''t he do as much and more for me?"
20033And your family?"
20033And yours?"
20033And, if she did, would she ever be willing to come home again?
20033And, upon being informed sorrowfully that he did, he added obligingly,"Do n''t you want me to bring him in for you?"
20033Any others?"
20033Anything else I can do for you?"
20033Are n''t you already a little ashamed of getting angry with me just now?"
20033Are you in love with him?"
20033Are you sure Nellie is safe?"
20033Are you sure?
20033At the office door he was dismounting from the car with his silence still unbroken, when Quin asked nervously:"Shall I go on with my old job, sir?"
20033Back in his fringe of consciousness he was frantically groping for the name the Captain had mentioned: Barnet?
20033Bangs?"
20033Bangs?"
20033Barret?
20033Bartlett?
20033Bartlett?
20033Besides, it''s an actress''s business to cultivate her emotions rather than repress them, is n''t it?"
20033But did she honestly want to make another start?
20033But how was he ever going to get any better lying there on his back?
20033But if she had n''t cared for him, why had she come to him with her troubles, and followed his advice, and wanted his good opinion?
20033But it was worth it, was n''t it-- Sergeant Slim?"
20033But just tell me one thing: is there anybody you_ are_ interested in?"
20033But the old cough remained, as was evident when he presented himself breathless at the Martels''door and demanded of Cass:"Has she gone?"
20033But then, six thousand dollars is very little, is n''t it?
20033But then, what can he do?
20033But what can we do?"
20033But what has that to do with it?
20033But what was it she wanted, she asked herself, in place of this gay kaleidoscope of light and color and ceaseless confusion?
20033But where was Eleanor?
20033But-- do you like me enough to let me come to see you when you come back?"
20033Ca n''t we have a window open?"
20033Ca n''t you see that this ca n''t go on?
20033Ca n''t you tell me something about the position of women in China?"
20033Ca n''t you trust Rose to take care of herself?"
20033Can you beat that?"
20033Chester?"
20033Confess, would n''t you?"
20033Could n''t you have withdrawn the sunshine of your presence from the hospital half an hour sooner?"
20033Could there be anything between them?
20033Did n''t you know it was your duty to be in before five?"
20033Did n''t you know your grandmother would be fretted?"
20033Did the play fail?"
20033Did you ever feel anything so hot and stuffy as that room?
20033Do n''t you believe she will get over it?"
20033Do n''t you know you ca n''t dance?"
20033Do n''t you think either Ranny or Isobel had better take her on to New York to- morrow?"
20033Do n''t you think you can stop them?"
20033Do n''t you think you might----""Who left that front door open?"
20033Do n''t you want me to shift that pulley a bit?
20033Do stay, Quin; wo n''t you?"
20033Do the Bartletts know?"
20033Do you believe we can pull him through?"
20033Do you have to use your crutches now?"
20033Do you know who this is?"
20033Do you know, none of them ever write to me any more?"
20033Do you like me any better than you did in the spring?"
20033Do you mind walking the rest of the way?"
20033Do you remember living in this house?"
20033Do you remember the big blue parrots that swung in hoops from the chandeliers?
20033Do you suppose I could send her a telegram to be delivered on the train?
20033Do you suppose it''s pleasant for me to know that everybody in the company is whispering about my infatuation for you and your indifference to me?
20033Do you suppose that stage lovers are going to stand in the wings and throw kisses to you?"
20033Do you think I ought to go back?"
20033Do you think a girl has the right to go ahead and do as she likes, regardless of her family?"
20033Do you think it was a frame- up?"
20033Do you think, when she finds out that I am actually on the stage, that she will ever forgive me-- that she will ever want me to come home again?"
20033Do you understand?"
20033Do you understand?"
20033Do you want me to go or to stay?"
20033Do you want to buy a farm?"
20033Do you_ have_ to take back an answer?"
20033Does Papa Claude think he is_ very_ talented?"
20033Does he belong here?"
20033Does she want me to get down on my knees and apologize?"
20033Edwin Booth used to say----""Sir?"
20033Eleanor Bartlett?
20033Eleanor, why do you play with me like this?
20033Ever hear of him?"
20033Go to a hotel alone?
20033Go to his apartment?
20033Good God, Rose, ca n''t we do something?"
20033Had n''t Miss Nell told him that she did n''t care what he said or did, just so he left her alone?
20033Had n''t it been enough for him to come to her party in that idiotic coat, with his shirt- front bulging and his face swollen?
20033Had n''t she let him come away without expressing a regret for the past or a hope for the future?
20033Has Aunt Enid come home?
20033Has Madam found out about her going out to camp?"
20033Has n''t Cass ever told you about Nell?"
20033Has she let me go for good and all?"
20033Have I made any headway?"
20033Have n''t I been coming out here all the time?"
20033Have n''t I swallowed my pride and promised to say nothing if she comes back?
20033Have n''t we got past that?"
20033Have n''t you ever heard them speak of me?"
20033Have n''t you had enough noise for one night?
20033Have they called up?"
20033Have you come to stay?"
20033Have you heard about Myrna?"
20033He has a lovely, detached soul, as impersonal-- What is the matter, Rosalind?"
20033How about you, Nell?
20033How are Rose and the children?"
20033How are we going to emancipate her, Ran?"
20033How can she pretend to care for me when she ignores my letters and treats me with perfect indifference?"
20033How do you mean?"
20033How do you mean?"
20033How do you mean?"
20033How long has she been here?"
20033How long will you be here?"
20033How long would it take her to get out to Ranny''s?"
20033How much have you missed me?"
20033How on earth_ did_ you know that?"
20033How''s everybody at grandmother''s?
20033How''s the play coming on?"
20033How_ could_ they sit there saying such kind things to him, and at the same time shut the door between him and the great opportunity of his life?
20033Hurry up with those crutches, Graham; do you think I am going to wait all night?"
20033I hope you are a little bit interested in me?"
20033I know I am regarded as a visionary, a dreamer, but I assure you----""What about the ground?"
20033I leave it to my distinguished collaborator: could any toilet, however elaborate, be more becoming?"
20033I suffer from the excess of my virtue; you see?"
20033I think that''s better taste, do n''t you?"
20033I told sister then that if you got well----""But what about Madam?"
20033I wonder if we_ could_ give the dear child a party?"
20033I wonder if you would consider taking up some night courses at the university?"
20033I''ll only be a minute?"
20033If he got a raise, would he be justified in putting his fate to the test?
20033If the university classes have done this much for you in four months, what will you be by the end of the year?"
20033If you could jump right in and say you think it''s a bully idea, and that you are coming out to see what he has done, and----""Do you want me to lie?"
20033Is he going to follow Enid''s high- handed way of deciding things without the slightest reference to my wishes?"
20033Is it good- by?"
20033Is n''t it funny, Quin?
20033Is n''t it too funny for words?"
20033It''s just some more of grandmother''s tyranny, and I''m not going to submit much longer; would you?"
20033It''s pouring rain and I have n''t any umbrella, and if I get to the hotel and he is n''t there, what shall I do?
20033Leg off at the knee, crutches for life?
20033Little flying things going home?
20033Look at Uncle Ranny; would you ever take him for the same person he was six months ago?"
20033Look at the way they have treated me at home?
20033May I ask what yours is to be?
20033Miss Isobel pushed him toward the door as she spoke:"You-- you do n''t think anything dreadful could have happened to her, do you?"
20033Miss Nell?"
20033Now you will go, wo n''t you?"
20033Now, suppose I construct a great plot, and he supplies great dialogue?
20033Of course I am sorry for Madam Bartlett, but what can I do?
20033Oh, Captain, would n''t that be glorious?"
20033On the bare chance of his not meeting her, what would she do?
20033Papa Claude''s?
20033Perhaps you prefer to go inside and be pushed about and eat messy things with your fingers?"
20033Phipps?"
20033Pretty?
20033Put-- what?
20033Quin had said,"Tails, yes"; and who knows but that down there under the pavement that coin of fate was registering"Heads, no"?
20033Ranny?"
20033Right now?"
20033Say in the spring?"
20033Shall I lend you some?"
20033Shall I play on the piano, Papa Claude, or will you?"
20033Shall we go in and dance?"
20033Shall we show him, Miss Enid?"
20033She flashed a look at him from under her tilted hat- brim:"What on earth''s the matter with you?
20033She''s going to stay right here and let me make love to her-- isn''t she?"
20033Shields?"
20033Stung by his silence, she burst out afresh:"Does n''t she ever ask about me?
20033Suppose Papa Claude was as visionary about her career as he was about everything else?
20033Suppose she did not make good?
20033Suppose she did not want to see him again?
20033Suppose she had no talent, after all?
20033Suppose she should be angry at him for coming to her party?
20033Suppose she should be too taken up with all these strange friends of hers to have time to dance with him?
20033Take the next train home?
20033That is-- whose money?"
20033The colored chauffeur who had driven them out came to the door and asked:"Shall I lay the table for two or three, sir?"
20033Then he added inconsequently:"Who was that fat man you were talking to when I came up?"
20033Then she dismissed the subject abruptly:"Rose, if I tell you something will you swear not to tell?"
20033Then, in answer to a plaintive voice from the library,"Yes, Aunt Enid?"
20033Then, seeing a humorously unsympathetic look flit across Quin''s face, she burst out angrily:"What right had you to follow me over here?"
20033Then, trying very hard to keep his voice steady, he asked gently:"What does this mean, Miss Nell?
20033These orchids are perfectly sweet, and the candy that came yesterday----""Was also_ perfectly_ sweet?
20033Uncle Ranny?"
20033Want to go out with me next Saturday and see''em?"
20033Was it any wonder that Quin''s foot began to twitch, and that, in spite of repeated warnings at the hospital, a blind desire seized him to dance?
20033Was it possible that that absurd boy had actually followed her up to the Bartletts''with the intention of going with them on their expedition?
20033We fooled them, did n''t we?"
20033Well, what are you waiting for?"
20033Were n''t they the funniest and the dearest people he had ever known?
20033Were you or were you not glad to see me?"
20033Were you the boy on the porch?
20033What are you doing here?"
20033What are you smiling about?"
20033What are_ you_ laughing at, Quinby Graham?"
20033What business has he got worrying you with letters and flowers when you have told him you are through with him?"
20033What did it all mean?
20033What did you say he said about Ranny?"
20033What do you see in that silly coxcomb, anyhow?"
20033What else do you like about him?"
20033What had"you"meant to him then?
20033What happy fortune blew you hither?
20033What influence could you bring to bear?"
20033What is it?"
20033What is six thousand dollars to me if it turns Papa Claude out in the street?"
20033What is your name?"
20033What other girl of your acquaintance has her own car, all the pretty clothes she can wear, and as much pin- money as she can spend?"
20033What possible chance would there be of rousing people like that to sympathy for poor, visionary Papa Claude?
20033What right had he to take Shields''s place, when he had said exactly the things that Shields had been fired for saying?
20033What sense was there in his ordering more of this fool rest business?
20033What sort of a place is this you are living in?"
20033What time do you start?"
20033What time does your train go in the morning?"
20033What was the use in going on?
20033What will be the inevitable result?
20033What will she say when she sees your name blazing over a Broadway theater?"
20033What would happen if Cass should die?
20033What''s happened?"
20033What''s happened?"
20033What''s it to you?"
20033What''s the box by the door?"
20033What''s the harm?
20033What''s the matter with them, anyhow?"
20033What''s the matter with us getting Cass and Fan Loomis and going down to Fontaine Ferry to- night?"
20033What''s the trouble?"
20033What''s the trouble?"
20033What''s the use?
20033What_ will_ the family say to me?
20033Whatever made you think I did n''t?"
20033When can I see you again?"
20033When do you go?"
20033When?
20033Where did you get that notion?"
20033Where had he failed?
20033Where had he heard that name?
20033Where have I seen you before?
20033Where in the dickens have I met you?
20033Where is Tom?"
20033Where is that contemptible Phipps?
20033Where''s Quinby Graham?
20033Where?"
20033Which way do we turn?"
20033Who is going to carry Madam up and down stairs?
20033Who is going to stay here at night?
20033Who would take care of her and the children, helpless and penniless, with only Papa Claude and his visions to stand between them and the world?
20033Whom are you going to sell it to?"
20033Why ca n''t you be sensible and see it as we do?"
20033Why ca n''t you trust me, Quin?"
20033Why did n''t you dress yourself properly before you came in here?"
20033Why do n''t they rig you up a pulley, so''s you can change the position of your body without disturbing your leg?"
20033Why do n''t they send for Ranny?"
20033Why do n''t you get a soap- box and preach on the street- corners?
20033Why do n''t you give her just barely enough to live on, and let her try it out on the seamy side for the next six months?
20033Why do n''t you have me stay on until things get to running easy again?"
20033Why do n''t you help me, Quin?
20033Why do n''t you like him, Quin?"
20033Why do n''t you send Tom for the doctor?"
20033Why do n''t you stay down?"
20033Why do n''t you stay with me till he comes?"
20033Why do n''t you try it, Aunt Flo?"
20033Why do n''t you try to get one here in New York?"
20033Why does she sometimes almost seem to hate me?"
20033Why does she treat me the way she does?
20033Why have n''t you told me this before?
20033Why not put an end to everything?
20033Why not?
20033Why not?"
20033Why should n''t they throw discretion to the winds and answer the call?
20033Why then?"
20033Why was she even now flying in the face of authority and risking a serious reprimand by letting him ride in her car?
20033Why?"
20033Will you go to him, child?
20033Will you go?"
20033Will you leave the matter with me until Sunday night, Mr. Martel, and let me see what I can do?"
20033Will you listen while I tell you all about it?"
20033Will you plead our cause for us?"
20033Will you watch the front door and let me know as soon as Mr. Chester arrives?"
20033Wo n''t you come the moment you get this, and try to persuade her?
20033Would Miss Nell believe what she heard?
20033Would he be willing?
20033Would it go very hard with her?
20033Would n''t it be too wonderful, Rose, if Captain Phipps should produce one of his plays?
20033Would she accept Madam''s offer?
20033Would she give Phipps up?
20033Would she recognize him?
20033Would she speak to him if she did, when he looked like that?
20033Would you be willing to go with me?"
20033Would you dare to take it?"
20033Would you mind bringing him into his bedroom?"
20033Would you mind putting this one down?
20033Write every day?
20033You ai n''t going to turn me down, are you?"
20033You are satisfied, I take it?"
20033You do n''t happen to have a cigar about you, do you?"
20033You do n''t mean that you would consider the place seriously?"
20033You do n''t mean to- night?"
20033You do n''t mind, do you, Fan?"
20033You do n''t want to be a thin- blooded little old maid, do you?"
20033You do n''t want to pitch the fat back in the fire, do you?"
20033You have doubtless heard me speak of a very wealthy and talented young friend of mine-- Mr. Harold Phipps?"
20033You love me, do n''t you?"
20033You remember meeting him at our apartment last spring?"
20033You remember that night at Ran''s when you recited for me?
20033You remember the night over home when he talked about his lovely detached soul?
20033You understand definitely that I do not wish you to see him again?"
20033You will go right away, wo n''t you?
20033You''ve definitely decided?"
20033Your clothes are in good condition, I presume?"
20033said the Captain with icy decision,"were n''t you instructed to stay in bed?"
20033she said, then added shrewdly:"Are n''t you the soldier that put the splint on my leg?"
20033they inquired daily;"think it''s going to be chronic?"
17031And why?
17031Have you secret passages and sliding panels and dark turnpike stairs? 17031 Loitering with intent"?
17031What news do you mean? 17031 ''How the D--- I mean, how do you know, Miss Martin, about my private affairs?"
17031''"James, have you heard any good news?"
17031''A Toltec mummy?
17031''A far- off kinsman of the Marquis,''said Logan, adding,''May I ask you to be seated?''
17031''A featured tale?''
17031''A pleasing group, and so they were engaged on the spot?''
17031''A reef?''
17031''A seance?''
17031''A token of some friendly chief, I suppose, at Cagayan-- what do you call it?''
17031''About the dinner?
17031''Ah, so you_ do_ allow for the claims of conscience, do you?''
17031''Ah, the blow- tube?''
17031''Ah, the old Gowrie game, to capture the King?''
17031''Am I to read the message aloud?''
17031''Am I to understand that all the three admirers about whom Miss Baddeley suffers remorse are clerics?''
17031''Am I too curious if I ask what is the source of this opulence?''
17031''Among them were, perhaps, some curious native shoes, made of emu''s feathers-- they are called_ Interlinia_ or, by white men,_ Kurdaitcha_ shoes?''
17031''An allowance which ends on her marriage, if she marries with your consent?''
17031''And I am to ask for?''
17031''And Lady Teazle at an amateur performance in the Canterbury week?''
17031''And about what age is your uncle?''
17031''And asked you how you got it?''
17031''And beer money?''
17031''And do not all your Irish reapers belong to that dreadful Land League, or whatever it is called?''
17031''And have_ him_ carry her off under my very nose?
17031''And he said?''
17031''And how are you going to do it?''
17031''And how are you going to stop the Wheel?''
17031''And how did you come here?''
17031''And lend me a set of Mrs. Lumley''s raiment and a lady''s portmanteau?''
17031''And me to have her snapped up by some whipper- snapper that calls himself a lord?
17031''And now, Clancy, may I offer a hasty luncheon to you and your friends before we go to Lord''s?
17031''And now, gentlemen, what am I to do?''
17031''And she told you to come here?''
17031''And so you are to go to Upwold?''
17031''And that is?''
17031''And the conclusion?''
17031''And the fourth?''
17031''And the third way?''
17031''And there was nothing wrong then?''
17031''And they became engaged on so short an acquaintance?''
17031''And was there any result?''
17031''And wha the deil said a_ was_ Lairdie Bower?
17031''And what are"The Seven Hunters"?''
17031''And what did I say?''
17031''And what for no?
17031''And what have I been acting for the last ten days?''
17031''And what, may I ask, are the grounds of your objection to this engagement?
17031''And where may that be?''
17031''And who is your father?''
17031''And who_ is_ he like?''
17031''And why did the judge assassinate the prelate?''
17031''And ye''re ganging to Embro?''
17031''And you are aware that similar prophylactic measures have been adopted, with more or less of success, in the case of other diseases?''
17031''And you guessed, from the cry you gave, who my confessor(_ he_ banged the door, of course to draw me) turned out to be?''
17031''And you made no objection to his winning your ward, if he could?''
17031''And you told None- so- pretty that you fell off a tree?''
17031''And you will not suffer in character if you fail?''
17031''And you would rather that she suffered some present distress?''
17031''And you, Batsy?''
17031''And you, Clancy Minor, why are you not converting the Heathen Chinee?
17031''And, after all,''Merton asked,''the lover has prospered in his suit?''
17031''Any chance?''
17031''Any exciting secrets?''
17031''Any news?''
17031''Any other queer beasts?''
17031''Anything else on?''
17031''Anything else?''
17031''Are Donald and Sandy and Murdoch about?''
17031''Are all the devoted young men under vows to seek the crown of martyrdom?
17031''Are the dates all right?''
17031''Are the islands inhabited?''
17031''Are there any more survivors of extinct species?''
17031''Are they not educational?''
17031''Are they quite definitely engaged?''
17031''Are you and she great friends?''
17031''Are you going to tell me that_ I_ am a traitor to the flag, sir?
17031''Are you quite mad?''
17031''Are_ you_?''
17031''As how?''
17031''As to the crystal stream, what business has it to be crystal?
17031''At what hour shall I start?''
17031''Ay, and little to his good, I''ll be bound?''
17031''Besides they are family men, married men, and so--''''And so what?''
17031''Better get some of Ned Mahony''s gang?''
17031''Blackbird catching?''
17031''Blackmail?''
17031''Bude, is this worthy of an old friend, this_ blague_?''
17031''Bude, you are serious about Miss McCabe?''
17031''But I mean, honour bright, you have no attendant armed vessel?''
17031''But about the man of her choice, have you anything against him?''
17031''But as how?''
17031''But as the lady is in all other respects so suitable a match, can not this one difficulty be got over?''
17031''But did not the story you speak of make her see that she must break off her daughter''s engagement?''
17031''But do not the musicians all belong to that dreadful Camorra?''
17031''But how about the recruiting?''
17031''But how can you prevent them if they want to do it?''
17031''But how did all end happily?''
17031''But how do you begin with a situation?''
17031''But how was he planted on_ you_?''
17031''But is there nothing else?''
17031''But it would be all right to give me away, I suppose, and let him understand that I had violated professional confidence?''
17031''But may I inquire what is your scheme?''
17031''But sensational, I fear?''
17031''But suppose I could manage a happy ending?
17031''But suppose that I see a way of defeating the scoundrels, would you let me risk it?''
17031''But the broken window?''
17031''But the gambling establishment?
17031''But these we can still get at,''Logan asked:''how are you to be sure that they are-- vaccinated?''
17031''But what about it?
17031''But what followed?
17031''But what is her real name?''
17031''But where are those thieves?''
17031''But where did you find them and why?''
17031''But where do you come in if you refuse?
17031''But where is the joke?''
17031''But why Vidame Potter?''
17031''But why are the clergy more privileged than the laity?
17031''But why have you changed your mind, if you liked her?''
17031''But without_ you_, I should never have had his aid,''said Mr. Macrae:''Where_ is_ Lord Fastcastle?''
17031''But wo n''t the clients blab?''
17031''But you do n''t mean to steal him?''
17031''But you do?''
17031''But you do?''
17031''But you have your own ideas?''
17031''But, Merton, I understand your leaving in disguise; still, why go first to Edinburgh?''
17031''But, Mr. Macrae,''asked Merton,''how about the false Gianesi?''
17031''But, how are you to account for the marquis''s reappearance alive?''
17031''But, if it_ was_ a treasure, who would care?''
17031''But, unluckily, what can London detectives do in a country like this?''
17031''But,''asked Logan,''have things gone so very far?
17031''But,''asked Merton, as they reached the level, and saw the old keep black in front of them,''what is that rope stretched about the lawn for?
17031''But,''he asked,''has this ingenious system failed to work?
17031''By the way, as I have no Aaron and Hur to help me to hold up my hands, may I drop them?
17031''By whom?''
17031''Ca n''t you get him to stand out, and, Alured, ca n''t you-- fetch along that old tall talk mummy?
17031''Ca n''t you send them away?''
17031''Can I send a telegram to town?''
17031''Can a humble person like myself aspire to the daughter of the greatest living millionaire?
17031''Can they have had themselves ferried across the sea loch to the village opposite?''
17031''Can we trust the man?''
17031''Can you listen to rather a long story?
17031''Can you trust me, or not?''
17031''Can you write a lecture on"The Use and Abuse of Novels"before Friday week?''
17031''Captain Funkal, may I be frank with you?''
17031''Captain McClosky,''said Mr. Macrae,''will you kindly pipe all hands on board to discharge cargo?''
17031''Considering his devotion to the pleasures of the table?''
17031''Could I go and consult---?''
17031''Could you give us them in Gaelic?''
17031''Curious accident,''said Merton;''and None- so- pretty saw the mark?''
17031''Dear Julia_ is_ engaged, or rather entangled, in-- how many cases, dear?''
17031''Did Bran invent the submarine?''
17031''Did Mr. Logan call?''
17031''Did he shoot it?''
17031''Did what?''
17031''Did you ever see Jones Harvey?''
17031''Did you examine the snow near the harbour?''
17031''Did you shoot?''
17031''Did you try to find out what sort of character he had at home?''
17031''Did_ your_ men have fits?''
17031''Do I sleep, do I dream?''
17031''Do n''t you see?
17031''Do n''t you wish dear old Milo was here?''
17031''Do ye mean that ye''re an English detective?''
17031''Do you doubt my word?''
17031''Do you ever go up to Oxford now?''
17031''Do you fish?''
17031''Do you know him well?''
17031''Do you know nothing of your ancestral tongue?
17031''Do you know the man by sight?''
17031''Do you know what these red fire- flies were that come aboard, sir?''
17031''Do you not think that Mrs. Brown- Smith would be very much surprised if I consulted her?''
17031''Do you see your way?''
17031''Do you think that Mr. Fulton is-- passionately in love, with his domestic?''
17031''Do you understand this house, Mr. Logan?
17031''Do you want me to call myself a young lady?''
17031''Do you want proof?''
17031''Do you-- I mean as an official-- believe me?''
17031''Does he give you trouble about food?''
17031''Does your Society ever employ lady lecturers?''
17031''Early Georgian, surely?''
17031''Eh, what?
17031''Evolution can explain everything,''said the Jesuit demurely,''but who can explain evolution?''
17031''Fellows of our own sort, or the police?''
17031''Fire- flies?
17031''For a day or two-- you will lend me a portmanteau to give local colour?''
17031''For what do you take me, sir?
17031''Go-- how did he go?''
17031''Graham, at your service,''said Merton, gravely;''may I ask you and Miss Apsley to be seated?''
17031''Great heaven, no accident has happened to Logan?''
17031''Ground bait for salmon?''
17031''Hae ye a spunk?''
17031''Has Mr. Logan no guess?''
17031''Has it come to this?
17031''Has it gone very far?
17031''Has this gone on long?''
17031''Have what?''
17031''Have you a mother?''
17031''Have you anything in the way of terms to propose?''
17031''Have you heard anything?''
17031''Have you looked at the floor beneath those fallen stones?''
17031''Have you seen our host yet?''
17031''Have you seen_ him_?''
17031''Have you the works of the ancient Sennachie, Macfootle?''
17031''Have you, by any chance, a spark of the devil in you?''
17031''Have you_ written_ anything?
17031''He wants to put a spoke in somebody''s wheel,''thought Merton,''but whose?''
17031''He will be quite safe if he sees you?''
17031''Her property, I suppose, is considerable?
17031''Here I rose-- I was rather excited-- and said that I hoped the reverend speaker was not deserting the sacred principle of compulsory temperance?
17031''His arguments,''said Merton,''must have been very cogent?''
17031''How can I hope?''
17031''How can I wish that anyone was here but you?''
17031''How can it be happy if you are to be successful?
17031''How can they?
17031''How can you be so cruel?''
17031''How could they have been stirred without the old woman hearing the noise?''
17031''How did he get in?''
17031''How did you get away?''
17031''How did you get hurt_ there_?''
17031''How do you know they were there before the marquis''s death?''
17031''How do you know?''
17031''How do you mean?''
17031''How in the world does she know them?''
17031''How is it done?''
17031''How is it going?''
17031''How is this going to end?''
17031''How much more?''
17031''How the dev-- I mean, how do you know_ that_?''
17031''How was James to do very well?
17031''How?''
17031''How?''
17031''Hullo, look there, what''s_ that_?''
17031''Hullo, shall we lunch together?''
17031''I am sure I shall be delighted to do anything you ask, but--''''Will you_ promise_?
17031''I daresay you would like to see your room?''
17031''I do n''t know your name?''
17031''I do n''t want to be inquisitive, but is she in this country?''
17031''I do,''said Trevor;''but how do you know?
17031''I guessed as much, but can it really be worked like that?
17031''I know the face-- I know the voice; hang it!--where have I seen the man?''
17031''I may come?''
17031''I may not even subsidise the affair-- put a million to Mr. Merton''s account?''
17031''I meant nothing wrong_ here_?''
17031''I need hardly ask,''said the doctor,''it would be an insult to your intelligence, whether you have taken the usual precautions?''
17031''I presume, though you have not addressed me by letter, that your visit is not unconnected with business?''
17031''I say, Merton,''asked Bude,''how can you be so uncivil to that man?
17031''I see, and she being an heiress, the testator was anxious to protect her youth and innocence?''
17031''I see, so far-- but the machine?''
17031''I suppose he has no objection to them; but have you seen Miss Bangs?''
17031''I wonder how much the six figures run to?''
17031''If you fish did you ever try the Perch-- I mean an inn, not the fish of the same name-- at Walton- on- Dove?
17031''In Heaven''s name,''asked the earl,''what means this mystification?
17031''Indeed, and why?''
17031''Indeed?''
17031''Is Bulcester, then, such an intemperate constituency?
17031''Is Gran your grandmother?''
17031''Is Miss Limmer kind to us?''
17031''Is Rangoon in his place, Mary?''
17031''Is he a very portly gentleman?''
17031''Is he about my size?
17031''Is he near my size?''
17031''Is he?''
17031''Is his god very-- voluminous?''
17031''Is it not so, Julia dearest?''
17031''Is it not, or do my trained instincts deceive me, that of young Blake, the new poet?
17031''Is it one, Julia-- nod when I come to the exact number-- two?
17031''Is she attached to a South African Jew?''
17031''Is that a fishing village in the cleft of the cliffs?
17031''Is that you, Merton?''
17031''Is the idea that the Prince and the Viscount should_ both_ neglect their former flames?''
17031''Is the young lady an angler?''
17031''Is there absolutely no other way?''
17031''Is there any restriction on the nationality of the competitors?''
17031''Is your secret to be kept from me?''
17031''It does not seem to lead to much?''
17031''It is a subject sure to create a sensation, is n''t it?''
17031''It_ must_ be a practical joke, but how to reach the operators?''
17031''Learning ping- pong easily?''
17031''Logan, would you mind very much if I said no more just now about the feathers?
17031''Lost your cook?
17031''May I ask how old the lady is at present?''
17031''May I ask whether in fact your sorrows at this discovery have been intense?''
17031''May I beg you to help Miss Apsley to arrange her tucker?''
17031''May I call a cab for you-- it still rains?''
17031''May I remove some of these feathery things?''
17031''May I take your boat, sir, across to the ferry, and send the fishermen from the village to search each end of the loch on their side?
17031''Merton, is this an interview?
17031''Merton,''said our hero,''and yours?''
17031''Miss Limmer?''
17031''Must you leave us?
17031''My ancestors nearly nipped off with a king, and why ca n''t I carry off a cook?
17031''My friend,''said Miss Crofton, thoroughly enjoying herself,''is the victim of passionate and unavailing remorse, are you not, Julia?''
17031''Nane o''ye dry?
17031''No bad news?''
17031''No doubt you have received a report from your agents?''
17031''No kidnapping Miss Blowser?''
17031''No practical jokes with the victuals?''
17031''No schemes to poison people?''
17031''No, not that exactly, still, you see the motive?''
17031''Not at a preparatory school yet?
17031''Not at the Cats''Home?''
17031''Not for the name?''
17031''Not, oh, of course not, the one who left her money to the Armenians?''
17031''Nothing gone wrong?
17031''Nothing?''
17031''Now can you remember any little weakness of this, I must frankly admit, admirable artist and exemplary woman?''
17031''Now speaking as a professional man, and on honour, how_ is_ his lordship?''
17031''Now what shall I show you?
17031''Now what variety of nature shall you go for?
17031''Now will you explain,''Logan asked,''or shall I pour this whisky and water down the back of your neck?''
17031''Now, Merton,''said Blake,''it is not usual, is it, for ministers of the Anglican sect to play the spy?''
17031''Now, Mr. Jones Harvey, and Mr. Logan, sir, what have_ you_ to say?''
17031''Now, Mr. Merton, did you ever see or hear of a_ popular_ museum, a museum that the People would give its cents to see?''
17031''Now, Tommy, is Miss Limmer kind to you?''
17031''Now, am I,''thought Merton as he walked down the Broad,''to put Jephson up to it?
17031''Now, honour bright, is your plan within the law?
17031''Now, what tidings?''
17031''Now, what_ have_ you been doing, Merton?''
17031''Now,''he asked,''about your plan; is it following the emu''s feather?''
17031''Now,''said Merton,''shall I sign a promise?
17031''Oh, Melissa, can you even_ dream_ of another in an hour like this?''
17031''Oh, a drysalter?''
17031''Oh, do n''t they?
17031''Oh, hang it, where is there an opening, a demand, for the broken, the stoney broke?
17031''Oh, it is I who am running up to town incognita?''
17031''Oh, the chaff?''
17031''Oh, why from the heretic girl of my soul Should I fly, to seek elsewhere an orthodox kiss?''
17031''Only about_ me_?''
17031''Ony ither gentleman tak''a sook?''
17031''Or a father or sister?''
17031''Perhaps I had better walk in front of you down stairs?''
17031''Perhaps they might never--?''
17031''Perhaps, Captain Funkal, you will honour me by accepting this specimen, and wearing it while we are in these latitudes?
17031''Personal, sir?
17031''Poison the lemons?
17031''Probably in Mr. Skertchley''s curious paper in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal?''
17031''Proof that you saw a hen Moa sitting?''
17031''Quakers?''
17031''Queer situation, eh?''
17031''Satan reproving sin?''
17031''Say seven thousand words?
17031''Shall I send the animal out of the room?
17031''Shall we go to see the horses?''
17031''She is fond of cats?''
17031''She is not a Christian Scientist?''
17031''She is one whom a father can trust-- but has she been vaccinated?''
17031''She opened that letter?''
17031''She wo n''t change her creed?''
17031''Short- sighted, perhaps?''
17031''Sir, have you been vaccinated?''
17031''So Rudolph had no chance?''
17031''So he wants to marry dollars?''
17031''So we thought we had better take advice: it seemed rather a lark, too, do n''t you know?
17031''Stop whom?
17031''Than that she was tied for life to a man who could cause it?
17031''That is all you know?''
17031''That will do, as far as his bothering old manuscripts are concerned; but how about the real business-- the two undesirable marriages?''
17031''The Blood Covenant?''
17031''The Bride of Seven?''
17031''The Vidame de la Lain will be staying with you?''
17031''The body disappeared?''
17031''The bustard?''
17031''The dinner is on Friday, you say?''
17031''The divine Althaea-- Marchioness of Bowton?''
17031''The lady''s name is Bats?''
17031''The mysterious female?''
17031''The obsolete Thackeray?
17031''The other gentlemen''s scientific beasts do n''t seem to like them, sir?''
17031''The sea serpent?''
17031''The situation is grave?''
17031''The voters will be prejudiced in favour of their own fellow citizens?''
17031''The what?''
17031''Then I owe you nothing?''
17031''Then am I to understand that the conditions affecting your marriage are still an entire secret?''
17031''Then everybody who has such a machine as Mr. Macrae''s gets all Mr. Macrae''s messages for nothing?''
17031''Then he may marry his cook?''
17031''Then my theory need not necessarily be wrong?''
17031''Then the conversion is relatively recent?''
17031''Then the somebody before was another somebody?''
17031''Then there is a reason in addition to that which most people do n''t find obvious?
17031''Then where did Miss Monypenny make his acquaintance?''
17031''Then why did n''t you lay in a stock of the pearls?''
17031''Then why did not Jones Harvey weigh in with a letter to_ Nature_?''
17031''Then why do n''t you bring one over to the Zoo?''
17031''Then why does she not consult some discreet and learned person, her spiritual director?
17031''Then you are sailing near the wind?''
17031''Then you really will essay the adventure?''
17031''Then, Mr. Merton, why in the world did you not let your friend walk in Burlington Arcade, and see the lady?
17031''Then, really, if he is an honest young man, as he seems to be a patriotic fellow, are you certain that you are wise in objecting?''
17031''Then, to begin with a simple example in ordinary life, you know what telepathy is?''
17031''Then, to enter on odious details,''said Merton,''had you thought of any terms?''
17031''There is somebody in America?
17031''They found out nothing?''
17031''They say, What say they?
17031''They wo n''t recognise you as the author of your more criminal romances?''
17031''They''ll think that a patient is to be rescued?''
17031''This to an author?
17031''This young lady, if our James lets his affections loose on her-- how would_ that_ be, sir?''
17031''Tierney,''said Logan, in a pause,''may I present you to Miss Martin?''
17031''To neglect you?''
17031''Tommy,''he said( having seen his signature),''where do you live?''
17031''Tommy,_ why_ did you come here?''
17031''Trust you; how, ma''am?''
17031''Was it Clonmell?''
17031''Was it Eachain?''
17031''Was the witness a man or a woman?''
17031''Well deserved, I am confident,''said Logan;''and now you are sure that you know exactly what you have to do, as I have explained?''
17031''Well, I am not ill, but people must think I am ill. Is your grandson on the night shift or the day shift?''
17031''Well, and what can our Society do for you?''
17031''Well, as his offer is not a basis of negotiation?''
17031''Well, my man, what''s a''this aboot?''
17031''Well, try me; how does the wireless machine work?''
17031''Well, what do you want me to do?''
17031''Well, what is the plan?''
17031''Well, where is he?
17031''Were you wearing the ring?''
17031''Wha''s gaumlin''?
17031''What am I to think?''
17031''What are we to do next?''
17031''What are you busy with just now?''
17031''What are you publishing just now?''
17031''What are your terms?''
17031''What became of my daughter?''
17031''What can I say to you?''
17031''What can this new outrage mean?
17031''What did Mr. Macrae say?''
17031''What did he know?''
17031''What did the marquis propose?''
17031''What did you do?''
17031''What did you say to him?''
17031''What do you mean, sir?''
17031''What do you say?''
17031''What do you think of Miss Macrae?
17031''What do you think of it?''
17031''What do you want me to do?''
17031''What do you want_ them_ for?
17031''What does the jester mean by heading his communication"The Seven Hunters"?''
17031''What does this mean, Madam?
17031''What does_ he_ do?''
17031''What for?''
17031''What had I better do now?''
17031''What had you got?''
17031''What has his history been, this gentleman''s-- Mr. Fulton, I think you called him?''
17031''What in the world do you mean?''
17031''What is Gaelic for a wild cat, Blake?''
17031''What is conscience without knowledge, sir?''
17031''What is it?
17031''What is love but a disease?''
17031''What is that?''
17031''What is the beggar like?''
17031''What is the matter?
17031''What is this fine conspiracy?''
17031''What is this wireless machine?
17031''What is to be done?''
17031''What is young Bower?''
17031''What kind of boat was it?''
17031''What kind of looking men were they?''
17031''What of it?
17031''What on earth do you mean?''
17031''What the devil do you mean?''
17031''What was in the sack?''
17031''What was that?''
17031''What was the end of it?''
17031''What was your theory?''
17031''What way?''
17031''What you really want, I think,''he went on, as Miss McCabe resumed her seat,''is to have your choice, as you said, among the competitors?''
17031''What''s that?''
17031''What''s that?''
17031''What''s that?''
17031''What''s your story, sir?''
17031''What, of the Restalrig family?''
17031''What?''
17031''What?''
17031''What_ are_ you about?''
17031''When does he leave his work?''
17031''When had the snow begun to fall?''
17031''When shall England return to her Mother''s bosom?''
17031''When shall our prayers be heard?''
17031''Where are my poems?''
17031''Where are they not?''
17031''Where are they now-- the policemen, I mean?''
17031''Where can we talk without being disturbed?''
17031''Where is Miss Macrae?''
17031''Where is he?''
17031''Where, indeed?''
17031''Where?
17031''Which?''
17031''White bronze, what''s that, eh?''
17031''Who are the Berbalangs then?''
17031''Who are_ you_?''
17031''Who is Miss Limmer?''
17031''Whose it is?''
17031''Whose skirts do you allude to?''
17031''Why cruel?''
17031''Why did you laugh when my friends came to luncheon?
17031''Why do n''t they elope?''
17031''Why do n''t you take her into the world, and show her life?
17031''Why do you call her"the downy she"?
17031''Why do you contemplate life as a whole, Mr. Merton?
17031''Why do you want Bats and me?''
17031''Why does he call himself Vidame,"the Vidame de la Lain"?''
17031''Why have you asked us, me at least?''
17031''Why not?''
17031''Why not?''
17031''Why should Jane break it off if the old gentleman agrees?''
17031''Why, if you insist on knowing,''said Merton,''I have, though I do not see--''''Recently?''
17031''Why, sir, I have a family, and my eldest son--''''Does he decline to be vaccinated?''
17031''Why, sir-- I am addressing Professor Jones Harvey?''
17031''Why, suppose they do release the marquis, how am I to get the money to pay double his offer?
17031''Why, what could they do?''
17031''Why?
17031''Why?''
17031''Why?''
17031''Why?''
17031''Why_ Myself_?''
17031''Will you kindly send a boat round here for me, Mr. Macrae, if you do not object to my joining you on the return voyage?''
17031''Will_ that_ do?''
17031''With the people?''
17031''With whom?''
17031''Wo n''t there be a row if you kill the cat?
17031''Would a thunder- storm further south derange it?''
17031''Would it be asking too much to request you to let me keep it concealed, even from you?
17031''Would you mind saying that again?''
17031''Would you oblige me by repeating that statement?''
17031''Ye''re a Lanerick man?''
17031''Yet it would not do for_ me_ to be known to be connected with the enterprise?''
17031''Yet, after all,''thought he,''is she not right?
17031''You are not going to try any detective work; to find out if she is a woman with a past, with a husband living?
17031''You are not in my debt to the extent of a farthing, but if you think I have accidentally been--''''An instrument?''
17031''You are satisfied that Te- iki- pa knew something?
17031''You are sure that you will be in no danger from evil tongues?''
17031''You are wearing the ring I gave you?''
17031''You can guarantee absolute secrecy?''
17031''You can not mean that the young lady is excessively addicted to the-- wine cup?''
17031''You can think of nothing else-- no weakness to work on?''
17031''You did n''t expect_ me_ to meet you on such a night, did you, Johnnie?''
17031''You did not send down that blessed young man to the Perch?''
17031''You did, perhaps, sign one when he made his will, as he told me?''
17031''You do n''t call_ that_ a sacrifice?''
17031''You do n''t know what that is?
17031''You do n''t mean that you can persuade Jane to be vaccinated?''
17031''You do n''t mean to do him any harm?''
17031''You do not hint at any cerebral disequilibrium?''
17031''You do not mean that there is any reason to suspect foul play?
17031''You examined the carpet of the room; no traces there of these odd muffled foot- coverings you found in the snow?''
17031''You give me your word that your idea is absolutely safe and harmless?
17031''You have a cab there, shall I drive to your rooms with you and him?''
17031''You have found no tracks, then?''
17031''You have museums even in London?''
17031''You have no consort?''
17031''You have no other objections to the alliance?''
17031''You have not searched the cliffs?''
17031''You have your idea?''
17031''You kept up her acquaintance?
17031''You know you must be very careful?''
17031''You mean about nobbling the electric machine?
17031''You never saw him before; are you sure it was the man?''
17031''You quite understand, Merton, do n''t you?''
17031''You read the old Masters?''
17031''You really do n''t know?''
17031''You really have no hope by this method?''
17031''You remember Water Lane?''
17031''You say that your scheme involves you in no personal danger?''
17031''You see one weak point in your offers, do n''t you?''
17031''You slipped through the cordon?''
17031''You suppose that it has been stolen( you know the American and other cases of the same kind) for the purpose of extracting money from the heir?''
17031''You think you have a clue?''
17031''You will dress as in your photograph in_ The Young Girl_?''
17031''You will not go to him armed?''
17031''You will not hurt him?
17031''You will report at once on your return?''
17031''You wo n''t forget-- I know how busy you are-- her cards for your party?''
17031''You wo n''t hypnotise the girl and let him vaccinate her when she is in the hypnotic sleep?''
17031''You wo n''t stop and smoke?''
17031''You wo n''t?''
17031''You would like a ride on the elephant, Tommy?''
17031''You would not use a girl against her own father?''
17031''You wunna forget to rake out the ha''fire, my lord?''
17031''You''ll be cautious?''
17031''You''ll not have any snuff?''
17031''You''re laughing at my Doric?''
17031''You''re sure of it?''
17031''Your friend is not a professor?''
17031''Your kindness in taking charge of her is not not wholly uncompensated?''
17031''Your sister is staying with you?''
17031''Your subordinate has doubtless told you all that I told him?''
17031''Yours?''
17031''_ Lastly, did the trustees ask you if you were a married man_?''
17031A big fellow like you?''
17031A large order from Sarawak?"
17031A_ dragon volant_, did you ever hear such nonsense?
17031Am I to come to that?
17031And Lady Alice Guevara?
17031And do you believe that Mr. Logan will thank you for acting in this way?''
17031And how are you to explain this escapade?
17031And if it did, would his conduct not confirm what you have heard, and open the eyes of Miss Malory?''
17031And noo, wull ye tell me hoo we''re to win back to Drem the nicht?''
17031And now can you give me your attention for a few minutes?''
17031And now in the name of God,''said the girl reverently, with sudden emotion,''you will keep your promise to the letter?''
17031And now, Mr. Logan, you know the full extent of my misfortunes: what course does your experience recommend?
17031And, ah yes, does he possess such a thing as an old greatcoat?''
17031Any followers allowed?
17031Anything in business?
17031Apsley, may I ask whether you wrote this letter yourself?''
17031Are there any weak points in the defence?
17031Are you doing Mr. Jones Harvey at home for a picture paper?''
17031Are you serialising anything else?''
17031At last he spoke:''Will you leave this affair to me, Merton?
17031At the end of it where is the man?''
17031Aw''m askin''the company,_ div_ a look like a polisman?
17031Before what magistrate can you take him, and where?
17031Blake?''
17031Blake?''
17031Brown- Smith?''
17031But he had, perhaps, a collection of native arms and implements?''
17031But if Leah has let her affections loose on young Timmins, an Anglo- Saxon and a Christian, what can we do?
17031But now, how can I speak of your wise advice, and how much do n''t I owe you?''
17031But the accomplices?''
17031But were you going to shake hands with Miss Truman with that horrible ring?
17031But what are we to do?
17031But what for?''
17031But what is the mystery?''
17031But what, after all, is hysteria?''
17031But where are the accomplices?''
17031But where are the girls?''
17031But where was that other body?
17031But which of you is the senior officer here?''
17031But who is the Jesuit?''
17031But who''cornered''the muddy pearls in Cagayan Sulu?
17031But why?''
17031But you will bring me the document?''
17031But, as a question of business, may we call the fortune considerable?''
17031But, bless my soul, what''s thon?''
17031But, by the way, how is Blake?''
17031But, look here, am I too inquisitive?
17031But, look here, do you want a happy ending to this romance?''
17031By the bye, what about"value received"?
17031By- the- bye do you remember the address of the parson whose dog was hurt?''
17031Ca n''t we send her a forged telegram to say that her mother is dying?
17031Ca n''t we think of something?
17031Ca n''t you help me?''
17031Can I--''''Turn it to any purpose?
17031Can anybody see her and not love her?''
17031Can not you find an opening?
17031Can you enable me, dressed as I am, to have an interview with him?''
17031Can you not put me on some work if it is only to copy telegraphic despatches?
17031Can your skipper come aboard?''
17031Could Jane have drowned herself out of the way, or taken smallpox, which might ruin her charms?
17031Could anything be done through the softer emotions?
17031Could we find a room less crowded?
17031Did she create her characters first, and let them evolve their fortunes, or did she invent a plot, and make her characters fit in?
17031Did they correspond?''
17031Did you ever hear of the Berbalangs of Cagayan Sulu?''
17031Did you ever try night fishing with the bustard?''
17031Did you get the threepence?
17031Did you not act in a revival of_ The Country Wife_?''
17031Div_ ye_ ken Lairdie Bower?
17031Do n''t you know?''
17031Do n''t you see how safe it is?
17031Do n''t you see that he made the will long_ before_ he took the very natural and proper step of consulting Messrs. Gray and Graham?''
17031Do the others?
17031Do you call yourself a Gael?''
17031Do you correspond?''
17031Do you fish?''
17031Do you know Mackinnon''s cave in Mull, opposite Iona?''
17031Do you know how it is done?''
17031Do you know what they would have called people like me a hundred years ago?
17031Do you not agree with me, my lord?''
17031Do you remember a house with high walls and spikes on them?''
17031Do you see my ring?''
17031Do you see?''
17031Do you seriously believe, with your experience, that some extinct species are-- not extinct?''
17031Do you use_ urali_?
17031Do you want to be vaccinated?
17031Does he smoke?''
17031Does your friend act as recruiting sergeant, if you will pardon the phrase, for the noble army of martyrs?''
17031Douglas?''
17031Fogarty will then ask,"Have you the_ churinga_?"''
17031Friday is one of his gorging dinner- parties, and who knows what may happen if she pleases him?
17031Fulton?''
17031Fulton?''
17031Graham?''
17031Graham?''
17031Graham?''
17031Had she a moral aim, a purpose?
17031Have I time to reach the station by ten minutes past seven?''
17031Have we not the Maxims, and any quantity of Lee- Metfords?
17031Have you a revolver?''
17031Have you a taste of brandy in the house?''
17031Have you any ideas?''
17031Have you been vaccinated, sir?''
17031Have you come into a fortune?''
17031Have you heard of Eachain, Mr. Blake?
17031Have you my poems?''
17031Have you seen him?''
17031Have you written your lecture?''
17031Have you_ said_ anything?''
17031He asked for a private interview with Mr. Macrae, who inquired whether his school friend, Mr. Williams, might share it?
17031He has a better one?''
17031He may alter his will, and then-- where do I come in?''
17031He sat down in the boat pensively, and then-- what was that?
17031He shouted for Mary:''What''s the matter with your mistress, with my cook?''
17031How are you to get round that?
17031How can I hope to find an object more eligible, Miss Crofton, than I must conceive your interesting friend to be?''
17031How can you keep him?
17031How could that have been done?
17031How could_ that_ be done?''
17031How do you know that?''
17031How else could a kite--"a dragon,"the sailor said-- have been flying above the empty sea?''
17031How much?''
17031How stop the mesalliance?
17031How will you manage about getting into decent clothes?''
17031How would that work into the plot?
17031I asked if you--''''Your words were"Had I a spark of the devil in me?"
17031I do n''t deny that there may be distasteful things, but if you are quite sure about this gentleman''s--''''Character?''
17031I hae the cairts on me, maybe ye''d take a hand, sir, at Beggar ma Neebour, or Catch the Ten?
17031In the station, not a nice station, he was accosted by a stranger, who asked if he was Mr. Merton?
17031Intended marriage off, and nobody a penny the worse, unless--''''Unless what?''
17031Is he very deeply enamoured?
17031Is it a Neo- Christian dinner?
17031Is it the Daoine Sidh?''
17031Is n''t the scenery, is n''t the weather, beautiful enough for you?
17031Is she not"the girl who gives to song what gold could never buy"?
17031Is that hypothesis absolutely out of keeping with his curious character?''
17031Is that your objection?''
17031Is the disaster irremediable?
17031Is there anybody in the country whom you can absolutely trust?''
17031Is this part of the great American Joke?
17031Is your grandson a teetotaller?''
17031Is your ward beautiful?''
17031It involves no crime?''
17031It is a plan which, I confess, appears wild, but what is_ not_ wild in this unhappy affair?
17031It looks very modern, does it not?''
17031It usually does in our experience,''said Merton, adding,''Am I to write to you at your London address?''
17031Know any Latin yet?''
17031Let me take your hand, it is cool as the hands of the foam- footed maidens of-- of-- what''s the name of the place?''
17031Logan knows nothing?''
17031Logan looked forward to finding him crusty, but, after seeming a little puzzled, the holy man exclaimed,''Why, you must be Logan of Trinity?''
17031Logan rumpled his hair,''Ca n''t I get her to lunch at a restaurant and ply her with the wines of Eastern France?
17031Logan, did I not regret the choice of that port when the news reached us in New Zealand?''
17031Lumley?''
17031M.?''
17031Macnab,''said Lumley, shaking hands with the chief,''you have not taken my friend into custody?''
17031Macrae,''asked Lady Bude suddenly,''have you had Donald with you long?''
17031Macrae,''he exclaimed,''may I speak to you privately?
17031Macrae,''said Merton,''may I run and bring Donald and the other servants here?
17031Macrae?''
17031May I ask if he was interested in the Aborigines?''
17031May I speak quite freely?''
17031McCabe?''
17031Merton went on,''to find a worthier and more attractive object?
17031Merton, do you remember a question, rather unconventional, which you put to me at the dinner party you and Mr. Logan gave at the restaurant?''
17031Merton?''
17031Merton?''
17031Merton?''
17031Methven,''to her maid,''where is the Vidame de la Lain?''
17031Might I suggest a gag, if by chance you have such a thing about you?
17031My dear fellow, do n''t you know how dismal the_ parti_ selected for a man or girl invariably is?
17031No police- court publicity?''
17031Not by death, I hope?''
17031Now a raid on the fish?
17031Now, I wonder if that injured man is not meditating some priestly revenge that would do our turn and get rid of Miss Blowser?''
17031Now, where was there a magistrate?
17031Or should we take my motor car?''
17031Perhaps he himself had better go and pick up Logan and inform him fully as to the mysterious events?
17031Perhaps the reader guesses?
17031Perhaps you have some sort of means of intelligence in the enemy''s camp?''
17031Poisoned?''
17031Proudie?''
17031Recently, ever since she met Captain Lestrange-- of the Guards--''''The fourth?''
17031Secret for secret, out with it; how did the feathers help you, if they_ did_ help you, to find out my uncle, the Marquis?
17031Shall I give you her address?
17031Shall I shake hands with the office- boy?--it might do him good-- or would Kutuzoff give a paw?''
17031Shall we say that we purchase your ethnological collection?''
17031Shall you fetch a Berbalang of what do you call it?''
17031She is American, you know, and perhaps you know her book,_ Social Experiments_?''
17031She is free from the besetting sin of the artistic temperament?''
17031Should I tell them?''
17031Should he ask the girl whether she had told her father what, on the night of the marquis''s appearance at the office, Logan had told her?
17031Should we write her a Round Robin?
17031So what next?
17031So you must not despair of us, Mr. Blake, and you, that have"the sight,"may see Eachain yourself, who knows?''
17031Social inequality?''
17031Suppose I reconcile Mr. Warren to the union?
17031Tankerville?''
17031The bard went on,''A beautiful game, most delightful They play--''''Ping- pong?''
17031The first-- that was Mr. Bathe, Julia?''
17031The natives?''
17031The one question is How Much?
17031The poet went on,''May I speak to you the words of the emissary from the lovely land?''
17031Then there rang out a pistol- shot, or was it two pistol- shots?
17031There''s one good thing about it, you know how Highland landscape is spoiled by telegraph posts?''
17031These dreams or visions of his own on the night before Miss Macrae was taken-- were they wholly due to tobacco and the liver?
17031They found that he could catch a train at 10.49 A.M., and be in London about 9 P.M.''How are you to get to the station?''
17031This affair--''''The body snatching at Kirkburn?''
17031To support them?''
17031Two minutes later she asked,''Has Rangy come back?''
17031Vaccinating a Conscientious Objector, without consent, yet without violence,--what would the law say to_ that_?''
17031Was I asleep when I saw the tartans go down the stairs?
17031Was Mrs. Nicholson in a rage?
17031Was Tommy going to Eton?
17031Was his name Harris?''
17031Was it for_ your_ shattered ideals that I have wept many a night on Serena''s faithful breast?''
17031Was this extraordinary man anxious to reject a lady''multimillionaire''for his son, and a crown of some sort or other for his daughter?
17031We are to disentangle--''''A royal duke?''
17031We have a vacancy for Friday week; but why do you inquire?
17031Well, Logan, I suppose you wo n''t tell me what your game is?''
17031Were you not told that his cure of souls is in Scotland Yard?
17031What am I in the eyes of a man like Mr. Macrae?
17031What are you doing with my children?
17031What are your terms?''
17031What can we do?
17031What can you or I do in the Colonies?
17031What could a puzzled parent do but bid his cabman follow like the wind?
17031What did Mr. Blake say?''
17031What did you say her name is, Logan?''
17031What did you say you can pick up?''
17031What do you know about them?''
17031What do you know about these children?
17031What do you think of a game of billiards, father?''
17031What do you think of asking our young friend down to lecture-- on Friday week, I think you said-- on the Use and Abuse of Novels?
17031What had occurred?
17031What has happened?''
17031What have we against the man?
17031What have you got to say for yourselves?''
17031What is appleringie?''
17031What is he doing now?''
17031What is yonder shape skirting the lawn?
17031What ought I to do?
17031What sort of client was he, or she?
17031What sort of fellow is Scremerston?''
17031What the deuce is your felt want?''
17031What then?''
17031What was he up to?''
17031What was the holy man doing?''
17031What was this mystery?
17031When was Bude to return from his cruise to"The Seven Hunters"?''
17031When you saw the trustees in the States, did they tell you about the prize?''
17031Where can I find a cook?
17031Where did_ he_ learn grammar?''
17031Where were they?
17031Who are you?''
17031Who is the man that the beautiful lady opposite is making laugh so?''
17031Who was she?''
17031Who was the woman?''
17031Who were the wretches?
17031Why are you so moral?
17031Why did I ever know what_ Kurdaitcha_ and_ Interlinia_ mean?
17031Why did not Bude marry?
17031Why did you bring these two natives of our territory on board, you well and duly knowing that the end would not justify the proceedings?''
17031Why did you send them here?''
17031Why did you shut me out of the office?''
17031Why were my fascinations not to be exercised, as per contract?
17031Why where do_ I_ come in, in this pretty plan?''
17031Why, what can you want with him?''
17031Why?''
17031Will you get into talk with the boy, and ask him if he is fond of his governess, say"Miss Limmer,"and notice what he says and how he says it?
17031With a hypodermic syringe?''
17031With whom does the decision rest?''
17031Would a guardsman, for instance--?''
17031Would he recognise the crew?
17031Would not the society of another pretty and intelligent girl perhaps work wonders?''
17031Would the guest hold himself, or herself, ready at need?
17031Would the speaker allow people freedom to drink?
17031Would you like me to send out for smelling- salts?
17031Would you mind telling me your dreams again?''
17031Ye''ll a''hae Jos, billies?''
17031You are dissatisfied with the choice, I understand, which she has made?''
17031You are not certain that she has accepted him?''
17031You are not chaffing?''
17031You are not going to put a live adder among the eels?
17031You are not going, I trust, to poison the lemons for the elder Mr. Warren''s lemon squash?
17031You can give me a bed to- night?''
17031You can swim?''
17031You did not show them the letters?''
17031You do not suspect-- murder?''
17031You have heard of the Mylodon, the gigantic Sloth?
17031You hit on its discovery through knowing the priest''s hole at Oxburgh Hall, I suppose?''
17031You may know Mr. Lumley, the Professor of Toxicology in the University here?''
17031You may remember that an unknown person, a friend of your ancestor, was engaged?''
17031You quite understand?
17031You remain in town for the season?''
17031You said that your Society indulged in literary lectures: is your programme for the season filled up?''
17031You see that window in the embrasure here, next the door, looking out towards the loch?
17031You sent to Scotland Yard for detectives, I think you said?''
17031You take me for an English tourist, behaving as I have done by way of a joke, or for a bet?''
17031You understand?''
17031You will not bring the police on him?''
17031You will not give him up?
17031You will take him to his house; he lives with your son?''
17031You wish to see this engagement ended?''
17031You''ll know who I am?''
17031You''ll not be one of the Grahams of Netherby, though?''
17031You,''he said to the wretched captive,''have you been at this machine?''
17031_ Div_ a look like an English birkie, or ane o''the gentry?''
17031adding,''I must ask, Miss, have you the_ churinga_?''
17031fill yer ain glass, And let the jug pass, Hoo d''ye ken but yer neighbour''s dry?''
17031four?''
17031has Mrs. Bower a pack of cards?''
17031mused Mr. Macrae;''what is it in circumstances like mine?
17031thought Logan; but what he said was,''You know Mr. Tierney, your neighbour?
17031three?
17031was it for such as_ you_ that I pointed to the crown of martyrdom?
17031{ 406} The owner of the voice replied:''You have no torpedoes?''
36427( G. B. Farinati), 1532- 1592, Italian--Vision of Resurrection, 267 Foppa, Vincenzo, 1427(?
36427And what of the struggling artists?
36427And what was the result?
36427But the objects are distinguished by our knowledge and experience, and if we are to eliminate these in one art, why not in another?
36427But where is the Phidian Demeter?
36427Does the impressionist see these things?
36427How can he paint her anointed with ambrosial oil which is ever struggling for freedom to bathe the rolling earth in fragrance?
36427How many artists now would have the patience to make such a mould?
36427If we accept beauty as the expression of emotion, how far have we progressed towards the indicated goal?
36427Let us suppose that a painter could be found who could execute such a figure: how could he isolate it to the mind?
36427Mars may disappear with the wolf, but who can hide the glory of Rome?
36427Now what does this mean?
36427Such was Turner according to Ruskin, but is there any sign of this in his works?
36427There must come a period when the optic or aural nerves can be attuned no further; and is the limit equal in all persons?
36427What human being can appropriately describe the great ideals in art of ancient Greece?
36427What imagination can picture the expansion of art throughout the world had its flight been free since the dawn of history?
36427What is there then to compensate the artist for this limitation?
36427What of these?
36427What was it then that established the eternal fame of her beauty?
36427What were these to do at a time when at the best the outlook was poor?
36427Who would weep when in front of the greatest marvels of Greek sculpture?
36427Why should the artist remember the orgies of Rome, and forget the Grecian pastoral fancies?
36427Why should the dance be turned into a drunken revel?
36427Why trouble about carving in the round when we only actually see in the human figure a flat surface defined by colour?
36427With what other term than"limitless"can we describe the imagination of a Shakespeare?
36427[ 10] Of course these observations are general, for there arises the question, to what extent can the senses and imagination be trained?
36427[ a]_ What is Art?_ Aylmer Maude translation, 1904.
36427[ b]_ What is Art?_ Aylmer Maude Translation.
36427[ c] What can be said of so amazing a declaration?
32075After all, what does it matter?
32075Already, Mary?
32075Am I glory''s queen?
32075And are you sure that the Baron will approve of your choice of an escort?
32075And do you notice how she can manage s before a, and not before u? 32075 And even if I am, what matter is that?
32075And his office, 170 Rue des Allumettes?
32075And if I am, am I letting light or darkness in upon my poor poet? 32075 And in fact you do n''t think a girl ought to be allowed to spend her money without some wise person of the superior sex to guide her hand?
32075And the object?
32075And went by the name of Jules von Dressdorf?
32075And what are you going to do?
32075And you wo n''t tell me what all this means?
32075And your king-- the king in your story-- did he cut the rope at last?
32075Bad form, is n''t it-- don''t you think? 32075 Believe what nonsense?
32075Both what fellows?
32075But are there not rules in every game? 32075 But how could that be?"
32075But why do you make this offer to me?
32075Ca n''t you tell me what it was like?
32075Came from''Frisco?
32075Can I do_ nothing_ but sit here and wait? 32075 Did you hear?
32075Did, eh?
32075Do you see much of an alteration in the ways of men toward me already, Mary? 32075 Do you think,"I said wearily,"that the proprietor of the_ pension_ was an accomplice?"
32075Do? 32075 Flanel peticoat?"
32075Had my trouble with the police here anything to do with the matter?
32075Have you a passport?
32075Have you been long here?
32075Have you read the papers to- day, Lil?
32075He d money left him?
32075His name?
32075How could that be, Mr. Heron? 32075 How d''ye do, Miss Grey?
32075How do you like Blanchet''s book?
32075How would that do for a young lady''s name?
32075I do n''t think a man ought to take such a helping hand as that from-- well, from----"From a woman, you were going to say? 32075 I hope you found a pleasant reception there?"
32075I wonder what he would say if he knew of it?
32075I''d know it ef I seed it, but----"Was it like this?
32075I''ll walk a little way with you if you will allow me?
32075Ma- a- a''m?
32075Miss or Mrs., ma''am?
32075Mought I ax your name, ma''am?
32075No? 32075 Offended?
32075Oh, that fellow? 32075 Ronayne, fount of wisdom and light, whatever may the Dialectical Society be?"
32075Sir, your passport?
32075So you are really going to be an heiress, my dearest?
32075Spoke English well?
32075That little old maid? 32075 The man you talked to just now?"
32075The officer''s number to whom you say you gave your passport?
32075The terms?
32075The youth-- black eyes, black hair, high forehead, projecting chin, height five feet three?
32075The_ pension_ in the Porte de Schaerbeck?
32075Then how am I to become returning officer for Keeton?
32075Then your visit did not bring you any nearer to a reconciliation with your brother?
32075Then, papa, do you think we sha n''t win now?
32075Throwing away her money?
32075To me?
32075Was he-- an-- educated man?
32075Was the snow very deep?
32075Was there no danger of his freezing to death?
32075Well, Mr. Heron, what if they do?
32075Well, why should there not be a woman Alceste? 32075 Whar_ did_ yer come from?"
32075What can I do for you to thank you?
32075What can it matter which way my wishes go-- if they went any way?
32075What can_ I_ do to find him? 32075 What do you mean?"
32075What does it matter if I am made a little ridiculous in my own eyes?
32075What does our father, the Dean, say?
32075What have I to do with it?
32075What is his opera to be called?
32075What is like a woman? 32075 What must I do?
32075What on earth can he be doing there,he asked,"under her window?
32075What was the date of your leaving Brussels?
32075What was the name of the advocate?
32075What''s that fellow''s name that wus partners with Circus Jack in the Banderita?
32075What?
32075When can I see the youth?
32075Where?
32075Why confess myself a fool by asking what anything means? 32075 Why do I make the offer to you?
32075Why do you think that, my dear?
32075Why should he be a lover any more than I?
32075Why should n''t he be there as well as I?
32075Will the Herr ride or walk?
32075Will the Herr ride or walk?
32075Wo n''t you_ help_ me?
32075Yes, I am speaking of Blanchet, of course-- of whom else could I be speaking in such a way?
32075You are not going any further, I suppose?
32075You are shocked at my want of sweet, feminine docility? 32075 You do n''t like the other fellow so well?"
32075You surprise me-- and where?
32075You wise woman, what is it?
32075Zo? 32075 Zo?"
32075Zo?
32075Zo?
32075_ Quien sabe?_ Let the dead past bury its dead.
32075''What else_ could_ he do?''
32075''What would I not have given a year ago for any sort of hard work that would have made me sure of £ 500 a year?''
32075''Will you go with me to see him, and convince yourself?''
32075--Where will the desire for championship not lead some one of us, and where will it end?
32075Am I depriving him of the amber, the dew, and the saffron light, or not?
32075Am I wicked, I wonder, to be repeating these stories?
32075And do I never, in these days, see anything of my coöperative friends?
32075And he did n''t see how it was it had n''t killed me off long ago-- you remember, Jim?
32075And is it not an argument in its favor that its discipline is able to control and surmount such demoralizing tendencies?
32075And pray, what have you to do with Dialecticals, Eve?
32075And that young Scotch doctor that was so astonished to see what a family I had-- you have n''t forgotten him, have you, Jim?''
32075And then what do I want of it?"
32075And this permit?"
32075And what have either been since?
32075And why exact military service from those who are in the decline of life?
32075And why not?
32075And, now, what have you been doing with yourself?"
32075Are there not such things as fair and unfair?"
32075Are we never to do a kind thing, we unfortunate creatures, because we are women and are young?"
32075Be he livin''in Mariposa, ma''am?"
32075But I do n''t suppose in real life brothers and sisters ever do care much for each other-- do you think they do?
32075But even if they were?
32075But if this be Swedenborgianism, who of us is there that will not bid it God speed?
32075But to what great end?
32075But what can have made you think that I needed any lecture about him?
32075But what did this matter to the criticaster?
32075But what is all this hurly- burly about?
32075But what is its real value?
32075But what of that?
32075But what was I going to tell you?
32075But whom then do you care about-- in that sense?"
32075But why should you not object just at present?
32075By the by, did Danneris advance you money for the journey?"
32075By the way, you know Mellifont?"
32075Can anything have happened to Mrs. Malise''s baby?
32075Can it be possible that he too is a lover?"
32075Can you fancy it?
32075Can you give me the names of the Three Persons?''
32075Colette, the Saint who was walled up?
32075Could one have suspected such oddities in human shape, such outlandish rigs?
32075Danneris?"
32075Dared I apply to the English embassy?
32075Did Herbert think for a moment what would befall Mimi if she acted as her generosity and all their ideas would prompt her?
32075Did a cruel father, my lammie, spear his own child with a wicked pin, and stick her up in a case?"
32075Did you ever notice any-- ring-- that he wore or-- carried?"
32075Did you know it?"
32075Dis- moi, qu''en penses- tu dans tes jours de tristesse?
32075Do they hang around me in adoring groups?
32075Do they lean enraptured over me as I sweep the chords of the harp?
32075Do they who whispered that I sang like the crow before, now loudly declare that my voice puts the nightingale out of conceit with his own minstrelsy?"
32075Do you ever look at the pictures and the titles of books in the windows of the High Church bookshops?
32075Do you know what being wiped out means?"
32075Do you know what these things are, Miss Grey?"
32075Do you remember that particular year when it froze so very soon, or did not freeze for such an unprecedented length of time?
32075Do you understand what that means?"
32075Finally, with an effort, she half whispered:"Do you know where he is now?"
32075He briefly compared my person with the description, and then queried:"And the boy?"
32075He further inquired"what they wanted to hev sech a doggoned mis''able word as thet on a ring fur?"
32075He is at work on an opera, you know-- or perhaps you have not heard?"
32075He too?
32075Heron?"
32075Heron?"
32075How could I possibly be offended?
32075How could I save him with such a wreck?
32075How d''ye think of getting a livelihood this winter?''
32075How soon will it freeze this season?
32075I believe you do own a good many of the houses there now, do n''t you?"
32075I called him han''some, did n''t you, Scotty?"
32075I dare say it has given me as much pleasure as it has given him, and made me quite as proud too-- and is not that something to gain?"
32075I have n''t known any such cases-- have you?"
32075I ought not to have any ideas of my own, I suppose?"
32075I suppose it means being killed?"
32075I think they are both right enough all things considered, do n''t you know?"
32075I wish I could think myself entitled to bear such a name?"
32075I wonder if he is happy-- if he_ is_ anywhere?"
32075If the one should be condemned-- and it should be-- what should be done in case of the other?
32075In appointments other tests than the Jeffersonian,"Is he honest, is he faithful, is he capable?"
32075In the light of recent disclosures, does not the ill- gotten money burn in your pockets?
32075In what year did it freeze soonest?
32075Is it not extraordinary,"said M. Danneris, turning to me,"that even the very children of this oppressed race fill their minds with a sense of wrong?"
32075Is it not written that good Americans, when they die, go to Paris?
32075Is it praise or blame, this dedication?
32075Is not this rather a pitiful spectacle?
32075Is the affair of Bull Run to be wondered at, with such material, and in the light of later education?
32075Is the reason given any reason at all?
32075Is there anything in it?
32075Is there anything to- day?"
32075It sounds very mean, but what is a girl to do?
32075It was his own philosophy that in this matter one thing is about as good as another-- Aimer est le grand point; qu''importe la maitresse?
32075Just in time to see you, I suppose, before you go?
32075Now then, Miss Grey, which of these two fellows is to sit for Keeton?"
32075Now which of them do you want to win?"
32075Now, Miss Grey, who is to have the seat?"
32075Odd, is it not?
32075Odd, is n''t it, that he should come to be elected after all by me?"
32075Oh, my dear little Mary Blanchet, why must you have a brother-- and why must that brother be a poet?"
32075On the other hand, how could he formally ask for a private conversation with Minola without stirring all manner of absurd curiosity and conjecture?
32075On what precise day was it closed to navigation last year-- the year before-- the year before that?
32075Paul?"
32075Paul?"
32075Paul?"
32075Paul?"
32075Perhaps you would even choose to be bow- legged if so you could escape doing your duty?
32075Qu''importe le flacon pourvu qu''on ait l''ivresse?
32075Que t''a dit le malheur quand tu l''as consulté?
32075Shall we indeed see that?
32075She patiently answered one hundred and seven inquiries that evening, varying from,"How''s the sick lady?"
32075So- and- So said there was n''t another case like mine in this country, did n''t he, Jim?
32075Some particular person, then?"
32075That sisters may be fond of their brothers sometimes?"
32075That was the same year that-- no, not that year; it was the other year, do n''t you remember?
32075The question with us is, Where is your passport?
32075The work was a little expensive in this case, but what miser will say that the money was thrown away?
32075Then you pronounce for Heron?"
32075Then, as the men looked at each other, she cried in a clearer tone,"Is he_ dead_?"
32075There are not many such men, I suppose?"
32075They were there in charge of a sacred trust, and they have sold and betrayed that trust-- for what?
32075This may be called devotion to one''s work?
32075This morning I shook her, and nurse asked her,''What does papa do?''
32075To whom is the offer to be made?
32075Trompé par tes amis, trahi par ta maitresse, Du ciel et de toi- même as- tu jamais douté?
32075Was I in a dream?
32075Was ever anything so unfortunate?
32075Was it bile?
32075Was it love?
32075Was there some such ill- omened charm working all that night on Victor Heron?
32075What are the ideas?
32075What art thou doing here, O Imagination?
32075What could I do?
32075What could Minola say against all this arrangement, which seemed so satisfactory and so delightful to her friends?
32075What distinctive principles divide them?
32075What do you say to a scamper over the continent?"
32075What do you think of a Duke''s brother for an admirer, Minola?"
32075What do you think of all this, Susie?
32075What is one of the mediocre mass to do?
32075What is there here of harmony or of melody that would be valuable for its own sake?
32075What next?"
32075What to all the cheek- by- jowl encounters with the peasants in our cheap, rapturously happy sketching tours?
32075What to my lodgings at the tailor''s-- a poor cobbler- tailor, in Dresden?
32075What to my lunches of_ Wurst_ beer and black bread?
32075What to the concerts, where, in smoke and a three- penny seat, I heard music as good as plenty which costs me ten shillings to a guinea in London?
32075What was dramatic poetry before the half century which began with Marlow and Shakespeare?
32075What was painting before the like period of its glory?
32075What would have been thought of them five years ago even?
32075What would they have said to it?
32075When could you start?"
32075When?
32075Where is the blame If, when their mute significance I meet, Mine say the same?
32075Where was the free life she had arranged for herself?
32075Where were the frowns gone?
32075Where?"
32075Which of these two men do you want to see in Parliament?"
32075Whither hast thou, Fancy free, Guided me, Wild Bohemian sister dear?
32075Who does not know Mrs. Norton''s"A soldier of the Legion lay dying in Algiers,"and has not conjured up an image of"fair Bingen on the Rhine"?
32075Who is wise enough to tell what differentiates the Republican and the Democratic parties?
32075Who then was_ the_ lover-- the other lover?
32075Who would ever have thought of meeting you here?"
32075Why ca n''t you tell me what you are going to do?"
32075Why not from a woman, Mr. Heron?
32075Why not now as well as at any other time?"
32075Why not speak out, Mr. Heron, like a man and a brother?
32075Why should I disturb the arrangements of these kind people because of any weaknesses of mine?
32075Why should I not be?
32075Why should Mr. Wilkes speak of Bassanio''s going to Belmont"to swindle Portia"?
32075Why should military law assume the power to control more?
32075Why should there be any greater degradation to him in having it done by me?
32075Why such an incongruous distinction between uniformed corps and ununiformed militia?
32075Why then ask, was Mr. Sheppard too a lover?
32075Why?
32075Will not the Herr dine before he leaves?"
32075Will the Herr follow me?"
32075Will you have beer or wine?
32075Would I be seated?
32075Would you exchange love in the bush for love among these"leaders of thought"in London?
32075You appreciate my motives I am sure, Heron, my dear friend?"
32075You do n''t know what that is, my barbaric New Zealander?
32075You have promised to excuse my blunt way of talking out, have n''t you?
32075You know both these fellows, do n''t you?"
32075You would have thought that would have fetched him, would n''t you?
32075_ Voilà tout._""Bribe the commissaire?"
32075to,"Jim Wilmer''s gal perking up a little arter her faint?"
33319''Afraid of thieves? 33319 ''And what are_ you_ doing?''
33319''And where is my fine gray mare?'' 33319 ''Are you in pain?''
33319''But why do you not take a_ man_?'' 33319 ''But why is your music so sad, my good harper man; what is there that you would have that fortune denies?''
33319''Colic, said ye? 33319 ''From whence does it come?''
33319''Has your Worship no commands?'' 33319 ''I wish that old Stephen Sly was here, and John Naps and Peter Turf, and my wife Joan, and Marian Hacket: would n''t it be jolly?''
33319''See you not Loch Lomond silvered in the moon?'' 33319 ''Then why are you not married?''
33319''Then why not leave the door at home too?'' 33319 ''To the priest''s, to be married?''
33319''What are those queer- looking things yonder?'' 33319 ''What are you doing?''
33319''What is to be done?'' 33319 ''What is your wish?''
33319''What will your Worship have this morning?'' 33319 ''What''s here?''
33319''What,''said Robert,''shall we let our brother die of thirst? 33319 ''Whither away?''
33319''Who is your lord?'' 33319 ''Why do you carry that door?''
33319''Why do you wander here, my good harper?'' 33319 A what?"
33319And what is the result?
33319And what is_ that_?
33319Are the passengers here more likely to be sick than in the first cabin?
33319Are they like Mrs. Jarley''s''wax figgers?''
33319Are you sure you treated Tommy quite right at the first meeting?
33319Are you sure?
33319Before we go to Windsor Castle,said Frank Gray to Master Lewis,"will you not tell us something about the place?"
33319But how should they accomplish the end? 33319 But why a secret society?"
33319By whom?
33319Can a ship meeting another ask other questions in this way?
33319Can you now repeat it?
33319Can you tell us the story?
33319Carlisle? 33319 Carlisle?"
33319Did Prince Henry succeed his father as king? 33319 Did the mighty Guy drink as much porridge as that at every meal?"
33319Did you ever know any thing like it in your life? 33319 Did you ever see a bear in the backwoods?"
33319Did you ever see a wild man?
33319Did you think I could not speak French well enough to go out alone?
33319Do you collect leaves at all the historic places you visit?
33319Do you ever sing the songs of Burns?
33319Do you sing?
33319Do? 33319 Dunno,"said Sad Eyes;"''ave ye got a penny?"
33319Had the poet been to London when he wrote,--''Oh, then and there was hurrying to and fro''?
33319Have you decided upon a secret?
33319Have you obtained your return tickets?
33319He presently added;''Do you not hear the music?'' 33319 He stripped his back, and allowed the monks to whip him, did he not?"
33319Highland Mary?
33319How could it be done? 33319 How far can that boat go on in that way?"
33319How many feet high is the Countess? 33319 How much do you think their whole tour will cost them?"
33319How much does it hold?
33319How much will the whole trip cost you?
33319I guess yer lost, ar''n''t ye?
33319In midsummer?
33319Is Chateaubriand living yet?
33319Is he thrown to the ground?
33319Is he wounded?
33319Is my son killed?
33319Is that the secret?
33319Is the story a true one?
33319Is_ she_ living?
33319Is_ she_ living?
33319It is a very old city, is it not?
33319Now perhaps you would like to hear''When first I came to merry Carlisle''?
33319Now, what do you suppose the jolly harper man did? 33319 O Frank,"he said,"how could you?
33319Of course there can be no truth in the tradition of Joseph of Arimathæa and the White Thorn?
33319Punch- and- Judy hunting?
33319Return a watch?
33319She dropped the frog into the plate of the startled guest, and passing around the table, with a liberal supply of the reptiles, said,''Have some? 33319 The Louvre?"
33319The Tuileries?
33319The bark that held a prince went down, The sweeping waves roll''d on; And what was England''s glorious crown To him that wept a son? 33319 The cow?"
33319The first question to be decided,said Tommy, when the boys had met in his room,"is, Shall we organize a secret society?"
33319The flies, or water- omnibuses?
33319Then it is correct?
33319Then the jolly harper man returned the king''s horse to the royal owner: and who ever heard of such a thing as a king breaking his promise? 33319 Then what is the difference between the cabin and the steerage?"
33319To- night?
33319Tommy,said Master Lewis, from within the coach,"are you_ sure_?"
33319Were you afraid to trust me alone this morning?
33319What are signals of distress?
33319What book?
33319What did she do?
33319What did you do?
33319What do you intend to do with them?
33319What for?
33319What has interested you most in Scotland?
33319What is it?
33319What is?
33319What kind of a cow was that?
33319What made that cow come up from the ground?
33319What shall we see there?
33319What time of the evening do you think it is?
33319What was Joan of Arc made of?
33319What was to be done? 33319 What will you have?"
33319What, Frank, has been the most interesting object you have seen?
33319When will you return?
33319Where are the ruins caused by the siege and the Commune?
33319Where are yer going,_ yer honor_?
33319Where are your bow and arrows?
33319Where did you get_ them_?
33319Where is Frank?
33319Where is your home?
33319Where were the children of Edward murdered?
33319Where will you go to- day?
33319Where?
33319Which is the way to Regent Street?
33319Who may that be?
33319Who shall decide upon a secret?
33319Who was her daughter?
33319Who was the Man of the Iron Mask?
33319Who went to sea in a bowl?
33319Who will prepare the rules for the society?
33319Who would volunteer? 33319 Who, then, was this person of mystery, familiarly known as the Man of the Iron Mask?
33319Why did n''t you tell me the thing was bewitched?
33319Why good- by?
33319Why, did you never hear of the Letters of Madame de Sévigné?
33319Why?
33319Wild people?
33319Will some one collect the slips?
33319Will you direct me to a street where I can find a hack?
33319Will you not let me go with you?
33319Will you not read their letter to us?
33319Will you not tell us the history of Rizzio?
33319Will you not tell us the story?
33319Would you like to hear me try''Highland Mary''?
33319Would you like to know what lovely- looking creatures these Norman peasant girls are, and how they look?
33319Would you like to visit Chateaubriand''s birthplace with me?
33319You do not think that a church like this would be guilty of imposture, do you?
33319You remember the story?
33319Your meaning I discern; Such honest lads are seldom found: And when would_ you_ return?
33319_ Voulez- vous m''indiquer quelqu''un qui parle l''Anglais?_"_ Je ne comprends pas._"_ Ne comprenez- vous Français?_said Tommy.
33319_ Voulez- vous m''indiquer quelqu''un qui parle l''Anglais?_"_ Je ne comprends pas._"_ Ne comprenez- vous Français?_said Tommy.
33319''A MAN?
33319''Ave you got a penny?"
33319''Ave you han hache or a pain?
33319( 3)"Here is one that signifies,''Will you take a letter from me?''"
33319190 Oliver Cromwell 191 Queen Henrietta Maria 193 Street Amusements 195 Street Amusements 196"''Ave you got a Penny?"
33319Are her letters there?"
33319Are there wild animals in the woods here?"
33319Are you surprised that Frenchmen should rise against such a state of things as this?"
33319Can I forget the hallowed grove, Where by the winding Ayr we met, To live one day of parting love?
33319Can this be done?
33319Could you not make some arrangement to admit us?"
33319Did you ever hear of Peter the Wild Boy found in the woods in Hanover?"
33319Do you think it will?"
33319Do you think we shall ever see land again?"
33319Do you wonder the people of France desired a Constitution for their protection?
33319Ernest Wynn was at the bottom of this, was n''t he?"
33319He gave me a dreadful cut across my back, and said,--"Where''d yer come from?
33319He said to one after another of the very polite people he chanced to meet,--"Please, sir[ or madam], do you speak English?"
33319How did we get here?
33319I handed him the bow, and what do you think he did with it?
33319I say,''ave you han hache or a pain?
33319It is a letter written--""By Shakspeare?"
33319It was this king, was it not, whose mother offered a beautiful manuscript to the one of her four sons who would first learn to repeat it from memory?
33319Louis?"
33319Now, Tommy, what is the most attractive thing_ you_ have seen?"
33319Perhaps you would like to hear''Mona''s Waters?''"
33319That sacred hour can I forget?
33319The boys''faces, too, were cloudy, and each one pressed Master Lewis with the question,"What shall we do?"
33319There stood proud forms around his throne, The stately and the brave; But which could fill the place of one, That one beneath the wave?
33319Were you ever sick on the ocean?
33319What became of their children?"
33319What good will that do?"
33319What is its early history?"
33319What makes the city so famous?"
33319What suit will your Worship wear to- day?
33319What was her name?"
33319What would you have me sing?"
33319What, Ernest, has impressed you most?"
33319What, so far?
33319Where shall we get another, when he is gone?''
33319Which doublet, and what stockings and shoes?''
33319Who ever knew any mischief to happen when everybody was asleep?
33319Who that has read of the London"Zoo"has not wished to visit it?
33319Who was Madame Tussaud?"
33319Who wrote that?"
33319Will you go with me?"
33319Will you not relate it to us?"
33319Will you not sing for me?"
33319You have often heard of him, I suppose?"
33319You have read Burns''s lines''To Mary in Heaven''?"
33319[ Illustration:"''AVE YOU GOT A PENNY?"]
33319come ye to seek yere dearie?''"
33319did n''t I run?
33319educated by Fénelon, who wrote_ Télémaque_, the French text- book we have been studying?"
33319have some?''
33319said Tommy Toby, with large eyes,"will you please tell us who_ he_ was?"
33319she said,''is it here that I must die?
33319the St. Dunstan that the devil tried to tempt?"
33319what stirs the funeral pall?
33319would n''t that sound well?
36149King Arthur, wit ye by what Knight May the Holy Grail be found?
36149O Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this marvel mean?"
36149O Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this sight avail?"
36149O, Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this marvel mean?"
36149O, Jesu,said Sir Launcelot,"What may this sight avail?"
36149Where is the queen?
36149***** Do you remember that banquet at the Tremont In''97 on Jackson''s day?
36149A curious boy asks an old soldier Sitting in front of the grocery store,"How did you lose your leg?"
36149A thousand years are but a day, A little day within Thine eye: We thirst for love, we yearn for life; We lust, wilt Thou the lust record?
36149And I ask: For the depths Of what use is language?
36149And gave her a marvellous riddle That the eyeless should read as he ran: What crawls and runs and is baffled By woman, the sphinx-- but a man?
36149And she says to me:"You do not know me at all, How can you love me?
36149And that day I said: There are wild places, blue water, pine forests, There are apple orchards, and wonderful roads Around Elk Lake-- shall we go?
36149And what shall I do?"
36149And who made reply?
36149And why you loved another woman than Aunt Susan, So it was whispered at school, and what could be baser, Or so little to be forgiven?...
36149And you asked,"Is there a town near?
36149Beneath that ancient sky Who is not fain to fly As men have fled?
36149But could we speak of it, even though I saw your eyes when you thought of it?
36149But he asked all the twelve,"Who am I?"
36149But my wife, who is sitting beside me, exclaims:"Well, what is this jangle of madness and weakness, What has it to do with poetry, tell me?"
36149Choose me as mistress-- how can I do less for dearest?
36149Do shadows crouch within the mocking light?
36149Do we not understand Why thou didst leave thy land, Thy spouse, thy hearth?
36149Do you make merry, do you weep?
36149Do you wonder sometimes men Kill women with a knife or strangle them?
36149Dost Thou not see about our feet The tangles of our erring thought?
36149Dost thou bewail love''s end and friendship''s doom, The dying fire, drained cup, and gathering gloom?
36149Eh?
36149For had her soul not been as pure As sifted snow, could she endure Antonio''s passion and be sure Against his passion''s strength and lure?
36149He was a trained collie, And he looked like a lion, There in the convention of''96--What do you know about that?
36149Hence, soul, be brave across the ruined floor-- Who knocks?
36149How are you crucified, my son, betwixt a thief and thief?
36149How do you live without me, is the fear?
36149If I gave a cell Voice to inquire, and it should ask you this:"After me what, a stalk, a flower, life That swims or crawls?"
36149If we who are in life can not speak Of profound experiences, Why do you marvel that the dead Do not tell you of death?
36149In whose arms are you now asleep?
36149It ai n''t really a hat at all, Ed: You know that, do n''t you?
36149It seemeth, now that you are gone, My heart a measured pain doth keep:-- Are you now, as I am, alone?
36149John leaned on His breast, but he asked you, your strength to foresee,"Nay, lovest thou me?"
36149Mother, my soul is weary, where is the way to God?
36149My feeling with this money which I''ve made And can not use?
36149Or what is writ on the brow of the babe as the mother wails for the day When it leaped in the light of the sun and babbled its pure delight?
36149Or who it was that walked through Burnham wood?
36149So what should be said of the faun surprised in the woodland dances, Of Harold the light of heart who fought with fear to the last?
36149Surely your ermine furs were warm, And warm your flowing cloak of red; Was it the wild wind kept you thus Pensive and with averted head?
36149The world seems better, Julia, For that kiss which you gave me at the door.... Breakfast?
36149Then a certain god, Of less power than mine, Came and sat beside me and said:"Why do you allow this to be?
36149Then came King Pelles out and said,"Your name, brave Knight and true?"
36149They are all seeking, Why do you not let them find their heart''s delight?
36149Think you not that there doth pass In them something we did know?
36149Though you know That I am fifty- one, can you imagine My feeling with no children growing up?
36149To''scape the blustering breath of March, Or was it for your mind''s disguise?
36149We bleed, we fall, we rise again; How can we be of Thee abhorred?
36149Well, foolish son, I told you so, why went you to the wars?
36149What could I do but take a boat And go to meet you?
36149What has the artist caught?
36149What is it I see?
36149What is the origin Of spiritual species?
36149What shall be done with love?
36149What strains of ancient blood Move quicker to the music''s passionate beat?
36149What though there are remnants here Of faded coronals, And bits of silver string Torn from forgotten harps?
36149What was the charm and what the spell That made one hour of life become A memory ever memorable?
36149What was the world?
36149What''s the pons For you to cross to fame?--Your head in bronze?
36149When at night by the boat on the sea He appeared Did you wait till he neared?
36149Where is my lady?"
36149Where now do I go?
36149Who knows what lips were kissed at Laracor?
36149Why do you allow this to be?"
36149Why do you never tire of playing, Or cease from mischief, or cease from noise?
36149Why try to tell you?
36149Will the look return to your eyes, the warmth to your hand?
36149Wilt Thou then slay for that we slay, Wilt Thou deny when we deny?
36149Wouldst thou escape for deeper or no breath?
36149Wouldst thou, perchance, a larger freedom win?
36149You are tired of the house?
36149You understand?
36149You will not sleep?
36149asked the Knight,"There in the Castle Case?"
35416[ 122] It_ was_ too late!-- What now to her was womanhood or fame? 35416 & c.Why, O thou dearer half of my soul, dost thou watch over me thus mute and pensive?
35416-- What should we fear, Castara?
35416--"Why an almanack?"
35416....*....*....*....* How in the world, to me a desert grown, Abandon''d and alone, Without my sweet companion can I live?
35416....*....*....*....* Quand reverrai celui do nt as reçu la vie?
35416Ah, tandis qu''eplorée et de coeur si malade, Te quier[19] la nuit, te redemande au jour-- Que deviens?
35416And after all this passed purgatory, Must sad divorce make us the vulgar story?
35416And now, how shall I fill up this sketch?
35416At balls must she make all this rout, And bring home hearts by dozens?
35416But can you as easily part from me as I from you?
35416But is this merciful, or is it just?
35416But tell me,( glorious lamp,) in thy survey Of things below thee, what did not decay By age to weakness?
35416But who has not heard of"Swift''s Stella?"
35416But who, like him, could administer to that"_ besoin de sentir_"which I am afraid is an ingredient in the feminine character all over the world?
35416But why dost thou those beaming glances turn Thus downwards?
35416But, says the mother,_ Un tiers_ si doux ne fait tort à plaisir?
35416Ch''l mio ben m''allontani, anzi m''involi-- Fia mai quel di ch''io lo riveggia o mora?
35416Che più ti resta a far per mio dispetto, Sorte crudel?
35416Chi detto avesse ad ella:"Il tuo bel core Sai chi l''avra?
35416Contemplating him asleep, she says, N''était ce teint fleuri des couleurs de la pomme, Ne le diriez vous dans les bras de la mort?
35416Could Emilie ever have forgiven those words, or Voltaire have forgotten the look that provoked them?
35416Dimmi, quando le voci a lui volgesti Tacque egli mai, qual uom che nulla sente?
35416During that time, what must have been his feelings--_if_ he felt at all?
35416E di segrete stille, Rugiadose si fan le tue pupille?
35416Feu de son oeil, et roses de son teint.... D''où vient m''en ébahir?
35416Giunse dal prato, o pur dal ciel discende?
35416Had correspondence whilst the foe stood by?
35416Have we for this kept guard, like spy o''er spy?
35416He will soon return; but what does that help?
35416His Anacreontics, and particularly his little drinking song, Come farò?
35416His countenance, fitted by nature to express the dark and fierce passions, so terrified her, that she could scarce ask him whether he would sit down?
35416How could she so belie her noble blood?
35416Is it surprising that powers of fascination, which carried a Duchess"off her feet,"should conquer the heart of a country lass of low degree?
35416Is this our patriotism?
35416La prima volta ch''io m''avenni in quella Ninfa, che il cor m''accese, e ancor l''accende, Io dissi, è donna o dea, ninfa si bella?
35416Loin de ta bien- aimée, Où les destins, entrainent donc tes pas?
35416Meanwhile, what became of Stella?
35416Must Lady Jenny frisk about, And visit with her cousins?
35416O le turbate luci alteramente,( Come a me volge) a te volger vedesti?
35416O wha could prudence think upon, And sae in love as I am?
35416O wha could prudence think upon, And sic a lassie by him?
35416O, when shall I have him?"
35416Or what avails her that she once was led A glorious bride to valiant Digby''s bed?
35416Or, did he turn those sweet and troubled eyes On thee, and gaze as now on me he gazeth?
35416Perchè muta in pensosa atto mi guati?
35416Quand reverrai, dis- moi, ton si duisant[23] visage?
35416Quand te pourrai face à face mirer?
35416Reading thy verse,"who cares,"said I,"If here or there his glances flew?
35416Say, Stella, was Prometheus blind, And forming you, mistook your kind?
35416Shadow''d with negligence our best respects?
35416Shall I thumb holy books, confin''d With Abigails forsaken?
35416Stolen( more to sweeten them) our many blisses Of meetings, conference, embracements, kisses?
35416T''enlacer tellement à mon frément[24] corsage, Que toi, ni moi, n''en puissions respirer?
35416The next day I asked one of his friends who was the author of this poem?
35416The"Lines on her fainting;"those on"The fear of death,"-- Why should we fear to melt away in death?
35416Then is there not the German Klopstock and his Meta,--his lovely, devoted, angelic Meta?
35416Then it was, that he wrote the simple, wild, but powerful lyric,"Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary?"
35416Then we shall not ask in vain who was Campbell''s Caroline?
35416Varied our language through all dialects Of becks, winks, looks; and often under boards, Spoke dialogues, with our feet far from our words?
35416We may repeat with Pope,"Who now reads Cowley?"
35416We write to each other every post; but what are letters to presence?
35416What has she better, pray, than I?
35416What hidden charms to boast, That all mankind for her must die, Whilst I am scarce a toast?
35416What is this world?
35416What lady''s that to whom he gently bends?
35416What though she be now a grandmother?
35416What true poet, who felt as a poet, would have said this?
35416What would Habington have said of the flaunting, fluttering, voluble beauties of Charles the Second''s time?)
35416What''s honour but a hatchment?
35416Whence then this strange increase of joy?
35416Where could she fix on mortal ground Those tender thoughts and high?
35416Where, among scholars, can you find So soft, and yet so firm a mind?
35416Who was the Hannah, whose fickleness occasioned that exquisite little poem which Montgomery has inscribed"To the memory of her who is dead to me?"
35416Why are thine eyes heavy with suppressed tears?"
35416Why are you then so thrifty of a kiss, Authorized even by custom?
35416Why doth fear So tremble on your lip, my lip being near?
35416Why so careless of our care Only to yourselves so dear?
35416Why so kind, and so severe?
35416Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary, Across the Atlantic''s roar?
35416Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary, And leave old Scotia''s shore?
35416Without her lovely smile, The dear reward of every virtuous toil, What pleasures now can pall''d Ambition give?
35416Yet how do her justice, but by borrowing her own sweet words?
35416[ 119] It will be said, where was her sex''s delicacy, where her woman''s pride?
35416[ 130] In one of his letters, written immediately after her departure, he asks her how he had looked?
35416[ 25] De Surville closed his brief career of happiness and glory( and what more than these could he have asked of heaven?)
35416[ 80] Du zweifelst dass ich dich wie Meta liebe?
35416_ autre qu''en tout lui même, Pût- il jamais éclore de mon sein?_ This is beautiful and true; beautiful, because it is true.
35416and of Cadenus and Vanessa?
35416and why?
35416by what right does he sit in judgment on the unhappy dead, of whom he knew nothing?
35416her soul aspire Above the vulgar flight of low desire?
35416how he had behaved at the last moment?
35416or how could he tell by what course of suffering, disease, or tyranny, a gentle spirit may have been goaded to frenzy?
35416or pleased, by being addressed with the swaggering licence of a libertine?
35416or would have said to her,"Know you who is destined to touch that virgin heart?
35416où cours tu?
35416quand verrai celui pour qui mon coeur soupire, Au miens cotés jouir de son réveil?
35416s''en crois la renommée De bien long temps ne te reverrai pas?
35416thy woes compar''d to mine?
35416to her who has almost banished from the world that pest which once extinguished families and desolated provinces?
35416what asken men to have?
35416what is here Of Percy left, or Stanley, names most dear To virtue?
35416when thou look''dst, was he from silence won?
35416whether he had betrayed any deeper feeling than propriety might warrant?
35416why dost thou falsely feign Thyself a Sydney?
36700Aye, my lord,came the youngster''s prompt response,"ai n''t I your caddie?"
36700Do you mean to tell me,shouted the heckler,"that when I am dead I fade absolutely away and am done with for ever?"
36700Do you think not?
36700Doctor Brighton( was not this affectionate sobriquet the invention of Thackeray?)
36700Have n''t you seen my Papal Bull?
36700How do you mean exactly, might be worse?
36700Is n''t it?
36700Is this necessary?
36700No, do you know?
36700Tell me, children,we heard him say,"who was the first Protestant?"
36700Well, do you know?
36700Well, what do you think of our course?
36700Where were the freshman''s wives?
36700Why Abbey?
36700Why on earth does n''t somebody stop him?
36700[ 13] When are you and Lady Blair going to take another run down Tweed? 36700 ( King)...Watty, what is this?
36700--"Do you think,"the don asked me,"he meant the word''_ quasi_''to apply to''Christian''or to''scientist''?"
3670011),_ Numquid medici suscitabunt et confitebuntur tibi?_("Shall the physicians rise up and praise Thee?")
3670011),_ Numquid medici suscitabunt et confitebuntur tibi?_("Shall the physicians rise up and praise Thee?")
36700And why should there be this precocious development in music alone, of all the arts?
36700Brontë, Charlotte( to her husband)..."I am not going to die, am I?
36700Could the_ Entente_ go further?
36700Goldsmith, Oliver( to the question,"Is your mind at ease?"
36700How many Londoners know the last- named?
36700I heard that unmistakable voice like a volcano''s roar, tamed into the softness of the flute- stop, and got a glimpse( may I say it to you?)
36700I said,"a child of three!--but why, and where?"
36700IS GERMANY PROSPEROUS?
36700Lys., v. 1263, and{ 32} adding,"Do you think that[ Greek: chunagè parséne] in this line means''a hunting parson''?"
36700My French visit was brought to an agreeable close by a trip across the Channel("Why do you call it the_ English_ Channel, you others?"
36700Our host recalled a country squire who, perfunctorily looking round his table, would mutter,"No parson?
36700Questioned as to whether he was not a member of the"Protestant Episcopal Church"( if not, what on earth was he doing at Keble?
36700The Bishop of Worcester tied the knot--"impressively,"as the reporters say( but why can not an Anglican dignitary read the Bible without"mouthing"it?
36700The bride- elect, in inviting me, had spoken about"a quiet wedding at home"; but how was that possible?
36700The comment of one of our party, a lady rather"slow in the uptake"( as we say in Scotland) was,"But what did he_ mean_?
36700They have, of course, an important bearing upon the vital question"Can Germany Pay?"
36700What does the man mean by''see my way''?
36700What( I thought) will the"unco guid"of Glasgow say now?
36700Where are you speaking from?"
36700Whom was she leaning_ on_?
36700Why is there no time- limit to the oratory on such occasions?
36700Why not Lord Chancellor or Commander- in- chief at once?
36700[ 11] Have they ever been reprinted?
36700[ 15]"If you happened to find an egg on a music- stool, what poem would it remind you of?"
36700[ 15]"Is n''t this invigorating?"
36700[ 19] Would Lady X----( who was familiar with Courts) have acted thus in an audience granted her by King Edward VII.?
36700[ 1]"Do you very much mind dining in the middle of the day?"
36700[ 4]"Were the Vanderbilts as great a power in the American railway and financial world in your time as they are now?"
36700do n''t you hear?
36700more, and have a tower and spire when you are about it?"
36700was it_ King_ George?"
34313''What do you mean?'' 34313 And have you such a thing as a favorite author?"
34313And just why should the exploitation of filth assume to monopolize the word''realism''? 34313 And was n''t that one of the things for which you condemned our hypothetical writer of Western tales?"
34313And what changed woman?
34313And what effect are the moving pictures going to have on fiction?
34313And what effect can it have on our literature? 34313 And what is it that makes a man an artist, in pigments or in words?"
34313And what of Boccaccio? 34313 And where does genius come in?"
34313And you,I said, determined to make the conversation more personal,"prefer the romantic method?"
34313But do n''t you think,I asked,"that the permanence of a book''s appeal is a proof of its greatness?"
34313But do not these conditions in many instances seriously hinder individual artists?
34313But do you think,I asked,"that the fault is entirely that of the public?
34313But have there not been writers,I asked,"who seem to prove that there is some truth in the inspiration theory?
34313But is not that what you yourself did?
34313But the American Civil War produced literature, did it not?
34313But was n''t that because his negro folk- tales were a sort of''glorified reporting''rather than creative work?
34313But what are the manifestations of this new democratic spirit?
34313But what do you think of Flaubert''s method, as a method?
34313But what has this to do,I asked,"with making poetry more democratic?"
34313But what,I asked,"about materialism-- not specifically commercialism, but materialism?
34313But why is it,I asked,"that a great poet so often is without honor in his own generation, where mediocrity is immediately famous?"
34313But you do not believe,I said,"that American literature in general is better than it used to be, do you?
34313But you yourself write serial stories, do you not?
34313Can you possibly have, at any time or anywhere, great art without a great faith? 34313 Did he say that the Civil War had produced no literature worthy of preservation?"
34313Did you ever think,said Mrs. Marks, suddenly,"that the truest exuberance of life always expresses itself rhythmically?
34313Do n''t you think that the snobs were always very much apart from our civilization and national ideals? 34313 Do you believe in the old saying that the poet-- the creative artist-- is born and not made?"
34313Do you believe,I asked,"that being in the city has had a good effect on literary activity among Columbia students?"
34313Do you think that Ibsen expressed the modern feminine unrest in_ The Doll''s House_?
34313Do you think that a writer who works with such laborious care is right?
34313Do you think that the American novel will always be inferior to the English novel?
34313Do you think that the Russian novelists have influenced your work?
34313Do you think that this harms their work?
34313Do you think, then,I asked,"that our writers are producing work as likely to endure as that which is being produced in England?"
34313Do you think,I asked,"that romanticism has lost its hold on the novelists?"
34313Do you think,I asked,"that the great social problems of the day, the feminine unrest, for instance, are finding their expression in literature?"
34313Do you think,I asked,"that the poetry that is written in America to- day is better than that written a generation ago?"
34313Do you think,I asked,"that this is a good thing for civilization, this increased activity of women in business?"
34313Do you think,I asked,"that writers should be specialists in writing?
34313Does this enthusiasm for literature show itself in the college magazine?
34313Has American fiction been lacking in visualization?
34313Has literature been produced by people who made writing only an avocation?
34313How did this happen?
34313How do you account for that?
34313How does this theory apply to poets?
34313How far is this idolatry of the movie actor to go, anyway? 34313 How has literature been affected,"I asked,"by the suffrage movement and feminism?"
34313How is a writer going to get ideas for stories,asked Mr. Beach, in turn,"unless he uses ideas?
34313How is one to decide whether or not a poet is great?
34313How will it alter it?
34313I suppose,I said,"that the conditions you describe are distinctively modern, are they not?
34313Is it not probable that the American novel will so develop as to escape the effects of serialization?
34313Is n''t this rather high praise for Charlie Chaplin?
34313Is not the war, which is surely the greatest event of our time, an anti- democratic thing?
34313Is this true of the best short stories being written now? 34313 Is_ Huckleberry Finn_ a phase?
34313Mr. Guiterman,I said,"is this the advice that you would give to John Keats if he were to ask you?"
34313Mr. Herrick,I asked,"just what is a realist?"
34313Now, when you walk down Broadway, do you find any reminders of the popular novels of the day? 34313 Should a poet be able to make a living out of poetry?"
34313Still, in spite of their precarious financial condition, modern authors are doing good work, are they not?
34313Then a novel may be at once optimistic and realistic?
34313Then you believe that there is a distinctively American literature?
34313Then you do n''t think,I said,"that literature has lost through the poverty of poets?"
34313Then you do not share Katharine Fullerton Gerould''s belief that O. Henry''s influence on modern fiction is bad?
34313Then you think that poetry is not always appreciated in the lifetime of its maker?
34313Then,I said,"you would go to Georgia, I suppose, if you wanted to write a story about life in a New York apartment?"
34313This has not always been the case, has it?
34313To what publication had you sold it?
34313War stops everything else,said Mr. McCutcheon,"so why not literature?
34313Were those the days,I asked,"in which you first read Tolstoy?"
34313What about present- day relationship between American publishers and authors?
34313What are the forces in America to- day,I asked,"that hinder the development of art and letters?"
34313What do you mean by the great American novel?
34313What effect,I asked,"is the war likely to have on American literature?"
34313What great literature did it produce?
34313What is Bohemia?
34313What is genius?
34313What is it in Dickens that especially attracts you?
34313What is it, then,I asked,"that has changed American humor?"
34313What is the connection between democracy and the tendency you have described?
34313What is the remedy for this condition, Miss Hurst?
34313What is the thing that American poetry chiefly needs?
34313What realists have been optimistic?
34313What was it that did away with the snobs?
34313What writers who use the English language seem to you to deserve best the name of realist?
34313What,I asked,"are some of the extra- curricular manifestations of literary interest among the students?"
34313Where,he asked,"are the German- Americans and the Italian- Americans?
34313Who are some of the writers who seem to you to be especially ready to avail themselves of the commercial value of sex?
34313Who are the leading romanticists of the day?
34313Who was the last great poet?
34313Why is it that the art of fiction is no longer taken as seriously as it was, for example, in the time of Sir Walter Scott?
34313Why is it that_ Pepys''s Diary_ is interesting to us?
34313Why is it, then,I asked,"that Russia, a nation of militaristic ideals, has produced so many great novels during the past century?"
34313Why is it,I asked,"that Poe''s influence on American fiction has been so slight?"
34313Why is it,asked Mrs. Norris,"that a girl like that can not see the value of such an incident as that?
34313Why is there,Mr. Tarkington asked in turn,"no group like Homer( was n''t he a group?)
34313Why unionize? 34313 Will it be good or bad?"
34313Will there,I asked,"ever be the great American novel?
34313Would you make a similar comment on any other poetry of our time?
34313You believe,I said,"that Whitman is our greatest poet?"
34313You do not agree with the critic who said that American literature was''a condition of English literature''?
34313''What is your shoe- drawer?''
34313And yet what more interesting subject is there for her to write about than that shoe- drawer?
34313Are any of the short stories written since that period being bound into volumes and extensively sold?
34313At Columbia-- I have Prof. John Erskine''s word for it-- there has lately developed a genuine interest in-- what do you suppose?
34313At what time in the history of America have conditions been most favorable to literary expression?"
34313Beyond our literature, what of Balzac?
34313But do they?
34313Can a mere reflection of life justly be called poetry, or must imagination be present?
34313Did you ever read Brand Whitlock''s_ Forty Years of It_?
34313Do the professors of English literature recommend them to their classes?
34313Do you remember how Dr. Johnson wrote_ Rasselas_?
34313Do you think that O. Henry''s influence is responsible for this?"
34313Do you think that its evil effects are evident in contemporary literature?"
34313Have n''t the authors changed, too?"
34313How should he, with no one to tell him?
34313I asked,"Do you think they are all they should be?"
34313I asked,"What do you think of contemporary poetry?"
34313If one must have a model, why not Hall Caine, infinitely the superior of Dickens as a craftsman?
34313Is it because of snobbishness or literary colonialism on the part of the American public?
34313Is it not the appeal of symbolism, the expression of life''s meanings in sensuous form?
34313Is rhyme essential to poetry?
34313Is rhythm essential to poetry?
34313Just what sort of reformer is it that has taken the place of the snob?"
34313Mr. William Dean Howells was the third writer to whom was put the question,"What effect will the Great War have on literature?"
34313That is, will there ever be a novel which reflects American life as adequately as_ Vanity Fair_ reflects English life?"
34313The good novel, it is true, is praised heartily, but then so are all the bad novels-- and how is one to tell?
34313There is Tcheckoff-- have you read his_ Orchard_?
34313Think how the war changed Rupert Brooke, for instance?
34313Well, what if that is true?
34313What could be more conventional and more democratic than the old ballad, with its recurrent refrain in which the audience joined?
34313What do you think about it?"
34313What else is there to think?
34313What is art but self- government, the harmonizing of the elements of the mind?
34313What is this elemental appeal?
34313What kind of French literature of the war do you think would appear in Germany and be fostered there?
34313What''s the value of my opinion that_ The Undiscovered Country_ is a''greater''novel than_ A Pair of Blue Eyes_?
34313When any one says that to me, I always answer him in the chaste little way which so endears me to my day and generation:''Hell, are n''t you?
34313Who is conscious of his heart- beats except at the great moments of life, and who is unconscious of them then?
34313Who nowadays can find a laugh in the pages of Artemus Ward, Philander Q. Doesticks, or Petroleum V. Nasby?
34313Why ca n''t I do what they''re doing?''
34313Why is this?
34313Why not, when Shakespeare himself followed the line of action of which I spoke?
34313Why should I go back to the people of bygone ages and of lands not my own?"
34313_ MAGAZINES CHEAPEN FICTION_ GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON Why is the modern American novel inferior to the modern English novel?
34313_ WHAT IS GENIUS?_ 75 ROBERT W. CHAMBERS Robert W. Chambers was born in Brooklyn, New York, May 26, 1865.
34313_"EVASIVE IDEALISM"IN LITERATURE_ ELLEN GLASGOW What is the matter with American literature?
34313in Greece?
37752But if death shuts the book?
37752Dear my friend, who knows?
37752Each for himself must dare If the answer is here-- or there, Here for regret-- or there for hope, O Lord?
37752In that horror of blood and gloom, What of the noble, what of the brave?
37752Is it a rustle that stirs in the halls?
37752Is it a whisper that runs through the galleries?
37752Is it of mortals, or things that are otherwise This sound that so haltingly, dreadfully falls, Pauses, and hurries, and falls?
37752Minos is slain; his guards are slain; Which of his sons shall live In this pillared Hall of the Double Axe The word of the Kings to give?
37752Oh little moment of space, Oh Death''s averted face, How shall we grasp, shall we grasp what still is ours?
37752Passionate, swift, and rife With pleasure or pain in the hand of the hurrying hours?
37752Possess you?
37752QUESTION What of this gift of Life?
37752Shall it be idly spent, or idly stored?
37752Shall it be worn in strife?
37752Shall they know his sons In this sudden terror sprung On sleeping men?
37752THE GENTLE HEART What shall harm the gentle heart In its purpose undefiled?
37752There''s a miracle, a miracle-- oh mortal, have you seen it?
37752What door shall hold, or what walls withstand The roll of a full spring- tide, With an on- shore wind?
37752What if a son of Minos live?
37752What of this gift of Life?
37752Which of his sons?
37752shall they drop the bars, And the doors open?
37846O death, where is thy sting? 37846 And on what conditions? 37846 And to what end? 37846 Does the Kaiser, at safe distance, stilllook on"?
37846March 26, 1916._[ Illustration]_"MY SON LIES HERE, WHERE ARE YOURS?
37846O grave, where is thy victory?"
37846To whom has it been spoken?
37846What blessing has this monarch of a great and productive realm brought upon his people?
37846What should our reply be if tomorrow, after having concluded such a peace, our countries were dragged anew into the frenzy of armaments?
37846Where does this word come from?
37846[ Illustration]_ BALAAM AND HIS ASS_***** What, German people, is your duty in this hour?
37846[ Illustration]_ Pallas Athene:"Has it come to this?
37846[ Illustration]_ WHAT SHOULD WE DO WITHOUT MICHAEL?__ Michael_:"_ For my 100 Marks I obtained a receipt.
37846_ Reichstag, December 9, 1915._[ Illustration]_ THE EVACUATION OF GALLIPOLI_"_ What are you firing at?
36908'', I can only answer by asking,''Where is this"public opinion"and what does it look like?''
36908''And, David,( is not that your Christian name?)
36908''Well, of course, if you deceive the spirits like that how can you expect the truth in return?''
36908''What dug- out, sir?''
36908( Feda(_ sotto voce_): Did he hop, Raymond?)
36908( N. M. L. asks):''Play what?''
36908( No bite)--Georgina?
36908A delightful example of Sir Oliver''s anxiety to help the medium occurs on page 256:-- O. J. L.:''Do you remember a bird in our garden?''
36908And any voice?
36908At a London séance on December 20th, 1915, with the same medium there occurs the following:--( Question):''What used he to sing?''
36908At this she asked,''Which one?''
36908At this stage he was told,''You felt like that in France, what was it?''
36908But when I showed this spirit photograph to a friend, with a query as to sex, she answered,''But it_ is_ a woman, is n''t it?
36908Can we voluntarily forget?
36908Did you even know you were shifting it?
36908Did you think,''My leg is beginning to feel tired, I''ll shift it?''
36908Do you see Papa?"
36908Friends had told me of his gifts and had met my incredulity with''How do you explain this?''
36908He is which had reached England?
36908Here are the important ones:-- O. J. L.:''Do you recollect the photograph at all?''
36908How did the word come to be selected?
36908How did this joint error of observation arise?
36908I can not answer either except by putting a new one, which is,''Do we ever forget?''
36908I mean was he standing up?''
36908I wonder how Mr. Carrington explains the failure of previous observers to detect the trickery?
36908If by that is meant,''Can we voluntarily lose the power of voluntary recall?''
36908If one asks,''Where is this unconscious and what does it look like?
36908If we specify the factors concerned in memory and say that it depends upon impression, retention, and recall, then what do we mean by''forgetting''?
36908In the early stage of the disease some one examines the arm, pricks it, and asks,''Do you feel that?''
36908In the one place the old countryman said,"How can he get water there?
36908Instead of this the procedure was:''I hear a name, is it George?
36908Later on his chief asks him,''How did you spot this case?''
36908Next a yacht appears out of the spirit world, and O. J. L. asks:''What about the yacht with sails, did it run on the water?''
36908Not yet?
36908O. J. L.''Did it go along?''
36908O. J. L.:''Did he have a stick?''
36908O. J. L.:''Does he remember how he looked in the photograph?''
36908O. J. L.:''Was it out of doors?''
36908She was a stranger to the photographer, so how could he produce the likeness even if he substituted his own plates?
36908Surely an out- of- door family like this includes at least one fisherman; why not think out who he is and score another bull''s- eye to the medium?
36908The first question was,''Who is Brown?''
36908The question is taken by the patient to mean that the doctor expects that the prick will not be felt-- or why should he ask?
36908The second question may be compared with''Did you feel that?''
36908Then begins his conflict; like the patient who successfully feigns symptoms, he finds withdrawal difficult:--''You''d prove firmer in his place?
36908Then, the medium having discovered that O. J. L.''s family had a tent by the water, O. J. L. asks:''Is it all one chamber in the tent?''
36908What are two failures against three and a half years''manifestations that''had grown more and more numerous and bewildering as time went on''?
36908What can be more authoritative and confident than the manner of a man who believes what he says and knows that his hearers are willing to believe?
36908What could be more convincing?
36908What does it effect?
36908What has been happening all this time in the mind of the patient?
36908When Sir Oliver asks concerning a yacht,''Did it run on the water?''
36908Whence does he obtain his evidence that the medium had heard nothing of the incident?
36908While a light whisked"..."Shaped somewhat like a star?
36908Who can say that, in the days when Home- Rulers and anti- Home- Rulers abounded, the average voter was swayed by a reasoned knowledge of the subject?
36908You mean yes, do n''t you?''
36908[ Illustration] How can we explain this belief on the one hand and the trickery on the other?
379836d._][ Illustration:''Nettie,''he said,''you wo n''t never tell, will you?''
33201Do They Affect Our More Serious Reading?
33201The Growth of the Short Storyand"Which Magazine Seems on the Whole the One Best Worth Taking in a Family, and Why?"
33201( 3) Is the elimination of the servant possible?
33201( 4) How far is woman responsible for the state of things, and what can she do to reduce social expenditure?
33201A concluding paper might inquire, What is it in these two themes which has always attracted the poets?
33201A discussion may follow: Should the Philippines be made self- governing?
33201A good topic here is, How shall we have variety without increasing the expense?
33201And is buying in large quantities a good plan?
33201Are advertisements painted on rocks or put up in fields?
33201Are children paid too much attention?
33201Are clubs for servants desirable?
33201Are coffee rooms needed to supplant the saloon?
33201Are materials more, or less, expensive?
33201Are open- air schools needed?
33201Are our children growing up thinking that money is the principal thing in the minds of their parents?
33201Are rents, food, and clothing actually higher for the same things, or does life to- day demand that we add to what we then had?
33201Are sufficient numbers of courses offered?
33201Are the Courts of Domestic Relations of value in preventing them?
33201Are the alleys clean?
33201Are the boys educated?
33201Are the playgrounds used in summer time?
33201Are the problems of Anna the same as those which confront women in other lands to- day?
33201Are the shows clean?
33201Are their home lives well developed?
33201Are their morals endangered?
33201Are there any playgrounds for children?
33201Are there cheap theaters in town?
33201Are there saloons, and, if so, do they in any way evade the law?
33201Are there short cuts in laundry work?
33201Are there tenements?
33201Are there vines, flowers and grass around the building?
33201Are they enforced?
33201Are they essential?
33201Are they fitted for the career of the law?
33201Are they in good order?
33201Are they loafing places?
33201Are they over- amused?
33201Are they really as useful as they seem at first sight?
33201Are they sanitary?
33201Are they well cared for and attractive?
33201As to the schools, can not manual and vocational training be secured?
33201Assuming that prices have really gone up, and are to stay there, what can women do to adjust themselves to the fact?
33201But the great question will surely arise: What shall we study?
33201Can a Woman Work All Day and Still Bear Healthy Children and Bring Them Up Properly?
33201Can a girl save for illness?
33201Can employers combine to make relations between mistresses and maids better?
33201Can not music and art be better taught?
33201Close with a discussion on the point: How can a woman learn to be a good cook?
33201Discuss the bargain each country made; what did she lose and what did she gain?
33201Discuss the question: How shall we make our brains save our bodies?
33201Discuss the relative values of the two; is there a tendency more and more toward having the State give the whole education?
33201Discuss the topic: What did the Dutch settlers give to the American people?
33201Discuss, Does it give an unbiased picture of the people?
33201Discuss, How can the school obtain and hold the child?
33201Discuss: Are athletics neglected or overdone?
33201Discuss: How did it represent the spirit of the age?
33201Discuss: Is it an extravagance or an economy to hire the hard work of the family?
33201Discuss: Is it too comprehensive?
33201Discuss: What can be done to give us better servants?
33201Discuss: What did Rome give England of permanent value?
33201Do Strikes Pay?
33201Do boys go from them to college better prepared to meet the life there than from the high school?
33201Do children patronize them?
33201Do our growing girls receive the care they need in this regard?
33201Do servants''unions help matters or make them worse?
33201Do they send a yearly clique to college?
33201Do we have too many clothes?
33201Do writers and artists tend to become bohemians?
33201Does Hawthorne answer the question?
33201Does a college woman lose interest in her home?
33201Does he have too much home work?
33201Does he successfully combine the real and the grotesque, or lean too far toward the latter?
33201Does her picture differ from that of Dickens in"David Copperfield"?
33201Does it fit the child for business and home life?
33201Does it pay to dye one''s gowns?
33201Does separation take the place of divorce in most cases?
33201Does she marry early, or does she drift into a career?
33201Does the artist in him at times overpower his moral sense?
33201Does the low wage drive girls to immorality?
33201Does the town need a"clean- up"day?
33201Especially make a point of the question: How much should the individual sacrifice for the good of society?
33201Has the child a right to one father and one mother even though their attitude toward each other is strained?
33201Have a paper on public laundries: Are they sanitary?
33201Have papers or talks on these themes: Shall divorce be free where love has gone?
33201Have some of these questions taken up: Should Women Enter Trade Unions, or Is Organization Unnecessary?
33201Have they swings, parallel bars and the like?
33201How can one do with less meat?
33201How can one learn how to buy good and still cheap meats?
33201How can we systematize the making of our wardrobes so that sewing shall occupy us only a small part of our time?
33201How do our great endowed universities compare with those of England and Germany?
33201How does it wear as compared to that made elsewhere?
33201How does the standard of morals differ in our day from that in the time in which the book is placed?
33201How is it made so cheaply?
33201How is she educated and trained?
33201How is the poorhouse managed?
33201How many churches are there and in what financial condition?
33201How much should a girl know of business?
33201II-- DRAMATIC POETRY An early meeting should study the comparison of poetry and prose in plays, and the question, Is poetry acceptable on the stage?
33201III-- ECONOMY IN FOOD By way of opening the meeting a brief paper may be read on What Is True Economy?
33201If not, how far does Goethe give his own experiences?
33201If so, on what?
33201If so, what does it teach?
33201If the playgrounds of the school are inadequate, can they be supplemented?
33201In spite of the faults of construction, how does the book rank as literature?
33201In what does the power of the book lie?
33201Is Don Quixote a madman, or does the author intend to show under his extravagances some philosophy of life?
33201Is Levin a mouthpiece for Tolstoy''s own views of life?
33201Is Tolstoy really capable of humor?
33201Is a high standard of purity held up always?
33201Is a mere smattering given?
33201Is benevolence compatible with a small income?
33201Is education to be regarded as an investment?
33201Is hygiene taught?
33201Is immorality due to a low living wage?
33201Is it a benefit to children in their later education to have it begun in the kindergarten?
33201Is it a benefit to them?
33201Is it a clean, well- kept place?
33201Is it a fair one?
33201Is it an economy to take lessons in dressmaking and millinery?
33201Is it economical to have shirts done up there rather than at home?
33201Is it extravagant to hire a day''s work when one could really do it one''s self?
33201Is it fair to pay alike the competent and incompetent?
33201Is it only because so many go into business life?
33201Is it possible to establish a rest room for farmers''wives who come to town?
33201Is it safe to send washing out to a home which may not be clean?
33201Is it sufficiently practical?
33201Is it up- to- date?
33201Is it wise to develop the mind of a young child rapidly?
33201Is making- over always cheap?
33201Is the book a parable?
33201Is the book a study in realism or does it deal with the unnatural?
33201Is the book an autobiography?
33201Is the building in which he studies clean, well- ventilated, and sanitary?
33201Is the comedy character, Oblensky, satisfactory?
33201Is the common drinking cup used?
33201Is the cost in the making?
33201Is the garbage well taken care of?
33201Is the general course too cultural and not sufficiently practical for a boy who is going into business?
33201Is the material of any ready- made garment really as good as it looks at first?
33201Is the preparation for college adequate?
33201Is the railroad station attractive?
33201Is the sewerage system in good order?
33201Is the theater building sanitary?
33201Is the town jail sanitary?
33201Is the town water pure?
33201Is the training in athletics valuable?
33201Is their health impaired?
33201Is their home training at fault for the many mistakes of the average woman?
33201Is there a doctor to supervise the children''s eyes, ears, throats, and general condition?
33201Is there a fund for cheap food for the very poor children?
33201Is there a hotel in town?
33201Is there a lack of democracy about them?
33201Is there a moral purpose, and are any problems settled?
33201Is there a plot?
33201Is there a supervisor?
33201Is there a town library?
33201Is there an oversight against contagion?
33201Is there any one in charge of the waiting- room?
33201Is there any place in town which affects good morals?
33201Is there any town nuisance, such as soft coal smoke or malodorous factories?
33201Is too much attention paid to social preparation?
33201It will raise such questions as these: Are standards of character higher than in the public schools?
33201Last of all, should not a club extend its membership to as many as possible, rather than have a waiting list?
33201One meeting should raise the question, Upon what should marriage be based?
33201Read the reports of exhibitions: Could the club have some sort of an exhibit?
33201Should There Be Mothers''Pensions?
33201Should Women Insist on Compensation for Injuries and Old- Age Pensions?
33201Should divorce be given on other than statutory cause?
33201Should every girl be able to earn a living?
33201Should fathers see that their daughters understand something of banking, of keeping accounts, of investments, of managing an income?
33201Should public opinion against child labor be aroused?
33201Sing"Kennst du das Land?"
33201Sing"The Erl- King,"written when he was only eighteen,"Hark, Hark, the Lark";"Death and the Maiden";"Who is Sylvia?"
33201Speak of coeducational colleges and State Universities; have they advantages over the rest?
33201Such questions as these may follow: Should professional women marry?
33201The discussion may be on the point: How shall we reduce the size of the family wash?
33201The discussion may take such lines as these: What sacrifices to economy are worth while?
33201The first subject which will come up will be: What are the principal difficulties we have to meet in our homes, and how can we overcome them?
33201The paper next to this would be on the finishing school for girls, and will raise the questions: Are the standards of education sufficiently high?
33201Then have again a brief discussion: Is the Montessori system adapted to American children?
33201There should be an excellent discussion on this subject, covering such things as: Home dressmaking; does it pay?
33201Two lovely settings of old words are noticeable:"Ye Banks and Braes o''Bonnie Doon,"and"Kennst Du das Land?"
33201Was George Eliot really a humorist?
33201Was their influence good?
33201What advantages has the finishing school?
33201What are its limitations?
33201What are the relations of men and women in the same profession?
33201What can be done locally to better conditions in our shops?
33201What can be done to rid the town of flies and mosquitoes in summer?
33201What can be said of literature, art, music and science?
33201What can be said of the morals of the Latin Americans?
33201What can club women do by way of personal acquaintance and interest?
33201What does the author satirize?
33201What has been done along these lines, and what is still to be done?
33201What has the author to say of education, religion and esthetics?
33201What is her home efficiency?
33201What is the effect in its later education?
33201What is the effect of divorce on children in the home?
33201What is the mainspring of Anna''s character?
33201What is the moral effect on a child in the latter case?
33201What is the percentage of those who can read and write, and why is it so low?
33201What is the position of woman?
33201What is the relation between church and state and what has the church done for education?
33201What is their condition?
33201What luxuries are necessities?
33201What of Night Work for Women?
33201What of her health and schooling?
33201What of higher education?
33201What of its pay?
33201What of lack of recreation and social life?
33201What of ordering by mail?
33201What of short shopping hours and early Christmas shopping?
33201What of the conditions under which garments are made?
33201What of the effect of long hours of confinement?
33201What of the ethics of the removal of the sculptures?
33201What percentage of child criminals come from the laboring classes?
33201What results were brought about later?
33201What should be the attitude of the church toward divorce?
33201What should be the proper attitude of the State toward divorce?
33201Where does South America show her strength, and where her weakness?
33201Where shall a housekeeper buy-- at a large market or a small one?
33201Who can stop to write dull papers on Italian Art in this day of efficiency?
33201Would Divorce Courts, dealing with this whole matter intelligently, be helpful?
33201Would the addition of a civil ceremony to the religious make divorces less frequent?
33201Would the attitude of society toward hasty marriages, should they be discountenanced, be helpful?
33201X-- WHAT IS HOME FOR?
33201XII-- LATIN AMERICA Among the many topics which will suggest themselves for discussion are these: What can be said of education in Latin America?
33201_ Discussion_: Is it more economical to buy bread or make it, for a small family?
33201_ Discussion_: Shall the Baby Sleep Out of Doors?
33201_ Paper_: The chafing dish; is it practical?
33201_ Paper_: The nurse, or the hospital?
33201_ Roll call_: How shall we replenish the preserve closet in winter?
33201_ Roll call_: Waste; what is it?
33201_ Roll call_: Where shall we market?
30714And has one man done all this?
30714Be sure we''ll have some pleisand weather, When a''the clouds( storms?) 30714 Has he done his work?"
30714His brother was killed there,pursued Salé; and Belle, prompt as an echo,"Then there are no more of the family?
30714Is this the road across the island?
30714The coast is so rugged,said Salé.--"What?"
30714Ulufanua the isle of the sea,read that verse dactylically and you get the beat; the u''s are like our double oo; did ever you hear a prettier word?
30714Well,said the waiter,"what d''you expect?
30714What do you call that?
30714What do you want with a gun, Arick?
30714What that?
30714White man he gone up here?
30714Why do you do that?
30714( 1) Will Mataafa surrender?
30714( 2) Will his people allow themselves to be disarmed?
30714( 3) What will happen to them if they do?
30714( 4) What will any of them believe after former deceptions?
30714("Draw all his strength and all His sweetness up into one ball"?
30714--"But will not your family be angry if you marry without asking them?"
30714--"My village?
30714--"Somebody he sing out?
3071414- 30, and continuing, impressively asked:"What are you doing with your talent, Samoa?
30714229"How do you like to go up in a swing?"
30714255"What are you able to build with your blocks?"
30714256, 257"Hey, Johnnie Cope, are ye waukin''yet?"
30714257"Home no more home to me, where must I wander?"
30714273"Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?"
3071429th_(?).--Book.
307145(?
3071453"Do you remember-- can we e''er forget?"
3071484"Who comes to- night?
30714A History for Children?
30714A subject?
30714Adela, Adela, Adela Chart, What have you done to my elderly heart?
30714Aha, say you, and what is a black boy?
30714Also could any trace be found through Nether- Carsewell?
30714Am I beginning to be sucked in?
30714Am I right in thinking you were a shade bored over the last chapters?
30714And AM I HANGIT?
30714And I dare say the consuls say,"Why, then, does he write them?"
30714And I thought the French were a polite race?
30714And Old X----?
30714And first, how about blunders?
30714And hence, how to sugar?
30714And if I had done so, what would have been the result?
30714And if so, why is the lava sharp?
30714And rest?
30714And then the problem that Pinkerton laid down: why the artist can_ do nothing else_?
30714And then?
30714And was that last chapter worth the trouble it cost?
30714And who is the true champion of Samoa?
30714And why ca n''t R. L. S.?
30714And why did I read it to an end, W. E. G.?
30714And will you please to observe that almost all that is ugly is in the whites?
30714And without an opinion, how to string artistically vast accumulations of fact?
30714Apropos, I want a book about Paris, and the_ first return_ of the_ émigrés_ and all up to the_ Cent Jours_: d''ye ken anything in my way?
30714Are you Great Eaters?
30714Are you a reader of Barbey d''Aurévilly?
30714Are you going to do it?
30714As he left I heard the villagers asking_ which was the great lady_?
30714As yet we have not had it at Vailima, and, who knows?
30714At last we had him spread- eagled to the iron bedstead, by his wrists and ankles, with matted rope; a most inhumane business, but what could we do?
30714B._ map?
30714Balfour_?
30714Because?
30714Boys switched out of college into a pulpit, what chance have they?
30714But Marbot and Vitrolles are dead, and what has become of the living?
30714But could I, in my present disposition, do much more with it?
30714But did you ever hear of anything so tantalizing as for you to tell me the story and not send me your notes?
30714But in this out- of- the- way place, are these extreme experiments wise?
30714But then with what colour to relieve it?
30714But what are they made of?
30714But what did he want with me?
30714But what have you to do with this?
30714But what was his errand with me?
30714But what would it matter?
30714But what would the ex- Slade professor do about the letter Y?
30714But when or where to say so?
30714But which is it to be?
30714But why has it not come?
30714But will you not run dry of fairy stories?
30714By the by, did you ever play piquet?
30714By the by, was it not over_ The Child''s Garden of Verses_ that we first scraped acquaintance?
30714Can I finish it for next mail?
30714Can I really have found the tap- root of my illustrious ancestry at last?
30714Can that be the difference?
30714Can you give us any advice as to a fresh field of energy?
30714Can you help?
30714Can you not see that the work of_ falsification_ which a play demands is of all tasks the most ungrateful?
30714Certainly Kipling has the gifts; the fairy godmothers were all tipsy at his christening: what will he do with them?
30714Could it be again at the circuit town?
30714Could we ever stand Europe again?
30714Could you get me further back?
30714Did I ask you to send me my books and papers, and all the bound volumes of the mag.?
30714Did I go and dedicate my book[64] to the nasty alien, and the''norrid Frenchman, and the Bloody Furrineer?
30714Did ever anybody see such a story of four characters?
30714Did you ever blow the conch shell?
30714Did you observe the dedication?
30714Did you read the_ Witch of Prague_?
30714Did you see a silly tale,_ John Nicholson''s Predicament_,[15] or some such name, in which I made free with your home at Murrayfield?
30714Did_ no one_ of them write memoirs?
30714Do I then prefer a famine to a war?
30714Do I wish to advertise?
30714Do you appreciate the height and depth of my temptation?
30714Do you know I picked up the other day an old Longman''s where I found an article of yours that I had missed, about Christie''s?
30714Do you know anything of Thomson?
30714Do you know anything of it?
30714Do you know barbed wire?
30714Do you know the story of the man who found a button in his hash, and called the waiter?
30714Do you know the_ Chevalier des Touches_ and_ L''Ensorcelée_?
30714Do you know where the road crosses the burn under Glencorse Church?
30714Do you know, and have you really tasted, these delightful works?
30714Do you know, it strikes me as being really very good?
30714Do you know, though we are but three miles from the village metropolis, we have no road to it, and our goods are brought on the pack- saddle?
30714Do you know, when I am in this mood, I would rather try to read a bad book?
30714Do you mind the SIGNAL of Waterloo Place?--Hey, how the blood stands to the heart at such a memory!--Hae ye the notes o''t?
30714Do you mind the youth in highland garb and the tableful of coppers?
30714Do you not suppose that makes me proud?
30714Do you see me doing that with a catarrh?
30714Do you think I have an empty life?
30714Do you think it would look like affectation to dedicate the whole edition to his memory?
30714Do you understand?
30714Do you wish to illustrate_ My Grandfather_?
30714Does it not amaze you?
30714Does it shake my cast- iron faith?
30714Expect to find a gold watch and chain?"
30714Fiction?
30714For how many centuries did literature get along without a sign of it?
30714For what is this that you say about the Muses?
30714Gay designation?
30714Had the secret oozed out?
30714Has he changed his mind already?
30714Have the Neilston parish registers been searched?
30714Have you any document for the decapitation?
30714Have you any old notes of the trouble in the West Indian business which took Hugh and Alan to their deaths?
30714Have you been as forgetful as Lloyd?
30714Have you buried it in a napkin?
30714Have you identified Nether Carsewell?
30714Have you seen it coming out in Longman''s?
30714Have you seen no more of Graham?
30714He asked me why I had not been to see him?
30714He was helping his wife on the verandah, and gaily talking, when suddenly he put both hands to his head, and cried out,"What''s that?"
30714He writes very prettily, and then afterwards?
30714Heads or tails?
30714Heard you ever of him?
30714Heavenly apologue, is it not?
30714Here is a long while I have been waiting for something_ good_ in art; and what have I seen?
30714Here, you boy, what you do there?
30714History for Children?
30714How about my old friend Fountainhall''s_ Decisions?_ I remember as a boy that there was some good reading there.
30714How can anybody care when or how I left Honolulu?
30714How could I have dreamed the French prisoners were watched over like a female charity school, kept in a grotesque livery, and shaved twice a week?
30714How do journalists fetch up their drivel?
30714How does it strike you?
30714How does_ The Wrecker_ go in the States?
30714How had they acquired so considerable a business at an age so early?
30714How have I seen this first number?
30714How if he should put dynamite under the gaol, and in case of an attempted rescue blow up prison and all?
30714How is it that amateurs invariably take better photographs than professionals?
30714How is that for high?
30714How should the grave Be victor over these, Mother, a mother of men?"
30714How to get back?
30714How would Rarotonga do?
30714How, then, to choose some former age, and stick there?
30714I always suspect_ you_ of a volume of sonnets up your sleeve; when is it coming down?
30714I am sending you a lot of verses, which had best, I think, be called_ Underwoods_ Book III., but in what order are they to go?
30714I can not bear this suspense: what is it?
30714I do n''t think I ever saw this engraved; would it not, if you could get track of it, prove a taking embellishment?
30714I have not got beyond James Stevenson and Jean Keir his spouse, to whom Robert the First(?)
30714I have the old petty, personal view of honour?
30714I have_ carte blanche_, and say what I like; but does any single soul understand me?
30714I helped the chiefs who were in prison; and when they were set free, what should they do but offer to make a part of my road for me out of gratitude?
30714I know what kind of effect I mean a character to give-- what kind of_ tache_ he is to make; but how am I to tell my collaborator in words?
30714I never could fathom why verse was put in magazines; it has something to do with the making- up, has it not?
30714I observe with disgust that while of yore, when I own I was guilty, you never spared me abuse-- but now, when I am so virtuous, where is the praise?
30714I pulled it off, of course, I won the wager, and it is pleasant while it lasts; but how long will it last?
30714I remember acknowledging with rapture_ The Lesson of the Master_, and I remember receiving_ Marbot_: was that our last relation?
30714I said,"all these villages and no landing- place?"
30714I say, have you ever read the_ Highland Widow_?
30714I see with some alarm the proposal to print_ Juvenilia_; does it not seem to you taking myself a little too much as Grandfather William?
30714I thought Bourget was a friend of yours?
30714I thought_ Aladdin_[37] capital fun; but why, in fortune, did he pretend it was moral at the end?
30714I wonder exceedingly if I have done anything at all good; and who can tell me?
30714I wonder if any one had ever the same attitude to Nature as I hold, and have held for so long?
30714I wonder if you think as ill of mine as I do of yours?
30714I wonder if you think as well of your purple passages as I do of mine?
30714I wonder is there nothing that seems to prolong the series?
30714I, as a personal artist, can begin a character with only a haze in my head, but how if I have to translate the haze into words before I begin?
30714I. JAMES, a tenant of the Mures, in Nether- Carsewell,|| Neilston, married( 1665?)
30714If that was Heaven, what, in the name of Davy Jones and the aboriginal night- mare, could Hell be?
30714If this be so, might not the Cauldwell charter chest contain some references to their Stevenson tenantry?
30714Is he still afloat?
30714Is it next Christmas you are coming?
30714Is it possible for me to write a preface here?
30714Is something of this sort practicable for the dedication?
30714Is that your mother''s breakfast?
30714Is there any book which would guide me as to the following facts?
30714Is this the reason why war has disappeared?
30714Is this, then, a new_ drive_[83] among the monkeys?
30714It is great fun( I have tried it) for the child, and I never heard of it doing any harm to the fishes: so what could be more jolly?
30714It is not all beer and skittles, is it?
30714It sounds cheering, does n''t it?
30714It was Kirriemuir, was it not?
30714It was about four, I suppose, that we met in the Lothian Road,--had we the price of two bitters between us?
30714It''s done, and of course it ai n''t worth while, and who cares?
30714It''s no forgery?
30714J. Horne Stevenson( do you know him?)
30714Jack saw it, and he was appalled; do you think he thought of shying?
30714Last, will it mark sufficiently that I mean my wife?
30714Lives of the Stevensons?
30714Looked at so, is it not, with all its tragic features, wonderfully idyllic, with great beauty of scene and circumstance?
30714Make another end to it?
30714May I tell the sister of my father?
30714Might I ask if you have any material to go upon?
30714My good man, is it three or five years that you have been to sea?"
30714O I know I have n''t told you about our_ aitu_, have I?
30714Of A----, B----, C----, D----, E----, F----, at all?
30714Of course you will send me sheets of the catalogue; I suppose it( the preface) need not be long; perhaps it should be rather very short?
30714On Friday, Henry came and told us he must leave and go to"my poor old family in Savaii"; why?
30714On Thursday, a policeman came up to me and began that a boy had been to see him, and said I was going to see Mataafa.--"And what did you say?"
30714On the return journey on Sunday, they were led by Austin playing(?)
30714On the way down Fanny said,"Now what would you do if you saw Colvin coming up?"
30714Or is it only afternoon tea?
30714Or suppose he took the other version, how would he meet the case, the two N.''s?
30714Or would that look like sham modesty, and is it better to bring out the three Roberts?
30714Or-- might Lieutenant G. be her tutor, and she fugitive to the Pringles, and on the discovery of her whereabouts hastily married?
30714Query, in a man who has been so much calumniated, is that not justifiable?
30714Query, was that lost?
30714Question: How far a Historical Novel should be wholly episodic?
30714Samoa?
30714Shall I be suffered to embark?
30714Shall I become a midnight twitterer like my neighbours?
30714So you have tried fiction?
30714So you think there is nothing better to be done with time than that?
30714So, at last, you are going into mission work?
30714Stevenson?"
30714Stevensons?
30714Surely you had not recognised the phrase about boodle?
30714TO HENRY JAMES_ December 5th, 1892._ MY DEAR JAMES,--How comes it so great a silence has fallen?
30714TO SIDNEY COLVIN_ Saturday, 24th(?)
30714Talking of which, ai n''t it manners in France to acknowledge a dedication?
30714The thought began to haunt him, What if his power of earning were soon to cease?
30714Then he asked quickly,"Do I look strange?"
30714Then my wife asked him,"So you refuse to break bread?"
30714Then_ viator_( though it_ sounds_ all right) is doubtful; it has too much, perhaps, the sense of wayfarer?
30714They may be seen to shrug a brown shoulder, to roll up a speaking eye, and at last secret burst from them:"Where is the bottle?"
30714This makes a cheery life after Samoa; but it is n''t what you call burning the candle at both ends, is it?
30714Those who had accompanied them cried to them on the streets as they were marched to prison,"Shall we rescue you?"
30714True; but why did he go?
30714Was it grateful?
30714Was it politic?
30714Well, suppose we call that cried off, and begin as before?
30714Well, then, what is curious?
30714Were they arrested?
30714What about my Grandfather?
30714What ails you, miserable man, to talk of saving material?
30714What am I to do?
30714What did I mean?
30714What do I please?
30714What do I think of it all?
30714What do the little girls in the cellar think that Austin does?
30714What do we know of yours?
30714What do you care for ours?
30714What do you suppose should be done with_ The Ebb Tide_?
30714What do you think of it for a year?
30714What do you think of that for a vicissitude?
30714What does my village want?
30714What else are you doing or thinking of doing?
30714What else is to be done for these silly folks?
30714What for he take my pig?"
30714What has gone on?
30714What is wrong, then?
30714What is your love to his love?
30714What was in it?
30714What will Cedercrantz think when he comes back?
30714What will he do with it?
30714What would you do with a guest at such narrow seasons?--eat him?
30714When Mataafa was taken, who was our support but Tusitala?
30714When shall I receive proofs of the Magnum Opus?
30714When your hand is in, will you remember our poor Edinburgh Robin?
30714Where the devil shall I go next?
30714Where there are traders, there will be ammunition; aphorism by R. L. S. Now what am I to do next?
30714Where would this trial have to be?
30714Whether to add one or both the tales I sent you?
30714Whether to call the whole volume_ Island Nights''Entertainments_?
30714Who could foresee that they clothed the French prisoners in yellow?
30714Who has changed the sentence?
30714Why did I take up_ David Balfour_?
30714Why do you not send me Jerome K. Jerome''s paper, and let me see_ The Ebb Tide_ as a serial?
30714Why does n''t some young man take it up?
30714Why have I wasted the little time that is left with a sort of naked review article?
30714Why should I disguise it?
30714Why should not young Hermiston escape clear out of the country?
30714Why should they not then?
30714Why should you suppose your book will be slated because you have no friends?
30714Why the devil does no one send me Atalanta?
30714Why?
30714Will any one ever read it?
30714Will it do for the young person?
30714Will the public ever stand such an opus?
30714Will you give my heartiest congratulations to Mr. Spender?
30714Will you kindly send an able- bodied reader to compulse the parish registers of Neilston, if they exist or go back as far?
30714Will you try to imitate me in that if the spirit ever moves you to reply?
30714Work?
30714Would it bore you to communicate to that effect with the great man?
30714Would you like me to introduce the old gentleman?
30714Yet who among you is so great as Tusitala?
30714You ask me in yours just received, what will become of us if it comes to a war?
30714You have reached a trifle wide perhaps; too_ many_ celebrities?
30714You know the vast cynicism of my view of affairs, and how readily and( as some people say) with how much gusto I take the darker view?
30714You mention the belated Barbeys; what about the equally belated Pineros?
30714You no get work?
30714You say carefully-- methought anxiously-- that I was no longer me when I grew up?
30714You would get the Atlantic and the Rocky Mountains, would you not?
30714Your three talents, Savaii, Upolu, and Tutuila?
30714Yours is a fine tool, and I see so well how to hold it; I wonder if you see how to hold mine?
30714[ 65] It is excellent; but is it a life''s work?
30714[ 66] He is a good fellow, is he not?
30714[ 81]_ Sic_: query"least"?
30714_ 10 a.m._--I have worked up again to 97, but how?
30714_ Absit omen!_ My dear Barrie, I am a little in the dark about this new work of yours:[79] what is to become of me afterwards?
30714_ Christmas Eve._--Yesterday, who could write?
30714_ E pur si muove._ But Barrie is a beauty, the_ Little Minister_ and the_ Window in Thrums_, eh?
30714_ Evening._--Can I write or not?
30714_ Friday, Feb.??
30714_ Friday, Feb.??
30714_ Historia Samoae_?
30714_ May 17th._--Well, am I ashamed of myself?
30714_ Monday, 31st(?)
30714_ October 13th._--How am I to describe my life these last few days?
30714_ October 8th._--Suppose you sent us some of the catalogues of the parties what vends statutes?
30714_ P.S._--Were all your privateers voiceless in the war of 1812?
30714_ Sunday, Nov. 6th._--Here is a long story to go back upon, and I wonder if I have either time or patience for the task?
30714_ Sunday._--The deed is done, didst thou not hear a noise?
30714_ Tenez_, you know what a French post office or railway official is?
30714_[ Vailima] October 8th, 1894._ MY DEAR CUMMY,--So I hear you are ailing?
30714_[ Vailima] Sunday, 29th May[ 1892]._ How am I to overtake events?
30714and can you guess my mystery?
30714and how did you like it?
30714and how far did she go with the Chevalier?
30714and there was nobody in the whole of Britain who knew how to take ava like a gentleman?
30714and to- night I might seize Mulinuu and have the C. J. under arrest?
30714and what could Lloyd do?
30714and what has driven them to it but the persistent misconduct of these two officials?
30714and what have I?
30714and why should I wish to know?
30714did she appreciate that if we were in London, we should be_ actually jostled_ in the street?
30714has blawn( gone?)
30714in my present pressure for time, were I not better employed doing another one about as ill, than making this some thousandth fraction better?
30714might there not be some Huguenot business mixed in?
30714of Art?
30714or serve up a labour boy fricasseed?
30714or shall I receive them at all?
30714or the Christmas after?
30714or was it my own fault that made me think them susceptible of a more athletic compression?
30714read--"But life in act?
30714say I;"are you two chiefly- proceeding inland?"
30714that I have about nine miles to ride, and I can become a general officer?
30714which serves here for"What''s your business?"
37795Do you want to know how I manage to talk to you in this simple Saxon? 37795 Have you ever rightly considered what the mere ability to read means?
37795Is it not a new England for a child to be born in since Shakspeare gathered up the centuries and told the story of humanity up to his time? 37795 What is a great love of books?
37795Do you suppose when you see men engaged in study that they dislike it?
37795Has it been superseded by a later book, or has its truth passed into the every- day life of the race?
37795Is it within my grasp?
37795Is the author such a man as I would wish to be the companion of my heart, or such as I must study to avoid?
37795Is the book simple enough for me?
37795Is the matter inviting my attention of permanent value?
37795That it enables us to see with the keenest eyes, hear with the finest ears, and listen to the sweetest voices of all time?...
37795V. Will the book impart a pleasure in the very reading?
37795What effect will it have upon character?
37795What effect will the book produce upon the mind?
37795What is the relation of the book to the completeness of my development?
37795What will be the effect on my skills and accomplishments?
37795When did a thing such as that ever happen?
37795Will it exercise and strengthen my fancy, imagination, memory, invention, originality, insight, breadth, common- sense, and philosophic power?
37795Will it fill a gap in the walls of my building?
37795Will it give me a knowledge of what other people are thinking and feeling, thus opening the avenues of communication between my life and theirs?
37795Will it give me the quality of intellectual beauty?
37795Will it help to build a standard of taste in literature for the guidance of myself and others?
37795Will it make me bright, witty, reasonable, and tolerant?
37795Will it store my mind full of beautiful thoughts and images that will make my conversation a delight and profit to my friends?
37795Will it supply a knowledge of the best means of attaining any other desired art or accomplishment?
37795Will it teach me how to write with power, give me the art of thinking clearly and expressing my thought with force and attractiveness?
37795_ Do they live?_ If so, believe me, TIME hath made them pure.
27323''_ Conduct: lethargic and unsteady; but a fair speller._''Excellent, is n''t it? 27323 A new admirer?"
27323A present for me?
27323A_ dance_? 27323 Am I?
27323Am I? 27323 Am I?"
27323And China tea, of_ course_?
27323And may I ask your reason?
27323And now, tell me, how has life been treating you?
27323And suppose Rupert goes teaching English to an Italian girl at Venice, or gives her history lessons, or anything? 27323 And to- night we''re dining at home?"
27323And what about me?
27323And what did you say?
27323And what ought I to go as?
27323And what will happen to Percy? 27323 And why?"
27323And will dear Nigel ask me all the same to meet Rupert, Bertha?
27323And you believe it''s the real thing?
27323And you do n''t go without him?
27323And you think I''m trying to make you sorry for me?
27323Are n''t we going to dine together?
27323Are n''t you? 27323 Are you engaged in the morning?"
27323Are you going to let me read it?
27323Are you going to stay long to- day?
27323Are you madly in love with Percy?
27323Are you sorry to see me?
27323Are you speaking of men or husbands?
27323Are you sure it is n''t? 27323 Bertha, need I be frightened of Moona Chivvey?
27323Bertha, why do you sneer at him?
27323But are n''t they a little short, Cissy?
27323But does it all mean anything, Bertha?
27323But he''ll come back? 27323 But is he really an Italian?"
27323But is it a thing that may make any difference?
27323But may I ask, do you consider that this set, as you call it, lead a_ useless_ life?
27323But might n''t you later on, when we''re older?
27323But not for us? 27323 But tell me, Nigel, would you like us to go in more for society again as we used at first?"
27323But what''s the reason? 27323 But what_ did_ he say-- was he very odd and peculiar?"
27323But where does he come from... where does he really live?
27323But will mummy mind? 27323 But you do n''t know that it''s anybody''s birthday for a fact, do you?"
27323But you do n''t know whose?
27323But you do n''t want necessarily always to be_ run after_, surely? 27323 But you saw ze idea?"
27323But you''re not going to give a fire- escape performance to- night, are you? 27323 But, Clifford, will you,_ perhaps_,_ when_ I am out?"
27323By the way,he said, dropping his instructive manner,"can you tell me where you get your hats?
27323Can I go and tell cook to make some?
27323Clean- shaven?
27323Could stand what?
27323Darling pets, I suppose?
27323Dear boy, does he? 27323 Did he say who broke it off?"
27323Did he want to marry you?
27323Did he, though? 27323 Did n''t he wonder at your coming home so early?"
27323Did n''t you meet them that night at the Russian Ballet? 27323 Did she accept?"
27323Did she ever mention me?
27323Did she-- did she-- tell you?
27323Did you indeed?
27323Did you tell Percy?
27323Do I? 27323 Do n''t you like the plan of it?"
27323Do n''t you see any faults in it? 27323 Do n''t you think something thrilling and exciting and emotional-- or, perhaps, something light and frivolous?"
27323Do n''t you want mummy to see them?
27323Do n''t you, though?
27323Do these sudden and violent scruples mean simply that you do n''t want me any more?
27323Do you call him Eustace?
27323Do you know In the Orchard?
27323Do you mean that at your age you really appreciate the past?
27323Do you mean, Bertha, that the woman generally does n''t take enough trouble with the house to make it pleasant for him at home-- and all that?
27323Do you mind his not being here yet?
27323Do you object? 27323 Do you think Rupert has not been sincere with Madeline?"
27323Do you think her pretty?
27323Do you think she''d wait on the chance that Rupert might have a divorce?
27323Do you think there ought to be any sort of entertainment, Nigel?
27323Do you very particularly want me to?
27323Do you wish me to explain?
27323Does Rupert really do art needlework? 27323 Does he care for that?"
27323Does n''t it-- why?
27323Does n''t this look like it?
27323Floral tribs? 27323 For instance?"
27323Good teeth?
27323Had n''t you better get ready for your mother?
27323Has his wife-- do you think it''s been noticed he does n''t come here so often?
27323Have I been too long?
27323Have I? 27323 Have a cigarette?"
27323Have you any right to ask?
27323Have you ever been down a fire- escape, Clifford?
27323Have you got it there, Cliff?
27323Have you many English friends here?
27323He''s rather a wonderful chap, then?
27323How are you, Mrs. Hillier? 27323 How can you say that; how can you make him care for me if he does n''t?"
27323How did you suppose I''d take it, then?
27323How do you mean''that will do''?
27323How do you mean?
27323How do you suppose?
27323How is it you did n''t enjoy it?
27323How long can I?
27323How on_ earth_ can you know through the telephone?
27323How would you advise me to behave to him, if it_ had_ come off-- I mean if I_ had_ married Rupert?
27323How''s Marjorie getting on with her music lessons?
27323How''s Percy?
27323I know; but what can we do? 27323 I only hope that you''re not doing it so that your mother should ask Rupert to the wedding?
27323I say, Bertha, may I come back with you? 27323 I say, have you seen my report?"
27323I suppose Rupert has been seeing Moona Chivvey again? 27323 I suppose he drove Miss Irwin home?"
27323I suppose you''ll want me to ask the Kellynches?
27323Is he angry with you then?
27323Is he? 27323 Is it anybody''s birthday?"
27323Is it like you, Miss Chivvey?
27323Is it? 27323 Is it?
27323Is n''t he? 27323 Is n''t it touching?"
27323Is n''t there? 27323 Is that a fact?
27323Jealous? 27323 Likes him, does she?"
27323Look here--he was looking at the paper--"would you like to go to the opera after dinner?
27323Look here, Bertha, is the chap off his head, a fraud, or serious?
27323May I ask one thing more?
27323May I ask one thing?
27323May I call you Bertha?
27323May I consult you? 27323 May I give him a regular sort of invitation from you, then?"
27323May I tell you, later on... how things are? 27323 Me?
27323Me?
27323My birthday? 27323 My caring for you so much?"
27323Nigel dear, you know what you said the other evening about giving parties?
27323Nigel, are you trying to quarrel with me for loving you better than the children?
27323No? 27323 Now, will you give me another cup of tea?"
27323Oh no, I do n''t think I do; would n''t she laugh at me?
27323Oh yes-- been out at all?
27323Oh, I say, was that all? 27323 Oh, and I wanted to ask you, what time of the year_ do_ people hawk?"
27323Oh, are you? 27323 Oh, ca n''t you''phone about it, Nigel?"
27323Oh, do n''t you know him?
27323Oh, must you? 27323 Oh, really?
27323Oh, really? 27323 Or, perhaps, do you think a little for me?
27323Paquin?
27323Percy will soon be home, I suppose? 27323 Perhaps you would like me to put my head in a bag?"
27323Rather indefinite, is n''t it?
27323Rather odd; are n''t you?
27323Really and truly? 27323 Really?
27323Really? 27323 Really?
27323Seen much of them to- day?
27323Shall I go?
27323Shall I tell you?
27323Shall we take him out to lunch, Bertha?
27323She does n''t object?
27323Some tea?
27323Sorry to see you? 27323 Tell me Madeline, what made you change like this?"
27323That you, Nigel? 27323 The Lotus Eaters?
27323The dress I saw you trying on? 27323 Then must I happen to be there?
27323Then must I take Madeline alone?
27323Then will you tell me what to do?
27323Then you do like me a little bit too, Clifford?
27323Very dark, is he? 27323 Well, I should think so, do n''t you?"
27323Well, Nigel darling?
27323Well, after all, if you do n''t like them, why should you see them?
27323Well, and ca n''t it be?
27323Well, and would n''t that be ripping?
27323Well, have n''t you any nice little friends at school, Clifford-- any favourites?
27323Well, have you?
27323Well, mother?
27323Well, then, do n''t you want me to like her?
27323Well, what is it, Nigel?
27323Well, why should n''t you, if you like it? 27323 Well,"said Bertha, laughing, and turning to Madeline,"what do you think he said?
27323Well?
27323What are the children''s names?
27323What are you going to wear?
27323What did Pickering think of this?
27323What did she say?
27323What do you give him to do?
27323What do you mean by''Yes''?
27323What do you mean?
27323What do you think I used to want to do?
27323What do you want her to look like?
27323What does he do, darling?
27323What idea?
27323What in heaven''s name does that matter?
27323What is it? 27323 What is the question?"
27323What news? 27323 What on earth for?"
27323What on earth is it, old boy?
27323What shall I wear?
27323What sort of party?
27323What sort?
27323What then?
27323What time of the year? 27323 What would your idea be, then?
27323What''s a sonnet, Clifford?
27323What''s that book you''ve brought, Cliff?
27323What''s that got to do with it?
27323What''s the matter with them?
27323What''s the object of it? 27323 What''s vulgar?"
27323What''s wrong with them all?
27323What?
27323What_ sort_?
27323Where are you going to- day?
27323Where ca n''t you take me?
27323Where have you been?
27323Where''s that?
27323Which Mary?
27323Which little bits?
27323Who is Nigel Hillier?
27323Who on earth ever said it was?
27323Who said it was? 27323 Who sent you the flowers, Bertha?"
27323Who sent you those flowers, Bertha?
27323Who was she?
27323Whoever''s that pretty picture over there?
27323Why do you call her a horrid woman? 27323 Why do you pass me the letters, as though you thought I came down for that?"
27323Why do you say that?
27323Why not, dear?
27323Why not, pray? 27323 Why not?
27323Why not? 27323 Why not?"
27323Why should Mary care?
27323Why, the simultaneity of the plastic states of mind in the art? 27323 Why?"
27323Will you have China tea and lemon and be smart, or India tea and milk and sugar and enjoy it? 27323 Wo n''t you kiss me to show you''re not cross with me, Clifford?"
27323You did n''t really think for a moment, seriously, that I ever-- that I didn''t-- oh, you never stopped knowing how much I love you?
27323You do n''t share your husband''s taste for it, it seems?
27323You enjoyed yourself last night, did n''t you?
27323You knew it? 27323 You know my brother- in- law, Clifford?"
27323You like honesty and frankness, and I''ve honestly come to ask you-- are you coming to my party?
27323You mean anyone can see it''s not designed by an architect?
27323You must come and dine with me to- night, wo n''t you, Miss Chivvey?
27323You understand now that I also care for my husband? 27323 You want to go?
27323You''d like me to help you with the list, would n''t you, dear?
27323You? 27323 Your daughter- in- law, my dear?"
27323( Now the dialogue begins, Bertha, listen):"''YOUTH: Are you there, mistress?
27323*****"Percy, what is the matter?"
27323... Did you know mine before you came here, Clifford?"
27323... How much longer_ can_ I bear it?"
27323... How would it be to have a band to play the whole evening?"
27323... Oh, Bertha, do you_ really_ think he''ll miss me?"
27323... What is this chap like, this Semolini man?"
27323... What would you have done?"
27323... What_ do_ you do all day, Mary, if I may ask?
27323... You''ll remember that, wo n''t you?"
27323..._''""Is it in blank verse?"
27323A second of acute physical jealousy made him remark rather bitterly before he left that her hat was a little bit striking, was n''t it?
27323A special favour, wo n''t you?"
27323About the play-- you want something serious, what price Shakespeare?"
27323And all these gifts she used-- for what?
27323And now I suppose you want me to go?"
27323And what are you doing here?"
27323And what has Bertha''s kindness to do with it?"
27323And will you all come and dine with me, and where shall we go?"
27323And you are pleased?"
27323Are n''t I unfashionable?"
27323Are they real?"
27323Are you going to see him to look into the matter?"
27323Because you attract them?"
27323Before I go, will you answer me one little question?"
27323Before she could answer, he went on:"And that book on architecture that I sent you-- tell me, have you read it?"
27323But I think it''s very satisfactory, do n''t you?"
27323But are there no nice boys that you like?"
27323But if he_ did_ propose, how do you suppose he''d do it, Bertha?"
27323But it does n''t take long; and after that----?"
27323But it just shows, does n''t it?"
27323But must n''t she know it?"
27323But now?
27323But then, could he help it that Mary went behind his back and wrote the most dreadful letters, that she had this terrible mania for writing letters?
27323But then, where are you if he goes and marries someone else?
27323But what does it matter?
27323But what_ is_ he like?
27323But why so many mysteries?
27323But will Percy go-- and let you go?"
27323But wo n''t you answer his letter?"
27323But you can easily make them longer, ca n''t you?"
27323But, after all, what did it matter?
27323But, please forgive my asking, wo n''t you?
27323By looking in_ Who''s Who?_--going to Somerset House or the British Museum?"
27323CHAPTER XXXII PRIVATE FIREWORKS AT THE PICKERINGS''"I say, Clifford, when is your birthday?"
27323Ca n''t I have hot tea- cakes?
27323Ca n''t you see I do n''t like it?"
27323Ca n''t you see now how terrible it was to suggest these absolute lies as facts to her husband?
27323Could a man have said anything that would please a woman as much as this primitive assertion?
27323Could n''t you go in for a few minutes to- morrow morning at the Grosvenor Gallery in Bond Street?
27323Could she let her remain in ignorance of this until afterwards?
27323Denison?"
27323Did he not make love to you?"
27323Did n''t you tell me you were almost engaged once?"
27323Did you really think this, may I ask?"
27323Did you write the letters?"
27323Do I look like a canary?"
27323Do n''t you believe me?"
27323Do n''t you_ like_ me to be waiting for you?"
27323Do you care so much, Madeline?"
27323Do you envy him?"
27323Do you ever think that Rupert still takes an interest in Miss Chivvey?"
27323Do you expect me to spend my whole time with children of eight and nine?"
27323Do you know her?
27323Do you like it?"
27323Do you mind?"
27323Do you really know anything about it?"
27323Do you see this is my book?''
27323Do you want me to be sorry I came out with you?"
27323Do you_ mind_ my caring more for you than for the children?"
27323Does it mean mummy?"
27323Down a fire- escape?
27323For not looking older than you?"
27323Funny place this, is n''t it?"
27323Had she ever really forgiven him?
27323Have n''t I been nice?"
27323Have n''t you?"
27323Have some more tea?"
27323Have you a favourite poet, Madeline?"
27323Have you any objection to showing me the letters?"
27323Have you been for a drive to- day?"
27323Have you decided to let her have it back on mature consideration?"
27323Have you?"
27323He gave her a rather searching look, and then said:"Did Hillier like it?"
27323He was going to the Russian Ballet with Bertha-- how could he leave Bertha in the lurch?
27323Her warm, kind heart made her say gently:"Nigel, I hope you''re nice and considerate to Mary?
27323Hillier?"
27323Hillier?"
27323Hillier?"
27323Hope I have n''t kept you?"
27323How can I?"
27323How can people be called Rupert?
27323How could he have been so idiotic?
27323How dare I be short and tiny, and yet not thin, nowadays?"
27323How did he find out your birthday?"
27323How do I know what I''ll do when you''re out?"
27323How is it all going on?
27323How will you explain to her that I drop your acquaintance?"
27323I danced the tango with Nigel''s brother Charlie last night, and at the end-- he really does dance divinely-- what do you think happened?
27323I do n''t know whose and I do n''t want to; what does it matter?
27323I hope you''ve got those with the burnt almonds that you''re so particularly fond of?"
27323I may know just a little bit more about men than some women do, for one reason----""And what is that?
27323I mean to say-- well!--almost anyone would guess that, would n''t they?"
27323I mean, suppose you found out that he had been making love to me?
27323I mean-- we''ve had all this; have n''t we?"
27323I need n''t go home, need I?"
27323I say, Bertha,... can I bring Pickering here?"
27323I say, I wonder what it means exactly?"
27323I say, ca n''t you tell mother to wear the same sort of shoes?
27323I say, mother, what cakes have you got?"
27323I suppose that''s one of your school expressions-- you mean no nice boys?
27323I suppose you want to wear it?"
27323I thought you enjoyed it the other night?"
27323I trust your wife is not ill?"
27323I wonder how he manages to make two ends meet?"
27323I''m going, and-- do you know why I accepted, Madeline?"
27323If I may put it plainly, did you think I cared for her in a way that I had no right to?"
27323If she had been doing Bertha an injustice, as it seemed, if Bertha was not seeing him at all, why should she not go and see her?
27323If she liked_ you_ ever so much and you were free, do you suppose I would take her side-- help her?"
27323If she would agree to this, and if she were as affectionate as formerly, what did the rest matter?
27323Is it asking too much, Bertha, to beg you not to resent it?
27323Is my ale nigh on ready?
27323Is n''t it funny?"
27323Is n''t it?"
27323Is n''t that a bit strong before a lady?"
27323Is she not one of those( alas, too few) who are always followed by the flutes of the pagan world?_''""That''s really very sweet of him.
27323Is that it?"
27323Is this infernal intimacy beginning again?"
27323Is your wife here?"
27323It''s a nice little thing, is n''t it?"
27323It''s a pretty little thing, is n''t it, Lady Münster?"
27323Mary dear, why do n''t you do your hair?"
27323Mary?
27323May I burn the letters now?"
27323May I smoke a cigarette?"
27323May I use your telephone?"
27323Miss Belvoir and I met an elephant, an enormous creature, galumphing along, knocking everybody down, and was n''t it clever of me?
27323Mrs. Kellynch, may I really ask you a great,_ great_ favour?"
27323Must we have your friend Miss Sutton too?"
27323Need I be afraid?"
27323Nigel walked up and down the room, turned suddenly and said:"What has put this idea into your head?"
27323Not to hate me for to- night?
27323Percy Kellynch, the husband-- he was spoken of as the husband( people said:"Is that the husband?"
27323Presently Clifford looked up and said:"Anyway, you''ll think it over, Bertha; and see what you decide to do about asking Pickering?"
27323Say at about eleven or twelve?
27323Shall I tell you why I do n''t want to marry Henry Ainley any more?"
27323Shall I write to Rupert Denison and Miss Irwin?
27323Shall I?"
27323Shall we talk about it now, or wait till after dinner?
27323She then went on, after a longer pause:"''_ Music and dancing: music, rather weak... dancing, a steady worker._''That''s very good, is n''t it?
27323She waited, then, at a pause, said, rather pathetically:"Oh, Percy, do tell me what it is?
27323She would say:"Mrs. So- and- so?
27323Should she tell her?
27323Surely you''ve noticed that, Madeline?
27323Surely, he means to come back?"
27323That was all, and the cloud''s gone?"
27323That was diplomacy, was n''t it?
27323That''s not too hospitable and gushing, is it?"
27323The canary dress?"
27323The letters must have been slanders; who_ could_ have written them?
27323The sort of chap you''d like to be seen with?"
27323Then he said:"Has anyone been here to- day?"
27323Then he went on:"Might I venture to ask whether you suspect I''ve been making the most of our plans for Madeline to see as much of you as I could?"
27323Then he''s a friend of Percy Kellynch?
27323Then she said:"It''s all right now, then, Percy?
27323Then, as she left:"My dear, where do you pick up your extraordinary friends?"
27323Then, did I say just now he was fond of music?
27323To- day is not the day he goes to the Queen''s Hall, is it?"
27323WHO is he?"
27323Was Mrs. Kellynch there?"
27323Was he now not even going to have this pleasant morning hour to himself?
27323Was it indeed?
27323Was it wrong of me?
27323Was n''t the fog and the hypocrisy-- one was the symbol of the other-- weren''t all these things the very charm of London?
27323Was this fair?
27323Well, Cliff, did n''t we have fun the other day?
27323Well, now, ca n''t you see that you''ve every possible chance of happiness together?"
27323Well-- shall I, after supper, drive back with Rupert and praise up Miss Irwin-- or not?"
27323What about Mrs. Nigel, and Percy?"
27323What are floral tribs?
27323What are you all going as?
27323What are you going to be, Clifford?"
27323What did it matter?
27323What do men know of millinery?"
27323What do you mean?"
27323What do you say, my precious Madeline?"
27323What do you want to look like?"
27323What does he say?"
27323What have you got Warden for?
27323What man wants to be deluged with tears and complaints?
27323What man will bear that?"
27323What on earth is it?"
27323What shall I do-- what can I do to make him fond of me?"
27323What shall I do?"
27323What will you have, dear?"
27323What''s he like?"
27323What_ does_ it matter?"
27323When shall this be?
27323When they left Nigel said:"Do you know that I ought n''t to have taken you there to- night?
27323Where are the children?"
27323Who cares?"
27323Who did he take to dinner?"
27323Who did you see at the picture gallery?
27323Who_ is_ he?"
27323Whom had she to fight against?
27323Why ca n''t you read while I''m looking at you?
27323Why did n''t you take_ me_?"
27323Why did n''t you?
27323Why did n''t you?
27323Why do n''t you change it to me?
27323Why do n''t you ring him up and ask him to come here?"
27323Why do n''t you send the footman?
27323Why does he behave like a belated schoolmaster?"
27323Why had she not waited?
27323Why is a feast day always followed by a fast?_""Is it Doncaster to- morrow?"
27323Why is a feast day always followed by a fast?_""Is it Doncaster to- morrow?"
27323Why is he so desperate you should be seen there?"
27323Why not wait till trouble comes?"
27323Why not?"
27323Why not?"
27323Why should I take you there to make things comfortable with him and his wife?"
27323Why should he be hurt, annoyed, and humiliated?
27323Why should he?
27323Why this reproach?
27323Why was Percy so long?
27323Why, indeed, should she be anything else?
27323Why-- why was I such a fool?
27323Why?"
27323Will he_ really_?
27323Will you come and see me at my chambers at four o''clock the day after to- morrow?
27323Will you, Cissy?"
27323With Madeline and Rupert, too-- what harm was there in it?
27323With those letters upstairs in the box, how could he?
27323Wo n''t mummy say it''s_ vulgar_?"
27323Wo n''t she be afraid?"
27323Wo n''t you anyhow think it over for a day or two?"
27323Wo n''t you leave it at that?
27323Wo n''t you take me?
27323Would n''t Charlie have a chance then?"
27323Would n''t you prefer he should make_ your_ life miserable than any other woman''s?
27323Would you flirt to make him jealous?"
27323Yes, you''re looking charming, Madeline-- it''s absurd calling you Miss Irwin after knowing each other so long, is n''t it?"
27323You make her happy?"
27323You understand, do n''t you?
27323You''ll go with me to the Hilliers''party, wo n''t you, as Charlie will be away?"
27323You''ll make this sacrifice for me-- if it is one, Bertha?"
27323You''re becoming a regular jealous husband, do you know?
27323You''re going to see Bertha soon, are n''t you?"
27323ca n''t you telephone to a florist and have it sent to her, if she''s_ got_ to have vegetables?"
27323or"What''s the husband like?")
27323quite black?"
27323will someone take me away and serve me up on a cold plate?"
37565What difference does it make whether we are the Tribes or not?
37565What doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with thy God?
3756511 PSYCHICAL RESEARCH; ITS METHOD, EVIDENCE, AND TENDENCY 18 THE EVOLUTION OF A PSYCHICAL RESEARCHER 43 DO MIRACLES HAPPEN?
3756552 THE TRUTH ABOUT TELEPATHY 58 THE TRUTH ABOUT HYPNOTISM 63 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 75 JOAN OF ARC 88 IS THE EARTH ALIVE?
37565And can the dead give birth to the living?
37565And if it is so with a pen, will it not be more so with greater things?
37565And indeed_ are_ all its actions predictable?
37565But even of"finite", can we say that it has any useful clear meaning?
37565But is it not somewhat presumptuous to dogmatise thus?
37565But will this be sufficient?
37565CONTENTS PAGE DEATH 1 IF A MAN DIE, SHALL HE LIVE AGAIN?
37565DO MIRACLES HAPPEN?
37565He is high as heaven; what canst thou do?
37565How came she to be given the command of an army?
37565How could"dead"matter have any activity at all?
37565IF A MAN DIE, SHALL HE LIVE AGAIN?
37565IS THE EARTH ALIVE?
37565Illogical?
37565In Piccadilly and the Bowery( and Throgmorton and Wall Streets?)
37565Is it asked:"Who is the Law- giver, and to what end is the Law?"
37565Is it not a trifle ludicrous to find some of these little creatures looking down so condescendingly on the remainder of the planet?
37565May it not have been somewhat thus with Jeanne?
37565Moreover, how many times have they"willed"without result?
37565Shall it not return to the earth- soul, as the body returns to the earth- body?
37565Some people say:"But if communication is possible, why can not_ I_ communicate direct with my own departed loved ones?"
37565Still the distinction between life at its lowest and non- life at its highest( crystals?)
37565Surely He must be either not All- good or not Almighty?"
37565The question then arises: What is the nature of the after life?
37565To which the Abbé responded:"Has one of them given us back Alsace and Lorraine?"
37565We have heard, over and over again, the pathetic cry:"Why does God permit such things?
37565What delight Bring days, one with another, setting us Forward or backward on our path to death?
37565What then of the soul?
37565What, next, about telepathy?
37565What, then, are the facts?
37565Where do they go?
37565Why should mind always manifest itself in the same way?
37565Why then deny consciousness to the Matterhorn, because_ all_ its actions are calculable and predictable?
37565Will not rather the whole theological scheme have to be remodelled?
37565and went home, making a speedy end, unwilling to suffer the indignity of disease and the shame of being served in weakness?
37565deeper than Sheol; what canst thou know?
38022Juliet, wilt thou have this false pretence, this profligate in broadcloth, this unpaid tailor''s bill, for thy wedded husband?
38022You believe a woman should have all the rights of a man?
38022According to the old but truthful saying, it is impossible for a man to outwit a shrewd woman; and instead of asking, What can a woman do?
38022And what is the result?
38022But where did it come from?
38022Did it come from the sun, the moon, the earth, or from some exploded planet?
38022It does not matter what a man professes to know, but the question is, what does he know, compared with what he might know?
38022Where can it be commenced, except in our common schools?
38022Where, then, is this all- important work to be commenced?
38022Why is this?
38022or was it generated in the atmosphere?
38022we should ask, What is there a woman can not do?
37701*Mount Vernon, June 12.--Dear Sir,--Can nothing be done in our Assembly for poor Paine?
37701Be not righteous overmuch,saith cynical Solomon;"neither make thyself over- wise: why shouldest thou destroy thyself?"
37701His writings certainly have had a powerful effect on the public mind,--ought they not then to meet an adequate return? 37701 How just, how suitable to our crime is the punishment with which Providence threatens us?
37701Was America then,asks Paine,"the giant of empire, and England only her dwarf in waiting?
37701What kind of office must that be in a government which requires neither experience nor ability to execute? 37701 What was he then?
37701What,he asked,"would the sovereignity of any individual state be, if left to itself to contend with a foreign power?
37701Whether ought his flight to be considered as his own act, or the act of those who fled with him? 37701 Who are those that are frightened at reform?
37701( See the reports of Wentworth and others in Stevens''_ Facsimiles?_) Deane and Gerard came over together, on one of d''Estaing''s ships.
37701**"Pitt''used to say,''according to Lady Hester Stanhope,''that Tom Paine was quite in the right, but then he would add, what am I to do?
37701Are the poor afraid that their condition should be rendered too comfortable?"
37701Are the public afraid their taxes should be lessened too much?
37701Are they afraid that sinecure places and pensions should be abolished too fast?
37701As, alas, who is in a true one?
37701But how far is it justifiable upon an officer under the faith of a capitulation, if none other can be had is the question?
37701But what has the Convention to do with deciding about Louis XVI., or about affairs, foreign or domestic?
37701How did the seventeenth century secure a monopoly in revolution?
37701How is my favorite Sally Morris, my boy Joe, and my horse Button?
37701If it be asked,''What is the French revolution to us?''
37701If one revolution could be authoritative, why not another?
37701If we have an equal right with you to virtue, why should we not have an equal right to praise?
37701Must the merits and services of_ Common Sense_ continue to glide down the stream of time, unrewarded by this country?
37701Polly and Nancy Rogers,--are they married?
37701Should he not obtain this?
37701The affairs of that Country are verging to a new crisis, whether the Government shall be Monarchical and heredetary or wholly representative?
37701They come into my office not having been seen by Congress; and as they contain an injunction not to be conceded by[ to?]
37701Was it a spontaneous resolution of his own, or was it inspired into him by others?
37701What other last- century writer on political and religious issues survives in the hatred and devotion of a time engaged with new problems?
37701What, then, are they sorry that the pretence for new oppressive taxes, and the occasion for continuing many old taxes, will be at an end?
37701What, then, means this sudden attachment to Kings?
37701You used to complain of abuses, as well as me, and write your opinions on them in free terms-- What then means this sudden attachment to_ Kings_?"
37701or do they intend to build bowers as I have done?
37701this fondness of the English Government, and hatred of the French?
37744;Does a house burn up or burn down?
37744;Does increase of culture involve decrease of amusement?
37744;Had you rather be more stupid than you seem, or seem more stupid than you are?"
37744;Is the existence of a''Mute inglorious Milton''possible?
37744;Is the highest musical culture compatible with the highest intellectual development?
37744;Is there a distinctly American literature as contrasted with that of England?
37744;Ought we to cultivate most those faculties in which we naturally excel, or those in which we are naturally deficient?
37744;Should matrimonial union be contracted early or late?
37744;Will giving the franchise to women exert a beneficial influence on society?
37744Of what consequence is it whence the living matter is derived? 37744 _ Are these people_ MEN?"
37744And who were the inmates?
37744But have not they their places?
37744But how shall we acquaint ourselves with this super- sensible?
37744But some one will say: Does not the love of truth count for anything?
37744But what follows?
37744Could anything be more pitiful?
37744Did Hopkins or Bellamy or Edwards melt people?
37744Did he know what he did?...
37744Do I have these without a mediator, and must I travel for the rest?
37744Does not John speak of God as love?
37744Does not Paul preach reconciliation?
37744Has not each liberal province leave to be?
37744Have not we?
37744If brain be source or instrument of human consciousness, what preserves it when the brain is dead?
37744Is Unitarianism then to be the coming religion?
37744Is demoniacal possession credible?
37744Is it incapable of sustaining all my functions of true religion on the spot as well as these?
37744Is not this an exclamation of temperament?
37744Is this the church that Emerson predicted?
37744Is witchcraft respectable?
37744Shall I say that some form of theism will be the religion of America in the future?
37744Shall it be added that his sincerity of speech, running into brusqueness, startled a good many?
37744Shall life be stabbed and no justice compensate these sickening drippings of the soul in her secret faintness?
37744The subjects for debate were equally varied:"Ought the sexes to be educated apart?
37744The threads are fine, of course, but what have we eyes for?
37744Were the preachers of Calvinism priests of sorrow?
37744What is it that we gather and garner up from the solemn story of the world, like its struggles, its sorrows, its martyrdoms?
37744What supplied infinite mind with its preliminary_ sine qua non_ of brain matter?
37744What was this dwelling?
37744When shall we learn that without the spirit of Christ we are none of us His?
37744Where is that point?
37744Who was this friend?
37744Why is not this system sufficient?
37744exclaimed one of the impudent,"did they find anything, Sam?"
37751Ah, do you think I am afraid,Said he,"of man that sees the light?
37751And ah,said he,"I''ll give my soul To lie beneath your foot in hell, That you may walk unscorched and whole-- Can other lovers love so well?"
37751Do you give me words?
37751How came you hither?
37751Is this life?
37751Now at last The hours bear fruit, and shall I hold my hand,He answered,"for your vision?
37751Now what prevents that I kill you straight And your corpse to the ravens fling? 37751 Now what prevents that my fury vents Itself?"
37751Shall this bastard son of a bastard sire Boast he o''erruleth me? 37751 This bastard son of a bastard sire The standard first would plant On the city''s walls when Jerusalem falls; Must we this honour grant?
37751A SONG What if the rose should bloom, And the sunset deepen and fade, If we are penned in the gloom By close- barred shutters made?
37751Ah, is it possible that we can sin In happiness, against a jealous God?
37751And dare we wish that our poor dust should mar The wonder of such immortality?
37751And yet and anon comes Leopold His captive lord to see, And revenge to taste, as he sees him waste,"How fares the Lion?"
37751CONSOLATION"Is there a pain to match my pain In all this world of woe; When to and fro on a barren earth My weary footsteps go?
37751How should we not be glad, when this one day Out of the saddest of all months, appears Suddenly beautiful?
37751How will history place Your name beside her others, if you fight With such- like weapons?
37751Is not love, My love, and youth and joy enough for you?
37751Is there help now?
37751Must not that heart still keep his country''s name, Though o''er him all death''s waters heave and roll?
37751No stars, but the eye of God?
37751Roses are beautiful to bind one''s brow, Why must one grasp at stars?
37751Still do you tremble, what is it you fear?
37751THE MOTHER Belovéd, what should I tell That his lips have not taught you?
37751THE MOTHER Not sweet now?
37751THE SEEKER Who is this that speaks?
37751THE SEEKER Why do you weep when all the world should be Poised on the outspread wings of happiness?
37751THE WIFE Ah me, my lord, what is it I can say That will excuse the saying?
37751THE WIFE Give me your hand, what is it makes you fear And shiver like plane trees before the rain?
37751THE WIFE Since end must be what matter how it come?
37751THE WIFE The first time that you met?
37751The Kings were wroth at King Richard''s words That were carried to them that day;"Does he make a mock of our ancient stock, This king of an hour?"
37751Union of the nature''s twain?
37751Were it better the rose were dead In a black December frost, That no more skies were red, That lovers''ways were lost?
37751What of the birds and the sun, And the moon- rise behind the trees, To the eyes and ears of one Who neither hears nor sees?
37751What of the world of love, Its fragrance, and light, and bloom, To the soul that can not move Out of a loveless room?
37751When no day''s sun shall give me mirth And no stars blessed be; Because my heart goes hungry and lone For one who turns from me?"
37751Why must you venture to the wrath of God For a mere idle fancy?
37751Why will you hope to change appointed fate?
37751Will you forget You are our Leaders, we, a people yet?
37751to whom shall be appeal?
33265A brief talk may be given on The Change in the Scale of Living To- day, and another on Is a Return to the Simple Life Possible?
33265A discussion may be planned on home work: How much shall be expected and arranged for by the parent?
33265A paper might deal with the question: How can women carry out their ideas without antagonizing the town council?
33265A practical discussion may follow on, What shall we do with our ugly belongings?
33265A supplementary paper may be written on the question, Has Shaw a positive message of any importance, or is he merely a negative critic?
33265A third paper would speak informally of conversation to- day; is it becoming a lost art?
33265After this program have a discussion on the question: Are women responsible for the character of the modern drama?
33265Are Ibsen''s themes suited to the stage and the average audience?
33265Are children too prominent in the home life?
33265Are city water and gas at hand?
33265Are husbands and wives separated?
33265Are our ideas changing on this subject?
33265Are the airs as marked as those of a decade ago?
33265Are the old people well fed, clothed and amused?
33265Are there readable books on geology in the public library, and are they read?
33265Are these considered historically true to- day?
33265Are they accessible, yet not too near for comfort?
33265Are they hygienic?
33265Are they still held?
33265Are they true to life?
33265Are wall- papers desirable?
33265Are weekly menus a help?
33265At what age should a child begin to attend church service?
33265Begin the discussion of the day with a paper on the Modern Science of Eugenics: How Far is It Practical?
33265Can entertaining be done economically?
33265Can the average woman consider housekeeping as a profession?
33265Can the latter insist on cleanliness and fair trade?
33265Can the situation be changed in any way for the better?
33265Cheap opera: is it possible for us to- day?
33265Children''s questions about God and heaven: how shall they be answered?
33265Close with a discussion on these lines: What books have replaced the Rollo Books, Little Prudy, and the Elsie Books?
33265Close with a discussion: What is the standing of your local school?
33265Clubs should take up some of the following subjects: The health of school children; what is being done to improve it?
33265Contrast the two styles; discuss the character of Marjorie in the latter; is she a possible woman?
33265Did Shakespeare intend so to represent him, or to leave the matter in doubt?
33265Did he reveal himself in his plays?
33265Discuss in closing such questions as: What does our local Board of Health do for us?
33265Discuss the bearings of this great struggle for liberty on other nations: what was really won?
33265Discuss the opera music of to- day: Is it on the whole melodious, or is there a tendency to return to the old style recitative?
33265Discuss the question, Is an architect really necessary, or can a builder carry out a printed plan?
33265Discuss the question, Who is the hero of the drama?
33265Discuss the question: Are our children being really prepared for a broad and useful life- work?
33265Discuss the question: How does the furnishing of an apartment differ from that of a house?
33265Discuss the sky scraper; is it necessary?
33265Discuss these questions: What proportion of one''s income is properly spent in a vacation?
33265Discuss these subjects, and add others: Does college life unfit a girl for life at home?
33265Discuss topics such as these: How far shall we follow the dictates of fashion?
33265Discuss welfare work, the care of employers for employees; what has been done?
33265Discuss, Business- like Housekeeping; How shall we best train our daughters in it?
33265Discuss, Is Emerson''s place among philosophers what it was a generation ago?
33265Discuss: Does Mendelssohn rank among the great musicians?
33265Discuss: In how many ways can parents and children share their pleasures, and how may the spirit of mutual enjoyment be fostered?
33265Discuss: Is war ever necessary?
33265Discuss: The Cost of Mural Paintings To- day: Are They Worth While?
33265Discuss: Would enforced prohibition be beneficial to the state?
33265Discussion: What are the best books for family reading aloud?
33265Discussion: What can we do to improve local conditions?
33265Discussion: What good books can we suggest?
33265Do hedges pay?
33265Do his books lend themselves to the stage?
33265Do settlements, vacation homes, and the like meet their needs?
33265Do teacher and parent work together?
33265Do they think and reason?
33265Do we consider it seriously?
33265Does Hardy show a lack of humor?
33265Does a pretty bedroom tend to make a girl orderly?
33265Does earning money tend to make boys mercenary?
33265Does he give an accurate account of events or only reproduce general color?
33265Does it pay to spend time on the esthetic side of cooking and serving?
33265Does it tend to foster or discourage neighborliness?
33265Does much reading of stories vitiate their taste for better literature?
33265Does one form the habit of moving, and is the sense of continuity of a permanent family home destroyed?
33265Does she marry?
33265Does the modern idea of social service find encouragement in him?
33265Does the play The Christian show more strength than the novel of the same name?
33265Does the weight of their expressed opinion influence the management?
33265Has house- cleaning lost its terrors?
33265Have little ballads about dress sung if possible, the Old Grey Bonnet, the Owld Plaid Shawl, and Oh Dear, What Can the Matter Be?
33265Have papers on, Is a college education essential for all girls?
33265Have their advantages and disadvantages presented, and question: What are the essentials of a good, livable apartment?
33265Have these books a moral?
33265How can life be made more easy and attractive on a farm?
33265How can public sentiment be aroused?
33265How can such committees coöperate with similar men''s committees and with the public authorities?
33265How can we make over what we have?
33265How does Velazquez compare with Raphael?
33265How early should they be taught, and how?
33265How far is imagination responsible for falsehood?
33265How far were they calculated to stimulate patriotism by the glorification of England?
33265How is it managed in Germany and Italy?
33265How may our girls be taught to understand the value of money?
33265How much can the children help?
33265How much influence should the parent exert?
33265How much liberty should a child have in using it?
33265How much of a woman''s income should be spent for clothes?
33265How satisfactory do the tenants find the system of leases and regulations?
33265How shall good music be secured in a small neighborhood?
33265How shall the mystery of sex be taught to a child?
33265How shall we deal with the ordinary faults?
33265How shall we deal with this phase?
33265III-- BUILDING A HOME How shall one decide on a site for a new house?
33265IV-- THE REMODELLED HOUSE What can be done to make over a city house that is unattractive?
33265IX-- THE CARE OF THE HOUSE Prepare in advance a discussion on these subjects: How much care shall we put on our houses?
33265If in a country district, how near are the schools, the church, the markets?
33265If so, was he justified?
33265If the room is small, how can the space be best utilized?
33265If there is no gymnasium provided by the school, can the parents combine and make one?
33265If they are wrong, what can be done?
33265In a large city, can there be a roof- garden for recreation?
33265In the long run, are such floors and the necessary rugs more or less expensive than carpets?
33265In what differing ways do Ibsen''s plays affect the club members?
33265Is Ibsen critic or prophet?
33265Is Taine''s estimate of him just?
33265Is a college girl likely to demand a career?
33265Is he a fatalist?
33265Is he trustworthy?
33265Is his broad humor defensible?
33265Is his optimism philosophically justifiable?
33265Is his refined and unconscious selfishness a common occurrence?
33265Is improvement possible?
33265Is it a good preparation for later work?
33265Is it drained?
33265Is it possible under ordinary conditions?
33265Is it well done and well paid?
33265Is living in an apartment hygienic?
33265Is local option a success?
33265Is she Shakespeare''s highest female type?
33265Is the American color correct?
33265Is the condition of the street on which the house will face attractive, well kept, and shaded?
33265Is the enlarging of the social circle of one''s grown children a duty?
33265Is the estimate of the Duke of Marlborough just?
33265Is the lot in good condition?--not too full of stones, not so low that it will require filling, nor so high that it will need grading?
33265Is the outlook good?
33265Is the public exhibition desirable?
33265Is the rest from housekeeping and the change of life compensation for the drawbacks there?
33265Is the school board doing its best?
33265Is there a Shakespearean affectation?
33265Is there a cipher in Shakespeare?
33265Is there open violation of the law in prohibition states?
33265Is there shade?
33265Is vegetarianism wise?
33265Must our boys fight?
33265Note also these questions: How can spaces be saved in sleeping and other rooms?
33265On the whole, are the morals of the drama improving?
33265On what did the suffrage party base its claims?
33265Once a club is started, the great question is, What shall we study?
33265Settlements; their origin and history; what can neighborliness do for the poor?
33265Shall boys be taught housework?
33265Shall there be a place for"collections"?
33265Shall we employ an architect for the small home, or are published plans practical?
33265Shall we prepare ourselves in advance for conversations at dinners and other social occasions?
33265Shall women give up all their time to keeping them clean and orderly?
33265Sherman: What is Shakespeare?
33265Should children be taught to converse rather than to chatter?
33265Should tale- bearing be encouraged?
33265Should the theater preach or amuse, or both?
33265Should they be paid for doing daily household duties, or not?
33265Subsidizing the opera: shall this be done by the state, as in Germany; or by individuals, as in New York?
33265Take up as additional topics: How shall we have an abundant table under present conditions?
33265The Montessori system; is it successful?
33265The jail: what are the present local conditions?
33265The subject of mothers''congresses may be discussed: Are they practically helpful, or merely speculative?
33265The third paper would be on the care of the aged; of almshouses, especially those of the county; are they sanitary, well cared for and cheerful?
33265This paper will lead naturally to a discussion on these and similar themes: What of our home table talk?
33265To how much liberty in taste and choice is a child entitled?
33265Under what conditions is such work done?
33265VIII-- SPECIAL ROOMS Have illustrated papers or talks on these topics:_ The Living- Room_--How can it best be made beautiful and comfortable?
33265Was he really mad?
33265Was his meaning always clear to himself?
33265Were any plays written at her suggestion?
33265Were they purposely obscure?
33265What about a sideboard, glass- closet, pantry?
33265What about heating and ventilation?
33265What about modern appliances to avoid sweeping, and the like?
33265What about the Darwinian theory?
33265What about the condition of the roads in winter?
33265What about woman''s work in general?
33265What are artistic, durable, harmonious in color and pattern?
33265What are its difficulties and what its advantages?
33265What are the possibilities of the near future in medicine and surgery?
33265What can be done to make over a farmhouse?
33265What can be done to make over a village house?
33265What can be done to regulate our markets, and make them clean and wholesome?
33265What can be done with old carpets?
33265What can be eliminated from the daily routine?
33265What can they do to save steps?
33265What can women''s clubs do to make it more effective?
33265What can women''s clubs do toward making the home city beautiful?
33265What colors are best?
33265What colors are suitable for the walls?
33265What colors are suitable?
33265What curtains and hangings are best?
33265What did the other poets of Shakespeare''s time think of these early poems?
33265What especial questions are of vital interest to women, and how will they be aided by the vote?
33265What excursions may they take in the vicinity for this purpose?
33265What furniture can be home- made for the bedroom?
33265What has the pure food legislation done on those points?
33265What have women done here of recent years to clean up the markets of the West?
33265What in research work?
33265What is Forestry?
33265What is an ideal education?
33265What is being done for working girls?
33265What is essential, and what can we do without?
33265What is his position with regard to religion?
33265What is the cost of hard wood, of Southern pine, of painted or stained floors?
33265What is the expense of opera in New York, in great salaries, scenery, costumes, etc.?
33265What is the influence of life in a summer hotel on parents and children?
33265What is the relation between a good conversationalist and a good listener?
33265What of adopting children from asylums?
33265What of apartment houses?
33265What of corresponding salons elsewhere?
33265What of country sports?
33265What of factory work, domestic service, and work in shops?
33265What of foreign markets, especially in Germany?
33265What of giving children grown- up writers to read such as Shakespeare, Don Quixote, Mallory and Bunyan?
33265What of her relation to her home if equal suffrage is granted?
33265What of making and breaking wills?
33265What of our country?
33265What of our daughters''dress?
33265What of placing children in homes instead of asylums?
33265What of such work as that of soldier, sailor, worker on roads, in sewers, on the police and fire boards?
33265What of the floor, the curtains, the cushions?
33265What of the floor?
33265What of the legislative work of the Anti- Saloon League?
33265What of the question of equal pay?
33265What of the relation of farmers to customers?
33265What of the use of chintz and white paint?
33265What of the"living wage"?
33265What of woman''s physical and mental ability to handle political issues?
33265What ought to be the relative emphasis on money in our home life?
33265What should it cover?
33265What shrubs are best adapted for hedges locally?
33265What sort of furniture will he like best, and what colors?
33265What sort of politician shall boys be taught to admire?
33265What sort of rugs are desirable beyond the Oriental?
33265What was his attitude in regard to individualism?
33265What was the effect of Ibsen on the German drama?
33265What were his personal characteristics?
33265What wood for the furniture?
33265When are punishments outgrown?
33265When is it best done?
33265When should discipline end and personal freedom begin?
33265Where does it fail?
33265Where shall the writing- desk, the large table, the piano, stand?
33265Which of the two best concealed the moral purpose both used as the theme of their books?
33265Which states have equal suffrage, and how does it work?
33265Who was the Earl of Southampton, to whom the poem was dedicated?
33265Why is Meredith not more popular?
33265Why is Whistler''s appeal not more popular?
33265Why this change in opinion?
33265Why was he ignored in the later seventeenth century?
33265_ Characteristics of His Work_--Did he plagiarize?
33265_ Estimate of Shakespeare in His Own and Later Times_--What did his contemporaries think of him?
33265_ General Discussion_--Living where we do, how can we improve our houses and their surroundings?
33265_ His Personality_--How much education had Shakespeare?
33265_ His Place in Literature_--What is the meaning of his mysticism and his symbolism?
33265_ Moral and Religious_--How are morals best taught?
33265_ Music_--Should all children be taught to play and sing?
33265_ Neighbors_--Who is my neighbor?
33265_ Organization_--What committees are needed to help improve the town?
33265_ Punishments_--Discuss the question: Is physical punishment ever allowable?
33265_ The Bedrooms_--Shall we use wood or metal beds?
33265_ The Boy''s Room_--How can it be at once sensible and attractive?
33265_ The Dining- Room_--Which side of the house is best to choose?
33265_ The Girl''s Room_--How shall this be at once dainty and practical?
33265_ The Minister''s Home_--Should the social life of the church center in the minister''s home?
33265_ The Plan of the Town_--Is the location of the best?
33265_ The Question of the Allowance_--At what age should a child have an allowance?
33265_ The Relation of Manners and Morals_--Are American manners deteriorating?
33265_ Travel_--Should we see our own country before going abroad?
33265_ Vacation and Study_--Is it a good plan to combine the two?
33265and Should their studies be those of men''s colleges entirely?
33265and What are its advantages over the boarding- school, and its disadvantages?
33265and What of athletics for girls?
33265and if so, how and where can she best be trained?
33265of bungalows, camps, seashore cottages, etc.?
33265of disfiguring gas works, chimneys, manufactories?
33265of elevated railroads?
33265of funds left for institutions which may not be always needed?
33265of golf, tennis, hunting, motoring, etc.?
33265of protection to society through state boards, etc.?
33265what furniture?
33265what pictures and ornaments?
33309''Little Boy Blue,''I said,''may I help you to carry your stone?'' 33309 A silly little ass that said it did n''t like girls?
33309And does the umbrella with the waist belong to the same old woman?
33309And if winds are wrong, Boy? 33309 And the Professor''s cap and gown, hanging near by?"
33309And the-- er-- occupant?
33309And where does poor Mollie come in, in all this?
33309But suppose she had a comfortable little income of her own; and you had less-- much less-- to offer her? 33309 But you admit it was sweet?"
33309Christo_bel_?
33309Christobel-- belovèd?
33309Did n''t you know it was love?
33309Did you think me a lazy beggar?
33309Did you?
33309Do you call that kissing?
33309Do you consider it right to take away a person''s breath, in this fashion? 33309 Do you know his name?"
33309Do you love his mouth, his eyes, his hair----?
33309Do you suppose I wished you to marry a bare- toed baby, with sand on its nose?
33309Do you wish to make me really angry? 33309 Does Miss_ H_ann come often?"
33309Does the Professor stay to tea?
33309Eh, what? 33309 Eh, what?"
33309Harvey?
33309Has he told you so?
33309Has it ever struck you that, if you marry, your wife-- whoever she might be-- would most probably want you to give up flying? 33309 Her?"
33309How can I help best?
33309How could you think the attraction would be gone?
33309How dare you pretend to think I do n''t? 33309 I?"
33309Is there any hope?
33309Is this a proposal?
33309Jenkins?
33309Living?
33309Martha-- is he-- living?
33309May I ask when he proposed?
33309May I go, my Queen?
33309Mollie?
33309Mr. Taylor,she said, hurriedly;"can you supply me with the very newest thing on the subject of aviation?
33309My dear,Miss Ann would say,"as you_ are_ here, will you_ just_ clean the canary?"
33309Oh, do n''t I?
33309Old, my Belovèd?
33309One crack through which you think I could see? 33309 Really?"
33309Really?
33309So you felt it wisest to avoid being Senior Wrangler?
33309So you had prayed about the stone?
33309The aeronaut? 33309 Then you_ will_ marry Kenrick?"
33309Then you_ will_ marry Kenrick?
33309Well?
33309Well?
33309Well?
33309What are you doing, Martha?
33309What can I do for you to- day, Miss Charteris?
33309What do_ you_ know of Miss Ann?
33309What else did she say, Boy?
33309What happened after I had gone?
33309What is it, dear heart? 33309 What is it?"
33309What is that thing in the water?
33309What is to- day?
33309What''s the matter with it?
33309What_ could_ be more pure, more perfect?
33309Where do I come in?
33309Who is Miss_ H_ann?
33309Why did you say''Do n''t''?
33309Why do n''t you tell her so?
33309Why should you care?
33309Why two cups, Martha?
33309Working for me?
33309Yes?
33309Yes?
33309You see? 33309 You told me all that last night, did n''t you?
33309_ How about him? 33309 _ How are you, dear?
33309''Little Boy Blue,''I said,''may I play with you, and help you to fill your bucket with sand?''
33309''Millions, or is it billions?''
33309''Ow came you to be awake, Miss Christobel?"
33309( Oh, Boy dear, what would you have said to that four- wheeler-- you dear record- breaking, speed- limit- exceeding, astonishingly rapid Boy?
33309... Do you hear, my Little Boy Blue?
33309... May I come to- morrow?
33309... Oh, ca n''t you see where duty comes in?
33309... Oh, you do not know her by sight?
33309... Sure?
33309Ah, was it too late?
33309Ah, why was the Boy so dear?
33309Am I free to give him all he wants, free to be all he needs?"
33309And am I free-- free to be his alone?
33309And do you not think, that, under these circumstances, any mention of bodies savours of impropriety?"
33309And he would have answered:''It jolly well gave you the feeling of the scene, did n''t it, Christo_bel_?''
33309And now, tell me?
33309And she, half- laughing at him, had asked:"Is this a proposal?"
33309And they said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre?
33309And when the seven days were over-- what then?
33309And why not wear glasses?
33309And, I say, Martha, do you ever write postcards?
33309And, if she_ must_ do so, how could she best help him to bear it?
33309Ann, are you sure you told your brother that I had cared for him for years?"
33309Are you coming from, or going to, a function?
33309Boy dear, ought I to have told you, quite plainly, sooner?
33309Boy dear?
33309Boy-- my Little Boy Blue-- shall I tell you an awful secret?
33309But can not you understand that all men have not fifty thousand a year, and the world at their feet?
33309But if the subject of aviation came up, and you said to the Boy:"Do you know anything about it?"
33309But on the seventh day, when the walls fall down, and I march up into the citadel, I shall give you millions of kisses-- or will it be_ billions_?"
33309But she suddenly remembered:"Millions, or would it be billions?"
33309But why should you wish to keep him waiting any longer?
33309But-- who said you might call me''Christobel''?"
33309Ca n''t you stop where I put you?"
33309Can you wonder that I avaunted-- to Martha?"
33309Chelsea?"
33309Christobel?
33309Could she feel free to take happiness with the Boy, if she had disappointed and crushed a deeply sensitive nature which trusted her?
33309Did he know?
33309Did n''t you feel it was a kiss?"
33309Did you know?"
33309Do n''t you wish it was the seventh day_ now_, Christobel?"
33309Do you hear?
33309Does a martyr''s crown await it, in another world?
33309Does not the love of the sort of wife a fellow really wants, have a lot of the mother in it too?
33309For you_ do_ love my brother; do you not, dear Christobel?"
33309Guy, sir, I suppose you don''t-- I suppose you do-- that is to say, sir-- Do you call_ her_ what you''ve been pleased to call me?"
33309Guy?"
33309Guy?"
33309Had he not said he would"march round"every day?
33309Had he noticed the trembling of her hands, before she steadied them by laying hold of the arms of her chair?
33309Had the book in his pocket, and the prayers hovering about him, something to do with the fact that he was still-- just Little Boy Blue?
33309Have I stayed too long?
33309Have you a pocket- book?
33309Have you ever seen it?
33309Have you forgotten that you said that, kneeling beside this_ very_ sofa?"
33309Having successfully escaped so serious a drawback to future greatness as becoming Senior Wrangler, on what definite enterprise have you embarked?"
33309He has waited, Boy; and when anybody has waited nearly twelve years, could one fail them?"
33309He''s not much to look at, is he?
33309His hair?
33309How best could she help?
33309How can you have thought it was Mollie, when it was you-- you-- just only you, all the time?"
33309How can you have thought it was Mollie, when it was_ you_--YOU, just only you, all the time?"
33309How much had this book meant during all these years, to the"Baby Boy"?
33309I asked her what the-- what the-- I mean, what on earth the meaning of that was?
33309I had no idea it had meant so much-- to him-- all these years.--Boy dear?"
33309I say, Christobel-- do you know how to make a sentence of''together''?
33309I say, Christobel-- it has just occurred to me-- did you know my mother?"
33309I say, Martha?
33309I say, Miss Charteris, may I ask the Professor''s name?"
33309If something happens to your propeller, and you fall headlong into the sea?"
33309If the Boy came back to plead once more?
33309If you rush out and take the horrid risks of the cross- currents you told us about?
33309In order not to fail the possible expectations of another, had she any right to lay such a heavy burden of disappointment upon her little Boy Blue?
33309Is it possible?
33309Is it very hard?
33309Is my Boy alive?
33309Is not twelve years sufficiently long?"
33309Love_ is_ all"?
33309Martha, whose goloshes are those, sitting on the mat in the hall?"
33309May I tell you what I am going to do for my next fly?
33309Meanwhile, may I show you this?"
33309My Little Boy Blue, do n''t I know you?
33309No?
33309Now could it?
33309Now, did I?"
33309Oh, my wig!--Yes, they are a lot of old stick- in- the- muds in the Upper House, are n''t they?"
33309Oh, where is the boy who looks after the sheep?
33309Oh, would he see the growing pain in her eyes?
33309Oh,''Martha, my duck''?
33309Oh,_ darling_ girl, you will not disappoint us?
33309Or are you trying to be funny?"
33309Ran up into the hall; when up got a pair of old goloshes-- eh, what?
33309Seven?
33309Should she put up her arms and draw it to her breast?
33309Should you object, my dear Ann-- er-- that is, Christobel, if I sought a smoking compartment?"
33309Surely, Boy, proper pride would keep you from asking her to marry you, until your income at least equalled hers?"
33309The Boy might have said:"Do n''t_ what_?"
33309The only perplexing question, in these cases, being: What awaits the wrecked life of"the other man"?
33309Then do n''t you want tennis after tea-- a few good hard sets; just we two, unhandicapped by our dear little Mollie?"
33309Then the Boy said, softly:"Some day, will you tell me heaps more-- details-- lots of little things about her?
33309Then the Boy''s gay voice said:"And what of that, dear?
33309They were like those wooden monkeys and bears you buy in Swiss shops, do n''t you know?
33309Twelve years?
33309Was it going to be over so quickly, that her cup of bliss would be dashed from her lips untasted?
33309Was it happening now?
33309Was n''t it?
33309Was she making a mistake?
33309Was she to lose her all, because of a cross- current or a twisted wire?
33309Was there time to stop him?
33309What are the symptoms?"
33309What could have been more satisfactory, in every way, than the Boy''s visit; in spite of his absurd castles in the air?
33309What do they matter?
33309What does Jenkins call you when he feels affectionate?"
33309What had she lost?
33309What if he got into cross- currents?
33309What if the propeller broke?
33309What if the steering- gear twisted?
33309What is that striking?
33309What was it you took at Girton?"
33309What was she losing?
33309What would_ Kenrick_ say?
33309What''s a placket?"
33309What''s the matter with her?"
33309What?
33309When the Boy had finished rocking backwards and forwards in his chair, she suggested, tentatively:"You went to the kitchen--?"
33309Where is the Boy?
33309Where is the Boy?
33309Where is the boy who looks after the sheep?
33309Where was the good of waiting?
33309Who should roll it away?
33309Who wants a muffler in June?
33309Why did her whole life seem passing out through that green gate?
33309Why did you go to a drawing- room meeting?"
33309Why do people always break the points of the pencils hanging from strings in the telegraph- offices?
33309Why had she allowed Ann Harvey to keep her so late?
33309Why had she gone at all, during the Boy''s own time?
33309Why should you care?
33309Why this wedding attire?
33309Why was the Boy so near?
33309Why worry about the future?
33309Why_ should_ you care?"
33309Will that do?"
33309Will you be good enough to repeat it?"
33309Will you help me to tell it?"
33309Will you walk down to the gate?
33309Would Martha have arranged a tea such as the Boy loved, with cups for two, hot buttered- toast and explosive buns?
33309Would he want to obliterate that name?
33309Would the gates ever really fly open, except to the horn- blast of little Boy Blue?
33309Would the walls tremble at that knock?
33309Would they ever tremble again, save for the march- past of the Boy?
33309Would you have me marry a girl as feather- brained, as harum- scarum, as silly as I often am myself?
33309Yet what could she say or do?
33309You do n''t really care about the Professor?"
33309You remember the day we invaded the kitchen to see how Martha made those little puffy buns-- you know-- the explosives?
33309You will find it out, when it is too late"?
33309You_ would_ call Lady Goldsmith''florid,''would you not, dear Christobel?
33309_ How about him_?
33309_ Why_ should you care, Christobel?
33309_ You_, with your intellectual attainments, your honours, your high standing in the world of books?
33309about, at that moment?
33309she breathed,"is it indeed true?
30914''Nosmo''sounds kind of funny, does n''t it? 30914 ''Tom Jonah''?"
30914A little thing like_ what_?
30914A trace of the children?
30914A_ real_ pony?
30914Ai n''t he, Bill?
30914And I should like to know if we''re not all growing up?
30914And are n''t we?
30914And are you going to let''em carry us off this way?
30914And chocolate and cream color, too?
30914And d''juno, Ruthie, that they are going to stop people from keeping pigs inside the city limits? 30914 And do pirates_ steal_?"
30914And do you children belong to a circus, too?
30914And if Neighbor will not listen to reason?
30914And if they do find out?
30914And is Luke actually fond of her?
30914And since that morning I first saw you and we both tumbled out of the peach tree,Agnes declared solemnly--"do you remember, Neale?"
30914And then make you stay in your room and have your supper there?
30914And then what did she say?
30914And what second?
30914And why do they call a pony''calico''?
30914And without your lunch?
30914And you expect_ me_ to accompany you on a shopping trip, Aggie, when you''ve all those feminine folderols to buy?
30914And you spoke with Cap''n Quigg, did you?
30914And you, my dear?
30914And''member when he got carried away in the hamper by the laundryman?
30914And-- and do you suppose Miss Kenway appreciates our Luke?
30914Anybody will_ what_?
30914Are there what?
30914Are they friends of Aggie and Ruthie? 30914 Are they pirates, just the same as we are pirates?"
30914Are you going on?
30914Aw, who''s goin''to hurt your old doll?
30914Aw, who''s leavin''you here alone?
30914Beware of the dog?
30914But a very good friend of yours?
30914But are n''t they going to let us out-- not ever, Sammy?
30914But on a canalboat?
30914But s''pose they''d''ve got dizzy and fell out-- like I did out of the swing?
30914But what about Neighbor?
30914But what can we do?
30914But what will you do?
30914But where are we going, Sammy Pinkney? 30914 But who in the world would want to steal Sammy?
30914But why do you call him Neighbor?
30914But you haven''t-- you_ wo n''t_?
30914But you saw there was nobody with him on the boat-- no children?
30914But-- but suppose it should be a long, long time?
30914But-- but,Tess questioned softly,"Mr. Northrup''s cured of that disease, is n''t he?"
30914Ca n''t we turn him up a side street, Sammy?
30914Ca n''t you budge it, Sammy?
30914Ca n''t you find out at the police station?
30914Can girls run away and be pirates, too?
30914Can it be_ that_ that seems to have changed Ruth so?
30914Carrie_ Who_?
30914Charmed Neighbor?
30914D''juno, Ruthie, that Mr. Sauer, the milkman got''rested because he did n''t have enough milk in his wagon to serve his customers? 30914 De leetla padrona allow, I go right away queek and looka for theem-- yes?
30914Did ever any one hear of such ridiculous things as happen to us?
30914Did n''t we go there?
30914Did they come aboard your boat? 30914 Did you ever find out yet what was in a girl''s head?"
30914Do n''t pirates have to have somebody to cook and wash and keep house for them?
30914Do n''t you know yet what they mean when they are joking us?
30914Do n''t you see? 30914 Do n''t you suppose I know that?"
30914Do n''t you think Scalawag would feel he was insulted if I wunk at him?
30914Do you mean the yellow jaundice? 30914 Do you mean to stand there and deliberately defy me?"
30914Do you realize what it''s going to mean-- these next four or five years?
30914Do you suppose I care what Neighbor does with his money?
30914Do you suppose that canal boatman is bad enough to have shut the children up on his boat and will keep them for ransom?
30914Do-- do people do that to pirates?
30914Does he quarrel with you people all the time?
30914Does n''t Neighbor influence you?
30914Eating, folks? 30914 Er-- yes?"
30914Go to Milton? 30914 Guess we''d better save Aunt Sarah, had n''t we?"
30914Have a summer sweetnin'', Ag?
30914Have you seen Dot?
30914He was a rabbit, Dot?
30914He wo n''t bite?
30914Heh? 30914 Heh?
30914Heh? 30914 Heh?"
30914How about Luke?
30914How about Sammy?
30914How about this, Harry?
30914How am I going to fight these-- these pirates, if I have n''t anything to fight''em with?
30914How are you going to find out about these boats?
30914How could he?
30914How do you know this fellow was going to sting you?
30914How many canalboats went toward Durginville to- day?
30914Huh?
30914I do wish, Mr. Howbridge, that you would n''t joke so--"On such very serious subjects?
30914I guess he''ll think it is a nice name, wo n''t he?
30914I should like to know why not? 30914 I suppose you really_ need_ our advice, Mr. Howbridge?
30914If they are conducted so badly that diseases become epidemic there,_ we_ shall be to blame-- shall we not?
30914If you and Aunt Sarah dislike men so,she asked Mrs. MacCall, laughing,"what are you going to do when Cecile Shepard and her brother come?
30914If you wish to see our lawyer--"Have n''t you anybody?
30914In what way, Miss Maltby?
30914Indeed?
30914Is an offling like an orphan?
30914Is it a funny picture he''s drawed?
30914Is it a house?
30914Is n''t he a character?
30914Is that a dog?
30914Is that so?
30914Is there a park over that way-- or some regular picnicking grounds?
30914Is this Ruth Kenway a nice girl?
30914It really does not matter, does it, sir? 30914 It''s lots wusser''n it was when Tess and I was losted and we slept out under a tree till morning, and that old owl hollered''Who?
30914Just what does''scatecornered''mean, Uncle Rufus?
30914Let me see, there''s no danger yet of a dowry being wanted out of that idle money we are going to have-- for Agnes, for instance?
30914Lost, strayed, or stolen? 30914 Me?
30914My niece_ fond_ of a boy?
30914No others?
30914No? 30914 Not now?
30914Not our Luke? 30914 Not very conclusive, is it?"
30914Not-- not even girl pirates?
30914Now what do you think of that?
30914Now what''ll we do, Sammy?
30914Oh, Mrs. MacCall, do n''t you remember?
30914Oh, do you believe it, Neale?
30914Oh, is n''t he a circus pony?
30914Oh, what shall we do? 30914 On the_ Nancy Hanks_?"
30914Or a game?
30914Or, is it only a manner of speaking?
30914Ought n''t he to have a middle name?
30914Out? 30914 Painted Mr. Timmins-- the lame man?"
30914Penny for your thoughts, Luke?
30914S''pose he should fall out?
30914Sammy,she murmured,"is it morning?
30914Shall I make''em heave to when they come near''nough, or shall we let''em go on and give chase?
30914Shure,said Con Murphy,"is that little beauty likely to be lost, I ax ye?
30914So that was the only one?
30914So you like that pony, do you?
30914Stuffed with cotton?
30914Tell me, are there others aboard the boat?
30914Tell us,Ruth begged, quite as anxious now as her sister,"have you seen two children-- a boy and a girl-- this afternoon?"
30914Tempted to do what-- to say what?
30914That pony, Uncle Bill?
30914That would be some airship, would n''t it? 30914 That''s like Miss Pettingill''s got down the street, ai n''t it?"
30914The airmajig?
30914The clock?
30914The sweet girl? 30914 Then he is a pretty poor citizen, I take it?"
30914Then it ca n''t be morning,Sammy declared, for what better time- keeper can there be than a child''s stomach?
30914Then what have you against my-- my liking her?
30914Wal, Lowise?
30914Was it good?
30914Well, now, Miss Ruth,he said, in defense,"who is n''t made happier by seeing a pretty and cheerful face?"
30914Well?
30914Well?
30914Were-- were the Pilgrims furniture movers?
30914Wha''dat?
30914Wha-- what''s a offling?
30914What did she say?
30914What did you say?
30914What did you suppose they was pirates for? 30914 What do you little folks want?"
30914What do you mean, boy?
30914What do you mean? 30914 What do you mean?
30914What do you mean?
30914What does the doctor say is mostly the matter with you, Aggie?
30914What does''strain-- strain- u- ous- ly''mean, Aggie?
30914What does?
30914What for, Lowise?
30914What for?
30914What for?
30914What happened to_ what_?
30914What has become of Sammy?
30914What have you done to your stocking?
30914What is an airmajig?
30914What is he called?
30914What is it, Dottums?
30914What is it?
30914What is it?
30914What kind of a pirate will_ you_ make? 30914 What silly things?"
30914What sort of trouble?
30914What trade, honey?
30914What under the canopy are we going to do?
30914What under the sun''s the matter with that little pony?
30914What under the sun''s the matter with you, girl?
30914What was painted on a barn?
30914What will I ever say to Sam''l to- night when he comes home?
30914What would you do, Iky?
30914What''ll we do? 30914 What''s goin''on?"
30914What''s happened? 30914 What''s he got all those teeth for?
30914What''s that?
30914What''s the kid trying to do-- wrastle him?
30914What''s the matter with you, boy?
30914What''s the matter with you? 30914 What''s the matter, Sammy?"
30914What''s up, anyway?
30914What?
30914Where are you going, Tess?
30914Where would they be likely to go?
30914Where''s the key to the house? 30914 Which one?
30914Which way were they going?
30914Who is Scalawag?
30914Who is he? 30914 Who is she?
30914Who knows? 30914 Who says I do n''t mind that Neale O''Neil?"
30914Who was it then?
30914Who''s nearer?
30914Whose barn?
30914Why do you tell me about any silly girl? 30914 Why not both ways?"
30914Why not what?
30914Why not, I should admire to know?
30914Why not?
30914Why not?
30914Why so touchy?
30914Why, Miss Ruth,asked the little Italian girl into the transmitter,"was n''t you going on the picnic, too?"
30914Why, Sis, I do n''t believe Ruth Kenway has ever even_ thought_ of a boy--"As you are thinking of her?
30914Why, if they_ do_-- Well, ai n''t we pirates?
30914Why, who ever would sail as a passenger on that old ramshackle thing? 30914 Why-- now,"began the older sister,"you-- you know what a calico cat is, Sammy Pinkney?"
30914Why? 30914 Why?"
30914Will they be standin''in line, think you? 30914 With Bill Quigg?"
30914Wonder what Beauty smells there?
30914Would n''t it be impolite to wink at a horse, too, Aggie?
30914You are a wealthy girl, then?
30914You are n''t going right off now to be a pirate, Sammy Pinkney?
30914You do n''t approve of the owner of the_ Nancy Hanks_?
30914You do n''t know--"Did they lick you?
30914You do n''t mean you think you''ve changed your mind about your college work?
30914You do n''t s''pose our Dot has really been_ arrested_?
30914You do n''t suppose Dot could have started out to hunt for the circus to get that pony, do you?
30914You do n''t suppose Mr. Sorber knows anything about the children?
30914You goin''?
30914You got something on that Bill Quigg?
30914You here, Neighbor?
30914You know what I would do if the pony was mine?
30914You mean they took him out of your yard?
30914You want to be a pirate?
30914You wanted an airship, did n''t you? 30914 You''ve noticed it?"
30914You_ did_ know all about what a calico pony was like, did n''t you?
30914_ Chained?_gasped the excitable Agnes from the rear.
30914_ Then_ what would have happened?
30914_ What?_gasped Tess, staring at her little sister who had mouthed the word so deftly.
30914''What''s in a name?''
30914''Where''s your buttons, Iky?''
30914A basket to pull across the street?
30914A boy''s name that has n''t ever been used on a boy before?"
30914A secret?
30914Agnes''eyes twinkled as she asked the smallest girl:"Did you get those two, honey?"
30914Ai n''t you, Scalawag?"
30914An airship?
30914And Tess said:"Do n''t you think it is a pretty name?
30914And did n''t they make over her face just like society ladies get_ theirs_ done by a der-- der- ma- olywog?"
30914And this Shepard is nothing more than a boy, is he?"
30914And wealthy, too?
30914And what do they call a man- hater?"
30914And you with your hair in plaits?"
30914Any place into which they could have wandered and be unable to get out of, or to make their situation known?
30914Are you hungry?"
30914Are you there, dear?"
30914At that moment Mrs. Pinkney saw the neighbors pointing upward, and hearing them say:"See up there?
30914Aunt Sarah Maltby, even, appeared at the door, while Uncle Rufus limped up from the hen houses mildly demanding:"What''s done happen''to dem cats?
30914Boadicea?
30914Broke somebody''s window, have you?"
30914But Luke Shepard asked:"Is there much traffic on the canal?"
30914But then--"Why ca n''t girls be pirates?"
30914But this time''twas ane o''_ your_ friends, Ruthie--""But who was he?"
30914But,"murmured Cecile,"will that be kind to Ruth?
30914Ca n''t a feller count on his fingers?
30914Cecile told you he is a woman- hater?"
30914Dick?"
30914Did n''t Neale O''Neil have her taken to the hospital?
30914Did you ever hear of it before?"
30914Did you ever hear of such a dunce as that kid?"
30914Did you ever?"
30914Do n''t I hear dem prognosticatin''about, somewhar''s?"
30914Do n''t he like band music?"
30914Do n''t we, Sammy?"
30914Do n''t you know that it offends me?
30914Do n''t you think so, Tess?"
30914Do n''t you, Luke?"
30914Does your mother say you may, Sammy?"
30914Dot Kenway?"
30914Dot did not know just what to reply to this thrilling summons, but she ventured to ask:"Do you want to say something to me, Sammy Pinkney?
30914Dot?
30914For, indeed, what else is there more interesting in being pirates than using up the food laid in for a voyage?
30914Frightened?
30914Get married?
30914Goin''to stop at Purdy''s to git that mess of''taters he said he''d have ready for us?"
30914Had there been an accident of any kind near this vicinity during the day?
30914Have been carried off in one?
30914Have we been here all night?"
30914Have you got children--""Aw, who said anything about children?"
30914He does n''t bite?"
30914He is a misogynist--""A mis-_what_-inest?"
30914He''s not gone to tell that old man about the girl?"
30914How dared those men take our dog?"
30914How will we get him down?"
30914How would you like to be nagged in such a way continually?
30914I ca n''t blame him if I do n''t blame her, can I?"
30914I find you at last, do I?"
30914I hope you have no objection, Luke?"
30914I never heard of such a thing, did you?"
30914I never heard of that Carrie-- What did you say her name was?"
30914I suppose you think I am rich and that I have come to reward you?"
30914I wish it was Jonas we had here now, do n''t you, Tess?
30914I_ know_ they have been carried off--""Who''s carried them, Aggie?"
30914Is n''t she a splendid girl?"
30914Is n''t she just wonnerful?"
30914Is n''t that nice?
30914Is n''t that nice?"
30914Is the chimney leaking?"
30914Kidnapped-- actually kidnapped?"
30914Like one of these Teddy bears?"
30914Luke, sitting in the seat beside Neale on the way up town, whispered to him:"Is n''t she sweeter than ever?
30914Mac?"
30914MacCall?"
30914Not before your mother comes back from marketing?"
30914Not this morning?
30914Not_ Agnes_?"
30914Now, would n''t you think he was ignorant?"
30914Or did you see them?"
30914Or is it a what?"
30914Puttin''up a trolley line, is they, fo''airships?
30914Queen Elizabeth?
30914Query: How to obtain their release?
30914Sammy said,"did n''t I tell you to wait till the next load?
30914See yonder?"
30914She asked faintly:"What boy, sir?
30914She rose from her seat, folding the work in her lap, and demanded:"What do you suppose has become of them?
30914She would have plenty when she came of age, and why could not her money set Luke up in some line of business that he was fitted for?
30914So, ai n''t that saying I can?"
30914Suddenly Luke Shepard exclaimed:"Hullo, what''s afire, Neale?
30914Suddenly Ruth startled them all by demanding:"How do we know it is n''t the_ Nancy Hanks_?"
30914Tess asked in an apologetic voice, after a moment of silence:"What happened, Sammy?"
30914Tess?
30914That''s what they make kids''dresses out of, is n''t it?"
30914The name of that avenue we just passed?
30914Then as she turned to face him he grumbled:"So I suppose you''re going to tell me that you are Ruth Kenway?"
30914Then he asked harshly:"So this girl lives in Milton?"
30914Then, what small boy could remain subdued with the joys and wonders of a real circus evolving before his eyes?
30914Then, when she stopped at the gate he demanded:"So you live here?"
30914They can open the door of the cabin and walk out, ca n''t they?"
30914This is the day, ai n''t it?"
30914Understand?"
30914Undt de baby, too?
30914Walk tight- rope?"
30914Want some, Tess?"
30914Were not rats supposed to infest the holds of all ships?
30914Were they coming to search for him and Dot?
30914Wha-- what do you think of''Brandywine,''Tessie?"
30914What are you glad for?"
30914What did I tell you?
30914What did he do, Tess?"
30914What do you say, Aggie?"
30914What do you think of that?
30914What have I always told you?
30914What have you to offer Ruth Kenway if you should come to the point where you might ask her to engage herself to you?
30914What if Luke Shepard had no money when he graduated from college?
30914What is it?
30914What shall we do?"
30914What were they given us for, I''d like to know?"
30914What would you do with it?
30914What''s a calico pony?
30914What_ is_ that?
30914What_ would_ we do?
30914Whatever has the boy tried to do?
30914When Dot called after her:"Where are you going, Tess?"
30914When they see the Black Roger flying at our peak--""What''s the Black Roger?"
30914Where do you live?"
30914Where does she pick up her knowledge of scriptural history?"
30914Where else could they go with any reasonable hope of finding trace of the runaways?
30914Where would you keep it?"
30914Where''s Dot?"
30914Who are you talking about?"
30914Who are_ they_?"
30914Who ever heard de like?"
30914Who ever heard of a pink horse?"
30914Who saw them last and where?"
30914Who would n''t be?"
30914Who- o?''
30914Whom do you mean?"
30914Why does n''t he write?"
30914Why not?
30914Why, pray?
30914With the children so dependent upon me?"
30914Without his elderly friend''s promised aid how could he ask the oldest Corner House girl to share his fortunes?
30914Would n''t we, Dot?"
30914Yes?"
30914You do n''t?
30914You girls would n''t really be influenced by such foolishness?"
30914You know about the Pilgrims, do n''t you, Sammy?"
30914You know the old chap?
30914You know, as the smallest member of the catechism class replied to the question:''What is the chief end of woman?''
30914You stretched a wire, and then wound it up--""Wound up the wire?"
30914You want to catch hydrophobia?"
30914_ Ca n''t_ you turn him around?"
30914are n''t kids the greatest ever?"
30914big enough to carry us?"
30914blurted out Sammy,"would n''t_ you_ try to chew a feller up if he caught you in a fish- net and dragged you to a wagon like that?
30914cried Agnes,"is it Uncle Bill''s?"
30914cried Mrs. MacCall, the first to spy the boy at the window of the little girls''play- room,"what are you doing up there?"
30914cried Ruth, from the tonneau,"they could not possibly be shut up anywhere on your boat?"
30914cried her little sister indignantly,"is n''t that just what we want?
30914did n''t they treat you nicely?"
30914did you ever think of being married?"
30914ejaculated Ruth, hiding her face quickly from her pretty sister,"where is your sense?"
30914ejaculated Sammy Pinkney;"who''d ha''thought of Tom Jonah getting pinched?"
30914elephants ca n''t work at that trade, can they?"
30914exclaimed Sammy, with returning valor,"did n''t I tell you if we ran away to be pirates that we could n''t go home again?"
30914gasped Dot, clasping her hands across the Alice- doll''s stomach,"are-- are there_ girl_ pirates?"
30914gasped Dot,"what is the matter with Scalawag?"
30914gasped the little girl, breathlessly,"is n''t he a_ dear_?
30914gasped the youngster, his eyes fairly bulging,"you do n''t mean that''s the pony I thought was like a Teddy bear?"
30914have a ball?"
30914have we?"
30914he exclaimed more eagerly,"could n''t we fly your dolls in it-- yours and Dot''s?"
30914not_ now_?"
30914puffed Mr. Bill Sorber,"ast your party to git out and take us over the bridge in that there machine of yours, will you?
30914said Sammy,"what''s the odds?
30914scoffed Mrs. MacCall,"is there such indeed?
30914she said to Louise,"is that the_ Nancy Hanks_?"
30914the boy added,"why did you call it calico?
30914were ye not just now speakin''of such a possibeelity?"
30914were you trying to climb into that coal cart or only fooling?"
30914what are you going to do?"
30914what can have happened?"
30914what''s going on?"
30914would n''t it be dreadful?"
33918And in what particular ceremony were they engaged once a year?
33918Are''maginations white behind?
33918Bottom bell but one, four times, my boy?
33918But there are n''t_ really_ such animals, nurse, are there?]
33918But, my dear Nora, you do n''t surely propose to go without your shoes and stockings?
33918Can you tell me anything peculiar about the cuckoo, in regard to nesting?
33918Do you take sugar, darling?
33918Hallo, missus, wot are those?
33918How long ago, auntie dear?
33918I suppose, mother, it does n''t mention_ which_ half of the poor thing we are to look for?]
33918Mother, I hope we shall never be rich?
33918Now, what are the principal things that are obtained from the earth?
33918Oh, Molly, do n''t you know who it is puts such wicked thoughts into your head?
33918Oh, mother, how_ will_ Santa Claus do about that poor man''s stockings?]
33918Then may I say I''m not at home when Miss Krux calls to- morrow? 33918 Well, Tommy, how are you getting on at school?"
33918Well, now, what causes heat without light?
33918Well, then, ca n''t you read?
33918What''s she crying for?
33918Whatever_ are_ you children doing?
33918When did you begin, then?]
33918When will_ I_ be old enough, mummy, to have holes made in_ my_ head to keep my hat on?]
33918Who signed Magna Charta?
33918Who signed Magna Charta?
33918Who signed Magna Charta?
33918Why, darling?
33918_ Surely_ you''ve eaten enough, have n''t you, Tommy?
33918''Ow am I to cry then?"]
33918(_ Emphasising question_)"Anti- bilious?"
33918(_ Pause._)"Mummy, I mean----"_ Mamma._"When Sir Fusby Dodderidge called?
33918(_ To children._) What is a Red Indian''s wife called?
33918***** A CONSCIENTIOUS CHILD.--"Is your cold better this morning, darling?"
33918***** A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE.--_Daisy_(_ who has been studying Chrysanthemums_).--Maisy, do you know what''s a_ Double Begonia_?
33918***** A LITTLE LEARNING.--_Teacher._ And who was Joan of Arc?
33918***** A SCIENTIFIC NURSERY DEFINITION.--_Little Algy Muffin._ What''s the meaning of bric- à- brac, that mamma was talking about to Colonel Crumpet?
33918***** ADDING INSULT TO INJURY.--"Mamma,_ is n''t_ it very wicked to do behind one''s back what one would n''t do before one''s face?"
33918***** AT THE BOARD SCHOOL.--_Inspector._ Now, can any of you children state what is likely to be the future of China?
33918***** AT THE SUNDAY SCHOOL--_Teacher._ Now, Mary Brown, you understand what is meant by baptism?
33918***** COMPREHENSIVE.--_Preceptor._ Now, can any of you tell me anything remarkable in the life of Moses?
33918***** CONFUSED ASSOCIATIONS.--"And where did these Druids live, Tommy?"
33918***** ENGLISH HISTORY.--"And who was the king who had so many wives?"
33918***** IMPROVING THE SHINING HOUR.--_The new Governess._ What are the comparative and superlative of_ bad_, Berty?
33918***** INADEQUATE HOSPITALITY.--"Well, Guy, did you enjoy the party?"
33918***** NATURE''S LOGIC.--_Papa._ How is it, Alice, that_ you_ never get a prize at school?
33918***** PHYSICS.--"Now, George, before you go and play, are you quite sure you know the lesson Professor Borax gave you to learn?"
33918***** READY ANSWER.--_Uncle._ Now, how did the mother of Moses hide him?
33918***** ROGUES FALLING OUT.--_Mamma._ What is baby crying for, Maggie?
33918***** SUNDAY SCHOOLING.--_Teacher._ What does one mean by"Heaping coals of fire on someone''s head"now, Harry Hawkins?
33918***** THE EVIDENCE OF THE SENSES.--_Mamma._ How_ dare_ you slap your sister, George?
33918***** THE FORCE OF CLASSIC TEACHING.--_Master._ Now, boys, what is Hexham famous for?
33918*****[ Illustration: A BIG PILL.--"What is it, my pet?"
33918*****[ Illustration: A CANDID INQUIRER"I say, John, is there anything I have n''t tasted?"
33918*****[ Illustration: A PROTEST"And pray, am I_ never_ to be naughty, Miss Grimm?"]
33918*****[ Illustration: A QUESTION OF HEREDITY_ Hal._"Is there anything the matter with this egg, Martha?"
33918*****[ Illustration: A Toothsome Morsel.--_ Distracted Nurse._"Gracious, children, what_ are_ you doing?"
33918*****[ Illustration: BEFORE THE HEAD_ Fourth Form Boy( with recollections of a recent visit to the dentist)._"Please, sir, may I-- may I-- have gas?"]
33918*****[ Illustration: BETWEEN THE ACTS_ Governess._"Well, Marjorie, have you done crying?"
33918*****[ Illustration: EXPERIENTIA DOCET"And are_ you_ going to give me something for my birthday, aunty Maud?"
33918*****[ Illustration: INCONTROVERTIBLE"And how_ old_ are you, my little man?"
33918*****[ Illustration: INDUCTION"Is this the_ new_ baby, daddy?"
33918*****[ Illustration: ON THE FACE OF IT_ Pretty Teacher._"Now, Johnny Wells, can you tell me what is meant by a miracle?"
33918*****[ Illustration: OVERHEARD IN BOND STREET"Which of''em would yer''ave for a muvver, Billy?"]
33918*****[ Illustration: QUESTION AND ANSWER_ Mamma._"Who was the first man,''Lina?"
33918*****[ Illustration: RUDIMENTS OF ECONOMY"May I_ leave_ this piece of bread, nurse?"
33918*****[ Illustration: SENSIBLE CHILD.--"Well, Jacky, and did you hang up your stocking for Santa Claus to fill?"
33918*****[ Illustration: THE CHILD OF THE PERIOD"Why did that policeman touch his hat to you, aunty?
33918*****[ Illustration: THE JOYS OF ANTICIPATION.--"When are you coming out with me, mummy?"
33918*****[ Illustration: THEIR FIRST VISIT TO THE ZOO_ Tommy._"Them ai n''t donkeys, Billy?"
33918*****[ Illustration: UNIMAGINATIVE_ Auntie._"Do you see the hair in this old brooch, Cyril?
33918*****[ Illustration: UTILE CUM DULCI_ Arry._"Ai n''t yer comin''along with me, Bill?"
33918*****[ Illustration: VERY NATURAL.--"Vell, and vat to you sink tit happen to me at Matame Tussaud''s de oder tay?
33918*****[ Illustration: WELL BROUGHT UP.--"Now then, my little men, did n''t you see that board on that tree?"
33918*****[ Illustration: WELL UP IN HER MYTHOLOGY.--_Tommy._"Madge, what''s''_ necessitas_,''masculine or feminine?"
33918*****[ Illustration:"Did our hat- rack walk about and have only two pegs, once, auntie?"]
33918*****[ Illustration:"SAUCE FOR THE GOOSE,"& c.--_Ethel._"Mummy dear, why did you tell Richard you''were n''t at home''just now?"
33918*****[ Illustration:"WELL OUT OF IT"_ Uncle._"And you love your enemies, Ethel?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Auntie._"Do you know you are playing with two very naughty little boys, Johnny?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Chemist._"Pills, eh?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Grandmamma._"And how did it happen, dear?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Hostess._"What would you like to eat, Effie?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Lady._"Have you lost yourself, little boy?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Little Boy._"How many steps can you jump, grandma?
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Mother._"Now, dear, why do n''t you run away and give grandpa a kiss?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Old Gent._"Do you know what a lie is, sir?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Old Gent._"Is it a_ board school_ you go to, my dear?"
33918*****[ Illustration:_ Porter._"Why is the little girl crying, missie?"
33918*****_ Auntie._ Do you love the chickens, dear?
33918*****_ Auntie._ Well, Effie, did you enjoy your party last night?
33918*****_ Mother._ Well, Dorothy, would you like your egg poached or boiled?
33918--"Auntie, ought Bertie Wilson to have_ smiled_ so often at me in church?"
33918--_Grace._ Harold, why did pa call that Mr. Blowhard a liar?
33918--_Uncle._"Well, Tommy, you see I''m back; are you ready?
33918Ach, vy?"
33918And how often have I told you not to say"beastly"?
33918And was it in the Chamber of Horrors?"]
33918And was the Queen weally named after me?
33918And was the little boy allowed to_ eat_ the apple afterwards?
33918And what profession do you mean to choose?"
33918And what was he like, eh?"
33918And who was the first woman?"
33918Are n''t you ashamed of yourself for being a little liar?"
33918Are n''t you glad I was n''t twins, mummy?
33918Are you a chemist?
33918Are you not ill?"
33918Are you sure he''s not getting hurt?
33918At last a boy volunteers._) Well, my boy?
33918Between ourselves, now, have you any choice?"
33918But are n''t they rare?
33918But are you and ces demoiselles going to dine viz de compagnie?"
33918Can_ you_, auntie?
33918D''ye tike me for a canary?
33918D._ Do n''t you?
33918D._ Have you got a shop with lovely large, coloured bottles in the window?
33918Did n''t you want it yourself?
33918Do n''t most people tell you so?
33918Do n''t you know it''s very cruel?"
33918Do n''t you know the difference between a_ window_ and a_ widow_?"
33918Does your governess get ill on mince pies?
33918Dot, got a new doll?
33918Even before_ you_ were born, auntie?"]
33918Had n''t I?"]
33918Has goosegogs got legs?
33918Has he bitten you?"
33918Has mamma been telling you she''d give you''_ a lovely spoonful of delicious currant jelly, O so nice, so VERY nice_''?"
33918Have I?"]
33918Have n''t you some nice message to send her?"
33918Have you got one as well as nurse?"]
33918Have you-- er-- been to many parties?
33918He calls him"Sir"--is Punch_ really_ a gentleman?
33918Honeybun._ Is that Tommy underneath?
33918How dare you tell such stories?
33918How did that happen?
33918I say,_ did_ you hear what the clown said then?
33918I-- er-- you would rather stop?
33918If----?"
33918Is it a tooth?"
33918Is n''t it a beastly shame?
33918Is n''t it, Uncle Fred?"
33918Is that true?"
33918Is that why it''s so long?"]
33918Kids?"
33918Mamma, have all the angels been to Drury Lane to- night?
33918Mother, will you read me the text out of my cracker?...
33918Now, boys-- ah-- can any of you tell me what commandment Adam broke when he took the forbidden fruit?
33918Old Bachelor Guest_(_ violently awakened out of his morning snooze._)"Who''sh there?"
33918Ought she to sit so near the fire?"
33918P._ Why not, my dear?
33918Pefore tinner?
33918Please, will everybody keep quite quiet for a minute or two; I have n''t said my grace.... Do n''t you think it''s unfair of nurse?
33918Pup?"
33918Say,''pa, what''s a v''cab''lary?
33918Shall I be allowed to keep the whip after, mammy?
33918Shall you go to the pantomime this year?
33918So will you give it me to- morrow?"
33918Then I suppose you do n''t sell Jones''s Jubilee Cough Jujubes?
33918Then would the chicken that came out of it be a little mad?"]
33918There''s generally a good deal going on just now, is n''t there?
33918Tovey?"
33918Was it Mr. Jones, or Mr. David Jones, or Mr. Griffith Jones, whom you met?
33918What are the four seasons of the year, Phyllis?
33918What are they reading about?
33918What are they?
33918What do you mean by bullying that little girl?
33918What do you mean?
33918What does it mean when a clergyman wears gaiters?"
33918What have I to pay for, miss?"
33918What have you been doing?"
33918What have you got that string tied on that fowl''s leg for?"
33918What is it?"
33918What is the word you''ve forgotten?
33918What will_ papa_ say when he comes home?"
33918What wound?"
33918What''s for supper?''"
33918What''s the matter, my pet?
33918Where was he sitting?"
33918Where_ have_ you been?"
33918Which is the most, mother?
33918Why do n''t you play with good little boys?"
33918Why?
33918Why?
33918Will you have plum or seed?
33918Will you have some more bread- and- butter?
33918Would n''t I?
33918[_ Auntie, who was about to enter, quickly and quietly retires._]*****[ Illustration:"What are you doing in that cupboard, Cyril?"
33918[_ Class dismissed immediately._*****[ Illustration: AN INNOCENT HINT_ Auntie._"What is Nellie''s nose for?"
33918[_ Conference broken up by arrival of the lady in question._*****[ Illustration: WHAT IS IT?
33918_ A Puzzled Child._ Mother, why is the man at the side so_ polite_ to Punch?
33918_ Auntie._ And I suppose mamma was there to look after you?
33918_ Auntie._"And what are Nellie''s ears for?"
33918_ Auntie._"And what is Nellie''s mouth for?"
33918_ Boy._"Well, then, can we sing yer some Christmas carols instead?"]
33918_ Brown Minimus._ Please sir, I''d eat it before they asked for it?
33918_ Did_ you hear that?
33918_ Effie._"Why?"
33918_ Ethel._ But do n''t you like Scott?
33918_ Father._ A vocabulary, my boy-- what d''you want to know that for?
33918_ Father._"Were you?
33918_ Geoffrey._"Oh!----does mummy know?"]
33918_ Hester._ That is n''t as jolly as the pantomime, is it?
33918_ Humorous Little Boy._"Plea''sir, will you ring the bottom bell but one, four times, sir?"
33918_ Inspector._ What is a Red Indian''s baby called?
33918_ Interested Little Boy._"Oh, and which did you shoot first-- the lion, or the tiger, or the d''lemma?"]
33918_ Is there such a thing as a bun in the house?_"]*****[ Illustration: THE FESTIVE SEASON.--_Tommy_(_ criticising the menu of the coming feast_).
33918_ Just!_"]*****[ Illustration:"_ Please_, auntie,_ may_ I have the fairy off the Christmas tree--_if I do n''t ask you for it_?"]
33918_ Kitty._"Oh, Mr. Softly, is that why you stutter?"]
33918_ Lady._"How many lumps?"
33918_ Maisy_(_ who has been studying the Classics_).--"Double Big- onia"?
33918_ Mamma._ And that your friend, Louisa Sharp, gets so many?
33918_ Mamma._ And what are_ you_ looking so''ndignant about?
33918_ Mamma._ No, darling?
33918_ Mamma._ Where did she hurt you?
33918_ Mamma._"Already?
33918_ Mamma._"Give you what, dear?"
33918_ Mamma._"Well, what''s the matter with_ you_, Jack?"
33918_ Mamma._"Why?"
33918_ Marjory._"Yes, granpa''; but"--(_hesitating_)--"I do n''t fink_ one_ lock would be enough, would it?"]
33918_ Messenger._"_ Wiv our comb, sir!_"]*****[ Illustration: A FATAL OBJECTION"Mother, are the Wondergilts very rich?"
33918_ Mother._"That horrid boy at the farm?
33918_ Mother._"What_ do_ you mean?"
33918_ Now_ will you be good?
33918_ Samuel._"Muvver, does a hen lay an egg when it_ likes_ or_ must_ it?"]
33918_ She''s my Sweetheart!_"]*****[ Illustration:_ Grandpapa._"Well little lady, will you give me a lock of that pretty hair of yours?"
33918_ Tommy._"Is n''t it Sunday in the back garden, mamma?"]
33918_ Tommy._"Mummy, dear, do the angels say''dam''when a string breaks?"]
33918_ Tommy._"Talking of riddles, Uncle, do you know the difference between an apple and a elephant?"
33918_ Tommy._"Why?"
33918_ Tommy._"You''d be a smart chap to send out to buy apples, would n''t you?"]
33918_ Uncle._"And who are your enemies, dear?"
33918_ Vicar''s Daughter._"If----?
33918dear me, what_ are_ they doing?
33918for_ she_ bores_ me_ awfully?"]
33918what shall I do?
33918wo n''t I?
33918wot''s the trouble?
31200''Earth being so good, would Heaven seem best?''
31200Afraid of the devil?
31200All of them?
31200All of you together?
31200Already? 31200 Am I such a bore?"
31200American children are pretty bad, are n''t they, Frieda?
31200Are n''t people lovely?
31200Are n''t these very small bushel baskets?
31200Are n''t they? 31200 Are n''t you a child any longer, Frieda?"
31200Are n''t you rather warm, dear, with that heavy gown on? 31200 Are we talking too much?"
31200Are you all here? 31200 Are you going around seeking words in a dictionary all the time, Frieda?
31200Bell- i- gerent?
31200Bored? 31200 Bread and butter?"
31200But Frieda, then, if you are no longer a child, at last you have a will?
31200But I do n''t suppose you''d give me your share in them, would you?
31200But I hardly know-- the Past, the Present, and the Future of what?
31200But is n''t it perfectly lovely the way the council did take up with the idea? 31200 But what could I tell youngsters about it?
31200But_ what_ do they mean?
31200Ca n''t they heat the place?
31200Ca n''t you come out and walk with me?
31200Ca n''t you come out home with us?
31200Ca n''t you do anything for it?
31200Ca n''t you guess?
31200Can I do anything for you?
31200Can all the cripples make pretty things like this?
31200Could n''t we put her in it, Tante Clara, to make up for having torn the pretty dresses?
31200Did he tell you so?
31200Did his mother hear you?
31200Did you find out what her name was?
31200Did you go to Germany alone?
31200Did you have any funnier than Pearl Button?
31200Did you like it? 31200 Did you put Bertha''s lame sister on it?"
31200Do n''t you know the other Germans here?
31200Do n''t you think there are some people who ca n''t do anything?
31200Do they always act this way, Catherine?
31200Do you mean they want to be petted? 31200 Do you remember how Inez brought a pail of honey in her trunk,"put in Alice,"and how it leaked out all over everything she had?"
31200Do you remember the time we got our own supper in Berlin, Hannah?
31200Do you think he knows he''s lonely?
31200Do you think in statistics party- nights, even? 31200 Do you think you could get the news?"
31200Does n''t any one know the Golden Text?
31200Does n''t anybody know? 31200 Does no one punish Elsmere except the neighbors?"
31200Family rates?
31200Frieda was saying that? 31200 Frieda,"she called,"will you gather flowers for the luncheon table, please?
31200Girls, do you realize the absurdity of us? 31200 Has n''t Bert something to keep him?"
31200Have you anything in the library on the Past, the Present and the Future?
31200Have you ever heard of the Guild of Brave Poor Things in England?
31200Have you seen the last_ North American Review_?
31200How about playing the violin?
31200How about their hearts?
31200How can I help her? 31200 How can we get hot water?"
31200How did you?
31200How do you account for your own sudden ennui?
31200How do you happen to be here?
31200How many books did you and Bert gather up this morning, Dot?
31200How much for your tickets?
31200How''d you get out?
31200How?
31200However in the world did you get off here?
31200I always feel about those as the old lady did about her pies, after she labelled them T. M."What did she label them like that for?
31200I suppose so, but it wo n''t go down in time for Sunday- school, and who will take my class?
31200I suppose that would be more fun than having them all come here?
31200I suppose the rest of you feel the same way, but, being guests, do n''t dare say so?
31200I wonder if I ought? 31200 I wonder if I''d have to put my hair down just to teach them on Sundays?
31200I wonder what it means?
31200I wonder-- Do you suppose we dare try them on? 31200 Is Frieda late?"
31200Is Hannah Eldred coming?
31200Is it your first visit here?
31200Is n''t it beastly?
31200Is n''t it spick and span?
31200Is n''t it too unbelievable that that queer little letter with that ridiculous fancy name at the end should have done so much? 31200 Is n''t she a dear?"
31200Is n''t that a fright? 31200 Is she still given to crushes?"
31200Is this what they teach you at college?
31200Is this your liberry?
31200Is_ Handarbeit_ a gift?
31200It''s a nuisance having to wait so, is n''t it? 31200 Like''objective''and''subjective''?"
31200Mate,he said suddenly,"think you''d like to read any of these here books?
31200Mind? 31200 Miss Lyndesay?"
31200Not my Miss Lyndesay?
31200Not really?
31200Not the German one?
31200Not the beech woods, surely?
31200Now I wonder who can tell me what that was all about?
31200Now may the peace of withered grass And goldenrod abide with you; Abide with me-- for what is death? 31200 O, have you been learning English out of that ridiculous Edith and Mary book, too?
31200Overstudy? 31200 Poor Frieda,"she said in German,"does it hurt you awfully to hear English all the time?
31200Pretty?
31200Professional? 31200 Room for a tired man in your party, children?"
31200Say, kid, where''s the liberrian?
31200Say, wo n''t that lamb kick him? 31200 Shall not want?"
31200Shall we withdraw?
31200She will be all right after a while, but it is a pity, is n''t it? 31200 Shows off?
31200The father of the dear twin babies?
31200The key?
31200The magazine? 31200 The what?"
31200Too tired?
31200Turn into Carnegies?
31200Walk on your heels, why do n''t you?
31200Was n''t it fun? 31200 We''ve accomplished a lot, have n''t we?"
31200Well, and whose business is it, I''d like to know?
31200Well, what is it?
31200What did you choose?
31200What did you say?
31200What did you think of our black stoves and things, Frieda?
31200What else did you cut out? 31200 What is it this time?"
31200What is it? 31200 What is it?"
31200What is this Sunday''s?
31200What you givin''us?
31200What you want?
31200What''s that? 31200 What''s that?"
31200What''s the kid doin''in the liberrian''s chair?
31200What''s the matter with the Boat Club?
31200What''s the matter with the Three R''s?
31200What''s the matter with the library?
31200What''s the matter? 31200 What''s the matter?
31200What''s the matter?
31200What''s''it''?
31200What? 31200 What?"
31200What?
31200When does Hannah come? 31200 Where are Bess and Archie?"
31200Where did you come from?
31200Where did you rain down from?
31200Where was your ma goin''?
31200Where were you?
31200Where''s my girl?
31200Where''s the young fellow that invited us to come in this evening? 31200 Which is worse, a soaking or a fourth- class phonograph?"
31200Which way does Madam Kittredge live, Catherine?
31200Who are the Wide Awake girls?
31200Who do you think is coming to spend a few days with us next week? 31200 Who is it?"
31200Who is n''t here?
31200Who owns the building?
31200Who would ever get up in the middle of the night and worry about a Sunday- school class, when they had a toothache? 31200 Why are n''t you in your own room and bed?"
31200Why could n''t she have waited till Alice came? 31200 Why do n''t you two say anything?"
31200Why do you be goin''that way?
31200Why not fish- ous?
31200Why not have Algernon give you library notes?
31200Why not to- day?
31200Why not write an editorial on it?
31200Why, my dear, what is wrong? 31200 Why,"it called after him,"why?
31200Why?
31200Will you pank me?
31200Will you take the place of honor?
31200Winifred, will you sing, if I bring out my fiddle?
31200Wo n''t you please let us come in and telephone for a carriage, and then wait for it?
31200Wo n''t you tell me about it?
31200Would n''t it be fun if he had?
31200Would n''t it be practical, really, Mother? 31200 Would the Board be willing?"
31200Would you give up your father and mother for any or all of those things, Hannah dear?
31200You can give him material to read, ca n''t you, Algernon?
31200You cross your heart and hope to die you''ll go straight to Bertha''s and give her the key?
31200You do n''t think I''d go and spend the public money, do you? 31200 You talked with the woman, did you?"
31200You think it would be more dramatic? 31200 You''give us credit for more discretion than you have, yourself?''"
31200You?
31200_ Darling Lady Love of Mine:_Are you in Ventnor still?
31200_ Eins, zwei, drei, vier, fünf,--wo denn? 31200 ''I am''--don''t you remember? 31200 77Sure I am not too heavy, Karl?"
31200A vocation?
31200After an ivory manicure set or a lawn- mower premium?"
31200Algernon, will you get the balls and rackets?
31200Am I like her?"
31200And Frieda?
31200And have people bring books for admission fees?"
31200And if you''re going down, will you ask mother to come in before breakfast?
31200And there come Archie and Win with a donkey- cart, and-- why, what do you think they have?
31200And this plan of yours is to make Algernon less lonely?"
31200And were n''t the little pig- tailed preps dear with their pink doves, I mean pink- ribboned doves?
31200And what do you think?
31200Anything so simple and delightful, and_ natural_ as telling stories?
31200Archie Bradly, will you please state the object of the meeting?"
31200Are n''t you afraid we''ll make you wetter, though, if we ride in the same carriage?
31200Are n''t you dressed yet?
31200Are they all coming at once, Catherine?"
31200Are you girls honestly afraid of mice?"
31200Are you going off with Polly, as usual?
31200Are you going to work to- day?
31200Are you ill?
31200Are you quite free now?"
31200Are you sure we dare ask her?"
31200But are you sure I''m not too heavy, Karl?
31200But we have had a lot of fun these days, have n''t we?
31200But what would you have said if Hannah had told you to say:''So am I''when strangers said:''I am glad to meet you''?
31200But where is Miss Lyndesay?"
31200By the way, would you like that little old set in the guest- room for your library?
31200CHAPTER FIFTEEN SUNDAY SCHOOL"Hannah, are you awake?"
31200CHAPTER FIVE A DAY OFF"Not going over to the library to work to- day?"
31200CHAPTER SEVEN A PARTY AT POLLY''S"Where you goin'', Algy?"
31200Ca n''t I call your mother?"
31200Ca n''t you do some more calls?"
31200Ca n''t you get the people who draw books at the new library to agree to sprinkle the breeding- places with oil?"
31200Ca n''t you prescribe for us, Doctor?"
31200Ca n''t you see?
31200Ca n''t you sit and sew too, Mother?"
31200Ca n''t you, please?"
31200Can they have no share in the library?"
31200Can you see?"
31200Catherine, did you tell Inga to order peas for dinner?"
31200Catherine, will you tell us the object of the meeting?
31200Catherine?
31200Could you undertake Elsmere?"
31200Could_ I_ do something that would make lots of people happier and better, as Aunt Clara''s pictures do, and Mother''s work and Father''s?"
31200Did Catherine make you properly comfortable?"
31200Did Catherine show you your bath- room?
31200Did n''t the rest of you?"
31200Did n''t you ever take_ Wide- Awake_?"
31200Did she say anything about her own health when she wrote?
31200Did she tell you so?"
31200Did you carry my embroidered waist home with you by any chance?
31200Did you ever hear such a tale in your life?
31200Did you ever hear the riddle about when a door is not a door, Frieda?"
31200Did you ever in your life?
31200Did you ever read Stevenson''s fable of the reformer who thought the first step in reforming the world was to abolish mankind?
31200Did you not see that I make no more_ Knixes_?"
31200Did you read it all by yourself, dear?"
31200Did you talk German to her coming over, Miss Lyndesay?"
31200Did your stomach bleed?"
31200Do n''t you ever forget?"
31200Do n''t you know about them?"
31200Do n''t you think we could?"
31200Do they always send girls off to school with food for the term, Catherine?"
31200Do you all like it?
31200Do you ever wear them at college?"
31200Do you know the Merry Widow waltzes?"
31200Do you know the way to yours, Frieda?"
31200Do you know what the lesson is?"
31200Do you remember how you gave it to me to read the first evening I was at your house?"
31200Do you see any other lack, any of you?"
31200Do you suppose I can cure myself and still have time and attention to give to starting the library?
31200Do you suppose she would let us have them?"
31200Do you suppose there''s any hope of her coming back to this country this summer?"
31200Do you think you can see her, Karl?
31200Does Catherine want us to subscribe?
31200Does n''t Caffrine know the way to Peter and Perdita''s house?
31200Does that chair screw''round?"
31200Dy- the, going on this train?
31200Editor?"
31200First was a little red rose bush in a pot--""Is she going to send the thing that way?
31200From Peter and Perdita to-- to Elsmere, possibly?"
31200Germany?"
31200Give your father my love, wo n''t you, darling?
31200Hannah may take advantage of your not understanding perfectly, but who taught her that that sort of thing was funny?
31200Hannah, Hannah, have n''t you learned yet that one ca n''t have everything that is delightful all at once?"
31200Has it?
31200Have n''t you any uninstructive thoughts for warm evenings?"
31200Have you called the Boat Club meeting?"
31200Have you ever noticed how Polly does?
31200Have you honestly ever wanted to be bad?"
31200Helen?"
31200How about that little canoe jaunt on the quiet yesterday, Catherine?
31200How are the editorials coming?"
31200How can she?"
31200How could a porter understand that the mere beauty of words and ideas could render one unconscious to delays in transportation?
31200How could she care for other things, when Persephone was gone?"
31200How did you get it?"
31200How do you suppose I can carry this cake, though, Mother?
31200How does it seem to you, Frieda?"
31200How is a poor foreigner to guess that''sumpn''for instance means''something''?"
31200How many of you know it?"
31200How many towns have librarians who work without pay, and furnish all their materials besides?"
31200How many were there finally, Bertha?"
31200I do n''t suppose any of you noticed the difference?"
31200I mean, is n''t that startling?
31200I pulled greatly and in he came lickety split, and what do you think he said?
31200I say, Catherine, would you mind taking the desk for a few minutes?
31200I say, does n''t the Osgood place look fine?"
31200I say, who''s that odd little pair over there?
31200I suppose you pine for my fearful reprimands?"
31200I think she will need a long time to get acquainted, do n''t you?
31200I thought you embroidered that wonderful apron yourself?"
31200I wonder if your soul wears soft gray fur?"
31200I wonder-- What is that?
31200I''m so glad it all turned out all right; and you''re feeling happier, are n''t you?"
31200Is n''t it an interesting story?"
31200Is n''t it awful?"
31200Is n''t it fun not to?
31200Is n''t it just the dearest, sleepiest place you ever saw in all your life?"
31200Is n''t it odd that it happens so?
31200Is n''t it one of Tennyson''s?"
31200Is n''t that interesting?"
31200Is n''t there a shed we could go into, and not make such a lot of work for you?"
31200Is n''t this room the cleanest spot you ever saw?"
31200Is this the house?
31200Is this your sister?
31200It is a secret, but I think she will let me tell it now, just for completeness, wo n''t you, Miss Prescott?"
31200It will tell you all about where they are to be, and you will try your very hardest to see them, wo n''t you?
31200Just how can we work?"
31200Mills?"
31200Mother, how can I ever thank them all?"
31200Not even once?''
31200Now who can tell the Golden Text?"
31200Now, what could one say to a statement about Abyssinian trousers, for instance, when one is just peacefully walking along, going to a party?"
31200O, Aunt Clara, would n''t Catherine_ love_ it?"
31200O, Bess, you go right by Grandma Hopkins''on the way home, do n''t you?
31200O, Hannah darling, how can we ever let you go on without us?"
31200O, it''s you, is it?
31200Of course, we all know we have them both, but who is going to claim them?"
31200Once for all, what is her ridiculous name?
31200Or even if I could?"
31200Or overwork reading postals last week?"
31200Polly Osgood, did n''t that tennis game Friday morning save you from collapse?
31200Polly, why have you gone back to braids and bows?
31200Presently Hannah said softly:"And_ they_ have_''Laetus sorte mea''_ for a motto?
31200Say, could n''t you stop off now for the wedding?"
31200See if you do n''t think that little red speck in the bow is her?"
31200Shall you be there the 23d?
31200Shall you have a spread to- night?
31200Shall you like that?"
31200So wo n''t you tell me just what you meant by this afternoon?
31200Sure you''re not afraid to go out alone with me?
31200Tell me, Hannah dear, how are your family?"
31200That is anything but wise, is n''t it?
31200Then they have a short service of prayer--""Do they sing the tug- of- war hymn?"
31200Then,"What''s it for?"
31200They would send her flowers gladly, but sell them to her?
31200Through with the nuts so soon, Frieda?
31200Von Arndtheim?
31200Want any help in locking up, Al?"
31200Want to find your mamma, little boy, and go to Grandma''s and play with all the pigs and chickies?"
31200Was he pleased with the way we handled the paper?"
31200Was it a very bad poem?"
31200Was it fun?
31200Was n''t Lilian the sweetest thing?
31200Was n''t it just like Catherine to put them there?
31200Was nennt man dies?
31200Was there any hitch at all about it?"
31200What are you all out here for?
31200What are you discussing?"
31200What are you smiling at?"
31200What did I tell you people?
31200What did Mr. Morse say?
31200What did she have for orange, Alice?"
31200What did the Hampton ladies say?"
31200What did you do?
31200What did you do?"
31200What do you think of a regular library opening, with refreshments and all that?
31200What does yours say, Catherine?"
31200What else are you going to have for eats, Catherine?"
31200What is it?
31200What made you stop?"
31200What of it?
31200What time is it anyway?"
31200What will mother think?"
31200What you goin''to get her_ for_?"
31200What''s before the house?"
31200What''s this?
31200What''s your name?
31200When can you?"
31200When does Mr. Kittredge want me to begin?"
31200When your heart is full of love, why should it be hard to express it?"
31200Where are their beautiful statues?
31200Where are their bridges?
31200Where are you?
31200Where did you say we''d have the meeting?"
31200Where do you suppose Algernon is?"
31200Where is Archie?"
31200Where is Elsmere?
31200Where is their Victory Avenue?
31200Where were they ever more to the fore than here?
31200Where will we ever put books to- day, with the room in such a state?"
31200Where''s the real one?
31200Who is in the class?"
31200Who told her the brass plate over the barber''s door meant that cakes were for sale there, so that she almost went in to buy one?"
31200Whose broom?"
31200Why could n''t we start a library and have Algernon run it?
31200Why did n''t Dr. Helen tell us about you before, and let us come to see you?"
31200Why did n''t you bring the doll?"
31200Will you find the way to our trunks, please?
31200Wo n''t that be fun?"
31200Wo n''t you bring out some pans for the peas when you take your broom in, Hannah?
31200Work?
31200Would n''t it be fun if just one more should come?"
31200Would n''t you like to come out for a little walk?"
31200Would you mind running in and telling her that the cake got off all right?
31200You are sure Algernon can run it?
31200You do n''t mean it?
31200You do n''t mind, I hope?"
31200You do n''t mind, do you?"
31200You do n''t think he has, do you?"
31200You had been sitting on the railing and I was in the steamer chair-- O Elsmere Swinburne, where have you been?"
31200You have one all to yourself; is n''t that lovely?
31200You know Algernon Swinburne?"
31200You would hardly know she is blind, would you?
31200[ Illustration:"''How much for your tickets?''"
31200[ Illustration:"''Sure I am not too heavy, Karl?''"
31200_ Hast du gut geschlafen?_"The Three Gables household was a church- going one.
31200_ Have_ you seen her?
31200and an inspired look came into Catherine''s eyes,"why could n''t we have our picnic in the library instead?
31200cried Polly,"but how do the Wide- Awakes come in on that?"
31200what are you doing here?"
34462''May n''t I get up? 34462 Are n''t there the nights?"
34462Are you going to buy Polly?
34462But surely you know Stevenson''s''Island Nights''Entertainments''?
34462But you do n''t really mean to say I''ve guessed right?
34462Do n''t you remember, mother,he began,"that day when she was frightened by the traction engine and ran into the grocer''s shop?"
34462Do n''t you think,my friend asked,"that this gentleman is the very image of Dr. Sullivan of Harley Street, who was here last summer?"
34462Go-- what?
34462Have you a rule against honorary members inviting guests?
34462Have you had a reply?
34462How much is this?
34462I never heard of it,she said,"but then why should I?
34462I was thinking about it,said Mr. Fox, adding to me,"How old do you call her, ma''am?
34462In French?
34462Is it always like this?
34462Is it very strictly enforced? 34462 Is that Blank?"
34462Mine?
34462Mr. Brooks said that, did he?
34462Not even Conrad?
34462Of course,was her splendid answer;"are n''t there the nights?"
34462Oh, would you mind?
34462Shall those of us who have kept our Baedekers have the courage to carry them?
34462She''s been down, has she?
34462She''s quiet enough; used to traffic and all that?
34462Well,my hostess asked me,"what do you think of it all?"
34462What Dr. Sullivan''s that?
34462What do you think a lady-- calls herself a lady-- said to me just now when she bought threepenny worth? 34462 What,"she panted,"is the meaning of this outrage?
34462When it''s cold and wet like this,I asked,"is life worth living?"
34462Why are your flowers,I asked her,"so much better than the flowers of the man the other side of the road?"
34462Why?
34462Yes, what is it?
34462Yes,said the daughter,"and if she''s going to go off hunting like this what on earth shall we do?
34462You say,he remarked,"that he had been in Persia?
34462You sent them to the Chief of the Police with your letter, I suppose?
34462You''re sure he said Blank?
34462You''re sure you''re right in saying he is unusually tall?
34462Your dog, madam?
34462( How could I, having seen it in preparation?)
34462( Without beauty what are we?)
34462According to him Pope''s questioning line:-- Who hung with woods yon mountain''s sultry brow?
34462Again I say, why?
34462And Louis Becke-- you must have read him?"
34462And did the British Fleet push in the glad cry right away when Nels put in his entrance?
34462And his grievance?
34462And how do they talk at home?
34462And supposing that this first love fails, what will be the attitude of subsequent ladies to these embellishments?
34462And then, are we not all different?
34462And what occasioned the identification of the ocean itself with the locker of this mysterious person?"
34462And what was the ferryman before he was a ferryman?
34462And what?
34462And who now exchanges market greetings, with a gaitered gentleman named Paradine Ebb?
34462And why does one sometimes hear other conversations over other wires, and sometimes not?
34462And why should memory be subject also to that downward tendency in life which forces us always to fight if we would save the best?
34462And why?
34462And, added to all this, circumstances of poverty to drive his thoughts inwards?
34462And, equally, how permit a customer to be so misguided as to pay money for a bad one?
34462And, indeed, why should they be associated?
34462As to Pope''s question:-- Whose causeway parts the vale with shady rows?
34462At any rate, if a restaurant door- keeper does not learn such things, who can?
34462At night, when we have lost the latch- key, who is it that effects an entrance( I borrow his own terminology) through a window?
34462But have I found it?
34462But how do you think she brought herself to face it?
34462But is it so ugly?
34462But to select one''s line...?
34462Can you conceive of a more impish hoax?
34462Can you wonder, then, that I nearly included a determination never to be punctual again among my New Year resolutions?
34462Celerity?
34462Could I name a more abundant_ collazione_ at 4_ lire_ or a better_ pranzo_ at 5?
34462Could he possibly have been the author?
34462Could the admirable elderly player who always lifted his right foot and held it poised in the air while delivering the bowl be Mr. Jethro Ham?
34462Could there be lower tricks?
34462Did a ferryman ever sing?
34462Did any one ever meet"in the form"a Lavender Wiseways?
34462Do n''t you remember him?
34462Do n''t you remember, Vivian, it was on your fifth birthday?"
34462Do the rank and file of us, I wonder, when telephoning, thus grimace?
34462Do they not, perhaps, have evenings out, times off for lunch and so forth, and thus we sometimes miss them?
34462Do you think that the thermometer might he faulty?
34462Does he prosper and multiply, or is the competition of the_ Columba Londiniensis_"( meaning the Metropolitan pigeon)"too much for him?"
34462Does he seem to thrive?
34462Does he stand before the glass and search the recesses of his countenance-- which is now far more familiar to the world than any other-- and marvel?
34462Does not that make for a certain moroseness?
34462Does not their flattery perhaps blind us to their mediocrity?
34462Does the Funniest Man on Earth, as he is called, I should like to know, realise what a rôle he fills?
34462For example, would a little spice of malice in her anecdotage be so undesirable?
34462For how could the poet, for all her epigrammatic conciseness, ever have given her exemplary friend the opportunity of drinking lukewarm tea?
34462For one thing, who said anything about being logical?
34462For restoring a lost memory the heart of Hirundo, the Swallow, to which the filings of a man''s skull( Mr. Pelman''s for choice?)
34462From the dry rock who bade the waters flow?
34462Has a Carnegie ever left a ferryman a legacy?
34462Has a whimsical millionaire ever played at being a ferryman?
34462Has it ever been explained why the dead have more remarkable names than the living?
34462He asked, as a gentleman should, in gentlemanly, if precise, terms:"Who was the important individual whose name has become so powerful a myth?
34462Her father was-- where?
34462His race, his form, his name almost unknown?
34462How can aunts possibly survive such subtle attacks as that?
34462How dare they also not have heard it before?
34462How dare you steal my dog?"
34462How do they do that, and do they know what its effect is?
34462How is that?
34462I mean, would there be any risk in breaking it?"
34462If possessions are undesirable, are they not undesirable also for the young?
34462In short, are they swans or geese?"
34462In the company of such taciturnity and gloom who could carol?
34462Indeed, the copy which lies before me-- as pretty a little book, did I say?
34462Is any sick?
34462Is there a variance?
34462It was impossible, unthinkable.... What then?
34462Joseph Knight being no more, to lighten the small hours with gossip and erudition, who shall tell?
34462Let us search our hearts and answer truthfully the questions: Do we know our friends as we ought?
34462May n''t I get up?''
34462Meanwhile, what of the horse?
34462Might I-- would it be-- could you-- would you, sir, be so very kind as to allow me to paint you?
34462Mistress Eleanor Gwynne?
34462Mr. Campkin, however, did not, as my Admiralty friend did, say,"By the way, who the devil_ was_ Davy Jones?"
34462My knees, too, were very sore; but what did I care?
34462Nôtre Dame''s twin towers on each side of that miracle of a rose window would be there next time; but would M. Pol?
34462Of this?
34462Oh say, what sums that generous hand supply?
34462Or are they, perhaps, not there at all?
34462Or did you say''cobra''?
34462Or served with more despatch?
34462Perhaps the nose-- a little bigger, do n''t you think?
34462Pictures, too-- how could one part with a good one?
34462Strayed revellers?
34462Strength?
34462THE SPARROWS''FRIEND If you entered the Tuileries any fine morning( and surely the sun always shines in Paris, does it not?)
34462The Roman theatre, moreover, is rather out of the way; and, well, is not the Coliseum Roman theatre enough?
34462The gamblers, the careless, the sippers of all the honey the moment contains: are not these the best?
34462The great mystery is, Where, while one is forgetting them, are the things one forgets, but suddenly will remember again?
34462The moral?
34462The poet''s next query:-- From the dry rock who bade the waters flow?
34462Then he said,"You''re sure it was n''t a clean- shaven bald man with a single eyeglass?"
34462This is fitness with fun-- and is there a better mixture?
34462Was Mr. Condy U''Ren winning or losing?
34462Was it a commonplace of the green- room or did Dickens( who was capable of doing so) invent it?
34462Was it nice?
34462Was it not asking her to disregard me-- only a day or so after we had at last got on terms?
34462Was not his hotel clean?
34462Was not his wine sound and far from dear?
34462Was not that flying in the face of the Goddess of Business, whoever she may be?
34462Was not that the test-- that they came again and again?
34462Was there ever a rich ferryman?
34462We all knew it; why did we unanimously fail to know it then?
34462Were any of the great Devon tribe of Yeo there?
34462Were not the meals generous and diversified?
34462What did he think could have happened?
34462What do you think we ought to do?''
34462What kind of a"wood"did Mr. Odam project towards the"jack"?
34462What kind of emotions, I wondered, will be his as he views them at thirty- one, forty- one, fifty- one?
34462What mines, to swell that boundless charity?
34462What reparation can we make?"
34462What shall I do?"
34462What so cheerless as iron girders and scaffold poles?
34462What so enkindling as the overture to a play in a crowded, anticipatory theatre?
34462What would Mr. Fairchild say to it?
34462What would happen if Thomas Brown''s friends paid for such lapidary style as that?
34462When our friends are dead why should we not disclose a little?
34462Where are they lurking?
34462Where then are the other two?
34462Who could they be?
34462Who hung with woods yon mountain''s sultry brow?
34462Who is it that knows where the nearest chemist''s is?
34462Who is it, when we are lost, that tells us the way, always extending an arm as he does so?
34462Who taught that heaven- directed spire to rise?
34462Who, when we are in danger of being run over if we cross the road, lifts a hand like a York ham and cleaves a path for us?
34462Who, you ask, is Vivian?
34462Whose causeway parts the vale with shady rows?
34462Whose seats the weary traveller repose?
34462Why be quixotic?
34462Why had we not made pony- breeding a hobby?
34462Why is everything to do with underground passages so interesting?
34462Why is that?
34462Why is this?
34462Why put a premium on ineptitude?
34462Why should not some one, greatly daring, go so far as to bid the mason engrave a tribute to the world that is being left behind?
34462Why should not the rôles be reversed?
34462Why should that discovery be interesting?
34462Why should they all say"No replay,"when they mean"No reply"?
34462Why( so my thoughts ran) give him half?
34462Why( so my thoughts ran) send him ten pounds?
34462Why?
34462Will you be good enough to agree with me?
34462Willingness?
34462Wisdom, after all, is an element in business success; and what wise man would ever be punctual at his dentist''s?
34462With such attractive jam, who could resent the pill?
34462With this new public, clamorous and appreciative, why do humourists try so hard to be novel?
34462Would not he return with renewed relish to the congenial task of repeating to his brood Biblical verses illustrating the wickedness of man''s heart?
34462Would that be so impious?
34462Would the world totter?
34462XIV MY FRIEND FLORA"How much is this bunch?"
34462Youth?
34462but you say, why be so illogical?
34462is a secret staircase in the wall leading to the apartments set apart for( need I say?)
34462my friends may not each of us be as much in error as that poor deluded ferryman?
34462no monument, inscription, stone?
34462they cried;"how dare you go hunting?"
34462whispered the painter excitedly,"do you see that?
23789''--But what I felt?'' 23789 ''Alicia,''he said,''my dear Alicia, what is the matter?''
23789''And you say she has not been here for a fortnight?'' 23789 ''But you have seen her?''
23789''Did I not command that that girl should not come here again?'' 23789 ''Did I not order you, on pain of my heaviest displeasure, never to annoy Mrs. Dubarry by so much as the mention of the gipsy girl''s name to her?''
23789''Did you speak to the girl when you found her in your room at midnight?'' 23789 ''Have I said anything wrong?
23789''Have you spoken to any of the servants of this girl''s intrusion into parts of the house where she has no business to come?'' 23789 ''How dare you come here, after the message I sent you?
23789''Isaac, is this true?'' 23789 ''Lovers in history''were they?
23789''Murdered? 23789 ''Oh, sir, are they murdered in their bed?''
23789''Some one;''but whom?
23789''Then how is it that she comes here as much as ever?'' 23789 ''Then, in the name of Heaven,_ who_ is it that I meet so often?''
23789''We? 23789 ''What did you say?''
23789''What do you mean by that? 23789 ''What is there, good Alicia?
23789''Who is that little girl in the red cloak, who seems so much at home in the house? 23789 ''Who walks, you old fool?''
23789''Why?'' 23789 ''Would''st bid me burst The loathsome charnel- house, and Spread a pestilence?''"
23789''Yes, but are you sure she is to be trusted? 23789 ''You were asking me about-- one of the servants, were you not?''
23789''You will not tell me who she is? 23789 ''Your master and mistress not up yet?''
23789''_ Where_ do you see her, or fancy you see her, lunatic?'' 23789 A keepsake, sir?"
23789Against-- against-- whom?
23789Ah, father, why can you not leave me free?
23789All right in the village, and in the valley?
23789And I, who must have been expected to be on the spot?
23789And Joe is here with us?
23789And are you sure that this beautiful Rosa Blondelle would not make you a more suitable companion than I do?
23789And do you love me?
23789And have you the things in that cart?
23789And he loves you?
23789And her infamous husband?
23789And her lady?
23789And no boys?
23789And now that you have told me your mind, what do you want me to do, my darling?
23789And now, about these housekeeping articles that we must leave here? 23789 And now, are we ready?"
23789And now, how are you going to support my character, or rather my disguise?
23789And now, my dear Sybil, are you sure you have got all that you need in your bag?
23789And she?
23789And so discovered and denounced me?
23789And so that is the way in which_ you_ accounted for matters and things that you could n''t understand?
23789And so, Joe, you overheard the whole matter?
23789And that is all?
23789And the coach be come in, sir, and what be we to do with the passengers?
23789And the horses?
23789And then? 23789 And then?"
23789And they never discovered you?
23789And this is their family vault?
23789And we can not even yet go home?
23789And what else?
23789And what is that prayer, so awful in its earnestness, dear love?
23789And what might your name be, farmer?
23789And what will he be then, ma''am?
23789And where did you part from them?
23789And you love him?
23789And you will come and listen to my poor little songs this evening, and let me do my best to amuse you?
23789And you will not be cold to me any longer?
23789And you will not be reconciled to this injured young stranger?
23789And you will not believe this?
23789Another morning dream?
23789Are our rooms ready?
23789Are the guests all gone away from the house?
23789Are those some of your passengers coming in the boat?
23789Are you going to direct me to a dressing- room?
23789Are you quite comfortable, darling?
23789Are you sure?
23789Are you sure?
23789Band of burglars, Joe?
23789Bob Munson-- oh, is it you? 23789 Bob tell me: how was it that we were found out?"
23789But could you not have helped her without inviting her home with us?
23789But for what purpose do you think she drugged your drink?
23789But how came you to be a sheriff''s officer? 23789 But how did you know we were here?"
23789But how now?
23789But how?
23789But is it not early to send them?
23789But my strange visitor?
23789But now, seriously, Lyon; do you really dislike or disapprove this plan? 23789 But she is very pale, and she limps as she walks; did you notice?"
23789But suppose some robber were to get into these windows, and be right upon me before I could run, what should I do then?
23789But that cart, Pendleton?
23789But what character does she take?
23789But what does all this mean? 23789 But what news did he bring?"
23789But when it shall be discovered, my poor fellow, will you not get yourself into trouble?
23789But where shall I find such a place of concealment?
23789But why should she wish to come back and forth to such a dreary, empty old place as this?
23789But why should that oblige you to leave the house?
23789But why should you wish to be anything else but yourself, being so charming as you are?
23789But why, I repeat, should you call this glorious vale the''Black Valley''?
23789But why, if you had met her before you married me, and found her free, why should you not have made her your wife?
23789But why?
23789But you know, I suppose, that they did accuse a lady?
23789But, Marse, how is Miss Sybil, and where is she?
23789But-- are you-- a gentleman''s skeleton, or a lady''s?
23789But-- as a_ brother_, I mean?
23789But-- how in thunder, came I here?
23789But-- the women of your family?
23789By the way, did you send for the coroner, sir?
23789Captain Pendleton?
23789Come to market, I reckon, father?
23789Come, is it not so?
23789Come, now; what say you? 23789 Consumption?"
23789Could you not have paid her board? 23789 Crow is quite well, Janet?"
23789Dear father, can you not comprehend that he is too proud to do so?
23789Dear wife,he earnestly commenced,"you believe that my affections are inconstant, and that they have wandered from you?"
23789Did you want anything?
23789Do n''t I know it? 23789 Do you belong to Farmer Nye, boy?
23789Do you expect any more passengers?
23789Do you really not know who he is?
23789Do you see that then gabble ind stickin''up through the trees?
23789Even if I should, what will my trouble be to this lady''s? 23789 Father, you have named every young man in the neighborhood whom you would like as a son- in- law?"
23789Fire?
23789First, what important families have you in this part of the country?
23789Gay?
23789Going out for a walk, I reckon, farmer?
23789Got entirely through packing, my darling?
23789Has she no one to pity her among the ladies in the house?
23789Has the murderer been discovered? 23789 Have I been gone long?
23789He is wealthy, then?
23789He sent you to me?
23789How are you enjoying yourself?
23789How can that be? 23789 How did I know it was a lady?
23789How did you know all this, boy?
23789How ever did you get that along the narrow path through the thicket, Joe?
23789How far did you follow them?
23789How is it that I was not awakened before?
23789How long will it take you to reach your beautiful home?
23789How shall we ever find our way?
23789How so?
23789How the deuce came I here?
23789How was it that you found us?
23789How? 23789 How?
23789How? 23789 Hum, ha, yes; well, and where is her husband?"
23789I linger here,she cried,"while they-- Where are they, the traitor and his temptress?
23789I may be so,replied Mr. Berners with an arch smile,"but how will your proud neighbors receive this questionable stranger?"
23789I think it was very improper; do n''t you?
23789I? 23789 Impossible is it?"
23789In the first place, how is your wife, and how does she sustain herself under this overwhelming disaster?
23789In the name of Heaven, Sybil, what now?
23789In the name of heaven, then, what has befallen us all?
23789Is anybody hurt?
23789Is it possible, that this pretty little fool can really be pleased with me, and pained by my neglect?
23789Is it possible?
23789Is this enchantment?
23789Is this true? 23789 Is your father going to eat his breakfast with you?"
23789It does remind one of Dante''s descriptions of the''Entrance into the Infernal Regions,''does it not?
23789It was black enough last night, was it not?
23789Joe, how far are we from the Haunted Chapel?
23789Look, is he still near me?
23789Lyon, can my mysterious visitor have hidden herself in that vault?
23789Lyon,whispered Sybil, in a deep and solemn voice,"Lyon, could she possibly have come out from there?"
23789Miss Sybil, do n''t you know me? 23789 My darling wife, have you lost your senses?"
23789My''putty''face? 23789 Name, sir, please?"
23789Names, if you please, sir?
23789No good? 23789 No poultry, eggs, nor butter?"
23789No; what is it?
23789Now then, Sybil, what is it?
23789Now then, tell me what has thrown you into this state? 23789 Now what am I to do in this case?
23789Oh, Miss-- I mean, Madam,--can''t you guess in your heart? 23789 Oh, for Heaven''s sake, who is that?"
23789Oh, my dear Pendleton, how shall I ever repay you?
23789Oh, why did n''t you follow her in?
23789Oh,_ do_ you mean this? 23789 Poor child, are you superstitious as well as nervous?
23789Really? 23789 Robbed and forsaken his wife?"
23789Robbers?
23789Shall I tell him the whole truth?
23789Shall I whisper my opinion? 23789 She has lost friends or-- fortune?"
23789She was in danger, then?
23789Sybil, my dearest, you are ill. What is the matter?
23789Sybil, what are you saying? 23789 That gipsy- like girl in the red cloak; who was bending over me, and staring into my face, just as you came in?"
23789The coffee is ready, Marse Lyon; but how about the Missis?
23789The old ruined church in the cleft on the other side of the Black Mountain?
23789Then all our friends heard the fatal verdict?
23789Then how the deuce do you know that he loves you, girl?
23789Then the character I shall take is--"What?
23789Then what is it that troubles you, my own dear wife? 23789 Then you found a ship?"
23789Then, if he loves you, why do n''t he come and tell me so like an honorable man?
23789Then, in the name of Heaven, what_ will_ do?
23789Then, my dear Mrs. Berners, if this was not incubus, what do you suppose it to have been?
23789They are very hospitable, then?
23789Travelling on business, or for pleasure?
23789Very well; what would you like?
23789WHAT? 23789 Was there ever such a mischief of a mistake?"
23789Was there-- a warrant issued?
23789Well, Mrs. Berners,spoke the Captain, gayly,"any more supernatural phenomena?"
23789Well, and what is that?
23789Well, and what then?
23789Well, and, bless my soul alive, have n''t you done it? 23789 Well, him and her is in there?"
23789Well, what?
23789Well, you see who we are now?
23789Well,inquired Sybil, seeing that he still remained silent,"what do you think now, Lyon?"
23789Well?
23789Well?
23789What about, now?
23789What are these people making of themselves? 23789 What are we waiting for, in this horrible pause?"
23789What bad news have you heard, dear Sybil?
23789What could Philip Dubarry say to all this? 23789 What could have ailed Sybil?
23789What do I want?
23789What do you see there?
23789What do you suggest, Pendleton?
23789What else?
23789What else?
23789What followed?
23789What is it you say, dear Sybil?
23789What is it, dear Lyon?
23789What is it?
23789What is that?
23789What is that?
23789What is the legend? 23789 What is the matter with you?"
23789What is the matter? 23789 What is the matter?"
23789What is the matter?
23789What is what?
23789What might it be sir?
23789What name might I have the honor of entering on my books, sir, if you please?
23789What name might you have the honor of entering on your books?
23789What news, Captain? 23789 What wit so sharp is found in youth or age That can distinguish truth from treachery?
23789What would you like to hear about, then, sir?
23789What''s all this?
23789What''s all this?
23789What''s the matter?
23789What? 23789 What?
23789Where can you find such an one, father?
23789Where do you mean to take us first?
23789Where is little Crow?
23789Where is she, then?
23789Where is that chapel of which you speak? 23789 Where the deuce am I to go after them, when there are so many roads to choose from?"
23789Where? 23789 Where?"
23789Where?
23789White Cat?
23789Who are you? 23789 Who dar?"
23789Who did I take you for, is it? 23789 Who is he?
23789Who is she? 23789 Who says I can?"
23789Who was he?
23789Who was who, dear Sybil? 23789 Who, then, is she?"
23789Who, who has done this fiendish deed?
23789Who, who has done this?
23789Who,_ he_? 23789 Who,_ me_?
23789Who? 23789 Who?"
23789Whom did you leave there?
23789Why do you think so?
23789Why have you done that?
23789Why should I take refuge in flight? 23789 Why were you not waltzing?"
23789Why, if you were not afraid of the Devil, why should you shrink from Death?
23789Why, love, what is the matter?
23789Why, my dear Sybil, what on earth do you mean?
23789Why, what''s the matter now, Miss Tabby?
23789Why, what''s the matter now?
23789Why, where did you get this?
23789Why? 23789 Why?
23789Why? 23789 Why?
23789Why?
23789Will you not remain with us?
23789With the Evil One for a pattern, eh? 23789 Would not the''Valley of the Pyrotechnics''do as well?"
23789Would they not be likely to make straight for the east and a seaport?
23789Would you shed each other''s blood so recklessly? 23789 Yet withal you believe me to be a man of truthful words?"
23789Yet you must have observed something out of the common about our party?
23789You are Mrs. Sybil Berners of Black Hall?
23789You come from Captain Pendleton? 23789 You come from far?"
23789You have got all you will need on your journey, have you not?
23789You have your pocket compass?
23789You know exactly where it is; you have been there, perhaps?
23789You know this injured lady, then?
23789You may be able to protect yourself from all others, but can you always protect yourself_ from yourself_?
23789You? 23789 Your daughter, I reckon, farmer?"
23789Your face seems familiar; but--"But you do n''t recollect it? 23789 _ Do n''t_ I see it?
23789_ What?_demanded Mr. Berners, gathering his brows into a frown.
23789_ You?_ Why you took the very means to reveal your self, wearing a dress so perfectly adapted to your nature. 23789 A guest of the house?
23789AMBROSE-- Where be these maskers, fool?
23789Against whom must this verdict be given?
23789Am I not right?"
23789Am I not to have the freedom of that fine estate?"
23789And by the way, have you the money and jewels safe?"
23789And by the way, talking of that, have you seen any more apparitions?
23789And do you remember the reaction?
23789And no clue to the robbers?"
23789And now, in the hurry, have you decided upon your route?"
23789And shall_ she_ live to bloom and smile and brighten in the sunshine of his love, while I moulder away in the earth?
23789And then?"
23789And this lady is still with them?"
23789And what do you think old Monica answered?''
23789And what sort of an affair is it to be?"
23789And why should I seek to detain you?
23789And wo n''t that be good?"
23789And you?"
23789And you?"
23789Anything else?"
23789Are they treading on your feet?"
23789Are you a gentleman''s death, or a lady''s?"
23789Are you ready?"
23789Are you thinking of ghosts?"
23789At length Captain Pendleton came up, and mistaking her for his sister, said:"Sulking still, Trix?"
23789At length, Sybil heard her inquire:"Where is your wife?
23789At what hour may we go on board, this evening?"
23789Berners?"
23789Berners?"
23789Berners?"
23789Berners?"
23789Berners?"
23789Besides, what could harm you?
23789Blondelle?"
23789Boy, do you know which road they took?"
23789But fled whither?
23789But he held her in a fast, loving embrace, murmuring still:"Sybil, you must tell me what troubles you?"
23789But how on earth will you contrive to costume and impersonate the consuming element?"
23789But now, dear Sybil, let me hear what fantastic shape you will assume at this witches''dance?"
23789But now, talking of open vaults, have you brought the crowbar to force the door, sir?"
23789But tell me, Pendleton, has our flight been discovered yet?"
23789But tell me, my good man, are we missed yet?
23789But what are words?
23789But what particular instance of wickedness frets your soul now?"
23789But when do you propose this affair to come off?"
23789But who and what besides heiress and beauty was Sybil Berners?
23789But who is he, unhappy child?
23789But you, in the face of this overwhelming evidence-- you believe her to be innocent?"
23789But your horse?
23789But, Joe, what has Miss Tabby got for supper?"
23789But-- but----""But what, my darling?"
23789Captain Pendleton, will you oblige me by despatching a messenger to Coroner Taylor at Blackville?"
23789Come, Joe, are you ready?"
23789Come, what have you to say to this?"
23789Common name, eh, landlord, and from a big city?
23789Could he refuse her request?
23789Do n''t even old Purley know it, ever since he first clapped eyes on your face?"
23789Do n''t everybody with any sense know it?
23789Do n''t you hear something?"
23789Do n''t you see the awful danger of your innocent wife?"
23789Do n''t you see they are making right for the ship?"
23789Do you know that I am really afraid of her?"
23789Do you not know, dear, that you are unique?
23789Do you not see them?''
23789Do you remember how unreasonably gay we all were at supper last evening?
23789Do you see him anywhere?"
23789Does any one know her?"
23789Does such a one really exist?"
23789Does the child squall?
23789Farmer, whom did you take us for?"
23789For where, indeed, can she go?
23789Gentleman, or lady, if your honor pleases?"
23789Gentleman, or lady, please?"
23789Going to market?"
23789Had they who cavilled at his high- placed love but known the truth; how she whom he so worshipped, on her part, adored him?
23789Has any one inquired for us?"
23789Has any trace been discovered of the murderer?"
23789Has the coroner come?
23789Have I slept so late as this?
23789Have we a friend in one of our captors?"
23789Have you any memory of a poor boy you used to help, named Bob Munson?"
23789Have you any oysters?"
23789Have you heard any bad news?"
23789He went and took her in his arms, saying more gently than before:"Sybil, what is it?"
23789Her heart pang may have come of a false fear, or a true one; who could then tell?
23789How came this man Joe here?"
23789How can I harm you?
23789How could I see in this dim light?
23789How could one so gentle as yourself offend any one?"
23789How in the world, then, can you know whether she will accept you or not?
23789How is it at the house?
23789How is this?
23789How many will be wanted?
23789How shall we contrive to pass the time until then?"
23789I have caught you, have I?
23789I inquired,''Seen who?''
23789I look as if I was likely to be-- do I not?
23789I shall nab you, shall I?"
23789I want to know if_ that''s_ a compliment?
23789I will keep away from your husband, if I can; but how shall I know him?"
23789I wish it were to- morrow that ship is to sail?"
23789I wonder if I could hear of anything more to my advantage than the chance of helping to resky that lady as I have felt for so much?"
23789I wonder who_ he_ is?"
23789I-- I mean, to go to when they die?"
23789Is it ralely and truly her herself and you yourself?"
23789Is she deaf and dumb?
23789Is the murderer discovered?
23789Is there no danger?"
23789Is there not one among those whom you might prefer to all the rest?"
23789Is there one here who believes that the daughter of Bertram Berners could be guilty of that or any other base deed?"
23789Joseph, where do all these people expect to die when they go to?
23789Lyon, is this nightmare?
23789Lyon,_ when shall I wake?_"she exclaimed in wild despair.
23789May we go home?"
23789May we return home?"
23789Meanwhile where were they, the false friend and the fascinated husband?
23789Mrs. Berners, do n''t you know me?"
23789Never had any children but this, farmer, or did you have the misfortune to lose''em?"
23789Never heard the legend of''Dubarry''s Fall''?"
23789Now what do you think of that?''
23789Now what next?"
23789Now, how is anybody to tell what it is?
23789Now, sir, what had you to tell me to my advantage?"
23789Of whom are you afraid?
23789Oh, Lyon, are you sure it would be improper for me to go and see if I can relieve her in any way?"
23789Oh, does she know-- does she even dream of the awful position, the deadly danger in which she stands?
23789One of them jailers your partisan?"
23789Or else, why had she not spoken plainly with her guest?
23789Pendleton asleep among the gravestones?
23789Seest thou our home?
23789Set fire to you, would you murder an innocent man out of kindness?"
23789She lifted up her head and listened; controlling her voice as well as she could, she inquired:"Who is there, and what is wanted?"
23789She turned to her partner and inquired:"Do you know me?"
23789So you see, farmer, I am a widower, with one gal like yourself-- for I reckon, from what you said, you are a widower?"
23789Still the man hesitated, and at length inquired:"Why do you wish to speak with her alone?"
23789Still the wood is dim and lonely, Still the plashing fountains play, But the past with all its beauty, Whither has it fled away?
23789Suddenly a soft hand stole into his, and a soft voice murmured in his ear:"Mr. Berners, how have I been so unhappy as to offend you?"
23789Sybil Berners shrank in dismay from the excited woman, who continued, vehemently:"Do you wonder at this?
23789The coroner''s jury have found their verdict then?"
23789The elder of the two took off his hat, and bowing gravely, said to Sybil:"You are Mrs. Sybil Berners of Black Hall?"
23789The verdict of the coroners jury?
23789Then his sister inquired, in a voice full of anxious entreaty:"Clement,_ where_ is Sybil?"
23789Then how came you here?"
23789Then she turned to her husband and lowered her voice to an almost imploring tone as she inquired:"Lyon Berners, do YOU believe me guilty?"
23789This door as fast as it is?"
23789Turning to the Scotch girl, he demanded somewhat sternly:"And where were you when your mistress was being murdered?
23789Was this a nightmare?
23789We, too, who had every reason to be very grave and even sad?
23789Well, will you honor me with your hand in this quadrille?"
23789Were you anxious or lonely, dearest?"
23789What are you about to do?
23789What are you talking of, Lyon?
23789What bad news_ could_ I hear to make_ me_ weep?
23789What brought you here this morning?"
23789What can you do?
23789What cause can you have for weeping?"
23789What cause, indeed, have I to be so?
23789What chill could resist your warm draughts?
23789What could all these things mean?
23789What could these things mean?
23789What do you mean?
23789What do you think it is for, dear Lyon?"
23789What do you want?"
23789What does Kotzebue say?
23789What has happened to distress you so deeply?
23789What has happened to terrify you so much?
23789What has happened?"
23789What if he should speak of the young lawyer?
23789What is his name?"
23789What is it that you''ve brought to market, anyways?"
23789What is she?
23789What is this shallow- hearted blonde beauty to me?
23789What is this that you have done?"
23789What is this?
23789What is this?"
23789What message does he send?
23789What news would he bring?
23789What news?
23789What news?"
23789What on earth is the matter?
23789What should he do, then?
23789What strange place is this?"
23789What the demon''s all this?
23789What then had been the vision?
23789What was it?''
23789What was there in it to drive all the color from her cheeks?
23789What would you like for tea?"
23789What''s that for?
23789What''s the matter?"
23789What''s_ that_?"
23789What, indeed might Sybil, with her magnanimity and munificence_ not_ think proper to do for this utter stranger-- this possible adventuress?
23789What, then, is this favor, sweet Sybil?"
23789What_ should_ have ailed her?"
23789When they had passed out of hearing of the negroes Mr. Berners stopped, and turned to his host, and said:"You know who we are?"
23789When we all grew so drowsy that we could hardly keep our eyes open?
23789Where am I?
23789Where are we?
23789Where did she come from?
23789Where is Pendleton?
23789Where is he?
23789Where is he?"
23789Where would you like to have it?
23789Whether it is a tall woman or a short man?
23789Who are they?"
23789Who can tell?"
23789Who dares to accuse me?"
23789Who is she, Phil?''
23789Who is that mask?"
23789Who is this silent girl in the red cloak, I ask?''
23789Who is with her?"
23789Who now can be assured of her safety?
23789Who was she?"
23789Who?
23789Whom do you call"we,"you insupportable idiot?''
23789Why did you let me?"
23789Why do n''t he speak?"
23789Why do you ask?"
23789Why have you destroyed the cards?"
23789Why?
23789Why?"
23789Will not the smoke be seen, and lead to our discovery?"
23789Will you be our dear and welcome guest this autumn?"
23789Will you come now?"
23789Will you let me send my maid to help yours?"
23789Will you write it now?"
23789With all my heart I do!--Yet-- yet--""Yet what, sweet love?"
23789Would n''t it be good fun to keep a eating stall in a market?"
23789Would the ushers, Joe Joy and Miss Tabby, recognize their lady?
23789Would there be danger in his coming through the open daylight?
23789Would you oblige us with supper as soon as possible?
23789Yet who can account for human caprice, especially in such matters?
23789You know the''Haunted Chapel?''"
23789You say the door was wide open?"
23789You will not be afraid to stay here by yourself?"
23789You will oblige me?"
23789You wish me to marry; but, dear, dear father, I can never bring myself to marry any one but_ him_; and he loves me truly, but does not seek me?"
23789Your cards, I believe, are all printed?"
23789Your friend, my wife, Sybil?
23789Your heart has left me already; why should I wish to retain its empty case?
23789_ Do_ you not see what is to be done?
23789_ Had_ she gone suddenly mad?
23789_ You_ do n''t mean to say you believe she did it?"
23789_ can_ you mean it?"
23789_ for whose sin do we die?_''"Before he could make a reply, if any reply had been possible, she was gone.
23789_ who_ has sent you here?"
23789all right with you?"
23789and is it gone ye are, my bonny leddy?
23789and oh, above all, how_ could_ you come to take_ me?_"reproachfully inquired Sybil.
23789and where has she gone?"
23789another dream, vision, apparition?
23789any more spectral gipsy girls?
23789are you going to let me in?"
23789are you really afraid to stay here alone?"
23789best beloved?
23789can you ask?"
23789do they say that?
23789do you dare to mock me?''
23789do you mean this?"
23789do you so much wish to see me married?"
23789down here, or in your room?"
23789echoed Rosa, raising her eyebrows--"Gay?
23789had he murdered her and fled?"
23789has any clue been found to the murderer?"
23789have you gone suddenly mad?"
23789how can I help it?
23789how did ever IT get here?"
23789how?"
23789how?"
23789inquired Lyon Berners, taking the siren''s hand, and utterly yielding to her allurements;"say, fair one, do you love me?"
23789is it possible that he loves me less than formerly?
23789is it you, Mr. Purley?
23789is it you, Sybil?
23789is not this a beautiful morning?
23789is this indeed true?"
23789is_ that_ Mr. Berners?
23789no engagement?
23789or lent her money?"
23789or open vaults?
23789or shadowy coffins?
23789or shrouded forms?
23789or the nurse drink?"
23789or, consequently, whether it will be necessary for you to leave or not?"
23789pappy?
23789said Sybil, suddenly and solemnly--"Lyon Berners, do_ you_ believe that dying declaration to have been true?"
23789see what it is, dear, will you?"
23789shouted the usher, passing in this mask, and passing immediately to the next with,"Name, missus, please?"
23789that he loves me not at all?
23789that he loves this stranger?"
23789that there is not another like you in the world; and that I value you and love you accordingly?
23789then our carriage is waiting for us there?"
23789this was very kind and thoughtful of you; but was it quite safe for you to come here with a hamper on your back in open day?"
23789though we may not yet discover ourselves to each other, yet we are at liberty to form a guess of the identity of our friends here?"
23789what about her?"
23789what are those white things that I see standing among the bushes at the foot of the mountain?
23789what can I do to make you happy?"
23789what can you expect of a poor, weak,_ he- man_?
23789what has happened to you?"
23789what have you done?"
23789what horse did you ride, and what have you done with him?"
23789what is all this about?
23789what is all this?
23789what is it that you would say?"
23789what is it?"
23789what is this?
23789what news?"
23789what next?"
23789what?
23789what?"
23789what?"
23789when?
23789where were you, that you did not hasten to her assistance?
23789where_ do_ you expect to go when you die?"
23789whither?
23789who cares for such double- dealing wretches, who flatter us before our faces and abuse us behind our backs?"
23789who comes here?
23789who could have murdered that poor woman, and brought us into such a horrible position?"
23789who has done this deed?
23789who would care to claim sisterhood with such a wretch as I am?"
23789why ca n''t you let bar- rooms alone?
23789why so?"
23789why?
23789will you use your_ brute strength to hold me_?"
23789would you_ keep me a prisoner-- by force_?"
23789you have not fancied that you have seen it lately?''
28725''Ave you been asleep? 28725 ''Ave you got e''er a little boy?"
28725''Ventures? 28725 Afraid?"
28725Ah,said Beale to the old man,"''e knows how to get round his old father, do n''t''e?"
28725Ai n''t I never to''ave never a word with nobody without it''s you?
28725Ai n''t kiddin''? 28725 Ai n''t there some way you get furniture without payin''for it?"
28725Ai n''t there_ nothing_ else you''d like to do?
28725Ai n''t tired in yourself, are you?
28725Ai n''t''urt yerself,''ave yer?
28725Am I really Lord Arden?
28725An''if I do n''t get pinched?
28725And how can I find my cousins and help them to find their father?
28725And if I''m nabbed, what is it I am to say?
28725And not nick anything?
28725And now? 28725 And then?"
28725And what about Amelia?
28725And what about Lord Arden in the Tower? 28725 And when?"
28725And where did you spring from? 28725 And who is your little friend?"
28725Any more dreams?
28725Anyway, it''s not your business, is it?
28725Better?
28725But how is he the rightful heir?
28725But if father says you may?
28725But in the winter- time?
28725But is n''t Elfrida to have a chance to be noble too?
28725But suppose I just worked the magic and wished to be where the treasure is?
28725But what did it say?
28725But where have the real cousins I knew at Deptford been then-- all this time-- while those other kids were here pretending to be them?
28725But which is the way?
28725But why,asked the long- nosed gentleman--"why put boyth in bathketth?
28725Can you write?
28725Come along down, ca n''t you? 28725 Come to yourself, eh?"
28725Could I take anything out of this dream-- I mean out of this time into the other one?
28725Could you spare a trifle, mum,said Beale, very gently and humbly,"to''elp us along the road?
28725Crest?
28725Crutch?
28725Dickie,she said,"how would you like to stay here and be_ my_ little boy?"
28725Did any one ever live in it?
28725Did n''t you pick''i m up with the dog- cart, same as you said you would?
28725Did you sleep well?
28725Did''st thou find thy friend in thy dreams?
28725Didst never hear that all life is a dream?
28725Do I?
28725Do n''t you take on,said Beale comfortably;"I ai n''t said I''ll be in anything yet,''ave I?
28725Do you have adventures?
28725Do you live here?
28725Do? 28725 Doin''well, eh?"
28725Eh?
28725Father-- did you promise----?
28725Fifth o''November?
28725Fond of books?
28725For me,Dickie said--"really for me?
28725Give her a lift with her basket, shall us?
28725Got any chink?
28725Got the money?
28725Got the penny?
28725Got the ticket?
28725Got the''ump, mate?
28725Gravesend, thou knowest that,said the little cousins,"or hadst thou forgotten that, too, in thy fever?"
28725Gravesend?
28725Here we are again,said that tradesman;"come to pawn the rattle?"
28725How can we get home?
28725How long ago was it, all this?
28725How would it be,Dickie spoke slowly,"if I tried to see the Mouldierwarp?
28725How''d I come''ere? 28725 How''d you get it?"
28725I ca n''t go back on my pals, matey,said Mr. Beale;"you see that, do n''t yer?"
28725I ca n''t''elp what I dreams, can I?
28725I did n''t_ arst_ to come''ere, did I?
28725I never told you a lie, did I?
28725I say, what''ll you do?
28725I should like that,said Dickie--"but ca n''t_ I_ see the white Mouldiwarp?"
28725I was wondering whether you''d let me go down and have a look at it?
28725I wonder,he said, trying to feel his way,"what treason the ballad deals with?"
28725I wonder,he said,"if Deptford was ever really like it was in my dream-- the gardens and the clean river and the fields?"
28725I''d like it,said Dickie,"but what about the dogs?"
28725I''ll do it,Dickie said,"and then I may come back to you, may n''t I?"
28725If he''s there,said Dickie,"do n''t you think you_ ought_ to go, just on the chance of him being there and wanting you?"
28725If she wants to make a fool of a kid, ai n''t I got clever brothers and sisters?
28725If you could make up some poetry now,Edred went on,"would that be any good?"
28725Indeed?
28725Is it a king as lives''ere, then?
28725Is it coming?
28725Is n''t he?
28725Is n''t old Beale a funny old man?
28725Is n''t there any way?
28725Is that my name?
28725Is this Deptford?
28725It''s all very smart,he said,"but do n''t you never feel the fidgets in your legs?
28725It''s only----"What is it, then?
28725Know? 28725 Like to?"
28725Lying out? 28725 May I give the little boy my penny?"
28725May I have a drink of water?
28725May I ride in the pram, farver? 28725 Me?
28725Mean to say you can talk like a book when you like, and cut it off short like that?
28725Mean to say you''d cut and run if you was the same as me-- about the legs, I mean?
28725Mother?
28725No good?
28725No,said Dickie,"but what''ll you give me on the seal you gave me?"
28725No,she agreed;"but then if we could get Dickie back by doing a noble deed we''d do it like a shot, would n''t we?"
28725Nor yet no dealings with that redheaded chap what I never see?
28725Not Elfrida?
28725Not so dusty,said Beale, shining from soap;"''ave a look at my dawgs?"
28725Now lookee here,said Beale sternly,"do n''t you come this over us,''cause I wo n''t stand it, d''y''ear?
28725Now, is it likely?
28725Now, should I?
28725Now-- are you ready to do what is to be done?
28725Now?
28725Nurse, have I got a mother?
28725Odds bodikins,said the nurse impatiently,"how often am I to tell you that there''s no such thing as time?
28725One dream to another?
28725Parrot- nose for short,Dickie hastened to add;"and did you ever shovel snow on to his head and then ride away in a carriage drawn by swans?"
28725Pretty, ai n''t they?
28725Put_ what_?
28725Richard is asleep, I suppose?
28725See that bloke just now?
28725Shall I go up by myself to where he lives and see if he''s all right?
28725Shall I hurt you if I put you on my back?
28725She any good?
28725Should I think so?
28725Since_ when_, dear?
28725So they tell me,said Lady Talbot,"but how do you know it?"
28725Suppose you was to get pinched?
28725That settles it,said the second voice--"here?"
28725That the dog?
28725That was the man you ran away from me to go to?
28725That''s very flash, that what you''re doing,said Beale;"who learned you that?"
28725That?
28725The Talbots?
28725The_ Spanish_ Armada?
28725Then why did n''t you go back to that time and see it really?
28725There were three or four of them,said the gentleman in pink;"four or five----""What man, dear?"
28725This what you want?
28725Tired?
28725To let----?
28725Wanted you to?
28725Wanted you? 28725 Was thy friend well, in thy dream?"
28725Was your bed comfortable?
28725Well, I ai n''t askin''_ you_ to do anything, am I?
28725Well, I offered for to go, did n''t I?
28725Well, but how am I to get away-- with my crutch?
28725Well, then,said Beale more gently,"what do you go settin''of yourself up agin me for?"
28725Well, then?
28725Well, well, I''ll ask no questions and you''ll tell me no lies, eh?
28725Well, young man,said the stout gentleman behind the counter,"what can we do for you?"
28725Well,said Beale sheepishly,"what if I did?"
28725Well,said Dickie,"they was give me-- see?"
28725Well,said Elfrida in tones of brisk commonplace,"what did it say to you?
28725What address was it?
28725What ails my lamb?
28725What ails the child?
28725What am I to do?
28725What are they? 28725 What can we do to pay out old Parrot- nose?"
28725What could be greater?
28725What do you mean you do n''t know?
28725What does he want to talk that way for?
28725What for?
28725What for?
28725What is his name?
28725What is it, dear? 28725 What is it, my dearie?"
28725What is it, then?
28725What is it?
28725What is it?
28725What is it?
28725What is your magic?
28725What man?
28725What other?
28725What say, mate?
28725What should it frighten me for?
28725What sort o''wood?
28725What treasure? 28725 What with?"
28725What you open that door at all for?
28725What you think? 28725 What''s a galleon?"
28725What''s all that there?
28725What''s that there?
28725What''s the fare to Gravesend?
28725What''s this?
28725What''s up?
28725What''s up?
28725What''ud pinch me? 28725 What, weeping, my lamb?"
28725What-- me?
28725What_ is_ this place?
28725When shall I see the other Mouldiwarp?
28725Where are they-- the man and woman?
28725Where did you get these?
28725Where do you learn such talk?
28725Where do you want to go to?
28725Where else should I live?
28725Where is he? 28725 Where you been?"
28725Where''d yer nick that?
28725Where''d you get it?
28725Where''d you get that face, eh? 28725 Where''d you like to be?"
28725Where...he asked, hesitatingly,"where''s my...?
28725Which way you goin''?
28725Who would it be but me, little master?
28725Who''s livin''there now?
28725Who''s there?
28725Why do n''t you help me get out? 28725 Why not?
28725Wild?
28725Will you help me?
28725Will you, indeed?
28725Wo n''t you let me help you?
28725Wo n''t you mind frightfully, daddy,Elfrida asked during this long waiting,"if it turns out that you''re not Lord Arden?"
28725Wot''s the bloomin''row now?
28725Would n''t what?
28725Yer aunt? 28725 Yer father''s_ what_?"
28725Yes, is n''t he, mother?
28725You ai n''t afraid those Talbots will know you again?
28725You are n''t vexed because I forget? 28725 You cadged it, then?"
28725You did n''t pinch it?
28725You did-- did you? 28725 You do n''t look up to much,"he said;"warn''t your bed to your liking?"
28725You know a lot about it, do n''t you?
28725You know that other dream of mine-- that dream of mine, I mean, the dream of a dreadful place?
28725You like country best, do n''t yer?
28725You liked the flowers?
28725You mean the Mouldiestwarp?
28725You mean you will?
28725You pretty flush?
28725You really must n''t tell me?
28725You wo n''t keep a down on me for it?
28725You''is father?
28725You''ll lend me this? 28725 You''re from the Castle, are n''t you?"
28725_ Crutch?_the father repeated.
28725''Ave I bin run over agen?
28725''Cause why?
28725''E''s got a silver toy''idden away somewhere-- it only pops for a bob-- and d''you think''e''ll tell me where it''s stowed?
28725''Member what I says to you in the winter- time that night Mr. Fuller looked in for his bit o''rent-- about me gettin''of the fidgets in my legs?
28725''Ow much a week''s four bob a day?
28725''Ow''m I to wheel the bloomin''pram if you goes on like as if you was a bag of eels?"
28725( Got that?
28725A box, ai n''t it?"
28725A dawg?"
28725A great undertaking for a child?
28725Adventures?
28725Ai n''t I?"
28725Ai n''t she arst you to stay and be''er little boy?"
28725Alone?"
28725Am I the master or is it you?
28725An''I says,''Why not take to the road a bit, now and again?''
28725An''you do want to get out of it, do n''t you?"
28725And a horse?
28725And all''s strong again-- no bones broken?
28725And he walked slowly and heavily up the path and said,"Hullo, dad!--how goes it?"
28725And it_ was_ nice of you and I am pleased-- and I do love the pups-- and we wo n''t sell all three, will us?
28725And presently he said--"You once saw the treasure being carried to the secret room-- in a picture, did n''t you?"
28725And the Mouldierwarp said--"What is your desire?"
28725And the house would be so much stronger than me-- it would get the best of it, and where should I be then?"
28725And the verse?
28725And what price that there room you was talkin''about?"
28725And yet without his crutch, how else was he to get to that bath?
28725And you''ll let me help?"
28725Beale who did not believe in the dream-- did not understand it-- hated it?
28725But as he was only Dickie, he said--"Your name''s Beale, ai n''t it?"
28725But how had Elfrida known?
28725But how?
28725But in the spring-- when the weather gets a bit open-- what d''you say to shutting up the little''ouse and taking the road for a bit?
28725But she was also quite truthful, and when Edred said in an ashamed, muffled voice,"Is it all right, do you think?"
28725But we do n''t often use''em--''cause why?
28725But what do these doctors know of babes?
28725But you''ll tell me the minute you can, wo n''t you?
28725But--"We''ll be beggars, you mean?"
28725CHAPTER IV WHICH WAS THE DREAM?
28725Can I, now?"
28725Can you forgive me?
28725Come along down and fetch me a ha''porth o''wood-- I ca n''t get the kettle to boil without a fire, can I?"
28725Coming?"
28725Could he really trust Amelia?
28725Could it be that she had dreams like his, and in those dreams visited later times when all this was matter of history?
28725Could it be that some one was trying to get in to help him?
28725Could this man, whose hair was only just touched with gray, be hundreds of years old?
28725Crost the road there?
28725Dickie asked, sitting up, alert in a moment;"not a dawg?
28725Dickie darling, how did you hurt your foot?"
28725Dickie turned a little paler and said,"Why police?
28725Dickie, after some reflection, said,"D''jever''ear of Here Ward?"
28725Dickie, you''ll come home to tea with us, wo n''t you?"
28725Did n''t Lady Talbot ask me to be her boy-- and did n''t I cut straight back to you?
28725Did n''t you notice any difference in them?
28725Did n''t you notice the tea tasted quite different from what it does anywhere else?
28725Different, I mean, from the Edred and Elfrida you''ve been used to?"
28725Do n''t you feel responsible any more?"
28725Do n''t you know?"
28725Do n''t you remember you can only get at the Mouldiestwarp by a noble deed?
28725Do you want to know what sticks they bought?
28725Done?
28725Dost mean to tell me the fever has mazed thy poor brains till thou do n''t know that thy name''s Richard----?"
28725Eh, matey?"
28725Even if he got out, how could he find his cousins?
28725Ever been on the boat?"
28725Ever seed the sea?"
28725Father at Gravesend?
28725From what they were at Deptford?"
28725Ha, my cure pleases thee?
28725Had he dropped it somewhere?
28725Had his aunt found them and taken them away?
28725Hast thou forgotten that?
28725Have n''t we seemed odd to you at all?
28725Have you ever played with mother- of- pearl card counters?
28725Have you ever slept out- of- doors?
28725He bowed in a courtly manner, and said--"What can I do for you to- day, Richard Lord Arden?"
28725He felt it had been the wrong thing to say, when Elfrida answered in surprised tones--"Do n''t you know?
28725He took his clay pipe out of his mouth to say--"What''s up, matey?
28725How could he get out?
28725How could he get to Gravesend without a crutch?
28725How did she know?
28725How in thunder can I get on with my digging with you''owlin''yer''ead off?"
28725How long would your father wish to keep his house and his castle if he knew that they belonged to some one else?"
28725Hurry up, ca n''t you?"
28725I ai n''t done nothing wrong writin''what you telled me?"
28725I ai n''t''it yer, have I, like what yer aunt do?
28725I did n''t tell you, did I, we passed close longside our old''ome that time we slep''among the furze bushes?
28725I suppose so,"said Edred grumpily;"fire away, ca n''t you?"
28725I''ave no father nor yet mother to be uneasy''( Can you spell''uneasy''?
28725If one could get a lift?
28725If she had n''t and they were still there, would it not be wise to get them at once?
28725If the police were set to find out"where he was and what he was doing?"...
28725Is it a bargain?"
28725Is it a hospital?
28725It said briskly--"Now, then, where do you want to go to?"
28725Joe,"she whispered,"you there?"
28725Know what?"
28725Lay up for a rainy day, eh?
28725Let''s get to bed, sha n''t us?"
28725Little surprise for''i m, eh?
28725Look here, you just come and live''ere,''Melia-- see?
28725Lost your way?"
28725May I?"
28725Might a passed''i m in a crowd-- see?"
28725Might n''t that----?"
28725No cadging?"
28725Now is it?"
28725Old Beale said--"Why did n''t you ask me?
28725Or had he and Markham, in the hurry of that twilight dressing, forgotten to put it on?
28725Or should he, if he could, climb up and hide on the boxes and take his chance of discovery on the lift?
28725Or was he that boy with the other name whose father was a knight, and who lived in a house in Deptford with green trees outside the windows?
28725Or was the other the dream?"
28725Parados?"
28725Quite at the beginning, did n''t we, Elf?"
28725Rosenberg?"
28725See him?"
28725See''i m?
28725See?
28725See?
28725See?
28725See?
28725See?
28725See?"
28725See?"
28725See?"
28725See?"
28725See?"
28725Shall we go?"
28725Should he ask for a lift, when the carter came out of the"Marquis"?
28725So Dickie made the crossed triangles of moon- seeds and he and his cousins stood in it and Dickie said,"Please can we see the Mouldierwarp?"
28725So- and- so?"
28725Somewheres where nobody ca n''t say,''What you up to?''
28725Still he must say something, so he said--"Are there more verses?"
28725Suppose Dickie was not at Beale''s?
28725Suppose he gave them up-- the priceless possessions?
28725Suppose he went away to that sure retreat that was still left him-- the past?
28725Suppose we work the magic and just ask to see him?"
28725Supposen they was to nab you-- what''ud you say?"
28725Sure?
28725Take your Bible?"
28725Tell me all about myself, will you, Nurse?"
28725That was hard, was n''t it?
28725That wo n''t frighten you, will it?"
28725That''s just what I''m a- saying, ai n''t it?
28725That''s the way it is, ai n''t it?
28725The air tastes good, do n''t it?
28725The lady fumbled in her pocket, and the little girl said to Dickie--"Where are all your toys?"
28725The man''s manner was so kind and hearty, the whole adventure was so wonderful and new...."Is it country where you going?"
28725Then how''s us to get a honest living?
28725Then the Mouldiwarp said--"What brings you here?"
28725Then,"Does it hurt you-- walking?"
28725There''s a bit of the sofer leg left, ai n''t there?"
28725They are not so bad,"he added, more willing to prize them now that they were his( things do look different when they are your own, do n''t they?).
28725Think you can stick it?
28725Twenty- four shillings a week for a chap an''''is nipper ai n''t so dusty, farver, is it?
28725WHICH WAS THE DREAM?
28725Want to pawn the rattle, eh?"
28725Was he Dickie Harding who had lived at New Cross, and sown the Artistic Parrot Seed, and taken the open road with Mr. Beale?
28725We ai n''t done so much walkin''lately,''ave us?"
28725We pays our own way?
28725We were saying,_ could_ it be you?
28725We''ve''ad some good times here in our time, farver, ai n''t us?"
28725Well, was Richard Lord Arden to be afraid of exile-- or of anything else?
28725Well, what am I to do?"
28725What ails thee to act so?"
28725What are you doing that for?"
28725What call you got to do it?"
28725What can I do to help?"
28725What colored horse would you choose-- if a horse were to be yours for the choosing?
28725What could he have meant?
28725What d''you say to stopping along of me a bit, my boy?
28725What did you say your name was?"
28725What do you say, matey?"
28725What if we was to take the road a bit, mate-- where there''s room to stretch a chap''s legs without kickin''a dog or knockin''the crockery over?
28725What offers?"
28725What was the use of telling Beale that he had come back out of the dream just for_ his_ sake?
28725What wonders could be done for Beale with those twenty- five gold sovereigns?
28725What would you_ like_ to do for your living if you could choose?"
28725What you say, matey, eh?"
28725What you say?
28725What you say?"
28725Whatever is it?"
28725Whatever will you do without us?"
28725When Markham came with the milk Dickie said,"You want me gone, do n''t you?"
28725When did you make all that up?"
28725When he said,"''Ave I bin asleep?"
28725When they went out Dickie said--"What did he want, farver-- that redheaded chap?"
28725When we met in the magic times I was like everybody else, was n''t I?"
28725Where are the others?"
28725Where did you get hold of me?
28725Where did you get them?"
28725Where had he heard that other voice?
28725Where have you put the crutch?"
28725Where''d ye want to go, my lord?"
28725Where''s the kid?"
28725Where?"
28725Who are you?"
28725Why did n''t you let on before as you could?
28725Why had no one else thought of putting the dog on the scent?
28725Why have n''t you gone?
28725Will he be beheaded for treason?"
28725Will you give me the fare for the seal?"
28725Will you go?"
28725Will you please advise me?"
28725Will you please take me on tramp with you?
28725Will you, Dickie dear?"
28725Wo n''t you tell us something plain and straightforward?"
28725Wo n''t you?"
28725Would they know him?
28725Would they remember that he and they had been cousins and friends when James the First was King?
28725Yet when he woke in the morning, remembering many things, he said to himself--"Is this the dream?
28725You are not a native of these parts, I think?"
28725You been there before, ai n''t ye?"
28725You come on your own free wish, eh?"
28725You do forgive me, do n''t you, father?"
28725You might do different coats of arms-- see?"
28725You wanted me to, did n''t you?"
28725You was his little boy once, was n''t you?"
28725You''ll trust me?"
28725Your obedient servant----''What''s your name, eh?"
28725_ You''re_ keen, are n''t you?"
28725and how often have I told you not to interrupt me when I am busy?"
28725dear Dickie, and if he''s really down a mine, or things like that, what''s the good of anything?"
28725he asked, to keep up the conversation--"the one on our shield of arms?"
28725said Dickie breathlessly;"oh, father, not a little horse?"
28725said Dickie,"and the little ones?"
28725said Dickie;"ai n''t they fine?
28725said Dickie;"is n''t that what you wear on your helmet in the heat and press of the Tower Nament?"
28725said a voice surprisingly in his ear;"that you?"
28725said the lady;"you miss your mother, do n''t you?"
28725the Man Next Door suddenly asked;"been hittin''of you?"
28725the little girl called out;"have you hurt yourself?"
28725what is it?"
38373Shall America,he asked,"be only an echo of what is thought and written in the aristocracies beyond the ocean?"
38373Why should I give up my thought, because I can not answer an objection to it?...
38373Ample provision was made for conventions in behalf of education and reform; but what was to be done for religion?
38373An opponent who feared that this would destroy private property was answered thus:"Has he ever heard of Pennsylvania?"
38373As Phillips was returning from this meeting, Theodore Parker said to him,"Wendell, why do you make a fool of yourself?"
38373But what becomes of people who have no parlours?
38373For instance, of servant- girls who have no place where they can sing or even laugh?
38373He finds an opportunity to introduce an enthusiastic panegyric on the victories of Napoleon, closing with the question:"What could be more grand?"
38373He went on to ask,"In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book?"
38373His contributors spoke often of the right of slaves to resist, and asked,"In God''s name, why should they not cut their masters''throats?"
38373How does anyone know which of his instincts and impulses to control and which to cultivate?
38373If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint, and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?"
38373In protesting against subordinating reason to faith, Ingersoll says:"Ought the sailor to throw away his compass and depend entirely on the fog?"
38373Intuition is plainly not an infallible oracle; but is it merely a misleading prejudice?
38373Is there no need of them on the day when there is more drinking, gambling, and other gross vice than on any other?
38373Libraries and museums are blessed places of refuge; but"What are they among so many?"
38373Need I say what day keeps our policemen and criminal courts most busy, or crowds our hospitals with sufferers from riotous brawls?
38373Nothing could be more complete for the working- classes; but what will become of us?"
38373One man could make as much cotton cloth in a day as two hundred could have done before; but what was to become of the one hundred and ninety- nine?
38373Should those who wish to rest as much as possible on Sunday sleep in church?
38373Their action called out the spirited poem in which Whittier said:"What marvel if the people learn To claim the right of free opinion?
38373Then an illiterate old woman who had been a slave arose and said:"What''s dat got to do with women''s rights, or niggers''rights either?
38373Was he the greatest of architects, every one of whose colossal structures fell under their own weight before they could be used?
38373What better light has he than is given either by his own experience or by that of his parents and other teachers?
38373What marvel if at times they spurn The ancient yoke of your dominion?"
38373Who can say whether unbelief, orthodoxy, or liberal Christianity is the legitimate outcome of this ubiquitous philosophy?
38373Why should every week in a democratic country begin with an aristocratic Sunday, a day whose pleasures are mainly for the rich?
37499Et si je fuis?
37499Have I displeased you? 37499 Is it true that engravings are being published with the title of_ Josephine Beauharnais née La Pagerie_?
37499Papa, kleba?
37499Why, for example, does the Grand Duchess occupy your boxes at the theatres? 37499 ''How many wounds?'' 37499 A week later the Emperor asked,When is the wedding?"
37499And that man,_ that unfortunate_( he was thus designating the Duc d''Enghien), by whom was I advised of the place of his residence?
37499Are those of whom you speak of this kind?
37499Are you not the soul of my life, and the quintessence of my heart''s affections?
37499Are you vexed?
37499Are your mother and myself nothing?
37499Bah, do n''t I love you the more?
37499But let us suppose that your object were already attained, would you stop at the foundation of the new empire?
37499But will not the throne inspire you with the wish to contract new alliances?
37499But with whom are you about to form an alliance?
37499Car le chasseur le voit à peine Qu''il l''ajuste, le tire-- et le chien tombe mort Que dirait de ceci notre bon La Fontaine?
37499Do you dare to say?
37499Do you remember my dream, in which I was your boots, your dress, and in which I made you come bodily into my heart?
37499Do you think, then, that I have a heart of stone?
37499Hate me?
37499Have I been mistaken?
37499Have the grand fêtes at Baden, Stuttgard, and Munich made you forget the poor soldiers, who live covered with mud, rain, and blood?
37499Have you then no longer any fortitude?
37499How can you think, my charmer, of writing me in such terms?
37499How often have you not spoken in his praise?
37499How, then, do you spend the livelong day, madam?
37499I am very anxious to know how you are, what you are doing?
37499I have heaped favours upon a countless number of wretches; what have they latterly done for me?
37499Is it because they have refused to do what was required?
37499Is it possible that you no longer love your comrade?
37499Is it so difficult to get a reply?
37499Is she so busy, that writing to her dear love is not then needful for her, nor, consequently, thinking about him?
37499Is this a joke, or a fact?
37499It is_ most_ difficult to gauge the details-- was it a political or a conjugal question that made the interview a failure?
37499Josephine, had you known my heart would you have waited from May 18th to June 4th before starting?
37499Love me no longer?
37499Might you not speak to her about mending her ways, which at present might easily cause unpleasantness on the part of her husband?
37499Most charming of thy sex, what is thy power over me?
37499Not a word from you-- what on earth have I done?
37499Some water?
37499The latter dreamily but good- humouredly asked,"Why, General, what are you doing in a lady''s chamber at this hour?"
37499Was it the"General"she played or the"Emperor,"or did she find distraction in the"Demon"?
37499What business of such importance robs you of the time to write to your very kind lover?
37499What do you hope?
37499What do you wish for?
37499What have you done with them?"
37499What inclination stifles and alienates love, the affectionate and unvarying love which you promised me?
37499What means the future?
37499What more can you do to make me indeed an object for compassion?
37499What on earth do you want?
37499What then are you aiming at?
37499What will he do?
37499What_ are_ you doing then?
37499When I exacted from you a love like my own I was wrong; why expect lace to weigh as heavy as gold?
37499When will you be able to rejoin me?
37499Who deserves them more?
37499Who drove me to deal cruelly with him?
37499Who looks after you?
37499Who on earth is the editor(_ rédacteur_) of this paper?
37499Who should be happier than you?
37499Why does she go thither in your carriage?
37499Why have you not found her some distractions?
37499Why these tears, these repinings?
37499Will you not seek to support your power by new family connections?
37499Would you have given an ear to perfidious friends who are perhaps desirous of keeping you away from me?
37499Would you know her?
37499Would you willingly augment my grief?
37499You are pale and your eyes are more languishing, but when will you be cured?
37499You ought to return with him, do you understand?
37499You will come again, will you not?
37499You, to whom nature has given a kind, genial, and wholly charming disposition, how can you forget the man who loves you with so much fervour?
37499[ 88] What solace to know its beautiful situation, its capabilities?
37499and do my sufferings concern you so little?
37499are you ill at ease?
37499do I see you sad?
37499how did he drag on his loathsome existence?"
37499tell me, you who know so well how to make others love you without being in love yourself, do you know how to cure me of love???
37499tell me, you who know so well how to make others love you without being in love yourself, do you know how to cure me of love???
37499tell me, you who know so well how to make others love you without being in love yourself, do you know how to cure me of love???
37499what are we ourselves?
37499what are your young engineer officers doing?"
37499what magic fluid surrounds and hides from us the things that it behoves us most to know?
37499what means the past?
37499you are surprised that I am so well acquainted with your affairs and those of that little fool, Madame Murat?"
35699Ah, monsieur, vy no lodge in my house?
35699And why so nimbly glide away, At our true love''s return?__ Ah, gentle time!
35699But I must get something to this cut-- Have you no''pothecaries here in France?
35699But how many did you pay for?
35699Casey._ And why so, pray?
35699Casey._ Come, Bob, what are you about, boy?
35699Casey._ Lord, your honour, what need your honour mind the bill now?
35699Casey._ Run, do n''t you hear?
35699Casey._ What d''ye say, honey?
35699Casey._ Why, did n''t you desire me to get your bill?
35699Come to sport here at the races, eh?
35699Do you consider where you are?
35699Eh, did I dream, or was n''t there a match talked of, between her and Lord Winlove?
35699Have n''t I left the mark of a dice box upon every table?--was there a morning I did n''t take a sandwich?
35699I am this moment the most unhappy-- in a word, you see me here an exile, fled from the hands of justice!--You remember my sister Rosa?
35699I no understand vat he mean-- Sir, de ladies----_ Sir J. B._ You understand the work for the ladies?
35699I shall go mad!--my daughter married to a fellow that I saw this morning in white shoes, and a black shirt?
35699I wish we were once upon the road!--this anxiety is tormenting; I long, though why desire, to see England, when all I love, is here?
35699I''ll attack Miss Buffalo, or what is that-- the grocer''s----_ Tall._ What, then you have thrust your copper face into Sir John Bull''s family?
35699Lackland, vill you dine vid me to- morrow?
35699Oh here comes Mrs. Casey, with her sedan chair, and brown musket, upon me-- what-- what shall I do?
35699Oh, if it had been Monsieur Lackland, how I voud-- hem!--vat you vant, Monsieur?
35699Oh, to take measure of me-- well, where is he?
35699Tell me, man-- I mean the gentleman that-- has that gentleman been to inquire for me since?
35699The company tumble in upon us like smoke; quick, all the cooks at work, do you hear me now?
35699Well, that is very good,''faith-- such a joke----_ Miss Dolly B._ Joke?
35699What''s glory, but pride?
35699What''s riches, but trouble?
35699Where is this fellow?--what has he done with Rosa?
35699Who''s there?
35699[_ Aside, and looking out.__ Tall._ What, are you making a set, my pointer?
35699[_ Aside._] But, really, Squire, is that young lady your sister?
35699[_ Aside.__ Celia._ Is that lady with him?
35699[_ Aside.__ Lack._ And how have you left all friends in a-- a-- a-- Throgmorton Street?
35699[_ Bows very low._[_ Exit LACKLAND, leading LADY BULL._ Sir John, I am so hurt that my mare should-- how is your collar bone now?
35699[_ Exit ROBIN._] But where is she?
35699[_ Exit.__ Enter LEPOCHE, peeping.__ Lep._ Vat, is he gone?
35699[_ Exit.__ Lady B._[_ Passionately._] Who waits, I say?
35699[_ Eying them curiously.__ Lady B._ What is he at now?
35699[_ Going.__ Miss Dolly B._ Stop, will you excuse me afterwards to Squire Tallyho?
35699[_ Imperiously.__ Robin._ What do I want?
35699[_ Loud._] Was n''t I a good customer, Lapoche?
35699[_ Makes a low Bow.__ Enter TALLYHO.__ Tall._ Eh, what, have you all got about the winning- post here?
35699[_ Mimicking._]---Where the devil are you taking us?
35699[_ Retires.__ Enter SIR JOHN BULL, in a passion, and ROBIN.__ Sir J. B._ You''ve been, sirrah, but where have you been?
35699[_ To MRS. CASEY._] Ma''am, pray which is the inn?
35699[_ With Concern._] But how has all this come about?
35699_ 1 Waiter._ Your honour will remember the waiters?
35699_ Boots._ Your honour wo n''t forget Jack Boots?
35699_ Colonel E._ For vat?
35699_ Colonel E._ How is my good Lady de Bull?
35699_ Colonel E._ I''m much oblig''d to him, but is he fond of play?
35699_ Colonel E._ Miss, vas you ever in love?
35699_ Colonel E._ Miss, vill you be in love de ninth time, and run avay vid me?
35699_ Colonel E._ Oui, vere have you put her?
35699_ Cook._ The cook, your honour?
35699_ Enter COLONEL EPAULETTE.__ Colonel E._ How do you, good folks, damme?
35699_ Enter FIRST WAITER.__ Waiter._ Mr. Lackland, madam; would you chuse to see him?
35699_ Enter LADY BULL.__ Lady B._ What''s the matter-- what''s the matter now with you, Sir John?
35699_ Enter NANNETTE._ Oh, Nannette, is the gentleman come?
35699_ Enter Second WAITER, stumbling in._ What''s the matter now?
35699_ Henry._ All gone?--Play, I suppose?
35699_ Henry._ And pray, my good friend, what are you now?
35699_ Henry._ And this, perhaps, you call honour?
35699_ Henry._ And, seriously, did you dare to think that I''d join in such a scandalous affair?
35699_ Henry._ But what shall I do with Rosa?
35699_ Henry._ I am enchanted with your gaiety, charmed with your beauty--_ Celia._''Pray, were you ever enchanted, or charmed before?
35699_ Henry._ Oh, you''re the little English fille de chambre to Monsieur Lapoche, the French tailor?
35699_ Henry._ Pray, friend, can you direct me to the best--[_Stops, and looks attentively on LACKLAND._] Is it possible?
35699_ Henry._ Pray, which is your best hotel here?
35699_ Henry._ Sir, I do n''t understand----_ Tall._ Why, did n''t I pay forfeit, and let the colonel''s Black Prince walk over the course to- day?
35699_ Henry._ Tell me, Rosa, why would you quit the convent?
35699_ Henry._ Where?
35699_ Henry._ Who are you, my little countrywoman?
35699_ Henry._[_ Coming forward._] This travelling by night-- thought to have slept in the chaise; but, not a wink----_ Nan._ Did you call, sir?
35699_ Jockey._ Did n''t I, your honour?
35699_ Lack._ And have taken the races of Fontainbleau in your way back to Paris?
35699_ Lack._ Eh?
35699_ Lack._ Her name?--Good family, eh?
35699_ Lack._ How d''ye do, Harry?
35699_ Lack._ I paid you eight livres a week, was n''t it?
35699_ Lack._ Make me your decoy- duck?
35699_ Lack._ Never mind that, that''s my affair-- By Heaven, madam, I''ll ruin your house!--d''ye hear?
35699_ Lack._ Oh, pray, Tallyho, is n''t that your sister Celia?
35699_ Lack._ Say?
35699_ Lack._ Well, has her money spoiled her dancing?
35699_ Lack._ What d''ye mean?
35699_ Lack._ What, little romping Rose, that used to steal our fish, and throw our cards in the fire?
35699_ Lack._ Where?
35699_ Lack._ Why, sir,--I have had money--_ Sir J. B._ And what did you do with it?
35699_ Lady B._ And, when it suits you to introduce us to his highness--_ Lep._ Me?
35699_ Lady B._ Ay, where''s Dolly Bull?
35699_ Lady B._ By this day''s running?
35699_ Lady B._ D''ye hear him?
35699_ Lady B._ Dear sir, which is the hotel?
35699_ Lady B._ Do n''t you see, the gentlemen are porters, Sir John?
35699_ Lady B._ Have n''t I hopes of Colonel Epaulette, for you?
35699_ Lady B._ Sir, you have had a loss to- day?
35699_ Lady B._ What, have you been fighting, Sir John?
35699_ Lap._ Eh bien, monsieur, vill you look at my lodgment?
35699_ Lap._ Lately from Londres, monsieur?
35699_ Lap._ Oh my dearest, sweetest----_ Rosa._ Tell me, have you seen the gentleman since?
35699_ Lep._ De pretty gentilhomme dat love a you?
35699_ Lord W._ Sorry to see me so, Henry?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Ay, that you must, indeed, my boy-- Lord, Squire, what has made you so tipsy?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Bless me, papa, what''s the matter?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Lord, do n''t you know?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Lord, sir, are you going to run away?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Oh, now I understand you-- but why scamper off, sir, when I''m sure mamma would consent?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Squire Tallyho!--Oh, dear, what shall I do?
35699_ Miss Dolly B._ Who have we now?
35699_ Nan._ Oh, lud, what''s the matter?
35699_ Robin._ What?
35699_ Robin._ Who, madam?
35699_ Robin._ Why, was n''t I sent for the French tailor?
35699_ Robin._ Will you come?
35699_ Rosa._ What shall I do?
35699_ Rosa._ Where?
35699_ Sir J. B._ And are you English?
35699_ Sir J. B._ But how shall I get this rook[_ To LACKLAND._] out of my pigeon- house?
35699_ Sir J. B._ How?
35699_ Sir J. B._ I wish I had left you, or myself there, damme!--what are these fellows doing with the things?
35699_ Sir J. B._ I''m very much obliged to you-- give me your hand-- will you eat a bit of mutton with us?
35699_ Sir J. B._ If he was myself-- I hope he''s a rogue--_ Lady B._ Tell me Dolly, how dare you take up with that person?
35699_ Sir J. B._ Me?
35699_ Sir J. B._ Oh, you work for a regiment?
35699_ Sir J. B._ Pay you-- what the devil, do you think I''ll give you fifty pounds, because one horse thrusts his nose out before another?
35699_ Sir J. B._ Well, what have you to say to my honest face?
35699_ Sir J. B._ What, and you''ve got rid of them all?
35699_ Sir J. B._ What, when the arables come back!--A guinea-- well, I do n''t mind as far as-- distress in a strange country, is-- what''s your name?
35699_ Sir J. B._ Where have you hid my child?
35699_ Sir J. B._ Who, Doll?
35699_ Sir J. B._[_ Goes to her._] Ay, and carry me up to the Lion, I like to dine in good company:--Who are you madam?
35699_ Sir J. B._[_ To COLONEL E._] Where is Doll?
35699_ Tall._ Ay, where is she gone?
35699_ Tall._ But how is your leg?
35699_ Tall._ Celia?
35699_ Tall._ Crying-- fudge-- show-- why, your eyes do look as if--- Ah, come now, you''ve an onion in your handkerchief?
35699_ Tall._ Now, now, there-- now, what''s that for?
35699_ Tall._ Oh, Captain, you made the betts against my mare-- when do we share, my Trojan?
35699_ Tall._ Why, did n''t you lay?
35699_ Tall._ Why, do n''t you know you laid me fifty pounds upon the colonel''s Joan of Arc, and did n''t my Whirligig beat her?
35699_ Tall._ Yes, Mr. Captain; who gave you commission to talk o''my thick head?
35699_ Tall._ Yes, but when I laid fifty he''d lose, did n''t you say done?
35699and bridles her chin; You impudent man, you, How can you?
35699and had n''t you your purse out just now to pay me?
35699are you above your business, you proud monkey, you?
35699but I heard something of this-- Can you be Charles Lackland?
35699can it be!--My dear, will you step down a moment?
35699did n''t you promise Squire Tallyho?
35699flush?
35699for what?
35699ha!--recovered the arables, or another old fool from Throgmorton Street?
35699how can you damn his Whirligig?
35699how can you?_ Henry.
35699is n''t that one of your sword and pistol terms?
35699is the lady this way?
35699live by entertaining a company?
35699look at him, says one-- at who?
35699me!--Damme, if I have any thing to say-- but, only-- how d''ye do?
35699my brother Henry!--_ Enter HENRY.__ Henry._ Is it possible?
35699non!--de prince?
35699not my own daughter?
35699or a day passed, without my drinking my four bottles?
35699says another-- that smart gentleman, says a third-- I vow, a monstrous pretty fellow, says a fourth-- but who is he?
35699such burgundy!--won''t you come and get drunk with us?
35699the Squire?
35699to be a scoundrel?
35699to fly from the only place that could afford an asylum for your shame?
35699to who, pray?
35699what man, d''ye think you''re at Dobney''s bowling- green?
35699what, am I thrown out here, old Hurlo- thrumbo?
35699what, and come here to the races of Fontainbleau, to sport your Louis d''ors upon the jockeys of France?
35699what, d''ye stand grinning at me?
35699what, then, my motley friend, I suppose you have a character for every country?
35699where is she now?
35699why with us stay, When absent love we mourn?
38596''Have you,''he said delicately,''gone on at all with literature?'' 38596 ''Have you-- published anything?''
38596And now, where shall we go? 38596 Maid, Wife, or Widow,"a clever little story, is an"Episode of the''66 War in Germany";"Which Shall it Be?"
38596What are you doing?
38596What are you going to do with him?
38596Why not put him into the Admiralty? 38596 (Had we any more black relations?"
38596A stranger inquired of a solemn old gardener what was done to keep it so fine and smooth?
38596And who has not read and heard over and over again that exquisite song which has been set to music no less than thirteen times,"When sparrows build"?
38596Another is a comic lecture entitled,"Women of the future( 1991); or, what shall we do with our men?"
38596Do you go to consult her on a tiresome bit of business, to take a tale of deserving charity, to confide a personal grief?
38596Got any interest in the Church?"
38596In despair, one after another has taken to her an article, a story, a three- volume novel, a play; what not?
38596Jacob''), almost the first thing, asked of me,''Have you heard the story of Dr. J---- which has just scandalized this town?''
38596Need I add it was never published?"
38596Press Opinions on"WHAT WAS IT?"
38596The genuine novel- lover, indeed, feels somewhat cheated, for did not the author almost promise in the last page a sequel?
38596Where are the manuscripts, the"copy,"the"proofs,"which might reasonably have been expected?
38596Where are the solid, but dull, old, grey houses which erstwhile stood on this spot?
38596You are curious to know if Mrs. Lynn Linton reads and is influenced by criticisms on her works?
38596You venture to make some allusion to this fact; a faint smile comes over the placid countenance, as she says inquiringly,"Yes?
38596[ Illustration]_ Second Edition._ WHAT WAS IT?
38596_ How do you begin?_"Later on, a visit to the schools is suggested, and, escorted by your hosts, you make a tour round these interesting premises.
37888Will she refuse me when I work so hard for her?
37888About what time will you be likely to get here, and how will you come-- by coach to Keighley, or by a gig all the way to Haworth?
37888Again and again I have felt it for myself; and what is_ my_ position to M----''s?
37888Am I the person best qualified to make him happy?
37888And if not, is he a devil?"
37888And what is the inference drawn?
37888Are you any happier than you were?
37888Are you comfortable amongst all these turtle- doves?
37888Are you taking proper care of yourself, and either staying in the house or going out warmly clad, and with a boa doing duty as a respirator?
37888At last he came into the shop, saying, with some annoyance:"Young woman, what can you want with me?"
37888But again I asked myself two questions: Do I love T---- as much as a woman ought to love her husband?
37888Could I ever feel for him enough love to accept of him as a husband?
37888Could I, knowing my mind to be such as that, conscientiously say that I would take a grave, quiet young man like T----?
37888Could you come on Wednesday?
37888DEAR ELLEN,--Who gravely asked you whether Miss Brontë was not going to be married to----?
37888Did I say right?
37888Did he blame Mr. Brontë?
37888Do n''t you remember telling me to write such letters to you as I wrote to Mary?
37888Do you remember my telling you-- or did I ever tell you-- about that wretched and most criminal Mr. J. S.?
37888Does a doubt of mutual satisfaction in case you should one day meet never torment you?...
37888Have they agreed to let you come?
37888Have you spoken of it to the family?
37888How are you all?
37888How has it been round the populous neighbourhood of B----?
37888I wish I could say anything favourable; but how can we be more comfortable so long as Branwell stays at home and degenerates instead of improving?
37888I wonder what their sister would say to them, if they told her that tale?
37888If so, is he mad?
37888In what obscure hiding- place could the forlorn soul, whose cry of agony had stirred the hearts of readers everywhere, be discovered?
37888Indeed, what part of it was new to us?
37888Is not the furniture they have very decent?
37888Is this the usual way of spending the honeymoon?
37888Is_ Sharpe''s_ small article like a bit of sugar- candy, too, Ellen?
37888Man''s lot is far, far different.... Have I told you how much better Mr. Nicholls is?
37888Meantime, why do B---- and G---- trouble themselves with matching him?
37888Shall we go forward unseen, and study the approaching travellers whilst they are still upon the road?
37888So far I keep pretty well, and am thankful for it, for who else would nurse them all?
37888So sure was I of it that I ventured to say to him,"_ Monsieur est français, n''est- ce pas_?"
37888The churchwardens recently put the question to him plainly: Why was he going?
37888The reader of the story is disposed to echo the agonised cry of his wife when she asks:"Is Mr. Heathcliff a man?
37888Under what banner have your brothers ranged themselves?
37888Was he willing to go?
37888Was it Mr. Brontë''s fault or his own?
37888What am I compared to you?
37888What do you mean by such heathen trash?
37888What do you think of the course politics are taking?
37888What is her name?
37888What is the superstition?--about a dead body?
37888What, for instance, can I say to your last postscript?
37888Where then was this wonderful governess to be found?
37888Who can have forgotten her interview with Thackeray, when she was"moved to speak to the giant of some of his shortcomings?"
37888Who then does not know the salient points of that strange and touching story which tells us how the author of"Jane Eyre"lived and died?
37888Whom am I to marry?
37888Why did she thus go back"against her conscience?"
37888Why not enlarge her views by a little well- chosen general reading?
37888Why should we be otherwise?
37888With a paragon of a husband and child, why that whining, craving note?
37888Would Wednesday suit you?
37888Would X---- and I ever suit?
37888_ Charlotte._ Why are you so glum to- night, Tabby?
37888_ When_ shall I see you again?
37888or has it the proper wholesome wormwood flavour?
37888the Blue or the Yellow?
37888why tarry the wheels of thy chariot so long?"
38068And what''s the good of it?
38068Not''a Landlady of France she loved an Officer,''tis said,''nor''stick''em up again in the middle of a three- cent pie''?
38068Priests Should study passion; how else cure mankind, Who come for help in passionate extremes?
38068What became of the baby?... 38068 Where is Samoa?"
38068A very pretty girl with an affectionate disposition,--what more can be said?
38068And hence, how to sugar?"
38068And is the literature of our generation really slight and mean?
38068And what would have become of Fenwick without the mature Rosalind?
38068And, as a matter of fact, how valuable or vital would a Christian faith be that could be destroyed by the perusal of_ Robert Elsmere_?
38068Are these pictures of English and native life in India faithful reflexions of fact?
38068As to the secret of his power, who can say?
38068But after the spell of the wizard''s imagination has left us, we can not help asking, after the manner of the small boy, Is it true?
38068But how many would have recognised its superiority to the tinsel stuff of those recent days, full of galvanised knights and stuffed chatelaines?
38068But what would become of Mr. De Morgan''s novels, and of the attitude toward life they so clearly reflect, if they contained no women?
38068Can Sudermann have purposely set a trap for his moon- struck constituency?
38068Can we depend on Mr. Kipling for India, as we can depend( let us say) on Daudet for a picture of the_ Rue de la Paix_?
38068Does his sympathy with life desert him here?
38068Had Mr. De Morgan died at the age of twenty- five?
38068Had that been a raft on the Connecticut River, and had Huck and Jim been Yankees, they would have said to the intruders,"Whose raft is this, anyway?"
38068How comes it, then, that he could so often fob us off with languid, inarticulate twaddle?...
38068How do you know you wo n''t have a tremendous success, all of a sudden?
38068How does the case stand with the comedies of Dryden or with the novels of Henry Fielding?
38068I said,"What reasons made You call From formless void this earth I tread, When nine- and- ninety can be read Why nought should be at all?
38068If immorality be the cry, what shall we say about Aristophanes or Ovid?
38068If she had never met Bartley, and had married Halleck, would she have been better off?
38068If some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested, what shall we do with Sienkiewicz?
38068In view of what I believe to be the standard mediocrity of her novels, how shall we account for their enormous vogue?
38068Is He the Dearest One?
38068Is Shakespeare dead?
38068Is it possible that a book, like a dog, may be killed by a bad name?
38068Is it really true that her stories are equal in value to_ Adam Bede_,_ The Mill on the Floss_, and_ Middlemarch_?
38068Is it well that they should abandon Dickens, Thackeray, and Stevenson, for the novel in vogue on the Continent?
38068Is the_ romanticist_ Sienkiewicz an original writer?
38068Is this really a desirable state of affairs?
38068The absorbing question in every reader''s mind is, of course, Will John marry Lorna?
38068Those critics who saw it must have smiled, and shaken their wise heads, for had not the time for such follies gone by?
38068Was there ever a better formula for Mrs. Ward''s constantly recurring heroine?
38068What shall we say of her heroines?
38068What would authors give for a reading public like that?
38068Where had he found that extraordinarily vivid style, and what experiences had he passed through that gave him his subtle insight into character?
38068Who are the English novelists of the first class?
38068Who now reads Cowley?
38068Who was this writer who knew so much of the nature of dogs and men?
38068Whose Fault?
38068Whose Fault?
38068Whose Fault?
38068Why does Mr. De Morgan make elderly women so disgustingly unattractive?
38068Why is it that we are surprised in books and in plays by simple language and natural characters?
38068Why not you?"
38068Why should they live for ever?
38068and if so, what is the nature of her salvation?
38068are we to understand that she is finally saved by Halleck?
37722Can you read and write?
37722Has he yet any Jalpany or scholarship?
37722Is this all? 37722 Let us see the pearl necklace_ first_,"says Bhoopada?
37722The pearls are not smooth and round, what may be its value?
37722Ullungo( name of the maid- servant) what is the cause of this uproar?
37722What did they( bridegroom''s family) say about our_ dayway thowya_( presents)? 37722 What is your name, mother?"
37722What led to the wars of Rama? 37722 Where is Dundee, and what is it famous for?"
37722Who is that sitting before you?
37722( 2) what is their origin?
37722( laughter): A. pressing his adversary, continues,"What was the cause of the Trojan war?"
37722A piece of stone made into a face, or the silver hands?
37722A. asks,"What is your pedagogue''s name?"
37722A. continues,"What books do you read?"
37722A. drawing nearer, asks him to spell the word, housewife?
37722As I have observed elsewhere, no expression is more frequent in the mouth of an aged widow than the following:"Shall I ever die?"
37722At this time his mother asks him,"_ Baba_ where are you going?"
37722Bearing her message, one of them goes for the purpose but the mother replies, How can she send the Palkee except at the lucky hour after dinner?
37722Before going inside he thus speaks to the son: I hear Dr. Charles was here, what did he say?
37722Being pleased, Mahádev( Shiva) is supposed to ask from heaven what Brata or religious ceremony is Gouri( Doorga) performing?
37722Can Luckhee dwell in such a house?
37722Can imagination conceive a more dismal, ghastly scene?
37722Can religious jugglery, and blind credulity go farther?
37722Can we find traces of such catholicism in our Hindoo Shaster?
37722Did not your heart mourn for us?"
37722Did they express any_ nindya_,( dissatisfaction)?
37722Do you apprehend any immediate danger?
37722Except a mother, who can adequately conceive the thousand and one miseries which are in store for the daughter?
37722Except she that gave her birth, who would deign to look upon her with love and affection?
37722From what_ pajee_( mean) families have you brought these two females?
37722Gopeebullub-- Everything depends on the will of God, what can we mortals do?
37722Have you arranged for_ sastyána_( religious atonement)?
37722Have you seen the almanac?
37722He will get well through the blessing of God; who attends him?
37722He would have sternly replied--''And was not Baal, whose prophets I destroyed, the same?''"
37722How are your_ sassooree_ and_ sasoor_( mother- in- law and father- in- law,)?"
37722How have the women behaved towards you?
37722How many Hindoos are annually hurried to their eternal home by reason of this superstitious, inhuman practice?
37722However, he had still a mouth and a tongue, and he would again call upon her; he then called out aloud twice,"Kali?
37722I see he is very much pulled down; the times are very bad, I hear of sickness on all sides, when did he get ill?
37722If so, how many_ passes_ has he got?
37722Is he beautiful, amiable and high- minded?"
37722Is it written in the books that you should never touch the body of a female?
37722Is the pulse in its right place?
37722It is a common expression used by a Hindoo widow, shewing her contempt of life,"will she ever die?
37722Kali?"
37722No Rupees?
37722Rámkánto to Gopeebullub-- How did you find him?
37722Rámkánto, sitting, asks How is your father?
37722Rámkánto,( taking Mohun aside) Baba, what will I say?
37722The bustle consequent on the first interview after a long absence being over, Nárada asked the king:"O monarch, where did your daughter go?
37722The following may be taken as a specimen: Aushotosh asks Bholanauth,"In what school do you read?"
37722The god seeing this, is supposed to ask what girl worships his feet, and what boon she wants?
37722The king asked:"Is the prince a sincere worshipper of God, walking in the path of righteousness?
37722The parting exclamation on such occasions is,"Sister, when shall I have the good fortune to see you again?"
37722To this, Sabitri said,"O king, I have heard that your imps carry away the dead bodies from the earth; why are you then come yourself?"
37722Was not this a violation even of neutrality, and an offence, not only against the gospel, but against theism itself?
37722Well,_ Khobiraj Mohashoy_, please go and see how the patient is doing?
37722What advantage do they gain by such conversions?
37722What ancient system of mythology contained so many as 330 million gods and goddesses?
37722What do fathers and mothers wish children for?
37722What made Raja Bharti abandon the throne of Avanti?
37722What made prince Nala an exile from Nirwar?
37722What rendered deadly the feuds of the Yadus?
37722What sort of a_ gooroo_( master) is your Sahib?
37722What subjected the Hindu to the dominion of the Islamite?
37722What with such a big son, and so many friends and relations, it would be a crying shame if the patient die at home?
37722What would Elijah have said to such an employment of talents?
37722What young man would be so ungallant as to resist them after all?
37722When does the fever come on?
37722Whence is she now coming?
37722Where are the spices and clothes?
37722Where are the_ sidoorchupry_ and sundry other things for the_ Barandalla?_"Adding that there is no time to be lost, the Poojah is near at hand.
37722Where is the_ koomar sujah_,( pottery)?
37722Why do the heads of the_ Padrees_ ache for this purpose?
37722_ Bidhata_( God) you have ordained this for me?"
37722_ Yama_, Pluto, seems to have forgotten her?"
37722meaning thereby how many examinations of the University has he passed through?
37722nothing more?"
37722she gave birth to a female child_ again_, and what did she do?
37722what will I do?
37964Is it inconceivable that Nature should sometimes do things with an ulterior object, an ethical one, for instance? 37964 ( What would be said of the soldier who should turn his back upon the enemy for fear of losing life even?) 37964 ***** Shall woman leave to man no field at all of natural supremacy? 37964 *****_ Do we not pitch our songs too low, O sweet-- my Singers?_ CHAPTER IX THE IMPENDING SUBJECTION OF MANThe Earth never tires....
37964Again,_ Why_?
37964And do these two states alternate normally in the opposite halves of the brain, concurrently with the alternation of Day and Night?
37964And now upsprings a further momentous consideration: Is this cause and effect?
37964And to what end is it all?
37964And yet-- Have we reached such a stage of development that emotional considerations are more binding on us than material ones are?
37964And yet-- Whither will drift the Galley of Life when its rowers put their strength elsewhere?
37964Arrogance?
37964Boy- Work: Exploitation or Training?
37964But by what precise means?
37964But yet, in point of fact, what was it that inspired and energised the earlier processes, if not this same Divine Influx?
37964But-- whither is all this trending?
37964Do we, in sleep, when processes have exhausted our daily influx of Life- power, recruit this again from a psychical source?
37964How and why should disease thus have stricken these in mid- career?
37964How and why then did this happen?
37964How is it that the mother, who belongs to one sex only, produces-- and produces in about equal number-- offspring of both?
37964How is it, they inquire, that an embryo bred of two parents of opposite sex develops the sex of one only of these?
37964I Of what order is this Woman- half of Mind which Feminism seeks to extinguish?
37964In the exercise of what vital processes has it been fostered and furthered?
37964In what nursery of Human Consciousness was this fair and gentle blossom sown; to spring, to develop, and to make for gracious growth?
37964Intolerance?
37964Is Sleep a recession merely from the state of Consciousness to the potential states of Sub- and Supra- consciousness?
37964Is it an evolution of the self- negation and the tenderness of parents for their children?
37964Is the power held latent in one generation the potential of the generation following?
37964Is this dynamo re- charged during sleep from some Occult Power- station?
37964It may be asked: Why should woman forgo possession and exercise of faculties available to her, in order to transmit these to sons?
37964Nevertheless-- For how long after the clarion- note of aspiration sounded by Marriage should have ceased to vibrate, would the echo of it last?
37964Otherwise, why two reproductive glands?
37964Pharisaism?
37964Shall she not be content with her beautiful part as generatrix of Faculty, but must seek to be exponent too?
37964Since, in every equation of Science, an unknown factor reveals itself, why not candidly confess this to be a Spiritual factor?
37964The Subjection of woman by man-- What was that evil compared with this other enormity: the Subjection of man by woman, which is fast replacing it?
37964The burning wrongs of women?
37964To say nothing of the less constitutionally- sound, the Ultra- Feminine being, for the most part, a neurotic?
37964What are we?
37964What is it that we, seeing this condition of things at our very door, have, as women, to be so grateful for in male legislation?"
37964What is its significance-- what its explanation?
37964Whence are we?
37964Whence do we derive our daily influx of Life?
37964Whither do we go?
37964Who are we?
37964Why?
37964Yet how is this?
37964Yet what has been the outcome of it all?
37964what are they beside the burning wrongs of helpless babes and children?
34252Ah,he added quickly,"this is the street where old Sora Lena committed suicide-- and-- is-- is that the house?"
34252Ah-- and why did n''t she have proper settlements made?
34252And beautiful? 34252 And now,"she finally said, with a little suppressed desperation,"wo n''t you show me some of the Rhodian ware, Colonel Dunstan?
34252And still,suddenly remarked Marion,"you were not-- not--_very_ much attached to your brother, were you?"
34252And you think that to hear people talk about_ real, important things_ is a great delight, Miss Flodden?
34252And your sister, how is she?
34252Are n''t you? 34252 Are you going for a walk?"
34252Besides, after all,put in the millionaire in distraction about the sideboard,"why should Lady Tal want to marry again?
34252Bore themselves?
34252But why should you mind who buys your pots, so long as your pots are beautiful?
34252But,said Miss Flodden-- Val Flodden it appeared she was called--"mayn''t I-- couldn''t I-- be allowed to see those Rhodian pots also?"
34252But-- why should n''t one care-- doesn''t everyone care-- for-- well, good manners?
34252By the way, Lady Tal, will you allow me to take you to Rietti''s one day?
34252Do n''t you think it''s time for us to go back to the rest of our rabble?
34252Do tell me all about her;--has she a name? 34252 Do you know to whom it belongs?"
34252Do you mind coming in here?
34252Do you see?
34252Do you want to know about Sora Lena?
34252Do you want to know the story of poor old Sora Lena?
34252Does n''t it seem rather lame? 34252 Has n''t a pretty woman a right to be heartless, after all?"
34252Have you read that book-- the''Princess Casamassima''--Miss Flodden?
34252Have you-- have you-- never read at all methodically?
34252How long has she been wandering about here? 34252 I beg your pardon-- would you allow me to stop a minute and shift the bags to the other arm?"
34252I have been wondering of late why I liked you?
34252I have noticed her so often,she went on, with that silvery young voice of hers;"she''s mad, is n''t she?
34252I suppose it''s being brought up among the Yetholme collection that makes you know so much about pottery?
34252I suppose you ca n''t tell a fresh egg when you see it, can you, Mr. Marion? 34252 I wonder whether they''re fresh?"
34252If-- if ever you be passing anywhere near Eaton Square-- that''s where I live with my aunt,she said,"wo n''t you come in and have a cup of tea?
34252Is it true that you go back to town this afternoon?
34252It is not always easy, is it,rejoined Greenleaf,"to make things appropriate?"
34252Like what, Miss Flodden?
34252Make me a note of the main wrongness, and send me the MS., will you? 34252 May n''t I have the honour of offering mine?"
34252May n''t I really accompany you?
34252May-- I-- a-- a-- ask for anything for you, Lady Tal?
34252Mean?
34252My novel? 34252 Now, why did you think that, you horrid creature?"
34252Of course I meant in her statues-- modelling-- what d''you call it----"And then?
34252Oh, I do think cows are such interesting creatures-- don''t you?
34252Oh, her brother-- her brother-- do you suppose she cared for_ him_?
34252Poor little Clarence, he is n''t a bad little thing, is he? 34252 Really,"she asked incredulously,"are you speaking seriously?
34252Shall I call you a hansom?
34252Tal?
34252Tell me about her-- Sora Lena, did you say?
34252That''s a house they''re going to pull down, is n''t it?
34252Well, but if she''s got simple tastes?
34252What does the Signora Contessa command?
34252What happened?
34252What happened?
34252What have you got there? 34252 What will your novel be about?"
34252What?
34252Where''s Tal? 34252 Why do you do it?"
34252Why have n''t you been round to me yet, you savage?
34252Why must you throw that in my face? 34252 Why not?"
34252Why, what have I been saying, my dear thing?
34252Why? 34252 Why?"
34252Will you take me to that curiosity- dealer''s this afternoon?
34252With me?
34252Would you put this snuff in your pocket for me? 34252 Yes,"answered the girl;"is n''t it good?
34252You are n''t surely going yet, dearest?
34252You do n''t mean that you think the Princess natural-- you do n''t think there ever could be such a horrible woman?
34252You have children at least?
34252You mean more wicked?
34252You thought I had contemplated having Clarence myself?
34252You want stamps, I presume; may I have the honour of assisting you in your purchase?
34252You will let me show you the Etruscan things some day?
34252After all, how could Lady Tal see the difference between him and the various mashers of her acquaintance, perceive that he was the salt of the earth?
34252Ah, could he never, never learn to restrain himself?
34252All those years of work, of success, of experience( or was it not rather of study?)
34252And does_ she_ also take an interest in Rhodian pots, the dear, beautiful creature?"
34252And had he not always wished for that sister, that Emily who had never existed?
34252And how are your people?
34252And what did you say her name was?
34252And what''s become of that nice young fellow, Hermann Struwë, who used to be at your house?
34252And why indeed should a beautiful creature like that get married?
34252And,"she added, as they shook hands,"you''ll tell me some more about how it will be when everybody works and has leisure, wo n''t you, to- morrow?"
34252Anyhow, perhaps you will show me when I have gone wrong, will you?"
34252At the station?
34252But after all, they all talked very well; about interesting things-- real, important things-- didn''t they?"
34252But he really did n''t see the joke of being made conspicuous and grotesque before all Venice----"Sha n''t we go in, Lady Tal?"
34252But if a woman were secure of her living, and did not want things, why should she get married?"
34252But then-- what would become of luxury and so forth?"
34252By the way, that train the day after to- morrow is at 6.20, is it not?"
34252Could he be a Pharisee?
34252Dear old place, is n''t it?
34252Did n''t he look Japanese?
34252Did she know Miss Tilly Tandem, who had just been engaged by Irving?
34252Do n''t you think Mr. Marion, that would be more_ modern_ than your_ dénouement_?
34252Do n''t you think you may be partly responsible for this-- this little misapprehension?"
34252Do you know to whom it belongs?"
34252Do you mean an awfully handsome young Scotchman, who did something very distinguished in Afghanistan?
34252Do you remember the first evening we met here, a splendid moonlight, and ever so hot?
34252Do you remember the heron?
34252Do you see?"
34252Do you suppose all things would be equally interesting if one knew about them?
34252Do you suppose that our dear Tal is putting by money in order to marry some starving genius, to do love in a cottage with?
34252Ever tasted any of that fried pumpkin?
34252For a minute I managed to make you believe it-- it was rather mean of me, was n''t it?
34252Greenleaf found it too difficult to say anything, and, after all, why say anything to her?
34252Greenleaf was in an agony of doubt; he kept on repeating to himself--"Is she a Princess Casamassima?"
34252Greenleaf, take Miss Val Flodden to see the Rhodian ware some day soon; do you hear, Greenleaf, eh?"
34252Greenleaf?"
34252Had he not come to Venice with the avowed intention of suspending all such studies?
34252Had he not long made up his mind that she possessed them,_ must_ possess them?
34252Had it really all happened?
34252Have you ever taken snuff?
34252Have you ever tried to imagine what it is to be poor and forsaken and old?"
34252He had come to give himself a complete holiday here, after the grind of furnishing a three- volume novel for Blackwood( Why did he write so much?
34252He had not made love to her, so what could he deprive her of?
34252He has n''t got a wife yet, eh?"
34252He really meant,"Have you never received any education?"
34252He would n''t be bad to a woman who married him, would he?"
34252How did she come to know about this woman?
34252How have you got to know all these things, Mr. Greenleaf?
34252How on earth could he have been such a miserable worm?
34252I always conform, you know; only it''s rather dull work, do n''t you think, considered as an interest in life?
34252I mean all the connections between things; and could anybody get the connecting links if they tried, or must one have a special vocation?"
34252I thought it_ rather_ pretty-- don''t you really think it_ rather_ nice, Miss Vanderwerf?"
34252Is he really so learned, does he know such a lot of things?"
34252Is she really a lunatic?"
34252Is she your sister?
34252Is there any person who thinks himself sufficiently clever to understand me?"
34252It was as if she had said, Why should a Hindoo widow burn herself?
34252It was childish, absurd of him to mind; for, after all, was n''t Lady Atalanta equally burdened?
34252It would prevent one''s clothes fitting, would n''t it?
34252It''s months since I''ve seen her; why did n''t you bring her with you, my dear?
34252It''s rather hard lines for a poor fellow to be unable to find a sideboard ready made, is n''t it?
34252It''s rather nasty but quite good; have some?
34252Just now you thought I''d got a soul, did n''t you, Mr. Marion?
34252Mad?
34252Marion, on his side, gave a feeble stir to the mass of paper, and said, rather sadly:"Are you sure you left them on this table?"
34252Marion?"
34252Marion?"
34252May I call on them then, do you think?"
34252One makes pots of money in your business, does n''t one?"
34252One may learn all about that; or ca n''t all that, and style, and so forth, be put in for one, by the printer''s devil?
34252One ought never to take anything for granted, in the way of human insight, ought one?
34252One would merely say:''Dear me, what''s become of it all?''
34252Or does one get interested whenever one does anything as hard as one can, like hard riding, or rowing, or playing tennis properly?
34252Or was it going to happen still?
34252Or would it only be every now and then, just as with other matters, balls, and picnics, and so forth?
34252See, Teresina, this gentleman and I are writing a book together, all about a lady who married a silly husband-- would you like to hear about it?"
34252Sha n''t I stop that hansom for you, Miss Flodden?"
34252Shall I hail that hansom for you, Miss Flodden?"
34252Shall we go towards home?
34252She seemed to be playing on a gong and crying:"Does anyone feel inclined to solve a riddle?
34252Tell me, then: since Colonel Dunstan knows so many interesting things, why in the world does he live like that?"
34252That''s what comes of our not knowing how to earn a penny for ourselves, does n''t it, Signor Cecchino?"
34252The old peeress lolled out her Blessingtonian anecdotes; the Senator raised his hand to his ear and said"Beg pardon?"
34252The poor old woman did no one any harm-- why shut her up?
34252There was a little soreness under all this banter; but how could she banter?
34252There''s nothing so pleasant in this world as finding out_ why_ one thinks or does things, is there?
34252They walked along in silence; which Greenleaf broke by asking as in a dream--"And your violin?"
34252To conceal what?
34252To let the holy of holies become, most likely, a subject of mere idle curiosity and idle talk?
34252Two months ago?
34252Was he worse than all the other manly, well- mannered, accomplished, futile, or mischievous creatures?
34252Was he worse than_ she_?
34252Well, just suppose you_ were_ writing that novel, with me for a heroine, what would you advise me?
34252What did she want?
34252What do you think one might do to make things a little less dull?
34252What little romance could there exist in common between my eccentric painter and that serene but tragic Sister of the Poor?
34252What on earth else could she have wanted his sketch for?
34252What the deuce did he want with the friendship of a Lady Tal?
34252What was it all?
34252What were we talking about?
34252What will my novel be about?"
34252What_ did_ she want?
34252When was it?
34252Why do you?"
34252Why had he not guessed it at once?
34252Why have n''t you had any more strawberries, Miss Val?"
34252Why on earth had he done any of these things, much less all?
34252Why on earth, or rather how on earth, had he let himself in for all this?
34252Why should n''t we write that novel together?
34252Why should not the whole of society work out harmoniously a new and better social order?
34252Why, indeed?
34252Would n''t it feel like being one of the fish in that tank we saw?
34252You cross the big square, and then along the side of the British Museum, do n''t you?
34252You do n''t mean to say he was any relation of Lady Atalanta''s?
34252You do n''t mind carrying parcels, do you?"
34252You do n''t seem to have got sufficient_ dénouement_, do you?
34252You will write to me sometimes, wo n''t you, and send any of your friends to me?
34252and so natural, do n''t you think?"
34252and to whom?
34252but what had happened at the station?
34252exclaimed Marion,"what on earth is it all about?"
34252how difficult it is just to explain, when one is n''t a clever creature like you?
34252how_ can_ you be so rude to the_ gentleman_?
34252or someone else''s?
34252remarked Greenleaf, in considerable surprise:"you have n''t been to this part of the Museum before?"
34252went on the old gentleman;"is she as bright as ever, now she is married, and has she got that little_ air mutin_ still?
34252what had he allowed himself to say?
38448And when is all this going to happen?
38448But they will not deny us a confessor?
38448How so?
38448Surely not princesses of the royal blood?
38448Are they, on that account, nothing more than creatures of our imagination, set free by night and darkness?
38448But the murdered man was not satisfied yet; he showed himself once more to the president and asked how he could prove his gratitude?
38448Canst thou put no limit to thy thirst of conquest?
38448Cazotte?"
38448Do you see the Prince of Condé there?
38448Finally the victim was conducted into a dark room, where he was suddenly asked by a stern, imperious voice:"Do you not see that woman in white?"
38448Had not the same Academy pronounced against the use of quinine and vaccination, against lightning- rods and steam- engines?
38448He asked her roughly what she was doing there?
38448He stopped the driver and asked him what he had hidden in his wagon?
38448Laharpe now asked:"And about me you say nothing, Cazotte?"
38448Nor was this a solitary case, for on the same day a girl of fourteen, living near the city of Orleans, had asked her father, Simonne, what a king was?
38448Then he asked the girl what she saw now?
38448They cried out:"Who on earth has made you think of prisons, poison, and the executioner?
38448They suggest the interesting but difficult question, whether visions and ecstasy can extend to large numbers of men at once?
38448What have these things to do with philosophy and the reign of reason, which we anticipate and on which you but just now congratulated us?"
38448What then can we learn from modern magic?
38448When he asks if it is a good angel or a demon, no answer is given; but the question: Art thou the Devil?
38448and if objects were placed against the sole of her foot, she would often exclaim:"What is that?
38448will you not take time to translate the book?
37203''A man-- John G.''Mr. W. asked,''How was it given to you?''
37203''Can you say what rank?'' 37203 ''Is it not whisky or rum?''
37203''Is it not wine?'' 37203 ''Very fat,''she answered;''but has the gentleman a cork leg?''
37203''Were you a soldier?'' 37203 ( 2) What town have we thought of?
37203( 3) What town have we thought of? 37203 ( 4) What town have we thought of?
37203( 5) Is it hurt--? 37203 And you do not see any bridge?"
37203But how does wife''s brain know certain secrets?
37203By whom?
37203Can you foresee the future?
37203Can you name his illness?
37203Can you remember the_ time_ of the incident?
37203DEAR ARTHUR,--Has anything happened to you? 37203 Do you know Ansel Bourne?"
37203Does no one tell wife what to write? 37203 Does time run backward here?
37203Had Gen. Richardson, before he left home, promised or said anything to Mrs. R. as to sending his ring to her in case he should be wounded?
37203Have you arrived?
37203How is your head?
37203I replied,''Yes; is he thin or fat?'' 37203 Is it the will of a living person or of an immaterial spirit?
37203Mr. W.''We do n''t know J. G. Have you anything to do with us?'' 37203 Mrs. R. asked,''Are you a man or a woman?''
37203Now, how did I come to have my looms and driving- gear arranged in this particular way? 37203 Now, what do you think of such a vision as that?
37203Of what does he write?
37203Old Governor Stuyvesant?
37203Seventeenth of what?
37203To whom is it directed?
37203What day of the month is it?
37203What do you think of it?
37203What does he say caused his illness?
37203What have you in your hand?
37203What is he doing now?
37203What is it that you hear?
37203What is the matter, Marie?
37203What is your own name?
37203What sort of sewing is it?
37203What was it that happened,asked Prof. Janet,"when Léontine was so frightened?"
37203Where am I?
37203Where is Norristown?
37203Where is he stopping?
37203Who are you that writes?
37203Who is dead? 37203 Whose spirit?"
37203Why the mischief have you been so late?
37203''Is that all?''
37203''Well,''I said;''how much do you want for that piece of property you wish to sell?''
37203''What do you mean by that?''
37203''What does it cost you to live?''
37203( Signed) J. G.''"We did not fully understand this drawing; and Mr. W. asked,''Will J. G. try again?''
372031 came for her favorite concerto; was n''t it splendid that she could hear it?"
37203Accordingly he had to leave at once-- but before starting he said,"Where are you at this moment?"
37203Again it was asked,"Is it the operator''s brain, or an immaterial spirit that moves Planchette?
37203As Frank and the native were cross- cutting a tree, the native stopped suddenly and said,''What are you come for?''
37203Bernheim?"
37203But whence came the vision, and why to- day?
37203Can these statements be received as true and reliable?
37203Do n''t you see?
37203Do you see the picture?"
37203Does he remember who were present and what was going on?
37203Fairly studied, then, what does Planchette really do?
37203Frank replied,''What do you mean?''
37203Frank said,''Where is he?''
37203Has Hypnotism any actual standing either in science or common sense?
37203Having been received, how can they be explained?
37203How about the old pear tree?"
37203How much money do you owe?''
37203How stupid''the other one''looked while I took her apron off?
37203I had screamed and struggled, crying out,''Is he really dead?''
37203I said:"Yes; but how did you know she was here?"
37203If so, who?"
37203Is it one of my patients?"
37203Is there any possible truth in it?
37203Mr. W. asked,''What does the drawing represent?''
37203On my replying in the affirmative he said,''Can you mesmerize any one at a distance?''
37203On seeing Z. a few days afterwards I inquired,''Did anything happen at your rooms on Saturday night?''
37203Salt was first so tasted by the operator, whereupon the subject, C., instantly and loudly cried out:"What''s that salt stuff?"
37203The following experiments were also made among many others, Miss Maud Creery being the percipient:--"( 1) What town have we thought of?
37203There is inquiry concerning Telepathy or Thought- Transference-- is it a fact or is it a delusion?
37203Thinking some one might be behind the screen I said,''Who''s there?''
37203Truly what is this tenant, what are its powers, and why is it here at all?
37203We first heard a faint cry of''Mother''; we all looked up and said to one another,''Did you hear that?
37203Were you angry?
37203What are these facts which have come to the notice of students of psychology?
37203What do you want?''
37203What is her name?"
37203What is the condition of the patient while under the influence of this induced sleep?
37203What is the nature and what the method of this peculiar vision which has been named clairvoyance?
37203What next?
37203What next?
37203What of Clairvoyance, Planchette, Trance and Trance utterances, Crystal- Gazing and Apparitions?
37203What on earth has been the matter?"
37203What part did you think of first?
37203What part did you think of first?
37203What was the character of the apparitions or appearances which were presented; were they, properly speaking, dreams?
37203Where am I?"
37203Which of us is right?
37203Who is it there talking to me like that?"
37203Why did you leave so suddenly?
37203Why did you tell her that her apron was falling off?
37203Why do you look so frightened?''
37203Why should two of those present have seen his apparition, and two others have failed to see it?
37203With evident surprise he said:"What do you mean?"
37203You looked distressed, and in answer to my greeting and inquiry,''What''s the matter?''
37203said the doctor;"from what are you suffering?"
37203wo n''t you sit down?''
37203you said:''Are you taking your dinner?
37203|"Yellow... is it a||| feather?...
37174''And what is the nature of the seizure you speak of?'' 37174 ''As philosophers tell us,''she said;''and how do you know that a sight of my face would help you?''
37174''Can any request be more unreasonable?'' 37174 And had you the charm near you?"
37174And how soon does he come?
37174And how, papa, do you account for her finding herself on the sofa in the dressing- room, which we had searched so carefully?
37174And so you were thinking of the night I came here?
37174And what do you think the charm is?
37174And where do you mean to go?
37174And why?
37174Are we related,I used to ask;"what can you mean by all this?
37174Are you afraid, dearest?
37174Are you glad I came?
37174Ay, you see?
37174But do tell me, papa,I insisted,"_ what_ does he think is the matter with me?"
37174But quite long enough, I fancy, to recognize him?
37174But you did walk in your sleep when you were young?
37174Can you indicate with your finger about the point at which you think this occurred?
37174Can you point out where it stood?
37174Certainly; you do n''t suppose that evil spirits are frightened by bits of ribbon, or the perfumes of a druggist''s shop? 37174 Dear Carmilla, what has become of you all this time?
37174Did you remark a woman in the carriage, after it was set up again, who did not get out,inquired Mademoiselle,"but only looked from the window?"
37174Did you remark what an ill- looking pack of men the servants were?
37174Do you think,I said at length,"that you will ever confide fully in me?"
37174Does the doctor think me very ill?
37174Have you been long employed about this forest?
37174How came the village to be deserted?
37174How dares that mountebank insult us so? 37174 How do you feel now, dear Carmilla?
37174How do you like our guest?
37174How far is it to the ruins?
37174How long ago, exactly? 37174 How much did you give him?"
37174How so?
37174I almost shiver; have I been dreaming? 37174 I have not got it; how could I?
37174I hope you are thinking of claiming the title and estates?
37174I mean the body?
37174If he were to die the evaporation would be arrested, and foreign matter, some of it poisonous, would be found in the stomach, do n''t you see? 37174 In the hot coffee?"
37174Is there a chill in the air, dear?
37174Is there any danger?
37174It is time we should get him lying down, eh?
37174It is_ that_?
37174Long ago?
37174Papa, darling, will you tell me this?
37174Seen him? 37174 Shall I say a word to Madame?"
37174She called herself Carmilla?
37174Tell me all about her?
37174Then it acts only on the body?
37174Then you have been ill?
37174Was ever being so born to calamity?
37174We have a portrait, at home, of Mircalla, the Countess Karnstein; should you like to see it?
37174Well, doctor, what do you think?
37174Well, my dear Eugenie? 37174 Were you near dying?"
37174What is it?
37174What vengeance can you mean?
37174What?
37174Where have you been? 37174 Who can have a better right?"
37174Why does your papa like to frighten us?
37174Why should I not?
37174Will that satisfy him?
37174Will you forgive me, my dear, if I risk a conjecture, and ask a question?
37174Will you let me hang this picture in my room, papa?
37174You are afraid to die?
37174You are going to the Ruins of Karnstein?
37174You leave France, I suppose?
37174You were very young then?
37174You wo n''t answer that?
37174You wo n''t tell a friend, eh?
37174_ She?_ I do n''t trouble my head about peasants. 37174 ''Is that not enough? 37174 All things in the heaven, in the earth, and under the earth, act and live as Nature ordains? 37174 All things proceed from Nature-- don''t they? 37174 Another ten thousand francs: is it down? 37174 Are his night- shirt and night- cap-- you understand-- here?
37174Are there any Karnsteins living now?"
37174Are you really better?"
37174Beside, how do you know you should recognise me?
37174But into what quackeries will not people rush for a last chance, where all accustomed means have failed, and the life of a beloved object is at stake?
37174Do you now know me?''
37174Do you see, now, what I mean?"
37174Had she no trust in my good sense or honour?
37174Have I been too bold?
37174Have I offended her?"
37174Have you ever been suspected of walking in your sleep?"
37174Hey?
37174How can I get up just now and lock my door?"
37174How can we all thank you?
37174How could all this have happened without my being wakened?
37174How did she escape from the house without unbarring door or window?
37174How did she pass out from her room, leaving the door locked on the inside?
37174How did you come back?"
37174How does it begin, and how does it multiply itself?
37174How far on, sir, can you tell, is the nearest village?
37174I have pencil and pocket- book-- but-- where''s the key?
37174I then heard her ask:"Where am I?
37174I wonder whether you feel as strangely drawn towards me as I do to you; I have never had a friend-- shall I find one now?"
37174Is n''t it beautiful, papa?
37174Is the young lady displeased?
37174Is there still any soreness?"
37174Not know him at a glance?
37174Often, too often?"
37174Or-- or--_what_?"
37174Pierre de St. Amand?
37174Pocket- book?
37174Shall I hold the candle for you?"
37174Shall I say Madame la Comtesse?''
37174She said brusquely,"Do n''t you perceive how discordant that is?"
37174That is the point at which the sense of strangulation begins?"
37174Then turning to the old man with the gold spectacles, whom I have described, he shook him warmly by both hands and said:"Baron, how can I thank you?
37174There is a ruined chapel, ai n''t there, with a great many tombs of that extinct family?"
37174Was she, notwithstanding her mother''s volunteered denial, subject to brief visitations of insanity; or was there here a disguise and a romance?
37174Well, child-- eh?
37174Well, it all goes admirably?"
37174Were you ever at a ball?"
37174What do you say to hippogriffs and dragons?"
37174What harm could it do anyone to tell me what I so ardently desired to know?
37174What is it like?
37174What is it?
37174What is it?
37174What is this place?"
37174When did it commence?"
37174Where is your father?
37174Where''s the key?"
37174Whose clothes are these?"
37174Why did they not despatch me at once?
37174Why did you not tell him to get it in smaller notes?
37174You are certain you did not exceed_ seventy_?"
37174You would not wound a friend?"
37174_ Write._ Ten thousand francs again: is it written?
37174and after that she said,"I do n''t see the carriage; and Matska, where is she?"
37174do n''t you know me?"
37174exclaimed Madame, who probably thought the theme rather inopportune,"and who tells that story, my dear?"
37174then you''ve seen him?"
37174wo n''t you, now, consent to stand on equal terms, and do me the kindness to remove your mask?''
3741Can Britain fail? 3741 What''s in the name of lord, that I should fear To bring my grievance to the public ear?"
37411st, What is the original fountain of power and honor in any country?
37412d, Whether the prerogative does not belong to the people?
37413d, Whether there is any such thing as the English constitution?
37414th, Of what use is the crown to the people?
37415th, Whether he who invented a crown was not an enemy to mankind?
37416th, Whether it is not a shame for a man to spend a million a year and do no good for it, and whether the money might not be better applied?
37417th, Whether such a man is not better dead than alive?
3741All we want to know in America is simply this, who is for independence, and who is not?
3741And if not in the worst, why is it to follow at all?
3741And shall disaffection only be rewarded with security?
3741And what is a Tory?
3741And why not do these things?
3741Besides, the doctrine contradicts itself; because, if the whole country can not bear it, how is it possible that a part should?
3741But Providence, who best knows how to time her misfortunes as well as her immediate favors, chose this to be the time, and who dare dispute it?
3741But has any part of your conduct to America corresponded with the title you set up?
3741But how, sir, shall we dispose of you?
3741But there is another thought which ought to strike us, which is, how is the army to bear the want of food, clothing and other necessaries?
3741But to be more serious with you, why do you say,"their independence?"
3741But we know the men in whom we have trusted; can England say the same of her Parliament?
3741But what can this expected something be?
3741By what means, may I ask, do you expect to conquer America?
3741Can Bedlam, in concert with Lucifer, form a more mad and devilish request?
3741Can any thing be a greater inducement to a miserly man, than the hope of making his Mammon safe?
3741Can it be supposed that conquerors would choose to put themselves in a worse condition than what they granted to the conquered?
3741Can the country bear to be overrun, ravaged, and ruined by an enemy?
3741Can words be more expressive than these?
3741Can ye obliterate from our memories those who are no more?
3741Can ye restore to us the beloved dead?
3741Can ye say to the grave, give up the murdered?
3741Could this be a desirable condition for a young country to be in?
3741Could you possibly wish for a more favorable conjunction of circumstances?
3741For, why is it that you have not conquered us?
3741Has not the name of Englishman blots enough upon it, without inventing more?
3741Howe has been once on the banks of the Delaware, and from thence driven back with loss and disgrace: and why not be again driven from the Schuylkill?
3741I do not ask whether this is Christianity or morality, I ask whether it is decency?
3741I have no other idea of conquering countries than by subduing the armies which defend them: have you done this, or can you do it?
3741If you cast your eyes on the people of England, what have they to console themselves with for the millions expended?
3741If you could not effect it in the summer, when our army was less than yours, nor in the winter, when we had none, how are you to do it?
3741In the last war you made many conquests, but were any of your taxes lessened thereby?
3741Is he afraid they will send him to Hanover, or what does he fear?
3741Is it not common for an enemy to take every advantage?"
3741Is it worth while to keep an army to protect you in writing proclamations, or to get once a year into winter quarters?
3741Is it worth your while, after every force has failed you, to retreat under the shelter of argument and persuasion?
3741Is this a time to be offering pardons, or renewing the long forgotten subjects of charters and taxation?
3741Let me ask, sir, what great exploits have you performed?
3741Must England ever be the sport of hope, and the victim of delusion?
3741Must we not look upon you as a confederated body of faithless, treacherous men, whose assurances are fraud, and their language deceit?
3741Now, I ask, why was all this done, but from that extremely weak and expensive doctrine, that the country could not bear it?
3741On the contrary, were you not taxed to pay for the charge of making them, and has not the same been the case in every war?
3741Or ought we not rather to be blotted from the society of mankind, and become a spectacle of misery to the world?
3741Or what are the inconveniences of a few months to the tributary bondage of ages?
3741Or what more can they hope for than to wander like vagabonds over the face of the earth?
3741Or where is the war on which a world was staked till now?
3741Or, has a land of liberty so many charms, that to be a doorkeeper in it is better than to be an English minister of state?
3741Or, if America is lost, is it manly to sob over it like a child for its rattle, and invite the laughter of the world by declarations of disgrace?
3741Or, if obtained, what can it amount to, but new disgraces, contentions and quarrels?
3741Or, rather, would it not be an insult to reason, to put the question?
3741Or, what encouragement is there left to continue throwing good money after bad?
3741Ought we ever after to be considered as a part of the human race?
3741Perhaps it may be asked, why was the motion passed, if there was at the same time a plan to aggravate the Americans not to listen to it?
3741The writer asks:"Have not the Americans been driven to this frenzy?
3741To put a plain question; do you consider yourselves men or devils?
3741We ask, what powers?
3741We began the war with this kind of spirit, why not end it with the same?
3741What advantages does England derive from any achievements of yours?
3741What are the little sufferings of the present day, compared with the hardships that are past?
3741What can we say?
3741What is there to hinder?
3741What is to become of those who went over to you from this city and State?
3741What more can you say to them than"shift for yourselves?"
3741What relief under such circumstances could she derive from a victory without a prize?
3741What then, in the name of heaven, could you go to war for?
3741What would she once have given to have known that her condition at this day should be what it now is?
3741What, I ask, in that case, would have been your conduct towards her?
3741What, I say, is to become of those wretches?
3741Where is the man who can say the fault, in part, has not been his?
3741Who, or what has prevented you?
3741Why are there so many unpaid certificates in almost every man''s hands, but from the parsimony of not providing sufficient revenues?
3741Why is the sycophant thus added to the hypocrite, and the man who pretends to govern, sunk into the humble and submissive memorialist?
3741Will not the capture of one army after another satisfy him, must all become prisoners?
3741Will they, who long since threatened to bring us to their feet, bow themselves to ours, and own that without us they are not a nation?
3741Yet who, through this wilderness of error, has been to blame?
3741what have you to do with our independence?
3741what is he?
3741what volumes of thanks does America owe to Britain?
3741whether it is proper language for a nation to use?
37988Any thing new in the literary world?
37988Do you feel any better?
37988Good woman,said the stranger,"why do you whip that boy so severely?"
37988In what manner did Captain May cheat the Mexicans?
37988Now,continued she--"I can not understand why a mere acquaintance should be so familiar as to call me''poor dear;''why am I a poor dear to her?"
37988Shepherd, then?
37988Where is Solomon King, then?
37988Why then does she always try to get a seat next to me, and ask me to tell her something more of those countries?
37988Will you be kind enough to lend me this book?
37988Will you permit me to ask the loan of this book?
37988--"Give me some water, will you?"
37988And how can you be sure?
37988And how many pages can you write in a day?"
37988And how much a page do you get?
37988And how much do you make in the course of a year?
37988And if you are awake, do not be continually calling upon the poor chambermaid, and disturbing her with enquiries, such as"Where are we now?"
37988And who has not?
37988At first, the sociablist will say, on making her third or fourth appearance for the day,"Who comes to see you oftener than I?"
37988But can the annals of woman produce a female Shakspeare, a female Milton, a Goldsmith, a Campbell, or a Scott?
37988But is there among them a Mozart, a Bellini, a Michael Kelly, an Auber, a Boieldieu?
37988But it is much easier and smoother to say simply,"Will you lend me your fan for a few minutes?"
37988Can they have read Shakspeare?
37988Could it be that this house was frequented by persons unaccustomed to bells?
37988Does any lady in talking say,"The two Misses Brown called to see me?"
37988Does she suppose he can not understand her if she talks sense,--or does she think he will like her the better for regaling him with nothing but folly?
37988From low newspapers, or from vulgar books?
37988Has a woman made an improvement on steam- engines, or on any thing connected with the mechanic arts?
37988Has he the option of refusing?
37988Have they no respect for themselves?
37988How can they be otherwise, when they seldom feel comfortably?
37988How do they pick it up?
37988How is it that most of these ladies live separately from their husbands; either despising them, or being despised by them?
37988How is it that young ladies are frequently matronized to plays that even their mothers can not witness without blushes?
37988How is this possible, when it is her pastime to scatter dissension, ill- feeling, and unhappiness among all whom she calls her friends?
37988I am sure I do n''t know how I like it-- can''t you pass me by?"
37988If you have not distinctly heard what another lady has just said to you, do not denote it by saying,"Ma''am?"
37988In asking a servant to bring you a thing, add not the useless and senseless words"_ will_ you?"
37988In fact, what is it but woollen calico?
37988In rough weather, refrain from asking, whenever you see him,"If there is any danger?"
37988Is it true that we republicans have such a hankering after titles?
37988Is she to suppose that you do not consider her conversation worthy of a visit made on purpose?
37988It is sufficient simply to_ refuse_; and then no one has a right to ask why?
37988It is true you can say,"May I request the loan of your fan?"
37988Left what?
37988Many young ladies can play nothing beyond"How do you like it?"
37988Surely not from low companions?
37988We are asked--"Why should not such a lady dance, if it gives her pleasure?"
37988We have known the mere question,"Have you been to church to- day?"
37988What did they pinch?
37988What inconveniences can possibly happen to_ him_?
37988What is it?
37988What woman has painted like Raphael or Titian, or like the best artists of our own times?
37988When any one prefaces an enquiry by the vulgarism,"If it is a fair question?"
37988When you ask to borrow a thing, do not say,"Will you_ loan_ it to me?"
37988Where do they get it?
37988Where is Bogle?"
37988Where then is the shame of surviving our youth?
37988Who is there that does not know a poor family?
37988Why not say,"up in the chamber, up in the garret, down in the kitchen, down in the cellar"& c.?
37988Why should a mirthful fit of laughter be called"a gale"?
37988Why should she be rewarded for gratifying her own inclination in marrying the man of her choice?
37988Would it not be much better to have them sent to bed at their usual time?
37988Would it not be well for the harpist to come a little earlier than the rest, and tune it herself previous to their arrival?
37988after their name, when with reference to_ them_, it can have no rational application?
37988and how much are you to have for this?
37988and"How soon shall we arrive?"
37988can_ you_ sew?"
37988did you hear that?
37988for instance,"Bring me the bread, will you?"
37988or,"Do you think you could not eat something?"
36663''And where-- where do you think this money is to come from? 36663 ''And you had a fine feast, had you not?''
36663''Are n''t they beautiful, my dear Solomon?'' 36663 ''As to the young lady''s dowry?''
36663''At a word, then,''cried Jericho with affected heartiness,''will you take fifteen thousand?'' 36663 ''But the dowry; what dowry do you give?''
36663''Come, then, we''ll advance to ten?'' 36663 ''Do you?''
36663''Eh? 36663 ''My dear madam''--and Candytuft appealed to Mrs. Jericho--''is not this a delightful group-- an exquisite family picture?
36663''My father?'' 36663 ''My friend,''exclaimed Candytuft,''have you made your will?''
36663''Of what description?'' 36663 ''There is no danger in this mask, you say?''
36663''This is idle talk,''said the Marchioness....''Will you not come with me, Gaudin?'' 36663 ''Well, has it come?''
36663''Well, what does the old fellow say, the scaly old griffin? 36663 ''What do you say to seven?''
36663''What have you there?'' 36663 ''What is the matter?''
36663''Where should I be but in the place of rejoicing just now?'' 36663 ''Why stay you here?''
36663''Why, of course-- are we not, dear Mr. Candytuft? 36663 ''You will give me the secret?''
36663''You will let me have the money?'' 36663 Ah, is he?
36663And a gilt belt round her waist?
36663And what line is that?
36663And what said Jericho? 36663 Could n''t you manage to get him to go?"
36663Could you favour me with an introduction to her?
36663Do you know the young lady,he says to a habituà ©,"who dances in the ballet with a green wreath round her head?"
36663FOURTH BOY:''Would n''t they pinch my toes if I had''em? 36663 Given up hunting?
36663How about the hunting? 36663 Is there anything in the shape of a good cob that could hunt if wanted down in your parts?
36663MISS H.''Which one?'' 36663 MR. L.''Have you been to many parties this season?''
36663MR. L.''What do you think of Alfred Tennyson?'' 36663 MY DEAR CHARLEY,"How is the country?
36663Now,says the indignant writer,"why does Buttons do this?
36663Oh,was the reply,"I think I know what you are; but what''s your name?"
36663THIRD BOY:''Ai n''t his boots thin neither?'' 36663 What do you say?
36663Where are you going?
36663You know her intimately then?
36663You know what I am?
36663''Am I to be accountable to you for all my actions?
36663''And why, my love, do you wish for these things?
36663''Are you going to Court?''
36663''Come, what is it?
36663''Why will you not be warned?
36663''Will you tell her she is wanted on pressing business?''
36663( now the judge), Landseer, Mulready, Webster, and other artists less famous?
366634 likes a holder and a thinner wine, does he?
36663A basin of gruel, or a glass of cough mixture?
36663Again I ask, why does Buttons do this?
36663Am I right?"
36663At last she put the point- blank question:"''What do you propose to give the dear child?''
36663Basil put it-- there was the difficulty, only to be surmounted by Mr. Jericho''s yielding to the repeated cry,"When will you let me have some money?"
36663Can I offer you anything?
36663Do you know her?''
36663Do you think I could have the horse Mark Lemon had when he was down at Barkway?
36663Do you think Pattison has got a horse that would carry him?
36663Does she admire it?
36663Does she have her gloves cleaned?
36663FRENCH MAID:"You like-- a-- ze-- seaside-- M''sieu Jean Thomas?"
36663For the devilish serving- man had folded a note( how obtained can it matter?)
36663Have I ever been engaged?
36663Have you?''
36663How, in the name of common- sense, of propriety, or of justice, can the word"nuisance"be applicable to the occupants of that balcony?
36663I have never met with the word"gangling"before; is it an invention of Mr. Albert Smith''s?
36663I loved; what Italian at my age does not?
36663I thought, my dear, you observed marriage was no bargain?
36663If so, where is the word that will express as much?
36663In a word,''asked young hopeful,''will he go into the melting- pot, like a man and a father?''
36663Is the horse I had before still alive, I wonder?
36663Is this squalid group, with debauchery and criminality in evidence in each figure, likely to be morally impressed by the sight of a public hanging?
36663Jericho, when can you let me have some money?''
36663Jericho, when can you let me have some money?''"
36663LADY:"Are you at Eton?"
36663Mulready?"
36663No inquiry, so he"rubs up an idea upon another tack":"MR. L.''What do you think of our_ vis- Ã  -vis_?''
36663Not bad, eh?
36663Now will you depart?''"
36663Of course you remember that unfortunate postal envelope that I designed?
36663Of course you shall have them, but why?''
36663Or if I could n''t have that one, do you know of any other that would be equally TEMPERATE and WELL- BEHAVED?
36663Poster, ai n''t you precious drunk, rather?"
36663Rather a nice place, is it not?"
36663SECOND NATURALIST:"Who said Ich-(hic!)-Ichthy- o- saurus?
36663SERVANT- MAID:"If you please, mem, could I go out for half an hour to buy a bit of ribbin, mem?"
36663Take counsel together, I say, and make me an offer, a lumping offer, for the whole-- eh?''"
36663The acme of imbecility seems to be reached when the lady asks if Mr. L. plays any instrument?
36663The ambassador then speaks for himself:"''You may have remarked my affection for Miss Monica?
36663The name certainly was not what Percival had expected; still, what was in a name?
36663They are about to load their guns, when one says to the other:"''I say, which do you put in first-- powder or shot?''
36663Thy virgins?
36663UNCLE:"Now, then, what is it?
36663WE''VE TEN MILES TO GO TO COVER"245 EFFECTS OF A FALL 253 BILLY TAYLOR 256"WHERE GOT''S THOU THAT GOOSE?
36663Was that a_ lady''s_ mask?
36663We know his wicked intentions; but how would he carry them out?
36663Well, then, what sum would satisfy you?''"
36663What am I to do?
36663What are they but types of a class that always frequented such scenes?
36663What are you making that dreadful noise for?"
36663What could ail him?"
36663What else can he mean by using that infernal little leech in a bottle in the front of his caricature as my signature?
36663What was there wrong in going to a masquerade?
36663What''s he got to answer for himself?''"
36663What''s the matter?''
36663What_ will_ missus say?"
36663Where got''s thou that goose?
36663Where?''
36663Who knows how much it may have done towards hastening the time when those horrible exhibitions ceased?
36663Wilkins?"]
36663Will he give me some money?
36663Will it, with other future possibilities, be considered sufficient to assure to"my daughter, sir, the comforts to which she has been accustomed"?
36663Will that suit Mrs. Adams?
36663Will you let us know when the hounds meet near you?
36663Would the drawing have lost, or gained, if Leech had given us a handsome young guardsman instead of this ugly fellow?
36663You must have remarked it?''
36663You wish it had been a boy, do you?
36663[ Illustration: PASTRYCOOK:"What have you had, sir?"
36663[ Illustration:"SO YOU HAVE TAKEN ALL YOUR STUFF, AND DON''T FEEL ANY BETTER, EH?
36663[ Illustration:"WHERE''AVE WE BIN?
36663and if it was criminal to do so, why leave the evidence of your guilt where Mrs. W. could find it?
36663cried the King,''who gave you leave to put that on?
36663dost thou dare to break in upon my mood?''
36663or could you, if I came, get me a horse''in every way suitable for a timid, elderly gentleman''?
36663said I, surprised;"what am I?"
36663what''ave you got there?"
36663you are going to enjoy the recess, and you''ll be rid of me for some months?_ Never mind.
38391But who is not a doctrinaire? 38391 Can the Church Aid Therein, and What is Her Duty?"
38391What are the Remedies at Her Disposal?
38391... in such case what will become of our protectorate over the Catholics of the East?
38391And yet, had it been otherwise, had we possessed such covered ways-- what then?
38391Are we going to permit Germany, Italy, and other nations to divide the debris, the remnants of our patrimony?"
38391Are you bound to accept as Gospel truth, every idea that rises in the minds of men?
38391Briand._--And what of that?
38391But does that mean that I ought to close my eyes to what is taking place today?
38391But, after all, does the fact of not recognizing the Organic Articles constitute a violation of the Concordat?
38391But, after all, what did Hegel and his disciples mean by religion?
38391Could we, without being false to our most cherished principles, affect sympathy with such a party?
38391Do the affairs of the Catholic world concern heretics and schismatics?
38391Does he suppose that the arms will fall from the hands of my soldiers?"
38391Does not the Emperor perceive that they are a menace to his throne?"
38391Had we not a right in view of what had occurred?
38391He had hardly seen me than, with inflamed countenance, and in a loud voice, he said:''So, Monsieur Cardinal, you wish to break the negotiations?
38391Hence, independently of the Concordat, is not such liberty of conscience demanded for all citizens by the Declaration of the Rights of Man?"
38391Here the speaker began to be interrupted, thus:_ Voices from the Left:_"What new spirit?"
38391If you ask me:''Do you believe that France in the relations of Church and State has arrived at definitive crisis?''
38391Is there anyone who does not profess some doctrine, either good or evil?
38391Is this not the time when instead of deriding ourselves further, we ought if possible to bring back union to our country?"
38391It is Republicans who make a republic, and who were these in Portugal?
38391Ketteler spoke eloquently upon the questions,"Does the Social Question Exist in Germany?"
38391Must you take every man as a Messiah who proclaims himself an apostle or a prophet?
38391Rene Boblet:_"Whom are you accusing of carrying on this exasperating war?"
38391Ribot._--"Never?
38391Some have tried to do this, and why?
38391Supposing this belief to be well- grounded, why should it make us criminals?
38391Two years before, in July, 1807, the Emperor had asked scornfully:"What does the Pope mean by the threat of excommunicating me?
38391What am I to say of our seminary fund, that, I mean, which is devoted to the education of young men in the society?
38391What consideration ought he to have for you, when you have had none for him?
38391What good reasons, political, historical or philosophical do you bring to support these theories?
38391What, then, about our methods of acquiring inheritances?
38391What, then, of the shots fired from our residence at Quelhas?
38391Why does the Court of Rome allow itself to be influenced by these non- Catholic powers?
38391Yet what else did we do?
38391You are preaching social and economical emancipation to the masses; but what obstacle has the workman from performing his labors freely?
38391You demand the restoration of the Legations?
38391You wish to be rid of the troops?
38391_ THE CHARGES AND THEIR ANSWERS._ It will naturally be asked, what were our crimes?
38391the great question began to be asked: How and where shall the Conclave be held?
37937But what is this that, with Legislative Insignia, ventures through the hubbub and death- hail, from the back- entrance of the Manège? 37937 But who,"my countryman went on, in the relentless English way,"checks the weigher?"
37937Who can help the inevitable issue; Marseillese and all France on this side; granite Swiss on that? 37937 ''He had on the sky- blue coat he had got made for the Feast of the_ Être Suprême_''--O Reader, can thy hard heart hold out against that? 37937 ''It is for a very important personage, then?'' 37937 ( Why did n''t we stay in the Salon Carré?) 37937 ( Why should he?) 37937 --Forgive me, yes"--"What is it?"
37937--"Trash, is it, Mademoiselle?
379378 Rue Figuier, for instance, Rabelais is said to have lived, and what could be better than that?
37937A new dancer( or shall I say attachée?)
37937A very charming incident, do n''t you think?
37937Again, was it in four years and by renewed labour never really completed, or in four months and as by stroke of magic, that the image was projected?
37937All were German and all rain- soaked( or was it tears?)
37937And after?
37937And for lunch to- day?
37937And here?
37937And of Meissonier what am I to say?
37937And then comes the question"What to do?"
37937And why on earth not?
37937And yet, alas, how fall?
37937But according to_ The Golden Legend_, which I for one implicitly believe( how can one help it, written as it is?
37937But could there be a better morning for the children in the Champs- Elysées?
37937But what is one to say here on such a theme?
37937But what is that sound?
37937By what strange affinities had the dream and the person grown up thus apart, and yet so closely together?
37937Can it still be there?
37937Can that wonderful wooden hanger that covers half the courtyard have held so long?
37937Could it happen again?
37937Did a new canvas never deter or abash him?
37937Did he never tire, this Peter Paul Rubens?
37937Do you read such trash?"
37937Do you want any other books?"
37937Every city has these humorists-- shall I say?
37937Gardens are among those things that we order( or shall I say disorder?)
37937Gladly would the Swiss cease firing: but who will bid mad Insurrection cease firing?
37937Has the Savoy a number in the Strand?
37937He is gone, then, and has not seen us?
37937Hence the present one, which represents-- what?
37937How can they, disliking as they do to leave Paris?
37937How do the lines run?
37937How indeed could it be, even although when heaven sends a cheerful hour one would scorn to refrain?
37937How is it?
37937Is it to be wondered at that he wears that expression?
37937Is the Ritz numbered in Piccadilly?
37937Like sheep hounded into their pinfold; bleating for mercy, where is no mercy, but only a whetted knife?
37937Look at that tall boulevardier with some one else''s hat( why do so many Frenchmen seem to be wearing other men''s hats?)
37937Never, do I say?
37937O unhappiest Advocate of Arras, wert thou worse than other Advocates?
37937O ye hapless Swiss, why was there no order not to begin it?
37937Of these what can I say?
37937Or shall it be at my nameless restaurant?
37937Royalty has vanished for ever from your eyes.--And ye?
37937Saint Louis''s Shirt is burnt;--might not a Defender of the Country have had it?...
37937Shall it be chez Voisin, or chez Foyot, by the Sénat, or chez Lapérouse( where the two Stevensons used to eat and talk) on the Quai des Augustins?
37937Shall we go at once to"Monna Lisa"?
37937Shelter or instant death: yet How, Where?
37937Still the old subjects-- How long will it last?
37937The Louvre has all these( together with many drawings), but above all it has the Monna Lisa, of which what shall I say?
37937The life of our own Nicol of the Café Royal, for example, would not be without interest; and what of Sherry and Delmonico?
37937The way now is to the left, through the Italian Schools, through the Salon Carré( why not stay there and let French art go hang?)
37937To particularise would merely be to convert these pages into an incomplete catalogue( and what is duller than that?
37937To the frock coat in sculpture we in London are no strangers, for have we not Parliament Square?
37937Well and good: but till the Assembly pronounce Forfeiture of him, what boots it?
37937Well, who is Wanamaker, who was Whiteley?
37937What Curé will be behind him of Boissise; what Bishop behind him of Paris?
37937What could be prettier for Voltaire?
37937What else is there?
37937What is a stoppeur and what does he stop?
37937What is the reason?
37937What kind of an old man do you think gave his name to this cemetery?
37937What life?
37937What shall they do?
37937What temper he is in?
37937What to do?
37937What use to him was half a cloak?
37937What was the relationship of a living Florentine to this creature of his thought?
37937What was the secret of that astounding period?
37937When President Fallières''daughter was married, it remarked, where was the ceremony performed?
37937When we come to his saintliness I would stand aside, for is he not in_ The Golden Legend_?
37937Where to begin?
37937Whereupon, thou bronze Artillery- Officer--?
37937Who ever dreamed that hotels have numbers?
37937Who is Dufayel?
37937Who is M. Pol?
37937Who the squat individual was?
37937Who would not commend him for this kind toleration?
37937Who, it asked, is called to visit a man on his death- bed, no matter how wicked he has been?
37937Why did the first twelve years of the last century know such energy and abundance?
37937Why does not Gambetta write more clearly?
37937Why should all the bookstalls and curiosity stalls of London be in Whitechapel and Farringdon Street and the Cattle Market?
37937Will it?...
37937Will there be a motor- car among the old diligences and waggons?
37937[ Illustration: LE PRINTEMPS ROUSSEAU_( Louvre: Thomy- Thierret Collection)_] Is that too dreadful an association for this spot?
37937shall we die like hunted hares?
38964Do you find anything singular in what I say?
38964Where are the old Magyar saints? 38964 And did she ever get out of gaol, Sir? 38964 And for heaven''s sake how came you to know her? 38964 And pray what became of her, Sir? 38964 Had, then, his operation been in some way defective? 38964 In that event, would he be able to carry his party with him in support of his modified programme? 38964 In what does life consist? 38964 Or should he adopt the procedure, deemed by Pott generally advisable, of amputating the limb above it? 38964 The famous Robin Hood(? 1160-?1247) is said to have had a claim to the earldom. 38964 The only question was which form of Christianity were the Magyars to adopt, the Eastern or the Western? 38964 The position thus created raised a twofold question: Would the crown accept? 38964 Thus Shakespeare, in the first scene of the second act of_ Julius Caesar_, makes Portia say to her husband:--Is Brutus sick?
38964What did he understand the word to mean?
38964What, for a conscious experience so constituted as Hume will admit, is the precise significance of such belief in real existence?
38964When Boswell asked him,"Then, Sir, what is poetry?"
38964Whence then do these units arise?
38964Who could associate them with Sir Walter Scott''s characters of Bradwardine or Monkbarns?
38964Why do they not defend the realm against the Turks?"
38964Yet Rabelais came from Touraine, and if the creator of Panurge has not humour, who has?
38964and is it physical To walk unbraced and suck up the humours Of the dank morning?"
38964why not try the experiment?
38035But,you will say,"why did n''t you send the promised volume for E. M. from_ London_ then?
38035That''s all very well; but why then did n''t you write and explain why it was that you were keeping us unserved and uninformed?
38035Then why the hell did n''t you?
38035Why then could n''t you write home and have one of the books in question sent you?--or have it sent to Hastings directly from your house?
38035( My subject-- unless I grip it tight-- melts away-- Rye, Sussex, is so little like it; and then where am I?
38035), for there are still things I want to_ do_, and I ask myself, at such a rate, How?
38035*/ I have for a long time had it at heart to write to you-- as to which I hear you comment: Why the hell then did n''t you?
38035--and who shall blame you?
3803512th._ I wrote you last from Rome, I think-- didn''t I?
38035A play appears to me of necessity to involve a struggle, a question( of whether, and how, will it or wo n''t it happen?
38035After the generosity of your letters of last month how can I ask you to labour again in my too thankless cause?
38035Ah, Walter, Walter, why do you do these things?
38035And now, coming to Kipps, what am I to say about Kipps but that I am ready, that I am compelled, utterly to_ drivel_ about him?
38035Are they presented in some procurable volume that would be possible to send me?
38035As they must now have children enough for them to take care of_ each other_( have n''t they?)
38035But how do I know, after all, even yet?
38035But we must all wait, must n''t we?
38035But what am I ridiculously remarking to_ you_?
38035But what memories are these not to you, and how can one speak to you at all without stirring up the deeps?
38035But what need of that have_ you_, lady of the full programme and the rich performance?
38035But why do I make these restrictive and invidious observations?
38035But why do I speak to you of this as if I needed to and it were n''t with you all the while far more than it can be even with me?
38035Could you see-- ask-- if Fanny Morse has kept any?
38035Could you, would you?
38035Does this at any rate-- the best I can do for you-- throw any sufficient light?
38035How can we be sufficiently thankful for these charming breaks in the sinister perspective?
38035How can what is going on not be to one as a huge horror of blackness?
38035How is Gross, dear woman, and how are Mitou and Nicette-- whom I missed so at Monte Cassino?
38035How on the other hand_ not_ represent it either-- without putting into play mere fiddlesticks?
38035How shall I tell you in return what an interest I am going to take in you-- and how I want you to multiply for me the occasions of showing it?
38035How shall I tell you, at any rate, today, how your letter touches and even, as it were, relieves me?
38035I ca n''t remount-- but can only drift on with the thicker and darker tide: wherefore pray for me, as who knows what may be at the end?
38035I come up again and quite well up-- as how can I not in order again to re- taste the bitter cup?
38035I do n''t know, and how should I?
38035If it had n''t been for this I think I should have two or three times quite said to you:"Wo n''t you let_ me_ have a try?"
38035Is Margaret on better ground again?
38035Is it thinkable to you that you might come over at this ungenial season, for a night-- some time before Xmas?
38035It is indeed beautiful of you to think of these little deeds of kindness, little words of love( or is it the other way round?)
38035Or shall you pass through this place-- homeward-- before May 1st?
38035Or would a big development of inspiration and form have come?
38035Reality is a world that was to be capable of_ this_--and how represent that horrific capability,_ historically_ latent, historically ahead of it?
38035Save in the fantastic and the romantic( Copperfield, Jane Eyre, that charming thing of Stevenson''s with the bad title--"Kidnapped"?)
38035Seulement alors je compterais bâtir a great many( a great many, entendezvous?)
38035Still, what those we so love have done_ for_ us does n''t wholly fail us with their presence-- isn''t that true?
38035The elderly( or almost?)
38035We feel, do n''t we?
38035What does that sadly mean?
38035What is a poor man to do, mon prince, mon bon prince, mon grand prince, when so prodigiously practised upon?
38035What is one to say or do in presence of an expression so generous and so penetrating?
38035What is the rent of a house-- unfurnished of course( a little good_ inside_ one)--in your Terrace?--and are there any with 2 or 3 servants''bedrooms?
38035What matter to us where it came from so long as it came?"
38035Who is D. H. Lawrence, who, you think, would interest me?
38035Will you consider at your leisure the plea thus put?
38035Will you give me the great pleasure of being one of them?--signing a paper to that effect?
38035Will you give my tender love there when you next go?
38035Will you kindly keep a little in the dark for the present my fond chatter about my poor Edition?
38035You can see, ca n''t you?
38035You will have finished your new fiction, I"presume"--if it is n''t presumptuous-- before embarking?
38035You''ll say doubtless:"Damn you, why report_ at all_--if you are so crassly superstitious?
38035why_ did_ they?"
38636Does he?
38636Mabel, what do you mean? 38636 Mabel,"he said to her,"did you pick my flowers?"
38636Papa, what did grandma send me?
38636Papa,said Mabel,"did you see a monkey in town?"
38636Where is Little Joe?
38636A little door is hid in the boughs, A face is hiding within; When birds are silent and oxen drowse, Why should a maiden spin?
38636After all, what did it matter that Little Joe was dead?
38636And how long, he asks, would the country support a policy of blood and iron?
38636And what would England do if, taking advantage of these revolts, a great European power should declare war against her?
38636But there is only a little carbonate of lime in oats, and from whence could this 409 grains of the rocky material have been derived?
38636But what could the fleet do against an enemy invading India by land?
38636Did you pick my flowers?
38636Did you pick my flowers?"
38636How are they to secure a reduction?
38636I''m so tired- like, an''my heart''s so empty for the child; an''you''ll say''God''s will be done,''wo n''t ye, achora?
38636If, after reading one of her poems carefully, we sometimes have to ask"What does she mean by that?"
38636Jim, Jim, do n''t you know your own Winnie?"
38636Might this be, asks Father Cahier, a way of expressing the fact that the saint had banished Arianism from amongst his people?
38636Now, where does the hen procure this substance with which to form the shell?
38636Of what use was it against the Boers or against Cetywayo?
38636Of what use would it be against even a very inferior fleet that used torpedos as the Russians did on the Danube?
38636P. 242,"Asinara(?)"
38636Protus, exiled at first to the island of Asinara(?)
38636SAINT MELLON( Mélon,_ Mellonus_,_ Mallonus_,_ Mello_,_ Melanius_?)
38636Shall it no more be spoken on Eire''s fertile plain?
38636Shall not her sons aspire no more to rend the iron chain, And light the fires of freedom that smouldered in its train?
38636Sure, how can I bear at all, at all, to listen to ye sobbin''like that?"
38636Then why are you so sad?
38636There in my hand it lay: Who could say How from the depths of the ocean calm It rose, and slid itself into my palm?
38636Was there ever a sweeter or gentler rebuke?
38636Was this story the legend or the consequence of an invocation of Saint Pirmin against unwholesome drinks?
38636What metre is it?
38636What would England do if upon two or three of these territories revolts should come simultaneously?
38636What would she have done in 1857 if Russia had been in a position to give assistance to Nana Saïb?
38636Where can England get that army?
38636Who can tell the number that have been rescued from a life of crime through his ministrations?
38636Why are you so sad?
38636Why did you die?
38636Will it be a triumph?
38636Would even the Whigs go through with it for two sessions?
38636You did n''t give him anything did you?"
38636Your troubles are all over, you''re at rest with God on high; But we''re slaves and we''re orphans, Owen!--why did you die?"
38636why did you die?
38636why did you leave us, Owen?
38636why did you leave us, Owen?
39677_ INDIA_: What can it Teach Us?
37179Do tell me what that is?
37179Was a lady_ such_ a lady?
37179Well, and then?
37179Would you like to see one near? 37179 ''Tis doubtless his invention? 37179 ), would he have wandered round those quaint towered walls, over that bridge, along that grassy walk? 37179 A masquerade? 37179 Am I over bold? 37179 And after all, princes or slaves, can others ever help us, save with their purse, with advice, with a concrete favour, or, say, with a song? 37179 And how much in Germany? 37179 And in the past----tell me: had you ever sung to him? 37179 And now? 37179 And what is architecture to that? 37179 And who knows? 37179 And who knows? 37179 Are they not so in the life of a prince? 37179 But are they not also, to a great extent, frightened of themselves and running away from boredom? 37179 But does that compensate? 37179 But if it be so, what can my son have done to break your heart? 37179 But in reality is not the train the empty thing, and are not those solitary houses and pastures that which is filled with life? 37179 But that was surely never a source of strength, craving your Grace''s pardon? 37179 But why should you seek to be wise? 37179 CARDINAL Have you so soon forgotten that the Duke must not suspect your being a woman? 37179 CARDINAL( whispering) Ah, is that all? 37179 CARDINAL(_ to_ VENETIAN AMBASSADOR) What say you to our Diego''s masque, my Lord? 37179 Certainly not for the men of those days, who would doubtless have been merely shocked could they have seen or foreseen.... For their ghosts perhaps? 37179 DIEGO Ah!----Then happiness, love,--all that a woman craves for? 37179 DIEGO And now, dear Master, you can recollect----all? 37179 DIEGO And the name explained the trade? 37179 DIEGO And you are satisfied? 37179 DIEGO And-- if that occasion came, for the first time or for the second, perhaps, after your marriage? 37179 DIEGO Betray me? 37179 DIEGO By what means, please your Grace? 37179 DIEGO Do you speak truly, Master? 37179 DIEGO For what then? 37179 DIEGO Her name was Magdalen? 37179 DIEGO Is it so?----And----is there any reason His Highness''s melancholy should take this shape? 37179 DIEGO Is this not wisdom? 37179 DIEGO Shall I teach you to sing as I do, gracious Madam? 37179 DIEGO Think you he has, Madam? 37179 DIEGO Well, and to be beautiful, young, radiant; to be a woman; is not that the office of a wife? 37179 DIEGO Why not before? 37179 DIEGO Will it please your Eminence that I should sing the Lament of Ariadne on Naxos? 37179 DIEGO You loathed the maze, my Lord? 37179 DIEGO You loved her then, sincerely? 37179 DIEGO You think so, Lady? 37179 DIEGO Your Highness surely does not mean use it to love with? 37179 DIEGO(_ hastily_) Donning men''s clothes? 37179 DIEGO(_ interested_) Other regions? 37179 DIEGO(_ reassured and indifferent_) Did Ulysses love Penelope any better for it, Madam? 37179 DIEGO(_ slowly_) Why more than you wanted her? 37179 DIEGO(_ very slowly_) Thinking me what, my Lord? 37179 DIEGO(_ who has started slightly_) Ariadne? 37179 DUCHESS How can a child like you already know such things? 37179 DUCHESS Not recognise you? 37179 DUCHESS Then, it is he who, as you call it, spurns you? 37179 DUCHESS Then----he does not know----he still believes you to be----a stranger? 37179 DUKE You mean, Diego? 37179 Did you never, perhaps, make trial of this----Magdalen, with---- DUKE With what? 37179 Do you remember, by the way, reader, a certain hasty sketch by Cazin, which hangs in a corner of the Luxembourg? 37179 Do you wish your picture, statue or poem to remain whole as you made it? 37179 Does he really require more money? 37179 Does not his skill as a composer vie almost with his sublety as a singer? 37179 Does not living mean old age, disease, possible blindness or paralysis, and quite inevitable aches? 37179 For whom? 37179 GENTLEMAN(_ whispering_) Most Eminent, a word---- CARDINAL(_ whispering_) The Duke has had a return of his malady? 37179 Given these lakes, what fitter argument than Ariadne abandoned on her little island? 37179 Had they been mislaid, stolen, mixed up with those of ordinary mortals? 37179 Has Duke Ferdinand suffered some wrong at the hands of women? 37179 Has the Duke ever loved? 37179 Has your Grace any message for him? 37179 Have you been given any knowledge of this case? 37179 Have you knowledge of it, Madam? 37179 Have you notes by you? 37179 How convey this sense? 37179 How so? 37179 I know it happened in this very place, because Benozzo Gozzoli painted it all at the time; and you were already about the place, I presume?
37179If I lived in Granada, or went back there, should I ever see this wonder again?
37179Is he more really useful as a colonel than as a major, in a wig or cocked hat than out of it?
37179Is he the better for a deliberative, sedentary business, or it for him?
37179Is it possible, Diego?
37179Is this great gain?
37179Is this, my friend, the reward of my confiding in thee, even if tardily?
37179It is ours?
37179My secret?
37179Nay more, may it not be in Leisure, during life''s pauses, that we learn to live, what for and how?
37179Nay, there is something more subtle than this: the whole place( how shall I explain it?)
37179No wonder, for has she not the chemistry of soil and sun and moisture and wind and frost, all at her beck and call?
37179O Theseus, why didst thou ever come into my life?
37179On what railway journey would he have come across that little town of Rheinfelden( where is Rheinfelden?
37179Or else---- DIEGO Or else, illustrious maiden?
37179Or is it the case of some passion, hopeless, unfitting to his rank, perhaps?
37179Or is it, gracious bride, that too much happiness overwhelms our friend?
37179PRINCESS Does a well- bred horse or excellent falcon do its duty to please its master?
37179PRINCESS It is strange that being a man, you should conceive of women from---- DIEGO From a man''s standpoint?
37179PRINCESS What is that, pray?
37179PRINCESS Why not?
37179PRINCESS You think so?
37179Shall we go and listen?
37179So long as this be placed on the stall where it courts inspection, what matter how empty and exhausted the soul which has grown it?
37179So why should the past be charming?
37179Straws, ears?
37179That in this solid world only delusion is worth having?
37179The two, then, could not have been much in love?
37179The_ PRINCESS_ plays a wrong chord, and breaks off suddenly._ DIEGO(_ having finished a cadence, rudely_) What is it, Madam?
37179Those sheaves, or stooks-- who can describe their metamorphose?
37179Was it so?
37179Was she the predecessor of Hippolyta?
37179Well, if not disintegrated, would you prefer it to be unassimilated?
37179What are such things to me?
37179What became of the previous tenant?
37179What do you mean, my Lord?
37179What do you mean?
37179What does it mean?
37179What say you, Signor Diego?
37179What to him is this miserable little swish past of to- day?
37179What would you do, Madam?
37179Where was Florence then?
37179Why cause me pain by disrespectful treatment of a person-- your own admirable self-- whom I respect?
37179Why did not the cruel Minotaur gore and trample thee like all the others?
37179Will it please you that I call your maid- of- honour, or summon the gentleman outside?
37179Will it please you to order the other musicians, Madam?
37179Woods where?
37179YOUNG DUCHESS But where is Diego, meanwhile?
37179You have understood?
37179You love my son; you have cured him,--cured him, do I guess rightly, through your love?
37179You smile?
37179_ What do we make of our idea of others_ in our constant attempt to justify ourselves?
37179better than poor besotted Menelaus, after all his injuries, loved Helen back in Sparta?
37179you who are fair, young, a princess, and betrothed from your cradle to a great prince?
32428''Cheek?''
32428''Now will you promise?'' 32428 ''Why?''
32428A Brightener?
32428A man?
32428A-- love affair?
32428All I ask is, where''s the stuff?
32428And Rosemary?
32428And where used Joyce Arnold to sit and work?
32428And why not to- day, while we''re close to Merriton?
32428And you-- were you there?
32428And you?
32428And-- and June never----?
32428Are n''t you frightened?
32428Are n''t you going to invite us, too?
32428Are you congratulating me?
32428Are your parents at home?
32428Back already, Princess?
32428But I believe_ I''ve_ evolved something more practical, considering your name-- and your age--(twenty- one, is n''t it?) 32428 But before the subject is shelved,_ where_ is the''place''you speak of?
32428But he told you, did n''t he, that he was going away?
32428But if I let you off it? 32428 But no words?
32428But the perfume of La France roses? 32428 But what about_ her_?"
32428But where is the_ thing_?
32428But you do suspect him?
32428But you hesitate?
32428Ca n''t anything be done?
32428Ca n''t you manage to want something you might possibly get?
32428Can those two have met before?
32428Can we get it?
32428Come into my study, wo n''t you?
32428Could n''t she have kissed your feet for the blessed message of hope you gave her?
32428Could you leave Miss Fawcett at once, and come to me?
32428Darling one, what is it? 32428 Dearest, have you forgotten me so soon?"
32428Did Opal Fawcett ever try to persuade you to-- to----?
32428Did_ you_ lose the one thing you''d wanted in the world? 32428 Do n''t you approve of my wanting to meet her?
32428Do n''t you guess yet who I am?
32428Do n''t you know me intimately enough to be sure that once I''m on the warpath I stop at nothing?
32428Do n''t you?
32428Do n''t you_ see_--there''s someone there?
32428Do you by chance mean marriage?
32428Do you call yourself a''conclusion''? 32428 Do you like her?"
32428Do you see light?
32428Do you want me to live all my life alone, now that I''ve lost you, June?
32428Do you wish him to fall in love with me?
32428Does my name suggest nothing to you?
32428Empty?
32428Except the letter-- or was it a telegram? 32428 Face?"
32428For a car?
32428For me? 32428 Frightened?"
32428Good heavens, what''s happened?
32428Has n''t she confided in you at all?
32428Have n''t you the wits to see I_ want_ to marry you? 32428 Have the police ever_ seen_ the little lamb?
32428Have you?
32428He can; but will he?
32428How can I to talk to you every day?
32428How can we be surer than we are?
32428How can we see anything if the room''s pitch- black?
32428How did you know, pray, which girl I was?
32428How do you know he''ll be so quick?
32428How would you like to stay with me,I wheedled,"until your mother is ready to crawl to get you back, cry and sob, and swear not to punish you?"
32428How?
32428I ca n''t tell you where he is,I said,"and even if I could, why should I?
32428I hope poor Murray did n''t get the same impression you got?
32428I suppose you asked them not to tell?
32428I wonder how long it is since the pictures were valued?
32428I wonder,I thought aloud,"if she could have meant to suggest some friendly compromise?
32428If I do n''t care how much I spend, do n''t you think we can make an earthly paradise of the place in a week?
32428If already you seem to me indispensable, how_ could_ Robert Lorillard have made up his mind to part with you, after_ months_?
32428If you''re so well as that, you''ll be ready to let me go to India soon, wo n''t you, dear?
32428Invented? 32428 Is it a coffin or a treasure chest?"
32428Is it a good idea?
32428Is it?
32428Is n''t one firm of detectives enough at one time, on one job?
32428Is that your_ real_ advice?
32428It had better be historic, had n''t it?
32428It''s to somebody else----"Oh, somebody you''ve been trying to''brighten,''I suppose?
32428Lady Scarlett_ is_ a Boche, is n''t she?
32428Let the place? 32428 Like to do?"
32428Look here,I said,"would your mother mind if you came out with me?
32428Mrs. Paul Jennings? 32428 No lunch?
32428Now what is it?
32428Now, do you still want to call the police and charge me with kidnapping? 32428 Of course, Murray decided at once to run the risk?"
32428Oh, it''s_ you_, is it?
32428On the contrary, why should n''t our brave Bart be suspected of precisely the same fraud, and more of it?
32428Only----"Did n''t she make some threat to you? 32428 Or''friend,''if it pleases you better?"
32428Ought n''t she to see a doctor?
32428Ought we to speak to Murray-- just drop him a hint, and suggest his getting an expert to have a look round?
32428Perhaps in that case you wo n''t care to explain how you came on board the_ Naiad_?
32428Perhaps you''d rather not have me understand? 32428 Really?"
32428Rosemary went to Italy?
32428Shall Jim and I go away?
32428She never even told you about our first engagement, eight years ago?
32428So hearts can really be caught in the rebound? 32428 Supposing she wo n''t see you?"
32428Tanks and motor cars that go?
32428Tell me what it is you want to do?
32428That makes you sit up, does n''t it?
32428The cry? 32428 Then you wo n''t undertake the task?"
32428Then-- doesn''t it seem that Fate bade you put it there?
32428Then_ he''s_ what you want to break to me?
32428Was she in the house?
32428We both_ know_ what it is, without telling, do n''t we?
32428We?
32428Well, I''d like to tell you that, if the story wo n''t bore you?
32428Well, I''ve sort of blackmailed you, have n''t I?
32428Well, what is your impression of the famous collection?
32428Well-- and then?
32428What are you doing that for?
32428What are you driving at? 32428 What are you hinting at?"
32428What could happen in the middle of the night? 32428 What do you mean?"
32428What do you mean?
32428What do you mean?
32428What do you think of everything?
32428What do you want to do to them?
32428What do you want?
32428What else is there to say? 32428 What have the portraits to do with Doctor Jennings?"
32428What if Rosemary is right?
32428What if it_ would_ be best as she says, for both your sakes, to let her go?
32428What is it you''re trying to break to me?
32428What is it?
32428What is it?
32428What is the funny thing?
32428What is this favour you speak of?
32428What kind of toys?
32428What mystery?
32428What prayer do you say for yourself? 32428 What sort of house_ have_ we?"
32428What stuff?
32428What was it then, if not a meeting?
32428What was your first impression?
32428What will be the next thing?
32428What would you give?
32428What would you suggest?
32428What''s the matter?
32428What, if I may ask?
32428What-- did she say?
32428What_ do_ you think, then? 32428 What_ is_ it?
32428Where is she?
32428Where was Cecil before you went to live in the wing?
32428Who can tell? 32428 Who is going to punish us?"
32428Who said anything about my going without you?
32428Who''s Terry Burns?
32428Who_ was_ she before she married Lord Thingum- bob?
32428Why did you have to insist on her coming back to America?
32428Why do you think of_ me_?
32428Why does your mother give Cecil a room whose window looks over the moat, if it''s so important she should hide?
32428Why not? 32428 Why on earth did n''t you tell her yourself-- tell them both together?"
32428Why on me?
32428Why should he want to get rid of such a girl?
32428Why should you want to know?
32428Why snatched away?
32428Why?
32428Will he stick to his point about his own doctor?
32428Will she be angry? 32428 Will what you have to tell help me to get Rosemary back?"
32428Wo n''t you( to the girl)"take my chair and talk to your friend?
32428Would Sir Beverley be offended if we asked him not to come, after all? 32428 Would n''t you like to go with me?"
32428Would she be vexed? 32428 Would you do for me what your friend is doing for her husband?"
32428Would you have something more to say if they did come?
32428Would you like to be alone?
32428Would you like to come with me now?
32428Would you rather I''d go?
32428Yes, I''ve got a plan-- already, if----"If what?
32428Yet you think light_ could_ be got? 32428 You do n''t mean to insinuate that they''ll suspect me?"
32428You do n''t_ love_ her?
32428You have n''t heard anything?
32428You know something, then?
32428You mean to say you have_ not_ seen him?
32428You mean, he might be entirely cured-- a well man again?
32428You mean?
32428You think June would be willing to have me marry another woman?
32428You want the lady to believe that you have bought Dun Moat?
32428You wo n''t? 32428 You''re a distant cousin, are n''t you?"
32428You''re not surprised, are you?
32428You''re not_ afraid_ of that wretched thing-- whatever it is?
32428You''ve got a plan-- already?
32428You''ve_ come_?
32428You_ heard_?
32428_ Dead!_ You killed her?
32428_ Not_ the ex- cowboy?
32428_ Something about the child?_"I might,I drawled,"rack my memory for the time when I saw him last."
32428_ Think_, my child?
32428_ What_ have you brought?
32428_ You_ say that, at twenty- one?
32428_ You_ say that?
32428''Have you forgotten me already?''...
32428*****"Well, are you satisfied?"
32428A voice inside me always used to say:''Why should June want to talk to you through Opal Fawcett?
32428Above all, would she have offered the blood from her veins to save Ralston Murray if she had not wanted him to live?
32428According to habit, therefore, my first thought was: What_ could_ be done for the man in the cushioned chair?
32428After going so far, I was going to desert him in the midst of the woods?
32428After to- day you will never see her again?"
32428Ah, what_ had_ I brought?
32428All the American specialists agreed that nothing on earth could change the course of events, so why fuss, as I''m more comfortable than I hoped to be?
32428And I would not try to guess-- would you?
32428And at that distance, behind window glass, and after all these years, how could I be sure?
32428And if Doctor Jennings_ had_ brought it off, would he be a safe person to look after the health of the man he''d cheated?"
32428And it is n''t our_ business_, is it?"
32428And she?
32428And so you do n''t think my theory of what''s going on at Dun Moat is too melodramatic?"
32428And that is all?"
32428And then----""Why waste time in accusations?"
32428And what could intervene?
32428And what do the brutes mean by a''double blow''?"
32428And what good would it do me to be remembered by you at a distance, perhaps married to some beast or other?"
32428And when I shrieked"Why?"
32428And would she in the end speak, or decide to be silent?
32428And-- I''ve never been there; but I suppose we must pass close to Robert Lorillard''s cottage?
32428And-- Paolo?"
32428As for--_the other_--the unknown one-- if the spirit can see, surely it would be glad to help in such a cause?
32428As he had no invisible cloak, and could n''t crawl under a sofa, poor Robert was obliged to say pleasantly,"How do you do?"
32428At last I asked her the question:"Can it be that we''ve met somewhere?"
32428Besides, how_ could_ they, through any correspondence, have contrived the things that had happened?
32428Brandreth?"
32428But I argued that this could hardly be, because-- surely-- bodies buried at sea were not put into coffins, were they?
32428But as it is, he''ll no doubt try to get an opinion from Beverley Drake?"
32428But if you think that, what will--_others_ think?"
32428But there''s_ no_ moated grange, and so----""Why should n''t there be one?"
32428But this Terry Burns of yours-- what can I do for him?"
32428But this is n''t what I was thinking about when I said,"Oh, that''s it?"
32428But what I most want to know is, why have you unloved Princess Avalesco?"
32428But what about the telegrams?"
32428But what about those''exquisite oriels,''those famous fireplaces, those stairways, those celebrated ceilings, and corbels-- whatever they are?
32428But what beats me is this: why did the fly walk into the spider- web?
32428But what matter?
32428But whenever there was an instant''s lull in the conversation, I felt that everyone was asking him or herself,"_ Where_ is the coffin?"
32428But why be early Victorian and ignore the lovely, naked truth, instead of late Georgian and save beating round the bush for both of the lovers?
32428But why stop the taxi to ask that?"
32428But-- I beg your pardon if I''m rude-- could you-- er-- seem not to be there?
32428CHAPTER IX THE RAT TRAP Did you ever see a wily gray rat caught in a trap?
32428Ca n''t you open the door?"
32428Can Joyce bear this?
32428Captain Lorillard, will you switch off the lights as usual?"
32428Could I bring the thing off?
32428Could I say I''d lent the rooms to someone I did n''t like to turn out?
32428Could Opal suspect, I wondered, the truth about the broken love story?
32428Could it be that she did n''t truly care for Murray-- that if she married him in spite of the mysterious"obstacle,"it would be for what she could get?
32428Could it be that she was ashamed of having been with Opal Fawcett, or-- was it something to do with the mention of June?
32428Could it have to do with her husband?
32428Could she have pretended well enough to deceive me in spite of my suspicions?
32428Did she not_ want_ to give her husband a chance of life?
32428Did_ you_ know that you were being forced to marry that poor young prince of yours?"
32428Do Parisian women, especially actresses, marry obscure English doctors in country villages which are hardly on the map?
32428Do n''t you think it would be fun to find out-- and reading the letters if there were any?
32428Do those words convey any special impression to your mind, sir, or has this spirit mistaken you for someone else?"
32428Do you think I''d have told you all this, if any one was likely to believe such a cock- and- bull story as the truth would sound to a jury?
32428Do you think she would?"
32428Do you think we''re fools enough to leave the place alone with only Kramm on guard, if we had someone concealed there?"
32428Do you wonder?
32428Do you?"
32428Do_ you_ pray to forget?"
32428Does he know yet?"
32428Does what I''ve told help you at all to understand the condition she wants me to make about her name, in my will?"
32428Even if the woman could have found out other things, how should she know about a small detail like June''s favourite flower?
32428Fully armoured like Minerva it had leapt into my brain while I said to myself,"What_ if_----?"
32428Guy Brandreth at nine o''clock next morning, and heard the rich contralto voice asking"_ Who_ is it?"
32428Had they needed, for pressing reasons of their own, to possess that place on the coast?
32428Has he been killed, or only wounded?
32428Has n''t he been watching-- playing detective for you?"
32428Has n''t she come?"
32428Has she consciously or unconsciously given you some clue?"
32428Has she done something that makes it wise to keep her out of sight?
32428He and the aunt both stayed at Mrs. Hillier''s house in Surrey, and-- I suppose you can guess what happened?"
32428He did n''t say to her,"What am I to do?"
32428He was a West Point graduate, it seems; probably you know that West Point is the American Sandhurst?
32428How can they all squeal and chatter so?
32428How did Lord Glencathra account for that fact?
32428How did he like being mewed up in one wing of his own home?
32428How did you get hold of this information so soon?"
32428How do_ you_ know about her hair and eyes?
32428How''s that?"
32428How, on the contrary, could he have helped wanting this noble, brave, sweet creature to warm his life for ever?
32428I broke in, surprised,"I thought you''d told us that the''influence''was just as strong in light as darkness?"
32428I could n''t help_ that_, could I?
32428I could n''t resist asking the question,"Had you ever seen Mrs. Jennings before she was married?"
32428I had no definite suspicion; but why had the Scarletts, poor as they were, determined to stick to the house?
32428I hope you will let me introduce her to you, Lady Courtenaye?"
32428I mean, where is the coffin to rest throughout the night?"
32428I suppose it could n''t be a dead_ shark_?"
32428I suppose you did n''t see him?"
32428I suppose you would n''t sell it?"
32428I''ll tell the truth, too-- for the more I say, and the more you''re shocked, the more helpless you are-- do you see?"
32428If she can come back, why should n''t she speak with you direct, instead of through a third person?''"
32428If so, what could be her part in it?
32428If this was what the first three hours brought forth, how would the tide swell by the end of the day-- the end of the_ week_?
32428If you do n''t care what you pay?"
32428In fact, I_ did_ feel so; and though I was able to say"Yes"and"No"and"Oh, really?"
32428Is he English or American or_ what_?"
32428Is that it?"
32428Is that you, Krammie?"
32428Is-- is all_ safe_?"
32428It just flashed through my subconscious mind, while I asked myself,"What has happened to Paolo?
32428It was another door opening, and a child''s voice squeaked,"Who''s there?
32428Let''s have the_ oldest_ bits earlier than Tudor-- what?"
32428May she make some orange- flower tea for you to- night at bedtime?"
32428Murray will have made a will in his wife''s favour?"
32428Now you have heard all-- and you_ see_ all, do n''t you?
32428Now, is it only a''silly- season''cry, this grievance about no houses, or is it true?
32428Oh, Robert, in giving up my progression from plane to plane till you could join me, has the sacrifice been all in vain?"
32428On the following Saturday, at luncheon, I suddenly said,"Look here, Miss Arnold, how would you like to live with me instead of in lodgings?"
32428One heard all one''s friends talking about her, saying,"Have you ever been to Opal Fawcett?
32428Only you was n''t quite smart enough-- savez?
32428Or do n''t you think_ anything_?"
32428Or is it_ they_ who do n''t wish her to be seen, for reasons of their own?"
32428Or only just to London for a change?
32428Or would you rather stay with her over Sunday?"
32428Or, still more thrilling, a_ pair_ of wily gray rats?
32428Or-- had the news of the_ other_ blow come while I was gone, and killed her?
32428Say, Princess, do you think I''m going mad-- just when I hoped I was cured?
32428Seems funny she_ could_ have been a baby, does n''t it?
32428So what must Robert have felt?
32428So what was I to do?
32428So why should n''t I have_ your_ chair, wherever it is, and you keep mine?
32428So why waste thrills upon a horror which had not time to materialize?
32428Surely such circumstantial evidence against him weighs more heavily in the scales than a mere scrap of paper against me?
32428Surely that exquisite face could n''t mask sordidness?
32428Surely the duchess is n''t there at this time of the year?"
32428The kind of light I want?"
32428The question is,_ do_ you agree?"
32428There was a slight pause; then the voice answered with a new vibration in it:"When can you come?
32428They took the coffin to a nice convenient cave( that''s what made this house worth buying back, is n''t it?)
32428Was I_ wrong_ in the judgment I''d impulsively formed?
32428Was Opal Fawcett in the"story"which my imagination had begun to write around Miss Arnold and Robert Lorillard?
32428Was he_ really_ going abroad?
32428Was it probable that any one else-- except ourselves-- could be?
32428Was it the spirit of Margaret Revell''s lost youth I saw, or-- or----""At which window was the-- er-- Being?"
32428Was n''t it dull with no one to play with?
32428We''ll never speak of this again, because we do n''t need to, do we?"
32428What are detectives_ for_?
32428What awful catastrophe has happened to you, Elizabeth, to make you want to see me?"
32428What can it have to do with me?"
32428What could it be?
32428What could we say?
32428What did he do to amuse himself?
32428What did it mean?
32428What do you say?"
32428What if Rosemary or Murray himself should suggest Paul Jennings as the doctor understudy?
32428What if the daughter came into money from sheep or mines, or something, and meant to propose living at Dun Moat with her uncle''s family?
32428What if-- he_ had n''t_ helped it?
32428What is she likely to know about Rosemary''s secrets that you do n''t know?"
32428What relation is she to you?"
32428What time to- morrow will you talk with me?"
32428What will you call me, then?"
32428What would he give for the honour of invitations to tea, with introductions and social advice, from the popular Princess di Miramare?
32428What''s the matter with her?"
32428What''s the matter?"
32428What''s your answer?"
32428What?
32428What_ are_ we to do with her?
32428What_ can_ you be meaning to do?"
32428When Ralston implored desperately,"Do_ you_ believe this of Rosemary?"
32428When can you have me call on you?
32428When you are better, will you come on deck and talk to Ralston?"
32428Where was Roger Fane?
32428Who could have an object in parting Joyce and me?
32428Who knows what might have happened?
32428Why are the Scarletts hiding a girl?
32428Why did the girl blush so?
32428Why did you think I chose your cabin?
32428Why look beyond seven perfectly good days?
32428Why, for instance, the Parisian wife?
32428Will she vanish?"
32428Will you both consent to that?
32428Will you come to my cabin and see what it was?
32428Will you do that?"
32428Would there be thousands or just a mere dribble, or none at all?
32428Yet-- what could I do?
32428You did n''t see her, did you?
32428You know that soft amber light there is in the big_ foyer_ of the Savoy at tea- time, like the beautiful subdued light in dreams?
32428You mean----?"
32428You remember my telling you that Opal suggested this long ago, saying that June wanted to get in touch with me?
32428You remember, my husband witnessed it, one day when Sir James Courtenaye had meant to come over, but could not?
32428You wo n''t marry that girl?"
32428You''d leave me here, and go across the Atlantic without me on a wild- goose chase?"
32428_ Can you say the same of your own?_""Yes!"
32428_ Had_ the boys"saved"money, or-- had they got it in a way less meritorious?
32428_ How_ keep the secret when Gaby Jennings had known the real Rosemary Brandreth in Baltimore?
32428_ Now_ do you understand?"
32428_ Telegrams!_ Could it be possible that there would be telegrams?
32428_ What_ about his nephews?"
32428how could Robert Lorillard have sent her away?
32428in her hand, do you?
32428mean precisely?"
32428what''s the matter with the man-- senile decay?"
32428what''s the matter?"
32428when there were those cablegrams from Baltimore and Washington?
38049Abby Alcott, what does this mean?
38049Do you think I shall ever forget that bandbox?
38049Hospital Sketchesis not cared for now, and is filled up with other tales you know.... Can that plan be carried out?
38049So I am dead, am I?
38049What vices less of?
38049Where did Mr. Alcott get the means to build this great concern?
380491.--MY DEAR LITTLE GIRL,--Will you accept this doll from me on your seventh birthday?
38049After it was over some one said to him,"Well, what do you think of it?"
38049Ai nt I grateful?
38049Also to demand,"Where is my niece, Louisa Caroline?"
38049Are his clothes getting shiny?
38049Are these friends or enemies?"
38049As Mrs. Alcott did not readily think of any who would fill the place, the impulsive Louisa suggested,"Why could n''t I go, Mother?"
38049As her representative on earth, may I send you, with my love, the little book to come out in November?
38049Beauty or Duty,-- which loves Anna best?
38049But Emerson said:"Give it up?
38049By resolving, and then trying_ hard._ What then do you mean to do?
38049By the way, madam,''he continued, addressing Miss Alcott,''will you tell me what is your definition of a philosopher?''
38049Can not you do a small edition for her?
38049Can you send me the right number to go on with in chapter seventeen?
38049Could you do it?
38049Dear B. beamed upon me from the depths of his funny little cloak and said,"We are getting on well, ai n''t we?"
38049Did the author of"My Wife''s Sister"write it?
38049Do n''t he want new socks?
38049Has she seen you about it?
38049Have you sent her"Is That All?"
38049He seemed to catch my naughty thought, and asked, with a twinkle in his eye, looking up as if I were a steeple,"And all as tall as you?"
38049How can I keep a sunny soul To shine along life''s way?
38049How can I learn to rule myself, To be the child I should, Honest and brave, nor ever tire Of trying to be good?
38049How can I tune my little heart To sweetly sing all day?
38049How can you get what you need?
38049How did you like"Mark Field''s Mistake"?
38049How do you all get along,--Marmee, Father, the laddies, my lass, and dear old John?
38049How do you try?
38049How gain love?
38049How is self- denial of temper known?
38049How shall we learn this self- denial?
38049How would a boy I know like that,--a boy who likes to have"trommin"on his nighties?
38049How would it do to ask her to illustrate the fairy book?
38049I said,"Shall I stay, Mother?"
38049I sat in my usual corner, but Mr. P. came up and said, in that cordial way of his,"Well, child, how goes it?"
38049I used to dream of being famous, and it has partly become true; so why not Pa''s college blossom, and he get young and happy with his disciples?
38049I wonder what?
38049If He clothes these And the leafy trees, Will He not cherish thee?
38049If I do begin a new story, how would"An Old- Fashioned Boy"and his life do?
38049In the evening Mr. Lane asked us,"What is man?"
38049Is n''t it hard to sit serenely in one''s soul when one''s body is in a dilapidated state?
38049Is not another to come before this?
38049Louisa loves-- What?
38049Mother''s eyes followed mine, and when I said,"What did you see?"
38049Oh, why these tears, And these idle fears For what may come to- morrow?
38049Rather like Sumner''s end, was n''t it?
38049Sha''n''t we be glad when it is done?
38049Shall I ever know why such things happen?
38049Shall I ever see that dear old face again?
38049She could not have portrayed such men: but who could?
38049She herself asked,"Is it not meningitis?"
38049She is overcome and melted with emotion at the passion and pathos of the story; and when Helwyze asks,"Shall I burn it?"
38049Slipped behind a door, but Dr. Holmes found me out, and affably asked,"How many of you children are there?"
38049Some Americans said,"Who was Goethe, to fuss about?"
38049The dear baby may comfort E., but what can comfort us?
38049Then why be sad When all are glad, And the world is full of flowers?
38049Was n''t that nice?
38049What are the elements in_ wish_?
38049What are the elements of_ hope_?
38049What are the most valuable kinds of self- denial?
38049What are we coming to in our old age?
38049What had they to conceal?
38049What had they to exhibit?
38049What is gentleness?
38049What is her address, please?
38049What is the difference between faith and hope?
38049What is the result of this self- denial?
38049What next?
38049What say you?...
38049What will next Christmas bring forth?
38049When shall I have mine?
38049Where did you get your metaphysics?"
38049Who has it?
38049Who means to have it?
38049Who_ can_ lead it, and not go mad?
38049Why discuss the"unknowable"till our poor are fed and the wicked saved?
38049Why do n''t rich people who enjoy his talk pay for it?
38049Why have any illustrations?
38049Why might it not have been a true wedding or a harvest feast?
38049Why use self- denial?
38049Will you come?"
38049Will you look at the manuscripts by and by, or do you scorn the whole thing?
38049Would I cut the book down about half?
38049Would it go with new ones added and good illustrations?
38049Would that do?
38049Would that do?
38049Yet, as the book is funny, people will say,"Did n''t you enjoy doing it?"
38049Yours in haste, L. M. A. P. S.--Do you want more fairy tales?
38049_ A Sample of our Lessons._"What virtues do you wish more of?"
39663A timely topic for discussion is the never- answered question: When does the new century begin-- with January 1, 1900, or 1901?
39663CHAPTER VI DOLLS AND DOLL- HOUSES What little girl does not love a doll?
39663Is she busy in the kitchen?
39663Is she mending the stockings?
39663Mama, what can I do now?"
39663What do the contents of the sewing- basket hint?
39663Why should not the child be taught, before throwing away the discarded picture book, to ask if there is not a use for it still?
38590Am I, then, in danger from them?
38590Am I, too, a Sensitive?
38590And how,I asked,"may we discern the Astrals from the higher spirits?"
38590And if not Five?
38590And why so,she asked,"since, if you have them, they are for the learning of others likewise?
38590But even this may be hard to find, and if you should not meet with Three, what then will you do?
38590But if you find not Seven?
38590Concerning memory; why should there any more be a difficulty in respect of it? 38590 Do they, then,"I asked,"come from within the man?"
38590Do you, then,I asked,"desire the whole world to abandon the use of fire in preparing food and drink?"
38590How can you have the answer before I have written it?
38590Humanity has always and everywhere asked itself these three supreme questions: Whence come we? 38590 Why will you have Adam to be spirit, and Eve matter, since the mystic books deal only with spiritual entities?
38590''If thou understood not earthly things, how shall I make thee understand heavenly things?''
38590''Why callest thou me?
38590--Instantaneous transfer of inspiration--"Woman, what have I to do with thee?"
38590And I said,''Lord, if the darkness in one of these stars be caused by the darkness in its fellow, which of them was first darkened?''
38590And how shall it remain except it be purely spiritual; since, when matter ceases, it would then be no longer comprehensible?"
38590But he who sat next the last speaker answered,"Truth also is partial; for where is he among us who shall be able to see as God sees?"
38590Can such an one, think you, be vain- glorious or self- exalted, and lifted up?
38590For how shall it respond to that which is above all, if it respond not to that which is nearest?''
38590Had not even Jesus Himself been"crucified through weakness"?
38590How shall we understand this word''perfection''?"
38590I say not, let it suffice; it is better to know all things, for if you know not all, how can you judge all?
38590Is it not said that the immaculate woman brings forth without a pang?
38590Is there anything strong?
38590Is there anything sublime?
38590Is there anything wise?
38590It is like an emerald?
38590It was by will that Thou createdst, by will alone, not by love, was it not?--was it not?
38590It was true that they had both prophets and prophetesses, but did they work like us in supplement and complement of each other?
38590Might it not be, then, that it was my own spirit who knew them and gave them to her, finding her more sensitive to impression than myself?
38590O my God, my God, why didst Thou create?
38590O wretched man; who shall deliver you from this body of Death?
38590Shall I let him?"
38590Then he saw the angel, and said to him,"Brother, what doest thou here?
38590Then, the man being come up to us, Jesus took him by the hand and said,"What readest thou?"
38590They present a body of doctrine at once complete, homogeneous, logical and inexpugnable, in which the three supreme questions, Whence come we?
38590To her enquiry,"Can I never overcome this evil prognostic?"
38590To which she replied, smiling, that she had known it for some time, but which of her names did I mean?
38590Were the prophets, then, shedders of blood?
38590What are we?
38590What are we?
38590What can be the meaning of the general move among these self- appointed censors of morals?
38590What is it?
38590What, then, I asked myself, was the foremost moral need for the instruments of such a work?
38590What, then, is idolatry, and what are false gods?
38590Where is he among us who could attain to such a state?
38590Wherefore, indeed, said our Lord to our Lady:--"Woman, what is between me and thee?
38590Wherefore, then, saith the Lord that the budding of the Fig- Tree shall foretell the end?
38590Whither go we?
38590Whither go we?
38590Who is he who can part with his goods without regret?
38590Who is he who is never consumed by the desires of the flesh?
38590Who or what, then, is this moon?
38590Who shall attain to this perfection?
38590Why comest Thou not to lead the perfect life, and to save the world as woman?
38590Why is this?
38590Will Cain and Caiaphas still have the dominion, and ecclesiasticism be as ready to crucify the Christ on His second coming as it was on His first?
38590Will you not rather communicate these saving truths to thirsty souls?"
38590Will you therefore be regenerate in the without, as well as in the within?
38590Wo n''t you wait for me?"
38590a sapphire?
38590and what is its nature?
38590how am I to send the answer?
38590why didst Thou create this stupendous existence?
39114Are you twenty- one years old?
39114Do you live in this city?
39114(_ Another_ horse?
39114A quaint title, dear reader, is it not?
39114At last one day in an agony of despair I exclaimed,"Where, O where can humbugged humanity find a decent place to feed?"
39114Damphool says my concluding quotation is not strictly correct, but what does he know about it?
39114Do you have good liquor up there?
39114Do you wish to make the acquaintance of Doesticks?
39114How''s your wife?
39114Inspector asks--"Are you a voter?"
39114Inspector hurried to the rescue, and put the test question:"Do you vote for Hoggs?"
39114Is he a malicious, unscrupulous conspirator?
39114Now, if Croton water interferes with my susceptible system in this unaccountable manner, what shall I drink?
39114There, is n''t that_ some_?
39114What are you about?
39114What can I have done to provoke his ire?
39114What is your comparative situation?
39114What kind of a fellow is Burnham?
39114What right has Mayor Wood to come in and upset ancient customs with his new- fangled notions?
39114What would be the effect of brandy and water without any water, and a little lemon?
39114Will somebody answer Bull Dogge?
39114and the ferocious reptiles of fabulous size shrink into a couple of exaggerated angleworms?
39114and what if the two ladies before mentioned are resplendent in sky- blue dresses and yellow turbans?
39114you imagined it a fish pole?
35994''But what if you were to take the disease and die?'' 35994 A stranger, sayest thou?
35994Alas,she cried,"will they treat me so horribly and cruelly?
35994And did you advise that I should be brought by this side of the river, and not straight to the English?
35994And dost thou not dishonour him when thou honourest his enemy?
35994And how came you, madam,quoth he,"to this deep knowledge of pleasure?
35994And how wilt thou deal with the other?
35994And should it hinder him that there is some stranger dead in the house?
35994And the master of these steeds, whose son is he?
35994And what did the voice say?
35994And what,said Lady Kingsburgh,"has been done with the boatmen who brought you to the island?"
35994And who is your Lord?
35994Art thou going a journey from me, my father?
35994Ay,said the old man,"but how wilt thou deal with King Achilles?
35994But are you sure his leg is broken?
35994But if it be so, my sister, how can we avail to change it?
35994But say,said the King,"what troubles thee so much?"
35994But were you in a different situation in life, would you then wear feathers?
35994But where,answered the Queen,"is it your pleasure that I should be?"
35994Can it be well to honour them that transgress? 35994 Did not the women touch their rings with the ring you wore?"
35994Did you not tell them to carry their pennons boldly, and they would have good luck?
35994Did you understand the feelings of those who kissed your feet, your hands and your garments?
35994Do those of your party believe firmly that you are sent by God?
35994Do you know Achille Viard?
35994Do you think them right in believing it?
35994Glad art thou? 35994 Hast thou hold of her?"
35994Hath thy lord then suffered some sorrow that he told thee not?
35994Have you good spurs?
35994Have you not a good hope in God?
35994How daredst thou to transgress the laws?
35994How do you enjoy your visit, my daughter?
35994How knowest thou but that such honour pleaseth the gods below?
35994How sayest thou that they live? 35994 How wilt thou do this?
35994I am so glad,said Florence;"but can we do nothing for him, he seems in such pain?"
35994I know thy good will, but what profiteth it? 35994 If thou hast justice, what need of thy bow?"
35994Must I make it alone, or with my mother?
35994Nay,said the King;"shall I be taught by such an one as thou?"
35994O my sister, wilt thou do this when Creon hath forbidden it?
35994Oh, Joan,said the Archbishop,"in what place do you expect to die?"
35994Sayest thou that I return? 35994 Sendest thou me to dwell elsewhere?"
35994Shall I call her back?
35994Shall I lead the dances, my father?
35994Shall the King be driven out of France, and must we all turn English?
35994Shall then the wicked have like honour with the good?
35994Tell me,cried the Queen,"dost thou purpose to slay thy daughter and mine?"
35994The people, sayest thou? 35994 Thou art resolved then to do this thing or to die?"
35994What air can we breathe at night but night air? 35994 What are you doing here, my child?"
35994What deed? 35994 What has passed between you?"
35994What is your name?
35994What sayest thou? 35994 What sayest thou?
35994What sayest thou? 35994 What then?
35994What will this profit her that is dead?
35994What, then, would ye have done?
35994What? 35994 What?
35994Why not? 35994 Why should he stand between me and mine?"
35994Why, what harm have these persons done you, my child?
35994Will you believe me?
35994Will you believe me?
35994Will you swear,insisted Cauchon,"to speak the truth about whatever you are asked concerning the faith, and whatever you know?"
35994Wilt thou not speak out thy news and then begone?
35994Wilt thou then slay them both?
35994''But,''I said,''who will take charge of the hospital if you go there?''
35994After telling me about the patient who had just been brought in, he said,''Do you know Sister Dora is very ill?
35994Again kneeling she asked him:"Will you take it off before I lay me down?"
35994And also how could she, being young, abide in my house, for young I judge her to be?
35994And hath not this woman transgressed?"
35994And he answered:"What sayest thou, lady?
35994And if I die before my time, what loss?
35994And now King Menelaus came, saying that he repented,"For why should thy child die for me?
35994And now the rush was heard on the stair, And"God, what help?"
35994And of the maiden, what shall I say?
35994And shall not I do pleasure to the dead rather than to the living, seeing that I shall abide with the dead for ever?
35994And shall we not fall into a worse destruction than any, if we transgress these commands of the King?
35994And the traitor looked on the King''s spent strength And said:"Have I kept my word?
35994And was I frenzied or was I bold?
35994And was it only the tossing furze Or brake of the waste sea- wold?
35994And what did chiefly allure you unto it, seeing not many women, but very few men, have attained thereunto?"
35994And when Death saw him, he said:"What doest thou here, Apollo?
35994And when Ismené saw that she prevailed nothing with her sister, she turned to the King and said:"Wilt thou slay the bride of thy son?"
35994And when he was come to the gates of his palace he cried:"How shall I enter thee?
35994And when the King saw him he asked:"What seekest thou, wisest of men?"
35994And when the King saw him, he said:"Art thou content, my son, with thy father''s judgment?"
35994And when the young man was abashed she said:"But why art thou abashed, seeing that thou art about to marry my daughter?"
35994And while they went to fetch the maiden Ismené, Antigone said to the King:"Is it not enough for thee to slay me?
35994And yet he gave me entertainment?"
35994As she was passing through the gate, a man- at- arms called out,"What, is that the Maid?"
35994But she was of a marriageable age; why should she not marry, stay at home, and bring up children, like other women?
35994But those voices of hers, were they of God or of the Devil?
35994But thou, if thou wilt, do dishonour to the laws of the gods?"
35994But what will she say when she knoweth my purpose?
35994But what, I pray thee, bringeth thee to this land?"
35994But who is the good Samaritan?
35994But, come, tell me; where doth he bury her?
35994But, hold, was not he that fell in battle with this man thy brother also?"
35994Did Mrs. N. tell you that she had sent us five pounds for our seaside expedition?
35994Did she hear them, those voices that had said,"Fret not thyself because of thy martyrdom; thou shalt come at last to the Kingdom of Paradise"?
35994Did she know that those of her party had caused masses and prayers to be said in her honour?
35994Do thou therefore make this recompense, which indeed thou owest to me, for what will not a man give for his life?
35994Dost thou keep watch and ward over this woman with thine arrows and thy bow?"
35994Dost thou not know this Diomed?"
35994Dost thou not see him?''"
35994For she will cry to me,''Wilt thou kill me, my father?''
35994For that she is rightly come to the marriage of her daughter who can deny?
35994For the whole host will compel me to this deed?"
35994Had not the Knights, her companions, their pennons made after the pattern of hers?
35994Had she not ordered pictures or images of herself to be made?
35994Had she not told them that such pennons would be lucky?
35994Hast thou not had all happiness, thus having lived in kingly power from youth to age?
35994Have I not always done due reverence to thee and to my mother?
35994He left me, and I was just trying to solve the problem--''What shall be done?
35994He said,''Do you know where Sister Dora is?''
35994Her old and devoted servant said:"Do you think I would let my darling die alone?"
35994How could a dutiful child leave her parents and her home?
35994How could a peasant brave the governor of Vaucouleurs?
35994How have I wronged thee?
35994How was a modest girl to venture among rude men- at- arms?
35994I said,''How did she save your foot when you were not in the hospital, and she was ill at the time you left the hospital?''
35994I said,''I suppose she is going to Yorkshire?''
35994In a short time she returned, and I said to her,''Sister, the doctor has just been telling me how ill you are-- how is it you are here?''
35994Is it for them to rule, or for me?"
35994Is it not enough for thee to have kept Admetus from his doom?
35994Is there a man in Thessaly, nay in the whole land of Greece, that is such a lover of hospitality?
35994It was a perilous position to fill, but what danger will not ambition face?
35994King Agamemnon was sore dismayed when he knew that the Queen was come, and spake to himself:"Now what shall I say to my wife?
35994Knowest thou what manner of thing the life of a man is?
35994Like Baudricourt, the knight asked her:"Who is your lord?"
35994Love you not me?"
35994Madame De Boismorel, at one time eulogising her taste in these respects, remarked:"You do not love feathers, do you, Miss Phlippon?
35994Maurice looked kindly at her as he went, and she said to him:"Master Pierre, where shall I be to- night?"
35994Must my body be consumed to- day and turned to ashes?
35994Now that she was an innocent and interesting young prisoner among them, what more natural than that she should be honoured and petted?
35994Of what have I defrauded thee?
35994Oh, my dear, is it not sad that we prefer to live in the shade when we might have the glorious sunshine?"
35994One of thy lord''s children, or the old man, his father?"
35994Or was it an eagle bent to the blast?
35994Pocahontas became a Christian, and what more natural than that the constant friend of the white men should love an Englishman?
35994She bound the handkerchief round her eyes, and feeling for the block, exclaimed,"What shall I do?
35994She rose, very modestly, and with a pleasant smile said:''How do you do, sir?''
35994She would come and do it, whatever it was, and say,''Will that do?''
35994She''d say,''Do you want your pillows shaken up, or do you want moving a little?''
35994Should I, for fear of thee, be found guilty against them?
35994The figure was rather indistinct, for it was nearly dark; and as I gazed at the receding form, I said,''Sister, is it you?''
35994The question between the Girondist and the Jacobin was:"Who shall lie down on the guillotine?"
35994Then King Agamemnon came forth from his tent, saying:"What meaneth this uproar and disputing that I hear?"
35994Then one of them seized the Queen, and cried,"Now tells us, where is thy lord?"
35994Then said King Agamemnon:"But how shall I escape from this strait?
35994Then said the King to Antigone:"Tell me in a word, didst thou know my decree?"
35994Then she asked:"Are the faces of the English towards us, or their backs?"
35994Then why dost thou weep?"
35994They tormented the captain by pressing around him saying,"Love you not me?
35994Thinkest thou that thy father loveth it not?
35994Was it not good of her?
35994Was it not plainly declared?"
35994Was she witch or saint?
35994What could three do and the billows running mountains?
35994What has dear old Cap done?"
35994What hath she to do with war?
35994What meanest thou?"
35994What need to say more?
35994When he approached Joan, she asked him:"Are you the bastard of Orleans?"
35994Where is it?"
35994Where shall I find her?"
35994Who art thou that thou shouldest bewail her?
35994Who hath dared to do this deed?"
35994Who is dead?
35994Who then will hold up the torch for the bride?"
35994Who was she that should save it?
35994Why must I and my child walk on this hot pavement, while they repose on velvet cushions and revel in all luxury?
35994Why not?
35994Why shouldst thou be so troubled, seeing that they who rule this house yet live?"
35994Will he not be wroth, hearing that he hath been cheated of his wife?"
35994Wilt thou bury him when the King hath forbidden it?"
35994Wilt thou not take another in her stead?"
35994With that he laid his hands on his King:"Is this not so, my lords?"
35994Yea, King, the mortal pledge that I gave?
35994Yet what nobler thing could I have done than to bury my mother''s son?
35994exclaimed some who stood by;"should we turn our backs?"
35994hast thou stricken kings with blindness?
35994he cried,"what shall I do, being bereaved of thee?"
35994how shall I dwell in thee?
35994or how shall her place be supplied if she be taken from us by death?''
35994she cried,"is it here that I must die?"
35994shouted one of them,"are you going to make us dine here?"
35994what more did I hear or see, Or how should I tell the rest?
35994which she''d do, whatever it was, and say,''Do you feel quite cosey now?''
35994why lookest thou so solemn and full of care?
35994wilt thou always keep this widowed state?"
38749How can I be sure,she said to me,"that, though my mother was a cook, my father might not have been a_ préfet_, or even a prince?"
38749Look''ere,said the policeman,"where do you live any''ow?"
38749Provençale?
38749Seen a cat? 38749 Well, and have you ever seen one come down again?"
38749What would you have?
38749What, mum?
38749Why not apply to the''New York Herald''office here?
38749Wot sort o''cat?
38749You have been amused?
38749A younger woman, golden- haired, in big hat and feathers, whom the others called Duchess, demanded"Who are you anyhow?"
38749And how can I help it if, when I am there, I see many things besides the beauty that lured us to the Quarter and keeps us in it?
38749And now what had she to say?
38749And now?
38749And then?
38749Auguste?
38749But could we see her go?
38749But he might have been the burglar for all Trimmer knew, and-- what then?
38749But if Louise had not asked for our marriage certificate, could we insist upon her producing hers?
38749But what could I do?
38749But why make it sad for all the world because she was in pain?
38749Could I blame her?
38749Could he go?
38749Did M. Auguste''s fate overtake him when they crossed the Channel?
38749Did she ever leave London?
38749Did she use the money to go back to Marseilles?
38749Had he gone?
38749Had she not said_ Madame_ was kind?
38749He was a man like us, was n''t He?
38749Her head was no better, and what was the hospital good for if they could n''t cure her?
38749How could I see blood on the hands of the man who presided so joyously over my pots and pans?
38749How could she forget us?
38749How could we forget her?
38749I complimented her on her fore- thought; but"What could I do?"
38749I could not believe that she really did not know, and at last I asked her:--"I suppose you have heard, Trimmer, what has been going on these days?"
38749I remember Harold Frederic seeing her once and, with the intuition of the novelist, placing her:"Who is your old Queen Victoria?"
38749Nor would there be a penny over for the family mourning,--could I allow them, the chief mourners, to mourn without crape?
38749On one of these occasions, a policeman materializing suddenly from nowhere and turning a bull''s- eye on him,--"Have you seen a cat about?"
38749She giggled:"Would_ Madame_ look at her feet in_ Madame''s_ shoes?
38749She had but arrived in London, she had never gone as_ bonne_ anywhere; how, then, could she give references?
38749She had never done any harm to any one: why should she have to suffer?
38749She needed the work and was willing to do it: was not that sufficient?
38749Then he added:"You have seen dozens of children go up to the Dramatist''s room, have n''t you?"
38749We have told her many stories,--_et des histoires un tout petit peu salées, n''est- ce pas?
38749Were the Soho lodgings the scene of some tremendous_ crime passionel_?
38749What Trimmer did, when she came home ten minutes later and I told her,"There''s a burglar in the box- room,"was to say,"Oh, is there, mum?
38749What became of her, who can say?
38749What could be simpler?
38749What could she do but go and look after them when he asked her?
38749What did we know about him, anyway?
38749What happened?
38749What if the murder is only technical, Mr. Square''s arrest a matter of form, his discharge immediate?
38749What would you?
38749When Augustine warned her that her idleness was preparing for her a bed on the Embankment and daily food in a soup- kitchen,"_ Eh bien?_ why not?"
38749When Augustine warned her that her idleness was preparing for her a bed on the Embankment and daily food in a soup- kitchen,"_ Eh bien?_ why not?"
38749When did I propose to pay back the money Trimmer had spent on the doctor in Camden Town?
38749Who could help loving her?
38749Why did n''t I think of it before?
38749Why, indeed?
38749Why, she moaned, should this sorrow come to her?
38749With so stupendous a spectacle arranged for my benefit, is it any marvel that much of my time is spent at my windows?
38749how could he venture back to France, as I know he did for I received from him letters with the Paris postmark?
38749pour égayer cette pauvre Mademoiselle?_"It was the day after the feast that Louise had to give in.
39828Albany[?]
39828Can any country besides ours show a better result-- at least for quantity, if not for quality?
39828IOOR, W. INDEPENDENCE; OR, WHICH DO YOU LIKE BEST, THE PEER OR THE FARMER?
39828IS IT A LIE?
39828New York, 18--?
39828Philadelphia,[?]
39828Played at the Park Theatre, New York, October 14, 1826, as_ Peter Smink; or, Which is the Miller?_ A Farce.
39828THE WIDOW''S SON; OR, WHICH IS THE TRAITOR?
39828The Embargo; or, What News?
39828This play is a version of Colman''s_ Who Wants a Guinea?_ and was performed at the Park Theatre, New York, December 3, 1828.
39828Where Is He?
39828Which Do You Like Best?
39828Written by(----?)
39828[ A] Newark[?
35372''And who christened it thus, and who has ordered it to be built?'' 35372 ''But why does he build ships?''
35372''Is he a rich ship- owner?'' 35372 ''Paulina,''cried I,''you have heard my offer, and you would still thus refuse to be mine?''
35372''The little Salden?'' 35372 ''What kind of a ship is that which you are building over there?''
35372''Wherefore,''said she,''reveal the deeper meaning of Nature and the Bible to those who, after all, can not grasp it? 35372 ''Whither does the procession go?''
35372''Who is the Paraclete?'' 35372 ''Why shall marriage,''replied she,''not be the pillar of lasting communion of souls?
35372A sad lot,said Giulia to Beate, who entered,"this dependence upon the public-- is it not the worst slavery?
35372An assignation; how so?
35372And are you in earnest about it?
35372And can you see no means of escape?
35372And could it be otherwise? 35372 And did you not enchant all the rooms of my castle with leaves of recollection and golden sayings?"
35372And is not every bride a spiritual one, and every bond united for everlasting endurance?
35372And she has accepted?
35372And the maccaroni?
35372And the paper-- unhappy girl, when were you to give me the paper?
35372And then we will return here; we will have ink and paper brought to us, and you will write the guarantee, will you not, dear, good friend?
35372And what did, then, really lead you into this temple of art, if it is not''Norma''nor Signora Bollini?
35372And what do you want of me?
35372And what shall I do there?
35372And when I have told him, if he believe me, if he still love me, what then? 35372 And which daughter did he marry?"
35372And who gave you this locket?
35372And why did you not show this paper to the judges? 35372 And you did not do it?"
35372And you do not ask if I have courage to confess all?
35372And you live solitarily and alone?
35372And you love him still?
35372And you preferred to be tortured and locked up?
35372But I myself-- am I not become old? 35372 But for heaven''s sake, Lori-- the pink note?"
35372But indeed, dear brother, what brings you here at this unwonted hour?
35372But of course he would provide for them?
35372But surely not for you?
35372But what will Euphrasia say if I remain away so long?
35372But where shall we sit?
35372But where were you after you left Nice? 35372 Chance?"
35372Cäcilie, my sister Cäcilie--"What about her?
35372Did you see the Pope, and eat maccaroni?
35372Do not deny it; you have probably already passed many a night upon this meadow? 35372 Do you ever attend the theatre, Herr von Blanden?
35372Do you love Cäcilie?
35372Dr. Reising is here?
35372Have you any message for me? 35372 How could he fail at the University Jubilee?
35372How long in worldly circles must hesitating affection wait ere love presses the seal of the first kiss upon it in token of acquiescence? 35372 I am not returned?"
35372If it were so easy to lift the veil, should I not have raised it long since? 35372 Ill?"
35372Indisposed, beautiful_ prima donna_?
35372Is enthusiasm then dependent upon the approval of the many? 35372 Mad woman-- and now, for the first time, you speak of it to me?"
35372My heart seemed to be pierced and torn; was it possible that she, in whom I had found the delight of my life, was lost to me? 35372 My mother is ill,"said Eva,"can I leave her now?"
35372Olga, you surely did not find Kanzleirath''s Minna at home?
35372Passionate? 35372 Regretted?
35372She does not owe you anything? 35372 So little do you know me, Paul?
35372That will I, but without social prejudice; my happiness does not depend upon the world; but how are you getting on? 35372 Then our_ prime- donne_ are allied to Italian_ bravi_?
35372Then the candidate rose from his chair, and, with the gestures of a zealous accuser, asked--''Who, then, are these elect?
35372Theories? 35372 Too far?
35372Well, and the election?
35372What brings you here? 35372 What brings you hither in this tropical downpour of rain?"
35372What do you want? 35372 What have you done?
35372What is the matter with you, my friend?
35372What is the use of these castles in the air?
35372What, in the world?
35372Where is Eva?
35372Where is Eva?
35372Which you defended stoutly, though?
35372While contemplating the immature diamonds, with a hopeless gaze, he heard his mother''s voice in the study--Where is the youngster, then?"
35372Who could exclude politics?
35372Who was that remarkable man, who seemed to step out of the''thousand and one nights''into the sober life of the old royal Prussian town? 35372 Who would trouble themselves about an adventure on Lago Maggiore?"
35372Whom in the world, then?
35372Why do you ask this question?
35372Why do you look so strangely at me?
35372Why do you rove about here alone at night? 35372 Why should she have left us alone?"
35372Why then?
35372Why?
35372Will you be mine? 35372 Would the world''s secret let itself be put into set forms?
35372You are a political agent?
35372You doubt that I still retain my power over him? 35372 You have surely been refused?"
35372You speak, dear friend, of matters which it is to be hoped you do not know from personal experience?
35372You think that I shall make conditions, I shall insist upon the right of exclusiveness which such glowing love demands? 35372 You, Lori, you would leave us?"
35372_ Corpo di bacco_,echoed a violent voice,"of what use are_ biglietti_ when the people assembles?"
35372A question has long been hovering upon my lips; why, then, did you not become man and wife, if you loved one another?
35372Ah, the sea is so wide, so wide-- and the boat drifts farther and farther out-- and who cares for me?
35372Am I not so too?
35372And did this religion possess such graceful priestesses as that one, from whom I could not avert my gaze so long as she was within its reach?
35372And had he the power to alter it?
35372And should he, indeed, still pay the visit?
35372And was not then Signora Giulia secretly at my castle during my absence?"
35372And what had driven her here to these remote districts?
35372And what is it all for?
35372And why should she hesitate?
35372Are we not all ill?
35372Are we not like galley- slaves, who are seared with an ineffaceable brand?
35372But he, he-- how can he respect me?
35372But how do you like our opera?
35372But the lady-- did his eyes deceive him?
35372But was it only a deplorable deception?"
35372But we are tried weather- proof friends, is it not so Böller?
35372But what brings you here, then, my sister?"
35372But when the magic forsakes us, who should be the representatives of art?
35372But why do I wonder?
35372But why was Cäcilie jealous on the very day on which she had sacrificed him to another?
35372But you are surely unwell, Signora?
35372Can I endure it?
35372Can an Italian possess intellect?
35372Can he follow her then, as he once followed her, when he conquered the bride with daring corsair courage?
35372Can idiot Kätchen be making another swimming excursion and Eva be holding the oars?"
35372Certainly in those days you did not deal in amber?"
35372Could Dr. Kuhl not give him better counsel?
35372Could not the weather- wise determination of that child of Nature fail for once?
35372Did not life lie joylessly before the convalescent girl?
35372Do I not glide like a shadow amongst these joyous beings?
35372Do you know if it was chance?"
35372Do you like that sun- burnt complexion, those dark eyes, that excessively brunette appearance?
35372Does my heart still possess a youth?
35372Does not Beatrice bear the olive branch of peace?"
35372Does she not perceive the stormy clouds on the horizon?
35372Even if it cost all my rye- harvest-- what will one not do, when any especial happiness in life befalls one?"
35372Had any one ventured to play a practical joke on him?
35372Had he, then, been blind in those days by the seaside?
35372Had she had not openly set herself free?
35372Had she yesterday cast the flowers into the water so as to bury all recollections?
35372Had the wind dazzled them with the dust that was blown about?
35372Has he done anything to injure you; has he offended you deeply?
35372Have you anything to say to me?"
35372Have you not written to one another?"
35372Have you often followed me?"
35372He must have wearied for you?
35372How can any one wish to rule the human heart according to this freak of nature?
35372How can one apply the laws of dead nature to the human heart?
35372How can she, who has barely recovered from a fever, venture out on the evening tide?
35372How could I curse love?"
35372How pale you look-- where are the roses which yesterday bloomed so freshly in your cheeks?
35372I became a hypocrite, I required these tokens in the name of salvation, of spiritual exercises; could my spiritual bride deny me them?
35372I have longed for it, I showed consideration for your beauty, did any favour befall me in consequence?
35372If any happiness, any comfort could arise from it, should I hesitate with such a disclosure?"
35372Indeed, I surely weary you?"
35372Is it not so?"
35372Is it not the artist''s voluntary devotion to his ideal?"
35372Is it not true, dear Ferdinand?"
35372Is my misfortune any the less?
35372Is she a genuine or only a theatrical Italian?
35372Is there a greater pain than the sensation of one''s own uselessness, and in addition, when it is unmerited, when it was formerly foreign to us?
35372Is there a sweeter bit of country in which fire- works can be let off?"
35372Is truth to be cudgelled?
35372May she learn the truth?
35372Must I not guard myself against the funeral song of the land of the lotos flowers, against the Indian barcarolle of Nirvana?
35372Must he be accountable for the victim whom the sea had swallowed up?
35372Must not this intoxicate me, and kindle an unknown ardour within my soul?
35372Of what use is the pure flame of oxygen when it only serves to make old iron rusty?
35372Of what use to her was all proper indignation?
35372Or shall I venture forth again into a world of adventures from which an internal lack of contentment drove me back?
35372Read this condemnation, must not every glad emotion be crushed by it?
35372Rose- coloured paper-- disguised writing--- what could this tiny sheet signify, that might have been wafted into his room through the air?
35372Shall you then retire from the stage?"
35372She had thrown the nosegay into the water; should all memory of the happiness of love be buried with it?
35372Should he request her to sit down beside him?
35372Should she cease to be my friend, because she may not be my wife?
35372Since when has she belonged to the stage celebrities?
35372So little do you all know me?
35372The mother stirred; did the first ray of the sun disturb her?
35372The young beauty passed close by me; was I mistaken, or did she smile pleasantly at me?
35372There you have a few specimens; how do you like the colour?
35372They possess a little robber''s cave close to their drawing- rooms?
35372To- day she appeared, to herself, so intellectually superior, could it be difficult for her to enchain an interesting man?
35372Was Lori not more graceful, more clever than Euphrasia?
35372Was it a girl or a young married woman?
35372Was it by chance that her weird shadow also, which had accompanied her on Lago Maggiore, had followed her hither?
35372Was it credible that now we parted coldly and distantly?
35372Was my youthful dream of founding a new religion called into life by this enthusiast?
35372Was she right, could Eva have taken her own life?
35372Was there ever a more pitiable slave than I?
35372Was this ride not an intelligible reply?
35372We are and shall remain in the sanctuary; what do we care about the baying of the dogs at the portals of the temple?"
35372We have the same eyes, the same heart; must we not also have the same love?"
35372Were not her own secret hopes annihilated by such lamentable obduracy?
35372What am I to you here, where my name can be read at every street corner?"
35372What did that brave Böller gain when he even travelled to Moscow after her?
35372What do you want here in this tempest?"
35372What doctor does not alter his diagnosis after closer observation?
35372What does our great public understand about music?
35372What excuse is offered for my withdrawal, for behaviour that looks like a public insult?"
35372What had Eva been?
35372What had happened?
35372What has grieved you so, shocked you?
35372What is my life?
35372What is talent?
35372What possessed you?
35372What should I confess?
35372What should he do?
35372What should he do?
35372What was left to them but painful renunciation; but is not the life of most mortals doomed to it?
35372What was more probable than that on this evening the_ Principessa_ of Lago Maggiore should visit the theatre?
35372What were his intentions, what was his connection with her?
35372What, have we then really learned, according to any system, any principle?
35372When it had drawn near to the open grave, Blanden asked the person next to him who was being buried?
35372Where has she gained her laurels?"
35372Who could endure life without sleep?
35372Who is this Signora Bollini?
35372Who should solve that mystery?
35372Who then is this stranger who crosses our mutual path?"
35372Who would enquire whether that music is always adapted to the_ libretto_?
35372Who would not be coquettish?
35372Who would turn that into a reproach against him?
35372Whom did they bear to the tomb?
35372Why do the women and girls follow a banner which dared not be unfurled in the open light of day?
35372Why do you not remain in Warnicken?"
35372Will the boat not return?
35372Will you be mine, dear Cäcilie?"
35372Would it not much rather disclose itself to inexpressible feelings?
35372You call me coquettish?
35372You know that lady, who is she?"
35372You will come to see us soon, will you not?"
35372You will come, will you not?"
35372and the management-- did you see the Wolfs- schlucht lately in the''Freischütz?''
35372and the very canto which treats of Armida and Rinaldo?
35372and then suddenly starting, he cried, as he held Kätchen firmly with his strong arms--"And yet you are her murderess-- why did you not save her?"
35372asked Eva,"and you are angry with me that I would rob you of him?
35372cried Eva suddenly,"what did I say of you?
35372cried Miranda,"Ill?
35372exclaimed he then,"Jerusalem delivered?
35372said the amber merchant, turning round,"chance?
33959''Ai n''t I got a right to say a word here, gentlemen?
33959Again?
33959An''be you hard up, an''earnin''your own livin''by yourself, did ye say? 33959 And as to my own risk?"
33959And broke the wind- shield? 33959 And if I do not come?"
33959And if I should n''t come?
33959And if she says no?
33959And if you do n''t?
33959And in case you do not make a will?
33959And now what does this Geraldine want from my respected brother?
33959And that one?
33959And then?
33959And which parent, Sir Oracle, would you have her be most like?
33959And you did n''t ask York to help you?
33959And you do n''t go mad?
33959And you got it?
33959Any news from the Argonaut to- day?
33959Are we less able than our forefathers?
33959Are you sure?
33959As I was saying half an hour ago, brother, have you seen my little silk purse anywhere? 33959 Aunt Jerry, how much do you know of the value of this Swaim estate?"
33959Aw, shut up an''listen, now, will you? 33959 Be you goin''on the Sage Bresh train, lady?"
33959Be you goin''on this train, too?
33959But how is all this psychological analysis going to help matters here?
33959But how will you know?
33959But how? 33959 But suppose I should sublease this land?"
33959But tell me why she should make capital out of me?
33959By the way, do you know who owns any of the claims, as you call them, in this valley?
33959Ca n''t you let me have some of your fish? 33959 Can I be of any service to you?"
33959Can you tell me where to find the one belonging to the estate of the late Jeremiah Swaim, of Philadelphia?
33959Could such a thing be possible that this dear girl is discouraged and tempted to hide her necessities?
33959Did I shock you? 33959 Did n''t Jerry leave suddenly?
33959Did she tell you so?
33959Did you ever see that dreadful''blowout''thing?
33959Did you want to see me about something?
33959Do they interest you?
33959Do you believe your own words?
33959Do you control the sections south of mine?
33959Do you ever get lonely here? 33959 Do you fully understand what you are giving up, Jerry?"
33959Do you know an old gentleman here named York Macpherson, a Mortgage Company man?
33959Do you know him?
33959Do you know which one that is?
33959Do you know who owns this ground now?
33959Does n''t anybody know where Joe is?
33959Does this finish your''confession''?
33959Even if your Big Dipper tells me, shall I wait for your confirmation?
33959For why?
33959Geraldine Swaim, what are you saying?
33959Has Thelma Ekblad a blowout farm, too?
33959Has n''t Jerry the prospect of enough for herself? 33959 Has she flinched or fell down once in three years, York Macpherson?
33959Has the young lady anything to say?
33959Have you a good little runabout that I could hire this morning? 33959 Heir to what?"
33959How do you do, Thelma? 33959 How do you know, fair lady, that this is the same creature?
33959How do you know? 33959 How shall we make her see?"
33959How''s it going to help Joe Thomson, or keep him from being helped, you mean?
33959How''s the blowout?
33959If you did n''t take it, why did you have it here? 33959 Is it courage, or contempt for the West, that makes her fearless where one would expect her to be timid?
33959Is it wilfulness and love of adventure still, or something else, that holds you here''yet awhile''?
33959Is that the Sage Brush Railroad so near?
33959Is there any more silver of that pattern in this part of the country?
33959Is this Miss Swaim?
33959Is your friend related to John Wellington, who once lived in Philadelphia?
33959It''s Joe''s place, eh?
33959It''s a joke on me bein''so stupid, but you wo n''t give me away to''em, will you?
33959Jerry Swaim,Mrs. Darby cried, staring up at her niece in amazement,"do you mean to say you drove out alone over that sideling, slippery bluff road?
33959Jerry, do you know why I called you your mother''s own child just now?
33959Jerry, must you make this sacrifice?
33959Like that silver cup I saw down at the deep hole?
33959Look at little Brother Ponk strut, would you? 33959 May I sit here with you awhile?"
33959May I stay with you until I find where I really am? 33959 Me?
33959Miss Swaim, will you let me, without no recompense, be a friend at court whenever you need my help? 33959 No, no; you do n''t count him as your property, do you?"
33959Not entirely,Joe replied,"but if I do my part, who knows what Providence may do?"
33959Now as to Mrs. Bahrr, which course do you advise me to follow?
33959Now how did it ever get in there? 33959 Oh, but I mean what''s he doing about it?"
33959Pardon me, but may I ask what brought you down here to look at such a place?
33959Say you would n''t? 33959 Say, had n''t you better wait and let York Macpherson soar down with you?"
33959Shall I tell you why?
33959So serious as all that?
33959Tell me all about this place, wo n''t you?
33959Tell me, Mr. Ponk, why do the New Eden people listen to a sharp- tongued trouble- maker, since they know her power?
33959The artist who turned out to be a bank clerk?
33959The river runs by your place?
33959This artist''s father was in business with your father once, was n''t he?
33959To go mad or go back East?
33959Was it always like this, here? 33959 Well, what next?
33959Well, what of it? 33959 Well, why not let the sand have its own third, while he uses the other two- thirds himself?
33959Well?
33959Were those the people we saw on the south border of''Kingussie''?
33959What are you doing, Miss Swaim?
33959What are you staring at?
33959What brought you here to look at it, then?
33959What can I do for you to- day, Joe?
33959What could I tell you, Miss Swaim?
33959What difference if you did? 33959 What do you mean, York?"
33959What for?
33959What has done all this?
33959What have you heard from Jerry recently?
33959What if he were dead?
33959What is it doing to your land?
33959What is it worth?
33959What kind of mounts are you afraid of? 33959 What of that?"
33959What should I do now? 33959 What''s on her mind now?"
33959What''s the matter, Jerry?
33959What''s the old Teddy Bear doing here?
33959Where is Uncle Cornie? 33959 Where shall I take you to, Miss Swaim?"
33959Where were you in the city to- day?
33959Where''s the deep fishing- hole?
33959Where''s your dead to you, Miss Swaim?
33959Wherefore?
33959Who are you?
33959Who''d you say she is?
33959Why do n''t you answer my question?
33959Why do you loan him money if you know he ca n''t succeed?
33959Why do you prefer that?
33959Why do you run away? 33959 Why do you stay here?
33959Why not go back East?
33959Why not? 33959 Why should a bear with cracked plates and iron knives and forks offer me a drink in a silver cup?
33959Why''must''? 33959 Why, Jerry, are n''t you happy to see me-- glad for us to be together again?"
33959Why? 33959 Why?"
33959Will this young Ekblad go up to his sweetheart''s grave every Sunday, like Mr. Ponk comes here?
33959Will you let me give a receipt for the cash instead of taking a check?
33959Wo n''t you come in?
33959Would you do-- me a favor?
33959Yes, and what else?
33959York, could n''t you tell her?
33959York, what happens to folks that tends to other folks''s affairs?
33959You bet she wo n''t, York, but what will stop it? 33959 You hitched your wagon to a star, but to what kind of a star-- to what kind of a star?"
33959You love it all as much as I do, do n''t you, Jerry?
33959You say you do?
33959You say you have the report on the Swaim estate that the Macpherson Mortgage Company of New Eden, Kansas, is taking care of for us?
33959You say you wo n''t tell''em at all that I come?
33959''Ai n''t ye got a rich kin back East to help ye none?"
33959After all,_ are_ you really in earnest about this Sage Brush Valley New Eden?
33959Ai n''t she stronger and handsomer to- day than she was the day I had the honor to bring her up from the depot in that new gadabout of mine?
33959Ai n''t that funny?
33959Am I involved in your scheme of things?"
33959And how do you happen to know Joe Thomson?"
33959And how would the Big Dipper act?
33959And we''ll be true to our word to make the best of ourselves and not let Aunt Jerry frighten us into changing our plans, will we, Gene?
33959And what about the valley down- stream?
33959And why?
33959Are n''t you Miss Swaim?"
33959Are n''t you?"
33959Are you in line for promotion on that, Ponk?"
33959Are you right sure you would n''t believe her yourself, much as you despised any story of hers you''d be forced to listen to?
33959At last she asked, plaintively,"With all you have here, Jerry, why do you go hunting opportunities in Kansas?"
33959Bahrr?"
33959But could he?
33959But if he really has n''t it?"
33959But what for, if it took him?"
33959But what for?
33959But what made you take it?
33959But why is she here at all?
33959But, Ponk, could she teach mathematics?
33959But, say,_ you_ ai n''t any kin to the late Mr. Swaim, who never seen that land of hisn, I reckon?
33959By the way, Miss Jerry, how would you like to take a horseback ride over''Kingussie''?
33959Can I be of any further service to you?"
33959Could you come over this afternoon?"
33959Did He overlook this spot?"
33959Did he go?"
33959Did his shabby form lie under the swirling current of that angry river, his heroic old heart stilled forever?
33959Did she say who was to make that new white dress she was buyin''yesterday at the Palace Emporium?"
33959Did the Big Dipper come calling on you?
33959Did the folks miss me and say I had gone down the river?
33959Did you ever need one?"
33959Did you ever see such a precious thing as a''blowout''here, Jerry?"
33959Do n''t you know it is all I have, and I must earn my living, too, just like anybody else?"
33959Do n''t you say so, Miss Swaim?"
33959Do n''t you think so?
33959Do you remember her, Laura?
33959Do you remember what we were saying when he appeared on the scene?"
33959Do you see what you are up against, Joe?
33959Do you suppose she''d do it?
33959Ever see the blowout by moonlight?
33959Go mad or go back East?
33959Got her shopping all done a''ready?
33959Had she fallen so low as this, or had she risen to a newer height of character than she had ever known before?
33959Hard luck, was n''t it?
33959Has the East too strong a hold for the West to break?"
33959His reward?
33959How could she understand the temptation to the soul of an artist in such lovely settings as"Eden"offered?
33959How is the baby?"
33959I know you''ll be glad to leave this God- forsaken country, wo n''t you, dearie?
33959I knowed Laury would n''t be here, an'', would you believe it?
33959I''m sorry, but could you wait till, say, about a- Thursday, or mebby a- Friday?"
33959I''m willing she should stay with us awhile, but how can_ she_ live on a Sage Brush claim?
33959II JERRY AND JOE VII UNHITCHING THE WAGON FROM A STAR How long is a mid- June day?
33959If this''Eden''can be so beautiful and profitable, what can I not make out of twelve hundred acres, in a New Eden?
33959Is everything clear to you now?"
33959Is it your settled occupation?"
33959Is n''t it strange how suddenly we drop off one life and take up another?"
33959Is n''t the town big enough without her ranging all over''Kingussie''?"
33959Is n''t''Eden''beautiful?
33959Look over the place well, wo n''t you?
33959May I come down to your office in the morning for a little conference?
33959May I take you to your destination here in my little gadabout?
33959May I tell you something, Jerry?
33959Might not your good judgment take you back, in spite of a little pride and the newness of a different life here?"
33959No hint of this thought, however, was in his face as he laid aside his pen and asked, in his kindly, stereotyped way:"What can I do for you?"
33959Now ai n''t that so?"
33959Now what can I do?"
33959Of course we--"Oh what was the use?
33959Oh, where did the river take Joe?"
33959Or do we change them?
33959Or is it because you are here with me that''Eden''is so fair to- night?
33959See the drift of it all?
33959See?"
33959Shall I go out to Kansas after her?"
33959Shall I read you his description?"
33959Shall I?"
33959She is getting tired and disgusted with her plebeian surroundings, and as to her estate--""What of her estate?
33959She''ai n''t gone home, is she?
33959Should she climb over it, hammer an opening through it, or turn back and run from it?
33959Since you know so much about my coming here already, may I tell you a few more things?
33959Something I''ve waited for the summer and''Eden''to give me the hour and the place to say?
33959Takin''a constitutional?
33959Tell me, wo n''t you, what is next for me?"
33959That would necessitate the query,"Which church?"
33959The married one now, I think, an''a bouncin''big baby, but what do you care for all that?"
33959The plea of the old woman, and the soul of the young woman, which called loudest now?
33959Then came a greater query:"Shall I go back to''Eden,''to Aunt Jerry''s rule, to Eugene, to love, to easy, dependent, purposeless living?
33959Then it is my estate that is all covered with sand, barren and worthless as a desert?
33959Then she said, sharply:"Where did you find out all this?"
33959There''s an inspiration for me in the things that you can do?"
33959This is Miss Swim, ai n''t it?"
33959This is a secret session, hain''t it?"
33959To Ponk''s anxious query,"What will you do?"
33959Was he lying and whining for mercy, being caught with the spoils of his thieving?
33959Was he?
33959Was it selfishness, or thoughtlessness, or love of startling adventure, or insight, or fate bringing her this way?
33959Was it, sure?"
33959Was n''t she named for her father''s rich sister, Mrs. Darby?
33959Was the wish of the evil mind of the woman hitching away across lots and corkscrewing down alleyways projecting itself so far as this?
33959Were you busy?"
33959What are you doing to bring her back to me?"
33959What could this dainty, untrained creature do with the best of claims?
33959What did life mean, anyhow?
33959What do you care who else plays there?
33959What do you know?
33959What do you make of her, anyhow, York?"
33959What do_ you_ think it is worth, as a whole, or cut up into town lots for a summer resort?"
33959What does she look like?"
33959What else?"
33959What has changed this prairie to such an awful place?"
33959What matter that her greatest enemy was herself?
33959What more need be said for this"Eden"into which only the good little snakes were permitted to enter?
33959What right had Jerry to go off to earn a living when a living was here ready- made merely for her subjection to a selfish old woman''s wishes?
33959What shall I call mine?
33959What''s she here for?"
33959What''s that you''re lookin''at?"
33959What''s the matter?"
33959What''s the use of talking about it?
33959What''s your grievance?"
33959What''s your idea, Joe?"
33959What_ do_ you think of that?"
33959Where can you go?"
33959Where did the B. D. see it?"
33959Where does she get money when I ca n''t keep a bill around the house?"
33959Where has this day gone, and where am I, anyhow?"
33959Where is she, then?"
33959Where is this precious claim that is to sustain this luxuriously reared child?"
33959Where was the flimsy little shack now, and where was the old Teddy Bear himself?
33959Where would she go?
33959Where''s she from?"
33959Where?"
33959Who can forecast the trend of the human heart?
33959Who ever called anything ugly about Jerry Swaim before?
33959Who invented freight- cars, anyhow?
33959Who is that strange girl Ponk''s running around with last night?"
33959Who''s afraid of bears?
33959Why did that thought come to the girl''s mind just now?
33959Why do you want to go to Kansas?
33959Why does n''t her rich aunt Darby provide for her?
33959Why not?"
33959Why should Paul Ekblad go so far to a funeral?
33959Why should n''t I know love when I see it?"
33959Why should she do either one, who had not offended anybody?
33959Why was such land ever made?"
33959Why, what is that?"
33959Why, why, where''s York?"
33959Why?
33959Why?
33959Why?
33959Why?"
33959Why?"
33959Will you do it?"
33959Will you help me to keep across the river?
33959Will you sit down?"
33959Wo n''t it be one big lark for me to go clear to the Sage Brush Valley?
33959Wo n''t you come with us?
33959Wo n''t you tell me?
33959Would it help any if we offered the place to Miss Swaim?
33959Ye ai n''t alone this dreary day, are ye?
33959Yes, why?
33959Yet why?
33959You had n''t figured on my boasting qualities, had you?"
33959You know where I have been to- day?"
33959You like him very much?"
33959You really are here, and not dead, are you?"
33959You remember York came trailing after you with some excuse or other, an''right behind him comes another trailer, a womankind?"
33959You remember he was shambling around the grounds the night before, waiting for you?"
33959You think I could n''t teach A, B, C, the known quantities, let alone x, y, z, the unknown quantities, do n''t you?"
33959You tried yet to_ keep_ her anywhere?
33959You were n''t born here, were you?
35574Ca n''t you find anything suitable in that code- book? 35574 Good to be out in the air, eh?
35574Great Scott, is n''t it big, and_ is n''t_ it damp? 35574 I beg your pardon, sir, but is your name Porter?
35574Is that a Swiss-- that splendid circus- chariot driver? 35574 Is this the place?
35574Is_ that_ what I-- what we--[ Illustration: Beauvais]Where''s the front of it?
35574Now, my dear, the question is, what''s to be done? 35574 So this is the tomb of the husband of Diana of Poitiers?
35574There, what do you think of that? 35574 Well, Peters, and so we are off for Mont- Saint- Michel, bless her old heart-- or is Michel a him?
35574Well, ai n''t you going to get the code- book? 35574 Well, ai n''t you ready?
35574Well, where can we get a Swiss? 35574 Well, where can we go now?
35574Well, where is the church? 35574 Well, why do n''t we start?
35574Well, why do n''t you holler, Lee? 35574 What comes next?
35574What time is it? 35574 What''s he saying?
35574What''s our Goddess of Liberty doing up there? 35574 What''s that ant- hill out at sea?
35574What''s that chopped- off creation before us? 35574 Where''s our man gone?
35574''Clear vertical fall''eh?
355742:41--tomb of the Duc d''Aumale; good face, handsome decorations on his bosom, stained- glass windows-- all made at Sévres, eh?
3557433"''So that''s the clock?''"
35574A bank, eh?
35574Ahead there?
35574Ahead, eh?
35574An hour after we leave, eh?
35574And so that is Mont- Saint- Michel?
35574Another?
35574Are those the famous bas- reliefs?
35574Are you all right, child?
35574Are you sure?
35574Ask him if he has ever known anyone to miss their footing?
35574Ask if it''s his bona fide heart or only a death- mask of it?
35574Baggage- counters, eh?
35574Belle- Isle, eh?
35574Betty glanced around and said,"Oh, Madame, où est Fakir?"
35574Bob, do you remember me?
35574But how could they have arranged it?
35574But what are the beads?
35574By Pontorson, eh?
35574Ca n''t we go to Mont- Saint- Michel some other way?
35574Could you give a description of the man?
35574Curious about the Brewers not turning up; suppose he''s under the automobile yet?
35574Curious little creature, the cross- eyed one, is n''t she?
35574Curious place, Havre, do n''t you think?
35574Did it roll?
35574Did you ever hear of anything more cruel?
35574Did you ever see anything like that young man''s gall?
35574Did you ever see so many canals-- or smell so many?--and the little cottages out of another century?
35574Did you ever see such a collection as those girls?
35574Did you know he was in Rouen?
35574Did you know that?
35574Did you notice how she used to push the ash- receiver toward me?
35574Did you see him while he was there?
35574Dike, eh?
35574Do n''t you know I''m responsible for you two girls?
35574Do n''t you want to go with them, Edgar?
35574Do we get down here?
35574Do we get up there?
35574Do we go upstairs?
35574Do you mean that we have got to climb that little ladder?
35574Do you remember-- but how do you come to be in Europe, anyhow; and what liner did you line up on?
35574Do you suppose we ought to speak to a policeman?
35574Down here?
35574Dumas''Belle- Isle?
35574Eat up there, eh?
35574Edgar, will you do me the courtesy not to be pointing to the left with that cane of yours when I turn suddenly to the right again?
35574Edgar, will you oblige me by carrying that cane so that child does n''t come within an ace of catching her mouth on it every other second?
35574Edna, is this soap yours?
35574Faster than a horse can gallop, eh?
35574Fishing- rods and oars all about; when does the tide come in?
35574Girl who captured flag from Charles the Bold, eh?
35574Good job of scaffolding, is n''t it?
35574Got her?
35574Great Scott, what are you staying so long for?
35574Great place, eh?
35574Has she got her year under her?
35574Have we got to hunt''em up?
35574He is n''t going to Rouen?
35574He says he is sure M. Sibilet is in love with Mrs. Clary now, or why under the sun should he offer him his tooth- powder?
35574Heart buried underneath?
35574Henry II of England, eh?
35574How do we get from Dol to the mont?
35574How do you know?
35574How does he come to be in Rouen?
35574How much of a tip is that much gold lace going to look forward to getting?
35574I do n''t catch what you say?
35574I do n''t see anything very remarkable in a Norman being buried in Normandy, do you, Bob?
35574I said:''Have it_ rough_, eh?
35574I sent her ahead, did I?
35574I tell you, Bob, when I was--"Is that the fountain?
35574I think we ought to be speaking to a policeman, do n''t you?
35574I''ll take the tickets; we''re all full- fare, are n''t we?
35574II UNCLE JOHN IN ROUEN 9 A.M."Well, girls, are you ready to get up and out and set about improving your minds?
35574If they did n''t arrange it, why did they look upset?
35574Is it a joke, or ca n''t they trust a Frenchman with their old relics?
35574Is n''t he the one we peeked around in Rouen?
35574Is n''t it awful?
35574Is n''t that awful?
35574Is that the diligence?
35574Is that the tomb he finally got into?
35574Is that why they called him''the Bold''?
35574It is n''t the sea, though, is it?
35574It''s big, is n''t it?
35574Jeanne Hachette?
35574Joan of Arc?
35574Just hold my hat, will you?
35574Just tell him we do n''t want any of those oyster- shell pincushions first, will you?
35574Look at that woman, with her bouquet of live chickens-- novel effect in chickens, eh, Bob?
35574Looked disappointed, did n''t he?
35574Looks Roman to me; what do you think?
35574Looks easy, do n''t it, Peters?
35574Lumbering old concern-- eh, Peters?
35574Malo._ Dearest Mama: Why did n''t you write me that Mrs. Whalen was coming abroad?
35574Mine?
35574Mr. Chopstone said very roundly:"You''d better fight shy of her, I think,"and Edna said dryly:"Of him, too, do n''t you think?"
35574Nice joke, eh?
35574No?
35574Now do n''t you see why no woman could be happy with a man like that?
35574Now, Edgar, I have one favor to ask of you-- will you kindly allow me to manage my own affairs while you manage yours?
35574Now, where_ is_ the porter?
35574Of course it was easier, though, going down- hill, and I said, when we were near enough not to be anxious any more,"It was worth seeing, was n''t it?"
35574Oh, yes, of course the aunt was interesting, too; but-- what did you say?
35574Or-- how old is the little cross- eyed one?
35574Peters, I-- where''s the next step?
35574Peters, have you observed how many stairs there are in Europe?
35574Peters, you-- where''s the bottom?
35574Poulard herself, is n''t it?
35574Pretty bit of sarcasm, eh, Bob?
35574Pretty idea, to put up a fountain where they burnt her-- keep her memory damp at all events, eh?
35574Pretty place, do n''t you think?
35574Rather a medieval staircase, eh?
35574Rather a rough joke, its being so much the biggest, is n''t it?
35574Richard- Coeur- de- Lion-- petrified, eh?
35574Robert Porter-- Bobby Porter that went to the Washington School?
35574Rollo the Norman?
35574Round back of this crazy mob?
35574Said to ask the Swiss, did he?
35574Say, was there any one else with you?
35574See any one you knew there?
35574She put him down and began to look displeased again, and Betty just glanced about and said calmly,"Oh, Madame, où es Fakir?"
35574Sort of like turning around and hitting your cane, eh, Edgar?
35574Speaking to_ me_?
35574Strikes me as a pretty big statue to put up to a heart, do n''t you think, Bob?
35574That''s Edna and this is Yvonne, and-- you do n''t say he''s your son?
35574The Bois was just lovely-- all automobiles and babies; and who do you think we met?
35574The red- haired man said,"Why do n''t you buy a chain for him?"
35574There, do you see that old staircase?
35574They did n''t invite the elderly French lady, and she protested about"comme il faut"--but Betty said,"Où est Fakir?"
35574This is the kind of thing I''ve come several thousand miles to look at, is it?
35574Those gargoyles and saints around the top stick their heads out pretty interested- like, do n''t they?
35574To keep the rain from damaging them, eh?
35574Uncle thought the word meant"nervous,"and we heard him say to Mr. Porter,"Well, who would n''t have been, under the circumstances?"
35574Used to be on land, eh, and then got to be on sea?
35574Was n''t some English Henry shut up on Mont- Saint- Michel and fed by ravens there, or something like that?
35574Wave and holler?
35574We had a beastly trip,--only came from Havre last night,--and, by the way, how in thunder can we get hold of the man who opens these iron gates?
35574We have n''t got to overhaul them again here, have we?
35574We might make a little excursion out there, calling ourselves the Three Mousquetaires, eh?
35574We-- who did you say?
35574Well, Bob, the Reformation was a great thing, after all, was n''t it?
35574Well, Edgar, are you coming, too, or do you choose to stay outside with your stick?
35574Well, I vow, who has she got-- if it isn''t-- Yvonne, is n''t that that young man-- how d''ye do, Edgar?
35574Well, ask him?
35574Well, do n''t you hear?
35574Well, that''s a pretty tall flight of steps, is n''t it, Peters?
35574Well, what did he say?
35574Well, what did he say?
35574Well, what did he say?
35574Well, what did they say?
35574Well, what is it?
35574Well, what shall we do?
35574Well, when did she live?
35574What are we paying him for, anyway?
35574What boat did you come over on?
35574What did he say?
35574What did she say?
35574What did you say, Yvonne?
35574What did you say?
35574What did you say?
35574What do they have the thing so high for, anyhow?
35574What do you say, Peters?
35574What do you suppose the people here do to amuse themselves, anyhow?
35574What do you think of Sibbilly now, Edna?
35574What do you think, Peters?
35574What does he mean by that?
35574What is it, Yvonne?
35574What is it, now?
35574What is our Swiss friend hissing about?
35574What is this road we''re on, anyway?
35574What makes you handle it as you do, anyway?
35574What other?
35574What shall I do with the girls?''
35574What''s he saying?
35574What''s that Indian beadwork around her feet for?
35574What''s that island off at sea?
35574What''s that?
35574What''s that?
35574What''s the moral of her train turning into a dolphin?
35574What''s the tin overhead for?
35574What''s this system of wildly speculating wheat- pits?
35574What, Rollo that was''At Work''and''At Play''and at everything else when we were kids?
35574What?
35574What_ did_ happen to it?
35574When did he die?
35574When did you come over?
35574Where did he spend the time while he was waiting to be buried?
35574Where in thunder did you get that fellow from?
35574Where is he going?
35574Where''s Yvonne?
35574Where''s the door?
35574Where?
35574Where?
35574Where_ is_ that porter?
35574Which Henry was he, anyhow-- the one with six wives or the one who never shed a smile?
35574Who is n''t here?
35574Who was Jeanne Hachette?
35574Who''s buried here?
35574Who''s speaking to me?
35574Who?
35574Whose grave?
35574Whose heart?--Richard''s?
35574Whose statue is that in the middle?
35574Whose umbrella is that getting left by the door?
35574Why do n''t they put in the guide- book,''Street commands a fine view of the roof?''
35574Will you look up in that roof?
35574Will you think of the difference he is making in our comfort these days?
35574Will you?"
35574Wonder how high they are, anyhow?
35574Would n''t that be terrible?
35574XII UNCLE JOHN AND MONT- SAINT- MICHEL"Well, this is a great change from the automobile-- eh, Peters?
35574Yes?
35574You do n''t mean to tell me that''s Joan of Arc?
35574Yvonne, did n''t that young reprobate write you he was going to Russia?
35574Yvonne, did you notice the way they handled those trunks when we landed-- as if they were eggs?
35574Yvonne, do you know where that fellow went to?
35574[ Illustration:"''Richard Coeur- de- Lion-- petrified, eh?''"]
35574[ Illustration:"''Tell her we want dinner for four, and prompt''"]"Do we go up here?
35574[ Illustration:"''What''s that chopped- off creation before us?''"]
35574_ Not_ the cathedral?
35574_ You?_ Well, what do you want to say to me?
35574_ You?_ Well, what do you want to say to me?
35574do they keep Charlemagne wreathed, too, or is five hundred years the bead- wreath limit?
35574how can we?
38977Can you_ never_ remember,they said,"just a simple thing like not biting your nails?"
38977Why is it right?
389778]] CHAPTER II New Ways"WHAT,"we ask with anxious gravity,"what is the best sort of teaching for children?"
38977And let Me help you"?
38977And the ostrich who draws a hansom cab, and the man who beats the boy with a stick?
38977And when the child asks,"Why is it wrong to steal?"
38977Are You pleased with Your boy?"
38977Do you remember the toys you hated-- after the fading of the first day''s flush of novelty, of possession?
38977Do you remember the toys you liked, the toys you played with?
38977Do you remember the world of small and new and joyous and delightful things?
38977Does any one play it now?
38977Entirely to divorce amusement and instruction-- may not this tend to make the one dull and the other silly?
38977Et que veulent ces cavaliers Toujours si gais?
38977Et que veulent ces cavaliers, Compagnons de la Marjolaine?
38977Grown- ups would always rather that you played hide- and- seek-- and can you wonder?
38977Has it ever occurred to any one that the reason why old people say this is quite the simplest of all reasons?
38977How did these despised mid- Victorians deal with it?
38977How then can we not remember, and, remembering, refrain from hurting other children as we were hurt?
38977How would our twentieth century_ entrepreneurs_ deal with a lake?
38977I suppose you know how to use sand- paper?
38977If electricity can move unseen through the air, why not carpets?
38977If very big men live in Patagonia, why should not very little men live in flower- bells?
38977Is it not well that they should feel themselves important as givers, and not as claimants only?
38977No, of course it wo n''t be in the way-- and would n''t it be pretty if we lighted it up with fairy lights after dark?"
38977Qu''est- ce qui passe ici si tard Toujours si gai?
38977The houses with doors that would n''t open?
38977The stables with horses that would n''t stand up?
38977They will wander off, returning with needle- cases, little boxes, shells-- and"Would this do for something?"
38977This game of come and go and give and take is alive in France; witness the old song: Qu''est- ce qui passe ici si tard, Compagnons de la Marjolaine?
38977When he asks,"Why is it wrong to lie?"
38977When they have whizzed their last, who cares for the tin relics outliving their detestable activities?
38977Who wants to know about pumpkins until he has heard Cinderella?
38977Why not tell the miracle of Jonah first, and let the child ask about the natural history of the whale afterwards, if he cares to hear it?
38977Why not?
38977You can not order your life by that Divine precept without a hundred times a day asking yourself,"How should_ I_ like that, if I were not myself?"
38977You will?
38977and"I hope you agree with me?"
38977what are you kids up to with all this rubbish?"
38977why must we clip those wings and dim those eyes with books?
37357And I suppose,said Sandie,"the devil a one of them has one sixpence to rub against another?"
37357And did Grahame retaliate?
37357And does she return your affection?
37357And he is not dead, then?
37357And it is?
37357And she sailed from Glasgow nearly three years ago?
37357And she?
37357And that is?
37357And they will lay down their arms?
37357And what upset you, dear Reginald?
37357And you ca n''t take poor Matty with you?
37357And you love this young man still?
37357And-- and,he said, in a husky voice,"whom am I accused of murdering?"
37357Are there many battles, then?
37357Beg pardon,said the jarvey,"but is it Laird McLeod you''re a- talking about?
37357But may this young fellow not be an impostor?
37357But would n''t you like a hair of the doggie that bit you this morning?
37357But, Fanny--"Well, Sandie?
37357But, my charming little stowaway, who on earth are you, and how did you come here?
37357Can I get ye a plaid, Mr Grahame, to throw o''er your legs? 37357 Can anyone identify this knife?"
37357Can you?
37357De''il a living?
37357Did n''t I tell ye, sir? 37357 Do you see that couch yonder?"
37357Had Craig any other enemy?
37357Have they gone?
37357Have you agreed as to your verdict?
37357Have you spoken to herself?
37357He is n''t so terrible- looking, is he, auntie?
37357He will miss you so much?
37357Horses and hounds all well, Sandie?
37357How could you have left your poor Oscar so long?
37357How is it with you by this time?
37357How much do you need?
37357Hullo?
37357I''se never been a very great sinner, has I?
37357If,he cried,"there is the slightest approach to a repetition of that unseemly noise, I will instantly clear the court?"
37357Is it likely,he added,"that Reginald-- had he indeed murdered his quondam friend-- would have been so great a fool as to have left the knife there?"
37357Is that all my thanks?
37357Is that threatening my life, you old reprobate? 37357 Is this Heaven?
37357Look at that, and say if you have seen it before?
37357Might not the farmer have committed suicide?
37357Must I tell?
37357My child,said Reginald,"what has put all this into your head?"
37357Now,he continued, in a half- whisper,"ye''ll never breathe a word of what I''m going to tell you?"
37357Oh, Queen Bertha,said Reginald sadly, as he placed a hand on the dog''s great head,"will-- will you keep my faithful friend till all is over?"
37357Oh, Sandie, is she living?
37357Oh, ma, he''s coming-- the awful man is coming?
37357Oh, uncle dear, are you ill?
37357Oh, uncle dear,she said at last,"what does this mean?
37357Poor dear doggy Oscar?
37357Ready- made?
37357Reginald,she said,"tell me, is Miss Hall very beautiful?"
37357Sir,he said to Dickson,"the darkness will be our greatest foe, will it not?"
37357So that_ felo de se_ is quite out of the question?
37357Then there must be no lawsuit?
37357Want to speak to me, my man?
37357Was he poor or rich, Sandie?
37357Was the farmer at home?
37357Well, Mr McDonald, what is the extent of the damage? 37357 Well, Sandie?"
37357Well, sir, what are you going to do about it? 37357 Well, will a pound do it?"
37357Well, would you believe that a creature like me could possibly fall in love over the ears, and have a longing to get married?
37357Well,said the Laird,"to what am I indebted for the honour of_ this_ visit?"
37357Were not Craig Nicol and Reginald Grahame particular friends?
37357What can it mean?
37357What in thunder?
37357Where am I?
37357Where did this come from, my man?
37357Where did you last see it?
37357Where did you obtain those notes?
37357Where does he live, this Mr Grahame?
37357Who knows, or can tell?
37357Why not, Sandie? 37357 Why, Sandie, man, what brings you here at so early an hour?"
37357Will ye be my wife? 37357 Will you have a thistle, Sandie?"
37357Ye have n''t a terrible lot of sweethearts, have you, Fanny?
37357You and I are going to be good friends always, are n''t we?
37357You do not_ believe_?
37357You have? 37357 You think God wo n''t be angry, and will take you and me and Ilda and Queen Bertha straight up to Heaven, clothes and all?"
37357You think,said the coroner,"that Laird Fletcher meant to carry out his threat?"
37357_ You_ marry our bonnie Annie?
37357------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Isle of Flowers was very lovely now, and the valley--"Oh?"
37357Ah, well, what did life signify to her now?
37357And the three smaller?
37357And what was it that gold could not purchase in this world?
37357And you?"
37357Are you an-- an-- angel?"
37357Are you guilty or not guilty?"
37357But have n''t you heard, sir?"
37357But how came Matty on board?
37357But what of the girl''s other lover?
37357Can you believe it?"
37357Can you forgive me?"
37357D''ye think, sir, they''d let us on board for a squint?"
37357Do I love Ilda?
37357Do you follow me, sir?"
37357Do you know, dear, that it is almost sinful to grieve so long for the dead?"
37357Eh, dear?"
37357Eh?
37357Everything was happy; why should not she be?
37357Fletcher winced a little, but summoned up courage to say:"Ah, Annie, could we not be united by a dearer tie than that?
37357Had she not seen him remove a worm from the garden path lest it might be trodden upon by some incautious foot?
37357Have you any plans, McGregor?"
37357He must have been wrecked somewhere, but had she not prayed night and day for him?
37357Must I drink all this?"
37357Need I say that they received a hearty welcome from her Majesty and Ilda?
37357Now, sir,"continued the man,"why not employ native labour?
37357Oh, when will God come and take us away?"
37357Oh, will you, Fanny?"
37357Ominous number-- but ominous for whom?
37357Once he said after giving her a pretty bangle:"I''m not so very,_ very_ ugly, am I, Fanny?"
37357Reginald, when shall I ever see thee again?
37357Said the advocate:"My dear Laird, this is a sad affair; but are you convinced that this young fellow is the rightful owner?"
37357Say, Captain Dickson, is it going to be a hanging match?"
37357Shaft broken?"
37357Shall I resign her?
37357Shall I speak to them, captain?"
37357Should she sacrifice her young life for the sake of her dear uncle?
37357Strange, was it not?
37357The parting?
37357Think you that you could love him?"
37357This is the little song she sang:"What can a young lassie, what shall a young lassie, What can a young lassie do with an old man?
37357Thus she spoke:"You do not think my uncle is ill, Jeannie?"
37357WHAT CAN IT BE?"
37357Wants Farmer Nicol got out of the way, does he?
37357Was he thinking also of the cold, stiff body of his quondam friend Craig, hidden there under the dark spruce trees, the tell- tale knife beside him?
37357Was there anyone happier, I wonder, at seeing her guests, her dear old friends, than Queen Bertha?
37357We can trust the honest blacks we have here within the fort?"
37357What can have happened?"
37357What can it be?"
37357What had they done to deserve so terrible a fate?
37357What is it a man will not do whom love urges on?
37357What more have queens upon a throne?"
37357What think ye of that?"
37357What think_ you_?"
37357When do we sail for sure?"
37357Who can say what the innermost workings of his mind were?
37357Who is this fluttering up along the deck?
37357Why are they called the Red- stripe savages, your Majesty?"
37357Why not give lessons?
37357Will you give me her hand?"
37357Will you steal out at eight o''clock and take a wee bit walk with me?
37357Will you, Jeannie, dear?"
37357Wo n''t it be delightful, dear?"
37357Wo n''t we, skipper?"
37357Would steam never be got up?
37357You promise?"
37357You will never lose your temper with me, will you?"
37357You would n''t turn me away, would you, sir, if I got married?"
37357but was it?
37357cried Reginald, in great concern,"why did you come?"
37357he roared,"has your house or marriage to do with me?"
37357said Annie Lane,"would you really marry an old man?"
37357said Laird Fletcher,"where did_ you_ come from?"
37357the sweetest lass to me Is Annie-- Annie o''the Banks o''Dee?"
37357ye''re surely not crying, are ye?"
27950Actions?...
27950Ah, why?...
27950Ah; he has revealed that much, has he?
27950Am I going to be own cousin to a marchioness?...
27950And I suppose He said to Himself,''I will let Diana and Meryl Pym see one of my secret, treasured places''?
27950And are you... er... a scientist, evolving a theory about the ruins?
27950And at first?...
27950And could n''t we go there with you?
27950And did you like this wild, wilderness land of silence?
27950And do n''t you ever feel you are wasting your talents?
27950And do you think Major Carew is here about some such matters?
27950And fish?...
27950And how do you know that with such sureness?
27950And in the meantime intermarriage?
27950And is he coming?
27950And it is lying idle?
27950And let you go alone?... 27950 And now I am here?"
27950And she told you?...
27950And something had happened?...
27950And suppose Meryl wishes to hold to her promise and give herself to her country?
27950And was it equally obvious who the other woman was?
27950And what about the other one?
27950And what about this brilliant speech of General Grets''reported this morning? 27950 And what are you going to do?"
27950And what do you say, Meryl? 27950 And what do you think South Africa will say?"
27950And what do you think he is down here for now?
27950And what happened to cause the quarrel?
27950And what in the world do you want it to be? 27950 And what in the world do you want with a corpse, Di?"
27950And what is the truth?
27950And what should you be doing with the old corpse when you''ve taken the gold?
27950And what would have happened to Stanley, do you suppose?... 27950 And when did you propose to begin?"
27950And why do you want to know?
27950And will you promise to growl very prettily?
27950And you are fond of the natives? 27950 And you feel like Cecil Rhodes?...
27950And you gave him a lesson?
27950And you have never been back?
27950And you heard me discussing your amiable attributes? 27950 And you will take us?..."
27950And you will tell him?...
27950And you?
27950And you?...
27950Any news, sir?
27950Are you going to the Grand Hotel?
27950Are you still worrying about that absurd money? 27950 Are you sure?"
27950As I asked you on Tuesday, I ask you again,''What do you think of a man who marries a woman when he does not love her?''
27950But I hope in the meantime you do not endorse the slander?...
27950But I thought Native Commissioners were always gentlemen?
27950But can nothing be done, do you think?
27950But he is still a Church missionary, is he not?
27950But if you have fever?
27950But need you be bothered with us?
27950But not better than something else, perhaps?
27950But that did not appeal to you?
27950But that is n''t what you came for?
27950But that is what you wo n''t see; how should you? 27950 But the standard will improve as the country grows?"
27950But where? 27950 But why all this mystery?...
27950But why go at all?
27950But you will go?
27950But you?...
27950But your home?...
27950But your people?
27950But, of course, it did n''t?...
27950Ca n''t I tempt you to come also? 27950 Can you not see the rest?...
27950Can you tell me where I can find Henry Delcombe?
27950Can you tell me why chiefly?
27950Certainly not,agreed Grenville gravely;"but why not make it a lion while you are about it, or even a rhinoceros?"
27950Coming here, sir?... 27950 Compensations that make it worth while?"
27950Could it in any way better be given the lie?
27950Dearie,murmured Diana again,"was she crying because of that big soldier- policeman up north?"
27950Decent old Johnny, was n''t he? 27950 Did he say whom?"
27950Did he tell her so?
27950Did ye ask either of them to share your little wooden hut?...
27950Did you have a successful trip, sir?
27950Did you know him before he came out here?
27950Did you see the announcement yesterday?
27950Did your diviner divine any ghosts while he was about it?...
27950Do n''t do what?...
27950Do n''t you_ know_?
27950Do you call him Kid?
27950Do you feel as if you hated it and worshipped it both together? 27950 Do you find the natives lovable, and the primitive conditions?...
27950Do you know Major Carew well?
27950Do you know the Macaulays?
27950Do you know, Major Carew, your singularly appropriate nickname has been subjected to a little embroidery?... 27950 Do you know?"
27950Do you mean he has gone already and without saying good- bye?
27950Do you mean to say you sat perfectly still in front of him, and let him sit on, thinking himself alone, and then suddenly discover you?...
27950Does n''t Major Carew ever growl when he is here?
27950Eh... eh... eh... eh... ah,and when Aunt Emily had duly enquired,"What did you say, my dear?"
27950Gone?...
27950Has Major Carew been with you into the temple, yet?
27950Has Meryl a lot of pioneer spirit?
27950Has anyone ever thought of a Rhodes Scholarship, that might take the form of grants of land and be won by competition, I wonder? 27950 Has it any special object, or just a general one?"
27950Has my uncle something to do with your company? 27950 Have I?...
27950Have you everything you need for the night? 27950 Have you had hosts of visitors while you were all alone?"
27950Have you remembered it long enough?... 27950 Heiresses are seemingly not much in your line, sir?"
27950How are the others?... 27950 How did_ you_ know that_ I_ had changed?"
27950How do you do, Miss Diana Pym?
27950How do you specially mean it?
27950How do you think it will prevail?
27950How is everyone, Aunty?
27950How long will you be away?
27950How should numbers of men of fine fibre ever reach Rhodesia at all? 27950 I need n''t, need I?..."
27950I presume you had your reasons?
27950I see; and you think it is for me to attend to the wounded?
27950I should like to, if Di really wants to go; otherwise we could quite well have remained on here, could n''t we?
27950I suppose he wo n''t have heard?
27950I suppose the letter does n''t specify the attention?... 27950 I suppose you are in earnest?"
27950I suppose you do not attempt to analyse it? 27950 I think I understood he was some connection of yours?"
27950I thought people who had been abroad always ran down missionaries, and scoffed at missionary work?
27950I thought you could not possibly return from Segundi for a week?
27950I wonder if Helen will have the sense to manufacture some request?
27950I wonder if my father owns land here? 27950 I wonder if the Major will come through to- night?"
27950I wonder what they are doing?... 27950 I wonder what you were thinking about just then?"
27950I wonder why Rhodesia is so fascinating?
27950I wonder why you say that?
27950If I speak to Meryl to- night, and she decrees that the engagement shall end, will you promise to ride this way to- morrow morning?
27950In a fortnight?
27950In this country I wonder if people say they are''out''or''asleep''when they do not want to be found''at home''?
27950In what way?
27950Is Meryl at home?
27950Is it possible,she asked slowly,"when it seems one side only is honest in its protestations?"
27950Is there some special haste then?
27950It must be a legacy?...
27950It''s a hideous tongue, and he knows it, and what''s the good of pretending anything else? 27950 Married whom?..."
27950May I ask in what exact particular?
27950May I write to you?... 27950 My dear young lady,"he remonstrated,"can you blame me for the unwise, indiscreet utterances of every Dutch predicant who opens his mouth?"
27950Need you ask?
27950Nor England?...
27950O well, it would be silly to pretend to be surprised, would n''t it?
27950O yes, even that; why not?... 27950 O, are there ghosts?"
27950O, do you really think so?...
27950O, is he an original also?
27950O, was it?...
27950O, what did they want to come for,he groaned,"if they had to go away again?"
27950O, wo n''t you at least go to Johannesburg?...
27950Of course you are thinking of starting back to- night and are in a great hurry?
27950Oh, did n''t you know there was nourishment in mule harness?... 27950 Only no one tells them so?"
27950Or are we going to be a... a... frightful nuisance?
27950Or do you mean unclean?
27950Perhaps Meryl knew?
27950Perhaps you will be coming to Johannesburg presently?
27950Perhaps you would sooner drop one on his head to make him look up?
27950Shall I have married her?...
27950Shall I see your father to- night?
27950Shall I wind up again?
27950Shall we go on now?
27950Shall we have your company for a day or two? 27950 Should n''t we ever need to wash?"
27950So you came home to worry us?...
27950Surely it had already reached the limit of human ingenuity?
27950Surely,she thought,"he is not genuinely angry just because I did not tell him I was there?"
27950Tell me something I can do to help them, Billy?
27950Tell me what?...
27950That you are English and I am Dutch?... 27950 That''s the missionary and his wife, is n''t it?
27950The Bear?...
27950The King?...
27950The bear?...
27950The same sort of policeman as Mr. Stanley, I suppose?
27950Then Mrs. Grenville did not tell you?
27950Then we may not see you again before we start for Salisbury?
27950Then what in the world is_ he_ buried in the wilderness for? 27950 Then what?
27950Then why was she crying?
27950Then you knew he cared for someone else?
27950Think you can bear it, aunty?...
27950To any particular end?
27950Was our bronze image a bit hit too? 27950 Well, afterwards?..."
27950Well, how did you get out of it?... 27950 Well, uncle,"was Diana''s greeting,"what do you make of The Bear?"
27950Well, what about Rhodesia? 27950 Well, what does thrive?"
27950Well,he said again,"about that summons?..."
27950Well,she said,"how did you get on with The Bear?
27950Well?...
27950What actions?... 27950 What are you going to do?..."
27950What did Diana say?
27950What did Major Carew say?
27950What do you mean, Diana?
27950What do you think?
27950What does it mean, Billy?... 27950 What does it say to you, Meryl?..."
27950What else did he do?
27950What for?
27950What happens when you two overbalance and do n''t happen to be near enough to catch each other?... 27950 What has given you the notion, Meryl?
27950What have you been doing?
27950What in the world,she wondered,"was this smart, soldierly looking man, correctly booted and spurred, sitting down there for in the ruins?..."
27950What question?...
27950What to do?
27950What?...
27950When it played catch- ball with them?
27950When?...
27950Where did he come from?
27950Which question? 27950 Who has to sit on a chair?"
27950Who is The Bear?
27950Who told you?...
27950Who would have thought of finding you here?
27950Why are we here? 27950 Why cowardly?..."
27950Why did he come?
27950Why do n''t you try and teach your people to play the game?
27950Why do you ask it like that?
27950Why do you run away when, for once in a way, you have the chance of a little companionship? 27950 Why do you think he is out here at all?
27950Why do you think so?
27950Why in the world do you want to go to Rhodesia?
27950Why is that, do you think?
27950Why may I not?
27950Why shall I have to take you?
27950Why?
27950Will it be all right for my niece to accompany us?
27950Will you have your dress fitted now?
27950Will you let me congratulate you?
27950Will you take me if I promise not to ask any silly questions?
27950Will you tell me what it is you have to say?
27950Wo n''t you sit down? 27950 Wo n''t you sit down?
27950Would n''t you rather have a nice quiet summer in England?
27950Would you like us to go?
27950Would you mind helping me down?
27950You did n''t know I was a politician, did you?... 27950 You found it very engrossing?"
27950You have n''t always been in this part of Rhodesia?
27950You have n''t yet said, How do you do?
27950You mean Major Carew? 27950 You mean?..."
27950You mean?...
27950You mean?...
27950You read Omar?
27950You saved her?...
27950You speak almost as if you never expected to go there again?
27950You think so?
27950You wonder why she engaged herself to you?... 27950 You?..."
27950Your friends, Mr. and Mrs. Grenville,she said coldly,"would they care to see us if we called, or would they think it perhaps just vulgar curiosity?"
27950_ Do_ you know what you want? 27950 _ You?_..."as if she could not believe her own eyes.
27950''s are pretty cheap nowadays, are n''t they?
27950Ailsa, snug in her little bed, thought happily about the earth and its glad renewing, and woke up her precious Billy to say,"Are you awake, Billy?
27950And are you proud of the mission farm?...
27950And as soon as the other boys discovered...""Did they duck his head in a bucket?..."
27950And he had found?...
27950And how did you leave Salisbury?"
27950And how is your old heap of stones?"
27950And if the instrument used was a woman, has not a great nation itself been built up through such instrumentality?
27950And in any case, how could he tell her his story?
27950And now?...
27950And suddenly, Diana, giving rein to her impulsive temperament, said,"What is your opinion of a man who marries one woman and loves another?"
27950And what about Mr. Stanley, who is also a representative of the Government that made the laws?"
27950And you eat a lot of bully beef, now do n''t you?"
27950And you?"
27950And, anyhow, the great question just now is, having taken over the bridegroom, ought I to take over the wedding presents as well?..."
27950Anyhow, who_ did_ vote the money for the new Government buildings?..."
27950Are we not both South Africans?..."
27950Are you afraid of a spill?..."
27950At last,"And when do you think I should say this to Meryl?"
27950At last--"Is he in Rhodesia now?"
27950Beside those settlers''wives he had said were heroines, was she but an idle, contemptible, useless heiress?
27950But if it was also a sacrifice, an offering of herself and her happiness upon some altar of need, ought he to let her fulfil it?
27950But what had this to do with the trust that was hers?
27950But what of it to the syren?...
27950But what of it?
27950But what?...
27950But who is he?..."
27950But why are n''t you and your brother making a fortune?
27950But why is he?
27950But women are the devil, are n''t they?"
27950Can I offer you anything?
27950Can you hear it?...
27950Coming here to Zimbabwe?"
27950Could a sudden call be arranged?...
27950Could all his love and hope and tenderness bring back joy to the eyes that were his heaven and his earth?
27950Could anything truly separate them if once the love were born?
27950Could he ask any other woman to share that with him?...
27950Could it have been less so?...
27950Could it perhaps be overruled?
27950Could she love him truly enough to hold his love for ever, and through it lead him to heights he might never even sight without her?
27950Could two such humans meet and not love?
27950Diana clapped her hands, feeling her point was won easily, and then added,"Could n''t we take Mr. Stanley with us?
27950Diana went straight to it, and sent a wire, with prepaid reply, directed to Major Carew, which ran:--"Can you come at once?
27950Diana, what you asked me was, what did I think of a man who married one woman and loved another?
27950Did anything else really matter?...
27950Did he chore you up over anything?"
27950Did he see in her only a willing accomplice to her father''s money- making schemes?
27950Did the Kaffir boom shed its great red flowers for ever, like drops of blood upon the altar of the world''s pain?
27950Did you know he was once engaged to someone who died?"
27950Do n''t you hear the note of revelling now?...
27950Do n''t you hear them?...
27950Do n''t you?"
27950Do you happen to know?"
27950Do you remember our first meeting in the ruins, when I sat quite still and watched you until you looked up?...
27950Do you remember the original question, or must I tell you what it was?"
27950Do you think there are any?"
27950Do you think there is anything to eat there except locusts and wild honey?"
27950Do you think they''ve brought their lunch with them, or shall we send them some?"
27950Do you want to go a journey to convert heathen, or preach Christian Science, or explore untrodden country?
27950Does anything else really matter if you can love me in return?"
27950Does the dinner come in and find you both sprawling on the floor?"
27950For answer, she said thoughtfully,"I wonder if something hurt him very badly some time or other?"
27950For you at least they are worth while?"
27950Going strong?...
27950Granting that what you have told me is true, what do you expect me to do?"
27950Grenville?"
27950Had Rhodesia, in her sunny loveliness, been wife and child to the great man who went lonely to his grave?...
27950Had he cared for it all very much then?...
27950Had he ever told anyone?
27950Had he for a moment believed that it would?
27950Had he not then outlived anything?
27950Had he only put his memories lightly to sleep, and dreamt all the life he had lived since?
27950Had he, after all, been seriously delayed?
27950Had he, that great Imperialist, looked at it with those calm eyes of his, and known just that sense of aching love?...
27950Has Rhodesia any use for... for such as I?"
27950Hated its remote magnificence and devilish cruelty, and worshipped it because you could n''t help yourself, either from fear or wonder?
27950Have you any ideas at all, or are you just a blank?"
27950Have you found a gold- mine up there?...
27950Have you heard that little song before that I was singing?
27950Have you made up your mind how you propose to heal him?"
27950Having asked, she added with a light touch,"I imagine you are hardly ready yet for libraries and public parks and orphanages?"
27950He paused, then added,"I wonder if he has the remotest idea that, owing to several deaths, he is now the next heir to the Marquis of Toxeter?"
27950He was a great hunter who had lost his way, and dragged himself into the temple to die....""I thought you said he strode in?..."
27950How are you?"
27950How came they with long, dark, curling lashes when her hair was a dusky, light shade, with soft waves and gleams of sunlight?
27950How can I go to her and tell her that once I killed the woman I loved?...
27950How can I speak to her of love-- I, the policeman, she the heiress?...
27950How can I tell her that story which was told to you?...
27950How could I?...
27950How could Meryl let you?...
27950How could any land, however willing, look spruce and green and clean with no rain for four months?
27950How could any self- respecting young cock bird or male insect go and pay his addresses in a dusty, dirty, faded coat?
27950How could he go to her with that story and empty- handed as well; she the heiress of great wealth, and he without even a name and position?
27950How could you be so careless?
27950How do you know she has not cared for this man for a long time?
27950How shall I explain?
27950How would it go?...
27950How, why, where?...
27950I hardly thought.... Have you... have you... remembered everything?..."
27950I have married a wife, an English one, therefore I can not come?..."
27950I hope Mr. Stanley has made himself very useful?"
27950I hope he thinks so?"
27950I may call you Meryl, may n''t I?...
27950I mean the dust and the journey?
27950I shall not tell the Jo''burg folk about not aiming; why should I?
27950I suppose we could both come?"
27950I suppose you have n''t heard?"
27950I suppose you knew that he was going to be married just before he came away, and something rather dreadful happened?"
27950I understood from the young trooper there that he is some relation to the Fourtenay- Carews?"
27950I wonder at what particular point you saw first?..."
27950I wonder if, in another existence, I was one of the wives or handmaidens in Abraham''s caravanserai?
27950I wonder why God painted such lovely scenes where no one ever came, or scarcely ever, to see them?"
27950If I persuade father to take me up to Rhodesia with him, will you come too?..."
27950If he then married an Englishwoman, not even South African born, would he not be held up to ridicule by his colleagues?
27950If it was true, how was it he had never heard?...
27950If there were anything I could do to serve you?..."
27950If you were going on to the top of the kopje, may I come with you?"
27950In a more serious mood, however, she asked him presently,"I suppose it has been rather a disappointment?...
27950In a young, struggling country what place was there for the idly, gracefully rich?
27950In all the annals of the race, is there anything to compare with their service to the coming swarm?"
27950In any case, what right have I to cross_ his_ path now?"
27950Interest, excitement of a kind, freedom....""And the women?"
27950Is he rich and haughty, with lovely estates left to dishonest stewards, and all that?..."
27950Is n''t it enough that you know she could love you as a Rhodesian soldier- policeman?
27950Is n''t it the same with the men?"
27950Is the grass dry enough to burn to- night?"
27950Is this one of the rich rewards Life holds in the palm of her hand for the path- finders?...
27950It was just a silly muddle altogether, do you see?...
27950Laughter and gay music and devil- may- care colonists awaking echoes that have been more or less silent to civilisation for how many thousand years?
27950Meinheer van Hert, Mister Pym says, will you drink with him?..."
27950Meryl had it on the tip of her tongue to add,"They do n''t mind even millionaires''daughters?"
27950Meryl laid a sympathetic hand on her arm and murmured,"And you?..."
27950Meryl, I wonder if we shall ever see anything quite like this again?
27950Nay, why did he half begin to wish that he had not let himself be overruled by his own counsel of prudence?
27950Now do you understand?"
27950Now, I want to know how and when you discovered that I loved another?..."
27950Now, did n''t you?..."
27950O, what did it matter about afterwards, if one had put up a good fight and dared the deep waters?
27950Of course it ca n''t go on; but what in the name of all that''s wonderful can I do to stop it?...
27950Once seated, however, he turned to her and said, gravely,"Of course, that remark of yours had to do with our conversation the last time we sat here?"
27950Only, what could she do; ah, what?
27950Or does n''t it all sometimes make you just long to scream?...
27950Or was it indeed all finished for ever?
27950Or why, since he had chosen not to do so, could he not put the whole remembrance from his mind?
27950Perhaps if I could get Major Carew to talk?..."
27950Shall I ask her?..."
27950Shall I go now?
27950Shall I tell you a little, or will it bore you?"
27950Shall we go back?"
27950Shall you like that?..."
27950She kissed his hand again, and asked in low tones,"Why was she crying when she came out of the study?
27950She only looked at him a trifle anxiously, saying,"But, of course, you could never give up Rhodesia?
27950She was rich, she was free, she was young, she was strong; why dawdle and dream among the fiords of Norway?
27950She was silent a few moments, and then added simply,"I suppose you knew him personally?"
27950She who did not even bear the heat and burden of the day in making the money?...
27950She... she... is not sorry about things?..."
27950Stanley, looking much amused, replied,"You must mean the Major; but you have n''t met him, have you?"
27950Suddenly Diana asked,"I suppose he is pretty sick about two modern young women presuming to journey here to gaze at his treasure?"
27950Surely that were the simpler plan?
27950Surely the wonderful old ruins are somewhere near Edwardstown, father?
27950The making of walls and fortifications for another race, centuries afterwards, to look upon with cold wonder and curiosity?
27950The one perhaps who spent the gains heartlessly and carelessly elsewhere?
27950The only question that seemed to arise was, what did she specially want of the women ready to serve her?
27950The wedding he so dreaded was safely prevented, but would the happiness come back?...
27950The young trooper watched him a moment, and then added:"Did you have trouble with M''Basch?"
27950Then Meryl spoke:"Why ca n''t we go back with you to South Africa, father?"
27950Then she had not gone with Stanley and Diana?
27950Then, changing her voice subtly, she enquired,"Is it too much for you, aunty?...
27950There is nothing whatever to fear, but if it would add to your comfort?..."
27950There was a decided gleam in the millionaire''s eyes as he inquired,"And what do you want to do instead, Di?"
27950These might be won some day as restful leisure hours in a strenuous life; but without the just winning, what had they to do with her?
27950They moved towards the hotel together, and Ailsa asked,"Have you seen them?"
27950Thought it out thoroughly?...
27950To what end turn this existence, blessed by fortune with wealth and the power wealth brings, though suddenly swept bare of joy?
27950Unanimous in what?...
27950Was he really coming at last?
27950Was he still grinding at his report, she wondered, looking like a bronze figure?
27950Was it all, then, vanity, this building and striving?...
27950Was it as lovely then?...
27950Was it possible that Ailsa''s accusation was true?
27950Was it possible that already his preference was given to Diana, with her light raillery and ready laugh?
27950Was it the altar of sacrifice?
27950Was she ill for long?"
27950Was the other perhaps to be sacrificed to his rigid, indomitable pride?
27950Was there any special kindness in letting him know that I had the perspicacity to see it?"
27950Was there still time to get away, he wondered?
27950We prodded him last night, did n''t we?"
27950Well, I wonder what Dutch Willie will have to say to that?"
27950Were there many like them among his own countrymen?
27950Were they blue, or were they grey?...
27950Were they brave, were they mighty in stature, those men who evolved and achieved those wonderful defence works?
27950Were they fair, those women of that old, old day?
27950Were you wondering what you are here for too?"
27950What can have influenced her?...
27950What can it be?...
27950What did he mean?...
27950What did he not mean?...
27950What did she want with an English village?
27950What did they want with ancient rites and wonderful relics of antiquities?
27950What did you do?..."
27950What do you and your colleagues want it for so badly, anyway?..."
27950What do you say, Meryl?...
27950What does it matter who and what I was before?...
27950What else is there in heroism?
27950What had become of it?...
27950What had become of the gay Londoner, who drove the smartest four- in- hand in the park, and rode the fastest horse to hounds?
27950What has kept him so reserved in every particular all these years?"
27950What have those lonely mountains worth revealing?
27950What have you been doing all the week?"
27950What he said was,"Do you wish me also to lose my career and leave the Blues?"
27950What in the world can a man like that see in a missionary?
27950What in the world was she to say to him?...
27950What is it?...
27950What might it not result from?...
27950What of it, Meryl?...
27950What shall I do with all this money my father makes?
27950What shall we do?
27950What shall you say to your colleagues the next time they are expecting you at one of their fiery denunciation meetings?...
27950What should such a man as he be drawn to except in friendly intercourse in a girl as young and simple and undeveloped as herself?
27950What should_ you_ do, for instance, if you suddenly found you cared for someone else more than Meryl?"
27950What then should she do with her life?
27950What to her was a yachting cruise in Norway?
27950What was there to say?
27950What was to be done?
27950What''s the use of decayed old walls anyway?
27950What, in the name of fortune,_ is_ the good of going to Rhodesia?
27950When she felt she had complete control of her voice, she asked,"And you were never able to be married?"
27950When will you see her?"
27950Where is Jeanne, I wonder?
27950Where should she go?
27950Where then are the bones of their dead?
27950Where was the gold taken to from Solfala, and by whom?
27950While for her?...
27950Who could she be?...
27950Who do you pay it to?"
27950Who shall attempt to explain?...
27950Who shall say?...
27950Who was it came for gold in those old, old days?
27950Why are you sure he is an artist?"
27950Why ca n''t he behave like an ordinary man just once in a way?
27950Why does Rhodesia fascinate?
27950Why had he come back?
27950Why had he looked full and deep into her eyes like that?...
27950Why had he not gazed only upon the mountains that soothed and refreshed him?...
27950Why had he not taken her?
27950Why need they come?...
27950Why not go and get it over, instead of troubling to send an excuse?
27950Why not to- night?"
27950Why not wait and see them first?"
27950Why not?"
27950Why scale Swiss mountains?
27950Why should he be?
27950Why should it?..."
27950Why should n''t I have a little romance if I want to?
27950Why should we be condemned to some dull little hole of an English village, just because there is to be no London season?"
27950Why should we?...
27950Why torture yourself unnecessarily?"
27950Why was he hovering in the grip of it again, that strong need of the human, however resolute, for sympathy, for companionship, for understanding?
27950Why, after all, should he not go with her just once, and no doubt Diana also, and tell them a little about the mysterious walls?
27950Why, there are lions and elephants and things, and the natives are savages; surely no mines are worth running such risks?"
27950Will you kindly say good- bye to the ladies for me, should I be prevented doing so in person?"
27950Will you ride the same way to- morrow?"
27950Will you sometimes write to me?...
27950Will you stay in Bulawayo, or go back to Johannesburg?"
27950Will your party allow you to consummate the match, do you think?..."
27950With all his money, and all his power and influence, what could he do in this one thing that seemed to matter beyond all other things?
27950Wo n''t you sit down?
27950Wo n''t you sit down?"
27950Would a scheme like that work, do you think?"
27950Would anything ever ease it in reality?
27950Would he ever tell anyone?...
27950Would humanity ever sing again as the sons of the morning?
27950Would you all like to go to Norway?"
27950Would you like a police- boy to keep guard here all night?
27950XX FAREWELL"Did I hear the growl of a bear?"
27950Yet how could it very well be otherwise?
27950Yet if penance were required, what had he not given?...
27950Yet what use to fret and trouble now?
27950You and I do n''t either of us care for much beating about the bush and subterfuge, do we?"
27950You did n''t find much brilliance there, I imagine?
27950You do n''t seem to mind his bearishness, Meryl?
27950You know, of course, that Meryl Pym has become engaged to Mr. van Hert, the well- known Dutch politician?"
27950You surely did n''t imagine I was going to carry a sun- umbrella about, did you?"
27950You will be there?"
27950You would n''t let any claim come before hers?"
27950_ I_ offer love to Meryl Pym?...
27950a sudden need for hasty departure?...
27950are you really and truly a missionary?"
27950bravely;"your country?..."
27950do you call it?...
27950do you hear that?...
27950have you lived beside this all these months?''
27950if he had stayed in the army?"
27950in quick surprise; and after a short, tense silence,"Then why in the world?..."
27950is it likely?..."
27950let the burden of such a memory faintly touch her life?...
27950or is the plural Bantams?...
27950or the corpses in the temple hung with gold ornaments?..."
27950or would he go quietly on through his life, self- contained, self- dependent, aloof?
27950that keeps Major Carew so aloof?
27950that... that... perhaps it belongs to it?..."
27950the happiness that had been in that household before they went to Rhodesia?
27950the millionaire?...
27950what?...
27950what?...
27950why ca n''t I have a hut in the wilderness?..."
27950you will know that I mean, is it your day of lordly graciousness, or is it the cast- iron, beware- of- the- bull frown day?"
39339''Olympia?''
39339Do you place your hope in the God of the Universe?
39339Lefebvre,said Napoleon, in Egypt,"what is Josephine doing at this moment?"
39339Well,she retorted,"and is not that an age?"
39339After all, since we believe in Santa Claus, why not in Helen of Troy?
39339Agamemnon, looking at her, cried:"Hath no man, then, avenged his wrongs by slaying thee?
39339And Adrienne?
39339And her husband?
39339And the personality, the appearance, the Venusberg charm of this heart monopolist?
39339And what is common sense among friends?
39339Back to the challenger came this terse reply:"Can Antony find no readier mode of death than at the sword of Octavius?"
39339Before I go on, may I quote a contemporary writer''s word picture of Marie, as she appeared at this time?
39339But how could people like Marguerite and D''Orsay keep abreast of the social current on a beggarly twelve- thousand- five- hundred dollars a year?
39339But how?
39339But should he hesitate-- well, what could that prove, instead?
39339Did Betty mourn her husband emeritus?
39339Do you recall, in Marlowe''s"Doctor Faustus,"it was by promise of Helen''s love that the devil won Faustus over to his bargain?
39339For her ye left your dear homes long ago, but now the black ships rot from stern to prow, and who knows if ye shall see your own again?
39339He eyed the monkey- like Voltaire in amused disfavor; then drawled, to no one in particular:"Who is this young man who talks so loud?"
39339He taught Emma to ride--"a beggar on horseback?"
39339I mention it, at the outset, only because more than one chronicler has used it to account for hiati--(or is it hiatuses?
39339I shall write the tragedy of my love-- in romance form-- and--""Why not in city- directory form?"
39339Is it beauty?
39339Is it daintiness?
39339Is it the subtle quality of femininity?
39339Is it wit?
39339Is it youth?
39339Is there none to shed thy blood for all that thou hast slain?
39339It was,"~Que Faire Au Monde Sans Aimer?~"("What is living without loving?")
39339Oh, how can I convince you-- you who alone can wound my heart?
39339Or, rather, their secrets?
39339Or-- is it happy Helen?
39339Seeking to win her interest, in a literary discussion, he opened one conversation by inquiring:"Madame Dudevant, what is your favorite novel?"
39339Sha n''t we give Betty Bowen-- her commonly used name-- the benefit of the doubt?
39339Shall we glance at a short word picture of Jeanne, limned by a contemporary?
39339The Clarion editor, taken to task for printing nothing about the fire, excused the omission by saying;"What''d''a been the use of writing the story?
39339To which does the ensuing anecdote belong?
39339To wreak on thee the wrongs that thou hast wrought?
39339Up flew her ladyship, and, exclaiming:"Oh, God, is it possible?"
39339What chance had the worthy, but humble, Captain Jenkins against this golden- tinged whirlwind wooer?
39339What death is coming on you from across the waters?"
39339What does it matter?
39339What else was there for him to do?
39339What makes the Super- Woman?
39339Wherein lay their secret?
39339Which, in conjunction with her motto,"What is living without loving?"
39339Who can say anything about her that you have not heard?
39339Will you kiss me, once?
39339Will you let me go back for a space and sketch, in a mere mouthful of words, the haps and mishaps of one of Betty''s earlier admirers?
39339Wo n''t you remember that, in dealing with Peg Woffington?
39339Would you hold it?
39339Would you make them long- lasting, instead of transient blessings that shall too soon become mere memories?"
39339Yet was Ninon''s adventure more inexplicable than some of the absolutely authenticated cases of Cagliostro''s magic?
39339Zounds, ma''am, d''ye think''tis to be bought at a penny the pound that you squander it so?"
39843Chevalier de Grammont,they exclaimed,"have you forgotten nothing in London?"
39843Have you anything to say?
39843Oh,she whispered forth,"I am not going to die, am I?
39843You persist, then, in denial?
39843A beauty?
39843And do you reply to me, exclaimed the protector, with your if''s and your and''s?
39843But she, the child that at nineteen had wrought wonders so great for France, was she not elated?
39843Did she not lose, as men so often have lost, all sobriety of mind, when standing on the pinnacle of success so giddy?
39843Her business is with Marat, then?
39843How could he be attacked in a more tender part?"
39843Is it indeed the unhappy instinct of publishers to be thus always blindest to the value, before they come out, of the books that succeed the best?
39843Now what are the traitors doing at Caen-- what deputies are at Caen?"
39843To such changes of human fortune, what words are adequate?
39843Vain, greedy of admiration, an errant coquette, a somewhat frivolous intruder on the threshold of criminal passion,--what was she more?
39843What is to be thought of_ her_?
39843Wife being intrinsically, as well as extrinsically, the better man, what other can he do?
39843Yes, but could beauty alone have secured her so wide a repute among her contemporaries?
31484A glass? 31484 A new chamber?"
31484Ah, have you been in love? 31484 Alone?"
31484An she be so young, and so fair, and so wealthy, why do ye not bring her forth among her mates? 31484 An what came he smelling up so many stairs in my poor mansion?
31484And Joanna, my lord?
31484And a man would be right glad to we d me?
31484And did they knight you?
31484And do you, then, suppose me such a creature?
31484And grace?
31484And how came ye with Sir Daniel, Master Matcham?
31484And how, dear Lawless,cried the lad,"shall I repay you?"
31484And if I had forgotten it?
31484And now, my lord duke,he said, when he had regained his freedom,"do I suppose aright?
31484And she bemoaned herself? 31484 And so ye go to Tunstall?"
31484And so,said Pirret,"y''are one of these?"
31484And supper?
31484And this magic,he said--"this password, whereby the cave is opened-- how call ye it, friend?"
31484And what make ye to Holywood?
31484And what will ye leave me to garrison withal?
31484And where goeth Master Hatch?
31484And where is John?
31484And wherefore named he Carter? 31484 And wherefore so?"
31484And why not?
31484And why so poor?
31484And ye think I would be guardian to the man''s son that I had murdered?
31484And yet, Lawless, it goes hard against the grain with me to die; but where whining mendeth nothing, wherefore whine?
31484And yet,he thought,"of what use is courage without wit?
31484And you, sir,added the young lady,"what do ye give me?"
31484And you-- how call they you?
31484Are we going ashore?
31484Are ye Lancaster or York?
31484Are ye dumb, boy?
31484Are ye here alone, young man?
31484Are ye then a spy-- a Yorkist?
31484Are ye there?
31484Are you for York or Lancaster?
31484Ay, Bennet,said the priest, somewhat recovering,"and what may this be?
31484Ay, dear, ye are my lady now,he answered fondly;"or ye shall, ere noon to- morrow-- will ye not?"
31484Ay, good fellow,answered Dick;"for in that house lieth my lady, whom I love, and who should these be that lie about her secretly by night?
31484Ay, gossip, truly?
31484Ay, sir? 31484 Ay,"returned Dick,"is it so?
31484Bennet,he said,"how came my father by his end?"
31484But are ye not ward to Sir Daniel? 31484 But did my Dick make love to you?"
31484But wherefore, then, deliver me this letter?
31484But wherefore? 31484 But why keep ye her here, good knight?"
31484But, my lord, what orders?
31484But, prithee, how shall I do? 31484 Call me Alicia,"she said;"are we not old friends?
31484Can we be, then, so near to Holywood?
31484Can ye hear, old Nick?
31484Can ye so?
31484Carter, poor friend, how goeth it?
31484Come sound ashore? 31484 Come, now, will ye read me a riddle?"
31484Could ye not see it was a wench? 31484 D''ye see aught?"
31484Dick,said he,"y''have seen this penny rhyme?"
31484Dick,she said,"is it so deep?
31484Did I not tell it thee myself? 31484 Did ye hear of her?"
31484Did you call me?
31484Dinner?
31484Do these churls ride so roughly?
31484Do they command Sir Daniel''s own ferry?
31484Do ye hold me so guilty?
31484Do ye not feel how heavy and dull she moves upon the waves? 31484 Do you see Harry the Fift?"
31484Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at the last, sneak into heaven? 31484 Fellow,"he asked,"were ye here when this house was taken?"
31484For a witch''s spirit?
31484For my Lord of Gloucester?
31484For what cometh to mine ears? 31484 For what price?"
31484Friend Dick,he said, as soon as they were alone,"are ye a moonstruck natural?
31484Friend Dickon,resumed Lawless, addressing his commander,"ye have certain matters on hand, unless I err?
31484Girl, Sir Daniel?
31484Goody,he said,"where is Master Matcham, I prithee?
31484Hath, then, the battle gone so sore?
31484Haunted?
31484Have ye a last wish before ye wend, old brother?
31484Have ye brought me Sir Daniel''s head?
31484Have ye brought the priest?
31484Have ye ever a penny piece for a poor old shipman, clean destroyed by pirates? 31484 Have ye my Lord Foxham''s notes?"
31484Have ye seen him?
31484Have ye there the ring ye took from my finger? 31484 Have you not tried it?"
31484He did?
31484He hath gone each night in this direction?
31484Hey, Master Shelton,he said,"be ye for the ferry?
31484Hey?
31484How call ye her?
31484How call ye him?
31484How call ye your name?
31484How can I swim the moat without you? 31484 How if we lay there until the night fall?"
31484How is this?
31484How knew ye who I was?
31484How many do ye count?
31484How now, brother?
31484How please ye, sir? 31484 How say ye now?"
31484How say ye,asked Dick of one of the men,"to follow straight on, or strike across for Tunstall?"
31484How say you? 31484 How so?"
31484How, sir?
31484How, then? 31484 How?"
31484Hugh, who goes?
31484I would look gladly on a pottle of strong ale, good Master Pirret,returned Arblaster.--"How say ye, Tom?
31484I, Dick? 31484 If they live,"returned the woman,"that may very well be; but how if they die, my master?"
31484Ill with_ you_, fair sir?
31484In all civility, who are ye? 31484 In any one?"
31484Is Ellis then returned?
31484Is it decided then?
31484Is it even so? 31484 Is it so?"
31484Is it so?
31484Is it you, my lord?
31484Is not Sir Daniel here?
31484Is the arrow black?
31484Is this the maid?
31484It befell at the Moat House?
31484Know ye Sir Daniel?
31484Lads,he said,"we have had a shog, we have had a tumble; wherefore, then, deny it?
31484Lawless,cried Dick,"are ye safe?"
31484Let them be wedded speedily.--Say, fair maid, will you we d?
31484Lieth he there?
31484Lion- driver,she said at length,"ye do not admire a maid in a man''s jerkin?"
31484Master Dick, Master Dick,said Bennet,"what told I you?
31484Master Shelton,observed the outlaw,"y''have had two mischances this last while, and y''are like to lose the maid-- do I take it aright?"
31484Must we not go down to supper?
31484My Lord Risingham?
31484My father?
31484My lord duke,said one of his attendants,"is your grace not weary of exposing his dear life unneedfully?
31484My lord,cried Sir Daniel,"ye will not hearken to this wolf?
31484My lord,returned Dick,"ye will think me very bold to counsel you: but do ye count upon Sir Daniel''s faith?
31484My lord,said Sir Daniel,"have I not told you of this knave Black Arrow?
31484My masters,he began,"are ye gone clean foolish?
31484Nay, Dick,said Joanna,"what matters it?
31484Nay, Master Shelton,said Hatch at last--"nay, but what said I?
31484Nay, but against traitors, my lord, are not all sides arrayed?
31484Nay, but what made he by the church?
31484Nay, but where is he, indeed?
31484Nay, then, shall I call you girl, good Richard?
31484Nay, what matters it?
31484Nay, what should this betoken?
31484Nor heard tell of her?
31484Not charitable? 31484 Not charitable?"
31484Not?
31484On what probation?
31484On whose side is Sir Daniel?
31484Richard Shelton,said Matcham, looking him squarely in the face,"would ye, then, join party with Sir Daniel?
31484Said he so?
31484Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worse, continue until the end to override the better? 31484 Say ye so, Sir William?"
31484Selden? 31484 Sir Daniel?"
31484Sir,replied Dick,"I am here in sanctuary, is it not so?
31484Sirrah,said Sir Daniel,"your name?"
31484So y''are to be true to me, Jack?
31484Stand?
31484Still your uncle''s cabinet? 31484 Sweetheart,"he said,"if ye forgive this blunderer, what care I?
31484That being so,he said,"shall I show you the money?"
31484Then, in honour, ye belong to me?
31484This favour of mine-- whereupon was it founded?
31484To me?
31484Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn?
31484Was he in the mansion?
31484Was it to laugh at my poor plight?
31484Well, Dickon,said Sir Daniel,"how is it to be?
31484Well, then, lion- driver,she continued,"sith that ye slew my kinsman, and left me without stay, ye owe me, in honour, every reparation; do ye not?"
31484Well, then, what matter?
31484Well,said the knight,"what would ye?
31484Well,thought he to himself,"even if I lose my horses, let me get my Joanna, and why should I complain?"
31484What ails ye at my face, fair sir?
31484What are you driving at?
31484What are you?
31484What can he do? 31484 What cheer, Jack?"
31484What d''ye want?
31484What doth he want? 31484 What is it, Appleyard?"
31484What made I?
31484What made ye in the battle?
31484What make I with your honour?
31484What make they to- morrow?
31484What make ye after me? 31484 What make ye here, good brother?"
31484What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood shaws?
31484What make ye here? 31484 What make ye?"
31484What make ye?
31484What maketh Bennet Hatch?
31484What maketh he?
31484What manner of room is it?
31484What may this be?
31484What meaneth he?
31484What meaneth this?
31484What of the birds?
31484What said he-- what said he?
31484What should this betoken?
31484What think ye, sir,returned Hatch,"of Ellis Duckworth?"
31484What want ye?
31484What would ye?
31484When came they?
31484Whence came that shot?
31484Where goeth me this track?
31484Where is my ship? 31484 Where is the hurry?"
31484Where?
31484Wherefore arrows, when ye take no bow?
31484Wherefore do ye that?
31484Wherefore so? 31484 Wherefore would he not tell me?"
31484White, chequered with dark?
31484Whither, my son?
31484Who can do so? 31484 Who else is there but you that could do aught in such a house with such a garrison?"
31484Who goes? 31484 Who goes?"
31484Who goes?
31484Who goes?
31484Who goes?
31484Who hath done this, Bennet?
31484Who is this?
31484Why am I in this jeopardy of my life? 31484 Why call me''boy''?"
31484Why do ye take me?
31484Why not a glass?
31484Why said ye he was rustic, Joan?
31484Why, Dick,she cried,"would I be here?"
31484Why, fool, did ye not eat at Kettley?
31484Why, now, what aileth thee?
31484Why, what are you looking at?
31484Why, who the murrain should this be? 31484 Will it please you, my lord, to alight?
31484Will it please your lordship to set foot to earth?
31484Will ye assault the house?
31484Will ye put your oar in? 31484 Will ye take my word of honour, Dick?"
31484Would ye be led by a hired man? 31484 Would ye evade me?"
31484Would ye have me credit thieves?
31484Would ye have me shoot upon a leper?
31484Would ye lie there idle?
31484Would ye mind a ducking? 31484 Would ye shoot at the moon with a hand- gun?"
31484Would ye shoot upon your guardian, rogue? 31484 Y''are in a hurry, Master Dick?"
31484Y''are weary?
31484Y''have sent for me, Sir Daniel?
31484Ye are not then appalled?
31484Ye come too soon,he said;"but why should I complain?
31484Ye have read this also?
31484Ye have read this?
31484Ye that fight but for a hazard, what are ye but a butcher? 31484 Ye would leave me, would ye?"
31484Yield me? 31484 You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think?"
31484You ask me why not?
31484You know me?
31484Young Shelton,he said,"are ye for sea, then, truly?"
31484Your father? 31484 Your name?"
31484''Good boy''doth he call me?
31484After a while we shall return, when perchance they shall be less carefully upon their guard; and, who knoweth?
31484All these years have ye not enjoyed my revenues, and led my men?
31484And Sir Oliver here,"he added,"why should he, a priest, be guilty of this act?"
31484And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind?
31484And have ye the young gentlewoman there?"
31484And is she shrewish or pleasant?"
31484And is that the_ Good Hope_?
31484And meanwhile what do we?
31484And now, what make ye?
31484And now,"she continued,"have ye said your sayings?
31484And then catching sight of Matcham,"Who be this?"
31484And wherefore did ye slay him, the poor soul?
31484And why spy ye after Lady Brackley like a thief?"
31484And will men follow such a leader?"
31484And with whom was I to marry?"
31484And ye would have me eat with you-- and your hands not washed from killing?
31484And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow?
31484And, whether for one thing or another, whether to- morrow or the day after, where is the great choice?"
31484Are we in good case?"
31484Are ye my Lord Duke of Gloucester?"
31484Be helped by you?
31484But can you not look within?
31484But come, now, what is it ye wish?
31484But had ye no hand in it?"
31484But here is this----"And there he broke off and pointing to Matcham, asked--"How call ye him, Dick?"
31484But here, within the house, was he alone?
31484But how mean ye, lion- driver?
31484But how think ye?
31484But if ye have so long pursued revenge, and find it now of such a sorry flavour, bethink ye, were it not well to pardon others?
31484But if ye know her, prithee, of what favour is she?
31484But marry, come up, my gossip, will ye drink?
31484But now that I think, how found ye my chamber?"
31484But see ye where this wide glade runneth down before us, and in the midst of it, these two score trees make like an island?
31484But shall we forth?
31484But to the more essential-- are ye Lancaster or York?"
31484But what have we here?
31484But what made ye, sir, in such a guise?"
31484But what o''that?
31484But what said I ever?
31484But what then?
31484But what wrote ye in a letter?"
31484But who''ll shoot me a good shoot?
31484But why stand we here to make a mark?
31484But, Dick, are your eyes open?
31484But, now, what shall I do with this poor spy?
31484But, prithee, how go we?
31484Can it be clearer spoken?
31484Can ye not speak in compass?--And now, Joanna, my fair maid of the woods, what will ye give your gossip for bringing you your sweetheart?"
31484Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?"
31484Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any wilful sophistry, although too often disregarded?
31484Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me?
31484Clipsby, are ye there, old rat?
31484Come ye in peace or war?
31484Could it conceal a snare?
31484Dear God, man, is that all?"
31484Did I put the fear of death upon you?"
31484Did you mean it?
31484Do I bemoan myself?
31484Do I say that I follow sins?
31484Do we lie well?
31484Do ye desert me, then?"
31484Do ye make war upon the fallen?"
31484Do ye not hear the water washing in her hold?
31484Do you like to see it?
31484For Christmas?
31484For of what avail is penitence, an ye have no mind to right those wrongs ye had a hand in?
31484For to get back, by the mass, we must have an offing, must we not?
31484For what reason had he been given this chamber?
31484Had Sir Daniel joined, and was he now a fugitive, and ruined?
31484Had you a thought in your mind?
31484Hath he not his bell to that very end, that people may avoid him?
31484Have I been to you so heavy a guardian that ye make haste to credit ill of me?
31484Have they told you of to- morrow''s doings?"
31484Have ye chosen?
31484Have ye not ears?
31484Have ye not still my marriage?
31484He held the clapper of his bell in one hand, saw ye?
31484Heard ye not this Ellis, what he said?
31484Here am I disguised; and, to the proof, do I not cut a figure of fun-- a right fool''s figure?"
31484Hey, Dick?
31484How call they the name of this spy?"
31484How came my father, Harry Shelton, by his death?"
31484How if I offered you a brave marriage, as became your face and parentage?"
31484How if I turned me up stream and landed you an arrow- flight, above the path?
31484How if Master Matcham came by an arrow?"
31484How say ye, lads?
31484How think ye, Bennet?"
31484How, fellow, are ye so bold?
31484I have but a little company remaining; is it grateful or faithful to poison me their hearts with your insidious whisperings?
31484I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?"
31484I know you for a man of naught.--Nance,"he added, to one of the women,"is old Appleyard up town?"
31484I never had the time, nor have I the time to- day for all this nonsense.--Will you take the glass?"
31484I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself?
31484In honour do ye belong to me, till ye have paid the evil?"
31484Instantly, from the battlement above, the voice of a sentinel cried,"Who goes?"
31484Is that all?
31484Is the arrow gone?"
31484Is this, then, your experience of mankind?
31484It doth appear, indeed, that ye have somewhat abused our gossip Arblaster; but what then?
31484It may be he hath better sped.--Say, Master Shelton, have ye found the maid?"
31484It may be; what know I?
31484It was the law that did it; call ye that natural?
31484Know ye him not?
31484Know ye not a friend?"
31484Let us talk of each other: why should we wear this mask?
31484Look ye, now, when ye were but a name to me, did I not follow-- did I not rouse good men-- did I not stake my life upon the quarrel?
31484May not?"
31484Nay, then, and by whom?"
31484No women, then?"
31484Now, what might you call a long shoot, Bennet Hatch?"
31484Now, which, I marvel, of you or me, shall be first knighted, Jack?
31484Of so many black ill- willers, which should he be that doth so hardily outface us?
31484Or if he be fallen among ill company, whom should ye blame-- the lad that was unjustly handled, or the guardian that did abuse his trust?"
31484Or sith that ye see me, for the nonce, some worsted, do ye think to quit my party?
31484Saw ye this Joanna?"
31484Say, shall we go hear him?"
31484See ye not how swift the beating draweth near?"
31484Shall I help you; I, who know all?
31484Shall I tell you where to find the money?"
31484Shall he then profit?
31484Shall we attend their coming or fall on?"
31484Shall we go hear him, indeed?
31484Shall we go once more over the dingle, or push straight for Holywood?"
31484She in the murrey- coloured mantle-- she that broke her fast with water, rogue-- where is she?"
31484Simnel?
31484Sir Daniel, Sir Oliver, Joanna, all were gone; but whether butchered in the rout or safe escaped from Shoreby, who should say?
31484Sore bestead?"
31484Surely not?"
31484The Walsinghams?
31484The verdict on"Treasure Island"was reversed in the other court: I wonder, will it be the same with its successor?__ R.
31484Then, very suddenly, she asked:"My uncle?"
31484There is, then, a question of it?"
31484There shall we be we d; and whether poor or wealthy, famous or unknown, what matters it?
31484This spell-- in what should it consist?"
31484Was it indeed haunted?
31484Was it not more than probable that the passage extended to the chapel, and, if so, that it had an opening in his room?
31484Was it not so it went?
31484Was there a secret entrance?
31484We have no priest aboard?"
31484Were they not men of Sir Daniel''s?"
31484What a murrain do ye keep me here for?
31484What age are ye, for a wager?--twelve?"
31484What aileth you?"
31484What chamber?"
31484What cheer is this?"
31484What cheer, my bully?
31484What cometh of it?
31484What do ye here?
31484What enemy hath done this?"
31484What force have ye?"
31484What is in your mind to do?"
31484What maketh he in Tunstall Woods?
31484What matters foul or fair?
31484What may this betoken?
31484What meaneth it?"
31484What of Selden?"
31484What read ye?"
31484What was to be done?
31484What would ye have?
31484What would ye have?"
31484What would ye more?"
31484What would ye?
31484What, then, is lacking?
31484What?
31484When I took your ship from you, we were many, we were well clad and armed; but now, bethink you a little, who mustered that array?
31484Where be all my good men- at- arms?
31484Where hid ye?"
31484Where is my wine?
31484Where shall I conceal them, Will?"
31484Wherefore did ye fight?
31484Wherefore, then, fell ye upon mine ambush?
31484Which, then, of this company will take me this letter, bear it to my Lord of Wensleydale, and bring me the answer back?"
31484Whither shall we march?"
31484Who ever heard the like, that a leper, out of mere malice, should pursue unfortunates?
31484Who hath done this, think ye?
31484Who should these be?"
31484Who should this be?
31484Who, then, hath done this evil?
31484Whom do ye require?"
31484Why am I now fleeing in mine own guardian''s strong house, and from the friends that I have lived among and never injured?"
31484Why are ye thus sacrilegiously tricked out?
31484Why do men come privily to slay me in my bed?
31484Why sup ye not?"
31484Why tarry we here?"
31484Why would ye shoot upon an old, kind friend?
31484Will ye be the last?
31484Will ye obey?
31484Will ye stand a pinch for expedition''s sake, or shall we turn by Holywood and sup with Mother Church?
31484Would ye be forsworn?
31484Would ye rob the man before his body?
31484Would you desert me-- a perjurer?"
31484and at whose instance do ye join your supplications to ours?"
31484and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?"
31484and to make a clear end of questioning, to what good gentleman have I surrendered?"
31484and your oath to me?
31484ay, and then?
31484could ye not smell harm and get ye gone from evil?"
31484cried Dick,"when good fellows stand shot?
31484cried Markheim,"the devil?"
31484cried Richard,"is this so?
31484cried the skipper tipsily,"who are ye, hey?"
31484fair or foul?
31484he cried,"what poor dogs are these?
31484he cried,"you that were a shipman, can ye steal me a ship?"
31484he said;"you that defended me-- you that are Joanna''s friend?"
31484his old wood companion, Jack, whom he had thought to punish with a belt?
31484in what quarrel, my young and very fiery friend?
31484is he of this company?"
31484or had he deserted to the side of York, and was he forfeit to honour?
31484or have ye no heart for your own kindly blood and the father that men slew?
31484or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness?
31484repeated Arblaster.--"What, sea- thief, do I hold you?"
31484shall he sit snug in our houses?
31484shall he suck the bone he robbed us of?
31484shall he till our fields?
31484shall they all die?"
31484sots, what make ye here?"
31484thought Dick,"can the poor lad have perished?
31484to what earthly purpose?
31484what do ye?
31484what doth faith?
31484what say ye?
31484what seek ye here?
31484where is she?--Host, where is that girl?"
31484will ye be a man?"
31484would ye have me leave my own men that I have lived among?
31484would ye snivel''for a word?"
19146A hat?
19146A mountain bank? 19146 A sailor, was he?
19146A separation in this family?
19146A_ white_ man here?
19146Ai n''t I a better friend to ye? 19146 Ai n''t there no place where a white man kin treat a bright- skinned slave like that as if they both was a Christian?"
19146Ai n''t they all right black and ugly in Africa, Captain?
19146Ai n''t you got no daddy, pore pap- lap?
19146Ai n''t you in the business now, sir?
19146Air we watched?
19146All these things taken from the poor?
19146Allan McLane pays fur the job?
19146Am I afraid? 19146 Am I dying, Samson?"
19146Am I young a little yit, honey?
19146An''leave you yer alone, Jimmy? 19146 An''why did I git that egg an''make you smell it, Joe Johnson?
19146And I suppose Mrs. Somers tells it on him?
19146And can you believe in anything after the surroundings of your childhood, touching crime like the pond- lily that grows among the water- snakes?
19146And dear old Princess Anne, how does she fare?
19146And he gave you a boat?
19146And he was hanged there for assassinating a friend who detected him?
19146And mother?
19146And my money, too?
19146And not a suspicion of our coming?
19146And so you were an orphan, brought up at the old roadside stage- house at Newark? 19146 And the queen bee''s honeymoon?"
19146And what was the fate of the murderers?
19146And what was_ your_ hokey- pokey?
19146And where is Judge Custis''s, you rum chub?
19146And you have, I reckon?
19146Any property, Milburn?
19146Are you a colored boy?
19146Are you a dealer?
19146Are you afear''d?
19146Are you going to give me back that ten dollars, you old scoundrel?
19146Are you not afraid to lean on me?
19146Are you on your way north, Brother Custis, or going home?
19146Are you robbers? 19146 Are you sure that you saw and heard truly?"
19146Are you travelling north, Judge Custis?
19146Are your parents living, Rhoda?
19146Bad ole hats?
19146Besides, could she have killed my dog?
19146Boy,cried Samson,"is dat de road to Laurel?"
19146Bring a forester in here?
19146Bruinton-- where did I hear that name?
19146But the queen bee also has a fate some time, sir?
19146But-- mother?
19146By cash or judgment- note, captain?
19146By marrying the forest hero?
19146By whom, fair Hulda?
19146Ca n''t I do somethin''fur you, Jimmy? 19146 Ca n''t we do so some way?"
19146Can you walk, Hudson?
19146Cannon, will you take me for it?
19146Captain, where do we feed?
19146Captain,Levin said,"how kin I git character?
19146Come on, an''be damned to you?
19146Conservative? 19146 Dare not, again?
19146Dead? 19146 Dear friend,"he said,"I hope your heart was not committed to my wayward niece?"
19146Derrick Molleston?
19146Devils, or men, Patty? 19146 Did he dig it up somewhere?"
19146Did it hurt ye, honey?
19146Did n''t I see him a doin''of it?
19146Did the gineral dance at the ball?
19146Did they sell you fur never knowin''whar to stop a good thing?
19146Did you ever see Gineral Washin''ton, mem?
19146Did you have the church made ready, William, as I requested?
19146Did you hear anything?
19146Did you hear me?
19146Did you hear the long man speak after that, Vince?
19146Did you make money?
19146Did you see her kill this man?
19146Do I understand you?
19146Do n''t it look like a witch''s, Missy?
19146Do n''t they have slavery thair, sir?
19146Do n''t you know me?
19146Do n''t you know your Rhudy? 19146 Do n''t you remember, mother, where it says:''As thy day, so shall thy strength be''?".
19146Do we worry you, Mr. Milburn, by reading here?
19146Do you believe it is good, precious? 19146 Do you enter that claim?"
19146Do you fear me, Devil Jim?
19146Do you hate_ me_, Cy Jeems? 19146 Do you know Joe Johnson, Dave?"
19146Do you know the man he works for-- Meshach Milburn?
19146Do you know the nature of an oath? 19146 Do you know what love is?"
19146Do you like to travel that road?
19146Do you really believe you love me? 19146 Do you repent coming with me?"
19146Do you suppose any well- raised girl would have a man who got rich by cleaning the Bad Man''s hat? 19146 Do you suppose the abolitionists would tamper with a poor old woman like that, whose liberty would neither be a credit to them nor a comfort to her?
19146Does Derrick live there?
19146Does he want a business- office for that?
19146Duty?
19146Escaping, are you?
19146Five dollars? 19146 For kidnapping free people?"
19146For lovin''liberty?
19146For me? 19146 For negroes?"
19146For you?
19146Go whar, my love?
19146Good- evening,said the man;"you do n''t know me, Judge Custis?
19146Hab he got dat debbil hat on he head, chile?
19146Had n''t we better wake_ him_ up now?
19146Harm? 19146 Has he become so necessary to you already?"
19146Has he been coming of late?
19146Has he other nieces like you?
19146Has she engaged herself to another, Cousin Meshach?
19146Has that exceptional charity extended to my father?
19146Has the Señor been in that direction, do you think? 19146 Have I another friend already?"
19146Have they arms?
19146Have you any relations or connections fit to bring here-- to this house, to me?
19146Have you heard of the incendiary proclamation issued in Boston by David Walker, telling all slaves that it is their religious duty to rise?
19146Have you no friend you might suspect?
19146He bruke a stone with his fist and Misc Somers kep the stone, and what do you think it was?
19146He do n''t narry a feller down to the cloth he''s got, sir?
19146He sends me to Camden of an errand,Levin answered;"is it far?"
19146He turned on K- k- king Custis and screamed,''W- who art thou? 19146 He?
19146Heigh?
19146Here is Camden,Levin thought;"where shall I go?
19146Hills? 19146 Him?
19146Him? 19146 His wife?
19146Honey,cried Patty Cannon to Levin, giving him an affectionate hug,"have ye swallered yer liquor so smart as that?
19146Hope a may die?
19146How are the prisoners, Patty?
19146How are you to be repaid for this?
19146How came you free?
19146How can his hat measure people''s lands in, Aunty?
19146How could I have spent such a heavenly night of peace and hope if you had not come, dear? 19146 How dare you say that of my father?
19146How do you know so much of women''s trials, Mr. Milburn? 19146 How far is that?"
19146How fur is it from this road to Delaware, Dave?
19146How fur is it to Prencess Anne? 19146 How have I won your favor?"
19146How is that?
19146How kin I do that, Cy?
19146How kin he be good, Jack?
19146How kin you be wicked at all,Levin asked,"when you look so good?
19146How many are here?
19146How was that proved?
19146How''s the purty gals, Jimmy? 19146 Huldy, air you a purty devil drawin''me outen my heart to ruin me?"
19146I expect now that you are Jacob Cannon?
19146I fancy, Joseph, you might be a legislator in Delaware if your inclinations ran that way?
19146I have never been in Dover; how shall I tell where Lawyer Clayton dwells?
19146I often said to Cousin Martha,''What did you see in this big horse of a man?'' 19146 I reckon it''s eighteen miles to the head of deep water on Manokin, Levin?"
19146I reckon you do n''t belong fur down this way, Mary? 19146 I say, sell them and get the money,"Mrs. Custis cried;"are they not ours?"
19146I wonder if men are ever great?
19146If it''s any harm I wo n''t ask it,the easy- going mariner spoke,"but air you two Cannons ary kin to ole Patty Cannon?"
19146Insulted you, Cunnil? 19146 Is Greenley ready to make the diversion if any attack be made upon us?"
19146Is Levin coming for you to- night?
19146Is he your friend, sir?
19146Is it a bargain, Cunnil?
19146Is it a little or a large house, Rhoda?
19146Is it a nice place?
19146Is it far to freedom now?
19146Is it not something of that revenge which instigates you here-- even in this profession of love?
19146Is it not your intention, honey,asked the creditor,"to take Mrs. Custis into your confidence before this marriage?"
19146Is it the white man that talks?
19146Is it you, Jimmy?
19146Is my father there?
19146Is not that larger door standing ajar, the one with the four panels in it?
19146Is thar people with blue blood comin''outen of''em?
19146Is that dreadful woman dead?
19146Is that your desire?
19146Is that your wish, my dear one?
19146Is the cradle worth anything, constable?
19146Is there any law, husband,Vesta asked,"to prevent Rhoda marrying Judge Custis?"
19146Is this a child or Echo?
19146Is what this bell- crowned fool says, true, Miss Vesty?
19146Is you de man?
19146Is your buggy ready harnessed, Samson?
19146It was another Shirt of Nessus, Milburn; it poisoned your life, eh?
19146It''s a gal, is it? 19146 Jack,"said Levin Dennis,"what do you mean by gittin''money to buy Roxy Custis?
19146Jack,said Levin, abruptly,"do you believe in ghosts?"
19146Joe,said Van Dorn,"what is to be your disposition of the prisoners we have?"
19146Leave you?
19146Let go, Jimmy,Samson said;"do n''t you see Miss Vesty heah?"
19146Let me introduce my great friend to you, Randel?
19146Levin,said Joe Johnson,"do n''t you like me?"
19146Like you?
19146Lookin''fur what, fur which, fur who?
19146Mamma,said poor Vesta,"are you in pain?"
19146Marble?
19146Marry immediately?
19146Mary,he exhaled,"why did n''t you ketch the baby and leave me go?"
19146Master,she said,"whose am I?"
19146May I ask who this lover is that I am so much beneath, Hulda-- I, who have taught you the accomplishments you chastise me with? 19146 May I come and sit with you to- morrow, sir?"
19146May I come up?
19146May I go with him?
19146May I kiss you now?
19146May I take Rhoda with me?
19146Me? 19146 Milman?"
19146Miss Vessy,she stammered, at last,"is you measured in by ole Meshach?
19146Miss Virgie,said the woman Mary-- ten years her senior, but comely still--"have you ever loved like me?
19146Mother,she said,"is that father coming, yonder?
19146Mr. Cannon,said Levin,"what kin you do with''em?
19146Mr. Milburn, I believe?
19146Must I climb any more? 19146 Must you read such things to her?"
19146My child?
19146My father has spoken of a degrading condition? 19146 My father never insulted you, sir?"
19146No swearing, Colonel, before us conservatives,ventured Joe Johnson;"what was the hat like, Dave?
19146Not Miss Vesty Custis?
19146Not dead?
19146Not like that? 19146 Not religious ecstasy?"
19146Not some kidnapper?
19146Not to- night, surely?
19146Now whar did you go all day Sunday with Levin Dennis and the nigger buyer? 19146 Now what did Roxy tell you about Meshach Milburn and Judge Custis?"
19146Now, British money ai n''t coined by Uncle Sam; what is the date? 19146 Now, Rhoda,"Vesta said, almost indignantly,"why did you not ask your wealthy uncle for some good yarn stockings?"
19146Now, Vesta,spoke the young man, as her father left the room,"whom are you going to marry, cousin, in such haste as this?"
19146Now,exclaimed the host, taking both of Judge Custis''s hands,"how do our dear friends all get along in Somerset and Accomac?
19146Now,said Milburn,"what enemy of mine delegated the kidnapper to procure a murderer?"
19146O God,a soft voice said,"may I not die?"
19146Of course you found them?
19146Oh, sir, you are not like my wicked husband, trying to sell me too?
19146Oh, that''s your trade, nigger buyin''? 19146 Oh, what will he do with that hat, now that he has married me?"
19146Oh, who dares contest the sunshine with the tailor and hatter? 19146 Oh, why did not this flower speak for us?"
19146Oh,said Vesta,"but to be_ bought_, Mr. Milburn?
19146Old woman,said the Judge to Aunt Hominy,"can you give me a bit of broiled something for my stomach?
19146Papa, if you can see these things that are to be, so clearly, why can you not take the wise steps to plant your family on the safe side?
19146Perhaps you can love him, too?
19146Politely, Mr. Ogg; will not the entire institution some day blow itself out, like one of their Western steamboats?
19146Princess Anne? 19146 Quotient?"
19146Randel,asked Mr. Clayton,"what were those stakes I saw some distance back, running north and south across the fields?"
19146Right south, sir?
19146Run? 19146 Samson Hat,"she said,"what''s that you are talking about?
19146Samson Hat? 19146 Samson,"spoke Dave,"you see dat ole woman in de cart yonder?"
19146Secured upon the furnace?
19146Shall I awake her?
19146Shall I come in?
19146Shall I go and see him on this nigger business?
19146Shall I make the home of the Chancellor of Delaware a hospital for Patty Cannon''s men as a reward for her sending my brother to the gallows?
19146Shall I take him, Doctor Gibbons?
19146She''s gone for Adams an''Clayton, ai n''t she, Jonathan Torbert?
19146Sir,exclaimed Vesta indignantly, rising from her rocker,"do you set this warning for me?"
19146So Ebenezer Johnson, accordin''to the autum bawler''s patter, got popped in the mazzard, my brother of the surplice? 19146 So you are the favorite?
19146So you could quit him, too, Rhoda?
19146So you do talk to Roxy some?
19146So, since it has ceased to be a tavern, dear, you see no more jugglers?
19146Some of the gin?
19146Sorden,Van Dorn said, slipping down,"can Ransom have betrayed us?
19146Still, where? 19146 Tell this man what you did,"Joe Johnson spoke;"you waited till you saw the hat at the window, and fired, and fetched hat an''man to the ground?"
19146That disobedient girl?
19146That distinguished engineer?
19146The dell dead and undocked?
19146The lily can not help it, and is just as white as if it grew under glass, because--"Because the lily has none of the blood of the snake?
19146The niggers stole, an''the dog dead, too?
19146The point now is,''Am I guilty of inhospitality?'' 19146 The portmanteau?"
19146The shoes? 19146 The white people absolutely gone from Cowgill House?"
19146Then are we not impostors, papa, if we assume to be so much better than our real superiors? 19146 Then give them back, my child, and save your soul and your purity, lest I live to be cursed with the sight of my noble daughter''s shame?
19146Then what shall I do,exclaimed Vesta, in low tones,"if you are unable to rise to the height of my friend, and my father is your slave?
19146There is a white man up there,Hulda reflected;"dare I go up to see?"
19146There''s a tree-- a bee- tree, Brother Jacob, I think you said-- cut down from Mrs. Cannon''s field?
19146There, my dear,he said, passing it over,"what do you want with it?
19146This Lawyer Clayton?
19146This Phoebus, is he a good man?
19146This is to torture me,he cried;"he has not dared to ask you, Vesta?"
19146Time?
19146To her?
19146To marry a Custis?
19146To- night?
19146Two worlds, sir?
19146Vesta,her father called,"you know you do not love this man?"
19146Virgie, no one has passed?
19146Virgie,he exclaimed,"is all dat kissin a gwyin on an''we black folks git none of it?
19146Wants a tune? 19146 Well, daughter, what are you going to do with these articles he has brought?"
19146Well, what kin you do with a nigger, Jack? 19146 Well,"said Vesta,"Norah loves James Phoebus; do n''t you, Norah?"
19146Whair did you pick up them words, Cy?
19146Whar did the devil git it?
19146Whar did you go, Jack, wid the long man and Levin all day yisterday?
19146Whar did you leave Ellenora''s boy and that infernal soul- buyer? 19146 Whare did you git''em, sir?"
19146What Comforter?
19146What a brutal giant,Vesta said;"and how came he to be doing our errands?"
19146What ails you, Virgie?
19146What air you prowlin''about the church then fur, anyhow?
19146What did King Custis do then, Pappy Thomas?
19146What did he do with his swurd? 19146 What did he go there for?"
19146What did he preach at me fur?
19146What did papa say before he left home?
19146What did you run for?
19146What do they say, William, about Jack Wonnell''s being found shot dead?
19146What do we want with this tolabon sauce?
19146What do you ask, William Tilghman? 19146 What do you hallo for?"
19146What do you say, William Tilghman?
19146What fur, Mary?
19146What further disgrace can this monster inflict upon us than to expose our dishonor? 19146 What has not that poor old hat brought upon every body?"
19146What have I done to be driven away? 19146 What have you done?"
19146What have you got? 19146 What is an infidel?"
19146What is he?
19146What is iron?
19146What is it saying now?
19146What is it to be conservative?
19146What is it, father?
19146What is it?
19146What is man''s whole work with a woman but deceit? 19146 What is that name?"
19146What is that story I have heard something of, about your origin, Patty?
19146What is that, James?
19146What is that?
19146What is the meaning of this trespass so late at night?
19146What is the name of the girl you gave her pass to?
19146What is the sum of papa''s notes and mortgages? 19146 What is your name, then, besides Huldy?"
19146What is your name?
19146What kin you do fur her?
19146What kind of coves are you to let a black bloke fight a white man? 19146 What language is that, Mr. Johnson?
19146What latitat chants there?
19146What makes him hate you so, Jack?
19146What makes you cry?
19146What makes you so miserable?
19146What obligation had he incurred there, too, I should like to know? 19146 What place is this?"
19146What sayeth Brother Elias, Lucretia?
19146What shall I do with this letter, bad wild- flower?
19146What shall we do, my lady?
19146What shape of hat was it?
19146What spot?
19146What wair they, Huldy?
19146What was it?
19146What will Allan McLane''s daughters say? 19146 What will the world say to your marriage after a single day''s acquaintance with me?"
19146What will you do if papa leaves us, Custis?
19146What will you do, Owen, to help your poor mother?
19146What would become of my self- respect, my maiden name, if I made that show of my private griefs, mother?
19146What yo''doin''with them rosy- posies?
19146What''company''is here?
19146What''s Floredey good fur?
19146What''s dat he said about Joe Johnson?
19146What''s his business?
19146What''s in there?
19146What''s it fur?
19146What''s that glibe on yonder?
19146What''s that?
19146What''s the hell- dorader?
19146What''s this?
19146What''s this?
19146What''s_ Quaker_, Aunt Hominy?
19146When do you leave for Baltimore, Cunnil McLane?
19146Where can we go?
19146Where could you take her to?
19146Where did he get the hat, Aunt Hominy?
19146Where did she go?
19146Where else kin he go?
19146Where is Judge Custis, Miss Vesty?
19146Where is Van Dorn?
19146Where is my baby?
19146Where is that poor, deluded man?
19146Where is the little tacker, Levin?
19146Where is the nigger?
19146Where is thy father, Levin, to let thee go so ragged, with such graceful limbs and feet as these?
19146Where is your mother now?
19146Where shall I begin to rove within confines?
19146Where shall I lie with my babe?
19146Where were you born and reared?
19146Where will be my share of love in this world, married so?
19146Where''s that?
19146Where''s your master, boy?
19146Which one, Captain?
19146Who air you?
19146Who are you, dear lady?
19146Who could remember what he was, Rhoda, sitting all that evening beside you at-- where was it?
19146Who has fed mother?
19146Who is it, Virgie?
19146Who is making it?
19146Who is t''other young offender?
19146Who is that woman back yonder so quare an''still?
19146Who is this Van Dorn?
19146Who is your father?
19146Who is your poppy, Aunt Vesty?
19146Who told you, Jack Wonnell,spoke the bay sailor,"that Judge Custis was to be sold out?"
19146Who was he?
19146Who would have thought this was a house of learnin''?
19146Who would think,he said, sarcastically,"that a mere head- covering, elegant in its day, could make more hostility than an idle head?
19146Who''re they fur? 19146 Who''s he a prayin''to?"
19146Who''s he, Roxy?
19146Who''s there?
19146Who''s there?
19146Who''s there?
19146Who''s yo''gal, Jack, for this winter?
19146Who_ are_ you?
19146Why can not human natur be happy yer, pertickler with its gal-- some one like Ellenory?
19146Why did you not tell me?
19146Why did you, then, from a commercial view, lend me large sums of money again and again?
19146Why do I rest my busy wheel?
19146Why do you draw me to you by awakening the motive of my self- love?
19146Why do you make this sacrifice?
19146Why do you offer me a flower?
19146Why do you wear the name_ Custis?_"Oh, I inherited that!
19146Why not to your mother, Levin?
19146Why not? 19146 Why religious as well as conservative, sir?"
19146Why should he? 19146 Why this pain?"
19146Why, Jimmy, do n''t you know Aunt Hominy, Jedge Custis''s ole cook? 19146 Why, dear presumer?
19146Why, what is the occupation of those terrible people at present?
19146Why?
19146Why?
19146Why?
19146Wife? 19146 Will he continue to afflict me with it?"
19146Will that encourage you to advise me like a friend?
19146Will this haste not be repented, or become a subject of reproach to you?
19146Will you not buy it back, Hulda,he whispered,"with love?"
19146Will you sit, Mr. Milburn? 19146 Will you take her if she is still delirious?"
19146Will you take me to- night?
19146Will you take this?
19146William,Rhoda asked,"was this the first Presbyterian church ever made yer?"
19146William,said Rhoda Holland,"what air we to do to save Virgie?
19146Wo n''t he give it to me? 19146 Wo n''t it?
19146Wo n''t that piece_ he''s_ gwyn to give you buy her?
19146Wo n''t you give me your knife?
19146Wo n''t you give the alarm the first thing?
19146Would you accept your father''s independence at the expense of the most despised man in Princess Anne?
19146Would you? 19146 Yes, and rise they will, but to what end?
19146Yes, and you, sir?
19146Yes, whar was you?
19146You are not going to make a Meshach Milburn of me?
19146You are not receiving the attentions of white men, Roxy?
19146You ask me to marry you?
19146You can not conceive I have had any real love for you?
19146You could not stoop to me?
19146You do n''t believe such foolish tales as that, Virgie?
19146You do n''t mean that you are going to visit him at his den?
19146You do n''t want to git among Joe Johnson''s men, boss?
19146You do n''t wipe your nuse on it, do you? 19146 You hate me, then?"
19146You have dressed yourself for me?
19146You have found that out?
19146You have not loved, I think, Miss Custis?
19146You licked by a woman, Samson?
19146You like my company?
19146You never heard of the queen bee? 19146 You require to be very neighborly, Clayton, in a small bailiwick like this?"
19146You say he sold you, Mary?
19146You say that I influenced you to lend my father money? 19146 You talk as if you kin read, Huldy,"said Levin, wishing to change so harsh a topic;"kin you?"
19146You want your young cousin made a felon, then?
19146You wo n''t tell nobody, Levin?
19146You''re a- goin''with Joe to- night, ai n''t you?
19146You_ work_?
19146Your child is not to go,Vesta whispered;"is not that a comfort?"
19146Your husband? 19146 Your own husband?
19146[ 8]What did you see them put in that chest?"
19146_ Ce ce ce!_the Captain mused;"your mother lives, then?"
19146_ Dónde està ¡!_ What slave that we know was so God- read?
19146_ Mercy?_he exclaimed,"you do not know what it is!
19146_ Quedo!_ a ghost? 19146 _ Ya, ya!_ Are you not harsh?
19146$ 20 What will He do with it?
19146''Do you?''
19146''Do you?''
19146*****"Cunnil McLane,"said Patty Cannon, in his room that night,"what interest have you in the quadroon gal an''Huldy, too?
19146--he had again turned to the Judge--"how is the little river Wicomico-- no, I mean Manokin-- how does it flow?
19146--this addressed to a thick- set, sandy, uncertain- looking man who was about retreating into the Capitol Tavern--"what brings you to town, Jim?"
1914635 Can You Forgive Her?
1914680 Is He Popenjoy?
19146A mocking- bird caught in the swamp became one of the family by her kindness; would it ever sing again?
19146Ai n''t you got no Dennis pride left in you?"
19146Air they all there?"
19146Am I beautiful a little yet?
19146Am I sick, or is it Love?"
19146And it''s Bill Greenley that burned the jail?
19146And niggers?
19146And the black people licked the kidnappers at Cowgill House?"
19146And you have been sold and run away in nearly every slave state?
19146Are you all true to each other?"
19146Are you all with me?"
19146Are you not sure of a home here as long as you live, even with me as the proprietor?"
19146As Judge Custis cast his eye around, to note the company, the demonstrative host, with a flash of his gray- blue eyes, whispered,"Who is he?
19146As the Judge wrote the note with his gold pencil on a leaf of his memorandum book, he said:"James, did you identify that man yesterday?"
19146As the woman departed, the black boy, looking around him, muttered:"Whar is dat loft?
19146As they clasped each other fondly, Senator Clayton exclaimed,"What?
19146At the last words, he exclaimed:"Samson knocked Joe Johnson down?
19146Behave like a free man, Samson Hat, or what is freedom worth to you?"
19146Boy, what are you out fur?
19146But he did n''t climb no ladder, did he?"
19146But how am I to prevent you from remembering it, especially when you say that I am the sum of your purest wishes?
19146But was that, indeed, your motive in being so eccentric?"
19146But what can I do to show my love-- poor naked slave that I am?
19146But what is that I hear in this parlor, like somebody sniffling?"
19146But, Patty, have n''t you a little remorse about it, considering she''s your grandchild?"
19146But, if I had n''t come yer, how could I have seen you, Huldy?"
19146Ca n''t you insult her back?
19146Can I find the way I have wandered down and retrace my steps?
19146Can I marry, with this ghostly visitation coming so regularly?
19146Can he kill us more than that?"
19146Can he see me here, sick and lonely, and hate me?"
19146Can my eyes look love an''hate, like old times?"
19146Can not you stoop to re- create me?
19146Can you be a gentleman?"
19146Can you guess what it is?"
19146Captain, is n''t he a perfect Marius?"
19146Clayton?"
19146Cnidus?
19146Could I acquire the heart even of this dog, though I might buy him?
19146Could I ever be happy with this man, by study and piety?
19146Could n''t I never stay home from the preachin''?
19146Could she not earn something by her voice, which had sung to such praises?
19146Could you love me if I asked you?"
19146Curse on the swaddler?
19146D''ye s''pose yer daddy on the privateer would n''t lick the British of a Sunday?
19146Dare I go further?"
19146Dead where?"
19146Did he dance with it outen his scibburd?"
19146Did he steal them an''decoy them, or wair they sold to him by Judge Custis or by Meshach Milburn?"
19146Did my father love me?"
19146Did n''t he, dat drefful Meshach Milbun, offer Miss Vessy a gole dollar, an''she wouldn''have none of his gole?
19146Did you ever see anything like it?"
19146Did you ever see as big a place as this?
19146Did you ever see him?"
19146Did you ever see it, Samson?"
19146Did you ever see such a hat?"
19146Did you hear from Charles McLane?"
19146Did you hear, papa, his feeling for me but this moment?
19146Do I fear to enter my own?
19146Do I please you?
19146Do n''t I know when he wore it fust?
19146Do n''t I know when you is a- makin''believe?
19146Do n''t your Bible tell you to watch_ an''_ pray?"
19146Do you believe he deals with the devil?"
19146Do you believe in everlasting fire?--that every injury is a live coal to roast the soul?
19146Do you know Jimmy Phoebus?"
19146Do you know where I saw you first?"
19146Do you love cousin William Tilghman?
19146Do you mind?
19146Do you not feel happier that my husband is not to be a drunkard?"
19146Do you remember when first we met?"
19146Do you see the stab on that dog?
19146Do you sometimes feel it, Hulda?"
19146Do you think God can bless your prosperity, when you are so hard with your debtor?
19146Do you think he will come?
19146Do you want me to be your wife?''
19146Do you want to fight?"
19146Does Mr. Milburn keep birds?"
19146Does he sniffle yet?"
19146Does it abound in the best oysters I ever tasted?
19146Does it flow benevolently?
19146Does it not, then, justify the man who solicits me in his means of getting money?
19146Does my wife love me?"
19146Does not that deserve a kiss, mamma?"
19146Es posible?_ A spy, perhaps.
19146Gal, how did you git yer?"
19146Go with me, and keep with me: do you understand?"
19146Have you accepted young Carroll?"
19146Have you brought a ring, sir?"
19146Have you had sisters, or other ladies to woo?"
19146Have you not made home cold to him by this formalism?
19146Have you picked out one?"
19146Have you spent his money remembering that?"
19146He added:"Will I ever be more than your husband?"
19146He knew it was liquor, yet what made him drink if not a disposition too easily led?
19146He puffed his cigar upon the paper, and exclaimed,"Prissy Hudson?
19146He went up to dat buzzard one day wid a little tea- bell in his hand an''says,''Buzzard, how do ye like music?''
19146He''s got my boat an''ruined my credit, I''spect, in Princess Anne, an''what will mother do when I go to jail?"
19146He''s got to be a senator; some day he''ll be chief- justice of Delaware: then, what''ll niggers be wuth thar?"
19146He''s took a shine to Huldy: why not to me?"
19146Him?"
19146His address, too?
19146His voice was like a happy sigh, as of one disturbed near the end of a comforting morning nap in summer:"You thar, Mary?"
19146Honor thy father and mother, and grandmother, of course; did n''t I teach you that?"
19146How are our friends at St. Martin''s Bay and Sinepuxent?
19146How are our old friends Spence and Upshur, and Polk and Franklin and Harry Wise?
19146How are you to take a withered heart like that and find glad companionship in it?
19146How came that great alliance?"
19146How can ye bloom so fair?
19146How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I so full of care?
19146How could I make you happy?
19146How could I reconcile myself to let you live alone?
19146How could you hear from Baltimore so soon?
19146How did you ever think that feeling could be returned by me?
19146How do I know Meshach Milburn is dead?
19146How do you account for it?"
19146How is Aunt Patty?"
19146How is he now and what is he at?"
19146How is she now?
19146How kin I repent unless I confess my sin?
19146How long will they keep him?
19146How loud speaks the first commandment to us this moment:''Thou shalt have no other gods before me''?"
19146How many fighting men are we here?"
19146How much do you want?"
19146Hudson?"
19146Hudson?"
19146Hulda_ Brereton?_""The other Griffin also suffered death?"
19146Hulda_ Brereton?_""The other Griffin also suffered death?"
19146Huldy, how shall I save myself from these wicked men and the laws I never broke till Sunday?
19146I am growing old, and where is the arm on which I should be leaning?
19146I feel my heart is in my wings, and must I go sit on a nest?
19146I recollect a fable I read of a god loving a woman, and he burst upon her in a shower of gold; and what was that but a rich man''s wooing?
19146I say, Virgie, sence my marster an''your mistis have done gone an''leff us two orphans, sposen we git Mr. Tilghman to pernounce us man an''wife, too?"
19146If my singing in the church has given you happiness, why could it not move you to mercy?
19146If that''s the case, which state am I in?"
19146In fact, what good can come of this violent alliance?
19146Is all done and fetched?"
19146Is all this sorcery inseparable from that necromancer''s Hat you wear in Princess Anne?"
19146Is he got you, honey?
19146Is he strong?"
19146Is his conquest as complete as that?"
19146Is it Dutch or Porteygee?"
19146Is it at me, Van Dorn?"
19146Is it fur yourself?"
19146Is it more than he can pay by the sacrifice of everything?"
19146Is it my pure, poor child?
19146Is it necessary to tell my mother?"
19146Is it not Derrick Molleston''s loper thee has-- the same that he gets from Devil Jim Clark?
19146Is it not ambition of some kind; perhaps a social ambition?"
19146Is it restitution, also, for Mr. Milburn to strip himself to pay your debts to mother?"
19146Is it to love you?"
19146Is it too late?"
19146Is n''t it cowardly?"
19146Is thair any niggers to sell hereby?"
19146Is that not so?"
19146Is that you, or is it I?
19146Is the beast dead?
19146Is them ole buryins of mine suspected?"
19146Is there any excuse but cowardice for not going?"
19146Is you alive again?"
19146It must be freedom, Virgie thought, but why was she so cold?
19146It''s a hard team to pass on a narrow road,--Meshach and Samson; hey, Virgie?"
19146It''s money, I suppose, that brings you here?"
19146Jack Wonnell put his bell- crown to the side of his mouth again, grinned hideously, and whispered:"Kin you keep a secret?"
19146Jimmy called me a liar fur sayin''Meshach Milburn was gone into the Jedge''s front do'', but we saw him come out of it, did n''t we?"
19146Johnson?"
19146Judge Custis heard Clayton say, as he entered the room:"So ole Derrick Molleston, Aunt Braner, asked you about my dinner, did he?
19146Levin asked the Quaker, who had rejoined him;"niggers?"
19146Levin asked;"some tale has been told me, I reckon, about him?"
19146Levin exclaimed;"oh, must I leave her yonder at the tavern another night?"
19146Levin, are you awake?"
19146Liberty, restitution, as you name it, and his affection to both of us: is he not a gentleman now?"
19146Mary, how do people feel when they are free?"
19146May I become your friend, and let my love for your wife recommend me to your confidence, as you to mine and to my prayers?"
19146Maybe I kin steal Roxy?"
19146Maybe it''s warrants for both of us?"
19146McLane asked, shaking the negro savagely;"was it like this?"
19146Me loved by a preacher?
19146Meshach Milburn?
19146Milburn cried,"may I kiss you?"
19146Milburn said to himself, passing on:"Are those voices kinder than usually, or am I more timid?
19146Milburn said, gravely,"How can you know about hats, when you can not see them?"
19146Milburn?"
19146Milburn?"
19146Milburn?"
19146Miss Somers--""The question is, dear, do you love?"
19146Mother"--Vesta spoke--"you would have me marry, then?"
19146Mr. Clayton continued:"How did she say she killed him?"
19146Mr. Clayton rushed upon him and seized his hand:"How is my friend Randel?
19146Mr. Milburn, may I address her?"
19146Mr. Milburn, where was your heart, to let papa waste his plentiful substance in such a hopeless experiment?
19146Mr. Milburn,"she said aloud,"how is it my duty to do what you ask?"
19146Mrs. Custis, growing paler, exclaimed:"Daniel Custis, have you lost everything in that furnace?"
19146Must I wade the swamps again?
19146My friend, how do you feel?"
19146My wife?
19146Need I say that this was before the perfect day of Isaac and Jacob Cannon?"
19146Next day I was thar agin, Levin, an''I says, to make it seem like a trade:''Roxy, kin ye give me a cup of coffee?''
19146Not Joe Johnson of Dorchester?"
19146Not a minister of the Gospil?"
19146Now where did the bungler who killed me by proxy come from?"
19146Now, whar has Levin gone with the_ Ellenora Dennis?_""I do n''t know, Jimmy.
19146Now, what was your uncle going to do with all his money?"
19146Now, where is your friend?"
19146Now, who can this man be, so free with his ready money?
19146Of Judge Custis?"
19146Of course, you never loved in this place?"
19146Ogg?"
19146Oh, Hulda, where is your real pride?
19146Oh, am I free?"
19146Oh, is he dead?"
19146Oh, my father, art thou in heaven?"
19146Oh, my heart is bursting: what can I say?"
19146Or did you set yer hat under a hen in yere, by a stiffy?"
19146Papa deeded them to me only last Saturday; why should they have deserted at the moment I had redeemed them?
19146Perhaps you will cut up the same way again?"
19146Phoebe?"
19146Phoebus thought;"why must it git cruel an''desperate for money, lookin''out on this dancin''water, an''want to turn this trance into a Pangymonum?"
19146Politely, sir, are they not kidnapping white men, too?
19146Poor Jack Wonnell returning, with something on his face between a grin and a tear, said:"Levin, did n''t I never harm nobody?"
19146Ransom-- pardon, sir, does your shackle incommode you?
19146Rhoda exclaimed, with quiet delight;"who is''fellow Mil,''Jedge?"
19146Rhoda said, looking at Mr. Tilghman candidly;"you ai n''t a minister now?
19146Rhoda, you can read?"
19146Said I,''Carroll, is this another Declaration of Independence?
19146Says I,''Roxy, little dear, what ails you?''
19146Says I:''Roxy, air you goin''to have all that trouble on your mind an''not let me carry some of it?''
19146Sha''n''t we wait fur him?"
19146Shall I embrace your youth with my strong passion?
19146Shall I leave him here to feel that I despise him?
19146Shall we call on him?"
19146Shall we wait, or are you ready?"
19146She addressed the niece again:"Rhoda, did your uncle say he loved Miss Vesta?"
19146She loves this quadroon; therefore, I want to deprive her of the girl: Joe is to bring her to me, do you see?"
19146She saw their wings, and moved the old man at her side to say,"Samson, why can not these angels sing?"
19146She was brought up with me; what right have I to sell her any more than she has to sell me?"
19146Should I not have faith in a husband''s living if I receive a wife''s care from an unseen hand?"
19146Silent for a moment, the young rector exclaimed:"Cousin Vesta, have I lived to see you a mercenary woman?
19146Sir, do you ever pray?"
19146So I''m in the nigger trade an''tryin''to be useful to my country, an''wot does I git fur it?
19146So Joe has left you?"
19146Somers?"
19146Suppose it shows some vanity or eccentricity, why is there more merit in covering that up than in expressing it in the dress?
19146Suppose, indeed, he was the heir?
19146That I had been made a fool of, and hurl new epithets after my hat?"
19146The Captain blushed, and asked,"Why do you like me?"
19146The girl belonged to her mother''s estate: suppose Allan McLane was the administrator of it?
19146The moody negro looked up from his remorseful, brutalized orbs, and said:"Steal it?"
19146The negro''s price is all the negro is; why make him your equal by hating him?"
19146The stuttering host seemed not to comprehend this sneering exclamation, and Levin Dennis said:"King Custis was n''t killed, was he, Pappy Thomas?"
19146The two slave girls looked at each other significantly, and Virgie answered,"Do n''t the Quakers help slaves to get off to a free state?
19146The vulgarian in the play- actor''s hat?
19146Then by what right do they decide my marriage choice?
19146Then you love me from a passion?"
19146Then, addressing the new arrival, Vesta said,"This is your uncle, then?
19146Then, shaking Meshach''s hand, he said, with his boyish countenance bright as faith could make it:"My friend, may I take my kiss?"
19146There he heard Jimmy Phoebus speak to Levin Dennis sharply:"Levin, what you doin''with that nigger buyer?
19146This is the camp- meetin'', then?
19146Thou wilt not stab a citizen of Camden town at his own door?"
19146To be weighed against a father''s debts-- is it not degrading?"
19146To court her for her money, to kiss her into taking her money out of good mortgages and putting it into bog iron ore?
19146Turk dead?
19146Van Dorn made several efforts to talk, and often coughed painfully, and finally, as they reached a lane gate, he articulated:''"The Chancellor''s?"
19146Van Dorn not lucky, heigh?"
19146Vesta thought to herself:"Can that be so?
19146Vesta, this house, I believe, is yours now?
19146Virgie, can you guess?"
19146Was it this one over yer on the Wes''n Shu?"
19146Was it too late to recall her words, and ask for delay?
19146Was she to disappear from the lonely clearing, and leave only the hut and its orphans?
19146Well, Mrs. Milburn-- I will give you the title-- for what must I make over these old properties to you?"
19146Wha''s yer yard- stick, ole debbil?''
19146Whair did they come from?
19146Whar''s the tavern?"
19146What ails you, Dave, sence I larned you to box?"
19146What air you sneakin''aroun''Teackle Hall fur so bright of a mornin'', lazy as I know you is, Jack Wonnell?"
19146What are they?"
19146What are we but two women left?
19146What art thou, then?
19146What can have happened?"
19146What could she do?
19146What did I know of this world only yesterday?
19146What did Joe Johnson say to me last night before the Washington Tavern?
19146What did it mean?"
19146What do we care?
19146What do you bring her presents fur, and hang around us when we know you despise us all, except fur the black folks we can sell you cheap?
19146What do you want?"
19146What have they done?"
19146What have you been teachin''that child to read an''write fur-- out of your Bible, too?
19146What hokey- pokey wair you up to?"
19146What if something should happen to us?
19146What interest have you in me?"
19146What is escaping discovery to the increasing degradation of my own sanctuary, my created spirit?
19146What is he doing with two horses?"
19146What is it in the air that makes everything so acute, and my cheeks to tingle?
19146What is it?"
19146What is it?"
19146What is it?"
19146What is that?"
19146What is your name?"
19146What is your name?"
19146What is your next move, Vesta?"
19146What made you break the laws so and be a bad man?"
19146What of it?
19146What place is this?"
19146What shall I do?"
19146What shall it be?"
19146What time to- night kin you make it?"
19146What will become of the Christian religion and society and good principles?"
19146What will they think of me, they gathered around so many years and watched me boil, and poked their little fingers in to taste the stewing meat?
19146What will you do with the shillings?"
19146What would Jimmy Phoebus do?"
19146What would Princess Anne say of me?
19146What would Van Dorn do in Levin''s place?
19146What''s the name, angel gal?"
19146When did you last see this box, James?"
19146When do we sail, cap''n?"
19146When may I return?"
19146Where are the two bright wenches, Virgie and Roxy?"
19146Where are you going?"
19146Where can I turn?"
19146Where could she have run?"
19146Where could she lean for the close sympathy befitting such grief?
19146Where did you get authority to question another person about any decent article of his attire?"
19146Where do you live?"
19146Where has he gone?"
19146Where have you been?"
19146Where is it?"
19146Where is my son?
19146Where is that pot of color you paint your cheeks with even before_ me_, whose blushes none can recollect?
19146Where is the bird?"
19146Where is the key?"
19146Where shall I fly?"
19146Where shall we go when you are well?"
19146Where will I find another lover at my age?
19146Where''s Meshach?"
19146Where''s your passes?"
19146Where?
19146Where_ do_ you call home now, Friend Custis?
19146While the two youths were still lingering by the wagon they heard these words:"Have you arranged everything with Whitecar and Devil Jim?"
19146Who could have expected you on this simple occasion?
19146Who could have suspected his intelligence?
19146Who cried''steeple- top''?"
19146Who has not his vulture?"
19146Who is he?"
19146Who is he?"
19146Who is it that feeds me so mysteriously?"
19146Who is this Morgan that was stolen last year in the State of New York?"
19146Who is your friend, sir?"
19146Who keeps me here idle while Mother asks for me?"
19146Who that ever comes to Johnson''s Cross- roads brings the Bible?"
19146Who that underrates him will make any considerable sacrifice to assist us?
19146Who was it that called her"daughter"?
19146Who''s your whiffler?
19146Who?"
19146Whom have you selected, that he is so free with his money?
19146Whose was it?"
19146Why air you so fur from home?"
19146Why are you here, if you are conservative?
19146Why ca n''t I be so?
19146Why ca n''t he, rich as a Jew, go buy a new hat, or buy me one?
19146Why came those cold stars so close, as if to spy upon him?
19146Why do you love me?"
19146Why do you marry him?"
19146Why do you speak so mad at me when you give me these pretty things?
19146Why do you wear that forlorn, unsightly hat?"
19146Why not?
19146Why should it have ever done so?
19146Why should this man be so derided because he covers his head with an old hat?
19146Why stays he, O my Levin?"
19146Why, Captain, honey, ai n''t ye hungry?"
19146Why, Jack, how much money do you s''pose a beautiful servant like Roxy will fetch?"
19146Why?"
19146Will he who gave me life never call me his, and say,''My daughter, come to my respect, rest on my heart, and take my name''?"
19146Will she be tractable?"
19146Will you ask it?"
19146Will you discount my note at legal interest?"
19146Will you pay my price or not?"
19146Will you pay my price?"
19146Will you take it?"
19146William?"
19146Wo n''t you stand by me, Levin?
19146Wonnell, what do you put yourself at sech pains fur to''blige a pore slave girl that ai n''t but half white?''
19146Wot kin a nigger earn for yer?
19146You are his creditor, are you not?"
19146You are not thinking of love, too, Samson?"
19146You are one of father''s men, I suppose?"
19146You are there, Miss Custis, are you not?"
19146You do n''t want''em both, Cunnil?"
19146You had a family, then?"
19146You hate this boy?"
19146You have n''t been playing your tricks on anybody''s negroes, Joe?"
19146You intend to give your mother the money which has been lost, and silence her complaint before she makes it?"
19146You mean a mountebank-- an impostor?"
19146You remember, Jimmy, when I leff you by ole Spring Hill church, to go an''git a woman on a little wagon to show me de way to Laurel?"
19146You say you will marry me; when?"
19146You would not like to sell them?"
19146You''ll come, papa?"
19146You''re a fine American citizen, ai n''t you?
19146Your jewels, I suppose?
19146Your sons,--will they do it?
19146_ Ayme!_ that poor little wild- flower: where did she spend the chill night yesterday, Patty, can you tell?"
19146_ you_ sad?
19146a Abolitionist?"
19146ai n''t it a piece of your neck fixin''?"
19146ai n''t you most a- starved fur yer breakfast?
19146air you dead, uncle?
19146are you_ fearing_, at your time of life?"
19146chito!_ You can shrink from me and not from a Cannon, too?
19146could my own father have brought me into the world and hated me?"
19146cried Aunt Hominy,"did n''t Miss Vessy hole dat ar''hat one time, an''pin a white rose in it?
19146cried Jimmy,"what''s this a rollin''yer?
19146did you think I was sold, or abused, because I had been married?
19146echoed Mrs. Custis, mockingly,"what trouble has he had, I would like to know?
19146exclaimed Judge Custis,"how came you by those papers?"
19146exclaimed Levin;"that''s twenty- five dollars, ai n''t it, sir?"
19146exclaimed Rhoda, putting out her crescent foot, on which was Vesta''s worked stocking,"did they have Fair Havens in them days?
19146exclaimed Virgie;"what ails you, pore man?"
19146exclaimed the superior- looking person;"what can they mean?"
19146gurgled the girl''s low notes;"where is she?"
19146has some one set you on to demand your wages?"
19146he ai n''t your par, is he?
19146he breathed, with fever- weakened eye- sockets, and mind struggling up to his distended orbs,"do I know you?"
19146he cried,"is this one of your tricks?"
19146he gave you the Book?"
19146he interjected,"have I a rival already, daughter?
19146he said"Not from your father''s gallows?"
19146he shouted, taking the money- lender by the throat,"do you dare to mention her as part of your mortgage?"
19146how could I ever pray again if they were sold?
19146how does he do?
19146how fresh your critter is; ai n''t it Dirck Molleston''s?
19146in_ tar_rapin, too?
19146is it wicked now?"
19146is that a picture?
19146mused Van Dorn,"shall I tell you?
19146said Clayton, warming up;"Quakers will set other people on, wo n''t they?
19146said Clayton;"hesitate to do a little thing like this, after the free opinions you have expressed?"
19146said Hulda,"I am of them; how can I wish harm to my stepfather and my grand- dame?
19146said Jack Wonnell;"I''spect you want a drink, Levin?"
19146said McLane, throwing open his door, out of which the full light of fire and candles gleamed,"conservative, is she?
19146said Vesta;"do you command me to leave you?"
19146said Virgie, trembling,"what voice is that?"
19146said Virgie, wanderingly;"have I come to it?"
19146shall I ever see you again?
19146she said;"to open your lips after that, to save my father?
19146she screamed, as Vesta came in;"are you alive?
19146she, who kept heaven here below, and was the saints, the arts, the all- sufficient for her child?
19146shouted the Judge,"O curse of God!--not him?"
19146spoke the man;"do n''t you never come to a churchyard to git yer sins forgive?"
19146that is a Judge''s?
19146the cradle seemed to say,"that I received and rocked warm from the womb of pain?
19146the spinner seemed to creak,"when I know my children are without stockings?
19146thought Virgie,"my dear white father?
19146well,"exclaimed Vesta, as her maid entered and proceeded to wind up this satin cordage on her crown,"what men are in their minds, can woman know?
19146what can I say?
19146what can he want?"
19146what company?
19146what do you mean?
19146what is that?
19146what kind of thing is that?
19146what shall I say?"
19146what''s that?"
19146whence came that ominous hat?"
19146where did you get this pass?"
19146where is it?"
19146where is the tie that fastens me to heaven?
19146who did it?"
19146who did this?"
19146who had ever shaken that hand?
19146who is he?"
19146who knows?"
19146why, what has become of you?
19146wild- flower, you have been listening?"
19146you mean my legs?
39455Am I saved? 39455 Does it work,"is the test, they say, of the value of a scheme or statement, and not,"Is it true?"
39455Is it possible?
39455Who would have believed it?
39455And how do we know that things will be better in the unseen world?
39455And listen to the cry of despair from the lips of the Son of God:"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?"
39455And what is the verdict of history on this question?
39455Ask,"What is Truth?"
39455Can any religion offer more?
39455Did it make me happy?
39455Does the belief in God and immortality make for morality?
39455How can I be sure that God has forgiven me?
39455How was God made?
39455How was the world made?
39455If God is everywhere, why is there darkness anywhere?
39455If a god were to ask the question,"What is Truth?"
39455If men asked,"What is Truth?"
39455If there is within reach an ocean of truth, why is it doled out to us in driblets which hardly wet our lips, when we are burning with thirst?
39455Is America going to live forever?
39455Is Life Worth Living Without Immortality?
39455Is Life Worth Living Without Immortality?
39455Is it because these paintings are never going to perish?
39455Is it going to have a future existence?
39455Is it not interesting?
39455Is it possible?
39455Is life worth living?
39455Is man lower than the animal?
39455Is not that worth living for?
39455Is the canvas which you adore immortal?
39455Is this Truth?
39455Moreover, how can what is wrong here be made right in the next world?
39455Must somebody be always whispering in our ears,"Ye are gods; ye are gods,"to prevent us from doing violence to ourselves or to our fellows?
39455Nevertheless, are they not precious while we have them?
39455Perhaps it never will, but what of that?
39455Presentation Edition, limp leather$ 1.00 A FEW LECTURES--10c A COPY Is the Morality of Jesus Sound?
39455Suppose they should be worse?
39455This shuddering thing in tattered clothes, and almost naked?
39455To seek the truth, to love the truth, to live the truth?
39455To those who say that service or usefulness is the noblest aim of life, we answer,"Why should those who serve the noblest ends of life be unhappy?"
39455What evidence does the professor offer to prove the existence of an unseen world and the immortality of man?
39455What is the remedy for the pessimism that asks,"Is life worth living?"
39455What was the effect of this belief upon me?
39455Where would I open my eyes if I should die tonight?
39455Would that satisfy us?
39455Would this be expecting too much of him?
39455Would we not still wish for a God who could have contributed to the progress of civilization without resorting to so unspeakable a murder?
39455You love your country and you are willing to defend its institutions, if need be, with your life, but is it because your country is immortal?
40032And how many are there here?
40032How many monks, father, have you in your convent?
40032There are many more in the forest yonder,he said;"why do not you go there to get them?"
40032Did her grandmother learn the art from the same coiffeur that prepared the mother of Ramses for her morning care?
40032Did they come to demand something?
40032Had they an ultimatum to present?
40032How many ounces did you have in your bag?"
40032Perhaps it was more cheerful in the heyday of Mexico, or did coming events cast their shadows before, as Montezuma paced those silent alleys?
40032Whence came the shadowy race whose history vaguely underlies that of later Mexican races?
40032Whence came this proud people which had conquered for itself a place in that valley of the perfect climate?
40032Where are all these things now?
40032Why were they there?
39641But how is one ever to be sure?
39641By the way, Judith, where is that fascinating little flirt of a cousin of yours?
39641Did they quarrel that way_ before_ they were married?
39641Did you ever see the stars so bright? 39641 Do n''t you care?"
39641How did Uncle Darcy take it?
39641How did you find me?
39641How did you know?
39641How do I know he''ll ever come back?
39641How many hours now?
39641Only what?
39641So anxious to get away?
39641Tell him_ what_ about her?
39641The little goldilocks in blue, or the one under the red parasol?
39641Well?
39641What''s become of that good- looking doctor?
39641Which one said it?
39641Without my having done my part to win it?
39641_ Will_ you do that?
39641After all, what difference will it make a thousand years from now if they do tag?
39641And dear old Uncle Darcy-- in the very first hour of his terrible loneliness-- how could I forget to ask comfort for_ him_?
39641And now-- oh how can I tell what followed, or how it began?
39641As we started towards the stairs she gave me a puzzled look which said as plainly as words,"Now what did you do_ that_ for?"
39641Babe said probably it was the work of hands long dead and gone, and did n''t it seem sad that they should come to this end?
39641Besides, why should n''t he see his own floral offering?
39641But not till one of them asked,"Where''s the boy now?"
39641Could I come and help him hold the fort for awhile?
39641Do n''t you believe that He''d let a mother, even up in heaven, have some way to comfort and help a son who was offering_ his_ life to save the world?
39641Do you realize I''ve only four more days left to spend in this old town?
39641Ever since they left I''ve gone around humming:"What''s this dull town to me?
39641He believed in''em now and_ could n''t_ I,_ would n''t_ I----?
39641He said was n''t it"better to be a live dog than a dead lion?"
39641Helping us as Israel was helped, by the invisible hosts and chariots of fire, in the mountain round about Elisha?"
39641How could I be selfish enough to think of anything but the great need?
39641How could I endure the ordinary orbit of my days?
39641How do we know but what those who watch and wait for us up there are not aiding us in ways greater than we dream possible?
39641How do we know that the windows of heaven are not hung with stars that mean the same thing?
39641How does one ever become reconciled to being old?
39641How is one to know?
39641I had been mistaken in one thing, why not in others?
39641Is Richard still there?
39641Is it too late for you to come down for a few minutes?
39641Is n''t that wonderfully appropriate?"
39641It lighted up both faces, and, as I looked at his, I whispered through tears:"What does a little guerdon matter to a soul like yours, John Wynne?
39641It seems dreadfully deceitful, but what else can I do?
39641On the way home I asked,"Did you ever see such devotion?"
39641One feels that she met it with a broom, saying:"Shall birds and bees and ants be wise While I my moments waste?
39641Some other artist- looking man followed him in, and I heard him say as he caught up with him:"Bart, have you heard the news about Moreland?
39641Suppose he''d be killed?"
39641The wonder of it, the rapture of it?
39641There''s a double reason now, do n''t you see, with_ Dad_ to be avenged?
39641What difference if one little ant in the universe is happy or unhappy for one atom of time?
39641What is there about it at the source that Youth can not understand or should not talk about?
39641While Judith was answering, Esther laid her hand on my arm in her enthusiastic way and exclaimed in a low tone,"Who is that young Apollo you spoke to?
39641Why do n''t you wait till it''s all over and he comes back in peace times?"
39641Why should he sacrifice it for this careless young fellow, who by his own confession had never denied himself anything?
39641Would I walk up to the beach with her?
39641Yet how could I disappoint him?
39641and she said in that honey- sweet way of hers,"a yellow dog?"
3806A thousand thanks; but does Mademoiselle remember the forfeit I might demand to add to the favor she has already done me?
3806And she killed herself, when you sold Bob?
3806And what becomes of you, Nan?
3806Aunt Pen, are you a modest woman?
3806Bless the child, what does she mean?
3806But why, Robert? 3806 But, Robert, why think her dead?
3806Can I help you out of it? 3806 Can you skip a stone, Mr. Leavenworth?
3806Dear girls, what have I ever done, that you should love me so?
3806Dear me, what shall I do for him?
3806Do you expect your patients to come to you, Nelly?
3806Do you know him, Robert? 3806 Do you think so?
3806Eh? 3806 Has he taken it?"
3806How do you like our new acquaintance, Dora?
3806How many years will it take to change that fresh- hearted little girl into a fashionable belle, I wonder?
3806How the Devil did you know that?
3806I suppose it wo n''t do to put butterflies and toads and worms into beds like the real soldiers where Will was?
3806John, have you seen Philip since you wrote about your last meeting with him?
3806John, what are you thinking of?
3806John, you absurd man, what are you doing?
3806Making what?
3806Nan, are you in hysterics?
3806Now, what sort of beds are you going to have, miss? 3806 Robert, tell me what it means?
3806Shall I have the honor of averting either calamity?
3806Were you afraid?
3806Were you with him when he was wounded? 3806 What can be your objection, Dora?"
3806What have you lost? 3806 What is your other name?"
3806What must we do first?
3806What next?
3806What time is it, and where are you going, dear?
3806What will happen then, John?
3806When are you going to make your fortune, John, and get out of that disagreeable hardware concern?
3806Where is Laura?
3806Where is father, Sally?
3806Where is your father?
3806Where shall you go to look for your first load of sick folks, miss?
3806Where''s Di?
3806Where''s Sally?
3806Who is Lucy?
3806Why do you say''was,''as if the man were dead and gone?
3806Will you open these windows? 3806 Would you like to have a daughter of yours go to a party looking as I look?"
3806Yes, yes,--but go on now; what came next?
3806You darling thing, did you fall out of your nest and hurt your wing?
3806You insinuate that I should pick at the pudding or invade the cream, do you? 3806 You may, but tell me first where will you have your hospital?"
3806And-- oh, my dear boy, have you been to supper yet?"
3806Are you quite ready, quite comfortable for your journey?
3806As you are fond of hay- making, I suppose you intend to pay your respects to the old gentleman with the three- pronged pitchfork?"
3806Bless the man, what''s he doing down there?
3806Burying sunfish, hey?"
3806But are you well and strong enough?"
3806But is this man well enough?"
3806But what is the ribbon for?"
3806By what name shall I call you?"
3806Could I, mamma?"
3806Did you learn his name, Dora?"
3806Do you know, he is very witty and well informed, though he says he never had much time for self- cultivation?
3806Do you think I can find any patients so?"
3806Do you?"
3806Does he mean you?"
3806Does this look like an ambulance, Will?"
3806Evans?"
3806Girls, you know when father died, John sent us money, which he said Mr. Owen had long owed us and had paid at last?
3806Good of him, was n''t it?
3806Has he spoken to you to- night, Dora?"
3806Have you had the fever?"
3806He is not your master?"
3806How came you to forget what I have told you over and over again about a proper reserve?"
3806How can I be expected to remember that Sally''s away, and people must eat, when I''m hearing the''Harper''and little''Mignon?''
3806How had his appeals been answered?
3806How have you been?
3806How many white men, with all New England''s freedom, culture, Christianity, would not have felt as he felt then?
3806How was it?"
3806I have broken through the rules of a false propriety for Clara''s sake; can I not do as much for Frank''s?
3806I must prevent murder, if I could,--but how?
3806Indeed, I am in truly earnest; I will learn, I will be kind, and may I go now and begin?"
3806John, how dare you come here and do my work, instead of shaking me and telling me to do it myself?
3806Now, then, will you go?"
3806See, I''m getting on finely now:--you''re a judge of such matters; is n''t that nice?"
3806Shall I fetch him in?"
3806Should I have reproached him for a human anguish, a human longing for redress, all now left him from the ruin of his few poor hopes?
3806Should I have tried to touch him by appeals to filial duty, to brotherly love?
3806Should I have urged the beauty of forgiveness, the duty of devout submission?
3806Should I have warned him of penalties, of judgments, and the potency of law?
3806Then Laura looked up, saying, playfully,--"Here are the good and wicked sisters;-where shall we find the Prince?"
3806What could he be thinking of?
3806What did he know of justice, or the mercy that should temper that stern virtue, when every law, human and divine, had been broken on his hearthstone?
3806What does he write books full of smart''Phillinas''and interesting''Meisters''for?
3806What future would this crime mar?
3806What have you done?
3806What have you said?
3806What memories had father and brother stored up in his heart to plead for either now?
3806What was the wager?"
3806What will you do while I''m gone?"
3806When can you go up?"
3806Where were we when I lost my head?
3806Who and what is the man?"
3806Who had taught him that self- control, self- sacrifice, are attributes that make men masters of the earth and lift them nearer heaven?
3806Why did n''t you let us know you were coming so soon?
3806Why did you shut it?"
3806Why do you hate him?
3806Will you do this, Robert?"
3806Will you have him?"
3806Will you, dear?
3806Wo n''t you speak it, Dora?"
3806Would n''t you like to take it to him, John?
3806and predict that the good daughter will yet prove the happy wife?"
3806and what makes you so late to- night?
3806and what were we talking about?"
3806and why should he deny himself that sweet, yet bitter morsel called revenge?
3806it''s Bob; where''s Lucy?"
3806that Laura the artist has not conquered Laura the woman?
3806what did you do?"
3806what''s that?"
3806why did you do it?"
35837''Tis well: we met as friends, Are we to part as foes?
35837( Has hell worse torture?
35837(_ Aside._) Why should the thought Dart agony like this into my heart?
35837(_ aside._ Will nought correct this levity of speech?
35837(_ rises._) How died the maid?
35837A better chance awaits thee; She meets the foe!--meets!--when shall she return?
35837A ghastly corpse?
35837A hideous shout was raised-- my blood with horror-- DU N. Thou couldst not longer look?
35837Ah, wherefore start?
35837Ah, why should this be so?
35837Am I John Talbot''s son?"
35837Am I then so near him?
35837And his brave sire?
35837And is our honour doubted?
35837And shall I imitate the vice I scorn, And wring some breast with anguish like my own?
35837And she, the sainted maid, has done the deed?
35837And thou wert in the fight?
35837And who can e''er be sad in such sweet fellowship?
35837And why?
35837And why?
35837And wilt thou have it seen in that same page Thy king ungrateful proved?
35837And wouldst thou move me to a coward''s deed To soothe his wounded vanity?
35837Are earth and heaven again in fury met, As late on Orleans''fields?
35837Are scenes of death and agony so pleasant That such a throng of eager witnesses Should press to view them?
35837Are they not traitors; Aye, traitors to the land they help to fetter?
35837Are we not master of ourself-- our actions?
35837Art thou not lonesome oft?
35837Astonished o''er the deep of my own heart, First to my startled view revealed I stand, And almost trembling ask-- Can this be so?
35837At what?
35837Bribe the cold grave?
35837Broken?
35837But how deceive the intervening moments?
35837But how shall I forget?
35837But how?
35837But pledged to whom?
35837But said they not that Richemont too was near?
35837But the maid,--she bore it?
35837But what devise?
35837But yet without advice, A step of such importance meditate?
35837Can Death then ope his mouldy jaws, and speak Without a tongue?
35837Can lonely woods and dells restore then peace?
35837Can this be so?
35837Canst forgive-- Forget?
35837Canst read, Or are thy eyes, like mine, made dim and blistered?
35837Canst thou be ignorant?
35837Canst thou not save her?
35837Canst thou resist that look?
35837Claims she not by right, All love, disinterested faith, all service?
35837Contains revenge then ought that may impart Joy to felicity, or make repose More tranquil, which already was complete, That it should be desired?
35837Cringe to the man who thus has wounded me?
35837Crowd ye upon my mind alone to torture me, Or are ye pledge of wonders yet to come?
35837DU N. And what is there in this to waken malice?
35837DU N. Are words denied the heart Of firmest mould, or what enchains my tongue?
35837DU N. Couldst see her Dragged from thy arms to meet a horrid death?
35837DU N. Is she then safe?
35837DU N. Is the maid safe?
35837DU N. Together, saidst?
35837DU N. What hath she done?
35837DU N. What more have I to hear?
35837DU N. What wouldst venture For sake of yon sweet form should ill assail her?
35837DU N. Wilt thou indeed then plight, wilt vow with me, To share through danger''s hour, through sunny days-- What mean those tears?
35837Dares he address such words as these to Richemont?
35837Describe her: is she young?
35837Do maniacs know what wakes their frenzy?
35837Do we not hang The captive linnet who denies to sing, In sight of his own fields and native woods, To cheat him into song?
35837Dost hear?
35837Dost hear?
35837Dost seek a bribe?
35837Dost thou refuse?
35837Doth friendship''s sacred garb clothe friendship only?
35837Du Nois?
35837E''en on this field Must I receive fresh proof of hate?
35837Faint heart, Why doubt that noble blood doth show itself, Though severed from its fount by laspe of years?
35837For insult this?
35837For the last time, Xaintrailles, wilt follow me?
35837From whom should we or ask, or need advice?
35837Give me thy hand that thus-- why dost thou tremble?
35837Had I a hope?
35837Had I a sorrow?
35837Has then Du Nois declared?
35837Hast found the wine?
35837Hast found the wretch?
35837Hast nought to say?
35837Hast seen her?
35837Hast thou forgot A brother, once my friend?
35837Hast thou then never felt that bliss approached So near as just to meet the grasp, becomes Extreme of pain?
35837Hath pity touched their breast?
35837Hath then the unchanging voice of destiny Indeed been heard, and I and death in league?
35837Have I not hope to share the hours with me?
35837Have these poor weeds so changed me, Has frenzy so deformed what once was fair, That recollection of me has escaped thee?
35837Have ye then quite forgot proud Cressy''s field, Poictiers or Agincourt?
35837He raised him on his side, Clung round his father''s neck, and looking on him, Feebly he said,"Have I done well, my father?
35837Hours of past glory, are ye gone for ever?
35837How goes the fight with thine?
35837How goes the hour?
35837How hast thou sped?--the sword?
35837How introduced?
35837How may that be?
35837How met The haughty occupant of our own place The offer tendered him?
35837How of his race?
35837How wilt thou meet me there?
35837How''s this to tempt her?
35837If fortune''s tide Have met a turn, no matter by what means, Would it be well to stand aloof, and miss The way to honour?
35837Is conscience then no tale To frighten coward hearts, and is there truth In retribution?
35837Is he dead?
35837Is insult then annexed to gross injustice?
35837Is not His promise ours Who leads the hosts of heaven?
35837Is not yon planet Distinct in its own splendour, though the moon Sheds more and brighter beams?
35837Is there hope?
35837Is there such weapon in these walls?
35837Is this no dream?
35837Is wealth thy wish?
35837JOHN T. Are not their arms against their country turned In aid of foreign foes?
35837Know ye what''tis?
35837Knows''t thou what thou sayest?
35837Loves she then another?
35837May I not speak to thee?
35837Nor yet enquire How speeds the war?
35837Not sad when Warwick is away?
35837Of noble birth The maid?
35837Oh say, what brings thee to this sad abode?
35837One question more-- is Richemont here?
35837Or will not e''en the dead arise in wrath, And punish the intrusion?
35837Recall the past, remember Orleans''walls, The battles fought, the warring perils shared, The blessings joined-- how have I wounded thee?
35837Retire;--rely upon thy monarch''s word:-- Doth this not comfort thee?
35837Saw ye his wounds?
35837Say, hast thou ever marked the moon''s full beams Upon the wave, when broken by the breeze?
35837Sayst thou the siege is raised?
35837Seest thou yon star?
35837Shall I advance?
35837Shall I submit to such indignity?
35837Shall I then be forgot?
35837Shall I turn villain?
35837Shall not the net be spread in vain before The simple bird, and wilt thou rush to peril?
35837She loves him, then?
35837Should his intent be mischief, would he scruple, E''en by the nearest road, to blast our hopes?
35837Sits not the stamp accursed Of bastardy upon my brow, to dim The gems that in my coronet might sparkle?
35837Stand I indeed on earth?
35837The life I have?
35837The prince Will ne''er demean himself to listen to her?
35837The prize is sweeter made as woman''s gift: We strengthen ties by woman''s aid with kings, Then why not owe a crown?
35837The sovereign''s scorn Infects thee, then?
35837The time?
35837Their shame, forsooth?
35837Then, wherefore, peril life?
35837They may appear to show me some neglect, And why?
35837Think you I care for threat of you, or yours?
35837Think''st thus to die?
35837Thinkst thou that she will heed what I might say?
35837Thou dost not deem me then accursed, forsaken, Stained with foulest crime?
35837Thou know''st the Constable is on his way?
35837Thou knowst the wretch who followed us When late we passed to Baugenci?
35837Thou lovest her then?
35837Thou wilt comply then?
35837Time wears-- dares she delay?
35837To whom?
35837Was this prudent?
35837Well thought-- but how?
35837What chains your feet?
35837What could I do?
35837What does it mean?
35837What else could instigate the wary Bedford To waive my offer to command his host?
35837What followed?
35837What folly next, is son as father mad?
35837What greater fury rent the vaulted sky At Orlean''s fight, or Patay''s gallant field?
35837What greater need than that which now afflicts us?
35837What hath she done, this delegate of Heaven, But what the meanest, youngest of your captains, Had, in like case, done better?
35837What have I heard?
35837What have ye seen to discompose ye thus?
35837What is it to be great?
35837What may this mean?
35837What may this mean?
35837What means this tumult in my soul?
35837What news?
35837What next is her intent?
35837What noise was that?
35837What of him?
35837What owe I to their love That I should claim them such?
35837What place so meet?
35837What proof Produced of such a mission?
35837What sound is that?
35837What sound was that?
35837What then?
35837What thus unnerves My arm and chains my tongue?
35837What too but envy influences Charles?
35837What wait we?
35837What wouldst thou have from me?
35837What wouldst thou know?
35837What wouldst thou?
35837What''s that to men like you?
35837What, if too careful of his charge, the abbot Coldly deny his suit, some fraud suspecting?
35837Whence but in strength of some infernal spell, Of the foul prompting of some lying fiend?
35837Whence this boldness, unnat''ral to thy sex?
35837Whence this intrusion?
35837Where dost thou speed so fast?
35837Where is the maid?
35837Where rendezvous?
35837Where will the folly end?
35837Wherefore claimed?
35837Wherefore hath anguish thus o''erspread each feature?
35837Who art thou?
35837Who doubts then victory?
35837Who fears defeat in what the maid devises?
35837Who honour''d as thyself?
35837Who told thee this?
35837Who trusts a woman''s word, Which varies with her varying mood?
35837Whom do I see?
35837Whose fame fills Europe?
35837Whose heart is large enough to envy it?
35837Whose voice---- DU N. Knowst me not, Joan?
35837Why generous by halves?
35837Why has the dungeon''s gloom been changed for light That cheers, for air that wakens life, not chills?
35837Why here alone?
35837Why not devise some plan To prove her truth, or to detect the fraud?
35837Why not his sword?
35837Why not then grant her all,--ease, liberty, With means again to lord it over those Whose path''tis outrage she should dare to cross?
35837Why not?
35837Why pause?
35837Why should I censure thee, sweet friend, for that Which is but honour to himself, as thee, And marks the worth of both?
35837Why, when thy hopes have nearly gained their height, Is thus thy cheek so pale, thy look so pensive?
35837Will gold redeem the dead?
35837Will not thy absence Rather awake impertinent remark,-- Be deemed his will?
35837Will not your grace resent the indignity?
35837Wilt thou do nought for me?
35837With what intent, my liege-- a friend or foe?
35837Wouldst know the heaviest ill mortality Can bear?
35837Wouldst thou hear more?
35837Yet dost thou doubt me?
35837Yon was my son: time was when I had four; Where are they now?
35837[_ Advances._ Who thus disturbs the peaceful hours of night, And what thy purpose?
35837[_ Exeunt._ DU N. Cut off from ev''ry hope!--friend, foe alike-- Has Heaven itself forgotten to be just?
35837[_ SOLDIERS enter the inner apartment._ Does vengeance sleep?
35837[_ SOLDIERS return._ Why that look?
35837_ Enter XAINTRAILLES._ What tidings?
35837_ aside._) The proud Du Nois?
35837and Valancour?
35837and wherefore come?
35837and why?
35837art dumb?
35837can ye indeed thus meet?
35837deserved I this?
35837didst mark?
35837disappoint his hopes?
35837does this cause sorrow?
35837gaped they not wide?
35837has evil too befallen thee?
35837has she then consented?
35837he Of whom tradition speaks a royal damsel Viewed with eyes of love?
35837his fav''rites banish?
35837not yet returned?
35837refined society?
35837say, have swords been interchanged, Or comes he peacefully?
35837say, what has caused this change?
35837this damsel, who,''tis said, Is hither come to work such wondrous feats-- Whence doth she spring?
35837thou here?
35837was it not delicious to the taste?
35837we are hungry and thirsty.--What have you to give us to eat?
35837what has delayed thee?
35837what madness brings thee?
35837what means that agonizing shout, That wail of lamentation, noise confused, The braying of the battle?
35837what steps are these?
35837when did England''s sons e''er turn Their backs to Frenchmen-- seeking mean safety?
35837who calls?
35837why hast thou failed me thus?
35837witness not these swelling veins, that I Myself am heir of wanton shame, and worse, Of broken faith?
36168But why not?
36168Did yez say twenty?
36168Do n''t use so much slang,cried his mother;"why ca n''t you call a boy a boy as well as a''kid''and a''duck''; and whatever do you mean by''Gee''?"
36168Do you mean to tell me,I asked,"that my nose is as big as yours?"
36168Does that dog bite?
36168Gor- a- mighty, Missus, what''s in that ar desk?
36168Have you a mother?
36168Have you a sister? 36168 Have you any second- hand chests?"
36168How much will you charge to move two articles of furniture one block?
36168In the name of heaven,exclaimed a friend, as I bore down upon him beneath a cloudless sky,"what have you got on?"
36168Is it an ice chist yez want?
36168Is it the price of that yez''d be afther knowing?
36168Is your name Maria Hopkins?
36168May I sit here and wait for a friend?
36168Must I go down there to find it?
36168Oh, will it kill her?
36168Shall we make for the nearest line of street cars?
36168Walked,did I say?
36168What will become of the sleigh and the poor, tired horses?
36168What will you have?
36168Where, pray, are those laggards, the violets blue? 36168 Would you please get out and walk over this bad place?"
36168Yea, why rockest thou like boats that find no anchor, and like poplars which the north wind smiteth?
36168***** Did it ever strike you, I wonder, this marvel of our individuality?
36168***** Did you ever hear of the island of Avilion?
36168***** Did you ever hunt for eggs in a haymow?
36168***** Did you ever read of a battle siege in olden times?
36168***** Do n''t you get awfully tired of people who are always croaking?
36168***** Do you know which, of all the sights that confronted me yesterday in my rambles through the rainy weather, I pigeon- holed as the saddest?
36168***** Has it been borne in upon you what radiant mornings and September nights the last two weeks have brought in?
36168***** I am tired of the endless dress parade of the great alike-- aren''t you?
36168***** Is n''t it heavenly to see the primrose around again?
36168***** Is there any flower that grows that can compare with the pansy for color and richness?
36168***** See that half- grown man?
36168***** When you and I get rich, my dear, as some day we surely shall, what are we going to do with all our money?
36168***** Where shall we go to find the fit symbol of Easter?
36168***** Which would you rather be in the orchestra of human life, a flute or a trombone?
36168*****"What is the matter, my darling?"
36168A bull of Bashan encountered in a ten- acre lot may be outrun, but who shall escape from a cloud of mosquitoes on a windless night?
36168A lightning stroke is soon over, but who shall deliver us from the torments of dog- days?
36168A rat?
36168And Lydia spoke yet again, saying,"Why, O woman of many wiles, hast thou no cream?"
36168And dwellest thou and thy sisters in Hades by reason of the evil thou hast wrought?"
36168And so when you encounter the bad boy, whom do you hold responsible for his badness-- the boy himself or the mother who trained him?
36168And the daffodils?
36168And the hyacinths?
36168And what shall make you sweet, dear girls?
36168And what was I to do?
36168And what wouldst thou of a public house?
36168And why did she make me a master hand at doughnuts and turnover pies?
36168Another is that I am modest enough to question whether I could run a grip any better than he does?
36168Are its tears His scorning, its groans His mirth?
36168Are you not to be congratulated that you are out of reach of this latter day development of the human brute?
36168Await another storm like a crab in its shell, or venture forth and become the byword of an overwrought populace, the scorn of old men and matrons?
36168Because the goblin bee has stung our own souls, shall we seek to share the pain of its stateless sting with all we meet?
36168But are you happy?
36168But how about the flavor that lingers in your mouth?
36168But of what use is a fog horn to a vessel that gives no heed?
36168But what is the use of talking?
36168But who shall take from me the glory of the start?
36168But who would not rather go to wreck in a storm than founder in becalmed waters?
36168By the way, do you know there is lots of solace to be found in an old music book of twenty years ago?
36168Can you recall much, in all the years that thread between that happy time and this, which can transcend the pleasure of those wildwood tramps?
36168Did fruit ever amount to anything that was left unacquainted with the sharp discipline of the gardener''s shears?
36168Did you ever go berrying?
36168Did you ever know a sweet young girl yet, one who was rightly trained and modestly brought up, who took to decollete dresses naturally?
36168Did you ever stop and think just what it means to be a tramp?
36168Did you ever stop to think, my Christian friend, that that tramp is a neighbor whom you are to love?
36168Did you ever watch a flock of birds sitting for a moment on the mossy gable of a sloping roof?
36168Did you notice the purple center and the dazzling edge, with the rose blush that fringed its borders?
36168Did you see it pale to gray and vanish like a ghost into the starry night?
36168Do I see many faces that do not bear the scar of the"goblin bee"?
36168Do n''t you know that you are the very ones who tend to make them so-- you men?
36168Do they miss her fairy footfall In each dim and flow''ry nook?
36168Do they mourn for the vanished brightness Of my baby''s golden hair?
36168Do you choose the young man who has a clean record, who neither drinks nor wastes his money in riotous practices?
36168Do you ever stop, Mrs. Featherhead, to mark the beauty of our wayside clover or the sparkle of a buttercup in the dew?
36168Do you know the thought of a baby without a mother to cuddle it always brings the tears to my eyes?
36168Do you never walk to and fro with the restless countess in the sad old ballad, dreaming of"Alan Percy?"
36168Do you pick slug- eaten roses and wind- fall blossoms?
36168Do you remember the minister down New York way whom they fined for shooting robins?
36168Does it dream of the lovelight tender In my baby''s eyes so blue?
36168Does the farmer go forth with tears to plant the seed for the coming harvest?
36168Does the navigator rebel when a bark that has been tempest- tossed and storm- driven enters port?
36168Does the scientist mourn above the chrysalis that lets a rare butterfly go free?
36168Ever been there?
36168For what other purpose did nature turn me out a born cook?
36168Have you found the nooks where, like shy children, the violets cluster?
36168Have you seen the lake lately, as blue as a heather bell, as wild as a wood- bird, as peaceful as a brooding dove?
36168Have you stopped, Mr. Busyman, to note the wonder of the skies, never so glorious as of late?
36168How about the display of pine toothpicks and spotted linen?
36168How about the finger- marked drinking glasses and damp napkins?
36168How about the lewd jesters and the low- minded?
36168How about the tobacco chewers and the swearers?
36168How could hell be more quickly created than by the unmasking of such a crowd as this?
36168How did he fulfill this prophecy of woe?
36168How far out of our way do we go to accompany his sister on her homeward faring after a season spent among the swine and the husks?
36168How many of us, poor earthworms that we are, would rather spend our dollar for white hyacinths than for a big supper?
36168I am tired of walking in file, as convicts walk together in stripes-- aren''t you?
36168I can be just as rude and just as mean as I want to be, and who is going to hinder, so long as I wear a gown and call myself a lady?
36168I do n''t know why, I''m sure, for why should we cry when a baby dies?
36168I do n''t like noisy people, do you?
36168I said to myself one weary day When the world was old and the world was gray,"Has God forgotten His wandering earth?
36168I saw a beaten dog turn and fawn beneath his master''s brutal kick, and I thought to myself, where is a more faithful friendship than that?
36168I saw a little coffin in an undertaker''s window, and thought, what child in this busy, bustling city is doomed to fill that casket?
36168I saw lots of things besides, but how does the balance strike?
36168If I choose to cut criss- cross through a crowd, who shall forbid me, being a woman?
36168If my little girl has the ear- ache, or any other tormenting ailment of childhood, do I stand over her and exact songs and smiles?
36168If the career of a politician will spoil a man what would it do for a woman?
36168In your long time disembodied state have you yet reached a point, I wonder, when such news as this can no longer thrill a woman''s heart?
36168Is it worth while to keep our hearts stolid merely because we may be cheated in the bestowal of a nickel''s worth of alms?
36168Is not the first wearing of one a trial, and a special ordeal?
36168Is there a nook so dark and forbidding that the beautiful Easter sunshine can not enter and woo forth a flower?
36168Is there a rock so impervious that the April wind may not find lodgment for a seed in some crevice, and there uplift a bannered blossom?
36168Is this all the lesson the world has taught you, my pretty maiden?
36168Madam, are you aware that a man kicked his wife to death yesterday because she failed to have his supper ready for him?
36168Now, the woman who dreamed, being full of amazement, replied anon, and these were the words that fell from her lips:"Sayest thou so?
36168Of what use is the tie that binds wedded hearts together if like a filament of floss it parts when the strain is brought to bear upon it?
36168On the streets they may see a brute tyrannizing over a helpless beast of burden, or a mother(?)
36168Or is there a nearer one yet and a dearer, from whom I could buy or borrow a pair of stockings that I may go in bathing?"
36168Question yourself seriously, my dear; are you sufficiently considerate?
36168Shall I ever forget how, turning to him when the carnival of sport was at its height, I murmured:"Are you enjoying yourself, dear?"
36168Shall I say the coming man?
36168Shall I tell you the kind of girl I especially adore?
36168Shall I tell you what it is?
36168Shall anybody forget that a sunrise was fair and full of promise because the noon was clouded and the evening declined into rain?
36168She had no doubt whatever but what her husband was going to ruin himself on''Change, and then what would become of them all?
36168So I went, and rather than again undergo the torments of the five days spent in that restful(?)
36168That enchanted place where"falls not hail, or rain, nor ever wind blows loudly,"whose orchard lands and bowery hollows lie lapsed in summer seas?
36168The roses and lilies and daffodils too?
36168Their only interest is in the question,"Wherewith shall we be clothed, and what shall we have to eat?"
36168There will be odd little freaks and unreasoning caprices, like the"What is it?"
36168To the encyclopedia that we may post ourselves as to word derivations and root meanings?
36168To the question,"How are you to- day?"
36168To what shall we liken the brooding sky and the warmth of the all- loving sun?
36168To what shall we liken the cowslip''s valiant gold?
36168To what shall we liken the grass blades already springing up along the loosened water ways?
36168To what shall we liken the shy unfolding of the lilac buds?
36168To what shall we liken the twinkling leaves that shine in the dim depths of the woods?
36168To what shall we liken the violet buds spread thick beneath the country children''s feet?
36168To- night the sky was like the flame of King Solomon''s opal-- did you see it?
36168Very well, that is certainly too bad, but what''s the use of being forever in the dumps about it?
36168We love each other, but what is it that makes human love any nobler than the chirruping of birds if not its duration?
36168What are they but fog horns warning us from off a mist- enveloped shore?
36168What brings peace?
36168What chance is there for a ragged tramp when such as these fail?
36168What constitutes happiness?
36168What did God give you muscle and girth and brain for, if not to launch you on the high seas?
36168What do you think of him?"
36168What earthly purpose would a cable serve that never was tested by a weight?
36168What is this half- dead thing that is trying to force its way onto dry land from the whelming waters of temptation and misery?
36168What love- watched home shelters the head that shall one day sleep upon that satin pillow?
36168What matter if I am poor and unsheltered and costumeless?
36168What matters the room where we doff our toggery when we are once out of it?
36168What on earth is going to become of us if this awful wave of effeminacy which has struck the race does not soon subside?
36168What progress do they make even inland?
36168What was the matter?
36168What would we all begin to do then, I wonder?
36168When the trap is set, however, right in the business center of the town by daylight, what safety have we?
36168When you go forth to buy material for a new gown do you choose cotton warp fabrics and colors that will fade in the first washing?
36168Who are the men who wear diamonds and live easy lives?
36168Who are the women who succeed in business ventures of any sort?
36168Who is contented?
36168Who is to blame-- the waiter who serves it or the business man of the concern who does the marketing?
36168Who shall blame the woman if she said"darn"with an emphasis that might have made a pirate wan with envy?
36168Who sings such soul- ravishing duets to- day as"She Bloomed with the Roses,""Twilight Dews,"or"Gently Sighs the Breeze"?
36168Who would n''t rather have mignonette growing in the window?
36168Why are girls so proud to parade an engagement ring upon their finger, when the diamond is too often the danger- light thrown out above the breakers?
36168Why did n''t he seal them up behind double windows in an airless, sunless, hot and unhealthful home where the dear things could keep warm?
36168Why does n''t some good citizen enter a complaint of that place and break it up?
36168Why not add a gymnasium and dancing hall to the Sunday school and filter some of the world''s innocent sunshine inside its gloomy walls?
36168Why not have more fun and frolic in the home?
36168Why should evil have so much greater chance than good?
36168Why uplift them on dangerous reefs if the ship''s crew sleeps through their warning and the unconscious captain ignores their hoarse note of alarm?
36168Why was all this, when the mother was so eminently fitted by grace and accomplishments to create a beautiful and happy home?
36168Within two hours it stopped raining; the sun came out and the streets filled with festively attired men and women, and where was I?
36168Would any sane being have reviled those sorry beings for a lack of spirit?
36168Would it pay to be pleasing to such an audience at such a sacrifice?
36168Would not the gentle- hearted spectator have proffered a handful of fresh leaves rather, and turned away in pity that sympathy could do no more?
36168dance like a thistle- down in a summer breeze?
40113307, be uppermost it constitutes what is termed an attention signal; thus the hoisting of B.D signifies,"What ship is that?"
40113330"Do you wish to be reported?"
40113330, flags B.P.Q, asks"Do you wish to be reported?"
40113333"Do you want assistance?"
40113333, H.V.F, asks,"Do you want assistance?"
40113334"Has any accident happened?"
40113334, G.B.H, enquires,"Has any accident happened?"
40113Be it so; but will anyone deny that the character of the soldier has much to do with the strength of the battalion they form?
40113Esperance in exaltacion of honour?
40113Esperance in riches?
40113Esperance in the worlde?
40113Know ye not my banner?
40113Our readers will doubtless be familiar with the lines--"Who, in field or foray slack, Saw the blanch lion e''er give back?"
40113Thus in answer to"How many guns does she carry?"
40113he exclaimed,"the fleurs- de- lys?
38370''Do we want to contemplate his mercy? 38370 ''Do we want to contemplate his munificence?
38370''Do we want to contemplate his power? 38370 ''Do we want to contemplate his wisdom?
38370Did I tell you that my West of England friends had sent me another handsome remittance before I left, and still promise future good? 38370 I am somewhat damaged in health, but I am looking?
38370I did, love, indignantly say to Mr. League, do you think Miss Sharples is hiding herself? 38370 I was surprised by a visit from two ladies last night after nine o''clock, and who do you think they were?
38370If you were going out of the harbor in a ship to fight an enemy in another ship, would you not put your wife and children ashore if they were aboard? 38370 Submit to what?"
38370What shall I do to be saved? 38370 Will the new Reform Bill allow women who are householders to vote for members of the House of Commons?
38370''Do you call_ that_ nothing?''
38370''What,''said the sage,''do you wish me to die guilty?''
38370''Why do n''t you bring us_ Cobbett''s Register?
38370A land of freedom?
38370After reading some passages, the Court asked with what object he proceeded?
38370Ah, Richard, have not wisdom, strength and power fled when love gains possession of the heart?
38370Alack, my dear Eliza, what is it but my sister''s love and duty that hinders her from putting a critical question to you?
38370All that the Doncaster religious folks can say to me is to ask how it is that I am the only wise man on the subject of religion in the country?
38370And how in the name of wonder can you preach philosophy to me in my present situation, surrounded as I am by almost insurmountable difficulties?
38370And what existing law is there to reject a woman if she were returned to Parliament?
38370Are you willing to relinquish your Isis, your bride?
38370But where could a place be found that was more fitting than this for the death of the hero of a hundred fights, the battlefield itself?
38370Can I change my nature?
38370Can not David get the paper from Shelding and Hodges?"
38370Can such things be and pass us by like a summer''s cloud, unheeded?
38370Can the ass ever inherit the strength of the horse?
38370Can weakness ever become strength?
38370Can woman become man?
38370Come, make a choice; oh, make a choice; philosophy or love?"
38370Could I get the Sheffield Theatre again?
38370Deism had been much abused; but what was Deism?
38370Do you remember the contents of that letter?
38370Do you think I can be of any service when I come to town?
38370Does not that prove that there is nothing charming about philosophy; or why fear me?
38370Else why such measures?
38370He answered:''Friend, if a jackass were to kick me, would you have me kick him back again?''
38370He called on me at the King''s Bench and asked me what I thought of the project to liberate me?
38370He wanted to know how a Jewish alderman could have met me?
38370How many odious and absurd doctrines have been tolerated, nay, supported in this country?
38370How then is it possible to arrive at a knowledge of what is right or wrong, unless we judge for ourselves?
38370I answer that it is for them to find out how they have been misled?
38370I could wish, my lord, to understand whether I am to go into that defence which I conceive to be my only defence, or to be put down unheard?
38370I feel quite assured that if I return home that I shall never see you again, and what say you to that?
38370I first heard of my good fortune in the sight of a King(?)
38370If I remember rightly it was I that retired from the room into which you were shown at Mr. A------''s?
38370If he breast and conquer the tyrant, Who our cherished rights assail, Shall he sink in the sea''s oblivion, Or pass beyond memory''s pale?
38370If he was in the right, would it not be most unjust?
38370If he was not, would not such means taken to suppress his opinions cause them to spread the wider?
38370Is it not blasphemy?
38370Is it to be supposed that the law, which affords protection to every individual, has not the power to protect itself?
38370Is not this a gross assumption?
38370Is this England?
38370Is this a Christian land?
38370It is a question if any periodical is the better for a name?
38370Kill men unarmed and unresisting, and, gracious God, women too, disfigured, maimed, cut down, and trampled on by dragoons?
38370Mr. Carlile: By what means can I appeal to the Court of King''s Bench when I am confined within the walls of a prison?
38370Mr. Carlile: Can we compel our minds to receive as true what we do not believe because there is a law in support of it?
38370Mr. Carlile: Do you wish me, my lord, to proceed now?
38370Mr. Carlile: I appeal to your lordship, what proof have we that they are_ divine?_ The Chief Justice: I will not answer such a question as that.
38370Mr. Carlile: Is it not actually the case, that God is represented in the text as dwelling in a box of shittim wood in the temple?
38370Mr. Carlile: Then, my lord, am I to understand that you refuse my request to adjourn the trial?
38370Mr. Carlile: To what are we to appeal, if not to reason?
38370Mr. Carlile: Why did not the Attorney- General found his information on that statute?
38370Mr. T. bear a''critical question?''
38370Must I practise love?
38370Must I visit you to- morrow?
38370Must your Isis love you or must she not?
38370My dear Richard, what must I do?
38370My wishes to prove the sincerity of my assertions are equally so- Will you add to your kindness by pointing out the best method of conveyance?
38370Now must not I come just while I tell you the news?
38370Now what does all this argue?
38370Now what say you?
38370Now, how can I defend myself but by showing the truth of the book I have published?
38370Of what use was Solomon''s wisdom or Samson''s strength?
38370Pray tell me how do you like a moderate reformer?
38370Shall I find at last that principles are to be talked of and the world to be lived in?...
38370Shall we ever see mankind, or will future ages see them, working together for common good?
38370The Chief Justice: What then am I to understand?
38370The Chief Justice: You hear the objection taken by the Attorney- General?
38370The King, startled at the noise, asked,''What''s that?''
38370The question was whether, according to the law of the country, the defendant had been guilty of the offence with which he was charged?
38370The question with the public is not whether Mr. Carlile is right or wrong in his opinions, but whether he has acted from purity of motive?
38370The question, What is God?
38370Their first question was,''Who are you?
38370Then I ask what part of the British public I have corrupted?
38370To begin, let me remind you of the question of the Greek philosopher when asked why he did not resent the insolence of a vile fellow?
38370Under this impression my thoughts are committed to paper and transmitted to London; her thoughts are wandering-- God knows where?
38370What become of Peter Annett, can you tell me?
38370What business have you here?''
38370What can I send you, love?"
38370What could be the corrupt motive for bringing upon us so much sorrow?
38370What is to be done now?
38370What must I do?
38370What think you, love, must I attend them or send Mullins?
38370What was the common law?
38370What was the death of Napoleon?
38370What was the disease of Queen Caroline?
38370What?
38370When I am prevented from reading passages from the Bible, is it because the Bible is not fit to be read?
38370When may I expect the one for Sunday?
38370When you read,"In the_ beginning_ God created the heaven and the earth,"the philosopher naturally asks, what beginning?
38370Where then was philosophy?
38370Where will_ you_ be then?
38370Where, my Lord Sidmouth, where are now to be found the assassins with their daggers?
38370Who then will venture to stop human improvement?
38370Who was chairman of Powmell''s committee in opposition to Hume in Middlesex?
38370Who will say we have gone far enough?
38370Why do you not publish your names and the names of those subscribers of high rank and character you mention in your advertisement?
38370Why had all these escaped with impunity, and Paine and he( Mr. Carlile) to be singled out as victims?
38370Why should you do it?
38370Why was the information against him founded not on the statutes the 9th and 10th of William III., but on the common law?
38370Why, then, did you arouse, by your kindness, by your attention, by your example, by everything but precept, my affection to such a pitch of love?
38370Why, therefore, should such books be considered as the will of God?
38370Will the gentlemen of England support or wink at such proceedings?
38370Would Eliza have turned Pagan had he lived?
38370Would the Jews go back?
38370You have the spirit of humanity also that is weak and to be conquered-- now which will you present to your enemies?
38370You make profession of your own utility and laudable exertions; surely you can not feel shame in publishing your names?
38370_ What_ is a government that is supported by scenes of distress of this kind?
38370and how can we tell that they are worthy of being so called unless we examine them?
38370did you not know human nature better than to expect patience?
38370or whose feelings I have outraged?
38370that is the question; or must she assume an indifference that she does not feel: a cold, calculating, philosophical, dignified indifference?
38370what shall I do?
38370whether he is a malicious person, in short, whether he has published the''Age of Reason''with a view to corrupt the morals of society?
29419''Are you a peddler?'' 29419 ''I want to know,''says I;''how on airth did it happen?''
29419''My dear,''said we fondly,''did you make this?'' 29419 ''She is all cut to pieces,''says he;''do you know whether she was in your stable, Mr. Hitchcock, last night?''
29419''Taint a bit like me?
29419''Yes, my love, ai n''t it nice?'' 29419 A different story from what I have told, sir?"
29419A fig for your banister,retorted Mrs. Grumly, turning up her nose,"have n''t I a cousin as is a corridor in the navy?"
29419A longish critter, with a short tail?
29419A pook achent, vat podders te school committees till they do vat you vish, shoost to get rid of you?
29419A rabbit?
29419A shenteel shoemaker, vat loves to measure te gals''feet and hankles petter tan to make te shoes?
29419A singin''-master, too lazy to work?
29419Ah, as you know,said he, quitting the pulpit,"why should I take the trouble of telling you?"
29419Already?
29419And I presume the porpusses give it up in despair, do n''t they?
29419And am I always to remain so?
29419And how do you manage when the happy pair are negroes?
29419And how long,said the youth,"has he had this trick?"
29419And pray, Mr. Philosopher,observed the seaman,"where did your father die?"
29419And pray, Sir,said the counsel,"for what reason did you take up your residence in that place?"
29419And shall the instrument,said the earl, coolly,"run as usual--_to our trusty and well- beloved cousin and counsellor?_"AN HIBERNIAN CAPTURE.
29419And sorter jumps when it runs?
29419And was justice done the murderer?
29419And what did you reply?
29419And what, man,said the other,"do you get by this business of yours?"
29419And what,said he to the Dean,"do you think the Prince of Orange has chosen for his motto?"
29419And what?
29419And when will it be ended?
29419And where did your grandfather die?
29419And your grandfather?
29419And your great- grandfather?
29419And your great- grandfather?
29419Are you a horse?
29419Are you confident you were born at Bourges?
29419Are you married?
29419Are you not sorry for it?
29419Are you sure your name is Lessite?
29419Ay-- ahem!--do you? 29419 Aye,"observed Mr. Mingay,"what would they have said to see your feet ornamented with either shoes or stockings?"
29419BEN,said a politician to his companion,"did you know I had declined the office of Alderman?"
29419BUBBY, why do n''t you go home and have your mother sew up that awful hole in your trowsers?
29419But do n''t they join together again when they meet in your wake?
29419But how ith your wife, thir, and the children?
29419But in case your friend is not a candidate,said the solicitor,"might I then count on your assistance?"
29419But what do I want with a coffin? 29419 But what makes it so many different colors?"
29419But will your majesty,continued he,"permit me to ask you a question in my turn?
29419By the by,said the lady,"how came you to tell me such a story about one side of that child''s face being white?"
29419CAN you return my love, dearest Julia?
29419Ca n''t I sell you a trunk?
29419Ca n''t you compare it to something?
29419Ca n''t you have dinner first?
29419Can you remember ever having seen your father and mother?
29419Certainly not, my dear, but why do you ask?
29419DO you want to buy a real lot of butter?
29419DOES the razor take hold well?
29419Did I not order some hock, sir? 29419 Did it take you two hours to perform the operation?"
29419Did you hire out?
29419Did you remain long in New York?
29419Did you say you had followed the enemy of your country over frozen ground, till every footstep was covered with blood?
29419Did your wife drive you off?
29419Did your wife ever treat you badly?
29419Did your wife oppose your leaving her?
29419Dis razor hurt you, Sah?
29419Do n''t you know that_ black_ berries are always_ red_ when they are_ green_?
29419Do n''t you know you should not be out there, my son?
29419Do n''t you see,said Sims,"what is written on the board?"
29419Do they so?
29419Do you know its name?
29419Do you know who I am, Sir?
29419Do you know, Sir, to whom you are talking?
29419Do you still love her?
29419Do you, indeed?
29419Does he?
29419Exactly,said Dick,"and in your limbs too?"
29419Fellow,said he,"how dared you neglect making the gibbet that was ordered for me?"
29419Finish what?
29419For what?
29419For who knows,said she,"but it may bear the same kind of fruit?"
29419Four quarts?
29419GEORGE, what does C A T spell?
29419Got them from Bets, did you?
29419HALLO, boy, did you see a rabbit cross the road there just now?
29419HOW can you call these blackberries, when they are red?
29419Had it long legs behind, and big ears?
29419Have you a marriage certificate?
29419Have you seen the Dardanelles?
29419His lordship wants to know what you will take?
29419Hold your tongue, you dunce; where does the sun rise?
29419How can I drink, when there is no beer in the jug?
29419How could that be,said the captain,"since there are no chimneys in that country?"
29419How dark was it?
29419How do you know I''ve got the delirium tremens?
29419How do you know they are your ducks?
29419How is it,said a man to his neighbour,"Parson----, the laziest man living, writes these interminable sermons?"
29419How knowest thou, old man,cried the Khazee,"where that tree is?"
29419How long did you teach?
29419How long may she take to make the run?
29419How long? 29419 How many children have you?"
29419How many were there?
29419How so?
29419How so?
29419How, Murphy?
29419How,replied Jim, flattered by the remark,"how''s that?"
29419How,said the one,"are you quartered?"
29419How?
29419I RECKON I could n''t drive a trade with you to- day, squire?
29419I do n''t know, my son,replied the parent,"but why do you ask me such a question?"
29419I do n''t understand you; what do you mean?
29419I will,answered the little boy;"but ai n''t it Sunday in the back yard, mother?"
29419I''ll trouble_ you_ for two dollars, Mr. High Sheriff''s representative,says Sassy,"for smokin''in the streets; do you underconstand, my old coon?"
29419IS Mr. Brown a man of means?
29419IS that clock right over there?
29419In the garret, perhaps?
29419In what condition did you leave her?
29419Is not Geneva dull?
29419Is the Bank broke?
29419Is your family provided for?
29419JOHN, what is the past of see?
29419Knotting, Sir,replied she;"pray Mr. Whitefoord, can you knot?"
29419MAMMA,said a promising youth of some four or five years,"if all people are made of dust, ai n''t niggers made of coal- dust?"
29419MAY I help you to some beef?
29419MISTER, I say, I do n''t suppose you do n''t know of nobody who do n''t want to hire nobody to do nothing, do n''t you?
29419MOTHER,said a little fellow the other day,"is there any harm in breaking egg shells?"
29419MR. JENKINS, will it suit you to settle that old account of yours?
29419MY DEAR,said an affectionate wife,"what shall we have for dinner to- day?"
29419Mr. Kelvy, did you witness the affair referred to?
29419My neighbor,said the countryman,"handed me two cents when I left home, to buy a plug of tobacco-- have you got that article?"
29419Never mind, my son, what Bill did; what has the committee met for?
29419No, no, what animal is very fond of milk?
29419No, no; I wish you to tell me whether the attack was at all a preconcerted affair?
29419No, vat vas it?
29419No, what was it?
29419Not I, but you, ma''am-- how''s that?
29419Now what do you want to purchase?
29419Now,said Mrs. Slocum, perceiving that the narration was ended,"now, I should like to know whether the man was killed or not?"
29419Now,said he,"where''s my wig,--where_ is_ my wig?"
29419O Sir,said he,"where are your_ good witnesses_?"
29419Oh now,says he,"how much a yard did you give for that, and that?"
29419Oh, dear, what can the matter be?
29419Oh, you did, eh?
29419Oot awa, my lord, how can you say so of a_ British clergyman_?
29419PA, what is the interest of a kiss?
29419PAPA, ca n''t I go to the zoologerical rooms to see the camomile fight the rhy- no- sir- ee- hoss?
29419PRAY, Sir, what makes you walk so crookedly?
29419Pe ye a Yankee peddler, mit chewelry in your pack, to sheat the gals?
29419Pray madam,said the Doctor,"was it a counterfeit?"
29419Pray, Miss D----,said he,"what time do you prefer?"
29419Pray, what is it?
29419Prenologus, ten, feeling te young folks, heads like so much cabbitch?
29419Right over there? 29419 Right, and why does it rise in the east?"
29419SIR,said a pompous personage who once undertook to bully an editor,"do you know that I take your paper?"
29419SUPPOSE you are lost in a fog,said Lord C---- to his noble relative, the Marchioness,"what are you most likely to be?"
29419Salt, for what?
29419Show, Jake; what reply did they make?
29419So you have returned, Mr. Whitefield, have you?
29419Stranger,says he,"where was you raised?"
29419Super and lotchin, I reckon?
29419TAKE a ticket, Sir, for the Widow and Orphans Fund of the Spike Society?
29419The harp that once through Tara''s halls--"What do you propose to do with it?
29419The_ delirium tremens_--have I?
29419Then he is_ yours_, and you have a treasure in him, Sir?
29419There''s Doll, and Bet, and Moll, and Kate, and--"What is your wife''s name?
29419This is excellent steak,said he,"what did you pay for it?"
29419Vell, ten, vat the mischief can you be? 29419 Vere''s the difference?"
29419Very well,I make response,"where was it?"
29419Votch dat?
29419WELL, Pat, Jimmy did n''t quite kill you with a brickbat, did he?
29419WELL, Robert, how much did your pig weigh?
29419WHAT are you writing such a big hand for, Pat?
29419WHAT do you think of the new sewing machine?
29419WHAT is your name?
29419WHAT makes you spend your time so freely, Jack?
29419WHERE did you get so much money, Isaac?
29419WILL you never learn, my dear, the difference between real and exchangeable value?
29419Wa''al,said the old woman,"I raaly do n''t know; wo n''t you just take the candle and see?"
29419Wall, mister, with this I let out:''Do I_ know_ it?'' 29419 Was it a kinder gray varmint?"
29419Was the man killed? 29419 Was the man killed?"
29419Was your wife good- looking?
29419We rose, and with an unfaltering voice said:Well, Judge, how do you do?"
29419Well, Mary?
29419Well, Pat, where have you been all this time?
29419Well, and how much do you get a chimney?
29419Well, did n''t it kill him?
29419Well, is he coming?
29419Well, sir, how much wine do you suppose they drank last night?
29419Well, sir,said the farmer,"what of that?
29419Well, they are great horse- stealers in your country are not they?
29419Well, what do you think I''ll do to you?
29419Well, what have you to say about it?
29419Well, when does the President fodder?
29419Well,ses I,"go rite strate and tell Sal I wo n''t stand it, I do n''t want''em, and I ai n''t goin''to have''em; dus she think I''m a Turk?
29419Were you traveling on the night this affair took place?
29419What are you down here for?
29419What are your possessions?
29419What country are you from, my lad?
29419What did he say?
29419What did she say to you, when you were in the act of leaving?
29419What did you put in your paper? 29419 What did you run away for?"
29419What did your wife say to you, that induced you to_ slope_?
29419What do you ask me that for?
29419What do you mean by that?
29419What do you mean, sir?
29419What do you want to do with it?
29419What does your mother keep to catch mice?
29419What for?
29419What gymnastiness are you doing here?
29419What in thunder have you been at, you black rascal?
29419What is that to you?
29419What is that?
29419What is the matter, my dear?
29419What is your name?
29419What is your name?
29419What is your occupation?
29419What kind of butter is it?
29419What kind of character can I give you?
29419What kind of weather was it? 29419 What part of the house do you sleep in?"
29419What put that notion into your head, Sally?
29419What right then,asked he,"have you to put up those letters after your name?"
29419What sort of horses have you in America?
29419What then? 29419 What time do they dine in Washington, Colonel?"
29419What trade do you follow?
29419What was there?
29419What will you take?
29419What''s that noise?
29419What, how you call that?
29419What,answered the monarch,"would the king of England say, were I to demand the liberation of the prisoners in Newgate?"
29419What-- so, Sir?
29419When you announced your intention of emigrating, what did she say?
29419Where are you going to?
29419Where are you lodging now?
29419Where did you come from?
29419Where did you last see her?
29419Where did you stop?
29419Where do you expect to make a living?
29419Where does the sun rise?
29419Where does your family live at present?
29419Where is my horse and wagon?
29419Where then?
29419Where was that?
29419Where were you, young man, when you delivered this money?
29419Where, and what?
29419Where,exclaimed he, with great emphasis,"where shall we find a more foolish knave or a more knavish fool than he?"
29419Who goes there?
29419Why did you give it up?
29419Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson? 29419 Why do n''t you heave to for it?"
29419Why is neighbor Smith''s liquor shop like a counterfeit dollar?
29419Why is this? 29419 Why so?"
29419Why, John,says his lordship,"you seem to have got an excellent place; how could you manage this with the character I gave you?"
29419Why, Sir,replied she,"if_ you_ have not_ impudence_ enough to speak them, how can you suppose that_ I_ have?"
29419Why, do n''t you see that cursed big rat?
29419Why, gentlemen,exclaimed the parson,"was Milton in hell when he wrote his_ Paradise Lost_?"
29419Why, how in the world could it cost that much?
29419Why, ma''am?
29419Why, what have I done?
29419Why,exclaimed an Irishman,"would you beat the poor dumb animal for spakin''out?"
29419Why,said the gentleman,"did you not say you were a poor scholar?"
29419Why,said the old man,"this here is one cabbage head, ai n''t it?"
29419Why?
29419Why?
29419Will you take this woman to be your wedded wife?
29419Will you, Madam, be kind enough,said he,"to tell the Court what these words were?"
29419With all my heart,said the gentleman,"but if we should be going different ways, how will you get your great coat?"
29419Wo n''t you try and do better next time?
29419Women,he added,"we know, are rational animals; but would they be less so if they spoke less?"
29419Would the devil beat his wife if he had one?
29419Yes or no?
29419You are very accurate; and how do you happen to know this so very exactly?
29419You claim to have this saddle checked as baggage?
29419You did n''t do it, did you?
29419You dirty fellow,exclaimed the astonished Yankee,"what the mischief are you doing that for?"
29419You dunce, what was it scratched your sister''s face?
29419You have n''t, eh? 29419 You misunderstand me, my friend; I want to know whether he attacked him with any evil intent?"
29419You''ll kick me out of this cabing?
29419You''ll kick_ me_, Mr. Hitchcock, out of this cabing?
29419You, ma''am?
29419_ And the partridges too, Sire?_said the actor.
29419_ You_ declined the office of Alderman? 29419 ''Gunnin''?'' 29419 ''Man alive,''says she,''are you here yet? 29419 ''Pray, ma''am,''said the Southerner,''will you''ave the goodness to lean back in your chair?'' 29419 ''What ails you, Sam,''says she,''that you do n''t hook it?'' 29419 ''What''s that?'' 29419 (_ bear!_) When is music like vegetables? 29419 (_ with a smile_)he belongs to_ you_, as a matter of course, then?"
29419--meaning, of course,"How d''ye do?"
29419A CERTAIN cabinet minister being asked why he did not promote merit?
29419A CLERGYMAN meeting a chimney sweeper, asked whence he came?
29419A COUNTRY parish clerk, being asked how the inscriptions on the tombs in the church- yard were so badly spelled?
29419A FOP in company, wanting his servant, called out:"Where''s that blockhead of mine?"
29419A GENTLEMAN asked a friend, in a somewhat knowing manner,"Pray, sir, did you ever see a cat- fish?"
29419A GENTLEMAN inspecting lodgings to be let, asked the pretty girl who showed them,"And are you, my dear, to be let with the lodgings?"
29419A HUSBAND telegraphed to his wife:"What have you got for breakfast, and how is the baby?"
29419A MAN who was sentenced to be hung was visited by his wife, who said:"My dear, would you like the children to see you executed?"
29419A MATHEMATICIAN being asked by a stout fellow,"If two pigs weigh twenty pounds, how much will a large hog weigh?"
29419A PERSON meeting a friend running through the rain, with an umbrella over him, said,"Where are you running to in such a hurry,_ like a mad mushroom_?"
29419A PERSON who had resided some time on the coast of Africa, was asked if he thought it possible to civilize the natives?
29419A SAILOR being about to set out for India, a citizen asked him:"Where did your father die?"
29419A young minister standing by, blushed to the temples, and said,"O brother, how could you say what was not the fact?"
29419AN Irishman, observing a dandy taking his usual strut in Broadway, stepped up to him and inquired:"How much do you ax for thim houses?"
29419AN Oxford scholar, calling early one morning on another, when in bed, says,"Jack, are you asleep?"
29419AN ignorant rector had occasion to wait on a bishop, who was so incensed at his stupidity that he exclaimed,"What_ blockhead_ gave you a living?"
29419AT a cattle show, recently, a fellow who was making himself ridiculously conspicuous, at last broke forth--"Call these ere prize cattle?
29419After he had been gone some time, the Khazee said to the old man,"He is long-- do you think he has got there yet?"
29419All as ever I got is threeha''pence- farden, and a bag of marbles;(_ to the other_)--you got any capital, Bill?
29419An Irishman asked him if that was the way"he threated a fellow creathur?"
29419An old acquaintance stepped up to the prisoner and said:"Jim, the danger is past; and now, honor bright, did n''t you steal that horse?"
29419And no doubt you are now come from--?"
29419Another member then rose, and thus delivered himself:"Mr. Speaker, did the honourable member speak to the purpose, or not speak to the purpose?
29419Before he had time to seat himself, she said:"Have you seen cousin John?
29419Belongs to YOU, I suppose, Sir?"
29419But no matter, it is a good joke:--"''What do you charge for board?''
29419But what do folks say?"
29419But what means this sudden lowering of the heavens, and that dark cloud arising from beneath the western horizon?
29419But_ any_ how, Squire, what''ll you give, sposin''I_ do_ try?"
29419Canon biblically replied--"Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?"
29419Charley opened the door to go out, when George raised himself on his elbow, and said,"Charley, where are you going?"
29419Cicero replied,"Can your mother tell yours?"
29419Conant:_ Is it your business to take away the dust?
29419Conant:_ The case is proved, and the act says you must be fined 10_l._ Have you got 10_l._ a- piece?
29419Conant:_ You hear the charge, my lads-- what have you to say in defence?
29419Could there have been anything more gallant than that?
29419DURING the examination of a witness, as to the locality of stairs in a house, the counsel asked him,"Which way the stairs ran?"
29419Did I say sixteen_ feet_?
29419Did n''t I see you with my own eyes?"
29419Do n''t you hear distant thunder?
29419Do n''t you say when you come to our house on a night,''Bet, bring me some more ale?''"
29419Do n''t you see those flashes of lightning?
29419Do you give it up?
29419Do you hear it against the windows?
29419Do you hear the rain, Caudle?
29419Do you hear?
29419Do you pray for him?"
29419Do you thill live on the old farm?"
29419Do you_ hear_ it, I say?
29419Does the Court understand from that, that you are married to him?"
29419Dus she think I''m wurth a hundred thousand dollars?
29419Dyer:_ How do you get your living?
29419Dyer:_ Policeman, do you know anything of the prisoner?
29419Dyer:_ What have you to say?
29419Dyer:_ What is the worth of the dog?
29419Fires and furies-- was he alive?"
29419Hain''t I attended devine worship reg''lar?
29419Hain''t I bin a good and dootiful husband to Sal?
29419Hain''t I bought her all the bonnets an frocks she wanted?
29419Hain''t I kep''in doors uv a nite, an quit chawn tobacker and smokin''segars just to please her?
29419Have I ever done enny mean trick, that she should serve me in this way?"
29419Have I ever stole a horse?
29419Have you lost any baggage?"
29419Having descanted at some length upon its merits, the boy remarked,"Mother, I see Luther and the table, but where are the worms?"
29419He first said to the man:"Vell, you vants to be marrit, do you?
29419He said he had nobody to employ him, but added,"Why do n''t you work, massa?"
29419He told the story to Smithers, when the latter said:"Do you know, Diggs, you have committed a very grave offence?"
29419He went home, and the next day being at work in a cabbage patch with his father, he spoke out:"Daddy, what''s the meaning of ditto?"
29419He went to preach a second time, and asked the congregation,"Oh, true believers, do you know what I am going to say to you?"
29419Here the train- hand who overheard the talk, stepped up, and inquired,"Have you lost anything?"
29419Highly enraged,"Sir,"says he to the farmer,"do you know that I have been at two universities, and at two colleges at each university?"
29419How do you do?
29419How do you get your bread?
29419How do you live?
29419How do you support yourself?
29419How do_ you_ do?
29419How long have you been in my service?
29419How old are you?
29419I am sure I''ve let you''ave your own way in most everything?"
29419I believe your Grace and I have now been in every jail in the kingdom?"
29419I found the same waiter, who, so soon as I come in, tell me--"Sir, did you not say that you would go by the coach to- morrow morning?"
29419I go into a saloon, but, before I finish, great noise come into the passage, and I pull the bell''s rope to demand why so great tapage?
29419I never heard of it; what place?"
29419I once took an Englishman with me in a gig up Alabama country, and he says,''What''s this great church yard we are passing through?''
29419I s''pose if I am challenged, I have the right to choose my weapons?''
29419I say do you_ hear the rain_?
29419I suppose they have n''t invented bells in America yet?"
29419I suppose you live by going around the docks?
29419I suppose, Sir, you are going to--?"
29419I thought you was off gunnin''an hour ago; who''d a thought you was here?''
29419I was looking on, and some member said to me,''Crockett, do n''t that monkey favor General Jackson?''
29419If he did not speak to the purpose, to what purpose did he speak?"
29419If we have laws, and they are not executed, for what purpose were they made?"
29419Is that what you want to know?
29419Is there anything stirring in London?"
29419It is to be presumed that thereafter Jacob''s first inquiry must have been,"Oh now, where did you get such and such goods?"
29419It was Sir Hercules Langrishe, who, being asked, on a similar occasion,"Have you finished all that port( three bottles) without assistance?"
29419It went off well enough, till she came to a rather hard looking specimen of humanity, whom she asked:"What are you in here for?"
29419LORD MANSFIELD examining a witness, asked,"What do you know of the defendant?"
29419MISS Lucy Stone, of Boston, a"woman''s rights"woman, having put the question,"Marriage-- what is it?"
29419Meisther Morgans, you zee ony zour krout dare?"
29419Metellus said to Cicero,"Dare you tell your father''s name?"
29419Next morning, as they were stepping into their carriage, the waiter said to Stothard,"Sir, do you observe these two gentlemen?"
29419Nominated?"
29419Now what do you want to do with it?"
29419Now, does that passage mean that_ every one_ of us has sinned?"
29419Now, if folks enquire again whether you be or not, what shall I tell them I think?"
29419Now, what''s that letter, eh?"
29419Now, why do n''t you hire an Irishman to go up, and den if_ he_ falls and kills himself, dar wo n''t be no loss to nobody?"
29419Oh, you_ do_ hear it, do you?
29419One of them, in the midst of the altercation, asked the other contemptuously,"Do you remember, Sir, when you were my footman?"
29419Ordering him to stop, he asked hastily,"Whence?
29419Perhaps he is_ yours_, Sir?"
29419Pickrel?''
29419Pray, Captain, does everything else go fast in the new country?"
29419Pray, mister, may I ask your name?"
29419Proceeding in his cross examination, the counsel asked where the affray happened?
29419Rising solemnly, after three loud hems, he spoke as follows:"Mr. Speaker, have we laws, or have we not laws?
29419SOME one asked a lad how it was he was so short for his age?
29419SOON after the settlement of New England, Governor Dudley saw a stout Indian idling in the market- place of Boston, and asked him why he did not work?
29419Said the doctor, nodding his head knowingly,''Have you got a sorrel horse then?''
29419She hesitated a little, and he repeated:"Vell, vell, do you like him so vell as to be his vife?"
29419Slocum?"
29419Speech was principally contended for; but on this Dr. Johnson observed, that parrots and magpies speak; were they therefore rational?
29419Stepping on deck, he addressed me in English, thus:''Pray, young man, is the captain on board?''
29419Stock- holders and depositors flocked into the Bank, making the panic, inquiring,"What is the matter?"
29419TALLEYRAND being asked, if a certain authoress, whom he had long since known, but who belonged rather to the last age, was not"a little tiresome?"
29419THE following conversation occurred between a theatrical manager and an aspirant for Thespian honors:"What is your pleasure?"
29419THE late Caleb Whitefoord, seeing a lady knotting fringe for a petticoat, asked her, what she was doing?
29419The Judge inquired if that was the_ sole_ object of the plaintiff, or was it not rather baiting with a_ sprat_ to catch a_ herring_?
29419The child observed,"Father, did you ever learn anything?"
29419The counsel, not yet abashed, asked,"And pray, my witty friend, how far were you from Tom when he knocked down Jack?"
29419The driver was very wroth:"Well, what did you get_ in_ for, if you could not pay?
29419The fellow, popping out his head, said,"Shall it be_ we_ then?"
29419The general asked where he had been?
29419The king having heard of it, one day asked him good humouredly,"Pray, Zaremba, what is your name?"
29419The lieutenant asked where he_ came from_?
29419The organist, enraged, cried out,"Why do n''t you blow?"
29419The poor African immediately exclaimed,"Oh, missus, dat you?
29419The recipient telegraphed back the following startling query:"For Heaven''s sake, how many?"
29419The stranger answered,"Your account is a very extraordinary one; could you have believed it if you had not seen it yourself?"
29419Then I say,"What for all so large concourse?"
29419Then to the woman:"Vell, do you love dis man so better as any man you have ever seen?"
29419There, do you see that animal on the fence?"
29419There-- do you hear it?
29419This had a great effect, till the opposite lawyer asked what made him cry?
29419Thus instructed, our learned advocate boldly asked,"When, Sir, were you last in Gloucester gaol?"
29419To this the passenger demurred, and losing his temper, peremptorily asked:--"Will you check my baggage, sir?"
29419To this, the son made no reply; but turning to his father, asked him,"Is it your will, sir, that I kick this monk down stairs?"
29419Unable longer to restrain his curiosity, he burst out with,"Excuse me, Sir, are you the_ Robinson Crusoe_ so famous in history?"
29419Vell, you lovesh dis voman so goot as any voman you have ever seen?"
29419WHAT IS A SPOON?
29419WHAT is the difference between an attempted homicide, and a hog butchery?
29419WHAT tune is that which ladies never call for?
29419WHEN Horne Tooke was at school, the boys asked him"what his father was?"
29419WHICH travels at the greater speed, heat or cold?
29419WHO is not carried back to good old times as he reads this sketch of Connecticut goin''to meetin''fifty years ago?
29419WHY is a man eating soup with a fork like another kissing his sweetheart?
29419Was it raining at the time?"
29419Was n''t me father a miller?"
29419Was you elected?"
29419Well, because I did n''t want to let the dacent baste see that he carried so big a load so far for sixpence?"
29419Well, thir, how are the old gentleman and lady?"
29419Well, we come at a house of country, ancient with the trees cut like some peacocks, and I demand--"What you call these trees?"
29419What can be the cause of such disfigurement?"
29419What do you always sit on?"
29419What do you follow?
29419What does c- h- a- i- r spell?"
29419What for?"
29419What is your name, fellow?"
29419What next?"
29419What was he to do to escape with his plunder?
29419What were you to do?
29419What will people say?"
29419What''s your business?
29419When is a lady''s neck not a neck?
29419Why do you ask?"
29419Why do you read your speeches to parliament?"
29419Why is a poor horse greater than Napoleon?
29419Why is a thief called a"jail- bird?"
29419Why is it not brought in?"
29419Why is that?"
29419Why should an editor look upon it as ominous when a correspondent signs himself"Nemo?"
29419Why was the elephant the last animal going into Noah''s ark?
29419Will the anecdote raise a laugh?
29419Wishing to give his uncle an idea of his superior knowledge, he tapped him on the shoulder, and pointing to the windlass, asked,"Quid est hoc?"
29419With the utmost suavity the trader says:"I think I can treat you to your liking; how do you want to be treated?"
29419Witness, has not an effort been made to induce you to tell a different story?"
29419Wonderful, is n''t it?
29419You mean to say, that not I but you are a blockhead?"
29419You see, one of those days I''ll be after dying, and when I go to the gate of heaven I''ll rap, and St. Peter will say,''Who''s there?''
29419You shall excuse my badinage-- eh?
29419_ Captain O''Flinn_: Faith, ma''am, I''ve heard o''that complaint running in families; p''rhaps your mother had not any childer either?
29419_ Cook:_( in astonishment)--"Why, ma''am?
29419_ Do you think there is nobody killed but yourself?_"SEVERAL NEGATIVES.
29419_ Judge_: How do you keep yourself alive?
29419_ Prisoner:_ There, your vership, you hear it''s a waluable dog-- now is it feasible as I should go for to prig a dog wot was a waluable hanimal?
29419_ Prisoner:_(_ affecting a look of astonishment_)--Vot, me_ steal_ a dog?
29419_ Webster:_ Mrs. Greenough, was Mrs. Bogden a neat woman?
29419_ Webster:_ What was that, Ma''am?
29419_ yours_, Sir?"
29419a dentist, preaking te people''s jaws at a dollar a shnag, and running off mit my daughter?"
29419an Irish echo in the_ Boston Post_ inquires,"Would n''t you like to know?"
29419and I''ll say,''I want to come in,''and he''ll say,''Did you behave like a dacent boy in the other world, and pay all the fines and such things?''
29419and I''ll say,''It''s me, Pat Malone,''and he''ll say,''What do you want?''
29419and you made no attempt to stop him?"
29419are you not a member of the African Church?"
29419asked a tall Green Mountain boy, as he walked up to the bar of a second- rate hotel in New York--''what do you ask a week for board and lodging?''
29419asked the agent in surprise;"so much as that?"
29419but Tom put them all in good temper, by asking, with irresistibly quaint humor,"Why should I_ shoot her_?
29419did you kill him?"
29419did you let off that gun?"
29419do you think I am always obliged to find you ears?"
29419eh?"
29419exclaimed Saunders, astonished,"_ hae ye ony vacancies in your corps?_"AN INVITATION.
29419exclaimed the other,"do you mean to insult me?
29419for what?"
29419good old neighbor,"cried Mrs. Popps,"what are you going to do with that great ugly crow?"
29419instead of"Oh now, how much did you pay?"
29419is Silver Tail dead?"
29419is he yours, Sir?"
29419is that all?"
29419or Brigham Young?
29419or a Mormon?
29419rejoined George;"for what?"
29419said the Vicar,"then how do you get on if he do n''t pay?"
29419said the adjutant,"what do you mean?"
29419said the astronomer;"you do n''t think it is going to rain, do you?"
29419said the bantering bachelor,"how comes it you let your mistress ride the better horse?"
29419said the highwayman,"what do you mean by pressing on me so?"
29419said the other,"after declaring your opinion that to lend money on usury, was as bad as_ murder_?"
29419says the Colonel:"but did you hear what Mr. Morgan did when he returned from visiting you?"
29419she exclaimed,"how could you do so when gaming is such a horrid habit?
29419she''ll say,"how so?"
29419that I kin afford thribbles, an clothe an feed an school three children at a time?
29419that I''m Jo''n Jacob Aster, or Mr. Roschile?
29419that''s too much; but I s''pose you''ll allow for the times I am absent from dinner and supper?''
29419us two fools get married?
29419what do you mean by that?"
29419what does the fellow mean?"
29419what have the cats to do with the school committee?"
29419where''s that?"
29419whither?
29419who is that?"
29419why, what is the matter, Betty?"
29419young man,"exclaimed the Dean,"is this the way you behave yourself?
29419your honour,"said Pat, brightening up,"and is that all?
39612Supposing that on such principles King James was rejected, who would come next? 39612 Will you come with us?"
39612[ 151] And had not the very gentlest of men, even the God- man, said,I am come to send fire on the earth?"
3961215_s._ Salvator Mundi; or, Is Christ the Saviour of all Men?
39612500,000(?)
396125_s._ RICHARDSON, AUSTIN,''What are the Catholic Claims?''
39612And besides all this; if they complained of having been invited to hunt and hawk at Dunchurch on false pretences, who could blame them?
39612And had he not already had most ample and most undeserved moderation shown to him?
39612Can it be that some immense bribe was given, or promised, to Guy Fawkes for the excessively dangerous part which he was to play in the drama?
39612Catesby answered,''Why were we commanded before to keep out one that was not a Catholic, and now may not exclude him?''
39612Catesby himself had certainly lost money, and a great deal of money; but how?
39612Could he call himself a man if he trembled at the very thought of bloodshed?
39612Could he have induced Manners to come to his rooms by no other attraction than a game of cards, which he had no intention of playing?
39612Did he hesitate to go to Coughton through fear of Catesby, or was he afraid to trust himself in the presence of his wife?
39612Does any such excuse exist for the Gunpowder Plot?
39612Does... know him?"
39612Had not Watson given King''s evidence?
39612Had not foreign invasion been implored by Catholics?
39612Had they not intended"the Lady Arabella"as a substitute for his own Royal Majesty upon the throne?
39612Has he not played cards with my husband, and played well too, which is impossible for those not accustomed to the game?
39612If he were really going to join the army in the Low Countries, why these long delays?
39612If there be any matter in hand, doth Mr Walley know of it?"
39612Let us hope that the game of cards diverted such thoughts; yet who could blame him if, with such matters on his mind, he forgot to follow suit?
39612Need he have put himself to the trouble of apologising to Father Gerard for revealing that he was a Catholic?
39612Or was the finding of a priest so difficult a thing just then as to make a wish to attempt it absurd?
39612Was he alone, among the most zealous Catholic laymen of England, to show the white feather in a time of peril?
39612Was it a violent attempt made on the spur of the moment, or was it the result of lengthy, deliberate, and anxious forethought?
39612Was it necessary on his arrival there to ask him to await that of guests who were not coming, and had never been invited?
39612Was it not sufficient consolation to him to reflect upon his good fortune in this respect?
39612Was there not something biblical and appropriate, again, in destroying the enemies of the Lord with fire?
39612Were the Catholics to rise and invade the houses of parliament with drawn sabres?
39612What became of it?
39612What did she?
39612What had Lord Windsor done that his house should be pillaged?
39612What is a good Catholic?
39612What shall we do?
39612What was the consequence?
39612When they reflect upon all these things, can Catholics recall the memory of Sir Everard Digby with no other feelings than those of pity?
39612When would he hear of the great event?
39612Who were these princes and rulers?
39612Who''s that which knocks?
39612Why should his things be taken feloniously from his home during his absence?
39612Would a Catholic have written such a passage as the following, which I take from the_ Dissuasive_?
39612[ 35] Could it be that he thought her a silly woman, hurriedly contemplating a change of religion on too scanty consideration?
39612[ 36]"How is it possible he can be a priest?"
39612did he forget how he had said"that for the Catholick Cause he was content to neglect the ruine of himself, his Wife, his Estate, and all"?
39612hast thou any hope, Robin?
39612said he;"what then?"
39612she asked,"has he not lived rather as a courtier?
35533''How then is the lad to forward the jewels?'' 35533 A law- suit?"
35533All these women declare that they are in want, that their husbands are out of work; and how am I to tell whether this be or be not the fact? 35533 And I hope that you found the manufacturer open to reason?"
35533And I suppose that fishing and shooting are to be had at Myst Court?
35533And are the cottagers your tenants, papa?
35533And did it fit it?
35533And has it done you good?
35533And have you no acquaintance with that personage?
35533And her family?
35533And how does Emmie like her new life?
35533And is any one suspected?
35533And now that she has discovered your hiding- place, what is to be done?
35533And was any one there, any one arrested?
35533And what can bring so many people around us?
35533And what will you do?
35533And when the ladies sat down, what happened next?
35533And with the power to enter at will into the haunted chamber, had you not the curiosity to tread the forbidden ground?
35533Any one arrested?
35533Are there good shops near?
35533Are we in the right road for Myst Court?
35533Are we on the right road to the large house where Mrs. Myers used to live?
35533Are we, or are we not, on the direct road to Myst Court?
35533Are you some of the new folk as are coming to the old haunted house?
35533But Myst Court itself, what do you think of the place?
35533But have you had no medical advice?
35533But there is just the difficult point,observed Emmie,--"how did the family come to know the poor so well?
35533But what have you to say about the haunted room?
35533But what will you say to the interior of the house? 35533 But where on earth are you, Emmie?
35533But,she added anxiously,"is he thought to have had no accomplice?"
35533Can it not be improved?
35533Can you imagine a more horrid affair than this has been?
35533Can you recall to memory any of those words?
35533Did not my brother at once clear himself from suspicion?
35533Did she not go with you to watch the eclipse?
35533Did they easily find their way into the bricked- up room?
35533Did you hear anything more regarding the plans of these men?
35533Did you long continue in an unconscious state?
35533Did you see any ghosts?
35533Did you sleep well?
35533Did you think so?
35533Did your ladies never talk to the people about their souls?
35533Do you know where my father is going?
35533Do you know who they were?
35533Do you not think that it would be only right for you to speak seriously to papa about Vibert''s present way of going on?
35533Do you think it easy to acquire self- knowledge?
35533Do you think that the place is really haunted?
35533Do you think, John, that the young gentlemen will like Myst Court?
35533Does Mrs. Jessel live far from here?
35533Does any one but yourself know the secret of the door in the panel?
35533Emmie, Emmie, is this miserable timidity to meet you at every turn?
35533Emmie, I have wronged a brother, and shall I not do what I can to right him?
35533Emmie, can you not trust me?
35533Emmie, what induced you to go to that house, and alone?
35533Emmie-- is she with you?
35533For what have you come, and at such a time?
35533Had anything occurred to make you suspect treachery in that most false of women?
35533Have they come to search the house?
35533Have you no spirit, no strength of will to wrestle it down, to rise above it?
35533How am I to get the pony on his legs? 35533 How came you here?
35533How can you bear to see him thus?
35533How could I rest if I heard him stealthily moving about so near, even though aware that he could not possibly reach me?
35533How dare you speak thus of my brother?
35533How now, boys? 35533 How?--what do you mean?"
35533I say, young one, which is the way to Myst Court?
35533In Labrador-- or equatorial Africa?
35533In whose company did the dreamer represent Mistrust, when he ran down the Hill of Difficulty to startle Christian with tidings of lions in the way?
35533Is Vibert to go with me?
35533Is all safe,--my father, my brothers? 35533 Is there no hope for the poor woman?"
35533Is there no one to look after the people?
35533Is this the night of the eclipse?
35533Mark you not that smell of burning?
35533Mrs. Wall, you may be wanted, but let the rest go out and leave the poor creature to the lady; ca n''t you let a woman die in quiet?
35533My child-- my sweet child-- what ails you? 35533 My dear Emmie, what can be the cause of all this sorrow?
35533My poor little trembling dove, what has frightened you so?
35533Not rest-- why not?
35533Since you were such an early riser to- day,she observed,"why were you absent from prayers?"
35533Surely not alone?
35533Susan, have you not told me that the ladies with whom you once lived used to visit the poor?
35533The first words which I remember hearing were some spoken by Harper--''How could you trust Vibert Trevor to pass my notes?'' 35533 Then are the jewels safe in the hands of the police?"
35533Then why does he not own frankly that he is sorry?
35533Then why not take our good Susan with you?
35533Then why quit it?
35533There will be time for all that,exclaimed Bruce with impatient gesture;"more important matters press,--is not our brother''s honour at stake?"
35533They''ve never done anything for us, why should we do anything for them?
35533Think you that my husband does not take every precaution to prevent discovery? 35533 To whom did you give a half- crown?"
35533Unreasonable fear,--uncontrolled fear,--what has it done for me to- day?
35533Vibert, do you remember what our uncle wrote on those fragments of paper when we were together at Summer Villa?
35533Was nothing said about religion in these visits which they paid to the poor?
35533What are those square marks on it?
35533What brought_ him_ here?
35533What can be bringing them hither? 35533 What can be done for them?"
35533What can be the matter?
35533What can have taken him there?
35533What caused this quarrel?
35533What description does Bruce give of Myst Court?
35533What did you see,--what did you hear?
35533What did your ladies say? 35533 What do the servants say about that chamber?"
35533What do you suppose that this man Harper and his accomplice intended to do with you, when they carried you through the wood?
35533What does Bruce, who has seen the property, say on the question?
35533What effects do you mean?
35533What has happened to make such a migration probable?
35533What has happened to you, Bruce?
35533What has put such a sudden flight into your mind?
35533What is her name?
35533What is in your tiny paper?
35533What made you bring her here?
35533What made you do that?
35533What news? 35533 What takes him to London?"
35533What would you have me promise?
35533What would you say if papa were to throw up office, leave Summer Villa for ever and for aye, and carry us all off to be buried alive?
35533What''s against her?
35533Where is Bruce? 35533 Where is Bruce?"
35533Where is the luggage, Vibert? 35533 Where is the pony- chaise?"
35533Where is your faith,--where is your faith?
35533Wherefore did he go? 35533 Who can have found us out already?"
35533Who can this low- bred talkative fellow be?
35533Who is this vulgar flatterer?
35533Why could you not endure that capital room?
35533Why do you look ill? 35533 Why has Master Vibert not made his appearance either at prayers or at breakfast?"
35533Why not let Susan go by herself?
35533Why should ladies demean themselves by going amongst dirty beggarly folk?
35533Why was I not sent for before?
35533Why, have you learned anything more about him?
35533Will this lane never come to an end?
35533Will you come with me, Emmie, or stay?
35533Will you lend me that five- pound note?
35533Will you not suffer us first to bathe and bind your poor head?
35533Will you take the most solemn oath that tongue can frame never to give hint, by word or sign, of what you have seen this night? 35533 Wo n''t you step in, miss?"
35533Would I leave my young lady now, just when her heart is heavy? 35533 Would a close observer''s view of its nature agree with that held by the person within whose heart it might lurk?"
35533Yes; had you forgotten it?
35533You call the place haunted?
35533You have given yourself, body and soul, to a heavenly Master,--is it for Him or for you to choose your work? 35533 You looked in?"
35533You must have had letters from your father; to which decision does he appear to incline?
35533You speak of our hearts?
35533You would not have me a Boadicea or a Joan of Arc?
35533_ Beware of selfishness!_--eh? 35533 ( The slang in wich some modern ladies(?) 35533 A brief silence succeeded the young man''s reply to his father; it was broken by Vibert''s inquiry,What sort of a town is S----?"
35533And you, dear, what have you been doing during my absence, and where have you been?"
35533Are all to be stowed away in the chaise?
35533Bruce, do n''t you recollect the wretched pig- sties of hovels that stood in that place?"
35533But can I set the police on their track without breaking my oath, my horrible oath?
35533But do not the lightnings obey God''s bidding?
35533But had Bruce no special work to do from which the natural man recoiled?
35533But who can have patience with Vibert''s follies?"
35533Ca n''t you manage to get up?"
35533Can Harper''s secret have been discovered?"
35533Captain, have you been hunting up the ghosts in our haunted rooms?"
35533Could the forgers be returning to make sure of their victim?
35533Did I not feel some slight vexation even at Vibert''s playful words about Alice, his wish that I were more like that gay, giddy girl?
35533Did they begin directly to teach and to preach?"
35533Did they not find it very difficult at first?"
35533Did this brave lady''s- maid look much the worse for meeting her ghost?"
35533Do n''t you see that thick bank of clouds in which the sun is setting?
35533Does not fear hang like a clog on the spirit,_ making''I dare not''wait upon''I would,''_ even when duty to God and mercy to man is in question?"
35533Emmie expected him to growl out,"What brings you here?"
35533Emmie gave no direct reply, but inquired abruptly,"Have you a bell in your room?"
35533Even if it bring His summons to His child, should I fear to go unto Him?"
35533Had the officers of justice received information of some secret plot,--had they come to search the house,--would light be thrown on its dark recesses?
35533Had vivid light been thrown into her heart''s haunted chamber, only that she should again resign it to darkness?
35533Had you not better return home, miss?"
35533Has-- has anything painful occurred?"
35533How could I have let myself be so deceived by a worthless adventurer?
35533How had that slipper come there, and when?
35533How is it that I have so miserably failed in the hour of trial?
35533I must depend on you for my information, or-- where is my brother, Master Bruce?"
35533Impiety?
35533Is it a very hard command if He say to you now,''Work for one half- hour each day in My vineyard''?"
35533Is it not that I have never earnestly struggled against the sin of Mistrust?
35533Is it not the voice of my Father which I hear in the thunder?
35533Is it vanity?"
35533Is not the inconsistency of His children dishonouring to God?
35533Is she recovering her health?"
35533Is there any other course open before me in this maddening misery of doubt?"
35533Levity?
35533May she not hope that they will ask for her, wisdom, humility, zeal, and success?
35533Must we really return through that slough of a lane, through which we have scarcely been able to struggle?"
35533Oh, is there no danger for them in this horrible house?"
35533She had been preserved through one terrible peril; and would not the Power that had helped her hitherto sustain and protect to the end?
35533She read the heart- stirring verse:_ The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?
35533So nothing was done to- day?"
35533Some concealed inclination to commit burglary or manslaughter?"
35533Surely you must have heard me calling your name?"
35533The captain would call that-- let me see-- would he call that irreligion?
35533The question mark"(?)"
35533The slang in which some modern ladies(?)
35533The truth is, that I wanted, before I set off for the town, to ask,--but what is that which you have in your hand?"
35533The young lady could not get in; wherefore, then, should she stay?
35533Then am I not conscious of giving way to indolence, and harbouring self- will?
35533There''s my brave little pony, does he not go at a spanking pace?"
35533Those words were--_Conquer Mistrust._"Mistrust of what or of whom?"
35533Was it indeed, she urged, so needful for him to appear in person in London?
35533Were you afraid of the snow that you stopped at home this morning?"
35533What ails you?"
35533What defect in my character is most likely to have struck so acute an observer?
35533What folly possessed me to tell a wild hare- brain like Vibert of the little door in the panel?
35533What had been the effect of his words?
35533What might not Harper do, in his desperation, if he were driven to bay?
35533What then might ensue?
35533What was the vehicle brought for at so early an hour?
35533What were such penances or pilgrimages, Emmie?"
35533Where did you hide that I could not find you?
35533Where is my reason,--where is my faith?
35533Where is your spirit,--where is your faith?"
35533Where, then, was young Trevor''s pride to be found?
35533Who should dare to taunt him with lack of daring, or the slightest taint of that superstitious fear which he scorned even in Emmie?
35533Who will come out with me and look at the queen of night under a shadow?
35533Why did we not bring our old cook to Myst Court?"
35533Why on earth did you not bring an umbrella, Emmie?
35533Why should he do so when he had no intention of startling the household and frightening his sister by the sudden report of fire- arms?
35533Why should we trouble ourselves about them?"
35533Will you swear silence deep as the grave?"
35533Would he not conclude that her lips had betrayed his secret, that she had broken her solemn oath?
35533You remember that one of the murdered Red Indian''s ghost keeping watch over buried treasure?"
35533You see yonder builders busy at work?
35533You''re not hurt, are you?"
35533_ Superstition!_--if it be superstition to dread the unseen, to tremble before the unknown, is it for_ you_ to talk of superstition in another?"
35533and on what pretext?"
35533are you hurt?"
35533asked the father;"when did you miss her?--where did you leave her?"
35533at work still?"
35533cried Ann with impatience;"what comes after the''but''?"
35533had he no battle to fight against a besetting sin?
35533have I caught you at it?"
35533is not this selfish, hatefully selfish?
35533the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?_"Why can not I make this glorious assurance of faith my own?"
35533the Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?_"Why can not I make this glorious assurance of faith my own?"
35533what do ye here?"
35533what do you ask me to do?"
35533what has happened to alarm you thus?"
35533what was that sound?"
35533what''s all this?"
35533where, where was he who had worn it?
35533who is with you?"
35533who was taken up?"
35533why did I madly come hither?"
39079''Going out, ladies?'' 39079 ''Return as what, madam?--prisoners or subjects?''
39079''Well,''said the man,''do you wish to hear from them, or send any thing by way of refreshment to them? 39079 ''Will you?''
39079And hast thou forgotten, Friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? 39079 And why,"asked he,"is it called the rebel flower?"
39079Does it enable you to sleep?
39079When we got to the front door, we asked,''Who are you?'' 39079 Where do you live?"
39079Who has dared to do this atrocious act? 39079 Why have you come so far away from your homes?"
39079Why were you singing?
39079Would you?
39079''Have you any?
39079''Is she killed?
39079--''O, Lord North''s and Lord George Germaine''s, beyond all question; and where is the third head?''
39079----When meet now Such pairs, in love and honor joined?
39079And who would risk life in attempting it?
39079And who, with her disposition and spirit, could not do something to aid the cause of God?
39079As she recovered from a spasm, I said to her,"do you not often desire to depart, and be with the Saviour you love so fervently?"
39079As the stranger drew near the table and saw the scantiness of the fare, he asked,"And is this all your store?
39079Augustine?"
39079Brewton?"
39079But pray,''said he,''how came you here?''
39079But then the thought occurred to me, What can_ you_ do, a poor widow, with four small children to support, and your house rent to pay?
39079But we are not so sure we have to die; do n''t you hear the crack of Melbury''s rifle?
39079But when winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then?
39079But, madam, do you not wrong your children by giving a part of your morsel to a stranger?"
39079Can you comfort me?
39079Dear President, will it be possible for you to do any thing?
39079Dear father of the land of my birth, can you do any thing?
39079Did the mother indulge the grief of her spirit, and sit down in despair?
39079Do you not know what the---- rebels have been doing?"
39079Do you offer a share to one you do not know?
39079For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?''
39079Have chivalry''s bold days A deed of wilder bravery In all their stirring lays?
39079He sees that there is much dross to refine away, and why should I wish against his will?"
39079Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?''
39079I cried,"do you never rest?"
39079If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness, and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings?
39079If, therefore, the proposed change should profit neither man, woman, nor the rising race, how can it benefit the world at large?
39079Inquiries were made as to who had been killed, and one running up, cried,''Where is the woman that gave us the powder?
39079Is it not the province of true wisdom to select such measures as promote the greatest good of the greatest number?
39079It may be asked, What was the result?
39079MATERNAL HEROISM Is there a man, into the lion''s den Who dares intrude to snatch his young away?
39079Mr. Van Alstine, starting up in surprise, asked impatiently,''What the devilish Indian wanted?''
39079One day the physician of the hospital, inquiring--"How is Robert?"
39079Rocks have been shaken from their solid base; But what shall move a dauntless soul?
39079She scornfully replied:"And if I could act so dastardly a part, think you that General Washington has but one Captain Randolph in his army?"
39079The only question which concerns me, is, are my motives pure and holy?
39079Think''st thou there dwells no courage but in breasts That set their mail against the ringing spears, When helmets are struck down?
39079To whom else could I look for comfort?
39079Walking to the spot where she stood near the gate, he said fiercely:"Did I not order you, madam, to keep out of my presence?"
39079Were these somewhat indefinite claims conceded, would the change promote her welfare?
39079What bosom beats not in its country''s cause?
39079What rhetoric didst thou use To gain this mighty boon?
39079What then should she do?
39079When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,''Elizabeth, why didst thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?''
39079Who can tell how much this republic is indebted to the prudence, integrity, courage and patriotism of Cornelia Beekman?
39079Who shall find a valiant woman?
39079Why do n''t you put powder in your guns?"
39079Why need she be again tempted by pride, or curiosity, or glozing words, to forfeit her own Eden?
39079Why should''st thou faint?
39079Wilkinson?''
39079Will you ask for their release?
39079Will you feel offended with me for appealing to you for comfort?
39079With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man?
39079Would she be a gainer by any added power or sounding title, which should require the sacrifice of that delicacy which is the life- blood of her sex?
39079cruel fate, why have I lived to see this?
39079do n''t you call that rebellion against their king, madam?"
39079he exclaimed,''What are you doing there?
39079not in rebellion against their king?
39079replied he, with great surprise,"pray what can be your meaning in that?"
39079what madness fires her?
39079where is your master?"
37527Am I a Jew?
37527Are they Hebrew? 37527 He that spared not His own Son... how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?"
37527Is it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a Roman, and uncondemned?
37527Not so, Lord, for how can I endure to part with Thee? 37527 Pilate saith unto Him, What is truth?
37527Show me Thy Glory,where else again shall His glory be seen, if not in those friendships which are the crowning gift of University life?
37527Think you,He seems to say--"think you that My working is confined to a few paltry miracles wrought in Galilee?
37527Truth?
37527Truth?
37527Truth?
37527What is truth?
37527Will you that I release unto you the King of the Jews?
37527_ At Thy word._Who is this, that this most unreasonable demand meets with such ready acquiescence?
37527A clean page lies open, and with what writing shall it be filled?
37527A dream?
37527And again I ask, is not this the time?
37527And does not all analogy enforce the truth of this lesson?
37527And have we not full and perfect assurance that His love will never fail us?
37527And have we not here a parable of the most intense pathos and of the widest application?
37527And his successor, the present occupant of the imperial throne, was he not an arch dissembler, the darkest of all dark enigmas?
37527And now where are they, and what are they?
37527And the man before us-- what shall we say of him?
37527And, why, why?
37527Are not you the men, and is not this the season, for the handling of such a topic?
37527Are not you the men?
37527Are not you the men?
37527Are there not others even more needy than they of this beneficent movement?
37527Are they the seed of Abraham?
37527Are we diligent students of the lessons of history?
37527Are we not taught on the highest authority that it is more blessed to give than to receive?
37527Art Thou, then, a king-- Thou poor, weak, helpless fanatic, whom with a single word I could doom to death?"
37527Ask yourselves, Can it be otherwise than"an awful thing to appear before the Moral Governor of the world"?
37527But art and culture, which studiously ignore God-- what can be said for these?
37527But what are the facts?
37527But what do we find as a matter of fact?
37527But what next?
37527But what right have we to expect it as a matter of course?
37527But what triumphs may you not achieve, if you are true to yourselves?
37527But you will ask, What is it doing at the present moment?
37527But, if so, have we not a truer antitype of this damsel whom Christ raised in these befriended girls?
37527But, meanwhile, what was Constantine himself?
37527Could any good thing come out of Nazareth?
37527Could any pious Jew have doubted about his answer to this question?
37527Could anything seem more hopeless than the revival of the nation from the Babylonish captivity?
37527Could he believe all or any of these?
37527Could you feel that there was any finality in such aims and acquisitions as these?
37527Depart from me?
37527Depart from me?
37527Did love, true love, truly felt, ever have this effect?
37527Did not Thomas who doubted and Peter who denied know Him after the flesh?
37527Did not the Jewish mob which hooted and reviled, and the Roman soldiers who scourged, know Him after the flesh?
37527Did not the Saviour say this?
37527Did not the disciples know Him after the flesh, and did they not forsake Him?
37527Did they give you the satisfaction you hoped for?
37527Do I not know that though the hand of the swordsman is feeble, yet the weapon itself is powerful-- keener than any two- edged sword?
37527Do we ask again how it came to pass that, when Israel called to the Gentiles, the Gentiles responded to the call and flocked to its standard?
37527Do we ask what it was which gave the Jewish people this toughness, this vitality, this power?
37527Do we delight to trace the progress of the human race from the first dawn of civilisation to its noonday blaze?
37527Do we thank God, can we thank God now, that we are not as bad as other men are?
37527Do you ask how your work may be truly effective?
37527Do you think, can you think, that the sense of His infinite love will make you reckless, will make you indolent, will make you presuming?
37527Does the memory of some ugly school- boy sin dog your path, haunting and paralysing you with its importunity?
37527For is it not true, that those will love most to whom most is given and forgiven?
37527For what was the state of things at the beginning of this period?
37527Had not Augustus established his sovereignty by an unscrupulous use of force, and maintained it by an astute use of artifice?
37527Has the Spirit nothing else to teach us?
37527Have we caught only a faint, transient glimpse of it?
37527Have we sinned, and shall we go to Him as to a taskmaster?
37527He had gone through life asking, half in bitterness, half in jest,"What is truth?"
37527He had no belief in them, and why should he practise them?
37527How can I do otherwise?
37527How can I hope for a hearing, if I begin by distrusting it where I myself am concerned?
37527How can we better realise this power of God than by taking St. Paul''s statement as our starting- point?
37527How shall they wake up from their barren monotony and death- like existence?
37527How so?
37527I appeal confidently to all those who have made the trial to say whether this medicine has healed them where all other medicines have failed?
37527If it be true of your body that it is fearfully and wonderfully made, is it not far more true of your soul?
37527If its operations have been thus effected in the past, does it still maintain its efficiency?
37527Is any one here burdened with the consciousness of a shameful past?
37527Is it possible that He can have been a mere passing stranger, or a mere casual acquaintance?
37527Is it quite creditable that matters should go on thus?
37527Is it some fierce temptation which shamed you, and each fresh struggle seems to leave you weaker than before?
37527Is it some secret sorrow gnawing at the heart, some outraged feeling, or some harrowing bereavement, or some actual disappointment?
37527Is not this a significant fact in itself, but especially significant for you, for it proclaims the fundamental principle of the Gospel charter?
37527Is not this also the meaning of those words which He utters to the girl lying helpless before Him?
37527Is not this the typical meaning of Christ''s action in the text?
37527Is there a God in heaven?
37527Is there a providence, a moral government, a judgment?
37527Is there a redemption, a sanctification, a life eternal?
37527Is there not here the manifestation of Divine providence?
37527Is this an adequate representation of the case, think you?
37527Lord, to whom shall we go?
37527May we not call it in some sense a sacrament, a sign and a parable of your relation to your Lord?
37527Must it not be crushed and ground to atoms and annihilated by its foes?
37527Nay, was there not a truth in this childish ignorance which threatens to elude the grasp of our manhood''s wisdom?
37527Need I remind you that this is the earliest miracle of raising the dead recounted in the Gospels?
37527Once again; look into your own soul, and what do you find there?
37527Peter?"
37527Shall I crucify your King?"
37527Shall not Moses''prayer then be our prayer,"Lord, I beseech Thee, show me Thy glory"?
37527The mighty engine of imperial power, the armed sceptre which ruled the world, whence came it?
37527There is a sarcastic pity in the question which he addresses to the Prisoner before him,"Art Thou the King of the Jews?
37527These properties of numbers, these selections of space, these phenomena of light, of heat, of energy, of life, of language, of thought, what are they?
37527Think you My words are restricted to a few short precepts uttered to the Jews?"
37527This account also is perfectly plain, but how can the two be harmonised?
37527This is always the language of Christ''s words, the language of Christ''s Gospel,--"How hear we every man in our own tongue wherein we were born?"
37527This thirst for enduring fame, what is it but an echo, a mocking echo, of an eternal verity?
37527To be ready to do and to suffer, if need be to die, for our country, what broad elevation of soul is there not in a temper like this?
37527To disclose the obscure past of the great nations of the earth?
37527To which will you give the preference?
37527Uprightness, honour, frankness, generosity, truth-- what were these to him?
37527Was ever any claim more contradictory of all human experience, more palpably absurd, than this?
37527Was it altogether a baseless dream in those stoic Pantheists, who endowed each several planet with an animating spirit of its own?
37527Was it not rather a Divine instinct feeling after a higher truth?
37527Was not human life itself one great query without an answer?
37527Was there not ground for the wanderer''s surprise on that memorable night?
37527We have been saddened justly; but why should we be disconcerted?
37527We should have predicted weakness, depression, misery, scepticism, apostacy, despair; and yet what was the actual result?
37527What becomes of our righteousness, our merit, our self- satisfaction, our self- complacency?
37527What chance has Israel against such terrible neighbours?
37527What consolation, what forgiveness, what hope of either here?
37527What else is the meaning of His great, His inestimable gift to man of His only- begotten Son, to take His flesh upon Him and to die for us?
37527What have we to do with Thee?''
37527What is conscience?
37527What is sin?
37527What joy, what strength, what comfort could they have henceforth in life?
37527What may you not look for, what may you not hope for from a Father who has vouchsafed to you this transcendent manifestation of His loving- kindness?
37527What more, then, would you have than this?
37527What security was this knowledge after the flesh against scepticism, against blasphemy, against apostacy, against rebellion?
37527What then?
37527What then?
37527What then?
37527What was truth?
37527What was truth?
37527What witness need we more?
37527What would Cambridge be without its honourable emulations, its generous rivalries?
37527What would we not have given to have known Him after the flesh?
37527What, then, shall we say?
37527What, then, was the change wrought in the relations of Christianity and Paganism during this period?
37527When had truth anything to do with founding a kingdom?
37527Whence came I?
37527Where else shall this glory reveal itself if not in the studies of this place?
37527Whither go I?
37527Who among you has not felt, at one time or another, the spark of a divine fire kindling within you?
37527Who can for a moment hesitate to rank the Pharisee higher than the publican?
37527Who has not yearned with an intense, if momentary, yearning to do something worthy, to be something worthy?
37527Who was Israel, then, that he could withstand Egypt?
37527Who will waver between these two men?
37527Who would blame the child for seeking to win its mother''s good opinion?
37527Who would not shrink from the responsibility of addressing you at such a crisis?
37527Why amidst these bare rocks?
37527Why here of all places in the world?
37527Why in this bleak wilderness?
37527Why of Christ, and Christ only?
37527Why should this one spot be chosen to plant the foot of the ladder which connected heaven and earth?
37527Why should we desire to know Him after the flesh?
37527Will you accept this challenge?
37527Will you close with the offer?
37527Will you not give it this day, either in this church, or in contributions sent afterwards to the treasurer?
37527Will you not make an adequate return?
37527Will you, as consecrated soldiers of the Cross, claim your part in the glory of this campaign?
37527Would you yourself have doubted if you had been a Jew and lived in that age?
37527Yes, why here?
37527You will not be content, will you?
37527[ 12]"Pilate saith unto Him, What is truth?"
37527to discern the stream of human life broadening slowly down with the force of ages?
37527to follow the ever- widening range of intellect?
37527to mark the development of the arts of government?
40537*****"L''Empereur Frederic avoir déjà?
40537Is this historical justice?
40537The only question was,"Where are they?"
40537Then Saladin asked,''Where is he?''
40537Where go you Tancred?
40537Whither fly you Boemond?"
40537Who shall tell the children and the infirm that, animated with the same spirit, hastened to the war?
4004Use every man after his deserts, and who shall scape whipping?
4004Against this comes the protest of the Sunday School theorists"Why not distribute according to merit?"
4004But how much?
4004But you can not object to being asked how many minutes of a bookmaker''s time is worth two hours of an astronomer''s?
4004He heard Jesus calling to him from the clouds,"Why persecute me?"
4004His prolonged agony of thirst and pain on the cross at last breaks his spirit, and he dies with a cry of"My God: why hast Thou forsaken me?"
4004Indeed, the Jews say of him"How knoweth this man letters, having never learnt?"
4004It does not seem very sensible, does it?
4004Later on John claims that Jesus said to Peter"If I will that John tarry til I come, what is that to thee?
4004PREFACE TO ANDROCLES AND THE LION: ON THE PROSPECTS OF CHRISTIANITY By Bernard Shaw 1912 CONTENTS: Why not give Christianity a Trial?
4004That question is, Why on earth did not Jesus defend himself, and make the people rescue him from the High Priest?
4004The King of England is the defender of the faith; but what faith is now THE faith?
4004This, fortunately, is only one side of marriage; and the question arises, can it not be eliminated?
4004WAS JESUS A COWARD?
4004WAS JESUS A MARTYR?
4004WHY JESUS MORE THAN ANOTHER?
4004Was Jesus a Coward?
4004Was Jesus a Martyr?
4004Was ever so idiotic a project mooted as the estimation of virtue in money?
4004Well, never mind: I am willing to be hanged for it in your stead?"
4004What do you give a man an income for?
4004What would Jesus have said?
4004When the Trinity was added to the faith the question arose, was the virgin the mother of God or only the mother of Jesus?
4004Why Jesus more than Another?
4004or What shall we drink?
4004or Wherewithal shall we be clothed?"
34474A disaster hath befallen the Dauphin?
34474A priest, messire? 34474 A priest?"
34474Abjure?
34474Ah, Sieur Pierre,she said,"where shall I be to- night?"
34474Alone?
34474And did the Domremy boys give a good account of themselves?
34474And do you forgive me, my little one? 34474 And father?"
34474And how did you get the gash?
34474And how is Aveline?
34474And how kept you yours?
34474And if he does not? 34474 And not from the maid at all?"
34474And what do you say, Hauviette?
34474And who is to tell him what I say?
34474And why not bed them, mother? 34474 And why not retire to the Castle of the Island, my children?"
34474And why to Poictiers?
34474And with him stands my uncle, Durand Lassois: he who took me to Vaucouleurs, you remember?
34474And you in truth made that long perilous journey to speak with the King?
34474And you, I doubt not, are that Burgundy who hath beguiled the gentle King with fair words and false promises?
34474And your standard?
34474Are not you the little maid who dressed my wounded arm at your father''s house in Domremy?
34474Are there no cudgels to be had that you should use the sacred weapon? 34474 Are we to turn our backs?"
34474Are you grieving over the cattle and the goods?
34474Are you hurt, Mengette?
34474Are you in truth going to get it for me, father?
34474Are you the Count of Dunois?
34474Are you the maid concerning whom letters have come to the King from Vaucouleurs?
34474At once?
34474But Aveline, Jeanne?
34474But how will they know that it is the sword that you mean?
34474But what made you think of coming?
34474But where are the boys?
34474Call you? 34474 Can Orléans hold out forever?
34474Colet, is this in truth the King''s desire, or hath he been influenced to it by George la Trémouille? 34474 Could it be that some one is teaching the girl letters, that she is so quiet?
34474Dear Maid, have you forgot Paris? 34474 Did mother go on a pilgrimage to Puy en Velay?"
34474Did the priests know that the sword was there?
34474Did you know before you were taken that you would be captured?
34474Did you not call me, mother?
34474Did you not promise and swear not to resume the dress of a man?
34474Did you not say that you had received divine direction regarding it also?
34474Did you think that I would leave her while she has need of me, Uncle Durand?
34474Do n''t you, Mengette?
34474Do you believe in God?
34474Do you like it, my little one?
34474Do you mean to reflect upon the honor of our cousin Burgundy?
34474Does it hurt much?
34474Does your Counsel tell you to say this?
34474Eh? 34474 For do not the wayfarers bring you news of all that happens beyond the mountains?"
34474From Rome?
34474Go back now, Jeanne?
34474Has anything happened to the flocks?
34474Have I not seen you somewhere, messire?
34474Have we not boldly told all who came to Domremy to inquire concerning her of her goodness and purity? 34474 Have you broken your fast to- day, my child?"
34474Have you marked, Isabeau, that she no longer dances with the other children? 34474 Have you not good faith in the Lord?"
34474Have you not heard that a woman should lose France, and that a Maid should save France?
34474Have you nothing further to say?
34474Have you witnesses to prove this?
34474Have you, as''tis said, a message for the King?
34474Have your voices told you that also, Jeanne?
34474Hear you that, Isabeau? 34474 How can God leave those good people of Compiègne, who have been and are so loyal to their King, to perish?"
34474How can they help it, mother, when even grown people fight their enemies when they meet?
34474How can you say that? 34474 How could you know that a disaster hath befallen him to- day?"
34474How could you understand, father? 34474 How did you come to speak so to him, Jeanne?"
34474How did you know, uncle?
34474How do you do, Jeanne?
34474How is father?
34474I know quite well that you are sent to question me,spoke the maiden with spirit,"but of what avail is it?
34474I think she must be inspired in very truth, Jean; else how is it that she stands the journey as she does? 34474 I, Messire?
34474If you feared it, why were you not on your guard?
34474In God''s name, my fair duke, why do they ask so many questions instead of setting me about my work?
34474In God''s name, why do they not set me about my work?
34474In what language, Pucelle, do these voices speak to you?
34474Is aught amiss? 34474 Is it your pleasure to have dinner, messire?"
34474Is not the Dauphin master of his presence? 34474 Is she-- is she dead?"
34474Is that all, Jeanne?
34474Is this thy daughter?
34474It would seem so, my child; but, unless there were cause why should he take this action?
34474Jacques,ejaculated his wife reprovingly,"what are you saying?
34474Jeanne, do you in truth know that?
34474Jeanne, in what place do you expect to die?
34474Jeanne, ma mie, what is it?
34474Know you not that there are perils enough about us without giving a false alarm? 34474 Make peace, Sire; but--""But what, dear Maid?"
34474May I hear mass before entering the court?
34474Messire, would I not, were I betrothed to this man, go abroad with him to church, to dances, or to other public places?
34474Mother scolding? 34474 Mother, did my father do that?"
34474Not go back, my little one?
34474Now then, Jeanne, did not your Voices promise you deliverance?
34474Now who can it be that fares forth in such weather to go visiting?
34474Of me, father?
34474Of what?
34474Oh, dost thou jarnedieu?
34474Said I not so, Alain?
34474Shall I be believed if I speak?
34474Shall I be believed?
34474Shall I burn?
34474Shall I get you some fresh water, father?
34474Shall I not speak to Sire Robert first, Jeanne?
34474Since last Thursday have you heard your Voices?
34474So you are the Pucelle?
34474So?
34474The King?
34474Then what is it?
34474Then why fret about telling the King what ye believe?
34474Then why go to him?
34474Then will you relate how the commands were given to you?
34474There could n''t be one; could there, Jean?
34474There is naught but good in that, so what makes the people talk so?
34474Think you that I heed what a mad woman says?
34474Think you that the Governor would listen to her if she were to go to him again?
34474Thou who art so near death?
34474To Poictiers?
34474To Vaucouleurs?
34474To- night, Pucelle? 34474 Was it you that gave counsel that I should come by this bank and not by the other side, and so straight against Talbot and the English?"
34474We will willingly give you one or two worthy men who speak French; will you say your Pater to them?
34474We--"What''s that about going to fighting?
34474Well, ma mie,he said banteringly,"what are you doing here?
34474Were you, mother?
34474What ails you, Jacques?
34474What can be done?
34474What can they mean?
34474What did they say to you?
34474What do you fear, messire?
34474What do you mean, Colin?
34474What do you think, Jeanne?
34474What for?
34474What has come over you, Jeanne?
34474What hath happened?
34474What have you to say to this article?
34474What is abjure?
34474What is it that I am to do?
34474What is it that you have really decided? 34474 What is it, father?"
34474What is it, ma mie?
34474What is it, messire?
34474What is the danger that may befall him?
34474What is the use in having learned men ask me questions when I know neither A nor B?
34474What is this that I hear about your visiting Sire Robert de Baudricourt?
34474What shall be done now?
34474What then, Jeanne?
34474What would you of me, messire?
34474What would your father say to you should aught happen to the sheep? 34474 What?"
34474When did you come? 34474 When does messire, the bishop, wish to see me?"
34474When may I begin, sire?
34474When shall we go?
34474Where are you going?
34474Where did you get such notions? 34474 Where got you such skill in military matters, Jeanne?"
34474Who is Messire?
34474Who taught you where to set those guns? 34474 Why did n''t you pack them yourselves?"
34474Why did you go there? 34474 Why do you call the King the Dauphin, even as the foreigners do who deny him the right to the throne?"
34474Why do you speak so, Jeanne?
34474Why does it have the notches upon it, father?
34474Why fret indeed? 34474 Why have you come to Court?"
34474Why have you done this?
34474Why, Jeanne, you do n''t mean that he wants to see me?
34474Why, child, what brings you home so early?
34474Will you not tell us in the presence of the King the nature of this Counsel?
34474Will you really do what you say?
34474Wish that Jeanne D''Arc would not be so good?
34474With mother?
34474Wolves?
34474Would it not be best to take it without bloodshed?
34474Would n''t you, Pierrelot?
34474Would you sell this ring, good father?
34474Would you travel in that garb, pucelle? 34474 You did not?
34474You hear?
34474You mean to walk there, Jeanne?
34474You must believe me, uncle,spoke the girl pleadingly,"Have I not always been truthful?"
34474You were prisoners to the Duke of Lorraine?
34474You will return with me, Jeanne? 34474 You will, messire?"
34474You wish me to do what, child?
34474You?
34474Your voices? 34474 A blot upon England? 34474 A little wearied she may be when we stop for rest, but do you note that she starts onward as blithely and gayly as though we had but just set forth?
34474A prisoner?
34474After a time he raised his head to ask brokenly,"She told the Sire Captain that she would come again, Durand?"
34474After each one the young doctor paused to ask?
34474After they had spoken the bishop turned to the girl kindly and said:"And where is thy counsel, my child?"
34474All but her, and what could she have done to help me an there had been a wolf?"
34474All feared for the result, for what chance would a peasant maid stand with such wise men?
34474All the harshness and severity that I showed you?
34474And her parents?
34474And now you have come here with a mission?
34474And why do you want to take the sheep elsewhere?
34474And you wish it too, do you not, Hauviette?"
34474And, Hauviette, did Isabeau tell you that they wanted to know whether Jeanne ever carried a mandrake?"
34474As he still hesitated she added:"Ah, gentle duke, are you afraid?
34474As the trumpets sounded the assault, and he did not advance, Jeanne turned upon him quickly:"Why do you hesitate?"
34474Be hunted like wild beasts, and killed if they can not pay ransom?
34474Bertrand, man, does not the flavor of that stew assail your nostrils deliciously?"
34474Build, for men- at- arms to burn?
34474But I made up for it afterward; did n''t I, Pierre?"
34474But is it by evil or by good spirits that you speak?"
34474But you?
34474Can they not see that she is one of God''s saints?"
34474Can you in very truth do as you say: raise the siege of Orléans, and bring the King to his anointing?"
34474Catherine?"
34474Colin?
34474Could it be that that was what Martin had heard?
34474Did I not, Colin?"
34474Did Pierre too feel for their suffering country?
34474Did you look well to the money?"
34474Did you wish to see them?"
34474Didst not hear them say that they knew of your engagement to Colin?"
34474Do we have to carry the tables and the paddles home, Jeanne?
34474Do you hear, Jeanne?"
34474Do you not know that I promised your wife to bring you back safe and sound?"
34474Fair Dauphin, did you tell to any one the prayer that you made?"
34474For were they not likely to lose the beasts forever on the morrow?
34474For who that had not kinship with the Divine could transcend the weakness of the flesh as did this girl of seventeen?
34474Had he ever heard her, Jeanne, speak of being engaged to Colin?
34474Had he seen her at church, or any public place with Colin?
34474Has your mother been scolding you?"
34474Hast thou not heard that France ruined by a woman shall by a virgin be restored?
34474Have you been accustomed to riding?"
34474Have you never heard that though a woman should lose France, from the march of Lorraine a Virgin shall come for its redemption?"
34474Have you thought of that?"
34474Have you thought of that?"
34474He dragged himself up as well as he could upon his horse, and galloped up to her, crying:"What are you doing here alone, Pucelle?
34474Here Doctor Jean de Mascon, a"very wise man,"said to her:"My child, are you come to raise the siege?"
34474Here and there an English soldier laughed, and suddenly a hoarse voice cried:"You priests, are you going to keep us here all day?"
34474How could he, when I did not call?
34474How could she approach such a man?
34474How did you get here?"
34474How then could I lead men- at- arms?"
34474How was that faith kept?"
34474How would they receive her?
34474I have but to speak the truth; have I not?"
34474I?"
34474If receiving an answer to earnest prayer be witchcraft were not the maidens of Lagny equally guilty with Jeanne?
34474If they be not true, why then do you besiege the good city of Compiègne, bringing suffering upon your own people?
34474Is it not a secure stronghold?"
34474Is it not his to say who shall, or who shall not be admitted to him?"
34474Is it not so?"
34474Is it true?"
34474Is not that a Friar turning in from the highway, Isabeau?"
34474Is not that a thing allowed to every prisoner?"
34474Is not that best?"
34474Is there aught from your heavenly visitors that would answer that prayer?"
34474Is there in truth danger?"
34474Is there not some gift or boon that you wish other than this?"
34474Is this what you promised me?"
34474Jeanne a heretic?
34474Know you not that La Hire, the fiercest soldier of the Armagnacs, says,''Never was a king who lost his kingdom so gay as Charles?''
34474Know you not that the whole countryside is talking of you?
34474Know you where the lads are?
34474Must my children too live always in the midst of strife?
34474Must the King be driven from his Kingdom, and we all turn English?"
34474Must they too count on nothing; neither their goods, nor their lives?
34474Must they too sow for soldiers to reap?
34474Of what avail would such a small number be against an attacking force of freebooters?"
34474Oh, Jacques, must France always be torn by war?"
34474Oh, is not God good to give us so fine day for our pleasure?"
34474Oh, would n''t the Godons run when they saw you?"
34474One of them cried:"How can you set forth on such a journey when there are men- at- arms on every hand?"
34474Or are n''t you through washing yet?"
34474Pierre, will you see to the oxen?
34474Presently he said, wistfully:"Do n''t you ever get afraid in battle, Jeanne?
34474Presently she dashed away the tears and turned to Durand as though an idea had come to her:"Uncle Durand,"she cried,"Will you take me into France?"
34474Ransom?
34474Resistance to the force that was with Antoine was out of the question, so what could they do?
34474She had been deceived once; how could she know that the captains would keep the promise to return with the soldiers?
34474She is but a peasant girl, and when hath a villein''s daughter ever ridden a horse, or couched a lance?
34474She knew no language but French, so what other could the Voices use?
34474Sire Bertrand leaned over to Jean de Metz and spoke in an awed tone:"Saw you that, Jean?
34474So this was what Colin had been about in his absence?
34474So what would be the use of coming here Thursday?"
34474So when she said again:"Is anything amiss, Jeanne?"
34474So you are that little maid?
34474Solemnly he spoke:"How know you this, Maid?"
34474The girl was so young, so fair, so slight, yet what great deeds had she not wrought?
34474The song?"
34474The wound?"
34474Then drawing her mystic sword she waved it above her head, crying:"Dost thou so speak, Classidas?
34474Then you can hear me in confession?"
34474There was not the least flicker of amusement in his countenance as he said:"Well, my little maid, what brings thee here this time?"
34474Therefore, was it not better that I should take her?"
34474They asked her one day:"Do you know that you are in the grace of God?"
34474They follow us, do they not, Jean?"
34474This visit is for the day only, is it not?"
34474Upon what were the people to live?
34474Was she inspired, or possessed?
34474Was the girl really an inspired prophetess, or a witch?
34474We are to march there from here, and who can lead the men- at- arms to the storming so well as you?
34474Were they too concerned in the matter?
34474What business had you with him?"
34474What could a maid do in such matters?
34474What does it mean?"
34474What guerdon shall be yours for these amazing labors?"
34474What is it, Jeanne?
34474What is the matter?"
34474What is your name?"
34474What is your sign, Pucelle?"
34474What made you think that I called you?"
34474What made you think that I called you?"
34474What need, therefore, is there for you, a young girl, to go to the Dauphin?"
34474What sign can you give us that you can perform them?"
34474What sign can you give?"
34474What then?"
34474What voices?"
34474What wonder that she wept?
34474What wonder then, that when the divine call came, it was heard and heeded?
34474What wouldst thou have with me?"
34474What, a young girl fair and lovely as was this peasant maid to deliver France?
34474What?"
34474When do we start?"
34474When will you set forth?"
34474Whence came that indomitable spirit and courage?
34474Where did you say the flowers were?"
34474Where do you bide?
34474Where is the pain?"
34474Where were La Hire, Dunois, Alençon, Boussac, Rais, and other captains that no sword was drawn for Jeanne?
34474Whip Jeanne, who was so good and sweet?
34474Whip her?
34474Who could guess that lords and knights of the Christian faith, holding captive the gentle Duke of Orléans, would besiege his own city?
34474Who else has shown such courage and high heart since the beginning of the world?
34474Who taught you to be so deft in such matters?"
34474Why did they not leave France and go back to their own country?"
34474Why did they not tell me?"
34474Why do they not stay in their own country?"
34474Why do they not take Messire''s word as it comes to them?
34474Why do you fear to tell me what it is?
34474Why do you not retreat with the others?"
34474Why will you burn?"
34474Why, what ails you, my little one?"
34474Why, why did you permit it?"
34474Will you go with me?"
34474Will you let her go, Jacques?"
34474Will you take me to Sire Robert?"
34474You are getting ready to be a saint, are n''t you?"
34474You are, I should judge, not over sixteen?"
34474how is she?"
34474she cried wonderingly;"and am I to die here?"
34474where are you?
34474why did you not keep her from going to Vaucouleurs?
39657And our opponents?
39657And suppose you said,''I will go to bed under no blanket,''it would mean that you preferred to sleep without a blanket, would n''t it?
39657And which would you rather not have, a lower berth or an upper one?
39657Are n''t you going to say''Good morning''to him, if he is your friend?
39657Are there really such people?
39657As you go into battle,he went on,"ask yourself this: Can the practitioners of theft and burglary triumph over the forces of righteousness?"
39657Axiomatically, you mean?
39657But how about me?
39657But if they are already intelligible, what use is there in reading them?
39657But not on us,the Pledges cried--"Please,"said Alice,"please wo n''t you skip what happened next?
39657But what good does that do?
39657But what happens to my pocketbook?
39657But who are''they?''
39657But you do n''t absolutely have to cry fraud, do you?
39657Can you read it? 39657 Dangerous where I am?"
39657Do Good Trust and Bad Trust both live in the same house?
39657Do you like puzzle pictures?
39657Do you play well?
39657Do you think so?
39657Does it?
39657Does that mean two separate things, or one?
39657Have you ever figured out how many Governors have come out for me?
39657How did it all happen?
39657How do you manage to do it?
39657I do n''t think so,said the Red Knight,"and, besides, where am I to get the other letters from?"
39657I do n''t think that is a very good pun, do you?
39657I have n''t overdone the pathos, have I?
39657If we do n''t fight, how can we cry fraud afterwards?
39657Including the paragraph about the tariff which Joe Cannon made you take out?
39657Is it very dangerous?
39657Is that axiomatic, also?
39657It''s a telegram, is n''t it?
39657My dear Alice, do you happen to remember the name of the President who was nominated at Chicago in 1860?
39657Now, were there any circumstances why you should have gone out with me in this boat?
39657People say that the Governor of New Hampshire is of two minds about me-- that means twice, does n''t it?
39657Perk or Pert, what difference does it make?
39657Shall I tell the story by Congressional districts or by States?
39657Shall we say four years from now on Lincoln''s birthday?
39657Suppose it_ is_ a fact, what difference does it make?
39657That does n''t mean I ca n''t have a first cup without sugar in it, does it?
39657The same,said the old lady;"may I facilitate you upon the results in Illinois and Pennsylvania?"
39657Then it means you once more?
39657Then why fight at all?
39657Was it breakfast food you had in the boxes?
39657We are n''t getting any nearer the shore, are we?
39657Well, then, is n''t it as plain as anything that you are going out in this boat under no circumstances?
39657Well, why?
39657What are those famous words in Lincoln''s Second Inaugural, Alice? 39657 What is it, Alice?"
39657What is it?
39657What is it?
39657What is?
39657What keeps up?
39657What train wo n''t you take?
39657What''s the difference between taking a canal from Colombia and taking candy from a child?
39657What_ is_ a logical candidate?
39657Where are we?
39657Why do you call him deceptive?
39657Why is George W. Perkins like the voice of the people?
39657Why must you always be fighting? 39657 You are not discouraged, are you?"
39657You mean_ in_vincible, do n''t you?
39657''With-- With----''How does it go?"
39657And he proceeded to push his finger into the side of the other Trust, repeating:"What do you think of the Sherman law?"
39657But perhaps you''d rather have me ask you riddles?"
39657Can you now?"
39657Did you ever see such criminal indifference?
39657Did you see me charge?"
39657Do all of you know what you are after?"
39657Have you ever seen a more impressive lot of men?"
39657I do n''t suppose you have ever met them before, have you?"
39657I''ll pass on to the last verse:"''Oh Pledges dear,''the Colonel said,''Is not this bully fun?
39657If I gave up the fight who else would there be to carry it on?"
39657If he takes your hand and says,''How do you do?''
39657Is there anything I have overlooked?"
39657It says:''When you take a third cup at breakfast, do you drink coffee like the plain people, or cocoa like the enemies of progress?''
39657Now what does all that prove?"
39657So what does all this show?"
39657What does it all prove?
39657What''s the difference between a Southern postmaster in 1908 and a Southern postmaster in 1912?"
39657Why not leave that for younger people, and let everybody remember you at your best?"
39657Would n''t that mean that you intended to go out without an umbrella?"
39657You do n''t ride a horse, do you?"
27682''S anythin''more?
27682''Twas farther on, was it not, Harry?
27682''Twere better, were it not,Phoebe suggested,"that we turn to the left and make a circuit into the Aldersgate?"
27682''Twouldn''t be perlite, I s''pose, to ask to hear some o''them letters?
27682A man-- a poet-- a genius?
27682A member of Parliament, is he not?
27682A mighty lot of riches it''ll bring me, wo n''t it? 27682 A patent?
27682A poet-- a genius, you say? 27682 A what, friend?"
27682Ah, but wo n''t they seize your clothes, Brother Bacon?
27682Ai n''t any steam- cars''round here, is there?
27682Ai n''t that the right postage?
27682Ai n''t the air too thin up very high?
27682Ai n''t you ever agoin''to fix up your room, Phoebe Wise?
27682Air ye goin''as fast as ye can?
27682Air ye struck silly, Phoebe?
27682Am I to have every lazy jade in London prying and eavesdropping? 27682 Am I under the table?"
27682An''can ye see the meridians jammed together like in the geographies?
27682An''did ye get every thin''done right?
27682An''only unwind six years?
27682An''what''s this room for?
27682An''where in creation does it go when it stays set?
27682An''where is the future- man now?
27682An''who''s the man with him in black togs an''rumpled stockin''s?
27682And for you, sir?
27682And have you forgot your bargain so soon?
27682And is there a pole there?
27682And prithee, Master Droop, where may Chicago be?
27682And then?
27682And think you I have not suffered in the exchange, Master Droop?
27682And was it, then, Guy who brought me these same lines of Jacques the melancholy?
27682And what d''ye do with this little handle?
27682And you''ll take my offer if I do?
27682Are we less lovely or less awful now than a moment since? 27682 Are ye all in?"
27682Are ye outlandish bred that ye put me such questions?
27682Are ye there, traitor?
27682Are you keepin''enough for yourself, Rebecca?
27682Are you, then, the new limner who makes pictures by aid of the box and glass?
27682Ay, this Shakespeare hath impudently claimed for his own credit and reputation?
27682Be these the Lord Chamberlain''s men?
27682Besides, it''s mos''too dark to see the thing, ai n''t it?
27682But did n''t you say you had friends?
27682But how''bout linen-- sheets an''table- cloths an''all?
27682But s''posin''he ca n''t answer it?
27682But tell me, would it be unmaidenly, think you, were I to grant Sir Guy a private meeting-- without the house?
27682But what ever''s the use o''keepin''on a- climbin''?
27682But what is the plan?
27682But what''re we goin''to do?
27682But what''s the good of that?
27682But why such haste?
27682But why?
27682But, Rebecca,said Phoebe, stepping back and wiping her eyes,"what shall we do about the Panchronicon?
27682By the same token, how could the lass be here and we not see her? 27682 By what name are you called?"
27682Ca n''t we get into the thing, an''light a candle or suthin''?
27682Ca n''t we go a little faster?
27682Can I come in?
27682Can any voice be so repeated?
27682Can it sing anythin''else?
27682Can these be your father''s minions, think you?
27682Can you tell me where I can find one o''the selectmen?
27682Can you thus give a name to this black phantom, Mary?
27682Can you thus record e''en the voices of fowls?
27682Canst not say yes or no, man?
27682Come to think of it, Rebecca,she said, dolefully,"what''ll I do all the time between full- grown and baby size?
27682Copernicus Droop, do you mean it?
27682Copernicus Droop,she said, solemnly,"hev ye brought any rum aboard with ye?
27682Could n''t we fix some way to get some of''em to ye?
27682Course not-- but----"An''wo n''t it be yesterday for us mighty soon-- yes, an''a heap longer ago than that?
27682Cuttin''twenty- four meridians----"And how many days in twenty- two years?
27682D''ye mean right now?
27682D''ye see thet big iron ring''round the pole, lyin''on the ground?
27682D''ye think I wo n''t split these darned pants and tight socks?
27682D''ye think ye could stand a little more speed, Cousin Phoebe?
27682D''you mean to tell me, Copernicus Droop,cried the outraged spinster,"that I''ve got to go''thout airin''my bed?"
27682Dame,said Elizabeth, sternly,"is this the respect you show to them above you in America?"
27682Did I say that? 27682 Did either of you think what would happen to me if we all went back to 1876?
27682Did he live very far back, then?
27682Did n''t I go back five weeks with that future man? 27682 Did n''t I_ ask_ you ef I had n''t told you I heard a burglar?"
27682Did n''t you never hear one afore, Cousin Rebecca?
27682Did we hear aright, your Highness?
27682Did ye feel the footboard?
27682Did you call, sir?
27682Did you do me the honor of a summons, mistress?
27682Did you say he went off to the north, Mis''Allen?
27682Do n''t he, Rebecca?
27682Do n''t ye believe ye might change yer mind?
27682Do n''t you know what a North Pole is like fer weather an''sich?
27682Do queens and princesses perform menial offices in America?
27682Do they play at the Shoreditch Theatre or at the inn, good Gregory?
27682Do you know him?
27682Do you mean-- hev you brought----?
27682Do you s''pose the flood would come up as fur''s this, Phoebe?
27682Do you suppose we''ve arrived in Infinite Space yet?
27682Dost take me for a little half- weaned knave, that I''ll learn how to dress me of a woman? 27682 Dost think that Mary Burton prizes these weary labyrinthine sentences-- all hay and wool, like the monstrous swelling of trunk hose?
27682Doth she give a good account?
27682Doth the muse live? 27682 Excuse me, forsooth, your Majesty,"Droop broke in,"but would thou mind if I get up, my liege?"
27682For me?
27682Goin''to start right now?
27682Good manners never did a mite o''harm, did they?
27682Got any matches, Cousin Rebecca?
27682Had this American a horse?
27682Had ye no drink when ye first returned, then?
27682Hast breakfasted, woman-- what?
27682Hast heard from my father yet?
27682Hath it not a very proper savor?
27682Hath your hand suffered some mischance, Sir American, that you hide it in your bosom?
27682Hath your invention this intent, Master Droop?
27682Have another?
27682Have the players left the Peacock?
27682Have ye any funny ones?
27682Hev ye decided ye''ll go, then?
27682Hev ye got everythin''ready?
27682Hev ye shrunk any yet? 27682 Hez it got wings?"
27682How are you goin''to lift us up?
27682How can I go?
27682How do you let down?
27682How far shall we fare to- night, love?
27682How in creation did you get here?
27682How should I taste it, man, not knowing its very name?
27682How should they know where you are?
27682How would you go-- by what conveyance? 27682 How write you sounds with this device, Master Droop?"
27682How''d it come? 27682 How''d the butcher''s boy find it?
27682How''d they know about it? 27682 How''ll ye find yer sister, Cousin Rebecca?"
27682How''ll you know when we get there?
27682I do n''t see''s I''ve shrunk a mite, hev I?
27682I do n''t see, though, how I''m to get any victuals, do you?
27682I do n''t suppose ye want to make yer will, do ye?
27682I mean by the clock? 27682 If I mistake not, you will return forthwith to Master Droop, to the end that you may regain your proper garb, will you not?"
27682If it breaks we''ll move straight an''get rid o''this side weight, wo n''t we?
27682Illinois-- yes-- and Illinois?
27682In all sadness, Master Shakespeare, have you had aught from Francis Bacon? 27682 Is Miss Rebecca there?"
27682Is all clear now?
27682Is it from the guy?
27682Is it the custom to take the Queen to task in your realm?
27682Is it then true?
27682Is that Mr. Droop comin''back, d''you s''pose?
27682Is that a fact?
27682Is that all you''d be askin'', young man?
27682Is that so? 27682 Is that you, Mis''Allen?"
27682Is the''really an''truly a pole there?
27682Is there not among them one Will Shakespeare, Gregory? 27682 Is thet all?"
27682It reads:''Thy mother thinks thou wilt make better speed if I make thee to know that the players thou wottest of''----"What''s a''wottest''?
27682Jest tell me the way to Eastcheap, wilt thee?
27682Jest turn round, will ye?
27682Know you Sir Percevall''s friend, Lady Rebecca?
27682Know you a way back thither?
27682Know you aught of this, my lord?
27682Know you that region, Raleigh?
27682Lady Rebecca, can you better explain this matter of the Czar?
27682Lady Rebecca, will you sit nearer?
27682Look a- here, Phoebe,she said, in a scandalized voice, as she rose and faced her sister,"ai n''t you goin''to put on somethin''over your chest?
27682Marry, an I he d known as thou wast not an acquaintance----"You would not have given me admittance?
27682Marry, you would n''t mind ef I was to set this right here on your table, would ye, my liege?
27682Mean you him holding the two bright wheels, your Highness?
27682Milliken ai n''t agoin''back six years with us, is he? 27682 Milliken''s cough syrup is only four years old, ai n''t it?"
27682Nay, mistress, know you not that they play to- night at the home of Sir William Percy?
27682Nay, then,he replied, bowing half- mockingly,"an the accountant be so passing fair, must not the account suffer in the comparison?"
27682Nay-- but----"What the lands sakes d''ye holler neigh all the time fer? 27682 No?"
27682Now what the land is this for?
27682Now, tell me,said Rebecca, curiously,"whatever brought you up here?
27682Now, then, every time you whirl once''round the pole to westward you lose one day, do n''t you?
27682Oh, I see,said Droop, smiling slyly,"letters from some young feller, eh?"
27682Oh, but where''ll you sleep?
27682Oh, have n''t I?
27682Oh, is that the rudder?
27682Oh, say, Cousin Phoebe,was the man''s greeting,"can you tell me ef yer sister''s to home?"
27682One fourth part of all profits was the proposal, was it not?
27682Perhaps-- but where? 27682 Phoebe,"she exclaimed at length,"where ever can I set my slips?
27682Pray, what now may this be? 27682 Runs it not so?"
27682Said you--''wash up the dishes''?
27682Saw you ever such an array as this?
27682See that indicator?
27682Selectmen?
27682Shall I hear from thee soon?
27682Shall I hev to take it to him myself?
27682Tell me, Master Shakespeare, have you yet brought that speech to its term?
27682Tell me, fellow,said he who had landed,"hast seen one pass the bridge to- night astride of two wheels, one before the other, riding post- haste?"
27682That reads May 3, 1898, now, do n''t it? 27682 That''s so, ai n''t it, dearie?"
27682That''s what heats up meteors so awful hot, ai n''t it?
27682The conceit is very novel, is it not, my lord?
27682The daughter of Isaac Burton?
27682The one holdin''the bicycle?
27682The third age past, what then? 27682 Then they are here, at the inn, boy?"
27682Then what do you want to calculate how often to whirl round?
27682Then what say you to a bargain, Master Shakespeare? 27682 Then what''s happened to the machine?"
27682Then, prithee, friend, how meant you in saying you thought me him who had written Shakespeare? 27682 Thet''s the wrinkle, eh?"
27682Think you so?
27682To put it another way, it comes from the sun cuttin''meridians, do n''t it?
27682Wal, Cousin Rebecca,he said, with a sweeping gesture indicating their general surroundings,"what d''ye think o''this?"
27682Walks pretty straight fer him, do n''t he?
27682Warn''t there no Shakespeare meetin''to- day?
27682Was n''t it a question, Rebecca?
27682Was this printed in your realm, Lady Rebecca?
27682We''ll need some o''them on the trip, wo n''t we?
27682Well, Master Guido,said the Queen,"what make you of it?"
27682Well, Polly,she resumed,"art still bent on thy foppish lover, lass?
27682Well, Rebecca,tittered her sister,"I did n''t have it on my mind yesterday, did I?"
27682Well, Sir Walter,she said,"what say you now?
27682Well, ai n''t it so?
27682Well, an''why ca n''t ye?
27682Well, but wo n''t we get too high?
27682Well, sirrah,said Elizabeth,"what is your message?"
27682Well, that ai n''t so bad, is it? 27682 Well, then, how many times a minute did the future man take you when you whirled back five weeks?"
27682Well, what did ye come fer?
27682Well, young feller,she said, with icy dignity,"what can I do fer you?"
27682Well,he said,"the''is n''t any use you seem''the Panchronicon now, is the''?"
27682Well,she inquired,"hev ye found anythin''?"
27682Well,she said, a little anxiously,"what''s the matter?
27682Well-- what-- who is it?
27682Well?
27682Were we not safer far afield? 27682 What I mean is, it''s clear that you''re not a triflin''poet, but a man of science-- eh?"
27682What about me, then?
27682What about the horse and the saddle and bridle?
27682What brought ye so early to home, Phoebe?
27682What can I do fer ye? 27682 What command gave you, sir?"
27682What d''ye mean?
27682What d''ye mean?
27682What d''ye think o''this little phonograph, Cousin Phoebe?
27682What did I say?
27682What do you mean?
27682What do you s''pose they''re doin''in New Hampshire now, Phoebe?
27682What dost thou here, Poll?
27682What drives the thing?
27682What ever happened to you?
27682What feather?
27682What good would that do? 27682 What have we here?"
27682What is a plexus of the sun, and how doth it blow on a bull?
27682What is it-- who are they whom you flee?
27682What is it? 27682 What knowledge have you of this, learned doctor?"
27682What may a side- splitter be, Master Droop?
27682What may that be, Sir Percevall?
27682What may these be?
27682What mean you, master, by a cut?
27682What of Rebecca? 27682 What on the face of the green airth does it?"
27682What say ye, my good hearts-- shall we have a double coronation? 27682 What says she, Raleigh?"
27682What shall we say?
27682What terms do ye offer, Master Droop? 27682 What the lands sakes did you go an''make the machine run away for?
27682What they mean is thet''twas you wrote the things Shakespeare put his name to-- you did, did n''t you?
27682What words are these?
27682What you bringin''that everlastin''packet o''letters for?
27682What you doin''with that handle?
27682What you talkin''about, anyway? 27682 What''s about Mr. Milliken''s money, Phoebe?"
27682What''s come over ye?
27682What''s his name?
27682What''s that?
27682What''s that?
27682What''s the date, Cousin Phoebe?
27682What''s the letter''bout, anyway?
27682What''s the matter?
27682What''s this a- pullin''? 27682 What''s this?
27682What-- doth it raineth-- eh?
27682What-- how?
27682What? 27682 What_ air_ you a- drivin''at?"
27682Whatever air ye takin''that old book fer, Phoebe?
27682Whatever did you bring those slips with you for?
27682Whatever makes ye talk like that, child?
27682Whatever shall we do?
27682Whatever will be the end o''this?
27682Where are we goin''?
27682Where are we? 27682 Where can we put down all these things?
27682Where did it come from?
27682Where ever did ye get them funny dresses? 27682 Where have you learned this, mother?"
27682Where is my daughter?
27682Where is the old machine, anyhow?
27682Where to?
27682Where''s Cousin Rebecca? 27682 Where''s Cousin Rebecca?"
27682Where''s Cousin Rebecca?
27682Where''s that?
27682Where''s the open sea?
27682Where''s the trunks?
27682Wherefore should he, your Highness?
27682Wherefore to London, sweet?
27682Which means would I think ye was wrong to spark with that high- falutin man out o''doors, eh?
27682Which think you passed the merrier night-- or the Queen( God''s blessing on her) or you and I?
27682Whither hath the strange woman gone?
27682Who buried him?
27682Who gave thee commission to ferry madmen, fellow?
27682Who gave thee leave to run races in London streets?
27682Who goes there?
27682Who hath selected them, dame?
27682Who was the player?
27682Who was they to--''f I may ask?
27682Who''s ben there?
27682Who''s loony now?
27682Who''s that?
27682Who''s there?
27682Whose goin''to keep count?
27682Why ask you this?
27682Why ca n''t ye come right along now?
27682Why did n''t ye say that sooner?
27682Why do n''t ye spread out that newspaper you brought with you?
27682Why in goodness''name does all the folks throw sech messes out in the street?
27682Why is it I''ve never heard tell about this love affair before now? 27682 Why so?"
27682Why the lands sakes do you suppose these London folks dump weeds on their floors?
27682Why this?
27682Why, I guess Mr. Milliken must have two or three millions, has n''t he?
27682Why, London ai n''t a Bible country, is it?
27682Why, Master Bacon,he said,"I''m clean surprised-- yea, marry, am I-- that anybody could hev ben sech a fool-- a-- eh?
27682Why, Master Droop, you that are the inventor of this same''bicycle,''how explain you this?
27682Why, Master Droop,he said,"from what unknown bird have you plucked forth this feather?"
27682Why, Master Droop,said Bacon, glancing down in surprise at his friend''s nether extremities,"what giveth that unwonted spiral look to your legs?
27682Why, Rebecca, what you scared of?
27682Why, Rebecca,said Phoebe, laughing,"do you suppose five miles is any worse than four?
27682Why, an I do thee good, what cause for grief?
27682Why, how knowest his habits?
27682Why, how''s that?
27682Why, if he''s a harbinger of woe-- ain''t that what they call''em?
27682Why, it''s gettin''along to dinner- time, ai n''t it?
27682Why, no,she replied, glancing at Droop with a mischievous smile,"it''s twenty- two years back to 1876, ai n''t it?"
27682Why, where would you have them throw them, dame?
27682Why, who''d take''em?
27682Why, yes-- no-- that is, can you tell me how far it is to London?
27682Why-- ain''t Mr. Droop there? 27682 Why-- what can I do?"
27682Wilt make a jolly night of it in the bargain?
27682Wo n''t we make fer home as soon''s we can?
27682Wottest means knowest-- haven''t you read Shakespeare?
27682Would you be so kind as to tell me the name of this town?
27682Would you like to hear some of them?
27682Would you mind settin''off my chist?
27682Would your Highness that I play again?
27682Ye hain''t ben drinkin'', hev ye?
27682Ye hevn''t much time to live now, hev ye?
27682Ye would n''t want to come back to''76 with me an''leave Cousin Phoebe behind, would ye?
27682Yes-- but----"Well, then, what''s the use o''talkin''''bout it? 27682 You do n''t mean,"said Droop,"that you''d want half the profits, jest fer introducin''me to Lord What''s- is- name, do ye?"
27682You do n''t want to fall down dead o''cold, do ye?
27682You sure it''ll do it?
27682You''ll hev suthin''hot, wo n''t ye?
27682You''re down on monopolies, air ye?
27682You''re not agoin''back for them, air ye?
27682''Tis for London Bridge we are bound, is''t not?"
27682Ai n''t Mrs. Tudor on the ship?
27682Ai n''t all the twenty- four meridians jammed up close together round that part of the globe?"
27682Ai n''t got''em?
27682Ai n''t it a good deal like cheatin''the bank?"
27682Ai n''t it goin''to set at all?"
27682Ai n''t this our money?"
27682Ai n''t ye got any steps for a body to climb?"
27682Air ye all right?
27682Am I right?"
27682An he keep not the tryst,''twill only be----""''Twill only be thy first misprision, eh?"
27682An''ai n''t that jest no older at all than when he started?"
27682An''ef the sun goes the other way round, ai n''t it sure to unwind all the time thet it''s ben a- rollin''up?"
27682And I understand that I am reputed to have been the true author of-- eh?"
27682And now, ere you depart, may I make bold to urge one last request?"
27682And the service you require--?
27682And these temples-- to what false gods are they set up?"
27682And these, then?"
27682And would you or I barter this freedom for a crown?"
27682And yet, how address him?
27682And yet-- was it likely or even possible that Sir Percevall Hart could make such a vulgar haunt as this his headquarters?
27682And yet-- what explanation would be believed?
27682And yet-- why didst thou avert thine eyes from me this even?
27682Anythin''wrong?"
27682Approaching Phoebe''s side, he said:"Mighty pretty, ai n''t it?"
27682Are ye growin''littler in there?
27682Art thou, indeed, no other than Mary Burton?"
27682Ben makin''the beds?"
27682Besides-- who''s to say the old thing wo n''t whirl us back to the days of the Greeks an''Romans?
27682But if he refused this, what was she to do?
27682But it never_ has_ been reached yet, an''how are you agoin''to do it?"
27682But let''s drop comical talk jest fer a minute an''get down to sense, eh?"
27682But what if ye go to the North Pole?
27682By my troth, why should we fear them, sweetheart?"
27682By what manner of race as yet unborn had its elements been brought together-- no, no--_would_ they be brought together?
27682Can a king unbend-- be merry-- a good fellow with his equals?
27682Can a man-- a poet-- be written?"
27682Can it be doubted that the Americans have royal governors?"
27682Can it be that you have heard no word of these before?"
27682Can this be the suit of the fat knight?"
27682Can you complete these lines, think you?"
27682Can you find Cousin Phoebe to- night?"
27682Can you make aught of it?
27682Can you more fully state the nature of this petition?"
27682Come, where hast put it?"
27682Could n''t we find the folks that was struck with the English language an''get one of''em to go back an''speak to Noah?"
27682Could n''t ye leave the machinery alone?"
27682Could she let him pass on without one glance-- one word?
27682Could this be he?
27682Could we have planned all better had we willed it?
27682Could you make aught of it, Lady Rebecca?"
27682D''ye feel any side weight?"
27682D''ye guess it''ll make us feel sick, like ridin''backward in the cars?"
27682D''ye mean to say ye''ve me in yer mind fer a partner-- with capital?"
27682D''you s''pose I''d touch the nasty stuff?
27682Did I speak funny?"
27682Did he write it?"
27682Did they find p''ison in''em?"
27682Did y''ever see so many?"
27682Did ye hear those girls talkin''Bible language, Phoebe?"
27682Did you bring the wheelbarrow?"
27682Did you feel much side weight then?"
27682Do I apprehend you?"
27682Do I not fit the wizened stamp of Macbeth''s sisters three?"
27682Do any of you girls know who''tis?"
27682Do n''t ye see it lyin''black there against the snow?"
27682Do n''t ye see they''ve stopped to wait fer us?"
27682Do n''t you have''em in London?
27682Do n''t you know the Patent Examiner-- or Commissioner, or Lord High Thingummy that runs the Patent Office here?
27682Do n''t you s''pose they''ve made hills o''money out o''them things-- with patents an''all?"
27682Do you know my father?"
27682Do you perchance make a mock of me, Mistress-- Mistress----?"
27682Do you reely mean to tell me,"she continued, vehemently nodding her head at the Queen,"that you think the''s nothin''but Indians in America?"
27682Do you s''pose he really did?"
27682Dost not feel cold chills in thee, Rebecca?"
27682Doth he ask for a patent of nobility-- a title?
27682Doth he not once turn to thought of self- murder?"
27682Droop cried, suddenly,"what''s that?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Droop?"
27682Elizabeth started haughtily, but recollected herself and repeated:"Was this leaf printed in your country?"
27682Et must be fun to be a queen, eh, Percevall?"
27682Full well she knew its contents, too; for had she not read this very note to Copernicus Droop at the North Pole?
27682Guess you''re pretty middlin''rich, ai n''t ye?"
27682Had he perhaps made a mistake?
27682Had it not been one of her New England collection?
27682Had not Orlando cut Rosalind''s name into the bark of many a helpless tree?
27682Had they been cutting meridians the wrong way?
27682Have not a score of scurvy plots been laid against her life?
27682Have ye got your satchel with the money in it?"
27682Have you considered of this?"
27682Have you many such ingenious gentlemen in your kingdom, Lady Rebecca?"
27682Have you not been acquainted with goldsmiths''wives, and conned them out of rings?"
27682Have you the fabled power to read the soul?
27682Having picked up her umbrella, Rebecca approached this youth and said in a sharp whisper:"Could n''t you get me a chair, sonny?"
27682He craveth a monopoly?
27682He foresaw no trouble in procuring patents for his inventions, but how about the capital for their exploitation?
27682He was chary of words, and after all, did not all the world know what to pay for conveyance to Southwark?
27682Hedn''t you better go, too, Phoebe?"
27682Hev ye missed anythin''?"
27682Hev ye shrunk any yet?"
27682Hev ye some errand with the Queen?"
27682Hez he broken yer door?
27682Honest true?"
27682How assume a comfortable mental attitude toward this creation whose present existence so long antedated its own origin?
27682How be ye?"
27682How comes it I have not had earlier intelligence of her arrival in this realm?"
27682How comes it that in all your fine travels in the New World you have heard no English spoken?"
27682How comes it that we must await so strange a chance as this to learn such weighty news?"
27682How comes it that you have invented these things?
27682How comes it you have so much figurin''to do?"
27682How could we be robbin''him of somethin''he has n''t got?"
27682How dare to show her face?
27682How refuse this request?
27682How say you?"
27682How the fiend''s name came you acquainted?"
27682How, then, canst thou better thee by fighting two?
27682How?"
27682I mean by way of aid in writing-- or e''en of mere suggestion?"
27682I s''pose you''re mad because I''ve interrupted your party, but did n''t that man there invite me in?
27682I''m sure that''s jest as bad as robbin''him, ai n''t it?"
27682Is Mrs. Victoria Tudor at home?"
27682Is everything all right?"
27682Is it you that broke his heart an''made him an old bachelor all his life?"
27682Is not the way clear?
27682Is that it?"
27682Is this a woman of your tribe, my lady?"
27682Is your ma in, young man?"
27682It beareth writing within the circle--''Sois fidèle''--do you see?"
27682Knew ye ever Master Stephen to be forsworn?"
27682Know you aught of the strange woman?
27682Know you not London Bridge and the traitors''poles yet?"
27682Know you not, Sir Knight, that these be parlous days for making of new monopolies?
27682Laying her hand on his arm:"Why, what ails thee, dear heart?"
27682Leaning over the phonograph as Droop started the motor, she looked about her and said, with a titter:"What shall we say?
27682May I have your assistance, friend, in this matter?"
27682May I not be forgiven, sweet girl, or shall I ever stand as I have this day, gazing upward in vain for the dear glance my fault hath forfeited?
27682May I rely on your faithful repetition of this to him?"
27682Mr. Droop,"she continued,"do you hear?
27682My good fellow,"she continued, addressing Jock with an air of condescension that dumfounded her sister,"is not yonder the Southwark pillory?"
27682My lady, why partake you not of the pasty?"
27682My patron is the Earl of Essex----""Why do n''t they give ye a lift?"
27682Never tasted it, either, I s''pose?"
27682No?
27682Not a mere prompting inward sense, but in bodily semblance visiting the poet''s eye?
27682Not mended since yesternight-- what?"
27682Not the one as wrote Shakespeare?"
27682Nothin''?
27682Now she pointed upward with her umbrella and said:"Do you mind tellin''me, mister, what''s thet fruit they''re a- dryin''up on thet meetin''-house?"
27682Now, ef that feller travelled round as fast as the sun, the stay- at- homes would only be one day older by the time he got back-- ain''t that a fact?"
27682Now, methinks''twere but equity and good fellowship for two such as we are to go snacks, eh?
27682Of what play speak you?
27682Oh, please will you do it?"
27682One grove looked much like another, and how was she to choose between garden walls"as like as two peas,"as she expressed it?
27682Or art thou a creature of Fancy''s colors blended, feigning reality?"
27682Phoebe exclaimed, severely,"what_ do_ you s''pose folks would say if Rebecca and I was to set to work makin''baby clothes-- two old maids like us?"
27682Pray tell me, sir, who are they that so besmirch my reputation as to impute to my poor authority the pitiful lines of this rascal player?"
27682Pray what think you of my lines?"
27682Pray, sir, is it a homily or an essay?"
27682Pretty big paper, ai n''t it?"
27682Rebecca looked with troubled eyes into Phoebe''s face and said, timidly:"Wo n''t ye go to a doctor''s with me, Phoebe?"
27682Richard Coor de Lion-- Henry Eight-- no-- or was it Joan of Arc?
27682Say I well-- what?"
27682Say, my Lord of Nottingham, hath the woman a frenzy, think you?"
27682Say,"he exclaimed, brightening up with startling suddenness,"praps you know the racket-- got the inside track, eh?"
27682Shall I not?"
27682Shall I?
27682She felt sure that if Droop reached the Panchronicon alone, he would depart alone, and then what was to become of Phoebe and herself?
27682Shutting his eyes again, he remarked:"What you flashin''that bright light in my eyes so often for?"
27682So to terms, eh?
27682Some fantastic reverie limned for amusement?"
27682Spreading forth his two fat hands, he continued:"Spake I not fairly?
27682Standing up in the boat:"What''s the Queen''s last name?"
27682Tell me, dame, come you from the New World?"
27682The machine do n''t need it, an'', besides, I''ve got to eat, have n''t I?"
27682The''ai n''t anythin''in the Bible''bout it, is the''?"
27682Then he burst out suddenly:"Ye know the graphophone an''the kodak and the biograph an''all them things what ye can see down to Keene?"
27682Then how explain you this?"
27682Then to the boy:"Know you him who cut the letters?"
27682Then turning to Lady Margaret again, she continued:"Would you mind runnin''down to ask who that man is, Miss Margaret?
27682Then with a coaxing tone and looking with appealing archness at her sister, she went on:"Is it really like me, Rebecca?
27682Then, after a pause, he continued, in a stern voice:"How many be they?"
27682Then, as she still remained undecided, he continued, in an undertone:"Cousin Phoebe''s up in her room, ai n''t she?
27682Then, glancing all about him:"Ai n''t there any smaller glasses''round here?"
27682Then, in pleading tones, she continued:"Didst not agree to trust thy lady, dear?"
27682Then, turning once more to the still approaching barge, she continued:"An''so thet''s Queen Victoria''s ship, is it?"
27682Then, turning to the stupefied and trembling waterman:"Why do n''t you row, you?
27682Then, with some dismay:"Here you, mister, do n''t ye want yer money?"
27682Then--"Miss Wise-- Miss Wise-- are ye to home?"
27682There was no further conversation until long afterward, when Rebecca suddenly remarked:"Are n''t ye hungry, Phoebe?"
27682Thet''s so, ai n''t it, Phoebe?"
27682They trotted quietly past the greater number of the group until a dark figure approached and a voice in the gloom said, severely:"What dost thou here?
27682Think you this be law?"
27682Thinkest thou I came hither to smell civet?
27682This is what he says:"''Dear Poll''--horrid nickname, is n''t it?"
27682Those very words?"
27682Turning now to the younger sister, Droop asked, in a melancholy tone:"Do n''t you want to get rich, Cousin Phoebe?"
27682Turning then to the impatient gentleman waiting at the door:"Guess you''re one o''the family, ai n''t ye?
27682Turning to a gentleman at his elbow:"Can you tell me, sir,"he said,"who is yonder stranger in outlandish apparel?"
27682Was it Russian, Japanese, or Italian?
27682Was she pressed out through the wall?"
27682We have n''t packed only a few things,''cause I expect we''ll find all our old duds ready for us in 1892, wo n''t we?"
27682We wo n''t have to do any washing on the way, will we?"
27682What ails ye?"
27682What amazing quality was it that stamped its impress upon the maiden''s face-- a something he had never seen or dreamed of?
27682What are golden rings to these?"
27682What could it be?
27682What do you charge for ferryin''folks across the river?"
27682What do you mean?"
27682What have ye to say to this, mistress?"
27682What in thunder_ do_ ye sell, then?"
27682What is it makes the days go by-- ain''t it the daily revolution of the sun?"
27682What is this book, Lady Rebecca?"
27682What is your pleasure?"
27682What may your worship require by way of food and drink?"
27682What mean you?
27682What o''clock is it?"
27682What of my aunt-- my gowns?"
27682What play give they to- night?"
27682What player?"
27682What say ye, sir?"
27682What say you?
27682What say you?"
27682What says my Lord Baron?"
27682What the devil, man; must we quarrel perforce?"
27682What time''ll that be?"
27682What unknown and incomprehensible forces were locked within that formless mass?
27682What would you counsel?"
27682What!--doth the cap fit?"
27682What''ll it feel like-- livin''backward that way?
27682What''s that fer?
27682What''s the matter, anyway?
27682What''s the matter, anyway?
27682What''s the old Pan lyin''on it''s side fer?"
27682What''s the shortest cut to Eastcheap?"
27682What''s the use o''tryin''to scare a body with gibberish?
27682What?"
27682What_ could_ this man want with her sister?
27682When was that tuck, Miss Wise?"
27682When was you born, Cousin Phoebe?"
27682Whence had you it?"
27682Where are you?"
27682Where do you s''pose we''d be?"
27682Where is he, boy?"
27682Where is the woman?"
27682Where next could she find shelter?
27682Where shall I find you?
27682Where''s the quean will be his consort?
27682Wherein doth it concern Francis Bacon?"
27682Whiskey, say you?"
27682Who calls?"
27682Who gave ye license to miscall our glorious sovereign?"
27682Who in Sam Hill was runnin''things in 1598?
27682Who is it, anyway?"
27682Who rides with thee, lass?"
27682Why could n''t you show that at the World''s Fair an''get a patent fer it?"
27682Why do n''t ye jest set up as the inventor o''this machine?
27682Why not go round twice a minute?"
27682Why seek the shadow of the Tower?"
27682Why sit you here amazed?
27682Why undeceive her sister?
27682Why wo n''t they do?"
27682Why-- don''t I talk as good English as any of ye?
27682Will you accept new clothing and rich-- for old and worn?"
27682Will you go, sir, without delay, if that I speak for you the missing lines completing young Hamlet''s soliloquy?"
27682Will you have horses-- men- at- arms?"
27682Will your Majesty but look at this drawing on one of the inner pages of the printed document brought by the Lady Rebecca?
27682Wo n''t he see the sun gettin''left behind an''whirlin''the other way from what it does in nature?
27682Wo n''t you run''s quick''s ever you can to Si Pray, an''ask him to bring his gun?
27682Would he go by unheeding?
27682Ye do n''t happen to have any tea, do ye?"
27682Ye''ve heerd it, no doubt?"
27682You do n''t s''pose he stole it out o''the Panchronicle, do ye?"
27682You know where Sir Guy Fenton may be found?"
27682Your Grace of Devonshire, what say you to this?"
27682cried Elizabeth,"hast lost thy voice, man?"
27682cried Rebecca,"did n''t Si Wilkins''boy Sam say he seen a comet in broad daylight last June?"
27682exclaimed Rebecca,"how ken you laugh so?
27682he cried,"an''what will happen ef that traveller whirls round, cuttin''meridians jest twice as fast as the sun-- goin''the same way?"
27682he cried,"soon to be Sir Isaac?"
27682he exclaimed,"what is sticking out, friend?"
27682he said, with a whirling movement of the hand,"an''let me see how it looks in the back?"
27682said Droop, drawing forth his flask of nineteenth- century rye,"never heerd o''whiskey, eh?
27682said Rebecca, conscious for the first time of her slip,"did that puzzle ye?"
27682said Rebecca, with an expression of immense relief,"I do n''t believe the''s any hens an''roosters in Infinite Space, is the''?"
27682she cried, as she caught sight of Phoebe,"art here, then?
27682she cried,"do you know what time it is?
27682what''s this?"
40889So he is anxious to throw away his brooms, is he?
40889And may we add the ubiquitous"Kodaker"?
40889But if very much in love to what deception of this kind might he not stoop?
40889But the two lads, knowing there was no water near, exclaimed,"You tell us to drink, but where shall we find water?
40889One was Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau( 1587- 1611?)
40889To which the newcomer replied,"And so am I. Shall we venture down together?"
40889What brings you here?"
40889What the future of this favoured and beautiful land may be, who can tell?
40889Who knows?
40701AND WHAT PREVENTS OUR DOING IT?
40701Chapter I.--What Is an Aquarium?
40701Chapter VI.--What Is Anemone?
40701Foolscap 4to, price 1_s._ 6_d._ WHY MUST WE EDUCATE THE WHOLE PEOPLE?
40701How do they get there?
40701PAGE Chapter I.--What is an Aquarium?
40701WHAT IS AN ANEMONE?
40701WHAT IS AN AQUARIUM?
40701What happens when we put half- a- dozen gold fish into a globe?
36590And how may you know that you have reached to philosophy? 36590 And what rôle are you most anxious to play?"
36590And you, are you also a woman?
36590Are you insured?
36590Dirty drab and rose- pink, with their silly cancelling contest--does not that sum up the English drama of the last few years?
36590Have I ever behaved to you in an ungentlemanlike manner?
36590Have I ever kicked you?
36590Have you ever seen me in this before?
36590I suppose,he said,"that you want to become a great actress?"
36590If it were I, what would you do?
36590Is this love or is it not?
36590No, it is not strange, really,--do you remember the kind of work she was engaged upon?
36590Now, sir, if a man who had a heart wanted to marry me in full consciousness of my past, should I have the right to accept him?
36590School mistresses and governesses, shop- girls, dressmakers, cooks, housemaids,--what are your fatigues to those of an actress?
36590Then why be so foolish as to do it?
36590Well, and how did it end?
36590Well, what is it then?
36590What does that matter?
36590What has that got to do with what we are talking about?
36590What is love?
36590What is this?
36590What would the world say if it knew you had allowed your mistress to invite it to dinners and dances under the guise of being your wife?
36590What, then, is a man?
36590Who the devil are you?
36590Will you allow me to ask you,says Charles Courtly in the last scene,"an impertinent question?"
36590You wo n''t? 36590 You would still be of the same opinion even though the man were of your own rank,... were a friend of yours,... were your son?"
36590( But was the public which applauded_ School_ and_ Society_ sufficiently advanced in its artistic education to enjoy these things?)
36590(_ Sings._)''Who ran to catch me when I fell?
36590*****_ Naomi_:..."Are you fond of reading?"
36590A husband staking his wife at a game of écarté-- is not this melodrama?
36590Ah, then( he resumes), she had turned down the page when he had interrupted her?
36590Analytical or dogmatic, comparative, anecdotical or facetious?
36590And after all, why not?
36590And in truth, does Shakespeare cease to be Shakespeare because in Irving''s hand he is also a mine of gold?
36590And the Future, what of it?
36590And what had she been reading?
36590And what is one to say of the love idyll appended to the historical drama, in spite of history, in spite of the drama itself?
36590And what is one to say of the"Profligate"himself?
36590And what was it they had to offer in place of the old order?
36590And what was this silly novel of hers?
36590And whither is he making?
36590And would such an institution really help to the perfecting of the art?
36590And you, doubtless-- you helped her?"
36590Are they not one of the forces of the national mind, one of the reasons of England''s existence?
36590Are we slaves, we working- men?
36590Are we to believe that the gambling scene in the third act takes place in an aristocratic club?
36590But after all, was it incumbent on the author to give us Tanqueray''s psychology?
36590But are they really historical dramas?
36590But do you let your daughters read the Bible?
36590But even then?
36590But how does he set about it, this reformer?
36590But how to get nature and art to combine together in the same work?
36590But is he so vile as he seems, as at first we are inclined to regard him?
36590But is it true?
36590But is life the dream or is the dream life?
36590But is the resuscitation of Shakespeare productive of nothing but good?
36590But may this not be that for one reason or another their competency, except in the case of some of them, is inferior to their pretensions?
36590But shall we exact from him that he should have a real craving to deceive when he impersonates a hypocrite?
36590But what cares the author of_ The Masqueraders_, whether the incidents be improbable and his situations artificial?
36590But what has become of the English drama that M. Filon has given so many of the following pages to discuss and dissect?
36590But what is an anachronism of this kind compared to that which involves the principal character in one continued topsy- turveydom?
36590But what is it she has to do in the three other pieces?
36590But what prevented the drama from being"English"?
36590But will they ever find the thirty years that they have lost?
36590By what prejudices-- religious, philosophical, æsthetic-- has it been impeded?
36590By what racial affinities was the way for this influence prepared?
36590Can one say the same, however, of the ideas?
36590Can you dance?
36590Did the great British public get a glimmer of Newman''s lofty idea of the continual indwelling miraculous spiritual force of the Church?
36590Did the great British public get a glimmer of William Morris''s lofty idea of making every home in England beautiful?
36590Do you let them read Shakespeare?
36590Do you see?"
36590Does one go to the theatre to see life depicted upon the stage, or, on the contrary, to escape from life and forget it?
36590Does the play bear out the promises of its title?
36590Fool that she was, why did she ever want to be married?
36590For can we doubt that, had this excellent method suggested itself, it would have been instantly adopted?
36590From the superiority of Parisian taste?
36590Had a man any right to be a success in two trades at once?
36590Has he not everything required for the purpose?
36590Has he not run too great a risk in confiding the education of a pure- minded girl to an adulteress?
36590Has it not been accompanied by certain drawbacks which are still evident, and by certain dangers all of which have not been successfully surmounted?
36590Has she been guilty or merely imprudent?
36590Has she ceased to love her husband and to appreciate the sacrifice he has made for her?
36590Has the question ever been better set?
36590Have you ever been married?"
36590Have you got good legs?"
36590He could assure her of it?
36590He used to ask his small boy, whilst walking with him in Belsize Park, what he would answer to such and such a question?
36590His enemies have broken his windows: what does he do?
36590How do people put up with him?
36590How do we find Julius intervening in the interests of his son?
36590How does he set about the management of this?
36590How far has her vengeance carried her?
36590How far has she gone in her search?
36590How had the type of the company- promoter been modified in the course of thirty years?
36590How is it they let him into their houses?
36590How is this genealogical mystery to be solved?
36590How much does Sir George know?
36590How was it she had a light still in her window?
36590How was it that under these conditions Henry Irving''s vocation for the theatre came out?
36590How were they to make an English play out of it?
36590How would he set about enraging his master?
36590How would it be if we were passionately in love with her?
36590How would they take this caricature of themselves?
36590How?
36590I began with the question: Is there a living English drama at the present moment?
36590I wonder what Algiers looks like this morning from the sea?
36590Idealism, or the House of Commons?
36590If the play be theoretically bad, how is it that we listen to it, moved or amused, without a moment of fatigue?
36590If this is not burlesque, what is it?
36590In this strange conflict between laws and manners, upon which side will the drama definitively take up its stand?
36590In what particulars does the English speculator differ from his French compeer?
36590Is Irving to quit the stage without attempting an Ibsen part?
36590Is he absolutely sincere?
36590Is his affection quite so rational as he asserts?
36590Is it better or worse?
36590Is it not curious that the Sagas should have been the common source of Carlyle''s last work, and of the most important poem of William Morris?
36590Is it not one of the rules of his profession to bring down the curtain on a witticism?
36590Is it out of a kind of revenge that he has continued to rail at love ever since?
36590Is it possible that she has learnt all this during the entr''acte, whilst the orchestra got through a waltz?
36590Is the censorship more favourable to manners than it is oppressive to talent?
36590Is the establishment of a national theatre, which should serve at once as a school and a standard, a practicable idea?
36590Is there a dramatic idea underlying_ Becket_,_ Queen Mary_, and_ Harold_?
36590Is_ this_ right?
36590Jones?"
36590Not quite so far, surely?"
36590Now that Ibsen is known in England, what influence does he exert, or will he continue to exert in the future, upon English dramatic literature?
36590Once publication was no longer attended by risk, how could they hold aloof from this new form of success?
36590Or check it with satire and ridicule?
36590Or else you put before me things, ideas, and modes of life of which I know nothing; and how am I to determine their degree of truth and reality?"
36590Or will it be Mr. Haddon Chambers, who is already known in Paris, one of his works,_ The Fatal Card_, having crossed the channel?
36590Or will it turn aside from such things altogether, and aspire to those serene heights of art, to which the noises of the plain can never reach?
36590Otherwise, what would become of the crisis of this"Faultless Third Act"?
36590Ought the English dramatist to accept the collaboration of the actor- manager, and to what extent?
36590Repeat those lines evening after evening till he got addled?
36590Shall this mindless wretch enjoy in his sleep a jewelled gaud while his poor old grandfather is_ thirsty_?
36590Shall we try it?"
36590Sir Philip swallows his laudanum( or is it strychnine?)
36590So she had been reading, eh?
36590Supposing they had a game now?
36590Tanqueray_?
36590That phrase of his--"Who''s this rude gentleman?"
36590Then, when he cries out,"Christians, will you never learn to forgive?"
36590There is something at once virile and moving in this passage, but how many such cases are to be found in this tragedy?
36590These things succeeded in attracting the public, but_ what_ public?
36590This is precisely what Mr. Grundy sets out to show us, but is his representation of it accurate, lifelike, credible?
36590This study, direct from nature-- from the life-- is not without difficulty, even to Englishmen; how much less easy must it be to a Frenchman?
36590To sup instead of dining, does not this in itself suggest a whole conception of life?
36590To the dramatist''s art, or to the ideas which inform his work?
36590To what does it owe its strength?
36590To what is this due?
36590To which of the two does the child belong-- to him who begat but abandoned it, or to him who took pity on it and brought it up?
36590Twenty or twenty- five years ago a manager''s first question of a girl coming to him for an engagement would be--"Can you sing?
36590Up to what point may Shakespeare be imitated with profit?
36590Was there not a law against this kind of pluralism, tacitly agreed upon by critics, and applied by them with remorseless rigour?
36590Was this Jerrold''s fault, or that of a public which insisted upon monster jokes and monster crimes?
36590Were you a horse- soldier or a foot- soldier?"
36590What are the dangers, and what the advantages, inherent in the system which leaves all the great theatres in the hands of actor- managers?
36590What are the rights and the duties of the critic?
36590What business had this old man to start on a new career, and a career requiring all the powers of youth?
36590What had she been doing?
36590What has wax- doll morality to do with them?
36590What induced him to believe that he had developed faculties at an age at which it is more usual to repeat and re- read oneself?
36590What is it intended to do?
36590What is it that makes her stay?
36590What is lacking?
36590What is one to think of Diderot''s paradox about the actors''art, and what do actors think of it themselves?
36590What is the mysterious reason why we can put up with these absurdities and take an interest in them?
36590What is the reason that it hears nothing, or next to nothing, about the English drama?
36590What life is there in the drama that has followed?
36590What mattered it, however, to the writer, who was expected only to praise the pieces and the performers, without being too much of a bore?
36590What part will it play, and what place will it assume, in the renovation of England by the democracy?
36590What prevents her?
36590What sort of criticism was required to this end?
36590What was he to do?
36590What was the social position of actors in former times, and what will it be in the future?
36590What will they do?
36590When will philosophy come to our aid and depose this silly rose- pink wax- doll morality?
36590Whence is this difference?
36590Where does it paint one living English character?
36590Where does it touch one single interest of our present life, one single concern of man''s body, soul, or spirit?
36590Where shall we drive to, mother?
36590Where, then, was the problem?
36590Which of the two is Mr. Jones turning into ridicule?
36590Which of these portraits tells the truth?
36590Who is it that advises her to bring about this scandal?
36590Who then will succeed to the censor?
36590Who will take the lead amongst the younger school of dramatists?
36590Who will write the_ Judahs_,_ The Second Mrs. Tanquerays_ of to- morrow?
36590Who would not be, in the presence of so charming a woman?
36590Whom shall I recognise as an English character, or even as a human type?
36590Why should not such love as this have its drama and its romance, as it has its anguishes, its sacrifices, and its joys?
36590Why should not the spectator also be endowed with the same critical instinct?
36590Why should she not succeed?
36590Why should the drama be logical when life is not?
36590Why should there not be a double irony for the clever, just as there is a_ galimatias double_ for the dull?
36590Why then should he not secure the aid of real music by a musician?
36590Why, when you behold it you love it,--and you will not encourage it?--or only when presented by dead hands?
36590Why?
36590Will it be Mr. Louis N. Parker, Mr. Malcolm Watson, or Mr. J. M. Barrie?
36590Will it be believed that it was from such a standpoint that objection was first raised against the acceptance of Ibsen?
36590Will it help democracy with earnest homilies?
36590Will they be artists or artizans?
36590Will they be respected because of their profession, like the judge, the clergyman, the officer, or only in spite of it?
36590Will they ever be brought to understand?
36590Will they stoop to the conditions of the trade, or rise to the requirements of the art?
36590With whom should one commence?
36590Would you have supposed that there would be material enough in this to furnish forth three hours''entertainment?
36590You can guess what is the first question of Galatea,"Who am I?"
36590_ Crumbs_:"Has your brother no one to speak for him?"
36590_ Crumbs_:"Where shall I find them?"
36590_ Drummle_:"Eh?"
36590_ Galatea_:(_ Horrified, takes Myrine''s hand_)"To wake no more?"
36590_ Jack_(_ bows_):"The fibs or the truth?"
36590_ Naomi_:"And that you were in the Crimea?"
36590_ Naomi_:"At the battle of Inkermann?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Did they pay you much for fighting?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Did you ever read Othello?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Did you fight?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Oh, you must be something?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Then why did n''t you mention it?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Then why did you stay?"
36590_ Naomi_:"Were n''t you frightened?"
36590_ Naomi_:"What are you?"
36590_ Naomi_:"What were you before you were what you are now?"
36590_ Paula_:"Does n''t that define a happy marriage?
36590or that he should be in love with the actress who has to enact a love scene with him?
36590or thirst for blood when he accomplishes a stage murder?
36590who will be censor when the Censorship has been abolished?
31666And has the time indeed come that I can thus speak calmly of all that horror? 31666 But if you are not guilty, Ludovic,_ who can be the murderer_?
31666But what are these, So wither''d and so wild in their attire; That look not like th''inhabitants o''the earth, And yet are on''t? 31666 But where,"murmurs Matilda,"are we going?"
31666Flora, where are you? 31666 God''s truth?"
31666Is he gaun to be lang, Hamish?
31666Ony meat-- ony meat-- ony meat?
31666What body is this? 31666 What wonder, then, if I, whose favourite School Hath been the fields, the roads, and rural lanes, Look''d on this Guide with reverential love?
31666What''s your name, my man?
31666What? 31666 Where-- where is Ludovic Adamson?"
31666Who dares to condemn the deed? 31666 Who forgives?
31666Who is he that bounds with joy On Carrock''s side, a shepherd boy? 31666 Who will try me,"cries Kit,"at loup- the- barrows?"
31666Wild swans, they say, are come to Loch- Phoil-- let us go, Ranald, and see them-- but no rifle-- for why kill creatures said to be so beautiful?
31666Yet you would not curse her now-- were she lying here at your feet-- or if you were standing by her deathbed?
31666--"Hamish, are they bagged?"
31666A Banker?
31666A Millionaire?
31666A Nabob?
31666A breezy coolness, with a sprinkling of rain?
31666A head?
31666A merry- making in the moor?
31666A retired Judge?
31666Age is the season of Imagination, youth of Passion; and having been long young, shall we repine that we are now old?
31666All these are splendid schemes-- but what say you, Hamish, to one less ambitious, and better adapted to Old Kit?
31666Am I like a murderer?"
31666An Ex- Lord Chancellor?
31666And are there not now-- have there never been young Poets?
31666And call you that solitude?
31666And dare we say, after that, that Campbell has never written a Great Poem?
31666And did her parents, soon after she was buried, die of broken hearts, or pine away disconsolately to their graves?
31666And how can that full speed be anything more than a slow heavy hand- gallop at the best, the Barbs being up to the belly at every stroke?
31666And how could the great north- country horse- coupers perform their contracts, but for the triumphs of the Turf?
31666And how dare ye to think me the criminal?
31666And how happened it that only by nights and dark nights it was so haunted?
31666And how many, think ye-- three, six, twelve?
31666And if a good one, will the company not be social?
31666And if all the population were gone, or extinct, where then would be your social life?
31666And if there be a dinner, should it not be a good one?
31666And is it a disgrace to an age to produce a genius whose grandeur it can not all at once comprehend?
31666And is it thus that we sportsmen spend our time on the Moors?
31666And is not the law the same in the world of Literature and the Fine Arts?
31666And is not this the state of best happiness for mortal man?
31666And is not"The Fairy Queen"a Great Poem?
31666And is the spirit of the inhabitation there worthy of the place inhabited?
31666And may Genius and Talent indeed be, conceive, and execute, without the support of Virtue?
31666And of all the Lomond Isles, what one rises up in the sudden illumination so bright as Inch- Cruin?
31666And said we truly that Age is the season of Imagination?
31666And that he will not run away?
31666And the great English Moralist has asked, where may a Scotsman be found who loves not the honour or the glory of his country better than truth?
31666And then, when suddenly interrogated,"Where were you?"
31666And these figures in men''s coats and women''s petticoats are females?
31666And think ye not that an Eagle glorifies the sky more than a Condor?
31666And up which of its sides, pray, was it that we crawled?
31666And was I old?
31666And was the revealer of those high mysteries in his youth a deer- stealer in the parks of Warwickshire, a linkboy in London streets?
31666And what can surpass many of the Shepherd''s songs?
31666And what could have been done for them, had they been told by some good or evil spirit that their children were in the clutches of such a night?
31666And what is not in the power of the gentlemen of England?
31666And what may he be purposing to shoot?
31666And what may mean that sighing and moaning and muttering up among the cliffs?
31666And what the worse have we been of being thus revolved?
31666And what''s the use of them to us now, or indeed at any time?
31666And what''s the use of this identical rod?
31666And who showed him the Swerga''s Bowers of Bliss?
31666And who so eloquent as he in expounding its most dreadful mysteries?
31666And why does he seek to hide his right hand in his bosom?
31666And why should any rueful lamentation have been wailed over the senseless dust?
31666And would we be so barbarous as to seek to impede the progress of improvement, and to render agriculture a dead letter?
31666And, having stolen them, to what use did he turn the treasures?
31666Any lochs?
31666Any rivers?
31666Are not our living yet as brave as our dead?
31666Are the Polish patriots degraded by working at eighteenpence a- day, without victuals, on embankments of railroads?
31666Are then"The Seasons"and"The Task"Great Poems?
31666Are they going to execute the murderer in his shroud?
31666Art thou afraid to touch the dead?"
31666At his retort?
31666At last, almost fiercely, he uttered,"Who dares denounce my son?"
31666Buried-- said we?
31666Burst and rent asunder, art thou now lying buried in a peat- moss?
31666But God it was who had removed them from our earth-- and was it possible to doubt that they were all in blessedness?
31666But are not his pictures sometimes too crowded?
31666But are you sure, gents,_ that we are on_?
31666But could he not have died of cold, thirst, and hunger-- of starvation?
31666But did the Boroughmonger ever produce a Great Poem?
31666But had not his father often visited the prisoner''s cell?
31666But has Bowles written a Great Poem?
31666But has he-- even he-- ever written a Great Poem?
31666But how has it been with us in our Green Island of the West?
31666But in all the ordinary affairs of life, have not the best the best chance to win the day?
31666But in what direction shall we go, callants-- towards what airt shall we turn our faces?
31666But is it a Great Poem?
31666But is it or is it not a land where all the faculties of the soul are free as they ever were since the Fall?
31666But is it our intention to sit scribbling here all day?
31666But is not this a material creed?
31666But is ours a true picture?
31666But is that any proof that nature has cursed the race with a fatal tendency to multiply beyond the means of subsistence?
31666But is the statement not borne out by facts?
31666But let us speak only of this earth-- this world-- this life-- and is not Age the season of Imagination?
31666But must all true poetry necessarily create imitation, and a school of imitators?
31666But pray, how does the man write poetry with a pen upon paper, who thus is perpetually pouring it from his inspired lips?
31666But shall the men in authority dare to stay the execution at a maniac''s words?
31666But the simple question is, Do the poems of Ossian delight greatly and widely?
31666But were there no Lochs in our parish?
31666But wha''s that snorin?"
31666But what Apparitions at the Tent- door salute our approach?
31666But what Fairy is this coming unawares on us sitting by the side of the most lucid of little wells?
31666But what comet is yon in the sky--"with fear of change perplexing mallards?"
31666But what has misery to do with the comfort of its habitation?
31666But what is that to the principle of the Worm?
31666But what mean we by saying that"The Seasons"are a national subject?--do we assert that they are solely Scottish?
31666But what more could he have done?
31666But what was that to me who thirsted for his blood?
31666But what''s this?
31666But what_ is_ our age?
31666But whence come they-- the little scholars-- who are all murmuring there?
31666But where art thou, Hamish?
31666But where have her gowans gone?
31666But where is the Burn?
31666But where the devil are the ducks?
31666But where''s the Sun?
31666But where, Hamish, are all the flappers, the mawsies, and the mallards?
31666But who can be querulous on such a day?
31666But who shouts from the shore, Hamish-- and now, as if through his fingers, sends forth a sharp shrill whistle that pierces the sky?
31666But why try to recount, however feebly, the line of defence taken by the speaker, who on that day seemed all but inspired?
31666But why, we ask, did Dryden suffer a ribald king and court to debase and degrade him, and strangle his immortal strain?
31666But without racing and fox- hunting, where could it be found?
31666But would all those blossoms have been fruit?
31666But you would rather see a storm, and hear some Highland thunder?
31666But-- heaven preserve us!--what is the angelic creature about?
31666By that fine line in the"Pleasures of Hope"--"To muse on Nature with a poet''s eye?"
31666Call that pond a lake-- and by a word how is it transfigured?
31666Can it be a spring-- or merely the axle- tree?
31666Can not they, indeed?
31666Can the bird fly the air?
31666Can the camel speed over the desert?
31666Can the fish traverse the waters?
31666Can there be an eclipse going on-- an earthquake at his toilette-- or merely a brewing of storm?
31666Can this be He that hither came In secret, like a smother''d flame?
31666Can you say many psalms and hymns?
31666Can you, Mac, how can you resist that Pulpit?
31666Cheviot, Leicester, Southdown?
31666Close your eyes but for a moment-- and when you look again, where is the Cloud- Cleaver now?
31666Could it be that he groaned in remorse over some secret crime?
31666Could we swim?
31666Did England, then, keep Bloomfield in comfort, and scatter flowers along the smooth and sunny path that led him to the grave?
31666Did either of them ever write one?
31666Did he ever, by way of giving dinner a fair commencement, swallow a tureen of hare- soup with half- a- peck of mealy potatoes?
31666Did imagination ever create scenery more Scottish, Manners, Morals, Life?
31666Did n''t ye hear something crack?
31666Did not that stone image wax more and more lifelike in its repose?
31666Did patriotism ever inspire genius with sentiment more Scottish than_ that_?
31666Did some vulgar villain of a village Vulcan convert thee, name and nature, into nails?
31666Did we not always tell you that fairies were indeed realities of the twilight or moonlight world?
31666Didst thou take us for a water- kelpie?
31666Do they not embosom him in a style of grandeur worthy, if such it be, of a"City of Palaces?"
31666Do they, indeed?
31666Do we look like Excisemen?
31666Do you desire a close sultry breathless gloom?
31666Do you long for wings, and envy the Eagle?
31666Do you think you could recollect one of your sermons?
31666Do you think yourself alone?
31666Do you wonder how one mind can have such vivid consciousness of the feelings of another, while their characters are cast in such different moulds?
31666Dumb?
31666During such journeyings we never saw the moor, how then can you expect us to describe it?
31666Eh?
31666Everything is romantic that is pastoral-- and what more pastoral than sheep?
31666Faster they fall and faster-- the flakes are almost as large as leaves-- and overhead whence so suddenly has come that huge yellow cloud?
31666For shelter and a poor man''s bread?"
31666For what is its design?
31666From what point of the compass would we come on our rushing vans?
31666Had he gained the Cup at the Great North Show?
31666Had the hut put already on the strange, dim, desolate look of mortality?
31666Had they heard aright the unimaginable confession?
31666Hamish, who are these strange, suspicious- looking strangers thitherwards- bound, as hallan- shaker a set as may be seen on an August day?
31666Harlequin art thou-- or Columbine?
31666Has Coleridge, then, ever written a Great Poem?
31666Has it not a wild twang on the tongue and palate, far preferable to sheep''s- head?
31666Has not wide over earth"England sent her men, of men the chief, To plant the Tree of Life, to plant fair Freedom''s Tree?"
31666Have I frightened her away into the wood by my unfatherly looks?
31666Have not millions of men and women done so, rather than sacrifice their conscience?
31666Have we, then, Christopher North, that gift?
31666Have you any intention, dear reader, of building a house in the country?
31666Have you your horse- pistol with you to- day, surveyor?
31666Have you?
31666He deserved death-- and whence was doom to come but from me the Avenger?
31666Heard you ever the like o''that?
31666Heardst thou ever such a syren as this Celtic child?
31666Hecate''s forefinger mixes it in a quaich with mountain- dew-- and that is Atholl- brose?
31666Hollo, you there; friend, what sport?
31666How far off from our Tent may be the Loch?
31666How far off from our Tent may be the mountains at the head of the Glen?
31666How goes it, Cappy?
31666How is it, pray, that our souls are satiated with such beauty as this?
31666How is this?
31666Idle?
31666If death befall, what wonder?
31666If such fire still be in the dry wood, what must it have been in the green?
31666Ilk happing bird, wee, helpless thing, That, in the merry months o''spring, Delighted me to hear thee sing, What comes o''thee?
31666In a boat, upon a great sea- arm, at night, among mountains, who would be so senseless, so soulless as to speak?
31666In a cave, or within the Fairies''Knowe?
31666In the body?
31666In the third place, what shall we say of the poetical influence of STILLS?
31666In what guidance but that of his own genius did he descend with the Destroyer into the Domdaniel Caves?
31666In what page of the New Testament am I told to forgive her?
31666Indeed, gentlemen, you have reason to be ashamed of yourselves-- but where is the awkward squad?
31666Is he blind?
31666Is it a sterile region?
31666Is it electric matter in the atmosphere-- or fear and wrath that illumine his wings?
31666Is not that Ham beautiful in the calm consciousness of his protection?
31666Is not that strange?
31666Is that a house?
31666Is that snow?
31666Is that the character of the whole region?
31666Is that the creaking and groaning, and rooking and tossing of old trees, afraid of being uprooted and flung into the spate?
31666Is that the pluffer at partridge- pouts who had nearly been the death of poor Ponto?
31666Is there no energy, no spirit of adventure and enterprise, no passion in the character of our country?
31666Is there no nook of earth perfectly solitary-- but must natural or supernatural footsteps haunt the remotest and most central places?
31666Is there not something very sweet in his sunny smile?
31666Is youth a plea for wickedness?
31666Is"Childe Harold,"then, a Great Poem?
31666It is found frequently apart from prudence and principle; and in a world constituted like ours, how can it fail to reap a harvest of misery or death?
31666It is giving birds a chance for their lives, and is it not ungenerous to grudge it?
31666Knowledge is power to the poet as it is power to all men-- and indeed without Art and Science what is Poetry?
31666Let the Radicals set poor human nature on her legs again, and what would become of_ them_?
31666Live you?
31666Lovers as they were, might not the unhappy girl have given them to him for temporary keepsakes?
31666Macpherson''s"Ossian,"is it not poetry?
31666May this be Loch- Etive?
31666Mont Blanc might be as big again; but what then, if without his glaciers?
31666No answer; are you deaf?
31666Nor have we any doubt that things were every whit as bad in the time of the patriarchs-- else-- whence the satirical sneer,"sham Abraham?"
31666Not old-- how do we know that?
31666Not"Lear,"Hamlet,"Othello,""Macbeth?"
31666Now for the orphan family-- marked ye them round"The swelling instep of the mountain''s foot?"
31666Now, are you not, as we hinted, a prodigious ninny?
31666Now, be candid-- did you ever sleep in perfectly dry sheets in a Cottage ornà © e?
31666Now, we beg leave to decline answering our own question-- has he ever written a Great Poem?
31666Now, what more could have done a detonator in the hands of the devil himself?
31666Of what breed was the Tup?
31666Oh, why think of burial when gazing on that resplendent head?
31666On the sunset in the heaven-- or the sunset in the lake?
31666On their meeting seemed not to them the whole of nature suddenly inspired with joy and beauty?
31666On which of the two sunsets art thou now gazing?
31666Or have I suffered her to become one of the miserable multitude who support hated and hateful life by prostitution?
31666Ours is a poetical age; but has it produced one Great Poem?
31666Peter the wild boy, how are you off for wind?"
31666Pure Shelty you say, Hamish?
31666Ross- shire?
31666Sagittarius, think you, you could hit, at twoscore, a haystack flying?
31666Saw ye ever banks and braes and knolls so beautifully bedropt with human dwellings?
31666Sawest thou ever the bosom of the Lake hushed into profounder rest?
31666Sent hither by the Queen of the sea- fairies to bear back in state Christopher North to the Tent?
31666Shall such creatures disturb the equanimity of the magnanimous working- classes of England?
31666Shall we never be done with our soliloquy?
31666Shall we slay him where he stands, or let him vanish in silent glidings in among his native woods?
31666She forsook this bosom-- but tell me if it was in disgust with these my scars?"
31666Shoot her sitting?
31666Since there has to her been so much suffering-- was there on her part no sin?
31666So much for description-- an art in which the Public( God bless her, where is she now-- and shall we ever see her more?)
31666So we are known, it seems, in the Still-- by the men of the Worm?
31666Some dark- visaged Douglas of a henroost- robbing Egyptian, solder thee into a pan?
31666Some knight who perhaps had fought in Palestine,--or some holy man, who in the Abbey-- now almost gone-- had led a long still life of prayer?
31666Such a creature-- such creatures-- may have been; but the question is-- did you ever see one?
31666Such were her words to the dying man; and all at once he took her in his arms, and asked her"If she had no fears of the narrow house?"
31666That Tongue mutely eloquent in his praise?
31666That is a most indeterminate mode of expression, for there are nights of all sorts and sizes, and what kind of a night do we mean?
31666That is a true image; but is"The Pelican Island"a Great Poem?
31666That, in our pride, we could not stomach; but if ours had not been the sin by which Satan fell, where now had been the excellent Howley?
31666The Senior Fellow of a College?
31666The board is spread-- why not fall to and eat?
31666The child stole close behind her father, and kissing his cheek, said,"Were there ever such lovely flowers seen in Ulswater before, father?
31666The father his profligate son, or disobedient daughter?
31666The feeble, the ignorant, and the base, or the strong, the instructed, and the bold?
31666The proof of the pudding is in the eating of it; and where, we ask, were the British cavalry ever overthrown?
31666The thoughts and feelings-- to whom by divine right did they belong?
31666Then I may have confessed that I was guilty-- did I, or did I not, confess it?
31666Then all at once a hundred voices repeated the same words,"Where-- where is Ludovic Adamson?"
31666Then has he no tenderness-- no pathos-- no beauty?
31666Then why change altogether the character of your domicile and your establishment?
31666They have packed, Hamish-- they have packed, early as it yet is in the season; and the question is--_What shall we do?_ We have it.
31666Think ye there is no scenery there?
31666Thou who art to our old loving eyes so like the"mountain nymph, sweet Liberty?"
31666To Inch- Murrin, where the fallow- deer repose-- or to the yew- shaded Inch- Caillach, the cemetery of Clan- Alpin-- the Holy Isle of Nuns?
31666To which of all those lovely isles shall we drift before the wind on the small heaving and breaking waves?
31666Was Homer in his own day obscure, or Shakespeare?
31666Was I mad?
31666Was he to escape death, because he dared not wound bone, or flesh, or muscle of mine, seeing that the assassin had already stabbed my soul?
31666Was it boggy?
31666Was it hilly?
31666Was it level?
31666Was it mountainous?
31666Was it not a Paragon of a Parish?
31666Was it not my Lord Byron who liked not to see women eat?
31666Was it woody?
31666Was not that a noble parish for apprenticeship in sports and pastimes of a great master?
31666Was not that vision mockery enough to drive me mad?
31666Was the Pedlar absolutely asleep?
31666Was there ever such a man as Ossian?
31666Watty Ritchie, my man, is that you?
31666We do not call this the same side of the mountain we crawled up?
31666We have been gradually growing national overmuch, and are about to grow even more so, therefore ask you to what era, pray, did Thomson belong?
31666We have heard of people who pretend not to believe in ghosts-- geologists who know how the world was created; but will they explain that moor?
31666We know not in what airt to look for him, for who knows but it may now be afternoon?
31666We may do that well in some six or seven hours-- and then let us try that famous salmon- cast nearest the mansion--(you have the rods?)
31666We now offer a set of_ Blackwood''s Magazine_ to any scientific character who will answer this seemingly simple question-- what is Damp?
31666Weigh all its defects, designed and undesigned, and is not Edinburgh yet a noble city?
31666Were he to tumble in, what would become of the personage whom Kean''s Biographer would call"the future Christopher the First?"
31666Were princes and peers in our day degraded by working, in their expatriation, with head or hand for bread?
31666Were those prayers heard in heaven and granted on earth?
31666Were we never here before-- in the olden and golden time?
31666Whar wilt thou cow''r thy chittering wing, An''close thy ee?
31666Whar wilt thou cow''r thy chittering wing, An''close thy ee?"
31666What ails the boy?
31666What are feats done in the flesh and by the muscle?
31666What better education, too, not only for a horse, but his rider, before playing a bloodier game in his first war campaign?
31666What bird lilts like the lintwhite?
31666What blackens on that tower of snow?
31666What brought them there?
31666What can have become of Laird Warnock, whose word is law?
31666What can we do but return to our First Love?
31666What cares he for all the multitude of other lochs his gaze commands-- what cares he even for the salt- sea foam tumbling far away off into the ocean?
31666What could have made us think at this moment of London?
31666What could the Bible teach to such a man?
31666What crime has been committed?
31666What danger but of breaking their own legs, necks, or backs, and those of their riders?
31666What did England do for her own Bloomfield?
31666What do you mean by original genius?
31666What do you say-- two score?
31666What good could he derive from the calm air of the house of worship?
31666What harm could she ever do?
31666What harm could she ever think?
31666What has been the result?
31666What height are you-- Captain of the Grenadier Guards?
31666What is a Cottage in the country, unless"your banks are all furnished with bees, whose murmurs invite one to sleep?"
31666What is a people without pride?
31666What is your private opinion, O''Bronte, of the taste of Red- deer blood?
31666What kind of climate?
31666What loose leaves are those lying on the Bible?
31666What made Wellington?
31666What mattered his possession of the watch and other trinkets?
31666What more pleasant than a bow- window?
31666What more poetical life can there be than that of the men with whom we are now quaffing the barley- bree?
31666What right had we to commit this murder?
31666What saith our repeater?
31666What seated Thurlow, and Wedderburne, and Scott, and Erskine, and Copley, and Brougham on the woolsack?
31666What shall we say of"The Pleasures of Hope?"
31666What signifies any sport in the open air, except in congenial scenery of earth and heaven?
31666What sound is that?
31666What sport we say?
31666What sport?
31666What steed like thee in all Britain at a steeple- chase?
31666What think you of OUR FATHER, alongside of the Pedlar in"The Excursion?"
31666What think you of that, you son of the mist?
31666What though a few clouds bedim and deform"the innocent brightness of the new- born day?"
31666What though it be but a smallish, reddish- brown, sharp- nosed animal, with pricked- up ears, and passionately fond of poultry, that they pursue?
31666What though no human dwelling was at hand?
31666What though the frost seem to blight the beauty of the budding and blowing rose?
31666What though the waters of the sullen fen seem to pollute the snow of the swan?
31666What would you rather have had the Sage in"The Excursion"to have been?
31666What, Watty, would you think of a Fish like that about Peebles?
31666What, pray, is the aim of all tragedy?
31666When we had killed our fiftieth bird in style, we put it to the Christian reader, would not the odds have been six to four on the flint?
31666Whence comes it-- whither goes it-- for what end, and by what power impelled?
31666Where are all the dogs?
31666Where are we now?
31666Where is Ben Cru-- Cru-- Cru-- what''s- his- name?
31666Where is Flora?
31666Where is Simon Andrew the constable?
31666Where is auld Robert Maxwell the ruling elder?
31666Where is he-- the matchless Newfoundlander--_nomine gaudens_ FRO, because white as the froth of the sea?
31666Where is my child?
31666Where is the grandson of the desert- born?
31666Where is the piper?
31666Where is the sooty sinner?
31666Where lies Our Parish, and what is its name?
31666Where the devil is Sir Humphrey?
31666Where, pray, in all this is there a single symptom or particle of Imagination?
31666Which is the greatest?
31666Who built for him with all its palaces that submarine City of the Dead, safe in its far- down silence from the superficial thunder of the sea?
31666Who can read the following lines, and not think of Christopher North?
31666Who cares for a dozen dirty sovereigns and a score of nasty notes?
31666Who is disturbing me-- and what noise is this in our house?"
31666Who knows that they may not do so yet?
31666Who knows the laws of light and the perpetual miracle of their operation?
31666Who once so beautiful as the"Fair Portuguese?"
31666Who said that Cruachan was a steep mountain?
31666Who said that Windermere was too narrow?
31666Who shall speak of temptation-- or frailty-- or infatuation to me?
31666Who that ever stooped his head beneath a Highland hut would grudge a few gallons of Glenlivet to its poor but unrepining inmates?
31666Who''s laughing?
31666Who, in general, achieve competence, wealth, splendour, magnificence, in their condition as citizens?
31666Whose are these fine lines?
31666Why bark the sheep- dogs so-- and why howls Fingal, as if some spirit passed athwart the night?
31666Why could you not purchase your honey?
31666Why do we think it a glorious thing to fly from the summit of some inland mountain away to distant isles?
31666Why in the devil''s name should dwellers in the desert always be going at full speed?
31666Why not?
31666Why spoke he thus?
31666Why then complain?
31666Why, therefore, should we complain, or why lament the inevitable loss or change that time brings with it to all that breathe?
31666Will conscience dread such spectres?
31666Will you quake before them, and bow down your head on the mossy root of some old oak, and sob in the stern silence of the haunted place?
31666Wo n''t you be done with this Moor, you monomaniac?
31666Would Alfred have ceased to be Alfred had he lived twenty years in the hut where he spoiled the bannocks?
31666Would Gustavus have ceased to be Gustavus had he been doomed to dree an ignoble life in the obscurest nook in Dalecarlia?
31666Would you grudge them a little whisky?
31666Yes.--Why?
31666Yet alive-- is not the secluded scene felt to be most beautiful?
31666Yet life in both is frozen-- and will the iced blood in their veins ever again be thawed?
31666Yet though all is thus dim in our memory, would you believe it that nothing is utterly lost?
31666Yonder is the kind of ground we now love-- for why should an old man make a toil of a pleasure?
31666You are a scholar, and love poetry?
31666You are sure_ we are on_, Hamish?
31666You prayed just now that the God of Mercy would spare her life-- and has He not spared it?
31666You say they do n''t suck it in-- well, then, they spew it out-- it evaporates-- and what is the worth of weeds?
31666am I lying in your arms?
31666and are not these Great Poems?
31666and of what avail were fifty- times- washed nankeen breeches against the Polish Lancers?
31666and sing aloud to all the nations of the earth, with thy voice of cliffs, and caves, and caverns,"Wha daur meddle wi''me?"
31666does he not?
31666eh?
31666hast thou ever seen a SCOTTISH THRISSLE?
31666how much fine gold was poured out for the indigent son of genius and virtue?
31666is it so even with Virtue?
31666is this a time for full- grown men in holiday shows to play the part of children?
31666metaphysical critic of the gruesome countenance-- or modifications of one and the same?
31666not a word for Allan Ramsay?
31666or are you aught That man may question?
31666or the Honourable Custos Rotulorum?
31666or, at once to condescend on individuals, Natus Consumere Fruges, Esquire?
31666was ever man tempted as we are tempted?
31666were not those glorious days?
31666were you ever in the Highlands?
31666whare''s the minister?"
31666what mean ye by this?
31666what old ghost art thou-- clothed in the weeds of more than mortal misery-- mad, mad, mad-- come and gone-- was it Lear?
31666where are you, Flora?"
31666where shalt thou hide thy many- coloured sides?
31666whoop and hollo, and is that too the music of the hunter''s horn?
31666why fell she from that sphere where she shone like a star?
31666why not seven more?)
37471And do you rank the best way of making pies, cakes, and puddings, with necessaries or superfluities?
37471And what is that exception?
37471Any thing worth hearing?
37471But tell me, Abigail,said Henry, with a roguish leer,"was that milk really intended for whitening the sugar?"
37471But what did you do with all your money?
37471But what will our acquaintances say?
37471But with all your privileges, Martha,said Mrs. S.,"was it not wearisome to labor so many hours in a day?"
37471Ca n''t you earn enough in the mill to afford yourself a little time for rest and amusement?
37471Can you recommend a_ subject_?
37471Clarina, has your father sold that great calf of his?
37471Clarina,said she,"did you ask Frederic to call for the other volume of the''Alexandrian?''"
37471Could not we recover them, dear Mary?
37471Did n''t I tell you so, Julia?
37471Did not Ellinora extend an invitation to her?
37471Did you ever read Pelham?
37471Do n''t you cook meat for breakfast?
37471Do you intend to feed your people with hay to- morrow?
37471Does your mother use it much?
37471Ellen,said I,"do you remember what is said of the bee, that it gathers honey even in a poisonous flower?
37471Ellinora, where now?
37471Father, are you in earnest? 37471 Father,"said Abby, as she arose to retire, when the tall clock struck eleven,"may I not sometime go back to Lowell?
37471Has she interfered with your heart, Lane?
37471How much did he get for it?
37471How? 37471 Oh, why is it so?"
37471Pray, Miss Curtis, what may be your opinion of our belle, Miss Greenough?
37471Shall I go, ma?
37471She did not hesitate in the least,said friend H.;"for when I''popped the question,''by saying,''Hannah, will thee have me?''
37471Then,said one of our company,"your wife was not afraid to trust herself with the bear?"
37471To- morrow is pay- day; are you not glad, Rosina, and Lucy? 37471 Well, Abby, how many silk gowns have you got?"
37471Well, Emily,said Ann,"you have no fringe to make, ca n''t you accompany me?"
37471Well, Lizzy,_ you_ know that''to- morrow is pay- day,''do you not?
37471Well, is there no foreign news?
37471Well,said Elizabeth,"will you go out to- night with me, and we will look at the bonnets, and also the damask silk shawls?
37471What auction? 37471 What chance can they have for improvement?"
37471What difference does it make?
37471What for? 37471 What has happened?
37471What made you, Nora?
37471What were they, Mary?
37471What, dinner at that time of night?
37471What, pa, this old paper,''The Village Chronicle?''
37471Where is the man who is going straight ahead to Kentucky?
37471Why have I such a thirst for knowledge, and not one source of gratification?
37471Why, Lucy, pray tell me what_ you_ do?
37471Why, do n''t you think Alice might be as happy as we are, if she chose? 37471 Why, what is the matter, Ellen?
37471Why, what is the matter?
37471Why, you do not intend to answer it to- night?
37471Wife,said he to Mrs. Atkins, who was busily preparing the evening meal,"is it not a year since Abby left home?"
37471Will it not last me one month more?
37471Will my red brother slake his thirst with some milk?
37471Would it improve her spirits to walk with me?
37471You are somewhat out of humor, my child; but are there no new notices?
37471Your cup has then been mingled with sorrow?
37471''A what?''
37471***** Shall I tell you now of my own home?
37471Almost in despair, he exclaimed,"Is there aught that fades not?"
37471And can I lead you, Ann?
37471And did those who first admitted the claims of Joan as an inspired leader, themselves believe that she was an agent of the Almighty?
37471And shall it be thus?
37471And then there is the black colt-- you got forty dollars for him, did n''t you, father?"
37471And then, how should you like to be ordered about, and scolded at, by a cross overseer?"
37471And what is this but poetry?
37471And who were_ they?_ His own aged father, the companion for many years of her who was before them in her shroud.
37471And why should they?
37471And, dear sisters, how is it with each one of_ us_?
37471Anything else?"
37471Are all the articles, in good faith and exclusively the productions of females employed in the mills?
37471As Ann, Bertha, Charlotte, Emily, and others, spent theirs?
37471Ay, who were they?
37471But blessed with youth, health, love, and hope, what had we to fear?
37471But do you think your love will stand the test of poverty, and the sneer of the world?
37471But if she does not want to be an old maid, she might as well leave off writing sentimental poetry for the newspapers; for who will marry a_ bleu_?"
37471But in what other light, save that of common and united interest, could the words of Christ''s prophecy or promise be fulfilled?
37471But was it not sometimes hard to resist temptation?"
37471But what most strikingly arrests the antiquarian''s observation, and causes him to repeat the inquiry,"who were they?"
37471But you spake about some time paying me; pray, how do you hope to do it?"
37471Can there be a more beautiful bend in a river, than that which it makes at Salisbury Point?
37471Can you just tell me where Cain and Abel found their wives?
37471Cheerful, did I say?
37471Could she not be as grateful for letters and love- tokens from home?
37471Could she not do all this, Isabel, as well as we?"
37471Could she not leave her room, and come out into this pure air, listen to the birds, and catch their spirit?
37471Curtis?"
37471Debby, why did n''t you see to them?"
37471Did they come from that land in the days of its proud glory, bringing with them a knowledge of arts, science, and philosophy?
37471Did they, too, seek a home across the western waters, because they loved liberty in a strange land better than they loved slavery at home?
37471Did you, Fanny?
37471Do n''t I speak truth_ now_, Miss Dorcas Tilton?"
37471Do you hear what Abby says?"
37471Do you think, Isabel, that religion would make her happy?"
37471Do you walk with us, or do you not?"
37471Do you wish to hear any more?"
37471Does Physiology tell us?
37471For what?"
37471From whence originated the idea, that it was derogatory to a lady''s dignity, or a blot upon the female character, to labor?
37471Had the woman''s heart been crushed within their breasts?
37471Has she made many cheeses this summer?"
37471Have not the articles been materially amended by the exercise of the editorial prerogative?
37471Have we not all our trials?
37471He was then ready to enter college-- but how were the necessary funds to be raised to defray his expenses?
37471How are they connected?
37471How do them cakes bake?
37471How do we spend our leisure hours?
37471How is it, Isabel?
37471How many chapters has the New Testament?--How many verses, and how many words?"
37471How much have you spent?
37471Husband, why ca n''t you speak?
37471In what period of time did they exist?
37471Is it not strange that all will not be as happy as they can be?
37471Is n''t this strange-- even silly?"
37471Is that all?"
37471May I go with the Slater girls next Tuesday?
37471May we not, in like manner, if our hearts are rightly attuned, find many pleasures connected with our employment?
37471Might not America have had its Hector, its Paris, and Helen?
37471Now ai n''t I literary?
37471Now tell me if you will not get a new gown and bonnet, and go to meeting?"
37471Now, what is this spine, of which there is so much"complaint"now- a- days?
37471Oh, ladies, will you listen to a little orphan''s tale?
37471One must cut the meat and set it to cook; then it was"Mary, have you seen to that meat?
37471Or should we spend our whole lives in adding another acre to our farms, another dress to our wardrobe, and another dollar to our glittering heap?"
37471Pray what new thing shall_ you_ get, Dorcas?"
37471Pray what shall you get that is new, Elizabeth?"
37471Reader, did you ever hear of the"thirty years''consumption?"
37471Shall her country thus tamely submit to wear the foreign yoke?
37471Shall the victor revel and triumph in her own loved France?
37471Shall we take a peep at Rosina''s letter?
37471Should you not like to see my letter?"
37471So away she went to the haying field, and when she was in sight of the reverend haymaker, she screamed out,"Mr. W., Mr. W.""What, my dear?"
37471So sights by means of-- of what?
37471Something for gal''s gowns,_ I guess_; and what will they next invent for a name?"
37471The labials,_ f_ and_ v_, can not be perfectly articulated without the action of the lips.--What subject shall we take next?
37471The leisure hours of the mill girls-- how shall they be spent?
37471The silly girl cried when she see them; should you have thought it?"
37471The voices of thy hindred band,"-- was it not, my sister?
37471Then if sickness should overtake us, what are the probable consequences?
37471Think of this a moment, Deborah; and say, should not the mind be fed and clothed upon, when its destiny is so glorious?
37471This is the moment of Joan''s glory,--and what is before her now?
37471To my eager inquiry, Did you not always live in the large white house yonder?
37471To stand in courts, a favored and flattered one?
37471Was it choice, or necessity, which led them to the battle- field, or council- hall?
37471Was that the talented Augustus Wilson?
37471Were they a colony from Greece?
37471Were they recreant to their own sex?
37471What are the brain and spine, Isabel?
37471What comes next?"
37471What does this mean, wife and Hatty?"
37471What is the mucous membrane?
37471What is this life that I feel within me?
37471What made you, Nora?
37471What proof and evidence do we gather from their remains, which have withstood the test of time, of their origin and probable era of their existence?
37471What sacrifice have you made?
37471What verse is there in the Bible that has but two words in it?
37471When have you ever given anything for the support of the gospel?"
37471Where do you think of going?
37471Where is she, I wonder?"
37471Who was the father of Zebedee''s children?
37471Who were they?
37471Why is it, said a friend to me one day, that the factory girls write so much about the beauties of nature?
37471Why is it, then, that you so obstinately look altogether on the dark side of a factory life?
37471Will you not, dear Isabel?"
37471You never think of pitying them; and pray what gives you such strong claims on their sympathies?
37471You perceive that cord, do you not?
37471_ A._ Before leaving the head, will you tell us something of the organs of voice?
37471_ A._ How is it that air enters it so freely, while food and drink are excluded?
37471_ A._ There is no channel of communication between these parts, is there?
37471_ Alice._ How long does it take the food to digest?
37471_ Alice._ The lights of inferior animals are very light and porous-- do our lungs resemble them in this?
37471_ Ann._ And no wonder that the Christian bends in lowly adoration and love before_ such_ a Creator, and_ such_ a Preserver?
37471_ Ann._ But why does it never leave the stomach until thoroughly digested?
37471_ B._ What did the lecturer say is the cause of the color of the pupil?
37471_ E._ But how can the will operate in this manner?
37471_ E._ Do not the lips and tongue contribute essentially to speech?
37471_ E._ It is the dissolving, pulverizing, or some other_ ing_, of our food, is n''t it?
37471_ E._ Now, dear Isabel, will you tell us something more?
37471_ E._ The principles of life-- what are they?
37471_ E._ Whose popular name is breathing?
37471_ E._ Will you_ shape_ my ideas of sensation?
37471_ I._ And thus perpetuate your ignorance, my dear Ellinora?
37471and what for?"
37471and who was the first to say sneeringly,"Oh, she_ works_ for a living?"
37471as we spend ours?
37471do let me have a new dress, wo n''t you?"
37471exclaimed Lucy;"do you call our pay- master_ beautiful_?"
37471going to burn coffee now?
37471hast thee strained the milk?"
37471he whose thrilling eloquence had sounded far and wide?
37471is there nothing in this pile of papers?"
37471its maidens who prayed, and its sons who fought?
37471may I go to Lowell?"
37471must it be said that even love, too, fades?
37471or did it struggle with the sterner feelings which had then found entrance there?
37471or were the deed which claim the historian''s notice but the necessary results of the situations in which they had been placed?
37471said I,"whether you shall be awakened by a bell, or the noisy bustle of a farm- house?
37471said he,"What in the name of common sense are they?
37471said he.--"Playing the baby, Hat?
37471see that cucumber?"
37471to revel in the soft luxuries and enervating pleasures of a princely life?
37471what sound salutes mine ear?
37471where dost thou go?
37471where_ could_ I be alone?
37471you know better; how can you do so?"
37471you would have folks prepare for a wet day, would n''t you?"
35346''Whither, whither?'' 35346 ''Why toil any more,''they say,''for the low ambitions of this mere peak of rock?
35346And for such can it ever be recovered?
35346And is our mother with Him?
35346And the telescope?
35346And what do they search? 35346 And what will be burned in His fires?
35346And you, my own? 35346 And you?"
35346Are there any other dangers?
35346Are we not in the Cathedral?
35346Are you a medusa?
35346Are you always eating and drinking?
35346Are you limpets?
35346Are you related to the builders of the sand- bridges?
35346Are you sure?
35346Are you unhappy,asked the Child,"since your family are so fallen?"
35346At early dawn, at dead of night, in the hush of the summer morn, in twilight such as this? 35346 Away_ whither_?
35346But can nothing you yourselves do, or omit to do, spoil or dim your jewel?
35346But how do you know the way?
35346But our father?
35346But what do you do when the tide is low, and your little cities are left dry?
35346But where did you go?
35346But why, at least, does not each one try for himself,I asked,"and see if it is true or not?"
35346But would not the Architect come if asked? 35346 But,"I said reverently, and half hesitating to disturb his happy dream,"when that morning dawns will you still be here?"
35346But,I said,"surely your enemies must seek to rob you of such a treasure?"
35346Can this be the Cathedral?
35346Can we be in the right place? 35346 Can we be right?"
35346Children, why should you wish to know? 35346 Did He say so?"
35346Did n''t I hear the gold ring this very instant? 35346 Did you ever hear Him speak?"
35346Do not you speak to GOD?
35346Do they build cities like you?
35346Do you build anything besides bridges?
35346Do you come from across the mountains?
35346Do you go out to sea?
35346Do you never wish to wander, and never long for change?
35346Do you not know me?
35346Do you often bury yourself very deep?
35346Earth is all one grave to thee? 35346 Father,"he said in his heart,"can this be true?
35346Give_ her_ inheritance up to them? 35346 Has no one ever tried?
35346Have you ever seen it, mother?
35346How can I tell how I came here?
35346How could I know that?
35346How did you come here?
35346How is the jewel to be recovered if lost?
35346How will you cross it? 35346 If I flew away, who would take care of my little ones?"
35346If the King is good, and is our King, and will receive us, why not all return?
35346In what way?
35346Is He near enough?
35346Is it really true,I asked, after a time,"that nothing, or no man, can rob you of this treasure?"
35346Is it that, mother? 35346 Is it the Day you are dreading, or the Judge?
35346Is it the Day, men and women of the world, which is to turn all your glory into dust? 35346 Is it the sentence, or Him who will award it?
35346Is there no help, mother?
35346Is there no wrong you can forgive now before it is too late? 35346 It is very strange,"she would say;"what does it all mean?
35346May I see it?
35346Mother, what did old Snorro mean?
35346No need you can supply now? 35346 No wrong you can repair now?
35346Some, then, have submitted to the King?
35346The same? 35346 The wheat to the barn; the tares whither?
35346Then it was GOD who took care of you in the storm?
35346Then,he said,"if God could take care of you, may He not have taken care of her, and be bringing her to us?"
35346Was old Snorro quite wrong, mother?
35346Were you not afraid I might hurt you?
35346What are those counterfeit jewels you alluded to?
35346What are you always singing?
35346What can we do to help her?
35346What can you carry all that on your back for?
35346What could be less musical than we, as we rose in bare crags from the hill- tops, or lay strewn about in huge isolated boulders in the valleys? 35346 What do they do for you?"
35346What do you do then?
35346What do you look like?
35346What do you see?
35346What is death?
35346What is on the other side?
35346What is sin?
35346What is your name?
35346What little bird?
35346What name is engraved on it?
35346What were you saying?
35346Whence does the Ship come, mother?
35346Where can I learn them?
35346Where do you think you are?
35346Whither are you going?
35346Whither are you going?
35346Whither?
35346Who are they?
35346Who are you?
35346Who built this?
35346Who fills it?
35346Why am not I a flower- bud?
35346Why are you never still?
35346Why are you never still?
35346Why do not those who go to Him ask Him to come quickly?
35346Why do you hasten away from these sunny slopes?
35346Why do you sit still?
35346Why is it not rebuilt?
35346Why not all?
35346Why not, darling?
35346Why?
35346Will the Judge be the same as that, mother?
35346Will you wear your jewel,I asked,"when the King comes, or when you go to join Him beyond the sea?"
35346Yet He likes us to say''Thank you,''too? 35346 You sleep,"said the Child;"then do you dream?"
35346_ Shall we see Him?_said the Child, his tears stopping in a moment, as he looked up with a beaming face,"will He speak to us, to_ you_ and to_ me_?"
35346_ Shall we see Him?_said the Child, his tears stopping in a moment, as he looked up with a beaming face,"will He speak to us, to_ you_ and to_ me_?"
35346_ What_ will appear suddenly? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES CREATURES MUSICAL? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL? 35346 ***** WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL? 35346 *****Mother,"said her boy, when they rose from their morning prayer together,"what do all these joy- bells mean?
35346An awe and trembling came again over the children; and the brother whispered,--"Can we be right?
35346And as they were walking again by the green path into the wood, at length he ventured to say,--"Sister, was our mother with you on that stormy night?"
35346And could the unforgiving be forgiven?
35346And even Thou, dost Thou forgive cruel unrepented wrong to Thy beloved?
35346And if he were to instal that beggar''s family in the castle, what reparation were that?"
35346And little Hilda sought in her heart on all sides for the answer to the question, not what will the Day be like?
35346And what is beyond?"
35346And what would the world do if the only voice worth listening to were thine?
35346And what, indeed, could the blessed saints do more?
35346And who can say how many more?
35346And who could say which thunders and lightnings might be the heralds of that liberating storm?
35346And_ Who_?
35346Are the archangels content before the throne?
35346Are these wonderful to thee?
35346Are we not going to church just to say''Thank you,''to- day?"
35346Art thou content?"
35346At last a young priest, an Augustinian friar, ventured a bold suggestion:--"Are not the devils proud, and the angels lowly?
35346At length the Child recovered his speech and said,"Are you in difficulties?
35346But I have wandered far astray, Blinded, and wearied sore; How can I find the plainest way, Or reach the nearest door?
35346But have we no share in this Grave of Christ?"
35346But if indeed He lay in it only those three days, what was it more than a sick- bed, from which one rises to new health and strength?
35346But in that day what will such have to fear?
35346But still the longing grew within him to learn the words of the Song, and he thought,"I wonder if they could teach it me far out on the deep sea?"
35346But the child for whom I would shed my blood, for whom belike I have given my soul, does she know?
35346But the great question for us all is not, what will the_ Day_ be like?
35346But what the step out of it will be, who can utter?
35346But who entertains longer than can be helped the thought of an inevitable misery?
35346But who ever said you or your kind were_ Things_?
35346But who told you?"
35346Can I help you?"
35346Can it be indeed for_ me_?"
35346Can it be that they have rescued the Holy Sepulchre from the infidel at last?"
35346Can no one even guess?"
35346Can they be going to the_ other music_?"
35346Can this be the Cathedral?
35346Can we doubt what pleases Him?
35346Can_ you_ forgive?"
35346Could it be forgiving to wish evil?
35346Couldst thou have thought of them, or built them?"
35346Did Gabriel hesitate to descend from the presence of God to bear to an aged priest the tidings of the birth of a child?
35346Did his mother think it was always so easy for boys to do their duty?
35346Did the angel think it beneath him to say to Elijah,''Arise, and eat''?
35346Did you not say all the Church services, all the beautiful cathedral itself, is just the people''s''Thank you''to God?
35346Do the thousands of thousands always singing to Him above prevent His hearing you?
35346Does she love or trust me?
35346Else where were we?"
35346Even yet, after all,_ might_ it be possible to atone?
35346Exiles on this broken fragment of thy Land, which is ours,--why dost Thou keep us here?
35346Father, Redeemer, hast Thou indeed accepted my work thus?
35346First me, and then it?--Wilt Thou indeed accept both altogether thus?
35346For are not reverence and love the highest religious lessons of childhood; and indeed of all this life, which is but a childhood?
35346For if it were possible to restore him the castle, what of the sight, and the ruined life?
35346For what could we think?
35346Hast thou had a vision?
35346Have they ever been in the land beyond the sea?"
35346Have your opponents any similar guerdon to offer?"
35346He does not stand at the fountain; He brings the water home, does He not?
35346How can we rest longer on these shores of exile?
35346How can you go there?"
35346How ever am I to grow into an oak when I am so crushed and cracked that scarcely any one would recognize me for an acorn?
35346How was I to show myself truly the possessor and mistress of those cherished Things of my own?
35346I asked them--"Why are you thus hastening on?"
35346I inquired--"the magic glass?"
35346I suppose thou hast never before sung a note to any one who understood music?"
35346If He lives, has He left you nothing more precious than a grave?"
35346If it were a slave, if it were a dog that had been so wronged, must I not rejoice the wrong- doer should be punished?"
35346In the evening, when they were sitting hand in hand at the entrance of the cave, the little maiden suddenly said,--"How long have you been here?"
35346Is it a king''s marriage, or a great victory?
35346Is it indeed that?"
35346Is it not just what His only Son, our Lord, is doing always for us?
35346Is it the Day, beloved, which is to turn all your sorrow into joy?
35346Is not my work done?
35346Is not that forgiving?
35346Is not this a cathedral, a sanctuary, and a shrine, sacred with the dust of martyrs, and dedicated to the service of Heaven?
35346Is there no repentance, no reparation possible?
35346Is thy will indeed the law of the land?"
35346It is a good book for the home circle, or for the Sunday school._ The Golden Fleece; or, Who Wins the Prize?
35346It was, indeed, a sacred place once more, and she its consecrated Priestess; but was this ruin never to be repaired?
35346My offering and me-- even me?"
35346No sorrow you can soften?
35346Of geography they knew little more than the children, who cried out as each town came in sight,"Is that Jerusalem?"
35346Of what use is it to climb a few steps higher than our fellow- men, if all are to be levelled again at the bar of God so soon?"
35346Oh, surely some help could be found?"
35346Raised on high to be near the heavens we serve, shall our saintly voices serve to tell you when to eat and sleep?
35346Set apart like sacred ministers in a sacred dwelling, shall we be required to mingle in the common circumstances of your daily life?
35346Shall this offering of mine be indeed so accepted on Thine altar?
35346Since we have heard of Thee, what can we do but long for Thee?
35346Since we have learned of our home, what do we here any longer?
35346Since we know where our beloved are gone, how can we bear this exile any more?
35346That night Bruno also lay awake, and he answered her thoughts, and said reproachfully to her,--"Wilt thou, even thou, be hard on me?
35346The Child gazed earnestly into her face for some moments, and then said in a soft whisper,"_ Is that the Name?_""What Name?"
35346The Child gazed earnestly into her face for some moments, and then said in a soft whisper,"_ Is that the Name?_""What Name?"
35346The Child looked very much perplexed and grieved, and asked if that was the end of all God had made so good and happy?
35346The Child sat silent for some time, with a look of awe in his eyes, and then he said,"Was it to Him you were speaking whilst I was asleep?"
35346The house- father said,"Shall we never more hear your voices calling us to morning and evening prayer?
35346The rude words smote her to the heart, but she only said,--"Thou art not ashamed of the hermit''s house, nor of being old Hans''s darling?"
35346The touch of holy hands is on us, and shall we be debased to secular uses?
35346They looked at him with a strange, bewildered, questioning look, and at length a faint voice murmured,"Is it a dream?--are we in heaven?"
35346They walked on some steps without speaking, till the Child said,--"Why does God let anything die, when He is so good?"
35346Thou who didst say of Thy sufferers of old,''Why persecutest thou_ Me_?''
35346Was he indeed a little prince and a wonder, on his platform of gifts and goodness?
35346Was it a beautiful little living being which was to be his companion?
35346Was it to be another disappointment, like the silent roll of dead leaves?
35346Were not we christened like immortals?
35346Were not we consecrated like priests?
35346What besides could earth now be, Since He died upon the tree, Since He died on earth for thee?
35346What does it mean?"
35346What does the fan do?
35346What proof have these ambassadors given?
35346What will it be to see Thee as Thou art?"
35346What will that dreadful Day be like?"
35346What will they burn?
35346What would become of any of you, I should like to know, if some of us did not take care of you?"
35346When shall I begin to be like him?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When will my training begin?"
35346When wilt Thou come for us and take us Home?"
35346Whither can they go?"
35346Who ever said we could get on unless you took care of us?
35346Who stays in the house-- the owner, or the servants?
35346Who will remember his name as we would there?"
35346Whom are you talking to?"
35346Why heap up its cockle- shells of wealth?
35346Why not all?
35346Why not more?
35346Will another little voice on earth prevent His hearing you?
35346Will it be like that?
35346Will it be like the great fire when half the street was burned down-- only, instead of half the street, all the world?
35346Will it ever be worth while to do anything any more but go to church and pray?"
35346Will not that cup of cold water be remembered by Thee?"
35346Will not this youthful voice speak for Thee here as my quivering tones no longer can?
35346Will one then be denied?
35346Wilt Thou indeed let me be altogether hidden in this thing I have thought, in it and in Thee?"
35346Wilt Thou not come?
35346Wo n''t old Hans be glad?"
35346Wouldest thou?
35346Wouldst thou take the crypt''s chill damps, And its few sepulchral lamps, For His temple spaces high, For His depths of starry sky?
35346Your father encountered it boldly, and said,''Where is my child?''
35346Your gold?
35346Yours is, indeed, a useful, honoured life; but as for me, who can tell what I was made for?
35346_ The Acorn._"When will my training begin?"
35346_ The Sepulchre and the Shrine._"Why seek ye the living among the dead?"
35346_ What Makes Things Musical?_ WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL?
35346_ What Makes Things Musical?_ WHAT MAKES THINGS MUSICAL?
35346already is there no rumble of the far- off storm?
35346and should he never find any who would understand him or speak to him?
35346and that every one did it?
35346and what is Earth but the floor of Heaven, which heavenly feet once trod?
35346and what is Time but the little fragment of Eternity in which we live on earth?
35346asked Hope, after a long silence,"and whither does it go?"
35346but what is the Judge like, and what pleases Him now?
35346but what is the Judge like?"
35346fire, and nowhere to flee to?
35346he answered cheerily;"nothing is too good for Him to give; and what was the Cathedral built for, but for such as thee to sing His praises inside?"
35346he said,"when wilt Thou come for me?
35346how can such a wrong be repaired?
35346if it is a long time, how can we all wait?
35346mother, how are we to know that?"
35346mother,"the little one resumed with a tremulous voice,"what will it be like, that Great Day?
35346no faint far- off murmur of His footsteps?
35346said the Child kindly;"may you not return by the same way?"
35346whispered the brother to the sister;"the glorious House of God our fathers told us of, and we have dreamt of?"
35346why tarriest Thou?
35346will you mingle with our family joys no more?
35346will you never chime for us again?"
35346your harvests?
35346your houses?
41345I durst not eat any fruit, but one fig,he writes to Stella, and asks,"Does Stella never eat any?
41345Give me account, where is my noble fere?
41345Nothing but claret and ombre?
41345Were you ever at Windsor?
41345What, no apricots at Donnybrook?
4061But wouldst thou have ME share the prey? 4061 If I am innocent,"said he,"why did you place such a stain on me?
4061What was to be done? 4061 ''Is it you, General? 4061 ''What can the English do to us worse than the things we suffer at the hands of our own princes?'' 4061 A little revived, we ask,''Where are we? 4061 And, indeed, what orders could Marshal Ney have given? 4061 Are they and we no longer the same men? 4061 As for my sister, whom the Duke claims that he may marry her to one of his chiefs, she has died within the year; would he have me send her corpse?
4061Blucher had not stood before him; and who was the Adversary that now should bar the Emperor''s way?
4061Could he hope to succeed where Hannibal and Mithridates had perished?
4061Follow that crowd of runaways?
4061If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second consulship than I was for my first one?"
4061Nay, how shall they at Foulkstone be able to do it, who are nearer by more than half the way?
4061Suddenly the stillness was broken by a challenge,--''QUI VIVE?''
4061What cause can prevent the United States from having as numerous a population in time?
4061What had been the doom of Viriathus?
4061What hope was there of their being able to make head against them both, united under such a monarch as Louis XIV.?"
4061Why then risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee?
4061and what warning against vain valour was written on the desolate site where Numantia once had fourished?
4061succeed in establishing absolute power in Spain?
41370Does this mean that some of them were English or Germans, or only men from other provinces than the Ile de France?
41370The uppermost subjects in them are the Baptism of Christ and the"Domine, quo vadis?"
41370Were Yorkshire women, one wonders, so very silent?
41370What, to begin with, is glass?
41370Who were these men and where did they come from?
41370[ 3] What, then, is the oldest"stained- and- painted"glass in existence?
41370a foot for white(?
32308''And the work?'' 32308 ''And the work?''
32308''And what are they worth?'' 32308 ''But my poor woman, if you should tremble?''
32308''Have you never heard of the League of the Red- Headed Men?'' 32308 ''What do you call purely nominal?''
32308''What would be the hours?'' 32308 ''What, the red- headed man?''
32308''Where could I find him?'' 32308 ''Why that?''
32308''Why, what is it, then?'' 32308 ''You found him at home, then?''
32308A pasty and a bottle of wine-- What is that?
32308A spent ball?
32308Ah, now we are getting to it,observed Chicot dolefully;"it is about my conduct, I suppose?"
32308Ah, what is that on your hand, D''Artagnan? 32308 And do you think I shall escape?"
32308And do you understand them?
32308And has your business been attended to in your absence?
32308And have you never tried to understand them?
32308And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to- night?
32308And how many did we crush?
32308And how much is the pension?
32308And now look at that old house over there,pointing to my old home;"how many windows are there in the top story?"
32308And now, my dear Athos,said he,"will you be good enough to tell me where we are bound for?"
32308And sit in the dark?
32308And the guardsman?
32308And then?
32308And there was a good deal of sharp- shooting?
32308And what are we to do when we get there?
32308And what did you do then?
32308And what did you see?
32308And what do you think he said in his deep voice when he got into the room? 32308 And what is it saying-- anything you understand?"
32308And what is the pay?
32308And where, if you please?
32308And whose are they?
32308And you did n''t tremble, Louise?
32308And you had to behold every detail of that operation?
32308And you reply?
32308And you would be pleased to have, instead of this terrace of twenty feet, an inclosure of two acres?
32308And you-- you often pray to God, Sonia?
32308Are any men missing?
32308Are n''t you afraid you''ll stick yourself, Ma''m''selle? 32308 At what hour?"
32308At what time?
32308But Ma''m''selle Adèle, why should I tell you all this? 32308 But how could you guess what the motive was?"
32308But my good Louise, would n''t you have suffered much less last year, when you came so near losing your boy, if you had n''t cared so much for him?
32308But surely, if we were embarking on such an expedition, we ought to have brought our muskets?
32308But tell me, Barty,I whispered--"_have_ you-- have you_ really_ got a-- a--_special friend above_?"
32308But what is it, then?
32308But what is it?
32308But what_ do_ you feel when you feel the north, Barty-- a kind of tingling?
32308But where are you going to eat it?
32308But why did n''t we do that at Parpaillot''s?
32308But you did not mean what you said just now, did you?
32308Did n''t I say so?
32308Did you come here, sir, to see the telegraph?
32308Do n''t you hear something behind us?
32308Do n''t you want my son to go with you?
32308Do you hear me?
32308Do you hear that sighing sound?
32308Do_ you_ understand, Grimaud?
32308Does it require much study to learn the art of telegraphing, sir?
32308Had n''t we better return to the camp?
32308Hardened sinner, are you there?
32308Has anything been forgotten?
32308Has it ever happened to you?
32308Has your husband any Spanish bonds?
32308Have we crushed them all, do you think?
32308Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for earrings?
32308Have you ever read the passage?
32308Have you never heard it in church?
32308He is still with you, I presume?
32308He is still with you?
32308How can that interest you, since you do not believe?
32308How did he come?
32308How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? 32308 How do you know?"
32308How far off?
32308How in the world did you keep yourself steady?
32308How long have you been here?
32308How long must you serve to claim the pension?
32308How many charges?
32308How many guns have we got?
32308How many was it we killed? 32308 How many?"
32308How much?
32308I bet it''s the first time you ever made an omelette in a wood- cutter''s hut-- isn''t it, my young lady?
32308I understand, then, you wo n''t go tomorrow to your father''s funeral service?
32308Is it all right?
32308Is it possible that such is really the case?
32308Is it possible that this creature, who still retains a pure mind, should end by becoming deliberately mire- like? 32308 Is it possible,"said Monte Cristo to himself,"that I can have met with a man that has no ambition?
32308Is it true that you captured a bastion?
32308Is that you? 32308 It is a cat''s name, then?"
32308It is a little off the beaten track, is n''t it?
32308Just so; fifteen thousand francs, do you understand?
32308Listen, Varvara Alexievna,he began timidly, in a low voice:"do you know what, Varvara Alexievna?"
32308Mother,retorted Philippe in his quietest tones,"do you not know your own son?"
32308My good fellow,remarked Athos,"do you really think that the enemy''s bullets are those we have most cause to fear?"
32308Not even for fifteen years''wages? 32308 Oh, has it?"
32308Oh, sir, what are you proposing?
32308Shall I come up and help you?
32308Sir, you are tempting me?
32308Tell me, mamma, do naughty children have presents at New- Year''s?
32308The little lady who makes such good omelettes, she is n''t sick, for sure?
32308Then what would happen?
32308To an end?
32308Twenty?
32308Was he the only applicant?
32308Watson, I think you know Mr. Jones, of Scotland Yard? 32308 We shall be wood- cutters, sha n''t we?"
32308We will come some morning and breakfast with them,--shan''t we? 32308 Well, Watson,"said Holmes, when our visitor had left us,"what do you make of it all?"
32308Well, but China?
32308Well, has n''t everybody been too busy ever since to think of stripping the dead bodies?
32308Well, suppose you were to alter a signal, and substitute another?
32308Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?
32308Well, would you please, sir, march upstairs, where we can get a cab to carry your Highness to the police station?
32308Well,murmured Henri,"are you convinced now?"
32308Well?
32308Well?
32308Were you comfortable there?
32308Were you friends with her?
32308Were you quite free and at your ease, or did any one pay attention to you?
32308What am I to do?
32308What are they doing?
32308What are they?
32308What are they?
32308What are you going to do, then?
32308What bastion was it?
32308What bet?
32308What could I be, what should I be without God?
32308What did D''Artagnan say?
32308What did I say?
32308What did you say, sir?
32308What do you think, Watson? 32308 What do you want more?"
32308What does that matter to you as long as you are paid?
32308What have you discovered?
32308What is all this noise?
32308What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?
32308What is it, sir?
32308What is it?
32308What is it?
32308What is that you are saying?
32308What is the matter?
32308What is the name of this obliging youth?
32308What on earth are you doing?
32308What on earth does this mean?
32308What then? 32308 What then?"
32308What then?
32308What was?
32308What were you saying to me in that horrid wood, my darling?
32308What''s the matter?
32308What, no fish to be had in a seaport town?
32308What,asked he himself,"could be the meaning of the mysterious interviews of two such idiots as Sonia and Elizabeth?
32308Where are those boys going?
32308Where are we going?
32308Where do you live? 32308 Where does that come from?"
32308Where is mention made of Lazarus?
32308Where is mention made of the resurrection of Lazarus? 32308 Who is Byron?"
32308Who is there?
32308Who lent it you?
32308Whose was that?
32308Why did you beat the pavement?
32308Why did you give me back the handkerchief so awkwardly?
32308Why did you let it fall so awkwardly?
32308Why did you pick him?
32308Why do you like that best?
32308Why not?
32308Why serious?
32308Why, indeed? 32308 Why?"
32308Why?
32308You are fond of gardening?
32308You are gathering your crop, sir?
32308You are thinking about that? 32308 You asked the names of these gentlemen?"
32308You ate it?
32308You do n''t mean to fight a whole regiment?
32308You do?
32308You live badly on your thousand francs?
32308Your French gold?
32308''And the pay?''
32308''Where are you going, Alexandre?''
32308--"And from myself?"
32308--"From myself alone-- that is, in my own name?"
32308--"How all?
32308..."What is going on in the town?"
32308After all, does not sorrow wring tears enough from us to make up for the solitary one which joy may call forth?
32308Alexandre Dumas was born at Villers- Cotterets- sur- Aisne, on July 24th, 1803(?).
32308All at once I heard a noise, a running and a tumult; I heard-- did my ears deceive me?
32308And after that, trust my imperfect sense Which calls in question his omnipotence?
32308And does not all this seem like signs of mental derangement?"
32308And have I any right to peep under their cloaks to see what they have n''t got?
32308And how can I serve you as to that?
32308And how did you come to permit such a thing?"
32308And if he can, why all this frantic pain To construe what his clearest words contain, And make a riddle what he made so plain?
32308And in another minute she went on:--"You think I do n''t love you, you and our boy?
32308And pray who will be the most thought of at the end of this grand race after money?
32308And some of them said, Could not this man, which opened the eyes of the blind, have caused that even this man should not have died?"
32308And then what business had_ she_ in_ this_,_ my_ particular dream-- as she herself had asked of me?
32308And what about the boat, if you please?
32308And you really understand none of these signals?"
32308And you?
32308Are his senses vigorous and fine?
32308Are n''t you surprised to hear that it was he who attended_ our_ little boy?
32308Are people to be run into without warning?
32308Are you a married man, Mr. Wilson?
32308Are you ready, Grimaud?"
32308Are you willing to have her come?
32308Are you willing to let me arrange your life for you in the future exactly as I would wish to arrange my own life?
32308At first his Excellency turned away; then he scrutinized me again, and I heard him say to Evstafiy Ivanovitch:--"How''s this?
32308At what hour can I take the first train for Paris?
32308Believest thou this?
32308But after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?"
32308But the doctor?''
32308But the writing?"
32308But then what can anybody do with two hundred thousand livres for an income?
32308But we must go on to ask,"What did he laugh at?
32308But what has this to do with earth or with agriculture?
32308But what?
32308But where is this tunnel going to, and what object have the insects in view in ascending this lofty tree?
32308But, sir, once more I beg pardon; perhaps you are an official that I am detaining here?"
32308But_ was_ it a dream?
32308By which base worldlings vilely play their parts, With horrid acts staining Earth''s stately stage?
32308By- the- by, does M. Mauriceau also know of this letter?
32308Can I believe eternal God could lie Disguised in mortal mold and infancy, That the great Maker of the world could die?
32308Can I my reason to my faith compel, And shall my sight and touch and taste rebel?
32308Can people anticipate future destruction with such tranquillity, turning a deaf ear to warnings and forebodings?
32308Can they, who say the Host should be descried By sense, define a body glorified, Impassible, and penetrating parts?
32308Clarkson_--They are fighting?
32308Clarkson_--Were you not really expecting me to- day, madam?
32308Clarkson_--What do you mean?
32308Clarkson_--Why not?
32308Clarkson_--You?
32308Cloud to Paris?
32308Come, it is worth thinking about?"
32308Could he his Godhead veil with flesh and blood And not veil these again to be our food?
32308Could it be that I was dead, that I had died suddenly in my sleep, at the hotel in the Rue de la Michodière?
32308Could your patients spare you for a few hours?"
32308Cover the place with some light thing or other, and Joseph must stay with you to- night; wo n''t you, Joseph?
32308D''Herblay?"
32308Did n''t you see something just in front of us?"
32308Did your father or mother die?
32308Do n''t you know such thoughts are wicked?
32308Do n''t you think I am right?
32308Do people of sound judgment reason as she reasons?
32308Do you go often yourself?"
32308Do you know that tune?"
32308Do you know whether the sentiments between M. Gérard and the duchess were of long standing?
32308Do you mean all the books?"
32308Do you not see that we are opposite Aiguillon House, full of the Cardinal''s creatures?
32308Do you understand?"
32308Does he delight in all that appeals to the sense of hearing-- the voices of nature, and the melody and harmonies of the art of man?
32308Does he see color as well as form?
32308Does she expect a miracle?
32308Even my poor child is learning to forget, and when I say to him most unwillingly,"Baby dear, do you remember how your mother did this or that?"
32308Father, are you not disposed to settle down?
32308For what reason?
32308For you are Mr. Ibbetson, Lady Cray''s architect?"
32308Good life be now my task; my doubts are done; What more could fright my faith than Three in One?
32308Has he like Browning a vigorous pleasure in all strenuous muscular movements; or does he like Shelley live rapturously in the finest nervous thrills?
32308Has my son seen them?
32308Have you a family?''
32308Have you and my wife known each other long?
32308Have you paid it?
32308He began angrily,"What''s the meaning of this, sir?
32308He laughed heartily, and said to my husband,''Are you not jealous, friend?
32308Holmes?"
32308How can it be otherwise, since they are not permitted to pray in a mosque upon earth?
32308How could I forget?"
32308How do I know that it is not his Eminence who has honored you with the commission to bring him in my head?
32308How does it solve the difficulty?
32308How has he regarded and interpreted the life of man?
32308How in this chorus of laughters, joyous and terrible, is the laughter of Shakespeare distinguishable?
32308How things change, eh?
32308I am pursuing some one, and--""And I suppose that on such occasions you leave your eyes behind you?"
32308I asked him if he had much money?
32308I detest women?
32308I hope that you have done what I asked you, Jones?"
32308I must go aboard, do you hear?
32308I stepped up to him and asked him what he was doing there?
32308I suppose you imagine that because you heard M. De Treville speaking to us rather brusquely to- day, that everybody may treat us in the same way?
32308I will not rake the dunghill of thy crimes, For who would read thy life that reads thy rhymes?
32308Ibbetson?"
32308If I live a century, I''ll not forget his look when he said:--"''Well?''
32308If the magnitude of the earth be too great for us to attach to it any definite conception, what shall we say of the compass of the solar system?
32308In the conflict of motives, which class of motives with him is likely to predominate?
32308In what mood was he, and was not he occupied in something important?
32308Injury?
32308Is he framed to believe or framed to doubt?
32308Is he of weak or vigorous will?
32308Is he prudent, just, temperate, or the reverse of these?
32308Is his intellect combative or contemplative?
32308Is it here?"
32308Is it possible to speak as she does?
32308Is she in full possession of all her faculties?
32308It seems to me that with our fortune--_ André_--Our fortune?
32308Let Reason then at her own quarry fly; But how can finite grasp infinity?
32308Like our daily bread-- who thinks of that?
32308Look at Aramis, now: mildness and grace embodied; and did anybody ever dream of calling Aramis a coward?
32308Look at this house; what is written on the portico?"
32308May I ask you if you know how I can be of service to him?
32308May she not be mad after all?
32308May we presume to say that at thy birth New joy was sprung in heaven, as well as here on earth?
32308Might I beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?"
32308Mrs. Clarkson goes out._]_ Commissioner_[_ to Dr. Rémonin_]--You are a doctor, monsieur?
32308My dear sir, will you allow me to ask you a question?"
32308Now, are you disposed to be present as my second?
32308Of what use can these dead men be?"
32308Once dead, what does it matter to you?
32308One jewel set off with so many a foil?
32308One may guess what he said to them:--"Why strike the innocent and tender, as if they were execrable?
32308Or were these gems sent to adorn his skin, The cabinet of a richer soul within?
32308Ought I to have condemned you to this sort of life that I had led at Vilsac, and which had been for me so often an intolerable bore?
32308Pray, what have you done to her?
32308Pray, what steps did you take when you found the card upon the door?"
32308Punish a body which he could not please; Bankrupt of life, yet prodigal of ease?
32308Rémonin_--I?
32308SHAKESPEARE''S PORTRAITURE OF WOMEN From''Transcripts and Studies''Of all the daughters of his imagination, which did Shakespeare love the best?
32308Said I not unto thee, that if thou wouldst believe, thou shouldst see the glory of God?
32308Shall our last glance at Shakespeare''s plays show us Florizel at the rustic merry- making, receiving blossoms from the hands of Perdita?
32308She was still afloat; what did he care for the gale and the heavy sea?
32308So many spots, like naeves, our Venus soil?
32308Suddenly she rose, and taking the pan- handle from the old woman, said,"Let me help you make the omelette, will you?"
32308Superior faculties are set aside; Shall their subservient organs be my guide?
32308THE BOWMEN''S SONG From''The White Company''What of the bow?
32308That is justice; and do you think that I object-- I who am to be the loser?
32308That was all he said, but it was enough, was n''t it, my dear,--quite enough to say?
32308That will be very fine, that would be very fine indeed,--only, what are you going to do, Varvara Alexievna?"
32308The darkness and the forest, or her own words?
32308The movement struck Louis, and turning to the Queen he said:"Mother, do you not know your own son, although every one else has denied his King?"
32308The £ 4 a week was a lure which must draw him,--and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands?
32308Then, turning to M. De Busigny, he observed:--"Will you have the kindness, monsieur, to set your watch by mine, or let me set mine by yours?"
32308This assistant of yours who first called your attention to the advertisement-- how long had he been with you?"
32308Twelve?"
32308Under what aspect has this goodly frame of things, in whose midst we are, revealed itself to him?
32308Used you not to read to Elizabeth?"
32308WILLIAM DUNBAR( 1465?-1530?)
32308Was he well?
32308Was he writing, or engaged in meditation?
32308Were all those wonders wrought by power Divine As means or ends of some more deep design?
32308What are his special intellectual powers?
32308What are the emotions which he feels most strongly?
32308What are the laws which chiefly preside over the associations of his ideas?
32308What are you staring at?
32308What are you trying to be,--Lovelace or Don Quixote?
32308What became of this brave man, who at the risk of his life saved the property of a man whose speech had touched him?
32308What can we say to excuse our second fall?
32308What could it be, once more?
32308What could it be?
32308What difference does it make to you?
32308What had frightened her?
32308What have I been doing?
32308What is his feeling for the beautiful, the sublime, the ludicrous?
32308What is his theology, or his philosophy of the universe?
32308What is it?
32308What is it?"
32308What is that cracking noise?
32308What is there to indicate that this letter was addressed to M. Gérard?
32308What of the cord?
32308What of the men?
32308What of the shaft?
32308What was this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed?
32308What weight of ancient witness can prevail, If private reason hold the public scale?
32308What will it be?
32308What would be the good of burdening ourselves with anything so useless?"
32308What''s the matter with him?"
32308What, precisely, was he doing?
32308When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?''
32308Where were we going, and what were we to do?
32308Where''s that child?"
32308Who says she is not so?
32308Why be enraged with a Protestant, a minister, whose religion, founded on the dogma of free examination, is naturally allied to republican ideas?
32308Why choose we then like bilanders to creep Along the coast, and land in view to keep, When safely we may launch into the deep?
32308Why is it that with all the quantity of love in this world, there are so many unhappy marriages?
32308Why should I have been partner of the light, Who, crost in birth by bad aspéct of stars, Have never since had happy day or night?
32308Why should I?"
32308Why should he?
32308Why was not I a liver in the woods, Or citizen of Thetis''s crystal floods, Than made a man, for love and fortune''s wars?
32308Why was not I born in that golden age When gold was not yet known?
32308Will you be ready to- morrow?''
32308Will you go up with me?"
32308Will you have a glass of water?
32308Will you kindly accept the commission?
32308Wilson?"
32308Wilson?"
32308Would you like to know in what condition our fortune is?
32308You are a very agreeable person--_ Count_--What in the world is the matter with you?
32308You have come to take me into custody?
32308You have wished to be free, have n''t you?
32308You know her address, do you?
32308You think a great deal of our Vilsac estate?
32308You''ve brought a breathing- tube with you, my son?''
32308You''ve seen a lamp almost out, when you pour in oil?
32308You, all by yourself, have had this idea of marriage?
32308[_ Exit servant._]_ Clarkson_--And now, madam, do you know why M. de Septmonts wishes to have an interview with me?
32308[_ In saying this De Ryons draws back and crouches down as if expecting to be struck._]_ Madame Leverdet_--So then, you detest women?
32308[_ Joseph bows, and hands the Count a large envelope._] What''s all this?
32308_ André_--A perfectly exact one, only--_ Count_--Only--?
32308_ André_--And you accept?
32308_ André_--Are you under the impression that there comes a time when mortgages wear themselves out?
32308_ André_--Are you willing to accept my scheme?
32308_ André_--So then the place at Vilsac is just so much economy?
32308_ André_--Well?
32308_ André_--Well?
32308_ André_--What?
32308_ André_--Where in the world does that money come from?
32308_ Catherine_--Are you really telling me the truth?
32308_ Catherine_--Did not his letter contain another letter, sealed, which he purposed leaving in your hands?
32308_ Clarkson_--And as you had your suspicions you-- opened it?
32308_ Clarkson_--And how?
32308_ Clarkson_--But as you were ruined, duke, how could you pay this large capital and this large interest?
32308_ Clarkson_--Do you fence well?
32308_ Clarkson_--Duke, do I look like a man to whom to say"leave"in that tone, and who goes?
32308_ Clarkson_--How are you going to do that?
32308_ Clarkson_--Nothing but that?
32308_ Clarkson_--Say the day after to- morrow, then?
32308_ Clarkson_--Well, is that the whole story?
32308_ Clarkson_--What do you say, then?
32308_ Clarkson_--Why did he not take it?
32308_ Clarkson_--You found this letter?
32308_ Clarkson_--You?
32308_ Clarkson_--Your wife''s letter?
32308_ Clarkson_[_ reflectively_]--M. Gérard wanted to marry her, did he?
32308_ Commissioner_--Will you have the goodness to give a certificate of death?
32308_ Count_--Against whom?
32308_ Count_--And how about yourself?
32308_ Count_--André, do you know something?
32308_ Count_--As to what, Joseph?
32308_ Count_--How?
32308_ Count_--What are they?
32308_ Count_--What do you mean by"settle down"?
32308_ Count_--Why did you not say that to me at the time?
32308_ Count_--Why?
32308_ Count_--Will you kindly allow me to get my breath?
32308_ Count_--You are going to forbid--_ André_--Are you out of your senses?
32308_ Count_--Your word on it?
32308_ De Ryons_--And apropos of them?
32308_ De Ryons_--I?
32308_ De Ryons_--The true, the true, the true sum?
32308_ Jean_--The railway director?
32308_ Jean_--Who is that gentleman who has just been speaking?
32308_ Joseph_--May I beg monsieur to say a good word for me to his son?
32308_ Madame Durieu_--Come now, my dear M. De Cayolle, what do you think of what M. Giraud has been telling us?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--And those who are?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--And why not, if you please?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--Are you willing to be married off yet?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--Do you know how you will end, you incorrigible creature?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--Meaning by that-- what?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--Well, and I am-- what?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--What is one to do in the case of those who are not-- good women?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--What sort of studies?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--Will you kindly give me the sum of your observations in general?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_--Without fine distinctions?
32308_ Madame Leverdet_[_ scornfully_]--So you really think you understand women, do you?
32308_ Madame de Rumières_--You mean that the explanation is not decent?
32308_ René de Charsay_--And what is Father Giraud nowadays?
32308_ Septmonts_--And so speaking, you mean--?
32308_ Septmonts_--Do you happen to remember, Mr. Clarkson, that you are talking to_ me_--in this way?
32308_ Septmonts_--Don''t you agree with me, Mr. Clarkson?
32308_ Septmonts_--Mr. Clarkson, did_ she_ tell the servant that you would prefer to hold our conversation here?
32308_ Septmonts_--Yes; but now, Mr. Clarkson, this young gentleman has come back--_ Clarkson_--And is too intimate a friend to your wife?
32308_ Septmonts_--You will fight me, then, you mean?
32308and how do his emotions coalesce with one another?
32308and that, both having died, so near each other, we had begun our eternal after- life in this heavenly fashion?
32308and what was the manner of his laughter?"
32308asked Porthos;"what are they firing at?"
32308cried Athos, stopping suddenly,"what the devil is to be done?"
32308cried Porthos, struggling in his turn,"have you gone mad, that you tumble over people like this?"
32308cried the musketeer, whose face was the color of a shroud;"and you think that is enough apology for nearly knocking me down?
32308cried the old man almost in terror;"so you will not give Petinka anything, so you do not wish to give him anything?"
32308did the Romans eat them?"
32308do you not know these little papers?"
32308do you understand?"
32308exclaimed D''Artagnan;"do n''t you see they are aiming at you?"
32308exclaimed Henri,"what are you talking about now?
32308he muttered to himself.--"And what does God do for you?"
32308is not your correspondent putting himself in motion?"
32308replied Henri,"what do you suppose is the meaning of that?"
32308ruin himself?
32308said Athos,"did n''t you hear what D''Artagnan was saying?"
32308said Chicot,"are you sure I did not send him there quite?"
32308said the gardener;"eat dormice?"
32308they called;"where''s Dyevushkin?"
32308why were we hurried down This lubric and adulterate age,( Nay, added fat pollutions of our own,) To increase the steaming ordures of the stage?
32308you are here, are you?
32308you take it up that way, do you, Master Gascon?
37396''And Brom Dutcher?''
37396''And Formosante, where is she?''
37396''And did Sam never find out what they buried?''
37396''And have you not written to him about this business?''
37396''And now, Princess, if you are to travel as the oracle desires, will you not give me the happiness of guiding you thither?''
37396''And shall I see my mother?''
37396''And van Bummel, the schoolmaster?''
37396''And what answer did he make to that?''
37396''And what do you think yourself?
37396''And what is_ your_ name?''
37396''And what makes you think so, sir?''
37396''And where is that?''
37396''And who was your father?''
37396''And your mother?''
37396''And your parents, sir?
37396''Are you a magician or one of the gods in the shape of a bird?''
37396''Are you going away and leaving your brother without anyone to look after him?''
37396''Are you going to sea in such a storm?''
37396''Are you not coming with us?''
37396''As much as I am?''
37396''Betty here?''
37396''But how can a princess of Babylon, who never has stepped beyond the bounds of the park,"travel over the world"?
37396''But how old are you?''
37396''But what is the game?''
37396''But what is to be done now, as I have neither clothes nor cash?''
37396''But why did you arrange to leave just as they arrived?''
37396''But,''answered Mrs. Bargrave,''how do you come to be travelling alone?
37396''But_ was_ he a_ totally_ helpless cripple?''
37396''But_ was_ it a dead body that was buried?''
37396''Can it really_ be_ a dog?''
37396''Can the tide have taken him, or a wild beast have eaten him?
37396''Canst thou borrow thy master''s mare for the night?''
37396''Catalina?
37396''Did you hear no noise?''
37396''Did you never have friends like other people, and have those houses over there always stood empty?''
37396''Did you see that hand at the window?''
37396''Do you call this sputter of weather a storm?
37396''Do you feel inclined for some food?''
37396''Do you know the young daughter of the chief who lives not far from here?''
37396''Do you know who brought them here?''
37396''Do you not see two lights?''
37396''Do you see that tree on the slope over there?
37396''Do you suppose I do n''t know them?''
37396''Does nobody know Rip van Winkle?''
37396''Grandchild, why are you here?''
37396''Has the king''s favourite horse passed by here?''
37396''Have I really slept here all night?''
37396''Have none of you heard of Father Redcap that haunts the old farmhouse in the woods near Hellgate?''
37396''Have you been bidden to the hunt?''
37396''How can I get over the lake?''
37396''How can I?''
37396''How can we get the better of this son of Fire- drill?''
37396''How do you begin?''
37396''How long will your father and mother be away?''
37396''How much will they pay the shaman?''
37396''How now?''
37396''How_ did_ they come up from the beach?''
37396''Is anything the matter?
37396''Is it you, my nephew?''
37396''Is it you, my son?''
37396''Is that all?''
37396''Is that all?''
37396''Is that you, my son?''
37396''Is there anything I can do for you?''
37396''It is a tiny spaniel, is it not?''
37396''It was only some beast or other,''he said,''and surely you are not going to fire a pistol and alarm the country?''
37396''Kidd up the Hudson?''
37396''Me rob you?''
37396''Nicholas Vedder?
37396''Not know that they spoke?
37396''Not so fast,''said he;''hast thou not brought any gowns?
37396''Owen, are you there?''
37396''Pray, madam, when do you say I robbed you?''
37396''Princess,''answered the lady,''did you not happen to notice while you were at supper with the King of Egypt a blackbird flying about the room?''
37396''Rip van Winkle?''
37396''Shall I dig?''
37396''Shoot him,''said one of the men, and as Metcalfe heard them cock their muskets he exclaimed quickly:''Why do you want him?''
37396''Sixty pounds, do you say?
37396''Summs?''
37396''Surely they will be vexed?''
37396''Surely this was the place?
37396''The first day of the New Year?''
37396''The horse?
37396''The pillion?
37396''To see your house?''
37396''Well, but where has she gone?''
37396''Well, give us their names?''
37396''Well, it must be_ one_ of the two, must n''t it, your worship?''
37396''Well, what now, Francisco?''
37396''Well, why do n''t you bring her in?''
37396''Well, why do n''t you marry her?''
37396''What are the people talking about in the village?''
37396''What can you invent, Messer Leonardo?''
37396''What do you mean by behaving like that?''
37396''What do_ I_ know?''
37396''What game is it, and where do you play?''
37396''What had you done to vex her?''
37396''What is it you want, grandson?''
37396''What is one to do?
37396''What is that light I see?''
37396''What is that?''
37396''What is the matter with me?''
37396''What is the matter with my son?''
37396''What is the matter?''
37396''What is your name?''
37396''What opinion can you have had of me?''
37396''What sort of game is it?''
37396''What was it?''
37396''What was the toy the children were playing with?''
37396''What''s that?''
37396''What_ is_ that?''
37396''When did you last hear from your son?''
37396''Where can he be?''
37396''Where can they all have come from, and who can they be?''
37396''Where did you come from?''
37396''Where is the chief''s house?''
37396''Where is the dog?''
37396''Who can the woman be that lives behind the curtain?''
37396''Who goes there?''
37396''Who is that?''
37396''Who, that has once seen you, could live without seeing you again?''
37396''Why are you crying?
37396''Why are you in such a hurry?''
37396''Why did you do it?''
37396''Why did you do that?''
37396''Why do you say such things?
37396''Why not write it yourself?''
37396''Why, what else do you think you are?''
37396''Why-- what have I done?''
37396''Will you come in now, father?''
37396''Yes, sir?
37396''Yes, yes, that is the runaway,''cried the chief huntsman;''which way did he go?''
37396''You mean a wonderful galloper fifteen hands high, shod with very small shoes, and with a tail three feet and a half long?
37396''Young man,''he said, panting for breath,''have you seen the queen''s pet dog?''
37396***** It was not till he had come to his last shilling-- or at any rate his last pound-- that Maclean began to ask himself''What next?''
37396*****''Do you hear the noise she is making?''
37396*****''Why are we all alone with grandmother?''
37396After that the shaman went out to meet them, and she asked:''Where is my aunt?
37396After that, the boy came out of his hiding- place and climbed up the tree and said to the little birds:''What do you live on?''
37396And after all, what is the use of troubling about a dead body, if you can not hang the murderers?''
37396And as one by one Belus recalled these conditions he sighed aloud, for where should he look for a son- in- law like that?
37396And do you not possess the two rarest objects in the world, the bull Apis and the book of Hermes?
37396And why do they all stroke their chins as they look at me?
37396As the Latin proverb tells you, it is easy enough to go_ down_, but what about getting back again?
37396As the girls approached he looked up and said:''What are you two doing here?''
37396Bargrave, do n''t you think I look much the worse for my fits?''
37396But at the most the defenders did not number more than 6,000, and who could tell how many the Turks might be?
37396But at these words the wife, who had recovered her courage, exclaimed:''What is the use of talking like that?
37396But beyond the doctor who was that?
37396But how?''
37396But if not, why drag in all these people to no purpose?
37396But what can be said of the treachery of one of the Knights themselves who out of jealousy had bidden Solyman to besiege the town?
37396But why do you want to know?''
37396But, could Belus be mistaken?
37396By and bye a man approached him and said:''What are the village people talking about?
37396Can they be a crew of foreigners shipwrecked in the Sound, who have strayed up here?
37396Canst thou bear starving?''
37396Could it be that he was blind?
37396Did you not see your father?''
37396Do n''t you know me?
37396Do you agree to that?''
37396Do you believe he is dead?''
37396Do you love ghosts?
37396Do you see that tree?
37396Do you tell me that your father and your grandfather both died at sea, and yet you are a sailor?
37396Do you understand?''
37396Does_ nobody_ know poor Rip van Winkle?''
37396England was behind her; that was the chief thing, and who could tell what wonderful adventures lay in front?
37396Had he already deserted the little English bride he had so bravely rescued?
37396Had not the oracle said something else?
37396He did not know her, of course; how should he?
37396How did they die?''
37396I should like to speak to him,''and as Jack entered he exclaimed:''My friend, is it really true that you are blind?''
37396In a quarter of an hour they reached the inn, but as they gathered round the table, someone inquired:''Where is Catalina?''
37396In that position?
37396Is anything the matter with_ my_ chin?''
37396Is it not enough?''
37396Is n''t she here?''
37396It was foolish, she thought, to make so much fuss about nothing; but after all, what did it matter?
37396It would be well, as thou mayst not see thy mother for some time; and where is thy new pillion and cloth that thy father gavest thee?''
37396Let us ask him if he ever knew of such doings?''
37396One of them had gone, but what about the other?
37396Or stay, was it not beside that big white stone, or beneath that small green knoll?
37396She waited a little, expecting to see them every moment, and as they did not come she called out,''Why do n''t you get up?
37396Take care of this fire- stick, or else if the fire goes out, how will you make it again?
37396The ornaments of his bit are of gold and he is shod with silver?''
37396Then if no dead sacrifice was to be laid before him, why should he not become the champion and deliverer of living objects in danger of death?
37396To go as far as possible from Carlisle was her one idea, and what town could be better than Portsmouth for the purpose?
37396Was he asleep?
37396Was he friend or foe?
37396Was it true?
37396Was there no way by which he could make the money that would be so badly needed by and bye?
37396Well, were you not the favourite pupil of the Egyptian priesthood?
37396What could it be?
37396What could they be going to do?
37396What did your husband do to the dog?
37396What do you mean by"outside the class- room"?''
37396What had become of all his friends and of the children whom he had left behind him when he left to seek for his dog?
37396What the plague do_ you_ know of him and his haunts?''
37396What was the matter that in one night everything had changed so, and nothing seemed as it was only yesterday?
37396Where have you been these twenty long years?''
37396Which?
37396Who can tell the joy of poor Rip at this hearty greeting?
37396Who could it be intended for?
37396Who could tell?
37396Why could n''t you?''
37396Why else are we here?
37396Why should he do badly what another could do perfectly?
37396Why, do n''t you know he is blind?''
37396Wouldst thou rather have me?
37396Yet to the end we shall ask, why_ did_ Mary Squires keep her at Enfield Wash-- if she_ did_ keep her?
37396Yet, even if his legs would carry him, where could he go?
37396Yet, who was worthy of such a prize?
37396You will conquer the lion, for have you not the sabre of the god Osiris?
37396[ Illustration: HAD IT NOT BEEN FOR THE INTERFERENCE OF THE BISHOP HIMSELF, IT WOULD HAVE GONE HARDLY WITH CATALINA]''Are you sure?''
37396[_ Tlingit story._]_ THE STRANGE STORY OF ELIZABETH CANNING_ Are you fond of puzzles?
37396_ BLIND JACK AGAIN_ Would you like to hear some more of Blind Jack?
37396_ Was_ it Wolf, or not?
37396_ Was_ it?
37396answered Zadig,''which limps on the left fore- paw, and has very long ears?''
37396are they at their works again?''
37396cried Dolly;''but what good is that to thee?''
37396he exclaimed,''though they_ did_ look so solemn; but what has become of Wolf?
37396how can I ever thank you for your goodness?''
37396repeated the porcupine in amazement;''but how am I to do that?
37396she asked many times, and the townspeople repeated,''Why did you do it?
37396she said at last?
37396they whispered proudly yet with awe- struck voices;''did ever any man before fight in so many as that?''
40371And who is your Lord?
40371But,said Tostig,"what shall be given to the King of Norway for his trouble?"
40371Consider I am old and unfit for work, how can I bear the charge of all this church? 40371 From which Pope?"
40371Is my son dead or hurt or felled to the ground?
40371What time is it now?
40371Ye doubt? 40371 ''Are you a Lombard?'' 40371 ''What do you want?'' 40371 And this is his second year and what help has he found? 40371 Are they not mine? 40371 Damosel, said Arthur, what sword is that, that yonder the arm holdeth above the water? 40371 Have you a fish pond? 40371 Have you a mill? 40371 Have you paid them? 40371 How many cattle have you? 40371 How many people dwell upon your land? 40371 How many soldiers must you lend to the King if need be? 40371 Or of the halls and royal chambers wonderfully made of stone and wood by his command? 40371 Or of the work in gold and silver, incomparably made under his directions? 40371 Quoth Brother Masseo,I say, why doth all the world come after thee and why is it seen that all men long to see thee and hear thee and obey thee?
40371Rufus was angry,"What good would come of this matter for you?"
40371The Archbishop begged the King not to rob the Abbeys and the King answered,"What are the abbeys to you?
40371The wise men begged Harold to burn the land, that the enemy might starve, but Harold would not, for he said,"How can I do harm to my own people?"
40371Then Henry turned sorrowfully to his father,"And what, my father, do you give to me?"
40371Then said Henry,"What shall I do with this money, having no corner of the earth I can call my own?"
40371Then they threatened to burn and slay, and the citizens in their fear said,"Why do we not let these good people enter into the city?
40371They were to ask of the lord and of the freemen in the villages and of the monks in the monasteries these questions: How much land have you?
40371What can you discover about the Normans from the pictures of the Bayeux Tapestry?
40371What damosel is that?
40371What lack ye?
40371What saw thou there?
40371What saw thou there?
40371What services do you owe the King for it?
40371What shall I do?"
40371What shall I say of the cities and towns which he restored, and of the others which he built, where before there had never been any?
40371What will ye say?"
40371Who gave you that land?
40371Who would have weened that, thou that hast been to me so dear?
40371Why do they not ask me for the Kingdom at once?
40371Yet it is of us and our toil that these men hold their state,"and the people said When Adam delved and Eve span Who was then the gentleman?
40371you do what you like with your farms and am I not to do what I like with my Abbeys?"
32954A new chamber?
32954Alone?
32954An she be so young, and so fair, and so wealthy, why do ye not bring her forth among her mates? 32954 And Joanna, my lord?"
32954And a man would be right glad to we d me?
32954And did they knight you?
32954And how came ye with Sir Daniel, Master Matcham?
32954And how, dear Lawless,cried the lad,"shall I repay you?"
32954And if I had forgotten it?
32954And now, my lord duke,he said, when he had regained his freedom,"do I suppose aright?
32954And she bemoaned herself? 32954 And so ye go to Tunstall?"
32954And so,said Pirret,"y''are one of these?"
32954And supper?
32954And this magic,he said--"this password, whereby the cave is opened-- how call ye it, friend?"
32954And what came he smelling up so many stairs in my poor mansion? 32954 And what make ye to Holywood?"
32954And what will ye leave me to garrison withal?
32954And where goeth Master Hatch?
32954And where is John?
32954And wherefore named he Carter? 32954 And wherefore so?"
32954And why so poor?
32954And ye think I would be guardian to the man''s son that I had murdered?
32954And yet, Lawless, it goes hard against the grain with me to die; but where whining mendeth nothing, wherefore whine?
32954And yet,he thought,"of what use is courage without wit?
32954And you, sir,added the young lady,"what do ye give me?"
32954And you-- how call they you?
32954Are we going ashore?
32954Are ye Lancaster or York?
32954Are ye dumb, boy?
32954Are ye for York or Lancaster?
32954Are ye here alone, young man?
32954Are ye there?
32954Are ye, then, a spy-- a Yorkist?
32954Ay, Bennet,said the priest, somewhat recovering,"and what may this be?
32954Ay, dear, ye are my lady now,he answered, fondly;"or ye shall, ere noon to- morrow-- will ye not?"
32954Ay, good fellow,answered Dick;"for in that house lieth my lady, whom I love, and who should these be that lie about her secretly by night?
32954Ay, gossip, truly?
32954Ay, sir? 32954 Ay,"returned Dick,"is it so?
32954Bennet,he said,"how came my father by his end?"
32954But are ye not ward to Sir Daniel? 32954 But did my Dick make love to you?"
32954But wherefore, then, deliver me this letter?
32954But wherefore? 32954 But why keep ye her here, good knight?"
32954But your father, Dick?
32954But, my lord, what orders?
32954But, prithee, how shall I do? 32954 Call me Alicia,"she said;"are we not old friends?
32954Can we be, then, so near to Holywood?
32954Can ye hear, old Nick?
32954Can ye so?
32954Carter, poor friend, how goeth it?
32954Come sound ashore? 32954 Come, now, will ye read me a riddle?"
32954Could ye not see it was a wench? 32954 D''ye see aught?"
32954Dick,said he,"y''have seen this penny rhyme?"
32954Dick,she said,"is it so deep?
32954Did I not tell it thee myself? 32954 Did ye hear of her?"
32954Dinner?
32954Do these churls ride so roughly?
32954Do they command Sir Daniel''s own ferry?
32954Do ye hold me so guilty?
32954Do ye not feel how heavy and dull she moves upon the waves? 32954 Do you see Harry the Fift?"
32954Fellow,he asked,"were ye here when this house was taken?"
32954For a witch''s spirit?
32954For my Lord of Gloucester?
32954For what cometh to mine ears? 32954 Friend Dick,"he said, as soon as they were alone,"are ye a moon- struck natural?
32954Friend Dickon,resumed Lawless, addressing his commander,"ye have certain matters on hand, unless I err?
32954Girl, Sir Daniel?
32954Goody,he said,"where is Master Matcham, I prithee?
32954Hath, then, the battle gone so sore?
32954Haunted?
32954Have ye a last wish before ye wend, old brother?
32954Have ye brought me Sir Daniel''s head?
32954Have ye brought the priest?
32954Have ye ever a penny piece for a poor old shipman, clean destroyed by pirates? 32954 Have ye my Lord Foxham''s notes?"
32954Have ye seen him?
32954Have ye there the ring ye took from my finger? 32954 He did?"
32954He hath gone each night in this direction?
32954Hey, Master Shelton,he said,"be ye for the ferry?
32954Hey?
32954How call ye her?
32954How call ye him?
32954How call ye your name?
32954How can I swim the moat without you? 32954 How if we lay there until the night fall?"
32954How is this?
32954How knew ye who I was?
32954How many a rogue would give his two crop ears to have a shoot at either of us? 32954 How many do ye count?"
32954How now, brother?
32954How please ye, sir? 32954 How say ye now?"
32954How say ye, Tom? 32954 How say ye,"asked Dick of one of the men,"to follow straight on, or strike across for Tunstall?"
32954How say you? 32954 How so?"
32954How, sir?
32954How, then, is he of this company?
32954Hugh, who goes?
32954I, Dick? 32954 If they live,"returned the woman,"that may very well be; but how if they die, my master?"
32954Ill with_ you_, fair sir?
32954In all civility, who are ye? 32954 Is Ellis, then, returned?"
32954Is it decided, then?
32954Is it even so? 32954 Is it so?"
32954Is it so?
32954Is it you, my lord?
32954Is not Sir Daniel here?
32954Is the arrow black?
32954Is this the maid?
32954It befell at the Moat House?
32954It is your lordship''s own estate he offers to Lord Wensleydale?
32954Know ye Sir Daniel?
32954Lads,he said,"we have had a shog, we have had a tumble; wherefore, then, deny it?
32954Lawless,cried Dick,"are ye safe?"
32954Lieth he there?
32954Lion- driver,she said, at length,"ye do not admire a maid in a man''s jerkin?"
32954Master Dick, Master Dick,said Bennet,"what told I you?
32954Master Shelton,observed the outlaw,"y''''ave had two mischances this last while, and y''are like to lose the maid-- do I take it aright?"
32954Must we not go down to supper?
32954My Lord Risingham?
32954My father?
32954My lord duke,said one of his attendants,"is your grace not weary of exposing his dear life unneedfully?
32954My lord,cried Sir Daniel,"ye will not hearken to this wolf?
32954My lord,returned Dick,"ye will think me very bold to counsel you; but do ye count upon Sir Daniel''s faith?
32954My lord,said Sir Daniel,"have I not told you of this knave Black Arrow?
32954My masters,he began,"are ye gone clean foolish?
32954Nay, Dick,said Joanna,"what matters it?
32954Nay, Master Shelton,said Hatch, at last--"nay, but what said I?
32954Nay, but against traitors, my lord, are not all sides arrayed?
32954Nay, but what made he by the church?
32954Nay, but where is he, indeed?
32954Nay, then, shall I call you girl, good Richard?
32954Nay, what matters it?
32954Nay, what should this betoken?
32954Nor heard tell of her?
32954Not?
32954On what probation?
32954On whose side is Sir Daniel?
32954Richard Shelton,said Matcham, looking him squarely in the face,"would ye, then, join party with Sir Daniel?
32954Said he so?
32954Say ye so, Sir William?
32954Selden? 32954 Sir Daniel?"
32954Sir,replied Dick,"I am here in sanctuary, is it not so?
32954Sirrah,said Sir Daniel,"your name?"
32954So y''are to be true to me, Jack?
32954Stand?
32954Sweetheart,he said,"if ye forgive this blunderer, what care I?
32954Then up and spake the master, the king of the outlaws:''What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood shaws?'' 32954 Then, in honour, ye belong to me?"
32954This favour of mine-- whereupon was it founded?
32954Was he in the mansion?
32954Was it to laugh at my poor plight?
32954Well, Dickon,said Sir Daniel,"how is it to be?
32954Well, then, lion- driver,she continued,"sith that ye slew my kinsman, and left me without stay, ye owe me, in honour, every reparation; do ye not?"
32954Well,said the knight,"what would ye?
32954Well,thought he to himself,"even if I lose my horses, let me get my Joanna, and why should I complain?"
32954What ails ye at my face, fair sir?
32954What can he do? 32954 What d''ye want?"
32954What doth he want? 32954 What is it, Appleyard?"
32954What made I?
32954What made ye in the battle?
32954What make I with your honour?
32954What make they to- morrow?
32954What make ye after me? 32954 What make ye here, good brother?"
32954What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood shaws?
32954What make ye here? 32954 What make ye?"
32954What make ye?
32954What maketh Bennet Hatch?
32954What maketh he?
32954What manner of room is it?
32954What may this be?
32954What meaneth he?
32954What meaneth this?
32954What of the birds?
32954What said he? 32954 What should this betoken?"
32954What think ye, sir,returned Hatch,"of Ellis Duckworth?"
32954What want ye?
32954What would ye?
32954What, sea- thief, do I hold you?
32954When came they?
32954Whence came that shot?
32954Where goeth me this track?
32954Where is my ship? 32954 Wherefore arrows, when ye take no bow?"
32954Wherefore do ye that?
32954Wherefore so? 32954 Wherefore would he not tell me?"
32954Whither, my son?
32954Who else is there but you that could do aught in such a house with such a garrison?
32954Who goes? 32954 Who goes?"
32954Who goes?
32954Who goes?
32954Who goes?
32954Who hath done this, Bennet?
32954Who is this?
32954Why am I in this jeopardy of my life? 32954 Why call me''boy''?"
32954Why do ye take me?
32954Why said ye he was rustic, Joan?
32954Why, Dick,she cried,"would I be here?"
32954Why, fool, did ye not eat at Kettley?
32954Why, now, what aileth thee?
32954Why, what are you looking at?
32954Why, who the murrain should this be? 32954 Will it please you, my lord, to alight?
32954Will it please your lordship to set foot to earth?
32954Will ye assault the house?
32954Will ye put your oar in? 32954 Will ye take my word of honour, Dick?"
32954Would ye be led by a hired man? 32954 Would ye evade me?"
32954Would ye have me credit thieves?
32954Would ye have me shoot upon a leper?
32954Would ye lie there idle?
32954Would ye mind a ducking? 32954 Would ye shoot at the moon with a hand- gun?"
32954Would ye shoot upon your guardian, rogue? 32954 Y''are in a hurry, Master Dick?"
32954Y''are weary?
32954Y''have sent for me, Sir Daniel?
32954Ye are not then appalled?
32954Ye come too soon,he said;"but why should I complain?
32954Ye have read this also?
32954Ye have read this?
32954Ye that fight but for a hazard, what are ye but a butcher? 32954 Ye would leave me, would ye?"
32954Yield me? 32954 Young Shelton,"he said,"are ye for sea, then, truly?"
32954Your father? 32954 Your name?"
32954''Good boy''doth he call me?
32954After awhile we shall return, when perchance they shall be less carefully upon their guard; and, who knoweth?
32954All these years have ye not enjoyed my revenues, and led my men?
32954And Sir Oliver here,"he added,"why should he, a priest, be guilty of this act?"
32954And have ye the young gentlewoman there?"
32954And is she shrewish or pleasant?"
32954And is that the_ Good Hope_?
32954And meanwhile what do we?
32954And now, Joanna, my fair maid of the woods, what will ye give your gossip for bringing you your sweetheart?"
32954And now, what make ye?
32954And now,"she continued,"have ye said your sayings?
32954And then catching sight of Matcham,"Who be this?"
32954And wherefore did ye slay him, the poor soul?
32954And why spy ye after Lady Brackley like a thief?"
32954And will men follow such a leader?"
32954And with whom was I to marry?"
32954And ye would have me eat with you-- and your hands not washed from killing?
32954And, whether for one thing or another, whether to- morrow or the day after, where is the great choice?"
32954Are we in good case?"
32954Are ye my Lord Duke of Gloucester?"
32954But had ye no hand in it?"
32954But here is this----"And there he broke off, and pointing to Matcham, asked:"How call ye him, Dick?"
32954But how mean ye, lion- driver?
32954But how think ye?
32954But if ye have so long pursued revenge, and find it now of such a sorry flavour, bethink ye, were it not well to pardon others?
32954But if ye know her, prithee, of what favour is she?
32954But marry come up, my gossip, will ye drink?
32954But now that I think, how found ye my chamber?"
32954But see ye where this wide glade runneth down before us, and in the midst of it, these two- score trees make like an island?
32954But shall we forth?
32954But to the more essential-- are ye Lancaster or York?"
32954But what have we here?
32954But what made ye, sir, in such a guise?"
32954But what o''that?
32954But what said I ever?
32954But what then?
32954But what wrote ye in a letter?"
32954But who''ll shoot me a good shoot?
32954But why stand we here to make a mark?
32954But, Dick, are your eyes open?
32954But, come, now, what is it ye wish?
32954But, now, what shall I do with this poor spy?
32954But, prithee, how go we?
32954Can it be clearer spoken?
32954Can ye not speak in compass?
32954Clipsby, are ye there, old rat?
32954Come ye in peace or war?
32954Could it conceal a snare?
32954Did I put the fear of death upon you?"
32954Do I bemoan myself?
32954Do we lie well?
32954Do ye make war upon the fallen?"
32954Do ye not hear the water washing in her hold?
32954Do you desert me, then?"
32954For of what avail is penitence, an ye have no mind to right those wrongs ye had a hand in?
32954For to get back, by the mass, we must have an offing, must we not?
32954For what reason had he been given this chamber?
32954Had Sir Daniel joined, and was he now a fugitive and ruined?
32954Hath he not his bell to that very end, that people may avoid him?
32954Have I been to you so heavy a guardian that ye make haste to credit ill of me?
32954Have they told you of to- morrow''s doings?"
32954Have ye chosen?
32954Have ye not ears?
32954Have ye not still my marriage?
32954He held the clapper of his bell in one hand, saw ye?
32954Heard ye not this Ellis, what he said?
32954Here am I disguised; and, to the proof, do I not cut a figure of fun-- a right fool''s figure?"
32954Hey, Dick?
32954Host, where is that girl?"
32954How call they the name of this spy?"
32954How came my father, Harry Shelton, by his death?"
32954How if I offered you a brave marriage, as became your face and parentage?"
32954How if I turned me up stream and landed you an arrow- flight above the path?
32954How if Master Matcham came by an arrow?"
32954How say ye, lads?
32954How think ye, Bennet?"
32954How, fellow, are ye so bold?
32954I have but a little company remaining; is it grateful or faithful to poison me their hearts with your insidious whisperings?
32954In honour do ye belong to me, till ye have paid the evil?"
32954Instantly, from the battlement above, the voice of a sentinel cried,"Who goes?"
32954Is the arrow gone?"
32954It doth appear, indeed, that ye have somewhat abused our gossip Arblaster; but what then?
32954It may be; what know I?
32954It was the law that did it; call ye that natural?
32954Know ye him not?
32954Know ye not a friend?"
32954Look ye, now, when ye were but a name to me, did I not follow-- did I not rouse good men-- did I not stake my life upon the quarrel?
32954Man Tom, how say ye to that?
32954May not?"
32954Nance,"he added, to one of the women,"is old Appleyard up town?"
32954Nay, then, and by whom?"
32954Nay, then, what a world is this, if all that care for me be blood- guilty of my father''s death?
32954No women, then?"
32954Now, what might you call a long shoot, Bennet Hatch?"
32954Now, which, I marvel, of you or me, shall be first knighted, Jack?
32954Of so many black ill- willers, which should he be that doth so hardily outface us?
32954Or if he be fallen among ill company, whom should ye blame-- the lad that was unjustly handled, or the guardian that did abuse his trust?"
32954Or sith that ye see me, for the nonce, some worsted, do ye think to quit my party?
32954Saw ye this Joanna?"
32954Say, Master Shelton, have ye found the maid?"
32954Say, fair maid, will you we d?"
32954Say, shall we go hear him?"
32954See ye not how swift the beating draweth near?"
32954Shall he then profit?
32954Shall we attend their coming, or fall on?"
32954Shall we go hear him, indeed?
32954Shall we go once more over the dingle, or push straight for Holywood?"
32954She in the murrey- coloured mantle-- she that broke her fast with water, rogue-- where is she?"
32954Simnel?
32954Sir Daniel, Sir Oliver, Joanna, all were gone; but whether butchered in the rout or safe escaped from Shoreby, who should say?
32954Sore bested?"
32954The Walsinghams?
32954The verdict on_ Treasure Island_ was reversed in the other court; I wonder, will it be the same with its successor?
32954Then, very suddenly, she asked:"My uncle?"
32954There is, then, a question of it?"
32954There shall we be we d; and whether poor or wealthy, famous or unknown, what matters it?
32954This spell-- in what should it consist?"
32954Was it not more than probable that the passage extended to the chapel, and, if so, that it had an opening in his room?
32954Was it not so it went?
32954Was it, indeed, haunted?
32954Was there a secret entrance?
32954We have no priest aboard?"
32954Were they not men of Sir Daniel''s?"
32954What a murrain do ye keep me here for?
32954What age are ye, for a wager?--twelve?"
32954What aileth you?"
32954What chamber?"
32954What cheer is this?"
32954What cometh of it?
32954What do ye here?
32954What enemy hath done this?"
32954What force have ye?"
32954What is in your mind to do?"
32954What maketh he in Tunstall Woods?
32954What matters foul or fair?
32954What may this betoken?
32954What meaneth it?"
32954What of Selden?"
32954What read ye?"
32954What was to be done?
32954What would ye have?
32954What would ye have?"
32954What would ye more?"
32954What would ye?
32954What, then, is lacking?
32954What?
32954When I took your ship from you, we were many, we were well clad and armed; but now, bethink you a little, who mustered that array?
32954Where be all my good men- at- arms?
32954Where hid ye?"
32954Where is my wine?
32954Where shall I conceal them, Will?"
32954Wherefore did ye fight?
32954Wherefore, then, fell ye upon mine ambush?
32954Which, then, of this company will take me this letter, bear me it to my Lord of Wensleydale, and bring me the answer back?"
32954Whither shall we march?"
32954Who ever heard the like, that a leper, out of mere malice, should pursue unfortunates?
32954Who hath done this, think ye?
32954Who should these be?"
32954Who should this be?
32954Who, then, hath done this evil?
32954Whom do ye require?"
32954Why am I now fleeing in mine own guardian''s strong house, and from the friends that I have lived among and never injured?"
32954Why are ye thus sacrilegiously tricked out?
32954Why do men come privily to slay me in my bed?
32954Why sup ye not?"
32954Why tarry we here?"
32954Why would ye shoot upon an old, kind friend?
32954Will he obey?
32954Will ye be the last?
32954Will ye stand a pinch for expedition''s sake, or shall we turn by Holywood and sup with Mother Church?
32954Would ye be forsworn?
32954Would ye rob the man before his body?
32954Would you desert me-- a perjurer?"
32954[ Illustration:_ First came the bride, a sorry sight, as pale as the winter, clinging to Sir Daniel''s arm_]"Where?"
32954and at whose instance do ye join your supplications to ours?"
32954and your oath to me?
32954and, to make a clear end of questioning, to what good gentleman have I surrendered?"
32954could ye not smell harm and get ye gone from evil?"
32954cried Dick,"when good fellows stand shot?
32954cried Richard,"is this so?
32954cried the skipper, tipsily,"who are ye, hey?"
32954fair or foul?
32954have I you in my hands?
32954he cried,"what poor dogs are these?
32954he cried,"you that were a shipman, can ye steal me a ship?"
32954he said;"you that defended me-- you that are Joanna''s friend?"
32954his old wood- companion, Jack, whom he had thought to punish with a belt?
32954in what quarrel, my young and very fiery friend?
32954or had he deserted to the side of York, and was he forfeit to honour?
32954or have ye no heart for your own kindly blood and the father that men slew?
32954shall he sit snug in our houses?
32954shall he suck the bone he robbed us of?
32954shall he till our fields?
32954shall they all die?"
32954sots, what make ye here?"
32954thought Dick,"can the poor lad have perished?
32954to what earthly purpose?
32954what do ye?
32954what doth faith?
32954what said he?"
32954what say ye?
32954what seek ye here?
32954where is she?
32954will ye be a man?"
32954would ye have me leave my own men that I have lived among?
32954would ye snivel for a word?"
41055I have told you of earthly things and you believe not; how shall ye believe if I tell you of heavenly things?
41055( c) That the exile lasted seventy years(?
410551 even record an invasion of Philistines and Arabians(?
4105514, 16( the numbers are not inclusive), and reckons three deportations in the 7th(?
4105564"Filigree ornament( ear- ring?)
410558?
41055Again, without justice mere earthly rule is impossible; how then is injustice conceivable in Him who rules over all?
41055From Chiusi(?)."
41055His most famous romance is The_ Famous Historie of the Seaven Champions of Christendom_( 1596?).
41055In answer to this demand the Divine voice answers Job out of the tempest:"Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?"
41055In his 30th year( 15th year of the emperor Tiberius,?
41055JOHNSON, RICHARD( 1573- 1659?
41055Sanballat of Horon, Tobiah the Ammonite, and Gashmu the Arabian(?
41055what can human weakness, however innocent, do against infinite might and subtlety?
31782''And what did the bishop of Chalon do?'' 31782 ''Hermit, are such prospects possible?
31782''Hermit, our friend,''the interrupter cried again,''how else can we fight our enemies than arms in hand? 31782 ''What is it that has turned you into Vagres, ye men of all conditions?
31782A miracle in favor of us, Vagres? 31782 A voice cried out from the crowd:''Have not our conquerors shed the blood of our race in torrents?
31782And I suppose that once so brave region has undergone the fate of the others?
31782And I, do not I also run the risk of seeing the best two dogs of my pack hugged to death-- or torn to pieces by your bear''s claws? 31782 And did the devils carry off Duke Rauking?"
31782And did the thought never occur to you,asked Ronan,"of choosing some fine dark night to set the burg on fire?"
31782And did you never hear from him, father?
31782And does that frighten you, poor child, to be a slave of the seigneur bishop?
31782And has there never been found any courageous man to plant a dagger in the heart of such a King?
31782And have you not been rifled a hundred times by those thievish Franks?
31782And have you the account of your own and my brother''s lives?
31782And it closed this wise,replied the monk:"''This evening we say: How many were there of these barbarous hordes?
31782And let loose some of your mastiffs against him? 31782 And like so many others you consented to the servitude?
31782And my brother Karadeucq, did he long enjoy that peaceful life after a life of so many hardships?
31782And my name is Neroweg; I shall ask seigneur Imnachair what will the thief do when he has found the nest and the dove?
31782And so, bishop,said the count scratching himself behind his ear,"you must have that blonde slave?"
31782And the house, Master of the Hounds, the house; how is it arranged?
31782And the twenty gold sous that he will surely expect to receive after the murder is committed?
31782And the woman-- the two children?
31782And what about your brothers, Charibert, Gontran, Chilperic and Sigebert? 31782 And what became of Clotaire?"
31782And what becomes of those who remain in Gaul?
31782And what do the Korrigans eat on that table cloth as white as snow? 31782 And what else should you have killed your brother for, beast?
31782And what is going on in Paris, brave roadster?
31782And what is its name?
31782And what must one do in order to be admitted into the ranks of those intrepid people?
31782And what of little Odille, Ronan? 31782 And where are their haunts?"
31782And where did they take those men, women and children whom they carried away as slaves?
31782And who is it that made these days what they are, if not you, princes of the Church? 31782 And why would you have shed more?"
31782And will you not regret life?
31782And yet the Catholic bishops preach to the people submission to such monsters?
31782And yet was there not a single man resolute enough to plant a dagger in the monster''s breast?
31782And you, Neroweg,said Sigefrid, more than any other of the leudes a stickler for the count''s dignity,"do you allow the bear to have a club?
31782And you, little Odille, you have neither father nor mother left, will you have Ronan for husband, if you survive your wounds?
31782And your mother?
31782And-- for what reason did he kill her, Morise? 31782 Answer, count; will you pledge yourself by a sacred oath to combat on my side at the head of your men?
31782Are we all outside of the enclosure of the burg?
31782Are we, the King''s men, to be chaffed for what we eat and drink at this burg?
31782Are you jesting?
31782Are you not a friend of Clotaire''s?
31782Are you quite certain you saw the name of Karadeucq on that gibbet? 31782 Are you running away from the leudes of the seigneurs?"
31782Bishop, do you hear these poor old women? 31782 Bishop, is not the Valley of Charolles located in your diocese?"
31782Bishop, what magic is this? 31782 Bishop,"Ronan proceeded,"has thy exalted truthfulness anything to answer to the accusations of thy slaves?"
31782Brother, are we all together?
31782Brothers, do you see yonder, at the foot of the hill, that little structure surrounded by pillars?
31782But did not the Franks take up arms against you? 31782 But first of all, brothers, answer me this question: Under whose royal claws did this beautiful land of Auvergne fall?"
31782But how can that Saxon word_ ghilde_, engraven on the iron impart strength to the weapon, as you tell me?
31782But how did you manage to capture Neroweg?
31782But suppose the Vagre promises to commit the murder but fails in carrying out his part of the bargain?
31782But what about the bishop, who has come to enjoy the sight of the bandit''s death? 31782 But what fate do you reserve for your father?"
31782But what is the meaning of that other word--_Ghilde?_"It is a Saxon word; it means association, fraternity. 31782 But what was the death that Clotaire reserved for his son and his son''s family?"
31782But when he returns from Saxony with his army, what will you do then?
31782But where is he? 31782 But where is he?
31782But why do you inflict such a punishment upon yourself, brother? 31782 But why, then, did you follow us in Vagrery?"
31782But, father, carried as we are by these good slaves, how could Loysik and I avoid being detected?
31782By the faith of a Vagre, what is death, beautiful bishopess? 31782 By the indivisible Trinity, are you serious?
31782Can I dispose of my slave at my pleasure, and chastise him as I may choose?
31782Chram, this is another of your humorous friends, I suppose?
31782Clerk, shall I have him quartered in order to be all the surer that the devils will be conjured away from my burg?
31782Count, do you smell that odor of sulphur?
31782Count, how much are the treasures worth that are locked in these coffers?
31782Count,insolently put in the Lion of Poitiers,"is your wife young and handsome?
31782Dare you issue orders to me?
31782Dare you resist my will?
31782Dear girl-- and the bishopess, who interested us all, despite her errors?
31782Did I not tell you so?
31782Did not the sacrilegious wretch, at the head of his band, pillage and burn down the episcopal villa of our holy bishop?
31782Did the count, accordingly, strip you of your fields and houses?
31782Did the hermit- laborers establish a colony?
31782Did you ever hear of the Bagaudy?
31782Did you not hear my answer to Bishop Cautin:''It is not the well but the sick who stand in need of the physician?''
31782Did you see them?
31782Did you, bishop? 31782 Do the people love them?"
31782Do you also swear by the great St. Martin, my patron saint?
31782Do you care for the life of your bishop?
31782Do you come from afar, gay stroller?
31782Do you expect to win in a game without taking any risks?
31782Do you hear those underground cries? 31782 Do you hear, dog?"
31782Do you know the reason why Bishop Cautin has been anxious to accompany me to this place?
31782Do you mean since I started this morning or since the beginning of my journey?
31782Do you not hate your master, Bishop Cautin, and the whole seigniory?
31782Do you not hear the dogs barking louder and louder? 31782 Do you place much store by that little corner of your forest?
31782Do you pretend to say that we, the faithful men of Neroweg, have smaller hearts than you?
31782Do you say so?
31782Do you see the smoke that is coming up from between those stone slabs?
31782Do you think him in league with the Dus and Korrigans, Madalen?
31782Do you think me weak?
31782Do you think yourselves above us, because we are leudes of a count? 31782 Do you, perchance, object that I told Morise to come?
31782Does that surprise you, good old man?
31782Dost thou fancy the views of these poor people?
31782Dost thou hear, renegade Gaul? 31782 Father, I shall be sixteen years old next vintage in the country of Nantes-- will you not take me with you?"
31782Father, are you sure that infamous bishop is dead?
31782Friends, what large residence is that which I see yonder, girt by a fosse?
31782From the city of Paris?
31782Gold grass blades? 31782 Grandfather, do you hear the watchdog bark?"
31782Has he not his nails?
31782He repent? 31782 Hermit, could you prevent a Frankish king from being born a rapacious thief?"
31782Hermit, good friend, you hear the''holy''man-- you perceive his repentance-- what shall be done, my Vagres?
31782Hermit, is not everything allowed to the clergy of our holy Church in order to terrify these brutes of Franks into subjection?
31782How came you to be separated from your father?
31782How did you become the slave of the Frankish count? 31782 How do you call him?"
31782How do you know that?
31782How do you know that?
31782How much is your bear worth?
31782How old are you, little Odille?
31782How so?
31782How, my friends, do you mean to say that Ronan the Vagre, the impious wretch, dared to commit such a crime? 31782 If your wife is with child,"replied the Lion of Poitiers,"who may the father be?"
31782In my burg?
31782In royal company?
31782Is Ronan the Vagre healed of his wounds? 31782 Is he at the burg to- day?"
31782Is he perchance a Christian that I should exercise charity towards him? 31782 Is it long since you were separated from your father?"
31782Is it really your wish that he go, father?
31782Is it your own voice, holy bishop, or is it a snare that Satan spreads for us?
31782Is it your voice I hear, holy father?
31782Is that really true, Morise? 31782 Is that the example in courtesy that you set to your men, Neroweg?
31782It is frightful to hear, is it not, my sweet Roselyk, especially when the laughers are your own father and brother? 31782 It must, then, be a lucky accident that would make one run across them?"
31782Madalen, what gives you that absent and pensive look? 31782 Madam, madam, do you not hear?"
31782Men at arms to us, men of peace? 31782 My beautiful bishopess, are you there?
31782My good friends, do you know it seems to me that it will bring me good luck to spend a few hours in a house peopled with such good slaves as you are? 31782 No, Karadeucq, you shall not go hunting to- day; I shall not allow it--""And why not, mother?"
31782Odille, what is it you are dreaming about as you gaze at the moon? 31782 Oh, have they been capturing Vagres in this region, my friends?
31782Ronan, the gates are solid, the windows high, the walls thick-- how shall we penetrate into the place and reach the bishop?
31782Roselyk, Roselyk, does not that also sound like mother? 31782 Roselyk, dear sister, do not my wife''s words remind you of our mother scolding our brother Karadeucq because he wished to see the Korrigans?
31782Roselyk, do you not notice that the stranger seems strangely affected? 31782 Seigneur, how will you have me extinguish my torch?"
31782She prayed for a miracle in favor of the murderer of her two grandsons?
31782Sigefrid, I have unlocked the railing,said one of the Franks;"shall we begin with the men or the women?"
31782Slaves of the bishopric,proceeded Ronan addressing those who surrounded him,"what charges have you to prefer against your bishop?"
31782So, then, you are tired?
31782The Bagauders are, then, numerous armed troops?
31782The father and son on our frontier?
31782The little fairies of olden times, of which good old Gildas, the shearer of the sheep, often talks? 31782 The misfortune that threatened our house--""The cries that were not human--""Will you be done laughing?
31782Then they must have denied that they had run the Vagrery, did they?
31782To the burg? 31782 Uncle,"says Ronan,"did you read through the narrative that I gave you yesterday?"
31782Very well, he shall have a club-- but do you think he will know how to help himself with it?
31782Was his end peaceful? 31782 Was it in Anjou that you met that troop of Bagauders?"
31782Well, my dear Roselyk, why tremble? 31782 Well, that was thanks to the Korrigans--""Indeed?
31782Were that woman and children Chram''s family? 31782 What Vagre would ever think of killing his own brother''s children in order to seize their property?"
31782What ails you?
31782What are you doing there, old vagabond?
31782What are you doing? 31782 What are you driving at with that long digression?"
31782What can I do? 31782 What chant was that?"
31782What do you fear, seigneur count?
31782What dost thou think of that?
31782What else could he? 31782 What else was I to do?
31782What have you now to say in defense of your fairies, my pet?
31782What have you to say? 31782 What is the Bagaudy, grandfather?"
31782What is the matter with Erer, father? 31782 What is the matter, Madalen?
31782What is the matter, folks? 31782 What is the reason of such emotion?"
31782What is your plan?
31782What jacket?
31782What makes you speak of my woods? 31782 What spectacle is that to be, my friends?"
31782What wisp of straw was that, madam?
31782What would you of me, old mountebank?
31782What, count, have you bears in this place?
31782What, then, do you fear? 31782 What, you shudder, my hosts, at so little?
31782What? 31782 Whence come you, good father?"
31782Whence does that smoke proceed?
31782Where are you going, son?
31782Where did you see that Vagre on the gibbet?
31782Where is my mother? 31782 Where is she?
31782Where is your father now?
31782Where shall we find him?
31782Where were you born?
31782Whither are you bound with the bishopess on your arm? 31782 Who are you that you know the history of my family so accurately?"
31782Who goes there?
31782Who goes there?
31782Who is master here, you or I, insolent priest?
31782Who is that man, my brave Master of the Hounds? 31782 Who is the present inheritor of Gaul''s one- time valor?
31782Who says otherwise?
31782Who should wear the cloak? 31782 Who was it planted the vine?
31782Who was it that tended and sheared the sheep and wove the cloth and made the cloak? 31782 Why delay?"
31782Why does he not step in?
31782Why is not the passage free that leads underground into the banquet hall?
31782Why think you, madam, that he will commit such a crime again? 31782 Why, then, the torture?"
31782Why? 31782 Will he not kill him, brother?
31782Will vengeance wipe out your past sufferings? 31782 Will you dare to break your engagement?"
31782Will you have them tried here, count?
31782Will you join us in running the Vagrery? 31782 With which shall we start?
31782Would you blame me for being a Vagre, and would you blame our father for having been a Bagauder?
31782Would you like to have domains as vast as those of a King''s son?
31782Would you prefer to be tormented by nocturnal phantoms?
31782Would you, instead of being count of a city in Auvergne, govern a whole province-- in short, be as rich and powerful as you could wish?
31782Yes, count, what have you to propose? 31782 Yes, in Anjou-- in a forest about eight leagues from Angers, whither I was then bound--""Do you notice my pet Karadeucq?
31782Yes, madam, he threw her down with a kick-- she fell near that beam-- and then--"What ails you, Morise-- why do you tremble?
31782You here, father?
31782You will not leave me alone in their hands? 31782 You, all of you slaves, do not hate me, do you?"
31782A hundred cloaks in the wardrobe, and only rags for the toiling slave?
31782A hundred kegs of wine in the master''s cellar, and only the water of the stream for the wornout slave?
31782A saint in the company of demons?"
31782A voice was heard saying:"Is that you, Ronan?"
31782Absolve me of the death of my brother; you shall have the meadow lands, the twenty gold pieces--""And the pretty blonde slave?"
31782After the first ebullition of their tender joy, Ronan said to Loysik:"And whatever became of our father?"
31782All these monsters deserve to be exterminated, do you not think so, friend?"
31782Am I his master-- yes or not?"
31782Am I wrong, my lad?"
31782An oven in a forest?
31782An oven large enough to embrace oxen, does, stags and wild- boars?
31782And Karadeucq and the lover of the beautiful bishopess, did they remain quietly in the midst of the butchery?
31782And Loysik?
31782And am not I, Godegisele, myself, his humble servant?"
31782And did those slaves all belong, perchance, to the class of laborers and artisans, strong, rough men, broken from infancy to hard labor?
31782And for seats?
31782And little Odille?
31782And now, friend peddler, I understand you to say that the Bagaudy is again raising its head, now against the Franks?
31782And so they were all sentenced to- day?"
31782And so you assure me, Morise, that it is there-- on that spot-- that he killed her?"
31782And the bishopess?
31782And the poor woman added in a low voice in Araim''s ear:"Was there any occasion for the peddler to mention such matters before my son?
31782And these others-- men with shaven heads, wan, clad in rags; these women and these girls, some of whom are pretty-- who are they?
31782And to whom did the mounts belong?"
31782And turning his head toward Neroweg:"You asked where hell was?
31782And what about the women, were they also put to the torture?"
31782And what can be the reason that my grandfather Goridek wrote not a line?
31782And what is Ronan doing?
31782And what was his name?"
31782And what was it that actually tumbled down from the tree?
31782And where do the bandits await death?"
31782And who is that portly, handsome and still young woman, who resembles Diana the huntress?
31782And will brother still want to meet the wicked things, these Korrigan fairies who snatch away babes?"
31782And you, accursed mountebank, the chief of these bandits, why do you look at me in that way in silence?"
31782And, finally, what can be the reason that my own father, Araim, waited so long-- so very long before fulfilling the wishes of the good Joel?"
31782Answer, are we agreed upon the Vagre''s flight?"
31782Are not his female slaves at his orders?
31782Are not those accursed fellows wolves?
31782Are we not"Wand''ring Men,""Wolves,""Wolves''Heads"?''
31782Are we, perchance, on such good terms with heaven?"
31782Are you about to start quarreling anew?
31782Are you aware of that?"
31782Are you now at ease?"
31782Are you still thinking of the Korrigans?"
31782As you see, the torture is finely graded, and will not you, you who have the power, snatch the dear girl from such torment?
31782Attracted by the light of the conflagration, the signal that was agreed upon, the good, brave Vagres had crossed the fosse; but how?
31782Back so soon?
31782Beautiful bishopess, could not you, whose arms are free, gently strangle that poor child?
31782But Childebert thought better, in honor of his royal family, did he not, learned Symphorien?"
31782But answer me without lying: when you are with the count, you do not, do you, seek to irritate him against me?
31782But are there many such wicked slaves at the burg?"
31782But as to your father-- what has become of him?"
31782But how is his flight to be connived at?"
31782But should the judgment of the Almighty prove that the accused is guilty, is not the accuser thereby declared innocent?
31782But the next day?
31782But what does the word_ ghilde_ mean?
31782But what has this to do with the murder of your brothers?"
31782But what is your reason for wishing to add so greatly to my power and wealth?"
31782But why are you silent?
31782But why do you look at me so wonderingly?"
31782But, brothers, do answer me; to whom shall we give the preference, to a bishopess or to a count''s wife?"
31782But, old mountebank, you seem greatly affected; I noticed a tear roll down your grey beard; why so?"
31782Can it be called to live, this dragging of my days in this opulent villa, a gilded grave?
31782Can it be that you hid some other crime from me?
31782Can it be true, after all, that the gods punish us for wishing to see the malign spirits?
31782Certes; for what other reason should they have brought along torches and straw?
31782Clovis?
31782Cross half Gaul in such times as these, when the cursed Franks overrun the country?"
31782Dare you cross me?"
31782Did he remember me and Roselyk, who loved him so dearly?"
31782Did not her wound already protect her against the brutalities of the count and the torture of to- day?
31782Did she dare quarrel with him?"
31782Did they not propose to canonize the monster with the title of''Saint Clovis?''"
31782Did we not triumphantly repel all the attacks of the Franks until now?"
31782Did you ask for the dwelling of Kervan, the son of Jocelyn?
31782Did you count the number of armed men in Chram''s suite?"
31782Did you hear me, Gondolf?"
31782Did you hear that, grandfather?"
31782Did you never notice, after you entered the heart of Auvergne, that from time to time your father absented himself for several days?"
31782Did you not surmise as much?"
31782Did you receive holy baptism?"
31782Did you see those demons?"
31782Didst thou hear that story, Gallic bishop?"
31782Didst thou hear?"
31782Do not the peddler''s pleasant face and kind words set you at ease?"
31782Do you believe, my children, that I shall be allowed admission to the burg?"
31782Do you fear, like Madalen, that danger may threaten Karadeucq just because, on such a tempestuous night as this, he wishes to see a Korrigan?"
31782Do you forget that the priests relieve him of the burden of remorse in consideration of good round pounds of gold or silver?"
31782Do you hear the distant din of their merriment?
31782Do you imagine I would order you to extinguish the torch between your knees if they were covered with oxhide or jambards of iron?"
31782Do you know the valley of Helle?"
31782Do you know, Karadeucq, you who love them so much?"
31782Do you know, Loysik, what grieves me most at this hour?
31782Do you know?"
31782Do you not hear those cries of death?''
31782Do you not know that the officers of the Church must stand by one another?
31782Do you not know--""What, my blonde Roselyk?"
31782Do you remember the incident?"
31782Do you wish to see Kervan?
31782Does the slave belong to me-- yes or not?
31782Ever after they will gnash their teeth--""Bishop, has thy exalted purity nothing else to say than utter insults?"
31782Flee?
31782From what pillage did you get that?"
31782Good-- do you hear them laughing aloud?
31782Had they already run any raids against the Franks and bishops?
31782Have not bears and wolves the same dens?
31782Hear you not the thunder of heaven, the rumbling voice of the Almighty?
31782Ho, there, mountebank, what tricks can your bear perform?
31782How could I resist the count and his leudes?
31782How many are there of these Franks?''"
31782How many years of life are left to me and what events are in store for me?
31782I am now left all alone, like a traveler among strangers; I have no relatives left to help me in case adversity overtake me?''"
31782I do not expect to be enlightened upon that until he and I meet again elsewhere--""Where?"
31782I shall narrate to you the conversation that took place between us:"''I said:"Did you ever hear about the Vagres?"
31782I suppose these are the device of the hermit- laborers?
31782I wished to lie down and die, but the chief raised me on his horse, and we arrived on the count''s domain--""Dost thou hear, bishop?"
31782If I promised, did I keep?"
31782Including the King''s bodyguard we are more than three hundred armed men-- who would attempt to free the prisoners under such circumstances?
31782Is he clever?"
31782Is it a declaration of war that you make to me?
31782Is it craziness or cowardly terror on the part of those priests?"
31782Is it for us, her children, to join hands with the barbarians in whelming her with sorrows and trials?
31782Is it long since you saw them?"
31782Is it not hard enough to have to rise with the sun, and to lie down upon straw at night worn out with fatigue?"
31782Is it not spoliation and misery, and a determination to be free rather than submit to slavery?
31782Is it perchance an unpardonable crime to kill a brother?
31782Is it that you are itching to fall into the very bottom of hell?
31782Is it that you do not know what is going on in Gaul?
31782Is it the brilliant army which you lead at your heels that makes you so audacious?"
31782Is it thus that you defend me?
31782Is not monseigneur master in this place?
31782Is not one of these deep semi- circular grottoes, in which a man can stand upright, a veritable bake- house?
31782Is she worth the trouble of courting?"
31782Is that sensible?"
31782Is the man a peddler?"
31782Is their King dead?"
31782Is there any present, Prince or seigneur, who dares outrage divine majesty?"
31782Is your conscience still uneasy?
31782It began this wise:"''This morning we said: How many are there of these barbarous hordes?
31782It brings bad luck--""What, mother, simply because I desire to see a Korrigan, some misfortune will befall me?
31782It was a lure, was it not, learned Symphorien?"
31782Kervan was the first to overcome his grief, and broke the silence, addressing his nephew:"Is it long since my brother Karadeucq died?"
31782Later the prisoner of the pirates succeeded in making his escape, reentered Gaul, joined us hermit- laborers--""Why do you break off?"
31782Let us resume, I am growing more collected-- what shall we do?
31782Look yonder, monk, is not that a sight to make one''s heart break?
31782Loup?"
31782Nevertheless, coming to think of it, there is one thing that both of us have overlooked-- and it is of capital importance--""What is it, father?"
31782Or is it some favor that you mean to draw from me through intimidation?
31782Or, in cases where the former owners are no more, why does not the Church distribute the land among the slaves that cultivate it?"
31782Really?"
31782Resist?
31782Say, young man, are you the son of Karadeucq?"
31782Shall I ever hear from him?
31782Shall I grow old without knowing you?
31782Shall I never enjoy a day of love, of freedom?"
31782Shall we allow that, Karadeucq?"
31782Shall we give our good Vagres the signal that we agreed upon?
31782Shall we look for you in the house of the free woman, whose very hearth is turned under her own eyes into a brothel?
31782Shall we look for you in the hut of the female slave whom her masters outrage?
31782Shall we start with the prelate, or shall we start with the seigneur?
31782Should battle be engaged with the leudes?
31782Suddenly he checked his laughter and said to Chram:"King, would you see still better sport?"
31782Tell me, Neroweg, how much did you pay for the slave who is the chief of your kitchen?"
31782Tell me, clerk, do you believe the Lord will be pacified if I inflict that punishment upon the slave?"
31782The Vagres or the Franks?
31782The grandmother of the two poor little victims of that monster of a Clotaire?"
31782The juice of night flowers, served upon gold grass blades?"
31782The three dear friends of Chram, still dearer friends of pillage, of murder and of rape, accompany the royal personage, do you not hear?
31782This evening we say: How many were there of these Franks?''"
31782To eat him up?"
31782To- morrow we shall say to the bishop:''The Vagre has fled''--why do you laugh, Count Neroweg?"
31782Was it better to flee before them and await a better opportunity for an offensive stroke?
31782Was it not they who baptised the murderer a son of the Roman Church?
31782Was it not they who called the Franks into Gaul?
31782Was not that fosse filled with such deep slime that a man would be swallowed up in it if he attempted to cross it?
31782Was, then, the villa set on fire by the Vagres?
31782We must pardon the bishopess for her want of kindness, not so, Loysik?"
31782Well, my children?"
31782Well, while the bishopess is being revived, shall we try the bishop?"
31782Were there many of them?
31782Were they terrified to that extreme?"
31782What ails you?
31782What are you doing?"
31782What became of her, poor, dear victim of Frankish brutality?"
31782What became of the silver dish, a precious article that I brought from the pillage of the town of Issoire?
31782What bonfire was that?
31782What carpet?
31782What did you save my life for but in order to rejoice at my humiliation?"
31782What evil has befallen us?
31782What has happened to Karadeucq?"
31782What is it that drove you to revolt?
31782What is it they eat?
31782What is the matter, Jocelyn?
31782What is there frightful in the steps that are approaching?
31782What is to be done-- what is to be done?"
31782What is to be done?
31782What is your project?"
31782What kind of misfortune?"
31782What makes you look so pale?
31782What manner of torture will you inflict upon them?"
31782What may have become of him?"
31782What new thought has just sprouted in your head?"
31782What resistance can the female slave offer when threatened?
31782What table?
31782What tidings do you bring us from him?"
31782What was it that angered him?"
31782What were the prelate and the count engaged in while the Vagres were approaching the ecclesiastical villa through the underground gallery?
31782What were they engaged in?
31782What were we to do?
31782What will become of us all?
31782What will you do with it, beautiful bishopess in Vagrery?"
31782What?
31782When they finally fell upon him she said, after a moment, in a weak voice:"Ronan, is the night over, and is it now day?"
31782Whence do you come?"
31782Where did he sing it?
31782Where do these accursed Vagres propose to take me?"
31782Where is he?"
31782Where is hell?"
31782Where is my bow?"
31782Where is the good peddler that Hesus sends to us to help enliven this long winter''s night?"
31782Where is the misfortune that this stranger was to bring down upon our house?
31782Where shall we look for you in these days?
31782Where would you have me go, if not with you who speak to me with so much kindness?"
31782Which is to be preferred, the wife of a Frankish count or a bishopess?"
31782Which of the two lies?
31782Whither do your thoughts fly, my child?"
31782Who harvested the grape and pressed it into wine?
31782Who has the key to the railing?"
31782Who is he who is celebrating night mass in the bishop''s chapel?
31782Who produced these wines, these mountains of venison, of fish, of beef, of pork, of mutton, of game, of poultry, of vegetables and fruit?
31782Who said this?
31782Who sang this song?
31782Who should drink the wine?
31782Who was it that said this?
31782Who was it that spoke thus?
31782Who were the vanquishers in that combat?
31782Why did I allow him to depart this morning?
31782Why did I yield to you?
31782Why did these watchmen cast such wistful glances to the side of the burg?
31782Why do you crawl on your knees in that style?"
31782Why do you look at me so fixedly?
31782Why is your mien still preoccupied?
31782Why open that coffer?
31782Why should both be put to the trial at the same time?"
31782Why should we be any less able to hold our own in the future?
31782Why so pale?"
31782Why those tears?
31782Why, madam, I ask you, do you apprehend that your husband will kill you?"
31782Will they leave your father''s kingdom to you alone?"
31782Will you answer, dog?"
31782Will you assist me, hermit- laborer?"
31782Will you be with or against me?"
31782Will you die, my Vagre?
31782Will you draw down a shower of fire upon the heads of us all?
31782Will you have us, ye bold runners of the night?"
31782Will you not bless your son?"
31782Will you not wake up?
31782Will you speak?"
31782Will you still ask where is hell?"
31782Will you walk to the forest with us?"
31782Wilt thou dare deny that thou art guilty of that felony?"
31782With a gesture the hermit arrested the anger of the Vagres and said:"Bishop, do you recognize the words of Jesus of Nazareth as divine?
31782Would she not like to come and see her darling husband, the holy Bishop Cautin, before we hang him?"
31782Would you be capable of abusing your influence over the masses in order to incite them to a rebellion in my diocese?
31782Would you form an idea of the wealth of the bishops?
31782Would you have the courage to refuse him an embrace?"
31782Would you order us to commit a mortal sin?"
31782Ye poor ecclesiastical slaves, what shall be done to this wicked and profligate religious humbug who buries the living with the dead?"
31782You accepted the hard conditions?"
31782You among us,''Wand''ring men,''''Wolves,''''Heads of Wolves,''Vagres that we are?
31782You are silent, my old Vagre-- what are you thinking about?"
31782You have been thinking long, old Vagre-- have you decided upon a plan?"
31782You must have made war?"
31782You old toothless dog, why do you not hold the candle straight?"
31782You poor frightened mother-- did the angry gods punish my pet Karadeucq for having wished to see the Korrigans?
31782You say that those monks fought well-- were they armed?"
31782You want my pretty blonde slave also?"
31782You will not thereafter ask again:"Why did good Araim start this narrative to- day, and not yesterday?"
31782You will protect me against the Philistines?"
31782You, a hermit?
31782Your ancestors astonished the world by their generous bravery-- and would you slay a defenseless man?"
31782Your wife''s chamber, perhaps?
31782and so many other heroes of Gaul, were they not all sons of Auvergne?
31782cried Sigefrid,"shall we tolerate the heaping of insults upon our count?"
31782of the beautiful Auvergne, to- day the prey of Clotaire, the most odious, the most ferocious of the four sons of Clovis?
39093And is it possible,said he,"that you, too, could think me such a bear as not to receive your brother with kindness?"
39093Heart, my heart, what change comes o''er thee? 39093 Is it not beautiful?"
39093Muss es sein?
39093Must it be?
39093Quousque tandem?
39093What is Rossini?
39093Where am I not injured and wounded? 39093 Why such a variety of dishes?"
39093''[ 140]--''The Concertos?''
39093(_ Wer ist ein freier Mann?_) Beethoven wished to have words for the theme of those Variations with which the grand Sonata, Op.
39093--''None in the summer season?''
39093--''The Solos?''
39093--''The Symphonies?''
39093--Is it not usual for persons in the most respectable conditions of life to purchase rare vegetables or fruit for the table?
39093After a good deal of discussion with one and another, it was at last decided that the works should be brought before the public-- but where?
39093Am I again to experience this hateful ingratitude?
39093And how did Beethoven behave amidst the innumerable contradictions and contrasts that already everywhere pursued him?
39093And what remained for me to do in this, but to give up my teaching and my whole business, in order to devote all my time to him?
39093And why, besides, desire to secure a monopoly of the productions of mind?
39093And you have written of me to Göthe, have you not?
39093Are you satisfied now?
39093Are you satisfied?
39093Are you satisfied?
39093Are, then, these divine compositions to be converted into show pieces for the performance of professional piano- forte players?
39093As most of his letters addressed to me whilst in England speak of pecuniary distress, why should he not have sent me manuscripts, if possessed of any?
39093At my years, I need some uniformity, some equality, in my way of life; can this be in our mutual situation?
39093But is not some blame to be attributed to Beethoven himself?
39093But was all the experience in the world of any benefit to him?
39093But what would the practice of these exercises now avail?
39093But, with Beethoven''s extraordinary susceptibility on the point of love, may he not actually have fared the same as others?
39093Can our love subsist otherwise than by sacrifices, by not wishing for everything?
39093Canst thou help it that thou art not wholly mine, that I am not wholly thine?
39093Does not Mignon''s song breathe all her feelings through its melody, and must not these very feelings be reproductive in their turn?
39093Does not, for example, the middle movement in C major plainly point to the rising of a star of hope?
39093Does the devil then ride you all together, gentlemen, to propose to me to make such a Sonata?
39093Further on, does not this same middle movement indicate the firm resolution of the hero to overcome his fate?
39093Have I not been wrecked once before in this year through Neate?
39093Have I not fulfilled mine towards my poor parents, and rejoiced when I was able to assist them?
39093He consulted me only on the artistical part of the all- important question-- was he to grow rich, or remain poor?
39093He had quarrelled with Stephen von Breuning( as with what friend did he not quarrel?
39093He says:"What can I answer to your warmfelt excuses?
39093He was most enthusiastic about your proposal of meeting him at Karlsbad, struck his forehead, and said,"Might I not have done this before?
39093How can I send you my portrait?
39093How could any rational person who is acquainted with Beethoven solely from his works, maintain the contrary?
39093How many pounds of butchers''meat are allowed for three persons?"
39093How often should one give them meat?--Ought they to have it both at dinner and supper?
39093How strong is your band?
39093How, then, did all this affect Beethoven?
39093I did the same thing with an early song of Beethoven''s--"Who is a free man?"
39093I feel it, my youth is but beginning-- have I not hitherto been a sickly creature?
39093I have not yet decided for or against this change, but who has not felt the storm which is raging around us?
39093If Cato, speaking of Cæsar, exclaimed''This man and we''--what shall we say of such a one as this?
39093In fact, is not the explanation of every individual phrase perfectly natural?
39093In how far could that ameliorate my condition?
39093In whom has the like ever been seen?
39093Is it to be supposed that he put the finishing hand to these also for the benefit of that undertaking?
39093Is the agreement become burdensome to you?
39093Is the reader curious to learn how Beethoven behaved towards such visitors?
39093Is the room large-- does the music tell in it?
39093It is said that, when he was asked,--"What is become of such a ring, or such a watch?"
39093It may be asked what object Maelzel could have to carry his dishonesty to such a length?
39093It may be asked, where was then his powerful patron and friend, Prince Lichnowsky, who would probably have cut the knot?
39093Melody gives a sensible existence to poetry; for does not the meaning of a poem become embodied in melody?
39093Might I not be your agent here for many things?
39093Need we say with what deep regret your late retired mode of life has filled us?
39093Or is it to be presumed that he was timid and alarmed in the year 1809 alone?
39093Or, let me ask, is it right to drag before the tribunal of the public what has been said and done in unguarded moments among friends and acquaintance?
39093The dedication was made by letter only; but are not such letters of greater value?
39093The plan succeeded to admiration, but what was the consequence?
39093They tell me wonders of galvanism; what is your opinion of it?
39093Unless the prices are raised, what will remain for me after so many expenses, since the copying alone has cost so much?"
39093Was there no fault in the execution?
39093Was there no party- spirit?
39093What a frivolous waste of time,& c.!--Why this profound sorrow, when necessity commands?
39093What can I say to you of myself?
39093What can such bravura players make of the melodies of Beethoven, so simple yet so profoundly imbued with sentiment?
39093What do you think of Schmidt?
39093What is a proper allowance for two servants for dinner and supper, both as to quality and quantity?"
39093What is now- a- days thought of a simple_ Allegro_, as written by Mozart or Beethoven?
39093What is to be done at last about this much- talked- of Concert?
39093What is to be the end of it, and what will become of me if it lasts much longer?
39093What then could be alleged in excuse of Beethoven, if Ries were right?
39093What will the professors of the Paris Conservatoire, and M. Habeneck, the leader, say to this?
39093What wrings thee thus with pain?
39093When I had thus proved myself to be right, he said,"Well, and who forbids them?"
39093When could such a mind be reproduced?--when equalled?
39093When the composer entered, the prince said to him in an indifferent tone--"But, my dear Beethoven, what have you been about here again?"
39093Whence was the necessary firmness to come in the conflicts with external life?
39093Where now is feeling-- where expression, and, indeed, where opportunity for the manifestation of any sensibility?
39093Who would not find his feelings revolted by this disgraceful fact?
39093Who would not rejoice to see the wanderer return again to the right path?
39093Why did not Ries insert Beethoven''s letter in that publication?
39093Why not have sent it with the manuscript of the music?
39093Why should no other publisher be allowed to adorn his shop with a work of Beethoven''s, when the house in question already had so many of them?
39093Will you, my dearest Ries, inform Mr. Birchall of this without delay?
39093You love me a little, eh?
39093You will write as soon as possible, will you?
39093[ 11] How happens it that Beethoven, sensible of the impropriety of this system of education, should not have avoided it in bringing up his nephew?
39093[ 127] Who does not with deep regret feel that such gross neglect amounts almost to profanation of the works of the great master?
39093[ 96] Am I continually to be forced to entangle myself in these abominations?
39093add_ two notes_ to a composition already worked out and out, and completed six months ago?
39093and should there not be beauty to render originality palatable?''
39093how can a parvum talentum com ego look for an appointment at the Imperial court?
39093how many violins,& c.& c., with single or double wind instruments?
39093inquired I, writing the words on the slate.--''Neither in summer nor winter,''exclaimed he.--''What should they hear?--Fidelio?''
39093part with thee this very day?
39093when can I again feel it in the temple of Nature and of men?--never?
39093who comprehends the meaning of this word?
39093with whom may I speak of this great divinity?
40677And did you,inquired a friend to whom Drew told the story,"pursue the boy and chastise him for his insolence?"
40677Protestantism a Failure''--two lectures delivered by F. C. EWER;The Signs of the Times-- Is Christianity Failing?"
40677What differ more''( you cry)''than crown and cowl?'' 40677 Who are you, sir,"demanded my lord,"that have the assurance to meddle in this affair?"
40677Why do you not speak?
40677Why do you_ write_ to me? 40677 Act v. Scene 3._ Archbishop Whately once amused a clerical dinner- party by asking the question,Why do_ white_ sheep eat more than_ black_ sheep?"
40677Did not this utterly crush me?
40677He says,"Mr. Wesley skulks for shelter under a cobbler''s apron;"and again,"Has Tom the Cobbler more learning and integrity than John the Priest?"
40677How are we to account for such facts as these?
40677How did you fall in?
40677In answer to the question,"What shoemaker has risen to political or literary eminence in the United States?"
40677Is there anything in the_ occupation_ of the shoemaker which is peculiarly favorable to habits of thought and study?
40677Looking at him with admiration mingled with something like pity, the admiral exclaimed,"Why, what can you do, my fearless lad?"
40677Taking a child''s hand, he would say,"What is this?
40677The question is often asked,"How are we to account for the fact that shoemakers outnumber any other handicraft in the ranks of illustrious men?
40677Then slapping it he would say,"What did I do?
40677They praise my sermons, and consider me a prodigy of learning; and yet what do I know?
40677This verse occurs in one of his publications--"''Apollo, why,''a matron cried,''Are poets all so poor?''
40677What could be a more pleasing and appropriate present than this book?
40677What could be more miserable and disheartening?
40677What does a particular passage mean, and to what use is it to be applied in public teaching?
40677Where have you been to?"
40677Why not speak?
40677[ 137] For an able discussion of the question,"Was Richard Savage an Impostor?"
40677[ 162] See answer to the question,"What is thy duty toward thy neighbor?"
40677can you preach in Arabic, in Persic, in Hindostani, in Bengali, that you think it your duty to preach the gospel to the heathen?"
40677what will be the end of my poor unhappy boy?"
39966And what is your own opinion?
39966And when do you think, my child, that you will succeed in this great design?
39966Are you dreaming now?
39966How came that goodly plant here, brother?
39966How is it, then, that you see me?
39966So be it,said Sylvester;"and if this comes to life again at the name of Christ, will ye believe?"
39966What are you doing, my pretty child?
39966Where is your body at this moment?
39966Who is there?
39966Would it not be good for my soul?
39966Your eyes, then, are closed and bound in sleep?
39966''And how can I endure patiently,''rejoined the leper,''since my pains are without intermission night and day?
39966''What peace,''exclaimed the leper,''can I have who am utterly diseased?''
39966''Who art thou,''said the lion,''who darest to bite me?''
39966''You may if you like; but what can you do more than the rest?''
3996622, 23, where Jesus said to Peter,"If I will that he[ John] tarry till I come, what is that to thee?
39966And for what worshipful reason would the wretch do such villainy to the cross of Christ?
39966And they asked him again,''How long is it since?''
39966And yet who will credit this?
39966But on another night the same youth came again, and asked,"Do you remember me?"
39966Can he persuade himself to utterly destroy so great and populous a city?''
39966Can not the corpses of the rich decay save in silk?
39966Do you think it troublesome to be asked any more questions?''
39966For when sudden destruction comes upon us, how can we be carried to a stable if it be far off?
39966Gregory said nothing more, but at the end of the meal he called to the thirteenth and unbidden guest,"Who art thou?"
39966Has any one appeased him?
39966Have we not many horses less valuable that would have suited the man just as well?"
39966He at once awoke, and they called out,"Why do you alone lie snoring here, while all your brethren are watching in the church?"
39966His lips seem to be parting with the question,"Whose is this image and superscription?"
39966How, then, can I speak evil of my King, who saved me?"
39966Is he incensed?
39966Is it not better that you should do this honourable action and receive the reward yourself?"
39966Is not this an high reason?
39966Moses has not told us precisely what tree it was: why should we wish to know what the Holy Scriptures have concealed?"
39966Our Saviour taught people only to excel in love and patience: why should priests grasp the sword for the temporal and perishable things of earth?"
39966Ruffinus says that Macarius once went to visit Antony in the mountain, and, knocking at the door, Antony opened to him and asked,"Who art thou?"
39966She burst into tears at this coldness, and at last exclaimed,"And what if I am a sinner?
39966She then retorted,"But what will it signify to you, Emperor, if it is left to some other person to do me justice?
39966Sylvester, with some shrewdness, observed,"As he who whispered the name must be well acquainted with it, why does not he fall dead in like manner?"
39966The King heard of this, and next day at dinner said,"How was it, lord bishop, that you gave away that fine horse to a beggar man?
39966The King hearing of this, asked Aidan why he did such a thing, and the answer was,"Surely a mare is nothing to compare with that son of God?"
39966The astonished apostle said,"Lord, whither goest Thou?"
39966The bishop''s answer was,"Surely, King, the foal of a mare can not be dearer to you than that son of God?"
39966The cardinals ironically whispered to each other,"Only look; can that be the Holy Ghost in the shape of an owl?"
39966The monk said,"But, father, how if I were to die without Sacraments in the wild waste?"
39966The obedient hermit arrived, and was joyfully welcomed; but the Pope, raising him up, said,"What garment is this, Jerome?
39966The widow then exclaimed,"But, sire, if you are killed in battle, who then is to do me justice?"
39966To this Poemen answered,"Do you think God would not receive you, coming from the battle- field?"
39966WAS ST. PAUL EVER IN GREAT BRITAIN?
39966Was it rational, when danger is on every side, to choose to remain where the danger is greatest?"
39966What more shall I say?
39966What sentence has he pronounced?
39966What was to be done with this intolerable nuisance?
39966When challenged for these constantly repeated exercises, he would say,"If I spent twice as much time in dice and hawking, should I be so rebuked?"
39966When his end drew near, he was seen to weep, which made the other monks ask,"Are_ you_ then, father, afraid?"
39966Why do you wrap even your dead in golden vestments?
39966Why does not ambition stop amid grief and tears?
39966Why for my sake omit your duty, your law, or your religion?
39966Why should this queen be so anxious to see a man disfigured by fasting and toil, and as brown as a chameleon?
39966or what their Maker, whose hand created them, or by whose will they are all governed?
39718A shark?
39718Ah, yes, how did they know?
39718At the time?
39718But how could they know New Zealand was there?
39718Can you tell me anything of the action?
39718Do you believe it is true?
39718Had they compasses?
39718Have you noticed a tree covered in spider webs during a fog? 39718 Have you seen the devil?"
39718Supernatural?
39718Tell us, friend, did you find it on the other side as you had preached?
39718The Maoris had a fair wind then?
39718Well, did you perceive resemblance?
39718Well, did you, for example, see Christ?
39718What bird is it?
39718What do you mean?
39718What have we to do,they say,"with these old historical quarrels which are hardly intelligible to us?
39718What is this ribald nonsense?
39718What''s psychic? 39718 Where did it come from?"
39718Who are you, friend?
39718Why not?
39718You mean fairies and things?
39718You''re sure it was Sir Oliver?
39718''Who''s that?''
39718Above all, how did the birds get into the carefully- guarded seance room, especially as Bailey was put in a bag during the proceedings?
39718After all, how much education had the apostles?
39718After all, if enemies are given full play, why should not friends redress the balance?
39718Among other remarkable advertisements was one"What has become of''Pelorus Jack''?
39718And the others?
39718Are they not the pools left behind by that terrible tide?
39718But after all, what''s the odds?
39718But how can anyone win through?
39718But what has a materialist to say to the whole story?
39718But what have Spiritualists had in the main save misrepresentation and persecution?
39718But what of Silesia and of Poland now?
39718But why should I abandon one faith in order to embrace another one?
39718Can a man with a moderate capital get a share of these good things?
39718Can any prophecy be more accurate or better authenticated than that?
39718Can such phrases really mean anything to any thoughtful man?
39718Can they not see that if they grant us one- tenth, they grant us our whole contention?
39718Do they think what they are saying, or does Faith atrophy some part of the brain?
39718Does anyone import Indian nests?
39718Does anyone import queer little tortoises with long, thin necks?
39718Granting that they are Jewish forgeries, how do they get into the country?
39718Had Germany obeyed the moral law would she not now be great and flourishing, instead of the ruin which we see?
39718Has France ever had the credit she deserves for the splendid faith with which she followed that great beneficent genius Lesseps in his wonderful work?
39718Have you ever seen Olver Lodge, sir?"
39718He answered,"Was it not in''_ Light_''office in London?"
39718His words to the sick woman,"Who has touched me?
39718How can a man fail to be earnest then?
39718How can the bulk of the people ever get into touch with a good medium if they are debarred from doing so in the ordinary way of business?
39718How can they hope with their feeble hands to clear the ground?
39718How could the motor- car or the aeroplane have been developed if hundreds had not been ready to give their lives to pay the price?
39718How long has the Aryan race to run?
39718How many cases are on record of the strange changes and wild deeds of individuals?
39718How many of us have, for example, seen the rings of Saturn?
39718How then can any church progress when all its leaders are over that age?
39718I ask again: What is this ribald nonsense?"
39718I have seen three pictures of his,"The Goths,""Who Comes?"
39718I suppose that on such a voyage one should rest and do nothing, but how difficult it is to do nothing, and can it be restful to do what is difficult?
39718I wonder from what heights that old fellow had fallen before he brought up against the public house wall?
39718If He be with us, who is against us?
39718If here and there one had a new idea, how could it survive the pressure of the others?
39718If not, why continue them?
39718If so, what is your charges?
39718If the whole transaction is normal, then where does he get them?
39718If these articles can be got in any normal way, then what is the way?
39718If they are not genuine, where do they come from?
39718Is it possible that under some conditions a mineral may change into a metal?
39718Is not valour the basis of all character, and where shall we find greater valour than theirs?
39718Is there a depot for Turkish copper coins in Australia?
39718Is there at the present moment one single bishop, or one head of a Free Church, who has the first idea of psychic truth?
39718Is there such evidence?
39718The man dies, and then where are these experiments?
39718Then what about 100 Babylonian tablets, with legible inscriptions in Assyrian, some of them cylindrical, with long histories upon them?
39718Then why were they playing tricks upon themselves?
39718Was colonisation to be abandoned, or were these brave savages to be overcome?
39718Was ever such an object lesson in sin and its consequence placed before the world?
39718Was he a lost soul?"
39718Was it fraud?
39718Was it not spirituality?
39718Well, who knows?
39718What are these among so many?
39718What are we to make of such a mixture?
39718What are we to say to that?
39718What did Hippocrates mean when he said,"The affections suffered by the body the soul sees with shut eyes?"
39718What direct proof have we of most of the great facts of Science?
39718What is he up to now?"
39718What is it?"
39718What right had such a man to die, he who had more vim and passion, and knowledge of varied life than the very best of us?
39718What view will the coming Labour governments of Britain take of our Imperial commitments?
39718What was wanting in you to bring you to such a pass?
39718What would not Galileo and all the old untravelled astronomers have given to have one glimpse of this wondrous Southern display?
39718When they speared the cattle of the settlers what were the settlers to do?
39718Where''s that little boy?"
39718Which is better-- that a race be free, immoral and incompetent, or that it be forced into morality and prosperity?
39718Who else could have drawn such fine detail and yet so broad and philosophic a picture?
39718Who loses except themselves?
39718Why do I not see it all the time?
39718Why should anyone invent such a thing, putting an actual name to the person?
39718Why should quartz always be the matrix?
39718Would a hundred million pounds cover the cost of that one?
35965Ai n''t I got a nice clean place?
35965All the way to the coast, eh?
35965And I suppose some of those holes you speak of are full of snakes?
35965And you''re really going to mention me?
35965Are you aware,I returned,"that half the bank clearings of Chicago are traceable to the stockyards?"
35965Are you from New York?
35965But Colorado Springs is a little bit of a place, is n''t it?
35965But I thought you said the road was wide?
35965But where is he?
35965But,objected the visitor,"all those places are in California, are n''t they?"
35965Colonel Nelson,said the attorney, menacingly,"did you write this?"
35965Colonel,asked the Colonel,"how old are you?"
35965Could n''t we walk it, then?
35965Did n''t you notice?
35965Did you enjoy your morning?
35965Did you ever feel a city growing so?
35965Do n''t you think my car can make it? 35965 Do the people out in this section of the State all have cyclone cellars?"
35965Do you get up early?
35965Do you know why you see so many of them?
35965Do you mean Charles A. Towne, the lawyer; Charles Wayland Towne, the author; or Charles Hanson Towne, the poet?
35965Do you mean that the snow makes it dangerous?
35965Do you mean the way we live at home?
35965Do you mean to say you do n''t want to be fair?
35965Do you think it is worth going on?
35965Do you want to be original?
35965Happened?
35965Have people gotten lost in here?
35965Have you any children?
35965Have you got to be going?
35965How about Askew?
35965How about some of the old stories of robberies in which you were supposed to have taken part?
35965How did you happen to know my name?
35965How did you like it?
35965How did your mother feel about it?
35965How do you like it?
35965How do you like the change?
35965How far are you young men going, did you say?
35965How far is it to the top?
35965How long have you been here?
35965How long should it take?
35965How long will it take you to pack?
35965How many children and grandchildren have you?
35965How many have you?
35965How many men are working in your factory now?
35965How many people are there here?
35965How much do you think we ought to give him for all this?
35965How much time can you spare?
35965How much truth is there in the different stories of bank robberies and train robberies committed by them?
35965How old is Colonel Buell?
35965How would it be for you to beat a policeman on the helmet?
35965How would we pass?
35965How would you like to get off and spend a week here, some day?
35965I hope you are n''t a coward? 35965 I know that, Colonel,"said the Colonel,"but what is your age?"
35965I suppose we had better go to the Sanitarium for lunch?
35965I suppose you''ve seen cyclones out here, too?
35965I suppose,I said to him presently,"there are toads and snakes and such things here?"
35965I suppose,I said,"there was some battle here, beside some creek, was n''t there?"
35965I suppose,said he,"that instead of drawing stockers and feeders with horses, they use gasoline motors now- a- days?"
35965If I advise you,he pursued,"will you agree to follow my advice?"
35965If you do that,he criticized,"who will make the pictures?"
35965Is n''t there even a fence?
35965Is that all you want to know?
35965Is that all?
35965Is that all?
35965Is there any wall at the edge?
35965Is this it?
35965It is sort of narrow for a turn, is n''t it?
35965Keep after him?
35965My man,said the regular naval officer on the bridge to common seaman Newberry below,"do you know what yacht that is?"
35965Never been in Kansas City?
35965Notice?
35965Notice_ what_?
35965Now,I said,"will you please tell me where Charles Towne was born?"
35965Of what else is my life composed? 35965 Oh, Ka''zoo, eh?
35965Oh,she said,"are you a writer?"
35965Oh?
35965Say, do you think Chicago is really any more moral this minute because the old red- light district is shut down? 35965 She''s a good old snow- boat, is n''t she?"
35965Spoil this machine? 35965 Students?"
35965That_ what_?
35965The Drew Question?
35965The other side?
35965Then why did Detroit become the automobile center?
35965Then you do n''t celebrate New Year''s out here?
35965Turn around?
35965Walk?
35965Well, did you run out?
35965Were you there?
35965What am I,he cries,"in the eyes of the eternal hills?
35965What are stockers and feeders?
35965What are your hobbies outside your business?
35965What did you eat-- Mercerized hay?
35965What does he want to ask about?
35965What for?
35965What happened?
35965What is it?
35965What is it?
35965What is the best way for us to see the town?
35965What is the idea?
35965What is there at Elko?
35965What makes you believe that?
35965What mountain do you call this?
35965What on earth is that thing?
35965What was that?
35965What was their idea in throwing the bomb?
35965What will you do-- back down?
35965What''s the matter?
35965What, for instance?
35965What?
35965When has your company been fair to Kansas City? 35965 Where are you from?"
35965Where do you boys want to go now?
35965Where else is there to go?
35965Where else would they be?
35965Where is the elevator?
35965Where''s William?
35965Which one?
35965Who killed him?
35965Who owns her?
35965Who''s that?
35965Why did you come?
35965Why do n''t you think of something for yourself to do?
35965Why do you say provincial?
35965Why is it so especially civilized?
35965Why is it,he asked in a bored and irritated tone,"that every one who comes out here has to go to the stockyards?"
35965Why not?
35965Why not?
35965Why not?
35965Will you have your toddy now?
35965Will you let me know when it comes out?
35965Would you like to go back?
35965You do n''t know about that? 35965 You do n''t mean that little dark slanting streak like a wire running back and forth, do you?"
35965You mean in my case?
35965You mean the building?
35965You yelled, did n''t you?
35965You''d of thought so, would n''t you?
35965You''re from New York? 35965 _ Plain?_"I gasped.
35965_ Thirty- five?_I repeated, astonished.
35965''Why,''he inquired,''are you from New York, too?''
35965( Is it dissemination?)
35965After a moment''s silence, he asked:"Travel out this way much?"
35965And as for:"How do you like being married?"
35965And did you know that in California as well as in New Hampshire there are the White Mountains?
35965And what do you know of the Wahsatch and Oquirrh Ranges?
35965And what do you suppose we had for breakfast?
35965And what happens?
35965And what is his own house like?
35965And what is memory built of, that it should outlast them?
35965And what on earth have they been doing to the neighborhood?
35965Are you shocked by my ignorance-- or my confession of it?
35965Are you there?
35965As we moved towards the elevator the waiter asked politely:"The gentlemans have never been in here before?"
35965At the bottom of the card was this-- shall I call it warning?
35965Because my shoes are polished?"
35965But as we were about to retire, a fellow- passenger with whom we had been talking, asked,"Are n''t you going to sit up for Elko?"
35965But do you see this border on it?
35965But how to ask?
35965But is that any worse than the chance for graft when the women are just chased around from place to place by the police?
35965But segregation keeps the worst of it from being scattered all over town, does n''t it?
35965But suppose I were not so-- suppose I were to come along to him, hanging by one leg from the trolley-- what would he do then?
35965But was it?
35965But what city has respected its ruins?
35965But what could I do?
35965But what if they do?
35965But when the medium requested him to give a message he could only falter:"Are you all right over there?"
35965But where are the cherry trees?
35965But where is Guy Hardy''s house?
35965But why rehearse the pathetic story?
35965CHAPTER XXIV COLONEL NELSON''S"STAR""What do you expect to see in Kansas City?"
35965Can he be living still?
35965Can it be that the school smell has gone forever from the earth-- that it has vanished with our youth-- that the rising generation may not know it?
35965Can you blame the little fellow for not talking?"
35965Can you tell me the population of Chicago?"
35965Could one''s mental attitude become so warped that one might actually look forward to returning-- to being greeted by the"family"?
35965Did we not even know what sort of underwear encased the ample figure of the man with the amazing memory of unessential things?
35965Did you ever see an apple with flesh white and firm, yet tender as a pear at the exact point of perfect ripeness?
35965Did you ever taste an apple that seemed actually to melt upon your tongue?
35965Do n''t you see that''s the way to make your story original?"
35965Do they wear tiaras and diamond stomachers?
35965Do you ask why she is different from her sisters?
35965Do you remember the big classroom that served almost every purpose?
35965Do you remember the old wooden floors?
35965Do you remember the plague of grasshoppers?
35965Do you remember the ugly old school building?
35965Do you remember when Tom Sawyer took the boys to the cave at night, in"Huckleberry Finn"?
35965Do you remember"Jim Bludso of the''Prairie Belle''"?
35965Do you remember, when you went to school, the long closet, or dressing room, where you used to hang your coat and hat?
35965Do you think we lack imagination?
35965Does it not seem a mistake for any museum not possessed of enormous wealth to attempt a collection of old masters?
35965Does n''t it remind you of the little boy who says to the other little boy:"My father can lick your father"?
35965Does n''t that claim reflect the quality of youth?
35965Finally I said to him:"What is the use in my copying all that stuff when you have it right there in print?
35965For is n''t it always the open season so far as railroads are concerned?
35965Freer, I inquired:"Do you care for art?"
35965Has it ever struck you that hotel waitresses are a race apart?
35965Have I always been as considerate of him, on this trip, as I should have been?
35965Have they that energy which replaces worn- out tires-- and methods-- and ideas?
35965Have you ever heard of Cranston, R. I., Butler, Pa., or Belleville, Ill.?
35965Have you, for example, ever heard of Anniston, Ala.?
35965He replied with a question:"When people come after_ you_ because they want to get something out of you, do n''t you get their number?"
35965How can men take so fine a name and treat it lightly?
35965How can they stand living out here?
35965How can those houses be so completely gone?
35965How can you muckrake a gallery like that?
35965How would you compare them?"
35965I call myself civilized-- and why?
35965I could n''t very well say to this pleasant lady:"How do you like being one of five or six wives, and how do you think the others like it?"
35965I felt like saying:"Why?
35965I felt that I must interrupt to save my reason, so I pointed in the direction of Mount Tamalpais, and cried:"What is that, over there?"
35965I had an engagement for dinner that evening, and besides, if I fell in, who would write the story?
35965I say, miss,_ are_ you there?"
35965I wonder if you knew it before?
35965If you had asked:"Is there anything wrong with Los Angeles?"
35965If, upon the other hand, you ask a Minneapolis man that question, what will he do?
35965In answer to this statement, Miss Buck simply winked one eye as one who would say:"You''re some little liar, ai n''t you?"
35965In that house over there lived a boy named Ben Ford, who moved away-- to where?
35965Is it an expression of the craving of Kansas mothers for poetry and romance?
35965Is it not, perhaps, a reaction, on the part of parents, against the eternal struggle with the soil, the eternal practicalities of farm life?
35965Is n''t that so?"
35965Is there any other thing in the world which epitomizes our times as does an automobile funeral?
35965It did not seem proper to inquire of my hostess:"How can you be content?"
35965Leo, the lion, eh?"
35965Louis?"
35965Now, remembering that whatever we may believe, the Mormons believe devoutly in their religion, what must be their point of view about all this?
35965Or Argenta, Ark.?
35965Or are they driven by chauffeurs?
35965Or would I grow tired of that, just as I grow tired of the contrasting coldness of New York?
35965Or would he do his work impartially?
35965Original?
35965SHIP- BORED Who has n''t been?
35965Should n''t I have taken more interest in his packing?
35965So I went over to her and asked:"How large is this store, please?"
35965St. Louis west?
35965Suppose they had caught one or two of them?
35965Suppose you had to decide between those three which would you take?
35965Take this little dinner we had to- night--""_ What?_"I cried.
35965That''s what we came up for, is n''t it?"
35965The heads of great Detroit industries drive their own cars; and if the fact seems unimportant, consider: do the leading men of your city drive theirs?
35965The publishers will have spent all this money for our traveling, and what will they get?"
35965The question is not"Will he win?"
35965The question is, which?
35965Then he asked me:''What are you doing away out here?''
35965Then let me ask you if you know that the Uintah Mountain Range, in Utah, is the only range in the entire country which runs east and west?
35965Then those hams and capons-- how many politicians can compare for interest with a tender capon or a fine old country ham?
35965Then, where did he get the Tosa design?
35965Then:"Did you lunch at the''San''?"
35965Then:"Do you expect to play cards much as you go along?"
35965Then:"What town are you making next?"
35965There''s no place like home"--?
35965Was Mr. Henry dreaming?
35965Was it right for me to insist on his going to bed that night, in Excelsior Springs, when he wanted to stay up?
35965Was it right for me to insist on his staying up that night, in San Francisco, when he wanted to go to bed?
35965Was she a new arrival?
35965Was she an"inmate"of one of the establishments?
35965We--""Yes,"you say,"but where is the Mark Twain house?"
35965Were they not built of timber?
35965What American can understand Italian railway stations?
35965What Commercial Club has n''t?
35965What are you holding back?
35965What city in the world can vie with San Francisco either in the beauty or the natural advantages of her situation?
35965What could I know about a cave away out here in Missouri?"
35965What did he find out?
35965What do the Atlantic Coast Congressmen and the Pacific Coast Congressmen really know of one another''s requirements?
35965What had dazed them so-- the bigness of the world?
35965What if assessments have been high?
35965What line are you gen''l''men travelling in?"
35965What must it be like to get home, when home is such a place?
35965What place has n''t?
35965What was her feeling at seeing, again, the crimson beacon in her own window?
35965What will we do then?
35965What would Kansas and Missouri make of them?
35965What''s a hundred?"
35965What, then, could I ask?
35965Where did the Chinese get that?
35965Where is the Lonergans''--the Lonergans who used to have the goat and wagon?
35965Where is the round flower bed?
35965Where was Artis?
35965Where was William?
35965Where was little Ed, ex- jockey, and ex- slave?
35965Where were the old colored coachmen who were so good to us?
35965Who could think of breakfast in a place like that?
35965Who shall say that tumbleweed is useless, since it contributes a rare note of drollery to the tragic desolation of the western plains?
35965Who tore up the missing will?"
35965Who would have believed it?
35965Why dally with the human race when seals are living such a lurid life?
35965Why did they not look up in wonderment?
35965Why did they not look up in wonderment?
35965Why did they not look up in wonderment?]
35965Why do n''t you wear a cap in here in all this dust?''
35965Why do we have so many Main Streets?
35965Why have they moved all the houses closer to the street and spoiled the old front yards?
35965Why then should they refer to the San Francisco Fire as the"Earthquake"?
35965Why were their bovine eyes gazing blankly ahead of them at nothing?
35965Why, I wonder?
35965Why?"
35965Will hearses go shooting through the streets at forty miles an hour?
35965Will the history of the Minnesota cities be repeated in Missouri?
35965Would I always want to?
35965Would he stop to ask why they had sent another sort of animal, I wondered?
35965Yet, after all, why should they understand?
35965You would n''t take offense if I gave you a pointer about your game?"
35965but"How much?")
35965they''d probably be content with selling you a city lot and then hanging you; but if you said:"What_ is_ wrong with Los Angeles?"
3464A holdup?
3464After all,she said softly,"if he loves her very much, and there was no other way-- Do you remember that night she arrived-- how he looked at her?"
3464And Percy agreed?
3464And the body of my parent-- could I let it lie and rot in the so hot sun? 3464 And the paper you dropped in the train-- was that a coincidence?"
3464And the tourists?
3464And the young lady?
3464And then?
3464And when was it that you assaulted the detective?
3464And who''s to know but that our guide will be in league with them? 3464 And you did that, knowing what it entailed?
3464And-- and berries?
3464And-- what about the-- the red- headed man over there?
3464Anyhow, what''s that to me? 3464 Are you ashamed of the body the Lord gave you?
3464Are you crazy?
3464Are you going for trout or bass?
3464Are you sure you wo n''t have tea?
3464Are you willing to swear you made that silly outfit?
3464As for instance?
3464As for what you want,she said,"how are we to know that?
3464At least,Mr. Oliver said savagely,"you can tell them who I am, ca n''t you?"
3464Biscuit in times like these?
3464Built for speed, is n''t she? 3464 But are n''t you in love with her?"
3464But do you think people have so much time in the-- er-- woods?
3464But may I have a little of your fire? 3464 But of course she refused?"
3464But the girl?
3464But what about Bettina and Jasper?
3464Ca n''t you toss a brand this way?
3464Can you imagine what mischief she''s up to?
3464Come now, Miss Lizzie,she said,"how can I help when I do n''t know what is being done?
3464Dear lady,he said,"there are n''t enough rabbits in the county to cover me, and how''d I put''em together?
3464Did n''t I tell you?
3464Did you notice that that young man said they would be firing blank cartridges?
3464Did you order it, Miss Lizzie?
3464Did you see its eyes? 3464 Did you think I meant the other one?"
3464Do I look like it?
3464Do I?
3464Do n''t I give him half his meals, with him soft- soapin''Miss Tish till she ca n''t see for suds? 3464 Do n''t you see it all?
3464Do the Indians stay on the reservation?
3464Do we look like persons carrying weapons?
3464Do you have to be alone?
3464Do you know the wireless code?
3464Do you know what she''s doing now? 3464 Do you know why he''s here?"
3464Do you know,she said,"the greatest weapon in the world?"
3464Do you suppose we''ll meet anybody but desperadoes and Indians in a place like this? 3464 Do you think she''s unalterably decided to take McDonald, money and all?
3464Does he come around-- er-- often?
3464Does he drink and smoke?
3464Does he live near?
3464Does it come off?
3464Drive where?
3464Explain to three lunatics? 3464 Get out of her?"
3464Go over them?
3464Gone is he?
3464Got what?
3464Grocery list?
3464Has Percy fallen out of the tree?
3464Has it any alcohol in it?
3464Have you any weapons?
3464Have you ever reflected, either of you,she observed,"that we know nothing of this great land of ours?
3464Have you got anything to eat?
3464Have you noticed,she said,"that the detective is always watching our camp?"
3464He is-- not to be suspected?
3464He''s looking at me rather strangely, do n''t you think? 3464 How are you betting, Aunt Tish?"
3464How can he be a spy when we see him all day long? 3464 How can we creep up on them when on every stony place we sound like an artillery engagement?"
3464How did he have a stable?
3464How did you get my grocery list?
3464How far north?
3464How is everything?
3464How long am I to be a prisoner?
3464How long did you ride?
3464How much to drive us fifteen miles in that direction?
3464How?
3464I hate to interrupt,said Hutchins;"but did he have a mustache as a boy?"
3464I hope you''re not sick, Hutchins?
3464I just thought as I was sitting there alone--"Where''s Tish?
3464I know you''ll look after him and make him comfortable and-- how old is Miss Letitia?
3464I say,he said,"you do n''t mean to camp here, do you?"
3464I suppose father and the Willoughby person will come to meet him?
3464I suppose you know,he said nastily,"that your train has gone and that you can not get the boat tomorrow?"
3464I suppose you like the same things?
3464I try to look after her, but what can I do?
3464I-- What other one?
3464I?
3464I?
3464If I choose to take a poor starving Christian youth and assist him by buying from him what I need-- what I need!--that''s my affair, is n''t it? 3464 If he wins, it''s all right, is n''t it?"
3464If you are going to see him,she said,"you might put them where he''ll find them?"
3464If you feel that way why do you do it?
3464If you find a roasted frog''s leg on the ground-- so-- there''s nothing to prevent you eating it, is there?
3464In this car?
3464Is anything broken?
3464Is it possible,she said in a withering tone that was lost on us at the time,"that you brought no dumb- bells with you?"
3464Is she-- is she always like this?
3464Is that all the loot you secured during the infamous scene on Piegan Pass?
3464Is that all?
3464Is the cure working?
3464Is who gone?
3464Is-- is he-- er-- nasty?
3464It is a fish, is n''t it?
3464It is for ships--"You go there in a ship?
3464It is not enough that I study? 3464 It looks like it, does n''t it?"
3464It''s a wonderful business, is n''t it?
3464It''s all civilized, is n''t it?
3464It''s quite convincing, is n''t it?
3464Its mate?
3464Jasper?
3464Just kick those things I brought into the river, will you? 3464 Just what,"broke in Charlie Sands,"does one say under such circumstances?
3464Lady,said one of the prostrate men,"are n''t you going to give us anything to eat?"
3464Lizzie,she said suddenly,"did you notice that when the anchor was lifted, we drifted directly to this island?
3464Look here,Tish said, putting down her beads;"what were you doing there that night anyhow?
3464Merciful Heavens, what''ll I do with the hose?
3464Mind if I borrow some matches?
3464Mind if I take you as you go down the mountain?
3464Miss Carberry,said the detective gently,"I believe you are back of this race, are n''t you?"
3464Miss Letitia,he said,"do you think you are wise to drive that racer of his the way you have been doing?"
3464Miss Lizzie,he began at once,"what have I done to you to have you treat me like this?"
3464Miss Lizzie,he said desperately,"do you want to hear me propose to her?
3464Miss Tish? 3464 Mother said-- that is-- won''t you go right upstairs and have some tea and lie down?"
3464Nice bag, is n''t it?
3464Not going to hike, are you?
3464Oh, Lizzie, do you think I could buy that drum for my tabouret?
3464Oh, my friends,--my Miss Tish, my Miss Liz, my Miss Ag,--what must I say? 3464 On what car and how much?"
3464Papers?
3464She''s not here among the drivers, unless she''s-- Who are these drivers anyhow? 3464 Similar tastes and-- er-- all that?"
3464Since when,said Aggie,"have you been walking to develop yourself, Tish?
3464Since you claim to be no spy,she said,"perhaps you will tell us what brings you alone to this place?
3464So you have come out from the city?
3464That sort of thing may be all right for savages, but--"Are we not as intelligent as savages?
3464That''s our affair, is n''t it?
3464The question is,he reflected, trying to view himself in the edge of the lake:"Will Dorothea like it?
3464The reason does n''t really matter, does it? 3464 Then perhaps you''ll tell me what that signal means?"
3464Then the-- the person in question has confided in you?
3464Then why not go comfortably in the motor boat?
3464Then you are not entirely cold and heartless?
3464There''s only one thing that still puzzles me,Tish observed:"granting that the grocery order was a grocery order, what about the note?"
3464They lend themselves to this imposition? 3464 They will all be armed?"
3464They''re so modest, are n''t they, Miss Tish?
3464Tish,she said brokenly,"does he recall anything to you?"
3464War?
3464Was it because he had heard of my Aunt Letitia''s reckless nature? 3464 Was there anything in the agreement to prevent your accepting any suggestions?"
3464We are-- aren''t we, Lizzie?
3464We give them their money''s worth, do n''t we? 3464 We''ve paid for that,"she said in a nasty tone; and to Tish:"How do we know this place is his?
3464Weapon? 3464 Well, George, how are you?"
3464Well,he said,"what is it this time?
3464Well?
3464What about him?
3464What about that rabbit?
3464What brought you?
3464What did Hannah do?
3464What did I tell you?
3464What did she say?
3464What do you think?
3464What do you want me to do?
3464What does it entail?
3464What does it matter?
3464What for? 3464 What for?"
3464What girl?
3464What has that to do with us? 3464 What if I am?"
3464What in Heaven''s name is the spade for?
3464What in the world are you doing anyhow? 3464 What in the world are you doing, Aggie?"
3464What in the world has happened?
3464What is Panama,she demanded,"to saving a life?
3464What is an extractor? 3464 What made you start out without looking?"
3464What of it?
3464What part of the West?
3464What sort of a play?
3464What sort of damnable idiocy is this?
3464What the hell are you doing?
3464What was that?
3464What was the proposition?
3464What were you going to extract? 3464 What''s an extractor?"
3464What''s her name?
3464What''s that?
3464What''s that?
3464What''s the antidote?
3464What,she said,"is more beautiful than young love?
3464Where are we going?
3464Where are you going?
3464Where could I practice?
3464Where is Miss Tish?
3464Where must I-- go?
3464Where the-- where the dickens did you hit him, Miss Tish?
3464Where to?
3464Where''ll I put it on?
3464Where''s Tish?
3464Where''s the blackberry cordial?
3464Where''s the girl?
3464Where-- where is he?
3464Where?
3464Where?
3464Who said I wanted you out of the way?
3464Who said anything about a camp?
3464Who said assistance? 3464 Who sent for you?"
3464Whose fault is it,I demanded,"that we are here in''Greenland''s Icy Mountains''?
3464Why Nantucket?
3464Why did n''t you tell Jasper about this curve?
3464Why not?
3464Why not?
3464Why not?
3464Why should you want to say anything we can not hear?
3464Why you do not let me die? 3464 Why, what is there to do?"
3464Why? 3464 Why?"
3464Why?
3464Will it take you long to move over here?
3464Wireless?
3464Wo n''t you try it, Miss-- er-- Lizzie?
3464Would you believe that there''s a moving- picture outfit here, taking scenes in the park?
3464Would you like some fish?
3464You are not going on another walking- tour?
3464You are sure that you do n''t use strong language?
3464You can trust me not to say anything, ladies,he said at last,"but do n''t you think you''re playing it a bit low down?
3464You did n''t take the children out for the picnic, did you?
3464You do n''t suppose he went into that tent shop and asked about us?
3464You go-- away?
3464You remember the night we got the worms?
3464You remember,said Aggie,"that time she tried to shoot the sheriff, thinking he was a train robber?
3464You see, we-- we are all very tired, and the Panama Canal--"Canal? 3464 You''ll wish me luck, wo n''t you?"
3464You''re not going to scrape it off?
3464You''re not tongue- tied all of a sudden, are you? 3464 You''ve discovered that, have you?"
3464You''ve got to dig bait, have n''t you?
3464You-- you do n''t think it will get in the papers, do you?
3464You-- you know her?
3464You-- you wo n''t have tea?
3464Your Miss Hutchins is reckless, is n''t she?
3464*****"But why was the detective watching Hutchins?"
3464A canal is a--""You go far-- in a ship-- and I-- I stay here?"
3464A sleeve''s not all of a coat, but what''s a coat without a sleeve?
3464Across the street some one was raising a window, and a man called"What''s the matter?"
3464Am I on, ladies?"
3464And did n''t I thrash my nephew, Charlie Sands, when he was almost as big as you and had less on, for bathing in the river?
3464And do n''t I do the washin''?
3464And do n''t he talk to me in that lingo of his, so I do n''t know whether he''s askin''for a cup of coffee or insultin''me?"
3464And had he not made this delicacy for us?
3464And shall I make this gore bias or on the selvage?"
3464And that it is all balderdash?"
3464And where are you going fishing?"
3464And will you look round the place and count the things I''ve got to do up every week?
3464Are the secret- service men closing in on McDonald?
3464Are there-- are there plenty of rabbits in the woods?"
3464Are you lost?"
3464As Tish said when we were going up to bed, why should n''t Mr. Ellis brag?
3464Besides, did you see those ferocious Indians hanging round?"
3464But again the question is-- which?"
3464But does she?
3464But he''s alive and well, and-- do you really want him to win?"
3464But is n''t it rather rubbing it in to make fun of me?"
3464But it''s curious, is n''t it, that I''ve got twenty- five hundred dollars from Cousin Angeline''s estate not even earning four per cent?"
3464But just at that time a-- a young brother of mine in the West got into difficulties, and I-- but why go into family matters?
3464But then again-- what chance has he of rising?
3464But there are n''t any bears, and if there were how''d I kill''em?
3464But what about the P.T.S.?
3464But why have n''t you succeeded?"
3464But, for Heaven''s sake, my respected but foolish virgins, why not an American that wants a real job?
3464Ca n''t a woman take a little exercise without her family and friends coming snooping round and acting as if she''d broken the Ten Commandments?"
3464Can you sew?"
3464Come to Island Eleven to- night, wo n''t you?
3464Did I tell you Heckert had entered his Bonor?"
3464Did any one happen to notice the young lady in the first canoe, in the pink tam- o''-shanter?"
3464Did n''t he follow you into the swamp?
3464Did n''t my cook see your thieving servant steal''em off the box on the fire- escape?"
3464Did n''t the Iddiads wear theb?
3464Did n''t they, Lizzie?"
3464Did you ever know a county detective to arrest a prominent woman at a race- track as a little jest between friends?
3464Did you, Aggie?"
3464Did-- did Bettina''s mother warn you against me?"
3464Do I really desire the suffrage?
3464Do n''t you realize that this is a matter of life and death to me?
3464Do n''t you see how clever it is?"
3464Do n''t you suppose we''ve all got skins?
3464Do n''t you suppose, if she loves you, she senses your nearness?"
3464Do n''t you think the expression of this right pant is good?
3464Do you know how deep the lake is?
3464Do you know that I have n''t had a word with Bettina alone since you came?"
3464Do you see?
3464Do you suppose my breastbone will ever straighten out again?
3464Do you want the rabbit skins?
3464Does Hutchins ever go out in the canoe that he does n''t go out also?
3464Even you itinerant folk need money now and then, do n''t you?
3464First thing you know you''ll put a hole through me, and then where will you be?"
3464Forty?"
3464Give me about twenty minutes on it, will you?
3464Has Ellis let you in on the betting?"
3464Has he been fed lately?"
3464Have you got a revolver?"
3464How did I know,"he pleaded,"that you were going to do such a crazy thing as this?"
3464How did she happen on the scene?"
3464How do you know he is a detective?"
3464How long do you reckon it''ll be before you''ll need some fresh eggs?"
3464How old is she?
3464How''d I know you ladies wanted pastry?
3464Hungry, eh?
3464I must also work?
3464I suppose you all remember when I completed the speedway at Indianapolis and had the Governor of Indiana lay a gold brick at the entrance?
3464I was almost asleep when Aggie spoke:--"Did you think there was anything queer about the way that Jasper boy said good- night to Bettina?"
3464If I do n''t, what does it matter?"
3464If that was a letter, why did n''t he send it by the boat?"
3464If we each had one-- Lizzie, did you bring any ink?"
3464If you must have publicity, why not seek it in some other way?"
3464If you object to my hanging round, why not just say so?
3464If you will take off your overcoat--""And see you put it on that little parasite?
3464In other words, has she come up the river to meet me or to meet my rival?
3464Instead you found-- By the way, Willoughby, did you see any wild- cats?"
3464Is any moving picture worth it?
3464Is he reading or watching this camp?
3464Is it anything to be ashamed of?"
3464Is she racing?"
3464Is that all?"
3464Is the fellow going to pull teeth?
3464Is the pleasure of seeing yourself on the screen any reward for such a shameful position as yours now is?
3464Is there another life after this?
3464It is evidently a signal-- but to whom?
3464Lizzie, do you remember Mr. Wiggins''s eyes?
3464Lizzie, do you suppose if we go back we can get that rabbit?"
3464May I examine the gasoline supply?"
3464Miss Aggie?"
3464No?"
3464Now do you understand?"
3464Or-- it being warm-- wouldn''t lingerie clothes and sunshades be most suitable?
3464Rather bully, is n''t it?
3464Teeth?"
3464The question in her mind was, had it been said purely for effect or did Tish mean it?
3464Then the voice called out:--"Why in the world did n''t you warn me?"
3464Then:--"I suppose the-- the person in question will stay as long as you do?"
3464Then:--"Will the Associated Chaperons,"he said,"turn their backs?"
3464There''s a theory there; and-- who knows?"
3464They are going to lead us in to Many Glaciers, and-- Jim, you wo n''t let them, will you?
3464This ai n''t quite up to contract, is it?"
3464This is your doing, Tish Carberry, and as for their having blank cartridges-- how do we know someone has n''t made a mistake and got a real one?"
3464To this infamy?
3464To this turpitude?"
3464Twenty years have I-- Do you know what she does when she come home from these sneakin''trips of hers?
3464Two dollars''worth?
3464Unless-- but perhaps I have two new friend also-- no?"
3464Wait until they starve to death?"
3464We do need rain-- don''t we?"
3464Well, about five dollars, but I think--""How much to drive us fifteen miles without thinking?"
3464Well, why did n''t Morris Valley jump at the chance?"
3464Were we not his friends?
3464What are you going to do?"
3464What can you make?"
3464What do they care for irrigation and apple orchards?
3464What do we know of the vagaries of the human mind?
3464What do you get out of her?"
3464What do you mean to do with all those rabbit skins?
3464What have you been up to this time?"
3464What in the name of Heaven induced you to ride off the way you did?"
3464What in the name of the gastric juice is this I''m eating?"
3464What''s the use?"
3464When is the time up?"
3464When the bandits take the money, where do they go?"
3464When you come to think of it, what are picnics but outcroppings of instinct?
3464Where are the handcuffs?"
3464Where do you think she gets them?"
3464Where would I be?"
3464Where''s Tish''s wreath?"
3464Where''s your writing ink?"
3464Which car is to win?"
3464Who are our visitors?"
3464Who asked him to guard us?
3464Who had cut away the signal-- McDonald or the detective?
3464Who knows what the future may hold?"
3464Who were we, as Tish said, to imperil a fellow man?
3464Why am I a Baptist?"
3464Why do n''t you explain?"
3464Why do n''t you raise your own flowers?"
3464Why do n''t you three try it?"
3464Why had he been so anxious to know who we were?
3464Why had he told us things that were not so?
3464Why not simply refer to her as the pink tam- o''-shanter-- or, better still and more briefly, the P.T.S.?
3464Why, had he asked us to take the Sunday- school picnic to a place that did not belong to him?
3464Why, who would send for me?
3464Wo n''t you sit down?"
3464You do n''t mind my being rather breathless, do you?"
3464You do n''t suppose I want to be here, do you?"
3464You remember, in Hiawatha, how they sing as they paddle along?"
3464You''re not in earnest?"
3464_ Aggie_(_ sneezing_): Why?
3464_ Lizzie_(_ changing the subject_): Would you like me to help you dress?
3464_ Lizzie_: Do n''t you want that window closed?
3464_ Tish_: Do you know that the Indians never sweetened their food and that they developed absolutely perfect teeth?
3464and the way he used to move his nose, just like that?"
3464he said,"is it permitted that my lady walk to the gate with me-- alone?"
3464sign by the gate, did you?"
4213Was Champlain''s dream of the great city of Ludovica to come true after all?
4213What was to hinder them from bombarding Quebec?
4213With such a magnificent opportunity, why was the result so meagre?
41685), Coriolani, Fidenates, Foreti( Fortinei?
41685), Hortenses( near Corbio), Latinienses( near Rome itself), Longani, Manates, Macrales, Munienses( Castrimoenienses?
41685), Tibullus(?
41685).--Naevius(?
41685113), Tacitus(?
41685118), Juvenal(?
4168514).--Varro( 116- 28), Cicero( 106- 44), Lucretius( 99- 55), Caesar( 102- 44), Catullus( 87-?
4168514- 180).--Velleius(?
4168519 B.C.-?
41685195- 159), Pacuvius( 220- 132), Accius( 170- 94), Lucilius(?
41685269- 204), Plautus( 254- 184), Ennius( 239- 169), Cato the Elder( 234- 149), Terentius(?
4168547), Sallust( 86- 34), Virgil( 70- 19), Horace( 65- 8), Propertius(?
4168547-?
4168550-?
4168554-?
4168560-?
41685Another question which might occur to the non- technical reader is, why should not the process be hastened by placing the goods in strong liquors?
41685But what could even he effect with only 700 European soldiers, when the epidemic spread after the Meerut outbreak of mutiny on the 10th of May?
41685Non redderes_,"Ought I not to have returned the money to him?"
41685Proserpina) comis sit, nisi quidem optimo(?)
41685The curious construction of the gerundive(_ ad capiendam urbem_), originally a present( and future?)
41685Theseae(?)
41685What confidence could there be in the depreciated paper after such a measure?
41685[ 7] Albani, Aesolani( probably E. of Tibur), Accienses, Abolani, Bubetani, Bolani, Cusuetani( Carventani?
41685_ kás_,"who?").
41685ending-_ae_ in_ quae?__ hae_,& c., which was accented in these monosyllables and had therefore been preserved.
41685for"What have you done?"
41685such Celticisms in Irish- English as"What are you after doing?"
41685whither goest thou without thy deacon?"
41685whither goest thou without thy son?
41479Not a cup of tea with the sandwich?
41479WrongConclusions"Should we, perhaps, have waited until the mobilized Russian Army was streaming over our borders?
41479( 2) What would be its effect on Germany''s relations with the United States and other neutrals?
41479( 3) To what extent does the internal situation in Germany demand the use of this drastic weapon?
41479--_General Foch._][ Illustration:[ American Cartoon] Prussianism_--From The Columbus Dispatch._ How can the world make peace with this thing?]
41479And did your friend behind the hedge send you to say that?"]
41479And were Edward''s trips to Paris without any effect upon our diplomats?
41479And why does any one stay in so precarious an outpost on the verge of the fighting line?
41479Are her citizens to be dragooned into the ranks of the Kaiser?
41479Built 675,010?
41479But if I would like a sandwich and some beer--?
41479But ought such intimate considerations to have been permitted to play a part when the fate of the nations was at stake?
41479Is it realized by the people of this country that America has already saved us from capitulating to the enemy?
41479It is also known that( on March 22?)
41479JOHN BULL:"Oh, must it?
41479Men from a self- declared democracy to fight in the ranks of autocracy?
41479Now, how is that to be met?
41479On which side is the right?
41479One mentally saluted, though one might think"poor, silly beast, in what way could he mitigate the lash of the tempest?"
41479The challenge of the mothers was inscribed on one of the banners they carried:"We give our sons-- they give their lives-- what do you give?"
41479What does he say?
41479What had happened in the meantime?
41479What is the every- day life in a town near enough to the front to be never free from the menace of a triple bombardment?
41479What is this"Council of Flanders"?
41479What shall we do?
41479Whence otherwise comes the Entente''s lack of tonnage, which, in view of the facts, can not be argued away?
41479Who comes?
41479Who knows?
41479Will the position of the western powers improve or deteriorate?
41479[ Illustration:[ English Cartoon] A Test of Endurance_--From The Passing Show, London._ How much longer?]
38940''Raphael,''cried I, and extended both hands toward him,''do you recognize me?'' 38940 Are you ready, sir?"
38940Brother,said he,"why do you grieve thus; do you see anything in my life or death which can cause you to feel any shame?
38940I am just going; have me decently buried, and do not let my body be put into the vault until three days after I am dead-- do you understand me?
38940Impossible,said he, lifting his arm:"how could I move my fingers so, if the pulse were gone?"
38940Is there anything else?
38940Say not, alas; but how do you know?
38940Sir,said she,"will you not take your tea?"
38940Too late,he said;"is this your fidelity?"
38940What am I better than my fathers? 38940 What have you to do with that?"
38940When a sick man is given over, and he suffers frightful pains, can a friendly physician refuse to give him opium?
38940Why weep ye? 38940 _ Are the doctors here?_"to his wife who had just asked him if he wanted anything.
38940_ Are we not children, all of us?_TAYLOR( Jeremy, distinguished bishop in the English Church, and author of"Holy Living and Dying."
38940_ Brother Ranney, will you bury me? 38940 _ Can this be considered a calamity?
38940_ Can this last long?_to his physician.
38940_ Did you know Burke?_He referred to Edmund Burke, the celebrated orator, statesman and philosopher.
38940_ Do you hear the music? 38940 _ Earth, dost thou demand me?
38940_ Give me back my youth_,to Taylor who had asked him"Is there anything I can do for you?"
38940_ I am not well, and should like to lie down-- will you call me in ten minutes? 38940 _ I do_,"in response to his sister''s question,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?"
38940_ I have known thee all the time_,to his niece in response to her question,"Do you know me?"
38940_ I must sleep now._It has been asserted, upon what authority the compiler does not know, that the last words of Byron were,"Shall I sue for mercy?"
38940_ I pray you all pray for me._Some authorities give his last words thus:"And must I then die?
38940_ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?"
38940_ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?"
38940_ Is this death?_RABELAIS( François), about 1483- 1553.
38940_ Is this death?_to his physician.
38940_ Know Him? 38940 _ Mais quel diable de mal veux- te que cela me fosse?_"he said, and ate the apricot.
38940_ Must I leave it unfinished?_He referred to his"History of Poland."
38940_ My Lord, why do you not go on? 38940 _ O Florence, what hast thou done to- day?_"He was strangled and burnt by the commissioners of the Pope, May 23, 1498.
38940_ O my poor soul, whither art thou going?_Adrian wrote both in Greek and Latin.
38940_ O, better_,in response to his wife''s question,"How do you feel now?"
38940_ O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee? 38940 _ Oh death, why art thou so long in coming?_"The punishment inflicted upon Damiens for his attack upon the king was horrible.
38940_ Oh, Lord, shall I die at all? 38940 _ Wally, what is this?
38940_ Were you at Sedan?_He asked the question of Dr. Conneau.
38940_ What can it signify?_Said to Miss Perowne, one of his attendants, who offered him some refreshments.
38940_ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?"
38940_ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?"
38940_ Who is near me?_he was told Gutman-- his favorite pupil.
38940_ Whose house is this? 38940 ''Now?'' 38940 ''Whence comes the sunshine?'' 38940 ( Quoi, déjà?) 38940 --And when?"
38940106 Is not this dying with courage and true greatness?
38940114 Murder of the Queen had been represented to me, The, 19 Must I leave it unfinished?
38940123 Are the French beaten?
38940153 But the consummate and perfect knowledge--, 249 Can this be considered a calamity?
38940165 Is this death?
38940189 Deep dream of peace, 142 Did I not say I was writing the Requiem for myself?
38940189 O, my poor soul, whither art thou going?
38940199 Are we not children, all of us?
38940201 Well, my God, I consent with all my heart, 171 Were the Church of Christ what she should be, 53 Were you at Sedan?
38940202 Did you know Burke?
38940229 O Florence, what hast thou done to- day?
38940233 Is this dying?
38940233 Why weep ye?
3894025 Anderson, you know that I always wished to die, 199 Are the doctors here?
38940254 Joy, 200"Justum et tenacem propositi virum,"82 King should die standing, A, 177 Kiss me, Hardy, 207 Know Him?
38940256 Did you think I should live forever?
38940270 Do you hear the music?
38940271 Will no one have pity on me?
38940274 Why dost thou not strike?
3894028 Is Lawrence come?--Is Lawrence come?
38940288 Will you tell the archdeacon?
3894031 Is there no priest at the château?
3894039 Very little meat for the mustard, 134 Vex me not with this thing, but give me a simple cross, 55 Vos plaudite, 19 Wally, what is this?
3894047 Observe how they are swelled, 13 Oh, the insufferable pangs of hell and damnation, 209 Oh death, why art thou so long in coming?
3894052 What can it signify?
3894070 What I can not utter with my mouth, 232 What is that?
389409 With all my heart: I would fain be reconciled to my stomach, 98 Whose house is this?
3894092 Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all?
3894097 Is this death?
3894098 Dream has been short, The, 247 Dying, dying, 134 Dying man can do nothing easy, A, 102 Earth, dost thou demand me?
38940A certain priest, named Nerotto, asked him,"in what spirit dost thou bear martyrdom?"
38940After standing on the plank for a few seconds the executioner said:"Are you ready, sir?"
38940Alive again?
38940And dost thou prune thy trembling wing, To take thy flight thou know''st not whither?
38940But what are the facts?
38940Can I make men live, whether they will or no?
38940Did you think I should live forever?"
38940Did you think that I could live forever?
38940Died he not in his bed?
38940Do I tremble like a criminal or boast like an Atheist?
38940He arose, turned to the soldiers, and said, his face wearing an expression of superhuman courage:--"Will no one have pity on me?
38940He frequently asked,"Are the French beaten?"
38940He knows best, 289 Well, ladies, if I were one hour in heaven, 186 Well, my friend, what news from the Great Mogul?
38940He started, and said,"Know Him?
38940He whispered as I placed the water to his lips,''Do n''t you remember that passage I once quoted to you from"King John?"
38940Here is the package,"continued Mr. Coyle, producing a letter envelope from his pocket;"what shall I do with it?"
38940His sister, Catherine of Schwartzburg, asked,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?"
38940How long, O Lord, how long?_"NEWPORT( Francis, once famous as an opponent of Christianity).
38940I am having Paul''s understanding, 237 Amen, 48 An Emperor ought to die standing, 289 And must I then die?
38940I quote Prior''s version:"Poor little, quivering, fluttering thing, Must we no longer live together?
38940I taste death; and who will support my dearest Constanze if you do not stay with her?"
38940Is that you, Dora?
38940Is that your heaven?''
38940Is this all that I feared when I prayed against a hard death?
38940Is this all that I feared?
38940Is this all?
38940Is this all?
38940Just before this he exclaimed:"Is this dying?
38940Later his father said,"Dudley, do you know the Lord Jesus Christ?"
38940O Lord, be merciful, 122 Oh, Lord, shall I die at all?
38940Others say that his last words were these addressed to the hesitating headsman,"Why dost thou not strike?
38940Peters?"
38940Shall I die at all?
38940Some authorities give his last words thus:"Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all?"
38940The watcher is with me; why tarry the wheels of his chariot?"
38940Then she kneeled down, saying,"Will you take it off before I lay me down?"
38940Then she tied the handkerchief about her eyes, and, feeling for the block, she said,"What shall I do?
38940Thinking that he saw paper lying on the floor, he said:"Why is Schiller''s correspondence permitted to lie here?"
38940Thou and this body were house- mates together; Wilt thou begone now, and whither?
38940To test his consciousness, the Pastor asked,"Who prayed thus?"
38940Well, they can, 318 Can this last long?
38940What company has that, I pray?
38940What doth all my glory profit, but that I have so much the more torment in my death?_"PIUS IX.
38940What street are we in?
38940What street are we in?
38940When he was dying his father said to him,"Dudley, your mother has your hand in hers, can you press it a little that she may know you recognize her?"
38940When this was done, he said:"Now, is my finger upon them?"
38940Where is it?
38940Where is it?"
38940Whither wilt thou go?_"MAZARIN( Hortense Mancini, sister of the celebrated cardinal), 1647- 1699.
38940Why do you thus look at me?
38940Why, then, oh, Lord, if ever, why not now?_"His mother, Monica, was a woman of the most devoted piety.
38940Will not all my riches save me?
38940Will not all my riches save me?
38940Wilt thou break a bruised reed?
38940Wilt thou break a bruised reed?_"So great was his cruelty and so oppressive his tyranny, that his own subjects rose in desperation and slew him.
38940Yet more trouble?"
38940Yet more trouble?_"These words he is reported to have spoken after the executioner had opened his body to extract his heart.
38940[ 4][ 4]_ Enter the KING, SALISBURY, WARWICK, to the CARDINAL in bed.__ King._ How fares my lord?
38940away!--why thus do ye look at me?"
38940bury me?
38940enquired one,"are you not afraid of becoming food for birds of prey and wild beasts?"
38940how deep will be thy sorrow at the news, 68 O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee?
38940is there no bribing death?
38940lower your arms, otherwise you will miss me or only wound me._"Some say his last words were:"Is there no priest at the château?--is there no priest?"
38940said she,"I dare not, lest--""Emma, will you?
38940she exclaimed,"is_ must_ a word to be addressed to princes?
38940where should he die?
34378''In the name of wonder, boy,''he exclaimed,''what are you doing there?'' 34378 A great_ what_?"
34378A lady in Broek, did you say?
34378Ah, child,she said in a changed tone,"what thief would ever have come_ here_?
34378And did the saint do it?
34378And now, boys,added Jacob, when he had told the plan,"who will go with us?"
34378And where did you find it to- day?
34378Are you awake, Raff?
34378Are you hurt, Hans? 34378 Are you in trouble, mynheer?"
34378By the way, did you know that the name Tulip came from a Turkish word, signifying turban?
34378Can you see anything?
34378Did I frighten you all?
34378Did patience mean folding his hands? 34378 Did the man live?"
34378Did the meester say he_ must_ have these things, mother?
34378Did you say Higgs? 34378 Did you?"
34378Do I?
34378Do n''t you remember?
34378Do n''t you see that pretty red pincushion hanging on yonder door?
34378Do n''t you see? 34378 Do they ever live there?"
34378Do you know aught of the family, mynheer?
34378Do you know how large it is?
34378Do you know what it is, father?
34378Do you think I would let her forget it? 34378 Do you think the father could tell aught?"
34378Do you_ believe_ that story, Captain Peter?
34378Had he done any wrong, think ye?
34378Hans loves the father so well,she thought,"why can not I?
34378Have n''t you heard me, you rascal?
34378Have you ever been in your Aunt Poot''s grand parlor?
34378Hey? 34378 Hey?
34378How came he to give it up?
34378How can I? 34378 How did you know it was my purse?"
34378How do you know that?
34378How do you know there were seventy thousand hundred- weight in them?
34378How old are you, Hans Brinker?
34378How so?
34378How soon, mynheer, can we know?
34378How?
34378I do n''t know much about the Haarlem siege,said Lambert,"except that it was in 1573. Who beat?"
34378I like that boy, rich or poor,he thought to himself, then added aloud,"May I ask about this trouble of yours, Hans?"
34378I thought your uncle lived in the city?
34378I''ve heard how they''ve had two sons turn out bad-- Gerard and Lambert?
34378If there is any service I can do? 34378 Is Athens in Holland, mother?"
34378Is it God''s day?
34378Is it you, Meitje?
34378Is she ill?
34378Is that all?
34378Is that the way men dress in mourning in this country?
34378Is the baby asleep, Meitje?
34378Is the man-- the lad-- thou wert talking of dead, think thee?
34378It may_ kill_ the father-- did you say, mynheer?
34378Lambert,continued Peter,"ask Ben if he saw Van der Werf''s portrait at the Town Hall last night?"
34378Let me see,muttered the father, looking in a puzzled way at them all,"how long is it since the night when the waters were coming in?
34378Look, Van Mounen,said Ben to Lambert,"could anything be better than this youngster''s face?
34378Made_ you_ so heavy, you mean, Poot?
34378May we enter and warm ourselves, jufvrouw?
34378N-- not a disgrace, mynheer,stammered Hans--"but----""But what?"
34378No eggs? 34378 No, indeed,"laughed Peter,"she did exactly the right thing-- ran home with her richly won treasures-- who would not?
34378Not Janzoon Kolp?
34378Now, Penchamin, vat you do mit yourself? 34378 Now, boys, we may as well make up our minds there''s no place like Broek, after all-- and that we mean to be there in two hours-- is that agreed to?"
34378Now,he cried triumphantly, at the same time arranging the strings as briskly as his benumbed fingers would allow,"can you bear some pulling?"
34378Oh, no, mother, I was only thinking----"Thinking, about what? 34378 Old Brinker dead?"
34378One of the greatest chaps in history? 34378 Pete,"asked Ludwig, changing the subject,"did you tell me last night that the painter Wouvermans was born in Haarlem?"
34378See old Van der Does? 34378 Shall I hurry home,"he was thinking,"to tell the good news, or shall I get the waffles and the new skates first?
34378Shall we go on by the canal or the river?
34378So they have,--"No, I''m sure they haven''t,"--"_Oh_, how can you say so?"
34378Steady, vrouw, steady,panted Raff;"have I grown old and feeble, or is it the fever makes me thus helpless?"
34378Thank you,replied the traveler, immediately writing the name in his note book;"pray are these very common in your country?"
34378That''s right, old fellow,pursued his tempter,"hurry up-- what news-- old Brinker dead?"
34378The father must have meat and wine at once,he muttered,"but how can I earn the money in time to buy them to- day?
34378Then why did you screw your face so when it hit you?
34378Told me what, man?
34378Treat you_ what_ way, Meitje?
34378Tut-- tut, woman, why do you cry?
34378Van_ who_?
34378Vat wash te matter, Pen?
34378Very queer,muttered Peter shaking his head as he turned to go into the house;"why in the world do n''t the boy wear his new ones?"
34378Very sick, mynheer----"Why go for Dr. Boekman, Hans? 34378 Vy, de-- de-- vat you call dis, vat you taste mit de nose?"
34378Was he so sick, Raff?
34378Was n''t that Van Tromp?
34378Was she? 34378 Well, mine host, what have you?"
34378Well, what about Van Tromp? 34378 Well, what of it?"
34378Well,resumed the mother,"what matter?
34378What about_ him_?
34378What are the Blue Stairs, Lambert?
34378What do you say, boys?
34378What do you think I''m standing here for, Raff Brinker, and my spinning a- waiting, if not to hear more than that?
34378What do you think of these moving figures in her neighbor''s garden?
34378What does this mean, mother? 34378 What fellow?
34378What for screw mine face?
34378What have I? 34378 What if it is cold, old Tender- skin?"
34378What is it, young lady?
34378What is it?
34378What is that?
34378What is the man saying, Lambert?
34378What is the man shouting about? 34378 What is your name, little girl?"
34378What kept you?
34378What now?
34378What of that?
34378What race?
34378What thinking on, Big- eyes?
34378What thinking on? 34378 What was it, did he say, Raff?
34378What was the name?
34378What way,said Dame Brinker, mimicking his voice and manner,"what way?
34378What well, mynheer?
34378What''s the matter?
34378What, the great Haarlem organ?
34378What, the weight of a man?
34378What? 34378 What?
34378What?
34378Where is Carl?
34378Where was I, mine vrouw?
34378Where was I?
34378Where were you? 34378 Where''s any dog?"
34378Where? 34378 Who cares for_ him_, little sneezer?
34378Who comes here?
34378Who is cold?
34378Who is to try?
34378Who told you we had any such custom as that?
34378Who''s quarreling? 34378 Why do you pray?"
34378Why do you say so, mynheer?
34378Why not indeed?
34378Why not?
34378Why, mother,he whispered in alarm,"what ails thee?
34378Why-- don''t you see? 34378 Will he die, mynheer, if this sickness goes on?"
34378Will it pain him, mynheer?
34378Will you take us on?
34378Will your worships have beds?
34378Working and studying,echoed Raff, in a musing tone;"can the youngsters read and cipher, Meitje?"
34378Would you be willing, with your parents''consent, to devote yourself to study, to go to the University-- and, in time, be a student in my office?
34378Would you like to become a physician?
34378Yes,very gruffly;"and other business, young master?"
34378Yes-- broken down-- skated all the way from Broek,answered Peter--"Do you go to Leyden?"
34378You would not grow restless, think you, and change your mind just as I had set my heart upon preparing you to be my successor?
34378_ Did n''t he have a fit once?_"My goodness! 34378 _ Murder?_"whispered the wife, not daring to look up.
34378_ Who_ said they had bells?
34378''But how is this?''
34378''Who is there?''
34378All the----What is that?"
34378All three cast quick, frightened glances at one another and at Raff-- were his wits on the wing again?
34378And Jacob?
34378And how do you like the cap?"
34378And yet if this were a saint, why did he not visit the Brinker cottage that night?
34378Anything?"
34378Are the waters rising?
34378Are they going to_ murder_ him?"
34378Are you all dead?"
34378Are you ready?
34378Are you ready?
34378Beds?"
34378Ben?
34378Both dead?
34378But did she set the cream to rise in golden pans?
34378But what about your friend with the four heads?"
34378But what have we to do with voetspoelen, brother Ludwig?
34378But what of that?
34378But who heard him?
34378But, Peter, before I forget it, was n''t that picture of St. Hubert and the Horse painted by Wouvermans?
34378Can I serve you?"
34378Can it be that Gretel and her mother have not stirred since we saw them last?
34378Can you hear him moan, jufvrouw?"
34378Carl Schummel----You here?"
34378Children, why do n''t you thank the meester?"
34378Decide quickly, boys-- Blue Stairs or Leyden?"
34378Did ever you see anything so funny?
34378Did he have two heads?
34378Did it last through all these ten years?"
34378Did she use a golden skimmer?
34378Did you ever notice it?"
34378Do n''t one of you know any one here who would lend us a few guilders?"
34378Do n''t you know if it was n''t an extra cold winter, and an early one into the bargain, we could n''t go?"
34378Do n''t you remember?
34378Do n''t you see?
34378Do we look sleepy?"
34378Do you forget?
34378Do you hear us, Nicholas, our friend?
34378Do you know aught of the money, Raff?--the money in the pouch and the stocking, in the big chest?''
34378Do you remember how the mother said it would bring us luck and how she cried when Janzoon Kolp shot him?
34378Do you remember_ when_ you buried the money, father?"
34378Do you think you can save him?"
34378Does not Carl hear it-- Carl the brave, the fearless?
34378Every one liked her, but who could love her?
34378Feel better, Jacob?"
34378For my part, I would rather steer direct for Leyden, but we''ll do as the captain says-- hey, Jacob?"
34378Give me such men as Van der Werf, and-- what now?"
34378Had he been shooting at a comrade, like they do down at the University at Gottingen?"
34378Hans and Peter, Peter and Hans; which is foremost?
34378Hans appeared so surprised and disappointed that his friend asked good- naturedly:"Why so silent, boy?
34378Hans, was it for nothing the stork settled on our roof last summer?
34378Has any one else any wine?"
34378Has the fever been on me ever since?"
34378Have you had much sickness to bear?"
34378Have you helped your mother, boy, through all these years?"
34378He arose, and, in almost a whisper, asked:"Have you ever_ tried_, mother?"
34378He shouted again,''Will no one come?
34378He was a great Dutch Admiral; was n''t he?"
34378He was laughing, as he said to the father:"Am I not a happy man, Raff Brinker?
34378He''s an anspewker, is n''t he?"
34378Here, this cloak will do; hey, schipper?"
34378How do ye know ye have the true name?"
34378How far are we from Leyden, schipper?"
34378How is your father to- day?"
34378How long did the money last, Hans?
34378How long did you say?"
34378How much money have we lost?"
34378How now, Captain van Holp, what next?"
34378How will it be, I wonder, on the day of the grand race?"
34378I know he defended the city like a brick, and----""Now vot for you shay dat, Penchamin?
34378I smoothed his hair, and whispered to him soft as a kitten, about the money-- where it was-- who had it?
34378I think the meester would let you in now-- he certainly would-- is your father so very ill?"
34378I wonder that you did not all go to bed at once-- Still, as you are awake, what say you to walking with Ben up by the Museum or the Stadhuis?"
34378I''d be loath to kill the tree, Hans-- will we harm it, think you?"
34378In England, did you say?"
34378In the height of the fun, one of the children called out:"What is that?"
34378Is it any disgrace to be a merchant?"
34378Is n''t Boerhaave''s monument in Saint Peter''s also?"
34378Is n''t it?"
34378Is not that so, Jasper?"
34378Is the father worse?"
34378Is your boss in there?"
34378It reached its height in Amsterdam, did n''t it?"
34378It was right for Hans to go but how could they ever live without him?
34378It will be like having_ two_ sons-- eh, Laurens?
34378Jacob, are you hurt?"
34378Katrinka, without replying, made a graceful pirouette, and laughing out a coquettish--"Don''t you hear the last bell?
34378Like the poor fellow who had learned in Ollendorf to ask in faultless German"have you seen my grandmother''s red cow?"
34378Looking down with a sigh at the two pairs of feet so very different in size, she asked:"Which of you is the better skater?"
34378Mynheer, is that you?
34378North side of the tree, was n''t it, father?"
34378Now, Hans, let me take a turn-- it''s lighter work, d''ye see?
34378Of course these often relieved themselves very much after the manner of other clouds-- But who saw the storms and the weeping?
34378Oh, if the father should die, and Hans, and the mother, what_ would_ I do?"
34378Oh, what shall I do?
34378One is tempted to ask,"Which is Holland-- the shores or the water?"
34378Shall I be the first?
34378Shall I take the watch?"
34378Shall it be done?"
34378Shall my poor father just coming back into life learn that his family have asked for charity-- he, always so wise and thrifty?
34378Shall we come back here to sleep, captain?"
34378Shall we return to Haarlem?"
34378Should she tell him all?
34378Softly rubbing his hands, he asked:"Will your worships have beds?"
34378Still looking toward Peter he asked:"How many?"
34378Such a little fellow as you?
34378Supper?
34378Sure enough where_ was_ Poot?
34378Tell him that he had been an idiot, almost a lunatic?
34378That gratitude would give us freedom?
34378That man''s imploring cry should in time be met with a deep content?
34378That the sick man upon the bed has not even turned over?
34378The English name spoke plain enough for_ one_ side of his house, but of what manner of nation was his mother?
34378The captain''s principle was all right, but its application was not flattering to Master Ludwig; shrugging his shoulders, he retorted:"Who''s weak?
34378The only question asked is--''will it kill?''"
34378The sail was lowered, then came the scraping sound of the brake, and a pleasant voice called out from the deck:"What now?"
34378Then turning to Hans he asked:"Can I depend upon you, boy?"
34378Therefore,"what keeps thee, Hans?"
34378Think, man, where is he?
34378Too bad,"he added maliciously,"was n''t it?"
34378Van Mounen?
34378Was it man or demon?
34378Was it noon- time?"
34378Was the father looking?
34378Were they thinking about sisters or kisses?
34378What are the people laughing at?
34378What are you going to do?"
34378What did he say?
34378What did it mean?
34378What did she say?"
34378What did this strange buzzing mean?
34378What did you stare at it so long for?"
34378What did_ she_ do without them, I wonder?"
34378What do those swans mean?
34378What do you mean?"
34378What do you say?"
34378What do you see?"
34378What had he done with the gold one he used to wear?
34378What is she now?
34378What is that flash of red and gray?
34378What is the matter?
34378What is to be done?
34378What mad errand are they on?
34378What now?"
34378What of being the greatest pill- choker and knife- slasher in the world?
34378What shall I say?"
34378What then?
34378What was he?
34378What was that?
34378What was the father''s name did you say?
34378What was the matter with the old doctor?
34378What was the matter with the people?
34378What will you have, Master Hans?"
34378What wonder then that the oaks have a grand, fearless air?
34378What wonder?
34378What would a gift of meat and wine be to him?
34378What''s going on at the idiot''s cottage?
34378What''s in thee, Hans?
34378What?"
34378When her cows were in winter quarters, were their tails really tied up with ribbons?
34378When shall I be at work, think you?"
34378When the mother arose, Dr. Boekman, with a show of trouble in his eyes, asked gruffly,"Well, jufvrouw, shall it be done?"
34378Whence did it come?
34378Where are the racers?
34378Where are they now?
34378Where can Gretel be?
34378Where did my boy say the letter must be sent?"
34378Where did they run to?"
34378Where did you say you buried the money?
34378Where else can nearly every boy and girl perform feats on the ice that would attract a crowd if seen on Central Park?
34378Where have they not settled?
34378Where is it?"
34378Where is the boy?"
34378Where was I?"
34378Where were Gretel and Hans?
34378Where were you to find him?"
34378Where would he like to go?"
34378Where?"
34378Where_ is_ the child, I wonder?"
34378Which was the greatest defence, Ben, the siege of Leyden or the siege of Haarlem?"
34378While through Wintry air we''re rushing, As our voices blend, Are you near us?
34378Who can she be, I wonder?"
34378Who comes flying back from the boundary mark?
34378Who could tell?
34378Who has caviare to sell?"
34378Who is first?
34378Who is hunted now?
34378Who were you flying from in such haste?"
34378Who''s ahead?"
34378Why did n''t we think of it last night?
34378Why do n''t you look where you are going?
34378Why do you not join it?
34378Why had not Hans told her?
34378Why not indeed?"
34378Why not, indeed, speak to the father?
34378Why not?
34378Why should I buy skates?"
34378Why should I doubt it?"
34378Why then must she be treated like one who could do nothing?
34378Why was that one home, so dark and sorrowful, passed by?
34378Why, mother, Gretel and I would rather see thee bright and happy, than to have all the silver in the world-- wouldn''t we, Gretel?"
34378Will the meester please be seated?"
34378Will you come with me?"
34378Wo n''t that be fine?"
34378X WHAT THE BOYS SAW AND DID IN AMSTERDAM"Are we all here?"
34378Yes, or no?"
34378You remember the father, Hans, when he was himself-- a great brave man-- don''t you?"
34378You remember the incident, do you not, Peter?
34378You will read in certain books that the Dutch are a quiet people-- so they are generally-- but listen: did ever you hear such a din?
34378You will testify truly, young masters, that you found most excellent fare and lodgment at the Red Lion?"
34378Young gentleman sick?"
34378_ What_ screamed-- that terrible, musical scream?
34378_ Who_ screamed?
34378_ you_ hate any one, Annie?"
34378and then the knives that seemed pricking and piercing him from head to foot?
34378and will Thomas Higgs-- I mean-- is your son not to be your assistant again?"
34378asked the captain;"will that do?"
34378cried Lambert,"what ails the man?"
34378cried Ludwig, frightened at last,"where is he?
34378cried Ludwig, glancing toward the rail- track--"who ca n''t beat a locomotive?
34378cried Peter hurrying with his companions as fast as he could, for the boat was"bringing to"some distance ahead,"will you take us on?"
34378echoed Hans,"wake-- and know us?"
34378exclaimed Lambert, triumphantly,"if you can read it so easily, let''s hear it, T-- H, what?"
34378good Captain van Holp,"called out Lambert in Dutch,"what say you to stopping at yonder farmhouse and warming our toes?"
34378grunted Lambert, still tugging away at the rope,"asleep, were you?
34378he asked faintly--"I have been asleep, hurt, I think-- where is little Hans?"
34378he cried, springing forward,"where is my cousin?"
34378he said, with something like his old smile( Gretel had never seen it before);"does a man want to be lifted about like a log?
34378interposed Peter van Holp, purposely mistaking Carl''s meaning,"who doubts it?
34378is n''t it just like a picture?"
34378laughed Jacob, holding his fat sides, and shaking his puffy cheeks,"_ you_ go?
34378laughed Ludwig,"where were you, Master Carl?"
34378mayhap the colt is a steadier horse than the mare?"
34378mocked Carl--"what do you mean?
34378mother,"laughed Gretel, eagerly holding forth her platter,"blood do n''t grow in girls''cheeks-- you mean roses-- isn''t it roses, Hans?"
34378my Laurens?"
34378not cheer Van der Werf?"
34378or was he one of your great, natural swimmers like Marco Polo?"
34378repeated Jacob soberly;"vy, it vash de-- de----""The what?"
34378said Ben,"what is that?"
34378screeched the dame,"what''s in the man?"
34378sneered Carl, throwing a contemptuous glance at Jacob,"who''s tired?
34378squeaked Voost;"is n''t_ she_ a bundle of rags, I''d like to know?"
34378that word puzzles me; what do you mean?"
34378that you?
34378they cried, in a breath,"have you heard of it?
34378what did all this mean?
34378what do you mean?"
34378what ever_ did_ become of them?
34378what meant that heavy, crashing sound?
34378what shall I do?"
34378what''s that?"
34378what?
34378what?"
34378where are we?"
34378where''s Poot?"
34378where''s your hat?
34378why, what is the matter with the lad?"
34378would you?
34378yes,"said he eagerly, in English,"the Tulip Mania-- are you speaking of that?
40758And pray, madam, did it cure you?]
40758And pray, madam,he inquired,"what made you go to Bath?"
40758Can not some one whistle it?
40758Difficult, do you call it, sir?
40758How do you manage it?
40758If you were in a strait,asks Thackeray,"would you like such a benefactor?
40758Is that all you have to say in its favor?
40758Very well, father,was the reply;"but where is the shilling to come from?"
40758Well, sir, what did you think of his acting?
40758What in the devil''s name,he writes,"have you to do with either Mr. Disraeli or Mr. Gladstone?
40758Why do you laugh?
40758Why, what''s the matter?
40758Will you do me the honor of accepting a copy of my works?
40758''Why so?''
40758Another peculiarity of Newton was that he fancied himself a poet; but who ever saw a verse of his composition?
40758Being asked,"What is a communist?"
40758Besides, did he not write an original cook- book, which still stands for good authority in the cafés of the boulevards?
40758Bracegirdle''s name had been mentioned; when Lord Halifax said:"You all of you praise the virtue of this lady; why not reward her for not selling it?
40758Canst thou be kind, And from thy darling part?
40758Canst thou range earth, sea, and air, And so meet me everywhere?
40758Could we have a clearer instance of monomania?
40758Did I ever attack your head?"
40758Did not Cervantes"laugh Spain''s chivalry away"?
40758Did not Thoreau also affect humility in his rudely built cabin on the borders of Walden Pond?
40758Does not this truthful sketch from life, of a poor wood- sawyer''s son, read like romance?
40758Garrick?"
40758Hall?"
40758Has Luther been crucified for the world?"
40758Have not these historic characters tested the familiar axiom that calamity is man''s true touchstone?
40758How many of our readers remember the one recorded scene when Queen Elizabeth condescended to coquet with Shakespeare?
40758In a poem called"Clio''s Protest; or, the Picture Varnished,"we find the following really beautiful lines:--"Marked you her cheek of rosy hue?
40758Is it not difficult to recall an instance where a pronounced genius has also enjoyed the quiet beauty of domestic life?
40758Is not this a quiet peep behind the curtain?]
40758Is not"Tristram Shandy"a synonym for its author, Sterne?
40758Is there not a ceaseless interest hanging over the domestic and professional habits of these famous men of the past?
40758Marked you her eye of sparkling blue?
40758Must not earth be rent before her gems are found?"
40758Of how many American books, of a similar character, can this be said?]
40758Thackeray''s tender and beautiful thoughts upon this subject occur to us here:"To be rich, to be famous?
40758They are pretty sure to have some idiosyncrasies more or less peculiar; and who, indeed, has not?
40758Was there ever pleasanter or more genial reading than"Cowper''s Familiar Letters,"full to the brim with sparkling humor?
40758When Coleridge once asked Lamb,"Charles, did you ever hear me preach?"
40758Where was all the monarch''s pride of State, his kingly dignity?
40758Who and what is Luther?
40758Who does not enjoy recalling these silent friends, favorite authors grown dear to us by age and long association?
40758Why am I grown old in seeking so unprofitable a reward as fame?
40758Why does not some popular author give us a book upon this theme, and entitle it"Behind the Prison Bars"?
40758Would it not seem, in the light of these many instances, that practical labor forms the best training even for genius?
40758[ Footnote 147: We find these two verses in Thoreau''s published journal: I. Canst thou love with thy mind, And reason with thy heart?
40758[ Footnote 18: Is it generally known that among the accomplishments of his after years was that of music and an instrumental performer?
40758[ Footnote 8:"What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe,"asks Sir Walter Scott,"save that it runs back to a successful soldier?"]
40758is there no bribing death?"
36713''Why should there have been?'' 36713 A-- what?"
36713Adaline, this is my little friend,said she; and Adaline replied:"How do you do, little friend?"
36713Ai n''t him a smart gemlan, dough? 36713 Alone?"
36713Am I Don Quixote the younger, that I should be guilty of such a piece of extravagant generosity? 36713 And have you done so?"
36713And is your mind at rest on that score?
36713And now what shall I do, Agnes?
36713And the windows?
36713And this morning, mother?
36713And what is that, Valentine?
36713And what was her history and her fate?
36713And where did you sleep?
36713And who sleeps here in the new house?
36713And who was she?
36713And-- she died there?
36713And-- well?
36713Anger is a short madness, is it not, mother? 36713 Are you there, Agnes?"
36713At your door, John? 36713 Aunt Legare!--Mathilde!--Jet!--Who is it?"
36713But how came it open?
36713But how should she ever think of such nonsense as her freedom?
36713But in what respect? 36713 But when had Madeleine Van Der Vaughan yielded to any will but her own?
36713But, Fannie, sir-- my poor wife----"Well, what of her? 36713 Ca n''t you speak, Hector?
36713Can I do anything to make you more comfortable, or help the time along?
36713Can you spend the night with us, Will?
36713Did I ever see a ghost, friends? 36713 Did n''t you hear it open?"
36713Did you ever see such a fine- looking person, Agnes? 36713 Do any one sturve you o''nights?"
36713Do n''t you know?
36713Do you not think that there may be a defect in the locks, sir?
36713Dreaming, am I? 36713 For Heaven''s sake, what is the matter, Agnes?"
36713Frank? 36713 Funny, is n''t it?"
36713Ghosts?
36713Have I? 36713 Have any of us hurt your feelings, Valley?"
36713Have you been up at all since you laid down?
36713Have you opened the door?
36713Have you seen anything, Rachel?
36713Hector, have you heard those noises?
36713How came it, then, you artful boy, that you took just the course, and the only course, by which you could procure him an invitation?
36713How have you got on?
36713How you dew likes your new place?
36713How you gwine cross bridge widout''mit, Brudder Walley?
36713How?
36713I ask you where you got that note, sir?
36713I believe you are pleased with your chamber, Agnes?
36713Incommoded? 36713 Is that you, Cassy?"
36713Is that you, Valley, old fellow? 36713 Let, is it?
36713Listen at what? 36713 Me?"
36713Might he not bring some later intelligence of Fannie?
36713Mother,said Valentine, after a few moments longer,"can you tell me now all about it?
36713Never mind,said Anna,"go on; brussels carpeting and what else?"
36713No will, did you say, mother?
36713Now, mother, what is the matter?
36713She was a favorite slave, was she not?
36713Sir?
36713Sorry to hear it, but-- how did you hear it, sir? 36713 That''s what you meant when you pinched my arm black and blue?"
36713Unreasonable that I should want to go and see my suffering wife?
36713W''en you hear from Fannie las''?
36713Was n''t you, though?
36713Was there no one to do that for you, Valentine?
36713Well, Governor, is that you? 36713 Well, my dear mother, what of that, that it should distress you so?"
36713Well, old fellow, why do n''t you answer me? 36713 Well, there was no conscious manoeuvring on your part, but was there not on his?"
36713Well, what else?
36713Well, what now?
36713Wen''ll de clothes be ready for me?
36713Were you at our door last night, Agnes?
36713What are you going to do, grandmother?
36713What do you mean?
36713What do you say, Madeleine?
36713What do you suppose it is?
36713What do you think it is, Alice?
36713What does he say about the accident?
36713What else, my dear? 36713 What is the matter, John?"
36713What of that? 36713 What the demon do you mean, sir, by treating my questions with this contemptuous silence?"
36713What''s the matter? 36713 What, sir, with all the privations of her lot?"
36713What? 36713 What?"
36713When the horses were rearing? 36713 Where is Elisha?"
36713Where is he now, mother?
36713Which way did you say you wer''goin'', Brudder Walley?
36713Who could it have been?
36713Who dar?
36713Who has the renting of it?
36713Who is that?
36713Who is there?
36713Who opened the door?
36713Who''s there?
36713Who''s there?
36713Who''s there?
36713Who-- is-- that?
36713Who?
36713Whose likeness is that, Mathilde?
36713Why do n''t you speak to your master?
36713Why do n''t you talk to her?
36713Why not? 36713 Why!--do they sleep there?"
36713Why, what is the matter with Phædra?
36713Why, where could the fool be better off, or freer, if that''s her whim? 36713 Why, where have they gone?"
36713Why?
36713Will you always say so?
36713Will you be so kind, Mr. Howard, as to enlighten us?
36713Will you have done worrying me? 36713 With what result, my dear Agnes?"
36713Would you think it too great if your own wife were the one concerned, sir?
36713Yes, why not? 36713 You do n''t mean to say that they have put us in this house to sleep alone?"
36713You make our anniversaries happy, best child; now tell us truly what shall be our New Year''s gift to you?
36713''Sides which, dey would n''t go to de''xpense o''coffins, would dey?"
36713''Sides which, would you temp''any brudder here to sin an''slave his''mortal soul, sake o''freein''of his poor, perishin''body?
36713''The servant is not greater than his master,''says the good Book; and, if I was overtaken, how could you expect to escape?
36713''deed, now?"
36713A permit to go to town, and to visit a woman ill with the very pestilence we are all doing our best to guard against?
36713Afterward at the ladies bowling- alley who but Mr. Howard stood at Mathilde''s elbow to hand the balls?
36713Agnes, my dear, have you been disturbed?"
36713And do you, perhaps, correspond with him?
36713And immediately I heard a sweet, familiar voice say:"Is that you, Uncle Judah?
36713And in the very same instant that I heard and saw this, Rachel had also been awakened, and was even now asking in frightened tones:"Who is that?"
36713And no sorrow, Valentine, for what has passed, and no promises for the future?
36713And, indeed, in any event, what preparation would soften such calamity?
36713As she entered I saw her eyes grow wild, and she inquired:"Miss Agnes, is yer been up, miss, to open dis yer door?"
36713At last a man, running against another immediately under the window, inquired:"For Heaven''s sake, what is the matter at the Willow Cottage?"
36713Blushing deeply, Mathilde whispered one word to her father, who repressed a rising sigh, and asked:"Is this so?
36713But before lying down, Rachel asked me:"Is the door secure?"
36713But did they, he asked them, suppose that he had repented only since the fatal deed?
36713But did you observe nothing interesting in the meeting between Mr. Howard and Miss Legare?"
36713But tell me, dear, how far this affair had gone?"
36713But the reader may ask, how I account for the resemblance between the woman of my vision and the portrait of the ill- fated Madeleine Van Der Vaughan?
36713But was he really satisfied with himself?
36713But what has that to do with it?"
36713But, by the way, who is his friend?"
36713Ca n''t you behave yourself with common decency?"
36713Can you blame me?"
36713Dey would n''t carry de nonsense dis far''out dey did, would dey?
36713Did Agnes come?"
36713Did they suggest wine- bibbing and brawling?
36713Did they think that the act was premeditated, then?
36713Do n''t you remember_ Le Lion blanc_ of the house of Howard?"
36713Do she know?"
36713Do you think he wished to go at first?
36713Do you understand?"
36713For eighteen months I have eluded the police; but think you, my brothers and sisters, that, for one moment, I have escaped the avenger of blood?
36713For who does not love a good laugher?
36713Freedom from what, I should like to know?
36713Governor, why, why did you take your revenge in your own hands, in this horrible manner?
36713Governor, wo n''t you kneel down with us, and pray for yourself?"
36713Hal- loe!--do you know anybody here, Frank?"
36713Has it come to this?
36713Have I hurt your feelings?
36713Have any of us hurt your feelings?"
36713Have you heard from her?
36713He concluded with_ outre_ expressions and gesticulations:"And why, my brethren, is this freezing spell of spiritual cold cast over us?
36713He seemed slightly agitated, but not one- half so much as Mrs. Hudson, who exclaimed,"William, my son, why are you here?"
36713How dare you enter my presence again, after your insolent conduct of this afternoon?"
36713How did I get home?
36713How did he?
36713How do you account for these noises?
36713How in the world came she to get such an idea into her head?
36713How is Fannie, my dear, suffering Fannie?
36713How many virtuous women were there on that or any other plantation?
36713How should either happen, when I could not read nor write?
36713How would you like that?"
36713However, what I wish to know is, whether Frank Howard did not use you to procure the''bid''that brought him hither?"
36713I answered:"What, my dear?"
36713I had reassured her, but who should reassure me?
36713I hope no one from that place has had the temerity to set foot upon these premises, in face of the prohibition?"
36713I know, beside----""What more do you know?"
36713In her evening walk?
36713In the duet with the piano accompaniment at night?
36713In what respect does her position now differ from that of any respectable white woman, filling the situation of housekeeper?"
36713Is he dead?"
36713Is it because there is''some accursed thing hidden''among us?
36713Is she-- is she still living?"
36713Is that it?"
36713Is that you?"
36713Is there an Achan in our camp?
36713Must this be so, my dearest child?"
36713Need I say more?
36713No one will occupy any room within it to- night except yourself, unless indeed you feel afraid----""Afraid?"
36713Now, I want to know if there are not hundreds of white women who would jump at such a situation as Phædra''s?"
36713Now, do n''t you know, if I wa''n''t the most forgivin''f''low in the world, that I''d have you tied up and whipt for such language?"
36713Now, what on earth can the angels reply, when the other party quotes Scripture against them?
36713Oh, Valentine, how is this course you and your master have begun, going to end?"
36713Pray, sir, what time is that?
36713Reflect; have you no thanks to offer to the Lord for his providential care, when you so little deserved it?
36713Say, William, why?"
36713Says she, at last,''Are you one of pa''s new servants?''
36713Shall I come to you?"
36713Should you, mommer?"
36713So what de use o''hanging of him?
36713This may sound harsh, unmotherly, but greatly have I been sinned against, and now, just as a brighter day is dawning upon me, why have you come here?
36713Valentine groaned deeply, asking:"When did you see her?
36713Walking out to take a little air, eh?"
36713Was he murdered?
36713Was he thrown out?
36713Was this because he felt that he had nothing further to hope or fear, and trouble had ceased with uncertainty?
36713Were they among the uncounted dead, whose rude coffins lay one upon another, three or four feet deep, not in graves, but in trenches?
36713Were they living, and suffering unimagined miseries?
36713Were you thrown out, also?"
36713What can be her object?
36713What den?"
36713What do you want with me?"
36713What good dat do?
36713What guilt, then, rests upon the comfortable home and beautiful garden?
36713What happened to the buggy?"
36713What has happened?"
36713What is it?
36713What is it?"
36713What kept her life power going?
36713What knew I of the hostility, or even of the acquaintance, between the parties?
36713What man has not?
36713What room did she occupy?"
36713What should have brought me there?"
36713What the devil do you mean by standing up and looking at me in that way?"
36713What the devil is Fannie or her brat to me?
36713What the h-- ll do you mean?
36713What was to be done?
36713What would she do if she were free?
36713Where did you get that, sir?"
36713Where did you see Major Hewitt, then?
36713Which ob yer here''ould buy his freedom wid the price ob Walley''s blood, and Phædra''s and Fannie''s tears?
36713Which of you will make himself a free man to- night?"
36713Which way is you walking, Brudder Walley?"
36713Who are you then?"
36713Who asks you for any such promises?
36713Who attended her in her afternoon ride?
36713Who could have put it there, do you think?"
36713Who is with her?
36713Who made a horseblock of his knee and a stepping- stone of the palm of his hand to lift Mathilde into her saddle?
36713Who shall answer?
36713Who should explain that?
36713Who took her in to dinner?
36713Why can we not love, or fear, or feel?
36713Why can we not pray, or exhort, or sing, or take sweet counsel together?
36713Why did you not, long ago, complain to me?
36713Why do you ask?
36713Why do you say that to me?"
36713Why do you suppose he collected them?
36713Why lengthen a sad story?
36713Why should I run into detail?
36713Why should there have been?"
36713Why will not the Lord inspire and accept our prayers?
36713Why will not the Spirit of God come down to us?
36713Why, what ails the child?"
36713Why, you insolent scoundrel; do you dare to stand there and tell me to my face that, in direct violation of my command, you attempted to go to town?"
36713Why?
36713Will you read this note, sir?"
36713Will you think so in the future?"
36713Will?"
36713With the agility of a fawn she bounded over the gate, and with the exclamation of,"Ai n''t I wetter than a drownded rat?"
36713Without perceiving the_ double entendre_ hidden in my reply, she said:"And you have always slept well, then?"
36713Would n''t we be happy?
36713Would you, Brudder Portiphar?
36713Wunner if him''s a wizard?"
36713You have seen her since morning?"
36713You tell me that the doors remain fast?"
36713You think dey''s gwine to let all dat here go to loss?
36713and did it happen to you?"
36713and do you call him Frank?
36713but making all dis here muscle dead?
36713could I disregard such an appeal as that?
36713did you hear-- did you hear all the ghoses and devils playing ninepins together in our very house?"
36713do you know that?"
36713do you mean to say that the new overseer is tampering with your wife''s fidelity to you?"
36713do you wonder that I am almost frantic?"
36713have you heard me lock the door?"
36713he said, turning abruptly to Valentine,"what now?
36713how is Fannie?"
36713no mysteries; answer if you can; what are they?"
36713oh, when was she taken?
36713or you, Sister Deely?
36713or you?
36713or you?
36713said I,"what is the matter?"
36713said Valentine, with a sigh so heavy that Mr. Waring inquired, quickly:"So you repent it, do you?"
36713so, what''s de use o''pentin''?"
36713tell me now, and tell me quickly, and truly-- was there any design on you or your friend''s part to get him invited here?"
36713was it a real ghost story, though?
36713what ails you?
36713what de use o''dead nigger?
36713what do you think of that?"
36713what is that?"
36713what is the matter?
36713what is the matter?
36713what is the matter?"
36713what was that?
36713when it is a perfectly new house, Mrs. Legare?
36713where are you, dear Mathilde?"
36713where are your perceptive faculties?
36713where were you pitched, and how much were you hurt, and who picked you up?
36713who is Frank, my love?"
36713why have you done this thing?"
36713why?"
36713would not any man, or, I was about to say, any beast, risk life, and more than life, if possible, to obey such a sacred call?
42367But, at our age,she asked,"who can question our intimacy, or prevent me taking care of you?"
42367And d''Artagnan?
42367Early in life, he wrote to his sister:"My two only and immense desires-- to be famous and to be loved-- will they ever be satisfied?"
42367He asks:"Who can stay long from the Place Royale?"
42367He overheard one of them, as he entered the office one day, say:"I''ve done my hour of Balzac; who takes him next?"
30351''S''ouse, ai n''t it?
30351''Yes''?
30351A dance? 30351 Abbie dear, have you heard the news?"
30351Again? 30351 Ah, you are then the brother of Marie Louise?"
30351Ai n''t you got any sense of decency or dooty a tall?
30351And about how much more delay will this mean?
30351And have him fire Jake, or get him arrested?
30351And he gave you twenty thousand pounds just out of generosity?
30351And if a woman cared a lot for a man, ought it to make a difference what he had done before he met her?
30351And me too?
30351And now are n''t you glad you''re not a ship- builder? 30351 And now that they are disposed of, have you decided what''s to become of me?"
30351And was the_ Clara_ like this once?
30351And what''s the price of all this grandeur?
30351And where did they find me? 30351 And who is Nicky Easton?"
30351And why not?
30351And will you take over my loans at the banks to meet the pay- rolls?
30351And you believed him?
30351And you were afraid he might have another?
30351And your only motive was gratitude?
30351Are n''t we going to be more than that?
30351Are n''t you afraid to push on when you ca n''t see where you''re going?
30351Are n''t you afraid to push on when you ca n''t see where you''re going?
30351Are n''t you both a trifle premature?
30351Are you referring to my head or my feet?
30351Are you sick of seeing me round?
30351Ask who? 30351 Because you''re leaving me?"
30351But are n''t you afraid to push on when you ca n''t see where you''re going?
30351But between your reaching Berlin and the time I saw you what happened?
30351But have you no relatives living-- no one of importance in the States who could vouch for you?
30351But how did Marie Louise come to escape and get to America?
30351But how did they know she was going to Norfolk to load?
30351But how were they able to destroy the_ Clara_?
30351But it''s getting rather late, is n''t it, to be knocking at all the doors all by myself?
30351But what happened to you after I saw you? 30351 But where will you sit?"
30351But who can do it as well as you can? 30351 But your own-- er-- mother and father-- you must have had parents of your own-- what was their nationality?"
30351By Baltimore we could meet once?
30351Ca n''t you guess?
30351Ca n''t you talk United States?
30351Chust as vich''before''? 30351 Dead, and sends you letters?"
30351Dead?
30351Did I hear Lady Webling call you her daughter?
30351Did he say that his money would be left in trust for his grandchildren?
30351Did n''t you know? 30351 Did the boss tell you where the_ Clara_ was goin''to?"
30351Did the clock freeze, too? 30351 Do n''t you think you''d rather begin in the office?
30351Do n''t you want to go on and-- finish it off?
30351Do n''t you wish you knew?
30351Do you believe that what I said was true?
30351Do you imagine for a moment,returned Polly,"that I''d ever believe a word that cat could utter?
30351Do you know, by any chance, Major Thomas Widdicombe?
30351Do you mean it?
30351Do you mean that you had an idea of kissing me?
30351Do you still have no sun in this bedamned England?
30351Do you suppose it''s that feller Davidge?
30351Do you think it''s proper to dress like that for a man to come callin''?
30351Does that look really like the writing from Nicky?
30351English?
30351Even your future husband has no right to know?
30351Excuse, pleass, Mr. Verrinder-- might it be we should take with us a few little things?
30351Forget and forgive who-- whom, for what?
30351Gasolene gave out, hey?
30351Germany for all she''s done to this poor world-- Belgium, the_ Lusitania_, the_ Clara_?
30351Give up Jake? 30351 Going to be home this evening?"
30351Had your breakfast?
30351Have you a Bible?
30351Have you never had an American spouse?
30351He did not by any chance refer to the other grandparents of the two children? 30351 He is not coming?"
30351Hot water? 30351 How could I prevent the Potomac from putting the old bridge out of commission?"
30351How did you find the United States?
30351How do you know? 30351 How do you mean-- she nearly cost you your life?"
30351How far is that?
30351How many hearts were broken-- how many hearts were stopped, do you suppose, because of your work?
30351How would I get the price?
30351How''d two dollars strike ye?
30351I know you do n''t like me, but could n''t you love me?
30351I wonder if you remember when we met in London, Mr. Davidge? 30351 I-- I destroyed lives?
30351If I come here, may I live in one of those cunning new bungalettes?
30351If I should tell the authorities, though, they''d put him in jail right away, would n''t they?
30351If I told you that I had been very, very wicked in those mysterious years, would it seem important to you?
30351If you''ve nothing special on, how about a tea- dance? 30351 In Heaven''s name, where can you get some more gasolene?"
30351In a submarine attack?
30351In the name of Heaven, why?
30351Indeed?
30351Is this company the same as all the rest-- treatin''its slaves like swine?
30351It was a fairish amount of money for messenger fees, was n''t it? 30351 It''s as bad as that, eh?
30351Kind of low neck, do n''t you think? 30351 Like it?"
30351London''s ranging beaut? 30351 Long as it ai n''t some woman-- or if it is, as long as it''s long distance-- why should I worry my head about it?
30351May I call, then?
30351May I have the next dance?
30351May I stop a moment?
30351Me?
30351Mitschief-- me?
30351My what?
30351News?
30351Nicky is in the-- He''s not ill?
30351Nicky is well enough to telephone?
30351No American woman can resist a lord; so how could an American man resist a Lady?
30351No, no-- but_ Clara_--the_ Clara_--"Clara who?
30351No?
30351Oh, you do n''t mean that you might?
30351Our Marie Louise?
30351Really, Mr. Verrinder, did you ever know a secret to be kept?
30351Really? 30351 S- secret codes I know?
30351See those railroad tracks over there? 30351 Send her away where, my child?
30351Shall we all get killed or starved?
30351That idea occurs to you, does it?
30351That man comin''?
30351That''s all very fine,he growled,"but where would I get my start?
30351The Germans could n''t have done much worse by her, could they?
30351The old- fashioned home goes overboard, then?
30351The_ Clara_ sunk? 30351 Theirs?
30351Then how can I see you?
30351Then how old does that make me, in the Lord''s name-- a million?
30351Then who told you?
30351This seems rather silly, does n''t it? 30351 Through treason and murder, too?
30351Tired of your rivetin''a''ready? 30351 To look at Miss Webling, would you take her for a perfect nut?
30351To the-- the Tower of London?
30351To whom?
30351Usedn''t you to keep me awake praying for her-- hollerin''at God to forgive her? 30351 Wa- all, all right, but what would I fetch the gasolene in?"
30351Want a receipt?
30351Was n''t I to have at least Westminster Abbey to live in? 30351 Was she nice?"
30351We are? 30351 We do n''t publish the accounts of the submarines we sink, do we?
30351We-- they? 30351 We?"
30351Well, it''s better to have almost any standard than none, is n''t it?
30351Well, then, do you think you''ll take advantage of my womanly helplessness?
30351Well, well, who''d''a''thought our little Mamise was one of them slouch- hounds you read about? 30351 Well, you know that Sir Joseph had a daughter; the two children up- stairs are hers, and-- and what''s to become of them, in Heaven''s name?"
30351Wh- where is Jake?
30351Whass''at?
30351What are you going to do with these poor souls?
30351What becomes of us wicked plutocrats?
30351What bet?
30351What cabarets have you graduated from?
30351What call you got to worry?
30351What could I do?
30351What did you say?
30351What do I do next, please?
30351What do I know? 30351 What do you call a good girl?"
30351What do you propose to do?
30351What else is there?
30351What happened-- many lost? 30351 What have you done to my poor papa and mamma?
30351What is this stuff?
30351What is to become of them,Louise groaned again,"when I go to prison?"
30351What is your first name, Miss Webling?
30351What time is it?
30351What was I to have?
30351What was his name?
30351What was his nationality?
30351What will you do with all the workmen who are on that job?
30351What''s that?
30351What''s that?
30351What''s the use,he maundered--"what''s the use of trying to do anything while they''re alive and at work right here in our country?
30351What-- what does it mean?
30351What?
30351Whatever is all that?
30351Whatever is all this,she asked,--"the beginning of a bridge?"
30351Whatever is the matter?
30351When will that be?
30351Where are you living?
30351Where are you now? 30351 Where are you?"
30351Where d''you git it at?
30351Where would I git a nautomobile?
30351Where''s the ship that''s nearly done-- your mother''s ship?
30351Where, then, and when?
30351Where?
30351Where?
30351Where?
30351Which way-- where-- did you-- have you an idea where she went?
30351Who are us?
30351Who can ever tell where he''s going? 30351 Who else would have wanted to play such a dastardly trick?
30351Who got robbed on that transaction? 30351 Who iss?"
30351Who said she went wrong?
30351Who was it said he''d rather have written Gray''s''Elegy''than taken Quebec? 30351 Who''s a spy?"
30351Whose war is it? 30351 Whurr''s that?"
30351Why did you take your oath?
30351Why do n''t you marry him and settle down respectable and have childern and--"Why do n''t you go home and take care of your own?
30351Why not, pleass?
30351Why not? 30351 Why not?"
30351Why not?
30351Why nowadays?
30351Why so?
30351Why the crocodiles?
30351Why?
30351With their poor bodies, then?
30351With those hands?
30351With whom? 30351 Wo n''t it keep till to- morrow evening?"
30351Woman- bad or man- bad?
30351Would you give up Jake?
30351Would you like a glimpse? 30351 Yah-- but what rent?"
30351Yes, of course I was, but-- What are you trying to make me say-- that I went to him and demanded the money?
30351Yes?
30351Yis?
30351You are ashamed of me, then?
30351You ca n''t suppose that Mr. Davidge has enemies among his own people?
30351You could come here best?
30351You could meet me some place, yes?
30351You did n''t plan to sail on her?
30351You do n''t ask me where I have been?
30351You do n''t mean you want me to stay, do you-- not after what that woman said?
30351You do n''t really dislike Nicky, do you?
30351You do n''t wash, do you? 30351 You don''d know my woice?"
30351You gave your oath to a German?
30351You have a howiss, then?
30351You know all there is to know, do n''t you?
30351You mean I''m fired?
30351You mean it?
30351You mean that I am to have no more to do with them?
30351You mean you do like me?
30351You mean you turned state''s evidence?
30351You never asked any pay for it?
30351You never doubted him?
30351You never received anything for it?
30351You promise to do vat I send you vord?
30351You rent foornished?
30351You sank his ship?
30351You see it''s all up, Sir Joseph, do n''t you?
30351You were not afraid of that?
30351You wo n''t send her away?
30351You''re changin''your tune now, ain''tcha? 30351 You''re not American?"
30351Your sister? 30351 _ Was giebt''s neues_--er-- what is the noose?"
30351("Why should they,"my wife puts in,"since they''re going to commit suicide, anyway?")
30351A fine thing it would be to ask this splendid young princess,"Pardon me, Princess, but were you playing in cheap vaudeville a few years ago?"
30351A long glum pause till she said,"Am I fired?"
30351Abbie broke in,"Who you got to long- distance to?"
30351Abbie called out,"Where you goin''?"
30351Abbie came in unexpectedly and regarded Mamise''s costume with no illusions except her own cynical ones:"What you all diked up about?"
30351Abbie continued:"And do you think it''s right, seein''men here all by yourself?"
30351Abbie dropped in and surprised her in her attitudes and was handsomely scandalized:"When''s the masquerade?"
30351Abbie gasped,"Oh God, is anything happened to Jake-- killed or arrested or anything?"
30351After a long silence, she asked:"Are you there?"
30351Am I as stupid as that comes to?"
30351Am I passing the hat to you other workers?
30351Americans?"
30351And after all, what proof was there that the spoliation of the rich and the ending of riches would mean the enrichment of the poor?
30351And for lunch going to a big mess- hall, waiting on myself, too, and eating on the swollen arm of a big chair?"
30351And he said,''Would you come with me?''
30351And it came to you while you were carrying those letters to Nicky?"
30351And now once more I ask you: will you marry me?"
30351And now that I''m crippled, am I asking for a pension or an admission to an old folks''home?
30351And once through, what could stop them?
30351And one of the crown princes for a husband?"
30351And these fellers was thinkin''about lynchin''you, was they?
30351And what do we call you?
30351And what would she do with this intractable situation?
30351And what''s your address?
30351And where did you get?"
30351And where dya get that Mamise stuff?
30351And where is she now?
30351And, Abbie honey, what would you say to your becoming a ship- builder, too?
30351Are n''t you going to dance with me any more?"
30351Are you telephoning from a hospital?"
30351As she gave him her hand and collected with her eyes the tribute in his, she said:"Break what to you gently?"
30351At his first chance to speak to Marie Louise he said:"You compared her to Little Red Riding Hood-- remember?
30351At last her voice murmured,"Are you quite too horribly uncomfortable for words?"
30351At length he surrendered and resolved to appeal:"How do you feel about-- about us?"
30351At the shipyard?"
30351Big whaht mansion, ai n''t it?"
30351But do you remember the night I told you both that the_ Clara_ was going to Norfolk to take on her cargo?
30351But don''t--""Do n''t what?"
30351But he found her unready with another perjury when he abruptly asked her:"What are you doing to- morrow?"
30351But he smiled on her dotingly and said:"You are not gone to bed yet?"
30351But he went on:"Wo n''t you allow me to try to find you a place?
30351But she murmured, distantly:"Oh, so you are-- interested in ships?"
30351But she said:"Will this do?"
30351But surely even you would hardly insist that denying it proves it?"
30351But what I come for--""Does n''t it ever occur to you to wonder?"
30351But what she asked was:"How did you find my address?"
30351But what will you do when you get there?"
30351But where did you first meet him?"
30351But why did you consent to such sneaking methods?
30351By the by, have you any one to represent you or intercede for you here, or act as your counsel in England?"
30351By the way, do you know what the answer will be?"
30351CHAPTER III How would she take it?
30351Ca n''t you take a hint?"
30351Can I see you to- night?"
30351Can you earn it?"
30351Can you forgive her for wearing your name?"
30351Come to get your old job back?"
30351Coming up?"
30351Could n''t you give me a lunch-- an early one at twelve- thirty?"
30351Could she possibly be the Mamise he remembered?
30351Daughter of a Sir and a Lady, eh?
30351Davidge asked in a matter- of- fact tone:"Do you think you could walk to town?
30351Davidge growled without looking up:"Why bother me?
30351Davidge grumbled:"Shall I see you to- morrow?"
30351Davidge heard Mrs. Prothero say to Lady Clifton- Wyatt, with all the joy in the world:"Who do you suppose is here but our Marie Louise?"
30351Davidge leaned out and called to the driver,"What''s the matter now?"
30351Davidge took the blow with a smile:"Our little guest is coming at last, eh?
30351Davidge''s head was buzzing with thoughts in which Cruit had no part:"Can she be one of those horrible women who have many lovers?
30351Davidge, hearing his name bruited, rose and called into the mob,"What''s that?"
30351Did I stop or go to making speeches about German vampires?
30351Did he mention the heirs?"
30351Did n''t you read in the papers-- about their death together?"
30351Did n''t you, or did you?"
30351Did you ever see a ship launched?"
30351Did you say''Americans taught?''
30351Divorce him or something?"
30351Do I come in-- no?"
30351Do n''t you abominate''em, too?"
30351Do n''t you know anybody here?"
30351Do n''t you know me?"
30351Do you believe anything I say?"
30351Do you get those words of one syllable?"
30351Do you know a man named Nuddle?"
30351Do you know what she has done?
30351Do you loaf Chermany or hate?"
30351Do you think that a plutocrat can kiss every poor goil in the shop?"
30351Do you want me to knock on the glass and tell the driver to let me out?"
30351Even now, if Nicky Easton, poising the bombshell with its appalling threat, had murmured a sardonic"Well?"
30351Every now and then her likeness popped out at her from_ Town and Country_,_ Vogue_,_ Harper''s Bazaar_,_ The Spur_, what not?
30351Fact is, some the women say,''Why, Mrs. Nuddle, how do you ever--''""Your name isn''t-- it is n''t Nuddle, is it?"
30351Had you heard?"
30351Have n''t you anything to thank God for?"
30351Have the bills sent to me at the shipyard, will you, dear?
30351Have you one for him?"
30351He felt so well reconciled with the world that he said:"You would n''t care to finish this dance, I suppose?"
30351He fooled her entirely with his ardor; and when he asked,"Do you think your gentleman friend, this man Davidge, would really give me a job?"
30351He groaned:"Without his-- his making love to you?"
30351He had a vague sense of her mental struggle before she spoke again, timidly:"I fancy you do n''t smoke cigarettes?"
30351He had to say:"Why did n''t you meet me at luncheon?"
30351He looked at her with a sudden demand:"Does it shock you to have me hate''em?"
30351He nursed Larrey''s story along, and asked with patient amusement:"What''s your theory as to her reason for playing such a game?"
30351He paused among the ruins of his favorite period, and said:"Well, my friend, what is it?"
30351He paused to say,"Where do we go from here?"
30351He quoted her own words,"Do n''t you wish you knew?"
30351He repeated it:"What happened after you and the monkey- trainer parted?"
30351He shook his head and turned to another clerk to ask,"Do you know of a hotel here named Grinden Hall?"
30351He smiled as he said this, but sobered abruptly when Larrey explained:"You lost a ship not long ago, did n''t you?
30351He stared at it without recognizing the hour, and stammered:"Will you lunch with me?"
30351He stood staring at the bottle so long in such fascination that Lady Webling came to the door to say:"Vat is it you could not find now, papa?"
30351He turned solemn and asked:"You mean that so many men came back to call on you?"
30351He ventured:"How is the old boy?
30351He was going on to describe her ecstasy, but Marie Louise broke in:"It''s Fräulein''s work, is it?
30351He was naked to the waist, and he had no weapon, but he held them at bay while he demanded:"What''s the big idea?
30351He was tactless enough to say to a furious orator:"Ah, what''s it to you?
30351He whined:"Ai n''t you no regard for a family man?
30351His always depressing wife suggested:"Supposin''the lady says she ai n''t Mamise, how you goin''to prove she is?
30351His first question was,"Where do we live?"
30351His hand went out to it, and she heard him say:"Mr. Davidge speaking.... Hello, Ed.... What?
30351His wife and he died together?"
30351How about the day after?"
30351How are you, and how long have you been married, and where do you live?"
30351How are you?"
30351How could Marie Louise be vile enough to suspect him?
30351How could Marie Louise suspect her of being anti- British?
30351How could a German spy have got into the yard?"
30351How could she at the first unsupported obloquy of a stranger turn against them?
30351How long ago was it?
30351How many of yous guys does it take to lick this one gink?"
30351How much was it?"
30351How on earth did you ever tie yourself up to such a rotten bounder?"
30351How''d she get her pitcher in the paper?
30351How''d you like that?"
30351However did you get out?"
30351I did n''t mean what I said last night about you bein''indecent, and you did n''t mean what you said about Jake, did you, Mamise?
30351I do n''t know one little secret, but Huns-- Do you know how many thousand Germans there are loose in England-- do you?"
30351I made an awful mistake that night at Mrs. Prothero''s in pretending to be ill.""You only pretended?"
30351I say, six survivors from what ship?...
30351I stopped, of course, and said,''What''s the matter now?''
30351I thought you should choin me therein, but you also told all you knew and some more yet, yes?"
30351If he despaired, what chance had she?
30351If she had welcomed every stranger that came along she-- well, as she did n''t, she must have been a good girl, do n''t you suppose?"
30351If they let me go for it, it was no use to kill everybody, should I?"
30351If you were deeply in love with me, would it make a good deal of difference to you if several years ago I had been-- oh, loose?"
30351Indeed, a sharp fear almost unmanned him-- what if she should fall sick and have to loaf in the horsepital?
30351Instead of saying something brilliant about how young Mrs. Prothero looked, he said:"Youth?
30351Is n''t it respectable enough for you?"
30351Is n''t that a glorious job for you?
30351Is she a woman of affairs?
30351Is that true?"
30351Is that understood?"
30351Is there anything they wo n''t do?"
30351Iss this Miss Vapelink?"
30351It could n''t be, could it, Mamise?
30351It was a frightful crusade; yet who was to blame for it but the Germans and their own self- advertised frightfulness?
30351It will be a fine thing for poor Abbie and her children to remember that, wo n''t it?"
30351It''s cold, is n''t it?"
30351It''s too terribly bad, is n''t it?"
30351Know anything about her?"
30351Lady Clifton- Wyatt gasped,"You do n''t mean to pretend that--""Did you read the will?"
30351Lady Clifton- Wyatt sneered,"Could one expect a spy to admit it?"
30351Lady Webling asked almost at once, with a nod of the head in the direction of the study door:"Well, my dear child, what do you think of Nicky?"
30351Like to meet him?"
30351Major Widdicombe pounded on the door and said:"Are you girls going to talk all night?
30351Make sure nobody sees you take that train, yes?"
30351Mamise had to oppose this:"Who''s going to get you soldiers across the sea or feed you when you get there if all the ship- builders turn soldier?"
30351Mamise said:"Polly, can you see me living in a shanty cooking my own breakfast and dinner and waiting on myself and washing my own dishes?
30351Mamise spoke in a curiously unnatural tone:"It was noble of poor Jake to give his life trying to save the ship, was n''t it?"
30351Marie Louise waited for him to explain his purpose till the suspense began to show; then she said, bluntly:"What mischief are you up to now?"
30351Marie Louise, feeling silly in the silence, asked, stupidly:"So that''s a riveter?"
30351Marie Louise, who had not yet recovered her American dialect, kept pleading with Long Distance:"Oh, I say, cahn''t you put me through to Washington?
30351Maryer?
30351May I breathe, please?"
30351May I come down and tell you about it?"
30351Miss Gabus came out, stared violently, and said:"Was you goin''in?"
30351Mr. Davidge, what you goin''to do about it?"
30351Mr. Verrinder went on:"These messages, you say, concerned a financial transaction?"
30351Mr. and Mrs. Oakby, the father and mother of the father of Victor and Bettina?"
30351Must I get on my knees to you?"
30351Nicky Easton was not a millionaire, was he?
30351Nicky did not come, but another man passed her, looked searchingly, turned and came back to murmur under his lifted hat:"Miss Webling?"
30351Nicky was cautious:"How do you propose to help the All Highest?"
30351Now I ask you, should you think of him as a Rothschild?
30351Now do I give you proof?"
30351Now do I loaf you, Marie Louise?
30351Now if we catch Nicky red- handed, and I turn over my own brother- in- law to justice, that ought to redeem me, ought n''t it?"
30351Or did the English shoot women, as Edith Cavell had been shot?
30351Or did you?"
30351Or does n''t it interest you?"
30351Or must I srow?"
30351Or was he, do you think, acting as agent for some one else, perhaps, and if so, for whom?"
30351Out of a long silence she spoke:"I wonder if the world will ever forget and forgive?"
30351Please have them brought down-- or up, from wherever they are, will you?"
30351Polly made one more onset:"But, tell me, Lady Clifton- Wyatt, where was Marie Louise during all this Wild West End pistol- play?"
30351Polly waited in a mockery of patience and said:"Well, after all that, what?"
30351Puss in a corner?
30351Seeing that Mamise''s startled eyes kept following these missiles, he laughed:"Do you use chewin''?"
30351Shall I help you pack?"
30351She accepted her dismissal dumbly, then paused to ask,"I say, do you by any chance know where Grinden Hall is?"
30351She apologized, meekly:"I''ve got you into an awful mess, have n''t I?
30351She asked:"And who was my mother-- my natural mother, could you tell me?
30351She asked:"But surely all this has never been published, has it?
30351She asked:"Where are you living-- here in Washington?"
30351She astonished him by a brazen question:"Do you really love me as much as that?"
30351She came down to:"Well, anyway, at last I was in Berlin-- on the stage--""You were an actress?"
30351She cried out to her sister:"How on earth can anybody be fiendish enough to have tried to destroy that ship even before it was launched?
30351She dropped into a chair, appealing feebly to the man she had retrieved:"Your name is not von Gröner?"
30351She ended with,"And now that I''ve unloaded my riddles on you, are n''t you sorry you spoke?"
30351She forgot the decencies of telephone etiquette enough to sing out:"Do you really love me so madly?"
30351She had not meant to hint, and it was a mere coincidence that he thought to say:"Could n''t I go along?"
30351She heard Davidge whispering:"What''s the matter, honey?
30351She heard Jake grumbling:"What ya mean--''poor Abbie!''?"
30351She heard Lady Clifton- Wyatt say something about,"How is the new ship coming on?"
30351She insinuated,"You could n''t expect me to make love to you the very first thing, could you?"
30351She laughed a trifle bitterly:"So we''re there already?"
30351She said nothing till she heard him speak again:"Vell, you come, yes?"
30351She seemed not to have heard him, for she murmured:"Yis, is n''t it?"
30351She sidestepped this sentimental jab and countered with a practical left hook:"But you''d teach me ship- building?"
30351She spoke with difficulty:"What if what she said was the truth, or, anyway, a kind of burlesque of it?"
30351She temporized,"What has she sai- said?"
30351She waited shame- fast for a moment before she could even falter:"Did you happen to hear the news I brought you?
30351She wanted to volunteer, too, but for what?
30351She was brazen enough to say,"You''ll accept Lady Clifton- Wyatt''s invitation to tea, of course?"
30351She was not afraid of it:"It is rather a stupendous inspiration, is n''t it?"
30351She went to Davidge to protest:"Ca n''t you hurry up my ship?
30351She''s gone?
30351Sighing with disappointment, but more determined than ever to make her his, he said:"Feerst I must esk you, how is your feelink about Chermany?"
30351Since how long do you have a sester?
30351Sir Joseph has worries enough without--""Ah, he has worries?"
30351Sir Joseph turned from the man to Marie Louise and demanded:"Marie Louise, you ditt not theenk this man is a Cherman?"
30351Sit down, wo n''t you?"
30351So Easton snapped a fulminate in Davidge when his Prussian tongue betrayed him into that impertinent, intolerable alien"Vell?"
30351So he spoke to her with more than his wonted gentleness:"Whatta hellsa matter wit choo?"
30351So she said:"Abbie darling, would you forgive me if I saw this-- person alone?
30351Something might happen to make it possible, do n''t you suppose?"
30351Study?
30351That is, I mean to say-- professionally?"
30351That was rather a largish transaction to be carried on through secret letters, eh?
30351The Willard at-- When shall you be free?"
30351The nurse ran after her, asking:"What on earth?"
30351The one that ran away?
30351The other man said:"Say, Davidge, are you daown heah looking for one of these dollah- a- yeah jobs?
30351The porter asked her,"Was you thinkin''of a taxi?"
30351The thing I wanted to speak of is--""Did n''t it rather make your blood run cold to hear Jake speak as he did of the lost ship?"
30351The_ Clara_?
30351Then did I retire and smoke my pipe of peace?
30351Then he came back with:"When am I going to get a chance to talk to you?"
30351Then he said:"Why the camouflage?"
30351Then he sobered and began to dictate:"Ready?
30351They were well to the north when she said:"Do you know Rock Creek Park?"
30351Those poor old darlings?"
30351To her that hath-- for now, whom should Mamise see but Lady Clifton- Wyatt?
30351To von Gröner he said,"How are you, Bickford?"
30351Understand?"
30351United about what?
30351Verrinder grew stern:"Lies, you say?
30351Verrinder was disgusted by such puerile defense:"What did you think was in them, then?"
30351Vould you like, yes?"
30351Was it an omen?
30351Was she a beaut like this?"
30351Was there ever a-- well, a nobler idea?
30351We hear words and say,"How''s that?"
30351Well, then-- well-- er-- when can I meet you?"
30351Well, what if I were?"
30351Well, what should she be up to but the Kaiser''s work?
30351What bouquet or jewel could equal it?
30351What could she do?
30351What did you think it was?"
30351What do you do with your nights?
30351What do you mean by again?"
30351What do you want?"
30351What does he know about what a man wants his wife to take an intelligent interest in?
30351What happened to him?"
30351What have you to say in your own behalf?"
30351What if he should succeed?
30351What if old England fell?
30351What if she should die?
30351What if the children should say such things before other people?
30351What is all this mystery about her?
30351What is she, a queen in burlecue?"
30351What is yours?"
30351What right had she to tell Davidge anything when her sacred duty to her family and her poor sister must first be heartlessly violated?
30351What scheme could ever be invented to keep poor old Iddings up to the level of a Sutton or a Sutton down to his?"
30351What shall we do?"
30351What time would be most convenient?"
30351What was her honestogawd name?
30351What was she really like?
30351What was she so afraid of the night she would not stop at Mrs. Widdicombe''s?
30351What would labor do when the spell of consecration to the war was gone and the pride of war wages must go before a fall?
30351What would she do now?
30351What would the situation do with her?
30351What you playin''?
30351Whatever was the Admiralty thinking of?
30351Whatya mean-- sunk?"
30351Whatya s''pose?"
30351When Abbie gasped,"What on earth''s the matter?"
30351When an Englishwoman said,"Cahn''t you?"
30351When he drew up at the curb Davidge''s first question was:"How''s your gasolene supply?"
30351When he threw the match overboard he said:"Like a human life, eh?
30351When she expressed a shy wish to belong to his riveting- gang he said:"Right you are, miss-- or should I say mister?"
30351When she pleaded,"Do you mind if I go back to Washington with you?"
30351When you want another-- Does it horrify you to see a woman smoke?"
30351When you''re in Rome--""You''re going to turn the world upside down, I suppose?"
30351When?"
30351Where could she get it to do?
30351Where did''dead labor suck the life out of living labor,''as Karl Marx says?
30351Where do yew- all want to go next?"
30351Where has the child got to?
30351Where should we send the poor thing?
30351Where''s my damned shirt?"
30351Where''s the bottle?
30351Where''s the bottle?"
30351Where?
30351Where?"
30351Where?"
30351Wherever did you get so hateful an idea?"
30351Wherever was it?
30351Which one of us is going mad?"
30351Who did she shoot?"
30351Who is it?"
30351Who iss?"
30351Who knows?"
30351Who was the fascinating stranger who kept me waiting so long?"
30351Who was there to live with?
30351Who was this spick foreigner who ran hooting after her?
30351Who was to build the palaces?
30351Who was to cut the marble from the mountains and haul it, and who to dig the foundations and blast the steel and fasten the girders together?
30351Who?
30351Why ca n''t I cook this vegetable?"
30351Why did n''t I see her first?
30351Why did n''t you put a feller wise?"
30351Why did you come here?"
30351Why did you let them use you for such evident deceit?"
30351Why do n''t you give her that?"
30351Why does n''t your husband go in for ship- building?"
30351Why not toss them on the table and throw yourselves on the mercy of his Majesty?"
30351Why not?"
30351Why should she wait when she knew what was coming?
30351Why so much German association?"
30351Why was n''t Marie Louise there?
30351Why was she in such a hurry to get me away from Mrs. Prothero''s dinner, and to keep me from keeping my engagement with Lady Clifton- Wyatt?
30351Why was she so upset by the appearance of Lady Clifton- Wyatt?
30351Why was that given you?"
30351Whyn''t you tell me more about her?
30351Will you try it?"
30351Will you?"
30351With all the superiority of the Kultured German for the untutored Yankee, Nicky said,"Vell?"
30351With nobody to envy, would contentment set in?
30351With some jealousy she asked,"What was she like?"
30351Without in the least understanding what it was all about, they heard her saying to the man:"And now what''s to become of these poor lambs?"
30351Wo n''t you drop in and have a cup of tea with me to- morrow at hahf pahst fah?"
30351Would the poor be glad to learn that they could never be rich?
30351Would the reduction of the opulent and the elevation of the paupers all to the same plain average make anybody happier?
30351Would you believe it?
30351Would you mind telling me the circumstances?"
30351Yes-- from what ship?
30351Yes?"
30351Yet all that Miss Gabus said to Miss Webling was:"Goin''to lunch now, Mi''Swebling?"
30351Yet what else could the worst spy do but pretend to be deeply worried?
30351You agree, yes?
30351You can hardly be in both places at once, can you?"
30351You come along with, yes?"
30351You do n''t mean a kangaroo?"
30351You got other ships on the ways, ai n''t you?
30351You just got to know everything, ai n''t you?"
30351You knew he was dead, did n''t you?
30351You like to do so much for Chermany, yes?"
30351You really knew another-- er-- Mamise?"
30351You see, I--""Where was Jake telephoning?"
30351You were n''t really a German spy, were you?"
30351You''re tryin''to swell her up a little, huh?"
30351You''ve heard of Helen of Troy, the lady with the face that launched a thousand ships?
30351_ Clara_?"
30351and,"Who is that?"
30351another,"Was she insured, d''you suppose?"
30351beat your brains for ideas?
30351he groaned,"why did you come out?"
30351is that you?
30351study?
30351told?"
30351you discussed his will with him, then?"
41689Is this proposal too much? 41689 Now, what are the conditions which they call impossible?
41689What conditions would a victorious France have exacted? 41689 And why? 41689 As I was on the point of making the first incision, who should walk up to the operation table but Professor Langenbeck, of Berlin? 41689 As he approached rather timidly, I smiled, and said, to relieve his embarrassment,You are not a Frenchman, I presume?"
41689But again, would the French military admit of our claims to be an International Ambulance?
41689Could any combination of circumstances make such a thing possible?
41689Could this be true?
41689Hence the question arose, what kind of treatment should we receive at the hands of our new masters, when the last of the Germans had quitted Orleans?
41689How could I dream of going out alone to a foreign country, where the fiercest war of the century was raging?
41689How, I often said to myself, could soldiers fight, who were habitually suffering from hunger, cold, and fatigue, like these poor fellows?
41689In this instance the property was ultimately restored to its rightful owner; but, in how many cases is that never done?
41689Shall I ever forget the moment when the_ infirmiers_ came, and that poor young lad, looking me wistfully in the face, read his doom in my silence?
41689Shall I ever see you again, and thank you with my own lips?
41689The challenge now came to us on all sides in French,"_ Qui vive?_"We replied,"_ Deux officiers de l''Ambulance Anglo- Américaine_".
41689The deed, though sanguinary, was not cruel; and where should the wounded find refuge if not under the sacred roof?
41689The greenhouse and conservatories,--who shall tell their ruin?
41689The question was, would it be safe to let us go back when we had been through the camp of the French, and had made observations on their position?
41689There was associated with every individual in this great host of patients an interesting story,--how, when, and where did they receive their wounds?
41689Were they altogether in the wrong?
41689What am I to tell you about my wound?
41689What could a Declaration of Independence do for such feudal enthusiasm as this?
41689What did we get in their place?
41689What had become, meanwhile, of the defeated and entrapped army of prisoners?
41689What has induced him to leave his home and country at such an age?
41689What was the explanation of it?
41689What would these officers have done, had they travelled in the same railway carriage with M. de Rothschild?
41689Who and what was he?
41689Who has given work to the millions of the labouring class throughout France?
41689Who has made Paris one of the most beautiful cities of the world, and the Capital of Europe?
41689Who ruled France when she was the most rich and prosperous of nations, with a trade and commerce more extensive than ever before?"
41689Who shall reckon the number of French dead in the many graves adjacent?
41689Who were we, whence had we come, and whither were we going?
41689Whom have we to thank for these things but the Emperor?
41689Would they, in the flush and the tumult of victory, overlook the fact that we were neutrals, engaged simply in alleviating the horrors of war?
41689or take us prisoners and send us beyond the frontier?
40644The young man likes musicsaid Brahms to the landlady,"will he be able to hear a little pianoforte playing or singing here sometimes?"
40644''And have you told him that he very often lies when he opens his mouth?''
40644''And where are you going to lead us to- night, Herr Doctor?''
40644''And who are ye?''
40644''Are you expecting Hausmann?''
40644''But what did Brahms say when he found he was causing such trouble?''
40644''Do you know if he is at home?''
40644''Does Avé often go to see you?
40644''Have you a great deal too much money, or may I send some?
40644''Have you had any conversation with X?''
40644''How about the photograph of the girls''quartet?
40644''How is your great brother?''
40644''I have heard there is an empty flat here, and have come to look at it,''responded Frau Truxa indifferently;''but perhaps it is not to let?''
40644''Is this your pianoforte- teacher''s pace?''
40644''It is assumed that they go away,''replied Bulthaupt;''do you mean to say that you wish actually to see them come out again on to the stage?''
40644''Saul among the prophets?''
40644''So you want to brag with them?''
40644''We have seen Brahms and Joachim together again, both in full vigour; may we not hope for a prolongation of this happy state of things?''
40644''What do you mean?''
40644''What have you been about that you have, so to say, run away?
40644''What is it, Brahms?
40644''What is your_ tempo_?''
40644''What shall we have next?''
40644''Will you not join us one day, Herr Doctor?
40644''s matter to me?
40644Am I not to have it?
40644Brahms?''
40644Brahms?''
40644By- and- by, taking up a copy of the''Four Serious Songs,''he said:''Have you seen my protest?
40644Could one compare the various works of Michael Angelo, Raphael, Beethoven, Mozart when they were at the height of their powers?
40644Could the marriage state be happy except under the rarest combination of circumstances?
40644Could you lend me the volume for a little while?
40644Every time I write I forget to ask about Fritz.... Is he very industrious?
40644Has he told you anything particular about Stockhausen?
40644How many drops of perspiration may adhere to these note- heads?''
40644I wished to ask you and Widmann if you would not like, as I should, to go for a little while to Italy?
40644I wonder if it could have been because he was pleased with my little Paula?
40644If not my sweetheart, what care I for dancing?
40644Loved one, without thee what were there in pleasure?
40644Loved one, without thee what were there in pleasure?
40644Next Sunday, perhaps?''
40644O death, where is thy sting?
40644Of what avail is the perfect, clear beauty of the principal subject in its thematically complete form?
40644Or is it floating in the evening air?''
40644Shall I see about another for him?
40644Sleeps under flow''rs the new- born creature rare?
40644Stockhausen has not returned, and you have had great success?''
40644Sweet one, without thee what joy in the dance?
40644Sweet one, without thee what joy in the dance?
40644The tall figure, bent forward and lost in tones and memories; was it not the tragic muse herself and was she not sounding a song of fate?
40644To what purpose?
40644Were there children of the widow''s first marriage to be provided for?
40644Who could the wife- elect be?
40644Who from the fulness of love Hath drunk but the hate of men?
40644Who is ill?''
40644Who knows whether a Riehl may not turn up in 1950 to beplutarch them as maestrinelli?
40644Who shall say that even at this time he had not a presentiment that before very long he was to follow?
40644Who was to keep the rooms in order and see to the very few of Brahms''daily requirements which he was not in the habit of looking after himself?
40644Would it not be possible to arrange his affairs quietly without having to speak about them with strangers?
40644Would she make Jakob happy?
40644You are probably rid of your guests again now and will be able to find a moment of time to write to me?
40644You must have travelled through by the earlier Sunday extra train?
40644[ 2]''Did you sit together on Wednesday over the egg- punch?
40644and on her replying,''I did it, Herr Doctor,''would answer,''You?
40644how comfort his sorrows Who in balsam found poison?
40644if so, by whom?
40644insisted the lady;''pray look at your things; do you not like scent?''
40644what are we to do with it?''
42420What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?
42420How are we to understand them?
42420How can I go to Church?
42420P.=--On Sacramental Baptism: What says the Liturgy?
42420What are we to infer from them?
42420What is it made to say?
42420What should it say, if revised?
42420Why should I not go to the Meeting- House?
42420the rule by which to judge being, What saith the Scripture?
41751''In God''s name, Efendi, what induced you to come to this fearful country, and to come to us too from that paradise on earth, from Stamboul?''
41751''What would you do with this Efendi,''said Kotchak Khan,''if you encountered him in Russia?
41751( thought I) thou cruel saint, couldst thou not have got thyself interred elsewhere, to spare me the terrible martyrdom of this pilgrimage?''
41751( thought I) water, dearest of all elements, why did I not earlier appreciate thy worth?
417516)?
41751And can not that which has once occurred, when the necessity arises, occur a second time?
41751And what if he is able to save a few small coins?
41751But why linger over Mazendran and all its beauties, rendered so familiar to us by the masterly sketches of Frazer, Conolly, and Burnes?
41751He was right, thought I, for, in fact, what was I to do?
41751How could it be otherwise in these countries, where there was positively not even a hope of seeing each other again?
41751I doubt much whether, in these extreme sufferings, water would have been of service; but who was there to give it to him?
41751Khalmurad?''
41751Need I say which side in this mental struggle gained the victory?
41751Was he, in any respect, the worse for that?''
41751What if I journeyed with these pilgrims into Central Asia?
41751What more can you say?
41751What need to insist that the spirit in which religion is administered has a powerful influence upon both Government and society?
41751What wilt thou then do?''
41751What wonder that I was somewhat in the condition of a half- boiled fish, when on the 13th July, 1862, I approached the capital of Persia?
41751When I bade him farewell I saw a tear in his eye-- a tear, who knows by what feeling dictated?
41751When I questioned the creditor as to this remarkable manner of procedure, his answer was,''What have I to do with the writing?
41751When two Kirghis meet, the first question is,''Who are thy seven fathers-- ancestors?''
41751Why add that we moved on unnoticed by the Turkomans?
41751[ Footnote 133: Deshti Kiptchak as far as the frontiers of Bolgar( in Russia?)
41751and thou hadst then no other motive in coming hither from so distant a land?''
41751why need I add that the impression produced by its exterior was weakened as we approached, and entirely dissipated by our entry into the place itself?
41751{ 237} But why any longer distress the reader with these cruelties?
42726And how did the Spaniards fulfil their part of the pact?
42726As a rule, the people are superstitious and very credulous; but how could they be otherwise?
42726But where are the enemy?
42726Cross or Crescent?
42726Did any government ever foster a more imbecile and iniquitous policy for its own damnation?
42726Is it to be wondered at, then, that this office is so eagerly sought after in Spain?
42726Upon one occasion a Catholic priest was horrified when an Igorrote asked him why it was that no black man ever became a white man''s Saint?
42726Why should he trouble himself further?
39498''Do people,''she quoted to herself from Sarella_ herself_,''confess these things?'' 39498 Am I,"he inquired,"supposed to show that I have been told?"
39498And expected to have your mouth full of apples when there was only blossom on it?
39498And if I did?
39498Are these two women Catholics?
39498But did n''t he resume the subject?
39498But she is not an idler?
39498But,he agreed with some adroitness,"though a blind person were older than you( who can see) you would show her the way?"
39498By Ginger you mean your daughter?
39498Can you tell him why?
39498Did she send me her love?
39498Did you ever lie under an apple- tree when the blossom was on it?
39498Did you tell her there was no one to keep it up with?
39498Do you_ ever_ think of anything?
39498Has he_ said_ anything?
39498Have you fixed it up?
39498He wants me to marry you?
39498How advantageous?
39498How dare you accuse your father of wishing to marry his own niece? 39498 How,"he said,"can a Protestant mother bring up her Catholic son?"
39498I was not lonely before--"But if I had died?
39498I wonder,thought Sarella,"what that lining is?
39498I''d rather not answer that question,she answered;"you''re asking quite a few questions, are n''t you?"
39498I? 39498 If I were to be going to a home of my own?
39498Is Mr. Gore going away?
39498Is it all settled?
39498Is n''t Mr. Gore coming to his supper?
39498Is n''t it just sweet?
39498Is n''t it pretty?
39498Is that what you have been wanting all the time?
39498Is this,inquired the blonde lady-- pointing, though inaccurately, as if to indicate Mariquita''s home,"where Mr. Xeres lives, please?"
39498Is your cousin, then, also a Catholic?
39498Jack,she said to him one day,"do you ever eat anything but stew from year''s end to year''s end?"
39498Mariquita not?
39498Mariquita,said her father one day,"does Sarella ever talk to you about religion?"
39498Married, I daresay?
39498Mr. Gore talks about interesting things?
39498Mr. Gore? 39498 No?
39498No?
39498Not even if it were advantageous to me?
39498Not ill, I hope?
39498One_ ought_ to keep up one''s sketching: I feel it to be a duty-- don''t you?
39498Out of esteem?
39498Shall you tell Mariquita, or shall I?
39498She did not seem glad that I had not insisted that my wife should be Catholic?
39498So,he queried eagerly,"you think that even if such a marriage is against regulation"( he would not say"forbidden"),"there might be a dispensation?"
39498Sounds pretty useless,Sarella remarked carelessly;"what do they do anyway?"
39498Sylvia Markham,he said,"you remember her?
39498Tell him? 39498 That is what you want?"
39498That pleased her?
39498Then, do not say anything about her moving off to a home of her own--"Why not?
39498Two ways?
39498Was Mr. Gore anxious too?
39498What better?
39498What did you say?
39498What did you say?
39498What is a Carmelite?
39498What light?
39498What o''clock shall you propose?
39498What things on earth?
39498What was it?
39498What''s that to do with it?
39498What''s_ he_ to do with it? 39498 Where would you go?"
39498Where''s Mariquita?
39498Where?
39498Who''s to do the work here while she''s away?
39498Why are n''t_ you_ in bed?
39498Why not?
39498Why not?
39498Why should he be unpleasant to her?
39498Would it be fair to ask why''impossible''?
39498You did not think she would have been angry if she had heard I had insisted that my wife should be Catholic?
39498You do n''t think she finds him tedious?
39498You know,she said,"that there are things which the Church does not allow except upon conditions, but does allow on conditions--""What things?"
39498You take it for granted I shall stop, then?
39498You think he does not dislike me? 39498 You think he likes my being here?"
39498You think so? 39498 You think,"he remarked when they were alone together over the fire,"that you shall buy Blaine''s?"
39498You_ are_ a Catholic, then?
39498Your son,surmised the rector,"would be younger than his sister?"
39498_ He_ would not like me to go away?
39498_ Is n''t_ he a thorough Spaniard?
39498("Is she stupid or cautious?"
39498And was it true?
39498And what is no sin on three Sundays out of four, or one Sunday out of two, how should it seem a sin on the other Sunday?
39498And why should n''t they?
39498Anyway, it did n''t last--""The esteem?"
39498Are they not dear women?
39498But Nellie Hurst-- you remember her?"
39498But can we agree?
39498But must it be clouded by such a suggestion?
39498But suppose I had died, all the same-- before Sarella came-- what would you have done?"
39498But when Gore first knew her, what occasion had she had for indulgence in the habit of humor?
39498But you were saying?"
39498Did she believe that God Himself had called her to it?
39498Did the young man really_ want_ to marry his daughter?
39498Did you ever hear of anybody being so kind?"
39498Did you like that Catholic gentleman well enough to share all he had, his religion, his name, and his home?"
39498Do they?)
39498Do you think that?
39498Going, for instance, to be married?"
39498Gore?"
39498Had Sarella brought tenderness with her from the East?
39498Had any coerced or urged her to it?
39498Had not Sarella''s unforeseen tenderness been her own gift to her?
39498Had there been quarrels about religion?
39498Has she said so?"
39498Have n''t you anyone belonging to you, Jack?
39498Have they?"
39498Have you yet made my daughter understand you?"
39498He knows I am not a Catholic-- why should he care?"
39498How can I wish to have done her the greatest harm?
39498How could he be expected to think it necessary to ride far, far away to find Mass?
39498How could he learn to think it a necessary part of life?
39498How dare you insult Sarella by supposing she would marry her uncle?"
39498I expect Larry Burke will show her one soon, do n''t you, Sarella?
39498I wonder if she guesses how little her father cares?
39498I wonder if you know her?"
39498Is one?"
39498It is a thing to thank you for, and always I shall thank you....""Is it impossible?"
39498Jack snorted, but Sarella, undefeated, proceeded to put the case of his being ill. Who would nurse him?
39498Mariquita answered at once and quite simply:"Miss him?
39498May I be told when it''s all settled?"
39498Me?
39498Miss Mariquita, you see, wants him and Ginger to make a match of it--""But does_ he_?"
39498Must Gore assume her to be specially incapable of an affection deeper than even friendship?
39498One is not sad because one has been allowed to do the one thing one wanted to do?
39498Sarella asked herself,"what''s coming?")
39498Sarella, will you share my religion, and my name, my home, and all that I have?"
39498Shall I have Ginger for a bridesmaid?
39498She found them together and began by saying, smilingly:"I expect you have known for a long while that there was a marriage in the air?"
39498Should n''t I have to go then?"
39498Tell him what?"
39498The two women drove the battered old fellow off, Ginger laughed and said:"Are n''t men helpless?"
39498There is nothing sad about it, is there?"
39498Was Gore equally indifferent to Mariquita?
39498Was Sister Aquinas so carried away as to be forgetful that Sarella was not the only auditor?
39498Was it?"
39498Was this of her own free desire?
39498What brings most of those who are brought?
39498What can you say to me?"
39498What did she ask?
39498What on earth can Mariquita confess?
39498What would range and stock and all cost?"
39498What''s_ he_ to the young mistress?"
39498Where do you think I heard Mass yesterday-- this morning again, too?
39498Why ca n''t they say what they mean?"
39498Why on earth ca n''t he keep his fingers out of the pot?
39498Why should Miss Mariquita be thinking of him unless he"let on"how much he was thinking of her?
39498Why should it surprise him that anyone should marry me?"
39498Will Gore?
39498Would Sarella ever want to climb?
39498Would you say that Shakespeare was useless, or Dante?"
39498You have done as you said?"
39498You may think,''But why should not_ he_ take her down to Maxwell and hear Mass himself also?''
39498You said so?"
39498You will not get tired of helping, by your prayers for me, will you?"
41855America?
41855Battle of the Marne? 41855 But if the Red Cross is to send you on that mission to Italy, why should n''t Troy wait and go as your secretary?"
41855Do n''t you see, father, that there''s no use talking at all? 41855 Do n''t you want to come and hear them, my dear?
41855Do you know her?
41855In defiance of our wishes?
41855M. Gantier-- the old gentleman? 41855 That so?
41855The theatre? 41855 To France, my boy?
41855To France----?
41855To do_ what_?
41855Well, why not?
41855What is it?
41855What-- all that money? 41855 Where are we going?...
41855Who''ll stay and nurse Granny if I go to a French base hospital? 41855 Why do you always say the war bores you?"
41855Why, is that_ you_?
41855Yes, Troy-- why not? 41855 And how should it not become known? 41855 And meanwhile, what might not be happening nearer by? 41855 As for Paris, is n''t it too frivolous for you? 41855 As they neared the Montmirail monument:Ever been over this ground before?"
41855At the very end, in a crossed postscript, he read:"Who do you suppose sailed last week?
41855But could it be possible that the Germans had crossed the Marne?
41855But it became clear to him that the one chance to wash his guilt away( was that funny old- fashioned phrase a quotation, and where did it come from?)
41855But the people who had clustered about him were pushed forward by others crying:"Are you mad to stay here?
41855Could I give it to her?"
41855Do you remember, dearest, your fifteenth birthday was on the very day that odious Archduke was assassinated?
41855Ever seen a French soldier yet that did n''t have a photograph of a baby stowed away somewhere in his dirty uniform?
41855He was rather sorry to have to class her with the other hysterical girls fighting for a pretext to get to France; but what did it all matter, anyhow?
41855He went first.... What, the others?...
41855How d''you suppose she''d got on so long without us?
41855Maybe some of you boys right here felt that way too?"
41855Or would that be disobeying orders again?
41855People wanted something newer... different.... And then, why had n''t Joffre followed up the offensive?
41855So what''s the use of always jawing about it?"
41855The old lady?
41855The sons-- ah, you knew Monsieur Paul?
41855Then, when you come back,"he continued, his voice weakening a little under the strain of Troy''s visible inattention,"we''ll see....""See what?"
41855Troy, will_ you_?"
41855Volunteers for what?
41855What did Troy Belknap and Sophy Wicks matter to young women playing a last tennis- match with heroes on their way to France?
41855What did it matter if a chit of eighteen, having taken up a foolish attitude, was too self- conscious to renounce it?
41855What was the use of trying to keep up her own enthusiasm when that of her audience had flagged?
41855When would Jacks be back again?
41855Where was she now, he wondered?
41855Which of the two would conquer, how many yards farther would the resolute Troy drag on the limp coward through this murderous wood?
41855Which shall it be, father-- the Palais Royal-- or the Capucines?
41855Why was it that, with all the currents of vitality flowing between this group of animated girls and youths, he could feel no nearness but hers?
41855You must set the example.... Oh, boys, do you know what my ambition is?
41855exclaimed Troy, in a tone that seemed to say:"Are n''t we out of the nursery, at least?"
41855he suddenly thought,"what am I doing here, anyhow?
4091Ah, little one, what is a leg more or less;--or a life either for that matter,--when our France is in danger?
4091Are you hungry, kid?
4091Avvy- voo- doo faim?
4091But have you_ got_ it? 4091 But how on earth did you happen to be in such a place as that at such an hour in the morning?"
4091But of what use is it to run when one has no place to run to?
4091But, Madame, it is not possible that you carry your houses with you like the snails?
4091Ca n''t we just tell him?
4091Can you be trusted to do an errand for me?
4091Can you tell me, ma petite,said Mother Meraut, her voice trembling,"whether there is any one here by the name of Jamart?"
4091Come, dear hearts,he cried,"are these your tears?
4091Did you think you were back home in Illinois? 4091 Easy enough,"said Mademoiselle;"there is still room in your stable, is there not?
4091He is not mad?
4091How is Father?
4091I say, kid,he began,"avvy- voo- doo- fam-- fam?"
4091If we only had the animals to go in two by two, we should be just like Noah and his family, should n''t we?
4091Is it not so, Pierre?
4091Is there an answer?
4091Is there anything I can do for you? 4091 Is there no way to get help from the soldiers''camp?"
4091Is there not something here you wish to buy?
4091It sounds simple enough,said the Doctor,"but have any of you ever known any cows or pigs?
4091It''s just like being gypsies, is n''t it?
4091Late where?
4091May n''t we stay with you and help take care of Father?
4091Now, what shall we say?
4091Oh, but how was I to know it was coming?
4091Oh,said Pierrette,"does n''t it seem like a year since we were here this morning?"
4091Oh,shuddered Pierrette,"among all those tombs?"
4091Pierre,said his mother, reprovingly,"where are your manners, child?"
4091Que vooly- voo? 4091 Que voulez- vous, Messieurs?"
4091So that''s their program, is it?
4091That''s all, is it?
4091This is not bad for the summer,he said,"and who knows what good luck may come to us by fall?
4091Too bad, is n''t it?
4091We''re not far from Fontanelle now,said Mother Meraut;"do n''t you think we''d better go on?"
4091Well,said the soldier,"what''s the matter?
4091What do you wish me to do?
4091What does it all mean?
4091What does that mean?
4091What is there, Mother, that we can cook?
4091What on earth are you doing here? 4091 What should we do without your help?"
4091What''s that?
4091Whatever should we do if we met that soldier?
4091Where did you get your wound?
4091Where else? 4091 Where in the world can we put them all?
4091Which way is it?
4091Who knows?
4091Why not?
4091Why, have n''t I told you?
4091Will that do?
4091Will you not come with me to my apartment in the stable?
4091Would you know that soldier if you were to see him again?
4091You can go about your work as usual with the noise of guns ringing in your ears and the Germans marching through Rheims?
4091You misjudge me,cried Mother Meraut;"but what good would it do to sit and quake in my own house?
4091( What do you wish?)
4091Did you think the Germans would make me sit at home and cry for terror while my work waits?
4091Do n''t I look like a Frenchman?"
4091Do n''t you know visitors are not expected in camp at this hour?"
4091Do n''t you think that would do?"
4091Do you know how to manage them?"
4091Do you suppose it is the birthday of the Commandant also?"
4091It is as if the sky had opened to let down three angels-- and where, then, is Jacques?"
4091Mademoiselle; will you stand here at the left, and, Madame la Docteur, will you station yourself at my right?
4091Must we move out of our apartment to admit the cows?"
4091Now I wonder if you can each do as well alone?
4091People came tumbling out of their houses, some not fully dressed-- but who cared?
4091Que voulez- vous?
4091The others have money too, but of what use is money when there is nothing to buy and no place to buy it?"
4091Then he said,"If you, Pierre, were to shoot a man in the street in order to take his purse, would that be wrong?"
4091Was it possible the Germans would shell the place where their own wounded lay-- a place protected by the cross?
4091What does he mean?"
4091What if the Germans should succeed in getting so far as that?
4091What place should be revisited by her pure spirit if not Rheims?
4091What shall we buy for our supper?"
4091What shall we do?"
4091What will become of her and her children?"
4091What would become of them?
4091What''s up?"
4091When do you think you can get over to see that fort?"
4091When they dared move once more they crawled out from under the straw, and Pierrette said,"Well, what do you think of that?"
4091Why do n''t you try some of your parley- voo on him?
4091You know the brook that flows through the meadow between here and camp?
41942Barefoot she toiled the forest paths, Where now the course of Empire speeds; Can you forget, loved Western land, The glory of her deathless deeds?
41942CHAPTER VII_ Why Did the United States Dicker with England for Half a Century, before Asserting her Rights to Oregon?
41942Can you apply steam?
41942Could the"Silent Man"have left that tender charge in the wilderness to answer a call to duty?
41942Did they come too near worshiping the child?
41942Dr. Fiske, headed,"Who will Carry the Book of Life to the Indians of Oregon?"
41942Had another great Donnelley disaster come to them, and they had perished, who knows when another would have followed?
41942Have the people of the United States done their simple duty to its noble martyrs?
41942Have you estimated the cost of a railroad to the mouth of the Columbia?
41942He in turn asked about Congress; whether the Ashburton treaty had been passed by the Senate; and whether it covered the Northwestern Territory?
41942He wearied with the years of intense business activity, retired, and said to himself, here is a snug little fortune, what is to be done with it?
41942How can I go back blind to my blind people?
41942I one day asked him,"Did any one ever ask that gift to Whitman College?"
41942It was then that the keen Webster made the remark, but"Doctor, how can you ever make a wagon- road for American immigration to Oregon?"
41942Possibly my young readers may inquire why was this permitted?
41942Senator Winthrop of Massachusetts, in one of his great speeches, said:"What do we want with Oregon?
41942The thought came to him, why not strike west and south and get between the great ranges so as to avoid the earlier snows of winter?
41942They knew the low esteem in which Oregon was held by many American statesmen, but what could they do?
41942Was his heroic ride to save Oregon in 1842 an accident?
41942Was it accidental that he was on the border in 1843 to lead that great immigration to Oregon in safety?
41942Was it likely the great, strong man who was to be called to a great work would have been turned aside from it had the child lived?
41942Was it?
41942Was the Story Authentic?
41942What are you going to do in such a case?
41942What could have been grander work for any Christian man than Whitman''s brave part in saving the whole great territory to the Union?
41942What do you think of that, my girl readers?
41942What use have we for such a country?"
41942What, gentlemen, are you going to do with your money?"
41942When did that great nation ever allow such a golden opportunity to pass without reserving tribute?
41942Whitman and Spalding and their wives accidentally in Oregon?
41942Who can answer?
41942Who can measure the power of the prayers of one faithful, trusting soul, in guiding that heroic little band over the dangers of their unknown way?
41942Who can overestimate the power of a good word or a good act?
41942Who can tell the secret of that sudden gathering of pioneer heroes, on the banks of"the Great Muddy"in 1843?
41942Who does not see and acknowledge that the treaty was a virtual acknowledgment of England''s ownership by"discovery"as claimed at that time?
41942Who will say that it is too late to remember such?
41942Why was the dear child taken, and such sorrow left in the home?
41942Would the good Dr. McLoughlin under such conditions be able to shield and protect them?
41942Would you have me turn a cold shoulder on the men of God, who came to do for the Indians, that which this company had ever neglected to do?
41942_ Whitman on the March and at the Mission_"Who led the great immigration of 1843 safely to Oregon?"
40412Can Love be controlled by Advice?
40412Is Life Worth Living?
40412Is n''t God upon the ocean Just the same as on the land?
40412What is to be done?
40412Why thus Longing?
40412Why wait,he said,"why wait for May, When love can warm a winter''s day?"
40412''ABD- URRAHMÁN JAMI, the last of Persia''s classic poets, was born in Jam, Khorasan, in 1414, and died in May(?
40412), 1650(?).
40412), March 15(?
40412), about 1575, and died in London(?
40412), and died in 1597(?).
40412), and died in Spain, 102(?).
40412), and died there in 1123(?).
40412), in 1661( or at Bolam, Durham, 1660), and died in London(?
40412A stranger hither?
40412ALEXANDRE DUMAS, the Elder, an illustrious French dramatist and romancist, was born at Villière Cotterets, Aisne, July 24, 1803(?
40412ALGERNON SIDNEY, a noted English republican patriot, was born at Penshurst, Kent, in 1622(?
40412ANACREON, a famous lyric poet, of Greece, was born at Teos, in Ionia, 562(?)
40412Among his writings are:"Can Abolitionists Vote or Take Office?"
40412And what is joy?
40412And what is sorrow?
40412Are your houses regulated, your children instructed, the afflicted relieved, the poor visited, the work of piety accomplished?
40412Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?
40412Child of mortality, whence comest thou?
40412Cruel is death?
40412DECEMBER DECEMBER What is the greatest bliss That the tongue o''man can name?
40412Do n''t you remember, sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?
40412ETIENNE PIVERT DE SÉNANCOUR, a distinguished French writer, born at Paris, March 4(?
40412Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality?
40412FOOTNOTES:[ 1] Is there no tyrant but the crowned one?
40412FRANÇOIS VILLON, a renowned French poet, was born in 1431, and died 1460(?).
40412GEOFFREY CHAUCER, the father of English poetry, was born in London(?
40412GEORGE COLMAN, THE YOUNGER, a famous English dramatist and humorous poet, was born in London(?
40412GEORGE PEELE, a famous English dramatist, was born in 1553(?
40412HARRIET WATERS PRESTON, a distinguished American scholar, translator, and writer, was born in Danvers, Mass., January 14(?
40412HESIOD, a renowned Greek poet, born at Ascra in Boeotia, and lived in the ninth century(?
40412Have you sent to the apothecary for a sufficient quantity of cream of tartar to make lemonade?
40412He has published:"Robert Browning,""Charles Dickens,""George Bernard Shaw,""What''s Wrong with the World?"
40412He wrote:"Barriers Burned Away,""What Can She Do?"
40412He wrote:"Our Old Church: What Shall We Do With It?"
40412He wrote:"The Hermit of Warkworth,"the song,"O Nanny, Wilt Thou Gang Wi''Me?"
40412He wrote:"The New Magdalen,""No Name,""Antonia,""Basil,""The Dead Secret,""Armadale,""Man and Wife,""Poor Miss Finch,""Miss or Mrs.?"
40412His best known works are:"In the Midst of Life,""Shapes of Clay,"and"Can Such Things Be?"
40412His"Sermons"were edited by Dr. Lyman Abbott in 1868. Who can refute a sneer?
40412How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule?
40412How shall I charm the interval that lowers Between this time and that sweet time of grace?
40412I loved thee once, I''ll love no more, Thine be the grief as is the blame; Thou art not what thou wast before, What reason I should be the same?
40412I reply,"Liberty for whom to do what?"
40412If on a Spring night, I went by And God were standing there, What is the prayer that I would cry To Him?
40412If you ask me,"Do you favor liberty?"
40412Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
40412Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love?
40412JEAN BAPTISTE POQUELIN( MOLIÈRE), the greatest of French dramatists, was born in Paris, January 15(?
40412JEAN DE LA BRUYÈRE, a famous French moralist and satirist, was born in Paris, August 30(?
40412JOHANN AMOS COMENIUS, an illustrious theologian and educator, was born at Nivnitz(?
40412JOHN BUNYAN, a renowned English author, was born in Elstow, Bedford, November 19(?
40412JOHN DUNLOP, a noted Scottish song- writer, was born March 25(?
40412JOHN FLETCHER, the renowned English dramatist, was born in Rye, Sussex, December 20(?
40412JOHN GOWER, a noted English poet, was born in Kent in 1325(?
40412JOSEPH MAZZINI, a famous Italian patriot, was born at Genoa, June 28(?
40412JULIA PARDOE, a noted English historical and miscellaneous writer, was born at Beverly, Yorkshire, December 11(?
40412LUCY LARCOM, a noted American poet, was born at Beverly, Mass., June 23(?
40412MARGARET JUNKIN PRESTON, a celebrated American author, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 19(?
40412MARTIAL, a famous Latin poet, was born at Bilbilis, Spain, A.D. 50(?
40412MARY ELIZABETH MAPES DODGE, a noted American editor, poet and author, was born in New York City, December 20(?
40412N''est- on jamais tyran qu''avec un diadème?
40412NATHANIEL LEE, a celebrated English dramatist, was born in 1653(?
40412NICHOLAS ROWE, a distinguished English dramatist and poet- laureate, was born at Little Barford, Bedfordshire, June 30(?
40412O Mother dear, Jerusalem, When shall I come to Thee?
40412OMAR KHAYYÁM, a celebrated Persian poet, mathematician, and astronomer, was born at Nishapur, in 1050(?
40412Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosy are?
40412Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught?
40412Quis legem det amantibus?
40412ROBERT BLAIR, a noted Scottish poet, was born at Edinburgh, April 19(?
40412SADI, one of the greatest of Persian poets, was born at Shiraz, in 1184, and died in 1291(?).
40412SIR JOHN DENHAM, a noted English poet, was born in Dublin, 1615, and died in London(?
40412SIR SAMUEL GARTH, a renowned English physician and poet, was born in Yorkshire(?
40412ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, a noted Greek Church father, born in Antioch, Syria, 350(?
40412Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair?
40412THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON( SAM SLICK), a famous Canadian author, was born at Windsor, Nova Scotia, September 26(?
40412THOMAS HEYWOOD, a famous English dramatic poet, was born in Lincolnshire(?
40412THOMAS WARTON, a distinguished English clergyman, critic, was born at Basingstoke, August 1(?
40412Thy joys when shall I see?
40412WILLIAM PALEY, a noted English divine and philosopher, was born at Peterborough, June 25(?
40412What are they?
40412What is it?
40412What is philosophy?
40412What right have we human beings to happiness?
40412What shall I do with all the days and hours That must be counted ere I see thy face?
40412What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me?
40412When shall my sorrows have an end?
40412Where are the cities of old time?
40412Where did you come from, baby dear?
40412Who can blame me if I cherish the belief that the world is still young-- that there are great possibilities in store for it?
40412Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have?
40412Why is thy countenance sad, and why are thine eyes red with weeping?
40412Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
40412You hail from Dreamland, Dragon- fly?
40412You k''n hide de fier, but w''at you gwine do wid de smoke?
40412[ 5] What law can bind lovers?
40412thy everlasting light?
40412why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling?
42950How true is for this year the prophecy?
42950In the Epilogue to"Sir Harry Wildair"( 1701) is the following: Vat have you got of grand plasir in dis town?
42950Omar Khayyam sings of him"Iran, indeed, is gone with all his Rose And Jamshid''s sev''n ring''d Cup, Where?
42950What were the methods used by the ancients for divining the wishes of the gods?
42950Who can resist the charms of Matadores?"
42950to what cometh all thy blandishing promises, O false astrology and divinitrice, Of God''s secrets vaunting thyself so wise?
42386Are you going back to it?
42386Is Maister Wilson,asked this enthusiast,"in favour of spending £ 36,000,000 a year on the Airmy, and only £ 12,000,000 on eddication?
42386Who? 42386 _ WHO SAID"ATROCITIES"?]
42386He:"Shall we-- a-- sit down?"
42386Is it proposed to build a church, a public institution, or a dwelling- house?
42386Mr. Punch:"Why do n''t you hit one of your own size?"]
42386Speaking at Ennis, he exclaimed,"What is to be done with a tenant bidding for a farm from which another tenant has been evicted?"
42386The Battle of Alma was won, but the fruits of victory-- where were they?
42386The question still remained-- who was to lead the House of Commons?
42386The rest of the Cabinet was made up of men then untried and unknown, though some of them afterwards rose to distinction, and got the name of the"Who?
42386West Australia, statistics of,* 128. Who?
42386What guns?
42386What was to be set to the credit of the account?
42386Who?
42386Who?"
42386Who?"
42386Who?"
42386Who?"
42386Who?"
42386Who?"
42386Why should they?
42386[ Sidenote: The"Who?
42386asked the old Duke, as, hand to ear, he strove to identify the unfamiliar names, and"Who?
42386the Coronation, what celebration For emulation with it can compare?
42386what more could he do?"
28982The Ghost?
28982''A Jewish Party?''
28982''A crank?
28982''A maiden?''
28982''A plot to destroy you has already been hatched; the question is, are you going to be destroyed like rats or like men?''
28982''A what?''
28982''Ah, but how shall I find achers?''
28982''Ah, yes-- now, how can a ghost affect a modern audience which no longer believes in ghosts?''
28982''Ah, you make cigar- boxes?''
28982''Am I the All- knowing?''
28982''And Joseph?''
28982''And after I had the fare, how should I live?
28982''And ca n''t he claim he_ was_ disturbed?''
28982''And can not the Almighty support us in Turkey as well as in England?''
28982''And could I oppress a brother- in- Israel?
28982''And did n''t he say the Jews must be English, too?''
28982''And do I not trust Him?''
28982''And do n''t they?''
28982''And do n''t you remember he was twelve last Tabernacles?''
28982''And do you call it"Hamlet"still?''
28982''And do you trust the P.P.P.?''
28982''And how are you going to get on without a prompter?''
28982''And how else should I live?
28982''And how goes your trade?''
28982''And how many shall I have but one?''
28982''And how shall I pay your bill, then?''
28982''And if they did n''t pay?
28982''And little Daisy?''
28982''And on whom else?
28982''And she has given you back your promise?''
28982''And suppose?''
28982''And what about Potiphar''s wife?''
28982''And what do I make out of it, if it is?''
28982''And what do you propose?''
28982''And what do you want?''
28982''And when is your play coming on?''
28982''And when will that be?''
28982''And where did you go?''
28982''And where did_ your_ father come from?''
28982''And where else shall a daughter of Israel desire to die?
28982''And where is Gittel?''
28982''And who am I that I should ask her to sacrifice herself?''
28982''And who are you to give orders?''
28982''And who but the Labour group promises equal rights to all nationalities?''
28982''And who wants to spell a thing like that?
28982''And why could n''t you live entirely among Jews?''
28982''And why do you want to go to Bursia?''
28982''And why do you wish to know?''
28982''And why in the Cadets?
28982''And why not here, as well as in the six hundred and thirty- eight other towns?''
28982''And why not?
28982''And why not?
28982''And why not?''
28982''And why not?''
28982''And why should I not go to Palestine too?''
28982''And why was n''t Simon in synagogue?''
28982''And you will see that they do not mutilate my play; you will not suffer a single hair of my poesy to be harmed?''
28982''And you will seek me in the café when rehearsals begin?''
28982''And you wo n''t come back till rehearsals begin?''
28982''Anyone you know?''
28982''Are n''t there plenty of Jewish girls who are English?''
28982''Are n''t you a Jew, then, sir?
28982''Are n''t you a trinity yourself?''
28982''Are n''t you engaged?''
28982''Are n''t you living among Jews now?''
28982''Are there any here?''
28982''Are there such?''
28982''Are you in need of work?''
28982''Are you mad, Aaron?''
28982''Are you the newest?''
28982''Asked?
28982''Besides,''David continued,''what new country could receive us at the rate of two hundred thousand a year?
28982''Bloomah Beckenstein, do you want me to pull you out by your plait?''
28982''But Yossel is pious-- surely?''
28982''But ca n''t there be Socialism outside Zion?''
28982''But ca n''t you make her a proselyte?''
28982''But can one pay too much attention to the Talmud?
28982''But can she make the audience cry?''
28982''But do you propose to restore them?''
28982''But have you enough plates and dishes and tablecloths?
28982''But have you never had any curiosity to see other parts?
28982''But have you thought of the danger of a_ pogrom_?''
28982''But how can I take your money?
28982''But how can he be ignorant that we''ve sent seven hundred at least to the war?''
28982''But how can we hold a meeting?
28982''But how many rooms have you?''
28982''But how shall I travel to them?
28982''But how will you be married?''
28982''But is Mrs. Wilhammer going to Russia, then?''
28982''But on what ground?''
28982''But sha n''t we take our things?''
28982''But the dead woman''s----?
28982''But the gas- brackets?''
28982''But what about?''
28982''But what business do you think you----?''
28982''But what have you Zionists to do with the Parliament in Russia?''
28982''But what have you done?''
28982''But what is there to discuss?''
28982''But what relief can they bring?''
28982''But what should we do there?
28982''But what will happen?
28982''But what''s the use of the resolution if you do n''t mention the member''s name?''
28982''But when will it be?
28982''But where are these individualists?''
28982''But where is Bursia?''
28982''But where is my little Joseph?''
28982''But who keeps it?
28982''But why ca n''t we go to Jerusalem and wait for the earthquake there?''
28982''But why ca n''t you die in Palestine?''
28982''But why shall I look foolish?''
28982''But why waste the engagement- ring?''
28982''But why?''
28982''But you ca n''t take her_ with_ you?''
28982''But you have a Committee?''
28982''But your restaurant?''
28982''But, Lucy, you do n''t think religion is ham?''
28982''Ca n''t we prove he has broken the Law of Moses?''
28982''Ca n''t you explain to her that the doctors mean no harm?''
28982''Ca n''t you hear?''
28982''Ca n''t you sweep quietly?''
28982''Comrade Berl or Comrade Schmerl?''
28982''Consecration wine, eh?''
28982''D''ye think you''ve taken me by the week?''
28982''Dear me, why did n''t you come to the point quicker?
28982''Did I not say he was a genteel archangel?''
28982''Did I not say the door must be opened?''
28982''Did I not say you were from heaven?''
28982''Did n''t I say an obstinate pig?
28982''Did n''t I, indeed?
28982''Did n''t you always say we are English?''
28982''Did not the Jews always fly to the synagogue when there was danger?''
28982''Did she beat him,''she murmured soothingly,''beat my own little Joseph?''
28982''Did you not hear what I was playing?''
28982''Do I know?''
28982''Do I know?''
28982''Do I not know it?''
28982''Do n''t you know it''s forbidden to touch money on the Sabbath?''
28982''Do n''t you see from this insolent letter how right I was?
28982''Do n''t you see it is the safest place for us?
28982''Do n''t you think I''ve already ordered him off my premises?''
28982''Do n''t you think, considering what has been happening, it is high time the Jews of Milovka learned to shoot?''
28982''Do the Jews say that after every meal?''
28982''Do we want to wash our dirty_ Talysim_( praying- shawls) in public?''
28982''Do without me?
28982''Do you mean it is she singing?''
28982''Do you mean that you asked him to marry you?''
28982''Do you mean to say you are going to marry my grandmother?''
28982''Do you realize what you''re saying, Sir Asher?
28982''Do you suppose he reads the Jewish what''s- a- name, like you?
28982''Do you suppose, by the way, that King Solomon made all his thousand marriages before he was eighteen?''
28982''Do you take it with hot water?''
28982''Do you take sugar?''
28982''Do you think a God- fearing congregation would offer office to a Sabbath- breaker?''
28982''Do you want to stay here and torture your poor mother?''
28982''Does Mrs. Mandle still live here?''
28982''Does n''t our name tell you?
28982''East Side?''
28982''Eh?
28982''Eh?''
28982''Eh?''
28982''Even on Sunday?''
28982''Fanny, what dost thou?''
28982''Five and a quarter million of us?
28982''For how long?''
28982''Give Ireland Home Rule?''
28982''Got your theatre ticket?''
28982''Hannah, will you explain to me what this_ Meshuggas_( madness) is?''
28982''Has Goldwater given you a contract?''
28982''Has n''t he the disease, then?''
28982''Has she seen the Christian slums-- Flower and Dean Street?''
28982''Have I not enough cooking to do for my own family?
28982''Have n''t I always said that?
28982''Have n''t I promised?''
28982''Have n''t they left any Jewish licenses?''
28982''Have n''t you a drop of vodka?''
28982''Have you gone on the religious lay now?''
28982''Have you scrolls of the Law for me to write?''
28982''Have you this land, then?''
28982''Her mother?
28982''How are you, granny?''
28982''How can I live away from Russia at such a moment?''
28982''How can I sell that?''
28982''How can any of us force Providence to do anything it does n''t want to?
28982''How can three be one?''
28982''How can we rehearse without you?
28982''How can you keep a restaurant up two pairs of stairs where no passer- by will ever see it?''
28982''How can you say that, Yenta?''
28982''How could I dissociate myself from the rest of the Sub- Committee?''
28982''How did you come to find it out yourself?''
28982''How do you know?
28982''How do you know?''
28982''How in advance?''
28982''How old is Moshelé?''
28982''How?''
28982''Humiliating?''
28982''Hunger, you old fool, why do n''t you let us sleep?''
28982''I am Elkan; do n''t you know me?''
28982''I hope Mrs. Wilhammer has n''t been keeping you too imprisoned?''
28982''I pay my dollar-- what for shall I go?''
28982''I shall die in Palestine?''
28982''I suppose you mean Palestine?''
28982''I suppose you will resume possession of them when you make your fortune by the piece- sorting?''
28982''Ill?''
28982''In that cab?''
28982''In time for what?''
28982''Indeed?''
28982''Is Mr. Elkman at home?''
28982''Is he married?''
28982''Is he not a dentist?''
28982''Is he open again?''
28982''Is he shut?''
28982''Is it for that you tore me away from my Talmud?''
28982''Is it possible?''
28982''Is my eye open?''
28982''Is not that the very first commandment in the Bible?''
28982''Is she beautiful?''
28982''Is there a greater lover of God in all Galicia?''
28982''Is your mouth shut?''
28982''Knowest thou me not?''
28982''Like Yvonne Rupert?''
28982''Love that painted jade?
28982''Madge painted?
28982''Maimon is the only Jew abroad to- night, and how were the poor drunken peasants to know he was baptized?''
28982''Manicuring?''
28982''May I open a window?''
28982''Me?''
28982''My Party?''
28982''My desire?''
28982''My heart and my crown, will he not come?''
28982''Naturally, but simply----''''And a Party- Chest?''
28982''Not a Party?''
28982''Not even a pair of old shoes?''
28982''Not mine?
28982''Nothing?''
28982''O God of Abraham, how shall I live without my Leah?''
28982''Of course, I have the next disposal of it?''
28982''Oh, Simeon Samuels has been talking to you, has he?''
28982''Oh, do n''t they, indeed?
28982''Oh, he said he''d stick to his Sabbath profit, did he?''
28982''Oh, is it a girl?
28982''Oh, then, it is not about your grandmother?''
28982''Oh, where can I get it?''
28982''Oh, would I, though?''
28982''One of which Jewish girls?''
28982''Only seeing you glued to it gave me the idea what a pity it was that you should not travel and sit at the feet of great Rabbis?''
28982''Painted?''
28982''Pardon me,''I went on, in my scrupulously worst German,''may I ask you a question?''
28982''Paste what?''
28982''Perhaps, but who can surpass Shakespeare?
28982''Prej- prejudiced?''
28982''Shall I give you some almond- pudding?''
28982''Shall I know?
28982''Shall I presume dictation to the angel?''
28982''Shooting?''
28982''Simon, did you tell him I was a P.P.S.?''
28982''Since when have we owned Sudminster?''
28982''Since when?''
28982''So the young men would not come?''
28982''So we have to remain dispersed to promote the week- end holiday?''
28982''So you''re a revolutionary, eh?''
28982''Sugarman?''
28982''Taking Daisy?''
28982''Tea?''
28982''Teach_ me_?''
28982''The Bund is exclusively Jewish, is it not?''
28982''The money is only----''''And Conferences?''
28982''Then Iselmann did not produce it?''
28982''Then do n''t you want the Holy Land?''
28982''Then how about Home Rule for India?
28982''Then how do you suppose we shall ever get to Palestine?''
28982''Then if we_ must_ suffer, why did you subscribe so much to the fund for the Russian Jews?''
28982''Then why did you bring me?''
28982''Then why did you buy it?''
28982''Then why do you pray for it--"speedily and in our days"?''
28982''Then why do you spoil it all?''
28982''Then why not join in the Self- Defence of our nation?''
28982''Then why----?''
28982''Then you persist in setting a bad example?''
28982''Then, what do you propose?''
28982''Then, why do n''t_ you_ go?''
28982''Then, you wo n''t inform?''
28982''They publish it on the East Side,_ nicht wahr_?''
28982''To a what?''
28982''To feel complimented at not being taken for a Jew-- what does it mean?
28982''To give to the widow Rubenstein?''
28982''True, but why could n''t they pay in advance?''
28982''We had already sacrificed our money; there was nothing left but to sacrifice our deepest feelings----''''But what for?''
28982''Well, has n''t he?''
28982''Well, we do n''t want foreigners, do we?''
28982''Well, what do I want with a barometer?''
28982''Well, why not go and see it?''
28982''Well?''
28982''What are S.S.''s?''
28982''What are you now, if I may ask?''
28982''What boy?
28982''What burden do I carry?''
28982''What business do you think your husband could set up here?''
28982''What can I do to repair-- to atone?
28982''What did you say?''
28982''What do I want?''
28982''What do you know about Palestine?''
28982''What do you mean?''
28982''What do you mean?''
28982''What do you want here?''
28982''What do you want him for?''
28982''What do you want?''
28982''What else had we to eat?''
28982''What else, Excellency?''
28982''What for?''
28982''What for?''
28982''What good''s that?
28982''What have we sacrificed ourselves for, all these centuries, if not for the Sacrifices?
28982''What have we to do with the Jewish bourgeoisie?''
28982''What have you forgotten, grandmother?''
28982''What is it, Mr. Levy-- what is the matter?''
28982''What is it?''
28982''What is the use of arguing with him?''
28982''What is there to discuss?''
28982''What paper?''
28982''What rights?''
28982''What signs?''
28982''What work?''
28982''What work?''
28982''What''s the good of a passive strike?
28982''What''s your books for?
28982''What, then?
28982''What?
28982''When does man rejoice most?''
28982''When will you be ready to start?''
28982''When, after a course of starvation and medicine at Berne University, I found I had to get a new degree for America....''''You are a doctor?''
28982''Where does your husband do his dentistry?''
28982''Where else shall a man live?''
28982''Where else?
28982''Where have you been?''
28982''Where is that?''
28982''Where is the gas?''
28982''Where is your step- mother, my poor angel?''
28982''Where was there room in the Temple for the millions who came up at Passover?''
28982''Where''s the wonder?
28982''Which Party are you of?''
28982''Who are you?''
28982''Who does?''
28982''Who ever heard of Ignatz Levitsky?
28982''Who has drawn and quartered my play?
28982''Who is he?''
28982''Who is it?''
28982''Who is this uncombed bunco- steerer?''
28982''Who is zis person?''
28982''Who knows?''
28982''Who or what needs me in America?''
28982''Who speaks of humps?
28982''Who speaks of passing off?
28982''Who wo n''t have you?''
28982''Who''s mutilating the poesy now?''
28982''Why are they traitors?''
28982''Why are you Jews surprised?''
28982''Why are you prejudiced against her?''
28982''Why did he not go on refusing you?''
28982''Why did n''t a Boer bullet strike me down?''
28982''Why did n''t you say at first you were a bourgeois?
28982''Why did n''t you say so at first?''
28982''Why did you interfere?
28982''Why does your Excellency intrude upon our prayers to God?''
28982''Why does_ Hamlet_ sing?''
28982''Why else did you refuse my money?''
28982''Why how am I to afford a new ring?
28982''Why more than manicuring her?''
28982''Why not?
28982''Why not?
28982''Why not?
28982''Why not?''
28982''Why only in Palestine?''
28982''Why shall I want to go to Bursia?''
28982''Why should I be prejudiced?
28982''Why should n''t_ I_ profit, too, by the Christian''s simplicity?''
28982''Why should you expect thought from a rabbi?''
28982''Why, what is wrong with Yossel?
28982''Why, what would be the good of keeping open if you did n''t take money?''
28982''Why, where is the spinning- wheel?''
28982''Why?
28982''Will you go-- if I swear?''
28982''Will you say I shall have much pleasure?''
28982''Will you throw that laughing hyena out, or shall I?''
28982''Wo n''t you come inside, and see the stock?''
28982''Wo n''t you come outside and walk a bit under this beautiful moon?''
28982''Would you have me arrive alone in Palestine?''
28982''Would you have me break the Fourth Commandment?''
28982''Would you have me stand by and see our people murdered?''
28982''Would you like to be a dentist again?''
28982''Yes, sir,''''Say, how''s the boss?''
28982''Yes-- but only----''''And Branches?''
28982''You are busy?''
28982''You are sending it away to Palestine?''
28982''You are sure you could absolutely produce the little ones?''
28982''You are the cook of the restaurant?''
28982''You do n''t patronize the Italians at all?''
28982''You do n''t remember me from_ Shool_?
28982''You do n''t suppose I do n''t read the Jewish papers?
28982''You do n''t suppose she wo n''t suffer dreadfully?''
28982''You ever seen this Yvonne Rupert?''
28982''You ever seen this Yvonne Rupert?''
28982''You have barred it?''
28982''You have been in India?''
28982''You have been to Palestine?''
28982''You have had a quarrel?''
28982''You have lived here all your life, Yossel, have you not?''
28982''You have made him a Hebrew?''
28982''You have told him?''
28982''You hear?''
28982''You knew I was coming?''
28982''You mean, who do n''t care a pin about the old customs?
28982''You mean?''
28982''You promise me all this?''
28982''You will not spoil my play, you will get me a maidenly Ophelia?
28982''You will save Ophelia?''
28982''You wished my Madge dead?''
28982''You would n''t class yourself with a low- down barnstormer like Shakespeare?''
28982''You''re not a Jew?''
28982''You''re not very encouraging, dear; what''s the matter with me?''
28982''You, too, want to die in Palestine?''
28982''You-- you do n''t know me?
28982''You-- you snub- nosed monkey, what do you mean?''
28982''Yvonne Rupert?''
28982''_ Monopolka?_''( monopoly), he cried.
28982''_ Rosh Hashanah_ so near?''
28982''_ Samooborona?_''said David.
28982''_ What_ hast thou signed?''
28982''_ Your_ Hamlet?''
28982''_ Your_ grandchild?''
28982''s are the synthesis of the historic necessities?
28982About Jews?''
28982After I gave you my Fanny, and she slaved for you and bore you children?''
28982Agriculture?
28982Am I a Talmud- sage that I should thus aspire?
28982And if not, which candidates shall we support?
28982And shall I not rejoice, shall I not exult even unto tears?''
28982And should I even be permitted to land?
28982And then, if Israel''s story was false here, what of the rest?
28982And what would your volunteers do in Zion?
28982And where shall I find money to keep a restaurant?''
28982And who wants his music?
28982And without conscription-- oh, what would poor Solomon have thought of that?
28982And you do n''t call France a Ghetto or Italy a Ghetto?''
28982Are not many of the Sultan''s own officials Jews?
28982Are we afraid of being packed off to Palestine and is the fulfilment of the dream of eighteen centuries our deadliest dread?''
28982Are we not one?''
28982Are you aware, sir, that every other Jew in Sudminster closes rigorously on the Sabbath?''
28982Are you, then, standing in them?''
28982As a member of the Party of Peaceful Regeneration----''''Peaceful Regeneration?''
28982As for quarrelling, were n''t you in Parliament?
28982Besides, had not the boy already proclaimed-- like his seniors-- that Russia, not Jewry, was to be saved?
28982Besides, how could one remember?
28982Besides, how had Yossel known that the heroine was ill?
28982Besides, was she not Sir Asher''s daughter?
28982Besides, would not everybody ask why she was going without her husband?
28982But Barstein inquired brutally:''Where do you do your dentistry?''
28982But Barstein, feeling duped, replied sternly:''Where do you do your dentistry?''
28982But have you forgotten there is still one form of_ Samooborona_ left?''
28982But how can there be three- in- one or one- in- three?''
28982But how could she charge herself with it-- she, with her daily rounds to make?
28982But how could we pass the winter nights on the bare boards?
28982But how if the woman refused to yield them up-- as Natalya could fancy her refusing-- out of sheer temper and devilry?
28982But let them; it will all be to the glory of Zionism----''''How so?''
28982But merit?''
28982But she?
28982But then, who could tell that the patriots who welcomed them to- day as co- workers would not reject them when the cause was won?
28982But what did you call him?
28982But what else could I do in such a wretched country?
28982But what''s the use of a preacher if he ca n''t make any text mean something else?''
28982But where in the world was Bursia?
28982But why Persia?
28982But why was she mute?
28982But you Zionists are less citizens than strangers, and if you were logical, you would all----''''Where''s your own logic?''
28982But, then, how could he be sure of knowing them all?
28982But-- was he on the right side of her?
28982Ca n''t you see your children have scarcely strength to live?
28982Can you afford to buy the food, and to risk it''s not being eaten?''
28982Could shameless passion further go?
28982Could this be the great She, the arbitress of art?
28982Did Jews really conceive it as a contemporary possibility?
28982Did he know Jacobs, the dentist of the neighbouring Mansel Place?
28982Did he not incarnate the great Jewish gospel of the improvident lilies?
28982Did he not pray every day to be delivered from the_ Satan Mekatrig_?
28982Did n''t the Hungarian Jews join Kossuth?
28982Did the second daughter ever go to Hamburg?
28982Did these Yankee ignoramuses suppose he did not share their aversion from the gaberdine or the three brass balls?
28982Did they imagine he wore phylacteries or earlocks, or what?
28982Did they think their delving spades would come upon a hidden store of gold, upon an ancient treasure- chest?
28982Did they, then, pray the Jewish prayers in Christian churches?
28982Did you not see the protest even in the Australian Parliament?
28982Do n''t the Southerners have negro servants?''
28982Do n''t they teach you here:"Honour thy father and thy mother"?''
28982Do n''t you know this is written by the_ Meshummodim_?''
28982Do you forget you are talking to your grandmother?''
28982Do you mean to say He sends us here a double dose of profit?''
28982Do you mean to say you ca n''t jump from one Commandment to another?''
28982Do you not hear?''
28982Do you not see how the folk- instinct leads them to Palestine?
28982Do you think I get fat on this inn?
28982Do you think I''d be where I am now if I had n''t had the courage to buy a bankrupt stock that I did n''t see my way to paying for?
28982Do you think there are a sea of Kazelias in the world?
28982Do you want to skin_ me_, like your martins and sables?''
28982Does Goldwater imagine I have written a melodrama?
28982Does not the Fourth Commandment run:"Six days shalt thou labour and do all thy work"?
28982Economic Zionism?
28982Eh?
28982Fight the Sultan with his million soldiers?
28982For I had hardly read him ten lines before he brayed out,"Where is the Ghost?"
28982For the last time I ask you, will you or will you not summon me a meeting of householders?''
28982Had he applied to the Russo- Jewish Fund, which existed to help such refugees from persecution?
28982Had he been the victim of a jealous libel?
28982Had he not meant it for the best when he took her into his workshop?
28982Had he perhaps misinterpreted and magnified the attitude of these Americans?
28982Had not her heroines enchanted the Ghetto?
28982Had they not even discovered that art levels all ranks and races?
28982Has our race reached self- contempt?''
28982Have n''t you been in my house, and seen what an honourable Jew I am?
28982Have we not of ourselves severed our relations with the D.K.''s?
28982Have you forgotten we are of Rabbinic family?''
28982Have you no feelings?
28982He had seen countless pictures and caricatures of them, for did they not almost hold the globe in their grip?
28982He produces not so badly, but act?
28982He said to me:''Are n''t you ashamed?
28982He should have love-- this strange English thing-- but could he not find a Jewess?
28982Hereditary privileges will be abol----''''But what land_ is_ there?''
28982His few childish years in the Russian Pale-- what were they to the long years of European art and European culture?
28982How about Ophelia''s songs?
28982How about that folk- instinct?''
28982How are you going to work Sabbath- keeping into that?''
28982How can you utter such an awful omen?''
28982How could I refuse?
28982How could Shakespeare really describe the thinker?
28982How could one give away the last kopeck and arrive penniless in a strange land?
28982How could that be?
28982How could that obscure rush- light of the London Ghetto Theatre have blazed into the Star of Paris and New York?
28982How could this stranger understand the mysteries of purging meat, of separating meat- plates from butter- plates?
28982How could you treat a poor family so?''
28982How do you know I''m not married?''
28982How had Nehemiah lived during those first ten years in England?
28982How if he formed a secret_ Samooborona_ Committee, composed equally of representatives of all Parties?
28982How in Heaven''s name will they live?''
28982How indeed could a man who had known the blessing of a sober, God- fearing wife endure a drunkard and a child- beater?
28982How old is the eldest?''
28982How should he even get his bread-- he whose ill- fame was doubtless the gossip of the Ghetto?
28982How sift the false from the true amid all this tangled mass?
28982I began to smell a rat, and thought to myself, How comes it that you know I want the frontier?
28982I could write Holy Scrolls, indeed, and keep an inn, but what availed these accomplishments?
28982I inquired,''What is the meaning of the word"slack"?''
28982I never hid it from her brother, so why should n''t she know?
28982I was to be given office, was I, on condition of closing my shop on Saturday?
28982I''m afraid you''ll think me very ignorant-- it was n''t Grieg, was it?''
28982If I am playwright as well as poet, was not Shakespeare both also?''
28982If he wanted to marry, why did n''t he marry before eighteen, as the Talmud prescribes?''
28982If they drank their money away?''
28982If this was the best, what in Heaven''s name awaited him elsewhere?
28982If, indeed, the handbill was written by apostates, what could it hold but Satan''s lies?
28982Indeed, had not the Passover Market hummed with the old, old story of a lost Christian child?
28982Is it not true I gave her the ring?''
28982Is it not wonderful-- the transformation of our people?
28982Is it your excellent management, I wonder, or have you endowments?''
28982Is n''t it in the papers that he promised?''
28982Is there a core of anti- Semitism in my nature?
28982It alone----''''May I ask whom you speak for?''
28982It is true that I early helped him to redeem his household gods, but could I do less for a man who had still no bed to sleep in?
28982It was only Miss Aaronsberg''s tactful''Do n''t you want to smoke?''
28982Let us make a demonstration against the director; let us----''''Who told you that?''
28982Merely Shem?''
28982Natalya cried, in her sweetest but harsh tones,''Wo n''t you come and kiss me?''
28982Nay, would she even be able to endure the burden till the end?
28982Now, what should I do?
28982One of the Kazelia conspirators-- for his arm reaches over Europe-- called us into his office, and said:''How much money have you?''
28982Or did Sir Asher consider his past life improper or his future behaviour dubious?
28982Or had she not even seen his letter?
28982Or is it only too logical?
28982Or was she deliberately choosing to forget and forgive his Jewishness?
28982Political Zionism?
28982President, are we here for business or are we not?''
28982President?''
28982Said he:''What can I do with such murderers?
28982She answered:''Why have you led me to such a land, where even prayer costs money-- at least, for women?
28982She was so beautiful and he was so strong-- what could stand between them?
28982So I started off at once to talk to him-- two days''journey, they said-- for I knew he would help; and if not he, who?
28982So what could I do with a large family?
28982Soundly invested, I hope?''
28982Still, where was he to sleep?
28982The Prince of Palestine talking with a twang-- how could he permit such an outrage upon his Hebrew Hamlet?
28982The habit of actualities had been lost; what need of them when concepts provided as much intellectual stimulus?
28982The superficial might call him shiftless, but more profoundly envisaged, was he not rather an education in the art of living?
28982Then it is the"Yvonne Rupert"cigar?''
28982Then she said icily:''And what do you want?''
28982Then where''s the difference?''
28982Then, as the minister rose in angry obfuscation,''You are sure you wo n''t have some whisky?''
28982They would inquire in the immemorial formula,''What town comest thou from?''
28982They, with Jewish blood warm in their veins, with the memory of their mother warm in their hearts?
28982This chic, this witchery, with which reputation credited her-- had not Gittel possessed it all?
28982To what end, then, had he escaped the conscription?
28982To whom?
28982To your godly congregation?
28982Was Kazelia also a myth?
28982Was he not pious enough, or not rich enough, too artistic or too low- born?
28982Was he not then alone?
28982Was it Heine or another who said''The people of Christ is the Christ of peoples''?
28982Was it because she could not trust herself to speak before the crowd?
28982Was it conscience, was it terror?
28982Was it not in her marvellous marble music- room-- one of the boasts of Chicago-- that he had mentally seen himself enthroned as the lord of the feast?
28982Was it possible that Mrs. Wilhammer had really been too ill to see him?
28982Was it the self- contempt natural to a race that had not the strength to build and fend for itself?
28982Was the landlord''s detaining me in the parlour a ruse to gain time for the attics to be emptied of any comforts?
28982Was there a black rag, and was there a white, or were both rags parti- coloured?
28982We have the whole Russian Revolution on our shoulders; how can we throw away our lives for the capitalists of the Milovka Ghetto?
28982Well, how could I answer?
28982Well, what could I do?
28982Well, what was to be done?
28982Were there ever two races less alike?"''
28982What about the barometer?''
28982What am I to do with it?
28982What are they but hirelings?''
28982What blood?''
28982What can I do for you?''
28982What can I do for you?''
28982What can you do with such greenhorns?
28982What did English people want with banners and such- like gewgaws?
28982What did they seek under the wall?
28982What do you want?''
28982What had the wretch to do with the children?
28982What if, in her drunken fury at the absence of Becky and Joseph, she did it a mischief?
28982What is the_ Parnass_ giving?''
28982What madness had driven him from her side?
28982What news from Warsaw?''
28982What other''pious philanthropist''had she found to replace him?
28982What right, indeed, had he to force himself upon this woman, upon these children, to whom he was dead?
28982What was I saying?''
28982What was she doing with this Christian Colossus?
28982What was the use of talking?
28982What was to be done?
28982What will it be?
28982What wonder if he could not suddenly rise to dictatorship?
28982What?
28982Where are you off to?''
28982Where did you go?''
28982Where had those young men to turn but to me?''
28982Where is my_ Chumash_( Pentateuch)?''
28982Where were the silver candlesticks?
28982Wherein lay the attraction of that exotic land, and whatever would Mrs. Silvermann and her overflowing progeny do in Persia?
28982Whither had she fled?
28982Who can make him intelligible to the modern soul?''
28982Who could put bounds to her achievement?
28982Who knew what would happen to it?
28982Who should say?
28982Who would have suspected Red Judah of such courage-- such apt speech?
28982Who, even for an imperial income, would bear the burden of those grotesque teeth, protruding like a sample of wares in a dentist''s showcase?
28982Whose language was this?
28982Why all this ceaseless sorrow, this footsore wandering, this rootless life, this eternal curse?
28982Why are you open?''
28982Why do n''t they stop in their own country?
28982Why else did we take your"Hamlet"for a Passover play?''
28982Why had he never thought of painting her?
28982Why have I not heard you in America?''
28982Why have you not compassion on your little ones?
28982Why not to Paris that her theatric gifts might receive training?
28982Why should I not arrange that for you?''
28982Why was she tendering this scented letter?
28982Why?''
28982Will you go there again?''
28982Will you not come and live with me in the country, and let me care for you?
28982With such ghouls hovering around the Hebrew''Hamlet,''who could say how the masterpiece had been mangled?
28982With which shall we form_ blocs_ in the elections?
28982With your sister in agony?
28982Wo n''t you come on the stage?''
28982Wo n''t you----?''
28982Would I get some intelligible written statement from Quarriar as to what had taken place?
28982Would Israel never return to reality, never find solid ground under foot, never look eye to eye upon life?
28982Would not Yossel go to a new land, and how much would he want over and above his fare?
28982Would she be taken away before Daisy became self- supporting?
28982Would the Banker be more susceptible now, under this disillusionment?
28982Would the maestro honour Mrs. Wilhammer by taking tea in her cabin?
28982Would you become a jewellery shop?''
28982Would you fall back on a stranger?
28982Would you not like to go and see Vienna?''
28982Yes, in very sooth-- he remembered it suddenly-- was it not this man''s wife on whom he had built his main hopes?
28982You came into a fortune?''
28982You do n''t mean to deny you''re a Zionist?''
28982You do n''t mean to say that she drinks in public- houses?''
28982You had to marry a Christian for the sake of Fanny''s children?
28982You were saying that, too, were n''t you, Witsky?''
28982You''d like to come and live with me-- eh, my lamb?''
28982You''ve never seen me act?''
28982_ Bezalel_, it''s called; is n''t that a beautiful name?
28982_ Himmel!_ what was this?
28982at once?''
28982cried the gossip, revolted;''and what would become of your own grandchildren?''
28982had her secretary presumed to guard her from Semitic invaders?
28982proved unexpectedly small in stature and owl- like in expression; but his''Be seated, sir-- be seated; what can I do for you?''
28982the question was,_ could_ a Banker be disillusioned?
28982were Christians coming to Jewish services, even as she had gone to Christian?
43347But what is a noble subject?
43347It is the Queen of Flowers, the Mystic Rose,& c.,& c. But is the rose greater than the cabbage from a purely pictorial point of view?
43347Where should they turn for precept and guidance on the line of their new- found principles?
37126A relation of Dr. Wilton''s, I presume?
37126Ada is very pretty, is n''t she? 37126 And if I asked the question now, could you answer it, Salome?"
37126And you are in debt for those things also?
37126Any letters for me by the second post?
37126Are you going now, dear?
37126Are you going to look for lodgings for Aunt Emily, mother?
37126Are you going to write to Ada, Salome?
37126Are you very busy?
37126Are you very tired, dear?
37126Can you tell me of any house where children would not be objected to? 37126 Could you wait?"
37126Could you, Mrs. Parsons, say less if the rooms were taken for some time?
37126Did I not always tell you that Salome was awfully clever? 37126 Did you ever see such hair?
37126Do you take beer, my dear? 37126 Do you wish to go, Ada?"
37126Does Percival''s brother ever say anything to you about Raymond?
37126Does he know?
37126Edith, have I not forbidden you to interrupt your brothers at their work? 37126 Essays-- papers?
37126Go where?
37126Had not you better go back, Sal? 37126 Have you got any money, Salome?"
37126Have you had no luncheon, mother? 37126 Have you seen Barnard lately?"
37126He is there in better time of a morning, is n''t he?
37126Her story?
37126How is your sister? 37126 How many young gentlemen are there?"
37126How much had we a year at Maplestone, Uncle Loftus?
37126How should I know who she was?
37126How should I know, Sal? 37126 How stupid of me!--Reginald, can you remember?"
37126How what is?
37126I am not to exceed two pounds a week, Anna?
37126I ca n''t have lost it.--Reginald,--I say, Reginald, have you seen my purse? 37126 I do hope he is not very ill. What do you think, Salome?"
37126I met an old friend-- Barington,Raymond said;"and I knew Reginald would meet you.--Hallo, Ada, how are you?
37126I want to see your little brothers,Kate said to Salome;"may I come with you and find them?
37126Is anything the matter, Ray?
37126Is he ill?
37126Is her cold worse? 37126 Is it quite near, Ruth?
37126Is it raining, Raymond?
37126Is mamma gone?
37126Is not that Salome Wilton, Eva,she asked of her daughter,--"poor Mr. Arthur Wilton''s child?
37126Is not this Mrs. Atherton''s paper you promised to send back this morning, Salome? 37126 Is there any change since the morning?
37126It is a fine winter''s morning, is n''t it? 37126 It would not be wrong, would it, mother?
37126Look,he said,"whose property is this?"
37126May I go and see father?
37126May we come and get daffodils, Katie?
37126Mr. Atherton? 37126 Mr. Stephens-- is that right?"
37126My dear Kate,said Mrs. Wilton,"will you ask Aunt Betha to come and speak with me?
37126My name is Stephen, is n''t it, Salome? 37126 No,"said Raymond;"what made you race like that?
37126No; you''ve never lost it?
37126O Reginald, where did you find it? 37126 Oh, I say, are you in a great scrape?
37126Oh, an awfully nice fellow!--I say, mother, you wo n''t stay here, will you? 37126 Oh, is it Percival, the brother of Reg''s friend?
37126Oh, what shall I do? 37126 Oh, why did Ada smile and look pleased?
37126Oh, you ca n''t think how glad I am you like my book; and-- has Mr. Darte sent the money? 37126 Pray, ma''am,"inquired Mrs. Parsons,"how many are there in the family?"
37126Raymond, do you know what has happened?
37126Raymond, may-- may I tell Reginald? 37126 Reg will be here directly; may I tell him?"
37126Ruth Pryor has sent us in some lovely hot cakes for tea; is n''t that kind?
37126Salome, do you think the Pryors can have been dishonest? 37126 Salome, is that you?"
37126Salome, where are we to drive?
37126Shall I tell mother about it when she comes in, or will you tell her?
37126Shall we have prayers, mother?
37126She patronized no end, did n''t she? 37126 She wo n''t take boys?"
37126Should n''t I? 37126 Sister-- which sister?
37126Stevens,Salome said, rushing up to Stevens,"have you seen my purse?"
37126Then you think it is safe to be rejected, Reg? 37126 Third class?
37126This house is ours, is n''t it?
37126Well, I ca n''t smoke here, can I?
37126Well, did anybody else come?
37126Well, look here, Sal, will you save me from a frightful row with Uncle Loftus by seeing Percival, and trying to make him wait for his money? 37126 Well, my dear Salome?
37126Well, my dear child,Dr. Wilton said, advancing to Salome when at last she opened the door,"how are you getting on?
37126What am I? 37126 What are we stopping for?"
37126What are you doing, Salome? 37126 What do I want it for?
37126What do you mean, Stevens? 37126 What has he got?
37126What is it? 37126 What is that?"
37126What is the title? 37126 What is to be done about old Birch, mother?"
37126What''s the name of the house?
37126What''s the use of asking?
37126What_ am_ I to say or think, Salome? 37126 Where I saw you with some one some time ago?"
37126Where are Ralph and Cyril?
37126Where are the lodgings?
37126Where are you off to, Salome?
37126Where are your brothers?
37126Where did Harrington come from?
37126Where have you been, Raymond?
37126Where is Raymond?
37126Where is mother?
37126Where is my necklet? 37126 Where is the nursery?"
37126Where shall I drive, sir?
37126Where''s mother?
37126Where''s mother?
37126Which way are you going?
37126Who came in the carriage just now?
37126Who is Lady Monroe? 37126 Who is come?"
37126Who is it from?
37126Whom can he be talking with?
37126Whom could Salome Wilton be talking to so earnestly?
37126Why did you not come and see Uncle Loftus?
37126Why did you not go to the station to meet mamma?
37126Why, Sal, what is the matter?
37126Why, old Sal, what is it?
37126Why, they are twins, are n''t they? 37126 Will you go and sit with mother while I find Raymond?
37126Wish? 37126 Wo n''t you come in?"
37126Wo n''t you have a cup of tea, Uncle Loftus?
37126Would you advise me to send a telegram for a paid answer?
37126Yes, Reg had picked it up; but you are not going out before dinner, are you, Ray?
37126You are never going out in the cold and fog, Miss Salome? 37126 You can let me have the necklet, I suppose?
37126You do not think you are alone in these feelings, do you? 37126 You know what is in this note, Ada?"
37126You want a nurse, you do,said the cabman,"to guide you?
37126You will come and see me again very soon, wo n''t you?
37126_ This_ way, do you hear?
37126A giddy girl she was when she lived here.--You remember Ruth, Kate?"
37126Ada looked up with a placid smile from her work-- for Ada was never idle for a moment-- and said,"Who is Barington?"
37126Ah, there was the sting to the undisciplined, selfish nature,--"What am_ I_ to do?"
37126And how are you, Emily?
37126And how could you and mamma cut Salome like that?"
37126And if no one took her story, and paid her for it, how should she be able to satisfy Philip Percival at Christmas?
37126And now, shall I see you home?"
37126And what is this?"
37126And why did Mr. Stone drive him home?"
37126And wo n''t Miss Barnes be angry?
37126And would you put in that tale about the monkey which Hans is so fond of?
37126And you three little ones may all come, only you must not make yourselves''jammy,''or what will Aunt Betha say?"
37126Are we not going to Torquay or Ilfracombe?"
37126Are we to have tea there?"
37126Are you not sorry for them at Maplestone?"
37126Are you quite sure the necklet was in that large dressing- case?
37126As the guard came to shut the door with the usual words,"Any more going on?"
37126Aunt Betha ought to have called you by this time; and what can Sarah be thinking of?"
37126Bragging as usual, eh?"
37126Ca n''t you trust me?"
37126Can you help me?"
37126Can you look for lodgings for them to- morrow?
37126Can you love me, and, when I come back next time, be my wife?"
37126Carl asked,"and the school- room?
37126Could anything be better?
37126Could you let me have it to raise money on it?"
37126Dear me, Miss Cox, how are you, ma''am?"
37126Did not Uncle Loftus say so?"
37126Did you not see him?"
37126Do n''t you remember how you used to let it down at Maplestone, and make me guess which was your face and which was the back of your head?
37126Do you care for music?"
37126Do you know, Ada?"
37126Do you remember her, mother?
37126Do you think Salome will get well?"
37126Do you think we are living in a den of thieves?
37126Do you think you_ could_ wait?"
37126Do you think, Salome, you could get it for me in any way?
37126Do you understand?"
37126For how could she doubt that he had taken the necklet?
37126Had she been right to do this?
37126Have you actually written a story?
37126Have you been spending the day at your uncle''s?"
37126Have you found your purse?"
37126Have you got to teach them?
37126Have you looked through the little one?"
37126Have you paid Mr. Percival?
37126Have you seen it?"
37126He has left a long family, has n''t he?"
37126How are you, old fellow?"
37126How can you say so?"
37126How could she promise, when once more she must meet Philip Percival and tell him if she had succeeded in getting the money or not?
37126How could you be such an ass, Reginald, as to travel third class when I had taken a first class ticket for you?"
37126How dare you speak like that?"
37126How has it been done?"
37126How is he ruined?"
37126How is the young lady?"
37126How long have you been in Roxburgh?
37126How many seats?"
37126How was it?"
37126I am not tiring you, am I?"
37126I can not do what I promised, and I-- I hardly like to ask it, but_ could_ you wait till Easter?"
37126I do hate it,"said Kate vehemently;"and yet what is one to do?"
37126I heard him order the dog- cart round at three o''clock, and he ought not to go; yet how can I stop him?"
37126I hope your mother is pretty well?"
37126I mean nothing that is yours ought to go to the creditors?"
37126I say, St. Clair, what''s up?"
37126I wonder how I shall get on at the college?
37126I--""How can I help you, Ray?
37126Is it at my hair?"
37126Is it not lovely?
37126Is it not odd I tremble so?
37126Is it true?"
37126Is that true?"
37126Is that your story?"
37126Is there any change in father?"
37126It is not far; will you come, Miss Cox?"
37126Kate sprang up when Salome came in and kissed her affectionately; while her mother said,"How do you do?--is this Salome?"
37126May I, mother?
37126Moore?"
37126Mr. Percival, is-- do you think my brother is getting on better at the office?"
37126Mr. Wilton turned his face towards her at last, and said, almost roughly,--"What do you want, Salome?"
37126My brother lived up to the mark, perhaps a little too much so; but who was to foresee such a calamity as this?"
37126My dear boy, it is such pain to me-- to-- to--"Mrs. Wilton was in tears again, and Salome murmured,"How can you be so selfish, Raymond?"
37126My dear,"said her mother sadly,"what could you do?"
37126Oh, how could Raymond talk like that?
37126One thing I forgot to consider,--how far are we from the college?"
37126Presently Salome said with a deep- drawn breath,"Has father all his money in the bank, then?"
37126Puck is looking his best, is n''t he?
37126Raymond and Reginald were still lingering at the bottom of the table, when Raymond said,--"I suppose I can take out Captain this afternoon?
37126Raymond had asked for a sovereign, and how could she refuse him?
37126Raymond said,"Where''s Reginald?"
37126Reg, do you know where he goes?"
37126Reg, is n''t it strange I can make all things in my stories go so pit- pat and right, and yet I never can keep my goods straight?
37126Reg,"said Salome in a low voice,"_ do_ you think he is getting into debt?"
37126Reginald called out from his mother''s bed- room, where he was fastening up a bracket for her little clock,--"What do you say you''ve lost?"
37126Reginald, however, stopped when his uncle called, and Salome, rising, said,--"Did you want us, Uncle Loftus?"
37126Reginald, thus appealed to, was obliged to turn his head, and in the very gruffest voice said,"How do you do?"
37126Sal, what''s the matter?"
37126Salome bit the end of her pen- holder, and could scarcely repress a smile, but she only said,--"What do you want money for, Raymond?"
37126Salome exclaimed;"how much is it?"
37126Salome, do you,_ can_ you imagine the Pryors are dishonest?"
37126Salome, have you nothing to advise or to say?
37126Shall I call a cab?"
37126Shall I make the children orphans, living with a cross aunt?
37126Shall I question Stevens?"
37126Shall I run over with it to the vicarage?"
37126Shall I wake him?"
37126Shall I write to him?"
37126Shall we call them?"
37126Spring,''midst the wakening of thy flowers and bees Why-- why awakest thou these?"
37126Sweet sounds and scents break forth where''er thou art; What wakest thou in the heart?
37126Take it from him, children.--What is it, Salome?"
37126The door was opened at once, and Raymond, looking straight at his sister, said,--"Well, what is the matter?"
37126The finished manuscript was in her hand, and she said,"Reg, where do you advise me to send my story?
37126Was he an old friend?"
37126Was it not so in the days when divine lips told the story of the lost piece of silver and of the wandering sheep?
37126What are you going for?"
37126What can be the matter?"
37126What do you both look so scared for?"
37126What do you mean?"
37126What do you mean?"
37126What do you want, Sal?"
37126What have you done with the money?
37126What is it?"
37126What is it?"
37126What is the matter with him?
37126What makes you ask?
37126What will become of the children?"
37126When shall we know about our affairs, mother?"
37126When would you go?"
37126Where are the boys?"
37126Where are the young gentlemen?
37126Where are you bound for?"
37126Where does that come from?"
37126Where had you flown to?"
37126Where have you been?"
37126Where''s the manuscript?"
37126Where_ did_ you find it?"
37126Who came besides?"
37126Who is it?"
37126Who shall say what this love of the stricken child did for the wayward, sinning brother?
37126Whom can he have been staying with, I wonder?
37126Whom did you expect to hear from?"
37126Why did Raymond always get undeserved praise?"
37126Why did he not say it to me?
37126Why did you do so by stealth and like a thief?"
37126Why had she been so cross to Kate?
37126Why should I leave the sinking ship like this?
37126Why should my life be so different to other girls?
37126Why should she be a drudge?
37126Why should she be in such a fuss?
37126Why, what am_ I_ to do, if I ca n''t go back to Eton?"
37126Will Mrs. Wilton, and will you, approve also?"
37126Will it do, Reg?"
37126Will it not be so to the end of time?
37126Will she need it no more in the womanhood which is dawning upon her with the soft, sweet radiance of a faithful heart on which she may rest?
37126Will you come and see?
37126Will you come for it some day?"
37126Will you come for me in half an hour?
37126Will you come in to- morrow afternoon for an hour or two?"
37126Will you come in?"
37126Will you have any tea, Raymond?"
37126Will you lend your dear Ada to me for the winter?
37126Will you promise?"
37126Wilton?"
37126With these words Dr. Wilton left the dining- room; and Louise said,--"What shall we do with all the Maplestone people, mother?
37126Would Miss Wilton walk in?
37126Would it not have been better to have gone direct to her Uncle Loftus and confided in him?
37126Would you not think it strange if people only sent to your uncle, Dr. Loftus Wilton, for great and dangerous ailments?
37126Your mother- in- law wo n''t mind my looking at them?"
37126[ Illustration:"''I say, Salome, have you got any money?''"
37126_ Page 176._]"Miss Wilton?"
37126_ Page 66._]"Shall I take the tickets?"
37126and Ada may write the notes for our birthday party?"
37126and how did she find you out?"
37126and what would become of him?
37126asked Salome, leaving her post by the window and coming towards the fire,--"go where, Ada?"
37126how could you be so mean and deceitful?"
37126how could you say your name was Stephens?"
37126how long is this to go on?"
37126indeed; will you please to look round, ma''am?
37126may he come with me this afternoon?"
37126oh, not to- night, Sal; besides, who is to read them?"
37126or shall they have a father and mother?
37126said a pleasant voice,"where are you off to?"
37126the pretty one at Cannes?"
37126what is that-- what is that to-- losing father?"
37126what is the matter with him?"
37126what should I do without you?
37126what sort of work?"
37126what_ shall_ I do?"
37126whoever heard such nonsense?
37126why should she be offended with her?
39769''Are we not children born of the one Father?'' 39769 ''But,''I said at last,''are n''t you going to tell me what has so unnerved you?''
39769Am I my brother''s keeper?
39769Are n''t you well?
39769At last I said,''Do n''t you think we had better leave to- day? 39769 But surely you heard the piano being played?"
39769But what sort of ghosts haunt it?
39769Do we need anything else, Phædrus? 39769 Have many people seen him?
39769Have you known any one who has ever seen anything?
39769How is it done?
39769Is it always the same figure?
39769It is a very large house, I suppose?
39769Seen things? 39769 Then what did you see?"
39769Then you all heard it?
39769Well, what of it? 39769 What did she think of the bathroom?"
39769What sort of figures?
39769What the devil is he to do?
39769Who was the man who killed himself in this room?
39769You also?
39769''What was it he had to do?
39769A day or two afterwards I said suddenly to the old family lawyer,"Was there ever a question of Uncle William leaving his money to me?"
39769After a few minutes of friendly conversation, which had taken an amusingly domestic turn, he said to me,"Now, how much has your husband got a year?"
39769After a little trivial conversation I said,"By the way, who is that brown man, dressed like a Satyr, who has been with you lately?"
39769Again, why did not Mrs. Sinclair see this ghost when her mother so plainly saw it?
39769Are burglars ever as rash as that?
39769Are the ghosts who haunt a dwelling indifferent to, or hostile to, the presence of their companions in the flesh?
39769As the horses were starting I called out to Miss Bates--"Tell me what''s going to win''The Cambridgeshire?''"
39769As the housemaid prepared to follow her I said,"Am I the only person sleeping on this floor?"
39769But was every one in the house clairaudient?
39769But where?
39769CHAPTER IX POMPEY AND THE DUCHESS Have animals souls?
39769CHAPTER XVIII HAUNTED ROOMS How is it that one can"feel"a room is haunted?
39769Could anything be more banal, more commonplace?
39769Did he contrive to drop the"tip"into my mind, open at that moment and eager to catch the response?
39769Did not the Christ warn his followers that the Path must be trodden more or less alone?
39769Do pictures originate the artist?
39769Do you wish to see me or my husband?"
39769Every one is interested in getting rid of this weird disturbance, but how to do it?
39769For what, after all, is a mystic, but one who enters into possession of the inner life?
39769Had I not heard them stealthily beginning the ascent of the stairs, and grow louder the nearer they approached me?
39769He sat up in bed and called out,"Who is it?"
39769How do ghosts contrive to make such a noise?
39769How few people realize that they have never seen themselves?
39769How many can tell what they really look like?
39769How often one is asked the question:"What is a medium?"
39769How shall I describe the sight?
39769How treat, as having right to equal power, the wise and the ignorant, the criminal and the saint?
39769How well I know the look and the words accompanying it:"Are you Violet Tweedale, the novelist?
39769How would she deal with the next story I am going to relate?
39769How would this lady treat the"Castel a Mare"scream?
39769How, she asked, could a firm social foundation ever be built up on this utter disregard of nature?
39769Human beings having a rag and trying to scare the neighborhood?
39769I sat down again and began to wonder if Lord Colin was ill, or was he dead, and why was he carrying lilacs?
39769I was alone, but for how long would I remain alone?
39769I wonder why?
39769I would have laid hold of them and said,"Do you hear that knocking?
39769If God be just and good, then what is the explanation of this hideous discrepancy in human lives?
39769If God is love, who could reconcile with any comprehensive idea of justice and law in the world the lives and experiences of common humanity?
39769If I had the courage to destroy them, what sort of condition would the bed be in after?
39769If the whole household was in the room what could they do?
39769In spite of this long friendship they were not the sort of people to whom I could have said,"Would you mind giving me another room?
39769Is he always there?"
39769Is it logical to suppose that there is no scheme of evolution for the immortal soul, in which it can preserve its individuality through the ages?
39769Lady Sykes laughed and replied,"Which are they?"
39769May it not be that this disembodied entity attached itself to my brother whilst he was out, and like a lost dog followed him home?
39769My father had put his invariable question to the old woman,"Have you seen her again?"
39769Nothing to be frightened of in that, is there?''
39769Now what does the subconsciousness contain?
39769Now will you give me your promise never to mention this subject to me again?
39769On the spur of the moment I said to my host,"Would n''t it be uncanny if we were to see a strange face looking down on us?"
39769Only then will come the perplexed question: Where can I see in all this overwhelming misery the Divine hand of love and justice?
39769Rats?
39769She paused, and I ventured to ask,"But what sort of shock?"
39769She set the tea down on a table and turned to me a scared face, as she answered by another question:"How ever did you find out that?"
39769Should I let go?
39769Supposing I did fall asleep, what would happen?
39769That was so, responded the ladies, and the burly Duchess inquired if Madame ever gave racing tips, or lucky numbers for Monte Carlo?
39769The hallucinations of a tired woman?
39769The question seems to me to hang more on the query-- do such creatures actually exist, than on the argument did I, or did I not see them?
39769Then I rang the bell, and when the butler entered the following dialogue took place:----"Who was the caller who has just been?"
39769There are people to- day who ask,"Is this the end of the world?"
39769Was murder taking place out there?
39769Was some spirit interested in racing hovering near?
39769Was this the real man and dog at last?
39769Were my nerves playing tricks with me?
39769What am I?
39769What are those entities working for?
39769What better shroud could any man ask for?
39769What brought about the decline of those mighty civilizations whose monuments of antiquity seem to mock our pride?
39769What can one do when paying a visit if one is ushered into a bedroom by one''s hostess which one instantly knows to be"unhealthful"?
39769What could I make of the affair?
39769What could Wynford have to say to any servant of Lord Strathmore?
39769What do you make of it?"
39769What explanation have I to offer?
39769What had I better do-- nothing?
39769What had prompted me to put that sudden question to the chambermaid?
39769What have we achieved?
39769What insidious disease brought about the fall of Rome?
39769What is an aura?
39769What is an elemental?
39769What is the Divine Law lying behind this seeming hideous injustice?
39769What is the grand apotheosis of each human life?
39769What is this astral counterpart of man?
39769What is this mysterious ego that thinks and acts?
39769What of our records?
39769What possible excuse could I make for cutting short my visit?
39769What should suddenly change a man''s whole disposition the moment he"shuffles off this mortal coil"?
39769What species of moth would he have declared them to be?
39769What then will be termed the severance we now call death?
39769What theory will explain this species of haunting which is quite common?
39769What was I to do?
39769What was I to do?
39769What was about to follow?
39769What was the power in you, Prince Charles Edward Stuart, that drew from countless women and men that wild unswerving devotion?
39769What was the secret of Helena Petrovski Blavatsky''s instant success?
39769What will become of all those grand old places in the future?
39769What would our grandparents have thought of this means of turning an honest penny?
39769What, I wonder, would he have made of that fat, gray flock sprinkling the bed?
39769What, it may be asked, is the value to a woman of psychic experiences, whose reality may be convincing to herself, but never to others?
39769When Christ asked,"Who has touched Me?
39769When I was once more alone with Madame Blavatsky, she turned to me with a wry smile and said,"Would you have me throw pearls before swine?"
39769When a break comes, perhaps through third- party treachery, there may come the sense of eternal severance, but is it eternal?
39769When were you last in Sicily?"
39769Where am I going?
39769Where are they now?
39769Where could they all have vanished to?
39769Where did that answer come from?
39769Where did you see him?"
39769Where had I seen this man before?
39769Where have I come from?
39769Where have they been lying hidden during all those flying years?
39769Where was she going?
39769Where was that stealthy watcher, whose baleful eyes I felt were fixed upon me?
39769Where will you be led: supposing you yield your will, would it ever be yours again?"
39769Where?
39769Which has the best chance of enduring in the future?
39769Which made light of terrible hardships, which followed you faithfully through glen and corrie?
39769Which?
39769Who and what are they, and for what distant shores are they bound?
39769Who can the"joker"be who is demoralizing his household, who has even dared to lock him into his own room?
39769Who on earth could she be?
39769Who was the player, and what was his instrument?
39769Why could we not leave to- day?''
39769Why did she come to that house, with which, it is certain, she had no connection?
39769Why did she only appear twice, and both times on the same date?
39769Why do ghosts suddenly take possession of a house with which, in their incarnate days, they have had no connection?
39769Why not?
39769Why should n''t you see a ghost?"
39769Will a member of the Psychical Society not try his luck?
39769Will these ancient civilizations be remembered when the fame of modern nations has vanished utterly?
39769Would I go and make inquiries?
39769Would I suddenly awake to the fact that some one unseen was pulling off the bedclothes?
39769Would one of the ladies suggest something she would like done?
39769Would some one come and try to strangle me in the night?
39769been on the Astral Plane lately?"
39769do books originate the author?
39769do n''t you know what that is?''
39769exclaimed Prince Arthur,"that letter is written by''The Pretender,''is n''t it?"
39769heard things?"
39769how do you think I am looking?''
39769who''d have thought it?
34232''T was queer, Mist''ess Dor''thy, dat we nebber foun''de two cows dat strayed so long''go, do n''t ye t''ink?
34232A great strapping red- cheeked clatter- tongue, who can do naught but laugh?
34232Ah, my little rebel,--and he spoke in no pleased tone,--"have I to fight the battle all over?"
34232Aha, Little Red Ridinghood, have you been, or are you going, to see your grandmother?
34232And John,he asked,--"what said our second son?"
34232And can I do aught to help?
34232And does he regard you in the same fraternal fashion?
34232And have any of these red- coated gallants stolen their way to the hearts of you two girls?
34232And have you had a pleasant water- trip?
34232And have you no other son-- a young boy?
34232And how often hath this happened since I gave strict orders that none should be had or drunk in this house o''mine?
34232And how were you guarding your master''s interests, to permit such secret goings on under his roof, without giving him warning?
34232And if I promise?
34232And is he well this morning, Jack?
34232And is that the face you wear, Dot, when you are joyful?
34232And now whatever is to be done?
34232And now, little Mistress Southorn,Washington said, smiling once more,"tell me, have you consented to leave America and go with your husband?"
34232And now,he said,"what is your will that I do?"
34232And pray, what is that?
34232And so this is the same fellow, is he? 34232 And so you have been to consult Moll''s oracle?"
34232And what do you guess, Johnnie?
34232And what if I refuse?
34232And what is that?
34232And what may that be?
34232And what might an officer of His Majesty''s army want with me?
34232And whatever can he mean about annoying her? 34232 And when are we to meet again?"
34232And whether it is or not,she answered,"pray tell me what matters it to you?"
34232And why did you send him away with such a notion as that?
34232And why not?
34232And will you come when I send word?
34232And you do not mind being left alone?
34232And you had not seen him?
34232And you love not the cause he fights for, though you love the man himself?
34232And you will come with me-- now, at once, as soon as I can make my arrangements?
34232And you will never forgive me?
34232And you''ll let no redcoats, nor any coats-- whate''er be their color-- come betwixt us?
34232And you''ll never say aught to-- him, should you two meet?
34232And you, Jack, do you-- can you look at and speak to this man with any tolerance?
34232And you, Lieutenant, do you give your consent to all this?
34232And, pray, may not women lay claim to having brave hearts?
34232Anne-- wife-- where art thou?
34232Answer me,the young Britisher repeated sharply,"do you know her?"
34232Are the little ones much affrighted?
34232Are you His Gracious Majesty, Dot, that you speak of yourself as''We''?
34232Are you abiding under this roof, Mistress Devereux?
34232Are you cold?
34232Are you dumb?
34232Are you frightened or unhappy?
34232Are you going to a meeting at the inn, Jack?
34232Are you gone daft, Hugh Knollys,she cried angrily,"or whatever ails you?"
34232Are you mad?
34232Are you sure, Dot, there is nothing?
34232Are you sure, my dear?
34232Are you trying to frighten old Leet into fits?
34232Are you?
34232Art thou still fearful, little one?
34232Aunt Lettice,she said presently,"what think you all these queer things mean?
34232Aye, child-- so? 34232 Aye, so you did; are you tired?"
34232But how?
34232But however will such a thing be brought about?
34232But she is coming back?
34232But what am I to go to Cambridge for?
34232But what did she say?
34232But what does it all mean, father?
34232But what is the meaning of all this sudden stir?
34232But wherever can he have gone?
34232But--persistently--"there was the ruby ring, when the child was first taken ill; how could you keep that from me?"
34232But, believing what you read in my eyes then and before, think you I would throw away the ring?
34232But,asked Mary,"did he not find you out-- that you were a girl masquerading in boy''s apparel?"
34232But,turning to Mary,"what shall ye do, Mistress Mary?
34232But-- what?
34232Can this be true?
34232Can ye see aught?
34232Can you tell me where to find him, Ruth,--did Moll tell you where he was?
34232D''ye think''twould be wise, mistress?
34232Dare I not? 34232 Did I not tell you,--because General Washington sent us to fetch you?
34232Did Mary go home?
34232Did Mistress Dorothy Devereux send you to inquire?
34232Did this man hold much converse with you this morning, Mary?
34232Did ye have to take off both shoes to find it?
34232Did you never see him before?
34232Do n''t you remember the ring you gave me when you were so ill, and told me to keep for you,--a man''s ring, with a ruby set in it?
34232Do n''t you think we had best send for your father and Aunt Lettice?
34232Do n''t you think, Dot, it is rather of a shame,--the way you do things, and then tell your father afterwards?
34232Do n''t you want to tell me about it? 34232 Do ye mean me to understand that ye set yourself up as the enemy o''your townsfolk and kindred?"
34232Do you dare say to my face that I am a British spy-- I, Dorothy Devereux, of Marblehead, whose only brother is an officer in Glover''s regiment? 34232 Do you hear?"
34232Do you know if Sergeant Knollys is within, Harris?
34232Do you know who he is?
34232Do you know, father,asked Jack,"what it was to which he expected an answer from Aunt Penine-- I mean, anything as to the contents of the letter?"
34232Do you mean me to understand that your son is so old as that?
34232Do you mean that you are in love with some one, Hugh?
34232Do you not think I am somewhat too young to have much of an opinion upon such matters?
34232Do you not think, Jack,she asked, still with that strange look in her eyes,"that when love comes in, it changes all of one''s world?"
34232Do you realize, sweet mistress, that you are my wife,--my own little wife?
34232Do you still hold to what you told me?
34232Do you think so?
34232Do you think there is like to be a battle?
34232Does father know?
34232Dorothy, are you going to let me be a good sister to you,--one of the sort you will come to with all your joys and troubles?
34232Dorothy, what is the meaning of all this?
34232Dorothy,and his voice was almost a whisper,"you care more for me than for the Britisher?"
34232Dorothy,he said presently, and very gravely,"I wonder will you promise me something?"
34232Dorothy,she repeated, as the girl drew close to her,"where is that ruby ring?"
34232Dorothy-- sweetheart, what does all this mean?
34232Dot, did you hear what she said?
34232Dot, why are you not asleep at this hour? 34232 Dot,"her father now asked suddenly, lifting his eyes from the paper,"when did you last see old Ruth Lecrow?"
34232Dot-- Dorothy-- whatever does this mean?
34232Dot-- little sister,he cried,"tell me-- what is the matter?"
34232Dot-- my child, what is it?
34232Eh,--ring,--what ring?
34232Fearful?
34232Frightened ye?
34232Had I not better go with her?
34232Had thou not best return to the wigwam, Joane, and to the Squaw Sachem?
34232Had you not seen him, Dot?
34232Has he been at our house this day?
34232Has it aught to do with that ring?
34232Have any of them come ashore yet?
34232Have you knowledge that they are coming down here?
34232Have you no-- manners?
34232How came you here? 34232 How can you ask?"
34232How can you dare to think of such a thing? 34232 How can you talk so, and he a hateful Britisher?"
34232How could beating the ground about the dead benefit or protect the living, who are surely in the keeping of Him who makes the tempests?
34232How could that be,she asked sharply,"when the cows were missing before any soldiers came down here?"
34232How dare you say so?
34232How dare you?
34232How dared ye do such a thing?
34232How is that, my child?
34232How long, think ye, Master John, afore the redcoats quit the Neck?
34232How many times must I tell you?
34232How was that, mistress?
34232Hugh?
34232Hungry?
34232I am sure he is the same man I noticed walking after us when we came; and if so, why has he been standing there all this time?
34232I fear so, and yet I can not but hope so, as well,--for how can another ever tell him?
34232I wonder if she sent the fellow?
34232I wonder if the one Mary pushed over the rocks last summer would not like to see her married?
34232I? 34232 If not, what then?
34232If ye did thet, Mistress Mary, the father would find out all''bout the prankin'', eh?
34232If you and Mary,he said to Dorothy,"were to ride to Boston this day, who would there be to do what you are entrusted with the doing on?
34232If,she demanded,"''t is wicked to say that God has bottles, what does the Church Book say so for?"
34232Is he the sergeant, Hugh Knollys, who went with your brother yesterday?
34232Is he?
34232Is it not dreadful-- and will they hang him?
34232Is it possible he can be known to ye?
34232Is that where I stole like a thief to catch one glimpse of you, pretty one?
34232Is there any doubt but that you will get within the house all safe?
34232Jack,she asked earnestly,"did you warn Hugh not to speak aught of this afternoon?"
34232Love you less, Dot?
34232Mary, what is to be done?
34232May I ask, Captain Southorn, if the plans of which you told Lieutenant Devereux and myself are to be carried out?
34232May I not first hear from your own lips,he asked earnestly,"that you wish me well?"
34232Me?
34232Mistress Mary, whatever was the Britisher seekin''about here, an''talkin''about? 34232 My darling,"he said slowly,"do you realize the full measure of what you have done for me?
34232My hair is not turning gray, is it?
34232My love-- my wife-- can it be that you love me at last?
34232My precious, brave little girl, how could I be that, except it were for your risking so carelessly the life that is so dear to my old heart?
34232No,she answered, smiling at him;"nor will you yours?"
34232No? 34232 Not alone, surely?"
34232Now,he asked, his voice growing stern once more,"know you where aught o''the forbidden stuff be kept, or if there still be any in the house?"
34232Oh Dot,she asked tremulously,"do you dare do such a thing?"
34232Oh, Dot, how could you seem so heartless?
34232Oh, Dot,she cried, astonished and angry,"how can you love such a man?"
34232Oh, Hugh-- what is it?
34232Oh, Jack,the girl cried piteously,"can not you see-- can you not understand?
34232Oh, Johnnie, do n''t say that-- how can you?
34232Oh, Johnnie, is it safe for you to be here?
34232Oh, Mary,her friend cried, regardless of who might be within hearing,"how can you speak so harshly-- and he such a handsome young gallant?"
34232Oh, sir-- you say that you knew my father?
34232Pirates,--say ye so? 34232 Pray, who is your father?"
34232Shall I call Jack?
34232Shall I help you to your room, Aunt Penine?
34232Shall I make a guess?
34232Shall you be home by evening?
34232She send me?
34232She thinks the men on the ship may do us harm?
34232She thinks they mean evil?
34232Sir,he asked,"are you Joseph Devereux?"
34232Speak to whom?
34232Spitfire, is it? 34232 Sweet little mistress,"he exclaimed, amazement showing in every lineament of his honest visage,"in Heaven''s name, whatever be ye doin''here?"
34232Tell me, cousin,--what sort o''bottles does God have?
34232Then he was all alone?
34232Then where is it?
34232Then who did? 34232 Then will you not tell me, dear?"
34232Then you admit she might be woman enough to take to heart whatever ill would come to me?
34232Then you have been with our madcap here?
34232Think ye so, Jack?
34232Think you that you have need for words?
34232Think you they will meet with opposition should they actually come down here? 34232 Think you, Jack, that she has been holding any further communication with Jameson?"
34232Thinking of what, sweetheart?
34232Thou dost mean that the Squaw Sachem sent thee to tell there be danger?
34232Thy grandmother sent thee?
34232To England?
34232Was she? 34232 Well, ladies,"he demanded,--his words and manner, albeit perfectly respectful and courteous, tinged with sternness--"what is the meaning of this?"
34232Were you dreaming of that young redcoat you were walking with this morning?
34232Were you there all the time, Johnnie Strings, and never came nigh to help us?
34232What are they come down from Boston for, Johnnie?
34232What are you reading,''Bitha?
34232What are you saying, Johnnie Strings?
34232What camest thou up here for?
34232What did he say to you?
34232What did he say?
34232What did she tell?
34232What did those Britishers want here, father?
34232What do you mean by all this, and what have you done with him?
34232What do you want?
34232What does it all mean, dear?
34232What for?
34232What go for?
34232What harm can come of it? 34232 What harm is it, I would like to know,"she burst out, but weakly,"that I should drink my tea, if I like?"
34232What interest have you in him?
34232What is it to us, whether he be handsome or ill- favored?
34232What is it, Hugh-- do you wish me to understand that you love Mary yourself?
34232What is it, child,--don''t you rejoice with me, when I am happier than ever before in my life?
34232What is it, child-- what is troubling you?
34232What is it, child?
34232What is it, dear?
34232What is it-- is anything amiss?
34232What is it-- what is the matter?
34232What is it?
34232What is it?
34232What is that?
34232What is''t thou wouldst do,--kill, perchance, an innocent man? 34232 What manner o''bravery be this-- crying for naught?"
34232What mean ye?
34232What mischief have you been up to, you little rogue, and why are you running away from me?
34232What of him?
34232What ring?
34232What think you is amiss, Johnnie Strings?
34232What think you it all means, Mary?
34232What''ll I say ter Massa Jameson when I sees him?
34232What, Hugh-- what is it?
34232What, little one?
34232What_ all_ means?
34232Whate''er be ye thinkin''on?
34232Whatever are you thinking about, to play such pranks at a time like this?
34232Whatever are you thinking of, not to remember about the witches? 34232 Whatever are you thinking to do?"
34232Whatever be she up to?
34232Whatever can he wish to say good- by to Dot for?
34232Whatever did she expect to hear, that she did so mean and dishonorable a thing as to listen at the keyhole?
34232Whatever does the child mean?
34232Whatever possessed ye?
34232Whatever should make him come back there at this hour of the night?
34232When are you going to open your heart to me? 34232 When are you intending to fetch that pink ribbon you promised me weeks ago, and the lace for Aunt Lettice?"
34232When will they go?
34232When will they go?
34232Where do she live?
34232Where do you purpose taking me?
34232Where is Joane?
34232Where is Ruth?
34232Where is he? 34232 Which one was it?"
34232Which was he, sweetheart?
34232Who be it?
34232Who can say?
34232Who is he-- do you know?
34232Who is this Hugh?
34232Who put him there?
34232Who said so?
34232Who says so?
34232Who told you I did?
34232Why are you so unhappy?
34232Why did you not ask them to your wedding, Cousin Jack?
34232Why do you stand there and look so strangely?
34232Why must he hang?
34232Why not let Dorothy be the one to give the signal?
34232Why not let Mary go?
34232Why not take them by boatloads over to the islands till the redcoats be gone, as has been done before, for pasturage?
34232Why not, sweetheart?
34232Why should she try to listen at the door?
34232Why will you always put it so? 34232 Why, Cornet Southorn,"exclaimed Master Weeks,"whatever can you be thinking on?
34232Why, Dorothy, whatever ails you?
34232Why, Dot, little girl, whatever are you dreaming about,--what should make you talk in this way?
34232Why, Dot, whatever is it?
34232Why, Dot,Mary asked, almost in alarm,"whatever ails you, crying twice in the one evening?
34232Why, is he ill? 34232 Why, marry a redcoat?"
34232Why, what harm, think you, should come to me?
34232Why, who should?
34232Why,Dorothy explained, smiling at Mary''s abstraction,"all these soldiers coming down here?
34232Why?
34232Will you tell Jack all this?
34232Wo n''t you wait and speak to him?
34232Would I do what,''Bitha?
34232Would you like to take a gun yourself, Mary, and help teach them this lesson?
34232Would you?
34232Ye wo n''t have me whipped, will ye, mist''ess?
34232Yes, Mary-- is that you?
34232Yes, to be sure I will,--have I not promised?
34232You are on guard here-- he knows you are outside his door?
34232You are still of the same mind as when we parted?
34232You know my father, and you''ll surely not hearken to this young Britisher?
34232You say truly, Jack,his father assented,"But whom can we trust to give the signal?
34232You say, Jack,he asked,"that Strings said the Governor was to order a body o''soldiers down to the Neck?"
34232You will go at once,he insisted,"and not delay a second?"
34232You will never speak to him of me in any manner, will you, Hugh?
34232You will surely come when I send?
34232You young rascal, what does all this mean?
34232You, Dot-- what for?
34232You-- you?
34232Ah, who have ye here?"
34232And Jack, and her father-- what would her father say to her?
34232And Mary-- oh, my wife, how could you keep it from me till now?"
34232And are we not told from the highest of all high sources that"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends"?
34232And could she be loyal to her father''s cause with such a love battling in her heart?
34232And if she did so, might not her revelation bring harm to him?
34232And if this be true, why is it not also truth that sorrow is to come with it?"
34232And now answer me this,--know you the one who is called Mistress Dorothy Devereux?"
34232And now that I have this opportunity, I mean to make the most of it, for who can say when another will come to me?"
34232And she added with a little impatience,"But why do n''t you tell me, Dot-- what has become of that man?"
34232And still how could she speak to any one-- even him-- of what was giving birth to thoughts and feelings such as she had never dreamed of before?
34232And what sea beats so relentlessly as do the black waters of Death?
34232And yet was it sure to be so dreadful to her?
34232And you will let no one turn you from that, little one?"
34232And you will surely-- surely join me there as soon as I send you word?"
34232Before she could speak, the voice went on,"Little rebel, sweet little rebel, will you not surrender to-- a vanquished victor?"
34232But come back, wo n''t you,--come and have something to drink before you go?"
34232But he still lingered beside her, and asked again,"And you are certain to get within the house, and that you fear naught?"
34232But how comes it, Dot, that you found the chance to lock him away?"
34232But how do you know that, Jack?"
34232But knowing now what I do, how can I have the heart to go away and leave you again?
34232But oh, Mistress Dorothy,"and his voice took a note of expostulation,"however had ye the heart to do it?
34232But stop-- where is every one-- have you breakfasted yet?"
34232But the voice of the first speaker called out gayly,"Aha, who goes there?
34232But think you it is safe for you two girls to come wandering over here by yourselves?"
34232But this he would not have, although his voice had a still milder sound as he asked,"Is your name Devereux?"
34232But we''ll be better friends than ever after this, wo n''t we, Dot?"
34232But whatever could have put such a crazy idea into his head?"
34232But whatever have you been up to, Dot, and who was the man you went off with, and where is he now?"
34232But who dare question the bravery and unselfishness of her deeds?
34232But you remember what Jack said last night; would not your father take the same view of the matter?"
34232But,"with some anxiety,"what think you this brother of yours will say to me, or will a bullet be all he will have for my hearing?"
34232CHAPTER VI"Do you suppose, Joseph, that Jack will have had his supper?"
34232CHAPTER XXVIII"Oh, Mary, which one of them do you suppose is he?"
34232CHAPTER XXXV"Dorothy, speak,--what is it?"
34232Can not you come to Boston with me now-- this very day?"
34232Can you keep all this in that small head of yours?"
34232Did you not note it, Hugh?"
34232Do n''t you love nor trust me any longer?"
34232Do you know Mistress Dorothy Devereux?"
34232Do you know?"
34232Do you think she was asleep as she talked to us, Dot?
34232Do you understand, sweetheart, what all this is about?"
34232Father, I want you,--where are you?"
34232Has he done anything amiss?"
34232He d n''t ye best let one o''the boys tek ye to the house?
34232He felt her head stir uneasily against his shoulder,"Surely you did not throw it away?"
34232He held her fast, and laid his cheek against her own, as he said softly:"Is it that you are jealous of me, or of-- Mary?
34232He made no reply, and, after a moment''s pause, she asked,"Do you feel able to stand on your feet?"
34232He seemed to make an effort to smile, as he asked,"Do n''t you?"
34232Hev ye no sense, thet ye risk callin''down the reg''lars on us with such a roarin''?"
34232His fingers closed quickly over them as he exclaimed,"Was there ever such a true little sweetheart?"
34232How can you, after the rough wooing to which I treated you?"
34232How comes such a baby as you with a ring like this?"
34232How could she ever dare tell of it?
34232How was it that she had come to sign the register so meekly?
34232How was it that the young Britisher had dared to do such a thing?
34232How was she to act toward him from whom she had never yet withheld her confidence?
34232Hugh followed her, and said in a low voice, not meant for Aunt Lettice''s ears,"You''ll not forget our compact, Dot, and your promise?"
34232Hugh''s blue eyes lowered as bashfully as those of a girl, and Jack, now smiling at him, said,"Who is it-- Polly Chine, over at the Fountain Inn?"
34232Humphrey begged that he might have a gun, and Robert sat quiet, looking at me with eyes so like your own as he asked,''Art fearful, mother?
34232I take it, Mistress Devereux,"--and he turned to Mary,--"that your little sister here has made you aware of what passed between us but an hour ago?"
34232I wonder if he will be angry at what I did last night?
34232Is it that you think I can not love her and love you as well?"
34232It was Mary Broughton who asked,"What are they come there for, Johnnie,--do you know?"
34232John Devereux started back and exclaimed,"Where is Dorothy?
34232Mary asked;"do you know?"
34232Nay, my baby, what would become o''your old father, if he had not a little maid to console him, when his only son must needs face risks and dangers?"
34232No matter what you may feel is wrong about it, you will not blame me?"
34232Only,"--and her voice softened again--"won''t you promise me, Jack, that you will not permit him to be injured?
34232Presently Mary whispered,"Why not let us go and stop beside Johnnie Strings?"
34232Presently he asked, as he toyed with her small fingers,"Where got you all these different rings, little one?"
34232Shall the time come, I wonder, when we must question the truth o''this inspiration we are now acting under as a town and as a country?"
34232She first awoke Dorothy by kissing her; then she asked with childish solicitude,"Why do you lie abed so late, Cousin Dot,--are you ill?"
34232She nodded quickly, but with a grave face; then, after a moment''s hesitation, she asked,"May I tell Mary?"
34232So,"pleadingly,"tell me, Mary-- sweetheart; tell me, do you love me well enough to be my wife?"
34232Suppose some of the men should recognize you,--and they will be keeping a sharp lookout for strangers-- what would your father say?"
34232Tell me quickly as to your own movements,--you surely are not going to stop here?"
34232Tell me-- do you love this man who is really your husband?"
34232Then an eager, appealing look came to his face, and he asked,"Have you naught to say to me-- no word for me before I go?"
34232Then bending her head quickly, she whispered with great impressiveness,"Who, think ye, we expect?"
34232Then he added impatiently,"I wonder where in tarnation Johnnie hev gone to, thet he did n''t cut back to tell us?"
34232Then he added rather impatiently,"What does Johnnie Strings mean by telling such tales to affright women- folk?"
34232Then he added with a glance that embraced them both,"May I know your names?"
34232Then he asked deliberately,"Of what were you dreaming just now, Dot?"
34232Then he asked quickly,"Think you, Mary, that Dot is telling our father aught of the matter now?"
34232Then he asked,"And you mean it,--that I leave you, and keep away?"
34232Then he turned to Dot, and taking her by the hand, asked tenderly,"What is troubling you, my dear child?"
34232Then he whispered,"And where is the ruby ring?"
34232Then quickly, as she saw the sudden change in Mary''s face,"Whatever is the matter with Hugh Knollys, I wonder?
34232Then she asked in turn,"Where is Johnnie Strings?"
34232Then she asked suddenly,"Where be Parson Legg?"
34232Then she cried in terror,"Oh, Mary, you did not show it to Jack, nor tell him or my father of the matter?"
34232Then stretching out his hand to Dorothy, he said with a sudden change of manner,"Will you shake hands, Dorothy?"
34232Then suddenly, as if remembering something, he turned to the shore and called out,"Shall ye find Master John at home, think ye, Mistress Dorothy?"
34232Then turning to Dorothy, he said,"Had n''t ye best let me take ye back, Mistress Dorothy?"
34232Then turning to Jack, he asked with a change of manner,"Did you see or hear aught o''the British frigate on your way home?"
34232Then turning to the head of the house, she asked:"Can not we go out in one of the boats, Uncle Joseph?
34232Then why, under the canopy, did n''t ye tell_ me_?"
34232Then, as she hugged her closer,"But you wo n''t love me less for what has befallen?"
34232Then, as the man saluted and turned to go, he asked,"Who is that fellow who just left?
34232Then, while he helped her to draw the hood over her curly head,"What if it were Polly Chine, now?"
34232They were now quite near; and slipping out of the bushes, Mary called out,"Doak, is that you?"
34232Thou''lt not be fearful if I leave the house awhile?"
34232Was n''t that it?"
34232What ailed his head, all tied up, like''t was hurt?"
34232What did she say?"
34232What had she done, and what could she do, in this new, strange matter, of which she might not speak to her father?
34232What had this hated Britisher''s ring to do with Dorothy''s illness and with her ravings?
34232What harm can come of it?
34232What is it, dear?"
34232What is that?"
34232What was all this about Master Weeks, and signing the register?
34232What was it he called her-- such a heathenish name it was never my lot to hear before?"
34232What will his poor wife do, and her father, now that they''ll not have Jem to look to for support and defence?"
34232What would that father say,--how was she ever to tell him of this dreadful thing?
34232What, she asked herself, did he seek, and why was he here?
34232Whatever can they have come for?"
34232Whatever shall we do?"
34232Where is Mary, and why are you here,''Bitha?"
34232Who are you, to say what you do and do not like here, on my father''s premises?"
34232Who can say how many of''em be lyin''''round this minute, to jump on us?"
34232Why can not ye take it this way?"
34232Why not let him speak a word to the young lady, when he asks ye so polite- like?
34232Why not tell them, as well as me, of-- whatever it is?"
34232Why should God keep bottles in Heaven,--and what sort would He keep?"
34232Why will you not go with me?"
34232Will ye not go, mistress, an''try to save his life?"
34232With all these Britishers bringing trouble upon us, who can say how much chance there''ll be left for joyful doings?"
34232With this he turned hastily away, and his mother asked,"You are going to get ready to start for Cambridge, child?"
34232Would not you, Cousin Dorothy?"
34232You will escort your sister back to Dorchester in the morning, Lieutenant?"
34232You will promise me this?"
34232You will stop right here beside her, wo n''t you, sweetheart?"
34232did he, indeed?
34232he cried,"what is it, child?"
34232what''s that?"
37903Afloat I drink it without milk or cream, sea- cows not being tractable animals, you know; but when in Rome, do as the rum''uns do, eh?
37903All well?
37903And Mary and I would love to do the other thing, would n''t we, Mary?
37903And how do you punish on board ship?
37903Are there people?
37903Are we going back without any oranges?
37903Are you all right, Bess?
37903Are you sure it was not the man we saw before?
37903But did n''t you see a body, too?
37903But how can we cut them down?
37903But suppose it has been discovered?
37903But what can we do?
37903But what then?
37903But who would want to steal a bit of fish?
37903But why, Uncle?
37903Ca n''t we come up, Uncle?
37903Ca n''t we help?
37903Ca n''t we snap it off, Bess?
37903Ca n''t you imagine how Drake must have felt when he first caught sight of the Pacific?
37903Can I be at the top of a cliff?
37903Can we find the way?
37903Can you climb that, Tommy?
37903Can you manage to get on to it yourself, Tommy?
37903Could n''t we try a little to the left? 37903 Could n''t you fetch her back, Bess?"
37903Did they give you food?
37903Did you know Uncle Ben?
37903Do n''t go out of sight, will you?
37903Do n''t the stones knock holes in them?
37903Do n''t they look nice, Uncle?
37903Do n''t you remember Uncle Ben told us of a friend of his who was returning to his station? 37903 Do n''t you remember how you said once at home you''d love to live in a banana plantation, where you could pick as many as you liked?"
37903Do n''t you remember the pictures in that book of Captain Cook''s voyages?
37903Do n''t you see? 37903 Do n''t you think we''ll be rescued, then?"
37903Do you hear me?
37903Do you think we can rear it?
37903Do you think you''d get your old diary published? 37903 Gone alone to where she saw the face?
37903Had n''t we better fetch our breadfruit first, now we are in this direction?
37903Had n''t we better launch the boat and spend the night on the sea?
37903Have you found her?
37903Have you wife, children, friends?
37903Have you your knives?
37903How am I to get you two poor invalids home?
37903How are you getting on?
37903How are you getting on?
37903How are you going to fry it?
37903How can we fasten it on to the rod?
37903How do we know that? 37903 How do you know?
37903How is she?
37903How long is it since you ate the fish?
37903How shall we speak to him?
37903How will you fix it at the hole, Bess?
37903How would he suppose that we should row out? 37903 How would you do that?"
37903I dare say she was,said Tommy;"we were both frightened, but we are good friends now, are n''t we, Fangati?"
37903I know Maku and Fangati, but who are you, my dear young ladies, and how came you upon this island? 37903 I know, why not make a fire to scare off intruders?
37903I no aflaid, what fo''aflaid of he? 37903 I suppose you''d call it a bed- sitting- room, would n''t you?"
37903I wonder how it happened?
37903Instead of the parrot?
37903Is it a cocoanut after all?
37903Is it worth while to bother about a hut again?
37903Is she coming this way?
37903Is the storm over, Uncle?
37903Is there much damage done, Uncle?
37903Is this it?
37903It looks very tempting, does n''t it?
37903It''s gone, every bit of it; oh, who has stolen it?
37903It''s like-- what is it like? 37903 Living in one little hut?
37903Married, you mean? 37903 Marvellous,"said the old man;"and my poor old friend!--you saw nothing of the raft?"
37903Mary wo n''t go?
37903More weaving?
37903Now what''s that mean?
37903Now who''s to be architect?
37903Now, you young stunpoll,cried the stationmaster sternly,"what do''ee mean by rampaging off like that?"
37903Oh, Bess, shall we never be found and taken away?
37903Oh, you dear silly old thing, did you think you would frighten us?
37903Old Jane-- poor old thing-- never got them white at home, did she? 37903 Pastimes, are we?"
37903Perhaps I might teach him to talk, and that would be a change, would n''t it?
37903Savages, perhaps cannibals?
37903Shall we go to the farther ridge?
37903Shall we venture?
37903Should n''t we get on better if two worked at the same tree while the other rested? 37903 Some one set up a cry of sea- serpent,"he went on gravely,"and Sunny Pat-- the little Irishman, you remember---?"
37903Suppose it should break?
37903Supposing there_ are_ people?
37903Surveying, do n''t they call it?
37903That means a storm, does n''t it, Uncle?
37903The milk is a sickly kind of juice, is n''t it, Mary?
37903The sea is getting calmer now; shall I swim out for it?
37903Then what shall we do if we do n''t find Uncle?
37903There are n''t any cats in these parts, are there, Mary?
37903These South Sea Islanders have canoes, have n''t they, Mary? 37903 Tommy has?"
37903Tommy, can you take my place for a little while?
37903Was it a shark?
37903We might snare some,said Tommy,"or fish-- what about fish?
37903We''re talking nonsense, are n''t we?
37903Well, now, there''s that notion I mentioned a while ago-- a little cottage by the sea, you know; we four-- me and the three Graces, eh?
37903Well, what amusements can they have? 37903 Well, you see, we do n''t want everything slopped about below, do we?
37903What about the boat and canoe?
37903What adventures did you have this time, Uncle?
37903What are you going to do?
37903What can you do? 37903 What do the South Sea natives do, Mary?"
37903What do you mean?
37903What if there are savages?
37903What is it, Bess?
37903What is it, Uncle?
37903What is it, dear?
37903What is it?
37903What is it?
37903What is it?
37903What is it?
37903What is it?
37903What is that?
37903What is the matter?
37903What is there, Bess?
37903What is your missionary''s name?
37903What next, Uncle?
37903What shall we do when all the bananas are gone?
37903What shall we do?
37903What should we have done without you?
37903What was it?
37903What''s the good of you for a pet? 37903 What''s the matter with me, Bess?"
37903What''s the matter?
37903What''s the time?
37903What?
37903Whatever should we do all day? 37903 Where are we to sleep?"
37903Where do you keep your irons?
37903Where have you been this voyage, Uncle?
37903Where is he?
37903Where shall we put our trunk?
37903Where''s Tommy?
37903White man, do you hear me?
37903Who speaks?
37903Who wants little skinny things?
37903Who''s that?
37903Why did n''t we stay with Uncle?
37903Why did you leave me?
37903Why did you let him? 37903 Why not?
37903Why should n''t we have a washing- day?
37903Why should we?
37903Why should you take the risk?
37903Why should you think that? 37903 Why wo n''t you believe me?
37903Why, what have I done?
37903Why? 37903 Will it be to- night?"
37903Will you stay here while I run back and get the painter?
37903Wo n''t our hair smell fishy, though?
37903Would n''t it be better to find your savage and teach him how to keep up an amiable conversation?
37903Yes, why not?
37903You are n''t much hurt, are you?
37903You are not going to batten us down again?
37903You have n''t refused to wash up, and if you did, do you think I should tell it?
37903You have n''t seen any one, have you?
37903You wo n''t be hard on him, Uncle?
37903You wo n''t eat much, will you, Bess? 37903 You''ll be careful, Bess?"
37903You''ll have another try, wo n''t you?
37903''Homeless, ragged and tanned, who so contented as I?''"
37903''Please''m, where''s the parlour?''
37903Are n''t there some islands called the Friendly Islands because the people were quite decent?"
37903Are you sure it''s strong enough?"
37903As they walked up the High Street Tommy suddenly cried--"Look, Bess, is n''t that little Dan Whiddon?
37903Be very gentle, wo n''t you?"
37903Bess, you do n''t want to get married?"
37903Boys never cry, and what''s the result?
37903But I own that weaving mats day after day is rather tiring, so shall we leave it for the present, and still sleep in the boat?
37903But what was she doing?
37903But what will happen?
37903But where are we?
37903Ca n''t we sleep on the ground?"
37903Can we have been scared all this time by a girl?"
37903Can you see the raft?"
37903Could n''t we go and fetch a few?"
37903Could n''t we make some by evaporation?"
37903Could she return with it in time?
37903Do you feel quite well, Bess?"
37903Do you think Uncle will find us, Bess?"
37903Do you think that there is any chance at all that Uncle Ben was saved?"
37903Eat slowly, that''s the rule after fasting, is n''t it?"
37903Elizabeth was beyond hearing: she might return to the orange grove: what would she do if she found Mary missing?
37903Every step was painful to him, and as he crept feebly on, Elizabeth''s heart misgave her; would he have the strength to climb?
37903Fangati is your granddaughter, I suppose?"
37903Father did n''t like my climbing, but if I had n''t where should we be now?"
37903Good- bye?
37903Had his captors given him food and drink?
37903Had she been startled?
37903Had some natives come stealthily upon her, and seized her?
37903Had there been time for the construction of a raft?
37903Had they been seen?
37903Have I been ill long?
37903Have you nobody else with you?
37903How can we manage?"
37903How do, Jane?"
37903I ca n''t believe there are any people on this island, in spite of Tommy, or why have n''t we seen something of them?
37903I say, are you dry?
37903I say, how should I do for the part of Little Billee?"
37903I wonder if it was a girl?"
37903I wonder what it is?"
37903I''ll get a few oranges; you can reach them if we throw them down, ca n''t you?
37903I''ve never seen the source of a river, and that''ll be geography, wo n''t it?
37903If we do n''t see the boat where we left it, you wo n''t go any farther, will you?"
37903Is n''t it only civilized people who play games?"
37903Is there any danger?"
37903Make the tea, Tommy, will you?
37903May n''t it have been a monkey or an owl?"
37903Mother took them all except a penny now and then for sweets, and the Captain he gives me sweets for nothing, he do, and so I save, do n''t I, miss?"
37903Now what do you say to building a hut?"
37903Now what will old Berry be calling I?"
37903Now, Uncle, where shall we go?
37903Now, steady-- there you go-- now, where''s that boy?"
37903Oh, what''s that?
37903Oh,''Will you walk into my parlour?''
37903Purvis?"
37903Ridiculous, was n''t it?
37903Robert Bruce, was n''t it, Mary?"
37903Shall we ever get away?"
37903Shall we go and see?"
37903Shall we go back to the boat and eat some of the food we brought?
37903She''s not really very strong, is she?
37903Should she go first, leaving the prisoner to follow, or see him in safety before she mounted herself?
37903Supposing she climbed up and got through, how far would she have to drop to reach the ground on the other side?
37903Tell me; has something happened to Tommy?"
37903That''s the sort of thing, is n''t it, Mary?"
37903The craft''s had a bit of knocking about, I wo n''t deny, but what could you expect?
37903The dreadful thought occurred to her,"Am I to die in this prison?"
37903The ladder creaked; would the sleepers waken?
37903The other girls smiled feebly, and Tommy, saying to herself,"I must talk, talk, or we shall all go mad,"went on--"Could I have a swim, do you think?"
37903The question is, what can you do for a year?
37903The same terrible thought oppressed them all: had the barque gone down already?
37903There''s no one else living in their hut, then?"
37903These objects were obviously the contents of Tommy''s pocket; why had she placed them there, and where was she?
37903They have milk, have n''t they?
37903They''ve no books to read, no amusements----""How do you know that?"
37903Tommy merely nodded; Mary murmured,"How_ could_ she do it?"
37903Tommy''s match- lighter would startle them, would n''t it?"
37903Tommy''s well enough to talk, is she?"
37903Tommy; do n''t you think you may have imagined it?"
37903Was Tommy dead?
37903Was he still alive?
37903Was he the owner of your little brown face, Tommy?"
37903Was her skipper Captain Barton?"
37903Was it possible that some one had been spying on them?
37903Was it possible?
37903Was she to behold the owner of the little brown face at last?
37903We are safe; why should n''t he be?
37903We ca n''t venture across the sea, can we?"
37903What are we to do?"
37903What can we do?
37903What do you say to doing a little more exploration?"
37903What do you say, Bess?"
37903What do you think of that, now?"
37903What forms of life were stirring amid that dark woodland?
37903What had happened?
37903What happened?
37903What has happened?"
37903What have they given us?"
37903What if the savages come and attack us?"
37903What lay beyond that curtain of rose pink and pearl?
37903What was his name, Bess?"
37903What were the savages doing?
37903What would be the end of the race?
37903What would you do with a stowaway, Bess?"
37903What''s that for a reason?
37903What''s that?"
37903What''s the good of crying?
37903What''s the time, Bess?"
37903Where is she?"
37903Where was she?
37903Who could tell what might happen?
37903Who knows what we should find among those trees?"
37903Why are n''t there any cocoanuts here, I wonder?
37903Why did n''t you swim ashore?"
37903Why did n''t you wake us?"
37903Why do n''t they ever come to this part?
37903Why should n''t we?
37903Why should they keep to themselves so?
37903Why was it necessary to carry Merrywink away so secretly?
37903With scissors and knives?"
37903Wo n''t her friends come and look for her?"
37903Would she reach the canoe safely?
37903Would the savage pursue them?
37903Would there be time, she wondered, to set him free now, before the savages returned?
37903Would they not at least have taken the knife at the same time?
37903You are getting on, are n''t you, dear?"
37903You are quite sure it was a human face?
37903You come sneaking aboard this vessel, ruining my cargo, expecting to fill yourself with my victuals, and all for what?
37903You could eat a little, could n''t you?"
37903You do n''t think there''s any danger?"
37903You expect us to punish you, do n''t you now?"
37903You will have to climb a ladder; do you understand?"
37903You''ve finished that rope?
37903and what if she should find herself only in another place from which escape would be no easier than from the pit?
37903are you there?"
37903asked Elizabeth,"or shall I come down again and help you?"
37903do n''t they look nice?"
37903has she damaged the cable?"
37903said Tommy,"why should be sensible?"
37903what can you be made of?
37903what''s that?"
37903why should n''t they enjoy themselves?"
36684''Teacher, teacher, why am I so happy, happy, happy, In my Sunday school?''
36684About me?
36684About me?
36684Am I a suspect?
36684And did your cook relatives marry butlers?
36684And if you have the vote,went on the Professor in a louder voice, and with a kind of mock solemnity,"what will you do with it?"
36684And this other girl whom you are shielding, Miss Brown, does she deserve so much generosity from you?
36684And you are n''t worried any longer?
36684And yours?
36684Angry?
36684Any one want to come along?
36684Are n''t you a sophomore?
36684Are n''t you ashamed, Judy?
36684Are n''t you going to catch your train?
36684Are those seniors?
36684Are you at home to visitors this morning, Miss Brown?
36684Are you running away, Judy?
36684Are you sure of this?
36684Are you thinking it over?
36684Besides, do n''t you think that''s a little personal just now, when the whole school is talking about the wire- cutter?
36684But are you going to join the debating club?
36684But do n''t these things interfere with-- with lectures?
36684But how can we tell?
36684But how did it happen?
36684But suppose she was n''t?
36684But the walk?
36684But what is it, Mabel? 36684 But what is it?"
36684But where did you get the cards?
36684Can this be the only door into the Cloisters?
36684Can you find your way to Queen''s Cottage?
36684Can you sew?
36684Confess now,he said, smiling at all of them and looking at Molly, whom he knew best of the three,"you took me for a tramp?"
36684Could you hear what I was saying to the girls?
36684Cousin Edwin, why ca n''t you hire a horse in the village and ride back to Wellington with me?
36684Cousin Edwin, will you sit there, next to me?
36684Cousin?
36684Did I hear the words''hickory nut cake''spoken?
36684Did Miss Blount decide on the courses?
36684Did n''t Dr. McLean tell you to go easy for the next week?
36684Did n''t you know that Molly had fainted and is now ill in the hospital and the ring is lost?
36684Did she mention?
36684Did they do it?
36684Did you ever hear of such a thing?
36684Did you ever see a dog that had been kicked all its life?
36684Did you write it?
36684Do my eyes deceive me? 36684 Do n''t you ever give yourself a holiday?"
36684Do you know,she exclaimed,"I forgot I was wearing it?
36684Do you remember helping a young lady who fainted on the day of the football game?
36684Do you think she''s a''le- o- pard,''Judy?
36684Do you think that''s good enough?
36684Does she, really? 36684 Edwin, can you put me up?
36684For instance, if we were detectives and put on the case, how would we go about finding the criminal?
36684For the love of heaven, ca n''t you let me in? 36684 Frances Andrews?"
36684Had n''t we better be chasing along?
36684Has any one in the world the heart to have a grudge against you, you sweet child?
36684Has anything been lost?
36684Has n''t any one else asked you yet?
36684Have you ever eaten too much of something, Margaret,she said,"and then hated it ever afterward?"
36684Have you lost your nerve, Judy, dear?
36684Have you no idea why?
36684Have you worn the coat since?
36684Her mother, being the most famous clubwoman in America, has n''t spent much time at home? 36684 How are you, Frankie?
36684How are you, Judith? 36684 How are you, Molly, dear?"
36684How are you, my dear?
36684How did you like Epiménides? 36684 How do you do it?"
36684How do you do, Cousin Grace?
36684How do you do, Miss Pembroke?
36684How do you feel after your night''s rest?
36684How do you feel now, dear?
36684How do you feel on the subject, Molly?
36684How do you know what I was going to say?
36684I do n''t think I have got them straight,answered Judy,"but they all sound alike, anyhow, so what''s the odds?"
36684I say, Ju- ju, who''s your head waitress?
36684I suppose you do n''t know how her father made his money?
36684I wonder how she knew I was invited to the McLean''s?
36684I wonder if she could and does n''t dare tell?
36684I wrote to Dodo and asked him for them,answered Judy, giving her a look, as much as to say,"What affair is it of yours?"
36684If I must miss the train, I must have some, whatever it is-- cream puffs or chocolate fudge?
36684If I tell you what it is, will you promise to keep it a secret?
36684Indeed, and what reason does she give?
36684Is Mrs. Oldham, the Suffragette, her mother?
36684Is Prexy here?
36684Is anything special the matter?
36684Is anything the matter?
36684Is everything all right?
36684Is n''t it jolly?
36684Is n''t it perfect, Jessie?
36684Is n''t it pretty? 36684 Is n''t it?"
36684Is n''t she a brick?
36684Is n''t she coming up soon? 36684 Is she one of the Queen''s Cottage girls?
36684Is that it?
36684Is the dance to take place, then?
36684Is there much out- of- door life here?
36684Is this to be an evening dress affair, or what''s proper to wear?
36684Is this your study?
36684Is your trunk strapped?
36684It was rather good fun to be sure, but would it have mattered so much, after all, if Margaret had boldly come in at the front door and explained?
36684It''s Kentucky ham of the finest, what do you call it-- breed? 36684 Judy,"she said,"will you please settle down to work this instant?
36684Julia Kean, what are you doing?
36684Locked up?
36684Louise,said the President suddenly,"Frances Andrews is one of the girls at that house, is she not?"
36684Me?
36684Miss Brown?
36684Mrs. Anna Oldham?
36684My emerald ring lost?
36684Nance, have you taken any interest in this question?
36684News? 36684 Not going?"
36684Now, is it so, then?
36684Now, where am I going?
36684Of course, but who? 36684 Of course,"said Frances Andrews, who had just come in,"why all this formality, when we are to be a family party for the next eight months?
36684Oh, Judy,she exclaimed,"do you remember that nice Exmoor Sophomore named''Upton?''
36684Oh, Miss Stewart, what did Frances Andrews do last year to get herself into such a mess and be frozen out by all her class this year?
36684Oh, are you going to Queen''s cottage?
36684Oh, have the trunks really come, Miss Oldham?
36684Oh,she cried,"are we really allowed to walk in this wonderful place?"
36684Play room?
36684Queen''s Cottage does seem so remote and lonesome, does n''t it? 36684 Say no?"
36684Shall we go down with you to meet her, Nance?
36684Shall we mention it to her, or do you think we''d better wait and let her introduce the subject?
36684Shall we not?
36684She has been saying some horrid things? 36684 She wishes to divide the class into committees and have a chairman for each committee--""Committees for what?"
36684Shielded from what?
36684So that''s it, is it?
36684So you are really off to- morrow?
36684So you have set your heart on Miss Oldham''s going to the supper to- night?
36684Supposing the ring is n''t found, what redress have I? 36684 Taking what vows?"
36684Tell us exactly who sent you each bunch?
36684That makes twenty, does n''t it? 36684 That was a swift remedy, was it not, Miss Oldham?"
36684The Flopping of Flora; or, Who Cut the Wires?
36684The violets?
36684Then, on the other hand,continued Molly,"suppose my going would help her a little, do n''t you think it would be mean to turn her down?
36684There to- night?
36684They certainly did,answered Jessie,"and when I saw the girl afterward in the dressing room, she said to me,''Oh, Jessie, was n''t it heaven?''
36684To- morrow morning?
36684Was n''t the lecture wonderful?
36684Was the difference about me?
36684Well, what is it?
36684What are we to do now?
36684What could you tell, Molly?
36684What did he look like?
36684What do you intend to be?
36684What do you intend to be?
36684What do you think of that?
36684What do you think, Nance?
36684What do you use, a guitar or a piano?
36684What is it, Molly, dear?
36684What is it? 36684 What is it?
36684What is it?
36684What kind of a mother is she, I''d like to know? 36684 What was your question?"
36684What''s bothering you, child?
36684What''s the difference, Miss Brown?
36684What''s this?
36684What''s to be done?
36684What''s your hurry?
36684What, is your mother Mrs. Anna Oldham, the famous clubwoman?
36684What, that lovely blue thing? 36684 What, you do n''t mean to say it was Epiménides Antinous Green?"
36684What?
36684What?
36684When did these letters come?
36684When do you get off?
36684When, as Botticelli''s Flora, you came to that night with the words,''I saw her----''you did not guess, did you, that I, too, had seen her?
36684Where are you to be this summer?
36684Where have you been?
36684Where is Dodo?
36684Where''s Lulu?
36684Where''s the can opener?
36684Where''s the rouge and who''s got my rabbit''s foot? 36684 Where''s the switch?"
36684Where?
36684Which one?
36684Who are you?
36684Who was it, then?
36684Who''s got any cookies?
36684Who''s in there? 36684 Who''s in trouble now?"
36684Who''s light manager?
36684Who?
36684Why are you hurrying so fast on Saturday?
36684Why did n''t you come sooner? 36684 Why did n''t you come to the spread?"
36684Why did you put the anchovies on crackers?
36684Why do n''t you earn some money, Molly?
36684Why do n''t you introduce me to your friends, Judy?
36684Why do n''t you join in, Eddie? 36684 Why do n''t you put your talents to some use and write, then?"
36684Why do n''t you write a short story? 36684 Why does n''t he have it cleaned off?"
36684Why talk about it?
36684Why, Judy, dearest, what can it be?
36684Why, Molly, dear, has anything happened to you?
36684Why, Molly, do you think I have any mind?
36684Will you please oblige the company?
36684Wo n''t it give him an awful shock when he catches a glimpse of us waiting here on the hilltop?
36684Wo n''t you have a popover, Miss Andrews?
36684Wo n''t you look me up to- morrow?
36684Wo n''t you show me the Cloisters?
36684Would n''t I?
36684Would n''t you like to go for a stroll before supper? 36684 Would n''t your mother and father be angry with you for giving up college and joining them uninvited?"
36684Would you mind letting me see that coat?
36684Yes, who are you?
36684You are pleased at being asked to the McLean''s?
36684You are talking of the emerald ring, are n''t you, Molly?
36684You can find your way back to Queen''s by yourself, ca n''t you, Miss Brown?
36684You do n''t think it was a freshman, do you, Miss Stewart?
36684You funny child,exclaimed Molly;"how do you know you are not all those things right now?"
36684You know exactly where it was you fell, do n''t you? 36684 You know how to wait, do n''t you?
36684You lent her your overcoat that afternoon, did n''t you?
36684You look like a charming and very youthful widow- lady, Judy, but how comes it you are wearing black?
36684You mean to say they were anonymous?
36684You must be a freshman?
36684You saw what, my child?
36684You will drop me there, you say? 36684 You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you, Miss Steel?"
36684You''re to be left at Queen''s by yourself?
36684Your name is''Molly Brown,''and you come from Kentucky, is n''t that so?
36684A five- pound box ought to be the equivalent of this, eh?"
36684Am I dreaming?
36684And how did you finally get out?"
36684And, by the way, have you got a cook, too?"
36684Are n''t you?"
36684Are you a detective?"
36684Are you freshmen?
36684But she felt nervous, as who would n''t in that lonely place?
36684But should you call her balanced?"
36684But that dress must be in one of them, do n''t you think so, Mary?
36684But what could be done?
36684But why Edwin?
36684But why did the foolish girl do that mischievous thing?
36684By the way, lend me some coffee, will you?
36684By the way, you are not going to the lecture, are you?"
36684Ca n''t you see that Nance would rather die than have people know that her mother is n''t exactly like other mothers?"
36684Can you guide, Molly?"
36684Did Judy understand the look of immense relief which instantly appeared on Molly''s sensitive face?
36684Did he behave this way at Harvard all the time, Cousin Edwin?"
36684Did she think it would reinstate her in the affections of her class to be seen in the company of the popular young freshman?
36684Do n''t you find it troublesome to be so nice to so many people?"
36684Do n''t you think him good- looking?"
36684Do you ever put things in the pockets of your coat?"
36684Do you think they''ll go round?
36684Do you want Molly to pay you for your ring?
36684Do you-- do you suppose Nance knows?"
36684Does n''t it, Judy?"
36684Doubtless you know the incident of last year?"
36684Following her assistant into the next room, she whispered:"Which would you rather do, Miss Brinton?
36684Go over to Queen''s and ask Nance to give you the rest of my ham or wait on the table while I go?"
36684Have a popover?"
36684Have you forgotten about the supper to- night?"
36684Have you prescribed for her, doctor?"
36684Have you thought of anything?"
36684Honor bright, who sent the violets?"
36684How about a walk before supper?
36684How are you, Lotta?
36684How do you care for this one?
36684How do you like it?"
36684How does she expect me to get there, I wonder, at the eleventh hour?"
36684How in the world did it happen?"
36684I was glad enough to answer them, because we have nothing to be ashamed of, have we, girls?"
36684If you should happen to be in about four o''clock, may I call?
36684Is n''t it beautiful?
36684Is n''t it fine of her?
36684Is n''t it the top- notch, Eddie?
36684Is she one of the students or some outside person?"
36684Is that it?"
36684It did happen just as Molly was about to give the encore, did n''t it?"
36684It read:"DEAR MISS BROWN:"Will you forgive me?
36684It''s Miss Bowles, Professor in Advanced Math., who is bringing her, you know, of course?"
36684Judy and I promise to go there first thing, do n''t we, Judy?"
36684Kean?"
36684Kentucky, did n''t you say?"
36684Mabel Hinton, passing them as they started, had called out:"Art off on a picnic?"
36684McLean?"
36684Mushroom sauce?
36684Nance, ca n''t you do your theme after supper?
36684Oldham?"
36684One of them writes to me----""Girl or man?"
36684She is my cousin, and her brother is as near to me as my own brother, but----""You are n''t going to tell Prexy?"
36684She was engaged in mentally clearing them all out, when a voice at her elbow said:"Are you thinking of taking the vows, Miss Brown?"
36684So there, will you say you have forgiven me?"
36684Some other girls had cried:"Whither away so early, Oh?"
36684Suppose we say we''ll go to one and listen?"
36684Tell me honestly, is n''t that the truth?"
36684That black- eyed Blount person?"
36684Then she added:"By the way, Molly, can you spare the time to tutor me for a month or so?
36684Then, someone opened a casement and a man''s voice called:"Is anyone there?
36684To- morrow-- let me see, that''s New England boiled dinner night, is n''t it?
36684Two freshies?"
36684Was anyone else there to hear you?"
36684Was it Frances, after all, who had broken up her party?
36684What absurd trick of the mind had made her say"soup"?
36684What can I do for you?"
36684What did she have to gain by it?"
36684What do they stand for?"
36684What is she?
36684What news?"
36684What terrible disaster might not have befallen them if the rags had not been discovered?
36684What time shall I come?"
36684What would you think?"
36684What''s the trouble, now, my children?"
36684What''s this?
36684Where are you stopping?"
36684Where''s Molly Brown of Kentucky?"
36684Who is she?
36684Why could n''t she stay at home just once?"
36684Why did n''t you wait and let us look?"
36684Why do her classmates snub her and why did Miss Pembroke, who belonged to the faculty, wish to speak with her in her private office?"
36684Why do n''t you get busy and do something?"
36684Why not become friends at once, without any preliminaries?"
36684Why not the youthful and blushing Dodo?
36684Why, for instance, could she not have put Frances Andrews off with an excuse for a day or so?
36684Will one of you girls take care of it for me?
36684Will you come?"
36684Will you forgive me?
36684Will you forgive me?"
36684Will you permit a gentleman to kiss you on the cheek, Molly?"
36684Would it be more tactful to slip out of the room or to try and comfort Nance?
36684Would it not be better to seize this opportunity than to wait for other chances which might not prove so agreeable?
36684Would you go gallivanting off with a young man if your mother was going to give a lecture here?"
36684You are going somewhere, Nance?"
36684You feel better now, do n''t you?"
36684You knew, Molly, dear, that I was rich, did n''t you?"
36684You wo n''t think I''m patronizing if I give you a little advice, will you?"
36684cried Jessie in her high, musical voice,"trying to crawl, were you?
36684cried Richard Blount, starting from his chair with mock seriousness,"Where is it?
36684he cried,"how am I ever going to make my apologies to you for all this trouble of which I have been the unconscious cause?"
36684said Judy at last in a low voice to Molly,"what''s to be done now?"
36684went on Mabel;"how it snarls and bites and snaps at anybody who tries to pet it?
36684what an extraordinary thing, and how did it get there?"
36684what are we going to do with you?"
36684why all this excitement?"
298823--and a lawyer?
2988APPENDIX K A SUBSTITUTE FOR RULOFF HAVE WE A SIDNEY CARTON AMONG US?
2988Am I right?
2988Am I saying that the pulpit does not do its share toward disseminating the marrow, the meat of the gospel of Christ?
2988Am I to go away and let them have peace and quiet for a year and a half, and then come back and only lecture them twice?
2988America?
2988And could we now?
2988And do you think that you have added just the right smear of polish to the closing clause of the sentence?
2988And ignorantly& unthinkingly?
2988And shall we see Susy?
2988And what is a man without energy?
2988And what is the appendix for?
2988And what the flavor can surpass Of sugar, spirit, lemons?
2988And when the man draws them well why do they stir my admiration?
2988And why should it be otherwise?
2988And why should n''t I be?
2988And will Mark Twain never write such another?
2988Anything left of Hoffman? ” “ No, ” I said.
2988Are the Blue and the Gray one to- day?
2988Are the two things identical?
2988Are there in Sir Walter''s novels passages done in good English--English which is neither slovenly nor involved?
2988Are there passages which burn with real fire-- not punk, fox- fire, make- believe?
2988Are there passages whose English is not poor& thin& commonplace, but is of a quality above that?
2988Are you sure it was clams?
2988Are you? ” I did not pursue the subject, and since then I have not traveled on my''nom de guerre''enough to hurt.
2988Are you? ” That broke the ice.
2988As concerns the man who has gone unpunished eleven million years, is it your belief that in life he did his duty by his microbes?
2988At first he looked at the culprit thoughtfully, then he made some inquiries: “ Did you strike him first? ” Captain Klinefelter asked.
2988At forty what do you do?
2988B.--Look here, are you charging storage?
2988Better lo''ed ye canna be, Will ye no come back again?
2988Blasphemy?
2988Bright?
2988But I have n''t lost my temper, and I''ve made Livy lie down most of the time; could anybody make her lie down all the time?
2988But ca n''t I get it in anywhere?
2988But in the mean time what do you do?
2988But to cease teaching and go back to the beginning again, was it not pitiable-- that spectacle?
2988But what if it produce that in spite of you?
2988But what is the use of remembering all these bitter details?
2988But what of that?
2988But what were you doing on the inside?
2988By searching?
2988By the way, third''s a lucky number for length of days, is n''t it?
2988Ca n''t you tell her it always makes you sick to go home late at night or something like that?
2988Can I support such grief as this?
2988Can not the''Californian''afford to keep Mark all to itself?
2988Can the curse of the Deity beautify a land?
2988Can you conceive of a man''s getting himself into a sweat over so diminutive a provocation?
2988Can you read him and keep your respect for him?
2988Clara, dear, after the luncheon-- I hate to put this on you-- but could you do two or three little shopping- errands for me?
2988Clemens said: “ Trowbridge, are you still alive?
2988Clemens said: “ What is it? ” Wilberforce impressively answered: “ It is the Holy Grail. ” Clemens naturally started with surprise.
2988Clemens, I am not embarrassed, are you? ” So he remembered that first, long- ago meeting.
2988Clemens, will you tell me where Mr. Charles Dudley Warner lives? ” This was the chance!
2988Continuing he said: Do you know the prettiest fancy and the neatest that ever shot through Harte''s brain?
2988Could she feel the wrinkles in my hand through her hair?
2988Could you lend an admirer$ 1.50 to buy a hymn- book with?
2988Curious, but did n''t Florence want a Cromwell?
2988DEAR CHAMP CLARK,--Is the new copyright law acceptable to me?
2988DEAR PAMELA,--Will you take this$ 15& buy some candy or other trifle for yourself& Sam& his wife to remind you that we remember you?
2988DOES THE RACE OF MAN LOVE A LORD?
2988Did I ever tell you the plot of it?
2988Did I know jean''s value?
2988Did he know how to write English,& did n''t do it because he did n''t want to?
2988Did it?
2988Did n''t you know that?
2988Did you get that key to- day?''
2988Did you get wet?
2988Did you have any bets on us?
2988Did you want to saddle that disaster upon us for life? ” He was blowing off steam, and I knew it and encouraged it.
2988Do n''t you care more about the wretchedness of others than anything that happens to you?''
2988Do n''t you feel well? ” Jean said that she had a little stomack- ache, and so thought she would lie down.
2988Do n''t you hear me?
2988Do n''t you know that I have expended money in this country but have made none myself?
2988Do n''t you know that I have never held in my hands a gold or silver bar that belonged to me?
2988Do n''t you know that I have only talked, as yet, but proved nothing?
2988Do n''t you know that it''s all talk and no cider so far?
2988Do n''t you know that undemonstrated human calculations wo n''t do to bet on?
2988Do n''t you know they are calling for you? ” They remained in Keokuk a week, and Susy starts to tell something of their visit there.
2988Do n''t you realize that you ought not to intrude your help in a delicate art like that with your limitations?
2988Do serenity and peace brood over you after you have done such a thing?
2988Do they even resemble each other?
2988Do they live in---- ” “ In this street?
2988Do you admire the race(& consequently yourself)?
2988Do you hear? ” The slim, youthful person trembled a good deal, and said: “ I would, Mr. Clemens, I would indeed, sir, if I could.
2988Do you know any one who does know him? ” “ Yes, I know his most intimate friend. ” “ Then he is the man for you to approach.
2988Do you know that shock?
2988Do you know that shock?
2988Do you remember?
2988Do you see the big, plain house over there with the placard in the third floor window?
2988Do you suppose you could get me a key that would fit my trunk?''
2988Do you think I wrote the second one to give that man pleasure?
2988Do you think you could teach it arithmetic? ” Joy was uncertain.
2988Do you want to bring the lightning? ” “ You know the lightning did come last week, mama, and struck the new church, and burnt it down.
2988Does he ever chain the reader''s interest& make him reluctant to lay the book down?
2988Does he keep boarders? ” “ What an idea!
2988Does he keep him in mind years and years and go on contriving miseries for him?
2988Does he take an oath or make a promise of any sort?--or does n''t he leave himself entirely free?
2988Does man regard the difference?
2988Does one build a boarding- house for the sake of the boarding- house itself or for the sake of the boarders?
2988Does this sound like shouting?
2988Does your wife give you rats, like that, when you go a little one- sided?
2988Dreaming of what?
2988Familiar?
2988For 6 days now my story in the Christmas Harper''s “ Was it Heaven?
2988Further along he refers to one of his reforms: Smoke?
2988Give him a good sound thrashing; do you hear?
2988Goodness, who is there I have n''t known?
2988Had we no moral duty to perform?
2988Has he funny characters that are funny, and humorous passages that are humorous?
2988Has he heroes& heroines who are not cads and cadesses?
2988Has he heroes& heroines whom the reader admires-- admires and knows why?
2988Has he paused& taken thought?
2988Has he personages whose acts& talk correspond with their characters as described by him?
2988Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways?
2988Have n''t I told you so, over and over again? ” “ It''s awful cruel, mama!
2988Have n''t you read anything at all about Joan of Arc?
2988Have you a memorandum of the route we took, or the names of any of the stations we stopped at?
2988Have you been secreted in the closet or lurking on the shed roof?
2988Have you developed any novelties of conduct since you left Mr. Murray''s,& have they been of a character to move the concern of your friends?
2988Have you ever been like that?
2988Have you forgotten early twitterings of your own?
2988He commended man to multiply& replenish- what?
2988He did not suspect what had happened until he heard one of the daughters ask: “ Katie, is it true?
2988He had never had a lesson, she said; if he could only have lessons what might he not accomplish?
2988He probably referred to the Monday Evening Club essay, “ What Is Happiness? ”( February, 1883).
2988He said to himself: “ Why did n''t I go now?
2988He said, very gently: “ How beautiful it all is?
2988He said: “''You thought you were playing a nice joke on me, did n''t you?
2988He says: “ A billion, that is a million millions,[??
2988He says: “ A billion, that is a million millions,[??
2988He wished to receive the full value( who does not?)
2988He wrote, asking Howells: Will the proposed treaty protect us( and effectually) against Canadian piracy?
2988Helen Keller wrote: And you are seventy years old?
2988Hereafter if you must write such things wo n''t you please be so kind as to label them?
2988His friend asked: “ Who''s Mark Twain? ” “ God knows; I do n''t! ” The lecturer could not ride any more.
2988How can you ask such a thing of me?
2988How could he, with a fortune so plainly in view?
2988How could that impress Adam?
2988How could you do it?
2988How did you ever think of it? ” It was a fearful ordeal for a boy like Jim Wolfe, but he stuck to his place in spite of what he must have suffered.
2988How do I account for this change of view?
2988How do you explain this? ” Clemens said: “ Oh, that is very simple to answer, your Excellency.
2988How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that? ” “ My boy, you''ve got to remember it.
2988How do you reckon he accomplished that miracle?
2988How do you run Plum Point? ” He met Bixby at New Orleans.
2988How in the world did you ever come to locate there? ” Then they began to notice what they had not at first seen.
2988How much money does the devil give you for arraigning Christianity and missionary causes? ” But there were more of the better sort.
2988Howells in his letter said: She hallowed what she touched far beyond priests.... What are you going to do, you poor soul?
2988Howells, did you write me day- before- day- before yesterday or did I dream it?
2988I asked him if he was well, and he said,''What the hell do you want?''
2988I gave her a conundrum, thus: “ My dear madam, why ought your hand to retain its present grace and beauty always?
2988I said to the Duke: “ Your Grace, they''re just about finger- milers! ” “ How do you mean, m''lord? ” “ This.
2988I said, “ I did n''t belong to any. ” Then he asked me what order of knighthood I belonged to?
2988I said, “ None. ” Then he asked me what the red ribbon in my buttonhole stood for?
2988I said,''Jean, is this you trying to let me know you have found the others?''
2988I sha''n''t say a word against it, but she will find it a difficult& disheartening job,& meanwhile what is to become of that miraculous girl?
2988I suppose I ought to defend my character, but how can I defend it?
2988I want somebody to light my pipe. ” “ Why do n''t you get up and light it yourself? ” Brownell asked.
2988I was greatly pleased and asked: “ Who gets the extra one? ” “ Widows and orphans. ” “ A good idea, too.
2988I was naturally astonished, and immediately wrote: I did fall and skin my shin at five o''clock yesterday afternoon, but how did you find it out?
2988I wonder if it is?
2988If I had my new lecture completed I would n''t hesitate a moment, but really is n''t “ Cussed Be Canaan ” too old?
2988If a life be offered up on the gallows to atone for the murder Ruloff did, will that suffice?
2988If base music gives me wings, why should I want any other?
2988If he ca n''t get renewals of his bric- a- brac in the next world what will he look like?
2988If so is she extinct and can never attend a third?
2988If they want letters from here-- who''ll run from morning till night collecting material cheaper?
2988If we are going to be gay in spirit, why be clad in funeral garments?
2988If we made this colonel a grand fellow, and gave him a wife to suit-- hey?
2988If you can play that way left- handed what could you do right- handed?''
2988If you should be passing this way to- morrow will you look in and change hats?
2988In a dictation following his return, Mark Twain said: Who began it?
2988In later years Mark Twain once said: “ How much of the nursing did I do?
2988In one of her letters she says: The house has been full of company, and I have been “ whirled around. ” How can a body help it?
2988In the accompanying note he said: Say, Boss, do you want this to lighten up your old freight- train with?
2988Interest?
2988Introducing him, President Frank Lawrence said: “ What name is there in literature that can be likened to his?
2988Is it a regular army?
2988Is it an army of volunteers who have enlisted for the war, and may righteously be shot if they leave before the war is finished?
2988Is it less humiliating to dance to the lash of one master than another?
2988Is it one prayer?
2988Is it possible for human wickedness to invent a doctrine more infernal and poisonous than this?
2988Is n''t it curious?
2988Is n''t it interesting?
2988Is n''t that a brewery? ” “ It is, Mark.
2988Is n''t that a brewery? ” “ It is, Mark.
2988Is n''t that valuable?
2988Is that it? ” “ Yes, that is correct. ” “ By George, it beats the band! ” He liked the expression, and set it down in his tablets.
2988Is the Rebellion ended and forgotten?
2988Is there imaginable a baser servitude than it imposes?
2988Is there some way, honest or otherwise, by which you can get a copy of Mayo''s play, “ Pudd''nhead Wilson, ” for me?
2988It has always seemed natural and right to me, and wise and most kindly and merciful. ” “ Who first thought of it like that, mama?
2988It is n''t Holcomb, it''s Blackmer. ” I was ashamed again, and confessed it; then: “ How old are you, dear? ” “ Twelve; New- Year''s.
2988It may have materialized out of the unseen-- who knows?
2988It only costs the people$ 1 apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for?...
2988It only costs the public a dollar apiece, and if they ca n''t stand it what do they stay here for?
2988It was not wrong?
2988It was you. ” “ But do you realize, ma''am, how tired and hungry we are?
2988Italy?
2988Klinefelter turned to Sam: “ Did n''t you hear him? ” “ Yes, sir. ” Brown said: “ Shut your mouth!
2988L. Am I not, to a man, as is a billion solar systems to a grain of sand?
2988L. And the air?
2988L. C.''Which was?
2988L. Do you know what a microbe is?
2988L. Does he forget him?
2988L. Employs himself with more important matters?
2988L. Has she been out to- day?
2988L. He commits depredations upon your blood?
2988L. How many men are there?
2988L. In ten days the aggregate reaches what?
2988L. In that costume?
2988L. Is it true the human race thinks the universe was created for its convenience?
2988L. Now then, according to man''s own reasoning, what is man for?
2988L. Then what?
2988L. Then why punish him?
2988L. To what intent are these uncountable microbes introduced into the human race?
2988L. What am I to man?
2988L. What is he for?
2988L. What is the sea for?
2988L. When was this?
2988L. Who is it?
2988L. Why?
2988L. Why?
2988L. You took a cab both ways?
2988Land sakes, Livy, what can I do? ” “ Which way did he go, Youth? ” “ Why, I sent him to Charlie Warner''s.
2988Land sakes, Livy, what can I do? ” “ Which way did he go, Youth? ” “ Why, I sent him to Charlie Warner''s.
2988Later he wrote: “ Put''Is He Dead?''
2988Livy screamed, then said, “ Who is it?
2988MR. MARK TWAIN-- DEAR SIR,--Will you start now, without any unnecessary delay?
2988Maguire, why Will you thus skyugle?
2988Mama said, “ Why do n''t you try''mind cure''? ” “ I am, ” Jean answered.
2988Man kills the microbes when he can?
2988Mark Twain''s own book on the subject--''Is Shakespeare Dead?''
2988May I send you the constitution& laws of the club?
2988Must he prove that he is sound in any way, mind or body?
2988Must he prove that he knows anything-- is capable of anything-- whatever?
2988My friend said, “ I always admired it, even before I saw it in The Innocents Abroad. ” I naturally said, “ What do you mean?
2988Next day he asked, “ Katie, did you see my pipe- cleaner?
2988Not much of it all is left to me, but I remember Howells saying, “ Did it ever occur to you that the newspapers abolished hell?
2988Now is n''t she the devil?
2988Now then, with this common- sense light to aid your perceptions, what are the air, the land, and the ocean for?
2988Now what is it?
2988Now you all know all these things yourself, do n''t you?
2988Now, do n''t you see what a world of confidence that must necessarily breed?
2988Now, therefore, why should I withhold it?
2988Now, therefore, why should I withhold it?
2988Now, will that do you? ” Clemens said it would.
2988Now, young men, if any of you were in command of such a fortress, how would you proceed?''
2988OR HELL?
2988OR HELL? ” The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story, “ Was it Heaven?
2988OR HELL? ” The Christmas number of Harper''s Magazine for 1902 contained the story, “ Was it Heaven?
2988Of course. ” “ What for? ” “ Oh, to discipline us!
2988Oh, Katie, is it true? ” He realized then that she was gone.
2988On another: Have you seen any portion of the second volume?
2988Once, half roused, he looked at me searchingly and asked: “ Is n''t there something I can resign and be out of all this?
2988Once, writing to Jean, he asked: What is your favorite piece of music, dear?
2988One day Clemens sand to him: “ Cable, why do you sit in here?
2988One day she said: “ Mama, why is there so much pain and sorrow and suffering?
2988One day, soon after, he said to me: “''Steve, do you know that I think that that bogus pipe smokes about as well as the good one?
2988One paper celebrated him in verse: Who killed Croker?
2988Or a gullet?
2988Or at least why was n''t something creditable created in place of it?...
2988Or is it a gull?
2988Or is the report exaggerated, like that of your death?
2988Ought we to allow this war to begin?
2988Out of this grew the story, “ Was it Heaven?
2988Presently, he asked me what order of nobility I belonged to?
2988Put a trap like that into the midst of a tragical story?
2988Redpath had besought him as usual, and even in midsummer had written: “ Will you?
2988Reverence for what-- for whom?
2988Rose Terry Cooke wrote: Horrid man, how did you know the way I behave in a thunderstorm?
2988Sam said: “ What''s that, Steve? ” “ Why, ” I said, “ that''s Laud.
2988Sam; ” he said, “ what do they mean by that? ” Clemens stepped to the wheel and brought the boat around.
2988Says I,''Hold on there, Evangeline, what are you going to do with them?''
2988See?
2988Shall I ever be cheerful again, happy again?
2988Shall we ever laugh again?
2988Shall we think this over, or drop it as being nonsense?
2988Shall you also say that it demands that a man kick his truth and his conscience into the gutter and become a mouthing lunatic besides?
2988Shall you say the best good of the country demands allegiance to party?
2988She ran breathlessly to her aunt: “ Can I have it?
2988She said, “ Why, Jean, what''s the matter?
2988She was determined to go out again, but---- L. How did you know she was out?
2988Shrunk how?
2988Since I wrote my Bible--[The “ Gospel, ” What is Man?]
2988So he sat down and stayed there until an executioner came. ” I said, “ How do you account for the changed attitude toward these things?
2988Speaking as a member of it, what do you think the other animals are for?
2988Suppose, after all, the school- teachers had declined to come?
2988Take a man like Sir Oliver Lodge, and what secret of Nature can be hidden from him?
2988Take it with you. ” “ Why? ” “ Because of that sketch of yours entitled''Luck.''
2988Telegram to Redpath: How in the name of God does a man find his way from here to Amherst, and when must he start?
2988That is to say, is n''t she a right smart little woman?
2988That they are in London, the metropolis of the world, Post- office District, N. W.?
2988That''s closed in, is n''t it, for the winter?
2988That''s his house. ” “ The placard that says''Furnished rooms to let''?
2988The autumn splendors passed you by?
2988The coachman sent in for him at 9, but he said, “ Oh, nonsense!--leave glories& grandeurs like these?
2988The curtain hid her.... Do you comprehend?
2988The humblest of us is cared for-- oh, believe it!--and this fleeting stay is not the end! ” You notice that?
2988The inspector asks: “ Now what does this elephant eat, and how much? ” “ Well, as to what he eats-- he will eat anything.
2988The letter itself consisted merely of a line, which said: Wo n''t you give your friends, the missionaries, a good mark for this?
2988The property has got to fall to some heir, and why not the United States?
2988The question is, if she attends two doe luncheons in succession is she a doe- doe?
2988The two sums aggregate- what?
2988Then he asked solemnly: “ And is he never serious? ” And Dr. Parker as solemnly answered: “ Mr.
2988Then he broke out: “ Why ca n''t a man die when he''s had his tragedy?
2988Then he says: Why do I offer him the play at all?
2988Then he was likely to say: “ Why did n''t you stop me?
2988Then if Satan should come, he would slap him on the shoulder and say,''Why, Satan, how do you do?
2988Then who is it, what is it, that they worship?
2988Then: “ What does he call it? ” he asked.
2988There''s nothing “ to strike out ”; nothing “ to replace. ” What more could be said of any one?
2988They cost ten dollars apiece. ” Clemens sand: “ Is that so?
2988They give us pain, they make our lives miserable, they murder us-- and where is the use of it all, where the wisdom?
2988This is my work, and I know that I do very wrong when I feel chafed by it, but how can I be right about it?
2988Thomas Hardy said to Howells one night at dinner: “ Why do n''t people understand that Mark Twain is not merely a great humorist?
2988To Howells, on the same day, he wrote: Wo n''t you& Mrs. Howells& Mildred come& give us as many days as you can spare& examine John''s triumph?
2988To Twichell Clemens wrote: Joe, do you know the Irish gentleman& the Irish lady, the Scotch gentleman& the Scotch lady?
2988To Twichell he wrote, playfully but sincerely: Am I honest?
2988To a woman who wrote, asking for his opinion on dogs, he said, in part: By what right has the dog come to be regarded as a “ noble ” animal?
2988To her sister she wrote: Do you think we can live through the first going into the house in Hartford?
2988Twain expect the public to credit this narrative to his clever brain?
2988U. E. WAS IT HEAVEN?
2988U. E. WHY NOT ABOLISH IT?
2988Upon my face She must not look until the day was done; For she was doing penance... She?
2988Venice?
2988Very well, then, what is the use of your stringing out your miserable lives to a clean and withered old age?
2988Very well, then- what ought we to do?
2988W- h- a- r- r''s my golden arm?
2988WHAT IS MAN?
2988WHICH WAS WHICH?
2988Was hast du gesagt? ” But she said the same words over again, and in the same decided way.
2988Was it Grady who killed himself trying to do all the dining and speeching?
2988Was it R. U. Johnson?
2988Was it an illusion?
2988Was it both together?
2988Was it not our duty to administer a rebuke to this selfish and heartless Family?
2988Was it not our duty to stop it, in the name of right and righteousness?
2988Was it the Authors''League?
2988Was it to discipline the church? ”( Wearily.)
2988Was it to discipline the hog, mama? ” “ Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while?
2988Was it to discipline the hog, mama? ” “ Dear child, do n''t you want to run out and play a while?
2988Was it you? ” “ Oh no, child, I was taught it. ” “ Who taught you so, mama? ” “ Why, really, I do n''t know-- I ca n''t remember.
2988Was it you? ” “ Oh no, child, I was taught it. ” “ Who taught you so, mama? ” “ Why, really, I do n''t know-- I ca n''t remember.
2988Was n''t it a rattling good comedy situation?
2988Was that right? ” “ Certainly, certainly.
2988We know it was a good reason, whatever it was. ” “ What do you think it was, mama? ” “ Oh, you ask so many questions!
2988Well, is it?
2988Well, then, what is he to do?
2988Well, they have invented a heaven, out of their own heads, all by themselves; guess what it is like?
2988What a child he always was-- always, to the very end?
2988What are deciduous flowers, and do they always “ bloom in the fall, tra la ”?
2988What are his tonsils for?
2988What are you going to do? ” “ I''m going to shoot those burglars, ” he said.
2988What are your plans for getting left, or shall you trust to inspiration?
2988What did it matter to him?
2988What do you take me for?
2988What do you think the General wanted to require of me?''
2988What does it mean, Susy?
2988What is Jean doing?
2988What is biography?
2988What is his beard for?
2988What is it all for? ” It was an easy question, and mama had no difficulty in answering it: “ It is for our good, my child.
2988What is it that we want in a novel?
2988What is it you want? ” But you and I are in the business ourselves.
2988What is it?
2988What is romance?
2988What is the essential difference between a lifelong democrat and any other kind of lifelong slave?
2988What is the matter? ” I said, “ There ai n''t anything the matter.
2988What is the process when a voter joins a party?
2988What is the use of your saving money that is so utterly worthless to you?
2988What is there to say?
2988What kind of a disease is that?
2988What mother knows not that?
2988What name do you want to use''Josh''? ” “ No, I want to sign them''Mark Twain.''
2988What nationalities would he prefer? ” “ He is indifferent about nationalities.
2988What night will you come down& smoke?
2988What noise?
2988What other humorist could have refrained from hinting, at least, the inference suggested by the obvious “ Gas Works ”?
2988What ship is that?
2988What should we do and how should we feel if we had no bright prospects before us, and yet how many people are situated in that way?
2988What slave is so degraded as the slave that is proud that he is a slave?
2988What the devil does a man want with any more feet when he owns in the invincible bomb- proof “ Monitor ”?
2988What they want---- ” “ The nobility?
2988What use can you put it to?
2988What was the greatest feature in Napoleon''s character?
2988What would become of me if he should disintegrate?
2988What would it be for the whole human population?
2988What''s happened? ” “ Do n''t wait to talk.
2988What, sir, would the people of this earth be without woman?
2988When did larches begin to flame, and who set out the pomegranates in that canyon?
2988When shall I come?
2988When the Duke first moved in here he---- ” “ Does he live in this street? ” “ Him!
2988When the children came for eggs he would say: “ Your hens wo n''t lay, eh?
2988When the dictation ended he said: “ Have you any special place to lunch to- day? ” I replied that I had not.
2988When we entered, and Mrs. Clemens read on Shakespeare''s grave,''Good friend, for Jesus''sake, forbear,''she started back, exclaiming,''where am I?''
2988When you get an exasperating letter what happens?
2988Where are we going? ” “ Do n''t worry.
2988Where is it Orion''s going to?
2988Where was ever a sermon preached that could make filial ingratitude so hateful to men as the sinful play of “ King Lear ”?
2988Where was your remedy?
2988Who is his nearest friend? ” MacAlister knew a man on terms of social intimacy with the official.
2988Who is it? ” His informant hesitated a moment, then named a name of world- wide military significance.
2988Who is it? ” The courier said, “ Napoleon. ” Clemens assented.
2988Who is to decide what ought to command my reverence-- my neighbor or I?
2988Who knows?
2988Who lit the lilacs, and which end up do they hang?
2988Who might this late comer be?
2988Who so poor in his ambitions as to consent to be God on those terms?
2988Whose heart is broken by this murder?
2988Why curse and swear, And rip and tear The innocent McDougal?
2988Why did n''t I go with her now? ” She went from Clemens''s over to Warner''s.
2988Why do I respect my own?
2988Why do we respect the opinions of any man or any microbe that ever lived?
2988Why does He give Himself the trouble? ” I suggested that it was a sentiment that probably gave comfort to the writer of it.
2988Why does he affront me with the fancy that I interest Myself in trivialities-- like men and microbes?
2988Why howl about his wrongs after said wrongs have been redressed?
2988Why should Darwin have gone to them for rest and refreshment at midnight, when spent with scientific research?
2988Why should his life be taken away for their sake, when he was n''t doing anything? ” “ Oh, I do n''t know!
2988Why should not China be free from the foreigners, who are only making trouble on her soil?
2988Why should they have declined?
2988Why was the human race created?
2988Why, Clara, are n''t you going to your lesson?
2988Why, Tufts, do n''t you know that the soldiers in the theater are the same old soldiers marching around and around?
2988Will Kanawha be sailing after that& can I go as Sunday- school superintendent at half rate?
2988Will anybody contend that a man can say to such masterful anger as that, Go, and be obeyed?
2988Will healing ever come, or life have value again?
2988Will one of you boys buy that house?
2988Will ye no come back again?
2988Will you remember that?
2988Will you return those proofs or revises to me, so that I can use the same on some future occasion?
2988With a rent- roll of twelve hundred thousand marks a year?
2988Wo n''t you please stop it?
2988Wo n''t you talk awhile?
2988Wo n''t you?
2988Would you encourage in literature a man who the older he grows the worse he writes?
2988Would you like a series of papers to run through three months or six or nine-- or about four months, say?
2988Would you like me to come out there and cry?
2988Writing to MacAlister, Clemens said: Florentine sunshine?
2988Yes, he is here; and the question is not-- as it has been heretofore during a thousand ages-- What shall we do with him?
2988Yes, you know that, and confess it-- but what were you to do?
2988You can do your work just as well here as in Cambridge, ca n''t you?
2988You could n''t possibly teach music with a company of raw recruits drilling overhead-- now, could you?
2988You do not think me wrong?
2988You hold her, will you, till I come back?''
2988You note that position?
2988You notice the stately General standing there with his hand resting upon the muzzle of a cannon?
2988You say, “ Is this it?--this?
2988You think that picture looks old?
2988You will continue upon the water for some time yet; you will not retire finally until ten years from now.... What is your brother''s age?
2988after all this talk and fuss of a thousand generations of travelers who have crossed this frontier& looked about them& told what they saw& felt?
2988and ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town? ” he asks in a critical moment-- a remark which stamps him as a philosopher of classic rank.
2988and in pursuit of an office?
2988can a body do it to- day?
2988do you realize, Mark, what a symposium it is to be?
2988have you noticed that?
2988he telegraphed his tormentor: “ Why do n''t you congratulate me?
2988how have you written this miracle?
2988how''s that? ” A curious character was Cutter-- a Long Island farmer with the obsession of rhyme.
2988impostors, were they?
2988or Hell? ” a heartbreaking history which probes the very depths of the human soul.
2988or Hell? ” and it immediately brought a flood of letters to its author from grateful readers on both sides of the ocean.
2988or shall I send it to the hotel?
2988the tropics?
2988where is he?
2988“ And how is Mrs. Clemens? ” asked the uninvited guest.
2988“ But what in hell is an oesophagus?
2988“ Could a man live on a world so small as that? ” I asked.
2988“ Did you do that? ” he asked, ominously.
2988“ Did you ever hear of Mark Twain? ” asked Twichell.
2988“ Do n''t I deserve one yet? ” Unhappy day!
2988“ Do n''t you understand?
2988“ Do you expect to pay extra fare? ” asked Sherman.
2988“ Do you know the Bowen boys? ” he asked--“pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade? ” “ I know them well-- all three of them.
2988“ Do you know the Bowen boys? ” he asked--“pilots in the St. Louis and New Orleans trade? ” “ I know them well-- all three of them.
2988“ Do you mean to say that you''re not going to vote for him? ” “ Yes, that is what I mean to say.
2988“ Do you see it? ” Clemens looked carefully now and identified one of the books as a still- born novel which Keeler had published.
2988“ Do you use terbacker? ” the big girl had asked, meaning did he chew it.
2988“ Does it? ” he said, very deliberately.
2988“ George, ” he said, “ what pictures are those that gentleman left? ” “ Why, Mr. Clemens, those are our own pictures.
2988“ Great guns, what is the matter with it? ” wrote Clemens in November when he received a detailed account of its misconduct.
2988“ Hain''t we all the fools in town on our side?
2988“ Have n''t you any other friend that you could suggest? ” Langdon said.
2988“ Here, where are you heading for now? ” he yelled.
2988“ Here, why did n''t you tell me we had got to land at that plantation? ” he demanded.
2988“ Here, ” he would shout, “ where are you going now?
2988“ How are you, Mr. Clemens? ” he said.
2988“ How far off was it? ” “ Oh, about thirty yards. ” “ Can he do it again? ” “ Of course, ” I said; “ every time.
2988“ How far off was it? ” “ Oh, about thirty yards. ” “ Can he do it again? ” “ Of course, ” I said; “ every time.
2988“ How many more are there? ” he asked.
2988“ How many? ” he demanded.
2988“ How much do you think it ought to be, Mark? ” James Anthony asked.
2988“ How would you like a young man to learn the river? ” he said.
2988“ I said,''Who the h-- l are you?
2988“ IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD? ” I set out on my long journey with much reluctance.
2988“ Is n''t that a guitar over there? ” he asked.
2988“ Is there any evidence that he did n''t? ” I asked.
2988“ Livy, ” he said, “ did it sound like that? ” “ Of course it did, ” she said, “ only worse.
2988“ M.--What does it mean?
2988“ MAMA-- What did you say?
2988“ Man adapted to the earth? ” he said.
2988“ Nobody could have done it better; and did you see how those cats got out of there?
2988“ Promise what? ” I said.
2988“ Quick! ” “ What is it?
2988“ Reporters? ” The butler feigned uncertainty.
2988“ Sam said,''Dan, did you know, when you invited me to make that speech, that those fellows were going to give me a bogus pipe?''
2988“ Some one you know? ” “ No, ” he said.
2988“ Steve, what is that d-- d noise? ” he would say.
2988“ Still you-- are going to publish it, are you not? ” Clemens, pacing up and down the room in his dressing- gown and slippers, shook his head.
2988“ Tell us, Mark, why are you like the Pacific Ocean? ” “ I do n''t know, ” he drawled.
2988“ That-- rascal? ” he said, “ He has done me more injury than any other man in America. ”] LVI.
2988“ WAS IT HEAVEN?
2988“ Was he always really tranquil within, ” he says, “ or was he only externally so-- for effect?
2988“ Was this rebuke studied and intentional?
2988“ Well, he''s been here. ” “ Oh, Youth, have you done anything? ” “ Yes, of course I have.
2988“ Well, ” he said, “ who told you you could go in this car? ” “ Nobody, ” said Clemens.
2988“ Well, ” he sand, “ why am I like the Pacific Ocean? ” Several guesses were made, but none satisfied him.
2988“ Well-- Mrs. Clemens is about as usual-- I believe. ” “ And the children-- Miss Susie and little Clara? ” This was a bit startling.
2988“ What are you doing here? ” he asked.
2988“ What are you reading, Sam? ” he asked.
2988“ What in nation are you steerin''at, anyway?
2988“ What is your name? ” The applicant told him, and the two stood looking at the sunlit water.
2988“ What kind of a trip did you boys have? ” a friend asked of them.
2988“ What makes you pull your words that way? ”( “ pulling ” being the river term for drawling), he asked.
2988“ What will you have, Sam? ” he asked.
2988“ What would you do? ” he asked me.
2988“ What would you give for a copy? ” asked.
2988“ What''s the matter, Sam?
2988“ Where is it?
2988“ Where is the elephant? ” he asked, as they drove along.
2988“ Who did that? ” asked Laird''s second.
2988“ Who is he, George? ” Clemens asked, without looking at the card.
2988“ Who was it? ” asked his companion.
2988“ Why did n''t you mention it before?
2988“ Why do you think so? ” he asked.
2988“ Why in nation did you offer him your cue? ” “ Was n''t that the courteous thing to do? ” I asked.
2988“ Why in nation did you offer him your cue? ” “ Was n''t that the courteous thing to do? ” I asked.
2988“ Why not leave them all to me? ” My business brothers?
2988“ Why not leave them all to me? ” My business brothers?
2988“ Why, ” he said, “ have we met before? ” The Prince smiled happily.
2988“ Yes, sir, it is; what of it? ” The culprit walked over, and taking it up, tuned the strings a little and struck the chords.
2988“''What is it?''
43427A_ living_ body?
43427Are_ you_ a body?
43427Is a stone possessed of life?
43427( 1785- 1795?
43427Again:"Is_ every_ body possessed of life?"
43427But who is a good teacher of such a science?
43427Napoleon was even reported to have said:"Qui m''empêche de laisser fusiller ce prince?"
43427What is truth, and who are the right teachers of it?
43427that of Homer and Hesiod) is included, and the question is asked, why the hearers of such stories are amused by them?
43427that of a system of laws which governs the many things?
42821).--I can not but express my surprise at the learned(?)
42821).--INQUIRER asks"Why the freedom of Edinburgh was conferred upon him?"
42821).--Is not_ mawkin_ merely a corruption for_ mannikin_?
428211819. Who is"the poet?"
42821And if there was, what arms did they bear?
42821Can any of your correspondents explain the expression,"a worse face under a cork upon a bottle?"
42821Can any one inform me whether the air is ancient or modern?
42821Did this piece contain any account of his researches in libraries alluded to?
42821Do the words admit two meanings?
42821Do they not move, Hyperion- like, on high?
42821How are we to reconcile these statements?
42821How did the word acquire the meaning given to it in such a sentence?
42821If so, has it ever been published?
42821If then the mediæval effigies are alive, how can the costume be reconciled with their position?
42821If there was such a family, was it in any way connected with any of the early proprietors of Belvoir Castle?
42821Is anything known of a family of the name of Harryes or Harris of Orton, and what were their arms?
42821Is anything known of such a person?
42821Is this ceremony at all connected with the symbolism I have noticed?
42821On the 1st JULY will be published, WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST?
42821That the pupil of Coleridge, and the author of_ Vital Dynamics_, will worthily acquit himself in this great field, who can question?
42821The SECOND will be published on the 1st of AUGUST, WHAT MUST I DO TO BE SAVED?
42821The earliest extant at the present day?
42821To which of J. H. Parker''s_ Parochial Tales_ does CHEVERELLS allude?
42821Was he a naturalist too?
42821Was there ever a family of the name of De Beauveir, De Beauvoir, or Beaver, of Tarwell, in Nottinghamshire?
42821Were they not likewise sons of heaven and earth?"
42821What but pre- Angeloism?
42821What is the symbolism of this position?
42821When and where did this occur, and what was the result?
42821Where do their clothes come from?
42821Where?]
42821Why then should this poor choice be denied?
42821Why, then, should a sculptor be now"cabin''d, cribb''d, confined, bound in,"by such inflexible conditions?
42821Y. S. M._ Army Lists for Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries._--Where are they to be found?
42821_ Grammar School of St. Mary de Crypt, Gloucester._--Can you give me the name of the master of the Grammar School of St. Mary de Crypt in 1728?
42821_ Parochial Registers._--When and where were parochial registers first established?
42821_ Quakers''Calendar._--What month would the Quakers mean by"12th month,"a century and a half since?
41901But where is our supply coming from? 41901 But why do you dwell on those things that terrify you?"
41901Lying on the prairie grass and lifting my hand toward the sky, I used to say in my inmost spirit,''What is it? 41901 What do you mean by that?
41901What is the use,he says,"of trying to fight against Nature''s laws?
41901Why do you harbor such old age thoughts? 41901 Why should I stamp these new body cells with four score years,"he says,"when not a single one of them may be a quarter of that age?"
41901You say you have tried everything you could think of in managing your employees, but has it ever occurred to you to try Love''s way?
41901Are you carrying a great excess of baggage, clinging to unnecessary things which handicap you?
41901Are you in the habit of losing your temper, of flying into a rage over trifles?
41901Are you not about tired of being defrauded by this thief of the blessings and the good things which the Creator intended we all should have?
41901Are you not tired of having your plans thwarted, your efforts blighted by the traitor, doubt?
41901But what difference does that make?"
41901But why should any one look forward to such a period?
41901CHAPTER IX HAVE YOU TRIED LOVE''S WAY?
41901CHAPTER XI THE TRIUMPH OF HEALTH IDEALS"What is the body after all but the spirit breaking through the flesh, or health but beauty in the organism?"
41901CHAPTER XIV PREPARING THE MIND FOR SLEEP Sleep, gentle sleep, how have I frighted thee?
41901Did you ever know a person who has a great many"I ca nt''s,"and excuses in his vocabulary to accomplish very much?
41901Did you ever think that every time you say"I ca n''t"you weaken your confidence in yourself and your power to do things?
41901Do you have a horror of possible failure?
41901Do you realize that habit is getting a tremendous grip upon you, and that before you realize it you may be a"perpetual clerk"?
41901Do you shrink from the possible humiliation of losing out in your venture?
41901Does any one question the mighty power of electricity because it can not be seen or heard or smelled?
41901Have you ever thought of the possibilities of spiritual and mental development during sleep?
41901Have_ you_ done the biggest thing you are capable of doing?
41901How are we going to get the necessaries of life?
41901How are we going to pay the rent, the mortgage off the home, the farm?
41901How long have you been just an ordinary employee?
41901How much of a grip has your vision on you?
41901If we wish to have abounding health( and who does not?)
41901Inasmuch as it is so affected, is it not reasonable to assume that the stomach cells are influenced by the thought which you project into them?
41901Is it any wonder that life is a disappointment to them?
41901Is it any wonder that they see only what they look for, get only what they expect?
41901Is it not worth while to get into such relations?
41901Is it the additional responsibility you shrink from, the extra work?
41901Now, if, as we have seen, the subconscious mind can perform real work, real service for us, why should we not use it especially during sleep?
41901Of course we all have ideals of some kind when we are young; but how many of us keep them even till middle age?
41901Some handicap, some invisible thread?
41901What are you afraid of?
41901What could have kept Ole Bull from becoming a master musician?
41901What could keep a Faraday or an Edison, whom no hardships frightened, from realizing the wonderful visions of boyhood?
41901What do these people know about love?
41901What is it that enlarges your doubt and holds you back?
41901What is the aim to be, O God?''"
41901What will happen to us if we can not get it?
41901What would become of humanity were it not for love, which sweetens the hardest labor and makes self- sacrifice a joy?
41901What young man has entered into active life without an ideal before him of what he is going to do, and how the world is going to be bettered by him?
41901Whence comes the intelligence which governs and directs the work of these little builders and repairers?
41901Where are the children''s clothes coming from?
41901Where is our supply coming from?
41901Where is the money coming from?
41901Who has not seen the magic power of love in transforming rough, uncouth men into refined and devoted husbands?
41901Why are you visualizing decrepitude, the dulling and weakening of your mental faculties?
41901Why ca n''t I get a job that will enable us to really live?"
41901Why delay beginning the thing that you know perfectly well you ought to do?
41901Why not try love''s way?
41901Why not turn it out of your mental house?
41901Why should we fear to jump into the arms of the Infinite when we come to death''s door, which is only the entrance to another life?
41901nor has returned; yet on my way Along the pave or through the clanging mart, Sometimes a stranger''s eye falls full on mine;"You too?"
40309''Art going?'' 40309 ''Why is this thus?''
40309''Wilt marry us?'' 40309 Are you ready?"
40309Ca n''t you make something that will jump up?
40309Can we not do something with paper?
40309D''you see that boat there?
40309Did we know what a billion meant?
40309Did we know what a million meant?
40309How did it happen?
40309How is that, Mr. Sprawl( Gold Specks''proper name being Sprawl); can anything be clearer than a mathematical demonstration?
40309I''m very sorry,whined Nix, contritely;"it was quite an accident, I assure you; but I wonder whether it could not be mended?"
40309Is that right?
40309Oh, ca n''t you make something that will jump up?
40309Well, but what do you throw at the person?
40309What shall we make next?
40309When did you get it? 40309 Why is an apple- tart like a slipper?"
40309( Aside-- He does n''t look as if he were thinking of a lady, does he?)
40309--Now wo n''t he be an unreasonable old polypus to object to that as a likeness?
40309--_See page 180._]_ Artist._ Here is who?
403092) representing the way in which it is done; need we add anything in the way of explanation?
40309Again they walked across the room, and as they passed, one said to the other,"How do, again?"
40309Ah, you villain, are you going to betray me?
40309Another wished to know why meat should always be served rare?
40309Are you fond of art?
40309Are you sure of it-- no deception?
40309As he neither erased any word or letter, nor substituted a new direction, how did he so alter it as to correspond with the contents of the box?
40309As we parted, he asked us if we should like to have a small statue of Vishnu?
40309B._ And sleep late in the morning?
40309B._ Are you short- sighted in your left eye?
40309B._ But my dear sir-- my good young friend, what was I to do?
40309B._ Do you snore at nights?
40309B._ Gooseberry?
40309B._ Have you a strawberry mark on your left arm?
40309B._ The shirt- collar is certainly very like; but do n''t you think the complexion is a little high?
40309B._ You are a painter, are you not, sir?
40309But how was this change effected?
40309But how were these extraordinary faces produced?
40309But my palette-- where can it have gone?
40309But what is this the rich man discovers?
40309Confession and repentance ought to come out of a man with tears of blood, and----""But about the ladies?"
40309Did you ever see a man ring the bell with his back to the target?"
40309Did you say Puttyblow?
40309Do n''t you find trees very difficult?
40309Do you know I like people who, when they are mad, get sulky?
40309Does it not sound plebeian?
40309Does the young man fancy that I propose to drink through my nose, like an elephant?
40309First came the question:"Why were Moses and the Jews the best bred people in the world?"
40309For who, they said, could speak better on the virtues of a_ great canard_ than an editor?
40309Have I the honor to address the Lady Cicily de Rhino?"
40309Have you a gooseberry bush on your left arm?
40309How do you play it, Toney?"
40309How is he to manage this, so that the wolf may not be left alone with the goat, nor the goat with the cabbage?
40309How''s the folks?"
40309I will demand satisfaction; where are they?"
40309I wonder who started the admiration of_ impulsive_ people?
40309If a herring and a half cost three cents, how many will you get for a dollar?
40309Is it because you are----?
40309Now comes the question-- How was the elephant made?
40309Now do you understand?"
40309Now turning to Bud, we asked her to decide what answer the lover should receive; should he be accepted or rejected?
40309Now, where on earth can be my palette?
40309Our friend Nix asked why Moses and the Jews were the best- bred people in the world?
40309Perhaps she has a brother; and how would she like to have him married against his will by fifteen women in blue?
40309Punch?"
40309Singular dream, was it not?
40309So when one of the company asked,"When does a sculptor die of a fit?"
40309The brave MacSlasher, who married my half- cousin Columbia Ann, of Pickleville, Indiana?
40309The conversation might commence something in this style( you in your natural tone of voice):"Well, aunty, how are_ you_ to- day?"
40309The second was:"Why meat should always be cooked rare?"
40309The shirt- collar and the cravat are extremely like; but do n''t you think you might alter the rest?
40309Then you do n''t love me?
40309Then, in a feigned voice:[ Illustration][ Illustration]"How do, pretty ladee and gentlemen?
40309There, sir, will you be kind enough to look at that?
40309They took positions in opposite corners of the room, advanced towards each other, and as they passed, the friend said to the doctor,"How do, Doctor?"
40309To this end he submitted the well known problem:"What is the difference between six dozen dozen and half a dozen dozen?"
40309To which of the family did she refer?
40309We even enjoyed the time- honored riddle:"What was Joan of Arc made of?"
40309Well, what do you say?"
40309What do you mean, sir?
40309What has brought me here?
40309What is his name?
40309What is it you have to say?"
40309What now?
40309What would you think of that, sir?"
40309When the Constable tells him to put his head into the noose, he puts it in the wrong place over and over again, inquiring each time,"That way?"
40309Where does he live?
40309Where is she?"
40309Where kin that keow a poked herself now?
40309Where would they have it?
40309Where''s that d-- d palette?
40309Where''s the knife( takes knife and loaf)?
40309Who is it from?"
40309Why does Aunty Delluvian consult us on this point, and many other trivial points concerning the proper conduct of a"modest, right- minded maiden?"
40309Why should you treat yourself so much worse than a horse?
40309Will some gentleman be kind enough to lend me three twenty- dollar gold pieces?"
40309Will you have him for nothing?
40309Will you kindly rise for one moment, Mr. Winglebully?
40309Will you take a seat, madam?
40309With my mouth?
40309Wonder, by the way, whether there''s anybody about, after all?
40309You doubt it?
40309You have a hand?
40309You see Mr. Smith, yonder; he is a rather tall man; six feet two, I should judge?
40309Your name is Lady Cicily Rhino?"
40309[ Illustration] Aunty Grummidge:"How am I?
40309_ Artist._ A what, sir?
40309_ Artist._ Are you in the habit of committing suicide?
40309_ Artist._ Are you subject to hydrophobia?
40309_ Artist._ Do you wear corns or paper collars?
40309_ Artist._ I mean, sir, will you be pleased to smile with your mouth?
40309_ Artist._ Or a side face?
40309_ Artist._ Or a three- quarter face?
40309_ Artist._ The blue woman?
40309_ Artist._ Will you smile, sir?
40309_ Artist._ Will you take a seat, Mr. Wingle?
40309_ Artist._ Would you like a full face?
40309_ Lady C._"Purty well; how''s yourself?"
40309_ Lady._ I have left my portemonnaie in your studio-- will you be kind enough to let me have it?
40309_ Lady._ Is there a gentleman here?
40309_ Lady._ There is no other studio in this building?
40309_ Lady._ This is an artist''s studio, is it not?
40309_ P._"Have you seen my wife?"
40309_ P._"Is n''t it?
40309_ P._"Shall I call my wife?"
40309_ Reginald._"A sympathetic heart within your bosom burns; say, let it beat in unison with mine?"
40309_ Reginald._"Coming?
40309_ S._"April fool?
40309_ S._"Because I do n''t understand the feelings of a gentleman?
40309_ S._"Got a nose just like yours, eh?
40309_ S._"Not so beautiful as you?
40309_ S._"Salt it down till next year?
40309_ S._"Seen your wife?
40309_ S._"Such a pretty creature, eh?
40309_ S._"Well, what do you say?"
40309_ S._"What?"
40309_ S._"You''re a proud, sensitive nature, are you, Mr. Punch?
40309eh?
40309gentleman?
40309how de do, my dear?
40309how shall I begin?
40309inquired Nix;"a bureau, or decanter, for instance?"
40309oh, why goest thou?''
40309that''s the way, is it?
40309that''s the way, is it?"
40309then, turning to the audience, he asks earnestly:"Is n''t she a beauty?"
40309was it punch, or was it negus, or was it sherbet?
40309will you smile, sir?
40309you''ve got a pretty baby, Mr. Punch, have you?
39710And in what manner does this activity of intellect interfere to impede the course of justice?
39710And what is the effect which this strangely assumed power has produced on your administration of justice?
39710And what is the recompense which you would propose, sir?
39710And your jurymen, according to a phrase of contempt common among us, are in fact judge and jury both?
39710Are you not gênés,said he,"by my being here to listen to all that you and yours may be disposed to say of us and ours?...
39710Are you prepared to be very much enchanted by what you are going to hear?
39710Because we are virtuous, shall there be no more cakes and ale?
39710But I presume you do not yourself subscribe to the sentence pronounced by these young critics?
39710But the single ladies no longer young?
39710But what right have they to doubt it?... 39710 Can not Alexa go too, mamma?"
39710Can you not tell me something of her character?
39710Certainly I do, sir,I replied:"how can I interpret it otherwise?"
39710Combien de temps vous faut- il pour vous préparer? 39710 Did you dine much in private society?"
39710Did you ever see anything like the fashion which this man has obtained?
39710Do you consider their appearing here a proof that they are religious?
39710Does public opinion sanction this strange abuse of the functions of jurymen?
39710Have I not told you?... 39710 Have you never met her before?
39710Have you read the works of the_ young men_ of France?
39710I presume,said I,"that Madame de C*** is not the only person towards whom this remarkable species of tolerance is exercised?"
39710I will tell you of what you all remind me at this moment,said he, reseating himself:"Did you ever see or read''Le Médecin malgré Lui''?"
39710Il eut la bonté de me lire les sommaires des chapitres-- Lequel choisir, lequel préférer? 39710 In what respect?"
39710Invariably?
39710Is it possible that the escape of a bird can have brought all these people together?
39710Is it possible you can really think so, my dear sir?
39710Is it since your last revolution,said I,"that the punishment of death has been commuted for that of imprisonment and labour?"
39710Is that all?
39710Is this the use your French romancers make of letters?
39710Non?... 39710 Où?
39710Pensez- vous Qu''Arthur voulût revoir Mademoiselle de Sommery?
39710Prête à quoi? 39710 Que puis- je dire maintenant de ces Mémoires?"
39710Quel poison? 39710 Voulez vous, madame?
39710Vous savez qui je suis? 39710 Well?"
39710What did happen to him?
39710What did we fight for?
39710What is this, Betty?
39710Who is that very elegant- looking woman?
39710Will you do me the favour to let me copy this receipt?
39710You are astonished at seeing her here? 39710 You are in earnest?"
39710You have, I think, no national cuisine?
39710... did you not see that?...
39710... is not this too hard?"
39710... le grand opéra?
39710... might one not fancy oneself at a première représentation?"
39710... said he, pointing to the tombs within the enclosure:"was it not to make France and Frenchmen free?...
39710Alexa dear, what will you do without us?"
39710And do they call it freedom to be locked up in a prison... actually locked up?...
39710And is it possible that such a mind as hers can be insensible to the glory of enchanting the best and purest spirits in the world?...
39710And what has been the result of all this?
39710And what was the piece, can you guess, which produced this effect upon us?...
39710Au lieu de demander où elle est, ne devrait- on pas demander où n''est- elle pas?
39710But must I write to you in sober earnest about this comic tragedy?
39710But what can not zealous kindness effect?
39710But when did ever the surface of human affairs present an aspect so full of interest?
39710Can I better keep the promise I gave you yesterday than by writing you a letter of and concerning le grand opéra?
39710Can we fairly doubt that, in many cases where we consider ourselves as perfectly well- informed, we may be quite as much in the dark respecting them?
39710Can we wonder that feelings, and even principles, are found to bend before an influence so salutary and so strong?
39710Can we wonder that the Morgue is seldom untenanted?...
39710Can you wonder that I was delighted?
39710Do they not seem an echo to the sound she describes?
39710En avez- vous eu une, vous?...
39710Est- ce qu''il y a quelque mouvement?"
39710Est- ce que c''est coupable tout ce que je dis là de lui?
39710Et savez- vous ce que c''est que Venise?...
39710Gaillardet et***** have brought together?
39710Has the dialogue either dignity, spirit, or truth of nature to recommend it?
39710Have you got Bernardin de Saint Pierre, ma chère?"
39710His first remark after we were placed at table was,--"You do not, I think, use table- napkins in England;--do you not find them rather embarrassing?"
39710How can you expect such blind confidence from me?"
39710How can you get away?
39710How is it possible to find or invent any device that can save you from enduring to the end?
39710I confess that I envy them their beautiful giraffe; but what else have they which we can not equal?
39710I fancied that I misunderstood him, and repeated his words,--"With the jury?"
39710Is it not wonderful that the Emperor of Constantinople could consent to part with such precious treasures for the lucre of gain?
39710Is it possible to conceive affected sublimity and genuine nonsense carried farther than this?
39710Is it to the Convention, or to the Directory?--Is it to their mimicry of Roman Consulships?
39710Is there a single sentiment throughout the five acts with which an honest man can accord?
39710Is there anything in the world so perfectly French as this?
39710Is there even an approach to grace or beauty in the_ tableaux_?
39710Is there, in truth, any picture much less new than that of a gondola, with a guitar in it, gliding along the canals of Venice?
39710Is this possible?...
39710Is this tact?
39710Justice encore rendu, que ne t''a- t- on?
39710Le monde nous demande de belles peintures-- où en seraient les types?
39710Ma mère fut saisie sur- le- champ-- elle ne dit rien... a quoi bon?
39710Mais que voulez- vous?
39710My voice may well falter-- unknown is my name, But say, must my accents prove therefore in vain?
39710My words, I think, were,--"Pourriez- vous me dire, madame, ce que signifie tout ce monde?...
39710Ne le croyez pas; c''est la mienne qu''il vous faut...""Et vous, monsieur-- c''est un cheval qui vous manque, n''est- ce pas?
39710Non, n''est- ce pas?"
39710Or is it knowledge,--real, genuine, substantial information respecting all things?
39710Quand donc au corps qu''académique on nomme, Grimperas- tu de roc en roc, rare homme?"
39710Que veux- tu que je te dise?
39710Query-- Do not the Germans furnish something very like this juste milieu?
39710Savez- vous ce que c''est que d''avoir une mère?
39710Shall I have the amiability to depart?"
39710Shall I tell you how it has been done in Paris?
39710Slaves have got chains on... qu''est- ce que cela fait?...
39710Suis- je un hors- d''oeuvre, un inutile article, Une cinquième roue ajoutée au tricycle?"
39710Surely he would hardly be permitted to preach at Notre Dame, where the archbishop himself sits in judgment on him, were he otherwise than orthodox?"
39710Tell me-- is there not some truth in this idea?"
39710Then Rodolpho says to Catarina,"Par qui as- tu été sauvée?"
39710This is a strange statement, is it not?
39710Treason and rapine, of course, if time be ripe for it-- but_ en attendant_?
39710Trouves- tu cela bien arrangé ainsi?"
39710What can be said in defence of such an act?...
39710What is there which men, and most especially Frenchmen, will not suffer and endure to hear that note?
39710What may it be?...
39710What would Saintfoix say to the notion that Victor Hugo had"heaved the ground from beneath the feet of Corneille and Racine"?
39710What would become of all the parties for amusement which take place morning, noon, and night in Paris, if this race were extinct?
39710What would the LIBERALS of Europe have said of King Louis- Philippe, had he acted upon this republican principle?
39710Where is the retreat that can be secured from it?
39710Why trembled the tear- drop so oft in mine eye?
39710Why, what would you do for an old nurse?"
39710With cheeks burning from steam and vexation, can you plead a sudden faintness?
39710a- t- il raison, ce Bernardin?"
39710and if it be not, what follows?...
39710c''est la première idée qui vous vient?"
39710can a slave be worse than that?
39710can you love me?"
39710huchera- t- on ton nom?
39710or has his restless star to rise again?
39710or skill in the arrangement of the scenes?
39710or that I have thought the occurrence worth dwelling upon with some degree of lingering fondness?
39710or, in short, any one merit to recommend it-- except only its superlative defiance of common decency and common sense?
39710said I:"what is it that you suppose was out of the common way?"
39710she continued;--"forgive me... but is it really supposed that they pass their entire lives without any indiscretion at all?"
39710she repeated with a very speaking smile:"est- ce que madame est effrayée?...
39710she repeated, laughing;"then you really find nothing extraordinary in this proceeding-- nothing out of the common way?"
39710why was my bosom with sorrow oppress''d?
39710y a- t- il une autre bête comme la mienne?..."
43209But you have a camera; is n''t that enough? 43209 Have I the pleasure of addressing Madame Bazin?"
43209Indeed,I remarked, with every evidence of surprise,"and who got hold of the feather first?"
43209Then, of course, you must have known the noted village character Father Adam, who sold his donkey to this Scottish traveller?
43209These gentlemen travel for pleasure?
43209Well?
43209What shall I say of Clarisse?
43209--R. L. S.] If his descent was thus, how much more so ours on our whirling wheels?
43209Did he know Stevenson?
43209L. S.] Is that not a lovely monument to have?
43209Perhaps the Bazins knew how much I liked them?
43209Perhaps they also were healed of some slights by the thanks that I gave them in my manner?"
43209The bill?
43209Thus, under the representation of Christ falling while bearing His cross we read:"Who is it that causes Jesus to fall a second time?
43209We knew, of course, what Stevenson had said of her?
43209What is he to say that will not be an anti- climax?"
43209What will you?
43209What would you in such a case?
43209Would we care to see her photograph?
43209Yet he was ever an adventurer in search of beauty, and who shall say his quest was vain?
43209Yet not always the same, for where was M. Bonnaire?
43209is that life?"
43209or"Watter, richt on?"
42787The thynge_ yttes_(_ ytte is?_) moste bee_ yttes_ owne defense.
42787_ Mater ait natæ._--Where can the following lines, thus"Englished by Hakewill,"be found?
42787_--Can any of your contributors inform me of any bibliographical notice of Bishop Patrick''s_ Parable of a Pilgrim_? 42787 :When Good Friday falls in a Lady''s lap, To England will happen some mishap,"or to whom the prophecy( I hope a false one) may be attributed?
42787Alphonso Horne Tooke?
42787And why?
42787Are these fables wholly modern or not?
42787Boscardo James Boswell, Esq.?
42787But what is the meaning of_ libera_, in the first verse?
42787Can any of your correspondents explain them?
42787Can any of your readers kindly inform me in what the celebrity of this animal consists, that Mr. Jessie takes for granted is so well known?
42787Can no earlier authority be given for it than that of_ The World_ in 1753?
42787Did Cardinal Bentivoglio visit England in person, or how did he collect his information?
42787Does the writer of the MS. corrections occasionally give reasons in support of the changes proposed?
42787Has it ever been printed?
42787I have often heard the phrase familiarly in my youthful days; may I ask of you to inform me of its origin?
42787I think there were but one or two more: but who were they?
42787If in honour of an officer commanding the corps, was the name changed when that officer died or removed to another regiment; or what was the rule?
42787Is it derived from the Latin_ rogare_?
42787Is it nearly equivalent to_ inobservata_, and does it denote the absence of the prying curiosity of men?
42787Is it possible it may have been removed to England, and still to be found in one of the public collections?
42787Is the distinction one which obtains generally; and what is the earliest mention of curtseys in any writer on English affairs?
42787It may serve to probe the matter of_ age_ to ask, Who was"the old Spanish author"alluded to?
42787Malvolio Payne Knight or Townley?
42787May I ask likewise, if it is known who was the author of this not very refined or elegant composition?
42787Now, what is the rule for ascertaining the_ numbers_ of these, and other old regiments, in the British army at the present day?
42787Pontevallo Duke of Bridgewater?
42787Query, For fairies, read witches?)
42787Query, Was this collect to be repeated from December 25 to March 24?
42787Was it according to the length of time it had been embodied?
42787What is the explanation of this phenomenon?
42787What is the guide now, in identifying a_ named_ with a_ numbered_ regiment?
42787What was the origin of giving British regiments the_ name_ of a certain officer, instead of_ numbering_ them as at present?
42787What was the rule or principle laid down in giving any regiment a certain_ number_?
42787Who can doubt after that?
42787Will some of your bibliographical correspondents inform me if my surmise is correct?
42787_ Curtseys and Bows._--Why do ladies curtsey instead of bow?
42787_ Daughters of St. Mark._--How many were adopted as daughters of the Republic of St. Mark?
42787_ Egg- shells._"Always poke a hole through your eggshell before you throw it away."--Why?
42787_ Harvest Spider._"The_ harvest- man_ has got four things on its back,--the scythe, the rake, the sickle, and[ Query the fourth?]
42787_ How can a letter be addressed to this Correspondent?_ J. O.,_ who inquired respecting_ Johanna Southcote.
42787_ How can we forward a letter to him?_ MOUSEY.
42787_ Kentish Fire._--What is the origin of the term"Kentish fire,"signifying energetic applause?
42787_ Mediæval Parchment._--In what way did mediæval illuminators prepare their parchment?
42787_ Rosary._--What is the origin of the term_ rosary_?
42787_ When_ did the present mode of_ numbering_ regiments begin; and by whom was it introduced?
42787and if so, what has become of Hone''s MSS., and the large collection he made on the subject of parody?
42787changed into an[ Greek: epithesis cheiros]?
42787say which Campbell is the author, and when and where the hymn was first printed?
42702But,said Cunninghame,"do you approve of it?"
42702I think,said Father Stanway,"you are a musician, Mr Mellor?"
42702What on earth made him do that?
42702Who would he like to meet?
42702After all, even if she wants to be a nun, is n''t it her duty to stay in the world?
42702Are n''t you?
42702Besides which, he argued, what was the result of the action of the Greeks?
42702C. said:"Where?"
42702Catholicism, he said, had survived the test; would my philosophy?
42702Copenhagen?
42702Could the marriage be annulled?
42702Could you bring it with you?
42702Did the letter which she left for Housman play a part in the tragedy?
42702Do n''t you yourself think,"he said,"that_ parti- pris_ is rather a mild term for such a tremendous decision, such a_ venture_?
42702Do you really think one becomes a Catholic to drift like a sponge on a sea of indecision, or to be like an Æolian harp?
42702Do you remember a large picture of a lady in white playing the piano?
42702Edmund said:"How could you be loyal to the State when you were under the authority of an Italian Bishop?"
42702Had I ever read his prose?
42702Have you ever heard of her?
42702He asked me:"Quest qu''on lit en Angleterre maintenant avant de se coucher?"
42702He keeps on saying that we ought to go to Rome, but I do n''t suppose that would be of the slightest use either, would it?
42702He plays for nothing here, an old friend; you know him?
42702He said:"What is it that you want to know?"
42702His hostess said to him, in the course of conversation:"You are not a Catholic, are you?"
42702How can he have known that I know her?
42702How can she have married that man?
42702How long must one stay exactly?"
42702How much leave will Jack get?
42702I feel he knows something that we do n''t know, but what?
42702I said my name was"Mellor"; he said:"Lord or Mister?"
42702I said, perhaps a little impatiently:"Then why does n''t she?"
42702I said:"You would n''t forbid it?"
42702I suppose this is right?
42702If you are passing that way could you ask about it?
42702Is n''t it a more difficult duty?
42702Perhaps you will let me come and stay with you in the summer?
42702She altered the text of the last line, and instead of singing"Qu''as tu fait de ta jeunesse?"
42702She said:"Oh yes,"and paused a moment and then said:"She''s a charming woman, is n''t she?"
42702Uncle Arthur said:"What, Anstruther?
42702Uncle Arthur said:"What, Edmund?
42702Upon which she said:"Do you think he will?"
42702What are we to do?
42702What does it all mean?
42702What for?
42702What is one''s duty to one''s neighbour?
42702What was the reason?
42702Who was Miss Housman to judge?
42702Why did she go to London?
42702Why did she stay at Garland''s Hotel?
42702Would I come?
42702Would the Church forbid it?
42702Would the Church then allow her to marry Y., and allow her to go back to the world, knowing she would in all probability marry Y.?"
42702Would your friend think_ parti- pris_ the right expression to use of a man who nailed his colours to the mast during a sea- battle?
42702You know her?
42702_ P.S._.--Lady Jarvis''explanation of the letter does not quite satisfy, but what_ did_ happen?
42702she rendered it--"Qu''as tu fait dans ta jeunesse?
37016Certainly he would do wrong,says Antipater;"is it not, in fact, leading a man into error knowingly?"
37016Do we not see,he says,"that the external worship follows necessarily the internal worship of love?
37016How much in adversity do we not wish for a friend, especially an effective friend, one finding in his own resources abundant means for helping us? 37016 Now, is prayer sufficient?
37016To this, my wife replied:''In what can I assist thee? 37016 What is a benefaction?"
37016What is after all the wrong the ingrate does you? 37016 Which, according to you, is the most culpable, he who feels no gratitude for a kindness, or he who does not even keep it in mind?...
37016Who would,says Bossuet,"dare think of other excesses which reveal themselves in a still more dangerous manner?
37016Will the setting one''s foot,says J. J. Rousseau,"on a piece of common ground be sufficient to declare one''s self at once the master of it?
37016_ Socrates_: One should then commit no injustice whatsoever?
37016''And do you not tell them,''said Socrates,''the fable of the dog?
37016''Then,''added Socrates,''because they are free and related to you, do you think that they ought to do nothing else but eat and sleep?
37016''What do you mean, sir?
37016--"And did you observe what is written somewhere on the temple- wall: Know Thyself?"
37016--"Think you that to know one''s self it is enough to know one''s own name?
37016--"When have I said to thee that I was immortal?"
37016--''Well; but what is your motive?
37016--''What do you mean, sir?
37016--Good Socrates, what sayest thou?
37016= The absence of a profession-- Leisure.=--Is it a duty to have a profession?
37016And again, wherein is the public functionary superior to this or that merchant, this or that big farmer, this or that great builder or contractor?
37016And are there none at Olympia?
37016And can the honor of a sensible man be at the mercy of the first ruffian he meets?
37016And how could they know each other if they did not talk to each other?
37016And if this be so, thinkest thou thy rights equal to ours; and that thou art permitted to make us suffer for what we make thee suffer?
37016And must they not learn the use of arms in order to be efficient on the day when the country shall need them?
37016And shouldst thou refuse to attend thy functions as man?
37016And think you that one alone is enough to condemn a man to death?
37016And why should I hesitate to look at any of my faults when I can say to myself: Take care not to do so again: for to- day I forgive thee?
37016And, finally, is it really true that we have only duties towards those that have duties towards us?
37016Are the two contracting parties here I and myself?
37016Are there duties toward God?
37016Are these always in an exact proportion to merit?
37016Are these suicides?
37016Are we not permitted, then, to change the nature of any thing because all that is, is as he wished it?
37016Are you not crowded?
37016Are you not heated?
37016Are you not wet through, when it happens to rain?
37016Are you not without good conveniences for bathing?
37016As for those who do not reach the spot, think you they will escape the consequences of the battle?
37016Beyond a certain limit, will not the interest become what we call_ usury_?
37016But are there, indeed, in man naturally malevolent inclinations?
37016But by what right should work be prohibited to woman more than to man?
37016But for a falsehood to be harmless, does it follow that it is not bad?
37016But how, in what manner, and to what degree must we be modest?
37016But if it be true, why should we not say so?
37016But if one were sure not to become cruel towards men, would it follow therefrom that it is permitted to be so towards animals?
37016But in case of loss or deterioration of the thing loaned, resulting from the use made of it, on whom is to fall the loss?
37016But what is to be understood by the terms_ recompense_ and_ punishment_?
37016But what is to determine the extent of this territory?
37016But what more vague than such terms?
37016But what remedy?
37016But when in a society all legal inequalities have been suppressed, does it necessarily follow that an absolute equality will be the final result?
37016But who does not know that to make a good use of a fortune is more profitable to society than dissipation?
37016But who in these days troubles himself about aristocratic names?
37016But who will defend the country in case of attack if it be not its young and robust men?
37016But why could we not also suppose a third duty, commanding us to observe the former, and so_ ad infinitum_?
37016But, it may be asked, suppose the parents command their children to do an immoral thing?
37016But, it may be asked, why all these inequalities?
37016But, strictly speaking, can a being endowed with sensibility be called a thing?
37016CLEANTE: Denier eighteen?
37016CLEANTE: Is there anything more?
37016Can he who makes himself a worm complain if he be crushed?
37016Can it, for example, go so far as the taking of life even?
37016Can sentiment become a duty?
37016Canius wondered:"What means this, Pythius?
37016Certainly, but why might not the minority be also mistaken?
37016Did Cæsar send a challenge to Cato, or Pompey to Cæsar?
37016Diogenes, on the contrary, replies:"Were you obliged to buy?
37016Do the insults of a drunkard prove that one deserves them?
37016Do you not have uproar and noise, and other disagreeable circumstances?
37016Does he not give the same signs of impressions received?
37016Does he not then take the place of him who knows and might save the patient?
37016Does it follow, however, that there can never be any injustice in sale or purchase?
37016Does one no longer belong to God when dead?
37016Does this solitary expression of my faith, my love, my ignorance, suffice the wants of my heart and my duties toward God?
37016Dost thou not, in the first place, owe us thy life?
37016Duty of silence: in what cases?
37016Even though you had not taught us any of these things, should we be less numerous, less flourishing, more depraved?"
37016For how can malefactors be prosecuted without employing force?
37016For when does rest, leisure, recreation give us most pleasure?
37016Free in the innermost of my thought, shall I be confined to a silent worship?
37016Has he not the same senses, the same nervous system?
37016Hast thou ceased to exist?
37016Have you not received a manly spirit?
37016Have you not received greatness of soul?
37016Have you not received patience?
37016He has, it is true, the resource of doing nothing; but might not this also be manslaughter?
37016How are we to know them?
37016How can I vote?
37016How can a lawyer defend as innocent one who is guilty?
37016How can any one attend the sick if he knows nothing of the human body; if he is ignorant of the symptoms of a disease?
37016How can we educate ourselves without eating?
37016How can we improve the heart and soul when want impels us to all sorts of temptations?
37016How could a society as complicated as ours dare to trust its security to so hazardous an experiment?
37016How could justice be rendered, instruction be given, the territory be defended, the roads kept up, without money?
37016How could men get to love each other if they did not know each other?
37016How could this philosopher be sure that_ these things_ did not feel?
37016How could you determine the amount of property requisite to belong to either of these categories-- the rich or the poor?
37016How do we call such a state?
37016How do we extend this primitive right over things which are outside of ourselves?
37016How do we go beyond that?
37016How far can this right of force go?
37016How is this to be remedied?
37016How many men are there who, in possession of a sum of one hundred francs, would not rather spend it than place it on interest?
37016How much more difficult when it comes to risking a popularity already acquired?
37016How often does it not, on the contrary, happen that the idleness of his youth determines the whole course of the man''s life?
37016How shall we conciliate, however, the just severity which vice deserves, with the spirit of kindness which charity and brotherly love demand of us?
37016How shall we proceed to substitute a good habit for a bad one?
37016I have certainly a right to the place my own body would occupy, but no further: for where would my right then stop?
37016I have deceived thee, oh thou rash one?
37016If I am willing to have recourse to law in a case of robbery, why should I not appeal to this same law when my honor is attacked?
37016If the return of the funds appears more or less doubtful, why should he not have the right to protect himself?"
37016If there is no being to love me and my fellow- men, why should I be held to love them?
37016If this is so, should we wish to do to others as we wish in similar circumstances, namely, in the gratification of passions, to be done by?
37016If thou owest us thy birth and education, canst thou deny that thou art our child and servant?
37016If we consider the will of God, what evil is there for us to combat, that he has not himself sent us?
37016If, for instance, we have done wrong, do we generally wish to be corrected and punished?
37016In one word, and to conclude, if God were an illusion, why could not virtue be an illusion also?
37016In short, man belongs to himself: is not that the first of ownerships, and the basis of all the others?
37016In thus busying themselves with the welfare of the people, could these holy men find leisure to engage in agriculture?"
37016In what hast thou become better?
37016In which condition will men be more temperate, living in idleness or attending to useful employments?
37016In which condition will they be more honest, if they work, or if they sit in idleness meditating how to procure necessaries?''
37016Instead of allowing itself to be overcome by hunger, by cold, by all sorts of ill- treatments, does it not overcome them?
37016Inward lying.--Can one lie to himself?
37016Is it necessary, in order that the duty of work be truly accomplished, that it be both painful and useless?
37016Is it not because others have been there before us that we have been enabled to grow up peacefully and happy to the age of manhood?
37016Is it not clear that one can be under no obligation towards him of whom one has a right to demand everything?
37016Is it not just that we should take their place and in our turn watch over the country?
37016Is it not that each sees above him a position he covets, and which he seeks to secure?
37016Is it the same with the destruction of animals intended for our nourishment?
37016Is it true again that an animal has no kind of rights?
37016Is it true, moreover, that an animal has no intelligence, no will-- that consequently it has not any vestige of personality?
37016Is not nature herself adorned?
37016Is not the animal organized in the same manner as man?
37016Is not the being born of the same parents, the having been brought up together, very strong reasons to love one another?
37016Is not this generally what we all wish, when the voice of duty is mute and does not silence our passionate feelings?
37016Is one obliged to keep his promise when the fulfillment of it is injurious to those to whom it was made?
37016Is our conscience satisfied if we can assure ourselves that we have not contributed to his sufferings?
37016Is the growing crop my property?
37016Is the respect I have for myself founded on one of those arbitrary agreements which cease to be when the two parties freely renounce it?
37016Is there nothing more needed?
37016Is this destruction innocent, or must we, as did the Pythagoreans or Brahmins of old( for superstitious reasons, however), interdict all animal food?
37016Is this duty the only one?
37016Is thy soul annihilated?
37016It will, perhaps, be said that_ sentiments_ can not be erected into_ duties_: for how can I force myself to feel what I do not feel?
37016May that be considered a cause of irresponsibility?
37016May we not say the same of the one Theseus claimed of Neptune?
37016Must we count among the number of voluntary mutilations, the religious mortifications or macerations by which the devout manifest their piety?
37016Now, if thou hadst in thy hands all possible earthly happiness, wouldst thou keep it wholly to thyself, or share it with thy fellow- beings?
37016Now, what are the titles to this superior authority?
37016Now, what is_ honesty_?
37016Now, who will furnish the rule for sacrifice, the formula for self- renunciation?
37016Of prudence or practical wisdom.--Can it be called a virtue?
37016On the contrary, do we not rather wish to be allowed to enjoy it, and have the free range of our vices?
37016On the professions?
37016On those who exercise public functions and those who do not?
37016On whom is it incumbent to do away with such inequalities?
37016Or do you suppose your mother meditates evil toward you?"
37016Ought we not, whether we dig, or plough, or eat, to sing this hymn to God?
37016Our duties in regard to animals, are they, however, of a kind to make us doubt our right to destroy or reduce them to servitude?
37016Pleasure and the good.=--Morality being, as we have said, the science of the_ good_, the first question that presents itself is: What is_ good_?
37016Property.=--What is property?
37016Rights and duties of the creditor.--Money interest.--Usury.=--And first, is it a duty to loan to any that ask you?
37016Say, for example, homicide: is it not evident that the murder of a benefactor is the most abominable of all?
37016Shall I not be allowed to express what I think?
37016Shall I not use my powers to that purpose for which I received them; but lament and groan at every casualty?
37016Shall we put the one kind and the other on the same level?
37016Shall we sacrifice life- long pleasures to pleasures that last but an hour?
37016Shall we still say that each of these groups forms a class?
37016Shall we take material work-- work of hand, as a class distinction among men?
37016Shall we, in order to avoid cupidity and avarice, run into dissipation and prodigality?
37016Shall you say that the rich man is he who has any capital, and the poor, he who has not any?
37016Should we not rather do to them what we should not like them do to us, that is, punish and correct them?
37016Shouldst thou not follow the biddings of nature?
37016Suicide, it is said again, is rebellion against Providence.--But how?
37016Suppose, by any means, it should ever come into your head to kill me; must you keep to such a determination?''
37016Suppose, then, these public functionaries should seek the death of him who has committed all these crimes, how would they proceed?
37016The child, we have said, needs protection for a long time: does the mother''s protection suffice?
37016The duel.=--Does the duel come under the head of legitimate self- defense?
37016The rights of man.=--What are the principal rights of man?
37016The second question is: How long does the duty of obedience last?
37016There remains then to know what is to be done in cases of conflict between our duties, and if moral law does not in certain cases relent?
37016Therefore must the family have a protector; and who should be the natural protector of the child, if not the father?
37016This is Socrates''own interpretation of it in his conversations with his disciples:"Tell me, Euthydemus, have you ever gone to Delphi?"
37016This is a remarkably striking argument:[19] Did ever the valiant men of antiquity think of avenging their personal insults by single combats?
37016This picture being an image of both lives, canst thou say that that of the libertine is happier than that of the temperate man?"
37016This principle of the right of the majorities has often been questioned: for, it is said, why might not the majority be mistaken?
37016Thus did Sextius; when his daily work was done, he questioned his soul: Of what defect hast thou cured thyself to- day?
37016To whom belongs this_ rôle_ of educator, protector, sustainer?
37016Upon what, then, shall we base class differences?
37016Was I born to remain warmly in bed under my cover?--But it is so pleasant.--Wert thou born for pleasure, then?
37016Was it not for action, for work?
37016Was it not under our auspices that thy father took to himself the companion that gave thee birth?
37016We hear often the term_ laboring classes_--men, namely, who live by work of hand; but are not those who work with their brains, workers also?
37016Well, and have you not received faculties by which you may support every event?
37016Were it not an actual lie?
37016What am I able to do?
37016What are the respective duties of these two classes?
37016What cause of complaint hast thou against us that thou shouldst try to destroy us?
37016What do you call external worship if this be not it?
37016What else then dost thou do?"
37016What hold can the vain opinion of others have upon true honor, the roots of which are in the depths of the heart?
37016What is avarice?
37016What is it marks in society the rich and the poor?
37016What is its origin and principle?
37016What is morality?
37016What is now the principle of this authority?
37016What is prodigality?
37016What is the law which is to regulate the relations between words and thoughts?
37016What moral and social reasons justify it, rendering its maintenance both sacred and necessary?
37016What more different than a physician, a man of letters, a soldier, a merchant?
37016What more just, also, than to love perfect goodness and the source of all love?
37016What now are the principal causes of these inequalities, which I call individual inequalities?
37016What objections has it raised?
37016What passion hast thou combated?
37016What shall I say of his moral education and intellectual development?
37016What shall disconcert or trouble or appear grievous to me?
37016What shall we say of Agamemnon?
37016What signifies to me anything that happens, while my soul is above it?
37016What use would it be to men to be all equal if they were all miserable?
37016What will be the natural result?
37016What would be more ridiculous than a seller who would make known the defects of the thing he puts up for sale?
37016What would be the result if the human race were deprived of half its means of subsistence?
37016What, then, are the ties to determine the existence of a country?
37016When we are yielding to a passion, do we wish to be repressed in it, have it repelled?
37016Where does barren enjoyment begin?
37016Where does legitimate need end?
37016Where does poverty stop?
37016Where would it be without me?
37016Wherein is the man who works mentally more idle than he who works with his hands?
37016Which of us has the better part, you or I?
37016Who can deny it?...
37016Who has told thee so?
37016Who is to decide that it shall go so far and no farther?
37016Who would reproach a man for being born blind, or because he became so in consequence of sickness or a blow?
37016Who, then, will assure us that it is different with us, and that we are the only ones free from this illusion?
37016Who, without the hope of gaining paradise, would think of God?
37016Why are some happy and others unhappy?
37016Why are the idle and prodigal sometimes rich?
37016Why are the poor overwhelmed by both work and poverty?
37016Why does every one work?
37016Why is there any inequality at all?
37016Why not look at the thing from the lender''s standpoint?
37016Why sayest thou: Virtue is nothing when thou art now about entering into the enjoyment of thine?
37016Why should I take so much trouble to so little purpose?
37016Why should it be allowable to get cured of the gout and not of life?
37016Why should not the cry of the animal express pain as does the cry of a child?
37016Why some rich, fortunate, powerful, intelligent, virtuous even?
37016Why the rich and the poor?
37016Why, for instance, is there in general very little merit in respecting other people''s property and abstaining from theft?
37016Why, on the other hand, is there great merit in sacrificing one''s life to the happiness of others?
37016Why, supposing this inequality must exist, has it no connection with merit or the work of the individual?
37016Why?
37016Will you never perceive what you are, or for what you were born, or for what purpose you are admitted to behold this spectacle?
37016Would it not also occur to thee to ask thyself whether thou art thyself worthy of happiness?
37016Would it not be to say at the same time give and not give, feed and not feed, share and not share?"
37016Would it really be doing good to these men to grant them the object of their desires, what may satisfy their passions?
37016Would they plunge the dagger in his breast at once?
37016Yet, is it always doing good to a person to procure him pleasure?
37016[ 121] In fact, what is temperance, if it is not a certain kind of courage before the pleasures of the senses?
37016[ 138] And shall I speak of Iris, loved and praised by all?
37016[ 173]_ Teacher._--What is thy greatest and even thy only wish on earth?
37016[ 174]_ Teacher._--Is it not always to succeed in everything according to thy wishes and will?
37016[ 82]"Another question presents itself now: How far, in its relation to its parents, should the child''s absolute obedience go?
37016_ Pretended Exceptions._--The duty of obedience to the laws must then be admitted as a principle; but is this duty absolute?
37016_ Teacher._--What do we call this necessity of acting conformably to the law of reason?
37016and does not this single condition, without equivalent, without exchange, carry with it the nullity of the act?
37016and if inequality must exist, why is it not in proportion to inequality of merit and individual work?
37016and is it always doing him harm, to cause him pain?
37016is it not susceptible of some exceptions?
37016of the wife, if not the husband?
37016said father Malebranche, coolly,"do you not know that these things do not feel?"
37016that the slander of a benefactor is the most criminal of slanders?
37016that to rob a benefactor is the most horrible of robberies?
37016the lies of a slanderer can destroy real virtues?
37016they would proceed to say,"than violate the treaty that binds thee to us, and trample under foot thy agreement?...
37016what economy, if not courage before the temptations of fortune?
37016what justice and benevolence, if not the courage to sacrifice self- interest to the interest of others?
37016what veracity, if not the courage to tell the truth under all circumstances?
37016who will deliver me from the body of this death?
39340''Course he did; why should n''t he? 39340 ''Tain''t Christmas, what''s the horrid row?
39340A little bit of chicken and bread- sauce done with broiled bacon-- at least I think so, dear-- why do you ask?
39340An''nen I says,''How can I be dood? 39340 And how do you come to have them all?"
39340And what did you buy with your half- crown?
39340And what do they yub on them when they do n''t fight bravely?
39340And what is his name?
39340And who may the young gentleman be?
39340And who may you be, little boy?
39340And why not?
39340And why?
39340And you know I remembered last night when I was lying awake that Catherine would have done this----"What Catherine?
39340Anybody might have seen you, and then what would they think?
39340Are you afraid?
39340Are you catching cold with the draught, Hugh John?
39340Are you not coming?
39340But did you ever hear such rot?
39340But look here, how are we to get back Donald unless we split? 39340 But suppose, father, that there was some one always there to see that they did behave, would you mind?"
39340But tell me, Toady Lion,she went on,"does Hugh John like going to church, and being washed, and things?"
39340But you won''t-- will you, dear Toady Lion?
39340But,said Prissy,"perhaps you forgot that a soft answer turneth away wrath?"
39340By the way, what is your name? 39340 Can I have the biggest and nicerest saucer of the scrapings of the preserving- pan to- night?"
39340Could n''t you say it now?
39340Course I would,agreed his officer,"do n''t you know that''s what generals are for?"
39340Course she does,sneered Napoleon;"think she''s out screeching like that for fun?
39340Did I not tell you not to go to the orchard?
39340Did n''t the fool ride a horse?
39340Did you call names at my mother?
39340Did you strike this boy to- day in front of his mother''s gate?
39340Did''oo find the funny fing behind the stable, Hugh John?
39340Do field- marshals_ all_ smell like that?
39340Do get me some mustard, Janet,he said, swinging his wet legs;"and where on earth have you put the pickles?"
39340Do n''t you know that''s the stuff they rub on the wounded when they have fought bravely? 39340 Do n''t you think the town''s people would if you gave them the sixpences all for themselves?"
39340Do n''t you think we should have the other children here?
39340Do n''t''oo know? 39340 Do you know me?"
39340Do you remember what you once made me say here, Cissy?
39340Do you take sugar?
39340Does Prissy have any of-- the missionary money?
39340Eh, what?
39340Father--she went a little nearer to him and stroked the cuff of his coat- sleeve--"does the land beyond the bridge belong to you?"
39340Father,she said at last,"you do n''t really want to keep people out of the castle altogether, do you?"
39340Get away out of my field, little boy-- where are you going? 39340 Go''way, Lepronia Lovell,"growled Billy;"do n''t you see that this is the young lady that cured my dog?"
39340Have you got a match- box?
39340Heavens and earth, Master Hugh-- what be you doing here? 39340 Hello,"cried Hugh John jovially,"at it already?"
39340How could you tell such a whopper? 39340 How different?"
39340I declare,she cried,"can you not give the poor little boy what he wants?
39340I say, Ashwell Major,he said,"about that Good Conduct Prize-- who are you going to vote for?"
39340Is n''t there something somewhere about helping the fatherless and the widow?
39340Is which? 39340 Jane,"he said to Mrs. Carter,"what does Cissy like most of all for supper?"
39340Just a little one to be going on with?
39340Just once?
39340Little girl,he said very gravely,"who has been putting all this into your head?
39340My wee man,she said,"what have they done to you?"
39340No, Prissy,he said wonderingly,"but what do you know about such things?"
39340No,said Toady Lion sadly;"do n''t you know?
39340Now speak up, Soulis,said General Smith;"I ask you would it be dasht- mean?"
39340Now, what''s all this?
39340One lump or two?
39340Say, chaps, did you hear her? 39340 So am I,"retorted Napoleon Smith sternly;"if I was n''t, do you think I would listen at all to your beastly old poetry?
39340Sodjers-- where?--what?
39340Sulky, hey?
39340Thank you,he said;"are you sure that the children are out?"
39340Then why does n''t_ it_ say so?
39340Then,answered Prissy,"would n''t it be all the nicer of you if you were to stop first?"
39340They ca n''t be at the castle all the time,said Billy;"why not let my mates and me go in before they get there?
39340This little boy wants to go on the island to find his brother,said the clergyman;"I suppose I may pass through your field with him?"
39340WILL YE SAY NOW THAT THE CASTLE IS YOUR FATHER''S?
39340Well, billies,he cried jovially,"what do you think?
39340Well, little girl, what is it? 39340 Well, sir, and what is this I hear?"
39340Well, what do you want?
39340Well, what is it? 39340 Well, what is the meaning of this?"
39340Well,said Cissy genially,"and what did you buy?"
39340Well?
39340Well?
39340What are n''t ready?
39340What are you going to do?
39340What did I tell you?
39340What did I understand you to say, little boy?
39340What in the world does he mean?
39340What is his other name?
39340What is it?
39340What is the matter with that boy? 39340 What now?"
39340What other?
39340What were you doing with my cannon?
39340What''s all this, I say-- you?
39340What''s that?
39340What''s this-- what''s this?
39340What''s''decision of character''when he''s at home?
39340When they what?
39340Where did you get all those nice new cannons? 39340 Who asked you to come here anyway to meddle with us?
39340Who found him?
39340Who''s afraid? 39340 Who''s touching your father?"
39340Who''s up there?
39340Who? 39340 Why did you tell the beak''s daughter your name, Bill, you blooming Johnny?"
39340Why do you want to go to the castle island?
39340Why is''oo so moppy?
39340Why, Hugh John,she cried,"have you really come?
39340Why, the same as his father of course, lass-- what else?
39340Wif my half- a- crown? 39340 Will_ you_ say''I love you, Cissy''?"
39340Yes, father; were you calling me, father?
39340You do n''t remember that either, I suppose?
39340You know that I did n''t come to spy or find out anything, do n''t you?
39340A rumble of wheels, a shout from the front door--"Hugh John-- wherever can that boy have got to?"
39340After all what save valour was worth living for?
39340After all, what did it matter about girls?
39340And he say,''What you doing there, little boy?
39340Are you sure there is no mistake?"
39340Besides, there are some dee- licious fruits which I have brought you; and if you will let me come in, I will make you some lovely tea?"
39340Besides, who''s to wash him first off, and him in a temper like that?"
39340But did General Napoleon stop to go to the schoolroom for clean ones?
39340But observing no gleam of fellow- feeling in his quondam comrade''s eyes, he added somewhat lamely,"I mean how do you do, Miss-- Miss Carter?"
39340But what use did they make of these god- like gifts?
39340By hokey, wo n''t I take this out of him with a wicket?
39340Could n''t he say grace?
39340Could there indeed be such dainties in the world?
39340Could this thing be?
39340Could''oo be dood wif all that sand in''oo trowsies?''
39340Did Sambo not wear a red coat?
39340Did n''t he remember the beginning?
39340Did they play with"real- real trains,"drawn by locomotives of shining brass?
39340Did ye think I was doon at Edam Cross?
39340Did you ever meet them at the tuck- shop down in the town buying fourteen cheese- cakes for a shilling, as any sensible person would?
39340Did you find it, or did some one give it to you?"
39340Did you think it was Blythe?"
39340Did''oo ever get sand in''oo trowsies, Cissy?"
39340Do n''t you see he is bashful before so many people?"
39340Do you hear-- you?"
39340Do you hear?"
39340Do you like to go to church?''
39340Do you take sugar in your tea?"
39340Does''oo fink so, Cissy?"
39340Drowned in the Edam Water-- killed by a chance blow in the great battle-- or simply hiding from fear of punishment and afraid to venture home?
39340For how could a Justice of the Peace and a future Member of Parliament demean himself to wink?
39340Had Mike or Peter?
39340Had Sammy Carter?
39340Has anybody told you to come to me about this?"
39340He owns the town, does he?
39340How do we know that you are n''t a spy?"
39340How much money had you, did you say?"
39340How were they to reach it?
39340Hugh John-- him?"
39340If that were Toady Lion''s attitude, how would it be with the enthusiastic Cissy Carter?
39340Is n''t it a beauty?
39340It would make him sick, Hugh John thought; but after all, what was a fellow to do?
39340May I sometimes, father?"
39340O- HO, JANE HOUSEMAID, WILL YOU TELL MY FATHER THE NEXT TIME I TAKE YOUR DUST SCOOP?"]
39340O- ho, Jane Housemaid, will you tell my father the next time I take your dust scoop out to the sand- hole to help dig trenches?
39340Of course he knew all about that, but would they join?
39340Oh, our father is the owner of this property, is he?
39340Oh, stone- broke,"laughed Cissy Carter, sitting down beside Toady Lion;"who taught you to say that word?"
39340Oh, the dear, dear lamb that he is; and will thae auld e''en never mair rest on his bonnie face?
39340Priscilla beamed gratefully upon her critic, and proceeded--"_ He rides him forth across the sand_----""Who rides whom?"
39340She turned away, calling over her shoulder to Cissy,"Can I tell your fortune, pretty lady?"
39340Smith?"
39340Smith?"
39340So no one contradicted him, and, indeed, who had a better right to know?
39340That was n''t fair, was it?"
39340There was yet another who rode in a mail- cart, and puckered up his face upon being addressed in a strange foreign language, as"Was- it- then?
39340There-- will that satisfy you?"
39340Thought you hurt, did n''t you?
39340Want to get knocked endways?"
39340Was Sambo not black?
39340Was n''t it nice of him?"
39340Were they not as gods, knowing good and evil?
39340Were they not rather on the side of the Smoutchies?
39340What are you doing there?"
39340What business have you in our castle?
39340What can I do for you?"
39340What did grown- ups know anyway?
39340What do ye want, callant, that ye deafen my auld lugs like that?
39340What does he want with that one too?"
39340What is it?
39340What is the matter, Arthur George?"
39340What then of Toady Lion?
39340What''s the matter, Grip?
39340What, then, could be clearer?
39340Whatever will I say to his faither when he comes hame?
39340Whatever will master say?"
39340When the dust finally cleared away, Peter was found sitting astride of Prince Michael, and shouting,"Are you the general- major, or am I?"
39340Where could he be?
39340Where ha''e ye been, and what ha''e ye done to these twa bairns?
39340Who else could have done that thing?
39340Who invited you into our parks?
39340Who is the youngest?"
39340Whom shall I ask for if you are not about to- morrow?"
39340Why ca n''t we all be nice together?
39340Why should not they against the son of that Smith and his allies?
39340Why should these glorious creations deign to notice him-- shining blades, shouldered arms, flashing bayonets, white pipe- clayed belts?
39340Why then plunder them now?
39340Will you allow me to conduct you across the policies by the shorter way?
39340Will''oo forgive me?"
39340Would it not be all right to split just to get Donald back?"
39340Would they never end?
39340You can have my ivory Prayer- book----""For keeps?"
39340[ Illustration:"''WASN''T IT SPLENDID?''"]
39340cried Prissy,"how could you?
39340ejaculated Hugh John, doubling his fist;"did you ever hear such rot?
39340he cried,"what''oo fink?
39340he demanded in his quick way--"Cissy and your son been fighting?"
39340roared his officer;"do n''t you know enough to salute when you speak to me?
39340said his chief;"who asked for your oar?
39340the herald angels sing, Glory to the new- born King, Peace on earth and mercy mild, God and sinners reconciled._""What is''weconciled''?"
39340what have you been up to-- stealing apples, eh?
39340||||_ Subject._--"Is the Pen mightier than the Sword?"
42621Why, MOSES, did thy treach''rous art Lead us from Egypt''s fertile clime, Amid these pathless wilds To sink, wan Famine''s prey? 42621 And does my friend again demand the strain, Still seek to list the sorrow- soothing lay? 42621 And need I court the goddess when I move The warbling lute to sound the soul of love? 42621 And what, my friend, is life? 42621 Does he not after fairy shadows run? 42621 Does man exist to bless himself alone? 42621 Follows he not some wild illusive dream, Like children who would catch the radiant sun, Grasp at its image in the glittering stream? 42621 Forgot the fatal hour when thousands fell; And Heaven''s avenging arm Hurl''d down the shafts of death? 42621 Forgot the heavenly food That fell like evening dew, For Israel''s chosen race? 42621 Have only zephyrs fill''d my swelling sails, As smooth the gentle vessel glides along? 42621 Have we no duties of a social kind? 42621 Have ye forgot the fires That led your nightly march? 42621 Have ye forgot the hour When murmuring Anger buzz''d Along the busy tents? 42621 Have ye forgot the hour When, bold in secrecy, Sedition''s impious feet Stole on from tent to tent? 42621 How bounds the soul at freedom''s sacred call? 42621 How can this wretch prefer the prayer to heaven? 42621 How heav''d thine artful breast the deep- drawn sigh? 42621 How shrinks from slavery''s heart- appalling train? 42621 How spoke thy looks? 42621 How then shall age its wonted succour find; The blind a leader, and the poor a friend? 42621 How, self- condemn''d, expect to be forgiven? 42621 Is SITTIM''s field forgot? 42621 Is it this? 42621 Is self- regard creation''s noblest end? 42621 Mark''st thou the reed that on its surface floats? 42621 Mark''st thou yon streamlet in its onward course? 42621 O, cold of heart, shall pride assail thy shade, Whom all Romance could fancy nature made? 42621 On yon wild waste of ruin thron''d, what form Beats her swoln breast, and tears her unkempt hair? 42621 Or chills pale terror now his death- like face? 42621 Or sunk he, when the noiseless night was near, As calmly on his couch of down to sleep? 42621 Or will thy hope expect the coming day, When bright the sun may shine with unremitted ray? 42621 Rose he, like you, at morn devoid of fear, His anxious vigils o''er his gold to keep? 42621 Say, faulters now your chieftain''s breath? 42621 Say, what is virtue, sages? 42621 Shall partial friendship turn the favouring eye, No fault behold, but every charm descry; And shall the thankless bard his honour''d strain deny? 42621 Soothe sad reality With visionary bliss? 42621 Still would he hear the woe- worn heart complain, When melancholy loads the lingering day? 42621 To quit the public weal, and guard our own: Is life''s sole object individual bliss? 42621 What boots thy wealth above the world''s controul, If riches doom their churlish lord a slave? 42621 What wildly- beauteous form, High on the summit of yon bicrown''d hill, Lovely in horror, takes her dauntless stand? 42621 When frighted ocean stopt his waves, And rushing seas stood still? 42621 Where, where such virtues can we see, Or where such valour, SIDNEY, but in thee? 42621 Why bid mine eyes two stars of beauty move? 42621 Why bursts the big tear from my guilty eye? 42621 Why form the melting soul too apt for love? 42621 Why glare her full- fix''d eyes in stern despair? 42621 Why heap with charms to load me with disgrace? 42621 Why heaves my love- lorn breast the impious sigh? 42621 Why seems the spectre thus to court the storm? 42621 Why wilt thou, Memory, still recall to view Each long- past joy, each long- lost friend anew? 42621 Why, nature, didst thou give this fatal face? 42621 _ TO HAPPINESS._ Say, lovely fugitive, where dost thou dwell? 42621 _ TO REFLECTION._ Hence, busy torturer, wherefore should mine eye Revert again to many a sorrow past? 42621 have your thankless hearts Forgot the bounteous gifts of Heaven? 42621 how glow''d thine ardent eye? 42621 name that friend to thee? 42621 said he,''here late did GRATIO dwell, Hast thou not heard of good old GRATIO''s fame? 42621 soft Pity''s child, Where shall we seek thee now? 42621 tell my wish to thee? 42621 tell my wish to thee? 42621 tell my wish to thee? 42621 tell my wish to thee? 42621 thus curst with poverty of soul, What boot to thee the blessings fortune gave? 42621 wherefore sleeps thy lay? 38619 ''All of them?'' 38619 ''And be I to dig another hole for the burial, miss, or not?'' 38619 ''And what became of the poor little boy and girl?'' 38619 ''And what have you done with them? 38619 ''And who is Maud Middleton, I should like to know?'' 38619 ''Anomalous?'' 38619 ''Are n''t you Miss Forster''s nephew? 38619 ''Are you sure it''s a Sunday book?'' 38619 ''Are you sure they do n''t call you Fatty?'' 38619 ''Be that you, miss?'' 38619 ''But King Henry did n''t stay long on the throne, did he? 38619 ''But how?'' 38619 ''But whatever_ shall_ we do without her?'' 38619 ''But wo n''t they all go for us when we start laying into their hive?'' 38619 ''But you left it for her, all the same?'' 38619 ''But, please, do the books really belong to Father?'' 38619 ''Ca n''t we leave them out?'' 38619 ''Can people live without hearts?'' 38619 ''Did Father have the money?'' 38619 ''Did he go?'' 38619 ''Did she tell? 38619 ''Did ye ever see the like?'' 38619 ''Did you get yours right, Nora?'' 38619 ''Did you make up the words too?'' 38619 ''Did you_ steal_ it, then, Ephraim?'' 38619 ''Do n''t you hear, Auntie? 38619 ''Do n''t you know where it is?'' 38619 ''Do you like it, Ephraim?'' 38619 ''Do you live at this side of Warford? 38619 ''Do you see that little farm nestling in the hollow, with the fir- trees behind it? 38619 ''Do you think he''ll go to heaven?'' 38619 ''Does n''t it look nice?'' 38619 ''Father, where are you going?'' 38619 ''Had n''t you better begin with bread- and- butter?'' 38619 ''Had n''t you better have some tea first?'' 38619 ''Hain''t I? 38619 ''Has any girl spoken during my absence?'' 38619 ''Have n''t you anything else this morning?'' 38619 ''Have n''t you got a Bible, Ephraim?'' 38619 ''Have you had enough?'' 38619 ''How big a boy is he?'' 38619 ''How could there be a hen and a half? 38619 ''How d''you do, Peggy? 38619 ''How did they get there? 38619 ''How did you get on at Sunday- school?'' 38619 ''How is the rheumatism?'' 38619 ''I say, Lil, could n''t we go straight down the wood here, and cross the stream by the picnic place instead of the pine bridge? 38619 ''I suppose we could get over the stepping- stones?'' 38619 ''I suppose you can keep your eye on it, Miss Lilian?'' 38619 ''I wonder how long they''re going to leave me here?'' 38619 ''I wonder who they are?'' 38619 ''If a hen and a half lay an egg and a half in a day and a half, how many eggs can four hens lay in six days?'' 38619 ''Is Isabella your dolly?'' 38619 ''Is it a red riband, then, ye''ll be after askin''me to wear?'' 38619 ''Is it really wrong to look after the bees and amuse babies on Sunday?'' 38619 ''Is n''t it fun?'' 38619 ''Is n''t she stunning?'' 38619 ''Is she gone?'' 38619 ''Is there much of this sort of thing going on at the Grammar School?'' 38619 ''Is this false or true, Margaret Vaughan?'' 38619 ''Is this nectar which you are offering us, fair nymph? 38619 ''Is your pa keepin''well these days?'' 38619 ''Lilian dear, are you busy?'' 38619 ''Lilian not come? 38619 ''Lilian, ca n''t you tell me something more about this latest idol of Peggy''s?'' 38619 ''May n''t I know the Rector, too, Peggy? 38619 ''Now then, what are you all doing?'' 38619 ''Oh, Auntie, I''ve finished my book, and we''ve nothing much to do this afternoon; do n''t you think we might take our tea out into the woods?'' 38619 ''Oh, Mr. Howell,''burst out Peggy, her gray eyes brimming over with tears,''is it really true that your heart is lost here? 38619 ''Oh, Mr. Neville, is it really you? 38619 ''Oh, do n''t you see it? 38619 ''Oh, why did we not come up sooner?'' 38619 ''Perhaps I might read you something else, then?'' 38619 ''Please can you let us have some milk?'' 38619 ''Promise me, then, that you wo n''t go playing such mad pranks again, and leading Bobby into them, too?'' 38619 ''Shall I?'' 38619 ''So you have been making Peggy''s acquaintance? 38619 ''Tell your fortune, my little master? 38619 ''The boys playing cricket by themselves, and the girls mooning about, keeping their frocks nice? 38619 ''Then do n''t you think,''persisted Peggy,''that he is_ quite_ the nicest man you''ve ever met?'' 38619 ''Then who is to take Bassanio and Gratiano and Salanio, and Salarino and the Duke, to say nothing of Nerissa? 38619 ''Then who would be Sir Anthony?'' 38619 ''Then, why could n''t you say so at first? 38619 ''Then-- would it be-- would it be possible for Father to get the money for them-- soon?'' 38619 ''Vaughan? 38619 ''Was it the Royal Academy?'' 38619 ''Well, Emily,''said Miss Martin gravely,''do you know anything about this unhappy affair?'' 38619 ''Were n''t you driving that queer little pony- cart?'' 38619 ''What am I to do with such terrible children?'' 38619 ''What are they doing in our fields?'' 38619 ''What be I to do with the box?'' 38619 ''What can it be?'' 38619 ''What did they want?'' 38619 ''What do I see?'' 38619 ''What does it all mean?'' 38619 ''What does she want me for?'' 38619 ''What does this Jones do to you?'' 38619 ''What has she been doing there?'' 38619 ''What is it?'' 38619 ''What mad folly is this? 38619 ''What made you so late, Peggy?'' 38619 ''What on earth has that stupid Nancy given me a hot bottle for on such a warm evening?'' 38619 ''What shall we do now?'' 38619 ''What shall we do this afternoon?'' 38619 ''What shall you call the darling?'' 38619 ''What''s that?'' 38619 ''What''s that?'' 38619 ''What''s the matter, Lilian?'' 38619 ''What''s this?'' 38619 ''Whatever can be inside it?'' 38619 ''Whatever can they want?'' 38619 ''Whatever could he mean, Lilian? 38619 ''Whatever have you got there, Joe?'' 38619 ''Whatever shall we do with them? 38619 ''Wheer did you say they be?'' 38619 ''When did it happen?'' 38619 ''Where did you learn that?'' 38619 ''Where did you spring from?'' 38619 ''Which sum are you doing?'' 38619 ''Who be they two, Miss Peggy?'' 38619 ''Who on earth is all this crew coming up the drive? 38619 ''Who were fighting?'' 38619 ''Who would ever have thought of Miss Martin taking it like this?'' 38619 ''Whose little girl are you?'' 38619 ''Why does n''t Father come to fetch us? 38619 ''Why not?'' 38619 ''Why of course? 38619 ''Why?'' 38619 ''Will you try living with the Davenports for a while?'' 38619 ''Wo n''t he get stung?'' 38619 ''Wo n''t you come and sit on my lap?'' 38619 ''Would not a good sitting hen be really better, my dear boy?'' 38619 ''Would you like a game of croquet, Margaret?'' 38619 ''You actually found something_ here_, in the Abbey, when digging? 38619 ''You do n''t mean to say you made that yourself?'' 38619 ''You wo n''t forget about the tombstone, will you, Joe?'' 38619 ''Your answer, Margaret?'' 38619 And Peggy? 38619 And after all, why should one''s ancestors do everything for one? 38619 And what have you got on your head?'' 38619 And your brother? 38619 Any relation to the Vaughans of Gorswen Abbey? 38619 Are you hurt?'' 38619 Are you staying about here?'' 38619 Are you sure you can find them?'' 38619 But if you like the churn, what do you think of this, now?'' 38619 But the movement disturbed him, and he sprang to his feet, calling:''Father, is that you? 38619 But we ca n''t expect the poor creatures to understand that, can we?'' 38619 By- the- by, did Joe bring in any onions this morning? 38619 By- the- by, how are Miss Forster''s carnations getting on?'' 38619 By- the- by, may I ask if any curiosities have ever been found while ploughing in these fields?'' 38619 CHAPTER XVII DAME ELEANOR''S GHOST''What see you there That hath so cowarded and chased your blood Out of appearance?'' 38619 CHAPTER XXIII THE ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY''Who comes to the ruin, the ivy- clad ruin, With old shaking arches, all moss- overgrown?'' 38619 Ca n''t I put the kettle on for you?'' 38619 Can you show them to me?'' 38619 Could both she and Lilian have made a mistake? 38619 David,''she said to the old man, who was coming across the field with a sack of potatoes,''who are those people riding along the pasture? 38619 Did he get off safe? 38619 Did n''t I wash and iron your pinafore yesterday, when you fell into the pig- trough, and nobody even suspected? 38619 Did n''t the people run?'' 38619 Did you watch them race round this corner? 38619 Do I ever tell? 38619 Do n''t I know a moke from a wild beast? 38619 Do n''t you agree with me?'' 38619 Do n''t you know it is nearly nine o''clock?'' 38619 Do n''t you know what a horribly dangerous thing you have been doing? 38619 Do n''t you remember what a fearful fuss she made about it, and we were all told to search in our desks? 38619 Do n''t you think it would be better, Nancy, if I were to clean the silver on Friday mornings, and you could get on with your kitchen?'' 38619 Do n''t you think they know where we are?'' 38619 Do n''t you think we could make hooks and lines, and catch some to surprise Father when he comes back? 38619 Do n''t you think, if we were both to look, we might find it again?'' 38619 Do n''t you want to hear this one aboutDorothy Gower"?
38619Do you go to school, or have you a governess?''
38619Do you know Phyllis and Marjorie Norton?''
38619Do you reckon I''d get the village joiner to fix it?
38619Do you remember him?''
38619Do you think he can be mad?''
38619Do you want to go down by the river now?''
38619Eh, Miss Tomboy?''
38619Eh, bairns?
38619Father''s reproachful face seemed to rise up out of the darkness, asking''Where is Bobby?
38619Had the world altered much in all these years?
38619Has the brute hurt you, Miss Vaughan?''
38619Have they lost his heart in the churchyard, and ca n''t anybody find it for him?''
38619Have you heard anything?
38619Have you seen it, Linda?''
38619How d''you do, Bobby?''
38619How is it all the other girls got the same as Bertha?''
38619How much may we send you?''
38619However did you get here?''
38619I believe there are a pile of old Forsters lying under elaborate tombs somewhere in Northumberland, but what have they ever done for me?
38619I guess you''re something of a tomboy, young lady, are n''t you?''
38619I suppose there''s no one else at school who would champion you?''
38619I wonder if it would be worth while going down to the harvest field?
38619I wonder if there is anything inside?''
38619I wonder what they have in that caldron?
38619Is it really true?''
38619Is n''t it glorious?''
38619Is n''t she a terror?
38619Is n''t that lucky?
38619Is she dead?
38619Is she one of your schoolfellows?''
38619Is the answer to come out in hens or eggs or days?''
38619Is the kettle boiling?
38619Is there anything else you would like to ask?''
38619It seems so hard never to do anything like other girls, does n''t it?''
38619Just stop that, will you?''
38619Let me see: how many years will it be agone?''
38619Lonely?
38619May I ask if it is the sprite of the ruins to whom we are indebted for this bounty?''
38619Miss Pope, will you kindly take Margaret Vaughan into the kindergarten classroom, where she will wait until I come to her?
38619My dear child, do n''t you think you might choose a less juicy seat than a tray full of raspberries?''
38619Neville?''
38619Now then, make room there, ca n''t you?
38619Now, wo n''t you come and speak to mother?''
38619Oh, Peggy, how could you go and hide all those pairs away under the dressing- table?
38619Sedgwick, do you hear that?''
38619See, is n''t it just the prettiest little nest that ever was?''
38619Shall I chop them up for you now?''
38619Shall I lift the lid?''
38619Shall I sing it for you over again?''
38619She actually kissed us both before we went, did n''t she, Lilian?
38619She did n''t tell, did she?''
38619Tell me truly now, Miss Peggy dear, does it suit me or not?''
38619Tell your fortune, my pretty young lady?
38619The girls kept whispering to each other under their breath:''Whatever can it all be about?
38619Then is it_ his_ ghost?''
38619Valuable?
38619Was it anything else you''ll be wanting?''
38619Was you going to do anything with that stock that has been in the larder since Monday?''
38619What about Jones minor?''
38619What do we live on mostly?
38619What happened at the battle?''
38619What happened?''
38619What have you done with my little boy?''
38619What shall I do with him?''
38619What''s that in your hand?''
38619What''s your name?
38619What, Miss Peggy Vaughan?
38619Whatever can it be?''
38619Whatever mischief will you be in next?''
38619Whatever shall I do?
38619Whatever shall I do?''
38619When did you say it falls due?''
38619Where are they?
38619Where did Joe say the long- tailed tits had built?''
38619Where is your home?''
38619Where''s Lilian?''
38619Wherever are you hiding?''
38619Who can tell all that goes on in the mind of a little child, or what it understands of death?
38619Who cares for old books?''
38619Why ca n''t I climb trees and jump fences, and enjoy myself like boys do, and yet be a thorough girl all the same?''
38619Why do n''t Father and Aunt Helen write and ask him?''
38619Why do n''t you write and tell me about it, and about Sky Cottage, too?
38619Why does she want us all here?''
38619Why have you never been to Gorswen before?
38619Why not do a scene from"The Rivals"?
38619Why, Nora, what''s the matter?''
38619Why, Peggy, where are you going?''
38619Will that suit you?''
38619Will the doggie hurt me?
38619Would n''t you like me to read some to you?''
38619Would n''t you like to look at it?''
38619Would you like to hear me sing now?''
38619You agree with me, Sedgwick?''
38619You do n''t think Father would really be likely to get us that governess, do you?''
38619You do n''t want one, do you, Bobby?''
38619You''re sure you put in the spoons, Lilian?
38619You''ve not brought your groom?
38619_ Are n''t_ they quarrelling over the price?
38619ai n''t he cunning?''
38619ca n''t we keep him for a pet?''
38619cried Peggy, flinging her arms round his neck in her most beguiling manner,''_ could n''t_ you take Bobby and me with you this time?
38619do''ee hear the lion roar?''
38619she cried, stopping short in amazement;''whatever is the matter?
38619she screamed,''what is it?
38619what have we here?''
38619where are you?
38619wherever have you been?''
42781).--"Have the modern phonographists ever owned their debt of gratitude to their predecessors in the phonetic art?"
42781).--In reply to the following Query,"Who was the greatest general, and why and wherefore did the Duke of Wellington give the palm to Hannibal?"
42781).--Perhaps you will think the following rhymes upon places worth insertion:"I stood upon Eyemouth Fort, And guess ye what I saw?
42781--_Is the Church of Rome Babylon?_ p. 58.: London, 1851.
42781A. C.{ 13}_ Smith._--Of what family was---- Smith, confessor of Katherine of Braganza, buried in York Minster?
42781And who was the noted ringleader of schism?
42781And why does[ Greek: ho Amnos] here become[ Greek: to Arnion]?
42781By whom is the observation?
42781Can any of your antiquarian readers throw any light on the subject to whom this device originally belonged?
42781Could the place be other than Tangiers, destroyed in 1684?
42781Did he give away that which is still wanting in the Bodleian library?
42781Folio 2.--1617(?).
42781G. H._ Hugh Oldham, Bishop of Exeter._--Is any pedigree extant of the family of Hugh Oldham?
42781Has not the following song something to do with the expression"Martin drunk"?
42781I do not insist upon the correction in the fourth line of_ lack_ for_ crack_, yet what can be meant by_ cracking a duty_?
42781I see a goose ring a hog, And a snayle that did bite a dog; Thou hast well drunken, man, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a goose ring a hog, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a hare chase a hound, Twenty mile above the ground; Thou hast well drunken, man, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a hare chase a hound, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a man in the moone, Clowting of St. Peter''s shoone; Thou hast well drunken, man, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a man in the moone; Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a mouse catch the cat, And the cheese to eate the rat; Thou hast well drunken, man, Who''s the foole now?"
42781I see a mouse catch the cat, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a sheepe shering corne, And a cuckold blow his horne; Thou hast well drunken, man, Who''s the foole now?
42781I see a sheepe shering corne, Who''s the foole now?
42781I shall feel obliged to any of your correspondents who can inform me what constituted a_ loak hen_?
42781If the latter, would he not have been so described?
42781In 1658 he was admitted to the Palm Academy("Palmen- orden"), choosing the name_ Der Erwacsene_( the adult?
42781In other words, why make it a plural term?
42781Is it not fit that such carelessness should be exposed?
42781Is this fact recorded in any Life of Locke; or how may it be ascertained?
42781It would not be uninteresting to learn, at the same time, at what period_ pearl_ came into general use as an English word?
42781Martin said to his man, Fill thou the cup, and I the can; Thou hast well drunken, man, Who''s the foole now?
42781My first question will be, therefore, who was the earliest writer of this description?
42781O Martin said to his man, Who''s the foole now?
42781Pray, can you or any of your readers explain the cause of this omission?
42781Query: Was the word_ union_ generally received in England instead of_ pearl_ in Burton''s time, and when did it give place to it?
42781R._ means Robert Randolph, master of arts, and student of Christchurch-- a younger brother of Thomas Randolph, and the editor of his poems?
42781R._?
42781Stebbing Shaw''s Staffordshire MSS., and the MS. notes of Dr. Thomas Harwood used in his two editions{ 14} of Erdeswick''s_ Staffordshire_?
42781The castle stood nearly midway between two other adjoining towns or villæ, also bearing plural names: Potternæ= arum[ Posternæ?]
42781Was it Hackett?
42781What arms did he adopt?
42781What?
42781Where can information be obtained as to a Judge Smith, supposed to have been of the same family?
42781Where do these lines come from?
42781Where does he praise Bacon?
42781Where is a_ genuine_ copy of Mr. Theobald''s letter to be found?
42781Where is this to be found?
42781Where recorded?
42781Where?
42781Who is here alluded to?
42781_ Can a Man baptize himself?_( Vol.
42781_ The Bourbons._--What was the origin of the Bourbon family?
42781and what are the arms on his tomb?
42781assist me in obtaining a copy of this work?
42781come to be the next heir to the throne on the extinction of the line of Valois?
42781tablet, is described as gent., likely to have been in 1684( aged twenty- seven) a private, a non- commissioned, or commissioned officer?
44538Who art thou, That counterfeit''st the person of a king?
39909Ah, rogues, said he, ah, whither do ye run,Bent on the ruin of this antique pile--"That, all the war, has braved both sword and gun?
39909Can they forget when, half afraid,The timorous Council[A] lent no aid;"But left them to the rogues that rob,"The tender mercies of the mob?
39909Have we not, to our utmost, stroveThat Congress might not hence remove--"At dull debates no silence broke,"And walked on tip- toe while they spoke?
39909The druids''oak and hermits''pineAfford a gloomy, sad delight;"But why that blush of health resign,"The mingled tint of red and white?
39909To gain so fair a flower as you,( The Tar returned) who would not plead?
39909What human eye, without dismay Can see torpedo- lightning''s play? 39909 What passion must that heart inspire That dives the sea, to deal in fire, What can he fear, I trembling ask Who undertakes the daring task?
39909Who would refuse this cheering draught?
39909( said the Saint) have I catch''d ye at last?
39909("''Tis almost time to doubt the fact,)"By which this gabbling crew are bound"The nearest way to Nootka Sound?"
39909-- Must not the wheels of fate go on?
39909A swarm is arrived from the hives of the east, Determined to sap the republic''s foundation; And who is their leader, their scribe, and their priest?
39909All this is heaven, I half suspect, And who would such a heaven neglect?
39909Already you have scorch''d your wings: What courage, or what folly brings You, hovering near such blazing things?
39909And have we lent thee wings To waft thy poison into Eutaw Springs?
39909And have you had a foreign bribe?-- Then, why so lean?--shall we describe The leanness of your honest tribe?
39909And must I all my fears impart; And do these guns my ship ensure?
39909And must I ask my fluttering heart If on these decks I stand secure?
39909And what but toil has your long service seen?
39909And where will be the pretty maid That sweeps my floor and makes my bed?
39909And who is to blame?
39909Are the english cruisers near?
39909Are these the men of English soul?
39909Are these the ocean''s lords?
39909Are they trampling on all sanctity; or what do they mean?
39909Ask you what matter fills his various page?
39909But I wanted----_ Genius._----Wanted what?
39909But now, suppose the matter done, And her the element upon; What cause have we mad wars to wage Or join the quarrels of the age?
39909Can we on such a kindred tear bestow?
39909Do these, indeed, the waves control?
39909Exists there a neutral where Britain has sway?
39909For death and blood, with bold design, Who bids a hundred legions join?
39909From distant traffic why expect The harvest of your toil?
39909From your lodgings on the leaf Did you utter joy or grief--?
39909Has manly prowess quit the abandon''d stage, Are midnight plots the order of the age?
39909Haste away from town and farm: If we meet them, where''s the harm?
39909Himself and his heroes are heroes indeed!-- In conquests, like this, can an englishman glory, One traitor among us, one Halifax tory?
39909Ho, sailors give the ship a heel: Go, chaplain, to the starboard chains And ask the rascal what he means?
39909How strike and stupefy the world?
39909How will they scorch your auburn hair--?
39909If doomed to wander on the coasts below, What are to them these floods of grief you shed?
39909If reason no attention finds, What magic shall unite all minds?
39909If war a patronage ensures That fifty thousand men procures, Is such a force to humble France?
39909In the name of common sense how did the printers of the Connecticut Courant_ dare_ to act so_ irreverantly_ as to place the parody before the psalm?
39909In this mysterious scene of things There must be laws or who could live?
39909Is it a crime to shade the dead?
39909Is there no way to coax a fight And gratify some men of might?
39909Is this the general taste?
39909Louis insults with chains no more,-- Then why thus wear a clouded brow, When every manly heart is glad?
39909Mais quels cris viennent de nos fetes Troubler les chants majestueux?
39909Must man at that tribunal bow Which will no range to thought allow, But his best powers would sway or sink, And idly tells him what to Think?
39909Must systems, still, of monstrous birth, Enslave mankind, deform this earth?
39909Must these, like common trees, be bled?
39909No church was made for Cupid''s trade; Then why these arts of ogling here?
39909ODD''S fish and blood, and noun and neuter, And tenses present, past and future: I utter''d with a wicked sigh, Where are my brains, or where am I?
39909ON POLITICAL SERMONS When parsons preach on politics, pray why Should declamation cease, if you go by?
39909ON THE ABUSE OF HUMAN POWER As exercised over opinion[189] What human power shall dare to bind The mere opinions of the mind?
39909ON THE WAR PATRONS, 1798[156] Weary of peace, and warm for war, Who first will mount the iron car?
39909Of northern pine her floors were made, A carpet on the boards was spread; And who shall dare this floor prophane, Which Nancy keeps without a stain?
39909Or the sons of those of old Cast in nature''s rudest mould,-- Dear Virginia, can it be?
39909Or, to the omnipotent allied, Control his heaven, or join his side?
39909Prevent his warm reviving ray, Or shade the influence of the day?
39909Quel demon porte sur nos tetes La nuit, le tonnerre, et les feux?
39909Say, Captain Hillyer, say?
39909Shall it fall to their lot To be basely forgot?
39909Shall these succeed?
39909Shall they, who spring from parent earth, Pretend to more than mortal birth?
39909She speaks, she moves with all attracting grace, And smiles display the angel on the face; Her aspect all, what female would not share?
39909Supposing George''s house at Kew Were burnt,( as we intend to do,) Would that be burning England too?
39909TO AN ANGRY ZEALOT[61][ In Answer to Sundry Virulent Charges] If of Religion I have made a sport, Then why not cite me to the Bishop''s Court?
39909Tell me, what did Caty do?
39909Tell me, where your waters go, Purling as they downward flow?
39909That friendship to all nations due, And taught by reason to pursue, That love, which should the world combine, To country, why do we confine?
39909The Phoebe mounted forty- nine-- All thought her on some grand design-- Does she alone the fight decline?
39909The Yorker asks-- but asks in vain--"What demon bids them''move again?
39909The haughty prince that England owns, To make more room for royal sons, Has given the hint, I would suspect-- And are you one of his Elect?
39909The nymph, who boasts no borrowed charms, Whose sprightly wit my fancy warms; What tho''she tends this country inn, And mixes wine, and deals out gin?
39909Then why these sobs, these useless floods of woe, That vainly flow for the departed dead?
39909Thence came a book( where came it but from thence?)
39909There commerce breeds no foreign war; At home they find their wants supplied, And ask, why nations come so far To seek superfluous stores?
39909They kill''d a goose, they kill''d a hen, Three hogs they wounded in a pen-- They dash''d away, and pray what then?
39909Thou, stranger, from a distant shore,[A] Where fetter''d men their rights avow, Why on this joyous day so sad?
39909To fight her legions, near the Rhine, Or England''s force in Holland join?
39909To shew our pity for their short- liv''d reign What shall we do, or how express our pain?
39909Twas thus Miranda play''d his game; But who with him should share the blame?
39909Was trash, like that we now review, The tribute to your valor due?
39909Was, Washington, your conquering sword Condemn''d to such a base reward?
39909We grieve to see such pens profane The first of chiefs, the first of men.-- To Washington-- a man-- who died, As_ abba father_ well applied?
39909Were these bleach''d bones the trophies he admired?
39909What do I hear?
39909What next, will policy contrive To bid the days of war arrive: Is there no way to pick a quarrel, And deck the martial brow with laurel?
39909What shall we do?
39909What will they do to avow their grief?
39909What youth but worship, with a mind so fair?
39909When dust to dust returns Does power, or wealth, attend the dead; Are captives from the contest led-- Is homage paid to urns?
39909Where mounted guns the porte secure, The cannon at the embrasure, Will british fleets attempt to moor?
39909Where will I be, and all my men?
39909Who bears the brunt, or pays the bill?
39909Who can their fire endure?
39909Who first appear, to shield the Stars, Who foremost, take the field of Mars?
39909Who now will rouse our youth to arms Should war approach to curse mankind?
39909Who now will save our shores from harms, The task to him so long assign''d?
39909Who shall repulse the hireling host, Who force them back through snow and frost, Who swell the lake with thousands lost, Dear freedom?
39909Who so base to be a slave?
39909Who would be a traitor knave?
39909Who would fill a coward''s grave?
39909Whose fame on the earth has encircled it round And spreads from the pole to the line?
39909Why all these hints of menace, dark and sad, What is my crime, that thus Ap- Shenkin raves?
39909Why continue to complain?
39909Why did you not with Tories join To hold the British king divine-- And all his mandates very fine?
39909Will these against her arms advance?
39909Would that be conquering London town?
39909Would that subvert the english throne, Or bring the royal system down?
39909Would you dear freedom sacrifice, Bid navies on the ocean rise, Be bound by military laws, And all, to aid a tyrant''s cause?
39909Would you, so late from fetters freed, Join party in so base a deed?
39909Ye patrons of the ranting strain, What temples have been rent in twain?
39909Yet, nature must her circle run-- Can they arrest the rising sun?
39909You ask me, where those numerous hosts have fled That once existed on this changeful ball?
39909[ 199] 1809 But will they once more be engaged in a war, Be fated to discord again?
39909[ A] Queris quo loco jaceant omnes mortui?
39909and will that sun Continue, still, his race to run O''er scenes that he must blush to see Disorder, chains, and tyranny?
39909but Memory still recalls"The Day, when ruffians scaled their walls--"Sovereigns besieged by angry men,"Mere prisoners in the town of Penn?
39909but should all shame forsake, And gratitude her exit make, Could you, as thousands say you can, Desert the common cause of man?
39909how find relief?
39909is all sympathy a jest; Art thou a stranger to the human breast?
39909let tragic story tell While sad sensations in the bosom swell-- What were the effects?
39909stay on shore: Why would you meet old Ocean''s roar?
39909tell me how?-- Tell me not, or tell me now, Can you wield the bolts of Jove, Seize the lightnings from above?
39909thy honored dust The foe will not profane, we trust; Or if they do, will vengeance sleep, Or fail to drive them to the deep?
39909too near thy tomb?-- Are they those who, long before, Came to subjugate this shore?-- Are they those whom he repell''d, Captured, or imprison''d held?
39909was I not among the first"Who did my name on paper trust,"To help this Journalist accursed?
39909who contrived the word?
39909why does vengeance sleep?
39909why half neglect The culture of your soil?
39909why that scream of death?
39909will you control such views?
39909would you conspire To extinguish this increasing fire?
39909you decide, who are in Galen read-- Take Boorhaave''s, if you please-- whatever system--( Why are men such that doctors can enlist''em?)
29932''Where have you been?'' 29932 A crowd of women here?
29932Alive?
29932All right,I thought,"what''s near me here?
29932All right-- where are you going now? 29932 All right-- who cares?"
29932Am I?
29932And all those things you did on the harbor?
29932And do you mean to tell me you did n''t like the harbor then?
29932And how about Sue?
29932And just how he wants you to live-- with nothing you''ve been used to-- nothing? 29932 And now do you know what I want you to do?
29932And the work you hope she''ll enter will be the kind you believe in-- organizing labor and taking an active part in strikes?
29932And what are_ you_ going to be,she asked,"in a year from now?"
29932And what do your masters answer? 29932 And what do_ you_ think, Joe?"
29932And what he wants and expects you to do?
29932And when you are riding on top of a car-- aren''t you ever frightened?
29932And when you sleep-- do you always dream?
29932And you think you can build a new world_ with them_?
29932And you''d expect to live like that?
29932And_ your_ salary?
29932Are many of them married?
29932Are n''t there a good many, too, who do n''t exactly marry-- but marry just a little-- one woman here, another there, and so on?
29932Are n''t we making it our business?
29932Are n''t you just a little afraid of real life, Eleanore?
29932Are they all like these?
29932Are you getting interested in strikes?
29932Are you going down to the docks?
29932Are you going to put her in school in New York?
29932Are you going to see him soon again?
29932Are you going to see him?
29932Are you real?
29932Are you sure it does-- still?
29932Are you through?
29932Are you?
29932As for instance?
29932Aw, what do I care for a doll?
29932Be out for dinner too?
29932Blind? 29932 But as a matter of fact,"I went on,"you would n''t have to, would you?
29932But can two of you live on pay like that-- say an average of ten dollars a week?
29932But damn it all, why not have a look? 29932 But do n''t you see what she''s up to?"
29932But how about wives?
29932But how about_ me_ and_ my_ life?
29932But if that''s how you feel,I retorted,"why are you always talking about the battleships we need?
29932But look here, Joe,I asked at the end,"what''s the good of living like this?
29932But where''s the harm,I argued,"so long as I always tear it up?
29932But why drag Joe way over there?
29932Ca n''t I possibly be any help down there?
29932Ca n''t you leave us?
29932Ca n''t you see the whole fire is out?
29932Ca n''t you see you''re all just floundering in a perfect swamp of ignorance?
29932Ca n''t you?
29932Can you wait a few moments?
29932Captain Townes? 29932 Chanties?"
29932Dear old Sue-- don''t you know how I feel? 29932 Did he talk about that?"
29932Did you ever know a woman who did n''t, the minute that she got a kid? 29932 Did you hear anything?"
29932Did you see Sue?
29932Did you see his face-- poor devil? 29932 Did you see me?"
29932Did you see the parade?
29932Did you think all that change in Joe''s point of view was on your account?
29932Did you think all that talk was aimed at you?
29932Did you write this?
29932Did you?
29932Do n''t you ever want to settle down?
29932Do n''t you remember me?
29932Do n''t you remember the evening when you took me down to the docks?
29932Do n''t you want to come into the nursery? 29932 Do n''t you want to see anything else?"
29932Do n''t you want to shoot''em off?
29932Do n''t you want to tell me, love, just what it was he showed you?
29932Do n''t you? 29932 Do they ever sing those words?"
29932Do you ever dream of Sam?
29932Do you fall asleep in bed-- or are you still on the top of the car the last thing you can remember?
29932Do you find time to keep up your music?
29932Do you happen to know the wives of any labor leaders?
29932Do you hear it any longer?
29932Do you know what I think they''ll do themselves? 29932 Do you know what it means to go there so often, almost every night?"
29932Do you know where you are?
29932Do you know who''s to blame for this stuff?
29932Do you like him?
29932Do you say so now? 29932 Do you see anything of the strikers?"
29932Do you think this kind of thing would interest their readers?
29932Do you want another look at your harbor?
29932Do you want to go back to Paris?
29932Do you want to marry her, Joe?
29932Do you, too, want to vote?
29932Do you? 29932 Does that girl run a motor boat?"
29932Done what, my love?
29932Eleanore Dillon? 29932 For example?"
29932Go to life?
29932Got any of that typhoid left?
29932Guns for Russia, eh?
29932Had enough?
29932Had n''t I better come home for the summer?
29932Hard?
29932Has he?
29932Has she? 29932 Have I?"
29932Have you ever been in Paris?
29932Have you ever played other games like that? 29932 Have you ever run a boat in your life?"
29932Have you got any plans for your writing here? 29932 Have you lived all the time at hotels?"
29932Have you met Marsh?
29932Have you seen Sue?
29932Have you?
29932Have you?
29932He did?
29932Hello, J. K. How are you?
29932Here?
29932How about Sue''s friends, Joe? 29932 How about that,"he asked at the end,"for an American row de luxe?"
29932How about the women and babies?
29932How am I to make money? 29932 How are they wrong?"
29932How did he look? 29932 How did you celebrate Christmas?"
29932How did you feel about all this,the Englishman asked,"before you were drawn into the strike?"
29932How do you know I have n''t tried?
29932How do you know it''s so bad for you to be brought back from Paris?
29932How do you know it''s what you want most?
29932How do you know they would n''t?
29932How do you know you do?
29932How do you like our home?
29932How do you look at this, Joe?
29932How is Eleanore taking it all?
29932How long has Joe been here?
29932How long will it take me to get a hay mind, back here by this damned harbor?
29932How much do you get?
29932How much money have_ you_ in the bank?
29932How old is your little girl?
29932How soon will that be?
29932How will Dad look at it?
29932How''ll you get''em into your country? 29932 How''s your mother?"
29932How?
29932Huh?
29932I know the person_ you_ ought to meet----"Do you? 29932 I''m only a poor young fellah who asks,''Say, Mister, if you_ are_ up there why is it that no big scientist has brains enough to see you?''"
29932I''m sorry, Sue----"Is that all you have to say to me?
29932Is Eddy-- I mean Captain-- Townes upstairs?
29932Is Mrs. Marsh a radical, too-- I mean an agitator?
29932Is it my soul?
29932Is n''t it funny,she added,"how sometimes everything comes all at once?
29932Is n''t it? 29932 Is n''t she now?"
29932Is that a heathen land?
29932Is that likely to grow steadier?
29932Is that true? 29932 Is there one?"
29932Is this daylight enough?
29932Joe, how did you ever stand this life?
29932Look here, Joe, how are_ you_ so sure about all this? 29932 Look here, Sis,"they wonder gravely,"where in thunder have you been?"
29932May I come out and see you now and then?
29932Mind? 29932 No longer young?"
29932Not a very healthy spree, was it?
29932Not even one?
29932Not exactly----"Poems?
29932Now are you satisfied, dear?
29932Now what kind of guns do you want? 29932 Now, did he?"
29932Now?
29932Of stokers?
29932Out again this evening, son?
29932Pretty bad, is n''t it, dear?
29932Print that?
29932Really? 29932 Say, Chief, just you forget this, will you?"
29932Say, Dad-- would you mind coming up to your room?
29932Shall I ask your anarchist friend to go?
29932Shall we talk it over a little?
29932So you do n''t feel you can sign this?
29932Songs? 29932 Still New York harbor, I believe?"
29932Stories?
29932Such as it is, where does it come from?
29932Sue too?
29932Sue?
29932Technique?
29932That girl?
29932That''s not exactly your business, is it?
29932The harbor?
29932The ships by the stokers?
29932Then what will become of the stokers?
29932Then why do n''t you do it?
29932There were speeches, I suppose?
29932They''re getting to be significant, are n''t they? 29932 Till I get back where I was, you mean?"
29932Till who comes?
29932Tired?
29932Townes, Townes? 29932 We''ll stay right here and see this show-- unless you feel you want to quit----""Did I say I did?
29932Well Bill,he inquired at last,"what are you going to do with yourself?"
29932Well, Billy?
29932Well, boys,he asked when our greetings were over,"what do you think of the news?"
29932Well, did ye find the chanties?
29932Well, sir, what can I do for you?
29932Well, what about it?
29932Well, young man, what have you to say to me?
29932Well?
29932Were n''t they all framed up ahead? 29932 Were you in that march?"
29932Were you speaking of Billy alone just now or did you have Sue, too, in mind?
29932What about Joe?
29932What about it? 29932 What about?"
29932What are all those lots marked''vacant''for?
29932What are you going to do about it?
29932What are you going to tackle next?
29932What are you up to?
29932What did she say?
29932What do I need_ her_ for?
29932What do you believe in, Joe? 29932 What do you know about writing?"
29932What do you know?
29932What do you mean, my rut?
29932What do you mean? 29932 What do you think of her?"
29932What do you think of it?
29932What do you think of it?
29932What do you think of my friends?
29932What do you think that I can do?
29932What do you think they''ll do to you?
29932What do you think?
29932What do you want of me, young man?
29932What do you want to write,she asked,"when you get through with the harbor?"
29932What does she do down there?
29932What for?
29932What good would it do?
29932What good would it do?
29932What has all this to do with me?
29932What have I done?
29932What is it?
29932What kind do you think you''re going to try?
29932What news?
29932What the devil do you mean?
29932What the devil,he asked,"do I want to come up to my room for?"
29932What time is it now?
29932What time is it?
29932What was he like as a boy?
29932What''ll they do to you?
29932What''ll we do?
29932What''s brought you here?
29932What''s come over Dad?
29932What''s his address?
29932What''s that got to do with it?
29932What''s the difference?
29932What''s the joke?
29932What''s the matter with you, little feller?
29932What''s the matter?
29932What''s the matter?
29932What''s the use of that? 29932 What''s youth?"
29932What?
29932What?
29932What?
29932What?
29932What?
29932What_ you''ve_ been doing?
29932When I came here what was I? 29932 When am I going to hear about you-- and your side of this dismal body of water?"
29932Where am I? 29932 Where are the heathen?"
29932Where did you get that picture, Joe?
29932Where did you go from your bed?
29932Where does that kid sleep?
29932Where is Dad?
29932Where is the Golden Age to- day?
29932Where on earth did you get that idea?
29932Where''s the money to come from?
29932Who are all you damn fools? 29932 Who gave you that?"
29932Who said he was coming?
29932Who said it was hideous at night? 29932 Who was Sam?"
29932Who with?
29932Who''ll print it?
29932Who''ll print it?
29932Why are you here?
29932Why are_ you_ glad, Sue?
29932Why be so busy about it?
29932Why ca n''t you all leave me alone?
29932Why ca n''t you lie back on those cushions?
29932Why do n''t you take Carlyle''s French Revolution along?
29932Why do n''t you talk this out with Sue, and tell her just what you think of it all?
29932Why do n''t you two go out for a walk?
29932Why do n''t you write an article, tell where you found them, put them in, and send it to a paper? 29932 Why does he always come ashore?"
29932Why does n''t he? 29932 Why in hell do you want me to get all hot?"
29932Why not have blue- penciled some of this?
29932Why not think it over, Billy?
29932Why not?
29932Why not?
29932Why not?
29932Why not?
29932Why should a man as busy as he is waste his time on a kid like me? 29932 Why should n''t I?
29932Why was it that those men all died? 29932 Why?"
29932Why?
29932Why?
29932Why?
29932Why?
29932Why?
29932Why?
29932Will you sign this, Joe?
29932Wo n''t you tell us about it?
29932Women are beyond you-- aren''t they, dear?
29932Would Friday evening be too soon?
29932Yes, I know----"Why did n''t you tell me? 29932 You can talk to her, ca n''t you?
29932You decided to travel with him then-- didn''t you?
29932You know how to bring pressure, do n''t you?
29932You mean you think she''s faking?
29932You mean you''re coming over?
29932You mean you_ were_ sent here for trouble?
29932You people fools? 29932 You said there were hundreds, did n''t you?"
29932You speak no English?
29932You think it''s good for you, being like this?
29932You''ll lock me in here?
29932You''re a good deal like your father-- aren''t you?
29932You''re going abroad?
29932You''re spicking now, ai n''t you?
29932You''ve heard all he said of this life of his?
29932You?
29932_ Books?_Joe''s look was funny.
29932''My dear,''he said, very coaxingly,''could we have a nice juicy porterhouse steak for supper to- morrow evening?''"
29932''What''s the matter with me?''
29932*****"What am I going to write about?"
29932*****"What have you been doing?"
29932After a time I heard her voice, low and intimate as before:"Finished up that hideous harbor of yours?"
29932Again he turned to me curiously:"You two can think together-- without talking-- can''t you?"
29932All at once he came closer, his whole manner changed:"Say, Bill-- tell her all I''ve said-- will you?
29932Almost unawares I had taken the habit of asking:"How much can_ we_ do?
29932Am I a murderer?
29932And all this talk about mistresses and this business of free love, and easy divorces and marriage itself-- what did they all amount to?
29932And by what?
29932And for what?
29932And happy over my success, and in love and starting life anew with all the signs so bright-- how could I have any doubts of my harbor?
29932And if this is true why not rise like men and end this fearful carnage?"
29932And if you were out of a job at times you''d be willing to let her support you?"
29932And if you''re able to feel like that why not do some thinking, too?"
29932And in place of that?"
29932And in the evening Eleanore said:"The women who came to our station to- day kept asking,''Why ca n''t they close up the saloons?
29932And she stopped abruptly with a look that asked us plainly,"Now that I''m here, what do you want?"
29932And should leaders such as these be allowed to go on preaching murder?
29932And then Eleanore asked me placidly,"Do you like my pretty new shoes?"
29932And then the loud voice of her daughter replied:"Eat?
29932And to- night when I told her that I had been with him,"What did he want of you?"
29932And turning from me to Eleanore,"And you?"
29932And what clear thinking can these men do?
29932And what has it done?
29932And what in the world were Dockers?
29932And what was that?
29932And what were heathen?
29932And what were they?
29932And where''s the beauty in_ them_?
29932And who were these people who lived under flowers?
29932And who''d have thought_ her_ an adventurer?
29932And why will it always have to be until you make these ships your own?
29932And with a humorous glint in his eyes,"How much do you know about banking?"
29932Are all the fine things fool things?
29932Are they Russians?
29932Are we all of us dubs?
29932Bealey?"
29932Because you were born here, were n''t you-- and you''ve been so close to it most of the time that you''re all mixed into it, are n''t you?
29932Big?
29932Bribery?
29932But a fat senior editor called"Pop"inquired one day with a sneer,"For God''s sake, Freshman, why these flowers?"
29932But for how long could he hold them?
29932But from somewhere deep inside me a voice rose up in answer:"If the crowd is growing blind-- is this the time to leave it?
29932But have they tried to arrest you?
29932But it''s a bit tough on her, is n''t it?
29932But then I heard her ask me,"Would n''t you like to talk to my father?"
29932But were they talking of plays?
29932But what are those ships worth to you?
29932But what do you think?
29932But what good were all these puny precautions?
29932But what was a lake?
29932But what was the ocean?
29932But what was this woman doing close by us?
29932But what were the verses?
29932But what were the words he was singing, this yarn he was spinning in his song?
29932But what would Eleanore think of it?
29932But what''s the use talking?"
29932But where are the great men living now?
29932But where''s the door?
29932But which to choose to make this person or this scene like no other in the world?
29932But why should n''t you change?
29932By writing?"
29932CHAPTER V"Did you see him?"
29932CHAPTER XIII What could such men as these raise up in place of the mighty life they had stilled?
29932Ca n''t you see?
29932Can you show me?
29932Can you take a decent old gentleman in out of the last century?
29932Could I help being young?
29932Could a man like that feel things like that?
29932Could it be that such upheavals as these meant an end to the rule of the world from above, by the keen minds of the men at the top?
29932Could it be that the time was near when this last and mightiest of the gods would rise and take the world in his hands?
29932Could n''t you have us all down to your room some evening?"
29932Could this harbor of his stand nothing heroic?
29932Damn the fellow, how much was there in it?
29932Did Eleanore really care for me?
29932Did my hands get cold?
29932Did n''t you?
29932Do I get you right?"
29932Do I have to come all the way from Chicago to tell you what''s happening down the street?
29932Do n''t I still want to write?
29932Do n''t you remember how I talked three weeks ago when you were here?
29932Do n''t you remember, when she was small, that little determined air she had in the way she went at every game?
29932Do n''t you remember?
29932Do n''t you see the hole you''re in?
29932Do n''t you see there''s no need of violence?
29932Do n''t you understand?"
29932Do n''t you want to come in and wash?"
29932Do you know how to tell me to go away?"
29932Do you know what I think is the matter with me?
29932Do you know what all this means in your homes?
29932Do you know what he''s doing?
29932Do you know what he''s up to right here on the docks?"
29932Do you know what this may mean to us?
29932Do you know what you''re going to do to- morrow, both of you poor foolish boys?
29932Do you mind?"
29932Do you see what I mean?
29932Do you think the people on the docks will just sit back and take it all?"
29932Do you want to freeze solid, you---- human bunch of stiffs?"
29932Does he give you any feeling at all of this harbor as a city of four million people, most of''em getting a raw deal and getting mad about it?
29932Does he make you think about low wages and long hours and all the fellows hurt or killed on the docks and in the stoke holes?
29932Does he say a word to you about Graft?
29932Does he talk of the North Atlantic Pool or any one of the other pools and schemes by which they keep up rates?
29932Eleanore turned to her again:"Do you mean for Billy?"
29932Eleanore''s eyes were attentive now:"Do you know her well, Joe?"
29932For what were these Coolies doing?
29932For when would I be earning enough to ask any girl to marry me?
29932From what were they coming so slowly away?
29932Got a cigarette about you?"
29932Had I gone insane?
29932Had n''t you better go yourself?"
29932Had the strikers fixed the winches with the purpose of killing strike- breakers?
29932Handling silks and spices?
29932Has everything fine already been done?
29932Has he no right to some joy in life?
29932Has n''t it ever struck you that you''re getting damnably narrow?"
29932Have things gone wrong?"
29932Have you any regular salary?"
29932Have you been selling short down there?
29932Have you not a tr- reaty which makes it forbidden to sell to me guns?"
29932Have you seen Sue?"
29932He may even learn to go slower himself-- now that he has had typhoid----""Do you think so?"
29932He said this regularly each night, and added,"Why ca n''t you keep up your health for your work?"
29932Here was the same thing magnified, a monstrous caravansary with but one question over its doors:"Have You Got the Price?"
29932How are you going about it to start?"
29932How can I make my evenings pay?"
29932How could he be any judge of life?
29932How could he feel that he had a chance?
29932How could she?"
29932How did it look to him?
29932How do you know?
29932How do you make it out?"
29932How far can we march toward this promised land?"
29932How had De Maupassant done it?
29932How long can we hold together fast?
29932How long was my father going to last?
29932How many of us would go that far?"
29932How much are they really changed?
29932How much did he already know?
29932How much has he saved from the wreck?
29932How much have you in the bank?"
29932How much time did I have?
29932How sane and vigilant can_ we_ be to keep clear of violence, bloodshed, mobs and a return to chaos?
29932How shall I do it?"
29932I a radical?
29932I a radical?
29932I did not look at him as I asked:"Why are you doing that, sir?"
29932I looked at her a moment:"Did you ask him here on my account?"
29932I looked at him quickly:"What do you mean?"
29932I looked up at him quickly:"The troops are here?"
29932I reached over and took her hand:"You do n''t want me to run away from it now?"
29932I regarded her anxiously:"Has this parade gone to your head-- or has Sue been talking to you again?"
29932I started:"Who is?"
29932I took her a moment in my arms:"You''re no quitter, are you?"
29932I''ve told you that I''m not afraid----""Then we''ll have to wait and see, wo n''t we, dear?
29932Idolize her?
29932If my father was a slave, is my color so against me?"
29932If you do take that office work and bring a lot of money home, do you know what I''ll do?
29932If you yourself were responsible to several hundred stockholders, what would you do?
29932Ignorant?
29932Immoral?
29932In Naples, Rome or Venice, or poking his toes into the dust of a street in some dull little town in the hills?
29932In a life like that-- always in strikes-- she''d have to give them up, would n''t she?"
29932In the sudden storm of cheers and"booh''s"I leaned over to Joe at my side:"Why did you let that man speak?"
29932Is he a crook?"
29932Is he much changed?"
29932Is n''t it only fair and square to let_ me_ travel this afternoon?"
29932Is n''t that enough?
29932Is n''t that your view?"
29932Is she still around?"
29932Is that Bill Townes?"
29932Is there no chance for us to be great and to do them?"
29932Is there no place for us in this strike?
29932It''s a new one, is n''t it?
29932Joe looked at me curiously:"How much of a lesson, Kid, do you think this strike has been to you?"
29932Just briefly, what''s your main idea in stirring up millions of ignorant men?"
29932May we bring her with us?"
29932Monotonous repetition, you say?
29932Months?
29932Must I always have that feeling the harbor used to give me?
29932No money but what a few drunken stokers throw your way, no decent ideals, no religion, no home?"
29932Nothing beautiful, fine or great for an eager, hungry, happy young man?
29932Nothing left in this rich old world but the harbor?
29932Nothing?
29932Of course if you wrap it all up in the dark, so that you can see none of its sea hogs----""What''s a sea hog?"
29932Of course you''ve left all the real stuff out----""What is the real stuff, as you call it, young man?"
29932Oh, my son, why not be brave?"
29932One morning at breakfast, when I remarked as I commonly did that I would be out for dinner that night,"Where are you going?"
29932Or to what else were they hurrying?
29932Or would you resort to bribery"--his smile slowly deepened--"which is a penal offense in this State?"
29932Patriotism, religion, love-- must they all be shoved aside to make way for his dull business?
29932Presently I went down to Sue:"When is the doctor coming next?"
29932Press of sail?
29932Risk a strike that might wipe out their dividends?
29932Romance, liberty, history, thrill?
29932See him?
29932See?"
29932Shall I go right on?"
29932She was the first of the dozen, eh?
29932She went on in an eager, absorbed sort of way:"Why not try it a little?
29932Should I become a great musician or a famous writer?
29932So I hardly miss a night at home.... Did she ever tell you,"he went on,"about the first week she spent in this boat?"
29932So out with it-- what have you gone and done?"
29932So why not add him to your list?
29932Testing me, was he?
29932Then what was the matter with me, I thought, that all this did not thrill me?
29932To Joe?"
29932To what were we both adventuring-- out of these little harbors of ours?
29932Ugly still?
29932Was everything modern only big?
29932Was it indeed a beginning?
29932Was it of that he was thinking?
29932Was love really what it was cracked up to be, or had the novelists handed us guff?
29932Was the defeat of this one strike the end?
29932Was there nothing else here?
29932Was there nothing under the heavens that this infernal harbor did n''t know all about, and"do business with"so thoroughly that it could always smile?
29932Was this Sabotage?
29932Was this another god of mine?
29932Was this the opening measure of music that would be heard round the world?
29932Well, what am I going to write about?
29932Were not these three leaders responsible for the death of that innocent black man?
29932What am I going to do with my life?"
29932What are they loaded with?
29932What are we going to do?"
29932What are you smiling at?"
29932What argument had she still to use?
29932What change was coming in my life?
29932What could these men ever put in its place?
29932What could we little pigmies do with the world?
29932What could you do about it?
29932What did Paris know about us?
29932What did a fellow want most in life-- what to do, what to get and to be?
29932What did he feel?
29932What did it mean?
29932What did prostitutes mean at present?
29932What did she mean?
29932What did the harbor do to you next?"
29932What do I know of the big things of life?
29932What do they know about it?
29932What does anyone know about that?"
29932What good is all this blood to us?
29932What good would it do me when I grew up to say that I had heard him?
29932What great condor of to- day had picked him up and dropped him here?
29932What had I to do with it all?
29932What had all this to do with the sea?
29932What had gone wrong with his business?
29932What had n''t I let her draw out of me?
29932What had she let me draw out of her?
29932What had worked this change in Joe?
29932What has all this to do with me?
29932What has happened?
29932What has he got to support her with?
29932What has made you change so?"
29932What has the change from sails to steam done to the lives of the men at sea?
29932What has the strike given you in return for all it has taken away?"
29932What has this sweet strike done to_ you_?"
29932What in the name of all the miracles did she do to him that night-- my mother so frail( she had grown so of late), my father so strong?
29932What in the world did Belle mean by that?
29932What is it going to mean in my life?"
29932What is the matter?
29932What is this going to mean to my life?"
29932What is this party, anyhow?"
29932What measureless army of labor was this?
29932What might not they do to her?
29932What other work could I find to do?
29932What possible chance to bring them together?
29932What the devil can you do?"
29932What under the sun was he going to do?
29932What was a"wharf?"
29932What was bad?
29932What was going on in there?
29932What was good in this labor rebellion?
29932What was he doing with my harbor?
29932What was he doing with my harbor?
29932What was he feeling?
29932What was he thinking?
29932What was in my father''s mind?
29932What was it deep within me that leaped up then as though to meet that burning passion in his eyes?
29932What was it he was thinking?
29932What was it she had told him?
29932What was it that lay just ahead?
29932What was the matter with my fool voice?
29932What was the trouble with me at college?"
29932What was there in common between these two?
29932What was there in the talk of the large white- haired old man in the pulpit to make my mother''s eyes so queer, to make her sit so stiff and still?
29932What was there really in business beside the making of money?
29932What was this baby, a Junk or a Docker?
29932What was this pleasant harbor of hers?
29932What was this strange fire deep down within my father''s soul that could give out such a flash?
29932What were the strikers thinking now, and what would they be thinking soon?
29932What will we do when we are grown up?
29932What would Joe Kramer say to this?
29932What would become of me''way down there?
29932What would come out of the furnace?
29932What would she do if I never came back?
29932What would wives mean later on?
29932What''s his name?"
29932What''s the matter with Dillon?
29932What''s the matter with efficiency?"
29932What''s the use of sitting down under a bridge and looking up at an ancient church and trying to feel like a two- spot?
29932What''s wrong with it?
29932What?"
29932When could I ask her?
29932When stop this endless starting out?"
29932When will you ever let me stand pat and get things settled for good and all?
29932Where did she live?
29932Where had he been a year ago, this imp who had fervently crossed himself?
29932Where had it come from?
29932Where was it taking me?
29932Where were they going?
29932Where''s someone who can help this Swede?"
29932Where''s your frontier weakest?
29932Where_ had_ she been, and what was she doing, what queer kind of a girl was this?
29932Which are the most significant ones?"
29932Who are you?''
29932Who ever heard of a hog departing?
29932Who was Old Junk, a man or a woman?
29932Who''s to take care of''em, feed''em, doctor''em?
29932Who''s your private broker?"
29932Why ca n''t we_ give_ ourselves a little?"
29932Why ca n''t you go to life for your stuff?"
29932Why can not you say it?"
29932Why could n''t I stop?
29932Why could n''t I think of something to say?
29932Why could n''t he ask me how I felt or pull my ear and say"Hello, Puss?"
29932Why could n''t he really love me?
29932Why could n''t somebody warn her in time?
29932Why delay any longer?
29932Why did he always get hold of me so?
29932Why did he always grip me so?
29932Why did it have to be?
29932Why did n''t he ask me,"What''s the matter, little son?"
29932Why did n''t we see it long ago?''
29932Why did n''t you tell me about it ahead?"
29932Why did that make her cling to me so?
29932Why did you let him come to the house?"
29932Why do n''t we?
29932Why do n''t you ask him and see for yourself?
29932Why do n''t you go and see him, Billy?"
29932Why do n''t you put in the whole Summer there, watching the big liners?
29932Why do n''t you write about_ them_ for a while?"
29932Why do n''t you write up Jim Marsh?"
29932Why do n''t you?"
29932Why does he like only tiresome things?"
29932Why does n''t he ever come and help me?"
29932Why had I never known him till now?
29932Why is n''t there?
29932Why is your magazine pushing you so?
29932Why make him look so small?
29932Why not be brave and take the plunge?
29932Why not give it another chance?
29932Why not say it?
29932Why not try becoming one of the workers?
29932Why not try something nearer home?"
29932Why not use it here?
29932Why not?
29932Why should I always give in to his harbor?
29932Why should n''t I be?
29932Why should n''t I march?
29932Why should you two have it all?
29932Why this anxious almost humble tone?
29932Why wait for mobs and bloodshed?
29932Why was it?
29932Why?
29932Will you tell me?"
29932Will you, son?
29932Wo n''t you?
29932Would J. K. never leave me alone?
29932Would anything happen to spoil it all?
29932Would that crowd spirit rise again?
29932Would we stand for coaches like our profs?
29932You do n''t know?
29932You do n''t mean to say that you mind it, dear?"
29932You had n''t thought?
29932You want her to be happy?"
29932You want to know, do n''t you?
29932You''d both be working for what you believe in, and how you lived would n''t especially count?"
29932You''re not afraid of it, are you?"
29932You''ve got to put a stop to this----""But how?"
42476''"Where wast_ thou_ when I laid the foundation of the earth?
42476''And who is this little girl who is so glad to see an old man?''
42476''And who may Craig Gibson be?
42476''Did you think of your own quotation from Homer,''she asks,''when you told me that field of yours was full of violets?
42476''Is it a boy?''
42476''Is it impossible to imagine a woman sweet and yet strong, high- minded and yet modest, tender if self- reliant, womanly if well- educated?
42476''Is there a gospel( of Art) according to Ruskin?''
42476''Lamb,''was the response,''did you ever hear me preach?''
42476''Love, like the lark, while soaring sings: Wouldst have him spread again his wings?
42476''Oh, strong soul, by what shore Tarriest thou now?
42476''Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right,''when He sits in judgment upon the soul?
42476''So you are the little girl who has written that queer book, and you want to be one of the press- gang, do you?''
42476''Was there ever kindest shepherd Half so gentle, half so sweet, As the Saviour who would have us Come and gather round His feet?
42476''Who taught you to read, boy?''
42476''Why do so many men return coxcombs from their travels?
42476''Woman you call yourself?''
42476And do you know''Cousin Winnie''?
42476Are ye, like daylight and sun, Shared and rejoiced in by all?
42476But is that so?
42476But where are the four fountains of white water?
42476Children dear, was it yesterday?''
42476Do you know''Babe Christabel''?
42476Does anyone ask who and what Cambridge''Apostles''were?
42476From whom did he inherit his strange temperament?
42476Here is his first impression of Venice:''How is it to be described?
42476How can I find specimens short enough?
42476How sing of hope when Hope hath fled, Joy whispering lip to lip instead?
42476How, then, shall it enter the realms of bliss?
42476In that paper, and in_ Blackwood_( is it not singular that most of our Lake celebrities were contributors to''Old Ebony''?)
42476In the caverns where we lay, Through the surf, and through the swell, The far- off sound of a silver bell?
42476Is God quite silent in these latter days?
42476Is it not pathetically true to experience?
42476Is it you, O beauty, O grace, Or the voice that reveals what you are?
42476Many will, no doubt, ask who this man was, and where he lived?
42476Or are there eyes beyond earth''s veil that see, Dreamers made strong to dream what is to be?''
42476Or are you immersed in the mass Of matter, and hard to extract, Or sunk at the core of the world Too deep for the most to discern?
42476Or how repeat the tuneful moan When the Obdurate''s all my own?
42476THE BLESSING OF A FULL LIFE''Deep streams run still, and why?
42476This is from''The Merman'':''Children dear, was it yesterday We heard the sweet bells over the bay?
42476This was promised to faith-- why should not we be the men to do it?''
42476What careth he for higher skies Who on the heart of harvest lies, And finds both sun and firmament Closed in the round of his content?''
42476What is the true estimate of his character?
42476What words can I use to express that vision, that thing of magic that lay before us?...
42476When did music come this way?
42476Where shall I begin?
42476Who among us does not recognise it?
42476Who does not know''the bell- shaped mountain which the wild winds ring full mournfully''?
42476Who was she?
42476Would a fine political conscience necessarily deaden- or depress the domestic one?
42476You remember this in the Prelude?
42476is it you, is it you, Moonlight and shadow, and lake, And mountains, that fill us with joy, Or the poet who sings you so well?
42476why will ye scatter Like a crowd of frightened sheep?
42476why will ye wander From a love so true and deep?
44367''Lose it, Miss Ashton?'' 44367 ''What keeps you here?''
44367''Why do you not follow?
44367Must your hour call you twice?
44334Addressing himself to a young Englishman who was in his camp, he said,"Have you ever seen how a battle is lost?"
44334Does not this picture imply that Woman at all ages holds in her hand the Empire of the World?"
44334For was it not here, in these woods and on these lakes, that they had lived and feasted in the manner recorded in the chronicles of their time?
44334Or was it not rather the intention of Raphael to represent the_ Three Ages of Womanly Beauty_?
44334The Duc d''Aumale expresses himself about it in the following terms:"Are these really the_ Three Graces_ whom we have here before us?
44334To the complaints of her Italian courtiers that she spent too much money upon her compatriots she replied,"_ Que voulez- vous?
44334Was this her Majesty''s gratitude for the victories he had gained against the enemies of France?
40232A round court house, you say? 40232 A what?"
40232An''what would there be sacred about the same?
40232And the bookcases?
40232And the cost of living?
40232And the girls are well?
40232And the play will be a success?
40232Are you converted?
40232Are you ever overtaken by sleep during the sermon, and if so, at what point in the sermon do you most readily yield to the influence? 40232 Are you sure it''s me you wished to see?"
40232But why make the chains so tight?
40232Do you go to sleep most easily under( a) an Episcopalian;( b) Presbyterian;( c) Methodist;( d) Rabbi;( e) Ethical Culturist? 40232 Do you know what I ought to do to you in the name of the New Parenthood?"
40232Do you mean to say that the Liebestod does not really carry you out of yourself?
40232Do you stay all through the sermon? 40232 Do you think,"I said,"that it will really make any difference to Mr. Galsworthy whether you read him in a voile or in a white cotton ratine?"
40232Does it though?
40232Does the shower work?
40232Harold,I said,"do you feel the sacred innocence of childhood brooding in you?"
40232How do you know?
40232I am not interfering with your work, am I?
40232If the making of laws has nothing to do with the comfort of life, why do you want to vote?
40232Is n''t it true,he said,"that once so often every one of us feels impelled to go out and assassinate a college professor?"
40232Is your awakening attended by a sensation of remorse or merely one of profound astonishment? 40232 Is your choice of a particular church determined by( a) creed;( b) the quality of the preaching;( c) ventilation?
40232Mrs. Hogan,I said,"what do you think of the Sacred Function of Motherhood?"
40232Oh it_ was_ President Eliot? 40232 Referring to eugenics?"
40232Then how about Pickwick?
40232Then you do n''t read all the time while you are driving?
40232There''s a crib?
40232Under the new tariff bill,she said,"will there still be only twenty- four hours to the day?"
40232Was n''t it? 40232 What about the future?"
40232What do I think of what?
40232What do you consider to be the ideal length for a sermon, leaving climatic conditions out of account? 40232 What do_ you_ think about it?"
40232What have we been paying duties on?
40232What is a teazel?
40232What is the average amount you deposit in the contribution plate( a) in summer;( b) in winter? 40232 What is there in sex emotion to be ashamed of?
40232What?
40232Why should n''t one?
40232With nothing to wear?
40232You are thinking of the tango?
40232You have bookcases?
40232You mean eugenics?
40232You mean the tango?
40232''Who won the battle?''
40232Am I wrong in supposing that somewhere in the high schools or the colleges this is what the young soul finds in the Gettysburg Address?
40232And do some of them do what some of us, in desperation, used to do?
40232And how far does their eccentricity go?
40232Are n''t you?
40232Are we in a fog?
40232Are we in the clouds striving toward the light?
40232Are you afraid?
40232Are you aware that when you married Mr. Hogan you were performing an act of social service?"
40232As long as we have men like Charles Crawl and Samuel Howard, do you think I care whether or not Harvard graduates neglect to reproduce their kind?
40232At what rate of interest must this sum be invested to produce a million dollars''worth of real estate in ten years?
40232But how does he do it?
40232But perhaps madam may be interested in some of the photographs illustrating incidents of our journey to the Pole?
40232But perhaps the subject tires you?"
40232But perhaps you do not agree with me?"
40232But what does that prove?
40232But where is denatured alcohol to- day?
40232But where is jiu- jitsu to- day?
40232But where is the bicycle to- day?
40232But where now are Prof. Metchnikoff and Pastor Wagner?
40232But which of the two was it?
40232But who shall say that the connection between high altitudes and the episcopal dignity is not really an important one?
40232But why deny it?
40232Ca n''t you see how a man''s imagination in such surroundings would naturally expand and embrace the world?
40232Can anything be more depressing?
40232Can the lower classes ever hope to obtain that complete view of the Fifth Avenue set which the Sunday columns offer them?
40232Can we assign moral attributes to what people usually regard as dead nature?
40232Come then, why not?
40232Could anything be more useful?
40232Did she look into shop windows when she was out walking or at moving- picture posters?
40232Did she prefer to play in the house or on the street?
40232Did the old tariff have a big duty on hanging up pictures?"
40232Do the primitive loyalties decay?
40232Do they walk downstairs when they wish to go to bed?
40232Do you think she''s hungry?
40232Do you think they''ll let Thaw off?"
40232Do you think we women love to dress?
40232Does a man really take joy in his art treasures in such circumstances?"
40232Does n''t the term at once call up a picture of shocking moral degradation?
40232Does the head of the house, when setting out for his office in the morning, walk upstairs?
40232Does the soul of man decay?
40232Does this show that we must give up all hope of seeing a new world around us before 1915?
40232First Lion: I would n''t touch it for the world-- Now what are you doing?
40232First Lion: Then why do you keep your tail between your legs?
40232First Lion: What I want to know is, what do they want to go and put her in the cage for?
40232First Lion: What made you back into me like that and growl when she waved her upper limbs and stepped forward?
40232First Lion: Whom would she be afraid of?
40232For that matter, what structural form is there which one might call typical of your country, outside of your skyscrapers?"
40232Have I made myself clear?"
40232Have you never felt what a sacred thing that is?"
40232He said:"Is there a soul in things we choose to describe as inanimate?
40232He''s been punished enough; what''s the use of persecuting a man like that?"
40232How does this compare with the literary productivity of Mr. Arnold Bennett and Mr. Jack London?
40232How many hours a day did she play?
40232How would this affect ourselves and our neighbours?
40232I can not recall the entire list, but these were some of the items:"Do you go to church willingly or to please your wife?
40232I do n''t suppose you have to keep away to one side and thrust your finger forward timidly before you venture under the shower?"
40232If the science of sociology could n''t look to us men of culture for its data, whom could it go to?
40232Is it any wonder that I can not even now read the Gettysburg Address without a twinge of resentment?
40232Is it our fate ever to meet?
40232Is it studied originality on their part or are they born rebels?
40232Is there any reason why we can not produce a race as healthy, as beautiful, as graceful in the free play of muscle and limb?
40232Is there anything in history to indicate that Abraham Lincoln, great man though he was, could be in two places at the same time?
40232It is this: Will your article go well with illustrations, and if so where are they to be had?
40232My peroration, for instance, would go somewhat as follows-- that is, if you care to listen?"
40232Need I say more?
40232Need I say more?"
40232Not long ago I came across a five- line''ad''in agate which said,''Are you earning less than you should?
40232Now why could n''t you write a series of snappy verses on the troubles of the flat- dweller?
40232Now, is n''t it true, as the speaker contended last night, that the human animal, taking him by and large, is not a beautiful object?
40232Pankhurst?"
40232Professor Lounsbury: But how about the grammar?
40232Professor Lounsbury: May I ask how the written answers showed up from the point of view of spelling and grammar?
40232Professor Lounsbury: The question is this: Are freshmen made for the English language or is language made for freshmen?
40232Professor Lounsbury: Then you agree with me that when a man has something to say he will say it?
40232Professor Lounsbury: Whom did you say the man is?
40232Second Lion: Ca n''t one stretch when one feels bored?
40232Second Lion: Who''s afraid?
40232Suggestive of the Colosseum, with a touch of the Tower of Babel, and the merest_ soupçon_ of Barnum and Bailey?
40232The Lady: That was a great deal, was n''t it, ninety kilogrammes a day?
40232There''s no reason why people should let themselves grow old, is there now?
40232They would be waiting for him, no doubt, and he was sorry, but what else could he do?
40232Think what?
40232Under such conditions would you keep the playwright from telling us what he knows?"
40232Was his argument, because of that, two times as convincing or only half as convincing?
40232Was it indifference on Harold''s part?
40232Was it studied reticence?
40232Was she afraid of dogs?
40232Was there any reason for doing that, other than habit?
40232What I am thinking of now is something which the speaker last night omitted to mention-- or was it the night before last?
40232What if empires, and republics, and incomes, and the size of families do rise and fall?
40232What is it now?
40232What is more natural than that he should conceal the smuggled goods in the Tenderloin?
40232What is the effect on the Stock Exchange compared with the crisis that ensues in the art world when a rich American dies?
40232What makes you think so?
40232Where''s Scutari and what are they fighting about?''
40232Where''s the sense of it?"
40232Why always the south- bound train?
40232Why do n''t we do something then?
40232Why should there be anything to puzzle him?
40232Why should they?
40232Wo n''t you sit down and tell us all about it?
40232You, mothers and fathers[ this advertising folder petulantly insists], can you appease the wonder that looks out of the eyes of your child?
40232to one cent a pound?"
44082That''s the way you see your model?
44082What else can I bring?
440826):"And one shall say unto Him, What are these wounds in Thine hands?
44082But even in the first picture how much of all the admiration excited was due to the painter and how much to the model?
44082But one may question how far his figures, and the environment of them, are true in colour?
44082By what possible means could it be supplied?
44082Can an Englishman, a matter- of- fact being who finds his happiness in comfort and a practical sphere of action, be at the same time a Romanticist?
44082Emilie Isabel Barrington: Why is Mr. Millais our Popular Painter?
44082How was it possible that England should have taken the lead upon this occasion also?
44082Is it merely pity that is in her eyes?
44082Is it that our eyes are by nature less delicate?
44082Is not London the most modern town in Europe?
44082Where in nature are the rounded forms which Raphael, the first Classicist, borrowed from the antique?
44082Who shall kiss in the father''s own city, With such lips as he sang with again?
44082YES OR NO?]
44082or is everything in the Japanese only the result of a more rational training?
43391Are we not hampered at every turn by false schemes of education, the object of which is to turn out certain conventional products?
43391Are we sure that the gods and customs were not imposed by local conditions?
43391But why?
43391Can it be that herein is a partial explanation of the social individuality of the Jewish people?
43391Can true health of body and mind be conciliated with social ambition or with commercial ambition?
43391Can you tell me how much money there is in a safe, which also has thick walls, by kneading the knobs with your fingers?
43391Does it seem unlikely that an event like this, especially if repeated, may have hastened the extermination of some species of land animals?
43391Have you ever quite realized what the tropical year is like?
43391How did men first come to notice, in the tropics especially, that there was such a thing as the year at all?
43391How did the plants learn when to blossom and produce seed?
43391How did they first observe, save in our frozen north, any fixed sequence or order in the succession of Nature?
43391How did they learn, even here, that spring would infallibly follow winter, and summer be succeeded in due course by autumn?
43391How has it come about that the playground and school recess have been so generally given up?
43391How has this remarkable result been achieved?
43391How many of us can rise up in effective rebellion against the very fashions that in our hearts we most condemn?
43391How, bereft of two out of three of the essentials of nationality, has the Jew been enabled to perpetuate his social consciousness?
43391If bread fails-- not only us, but all the bread- eaters of the world-- what are we to do?
43391In one word, how did the seasons come to be automatically recognized?
43391Is it a case of compensatory development, analogous in the body to a loss of eyesight remedied through greater delicacy of finger touch?
43391Is it altogether on account of appearances?
43391Is it entirely the fault of the native Poles?
43391Is not this a cogent argument in favor of a more rigid enforcement of our laws providing for the food inspection of the poor?
43391Is the superior force of religion, perhaps abnormally developed, alone able to account for it all?
43391Is this tenacity of life despite every possible antagonistic influence, an ethnic trait; or is it a result of peculiar customs and habits of life?
43391May it not as well have been transported by water?
43391Now, what is the reason of these changes in vegetation, when temperature remains so constant?
43391Or is there some hidden, some unsuspected factor, which has contributed to this result?
43391Thus Macbeth says, after he had"done the deed":"But wherefore could not I pronounce amen?
43391To what purpose are teachers urged to study psychology?
43391What is the meaning of this?
43391Where do they eat their luncheon?
43391Why are there seasons for things at all in the tropics?
43391Why do not trees and shrubs of each kind flower up and down throughout the year irregularly-- now one individual and now another?
43391Why should we spare him?
42789_ Omen._ And what shall he gaine that gets the victorie in lying? 42789 ( Query, Who were these people?) 42789 ( Query, Whose crest or badge?) 42789 ( Query, Whose emblem or badge?) 42789 20.--Why does the Church order this verse to be omitted in the reading of the lessons? 42789 ; did the latterfavour"his father or his mother in physiognomy?
42789And what are the arms belonging to it, if there are any?
42789And what is the derivation of_ marguillier_?
42789But sorrow from the human heart, And mists of care, will they depart?"
42789Can Norway be a misprint for Norfolk?
42789Can any of your correspondents furnish me with the names to the following coats of arms?
42789Can any of your correspondents give the etymology of the word, or other instances of its use?
42789Can any of your readers inform me of the origin and meaning of this word?
42789Can any of your readers inform me of this?
42789Can any of your readers tell me where they are to be found?
42789Can it be a blunder, in the original document, for_ beneficiatii_?
42789Can this change of vowels have taken place in this word, and"meals"signify"moles,"from the shelf of sand projecting like a mole?
42789Could you not acquaint me with the length, breadth, and height of the picture, and with the painter''s name?
42789Does it signify saddler, or, as has been suggested to me, esquire?
42789Either Coleridge did or did not cancel the lines mentioned; if he did, can any of your readers inform me in which of his works this fact is mentioned?
42789H. B. C. U. U. C._ Thomas Ceeley._--Who was Thomas Ceeley, who defended Lyme Regis so gallantly with the famous Blake, the former being governor?
42789H._ Lord Lyon King- at- Arms, Scotland._--Where is there an account of the origin of this office, and of the different possessors of it?
42789Has any subsequent discovery been made in the same locality respecting, or any additional light thrown upon, the one of which mention is herein made?
42789Have any of your correspondents ever met with, in similar representations, the instruments I have described as maces in shields 2. and 10.?
42789How is the bath of nitrate of silver prepared, and the mode of applying it to the paper?
42789How is the picture developed?
42789If either of the latter, for how long a time; and what then?
42789Is it because the passage assumes the fact that Samuel himself appeared to Saul-- a statement open to discussion?
42789Is it really intended to say that"scandal"reported Lord North to be the son of an illustrious lady of the royal family?
42789Is not the phrase a corruption of beaten to a mammock, to a piece, to a scrap, to a fragment?
42789Is the family from which she sprung now represented; and if they bear arms, what are they?
42789Is the paper, when removed from the water, to be partially dried with blotting- paper, and used in its damp state?
42789Is there any family of this name( D''Arc), and if so, where?
42789Is there any proof that it has not been used ever since the Reformation?
42789Is this MS. in their possession, and is it a piece of historic value?
42789MR. FORBES asks,"Is the tune of the_ galliard_ known?"
42789My object is to ascertain, if possible, if this portion of statue has been preserved?
42789Or shall we let him_ in_, And see if we can get him_ out_ again?"
42789Say, Mr. Speaker, shall we shut the door And keep him_ out_?
42789Should the dishes be kept in the dark constantly?
42789Should the paper be brushed with, floated on, or immersed in the solution?
42789The other, a broadside, headed by a woodcut with_ three_ wherries, entitled"First Oars to L-- m-- th, or who strives for Preferment?"
42789Was he any relation to the Gowrie family?
42789Was his_ Topographicall Dictionarie_( mentioned, as prepared for the press, in the_ Perambulation_) ever published, and what other works by him exist?
42789Was this statue cast for a St. Peter, or is it an ancient statue that had been found in the Tiber; or the ancient statue of Jupiter Capitolinus?
42789Was this statue cast from the metal of the Capitoline Jove?
42789What are the facts of this case, and where may the best account of this extermination of the natives be found?
42789What authority is there for believing it to have been cast in the pontificate of St. Leo?
42789What does this word mean?
42789What is known of Lambarde, or Lambert, as Gervase Markham calls him?
42789What is the probable time of exposure in the camera?
42789Where shall it be sent?_ H. E. P. T.( Woolwich).
42789Will some one of your readers favour me with an explanation of the meaning of this insinuation?
42789_ Beaten to a Mummy._--Whence comes this expression?
42789_ Contested Elections._--What book gives an accurate account of all the contested elections since the Restoration, and prior to the Reform Bill?
42789_ Joan d''Arc._--Did Joan d''Arc( the Maid of Orleans) bear any heraldic insignia; and if so, what?
42789_ Tenent and Tenet._--When did the use of tene_n_t( for opinion, dogma,& c.) give place to tenet?
42789_ Tuebeuf._--Where is it?
42789_ What Numbers are wanted?_ EARLDOM OF OXFORD.
42789and Patrick Ruthven, the son of{ 206} the Earl of Gowrie, in their flight into England in August 1600), and what became of him?
42789and a lion?
42789and, finally, how fixed?
42789and, if so, was the practice a general one, or were they merely for religious_ exercises_?
42789give any additional information on this rather curious point?
42789or can any correspondent suggest a better etymology?
42789or will it keep, and how long?
42789represent the Guelphs or the Saxe- Gotha family?
42789vii., p. 140. and why the_ soda_ is used for_ negatives_ and the_ allum_ for_ positives_, both being produced on_ iodized paper_?
42789would inform me where the old Scottish song,"Jenny''s Bawbee,"is to be found?
42789{ 210} SIGMA inquires why"this ancestor of Sir Walter''s was called Old Satchels?"
45270And sometimes does your patience flag?
45270And then your brain begins to grow; You learn"How does the Kitty go?"
45270But sometimes do the dull hours drag?
45270Do n''t you think that is nice to say Upon a breezy, shiny day?
45270How can you dream, not knowing words?
45270Or is it like the song of birds, Or scent of flowers, or sunshine bright, Or South breeze on a summer''s night?
45270So, then, what difference can it make, Whether you are asleep or''wake?
42041Brian, my brother,said the King, in a tone of scornful wonder,"Why dost thou come in beggar- guise our palace portals under?
42041Why did you crack them, grandpapa?
42041_ You say that''s so?_My American friend of the rue de la Paix?
42041_ You say that''s so?_My American friend of the rue de la Paix?
42041( Will you not play?
42041..... Weavers, weaving solemn and still, Why do you weave in the moonlight chill?...
42041A head''s breadth?
42041Am I grown grey And learnt no wisdom?
42041Am_ I_ wronged by it?
42041And Certainty?
42041And after, ere the night is born, Do hares come out about the corn?
42041And dare we wish that our poor dust should mar The wonder of such immortality?
42041And is there honey still for tea?
42041And laughs the immortal river still Under the mill, under the mill?
42041And sunset still a golden sea From Haslingfield to Madingley?
42041And what are thy shrine, and kine and kindred, what are thy gods to me?
42041And what can any old man do with shillings, With no one but himself to spend them on-- An idle, good- for- nothing, lone old man?
42041And when you are asked,"Did you see an old woman?"
42041Are you afraid of his arrows, O beautiful dreaming boy?)
42041Are you still asleep?
42041Broken and tarnished too?
42041But is it more than an appearance?
42041But is the specific quality of these delicate creations really epigrammatic?
42041But the Sage corrects him:... Poor fool, And didst thou think this present sensible world Was God?...
42041But we who sojourn yet in earthly ways; How shall we sing, now Helen lieth dead?
42041But what are we to say about the spirit of it-- the philosophy which is implicit in it?
42041Can death haunt silence with a silver sound?
42041Could a great conception be stated in a simpler phrase than that of the two first lines?
42041Deep meadows yet, for to forget The lies, and truths, and pain?...
42041Did you see aught?
42041Do they not shoot up radiant, A splendour of snowy vans, swimming the air Just ere the rush of rapture?
42041Do you dare face the wind now?
42041Goblin, why do you love them so?
42041Has anybody heard of a Saxon who could fit names like these to his sweetheart-- Little Joy, Sweet Laughter, Shy Little Gay Sprite?
42041His dust to- day lies with you, Italy; Where lie his words?
42041How can one describe this poem?
42041How much of this apparent paradox is due to knowledge derived from the author''s astounding autobiography?
42041I laughed at her over the sticky larch fence, And said,"Who''s down- hearted, Dolly?"
42041If I should find_ Her_ name among the friends of Cassius?
42041If it''s so fine and brave, the Old Kent Road, How is it you came to leave it?
42041Is dawn a secret shy and cold Anadyomene, silver- gold?
42041Is he not holy, like you?
42041Is it known to the Wind that takes Advantage at once and comes right in?
42041Is it known to the babe that he shouts?
42041Is it known to the cock in the yard, That crows-- the cause of that merry din?
42041Is it known to the dog, that he barks For joy-- what Mary and Maud laugh at?
42041Is it known to the old, purring cat?
42041Is it known to themselves?
42041Is not the balm of Africa yet clinging About the bones of Livingstone?
42041Mary and Maud have met at the door, Oh, now for a din; I told you so: They''re laughing at once with sweet, round mouths, Laughing for what?
42041May I not do as gods do?
42041Might you be looking for a job, my lad?
42041Misery?
42041Mother?
42041Nay, let me hear What is it that my sister Princess wills Out of the largeness of her heart for me?
42041Nay, would you have me weep?
42041Not yet the happy moment?
42041Nymph, nymph, what are your beads?
42041Of that rhapsody what can one say?
42041Oh to whom shall a song of battle be chanted?
42041Oh, is the water sweet and cool, Gentle and brown, above the pool?
42041One who might on a starvèd body take Strong flights beyond the fiery larks in song, With awful music, passionate with hate?
42041Say, Leonora, Where are my wings?
42041Say, do the elm- clumps greatly stand Still guardians of that holy land?
42041Say, is there Beauty yet to find?
42041The chestnuts shade, in reverend dream, The yet unacademic stream?
42041The lover replies: What are the sins of my race, Beloved, what are my people to thee?
42041Then thou art God?
42041Then truly, who art thou?
42041Then was I not in the midst of thee Lord God?
42041They can not both be-- Owain, where are they?
42041Though it should be so-- Though yet it can not be-- what''s that to me?
42041To pity me Makes me a beggar-- dare you pity me?
42041To what God Shall we chant Our songs of Battle?
42041Twice the traveller knocks, crying:"Is there anybody there?"
42041Unconcerned I sat and heard Little things, Ivy tendrils, a bird''s wings, A frightened bird-- Or faint hands at the window- pane?
42041Weavers, weaving at break of day, Why do you weave a garment so gay?...
42041What are words?
42041What can these builders Be doing here at this hour?
42041What does it matter?
42041What news of our dear cousin?
42041What scent will greet you in an hour?
42041What shall I read therein?
42041What thing am I That three soft words should drive the tear drops forth Like floods in winter?
42041When, with a bee''s mouth closed, she hums Sounds not to wake, but soft and deep, To make her pretty charges sleep?
42041Where are my children, if they are not there?
42041Where hast thou wandered since yester year, on what venture of love hast thou tarried?
42041Where shall I be when Summer comes?
42041Who wants to win''em?
42041Why be glum?
42041Why do n''t you come on?
42041Why do you stare at them?
42041Why dost thou creep so pale, like one afraid?
42041Why, mother, who should know as well as you How soon a riveter is done?
42041Will you go with me?
42041Will you pay me the price?"
42041Wilt thou not come again, thou godly sword, Into the Spirit''s hands?
42041You, who bled With Garibaldi, and the thousand more?
42041and Quiet kind?
42041does anyone know?
42041what should we have, He and I?
42041yet Stands the Church clock at ten to three?
43238Sir,she said to me, after she had told them to sit down,"you will not mind our dispensing with ceremony for you?
43238''"But why did you go so often to La Voisin''s house?"
43238''"Do you know La Vigoureux?"
43238''"Do you know La Voisin?"
43238''"I do away with him?
43238''"Well, gentlemen, is that all you have to say to me?"
43238''"Why do you wish to do away with your husband?"
43238''Are not those who have driven me to death my enemies, and is it not a Christian sentiment to forgive them their rancour?''
43238''But madam,''said Regnier,''surely you are not mixed up in this business?''
43238''Did you know it would be a great crime to make the slightest addition to the facts which you have declared?''
43238''Did you not know you were bound to tell, and that it would be a great crime to hide anything concerning this matter?''
43238''How can you be easy in mind when you have been so often to the sorceress?''
43238''How so, sir?''
43238''How, sir?
43238''I am accused of having poisoned Saint- Laurent,''added Pennautier;''but has it been so much as proved that he died of poison?
43238''Is it rash,''observes Monsieur Loiseleur very justly,''to see in these headaches and faintnesses the effect of powders provided by La Voisin?''
43238''Sir,''said the headsman,''is n''t it a fine stroke?''
43238''What is it, madam?
43238''Why should I be?''
43238And if I had not been taken, what would my end have been?
43238Are there not some so atrocious or so numerous that the Church can not remit them?''
43238But the lady seeing my confusion said:"What is the matter?
43238Could one find such a saying in Roman history, or in Corneille?
43238Do n''t you want to come?"
43238Do you know that, humbled though I be by my hapless present state, yet I do not feel humble enough?
43238Frankly, is this not giving to the text a signification which never entered into the mind of the physicians?''
43238Have they ever stopped anything?''
43238How am I to feed my family?
43238How far had she pushed her crimes?
43238How far had this terrible woman been to seek her accomplices?
43238How shall I know whether I am in purgatory or hell?''
43238How was that silence explained?
43238How, and by whom, was the haughty favourite led to the haunts of the witches?
43238I pretended to be undoing my shoes, desiring to know how far the lady''s cruelty would go, and she said,"What is the matter with you?
43238If I had died at Liége before my arrest, where should I be now?
43238In the examination of July 12, 1680, we read:--''Why did you not sooner give information of these evil designs against the person of the king?''
43238Is it possible to derive any positive conclusions from them?
43238Is it possible to imagine a more striking proof of the robust faith people then had in all these devilries?
43238Moreover, had he not himself confessed that he was a disciple of Agrippa,''the greatest sorcerer that ever was''?
43238Need anything be said of the manners of Monsieur?
43238She interrupted him:''Sir, are there not some sins that are unpardonable in this world, either from their gravity or their number?
43238Should I enter, or should I go away?
43238THE DEATH OF''MADAME''[12] Who has not read Bossuet''s funeral oration on Henrietta Anne of England, Duchess of Orleans?
43238Was it due to these revelations that, suddenly, the intentions of the court of Versailles underwent modification?
43238Was this in order to make false_ louis d''or_, as historians have supposed?
43238Were rank and name no longer a rampart high enough against the inquisitions of a lieutenant of police?
43238What have I done that you want to have me murdered?"
43238What passed in his soul, immured, for posterity as for his contemporaries, in that''terrible majesty''of which Saint- Simon speaks?
43238What were the declarations of the witches arrested by La Reynie?
43238What were these anxieties?
43238Where could she have lived except on wild heaths-- the hapless wretch who was so hunted down, the accursed, proscribed, hated poisoner?''
43238Why did the poet, contrary to the wishes of the sick woman, prevent these women from attending her?
43238You say nothing?''
411Ah, where indeed?
411Am I to read this?
411And the American?
411And why not, madame?
411Are you the Prince Kalonay, sir?
411But the prodigal''s father?
411Can I ever make you understand how much that means to me? 411 Confound your impudence, what the devil do you mean by that?"
411Did he stand over him and upbraid him? 411 Did you see him?"
411Do I understand you to say,he asked,"that you have a paper signed by the Republic agreeing to pay 300,000 francs to Kalonay?
411Do they understand?
411Do you follow me? 411 Do you not agree with me, Miss Carson?"
411Do you not think they will rise to this standard- bearer, will they not rally to his call? 411 Do you think he knows?
411From him?
411Has he borrowed any money from you yet?
411Have you been seen with him? 411 He?"
411How did you meet him, in Heaven''s name?
411How do you know he is General Renauld? 411 How do you know this?"
411How do you two come to be stopping here?
411I believe, sir, you are leading an expedition against the Republic of Messina?
411I thought this hotel had been turned over to King Louis?
411I wonder what he''s up to now?
411Indeed?
411Is it Archie Gordon you mean?
411Is she mad? 411 Is that a man- of- war?
411Is that not Zara coming now?
411Is that quite clear?
411It is a curious old town, Tangier,he said, affably,"but too many hills, is it not so?
411Kalonay''s?
411Kalonay''s?
411Madame Zara,he cried, in a tone of warning,"do you pretend that the Prince Kalonay was your accomplice in this; that he knew what you meant to do?"
411May I walk back with you to your hotel?
411May we sit down there a moment until they call us?
411Might I be permitted,he asked,"to kiss his Royal Highness?
411No? 411 See, what did I tell you?"
411So they surrendered as quickly as that, did they?
411That is the Hotel Bretagne, is it not?
411That was rather indiscreet, was it not, Marie?
411The boat from Gibraltar-- has she arrived yet?
411The idea was to make them think that I, at least, was sincere; was not that it? 411 Then you are encouraged, Father?"
411To what do I owe the pleasure of this visit?
411Warn me?
411Was it discreet of you to come together in this way? 411 We are working for only one thing, are we not?
411We undervalue ourselves sometimes, do we not?
411Well,said Colonel Erhaupt, briskly, as he followed Niccolas out upon the terrace,"has the boat arrived?
411What are you staring at? 411 What can he cable?"
411What child''s talk is this?
411What do I know against him? 411 What do you know against him?"
411What do you think of that, Colonel?
411What does the woman mean?
411What is it? 411 What is it?"
411What is your authority for saying we have failed?
411What nonsense is this?
411Where is Louis?
411Where is Madame Zara?
411Where is the King?
411Who is it?
411Who made you do it?
411Who? 411 Whose sorry trick is this?
411Why should we pity her, what pity has she shown for us-- for me? 411 Will you always take everything as a joke, Archie?"
411Will you give it me?
411You found them loyal? 411 You have heard what has passed?"
411Your Majesty has seen Miss Carson, then?
411--Or did she make love to Kalonay?"
411After luncheon, then, at, say, three o''clock-- will that be satisfactory?"
411And if I''m wasted away, can you wonder?
411And if she is----""Ah, and if she is?"
411And the launch from the yacht,"he continued,"has it started for shore yet?"
411And what do you mean by staying on when you see you are not wanted?"
411And you have been successful?
411Are you in earnest; do you really wish to serve us?"
411But you know why?
411Did she succeed?"
411Do you call it good fortune, sir,"he laughed,"to be an exile at twenty- eight?
411Do you happen to know from whence her money comes?"
411Has she said yet how much she means to give us,"asked the King,"and when she means to let us have it?
411Have Madame Zara and Kalonay returned?
411Have you got it with you?"
411Have you known him long?
411He is not a swindler, too, is he, or a retired croupier?
411He may turn on you and expose you, and then what have we left?
411He permits himself to condescend to many women, to any woman, to women of all classes----""That will do,"said the King;"what do you mean?"
411He was always at our house, and was a great friend of the family; was n''t he, mother?
411How did he get in?"
411How do we know what he might not do?
411How do you generally carry it?"
411How far successful?"
411How long has it been since I saw you, Patty?"
411I came to hear of your visit,"she continued;"am I to be told anything?"
411I go to fight for you, do you understand?
411I suppose you took out your commission in advance?"
411It is n''t possible this is the same young girl I used to take buggy riding on Sunday evenings?"
411Louis answered his pantomime with an appropriate gesture, and then asked, sharply,"Well, what is it?
411May I inquire how far your Majesty has taken her into our plans?"
411Mrs. Carson,"he exclaimed, bitterly, turning upon her,"why have you allowed this-- what have you been doing while this was going on?
411Not the King-- not that blackguard?"
411Now, what are you going to do?
411Shall I go on,"he asked,"or do you still think it advisable for anyone to leave the room?"
411She has acted according to my orders and for the best, but I confess I----""Some one had to be sacrificed,"returned the woman, boldly,"and why not he?
411Suppose he believes, suppose he believes that Kalonay and I have sold you out, but suspects that you know it?"
411That was it, was it not, Father?"
411Then how are we to get it?"
411To make it appear that though there were traitors in his camp, the King was in most desperate earnest?
411Warn me against what?"
411We do n''t want anyone like that around here, do we?"
411Well, Baron,"he cried, gayly, as he stepped forward,"welcome-- or are you welcome?"
411What do you know against him?"
411What does he want with us?"
411What does it matter what he says?
411What shall I tell him?"
411What?"
411Who had the impudence to present him?"
411Who is this man?"
411Who made you do it?
411Who was it, then?"
411Why did you bring me here?
411Why name the only one who is sincere?"
411Why should you complain?
411Will you do it?"
411Wo n''t you let me speak to him, mother?"
411You do not mind?
411You do not think I presume?"
411You got my cablegram?"
411You mean the expedition?"
411Your visit was all you hoped, you can depend upon them?"
411against what?
36208Whence comes to my intelligence this impression, so pure, of truth? 36208 [ 50] Who can produce, on the one hand, the sun and light, on the other, truth and intelligence, except a real being?
36208After having enumerated all these differences, could we not reduce them?
36208After having spoken of taste which appreciates beauty, shall we say nothing of genius which makes it live again?
36208After the dissolution of the body, can any thing of us remain?
36208After them, what artists again are Claude Lorrain and Philippe de Champagne?
36208All beings attain their end; should man alone not attain his?
36208Am I in his counsels so as to adjust my actions according to his decrees?
36208And do these rules of reasoning and conduct also exist in some place, whence they communicate to me their immutable truth?
36208And for what, I pray you?
36208And how?
36208And shall interest be entirely banished from our system?
36208And then, if the religious sentiment is weakened, are there not other sentiments that can make the heart of man beat, and fecundate genius?
36208And what will music gain by aiming at the picturesque, when its proper domain is the pathetic?
36208And why?
36208And without us, in society, to whom come esteem and contempt, consideration and infamy?
36208And would you establish ethics on a foundation so mobile?
36208And, thus to speak, is not the face of nature expressive like that of man?
36208Are not all those beautiful heads, and those draperies, too, worthy of Raphael?
36208Are not these reasons sufficient, I pray you, to conclude that the sole will of God is not for us the principle of the idea of the good?
36208Are physics possible, if every phenomenon which begins to appear does not suppose a cause and a law?
36208Are the two contracting parties here_ me_ and myself?
36208Are those primitive artists and poets, as Homer and Dedalus are called, strangers to this change?
36208Are we on that account the disciple of Reid and Kant?
36208Are we the authors of the bad action?
36208Are we the authors of the good action?
36208Are, then, being culpable and being unfortunate the same thing?
36208Authority, it is said, comes from God: doubtless; but whence comes liberty, whence comes humanity?
36208But are we witnesses of a bad action?
36208But by what right is the unity of a doctrine placed in allowing in it only a single principle?
36208But can any will whatever be the foundation of obligation?
36208But could I not employ my money in a way more useful to humanity?
36208But do we think for a single instant that there are in the midst of the sea the unfortunate who are suffering, and are, perhaps, about to perish?
36208But does it extend to all possible lands?
36208But does it follow that Plato gives to Ideas a substantial existence, that he makes of them beings properly so called?
36208But does it limit itself to the reproduction of them as nature furnishes them to it, without adding any thing to them which belongs to itself?
36208But here the number of voices means nothing?
36208But how and by what illusion can we draw the infinite from the finite?
36208But how are we to believe in another life, in a system that confines human consciousness within the limits of transformed sensation?
36208But in the name of what do you order me to do this?
36208But is it not sporting with philosophy to demand of it any other character than that of truth?
36208But is it possible to stop there?
36208But is it, then, the object of philosophy to produce at any cost a system, instead of seeking to understand the truth and express it as it is?
36208But is not a solid essentially divisible?
36208But is reason exercised only on the condition of reflection?
36208But is this continuation of the person possible?
36208But is this sentiment, one in itself, manifested only in a single way, and applied only to a single kind of beauty?
36208But logically, whence comes the obligation of performing an action, if not from the intrinsic goodness of this act?
36208But to obey reason is a precept very vague and very abstract:--how can we be sure that our action is conformed or is not conformed to reason?
36208But to what human faculty are addressed the promise and threat of the chastisements and the rewards of another life?
36208But what responsibility can there be in the absence of liberty and a recognized and accepted rule of justice?
36208But what shall we say of him who is the very substance of justice and the exhaustless source of love?
36208But who can have the strange idea of searching in Lesueur for an archeology?
36208But, I ask, is it proportion that is dominant in this slender tree, with flexible and graceful branches, with rich and shady foliage?
36208But, besides images and sentiments, does not the poet employ the high thoughts of justice, liberty, virtue, in a word, moral ideas?
36208But, it is said, is it not the aim of the poet to excite pity and terror?
36208By what sign, then, do you recognize that an action is conformed to reason, that it is good?
36208By what, in fact, do you know matter?
36208Can I at first place on one side the whiteness, and on the other side the color?
36208Can I here at the first step immediately arrive at a general idea of color?
36208Can any one, in sincerity, say as much as this for the_ Stanze_ of the Vatican?
36208Can obligation depend upon happiness, that is to say, on a thing that it is equally impossible for me to always seek and obtain at will?
36208Can one conceive, in fact, that he could take what we call the bad part?
36208Can there be among the attributes possessed by the creature something essential not possessed by the Creator?
36208Can this be one of two_ Moses_ which were painted by Lesueur for M. de Nouveau, as we learn from Guillet de Saint- Georges?
36208Can we despise a being who, in his acts, should not be free, a being who should not know the good, and should not feel himself obligated to fulfil it?
36208Can you conceive an event happening, except in some point of duration?
36208Charity is a sacrifice; and who can find the rule of sacrifice, the formula of self- renunciation?
36208Could you in any way conceive, in any time and in any place, a phenomenon which begins to appear without a cause, physical or moral?
36208Could you say as much of the principle of cause?
36208D''Assas did not deliberate; and for all that, was d''Assas less free, did he not act with entire liberty?
36208Do all these grand spectacles appear only for the sake of appearing?
36208Do not all languages, as well as all nations, speak of liberty, duty, and right?
36208Do not pictures, ordinary in coloring, often move us more deeply than many dazzling productions, more seductive to the eye, less touching to the soul?
36208Do the sweet light of day and a melodious voice produce upon you the same effect as darkness and silence?
36208Do the triangles, the squares, the circles, that I rudely trace on paper, impress upon my mind their proportions and their relations?
36208Do they demand our applause for the success of fortunate address, or for the voluntary sacrifices of virtue?
36208Do we not every day see criminals denouncing themselves and offering themselves up to avenge the public?
36208Do we not need, in order to feel an author, not to equal him, without doubt, but to resemble him in some degree?
36208Do we not regard them as manifestations of an admirable power, intelligence, and wisdom?
36208Do we refer to ourselves, for example, the definitions of geometry, as we do certain movements of which we feel ourselves to be the cause?
36208Do you dare blame virtue, or how in this world do you accord to it the recompense that it has not sought, but is its due?
36208Do you deny that this hall is in a larger place, which is in its turn in another larger still?
36208Do you deny that this vase is in this hall?
36208Do you deny that this water is in a vase?
36208Do you know a language, a people, which does not possess the word disinterested virtue?
36208Do you know in Italy or Holland a greater landscape painter than Claude?
36208Do you suppose that the word liberty could ever have been formed, if the thing itself did not exist?
36208Do you take memory?
36208Do you want a talent more natural, and still having force and elevation?
36208Do you wish a striking example of it?
36208Does a man excite in us by such or such an action a more or less vivid disposition to wish him well, a desire to see and even make him happy?
36208Does art blindly give itself up to the orders of religion and the state?
36208Does each one of us believe himself less than himself, because he possesses sensibility, reason, and will?
36208Does he excite an opposite desire, an opposite disposition?
36208Does it extend to all lands?
36208Does it not extend to all moral beings, without distinction of time and place?
36208Does not the object which you admire act upon me as well as upon you?
36208Does one ever say: This is a beautiful taste, this is a beautiful smell?
36208Does one wish to make absolute unity something else than an attribute of an absolute being, or an abstraction, a conception of human intelligence?
36208Father of a family, I should like much to know in the name of what principle you would hesitate to retain the sum which is necessary to you?
36208Finally, are powerful religious institutions found in the cradle of society?
36208Finally, consciousness, that indispensable condition of intelligence,--is it not the sentiment of a single being?
36208Finally, shall we reduce all morality to sentiment, to sympathy, to benevolence?
36208For example, the following is a very general truth: the day succeeds the night; but is it a universal and necessary truth?
36208For how could a true principle, rationally applied, be revolting to the public conscience?
36208For how do you suppose that I can be sensible to evils of which I form to myself no idea?
36208Good taste is distinguished from bad taste; but what does this distinction signify, if the judgment of the beautiful is resolved into a sensation?
36208Has a man devoted himself to death through love for his country?
36208Has art forgotten human nature?
36208Has autem rationes ubi arbitrandum est esse nisi in mente Creatoris?
36208Has it been too human, too real, too nude?
36208Has it made itself?
36208Has such or such an origin been found?
36208Has the infinite image[62] of the infinite had no original, according to which it has been made, no real cause that has produced it?
36208Have I not senses like you?
36208Have Jean Goujon and Germain Pilon done any thing more elegant and lifelike?
36208Have they a common sentiment?
36208Have we discovered any truth?
36208Have we performed a good action?
36208Have you discovered an antique vase admirably worked?
36208He asks-- What is the beautiful in itself?
36208He calls on you for this sum,--what will you do?
36208He conceives it, he feels it, he bears it, thus to speak, in himself,--how should his end be elsewhere?
36208He is, then, perfectly beautiful; but is he not sublime also in other ways?
36208How can I describe thee, O inimitable master- piece?
36208How can we demand light from the regions of darkness, and the explanation of reality from an hypothesis?
36208How can we go from the concrete to the abstract?
36208How can we love what we are ignorant of?
36208How can we penetrate to the sources of human knowledge, which are concealed, like those of the Nile?
36208How could eclecticism, which has no other field than history, be our only, our primary, object?
36208How could they attribute to him the justice and the love-- I mean disinterested love-- of which they can not have the least idea?
36208How make a virtue of it, when virtue is defined a_ disposition to contribute to the happiness of others_?
36208I touch the extension, I see the color, I am sensible of the odor; but do our senses attain the substance that is extended, colored, or odorous?
36208If I should say to you that a murder has just been committed, could you not ask me when, where, by whom, wherefore?
36208If I should say to you that love or ambition caused the murder, would you not at the same instant conceive a lover, an ambitious person?
36208If absolute truths are beyond man who perceives them, once more, where are they, then?
36208If an agreeable object is presented to me, am I able not to be agreeably moved?
36208If it is a painful object, am I able not to be painfully moved?
36208If the Idea of the Good is not God himself, how will the following passage, also taken from the_ Republic_, be explained?
36208If the person that I am, if the individual_ me_ does not, perhaps, explain the whole of reason, how could it explain truth, and absolute truth?
36208Imagination is conceded to the poet when he retraces the images of nature; will this same faculty be refused him when he retraces sentiments?
36208In fact, in order to relish the works of imagination, is it not necessary to have taste?
36208In fact, with what would you have reason defend herself, when she has called herself in question?
36208In order to be moved by certain ideas, is it not necessary to have possessed them in some degree?
36208In order to enjoy the truth, is it not necessary to know it more or less?
36208In order to follow it, what calculations are imposed on me?
36208In the first place, is that very certain?
36208In this case what should I do?
36208In what measure ought those two principles to be united?
36208Is Condé really inferior to Alexander, Hannibal, and Cæsar; for among his predecessors we must not look for other rivals?
36208Is Corneille happily inspired?
36208Is admiration increased to the degree of impressing upon the soul an emotion, an ardor that seems to exceed the limits of human nature?
36208Is he negligent?
36208Is it a capricious movement of the imagination and heart?
36208Is it because my will is limited?
36208Is it because those who feel like you are more numerous than those who feel like me?
36208Is it in the name of interest?
36208Is it not God that I am seeking?"
36208Is it not a rule of prudence not to listen to, without always disdaining them, the inspirations-- often capricious-- of the heart?
36208Is it not already for the good man an exquisite reward to make the noble sentiments that animate him thus pass into the hearts of his fellow- men?
36208Is it not because the dispositions of a man appear to us conformed to the idea of justice, that we are inclined to participate in them with him?
36208Is it not that of right?
36208Is it not the heart, in fact, that feels the beautiful and the good?
36208Is it not uniting a certain number of ideas under a certain unity?
36208Is it only a copier of reality?
36208Is it only imagination that makes the_ Polyeucte_ and the_ Misanthrope_, two incomparable marvels?
36208Is it possible to carry meditation, humiliation, rapture farther?
36208Is it pretended that this unity is a chimera?
36208Is it skilful selfishness or disinterested virtue that poets celebrate?
36208Is it the same when an object is not only agreeable to you, but when you judge that it is beautiful?
36208Is it true that in presence of an act to be done I am able to will or not to will to do it?
36208Is it true that there is no judgment, even affirmative in form, which is not mixed with negation?
36208Is it, in fact, necessary to seek for them any other subject than the beings themselves which they govern?
36208Is not the impression which I feel as real as that which you feel?
36208Is not this the expression of an irresistible belief, of a belief which is the voice of nature, and against which we contend in vain?
36208Is our conscience satisfied, if we are able to bear witness to ourselves that we have not contributed to his sufferings?
36208Is self- respect founded on one of those arbitrary conventions that cease to exist when the two contracting parties freely renounce them?
36208Is the architect obliged to subordinate general effect and the proportions of the edifice to such or such a particular end that is prescribed to him?
36208Is the sentiment profound, and, indeed, Christian?
36208Is the_ me_ more or less_ me_?
36208Is there a half of_ me_, a quarter of_ me_?
36208Is there a human language known to us that has not different expressions for good and evil, for just and unjust?
36208Is there in desire any of the characters of liberty?
36208Is there not a primitive affirmation which implies no negation?
36208Is there not a single beauty of which all particular beauties are only reflections, shades, degrees, or degradations?
36208Is this duty the only one?
36208Is this new place also a body?
36208Is this saying that it exhausts God?
36208It must be something real.... Where is this supreme reason?
36208Jean Cousin excepted, is there one of them that is superior to Jacques Sarazin?
36208Man seeks pleasure and happiness, but are there not in him other needs, other sentiments as powerful, as vital?
36208Moreover, to what are these necessary principles applied?
36208Moreover, who has made this infinite representation of the infinite, so as to give it to me?
36208Native faith is dead, but can not reflective faith take its place?
36208Now I pray you, am I obligated to be happy?
36208Now this other problem naturally presents itself: What, then, in themselves, are these universal and necessary truths?
36208Now, can the absolute good be any thing else than an attribute of him who, properly speaking, is alone absolute being?
36208Now, is the idea and the word disinterestedness explained to us by reducing disinterestedness to interest?
36208Now, is the idea of right a chimera?
36208Now, of these two ways of knowing truth, which precedes in the chronological order of human knowledge?
36208Now, on what condition is government exercised?
36208Now, when and how is the law fulfilled that attaches pleasure and pain to good and evil?
36208Now, where can these reasons be, except in the mind of the Creator?
36208Now, where is the true original, is it with M. Houdetot or in England?
36208Of all fabulists, ancient and modern, does any one, even the ingenious, the pure, the elegant Phædrus, approach our La Fontaine?
36208On the contrary, do we witness a bad action?
36208On the contrary, is this induction neither universal nor necessary?
36208On the other hand, shall we immolate the need of happiness, the hope of all reward, human or divine, to the abstract idea of the good?
36208On those perpetual fluctuations of sentiment, is it possible to ground a legislation equal for all?
36208On what condition is there intelligence for us?
36208Once more, whence comes this marvellous representation of the infinite, which pertains to the infinite itself, which resembles nothing finite?
36208Or are there others whose perfect trueness produces this effect?
36208Or, indeed, is it not rather he who has everywhere extended measure, proportion, truth itself, that impresses on my mind the certain idea of them?...
36208Shall this hope be deceived?
36208Shall we confine with Kant the whole of ethics to obligation?
36208Shall we give a recent instance of the small value we appear to set on Poussin?
36208Should the greatest of creatures be the most ill- treated?
36208Since then, what has French architecture become?
36208Suppress one of the two terms, and what becomes of the relation?
36208Take another example: if you had never smelled but a single flower, the violet, for instance, would you have had the idea of odor in general?
36208Take the most subtile fluids,--can you help conceiving them as more or less susceptible of division?
36208Tell me what sentiment does not come within the province of the painter?
36208That the world is ill- made?
36208The country of Shakspeare and Milton does not possess, since Bacon, a single prose writer of the first order[?
36208The following dilemma I submit with confidence to the loyal dialectics of M. de Biran: Is the induction of which you speak universal and necessary?
36208They are incontestable; but, in this diversity is there not unity?
36208This point being once conceded, can it be said that God has created things without reason?
36208To take, again, an example that we have already employed, what constitutes the beauty of a tempest, of a shipwreck?
36208Upon what ground could the idea of substance be anterior to the principle that every quality supposes a substance?
36208Was there ever a better chance for a national and Christian monument?
36208We can perceive the same truth without asking ourselves this question: Have we the ability not to admit this truth?
36208What are goodness, generosity, and beneficence without dominion over self, without the form of soul attached to the religious observance of duty?
36208What are its characters and different species?
36208What attracts us to those great scenes of nature?
36208What bears us towards the infinite in natural beauty?
36208What benevolence are we seeking, when we sympathize with men that we have never seen, that we never shall see, with men that are no more?
36208What can be the principle of intellectual beauty, that splendor of the true, except the principle of all truth?
36208What do you make of this noble victim?
36208What does that mean?
36208What does that mean?
36208What faculties are used in this free reproduction of the beautiful?
36208What has become of the original?
36208What has become of them?
36208What has hindered her from progressing at an equal pace with the physical sciences whose sister she is?
36208What has the condemned done?
36208What have we done thus far?
36208What holy hope could we then found upon such a God?
36208What is desire?
36208What is it called to be free?
36208What is it that first strikes you in what you have experienced?
36208What is the beautiful taken in itself?
36208What is the common quality which, being found in these two objects, ranges them under the general idea of the beautiful?
36208What is the exact proportion of chastisements and crimes?
36208What is the need of going farther?
36208What is there more opposed to interest than benevolence?
36208What is thinking?
36208What is this element?
36208What is this fact that is reproduced in all the vicissitudes of the life of humanity, except a law of humanity?
36208What is, then, in relation to the good, the natural and permanent belief of the human race?
36208What makes the terrible beauty of a storm, what makes that of a great picture, of an isolated verse, or a sublime ode?
36208What must we conclude from this?
36208What other time, at least among the moderns, has seen flourishing together so many poets of the first order?
36208What remorse can I feel for having followed the truth, if the principle of interest is in fact moral truth?
36208What school-- and we are not unmindful of those of Marc''Antonio, Albert Durer, and Rembrandt-- can present such a succession of artists of this kind?
36208What shall I believe, then, they can be?...
36208What should the poet do in the theory that we combat?
36208What then happens?
36208What will this father do with his child when he returns to him?
36208What word is it that restrains most in human societies?
36208What, in fact, is my right to your respect, except the duty you have to respect me, because I am a free being?
36208What, in fact, is self- devotion?
36208What, in fact, is will for this philosophy?
36208What, in fine, is its first and last principle?
36208What, then, according to him and in the system of empiricism, is the notion of substance?
36208What, then, can there be in this vaunted Virgin which so catches the multitude?
36208What, then, is right?
36208What, then, will the artist do?
36208What, too, is more just than to love perfect goodness and the source of all love?
36208When such writers are possessed, is it not a religion to render them the honor that is their due, that of a regular and profound study?"
36208When we have done a good action, is it not certain that we experience a pleasure of a certain nature, which is to us the reward of this action?
36208Whence come to it, in a word, those eternal truths which I have considered so much?
36208Whence does it come?
36208Whence does the effect draw its reality and its being, except from its cause?
36208Where are we in relation to it?
36208Where can genius find the elements upon which it works, except in nature, of which it forms a part?
36208Where have I obtained it?...
36208Where is it?
36208Where is this perfect reason, that is so near me and so different from me?
36208Where is this reason which we ever need to consult, which comes to us to inspire us with the desire of listening to its voice?
36208Where is this reason, which is both common and superior to all the limited and imperfect reasons of the human race?
36208Where is this wisdom?
36208Where, then, is this oracle which is never silent, against which the vain prejudices of peoples are always impotent?
36208Whither, in fact, would you have interest lead in the train of desire?
36208Who can enumerate them?
36208Who can say where it shall stop?
36208Who has ever perceived the soul?
36208Who is especially called an honest man?
36208Who of us, in fact, does not believe himself an indivisible being, one and identical, the same yesterday, to- day, and to- morrow?
36208Who would be blind enough not to see in that an energetic call of human nature for society?
36208Who would be disposed to give his blood for an uncertain end?
36208Why are there no penalties attached to involuntary crimes?
36208Why do we enchain the furious madman?
36208Why go back to a pretended primitive state in order to account for a present state which may be studied in itself in its unquestionable characters?
36208Why has the child already some rights?
36208Why have the old man, returned to infancy, and the insane man still some rights?
36208Why is slavery an abominable institution?
36208Why is the child, up to a certain age, subject to none but light punishments?
36208Why seek what may have been in the germ that which may be perceived, that which it is the question to understand, completed and perfect?
36208Why then should they not be in God?
36208Why, on the other hand, have the insane man and the imbecile old man no longer all their rights?
36208Why?
36208Will it be said that dominion over self is useful to others?
36208Will it be said that he owes to Flanders his color?
36208Will it be said that in moral paintings, in pictures of the intimate life of the soul, either graceful or energetic, there is no imagination?
36208Will it be said that the liberty of man is only an illusion?
36208Will not the country have need of it to- morrow?
36208Will this barren unity be the object of love?
36208Without absolute unity as the direct object of knowledge, of what use is ecstasy in the subject of knowledge?
36208[ 134] By what strange diversity could a country, in which the mental arts were carried to such perfection, remain ordinary in the other arts?
36208[ 144] Is it not strange, that Champagne has been put in the Flemish school?
36208[ 159] Since we have spoken somewhat extensively of painting, would it not be unjust to pass in silence over engraving, its daughter, or its sister?
36208[ 186] FOOTNOTES:[ 128] One is reminded of the expression of the great Condé:"Where then has Corneille learned politics and war?"
36208[ 204] So is it not because we find a good action that we sympathize with it?
36208[ 249] Before all, if man is free, can it be that God is not free?
36208[ 48] Will it be said that this ideal world forms a distinct unity, a unity separate from God?
36208are my ideas God?
36208been seen giving each other the hand?
36208is such the price of virtue?
36208iv., p. 174:"If the good is that alone which must be the most useful to the greatest number, where can the good be found, and who can discern it?
36208must I embrace the entire world in my foresight?
36208shall we be so easily persuaded that in reality, motion, life, soul, intelligence, do not belong to absolute being?
36208whence do they come?
36208where do they reside?
33407A race?
33407A worm?
33407Adele, do you know that you must begin to say good- bye to your cousin? 33407 Adele, do you know the old fishermen''s hut near the river?"
33407Adele,cried Bee sharply, a remembrance of Aunt Fanny''s words coming to her,"were those the things you were to take to old Rachel?"
33407All yer has ter do, Miss Bee, is to git jim''son-- yer know jim''son weed, honey?
33407Am I really to go in at last, father?
33407Am I so changed?
33407Am I telling secrets?
33407Am I, auntie?
33407Am hit bad news, honey?
33407And are n''t you ever going to forgive me?
33407And bees make honey, do n''t they? 33407 And could you make my hair yellow like Adele''s?"
33407And do n''t you intend to kiss that hand?
33407And is this the cousin of whom you have spoken, Beatrice?
33407And so you are going to leave us?
33407And the eggs, the larvà ¦ and the chrysalids; do you have them too?
33407And they are like flowers, are n''t they?
33407And was that what caused you to bleach your hair, and change your complexion?
33407And who is Percival, Beatrice?
33407And wo n''t you let me stay with you this Summer? 33407 And you are the girl who, but a few days since, assured me that she would fail me in nothing?"
33407And you do forgive me, uncle? 33407 And your bracelet?"
33407Another, aunty?
33407Are all butterflies as cute, Uncle William?
33407Are n''t they little bits of fingers?
33407Are n''t they?
33407Are n''t you going now, girls? 33407 Are n''t you going to kiss me too?"
33407Are n''t you going to wear any hat?
33407Are n''t you ready to go? 33407 Are n''t you tired, Adele?"
33407Are there?
33407Are they rare specimens, father?
33407Are we to have that next? 33407 Are we?"
33407Are you all right, Beatrice?
33407Are you going in here?
33407Are you going to bring Bee here to this house after she has been in that cabin?
33407Are you going to stop? 33407 Are you like your mother, I wonder, or do you take after me?
33407Are you mad at me?
33407Are you ready to go down now?
33407Are you strong enough to walk, child? 33407 Are you sure, Aunt Fanny?"
33407Are you thinking of going soon?
33407Are you through?
33407Aunt Fanny,she said to the negro woman,"do you know of anything that would make my skin white?"
33407Beatrice Raymond, do you know to whom you are speaking?
33407Beatrice Raymond, is that you?
33407Beatrice Raymond, what has come to you?
33407Beatrice Raymond,said the voice of Percival,"what in the world is the matter?
33407Beatrice was afraid that she would give it to us, and so would not return here?
33407Beatrice, what does this mean?
33407Beatrice, why did you not see that Rachel''s needs were attended to?
33407Beatrice,called her father at this moment from the foot of the stairs,"is anything the matter?
33407Bee, how can you bear the way Mrs. Medulla pronounces your name? 33407 Bee, whatever got into you today?
33407Bee,said Adele slipping her arm through her cousin''s as they walked homeward,"will you let me wear your new hat Sunday?"
33407Bee,spoke Adele sharply,"what in the world are you mooning about?
33407But do n''t you ever get tired of it? 33407 But do you?"
33407But what will you do after you give it to her?
33407But you have forgiven me that, Bee; have n''t you? 33407 Ca n''t one?"
33407Can you do it?
33407College?
33407Could you have done any better yourself, even though you are a boy?
33407Dear father, tell me what the matter is? 33407 Did n''t I?
33407Did n''t you heah''em say''twuz a hant?
33407Did you know that your Uncle Henry was very ill?
33407Did you run every step of the way?
33407Did you say that father fixed it?
33407Did you, Bee?
33407Do I hinder you, father?
33407Do n''t you know that the days are longer in June, Bee?
33407Do they feed on the different colored plants so as to have different colors?
33407Do you know that I wake up nights feeling creepy? 33407 Do you know, Bee, I do n''t think it is necessary to go every day?"
33407Do you know, Miss Raymond, that when I was a lad sweet peas were always associated in my mind with butterflies? 33407 Do you know, my mother said that she rather fancied you?"
33407Do you mean Miss Harris, the hairdresser, Aunt Fanny?
33407Do you mean that I am really to be with you? 33407 Do you mean that you did not aid her?
33407Do you mean to tell me that, seeing that sign there, you still went in?
33407Do you not feel well?
33407Do you remember what I said about my forgiveness of your carelessness depending upon your future conduct, Beatrice?
33407Do you suppose that they know that father is coming?
33407Do you think I am an awful goose, Uncle William?
33407Do you think you have proved worthy of being trusted, Beatrice?
33407Do you want some of the twigs, father? 33407 Doctor Raymond,"began Mrs. Medulla at once, her usually even tones tense with excitement,"do you know what your daughter has done?"
33407Does it hurt so much now?
33407Does n''t he like you yet, Bee?
33407Does n''t it become me?
33407Does n''t the city look beautiful?
33407Does your father know of it, Miss Raymond?
33407Edna was telling us how long your father had been away, and I want to ask you if you think he would know you if he were to meet you unexpectedly?
33407Father?
33407Go down?
33407Good gracious, what could she do? 33407 Habn''t I larn''d all erbout yarbs?"
33407Has Joel come back from town, Aunt Fanny?
33407Has n''t she told you?
33407Have I made you hate me?
33407Have n''t you? 33407 Have you any specimens?"
33407Have you been sick long, Aunt Rachel?
33407Have you been there all afternoon alone with Rachel?
33407Have you forgotten, father? 33407 Have you repeated your success of yesterday, Beatrice?"
33407Have you studied law also, Beatrice?
33407Have you, father?
33407Honor bright?
33407How came I here, and why do you carry me?
33407How came you to take it up, Beatrice?
33407How can you bear to repeat anything like that when it is a take- off on scientists?
33407How could you help noticing them?
33407How did you hear of it, Doctor Black?
33407How did you know?
33407How do you know?
33407How do you know?
33407How do you manage it, Adele? 33407 How funny that you should call Bee that?"
33407How has it come?
33407How is old Rachel?
33407How old are you?
33407Hurry up what?
33407Hurry up?
33407Hurt?
33407I do n''t see why she pokes around that old school house so long?
33407I must do something to make him like me; but what?
33407I thought, I certainly thought--"You thought that I was Bee, did n''t you?
33407I wonder if it is because of the butterflies that you are so different? 33407 I wonder if they do?"
33407I wonder if you realize what you have done today?
33407I wonder where it comes from? 33407 I wonder who mine''s from?
33407I''m not going to scold, Adele, but why did you not tell me that you did not want to go?
33407I-- What do you mean?
33407I?
33407If I go over for a little while to listen to you, will you let me come home alone? 33407 If you went to Rachel''s, how came this to be hidden in the hedge?"
33407If, if I should take the small pox you''ll be good to father, Adele?
33407Indeed? 33407 Is he coming home soon, Edna?"
33407Is he?
33407Is it alive?
33407Is it because it would involve another in the telling?
33407Is it hard for you, father?
33407Is it possible? 33407 Is it so bad as all that, Edna?"
33407Is it that I would be in the way? 33407 Is it true?"
33407Is it?
33407Is n''t Tillie there?
33407Is n''t it a beauty?
33407Is n''t it father?
33407Is n''t it true?
33407Is n''t she pretty?
33407Is n''t that what the girls are always saying, Bee? 33407 Is n''t there anything that you can do, Beatrice?"
33407Is not this strikingly beautiful? 33407 Is that the reason that you are taking such good care of your complexion?"
33407Is that true, Adele?
33407Is there another insect so pretty, I wonder?
33407Is vanity also one of your weaknesses? 33407 Is yer a fairy, er an angel, honey?"
33407It is nice to be loved like that, is n''t it, father?
33407Lawsie, Massa doctah, yer ai n''t a gwine ter leab me heah, is yer?
33407Like it?
33407Mamma always puts her lillies in the shade, does n''t she?
33407May I?
33407May I?
33407Miss Harris, can you change the color of the hair?
33407Must n''t one? 33407 Must you write it this very minute?"
33407My Teinopalpus Imperialis?
33407My acceptance?
33407My butterfly, Beatrice?
33407My daughter, are you still harboring resentment against your cousin on account of my mistake? 33407 No''m; she too busy wid sayin'':''How does ye like yer coffee, uncle deah?
33407No?
33407Not even if they are Infant Prodigies?
33407Not even to help you catalogue, father?
33407Not much Fauntleroy about these, eh?
33407Now ai n''t dat jest like yer pa? 33407 Now, Bee,"protested Adele archly,"why do you tease him?
33407Oh, where is your mother?
33407Or is that an excuse invented for not going in?
33407Ought we to go in, father?
33407Percival, are you here?
33407Percival,as the boy entered the room,"do you see who has come?
33407Percival,interposed his mother quickly,"would n''t you like to show Beatrice and her cousin your new pony?"
33407Picnics?
33407Really, I--"Is n''t it all true?
33407Say, kin ye speak?
33407Say, sissy, give me one of your curls to remember ye by; wo n''t you?
33407See how they are feeding upon the leaves? 33407 See that hand?"
33407Shall I tell Uncle William that lunch is ready?
33407She is n''t? 33407 She said that, Adele?"
33407That is scarcely complimentary to me, is it? 33407 That sounds formidable, does n''t it, Bee?"
33407The rose?
33407Then that is how you knew about protective mimicry?
33407Then what will become of me?
33407Then why did you tell me about it if you did n''t know?
33407Then, my dear, how about that feeling toward your cousin? 33407 Tired, Adele?"
33407Was not that a little abrupt, my daughter?
33407Was that entirely your own idea about the dinner?
33407We went to Rachel''s,replied Adele,"and, and--""Yes?"
33407Well, Miss Bee,he said genially with a searching glance at her pale face,"you''ve had rather a siege of it, have n''t you?
33407Well, what of it? 33407 Well; what''s the difference?"
33407Well? 33407 Well?"
33407Well?
33407Were n''t you a bit afraid?
33407Were n''t you awfully afraid that I''d get to read that letter?
33407Were you there the day before?
33407Were you there yesterday?
33407What am I to do with them all?
33407What are our Bee and Butterfly conversing so earnestly about?
33407What are we to do tomorrow, Bee? 33407 What are you doing here, sir?
33407What are you going to do?
33407What are your plans, William?
33407What can I do for you, Miss Raymond?
33407What did you do with that butterfly that you caught?
33407What do you know about protective mimicry?
33407What do you mean?
33407What do you mean?
33407What do you mean?
33407What do you think of them?
33407What do you think of these?
33407What does a clever thing like you care about what you wear? 33407 What does he say?
33407What have you been doing to your hair, Bee?
33407What have you been doing to yourself?
33407What if I were old and sick? 33407 What is it, Bee?
33407What is it, Bee?
33407What is it? 33407 What is it?"
33407What is the matter? 33407 What is the meaning of this?"
33407What kind is it?
33407What made him do that?
33407What made you so late, Bee?
33407What makes it so dark at the roots, and so yellow everywhere else? 33407 What makes you run after butterflies and things, then?"
33407What makes you wear them then?
33407What news, children?
33407What will you do when I am gone?
33407What will your mother say?
33407What would you do?
33407What''s a button more or less on such a glorious day as this? 33407 What''s the joke, Bee?"
33407What''s the matter?
33407What''s the use of supposing anything of the sort? 33407 What''s this?
33407What? 33407 What?"
33407What?
33407When did you ever have a picnic with Adele?
33407When have either of you been to see old Rachel?
33407Where did you find it?
33407Where did you see them?
33407Where is Adele, Bee? 33407 Where is Beatrice?"
33407Where is he?
33407Where is the address?
33407Where then did she get her knowledge of the subject?
33407Which one of you did it?
33407Who would think that such little things could make such divine music? 33407 Why ca n''t she?
33407Why could not she use judgment? 33407 Why did you catch it anyway?"
33407Why did you do it, my daughter?
33407Why did you not?
33407Why did you stay here, child? 33407 Why do n''t you get this one?"
33407Why do n''t you tell her our names?
33407Why is this door open? 33407 Why not, Percival?"
33407Why, Aunt Annie, glad when the blossoms are gone? 33407 Why, Beatrice?"
33407Why, I thought his mother would not want him to see me any more?
33407Why, Raymond, is that you? 33407 Why, how do you know that you will care to be after you know me?"
33407Why, oh why, was it done? 33407 Why?"
33407Why?
33407Why?
33407Will I?
33407Will it live?
33407Will it?
33407Will you come tomorrow then?
33407Will you?
33407William coming home?
33407Wo n''t you be friends, Bee?
33407Would it be asking too much to desire your son to play for us?
33407Would n''t it be better for your mother to help you, Percival?
33407Would n''t you call that an orange- red, father? 33407 Would you care to hear the lines?"
33407Would you rather have him here now, even though such a mistake has been made, than to wait two years longer to see him?
33407Yer want hit like Miss Adele''s?
33407Yes, doctor; but do you think it wise for father to come in? 33407 Yes, father?"
33407Yes; do you mind putting them on father''s table for me? 33407 Yes; why?"
33407Yes?
33407Yes?
33407You are not joking about it, Aunt Fanny? 33407 You are not nervous, are you?"
33407You are sure, father?
33407You ca n''t blame her, can you?
33407You can keep it for your collection, ca n''t you, father?
33407You did n''t think that I would ever come over to see you again, did you?
33407You did n''t?
33407You do like me a little, do n''t you?
33407You do n''t mean that you raised her head and gave her water, do you?
33407You do n''t?
33407You have n''t, eh? 33407 You have your good looks so what does it matter?
33407You hear, Raymond?
33407You remember the old proverb:''A watched pot never boils''? 33407 You saw those men?"
33407You were?
33407You wo n''t, will you?
33407You would?
33407You''re not?
33407Your daughter? 33407 --_Edwin Arnold._Now how shall I get this to him?"
33407--_Mary Aimee Goodman._"Beatrice, do you see that butterfly on the verbena bed?"
33407After all, why should she permit a mere hat to upset her temper, and spoil her afternoon?
33407Am I really to help you again, father?"
33407Am hit sweet''nuff fer ye?''
33407An oriole peeped at them saucily from his perch on a near- by tree, then whistled playfully,"Sweet, do you hear?
33407And why?
33407And, Beatrice--""Yes, father?"
33407And,"she added with a troubled look and speaking in a lower tone,"are you sure that father can afford to spend so much on me?"
33407Are n''t they dear?"
33407Are n''t they great?"
33407Are n''t you glad, too, father?"
33407Are n''t you mad?"
33407Are n''t you most finished?
33407Are they at home?"
33407Are you Doctor Raymond''s daughter?"
33407Are you a housekeeper also, Adele?"
33407Are you fearful or timid?
33407Are you going to keep me out here all night, young lady?"
33407Are you hungry, too, father?"
33407Are you ill that you do n''t come to breakfast?"
33407Are you ready for your coffee?"
33407Are you satisfied now?"
33407Aunt Fanny, left alone, began to soliloquize audibly:"Hant, eh?
33407Beatrice, do you realize just what your carelessness means?"
33407Beatrice, when would your father have come home had he not received the picture?"
33407Bee Raymond, do you know that you are dreadfully changed?
33407Bee, does Uncle William know that you have studied up butterflies?"
33407But perhaps you would prefer to go with Adele, Beatrice?"
33407But surely you also see beauty in this?"
33407But why do n''t you take them in yourself?
33407Butterflies never do anything, do they?"
33407Can this be it?"
33407Can you explain the mistake, my daughter?"
33407Can you forgive me?"
33407Can you forgive me?"
33407Can you help me about it?"
33407Come down to the house and help me; wo n''t you?"
33407Come over and see me; wo n''t you?
33407Could I not be of some use to you?"
33407Could one of the pretty things have hurt itself?"
33407Could you not get some capable person to assist you for the day?
33407Did he exact more from her because she was his daughter?
33407Did n''t Emma Drew come back from St. Louis with golden hair when she had gone away with it black?
33407Did n''t you know any better than to let her go to such a place?
33407Did n''t you know this, Beatrice?"
33407Did you bleach it?"
33407Did you ever see anything more beautiful?"
33407Did you ever see anything so pretty?"
33407Did you have no assistance beside Aunt Fanny?"
33407Did you hear him?"
33407Did you know that you have some claims to beauty yourself?"
33407Did you leave me any?"
33407Did you like it?"
33407Do I make myself clear about this, Beatrice?"
33407Do I?
33407Do be quiet, Bee?
33407Do n''t you know me?"
33407Do n''t you know that it takes more courage to stay for hours with a woman with the small pox that to endure a little scratch?"
33407Do n''t you know that there is small pox in this cabin?"
33407Do n''t you know, Beatrice, that this will end all engagements for the winter?
33407Do n''t you want to try your new rug?
33407Do we, auntie?"
33407Do you get frightened easily?"
33407Do you hear?
33407Do you know anything?"
33407Do you know the reason that I always give Dolly Madison as my favorite character in history, Bee?"
33407Do you know why no one has told you this before?"
33407Do you like it too?"
33407Do you not remember?"
33407Do you realize the meaning of such an act?
33407Do you think a real fellow likes to go around like a girl?
33407Do you think you could play your violin in those clothes?"
33407Do you understand matters now, Beatrice?"
33407Do you understand, Beatrice?
33407Does dey, Miss Bee?"
33407Does he let you have the money?"
33407Does n''t everyone indulge you just because you are pretty?
33407Even when you are in the study arranging your specimens?"
33407Father, do n''t you think that we ought to attend to that before we go shopping?"
33407For what lay at the bottom of her bitterness?
33407For, how should such a choice specimen exist here when it is so rarely found in its native haunts?
33407Had she so many follies?
33407Had we not better go inside?"
33407Has Beatrice had it?"
33407Has it settled yet?"
33407Have I?
33407Have either of you read it?"
33407Have n''t I always had to stand back for her?
33407Have you ever read of red rain, or the showers of blood of antiquity?"
33407How can you always remember, Adele?"
33407How could any one believe otherwise than that she had cut the boy''s curls when she held the telltale scissors in her hand?
33407How could he help it?
33407How did you know?"
33407How do you like it?"
33407How do you think that I feel about you?
33407How does the rhyme go?
33407How else could she drink?"
33407How is Uncle Henry?"
33407How kum yer ter do sech a fool thing?
33407How long have you been here?"
33407How was the old woman, Adele?"
33407I could n''t tell an appeal from a-- from a-- What do I want to say, Bee?"
33407I never knew a father who was a lepi-- what do you call''em?
33407I wonder if I seem as different to father?
33407If that can be done why could n''t any creature put on any form he liked?
33407If that were the case then did he expect her to come up to a higher standard?
33407Is Uncle William here?"
33407Is dinner ready?
33407Is it not beautiful?
33407Is it somewhat too remote for you?
33407Is n''t she, mamma?"
33407Is neither of you to be trusted?"
33407Is that the cabbage butterfly?
33407Is there no confidence to be placed in girls?
33407It grows dark, does n''t it?
33407It is the very one, is n''t it?"
33407Not even when she bores one?"
33407Now the President has to have a wife, does n''t he?
33407Now what am I going to do?"
33407Now what is the way to do it?"
33407Now would n''t you?"
33407Now, Beatrice, answer me one question: in your studies you have always been first, have you not?"
33407Now, child, you feel hard toward your cousin for changing those pictures, do n''t you?"
33407Now, my dear, why do n''t you throw yourself into your father''s arms, and tell him all your troubles, just as you have me?"
33407Now, why does n''t she go home now?"
33407Oh, are n''t you glad, glad?"
33407Oh, why did n''t I think of it sooner?
33407Or do n''t you trust me?
33407Our photographs?"
33407Remember, Butterfly-- Beefly, I mean?
33407Scientific people think so much of intellect, do n''t they?"
33407See if any of you can answer it:''Why are caterpillars like buckwheat cakes?''"
33407Shall I put the picture in for you, Bee?"
33407Shall we go to the piazza, gentlemen?
33407Shall we resume our work?"
33407She sat down suddenly, and asked weakly:"What are you going to do?"
33407She surely did not remain at Rachel''s?"
33407Something nice?"
33407Suddenly she gave a little ripple of laughter:"Would n''t it be fun to send my picture instead of Bee''s?"
33407Surely this explanation ought to excuse me, Beatrice?"
33407Surely you did not cut Percival''s hair?"
33407Sweet, sweet, do you hear?"
33407That is a Skipper, is it not?"
33407That is, if you would like it?"
33407That she did in truth plan this alone?"
33407The girl was silent for a moment, and then she asked,"did you go in the cabin?"
33407The last of August will see all of my specimens out of their cocoons; then--""Then what, father?"
33407The reason for my going being therefore defined, the question remains as to what disposition is to be made of you?
33407Then if the exchange had not been made you would not have had the pleasure of your father''s company at all this summer, would you?"
33407Then where is she?
33407They have a sting, too, do n''t they?"
33407Those pansies?"
33407Was n''t Beatrice a trump, though, not to tell on me, and to take the blame?
33407Was n''t Mrs. Simpson''s hair red, and then all at once was n''t it black?
33407Was she selfish?
33407Whar''d you say Miss Bee was?"
33407Whar''s Miss Bee?
33407What am de mattah wid yer skin?
33407What are you going to say to us, Uncle William?
33407What caused you to do it?"
33407What color did you wish?"
33407What could it have been?"
33407What difference does it make?
33407What do you like, Uncle William?"
33407What do you think?"
33407What does he say?
33407What does your father do?"
33407What effort have you made to find out what kind of a daughter you have?
33407What has come over you, Bee?
33407What has happened?"
33407What have you been doing?"
33407What if I were to command you?"
33407What in the world are you doing?"
33407What in the world brought you here?
33407What in the world has come to you?
33407What is she doing there?
33407What kind is it?"
33407What kind of a disposition have I?
33407What made them leave it?
33407What made you cut them?"
33407What makes the minutes seem so long when one is waiting for something good to happen?
33407What makes you like them?"
33407What shall I do?
33407What shall I do?"
33407What shall I do?"
33407What was the reason that he found it so much harder to forgive her than Adele?
33407What will father think?
33407What would Heinrich say to you?"
33407What would your Aunt Annie say if you were to come home with it at an angle of forty- five degrees?"
33407What''d I be tellin''yer fer ef I ai n''t sure?"
33407What''s yours thinking about that she lets you go wild like this?
33407Where are they, Adele?"
33407Where did you get it?"
33407Where did you learn it?"
33407Where is my net, child?"
33407Where is she?"
33407Where is your father?"
33407Where''s your mother?"
33407Which did you enjoy most: gaining a high mark without any competition, or getting one when others were striving for it too?"
33407Who looks after you?"
33407Why ca n''t you come over and stay with mamma and me, Beatrice?"
33407Why ca n''t you take me?
33407Why could n''t I have been nicer about this?
33407Why did n''t she come to school this afternoon?"
33407Why did n''t you tell, Beefly?
33407Why did you permit it?"
33407Why do n''t you have it bleached again?"
33407Why should she care now?
33407Why, you''re not afraid, are you?
33407Why?"
33407Will I do, auntie?"
33407Will Uncle Henry be able to leave court, and come too?"
33407Will it be too much of a walk for you to take the gardens and the orchard today?"
33407Will you accept?"
33407Will you be quick?"
33407Will you be the one to give it?"
33407Will you be well enough to go, Adele?"
33407Will you come down with me?"
33407Will you go?
33407Will you take your friends to the library?
33407Will you?"
33407Wo n''t he be surprised?"
33407Wo n''t it be fine to be in New York City?
33407Wo n''t she tire herself?"
33407Wo n''t we have good times together?
33407Wo n''t we, Bee?"
33407Wo n''t you go away, and not bother me?"
33407Would n''t it be funny if a girl could change her appearance every morning just like she does her dress?
33407Would n''t we, Uncle William?"
33407Would n''t you like to see it?"
33407Would you rather go to your Aunt Annie''s than to stay here?"
33407You are going to be brave, are n''t you?"
33407You are not going to send it to Uncle William, are you?"
33407You are not nervous, are you?"
33407You are not, you are not--"a sudden dread piercing her heart,"going away?"
33407You are sure that he did it, and not Adele?"
33407You do n''t know anything, do you?
33407You do n''t remember your father at all, do you?"
33407You heah me?
33407You kummin''ebbery day, Miss Bee?"
33407You like them too, do n''t you?"
33407You mean him, do n''t you?"
33407You remember that I shortened the term of years I promised the University to spend abroad?
33407You will let me try again?"
33407You would like to see Adele too, I presume?"
33407are you going away?"
33407but is n''t there some tall hustling then?"
33407have you noticed?"
33407how do you make yourself look so pretty?"
33407was n''t he mad?"
33407what will she say?"
33407where are they?
33407why?"
33407would he never, never care for her?
33407would you like it if someone were to come to your house, and want to take your place with your father and mother?"
44913Surely that was not too much to grant to their defender?
44913But what does it matter?
44913Shall we at their bidding turn, Fearful of their aspect stern?
44913The Bishop grew pale, the calumniators slunk away, and St. Goar, turning to the Bishop, said,"Perceivest thou not thy duty?
44913Time moves on and brings us to eternity; therefore, is it not well for man that Nature warns him of the lapse of Time?
44913What can I do for thee?"
44913While the whole earth and sky teem with glory and beauty, are we to believe that these things may not be enjoyed?
44913Who can say, I shall see spring again?
44913Who shall dare aspire to the central heaven itself?
44913[ 7] Query, Was this the origin of taking French leave?
44913he cried out;"how darest thou speak to this Bastard?"
44913replied she;"what brings your honourable and ever- to- be- delighted- in presence to the door of my humble abode?"
44913then tell to this gallant assembly, what is the sacred and characteristic mark of that place?"
44913they called out the names of any of their unmarried friends with the following words,"Qui donne- t- on à M----?"
44913who will join me in my voyage for the honour of God and the Holy Tomb?"
44913who will risk with me the voyage to the Holy Tomb?"
38310''Who''s that?'' 38310 A bit tall, is n''t it?"
38310A bit wholesale, is n''t it?
38310A foreigner?
38310A night for tales, eh?
38310A stranger?
38310Am I not right, perhaps?
38310An empty sleeve?
38310And the Turk?
38310And the fly?
38310And the other?
38310And the surgeon-- where was he all this time?
38310And their women?
38310And what did they use the Stone for?
38310And what is it you''re pleased to think?
38310And what on earth are they doing up there?
38310And what was it? 38310 And what''s this rubbish the brutes have left?"
38310And you welcomed him?
38310And your luggage-- where is that? 38310 Any rabbits out where you''ve been?"
38310As an-- animal, you saw him still?
38310At the trees again, Jim?
38310But what d''you mean, anyhow-- the Valley of the Beasts?
38310But where''s all the stuff you went away with? 38310 But you saw him again, of course, later?"
38310But-- the Siwash?
38310By all means,said the other patiently,"what is it?"
38310By the bye, Arthur,he said abruptly,"what bird makes this sound?
38310Can I be of any assistance? 38310 Can I help you?"
38310Can you give me the trail to Morley Place?
38310Changed there before my very eyes--he whispered it--"turned animal----""Animal?"
38310Clothes, you mean, or what?
38310Come, take my arm, wo n''t you? 38310 Curious, rather, is n''t it?"
38310D''ye really want to hear?
38310Did I say chariot?
38310Did he mean anything?
38310Did he use the Dodd bow, or the Tourte? 38310 Did n''t stay long, now, did he?"
38310Did n''t you see?
38310Did you hear that? 38310 Did you see anything?"
38310Did you see who it was?
38310Do you know where we are at all? 38310 Do you think he saw us on the lawn?"
38310Dog or cat, or something, I suppose, was n''t it?
38310Edward, what d''you mean?
38310Fed up already?
38310For_ her_?
38310God, did you hear that?
38310Going Windy Lake way, are yer? 38310 Harry.... You saw?
38310Have I been ill long? 38310 Have you any idea of the direction, ma''am, any idea at all?
38310Have you brought your gun?
38310Have you forgotten so completely?
38310Have_ you_ gone balmy, or have I? 38310 Hazel?"
38310He do n''t even ask''Say when?''
38310Hear anything?
38310His personality put a bit of hypnotism on you, eh?
38310How changes?
38310How,he asked,"shall we get free?"
38310Hyman played, I suppose-- on the fiddles?
38310I can do something for you?
38310I could n''t possibly get up at cockcrow without a very special inducement, could I, now? 38310 I may see them?"
38310I say, is this right for the Tube station, d''you know? 38310 I say, old man-- are you-- I mean, do you mean business there?
38310I went off easily?
38310I? 38310 Is she after all a figure?"
38310Is she unreal-- or real?
38310Is that enough? 38310 Is that so, now?"
38310Is that so?
38310It''s wolves or panthersh,he mumbled in his stupor on the floor,"but whatsh''s happened to Malay?"
38310Lost your tongue, eh?
38310Lost your way like myself, have n''t you, ma''am?
38310Lovibond?
38310Makes you feel at home, John, eh?
38310May I come in a moment with you? 38310 My help----?"
38310My wife-- well, you know the rest, do n''t you? 38310 No, sir, it do n''t, do it?"
38310Nothing but this hand- bag?
38310Only this?
38310Otherwise you might have murdered him instead?
38310P.S.--''The coming of a friend from a far- off land-- is not this true joy?''
38310Painful still, is it?
38310Played it well, though, did n''t he, this Lullaby thing?
38310Playing on his knees, you mean?
38310Shall we sit it out-- if you''ve no objection?
38310She had some proof for the assertion, no doubt?
38310Still in there, you say?
38310Tell us about the figure, Nancy?
38310That noise-- what is it?
38310The coming of a friend from a far- off land, even from Harley Street-- is not this true joy?
38310The old merchant who taught you your first Chinese? 38310 The witness?"
38310There''d be fearful damage, would n''t there?
38310Things ca n''t hide behind''em-- can they?
38310Tired out, are n''t you?
38310Uneasy?
38310Used the Dodd or the Tourte, Billy-- which?
38310Was it, sir? 38310 Water in the bath not reely''ot, was n''t it, sir?"
38310We do n''t know everything in the universe, do we?
38310We must do the thing faithfully, you know, must n''t we, Nancy? 38310 We''ll stick together, Tom, eh?
38310Well?
38310Were you-- we are such old friends--he apologized--"were you still celibate as ever?"
38310What d''you mean?
38310What did he say?
38310What do you mean exactly by''so do we''?
38310What else, my lovely one-- my best beloved-- what more did you see?
38310What had_ you_ done?
38310What if I----he whispered,"have combined the two?"
38310What is it, Billy?
38310What is it?
38310What other things?
38310What then?
38310What were you doing by the fire before you came here?
38310What''s it all about?
38310What''s odd?
38310What''s that mean?
38310What''s that?
38310What''s the matter?
38310What''s the matter?
38310Where am I?
38310Where are we?
38310Which was?
38310Who?
38310Why have you tarried thus so long, and where?
38310Why should I need more?
38310Why undeceive him?
38310Why, what did you think it was?
38310Why?
38310Will he do?
38310Wolf come?
38310Yes, but did you also notice----"What?
38310Yet I''ve known you some years, have n''t I?
38310You do n''t mean to say there are people living up there?
38310You got your buffalo?
38310You have no other luggage?
38310You have-- brought them?
38310You likee?
38310You married her, Edward?
38310You met her? 38310 You saw-- nothing?"
38310You see everything pictorially, of course, do n''t you?
38310You see wolf?
38310You think my spending a night there will stop the nonsense?
38310You were in a chariot?
38310You will let me know-- their message?
38310You''fraid wolf?
38310You''re dead right,he observed,"but how do you know it?"
38310You''re positive you saw no one? 38310 You''re used to huskies, ai n''t you?"
38310You''ve found it?
38310You''ve had enough of trees then?
38310You,murmured Lawson, with an incredulous smile--"you creepy?"
38310Your father, too, remembers?
38310Your friend,he asked in a whisper,"the surgeon-- I hope-- I mean, was he ever caught?"
38310Your jar sour milk come up late, sir, yesterday?
38310Your soul is with us now?
38310Already yearning to get back there, probably?"
38310Also, whether your thoughts were directed particularly to me?
38310An accident?
38310And where was... where was... someone... who was dearer to him than life itself?
38310And who?
38310And-- have you brought nothing home-- no treasures?"
38310At each blow of the wind that shook the building, a suitable remark was made, generally by Sandy:"Did you hear that now?"
38310Behind which of these doors, he asked himself, was the woman, figure or human being, now alone with"it"?
38310Between memory and recognition?
38310Between the various states of consciousness that usually dovetailed so neatly that the joints were normally imperceptible?
38310Blood''s thicker than water, ai n''t it?
38310Bread and water and extra work, I suppose?"
38310But had humanity advanced?
38310But he took no steps to carry out his purpose, he felt disinclined to move, he sat thinking, thinking.... What was he thinking about?
38310But how?
38310But there was n''t light enough to throw shadows, you see, and----""Hyman looked queer?"
38310But was it a dream?
38310But what did the doings of the father matter now to him?
38310But what were his"requirements"?
38310But where?
38310But, in that shock and dislocation, had he not possibly picked up another gear?
38310By''left,''I suppose he meant she died or ran away?"
38310Civilization, was it not the merest artificial growth?
38310Could his ambitions set an altar of sacrifice to his love?
38310Could not these"interstices"be used by-- others?
38310Could she face this sacrifice for him?
38310Cracks, so to speak, between his perception of the outside world and his inner interpretation of these?
38310Dead perhaps?
38310Deltas are all right-- it''s_ you_ we----""Why, the devil, do you call me Maggie?"
38310Did Morgan see him?"
38310Did Morgan take him down before you came?
38310Did he play it?"
38310Did his senses betray him?
38310Did the soul of the bully faint with fear?
38310Did the spirit leave him at the actual touch of earthly vengeance?
38310Do n''t you know me?
38310Do you know I did n''t catch yours either?
38310Do you know the name of the street?"
38310Do you think, perhaps"--he glanced over his shoulder--"there is someone at the door?
38310Fishing?
38310Had he already turned twice to the right, or had he not?
38310Had he been a fool, he now asked himself, to swallow the advice, putting all his eggs into a single basket?
38310Had he slept a moment in the sunlight, dreaming them?
38310Had human nature not advanced...?
38310Had she, then, missed life by living here?
38310Had somebody come close?
38310Had the individual progressed after all?
38310Have you forgotten old Shan- Yu?"
38310He began to wonder.... Had he, after all, become brutalized by the War?
38310He learned precious little English....""My pair, were n''t they?"
38310He walked about the room on tiptoe while he played it, complaining of the light----""Complaining of the light?"
38310Her words seemed driven out:"Who are you?
38310His state, he well knew, was abnormal, but were his symptoms on that account unreal?
38310His words came forth with difficulty, though he roared them into the silence of the forest:"I pay you, do n''t I?
38310How could mere weather matter?
38310How did they deal with the fact that this appalling thing existed in human nature in the twentieth century?
38310How had he come to this?
38310How had he felt its presence earlier and instantly?
38310How long had he been here, and where had he come from, and why?
38310How on earth do they manage it?
38310I suppose I''ve had some blasted concussion-- haven''t I?"
38310I want to help-- which room are you in?"
38310It was, of course, unlikely enough----""And the other thing that stopped you?"
38310It will be like a honeymoon over again, you and I on the spree-- eh?"
38310It''s beasts we''re after, is n''t it?"
38310It''s so utterly unthinkable to me that a man----""But why evoke the idea at all?"
38310Long, long ago.... Oh, how long, how long?
38310Murder?
38310Now what was it?
38310Odd, is n''t it?
38310Of course you stopped him?"
38310Oh, where is it?
38310Or Ten Mile Water, maybe?"
38310Pretty cool, was n''t it?"
38310Quixotic, absurd, unreasonable?
38310See?"
38310She wished him"Good evening"in her calm, quiet voice, adding with sympathy,"And who are you, I wonder?
38310Something magical, was n''t it?"
38310Superstitious, I suppose?"
38310The eyes, the hair, the"--her face grew like death--"the twist in his face----""What on earth are you saying?
38310The man who had asked the way to the station, was he not, after all, a shadow merely?
38310The net result, however, was slight enough, though it was certainly direct:"You camp there?"
38310Then Arthur, stammering a bit, said lamely, a certain hush in his voice still:"Where in the world did you hear that-- and_ when_?"
38310Then John spoke:"What''s wrong, Billy?"
38310Then he said slowly,''Why not?
38310Then she answered:"According to the story, he shows himself each time to the man----""The man who----?"
38310Then you''ll come to the Standing Stone on the left of the track----""The Standing Stone, yes?"
38310There''s no need to be rude, is there?"
38310They were a thoughtful, intellectual race, these Germans; their music, literature, philosophy, their science-- how reconcile the opposing qualities?
38310Tom said sympathetically, trying to help,"and things?"
38310Understand me?"
38310Was he anxious for his friend?
38310Was he still asleep and dreaming?
38310Was he suspicious?
38310Was he, in a word,_ the_ man whose appearance out of the sunrise she had been watching and waiting for all these hurrying, swift years?
38310Was it Purdy?
38310Was it a bird?
38310Was it also something in the words he had used--"Ishtot see_ you_"--that stung him into a queer caution midway in his violence?
38310Was it some hideous nightmare flash that touched him as he dozed a second?
38310Was it the Indian?
38310Was progress, his pet ideal and cherished faith, after all a mockery?
38310Was she a human being or a"figure"?
38310Was someone standing near him?
38310Was that a sound at the back of the room?
38310Was the woman real or was she unreal?
38310Were there not gaps and broken edges, pieces that no longer dovetailed, fitted as usual, interstices, in a word?
38310Were these figures in the fog real or unreal?
38310What brought Hyman in this way-- unexpectedly?
38310What d''you want, anyway?"
38310What did you think it was?"
38310What else mattered?
38310What in the world are you two up to?"
38310What in the world, he pondered, could be the objection to it?
38310What is it?"
38310What is your name?"
38310What should he do?
38310What was he doing here, where going, whither come, she wondered vaguely, the lane both his background and his starting- point?
38310What was his motive, what his secret purpose?
38310What was it?
38310What was their origin?
38310What were the Wolves of God?
38310What were they?
38310What''s happened?"
38310What''s wrong, old man?"
38310What''s your address?
38310What, then, could be the contents of the little brown parcel the professor had bequeathed to him with his pregnant dying sentences?
38310What_ was_ fire?
38310When he saw his"figures,"he used to ask himself:"Are not these the real ones, and the others-- the human beings-- unreal?"
38310When you write, please tell me if you were very anxious about these?
38310Whence came again, too, a certain queenly touch he felt in her?
38310Whence came, in this calm peaceful spot, the suggestion of a wild and savage background to her?
38310Whence came, too, that queenly touch about her that made him feel he should have sunk upon his knees?
38310Where had he come from?
38310Who knows what the evening may bring forth?
38310Who was he?
38310Who was she?
38310Who, and where, was he?
38310Why did he leave his door ajar so that the slightest sound of another door opening, or of steps passing along the corridor, must reach him?
38310Why did he sit up in this unnecessary way?
38310Why did he think already, but helplessly, of escape, yet at the same time burn to stay?
38310Why did it sit and watch him, as with purpose in its dreadful eyes?
38310Why did she think the face inscrutable?
38310Why do you treat me----?"
38310Why not?
38310Why not?
38310Why were there tumult and oppression in his heart, pain, horror, tenderness and mercy, mixed beyond disentanglement?
38310Why, then, if his fear was gone, did he think of certain things as he rolled himself in the Hudson Bay blankets before going to sleep?
38310Why?
38310Why?
38310Will you obey me now?"
38310Would Dick be satisfied with this humble cottage which meant so much to her that she felt she could never, never leave it?
38310Would his visit, the date, the conversation be recalled?
38310Would not his money, his new position, demand palaces elsewhere?
38310Would the shop- people remember his appearance?
38310Yes-- no-- yet, if not, who was it?
38310You are a painter, are n''t you?
38310You can have the night to think it over, Tooshalli-- see?
38310You had n''t either, I suppose?"
38310You have n''t regretted England, I''ll be bound?"
38310You know that way he has with him?
38310You made quite a friend of him, did n''t you?
38310You met the woman of your dream?"
38310You must have tons of it, I suppose?"
38310You noticed?"
38310You remember...?"
38310You want to ask me something?"
45555The subjects are most happily chosen; who, better than Chéret, could symbolize, in manner light and fantastic, music, comedy, pantomime, and dancing?
37257All of them?
37257And a lady, good God!--I mean it is unbelievable; but where is your driver? 37257 And can you tell me you have never heard its music-- on the banks of a river under the stars?"
37257And have you settled on a place yet? 37257 And what is to come of all these fine compacts, may one ask?"
37257And you are still Miss Saurin? 37257 And you think it insolence on my part to ask so much?"
37257And you will take me away from Africa?
37257Are n''t we going to get a word with Major Kinsella?
37257Are n''t you going to get up?
37257Are n''t you staying with the Salisbury ladies?
37257Are we likely to be here long?
37257Are we or are we not going to eat anything to- night?
37257Are you not coming on too?
37257Books and sculpture-- they are good, but` has life nothing better to give than these''?
37257But have they gone alone?
37257But the little tin-- the hotel--?
37257But was n''t that a very long time ago?
37257But what about that wonderful secret you were going to tell me, Makupi?
37257But what are you going to do?
37257But what are_ you_ going to do?
37257But what is there_ I_ can do, Judy? 37257 But where can she be gone to?"
37257But why does he wear turquoise ear- rings?
37257But why not do it yourself, Judy?
37257But why so early?
37257But you surely wo n''t try to stop him, Judy? 37257 But-- can''t it be patched up?
37257But-- what have-- what could you have done to offend her?
37257Can the man be an Indian-- or a Hindoo?
37257Deirdre, you would not leave me?
37257Do the Fort George men spend their evenings talking scandal also?
37257Do we think Victory great? 37257 Do you grudge me this work to do for you?"
37257Do you hear? 37257 Do you mean she is married to him?"
37257Do you not know your_ Bones and I_? 37257 Do you not think you should tell the Company and have an expedition sent?"
37257Do you see that big fair man with her? 37257 Do you think it quite fair to discuss other people''s private and rather sacred affairs, Mrs Valetta?"
37257Earn your living, Deirdre? 37257 Even if you had to take his past with it?"
37257Every one in this country is kind, do n''t you think?
37257Has she committed suicide?
37257Have n''t I told you that my heart is buried with Dick? 37257 Have n''t you felt my kisses on your eyelids whenever I looked at you, Deirdre?"
37257Have n''t you observed that there''s no wool on his head where the wool ought to grow?
37257Have you no rooms to let?
37257He is a splendid fellow-- any girl would be proud and happy to get him; but is n''t he--? 37257 How can you say such things?"
37257How can you say that?
37257How dared you ask me to take a name you did not mean to do something with?
37257I should think we had better begin to collect our things and make arrangements, should n''t you, Miss Saurin?
37257I suppose you know you have come to this part of Africa at a very bad time?
37257If I once get out of it, will I ever come back again? 37257 In your what days?"
37257Into the storm?
37257Is Dick all right?
37257Is it not all settled? 37257 Is it that you have changed your mind again-- after all our plans?"
37257Is it true? 37257 Is it true?--do you mean it?"
37257Is n''t it awful?
37257Is she so ill?
37257Is that Mrs Stair, Claude?
37257Is that you, Miss Saurin? 37257 Is this a game, Deirdre?"
37257It is a truly awful country, is n''t it, Constance?
37257Jack up five hundred a year and go and look for a chance living in some new country where I do n''t know the ropes? 37257 Leave it?"
37257Long? 37257 Maurice,"I cried out,"where is Snowie?"
37257My chicks are fast asleep already, and now that we''ve got that curtain up do n''t you think it would be as well if we all went off to bed?
37257My wife? 37257 Nina, was it for this I came down through deadly danger to mind you, instead of going off with all the fellows to have a good time at the front?"
37257Now,said he,"have you got anything to eat or drink?
37257O loved ones lying far away, What word of love can dead lips send? 37257 Of course she always has a dozen men round her,"Judy supplemented in a low voice;"they do so love a_ declassee_ woman, do n''t they?"
37257Oh, and Mrs Grant have you got those biscuits for your little Allie?
37257Oh, do you live in a hut, Judy? 37257 Oh, fair?
37257Oh, very well, since you are so very insistent,she said crossly, and turning to me added sweetly,"Dear Miss Saurin, how is your poor nose?
37257Oh, why?
37257Oh, will it be necessary?
37257Oh, would n''t I? 37257 Oh,_ every_ one?
37257Really?
37257Shall I go now?
37257Snowie?
37257So I hear-- and I want to know how you dare be happy-- you whom Tony loved-- with a knave like Maurice Stair?
37257So white-- like a snowdrop? 37257 That person?"
37257The` gold for silver''creed?
37257To- night?
37257We ca n''t possibly lose sight of them now, can we?
37257Well, but-- forgive me for asking-- what could you have done?
37257Well, let me help, wo n''t you?
37257Well, let''s beat it out together, shall we? 37257 Well?
37257Were n''t you out seeing the patrol go off to- night?
37257What are you doing, driver?
37257What are you going to do, Miss Saurin?
37257What can she expect?
37257What can you know that is not known to every one? 37257 What detained you, Maurice?
37257What do you know?
37257What do you mean, Judy? 37257 What do you mean, Judy?"
37257What do you want-- murderer?
37257What does it depend upon?
37257What has it to do with you or me? 37257 What has made him change his mind about helping you into the Consular service, Maurice?"
37257What has she done?
37257What have you locked yourself in for? 37257 What is it?"
37257What is it?
37257What is the good of pretending to me, Deirdre? 37257 What is the matter?"
37257What is there I can do?
37257What is there I can do?
37257What made her cry out last night-- in your hut?--"Last night?--in my hut? 37257 What now?"
37257What place is that on the right, opposite the the hill?
37257What was it you wanted to say to me?
37257What''s the good, my dear girl? 37257 What?"
37257What?
37257When shall the swan her death- song singing Sleep with wings in darkness furled? 37257 Where are the other ladies?"
37257Where did you leave them, Sergeant?
37257Where is Judy?
37257Where is Miss Saurin?
37257Where is the poor little woman?
37257Where is your passenger, Hendricks-- Miss Saurin? 37257 Where to?"
37257Who ever means those tom- fool things?
37257Who says tinned pineapples?
37257Why are you so white?
37257Why did n''t some one save him from the rocks, I wonder? 37257 Why did you ever wear them?"
37257Why did you marry Maurice Stair?
37257Why did you take his charm, Maurice?
37257Why do you wear them?
37257Why not have them roasted whole in their jackets?
37257Why not? 37257 Why not?
37257Why should I bother about a career, since I am never to have any children to pass my glories on to?
37257Why should I make you uncomfortable?
37257Why should I mind that he loved you best? 37257 Why should I?"
37257Why, have n''t you seen her around the place this morning? 37257 Why, what is likely to happen to them?"
37257Will it really be necessary if I thank you_ now_ for-- for the services you have been so extremely kind as to render me?
37257Will you be good enough to answer my question definitely? 37257 Will you come to my room then?"
37257Will you come?
37257Will you come?
37257Will you get ready, Deirdre?
37257Will you let me?
37257Will you mind if I call at the post- office?
37257Will you tell me that he never asked you to marry him?
37257Would you like to go up into the watch- tower to wait?
37257Yes, and what about that Bass''s ale you and Hunloke keep all to your own cheek?
37257Yes, but if Anthony Kinsella had not given him his chance he would never have broken away from-- Don''t I know? 37257 Yes, but why have you got on your best stars and stripes this afternoon?"
37257Yes-- my kitten?
37257Yes--"When I come back?
37257You are a Catholic?
37257You detest your uncle, why take his money under such an ignominious condition? 37257 You did not many Herriott after all?
37257You know my name?
37257You meant to die--_you_? 37257 You say there is a good hotel here, Hendricks?"
37257You still hold to that plan?
37257You surely do not include me in your hateful scheme to forget Dick-- to disgrace his memory?
37257You think it would have been more pardonable if I had done it secretly?
37257You''ll find them all there-- and Mr Stair, bring my dressing- case will you? 37257 _ Do you think Maurice Stair also croons over dream children?--does he give them the eyes of his love?--have they little hands that fondle him_?"
37257_ Words_!--what do they do for you? 37257 _ You have tried beguiling, and flattering, and scorn, and hate-- is there nothing else left to try_?"
37257***** Glory of youth glowed in his veins Where is that glory now?"
37257A mother would come to our post- office den and say:"Oh, Miss Saurin, would you come and speak to Jimmy?"
37257After saying"De do?"
37257And I would answer:"Darling, what look?
37257And I would be obliged to confront the criminal wearing the air of a Caesar reproaching his Brutus with a last"_ Et tu_?"
37257And Mrs Valetta said in a curious voice:"Can you possibly mean the Latin Quarter of Paris?"
37257And how to do that?
37257And what good in all my fine resolutions if they so quickly dissolved in the face of disaster?
37257Are you going to get down here, or let Hendricks drive you to my hut?"
37257Besides, what is there to keep one in a place like this?"
37257But I think it would be easier to fall in love with Tony Kinsella than out of it, do n''t you?"
37257But before I went I said to the husband of Nonie Valetta:"Is it true that she is so near death?"
37257But could I help it?
37257But do their impressions matter?"
37257But do you think he would change it?
37257But do you think that crushed him?
37257But look here, Makupi, will you go with me to the Matoppoe and show me the way to the cave of the_ Umlimo_?"
37257But was it possible that I had ever worn silk ones?
37257But what did that matter after all?
37257But what for, good Lord?
37257But what good in that?
37257But what kind of life is this for a woman?
37257But where did you get your experience of lions?"
37257But who ever heard of an Indian or a Hindoo having blue eyes?
37257But why are we going to war with Lobengula?"
37257But why did Maurice stay so long?
37257But why were these men standing out in the inhospitable night?
37257But yet-- but yet, why should he seem so alive to me still in my dreams, and my thoughts?
37257Ca n''t you overlook her offences?
37257Can I or can I not engage a room in this hotel-- and have my meals served to me there?"
37257Colonel, will you have the kit from her horse sent in, please?"
37257Could I after all bear to meet him there, casually, under all those women''s eyes-- Anna Cleeve''s searching glance, Nonie Valetta''s ice- cold stare?
37257Could it be true?
37257Could n''t I do that?"
37257Deaf as I had tried to be, had I not heard everywhere round me hints of his intimacies with women?
37257Dear girl that I love, why will you not let me try and make you happy?
37257Deirdre, have I brought you to such a pass?
37257Did any one ever taste such stuff as these boys make?"
37257Did he speak to you?"
37257Did n''t she come?"
37257Did n''t you speak to your chief about it on the wire this morning as you said you would?"
37257Did not I pray and watch and fight for him?--and afterwards_ watch him drop back_?
37257Did the Irish gift of foresight descend for a moment upon that one of Ireland''s sons, I wonder?
37257Did you buy the whole four quarters in the name of God?"
37257Did you ever hear of anything so horrible?
37257Do n''t you realise yet that I have never for one moment believed those lies about Anthony, that nothing can shake my belief in his honour?
37257Do n''t you think it is time you made up your quarrel with her?
37257Do n''t you think so, Mrs Shand?"
37257Do n''t you understand that it is sacred; that the memory of that man is the only thing I have left?
37257Do n''t_ we_ need defending, I''d like to know?"
37257Do you know that tag of verse--"` In the mud and scum of things Something, something always sings?''
37257Do you mean it?
37257Do you mean to say, Madam, that you have been here alone in that cart all the evening?"
37257Do you remember what he said to the soldier he found sleeping at his post?
37257Do you think I ca n''t manage two old Mashonaland nags?"
37257Do you think I could ever forget your face?"
37257Do you think you ought to see a doctor, Deirdre?
37257Do you understand that, Maurice?
37257Does n''t the place agree with you?
37257Evidently the idea is to get revenge on all women for his own wife''s infidelities, but it seems incredibly brutal, does n''t it?"
37257God knows if she too read his look aright, but she was the first to speak:"What news of my husband, Mr Burney?"
37257Had Stair''s arm miraculously recovered?
37257Had he not said to me with exceeding bitterness:"You will hear my name blown back upon the breeze of fame-- of a kind"?
37257Handsome, is n''t he?
37257Have n''t you eyes to see and ears to hear anything else but gossip?
37257He merely replied:"I drive Zeederberg''s mules, do n''t I?
37257Her voice came floating back to me:"Do n''t go in without me, will you?
37257How am I to sleep out in this infernal yard?"
37257How can I earn a living?"
37257How can you ask me that?
37257How could Africa keep me?
37257How_ can_ you?"
37257I am glad Tony Kinsella can not see you to- night looking like a white flame among red roses-- What are all those red roses?
37257I asked, and almost choked on the words remembering what Mrs Valetta had said,"Is it true that some woman put them there?"
37257I said at last:"What is there to prevent you from leaving Africa without your uncle''s consent?
37257I said to myself-- why, being so wretched, make another equally so?
37257I suppose you''ll give us some tea, Nonie?"
37257I think you must remember?"
37257I wonder if-- couldn''t we ask her to come in with us?"
37257I''ll go and ask her-- shall I?"
37257I''m so dead tired, are n''t you?
37257I--""How dared you keep it secret?
37257If I were alone-- married and yet alone-- and he should come for me, would I refuse to go?
37257If his wife could be up there, why could n''t I?
37257If the mules were unharnessed how could we reach that most desirable little tin hotel?
37257If we have no_ laager_, What will Col. Blow do?
37257If we learn to tolerate and help and comfort each other-- will not that be something?
37257Instantly the window was opened, and the divine performer upon banjos put out his blond rumpled head:"Wire come, Bleksley?"
37257Is he in the town to- night?
37257Is n''t it awful?
37257Is n''t it insolent of her to come here amongst_ us_?"
37257Is this the end?
37257Is this the end?
37257It is such a trying colour for any one but the very blond, and you are so very brown, are n''t you?
37257It is the Matabele whom we have to fear-- cruel, ferocious brutes--""Did Judy leave no message for me?"
37257Leave our beds?"
37257Lord Gerald Deshon said to me boyishly:"May I sit next to you, Miss Saurin?
37257May I, Deirdre?"
37257My dear girl, what on earth are you talking about?
37257My poor child, how can you delude yourself so?"
37257Now let us get our mattresses and rugs, shall we?"
37257Of course they were still noisy and often naughty-- what child worth its salt is not?
37257Of course you must eat-- what''s the matter?
37257On the third day he wrote a note and sent it to my hut by Sixpence: Would I be so extremely kind and condescending as to grace his table that evening?
37257Say, can that lad be I?
37257See dat place over dere?"
37257See the lights?
37257Shall I come with you?"
37257She would say:"Oh, Deirdre, what puts that look into the back of your eyes?"
37257Some one had the fearful courage to stammer from twisted lips a question:"Who were they?
37257The grey- eyed kitten again addressed me:"Dear Miss Saurin, have you brought any_ poudre de riz_ with you?
37257Then how could Maurice have received a message from Ringe?
37257Then what of Anna Cleeve?
37257They had not lost any Matabele, neither any small- pox; why should they seek for these things?
37257This is all wrong-- what has happened?
37257Very clearly I heard Mrs Valetta''s question, though it was in a soft and entreating voice I had never heard her use before:"Why are you going, Kim?
37257Was Bleksley an open rebel?
37257Was he dreaming, or was he infatuated with one of the women, and simply drivelling about her?
37257Was it possible that Clinton( the man most unwillingly left in charge of our guns) was breaking away after all?
37257Was it these thatched huts that held me-- because we had made them so charming and homelike without and within?
37257Was n''t it horrid of him, Colonel?
37257Was n''t it sweet of him?
37257Was the lure of Africa on me too?
37257Was there a curious inflection on the word_ everyone_, or did I only imagine it?
37257Was this strange brown land of golden days, and crimson and orange eventides, and purple nights, calling to me?
37257Were these the claw- marks that the witch Africa put upon those who dwelt in her bosom?
37257Were these the scars of her fierce embrace?
37257Were they preparing to spring upon me?
37257What are you worrying about, my dear girl?
37257What business could he possibly have on the other side of the river, unless it was to skin the lion?
37257What can I do to earn my living here?"
37257What could I say?
37257What could I say?
37257What could be happening?
37257What could be keeping him?
37257What could have happened?
37257What did anything matter?
37257What did it matter about the country being unsettled if one had a revolver and was an excellent shot?
37257What did it matter what unjust, cruel words she spoke?
37257What did it matter?
37257What did it matter?
37257What did you fall out about, by the way?"
37257What do you mean?"
37257What do you think of that?"
37257What do_ you_ think, Fan?"
37257What does one do in_ laager_?"
37257What excuse had I to knock at his door in the middle of the night?
37257What if I am ginning against him?
37257What if in my selfishness and pride I am wickedly unjust to him?
37257What is the use of worrying about the menu?
37257What makes you think you will be amused up here?"
37257What on earth is the matter?"
37257What right had I to hate them if, hearing that I was a traitor to their cause, they looked sideways at me?
37257What subtle note of regret had my ears caught in the low spoken words?
37257What was Africa to me or I to Africa?
37257What was I waiting for so passionately?
37257What was going on in the silent brilliantly lighted huts?
37257What was it?
37257What was it?
37257What was the use of struggling against the witch who had me in her toils and never meant to let me go?
37257What was the use, I demanded, of sticking in Johannesburg and all the other stupid imitation towns and imagining we were seeing_ real_ Africa?
37257What was to save their own husbands from my lures and wiles when they came back?
37257What will be the use of the Victoria Cross to me, I''d like to know, if I lose him?"
37257What you asking me about the scarlet mail- bag for?
37257What''s a chipped arm and a game leg if they''re not the honours of war?
37257What''s the use of rushing?
37257What?"
37257When will Heaven its sweet bell ringing Call my spirit from this stormy world?"
37257Where did I get them?
37257Where do these things go?
37257Where is our English chivalry?
37257Where is the box of sharks you had, Mrs Marriott?"
37257Where was it?
37257Who is he, Mrs Marriott?"
37257Why could n''t you have found a moment to come and see Anna and me?"
37257Why did I understand?
37257Why do n''t you take it off?"
37257Why do you say that to me?"
37257Why had he got up so early and finished his breakfast before-- What was that scratch?
37257Why had he let my hands fall so quickly?
37257Why had nothing been found to identify him?
37257Why not become an authority on them, a master of the native tongue as no other man in this country is?
37257Why not, indeed?"
37257Why was I not glad to be escaping at last from the claw of the witch?
37257Will you come in?
37257Will you come with me to search?"
37257Will you let me write it for you and send it in while you''re away?"
37257Wo n''t you come in with Mrs Grant and Mrs Shannon and me?
37257Would it be troubling you too much to ask for an explanation of your charming behaviour?"
37257Would it keep me as he had said it always kept people who felt the lure and heard the call?
37257Would she pretend to be shocked?
37257Wretched, is n''t it?"
37257Yet why should dust and fatigue and a stubbly beard so terribly alter a man as he was altered?
37257You are a great friend of Miss Saurin''s brother, are n''t you, Gerry?"
37257You are going to give yourself to me at last-- at last?"
37257You have said so yourself now, have n''t you?"
37257You have shown yourself worthy of any woman''s love, Maurice, and who am I--?"
37257You surely can not_ love_ him?"
37257You think that is what a man marries a beautiful girl like you for?
37257You were a good deal together this evening, were n''t you?
37257_ Deirdre Saurin_?"
37257_ He_ had not lost any Matabele_ impis_, so why should he go and search for them?
37257_ Now_, are you sorry you''ve come?"
37257and Mrs Valetta?
37257how can you?
37257how could you come?
37257how dared you?
37257if you_ must_ marry again choose some one else; there are lots of nice men here; why should you take one who is not even a gentleman?
37257is this goat going to last for ever?"
37257perhaps you can understand?"
37257was it all true?
37257well, what was the use of trying to make her feel what she could never feel?
37257what kind of behaviour is this?
37257what on earth are you doing?"
37257what time have I for teaching a child?
37257why had I not embraced my fate before this hour in which I knew that Anthony still dreamed of me behind the hills?
37257will some of you fellows kill those dogs?--choke''em-- feed''em do anything, only let me sleep..._ How_ many do you say?
37257you surely would n''t sell the Matabeleland property that Dick practically paid for with his life?"
41983How did I come? 41983 How did you come?"
41983What signifies philosophy that does not apply to some use? 41983 Whence do the wasps derive it?"
41983Who is there?
41983( say they) the heavens are open; if you enter not now, when will you enter?
41983------------Whence, but through an infinite, Almighty God, supremely wise and just?
41983A rock(_ waoke_?)
41983Among other things, he disputes whether or no the Anthropophagi act contrary to nature?
41983And this leads to the consideration of a question proposed by Aristotle,--Why are the upper parts of the sea salter and warmer than the lower?
41983And we may ask of this, as well as the former hypothesis,--what need of them, when the work may be done without them?
41983And who can follow Nature''s pencil here?
41983And why does a slighter degree of the nightmare sometimes seize people who sleep in an erect situation in a chair?
41983And why?
41983Another question sometimes agitated is, what kind of wood is meant by gopher wood?
41983As we entered the church- yard, the respectful"How do you do?"
41983But can putrefaction create an organic substance?
41983But is it not also apparent, that in all their works they propose to themselves certain ends?
41983But it may be asked, how is it produced?
41983But why should they at all change their habitations?
41983But, after all, what are those parts in the fungi casually observed by naturalists, and which they have taken for the parts of fructification?
41983Can an extorted oath compel me to observe secrecy on a thing so incredible, but which ought to be left on record to posterity?"
41983Can your majesty desire to see such another sight?"
41983Drowns my spirits, draws my breath?
41983Expressing some doubt of this to the landlord''s question,"Do you not know that he is blind?"
41983Had not Aaron, the high priest of the Hebrews, a ring on his finger, whereof the diamond, by its virtue, operated prodigious things?
41983Her father then asked why she would not make some signs when she wanted to drink?
41983How can we conceive that fire, in certain circumstances, can exercise so powerful an action on the human body as to produce this effect?
41983How was their frame to such perfection brought?
41983I asked Idris if ever he had before seen such a sight?
41983If a Chinese is asked how he finds himself in health?
41983If it be asked, whether these imperfect creatures have all distinct souls while lurking yet in their parent?
41983In the Athenian Oracle, a lady desires to know whether fleas have stings, or whether they only suck or bite, when they draw blood from the body?
41983In the course of his journey, the Mask was one day heard to ask his keeper, whether the king had any design on his life?
41983In the last place, he demanded of them,''What name they desired should be put upon the bell?''
41983Is it to be wondered at, then, that they hold the alarm- bird in the highest veneration?
41983Is this, in reality, a picture of the human mind, with all its boasted attributes, its delicacies, its refinements, its civilized superiority?
41983King James I. when a man was presented to him who could eat a whole sheep at one meal, asked,"What work could he do more than another man?"
41983M. de St. Mars was alarmed at the sight; and asked the man with great anxiety, whether he could read, and whether any one else had seen the plate?
41983My servants asked this man whether he could pipe these snakes out of their holes, and catch them?
41983Now, in this case, how was the number to be ascertained?
41983Or, when contending winds around you blow, Do you ne''er wish the cause of them to know?"
41983Say, what the various bones so wisely wrought?
41983Shall we soon be like him?
41983Soon as the daisy decks the green, Thy certain voice we hear: Hast thou a star to guide thy path, Or mark the rolling year?
41983Steals my senses, shuts my sight?
41983The only question, therefore, is, by what means this air comes to be extricated, and to take up more room than it naturally does in the fluid?
41983To which she answered,--why should she, when she had no desire?
41983Upon being asked, whether she would submit to the church the truth of her pretended visions, revelations, and intercourse with departed saints?
41983Upon what hypothesis can we account for a degree of foresight and penetration such as this?
41983We shall now make a few observations on THE TIDES:-- Say, why should the collected main Itself within itself contain?
41983What good man will ever come again under my roof, if I let my floor be stained with a good man''s blood?"
41983What is this absorbs me quite?
41983What then becomes of it?
41983What was he to do?
41983What youthful bride can equal her array?
41983What, and did the Bank refuse payment, Sir?"
41983When he wrote so much of what came to him as gifts, was it not to rouse more to give?
41983When it was demanded, why she carried in her hand that standard at the unction and coronation of Charles at Rheims?
41983When she was asked, why she put her trust in her standard, which had been consecrated by magical incantations?
41983When the wicked cease from troubling, will the good cease from doing good?
41983Where now the throng That press''d the beach, and, hasty to depart, Look''d to the sea for safety?
41983Who can with her for easy pleasure vie?
41983Who has furnished him with his painted wings?
41983Who has given to him the faculty of inhabiting the ethereal regions?
41983Who has raised him above the earth?
41983Who has taught them not to mistake the time, but to calculate so exactly, that the eggs are not laid before the nest is finished?
41983Who is able to number the different species of animals which people the seas?
41983Why should its num''rous waters stay In comely discipline and fair array, Till winds and tides exert their high commands?
41983Why to its caverns should it sometimes cree And with delighted silence sleep On the lov''d bosom of its parent deep?
41983Will no morning break over the tomb?
41983Will you permit once more our group to try To raise your laughter, or to make you cry?
41983Would any one ever have imagined, that the wings of butterflies were furnished with feathers?
41983and why is the land there dry and full of crevices?
41983he exclaimed,"What do you mean by that?"
41983on horseback?"
41983or who can determine their form, structure, size, and properties?
41983what finite can explore?
41983where is thy sting?
41983where is thy victory?
41983who could conceive such knavery to exist?
41983why is there commonly no kind of herb in the places where this species of fungus grows?
41632And is this all?
41632Do you remember, my dear, that you are in the house of the best_ entrées_ in London? 41632 Ha, what is this that rises to my touch So like a cushion-- can it be a cabbage?
41632My brains are surely turning? 41632 Pray, on what meat hath this our Cæsar fed?"
41632What do_ divorcées_ do with their wedding presents?
41632What is good taste but an instantaneous, ready appreciation of the fitness of things?
41632What is so good as an egg salad for a hungry person?
41632What is the matter, Jane?
41632What is the matter,said Lord Seaforth;"has the Duke turned rusty?"
41632What is thine age?
41632Who hath created this indigest?
41632''I bet that it is the first time you ever made an omelet in a wood- cutter''s hut, is it not, my little lady?''
41632A little girl says,"I do n''t know which dress to put on my dolly, Mamma, which shall I?"
41632A man always expects his wife to dress for him; why should he not dress for her?
41632Ancient or modern?
41632And do you ask why?
41632And what could the modern English novelist do without it?
41632Are there many opulent people who can say, The key to my house is wit and intellect, and character, without regard to party, caste or school?
41632Are you going to feast the whole army of the Rhine?
41632As true refinement comes from within, let him read the noble description of Thackeray:--"What is it to be a gentleman?
41632As, for instance, the drawer gets the word"Africa"and the question"Have you an invitation to my wedding?"
41632Broiled, devilled, stewed, cooked in a fashion called_ Bourdelaise_, it is the most delicious of dishes, and as a salad what can equal it?
41632But are we as conscientious as the gentleman in"Punch"who rebuked the giddy girl who would talk to him at dinner?
41632But if, after opening her doors, the hostess refuses the welcome, or treats her guests with various degrees of cordiality, why did she ask at all?
41632But who can eat an orange well?
41632Can we be a thorough- bred, or a thorough- fed, all by ourselves?
41632Canst thou gulf a shoal Of herrings?
41632Considering what has been expected of the American woman, has she not done rather well?
41632Do we not make our dinners too long and too heavy?
41632England is famed for its good fish, as why should it not be, with the ocean around it?
41632First, whom shall we ask?
41632For instance, if we compare a dinner in London with a dinner in New York, we must say, Whose dinner?
41632For the roast, too, what plates so good as Doulton, real English, substantial_ faïence_?
41632For what would Christmas be without the children?
41632Has she not conquered her fate?
41632Have we counted on that possible Utopia where men and women meet and talk, to contribute of their best thought to the entertaining?
41632Have we many houses to which we are asked to a banquet of wit?
41632Have we not the fee simple of terrapin and the exclusive excellence of shad?
41632Have we not trout, salmon, the great fellows from the Great Lakes, and the exclusive ownership of the Spanish mackerel?
41632His remark to his friend was,"James, you are a layman, why do n''t you say something?"
41632How can the reformer make society more amusing and less dangerous?
41632How did they do it?
41632How does a wedding begin?
41632How grapple with that important question,"How shall I give a dinner?"
41632How long does a French_ chef_, at ten thousand dollars a year, stay?
41632How long must a hostess wait for a tardy guest?
41632How many good servants could he find; how long would they stay?
41632How much will be enough and no more?
41632How should he dare to speak against a cucumber salad?
41632If our ancestors dined at nine, when did they lunch?
41632If they choose to play at times when the male golfers are feeding or resting, no one can object; but at other times, must we say it?
41632If they do badly, how can they help it?
41632If this is what they ate, what then did they drink?
41632If we compare New York with Paris, we must say, What Paris?
41632In this connection, why not call in the transcendent attraction of music?
41632Indeed, it is the custom abroad to ask,"what has he done, what can he do?"
41632Is it a manufactured object?
41632Is not this a list to make"the rash gazer wipe his eye"?
41632It is impossible to do much with the art of entertaining without servants, and where shall we get them?
41632It is not a bad"look- out,"is it?
41632Judging from many specimens which we have seen, may we not claim that the American woman must be stamped with an especial distinction?
41632Now what to drink?
41632Of what other fortune can we say so much?
41632One asks,"Where are their manners?"
41632Or hast thou gorge and room To bolt fat porpoises and dolphins whole By dozens, e''en as oysters we consume?
41632Ought a gentleman to be a loyal son, a true husband, and honest father?
41632Ought his life to be decent, his bills to be paid, his tastes to be high and elegant?
41632Raw, roasted, boiled, stewed, scalloped and baked in patties, what so savoury as the oyster?
41632Shall we try?
41632She has furnished them with food and wine, but can she amuse them?
41632Supposing we tell her?
41632Thackeray praises Chambertin in verse more than once:--"''Oui, oui, Monsieur,''''s the waiter''s answer;''Quel vin Monsieur desire- t- il?''
41632The old saying that it takes three generations to make a gentleman makes us ask, How many does it take to unmake one?
41632The questioner begins: Is it animal, vegetable or mineral?
41632Then try quibbles:"How can I get the wine out of a bottle if I have no corkscrew and must not break the glass or make a hole in it or the cork?"
41632To relieve them, to bring them into communion with their next neighbour, with whom they have nothing in common, what shall one do?
41632Was it on account of its weight?
41632We still have the"Whisk,"but what has become of_ lansquenet_, quadrille basset, piquet, those pretty and courtly games?
41632What dinner?
41632What is its shape, size and colour?
41632What is its use?
41632What is the reason?
41632What is thy diet?
41632What is your favourite Christian name for a man?
41632What is your favourite Christian name for a woman?
41632What matter if it be only a few more beans than one''s neighbour?
41632What shall we do with it?
41632What should be done with the broken meats of a great household?
41632What time did our forefathers lunch?
41632What woman could refuse to make a pudding and any number of pies after that?
41632What woman of fashion goes out of her way to find the man of letters who writes the striking editorials in a morning paper in New York?
41632What wonder if in the first essay some chords are missed, some discords struck?
41632What would Horace Walpole say, could he see the collections of some of our really poor people, not to mention those of our billionnaires?
41632Where are the broils of our childhood?
41632Where is it now?
41632Where is our Lady Jersey, our Lady Palmerston, our Princess Belgioso?
41632Who can endure the mingled misery of a hot room, an uncomfortable seat, a glare of gas, and a pianoforte solo?
41632Who can help them?
41632Who does not remember the ice in the pitcher of a morning, which must be broken before even faces were washed?
41632Who ever heard of society running after Mr. John Gilbert, one of the most respectable men of his profession, as well as a consummate actor?
41632Who in America would dare to give such a lunch?
41632Who is not glad to find a four- leaved clover, to see the moon over his right shoulder, to have a black cat come to the house?
41632Who is your favourite heroine?
41632Who is your favourite king?
41632Who is your favourite queen?
41632Who shall pretend to describe its attractions?
41632Who were these wretches?
41632Who wishes to sit next to Mr. Many- Courses, when he has been kept waiting for his dinner?
41632Who would not say that this would be the most amusing dinner in London?
41632Whose trial?
41632Why are not our women greater politicians?
41632Why not a pound- and- a- quarter trout?
41632Why''A cat has nine lives,''etc.?"
41632Why''cat- o- nine- tails?''
41632Will they come?
41632Wilt thou go with me?
41632Yet in a large town, in a house shut up from our cold winter blasts, what can she do?
41632_ Interlocutor._--"Is it something statesmen crave?"
41632_ Interlocutor._--"Is it something that goes halt?"
41632_ Interlocutor._--"Is it something tigers need?"
41632_ Interlocutor._--"Is it something we all would like?"
41632_ Interlocutor._--"Is it to shoot at duck?"
41632_ Ma foi!_"answered he;"you saw that man just gone out?
41632and"What Cheer?"
41632rather than,"how much is he worth?"
41632said the cook,''can I thus think of grilling?
41632since the days of canning, who offers the delicious preserves of the past?
39945And Ancona? 39945 And did you get it?"
39945And do you never have any troubles?
39945And does he never fail?
39945And may I know the cause of your unwarranted intrusion,I demanded,"without referring the question to the State Department at home?"
39945And now,said I,"may I see you at home?"
39945And then?
39945And then?
39945And what becomes of all the product of your farm?
39945And what books are they?
39945And what is the peculiarity of an English elevator?
39945And where do you wish to go?
39945And will not your Majesty honor me with his autograph?
39945And will this be published over your own name?
39945And you are Miss Witherup?
39945And you are all in it together?
39945And you are coming to America again?
39945And you do n''t feel, Mr. De Reszke,I asked,"that all this interferes with your work?"
39945And you have adopted this disguise?
39945And you will really fight England?
39945And-- ah,he added, with a slight coyness of manner--"we are-- ah-- supposed to be at what you Americans call par and a premium, eh?"
39945Any poets?
39945Are we-- ah-- are we appreciated in America?
39945Are you coming to America again?
39945Are you familiar with American literature?
39945Are you going to read from your own works in America, or not? 39945 Are you going to rewrite any of them?"
39945Are you not aware that my house is still in the market?
39945Are you sure?
39945Avez- vous_ Avec Feu et Sabre_?
39945Avez- vous_ Les Enfants de la Terre_?
39945But how can they?
39945But how? 39945 But what was the matter with the poker?
39945But what''s his name?
39945But where do you send his letters?
39945But why Ohio, General?
39945But would n''t a blackboard prove less expensive?
39945But you did n''t give up trying to live in your own house that had cost you$ 20,000 for that?
39945But your letters to him containing his royalties-- where do they go?
39945Can you really speak all those dreadful Polish words? 39945 Chicago?
39945Did Dreyfus write to you?
39945Did I get it? 39945 Do you know who that was?"
39945Do you like the American climate?
39945Do you like_ Vanity Fair_?
39945Do you mean to say that you adapt your scenery and personal make- up to the likings of the individual who calls?
39945Do you ride a bicycle?
39945Do you still hold with the Spanish that Americans are pigs, and that New York is a trough?
39945Do you think so?
39945Do you think you people in the States will really have war with Spain?
39945Do you use any tonic-- hair, health, or otherwise-- which you particularly recommend to authors?
39945Emperor,said I,"about the partition of China?"
39945Excuse me, madame,he replied, in English,"but what do you want, anyhow?"
39945Excuse me, miss,said he,"but you saw?"
39945For what?
39945Have you any novelties in hand?
39945Have you been at work on the ocean?
39945Have you spoken to my agents?
39945Have you? 39945 Herr Nansen,"said I,"are you as accurate in your observations of the North Pole as in your notes of the States, as expressed to me?"
39945How about our American authors?
39945How could it be otherwise?
39945How did you know that? 39945 How did you know?"
39945How do you do, Miss Witherup?
39945How he called me down about the Marie Antoinette poker?
39945How the deuce did you know?
39945How will that do?
39945I hope I do not disturb you, my dear Emperor?
39945I mean, how do you pronounce it?
39945I presume,said I,"that their voices are in good condition?"
39945I suppose we can get a furnished house for$ 10,000?
39945If you are so anxious to visit America, why do n''t you?
39945Indeed?
39945Is his a voluntary sacrifice?
39945Is it to be partitioned?
39945Is there such a thing?
39945Is-- er-- the head of the house in?
39945It was n''t polite, was it?
39945M. Zola,said I, placing great emphasis on the M,"tell me, what interested you in Dreyfus-- humanity-- or literature?"
39945Might not Bonaparte have used a Marie Antoinette poker?
39945Mr. Alfred Austin?
39945Not for me-- oh, sire-- not for me?
39945Now that your house is sold,said I,"_ why_, Mr. Peters, did you leave Vermont?"
39945Plançon here too?
39945Que voulez- vous, messieurs?
39945Rather clever, to be tossed off on a scratch pad while taking a shower- bath, eh?
39945Rather good joke that, eh, Rogers?
39945Running away, my dear Miss Witherup?
39945Saw what?
39945Say au revoir, but not good- bye, For why? 39945 Suppose, instead of going to that expense, we run over to the Golf Links?
39945Surprise? 39945 Tell me,"said I,"how did you know I was a matinée girl?
39945The De Reszkes?
39945The Polar Explorer?
39945The Pole?
39945Then how did it all come about?
39945Then what shall I do to attack Ohio?
39945Then why did n''t you choose an easier name, like Lang, or Johnson?
39945Then why, Dr. Maclaren,I asked,"were you running towards the docks within ten seconds of the arrival of my train?"
39945Then why,I queried,"do you not take it up exclusively?
39945There is to be a reorganization, then?
39945They study us in your schools, do they? 39945 To what?"
39945Vous? 39945 WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?"
39945Want me, S''rennery?
39945Want you?
39945We? 39945 Well, you were right; and now that I have found you, tell me, do you write or dictate your stories?"
39945Well,said he,"what of the partition of China?"
39945Wha-- what''ave I done, S''rennery?
39945What about?
39945What are the prospects for grand opera next year, Mr. De Reszke?
39945What do you think of Pickwick?
39945What is it, Jean?
39945What is your favorite novel in Chinese?
39945What is your favorite novel?
39945What is your favorite wheel?
39945What is your other question?
39945What on earth is the meaning of this?
39945What shall it be-- a radish or an Alderney cow? 39945 What suggested it?"
39945What?
39945When I get to-- er-- the author of_ Quo Vadis''s_ house, whom shall I ask for?
39945When do you expect to come?
39945Who are they?
39945Who''s there, who''s there, I fain would know, Are you some dull and dunning dog? 39945 Who''s there?"
39945Why ask foolish questions? 39945 Why not?"
39945Why should I work on the ocean? 39945 Why the devil did n''t you say so?"
39945Why would not a lay figure do as well for torture?
39945Why? 39945 Why?"
39945Would you like to see the cell?
39945Would you mind writing that down?
39945Write one for me, wo n''t you?
39945You are aware, of course, that Andrew Lang is not an individual, but a corporation?
39945You know the-- Manhattan cocktail?
39945You work from living models?
39945You? 39945 Your grandmother?"
39945Your name?
39945Ah, who is your best publisher, Miss Witherup?"
39945Ah-- how much do I owe you?"
39945Are you a friend, or eke a foe?
39945Are you a good sailor?"
39945Are you in Berlin for long?"
39945Are your shops open to visitors?"
39945Austin?"
39945Caine?"
39945Consider me--""Nansen?"
39945Did he ever fail to get anything he wanted?"
39945Did you ever hear that beautiful poem,''The Song of the Old Trap Door''?"
39945Do n''t English matinée girls wear large hats?"
39945Do n''t you?"
39945Do you come to interview us as singers or farmers?"
39945First, did you find it hard to make a name for yourself?"
39945For non- payment of rent?"
39945Good, say you-- but what does that mean?
39945Have you ever travelled in your own country, madam?"
39945Have you heard our latest musical composition?"
39945He seemed nonplussed for a moment, and, to cover his embarrassment, asked:"Second or third class?"
39945How about yourself?"
39945How much do I owe you?"
39945I ASKED"]"Is this Gloomster Abbey?"
39945I have heard of you, of course-- but-- ah-- who is Miss Longfellow?"
39945I wonder if she was right?
39945Is he with you?"
39945Iss dot some new kindt ohf chiggens?"
39945Kipling?"
39945Kipling?"
39945Lang?"
39945Maclaren?"
39945My first effort was to seek information from my friends the De Reszkes, and I telegraphed them:"Where can I find Sienkiewicz?
39945NANSEN?''
39945NANSEN?''
39945Nansen?"
39945Nansen?"
39945One must be introduced, and how can chairmen of the evening introduce me?"
39945Peters?"
39945Pray why should I surpriséd be?
39945Rather good expression that, do n''t you think?
39945SAID I"8"DINED WITH THE CABINET"12"''IS THIS GLOOMSTER ABBEY?''
39945Then he looked up, and perceiving me, rose courteously, and, much to my surprise, observed in charming English:"Miss Witherup, I presume?"
39945Vot is dose focal bowers you iss dalking apout?
39945What can I do for you?"
39945What did I learn from the New York Central time- table, for instance?
39945What did you think of Chicago?"
39945What is your favorite style of interior decoration?"
39945What is your other question?"
39945What is your price per word?"
39945What work are you engaged on now?"
39945When I wished to learn where was situated the city of Ohio did I send to New York for a map?
39945Who are we?"
39945Who are you?"
39945Why could n''t the Queen knight the theaytre?"
39945Why did you go to South Africa?"
39945Why not ask Scalchi to attend to it?
39945Why?
39945Why?
39945Will you take it?"
39945Would I have been a knight to- day had it not been for my care of details?
39945You would n''t fight her after that?"
39945Zola saw me to my carriage, and just as I entered it he said:"Excuse me, Miss Witherup, but what paper do you write for?"
39945[ Illustration:"''IS THIS GLOOMSTER ABBEY?''
39945[ Illustration:"ONE MUST BE INTRODUCED"]"But,"he added,"how can I?
39945_ Why_ are you here?"
39945_ d_.?"
44229Shall the base feare of displeasing the world overpower or withhold me from revealing unto man the spirituall works of the Lord? 44229 Was ever maiden in such humour wooed?
44229What can a man with faith in religion do more agreeable to God than to seek to convert these poor savages to Christ and humanity?
44229Where is your father[ Newport], and where are the guns and grindstone you promised?
44229Who would live at home idly or think in himself any worth, to live only to eat, drink and sleep, and so die?
44229And these implements, so much coveted by the Indians, had been traded again with them for"furres, baskets, muscaneekes[?]
44229Are there not gigantic footprints five feet apart on the rocks yet visible near Richmond at Powhatan?
44229But if we must take something_ cum grano_, must we reject all?
44229Can it be that Virginians would hold her less"a thing enskyed and saintly"if they knew her to have been a widow?
44229Could he put them on the backs of his men and send them?
44229Does not Talleyrand say that he who can suppress a_ bon mot_ deserves canonization?
44229Had the women and children been spared and given to the chiefs according to savage custom?
44229Had they fallen before the Indian tomahawk?
44229Had they perished from famine?
44229Have they not filled nearly a thousand pages of a late story of his life?
44229He called it"pone"--where did he find a word so near kin to the Latin_ panis_ and the French_ pain_?
44229He had something more to ask: Why had they gone up the river to the falls?
44229He was retained some days as the guest of the emperor, who soon put to him the crucial question,"What was the cause of the coming of the Englishmen?"
44229How about ambuscades, arrows, and tomahawks?
44229How did the new King promise, and what nobleman was now in power?
44229Is not a gorgeous bit of history worth more than a poor little_ bon mot_?
44229May I, too, be allowed to dream awhile, pausing in my story of misery, cold, ingratitude, war, famine, and pestilence?
44229Mr. Bucke; also Namontack and Matchumps( Machumps?
44229Need we say this is the Virginia persimmon-- a corruption of the"putchamin"of the Indian?
44229Old England owes much to her House of Commons:"A troublesome body,"said James,"but how can I get rid of it?
44229Pocahontas was a small maiden about ten years of age; Cleopatre( where did Powhatan get the name Cleopatre?)
44229Shall I despise to actuate the pious duties of a Christian?
44229The hand of God was heavy-- who could avoid it or dispute with Him?
44229The pieced barge for the South Sea?
44229There was the Chickahominy flowing in that direction,--why was this river not explored?
44229To this the old gentleman with the"sour look"returned churlish replies: what cared he for the Dutchmen?
44229Was ever maiden in such humour won?"
44229Was he not the son of Sir Richard Martin, Master of the Mint in England?
44229Was it the solidified foam of the sea or the tears of the mermaid?
44229Was peace concluded with Spain?
44229Was the Guy Fawkes conspiracy forgotten?
44229Was this a descendant of Ellinor Dare, or some other of the lost colony?
44229Were they cannibals?
44229Were they fattening him for the sacrifice?
44229What means this white pennon like a flag of truce?
44229What more could he do?
44229What story could he tell of the court?
44229What was the meaning of the traplike contrivances over the small streams that must be crossed before audience could be had of the monarch?
44229Who can avoid it or dispute with him?"
44229Who knows?
44229Would the savage king keep faith?
40539''And in conclusion, what is our crying need in England to- day? 40539 ''Where shall we find him or her?
40539And Bernard?
40539And the women?
40539And what about the other servants? 40539 And what did happen?"
40539And what happened to the poor man?
40539And why particularly at this moment?
40539And, please, what are they all about, and what do they mean?
40539Are you here, Ber?
40539But-- why-- is that all, Lord Huddersfield?
40539Did n''t I tell you, six months ago?
40539Did you get a cheque?
40539Do I_ love_ Him?
40539Do n''t such men ever rob you?
40539Do you know them, then?
40539Do you know what you''re asking? 40539 Does he live all alone?"
40539Does she live here, then?
40539Have any of you seen the papers?
40539Have you got it, Pa?
40539How did it all end up?
40539How is she?
40539How long would it take?
40539How much?
40539How utterly revolting,she said,"and people really take that sort of thing seriously?"
40539How will it do?
40539How''s the cash list to- day?
40539I am extremely sorry,he said,"to call on you so late, but have you seen the evening papers, any of you?"
40539I''ll see if master''s disengaged,she said;"are you the gentleman as has an appointment with master for eleven?"
40539Is any sick among you? 40539 Is it imminent?"
40539Is there any more?
40539It certainly is a dingy, gloomy old place, but what else can you expect down here?
40539Maud,said Hamlyn at length,"can you do a bit of typing for me this afternoon?"
40539Mavourneen,he said,"will you come with us to poor Miss Pritchett?
40539Now, then, Bernard,Lucy said as she began to pour out the tea,"what is all this I hear about a scene in church?
40539Now, ye''ll be careful, wo n''t ye, mavourneen?
40539Of course, Mr. Blantyre will prosecute?
40539Oh, the same old thing: Why does n''t Mr. Hamlyn do something decisive? 40539 Perhaps you would like to walk round the grounds?"
40539Pleased? 40539 Shall I give you some chicken, Father?"
40539The companion, you mean? 40539 Them?"
40539Then what does Agatha''s''sylvan''do?
40539Then why are there so many Salvationists and Dissenters?
40539There will be a service of reparation?
40539They''re not con--_consecrated_?
40539Thy righteousness, O God, is very high: and great things are they that Thou hast done; O God, who is like unto Thee?
40539To moderate MY methods?
40539Well, I suppose that is fairly explicit?
40539What about Miss Pritchett?
40539What about one of us going to the Mass and bringing away the consecrated wafer? 40539 What are these?"
40539What did I say this morning? 40539 What do you mean, my son?"
40539What do you mean?
40539What is it then?
40539What is it?
40539What is that?
40539What will you do with him?
40539What''s she been saying?
40539What''s the matter, child?
40539What''s the matter, my dear?
40539What?
40539What_ is_ it then?
40539When will Mr. Herbert pay up?
40539Where?
40539Who is, then, Father? 40539 Who''s speaking of Christians?"
40539Why did n''t ye knock her down?
40539Why me, Lord Huddersfield?
40539Will ye come with us all to the poor soul''s bedside?
40539Will you come up?
40539Will you follow me, Father?
40539Wo n''t you sit down?
40539You''ll not mind talking in here?
40539You''re due at Malakoff House to- night, are n''t you, Pa?
40539''Ave we the ready money to start it?
40539''Pleasant it is when the woods are green and the winds are soft and low, to lie amid some sylvan scene''--Lucy, dear, what are you thinking about?"
40539''Who''s there?''
40539And I''ll just ask him one myself-- if God had meant him to wear petticoats, would n''t He have made him a woman?''
40539And already,''If a man dies, shall he live again?''
40539And if they were, what then?"
40539And was James Poyntz a fool?
40539And what''ll it be worth when it is reaped?"
40539And where''s Miss Pritchett?"
40539And why is this?
40539And why?
40539Are you in your senses, Mr. Carr-- you a Protestant minister of the Word?
40539As for his goodness, how do we know what goes on in the confessional?
40539But do you know where it seems to me the great counteracting influence to his work lies at the moment?"
40539But do you think the game''s worth the candle?
40539But if I can keep her quiet_ now_, and do something big in the parish in a few days, then I suppose we might broach it?"
40539But if Miss Pritchett is such an angel, what''s the reason of her behaviour now?
40539But surely both of you can put the island to a better use than merely to illustrate quotations from the poets?
40539But what about your men-- where''ll you get''em?
40539But what''s in the paper?"
40539But when she''s in Glory where shall we be?"
40539But why should any one want to do that?"
40539Ca n''t you see the lecturer with his''Now, my friends, I ask you what a poor little spider''s done to be used like that?''
40539Can we go up?"
40539Come along, young ladies; we''ll walk, shall we?
40539Did they teach ye_ no_ history at Cambridge except that the Church of England began at the Reformation?
40539Did they_ imagine_ it week after week as they knelt in church?
40539Do n''t you think so?
40539Do you realise who I am?"
40539Do you think it wise to mention a contribution to the working fund just now?
40539Facing- both- ways?"
40539Gussie went on:"''But what shall we say when we find rank and fashion, acute intelligence and honoured names bowing down in the House of Rimmon?
40539Have I drawn a picture that is too strong?
40539Have n''t you, King?"
40539Have the band people come?"
40539Have you ever cast your eye upon the works of the immortal John Bunyan?
40539Have you seen his new leaflet?"
40539How did he exist spiritually without the sacramental grace so abundantly vouchsafed at St. Elwyn''s?
40539How have you been bewitched with these sorceries?
40539How shall we in Hornham regard such a strange and-- so it seems to us-- unnatural state of affairs?
40539How will opinion in the parish go?"
40539How''s Agatha, and has James Poyntz been at Scarning, and how''s that poor dear man, Huddersfield, who always reminds me of a churchwarden?
40539I asked him why he was so sure-- was it merely because I had told him, because I believed in it?
40539I suppose you''ve had no chance to get in a word about the will?"
40539I wonder if I might write to you now and then, and tell you some of my thoughts and how things are with me?
40539I''ve struck a new note, see?
40539In the face of such black depths of ignorance, what_ could_ any one do?
40539Is Miss Pritchett ready?
40539Is there no one in our midst willing to become the patron of Truth and to earn the praise of thousands and a place in history?
40539King?"
40539King?"
40539Luke''s?"
40539Miss Pritchett''s companion?
40539No spiritual trouble, I hope?
40539Now, Lucy, my dear, what will you stump up?
40539Now, what can I do for you, or are ye going to do anything for me?"
40539Now, what can I do for you?
40539Now, why should n''t this inaugurate a big public movement all over the country?
40539Oh, you''ve been smelling round in that quarter, have you?"
40539One good thing has happened: Every priest in the kingdom will have his warning now----""Of what?"
40539Only a brawl in church?"
40539Poyntz?"
40539Ritualists been prowling round St. Luke''s?
40539See?"
40539Shall I begin at the beginning?"
40539Something ought to be done, but what?
40539Stiffe?"
40539The law is quite clear, I suppose, on the point, James?"
40539The ordinary person would say,"Lord Huddersfield?
40539Then my man turns round and tells the crowd that a crucifix is nothing but a dolly on a stick-- he gets the laugh, see?
40539This which dissolved and broke the chains of bodily sense, banished the world, and enfolded them with its awful sweetness, its immeasurable joy?
40539Those weddings in France that were decorously arranged by papa and mamma, how did they turn out?
40539WILL HE BECOME A CATHOLIC?"
40539Was_ this_ a fable, as folks sometimes told them?
40539We have got to know each other very well, have n''t we?"
40539What are we now?
40539What did it matter if the man was rude?
40539What did she feel at that moment?
40539What do you mean?"
40539What do you suppose I did this for six months ago?"
40539What does a parson do?
40539What is it?"
40539What is there unscriptural, bad, or unseemly about Unction?
40539What was it?"
40539What were we then?
40539What''s this?
40539What?
40539When will you give me my answer?"
40539Where is the Jael who will destroy this Sisera?''"
40539Which was the one that went best?
40539Who knows how to work a popular cause?
40539Who will be our Boadicea to- day, who will come forward to crush the tyranny of Rome in our own England?
40539Who''s awakened Protestantism in Hengland?
40539Who''s going to boom the Luther League up to the top again?
40539Why ca n''t he do as she says?
40539Why could not Bernard come to Park Lane for a fortnight?
40539Why did you object, Carr?
40539Why does n''t he strike these proud priests some crushing blow?
40539Why should n''t offices be taken in the Strand and a new League started,''Hamlyn''s Protestant Crusade''or something of that sort?
40539Why was his church not beautiful?
40539Why was this?
40539Why?
40539Will they be present?
40539Will you come with me?"
40539Would Mr. Blantyre face the Luther Lecturers in the public hall?
40539Would such letters bore you?"
40539You remember St. James v. 14, 15?"
40539You sympathise with that, do n''t you?"
40539You will read my letters during the time of waiting?
40539You''ll come?"
40539You''ve never seen our church?
40539_ Do you suppose Jesus of Nazareth understood foreign tongues?_''"There was a tremendous roar of applause from the people at this.
40539and what guarantee will you have that they wo n''t rob the League?"
40539he bawled with unabashed and merry impudence,"been to Mass yet?"
40539he shouted,''will Greek save a man''s soul?
40539said Mr. Hamlyn sharply;"mite?--has Gussie Davies any idea of''ow much the legacy is, then?"
40539she said,"what has happened?"
40539she was asked tartly;"do you think no one''s got any nerves?
40539where are ye?
45498Shall the mothers that bore us bow the head And blush for degenerate sons? 45498 Since when has a Southerner placed his heel On the men of the northern zone?
45498What is a riband worth? 45498 Where is the Briton''s land?
45498''Shall we fight or shall we fly?
45498Are the patriot fires gone out and dead?
45498Each one knew that they had done their duty, but had others far away done theirs so that the links might be complete?
45498For some were sunk, and many were shatter''d, and so could fight us no more-- God of battles, was ever a battle like this in the world before?
45498Men call hym Sir Andrewe Barton, Knyte?
45498The new Union Jack certainly did not represent a union of the nations, else why did the two national Jacks still remain?
35447A lark?
35447A murder?
35447A serenade?
35447Absurd?
35447Ah, who''s afraid? 35447 Ai n''t I a- doin''it now?"
35447An enemy?
35447An''ye''re goin''ter help me bear mine?
35447And I distinctly said no jumping or screaming, did n''t I?
35447And how did you get all these costly and beautiful things, my dear?
35447And if I do not see you often while your palace is building, you may know at least I have not forgotten-- and you will understand?
35447And if she never calls?
35447And suppose they all choose one job?
35447And the man who refuses to work?
35447And this is the ideal you came here to build?
35447And what are the foundations on which you propose to build this heaven on earth?
35447And what brought you to this decision?
35447And what did he say?
35447And what happened?
35447And who will decide how much each one needs-- the man who feels the need or the state?
35447And why not? 35447 And why not?
35447And would you risk this enormous sum on one experiment? 35447 And yet you place yourself absolutely in my power?"
35447And you accepted these rich and costly things in perfect innocence of the evil meaning others might put on them?
35447And you could get no hint of the identity of the men who gave the money?
35447And you did n''t like it?
35447And you do n''t object?
35447And you got the incentive in your defeat?
35447And you think I''ll submit to this?
35447And you think that I will accept such shame?
35447And you think your father will stand for it?
35447And you will abolish private property?
35447And you''re my chum that never flunked when she gave her word?
35447And you''ve fully weighed the cost?
35447Are women to receive the same allowance as men, and married women the same as spinsters? 35447 Are ye willin''to learn them things?"
35447Are you mad? 35447 Are you mixed up in any way personally with the young woman who spoke here that day?"
35447Are you ready to descend with me to the depths, my princess in disguise?
35447Are you sure it would be perfectly safe, Norman?
35447As our society grows-- and thousands are now clamouring for admission-- how is wealth to be distributed? 35447 Awkward?"
35447Because I''m laughing?
35447Bigger news?
35447But do n''t we begin to weaken the moment we do a thing like that? 35447 But how did it happen twice the same day, sonny?"
35447But how?
35447But if he does something rash?
35447But if they propose to give you a better flag, Governor?
35447But is it a success? 35447 But my dear Blanche,"pleaded Barbara,"ca n''t you see that you are bringing scandal and disgrace into the colony?"
35447But over you?
35447But what did you tell him?
35447But what on earth do you want a lightning- rod for, John?
35447But where''s the calf I''m supposed to be watching?
35447But you believe in free speech?
35447But you have not accepted his love?
35447But your incentive-- I do n''t understand-- in such an hour?
35447Can I git de captain er de football team two seats? 35447 Can a farmer be allowed vacations?
35447Can he earn a wife, or make one for himself?
35447Can you blame him after the way you acted?
35447Congratulate me?
35447Dare?
35447Deliberately set out to make him love me?
35447Did you ever know me to flunk when I gave my word?
35447Do n''t you think, comrades,Norman began, in persuasive tones,"that your demands are rather high?"
35447Do what, Guardie? 35447 Do ye love me?"
35447Do you call this the Brotherhood of Man?
35447Do you know,smilingly inquired the superintendent,"how much it will cost to plant and harvest such a crop?"
35447Do you really doubt it?
35447Even at the risk of your life?
35447Even in spite of the Socialists?
35447Even so,the young leader responded,"is it fair that an assistant cook should receive equal wages with the chef?"
35447Ever milk a cow?
35447Ever swing a hod?
35447For heaven''s sake, what do I do?
35447Good heavens,cried the girl, her big blue eyes opening wide with injured innocence,"how could I help it?
35447Had n''t you better part them now?
35447Has he returned from that woman yet?
35447Has n''t your imagination been caught by beautiful phrases, my boy?
35447Have you gone mad?
35447Have you gone mad?
35447He told you he had whipped all the others who had taken that walk with him?
35447He will deliver the deeds to- morrow?
35447Honestly, I''m afraid I disgraced myself, did n''t I?
35447Honestly, now, Governor, just between us, do n''t you think you were a little bit absurd to- day?
35447Honestly?
35447How are the thousand and one matters pertaining to private life and habits to be settled without continually augmenting the power of government? 35447 How are we to prevent speculation, wages being unequal?
35447How can I know him?
35447How can we prevent a man from losing his wages playing poker with his neighbour if he does so joyfully? 35447 How can we punish the jobbery and waste and corruption which may enter from experiments which are not made in good faith?
35447How can we,the questioner went on,"retain our democratic liberties as law makers as we grow in numbers?
35447How could I dream that he would commit such an act of insane treason before my very eyes?
35447How do you like the picture?
35447How long have you loved me?
35447How long, O Lord, how long, will Thy servant wait for deliverance?
35447How many hours shall constitute a day on the farm? 35447 How?"
35447How?
35447I can not see Norman, to- day?
35447I did n''t feel it, sir-- why?
35447I hope you did n''t threaten him, Tom?
35447I suppose he has no people living who are interested in him?
35447I tried to eat and something choked me-- what was it? 35447 I''d like to know,"the cook shouted,"how I''m to do my work if every fool in creation can butt into my business?"
35447I''ve got to have some fun, have n''t I? 35447 If a man chooses to be a writer, how many years shall he be allowed to work at his occupation if in the opinion of the judges he shows no talent?
35447If churches are built, who shall determine their cost and their style of architecture if the State erects them? 35447 If labour is the creator of all wealth can one man ever earn a million dollars?"
35447If religion is allowed, who shall determine how many preachers each denomination can have? 35447 If the State will not make exchanges, what is one to do who has taken a piece of property and finds later he has no use for it?
35447If we are ever to attain a condition of equality must we not forbid gifts and exchanges? 35447 In heaven''s name, Norman, what''s the matter?"
35447In your new State of Ventura you will give to each man according to his needs?
35447Is it a world worth living in?
35447Is it becoming?
35447Is it possible,Norman inquired,"that there is a human being among us who eats sauerkraut for breakfast?"
35447Is n''t it thrilling?
35447Is not such pressure desirable?
35447Is there goin''ter be any trouble?
35447It makes your heart leap, does n''t it?
35447Just a little childish about a piece of red, white, and blue cloth?
35447Kin ye cook?
35447Kin ye scrub?
35447Kin ye wash?
35447Look here, Elena, I hope you do n''t believe that I have been disloyal to you in my association with Barbara Bozenta?
35447Look here, what are ye drivin''at?
35447Married?
35447Merely for a difference of opinion, Governor?
35447Must a doctor always come when he''s called-- even for imaginary, hysterical, and foolish causes? 35447 Name er God, man, what de matter wid you?
35447Nonsense-- who''s afraid?
35447Not coming?
35447Not old Tom and Joe?
35447Now that you are just making it a marvellous success?
35447Now, you_ are_ afraid of me?
35447Of course not-- what woman ever does?
35447Of me?
35447Oh-- after the disarming?
35447On the other hand, if the State alone can make exchanges, how can we prevent a shrewd man from getting rich by dealing with the State itself? 35447 Or will the State force him to spend all, thus encouraging reckless habits?
35447Over Norman''s meeting?
35447Promise to put all anger out of your heart and talk to Norman as a father, not as an enemy-- won''t you?
35447Put the question solemnly to ourselves-- we do n''t want the job at any price, do we?
35447Said that he had been appointed by the council to whip you?
35447Say, Elena, for heaven''s sake, who are you in love with anyhow-- with me or the Governor?
35447Say, ai n''t you worked your jaw overtime now?
35447Shall Protestants be allowed a sum equal to the amount used in support of religious orders? 35447 Shall men and women be required to marry or be allowed to remain single?
35447Shall one general manager decide what kind of crops to raise on each piece of land or each manager decide for himself? 35447 Shall we repeat it until you are used to it?"
35447She ca n''t live, can she?
35447So who''s afraid?
35447Still dreaming of the New Joan of Arc, Norman?
35447Suppose I can convince you that you have entered on a mistaken mission-- that your programme is foolish, impossible, and dangerous?
35447Suppose a poor manager spoils the crop on an immense tract of land, how can any adequate penalty be enforced? 35447 Suppose after all, Guardie, he should succeed?"
35447That''s my secret, sir,the old man answered,"but I must have one-- won''t you get it for me?"
35447Then I ca n''t persuade you to give up this madness?
35447Then I must speak softly, must I not? 35447 Then I''d like to know who did?"
35447Then I''m wasting breath to plead with you?
35447Then from to- day we are comrades in the cause of humanity?
35447Then we''re both in the right mind now, to begin all over again, are we not?
35447Then what''s a better way?
35447Then what''s the use? 35447 Then you are going to import a new breed of men and women?"
35447Then you''ll join us to- day?
35447Then, what t''''ell ye kickin''about?
35447This is your father, Norman----"Get off the wire or quit your kiddin''--what do you want?
35447Unfair? 35447 Wall, ef you try any more capers in that dinin''-room, your health''s goin''ter break clean down-- yer hear me?"
35447Was the old world of family life, of starvation and misery, worth living in?
35447Was there an earthquake this morning, Norman?
35447We shall be just two children to- day-- shall we not?
35447Well, does n''t that jar you? 35447 Well, is n''t the joke on me?
35447Well, sir,the father said, at length,"have you nothing to say to me after what has occurred to- day?"
35447Well, what do ye think er that?
35447Were you not partners and friends before you joined the Brotherhood?
35447What are you tryin''ter do anyhow?
35447What compensation can we give to those who hate theatres? 35447 What did ye ruin them horses''shoulders fer?"
35447What did you mean by saying that you were afraid of coming trouble?
35447What did you say to him?
35447What do you mean by that?
35447What do you mean, Catherine?
35447What do you mean, sir?
35447What do you mean?
35447What do you say, Tom?
35447What have you heard? 35447 What have you to say?"
35447What is it, Guardie? 35447 What is it-- what is it?
35447What is it?
35447What is it?
35447What is to be done with a strong minority who are bitterly opposed to the action of the majority when we assume our permanent democratic form? 35447 What kind of a surprise?"
35447What news?
35447What on earth is that they are singing, Norman?
35447What on earth is the matter?
35447What on earth''s the matter?
35447What shall be done with a man who works outside regular hours and accumulates a vast private fortune?
35447What shall be done with the Negro, the Chinaman, and the Indian when their numbers largely increase? 35447 What were the conditions?"
35447What''s happened?
35447What''s that you say?
35447What''s the matter, child?
35447What''s the matter? 35447 What''s the matter?"
35447What? 35447 What?"
35447What?
35447What?
35447What?
35447When our theatre is opened, shall admission be free? 35447 Where are you going?"
35447Where is it?
35447Which means for me?
35447Who can decide whether ideas proposed are useless or impossible? 35447 Who lowered that flag?
35447Who lowered that flag?
35447Who shall not inherit the kingdom of God?
35447Who shall say when a doctor is not fit to practise? 35447 Who will join us now?
35447Who''s afraid?
35447Why afraid?
35447Why do strong men go forth to war?
35447Why do you trust me with the greatest question of your life with such perfect faith?
35447Why not consider?
35447Why of me? 35447 Why should we rejoice to- day in the death of our fellow man?
35447Why should you continue to repeat that foolish assertion? 35447 Why should you fight one another?
35447Why stand by? 35447 Why this insult?"
35447Why?
35447Will the State permit freedom of opinion in the columns of its papers and the books printed? 35447 Will the State publish all books by all authors, or will selections be made?
35447Will you do it?
35447Will you promise me one thing, Guardie?
35447Without a frown or a hostile look?
35447Wo n''t this soil grow cantaloups?
35447Would such a fate be intolerable?
35447Would you be sorry if the dream should be realized?
35447Yer believe it now?
35447Yes, but how kin ye git any law inside a man ef he''s always chuck full er licker?
35447Yes, what is it?
35447Yes, yes, I know; but man must work-- all men must work in your new state?
35447Yet is n''t man greater than all these worlds?
35447You are not tired?
35447You are still daring me?
35447You are sure he ca n''t raise the money?
35447You are sure you do this because I asked you?
35447You are worried?
35447You believe me now?
35447You believe this?
35447You can not believe that I willingly betrayed you?
35447You dare thus to defy my wishes?
35447You deny the accusations they bring against your good name?
35447You did not sleep well?
35447You doubt it?
35447You doubt my power?
35447You grant these chumps-- these idiots-- wages equal to mine? 35447 You have n''t asked me if I love you?"
35447You have not made love to her?
35447You knew I would?
35447You know that if he did succeed in raising the money, and establishing his brotherhood of man, the scheme would end in failure?
35447You know that you will be forced to spend most of your time in my office?
35447You like it?
35447You mean Saka?
35447You mean it?
35447You mean the half million was subscribed?
35447You mean this?
35447You mean to stop all progress by stopping inventions?
35447You promise?
35447You say this to me after all that Catherine has been to you and your life?
35447You talk this twaddle about romantic love? 35447 You think I can do anything to help you?"
35447You think I do n''t mean it?
35447You think such drastic measures to prevent communication with the outside world will be needed?
35447You trust me so far?
35447You understand?
35447You were interested?
35447You will help and cheer me in the work I''ve planned?
35447You will not grant me the labour to complete the dredge?
35447You will not try to avoid me?
35447You wish me to decide the momentous question of our colony? 35447 You''ll report to me the moment you return?"
35447You''re sure that it is not her personal influence over you that has made you a Socialist?
35447You''ve heard about it?
35447You, Guardie?
35447You, too, side with these fanatics then?
35447You?
35447Your invention will succeed?
35447All I have done for your sake?
35447And then his short, sharp words came quick and curt and stinging:"Are you done now with this fool performance?"
35447And who shall call them to account if they publish treason against the State?
35447And who will determine how large the service required of each man?
35447Another suicide?"
35447Are n''t they glorious?
35447Are we Socialists not struggling merely with what is outside?
35447Are we not in reality struggling back into the primitive savage herd out of which individual manhood has slowly emerged?
35447Are you content with a system which produces three million paupers in a land flowing with milk and honey?
35447Are you satisfied with a system which drives hundreds of thousands of such girls into a life of shame?
35447As they grow up, who shall decide at what age each child shall begin to work?
35447At what period, or after how long a trial, shall it be decided that a man is a failure and must quit his chosen or assigned work?
35447Barbara started at his tone of anger and whispered:"How could you be so rude-- what is wrong?"
35447Barbara turned suddenly, looked into Norman''s eyes, and asked in anxious tones:"What do you mean?"
35447But your treatment of the brave and daring young spirit who conceived this colony and created its wealth and influence----""Am I responsible?"
35447But-- but if I_ do_--you promise to hold my hand every minute, Norman?"
35447CHAPTER X SON AND FATHER When the Colonel had greeted Elena at breakfast next morning he quietly asked:"You met Norman?"
35447Can I depend on you to execute my orders and mine alone?"
35447Can we allow individuals to work small farms?
35447Can we do it?
35447Can we mend matters by destroying them all?"
35447Can you kick me from your presence now as though I were a dog?"
35447Come, be honest with me now-- you''re not in love with this man?"
35447Confronting him a moment, Tom inquired:"Kin I ax ye a few questions?"
35447Could it be possible he was in love with her in the helpless, heroic, boy fashion of his age?
35447Did the sun ever shine on anything more beautiful?
35447Did they not find my death- song?"
35447Did you hear me?"
35447Do n''t you say so, miss?"
35447Do you like a system which drives thousands to the madness of drink and suicide every year?"
35447Do you propose thus to stop the progress of the world?"
35447Do you think I''d make a fool of myself trying before all these kids if I had n''t?"
35447Do you think it perfect?
35447Do you understand me?"
35447Do you want it at any price?"
35447Do you want to fight or work?"
35447For how can this cause of the herd be one with the heart- cry of the man for the one woman on earth his mate?
35447For, if men are not to be allowed to grow rich by trading, must not the State forbid private exchanges of every nature?
35447Free speech has been suppressed-- in God''s name, what next?"
35447Had Wolf discovered the boy''s absence from his post?
35447Had Wolf suspected and played with her?
35447Had the jailer recognized the trick and arrested the boy?
35447Have I, too, offended?"
35447Have they souls at all?
35447Have you any choice as to the kind of work to which you wish to be assigned?"
35447Have you forgotten all I have done in this work?
35447Have you no faith in your fellow man?
35447He scarcely recognized the short, sharp business accent of Norman''s voice:"Well, well, what is it?"
35447He tiptoed to Wolf''s side and whispered:"Any danger?"
35447How are sculptors, artists, musicians, or architects to be apportioned among different communities?
35447How are we to meet them?
35447How can I keep their tongues from wagging?
35447How can men who are not artists, poets, or musicians determine the value of such work?
35447How could you offend?
35447How determine which line of goods each community shall make?
35447How do you like our boasted civilization?
35447How is it to be known whether the parents misappropriate the fund of a child, or favour one more than another?
35447How is one community to exchange products with another?
35447How many sisters shall be allowed the Catholics and how many monks, and how shall they be distributed?
35447How much land will a man be required to work?
35447How shall this great industry be conducted ultimately?
35447How?"
35447I ca n''t help it that a dozen boys come to see me and nobody ever sees the old tabbies who lie about me, can I?
35447I ca n''t help it that they are foolish, can I?
35447I ca n''t help it that they are old and ugly, can I?"
35447I can do them, too----""But we''ve fixed the salary of the general manager at only seventy- five dollars a month, and you demand a hundred?"
35447I determined to put the work to the test first----""And I was the inspiration behind your faith and daring leadership?"
35447I do n''t like to press you for the secrets of your inner life, old man, but I''ve immense curiosity to know what you want with that lightning- rod?
35447I must wade and carry you across this place if you''re not afraid?"
35447I thought you were supremely happy this morning over the news that Dewey has smashed the Spanish fleet?"
35447I want to know if she''s in command of this colony?
35447If I no longer love, should I be chained?"
35447If a small majority want a dance- hall and musical extravaganza, and a minority want only the serious drama, which shall it be?
35447If a youth is forced to abandon a work on which he has set his heart, how can he be made of service to the community in a work he loathes?
35447If all books are published will not vast sums be wasted in printing worthless trash?
35447If he does n''t spend all his allowance by the end of the year can he save it and thus accumulate a private fortune?
35447If it continues to cost more to support a single woman than a married one, how can equality of rights be maintained?
35447If modern civilization is rotten, it ought to be destroyed, and who cares if it is?"
35447If not, suppose he goes at seedtime or harvest, gets drunk, stays two weeks or two months, and destroys a year''s crop?
35447If not, what shall be done when the receipts fall below expenses?
35447If opinions are to be edited by the State, how can the freedom of the press be maintained?
35447If selections are made, what unprejudiced, infallible board can be found competent to decide?
35447If so, can the new mongrel race maintain itself against the progress and power of the great high- bred races of men?
35447If so, must he ask permission where to go?
35447If so, what shall hinder a treasonable conspiracy from destroying respect for its authority?
35447If so, where is the justice and equality of such an arrangement?
35447If so, who determines the kind of crop each farm shall raise?
35447If so, who shall determine how it shall be expended?
35447If so, who shall do it?
35447If such an abuse of power should be made, would not the effect be to end forever all experiments and stop the progress of the world?
35447If the doctor proves a failure, how will they get rid of him?
35447If their souls are in subjection to his, has he not degraded them?
35447If they get rid of him, how can he be saddled on another community?
35447If we did n''t make the wealth, who did?"
35447In my heart of hearts I''ve always been afraid of men----""You''re not afraid of me?"
35447Into whose hands can this enormous power be entrusted, and how shall he be called to account?"
35447Is it worth the while of those who have to fret and fuss and fume trying to make something out of nothing?"
35447Is life inside or outside?
35447Is n''t that the only power worth having?
35447Is this an idle dream?
35447Is you gone clean crazy?
35447Joe repeated,"No drunkard-- shall-- what?"
35447Joe seconded the motion, and the chairman asked:"Are there any remarks on the motion?"
35447Marry her without even giving me the usual two weeks''notice?"
35447Merciful God, would he never return?
35447Nelson?"
35447Nobody will haul them down here, will they?"
35447Norman leaned close and whispered:"My boy, can you possibly get us two seats?"
35447Or how can one poet be just to his rival if he be made the judge?
35447Or shall we remain here, and hand in hand fight this battle to a finish?
35447Or shall we tax the believer to pay for lighting this hall for a weekly ball?
35447Or will they tell me what to do?
35447Perhaps the future of humanity?"
35447Secure from our young dreamer the title to this island and you will achieve an immortal deed-- you will not hesitate or fail?"
35447Shall I call at your office?"
35447Shall I do it?"
35447Shall I go back to the faith of my fathers in the old world, and will you come with me-- my wife, my mate, my life?
35447Shall a farmhand get only a dollar a day and a bricklayer two?
35447Shall all women be made to work?
35447Shall he be punished?
35447Shall one community suffer at the hands of an incompetent man, while a physician of genius ministers to the one next door?
35447Shall the resources of the colony be used thus against the bitter protest of those who do not believe in racing?
35447Shall we tax the unbeliever to support a church?
35447Suppose a majority demand a race- course?
35447Suppose a man offends the judge?
35447Suppose they all demand the right to live in one place?
35447Suppose your melons would not be sweet?"
35447Surely they''ll give you enough to get me a thirty- foot lightning- rod?"
35447That leaves a profit of more than a hundred thousand, does n''t it?"
35447That settles it, does n''t it?"
35447The Colonel paused as he turned to leave the room:"You will keep up your newspaper grind, my boy?"
35447The Colonel stroked her hair slowly, and asked with a smile:"What time is he coming?"
35447The boy darted up on the platform, and Norman turned to Elena:"Shall we please the boy?"
35447The entire colony is being disarmed this morning?"
35447The herd of cattle we call men, whose souls have never spoken that divine word of character and of action-- are they men?
35447The one man of all men on earth-- the man who loves you?"
35447The tireless zeal with which I''ve fought your battles?
35447The young poet- athlete looked at her in a dazed sort of way and stammered:"Did you ever see anything like it?"
35447There must be rulers, but how shall we choose our rulers, and with what powers shall we clothe them?
35447This is our compact?"
35447To whom shall they answer, the State, or their superior church dignitary?
35447Tom spoke vigorously:"Now will ye leave him to me?"
35447We do all the work, do n''t we?"
35447What are you going to do-- play the hero and rescue her from their clutches?"
35447What can I do for you?"
35447What can I do, for heaven''s sake?"
35447What can_ you_ do for me?
35447What do you say to it?"
35447What do you suspect?"
35447What does she say to- day if she knows what I''ve done?"
35447What is the good of achievement for any community if that achievement springs from the will of one man?
35447What matter if her appeal was to the emotions and not to the intellect?
35447What shall be done with an actor, for example, who should spit in the face of a judge deciding adversely?
35447What shall be done with the ever- increasing number of the lazy, dishonest, and criminal members of the community?
35447What should he do?
35447What sort of work would you like to have assigned you?"
35447What will be my lot?
35447What you doin''monkeyin''wid dat lightnin''-rod?"
35447What''s the difference?
35447What''s the trouble here?
35447What''s the use?
35447When our theatre is opened, who shall select the actors?
35447When the cost of experiments is greater than the total income of a citizen, how can the inventor bear the expense?
35447When they reached the pasture where the cows were herded, Norman asked Barbara, with some misgivings:"Honestly, did you ever milk a cow?"
35447When they reached the street, Norman asked:"You knew her before she fell into evil ways?"
35447Where will I find him?"
35447Which should it be?
35447Who asks if Humboldt was German or English, whether Spinoza was Jew or Gentile, Darwin English or French?
35447Who cares to know nationalities?
35447Who shall appoint editors?
35447Who shall decide on the selection of the star?
35447Who shall decide whether they are incompetent?
35447Who shall decide which to continue and which to stop?
35447Who shall determine, in this larger society, who shall be common labourers, who poets, artists, musicians, preachers, managers?
35447Who shall pay for this enormous damage, and how shall the penalty be enforced?
35447Who shall say when an editor is competent?
35447Who will be the first heroine to fill this breach in the walls of our defence?"
35447Who will decide the question of ability?"
35447Why did you do it?"
35447Why should n''t they?
35447Why should you desire me, knowing that I thus love another?"
35447Will I be allowed to choose my work?
35447Will any man sacrifice his own funds and his own time on an uncertain experiment when he can receive no benefit from the work?
35447Will it be dirty and disagreeable, or pleasant and inspiring?
35447Will the State make good his recklessness, force him to buy his own leg, or make him hop through the year on one leg?"
35447Will the new State of Ventura take direct charge of all children?
35447Will the people vote for and elect their own doctor, or will he be assigned?
35447Will these inferior races be placed on an absolute equality with the Aryan and will they be allowed to freely intermarry?
35447Will you come----?"
35447Will you come?
35447Wo n''t you come?"
35447Wo n''t you, dear?"
35447Would n''t you?"
35447You believe me?"
35447You know we licked England twice----""And we kin do it again, b''gosh, ca n''t we?"
35447You say you''re not afraid of lightning?"
35447You understand?"
35447You will raise this money?"
35447You wo n''t do this any more will you?
35447You''ll talk to him lovingly and tenderly as a father, wo n''t you?"
35447You''re not afraid?
35447You-- you will not allow me to be degraded thus-- will you?"
44649How do you know that you were a slave? 44649 And for the rest, what is the obvious meaning of this provision? 44649 And must he,--Burgers,--go down to posterity as a Dutchman who tried to forward the interests of the English party? 44649 And what is the consequence? 44649 Because our Lord clearly points him out to be the man, for why is there no other candidate? 44649 But, addressing those of other and older doctrines, I would ask what such an event would mean? 44649 Can it still be avoided? 44649 Could not the two great parties agree to rule Colonial affairs, and especially South African affairs, out of the party game? 44649 Did it not belong to our fathers and forefathers before us, long before the Boers came here? 44649 Did the country, then, belong to the Boers? 44649 Does he not know fear, feel pain, affection, hate, and gratitude? 44649 Doubtless the Annexation was wrong, since England disowns her acts; and may not that dream about the great South African Republic come true after all? 44649 If the Queen wishes to give them their land, why does she not give them back the Cape?
44649In the same way I ask, Has a native no feelings or affections?
44649Is it to be believed, too, that the Boers will stop to try and rule them?
44649Is it well that two men(''amadoda- amabili'') should be made''iziula''( fools)?
44649It is all very well to create a Resident with extensive powers; but how is he to enforce his decisions?
44649Of course, there was a lady in it; what plot would be complete without?
44649Of them might be aptly quoted the speech Shakespeare puts into Shylock''s mouth:"Hath not a Jew eyes?
44649Put very briefly, what has happened in that time?
44649R. H. Meanwhile, can nothing be done by direct treaty with the Portuguese?
44649To give back the country, what would it mean?
44649What does this mean to us?
44649What is he to do if his awards are laughed at and made a mockery of, as they are and will be?
44649What is now the remedy?"
44649What warrant had we to refer their rights to the arbitration of Marshal MacMahon?
44649What, for instance, is meant by the territory to the north of the Vaal River?
44649When will this problem receive the attention it deserves at the hands of our Governments and of those over whom they rule?
44649Who arranged it this way?"
44649Who shall say that he is wrong?
44649Why do you refuse to sign the paper?
44649Why?
44649Would it not be better if they looked back a little and tried to discover the causes of the war?
44649does he not suffer when his parents are shot, or his children stolen, or when he is driven a wanderer from his home?
44649hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?"
42451Are n''t you ashamed of yourself,she demanded,"to stop just because you are laughed at once?
42451But how can a girl who is all alone in the world, with no one to know what happens to her, help feeling old? 42451 But why do they hate us, Mother?"
42451But why?
42451But, Father, would n''t the fairies like it better if it was n''t quite so dusty there?
42451Can I trust your little fingers not to let things fall?
42451Do n''t you remember me?
42451Do you see that little dark- eyed girl? 42451 Do you too think it strange for a girl to want to do things?
42451Have you ever tried?
42451He be god- man bring the rum-- then what for god- man talk so?
42451How are you and Carlyle getting on together?
42451How can I learn a horse, David?
42451How can I leave you for two years to be a farmer, and father and mother, too?
42451How can you possibly get along?
42451How did you ever do it? 42451 How else can I know them?"
42451How is it that the harder a thing is the more you seem to like it, Mary?
42451How is it that the widow can do more for me than any one else?
42451How is it that you are able to do so much more than other people?
42451How many have you?
42451Is that a little professorling?
42451Is that all?
42451May I have ground for a schoolhouse and a home with you here?
42451May I plant this bush in the corner with your roses?
42451Oh, Eliza, did you ever see any one so beautiful? 42451 Shall I ever feel really young again?"
42451So you have been_ idling_ away precious hours at a time your mother has needed your help?
42451Tell me,Maud asked her once,"what is the ideal aim of life?"
42451The social what?
42451Tired, Doctor?
42451Was she really such a wonder as they all say?
42451What are my puny ailments beside the agony of our poor shattered boys lying helpless on the field?
42451What are these funny red and purple specks?
42451What are you going to put in your house for your interesting experiment?
42451What did she do besides turning all of you into an adoring band of Freeman- followers?
42451What do you suppose the future will bring to one who has not proved''faithful in little''?
42451What for white man bring them rum suppose them rum no be good?
42451What greater art than to try to restore the image of God to faces that have lost it?
42451What have you been doing, Anna?
42451What led you to undertake this important work?
42451Why do you take time to write down everything you do?
42451Why do you trust Miss Fletcher above any one else?
42451Why does a seaman keep a log, dearie?
42451Why is Father afraid of the police?
42451Why should we make provision for the wounded?
42451Why, Mother, why is it that we must not go outside the Pale?
42451Will you have me stay as your friend and help you as I have helped the people of Calabar?
42451Would it not be happier to live and work together than alone?
42451You are proud of your family, are you not?
42451You are proud of your great line?
42451You do n''t mean to say you are really going to live with the Indians?
42451You will be the little mother while I take father''s place for a time, wo n''t you, Alice?
42451''Who ever heard of a maid speaking as she speaks?''
42451And did n''t he come looking for the same things?
42451And do n''t you see how ill she is?
42451Can you imagine how the child from Polotzk loved the land that had taken her to itself?
42451Can you picture the three prairie- schooners that carried them and all their goods to the new home?
42451Could she not read for herself the inscription at the entrance: Public Library-- Built by the People-- Free to All--?
42451Did not the life of the trees, of the winged creatures of the branches, of the cool mossy ground itself, seem a part of your life?
42451Did they ever feel that the barnyard was a prison?
42451Did women expect to thrust themselves into the professions?
42451Did you not feel as if you were mounting higher and higher into the air and lifting the sky with you?
42451Do n''t you remember how much I used to read at that little round table at the back of the library?"
42451Do you know what it means for the Italian peasant, used to an outdoor life in a sunny, easy- going land, to adapt himself to the ways of America?
42451Do you want protection?"
42451Doth not the yearning spirit scorn In such scant borders to be spanned?
42451Dr. Peck looked at her smilingly and asked in an off- hand manner:"Would you like to preach the quarterly sermon at Ashton?"
42451HEROINES OF SERVICE PROPHET AND PIONEER"What is my little Mistress Mary trying to do?"
42451Has she always been ill, or has she never had a chance for a good time?"
42451Have n''t you noticed that fine- looking Willard?
42451Have you ever climbed a hill when it seemed that the wind was blowing something of its own strength and freshness into your soul?
42451Have you ever found yourself for a happy half- hour alone among the great trees of the friendly woods?
42451How could your head hold it all?"
42451How did it come to pass that the people knew it as their own?
42451How does your cup manage to hold so much?
42451How was it possible to teach the law of love to a people who had never known anything but the tyranny of fear?
42451In the midst of the joys and cares of such a rich home- life, how was it that the busy mother still found time for study and writing?
42451Is it where he by chance is born?
42451Is n''t your father just like them?
42451Is there no one who is willing to go to take life to these ignorant children who have suffered so many wrongs?"
42451It was man''s work; why did she not look for a place in a milliner''s shop?
42451Now is n''t that the best kind of a Christmas gift for us all?"
42451Pray, Monsieur, what do you intend to do about it?"
42451Shall I accept?
42451Shall we work things out together?"
42451THE HEART OF HULL- HOUSE Do you remember what the poet says of Peter Bell?
42451THE MAKING OF A PATRIOT: MARY ANTIN Where is the true man''s fatherland?
42451What am I to do for my thousand wounded men with night here and that inch of candle all the light I have or can get?"
42451What difference could it make to her?
42451What was there to say?
42451What would you say if I should tell you that a young girl once led a great army to victory?--a poor girl who had to work hard all day just as I do?
42451Who ever heard of a doll or a princess with red hair?"
42451Who would have believed that they would even dream of allowing a chief''s son to go unattended into the spirit- world?
42451Why should she ask this thing?
42451Why should they want the learning of men?
42451Why should you set your heart on this thing?"
42451Will you promise that my house shall be a place of refuge?"
42451Will you promise that they shall be safe with me until we can consider together their case?"
42451Would he not rather buy things for his work than have meat for dinner?
42451cried Eliza, the scornful;"did n''t you see that she has red hair?
42231A pin?
42231And what is it, pray?
42231Are you Coligny?
42231But how can we reward devotion like yours?
42231Can you cure me?
42231Demolish the tower of Saint- Jacques- de- la- Boucherie?
42231Did you never before hear of a man fighting two antagonists?
42231Didier de quoi?
42231Eh, bien, monsieur,he said,"êtes- vous arrivé pour voir ce spectacle?"
42231How?
42231I am,he replied with calmness;"but will you not respect my age?"
42231Is it a revolt, then?
42231It will take you a long time to pay it off at that rate,said Laffitte,"and who knows whether you will ever bring me the first instalment?"
42231Ought a man who can paint like that to be in want of a glass of sherry?
42231Shall I never have any peace?
42231Vous êtes bourreau?
42231We are to take away M. de Lavalette, are we?
42231What are you?
42231What do you say?
42231What have I done to be thus beloved?
42231What have you there?
42231What is it? 42231 What is it?"
42231What poor devil has lost these?
42231What was that?
42231What would become of society?
42231When?
42231Who is that young man contradicting me so loudly?
42231Why does n''t he appeal to arms?
42231Why should he not? 42231 Why,"exclaimed the public accuser,"after a virtuous life of seventy- two years, must you now be declared guilty?
42231Why?
42231Would you,he said,"be kind enough to place this at the bottom of my portmanteau?"
42231''Does monsieur wish to eat?''
42231''Does monsieur wish to read?''
42231''To bind me?''
42231''What are you attempting?''
42231''What do you want?''
42231''What have I done to my cousin,''he exclaimed,''that he should so persecute me?
42231After supper his inquiry was:"Maître Nicholas, what shall we have for to- morrow''s dinner?"
42231All those who have any share in the administration keep carriages, and what care they for the pedestrian traveller?
42231Among the questions put to candidates for election to the Jacobin Club were the following:"What were you in 1789?
42231And when?
42231At the end of dinner he was accustomed to send for Maître Nicholas, his cook, and say:"Maître Nicholas, what shall we have for supper?"
42231At the military post where he was taken upon his arrest, a National Guard having asked him who he was,"What''s that to you?"
42231But what ought I to do in the matter?"
42231Demolish the architect who suggests such a thing?
42231Demolish the architect?
42231Does he want us to perish of thirst now that he is dead?"
42231Had Paris been destroyed and something like it raised up with a new population?
42231He exclaimed with his last gasp,''Pas de Crême?''"
42231His wandering eye seems to interrogate every passenger, saying with heartrending accents of despondency:''Where shall I find my wife?
42231How can she replace this torn dress?
42231How indeed, without such a reflection, could he from day to day exist?
42231If they notice abuses why should they not point them out, when so many persons, reputed sage, are unwilling to do so?"
42231Is he not dead?"
42231Is it not the same fire and courage which you demand when you summon such youths to defend the country?
42231Is this a service or injury to the language?
42231King Louis IX., my brother, grants me 30,000 Paris livres, and the question is, shall I found a convent or a hospital?"
42231Ours are more sober, no doubt, but is this sobriety the companion of health?
42231She has no costume?
42231Should he not be clad in garments more suitable to the minister of death?
42231Soldiers of the 4th regiment of artillery, may the Emperor''s nephew reckon on you?"
42231The two establishments were only separated by a street very much too narrow; if the theatre caught fire, was it not sure to burn the Library?
42231They have fire, you say, in their nature; they love liberty: and at what age would you wish men to love liberty and defend it with courage?
42231They talk of a reformation, but when is it to take place?
42231Was I in Germany or in Russia?
42231Was it as patriot, people asked, or as minister of a would- be despotic king, that M. Thiers proposed to raise around Paris a new and formidable wall?
42231We see him still, coffee- pot in hand, saying in a voice profound,''Pas de Crême?''
42231What are your arms?"
42231What becomes of him after that?
42231What can be more admirable than Delacroix''s"Nymph,"at whose feet crouches a panther?
42231What colours do you prefer-- green, the colour of hope, or the blue of Cincinnatus, the colour of American liberty and of democracy?"
42231What crime have they committed?"
42231What had such inquiries to do with springs and volcanoes?
42231What has this brilliant college produced?
42231What have you done since?
42231What is the consequence of so gross an absurdity?
42231What is the consequence of this unnatural restraint?
42231What object could he have?
42231What was your fortune until 1789, and what is it now?"
42231What, it may be asked, had a quiet, peaceful, and eminently respectable monarch like Louis Philippe done to provoke repeated attempts upon his life?
42231What,"Barère went on to say,"has ever come out of the Military School?
42231When Richard III., in Shakespeare''s play, says to one of his pages,"Know''st thou a murderer?"
42231Whence the name?
42231Where are my children?''
42231Where is the turtle?"
42231Whilst Cléry, bathed in tears, ran for it, the King said,''Are there amongst you any members of the Commune?
42231Who can hear of the death of all he held dear and precious, and not wish to die?
42231Who ever heard of the"Earl of Chatham"being converted into the"Sir Robert Peel,"or of"Lord Nelson"turning into"Sir Charles Napier"?
42231Who has not read of Les Trois Frères Provençaux in Balzac''s"Scenes from Paris Life"?
42231Who is it that can survive his friends, his relations, nay, a whole generation?
42231Who will venture within a house where the bed of mercy is far more dreadful than the naked board on which lies the poorest wretch?
42231Who would not fly from the bloody, detested spot?
42231Who, meanwhile, was to live at the Tuileries?
42231Why describe the ancient monument, when it is so much simpler to represent through drawings and engravings its most characteristic features?
42231Why is one of them too rich, and the others too independent to write at so much per sheet?"
42231Why should he who puts the last hand to the work be reputed infamous for duties which are simply the complement of those of the magistrate?"
42231Will you, in your turn, reassure those who are attached to me in your neighbourhood?
42231Without them what should I now be?
42231You think, perhaps, that the dancer or the singer paid for the representatives of the people?
42231for what frightful calamity was I reserved?
42231had he not some personal vengeance to exercise against me?''
42231will you, then, to oblige the_ canaille_, compel me to hear out a whole play, when I am rich enough to see only the last scene?
30954''_ Sydney Morning Herald_, November 26th,''ca n''t you make that out?
30954A broken arm?
30954A''m your grandfaither, amn''t I not? 30954 Accuse you of?"
30954Already?
30954Am I?
30954Americans?
30954An observer, sir?
30954And I think it is this very friend you are now trying to repay?
30954And do you mean to say you would land us there to starve?
30954And do you think, Loudon,he replied,"that a man who can paint a thousand- dollar picture has not grit enough to keep his end up in the stock market?
30954And how about Mac?
30954And how have_ you_ fared?
30954And how is the old man?
30954And how long are we to keep up this racket?
30954And now you think better of it, and would like to be off with your bargain? 30954 And perhaps you bought a wreck?"
30954And should n''t you? 30954 And suppose,"said I,"suppose the opium is so securely hidden that I ca n''t get hands on it?"
30954And the bags?
30954And the change of writing?
30954And the other man was rich?
30954And then you will repay me out of Carthew''s pocket?
30954And what am I to do in''Frisco?
30954And what are ye going to do with the Highway boy and the plumber?
30954And what became of the other three Currency Lasses after they left Carthew?
30954And what do you think of that?
30954And what if I have?
30954And what sort of Bedouins encamp among the ruins?
30954And what will Captain Wicks be thinking of the whaleboat?
30954And whatever it was, he has got it.--By the way, where is Mr. Carthew at present? 30954 And where would I be the while you were doin''ut?"
30954And who is_ she_?
30954And who were they?
30954And why should n''t we say the Lord''s Prayer? 30954 And you gave it?"
30954And you so read these instructions that I am to be prohibited from making an honest livelihood?
30954And you would be a good deal surprised if I were to tell you they were gone already?
30954And you''re what ye call a British sayman, I suppose? 30954 And your room?"
30954Any advance on fifty thousand dollars? 30954 Any guess what it all means?"
30954Anything more?
30954Anything wrong with it?
30954Are you Broken- Stool Pinkerton?
30954Are you going to make a sketch of it?
30954Are you?
30954Ashamed, Loudon? 30954 Before you pick that wreck, you''ve got to buy her, and how much will she cost?"
30954Beg your pardon, sir,cried the sailor:"gen''lem''n in the white schooner?"
30954Bellairs?
30954But are you a seaman? 30954 But how about clearing?
30954But how did you get in?
30954But how do you explain it?
30954But is it safe?
30954But what have you sold it for?
30954But you saw more of the others?
30954But you_ are_ Irish, ai n''t you?
30954But, Pinkerton, do you think it''s honest?
30954But, my dear dad, what is it all about?
30954By saying disagreeable things? 30954 By the way, which of you is called Wicks?"
30954By- the- bye, who is he?
30954Ca n''t I?
30954Ca n''t you look at them?
30954Ca n''t you?
30954Can you forge hand of write?
30954Captain Jacob Trent?
30954Captain Trent of the wreck? 30954 Captain, sir, I suppose?"
30954Certainly not; why should he?
30954Come and have a drink?
30954Come, come, Mr. Pinkerton; any advance?
30954Cowtops?
30954Did he express his baggage, ma''am?
30954Did he?
30954Did he?
30954Did she break up?
30954Did they say much about the wreck?
30954Did ye see him after the naygresses now?
30954Did you ask a blessing on your present enterprise?
30954Did you get this by heart?
30954Do n''t it look a little as if you were trying to avoid the wreck?
30954Do n''t you know?
30954Do n''t you see what this British officer says about the safety? 30954 Do you call these Dutchmen and Scattermouches[4] Americans?
30954Do you know, Jim, what I''m sorriest for?
30954Do you know, Mr. Dodd,said he, in a queer voice,"this painter''s been cut?
30954Do you mean to leave her?
30954Do you mean to say it was true?
30954Do you mind asking, or letting me ask? 30954 Do you never do anything you''re ashamed of?"
30954Do you pay the men''s passage home?
30954Do you want me to be frank with you? 30954 Do?"
30954Does he write many letters?
30954Does it explain anything?
30954Dreadful stuff, is n''t it?
30954Dreary?
30954Ever try the blackmail?
30954Ever try the mounted police?
30954Excuse me, if I seem to press the subject,he continued;"but if you think my life erroneous, would you have me neglect the means of grace?
30954God knows,said Stennis.--"What is wrong with you?
30954Gone?
30954Good business?
30954Had he done anything very bad?
30954Had n''t we a hundred times better stay by the brig?
30954Hallo,he plainly thought,"this is not the ring I''m fighting, then?"
30954Has he big blonde side- whiskers like tusks?
30954Has he travelled much?
30954Has she any claim on you?
30954Have you a telephone laid on to the_ Tempest_?
30954Have you any idea what this would cost?
30954Have you driven me before?
30954Have you forgotten the circumstances of the case? 30954 Have you heard of your wife again?"
30954Have you taken her back?
30954He could n''t have been particular, you mean?
30954Here is Havens,said one, as if welcoming a fresh topic.--"What do you think of her, Havens?"
30954Here, Gregg,cried my grandfather,"just a question: What has Aadam got to do with my will?"
30954Hey?
30954Him Carthew shot in the companion, and the one I caught in the jaw on the main top- gallant?
30954Honest? 30954 How about the owners?"
30954How are you?
30954How can I make a calculation if you blow hot and cold? 30954 How can I tell you?"
30954How did she strike? 30954 How did that pan out?"
30954How do you mean, father,I cried--"experienced?"
30954How have you managed?
30954How many of them were here?
30954How much do you call that?
30954How on earth do you guess that?
30954How should I? 30954 How the mischief is it I can never keep you to that bankruptcy?
30954How to explain the loss of mine?
30954How was that?
30954How''s that?
30954How? 30954 How?"
30954I beg your pardon, Loudon,began Jim at last,"but why in snakes did you burn her?"
30954I beg your pardon,said the auctioneer;"anybody bid?"
30954I do n''t have any friends in Honolulu, do n''t you know?
30954I do n''t require to tell you the game''s up?
30954I do n''t think we were ever very intimate?
30954I hope it is n''t my business that decides you?
30954I know it''ll shock your delicate self- respect,he said;"but what was I to do?
30954I sought your fazér was immensely reech?
30954I suppose all''s up?
30954I suppose you''ve no tryde?
30954I think she is really grateful?
30954I thought you were a mate?
30954If you will allow me to clothe my idea in a somewhat vulgar form,said he,"I might ask you, did you go to Midway for your health?"
30954In reason?
30954In short, you support her?
30954In that black bag?
30954In what form was your money? 30954 Insured?"
30954Interested? 30954 Is Jim Pinkerton there?"
30954Is Mr. Sebright on board?
30954Is he saying he kicked her downstairs?
30954Is he to lose all?
30954Is my money mine''s, or is it Aadam''s? 30954 Is n''t there some official expression we could use?"
30954Is that cargo out?
30954Is that one of them?
30954Is that so, Jim? 30954 Is that so, indeed, sir?"
30954Is that the line?
30954Is that your last word, sir? 30954 Is the book well known?
30954Is there no survivor?
30954Is this public auction conducted in a subterranean vault? 30954 It did n''t really matter, do n''t you know?"
30954It is kind of lonely, is n''t it?
30954It took time, but I had him cornered at last; and then----"What then?
30954It would sicken a dog, would n''t it?
30954It''s dry and tough enough,said I;"_ a^2+ 2ab+ b^2._""It''s stimulating, though?"
30954It''s touching, is n''t it?
30954It''s what?
30954Jim?
30954Lawyer Bellairs?
30954Looks as if a fellow could stick his head into it, do n''t it?
30954Mac has his arm broken,observed Carthew;"how would he stand the voyage?"
30954Mac, you''ve been in China ports? 30954 Madden, you say his name is?"
30954Master,said I,"will you take me in your studio again-- but this time as a workman?"
30954May I have a word with you?
30954May I use your telephone one moment?
30954Montana Block, I think?
30954Mr. Daniells, will you oblige me by stepping clear of that main- sheet?
30954Mr. Dickson? 30954 Mr. Dodd, I believe,"said he, addressing a smallish, bearded gentleman, who sat writing at the table.--"Why,"he cried,"it is n''t Loudon Dodd?"
30954Mr. Goddedaal, the mate, was n''t here then?
30954Mudding? 30954 Must have rotted and come sweet again.--Queer, is n''t it, Mr. Dodd?
30954My God, Jim, can we pay the money?
30954Nares,said I,"I''ve told you how I first saw Captain Trent in that saloon in''Frisco?
30954Nice place, Hong Kong?
30954No doubt of that,said I;"but the other notion?"
30954No present use for a dollar?
30954No wages?
30954No, but to look at?
30954No,said he, quickly and timidly,"what was it?
30954No,says he, rolling his eyes;"why?
30954None of it?
30954Nor you never heard where he was?
30954Not in this still- life here of the melon? 30954 Not think better of it?
30954Now, gentlemen, what shall we say?
30954O yes, I remember: he was sick all the way to''Frisco, was he not?
30954O yes, you''re from China ways, like us?
30954O, that''s a different story!--What made you do it, you tomfool? 30954 O, the lime- juicers?"
30954O, you''ve heard of the sale, then?
30954Of our geological epoch? 30954 Of sculpture?"
30954One question more,said I:"did you recognise my voice?"
30954One word, Mr. Borden,said he; and then to Jim,"Well, Pink, where are we up to now?"
30954Or, in other words, the whole thing?
30954Pinkerton, what nonsense is this?
30954Pinkerton,I said,"ca n''t you understand that, as long as I was there, I never took the smallest interest in any stricken thing?
30954Pinkerton,said I suddenly,"have you that_ Occidental_ in your pocket?"
30954Please yourself,replied the pilot.--"You could n''t think of offering a man a nip, could you?
30954Rather a strong step, is n''t it?
30954Sacrificed me?
30954Safe?
30954Say, Freshman,he said,"what''s your name?
30954See that sandy- haired man in glasses?
30954Shall we go into the papers?
30954Shall we say Honolulu?
30954Shares in what?
30954She looks kind of pitiful, do n''t she?
30954She seems to me to lie nicely; ca n''t we get your ship off?
30954Should n''t we see the list of passengers?
30954So it is; and what the better are we for that, if it do n''t look so?
30954So that, if I like,concluded my grandfather, hammering out his words,"I can leave every doit I die possessed of to the Great Magunn?"
30954So?
30954Starve? 30954 Suppose I pass you my word that, whatever may have occurred, there were excuses-- great excuses-- I may say, very great?"
30954Suppose I spirit up the hands a bit,I asked,"by the offer of a reward?"
30954Suppose you took him aloft and got him to point out the channel?
30954Surely I know you?
30954That all? 30954 That so?"
30954That you, Bellairs?
30954That''s all we wanted, is n''t it?
30954That''s supposing that I do it?
30954That''s the money Trent tramped and traded with? 30954 That''s what they call Shanghaiing, is n''t it?"
30954The creditors will never believe what fools we were.--And that reminds me,I continued, rejoicing in the transition,"how about the bankruptcy?"
30954The ship''s money?
30954The spirit of my inquiries?
30954Then how the devil am I to get him?
30954Then what can he have come for? 30954 Then you have n''t paid them?"
30954There, what do you make of that?
30954Think it safe, Joe?
30954Tit you effer find a nokket?
30954To Lady Ann?
30954Trade? 30954 Unless you have private knowledge, there will be a good deal of rather violent wrecking to do before you find that-- opium, do you call it?"
30954Was he with the rest in that saloon when you saw them?
30954Was it an old taste?
30954Was n''t that the captain with the red face and coloured handkerchief? 30954 Was there money in that?"
30954Well now, and what did you think of Bellairs?
30954Well, Mr. Dodd, how does that strike you?
30954Well, and talking of Mamie?
30954Well, and where''s your station?
30954Well, but at sea?
30954Well, captain,Jim continued,"you know about the size of the business?
30954Well, is it to be Kauai, after all?
30954Well, sir,said Carthew,"and what_ is_ your price?"
30954Well, sir?
30954Well, that''s neither here nor there,cried Pinkerton;"the point is, how about these dollars lying on a reef?"
30954Well, then, what ails you?
30954Well, then, you wo n''t mind if I ask the lot of you down to tea in the cabin?
30954Well, then,suggested some one,"did you ever smuggle opium?"
30954Well, this ship''s mine, I think?
30954Well, what are we staying for? 30954 Well, what do I care?"
30954Well, what do you think of Douglas B.?
30954Well, what do_ you_ mean?
30954Well, what do_ you_ think of the ryleways, then?
30954Well, what shall we do next?
30954Well, what''s the odds?
30954Well, you ca n''t say fairer than that,the captain admitted;"and now the reward''s offered you''ll talk?
30954Well, your Majesty, what is the amount?
30954Well,I remember crying once,"and what is your life?
30954Well,drawled Nares,"there''s sixty pounds of niggerhead on the quay, is n''t there?
30954Well,said he,"you were going on to say?"
30954Well?
30954Well?
30954Well?
30954What about the men?
30954What ails you anyway? 30954 What are they?"
30954What are you talking of? 30954 What can she be?"
30954What did that make for him altogether?
30954What did you say to him?
30954What did you say your ship was?
30954What do you infer?
30954What do you make it?
30954What do you make of Trent?
30954What do you mean by calling my honesty in question?
30954What do you mean by calling my honesty in question?
30954What do you mean by that?
30954What do you mean by that?
30954What do you mean by that?
30954What do you mean?
30954What do you mean?
30954What do_ you_ think of them, if you come to that?
30954What does it all mean?
30954What figure, if you please?
30954What for?
30954What has he got to do with it?
30954What in creation ails you?
30954What is it that bothers you?
30954What is that?
30954What is this?
30954What made you so sure?
30954What matter a few dollars now?
30954What more is there to say?
30954What news?
30954What next?
30954What on earth have you done with it?
30954What on earth is wrong?
30954What papers are they?
30954What ship is she?
30954What size is she?
30954What sort of a place is it inside?
30954What sort of life is she leading now?
30954What the devil''s this?
30954What the devil''s wrong?
30954What was he like, ma''am?
30954What was it, Jim?
30954What were the names of the other two?
30954What would you do, sir?
30954What''s all this?
30954What''s that?
30954What''s the use-- at sea? 30954 What''s this thing about?
30954What''s wrong? 30954 What, the Redeeming Feature?"
30954When did he go?
30954When did he leave?
30954When was this done?
30954Where did you find them?
30954Where has he gone?
30954Where hye ye been a''dye?
30954Where is she bound?
30954Where shall we find him?
30954Where''s the captain of this----?
30954Where''s your mate?
30954Which is Brown, then?
30954Who are they?
30954Who are you?
30954Who can have put up a shyster[3] like that? 30954 Who is he?"
30954Who were the owners?
30954Who''s that?
30954Who?
30954Why did he want to buy her back in''Frisco for these fabulous sums, when he might have sailed her into the bay himself?
30954Why did n''t Trent get her off?
30954Why do n''t he come to see you?
30954Why do n''t he give me a chance then? 30954 Why do we want to visit this old ruffian?"
30954Why do you always say that?
30954Why do you call me that?
30954Why do you want to buy the_ Flying Scud_?
30954Why in snakes did n''t you say so, Loudon?
30954Why in snakes should anybody want to be a sculptor, if you come to that? 30954 Why must Brown go the same way?"
30954Why should not I dash( vocally) into the presence of this mysterious person, and have some fun for my money?
30954Why, Norrie, old chappie, where have you dropped from? 30954 Why, how do you know that?"
30954Why, what was wrong, then? 30954 Why, what''s all this?
30954Why, who''s to take it?
30954Why, you''re never the pilot?
30954Wicks,repeated the doctor;"which of you is he?
30954Will it pay?
30954Would that be a safe, conservative business?
30954Ye hear that, Aadam?
30954Yes-- and why should n''t he?
30954You agree with me that Bellairs was ready to go higher?
30954You ai n''t going to turn us to, to warp her off?
30954You are fond of poetry too?
30954You are still in relations, then?
30954You began; why do you stop and why do I come in? 30954 You do n''t object to that?"
30954You do n''t see any promise?
30954You do n''t think it''s honest?
30954You do n''t want to keep me here for a needless humiliation?
30954You had a secret?
30954You have n''t it here? 30954 You have no idea, Mr. Dodd, of returning upon your determination?"
30954You know I''ve been in trouble, and I do n''t deny but what I struck the blow, and where was I to get evidence of my provocation? 30954 You know a man by the name of Bellairs, do n''t you?"
30954You know a sight, do n''t you?
30954You mean about the bankruptcy?
30954You rather like the berth, I suppose?
30954You the master of this ship?
30954You think Paris necessary?
30954You think you can do what you please with James; you trust to his affection, do you not? 30954 You were once an outsider like your neighbours, I suppose?"
30954You would n''t have me miss a rising tide?
30954You''re a kind of company, ai n''t you, Captain Kirkup?
30954Your questions?
30954Your voice?
30954_ Qu''est- ce qu''il a_? 30954 _ Qu''est- ce que vous me chantez là?_ O, in América,"he added, on further information being hastily furnished.
30954_ Shall I strike out? 30954 _ Tempest_, do n''t you know?"
30954''Are you tired of me?''
30954''Grained you?''
30954''If we go ahead?''
30954''What''s wrong?''
30954( How does that strike you?)
30954A registered letter for me, who had been so long without one?
30954Ai n''t there no more Californians?"
30954Algebra?
30954Am I clear?
30954Amalu?
30954An artist, and straight from Sydney?
30954And do you mean to say that such a circumstance as that can pass without remark?"
30954And has this change-- poor Carthew''s return, and all-- has this not mended matters?"
30954And he has left it?"
30954And he told of the voice in the telephone, and the maddening question:"Why did you want to buy the_ Flying Scud_?"
30954And look here-- hadn''t you better just show our friends over the side?"
30954And mining-- how''s that for risk?
30954And perhaps you''ll be so kind as to tell me what the hell you''re doing on my quarter- deck?
30954And suppose another ship came in to- night?
30954And the sum?
30954And then paused, and his reason coming to him with more clearness, spoke again:"What was I saying Where am I?
30954And then to the driver:"Do you know Black Tom''s?"
30954And then, do n''t you see, if anybody is to win, somebody must lose?"
30954And then, how about all that blood among the chandlery?
30954And there''s his cheque- book to draw upon his owners?
30954And there''s no sense in my trying to deny I was afraid to go to trial, or why would I be here?
30954And what am I to do for a captain, Loudon, with Longhurst gone home an hour ago and the boys all scattered?"
30954And when will it be dated?
30954And where was the American Type?
30954And where''s the use?
30954And, in that lone spot, what else was to be found to speak of but the treasure?
30954Any other ass got any time to waste?
30954Anything wrong?"
30954Are we dipped as bad as that?"
30954Because you consider me in the wrong on one point, would you have me place myself in the wrong in all?
30954Bellairs?"
30954Bellairs?''
30954But I braced myself up with the_ Flying Scud_.--How did it exactly figure out, anyway?
30954But I lay it before you in all confidence of your acquittal: was the general tone of it"patronising"?
30954But he had his revenge with"Home, Sweet Home,"and"Where is my Wandering Boy To- night?"
30954But how to get the wrong crew there?"
30954But put yourself in my place-- how could I sleep-- how could I dream of sleeping, in this blackness of remorse and despair?
30954But the point is, do you accept?"
30954But the point is, how will your friend take it?
30954But the_ Flying Scud?_ a deep- water tramp, who was lime- juicing around between big ports, Calcutta and Rangoon and''Frisco and the Canton River.
30954But what I want to know is, where is Trent''s Hoyt?"
30954But what is that you say?
30954But when was this?
30954By sight, I may say I know you extremely well, you and your followers, the fellows in the kilts, eh?
30954Ca n''t keep them from talking, ca n''t I?
30954Ca n''t you give us''a dead bird''for a good traderoom?"
30954Ca n''t you see we''re doomed?
30954Ca n''t you see who you are talking to?
30954Ca n''t you talk sense?
30954Can Aadam interfere?"
30954Can I do anything in your way?"
30954Can you lend me a hundred francs until to- morrow?"
30954Captain Trent?
30954Carthew?"
30954Carthew?"
30954Carthew?"
30954Catch the idea?
30954Catch the idea?"
30954Confound it,"I thought,"have I got to the point of envying that ancient fossil?"
30954Could a plain citizen-- myself, for instance-- come and see?"
30954Could it be Norris?
30954Could n''t use it, I suppose, as a medium of advertisement for my article?"
30954Could n''t you get hands on him?"
30954Did I hear you make an advance, sir?"
30954Did he not come here to- day and pretend he would take a situation-- pretend he would share his hard- earned wages with us until you were well?
30954Did n''t I take his?"
30954Did n''t I take my risk when I bought her?
30954Do n''t you know you''ve come into your kingdom?"
30954Do n''t you see the cargo''s valued at ten thousand?
30954Do you know anything against him?"
30954Do you know him well?"
30954Do you know these people are the magnates of the section?
30954Do you make any advance on fifty thousand?"
30954Do you mean to say that wo n''t affect a ship''s compass?
30954Do you mean to tell me that the look- out wo n''t turn to and_ smell_ it?"
30954Do you see those boats there, one on the house and two on the beds?
30954Dodd?"
30954Dodd?"
30954Dodd?"
30954Dodd?"
30954Dodd?"
30954Everything''s got to come to bearings at some port, has n''t it?
30954FOOTNOTES:[ 1]"What''s the matter with him?"
30954For I daresay your lot would turn to and give us a hand?"
30954For it strikes me, when it came to smuggling opium, you walked right up?"
30954For why should this chest have been deserted and neglected, when the others were rummaged or removed?
30954Has he written other works?"
30954Have I a certificate, or what have I to do to get one?
30954Have n''t we enough to bear the way we are?"
30954Have we any choice, then?"
30954Have you forgotten that he knew the address, and did not tell it you until that man had escaped?"
30954Have you never printed an advertisement?
30954Have you read that?
30954He wished, then, to conceal his interest?
30954He''s been a good friend to you, has n''t he?
30954He''s likely to be right, for if he is n''t where can the stuff be?
30954Heard ever any man the match of that?
30954Here are the names on the register; perhaps you would care to look at them while I go and see about the baggage?"
30954His name was not Bellairs?"
30954How are we to stand to one another?
30954How can I prepare a lecture in thirty hours?"
30954How can he come in?"
30954How can we trust him?
30954How come you here in the South Seas, running a trader?"
30954How did the_ Sydney Morning Herald_ get to Hong Kong in thirteen days?
30954How did we come to go so soon?"
30954How do you make out that?"
30954How do you suppose I bought the_ James L. Moody_ for two hundred and fifty, her boats alone worth four times the money?
30954How does that affect the islands?"
30954How had he sacrificed the absent?
30954How much was it worth?
30954How old was Corot before he struck the vein of his own precious metal?
30954How was I to command chance?
30954I asked him,"or a sudden fancy?"
30954I cried,"who is there to rob you in a place like this?"
30954I do pilot him, to the inexpressible entertainment of the picnic, for I am( why should I deny it?)
30954I exclaimed;"have n''t we Depew City, one of God''s green centres for this State?
30954I hope we''re all Prodestans here?"
30954I just said to myself,''What is most wanted in my age and country?
30954I suppose that''s understood?"
30954I thought the name near enough, claimed the despatch, and found it was from Pinkerton:"What day do you arrive?
30954I trust you told him nothing about Carthew?"
30954I wonder if there ever was a captain yet that lost a ship with his log- book up to date?
30954I''ll wire you in the office cipher, and we''ll make it a kind of partnership business, Loudon:--Dodd and Son, eh?"
30954I''m not going to give you the run of the books of this firm, am I?
30954I''m not in the bankruptcy at all?"
30954I''m working me passage; I got no share in that two thousand pounds, nor nothing in my pockut; and I''ll be glad to know what you have to say to me?"
30954If any carpenter comes tinkering here where''ll he go first?
30954If we fail, like these old feudal monarchies, what is left?"
30954In what new imbroglio should I alight on the Pacific coast?
30954In what other city would a harmless madman who supposed himself emperor of the two Americas have been so fostered and encouraged?
30954Is Mr. Pinkerton in the thing at all?
30954Is he more astute than I was?
30954Is n''t the fairest kind of shipowning to risk men''s lives?
30954Is that you, Mr. Bellairs?
30954Is there nothing for you to do?
30954It wasn''t"--he faltered--"it was n''t because you were dissatisfied with me?"
30954It''s what you call Pythagoreanism, is n''t it?
30954Jim watched her go and shook his head; he looked miserably old and ill."What is it now?"
30954Looks as if he had brought her here on purpose, do n''t it?
30954Loudon?"
30954Money was undoubtedly to be made, or why should so many vessels cruise about the islands?
30954My dear sir, what is your name?"
30954My heart sank; perhaps my idiotic jest had indeed driven him away; and again I asked myself,"Why?"
30954Nares?''
30954No advance on fifty thousand?
30954No advance, gentlemen?
30954No other gentleman inclined to make any advance?
30954No?
30954Not here?
30954Number two was in a different style:--"MY DEAREST LOUDON,--How am I to prepare you for this dire intelligence?
30954O my dear laddie, why were nae you and Davie here?
30954Of course, Loudon, you''ll dine with me later on?"
30954Or was it really the eye, and not rather the heart, that identified the shadow in the dusk, among the shoreside lamps?
30954Perhaps, sir, you would n''t mind going right up to Mr. Denman?
30954Presently Pinkerton scribbled,"What can it be?"
30954Really?"
30954Schooners are begging just now; I can get my pick of them at two hundred and fifty a month; and how does that foot up?
30954Sebright?"
30954See?
30954See?"
30954Sell much of it?
30954She might have been too far gone; and where would I have been?
30954Should I ring up at once?
30954Sometimes he would appeal to one of the men--"That was how it was, Jack?"
30954Son of Big Head Dodd?
30954Speedy, that I can send you to the penitentiary?"
30954Stood by you, and all that?
30954Suppose Bellairs had given me the slip?
30954Suppose he was now rolling on the road to Stallbridge- le- Carthew?
30954Suppose you tried a big bluff?
30954That''s the name?
30954The Irrepressible, did I say?
30954The large desk( to resume our survey of the office) stood about the middle, knee- deep in stacks of handbills and posters of"Why Drink French Brandy?"
30954The thing for you to consider is just this, Am I to deal with you or direct with your principal?
30954Theology?
30954This sort of thing has to be done strictly, or where''s the use?"
30954Urquart?"
30954Very handsome, and, as you say, very just; but will you allow me to say that it had better, perhaps, be put in black and white?"
30954Walking this way, Mr. Dodd?
30954Was he an author of distinction?
30954Was he trembling for his certificate?
30954Was it the result of recent shock, and had he not yet recovered the disaster to his brig?
30954Was the wreck worth more than we supposed?
30954We''ve got six lives to save, and a pot of money; and the point is, where are we to take''em?"
30954Well, at each place, what is it?
30954Well, come, call it a dollar?"
30954Well, what is this?
30954Well, where is the boat Trent lowered when he lost the hands?"
30954Well, why you no savvy a little sooner, sonny?"
30954What are we to do about the_ Flying Scud_ and the dime novel?"
30954What can I do for you?"
30954What could it mean?
30954What could that mean?
30954What could they make of it?"
30954What did you accuse me of?"
30954What did you-- what did Nares expect to gain by burning her?"
30954What do they care for a ship or two?
30954What do they care for sailors''lives alongside of a few thousand dollars?
30954What do you mean by sacrifice?"
30954What does it mean?"
30954What had he done?
30954What have you done?
30954What if I had been right?
30954What if my childish pleasantry had frightened the principal away, and thus destroyed our chance?
30954What is it?"
30954What is that?"
30954What kind of an accident?"
30954What kind of mercy did you have on that Gilbert merchant?"
30954What mischief was he up to now?
30954What new bowl was my benignant monster brewing for his Frankenstein?
30954What other name?"
30954What port are you to sail for?"
30954What shall it be?
30954What ship is that?"
30954What vessel was this_ Leslie_, anyhow?"
30954What was his name, out of a thousand guesses?
30954What was the charge?"
30954What was the use of words?
30954What was the value of a lay?
30954What would my father think of it?
30954What''arm does the aristocracy do?
30954What''s algebra?"
30954What''s that to me?
30954What''s wrong?
30954What''s your figure?
30954What?
30954When had a young man been more derided( or more justly so) than the god of my admiration, Balzac?
30954Where else would bankers and merchants have received his visits, cashed his cheques, and submitted to his small assessments?
30954Where else would even the people of the streets have respected the poor soul''s illusion?
30954Where else would he have been suffered to attend and address the exhibition days of schools and colleges?
30954Where else, in God''s green earth, have taken his pick of restaurants, ransacked the bill of fare, and departed scatheless?
30954Where had he gone?
30954Where had my shyster wandered?
30954Where was his culture?
30954Where were all his generous, progressive sentiments?
30954Where''s Hoyt?"
30954Where''s the mate?
30954Who are you?"
30954Who can this person be?
30954Who cares whether I smiled or not?"
30954Who could doubt we were the usual Americans, travelling with a design of self- improvement?
30954Who could it be?
30954Who has a better right to a holiday than I have?
30954Who is that?"
30954Who was to guess that one was a black- mailer, trembling to approach the scene of action-- the other a helpless, amateur detective, waiting on events?
30954Why did we bust so soon?
30954Why do n''t you play for the lump sum?"
30954Why do we never come across Elias Goddedaal?"
30954Why not come with me?"
30954Why not go indeed, and keep a watch upon Bellairs?
30954Why prolong it?
30954Why, look here,"he went on,"you''re a young swell, are n''t you?
30954Will you allow me to express an opinion, in which I may be quite wrong, but to which I am entirely wedded?
30954Would you like to be left here in the chicken- ranch?
30954You do n''t call it American to treat men like dogs?"
30954You think me weak?
30954You''re to take the_ Norah Creina_ to Midway Island, break up a wreck, call at Honolulu, and back to this port?
30954You''ve got a brig, to be sure, and what use is she?
30954Your partner, Mr. Dodd?
30954Your presence on this ship has no connection with our interview?"
30954ai n''t that good enough to fetch a fleet?
30954and pulled you through for all he was worth?"
30954and who was_ Go- eath_?
30954asked Carthew,"what are they?"
30954born to be enthroned under the gilded, echoing dome of the new capitol, whither was she now to drift?
30954come by that second chest, with which( according to the clerk at the What Cheer) he had started for Honolulu?
30954cried Carthew;"Brown, where are you?"
30954cried Hadden,"how do you mean to manage?
30954cried Havens--"that about the opium and the wreck, and the black- mailing, and the man who became your friend?"
30954cried Nares,"you savvy plenty, do you?
30954for what base purposes be ultimately broken up, like an unseaworthy ship?
30954he cried sharply; and then to Wicks:"What''s that?
30954he cried, not unkindly,"is this to be run shipshape?
30954he cried,"are you the man in the telephone?"
30954he cried; and then, somewhat recovered,"Mr. Pinkerton''s partner, I believe?
30954he thought,"am I gambling again?"
30954honest?"
30954how do you know I think it a favour?"
30954how he came with his men, one of them a Kanaka with a canary- bird in a cage?
30954is it insurance?
30954is it piracy?
30954is n''t all speculation a risk?
30954or is it a Dutch grab- racket?"
30954or perhaps there already and laying before a very white- laced auditor his threats and propositions?
30954or shall I start another?''
30954or, like me, does he give it up?
30954or, with withering scorn,"Not know Mr. Dodd of the picnics?
30954or,"I say, am I alone in this blame''ship?
30954quoi?_"cried he, relapsing into French.
30954resumed that gentleman, plainly ogling Pinkerton,--"what shall we say for this remarkable opportunity?"
30954said I, gasping and winking after my first plunge into this fiery fluid;"and what does''Warranted Entire''mean?"
30954said Jim;"and so this is what you call rushing around?"
30954says Jim,"this is Captain Nares, is it?
30954she cried,"am I really like that?
30954stolen the chest before he proceeded to ship under a false name and domicile?
30954what can it be_ for_?"
30954what do you mean by this?"
30954what is it_ about_?
30954what is that honour?"
30954what would it matter what you did or did n''t?
30954where was I to find the ingenuity?
30954why go on with this?"
30954why seek to explain to Pinkerton the knotted horrors of"Americo- Parisienne"?
30954you may ask, and why am I gone Soft Tommy on this Museum of Crooks?
39804A way- bewildered traveller, seekest thouThe ruinous shelter here?
39804And dost thou think"Mohareb cried, as with a scornful smile He glanced upon his comrade,dost thou think"To trick them of their secret?
39804And dost thou triumph, Murderer? 39804 And in thy triumph,"he replied,"There thou wilt join us?"
39804And shall our sufferings end?
39804And who art thou,he cried,"That at an hour like this"Wanderest in Babylon?
39804But who am I that I should saveThe sinful soul alive?"
39804But who is he of woman bornThat shall vie with the might of Eblis?
39804But why that serious melancholy smile? 39804 Did ever stranger from our tent"Unwelcomed turn away?
39804Did ever we neglect our prayers,Or ever lift a hand unclean to heaven?
39804Did ye not bid me strike them all? 39804 Dost thou not hear?"
39804Dost thou not pray? 39804 Dost thou not see,"the youth exclaimed,"A Spirit in the Tent?"
39804Fate has written one death- blowFor Mohareb and the Foe?
39804Good is he?
39804Hast thou a fault to findIn all thine eyes have seen?
39804Hast thou had comfort in thy prayers?
39804Hath ever eye beheld,Hath ever thought conceived,"Place more magnificent?
39804Have I not strength, my father, for the deed? 39804 Have ye not tasted of the cup of joy,"That in these groves of happiness"For ever over- mantling tempts"The ever- thirsty lip?
39804He spake, and bade the full- grown forest riseHis own creation; should the King"Wait for slow Nature''s work?
39804How then shall we escape?
39804Hunger?
39804In the name of God, I ask theeWho was he that slew my Father?"
39804Is Thalaba aweary of our tent?
39804Is it in the Eden groves? 39804 Is it in the[ 24]Zemzem well?
39804Is it not He must save? 39804 Is it not come?"
39804Is it plumed with silver wingsUnderneath the throne of God?
39804Is not this a stately pile?
39804Is that the language of the lights of Heaven?
39804Ishmael, or Houd, or Saleh, or than all,Mohammed, holier name?
39804Knowest thou the track?
39804Moath thou thinkest me mad,...But when the Cryer[138] from the Minaret"Proclaims the midnight hour,"Hast thou a heart to see her?"
39804Now are thy words from God? 39804 Okba, wert thou blind of eye?
39804Okba, wert thou weak of heart? 39804 Or art thou drunk with wine?
39804Or can the will of ProvidenceBe mutable like man?
39804Or comest thou to hideThe plunder of the night?
39804Or dost thou dream, old man,Or art thou drunk with wine?"
39804Or has that evil guide misled my search? 39804 Or hast thou spells to make"These ruins, yawning from their rooted base"Disclose their secret[99] wealth?"
39804Said ye not root and branch should be destroyed? 39804 Sayest thou that diffident of God,"In magic spell I trust?
39804Shall I never be called to the task?
39804She knew me as I past,She stared[11] me in the face,"My heart was touched, had it been human else?
39804Should we remain and waitMore favourable skies?
39804Still art thou living, wretch?
39804Still dost thou stand and gaze incredulous? 39804 Tell me who slew my father?"
39804That shall rival the Prince of the Morning?
39804The Moon is bright, the sea is calmAnd I know well the ocean- paths;..."Wilt thou go on with me?
39804The day is fair but night must come....Wilt thou go on with me?
39804Turned with a threatful smile to Houd,Say they aright, O Prophet?
39804Waits it for the judgement- blastIn the trump of Israfil?
39804What brings thee hither? 39804 What powerful amulet"Protects Hodeirah''s son?"
39804What shall we do?
39804What tho''their founder filled with miraclesAnd wealth miraculous their ample vaults?
39804What tho''unmoved they bore[12] the deluge weight,Survivors of the ruined world?
39804What was to him the burthen of the land,The lavished misery?
39804What was to him the squandered wealth? 39804 When to thy tent the venomous serpent creeps"Dost thou not crush the reptile?
39804When will the hour arrive,exclaimed the youth,"That I shall aim these fated shafts"To vengeance long delayed?
39804Where Hodeirah is thy child?
39804Where are thine arms to meetThe Guardian of the Passage?"
39804Where can we find the Boy?
39804Where wilt thou go my Child?
39804Who is there here that by a deedOf danger will deserve"The eternal joys of actual Paradise?
39804Why dost thou pause to strike thy victim? 39804 Why dost thou wait?"
39804Why have the Fathers suffered, but to makeThe Children wisely safe?"
39804Why is my father killed? 39804 Why is that anxious look,"Oneiza cried,"Still upwards cast at noon?
39804Why lies the wax, like marble, in the fire? 39804 Wouldst thou for ever lose me?...
39804Wouldst thou rushHeadlong to certain death?
39804... Or lingers it a vernal brook[46] Gleaming o''er yellow sands?
39804A Stranger did you say?
39804A charm?
39804A guardian?
39804And hast thou never in the twilight, fancied Familiar object into some strange shape And form uncouth?
39804And have you always had your dwelling here Amid this solitude of snow?
39804And he who would have killed me Was one of these?
39804And look at it so near?...
39804And the ruins?
39804And the young Arab''s soul Arose within him;"what is he,"he cried,"Who has prepared this garden of delight,"And wherefore are its snares?"
39804And there Magician learn their impious sorcery?
39804And thou canst be warm Sometimes?
39804And was that lovely mariner A fiend as false as fair?
39804And was the Simorgh with the Powers of ill Associate to destroy?
39804And wherefore does the blood flow fast All purple o''er their sable hair?
39804And wherefore has he hidden you thus far From all the ways of humankind?
39804And wherefore?
39804And whither wouldst thou go?
39804And you do not know The God that made you?
39804Are Oneiza''s limbs Equal to that long toil?
39804Art thou a Man then?
39804Art thou firm of foot To tread the ways of danger?
39804At length raised Maimuna her thoughtful eyes,"Whence Sister was the wax"The work of the worm, or the bee?
39804Because the scorching summer Sun Darts fever, wouldst thou quench the orb of day?
39804Being asked what it was, how they procured it, and what were its uses and properties?
39804Belike you can interpret then the graving Around this Ring?
39804But Moath is not there; and wouldest thou dwell In a Stranger''s tent?
39804But how to pass again The iron doors that opening at a breath Gave easy entrance?
39804But if a Woman can have terrified thee, How wilt thou bare his unrelaxing brow And lifted lightnings?
39804But is their knowledge therefore in itself Unlawful?
39804Dig for it?
39804Dost thou long for the gales of Arabia?
39804Dost thou wish for thy deserts, O Son of Hodeirah?
39804Evil and Good...."What are they Thalaba but words?
39804For that is his covering only, it is his raiment for his skin: wherein shall he sleep?
39804Have the feet"Of Prophet or Apostle blest this place?
39804He raised his hand to Heaven,"Is there not God, Oneiza?
39804Heard ye not, Genii of the Air, her spell, That o''er her face there flits The sudden flush of fear?
39804Heedless he answered,"knowest thou"Their cave of punishment?"
39804His ring has some strange power then?
39804Hope ye that my blood"Can quench the dreaded flame?
39804How have you heard the tale?
39804How then is the truth?
39804I told him from our childhood We had been plighted;... was I wrong Oneiza?
39804I?
39804In hollow tones she cried to Thalaba,"And must I nightly leave my grave"To tell thee, still in vain,"God has abandoned thee?"
39804In shuddering pity Thalaba exclaimed"Servant of God, can I not succour thee?"
39804In tears Oneiza?...
39804Is Khawla''s spell so weak?
39804Is it a crime To mount the horse, because forsooth thy feet Can serve thee for the journey?
39804Is it his guide that approaches?
39804Is it not not delicate food?
39804Is it not prudent to abide in peace Till I am summoned?
39804Is it not the truth?
39804Is it the dew of night That down her glowing cheek Shines in the moon- beam?
39804Is it the river''s roar Dashed down some rocky descent?
39804Is it the storm that shakes The thousand oaks of the forest?
39804Is not the dungeon of their punishment By ruined Babylon?
39804Is the morn fair, and does the freshening breeze Flow with cool current o''er his cheek?
39804Is there no mercy after death?"
39804Is there no secret wile No lurking enemy?
39804It is her lips that move, Her tongue that shapes the sound, But whose is the Voice that proceeds?
39804Khawla to the Teraph turned,"Tell me where the Prophet''s hand"Hides our destined enemy?"
39804Know you these secrets?
39804Moath arose in alarm,"What ails thee Thalaba?"
39804Never... nay now Again that troubled eye?
39804Or comes the Father[43] of the Rains From his Caves in the uttermost West, Comes he in darkness and storms?
39804Or if haply not, yet whither should I go?
39804Perhaps thou knowest the happiness it is To have a tender father?
39804Sayest thou that Sin"Entered the world of Allah?
39804Shall danger daunt,"Shall death dismay his soul, whose life is given"For God and for his brethren of mankind?
39804Shall we leave him fettered here With hunger and cold to die?
39804She called him brother: was it sister- love That made the silver rings Round her smooth ankles[62] and her twany arms, Shine daily brightened?
39804She smiled in tears upon the youth,... What heart were his who could gainsay That melancholy smile?
39804She viewed his yellow- circled front With lines mysterious veined;"And knowest thou what is written here,"My father?"
39804Stands not Bagdad Near to the site of ancient Babylon And Nimrod''s impious temple?
39804Stranger in thy turn,"Why wanderest thou in Babylon,"And who art thou, the Questioner?"
39804Thalaba stood mute awhile And wondering at her words:"Cold?
39804That with such pride she tricked Her glossy tresses, and on holy day Wreathed the red flower- crown[65] round their jetty waves?
39804The Grapes shall ripen and who shall tread them?
39804The King said, will it come to our country?
39804The Sorceress looked and with a smile That kindled to more fiendishness Her hideous features, cried,"Where Hodeirah is thy soul?
39804The Trees shall give fruit and who shall gather them?
39804The grey haired Sorceress stamped the ground And called a Spirit up,"Shall we bear the Enemy"To the dungeon dens below?"
39804The long procession, and the gorgeous pomp Of their own sacrifice?
39804Then did the Damsel speak again"Wilt thou go on with me?
39804Then once again the Damsel spake,"The stream is strong, the river broad,"Wilt thou go on with me?
39804Then pausing,"whither goest thou now?"
39804Then you know not Your Father''s art?
39804There pausing at the cavern mouth Mohareb turned to Thalaba,"Now darest thou enter in?"
39804They hear her coming tread, They lift their asking eyes, Her face is serious, her unwilling lips Slow to the tale of ill."What hast thou read?
39804Think you the man Praiseworthy who by painful study learns The knowledge of all simples, and their power Healing or harmful?
39804Thou saidest that it is true, and yet is false, That men accurst, attain at Babylon Forbidden knowledge from the Angel pair.... How mean you?
39804Thou wilt give thy fruits,"But who shall gather them?
39804To him the Damsel spake,"Is it the hour appointed?"
39804Was Solomon Accurst of God?
39804Was it the toil of human hands That hewed a passage in the rock, Thro''whose rude portal- way The light of heaven was seen?
39804Was it to earthly Eden lost so long, The youth had found the wonderous way?
39804Was there a Spirit in the gale That fluttered o''er his cheek?
39804Wearied with endless beauty did his eyes Return for rest?
39804What Woman is she So wrinkled and old, That goes to the wood?
39804What boots it that they gave Abdaldar''s guardian ring, When thro''another''s life The blow may reach his own?
39804What boots it, that, in central caves The Powers of Evil at his Baptism pledged The Sacrament of Hell?
39804What could not a Domdanielite perform?
39804What follows hence?
39804What glorious pageantry Makes her streets desolate, and silences Her empty dwellings?
39804What if beneath no lamp- illumined dome, Its marble walls[54] bedecked with flourished truth, Azure and gold adornment?
39804What sound disturbs the night, Loud as the summer forest in the storm, As the river that roars among rocks?
39804What sound is borne on the wind?
39804What spectacle invites The growing multitude, That torrent- like they roll along?
39804What wretch, and hast thou raised The rushing Terrors of the Wilderness To fall on thine own head?
39804Whence came it?
39804Where does the Murderer dwell?
39804Where is the Boy for whose hand it is destined?
39804Where the Destroyer who one day shall wield The Sword that is circled with fire?
39804Wherefore has the wrath of God So sorely stricken him?
39804Whither is gone the Boy?
39804Whither must we bear the foe?
39804Who at this untimely hour Wanders o''er the desert sands?
39804Who comes from the bridal chamber?
39804Who shall seek thro''Araby Hodeirah''s dreaded son?
39804Who shall withstand his way?
39804Who stand against the fury of that arm That spurns her to the earth?
39804Who then rejoiced but Thalaba?
39804Who then was troubled but the Arabian Maid?
39804Why do you not rather take the Turkish sabres?
39804Why do you take it from him Thalaba?...
39804Why does the City pour her thousands forth?
39804Why dost thou stand and gaze upon my face?
39804Why dost thou watch with hesitating eyes The banquet?
39804Why hast thou left alone The weary wanderer in the wilderness?
39804Why howl the Dogs so mournfully?
39804Why were my Father and my brethren slain?
39804Will elephants in gilded cages bear The imprisoned victims?
39804Will he harm me if I go?
39804Without an oar, without a sail The little boat rides rapidly;... Is that a cloud that skirts the sea?
39804[ 144] How came Mohareb to be Sultan of this Island?
39804_ Nieuhoff._ Is there any analogy between a foam thus procured and the saliva of a mad dog?
39804_ THALABA THE DESTROYER.__ THE FOURTH BOOK._ Whose is yon dawning form, That in the darkness meets The delegated youth?
39804_ coming from the tent._ Thalaba, What hast thou there?
39804am I not An orphan,... among strangers?
39804and is it thou?"
39804and night must come,..."Wilt thou embark with me?
39804answered Thalaba,"Shall I distrust the providence of God?
39804are ye here?
39804art thou too"Among the Angels?"
39804comes the bridal pomp, And have the purveyors of imperial lust Torn from their parents arms again The virgin beauties of the land?
39804cried the boy,"Why are my brethren and my sisters slain?
39804cried the fiendly woman,"Hast thou yet a spell of safety?"
39804do I know thee, Infidel accurst?"
39804dost thou boast of guiding me?"
39804dost thou deem"Because I perish, that the unsleeping lids"Of Justice shall be closed upon thy crime?
39804exclaimed Okba,"darest thou disobey,"Abandoning all claim"To Allah''s longer aid?"
39804for a brother''s eye Were her long fingers[63] tinged, As when she trimmed the lamp, And thro''the veins and delicate skin The light shone rosy?
39804he cried,"Is the Robber of night at hand?"
39804he cried,"Wilt thou not wait a sign"To point thy destined way?"
39804he cried,"what brings thee here?
39804he replied,"And have thy years been numbered?
39804he sees His Father''s Sword, and who shall bar his way?
39804is it sin Because the Hern soars upward in the sky Above the arrow''s flight, to train the Falcon Whose beak shall pierce him there?
39804is the King"Great upon earth, a God among mankind?"
39804life- warm as I am?
39804never heard the names Of God and of the Prophet?
39804or is the man"So foul with magic and all blasphemy,"That Earth[40] like Heaven rejects him?
39804quoth Khawla,"is the Fire gone out"That threats the Masters of the Spell?"
39804quoth Thalaba,"Or should we pause, and wait the wind"To scatter this bewildering fog?"
39804sinks the Word With deeper influence from the Imam''s voice, Where in the day of congregation, crowds Perform the duty task?
39804that the Fiend"Permitted for a season, prowls for prey?
39804that the darkened lids[64] Gave yet a softer lustre to her eye?
39804the Enchantress cried,"Where lives the Boy coeval with whose life"Yon magic fire must burn?"
39804the dead man has a ring,... Should it be buried with him?
39804the youth replied:"What is there that I durst refuse to thee?
39804thy grapes will ripen,"But who shall tread the wine- press?
39804what hast thou read?"
39804what mean thy words?
39804where the Golden Image now, Which at the sound of dulcimer and lute, Cornet and sackbut, harp and psaltery, The Assyrian slaves adored?
39804where the fame Of[97] Belus?
39804whither art thou gone, Guide and companion of the youth, whose eye Has lost thee in the depth of Heaven?
39804wilt thou see him?
35991''You do not mean That was the first and last with him?'' 35991 About the time, That May before she finished High School, Elenor Broke loose, ran wild, do you remember, Carl?
35991And as for that, what did I see in Paris But human nature working in the war As everywhere it works in peace? 35991 As they rallied, But when my strength was almost spent-- what comes?
35991Before this quarrel we had been engaged And at this evening''s end I brought it up:''What shall we do? 35991 But first, my love, As spirits equal and with equal rights, Or privilege of equal wrongs, have I Demanded former purity of you?
35991But had I been American to the core, Would I have put the sweet temptation by? 35991 Could we manage it?"
35991I went to her, Pulled down her hands from eyes and shook her hard: What is this? 35991 If I had any thought There in that awful moment, it was this: To run away, escape, could I maintain An innocent presence there, be clear of fault?
35991Is it portless?
35991So, that''s your story, is it?
35991Well, now Why did I turn to Gregory from you? 35991 Well, then what was the riddle?
35991What is the matter?
35991Who was this woman? 35991 With the morning I lay in bed and thought: Did Irma Leese Know anything of me, or did she know That Elenor went out to meet a man?
35991A man can shake a vampire off, but how To shake a wife off, when the children come, And you must leave your place, your livelihood To shake her off?
35991A woman of one sin, Or many sins, her life filled up with treason, Since I had left her?"
35991A woman wholly bad?
35991All her life This girl aspires-- you think to win a man?
35991All learning may be that, but what is that?
35991America, Oh yes, America, she said to self, How is it different from the land I left?
35991And John speaks up:"Well, Carl, now Elenor Murray is no more, And we are friends so long, I''d like to know What do you think of her?"
35991And Lilli Alm who taught the art of song Looked at him half contemptuous and said:"Why did she fail?"
35991And Lowell studied them and said at last:"That new reporter makes the Murray inquest A thing of interest, does the public like it?"
35991And Merival spoke up:"What is to- day?
35991And Sosnowski spoke:"I meant to kill you-- where''s your right to live When millions have been killed to make the world A safer place for liberty?
35991And after that?
35991And all this realm of spirit, Of love for truth and beauty, is the play Of shadows on the tomb?"
35991And for this What did I get?
35991And for what?
35991And had she lied, had she been living free, Unshackled of our system, faith and cult, American or Christian, what you will?
35991And have n''t we, the nurses and the soldiers Written some million stories for the eyes Of boys and girls to read these fifty years?
35991And if A jury and the courts adjudged this boy Of nineteen in his mind, what was the right Of interference by the governor?
35991And if a man cause war, or suffer war, When he could stop it, do we say he loves?
35991And if she did not know, who could disclose That I was with her?
35991And if she had a syncope, was held up, Who held her up?
35991And if you shake her off Where do you go?
35991And just to hear that she Had planned to see me, ask for clemency For this condemned degenerate, made me say Shall I let death defeat her?
35991And just to think you used that sharpened talent For getting money, place, in the old regime, To place you where to- day?
35991And last night When Elenor Murray''s picture in the_ Times_ Looked at me, I began to think, Good Lord, Where have I seen that face before?
35991And may I test this jet, while I am here?
35991And on the third night saw At half- past eight or nine this fellow come And take her walking in the darkness-- where?
35991And on this day the coroner had a letter From Margery Camp which said:"Where''s Barrett Bays?
35991And others said:"We know through Jacob Bangs he has investments In wheat lands, what''s the truth?
35991And perhaps Real things were back of ways to be construed In innocence or wisdom-- for who knows?
35991And radical with axes after trees, And clergymen with curses on the fig trees?
35991And so what have we?
35991And then he said:"Why did you do this?"
35991And then she asked:"Have you felt in my hands Great tenderness, solicitude, even prayer?"
35991And this is what I hear-- the husband''s voice, Which well I knew, the officer''s in command:''Why have you brought your wife here?''
35991And to that end take life in hand?
35991And was it true That Elenor Murray strayed as a young girl In those far days of strolls and buggy rides?
35991And was it truth He told of meeting Elenor, her death?
35991And was she brave, And nerved to end it by these words of Elenor?
35991And were the Burtons better than this Kingston?
35991And what if our home was not home to her?
35991And what is next?
35991And what is this he sees?
35991And what of those who got effects because They knew this Elenor Murray?
35991And what''s the state Of things in Christendom?
35991And where is Barrett Bays?
35991And who does that?
35991And who knows But all the money went here in the end?
35991And why aspire if death Ends us, the scheme?
35991And why no sons and daughters, strong and fair, To use these horses, ponies, tramp the fields, Shout from the tennis court, swim, skate and row?
35991And why no woman in his life, no face Smiling from out the summer house of roses, Such riotous flames against the distant green?
35991And why not?
35991And why was that?
35991And why?
35991And write these words:"To be brave and not to flinch"?
35991And you want me?
35991Are not there rooms of books, of tales and poems And histories to show all secrets of life?
35991Are you engaged to me?
35991Asked Elenor Murray,"do you think we can?"
35991But I ask What soldier or what nurse retained his faith, The splendor of his flame?
35991But Sosnowski thought If I could do a flaming thing to show What courts are ours, what matter if I die?
35991But explain Why would she over- stress the roses, give Me understandings foreign to the truth?
35991But if our Elenor Murray Had not been found beside the river, what Had happened?
35991But if you loved me then, Or soon thereafter loved me, as I know, What should I do?
35991But just suppose, as I began to say, You never had discovered Gregory Wenner, And had the rapture, beauty which you had, How stands the case?
35991But meantime If Gregory Wenner killed this Elenor Murray How did he do it?
35991But now what do we see?
35991But the dead, And what they lived, what are they?--what the things Of our dead selves to selves who are alive, And live the hour that''s given us?"
35991But then at last What can you do with life?
35991But then you say, what of his love and doctrine?
35991But what is love but of the soul-- what flesh Knows love but through the soul?
35991But what were all these rooms and acres to him With no face near him but the servants, gardeners?
35991But who knew that I grieved to see her lose A schooling at St. Mary''s, have no chance?
35991But who knows About the father''s parents, or the mother''s?
35991But why do we suffer?
35991But win a man with what?
35991Can I regret my work, nor take a hurt Upon my very soul?
35991Can you dispute My eyes were fixed upon a lovelier life, Have never gaze withdrawn from loveliness?
35991Cause of death?
35991Concretely said, in brief, A man and woman have produced this child; What was the child''s pre- natal circumstance?
35991Consequence?
35991Could I get well in time?
35991Could I not wait from day to day and see What turn the news would take?
35991Could he kill her and return And kill himself?
35991Did I become a common woman, turn To common life and ways?
35991Did he forgive Judas Iscariot?
35991Did he forgive Poor Peter by specific words?
35991Did he forgive the thief upon the cross, Who railed at him?
35991Did she aspire?
35991Did she not ripple merriment to hide Her disappointment, wake me if she could?
35991Did she take Joan''s spirit for her guide?
35991Did that contaminate her, change her flesh, Or change her spirit?
35991Did the major steal The heart of Elenor Murray, speed her death?
35991Did the public make it?
35991Do I not soil my soul with penitence, And smut this loveliness with penitence?
35991Do n''t you know Roy Green is laughing at you in his sleeve, And boasts that Elenor Murray was all his?
35991Do n''t you see Our western culture in such words as these?
35991Do n''t you see that I Was caught in mathematics, jotted down Upon a slate before I came to earth?
35991Do you know A man until you see him face to face?
35991Do you know of the care a nurse can give, And what she can withhold?"
35991Do you not see the rule of compensation Shot through it all?
35991Do you remember all the books I read Two years ago upon heredity, Foot- notes to evolution, the dynamics Of living matter?
35991Do you so promise me?"
35991Do you think, A softness in the heart went to the brain And softened that?
35991Do you wonder now That people cry for war?
35991Does anyone live now, or learn a thing Not lived and learned a thousand times before?
35991Does this sound like a coward?
35991Dumm, dumm, dumm, dumm, How''s that for quality, sweet clear and pure?
35991Effluvia material of our bodies?
35991Elenor Murray Died how?
35991Elenor Stood on the fence, flung up her arms and crowed, And said"What can they do?
35991Elenor, What is the matter?
35991Escape The censor''s eye?
35991For if Elenor Was not a Joan too, why treasure this?
35991For who am I to judge?
35991Go up to see and test it?"
35991Good Lord, it''s one o''clock, I must to bed.... You get my story Merival?
35991Gregory Wenner''s?
35991He did forgive the hands Who crucified him, but he had a reason: They knew not what they did; well, as for that Who knows the thing he does?
35991He did?
35991He died a year ago, as you''ll remember, What were his secrets, agony?
35991He got a car And hurried to the place where Eleanor lay.... Now who was Merival the Coroner?
35991He took the dividends, and put them-- where?
35991He would ask:"No news?
35991He''s had enough of her or never cared-- Which is it?
35991He''s turned upon our inquest, did you see The jab he gives me?
35991Here''s my word: Give men and women freedom, save the land From dull theocracy-- the theo, what?
35991How Is that for metaphor?
35991How about the mother?
35991How about this lawyer, And Margery the aunt?
35991How could I follow them?
35991How could I trust her?
35991How could we escape?
35991How did her birth affect the father, mother?
35991How do I view the matter?
35991How do you know a man, or know a woman Until the flesh instructs you?
35991How had it benefited you or me, Increased your love, or founded it upon A surer rock than beauty?
35991How have I sinned?
35991How keep it clean Confessing what I did( if I thought so) As evil and unclean?"
35991How long had death Been on her eyes?
35991How long were you asleep?
35991However flamed with zeal had I said no When lips like hers were offered?
35991I call Death twin Of Love, and why?
35991I have heard Most everything about you, of your youth Your schooling, shall I say your sorrow too?
35991I read the letter over: How could this letter pass the censor?
35991I roll the panoramic story out To Washington the great-- what do I see?
35991I said to her, You leave me too?
35991I wonder should I tell the coroner?
35991I''d sit beside his cell and read some words From his confession, ask why did you this?
35991I''ve found it now: What is the intellect but eyes, where sight Is gathered in two spheres?
35991If I find no ricin I turn to streptococcus, deadly snake, Or shall I call him tiger?
35991If he had a friend, Who was a mind to him as well, perhaps It was a certain lawyer, but who knew?
35991If it had prospered The man had never told, what do you think?"
35991If that be mud, Which we have heard, around her, is it mud That weights the soul of America, the pure Dream of our founders?
35991If that were true, What was the past?
35991If that''s the case, Should not these letters reach the coroner?
35991If you could choose, be Elenor Murray or Our schoolmate, Mary Marsh, which would you be?
35991If you know it, why drop tears For people better off?
35991In Paris what Happened to break your balance?
35991In any case What avarice is this that made him anxious About the comfort of his wife and family?
35991Is a country Free where the laws permit such things?
35991Is it not true?
35991Is there a soul You''d like to know?
35991It came about When Ludwig Haibt said:"Have you read the papers About this Elenor Murray?"
35991It must be true, She went so secretly to walk that morning To meet a man-- why would she walk alone?
35991Let me look behind The door that closes on your man at home, The wife and children there, what shall I find?
35991Look You come into my life, what do you bring?
35991Look back Do you not see Voltaire lay hold of her, Hands out of tombs and spirits, from the skies Lead her to Europe?
35991Might not that progress start as one result Of this great war?
35991My care proved useless-- or shall I say so?
35991My father died before this son was born; Why does this son smack lips and turn his hand Just like my father did?
35991No chance save what she earned herself?
35991No word?
35991No, Why should she?
35991Now do n''t you see the contrast?
35991Now it seems She''s dead and never married-- why not me?
35991Now tell me, have you?''
35991Now two things: Suppose the writer of the letters killed This Elenor Murray, is somehow involved In Elenor Murray''s death?
35991Now what are these but levers of our machine?
35991Now, at the last Has not this war put by resist not evil?
35991Now, look a minute: Why did she join the church?
35991O, my love, What should I do when this most priceless gift Was held up like a crown within your hands To place upon my brows-- what should I do?
35991Oh, is it human nature, That fights like maggots in the rotting carcass?
35991Or anyone say so?
35991Or did it make the public, that it fitted With such exactness in the communal life?
35991Or did the major follow her?
35991Or is it human nature tortured, bound By artificial doctrines, creeds which all Pretend belief in, really doubt, resist And can not live by?"
35991Or know what texture is his hand until You touch his hand?
35991Or was it guilt For some complicity in Elenor''s death?
35991Or was she half and half?
35991Or with the inquest?
35991Result?
35991Schools She had in plenty, what would she have done With courses to the end in music, art?
35991Shall we let these trivial minds Who see salvation, progress in restraint, Pre- empt the field of moulding human life?
35991She could have married-- why not?
35991She drops Roy Green for me-- what does he care?
35991She goes to Europe then-- with husband?
35991She had kept from me The diary, threw it from the window, what Was life of her in France?
35991She might have married, had a home and children, What of it?
35991She renewed it-- said,"Why do you hurry back?
35991She straightened up And questioned me:"Have you been ill before?
35991She was the lover, do you understand?
35991Should not he stand on guard?
35991Should not the body lie, as it was found, Until the coroner takes charge of it?
35991So I say If her life came to any waste, what waste May her heroic life and death prevent?
35991So I say, Why do you come to me?
35991So was her life a ruin, was it waste?
35991THE BIRTH OF ELENOR MURRAY What are the mortal facts With which we deal?
35991Take the breach And make her death no matter in my course?
35991Take this girl: Why do you marvel that she rode at night With any man who came along?
35991Take you aside and say, here is the truth, Here''s Gregory Wenner-- what''s the good of that?
35991Tell me all?"
35991That night I lay awake and tossed and thought: Where are they now?
35991The bird is slain perhaps, the turtle lives, But which has known the thrills?
35991The father drinks, you say?
35991The fellow said it, damn him-- whether she Made such a promise, who knows?
35991The hand that stirs, The potter''s hand?
35991The hunter who came up and found the body?
35991The life goes out, how many things result?
35991The question is, Is life worth living, good Or bad?
35991The time?
35991The world Is better, is it?
35991Then David Barrow asked:"Who is the man That used to write to Elenor, went away?"
35991Then David Borrow, And Winthrop Marion with the coroner Shot questions at him till he woke, regained A memory, concentration: Who are you?
35991Then I lied to her; And laughed a little, answered no, and asked,''What do you know about her?''"
35991Then I thought: Here is a girl who rides with that Roy Green And what would he be with her for, I ask?
35991Then Winthrop Marion said:"I like your talk, Llewellyn George, but still what killed the girl?
35991Then if the lover be not known by lovers How is she known?
35991Then what are spirits?
35991Then what?
35991There I stood, Believed I was alone, then heard a voice,"Is it not beautiful?"
35991There is money in it, Perhaps, who knows?
35991There''s Bruno, Socrates, There''s Washington who might have lost his life, Why do these men cling to the vision, hope?
35991These months Of silence, what are they?
35991They live In heaven, say your Elenor Murrays, well, Who knows this?
35991They teach us physiology; who teaches The use of instincts and emotions, powers?
35991This Elenor Murray A miniature imperfect of La Menken?
35991To chasten us, to better, purge our sins?
35991To recur I''m down to this: Perhaps a hemolysis-- But what produced it?
35991To return How much did Elenor Murray use her mind, How much her instincts, leave herself alone Let nature have its way?
35991To what and whom?
35991Unless she runs to men already married, And if she does so, do n''t you make her out As loose and bad?
35991Until at last I said, no more, my dear-- The past is dead, What is the past to me?
35991Untruthful, how could confidence be hers?
35991Was I first rate lawyer?
35991Was I not justified In hiding Gregory Wenner to preserve The beauty and the rapture which you craved?
35991Was it Gregory Wenner?
35991Was it simply to conceal A passion written in these letters here For his sake or his wife''s?
35991Was it to forget?
35991Was she like Sieur LaSalle shot down, or choked, Struck, poisoned?
35991Was she married?
35991We are together now, We do not dream, do we?
35991Well she loved Dumas, Inscribed a book of poems to Charles Dickens, By his permission, mark you-- don''t you see Your Elenor Murray here?
35991Well, at first What did I care what she had been before, Whose mistress, sweetheart?
35991Well, but how about The flames that make the children?
35991Well, for some weeks I lay there, and at last Words dropped around me that the time was near For blows to count-- would I be there to strike?
35991Well, then I thought-- why not?
35991Well, then What was my love?
35991Well, then your marriage counter Could scarcely ask: What is your aim in life?
35991Well, then"What was he hired for?"
35991Well, what is more to tell?
35991What are they doing now?
35991What better way to end it?"
35991What calls you back?
35991What can I say?
35991What can I say?
35991What could you find here, if you seek no husband, Even in seeing France so partially?
35991What depths of calmness may a man come to As father, who can think of this and be Quiet about his heart?
35991What did I find?
35991What did Jesus do?
35991What did he find?
35991What did their friends, old women, relatives Take from the child in feeling, joy or pain?
35991What did we do?
35991What do we know of Elenor Murray''s death?
35991What does it come to?
35991What girl Has earned the money for two years in college Beside my Elenor in this neighborhood?
35991What good can come of hatred, greed and murder?
35991What happened then?
35991What happened then?
35991What happened there?
35991What happened?
35991What hunter after secrets could find out?
35991What if I Had failed as father in the way I failed?
35991What in adventure, lures to bring you here, Where peril, labor are?
35991What is a man or woman but a sperm Accreted into largeness?
35991What is it all?
35991What is that Contrasted with the cost to me, if I Had let him hang?
35991What is the inference?
35991What is the part it plays with Elenor Murray?
35991What is the time?"
35991What is this love force?
35991What is this spirit, but the spirit Of Something which moves through us, to an end, And by its constancy in man made constant Proclaims an end?
35991What is this?
35991What next?
35991What of her childhood friends, her days at school, Her teachers, girlhood sweethearts, lovers later, When she became a woman?
35991What of that?
35991What of the girl?
35991What of these?
35991What other entries did I miss, what shames Recorded since she left me, here in France?
35991What results?
35991What shall I do?
35991What shall we do about it?--let it go?
35991What shall we do?
35991What soul would seek him in this room of books?
35991What was I after all?
35991What was I then to judge?
35991What was she doing by the river''s shore?
35991What was she then?
35991What was she, anyway, that she could lose Such happiness and love?
35991What was she?
35991What was the cause of death of Elenor Murray?
35991What was the first thing entering in your mind From which you trace your act?
35991What was this Elenor Murray?
35991What was this love?
35991What was this woman, dear, what was her soul?
35991What was this woman?
35991What was your youth?
35991What were the circumstances?
35991What will it be like, sudden blackness, pain, No pain at all?
35991What would I do?
35991What would come to him?
35991What your wife?
35991What''s life here now?
35991What, my dear, You wo n''t hear any more?
35991What, you?
35991When neither poverty, nor jeers, nor flames, Nor cups of poison stay?
35991Where did the money go?
35991Where did you meet this Elenor at the first?
35991Where is Alma Bell, He has not heard about her in these years?
35991Where is the major?
35991Where shall I get the money, when pianos, Such as I make, are devilish hard to sell?
35991Where''s your right To live and have more honors, be the man To guide the city, now that telephones, Gas, railways have been taken by the city?
35991Who has the box''s key?
35991Who is La Menken?
35991Who saw her Before or when she died?
35991Who was La Menken?
35991Who was this woman mused the widow there?
35991Whom does it look like?
35991Whose letters?
35991Why am I harsh?
35991Why call God love who can prevent a war?
35991Why delay?
35991Why did she ditch me?
35991Why did she go to war?
35991Why did she never marry?
35991Why did she return?
35991Why did this Barrett Bays emerge not, speak, Come forward?
35991Why did you go to France?
35991Why do I wake?
35991Why do they do this, even while their lips Are wet with kisses given you?
35991Why do we suffer?
35991Why does He allow A world like this, and suffer earthquakes, storms, The sinking of_ Titanics_, cancers?
35991Why does she wish to give A finer spirit to this Barrett Bays?
35991Why have you not arrested him?
35991Why not a Domesday Book in which are shown A certain country''s tenures spiritual?
35991Why not join with me And get these letters?
35991Why should I Be just a cooing dove, why not a hawk?
35991Why sublimate a passion?
35991Why, boredom, nothing else.... Why pity Elenor Murray?
35991Why?"
35991Will it do?
35991Will you Absolve me, if I say I''m sorry too?
35991Will you renew it?''
35991Write me now What is your final judgment of the girl?"...
35991Write to this lawyer what my duty is Appointed me of her, go to New York?
35991Yes, tell you?
35991Yet how can I neglect to write this lawyer And tell him Elenor Murray gave to me This power of disposition?
35991You ask What took her to the war?
35991You do?
35991You have n''t read it, have you?
35991You have not promised marriage to that girl?
35991You hear much of the vampire, but what wife Has not more chance for eating up a man?
35991You know the face?
35991You may be called neurotic, what is that?
35991You should have seen my mother-- how she gasped, And gestured losing breath, to say at last:''Why, Carl, my boy, what are you thinking of?
35991You smile, which means you sun yourself within The power I have, and yet do you approve?
35991Your love life?
35991Your proselytes, and business man, reformer Nourished upon them, using them in life?
35991and how?
35991for he had given In a great passion out of a passionate heart All that was in him-- who was she to spurn A gift like this?
35991lighting lamps for men To walk by, men who hate the lamps, the hand That lights?
35991look at me, Did I become a drifter, wholly fail?
35991there''s the secret for a man As long as women interest him-- who knows What the precedent fellow was to her?
35991what do you do?
45097And do you believe that the soul of man will live hereafter?
45097And what shall we find at Winterberg?
45097And where are your children?
45097But what if one of those who has come to the holy sacrament falls into some sin, as stealing, or profane swearing?
45097But what is that?
45097But will it not vanish if we look away?
45097Can a woman come to that?
45097Do you speak English?
45097How do you know that you shall meet?
45097O Lord God of Hosts, who is a strong Lord like unto thee? 45097 What do you think of it?
45097What means this?
45097Which is the best hotel for us in Ichandau?
45097Will you,said she,"have the goodness to give me your name in writing?"
45097And now tell me, with all your studies have you yet learned how to die?
45097And who commanded,( and the silence came,)"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest?"
45097Are the virtues of social life held in honor among them, and are the children of these mountain homes trained up in the way they should go?
45097But what are the morals of such a people?
45097Does not my country know, and does it not delight to honor a man whose philanthropy and genius are alike deserving the admiration of the world?
45097I said to him,"Are these yours?"
45097I_ know_ that in another land we shall meet?"
45097Is it not fine: very fine?"
45097Must we mothers nurse beggars at our breasts, and bring up our daughters to be maid- servants to foreign lords?
45097She at last ventured to come toward the point by asking,"In what part of England do you reside, Sir?"
45097What are the men of the mountain good for?
45097What indeed is wealth, and title, and power, to a fool?
45097What shall I do?"
45097Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows?
45097Who can be afraid of a storm when the rainbow appears?
45097Who can tell the sufferings, who can tell the joys that the people of God have known in these high places?
45097Who filled thy countenance with rosy light?
45097Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy, Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam?
45097Who made thee parent of perpetual streams?
45097Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon?
45097Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth?
45097Who, with living flowers Of loveliest hue, spread garlands at your feet?
45097Would it be an_ indiscretion_ for me to ask you what is your name, Sir?"
45097_ Lady._--"Bless me, and of what country are you, pray?"
45097_ Lady._--"O you are, are you?
45097_ Lady._--"When do you return, Sir?"
45097_ Lady._--"Where do you spend the winter?"
39682A message?
39682A new window- washing system?
39682A triolet to a ton of coal would be a glorious thing now, would n''t it?
39682A what?
39682Ai n''t Bridget intelligent, pa?
39682Ai n''t it, pa?
39682And can you get along without an egg- beater?
39682And did he know you?
39682And did you ever hear from the man again?
39682And did you ever return it?
39682And did you?
39682And for why? 39682 And how about the egg- nog?"
39682And how did he blast the good old saint?
39682And how many calls does Mrs. Wilkins owe you?
39682And of course you offered to lend Tommy to them?
39682And so it is Santa Claus who is the snob, eh, and not Fortune?
39682And that brings up the question, why should your conscience be troubled by the insincerity of others?
39682And the other eighteen?
39682And the people on the wall? 39682 And what did you do?"
39682And you find nothing in his favor?
39682And you gave up the egg- beater altogether?
39682And you parted friends?
39682And you pay this man forty dollars for this?
39682And you propose to stand all this?
39682Are there any amateur burglars?
39682As a sensible man, why do n''t you stay here, then?
39682As, for instance?
39682Been fighting?
39682But how?
39682But if you make a business of society, why do n''t you carry it to a logical conclusion? 39682 But it''s rather queer, do n''t you think, that she has the children on her books?
39682But really,said Mr. Pedagog,"have n''t you raised anything in your garden?"
39682But the men, Mrs. Pedagog,said the Idiot,"did you ever think of them?"
39682But what does all this prove?
39682But where does the money come in?
39682But where?
39682But you''re not sorry you gave it?
39682But you, my dear Idiot, how about your allowance? 39682 But,"said Mr. Pedagog,"if you bid on it consciously where did the mistake come in?"
39682By the way, do you know anything about moths?
39682Can you get along without Wagner?
39682Did you, pa?
39682Do n''t you remember that I ignored you utterly?
39682Do you keep this interesting specimen of still life all through the year?
39682Do you usually serve so small a portion of the product of your garden?
39682Does he suspect them of lacking completeness or variety?
39682Does n''t Dr. Preachly believe in Santa Claus? 39682 For what-- for whom?"
39682Had a good time?
39682Had any of those mulled sardines he gives you Sunday nights?
39682Have you ever visited Newport?
39682Have you suffered?
39682He did n''t really, did he, dear?
39682He does take after you, does n''t he?
39682He said that, did he? 39682 He''s tackled Santa Claus first, as being the most seasonable of the lot, eh?
39682Heard what?
39682How could I?
39682How did this happen?
39682How did you know that they were yours that were sweet, and not the grocery- bought peas?
39682How does a father know his own children?
39682How else are they to learn how to conduct themselves? 39682 How is it to work?"
39682How long is six years, pa?
39682How much do you pay her, pa?
39682I did n''t say I wanted them to come again, did I?
39682I suppose he looks after the furnace and keeps the walks clear of snow in winter time?
39682I thought women liked sympathy?
39682Ideal-- is it not?
39682Idiot,said Mr. Brief, when the third course had been served,"what do you mean by''Last Call?''"
39682In the manner of Whitman, perhaps?
39682Is asparagus the extent of your gardening?
39682Is it a mere meal? 39682 Is it true,"asked Mr. Brief,"that home- raised peas are sweeter than any other?"
39682Is that a beech- tree?
39682Is that all?
39682Ith I a thandwich, popper?
39682Just a lock of his hair for my collection of curios? 39682 Lend me to somebody, will you, mamma?"
39682Like tumpany''s bald heads?
39682Liquefy coal?
39682Moths?
39682Mrs. Pedagog,said the Idiot,"did you ever have an attic?"
39682My dear Idiot,said Mrs. Pedagog,"do you know how I have always thought of you?"
39682Not altogether true, is it?
39682Not interested?
39682Only twice, eh?
39682Or is it anybody? 39682 Pa,"said Mollie, holding up the scissors,"can I borrow these?"
39682Richard,said Mrs. Dawkins, as they drove home,"did you get a receipt?"
39682Say, pa, where was I then?
39682Suppose he brings a diamond necklace to the daughter of a Croesus?
39682Suppose they do n''t pay?
39682Suppose we make the chance?
39682That you? 39682 Then I presume if we simply spread the table and let you talk our guests will be satisfied?"
39682Then if they are useless, why keep them?
39682Then it is selfishness?
39682Then what did you say?
39682Three?
39682To travel, eh?
39682Want to play a game with me to- morrow?
39682Well, are n''t they?
39682Well, she''s outgrown it,said Tommy; and then reverting to his father''s choice of words, he added,"What is dictums, anyhow?"
39682Well,smiled the Idiot,"what did you think of it?"
39682Well?
39682What are the main features of this simple contrivance?
39682What are we going to have for dessert?
39682What are you going to do with yourself this morning, dear?
39682What bill?
39682What did he say?
39682What did the doctor say when you told him all that?
39682What did you learn at Sunday- school?
39682What do you know about writing off?
39682What else did we think of? 39682 What for?"
39682What has all this to do with attics?
39682What has that to do with it?
39682What is a dinner, anyhow?
39682What kind of people can they be not to be interested in pots and pans and kettles and things? 39682 What slippers?"
39682What would the daughter of a carpenter do with a diamond necklace? 39682 What would you have done, John, if this had really been the night?"
39682Where?
39682Which of the two classes do you prefer?
39682While you?
39682Why did n''t you bring me a piece of him as a souvenir?
39682Why did n''t you tell him the dinner is n''t for to- night, but to- morrow night?
39682Why did you say that?
39682Why do n''t you apply your inventive genius to the discovery of a seedless dandelion?
39682Why should he be anxious about the children?
39682Why should you expect to sue a moth for damages any more than to have a mosquito indicted for assault?
39682With what result?
39682You ca n''t eat Spaniards, either, can you, pa?
39682You do n''t really think for a moment, do you, that the Jimpsonberrys would lend us their cook, or that she would come, or that I would ask them?
39682You keep books yourself, eh?
39682You mean cribs, do n''t you?
39682You sold my gift, did you?
39682You would n''t prefer having them at breakfast, would you?
39682You''ll call on me?
39682You''ll surely be here?
39682You''ve tried it, have you?
39682Ai n''t they fine?"
39682And then he added,"Poor Dawkins, who is taking care of him now?"
39682And--""And?"
39682Any more?"
39682As I have told you, that small circumstance Thomas, over which we seem to have no control, got ahead of us--""You was surprised, was n''t you, pa?"
39682As for you, my dear Bibliomaniac, why do you collect books?"
39682But how are you going to keep the saltpetre out of the peas themselves?"
39682But may I ask why you express this preference?"
39682Can you imagine the effect of a live wire upon ten loving couples engaged in looking at the moon while sitting on it?"
39682Coal runs into the cellar in such an irresponsible, formless way, eh?"
39682Did he say anything about Hop o''My Thumb and Cinderella?"
39682Did n''t you know that?"
39682Did they get anything?"
39682Did you ever hear of anything like that before?"
39682Did you ever undertake to punch a moth in the head?"
39682Dined there lately?"
39682Do the Poet and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and Mr. Whitechoker come here merely to get something to eat?
39682Do you know what a pint of liquid air costs?"
39682Do you see that small beech- tree over there?"
39682Do you suppose he has heard?"
39682Do you think you can amuse yourself while I am out?"
39682Do you?"
39682Does a lawyer invite his friends to join him in an opinion?
39682Does a true poet, with three names on his autograph, give a poem to anybody when he can sell it?
39682HAD A GOOD TIME?''"
39682HAD A GOOD TIME?''"]
39682Has your horseless cauliflower bloomed as yet?"
39682Have you a new idea in that line?"
39682Have you tackled the clothes- pin yet?"
39682How about him?"
39682How are you going about this business, provided you do retire from Wall Street?"
39682How''s this on a''Carpet- Tack''?"
39682I had the best of him to the extent that I had authority and he hadn''t--""And who came out ahead?"
39682I think, too, that using the Whitman lack of form carries with it the notion of the coal sliding down the chute, do n''t you?
39682I''ll just make it a plain poem of the go- as- you- please variety instead, eh?"
39682IDIOT"]"Who was it?"
39682Idiot have against a manager ahead of an army of servants of such magnitude?
39682Idiot keeps your promises?"
39682Idiot to accept a diamond tiara given in their honor?
39682Idiot, collect books because you wish to have something nobody else has got, or do you buy your books to read?"
39682Idiot?"
39682Idiot?"
39682If liquid air, why not liquid coal?
39682If one slice of ham between two slices of bread is a ham sandwich, why is not one slice of bread between two slices of ham a bread sandwich?
39682Is dinner ready?"
39682Is he not the embodiment of the golden rule, and is he not, after all-- God bless him and them!--something beautiful in the eyes of the children?"
39682Is it still as great as ever?
39682Let''s keep the children believing in Santa Claus, eh?"
39682Like to see''em?"
39682Never had a home?
39682Now, how can one who does not live be a snob or anything else?
39682Of course you are going?"
39682Or do they come for the pleasure of our society, or for the pleasure of leaving home, or what?
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Pedagog?"
39682Polly''s rather anthropological in her talks, is n''t she?"
39682Said he''d been robbed by some of our best people; what''s the use of working for nothing?
39682So he told you I was going into invention, did he?"
39682Teething is a natural first step, for if a child hath no teeth, wherewithal shall he eat dinners with his parents or without them?"
39682Terrible, is n''t it?
39682Then how could he have been a snob?"
39682Therefore, all things being sandwiches, life is a sandwich, Q. E. D.""Is life a thing?"
39682Therefore, why not make the talking easier?"
39682Therefore, why should I not_ give_ my views?
39682To begin, he called Santa a lie, did he?"
39682We shall go abroad and spend--""Not all of it, I hope?"
39682What else is there for a woman to think about?"
39682What has put him in this despondent mood?
39682What is a sandwich, anyhow?
39682What is the use of neighbors who will not be neighborly and lend you their most cherished possession?"
39682What then?
39682What was done with the remains?"
39682What was their name?"
39682What''s up?
39682Where did you pick it up?"
39682Where do you suppose he got her?"
39682Who told you I was inventing instead of broking these days?"
39682Why do n''t you write a book of household poetry?
39682Why not liquefy it, and let it drop automatically into the furnace through a self- acting spigot?"
39682Why not, therefore, admit that the moth serves a purpose in the great scheme of life?"
39682Why should he?"
39682Why, my dear fellow, what''s this?
39682Why, then, expect a landlady, by birth and previous training, to_ give_ a dinner?"
39682Would that prove a pleasing find?"
39682XIV SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE MOTH"Do you know anything about the habits of moths?"
39682XV SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE BURGLAR"Are you ever bothered much by burglars off here in the country?"
39682Yet who ever wrote dainty verses to a ton of coal, and who has n''t at one time or another in his life written about the eyebrows of some woman?"
39682You and Polly Dawkins had a fight?"
39682You did, eh?
39682You never lived in the country, did you?"
39682You, of course, refer to professional burglars, do n''t you?"
39682[ Illustration:"''A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER''"]"And a china doll to the daughter of a carpenter?"
39682[ Illustration:"''AN UNPAID GROCER''S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE''"]"Suffered?"
39682[ Illustration:"''WHO WAS IT?''
39682asked Mr. Brief,"or do you give him a much- needed vacation in winter?
39682how can he live with only eight pairs of slippers?
43538Ach so; it is the Princess Sophia of Zerbst who speaks? 43538 And did your Majesty deign to consider what would happen to this country had one of these scamps taken you at your word and fallen foul of you?"
43538And what may that be, dear Daddy?
43538Can I go home?
43538Did n''t I tell you not to go near that water again?
43538Didst hear yon plot? 43538 Didst hear, Isabella?"
43538Do you really think it''s good?
43538Do you think so, Daddy? 43538 Do you think we can go in the first boat, John?"
43538Hast thou ever seen one of those rings, Bianca, with a little hidden place to carry poison? 43538 Have you ever seen such sights in Scotland,_ chèrie_?"
43538Have you not ridden enough to- day, sire?
43538How is our little Queen of Scots?
43538How was that, Lady Jane?
43538However can you do it, Fanny? 43538 Is it so?"
43538Is there anything else as lovely, Isabella?
43538Justice?
43538Mary dear,said one of the girls to the other,"can you really believe that yonder low line is land?"
43538Oh, Fanny,cried her sister,"you''re not going to burn up all the story?
43538Our little bride- to- be of France?
43538Sent me? 43538 Sits the wind so?
43538So even in Ischia there is danger from those wolves, is there?
43538So this is what you''ve been about, is it?
43538So your Majesty would roam the streets at will?
43538Think, Isabella, think; what shall we do? 43538 Thou knowest Messer Lorenzino de''Medici, Duke Alessandro''s closest friend and counselor?
43538What are you doing here?
43538What are you going to do, Fanny?
43538What do you think you are? 43538 What is it, Vittoria?"
43538What say you, Lady Jane? 43538 What was it, Catherine?
43538What will my lady have? 43538 What would you say to me, Po- ca- hun- tas?"
43538When it''s Jacque''s turn to tend the cattle wilt thou go to that tree I know of and help me cut some pipes? 43538 Who is your Lord?"
43538Who''s to say no? 43538 Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?"
43538Why have you that on your head?
43538Why not?
43538Why, Vittoria?
43538Will you watch them a minute, please?
43538Would you mind, Susan, coming down into the yard with me?
43538A sweet dye for the hair, a ring, a love philtre, a girdle set with gems?"
43538And you would advise Prince Peter of Holstein to disobey his tutor?"
43538Do you know that I am one of the first geniuses of the age?
43538Do you know, Priscilla, that that''s where you and I are to live and that we may never see England again?"
43538How can I thank you, Po- ca- hun- tas, for this warning?"
43538Is it not a cheerful place?
43538Is it nothing to thee to marry and leave thy home?"
43538Moreover when have the Orsini ever had the better of a true Colonna?"
43538People tell me young ladies should n''t be writing stories, that it''s not genteel, but how can I help myself?"
43538She did not answer, so he took her hand and said,"Tell me, Catherine, what are you doing?
43538So you''ve been writing a story surreptitiously?
43538Suppose we be Robin Hood and his men and shoot at wands?"
43538The only reply was a moan and a whispered,"Oh, Vittoria, what will our dear lady the Duchess say?"
43538We know the woman, King Charles''mother, Madame Isabeau of Bavaria herself; but where is the maid?
43538What can we do to warn them?"
43538What shall I do with it?"
43538What shall we do?"
43538Which am I to marry?"
43538Why do n''t you send him away?"
43538Why do you stop here?"
43538Will you leave your book?
43538Wilt catch me if I climb down?"
43538he claps his hands to his head, but his beautiful curls have gone?"
43538propose that thou shouldst be set out between two battlements where the artillery fire would sweep across thee?"
43614''And what became of her?''
43614''And what became of him?''
43614''Ay, but where shall we find one?''
43614''Could n''t we be content with wine?
43614''Do n''t you know about Oswald Milser, who by his pride quenched all the benefit of his piety and his liberality to the Church?
43614''Do so many people come to you then?''
43614''How am I to set about it?''
43614''How can one be anything but out of spirits when one is crossed by such a stupid set as the people of your town?
43614''I say, neighbour,''he cried,''did you happen to notice, when your husband went out this morning, whether he had his head on?''
43614''I shall die but once,''he replied to all their warnings;''and where could it befall me better than when fighting for the cause of God and Austria?''
43614''Is that likely?
43614''So he is in a hurry to throw away his brooms at last, is he?''
43614''The Stase- Sattel,''I replied,''what is that?''
43614''There is the swallow,''she instanced:''why do swallows always hover over nasty dirty marshy places?
43614''What are you doing?''
43614''What stink is this I smell of Christian flesh?''
43614''Where shall we have to go to- morrow?''
43614''Who are you, and wherefore sought you me?''
43614''Who are you?''
43614''Who can tell what gives to these simple old stories their irresistible witchery?''
43614''Who was he?''
43614''Why did you come all this way?''
43614''You are either very clever or a great idiot,''now retorted the rich man;''will you please to explain yourself?''
43614A little girl being asked at a national school examination,''What David was before he was made king?''
43614And after all, why should we deprecate the result?
43614And indeed were they not great marvels( though of another order from those to which they were accustomed) which were narrated to them?
43614And may not Gannes have some relation with Kan or Khan( p. 322)?
43614And why do you let those pale- faced creatures pursue me with their hollow glances?
43614Are these mere spectres without distinct contour?...
43614Besides all this, have they not preserved to us, as in a registering mirror, the manners and habits of thought of the ages preceding ours?
43614But her talk showed she was of the right stuff to make a housewife; but then Maddalena, what will she say?
43614But what are those premises?
43614Cavalleria ben fornita?
43614Could anyone out of a dream put such ideas together?
43614Do they recall fantastic dreams long vanished from our horizon, hopes that have set never to rise again?...
43614Do they remind us of a distant home-- of a happy childhood?
43614Domenika honestly outspoke her inward cogitations on the subject-- what could a poor cattle- herd do?
43614Have they not served to record as well as to mould the noblest aspirations of those who have gone before?
43614In the morning he reasoned,''Why should I journey further when my ring can give one all one wants?''
43614Not liking to own himself puzzled, the rich man asked again,''Where is your father?''
43614Posed again, the rich man proceeded,''And where''s your mother?''
43614The giant with Barbiscat knocked first, and at midnight a magician came out and said,''Earthworm, wherefore are you come?''
43614Then the first said,''What shall we be at?''
43614Was it''Gannes''or''strega?''
43614What did he gain, however, by his uncannily- earned prowess?
43614What did he then do?
43614What was the Italian used for the words rendered in the German by''Witch?''
43614Which should he follow?
43614Who could throw away so fair a chance?
43614Who was the Berchtl?
43614Who was this deliverer?
43614Why should we not seek for similar delight in studying the figures of the Germanic Pantheon, and the rich folk- lore connected with them?
43614[ 239] Gh''è''n prà Tutto garofalà: Quanca se vien el Papa con tutta la sô paperia En garòfol sol no l''è bon de portar via?
43614are they not, even in their uncouth passions, the representatives of a primitive race, in which the pulse throbs with youthful freshness?
43614do n''t you know about Oswald Milser?''
43614exclaimed the famished children,''where shall we find water?
43614or for''Giant''and''Wild man:''was it''l''om salvadegh''or''salvan''or''orco?''
43614or of the thousand and one ruined castles which mark the''sky- line''of Tirol with melancholy beauty?
43614what was that?
43614who thinks of it?
36312''Hath she brought the book to you( the accusing girls)?'' 36312 ''How can you say you know nothing, when you see these tormented and accuse you?''
36312''Is this folly to see these so hurt?'' 36312 ''Of what sin?''
36312''Sarah Good, do you not see now what you have done? 36312 ''Sarah Good, what evil spirit have you familiarity with?''
36312''Well, sir, would you have me confess what I never knew?'' 36312 ''What did you think of the actions of others before your sisters came out?
36312''What do you say to this?'' 36312 ''What do you say; are you guilty?''
36312''What do you think ails them?'' 36312 ''What have you done to these children?''
36312''What_ creature_ do you employ, then?'' 36312 ''Why did you go away muttering from Mr. Parris''s house?''
36312''Why, do you not think it is witchcraft?'' 36312 Can you not,"we asked,"find him through her?"
36312How did you afflict folks? 36312 I do not hurt poor children?
36312O, star- eyedFancy,"hast thou wandered there, To waft us back the message of"--_credulity_?
36312Sarah Good being then asked, if that_ she_ did not hurt them, who did it? 36312 She_ pretended_ that the evil[?]
36312TheWhy have you done it?"
36312Were you to serve the devil ten years? 36312 What does she eat or drink?"
36312Who is it then?
36312Who made you a witch? 36312 Why did you say the magistrates''and ministers''eyes were blinded,"and"you would open them?
36312Why did you say you would show us? 36312 Why make an alternative?
36312_ Q._ At first beginning with them, what then appeared to you? 36312 _ Q._ But what did they say unto you?
36312_ Q._ Did he ask you no more but the first time to serve him? 36312 _ Q._ Did you ever go with these women?
36312_ Q._ Did you go with the company? 36312 _ Q._ Did you never practice witchcraft in your own country?
36312_ Q._ Did you see them do it now while you are examining( being examined)? 36312 _ Q._ Do you never see something appear in some shape?
36312_ Q._ Elizabeth Hubbard, who hurts you? 36312 _ Q._ How long since you began to pinch Mr. Parris''s children?
36312_ Q._ Is that the same man that appeared before to you, that appeared last night and told you this? 36312 _ Q._ Susan Sheldon, who hurts you?
36312_ Q._ Tell us true; how many women do you use to come when you ride abroad? 36312 _ Q._ What appearance, or how doth he appear when he hurts them?"
36312_ Q._ What clothes doth the man appear unto you in? 36312 _ Q._ What did he say you must do more?
36312_ Q._ What do you say to this you are charged with? 36312 _ Q._ What familiarity have you with the devil, or what is it that you converse withal?
36312_ Q._ What hath Osburn got to go with her? 36312 _ Q._ What made you hold your arm when you were searched?
36312_ Q._ What other creatures have you seen? 36312 _ Q._ What other likenesses besides a man hath appeared unto you?
36312_ Q._ What? 36312 _ Q._ When did he say you must meet together?
36312_ Q._ Who was that appeared to Hubbard as she was going from Proctor''s? 36312 _ Q._ With what shape, or what is_ he_ like that hurts them?
36312_ Q._ Would they have had you hurt the children last night? 36312 _ Q._''What did it propound to you?''
36312_ Q._''What lying spirit is this? 36312 _ Q._''What lying spirit was it, then?''
36312_ Tituba, the Indian woman, examined March 1, 1692.__ Q._ Why do you hurt these poor children?
36312''Are you certain this is the woman?''
36312''Are you not willing to tell the truth?''
36312''Do you think they are bewitched?''
36312''Doth this woman hurt you?''
36312''Have you made no contract with the devil?''
36312''Have you made no contract with the devil?''
36312''How came they thus tormented?''
36312''How comes your appearance just now to hurt these?''
36312''How do I know?''
36312''Then,''said I,''how can all these things be done by him?''
36312''What God do you serve?''
36312''What commandment is it?''
36312''What do you laugh at?''
36312''What is it you say when you go muttering away from persons''houses?''
36312''What psalm?''
36312''Who do you employ, then, to do it?''
36312''Who do you employ, then?''
36312''Who do you serve?''
36312''Who do you think is their master?''
36312''Who was it, then, that tormented the children?''
36312''Why do you hurt these children?''
36312''Why, who was it?''
3631270),"Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is_ a devil_?"
36312:"What does she eat or drink?
36312A trifle, was that?
36312And especially who"improved her tongue to express what was never in her mind"?
36312And how was it with the others?
36312And what is involved in that?
36312And when was he first seen?
36312And which boy did he see?
36312And who was_ the black man_?
36312And whose emotions mantled her face with smiles in the stern and frowning presence of"authority"?
36312And why"_ greater_ cruelty"?
36312And why?
36312And why?
36312Are expert tricksters accustomed to disown their own powers to astonish?
36312Are the results of your course to be lamented?
36312But is there probability either that he dictated any part of her testimony, or that she fabricated anything?
36312But seemingly the court could not wait for an answer, because, in the same breath, it asked, What did your visitant tell you?
36312But the magistrate seemingly doubted its truth or its sufficiency, for he next asked,--"_ Q._ Why have you done it?
36312But the_ cui bono_, the what good?
36312But what did her master require her to"stand to"?
36312But what did she say by way of confessing or accusing?
36312But which, among the human faculties, did that delusion spell- bind, stultify, and make sanguinary?
36312But who was genuine author of playful proceedings at a time when the business was so grave and solemn?
36312But why she?
36312But why to Thomas Putnam''s?
36312But with what eyes?
36312By whom was it seen?
36312Can any one doubt that she conceived herself to be speaking to the same being, though in dog form, that she had yielded to before in form like a man?
36312Can reflection find her competent to all that was ascribed to her?
36312Community called such matters witchcrafts, and why should not these children do the same?
36312Confessed to what?
36312Could Ann Foster''s gray- haired man have been Tituba''s white- haired visitant-- the originator and enactor of Salem witchcraft?
36312Could firm, true men, holding then prevalent beliefs, have done less?
36312Dadie thought I spoke, and said,''What''m?''
36312Did he believe that_ demons_ acted within her, held her back, and made her something like three times heavier than she normally was?
36312Did he offer you any paper?
36312Did he say you must write anything?
36312Did he see, hear, and feel all that he testifies to?
36312Did he tell you who they were?
36312Did such observable effects occur as Mather described?
36312Did supernal prescience select and post agents peculiarly fitted to perform the witchcraft tragedy?
36312Did the historian himself who quoted those words and let them appear to be accurately descriptive of facts, believe that they were such?
36312Did they, or did other agencies, produce the mysterious disorders which seemed to devil- dreading beholders like diabolical obsessions?
36312Did you think it was witchcraft?''
36312Do such feats bespeak their origin in_ delirium tremens_?
36312Do you get those cats, or other things, to do it for you?
36312Does he believe that such things were actually performed either by or through her?
36312Does he believe that such were the literal facts even in appearance?
36312Does the hugeness which debars them from entering contracted domiciles to- day prove their existence to be but fabulous?
36312Doth the devil tell you that he hurts them?
36312Doth the devil tell you that he hurts them?"
36312Elizabeth Knap''s visitant-- the one to whom she said,"What cheer, old man?"
36312Especially do they ever spontaneously avow that the devil or any_ evil spirit_ is helping them?
36312For who, in any community, would ever count one_ a saint_ who manifested such offensive qualities to any great extent as he ascribed to her?
36312For,--"_ Q._ What did you say to him, then, after that?
36312From whom came the things put forth through her which"she knew nothing of"?
36312From whom came the tones, if not the words, of languages which this possessed girl had never learned?
36312Had he met Tituba?
36312Had it less sagacity than his own?
36312Had she divulged her knowledge, what heed would have been given to the word of the ignorant slave?
36312Had she made a_ covenant_ with the devil, or any devotee of his?
36312Has he left record of a series of facts, or only of fictions which he set forth as facts?
36312Has the Great Permitter of the many sufferings which war has engendered been"shockingly wicked"?
36312Hath the devil ever deceived you and been false to you?''
36312He said,''Miss Perkins, can I go out and see who''s there?''
36312He was stating facts, which, in his apprehension, were harmless, and why should he not let them out?
36312Her patients promiscuously?
36312His only question was, did the thing occur?
36312How can the occurrence of such facts be explained, or rather_ who_ produced them?
36312How could he?
36312How did the historian account for such-- for those seeming"more than natural"?
36312How did you set your hand to it?
36312How else can thought inhere?"
36312How far have you complied with Satan whereby he takes this advantage of you?''
36312How far up, down, around, do natural forces and agents extend and operate?
36312How much beneficence did one then need to perform before public sentiment, would reprobate its author?
36312How much did this import?
36312How old are you now?
36312How_ know_ that she or her case was the then all- engrossing topic?
36312How_ know_ that their manner was expressive of any particular topic of conversation?
36312Hutchinson says,"The most remarkable occurrence in the colony in the year 1655[ 1656?]
36312Hutchinson states that Mr. Dane himself"is_ tenderly_ touched in several of the examinations, which"( the tenderness?)
36312I presently asked her, what letter?
36312I said to him,''Can you say your lesson?''
36312If he resembled an Indian, is not the inference very fair that he was an Indian?
36312If there be a fixed limit to nature''s domain, where is it?
36312If we presume( and why may we not?)
36312If_ entranced_, was the girl, then, a voluntary seer and speaker?
36312Indeed, how can any other than perverted vision see harm in the girl''s filial compact?
36312Indeed, who among men could possibly have taught or helped her to prophesy correctly, to hear the far distant, or to embody a spirit child?
36312Is crabbed temper there?
36312Is ignorance of, or is knowledge of, nature''s forces and inhabitants the greater blessing?
36312Is it possible that the mind of man should be capable of such strong prejudices as that a suspicion of fraud should not immediately arise?
36312Is she a witch or a cunning woman?
36312Is slander there?
36312Is that idea conveyed in calling her a successful practitioner?
36312Is there only one kind of mental power throughout the whole animal kingdom, differing only in intensity and range of manifestation?
36312Is this the woman?''
36312Little Sarah was asked,--"How long have you been a witch?
36312May not natural endowments sometimes be ample qualification for admitting the evolvement through one''s form of very great marvels?
36312Modern wisdom(?)
36312Most seriously we ask whether forces which can be and have been measured by palpable scales, are"beyond the legitimate boundaries of human knowledge?"
36312Mrs. Morse''s possession of their secret was so unaccountable that the husband in astonishment asked,"Is she a witch or a cunning woman?"
36312My husband presently said, What?
36312Now, then, there are some persons_ so constituted_ that they perceive these shadows(?)
36312On that Wednesday night"Abigail first became ill.""_ Q._ Where was your master then?
36312Or the second time?
36312Perhaps he did; and yet on what rational grounds could he?
36312She cried out to him,"What cheer, old man?"
36312She had penetration enough to_ conjecture_"( why say_ conjecture_?)
36312Should they be called outgrowths from"fraud and imposture,"as they were by another?
36312Should they be left unadduced and unalluded to, as they were by one elaborate historian?
36312The external or the internal one-- the boy material or the boy spiritual?
36312The girl''s confession?
36312The outer or the inner-- his material or his spiritual ones?
36312The question was repeated thus:"_ Why_ did you never visit these afflicted persons?"
36312The same question, partially, is up to- day-- viz., Can any but willing devotees to Satan be used in the processes of spirit manifestations?
36312The_ confessions_(?)
36312The_ only_ charge_ proved_?
36312Then what did you answer him?
36312Then why write?
36312Therefore our fathers would with conscious propriety ask any one whom they supposed to be under"an evil hand,""Who hurts you?"
36312This begs the primal question, viz.,_ Did_ he undertake to torment them?
36312This weakness(?)
36312To whom can they refer, if not to spirits of some grade?
36312Was clear statement of what its senses had witnessed evidence of its credulity?
36312Was he a faithful and true witness, or not?
36312Was it causing iron to swim?
36312Was it foolish in him to state the truth?
36312Was it only her_ pretense_?
36312Was it so?
36312Was its belief in the testimony of its own senses a proof of its_ credulity_?
36312Was she so generous as to give credit to another, and that other an"evil spirit,"for help which she did not receive?
36312Was that a condition of things in which the younger two would join the elder in sly additions to the distress around them?
36312Was that a_ deluded_ court, representative of a_ deluded_ people, which condemned Margaret Jones to"hang high on the gallows- tree"?
36312Was that a_ playful_ moment?
36312Was the former generation less truthful than his own?
36312Was their perception of him nothing more than the product of the imagination of the witnesses?
36312Was there any_ fraud_?
36312Was there anywhere a prior institution of that kind?
36312Were Braybrook''s statements true as to the main fact?
36312Were all the declarations false?
36312Were all those youthful females shockingly wicked?
36312Were horses, vehicles, and drivers, or were even saddle- horses, regularly at the command of such girls for conveyance to and from such meetings?
36312Were its senses less reliable?
36312Were the external senses of a whole community so disordered that the character and dimensions of sensible acts were grossly misapprehended?
36312Were these doings by Mather foolish and useless?
36312What amount of success in alleviating the sufferings that flesh is heir to would invoke public vengeance?
36312What beatings might she not well fear if she confessed to any dealings with invisible beings?
36312What did he say you must do?
36312What did he tell you?"
36312What do you ride upon?
36312What had you there?
36312What harm have they done unto you?
36312What if it was?
36312What is fit treatment of such facts and testimony from such a source?
36312What is_ he_ like?
36312What miracle did he concede that the devil can work?
36312What more common than for attendants to offer and urge upon a suffering and agonized person any stimulant or cordial at hand?
36312What next?
36312What persons would be summoned into court to testify concerning her when such was the charge?
36312What qualities give better_ a priori_ promise of correct testimony than do sincerity and a sound understanding?
36312What started, and extended, and intensified that tongue if it did wag?
36312What then?
36312What then?
36312What then?
36312What though all spectators failed to see the Indian?
36312What though the agitation of Christendom brings its latent iniquities and impurities to the surface?
36312What though the counterparts of publicans, sinners, and harlots float numerously into view?
36312What unseen power?
36312What was it like that got you to do it?
36312What was the character of the Goodwin children themselves?
36312What was their duty?
36312What were the accusations against him?
36312What were those feats?
36312What would you have me do?''
36312What, therefore, must be done?
36312What, therefore, was the historian''s necessity?
36312What_ lies_ were or could be fabricated against such a woman, the nature of which the common sagacity of society there and then would not detect?
36312What_ lies_ which the truthfulness of society there and then would not decline to repeat against her?
36312When I ceased working upon my patient, her husband said,''Do you suppose you can affect_ me_ in the same way?''
36312When her master hath asked her( Tituba?)
36312When she perceived and called out to some personage invisible to her companions, saying,"What cheer, old man?"
36312Whence the excitement itself-- such excitement as could regard an accurate guess as necessarily the offspring of diabolical insight?
36312Whence the impulse?
36312Where are they?
36312Where did they find him?
36312Wherein lurks anything which indicates that the witnesses in this case stated anything that was not substantially true?
36312Which is most dutiful to God and friendly to man?
36312Which is most scientific?
36312Which shall we do?
36312Which?
36312Which?
36312Which?
36312Which?
36312Which?
36312Who and what was he?
36312Who but visible or audible spirits, proving themselves to be such, can give decisive response to that momentous question?
36312Who first appeared to her?
36312Who helped the little clergyman lift and hold the heavy gun?
36312Who knows?
36312Who knows?
36312Who sees either mind, or the force by which an aching toe reports to the brain and excites the sympathy of the whole organism?
36312Who sees electricity, magnetism, gravitation, attraction, cohesion, repulsion?
36312Who was the prime mover?
36312Who was"my Indian man"?
36312Who, next to Powell, among those present at the manifestations, was most likely to have made a covenant with the Evil One?
36312Why afraid of such result?
36312Why call that a_ pretense_, and make her a liar?
36312Why did any intelligent being, whether mortal or spirit, thus woefully invade and disturb the homes of able, honored, worthy Christian men?
36312Why did n''t you take the words of your own witnesses as corroborative of the man''s statement?
36312Why did the people of his time take his life?
36312Why do you not tell us the truth?
36312Why do you thus torment these poor children?''
36312Why not put some confidence in the words of this religiously educated girl?
36312Why say_ pretended_?
36312Why should they lead to, or rather why fix upon, the beloved and venerated Mrs. Nurse?
36312Why was such a one an enterer of complaints against neighbors, whether high or low, good or bad?
36312Why, said she, hadst not thee such a letter from such a man at such a time?
36312Why?
36312Why?
36312With''eagerness of mind''she asked them,''Does she tell you what clothes I have on?''
36312Yes,_ what_ unseen power?
36312Yes; who that baker whose cake raised the devil, and caused apparitions to become exceeding plenty?
36312_ Ans._''What do I know?
36312_ Ans._''Would you have me accuse myself?''
36312_ Beyond a doubt?_ Perhaps not in some minds.
36312_ Mortal._"How do spirits materialize?"
36312_ Q._ And what book did he bring, a great or little book?
36312_ Q._ And what did he say to you when you made your mark?
36312_ Q._ And when would he come then?
36312_ Q._ But did he tell you the names of the other?
36312_ Q._ But why did not you do so before?
36312_ Q._ Can you look upon these and not knock them down?
36312_ Q._ Did he get it out of your body?
36312_ Q._ Did he not make you write your name?
36312_ Q._ Did he show you in the book which was Osburn''s and which was Good''s mark?
36312_ Q._ Did he tell you the names of them?
36312_ Q._ Did he tell you where the nine lived?
36312_ Q._ Did they do any hurt to you or threaten you?
36312_ Q._ Did they write their names?
36312_ Q._ Did you go into that room in your own person, and all the rest?
36312_ Q._ Did you promise him this when he first spake to you?
36312_ Q._ Did you see any other marks in his book?
36312_ Q._ Did you see the man that morning?
36312_ Q._ Did you write?
36312_ Q._ Do not those cats suck you?
36312_ Q._ Do not you see them?
36312_ Q._ Have you seen Good and Osburn ride upon a pole?
36312_ Q._ How did you go?
36312_ Q._ How did you pinch them when you hurt them?
36312_ Q._ How do you hurt those that you pinch?
36312_ Q._ How far did you go-- to what town?
36312_ Q._ How long ago was this?
36312_ Q._ How many marks do you think there was?
36312_ Q._ How many times did you go to Boston?
36312_ Q._ What apparel do the women wear?
36312_ Q._ What bird?
36312_ Q._ What black man did you see?
36312_ Q._ What black man is that?
36312_ Q._ What clothes the little woman?
36312_ Q._ What did he say to you then?
36312_ Q._ What did he say you must do in that book?
36312_ Q._ What did he say you must say?
36312_ Q._ What did he then to you?
36312_ Q._ What did these cats do?
36312_ Q._ What did they say?
36312_ Q._ What did this man say to you when he took hold of you?
36312_ Q._ What did you promise him?
36312_ Q._ What is the other thing that Goody Osburn hath?
36312_ Q._ What kind of clothes hath she?
36312_ Q._ What other creatures did you see?
36312_ Q._ What other pretty things?
36312_ Q._ What service do they expect from you?
36312_ Q._ What should you have done with it?
36312_ Q._ What sights did you see?
36312_ Q._ What time of night?
36312_ Q._ When did Good tell you she set her hand to the book?
36312_ Q._ When did you see them?
36312_ Q._ When?
36312_ Q._ Where did you go?
36312_ Q._ Where does it keep?
36312_ Q._ Who came back with you again?
36312_ Q._ Who did make you go?
36312_ Q._ Who tells you so?
36312_ Q._ Who were they that told you so?
36312_ Second Examination, March 2, 1692._"_ Q._ What covenant did you make with that man that came to you?
36312_ The Examination of Martha Carrier, May 31, 1692._"_ Q._ Abigail Williams, who hurts you?
36312_ The only charge proved!_ What can that mean?
36312_ These shadows_(?)
36312and especially why perpetrate such agonizing cruelties upon bright, lovely, and promising children?
36312have they done unto you?"
36312her course of fraud and imposture?
36312her frolic?
36312or of acts called witchcraft of old?
36312or was it such lifting of Margaret Rule as had been sworn to?
36312see the devil?"
45153But, mamma, do you think there are any wild dogs in the cavern?
45153What should I have felt if you had been in her situation?
45153Would you like to see the chapel?
45153( Bold?)
45153A.?)
45153And I asked Margaret,"whether she had done anything in lieu of it, which might answer it to the children?"
45153And does the kingly purple, and governing refractory worlds instead of stitching coarse shoes, make it any merrier?
45153And say we not all,"Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed,& c."?
45153And we asked him who should do it, then?
45153But why are they unfortunate?
45153Cuckoo, shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice?
45153Did he find a resting- place there?
45153Do we not all come of Adam, our earthly father?
45153For this your glorious progress next ordain, With chariots, horsemen, and a numerous train?
45153Friends we have had-- the years flew by, How many have they borne away?
45153He went on to say, that many years previously( I forget the exact date)[ 1828] he was in attendance upon one Miss Hale( Miss Frances Hall?)
45153How can we crack then of our ancient stock, seeing we came all both of one earthly and heavenly Father?
45153How many churches have had the full measure of services prescribed, in which from time immemorial the most scanty administration had sufficed?
45153How many parishes have been supplied with resident clergy, in which no pastoral care had been for years manifested?
45153I asked them why then did they did not appease the people, and keep them sober?
45153If ye mark the common saying, how gentle blood came up, ye shall see how true it is:-- When Adam delved, and Eve span, Who was then a gentleman?
45153Is God asleep on those days?
45153Is He weary, that He must rest Him in those days?
45153It''m, for a suet of coopes( suit of copes) claymed by ye inhabitants of Cartmell to belong to ye Church thereof, the gift of oon Brigg?
45153Man like the hours is born to die, The last year''s hours, oh, where are they?
45153Or doth He give the ruling of those days to some evil spirit or planet?
45153Or in favour of him, George?
45153Or the difference between Lord Hugh and Hugh Lord?
45153So the truth came over them, that when one of the rude fellows cried"he would swear,"one of the justices checked him, saying,"What will you swear?
45153Was thy own life merry, for example, in the hollow of the tree, clad permanently in leather?
45153What shall I do?"
45153When did Dissenters know anything of heraldry?
45153Wherefore I asked, where were the magistrates that they did not keep the people civil?
45153Whereupon I asked them,"whether, if their mother married, they should not lose by it?"
45153Why do n''t those acred sirs Throw up their parks some dozen times a year, And let the people breathe?
45153Will not the exploding gunpowder drive the firewood where they sit?
45153or doth He not rule the world and all things those days as well as on other days?
45336Are you then recalled to Poland?
45336Art thou the admiral?
45336Do you pardon your enemies?
45336Good people of Paris,said the Constable on his arrival at their camp,"what meaneth this?
45336Good people,protested Marcel,"why would you do me ill?
45336Is it for a man or a woman?
45336Is it your will?
45336My cure? 45336 Then,"said the king,"why am I asked to abandon it?"
45336What did he die of?
45336What do they take from me?
45336What do you ask?
45336Whither are you carrying that coffin?
45336Who are you?
45336And of the strong city built on the little island in the Seine who could have been its founder but the ravisher of fair Helen-- Sir Paris himself?
45336As she passed the lines of English soldiers, their eyes flashing fierce hatred upon her, a cry escaped her,"O Rouen, Rouen, must I then die here?"
45336As the duke hastened to spoil his victims, crying out--"Where is the archbishop?"
45336As we crossed the courtyard of the palace[23] he said:''Seest thou not what I perceive above this roof?''
45336At length he turned and said:"Know ye, my faithful servants, wherefore I weep thus bitterly?
45336Do they turn to the right?
45336He asked again,''Seest thou naught else?''
45336Louis XIV., who sat to him many times, one day, towards the end of his life, asked,"Do you find me changed?"
45336My life?
45336See you yon lights?
45336Soldiers of Italy, will you lack courage?"
45336Turning to the angels, Jesus said:"Know ye who hath thus arrayed Me?
45336Well may St. Simon exclaim,"Are these princes made like other men?"
45336When he entered Abbeville with the magnificent Duke of Burgundy, the people said"_ Benedicite!_ is that a king of France?
45336Where is the ancient prowess of France?
45336cried Maillart,"what dost thou here at this hour?"
45336must I suffer new trouble every day?"
45336shall I never be in peace?
38579A what?
38579Ai n''t you acoming in here, young man?
38579Ai n''t you afraid?
38579Ai n''t you going in?
38579Am dat so?
38579Are they fresh?
38579Are you at the helm?
38579Are you hurt?
38579But why should you act upon a different rule from other men?
38579But you can have it longer if you wish--"Ah, monsieur, sal be ver mooch glad if I can have zat house_ so long as I please_--eh-- monsieur?
38579But,she asked,"how came these names here-- names I never saw before?"
38579Can you hold on five minutes longer, John?
38579Come to what?
38579Den we dot up and prayed dust well as we tould, And Dod answered our prayers: now was n''t He dood?
38579Did you ever try it?
38579Do n''t you hear the governor calling? 38579 Do you consider_ your_ life worth more than other people''s?"
38579Do you hear me, I say?
38579Do you send mail there?
38579Do you think any of your company would have missed you, if you had been killed?
38579Does yer mean ter sen''me away from yer, Mass Cap''n?
38579End is there none?
38579For the Holy War? 38579 God of the flower,"he said, with reverent voice,"The violet lives again, and why not I?
38579Have you any eggs this morning, Uncle Mose?
38579How did this occur?
38579How does she head?
38579How long before we can reach there?
38579How old are you?
38579How so?
38579How''d I get it?
38579I wanted to know if you liked my f''ower?
38579If he wanted a piece of gingerbread, why did n''t he say so? 38579 In,_ in_, ter,_ ter_,_ inter_"--"Then you spell it with an_ I_?"
38579Is it askin''ye are, phwat''s makin''me croiy?
38579Is she comin''?
38579Is that all?
38579Is there any danger?
38579Is there such a place in this country as Cleveland?
38579Is this Heaven? 38579 Is this the woman?"
38579Is your name Mrs. Bacon, dear?
38579Just hold me at first, Sam, will you?
38579Major, your men?
38579Me? 38579 Now,"said Wardle, after a substantial lunch,"what say you to an hour on the ice?
38579Oh, holy father,Alice said,"''twould grieve you, would it not, To discover that I was a most disreputable lot?
38579Oh, my goodness? 38579 Phy, Dinny, me bhoy, ye''re croiyin''yersilf,"He said with a chuckle and grin;"Phwat''s troublin''_ yer_ sowl?
38579Run at the first fire, did you?
38579See?
38579Spell what?
38579Stood your ground, did you?
38579Then it will be two cents, eh?
38579Then it will take twelve cents?
38579Then patriotism and honor are nothing to you?
38579Then you must value it very highly?
38579Well, but have you no regard for your reputation?
38579Well, now, what are you going to do?
38579Well, who asked you to give me anything?
38579Well, why tan''t we p''ay dest as mamma did den, And ask Dod to send him with p''esents aden?
38579Were you in the fight?
38579Whar''s it at, Mass Cap''n?
38579What can an ignorant old woman like her want to hear Dr.---- preach for? 38579 What can you do?"
38579What did you come here for?
38579What for?
38579What have we here?
38579What is it?
38579What satisfaction would dat be to me when de power ob feelin''was gone?
38579What troubles you, child?
38579What''s she doin''?
38579What''s she doin''now?
38579What''s that?
38579When is yer gwine, Mass Cap''n?
38579Where have you come from?
38579Where is she now?
38579Where is your mother?
38579Which way is she lookin''?
38579Who is defending her?
38579Who vash dot?
38579Who vhants to catch''em?
38579Who was she?
38579Why ai n''t they?
38579Why should I bow the proud, imperious knee, To mighty powers no mortal eye can see?
38579Why should I keep der flies oudt? 38579 Why, how ole am de boy?"
38579Why, my_ dear_ sir, what did_ you_ propose to spell it with?
38579Why?
38579Will you give me those boots? 38579 Will you please tell me your first name?"
38579Yes, Tobe, what is it?
38579Yes, my boy: what shall I tell them?
38579Yes, sa, I does; more dan all dis world, more dan a million ob dollars, sa; for what would dat be wuth to a man wid the bref out ob him? 38579 You skate, of course, Winkle?"
38579''Twas only aid he wanted to help him across the wave, But what are a couple of women with only a man to save?
38579A patient form I seemed ter see, In tidy dress of black, I almost thought I heard the words,"When will my boy come back?"
38579A whiff came through the open door-- Wuz I sleepin''or awake?
38579After lying a few minutes with closed eyes, as if in sleep, he suddenly whispered:"Dinah, whar is you?
38579Ah?
38579Amazed and surprised, Mr. Dinny O''Doyle Said:"Michael, me darlin''bhoy, Phwat''s troublin''yer sowl?
38579An''de chillun-- whar''s de chillun?
38579An''doan''yer see de pearly gates a- openin''to let ole black Jake go frew?
38579An''the ould mother says,"Sure, an''it is; an''have ye the little rid hin?"
38579An''yer''ll be kind to my wife and chilluns for my sake, wo n''t yer?"
38579An''yo''say she has childruns?
38579And do n''t she look just lovely in that picture?
38579And in all chivalrous France was there not a champion to take up the gauntlet in defence of a helpless girl?
38579And truly I think that they may be well called so-- what word strikes so forcibly upon the heart as mother?
38579And we''ve been very happy-- have we not?"
38579And what have we to oppose to them?--Shall we try argument?
38579And what is this?
38579Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
38579Are not my people happy?
38579Are they dead that yet act?
38579Are they dead that yet move upon society, and inspire the people with nobler motives, and more heroic patriotism?
38579Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language?
38579Are you God''s wife?"
38579Are you an angel?"
38579Are you ready to begin?"
38579Art thou the one Who hast so long his vengeance counted dear?
38579Beautiful story, is n''t it?
38579Bess looked at the babies a moment, With their wee heads, yellow and brown, And then to grandma soberly said,"_ Which one are you going to drown_?"
38579Buried him without knowing whether he was dead or not?
38579But soft-- through the ghastly air Whose falling tear was that?
38579But what is the fare to poppy land?
38579But when shall we be stronger?
38579But why pause here?
38579By Bill Nye, 70 How"Old Mose"Counted Eggs, 272 How Shall I Love You?
38579Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
38579Can you face the just Judge and the souls you have wrecked?
38579De vistles vas plowing, und dem pells vos ringing, und von man shtepped up mit Yawcup und say"Vot vor dem pells pe ringing so mooch?"
38579Did you ever notice what life and power the Holy Scriptures have when well read?
38579Did you ever see a battery take position?
38579Did''st hope to have my knee Bend at thy feet, and with one mighty thrust,"The life thou hatest flee before thee here?
38579Did''st thou think to see A son of Gheva spill upon the dust His noble blood?
38579Do n''t you think you would like to go there?"
38579Do n''t your little boy call you so?"
38579Do you buy all your clothes with missionary money?
38579Do you know you''re destroying both body and soul Of the men whose honor and manhood you''ve stole?
38579Do you murmur a prayer, my brothers, when cozy and safe in bed, For men like these, who are ready to die for a wreck off Mumbles Head?
38579Do you not guess his name?
38579Does it not become a descendant of the Ptolemies and of Cleopatra?
38579Does not your heart beat responsive to mine?"
38579Does the hard accusation arouse you to fright?
38579Eh, monsieur?"
38579Every morning he would question:"Will she come to me to- day?"
38579Fine countenance, has n''t he?
38579For what?
38579Go''st thou to build an early name, Or early in the task to die?
38579HOW SHALL I LOVE YOU?
38579Had she not bled for them?
38579Had she not faithfully done her work?
38579Had she not saved the kingdom?
38579Had you, or have you, any brothers or sisters?
38579Handsome picture, ai n''t it?
38579Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
38579Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
38579Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love?
38579Have you never looked at yourself in the light Of a thief, nay, worse, a murderer, too?
38579He came to life again?
38579He disappeared, then?
38579He knew that few would ever ask,"What must I do to be saved?"
38579He looked at the silver and bills and gold, And he said:"She gives all this to me?
38579He looks like a man to do that, do n''t he?
38579He''ll be bruised, and so shall I-- How can I from bedposts keep, When I''m walking in my sleep?
38579Her dark eyes lit with the flash of fire, And she said:"You will pity my need most dire?
38579How canst thou then behold the God of Light, Before whose face the sunbeams are as night?
38579How could he be a hypocrite then?
38579How did you happen to meet Burr?
38579How do you account for that?
38579How do you like your house?"
38579How shall I love you?
38579How shall I love you?
38579How''s your son coming on at de school?
38579I am so sorry; will you ever forgive me?
38579I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
38579I know that I did it myself?
38579I look upon the past and the present, upon my nearer and remoter subjects, and ask, nor fear the answer, Whom have I wronged?
38579I said,--"How do you spell it?"
38579If you were at his funeral, he must have been dead; and, if he was dead, how could he care whether you made a noise or not?
38579Is he not grand?"
38579Is it fixed in nature that the limits of this empire should be Egypt on the one hand, the Hellespont and the Euxine on the other?
38579Is it not a magnificent sight to see that strange soldier and that noble black horse, dashing like a meteor, down the long columns of battle?
38579Is it not an honorable ambition?
38579Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
38579Is it wapin''ye are for a sin?"
38579Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
38579Is life worth living for its little hour Of empty pleasure, if decay we must?"
38579Is n''t that a brother of yours?
38579Is n''t that gorgeous?
38579Is n''t that voluntary lovely?
38579Is no poppy- syrup nigh?
38579Is there a burden your heart must bear?
38579Is there a thorn in the crown that you wear?
38579Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
38579Is_ so_ much ambition praiseworthy, and_ more_ criminal?
38579Lemme have your name, wo n''t you?"
38579Let the ambition be a noble one, and who shall blame it?
38579Nature soon will stupefy-- My nerves relax-- my eyes grow dim-- Who''s that fallen, me or him?"
38579Now is n''t that splendid?
38579Now, Nursey, what makes you remind me?
38579Now, how does that strike you?
38579Now, where was the mystery?
38579Now, will you give them up?"
38579Oh, Mister Breacher, shall I be cast into dat lake if I am vicked, or shust close py or near to-- shust near enough to be comfortable?
38579Oh, yes!--she stood up and recited, what do you think?
38579Or hath empire no natural limit, but is broad as the genius that can devise, and the power that can win?
38579Phwat the mischief''s about ye that bothers me so?
38579Phwat''s the raison ye''ve tears in yer oi?"
38579Phwat''s wrong wid ye now?
38579Phwat''s wrong wid_ ye_ now?
38579Pickwick?"
38579Praising your beauty, eh?
38579SIX LOVE LETTERS"Are there any more of those letters?"
38579Say, do the nigger ladies use hymn- book leaves to do their hair up on and make it frizzy?
38579Sebenty- two, sebenty- free, sebenty- foah, sebenty- five, sebenty- six, sebenty- seben, sebenty- eight, sebenty- nine-- and your mudder?
38579Shall I put fly- screens in the doors?"
38579Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
38579Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
38579Smart, was n''t it?
38579So one day Captain Leigh said:--"Tobe, how would you like to go North?"
38579So vot you tinks?
38579Still he stares-- I wonder why; Why are not the sons of earth Blind, like puppies, from their birth?
38579Surprising what some of these men have gone through, ai n''t it?
38579That I think, is-- is-- that''s a-- a-- yes, to be sure, Washington-- you recollect him, of course?
38579That''s a pretty cloak you''ve got, ai n''t it?
38579The lady bent over, and whispered,"Are you happier now, my lad?"
38579The padre said:"Whatever have you been and gone and done?"
38579The passengers rushed forward and inquired of the pilot,"How far are we from Buffalo?"
38579The soldiers were about finishing their examination, when one of them said,"What''s that under the seat of that wagon?"
38579The star in the storm and the strength in the strife; How shall I love you, my sweetheart, my wife?
38579Thine eyes before this trifling labor fall, Canst gaze on him who hath created all?
38579This time the door opened in response:"Well, child, what is it?
38579Thy golden fortunes, tower they now, Or melt the glittering spires in air?
38579To feel once more that fresh, wild thrill I''d give-- but who can live youth over?
38579Und ven I looked around dere shtood dot Villiam R. Shtover mit Leavenworth, Kansas-- und I said pooty quick:"Vot vor dem pells vas ringing?
38579Upward floats the voice of mourning--"Jesus, Master, dost thou care?"
38579Very flattering, was n''t it?
38579Want some gingerbread?"
38579Was n''t it a pity?
38579Was n''t it cruel?
38579Well-- where was I?
38579Were not Suez and Armenia more natural limits?
38579What are a couple of women?
38579What do I see on looking back?
38579What do you do it with?"
38579What do you want to spell it for?"
38579What do_ you_ think?
38579What good would forty heads do her?
38579What is it that gentlemen wish?
38579What is sacrifice to doing good and lifting toward heaven our fellow- men?
38579What is that?"
38579What is the matter?
38579What is the matter?
38579What province have I oppressed, what city pillaged, what region drained with taxes?
38579What shall I do?
38579What sound is that that is borne upon the breeze of the summer night?
38579What terms shall we find which have not already been exhausted?
38579What the mischief makes him cry?
38579What was the date of your birth?
38579What was the matter?
38579What would they have?
38579When I heard the first words I thought I should faint(_ imitating_):"Been out in the lifeboat often?
38579When a person gets to be fifty- three years old----""Fifty- free?
38579When in the world did the coxswain shirk?
38579When it''s rougher than this?
38579Where was that mother now?
38579Where were you born?
38579Who have we next?
38579Who is now fluttering in thy snare?
38579Who is this a picture of on the wall?
38579Who of this crowd to- night shall tread The dance till daylight gleam again?
38579Who sorrow o''er the untimely dead?
38579Who was the rider of the black horse?
38579Who writhe in throes of mortal pain?
38579Whoever achieved anything great in letters, arts, or arms, who was not ambitious?
38579Whom do you consider the most remarkable man you ever met?
38579Whose honor have I wantonly assailed?
38579Whose life have I unjustly taken, or whose estates have I coveted or robbed?
38579Whose rights, though of the weakest and poorest, have I violated?
38579Why stand we here idle?
38579Why, boy, did ye take me in earnest?
38579Why, boy, do ye think ye''ll suffer?
38579Why, how ole am de gal?
38579Why, just suppose it was you?
38579Why, you''ll reform, and what will then become of Father Paul?"
38579Will it be the next week, or the next year?
38579Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
38579Will you let me ask you certain questions calculated to bring out the salient points of your public and private history?"
38579Would that be an evil?
38579Would you mind telling me what peculiar circumstance it was that made you think Burr was such a remarkable man?
38579Yer''ll nebber forgit how Jake tuk keer of yer an''de chilluns when ole marster gone to de war?
38579You might make her look all mended-- but what do I care for looks?
38579You say he spoke to you, and that he was dead?
38579You will forgive my presumption, will you not, and speak the words that tremble on your lips-- the words that will fill my cup of joy to overflowing?"
38579You will give me steed to fly afar, To my love in the deserts of Khandakar?"
38579_ A._ Why, have you noticed that?
38579_ A._ Why, what makes you think that?
38579_ Q._ But was n''t he dead?
38579_ Q._ How could I think otherwise?
38579_ Q._ What do_ you_ think?
38579_ Q._ When did you begin to write?
38579_ Q._ Why, how could that be, if you are only nineteen now?
38579_ Q._ Why, is he dead, then?
38579_ Question._ How old are you?
38579_ You_ may call it a"drug store,"but does n''t God know?
38579again demanded the woman,"or do you want me to come out there to you with a stick?
38579are you Americans, men, and fly before British soldiers?
38579came another call, short and sharp;"do you hear me?"
38579do you hear your mother?"
38579doan''yer hear de bells ob heaven a- ringing?
38579have ye the pot bilin''?"
38579really, have I?
38579the angel solemnly demanded:"Is there indeed no end, and is this the sorrow that kills you?"
38579think''st thou yon sanguine cloud Raised by thy breath, can quench the orb of day?
38579what do you think of that?"
38579what do you want of a heathen doll?"
38579when ye come from heaven, my little name- sake dear, Did ye see,''mongst the little girls there, a face like this one here?
38579where is the land that each mortal loves best, The land that is dearest and fairest on earth?
38579who caused your stern heart to relent, And the hasty words spoken so soon to repent?
38579whose breath Waves through the mother''s hair?
45479Will you not submit to our holy father, the Pope?
454791. Who Made the Gods?
45479And which of us would like to be guided to the chambers of the inquisition, and the flames of the stake by"heavenly voices"?
45479And why do I take pleasure in proving this to be inevitable?
45479Another important question is: Why was she put to death?
45479But is it just to hold the whole Church responsible for the crime of an insignificant minority?"
45479But was Joan a heretic?
45479But why should the Church move heaven and earth to prove that it has never committed a mistake?
45479But why was it to the interest of the English to have Joan declared a witch?
45479Does it look as though the crime against Joan were the work of a discredited minority in the Catholic Church?
45479Furthermore, if only a part of the church persecuted the young woman, what did the rest of the church do to save her?
45479How could a king, anointed by the help of a witch, be the king of a Christian nation?
45479How do we explain her"voices"and her"visions"?
45479I shall reproduce in this connection what I said about him after my interview with him:"Who are the Rationalists?"
45479If she should repent of a single act ever committed by her officially, she would lose her claim to infallibility-- for how can the infallible err?
45479If, on the other hand, she should hold to her infallibility, how can she be sorry for anything she has ever done?
45479Is not that wonderful?
45479Is not this a pertinent question?
45479Is this denied?
45479Joan was sacrificed, nay,--the honor of France, of Europe, of civilization, of humanity-- was flung into the fire with Joan, to save-- what?
45479The Gospel of Sport-- What Shall I Do to Be Saved?
45479The hands, it is evident, commit the acts, but whose hands are they?
45479Walking up to the woman, I said,"What fountain is this?"
45479Was Jesus a Socialist?
45479What do you think was the motive of this revision?
45479What has Christ Done for the World?
45479What has he done for France?
45479What is the Trouble with the World?
45479Who is he?
45479Why did her voices, if they were divine, desert her when she needed their help most?
45479Why did they not assume the responsibility for the acts for which she was destroyed?
45479Why did they not save her from prison and the stake?
45479Why does St. Michael usurp the place of honor over the altar?
39997Ah, how do you do, Mr. Nollekens? 39997 Ah, well,"replied Sheridan,"What did he say to it?"
39997And as his strength Failed him at length, He met a pilgrim shadow:''Shadow,''said he,''Where can it be-- This land of Eldorado?'' 39997 And is the second volume to be had separately?"
39997And what, O messenger of God, are the signs of that happy sect to which is insured the exclusive possession of paradise?
39997Are we to think Pope was happy,said he, on another occasion,"because he says so in his writings?
39997Can anything be so elegant,asks Emerson,"as to have few wants and serve them one''s self?
39997Child, shall I tell thee where nature is most blest and fair? 39997 Details?"
39997Did he not repent him that he had made Nineveh?
39997Do n''t you know,urged Sydney Smith,"as the French say, there are three sexes-- men, women, and clergymen?"
39997Do n''t you think that statue indecent?
39997Finishing?
39997How could that be?
39997I asked him,said a child,"how he felt when he left the eleven slaves, taken from Missouri, safe in Canada?
39997Is not every infant that dies of disease murdered by an angel?
39997Montaigne''s Travels I have been reading; if I was tired of the Essays, what must one be of these? 39997 No; but what was he great in?
39997Not know,said the American,"the house of the great Wordsworth?"
39997Pleasures of what?
39997Pure,said Blake,"do you think there is any purity in God''s eyes?
39997Way over yonder?
39997Well, gentlemen, what is the matter here? 39997 Were you, indeed, Mr. Smith?
39997What could entertain you? 39997 What did you give for it?"
39997What do you bring me here for?
39997What folks say''bout me dar?
39997What is the meaning of all these shouts and cries? 39997 What stories are new?"
39997When we see a special reformer, we feel like asking him,says Emerson,"What right have you, sir, to your one virtue?
39997Where, then, and when,he says in his famous Confessions,"did I experience my happy life, that I should remember and love and long for it?
39997Who can even in thought comprehend it, so as to utter a word about it? 39997 Who can readily and briefly explain this?"
39997Who,said the five kings,"is this man who can afford to give a hundred times as much as any of us?
39997Why did you run away from me?
39997Why does everybody love you so much?
39997Why, sir, what have you been doing?
39997Why,asks Souvestre,"is there so much confidence at first, so much doubt at last?
39997Will you be created a count? 39997 Will you be the judge of our quarrel?"
39997Wilt thou not, Eyvind, believe in Christ?
39997Yes; what is it?
39997''And why is it your favorite, Henry?''
39997''And why not?''
39997''At Ambrose''s?''
39997''But is there such a tavern really?''
39997''Indeed,''said I,''how did they go?''
39997''Shall I give you a handkerchief,''he then asked,''and let you drop it as a signal?''
39997''What, madam,''cried Berlaymont in a passion,''is it possible that your highness can entertain fears of these beggars?
39997''Where are my dead forefathers at present?''
39997''Who is that?''
39997''Why so?''
39997''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks out to the steamer?''
39997A point in the conversation suggesting the thought, the president said,"Seward, you never heard, did you, how I earned my first dollar?"
39997An elderly, well- to- do inhabitant of Beaconsfield, of whom the same person inquired where Burke had lived, made answer:"Pray, sir, was he a poet?"
39997And there was Blake--"artist, genius, mystic, or madman?"
39997Are you free from shame in your apartment, when you are exposed only to the light of heaven?"
39997Are you, sir, also a king?"
39997As the terrible breakers broke over them, he asked, wonderingly,"Is this the way you go?
39997Augustine, St., and the idea of Fourierism, 182; subtleties on the question, What then is time?
39997Being asked about the moral character of Dante, in writing his"Vision,"--was he pure?
39997Bowyer asked me why I had made myself such a fool?
39997But did you not do it likewise to save money?''
39997But how could I guess at that, never having treated ladies to a play before, and being, as I said, quite a novice in these kind of entertainments?
39997But time, past or present,--time, what is it?
39997But what in discourse do we mention more familiarly and knowingly, than time?
39997But what shall we say of the instability of human greatness?
39997But when the third rogue met him and said,"Father, where art thou taking that dog?"
39997But who was he?
39997But, my sister, what shall we do?"
39997Calmly considering it, what can be more astonishing than vanity in a middle- aged person?
39997Certainly, said Mathews; but what do you want it for?
39997Compared with such spectacles, with such subjects of triumph as these, what can prætor or consul, quæstor or pontiff, afford?
39997Comparing moral with natural evil, he said,"Who shall say that God thinks evil?
39997Could he lift pots and roofs so handily?
39997Did you ever read that remarkable paper of Lamb''s, the Reminiscences of Juke Judkins, Esq., of Birmingham?
39997Did you ever try, like a little crab, to run two ways at once?
39997Do we not know there have been many princes such as he describes?
39997Do you know, my young friend, that the world has a contempt for the man that entertains it?
39997Do you not see how they die of sadness in the midst of that fortune which has been a burden to them?
39997Do you suppose society is going to take out its pocket- handkerchief and be inconsolable when you die?
39997Do you think it nothing to speak with Orpheus, Musæus, Homer, and Hesiod?"
39997Do you think there is only one?
39997Does a man drink more when he drinks from a large glass?
39997Dunsford, will you give us the words?
39997Elliott, the Corn- Law Rhymer, being asked,"What is a communist?"
39997From whence comes that universal dread of mediocrity, the fruitful mother of peace and liberty?
39997God answered him,"I have suffered him these hundred years, although he dishonored me; and couldst not thou endure him one night?"
39997Has Luther been crucified for the world?"
39997Has, then, the knowledge of life no other end but to make it unfit for happiness?
39997Hast thou not conversed familiarly with the only man greater than he, John Milton?
39997Have the waves ever run after you yet, and turned your little two shoes into pumps, full of water?
39997Have you been bathed yet in the sea, and were you afraid?
39997He asked me,''What is the reason of your fears?''
39997He knew the ground, he knew his plans, he knew himself; but where should he find his men?
39997How could he have done more?
39997How could men have been guilty of such an inconsistency?
39997How did you come?
39997How is it possible that an act of Parliament can supply the place of nature and natural affection?"
39997How is it that we can not truly say that time is, but because it is tending not to be?"
39997How long was it before Cato could be understood?
39997I had no alternative; I instantly went up to him:''What do you want?''
39997I took it, and said to it,''Art thou of heaven or earth?
39997I''m no more an individual than your mother was?''
39997Is it not obvious what manner of men they are?
39997Is it possible that he could have-- talked?''"
39997Is the world, and is the individual man, intended, after all, to find rest only in an eternal childhood?"
39997Is there anything in books more sad and touching?
39997Is there anything more curious or remarkable in fiction than the simple fact expressed by Thucydides, that ignorance is bold and knowledge reserved?
39997Is this the way you go?"
39997Is virtue piecemeal?"
39997It so happened that the question in the catechism which came to the stranger''s turn was that which asks,''How many commandments are there?''
39997Knowledge, in the common sense, as commonly acquired, what is it?
39997Landor, in his Imaginary Conversations, makes Marvell thus to address Marten:"Hast thou not sat convivially with Oliver Cromwell?
39997Men like ourselves are permitted to stand near, and indeed in the very presence of Milton: what do they see?
39997Mrs. Jameson once asked Mrs. Siddons which of her great characters she preferred to play?
39997Must we condemn ourselves to ignorance if we would preserve hope?
39997On her pressing for his opinion of that work, he said,"That is the work-- is it not?--in which you and I are exhibited in the disguise of females?"
39997Percy has preserved the ballad in his Reliques, but who remembers the air?
39997Quoth Master More, How say you in this matter?
39997Rogers said of Sydney Smith( of whose death he had just heard), in answer to the question,"How came it that he did not publicly show his powers?"
39997Says Pope,"What is every year of a wise man''s life but a censure or critique on the past?
39997Socrates asked Menon what virtue was?
39997Socrates, upon receiving sentence of death, said, amongst other things, to his judges,"Is this, do you think, no happy journey?
39997Suddenly she turned and said to him,"If your mother and myself were both to fall into this river, whom would you save first?"
39997The History of the Plague is an example; and Robinson Crusoe: what boy ever doubted the truth of the narrative?
39997The first said to him,"Good day, Master Dante;"the second,"Whence come you, Master Dante?"
39997The stable of Confucius being burned down, when he was at court, on his return he said,"Has any man been hurt?"
39997Then Pilate said unto them, Why, what evil hath he done?
39997They have not had wisdom enough to manage their own estates, and are they now to teach the king and your highness how to govern the country?
39997They would all have some people under them; why not then have some people above them?"
39997Those two times then, past and to come, how are they, seeing the past now is not, and that to come is not yet?
39997To get away from the ideal to the physical, what can at first blush be so absurd as the climatic changes believed by some to be produced by railroads?
39997Toward Allah''s house how dar''st thou turn thy feet?"
39997Walpole?"
39997Walpole?"
39997Was he a preacher or a doctor?"
39997Well, you have not commenced the model?"
39997What could they not, if only they would?"
39997What do you mean?''
39997What does it avail me that all the roses of Sharon tenderly glow and bloom for me?
39997What professor has ever yet been able to classify the wondrous variety of human character?
39997What resemblance do you suppose there is between your spirit and his?"
39997What signifies what a man thought who never thought of anything but himself?
39997What then is time?
39997What think you to be the cause of these shelves and flats that stop up Sandwich Haven?
39997What to do?
39997What want ye?"
39997What, then, has a jail that is formidable?
39997When did you return?
39997When the visitor approached His Majesty,--the dance suspended,--he exclaimed:"English?"
39997Whither go ye?
39997Who and what is Luther?
39997Who would read capabilities like these, in those heavenly and child- like features?"
39997Why are such princes angry at being immortalized by his means?
39997Why do you live upon potatoes?''
39997Why should it care, very much, then, whether your worship graces yourself or disgraces yourself?
39997Why, in all ages and among every people, do we meet with some one of these mad festivals?
39997Will you come forward?''
39997You are bankrupt under odd circumstances?
39997You are taken to prison and fancy yourself indelibly disgraced?
39997You drive a queer bargain with your friend and are found out, and imagine the world will punish you?
39997[ Talleyrand, when Rulhière said he had been guilty of only one wickedness in his life, asked,"When will it end?"]
39997and what signifies what a man did who never did anything?"
39997and"Why should we start and fear to die?"
39997cried Lord Durham,''how did you find that out?
39997did you not know that Cicero was quæstor of Syracuse?"
39997hast thou looked with love on a man who invokes an idol in a pagoda?"
39997how did you cure yourself?"
39997how to do?
39997is n''t it enough?"
39997it cried;"what am I in such a sea?"
39997it will be questioned,''when the sun rises, do you not see a disc of fire somewhat like a guinea?''
39997or that by Emerson, that the astonishment of life is the absence of any appearance of reconciliation between the theory and practice of life?
39997or that by Hazlitt, that every man, in his own opinion, forms an exception to the ordinary rules of humanity?
39997or that by Prescott, that in every country the most fiendish passions of the human heart are those kindled in the name of religion?
39997or that by Thomas Fuller, that learning has gained most by those books by which the printers have lost?
39997or, while he was reading them, the adventures of Lemuel Gulliver, incredible as they are?
39997she replied;"and why did you not tell me that before?
39997she screamed,''what do you mean by that?
39997the little dear, is he going to open his eyesy- pysy?"
39997the third,"Are the waters deep, Master Dante?"
39997who has not wanted one thing?
39997why dost thou carry that dog on thy shoulder?"
46115I then said to Mr. Myers:''Are we going to make a fight for it?''
46115If our semi- trained troops had broken under these combined stresses, who could have blamed them?
46115Slaughter inquiring for me about 4.55 p.m.''what time it was, and if the rifles Were clean and ready?''
46115Were they the enemy or one of our working parties gone astray?
46115Who of the millions that have undergone the experience will ever forget their first crossing of the Channel in a troopship?
40057''Paid by the world, what dost thou owe Me?'' 40057 And pray,"said Mrs. Roberts,"who are you?"
40057But how will they_ pairt_ with her,he said,"what''ll they do without her?
40057Can you find soldiers''orphans for me to educate,wrote one,"because I do n''t like leaving my sisters?"
40057Did I tell you,wrote Miss Nightingale to Madame Mohl( May 7, 1861),"what prompted my little chapter on_ Minding Baby_?
40057Has Heaven bestowed everlasting souls on men, and sent them upon earth for no better purpose than to marry and be given in marriage? 40057 Have you,"she was asked by the Royal Commission of 1857,"devoted attention to the organization of civil and military hospitals?"
40057Here is a dispute which is Hebrew to me; would you look it over with Sutherland?
40057I am getting up the examinations; does anything occur to you?
40057I beg you to supply me, and that immediately--with what?
40057Is there anything higher,she asked,"in thinking of one''s own salvation than in thinking of one''s own dinner?
40057Oh, no,he replied;"Madame Mohl is ill.""Then does Paris mean Madame Mohl?"
40057One of the Lady Nurses was his theological instructor, and asked him where he would go when he died if he were a good boy? 40057 Ought not one''s externals,"she wrote in her diary( July 2, 1849),"to be as nearly as possible an incarnation of what life really is?
40057Please, ma''am, have you any black- edged paper?
40057Please, what can I give which would keep on his stomach; is there any arrowroot to- day for him?
40057Sidney is again in despair for you,wrote Mrs. Herbert;"can you come?
40057The difficulty is,wrote Mr. Nightingale to his wife,"where is the county that is habitable for twelve successive months?"
40057Why do you do all this,wrote Mr. Herbert( Jan. 16),"with your own hands?
40057Would not Mr. Herbert,she wrote( Sept. 11),"go to you for a few days, settle all the points, and then communicate daily by letter?
40057You leave her alone,said his mate,"do n''t you see she''s one of Miss Nightingale''s women?"
40057[ 366] I also feel myself mistaken all day long in thought, feeling, or doing-- but what help do I find? 40057 ''Do you mean what you say?'' 40057 ''Yes, certainly; why do you ask me?'' 40057 ( 2) What does Mr. Herbert say to the scheme itself? 40057 ( 3) Would you or some one of my Committee write to Lady Stratford to say,This is not a lady but a real Hospital Nurse,"of me?
40057( June 20, 1861):"Is the Architect''s ideal the profile of a revolver pistol?
400571?
40057And are there any stores for the Hospital he would advise us to take out?
40057And if it comes by certain laws, why do n''t we find them out?
40057And then, with a humorous transition not infrequent in her musings, she asks,"But why ca n''t you get up in the morning?
40057And was there ever an age in so much need of heroism?
40057And when he said the"Son of Man,"did he not mean the sons of men?
40057And who can say how often her presence may have been as"a cup of strength in some great agony"?
40057And, again,"How would you like Leicestershire?
40057Are sets and cliques and dislikes unknown where men live together?
40057As to my calamity itself, it is like the Mariage de Mademoiselle: who could have foreseen it?
40057Because the Purveyor took it upon himself to override the requisition of the medical officers?
40057But I hear that you still feel interested in such subjects, and therefore may I venture to try and entertain you?"
40057But are we not really to do as Christ did?
40057But could not a compromise be arranged?
40057But shall I tell you what made you write to me?
40057But why could not this clearly foreseen want have been supplied?
40057But why, it was asked, were there no Presbyterians?
40057But would it be seemly for a gentlewoman to do this?
40057But would it?
40057But, did we study history as much as physical science, would this be so?
40057But, it may be asked, were the things which Miss Nightingale procured and issued really wanted?
40057By what authority could it be there, except as delegated from the Lady Superintendent in Chief?
40057Can it be said that the Battle of the Alma has been an event to take the world by surprise?
40057Can such an illness be unaccompanied by suffering?
40057Could not the heroine, the''sweet sad enthusiast,''have been set to some such work as this?
40057Could she not delay?
40057Could you come in to- morrow between 2 and 4, and bring your list of the causes of death after operations?
40057Could you give them a lesson?
40057Did a purveyor want some special authority from the military to facilitate his task?
40057Did a surgeon want some point represented with special urgency to the authorities at home?
40057Do you think me one of Byron''s young ladies?
40057Does he think it will be objected to by the authorities?
40057Econ.?)
40057For women she has-- what?
40057Four days later:"Can Miss Nightingale give me the names of some Governors for our new General Hospitals?"
40057Had I"lost"the Report, what would the health I should have saved have"profited"me?
40057Has M. Mohl told you?
40057Has not the expedition to the Crimea been the talk of the last four months?
40057Have you heard Batta on the violoncello at Paris?
40057He and his wife returned from the Continent with their infant daughters in 1821, and the question became urgent, Where to live?
40057Her habit of late rising grew upon her; for what had she to wake for?
40057Honorary members abound, but where are the working ones?
40057I enclose a letter from E. Do you think it any use to apply to Miss Burdett Coutts?
40057I indulge the hope that you will permit me hereafter to continue an acquaintance( may I say friendship?)
40057I relied on a Secretary of State, where is he?
40057II In what precise respect, it may be asked, did Florence Nightingale"found"modern nursing?
40057If not, why does she grumble at troubles which she can not remedy by grumbling?"
40057If we are asked, Is such or such a disease a reparative process?
40057If you were inclined to undertake this great work, would Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale give their consent?
40057If, when the plough goes over the soul, there were always the hand of the Sower there to scatter the seed after it, who would regret?
40057Is all that china, linen, glass necessary to make man a Progressive animal?
40057Is he at Paris now?
40057Is it not the same with moral evil, the laws of which are just as_ calculable_?"
40057Is it to be buried in that most undisturbed grave of wise thought and useful information, a blue book?
40057Is not this the reason why these cases_ are_ exceptional?
40057Is this for us or against us?"
40057Is this the way to manage the finances of a great nation?
40057Jesus Christ prayed on the Cross not for life or safety, but only for the light of His countenance: Why hast Thou forsaken me?
40057MY DEAREST FRIENT-- Do you see where I am?
40057May they not have been her fads?
40057Mrs. Herbert sent to Miss Nightingale the current riddle:"Why is Gladstone like a lobster?"
40057My other belongings, where are they?
40057My question simply is, Would you listen to the request to go and superintend the whole thing?
40057Nightingale?"
40057Now in what one respect could I have done other than I have done?
40057Now, why should not the_ Commissariat purvey_ the Hospital with food?
40057Now, will you undertake to look after them?
40057On the immediate question, To publish or not to publish?
40057One can almost hear the honest Colonel''s guffaw as he wonders whether"she will wear a wig or a helmet?"
40057Or do you think me an Ascetic?
40057Or ought not, in these times, all expenditure to be reproductive?
40057Or rather, is it any exercise at all?
40057Other contributions were quickly forthcoming, and on October 14 a letter was published asking:"Why have we no Sisters of Charity?
40057PART II THE CRIMEAN WAR( 1854- 1856) Who is the happy Warrior?
40057Poetry?
40057Shall I come to you at 5 o''c., or would you come here?"
40057Shall I come to you between 3 and 5?
40057Shall I say one odd and perhaps rather impertinent thing?
40057Shall we then not love the spirit of all that is loveable, which_ all_ material presence bespeaks to us?...
40057She applied only one kind of test to a nurse: Was she a good woman, and did she know her business?
40057She gave a sketch of Miss Nightingale''s career, and then continued:"Is it not like St. Elizabeth of Hungary?
40057She was of Ibsen''s persuasion:-- What is Life?
40057Since we came home in September, how long do you think we have been alone?
40057Some one said once, He that would save his life shall lose it; and what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?
40057That the sufferings of Christ''s life were intense, who doubts?
40057The man said to me afterwards,''Sa feelin''o''Is Royal Ighness, was n''t it, m''m?''
40057The questions are propounded, whether biography should describe a person''s life or his character?
40057The scheme is excellent, but what are the results?"
40057Then, again, was she"Protestant"or"Catholic"?
40057There is a letter from Lady Verney to Clarkey which describes how some one asked Mr. Nightingale,"Are you going to Paris?"
40057There was company coming to Embley, and could Florence have the heart to leave her mother?
40057This is only an anecdote( I hate anecdotes, do n''t you?).
40057To this letter she replied as follows:--(_ Miss Nightingale to Dr. Sutherland._) And what shall I say in answer to your letter?
40057True, there is in this world much more waiting to be done; but is it the man leading a secular life who will do it?
40057V How, if at all, it may be asked, did she adjust her innermost beliefs to the current creeds of the day?
40057Was Hampshire eager, she asked, to emulate the evil fame of Scutari?
40057Was Miss W---- an unsympathetic governess?
40057Was not the great Soyer himself among the escort?
40057Was she Unitarian or Trinitarian?
40057What can the future hell be other than this?
40057What do the cookery books say?
40057What gives her such a fullness of life now and makes her find enough in herself?
40057What have I done the last three months?
40057What is my business in this world and what have I done this last fortnight?
40057What is she to do?
40057What is the secret of Lady Jocelyn''s sublime placidity?
40057What suggestions do the above ideas make to you in Embley drawing- room?
40057What then, poor sufferer, dost thou want?
40057What was the use of praying to be delivered from"plague and pestilence"so long as the common sewers were still allowed to run into the Thames?
40057What would she say to Florence Nightingale?
40057What would they think of me did I possess such a discovery and keep it secret?"
40057When I had done he said,''That is perfect, whose is that?''
40057When a ship goes down in an"unforeseen"gale,"Do we say,''How could God permit such a dreadful calamity as the loss of all hands on board?
40057When, after many hours, he recovered his senses, I believe after trepanning, his first words were to ask after his comrade,''Is he alive?''
40057Whence comes it, why does it suffer, or why is it blighted, but that it is incipient love, and truth, and wisdom, tortured or suppressed?
40057Who are the other three?"
40057Who is he That every man in arms should wish to be?
40057Why are the men to die of foul air in August because they are too cold at Christmas?
40057Why ca n''t you, who do men''s work, take man''s exercise in some shape?...
40057Why could she not smile and be gay, while yet biding her time and not forsaking her ultimate ideals?
40057Why could she not, or why did she not, seek it in marriage?
40057Why did n''t I write before?
40057Why did she reject the second?
40057Why do I wish to leave this world?
40057Why must Florence go to the Sisters, and Roman Catholic Sisters, too-- abroad?
40057Why refused?
40057Why should not Miss Nightingale stay on at Malvern altogether?
40057Why should she be wearing herself out away from them?
40057Why should she not stay at home, and conduct some small institution on her own account?
40057Why should the Sacrament or Oath of Marriage be less sacred than any other?
40057Why was this?
40057Will you let me have a line at the War Office to let me know?
40057Will you not come?
40057Will you not come?
40057Would he give us any advice or letters of recommendation?
40057Would there be any use in my applying to the Duke of Newcastle for his authority?
40057Would you have one go away and''give utterance to one''s feelings''in a poem to appear( price 2 guineas) in the_ Belle Assemblée_?
40057You will say,_ Bless_ that man, why ca n''t he leave me in peace?
40057_ Vox populi_?
40057and was not hers perhaps a work of supererogation, for could not the official Purveyor have supplied them?
40057do I_ learn_ therefrom?
40057do my three score years and more give me the repose of a life spent in helping others or even in helping myself?...
40057his work or how he did it?
40057or what exertion have I made that I could have left unmade?...
40057or what would ten years of life have advantaged me, exchanged for the ten weeks this summer?
40057that most repulsive, unapproached, unapproachable place of sepulture?
40057to invent wants in order to supply employment?
40057what is to become of me?"
40057where all my many friends on whom I placed my work?
40057where is my strength?
40057where, my Hospitals?
40057with the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?
45329Amabel, what is it? 45329 Are you a coward?"
45329Do n''t you hear them? 45329 Do you believe, George, that that poor dried- up insect on the wall there will ever come out of its tomb a beautiful creature with wings?"
45329Does n''t it, then? 45329 Have n''t you made a mistake, Tom?"
45329How did you know it wanted that?
45329I wonder if they''ll think I''m a robber?
45329Is he dead?
45329Is it Jeff Brown or the widow Smalley? 45329 Now how shall I repay you, my brave friend?"
45329Oh, Aunt Kate, can that be our ugly caterpillar turned into such a beautiful butterfly?
45329Oh, Confectionery Lady, what have you good to- day?
45329Set out on a two miles''walk on a pitch- dark road at three o''clock in the morning? 45329 Somebody wanting me?"
45329What shall we do? 45329 What''s the matter?"
45329What''s up now?
45329What?
45329Where are they?
45329Where has the night- hawk flown?
45329Why do you not go after him, and punish him?
45329Why do you want to spoil the night with such wailing?
45329Why should you thus disturb my slumber, and demand of me this journey in the night?
45329Why, Jimmie Peters, is that you?
45329Would you rather be a beauty, Or do your duty?
45329You will try to do this, will you not?
45329''Can you suggest anything?''
45329Could you go?--do you know the way?"
45329I tell you it''s in me to be a heroine, or why should I look like one?
45329Is n''t it wonderful how they could come up out of the dirt so clean and bright?"
45329Oh, what shall we do?
45329Slim Mr. Jonquil comes on the run;"Pray, am I up in time for the fun?"
45329Stubbs?"
45329Was there ever anything brighter than Christmas?
45329What are you dressing for?"
45329What is the depth?
45329What weapons have you with which to meet him?"
45329Why does the Baby look straight into your faces, instead of turning His sweet smile to St. John or to one of the angels?
45329Why should a fissure always be produced in the frozen mass opposite one point of the steep bank?
45329Why should the surface regularly bulge out in one part to become fissured elsewhere?
45329Would you--_should_ you mind coming with me?"
45329_ Holroyd!_ how can any one with such a name be romantic?
45329a caterpillar burying himself in a shroud and a coffin?"
45329it''s never one of Holroyd''s girls?
45329said Ella;"and why does he wave his wings so?"
45329was n''t you bad enough when you threw all the money away, so you had to go an''do this just when we was in awful trouble?"
45329what''s the matter?"
45329what''s the row?"
43571And pray, sir, who gave you the right to exercise any judgment in the matter?
43571But would Madam Washington come to a ball?
43571In God''s name,he writes to his brother, John Augustine,"how has Samuel managed to get himself so enormously in debt?"
43571Mammy,exclaimed a little Fredericksburg maiden of ten,"what do you think?
43571Oh, is there to be more fighting, more bloodshed? 43571 See here, do you expect to get to heaven?"
43571Sir,exclaimed Franklin,"is Philadelphia taken?"
43571Well, methinks I hear Betsy and Lucy say,''What is cousin''s dress?'' 43571 What did he say?"
43571Why not?
43571Why? 43571 _ Sed quid ego hæc nequicquam ingrata revolvo?_ It is vain to lament that corruption which no human power can prevent or repair."
43571''Does George need horses?''
43571''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden?''
43571( why, indeed?
43571Adams, have you got into your house?
43571And who can tell what heavenly messengers visited this great spirit and ministered unto her?
43571And, while she lived in retirement and in silence, how had great events rushed forward; how had the child become the father to the man?
43571At last with great gravity he asks,''_ What''s this?_''''Do you ask, Sir?''
43571At last with great gravity he asks,''_ What''s this?_''''Do you ask, Sir?''
43571At what point was it punishable?
43571Besides, where were Lawrence and Augustine during all those halcyon years?
43571But how about drunkenness?
43571But how was the aged mother to hear the news?
43571Call you this insensibility?
43571Could any admiring biographer ask more?
43571Could this monstrous woman have held an honored place in a social circle of stately, courteous, cultured people?
43571Do n''t you love walking?"
43571Do n''t you suppose I want to see General Washington?"
43571Do we not know of Miss Mary Philipse, whose father''s manor- house may still be seen on the Hudson?
43571George the Third found only this to say:--"Madam, have you taken a walk to- day?"
43571Had he not been her suitor in her girlhood?
43571Has not some one said"her eyes were blue"?
43571Has the reader ever sought an intelligent definition of the term"society"?
43571How could it be otherwise when Thomas Jefferson prescribed that his daughter''s time should be divided between dancing, music, and French?
43571How else did the colonial dames eat their peas?
43571How far out into the river does your unfortunate master live?"
43571If"hir"did not spell"her,"pray, what did it spell?
43571Is he as big as his sire?"
43571Is not"a shield of pretence"arms which a lord claims and which he adds to his own?
43571No Virginian( for were they not all British subjects?)
43571Pray what have we, my fastidious sisters, done for our country in our day and generation?
43571Pray, how do you like the situation of it?''"
43571Presently the mother forced matters to an issue by asking:"Boys, have you seen my fine sorrel colt lately?
43571Shall the great mammoth of the American forests leave his native element, and plunge into the water in a mad contest with a shark?
43571The title to these arms may have long been extinct-- but who will take the trouble to investigate?
43571Then there were Fashion, Eclipse, Selima, Ariel, Why Not?
43571Think you there was ever a Lady more curious than our Cousin the Squire?
43571This is the amended story:"''What are you doing there with my horses?''
43571Thus it would sometimes happen( and who so willing as the hosts?)
43571Turberville''s?''
43571Was it the"alliance"or the dearly loved beverage of which they had been so long deprived?
43571Was not that all right?
43571Was she responsible for the"hurt of the heart uncurable,"of which he wrote a few months later?
43571Well might he be more afraid of Mrs. Washington even than of his own parents( and what more could he say?
43571Were they not ordinary, commonplace fellows-- their own everyday playmates?
43571What are they worth?
43571What do we know of the mother of Daniel Webster, or John Adams, or Patrick Henry, or Andrew Jackson, or of the mothers of our Revolutionary generals?
43571What said the"Godlike"hero to all this?
43571What time had she-- married at fifteen-- to read or study?
43571Where could he sleep?
43571Who can describe a garden in the Virginia of 1770?
43571Who cares whether Thomas Carlyle liked his chops tender, objected to vermin, or abhorred the crowing of a cock?
43571Who could be majestic in clinging, willowy chiffon?
43571Who was Frances?
43571Who was looking after those lambs while the Shepherd was disporting himself at villas in Cookham?
43571Why do readers never complain of the monotonous round of their travels?
43571Why do we find in every journal of the day long columns filled with the comings and goings, the up- risings and down- sittings of our wealthy classes?
43571Why should he cross the ocean to gather the flower that grew at his threshold?
43571Why should it have been made at all?
43571Why should they not enjoy it?
43571Why take to water where he can neither fight or swim?"
43571With these for companionship, who can be utterly wretched?
43571Would her heart break with the sudden access of joy?
43571Would it be sinister to suggest that the lady was already won?
43571he exclaims,"who besides a Tory or a Briton could have predicted this?
43571or want of ambition?
43571said Lord Dunmore,"has it come to this?"
45362And how did you get in?
45362Are you?
45362D''ye say so? 45362 Had he any clothes on?
45362Pretty well, thank ye,says he,"but pray, how do you know my name?"
45362What''s that?
45362Wo n''t ye? 45362 ''What ails thee, sepulchre? 45362 --Charles, what would thou do with me?'' 45362 A voice was then heard in the gloom asking in a strange intonation,What is wanted?"
45362An amusing anecdote illustrative of this belief was related by the daughter of''the celebrated Mrs. S.''[ Siddons?]
45362And I replied,''Why?''
45362And I said,''Father, shall I pray for you?''
45362Doth the earth press, or the black stone weigh on thee heavily?''
45362Elizabeth of Hungary, being on the point of expiring, said to those around him,"Do you see those doves more white than snow?"
45362He also asks,"Art thou satisfied?"
45362Mr. and Mrs. S---- coming in suddenly one day, heard her cry out,''Are you there again?
45362Says the ghost,"Well, Tommy, how are ye?"
45362The last point the old man quoted as at once settling the question,''How could I be mistaken?
45362The late Charles Kingsley, in his''Yeast,''asks,''Who are the knockers?''
45362Then I said,''Where are all our fathers who did like to him?''
45362What sound is that comes from afar?
45362Whence comes it?
45362Who comes here?
45362Who knoweth whether God will permit the persons, who have thus confederated, to appear in the world again after their death?
45362Why thus so deeply groan and sigh?
45362and if so, what were they like?"
45362are ye sleeping, Margaret?''
45362he says,''Or are ye waking presentlie?
45362what is that?"
45362who comes here?''
46251Now, what news on the Rialto?
46251A wider space and ornamented grave?
46251And in a brief enumeration of the buildings to be seen by the visitor, how can the unhappy writer avoid the charge of baldness and inefficiency?
46251And where shall we find Julia and Lucetta, and Valentine, and smile at the pleasantries of Launce, with his dog, Crab, on a leash?
46251But history''s purchas''d page to call them great?
46251Do Romeo, Mercutio, and Benvolio no longer roam these twisted ancient streets?
46251For what counted all this bloodshed?
46251How shall the visitor know where to turn for those objects that appeal to him, amid such a wealth of treasures?
46251How shall we separate myth and simple tradition from the veracious chronicles of the Roman people?
46251Is there any other city that grips us in every sense like Venice?
46251Shall we not see, leaning from one of the old balconies, the lovely Juliet?
46251What can be said of the sunsets, the almost garish colouring of sea and sky, and the witchery of reflection upon tower and roof?
46251What want these outlaws conquerors should have?
46251What were the causes of the downfall of their proud city, and the decadence of the great race that invaded all quarters of Europe?
46251Would he not have chosen to die in the Venice that he loved with such intense fervour?
32325Ai n''t them old crippled picks and things in there good enough to dig a nigger out with?
32325And ai n''t it natural and right for a cat and a cow to talk different from_ us_?
32325And ai n''t you had nothing but that kind of rubbage to eat?
32325And so you ai n''t had no meat nor bread to eat all this time? 32325 And_ Jim?_""The same,"I says, but could n''t say it pretty brash.
32325Any men on it?
32325Bilgewater, kin I trust you?
32325Blame it, ca n''t you_ try?_ I only_ want_ you to try-- you need n''t keep it up if it do n''t work.
32325Brought you down from whar? 32325 But I reckon we ought to tell Uncle Harvey she''s gone out awhile, anyway, so he wo n''t be uneasy about her?"
32325But I thought_ you_ lived in Sheffield?
32325But how can we do it if we do n''t know what it is?
32325But it''s_ somebody''s_ plates, ai n''t it?
32325But looky here, Tom, what do we want to_ warn_ anybody for that something''s up? 32325 But my lan'', Mars Sid, how''s I gwyne to make''m a witch pie?
32325But what time o''day?
32325But you can guess, ca n''t you? 32325 Cairo?
32325Come, ai n''t that what you saw?
32325Could n''t they see better if they was to wait till daytime?
32325Dad fetch it, how is I gwyne to dream all dat in ten minutes?
32325Dern your skin, ai n''t the company good enough for you?
32325Did anybody send''em word?
32325Did n''t I_ say_ I was going to help steal the nigger?
32325Did you ever see us before?
32325Do I know you? 32325 Do n''t anybody know?"
32325Do n''t mind what I said-- please don''t-- you_ wo n''t_, now,_ will_ you?
32325Do n''t they give''em holidays, the way we do, Christmas and New Year''s week, and Fourth of July?
32325Do you belong on it?
32325Does a cat talk like a cow, or a cow talk like a cat?
32325Drinkin''? 32325 Drot your pore broken heart,"says the baldhead;"what are you heaving your pore broken heart at_ us_ f''r?
32325For what?
32325Funeral to- morrow, likely?
32325Geewhillikins,I says,"but what does the rest of it mean?"
32325Get?
32325Gone away? 32325 Goodness gracious, is dat you, Huck?
32325Goshen, child? 32325 Hamlet''s which?"
32325Has anybody been killed this year, Buck?
32325Has there been many killed, Buck?
32325Has this one been going on long, Buck?
32325Have you got hairy arms and a hairy breast, Jim?
32325Him? 32325 His''n?
32325How I gwyne to ketch her en I out in de woods? 32325 How can he blow?
32325How does I talk wild?
32325How does he get it, then?
32325How long will it take, Tom?
32325How you going to get them?
32325How you gwyne to git''m? 32325 How''d you come?"
32325How''d you get your breakfast so early on the boat?
32325How''m I going to guess,says I,"when I never heard tell of it before?"
32325How''s it a new kind?
32325I do n''t know where he was,says I;"where was he?"
32325I do n''t reckon he does; but what put that into your head?
32325I is, is I? 32325 I thought he lived in London?"
32325If fifteen cows is browsing on a hillside, how many of them eats with their heads pointed the same direction?
32325Is a cat a man, Huck?
32325Is dat so?
32325Is it_ ketching?_ Why, how you talk. 32325 Is that what you live on?"
32325It''s natural and right for''em to talk different from each other, ai n''t it?
32325Keep what, Mars Tom?
32325Laws, how do I know? 32325 Looky here, Jim; does a cat talk like we do?"
32325Looky here,I says;"did you ever see any Congress- water?"
32325Must we always kill the people?
32325No, sir,I says;"is there some for me?"
32325No-- is that so?
32325No; is dat so?
32325No?
32325None of it at all?
32325Nor church?
32325Not a word?
32325Now, George Jackson, do you know the Shepherdsons?
32325Now,says Ben Rogers,"what''s the line of business of this Gang?"
32325Oh, that''s the way of it?
32325Oh, well, that''s all interpreted well enough as far as it goes, Jim,I says;"but what does_ these_ things stand for?"
32325Oh, you did, did you? 32325 Oh,_ do_ shet up!--s''pose the rats took the_ sheet?__ Where''s_ it gone, Lize?"
32325Oh,_ do_ shet up!--s''pose the rats took the_ sheet?__ Where''s_ it gone, Lize?
32325Old man,said the young one,"I reckon we might double- team it together; what do you think?"
32325Ransomed? 32325 Roun''de which?"
32325Say, wo n''t he suspicion what we''re up to?
32325The widow, hey?--and who told the widow she could put in her shovel about a thing that ai n''t none of her business?
32325Then what on earth did_ you_ want to set him free for, seeing he was already free?
32325They do n''t, do n''t they? 32325 They''re-- they''re-- are you the watchman of the boat?"
32325To dig the foundations out from under that cabin with?
32325Tools for what?
32325Tools?
32325Was Peter Wilks well off?
32325Was you in there yisterday er last night?
32325Well, anyway,I says,"what''s_ some_ of it?
32325Well, are you rich?
32325Well, den, why could n''t he_ say_ it?
32325Well, did you have to go to Congress to get it?
32325Well, does a cow?
32325Well, hain''t he got a father?
32325Well, if you knowed where he was, what did you ask me for?
32325Well, spos''n it is? 32325 Well, then, a horse?"
32325Well, then, how''d you come to be up at the Pint in the_ mornin_''--in a canoe?
32325Well, then, how''s he going to take the sea baths if it ai n''t on the sea?
32325Well, then, what are they_ for_?
32325Well, then, what did you want to kill him for?
32325Well, then, what does the rest of''em do?
32325Well, then, what makes you talk so wild?
32325Well, then, what possessed you to go down there this time of night?
32325Well, then, what we going to do, Tom?
32325Well, then, what''ll we make him the ink out of?
32325Well, then, what''s the sense in wasting the plates?
32325Well, then, why ai n''t it natural and right for a_ Frenchman_ to talk different from us? 32325 Well, then,"I says,"how''ll it do to saw him out, the way I done before I was murdered that time?"
32325Well, then,I says,"if we do n''t want the picks and shovels, what do we want?"
32325Well, we can wait the two hours anyway and see, ca n''t we?
32325Well, what did come of it, Jim?
32325Well, what in the nation do they call it the_ mumps_ for?
32325Well, what_ did_ you say, then?
32325Well, who done the shooting? 32325 Well, who said it was?"
32325Well, why would n''t you?
32325Well, you must be most starved, ai n''t you?
32325Well,I says,"s''pose we got some genies to help_ us_--can''t we lick the other crowd then?"
32325Well--_what?_he says, kind of pettish.
32325Wh- hat, mum?
32325What are you prowling around here this time of night for-- hey?
32325What did he do to you?
32325What did you do with the ten cents, Jim?
32325What did you reckon I wanted you to go at all for, Miss Mary?
32325What did you speculate in, Jim?
32325What did you think the vittles was for?
32325What do we want of a saw?
32325What do we want of a shirt, Tom?
32325What do we_ want_ of a saw? 32325 What do you want?"
32325What fog?
32325What got you into trouble?
32325What in the nation can he_ do_ with it?
32325What is it you wo n''t believe, Jo?
32325What is it, duke?
32325What kind of stock?
32325What letter?
32325What letters?
32325What made you think I''d like it?
32325What other things?
32325What three?
32325What town is it, mister?
32325What whole thing?
32325What wreck?
32325What you been doing down there?
32325What!--to preach before a king? 32325 What''re you alassin''about?"
32325What''s a feud?
32325What''s de harem?
32325What''s de use er makin''up de camp- fire to cook strawbries en sich truck? 32325 What''s de use to ax dat question?
32325What''s onkores, Bilgewater?
32325What''s the matter with you, Jim? 32325 What''s them?"
32325What''s your real name? 32325 What''s_ that_ got to do with it?
32325What, all that time?
32325What, you do n''t mean the_ Walter Scott? 32325 What_ does_ the child mean?"
32325What_ put_ it dar? 32325 When did you say he died?"
32325Wher''you bound for, young man?
32325Where do you set?
32325Where is it, then?
32325Where''bouts do you live? 32325 Where''s Jim?"
32325Whereabouts?
32325Which one?
32325Which side of a tree does the moss grow on?
32325Who do you reckon''tis?
32325Who is your folks?
32325Who makes them tear around so?
32325Who''d you give the baggage to?
32325Who''s me?
32325Who? 32325 Who?
32325Why did n''t you roust me out?
32325Why did n''t you tell my Jack to fetch me here sooner, Jim?
32325Why do n''t it, Huck?
32325Why do you reckon Harvey do n''t come? 32325 Why, Huck, doan''de French people talk de same way we does?"
32325Why, Jim?
32325Why, are they after him yet?
32325Why, blame it, it''s a riddle, do n''t you see? 32325 Why, how did you get hold of the raft again, Jim-- did you catch her?"
32325Why, how long you been on the island, Jim?
32325Why, pap and mam and sis and Miss Hooker; and if you''d take your ferryboat and go up there--"Up where? 32325 Why, what do they want with more?"
32325Why, what else is gone, Sally?
32325Why, where ever did you go?
32325Why, where was you raised? 32325 Why, who''s got it?"
32325Why?
32325Why?
32325Will you do it, honey?--will you? 32325 With_ who?_ Why, the runaway nigger, of course.
32325Yes, it_ is_ good enough for me; it''s as good as I deserve; for who fetched me so low when I was so high? 32325 Yes,_ dey_ will, I reck''n, Mars Tom, but what kine er time is_ Jim_ havin''?
32325You do n''t_ know?_ Do n''t answer me that way. 32325 You hain''t seen no towhead?
32325You mean to say our old raft warn''t smashed all to flinders?
32325You numskull, did n''t you see me_ count_''m?
32325You wo n''t, wo n''t you? 32325 You would n''t look like a servant- girl_ then_, would you?"
32325You''re s''rp-- Why, what do you reckon_ I_ am? 32325 _ Ain''_ dat gay?
32325_ Do_ with it? 32325 _ Hannel_''m, Mars Sid?
32325_ Him?_says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger?
32325_ Him?_says Aunt Sally;"the runaway nigger?
32325_ How?_ Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away?
32325_ How?_ Why, hain''t you been talking about my coming back, and all that stuff, as if I''d been gone away?
32325_ Sold_ him?
32325_ Which_ candle?
32325_ Whose_ pew?
32325_ Work?_ Why, cert''nly it would work, like rats a- fighting. 32325 _ You_ talk like an Englishman,_ do n''t_ you?
32325Ai n''t I right?"
32325Ai n''t that sensible?"
32325Ai n''t that so?"
32325All through dinner Jim stood around and waited on him, and says,"Will yo''Grace have some o''dis or some o''dat?"
32325And I_ did_ start to tell him; but he shut me up, and says:"Do n''t you reckon I know what I''m about?
32325And after a minute, he says:"How''d you say he got shot?"
32325And ai n''t that a big enough majority in any town?"
32325And by and by the old man says:"Did I give you the letter?"
32325And could n''t the nigger see better, too?
32325And did the sad hearts thicken, And did the mourners cry?
32325And do you reckon they''d be mean enough to go off and leave you to go all that journey by yourselves?
32325And leave my sisters with them?"
32325And looky here-- you drop that school, you hear?
32325And not sell out the rest o''the property?
32325And s''pose he steps in here any minute, and sings out my name before I can throw him a wink to keep quiet?
32325And they call it the_ mumps?_""That''s what Miss Mary Jane said."
32325And turns to me, perfectly ca''m, and says,"Did_ you_ hear anybody sing out?"
32325And what do you reckon they said?
32325And what do you think?
32325And what kind o''uncles would it be that''d rob-- yes,_ Rob_--sech poor sweet lambs as these''at he loved so at sech a time?
32325And what would you want to saw his leg off for, anyway?"
32325And what_ for_?
32325And when the king got done this husky up and says:"Say, looky here; if you are Harvey Wilks, when''d you come to this town?"
32325And would n''t he throw style into it?--wouldn''t he spread himself, nor nothing?
32325And you ca n''t get away with that tooth without fetching the whole harrow along, can you?
32325And you wo n''t go?
32325And you would n''t leave them any?
32325And, besides, he said them little birds had said it was going to rain, and did I want the things to get wet?
32325And_ then_ what did you all do?"
32325Are you all ready?
32325Ask him to show up?
32325Bekase why: would a wise man want to live in de mids''er sich a blim- blammin''all de time?
32325Buck?--land?"
32325But Bill says:"Hold on--''d you go through him?"
32325But Tom thought of something, and says:"You got any spiders in here, Jim?"
32325But answer me only jest this one more-- now_ do n''t_ git mad; did n''t you have it in your mind to hook the money and hide it?"
32325But at supper, at night, one of the little boys says:"Pa, may n''t Tom and Sid and me go to the show?"
32325But he''ll be pooty lonesome-- dey ain''no kings here, is dey, Huck?"
32325But how you goin''to manage it this time?"
32325But now she says:"Honey, I thought you said it was Sarah when you first come in?"
32325But other times they just lazy around; or go hawking-- just hawking and sp-- Sh!--d''you hear a noise?"
32325But s''pose she_ do n''t_ break up and wash off?"
32325But when he did get the thing straightened around he looked at me steady without ever smiling, and says:"What do dey stan''for?
32325But you got a gun, hain''t you?
32325But you wouldn''tell on me ef I''uz to tell you, would you, Huck?"
32325By and by Jim says:"But looky here, Huck, who wuz it dat''uz killed in dat shanty ef it warn''t you?"
32325By and by, when they was asleep and snoring, Jim says:"Do n''t it s''prise you de way dem kings carries on, Huck?"
32325Ca n''t you think of no way?"
32325Ca n''t you_ see_ that_ they''d_ go and tell?
32325Come slow; push the door open yourself-- just enough to squeeze in, d''you hear?"
32325Conscience says to me,"What had poor Miss Watson done to you that you could see her nigger go off right under your eyes and never say one single word?
32325Could you raise a flower here, do you reckon?"
32325Dad blame it, why doan''he_ talk_ like a man?
32325Did n''t you?"
32325Did you come for your interest?"
32325Did you hear''em shooting the cannon?"
32325Did you inquire around for_ him_ when you got loose?
32325Did you speculate any more?"
32325Did you tell Aunty?"
32325Didn''he jis''dis minute sing out like he knowed you?"
32325Do n''t I generly know what I''m about?"
32325Do n''t I tell you it''s in the books?
32325Do n''t anybody live there?
32325Do n''t you know about the harem?
32325Do n''t you know nothing?"
32325Do n''t you know what a feud is?"
32325Do n''t you reckon I know who hid that money in that coffin?"
32325Do n''t you reckon that the people that made the books knows what''s the correct thing to do?
32325Do n''t you see I has?"
32325Do they treat''em better''n we treat our niggers?"
32325Do you know him?"
32325Do you like to comb up Sundays, and all that kind of foolishness?
32325Do you own a dog?
32325Do you reckon Tom Sawyer would ever go by this thing?
32325Do you reckon that''ll do?"
32325Do you reckon you can learn me?"
32325Do you reckon_ you_ can learn''em anything?
32325Do you want to go to doing different from what''s in the books, and get things all muddled up?"
32325Do you want to spread it all over?"
32325Does three hundred dollars lay around every day for people to pick up?
32325Does you know''bout dat chile dat he''uz gwyne to chop in two?"
32325Does you want to go en look at''i m?"
32325Down by the woodpile I comes across my Jack, and says:"What''s it all about?"
32325En did n''t I bust up agin a lot er dem islands en have a turrible time en mos''git drownded?
32325En what dey got to do, Huck?"
32325En what use is a half a chile?
32325En you ain''dead-- you ain''drownded-- you''s back ag''in?
32325Every little while he jumps up and says:"Dah she is?"
32325Everybody says,"Why,_ doctor!_"and Abner Shackleford says:"Why, Robinson, hain''t you heard the news?
32325George Jackson, is there anybody with you?"
32325Going to feed the dogs?"
32325Hain''t he run off?"
32325Hain''t we got to saw the leg of Jim''s bed off, so as to get the chain loose?"
32325Hain''t you got no principle at all?"
32325Hain''t your uncles obleeged to get along home to England as fast as they can?
32325Has I ben a- drinkin''?
32325Has I had a chance to be a- drinkin''?"
32325Has everybody quit thinking the nigger done it?"
32325Has n''t he got away?"
32325Have you ever trod the boards, Royalty?"
32325He can hide it in his bed, ca n''t he?
32325He looked astonished, and says:"Hel-_lo!_ Where''d_ you_ come from?"
32325He says:"Ai n''t they no Shepherdsons around?"
32325He says:"If gentlemen kin afford to pay a dollar a mile apiece to be took on and put off in a yawl, a steamboat kin afford to carry''em, ca n''t it?"
32325He says:"What you doin''with this gun?"
32325He says:"Why, what can you mean, my boy?"
32325He says:"Why,_ Tom!_ Where you been all this time, you rascal?"
32325He see me, and rode up and says:"Whar''d you come f''m, boy?
32325He set there a- mumbling and a- growling a minute, and then he says:"_ Ai n''t_ you a sweet- scented dandy, though?
32325He stirred up in a kind of a startlish way; but when he see it was only me he took a good gap and stretch, and then he says:"Hello, what''s up?
32325He took up a little blue and yaller picture of some cows and a boy, and says:"What''s this?"
32325He''d_ let_ me shove his head in my mouf-- fer a favor, hain''t it?
32325Hey?--how''s that?"
32325His eyes just blazed; and he says:"No!--is that so?
32325Honest injun, you ai n''t a ghost?"
32325How can they get loose when there''s a guard over them, ready to shoot them down if they move a peg?"
32325How could a body do it in de night?
32325How do dat come?"
32325How do_ they_ get them?"
32325How does he go at it-- give notice?--give the country a show?
32325How does that strike you?"
32325How fur is it?"
32325How is servants treated in England?
32325How long you ben on de islan''?"
32325How much do a king git?"
32325How old is the others?"
32325How would you like to be treated so?"
32325How''d it get there?"
32325How''d they act?"
32325I ai n''t the man to stand it-- you hear?
32325I ben a- buyin''pots en pans en vittles, as I got a chanst, en a- patchin''up de raf''nights when--""_ What_ raft, Jim?"
32325I hunched Tom, and whispers:"You going, right here in the daybreak?
32325I live up there, do n''t I?
32325I ranged up and says:"Mister, is that town Cairo?"
32325I reckon he can stand a little thing like that, ca n''t he?"
32325I said, why could n''t we see them, then?
32325I says to myself, if a body can get anything they pray for, why do n''t Deacon Winn get back the money he lost on pork?
32325I says to myself, shall I go to that doctor, private, and blow on these frauds?
32325I says to myself, spos''n he ca n''t fix that leg just in three shakes of a sheep''s tail, as the saying is?
32325I says to myself, there ai n''t no telling but I might come to be a murderer myself yet, and then how would I like it?
32325I says:"What do we want of a moat when we''re going to snake him out from under the cabin?"
32325I says:"Who done it?
32325I says:"Why, Jim?"
32325I was going to say yes; but she chipped in and says:"About what, Sid?"
32325I wonder who''tis?
32325I''m for killin''him-- and did n''t he kill old Hatfield jist the same way-- and do n''t he deserve it?"
32325I''ve a good notion to take and-- Say, what do you mean by kissing me?"
32325If the profits has turned out to be none, lackin''considable, and none to carry, is it my fault any more''n it''s yourn?"
32325If they have, wo n''t the complices get away with that bag of gold Peter Wilks left?
32325If you do n''t hitch on to one tooth, you''re bound to on another, ai n''t you?
32325In this neighborhood?"
32325Is I heah, or whah_ is_ I?
32325Is I_ me_, or who_ is_ I?
32325Is Mary Jane the oldest?
32325Is a Frenchman a man?"
32325Is a cow a man?--er is a cow a cat?"
32325Is a_ harrow_ catching-- in the dark?
32325Is dat like Mars Tom Sawyer?
32325Is dey out o''sight yit?
32325Is it Bill, or Tom, or Bob?--or what is it?"
32325Is it ketching?"
32325Is she took bad?"
32325Is something the matter?"
32325Is that_ all_?"
32325Is there anybody here that helped to lay out my br-- helped to lay out the late Peter Wilks for burying?"
32325Is your husband going over there to- night?"
32325Is your man white or black?"
32325It ai n''t my fault I warn''t born a duke, it ai n''t your fault you warn''t born a king-- so what''s the use to worry?
32325It make me mad; en I says ag''in, mighty loud, I says:"''Doan''you hear me?
32325It was all she could do to hold in; and her eyes snapped, and her fingers worked like she wanted to scratch him; and she says:"Who''s''everybody''?
32325It''s only saying, do you know how to talk French?"
32325Just keep a tight tongue in your head and move right along, and then you wo n''t get into trouble with_ us_, d''ye hear?"
32325Kill the women?
32325Long as you''re in this town do n''t you forgit_ that_--you hear?"
32325Look yonder!--up the road!--ain''t that somebody coming?"
32325Looky here, did n''t de line pull loose en de raf''go a- hummin''down de river, en leave you en de canoe behine in de fog?"
32325Looky here, warn''t you ever murdered_ at all?_""No.
32325Looky here-- do you think_ you''d_ venture to blow on us?
32325Me?
32325Mrs. Phelps she jumps for him, and says:"Has he come?"
32325Next time you roust me out, you hear?"
32325Next, she says:"Do you go to church, too?"
32325Now I want to ask you-- if you got any reasonableness in you at all-- what kind of a show would_ that_ give him to be a hero?
32325Now ain''dat so, boss-- ain''t it so?
32325Now if you''ll go and--""By Jackson, I''d_ like_ to, and, blame it, I do n''t know but I will; but who in the dingnation''s a- going to_ pay_ for it?
32325Now, what do you reckon it is?"
32325Now,_ would n''t_ he?
32325One of them says:"What''s that yonder?"
32325Pretty soon Jim says:"Say, who is you?
32325Pretty soon Tom says:"Ready?"
32325Pretty soon she says:"What did you say your name was, honey?"
32325S''e, what do_ you_ think of it, Sister Hotchkiss?
32325S''pose a man was to come to you and say Polly- voo- franzy-- what would you think?"
32325S''pose he contracted to do a thing, and you paid him, and did n''t set down there and see that he done it-- what did he do?
32325S''pose he opened his mouth-- what then?
32325S''pose he_ do n''t_ do nothing with it?
32325S''pose people left money laying around where he was-- what did he do?
32325S''pose she dug him up and did n''t find nothing, what would she think of me?
32325Say, boy, what''s the matter with your father?"
32325Say, do we kill the women, too?"
32325Say, gimme a chaw tobacker, wo n''t ye?"
32325Say, how long are you going to stay here?
32325Say, how much you got in your pocket?
32325Say, where_ is_ that song-- that draft?"
32325Says I, kind of timid- like:"Is something gone wrong?"
32325Says I--"I broke in and says:"They''re in an awful peck of trouble, and--""_ Who_ is?"
32325Says he:"Do n''t you know, Mars Jawge?"
32325Says the king:"Dern him, I wonder what he done with that four hundred and fifteen dollars?"
32325See?
32325Shall I go, private, and tell Mary Jane?
32325She looked me all over with her little shiny eyes, and says:"What might your name be?"
32325She says:"Did you ever see the king?"
32325She says:"Honest injun, now, hain''t you been telling me a lot of lies?"
32325She was smiling all over so she could hardly stand-- and says:"It''s_ you_, at last!--_ain''t_ it?"
32325Snake take''n bite Jim''s chin off, den_ whah_ is de glory?
32325So I laid there about an hour trying to think, and when Buck waked up I says:"Can you spell, Buck?"
32325So Tom says:"What''s the vittles for?
32325So Tom turns to the nigger, which was looking wild and distressed, and says, kind of severe:"What do you reckon''s the matter with you, anyway?
32325So she put me up a snack, and says:"Say, when a cow''s laying down, which end of her gets up first?
32325So she run on:"Lize, hurry up and get him a hot breakfast right away-- or did you get your breakfast on the boat?"
32325So the question was, what to do?
32325So when I says he goes to our church, she says:"What-- regular?"
32325So, says I, s''pose somebody has hogged that bag on the sly?--now how do_ I_ know whether to write to Mary Jane or not?
32325So, then, what you want to come back and ha''nt_ me_ for?"
32325Soon as I could get Buck down by the corn- cribs under the trees by ourselves, I says:"Did you want to kill him, Buck?"
32325That''s the whole yarn-- what''s yourn?"
32325The doctor he up and says:"Would you know the boy again if you was to see him, Hines?"
32325The duke bristles up now, and says:"Oh, let_ up_ on this cussed nonsense; do you take me for a blame''fool?
32325The duke says, pretty brisk:"When it comes to that, maybe you''ll let me ask what was_ you_ referring to?"
32325The duke says:"Have you seen anybody else go in there?"
32325The king he smiled eager, and shoved out his flapper, and says:"_ Is_ it my poor brother''s dear good friend and physician?
32325The king kind of ruffles up, and says:"Looky here, Bilgewater, what''r you referrin''to?"
32325The king says:"Was you in my room night before last?"
32325The king says:"Why?"
32325The man sung out:"Snatch that light away, Betsy, you old fool-- ain''t you got any sense?
32325The next minute he whirls on me and says:"Do you reckon that nigger would blow on us?
32325The old gentleman stared, and says:"Why, who''s that?"
32325Then Ben Rogers says:"Here''s Huck Finn, he hain''t got no family; what you going to do''bout him?"
32325Then I says to myself, s''pose Tom Sawyer comes down on that boat?
32325Then I says:"Blame it, do you suppose there ai n''t but one preacher to a church?"
32325Then I says:"How do you come to be here, Jim, and how''d you get here?"
32325Then I says:"Miss Mary Jane, is there any place out of town a little ways where you could go and stay three or four days?"
32325Then I thought a minute, and says to myself, hold on; s''pose you''d''a''done right and give Jim up, would you felt better than what you do now?
32325Then he did n''t look so joyful, and says:"What was your idea for asking_ me?_"he says.
32325Then he says, kind of glad and eager,"Where''s the raft?--got her in a good place?"
32325Then he says:"How are you on the deef and dumb, Bilgewater?"
32325Then he says:"What did you want to walk all the way up to the steamboat for?"
32325Then he says:"Who dah?"
32325Then he studied it over and said, could n''t I put on some of them old things and dress up like a girl?
32325Then he turns to Jim, and looks him over like he never see him before, and says:"Did you sing out?"
32325Then she took off the hank and looked me straight in the face, and very pleasant, and says:"Come, now, what''s your real name?"
32325Then the doctor whirls on me and says:"Are_ you_ English, too?"
32325Then the duke says:"What,_ all_ of them?"
32325Then the duke says:"You are what?"
32325Then the old man turns toward the king, and says:"Peraps this gentleman can tell me what was tattooed on his breast?"
32325They sets down then, and the king says:"Well, what is it?
32325Think o''that bed- leg sawed off that a way?
32325Think o''what, Brer Phelps?
32325Thinks I, what does it mean?
32325Thinks I, what is the country a- coming to?
32325Tired of our company, hey?"
32325Tom he looked at the nigger, steady and kind of wondering, and says:"Does_ who_ know us?"
32325Tom looks at me very grave, and says:"Tom, did n''t you just tell me he was all right?
32325Twenty people sings out:"What, is it over?
32325Very well, then; is a_ preacher_ going to deceive a steamboat clerk?
32325W''y, what has you lived on?
32325Want to keep it off?"
32325Warn''dat de beatenes''notion in de worl''?
32325Was Solomon Wise?
32325Was it a Grangerford Shepherdson?"
32325Was there any such mark on Peter Wilks''s breast?"
32325Was you looking for him?"
32325We ai n''t a- going to_ gnaw_ him out, are we?"
32325We both knowed well enough it was some more work of the rattlesnake- skin; so what was the use to talk about it?
32325Well, did he?
32325Well, then, I said, why could n''t she tell her husband to fetch a dog?
32325Well, then, what kind o''brothers would it be that''d stand in his way at sech a time?
32325Well, we got to save_ him_, hain''t we?
32325Well, what did he do?
32325Well, what do you think?
32325Well, you answer me dis: Did n''t you tote out de line in de canoe fer to make fas''to de towhead?"
32325Well,_ was n''t_ he mad?
32325Whar is you?
32325Whar was you brought down from?"
32325What I wanted to know was, what he was going to do, and was he going to stay?
32325What are we going to do?--lay around there till he lets the cat out of the bag?
32325What did that poor old woman do to you that you could treat her so mean?
32325What did they do?
32325What did you say your name was?"
32325What did you_ reckon_ he wanted with it?"
32325What do we k''yer for_ him?_ Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side?
32325What do we k''yer for_ him?_ Hain''t we got all the fools in town on our side?
32325What do you mean?"
32325What does I do?
32325What does_ he_ want with a pew?"
32325What he gwyne to do?"
32325What is he up to, anyway?
32325What kep''you?--boat get aground?"
32325What made you think somebody sung out?"
32325What makes them come here just at this runaway nigger''s breakfast- time?
32325What towhead?
32325What was it?"
32325What was the use to tell Jim these warn''t real kings and dukes?
32325What you going to do about the servant- girl?"
32325What you know''bout witches?"
32325What you reckon I better do?
32325What you want to know when good luck''s a- comin''for?
32325What you''bout?"
32325What''s a bar sinister?"
32325What''s a fess?"
32325What''s that?"
32325What''s the good of a plan that ai n''t no more trouble than that?
32325What''s the matter with her?"
32325What''s the matter with''em?"
32325What''s the trouble?"
32325What''s your lay?"
32325What''s your line-- mainly?"
32325What''s your real name, now?"
32325What_ has_ become of that boy?"
32325What_ is_ the matter with your pap?
32325What_ is_ you a- talkin''''bout?
32325What_ will_ he do, then?
32325When I struck Susan and the hare- lip, I says:"What''s the name of them people over on t''other side of the river that you all goes to see sometimes?"
32325When Jim called me to take the watch at four in the morning, he says:"Huck, does you reck''n we gwyne to run acrost any mo''kings on dis trip?"
32325When was that?"
32325When we was at dinner, did n''t you see a nigger man go in there with some vittles?"
32325Wher''does he live?"
32325Where are they?"
32325Where could you keep it?"
32325Where did you hide it?"
32325Where would I go to?"
32325Where''d she get aground?"
32325Where''s that ten cents?
32325Where''s the raft?"
32325Where?"
32325Where_ would_ he live?"
32325Where_ would_ it be?"
32325Which end gets up first?"
32325Who ever heard of a state prisoner escaping by a hickry- bark ladder?
32325Who ever heard of getting a prisoner loose in such an old- maidy way as that?
32325Who nailed him?"
32325Who told you this was Goshen?"
32325Who told you you might meddle with such hifalut''n foolishness, hey?--who told you you could?"
32325Who''d you reckon?"
32325Who''s Jim''s mother?"
32325Who''s there?"
32325Who''s_ they?_""Why, everybody.
32325Who_ is_ it?"
32325Whoever would''a''thought it was in that mare to do it?
32325Why ca n''t Miss Watson fat up?
32325Why ca n''t a body take a club and ransom them as soon as they get here?"
32325Why ca n''t the widow get back her silver snuff- box that was stole?
32325Why ca n''t you stick to the main point?"
32325Why could n''t you said that before?
32325Why did n''t you come out and say so?
32325Why did n''t you get mud- turkles?"
32325Why did n''t you step into the road, my boy?"
32325Why did n''t you stir me up?"
32325Why do n''t your juries hang murderers?
32325Why would n''t they?
32325Why, Biljy, it beats the Nonesuch,_ do n''t_ it?"
32325Why, Huck, s''pose it_ is_ considerble trouble?--what you going to do?--how you going to get around it?
32325Why, hain''t you ever read any books at all?--Baron Trenck, nor Casanova, nor Benvenuto Chelleeny, nor Henri IV., nor none of them heroes?
32325Why, how in the nation did they ever git into such a scrape?"
32325Why, that ai n''t_ Tom_, it''s Sid; Tom''s-- Tom''s-- why, where is Tom?
32325Why, what in the nation do you mean?
32325Why?"
32325Will you?"
32325Will you?"
32325William Fourth?
32325Would he say dat?
32325Would n''t that plan work?"
32325Would ther''be any sense in that?
32325Would_ you_''a''done any different?
32325You been a- drinking?"
32325You ca n''t slip up on um en grab um; en how''s a body gwyne to hit um wid a rock?
32325You do n''t reckon it''s going to take thirty- seven years to dig out through a_ dirt_ foundation, do you?"
32325You going to Orleans, you say?"
32325You got any rats around here?"
32325You got anything to play music on?"
32325You know that one- laigged nigger dat b''longs to old Misto Bradish?
32325You lemme catch you fooling around that school again, you hear?
32325You prepared to die?"
32325You take a man dat''s got on''y one or two chillen; is dat man gwyne to be waseful o''chillen?
32325You think you''re a good deal of a big- bug,_ do n''t_ you?"
32325You think you''re better''n your father, now, do n''t you, because he ca n''t?
32325You''ll say it''s dirty, low- down business; but what if it is?
32325You''ll take it-- won''t you?"
32325You_ ai n''t_ him, are you?"
32325Your uncle Harvey''s a preacher, ai n''t he?
32325_ Hain''t_ you ben gone away?"
32325_ Now_ what do you say-- hey?"
32325_ Raf''?_ Dey ain''no raf''no mo''; she done broke loose en gone!--en here we is!"
32325_ Think_ of it?
32325_ Well_, den, is_ Jim_ gywne to say it?
32325_ What_ did he sing out?"
32325_ When_ did he sing out?
32325_ Who_ sung out?
32325ai n''t it there in his bed, for a clue, after he''s gone?
32325and I as high as a tree and as big as a church?
32325and do n''t you reckon they''ll want clues?
32325and"Where, for the land''s sake,_ did_ you get these amaz''n pickles?"
32325anybody hurt?"
32325do he know you genlmen?"
32325is dat you, honey?
32325is he going to deceive a_ ship clerk?_--so as to get them to let Miss Mary Jane go aboard?
32325is_ he_ her uncle?
32325it wo n''t do to fool with small- pox, do n''t you see?"
32325s''e?
32325says Aunt Sally;"_ is_ he changed so?
32325she says,"what in the world_ can_ have become of him?"
32325spos''n it takes him three or four days?
32325they give a glance at one another, and nodded their heads, as much as to say,"What''d I tell you?"
32325what are they doin''_ there_, for gracious sakes?"
32325would a runaway nigger run_ south?_"No, they allowed he would n''t.
32325you ca n''t mean it?"
46823Missing so many officers, he added:"Where are your officers-- all wounded or dead?"
46056Did he race his horses?
46056Do n''t you remember me? 46056 Is it a mouse?"
46056More as good as that one, eh?
46056Oh, please, has it a history?
46056As a customer arrived, she would make a deep curtsy, as though Royalty approached, and would say in her rich brogue,"And what fer yez, Darlin?"
46056But the wanting to give them is what counts, is n''t it?
46056Ca n''t you come along with us?"
46056Certainly you will have milk all the year, will you not?"
46056Did you run away from the convent?
46056Do you know that ice cream is almost unknown in a_ Habitant_ home?
46056She patted it and said:"It is the nicest cannon here, is n''t it?
46056What a large family you think?
46056What''s the use, I''d like to know?
46056[ Illustration:"''ARE YOU GOING TO THE CITADEL IN ONE OF THOSE FUNNY CALÊCHE THINGS?''"]
46056[ Illustration:"SOME OF THE BOYS ARRIVING ON SNOWSHOES BROUGHT FRIENDS WITH THEM"]"Do you know where you are, little one?"
46056are n''t you the melon child?"
46056she said,"are you going to the Citadel in one of those funny calêche things?
46056she ventured,"or a bird, mon oncle?"
26420I never said you could have one of my----"But you meant to, did n''t you? 26420 ''Political dynamite,"eh?''
26420''''Elp us?
26420''''Ow old are you?''
26420''''Ow''d yer like the skilly?''
26420''''ow long are you goin''on like this?''
26420''A Suffrage meeting?''
26420''A pilgrimage?''
26420''About the beads?''
26420''Accept it?
26420''Affect it?
26420''After all, they said he did very well with his Under Secretaryship under the last Government, did n''t they?''
26420''Ah,''said Borrodaile, slowly,''you go as far as that?
26420''Ai n''t you_ never_ goin''to stop?''
26420''Am I alone?''
26420''Am I?''
26420''Amazing!--was there ever anything so modern dug out of the earth before?''
26420''Among those women up there,''said Lady John,''can you tell me, my man, which are the ones that a-- that make the disturbances?''
26420''An object- lesson in practical religion, is n''t that something?''
26420''And did n''t he?''
26420''And did you find there was"something new under the sun"after all?''
26420''And if Geoffrey Stonor offered you-- er--"reparation,"you''d refuse it?''
26420''And it''s like_ that_?''
26420''And now he''s got this other preoccupation----''''You mean----?''
26420''And now?''
26420''And so you''re ready to leave me after all these years?''
26420''And still no work?''
26420''And the Battersea meeting?''
26420''And the little stones round?''
26420''And then?''
26420''And we''ll take The Earthly-- William Morris-- along, wo n''t we?''
26420''And why could n''t you?''
26420''And you count on my being interested in him like all the rest?''
26420''And you''re unchanged-- is that it?''
26420''And you''ve given me up?''
26420''And your boys, are they equally----?''
26420''Angelic?''
26420''Any men here belongin''to the Labour Party?''
26420''Are there any questions?''
26420''Are they there?''
26420''Are we all doing the same thing?''
26420''Are you a Conservative?''
26420''Are you afraid she''ll abstract the spoons?''
26420''Are you always so happy?''
26420''Are you coming with me to- day?''
26420''Are you never afraid that all you''re going through may be in vain?''
26420''Are you sure you are n''t?''
26420''Are you threatening me?''
26420''Are-- you-- married?''
26420''Are_ you_?''
26420''At eleven at night?''
26420''At home?
26420''Bad conscience?''
26420''Beady?''
26420''Because she did n''t so much as hint at it when she wrote that she meant to break off the-- the----''''What made her write like that?''
26420''But do n''t hundreds of poor women"stand"much worse?''
26420''But for the tramp population less conducive to savouriness-- don''t you think-- than baths?''
26420''But it is n''t so?''
26420''But still,''said Miss Levering, with a faint accent of impatience,''you_ are_ an advocate for the Suffrage, are n''t you?''
26420''But there''s a well- dressed man-- that one who is n''t holding up anything that I can see-- what on earth is_ he_ doing there?''
26420''But they came?''
26420''But who takes care of you?''
26420''But you do n''t mean seriously,''Lord John asked his guest,''you do n''t mean, do you, that there''s any possible complication about_ your_ seat?''
26420''But you''ve seen them----?''
26420''But_ how_ did you get here?''
26420''Ca n''t she see-- even if there were anything in the"Cause,"as she calls it-- what an imbecile waste of time it is talking to these louts?''
26420''Ca n''t you see the meeting''s over?''
26420''Can you lay your hand on your heart, and say you''ve tried as hard to entertain your other neighbour as I have to keep mine going?''
26420''Can you tell me who the speakers are?''
26420''Citizens?
26420''Clutches?
26420''Comin''to play golf?''
26420''Considering they''re men?''
26420''Could you please tell me the time?''
26420''D''you think we ought to st''y at''ome and wash the dishes?''
26420''Did I drop that?''
26420''Did n''t know?''
26420''Did n''t you sleep well,''m?''
26420''Did that man know us?''
26420''Did you mean you are"ready"to do that?''
26420''Did you want to?''
26420''Different, Wark?''
26420''Dislike?
26420''Do I_ always_ talk about Stonor?
26420''Do n''t they?''
26420''Do n''t you get the news of the day in the_ Morning Post_?''
26420''Do n''t you know his little lordship never did that?''
26420''Do n''t you remember how you said----''''That you have very pink cheeks?
26420''Do n''t you think I ought to like my niece best?''
26420''Do n''t you want to sit down?''
26420''Do n''t you?''
26420''Do they all end like that?''
26420''Do they let you sit up for supper?''
26420''Do what?''
26420''Do you deny that you refused to see me, and that when I persisted you vanished?''
26420''Do you expect any trouble?''
26420''Do you know about Mrs. Thomas''s work?''
26420''Do you know how that has come about?
26420''Do you know the real reason I''m getting up this foolish concert?''
26420''Do you know,''Vida asked,''who those men are who have just stopped?''
26420''Do you mean the mother of the Gracchi?''
26420''Do you picture the Suffragettes sitting in sack- cloth?''
26420''Do you reely think they could spare you?''
26420''Do you remember once telling me that I had a thing that was rare in my sex-- a sense of humour?''
26420''Do you see what it says?''
26420''Do you think she really does?''
26420''Do you think you have to tell me that?''
26420''Do you want it?''
26420''Do you?''
26420''Do you_ see_ a policeman?''
26420''Dodges?''
26420''Does Mrs. Freddy accuse me of being a"managing woman,"horrid thought?''
26420''Does he?''
26420''Does nobody have tea?''
26420''E wus awskin''me,"''Ow would you like men to st''y at''ome and do the fam''ly washin''?"
26420''Eh?
26420''For fear they''d call us fishes?''
26420''For just the woman you were, to do so brainless a thing-- what was behind?
26420''For me?''
26420''For what are you thanking God?''
26420''For what?''
26420''For you?''
26420''Geoffrey Stonor?''
26420''Geoffrey, Geoffrey, you are n''t going away like that?
26420''Geoffrey?''
26420''Give the speaker a chaunce, caun''t ye?''
26420''Go?
26420''Going to speak, you mean?''
26420''Good thing it is n''t us, ai n''t it, Joey?''
26420''Got us----?''
26420''Got yer dog- whip, miss?''
26420''Guess what?''
26420''Has Miss Levering gone for a walk?''
26420''Has he got his history right?''
26420''Has n''t she been amusing herself in Norway?''
26420''Has n''t she got any of her jewels along with her to- day?''
26420''Have n''t I been telling you it''s an exploded notion that the Suffrage people are all dowdy and dull?''
26420''Have n''t you had about enough?''
26420''Have n''t you noticed,''Miss Levering put it to Trent,''that all our worst disturbances come when men are in charge?''
26420''Have they told you about Mrs. Freddy''s friend who came to tea here in the winter?''
26420''Have to----?''
26420''Have you been reading any more poetry?''
26420''Have you got your lesson-- by heart at last?''
26420''Here''s a man,''says Ernestine,''asking,"If the women get full citizenship, and a war is declared, will the women fight?"''
26420''Homeless women?''
26420''Honestly, Mrs. Tunbridge''--Farnborough was for giving her a chance to clear herself--''what do you think of your friends''recent exploits?''
26420''How can you pretend that women want the vote?
26420''How can you stand it?''
26420''How could you?''
26420''How did_ you_ happen to be there?''
26420''How do you know?''
26420''How do you know?''
26420''How do you know?''
26420''How do you know?''
26420''How do you know?''
26420''How do you make that out?''
26420''How do you think the world got on before you came to show it_ how_?''
26420''How do_ you_ know?''
26420''How else,''said the woman,''should that inexperienced girl have felt the new loyalty and responded as she did?''
26420''How is it bad?''
26420''How will he do that?''
26420''How?''
26420''I did n''t hear, who is the man?''
26420''I did n''t know her name was Vida; how did you?''
26420''I did n''t"fall upon"him, did I?''
26420''I forget, do you know Mr. Stonor personally, or''--she smiled her good- humoured tolerant smile--''or are you just dazzled from afar?''
26420''I forget, were they Guelf or Ghibelline?''
26420''I have to be at Battersea at----''''What were you doing at Pimlico Pier?''
26420''I mean, do they often crowd up and try to hustle the speakers?''
26420''I suppose I can make some little contribution without-- without its committing me to anything?''
26420''I suppose you_ have_ to keep up with politics or you could n''t keep the ball rolling as you did last night?''
26420''I''m not a citizen?''
26420''I?
26420''I?''
26420''I?''
26420''I?''
26420''I?''
26420''If I gave you that much-- for your little projects-- what would you give me?''
26420''If he''s what my cousin says----''''A man you''ve never seen?
26420''If it was as horrible as that for Major Wilkinson to look on at-- what must it have been for those girls?''
26420''If it wus only to use fur_ our_ comfort, d''ye think many o''you workin''men would be found turnin''over their wyges to their wives?
26420''If prison''s so good fur the cause, why did n''t_ you_ go?''
26420''If the mother dies,''she was saying,''wot''appens?''
26420''If the vote ai n''t done us any good,''a man bawled up at him,''''ow''ll it do the women any good?''
26420''If we gave you the vote, what would you do with it?
26420''If women''ad''ave made the laws, do you think we''d''ave''ad one like that disgracin''the statue- book?
26420''If you ca n''t afford a bottle of Tatcho,''a boy called out,''w''y do n''t you get yer''air cut?''
26420''In a second- hand shop?''
26420''In a trip to''Olloway?
26420''In_ our_ debt?''
26420''Into the country?''
26420''Intriguing to get hold of?
26420''Is Miss Claxton some relation of yours?''
26420''Is it mine?''
26420''Is it my sister who is late?''
26420''Is it only the rich men who have the vote?''
26420''Is it premonition of death, or do n''t you like us any more?''
26420''Is it safe to stop and listen for a few minutes to these people?''
26420''Is n''t it a pity not to get your food regularly?
26420''Is n''t it angelic of him?''
26420''Is n''t it fun?''
26420''Is n''t that a phrase?''
26420''Is n''t the phrase consecrated to a different class?''
26420''Is n''t this an instance of your sex''s indifference to the whole thing?
26420''Is she Mrs. or Miss?''
26420''Is she here with you?''
26420''Is she here?
26420''Is something the matter?''
26420''Is that Miss----?''
26420''Is that so?
26420''Is that so?''
26420''Is that what he says?''
26420''Is there anybody here so difficult as not to like that one?''
26420''Is this the effect"seeing Geoffrey"has?''
26420''Is your grandfather worse?''
26420''Is-- is anything the matter?''
26420''Is_ she_ one of them?
26420''It has n''t ever occurred to you to ask?''
26420''It is n''t with your sanction, surely, that she makes this extraordinary demand?''
26420''It''s all this fellow Farnborough''s wicked jealousy-- routing us out of the summer- house where we were sitting,_ perfectly_ happy-- weren''t we?''
26420''Jean?''
26420''Just because the men wo n''t have it?''
26420''Just tell me, my child, is it all right?''
26420''Kicks up a reg''lar shindy, do n''t''e?''
26420''Knew----?''
26420''Let us see how it would sound, shall we?''
26420''Lord, wot are you?''
26420''Matter?
26420''Matter?''
26420''May I stay over till the next train?''
26420''May one wear the uniform who is n''t a member of the Army?''
26420''Me?
26420''Me?''
26420''Men, you mean?''
26420''Miss Levering?''
26420''More important?''
26420''My dear,''she asked her visitor,''have your things been sent down?''
26420''My engagement?
26420''My friends?''
26420''Near a public- house, I suppose?''
26420''Nicer walks than at Ulland?''
26420''No policeman?''
26420''No?
26420''No?
26420''No?''
26420''Not that little one?''
26420''Not to your mother?''
26420''Not when she says----''''Was there never,''he made bold to interrupt,''a misogynist of_ my_ sex who ended by deciding to make an exception?''
26420''Nothing so_ very_ reprehensible in what she said, was there?''
26420''Now are n''t you glad I brought you?''
26420''Now can you see?''
26420''Now, where''s that question that you were going to write?''
26420''Oh, I know him, then?''
26420''Oh, I_ can_ buy you off, can I?
26420''Oh, ca n''t they bring it off?''
26420''Oh, did n''t we?
26420''Oh, did you find your grandfather worse?''
26420''Oh, did you only bring Sara''s bock?''
26420''Oh, do you?
26420''Oh, has she?''
26420''Oh, helping you, is she?''
26420''Oh, how do you do?''
26420''Oh, if all you mean is that_ he''s_ happier, why not?
26420''Oh, in the gallery of the House of Commons?''
26420''Oh, is it all his?
26420''Oh, is n''t it?
26420''Oh, is that it?''
26420''Oh, is this Friday?
26420''Oh, is_ that_ Mary?''
26420''Oh, it''s on your account, is it?''
26420''Oh, look''ere, just take that extry''arf pint outside the meetin''and cool off, will yer?''
26420''Oh, the woman who brought her child here once?''
26420''Oh, was it as bad as the papers said?''
26420''Oh, what does it matter?''
26420''Oh, why did you do it?''
26420''Oh, yes,''m, quite''orrid,''agreed the maid, but with the air of''What can you expect of persons so low?''
26420''Oh, you arranged it?
26420''Oh, you did n''t hold a meeting here in the afternoon?''
26420''Oh,_ will_ you?
26420''Oh?
26420''Oh?''
26420''Ome do you call it?
26420''On their shoulders?''
26420''Once before?''
26420''One girl''s happiness-- against a thing nobler than happiness for thousands-- who can hesitate?
26420''One woman''s mishap-- what is that?
26420''One?
26420''Only one vacancy?''
26420''Oo among you workin''men''as the most comfortable''omes?
26420''Oo did you say that to?''
26420''Oo you talkin''to?
26420''Oo''s Mill?''
26420''Or was it because of some offence against one of her high laws that she wiped the old experiments out?
26420''Over what edge?''
26420''Paid?
26420''Perhaps you-- you do n''t know-- you do n''t know----''''_ How_''re we going to know if you ca n''t tell us?''
26420''Power?
26420''Rather too much, is n''t there, little girl?''
26420''Reading papers?
26420''Reading?
26420''Really?''
26420''Reason?
26420''Remarkable?
26420''Rest?''
26420''Rifles?
26420''Run away?''
26420''Said that, did he?''
26420''Shall I show the gentleman into the drawing- room, miss?''
26420''Shall I tell you a secret?
26420''Shall you stay, then, till the bitter end?''
26420''She took their pennies-- a rich woman like that?''
26420''She went away from you, then?''
26420''She''s a step- sister, is n''t she?''
26420''Skilly?''
26420''So he thinks when I challenge him:"What good, what earthly good, is all this unless an anodyne-- for you-- is good?"''
26420''So you''ve gone about all these years feeling that you''d discharged every obligation?''
26420''Some one asking, at this time of day, why women want the vote?
26420''Some one who can speak?''
26420''Spit?
26420''Still talking over your Shelter plan?''
26420''Taking him over?''
26420''Teach them not to hold their heads like a broken lily?''
26420''Than men?''
26420''That must have been when I was in the schoolroom-- wasn''t it?''
26420''That she was four years older than you?''
26420''That''s not a daughter of old Sir Hervey?''
26420''That''s them, ai n''t it?''
26420''The art of pleasing?
26420''The man who wants you to go to him as housekeeper?''
26420''The same man both times?''
26420''The tall young fellow with the stoop?
26420''The_ Clarion_?''
26420''The_ Labour Leader_?''
26420''The_ Labour Record_?''
26420''Then what''s all this chatterment about?''
26420''Then why keep up that old pretence?''
26420''Then you don''t-- after all, you do n''t mean to----''''To keep you and her apart?
26420''Then?
26420''They are not my friends,''said Mrs. Freddy, with dignity,''but I do n''t think you must call them----''''Why not?''
26420''They are often asked elsewhere; and I would like to ask in return: Since when was human society held to exist for its handful of geniuses?
26420''They do n''t?''
26420''Think so?
26420''Those two policemen,''she went on, in a whisper,''why are they looking at_ us_ like that?''
26420''To help you?''
26420''To wait for what?''
26420''To what?''
26420''Trent?''
26420''Unless you''re leader of the Opposition, I suppose it''s not very easy to do much while your party''s out of power,''hazarded Lady John,''is it?''
26420''Up_ there_, miss?''
26420''Vida, what have you been reading?''
26420''W''ich is the one in black-- this end?''
26420''W''y do n''t the men''elp ye to get yer rights?''
26420''Was it reading those papers that set you to thinking?''
26420''Was that because you would n''t marry her?''
26420''Was that the first thing you tried?''
26420''Was that why?''
26420''Well, do you mean to forswear pride?
26420''Well, have they primed you?''
26420''Well, how are the young barbarians?''
26420''Well, how spoilt is the great man?''
26420''Well, what of it?''
26420''Well,''said Borrodaile, a little mocking,''what is it?''
26420''Well,''she laughed,''did he get back alive?''
26420''Well?''
26420''Well?''
26420''Well?''
26420''Well?''
26420''Well?''
26420''What about my brother?''
26420''What about the policeman?''
26420''What about?''
26420''What can I do for you?''
26420''What could I do?''
26420''What day was that?''
26420''What do they mean?''
26420''What do you call the greatest evil in the world?''
26420''What do you call the main issue?''
26420''What do you call this?''
26420''What do you do with your power?
26420''What do you mean?''
26420''What do you mean?''
26420''What do you suppose he is carrying in that vase?''
26420''What do you think she said to me the day before she went off yachting?''
26420''What does she do in the meantime-- to----''( to account for your enthusiasm, was implied)''to show she''s a helper?
26420''What does she do to tire her?''
26420''What does?''
26420''What for?''
26420''What foundation is there,''she demanded,''for the rumour that he tells such good stories at dinner?
26420''What happened in that sacred place, that Ark where they safeguard the honour of England?
26420''What happened?''
26420''What if he does?
26420''What if it is?
26420''What if there is n''t?
26420''What is it you are asking of me?''
26420''What is it, Geoffrey?
26420''What is it?''
26420''What is she saying?
26420''What is the matter?''
26420''What is the subtlest art?''
26420''What kept_ you_ awake?''
26420''What made you think of going on that terrible pilgrimage?''
26420''What name did she say?
26420''What name?''
26420''What news?''
26420''What news?''
26420''What on the whole are the prospects?''
26420''What others?''
26420''What papers do you read?''
26420''What party?''
26420''What reason did she give?''
26420''What resolution?''
26420''What sort of things?''
26420''What terrible thing?''
26420''What then?''
26420''What was that about a telephone message, Jean darling?''
26420''What was?''
26420''What were they doing?''
26420''What were you doing, I should like to know?''
26420''What women do n''t want it?
26420''What would I understand?''
26420''What''s bewgly?''
26420''What''s coming?''
26420''What''s the matter?''
26420''What''s the matter?''
26420''What''s the use of all that?
26420''What''s the use-- what''s the use of your going on denying it?''
26420''What''s to become of chivalry?''
26420''What''s up?''
26420''What, in the name of----?
26420''What, is she talking politics?
26420''What?
26420''What?
26420''What?
26420''What?
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What?''
26420''What_ are_ you afraid of?''
26420''What_ has_ become of chivalry?''
26420''What_ have_ you been doing?
26420''When did he do anything like that?''
26420''When did you write this?''
26420''When do you dine?''
26420''When is the next meeting?''
26420''When may I come and talk to you?''
26420''When you are n''t in your garden you''re----''''Here?''
26420''Where are the others?
26420''Where are you going?''
26420''Where are you going?''
26420''Where did you go-- dressed like that?''
26420''Where''s Geoffrey?
26420''Where''s that other place?
26420''Where''s their Harry Lauder?''
26420''Where''s their Michael Angelo?
26420''Where----?''
26420''Where?''
26420''Where?''
26420''Which is Lady Whyteleafe?''
26420''Which is the one,''asked Lord Borrodaile,''that you were telling me about?''
26420''Which of us d''you mean?''
26420''Which one?''
26420''Which way are we going?''
26420''Who are who?''
26420''Who did?''
26420''Who do you think is coming round the drive?''
26420''Who else?''
26420''Who goes with you on these raids?''
26420''Who got him to?''
26420''Who has ruffled you?''
26420''Who has?''
26420''Who is Harry Lauder?''
26420''Who is it you are going to marry?''
26420''Who is it?
26420''Who is our fourth?''
26420''Who is that, Geoffrey?''
26420''Who is the Elusive One?''
26420''Who knows you''re doing this kind of thing?''
26420''Who tells you that?''
26420''Who told you that?''
26420''Who told you that?''
26420''Who''s going to have a short round before sundown?''
26420''Who''s that?''
26420''Who?''
26420''Who?''
26420''Who?''
26420''Who?''
26420''Who_ is_ the witch?''
26420''Who_ wants_ a woman to play golf?''
26420''Whose story?''
26420''Why are you always worrying the Liberals?
26420''Why are you catechizing me?
26420''Why are you saying good- bye as if you were never coming back?''
26420''Why are you so sure of that?''
26420''Why could that great, all- powerful body do nothing?
26420''Why did n''t you stay where I left you?''
26420''Why do I waste time over myself?
26420''Why do n''t more women come to hear you if they''re so in favour?''
26420''Why do n''t you make her sit down?''
26420''Why do you call them----?''
26420''Why do you dislike her so?''
26420''Why do you go?''
26420''Why do you say it like that?''
26420''Why do you say it like that?''
26420''Why do you say that?
26420''Why do you say that?''
26420''Why do you say that?''
26420''Why does n''t she?''
26420''Why have n''t I seen Miss Levering before this summer?''
26420''Why in heaven should_ you_----''''Why?
26420''Why is it cut short?''
26420''Why is she intriguing to get hold of a man that ten years ago she flatly refused to see or hold any communication with?''
26420''Why nervous?''
26420''Why not?
26420''Why not?''
26420''Why not?''
26420''Why should I prefer his wife?''
26420''Why should I pull down my veil?''
26420''Why should I remind_ any_body of what I want only to forget?''
26420''Why should I tell you?''
26420''Why should it?''
26420''Why should n''t you find it still?''
26420''Why should you mind so?''
26420''Why should you think that it''s only you these ten years have taught something to?
26420''Why shouldn''t''--she turned suddenly--''why should n''t the dogcart take me on after dropping Mr. Farnborough at the station?
26420''Why was it, then?''
26420''Why, where is he then?''
26420''Why,''he demanded with an effort to convey''pure logic,''''why should n''t a man- hater on your side prove equally open to reason?''
26420''Why?
26420''Why?
26420''Why?
26420''Why?''
26420''Why?''
26420''Why?''
26420''Why?''
26420''Why?''
26420''Why?''
26420''Why_ does_ Laura have her?''
26420''Why_ will_ you go on talking of what''s so long over and ended?''
26420''Will that ghost give you no rest?''
26420''With Miss Levering?''
26420''With her face screwed up?''
26420''Women?''
26420''Wot about the men?
26420''Wot can you expect from a pig but a grunt?''
26420''Wot do they give ye,''inquired a half- tipsy tramp,''fur''awkin''that rot about?''
26420''Wot yer doin''?''
26420''Wot''appens to the pore little''ome w''en the mother dies?
26420''Wot''s that?
26420''Wot''s the lydy''s nyme?''
26420''Would wives have a vote?''
26420''Would you have women magistrates?''
26420''Yes, I know; but the others are expecting me, are n''t they?''
26420''Yes, was n''t it disgustin''?''
26420''Yes, what did poor Paul say to make you fall upon him like that?''
26420''Yes, wot''ave women ever_ done_?''
26420''Yes; nice creature, is n''t she?''
26420''Yes; one of the best we''ve had----''''When was that?''
26420''Yes; seems funny, does n''t it?
26420''Yes; why not?''
26420''Yes?''
26420''Yesterday?
26420''You are n''t going to let this old thing come between you and me?''
26420''You are n''t serious?''
26420''You are_ not_ sure?''
26420''You call it a precipice?''
26420''You care about him still?''
26420''You did n''t get it then?''
26420''You did n''t see anything of my brother and his wife?''
26420''You do n''t believe her story?''
26420''You do n''t know about her, I suppose?''
26420''You do n''t know her?
26420''You have come to realize, then-- after all these years-- that you owed me something?''
26420''You hear?
26420''You heard why I was late?''
26420''You know some of them?''
26420''You know?''
26420''You mean she went away from you?''
26420''You mean the way she crosses her legs?''
26420''You mean we wo n''t be among the first of the great nations to give women the Suffrage?''
26420''You mean what are called your tactics?''
26420''You mean you do n''t know him yourself?''
26420''You mean you were n''t frightened?''
26420''You mean, he''s not as rude to me as he is to you?''
26420''You tell me you are n''t late?''
26420''You think I do n''t recall it correctly?''
26420''You think so?''
26420''You think we would n''t be glad,''she said,''to go straight to the goal?''
26420''You think"the facts"would have excused you?''
26420''You two still talking Barlow?
26420''You want me to have a real share in it all, do n''t you, Geoffrey?''
26420''You''ll have some tea?''
26420''You''ll help us out, wo n''t you?''
26420''You''ve got over it, then?''
26420''You-- wanted-- it_ overlooked_?''
26420''You_ wonder_?''
26420''_ Cleared up?_''''Yes, cleared up.''
26420''_ Dying?_ What was the----''''I got no more out of her than the farmer''s wife did.
26420''_ England?_''The slow head- shake and the smile airily relegated the Woman''s Movement to the limbo of the infinitely distant.
26420''_ I?_''But no comfort of doubting seemed to cross the darkness of Jean''s backward look into the past.
26420''_ I?_''Filey''s face was nothing less than aghast at the mere suggestion.
26420''_ Is n''t_ she wonderful?''
26420''_ Is_ it Stonor they mean?''
26420''_ Looks_ like she''d be''andy with her fists, do n''t she?''
26420''_ Miss?_ Why, that''s the mother o''the Gracchi,''and there was a little ripple of laughter.
26420''_ Saw?_''exclaimed Mrs. Heriot.
26420''_ That_ is Miss Levering?''
26420''_ There!_ Now tell me, what did you do yesterday?''
26420''_ To- day?_ Why she only came late last night!
26420''_ What?_''''Why, she went to you the minute I threw the pillow.''
26420''_ Whose?_''He crushed the rough note of his manifesto into his pocket.
26420''_ Whose_ happiness?''
26420''_ Will_ you?''
26420''_ Wonderful!_''''To have lived through_ that_, when she was-- how old?''
26420''_ Your__ Times_?''
26420''_''Appy?_ Lord!''
26420*****''Would you like to see my yellow garden, Vida?''
26420--_Louisville Courier- Journal._ SHERMAN-- WHAT IS SHAKESPEARE?
26420--meaning, How in the world did you manage without me to take care of you?
26420--the woman mused--''to cover our ignorance of how things go-- and why?
26420After a little pause,''Of course you know Stonor?''
26420After all, it''s rather the woman''s"part,"is n''t it?''
26420After all, why pursue the matter?
26420An angry voice had called out--''Oo are you talkin''to?''
26420And what did they decide?
26420And why were they not processing thither?
26420And you live at Battersea?''
26420Are n''t you very good to her?''
26420Are the men who avail themselves of Lord Rowton''s hostels, are_ they_ all angels?
26420Are they wrong to look to you, or are they right?
26420Are those women holding meetings in London now as well as in the constituencies?''
26420Are you mad?''
26420Are you worrying about a handful who think because they have been trained to like subservience everybody else ought to like subservience, too?
26420Are_ they_ all''appy?''
26420Are_ you_ going to listen to them?''
26420As I saw them, I said to myself,"What sort of crime shall I have to sit and hear about?
26420As Miss Levering made no rejoinder,''What greater victory do women want?''
26420As still he made no sign,''Of course,''the lady whispered across the back of the bench,''of course, you think she''s an abomination, but----?''
26420At intervals he inquired of the men around him, in a great jovial voice,''Are we down-''earted?''
26420Before Gorringe could reply:''Doddy''s a bootiful angel, is n''t Doddy?''
26420Brown?''
26420But Vida, glancing discreetly out of the side window, had said--''There?
26420But above argument, denial, abuse, steadily in that upper air the clear voice kept on--''Do you think they_ wanted_ to go to his house?
26420But did she mind?
26420But do they care?
26420But how do you keep them going?
26420But if my old half- forgotten pain can turn her generosity into the common treasury----''''What do you propose she shall do, poor child?''
26420But in Vida''s face-- what had brought to it that still intensity?
26420But it seems like those children need some one to look after them more than-- more than----''''Than I do?
26420But nobody knows the very nicest side of Geoffrey, do they?''
26420But our friendship is an uncommonly peaceful one, do n''t you think?''
26420But the ruddy man said,''Fists?
26420But the time has come when a woman may look about her and say, What general significance has my secret pain?
26420But who troubles to see that laws are fairly interpreted for the unrepresented?
26420But why was he looking so grave?
26420But women:"Where''s the chucker out?"''
26420But would it remain so?
26420But you really mean it-- that nobody has introduced you to Miss Levering yet?
26420But''--Vida looked deep into the candid eyes--''there is something you_ can_ do----''''What?''
26420But, what then would we talk about?''
26420But----''''Well?''
26420But_ why_ in the world?
26420CHAPTER XV She did not look round when Dick Farnborough ran in from the garden, saying:''_ Is_ it-- is it really?''
26420Ca n''t yer get a husband?''
26420Ca n''t you see what''s at stake?''
26420Can I have a trap of some sort to take me over?''
26420Did you hear''--he turned back and linked his arm in Greatorex''s--''did you hear what Mrs. Heriot said about him?
26420Do n''t hundreds, thousands of meek creatures who have never defied anybody, do n''t they have to bear worse ignominies?
26420Do n''t they hear constantly in the courts how little it costs a man to be convicted of beating his own wife?''
26420Do n''t you know there''s a third of the women in this country ca n''t afford the luxury of stayin''in their''omes?
26420Do n''t you know women are more civilized than men?''
26420Do n''t you know''--he turned to Lady John--''that look of half- resentful interest?''
26420Do n''t you men know-- why, it''s notorious!--that the women of the working class are worse sweated even than the men?''
26420Do n''t you see there''s some disturbance?
26420Do n''t you?''
26420Do they want to punish all women because they do n''t like the manners of a handful?
26420Do you know what a lorry is?''
26420Do you know what our fathers did to get ours?
26420Do you know who I am?''
26420Do you realize that we left"Orders"and"Honours"half an hour ago, and ever since we''ve been talking scandal?''
26420Do you reely think,''she reasoned with them as man to man;''do you think, now, we tyke those low wyges because we got a likin''fur low wyges?
26420Do you think our deputation should have tried to get in without ringing at the door?''
26420Do you think she''s not down yet?''
26420Do you think the car''--she turned to Stonor--''your man said something about recharging----''''Oh, did he?
26420Do you think the result should make us proud of our policy?
26420Do_ they_ bother about chivalry?
26420Does it make you morose as it does Freddy?''
26420Does it"join on"to anything?
26420Does n''t it stand to reason?
26420Ernestine?
26420Even the well- to- do middle- class woman----''''Wot are_ you_?''
26420For what other reason would you have for leaving me?''
26420Forgive my rushing off, wo n''t you?''
26420Freddy crestfallen, what about?''
26420Freddy?''
26420Had not his young kinswoman''s charity concerts helped to rebuild the chantry?
26420Has Miss Broughton said it, too?
26420Has she been seeing visions too?''
26420Have I done anything?''
26420Have I ever failed?''
26420Have n''t they deserved it?''
26420Have n''t you heard that they did n''t do that until they had exhausted every other means to get a hearing?''
26420Have they got a boy?
26420Have we any right to let the world go wrong while we get compliments for our forbearance and for pretty manners?''
26420Have you got other people?''
26420He bent down to put the low question,''Do you mean, then, that after all-- it lived?''
26420He could n''t forbear adding in a whisper,''Even such a question, and such men?''
26420He returned with,''After all, women are much more Conservative_ naturally_ than men, are n''t they?''
26420He said----''''How did Major Wilkinson happen to be there?''
26420He smiled down at her, echoing,''Well?''
26420He stared at the girl, till across the moment''s silence a cry of misery went out--''Why did you desert her?''
26420He stood bewildered, making with noiseless lips the word''_ Glad?_''She was''glad''he had n''t tired of her rival?
26420He stood bewildered, making with noiseless lips the word''_ Glad?_''She was''glad''he had n''t tired of her rival?
26420He''s a Liberal, is n''t he?''
26420He''s asking that old question, Why did we wait till the Liberals came in?
26420He''s far too busy, ai n''t he, Joey, even if we ca n''t see that he accomplishes much?''
26420He_ thought_ it was a young man----''''And it was really Miss Ernestine Blunt?
26420Her stiffly maintained attitude and direct look said as plain as print, Now what excuse have you to offer for asking me to come here?
26420How am I ever to face all those men?''
26420How did he take the sacrilege?''
26420How do they know what''s womanly?
26420How many Platos are there here in this crowd?''
26420How many Shakespeares are there in all England to- day?
26420How should_ they_ be expected to know how to treat women?
26420How?
26420How_ are_ you to know if we ca n''t somehow manage to tell you?''
26420I began to say to myself,"Is n''t it time the women lent a hand?"''
26420I did n''t believe them till----''''Till?''
26420I look quite like a Woman of the People, do n''t I?''
26420I s''y, miss,''oo killed Cock Robin?''
26420I spoilt it for you?''
26420I suppose it is-- but it''s rather a Geisha view of life, do n''t you think?''
26420I thought you said you wanted me to----''''To make nice little speeches with composure?
26420I''ve heard them ask Ernestine in Battersea-- she has valiant friends there--"Oo''s''urt_ your_ feelin''s?"
26420If I could think that because of me you were able to do this----''''You go back to that?''
26420If everybody said we were nice, well- behaved women, who''d come to hear us?
26420If she were''_ that_ sort,''why not hang out some signal?
26420If the middle and upper class women have the dignity and influence men pretend they have, why are n''t they represented there?
26420If the women want the vote, w''y ai n''t they here to s''y so?
26420If the women want the vote, w''y ai n''t they here to s''y so?"
26420Impossible for any passer- by to carry out the programme of pausing to ask idly,''What are those women screeching about?''
26420In Battersea, you go into some modest little restaurant, and you say,"Will you lend me a chair?"
26420In Northumberland?''
26420In spite of all I did for her----''''What did you do?''
26420In the case of this poor little abandoned working girl, what man can be the fit judge of her deeds in that awful moment of half- crazed temptation?
26420In the pause Jean asked,''Did nobody want you to teach French or sing the little songs?''
26420Is he, Ronald?''
26420Is it a quarter past already?''
26420Is it some poor woman, I wondered?''
26420Is it the one in mauve who did that?''
26420Is n''t a chair one of the things men have always been ready to offer us?
26420Is n''t it equally an instance of man''s keenness about public questions?''
26420Is n''t it too cheap an idea of morals that women should take credit for the enduring that keeps the wrong alive?
26420Is she going to faint?''
26420Is the little Sfink as old as me?
26420Is this a burglar being brought along between the two big policemen, or will it be a murderer?
26420It is so strange to see a man like you as much deluded as the Hyde Park loafers, who say to Ernestine Blunt,"Who''s hurt_ your_ feelings?"
26420It surprises you?
26420It was her sister who added anxiously,''Is Wood leading now at the Queen''s Hall Concerts?''
26420It was plain she heard the echo of that insistent, never- answered query of the crowd,''Got your dog- whip, miss?''
26420It''s rather upsetting to think-- do you suppose any of our servants have-- views?''
26420Leaving it to the poor and the ill- equipped to----''''To keep the world from slipping into chaos?''
26420Lord John stopped halfway across the lawn and called back,''are n''t you coming?''
26420May I?''
26420Miss Levering opened wide eyes-- a glint of something like amazed laughter crossed her face, as she repeated--''_ They_ are sexless, you think?''
26420Mrs. Freddy was looking round and asking where was the Elusive One?
26420Mrs. Heriot''s eyes flashed, but before she could speak Jean asked--''Where is she now?''
26420Must something be the matter that I venture into my own breakfast- room of a morning?''
26420Near----''''Why should n''t I drop down upon you some day?''
26420No small sum either----''''Has she never paid it back?''
26420Not here one there one, to keep the ball rolling, but a steady and pitiless fire of''Do you think?''
26420Now, can you lay your hand on your heart----''''And deny it?
26420Now, do you mind saying what is it you really do?"
26420Now, what will she say to you, Cecil?''
26420Now, who tells you these----?''
26420Now, you people who are nearer-- what?
26420Oh, is it question time?
26420Oh,_ is n''t_ she too funny for words?''
26420Oo yer pushin'', old girl?''
26420Or are you too"busy"?''
26420Or did she only see that it was empty?
26420Or does wrong- doing in a man not matter?
26420Or''--her eyes blazed--''or did you dare to be afraid I would n''t?''
26420Out of a little chorus of regret, came Borrodaile''s slightly mocking,''Anything wrong with the precious children?''
26420Out of the babel came the question,''What do you know about it?
26420Over her shoulder Lady John called out,''Is_ that_ Miss Levering?''
26420Prison Experiences of Miss----''''How much?''
26420Put it in a pie?''
26420SHERMAN-- What is Shakespeare?
26420Shall we go and see?''
26420Shall we go up and see them having tea?''
26420She answered without looking at him,''What is it?''
26420She consolidated her position by asking sweetly,''Does it need saying?''
26420She spoke the name with an accent of such protecting tenderness that Vida asked--''And who is Miss Mary O''Brian?''
26420So Mrs. Freddy asked me to turn over my Girls''Club to your cousin Sophia----''''Are you given to good works, too?''
26420So tell me, what if it should be a question of going forward in the suffrage direction or going back?''
26420So that justice should n''t miscarry-- wasn''t it?
26420Somebody had interrupted to ask,''If the House of Commons wo n''t give you justice, why do n''t you go to the House of Lords?''
26420Something unwonted in the wooden face prompted Miss Levering to say--''What do you want to do in the country?''
26420Stonor?''
26420Subscribes?''
26420Takes her away from her own home, where she ought to be----''''Who wants her at home?''
26420Tell me about----''''Like what?''
26420That little thing?''
26420That was why she made such a point of my coming and trying to-- to----''''You needed a great deal of urging then?''
26420That would be rather too inhuman, would n''t it?''
26420That''s new, is n''t it?''
26420The great man seemed not to see it, but he murmured,''How do you do?''
26420The only question is, on what terms shall she continue to be in?
26420The rest of your_ good_ speakers?''
26420Then a very penetrating voice screamed,''Will you be mine?''
26420Then how, in the name of Heaven, do you know-- she wants-- what you ask?''
26420Then the next time you and I meet in the country or find ourselves alone in a crush, you''ll be saying,"What''s her story?
26420Then to her sister Vida whispered,''What is quod?''
26420Then, do n''t you know, you must pay me in kind?''
26420Then, showing the profundity of his friendly interest,''Why does n''t she find some nice fella to marry her?''
26420Then, upon a sudden thought,''What has changed_ her_?
26420There''s more of him to_ be_ ugly, is n''t there?
26420They study music by thousands: where''s their Beethoven?
26420This is n''t_ the end_?''
26420Those Scotch peasants, you know----''''Oh, because he''s rude, and talks with a burr, you think he''s a sort of political Thomas Carlyle?''
26420Up and down the country we go organizing----''''''Ow do you go-- in a pram?''
26420Upon his''What can I do?''
26420Vida asked;''or is that some trophy?''
26420W''y do n''t you stop in it?''
26420Was he going to hale the girl off to Holloway?
26420Was it possible that this dread myrmidon of the law was vaunting the prowess of the small rebel?
26420Was it there not at all for memory of some battle long ago, but just to mark on the fair bright page of afternoon a huge surprise?
26420Was n''t it a woman, the Baroness von Suttner, whose book about peace was the corner- stone of the Peace Congress?
26420Was n''t it that book that converted the millionaire maker of armaments of war?
26420Was n''t it the Baroness von Suttner''s book that made Nobel offer those great international prizes for the Arts of Peace?
26420Was she looking at that?
26420Was the great shaft itself playing a part in the impression?
26420We can, at a pinch, see past unbecoming clothes, ca n''t we, Lady Whyteleafe?
26420We hate all beady ladies, do n''t we, Sara?''
26420Well''--she turned to the woman in the corner--''how''s the House of Help?''
26420Well----?''
26420Were they not Borrodailes of Borrodaile?
26420What a pity she has n''t got a husband and a baby to keep her quiet"?
26420What advertisement is so sure of being remembered?
26420What chance had a little unborn child against"the last of the great feudal lords,"as you called him?''
26420What did it matter what reasons were given for past failure, if only the future might be assured?
26420What did it matter?
26420What did she say, eh?''
26420What did she want with----?''
26420What did the leaders( in prison and out), what did they think they were accomplishing, besides making themselves hideously uncomfortable?
26420What do you suppose a door- bell is for?
26420What do you think he was charged with?''
26420What example do they have?
26420What excuse shall you make your own soul for not going straight to the goal?''
26420What had he been stealing, that small criminal?
26420What had that girl been saying?
26420What had they all been doing there in that-- garden, I was going to say!--that big grimy building?
26420What happened to_ our_ honour, that these men dare tell us is so safe in their hands?
26420What has she been saying to you?''
26420What have you done for yours?''
26420What if we have to earn the right to be gentle and gracious without shame?''
26420What is it but a loss of the sense of beauty that''s to blame?''
26420What is it to me?''
26420What is the use, we say, of crying about individual pains and penalties?
26420What makes you think----?''
26420What men?''
26420What name, miss?''
26420What night shall it be?"
26420What nonsense are you talking?''
26420What on earth is a person like that doing in this_ galère_?''
26420What part?''
26420What patriot''s voice is heard in Europe or America to- day?
26420What poet goes out in these times to die at Missolonghi?
26420What sort of felon is to stand in the dock before the people, whose crime is, they ask for the vote?"
26420What was going to happen?
26420What was he like?''
26420What was the new thing in it?
26420What was this armour that looked like mere indifference?
26420What woman is tried by hers?''
26420What''s he-- looking for another hansom?
26420What''s the result?
26420What?
26420What_ am_ I to do with you?
26420What_ happened_?''
26420When Ernestine declared that women could open doors for themselves, some one called out--''When do you expect to be a K.C.?''
26420When do you want to go?''
26420When he saw the girl rising from her knees, he turned to Lady John with a little gesture of,''What did I tell you?''
26420When shall I see you again, I wonder?''
26420When the man on my right asks,"Would n''t they quarrel?"
26420When they were out of earshot,''What''s the matter?''
26420Where did this mysterious stream of help come from?
26420Where in all this were_ her_"peers"?
26420Where is the modern Kossuth, Garibaldi?
26420Where should I go for tea and for news of the workings of the Zeitgeist?''
26420Where''s the woman Shakespeare?''
26420Where''s their Plato?
26420Where?''
26420Whereabouts are you?''
26420While the people were asking one another,''What is it?
26420Who am I that I should thank you?''
26420Who are they?''
26420Who cartoons people who are of no importance?
26420Who do you think are invited to serve on that Commission?
26420Who is it?''
26420Who is late?''
26420Who troubles himself?
26420Who with?''
26420Whose chivalry prevents that?
26420Why are they waiting?''
26420Why could n''t people like these go further still?
26420Why did men, when British justice was born-- why did they so long ago insist on trial by"a jury of their peers"?
26420Why did n''t their sons hold fast what so great a race had won?''
26420Why did n''t we worry the Conservatives when they were in power?
26420Why do n''t you ask after my babies?''
26420Why do n''t you ask the Conservatives to give you the vote?''
26420Why do they make that noise?''
26420Why do we pretend that all conversion is to some religious dogma-- why not to a view of life?''
26420Why do you stay there?''
26420Why has n''t a woman like that married?"
26420Why must there be a wedding in the family, Wark?''
26420Why not?
26420Why not?
26420Why not?''
26420Why should n''t she?''
26420Why should we be so content to go the old way to destruction?
26420Why should we suppose we''d gain anything by complaining?
26420Why should you think she wants me in her clutches?''
26420Why were they coming out at that hour of the day?
26420Why, then, carry a whip?''
26420Why, then, once again, this Commission of_ men_?
26420Will any one tell me what they_ want_?''
26420Will you come?''
26420With an air of profound suspicion, Mrs. Heriot interrupted--''She did n''t say, I suppose, how she happened to fall so low?''
26420Wo n''t you last longer if you do?''
26420Wo n''t you?''
26420Wot did you do last election?
26420Wot''s the reason thousands do-- and the best and the soberest?
26420Wot?
26420Yes?
26420You do n''t believe me?
26420You knew her father, did n''t you?''
26420You laugh?
26420You never asked yerselves,"Wot''s a Liberal, anyway?"''
26420You''ll remind her of that first of all, wo n''t you?''
26420You''re trying to shield him----''''Why should I?
26420_ Bus?_ Had danger robbed her of her reason?
26420_ Bus?_ Had danger robbed her of her reason?
26420_ Had_ anything happened?
26420_ Is n''t_ it?
26420_ They_ believe in prolonging their youth, do n''t they?''
26420_ W''y_ does any woman tyke less wyges than a man for the same work?
26420_ Where_ do you say these orgies take place?''
26420_ Why_ do they?''
26420_ You!_ You are n''t thinking of marrying?''
26420a man like_ you_ not to have had the freedom, that even the lowest seem to have----''''Freedom?''
26420am I such a chicken?''
26420and''_ Why_ do you?''
26420are those other people all about?
26420ca n''t you see that this crazed campaign you''d start her on-- even if it''s successful, it can only be so through the help of men?
26420do n''t you hear they''re talking about our cousin?''
26420exclaimed the girl,''_ they_ were able to do that?''
26420is that true?
26420page 250: quotation typographical error corrected''Why did n''t you stay where I left you?
26420said a decent- looking but dismal sort of shopman just behind,''is that the mother of those dreadful young women?''
26420she appealed to Borrodaile,--''nobody who has n''t seen him with children?''
26420should be reduced to asking,''Who are we waiting for?''
26420the young woman patted her fringe,''do you suppose we''ll be in the_ Magnifier_ to- morrow?
26420what are the women of this country coming to?
26420what can a woman like you_ know_ about such a thing?''
26420what next?''
46526Are the race often as good looking?
46526Elizabeth,said the old lady,"is it true that thee is learning music, and can play upon the guitar?"
46526Her first notes of"Where are now the hopes?"
46526Mother, tell me, would you chide me, If I bound it round my hair?
46526She gave us first the arietta,"Where are now the Hopes I''ve cherished?"
46526That we were delighted and surprised?
46526The dress itself was handsome, but why wear that_ white lace bertha_?
46526The mocking crowd are all I now shall see; Can I not''scape and hide me?
46526What shall we say?
46526tergete il ciglio, Perchè tremar, perchè?
46526who cares for Jenny Lind?
46587Is it not strange,he writes,"that in process of composition it seemed charming?
46587Why are we peasants not nobles? 46587 ''What''s to be done?'' 46587 Is it likely that the teachers sent out into the world from our future academies will be any better than those hitherto sent to us from abroad? 46587 Or why is the song of Agnes Sorel so reminiscent of the land of the steppes and birch forests? 46587 Were these men really only amateurs? 46587 Why must this be? 46587 Why then have we cause to complain of the wretched state of musical education in Russia? 46587 in common with a folk- song of Malo- Russian origin? 42058 And did I not,"said Allan,"did I not Forbid you, Dora?"
42058Bless us,cried the Mayor,"what''s that?"
42058Is it a year?
42058Know him?
42058Nay,she cried,"I am bound: you have my promise-- in a year; Will you not bide your year as I bide mine?"
42058Tell us, tell us why you look so?
42058This miller''s wife,800 He said to Miriam,"that you spoke about, Has she no fear that her first husband lives?"
42058Tired?
42058Why, sweet heart, do you pace through the hall As though my court were a funeral?
42058[ 285] But once the King asked:What distant cry Was that we heard''twixt the sea and sky?"
42058''Shall we fight or shall we fly?
42058( we could hardly speak we shook so),--"Are they beaten?
42058140 Should he not trade himself out yonder?
42058160 The calender, amazed to see His neighbor in such trim, Laid down his pipe, flew to the gate, And thus accosted him:"What news?
42058295 Have any of my folk done ill to thee?
4205830 Are these the laurels and repose For which the nations strain their strength?
42058325 But say, on what day will thou that I gain Fulfilled delight, or death to end my pain?
42058335 Thy beauty''s shield, heart- shaped and vermeil dyed?
42058585 Why must the memory to her heart arise Of things unnoticed when they first were heard, Some lover''s song, some answering maiden''s word?
4205860 For some were sunk and many were shatter''d, and so could fight us no more-- God of battles, was ever a battle like this in the world before?
42058650 Why do these tremors run through every limb?
42058670 Is it the wind those branches stirs?
42058675 The steeds rush on in plunging pride; But where are they the reins to guide?
42058795 XIX"I woke-- Where was I?--Do I see A human face look down on me?
4205880 Is a songbird''s course so swift on the wing?"
42058800 And is it mortal, yon bright eye That watches me with gentle glance?
4205885 And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when?
4205885 Whose child is that?
4205895 Are they panic- struck and helpless?
4205895"One?
42058= Cankering thing.= What does canker do?
42058= Die.= What is the plural?
42058= Flag- bird.= What bird was on Napoleon''s flag?
42058= Mused.= What effect has this supposed soliloquy of Napoleon?
42058= New- stuffed.= What does this mean here?
42058= Polar day.= What is the length of the day near the poles?
42058= Sealed.= How?
42058= Snarling.= Does this verse resemble the sound described?
42058A Lieutenant?
42058A Mate-- first, second, third?
42058ARE they beaten?"
42058And Philip ask''d 320"Then you will let me, Annie?"
42058And doth a roof above me close?
42058And one:"Who knows not the shrieking quest When the sea- mew misses its young from its nest?"
42058And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather; 145--"Please to tell us what his name was?"
42058And where was Enoch?
42058And wherefore did he go this weary way, 295 And leave you lonely?
42058Are they palsied or asleep?
42058Are you bought by English gold?
42058Are you cowards, fools, or rogues?
42058At last one night it chanced 485 That Annie could not sleep, but earnestly Pray''d for a sign,"my Enoch, is he gone?"
42058Away went Gilpin-- who but he?
42058Burn the fleet and ruin France?
42058But he-- what look of mastery was this 575 He cast on her?
42058But no such word Was ever spoke or heard; For up stood, for out stepped, for in struck amid all these--A Captain?
42058But on this day with whom shall he contend?
42058But through the stillness he her voice could hear 505 Piercing his heart with joy scarce bearable, That said,"Milanion, wherefore dost thou fear?
42058But yet-- what change is this that holds the maid?
42058Can one love twice?
42058Did I say, all?
42058Do these limbs on a couch repose?
42058Do you think a horse could gallop that distance?
42058Does she indeed see in his glittering eye More than disdain of the sharp shearing blade, 570 Some happy hope of help and victory?
42058Fairest-- why fairest wife?
42058For sidling up she said,"Canst thou live twice, Fair son?
42058Hath he not sworn his love a thousand times, In this green valley, under this green hill, Ev''n on this hand, and sitting on this stone?
42058Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed?
42058Have the deaths of Angela and the Beadsman been foretold?
42058Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?"
42058Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar?
42058He clung, and"What of the Prince?"
42058How make= purple riot= in his heart?
42058How should he listen to her earnest speech?
42058I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?"
42058I hear the sound of guns, O say, what may it be?"
42058I see a gleaming light, 45 O say, what may it be?"
42058III Then the pilots of the place put out brisk and leapt on board; 15"Why, what hope or chance have ships like these to pass?"
42058If here he stay, What can be done?
42058Insulted by a lazy ribald With idle pipe and vesture piebald[259]?
42058Is He not yonder in those uttermost Parts of the morning?
42058Is it love the lying''s for?
42058Is this a chamber where I lie?
42058Is this an advantage or a disadvantage?
42058Just as he said this, what should hap At the chamber- door but a gentle tap?
42058Most loving is she?
42058O goddess, if thou slayest me 405 What new immortal can I serve but thee?
42058O happy Heaven, how canst thou see my face?
42058O happy earth, how canst thou bear my weight?
42058Or art thou of the forest men in fear?
42058Quoth Charles--"Old Hetman, wherefore so, Since thou hast learn''d the art so well?"
42058Reach the mooring?
42058Say, may I be for aye thy vassal blest?
42058Seal''d it with kisses?
42058Then Enoch rolling his gray eyes upon her, 840"Did you know Enoch Arden of this town?"
42058Then said the King,"Stranger, what dost thou here?
42058Then when the farmer pass''d into the field He spied her, and he left his men at work, And came and said:"Where were you yesterday?
42058There Enoch spoke no word to any one, But homeward-- home-- what home?
42058Tired, Annie?"
42058Was the booming of the cannon from the river and the shore: 10"Child,"says grandma,"what''s the matter, what is all this noise and clatter?
42058We are six ships of the line; can we fight with fifty- three?''
42058What are you doing here?"
42058What are= lucent syrops=?
42058What is the meaning of this line?
42058What is the name of this figure?
42058What is the shame that clothes the skin 80 To the nameless horror that lives within?
42058Where every one is poor, What can be gained?"
42058Who sends me a fair boy dressed in black?
42058Why did Keats choose this name instead of Lionel, as he first intended?
42058Why does she tremble as the time grows near, And weak defeat and woful victory fear?
42058Why fails she now to see if far or nigh The goal is?
42058Why was his face so flushed with happiness?
42058Why, if Chaucer chose to call his masterpiece the_ Canterbury Tales_, should any one take the liberty of questioning his nomenclature?
42058Why?
42058Would Enoch have the place?
42058Would he go?
42058XI"How?"
42058XIV"My thoughts came back; where was I?
42058You hope, because you''re old and obese, To find in the furry civic robe ease?
42058You threaten us, fellow?
42058[ 265] VI And"What mockery or malice have we here?"
42058_ Are_ they beaten?
42058am I not fair?
42058and,"What_ will_ his mother do?"
42058at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride?
42058can you be ever loved As Enoch was?
42058canst thou have joyful youth again, That thus goest to the sacrifice, Thyself the victim?
42058cried the Mayor,"d''ye think I brook 185 Being worse treated than a Cook?
42058cries Hervé Riel: 45"Are you mad, you Malouins?
42058go This voyage more than once?
42058had he a home?
42058if I flee to these Can I go from him?
42058must I not speak to these?
42058none to be saved but these and I?"
42058water''d it with tears?
42058what is it that you ask?"
42058what news?
42058what then, thinkest thou Her shining head unto the yoke to bow?
42058what traitor could thee hither bring?
42058why did they take me thence?
42058why do her gray eyes grow dim?
42058why should we?"
42058why should you kill yourself And make them orphans quite?"
42058why were his lips so red?
42058why wilt thou affright a feeble soul?
42058your tidings tell; 165 Tell me you must and shall-- Say why bareheaded you are come, Or why you come at all?"
45766Chien, faisoit l''un, vez vous vo guide?
45766***** What racke, Randolphe?
45766And the gibes in which he indulged so tickled Knox''s sense of humour that he duly records them:"Fie upon you, why have ye broken order?
45766And who was there to lead the ring but the Queen Regent herself, with all her shavelings, for honour of that feast?"
45766But whoever heard Edinburgh call herself the city of St. Giles?
45766Can I not have peace in my own kingdom because of one priest?
45766Ces beaux Astres luisans au ciel de ton visage, De ma funeste mort seront- ils le présage?
45766How, best of poets, dost thou the laurel wear?
45766Is there none of all my subjects who will rid me of that annoyance?"
45766Nec quisquam meorum omnium est, qui hac molestia liberare velit?''
45766O, Comeliness, what need have I of thee, When hope of mutual love is dead for me?
45766Qu''aurait servi le bois de tant de sang lavé?
45766Should a friend stick at a demand that he ought rather to anticipate?
45766Tes yeux qui tous les coeurs prennent à leurs appas, Sans en estre troublez, verront- ils mon trespas?
45766This the Councillor meets with the significant question--"d''un ingrat obligé Que peut- on espérer que d''en être outragé?
45766Was any castle of hers to be assailed by a night- prowler and her ally not send the offender to his due punisher?
45766Was not the disrespect of the children who called the Prophet"bald head"visited upon them?
45766Who can better judge of theis whole proceedings than you?
45766Who can so well wyttnes it as yo^{r} dailie attendaunce?
45766Who may better defende it then yo^{r} learned experience?
45766Whom should my Muse then fly to, but the best Of Kings, for grace; of poets, for my test?
45766Why fly ye, villains, now without order?
45766[ 311] O gens Anglorum, morum flos gesta tuorum, Cur tu Francorum procuras damna bonorum, Servorum Christi, quos tractas crimine tristi?
45766cuidez vous que je me joue, Et que je voulsisse aller En Engleterre demourer?
46330500,000(?)
463305[ Greek: g.] Is Scientific Treatment_ appropriate_ to Art?
4633083([ Greek: g]) Some Arts can not be called Imitative 85(_ b_)_ Humani nihii_--?
4633087(_ c_) Mitigation of the Passions?
46330But when in place of the abstract,"Is man free?"
46330Crown 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._= Salvator Mundi=; or, Is Christ the Saviour of all Men?
46330Does Art_ merit_ Scientific Treatment?
46330He never asks,"Is it?"
46330In presence of such a demand we are at once met by the question,"Whence do we get this conception?"
46330Is it visible and tangible, like the unity of a human body?
46330Was he insensible to sound in poetry?
46330What even of an army?
46330What is man''s need to produce works of art?
46330What is this unity?
46330Work of Art as addressed to Man''s Sense 60- 78[(_ a_) Object of Art-- Pleasant Feeling?
46330[ The Interest or End of Art( 79- 106)(_ a_) Imitation of Nature?
46330_ Cf._:--"''Tell me, good Brutus, can you see your face?''
46330but always"What is it?"
46330retains the accessory meaning of the question,"What is the_ use_?".
47232Let him mark out his bed, dig the soil to the depth of eighteen inches?
47232What has been their parentage?
47232Whence have they sprung?
46473What is the use,say they,"of teaching children to read and think if you do not make them honest and truthful?
46473But of all the evil that is theoretically possible, how much is carried out in practice?
46473But what if commonplace insists on being supreme and shutting out whatever is not of one complexion with itself?
46473How are their characters to be built up?
46473How are we to resist its demand in the administration of a State- supported, and therefore majority- ruled, institution?
46473How old, then, is the earth, especially the inhabited earth, in years?
46473If practice of one hand educates the other hand, will it not also educate the foot?
46473In 1887, when Taxil was received in solemn audience by Leo XIII,"My son,"asked the Pope,"what dost thou desire?"
46473The confession is coupled with a demand for more legislation, but, were the demand conceded, who can guarantee that more still would not be wanted?
46473We must next ask: Is this effect of practice confined to the symmetrical organ, or does it extend to other organs?
46473Why can we not expect, that the development should be extended to the higher forms of will power that go to make up character?
46473why was it not done before?"
46190Am I not a priest?
46190And do you know a spot called Fountain Dale, and a certain monk who is called the Curtal Friar of Fountain Abbey?
46190But why should such a thing be done? 46190 Can any one hit inside that little garland at such a distance?"
46190Could no one of these ten be Robin Hood in disguise?
46190Do you know the country round about, good and holy man?
46190Do you know whether this friar is now on the other side of the river or on this side?
46190Have you no friends who could lend you the money?
46190How is this, master?
46190How is this?
46190How many miles is it to thy true love? 46190 How much money did you borrow of him?"
46190Is it across the river?
46190Master, can we not prevent such a wrong?
46190Now who are you who would stop a peaceful traveler on the king''s highway?
46190Now, sweet lad,he said to himself,"canst thou not tune me a song?"
46190Now, who are you?
46190Now, will you not come into my band?
46190What dost thou here?
46190What is thy name?
46190What is your name?
46190What mercy have you ever shown to the poor? 46190 What wilt thou give me,"said Robin Hood,"In ready gold or fee, To help thee to thy true love again, And deliver her unto thee?"
46190Who gives me this maid?
46190And when he came bold Robin before, Robin asked him courteously,"Oh, hast thou any money to spare, For my merry men and me?"
46190Maiden, is it of your own free will that you we d with this knight?"
46190Page 18, moved punctuation inside quotes for"How is this?"
46190Prythee, ask me not: dost thou not hear how I croak like a frog?"
46190Then the friar leaped forth, crying,"What spy have we here?"
46190Who are you, man?
46190Why should such a dreadful thing be done to them?"
46190Will you join my service?"
46190Will you join yourself to my men?"
46190the young man said,"What is your will with me?"
45790How old do you think?
45790I am a traveller, will it be permitted to inspect the château? 45790 No one save Jacques the huckster lives there, why should he excite any attention?"
45790Time hath wings; how, O mortal, hast thou spent thine?
45790( Just what sort of clients do chauffeurs have?)
45790And what, my dear Sir, may"Poliater"mean?
45790As for the springs, where are they and how are they used?
45790But which name stands first in the great court of God?
45790But, I exclaim, you say he never saw her until yesterday?
45790Can the naturalists inform me why all animals on the approach of a train or auto will, if possible, cross the track?
45790Certainly I do not propose to pay for an idle auto car, and can another chauffeur be gotten?
45790Certainly it does not seem a spot to offer much adventure, but then, who can tell?
45790Did he listen to the booming of these great bells rolling out their summons above us?
45790Do they dine here?
45790How did she use it?
45790How was it at Versailles in the days of the grand Louis?
45790How, by the way, came such a woman, as history paints her, to be daughter of a king who cared only for music and grapes, and the joy of laughter?
45790If so, how did the Terrorists overlook them?
45790Now,--stop.----What are all the cotton mills of earth compared to this stately shrine?
45790Shall we find it ahead of us; are there two such places in this world of the twentieth century?"
45790Should we pity her fate, or turn in disgust from a thing so degraded?
45790The Hôtel de Sens, unique and perfect but a year or so ago, is gone, and for what?
45790The heart of Louis le Grand mashed up by a painter''s knife and spread on canvas-- where now is your greatness, O King?
45790There must be young men there, but where are they?
45790Was there ever any more to him?
45790Were our late opponents such boys?
45790What is it,--why?
45790What were even French brutes made of to destroy a woman like that?
45790Where and how does the vast mass of the French nation bathe?
45790Where to now?
45790While singularly majestic, St. Étienne is simple to severity, but what do architects think about its façade and the odd- looking spires?
45790Why, since there would be few if any rivals on the earth, does not the nation complete it to its own glory?
45790Yet what do we find?
45790[ Illustration: THE CATHEDRAL AT AMIENS By permission of Messrs. Neurdein] Yes, yes, yes,--perhaps so, perhaps so, but, what is that to us?
45790[ Illustration: THE FORTIFICATIONS AT THE OLD TOWN OF CARCASSONNE From a photograph] But is that Carcassonne, or any town built by man''s hands?
45790[ Illustration: THE HOME OF MADAME DE SÉVIGNÉ AT VICHY By permission of Jules Hautecoeur] What do we find in Saratoga?
45790there would seem to have been no woman of importance though he had a queen-- Did that figure of leather ever know passion or love?
43043''Where blooms, O my father, a thornless rose?'' 43043 Dear kindred, whom the Lord to me has given, Must the strong tie that binds us now be riven?
43043Est ce que nous sommes faits pour chercher le bonheur? 43043 Is it not?"
43043Lisez les Chroniques--"de Froissart?"
43043Oh, it is so, is it?
43043Ruth,with all its merits, will not be an enduring or classical fiction-- will it?
43043Villette,"Villette--have you read it?
43043What are you doing?
43043Will you read enough of this to give me your opinion of it?
43043(?)
43043(?)
43043(?)
43043(?)
43043(?)
43043And do you really think that sculpture and painting are to die out of the world?
43043Are we to go on cherishing superstitions out of a fear that seems inconsistent with any faith in a Supreme Being?
43043Are you really so occupied as to have absolutely no time to think of me?
43043Are you really the better for having been here?
43043But to whom am I talking?
43043But where is not this same ego?
43043But why do I say the drop?
43043But, it may be said, how then are we to do anything towards the advancement of mankind?
43043Can I have the remaining volumes of Strauss, excepting any part that you may choose to keep for your own use?
43043Can you not drive over and see me?
43043Combien doit- il payer?"
43043Concerning the"tent- making,"there is much more to be said, but am I to adopt your rule and never speak of what I suppose we agree about?
43043Did Mr. Bray convey to you my earnest request that you would write to me?
43043Did you not think the picture of the Barroni family interesting?
43043Did you notice the review of Foster''s Life?
43043Do n''t you think my style is editorial?
43043Do we not commit ourselves to sleep, and so resign all care for ourselves every night; lay ourselves gently on the bosom of Nature or God?
43043Do you know Buckle''s"History of Civilization"?
43043Do you know if Mr. Chapman has any unusual facilities for obtaining cheap classics?
43043Do you know of this second sample of plagiarism by D''Israeli, detected by the_ Morning Chronicle_?
43043Do you mean to_ do_ it?
43043Do you stare?
43043Do you think any one would buy my"Encyclopà ¦ dia Britannica"at half- price, and my globes?
43043Do you think it worth my while to buy the_ Prospective_ for the sake of Wicksteed''s review-- is there anything new in it?
43043Even the little housemaid Jeanne is charming; says to me every morning, in the prettiest voice:"Madame a- t- elle bien dormi cette nuit?"
43043Evils, even sorrows, are they not all negations?
43043Has A. sent you his book on the Sabbath?
43043Have I confided too much in your generosity in supposing that you would write to me first?
43043Have I, then, any time to spend on things that never existed?
43043Have you any engagement for the week after next?
43043Have you asked Mr. Hennell about it?
43043Have you enjoyed its long shadows and fresh breezes?
43043Have you ever seen a head of Christ taken from a statue, by Thorwaldsen, of Christ scourged?
43043Have you known the misery of writing with a_ tired_ steel pen, which is reluctant to make a mark?
43043Have you not alternating seasons of mental stagnation and activity?
43043Have you seen any numbers of the_ Saturday Review_, a new journal, on which"all the talents"are engaged?
43043Have you seen the review of Strauss''s pamphlet in the_ Edinburgh_?
43043Have you seen them?
43043He was charmed with her, as who would not be that has any taste?
43043How are you and your dear husband and children?
43043How do you go on for society, for communion of spirit, the drop of nectar in the cup of mortals?
43043How do you like"Lelia,"of which you have never spoken one word?
43043How do you look?
43043How is it that I have only had one proof this week?
43043How long will this continue?
43043How shall I enable you to imagine mine, since you know nothing of the localities?
43043How shall I send to you"Don Quixote,"which I have quite finished?
43043How shall I thank you enough for sending me that splendid barrel of beet- root, so nicely packed?
43043I am not well-- all out of sorts-- and what do you think I am minded to do?
43043I do really like reading our Strauss-- he is so_ klar und ideenvoll_; but I do not know_ one_ person who is likely to read the book through-- do you?
43043I have quiet and comfort-- what more can I want to make me a healthy, reasonable being once more?
43043I shall soon send you a good- bye, for I am preparing to go abroad(?).
43043I thought"Walden"[52]( you mean"Life in the Woods,"do n''t you?)
43043I wish we could get the book out in May-- why not?
43043If I do not see you, how shall I send your"Don Quixote,"which I hope soon to finish?
43043If not, may I join you on Saturday the 4th, and invite M. d''Albert to come down on the following Monday?
43043Is it allowable to say_ dogmatics_, think you?
43043Is it not cheering to think of the youthfulness of this little planet, and the immensely greater youthfulness of our race upon it?
43043Is it not so, honor bright?
43043Is not the universe itself a perpetual utterance of the one Being?
43043Is not the universe one great utterance?
43043Is not this a true autumn day?
43043May I trouble you to procure for me an Italian book recommended by Mr. Brezzi-- Silvio Pellico''s"Le mie Prigioni;"if not,"Storia d''Italia"?
43043Qu''y a- t- il de plus?
43043Shall I despatch them by rail or deposit them with Mr. Chapman, to be asked for by Mr. Bray when he comes to town?
43043Shall you be as glad to see me as to hear the cuckoo?
43043The other day Montaigne''s motto came to my mind( it is mentioned by Pascal) as an appropriate one for me--"Que sais- je?"
43043The spirit of the sermon was not a whit more elevated than that of our friend Dr. Harris; the text,"What shall I do to be saved?"
43043Think of Babylon being unearthed in spite of the prophecies?
43043Think-- is there any_ conceivable_ alteration in me that would prevent your coming to me at Christmas?
43043Was n''t that pretty?
43043Was there ever anything more dreary than this June?
43043We are growing old together-- are we not?
43043What book is there that some people or other will not find abominable?
43043What do you think of the progress of architecture as a subject for poetry?
43043What has it brought you?
43043What is anything worth until it is uttered?
43043What is it to me that I think the same thoughts?
43043What shall I be without my father?
43043What would George Combe say if I were to tell him?
43043When does the_ Prospective_ come out?
43043When shall I attain to the true spirit of love which Paul has taught for all the ages?
43043When will you come to me for help, that I may be able to hate you a little less?
43043Why did not Scheffer paint him thus, instead of representing him as one of the three Magi?
43043Will not business or pleasure bring you to London soon, and will you not come to see us?
43043Will the fear of the critic, or the public, or the literary world, which spoils almost every one, never master you?
43043Will you also send me an account of Mr. Chapman''s prices for lodgers, and if you know anything of other boarding- houses, etc., in London?
43043Will you always remain equally natural?
43043Will you always write to please yourself, and preserve the true independence which seems to mark a real supremacy of intellect?
43043Will you ask Mr. Craig what he considers the best authority for the date of the apostolical writings?
43043Will you be so kind as to send my books by railway,_ without_ the Shelley?
43043Will you send the enclosed note to Mrs. C. Hennell?
43043Will you tell me what you can?
43043Will you try to get me Spenser''s"Faery Queen"?
43043Would it not be better to take to tent- making with Paul, or to spectacle- making with Spinoza?
43043Would not a parcel reach you by railway?
43043Write and tell you that I join you in your happiness about the French Revolution?
43043You and Carlyle( have you seen his article in last week''s_ Examiner_?)
43043You know that George Sand writes for the theatre?
43043You will write to me to- morrow, will you not?
43043[ 47]"Gentlemen, do you know the story of the man who railed at the sun because it would not light his cigar?"
43043[ Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, 25th June,(?)
43043[ Sidenote: Letter to Miss Sara Hennell, end of June,(?)
43043[ Sidenote: Letter to Mrs. Bray, Thursday, 14th(?)
43043[ Sidenote: Letter to the Brays, Monday, 12th(?)
43043_ Ã � propos_ of articles, do you see the_ Prospective Review_?
43043de Phaisan, who comes into my room when I am ill, with"Qu''est ce que vous avez, ma bonne?"
43043or Mr. Lewes''s?
43043or is there some other reason for your silence?
43043said he; and when I added, inquiringly,"The power lies there?"
43043shall that never be sweet?"
43043to think that the higher moral tendencies of human nature are yet only in their germ?
37399''And where are you going, my sweet daughter? 37399 ''But why, dear daughter, Why now quit this world, And travel away beyond Without the Angel of Death having called you?''
37399''What has happened in town, that I hear such a noise?'' 37399 Admit it, Sire of Novelpont, are you not slightly smitten by the beauty of Joan?"
37399Am I wrong in wishing that you should reign gloriously? 37399 And did Merlin go, god- mother?"
37399And did he?
37399And it is you, my pretty child, who will raise the siege of Orleans?
37399And those worlds,asked Jeannette,"are they the paradise where the angels and the saints of the good God are?
37399And what did Brother Arsene say?
37399And what would that matter?
37399And when did he make the prophecy?
37399And where was that harp, god- mother?
37399Are you going to take her visions seriously?
37399Are you not afraid of exhausting my patience?
37399Are you running for safety, Urbain?
37399Are you still at it?
37399Are you sure the pretty Joan will leave the castle by this gate?
37399But where and how did he do it, god- mother?
37399But whither shall we flee?
37399Did not Joan Darc defeat the English in a score of battles? 37399 Did not the ecclesiastical tribunal show how merciful the Church is by accepting Joan''s repentance?"
37399Did the messenger say all that?
37399Do they expect us to sleep here to- night?
37399Do you renounce your apparitions and visions as false, sacrilegious, and diabolical?
37399Do you submit yourself to the judgment of the Church?
37399Does it not endanger the life, at least the health of the King?
37399Father, has any misfortune happened? 37399 From which it follows that there are two Kings?"
37399God- mother, is not the story of Hena that you once told me, a legend of those days? 37399 Have we two masters?"
37399Have you any idea what the siege of a town means, and in what it consists?
37399How can that be?
37399How can you cry in such happy days as these,they asked naïvely,"in these days of the deliverance of Gaul?
37399How did he do it, god- mother?
37399How far is the convoy from here, sir?
37399How?
37399If the English take Orleans, the key of Touraine and Poitou, and they then invade those provinces, what will then be left to you?
37399In the desperate condition that France is in, what risk is run by resorting to empiricism? 37399 In what direction shall we run without the risk of falling into the hands of the English?"
37399Is all lost?
37399Is it a new scheme to keep the strumpet from roasting? 37399 Is it credible?--a poor child of seventeen years to command an army?"
37399Is it her fault that God inspired her?
37399Is there then no help for Gaul?
37399Joan, do you confess having cruelly desired the effusion of human blood?
37399So you attach credence to the words of the girl?
37399So you have confidence in your niece''s sincerity?
37399So, then, Joan,put in John of Novelpont,"you desire to go to the King?"
37399So, then, we are to yield, are we?
37399Spurs? 37399 The King had promised and sworn,"cried Jeannette,"did he fail in his word?
37399The fault lies with the knighthood,put in a civilian;"why did it prove so cowardly at Poitiers?
37399Then our young Sire has fought bravely?
37399Then you have no faith in the inspiration of Joan, the Maid?
37399Well, would you know how to ride on horseback?
37399What does your niece want of me?
37399What else can you expect? 37399 What else is she?"
37399What is the tonsured fellow whispering to the witch?
37399What must he do to get it?
37399What prophecy, god- mother?
37399What shall we do?
37399What were those gold leaves, god- mother? 37399 What?"
37399Whence then?
37399Where shall we flee for safety?
37399Which King are you writing to?
37399Who can that be, knocking at this hour of the night?
37399Who told you that?
37399Why do you place so much importance upon the raising of that siege?
37399Why not consent to see the girl? 37399 Will the witch be burned at last?"
37399Yes; can we rely upon you?
37399You defend her?
37399[ 33]And in what manner will you perform your task?"
37399_ Your_ council has decided, say you?
37399''"[ 5]"The branch of the oak that is stately-- in the woods-- on the banks of the fountain?"
37399''Is she strong and otherwise of good health?''
37399''What is the use,''they justly said,''of being born noble?
37399''What must I do, Sire?''
37399''Whence, Merlin, come you with your clothes all in rags Whither thus bare- headed and bare- footed go you?
37399--""Which would you prefer?"
37399--Do you confess it?"
37399--Do you confess it?"
37399--Do you confess it?"
37399--Do you renounce, do you abjure these crimes and errors?"
37399--Do you swear?"
37399A JUDGE--"And in France, Joan, did you there also hear those voices?"
37399A JUDGE--"By what sign did you recognize those whom you call St. Catherine and St. Marguerite to have been saints?"
37399A JUDGE--"Did you cross the bridge in order to make the sally from Compiegne?"
37399A JUDGE--"Did you give money to the one who helped you capture Franquet of Arras?"
37399A JUDGE--"Did you, at the moment of jumping down from the tower, invoke your saints?"
37399A JUDGE--"Did your voices order you to give up the garb of your sex?"
37399A JUDGE--"How is he clad?"
37399A JUDGE--"Joan, do you swear to tell the whole truth?
37399A JUDGE--"Thus your voices, the voices of your saints, told you you would be captured?"
37399A JUDGE--"Was it revealed to you that if you lost your virginity you would forfeit your luck in war?"
37399A JUDGE--"Was your standard frequently renewed?"
37399A JUDGE--"What advice did he give?"
37399A JUDGE--"What do you know about it?"
37399A JUDGE--"When you jumped out of the tower, had you the intention of killing yourself?"
37399A peasant we d a king''s daughter?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"And so the voices of your saints ordered you to come to France?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Did not some of those who followed you have standards made similar to yours?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Did you have a confessor?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Did your people follow you to battle because they considered you inspired?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"So, then, you do not think you are committing a sin in wearing the man''s clothes that you are covered with?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"What do you know about that?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"What were the circumstances under which you were captured at Compiegne?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Whence do you suppose came those voices?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Who dictated the letter that you addressed to the English?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Why should God have chosen a girl of your station rather than some other person to vanquish them?"
37399ANOTHER JUDGE--"Would you like to hear mass?"
37399Addressing Joan the Bishop asks:"Do you confess it?''
37399Again cries break out from the ranks of the English soldiers:"Will there ever be an end of this?"
37399And despite your oath to renounce such idolatrous garb forever?"
37399And that king, who else could he be but the lovely Dauphin whose mother had brought on the misfortunes of France?
37399And, finally, always granting the success of the ruse, what would have been destroyed?
37399Are not you ashamed, at your age, to attach any faith to such imbecilities, and to have the impudence of coming here with such yarns to me?
37399Are they, god- mother?"
37399Are you going to show pity for the liar?"
37399Are you smitten by the pretty eyes of the maid?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON( deliberately)--"You are certain of having seen the apparition?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON( excitedly)--"Registrars, did you enter that?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON( laughing)--"And the good people forthwith crossed themselves and gave the litter a wide berth?
37399BISHOP CAUCHON( slowly and weighing every word)--"You say you heard voices-- are you quite certain?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON( with a significant look at the judges)--"You claim, Joan, to have had revelations, visions-- at what age did that happen to you?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON( with difficulty restraining his joy)--"You will not, then, accept the judgment of the Church militant upon your acts and words?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"A mother at Lagny asked you to visit her dying child, did she not?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"After several battles you forced the English to raise the siege of Orleans?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"And is it not a mortal sin to accept ransom for a man and yet have him executed?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"And the archangel St. Michael appeared before you?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Did Captain Morris follow my instructions accurately?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Did you not, when your King was consecrated at Rheims, proudly wave your banner over the prince''s head?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Did your voices order the sally at which you were taken?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Do you admit having dictated a letter addressed to the Duke of Bedford, Regent of England, and other illustrious captains?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Do you affirm that?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Do you believe you are in mortal sin?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Do you desire to receive the body of the Savior?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Do you know your Pater Noster?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"How old are you?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"In that letter you threatened the English with death?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"In what place were you baptized?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"My son in Christ, what is your name?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"So, then, you persist in keeping your masculine dress?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"To what diocese does Compiegne belong?
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Was not that letter written by you under the invocation of our Lord Jesus Christ and of His immaculate Mother, the holy Virgin?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Well, what makes you believe that the voices you speak about were divine?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What are the names of your father and your mother?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What are your given names?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What figures were painted on it?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What is the man''s errand?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What names did you give them?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What priest baptized you at your birth?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"What was the reason of your action?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Whence did you come the last time you went to Compiegne?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Where were you born?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Who is Bishop of Beauvais by the grace of intrigues, the intervention of pretty courtesans and divine consent?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Who were your god- father and god- mother?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Will you pledge yourself not to flee from the Castle of Rouen, under pain of passing for a heretic?"
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"Will you submit to the successor of St. Peter, our Holy Father?
37399BISHOP CAUCHON--"You affirm that?"
37399BISHOP OF CHARTRES( disdainfully)--"You would write to the English, and you have just told us you do, not know A from B?"
37399BISHOP PETER CAUCHON( half rising and with deep interest)--"What news?
37399BROTHER AIMERY( with a grotesque Limousin accent)--"You say, Joan, that voices advise you in the name of God?
37399BROTHER SEGUIN( harshly)--"Do you pretend that the Lord God sends you to the King?
37399BROTHER SEGUIN--"And the third?"
37399BROTHER SEGUIN--"Which is the first?"
37399But first of all, holy Bishop, is it not an established fact that a demon can not possess the body of a virgin?"
37399But for whom the royal crown?
37399But for whom the royal crown?
37399But for whom the royal crown?
37399But for whom the royal crown?
37399But how shall we manage it that instead of saying:''I believe I heard the voices,''Joan shall say:''I have heard the voices''?"
37399But how to carry it out?"
37399But what did become of Merlin, the great enchanter Merlin?"
37399But why is your face so sad?''
37399CANON LOYSELEUR( from under his completely lowered hood and disguising his voice)--"Which of the two Popes is the real Pope?"
37399CANON LOYSELEUR( in a voice of tender commiseration)--"Sweet and dear child, need you fear a word of blame from my mouth?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR( pointing to the parchments)--"Shall we now proceed with the reading of the condensed acts of the Maid?"
37399CANON LOYSELEUR( pressingly)--"You heard them, the sacred voices?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR( rising on the straw)--"Who speaks to you?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR( with exaltation and a ringing voice)--"What can the English, whom I abhor, these enemies of our beloved country, do to me?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"And finally, monseigneur, did the University start the process?"
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"And you saw your saints?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"As to those voices, did you hear them?"
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"How, monseigneur?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"How, monseigneur?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"Predestined?"
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"What is the matter, my dear daughter?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"What must I do, monseigneur?
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"What must I do, monseigneur?"
37399CANON LOYSELEUR--"What stone, monseigneur?
37399Can I affirm such things?"
37399Can it not have been an illusion of your senses?
37399Could he not demand her either under bail or in exchange for English prisoners?
37399Could not Satan assume the form of a good angel to lead you to evil?"
37399Could she, consequently, feel herself bound by any promises that she might make to the butchers, she a prisoner, under duress?
37399Did not the plan resolve itself into a ruse of war that was not merely cowardly, but fatal in its consequences?
37399Did not the rest of us in Vaucouleurs go down in our pockets to purchase a horse for the warrior maid?"
37399Did not they, celebrated warriors, feel humiliated by the triumph of the peasant girl, of that cowherdess?
37399Did she not have the King consecrated at Rheims?
37399Did she not pass in the region for a soothsayer and sorceress?"
37399Did the angels or the saints give them to the grandmother?"
37399Did they proceed from the interior tribunal, the sacred refuge of truth with the oppressed?
37399Did they rout the English?"
37399Did you not hear her express her wish to assume man''s clothes, which she would not take off day or night during her journey?
37399Did you not see how she blushed to the roots of her hair at the idea of riding alone in the company of the horsemen of her escort?
37399Did you notice the manner in which Joan looked at the sergeant?
37399Do n''t you think so too?"
37399Do not most of those who favor the measure consider it idle?
37399Do you believe in Him?"
37399Do you believe these priests?
37399Do you call that''wisdom''?"
37399Do you consider yourself under the protection of God?"
37399Do you imagine plain soldiers are able to beat us?
37399Do you persist in keeping your male attire, a most blameworthy conduct?"
37399Do you see him?
37399Do you still deem these varlets to be invulnerable?
37399Do you think Joan went after battle to drink the blood of the slain?"
37399Do you understand me?"
37399Do you wish to see us all killed?
37399FRANCOIS GARIVEL--"And so you, a woman, are not afraid of shedding blood in battle?"
37399Finally, could Joan continue the war even after she regained her freedom?
37399Gaul, lost by a woman, will be saved by a virgin From the borders of Lorraine and a forest of oaks.-- For whom that crown, that steed, that armor?
37399Gaul, lost by a woman, will be saved by a virgin From the borders of Lorraine and a forest of oaks.-- For whom that crown, that steed, that armor?
37399God- mother,"Jeannette inquired,"can that be true-- did Merlin make that prophecy?"
37399Good or bad?"
37399Has not the Church given evidence of her maternal charity by admitting Joan to penitence, despite her perverse heresy?
37399Has not this comedy lasted long enough?
37399Have I been allowed to attend mass?
37399Have I been restored to freedom after my abjuration?
37399Have the promises made to me been kept?
37399Have you not been battling with the boys of the village against the boys of Maxey?"
37399He began by asking the heroine whether in her soul and conscience she did not look upon her judges as monsters of iniquity?
37399He cried:"John, what in the name of the devil are you thinking about?"
37399Here am I, And I bring the harp of Merlin''--""Then he succeeded in getting the harp?"
37399How can we expect her to repose blind confidence in an unknown adviser?"
37399How was this act of benevolence rewarded by her?
37399How will you take possession of such formidable entrenchments?"
37399I see a steed of battle as white as snow-- I see an armor of battle as brilliant as silver.-- For whom is that crown, that steed, that armor?
37399I see a steed of battle as white as snow-- I see an armor of battle as brilliant as silver.-- For whom is that crown, that steed, that armor?
37399ISAMBARD OF LA PIERRE--"Have you heard your voices since your condemnation?"
37399If we were locked up in here, and we were determined to go out or die, would we not sally forth even if there were ten men at the door?"
37399In her revery she repeated in a low murmur the passage from Merlin''s prophecy:"For whom that royal crown?
37399In order to protect ourselves against such a misfortune, what is to be done?
37399In what did she brag?
37399In what did she lie?
37399In what did you recognize that the form that appeared before you was that of the blessed archangel?
37399In what tongue do those voices speak to you?"
37399In what was she temerarious?
37399Is it quite certain that you are to lead an assault this morning?"
37399Is it to prevent all that that you have come here?
37399Is it wise to incur and provoke a terrible turmoil in the town?
37399Is such a thing possible?
37399Is that it?"
37399Is the light to enter at last your haughty and diabolical soul?
37399Is the prophecy about to be fulfilled?
37399JAMES CAMUS--"And before the abjuration, what did your voices say?"
37399JOAN DARC( blushing)--"Do you imagine God has not the wherewithal to clothe him?"
37399JOAN DARC( more and more cruelly affected by these remembrances)--"Does that belong to the process?"
37399JOAN DARC( stupefied)--"Are there, then, two Popes, sir?
37399JOAN DARC( stupefied)--"Who has done that?"
37399JOAN DARC--"Is it not all one-- God and His Church?"
37399JOAN DARC--"Who is speaking to me?"
37399MASTER ERAUT--"And the second?"
37399MASTER ERAUT--"What acts do you mean?"
37399More and more astonished at such a martial instinct, the cannonier cried:"Well, countrywoman, in what book did you learn all that?"
37399Must I come in and make you behave?"
37399Now, then, what is the cause?"
37399Now, then, what sign can you give of yours?
37399Oh, why am I alone?"
37399One of them, the Earl of Warwick, says to the prelate:"Well, what has been decided shall be done with the witch?"
37399One thought only absorbs her mind-- can she manage to confess aloud the truth of what she has denied?
37399Said the next day the Queen to the servant;''What has happened at court, that the crowd Are cheering so joyfully?''
37399She barely has enough strength to respond mechanically,"I confess it,"each time she hears Bishop Cauchon ask her,"Do you confess it?"
37399She called down:"Oh, Master John, are you there?"
37399She, sold for the price of gold?
37399Should not our patient try that last chance of recovery?
37399Should the answer be favorable to Joan, would you still think of accompanying her?"
37399THE INQUISITOR OF THE FAITH--"Do you now wear and have you worn masculine garb voluntarily, absolutely of your own free will?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"After your fall, did you renounce the Lord and His saints?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"And do you expect to gain paradise?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"Did you act by the advice of your voices?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"Since you have been a prisoner in Rouen, have your voices promised you your deliverance?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"What about Franquet of Arras?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"What do you understand by that?"
37399THE INQUISITOR--"You, then, think it useless to confess, even if you are in a state of mortal sin?"
37399THE JUDGE--"In short, your people took you to be inspired of God?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"Accordingly, you think you can violate without sin the commandments of the church?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"Did you confess your revelations to your curate or to any other man of the church?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"Did you in your infancy learn to work like the other girls of the fields?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"How much money did your King pay you to serve him?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"Was it to the archangel St. Michael that you promised to remain a virgin?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"Were those who bore a standard similar to yours lucky in war?
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"Why that secrecy towards your curate?"
37399THE SAME JUDGE--"You refuse to answer?
37399THOMAS OF COURCELLES( affecting astonishment)--"What, Joan, again in man''s attire?
37399Talbot, Warwick, Suffolk, are either captured or forced to flee, is that enough?
37399That armor?
37399That steed?
37399The English have been defeated in pitched battle at Patay, is that enough?
37399The Sire of Novelpont, shrugging his shoulders, seemed to say to his friend:"Was I wrong when I advised you to see the poor visionary?"
37399These are loudest among the soldiers and the Burgundian partisans, who say:"Will the Bishop keep his promise this time?
37399To flee?"
37399Turning to Joan, the Bishop asks:"Do you confess having wickedly sinned in that, and of having been impious and sacrilegious?"
37399WILLIAM HAITON--"What did your voices say to you?
37399Walk in-- why do you not walk in?"
37399Was Merlin then a saint, god- mother?
37399Was it not necessary to convince them that nothing could resist their daring?
37399Was not the Lord urging her by the voices of her saints: Go to the assistance of the King?
37399Was not the emancipatrix to come from an old oak forest?
37399Was not the village of Domremy situated close to a forest of centennarian oaks?
37399Was she not a virgin?
37399Was she not born and brought up on the borders of Lorraine and near a forest of oaks?
37399Was that done at the request of Robert of Baudricourt, or of your own free will?
37399Was that wrong?"
37399Was the angel perhaps quite nude?"
37399Were not the insensate expectations pinned upon the visionary girl an insult to their fame?
37399What confidence could she inspire in the masses, she who had been convicted of falsehood or cowardice?
37399What did you mean by that?"
37399What harm have I done them?
37399What inconceivable change has taken place in this soul, once so firm and so full of conviction?
37399What is the use of growing old in the harness, if it is enough for a cowherdess to come and our illustrious houses are eclipsed?''
37399What is the way that the skilful fowler practices the piping of birds in order to attract the mistrusting partridge?
37399What is to become of poor Alain?"
37399What makes you look so frightened?"
37399What must I do?"
37399What news?
37399What shall we do?"
37399What was its material?"
37399What were you thinking about just now?"
37399What would have been left for us?"
37399What would such vain words matter?
37399What would then happen?
37399Whence did she draw so much knowledge?"
37399Where did we break off in our reading?"
37399Where do you get it from?"
37399Where is the lie, the temerariousness, the bragging?
37399Where was the Maid captured?"
37399While King John was thus peaceably enjoying life in England, what was his son doing, the unhappy Charles V?
37399Whither thus are you going?''
37399Whither, old Merlin, with your holly staff go you?''
37399Who authorized you to?"
37399Who is the virgin''s elect?
37399Who is to prove that you are telling the truth?"
37399Who, if not Joan, could eat angels''bread?"
37399Whom do you think I come from this minute, Joan?
37399Why did you put it on?
37399Why do they persecute me?"
37399Why do you call yourselves Burgundians and English, seeing that we are all of France?
37399Why not taken, sentenced and executed?"
37399Why this delay in starting the process?
37399Why, then, try it?
37399Will you allow yourselves to be vanquished by a female cowherd?
37399Will you cease the great cruelty that you heap upon the poor people of the country of France?
37399Will you raise the siege of Orleans?
37399Will you submit to its judgment?
37399Will you, yes or no, acknowledge us as your judges, us, members of the Church militant?"
37399Will your journey, then, be long?
37399With her eyes still gazing afar, she murmured slowly the old chant of Armorica:"Merlin, Merlin, whither this morning with your black dog?
37399With the aid of God and His saints, could she not be victorious in an actual battle, also?
37399With your bodily ears?"
37399Would God fail to read these sentiments?"
37399Would I, if I again were to become King of France, find the satin of your skin whiter and smoother?
37399Would he, god- mother?"
37399Would not the consequence of a first success, of a victory over the English, be incalculable?"
37399Would not then the presumption of her divine mission be strengthened?
37399Would that not, they remonstrated with Joan, be to inaugurate her arms with a sacrilege?
37399Would you still hesitate to follow me to Rheims and be consecrated King by the command of God?"
37399You are silent?
37399You saw them with your own eyes?"
37399You say that Charles VII, our young prince, is a worthy sire?"
37399You will deliver Gaul''?"
37399according to the infallible judgment of the priests of the Lord?
37399and seem ready to riot at the time of the first abjuration?
37399asked Sybille, thrilling at a sudden recollection,"did he say that a woman had lost Gaul?"
37399could she ever have vanquished us without the assistance of the devil, us the best archers in the world?
37399cried in chorus James and his sons,"what shall we do?
37399interrupted the little shepherdess, more and more carried away with the marvelousness of the story,"how will it end?"
37399or idleness more agreeable?"
37399wine to taste better?
46069''Danger?'' 46069 ''How so?''
46069''No, sir,''retorted the officer frowningly,''nothing of the sort; do you not realize that you are in great danger?'' 46069 ''You are the Mayor Odent?''
46069''You have fired on our men?'' 46069 Did your teeth ache badly?"
46069Do these people never rest?
46069In God''s name,answered Joan,"are you making a mock of me, Captain?
46069Must the King be driven from his kingdom and we become English?
46069What do you here, my dear?
46069What is to be thought of her? 46069 Who is thy Lord?"
46069Who is your Lord?
46069A strange story; but then these are strange times, and who shall say that this is unworthy of credence?
46069And for what good was all this, one asks?
46069And how to repay such kindness?
46069And now what is left in place of the gray old churches, the quiet monasteries, the fruitful farms and flocks and the dense forests?
46069But the treasures which it contained, now either destroyed or carried off to Berlin, who shall say if they can ever be replaced?
46069Gentle dauphin, she said one day,"why do you not believe me?
46069Had John of Luxembourg come out of sheer curiosity, or to relieve himself of certain scruples by offering Joan a chance for her life?
46069How could the people who dwell in this terrible spot be other than debased?
46069Ransom me?
46069The reader will probably exclaim:"Well, if this is Ruskin''s idea of a''happy walk,''what then would be his description of a gloomy one?"
46069There were twin brothers who did the same, in some remote period, after refusing to open the gates to Wenceslaus, or was it Baldwin of the Iron Arm*?
46069What could be expected from the dreams of a young peasant girl of nineteen?
46069What of it?
46069What vituperation did she not address to us?
46069When will you set out?"
46069Where shall the artist seek the matchless châteaux gardens, which took centuries in the making?
46069Why should we priests not give our blood?''
4769Ah, fair son,said the king,"what right have you to the crown?
4769Angles?
4769Are you all afraid?
4769Who run?
4769And the country he came to see?
4769Do n''t you know what it is called now?
4769Do you know who these savages were who fought with Julius Caesar?
4769He was a dull man, and people laughed at him-- because, whenever he heard any news, he never said anything but"_ Est il possible?_"is it possible?
4769He was a dull man, and people laughed at him-- because, whenever he heard any news, he never said anything but"_ Est il possible?_"is it possible?
4769The king''s wife was not called queen, but lady; and what do you think lady means?
4769They went and complained to the king, and Henry exclaimed in passion,"Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?"
4769what?"
45567''Why, how does this relation affect her?'' 45567 A''igh wind, sir?
45567And if he did, would I need hear his suit? 45567 And where is Polperro, pray?"
45567Are you ill?
45567Do in winter? 45567 Do you own a house?"
45567Elsa, dearest, what are your wishes?
45567Fiend,he shrieked,"where is the parchment?
45567Fiend,he shrieked,"where is the parchment?
45567Fool, tenfold fool, dost thou call on my archenemy to adjure me? 45567 Fool,"replied the astonished artist,"who are you that thus accosts me on the highroad?"
45567In this room,she continued,"I would have the portrait painted, and as a setting can you not paint a portion of the room itself?"
45567Own a house?
45567The road to Tongue? 45567 Who shall describe the uproar and anger with which one was greeted as one stood in the midst of the nests?
45567Wie viel?
45567Will you let me see the book, please?
45567And who could be impervious to the charm of the English village?
45567Are you ready, lady, for the sitting?"
45567But why had this maiden so affected him?
45567But, after all, is not Rouen best known to the world because of its connection with the strange figure of Jeanne d''Arc?
45567Help themselves?
45567Her face bore a listless and far- away expression-- was it natural, or only assumed for artistic effect?
45567Here again a memory of Wordsworth is awakened, for did he not celebrate this valley in his series of"Sonnets to the Duddon?"
45567How can the poor devils who live in the foetid hovels which dot the Duchy of Cornwall''help themselves?''
45567Is it any wonder that the oft- trapped Englishman considers France a motorist''s paradise?
45567Shall he book us and our car for the boat?
45567She then appealed to her mother:"Will you permit the rash boy to leave in such a passion?
45567Show their gratitude?
45567Show their gratitude?
45567Sick with terror and yet determined even to death, Friedrich answered:"And knowest thou not?
45567This love in a day has become my life and what is mere breath without life?
45567To our half- serious remark that a lift would save visitors some hard work he replies with a shrug,"A lift in Mont St. Michel?
45567What have they to be grateful for-- these squalid, dependent, but always necessary outcasts of our civilization?"
45567What wilt thou?"
45567Who, though he had made a score of pilgrimages thither, could not find new beauties in this enchanted region?
45567Why give farther pain to the poor artist, who is already in deepest distress?"
45567Wot would you call a wind that piles up the waves so you ca n''t see yonder lighthouse, that''s two hundred and fifty feet tall?
45567XIV ODD CORNERS OF LAKELAND Who could ever weary of English Lakeland?
45811''Not particularly,''ha replied;''but where are you off to in such a hurry?''
45811''What is there odd about that?''
45811''Why seek ye the living among the dead?
45811''_ ASCENSION DAY What is the difference between Christ and Satan?
45811''_ DECEMBER 13th Elder father, though thine eyes Shine with hoary mysteries, Canst thou tell what in the heart Of a cowslip blossom lies?
45811''_ EASTER DAY I said to my companion the Dickensian,''Do you see that angel over there?
45811''_ George Bernard Shaw._''FEBRUARY 7th_ DICKENS BORN_ We are able to answer the question,''Why have we no great men?''
45811''_ OCTOBER 30th Do you see this lantern?
45811''_ SHROVE TUESDAY Why should I care for the Ages Because they are old and grey?
45811A bubble-- have you ever spied The colours I have seen on it?''
45811After a pause I answered,''Do you remember what the Angel at the Sepulchre said?''
45811Are we still strong enough to spear mammoths, but now tender enough to spare them?
45811But can you stand still in this meadow and_ be_ an English gentleman of Elizabeth?
45811But have you ever seen him?
45811Can you tell me, in a world that is flagrant with the failures of civilization, what there is particularly immortal about yours?
45811Do you really mean to say that at the moment when the Esquimaux has learnt to vote for a County Council, you will have learnt to spear a walrus?
45811Do you remember now what the Angel said at the Sepulchre?
45811Do you see the cross carved on it and the flame inside?
45811Does the cosmos contain any mammoth that we have either speared or spared?
45811Have we indeed outstripped the warrior and passed the ascetical saint?
45811Have you ever seen an austere republican?
45811How can we say that the Church wishes to bring us back into the Dark Ages?
45811If a man must not fight for this, may he fight for anything?
45811If he is to be anything else than this, why should we desire him, or what else are we to desire?
45811If so, where is the sense of all their dreams of festive traditions?
45811If the ordinary man may not discuss existence, why should he be asked to conduct it?
45811If the superman will come by human selection, what sort of superman are we to select?
45811If the superman will come by natural selection, may we not leave it to natural selection?
45811If you are merely a sceptic, you must sooner or later ask yourself the question,''Why should anything go right; even observation or deduction?
45811In a purely democratic state it would be always saying,''What laws can we obey?''
45811Is it really true that you and I are two starry towers built up of all the most towering visions of the past?
45811Is not He too a servant, And is not He forgot?
45811My little village smoke; or pass the door, The old dear door of that unhappy house That is to me a kingdom and much more?
45811O ill for him that loves the sun; Shall the sun stoop for anyone?
45811Shall I not fight for my own existence?''
45811Shall the sun weep for hearts undone Or heavy souls that pray?
45811The immediate answer, of course, is sufficiently obvious: the ape did not worry about the man, so why should we worry about the superman?
45811The real problem is-- Can the lion lie down with the lamb and still retain his royal ferocity?
45811They are both movements in the brain of a bewildered ape?''
45811Those names and notions are all honourable, but how long will they last?
45811Was he a good man with some greater moral code?
45811Was he a very, very bad man?
45811What phrase would inspire a London clerk or workman just now?
45811What then is your real quarrel with Catholicism?
45811What will remain?
45811Who cares?
45811Who knows now exactly what Nestorius taught?
45811Why did he who loved where all men were blind, seek to blind himself where all men loved?
45811Why should I bow to the Ages Because they are drear and dry?
45811Why should not good logic be as misleading as bad logic?
45811Why was he a monk and not a troubadour?
45811Why was it that the most large- hearted and poetic spirits in that age found their most congenial atmosphere in these awful renunciations?
45811Will it?
45811With us the governing class is always saying to itself,''What laws shall we make?''
45811Yes; we may pass the heavenly screen, But shall we know when we are there?
38863''Am I not quite fit for the_ rôle_ of an old maid?
38863''Am I wrong, Shane?''
38863''Are either of the gentlemen hurt?''
38863''Can ye speak with assurance of the man''s state?''
38863''Do yez think the likes o''me can stop up here?
38863''Do you know that the country is being scoured for you-- that if you are taken the scrag- boy will make short work of you?
38863''Do you know what they''re at?''
38863''Do you know, my love, that I dared to despise you once?
38863''Do you recollect, young fellow,''he railed,''how anxious you twice were to be arrested?
38863''Has anything befallen him?''
38863''He has come as a French general,''exclaimed Miss Wolfe with creeping fear;''who will betray his incognito?''
38863''He is a farrier, is n''t he?
38863''How can I bid him not disgrace the family?''
38863''How is Terence?''
38863''How much longer will the poison take to work?''
38863''How''s that?''
38863''I-- gibe?
38863''Is he gone?''
38863''Is he now-- are ye sure?''
38863''Is it Miss Wolfe, good luck?
38863''Is it kilt?
38863''Is it thrue, Jug-- is it, by the Holy Mother?''
38863''Is this a direct judgment on me?
38863''Leedies on a party of pleasure?''
38863''Might I offer some sherry- wine, or would your leedyship prefer clart?
38863''Miss Doreen,''he said,''will ye speak to me in private?''
38863''My God, what have I done?
38863''Now?''
38863''Shane,''she whispered, stroking his hair with clinging affection,''do you know what is the fondest wish of your old mother?
38863''Tell him what, mamma?''
38863''Was ever anything so indecent?''
38863''What are you doing there?''
38863''What can we do for you, my man?''
38863''What can we do?
38863''What d''ye think that stiff old bag- o''-bones said just now?
38863''What if I did,_ Croppy?_''was my lord''s surly rejoinder.
38863''What of the people?''
38863''What was it?''
38863''What''s to become of_ me_--what''s to become of_ me?_ I might as well be shot as beggared.''
38863''Where is Terence?''
38863''Where were the servants?''
38863''Whom did yon say I wished to bring to ruin?''
38863''Why gibe at me then?''
38863''Why let a murderer''s touch pollute the purity of the Gospel?
38863''Why make him swear at all?''
38863''Why should we be parted who are both hovering on the confines of eternity?
38863''Why?''
38863''Will ye inform me, Toler,''Curran interrupted,''who your witnesses are?
38863''Would Miss Wolfe have your lordship?''
38863''Would he not retort that I have done worse than he can do, by placing my neck within the halter?''
38863''Would ye have a poor man fling his chances away?
38863''Yes, gibe?''
38863''Yet what matters it?
38863''You are not afraid?''
38863''You didn''t-- did you vote with Government yesterday?''
38863''You then are Lord Glandore?''
38863''You''ve been to see them?''
38863''You_ really_ do not?
38863''_ He?_ To whom do you refer?''
38863''_ He?_ To whom do you refer?''
38863A fight, is it?
38863A grand figure entirely-- who was he?
38863Afraid?
38863After all, how could a scuffle about a union affect the lower orders?
38863All this was woefully illegal; but what did that matter?
38863And Crummell''s curse is on the likes of him, is n''t it?
38863And if she spoke the truth, what line would he take?
38863And, av ye plaze, might I go up too?
38863At length she clapped the errant comb into its place upon her head, and murmured:''I''m a devil, not a woman, am I?
38863But how about Terence?
38863But how about the breaking of his parole?
38863But surely he would not carry his slavish complaisance so far as to sacrifice his only brother to the English dragon?
38863But what did he mean, then?
38863But where was the new Earl of Glandore?
38863But would the King admit this; or would he frown on the elder, despite his grovelling, because of the sins of the audacious junior?
38863By whom organised?
38863Can I not look after myself without a protector?''
38863Can ye rouse him to hear his judgment?''
38863Could anything be more provoking than that he should get away?
38863Could he be fainting?
38863Could it be the banshee-- messenger of ill?
38863Could it be thunder?
38863Could not somebody suggest something?
38863Could she hope to rally?
38863Could they be about to make a match of it?
38863Could they be coaxed a stage lower-- just one?
38863Could they be executed?
38863Croppies, did he say?
38863Curran listened, and said nothing( what was the use of cross- examining these men?)
38863Dare you stand by and see them married?''
38863Destroy the innocent with the guilty, by the hundred?''
38863Did he not carry her off before all competitors, as many another noble member of the Abduction Club had carried away his bride?
38863Did he say anything?
38863Did my husband foresee this when he spoke upon his death- bed?
38863Did not the chancellor say only an hour ago that the tussle was close at hand-- that the Great Measure was to be again brought forward without delay?
38863Did she care so much, then, for this lad?
38863Did they not profess to hate the yoke of English and Anglo- Irish equally?
38863Did this point to a new conspiracy?
38863Do they not remind you of the time-- not so long ago-- when we were expecting a French invasion?
38863Do we part thus?
38863Do you recall it?
38863Does there chance to be e''er a doctor in the coort?''
38863Doreen patted her arm as you might that of a precocious child, and said, with her moonlit smile,''Have you a doubt, dear Sara?''
38863Had I acted as I ought, would Terence have been saved?''
38863Had he any reason to assign why sentence should not be passed on him?
38863Had he disguised himself in liquor to steal a march upon his fears?
38863Had he not been in the habit of fighting endless duels himself for a mere bubble reputation?
38863Had not Mr. Curran done all that might be done by man to prevent this hideous nightmare?
38863Had not he, Lord Clare, warned the young man against him once, when he was too stupid to take the hint?
38863Had she not sworn an oath beside that deathbed?
38863Had she wronged her cousin, or not?
38863Had that wretch no compunction?
38863Had they beaten down the little watch- house garrison, or had they-- forewarned-- approached the scene of action by another route?
38863Had they ever expected anything from England except wickedness?
38863Have they sunk to this?''
38863Have we not read somewhere of a certain prince who espoused an ice- maiden for the sake of her dowry?
38863He dared to aspire to Doreen, did he?
38863He of the silver tongue had failed?
38863He pictured himself high in office-- why not premier some day?
38863He therefore whistled in a deprecating and provoking manner, while the latter echoed pettishly:''But she-- what?''
38863He was well known; what more natural than that her cousin should rescue the bereaved Miss Wolfe from such a scene?
38863Her whitened hair and ashen cheeks were not to be taken into account?
38863His face was blue( was it the effect of light?
38863How can I do otherwise than blush at being an Irishman?
38863How deeply laid was it?
38863How did his lordship''s father espouse her ladyship?
38863How did she know that the party were not Croppies, intent on murder-- villainous rapscallions who ought to be strung up, every man jack of''em?
38863How long would it be before its work would be accomplished?
38863How much longer was the delay to last?
38863How much longer?
38863How then two countries, between which rolls a sea of blood more wide than the Atlantic?''
38863How was it that the said wheel insisted upon keeping its accustomed track, and that extra celerity was even given to its motion?
38863How was it they had not met his carriage on the road?
38863How would his Majesty look on the brother of a rebel?
38863How''s that?''
38863How, when so many came to a violent end, did such a monster escape assassination?
38863I ca n''t help it-- can I?''
38863I was as an infant under his iron will; how could I resist him?
38863If Terence were somehow to learn the secret, and to claim his own, what would become of his illegitimate brother?
38863If any evil befel Robert, what would become of her?
38863If he might live( his youth would assert its rights now and again for a brief instant), then perhaps-- perhaps----What?
38863If it were useless, why renew the struggle?
38863If not, then how was the matter of the pikes to be explained?
38863If one was desperately turbid, was it not better cheerfully to turn his back on it, and plunge with courage into the other?
38863If we were not beyond the influence of mundane hopes and longings, would you advise me to act thus?
38863In another world they would wander together in perpetual sunshine, by purling brooks, under softly waving trees-- but would they?
38863Is it Councillor Crosbie ye''re afther trying to peep at?
38863Is it any marvel that the bullet, the sabre, the lash, the halter, should have been met by the pike, the scythe, the hatchet, and the firebrand?
38863Is it likely I should jest?''
38863Is it not ofttimes thus?
38863Is it nothing to us-- to_ her?_''''Perhaps there is still time.
38863Is it you or I who would marry her?
38863Is this my fault?
38863It had never struck him that she could have already given herself away-- to whom?
38863It was by an accident, due to the involuntary influence of his younger brother, that he escaped degradation at the first voting?
38863It''s a quare world, is n''t it, Miss Wolfe?''
38863Madam Gillin, if I mistake not?
38863Might not the sacrifice of her existence bring peace unto her sons?
38863My lady too-- what should prevent her from speaking before these arrangements could be carried out?
38863Never, never?
38863Or would she, with the inherent ungenerosity of a low nature, spurn and deride the victim?
38863People''s opinions differ, do n''t they?
38863Perceiving his mother''s grief, had he, in his chivalry, withdrawn himself, lest his presence should add poignancy to it?
38863Perchance to her influence was this happy result due?
38863Rather than speak out, you''d let that lad be whipped off to Fort George, would you?
38863Scattered as usual by wind, or delayed by some accidental circumstance?
38863She did not ask for news-- preferred, indeed, to hear none, for what news was there that could bring aught but misery?
38863She was to bend her proud knees, was she-- and confess?
38863Should I thus keep untarnished the honour of the Crosbies?
38863So he said:''Delighted to see my respected Curran-- friend, I suppose, I may not say?
38863Something was afoot; what could have happened?
38863Sure, do n''t the Lords and Commons think it mighty honourable, and my Lord Clare too; or why do they make so much of us?
38863Sure, he would bring her back again?
38863Sure, is n''t it convanient and obleeging?''
38863Sure, it was but natural to come and take a last look at a beloved brother ere he went away?
38863Surely this little boon of a speedy flitting might be vouchsafed to her jaded spirit?
38863The Catholics emancipated indeed?
38863Then, nodding to the picture over the chimney- piece, she added aloud:''Have I kept my word with ye?
38863There was no sword now but that of an avenging tyrant; when might it be sheathed?
38863This the new Viceroy, and these his orders?
38863Under home- rule were they not always slaves?
38863Was Cassidy merely playing off an untimely jest on her by saying what he did?
38863Was Theobald with them?
38863Was aught amiss?
38863Was ever human wickedness so base as that of this false friend?
38863Was he never sick?
38863Was he not a state- prisoner on parole?
38863Was he praying, or sleeping a last sleep?
38863Was his combination to be a bloodless contest, such as was brought to a successful issue by the Volunteers?
38863Was it a surprise?
38863Was it for good or ill that she went away so hurriedly?
38863Was it her fault if her affections were so engrossed by Shane that there was no corner left for Terence?
38863Was it not after the then prevailing fashion of high- spirited Irish gentlemen?
38863Was it not better that time and breath should be economised, when cases were so notoriously prejudged?
38863Was it not enough to provoke a saint-- much more an Irish earl, who considered himself a pauper?
38863Was it of his own accord?
38863Was it out of curiosity, or were they here on business?
38863Was it possible after all that Terence could have behaved so shamefully?
38863Was it possible that these reports were true?
38863Was it that through her( the only one on earth who had power to do so) the secret she kept so hungrily should be blabbed forth upon the housetops?
38863Was it the effect of light?
38863Was it too late to make another effort?
38863Was its beauty a mockery of human trouble-- no more?
38863Was not that awkward?
38863Was she not rich herself?
38863Was that all his genius could discern?
38863Was that the conviction of the great philosopher?
38863Was the cause of her agony actually gone?
38863Was the danger then so pressing?
38863Was the law, which all respected so much, to leave a faithful servant without protection?
38863Was the simper more full of meaning than it used to be, or was it merely the limner''s conventional flattery?
38863Was the yearning of his soul to be gratified?
38863Was there another world?
38863Was this boor to take the damsel from under Shane''s nose?
38863Was this girl to pass, too, under the yoke?
38863Was this the way to train up witnesses?
38863Was this the_ avant- garde_ of the invading army?
38863We begged of him not to risk himself, but he would; and here he is--_que voulez- vous?_''Yes, here he was; there was no doubt of that dreadful fact.
38863We have passed through the fire, Doreen, have we not?
38863Well-- if ye will have it-- she-- I fear she''s sweet upon another gintleman-- that''s bad?''
38863Were both captured?
38863Were both concerned in the disastrous riot?
38863Were his well- constructed schemes to be disconcerted now?
38863Were n''t they always togither, masther and man?
38863Were not Croppies put down long since?
38863Were the military come in from Chapelizod?
38863What a strange life this quartet must be leading?
38863What ails ye?
38863What arguments, for instance, could have prevailed in the case of Orr, whose life was juggled away between two bumpers?
38863What better opportunity for a little''play''than diversity of political opinion?
38863What can you gain by compassing all this mischief?''
38863What comfort could there be for one whose fairest prospect was the cloister and the grave?
38863What could Heaven be about to allow its chosen and elect to suffer such gnawing torments?
38863What could an extra crime or two signify to one who was notoriously a murderess?
38863What could be done for their honours?
38863What could be done with these dangerous conspirators?
38863What could cause the strange sensation which acted on the nerves with such irritating effect?
38863What could her parent mean?
38863What could that mean?
38863What could they gain by surprising the prisoners?
38863What did it portend?
38863What did the wicked old woman mean to do?
38863What difference could a vow make to one whose heart was dead?
38863What do you gain by this ghastly display of martyrdom?
38863What frees the slave?
38863What greater delight could there be for him than to row so precious a burthen?
38863What humour could be more sly and delicate than to clinch a man''s fate by the false witness of her whom he had elected to love?
38863What if Doreen, instead of becoming by main force Madam Shane, were to return to the world as Madam Cassidy?
38863What if Sara were likewise summoned at the last moment to pass under the yoke?
38863What if the new Viceroy should have a will of his own to clash with the lord chancellor''s?
38863What is it?
38863What is the price?
38863What manner of men were these who carried sheaves of pikes?
38863What need to take the veil?
38863What on earth could he be doing in England?
38863What pleasanter than to enjoy the delicious autumn air, laden as it was with health- inspiring brine?
38863What signified the unsullied shields of departed Crosbies?
38863What then could be done with them?
38863What was Miss Wolfe thinking of-- she who had a head upon her shoulders-- to permit of such imprudence?''
38863What was he doing?
38863What was he to do?
38863What was it that ailed her?
38863What was it?
38863What was that?
38863What was the use of having mixed himself up in the odium of Tone''s capture if his brother was to cut the ground from under his feet?
38863What was the world coming to?
38863What was this about Croppies along the quays?
38863What was this venture which was to produce such marvels?
38863What was this will- o''-the- wisp that railed in such foolish fashion?
38863What was this youth in martial garb, who waved over his head a sabre?
38863What was to be done with Tom Emmett, Russell, Neilson-- what with the arch- traitor Terence Crosbie?
38863What was to be done with them?
38863What was to be done with those leaders of the United Irishmen who were still awaiting trial at Kilmainham?
38863What were these opinions of his that imparted so grandmotherly an air to the gentle Primrose?
38863What would she not have given to know what was passing there?
38863What would your father think of it?''
38863When did he take the poison?
38863Where and why?
38863Where did her father take her?
38863Where should they take their beautiful charge?
38863Where was the rest of the fleet?
38863Which of the rowdy knot was to do the work to- day?
38863Which of the rowdy knot-- and how many-- were to do the work to- day?
38863Which of the two stories was the saddest?
38863Which of''em did the ladies want to see?
38863Which was to enact Jacob, and which the angel?
38863Who had dared to give his pet victim drink?
38863Who is acting here?
38863Who might presume to talk of love amid the horrors of carnage, where victims had been done to death by hundreds with scarce an effort at defence?
38863Who might solve the riddle?
38863Who might tell what would happen next?
38863Who might there be on board?
38863Who should be a better judge of such matters than the King of Cherokees?
38863Who was it that was always bidding ye to see to it yourself, and ye would n''t?
38863Who was it?
38863Who was she that she might hope to fare better than they?
38863Who was their leader?''
38863Who''s their leader?
38863Why could not Arthur Wolfe hold his stupid tongue?
38863Why did n''t they send him to Fort George?
38863Why did she ever leave it to come to this accursed spot?
38863Why did she not choose to come out with him in a bigger boat?
38863Why had he not been told of this before?
38863Why had no arrests followed the discovery of the stores?
38863Why had she ever told him?
38863Why help to bring upon the land again the horrors of the Hurry?
38863Why prate of comfort?
38863Why prejudice the coort?''
38863Why should he?
38863Why was not Terence hanged?
38863Why was that?
38863Why were my lady''s letters so cold?
38863Why were these peasants turned to stone?
38863Why were they leading this odd hermit life?
38863Why, when so many Catholics came to ruin in the Hurry, was this horrible woman allowed to escape scot- free?
38863Will I call him?''
38863Will that please you?
38863With a bare bodkin who shall fardels carry?
38863With reference to him, which line would the jurors be instructed to take?
38863With what result?
38863Wolfe Tone, I think?''
38863Would he come to stand in the dock as so many had done who were now at rest?
38863Would he plead guilty or not guilty?
38863Would it have been better for her to have beheld the true man without his mask?
38863Would it not be best to sound Miss Wolfe once more?
38863Would she even now, with her rival at her feet, be merciful?
38863Would she go to the Castle, or to her lamented parent''s mansion?
38863Would she have the courage to let him go without speaking the truth?
38863Would she wish the rascals to be lashed, or would pitchcaps please her fancy?
38863Would success have blotted out the recollection of them?
38863Would the countess have to bewail both sons?
38863Would the other show his hand?
38863Would the radiant boy come and stop at Letterkenny?
38863Would they calmly endure while one of their noble name was being strung up as a felon?
38863Would ye have me rob the mail?
38863Would you dare ask her to sell herself for me?
38863Would you----''''Can there be any doubt?''
38863Yet surely he could not be so utterly distracted as to intend again to raise the standard of revolt?
38863Yet what could be his object now?
38863Yet why should the punctiliously upright dowager be possessed by so dire a visitation?
38863You do n''t feel quite that way?
38863You think it very shocking to be giving feasts at such a time?
38863You''ve come to look upon your work?''
38863Your_ protégé_ is the holder of the family honours now?''
38863had both escaped?
38863is that a reason why your union should answer?
38863or a dhrop of prime poteen?
38863that ardent face-- transfigured and inspired by his pure enthusiasm-- was she indeed no more to look on it?
38863where-- what for?''
38863why did she not accept her punishment all those years ago, when the task would not have been so hard?
38863would they please tell her something?
47121Ambition, pride, the rival names Of York and Lancaster, With all their long- contested claims, What were they then to her?
47121Have you seen yonder man?
47121Is there no remedy but that I must needs put my neck into this yoke?
47121What was the use of striking a dead man?
47121Where was the boy born?
47121And if all the fair spinners of France employ their hands to redeem me, think you, prince, that I shall abide much longer with you?"
47121Anne asked"why they had come?"
47121Beauty, wealth, genius, pleasure, power, royalty, had all been hers, and whither had they led her?
47121Death, who made thee so bold, To take from me my lovely princess?
47121How, then, can my right be disputed?"
47121On being advised to retire that the point of the arrow might be taken out,"To what place?"
47121Then?
47121This was awkward; for how could a committee wait upon the king to ask him to abdicate?
47121What must have been the agony of the good man when he beheld his own plight and that of his innocent, forsaken little ones?
47121When he asks her:"Do you like me, Kate?"
47121When his daughter visited him in the Tower he asked her"how Queen Anne did?"
47121Who can blame the poor woman for her tardiness?
47121Why say you so?
47121With a complacent smile he replied,"And is it so, sweetheart?
47121he asked,"who will remain fighting, if I, the prince, a king''s son, retire for fear at the first taste of steel?
47121how can I depend upon any one but myself?"
44703And why do you come into this land, and what are you going to do?
44703Do you think,said the sensible grammarian,"I am going to enter into disputes with a man who commands thirty legions?"
44703Does not your law command you,he said,"to submit to injury, and to renounce your worldly goods?
44703Have you no wish, then,said Hastings,"to submit yourselves to King Charles, who offers you land and honours on condition of fealty and service?"
44703Is it a prisoner you have brought us?
44703When do you think you shall die?
44703You have three or four cardinals,he says,"of learning and faith; but what are these three or four in so vast a crowd of infidels and reprobates?
44703All men equal before the dread tribunal of the imperial judge?
44703And in a third, how did the golden ring of sovereignty lose its controlling power, and republics take their rise?
44703And who can pretend to be qualified for so great a work?
44703And who could hesitate?
44703But of the two loudest of these declaimers, John, who said,--"What earthly power to interrogatory Can tax the free breath of a Christian king?"
44703But what was the use of all his genius?
44703But when church and aristocracy were thus protected from the tyranny of the king, were the interests of the great mass of the people neglected?
44703But who are you, who speak our language so well?"
44703But who were the electors?
44703Could he not go a step further, and convert a King of the Franks into an Emperor of the West?
44703Could the gratitude of Church or State be too generous to the man who preserved both from the sword of the destroyer?
44703Did the Senate receive a milder treatment?
44703Else why do we find the faith of one generation the ridicule and laughing- stock of the next?
44703Had he any patriotic pride in keeping the soil of Italy undivided?
44703Had he no relentings at the visible approach of the end?
44703He had already asked Pope Zachariah,"who had the best right to the name of king?--he who had merely the title, or he who had the power?"
44703His friends said to him,"Why did n''t you answer the emperor''s objections?"
44703How did aristocracy in one age concentrate into kingship in another?
44703How did knighthood rise into the heroic regions of chivalry, and then sink in a succeeding period into the domain of burlesque?
44703How did the reverence of Europe settle at one time on the sword of Edward the Third, and at another on the periwig of Louis the Fourteenth?
44703How was it possible for any two scribes, or even for the same scribe, to produce so undeniable a fac- simile of his work?
44703How was this done?
44703How was this great change worked on the English mind?
44703How, indeed, could the Church deprive itself of the organization which it saw so powerful and so successful in civil affairs?
44703How, indeed, even without this incident, could the Papacy have retained its power?
44703If the law guaranteed him the plough he held, the cart he drove, the spade he plied, why not the house he occupied, the little field he cultivated?
44703If these were the habits of the rich, how were the poor treated?
44703Inspired by the good cheer, the guests said,"Why do n''t you buy the empire?
44703Is he a churchman?
44703Is there no hope for Rome or for mankind?
44703Is there to be a perpetual succession of monster after monster, with no cessation in the dreadful line?
44703It might have been degrading to acknowledge the superiority of the son of Pepin-- but who could offer resistance to the successor of Augustus?
44703Pardon, did I say?
44703Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
44703The count replied,"Did you never hear of Hastings the famous pirate, who had so many ships upon the sea, and did such evil to this realm?"
44703Was Albinus still to live, and approach so near the throne as to have the rank of Cæsar?
44703Was he to go to the grave untouched by all the calamities he had brought upon mankind?
44703Was there no outcry from outraged piety?--no burst of indignation against the perpetrator of so foul a wrong?
44703We had taken Canada: are they going to take New York?
44703We turned them out of India: were they going to turn us out of America?
44703Were people to be debarred from social meetings and merry- makings at Christmas, and junketings at fairs, by act of Parliament?
44703Were the nobilissimi, the patricii, the egregii, to lose their salaries?
44703Were they to have no cakes and ale because their elders were so prodigiously virtuous?
44703What could be more enchanting than the position of their monastic homes?
44703What is this absorbs me quite, Steals my senses, shuts my sight, Drowns my spirits, draws my breath?
44703What more could the Church require?
44703What should we call the present century, for instance?
44703What was the effect upon the populace of these extraordinary shows?
44703What was the use of going on?
44703What were they doing at Rome during the thirty- three years of our Saviour''s sojourn upon earth?
44703What, then, was to become of the warrior''s holding when he died?
44703When there was any deficiency, was the emperor to suffer?
44703Where is the fiery Henry of England, with his pen or sword?
44703Where, indeed, could any element of security be found?
44703Who was there in the Forty- Five, or Forty- Six, or for many years after that date, to write such charming verses?
44703Who was to guide them in their future voyage?
44703Who were those soldiers?
44703Why, indeed, should not the first of those authorities exert his more than human powers in the production of the other?
44703Would it not be possible to win over the cardinals to make your majesty his successor?"
44703no more summary executions, nor forfeitures of fortunes, nor banishments to the Danube?
44703sly: a Presbyterian?
44703sour: A smart free- thinker?
44703the blood he had shed, the multitudes he had beguiled?
44703then he''s fond of power: A Quaker?
44703to purity of life?
44703to reform of abuses?
44703what crime have they committed?
44703where is thy sting?"
44703where is thy victory?
4776Are the Irish a nation?
4776Are the Ulstermen a nation?
4776Do they embody or promote a spirit of reverence between human beings?
4776Do they encourage creativeness rather than possessiveness?
4776Do they preserve self- respect?
4776How ought both parties to act in such a case?
4776Is it surprising that men become increasingly docile, increasingly ready to submit to dictation and to forego the right of thinking for themselves?
4776Should Christian Scientists be compelled to call in doctors in case of serious illness?
4776Should Welsh children be allowed the use of the Welsh language in schools?
4776Should gipsies be compelled to abandon their nomadic life at the bidding of the education authorities?
4776Should miners have an eight- hour day?
4776The Gospel says:"Take no thought, saying, What shall we eat?
4776Why, for example, should a hansom- cab driver be allowed to suffer on account of the introduction of taxies?
4776or What shall we drink?
4776or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?"
44133And who is that sweet- faced girl in the pew just in front of the pulpit? 44133 But do n''t you believe that we have faults that we ought to try to conquer?"
44133But do you really think, Miss Benton,said Ernestine, raising her eyes,"that we can so completely conquer our faults?"
44133But for a woman reared as she had been, what was there to do? 44133 But what kind of a pie, Miss Benton?"
44133But why should she do that?
44133Can you help Ernestine any by neglecting your own duties, dear? 44133 Did Norah det sick so''Innie have to''ork so hard?
44133Did n''t you say we were to help each other? 44133 Do n''t I?
44133Do? 44133 Ernestine, how do you keep from forgetting?"
44133Fannie''s father?
44133Have I been selfish? 44133 How could people do their duty, if they never knew what it was going to be?"
44133How did you know I was fond of lilies of the valley, Miss Benton?
44133How do you feel now, mamma?
44133How do you know?
44133How many canes and walking- sticks has he, Aunt Kitty?
44133I ca n''t go and apologize to someone for making fun of her as soon as her back is turned, can I? 44133 Independence Bell,"and"The Blue and the Gray"--for what patriotic celebration would be complete without these?
44133Is n''t it singular?
44133Is there any nearer duty, Winnie?
44133Mamma,asked Ernestine Alroy,"may I ask the girls to have their next meeting here and take tea with us?"
44133May n''t I go with you, mamma?
44133Mother dear, what is it?
44133Oh, Gretta, who is going to scold you? 44133 Oh, who cares for marks anyhow?
44133Selfish? 44133 She ca n''t have much to leave to anybody; and, if she had, Ernestine would be the only one to get it, would n''t she?
44133She has eyes, has n''t she?
44133We were all to have a text or a verse to- night, were n''t we?
44133Well, my dear,said Mr. Burton to his wife, as they rose from the table,"anything on the carpet for to- night?"
44133Well, what do you say to my taking all of you, the whole company of warriors, to Mammoth Cave?
44133Well,she said impatiently,"what are you and your philanthropy going to do about it?"
44133What did she do?
44133What have you, Ernestine?
44133What is it, Win?
44133What is my worst one?
44133What is the matter, mamma?
44133What is this, Miss Benton?
44133What is your bugaboo, Fannie?
44133Whatever can she want of him? 44133 Whatever do you mean?"
44133Whatever is the matter?
44133Where is the teacher?
44133Why do n''t you apologize?
44133Why do n''t you write to them?
44133Why is it like a bear?
44133Why is it like a book?
44133Why is it like a cream- puff?
44133Why is it like a flower?
44133Why is it like a novel?
44133Why is it like a ring?
44133Why is it like an egg?
44133Why is it like cheese?
44133Why is it like me?
44133Why is it like music?
44133Why is it like the grass?
44133Why is it like the sky?
44133Why, he''s my baby,said grandma;"you would n''t have me scold my baby, would you?"
44133Yes, is n''t it? 44133 And yet-- how would I know where they were sitting if I were blind, too?
44133But how is it that you have all this to do to- night?
44133But she is as frail as a reed, and her body, in spite of her will power, will break down under the pressure, and then----""Well?"
44133But to change the subject, would you young giant- killers like to hear a story that I have written for you?"
44133But was he conquered?
44133But what would Ernestine do if her mother should die?
44133But who are these descending the heretofore unscaled cliff?
44133Come up to my room, Winnie, and stay awhile, ca n''t you?"
44133Do n''t I look limp?"
44133Do we not know how the Savior turned away from the chosen way to heal the sick or comfort the afflicted?
44133Finally he said:"Excuse me, Mrs. Alroy, but may I ask what was your maiden name?"
44133Going to have a good time?
44133He read her thought well enough, but unhesitatingly continued:"The Van Ortons of New York?"
44133Her mother returned the embrace, holding her close for a moment, and then she said gently:"Have you your lessons for Monday, dear?"
44133How are we to do this, when we never know what is going to happen from one day to another?
44133How can people have refinements without comforts?"
44133How can we do that, if we do n''t say anything when one of us does wrong?
44133How would it do to take the one Winnie brought?
44133I thought that was just what we ought to do, is n''t it?"
44133If she goes to the high- school next year, she''ll have more time to practice, wo n''t she?"
44133Is I a bodder, mamma?"
44133Is n''t that strange?
44133Norah looked at her a minute, and then said:"So you want me to dress Ralph, do you?
44133One of them( Fannie), in answer, declaims the resolution, and as she comments, in rather excited tones,"Glorious, mother, is n''t it?"
44133S.?"
44133Something is wrong, radically wrong,''--and here I made the gesture she always makes when she says''radically wrong,''and-- what do you think?
44133Suppose we try it now?"
44133The temptation was too great; and beside, she reasoned,"What difference can it possibly make whether I am at school or at the church?
44133Then she quieted herself and said,"When, papa?"
44133Then, seeing the well- known twinkle in his eyes, she perched herself on his knee and said,"Now, papa, what are you up to?"
44133This morning I thought I was going to get my music lesson, and now how can I do that?"
44133This reminded Ralph of the loss of his humming- top, and he said, quite loudly,"Do you sink, papa, that little boy lost his birfday, too?"
44133Was the evening too much for you?"
44133What other sound is that which rises above the roar of the wind and fills one''s soul with terror?
44133What shall the owner do to redeem it?"
44133What shall the owner do to redeem it?"
44133What time is it?"
44133When now would she have time to learn those lessons?
44133When the latter rejoined her, she said with some irritation,"However could you touch those horrid, dirty clothes or go near that dirty child?"
44133When they had finished the last stanza, Winnie said,"Aunt Kitty, wo n''t you and Uncle Fred sing''Juanita''for us?
44133When they went home to supper, however, and Mr. Burton asked:"Well, my little man, what have you done with your birthday?"
44133Who all are to be invited?"
44133Who would take care of her?
44133With England than to be spending her time tending sheep?
44133You are not in a hurry?"
44133You will stay here awhile?"
44133asked Winnie;"and where are papa and Jack?"
44133or"Did you prove that?"
44133said Miriam;"or do n''t you have any?"
44133said she,"what do we care for giants?
40063And do you know what they are?
40063And to whom?
40063And what is the sea?
40063And what would you do with it? 40063 And who are you?"
40063And your hair is red-- and you are marked with the small- pox-- and what? 40063 Are ye out of your mind, my nurse, my nurse?"
40063Are you tired of your good Black Auster?
40063Axes? 40063 Can I do anything to serve you?"
40063Can you ride?
40063Captain Hedzoff? 40063 Dear Signor Lorenzo, who is this?"
40063Did not thy gentle hand smooth my pillow, and bring me jelly and roast- chicken?
40063Did you ever look at the stars?
40063Didst thou not tend me in my sickness, when all forsook me?
40063Dirty little girl, do n''t you think I am very pretty?
40063Do you know that you are insulting me?
40063Do you think,I said,"that our masters know how bad it is for us?"
40063Do you?
40063Doctor, you came to read the funeral service-- read the marriage service, will you? 40063 Does it begin with a Z?"
40063Drive to the Duchess of B----''s,she said, and then after a pause,"Are you never going to get those horses''heads up, York?
40063Have you decided what to do, John?
40063Have you?
40063His father, King Padella...."His father, King_ who_?
40063How is that, parson?
40063How is this?
40063How?
40063I suppose I had best warm both the young gentlemen''s beds, ma''am?
40063Is it a trade?
40063Is it metaphysics?
40063Is it some language?
40063Is it to be pistols, or swords, Captain?
40063Is not this the hour of the class? 40063 Is that all you wish for?
40063Is that the right thing to do, think you?
40063John, where is his Royal Highness?
40063Lady, do you know the tune? 40063 Master Will?"
40063My noble young Prince, is it my hand must lead thee to death?
40063Nay now, what faith?
40063Of course, Captain,says he,"you are come about that affair with Prince Giglio?"
40063Oh, dear Prince,she said,"how could you speak so haughtily in presence of their Majesties?
40063The great question is,says he,"am I fast or am I slow?
40063Unhappy children,cried Madame de la Tour,"where have you been?
40063Well, dear Giglio?
40063Well, dear Gruffy?
40063What are you two people chattering about there?
40063What do I know about fowls and jellies, that you allude to them in that rude way?
40063What do you mean?
40063What dress shall I put on, mamma? 40063 What is it you are writing, you dear Gruffy?"
40063What scrape?--fly the country? 40063 When will you come and see us?"
40063Where is Bulbo?
40063Which do you think the dear Prince will like best?
40063Who was your mother-- who were your relations, little girl?
40063Who''s there?
40063Why did he not marry the poor Princess?
40063Why did you not tell me so at first?
40063Why were you so cruel to Prince Bulbo, dear Prince?
40063Why, didn''t-- didn''t you send them, Angelica dear?
40063Why, then, what is''t?
40063Will she?
40063Wo n''t you give me a pair of shoes to go out in the snow, mum, if you please, mum?
40063Would they ask this question for her at Dr. Ashley''s, and bring the answer?
40063You are a doctor?
40063You like flowers?
40063You little wretch, who let you in here?
40063_ We_ will fly?
40063--"What shall we do then?"
40063--"Why,"answered Paul,"can not I give you something that belongs to heaven?
40063After what fashion, I pray thee?
40063Am I not Autocrat of Paflagonia?
40063And what in God''s name, is all this pother about?
40063And what more should he desire with either?
40063And what would you say,"he went on,"if I had come up here on purpose to cross yours?"
40063Angelica, wo n''t you have a saveloy?"
40063Angelica?
40063Are there balance here to weigh The flesh?
40063Are we then so near home?--at the foot of our own mountain?"
40063Are you a beast of field and tree, Or just a stronger child than me?
40063Are you acquainted with the difference That holds this present question in the court?
40063Are you answer''d?
40063As for the shoe, what was she to do with one poor little tootsey sandal?
40063As soon as they began to ascend, they heard voices exclaiming--"Is it you, my children?"
40063But why speak of thrones?
40063But you would not have me die like a dog and not see all that is to be seen, and do all that a man can do, let it be good or evil?
40063Ca n''t you see that while you are talking my Bulbo is being hung?"
40063Ca n''t you sit still?"
40063Can a man be more downright or honourable to a woman than I have been?
40063Can no prayer pierce thee?
40063Can you apply a parable?"
40063Can you tell me who was she, Mistress of the flowery wreath, And the anagram beneath-- The mysterious K. E.?
40063Clara, Clara Vere de Vere, If Time be heavy on your hands, Are there no beggars at your gate, Nor any poor about your lands?
40063Come you from old Bellario?
40063Could any thing be more absurd than to wake a patient to administer a sleeping- potion?
40063Did you ever see a squirrel turning in a cage?
40063Do re Mi***** What is this?
40063Do you love him, ay or no?"
40063Do you really fancy you should be more beholden to your correspondent, if he had been damning you all the while for your importunity?
40063Do you remember the day when we crossed over the great stones of the river of the Three Breasts?
40063Do you want me to marry you?
40063Dost thou love me?
40063For what cause do they embitter their own and other people''s lives?
40063Gruffanuff?
40063Ha-- ah-- what''s this?
40063Has God then forsaken us?
40063Have I been such a ninny as to throw away my regard upon_ you_?
40063Have I not blocks, ropes, axes, hangmen-- ha?
40063Have I not sacks to sew up wives withal?
40063Have we not enough in our garden already?
40063Have we not hitherto been happy?
40063He little knows that Miss Betsinda is----"Is-- what?
40063How could it be otherwise?
40063I stand for judgment: answer; shall I have it?
40063If they were continued, what happiness could the French princess have in her wedlock?"
40063In there came old Alice the nurse, Said,"Who was this that went from thee?"
40063Is it mathematics?"
40063Is_ this_ the woman I have been in love with all my life?
40063Madam, on its panes you''ll see The initials K. and E.""An old lantern brought to me?
40063Maybe, this is disagreeable to you?"
40063Now if I were only a fool, should not I be in a pretty way?"
40063O Love, where is thy sympathy, If thus our breasts thou sever?
40063O you that are so strong and cold, O blower, are you young or old?
40063O young lord- lover, what sighs are those, For one that will never be thine?
40063Once when on a sweet night in a balcony where they were standing, Angelica said,"There is the Bear"--"Where?"
40063One of the officers asked him,"If it was true that he had concurred with the Duke of Buckingham in causing his father''s death?"
40063Pray who is it to be hanged?"
40063Prithee, why so mute?
40063Prithee, why so mute?
40063Prithee, why so pale?
40063Prithee, why so pale?
40063Runs not a river by my palace wall?
40063Said Lady Clare,"that ye speak so wild?"
40063Scarcely drawing the rein, Blantyre shouted,"Which way?"
40063Scarcely had she finished, when Margaret exclaimed,"What have we to do with your relations?
40063Shall I try it?
40063She often said to me,"If I were to die, what will become of Virginia without fortune?"
40063She speaks, yet she says nothing: what of that?
40063Tell me by what charm you have thus enchanted me?
40063The Queen?
40063The king put up his flowing hair under a cap; then, turning to the executioner, asked,"Is any of my hair in the way?"
40063The passer- by on the road to the Shaddock Grove, indeed, would sometimes ask the inhabitants of the plain, who lived in the cottages up there?
40063Then Giglio would say,"Betsinda, has the Princess Angelica asked for me to- day?"
40063WHY SO PALE AND WAN?
40063Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream?
40063Was not that fine reasoning?
40063What care has_ she_ for line or hook?
40063What do you think of it, sir?"
40063What fields, or waves, or mountains?
40063What has become of that bozzy vagabond?"
40063What if her eyes were there, they in her head?
40063What if my house be troubled with a rat And I be pleased to give ten thousand ducats To have it baned?
40063What ignorance of pain?
40063What love of thine own kind?
40063What need, indeed, had these young people of riches or learning such as ours?
40063What objects are the fountains Of thy happy strain?
40063What shapes of sky or plain?
40063What thou art we know not; What is most like thee?
40063What woman in all Europe, Asia, Africa, and America-- nay, in Australia, only it is not yet discovered-- can presume to be thy equal?
40063What''s Montague?
40063What''s in a name?
40063What, are you answer''d yet?
40063What_ did_ you ever hear of?
40063When Bassompierre asked her,"How about the wooden platters?"
40063When Giglio had done knocking him up and down to the ground, and whilst he went into a corner rubbing himself, what do you think Giglio does?
40063When Prince Bulbo said,"Prince Giglio, may I have the honour of taking a glass of wine with you?"
40063When nature is"so careless of the single life,"why should we coddle ourselves into the fancy that our own is of exceptional importance?
40063When the little housemaid came to him in the morning and evening, Prince Giglio used to say,"Betsinda, Betsinda, how is the Princess Angelica?"
40063When they looked at the stars, what did Giglio know of the heavenly bodies?
40063When will the dancers leave her alone?
40063Where are my spectacles?"
40063Where is he?
40063Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew?
40063Which way had she turned?
40063Whither had they all gone?
40063Whither went all the tourists and pedlars with strange wares?
40063Who avert the murderous blade?
40063Who will shield the captive knight?
40063Who will shield the fearless heart?
40063Who''s that laughing?"
40063Why come you drest like a village maid, That are the flower of the earth?"
40063Why do you go so far, and climb so high, to seek fruits and flowers for me?
40063Why should two hearts in one breast lie, And yet not lodge together?
40063Why so dull and mute, young sinner?
40063Why so pale and wan, fond lover?
40063Why sweat they under burthens?
40063Why then this regret?
40063Why, if this be not education, what is?
40063Will you come home with me, little dirty girl?"
40063Will you show me the way?"
40063Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail?
40063Will, when speaking well ca n''t win her, Saying nothing do''t?
40063Worldly Wiseman accosting such an one, and the conversation that should thereupon ensue:--"How now, young fellow, what dost thou here?"
40063Would you not suppose these persons had been whispered, by the Master of the Ceremonies, the promise of some momentous destiny?
40063You stand within his danger, do you not?
40063[_ Juliet appears above at a window._ But, soft, what light through yonder window breaks?
40063[_ Presenting a letter.__ Bass._ Why dost thou whet thy knife so earnestly?
40063_ Bass._ Do all men kill the things they do not love?
40063_ Duke._ Come you from Padua, from Bellario?
40063_ Duke._ How shalt thou hope for mercy, rendering none?
40063_ Duke._ What, is Antonio here?
40063_ Jul._ At what o''clock to- morrow Shall I send to thee?
40063_ Jul._ By whose direction found''st thou out this place?
40063_ Jul._ How camest thou hither, tell me, and wherefore?
40063_ Jul._ My ears have not yet drunk a hundred words Of that tongue''s utterance, yet I know the sound: Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?
40063_ Jul._ What man art thou that thus bescreen''d in night So stumblest on my counsel?
40063_ Jul._ What satisfaction canst thou have to- night?
40063_ Por._ Art thou contented, Jew?
40063_ Por._ Do you confess the bond?
40063_ Por._ Is he not able to discharge the money?
40063_ Por._ Is your name Shylock?
40063_ Por._ It is not so express''d: but what of that?
40063_ Por._ What mercy can you render him, Antonio?
40063_ Por._ Why doth the Jew pause?
40063_ Por._ You, merchant, have you any thing to say?
40063_ Rom._ My dear?
40063_ Rom._ O, wilt thou leave me so unsatisfied?
40063_ Rom._ What shall I swear by?
40063_ Rom._ Wouldst thou withdraw it?
40063_ Rom._[_ Aside_] Shall I hear more, or shall I speak at this?
40063_ Shy._ An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven: Shall I lay perjury upon my soul?
40063_ Shy._ Ay, his breast: So says the bond: doth it not, noble judge?
40063_ Shy._ Hates any man the thing he would not kill?
40063_ Shy._ Is it so nominated in the bond?
40063_ Shy._ Is that the law?
40063_ Shy._ On what compulsion must I?
40063_ Shy._ Shall I not have barely my principal?
40063_ Shy._ What judgment shall I dread, doing no wrong?
40063_ Shy._ What, wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice?
40063and another squirrel sitting philosophically over his nuts?
40063and hiding her head in the Countess''shoulder, she faintly whispered,"Ah, Signor, can it be A?"
40063and should''st thou not be plying thy Book with diligence, to the end thou mayest obtain knowledge?"
40063and that this lukewarm bullet on which they play their farces was the bull''s- eye and centre- point of all the universe?
40063answered Virginia,"with that great wicked man?
40063are we men?"
40063did n''t you give me this paper promising marriage?"
40063exclaimed Cromwell, who sat just beneath him, turning suddenly round,"are you mad?
40063for what purpose, love?
40063let their beds Be made as soft as yours, and let their palates Be season''d with such viands?
40063or have you had enough of me for good?
40063or will you take my friendship, as I think best?
40063said Will,"if there are thousands who would like, why should not one of them have my place?"
40063says the Prince,"how have I lived fifteen years in thy company without seeing thy perfections?
40063the pink or the pea- green?"
40063what does this mean?
40063what dost thou say?
40063what is that?"
40063what will her Majesty say?"
40063wherefore art thou Romeo?
40063whither all the brisk barouches with servants in the dicky?
40063whither the water of the stream, ever coursing downward and ever renewed from above?
46385''To be sure, my dear sir; do n''t you remember that rats once came under the forest laws-- a minor species of venison? 46385 And who, silly child, is Nell Cook?"
46385Do you understand Italian, then?
46385Father,wailed that assembled multitude,"why do you desert us so soon?
46385Kent?
46385So gentlemen like you''ve told me afore; but what I says is, dey both comes from Italy, do n''t dey? 46385 What,"asked an indignant fisherman--"what makes them''ere hotels pay like they does?"
46385''s marine palace, the"Pavilion"at Brighton, or, at any rate, to snatch a glamour from its name?
46385An''now"(?
46385Ay, whence?
46385Bewildered at first by the almost complete darkness, they could only shout at random,"Where is Thomas Becket, traitor to the King?"
46385But from what stones those original names proceeded who shall say?
46385But, it may be asked, if the town were in such sore case, whence came the wealth of those substantial burgesses?
46385Callous Sandwich?
46385Can such things be?
46385Did the Roman scheme, we wonder, allow them compensation?
46385Does it not contain Ramsgate--"rollicking Ramsgate",--and Margate the merry, whose name-- I am sorry-- always reminds me of margarine?
46385Funds are accumulating for a restoration of this church; but, unless the people come back to the land, why expend so much good money?
46385He stood in front of what was then the the Chapel of St. Benedict, and calmly asked,"Reginald, why do you come into my church armed?"
46385How different this from Horace Walpole''s description of the place in 1755:"How shall I describe Netley to you?
46385How should it be?
46385Is there not something radically wrong with England when a farmer''s wife can make such a speech as that, and not think it strange?
46385Modern refinement subsequently euphemised the name into''East- street''; but''what''s in a name?''
46385Satire is writ large, in a fine bold Roman hand, over that description of the Military Canal, is it not?
46385Then, falling over a monk, came an oath, from FitzUrse, and the question,"Where is the Archbishop?"
46385There are, it is true, few places so interesting as Sheppey, but why, apart from its history?
46385To whom will you leave us?"
46385What do they find?
46385What is there of Ivychurch?
46385What says Ingoldsby of the canal?
46385What was that which wrought such enmity between such old- time friends?
46385What, then, do we know of Stonar?
46385What?
46385Where are the"York"or the"Ship"to- day?
46385Where is that harbour of which some vestiges remained to the time of Elizabeth?
46385Where, then, are the others of his household?
46385Who that ever has sojourned in the west, and has known lovely Devon, would for a moment give Kent that pride of place?
46385_ Can_ they be, indeed?
46385that haven which, according to Leland, was"strayt for passage owt of Boloyn?"
44860A tooth, perchance?
44860Can we come to any terms?
44860Hallo,cried the king,"who gave you leave to put that on?
44860How do I know what you are going to do with it?
44860How will his majesty take the contribution?
44860Hubert de What?
44860I?
44860Is there a person of the name of Hubert de Burgh stopping here?
44860Is your lordship aware,asked Sampson, K.C.,"that you will throw us over the long vacation?
44860Me,cried Philip, in the grammar of the period; but"Who''s me?"
44860Now then, stupid,resounded from rank to rank, and comrade addressed comrade with the words"Where are you shoving to?"
44860Now then, what is it?
44860Talk not of bowls,was the reply of John;"what is life but a game at bowls, in which the king is too frequently knocked over?"
44860True,said Edward,"but how about poor little Bet?"
44860Well, my good woman,he observed,"what is all this?
44860What do we want with more?
44860What do you do here?
44860What shall I say for Richard?
44860Where is the little fellow?
44860Why did n''t you let her go?
44860Why, do n''t you know me? 44860 Will fifty thousand marks be too much?"
44860Would you say as much to the pope himself?
44860You know your rights,said Philip to the youth,"and would you not be a king?"
44860You''re not joking?
44860*"For if,"said he,"the one thousand misdemeanors will not make a felony, how will twenty- eight misdemeanors make a treason?"
44860*"What has become of the fellow?"
44860*"Who will buy them?"
44860--"Did you, indeed, you young jackanapes?"
44860Arrest me?
44860As the friend was evidently not a man to take a denial, Henry?
44860Did you ever?"
44860Did you ever?"
44860He sounded Whitelock, to whom he put the question,"What if a man should take upon himself to be king?"
44860He took hold of the hammer- cloth, as if to mount, and looked round as much as to say,"Shall I?"
44860Henry exclaimed emphatically,"What are you going to give me?"
44860His majesty retired to York, but soon began to ask himself--"What''s this dull town to me?"
44860His wife had but little respect for his waggery, and would sometimes ask him"how he could play the fool in a close, filthy prison?"
44860In vain did a diminutive bishop ask a stalwart warrior"where he was shoving to?"
44860Jack had scarcely got out the words,"Is that you, Alick?"
44860Long before the promised aid arrived, he received a card inscribed"Dr. Knight,"and he had scarcely time to say,"Doctor Knight?
44860Nor can it be doubted that, had the air been popular at the period, the Ethiopian melody of"Who''s dat knocking at de door?"
44860Often, while reviewing the troops, if he complained of awkwardness in the evolutions, he would hear murmurs of"Why do n''t you pay us?"
44860On Tuesday, the 13th, Louis came to his bedside to say"How d''ye do?"
44860Sampson, K.C., had nevertheless got as far as"Will your lordship allow us?"
44860The king then exclaimed,"Well, Doctor, is that all you have to say?"
44860There''s some mistake, is there not?
44860This, however, was impossible; for though conscience must often have whispered"Ca n''t you leave the man alone?"
44860Those ensigns with the banners Must stand the other way, Or else how is it possible The white rose to display?"
44860To rub his eyes and ask"What''s this?"
44860Under these circumstances, he intimated that his presence among them should be regarded as a flying visit, just to say"How d''ye do?"
44860What has it cost me?"
44860What have I done?
44860What next?"
44860What will you give?
44860What''s become of the king?"
44860When the news was brought to her, she exclaimed indignantly,"Not married to the king?
44860Who is Doctor Knight?
44860Who is Sidney?"
44860and"Do n''t you wish you may get it?"
44860and"Where are you shoving to?"
44860and"what about?"
44860as if there must be some mistake, and as though he would have said,"Gentlemen of the jury, do you know what you are doing?"
44860cried Somerset, as York came in, which elicited, by way of reply,"You''re an old humbug,"and other taunts, among which"Who embezzled the taxes?"
44860did you ever?"
44860he whined,"dinna ye ken that there are times when you mun just throw your preencipal overboard?"
44860rejoined the Scot;"but ken ye not that ye might have bought half the powder, and put the rest of the siller in your pocket?"
44860roared Henry, in allusion to his having elevated Catherine Parr by marrying her;"so you are a doctor, are you, Kate?"
44860roared the Protector,"do you answer me with''ifs''?
44860what next?"
44860when Harrison pulled him back by the skirts of his coat, saying to him,"Ca n''t you be quiet?
44860who''s Fletcher?"
44860why should I not be able to drive my own carriage?"
44860would n''t I, just?"
44860would the urchin teach his grandmother to suck eggs, I wonder?"
44959All powerful force of nature?
44959And did you hint your own surmise?
44959And will that Being, whose penetrating glance reads the inmost soul, who knows all our frailty, all our weakness, pity less than I should do? 44959 Can it be possible?
44959Can this be pleasure?
44959How shall I break these fatal tidings, without endangering her life?
44959It is, indeed, a terrible story, if true; but what reference can it have to Zorilda?
44959My father thinks largely of my vanity, it would seem,said Lionel;"what has this complimentary stuff to do with me?
44959What have you got here? 44959 What is she?"
44959What took them to the Black Point at this unseasonable hour, and in such a storm?
44959What were they doing in such weather as this?
44959Whence comes she?
44959Who is she?
44959Why did I refuse to tie myself by a vow?
44959Why,murmured I,"am I gifted with talents which must remain unexercised?
44959Will you henceforward be my friend?
44959_ Who is she?_was the brand set on the frontlet which bound my infant brows, and it is indelible.
44959''Is she a foreigner?
44959''Who is she?
44959A thousand times did I form the resolution of snapping my chain, but whither should I fly; how subsist?
44959Am I right?
44959And if I am, have we no claims to urge?
44959Are those who have thrown off the ties of religion, and learned to contemn the commandments of their Creator, in the path of peace and virtue?"
44959Better remain the unknown, despised''Who is she?''
44959But how can all this be?
44959Glendruid, thou lovely scene of infant joys, shall I ever look upon thy rocky shore again?"
44959Good Heavens do you know the Gordons of Drumcairn?"
44959Have I met my father?
44959Have you looked at the letter which he gave you last night?"
44959How can I appear again in the presence of those from whom I might have averted the calamity which bows them broken- hearted to the earth?
44959How can I leave this abode of rest, and cease to hear your dear voice?
44959How do you stand, my dear, with respect to the Drumcairn branch?
44959How is he related to you, my dear?
44959If happiness and peace be in store for us, will they not be doubly enjoyed in concert?
44959If misfortune be our doom, what care or sorrow is not alleviated by sympathy?"
44959In India, on like occasion, the inquiry is,"Have you taken a voyage in his company?"
44959Is it because vice is cowardly, and dares not stand alone, while virtue, in its boldness, finds independence?
44959Is it nothing that your mother''s fame is brought out before mankind like''unsmutched snow?''
44959Is this gratitude?
44959Of what avail were resolutions now?
44959Of what use is the most ingenious invention, if people will not use it; or the best theory, if men will not reduce it to practice?
44959One day I ventured to retort to this invincible argument,"And what care I for the bench of Bishops, if they talk nonsense?
44959Shall I not offer him all that I have to bestow?"
44959Should my suspicions prove correct, to what joy may I not yet look forward?
44959Spanish, French, or Italian?''
44959Surely he can not still be here?"
44959The Gordons of Drumcairn?
44959Unheedful of my feelings, ungrateful for my worship, had Albinia laughed at my woes, and deceived my penetration?
44959WHO IS SHE?
44959Was it he who grasped my hand?
44959What do I want of cumfurt now?
44959What does my father say?"
44959What has a Cæsar or an Alexander to do with us?
44959What have we here?
44959What is the meaning, thought I to myself, of"up the hill?"
44959What need have we to wade through the jargon of the economists, and break down the soaring spirit to the low level of sordid calculation?
44959What was to be done?
44959Where does she come from?
44959Where is Jack?
44959Where is Timsey?"
44959Where is my father?"
44959Where is she going?''
44959Who is she?''
44959Who_ can_ she be?
44959Why endowed with activity which is to lie dormant?
44959Why not bring him here?
44959Why should I repine in this sad hour?
44959Why should we revive the old fashioned stuff of national resources, balance of power, and such useless nonsense?
44959Will Clara, too, cast me off, and hate me because I have none other to love and shelter me?"
44959Will you refuse pardon to such a petitioner?
44959and, who are the parents who could cast such a creature on the merciless world?"
44959exclaimed Zorilda, as she strained her eyes towards the door which had closed upon her father,"who could have believed this miracle?
44959have you turned author, or are you revising and correcting for another?"
44959must a helpless stranger be condemned unheard?
44959no more guessing,"interrupted Zorilda,"what have I to do with any one?
44959nursery of freedom, land of the generous and the brave, when shall I revisit your coasts?
44959says one:''Who is she?
44959what desert too revolting, what solitude too dreary for thy errant charities?
48470Baudricourt was a greet, rough, sensible soldier, and how could Joan go to him with a message of this kind?
48470But how could she escape?
48470The regular soldiers followed, and all day long they attacked the walls, carrying ladders to climb then?
48470They went to her, and asked her if the Voices had come to her again?
48470What had Joan told to the King?
48470â � � You know that I told the Duchess I would bring you back safe?
48470â � �_They say: What say they?
45353''And why not?'' 45353 ''How can the choice of subject be absolutely unrestricted?''
45353Dorothy Qdevotes thirty- two lines to the quaint fancy"What would I be if one of my eight great, great grandmothers had married another man?"
45353Suppose,said the doctor,"I had n''t found her a good woman, should I have told her to hold her tongue?"
45353Waldo, why are you not here?
45353Well, did n''t they listen to you, that time?
45353*****"And after that?"
45353And so he wrote: What, then, is the American, this new man?
45353And the first reaction to such teaching is to ask with shocked disapproval,"What would happen to the world if all men followed his advice?"
45353And were not_ they_ knit together by a higher logic than our mere senses could master?
45353And will you cloud the muse?
45353And will you scorn them all, to pour forth tame And heartless lays of feigned or fancied sighs?
45353Are passages in which it suddenly appears the result of forethought or merely the result of whim?
45353Are there any points in common?
45353Are you?"
45353BALTIMORE SATURDAY VISITER, 1833----(?).
45353Because one half of humankind Lives here in hell, shall not the other half Do any more than just for conscience''sake Be miserable?
45353But suppose she had missed it from the Creed As a child misses the unsaid Good- night, And falls asleep with heartache-- how should I feel?
45353But why should you keep your head over your shoulder?
45353Can you cite political events and characters and novels or plays on political life which belong to this period?
45353DEMOCRATIC REVIEW, THE UNITED STATES, 1837- 1859(?).
45353Do either or both throw light on the chief characters discussed in this chapter?
45353Do his writings give evidence of patriotism in the usual sense of the word?
45353Do the dates of the three poems suggest a progressive change?
45353Do these throw any light on the history of his neighborhoods and his period or are they purely personal in their interest?
45353Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied, over there beyond the seas?
45353Do you find a distinction between Mark Twain''s attitude toward religion and his attitude toward religious people?
45353Does Mark Twain''s consistent interest in history appear in his writing through the use of allusion and comparison?
45353Does Stedman''s own verse confirm the theory of his criticisms of Whitman?
45353Does the poem fulfill Lanier''s intentions?
45353Does this list include any personal lyrics?
45353Emerson visited him at the jail, where ensued the historic exchange of questions:"Henry, why are you here?"
45353From 1844(?)
45353Has any other educated person lived so many years and lost so many days?"
45353How far does he rely upon the symbol in any one of his more effective shorter stories?
45353If asked what was left?
45353In 1819 Sidney Smith''s contemptuous and famous query,"Who reads an American book?"
45353In 1902 he wrote: Shall we ever have an American literature?
45353Is all this to be at end?
45353Is it more like Emerson''s or Lowell''s, more like Whitman''s or Longfellow''s?
45353Is it not well, therefore, that, sharing none of its pleasures and happiness, I should be free of its fatalities, its brevity?
45353Is there a connecting unity in these passages?
45353Is there a legitimate connection to be mentioned between Gilder''s poems on civic themes and the movement for better citizenship in the 1890''s?
45353Is there any clear reason for this common dissent?
45353Is there any real likeness between Thoreau and Whitman in these respects?
45353Is there evidence that he was affected by Shakespeare''s poetic form?
45353Is this golden band of kindred sympathies, so rare between nations, to be broken forever?
45353Is this the way for us To lead these creatures up to find the light, Or the way to be drawn down to find the dark Again?
45353It is nearly a century and a half since he tried to answer the question"What is an American?"
45353NEW YORK REVIEW AND ATHENÆUM MAGAZINE, THE,(?)-1827.
45353Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea?
45353Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone?
45353Read Zangwill''s play"The Melting Pot"in the light of this letter on"What is an American?"
45353Read the letter entitled"What is an American?"
45353Shall I raise the siege of this hen coop, and march baffled away to a pretended siege of Babylon?"
45353Suppose you should contradict yourself; what then?...
45353The next New Englander to give proof that the Puritans were not having an easy time in their"new English Canaan"was Nathaniel Ward( 1578- 1652?
45353These can be supplemented by his own article in the_ Independent_ on"What is Poetry?"
45353To what objects of satire does he most frequently revert?
45353Were we enthusiasts?
45353What can my anger do but cease?
45353What company has that lonely lake, I pray?...
45353What is the likeness in the general drift of the two and what are the essential differences in the treatments of the theme?
45353What is wrong with the American drama?
45353Whitman wrote fairly in a letter:"The book is therefore unprecedently sad( as these days are, are they not?
45353Who can listen unmoved to the sweet love- tales of our robins, told from tree to tree, or to the shrill cat- birds?
45353Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race?
45353Who knows?"
45353Whom shall I fight and who shall be my enemy When he is I and I am he?
45353Why drag about this corpse of your memory, lest you contradict somewhat you have stated in this or that public place?
45353Why should Tamenund stay?
45353a newer page In the great record of the world is thine; Shall it be fairer?
45353is it well To leave the gates unguarded?
45353nor blush for shame To cast away renown, and hide your head from fame?
45353or have they none?
45353sings of America for the world, with its thrillingly prophetic fourth stanza, Have the elder races halted?
45353what we carried home?
47587Are you prepared to answer for your words, Zoé? 47587 But do you not care to make acquaintance with them?"
47587Did he give his name?
47587Is that all?
47587Lucien,says Zoé to her brother, Monsieur Bergeret,"you remember Putois?"
47587What does he want?
47587What is your gardener''s name, my dear?
47587What?
47587You remember him, of course?
47587And this figure has for us one element of interest in addition to those which it possessed for Dante?
47587But if he is to have more than one, why limit the number to three?
47587But what are to be its conditions?
47587But what is an event?
47587Dechartre replies:"Do you imagine that it would be a pleasure to me to live among my own works?
47587Do you suppose that we are on the side of Poland or Finland?
47587Does the historian represent it in all its compositeness?
47587Have you sufficiently reflected upon the conditions of existence and all the modes of being?"
47587How can the historian demonstrate their concatenation?
47587Monsieur Bergeret''s daughter Pauline asks:"What was Putois?"
47587Monsieur le Ministre, why have you not all your Heavenly Father''s rings?
47587Others have said: If there is inequality in law itself, where is equality to be found?
47587The friend to whom France replied,"I have no modern books in my house,"asked, smiling:"Not even your own?"
47587What is a human life?
47587Who decides whether a fact is remarkable or not?
47587Why give this insignificant figure, this poor creature going from place to place earning his bread by his songs, the awe- inspiring name of Homer?
47587Why should I look at them?"
47587Why take up this legend of the blind or half- blind old man?
47587You can not maintain that the three religions are in possession of the truth, seeing that each of them vigorously condemns both the others?"
47587You surely do not make yourself the judge of religious truth?
45559''Ails him? 45559 ''Do you want to sell?''
45559''I''ll take him,''says father;''what''s his name?'' 45559 ''What will you give for him?''
45559''Why, what ails the horse?'' 45559 And birds?
45559And so you mean to keep on drifting?
45559And what book did you learn from?
45559And what did Georgie do?
45559And who was your schoolmaster?
45559Are they both dead?
45559Are you wild?
45559But I have nothing to wear?
45559But if the oars have been lying in the bottom of his boat all the time? 45559 But what was that crack?"
45559But why should n''t you have the oars?
45559But with Susie she will not mind, will she? 45559 Difference?"
45559Do clothes make such a very great difference to girls?
45559Do you read?
45559Do you spell?
45559Does He love flowers?
45559He makes the flowers blow,she repeated with thoughtful face, then:"What did He make them for?"
45559How did it happen?
45559Is that the reason she wo n''t go to the flower show next week?
45559Polly,said her mistress,"do you hear that?
45559WHAT is going on in the attic?
45559What became of the boys who treated him so meanly? 45559 What can a fellow do?
45559What does he say?
45559What if I had not used that last opportunity?
45559Where are the rest of the boys?
45559Why, what do you wear on Sundays, I should like to know? 45559 Yes, Lannie, who am I, and what have I done to deserve the honor of this occasion?"
45559Yes; but, Jerry, are_ you_ pulling for the other shore?
45559You are sure you can have steady fires in the house? 45559 ''Do you suppose they were going to leave him there all night?'' 45559 After the formalities of the call had been carried out grandpa said:Now, will some one tell us who we are?"
45559And are you clothed in it from head to foot?
45559And it was at her dictation that the words,"What hath God wrought?"
45559And would they pull an old fellow like me into port?"
45559Another thing, will you try to be as patient as possible about receiving answers to your letters?
45559But we do belong to a royal house, eh, mother?"
45559But what was the fact?
45559Canst thou not settle this question for me?
45559Cousin John upon inspecting the work, exclaimed,"Lannie, you are a genius; how did you know the way to do it?"
45559D''ye s''pose they are as good and stout as ever?
45559Did you ever hear of the dear old lady who was in the habit of always saying something good about every one who was mentioned in her hearing?
45559Did you select the verses yourself?
45559Do n''t you think so?
45559Do n''t you?
45559Do you know I think it is a very good hint as to a girl''s character, when she says she always likes her teacher?
45559Do you know a little couplet-- Satan finds some mischief still For idle hands to do?
45559Do you know what I mean, darling?
45559Do you think He can be going to call her soon?"
45559Does He like to see pretty colors, do you sink?
45559Dove, tell what you said to Georgie?"
45559Have you read a careful description of the armor?
45559I guess he wo n''t scare us again so, do you?
45559I wonder if I met you last summer?
45559I wonder if the boys know how constantly mothers are blamed when they do wrong?
45559Is that it?
45559It is also asked:-- What makes an officer of the Pansy Society?
45559May I teach her, Mrs. Decker, and see if I can get her to learn it?"
45559Mr. Bangs''man can be relied on?"
45559Now shall we take another line of the hymn?"
45559Now will you study this letter with great care, and see if you fully understand it?
45559Now"who may join?"
45559Oh, I wonder if little Sate would not recite a verse about the daisy grandmothers?
45559Out in the middle of the river without any oars?
45559Sate reflected over this for a minute, then went back to the flowers:"What made Him put the colors on them?
45559Shall I tell you how to always have it?
45559So he sat in the wagon and took out his skeletons"--"Skeletons?"
45559So you do n''t mean to tell us what that"worst fault"is?
45559Still, you are welcome to all the privileges of the P. S. Will you let us hear how you succeed?
45559Suppose you send me a copy for the Pansies?
45559Well, what is to hinder?"
45559Well, you do n''t care much about the flower party, I suppose?"
45559Were they expelled?"
45559Were you named for the State, my dear, or was the State named for you?
45559What kind of thoughts?
45559What makes the difference?"
45559What may not be done by trying?
45559Which color does He like just the very bestest of all?"
45559Will you each try it?
45559did n''t you hear a child crying?''
45559did the children waken you?
45559it ai n''t much likely that a fellow would let them oars lie right afore his eyes and never touch them, is it, now?"
45559what is that?
46953''Do you think any harm can happen to you with me, the pope''s best friend?''
46953''Where do you come from?''
46953''[ 305] The enquiry,''And where would your beaux have Champaign to toast their mistresses were it not for the merchant?
46953''_ Mock._ Is that the witty liquor?
46953And, speaking of the ladies, is not Champagne their wine_ par excellence_?
46953But where''s the wit now, Club?
46953Croyez- vous que l''amour Leur fit un pareil tour?''
46953Cur fugis ad doctum, Burgundica testa, Fagonem?
46953Do n''t get such stuff at school, eh?''
46953Et quoi sous ces beaux doigts Bouchon a donc sauté pour la première fois?
46953Faut- il se contenter de boire Comme tous les peuples du Nord?
46953Have you found it?
46953Is this my grandson Louis?''
46953Must we never see our glorious days again?
46953Swarthy Falernian, Massica the Red, Were ye the nectars poured At the great gods''broad board?
46953What bread do you eat?''
46953What meat do you get?''
46953What wine do you drink?''
46953Who does not know the misery, the helplessness of that abominable ailment influenza, whether a severe cold or the genuine epidemic?
46953Who would be an angel when, Clement king of gods and men, He can soar so grandly, feathered With thy plumage, O Champagne?
46953[ Illustration:''I say, old fellow, how do you go to the Derby this year?''
46953_ Mock._ Is Champaign a tailor?
46953_ Mock._ What?
46953is this my grandson Louis?''
46953of Prussia actually proposed to the Academy of Arts and Sciences at Berlin the question,''Why does Champagne foam?''
49287What did you see?
49287At the same time the Marshal Duplessis asked of him,"Monsieur, are you the master of this house?"
49287Can you imagine a string of firecrackers, large and small woven together, of over one hundred thousand?
49287Could anything be more beautiful and invigorating?
49287Do you know what a minaret is?
49287Have you ever heard of dervishes?
49287Have you ever ridden a mule?
49287Is there a healthy, red- blooded American boy who does not feel a thrill of excitement at the thought?
49287They never say in Turkey,"Where do you live?"
49287and what of the market- place which was once, we were told, the Roman forum?
49287but always,"Where do you sit?"
49287she said, in astonishment,"what did you do with all the dirt?"
41716Any missionaries on board?
41716Did you hear those mad Maories?
41716Do n''t you go out, too?
41716Has he had a look round?
41716Has that always been the way?
41716How''d ye like it?
41716Is this a preliminary uprising?
41716Now, what difference does it make to you?
41716Strange, is n''t it,he said without any preamble,"how money goes from one man to another, from here to Auckland and to Sydney?
41716Want a ride?
41716What can she do? 41716 What is America going to do about it?"
41716What''s the trouble?
41716Where are the people?
41716Where are you from?
41716Where did they learn to sail?
41716Where were you when you saw this man kiss your wife?
41716Who are you?
41716Why should n''t he?
41716You''re always asking why this, why that?
41716''s now?
417162 In Fiji one is not yet compelled to ask,"Where are the Fijians?"
417163 Does Japan make the naturalization of aliens easy?
417164 How would these things work out with the new British arrangement as to the control of the Dominions?
417165 Who, then, does the work of the island?
41716A further problem is, what will happen when the policy applied to island possessions conflicts with the course permitted by the law of the mandate?
41716After that visit, so cordial was the attitude of Australians that everywhere they talked of floating the Stars and Stripes in the event of-- what?
41716All of us bring back accounts of what we''ve seen, but which of us can answer why we went?
41716American strikes are regarded as importations, but what about the strikes in Australia?
41716An amazed member of the Japanese Government( it was a government subsidized vessel) said, with semi- scorn:"Kore wa?
41716And after all, is it any reflection upon any race that it has been assimilated by its conquerors?
41716And have not the more mighty and the more venturesome come over the pass, or over the crest and invaded and conquered and changed?
41716And is not_ kuli_ the word with which he calls his dog?
41716And we?
41716And what, still, is there awaiting the world as they fulfil that destiny?
41716And when I mounted, he asked:"Seeing our little country, are you?
41716Are we to navalize the Pacific or to civilize it?
41716As for the dancers,--what to them were half- expressed notes?
41716Beside this I have thirty acres of orange orchard( four years old) all is my own, and my wife''s now which brought me four( boxes- horses)(?)
41716Better yet, where in all Fiji was fraternization more simple?
41716But has Japan actually never broken her word?
41716But have we not the same difficulty even among a given number of white men, where some are ready to undersell others?
41716But how far is Japan ready and willing to go in this denationalization of herself?
41716But if it did boil over, was it far from the city?
41716But if these loans are recognized, what guarantee is there that even under the nose of the consortium further"loans"will not be made?
41716But if they have forgotten the vision for the appearance of the catch, what about the East?
41716But is Japan giving it?
41716But is that to be her sole contribution?
41716But is there any parallel whatsoever?
41716But what are centuries, when waking is so simple and is always possible?
41716But what are these few assets compared with the greatly extended line of defense now left to the Dominion to keep up?
41716But what beauties or treasures were they meant to guard?
41716But what has that to do with Japanese atrocities in Korea?
41716But what have our Government and our diplomacy done to counteract the American influence?
41716But what have we in Japan?
41716But what is the sea?
41716But what to?
41716But what was the result of that"understanding"?
41716But whence did the woman come who was Cain''s wife?...
41716But where do the Hawaiians come in?
41716But where do we come in and where the peace of the Pacific?
41716But where should I go?
41716But where was man?
41716Came?
41716Can I mistake?"
41716Can it be that Darwin was right?
41716Can not coöperation among nations replace intriguing misalliances, with their vicious secret diplomacy?
41716Can not the sympathy and the emulation of races supplant their enmity and jealousy?
41716Could the coolie possibly abscond with a bag of mail under the very eyes of an officer?
41716Do n''t you know the Bible says,''Be prepared to meet thy Maker?''
41716Does Japan make the naturalization of aliens easy?
41716Does Japan permit the denaturalization of its people abroad?
41716Does Japan permit the ready purchase by aliens of agricultural land?
41716Does the Fijian not hear the white man-- whom he respects, after a fashion-- call his slim competitor"coolie?"
41716Does the woman''s father make witchcraft?
41716Ever been to a sheep auction?
41716First of all, then, is it really any of our business what Japan does in Asia?
41716From loss of reputation?
41716Had n''t"my boss"given me a lifetime''s vacation?
41716Has not every nation gloated over its antiquity and its security?
41716Have we approached the spot whereon man made his first appearance on the earth?
41716He is less able to feel at home there than the Oriental on the main street; but why does n''t the Oriental build for himself a main street?
41716He proceeds to give his own observations of life, and asks:"Is this true, reverend sirs?
41716He will ask you bluntly:"Are you what you say you are?"
41716How can a labor government be so utterly opposed to the extension of ideal opportunities to laborers from other lands seeking to enjoy them?
41716How can she be so utterly capitalistic on a national scale when nearly everything within her own ken is laboristic?
41716How can we know the sea?
41716How do you know but what any moment you may be called?"
41716How have these things worked out?
41716How have they affected the relations of New Zealand and the Commonwealth of Australia with Great Britain?
41716How is it that being, as it seems, people of extraction similar to that of Europeans, they have remained in such a state of arrested development?
41716How is it that they became cannibals, eaters of men''s flesh?
41716How is so sweeping a clause going to be kept within bonds?
41716How is that to be?
41716How long would it take us?
41716How many thousands of years of natural selection went into the making of those little feet?
41716How much of it would hold them?
41716How much of this splendor is Japan''s?
41716How should I have been received had Stevenson come up those steps that day?
41716How will she tackle the problem of poverty?
41716How?
41716I was inclined to dub him"Dr. Bunk,"but why arouse animosity in the tropics?
41716If Korean laborers are efficient in Korea, why not in Japan?
41716If his father could"raise"a family of ten on"nothing"and then just let them die off,--why not he?
41716In the event of that plea failing, what could Japan do, he asked, other than proceed to fortify the Marshall Islands?
41716Is America going to set out to make the world safe for democracy in Europe and then withdraw just when Europe needs her help most?
41716Is Fijian medicine more absurd than our patent medicines, or as expensive?"
41716Is it any of Japan''s business what interest we take in Asia?
41716Is it anything to be proud of?
41716Is it by the power of the devil that such wonders are wrought?
41716Is it going to take such a war to accomplish this in Japan?
41716Is it likely that Japan will relinquish her hold on the South Manchurian Railroad, which in her opinion is of strategic importance?
41716Is it water, space, depth?
41716Is it, then, so hard to remove troops?
41716Is n''t it only the conceit of the white man that makes him regard himself as superior to the Japanese?
41716Is n''t it true that the Japanese have n''t any room for their surplus population?
41716Is not this the history of every race on earth?
41716Is she, then, to be made an exception in the White- Australia policy?
41716Is that to justify her place as leader of Asia?
41716Is there a Romain Rolland or a Shaw, or an Emerson to whom he could bow in that reverence which invites the soul rather than bends the knee?
41716Is there not every reason to believe that permitted to take up quarters in the open spaces of the white man''s world, they will do the same?
41716Is there not something which can be substituted for them?
41716Is this China?
41716May not this vast, generous ocean become the great experiment station for human commonalty, for distinction without extinction?
41716May not time and patience remold antiquity, absorb its bad blood and rejuvenate it?
41716Not content with whisperings, I had sought definition, asked for distance,--Where?
41716Now the problem is, what is going to be done with it?
41716Now what would the world have thought if a Salvation Army man had picked up a strange young woman on a steamer and haled her into a strange house?
41716O Maker of lands''ends, O Sea, when will man be formed?
41716One can not live on sentiment, and when Japanese goods are the nearest and cheapest at hand, what could China do?
41716Or are others right whose soundings divulge a hidden course that gives these people a birthplace ten thousand miles away, in central Asia?
41716Or are the further calculations more accurate,--that there have been constant migrations of people from Asia?
41716Or what do you think in the matter?
41716Or what, sir, is your conclusion?
41716Pictures of the kaiser, pretty scenes along the Rhine, German castles,--what had they to do with Stevenson?
41716Protection from what could they need?
41716Seriousness and earnestness marked the features of these women, and who can say their faith was ignored?
41716So why fear?"
41716Tell me, Greenbie, have you seen any here you''d care to mess about with?
41716The bird sings to his mate, but what mate would listen to such tin- canning and howling, and not die?
41716The millennium?
41716The questions are generally these: What business is it of ours, after all, what Japan does in Asia?
41716The questions in the order of their importance then are: Does Japan permit the free entrance of alien labor?
41716Their speed was that of the comet''s, and what was a plodding little planet like myself to do trying to move into their orbit?
41716They may not become young bones, but may we not hope they will at least be clean?
41716This is my joy and my pride too, is it not?
41716This led to questions from me: Why were they turning Mormon?
41716This plastic people,--what is their destiny?
41716To change the subject, which was bordering on a fight, I asked:"Why do the palms bend out toward the sea?"
41716To protect themselves against Chinese pirates?
41716To- morrow?
41716Two weeks?
41716Two worlds?
41716Upon their"reservations"like our own Amerinds, or lost to their own costumes and even to their own blood and color?
41716Want to come along?"
41716Was n''t he passing reflections on the tribe of his wife?
41716Was not permanence a surety, and pride the father of ease?
41716Well, now, who in thunder was I, anyway?
41716What for?
41716What has happened since peace was declared?
41716What have they done with them?
41716What if America did so?
41716What if Great Britain now decided to annex Belgium?
41716What if the Fijian passes, or gives way to the Indian?
41716What in all the world is more wonderful than frailty imbued with passion mothering achievement?
41716What is Japan going to say about it all?
41716What is Shintoism?
41716What is that to the great problem of how to develop the native races?
41716What is there, then, for him to do?
41716What made them what they are?
41716What need for means of going farther?
41716What of Japan?
41716What ogre dwelt within?
41716What purpose could it possibly have served?
41716What should we do?
41716What should we see en route?
41716What then?
41716What though the prejudiced assure you that, however far the mixture may have gone, it reveals itself in a tendency to squat when least expected?
41716What was it that Balboa took possession of in the name of his Castilian kings?
41716What was there that I was not to see?
41716What, socially and individually, then, is the contribution of Australia to the civilization of the Pacific?
41716What, you are going to create a democratic sore right in my neighborhood?
41716When will the conflicts among men cease?
41716Whence?
41716Where are the Maories?
41716Where can one draw the line between experience past and present?
41716Where do they lead to?
41716Where is Bushido in Japan, that it does not rise in indignation at these atrocities?
41716Where, then, is the argument?
41716Wherefore?
41716Which sect did they prefer?
41716Who could stop her?
41716Who is to begin, and whom shall we trust?
41716Who were these minds?
41716Who will ever know the difference?
41716Who would dare ignore his arm and hand as he directs the passing vehicle?
41716Whom shall he try to see?
41716Why a special room for so simple a service-- and why men only?
41716Why are they not withdrawn?
41716Why bother?
41716Why did I have so much worldly goods to worry about?
41716Why has China remained dormant so long?
41716Why is she now waking?
41716Why not?
41716Why such timidity in the pursuance of direction and desire?
41716Why then does the child die thus?
41716Will he drink?
41716Yet one question preceded all others: whence came these Pacific peoples and when?
41716Yet what is New Zealand doing and what has it done in seventy- five years to approximate Utopia?
41716[ Illustration: ONE OF THE MOST GIFTED OF FIJIAN CHIEFS But who said that the wearing of hats causes baldness(?)]
41716_ Boat._[ This?
41716has this chief been indolent?
41716what with Colonel Logan and British occupation?
467561; v. 2--end), Wilson(?
467562, l. 60- 120?
46756212) and that peradventure he shall"sing it at her(?)
4675629|{[ John] Waterson}| T.|The Elder Brother,[?
467564), Hathaway(?
4675671; Will Cricket( in grey?
46756?
46756All?
46756And if player for the Globe, why not author?
46756Are we to attribute to this mention of him the tradition that Chapman wrote_ The Second Maiden''s Tragedy_?
46756Ay, that]"To be, or not to be?
46756But was this the date of its first production on the stage?
46756But were both taken from an older play?]
46756Could any critic, if the older_ John_ were destroyed, tell us which lines had been adopted in the later play?
46756Dewe?)
46756If Shakespeare had not, at the time when he finally produced the_ Two Gentlemen_, begun his study for the Venetian story, whence this name?
46756If this was not derived from Shakespeare''s play, whence was it?
46756It was probably written by R. Wilson, and is certainly not a romantic, but a satirical play; else why should Greene have been offended at it?
46756Of plays by other authors only one can be traced to his company in this year, namely,_ Sir Thomas More_(?
46756Of these twenty Shakespeare contributes nine, Fletcher( with Beaumont) six, Jonson one, Tourneur one, Drayton(?)
46756On 2d February,_ Twelfth Night_ was performed at the Readers''Feast at the(?)
46756On October 7, Cyril Tourneur''s(?)
46756Other points worth noting are that"Queen Mab, what''s she?"
46756Perhaps from a very old play by Ralph Radcliffe before 1553; more likely from the Moral by the player(?
46756The fairies are Nan the Queen( in red?
46756The only known writers for the King''s men at this date were Wilkins, W. S.(?
46756To die-- to sleep-- is that all?
46756Was the author his brother Edmund; and did Shakespeare assist in or revise his work?
46756What other mind but the author of_ The Jew of Malta_ could have conceived Aaron the Moor?
46756Who could have done this but Shakespeare?
46756Who would this endure, But for a hope of something after death,_ The undiscover''d country, from whose bourne No passenger has e''er return''d?
46756Why then should he not be mentioned?
46756_ A larum for London_, or_ The Siege of Antwerp_, by(?)
46756_ The London Prodigal_, and Wilkins''_ Miseries of Enforced Marriage_, were written and perhaps acted( at the Globe?)
46756_ The Revenger''s Tragedy_ by Cyril Tourneur(?)
46756art thou there, old Truepenny?"
46756by the Chapel children;_ Andronicus_ acted( under Peele''s auspices?)
46756nor a_ nest of antics_?
46756wilt thou stab Cæsar too?"
46756| Anonymous||||| The Politic Bankrupt, or Which| Anonymous|| is the best Girl?
46756|_ Shakespeare_ and Davenport|||[ Query, is Duke Humphrey a||| version of 2 Henry VI.?]
46756|| 1592 April 3|Arden of Feversham| 1592 Nov. 20|Salomon and Bersheba||{F. Bacon and F. Bungay| 1594 May 14|{Robin Hood and Little John|?
46756||?
40612''By whom?'' 40612 ''Sir, why do you pursue me here with petitions?
40612''Where is your master, Bevis? 40612 And if there were, what could be the object?
40612And the pictures in the hall?
40612And trying to be happy, Westbourne? 40612 Are we going far, Maurice?"
40612Be you going there?
40612Believed what?
40612But the farmers want work here as well as elsewhere, I suppose?
40612But, dear me, what is the matter?
40612But, my dear Mrs. Wharton, what else can I say?
40612But, still, though L''Estrange is, doubtless, all you say, do n''t you think he rather wastes his life-- living abroad?
40612Can I offer you a glass of wine-- it is pure, of our own making?
40612Captain?
40612Captain?
40612Dear me,cried Mrs. Leslie,"who can that possibly be?
40612Do you call this common sense? 40612 Do you hear it come and go?"
40612Do you not love me, Ursula?
40612Do you really think so?
40612Do you think, when Wolsey and Thomas à- Becket became priests, they were fond of telling their beads and pattering Aves? 40612 Does it frighten my Ursula to think of seeing distant countries?
40612Eh?
40612For me?
40612Good; but what can I do in your old Starosty?
40612Have you missed any property?
40612How shall I sign it, Mr. Randolph? 40612 How, kill?"
40612I do not know,he replied;"doctor, do you think I could take some more clams?"
40612I?
40612If you had any foresight, or a head for the commonest arrangements, would you not have a barrel of ale on wheels outside here?
40612Is he as amusing as ever?
40612Is it Emma Leveson you are going to marry?
40612Is that queer fellow ever coming back to England?
40612Is this the village of Rood?
40612Lieutenant, perhaps?
40612Lieutenant- colonel?
40612Lieutenant- colonel?
40612Lieutenant?
40612Major, I presume?
40612Major?
40612May I ask your permission?
40612Might I be permitted most respectfully to inquire whereabout this same old Starosty may be located?
40612Monsieur,said he, addressing me,"will you have the kindness to take my dog?"
40612Mr. Hazeldean has company staying with him?
40612My friend, can you tell me which of these roads will bring me to----?
40612Now, Snoady,was my next remark,"what do you deduce from this?"
40612Oh, pray what was it?
40612Oh, yes, I likes them well eno''; mayhap you are at school with the young gentleman?
40612Oh-- I-- no; but they are well done, arn''t they, sir?
40612On Saturday, then?
40612Shall I write it on this card?
40612Shall we try, Mary,said the husband,"to please the child?"
40612Taken from nature-- eh?
40612Tell me, my worthy friend,I asked, as we waded side by side through the mud,"do you know Mr. Tax- collector Burkhardt?"
40612That poor fellow, sir? 40612 Then it appears to me that your Highness is Field- Marshal?"
40612Those are very funny,said he:"they seem capitally done-- who did''em?"
40612To have you--"What?
40612To see what turtle, waiter?
40612Was the woman''s name Grace Greenside?
40612Well, Mr. Mayor,said Audley, pointing to a seat,"what else would you suggest?"
40612What am I to do with the card?
40612What are you about, Randal?
40612What do you here again?
40612What do you mean by die?
40612What do you mean by dying then?
40612What do you want to know?
40612What exile from his country can fly himself as well?
40612What have you lost, my good woman?
40612What is the meaning of this, and what do you seek here?
40612What is? 40612 What of her now?"
40612What paper is that, doctor?
40612What pardon do you require?
40612What possible consequence can the accidental stuffing of a Scotch banker be to you, milor?
40612What sort of face is it?
40612What, Randal?
40612When night comes-- this very night? 40612 Who is that for?
40612Who is that man?
40612Why does not he go to them?
40612Why, what have I done?
40612Will you permit me to ask you another question?
40612Will you pull me down that bough, Oliver?
40612Without compliment?
40612You do n''t seem very well off in this village, my man?
40612You do not think she would?
40612You have nothing to purchase breakfast with to- morrow, have you, Mary?
40612You will go, Randal?
40612Your Excellency is then Lieutenant- general?
40612''Now,''said he,''what do you wish to say to me?''
406121851; Please, Sir, shall I hold your Horse?
40612A tiger may feed to repletion, or be disarmed by drowsiness; but who could hope to appease the_ ghost of a tiger_, did such walk?
40612After a few observations on the last debate, this gentleman said:"By the way, can you dine with me next Saturday, to meet Lansmere?
40612After supper, Colonel Carlis asked the king,"What meat he would like for his Sunday''s dinner?"
40612And Kate, what of her?
40612And how have their places been filled?
40612And running toward her mother, she cried,"Mother, do you hear it?
40612And you, madam-- are you happy?"
40612Are there any that have never watched for his coming?
40612Are you sure it is not we who waste our lives?
40612BLANCHE.--"But pray whom do you mean for a hero?--and is Miss Jemima your heroine?"
40612Beautiful, broad- winged bird of Jove, why didst thou light on such a quarry?
40612But Milton or Shakspeare, could they have had colds?
40612But are they, therefore, without a common sympathy for one another?
40612But as to breakfast?
40612But what is all this to abstract thought, to learning and science, to poetic raptures, and picturesque ease?
40612But what mattered that to one of my imaginative powers?
40612But where was the evidence of the constraint?
40612But wherefore?
40612Can one imagine Homer with a cold, or Dante?
40612Can these not utter''d be, and can The day- spring of immortal man?
40612Charles, I hope you will allow there is some probability of her being rewarded?"
40612Did not that blundering Peter betray the secret of the intended massacre?
40612Do n''t you know the captain is married, though he passes for a bachelor here?
40612Do n''t you remember, Mr. Thornley, how you called her the heroine of Daisy Dell?"
40612Do we wish to banish all music from the busy haunts of men?
40612Do you think you are acting with any more reason than a dog possesses, to treat the public in this way?
40612Does not even the popular mind regard virtue with honor, and vice with contempt?
40612During the long midnight hours who can tell what passed in the poor girl''s mind?
40612Go into one of the rooms at any of these places, and whom do you see?
40612Has success or ill fortune attended the speculations by which they set such store?
40612Has the love been forgotten?
40612Have some of them passed to the land whose inhabitants send back no letters?
40612Have the friends become strange or enemies?
40612He asks if Her Majesty be aware of the position of a British subject named Sutherland?
40612He quickly asked,"Captain West of the Packet?"
40612He was rolling his head; and there was a working about his mouth before he asked--"What time did you sup that night?"
40612He would be asked where he sat at the supper?
40612How could I tell but that one of the ruffians might not fancy taking a shot at me through the windows?
40612How could compliments or insinuations be conveyed by such an autograph?
40612How d''ye think the Premier would take it?"
40612How far were they fulfilled?"
40612How has the world without and within been altered to the correspondents since they were written?
40612How many marriages may not have been prevented by colds?
40612How should an old bachelor, indeed, get such knowledge?
40612I asked myself, with a shudder, can there be''death- fires?''
40612I asked who was there?
40612I sometimes ask myself,"What has been her fate?
40612If I went to the Clarendon I could get nothing in bed but sleep; could I?
40612If he clogs that intellect by too good a breakfast, how can he properly exert that intellect in meditation, during the day upon his dinner?
40612Is it an inferior article, as compared with the Clarendon sleep, or is it of the same quality?
40612Is not my presence a comfort to you?
40612Is she dead?"
40612Is there not great sweetness in imparting joy to one who would otherwise pass a life of tears?"
40612Is this meant to guard against too sanguine notions of inheritance, which his generosity may have excited?
40612Is this your duty to the public who pays you?
40612Leslie''s?"
40612Mr. Gurney was very gentle; but, as he said, what_ could_ he suggest but indigestion, or some such cause of nervous disturbance?
40612Out leaped Sir Valentine, and demanded of the first person he met how far it was to Seaford?
40612PISISTRATUS.--"Agreed; have you any thing to say against the infant hitherto?"
40612PISISTRATUS.--"Do you remember any of his reasons, sir?"
40612Randolph?"
40612Rickeybockey?"
40612Said I to him,"Mr. Groggles, the best turtle is where?"
40612Said he to me, as he brushed the crumbs off the table,"Would you like to see the turtle, sir?"
40612Shaft from heaven''s inmost quiver, why wert thou spent upon such a work?
40612Skim''s when I could go to the Clarendon, you may ask?
40612Some one would earn it, why should not she?''
40612Surely there is, even in this world, an unslumbering Providence, which, eventually rewards the good and punishes the wicked?"
40612That''s speaking fair and manful, is n''t it?"
40612The low bow of the emperor made the man with the pipe conclude he was speaking to an inferior, so, without much ceremony, he said,"Pray, who are you?
40612The negro is a man and a brother-- should I hold myself accountable for my position in life,_ to him_?
40612The price of blood!--what then?
40612The young wife hastened to Richard Penderel, showed him the paper, and whispered--"''What is the king to us?
40612Then why should I go to the Clarendon?
40612These changes did not improve Kate''s good looks, but when did true love ever think of beauty?
40612These leaders of fashion when the old century went out on the young Republic of France, whose Master was already found-- who were they?
40612This pheasant and hare had doubtless been poached by Tom Stares, a notorious offender against the game- laws; but what was to be done?
40612True, he is very little in town; but why do n''t you go and see him in the country?
40612Two votes for a free and independent town like ours-- that''s something, is n''t it?"
40612Was he soon enough to observe what was on the table?
40612Was it not a trial to part?
40612Was the dead alive?
40612Were n''t they talking of her at Lady Annette''s to- night?
40612What brings you here but the public service?
40612What could it be that made her suddenly so silent and grave?
40612What does it signify whether a thing be English or French, provided it be a benefit?
40612What does your daughter say to it?"
40612What have been their effects on outward circumstances, and through that certain channel, on the men?
40612What if the dunder- headed fellow had meant to convey a warning to me?
40612What is it?"
40612What on earth was to become of me now?
40612What sort of visitation?"
40612What treatment do you call this?
40612What was I to do, where lay my head, or how find the lodgings engaged for me by the dear departed?
40612What was now to be done?
40612What would you have me do?"
40612What would you like to take?"
40612Where is Sir Arthur?''
40612Who has not had a cold?
40612Who has not seen at some time an empty house which has struck them as the picture of desolation?
40612Who is your master?
40612Who knows but more cliff may be coming down?
40612Who shall estimate the complacency of the good clergyman at this complete solution of the greatest mystery he had ever encountered?
40612Who will not honor the courage and fortitude of the ladies, and rejoice that their dwelling escaped the evil reputation of being a Haunted House?
40612Who would not have trembled for such a country?
40612Why not have ranged over Europe, in search of more potent and pernicious tyrants, or, at least, have run thy beak into the dark heart of Robespierre?
40612Why should I make the wretch the confidant of my timidity?
40612Why should you conceal any thing from me?
40612Why so?"
40612Why, what do you mean?"
40612Would you not grieve to part with me, my mother?"
40612You see you were member for Lansmere once, and I think you came in but by two majority, eh?"
40612You would not injure my prospects?
40612[ Illustration: Here, while the courtier glitters in brocade] If to the city sped-- what waits him there?
40612could not all Reprieve the tottering mansion from its fall?
40612couldst thou not have spared them to me a little longer?"
40612cried Ursula,"what hast Thou done for me this day?
40612did she love Thomas Winthorpe, too?
40612do you know that I have left St. Petersburg to be free from such annoyances?''
40612or rather, who has not had many colds?
40612said Mr. Gurney,"What did you see?"
40612sign it John Randolph of Roanoke?"
40612thine, the loveliest train, Do thy fair tribes participate her pain?
40612to what have I exposed myself?"
40612where shall poverty reside, To''scape the pressure of contiguous pride?
40612who reads Pope or Dryden now?
40612you are not so dull a fellow as you would make yourself out to be; and, even if an author did thrust himself forward, what objection is there to that?
40612you love me; do you not?
40612you painted them?"
50520But what have I done?
50520Would it be a blessing or would it be a misfortune if he were to die?
50520_ À me?_asked the astonished d''Ancre in imperfect French.
50520''What,''cried he,''is the frigate weary of carrying English colors?
50520And does she come to surrender without a blow?''
50520But what can not necessity and cruelty make men do?
50520The first sentinel cried,"Who goes there?"
50520What had actually happened?
45810But where''s the château?
45810C''est de quel couleur, Mademoiselle?
45810Did n''t you just hear that the lady is American?
45810Did you have enough to eat?
45810Do n''t tell me you''re married?
45810Have you your papers, your permis de conduire?
45810I suppose,said Mrs. Bigelow,"that''gilets''means''preservers''?"
45810Mais que voulez- vous? 45810 Où est- ce?"
45810Well, not exactly,said I;"''gilets''means waistcoats, and''sauvetage''means salvation; literally, the waistcoats of salvation; quaint, is n''t it?"
45810Were the Boches nice to you?
45810( I would like to have eyes to see you now, old fellow; is it true you are just going to be married?)
45810( Why be called fatuous if you can not live up to it?)
45810A queer choice?
45810Also you would find"essence,"where to get it, how much to pay for it,--"shall we stop here and buy some, or chance it till we get home?"
45810And where do we come in, we pensionnaires?
45810But in some ways I would rather have them drop cards than bombs on the villages, had n''t you?
45810C''est vrai que tu vais te marier?"
45810Could n''t you tell some of our dear friends about the Vestiaire?
45810Did I ask you if you have read"God, the Invisible King,"by Wells?
45810Did you ever have meat and eggs?"
45810Did you ever?
45810Did you hear about the mirrors used on submarines so that they are very hard to see?
45810Do n''t forget, Father, you''re going to get some confiding editor or journalist to send me to the devastated towns?
45810Do you remember reading it with Mother at Bailey''s last summer?
45810Do you remember the day we looked up Denfert- Rochereau on the map?
45810Do you remember when we used to struggle and squeak through"Anges purs, anges radieux"?--where it goes up a key each time?
45810Do you suppose I will want white wine with luncheon and red with dinner, when I get back?
45810Do you think, Father, you could get me a chance?
45810Does n''t it sound entrancing?
45810Does n''t that sound pretty nice?
45810He kept saying,"What is there for me to do?"
45810How can I describe Bordeaux as we saw it through that musty cab window?
45810How can a moving plane hit another in the dark?
45810How can either side tell which is friend and which is enemy, lights or no lights?
45810How can even an anti- aircraft gun hope to hit a tiny moving plane way up in the air?
45810How did they have the men and the time to do it all?
45810I guess it must have sunk,--isn''t it just my luck?
45810I said,"How much do you suppose the cheapest little frock would be?"
45810I said,"Vous pouvez dire hop- scotch?"
45810I should have told Madame that we were navrées not to have enough room to keep them and would they be safe in the cellar?
45810I wonder if it would interest you to hear what we did for one family in the way of moving?
45810I wonder if they are really using them as much as they expected to?
45810I wonder if you have the same picture that I had of it before I arrived?
45810I wonder just how soon one would be killed if she tried it?
45810I wonder what that meant?
45810I wonder what they expected-- that I would stay by the side of the road all night with a puncture?
45810I''ve never been so far away before, have I?
45810Is n''t it awful to think of Padua being bombarded?
45810It is a favorite thing to send, but even with that taken into consideration, it seems odd, does n''t it?
45810Miss Curtis will have a wonderful experience, wo n''t she?
45810Now, do n''t you call that the limit?
45810Oh, you dear, dear people, how did you ever think of doing such a wonderful thing?
45810Où vastu, mon vieux?
45810She said that she did n''t serve any meals except breakfast, but would we like eggs with our coffee?
45810The nice American said that he"knew nothing about a car,"but"could he help?"
45810They are not very dignified, I think, and it is an amusing campaign, is it not?
45810We made wild speculations-- were they French or Boche?
45810We went in and said"How do you do?"
45810Well, I was n''t dressed, and I could n''t go and ask the steward, so I said,"Go and find the steward, and say,''Où sont les gilets de sauvetage?''"
45810Well, there was n''t much chance for a vacation for me, was there?
45810Well, there was supply-- what cared I for the Metro?
45810What am I usually doing the first week in July?
45810What in the world could I say?
45810What is going to happen?
45810What will stop it all?
45810What would you say if I brought him home with me?
45810Where does the money come from to finance this war?
45810Which of the deep booms were guns and which bombs?
45810Why should any have lights?
45810Why should n''t they be paid for it, and paid well?
45810Why, why, do n''t we all use the same system of measuring clothes, coal, essence, and lots of things?
45810Will there be anything beautiful left after this war?
45810Wo n''t that be great?
45810Would n''t it be funny if-- I wonder how thick the roof of this place is, anyway?
45810but Marje-- a diplomatic one-- asked Madame if she thought it was quite comme il faut for two young girls to have a washstand in their salon?
50665What,says Rodin again,"is the principle of my figures, and what is it that people like in them?
50665And if that be true-- as I believe it to be true-- then where, between himself and Michael Angelo, is there so lofty a head as Rodin''s?...
50665And with Phidias and Lysippus all these some- and- twenty centuries afar, what more is left to say of the man of genius whose art is theirs?"
50665But is there anything finer in Olympia?
50665Do you know of anything more impossible than the centaur?
50665How could an equivalent be found for that?
50665How did he set about it?
50665What, then, was this_ Balzac_ which was so much detested, and about which the most abusive and extraordinary things were written?
50665Why should we assume embarrassment in explaining this?
49141Aw, wait a minute, ca n''t you?
49141Did n''t you once roll down the hill in a churn?
49141Getting it?
49141How about Farmer in the Dell?
49141Know what day it is, Mumsie?
49141Little- tot, where are you?
49141Mother,asked Blacky- ears as they waited for the door to be unlocked--"Mother,--was Bad Boy Mischief there at the picnic?"
49141Mumsie, we fellows want to play pirate, and first may we have some bread and molasses?
49141Now, Spotty, what does your side choose to play? 49141 Oh, Miss Pinky, do you suppose Santa will really, truly come here to see us?"
49141What do you mean?
49141What were you trying to do?
49141Why will you do such things? 49141 Wo n''t you come back again next Thursday?"
49141Yes-- why it''s-- Wednesday, is n''t it?
49141You will promise to be good, my dears?
49141And what do you suppose?
49141And you know all about how Old Mother Pig sent them forth to seek their fortunes, do n''t you?
49141But where?
49141Come on, will you play too?"
49141Do you know--?"
49141Do you wonder that they laughingly told each other that they would have no idle minutes that day?
49141Have you lived in this house always, Mother Grunty?"
49141How many hours ago did it strike 2?"
49141How many want to play hide and seek?"
49141I''m sorry-- honest I am,--but where''s the picnic?"
49141Just what do you think that table looked like a half- hour later?
49141Page 5, added missing quote after"be good, my dears?"
49141You do n''t want to be called Johnny shoestrings, do you?"
49141may we go over where the music is?"
37584A Chromosome? 37584 A speech?"
37584Am I to have it set up?
37584Amory? 37584 Amory?"
37584And I was going away-- but I''m not now----"Oh?
37584And do you expect to go to a house again after an exhibition like that?
37584And he''s after something really good this time-- Fortune and Brooks, the what- d''-you- call-''ems, in Pall Mall----"What about them?
37584And what about the others-- the''Eden''and the Suffrage Shop and Wyron''s Lectures?
37584And would n''t she come in?
37584And you''re sure of her age?
37584Are the children with Miss Belchamber?
37584Are you quite sure?
37584Are-- are they doing that?
37584Better wait for Cosimo, had n''t we?
37584But did her work-- what''s the expression?--fill her life?
37584But he could n''t do that...._ Have_ you swallowed it, Jackie?
37584But surely you''re joking about Walter and Laura?
37584But that''s only a small house of theirs?
37584But they_ are_ for Jackie, are n''t they?
37584But you say you have your doubts about it?
37584But-- but-- we have n''t settled about the paper!----He was grim.--"You do n''t suppose I can think about the paper_ now_, do you?"
37584But_ was_ that''i m in the long whiskers at the end, when the powder magazine blew up?
37584Can I be of use to you?
37584Did she-- develop-- early?
37584Did you bring me some cigarettes in?
37584Do n''t you see? 37584 Do you know what you''re doing?"
37584Do you know whether Mr. Dickinson, the poster artist, is up here?
37584Do you mean Sir Benjamin Collins?
37584Do you mean that the''Novum''s''going to refuse advertisements?
37584Do you mean that you did n''t hear what he was saying about you and Britomart Belchamber?
37584Do you mean this about the North- West Banks?
37584Do you mean-- you''ve got a job, Stan?
37584Does she paint now?
37584Dorothy----"Yes?
37584Eh? 37584 Eh?"
37584Eh?
37584Eh?
37584Eh?
37584Eh?... 37584 English?
37584Finished his work, I suppose?
37584Good, good,Mr. Strong had applauded under his breath;"have you Edward Carpenter''s book in the house, by the way?...
37584Good- bye, Lady Tasker----"All right?
37584Great big ones?
37584Had Jack to borrow money to send them up there?
37584Had n''t we better be settling about it?
37584Hallo, what''s this?
37584Hard? 37584 Has Cosimo been unkind to you?"
37584Has Mr. Strong been in?
37584Has her children to look after, I suppose?
37584Has she gone?
37584Has-- has anybody been unkind to you?
37584Have n''t you any?
37584Have n''t you done enough already? 37584 Have-- you-- ever-- been-- to-- Blackpool-- when-- t''Wakes-- is on?"
37584He''s gone back, has n''t he?
37584Head bad?
37584His habit of illustration and so on?
37584Hope it''s good news, Amory?
37584How are you, auntie?
37584How is it you are n''t there, by the way?
37584How long ago?
37584How old is she?
37584How will what affect him?
37584How''s that? 37584 How?
37584I do n''t see your husband anywhere about-- never mind-- so good of you-- good- bye----"Come again soon, wo n''t you?
37584I hope he was-- English?
37584I know, auntie; but what can one do? 37584 I mean she does n''t go in for marathon races or Channel swimming or anything of that kind?"
37584I say, Cosimo, I''ll have another cutlet if I may.--Why not''vieillards?'' 37584 I suppose I could n''t see him in his cot?"
37584I take it the''Novum''s''a serious enterprise, and not just a hobby?
37584I want to tell you about a rather important discussion we''ve been having----"Then shall I go and turn the tap off? 37584 If only what?"
37584If she''s black and Spanish you think I should?
37584Is Miss Belchamber in her room?
37584Is Mr. Pratt in?
37584Is n''t Amory coming down?
37584Is n''t it? 37584 Is she a Channel swimmer?
37584Is she coming here?
37584Is she very-- athletic?
37584Is she?
37584Is that so- o- o? 37584 Is that so?
37584It''s Libertys'', is n''t it?
37584Just a minute till I finish this bag.--What''ll Pratt say when he comes back?
37584Just feeling low, eh? 37584 Let''s have some tea.... Mr. Miller has n''t been in yet, has he, Ruth?"
37584May I come in?
37584May I sit down?
37584My dear Corin( this from Bonniebell),"Miss Belchamber''s told you over and over again guns are anti- social----""Anybody smoking?
37584My dear Cosimo,she said very patiently,"what is the matter?
37584No more babies yet, I suppose?
37584No-- yes-- I do n''t know----Dorothy''s eyes had hardened a little.--"_Do_ you want something-- and if you don''t--_had_ you to come-- to- night?"
37584No? 37584 Nor neglected you?"
37584Not Jackie? 37584 Not so much noise then.--Who hauls down the flag to- night?"
37584Of course-- without fear or favour in a sense-- but where there are extra risks----What did this slow- coach of a man mean?----"What risks?"
37584Of course:''How big is a piece of wood?'' 37584 Oh, Mr. Wilkinson will take you, or Mr. Prang; but are you sure you wo n''t stay?"
37584Oh, do n''t joke, darling!----"Eh?... 37584 Oh?
37584Oh? 37584 Oh?
37584Oh?
37584Or Fabians, perhaps?
37584Or perhaps it''s something to do with this Collins business?
37584Ought n''t there to be a grant, without a moment''s loss of time, from the Imperial Exchequer? 37584 Paid weekly or monthly, whichever I like, and a month''s screw to be going on with?"
37584Really? 37584 Really?
37584Seen Strong?
37584Shall I send for the doctor, m''m?
37584Shall I take him away, m''m?
37584Sit down, wo n''t you?
37584Sound? 37584 Straight across the Heath you said, did n''t you?
37584That Governor? 37584 The''Novum''?...
37584Then what_ has_ happened?
37584Thirty- two, is n''t she, Katie?
37584To Murree? 37584 Too much salesman about it, d''you think?
37584Tube headache? 37584 Van Gogh says_ that_?"
37584Was Amory ill?
37584Was I raising my voice? 37584 Was it Amory?"
37584Well, how are the Bits?
37584Well,said Dorothy,"it''s Miss Deedes''idea really-- and it would never have occurred to her if it had n''t been for Lady Upshire-- would it Katie?"
37584Well-- she has both a nurse and a governess----"They''re quite well off, are n''t they? 37584 Well?"
37584Well?
37584Well?
37584Well?
37584What Cause?
37584What did you say?
37584What do you want?
37584What had we decided?
37584What is it, old girl?
37584What is it?
37584What is this Collins business?
37584What we''ve heard to- day?
37584What were you and Edgar Strong discussing?
37584What''s happened-- had to happen, had n''t it?
37584What''s that?
37584What''s the matter? 37584 What''s the matter?"
37584What, that he should n''t see me? 37584 What?"
37584What?
37584What?
37584What?
37584What?
37584What_ is_ this relation of ours?
37584When, I should like to know? 37584 Where are you going?"
37584Where''s that cream I ordered, and that quart of nursery milk? 37584 Who-- Amory?
37584Who?
37584Why did you, Amory?
37584Why do n''t you go to India and see for yourself?
37584Why not''vieillards?''
37584Why, if your principles were universally applied----"Who said anything about applying''em universally? 37584 Will Wilkinson take it over?"
37584Wo n''t you have some more tea?
37584Would it woik?
37584Would you mind pouring out the tea? 37584 Yes, that''s what I mean... you do know?"
37584Yes-- no-- I''m not sure----"But you_ do_ know that-- nothing happening, nothing at all, and everything happening-- everything? 37584 You laughed rather at the Fortune& Brooks idea, did n''t you?"
37584You mean about another paper? 37584 You mean he might lose his money?"
37584You mean me to go by myself?
37584You mean that it just shows,said Amory eagerly,"that we are n''t humane at all really?
37584You mean the Bombay circulation? 37584 You''re telling me the truth?"
37584You''ve never heard of Walter''s Lecture on''_ Heads or Tails in the Trying Time_,''nor his''_ Address on the Chromosome_''?
37584You_ do_ understand, do n''t you, Amory?
37584Your little Pigeon Pair, eh?
37584_ Must_ you compromise yourself like this?
37584_ You_ felt it sweeping us away too-- didn''t you?... 37584 ( You remember Mollie, Katie? 37584 ***** What, again, was the purport of her questions? 37584 --I mean the fellow who came to The Witan in a morning- coat?
37584--Isn''t that just the way to bind them to us?
37584; Lennard,"Old John,""Spurrs,""The Brear,"Ludlow Montgomery("Good old family?
37584After all, what practical difference would it make?"
37584After she had tempted him as she knew she had tempted him?
37584After that stern repression of himself in favour of his duty?
37584Again he said"Oh?"
37584Again the quick motion of Mr. Strong''s blue eyes suggested an audible click--"Oh?
37584Amory had her fists between her knees again.--"What?"
37584Amory had replied, as who might say,"Has money been refused you yet?"
37584Amory heard an"Eh?"
37584Amory raised her brows.--"Oh?...
37584Amory turned quickly.--"What do you say?
37584Amory was awed.--"What-- what do you think will happen?"
37584Amory was quick.--"Oh!--You do n''t mean that Mr. Prang is n''t sound?"
37584Amory''s fingers left the cast, and Mr. Strong walked towards the asbestos log.--"May I?"
37584And do just excuse me-- I sha n''t be a minute.... Why did n''t this come yesterday?
37584And how''s the family----?"
37584And is n''t that precisely our opportunity, if only we had a statesman capable of seeing it?...
37584And is n''t that the real Empire, of which we all dream?
37584And is that the bi- metallists''doing-- or is it the Home Government?
37584And it_ is_ War, is n''t it?
37584And now you''ll be wondering what''s brought me up here?
37584And what made the miscalculation so unfortunate?
37584And who is there left?
37584And why on Amory?
37584And would n''t it matter how they dressed either in the Quarter?
37584And you ca n''t have War without killing somebody, can you?
37584Any new prime cuts?"
37584Anybody heard from Pratt this week?"
37584Anything been happening to- day?
37584Anything fresh about Fortune& Brooks?
37584Apart from their talks and books and meetings and"interests"and that full pack of their theories, what was their marriage?
37584Are matters any better because we know that?
37584Are they going to start it soon?"
37584Been out?
37584Besides, Stan has n''t time to look for one----""No?"
37584Bit off your beat, is n''t it?
37584Brand, a Hundred Gold Medals, and see that the blessed coupon is n''t broken.''--Eh?
37584But I thought that the truth, regardless of consequences, was our motto?"
37584But I wonder whether you''d admire Laura?"
37584But I''m frightfully selfish; I''m tiring you out.... May an A B C girl come to see you?"
37584But Mr. Brimby himself was rather absurd when you came to think of it.... Then there came another shouted outburst.--"Another Mutiny?
37584But as it happened it was not the Indian policy--"Oh,"Mr. Strong said,"I meant to ask you-- Who was that fellow who came up here one day?"
37584But he?
37584But if he should?...
37584But if you feel that you must-- will you come in again to- morrow?"
37584But need we say any more about it to- night?...
37584But to- day she was a little abstracted-- dull-- she did n''t know exactly what; and so she replied, without moving,"Would you like him here?
37584But was it?
37584But was n''t it sweet of Eva?
37584But what does it matter to us to- day, Dorothy?
37584But where all this time was Amory?
37584But where had she gone wrong?
37584But-- if you''ll pardon me putting the question in that form-- where''s the_ point_, Mrs. Stan?
37584But-- will you fetch her in?
37584But_ why_ did they pretend not to be married?"
37584By their gratitude, eh?
37584Ca n''t we_ try_ to put this on one side, just for an hour?"
37584Corin-- Corin!--What do you keep in the trenches?"
37584Cosimo in?"
37584Cosimo started on another nail.--"What arrangement?"
37584Could we hurry coffee up?
37584Dared she provoke him?...
37584Did Hallowells''want her back?
37584Did Mr. Miller want her help in restoring the firm''s fair name?
37584Did even the same succession of callers become stale and a bore, so that strangers had to be sought to provide a stimulus?
37584Did he intend to offer her another contract?
37584Did n''t Strong give him the push, Wilkie?"
37584Did n''t a Mr. Prang write for it?...
37584Did people suppose she was made of money?...
37584Did she, Katie?
37584Did their yawning cease when the bell rang and a caller was admitted?
37584Did they show you the Bluebeard''s Chamber?
37584Do n''t condemn it just because it would n''t go in New York.... You''ve heard of the Willyhams, of course?"
37584Do n''t the poverty and distress exist just the same?
37584Do n''t they see that what they really prove has nothing at all to do with the casts, but-- ahem!--a good deal to do with their own imaginations?
37584Do you know that with one thing and another we''re down more than three thousand pounds this year?"
37584Do you mean Amory''s ill?"
37584Do you mean to say you have n''t read about these things?"
37584Does anybody else want a bath?
37584Does she get any emotional satisfaction out of what she does?"
37584Does the man suppose that conveys anything to me?....
37584Dorothy gave a sudden exclamation.--"Why,"she exclaimed,"--come here, Katie, quick-- it''s Amory Towers!--It is Amory, is n''t it?"
37584Dorothy rose and walked to the window.--"Where?"
37584Dorothy sat heavily down and put out one hand for the paper again.--"What did you say?"
37584Dorothy summoned what interest she could,--"Not an agency or anything?"
37584Eh?
37584Eh?"
37584Eh?..."
37584English?
37584Flattery could hardly have gone further than that tortured cry,"What do you think I''m made of?"
37584For what, then?
37584Good gracious, auntie!----""Eh?"
37584Got an invitation for you, Dot, to lunch, with Ferrers on Monday; ca n''t you buck up and manage it?...
37584Had Amory married and had babies-- all, as it were, beside the mark?...
37584Had n''t Amory heard that all this agitation for the Suffrage was secretly fomented by the Government itself?
37584Had she simply been born wrong?
37584Had there not been women so much stronger than they that, doing apparently nothing, their nothings had been more potent than all the rest?
37584Had they not, each one of them, their own private and probably very similar affairs?
37584Has anything happened to Cosimo?"
37584Has what we''ve heard to- day made you change your mind?"
37584Have n''t I told you you must_ never_ do that, Laura?...
37584He accompanied her to the top of the stairs.--"You''ll let me know when you''re coming again, wo n''t you?"
37584He said"Oh?"
37584He spoke for the first time.--"What''s that you''re saying?"
37584He spoke without any beating about the bush.--"Ought you to have done this?"
37584He stopped me in the street, and what do you think?
37584He walked for a space longer, and then, turning, said almost with joy,"I say, Amory-- would you_ like_ to go?"
37584Here Walter Wyron intervened.--"By the way, who_ is_ this man Collins?
37584How are you?
37584How could he be expected to do anything but hate those poor innocents who had come between him and his desire?
37584How could it, when there was nothing to be liberated from?
37584How many annas to the rupee are they to- day?
37584How_ can_ people be so prurient, Cosimo?
37584I do n''t know anything about art.--Had she any affair before she married young Pratt?"
37584I do n''t suppose onny o''ye''s ever been i''t''''Arabian Horse''?
37584I suppose you see what it means to us?"
37584I think that''s a fair statement of their case.--But what''s ours?
37584I think you said he was married?"
37584I thought I heard him-- Yes?"
37584I''m dining with a man to- night, but I''d better be sure of my ground.--Now what about having the Bits in, Dot?"
37584I-- I suppose you know everybody here?"
37584In fact, that England''s a humbug?"
37584In the studio, I suppose?
37584Indeed, Dorothy said presently,"Do you mind if I leave you for a few minutes with Katie, auntie?"
37584Indian or China?"
37584Into Amory''s pretty face had come the look of the woman who prefers men to take risks rather than to talk about them.--"What do you risk?"
37584Is n''t getting their gratitude better than blowing them from the muzzles of guns, eh?
37584Is n''t it?...
37584Is she_ older_ than that?"
37584Is there any arnica in the house, Dot?...
37584Is there_ no_ way of finding out what this-- crisis-- is really about?"
37584Is_ that_ doing any Work, I should like to know?"
37584It did n''t matter so much about Cosimo; it would serve him right; but what about the twins?
37584It sounded to Amory rather like smallpox, but,"I suppose that''s the Monsoon?"
37584It''s War when they fetch the soldiers out, is n''t it?
37584It_ is_ War, is n''t it?
37584It_ would_ be rash, would n''t it?
37584Katie only said"Oh?"
37584Lady Tasker did not look up from her crochet.--"Ill?"
37584Make the cocoa, will you?"
37584May I ask what''s up?"
37584Mr. Miller put up a refusing hand.--"No, I thank you.--So you''ll do your possible, Mrs. Tasker?
37584Mrs. Beecher came to tea on Sunday----''("Is that_ our_ Mrs. Beecher, when Uncle Dick was at Chatham, auntie?")
37584My dear girl, concurred in what?
37584No illness about what?
37584No, she had provoked him, and he had now every right to cry, not"Have you read''_ The Tragic Comedians_''?"
37584Now if Pratt had only been guided by me----""Hallo, here''s Britomart Belchamber.--Why does n''t Amory come down, Brit?
37584Now you''ve put me off my argument.... What was I saying?...
37584Of her not having assumed enough?
37584Of her not having said to Life,"Such and such I intend to have, and you shall provide it?"
37584On the first landing she paused for a moment; the man with the pipe had, after all, challenged her,"Who is it you want, Miss?"
37584Once more Dorothy merely said"Oh?"
37584Only, you see, I''ve no idea of the kind of woman you_ do_ admire?"
37584Or better still, if it''s not too much trouble for you to come and see me again----?
37584Or did Edgar propose that they should be left behind in Cosimo''s keeping, with Britomart Belchamber for a stepmother?
37584Or do the others go into the studio and you and Walter and I have ours here?"
37584Or had all this been appointed for her or ever her mother had conceived her?
37584Or is that a bit more Brimby?
37584Or ought her painting to have been husband, home and children to her?...
37584Or unmarried?
37584Or wo n''t they be able to go if it''s very late?
37584Or would he ask her again what she thought he was made off?...
37584Owt settled yet?...
37584Perhaps I''d better write first.--But you''ll have tea, wo n''t you?"
37584Perhaps she did not yet even apprehend.--"But-- but--,"she said,"they''re from a statue, are n''t they?"
37584Police round The Witan, she thought?
37584Politics?
37584Poor fellow, what else had he been able to do?...
37584Prang?"
37584Pratt?"
37584Say a face-- Helen''s, she thought it was-- had launched a thousand, or even five hundred ships; where was the point?
37584See what I mean?"
37584See?"
37584She fiddled with her gloves.--"To have done what?"
37584She had brought word that the boat sailed the day after to- morrow...."There''s the telephone-- just answer it, will you?"
37584She had not courted disappointment that way....( But stay: had the trouble come of her not expecting largely enough?
37584She thought she heard Laura call,"Can I come and help, Amory?"
37584She took Dorothy''s"Shut the door-- and speak low, please-- what do you want?"
37584She was a young widow, and I''m sure she had a lovely face, because she''d such a noble soul.--Don''t you think they often go together?"
37584She was sure of this when, before she had read half a dozen lines, he cut in with a sharp"Well?
37584She wondered whether he would have turned with a half angry"Why, what''s the matter?"
37584She''s in, is n''t she?"
37584So I may move that billiard- table, and alter the gun- room?"
37584So again she merely said"Oh?"
37584So kind of you!--Amory, where are you?--How are you?
37584So many doctrines were enunciated in that studio, the burden of one and all of which was"Why not?"
37584Speaking of action, I suppose you''ve seen this Indian affair in to- night''s papers?"
37584Stan?"
37584Still without looking at her husband, Amory said,"How, serious?"
37584Suddenly he shot a glance at Amory, and said abruptly,"I suppose you''ve talked over the Indian policy with Cosimo?"
37584Suppose one or two natives_ are_ scoundrels: what about it?
37584The murder of a Governor?...
37584The old Anglo- Saxon- Idee-- reverence for motherhood.... And when, if an old married man may ask the question----?"
37584The very first question we ask one another is,''Do you hope it''s a little boy or a little girl?''
37584Then Mr. Strong had knitted his brows and had said, presently,"I see.... Have you read''_ The Tragic Comedians_?''"
37584Then,"What do you say, Dorothy?"
37584These''ere young pistills fro''t''Collidge-- what are they maalakin''at?
37584They discussed Cosimo''s latest letter, and then Mr. Brimby said,"By the way-- how will this affect him?"
37584They''re a Fam''ly, I presoom?"
37584They''ve just gone to Kohat).--Shall I read it, auntie?"
37584This was so vague that when Amory said"What fellow?"
37584Thrown alone together for an hour, did they fret?
37584To Dickie''s?
37584To Laura''s?
37584To dance round another Maypole?"
37584Walter, who was examining a Japanese print, called over his shoulder,"This a new one, Amory?
37584War?
37584Was it that they had not talked it over enough?
37584Was there one of them of whom it could be said with certainty that he or she was not, at that very moment, bound on the same errand?
37584Was this England, or a Durbar?...
37584Well now.... And how might Judge Deedes''Marshal be dressed, Miss Deedes?"
37584Well, Aunt Grace, what brings you up here?
37584Well, what about it?
37584Well, would three hundred a year cheer you up any?"
37584Were there to be more of Hallowells''plump, ringing sovereigns-- that she would know better how to take care of this time?
37584Were they also to be included in the seven francs a day?
37584Weren''t-- Indian policies-- worth a little risk?...
37584What about Corin and Bonniebell?
37584What are they?"
37584What are you looking like that for?
37584What business is it of theirs?
37584What cable?"
37584What did Mr. Strong want?
37584What did she do at the McGrath?"
37584What discoveries had they made in one another, what resources found within themselves?
37584What do we all mean about street barricades and rifles if it is n''t War?
37584What do you suppose I''m made of?"
37584What earthly right have I, when I concurred before ever we were married?"
37584What else did they expect, after the way in which they had made farm- labour too big for its jacket and beaters hardly to be had for love or money?
37584What for?
37584What had become of the Genius that had brought that picture into being?
37584What is a Chromosome?"
37584What is it-- Utamaro?"
37584What is there there?
37584What of those of her aunt?
37584What sort of a revenge?
37584What''s the reel prapasition?"
37584What''s to happen to the Real Empire if you and I put our private joys first?
37584What, after all, would it matter?
37584What, she asked herself, had the Pratts married on?
37584What, they asked, was war, more than an unfortunate miscalculation on the part of the lamb that happened to lie down with the lion?
37584What_ does_ it matter?...
37584What_ is_ the good of pretending that girls are boys?"
37584Where do we have it?
37584Where is that girl?--Sure you wo n''t have tea outside?
37584Whoever heard of a man wrapping himself up in a carpet and being carried by Nubians into his mistress''s presence?
37584Whoever heard of a man''s face launching as much as an up- river punt, let alone fleets and fleets of full- sized ships?
37584Why ask"Is she a Channel swimmer?"
37584Why do you ask?"
37584Why not be natural about these things?
37584Why not the people with eyes and minds?"
37584Why should it affect him at all?
37584Why this insistence on some satisfaction for labour, as if without that satisfaction the labour wreaked on the labourer some sort of revenge?
37584Why, does she suppose I was_ glad_ then?"...
37584Why, then, did she tingle?
37584Why, then, make a disproportionate fuss about a single( and probably corrupt) official, when thousands suffered gigantic wrongs?
37584Why?
37584Why?
37584Why?
37584Why?"
37584Why?"
37584Why?"
37584Without children at all?
37584Would a single one of the people she passed so hurriedly think her case in the least degree special?
37584Would it have been better had she not stopped?
37584Would it have made any difference whatever she had done?
37584Would it not be sufficient, without going into details, to let Dorothy suppose she had changed her mind?
37584Would phrases content him?
37584Would she have been happier with many children?
37584Would she have fared better then?)...
37584Wretched, eh?
37584Yes, I admit you did.... What is it you want to know, then?"
37584Yet what, between letting him go and bidding him stay, was she herself to do?
37584You do see, do n''t you, Amory?
37584You going to bed?"
37584You have n''t heard of it?
37584You have n''t...?"
37584You see what I mean?"
37584You see what I mean?"
37584You see, Prang----""What?"
37584You see?...
37584You''re always calling it War, are n''t you?
37584You''re sure he was n''t joking?
37584_ Have_ you put one of these things into your mouth, Jackie?"
37584_ Was_ it after all necessary that Dorothy should know everything?
37584_ Was_ it''i m?"
37584and added after a moment,"But you''re not?"
37584and added,"What about?"
37584and"Is her painting a mere hitting of the air?"
37584but"Do you know what you''re doing?"...
37584he said heartily, and went straightway off at score.--New?
37584she cried, startled...."But you''ll come in to- morrow?"
37584she herself had asked in alarm when that unexpected word"doctor"had been quietly dropped; and"Ill?
37584she said; and added,"Did you think her pretty?"
42816A banquet would be rather tame without, would n''t it? 42816 Ah, they are waking up, perhaps?"
42816Am I?
42816And God sent His Only Son to the Earth, you say, to redeem your race from the consequences of their own acts?
42816And I recognized her, too; she is that Madam Claris you introduced me to in the Auroras''Temple, is she not?
42816And are they successful rulers?
42816And do you parade?
42816And do you?
42816And do your women submit to such conditions,--do they not try to alter them, throw them off?
42816And how about her counterpart of the other sex?
42816And how are we to conduct ourselves during the visitation?
42816And how do you employ your capital?
42816And if one of these creatures is found out, what then?
42816And it is tolerated, allowed, nobody objects?
42816And not of man?
42816And that this planet has different relations with God from what your planet has?
42816And thrown an army of workers out of employment and the means of living, I suppose?
42816And what are teachers of the highest rank, presidents of colleges?
42816And what do they do with their cups,--I mean, how do they carry them about when they are not using them?
42816And what does it mean?
42816And what is that?
42816And what, may I ask, does she do with her surplus,--your sister, I mean,--she must make a great deal of money?
42816And why not your women?
42816And you guard the city?
42816And you make no discrimination in the kind of office?
42816And you think the process eliminates individual traits?
42816Any other women?
42816Are you not rather unjust to the woman?
42816Are your women inconsequent?
42816But did you not tell me just now that your country is a republic?
42816But do not the male relatives of these women object,--their husbands, fathers, brothers?
42816But do they also concern themselves with science?
42816But do you not find it horribly disagreeable, unbearable?
42816But how? 42816 But if I pardon that?"
42816But what constitutes citizenship?
42816But why do you do these things?
42816Certainly, when they choose to do so; what is there objectionable in that?
42816Claris?
42816Do n''t you believe in the Fall of Man?
42816Do n''t you think you are a little unreasonable?
42816Do no women in your country ever do these things,--parade and drink wine, and the like,--which you say you men are not above doing?
42816Do not the men here have clubs?
42816Do not your women engage in business?
42816Do these women drink champagne at their banquets?
42816Do they regard you as absurd?
42816Do you believe in temples of worship?
42816Do you mean that the place was planned for that purpose, or did the name get fastened upon it through accident? 42816 Do you often hear an upright man professing his honesty?
42816Do you punish offenders?
42816Do you wish to look in?
42816Do your women hold office, other than in the school board and the council?
42816Do your women realize what they have got to live up to?
42816Does not its name and those naked imps sufficiently explain it?
42816Does she not believe, then, in progress, development?
42816Does the same idea of equality, or likeness rather, exist in Caskia that prevails here?
42816Elodia,I ventured,"you asked me a very plain question a moment ago, will you forgive me if I ask you the same,--have you had amours?"
42816Except in the management and directorship?
42816Excuse me,I said,"but do I understand you to say that your women have the right of suffrage?"
42816Has Severnius been entertaining you with our religious fables?
42816Have you no houses of prostitution in your country, licensed by law, as this is?
42816Have you nothing of the sort on the Earth?
42816How do you mean?
42816How do you vote here?
42816How is it you are here?
42816How should I know?
42816How, a mistake?
42816How?--by legislation?
42816I hope you do not think we live in open and shameless lawlessness? 42816 I seem to see a vision, shall I tell it to you,--a vision of your Earth?
42816I suppose, then, that only the rich and the aristocratic''vaporize''?
42816If you would rather, you may take my place, sir?
42816Is Elodia''s club a literary one?
42816Is it a new idea to you?
42816Is it not injurious to health?
42816No, indeed, why should they? 42816 No?
42816O, then, it is a charitable organization?
42816On my account?
42816Perhaps we are intruding?
42816Salvation from what?
42816She does not like,--or she does not believe in these Caskians?
42816Since you put in yours?
42816Tell me, Severnius, do women on this planet do everything that men do?
42816Tell me,I said,"why is he called Master?
42816Their interests are identical with ours,I replied,"so what is the difference?
42816Then it must be a natural taste, among your women?
42816Then they of course have a vote?
42816Then why have servants at all?
42816Then you really have some among you who believe in the higher truths?
42816They what?
42816This celebration?
42816We have perhaps grown too frank with each other,she said,"but you are a being from another world, and that must excuse us,--shall it?"
42816Well, a good many more women do not marry; what of those?
42816Well, of course, I mean all those women,--why do they do such things? 42816 Well, surely you will agree with me that in this matter, at least, there should be discrimination?"
42816Well, tell me how it applies in this question of service?
42816Well, why not? 42816 Well, you are perhaps older than I am,"she said,"and you have doubtless had amours?"
42816What are they fitting for?
42816What are your qualifications and restrictions?
42816What do you mean?
42816What do you mean?
42816What does this mean?
42816What effect do you think it would have had?
42816What is it?
42816What is there peculiar about the religion of those people?
42816What parade?
42816What place is it, Severnius, and why have I never seen it before?
42816What possible reason is there why men, more than women, should be privileged to indulge in vice?
42816What sort of peace- offerings?
42816What, even here?
42816Who are they, pray?
42816Who? 42816 Why are you so surprised?"
42816Why does she take all these things upon herself?
42816Why my sister in particular?
42816Why not?
42816Why should I marry?
42816Why so,I asked;"do not women here ever take their husbands''advice?"
42816Will they preach or lecture?
42816Worse?
42816Would it be a disgrace if we were found here?
42816Would you mind telling me why? 42816 Yes, they have heard about you, and are extremely anxious to make your acquaintance?"
42816Yes; but did you notice her cup?
42816Yes?
42816You believe in that life, do you not?
42816You do n''t mean to tell me that these women have wines in their clubhouse?
42816You mean children? 42816 You mean instead of being with the others?"
42816You mean servants?
42816A little later he said:"You spoke of the fall of man,--what did you mean?"
42816A woman stooped down and whispered,"Do you want to go up and kiss Mamma''good- by''before they take her away?"
42816After a moment, he remarked, turning to me with a smile,"We are not so far apart as we thought we were, when we first started out, are we?"
42816And can you not, even yet, separate the spiritual meaning of Christ''s words from their literal meaning?
42816Another silence fell upon us, which I broke by asking,"Who were those pretty youngsters we saw lounging about on the lawn back there?"
42816Are they all angels?"
42816Are they denounced, ostracized, sat upon?"
42816Are we then too philosophical, too poetical,--and not practical?
42816Are your women happy?"
42816As I made no response she added:"Is it a new thing to you for a parent not to acknowledge illegitimate children?"
42816Baptism, you say, is a token and a symbol, but do a people so far advanced in intelligence and perception, still require tokens and symbols?
42816But tell me, is it really so?--do you upon the Earth not suffer the consequences of your acts?"
42816But you exempt their property, perhaps?"
42816By the way, have a cigar?"
42816By- and- by, I appealed to him:"Tell me, Severnius, what does it mean?"
42816Do n''t the waters ever get mixed?"
42816Do not yours?"
42816Do women never take a hand in state affairs on the Earth?"
42816Do you people never drink wine at your social gatherings?"
42816Do you wonder, sir, that a world should love the man who brought love into that world,--who brought peace, good- will, to men?"
42816He smiled as he went on,"This labor problem the Creator gave us was a knotty one, was n''t it?
42816How do you get such wonderful results?
42816How shall I describe that house?
42816I asked;"to what end?"
42816I cried, as the wonder of it broke upon my understanding,"and how many millions of years has it taken your race to attain to this perfection?"
42816I disregarded this, and returned:"Did he not get a divorce?"
42816I finally asked, nodding toward the beautiful enclosure still in view:"How do they manage about this business; do they practice any secrecy?"
42816I looked at her aghast; did she know what she was saying; did she mean what her words implied?
42816I may not do that which is proper for another to do,--why?
42816I often asked myself,"Why is it that we are always looking at her with a kind of inquiry in our glances?--what is it that we expect her to do?"
42816I presently broke the silence with a bold, perhaps an inexcusable question,"Elodia, do you intend ever to marry?"
42816I responded, and inquired,"What kind of standing have these men in the outside world?"
42816I saw you look into that car; did you observe the lady in blue?"
42816I was thinking of this when Elodia suddenly put the question to me:"Are you married?"
42816Is This Your Son, My Lord?
42816Is a man liable to arrest or condign punishment, if he happens to burlesque any of the higher callings under the impression that he is a genius?"
42816Is it a formal title, or was it bestowed in recognition of the quality of the man?"
42816Is it because they are incapable, or-- unreliable?"
42816Is not that a pretty fable?"
42816Is she to favor us?"
42816Is the club you speak of composed entirely of women?"
42816My look of prolonged amazement called out the usual question:"Have you no such class in any of your highly civilized countries?"
42816Pray You, Sir, Whose Daughter?
42816Severnius startled me suddenly with another question:"What, may I ask, is your theory of Man''s creation?"
42816Shall you pray for a personal blessing or favor which might mean disaster or injury to another?
42816She withdrew her eyes from my face with a faint smile and covered the question by another:"You intend to marry, I suppose?"
42816Suppose she should repent?
42816Tell me, Severnius, when did your women wake up?"
42816Tell me, what is it that usually prompts people to marry?"
42816There seemed to be a regret in his voice, and I asked:"Why did not you remain there?"
42816This prompted me to ask the familiar question:"And how do you manage the labor problem?"
42816We belong to the same system, and why should not the people of Mars have the sentence for sin revoked, as well as the people of Earth?
42816What does she do with her evenings?"
42816What does the saying mean,''I asked for bread, and ye gave me a stone?''
42816What is the camellia beside the rose?
42816What is the name of the superlative creature you were so charmed with, Severnius?"
42816What of the Morrow?
42816What would be the result of such a marriage, based upon simple sex- love?"
42816When I could command my voice again I asked:"Does this little one know that she is your child,--does any one else know?"
42816Who Lies?
42816Why could they not accept the truth from his lips?"
42816Why does she not give her time and attention to the softer graces, to feminine occupations?"
42816Why should not we have been provided with an intercessor?
42816Why should the free wish for fetters?
42816You would not have me think that there are two varieties of human nature on your planet, corresponding with the sexes, would you?
42816and how do you manage it,--how, for instance, can you prevent them from voting?"
42816but how?"
42816but"--a curious expression touched her face, a questioning, doubting, puzzled look--"we are speaking honestly, are we not?"
42816call them what you like, but tell me, what happens when there is an_ exposà ©_?
42816do the women propose?"
42816does an honest man-- a gentleman-- ever marry such a woman as that?"
42816has not Elodia told you?
42816have you no tenderness, Elodia?
42816no heart- need of these ties and affections,--which I have always been taught are so precious to woman?"
42816then you must all be rich?"
42816what shall we do?"
46321''What woman?'' 46321 And when will all this happen?"
46321Are you King Louis XVII?
46321But,said the curious Lazarist,"how will he ascend to the throne?"
46321Did it not trouble you to remain at Charenton? 46321 Did not the proudest of our kings at first approve this union?
46321Do you desire to see a sight worthy of your eyes? 46321 Has he not said to you that I have already sent forth decrees for all that you have spoken of to me?"
46321Have they not named the persons to you?
46321Her silence proved clearly that she knew nothing and did not understand, so to relieve her embarrassment he said to her,''Perhaps you are tired?''
46321How long will he reign?
46321How old is the curate of Gallardon? 46321 I feel a little better than I have for some time; and how are you getting along?"
46321What do you say? 46321 What is the reason for your coming here?"
46321Who will lead him to us?
46321Who? 46321 And what is this annihilation which allows the will to reassert itself incessantly, vivacious and active? 46321 And you, what is your name? 46321 But do we find here only an error of topography? 46321 But how much longer will these vestiges of the rites and the customs of the past endure? 46321 But if Martin''s affection approaches insanity in some particulars, it also differs from it in important and basic respects...What were they?
46321But was this on the first or second floor?
46321But where is the accent?
46321Could it not be preserved beside the proud modern construction, even if it were tottering and dilapidated?
46321Could this peasant, then, be playing a part in some political machination?
46321Did Mlle, de Clermont secretly marry the Duc de Melun?
46321Did he carry further than he admits the practice of doctrine, and freedom of manners?
46321Did he use the free and obscene speech which has been ascribed to him?
46321Did not Mlle, de Montpensier marry the Duc de Lauzun?"
46321Did this Sulpician, spiritual, cold and ambitious, ever feel the charm of the great trees of her park?
46321Did you get along well there?"
46321Do we go walking to be melancholy?
46321Do you not find it admirable that at my age I should attach myself to these things like a child?
46321Do you then take no more interest in it?
46321For is there anything more sweet than songs caused by happiness which one has given?"
46321Had he still other passions of which he says nothing in this public confession?
46321Has he been with you long?"
46321Has he brains?
46321Has one ever seen rogues so disinterested?"
46321How could Longueil afford this royal fancy?
46321However, if any one asked me:"What must I read by Théophile?"
46321In what house was Racine born?
46321Is Mademoiselle de Clermont a masterpiece?
46321Is it credible that people wept so abundantly at Chantilly in 1724?
46321Is this quite certain?
46321Me?
46321Must we believe that Martin is not the sole author of the imposture and that he was guided by outside advice?
46321Of the main body of the building, of which only ruins remain, a part only was rebuilt by M. Dru.... Will the nation accept the legacy?
46321On beholding this spectacle Cérutti burst forth: Who would believe it?
46321On what did the destiny of the poet depend?
46321Or did Madame de Genlis really receive the confidences of a well- informed old lady?
46321Shall we cite an example of the way in which Cardinal de Bausset transposes the descriptions of Abbé Le Dieu?
46321So great a room for this use?
46321The curiosity seekers who had been worried by his absence questioned him:"When you have business,"he replied to them,"do you not go and do it?
46321Then Bonnedame was wrong?
46321Then you no longer go to visit Sainte Radegonde?
46321They diminished the light in this part of their church; but is not this better than the crude daylight which enters through the clear panes?
46321To what sentiment did he respond in summoning Martin?
46321Was good Father Billaud of Juilly a hypocrite?
46321Was it not rather the chapter room of the monastery?
46321Was it worth while to demolish the modest and venerable edifice of earlier days?
46321What are the acts of grace which have been returned for such a benefit?
46321What can then be the nature of this condition, so individual and so different from insanity as it is usually observed?
46321What embellishments does the church of Senlis owe to him?
46321What is going to be done with these precious remnants?
46321What led Cérutti to describe the gardens of Betz?
46321What more is needed when I have not you?"
46321What remains of the old château?
46321Where are the acts of grace which have been rendered to God for so glorious a miracle?"
46321Where is the life?
46321Where was the apartment of the Marquise?
46321Who knows if we may not even see other mediaeval paintings appear from under the whitewash?...
46321Who was M. Jourdain?
46321Who will pay for it?
46321Why wish to give one''s self at any cost the haughty joy of feeling and exercising one''s liberty?
46321Why, strolling forever through your delicious prairies, Can I not fix my wandering course here And, known by you alone, forget the world outside?
46321Will an experience of three days consecrated to archaeology seem conclusive to you?"
46321You ask what causes that?
46321[ Illustration: 0231]"How is your health, Sire?"
46321[ Illustration: 0257] What does Boileau do when he is in the country?
46321cried the Duke,"what are you trying to make me think?"
46321my heart rests with thee; The world where thou art not is a desert for me; Art thou in a desert?
46321would I then be doing such an extraordinary thing?
5069ARE DOCTORS MEN OF SCIENCE?
5069After all, what harm is there in it?
5069Again, has the silliest burglar ever pretended that to put a stop to burglary is to put a stop to industry?
5069And what other men dare pretend to be impartial where they have a strong pecuniary interest on one side?
5069Are humane methods really to be preferred to cruel ones?
5069But the question remains: Do we all really wish to be spared that knowledge?
5069Could he not write as well-- or even better-- on one leg than on two?
5069Even if the experiments come to nothing, may not their cruelty be enjoyed for its own sake, as a sensational luxury?
5069If you come to that, what is laisser- faire but an orthodoxy?
5069Is any sick among you?
5069Not even if I have a chance of finding out how to cure cancer by doing it?"
5069THE PUBLIC DOCTOR What then is to be done?
5069The murderer who, when asked by the chaplain whether he had any other crimes to confess, replied indignantly,"What do you take me for?"
5069Then note the symptoms of a vivisector performing a cruel experiment; and compare them with the voluptuary symptoms and the mathematical symptoms?
5069What else can he do, except confess his ignorance and starve?
5069When a man says to Society,"May I torture my mother in pursuit of knowledge?"
5069When you have done that over and over again every day for a week, how much scientific conscience have you left?
5069Why not perform a careful series of experiments on persons under the influence of voluptuous ecstasy, so as to ascertain its physiological symptoms?
5069Why not test the diagnosis scientifically?
47204Are you, indeed? 47204 Booth led boldly with his big bass drum,_ Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?_ The saints smiled gravely as they said,''He''s come.''
47204Den whut_ am_ you skeered ob?
47204Does your uncle travel much?
47204Have you, indeed? 47204 My dearest Catherine, what have you been doing with yourself all the morning?
47204Yes, pretty well; but are they all horrid? 47204 ( Suddenly) Jim, they wo n''t have brought me up against her, will they?
47204And God said to the man,"Wherefore can I not send thee to Hell, and for what reason?"
47204And God said to the man,"Wherefore can I not send thee unto Heaven, and for what reason?"
47204And after all, what do the poor things get out of it?
47204And as his_ La Horla_ strongly reflects FitzJames O''Brien''s_ What Was It?
47204And what would a stage manager do with the rhythm of the universe, which enters into Dreiser''s play?
47204And who can say that our dream life is altogether baseless and unreal?
47204And why do they never wear out?
47204Are men skeptical of the existence of any but a satiric or symbolic heaven, or merely doubtful of reaching there?
47204Are you not wild to know?"
47204Are you sure they are all horrid?"
47204As Lord Dunsany says of it,"Who can say of insanity,--whether it be divine or of the Pit?"
47204As the old uncle is almost breathing his last, he cries out,"What the devil brings you here?"
47204But where did the second wife''s soul go, pray,--the"she o''the she"as Patience Worth would say?
47204Cain asks the unhappy spirit,"But didst thou not find favor in the sight of the Lord thy God?"
47204Does he drink the wrong elixir, or have all his calculations been wrong?
47204Each man is asked by name,"How is it with you?"
47204For psychologic subtlety, for haunting horror, what is a crashing helmet or a dismembered ghost compared with Brown''s Wieland?
47204Have you gone on with_ Udolpho_?"
47204He dies that night,--of what?
47204How could one stage such action, for instance, as his citizens turning into witch- cats or his Giant Devil looming mightily in the heavens?
47204How know you that you have not died elsewhere and that this is not the Heaven which there you dreamed?
47204How know you that your Hell may not lie only in not recognizing this as Heaven?"
47204I fell on my knees before her and kissed-- what?
47204I have nothing to say to you?"
47204If now we study a science where once men believed blindly in a Black Art, is the result really less mysterious?
47204If one could point with absolute certainty to the source for every one of Shakespeare''s plots, would that explain his art?
47204In fact, without the sense of the marvelous, the unreal, the wonderful, the magical, what would poetry mean to us?
47204In tropic countries we have stories of supernatural snakes, who appear in various forms, as were- snakes, shall we say?
47204J.   M. Barrie in_ Peter Pan_ won the doubtful world over to a confessed faith in the fairy- folk, for did we not see the marvels before our eyes?
47204Now, what was the status of those ghosts?
47204Of poison, of fear, of supernatural suggestion, or in the natural course of events?
47204Of what stuff are ghost- clothes made?
47204One hears echoing through all literature Man Friday''s unanswerable question,"Why not God kill debbil?"
47204Or we reflect that he may be a case of metempsychosis and treat him courteously, for who knows what we may be ourselves some day?
47204Some of the Gothic ghosts have a strange vitality,--and, after all, where would be the phantoms of to- day but for their early services?
47204The author of the drama admits getting his material from a French play, but where did Polidori get his?
47204The writer queries,"If the soul exists, where had that soul been?
47204The young man at last cries out in desperation,"What are you waiting for?
47204Walpole says in a letter: Shall I even confess to you what was the origin of this romance?
47204Was not this suggested by Rupert Brooke''s poem,_ Failure_?
47204Was there a ghost if the person was n''t really dead?
47204What are the rackings of monkish vindictiveness when set against the agonies of an unbalanced mind turned in upon itself?
47204What are they all?"
47204What can it be?
47204What careth Yohu?
47204What could be more beautiful than the incident in_ They_?
47204What could he do?
47204What regions did it relinquish at the command of the reviving body?"
47204What''s the good of seeing it fall?"
47204Who but Maupassant could make a story of ghastly hideousness out of a parrot that swears?
47204Whut you skeered ob when dey ain''no ghosts?"
47204[ 96]_ What Was It?
38861''A Union is it that they want?''
38861''A rich Catholic will be a curiosity,_ n''est ce pas?_ If this is at all your course of thought, why not prevent his going to the Little House?
38861''A rich Catholic will be a curiosity,_ n''est ce pas?_ If this is at all your course of thought, why not prevent his going to the Little House?
38861''Ah now, major dear,''he whimpered, smiling a sickly smile,''you''d not take it from me and shame a poor colleen?
38861''Am I?''
38861''And I am that rider?
38861''Are n''t you to be the future lady of Ennishowen?
38861''Are the sons of the ancient kings meekly to become galley- slaves?''
38861''Are we not fools enough without you?
38861''Are you straight?''
38861''Arrah, thin,''grumbled Cassidy,''will ye always be pitching my big shoulder sand empty head in my teeth?
38861''Believe it?
38861''But sure, though you rail at us, you would not stand by neither, any more nor this young gintleman?
38861''But what is your suggestion?''
38861''Conspirator-- why not, pray?
38861''Did not Tone say you were simple?''
38861''Did we not agree t''other day about true religion?
38861''Do I?''
38861''Do you know, Curran,''he said,''that Tone has left a sting behind him which till yesterday we did not suspect?
38861''Do you think if I knew the scoundrel I''d not have pointed at him long ago?
38861''Do you want fisticuffs?''
38861''Does it trouble you,''she said, wiping the dew from her skirts carefully with a handkerchief,''that Shane should stop out so late?
38861''Go on then?''
38861''Gone without dinner, eh?
38861''Have you any basis to work upon?''
38861''He has never spoken to you of love?''
38861''How long will it last?''
38861''How straight?''
38861''I beg pardon,''he stammered,''but I feel strongly----''''Are you a Roman Catholic?''
38861''I believe your honour is an Irishman?''
38861''I presume that, being a Crosbie, you are capable of feeling shame?
38861''Is he not?''
38861''Is it I?''
38861''Is it dangerous I am?''
38861''Is it now?''
38861''Is it the dean that''s rooned us?''
38861''Is it true, Curran,''he asked, with dyspeptic peevishness,''that my brother was with those rascals?
38861''Is there not?''
38861''Love and esteem, eh?
38861''More comfits?
38861''My darling, do you not know that I would cut my heart out for you, that I would walk to the stake to save you one needless pang?
38861''My lord?''
38861''Oh, Theobald, what will become of us when you are gone?''
38861''Shane raise a regiment?
38861''So she''s mixed up with all this plotting, is she?
38861''So there''s some one watching the Emmetts?
38861''Then I''m to be the scapegoat?''
38861''Then these United Irish did not intend to be mere wind- bags?''
38861''There, there, why not in bed?
38861''To please me, would you give up all for Erin, as Theobald has done?
38861''Twere idle to take our measures, for if they pinch us, what matters it?
38861''We''ll have to crimp you?''
38861''Well, gentlemen,''remarked his lordship, amiably;''this is a glorious day for Ireland, is it not?
38861''What are you doing?''
38861''What can a rabble hope to do against a disciplined force?''
38861''What can it signify to me what he does?''
38861''What do you mean?''
38861''What do you mean?''
38861''What do you want?''
38861''What does she mean?
38861''What have I done-- what have I done?''
38861''What have you in your hand?''
38861''What is it, father?''
38861''What is to become of us?
38861''What possesses the men?
38861''What rascal?''
38861''What would I have ye do?''
38861''What would happen to outlying places like the Abbey?''
38861''Whatever can the Volunteers be doing?
38861''Where did it bud?''
38861''Where did it grow?''
38861''Where will you plant it?''
38861''Whither do you take us?''
38861''Who knows to what I might be tempted if Shane should go too far?
38861''Why not,''she thought,''work on my aunt''s prudential fears, and induce her to transfer the establishment to Ennishowen, in the north?
38861''Within Trinity?
38861''Would ye have us turn the cheek like good Christians, then?''
38861''You are always talking of Doreen?''
38861''You dared to speak to her?''
38861''You do not believe that this pack of fools will do any harm?''
38861''You have explicit information?''
38861''Your godson, is n''t it, Wolfe?''
38861A Miss Hoyden, am I?
38861A drunkard, no doubt, and a fire- eater-- which some folks are rude enough to translate murderer-- what of that?
38861A flirt, am I?
38861A little ham, my lady?
38861A sentiment?
38861After forty years of seeking new abodes, which of those who lead them shall touch the Promised Land?
38861Am I making too free in asking you to lock away those documents, or would ye prefer hanging at once to save trouble?
38861And dear Norah, too, must she be left behind?
38861And how about mine?
38861And if he did in this much obey his mother, could the match with his cousin be in anywise promoted?
38861And the luxurious nobles-- do they help with their counsel?
38861And those smart garments, too-- that aggravatingly bewitching bonnet-- for whose behoof were they intended?
38861And why should it not be played on him?
38861Are not convenient edicts being passed each day to simplify the work of government?
38861As for Sirr, I do n''t care two pins for him; yet who knows how useful he may prove to us?
38861As for the youth here, it was only fitting that he should be fat and sleek; for was he not a Protestant, one of the oppressors?
38861Aunt, why do you object to my knowing this lady, though all the world speaks well of her?
38861Before he could reply the young man said sadly:''What can a lawyer do but prose?''
38861Before things attained a hopeless pitch, would it be needful for my lady to bow her haughty neck under Gillin''s caudine forks?
38861Bloody, say you?
38861But Shane, would he consent to be carried thither?
38861But are not first impressions snares, my brethren, for the deceiving of the unwary?
38861But if you went away?
38861But then was not that youth already a friend of the Emmetts and of Tone?
38861But what had such as she to do with unmaidenly meditations anent marrying and giving in marriage?
38861But what if the existence of the Parliament should come to be threatened?
38861But what is the use of courting melancholy?
38861But who shall dare to laugh at honest men, whose delusions are nursed and played upon instead of being tenderly swept away?
38861But why should she, after all?
38861Can he be closeted all this while with his mother?
38861Can not you see that in ignoble squabbles with the scum it is best to keep clean hands by remaining neutral?
38861Can we not be trusted to keep the secret?
38861Can you conceive anything more glorious and touching than the quiet gathering on the promontory of Duncannon?
38861Can you guess?
38861Could Sir Galahad reform so base a parliament?
38861Could his wife be misled in her suspicions?
38861Could she retain hers if Shane became her husband?
38861Could they be single- minded to the end, or would discord fling her apple among them?
38861Could ye improve on that?''
38861Curran''s words had come true with regard to the capture-- was his other assertion equally correct?
38861Dangerous, am I?
38861Did I fail in my duty to my lord?
38861Did he sleep in peace?
38861Did my lady see now?
38861Did my lady''s eyes ask what was to be done?
38861Did not Judith, the noblest of women, the purest of patriots, lower herself to the disguise of a harlot for the saving of her people?
38861Did she see what he meant?
38861Do I love Erin less?
38861Do you know that they are flooding the island with troops--_disciplined troops_, who will part your ill- trained myriads like water?
38861Do you know, mother, that there''ll soon be no end to the insolence of these ruffians?
38861Do you suppose I would counsel you to aught that could bring you injury?
38861Does any man in Ireland love Erin more than I?
38861For it was clear, was it not, that her mines must be countermined for her own sake and that of her belongings?
38861For might not the champion Blaster, the admirable Hellfire, the Prince of Cherokees, have other work upon his hands before dinner- time?
38861For what is death to him who dies, the martyr''s crown upon his head?
38861Has she taken the oath, or is she but a privileged outsider like myself?
38861Have you any objection?''
38861He''s no better than a_ half- mounted!_''''Mother,''whispered Terence, trembling,''do you stand by and hear him?''
38861How can a nation''s limbs obey her will if it is weighed to the earth by gyves?
38861How can a work stand which will benefit the few and; not the many?
38861How could Arthur Wolfe be bolstered into showing greater strength of character, and induced to obey his sister?
38861How long may the prodigy of your co- operation last?
38861How shall we find out the weakest point?
38861How was it to be treated?
38861How was the parliament to be purified?
38861How was this to be accomplished?
38861How''ll I get through the papers at all at all, unless I have my junior near me?''
38861How?
38861I am surely not so irresistible?
38861I can not set it right, but she-- call my lady-- why is she not here?''
38861I must leave this house, and to whose should I fly if not to yours?
38861I speak with loving authority to you, for is not your sister my dear wife, who, next to Erin, holds all my heart?
38861I suppose I may be bridesmaid, aunt?''
38861I will not waste my breath in railing; for what else could be expected of your blood and your religion?''
38861If 5,000 ragged Highlanders are capable of that, why should not the French army march on Dublin?
38861If I am not a drunkard and a gambler, whose fault is it, sir, but yours?
38861If a young lady touch your fancy, do you ask her to say her Catechism?
38861If he came and asked her, would she say''Yes,''or''No?''
38861If he knows and likes the Gillins, why should not I, who, as a Catholic, have a sort of right to cherish them?''
38861If pensions were withdrawn and mortgages foreclosed and proprietors in prison, what mattered to these last a national liberty?
38861If she said''Yes,''would Shane indeed take her to his bosom, or would he be disobedient in this as other things?
38861If they are bent on hanging themselves, why not give them rope?
38861If, driven by despair, she were to hurry unbidden into the presence of her Maker, might she not hope to be forgiven?
38861In the future might one be called upon to run the other through?
38861Is Shane going to marry her?
38861Is it fitting that a Crosbie should associate with tradesmen?
38861Is it not always thus?
38861Is it so much trouble to suborn two?
38861Is it surprising that their descendants should have hated England, and its truckling Anglo- Irish Senate?
38861Is not Ireland already traceable in the statute- book as a wounded man in a crowd is tracked by his wounds?
38861Is not our first stake our national honour?
38861Is there anything more painful than hearing one you love and respect talking nonsense?
38861Is this a girl to be received in respectable society?
38861Is this at all like the truth?
38861It may be asked, how came her aunt to permit the girl to form such dangerous ties?
38861It seemed an ignoble thing to do; yet, for the cause''s sake, was not anything justifiable?
38861It was plain that the scum must be kept in their place, or what would become of the nobles?
38861It was quite dark, and the incorrigible damsel was still galloping about the country, who might tell whither?
38861Just a little skelp?
38861LOVES AND DOVES?
38861LOVES AND DOVES?
38861Laws for the suppression of gaming, profane swearing, atheistical assemblies, which places every man''s home under surveillance of the town- major?''
38861Look at his smooth chin-- or is it a girl?
38861Master Tone was agitating for the Catholics, was he?
38861May I be the log to stop the wheels of the triumphal car?
38861May I speak to her when she''s Shane''s wife?
38861May she be trusted?
38861May this account for the growing dislike which she nourished for her second son, while she fed the poor with soup and wrapped their limbs in flannel?
38861Might any woman''s platonic worship make good that loss to him?
38861Might anything avert it?
38861Might the trace of it never be washed clean?
38861Might there be some truth in the pile of accusations which were being heaped upon the minister in power?
38861Must it be war?
38861My good fellow, I fail to follow your meanderings, though I seem to apprehend that you are cross about these arrests?
38861My lady wished to unite her to her eldest son, did she?
38861My mother''s too fond of the chancellor----''''What if you were assured that he''s a traitor?''
38861No?
38861Nobody would search there, would they?
38861None of these-- who then?
38861Of what dangerous stuff was she made to presume to chant it before the chancellor himself?
38861Or not?
38861Our master gives us a hangman and a taxgatherer; what more should such as we require?
38861Say you will do as I wish?''
38861Shall I go to Belfast and reconnoitre?
38861Shall we lie down to be whipped, like dancing- dogs?
38861She said therefore, with a distracting glance of her brown eyes, while eager muzzles wormed into her hand:''Is this quite irrevocable?
38861She would do much to injure her, but not to the extent of ruining her own daughter, surely?
38861Should she yield to her aunt''s wishes, and assume the high position of the young earl''s bride?
38861Sirr answered that he was come to search the house-- for what, in the Lord''s name?
38861So both her father and her aunt suspected her, did they, of urging men on to conspire against the state?
38861Still pining for a military frock and helmet?
38861Sure and is n''t that the way to out- plot England?
38861Sure you ca n''t know the scarecrow?''
38861That early sin which took place so long ago-- could any one declare that she was aught but an unwilling agent in it?
38861That will be funny, will it not?
38861The Volunteers have set us free, have they?
38861The important question was, could they keep it up?
38861The question was, where could a spot be found for them to lie snugly-- a place where folks would least suspect their existence?
38861Then this was the cause of her being left at the Abbey-- of Mr. Wolfe''s evident anxiety?
38861Then this wild scheme was not to be abandoned idly?
38861There''s no knowing,''she went on in a low absent manner,''what he might not do if he knew----''''Knew what?''
38861They would n''t?
38861To which arguments Curran answered, laughing:''Is it I that''s the frog, and he the bull?
38861Was I not too indulgent a wife, screening his unfaithfulness, enduring insult without end from that dreadful woman?''
38861Was Robert to share Theobald''s fate-- to be banished from friends and motherland?
38861Was he destined to achieve perennial fame, or doomed to eternal obloquy?
38861Was he making himself disagreeable on purpose?
38861Was he not in the habit of defending Lord Clare, and of pointing out that party- spirit embitters people to the point of shameful slander?
38861Was he not obliged to meet him several times a day in the four courts, or at Daly''s?
38861Was he whom she elected to worship to be drawn into the whirlpool after all?
38861Was her torment to go on increasing, instead of wearing itself out with its own rigour?
38861Was it already too late?
38861Was it her fault if her mind turned itself towards passing events instead of being absorbed by the manufacture of tarts?
38861Was it that his mother dreaded his being caught by some low and penniless adventuress-- he who was so self- willed and given to low company?
38861Was it the hussy''s mission to insult her always-- to cover her with unending mortification?
38861Was it to be exhorted to virtue gently, or flogged into improvement?
38861Was not his innate laziness a bulwark of defence?
38861Was not such injustice outrageous?
38861Was she as relentless as she looked?
38861Was she capable, she kept asking herself, as shuddering she drew the sheets around her, of so tremendous a sacrifice as this?
38861Was she prepared to endure opprobrium?
38861Was she regretting the past, conscious only of the sunshine, forgetful now of storms; or was she rejoicing at a release?
38861Was she sent to earth merely to bear pain, to linger for a space in more or less protracted agony, and then to die?
38861Was suicide the only means of escape from an agony to which on earth there seemed no term?
38861Was there a Judas in their midst who was handing them over to the avenger, the while he gave the kiss of fellowship?
38861We are men, are n''t we, who can die but once?
38861What a delectable picture, is n''t it?
38861What better catspaw could be selected by Mr. Pitt than this artless apostle in whom was no taint of guile?
38861What cared they for free trade?
38861What cares she if I am insulted or not?
38861What cleaves in twain the despot''s chain, and makes his gyves and dungeons vain?
38861What could be the cause of this sudden fancy for star- gazing?
38861What could be the reason for it?
38861What could be the reason?
38861What could he do then but sigh and hold his peace?
38861What did Master Terence think of it?
38861What did Mr. Curran think of it, that clever advocate?''
38861What did they behold as they dashed out into the street?
38861What does it all mean?
38861What frees the slave?
38861What had a Catholic to do with love and the exchanging of young hearts?
38861What is it that frets my lady''s spirit?
38861What is that?
38861What might the nipping blast have in store for it?
38861What rarer sport than this?
38861What right had she to flaunt in delicate muslins while her people were in bondage?
38861What say you, Master Crosbie, will you sit by and see Ould Erin sold?''
38861What signified bumps, when the subject of her thoughts was Robert, the dear, delightful undergraduate?
38861What then should there be suspicious if the middle class followed their example?
38861What then?
38861What was I saying?
38861What was his trouble to her trouble-- sorrow for a race ground down?
38861What was it about?''
38861What was your ancestors''sin that ye should be saddled with a curse for ever?
38861What will be the end?
38861What will be the end?''
38861What would be more likely to stimulate a coarse illiterate squireen than the aspect of such a living paradox as this?
38861What would be the end?
38861What would befall Sara, honest Arthur pleaded, if an accident were to befall the councillor?
38861What would happen to cherished ones in the throes of the hurricane?
38861What would he think of such a wedding?
38861What would his life be away at wild Glas- aitch- é without his boon companions, among boors who had probably never heard of a Hellfire Club?
38861What would my lady say, if you came to be arrested?''
38861What would you say if she pulled her purse- strings tight, you extravagant young dog?
38861What would you?''
38861What, I wonder, did the parents of Joan of Arc think of their daughter when she abandoned the care of sheep to go a- soldiering?
38861Where did the naughty damsel learn such a song?
38861Where was Doreen the tea- maker?
38861Where was his all- comforting finger, about which the poets have raved?
38861Where''s Tone?
38861Which was it to be?
38861Who can tell what lurks behind the veil?
38861Who could save an army from rout if attacked in rear, or judiciously decide upon a line of entrenchment?
38861Who have you amongst you who could teach a single military man[oe]uvre?
38861Who knows what might have been if my lady had not proved liberal-- a kind mother?
38861Who made me choose the Bar?
38861Who superintended my studies, and gave a helping hand?
38861Who taught me that as a younger son I have my way to carve through life?
38861Who was he?
38861Who was the wretch?
38861Who was to insert the wedge?
38861Whom could Miss Wolfe desire to snare, if not her cousin Shane?''
38861Whom was he to suspect?
38861Why are you here, and why have you brought my cousin if awful rites are going forward?''
38861Why be for ever snarling at Lord Clare?
38861Why could not the innocent conspirators be left alone?
38861Why did she encourage this terrible flirtation?
38861Why did you let me?
38861Why does their return procession tarry?
38861Why had she not proved barren?
38861Why not directly after breakfast in the rosary?
38861Why not lie hidden somewhere, and direct us still?
38861Why not one witness?
38861Why not remove for a few months to Ennishowen?
38861Why should I not be maddened as others are?
38861Why should it not be given to him, and such as he, to lead us from the labyrinth?''
38861Why should not she provide a portion of it out of the wealth of the lord of Strogue?
38861Why sit ye folded up and dumb?
38861Why the Pirate Earl?
38861Why would I gladly have him marry you?
38861Why?
38861Why?
38861Why?
38861Why?
38861Will my countrymen learn wisdom?
38861Will ye go and find out something to make our minds aisy, or do ye think Misthress Doreen would be cross wid ye?''
38861Will ye take a corner of that?''
38861Will you, my dear Curran?
38861Will you?
38861With what result?''
38861Would he who held it value the priceless gift?
38861Would it be best to speak out at once and brave a certain storm, or to let things be, hoping to be delivered by some unexpected means?
38861Would it be requisite to crave a boon of the too jolly tyrant?
38861Would my lady undertake the little service of finding out, and then tell her dear friend Lord Clare what plans were suggested, what names mentioned?
38861Would no one free Ireland from a tutelage which became hourly more oppressive and capricious?
38861Would not that be a capital example?
38861Would she ever see him again, and under what circumstances?
38861Would she try to save his sons from peril?''
38861Would the Volunteer leaders allow zeal to overstep prudence?
38861Would the champion dare to free the serfs from thraldom?
38861Would the ruthless tormentor exact such abasement as an exposure to her own children of the insulting behaviour of their father?
38861Would the stubborn girl be true to her hasty vow?
38861Would time alone do it, or would perfidious aid from London be required?
38861Yes, it is maddening?''
38861Yet what can be expected of a Papist?
38861Yet what difference could his absence make to one who treated him so scurvily?
38861Yet what may I do with my little weight?
38861You are not clever, my poor child; but we ca n''t help that, can we?
38861You do n''t believe it?
38861You know Tim Flanagan, of Ormond''s Quay, whose lady-- God rest her soul!--was brought to bed a week ago?
38861You were not conquered?''
38861_ You_ give up anything, who have all your life been lapped in luxury-- and why should you?
38861and how may we bow our necks beneath the Saxon''s heel without eternal shame?
38861does n''t that look like perpetual maidenhood?
38861harping on the old string, Theobald?
38861he reflected,''easily gulled and hoodwinked, how long will your triumph last?
38861is it?''
38861is to prevent his sallying forth in Dublin, and finding there a fitting partner?
38861murder a gownsman for a bit of folly?
38861my lady exclaimed,''who was the man?
38861she groaned,''that an earthly purgatory should be my lot?
38861that I have not anxiously weighed each side of the question before deciding what is best?
38861to forego the society of Norah, the allurements of Dublin taverns?
38861was the game worth the candle she was burning for it?
38861was the good she was likely to achieve at all in proportion to the social ruin which would fall upon herself?
38861what are you doing?''
38861what do you here?''
38861who comes?''
38861who in the world''s your friend?
38861why, bending, kiss a tyrant''s rod?
50577***** But where, meanwhile, was the army of the League?
50577Another is, what if the Pope should escape from the castle by aid of the enemy?
50577Are not his stanzas a solace to the jaded pilgrim, who sings them to alleviate the irksomeness of his hot and weary way?
50577Do you not hear them chanted all day long in the highways and the fields?
50577From a picture in the Albani Palace in Rome 88?
50577In the third place, should it come to an assault and the Pontiff unluckily fall?
50577In what was Donatello poorer than Michelangelo or Niccolò Pisano than either?
50577Is it not so?]
50577Monsieur di Borbone accordingly decided on approaching the walls, and on Sunday morning the 5th we made a lodgment within[ beyond?]
50577Rome, Kestner Museum; another female portrait:_ Ibit ad geminos lucida fama pollo_(?).
50577That others than myself I must deplore?
50577Then, rushing to his father, he exclaimed,''So you are come to kill me?''
50577Upon what laws of nature are regulated the gradations of aerial perspective, or the receding or flattened surfaces of basso- relievo?
50577What are the truths of nature?
50577What means of expression did Dante lack that Milton enjoyed, or Sophocles?
50577What, indeed, is art but a tissue of conventionalities, even when the imitation of external objects is its aim?
50577Whence then this difference?
50577Who would assert that the truncheons confided to him by the Church, Venice, and Florence, were not of silver?
50577Ye fabled joys, ye tales of empty love, What are ye now, if twofold death be nigh?
50577[ Footnote* 156: How could Italy have a ballad poetry full of national sentiment before she became a nation?
50577[ Footnote* 201: Yes?
50577[ Footnote* 227: No?
50577[ Illustration:_ Alinari_?
50577and is my store Of griefs become so scanty, that my own Are not enough to moan?
50577and may not the moral paralysis which impeded effective tactics in the army be fairly adduced in mitigation of their unauthorised furloughs?
50577and why should jewels and embroidery, that seem beautiful in Crivelli''s saints or Dello''s pageants, be vulgar gewgaws on recent canvasses?
50577married?
50577my Lord is ill, and am I not to see him?"
44520Are you then Turtle?
44520But pray how came you in the Slop- pail?
44520Dear devil!--it may be you are Sid.?
44520Let her be buried in the King''s highway, For on her heart they trod, the while she liv''d; And, buried once, why not upon her head?
44520What are you?
44520You must, then,replied I,"be either Derry Down Triangle, or the Waterloo- Man?"
44520_ right? 44520 )_ Can you produce a certificate of good character from those who_ know_ you? 44520 )_ The Witness from the_ Grillery_ asked whether the_ Cross_ Examination was nearly concluded? 44520 * Childeric I. the son of Merovius, for his lasciviousness, was banished by the great men, and one Egidiu?, a Gaul, set up in his stead. 44520 * If it be asked, Who shall be judge? 44520 * Will''His readers''explain, whether they were amused by''the Curtain before Potiphafs Wife,''raising a GROSSLY OBSCENE image of her naked person? 44520 32.)? 44520 4. Who can express the noble acts of the Lord: or shew forth all his praise? 44520 After that what did you do? 44520 And is a Tyrant King your early choice? 44520 And where''s his heav''nly high original? 44520 Are you a Member of the Society for the Suppression of Vice? 44520 Are you a sober man? 44520 Are you married? 44520 Are you not bound to manifest some gratitude towards those who have paid your debts? 44520 Are you sober now? 44520 Are you_ head waiter_, or by what other name than head waiter you may be called, at the Crown Inn? 44520 At the_ Cat and Fiddle._ What is your favorite dish? 44520 But who shall tell-- or who shall believe, That malice could deeper wrongs conceive? 44520 By the Roman law, a divorce was granted for Drunkenness, Adultery, and_ False Keys_: what is your opinion of that law? 44520 By what acts of your life do you expect you will be remembered hereafter? 44520 Devil!_ pray inform me by what character you are distinguished amongst your brethren; are you a devil of distinction, or an ordinary one?
44520Did not the Lord Precedent remember a Clock Case, in which, immediately after the chain had been locked up, a principal link suddenly disappeared?
44520Did not you write to your wife a licentious letter, called a letter of license?--(_Order, order._) I ask you again the cause of your separation?
44520Do you drink six bottles?
44520Do you know a certain Colonel Q.?
44520Do you live with your own wife?
44520Do you mean to say that you never went to Manchester Square?
44520Do you not recollect whether a new wing was added during the time you and your mistress were absent?
44520Do you_ understand_ English?
44520Does the Witness recollect whether he was at B--------?
44520Five bottles?
44520Fond of_ Goose_ I suppose-- but pray Mr. Mere- amusement what is your business?
44520Has she no Star in the celestial train?
44520Have they ever prosecuted you?
44520Have you any perquisites?
44520Hile be krapd miself a4 hide lev m. Wat a hepcl rnt et?
44520How dare they to talk of''public principle?
44520How do you get your living?
44520How do you live?
44520How long did it take you to travel from Manchester Square to Richmond?
44520How many Wives does_ your_ Church allow you?
44520How many have you had since you separated from your own?
44520How many nights in the week do you go to bed sober?
44520How many other places did you go to?
44520How much money has been expended on you since you were born?
44520I exclaimed,"what my political godchild?"
44520I hold in my hand a list of immense sums of money that have been advanced to you, how much have you left?
44520I understand you have the_ scarlet_ fever, do you not know that it ends here in a_ putrid_ fever?
44520If a king make a law, destructive of human society and the general good, may it not be resisted and opposed?
44520If desertion was base, Oh base be his name, Who, having deserted, would bring her to sham?
44520If your marriage oath has not bound you, can you expect people to believe you if ever you should take a solemn public oath?
44520In what light do you consider your oath at the marriage ceremony?
44520Is she in this country?
44520Is the Marquis of C. a married man?
44520I{ 074}do not ask what you are to be hereafter, but whether you are_ still_ head waiter at the Crown?
44520Konnatumcno, weddlmaobob Fnilkntar maionnlm aorulnncbl aois; nncdsnwrw nnaum, ajksbbl&& ooaau- aoummcdllooamg gfgkj?
44520Matthew?
44520Matthew?
44520Now, Muse, the parallel with caution bring, On what condition was this man their King?
44520On what account?
44520Order._) After you parted from your wife, on what terms did you live?
44520Parson C. alias Croly, or Crawley, or Coronaroly, Who putteth forth innocent pamphlet?
44520Search his ancient breed; What sacred ancestors did he succeed?
44520Symptoms{ 079}of impatience were now expressed, with loud cries of_ Withdraw, withdraw._ Do you remember any thing particular occurring one night?
44520The C. After Dressing, Drinking, and Dreaming, what time remains for thinking?
44520Then drew the picture of a monster crown''d, Ask''d them, if such a villain could be found,* Whether they''d like him, and their tribute bring?
44520Then why did you part?
44520They fought as long as there were any men to be raised?
44520WHO{ 071}are you?
44520Was her_ Trial_ in the House of Lords, amid the gibes and jests, and scoffs and sneers, and the taunt of_ Ferocity_--was this the act of"faction?"
44520Was it so close as to exclude any person outside from seeing what passed within, or was it partially open?
44520Was it this"faction"brought her from Germany?
44520Was she deserted and_ licensed_ to her"_ inclinations_"by this"faction?"
44520Was she_ married_ by this"faction?"
44520Was she_ spied upon_ by this"faction?"
44520Was the horde of miscreants who vomited forth their_ disgusting and obscene perjuries_ against her-- were these collected by this"faction?"
44520Was the spiritual and temporal_ refusal_ to place her name in_ the Liturgy_ the act of this"faction?"
44520Was the{ 229}"honourable"_ Milan Commission_ issued by the"faction?"
44520Was_ her character impeached_ by this"faction:"Was_ the late King''s friendship_ for her at that period caused by a"faction?"
44520Was_ her child_ torn from her by a"faction?"
44520Was_ she tricked out of the country_ by a"faction:"Was her name_ omitted upon her daughter''s coffin_ by a"faction?"
44520Well, but you have something to show for it?
44520Were her_ conjugal rights denied her_ by this"faction?"
44520Were you in the house on the footing of a private friend?
44520Were you not up to the eyes in debt?
44520What birthright raised that rav''nous leader''s name?
44520What can you get at it?--are you a good hand?
44520What claim had colonel Cnute,* or captain Suene?
44520What countryman are you?--a foreigner or an englishman?
44520What do you mean by saying with other pieces?
44520What do you mean then by Suppression-- is your Soeiety to prevent little vice from being committed, or great vice from being found out?
44520What have we here?
44520What have you done for it in return?
44520What is your favorite game?
44520What is your place of residence?
44520What mighty princes form''d his royal line, And handed down to him the right divine?
44520What right the roving Saxon, pirate Dane?
44520What wages have you?
44520What were their means of conduct- ing their governments, of exercising this office of Heaven''s vicegerents?
44520Where are''MOCKERY OF RELIGION,''''OBSCENITY,''and''BLASPHEMY''to be found, if not in the paper of this Founder of the Bridge- Street Gang?
44520Where did you go?
44520Where do you spend your evenings?
44520Where do you spend your mornings?
44520Who usually closed the Pavilion?
44520Why did you marry?
44520Why should it not be the same to us?
44520Will the Oath you have taken_ bind_ you to speak the truth, or do you know of any other Oath_ more_ binding?
44520Will''his readers''explain how they were amused by the OBSCENITY of his''fresh fig- leaves for Adam and Eve?''
44520Will''his readers''explain, what suggestions were conveyed to their minds by''a Fresh Witch of Endor,''and by''Six strings for David''s Harp?''
44520Yet let us look around the world awhile, And find a Patron- God for Albion''s Isle; Has she so many Tyrants borne in vain?
44520Yet no Despot ever supported himself steadily on an English throne; and what is there to prove, that such men ever can?
44520You are a master tailor, I think?
44520You have been a tailor, then?
44520You have many companions and advisers, but have you to your knowledge one_ real_ friend in the world; and if not, why not?
44520You{ 075}mentioned your father just now:--you did not go in your father''s_ cart_, I presume; in what sort of carriage did you go?
44520[ Illustration: 092]"What are you at?
44520[ Illustration: 228]{ 221}[ Illustration: 229] WHERE SHALL I DINE?
44520_ Bag- at- L----_ What is your favorite amusement?
44520a man or a fish?
44520an Epicure have_ his own_ wife in his arms?
44520and if a King can do wrong, why the plague are we constantly affirming that he can not?
44520banished?
44520do n''t trifle; can you from any_ respectable_ person?
44520tell me, I entreat you,"said I,"what post has Diabolus Regis?"
44520what are you after?"
44520wnubll anedjrq won nt a nid araoulatcoanmbly?
44520{ 180} Yet who was Egbert?
44520{ 252} Lord C----h cloth rule yon House, And all who there do reign; They''ve let us live this Christmas time--- D''ye think they will again?
45743And who is your Lord?
45743Are you the Bastard of Orleans?
45743Did you not send for me?
45743Do you believe all this, gentle Dauphin?
45743Do you believe in God?
45743Do you believe that,_ after this revelation_, you could not sin mortally?
45743Do you not know,asked the girl,"the saying that France is to be made desolate by a woman and restored by a Maid?"
45743Gentle Dauphin,she said to him one day,"why do you not believe me?
45743How can we pass through the armies of England and Burgundy?
45743How now, priest? 45743 How?
45743I have never sat a horse; how should I lead an army?
45743If you dress as you do by God''s command,they asked her,"why do you ask for a shift in the hour of death?"
45743Is it, indeed, come to this? 45743 Joan,"he said,"we could wait for six days were we sure of having the town, but can we be sure?"
45743Joan,said the archbishop,"is it known to you when you will die, and at what place?"
45743Miserable boy,she cried;"the blood of France is shedding, and you do not call me?
45743My child,he asked,"are you come hither to raise the siege?"
45743Now,said the Maid,"look well, and tell me; are their faces set toward us?"
45743Rascal,he said,"how dare you let that excommunicate wretch come so near the church?
45743Then I, Jean, swear to you, Maid, my hand in your hands, that I, God helping me, will lead you to the King, and I ask when you will go?
45743To Poitiers?
45743Was it you who gave counsel to come by this bank of the river, so that I can not go straight against Talbot and the English?
45743What brought you to the King?
45743What does she want? 45743 What language does the Voice speak?"
45743What woman is this?
45743What,he asked her,"would you think of a knight in your king''s land who refused to obey your king and his officers?
45743Who is this?
45743Will you not tell us, in the presence of the king, what is the nature and manner of this counsel that you receive?
45743[ 45] What next was for the Maid to do? 45743 _ Rouen, Rouen, mourrai- je içi?
45743A miracle?
45743A shining quartz pebble, shall we say?
45743After all, what more simple than to find out whether this counsel was of God or the devil?
45743Alençon had already built a bridge across the Seine near St. Denis; how if they crossed this bridge with a chosen few and surprised the town?
45743Alençon was loyal to the core; how could he disobey his sovereign?
45743Allies?
45743Appear before King and Parliament to receive his just doom?
45743Are we then to turn our backs?"
45743Are you going to make us dine here?"
45743Basque, is this what you promised me?"
45743CHAPTER VIII RECOGNITION Sera- elle point jamais trouvée Celle qui ayme Louyaulté?
45743Coronation at Rheims?
45743Could it be?
45743D''Aulon said to his friend, a Basque whom he knew well,"If I dismount and go forward to the foot of the wall, will you follow me?"
45743Did she, they asked, feel assurance of salvation?
45743Do you not know that I promised your wife to bring you back safe and sound, better than when you left?"
45743France in the fifteenth century: what was it like?
45743France?
45743Friends then?
45743Give way, without battle, to a girl?
45743Had he not bidden them sow beans in vast quantities in case of emergency?
45743Had not Brother Richard, the Cordelier friar, warned them against this Maid, saying that she was, or might be, a female Antichrist?
45743Had they heard the prophecy that a Maid should be born in the neighborhood, who should do great deeds?
45743Have you felt the touch of fire?
45743How should she ply her needle, when the sword was waiting for her hand?
45743How should she sit to spin, with saints and angels calling in her ear?
45743How then?
45743How, people asked, if here were a new revelation?
45743If my lord would call in, for example, those who dealt in magic----?
45743If so, was it a miracle, as people thought then, the robbers held with invisible bonds, unable to stir hand or foot?
45743If we stood, as one may still stand, in that vaulted chamber, would not the answer ring out once more from those grim walls that received it?
45743Is it a true tale?
45743Is not this perhaps the most wonderful part of all the heroic story?
45743It was ill- done of Father Fournier, she said afterward; had he not heard her fully in confession?
45743Joan had heard rumors of all this; but what was a baby princess three hundred leagues away?
45743Margaret?"
45743Must the King be walked out of his kingdom, and must we all be English?"
45743Must the city of Clovis bow like him, taking on new vows and forswearing old?
45743On came La Hire and his eighty cavaliers, dashing across the open, crashing through the woods, who so merry as they?
45743Our Maid was at Monlieu that very November; she may have met St. Colette, and talked with her of matters human and divine; who knows?
45743Seeing her in her red peasant- dress, he stopped and said,"_ Ma mie_, what are you doing here?
45743Sera- elle point jamais trouvée Celle qui ayme Louyaulté?
45743Sera- elle point jamais trouvée?
45743Seras- tu ma maison?
45743Shalt thou be my( last) home?
45743She may even have worn it-- who knows?
45743Should they storm the fortress, or proceed by slower methods?
45743Since all else had failed, why not let the Maid prove her Voices to be of God?
45743Son of a mad father and a bad mother, was he indeed the rightful heir?
45743The Duke related his symptoms and asked for advice; hinted that perhaps a little miracle, even, might be performed?
45743The Maid, Alençon, Dunois, Xaintrailles-- where was La Hire?
45743The cruel toil, the bloodshed and the glory-- was all to be for naught?
45743The day was lost?
45743The discovery was made in time, but who could tell what new dangers might await them?
45743The lord of Bourlemont and his lady sometimes joined the dancing; had not his ancestor loved a fairy when time was, and been loved of her?
45743Then the guest might ask, was not this the country of the Oak Wood,"_ le Bois Chesnu_?"
45743Torn by factions, weakened by loss of blood, ridden first by one furious free- booter and then another, what chance had she?
45743Was Heaven, after all, on the side of France?
45743Was he after all the rightful heir?
45743Was it the sight of her?
45743Was it true that after her fall she had blasphemed God and her saints?
45743Was one of them the quaint ditty whose opening lines head this chapter?
45743Was the breach definitely practicable?
45743What awaited the Maid in"white Chinon by the blue Vienne?"
45743What did she mean about help from Scotland?
45743What in return would they make of the slim rider in battered armor, urging her horse to the gallop?
45743What to do, with affairs in general, with the Maid in particular?
45743What to do?
45743What was a holy city to do?
45743What would she make, I wonder, of those two lovely ladies, her of the shoulders and her of the silken tresses?
45743Where La Hire, Xaintrailles?
45743Where her friend and brother- in- arms, the gentle duke of Alençon?
45743Who is she that cometh in bloody coronation robes from Rheims?
45743Who is she that cometh with blackened flesh from walking the furnaces of Rouen?
45743Who is this that cometh from Domrémy?
45743Who knows from what far Druid time came the custom of dancing around its huge trunk and hanging garlands on its gnarled boughs?
45743Who shall read this riddle?
45743Who wanted to save the kingdom?
45743Who would pay most for her?
45743Why not get up an expedition against these two places, and send the Maid in charge?
45743Would Joan of Arc submit to Holy Church, or would she burn, now, in an hour''s time?
45743Would she abjure, or burn?
45743Yes; but-- England beside her?
45743[ 70] Rouen, Rouen, shall I die here?
45743_ And all the people shall say Amen!_ Was the good Maid beginning to have glimpses of the clay feet of her idol?
45743_ À la bonne heure!_ The word?
45743adore----"was St. Remy speaking again in the person of this peasant maid?
45743gentle Duke,"she added, with the pretty touch of raillery that was all her own;"are you afraid?
45743where was Dunois?
3705''Tis wonderful how intelligent some trained animals are, ai n''t it?
3705A hundred miles?
3705About this younger son that came to America, now?
3705Ai n''t she here now? 3705 Ai n''t ya never comin''back?"
3705Ai n''t you dead?
3705Am I a hard man to work for?
3705An''the cook house is to the right of it?
3705An''who the fiber fingered flub- dub are ya?
3705An''you mean to tell me that this low- grade Dick Cleighton puts up that job on Jim, just so he can beat him to the title?
3705An''you wo n''t say nothin''about this letter to Daddy, until I let you?
3705And is my Daddy all right?
3705Any sport here?
3705Are the mosquitoes as bad as that?
3705Are you bad hurt, Daddy?
3705Are you goin''to stay here a spell, or are you just goin''to try to get Old Cast Steel interested in poultry? 3705 Are you goin''to stay this time?"
3705Are you goin''to talk about that ol''cayuse all night?
3705Are you hurt, Dick?
3705Are you sure, Barbie?
3705Are you the man?
3705Are you willin''to swear to it?
3705Aw sit down, Happy,they sez; an''"What''s the matter, Happy; you gettin''tender?"
3705Barbie,I sez at last,"supposin''he is playin''fair?
3705Barbie,sez Dick, an''his voice was meller as a flute,"do n''t ya love me no more?"
3705But what is the''about Captain that makes him so wonderful? 3705 Ca n''t you see what happened?"
3705Can I trust you?
3705Can you get ready for twenty?
3705Can you handle cattle?
3705Can you ride?
3705Claim her hand, do ya?
3705Clarenden Castle?
3705Come up there an''toss Fido out into the bushes, so as to kill two birds with one stone?
3705Confound you,sez I,"do you mean to say that just because I''m goin''to engage in business I''m a thief?"
3705Cook?
3705Cur? 3705 Did n''t Claud kill fourteen men in Gore Gulch, an''did n''t I think it was fine?
3705Did she do it?
3705Did you ever have any experience?
3705Did you ever hear of Custer''s massacre?
3705Did you ever know Dick before he came here, Happy?
3705Did you ever see a baby?
3705Did you ever see such grit?
3705Did you get your fence- rider yet?
3705Do I get the job?
3705Do any of you gentlemen know anything about that pony?
3705Do n''t you know better''n to stop up a chimney that''s workin''?
3705Do n''t you know who this pony is?
3705Do n''t you know?
3705Do you an''your dad ever talk about your mother any more?
3705Do you belong to this outfit?
3705Do you happen to know what I shot him for?
3705Do you know the reason why the''''s so much devilment in this world?
3705Do you know what a knight is?
3705Do you know what business is?
3705Do you know what is apt to happen if you keep on pesterin''me?
3705Do you know who lost it?
3705Do you know who you''re talkin''to?
3705Do you like the scenery around here, or do you have to live here on account of your health?
3705Do you live around here?
3705Do you mean to tell me that I got to find myself, out of forty a month?
3705Do you mean to tell me that you did n''t see him?
3705Do you really think''at I saved your life?
3705Do you reckon I could knock around this ranch the way I have an''not know nothin''except about flowers an''moonlight? 3705 Do you savvy how to run one?"
3705Do you suppose if they did n''t have any rights they''d have the nerve to carry on that way?
3705Do you think I got it stuck up on pillers''cause my foot''s asleep?
3705Do you think I''m afraid o''that cur?
3705Do you think it''s goin''to snow?
3705Do you think that I have n''t carried that cross also? 3705 Do you think''at you''re too big to be whipped?"
3705Do you want me to fix it easy?
3705Do you want that fence- ridin''job?
3705Do you want to marry her?
3705Does that letter tell about her, Barbie?
3705Does the boss know?
3705Good or bad?
3705Got any tobacco?
3705Happy,sez he,"are ya game?"
3705Happy,she sez to me one night when we was ridin''back from Look Out,"do n''t you think I''m old enough now to ask Dad about what that letter meant?"
3705Happy-- you do n''t really mean that, do you?
3705Happy?
3705Happy?
3705Has Clarence popped the question yet, honey?
3705Has n''t she gone to school every day this term?
3705Have n''t you any friends there who would swear it was self- defense?
3705Have n''t you never heard o''Happy Hawkins?
3705Have you any idea what the child''s thinkin''about?
3705Have you asked her what''s on her mind this time?
3705Have you asked her?
3705Have you ever read Monte Cristo?
3705Have you had a wide experience?
3705Have you learned anything yet?
3705He had horns an''a long beard, an''was about six feet high an''spouted fire, an''--"Do you mean the goat?
3705He was engaged to the daughter of the curat at Avondale Chapel,sez Bill,"an''he bein''the heir presumptive to the title--""What is that, Bill?"
3705He''s dead,sez a tall, snarley lookin''feller;"what do ya want with him?"
3705Healthy?
3705How about it bein''your bringin''me mine?
3705How can a body tell what that child is studyin''about?
3705How did Barbie get around this?
3705How did that happen, Monody?
3705How did you get here, child?
3705How did you like business, Happy?
3705How did you like business?
3705How do I know?
3705How do you feel?
3705How do you know he ai n''t got epolepsy?
3705How do you know he ai n''t married?
3705How do you know''at he ai n''t livin''with the woman he kept over at Laramie?
3705How do you know?
3705How do you know?
3705How far are you goin''to race?
3705How far did you race?
3705How far would you go when it came to payin''for him?
3705How long ago was this, Jim?
3705How long has this been goin''on?
3705How long have you known o''this feller?
3705How long will it take?
3705How many days''ridin''does it take to go around?
3705How many guests will the''be?
3705How much did he owe ya?
3705How much pay do you want, for heaven''s sake?
3705How old are ya, Happy?
3705How old is she?
3705How old was he?
3705How would I know it was yours?
3705How''s everything goin''?
3705How''s she goin''to get off?
3705How''s your catridges holdin''out?
3705I ai n''t neither afraid,I sez,"but what''s the use of a race just to satisfy our curiosity?"
3705I do n''t suppose the''''s any way to go back an''square it, is there?
3705I heard the cook say he knew you an''he called you Kid-- I suppose you are the Pan Handle Kid?
3705I never thought o''that before,said she,"I''ll do the best I can-- but you''ll come back to me sometime, wo n''t you, Happy?"
3705I own too to that,sez I;"but what have I got to do with it?"
3705I suppose you are well acquainted with the Philadelphia Jamisons?
3705I thought''at you had finally settled down at the Diamond Dot?
3705I understand you found some money?
3705I''m ready to take my oath on it, madame,sez I, not crackin''a smile;"but if I might make so bold, who are you?"
3705If I die with''em on you wo n''t let''em take''em off, will ya?
3705If I ruin my constitution through depravity, is it stealin''?
3705Is Starlight here yet?
3705Is everything goin''smooth?
3705Is it a bird?
3705Is it easy that way?
3705Is it too late?
3705Is she good at her studies?
3705Is that so; what''s happened?
3705Is that so?
3705Is that the reason?
3705Is the grub that rotten?
3705Is your friend a lady?
3705Jabez Judson, what are you doin''?
3705Jamison?
3705Jim swung purty wide in his taste for women, did n''t he?
3705Jim''s all right; but what become of Dick?
3705Jupiter has eight of''em an''we ai n''t but one an''the''ai n''t nobody lives there, while--"What do you happen to be talkin''of?
3705Kin you ride a hoss?
3705Know the governor?
3705Look here, Bud,sez I, interruptin'',"I know all about your golden gates an''sea lions an''cosmopopilic civilization; but how about your fleas?"
3705Marry me, kitten?
3705Me?
3705Melisse?
3705Miss Johnston,he sez in a low tone,"are you sufferin''much?"
3705Money? 3705 Monody, are you hurt?"
3705Oh, I''ll come back some day, ridin''a big black hoss with silver trimmed leather-- an''what shall I bring little Barbie?
3705Oh, do you know him?
3705Oh, hoofs,sez he,"you ai n''t that superstitious are you?
3705Out in the open, was he?
3705Ralph Chester Stuart-- Great Scott, have you lost your memory?
3705Say,I yelled, jumpin''to my feet,"you do n''t mean that you''re it yourself?"
3705Settle?
3705Shall I bring her in here?
3705Shall I get''em, Frenchy?
3705She did n''t wear boys clothes, did she?
3705She looked me plumb in the eyes, an''said,''Do you want me to ask you what I want to find out?''
3705Since when?
3705Six?
3705So you''re Happy Hawkins?
3705Spread what?
3705That''s a sample o''your idee of respect, is it? 3705 The pony corral stands at the mouth of a little canon, do n''t it?"
3705Then what the deuce do you mean takin''my wages?
3705Time?
3705Was she wearin''the buckskin pants when he was here?
3705Was that all you heard about the gigantic maid?
3705Was the letter to you?
3705Weak?
3705Well, as soon as you''ve give business a good fair try- out, you''ll come back here an''tell us about it, wo n''t you?
3705Well, do you want the job?
3705Well, had n''t you?
3705Well, how can I tell?
3705Well, naturally, while they was bein''nursed they both fell in love with her--"With Monody?
3705Well, then, what made you rear up about''em yesterday?
3705Well, then, what made you stay away so long for?
3705Well, then,sez I,"what was the thing that gave the spirit call in the cellar?"
3705Well, what about it?
3705Well, what are you gettin''at?
3705Well, what did you do about her bein''an infidel?
3705Well,sez I, as though I was inquirin''after an old pal,"how''s the Earl?"
3705Well,sez I,"what''s the story?"
3705Well,sez he,"was they polite?
3705Well?
3705What ai n''t I game about?
3705What are you doin''here this time o''the evenin''?
3705What are you goin''to do about it?
3705What are you goin''to do with him?
3705What are you ridin''that old skin for?
3705What did he quit for?
3705What did she say?
3705What did you pay for him?
3705What did you say?
3705What did you say?
3705What do you call this stuff?
3705What do you know about him?
3705What do you make out about it?
3705What do you mean by such nonsense, Happy?
3705What do you mean?
3705What do you reckon was the reason your friend would n''t let himself be examined?
3705What do you suppose''ll happen to my name?
3705What do you want to get on for?
3705What does H. H. stand for?
3705What does any one want to get on for?
3705What does it mean to steal?
3705What else did he say?
3705What for?
3705What for?
3705What for?
3705What grub?
3705What have you got to say about it?
3705What is it allus about?
3705What is it?
3705What is she studyin''about?
3705What is the''about that pony that everybody takes such an interest in him for?
3705What is your first offer, men?
3705What kind o''business have you been in, Happy?
3705What kind of a bell is a Creole Bell?
3705What kind of a scrape did the youngster get into, Bill?
3705What kind of lookin''feller was it?
3705What kind?
3705What makes you humor her in everything for?
3705What makes you think we wo n''t get them to market in good shape?
3705What money?
3705What now?
3705What of it?
3705What on?
3705What rights have they got?
3705What shall I do?
3705What the bloomin''blue blasted blazes is the matter?
3705What the deuce did you hammer this old skin over the road like this for?
3705What the deuce you makin''that racket for?
3705What the hell do you mean by pressin''my toe?
3705What the''ell do I know about your saddle an''bridle?
3705What the''ell for?
3705What was it?
3705What was th''about that buckskin mustang to make you think of a business man?
3705What''ll the night riders do?
3705What''s he done?
3705What''s legal age?
3705What''s that?
3705What''s the damage, Jabez?
3705What''s the goat done?
3705What''s the matter with your leg?
3705What''s the use of curiosity except to satisfy it?
3705What''s this I hear, Happy?
3705What''s your general plan of occupation, Slocum?
3705What''s your name?
3705What''s your news, Monody?
3705When I asked you to rope the pinto you told me to git one o''my own men to rope it; what does that mean?
3705When am I ever unjust?
3705When did you buy him?
3705When was the pot cleaned?
3705When will supper be ready, Frenchy?
3705When?
3705Where are you from an''how long have you been making my business your own?
3705Where did you learn to talk that way?
3705Where did your folks come from?
3705Where have you been all these years, an''why did n''t you come back to us?
3705Where have you been?
3705Where is St. James Court, Bill?
3705Where is he now?
3705Where is he?
3705Where is she, Barbie?
3705Where is she, Happy?
3705Where is the course laid out, Barbie?
3705Where is your gun, kid?
3705Where the deuce did you ever hear of Clarenden Castle?
3705Where was you hit, Jabez?
3705Where you been ridin''at?
3705Where you been that you have n''t heard about it?
3705Where you goin''to start in?
3705Where''d you get it?
3705Where''d you get this?
3705Where''d you learn all this?
3705Where''s Barbie?
3705Where''s Jim?
3705Where''s Melisse?
3705Where''s Peabody?
3705Where''s that picture of the girl who whipped the king?
3705Where''s this Dick now; when did you last hear from this winner of hands?
3705Who beat?
3705Who built the school?
3705Who by?
3705Who do you suppose George was, an''Jack?
3705Who from?
3705Who put you in there, child?
3705Who roped that pony for her?
3705Who told you you could be gone all day?
3705Who was it that Barbie married?
3705Who was n''t killed?
3705Who''ll give me a hundred dollars for this grand old relic; this veteran of a hundred wars; this venerable and honorable souvynier of bygone ages?
3705Who''s boss o''this place?
3705Who''s goin''to let him starve?
3705Who''s runnin''this place now?
3705Who''s the foreman?
3705Who-- the horse?
3705Who?
3705Why did n''t you let him raise your wages a little more, an''bring along a bunch o''five- year- olds too?
3705Why do n''t it belong to me?
3705Why do n''t you figger out some kind of a dress that would look like a girl''s and-- and work like a boy''s?
3705Why do n''t you go to a restaurant?
3705Why wo n''t he know it''s a goat?
3705Why, bless your heart, where did you ever hear o''marriage?
3705Why, it''s back in--he began; but Snarley snaps in"You shut up, will ya?
3705Why, you fool you,I sez,"if he SHOULD happen to ruin you beyond repair you do n''t imagine any one would put on mournin''do ya?
3705Wide?
3705Will ya marry me?
3705Will you put the letter back an''try to forget it?
3705Wo n''t you please get my leather for me,sez I,"or would you sooner have me guess off the center o''those two shots?"
3705Would n''t you sooner do it of your own free will?
3705Would you be so kind enough as to tell me where my saddle an''bridle is?
3705Would you feel like sort o''hintin''what it was about?
3705Would you need any more help?
3705Ya ai n''t goin'', are ya?
3705Yes, Jim was a fine feller from all accounts,sez Bill,"but where the Jink did you meet up with him?"
3705Yes, but did n''t I tell you I was goin''to paint him with phosphorus?
3705Yes,snaps Jabez,"an''who did you promise it to?
3705Yes?
3705You been away purt nigh a year,sez Jabez,"where you been?"
3705You do n''t mean to say''at you''ve gone an''got married,sez I,"or that you are tryin''to?"
3705You got friends there, ai n''t ya?
3705You got somethin''up your sleeve,sez Bill, who was a mite too observin''at times;"what is it you want to know?"
3705You mean that you said that she was never to argue with you again?
3705You seen it about all?
3705You surely do n''t think they serve meals here, do you?
3705You''ll come before it snows if you can, wo n''t you?
3705You''re from the South, ai n''t ya, Happy?
3705You''re headin''for the Diamond Dot, ai n''t ya?
3705You''re the owner, I know, but who''s in charge o''the men?
3705Your sister''s youngest brother?
3705A woman''s coarse voice sez,"What do ya want?"
3705About nine Piker, which was the name the stranger had handed in, sez,"Do you gentlemen ever indulge in a little friendly game?"
3705After a time the doctor got his heart to pumpin''again, an''he roars out,"Vat are you doin''--vat are you doin''?"
3705Ai n''t it figgerin''an''schemin''to get away from a man whatever he happens to have?
3705Am I or am I not your ol''Dad?"
3705Are you all right?"
3705Are you goin''to cook my supper?"
3705Are you goin''to go?"
3705Are you goin''to start in some town or go into a big city?"
3705Are you ready to begin?"
3705At first he thought she was a boy, an''it made me hot; but he sez to me,''Did n''t God create man first?''
3705Barbie went along eatin''her meal, an''purty soon Jabez sez,"Well, did you hear what I had to say?"
3705Beam?
3705But did he try to flunk it?
3705But do you know who you''re talkin''to?
3705But what about you an''Barbie?"
3705But what in thunder did you mean when you said that gettin''engaged to the daughter of one was a scrape?"
3705Ca n''t I come out now?"
3705Ca n''t you see that?"
3705Ca n''t you sort o''liven up a little?"
3705Cameron''s?"
3705Can you buy a thirst like mine with money?
3705Come on, what''ll you have to drink?"
3705Daddy, Daddy; what''s the matter Dad?"
3705Did they beg for what they wanted?
3705Did they have any doubt but that they''d be plenty of everything to go around?"
3705Did you ever have a stranger brace you like that?
3705Did you ever notice bear cubs gettin''an edication?
3705Did you ever read it, Happy?"
3705Did you ever think of that?
3705Did you leave last time in the same humor as usual?"
3705Do I get the job?"
3705Do n''t you remember givin''me six hundred dollars after you came back from the Pan Handle?
3705Do n''t you still miss your mother?"
3705Do n''t you think I did right?"
3705Do you hear what I say?
3705Do you know how to cook?"
3705Do you still study over it much, Barbie?"
3705Do you want to take your money with you, or leave it in the bank until you decide to invest it?"
3705Drive the rheumatiz out of your system?
3705Enjoy myself?
3705Happy Hawkins, is it really you?"
3705Happy, Happy, let me go in peace, wo n''t ya?
3705Have n''t you had your breakfast?"
3705He chuckled up another laugh, an sez,"If you had a good job here would you be apt to settle?"
3705He kind o''nervoused around a few minutes longer an''then he sez,"What did you mean a while ago?"
3705He looked at the pony an''sez,"Who gets the ten dollars?"
3705How do you want to settle?"
3705How many Alice LeMoynes did you ever happen to hear of?"
3705How many''s in the gang?"
3705How would you like to be called a Chinaman?
3705How you goin''to teach a child to spell an''be honest both?"
3705How''ll we fix for''em?"
3705How''ll you come back next time?"
3705I cried,"what on earth you doin''out here this time o''night an''all by your lone?"
3705I found that--""Who was with you?"
3705I heaved a rock at him which he dodged, an''then I sez,"You wicked of beast you, do I look old enough to have an eight- year- old daughter?"
3705I looked at him a moment, but he was merely speakin''his mind, an''I sez:"Bill, where in Goshen did you get to be a killin''man?"
3705I nodded my head:"Did the Friar get fainty about Barbie bein''a heretic?"
3705I stopped in my tracks gappin''at him, an''purty soon he noticed me an''sez,"Well, what are YOU starin''at?
3705I touched Bill on the shoulder, an sez,"Can the pup do anything, Bill?"
3705I waited a moment to quiet my voice, an''then I sez,"Are you all right, little Barbie?"
3705I walked over to the group an''I sez:"Is the''anybody else in this outfit that has any o''that brand o''supposin''about''i m?"
3705If he was honest why did n''t he ask me, the same as Hawthorn did?"
3705If you''ve been foolin''around here, how come the dogs never barked at ya?"
3705It seemed as if we had all been in that same position for ages, when suddenly a voice said,"Why, Dad, what''s the matter?"
3705It takes a woman to do such a job as this-- are you game?"
3705It was some time before he spoke, an''then he said,"How much longer you goin''to keep that child awake?"
3705Jabez fidgeted around a while, an''then he sez,"Are you goin''to try to catch the pinto?
3705Jabez looked at him about a minute to kind of get the drift of his remark, an''then he sez,"What do you mean by that?"
3705Just before she reached the house she turned an''calls:"You''ll get the pinto for me, wo n''t you, Happy?"
3705Just when things was clearin''off, I sez to him, usin''my biggest trump:"Spike,"sez I,"do you know what they say about you?"
3705Kids ought n''t to act so grown up at six, had they, Happy?"
3705My name is Happy Hawkins; what might I call you?"
3705Now how could you have evenings an''mornings an''grass an''fruit trees without sunshine?
3705Now where is my child?"
3705Now, how did this one get to be a younger son?"
3705Presently a soft, gentle voice sez,"What is it?"
3705Quiet?
3705Steep?
3705Still, I was n''t goin''to take sides without hearin''all the evidence, so I sez,"Is she healthy, Jabez?"
3705Talk about bein''game?
3705Talk about bein''handy?
3705The puncher reaches the washed- out railroad bridge five minutes before the train-- what do you call that?
3705The''was n''t no way to bluff her, so I said serious,"Well, what do you intend to do about it?"
3705Then I turned to the bar mop an''said,"Where''s that saddle an''bridle?"
3705Then an idea struck me:"But why do n''t you make a suit like her outside one?"
3705Then he sobered an''sez,"Is it your child?"
3705Want to take a ride?"
3705Was Jabez failin''--was he?
3705Was Piker or Denton, or whatever his name is, a gambler too?"
3705We started to walk to the house, an''I sez,"just what was your orders about these buckskins?"
3705Well, as soon as the mongrel cook had cussed himself clean an''dry, he yells at me,"Who in the hell are you an''what in the hell do you want?"
3705What about her?"
3705What are you gettin''at?"
3705What can you cook?"
3705What do ya think o''that for nerve?"
3705What do you say?"
3705What do you stand lookin''at me for?"
3705What do you think of that?"
3705What game did you say we was indulgin''in?"
3705What is business?
3705What on earth am I goin''to do with her?"
3705What on earth do you mean by bein''here?"
3705What seems to be wrong?"
3705What''ll you take for him?"
3705What''s got into you lately?"
3705What''s it about?"
3705What''s money for?
3705When I finally quit, the proprietor came up to me on a run an''sez,"Are you sure you have had all you wish?"
3705When we got upon the platform an''started to walk up- town Fatty sez to me,"What are you goin''to do to kill time now?"
3705Where did you hook up to that word''reckon''?"
3705Where is Daddy, Happy?"
3705Where is he?"
3705Where might your home be?"
3705Where you headin''for, K.C.?
3705Where''s my Daddy, an''are all the robbers gone?"
3705Who are you workin''for?"
3705Who is your Uncle?"
3705Why did n''t you face it right then?"
3705Why do n''t he tell me about her?
3705Why do n''t you tell it?"
3705Why do you suppose that is?"
3705Why does he allus turn me off when I ask about her?
3705Why?"
3705Will ya?"
3705Will you fight me again-- without weapons?"
3705Will you, or will you not, see that the arrangements are attended to?"
3705You do n''t reckon''at I''d leave this child just on your account, do ya?"
3705You remember Friar Tuck-- the one they call an Episcolopian?"
3705You wo n''t let''em bother me, will ya?
3705You-- you ai n''t Ralph Chester Stuart, are ya?"
3705is it really you?
3705sez Bill,"an''you say he knew about Alice LeMoyne?"
3705sez Hank Midders,"Happy what?"
3705sez Monody comein''to,"who''s Melisse?"
3705sez he, rushin''over an''shakin''my hand,"Still in business, Happy?"
3705what''s that?"
3705where are you?"
3705yells Jabez,"what do you mean by usin''such langwidge?
3705you call yourselves riders?
35146A lovely evening, is n''t it?
35146A row on the water?
35146About Vand murdering Huxham? 35146 About her interview?
35146After what?
35146Ah, so you recognised the bag when you tried to steal it from Mrs. Vand in your mother''s cottage?
35146All what?
35146Am I so like my father, then?
35146Am I then in the habit of murdering people?
35146And Mr. Pence''s statement?
35146And did my master get what he wanted?
35146And haunted,said the visitor in a thrilling whisper;"do you know of any sad legend connected with the Manor- house, Miss Ankers?"
35146And help her to escape?
35146And her son Luke?
35146And so invented the story of the epileptic fit?
35146And that was why the room was so upset?
35146And the money, master?
35146And what became of Edwin Lister?
35146And what do you think, aunt?
35146And what is left to me?
35146And why? 35146 And you accuse me of murdering your father?"
35146And you heard nothing?
35146And you will explain?
35146And your daughter, sir?
35146And your double?
35146Are you not hard yourself?
35146Are you not pleased to see me, Cyril?
35146Are you out of your senses?
35146Are you sure that it was a fit?
35146Are you sure,he added to Ward,"that the wound was made with this knife?"
35146Are you sure? 35146 Are you talking of the Vands?"
35146At what time?
35146Aunt, what do you think of Cyril?
35146Because I have fallen in love? 35146 Because I have not been to see you before?"
35146Bella, darling, do n''t you know me?
35146Bella, you have n''t many boxes?
35146Bella,Mrs. Coppersley screamed, and made for the door,"what do you mean?"
35146But Cyril,said Bella, as they drew near the cottage,"does it seem right for us to keep jewels that already have caused two murders?
35146But do you really think anyone can separate the spirit from the body?
35146But how can a blow do that?
35146But how did I come to pass as Captain Huxham''s daughter?
35146But if Mrs. Vand catches her?
35146But if my father is alive and has the jewels?
35146But on what evidence?
35146But surely you did not murder your own brother?
35146But surely you do not connect a harmless man, like Pence, with the crime?
35146But the British Government?
35146But what about Pence''s confession?
35146But what about your double?
35146But what had he to do with all this murder business?
35146But what has become of my father?
35146But what is it? 35146 But what will you do now?"
35146But what will you do?
35146But where are you going?
35146But who murdered my father?
35146But why should Mr. Lister kill my father?
35146But why?
35146But will she have the papers?
35146But with your occult powers, ca n''t you learn if my father is dead or alive?
35146But your expedition?
35146Ca n''t I come also to see her?
35146Ca n''t you get her out?
35146Ca n''t you get her out?
35146Ca n''t you tell?
35146Can you ask?
35146Can you prove his guilt?
35146Can you prove his innocence?
35146Can you prove this?
35146Can you swear to the truth of this wild statement? 35146 Can you tell me that she is not an accomplice after the fact?"
35146Could you have been happy in America knowing your husband to be a murderer?
35146Cyril Lister, you put an advertisement into several London papers a week ago?
35146Cyril, do you remember that the grey clothes worn by your father on that night aided me to make a mistake?
35146Cyril, has this matter anything to do with you?
35146Cyril, how can you when I love you so?
35146Cyril, why do you speak in that tone of your father?
35146Cyril, will you leave me? 35146 Cyril, you have been arranging this for some time?"
35146Dear, what does your aunt mean by treating you in this way?
35146Dearest and best,he kissed her ardently,"what have I done to deserve such perfect love?
35146Did Mr. Pence come to see my father?
35146Did he ever tell you that?
35146Did my master and Captain Huxham quarrel?
35146Did my master see Captain Huxham?
35146Did n''t you hear? 35146 Did not the black man tell you?"
35146Did you ever meet Mr. Lister before?
35146Did you ever see this man before?
35146Did you know that the tea was drugged?
35146Did you listen?
35146Did you not see your brother?
35146Did you notice if it was locked in the morning?
35146Did you see all you spoke of, or did you make up some?
35146Did you see anyone about?
35146Did you tell Inglis about the jewels?
35146Did you tell the truth in your trance last night?
35146Did you?
35146Did your father intend murder?
35146Did_ you_ see anyone?
35146Do I ever do anything else?
35146Do n''t you believe that I killed Jabez?
35146Do n''t you believe that your father has been murdered?
35146Do you accuse me of murdering father?
35146Do you believe in such rubbish?
35146Do you believe that?
35146Do you hear what this woman says?
35146Do you hear?
35146Do you know the Lister family then?
35146Do you know what you are, Aunt Rosamund?
35146Do you know, Durgo, that you are something of a puzzle to me?
35146Do you mean to say that Mr. Lister----"Mr. Lister? 35146 Do you mean to say that my father has left everything to you?"
35146Do you mean to say that the deceased planted the corn as a protection against some one coming on him unawares?
35146Do you mean to say that you would marry a man about whom you know nothing?
35146Do you not think that I would give the world to believe him innocent? 35146 Do you remember in Macbeth, Cyril Lister, of the night of Duncan''s murder?"
35146Do you suspect him?
35146Do you think Durgo himself is guilty?
35146Do you think I can do so?
35146Do you think she is dead there?
35146Do you think your father has the jewels, Cyril?
35146Does she?
35146Does this belong to your late brother?
35146Drugged, miss?
35146Durgo,Bella spoke in an alarmed tone,"you wo n''t hurt them?"
35146Either of the blokes? 35146 Father"--Bella stopped directly before the front door of the manor- house--"why do you hate Cyril?
35146For what reason?
35146Give you money to bring lawsuits against me?
35146Had you any reason to believe that deceased expected to be murdered?
35146Had you any such intention?
35146Had you not better return to the concert, Mr. Pence? 35146 Have I not pleased you, master?"
35146Have you any more questions to ask me?
35146Have you come to persecute me again?
35146Have you got those papers?
35146Have you not seen him since?
35146Have you the money?
35146He is raving?
35146He never came out?
35146Here, you,said Lister sharply,"what have you been saying to Miss Huxham?
35146How are we going to gain possession of them?
35146How are we to get across, Cyril?
35146How can I do that?
35146How can I love a woman who doubts me? 35146 How can I tell you when I do not even know his name?"
35146How can I?
35146How can my father hate a man he has never even seen?
35146How can you say that, when you lately intimated that Mr. Lister-- if it_ was_ Mr. Lister, which I doubt-- had come to see me?
35146How dare you linger here?
35146How dare you say that?
35146How dare you, Bella?
35146How did she lose them?
35146How did they pass out of Huxham''s possession?
35146How did you catch him?
35146How did you intend to escape?
35146How did you learn about the jewels and Maxwell Faith?
35146How did you manage all that?
35146How do you know that I have anything to do with the black man?
35146How do you know that she is dead and gone?
35146How do you know that such a chest exists or is in the Manor- house?
35146How do you know?
35146How do you know?
35146How do you know?
35146How much did Luke tell you?
35146How should I know?
35146How so?
35146How the devil can we get across here?
35146How was the man dressed?
35146How will Mrs. Tunks know the chest?
35146I am somewhat surprised, Mr. Pence,she replied demurely,"are you not making a mistake?"
35146I drug your tea? 35146 I have run all the way, and-- who are these?"
35146I know of no jewels,said Vand steadily;"do you, Rosamund?"
35146I love you very dearly, as you know; but----"How can I tell that you love me dearly?
35146I see what?
35146I see, and where will you be?
35146I wonder why my aunt hates me so?
35146If I do what will happen, governor?
35146If he did not, who did?
35146If so where did Captain, Huxham hide the body?
35146If so, would she not have accused me to my face when I turned her out of the house?
35146If that is so, he will write to me,commented the negro; he paused, and then asked abruptly,"If you learn that your father is guilty?"
35146If the man is alive, why does n''t he turn up?
35146If what?
35146If you''re not my master, Edwin Lister,he added, addressing himself to the young man,"who are you, sir?"
35146Ill?
35146In heaven''s name, why?
35146In what way, captain?
35146In what way, pray?
35146In what way?
35146In what way?
35146In what way?
35146In what?
35146Is Durgo dead?
35146Is Dutton on guard?
35146Is it anyone I know?
35146Is it really haunted?
35146Is that the only reason that you have asked Granny here?
35146Is that why Mrs. Tunks addressed you as master?
35146Is that why Mrs. Tunks calls you master?
35146Is that you, Inspector Inglis?
35146Is this young gentleman called Lister?
35146It is a small sum, but----"One hundred pounds in gold, perhaps?
35146It is the truth,she insisted quietly;"why shirk obvious facts?
35146Jabez-- is he Jabez?
35146Know what? 35146 Knows what?"
35146Like spiritualists?
35146Loot what?
35146Luke--Durgo nodded towards the inner room in his turn--"Luke knows that Vand murdered Huxham?"
35146Make her will-- in whose favour?
35146May I ask why you made use of the secret passages?
35146Mean? 35146 Missy"--Durgo turned to the girl--"can you work that search- light?"
35146Mr. Lister your master?
35146Murder you also?
35146My dear, am I sure that the hair grows on my head? 35146 My dearest, what is the matter?"
35146My innocence of what, in heaven''s name?
35146My-- father-- said-- that?
35146No, I never believed, and yet----"And yet what?
35146No,she replied, with unnecessary loudness;"how could I see anyone when I was drugged?"
35146Not all,said the Coroner,"was the front door locked?"
35146Now it is my turn to ask you what you mean?
35146Now then, my man, will you confess all that you saw?
35146Of what?
35146Of whom are you talking?
35146Oh--Durgo glanced from one to the other--"so Miss Huxham has told you?"
35146Oh, Cyril,said the girl, awestruck,"did Mrs. Vand steal them?"
35146Oh, I''m a liar, am I?
35146Oh, so you desire to marry Henry Vand?
35146Oh, what can we do?
35146Oh, will y''?
35146Oh, y''do, do y''?
35146Oh,sneered his wife,"you admit then that it is rubbish?"
35146On what charge do you arrest me?
35146Other people?
35146Perhaps Captain Huxham knows where my master is?
35146Respectable, eh?
35146Save us, Mr. Pence, what''s wrong?
35146Saw me what?
35146Saw me-- enter this house? 35146 See what?"
35146She must have read the first set of papers?
35146Sleep? 35146 So you knew before Vand took you to the Manor- house for this trance, that he had murdered Huxham?"
35146So you say; but where is the body?
35146Supposed to be?
35146Supposing you find Mr. Lister, and learn that he has not the jewels?
35146Tell me what he said?
35146Tell us shortly what you have discovered, Durgo?
35146Tell what?
35146That half- baked psalm- singer? 35146 That negro?
35146That''s my own dear boy,said the girl, kissing him,"and now what about the inquest?"
35146The dead?
35146The man was of my height?
35146The man you mistook for Mr. Lister was his father,she said quietly;"did you not see him in the room?"
35146The matter of the murder?
35146The son of a king?
35146Then it_ was_ you?
35146Then my father knew about this chest also?
35146Then the jewels really belong to you, Bella?
35146Then this Lister man is the murderer of Huxham?
35146Then you accuse me of murder?
35146Then you are going to marry that wastrel?
35146Then you have been afraid?
35146Then you know?
35146Then you really and truly love me?
35146Then you still intend to we d that son of Belial, overflowing with insolence and wine?
35146Then you were in the room on that night?
35146They have left the house,muttered Cyril, thrusting his pipe into his pocket;"what''s to be done now?"
35146They wo n''t put the whole story in the papers, Cyril?
35146Tunks, were you about the house last night?
35146Unpleasant? 35146 Until when, Cyril?"
35146Was he so like me, then?
35146Was his wife with him?
35146Was not this Mr. Lister your father?
35146Was there another man with Huxham before Vand came?
35146Was there blood on the knife?
35146Was your brother ever in Africa on the West Coast?
35146We discussed all this before,she said coldly,"did you invite me here to ask me to defend myself again?"
35146Well, and what do you make of the business?
35146Well, then, if my master, your father, is alive and has the jewels, why does he not write to me or to you? 35146 Well?"
35146What about me?
35146What am I to do?
35146What are the initials?
35146What are they doing?
35146What are you about to do, Cyril?
35146What are you talking about, lovey? 35146 What became of Mr. Pence meanwhile?"
35146What belief?
35146What can have become of him?
35146What can we do?
35146What can we do?
35146What did I say?
35146What did he do?
35146What did you do, Tunks? 35146 What did you do?"
35146What did you see?
35146What do I care, deary?
35146What do I care?
35146What do you know of this murder?
35146What do you make out of that?
35146What do you mean exactly?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you mean?
35146What do you say, Pence?
35146What do you say?
35146What do you think has become of him?
35146What do you think of it all, Cyril?
35146What do you want us to do?
35146What does he say, Cyril?
35146What does he say?
35146What does it all mean, dear?
35146What does it all mean?
35146What does this mean?
35146What does this mean?
35146What for?
35146What has that got to do with it?
35146What have you to say about this matter, Miss Huxham?
35146What is all gone?
35146What is it, missy?
35146What is it? 35146 What is it?"
35146What is it?
35146What is it?
35146What is that?
35146What is the matter with your name?
35146What is the matter?
35146What is the matter?
35146What is the use of saying that? 35146 What is the use of this old fool?"
35146What is to be done, master?
35146What money?
35146What more, in God''s name?
35146What more?
35146What of that? 35146 What papers?"
35146What signal?
35146What the devil are you talking about?
35146What the devil did you do that for?
35146What time did you fall under the influence of the opiate, Miss Huxham?
35146What time was that?
35146What took place between my father and you? 35146 What took place exactly?"
35146What will Mr. Lister say to your throwing away kisses on me?
35146What will you do?
35146What''s that? 35146 What''s the matter with Tunks?"
35146What''s to be done now, inspector?
35146What-- what do you know of my name?
35146What?
35146What?
35146What?
35146When are they going?
35146When did you go?
35146When did you see your master last?
35146When did you tell the police to come? 35146 When will you explain?"
35146When? 35146 Where are they?
35146Where are they?
35146Where did you get those papers?
35146Where did you go?
35146Where did you learn those terms?
35146Where has he been all this time?
35146Where have you come from, deary?
35146Where have you come from, miss?
35146Where is Luke Tunks?
35146Where is he now?
35146Where is my master?
35146Where is my master?
35146Where to, Aunt Rosamund?
35146Where to?
35146Where was the body of my father?
35146Where were you last night?
35146Who broke it?
35146Who can have set it on fire?
35146Who is this other man?
35146Who is this?
35146Who is waiting?
35146Who is watching your grandson?
35146Who says that it is?
35146Who should know but I, who am of the gentle Romany? 35146 Who told you all this?"
35146Who was the man then?
35146Who will prevent me?
35146Whose are these?
35146Why are you not weeping in your chamber?
35146Why did he hate him?
35146Why did n''t Dora tell me?
35146Why did n''t you come for me before?
35146Why did n''t you let me question her?
35146Why did n''t you warn the police?
35146Why did you change the conclusion of your sentence?
35146Why did you do that?
35146Why did you fly?
35146Why did you tell such a lie?
35146Why did your father drug you?
35146Why did your father require one thousand pounds?
35146Why do you call it a lie? 35146 Why do you call me Miss Faith?"
35146Why do you dislike me, Miss Huxham?
35146Why do you hate me so?
35146Why do you say that?
35146Why do you talk in this silly way? 35146 Why do you talk to me of the crystal, Mrs. Tunks?
35146Why have you left your grandson?
35146Why have you stripped to the buff?
35146Why is it impossible?
35146Why not? 35146 Why not?"
35146Why not?
35146Why secretly?
35146Why should I drug your tea, Bella? 35146 Why should I find myself in an unpleasant position?"
35146Why should I murder my own dear brother?
35146Why should I not?
35146Why should Pence tell a lie about his fall?
35146Why should he?
35146Why should it be far distant?
35146Why, when he hates me so?
35146Why, you do n''t mean to say that she loves Pence?
35146Why? 35146 Why?
35146Why?
35146Why?
35146Why?
35146Will I be arrested?
35146Will the truth ever be known?
35146Will you be ready to come with me to London to- morrow?
35146Will you hold your tongue? 35146 Will you not be seated?"
35146Will you speak?
35146Will you tell him about your father?
35146Wo n''t you come in, lovey?
35146Would you have done so, seeing that you did not believe that the papers existed?
35146Would you have done so?
35146Would you love me if you knew of my troubles?
35146Would you mind explaining?
35146Yes; who are you?
35146Yet, after all,she said reluctantly,"how did Granny come to know about the jewels?"
35146You accuse me of murdering your father?
35146You are not serious?
35146You ask me to take such a message, sister?
35146You asked him to?
35146You asked me to be quiet, so that you could think,he remarked lazily;"may I ask what you have been considering?"
35146You ca n''t say if this knife belonged to him?
35146You do not know?
35146You have forgiven me, have you not?
35146You have some idea?
35146You heard that Mr. and Mrs. Vand intend to fly to- night?
35146You know my father''s name also?
35146You made capital out of this?
35146You saw the face?
35146You say that I am guilty?
35146You understand that?
35146You will make no terms?
35146You''ll be glad of that, Bella?
35146You''ll cure him, master, wo n''t you?
35146You-- you-- you went to the funeral?
35146You?
35146Your brother''s daughter will inherit this----"Oh, will she?
35146Your house?
35146Your senses were quite clear?
35146Accept me as your husband, or----""Or what?"
35146All I ask is, if you know where your respected client is?"
35146Am I likely to stab an old man, and then rob him?"
35146And I shall, unless----""Unless what?"
35146And if my father killed your father, how can we marry?"
35146And this man-- Bella asked herself the question earnestly-- was this man Edwin Lister?
35146Anything more I can tell you, master?"
35146Bella had regretted her employment of his services, but what else could she do when so much was at stake?
35146Bella"--he turned suddenly--"if it is proved that my father is alive, will you still marry me?
35146Bella''s voice leaped an octave;"you-- you-- murder Cyril?"
35146Bella, you have not touched anything, have you?"
35146Besides, in any case, she would have to confess to Cyril, so why not now?
35146But I saw his poor, pale, peaked face, and----""Does he look ill?"
35146But are you connected in any way with the matter?"
35146But for what purpose?"
35146But he had n''t guessed I was absent, and so----""Did you see a light under the study door when passing through the hall?"
35146But how could she prove his innocence?
35146But how did my father learn the whereabouts of Captain Huxham?"
35146But if anyone else had seen him?
35146But if such is the case, and your marriage is an impossibility, why not come with us on our expedition to the Hinterland of Nigeria?
35146But it was strange that he should tell Pence-- why, what is the matter?"
35146But jewels?
35146But now that you understand the position, will you work with me?"
35146But what do you mean by my using the light as a pointer?"
35146But what is to be done?"
35146But when would that explanation be made?
35146But where is my master, Edwin Lister?"
35146But whose daughter am I?"
35146But"--Cyril shrugged his shoulders--"who can tell the truth?"
35146By the way"--Bella looked sharply at the preacher--"are we friends?"
35146By the way, Cyril, what about Durgo''s things?"
35146By the way, where did your father get them?"
35146By you?"
35146Ca n''t you see?"
35146Can you refuse me?
35146Could Lister be the culprit, after all?
35146Cyril, now thoroughly roused, advanced and seized her wrists in no gentle grasp,"are you crazy, talking in this way?"
35146Did I, or did I not?"
35146Did Lister''s father kill Captain Huxham?"
35146Did Mrs. Vand call to tell you this?"
35146Did he speak truly when he stated that Miss Huxham was not the captain''s daughter?"
35146Did she see the papers?"
35146Do n''t you hear me?
35146Do n''t you understand, Bella?
35146Do you agree?"
35146Do you hear?"
35146Do you know why he did so, Aunt Rosamund?"
35146Do you think she would have done so unless I had controlled her?
35146Does he think that I am a child, to submit to his tyranny?"
35146Durgo spoke softly in her ear:"Are you free?"
35146Durgo, you loved my father?"
35146Had Jabez really jewels?"
35146Has your grandson gone?"
35146Have you any brandy?"
35146Have you any right to take them?"
35146Have you had any answer?"
35146He consented, but only when he heard that you loved this man who----""You told him that?"
35146He interrupted my meeting with my future husband----""Who is he, if I may ask?"
35146How can you lie to me?"
35146How comes an African sacrificial knife here?"
35146How could it when the clouds which environed her were so densely black?
35146How could such a son as Cyril Lister respect or love such a parent as Edwin of the same name?
35146How dare you spend my money on silver frames?"
35146How did the assassin escape?
35146How did you find out?"
35146How do you know?"
35146How do you know?"
35146Hullo, what''s this?"
35146I called him master as a title of honour because I loved him, so why should I not say Edwin Lister?"
35146I knew that on my account you had quarrelled with my father, so what could I think but that you had killed him?
35146I wonder where they are going?
35146If nothing serious had taken place between Cyril and her father on the night in question, why had Lister gone away?
35146Is it not beautiful, Miss Huxham?"
35146Is she still at the hut?"
35146It was then that she asked a leading question:"Do you think that what Mr. Pence says is true?"
35146Lister?"
35146Marry me, and let us fly to far lands, and----""I thought you were desperately poor,"said Bella, suspiciously;"where did you get the money?"
35146Meanwhile, what will you do?"
35146Mr. Lister"--he brought his mouth very close to the young man''s ear and spoke in a whisper--"is what that nigger told me quite true?"
35146My father, I understand, came down here to ask Captain Huxham for certain jewels--""Those you showed me, sir?"
35146Oh, dear Cyril, what should I do if I lost you?"
35146Oh, who can have killed him?"
35146Oh, why not?"
35146Oh, you cruel- hearted girl: do you call him that?"
35146Pence?"
35146Pence?"
35146Pence?"
35146Pence?"
35146Pence?"
35146Perhaps if I had seen him in broad daylight I might have recognised my mistake unless-- oh, Cyril, could it have been your ghost?"
35146Perhaps you can tell me who is the assassin?"
35146Perhaps, after all, she was mistaken, and-- and--"You can prove your innocence?"
35146Save us, Bella, what do you mean?"
35146She made a will in favour of Miss Isabella Faith----""Faith?
35146Still anxious to gain time for further consideration, he remarked once more,"So''y''want t''merry m''gel, Bella, Mr. Pence?
35146Tell me, my good gentleman, what did I say?"
35146That Lister person must have seen your father, and, as they were not on good terms--""How do you know that they were not?"
35146Then you----""Is it a woman?"
35146To- morrow at nine o''clock let us start off with your boxes----""And Dora?"
35146Vand?"
35146Vand?"
35146We seem to be involved in a web through which we can not break?
35146Well?"
35146What did I say?
35146What do you mean by drugged?"
35146What do you mean?"
35146What do you mean?"
35146What do you mean?"
35146What has she to do with the matter?"
35146What have you against his name?"
35146What if, after all, Cyril had been the visitor of a fortnight since?
35146What says Isaiah?"
35146What took place?"
35146What will you do, Miss Huxham?
35146What''s become of Granny Tunks, Cyril?
35146What''s come to you, Bella?
35146What''s the matter?"
35146What''s the time?
35146When?"
35146Where are Durgo and Henry to be buried?"
35146Where are my jewels?"
35146Where is he?"
35146Where is he?"
35146Where is she?
35146Where?
35146Who are you to behave like this, I should like to know?"
35146Who drugged you?"
35146Who is this person?"
35146Who told you?"
35146Who told you?"
35146Who was that person?
35146Why did n''t you give the alarm?"
35146Why do n''t you do what you say instead of trying to frighten me with stage thunder?"
35146Why do you ask?"
35146Why do you ask?"
35146Why do you hate me?"
35146Why not?
35146Why should I forget?"
35146Why were you drugged?
35146Why?"
35146Will you both help?"
35146Will you come?
35146Will you give up those papers, or must I wring your neck?"
35146Will you help?"
35146Would I have spoken to the man had I not believed him to be you?"
35146Would a man be like this in your sober England?"
35146Y''love Bella, es I take it?"
35146Yes, for me, but----""But I might have sneaked back, I suppose you mean?"
35146You are doubtless aware of her whereabouts?"
35146You can say this to me-- to me, of all people?"
35146You did n''t come back, Tunks?"
35146You grant that?"
35146You know how rich the Northern part of Africa was in the time of the Romans?"
35146You know that I am supposed to be Captain Huxham''s daughter?"
35146You marry Bella?
35146You say that Miss Huxham''s guess is correct?"
35146You will shake hands, will you not?"
35146Your father wishes it, so why not, when I love you so deeply?
35146are you sure?"
35146asked Bella, bending her brows like an empress,"what is it?"
35146asked Cyril anxiously;"go with Bella?"
35146asked Inglis;"and if dead, why ca n''t we find his body?"
35146cried Silas vehemently, spreading his hands across his lean, agitated face,"how dare you ask such a thing?"
35146have not our late troubles shown you that we must judge no one?
35146she cried out shrilly,"will you murder me also?"
35146understand what?"
35146was that the money you mentioned?"
35146what has happened?"
35146what is it?"
35146what is it?"
35146what''s come to you?
35146what''s that?
35146where are they?"
35146why?
35146why?"
49754And is there anything else I can show you? 49754 As I understand it, you feed into the machine''s memories, basic plots, factual data, conversational variants, and they do the rest?"
49754But which magazine, sir? 49754 But_ what_, man?
49754Do your machines do nothing but write new material?
49754Have you forgotten,said Carre,"that I am a Writer?
49754How do you stand the noise?
49754Identification, please?
49754Is something wrong, Commissioner?
49754Is this what you were trying to tell me, Herbert?
49754John, do n''t you read the magazines any more?
49754Or are you just trying to sabotage my project with a deliberate misstatement?
49754Pleased? 49754 The story does n''t seem to you-- unhealthy?"
49754Tomorrow morning?
49754Violence? 49754 Well,"said Carre,"perhaps you might let me have some of your current manuscripts, just for tonight?
49754Why do n''t you use Silent Typers?
49754Wonder how that happened?
49754Would you like this sheet, as a memento? 49754 Your name, please, and your business?"
49754And I''m faced with a difficult decision: shall we employ Writers, or use Script- Lab?
49754And, half an hour later,"How did it happen?"
49754Are n''t you afraid of a biased report?"
49754Are they working you too hard?
49754But if they can really write it just as well, why not?
49754But what do you think of their output?
49754Can you do as well?"
49754Check?"
49754Class behind me at college, majored in electronics?
49754Correct?"
49754Could he make a plot out of this incident of the crippled boy?
49754Do the machines use much current?"
49754Do you remember Joan of Arc?
49754Do you?"
49754Great Gamma, do you mean personal threats?"
49754Have you seen any of it?"
49754How about your own stuff?"
49754How are things?"
49754How does it compare with the work of the Writers?"
49754How on earth is society to exist if it feels only the rational emotions?
49754Is that clear?"
49754It''s on the grim side, I suppose, but is n''t most modern fiction a little grim?
49754Mark Twain''s version?
49754Or are you just faced with the unpleasant job of firing an old friend?
49754Right?"
49754That was your doctoral thesis, I believe?"
49754WHAT DO YOU READ?
49754What did you think of Script- Lab?"
49754What explains the body- guards?
49754What had possessed the woman?
49754What machine could have written''Alice''?"
49754What principle do they work on?"
49754Why bother with human writers when the machines did the job so much faster and better?
49754Would you like to see?"
49754Would you like to see?"
49754You mean_ all_ literature will be machine- made from now on?"
49754You remember Hartridge, do n''t you?
38702A bribe to a servant?
38702A duty?
38702All the world loves a lover-- even I----"Yes-- yes----"If I could be sure that you loved----"You?
38702Am I late?
38702Am I right, Aurora?
38702Am I? 38702 An artist?
38702And Aurora?
38702And Louis?
38702And do n''t you ever go to the Club?
38702And do you always smudge your face?
38702And had Arnim know what we were driving for? 38702 And have Geltman putting you in jail?"
38702And if I do n''t forgive you?
38702And that?
38702And the letters-- you never even read them?
38702And then?
38702And what shall I write?
38702And who''ll pay for the lost balls?
38702And you?
38702Are n''t you getting a little tired of putting the world in order?
38702Are n''t you happy, Mort?
38702Are n''t you tired of making opportunities for other people?
38702Are they? 38702 Are you happy, Patty?"
38702Are you happy?
38702Are you hungry?
38702Are you ill?
38702Are you really?
38702Are you sure?
38702Are you sure?
38702Are you the owner of this yacht?
38702Bored as ever, Crabb?
38702But how about the Cross- Country Cup?
38702But how can you do such a thing,she cried,"without a reason-- without any excuse?
38702But how could such a thing happen? 38702 But who----?
38702But your future?
38702But your service?
38702Ca n''t a fellow ever get any higher?
38702Ca n''t you forgive?
38702Can I get you anything, sir?
38702Can you blame me? 38702 Can you ever forgive me, Mort?"
38702Can you get me--?
38702Candidly, do you feel in any better position to judge me now than you did before----"Before the Assembly?
38702Could you not learn to care a little?
38702Did I?
38702Did n''t what?
38702Did n''t you? 38702 Did you ever happen to drink any of Geltman''s beer?"
38702Did you get it, Mort?
38702Did you ring, sir?
38702Did you see''em? 38702 Do I win the Cup?"
38702Do n''t boast, worse vagabonds than you have been tamed-- come now, what shall she be-- blonde or brunette?
38702Do n''t you understand? 38702 Do we?"
38702Do you know,he said, calmly,"that you''ve been out there since ten?
38702Do you really mean it, Patty?
38702Do you think it kind-- wise to speak of this now?
38702Do you think, if by some chance you were enabled to give the Secretary of State this information, you''d better your condition?
38702Does it?
38702Fire Island,he cried,"and this--"as memory came back with a horrible rush--"what day is this?"
38702For long?
38702H-- m. Why all the mystery? 38702 Have n''t you ever wondered how the world would get on without you?"
38702Have you met him?
38702Have you not heard?
38702Have you thought I might take that with me, too?
38702He''s a very, very old friend of yours, is n''t he, Patty?
38702Heard what, Madame?
38702Here? 38702 How about----?"
38702How can I be sure?
38702How can you know?
38702How could I have done so?
38702How could I know you did?
38702How could you be so hard-- so-- so cruel?
38702How did you know, Patty, it was to be Steve?
38702How do you do?
38702How do you know this?
38702How do you know?
38702How do you like it, Steve?
38702How much of a run is it to the coast?
38702How much-- three thousand?
38702How shocking, and Miss Wharton is not dreadful?
38702How?
38702I beg pardon,he repeated,"but is n''t this yours?"
38702I beg pardon,he was saying quizzically,"but is n''t this yours?"
38702I know I ought to be called a beggar on horseback, because I really have ridden rather-- rather fast this winter----"Two thousand?
38702I say, my man,began the brewer again,"did you ever drink any of Geltman''s beer?"
38702I say, my man,he said,"are you from New York?"
38702I say, old man,he said, smiling,"had n''t you better get into some clothes?"
38702I should n''t say that-- only----"What?
38702I was thinking that perhaps if he''d had a little luck----"He might have come back to you?
38702I wonder,slowly,"why you speak of my_ beaux yeux_?"
38702I''ll do whatever you ask me----"Will you marry me next month?
38702I''m John Doe-- what can I do for you?
38702I''m sure of that, but----"But what?
38702I? 38702 I?
38702If I''m Otto Fehrenbach how is it that the letters C. G. are marked in my hand?
38702In pajamas, sir?
38702In the meantime----"Wo n''t you give me an answer?
38702Is he apt to be there all day?
38702Is it true you''re going to marry McLemore?
38702Is n''t Nick Hollingsworth an intimate friend of yours?
38702Is n''t he splendid?
38702Is n''t it punishment enough for it all to end like this,he went on,"without making it seem as though I were worse than I am?
38702Is n''t my word enough?
38702Is n''t she? 38702 Is n''t there any other way?"
38702Is n''t there any way, Crowthers?
38702Is n''t there anything a fellow-- even a consular clerk-- could do to win promotion in this service?
38702Is there anything you_ ca n''t_ get me? 38702 It looks so, does n''t it?"
38702It''s Crabb, is n''t it? 38702 It''s quite sad, is n''t it?
38702It''s really not Victorian, is it?
38702It''s very inconsiderate of her, is n''t it?
38702It''s very-- un-- er-- unprofessional-- isn''t it?
38702Like a husband?
38702Madame-- what do you mean?
38702Me?
38702Miss Darrow,he asked,"you know Mr. Crabb?
38702Monsieur,she asked,"what will you say to her?"
38702Must one always pay such a price to inspiration?
38702Must you go, Monsieur? 38702 My dear Miss Wharton,"he smiled,"how could I know what you were like-- er-- if I''d never seen you?"
38702Not in the least-- can she, Louis?
38702Oh, is that all?
38702Only do n''t you think-- isn''t that really what I''m here for?
38702Or Napoleon?
38702Patricia, you mean? 38702 Patty,"he was saying,"do n''t you know me?
38702Philip Burnett, I wonder if you''re good? 38702 Really,"she answered sweetly,"how so?"
38702Really? 38702 Sandy Hook, sir?"
38702Shall I be getting you something, sir?
38702She did not know?
38702She_ is_ pretty, is n''t she?
38702So you''ve been out and doing in the world, after all?
38702So you_ did_ mean it?
38702Steve!--how could you?
38702Stranded, Crabb? 38702 That I am ill-- that I----""How will that help either you or her?"
38702That will do, Dick, you may go inside,and then rather quizzically:"You wished to see Mr.--er-- Mr.--Doe?
38702That''s your decision-- your final decision?
38702Then I ca n''t dismay you-- either of you?
38702Then why do we rest so often? 38702 Then you do hope?"
38702Then you really did n''t wish to meet me? 38702 Then,"eagerly,"you are n''t?"
38702There wo n''t be any more Bachelors''Cups, then?
38702To- night?
38702Um-- er-- how much, Patty? 38702 W- who?"
38702Well, why not go to Tiffany''s? 38702 Well-- what?"
38702Well?
38702What are your plans, Ross? 38702 What can I do?
38702What can he think of me? 38702 What do you care, Steve, as long as you''re making history?"
38702What do you mean?
38702What do you say if we begin making opportunities for each other?
38702What does that matter?
38702What does this outrage mean?
38702What is it, Patty? 38702 What is it?"
38702What is it?
38702What is the meaning of this outrage?
38702What is the use, Crabb?
38702What kind of a tramp would I be if I was n''t hungry?
38702What on earth are you talking about?
38702What on earth is there to prevent my sailing off and leaving you?
38702What proofs have you?
38702What should it look like?
38702What then, Madame?
38702What was it?
38702What''s up now? 38702 What, please?"
38702What?
38702What?
38702When shall we start?
38702Where to now, sir?
38702Who ever heard of a printer being adorable? 38702 Who is Agatha?"
38702Who is he?
38702Who? 38702 Why do you ask?"
38702Why do you marry Aurora then?
38702Why do you say that?
38702Why is it then that I find you so very much more attractive now that I''ve found the_ Blue Wing_?
38702Why is it,she asked, after her first enthusiasm,"that the work of the artist so seldom suggests its creator''s personality?"
38702Why not?
38702Why not?
38702Why not?
38702Why not?
38702Why should n''t I be honest with you? 38702 Why should n''t I?"
38702Why? 38702 Will I do?"
38702Will you behave yourself?
38702Will you coach me?
38702Will you forgive me?
38702Will you give me your word?
38702Will you let me pass?
38702Will you please tell me your name?
38702Will you pour it? 38702 Will you tell me,"he asked,"who-- no, do n''t look now-- the girl in the black spangly dress is?"
38702With an anise- seed bag?
38702Wo n''t you answer me, Aurora?
38702Wo n''t you answer me?
38702Wo n''t you come over?
38702Wo n''t you forgive me and take me in?
38702Wo n''t you prove it?
38702Wo n''t you tell me,said the girl at last,"about that dinner?
38702Wo n''t you-- won''t you, Millicent, dear?
38702Would I not have heard this dreadful thing, Madame? 38702 Would you have it otherwise?"
38702Would you mind,said the brewer,"telling me how I came aboard your boat?"
38702Yes, but I fail to see----"Will you deny it?
38702You always get your way in the end, do n''t you?
38702You are not cold?
38702You found out these things to- day?
38702You hardly look the poet, Mr. Burnett-- you do n''t mind my saying so?
38702You mean-- did I arrange it?
38702You think I would have married you for your money?
38702You will permit me?
38702You''ll be out on Saturday as usual, wo n''t you, Steve?
38702You''ll let me go here, wo n''t you? 38702 You''ll write him, Patty, wo n''t you?"
38702You''re everything I can hope for-- and yet----"And yet?
38702You''re going?
38702A hat bill or an opera cloak?
38702A thousand?
38702About the parasol last summer-- did you forget it, really-- or-- or-- just leave it?"
38702And after that"--Mortimer Crabb stopped again and blinked quizzically at the fire--"hadn''t we better keep your engagement-- with Madame Jacquard?"
38702And if so, did the soul of Fehrenbach occupy_ his_ body?
38702And the yacht, too?
38702And then with a sudden and mystifying change of manner,"Do you know why he always wears a crimson vest?"
38702And then, after a pause, with all the seriousness in the world:"And are n''t you going to?"
38702And then, with the suspicion of a smile,"Shall I make a check to your order?"
38702And then:"The face is of the East-- the Slav-- did you choose her for that character?"
38702And who was that with him-- Mortimer Crabb?
38702And yet why should he have?
38702Are you going to the Inghams?
38702At the breakfast table?
38702Besides, what can I do with that girl for three hours?"
38702Burnett?"
38702But how can I?"
38702But is n''t it anything to take your place in the world?
38702But whom?
38702Ca n''t you remember coming up the gangway with Captain Weckerly?"
38702Ca n''t you see?
38702Ca n''t you tell a fellow?"
38702Ca n''t you tell a fellow?"
38702Ca n''t you understand that?"
38702Can you doubt me?
38702Can you forgive me?"
38702Can you not see that the whole thing is a terrible mistake?
38702Can you walk?
38702Could he be young and handsome as well as gifted?
38702Could he have been mistaken?
38702Could she never be free from this inevitable man?
38702Crabb felt the color rise to his temples and heard the young bud at his side saying:"What is it, Mr. Crabb?
38702Crabb?"
38702Crabb?"
38702Crabb?"
38702Did n''t you really ask Mrs. Hollingsworth to send you in with me?"
38702Did you ever see fish take the bait better?
38702Did you see''em?"
38702Do n''t you know that if this was to get abroad, it would hurt your business?"
38702Do n''t you understand?"
38702Do you think you could trust me?"
38702Doe?"
38702Does four years make such a difference?"
38702Had he been married, and was this--?
38702Had she really forgotten the parasol after all?
38702Had she really forgotten the parasol?
38702Has it occurred to you that perhaps she may hope for a somewhat different relation between you?"
38702Have n''t you met her?"
38702Have you a week to spare?
38702Have you dropped from heaven, man?"
38702Have you ever posed, Miss Darrow?"
38702Have you stopped seeking opportunities?"
38702He''s a very nice fellow but-- but I''ll be very unhappy----""Will you?
38702He''s neglecting Aurora shamefully----""It_ is_ careless of him, is n''t it?"
38702Her letters?
38702Honestly?
38702How about a cruise on the_ Blue Wing_?
38702How can I be-- now?
38702How can I expiate?"
38702How could he expect her?
38702How could one ever be tired making adagios in color?
38702How could these letters have fallen into the hands of a stranger?
38702How could this villainous Doe have guessed her identity?
38702How did you know I did n''t wish to meet you?"
38702How had it all happened?
38702How had this odious Doe----?
38702How long had he been lying in the bunk?
38702I''m not going to let you marry that fellow or anybody else-- do you understand?"
38702I''ve skinned the one and been skinned by the other-- to what end?"
38702If I''m respectable why should n''t you have cared to meet me?"
38702If not, what wild plan had entered his head?
38702Is Frederick here?"
38702Is it not so?
38702Is it to chance that I''m indebted for the-- the-- honor of your society?"
38702Is n''t it restful here?"
38702Is n''t that enough?"
38702Is n''t there any chance?"
38702It will be dark and you''re going to lose your way----""How do you know I am?"
38702It''s only your husband----""Oh, how could you, Mort?"
38702Look in my clothes, my handkerchiefs, my linen, you will see the monogram or initials C. G. Will not that be enough to satisfy you?"
38702Meetings in the Park?
38702Mort, could n''t you have dropped a little sand in his bearings?"
38702Mr. John Doe?
38702Mrs. Crabb?
38702No-- what is it?"
38702Now?"
38702Of course you know that, do n''t you?
38702Oh, we''ve planned that already, have n''t we, Louis?"
38702Or had she-- not forgotten it?
38702Or were they all mad together?
38702Or were they?
38702Politics?"
38702Rather a nice balance, do n''t you think?"
38702She arose and breathlessly asked,"What_ can_ I do?
38702She felt tempted to throw all else to the winds and make a full confession-- of what?
38702She paused a moment, then broke in,"Forgive me, wo n''t you?
38702Soon?"
38702Tell me, wo n''t you?
38702That a blow he had received in falling had turned his mind, and that his soul had migrated to the body of the hated Fehrenbach?
38702The fine frenzy is lacking, Mr. Burnett-- isn''t it so?"
38702Then, how did we happen to meet?"
38702This time the man questioned:"There is another thing-- won''t you tell me?
38702To Heywood Pennington?
38702Truly?"
38702Trusting husband-- hey?
38702Was he mad?
38702Was it mock virtue?
38702Was it nothing to have hungered and thirsted and sweated that the honor of these people and that of others like them might be preserved?
38702Was it only a little pleasantry of Crabb''s?
38702Was it possible that after all some dreadful misfortune had happened to him, Geltman?
38702Was it real or was that, too, some fantasy of a diseased imagination?
38702Was their sparkle quizzical or intrusive?
38702Was there not another life?
38702Was this the value of her reputation?
38702Was this to be indeed a setting for Machiavellian conspiracy?
38702Well,"he muttered brutally,"did you bring the money?"
38702Were the eyes smiling_ at_, or_ with_ her?
38702Were they, too, in the same state as the others?
38702What am I doing here?"
38702What boat is this?
38702What can he think?"
38702What could it mean?
38702What did Patricia mean, for instance, by the absurd lines at the bottom of his invitation?
38702What do you say?"
38702What does it mean?"
38702What earthly use did you make of all of my training?"
38702What had she said?
38702What had she to confess?
38702What had this insolent person said to make it possible for her to forget herself for so long?
38702What has poor Aurora ever done to you?"
38702What if some day he should meet Baron Arnim or Baron Arnim''s man and be recognized?
38702What is to be feared?
38702What value could she set upon the honor of one she knew not?
38702What was Philip Burnett like?
38702What was the use spending one''s life in bringing an art to the perfection Patricia had attained and then suddenly forswearing it?
38702What will you wear?
38702What would be the_ use_ of a way, if one did n''t_ have_ it?"
38702What''s in a name, after all?
38702What''s the game now?
38702What''s the use?
38702Where am I?
38702Where are we?"
38702Where shall I go?"
38702Where?"
38702Who are you?
38702Why ca n''t you leave these young people alone?
38702Why did n''t you tell me?"
38702Why had he returned?
38702Why had n''t Heywood burned them?
38702Why have n''t you played more with me this summer?"
38702Why not give it a trial?
38702Why should n''t I believe them?"
38702Why wo n''t you be frank?
38702Why, how can you pause?"
38702Why, otherwise, should I wish to marry her?"
38702Will the wonders never cease?"
38702Will you finish it-- as you please?"
38702Wo n''t that do?"
38702Wo n''t you come in to- morrow at five?
38702Wo n''t you forgive me?"
38702Wo n''t you go?"
38702Wo n''t you let me come in to see you before then?"
38702Wo n''t you let me?
38702Wo n''t you open the door?"
38702Wo n''t you really like to see us married?"
38702Wo n''t you, Mort?
38702Wonderful color, is n''t it?
38702Would n''t it be better after all to throw herself upon Mort''s mercy?
38702Would n''t it be good to be young forever?"
38702Would she care?
38702Would she not tarnish her soul still more by paying the wretched money-- Mort''s money-- in forfeit of her disobedience to him?
38702Would there not be some way-- an unguarded moment-- a faithless servant-- to give the thing the aspect of possible achievement?
38702Would you mind if I went in town to my hotel----""To- night?"
38702Would you really like to paint me?"
38702Yet how could she escape?
38702You can climb?"
38702You do n''t regret?"
38702You have awakened her,"she went on,"to what?"
38702You see?
38702You wo n''t mind not looking, will you?"
38702You''d say we were mistaken, would n''t you?
38702You''ll not follow me or try to find out anything, will you?
38702You''re not very angry?"
38702You''ve worked long?"
38702[ Illustration:"''I beg pardon,''he repeated,''but is n''t this yours?''"]
38702_ C''est si bourgeois-- n''est- ce- pas, Baron?_ Things are arranged better in France?"
38702_ C''est si bourgeois-- n''est- ce- pas, Baron?_ Things are arranged better in France?"
38702_ Frontispiece_"''I beg pardon,''he repeated,''but is n''t this yours?''"
38702_ Must_ you squint?"
38702_ Splendid._ I sure glitter in this bunch, do n''t I?"
33565A good deal of fuss over one small boy, eh, Monty?
33565Absurd?
33565After the dinner you ate?
33565Again?
33565All right,was the dubious assent;"but do n''t you think we might pull those curtains down?"
33565Am I by any chance to consider that as an offer of marriage?
33565Am I forgiven?
33565Am I so heartless as all that?
33565Am I to understand that all this, reduced to its last analysis, is intended to convey the information that you have fallen in love?
33565And the trip--Huntington interrupted, again convulsed--"''for two or three weeks, or longer''?
33565And you''ll take the stock?
33565Are marriages ever successful when one''s heart is made up of burnt ashes?
33565Are n''t you Billy Huntington''s uncle?
33565Are n''t you ashamed of yourself to let a girl beat you like that, Connie?
33565Are n''t you over here on business?
33565Are we all going?
33565Are we down- hearted?
33565Are we going to fight each other on that?
33565Are you caught as bad as that?
33565Are you fond of Merry?
33565Are you laughing at me or with me?
33565Are you prepared to do that?
33565Arrested you for stealing?
33565At it again?
33565At the Symphony?
33565Because you''re not like other girls, Merry--"I''ve always been a disappointment to you, have n''t I, Momsie?
33565Before we go indoors, may I not take you around the grounds?
33565Benten?
33565Bike?
33565Billy?
33565Both?
33565But he never married, did he? 33565 But if I lack them, why have n''t I felt the lack before?"
33565But like everything else I do, they have n''t amounted to anything, have they?
33565But not in their homes?
33565But suppose my speaking was more sudden than my decision?
33565But surely you have a Kelmscott''Chaucer''?
33565But the supreme test,Huntington asked,--"what is that to be?"
33565But why do n''t you tell us?
33565But why, if this is so all- important, have you yourself so little use for society?
33565But wo n''t you pledge yourself to assist me in my noble work? 33565 But you respect him, do n''t you, dear?
33565But you wish it?
33565But you would want this woman you-- intend to get to be a suffragist, would n''t you?
33565But, seriously, does n''t the rhythm of that one- step make you instinctively want to dance?
33565By myself?
33565Ca n''t we be friends-- because of her?
33565Ca n''t we do something for him, between us?
33565Ca n''t you do it now?
33565Ca n''t you see that the situation has changed, Monty? 33565 Can it possibly be?"
33565Can there be such-- for me?
33565Can this really have come to me?
33565Can you possibly make your feet behave when you hear that heavenly one- step? 33565 Can you take that hill without dismounting?"
33565Coming here?
33565Connie did that?
33565Connie? 33565 Could I have found a more beautiful exile?"
33565Could any one question that?
33565Could n''t I go with you?--No, of course I couldn''t,--but how can I endure it until I know? 33565 Could n''t you find out from Mr. Huntington something about his hobbies and his antipathies?"
33565Could n''t you telephone for another ticket and go with us?
33565Dad''s well, is n''t he?
33565Did I ever let any one beat me in anything when I could prevent it?
33565Did n''t you hear?
33565Did n''t you invite him?
33565Did she refuse you?
33565Did you ever play any musical instrument?
33565Did you ever see so wonderful a night, Edith?
33565Did you ever try smoking a cigar with a vacuum cleaner?
33565Did you jump your bail?
33565Did you know Hamlen then?
33565Did you know, Mr. Huntington,he continued, turning,"that your friend is a wrecker of other men''s plans?"
33565Did you really do that?
33565Did you really?
33565Did you see much of the family while you were in New York?
33565Do I look so now?
33565Do all older people run marriage down like that?
33565Do n''t you care to see the view from the Point?
33565Do n''t you feel any impulse to move your feet when you hear that music?
33565Do n''t you grasp the fact that his coming is going to mess things up?
33565Do n''t you know that you ca n''t try to do something for some one else without having it come back to you?
33565Do n''t you see how selfish I am? 33565 Do n''t you see that it''s Merry Thatcher the kid is making up to?"
33565Do n''t you see the application? 33565 Do n''t you think he''s earned me?"
33565Do n''t you think her capable of taking care of that herself?
33565Do n''t you think it''s too warm a day to begin?
33565Do n''t you want to see them?
33565Do other Harvard men feel as strongly as you do?
33565Do they ever lose with a lead like that?
33565Do you actually mean that, Thatcher?
33565Do you and Mother know each other?
33565Do you ever patronize them?
33565Do you expect that what you are doing for Mr. Hamlen will bring you a reward?
33565Do you know why?
33565Do you know yet what form you wish your individuality to take?
33565Do you mean that he is engaged?
33565Do you mean that you question your own strength?
33565Do you mean that, Huntington?
33565Do you mind, Harry,Marian said aloud, turning to her husband,"if the gardener shows you around the grounds?
33565Do you realize what you are saying, Merry? 33565 Do you really dislike me?"
33565Do you really think there will be a war?
33565Do you remember the last time you looked at me like that?
33565Do you suppose there''s anything in this war talk?
33565Do you think I can be lonely while I hear the surge of that great ocean upon my shore?
33565Do you think she cares for him?
33565Does Mr. Cosden share your views upon this subject?
33565Does he know how much he means to you, I wonder?
33565Does it ever really keep any one from doing the things he wants to do?
33565Eh-- what? 33565 Excuse me for asking, Marian, but where does the picnic come in?"
33565For what, this time?
33565For you?
33565Forgive me, Mrs. Thatcher,--but are you not thinking of him and of your obligation more than of your daughter?
33565Friends?
33565From New York? 33565 Good heavens, man, do you mean to tell me that you have n''t any modern books at all?"
33565Hamlen''s name is Philip, is n''t it?
33565Happiness is selfish, is n''t it, in making us temporarily forgetful? 33565 Has Hamlen been there yet?
33565Has he no friends-- no hobby which can take him out of himself?
33565Has he told you that he cared for me?
33565Has it occurred to you that Mrs. Thatcher is assuming a great responsibility in pledging her daughter''s consent?
33565Has she been consulted?
33565Has your mother been talking to you upon this subject?
33565Have I hurt you again?
33565Have n''t I given all my leisure to my family?
33565Have n''t they?
33565Have n''t you felt this?
33565Have n''t you kept in touch with any one at home?
33565Have you arranged your business matters to your satisfaction?
33565Have you been to Harrington Sound?
33565Have you found the woman you-- intend to get?
33565Have you given the prospective bride any suggestion of your intentions?
33565Have you heard anything from New York?
33565Have you no pity for me?
33565Have you reason to think she cares for you?
33565Have you seen the Thatchers?
33565Have you selected the happy bride, Connie?
33565Have you-- children?
33565He has spoken of it to you?
33565He is?
33565He married Mrs. Eustis, did n''t he?
33565He told you this and yet proposed to you? 33565 He was a collector, then?"
33565He was n''t hurt, was he?
33565He-- what?
33565Her husband?
33565Here come Edith and Philip Hamlen,Marian called her husband''s attention to the new arrivals;"where do you suppose she found him?"
33565How about Stevenson and Ibsen and Lafcadio Hearn?
33565How about bargain- sales when you are home?
33565How about me?
33565How about my feelings, Billy?
33565How about taking pictures to illustrate my articles?
33565How about that other toast we drank that night, Monty?
33565How about the daughter?
33565How about you?
33565How about yourself?
33565How can it interest any one but me?
33565How can the leopard change his spots?
33565How could you work me in?
33565How did you do it? 33565 How did you leave your worthy parents?"
33565How did you manage to get back to- night? 33565 How do you know that I do class myself among the fortunate ones?"
33565How do you suppose I can express an opinion on a girl half- way across a room the size of this?
33565How else can you learn?
33565How in the world are you going to twist what I said into an inconsistency?
33565How in the world do you expect to get a hundred dollars out of me unless I land Uncle Monty for it?--and he asked,''for what?'' 33565 How is it possible,"demanded Hamlen,"that any of these should have fallen into your hands?"
33565How is it that Mr. Cosden goes into the water? 33565 How long are you going to keep this up?"
33565How long would it have taken to make a baby''s fingers twine about your heart?
33565How many years have you been here?
33565How much did you value it before you discovered what it contained?
33565How much do you need?
33565How much more he would enjoy himself if he had a bump of humor, would n''t he?
33565How soon is this remarkable document to become operative?
33565How soon must you have the money?
33565I beg your pardon?
33565I do n''t believe we knew each other, did we? 33565 I do n''t often do that, do I?"
33565I do n''t quite understand it myself,Cosden admitted;"but as long as I want to why not make the most of it?
33565I get you, Stevie-- what''s the feminine for Steve, anyhow? 33565 I have done my best to prepare my children for the life they would naturally enter--""Is n''t life what we live every day, Momsie?
33565I helped him?
33565I hope he takes a header on this first hill!--You know how to ride, do n''t you?
33565I know how many lumps you take in your tea, and I know that you prefer cream, but shall I pass you the raspberry jam?
33565I know, Billy; but you do n''t want to say anything that will queer you with your uncle, do you?
33565I know; but what do you advise me to do?
33565I never stopped to think of it; but if we''re satisfied, whose concern is it, anyhow?
33565I recognized an aroma the moment I came into your presence--"An aroma?
33565I wonder if they have a breeze like this all the time in Bermuda? 33565 I''d love to play this course,"Merry said gratefully,--"but you''re going over for Class Day, are n''t you?"
33565I''m in no hurry,Cosden replied cheerfully;"are you?"
33565If I loved you once?
33565If a woman were to take that position she would be accused of''sour grapes,''would n''t she?
33565If it was the domination of my mind then, why should it not be now?
33565If you are so sure of it, why do n''t you show them to us? 33565 In what little pleasantry has my friendly critic been indulging himself?"
33565Inconsistent?
33565Is he really coming here? 33565 Is it possible that this is you-- here?"
33565Is love old- fashioned?
33565Is n''t all that legitimate?
33565Is n''t he still acting under your instructions? 33565 Is n''t it stronger than that?"
33565Is n''t it wonderful?
33565Is n''t she the best ever?
33565Is n''t some of that unrest gone now that you and the dear mother understand each other?
33565Is n''t that a beautiful idea?
33565Is that an insult or a compliment?
33565Is that what men believe?
33565Is the difference in our ages the only reason?
33565Is the secret- service department ready to make its report?
33565Is there a romance connected with it?
33565Is there anything more than Harry told me?
33565Is there by any chance some deeper reason?
33565Is this all our friendship amounts to?
33565Is this something which you ask me to do?
33565It gives me just the chance I''ve been waiting for: will you marry me?
33565It is a question of what one has within, is n''t it?
33565It is exactly the opposite of what we are taught to consider right, is n''t it?
33565It is n''t living to be without them, is it? 33565 It''s all your fault.--Uncle Monty, would n''t you like to have Merry in the family?"
33565It''s frightful, being stared at, is n''t it?
33565It''s the same Philip, is n''t it?--the same old Philip who refused, over twenty years ago, to recognize the real significance of life? 33565 Let me have him, Marian?"
33565Love? 33565 Market gone to pieces?"
33565Merry is very unhappy,--haven''t you noticed it?
33565Merry?
33565Missing what?
33565Monty Huntington a woman- hater?
33565Monty in the dumps?
33565Monty,he said,"what is there so different about us that it attracts comment?"
33565Monty,she whispered slyly,--"dare I call you Monty?"
33565Monty,--who is Benten?
33565Mr. Hamlen,--is he here?
33565Mr. Huntington has a good social position in Boston, has n''t he?
33565Mr. Huntington has n''t appeared yet?
33565Must you really go?
33565My great ambition?
33565Next week?
33565Now you consider it well worth including among your investments?
33565Now, when are you going to break the news to him?
33565Of course I''ll help you, my dear fellow,Huntington reassured him,"but are you not exaggerating Mrs. Thatcher''s attitude?
33565Of course each would be at liberty to use his own judgment?
33565Of course not,Cosden answered, with some impatience;"but what do you think of the idea in general?"
33565Of course you wo n''t; but how are you going to stop it?
33565Of what?
33565Oh, what''s the use in tiring Merry all out?
33565On Monday?
33565Ought it to?
33565Perhaps you are in the mood for it to- day?
33565Phil?
33565Rather late for him to come to that conclusion, was n''t it?
33565Refuse me?
33565Ricky interested in business?
33565Room for one more in your party?
33565Say, but he can ride a bicycle!--What did he have against me down at Bermuda?
33565Serious? 33565 Shall we rest?"
33565Shall we spend it on the piazza?
33565Shall we spend our honeymoon in Japan?
33565Shall we walk?
33565Should we want it to be?
33565So Billy has persuaded you to become his champion?
33565So Merry is really going to marry you?
33565So do I; that is another one of the things I wanted to find out.--Will you dine with me to- night, and then go to the theater afterwards?
33565So he came down to get Merry,--and proposed to you?
33565So it is still''Merry,''is it?
33565So this is where you disappeared to?
33565So you will dare to assume the prerogatives of man and God?
33565So you''re giving us the once over, are you?
33565So you''re going back to first principles, Connie?
33565Some boys would n''t realize the importance of this until too late, with no one to tell them, would they?
33565Still, there would be danger, would n''t there?
33565Still, your marriage is to be on an up- to- date common- sense, scientific basis: can it be unless you and your wife stand on equal terms?
33565Such as the course in bookbinding with Cobden- Sanderson?
33565Suppose I felt that I did n''t care to marry, Momsie, that I should be happier to go through life expressing my own individuality?
33565Suppose that to be accomplished, what then?
33565Suppose there is n''t any war?
33565Suppose we did: what difference would it make to you, so long as you get a good thing out of it? 33565 Suppose we grant all that,"Huntington answered frankly;"what difference does it make?
33565Surely those beautiful books encouraged you?
33565Take your own simile, with which you try to ease my sense of shame: even though the waters are not to be blamed, what do people do with them? 33565 Tell you one reason why this should not be?
33565That is what puzzles me; why should he decline my account?
33565That may be,Cosden admitted,"but how about you?
33565That should explain everything; for what is a bachelor''s life but one long inconsistency? 33565 That will be Paradise;--and you''ll teach me all you know about everything?"
33565That''s a promise, Dad?
33565That''s what you lawyers call it, is n''t it?
33565The girl Connie is going to marry?
33565Then he does care for me? 33565 Then it was you who tried to signal us from the tender?"
33565Then not to express one''s individuality shows a lack of character?
33565Then the supreme test, as I understand it, would be to marry a man you thought you could make happy whether you cared for him or not?
33565Then the wife wo n''t do it?
33565Then the work is good?
33565Then what did happen?
33565Then why do n''t you follow Merry''s example?
33565Then why do n''t you let me show you the way?
33565Then you agree with Monty?
33565Then you are ready for the supreme test?
33565Then you do n''t think it''s unwomanly?
33565Then you have loved her all these weeks?
33565Then you''re going to leave me to do the work?
33565There is n''t much of anything we ca n''t prove if we argue long enough, is there?
33565There''s your uncle,Merry said, nodding in the direction of the men;"do n''t you recognize him?"
33565To whom?
33565Too much wine last night, Ricky?
33565Until then why should I accept counterfeits?
33565Up for all day?
33565Waiting?
33565Was it their failure to understand you or your failure to give them the opportunity?
33565Was it their failure to understand you, or your failure to give them the opportunity?
33565Was that why you gave our boy the same name-- and was it Hamlen you referred to just now?
33565We always wish for something we have had, instead of something we are going to have, do n''t we?
33565We''re friends already, are n''t we?
33565We''ve all been going since breakfast,Stevens suggested;"why not sit still for a while?"
33565We''ve lost our little playmates, have n''t we?
33565Well, now I come to the supreme test of all: do you dance?
33565Well, suppose I am?
33565Well, what about Bill? 33565 Well,"she said smiling,"do you approve?"
33565Well?
33565Well?
33565Were n''t they wonderful?
33565Were they not placed upon the market?
33565Were you so ungallant as that?
33565What a cynic you are on the subject of marriage,Edith remarked;"you never pass an opportunity to knock it, do you?"
33565What are the matters you have in mind?
33565What are the others?
33565What are we doing to- night?
33565What are we going to do this afternoon?
33565What can I do to make you forgetful?
33565What can that mean to you who have so many friendships?
33565What can you think of an Alma Mater which would accept money in exchange for the life of one of her sons? 33565 What do I think of-- So that''s the idea, is it, Connie?
33565What do you mean by that?
33565What do you mean''need me as a friend''? 33565 What do you mean,--''thank God you could n''t write''?"
33565What do you mean?
33565What do you offer for it?
33565What do you say to our adopting a silver standard?
33565What do you suggest?
33565What do you think of Marian''s resurrection?
33565What do you think of marriage?
33565What do you think of the perspective?
33565What do you think, Connie?
33565What else is marriage?
33565What friends did I ever have whom I could regret to leave behind?
33565What has any man to offer the woman he marries,Huntington replied with feeling,"in comparison to what she brings into his life?
33565What has happened to lower me so in your estimation?
33565What has that to do with our discussion?
33565What has that to do with the present discussion?
33565What have you really accomplished, Philip?
33565What have you really accomplished?
33565What in the world has happened?
33565What is philosophy unless one can find the stone?
33565What is the connection?
33565What is the matter, Billy?
33565What is the use, Connie?
33565What is their custom?
33565What the devil did that young cub show up here for just at this time?
33565What will happen when this episode is over? 33565 What would your life have been if you had married Hamlen?"
33565What''s the matter with Harry?
33565What''s the other solution?
33565What''s the use?
33565What''s this?
33565What''s wrong?
33565Whatever you think is wise shall be done,she acquiesced,"but would n''t it be better for you to go ahead to prepare him for our coming?"
33565When did he arrive?
33565When does our Society go into executive session?
33565When may I play this adorable course?
33565When the son has forfeited his right to life--"Who are you to take upon yourself the judicial ermine, Hamlen?
33565When was Mr. Cosden''inoculated,''as you call it?
33565Where are the boys now?
33565Where did Monty come in?
33565Where did you come from, where are you going, and why ca n''t you stay but a minute?
33565Where did you learn to handle a boat?
33565Where do you come in? 33565 Where in the world can that boy be?"
33565Where on earth did you come from? 33565 Where shall I find Hamlen?
33565Where''s Marian?
33565Where, if I may ask?
33565Which is her husband?
33565Which is the misfit in my combination with Monty?
33565Who began it?
33565Who is going to invite me to have some strawberries and cream?
33565Who is the girl?
33565Who knows but that I was a professor of classical antiquities in my previous existence? 33565 Who shall say what''enough''really is?"
33565Why are boys, anyway?
33565Why are n''t you interested?
33565Why be an iconoclast? 33565 Why be catty, Marian?"
33565Why bring it up again? 33565 Why ca n''t his father straighten him out?"
33565Why ca n''t we get together on the Consolidated Machinery?
33565Why did n''t he telephone me to bring them to him?
33565Why did n''t you tell me before?
33565Why did you come,he asked,"to awaken these memories I have tried so hard to forget?"
33565Why do n''t you ask me?
33565Why do n''t you continue the good work and polish him up for yourself? 33565 Why do n''t you find Miss Thatcher?"
33565Why do n''t you let me wait, as other girls do, until I find the man I love?
33565Why do n''t you yell?
33565Why go out of the family?
33565Why had you no friends to leave behind you?
33565Why has n''t he spoken to me himself?
33565Why has n''t some one thought of it before?
33565Why is it curious?
33565Why is it he wo n''t let me go to the office, when he promised me I could help him as soon as college was over?
33565Why is it not the natural sequence of events?
33565Why is n''t an evening together the easiest way to satisfy it?
33565Why is n''t that taking advantage?
33565Why is n''t this a good time for our Society to go into executive session?
33565Why is n''t this my opportunity? 33565 Why not accept Mrs. Thatcher''s explanation until you have a better one?"
33565Why not cheer me up while you''re waiting?
33565Why not keep this setting to the end?
33565Why not let your Hearn teach you of Japan? 33565 Why not watch the sunset from the water- garden?"
33565Why not?
33565Why pick on me?
33565Why poor?
33565Why should I?
33565Why should it?
33565Why should it?
33565Why should you be unhappy? 33565 Why should you do this for me?"
33565Why should you have done that?
33565Why should youth be made to carry loads which belong to older shoulders?
33565Why slip back, Philip? 33565 Why speak so strongly?"
33565Why the devil ca n''t you send the boy home?
33565Why worry about him?
33565Why, Merry is a mere child, and-- what makes you think there is anything of that kind in Mr. Cosden''s mind?
33565Wild?
33565Will you come to my villa some day this week?
33565Will you?
33565With a definite purpose like this ahead of me, I''ll shake this weakness in no time.--How about the boys? 33565 With us both feeling our limitations, and with both striving to accomplish the same result, do n''t you think we ought to be successful?"
33565With your father''s approval, and with Mr. Hamlen''s assurances, I should surely be opposing Nature, should n''t I?
33565Wo n''t it wait until we get to the house?
33565Wo n''t you come in and sit down?
33565Wo n''t you come, Momsie?
33565Wo n''t you stop on the way home and get me some coral sand?
33565Would it seem a sacrilege if I asked you to join me in a toast?
33565Would n''t it be wrong to marry a man you did n''t love?
33565Would the boy permit it? 33565 Would this time be inopportune,"he continued,"to ask if you can spare this little girl to some one who loves her very dearly?"
33565Would you like to go?
33565Would you mind having a very personal conversation with me down there?
33565Yes,he admitted;"but where in the world did you meet him?"
33565Yes,she acknowledged frankly;"what did it?"
33565Yes,she exclaimed surprised;"but how do you know that, and why should I do it?"
33565Yes; rather well manoeuvered, was n''t it? 33565 You advance it simply as a loan?"
33565You are going Monday?
33565You are prepared to marry a man you do not love because you hope to make him happy, and thus gain happiness yourself?
33565You are to marry Miss Thatcher?
33565You certainly ride mighty well for a man your age,--doesn''t he, Merry?
33565You do n''t approve of taking advantage of some one else?
33565You do n''t mean Philip Hamlen?
33565You do n''t mean to say that the golf autobiographies have become exhausted?
33565You do n''t mind my butting in on you both once in a while?
33565You do n''t really mean it?
33565You do n''t think it will be as rough going back as it was coming down, do you? 33565 You do n''t think they''ll patch it up, do you?"
33565You do n''t understand, Marian,she protested;"he made this trip for the express purpose of picking out a wife--""In Bermuda?
33565You forgive me for being too old?
33565You have decided?
33565You have loved Merry, yet stood aside these weeks?
33565You knew her mother when she was a girl, you said?
33565You like-- responsibilities?
33565You mean that Hamlen chap?
33565You never loved me?
33565You really do n''t know?
33565You refer to your daughter?
33565You remember what he said just before we started out this morning? 33565 You saw him this morning?"
33565You see I can play a game that I do understand, do n''t you, Monty? 33565 You see what I''ve done with it,--but have I been quite delicate?
33565You think he will propose to her this morning?
33565You think she will acquiesce?
33565You think this would be for Mr. Hamlen''s happiness too?
33565You wo n''t force me, Huntington?
33565You wo n''t hold out now, will you, Mother?
33565You would do me an injustice if you stopped at that point: am I not offering her my name and my protection?
33565You would like to help Hamlen?
33565You''d never dream that he''d come within an ace of missing his breakfast, would you?
33565You''ll be down to see us off, Philip?
33565You''ll go?
33565You''re not going to make me live within my allowance?
33565You''re taking that Hamlen chap rather seriously, are n''t you?
33565*****"Shall we walk?"
33565After all, were not the principles the same the world over?
33565And Hamlen will go with me, wo n''t you, my friend?"
33565And the girl-- can she ever understand?"
33565And there you are.--How about the Consolidated Machinery deal?"
33565And was the sigh all because of doubts of Billy?
33565And why?
33565And you wish me joy?"
33565Are you fond of athletics?"
33565Are you my Genius or my Nemesis?
33565Are you true to your responsibilities?
33565Are you--""What do I owe the world?"
33565But I think it would become monotonous, do n''t you?
33565But if I am to accept your aid I must run that risk, must n''t I?"
33565But that''s what gives me hope: if you and so many other women can endure it, why ca n''t I?"
33565But the case is n''t so serious as Ned Fordham''s, is it?"
33565But this time it was n''t my fault, was it?
33565But what in the world have I to offer her?"
33565But what is your business doing all this time?"
33565But why settle your problem so hastily?
33565But why''rust''?"
33565But would marriage give that to him?
33565Ca n''t you almost hear the pathos in its tone as it asks to be filled?"
33565Ca n''t you see what I mean?
33565Can you advance any sane reason why I should not marry if I see fit?"
33565Can you wonder that I love him?"
33565Cosden?"
33565Cosden?"
33565Cosden?"
33565Could anything be more common- sense or scientific than that?"
33565Could he assume any position of impartiality?
33565Could he hope ever to bring the boy up to the standard he himself would insist upon before permitting any thought of an alliance?
33565Did n''t he, Phil?"
33565Did n''t you tell me that you owned a piece of land in Oklahoma on which oil was struck?"
33565Did she love her?
33565Did she?
33565Did you ever see such a change in any one?"
33565Did you ever see such a spot?"
33565Did you notice anything while you were out driving?"
33565Do n''t you admit that you are taking advantage of the dealer?"
33565Do n''t you agree with me that her interest is in men older than herself?"
33565Do n''t you see that by your very act you have placed yourself among the masters?
33565Do they let them continue on their path of destruction?
33565Do we have to go home now?"
33565Do you care to prophesy?"
33565Do you consider her as mercenary as that?"
33565Do you feel equal to another walk?"
33565Do you happen by any chance to know anything of the artistic side of bookmaking?"
33565Do you mind?"
33565Do you suppose they''ll keep that boy on board once they get him there?"
33565Do you take me?"
33565Do you think I would counsel this if I were not sure?"
33565Does n''t that clear things up?"
33565Down here on a vacation trip, I suppose?"
33565For what?
33565Forty- eight hours earlier he had asked Marian,"What do I owe the world?"
33565Had he a right to expect them to search him out any more than they a right to demand the same of him?
33565Hamlen fancied that he could hear the referee''s challenge:"Ready, Harvard?
33565Hamlen?"
33565Has he escaped you, after all?"
33565Have I partially succeeded?"
33565Have I your promise?"
33565Have n''t we enough to do that now?"
33565Have n''t you felt this yourself, my dear, when you have been with him?"
33565Have n''t you noticed the way he treated Billy?
33565Have you answered them?"
33565Have you anything to suggest?"
33565He wants to get married, and he thinks he has picked out the right girl, but--""But-- what?"
33565He was curious to see how far his friend was in earnest, and was this combination of names a pure coincidence?
33565Heaven knows what a mess I''ve made of it, but at least there is something saved out of the wreck?
33565How about opera?"
33565How about the trolley project?"
33565How are you planning to take advantage of your opportunity?"
33565How could the question be answered?
33565How long should you say a man could hold out against matrimony on the same ratio?"
33565How many copies did you print?"
33565How many girls do you think would ever marry if they were permitted to find any other real interest in life?"
33565How will you have me pay them?"
33565Huntington found himself echoing Cosden''s question,"Why not?"
33565Huntington?"
33565I could n''t leave it to her, but do you think the girl would understand my motive?"
33565I could see the gold- fish all right, but the spinach was on me.--That reminds me, Uncle Monty, will you lend me a hundred dollars?"
33565I had a vision once of what I thought marriage ought to be.--We spoke of it in Bermuda, and you made fun of it, do n''t you remember?
33565I have no doubt she has other attributes, but those are enough for us, are n''t they, little sweetheart?"
33565I wonder sometimes if what we gain by experience is worth what we lose in illusion.--Aren''t you coming up- stairs to dress for dinner, Billy?"
33565I''m not a bit discouraged, are you?"
33565If I leave it in your hands will you protect it for me, and deliver it to me when I am ready to make use of it?"
33565If he had misjudged Huntington had he not misjudged his other classmates, had he not misjudged the world at large?
33565If not, why should they give up their independence?"
33565If our friends were all alike what would be the need of having more than one?
33565In business, of course, there''s a reason--""Ca n''t a man be sincere in business?"
33565Is he in any new scrape now?"
33565Is he interested in this deal?"
33565Is it selfishness on my part, this desire to keep you as you are, or is it merely another of those paradoxes of which life is made up?"
33565Is n''t that a sure sign that he''s a woman- hater?"
33565Is n''t that enough?"
33565Is n''t that what you really mean to say, Monty?"
33565Is n''t this a fine old world, Momsie?"
33565Is she a widow?"
33565Is that to be your wedding- trip, and am I to go along as guardian?"
33565Is there any chance of pulling off my forlorn hope?
33565Is this merely the dream life of sunshine and of flowers?"
33565Is this the dawn of a to- morrow or the epitome of human suffering?
33565Is this the existence of the lotus- eater, Marian?
33565It is difficult to refuse anything you ask, but could n''t the matter wait?"
33565It is n''t all made up of worldly things, is it?"
33565It was after that I disappointed you most, was n''t it, Momsie?
33565Make a note of that, will you?
33565Merry will go, wo n''t she?"
33565Mighty fine concert, was n''t it?
33565Now do you see the value of the service you rendered him?"
33565Now the next; what is it?"
33565Now then, what''s the answer?"
33565Now, tell me, is there any association between these two ideas, and is this by chance the explanation of the changed Monty I find here to- night?"
33565Now, that is n''t_ lèse- majesté_, is it?"
33565Now-- well, what have you to put up against my line of argument?"
33565Of course you adore orchestral music?"
33565Oh, sailing-- are you?"
33565Our first undertaking, I presume, will be to prevent affairs from going any further between Merry and Mr. Cosden-- granting that they exist?"
33565Perhaps Connie let you beat him,--did you, Connie?"
33565Ready, Yale?"
33565Say, Mr. Cosden, you are some rider, are n''t you?
33565She''s all right, is n''t she?"
33565Splendid work, is n''t it?
33565Tell me, where did you learn the art of bookmaking enough to make yourself a master?"
33565That is making a tremendous compromise with sentiment, but do n''t you think it more sensible, after all?"
33565That is the main point, is n''t it?"
33565That shows that there''s something deeper in all this, does n''t it?"
33565That''s it, is it?"
33565That''s the idea, is n''t it, Phil?"
33565That''s why you picked me up on what I said about bachelors?
33565Thatcher interrogated good- naturedly;"are n''t you going to let me in on it?"
33565Thatcher?"
33565The signature will be genuine, wo n''t it?
33565Then he added,"The daughter is very like her, do n''t you think?"
33565Then it''s all settled that we go together?"
33565There is nothing more for us to talk about, is there?"
33565Think of strawberries and cream in January!--Won''t you go ahead of us, Mr. Cosden, and ask the boy to put a table out on the piazza?
33565To me your friendship is the grandest thing I know, but what can mine mean to you?
33565Want me to run an errand for you?
33565Was it not presumption on his part when until now his own vision had been equally restricted?
33565Was it possible that she might have been his daughter?
33565Was she the one to bring about the metamorphosis which her mother so confidently predicted?
33565Was this the self- assertive, vivified piece of machinery she had known three months before?
33565Was this what the world had given her?
33565What brings you home at this time of day?"
33565What can I do to help?"
33565What did he do that was crude,--refuse to propose?"
33565What did you people do to him down at Bermuda?
33565What do you say?
33565What do you say?"
33565What do you say?"
33565What do you say?"
33565What friendships can you have here?"
33565What had their relations been during these years?
33565What have you to say about the girl now?
33565What in the world has happened to send him motoring down here at ten o''clock in the morning?"
33565What in the world is the use of sitting still?
33565What in the world put that idea in your head?"
33565What kind of woman do you think she ought to be?"
33565What put that idea in your head?"
33565What right had he to condemn them because in their youth and inexperience they had fallen below the standard older men had set?
33565What shall I tell them?"
33565What were the relations existing between them?
33565What would be the final outcome?
33565What would he have been had she not broken her word to him?
33565What''s happened?
33565When did you first feel the attack coming on?
33565Where are the people anyhow?
33565Where did you learn so much?"
33565Who could fail to see that he would be an ideal husband for her?"
33565Who in those arts has surpassed the work of the old masters within that limit of time?
33565Who was the other girl?"
33565Why ca n''t she be allowed to do something, just as a boy is, until she finds out whether she wants to marry or not?"
33565Why could n''t I persuade you to start a campaign like that for me-- for us-- in Boston?"
33565Why could n''t he find one nearer home?"
33565Why do n''t you pay attention to the music?"
33565Why do n''t you take a chance?
33565Why do n''t you tell us how it happened?"
33565Why fuss until we find out?
33565Why is it?"
33565Why should I know?
33565Why should these false ideas, created by years of self- depreciation, stand in the way of what she knew was best?
33565Why should you think I had changed my mind?"
33565Why suppress your real self?"
33565Why was it that Cosden''s attitude caused him such peculiar annoyance at this particular time?
33565Why was it that the lessons he had taught himself during all these years proved so inadequate to combat the yearning which he felt within him?
33565Why, for instance, are you so anxious for me to be married?"
33565Why, he''s younger than Mr. Huntington, is n''t he?"
33565Will you do it, Philip?
33565Will you do it?"
33565Will you do it?"
33565Will you go?"
33565Will you let this wonderful work you''ve done here be the means and not the end?
33565Will you make us all happy, or will you send me to meet my fate amid the horrors of war?"
33565Will you put your accomplishments where they can be of value, instead of hoarding them, as a miser does his gold?"
33565Wo n''t you forget your infatuation and wish me joy?"
33565Wo n''t you wish me joy?
33565Would happiness come to her as a result of giving it to him?
33565Would n''t you think it would rust if he got it wet?"
33565Would not each word really be a cry from his own heart, not against Hamlen but against any one who should create a barrier between himself and her?
33565Would you change individualities with Ricky?"
33565You acknowledge-- don''t you?--that you still have an obligation to our Alma Mater which is unsatisfied?"
33565You are making a good start.--Are you fond of reading?
33565You have been here ever since?"
33565You must supply something which she lacks or it would n''t be a fair trade, would it?
33565You remember the man who said he did n''t get what he expected, and some one told him he was lucky not to get what he deserved?
33565You see, do n''t you, that my mercenary instincts saved you from an unpleasant maternal duty?"
33565You think they meant it, do n''t you, Huntington?"
33565You will be there, of course?"
33565You would let him come into my life?"
33565You would n''t have believed I could go as long as that without speaking of it, would you?
33565You would n''t want her to marry you if she loved some one else, would you?"
33565You''ll excuse us?"
33565You''re mighty well preserved, are n''t you?"
33565You''ve been lots happier since I told you that you loved me, now have n''t you?
33565he cried,"where are you?"
33565he repeated stupefied,--"she asks me to forgive her?"
33565he sighed deeply,"who am I to interfere?"
33565is that all?
33565she asked archly;"where does the girl come in?"
33565what''s the matter?
33565why do n''t you study yourself as you do your books, and even now learn the lesson you need to know?"
33565you have n''t made up your mind to marry me off like this without my consent?"
33565you would n''t make me wait another hundred years to see that, would you?"
47644''Ye''ll be tryin''anither kirk the morn?'' 47644 I suppose you repeated the remark you made at luncheon, that the ladies you had seen in Princes Street were excessively plain?"
47644Is that Christianity?
47644Sound your own soul,was his reply;"are you prepared to be chased into exile with your children, and to see your husband hunted to the death?
47644Then,continues the Inquisitive Person,"Peter was married?"
47644What did he say to that?
47644What note?
47644What, then,some one may ask,"do the good people in that church think of all the immoralities and frauds that it has condoned and fostered?"
47644You naturally inveighed against the Scotch climate?
47644''Wha did he hear the Sawbath that''s bye?
47644''Worships the sun?''
47644*****[ Sidenote: Do American Roman Catholics Believe in the Relics?]
47644And do you know who it was that won the day for William on the banks of the Boyne?
47644And has not his action, like Dean Sprat''s, defeated itself?
47644And while we are discussing these matters,''he went on,''how is your American dyspepsia these days-- have you decided what is the cause of it?''"
47644But are not their seniors equally indifferent about having Bibles in the regular service?
47644But can it maintain itself against the priests?
47644But what of all this?
47644C.?''
47644Div ye ken the new asseestant?
47644Do we owe the Huguenots anything?
47644Does this mean that he jilted the girl, or that she discarded him for losing her ring?
47644Dr. A.?
47644F.?
47644Giles?
47644Has this improvement come about because the church is really growing better?
47644Hear ye him?"
47644How can a man without Greek master the New Testament in the original?
47644I. P.:"Do the Popes still marry?"
47644IS THE SCOTTISH CHARACTER DEGENERATING?
47644IS THE SCOTTISH CHARACTER DEGENERATING?
47644If so, for what purpose?
47644In like manner the London newsboys say,"Pipers, sir?"
47644Is it not clear that no man can be a thoroughly furnished minister who has not studied Greek?
47644Mr. D.?
47644Reluctant, did I say?
47644She returned from the dinner, at which she had met him, all out of sorts:"How did you get on with your delightful minister?"
47644Some years ago a child was asked,"Who is the Prime Minister of England?"
47644The brotherhood of man-- how else shall it ever be fully and permanently brought about, except through men''s knowledge of the Fatherhood of God?
47644The first speaker was somewhat taken aback, but recovered himself sufficiently to say,"Well, my lord, can you tell me the way to heaven?"
47644The fleeing apostle exclaimed in amazement,"_ Domine, quo vadis?_"( Lord, whither goest thou?
47644The fleeing apostle exclaimed in amazement,"_ Domine, quo vadis?_"( Lord, whither goest thou?
47644Was there ever such turf in the whole world?
47644Was''n''t that unendurable?
47644We have not purchased any yet-- but who can tell?
47644Were they placed here by the Druids?
47644What is it that has given this venerable Presbyterian city this proud position, next to London?
47644When we inquired at Oxford for a Presbyterian church, the maid- servant said,"That is Protestant, is n''t it?"
47644Where could be found people so eager to listen to the preaching of the gospel, and to have their children taught its lessons?
47644Where in the whole world could be found so promising a mission field-- one ready to yield such rich returns?
47644Why should there be such a plague spot in the heart of Edinburgh?
47644Why should there not be at least as good a supply of Bibles in a church as of hymn- books?
47644Why should there not be street scavengers like those who keep even the small towns in France and Germany quite free from that kind of litter?
47644Why?
47644Will it endure?
47644Will this unification continue?
47644[ Sidenote: Are Virginia Episcopalians Becoming Less Liberal?]
47644inquired Salemina...."He was quite the handsomest man in the room; who is he?"
47644institutions?
47644yet?''
41837''Got trimmed, did I?'' 41837 A folio edition of Shakespeare or only the original manuscript of one of his plays?"
41837A wall?
41837Across the river? 41837 And indeed,"she thought dreamily,"why should they not be?
41837And it was you who told the police I was in danger when that terrible man and woman locked me in?
41837And was it done in dark red leather with the decorations all in gold?
41837And you followed us right out into the country that night we went to the Ramsey cottage?
41837And, and,Lucile whispered the words,"was there a bookmark in the upper corner of the inside of the front cover?"
41837Are these the ones?
41837Are you going to take the book?
41837Are you interested in the exhibit?
41837Are you interested in this child?
41837Are you sure?
41837Are-- are you Roderick Vining?
41837Been studying late?
41837But fi- fum,she laughed a low laugh, throwing back her head until her hair danced over her white shoulders like a golden shower,"why borrow trouble?
41837But how,she asked herself,"is all this tangle to be straightened out?
41837But if I were to tell you that for the present I did not wish to have you ask me where it was, what would you say?
41837But if they did, why should they call the police for your protection?
41837But this money, this hundred dollars?
41837But what are we doing out here?
41837But what do you mean to do about it?
41837But, Florence, how can we get it?
41837By the way,Frank Morrow''s voice startled her,"you live over at the university, do n''t you?"
41837Can I never escape it? 41837 Come alone?"
41837Decent?
41837Did he have a birthmark on his chin, this man you bought the book from?
41837Did we rescue that child from that woman?
41837Did we what?
41837Did we?
41837Did what?
41837Did you find out who it was?
41837Did you hear what the child said, that she''d rather die than steal?
41837Did you see that?
41837Did-- did you finish it?
41837Do you think we should warn her? 41837 Do you wish to stay with her?"
41837Florence,she whispered excitedly,"did you hear a footstep behind us?"
41837Frank Morrow sent you all the way from Chicago that you might ask me that question? 41837 From whom?"
41837He--She paused in her perplexing problem to grip her companion''s arm and whisper,"What was that?"
41837How can you know so much about the book?
41837How could she do it?
41837How did the police know that something was going wrong in that house? 41837 How did you come here?"
41837I do n''t believe in ghosts, but-- where have I seen that face before? 41837 I-- I do n''t like it,"shivered Lucile,"but what else is there to do?"
41837I-- I wonder if she could have taken it,she whispered,"that child?
41837If the books are worth all that money, how dare you take the risk of leaving things as they are for a single hour?
41837Is someone here to meet her or is she entering the place to get something?
41837Is that all you know about it?
41837Is what she says true?
41837It might be,said Florence doubtfully,"but it does n''t seem probable, does it?
41837Let''s do it then?
41837Lucile,said Florence in a tense whisper,"are we going to let that beast of a woman get that child?
41837Mind doing me a favor?
41837Mind going over the whole story again?
41837Miss Tucker,the librarian smiled,"do you chance to have any knowledge of the whereabouts of the first volume of our early edition of Shakespeare?"
41837Not the rich Ramsey?
41837Now how shall I find her?
41837Oh, are you?
41837Oh, that?
41837Oh,she smiled back,"are there really original manuscripts of Shakespeare''s plays?"
41837Pardon me; you wanted to see me? 41837 Perhaps not at all?"
41837Please may I take a chair?
41837Question is,she told herself,"what am I going to do about it?"
41837Seems strange, does n''t it?
41837She returned once, why not again?
41837Show up yet?
41837That book?
41837The one who followed me the night I got caught in that wretched woman''s house, and other times?
41837The one with his collar turned up and with his back to us?
41837The police? 41837 There''s nothing so terrible about that, is there?"
41837Want to see that she gets safely home?
41837We-- we--she faltered"--may we not step back under the light where you can see the book better?"
41837Well, my young friend,he smiled,"what is it I may do for you this morning?
41837Well, what will it be to- day?
41837Well,she heaved a sigh,"whatever could have come over him?
41837Well?
41837Were two of them very small ones?
41837Wha-- where has she gone?
41837What about it, little one?
41837What did he want?
41837What did you tell her?
41837What do you make of it?
41837What else could I do? 41837 What for?"
41837What is it?
41837What next?
41837What right has he? 41837 What right have you to keep it?"
41837What two?
41837What would n''t one give to have it for a study?
41837What would that young man be doing in a summer cottage at this time of year?
41837What''s going on here?
41837What''s that for?
41837What''s the answer to all this? 41837 What''s the girl tied up for?"
41837What''s the trouble?
41837What''s the use?
41837What?
41837What?
41837Whatever can be the matter with him?
41837Where am I and where am I to go?
41837Where are we?
41837Where did you get this book?
41837Where''ve you been in all this storm? 41837 Wherever can we be going?
41837Who can it be?
41837Who is it?
41837Who was he?
41837Who''s Frank Morrow?
41837Who-- who was he?
41837Why always the gargoyle? 41837 Why did we do it?"
41837Why-- er--there was a catch in her throat--"is it gone?"
41837Why?
41837Why?
41837Will you tell him all about it?
41837Wonder what my new acquirement is like?
41837Wonder what she calls the taking of our Shakespeare?
41837Would n''t you like to see the inside of it?
41837Would you like to have me tell you a little about them?
41837Would you like to see some old books and get a notion of their value?
41837Would you-- would you mind telling me how you knew what book I had when you did not see it?
41837Yes, was n''t it? 41837 Yes, why?
41837You do n''t think she''d dare?
41837You-- you''re not?
41837Your daughter?
41837''Why should you think that?''
41837A moment later she said in a quiet tone of voice:"Lucile, do n''t you think it''s about time we waded ashore?
41837A second question suddenly disturbed her: Who was this child?
41837Ah, yes, how wonderful they are, these books?"
41837And could he, above all, induce an innocent child to join him in the deed?
41837And how could a child with a face like hers consciously commit a theft?"
41837And what does he want?"
41837And what is the meaning of the secret mark?"
41837And what would n''t two hundred dollars mean to her?
41837And who would suspect me?
41837And why did he assume that she was borrowing it?"
41837And why?
41837And, indeed, who, besides herself, could be in the book stacks at this hour of the night?
41837At first she thought she ought, yet deliberation led to silence, for, after all, what did she know?
41837Besides, if it''s plain business, why all this slipping in at the lake front instead of passing through the gate?"
41837Besides, what if it is?
41837But now she clutched at her heart as she asked herself once more:"Who can it be?
41837But where?
41837But where?"
41837But why was she going?
41837Ca n''t you?"
41837Came clear and got out of this affair; turned facts over to the authorities and allowed them to take their course?"
41837Came to borrow a book, did you?
41837Can I go no place without discovering that books marked with that hated, haunting sign have been stolen?
41837Can you see it in the morning papers?
41837Could he stoop to stealing?"
41837Did he suspect her?
41837Did he suspect something?
41837Did he suspect?
41837Did she catch a glimpse of a retreating figure at the far side of the campus?
41837Did the prince of the steel market wish a folio edition of Audubon''s"Birds of America"?
41837Did you wish to speak with him?"
41837Dinner, on such occasions, is served on a tea- wagon in his library; sort of makes a fellow feel at home, do n''t you know?
41837Do-- do you suppose it will be anything very dreadful?"
41837Ever been to New York before?"
41837Got any friends in New York?"
41837Had he perhaps seen her enter the library on one of those nights of her watching?
41837Had she been watched from above?
41837Had she done so at the old man''s direction?
41837Had she heard?
41837Had she herself taken it?
41837Had she seen her before?
41837Had that person been the same as he who had followed her this very night in an attempt to regain possession of the two books?
41837Had they done this to free a child about whom they knew nothing save that she had stolen two valuable books?
41837Have you read it?"
41837He paused as if in reflection, then said suddenly:"Do you think one would ever be justified in protecting a person whom he knew had stolen something?"
41837How did she expect to get out?
41837How did they come to be right there when you needed them most?"
41837How had she gotten in?
41837How long would they remain there?
41837How was I to know what had happened?
41837I wonder if he suspects-- but, no, how could he?"
41837I wonder why?
41837If he was a detective, how had she escaped him on this trip?
41837If not, who then?
41837In such a place?
41837Is that tall book second from the end on the shelf with the vacant space the Portland chart book?"
41837It was the man who had been seated at the table, but why had he been spying?
41837Last of all,"she smiled,"where does our friend, the aged Frenchman, the godfather of that precious child, come in on it?
41837Let''s see, what is that one?"
41837Let''s see-- who could tell me?
41837Let''s see?"
41837Lucile asked eagerly,"and where was his shop?"
41837Mind if I smoke?"
41837Or was it a thought?
41837Or, after all, had she?
41837Perhaps you should like to have me explain some of them to you?"
41837Pretty good, eh?"
41837Probably-- but what''s the use?
41837See that man?"
41837She had told Florence nothing, yet she had surprised her roommate often looking at her in a way which said,"Why are you out so late every night?
41837She was in a great, dark city alone and she was going-- where?
41837Should she tell what she knew?
41837Should the child be allowed to carry it to the mysterious cottage or should they insist on taking it to their room for safe keeping?
41837Simple, was n''t it?
41837So he did have a customer who was impatient of waiting and might seek a copy elsewhere?
41837That ends the affair, does it not?
41837That seems sensible enough, does n''t it?
41837The next turn found her mind focused on the one important question: Which way had the child gone?
41837The question was, what did she intend to do?
41837To what place?
41837Want''a buy it?"
41837Was a single book missing?
41837Was he a detective who had been set to dog her trail or was he some friend?
41837Was she hardened or completely innocent of guilt?
41837We gave gladly, for was it not our beloved France that was in danger?
41837Were two or three missing?
41837What I wish to know is, where did you get it?"
41837What are two books compared to the marring of a human life?
41837What could that be other than books?
41837What could that child and the old Frenchman do if the fire reached their cottage?
41837What did Frank Morrow hope to prove by any discoveries she might make regarding the former ownership of the book she carried in her pocket?
41837What did he mean?
41837What do you think it would look like?
41837What do you?
41837What great man may have contemplated the destruction of his wife?
41837What if this turned out to be a jail- breaking expedition?
41837What is one to make of that?
41837What noble lady may have whispered in its presence of some secret love?
41837What right has a university, or anyone else for that matter, to have books worth thousands of dollars?
41837What was he driving at?
41837What was she doing in the library at this unearthly hour?
41837What was the man''s purpose?
41837What was the use?
41837What was to come of that?
41837What would be the sense of having a wood plane worth eighteen thousand dollars when a five dollar one would do just as good work?"
41837What would that old man and child have to do with prisons?"
41837What would you say it was worth?"
41837What youths and maids may have slipped away into its quiet corner to utter murmurs of eternal devotion?
41837What?"
41837When is he likely to return?"
41837Where was the culprit?
41837Where''d I get her?
41837Where?
41837Who at that moment could tell?
41837Who could be expected to keep up with her?"
41837Who could tell when the fire would reach the mysterious tumble- down cottage with its aged occupant?
41837Who shall it be?"
41837Why be so foolish?"
41837Why did he not wire me?
41837Why do n''t you let me follow her alone?"
41837Why do n''t you share things with your pal?"
41837Why does Monsieur Le Bon want the books?
41837Why had the child taken the book?
41837Why not now?
41837Why not pass them on?"
41837Why should not such a person be punished?
41837Why?
41837Why?
41837Wild questions raced through her mind: Who was the child?
41837Wo n''t you please look at the book and answer my question?"
41837Woods are awful sort of spooky at night, do n''t you think so?"
41837Would it be all yellow and fiery like a glowworm or would it be just white, like a sheet?"
41837Would you mind taking them along?"
41837You do n''t think someone could suspect-- be shadowing us?"
41837Your address?
41837Your friends here will see that they are not stolen from you, will you not?"
41837grunted the proprietor suddenly,"what''s this?
41837she exclaimed,"what are you crying for?
4288Am I? 4288 And how soon?
4288And that is, Madam--?
4288And then suppose your son asks you why he ca n''t go camping with the other boys in summer school, and your daughter wants to join the cotillion?
4288And what would new presses cost?
4288And who will George?
4288And you say that this Rogers owns the newspaper?
4288Anything go wrong?
4288Are you going to have Lizzie?
4288Auntie''ll tell you,she repeated, adding suddenly, to the boy,"Russy, was n''t Aunt Ide in her room when you went up?
4288Barry, are you working too hard?
4288Barry,she said with a little effort,"have I been mistaken in thinking Billy''s mother was dead?"
4288But how the deuce will you get the costumes made?
4288But what a distinct period these things belong to, do n''t they?
4288But what are they halting for, and what are they clapping?
4288But what did they EAT, do you suppose?
4288But why do you hate it?
4288But, Barry, why are you working now?
4288Can we talk?
4288Captain Burgoyne was older than you, Sid?
4288Could you, WOULD you, take her over the place this afternoon, Barry? 4288 D''you think he looks all right?"
4288Did I tell you what Silva told me?
4288Did n''t he say why?
4288Did you know her?
4288Did you tell Wayne you got that frock in Santa Paloma?
4288Do you know, I do n''t know where you''ve been all these days, or what you went for? 4288 Do you still smell spice, and apples, and cider here?"
4288Getting enough of dinner parties?
4288Have n''t I said that?
4288He looks better, does n''t he? 4288 He would n''t like to come up to me, and get broken on the Mail?"
4288He''s an artist, too, is n''t he?
4288He''s sick of it, is he?
4288Here?
4288Hetty IS here, is n''t she?
4288His wife is very delicate, and they lost their little girl... Are you angry with me about anything, Barry?
4288How d''ye do it? 4288 How do you mean?"
4288How is everything going, Celia?
4288How was it today, Nellie? 4288 I may have to play to- night, Celia,"she went on, to her own cook,"but you girls can manage everything, ca n''t you?
4288I suppose it would kill you to have''em up here?
4288I''ve been thinking, Barry,she went on,"if you reordered the presses, they''d give you plenty of time to pay for them, would n''t they?
4288I--? 4288 Is n''t it?"
4288Is she really coming, Barry?
4288Is that children?
4288Is that the club?
4288Is this inclusive?
4288Is your head better, Mother?
4288It wo n''t interfere with your club work, Anne?
4288It-- it rather staggers one to think of trying to entertain a woman worth eight millions, does n''t it?
4288Mother, am I interrupting you?
4288Mother,said Ellen, flashing into radiance at the slightest encouragement,"have you told them about our Flower Festibul plans?"
4288No smoking?
4288Not knowing what?
4288Oh, but Barry,she gasped, her face radiant,"would he lend them?"
4288Oh, why store it? 4288 Paul,"said she, kissing his warm, moist neck,"do you truly love me a little bit?"
4288Say--?
4288Sidney,he said incoherently,"who-- where-- where did your father''s money go-- who got it?"
4288Silva?
4288So if you need-- yeast is it, that women always borrow?
4288Tell me WHAT?
4288Tell me, Joe, what''s all this talk of trouble between you and the Lacy boys at the rink?
4288Tell me, who is my nearest neighbor there, in the white cottage?
4288That''s so, your dinner is tomorrow night, is n''t it?
4288That''s so; you''ve got some sort of''High Jinks''on for to- night, have n''t you? 4288 The poor old MAIL?
4288There''s nothing against him, I suppose? 4288 There, how''s that?
4288To get an issue of the MAIL out tomorrow? 4288 To the city, Billy?"
4288Walter,his sister suggested nervously,"you''ll be awfully affectionate with Lizzie, wo n''t you?
4288Well, Annie-- doesn''t she do these things?
4288Well, but what can we DO?
4288Well, we''ve seen that coming, have n''t we? 4288 Well, what d''ye think of that?"
4288Went on WHAT?
4288What are you trying to do over there?
4288What are you two doing here at this hour?
4288What did she say when she went out?
4288What do they come for anyway? 4288 What do you think, Miss Pratt?"
4288What does Barry think?
4288What''s new with thee, coz?
4288Whatever made ye go over there for a dress- maker?
4288Where are you two boys going, Billy?
4288Where did WHAT-- father''s money? 4288 Where else would she be?"
4288Who ever said I was? 4288 Who is she?
4288Who will I be friends with?
4288Who, Richard?
4288Who?
4288Why did n''t you say so before?
4288Why did n''t you set them right?
4288Why do n''t they eat at home?
4288Why should she? 4288 Why, is it such a terrible effort?"
4288Why, what''s the matter with them?
4288Woman''s sphere? 4288 Would n''t he have loved this sort of life?"
4288Would n''t they be in your way? 4288 Yes, but that''s puttering here and there,"asserted Mrs. Brown,"would n''t laws for a working wage do all that, and more, too?"
4288You ca n''t really buy for them what you can do yourself, do you think so? 4288 You get a lot of fun out of your money, do n''t you, Sidney?"
4288You mean for people of a better class to go and live among them?
4288You''ve asked eight, so far,he said, as she was departing for the office an hour or so after dinner was finished,"but do you think that''s all?"
4288''Ibsen-- Did he Understand Women?''
4288--"Don''t you and your friend want to come and have some ice- cream with us, Josie?"
4288--didn''t she, Mother?
4288--didn''t she, Mother?
4288A second later he changed the topic abruptly by asking,"Did your roses come?"
4288Adams?"
4288All that space, she said, and those bins, and the little rooms, and all?
4288And as far as copying goes, do n''t we women always copy somebody, anyway?
4288And facing him radiantly, she demanded,"Who am I?"
4288And it went to her daughters, my step- sisters, they are older than I and both married--""Then you''re NOT worth eight million dollars?"
4288And she said she thought God sent you, did n''t she, Mother?"
4288And so old Ferguson wanted to sell, did he?"
4288And there was another pause before she said,"Where do men get their information, George?"
4288And, you see, my Indian boys--""Your WHAT?"
4288Are n''t we always imitating the San Francisco women, and do n''t they copy New York, and does n''t New York copy London or Paris?
4288Are we nursing a socialist in our bosom?"
4288Are we so swayed by mere money?
4288Are you crazy, Barry?"
4288Barry, are you hungry?"
4288Barry, there will be room now for my Ellen, and Billy, and Dicky Carew, wo n''t there?
4288Barry, when will we know about it?"
4288Barry, will you be an angel?"
4288Burgoyne?"
4288But even when I was eighteen, and we took a house in Washington, what could I do?
4288But listen, do you want to hear the tick- tock?
4288But why is it that our nice young American girls wo n''t come into our homes?
4288But wo n''t he be in your way?"
4288CHAPTER I"Annie, what are you doing?
4288D''ye get that?"
4288Did Annie find the doilies for the big trays?
4288Did Mrs. Binney come?
4288Did it come to you?"
4288Did n''t you say Adams?"
4288Did people of the nicer class speak of furniture as if it were made merely to be useful?
4288Did the extra ramekins come from Mrs. Brown?
4288Did you speak to the foreman about an opening for your sister?"
4288Do n''t you know how popular the girl who can play college songs always is at a house- party?"
4288Do you know this office is going to be much nicer than the old one?
4288Do you know what percentage survived?"
4288Do you know who she IS?"
4288Does n''t it, Barry?"
4288Have the press boys showed up yet?"
4288Her husband was at St. Petersburg for a while; then in London-- was it?
4288How goes everything with you?"
4288I call it a bang- up dinner, do n''t you, Parker?"
4288I said,''George, are you willing to have Jeannette get interested in that crowd?''
4288Is n''t that very decent of him?
4288Is that for the reception on the Fourth?
4288It sounds to me as if you really ought to make an effort to buy the paper, Barry, Have you thought of getting anyone to go into it with you?"
4288It''s a great occasion, I suppose?"
4288It''s nice enough, is n''t it?"
4288Jen, did n''t you have a dress like that when we were first married?"
4288Might even take something off the price, under the circumstances?"
4288Mother, may we have it?
4288O''Brien?"
4288Oh, did the extra ice come?
4288Oh, the cakes came, did n''t they?
4288Polishing the ramekins?
4288Sha n''t you have her?"
4288She consulted gravely with George Carew: should they attempt it?
4288She had her cheese just ripe enough, and samovar coffee to wind up with-- what more do you want?
4288She made your pink, did n''t she, Sue?
4288She''s a poor, brave little scrap-- twelve years old, did she say, Baby?"
4288Take the Browns, now, your neighbors there--""In the shingled house, with the babies swinging on the gate as we came by?"
4288The ayes rise, is that it?"
4288The buttercups came up, did n''t they?"
4288The question, is if we work like Trojans from now on, can we get an issue of the MAIL out tomorrow?"
4288Then she said abruptly:"Would Ferguson let you use the old STAR PRESS for a few weeks, do you think?"
4288Then you could rent the office and loft over the old station, could n''t you?
4288Then, with a sudden rush of enlightenment,"Why, Barry, you''re not JEALOUS?"
4288They used to make things so much more solid, do n''t you think so?
4288This was Hetty''s baby, and where was Hetty?
4288To see the house or each other''s clothes, or to eat?
4288Was it to San Francisco?"
4288What do you think at THAT?"
4288What does she know?
4288What does that do?"
4288What for?"
4288What have we all done?
4288What is that, a new dress?
4288What is to be done first about the MAIL?"
4288What of her fabulous wealth, after all, if he could support her as she chose to live, a simple country gentle- woman, in a little country town?
4288What worse blow could life give to the poorest girl?"
4288What would it mean?"
4288What''s her method?"
4288What''s the use of bringing a lot of children into the world that are going to suffer all sorts of privations when they get here?"
4288When did she ever speak of money, or take the least interest in money?
4288Where are they?
4288Where are you going to put them?"
4288Where''d she come from?"
4288Who are the Adamses?
4288Who got it?
4288Why do we have to depend upon the most ignorant and untrained of our foreign people?
4288Why this consideration?
4288Why this extra fuss?"
4288Will you find out, Annie?
4288Will you, Barry?"
4288Would you be perfectly willing to have your children feel at a disadvantage with all the children of your friends?
4288You really would n''t mind-- you wo n''t change your mind about it, Walt?"
4288You''ve seen--?"
4288and Lizzie?
4288he pleaded, taking her hands again,"may n''t I speak of it just this one day, and then never again?
4288news as fast as it comes in?
51369And what is Brandt''s fate?
51369But could his counsel do nothing to save him?
51369But where are my things?
51369Do you know who I am,said the omnipotent minister of an hour ago haughtily,"that you dare to command me thus?"
51369Do you remember, Sir, the moment when this Princess, whom they wish to make you condemn to- day, was confided to your love and generosity? 51369 Even on that concerning the education of the Crown Prince?"
51369Have you woke the Count?
51369In the words of David:''How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thine hand to destroy the Lord''s anointed?... 51369 What have I done to the people?"
51369Where is Count Struensee?
51369Whither would you go,said Brandt,"where you would be Prime Minister and favourite of a Queen?"
51369Who would not praise and esteem that dangerous but honourable night?
51369You will at least allow me to dress myself?
51369''But tell me,''said her Majesty,''tell me ingenuously, were you not a bit of a one while it lasted?''
51369''You do n''t take that for a compliment, do you?''
51369And for the King, how is he?''
51369And must not the Queen''s confidence in him necessarily result from the confidence with which the King honoured him?
51369Are_ you_, my Lord,[ North] quite devoid of feeling?
51369But was he not also about the King?
51369But what will become of Struensee?"
51369Can it be credited that her Majesty could so easily have forgotten herself?
51369Could any more affecting illustration of the insecurity of human happiness possibly be imagined?
51369Do you hear?"
51369Does he know that I am imprisoned here?"
51369Has he food to eat?
51369Has the Queen never known and fulfilled what she owed to herself, her husband and his people?
51369Have you not invited all your successive favourites to tempt her?
51369He sprang up in the bed, and shouted:"In God''s name, what is this?"
51369How could life possess any charms for me, who am separated from all those I love-- my husband, my children and my relatives?
51369How then can they possibly remain neuter, and see their Princess imprisoned by banditti and northern Vandals?...
51369How will the honour of the King and his royal family be better promoted-- by proving the Queen guilty, or by showing her innocence?
51369In answer to the envoy''s inquiry,"Where is the Queen?"
51369Is our pious Monarch cast in a different mould from that of his people?
51369On one occasion he asked a court official with a sneer:"What has become of your Queen of Denmark?"
51369On the way he groaned:"My God, what crime have I committed?"
51369One of the maids objected, and said that there were few men worthy of such sacrifices; what was a woman to do if her lover proved unfaithful?
51369Or is he taught to believe that the opinion of his subjects has no manner of relation to his own felicity?
51369She had sworn never to abandon him, and should she now, because of one false step, throw him to the wolves?
51369Suspected, accused, in danger of living a life of wretchedness for long years to come-- can anything be more heart- rending than her position?
51369The Queen wept, and asked:"Is he in chains?
51369The words of Holy Writ:''O Death, where is thy sting?''
51369What have you been doing?"
51369What more could the most consummate corrupter have done?
51369When Struensee went up to him and said:"Are you not going to dance?"
51369Which shall it be?"
51369Whither indeed?
51369Who knows whether the spots on it were not produced by the tears of despair she shed?"
51369_ INDIA_: What can it Teach Us?
51369and again:"If the husband accepts him as his confidant, what consequences will result for all three, and for the children?"
51369he exclaimed,"what harm have I done, that my dear and faithful subjects should hate me so?"
51369she cried,"is this the language that you dare to address to me?
5197''Are you going to write scores for the barricades?''
5197''But what do you expect to get out of the revolution?''
5197''Has it come too early or too late?''
5197''Is Monsieur Meyerbeer here?''
5197''Provisional government?''
5197''What does this mean for me?''
5197''What is the matter?''
5197''What on earth am I to wear as Venus?''
5197''Where are you going?''
5197''Will you undertake my business?''
5197(''Are you on our side against the foreign troops?'').
5197And, after all, what nation could produce the composer who could surpass HIM?
5197But what was I to do next?
5197Do you really think the performance of an opera by an unknown composer can be anything but a matter of money?''
5197Had I done anything criminal in the eye of the law or not?
5197He hoped that I was not thinking of the so- called romantic style a la Freischutz?
5197How could we expect the kindlers of such a fire to retain any consciousness after so vast a devastation?
5197How was this to be done?
5197I played Ueb''immer Treu und Redlichkeit, and my father said to her,''Is it possible he has musical talent?''
5197Lending money again?''
5197Suddenly turning towards them he called in a sepulchral tone,''Are the violas dying?''
5197Tell me frankly, so that I may know if I can rely on your friendship in the future?''
5197To all this I said not a word, but finally with a smile asked him whether he would like to go over to Zurich?
5197Very much astonished he asked:''Est- ce que je n''ai pas de trombones?''
5197Was any one of us so mad as to fancy that he would survive the desired destruction?
5197What would be the consequence?
5197Why do I deserve such favour?''
5197With a ring of compassion in his voice, he replied that my question was wholly mistaken; in what would the novelty consist?
5197have you come to me again with your Rienzi?''
40316--And a man?
40316A surprise?
40316A tyrant, then?
40316A_ what_?
40316Alfred?
40316Alone?
40316Always? 40316 And Rufe is n''t going down?"
40316And Waterloo does n''t give you any trouble while you''re trying to work, does he?
40316And do n''t you feel that way in church?
40316And do n''t you know what to do with me?
40316And what have you to say for yourself about Doctor Morgan''s book, my lady?
40316And you are afraid that he will join Blake-- in some way?
40316And you are asking me to release you?
40316And you are going away so soon-- and for so long?
40316And you are very happy?
40316And you really were telling some child about the little pigs going to market one night when he heard you?
40316Ann, is it Chalmers?
40316Ann, is that Richard Chalmers down- stairs?
40316Ann,he said finally, speaking in a remarkably low, gentle voice,"why does it seem to give you such pleasure to torture me that way?"
40316Are n''t we_ still_ barbarians-- at heart?
40316Are you for it or''ginst it?
40316Are you glad to see me, Ann?
40316Are you talking? 40316 Are you tired?"
40316Big?
40316Blames you?
40316But how can you ever amount to anything without an education?
40316But surely you do n''t think that I am marrying Richard for his money?
40316But what has_ he_ to do with Richard Chalmers?
40316But what_ is_ he?
40316But who wants to go through life with a marble up the coffee- pot spout?
40316But who''ll get the calf out of the fence corner?
40316But why paint to- night?
40316But you know that Alfred Morgan would-- would--"Would let me use his name?
40316But--_does it fit_?
40316Ca n''t Miss Fielding and I make you a mustard plaster-- or something?
40316Ca n''t you rescue me from Clayborne''s relentless newspaper spirit?
40316Did you tell him the truth or did you take the credit to yourself?
40316Do n''t you know that there is nothing in the world I own or could get too valuable for me to give to you, Ann?
40316Do you care for politics any more than you used to?
40316Do you desire that most? 40316 Do you know what I do on such nights as this?
40316Do you suppose they let anybody as young as Alfred do_ this_?
40316Do you think I might double the amount of his fee?
40316Do you think it will do?
40316Do you think that there is any new danger in Evelyn''s case?
40316Do? 40316 Does n''t he tear, or break, or_ chew_, or sprinkle over with talcum powder everything he can get his hands on?"
40316Does n''t that whistle sound_ close_ on these clear, still mornings?
40316Even if frankness were the right name for-- this, do you consider that now is the time for it? 40316 False impression?"
40316Frankness?
40316Gas stove?
40316Granted that I look as well as you say, and that I live in an earthly paradise-- can''t you see that there is no-- that it is_ lonesome_?
40316Has it seemed a long time since last night?
40316Have you been waiting long?
40316He admitted that you had sense enough to?
40316Heathen? 40316 How did you feel when you heard that news?"
40316How did you manage to get your hat out of the wardrobe?
40316How do you know? 40316 How glad?
40316How is my little girl?
40316How long do you expect to keep this up?
40316How many years ago to- day was it that we looked down into the old well in the lot and tried to see our future husband''s face?
40316How old did the book say this Eve was?
40316I have n''t heard the train whistle, have you?
40316I suppose that is partly on account of your age?
40316I wonder if our friend, Mr. Chalmers, is a domestic tyrant?
40316I wonder if you are ever going to be really great?
40316I-- wonder?
40316If the telephone had n''t summoned him I wonder which of you would have come off victorious?
40316If you''ve stood a lot, do n''t you think that I have, too?
40316Incompatible? 40316 Is Mrs. Barnette such a big personage, then?"
40316Is he dead?
40316Is he unkind to_ you_, too?
40316Is it money?
40316Is n''t it a devilish old day?
40316Is n''t it a sign of the times when a child of his age does n''t know a coffee- pot when he sees one?
40316Is n''t there anything we can do?
40316Is she going to marry him this morning?
40316Is the trip such a long one?
40316Is there but_ one_ man on earth I''d turn the name o''my vittles up- side- down''ards for?
40316Is there some sort of political trouble?
40316Is this sudden''wanderlust''the outcome of collecting all those nickels?
40316It was during the year of Alfred''s internship and you remember that Burke was always doing him an ill turn? 40316 Jewels?"
40316Little runaway, where have you been all morning?
40316Love you? 40316 Mercy, what should one say?"
40316Mr. Chalmers, will you call the power- house and have them turn on the lights?
40316Mrs. Clayborne, Ann has told you of our happiness?
40316Mrs. Clayborne,_ do_ you think I am too stout for one of those loose cloaks?
40316No? 40316 Now is n''t that_ too_ bad?"
40316Now, I''ll put it to you, Miss Ann, ai n''t that enough to make a woman wish she had n''t never saw a child? 40316 Now, did you ever hear anything that sassy?
40316Now, do n''t you think I''m sentimental?
40316Of course, if it is only an ordinary case of appendicitis_ you_ might do,he admitted grudgingly,"but-- suppose there are complications?"
40316Oh, do n''t they_ know_ that I would promise him my very soul if he should ask it?
40316Oh, is n''t there always a gala feeling about eating out of wedding presents? 40316 One of_ my_ Texas cyclones?"
40316Perhaps this is my opportunity for pressing my suit-- isn''t that what they call it in novels? 40316 Secret?"
40316Shall I close these doors? 40316 Shall I close these doors?"
40316Shall we go back into the house? 40316 Shall we walk around and look at things, too?"
40316Shock?
40316So I am going to have you all to myself to- night?
40316So soon?
40316So you think that people ought to get spiritual upliftment from going to church, do you?
40316So you''re satisfied with yourself?
40316So? 40316 Some august company to dinner?"
40316Some professional_ what_?
40316Something to show me?
40316Sophie, have you been traveling in vaudeville?
40316Stella Hampton? 40316 The truth?"
40316Their Maker? 40316 Then I am_ good- looking_?"
40316Then there is no appeal to be made to your pride?
40316Then why did n''t you tell him plainly-- when you first met him here and saw that he remembered you?
40316Then why on earth did n''t she rub it on early this morning?
40316Then you''ve seen him?
40316Then, what''s the trouble?
40316They have to register before they can vote, do n''t they?
40316This is not going to make any difference between us?
40316This is what you mean?
40316This political business is the most infernal--"What, Richard?
40316Too late?
40316Torture you?
40316Well, do n''t you think the scar adds to my list of attractions?
40316Well, have I stayed away long enough?
40316Well, he''s a pretty decent chap, although he does look deucedly young to be cutting into people-- don''t you think so?
40316Well, if you should some day grow to know me''always,''could you-- even if I am thirty- seven-- could you call me Richard?
40316Well, shall we be off to church?
40316Well, she''d enjoy some of_ our_ politicians, would n''t she?
40316Well, so you decided to come for a walk?
40316Well, what good does it all do me?
40316Well, what good does it all do?
40316Well, what if it is? 40316 Well, who is he and where did he come from?"
40316Well,I answered with a laugh which I hoped would sound light,"have n''t you just said that I am a_ star_-gazer?"
40316Well?
40316Well?
40316What decent person does n''t denounce him?
40316What difference does it make about the actual number of years?
40316What difference would that make?
40316What do you mean, honey?
40316What do you mean?
40316What do''jepmen''want to ask such fool questions for?
40316What does Gordon think of her condition?
40316What for?
40316What is a summer girl?
40316What is my weak point?
40316What kind of people?
40316What on earth for?
40316What''s the trouble?
40316What?
40316What?
40316What?
40316When are you going to answer it, sweetheart?
40316Where the dickens were you?
40316Where you been at?
40316Whether she cares for politics or no, eh?
40316Who is he?
40316Who knows this better than I? 40316 Who told you that I live in Texas?"
40316Why could n''t he have gone to the foot- ball game with some one else-- or why could n''t he have come home?
40316Why should you look distressed over a mention of your age?
40316Why the Blakes?
40316Why''of course?''
40316Why, Richard,I cried,"did you go all the way to St. Louis to find them?"
40316Why, it''s like a dream, is n''t it? 40316 Why?
40316Would you object to hearing a word from me before your manipulations go further?
40316Yes?
40316You are bored?
40316You are inclined to be jealous?
40316You are_ sure_?
40316You do n''t suppose for a minute I''m going to give any other fellow a chance to steal you away from me now, do you? 40316 You do n''t think that he made them-- what they are?"
40316You have never imagined yourself in love before, Ann?
40316You mean--?
40316You mean?
40316You thought I wanted to catch him for Evelyn?
40316You took care of him when his head was hurt last year?
40316You want to marry me and be governor of this state-- now, on your honor, which do you desire the more--_Richard_?
40316You would imply then that I am-- that I am jealous of this yearling doctor?
40316You''ll be there-- if I am ever inaugurated?
40316You''ll be there?
40316You''re going, are n''t you?
40316You? 40316 You_ helped_ Rufe?"
40316Young?
40316_ Mary!_ Have I lived to hear you deny the faith of your fathers?
40316_ Might_ put a different aspect?
40316_ Sin?_ Why, Mis''Mary!
40316_ What?_she demanded.
40316''_ Want chew._''Mamma, have n''t I begged you not to go through life saying chew and Jew, unless you refer to mastication-- or an Israelite?"
40316--But you_ quite_ love some one else?"
40316And after all that, you did n''t get to see him?"
40316Are you already engaged to Richard Chalmers?"
40316Because the last three weeks have been dreary and barren to me shall I not rejoice in the happiness of some one else?
40316Before I have had time to realize my good fortune?"
40316But I had already bought it then, and I could n''t take it back to the jeweler and tell him that my lady had turned it down, could I?"
40316But do you know what that young''un done?
40316But she died still thinking her Richard was a lion- hearted king, so who can say that Fate was not kind to her?
40316But what else can you expect when you are engaged to an Olympian god?
40316But where would Richard come in then?
40316By the way, you''ll excuse me while I run back a few minutes and help give the little fellow a dose of medicine?"
40316Ca n''t you come over a little later on, or maybe after I''m dressed-- to see if I am fixed all right, and if the parlor looks swell?"
40316Can you deny it?"
40316Chalmers did n''t want anything special with me, did he?"
40316Chalmers?"
40316Clayborne?"
40316Could I forget that kiss in the hour of death?
40316Could it be that her desire to get Evelyn married off to him was going to carry her to such lengths as this?
40316Could n''t you have managed some way to smooth it a little before you reached here?
40316Did ever a girl have such dreams and such nightmares mixed up together?
40316Did he_ eat_ people when they dared to go contrary to his wishes?
40316Did you ever hear of a girl so deep in love that she''d_ curl her hair on a het augur_?"
40316Did you hear that?
40316Did you notice how I stayed clear away last night while you went to the door with him?
40316Do I please you, Coeur de Lion?"
40316Do n''t people call me up for miles around to ask who wrote_ Prometheus Bound_ and how to spell''candidacy?''"
40316Do n''t you believe that I came just to see you?
40316Do n''t you love me any more?"
40316Do n''t you see that I have been half crazy ever since I found it out?
40316Do you notice that I call it a_ record_, and not a diary?
40316Does n''t it?"
40316Fielding,"poor Mrs. Sullivan was saying beseechingly, as she looked at mother''s startled face,"_ do_ you know what''s happened to Tim?
40316Glad to see him?
40316Good I may occasionally be; wicked I shall certainly be, for are not we all born in iniquity?
40316Have n''t I been a mother to the boy ever since that time I read surgical anatomy to him when he had tonsillitis?
40316Have you ever noticed how often a woman, who has nothing better to do, will wash her hair?
40316He came to see you?"
40316He has to go up there to- night on business and he wants to know if you''ll let him come up to your door and say good- by?"
40316He quickly moved the gun and rags, but seeing that this offense was not the cause of my wrath, he meekly inquired:"What?"
40316How could I let Alfred know, without wounding him and spoiling our comradeship?
40316How deeply entangled-- and for what?
40316How glad,_ darling_?"
40316How_ could_ any one go against Richard''s expressed wish?
40316How_ do_ they manage it, I wonder, when one adjective too many would brand them as a female?
40316I believe you said that I placed it around his head?"
40316I could n''t go off into another car with him, could I?"
40316I could n''t refuse it, could I?"
40316I know this is true because the paper we take says so; and if you are going to doubt what your favorite newspaper says, why, then, do you take it?
40316I live near a little country town, and am vastly dissatisfied with the cramped stage and meager audience, else why should I be keeping a journal?
40316I might even lose him--"That train leaves at six- thirty, I believe?"
40316I wonder what kind of house Richard and I will keep?
40316I wonder why this is?
40316I wonder why?
40316Is_ them_ what you''re talking about?
40316It was possible he meant--"Could you?"
40316It will be-- expensive, but will it be harmonious?
40316Let me see-- shall I begin where I left off-- that sunny morning when I parried with Richard across half the state and lived to regret it?
40316Literally or figuratively?"
40316Maxwell?"
40316Men hate it, too, and when I sounded Rufe on the subject he just frowned and said:"Oh, it''s_ awful_, but what are you going to do?"
40316My own engagement?
40316Now, the question is, are you going to be guided by what I tell you in this matter, or not?"
40316Now, what started this digression?
40316Of course, you understand the cause of the political unrest?
40316Oh, why did I not realize at the time these papers were fresh and new that they held a"pearl of wondrous whiteness?"
40316Or shall I begin with my entrà © e into Charlotteville and then jot down the past happenings as they come to me?
40316Or would it be better_ not_ to let him know?
40316Our first thought always is,''Is there a letter on that train for me?''
40316Richard, what do you mean?"
40316Rufe had stopped her at the kitchen door with the usual query,"Well, Mammy, you''re not married again?"
40316Shall I forget Neva?
40316Shall we go?"
40316Should I say no and have a quarrel with him?
40316Should I say yes, and prove myself a coward-- or should I lie to him?
40316Since when?"
40316So this is good- by then?"
40316Sullivan?"
40316Supervision?
40316Surely you do n''t mean to tell me that I am already too late?"
40316Surely you do n''t really think it was the dance that brought it on?
40316The bait was a bag of gold and a handful of glory; and beneath it was written"Little fishie in the brook, can daddy catch him with a hook?"
40316The only deception you will have to practise will be to announce your own engagement to some one else this week, so that--""This week?
40316Then what next?"
40316Then you mean to ignore my rights?"
40316Tyrant?
40316Was Richard a monster then?
40316Was Richard hoping to gain, through his friendship with me, the support of the_ Times_?
40316Was it prophetic that just as I was thinking over the words"rare jewel"the object of my search met my eyes?
40316Was n''t I born and_ raised_ in the shadow of it?"
40316Was n''t that the thing hollerin''?"
40316Was there nothing in the world he could do except trample upon people''s feelings then offer to pay them to get in a good humor again?
40316Was this a lovers''quarrel?
40316What are you afraid of?"
40316What did it portend?
40316What do you say, dear heart?"
40316What shall I do with you?"
40316What would mother say to that?"
40316When are you going to marry me, Ann?"
40316When she is so wretched?"
40316Where was I?
40316Who is she?"
40316Who told you?"
40316Who wants to kiss something that looks about as lover- like as Rameses II?"
40316Who_ is_ here?"
40316Why did Richard leave home at this time to spend Thanksgiving with old man Blake if it did not mean that he was entangled with him?
40316Why should old man Blake give all the biggest portion of the plum to Richard, when he had never been governor himself?
40316Why should you torture yourself into a passion if I but mention anything even remotely connected with the medical profession?"
40316Will you be so good, madam, as to set forth your views?"
40316Will you forgive me-- and-- and kiss me?"
40316With their zest for canonizing their leaders I wonder what the temperance workers_ will_ do with a man as handsome as Richard Chalmers is said to be?
40316Wives?
40316Would we please wait outside?
40316You asked the man,''_ Do_ you know what the third little pig had-- or did?''
40316You remember you told me that you were booked to come home with them?
40316You''re not going to faint, nor-- anything, are you?"
40316_ What?_""''Tis true.
40316_ Will_ you hush talking about coffee- pots?
52713''But if,''he added,''the covetousness of this world caused him to remain on this way that he is upon, how did his correcting touch you?
52713''But why,''he says,''should I name it a Church?
52713''Doth he desire it?''
52713''Is there none of the Earl''s name,''he asked,''that will take upon him to follow and maintain that enterprise?
52713''Who knows not Arlo- hill?''
52713''Who,''said the Cardinal, with an expressive shrug,''would trust an Irishman?
52713''Why, man,''he told his own counsel,''I got it by the sword; what title should I say else?''
52713''Wilt thou tell me?''
5271371), to the Conde''the Lemes''(?
52713Crown 8vo., 5_s.__ INDIA: WHAT CAN IT TEACH US?_ Crown 8vo., 5_s.__ CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE SCIENCE OF MYTHOLOGY._ 2 vols.
52713Dr. Joyce hesitates to identify''the stony Aubrion,''but is it not the Burren in Carlow?
52713He undertook generally to''plant the Catholic faith throughout Ireland,''and when did Rome bear a rival near her throne?
52713How were O''Rourke and MacSwiney punished by imprisoning O''Gallagher or O''Dogherty?
52713Is Thomas Wilson a stalking- horse for Edmund Spenser?
52713There were spies about him,''and when a man hath so many shewing friends, and so many unshewing enemies, who learneth his end here below?''
52713Who were innocent of rebellion, and how far were conveyances to uses fraudulent?
52713Would your lordship have thought this weakness and this unnaturalness in this man?''
52713said Bingham,''would you have us keep our words with those which have no conscience, but break their word daily?
52713what is the matter?''
46434''A strained ligament(_ entorse_)?'' 46434 ''Ah, what can you expect?
46434''At Rheims?'' 46434 ''For the house of Pommery?''
46434''Here, you, what are you groaning about?'' 46434 ''Is that the bag?''
46434''That you, François? 46434 ''Uncomfortable, are you?
46434''What do you make of the convention of Geneva?'' 46434 ''What shirt did he have on?''
46434''Why? 46434 ''You are leaving us?''
46434''You are wounded, General?'' 46434 ''You know France?''
46434A military point to that bombardment? 46434 And why,"we pressed him,"did you run away without going to your mother?
46434And you are away from the army now,''on permission''?
46434By any chance, do you know a friend of mine, Charles Bonnell?
46434Do you know what you are in danger of in telling lies? 46434 Do you know, my sister, what has been done to the ciborium( sacred vessel for the sacrament)?"
46434Do you spell it B- o- n- n- e double l?
46434Do you think I''m taller than my uncle?
46434Enough, for I may die this very night And how should I dare die, this man let live?
46434Have you told your parents or any one?
46434How is this?
46434How long did he remain there thinking before he accomplished his crime?
46434How many milliards will bring us back our happiness?
46434Is it not true that the Lady Superior of the Hospital organized her people for the purpose of firing on our wounded with rifles?
46434It is then his son, the Crown Prince, who is responsible?
46434Oh, then, you care more for your furniture than you do for your own safety?
46434Pretty stagey, is n''t it?
46434Were they soldiers or officers?
46434What does it remind me of?
46434Where are you going?
46434Which is the one who lives next door to the hospital?
46434Why did you burn our homes?
46434Why is this house shut up? 46434 Why should nations go to war, since the principle of nationality is not vital?"
46434Why will you set fire to this house?
46434You are not afraid?
46434You are often shelled?
46434You have n''t any bread?
46434You rode easily?
46434Your name is Bonnell?
46434''Who is upon the Lord''s side?''"
46434And for which nationality, Greek or Bulgar?
46434And the remedy?
46434Are not the greatest nations of mixed blood?
46434But does our recent history mean much to Czech or Russian Jew or Calabrian who has settled among us?
46434But how is the social change inside the country to be related to other States?
46434But is that scrupulous care of mine a justification to the_ Independent_ for omitting to tell the humiliations visited on that convent school?
46434But was the case not established by the same process I have used-- personal observation, documentary proof, and the testimony of eye- witnesses?
46434But who will do the paying, and when will they do it?
46434Can that be the village of Evres on fire?
46434Could n''t work it to get the front?
46434Did n''t you think she might be anxious?"
46434Do I need to say that the soldier was bought out?
46434Do the Balkan mountains represent the purposes of God in Macedonia?
46434Do you think race and nation are the same thing?
46434Does venom act so?
46434Has Leon Mirman, Prefect of Meurthe- et- Moselle, given them a statement in which he retracts what he said to me?
46434Has that testimony shown that the destruction and murder did not take place?
46434Have the social workers as a unit denounced the continuing injustice to Belgium?
46434Have they examined the originals of the German diaries and found that I have omitted or altered words?
46434Have they spent many days in Lorraine taking testimony from curé and sister and Mayor and peasant?
46434Have you met Dick?
46434He stood there a moment in silence, then burst out again angrily:"''What are you eyeing me for?
46434He wrote:"What is America to do?
46434How can an officer in war time disobey the orders of the supreme military command?
46434How can they know it?
46434How does it differ from other sections of the map?
46434How fashion a civilization that shall absorb and assimilate those blood- strains and traditional beliefs?
46434How shall a man serve all humanity whom he has not seen, if he does not serve his nation whom he has seen?
46434How should I go about getting that promise?
46434I thought to myself, What is happening?
46434I thought: What is going to happen to them?
46434If we are disloyal, what then do you call the Choates, the Roosevelts, the Eliots, and the foreign- born Haven Putnams?"
46434Is it fair of the_ Independent_ to be inaccurate?
46434Is it too much to ask them to abstain from their peace parties and their anti- munitions campaigns?
46434Is that civilization potent enough to shape the new contributions?
46434It is easy to throw the discussion into nonsense by asking: Is there any such thing as a pure race?
46434Neutrality of word and thought?
46434Not yet can an American of these recent years stand off from the stream of his experience, saying,"What does it mean that I am an American?"
46434One of us asked him:"And were n''t you afraid, my boy, of the fight?"
46434Quis pro Domino?
46434Shall we take away their tradition from them?
46434So why should we who read of them?
46434The Germans saw him and said:"It is a lunatic asylum, do n''t you see?"
46434The final question was this:"As the result of this war, what hope have we of reconstruction and an altered policy in Germany?"
46434The officer asked me:"''Do you know these ladies?''
46434The quarrel none of ours?
46434The second question read:"How are such acts of German severity to be accounted for?"
46434The test of our desire for peace will be found in this: Do we mean business?
46434This idea is either good or evil; and you continue to call yourselves men and Christians, you claim the right of remaining neutral?
46434To what country can he travel where the sun is pleasanter on happy fields?
46434Too proud to fight?
46434Want a cigarette, do you?''
46434War profits out of their blood?
46434Were they present in Belgium at the moment of impact?
46434What blend can we obtain from a score of mixtures?
46434What does America mean?
46434What is Coöperative Americanism?
46434What is it trying to do?
46434What is the solution of these diverse elements?
46434What people can he visit who have the dignity and simplicity of his neighbors?
46434What shall be our foreign policy?
46434What the people say is this:"Ah, back in Paris, were you?
46434What to do?
46434What will they do?
46434What will you do about it?"
46434Where are your majors?"
46434Where does our future lie?
46434Why are these Southerners loved?
46434Why did they commit these horrors?
46434Why do n''t they cease their quarrel, and live as we live?
46434Why do their accomplishments conquer the world so gently, so irresistibly?
46434Why does Mr. Bourne applaud the one and lash the other?
46434Why else blindly scrape one''s way past a creaking truck of shells, testing 20 horses, two abreast, steaming in their own cloud of sweaty vapor?
46434Why have you taught your young men the use of arms?''
46434Why should he be seeking strange lands, like the troubled races?
46434Why should not social workers declare themselves in time?
46434Why the overnight change from sharp intolerance of successful injustice?
46434Why?''
46434Will you put out the fire?"
55439But why do we speak of it as a_ coat_ of arms when there is nothing to suggest such a term?
55439PEEPS AT HERALDRY CHAPTER I AN INTRODUCTORY TALK ABOUT HERALDRY What is heraldry?
36638Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, giving your dear dada such trouble, eh, Viper?
36638Anarchists out of employ?
36638And Pompey''s Pillar?
36638And cook saw nothing at all?
36638And do you mean to tell me that Jean Bouchon has haunted this café ever since?
36638And he haunts you now?
36638And heard_ Carmen_ at Her Majesty''s?
36638And how are you off for glass?
36638And how do you find yourself, sister-- out of the flesh?
36638And how is it that you are confident that you are not being observed by Jane?
36638And how many bottles to a cask?
36638And how were you roused? 36638 And is he buried here?"
36638And my Sally-- my wife?
36638And my wife will get over it?
36638And now,said I,"what may be your wishes in this most unfortunate matter?"
36638And pray why did you not make her come here instead of lugging me all the way down there?
36638And pray, what is the blend?
36638And quite recently?
36638And that I danced at Lady Belgrove''s ball?
36638And the Sphynx?
36638And the plate?
36638And the untoward Fates cut you short?
36638And then,added she,"if I really had been drowned, what would Joseph have done?"
36638And there is no one there?
36638And there is no way of getting rid of him?
36638And what do you call yourselves now?
36638And you are not too tired to go?
36638And you are sure it is Jane?
36638And you can not enlighten me?
36638And you desire no more of the pomps and vanities?
36638And you really recognised yourself?
36638And your ghost, will he attend you?
36638And, Jabez, if it was a man, a robber-- and me in my night- shirt? 36638 And, pray, has the_ Bold Venture_ made no attempt since?
36638Annerl, why do you not knit my socks or stocking- legs? 36638 Any particular carriage?"
36638Are you a Scotchman or an Englishman?
36638Are you sure it is not cook?
36638Aunt,said Betty, anxious to change the topic,"would you mind my seeing a doctor?
36638Betty,said Lady Lacy,"what do you say to going to the new play at the Gaiety?
36638Break what off?
36638Broken-- what glasses?
36638But did you not go and see?
36638But how do you know, Philippa, dearest?
36638But how-- did not Colonel Graham see personally to the matter?
36638But how?
36638But if it was a woman-- and me in my night- shirt?
36638But the dinner?
36638But was there any wind?
36638But what about papa''s consent?
36638But what are you doing?
36638But what can that Hindu know of underground London?
36638But what causes this alarm? 36638 But what do you mean when you say that you can not travel far from your bones?"
36638But what the dickens can I do? 36638 But where did she go?"
36638But who be they to go to, then?
36638But who is Jean Bouchon?
36638But why do you permit him to do that?
36638But why so? 36638 But why,"asked another,"do you call him Von Arler?
36638But you followed her, of course?
36638But, Davie, what do you mean? 36638 But,"began the girl, then checked herself, and said--"Is my aunt getting up?
36638By boat, I presume?
36638By the way,broke off Donelly,"do you understand Hindustani?"
36638Call ourselves? 36638 Can I go up to her?"
36638Can you read and write?
36638Did I not say that all forces were correlated? 36638 Did he mean the present Sultan of Turkey?"
36638Did she run upstairs or down?
36638Did they continue chummy?
36638Did you go with Lady Lacy?
36638Did you never wear clothes?
36638Did you see her face?
36638Did you see her face?
36638Do n''t you think, Ben, that one has got a little tired of those pictures?
36638Do you ever hear anything?
36638Do you not know,said he,"that we shall all of us, some day, develop wings?
36638Do you object to my putting the bar across the road, immediately on the arrival of the train?
36638Do you really mean this, Philippa?
36638Do you remember, Lynton, what happened here when I was with you before? 36638 Do you see anything particular?"
36638Does not this sort of work require a certain familiarity with the technique of the stage which I do not possess?
36638Eh?
36638Escape what? 36638 Excuse me, will you take a chair?"
36638For long?
36638For what purpose?
36638Ghost? 36638 Got your leg in all right?"
36638Halloo, mother, what brings you here?
36638Has Lasinia--that was the name of the servant--"broken any more dishes?"
36638Have I done so in my book?
36638Have the tenants had any particular reasons for not remaining on there-- if I may be so bold as to inquire?
36638Have you got a fiddle?
36638Have you never inquired into the matter?
36638Have you no thought of dramatising us?
36638Heard what, dear?
36638Hold,said I;"is Alphonse here?"
36638How about the kitchen utensils?
36638How are you, sir?
36638How are you?
36638How came that about?
36638How can I get rid of it?
36638How can I tell? 36638 How can I?"
36638How do you explain that?
36638How do you know about these products of the present age, here, buried under fifty feet of soil for eight thousand years?
36638How do you know that she is red- haired?
36638How do you know that?
36638How do you mean? 36638 How goes the enemy?
36638How long has he been on your staff?
36638How much be it?
36638How much?
36638How so?
36638How so?
36638How the deuce can I tell you? 36638 How, last night?"
36638How, my precious boy?
36638How? 36638 I beg your pardon?"
36638I say,said Jameson, raising his head,"is it too late for a brandy- and- soda?"
36638If it is not Miss Bessie, who is it, ma''am?
36638If not Jane, who can it be?
36638If there be no red- haired girl in the house, how can you have one watching you?
36638Indeed?
36638Is she here still?
36638Is that enough, mother?
36638Is that the boat?
36638Is there anything so rideeculous about me?
36638Is there no alternative?
36638It ca n''t be Sally-- how can it, when she ca n''t get out o''her room wi''out passin''through ours?
36638Jacob, what is it?
36638Jean Bouchon has been seen no more?
36638Joe,she said,"poor little man, how old are you?"
36638Joking apart, have you any such superstition hanging on in your neighbourhood?
36638Julia,said he,"do you observe how I have cut myself in shaving?"
36638Lead whom, my idol? 36638 Martha,"said she, when her maid appeared,"where is that novel I had yesterday from the circulating library?
36638May I take my fiddle with me?
36638Met what?
36638Miss Vincent,protested Leveridge with vehemence,"if I have, what then?
36638Monsieur asks after Jean Bouchon?
36638Monsieur has perhaps been informed that he was buried in the cemetery?
36638Monsieur has seen Jean Bouchon? 36638 Monsieur tipped Jean Bouchon?"
36638My dear Edward,she replied,"how could I?
36638My dear, who is to go with me?
36638My dearest, is that to be wondered at with this racketing about; balls and theatres-- very other than the quiet life at home? 36638 My knife?"
36638No, Julia; why do you ask?
36638No, ma''am, I''ve not, so to speak, seen her face; but I know it ai n''t cook, and I''m sure it ai n''t you, ma''am; so who else can it be?
36638Nor do sums?
36638Not admitted? 36638 Not an ordinary, barefaced, rudimentary hash?"
36638Not before, Mustapha?
36638Not even if she were a scold?
36638Now, then,said he to Poppy,"what do you think of her?"
36638Now, where''s the saddle? 36638 Oh, Aunt Elizabeth, how can you say so, when the verdict was that he committed suicide when in an unsound condition of mind?
36638Oh, Letice,said Betty, obtaining her speech,"you do not grudge me the joys of life?"
36638Perhaps cottage pie?
36638Please, sir, will you look? 36638 Pray what is the sense of this?"
36638Pray, what is your name, my man?
36638Pray, what may they be?
36638Pray, why not?
36638Prevent what, my love, my treasure?
36638Rissoles, ma''am?
36638Shall I get you a glass of sherry, or anything?
36638Shall we go and hear?
36638So I may count on your services?
36638So you''ve only one- and- six left?
36638Steppy, need I go to school any more?
36638Surely Abdulhamid can not be a Hindu name?
36638Surely not?
36638Take what away?
36638That was her last words?
36638The door was open?
36638The house has been let before, I suppose?
36638The key, mother?
36638Then perhaps croquettes?
36638Then where did she go?
36638Then who can she be?
36638Then who watches you?
36638Then why apply it? 36638 Then why does he come here and ask for payment for coffee and what else one may order?"
36638Then why have you attacked me? 36638 Then you do not know whither this galloping legion runs?"
36638Then you hold that I really was at the boat- race?
36638Then you know her?
36638Then you wo n''t mention this to my aunt?
36638Then, what became of his body?
36638Then,pursued the parson,"the situation is this: Have you secured the dramatisation of your novel?"
36638Then-- what is your sport?
36638There is no help for it, Mr. Fothergill, unless----"Unless what, Davie?
36638To whom, then?
36638Was there an inquest?
36638We''ll do so-- but I hope it''s not----"What?
36638We-- am I to accompany you?
36638Well, what next?
36638Well, where am I to get one?
36638Well,said she,"is that all you have to say to me?"
36638What I have said is fact, is it not?
36638What are you all?
36638What avail fig leaves? 36638 What book do you refer to?"
36638What can you do?
36638What did they say of me?
36638What do I care about a name? 36638 What do you all want?"
36638What do you mean by saying that people had fits?
36638What do you mean by serious?
36638What do you mean by that?
36638What do you mean, sir? 36638 What do you mean?
36638What do you mean? 36638 What do you mean?"
36638What do you mean?
36638What do you say to being my shepherd?
36638What do you want?
36638What dress will you go in?
36638What have I done to injure and incense you?
36638What have it come to?
36638What is a fact?
36638What is it, Jacob?
36638What is it, Philippa?
36638What is it, then?
36638What is it?
36638What is it?
36638What is not Jane?
36638What is not Miss Bessie? 36638 What is that for, Jacob?"
36638What is that? 36638 What is the matter with you, Joe?"
36638What is the matter with you, Samuel?
36638What is the price of cognac down there?
36638What is this fooling for?
36638What on earth do you mean?
36638What reason is there for the public''s being excluded, may I ask?
36638What sort of notions?
36638What the dickens am I to do?
36638What thing?
36638What was the matter, Joe dear?
36638What will they say if I do not go? 36638 What''s that you''ve got there, eh?"
36638What, miss, up already?
36638What-- at this time of night? 36638 What-- one at a time?"
36638What?
36638Whatever is all this nonsense about?
36638Whatever is the matter with the passage?
36638Whatever shall we do?
36638Whativer shall we do?
36638Whativer will her do wi''the rest?
36638When? 36638 When?"
36638Where did she come from?
36638Where did you get''un-- steal it, eh?
36638Where is the place?
36638Where is the toad?
36638Where was she, then?
36638Where, Jameson?
36638Which, she that was, or she that is to be?
36638Who can it be, then?
36638Who is Jehu?
36638Who is seen?
36638Who should I have?
36638Who was that? 36638 Who''ll get the silver taypot and spoons, and the money?"
36638Whom did you meet?
36638Whom do you mean? 36638 Whom have we here?
36638Why did they turn out the lights?
36638Why did you call her into being?
36638Why do they not import foxes?
36638Why do you not sit by me?
36638Why do you wish me ill?
36638Why may n''t I go where there is something pretty to see? 36638 Why not?"
36638Why not?
36638Why not?
36638Why should I? 36638 Why should there be bother, as you term it, then?"
36638Why should you put the cap on your own head?
36638Why so?
36638Why, what possesses you all? 36638 Why, what''s the matter?"
36638Why?
36638Will it be dry by to- morrow?
36638Will monsieur be so good as to come here to- morrow during the morning? 36638 Will you come with me?"
36638Will you kindly give me some lime- juice?
36638Wilt thou have this man to thy wedded husband?
36638Wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded wife?
36638Wo n''t you have your ship-- the_ Bold Venture_?
36638Would you venture on a visit to a church porch on this night-- St. Mark''s eve?
36638Yes, sir, unless----"In this damp, and cold, and darkness?
36638You can throw no light on the matter? 36638 You followed her-- how far?"
36638You have n''t been so foolish as to do that?
36638You have never heard of one, self- taught, with a real love of music in this country?
36638You have not been snapped up by a fortune- hunter?
36638You have not many friends in this place, have you, cook?
36638You have searched your room thoroughly?
36638You know, of course, the story which gave rise to the superstition?
36638You must really excuse me,interrupted I,"but how the dickens do you know all this?"
36638You think so, ma''am?
36638You wo n''t yet? 36638 You wo n''t, you dogged, insulting being?"
36638Your what?
36638''Does not sahib know?''
36638''Does that pay well?''
36638''How can I do that?''
36638''How many of these rubbishy bangles can you dispose of in a day?''
36638''I love you: then if you urge me farther than to say,"Do you in faith?"
36638''In Germany or in Birmingham?''
36638''Oh, sahib, how can I tell?
36638''Well,''said I,''and have you succeeded?''
36638''What are the Merewigs?''
36638''What do you mean by Merewigs?''
36638''Where are all these things made?''
36638''Why, what brings you here?''
36638A few days later the house- parlourmaid said to me,"Please, ma''am, may I have another pill?"
36638After nearly an hour had elapsed, whilst a hymn was being sung, Joseph, more to himself than to his mother, said:"Can I escape?"
36638Ai n''t it a beauty?"
36638Am I quoting aright?"
36638Am I to stick out here?"
36638And I said to cook, says I:''Did you see a girl come this way?''
36638And what did that blessed"( he did not say"blessed,"but something quite the reverse)"fiddle cost you?"
36638And what were those thoughts?
36638And who that has not experienced it can judge of the sensation of exquisite delight afforded by this to the young author?
36638Are we the happier for knowing that there are no ghosts, no fairies, no witches, no mermaids, no wood spirits?
36638Are you able now to rise?
36638Are you caking?"
36638Are you ill?"
36638Are you sure you went to the ball and to the opera?"
36638At what time would you like your supper, sir?"
36638Baker?"
36638Box,"said Leveridge,"how wags the world with you?"
36638But do you not know that the king has ennobled him?
36638But how do you account for his having seen his double?"
36638But how much earth had fallen?
36638But how was he to be identified?
36638But how were three shillings and sixpence to be earned?
36638But if so-- how had he vanished the moment my head was protruded through the window?
36638But if you''d consent to pass into her and become a mother----""And nurse the twins?
36638But in summer what is the use of clothing?
36638But one star?"
36638But the flag?"
36638But what do you say to these slit panjams?''
36638But what o''that?
36638But-- she said to herself-- it would really be a shame to spoil a pair, and where else could she get such fine and beautiful old linen as was this?
36638By the way, talking of tomatoes, who is that red- haired girl who has been about the house?"
36638By the way, that red- haired girl?"
36638Can one of the front panes be broken?"
36638Can you manage to reach your room?"
36638Come-- is this leap year?"
36638Consider: what will people say if you go to the assembly?"
36638Could a parson, could magistrates bring to naught what had been for centuries?
36638Could it be that a widow''s prayer should meet with no response?
36638Did he like you-- much?"
36638Did he?"
36638Did we not recapture Orléans from the Germans in November, 1870?"
36638Did you recognise the gown?
36638Did you see her, ma''am, as you came up?"
36638Do ye think as I knows''ow many people and dogs goes through this heer geatt in a day?
36638Do you hear?
36638Do you know of any cases of rupture of connection?"
36638Do you not know that burnt clay is a sure protection against ague, which was the curse of the Essex marsh land?
36638Do you see nothing more?"
36638Do you see that?"
36638Do you think it can be a ghost?"
36638Does not monsieur see that the sentiment is patriotic and magnificent?"
36638Flys never leave the moment that the train comes in, or the horses become restive-- a wonderful thing for a fly- horse to become restive, is n''t it?"
36638For instance, you say to the lady next to you,''Am I squeezing you?''
36638Good Lord, when will this come to an end?"
36638Had a London black, curdled in that dense pea- soup atmosphere, descended on my nose and blackened it?
36638Had it lost its virtues?
36638Had the hot sun during the day affected my brain, or had the last drain of whisky upset my reason?
36638Has she been looking into your drawers?"
36638Has she remarked concerning this girl to you?"
36638Have you anything against it?
36638Have you been hurt?"
36638Have you ever suffered from that previously?"
36638Have you long been subject to it?"
36638Have you seen her on these occasions and assured yourself that it is she?"
36638Have you, my friend, ever taken up the subject of the photosphere of the sun?"
36638He halted at the rails and said:"Why, vicar, what are you about?"
36638He was buried with the regular forms, I suppose?"
36638He was very unlike his idealised portrait in the statue; but what matters that?
36638Hodd, was n''t it?
36638How about the carpets?"
36638How came that about?
36638How can I golf any more?
36638How can I putt a ball and follow it up with any feeling of interest?
36638How can you get about?
36638How can you tell?
36638How could I help his blowing out his brains, when those brains were deranged?"
36638How did you become aware of it?"
36638How do you account for that?"
36638How goes on the drying?"
36638How is it with photography?
36638How many did you possess?"
36638How much of the passage was choked, and how long would they take before I was released?
36638How often has this occurred?"
36638How often have I told you not to go intruding into a place of worship?
36638How was she to solve the riddle?
36638However did he contrive to seat himself in my pocket?
36638I ca n''t get in?"
36638I have not found fault with you for anything as yet, have I, Jane?
36638I mean, who is not Miss Bessie?"
36638I now fixed my eyes intently on the one illumined window, and it appeared to me as if some dark body passed across it: but what?
36638I saw him come in----""Saw whom, father?"
36638I wonder why she leaves so soon?''
36638If he were dead, why did he not lie quiet and cease from vexing her?
36638If you are not feeling well, would it not be as well to stay at home?"
36638If you had''nt been punished a bit already, would n''t I larrup you neither?
36638In your parts have they any notions about St. Mark''s eve?"
36638Is not electric light becoming an artistic agent?
36638Is she very tired?"
36638Is that all?
36638Is there any truth in it?
36638Is there not a bottle of claret in the basket?"
36638Let me see-- where was I?
36638Mashed potatoes?
36638Miserable, miserable young man, you might have pumped others, but why me?
36638Murdered, was your son?"
36638Must it be twins?
36638My word!--why did n''t she use''em, instead of them rags?"
36638Not got the''flue, have you?"
36638Nothing at all?"
36638Now, is it not obvious that you are beginning at the wrong end when you attack the disease?
36638Of Assyrian sculpture?
36638Of Egyptian hieroglyphics?
36638Pete said in a low tone to his mother:"Have you seen any dark spots on his leg?
36638Pickles?
36638Pray what else can they do?"
36638Presently I summoned a waiter, and when he came up I inquired:"But where is Jean Bouchon?"
36638Shall you mind very much?
36638She said to her maid:"Martha, will you dress me this evening-- and-- pray stay with me till my aunt is ready and calls for me?"
36638Surely not one of the maids?"
36638Surely you might kill him and possess yourself of what you so ardently covet?"
36638Tell me, now, did Mr. Hattersley propose to you?"
36638That''s clear enough, is it not?"
36638The child raised its large blue eyes to her, pure innocent eyes, and said:"Mother, may I say my Catechism and prayers before I go to bed?"
36638The choir, the congregation, were singing the Advent hymn to Luther''s tune--"Great God, what do I see and hear?
36638The potato- sack?"
36638Then Mr. Fergus McAlister stood up and said:"Shall we join the ladies?
36638There was a sort of door- opener or verger at the entrance, and I said to him:"What is the meaning of all this?"
36638They might very reasonably say:''What the hang has Mr. Fergus McAlister to do with the body of Captain O''Hooligan?''
36638Under S. Aignan did we not repel Attila and his Huns in 451?
36638Underdone?
36638Walk the links any more with any heart?
36638Was I in my right senses?
36638Was any trust to be placed in that woman at the workhouse?
36638Was it not possible that she should know the ritual of St. Elian''s spring?--should be able to assist her in the desire of her heart?
36638Was it that fashion trampled on home- grown pictorial beginnings as it flouted and spurned native music?
36638Was not God righteous in all His ways?
36638Was she deceiving her for the sake of the half- sovereign?
36638Was the body embalmed?"
36638Was the request for that on the tip of your tongue?
36638Was the supply inexhaustible?
36638Was there no limner that was native?
36638Was this to be accompanied by her former experiences?
36638Was wrong to prevail in the world?
36638We-- did I say?
36638Were the weak and oppressed to have no means of procuring the execution of justice on the evildoers?
36638Were you hurt?"
36638What care they for eucalyptus?
36638What cared he for either?
36638What did she wear?"
36638What did you care about our souls so long as your terriers were washed and combed, and your horses well groomed?
36638What did you think, dear?"
36638What do you mean giving me such a cursed hunt after you as this-- you as ai n''t worth the trouble, eh?"
36638What do you mean?"
36638What do you suppose that ethereal pinions spring out of?
36638What do you think of doing with me?"
36638What do you think of them, Ben, dear?"
36638What do you want?"
36638What good have you ever done to anyone else beside yourself?"
36638What good have you ever done to deserve it?"
36638What good shall I be with only one leg?"
36638What had she said and done when unconscious?
36638What has a poor lorn widow like me got to boast of but her character?
36638What has that to do with me?"
36638What in the name of Thunder and Bones do you mean squandering the precious money over fooleries like that for?
36638What is that?"
36638What is the alternative?"
36638What is the cause of your impotent resentment?"
36638What is there?"
36638What is this?
36638What is your name?"
36638What knows such of prehistoric flints and scratched bones?
36638What name?"
36638What of her strange sleeps?
36638What of those mysterious appearances of herself, where she had not been?
36638What on earth could that harmless member have in it so terrifying?
36638What sense is there in such a name as_ Boneventure_?
36638What should he do?
36638What was it?
36638What was the meaning of this?
36638What was the result?"
36638What was the signification of that encounter?
36638What was time with such an end in view?
36638What will my wife say?"
36638Whativer can be up?
36638When Mr. Wotherspoon was gone--"Well,"said Poppy,"what have you got for me?"
36638When are we coming to the wings?"
36638When the grocer saw him he said:"Will you favour me with a word, sir, in the back shop?"
36638When they were within he said to his hero:"May I trouble you kindly to shut the door and turn the key?
36638Where did you get the money?"
36638Where is he at present?"
36638Where now will you see a girl like Viola''s sister, who let concealment, like a worm i''the bud, feed on her damask cheek?
36638Where were they?
36638Whereiver did she get it from?"
36638Who can have fired at us?"
36638Who is it?"
36638Who were there before Reynolds and Gainsborough and Hogarth?
36638Why are you nursed in the lap of luxury?
36638Why did you not call me?"
36638Why do we burn coal to warm our shins?
36638Why do you enjoy comforts, a civilisation that we knew nothing of?
36638Why may I not hear good music?
36638Why must I be kept forever in the Doleful Dumps?"
36638Why not, Davie?"
36638Why not?
36638Why should not we?
36638Why should we have horses drawing our buses?
36638Why should we let the tides waste their energies in the Thames?
36638Why should you have all and we have had naught?"
36638Why what is the matter with you?"
36638Why-- what is that light?"
36638Will these fits of failure come on again?"
36638Will you accept them?"
36638Will you come?"
36638Will you have some?"
36638With a cry, over which I had as little control as the scream uttered by a sleeper in the agony of a nightmare, I called:"Who are you?"
36638Would it be possible to induce the publisher to withdraw the book from circulation and to receive back the fifty pounds?
36638Would it be possible to translate that into the major?
36638Would it be righteous in Him to suffer the murderer of her son to thrive?
36638Would she deign to speak?
36638Would you mind, mamma, sleeping with me to- night?
36638Would you mind, sir, just coming to see?
36638Wretch?"
36638You are sure it is Jane?"
36638You knew him, I believe?
36638You like your meat well basted, do n''t you?
36638You never had those fits before?"
36638You think she will appear if I go to pay you a visit?"
36638You would like to go?"
36638You would like to hear the tale?"
36638You would like to see them, would you not?"
36638again I asked; and again she replied:"If not Jane, who else can it be?
36638ai n''t she a beauty?
36638and how was it that I had seen the shadow flicker past the light immediately after I had descended the ladder?
36638disobedient and daring?
36638exclaimed Jameson,"practice is better than precept, is it not?"
36638exclaimed Mr. Lambole with an oath,"what darn''d insolence be you up to now, Gorilla?"
36638he exclaimed with cheery voice;"influenza is it?"
36638in other estuaries?
36638is the glass down on your side?"
36638monsieur, who looks on a monument and expects to find thereon the literal truth relative to the deceased?"
36638no hope?"
36638said Betty,"what shall I do with all these sets of mustard- and pepper- pots?
36638said Joseph, addressing his character,"will you kindly step forward?"
36638said the doctor, looking round with a certain degree of interest in his face;"so you met it, did you?"
36638she said,"are all the glasses broken?"
36638sir, what is there in a name?
36638spluttered he,"by putting me into your book?"
36638that was the prologue, was it?"
36638that''s it, and where did the red paint come from?"
36638what is to become of me?
36638what will aunt say?
36638whatever shall I do without her?
36638where can be the key?"
36638where?"
36638you and your wives?"
52608And after you leave Germany?
52608And are you contented?
52608Another pet, grandmother?
52608Are you having nightmare, and did you think we might wish to go for a drive?
52608Are you ready?
52608But what about Rover?
52608Can nothing be done?
52608Can you imagine,I said,"that I have been as homesick in California as you are in France?"
52608Do you know Almoda?
52608Do you observe what a perfect accent he has?
52608Gerald,said the princess, tenderly,"do you understand?"
52608H''m,said grandmother,"waiting for the plunder, eh?
52608He may recover,she said, with delight;"now, where is he to sleep?
52608How old are you?
52608I guess you''re most old enough to be my mother, are n''t you?
52608I suppose,he said, soberly,"that you will not be at the Protestant church on Sunday?"
52608Indeed? 52608 Mademoiselle, do many French go to America for the accent?"
52608Mademoiselle, you are an American?
52608May I trouble you with a message?
52608Not older?
52608Oho, are you indeed? 52608 Second Cousin George, what are you doing?"
52608Shall I send them away?
52608That I sailed into San Francisco Bay with a heartache because those brown hills you speak of so lovingly were not my native hills?
52608The other?
52608Were you playing with this cord?
52608What about Second Cousin George?
52608What does this mean, George?
52608Where will he sleep?
52608Would you like to come and live with me for awhile?
52608Would you rather die, or live to grow up and forget your country, as you surely would do if you lived all your young life among strangers?
52608You do?
52608Grandmother sat up very straight on the sofa and asked,"Would you like to go to the penitentiary, Polly Jones?"
52608I am only a peasant, yet I can think, and is not one language good enough to ask for bread and soup?"
52608Mrs. Greyshield turned away, and the princess''s lips moved almost imperceptibly in the words,"What is the use?"
52608What do you call this kind?
52608What do you think of such narrowness, princess?"
52608Where is Miss Polly?"
52608Will you-- will you be good enough to tell papa not to think me a coward?
52608You have never been in California, I suppose?"
52608[ Illustration:( Courtesy of The Youth''s Companion)"''MADEMOISELLE, YOU ARE AN AMERICAN?''"]
52608[ Illustration]"Where is his mother?"
52608she said;"if you must fight, why do n''t you attack something your own size?"
522All?
522And what put in it?
522And why do they speak of snow and the crane, and lightning and a yellow dog?
522At last one of the old men said to him:''You have been here a long time, ought you not to go home?''
522Ca n''t you grab once for us?
522Can you do it?
522Can you toss the knives?
522Chi,I asked,"do you have any such games as host and guest, or games in which the large boys protect the small ones?"
522Chi,we asked,"what kind of games do boys play?"
522Did you ever hear this one?
522Do the Chinese have no other kinds of toy animals?
522Do you have any other guessing games?
522Do you know any games?
522Do you know any of these stories?
522For instance?
522Have you any games more vigorous than this?
522Have you any other games which develop the protective instinct in boys?
522Have you any other games which require strength?
522How high were they?
522How use the water?
522Is the mouse at home?
522My name is Grab, what is your name?
522There is no grandmother Wind, is there, nurse?
522What are in those?
522What does that represent?
522What have they done?
522What is it for?
522What is that game you were playing a few days ago in which you used one stick to knock another?
522What is that game,we inquired of Chi,"the boys on the street play with two marbles?"
522What is that?
522What is the knife for?
522What is your name?
522What rhymes?
522What shall we play?
522What were you playing a few days ago when all the boys lay in a straight line?
522What will you get to- morrow?
522What will you heat?
522What will you make?
522When did that happen?
522Who is Chi?
522Who is it?
522Why do they call the other mother- in- law Rain?
522Yes do you know any?
522Did n''t she get any meat?
522Did the dog die?"
522Does he like it?
522Finally, as it began to dawn on him that I was talking of his son, he asked:"Whom are you talking about?"
522Headland?"
522Hsin?"
522I followed him but how could I catch a man on horseback?"
522If you want them we can play any number of them for you, but what will you do with them after you get them?"
522In imagination I can see the reader raise his eyebrows and mutter,"Do the Chinese eat crows?"
522JUVENILE JUGGLING"How is that?"
522Returning she asked:"How is this that one of my flowers is gone?"
522They walked up to the girl digging and engaged in the following conversation:"What are you digging?"
522We said to Mr. Hsin,"Foreigners say the Chinese do not have dolls, how is that?"
522We want the monkey show, may we have it?"
522What do you see in the earth, pray tell?
522What do you see in the well, my dear?
522What is he saying there on the rock?
522Where has the little dog gone?
5620Does not that power of production appear to be intelligence in the seed?
5620Does the tapir stand for South America?
5620Has it not been so at the Panama Canal?
5620Has not the seed produced the bearded barley head you see represented?
5620Have not many done the labor that the United States, the Adventurous Bowman, may win?
5620It should, for is it not the vital part of this great Exposition?
5620San Francisco has a few(?)
5620Who would not mount Pegasus at such a glorious Exposition?
45929''Can man by searching find out God?'' 45929 And een like a gled''s?"
45929And is it not a noble thing, that the English tongue is, as it were, the common focus and point of union to which opposite beauties converge? 45929 And why do you go about as I saw you did before you came in to me?"
45929Are ye Hugh Miller?
45929Are you Mary Duff?
45929As I was sayin'', she''s got a kind o''trouble in her breest, doctor; wull ye tak''a look at it?
45929But what part of speech is it?
45929Did she drink?
45929Has he white hair?
45929How''s Rab?
45929I mean, what''s love?
45929Is there any chance of stupor or delirium?
45929May Rab and me bide?
45929Oh, mamma''s a_ biped!_I turned in dismay to her younger sister, and said,"What do you say?"
45929What bairn?
45929What does she want?
45929What for?
45929What is Sheffield famous for?
45929What is our life? 45929 What on?"
45929What''s the case?
45929Where''s Rab?
45929Which side is it?.
45929Why do n''t you rest sometimes?
45929_ Dish_, Sir, do you call that a dish?
45929''A but, Robbie,"said the logical Tammie,"hoo''re ye to gel him in?"
45929''Hae I no''?''
45929* Toby was in the state of the shepherd boy whom George Webster met in Glenshee, and asked, My man, were you ever fou''?"
45929** Can the gifted author of these lines and of their music not be prevailed on to give them and others to the world, as well as to her friends?
4592915), for the apostle''s declaration is, that he and his brethren were of''like passions''( James v. 17);--?
45929A student came up to the new master,"How should I do this, Sir?"
45929And is not this boy- nature?
45929And then, after a long and utter silence, his exclaiming,"Is this the man according to God''s own heart?
45929And what is all this for?
45929And what is genius?
45929And what is that idea?
45929And what of his end?
45929But may we not reverse the scene?
45929But until this step has been taken by Almighty Grace, how should man have a warrant for loving with all his heart and mind and strength?....
45929But what are"_ Brains?_"what did Opie mean?
45929But what are"_ Brains?_"what did Opie mean?
45929But_ genius_, and nothing else, is not enough, even for a painter: he must likewise have_ sense_; and what is sense?
45929But_ is_ it necessary that everybody should know everything?
45929Can there be anything more absurd than this, and at this time of day?
45929Could that mighty Potentate have been got up, think you, by a committee of gentlemen, and those drawings educed by proffered prizes?
45929Did I tell you of a female relative, Niven( whom he would never see), saying that she would come and streek him after he died?
45929Do our readers remember Horace''s description of Pindar?
45929Does any curious and finely- ignorant woman wish to know how Bob''s eye at a glance announced a dog- fight to his brain?
45929Etty?"
45929For they, are they not the"native wood- notes wild"of one of nature''s darlings?
45929He had been preaching when very young, at Galashiels, and one wife said to her"neebor,""Jean, what think ye o''the lad?"
45929He is looking seriously, but blankly, far on and up, seeing nothing outwardly, the mind''s eye seeing-- who can tell what?
45929He put me off, and said rather rudely,"What''s_ your_ business wi''the dowg?"
45929His teeth and his friends gone, why should he keep the peace, and be civil?
45929How did he get this?
45929How is this?
45929I said,"Would you let me have her?"
45929I saw what he was after, and when past the toll he said in a mild sort of way,"John, did you promise_ absolutely_ I was not to ride your horse?"
45929I think I hear him reading the words,"Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb?
45929I wrote on the slate,"Would you like her?''"
45929If one could only have daguerreotyped his day''s fancies!_"What is love, Mary?"
45929If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing?
45929In ten minutes he would have been in the next world; for I am one of those who believe dogs_ have_ a next world, and why not?
45929In the child''s story of"Beauty and the Beast"the Beast says to Beauty,''''''Doyou not think me very ugly?''"
45929Is he afraid?
45929Is he in pain?
45929Is it a trifle that wre temper energy with softness, strength with flexibility, capaciousness of sound with pliancy of idiom?
45929Man in a state of perfection, would no sooner think of asking himself-- am I right?
45929May we not imagine, when a great and good man-- a son of the morning-- enters on his rest, that Heaven would move itself to meet him at his coming?
45929Now, is not this rude ditty, made very likely by some clumsy, big- headed Galloway herd, full of the real stuff of love?
45929Or are they fighting faintly for desire That with May dawn their leaves may be o''erflowed, And dews about their feet may never fail?"
45929Rising up, she said,"D''ye mind me?"
45929She curtsied, looked at James, and said,"When?"
45929The boy pausing on the edge of the trench, and looking down upon Burns, said,"Robbie, what''s that ye''re doin''?"
45929There is a birch there, the lady of the wood, which any nurseryman would tell you was a birch; and yet look into it, and what do you see?
45929Wad ye be in, wad ye be in?
45929Was the eye of faith ever so expressed, the seeing things that are invisible?
45929We all know( but why should we not know again?)
45929What could I say?
45929What did she do?
45929What does Richardson say, John?
45929What does that teach?
45929What earthly good can this do any one?
45929What hast thou to do with sorrow, Or the injuries of to- morrow?"
45929What is all this?
45929What is the distinguishing character of Hebrew literature, which separates it by so broad a line of demarcation from that of every ancient people?
45929What is this?
45929What would you have done?
45929What, for instance, can be finer in expression than this?
45929Where will you find truer courtesy and finer feeling?
45929Who will now take up the tale?
45929Why is it that we can not but laugh at this?
45929Why should the eye, the noblest, the amplest, the most informing of all our senses, be deprived of its own special delight?
45929Why should there not be some large public hall to which artists may send their pictures at any time when they are perfected?
45929Why should we be treated in this matter as we are treated in no way else?
45929Why was that gentle, modest, sweet woman, clean and loveable, condemned by God to bear such a burden?
45929Why will we insist in pressing our Art and our taste, as we did long ago our religion and our God, upon our neighbours?
45929Wishing to try her faith, he said to her,"Janet, what would you say if, after all He has done for you, God should let you drop into hell?"
45929Would any of our greatest geniuses, being limited to one word, have done better than take"pleasant"?
45929[ Illustration: 0035] And what of Rab?
45929am I appearing to be what inwardly I am?
45929and do n''t we all wish a house on fire not to be out before we see it?
45929and human nature too?
45929and what is Sir Joshua''s"_ That?_"What is included in it?
45929and what is Sir Joshua''s"_ That?_"What is included in it?
45929and what is sense?
45929and would n''t they remember"cutlery"for a day or two?
45929and, moreover, has he a discerning spirit?"
45929have n''t I an eternity to rest in?"
45929he has power-- has he promptitude?
45929how is''t, man?
45929if the whole were hearing, where were the smelling?
45929is not Hamath as Arpad?
45929or a child says to itself-- do I love my mother?
45929quoth Jock,"d''ye see sick een?"
45929quoth the auld gudeman;"What wad ye, where won ye,--by sea or by Ian''?
45929than the eye asks itself-- do I see?
45929what did he die of?"
45929what do you mean, John?"
45929what impression does that make upon any young.mind?
45929why should I rest here?
45929would they hail The wild grey light that fronts yon massive cloud, Or the half bow, rising like pillar d fire?
45929ye hae little wit: Is t na hallowmas noo, an''the crap out yet?"
45929|Pray, Mr. Opie, may I ask what you mix your colours with?"
54468Do n''t you think I got mine?
54468Do?
54468How does a hardware dealer differ from a bootmaker?
54468I say, Rander,called out the Duke,"why do n''t you cable to New York for one of your American fire- engines?"
54468Is the great chief sure of that?
54468Not Antony?
54468Well,said Jesse,"you remember how you told me what valentines meant?"
54468What Send Warning say do?
54468What''s that noise?
54468Why, then, are you called Tony?
54468***** What do you think of the wardrobe of Queen Elizabeth, girls?
54468***** Who could have believed that even among the famous riders of Hungaria would be found one who could perform the following feat?
54468Are you not afraid the guinea- pigs will have"nerves"if you give them coffee?
54468But if one should come, how could I fight the Lipans?
54468But who has seen a show in winter- quarters?
54468But why should she not have brought the child to us, when poor Helen so evidently desired it?"
54468Did it spring from the earth in some wonderful hour, Dainty, and rare, and exquisite?
54468Did you begin when he was a little chick?
54468Did you mean to be as funny as you could, young gentleman?
54468How could he move the flooring?
54468How did he do so?
54468How did we come by this marvellous flower?
54468How many elephants do you suppose Mr. Barnum has now?
54468Is n''t this a long one?
54468Little Carrie, she cried, while vainly she tried Her dear Dolly to mend; then she said,"_ I''m afraid my sweet Pinkey is dead!_"Now what do you think?
54468Say, can you tell us what is it?
54468Suppose Miss Holsover refused to believe that Bill had meant to rob her cupboard, and asserted that the real thief was Jesse himself?
54468The men''s hearts glowed like living coals, And Regnier cried,"Why do we stay?"
54468Was there ever so nice a mamma?"
54468What am I doing in an Apache camp anyhow?
54468What could he do?
54468What was it he had come to steal?
54468What will the great chief say?"
54468[ Illustration: Does he, though?]
54468so sweet?"
49318And of what?
49318And you came here?
49318And you have never heard anyone speak of your family, of your father, or mother?
49318And you have never seen your family since?
49318Are we going to be left all alone?
49318At least, then, you have been happy?
49318At what hour must I get up?
49318But of what?
49318She is dead?
49318What wind?
49318Why was I not there with my Franks?
49318You have never written to anyone?
49318A mind?
49318Again, wherefore?
49318And the suns, whence do they come from?
49318And then?
49318And what do they earn, these starvelings?
49318Another adds:"How can you expect people to care for you, if you run away in this fashion from your friends?
49318Art?
49318Because it gives me pleasure to see and talk with some one, does it follow that I should be permitted to know what he does, and what he likes?
49318Bread?
49318But suddenly an official stopped him:"Are you not banished, sir?"
49318But where do those microbes come from?
49318By what sombre spirit Is thy face or profile, Swung as from a thread Through the shadows of the sky?
49318Can anything be more dreary than_ table d''hôte_ conversation?
49318Clovis, the Christian king, cried on hearing the story of the Passion:"Why was I not there with my Franks?"
49318Could justice be more gentle?
49318Did Napoleon the First continue the great intellectual movement begun by the philosophers at the end of the last century?
49318Do mothers even possess their children?
49318Do we ever think of the aged famished creatures in the garrets?
49318Do we love it because it is dead?
49318Do you know what she thinks, whether even she really adores you?
49318Does a woman ever really belong to you?
49318Does not that phrase remain to this day as good as a victory?
49318Each one inquires, although written by different hands:"Where are you?
49318For where can they go without money?
49318From whence, therefore, arises this anguish at living, since to the generality of men it only brings satisfaction?
49318Has it not made this prince more illustrious, than the conquest of a kingdom?
49318He asked again:"You have never told this to anyone?"
49318He inquired anxiously:"All?"
49318He who worthily fulfils all the kingly functions without the title, or he who bears the title without knowing how to reign?"
49318How can he have grown old without any event having occurred, without having been shaken by any of the surprises of existence?
49318How can he have reached this point?
49318How could a man fail to be victorious, who knew how to speak thus to his captains and his troops?
49318How many panting pauses on the steps, in the little stairway so black and winding?
49318I called out to them:"What on earth are you doing?"
49318I inquired:"What o''clock is it?"
49318I went towards her:"Will you drink?"
49318I went towards him, and he said:--"Will you help me to nurse a case of diphtheria?
49318Is a proof needful?
49318Is it not a fact, however, that the witticism caused a ready acceptance of the deed?
49318Is it true that such things happen?
49318Is she great by what she conquered, or by what she produced?
49318Nevertheless-- Who can tell?
49318Now why does not the mob reason, since each particular individual in the crowd does reason?
49318Of what use is all this?
49318Of what use is it to me to learn what I am, to read what I think, to see myself portrayed in the trivial adventures of a novel?
49318Our diseases are due to microbes?
49318She stammered out:"Is it done?"
49318Should we not have spurned any other than Victor Hugo, who should have launched forth the grand cry of deliverance and truth?
49318The doctor inquired:"Have you got a candle?"
49318They are striking resemblances?"
49318Those who fight to eat the vanquished, or those who fight to kill, only to kill?
49318Was I dreaming?
49318Was it the invasion of the Persians that prevented her from falling into the most hideous materialism?
49318Was it the invasion of the barbarians that saved Rome and regenerated her?
49318What are you doing?
49318What can be more curious, and more surprising, than the events which have been accomplished in the last century?
49318What could surprise them?
49318What did it matter?
49318What difference is there then between monarchies and republics?
49318What do we know of Louis VI.?
49318What had they done?
49318What have they ever done to show their intelligence, these valiant warriors?
49318What have they invented?
49318What have they to expect?
49318What horrible nightmare was this?
49318What ideas?
49318What is it?
49318What matter?
49318What remains of Greece?
49318What was it?
49318What was it?
49318What was it?
49318What was to be done?
49318What will come out of the sea?
49318What will to- morrow bring forth?
49318What would you have me do?
49318When would she get there?
49318Where was I?
49318Where was she going?
49318Wherefore such a vain imitation?
49318Wherefore such efforts?
49318Wherefore this trivial reproduction of things in themselves so dull?
49318Wherefore this unknown torture, which preys upon me?
49318Which are the savages, the true savages?
49318Why disappear in this way, without telling us where you are going?
49318Why do all the French laugh, while all the English and all the Germans can understand nothing of the fun?
49318Why have they killed her boy, her beautiful boy, her sole hope, her pride, her life?
49318Why indeed?
49318Why should I not know the reality of pleasure, expectation, and possession?
49318Why should I undergo these worries, these sufferings, these struggles?
49318Why should a crowd do spontaneously, what none of the units of the crowd would have done?
49318Why should not governments be judged after the declaration of every war?
49318Why?
49318With one_ bon mot,_ might he not perhaps have escaped the guillotine?
49318With whom are you hiding?"
49318Yes, indeed, why?
49318[ Illustration 028] And is it not he, the mocking poet, who immediately presents it to us through his eyes?
49318about what?
49318and the diseases of these invisible ones?
49318and what would become of me in that case?
49318l''Ambassadeur?"
49318that one dies like this?
49318what is it?
49318where from?"
4349Is happiness truly as happy as people imagine?
4349Is that all?
4349After all, what is a humble life?
4349And are not almost all the morals, and heroism, and virtue of man summed up in that single choice?
4349And besides, what are the joys to which we bid this somewhat affected farewell?
4349And do you remember, too, that the hour of separation was upon us, and that the arrival of the last boat of all was to be our signal for departure?
4349And further, what right have we thus to sum up an entire existence in the one hour of death?
4349And how should you know, if you have not loved them and lived in their midst, as this soul has loved and lived?
4349And is it not the first duty of those who are happy to tell of their gladness to others?
4349And is not moral suffering the most tyrannical weapon in the armoury of destiny?
4349And is there a thing in this world can be more reassuring, or nearer to us, more profoundly human, than an idea of justice?
4349And though the body may often be powerless to add to its strength, can this ever be true of the soul?
4349And truly, can we imagine that an event shall turn into tragedy between men who have earnestly striven to gain knowledge of self?
4349And truly, viewed from without, what life could be more dreary and colourless, more futile and icily cold, than that of Emily Bronte?
4349And was Eponina''s love other than a sudden lightning flash from this life of the soul, come to her, all unconscious and unprepared?
4349And what alien power can expel from our soul a feeling and thought that we hurl not our selves from its throne?
4349And when hesitation is conscientious, does it not often possess all the elements of duty?
4349And when his wisdom at length has revealed the profounder joys, will it not be in all unconsciousness that he renounces those of lesser worth?
4349And yet, are not joys to be met with on the highways of life that are greater than any misfortune, more momentous even than death?
4349And yet, was not Cato''s idea far greater than the disturbance, or death, that ensued?
4349And, in the first place, why this disdain of to- day?
4349Are we not almost teaching happiness if we do only speak of it; invoking it, if we let no day pass without pronouncing its name?
4349Are we not contending with troubles and doubts of our own?
4349Are we wiser than he as we waver betwixt the rights of human reason and those that circumstance claims?
4349But are we not saddening ourselves, and learning to sadden others, if we refuse to accept all the happiness offered to man?
4349But can the fact that disease is, unhappily, only too prevalent, render it wrong for us ever to speak of health?
4349But how shall the sage, to whom happiness never has come, be aware that wisdom is the one thing alone that happiness neither can sadden nor weary?
4349But if happiness lie yonder side of the wall, must despair and disaster of necessity dwell on the other?
4349But if it be not our reason that chooses what suffering shall bring us, whereby is the choice then made?
4349But if we can scarcely believe that"happiness in crime"be possible, have we more warrant for faith in the"unhappiness of virtue"?
4349But is there a destiny in the world empowered to hold such language?
4349But was this blindness inevitable?
4349But what can the wisdom desire that declares itself thus disenchanted?
4349But what may this wisdom be that we rate thus highly?
4349But where is the sage in Oedipus?
4349But where shall we take our stand, when we pass such a life in review, so as best to discover its truth, to judge it, approve it, and love it?
4349Can any connection exist between such as these and a deep- rooted feeling, a boundless love for humanity, an interest time can not stale?
4349Can any man be worthy of your love?
4349Can not destiny be beautiful and complete in itself, without help from without?
4349Can we conceive a situation in life wherein a man who is truly wise and noble can be made to suffer as profoundly as the man who follows evil?
4349Can we live, it matters not where, and love, and hate, listening for no footfall, spurning no creature?
4349Can you conceive Jesus Christ-- nay, any wise man you have happened to meet-- in the midst of the unnatural gloom that overhung Elsinore?
4349Did not Christ Himself weep as He stood before Lazarus''tomb?
4349Did not love and beauty, happiness and adventure-- did not all that we go in search of along the ways of life congregate in Emily Bronte''s heart?
4349Do happiness and sorrow, then, only exist in ourselves, and that even when they seem to come from without?
4349Do we know what we best had abandon, what we best had defend?
4349Do we not all of us know of heroic deeds whose reward has been only misfortune?
4349Do we not feel, even now, that Cato was right?
4349Do you know a novel of Balzac, belonging to the"Celibataires"series, called Pierrette?
4349Do you remember that one ship had a sail that was nearly black, and that she was the last to come in?
4349Does death occupy more space in life than birth?
4349Does it follow that they did the best that was to be done?
4349Does not love bring more goodness to us than thought can ever convey?
4349Does not the man who conceives it his duty to forswear all happiness renounce something as well that, as yet, has not turned into happiness?
4349For, after all, was it not truth your illusion was seeking, assuming it to have been sincere?
4349Have we indeed an inner life that yields not in reality to the outer life; that is no less susceptible of experience and impression?
4349He who moves not a limb is persuaded, perhaps, he is wise; but was this the purpose wherefor mankind was created?
4349He will believe these things much as wise men believe them; but do you think his manner of belief can be the same?
4349If it be your one hope to meet with an ideal soul, would it not be well that you yourself should endeavour to draw nigh to your own ideal?
4349If love has deceived you, do you think that it would have been better for you all your life to regard love as something it is not, and never can be?
4349Is each deed of the hero not always outside the boundary of reason?
4349Is it Tiresias?
4349Is it fitting that the ray of light should desire to alter the lamp whence it springs?
4349Is it necessary that we should conceive ourselves to be superior to the universe?
4349Is it not a mistake to imagine that time only flies swiftly with those whose hearts are devoured by mighty schemes, which fret and fever their life?
4349Is it not preferable sometimes to act in opposition to our thoughts than never dare to act in accord with them?
4349Is it not the paramount duty of every human being to offer to his destiny all that can be offered to the destiny of man?
4349Is it only to those whose conscience still slumbers that events can seem sad or sterile?
4349Is it possible for a man to smile in his hatred and not borrow the smile of love?
4349Is it to reason or wisdom that heroism should be ascribed?
4349Is not every action of Hamlet induced by a fanatical impulse, which tells him that duty consists in revenge alone?
4349Is not something of happiness to be found in our thus being able to pass by the side of our happiness?
4349Is not the happiness that accident brought to the heart of Eponina within reach of every heart, so the will to possess it be there?
4349Is not the very essence of human destiny, stripped of the details that bewilder us, to be found in the most ordinary lives?
4349Is our true destiny to be found in the things which take place about us, or in that which abides in our soul?
4349Is that conceivable?
4349Is the elevation sufficient wherefrom he looks down on the crimes of Elsinore?
4349Is the sage never to suffer?
4349Is the soul self- sufficient; and is it always the soul that decides, a certain height once gained?
4349Is there need of illusion to keep alive our desire for good?
4349Is your own character, at thirty, the same as it was when you were ten years younger?
4349May a happiness not be encountered that the eye can not see?
4349May it be true then that the last word of an existence is only a word that destiny whispers low to what lies most hidden in our heart?
4349Must his father not die, and his mother, his brothers, his sons-- must all these not die like the rest?
4349Must the life be a failure, useless and valueless, that is not as completely happy as it possibly might have been?
4349Must we take back all we have said?
4349Of what avail to punish him?
4349Or might we not say that it is with the roots of the happiness we cherish within as with roots of great trees?
4349Ought we never to hesitate, then?
4349Our thoughts of love, of justice and loyalty, our thoughts of bold ambition-- what are all these but acorns that fall from the oak in the forest?
4349Shall angels stand guard at each highway through which sorrow can pass into man?
4349Shall no storm ever break on the roof of his dwelling, no traps be laid to ensnare him?
4349Shall we begrudge him such happiness, we, whose eyes can see further?
4349Shall we strive for his consciousness of life, for the religion that pleases his soul, for the conception of the universe that justifies his cares?
4349Shall wife and friends never fail him?
4349Should we not invariably act in this life as though the God whom our heart desires with its highest desire were watching our every action?
4349The children have acted unwisely, perhaps, in their exuberance of life; but why should this distress him?
4349The immense forest is doubtless made up of ordinary branches and stems; but is it not vast, is it not as it should be, seeing that it is the forest?
4349To disdain to- day is to declare oneself a stranger, and what can you hope to do in a world where you shall ever pass as a stranger?
4349To such a question as this who shall dare to reply?
4349Was it not truth that it sought?
4349Was not destiny''s hand laid heavy on Paulus Aemilius, who was fully as wise as Timoleon?
4349Was the penitent thief not saved; and that not alone in the Christian sense of the word, but in its fullest, most perfect meaning?
4349We love to throw the dim light of our reason on to our unconsciousness: why not let it play on what we term the unconsciousness of the universe?
4349Were the flames to retreat before such men, were the waters to open and death to hesitate, what were righteousness or heroism then?
4349Were the gods defying the sage, and how would the sage reply?
4349What becomes of the refuge, then, where wisdom keeps watch over happiness?
4349What can be less abnormal than the ocean, which covers two- thirds of the globe; and yet, what is there more vast?
4349What can we say?
4349What is an act of virtue that we should expect such mighty reward?
4349What matter whether the event fall on our neighbour''s roof or our own?
4349What merit in being just ourselves if we be not convinced of the absolute injustice of fate?
4349What shall she do?
4349What soul that were sure of reward could ever claim to be good?
4349What would Christ, all the heroes, have done had their reason not learned to submit?
4349What would she have entrapped in her snares?
4349When shall we cease to believe that death, and not life, is important; that misfortune is greater than happiness?
4349Whence comes this rule that I thus propound?
4349Where could the virtue of man find more everlasting foundation than in the seeming injustice of God?"
4349Where do we find the fatality in"Hamlet,""King Lear,"in"Macbeth"?
4349Where have we learned that death fixes the value of life, and not life that of death?
4349Where shall the virtue of man find more everlasting foundation than in the seeming injustice of God?
4349Where was it written that Laertes, Ophelia, Hamlet, Claudius, Gertrude, should die-- where, save in Hamlet''s pitiful blindness?
4349Where was it, in body or soul, that grim fatality lurked?
4349Where were the hearth, the bed, the table, stool, and basin?
4349Which of us finds not, unsought, many thousands of reasons for sorrow?
4349Which of us, had he to choose, but would rather be Pierrette than Rogron?
4349Who knows?
4349Who that has a heart within him can doubt the truth of her words, or think without longing of the darkness that so great a love illumined?
4349Why conclude, from the fact that Socrates and Antigone met with unhappy ends, that it was their wisdom or virtue brought unhappiness to them?
4349Why harass our soul with endeavour to locate the infinite?
4349Why not speak as though mankind were always on the eve of great certitude, of great joy?
4349Why seek justice where it can not be?
4349Why should disillusion distress you, if you are a man of honest intention, if you strive to be just, and of service; if you seek to be happy and wise?
4349Why should we not say that wisdom is the triumph of reason divine over reason of man?
4349Why should we think that the woman I speak of would have known a more brilliant destiny in Venice, Florence, or Rome?
4349Why speak of destiny when a simple thought had sufficed to arrest all the forces of murder?
4349Why strive of our own free will to enlarge the domain of the inevitable?
4349Why, when we try to sum up a man''s destiny, keep our eyes fixed only on the tears that he shed, and never on the smiles of his joy?
4349Would it have dared to overstep the shining, denouncing barrier that his presence would have imposed, and maintained, in front of the palace gates?
4349Would life be endurable if we did not obey many truths that our reason rejects?
4349Would not the true happiness of virtue be destroyed?
4349Would such an illusion not warp your most significant actions; would it not for many days hide from you some part of the truth that you seek?
4349Would that noble sovereign''s soul have been hopelessly crushed?
4349Would the hero be crushed by his sorrow, or would sorrow acknowledge its master?
4349Would they have contained aught besides the pure light that streams from the lofty soul, as it grows more beautiful still in misfortune?
4349Would you rather live on in the world of your dreams and your errors than in the world that is real?
4349and does it need superhuman effort to recognise that revenge never can be a duty?
4349and is it not of the nature of happiness to be less manifest than misfortune, to become ever less apparent to the eye as it reaches loftier heights?
4349and is our duty most faithfully done when we ourselves are wholly unconscious that this thing that we do is a duty?
4349and is there a truth that can stifle the love of truth in the depths of a loyal heart?
4349and must not thousands and tens of thousands be lost and rot in the lichen ere a single tree spring to life?
4349and where can it be, save in our soul?
4349and yet, who would venture to say that the hero is not wiser by far than the sluggard who quits not his chair because reason forbids him to rise?
4349did not both his sons die, one five days before his triumph in Rome, and the other but three days after?
4349virtue that is happy because it is noble and pure, that is noble and pure because it desires no reward?
4349was bewildered: do we know what ought to be done?
47507Ai n''t you glad that you met me? 47507 And how did little Tim behave?"
47507And what''s that?
47507Are you afraid?
47507Are you happy, brother, and what can you see up there?
47507Brother, where are you?
47507But can you again find the spot?
47507But what''s the meaning of all this foolery?
47507Can it be possible,said she,"that my poor children whom the monster has swallowed for his supper, are still alive?"
47507Can you lay eggs?
47507Do ye mean it, squire?
47507Do you fancy this is the whole world?
47507How can you be so foolish to believe it?
47507How do you know him?
47507How much may your treasure be?
47507How much? 47507 I am not quite such a simpleton,"screamed the dwarf;"do you not see that the confounded fish is pulling me in?"
47507Idiot,replied the dwarf,"who would go and fetch more people?
47507Is it like--an awe crept into the child''s eyes and voice--"like Jesus?"
47507Margaret, could ye dare to get near and loose his foot?
47507Think you so, my lad? 47507 Vot vos der reason aboud it, of dot lambs und Mary?"
47507We ca n''t understand you? 47507 Well, and what will watching do?"
47507Well, how are you getting on?
47507Well, what can that be?
47507Well, who would believe it?
47507What are you looking at?
47507What did the squire call him, Jep-- a peace- offering?
47507What do you want for that golden apple of yours?
47507What do you want?
47507What else can my heart wish for?
47507What has ever got your precious father, then?
47507What have you been doing, little man?
47507What have you done?
47507What people are these, who are coming this way over the hill?
47507What''s that?
47507What''s this whim?
47507What? 47507 Where are you going?"
47507Where are you then going, dear bear?
47507Where might you come from?
47507Why ca n''t you stay where you are?
47507Why should I be melancholy?
47507Why, I, of course,said the princess.--"And what''s the meaning of it?"
47507You remember Bennie Wilson? 47507 And just because I''m only seven, Should be so teazed, yes, almost_ driven_, Soon as I''ve supped my milk and bread, To that old drowsy, frowsy bed? 47507 And so came the same question:Perhaps it is you who should have had the prince?"
47507And the brown thrush keeps singing,"A nest do you see, And five eggs, hid by me in the juniper- tree?
47507And the tom- cat inquired:"Can you raise your back, or purr, or throw out sparks?"
47507And then?
47507And what does he say, little girl, little boy?
47507And why do you speak so softly?
47507Been to breakfast?"
47507But are there any?
47507But do you think I awoke at three?
47507But how did you come to us, my dear?
47507But long it wo n''t be, Do n''t you know?
47507But the judge said,"Why should I not grant him this last request?
47507But what did he see in the clear stream?
47507Can you not come and see if you can help me?"
47507Children, ay, and children''s children Should behold my babes on high, And my babes should smile forever, Calling others to the sky?"
47507Could he give the darling up?
47507Could he?
47507Did n''t I hear him moving and crushing through the underwood, my canny Thor Lerberg?"
47507Did you ever hear me say what I did n''t mean?"
47507Do n''t you hear?
47507Do n''t you really and truly think so?
47507Do n''t you see?
47507Do n''t you see?
47507Do you think you''ll be coming here often?
47507Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old mustache as I am Is not a match for you all?
47507Feet, whence did you come, you darling things?
47507Has he been asleep?
47507Has he killed it?
47507Have you not found a warm room, and company that might improve you?
47507He stared at the children with his fiery red eyes, and cried out,"What are you standing there for?
47507How did they all come just to be you?
47507I breathed a song into the air, It fell to earth, I know not where; For who has sight so keen and strong, That it can follow the flight of song?
47507I wonder whether he is a guinea- chick after all?
47507Is it because I''m nobody''s child?
47507Is it likely?"
47507It stopped one of its friends who was going up the tree, and said,"Have you seen my goats this morning?
47507Kiss little Blossom; but dear Father, Need you tell her how I fall?"
47507Nor did he even presume to envy them; for how could it have ever entered his head to wish himself endowed with their loveliness?
47507Now tell me, you''d never have thought That once I was as little as that?
47507Now, are you?
47507On the following morning when the wild ducks rose and saw their new comrade, they said:"What sort of a creature are you?"
47507One day, when passing by a bush, a dwarf popped out of it, and accosted him, saying,"Whither away my merry fellow?
47507Shall I lay me down''neath the angry sky, On the cold, hard pavements, alone, to die?
47507Shall I snatch them up to- night?
47507Shall we always be youthful, and laughing, and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away?
47507Should he dash in and try to save him-- he who had robbed him of Spottie, only to tire of him and cast him off?
47507Snatch them, set them here forever, In the middle of my light?
47507Swallow, shall I have a gold crown?"
47507The answer came;"You''ve a mother, then?"
47507Then he said,"What can it be that rattles about inside me, and feels so heavy?
47507Was this lamb of earth shadowing forth to the minds of the simple children somewhat of the heavenly?
47507Watch them closely, mark them sharply, As across the light they pass,-- Seem they not to have the figures Of a little lad and lass?
47507What does little baby say, In her bed at peep of day?
47507What does little birdie say In her nest at peep of day?
47507What is that eery spark?)
47507What makes your cheek like a warm, white rose?
47507What makes your forehead so smooth and high?
47507What shall I do?
47507What was that?
47507What will it be?
47507What''s that, that gleams so,--eyes?
47507When the dwarf saw what they were doing, he cried out in a great rage,"Is this the way you spoil my beard?
47507When the little man had in a degree recovered from his fright, his little thin cracked voice was heard saying,"Could you not handle me more gently?
47507When they had gone some distance the white bear said:"Are you afraid?"
47507Whence that three- cornered smile of bliss?
47507Where did you come from, baby, dear?
47507Where did you get that little tear?
47507Where did you get the eyes so blue?
47507Where did you get this pretty ear?
47507Where did you get those arms and hands?
47507Where is my old''rithmetic?
47507Who could estimate the length of an hour, amid the excitement of fun and frolics?
47507Would the prints of rosy fingers Vex us then as they do now?
47507Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,-- And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men?
47507Yet, why muse Upon the past with sorrow?
47507You do n''t suppose you are wiser than the tom- cat and our mistress-- to say nothing of myself?
47507You know it?
47507You wo n''t run away then, as he did?
47507[ Illustration: WHICH WILL GET IT?]
47507[ Illustration] Then why do I sell it?
47507[ Illustration]"Frightening myself?
47507and how poor are they?
47507asked Rosy- red;"you will not surely jump into the water?"
47507asked the old woman,"perhaps it was you who should have had him?"
47507at last I said,"Have you no father?"
47507but are you all there?"
47507exclaimed the Turk;"how can such a little creature have such a powerful voice?
47507he cried,"and what do you see down there?"
47507he shouted out to her.--Yes, she would come in.--"Can you wash this shirt clean?"
47507here are already two too many; can you not think of anything better?"
47507is that you?"
47507master Ru, how could ye; and the sheep there feedin''and feedin''?
47507said the dwarf, rudely, at the same time reddening with anger;"and why do you stand there making faces?"
47507said the giant.--"Well, how can I help believing it when you say so?"
47507said the old man,"what did he want there?
47507said the south wind,"is that she?
47507what has brought you here?"
47507what minding do they want, gorging themselves with clover as they are?"
47507what shall I do when the night comes down, In its terrible darkness, all over the town?
47507why does the wind blow upon me so wild?
47507you are laughing, are you?"
47507you ask me again,"Big cabin an''clearin, an''all?"
46397Allow me a plain question: Have women been admitted to a share in the rule? 46397 Am I, then, always to be the plaything and sport of the invisible Powers?"
46397And have you had no relapse?
46397And how did you get cured?
46397And now his body appears to you?
46397And what about death?
46397And what were your doctor''s orders?
46397Are there any other places?
46397Are you afraid?
46397Born as I am out of mire, created for baseness, feeding on decay, how shall I be freed from earthly grossness except by death? 46397 Can you imagine,"he says,"such a piece of infernal bad luck?
46397Could you tell me what time it is?
46397Have n''t you seen a carriage drawn by a chestnut horse, and driven by a man with a dark complexion?
46397Have you ever had similar abnormal experiences before?
46397Have you had a pleasant journey?
46397Have you no talisman against them?
46397He suffers from neurasthenia and believes himself persecuted----"By demons?
46397How so?
46397I assure you----"Oh; then you made yourself invisible?
46397Is any one there?
46397Is it a real woman, or a spectre?
46397Is it some one with a spite against you?
46397Is not this plain speaking on the part of a mortal? 46397 Over your head?"
46397Since the first woman made an agreement with the Devil, why should her daughters not do so likewise? 46397 Some one unseen?"
46397Tell me, old fellow, can you sleep at night?
46397That man there resembles one of our friends, but which of them?
46397The dead? 46397 Then is it----?"
46397Thou wilt not answer? 46397 Well, who?"
46397Well?
46397What do you mean by''also''?
46397What does it mean? 46397 What does this Swedenborg say?"
46397What is he suffering from now?
46397What is it, then?
46397What is that about?
46397What is that?
46397What is the matter with him?
46397What is the matter with the old man?
46397What is the matter?
46397What then demandest thou of me? 46397 What was that?"
46397What?
46397Where am I?
46397Which driver?
46397Which way did you come?
46397Who is that?
46397Who?
46397Why? 46397 You also?"
46397You also?
46397--smile at the folly and over- daring of human ants?
46397Am I mad?
46397Am I the Wandering Jew who refused the Redeemer a drink of water?
46397Am I the first inventor of revolt or sin?
46397Am I then watched?
46397An accident(?)
46397An epidemic of coincidences?
46397And I speak,"What demandest thou of me, and wherefore plaguest thou me with thy Christ?
46397And how comes it that the disturbance always takes an acoustic form?
46397And what was won for us?
46397And whither has thy wisdom led me?
46397Are there none righteous?
46397As I remarked something of this sort to him, a light seemed to break upon him,"Is that not the Devil?"
46397But as to trusting doctors-- you know yourself already, perhaps?"
46397But how about the others who spent their lives on their knees in devotion and self- denial, and who have all been disowned?
46397But now no one takes me for an example, and what would be the use if I tried to preach to young men who have not sinned as much as I have?
46397But what have I to complain of, since Providence has only granted fulfilment to an unholy prayer which I addressed to it in my youth?
46397Can I then make myself invisible?"
46397Can one make oneself invisible?
46397Do I suffer from optical delusion?
46397Do you know what makes life bearable for me?
46397Does he appear to you in a disturbing way,--I mean in dreams?"
46397Doth it please Thee to oppress me, to overthrow the work of Thine own hands, and to further the devices of the wicked?"''
46397Edifying, is it not?
46397For a moment the thought strikes me,"Suppose one of your acquaintances saw you now?"
46397Has anyone got the power to tamper with my faculty of sight?
46397Have I conceived all this people?
46397Have I now blasphemed the Eternal, the Father of Jesus Christ, the God of the Old and New Testament?
46397Have I then lost the sense for distances?
46397Have you never had it?"
46397Have you tried sulphonal for it?"
46397He proceeds to corporal punishment, exclaiming,"So you answer back, do you?"
46397How are we to explain a hallucination which is seen by one and heard by another?
46397How can I have the right to despise the creation of the Eternal and the beautiful earth?
46397How could you?
46397How were you cured?"
46397I do not ask now,"What have I to do here?"
46397I do not deny the fact, but why must they do it just as I enter the place?
46397I said;"do n''t you hear something?"
46397In alarm, I wake him up,"Have you been dreaming, old fellow?"
46397In order to clear up the matter, I asked my companion,"Can you see a protuberance on this fellow''s neck?"
46397Is He preparing for His return, or has He arrived?
46397Is He the"Good Tyrant"which youth dreams of, a Prince of Peace, a glorious hero?
46397Is it necessary for me to answer?
46397Is it quite befitting, this speech of an angry servant?
46397Is it rash to connect these two facts?
46397Is it the irrevocable doom pronounced against Sodom?
46397Is it the sky which reflects the outspread sea, or the sea which mirrors the sky?
46397Is it to make me a martyr at all costs, whether I do thy will or disregard it?
46397Is my Teacher angry that I have written this?
46397It must be the infliction of punishment which is to educate me?
46397Moreover, Rheingold has a special message for me:--"_ Wellgunde_: Knowest thou not who alone is permitted to forge the gold?
46397Must all perish?
46397Norberg?"
46397Of whom was he the re- incarnation?
46397On the other hand, people lay stress on the proverb,"Evil companionship corrupts good manners"; but which is evil society, and which is the good?
46397One stoops one''s head before a stone flung at one, but what of the flinger whom one is not conscious of having seen?
46397Or have they fled from the sad sleep which, perhaps, has ceased to visit them?
46397Sometimes, in order to help him, I let drop, as though by chance, an interrogatory remark,"Something is happening, is n''t it?"
46397St. Chrysostom, the misogynist, says:"What is woman?
46397Suppose that it was a lie, and that I am not the person for whom men take me?
46397That is just the right word, and why?
46397There is a universal awakening proceeding, and what is to be its goal?
46397Thou wilt not?
46397To preach morality?
46397Was it a mere chance that frightened his horse so that he shied and upset the carriage?
46397Well then, what about the revolt against the Invisible?
46397What does He want?
46397What does it mean?"
46397What does that signify?
46397What for?
46397What is it after all in the book, which is to be a word of life to me?
46397What is it then that is taking place in the world to- day?
46397What is it?
46397What is the good of seeking when the devil has a finger in the pie?
46397What of my opponent in religion?
46397What of that?"
46397What protector furthered the schemes of this Corsican?
46397What would''st thou of me?"
46397When I hear fine music, I always ask myself,"Where did the composer find it?"
46397Whence should I have flesh to give unto all this people?
46397Where am I?
46397Where did you come from?"
46397Where does He hide Himself, the Master of the house who kept it in good order, and watched the overseers in order to prevent injustice?"
46397Where is He, the Heavenly Father, who can smite at the follies of His children and pardon after He has punished them?
46397Where is the pilot that will guide us between these hidden reefs of conceit and false humility?"
46397Who was Napoleon?
46397Whose is the fault, and why have they made me a scapegoat?
46397Why did not this confession of an occultist fall into my hands before?
46397Why do I not become ill after such tortures as these?
46397Why do n''t I complain to the manager?
46397Why do you ask that?"
46397Why hast thou condemned me to ingratitude, which I hate more than any other sin?
46397Why must it be pinks, which I dislike because they resemble raw flesh and smell of a chemist''s shop?
46397Why?
46397Wilt thou make me a prophet?
46397Without beating about the bush I asked him directly,"Where were you to- day between one and two o''clock?"
46397XI IN PARIS Once more,--is it for the last time?
46397and am I, now that I wish to follow and imitate Him, unable to approach Him?
46397and have the Powers prospered them in their worldly affairs?"
46397and wherefore have I not found favour in Thy sight, that Thou layest the burden of all this people upon me?
46397should I not hate them that hate thee?
54569''And what am I to do on the occasion? 54569 ''And what are they?''
54569''Have you been long in Bath, madam?'' 54569 ''Have you, indeed, sir?
54569''Why should you be surprised, sir?'' 54569 How are your absent cousins to understand the tenor of your life...?
54569What is become of all the shyness in the world?
54569Why drag in this nasty story?
54569''And what are you reading, Miss----?''
54569''In the name of heaven, who is that old fellow?''
54569''Of what are you talking?''
54569''Very well-- and this offer of marriage you have refused?''
54569And it is really true?
54569Bennet?''
54569But I have injured more than herself; and I have injured one whose affection for me( may I say it?)
54569Could we be offered the choice of re- possessing the United States, or losing the very memory of these three, which alternative would we choose?
54569Could we have loved her so much if we had{ 22} lived with her at Steventon Rectory or at Chawton Cottage?
54569Dearest Miss Morland, what ideas have you been admitting?"
54569Do our laws connive at them?
54569Does our education prepare us for such atrocities?
54569How are the men and women who bear them"introduced"to us?
54569How do you spend your evenings?
54569How is the charge supported?
54569If we were asked of some modern lady writer,"What are her books like?"
54569Is it likely that such an obscure little body should have written such admirable books?
54569Is it true?''
54569Is it what has been called the_ nostalgie de l''Infini_?"
54569Is not she an angel in every gesture?
54569Is she not an entirely credible, if happily rare, type?
54569Perhaps they should not, but then, what are types?
54569The secret they are supposed to have kept during her life was that she wrote the novels, but if so, where are the MSS.?
54569The surroundings are not all new-- how should they be in a thinly populated parish?
54569What do you take his age to be?''
54569What have you been judging from?
54569What is the_ dénouement_ of_ Lady Susan_?
54569What matter that the characters are only middle- class and"respectable,"if they can afford material for such excellent wit?
54569What was Brandon to do?
54569Who is more humourless than the notoriously funny man?
54569Who that has ever read_ Weir of Hermiston_ can forget the description of the heroine as she first appeared to Archie in the kirk?
54569Who were these"many"people?
54569Why did not her admiring brothers treasure those most precious relics?
54569Why_ should_ the dresses be described or the dishes be named?
54569Will not it be beautiful in her dark hair?"
54569ask the objectors, and above all,"why allow the Colonel to pour it into the ears of a young girl like Elinor?"
54569what will become of me?
46197''Twas enough; What was my country?
46197***** Now what''s to do?
46197***** Shall it be Michigan, Or Illinois, Or Indiana?
46197***** What are we, the living, beside you the dead?
46197All right; but why send devils Into my hogs?
46197And I wonder if it''s God that stretches out and hands us Troubles we remember?
46197And drew the bow till lyric fire Should all your thieving thoughts consume: In such case what is your desire-- The music or the violin?
46197And every evening brings its fear Of death which must come, Until her nerves are shaken Like a woman''s hair in the wind-- What must be done?
46197And love that seemed eternal once, Given of God to lift, inspire, Well-- now do we see?
46197And saw at last the blue light quenched, and saw A taper lighted in my chamber-- why This treachery, Leonora?
46197And then you ask: Is the mirror cracked, Or is it so bright that it casts a beam Through all the shadow scheme?
46197And what do you care if they pass away?
46197And what in such case is your sin?
46197And what is the tale Of the mirrors here in the blackness swung?
46197And who has the wedding blest?
46197Are spirits chaos?
46197Are you not proud of us, do you not pity?
46197At Milem Alkire''s why carousing; Everything that the good abhor In lovers and romancers?
46197But is our little Gladstone crushed, dismayed?
46197But man with many lusts, what is his way, Save in confusion, through accustomed rooms?
46197But who unbars the mouse traps of your world, Or kills the ambushed serpent where it''s curled?
46197By George, he says, What are you, a theosophist?
46197Can you spread wings across the darkening chasm To the craggy nest, Where the foreboding mate lies still?
46197Deny your theft, or put the worst Construction on your soul, obscure Thereby your soul''s investiture Of music''s gift and music''s lure?
46197Did he say that, Colonel, to you?
46197Did he scourge them then?
46197Did you two gaze as we had gazed before Upon that blissful morning?
46197Do Gods live, vanish, return again?
46197Do I feel less than Shelley would in this?
46197Do n''t you see?
46197Do the dead gibber and does the owl Hoot where the shroud is slipping, clings?
46197Do you know?
46197Do you suppose the primrose knows What skill adds petals to its crown?
46197Does guilty conscience stir the crickets?
46197Ends the play-- for what is life but dying?
46197For separation, hopeless miles Of land and water us between?
46197For the all unfolding Air is what?
46197For what is left of me, what ever was To be peeled off to realest core?
46197For what is the law If it ca n''t slip the noose and draw This minstrel man to a thing of awe?
46197For what the devil force that smiles At man''s immedicable pain?
46197For what the fate that says to us: Part hands and be magnanimous?
46197For what the judgment which decrees The mother love in me to cease?
46197For what this tragedy of war?
46197For when the bird cried, did you wake with him?
46197For you what were the unities, the rules Of Plautus, Corneille or the Grecian schools?
46197Freedom were what to travel you, O Earth, When my heart makes its daily agony?
46197He came and went, and what''s your soul, And what is mine with their crying needs?
46197He is dying, Death comes of Sin-- what plainer truth than this?
46197He says: You nobly celebrate in your Spoon River The pioneers, the soldiers of the past, Why do you flout our Philippine adventure?
46197How are those lovely daughters?
46197How comes it now one jar of wine To six jars is increased?
46197How could I live So many lives and not lose out of some, Some precious thing?
46197How could they be seen, or recollected Except for the Real-- except for a Star?
46197How did you first come to me, how confer On me your beauty?
46197How does this razor work?
46197How many failures laugh and frown Upon the hand that crosses, sows?
46197How much of truth is here?
46197How will you like me with hair white, And wasted cheeks, deep lined and pale?
46197I asked him:"Is there something more, Parker, that I can do for you?"
46197I wept, Do you remember?
46197I, a believer, too, In the synagogues.-- What is the faith to me?
46197In a few years we two Will be at one with earth-- before it comes Are not sweet hours together worth the cost Of a little drink?
46197In what water do these mates of a morning Exult on the morrow?
46197Is all the glory thine alone?
46197Is he a stranger, this wild bird out of the sky?
46197Is it to prove For duty, you, though bloody- lipped, And fallen my unconquerable love For country and for you through all, Whatever fate befall?
46197Is love for souls of us chlorophyll That makes us eatable, sweet and crisp For Gods that raise us to feed their fill?
46197Is there aught in flesh or is it spirit Conscious of its kindred soul when near it?
46197Is there greater martyrdom than this is?
46197Is this the ecstasy of renewal, Or the ecstasy of beginning?
46197May this not be In some realm an integrity?
46197Mother of God, What is this thing called Life?
46197My name?
46197Not even my face shows-- am I cursed?
46197Not shaving you too close?
46197Not that?
46197Nothing?
46197Now you have sponged His face, look at that brow-- it terrifies-- He looks now like a god-- who is this man?
46197Oftentimes Lying beside her I would shriek with laughter And she would ask, what is the matter, John?
46197Oh, love, Why is there not a heart that loves but mine?
46197One listless afternoon who should come in?
46197Or do they cry to him because of remembered places And remembered days Spent together In the north- land, or the south- land?
46197Or something?
46197Or stones, or meadows, rivers, seas?
46197Receive your love?
46197Said the chief of the marriage feast to the groom, Whence may this good wine be?
46197See what I mean?
46197So then''tis he, said the chief of the feast, Who the wedding feast has blest?
46197Stamps with his feet upon the void He stands on, paces on, why, he wonders Is he upborned like an asteroid?
46197Sweet, was it not?
46197THE WEDDING FEAST Said the chief of the marriage feast to the groom, Whence is this blood of the vine?
46197The gods may laugh, their interests Are what?
46197The lesson of the thing what soul can doubt?
46197The mother, Claire, Claire Claremont, as you know-- Pined for Allegra; would possess the child And take her from the convent-- where?
46197Then behold Your friend who loves you, hunted, buffeted, For a little drink, when in spite of drink and even Because of drink, who knows?
46197To whose cry will she quiver Through her burnished wings to- morrow, In the north- land, In the south- land, Far away?
46197Upon this fortress I can stand and shoot-- Who can attack me, since I seek for self Nothing, but for my country righteousness?
46197VI And what was next?
46197Was I dunce Drunk with the wine of soul''s desire?
46197Was it, beloved, so great a sin?
46197Well, in the midst of all of this what happens?
46197Were your spirit''s plight As mine is with this vision, had I willed To torture you with absence?
46197What are walls like these Beside the walls of memory, or the dearth Of hope in all this life, the agonies Of spiritual chains and gloom?
46197What are we to the gods, I wonder?
46197What day that dawns will bring her love?
46197What do you suppose?
46197What does he care?
46197What fate Was mine beneath the darkness of that sky, There at your door who could not leave or wait, And heard the bird of midnight''s desolate cry?
46197What have you gained?
46197What is love but fire forever crying?
46197What is my soul''s great anguish for?
46197What is she doing?
46197What is the curse, or is it the war?
46197What is the loss of hogs, if man be saved?
46197What is the turf of you, what the tree?
46197What loss of lands and houses, man being free?
46197What may it be?
46197What may the mirrors mean?
46197What moves, defeats him, works him ill?
46197What principle makes me collaborator With such fantastic business?
46197What prison chains could rest So heavily on the spirit, as that free, But vast and ruined world?
46197What then remains But memory of the waters of Babylon, And the ships like swan after swan, Under the drone of angry hydroplanes?
46197What to seek In earth and heaven more?
46197What was it that he said?
46197What was it that he said?
46197What wild birds will cry to them as they sink Out of an unknown sky?
46197What your soul but love''s pure carbon fuel?
46197What your treasure if you could retrieve it?
46197What''s the bond Between us two, that I respond To what you are?
46197What''s the game?
46197What''s the half to keep, could you achieve it?
46197When did this pageant of things begin?
46197Where am I now, where is my lover?
46197Where is the magistrate?
46197Where should I go?
46197Where?
46197Who are my enemies?
46197Who are my enemies?
46197Who drank your precious vintage from the flask Roman and golden whence I drank so late?
46197Who held you in his arms and thus could ask?
46197Who in the devil has love or luck?
46197Who lives, the dreamer, the will o''the wisp?
46197Who made that wine, why did I drink it?
46197Who makes our cup to overflow?
46197Who pities stocks, or pities trees?
46197Who pressed the squeaky springs In the death bird that it sings?
46197Who wore my robe of purple false and fair?
46197Whom shall we notify?
46197Why are the innocent sacrificed?
46197Why did I want it?
46197Why fly for the light and get the flame?
46197Would I save Your spirit if its anguish could be stilled Only among the worms that haunt the grave?
46197Would You falsify to keep your good?
46197Would you not say, Music intrigues me night and day?
46197Yes, you know Corinne adores the picture which you sent Of Madeline-- your boy, too?
46197Yet who knows why he is this or that?
46197Yet you found God through this?
46197You will still love on, or turn to hating, Days depart, your heart stays in its waiting, Where''s the blame?
46197through war, Through love found vision, perhaps peace?
46197what can it give In return for souls like yours Mangled or blotted out?--who shall forgive The war while time endures?
46197which is the way?
5324''And what is the pit for?'' 5324 ''But where are my sisters?''
5324''Why, how come you so early with the food?'' 5324 But what is the matter with the sheep?"
5324But what is the young monsieur to do?
5324But who will go with him?
5324Do you think then, messire, that your servants will accuse you?
5324Do you want to know Pierre Labourant, lass? 5324 Do your hands and feet become paws of a wolf?"
5324Does your head become like that of a wolf- your mouth become larger?
5324Have you nothing more to declare? 5324 How many children do you estimate that the Sire de Retz and his servants have killed?"
5324Is that little maid your daughter?
5324Is that why you look so dingy and black?
5324Monseigneur,said Pierre de l''Hospital, whom the form of the requisition had visibly astonished:"What justification have you to make?
5324Tell me the tenor of this parchment?
5324That is as may be; will you confess, or must I send you to the rack?
5324Then there rode up three black horsemen, and the last said to me:''Whither away? 5324 Well, my maidens,"said he in a harsh voice,"which of you is the prettiest, I should like to know; can you decide among you?"
5324Were you dressed as a wolf?
5324What are you accused of having done?
5324What do you want to know for?
5324What have you to say?
5324What is your name, and what your estate?
5324What shall we say about were- wolves? 5324 When did you begin your execrable practices?"
5324When rubbed with this ointment do you become a wolf?
5324Where''s Peter?
5324Where?
5324You want to know about the wolf- skin cape?
5324Are you going?"
5324As for her wit, try her at the game of the dish, and see who gets up master; and for cleanliness, look at her petticoat?''
5324As soon as Gilles heard that a troop in the livery of Brittany was at the gate, he inquired who was their leader?
5324Do you ask me if I know aught about them?
5324Do you want to know where he lives, lass?
5324Has my father kept them for companionship; or to help him in his work?''
5324However, when they had come near the spot where they had turned before, Arnkell said,''Think you not that Odd may have been in the goat''s form?''
5324I will only quote the words of the crier:--"I pray thee, tell me,"replied I,"of what kind are the duties attached to this funeral guardianship?"
5324Is it not so, M. le Curé?
5324Jean?"
5324One day it came into his head:''What is the good of having to support so many girls?''
5324Or was it man, or vile woman, My ain true love, that mis- shaped thee?
5324Or was it mermaid in the sea?
5324Should he judge and sentence a kinsman, the most powerful of his vassals, the bravest of his captains, a councillor of the king, a marshal of France?
5324Sinfjötli replied,''What was the need of asking your help to kill eleven men?''
5324Tell me first, what have Henriet and Pontou said?"
5324The youngest knew well that her father was a were- wolf, and she was grieved that her sisters did not return; she thought,''Now where can they be?
5324Then calling aloud,''Wife,''said he,''what have you to eat?
5324Thus in Kempion-- O was it war- wolf in the wood?
5324To whom she turned about with an ireful countenance, saying:--''Wherefore chide ye with me, as if I had committed ane unworthy act?
5324Up came Sigmund and said,''Why did you not call out?''
5324What am I to know about them, am I their keeper?"
5324What happened?
5324What is Lycanthropy?
5324What shall I, frail man, be pleading?
5324Where does he live?"
5324Who for me be interceding?
5324Why does a child impulsively strike at a butterfly as it flits past him?
5324Why, what could two men do if they were attacked by that wolf- fiend?"
5324You like the ring, is it not beautiful?
5324are you now falling upon your son?''
5324aû?
5324d?
5324d?
5324d?
5324echoed the girl;"and pray who gave it you?"
5324ge mèn e?n ðeófin geneh`, ðnhtoïs még?
5324h?
5324he had said,"am I to believe that a fairy spirits off and eats our little ones?"
5324kakou~ d?
5324kaì katà gai~ an a?peíriton, a?nðemóessan é?rg?
5324ou?
5324will you speak or will you not?"
5324wilt thou grant me that which is under the bear''s left fore- shoulder?''
5324you seem to be in trouble?''
5324{ Greek_ drákonta pursónwton, ó!s á?platon a?mfeliktòs é!lik?
5324{ Greek_ é!likes d?
5324{ Greek_? Ek dè Tufwéos é?st?
5324{ Greek_? Ek dè Tufwéos é?st?
5324á?llote d?
49569''But if the cattle disease should carry them off?'' 49569 ''But if they refuse?''
49569''Did you kill many Armenians generally?'' 49569 ''Did you often use your daggers?''
49569''These Armenians are to blame, I suppose?'' 49569 And if that number should not be sufficient?"
49569And you, father?
49569Are the Christian people of America willing that this thing shall continue?
49569But suppose all Europe should oppose you?
49569But,said Mahmood, dissembling his anxiety,"if I should stand in need of the whole force of your kindred tribes?"
49569Can I depend on you? 49569 Can you found me a piece sufficiently like a thunderbolt that a ball launched from it may shake the walls of Constantinople?"
49569Know you the city,says the Koran,"of which two sides look upon the sea and one side upon the land?
49569Of what do you complain?
49569We must die at some time,they answer,"what is the difference between dying now and a few days hence?"
49569What if the Sultan,exclaimed the British Prime Minister--"What if the Sultan is not persuaded?
49569What will he think of next?
49569Who would sit down and sigh for a lost age of gold While the Lord of all ages is here? 49569 Who''ll buy fine dogs''meat?"
49569Why do n''t you work?
49569Why do you kill people?
49569''Who was to blame?''
49569''Why did they refuse you reinforcements?''
49569And even then, namely in October last, did England show herself equal to the requirements of the crisis?
49569And why?
49569Any commerce, or industry, or literature, or art, or science?
49569Are the Armenians getting rich?
49569But how can they pray?
49569But what about this deplorable and ignominious failure of Europe to do her duty?
49569But what do we see in 1895?
49569But why not acknowledge such a fundamental truth, appealing to the intellect as well as the moral sense?
49569Could a community be conceived of more completely prostrated?
49569Did England fulfill her solemn obligation toward Armenia?
49569Did I say their"homes?"
49569Did we care for the poor manacled negro undergoing the horrors of the Middle Passage?
49569Did we have any interest in healing"the open sore of the world?"
49569Do you not love me better than you did her?
49569Do you shudder at even this cool recital?
49569For the greater security of the Christians in Bulgaria?
49569From what, pray?
49569HAVE MISSIONS IN TURKEY BEEN A FAILURE?
49569Has the spirit of Islam changed any during the last twelve hundred years?
49569Have they bishops, professors and other leaders of high education; and are they increasing in numbers?
49569Have they organized educational, religious or other benevolent associations?
49569Have you been long there?''
49569How Long?"
49569How could that benefit the Softas save as it were permitted them to beat, kill and plunder the Armenians in Stamboul?
49569How is she injured?
49569How long shall the blood of her slain cry aloud in the ears of Christendom, yet in vain still cry aloud?
49569How long?"
49569How much longer can human nature stand the strain?
49569How so?
49569If England entered into engagements she was powerless to make good, whose fault was that?
49569If so, then have missions been a failure?
49569In India and in China?
49569In the Bering Sea fisheries?
49569In the Transvaal?
49569In the extremity of their anguish they cried out:"How long O Lord?
49569In whose interest?
49569Is he not rather slitting the veins of Asia Minor and pouring out its heart''s best blood?
49569Is it the fifth century or the nineteenth that we are describing?
49569Is the heart of this nation dead?
49569Is there no law then?
49569Long afterwards, when she was dead, Ayeshah, his young and favorite wife, once asked him:"Am I not better than Cadijeh?
49569Now, who are these agents?
49569Often the question was asked,"Where is England''s guarantee to Armenian and Macedonian Christians now?"
49569On April 1st, Salisbury addressed a circular to the Powers, and after giving Russia''s refusal to consent to England''s demand( by what right?)
49569Or was it understood that it was merely dust for the eyes of Christian Europe?
49569Salisbury?
49569She was a widow, old and ugly?"
49569Should he remain and die, or fly for his life?
49569The Turkish soldiers cried out as they tortured the dying man,"Where is your God, now?
49569The general smiled and replied,"Well, did you ever hear anybody say that I was a fool?"
49569The ultimate issue can not be doubtful, but still the cry is,"How long, O Lord?
49569There is only time to notice one question,"Why did not Russia agree to the forcing the Dardanelles and coercing the Turks?
49569They replied:"Why should we deny Christ?
49569This was an earnest, urgent, emphatic, even threatening appeal: but where was there any warrant for the last threat?
49569Towards Turkey?
49569Was any promise, pledge or convention ever written that actually meant less?
49569Was this honest British Statesmanship actually determining that something should be done?
49569We may well exclaim"Cui bono?"
49569What are her interests in Venezuela?
49569What could the poor Armenians do but yield up their country to the power and government of the Saracens?
49569What did the Porte care for representations?
49569What do you think of that picture, Christian people of America?
49569What does England want?
49569What does she mean to fight for?
49569What greater-- greater outrages can be conceived of to rouse the Christian conscience, than have filled our ears for months?
49569What have the Turks brought into the Greek and Armenian centers of civilization in the Orient?
49569What right has she to interfere now that the treaty has been signed?
49569What will become of them then?
49569What witnesses ought we to call before us?
49569Who are they that I should suffer for them?''
49569Who then?
49569Who was it?
49569Why attack idols?
49569Why destroy his own interests?
49569Why destroy his popularity?
49569Why does he so bitterly hate the progressive Armenians?
49569Why does n''t he deliver you?"
49569Why is it that the sentimental compassion of England has not gone out into effective help to poor Armenia?
49569Why is the Turk so fiercely opposed to progress?
49569Why should not the Porte think a general harrying of the Armenians a ready way of allaying incipient disloyalty among the Faithful?
49569Why should not they?
49569You think the bulldogs would fight us?
49569and he said: I ate thousands of sheep, which of them are you talking about?
49569or England?
49569or was it shrewd Turkish diplomacy that will promise anything in the bond but withdraw it in the terms of later stipulations?
49569to which I received this characteristic reply:"''Once the wolf was asked: Tell us something about the sheep you devoured?
48673Johnnie, do you suppose you can find your way five miles to Neighbor Ashley''s clearing?
48673Tell me what you did last summer?
48673True enough,said the caliph;"but who ever thought of insisting upon a pack saddle''s being included in a load of wood?
48673Well, what shall I buy?
48673Were n''t you in Archester one summer?
48673Why do you refuse to shave this man''s companion?
48673( If your great- grandfather had written his autobiography when he was your age, what would you have liked to know of his life?
48673---- are you to believe?
48673---- can this be from?
48673---- do you think it was?
48673---- do you think this is?
486734. Who saw it first, you or----?
48673= Exercise 1.=--Which are dependent clauses?
48673= Exercise 28.=--What do the opening sentences in the following paragraphs show?
48673= Exercise 4.=--Which sentences are simple?
48673= Exercise 52.=--Do you see any difference in meaning in the pairs of words given below?
48673Ah, Moses, cried my wife, that we know, but where is the horse?
48673Ali, kissing the ground, answered,"It is true, O caliph, that such was our agreement; but who ever made a companion of a donkey before?"
48673And now the great question was,"What shall be done with the rogue?"
48673And those maps-- how could they be any better?
48673And what became of the little----, the poor_ boy_ in the pretty town of Marbach?
48673And what next?
48673Are n''t you glad then, little Queen, That your name is Josephine?
48673Are you having a good time?
48673Better for whom; or for what results?)
48673But how shall we begin?
48673But what are_ bad_ sentences?
48673Can it be----?
48673Can you tell---- to believe?
48673Can your basket- ball team put off the match we were to play on Monday until Wednesday?
48673Construct your argument as though in answer to the remark,"Why do you feel that way?
48673Could it have been----?
48673Dear mother, cried the boy, why wo n''t you listen to reason?
48673Did you get the new skates you wanted?
48673Did you notice the extreme delicacy of the shells?
48673Did you put it in the trunk or was it left behind?
48673Do these boys go to school?
48673Do you feel that you would need to know more about it before trying to play?
48673Do you mean that they should learn nothing else?
48673Do you remember---- you saw?
48673Do you see how much better the first way of telling you all this about Harry is than the second?
48673Do you sing as wonderfully as you fly?"
48673Does not the paragraph seem a little flat?
48673Dost thou love life?
48673Explain( as if to a boy or girl younger than you, who asks,"What is it for?")
48673For instance, if some one should ask you, What is cheerfulness?
48673For instance, the answer to the question,"Who was Abraham Lincoln?"
48673From that charge who needs defend her?
48673Has he---- it yet?
48673How about dreadful tales of witches and hobgoblins that make the healthiest child afraid of the dark?
48673How are bricks made?
48673How do little girls play keep house?
48673How does a water wheel work?
48673How many did Audubon?
48673How many did Henry Thoreau?
48673How many eyes did Gilbert White open?
48673How many topics are treated in each?
48673I ask you,"Shall I go?"
48673If I can not believe in her, in---- can I believe?
48673If Pocohontas had written her autobiography, what would most interest you?)
48673If a boy in China kept a diary, what would you find most interesting?
48673If you are away on a visit, for instance, the questions he would probably ask are,"What sort of a place is it where you are?
48673If you had been able to keep a diary when you were six or seven, what would you now read in it with most interest?
48673If your parents had kept one when they were your age, what would you have found most interesting now?
48673In a word, that Hat and you Do not have to be Hindu?
48673In the complex sentences, which clauses are dependent?
48673Is history taught in the schools?
48673Is it you, Alice?
48673Is it you?
48673Is n''t he grand, the captain, as he comes forward_ like lightning_, stroke after stroke?
48673Little Mistress Josephine, Tell me, have you ever seen Children half as queer as these Babies from across the seas?
48673MAIN:_ Cities and Sights of Spain._ Are there any questions that you would like to ask about pelota after reading this explanation?
48673May Aunt Jane buy a new one for me to wear at my cousin''s party?
48673May Ethel and---- remain after school?
48673May I stay over another day to see it?
48673Or animals used for food?
48673Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy, for with the jeopardy of their lives they brought it?"
48673Shall I go?
48673That you live in Springfield, or Not at least in old Jeypore?
48673That you''ve an entire nose And no rings upon your toes?
48673That your Christian parents are John and Hattie, Pa and Ma?
48673The mother turned her head as Alice entered, and said, Who is it?
48673The next morning, at breakfast, the landlord said to him,"Did you enjoy the cornet playing in the room next to yours last night?"
48673Tiger, tiger, burning bright in the forests of the night, what immortal hand or eye could frame thy fearful symmetry?
48673Till at length the portly abbot Murmured,"Why this waste of food?
48673Was it---- whom you saw?
48673Welcome, welcome, Moses; well, my boy, what have you brought us from the fair?
48673What are you and---- doing?
48673What are you doing to amuse yourself?"
48673What could she do?
48673What do you mean by being"better off"--merely"healthier"or"happier"or"more secure"?
48673What do you mean by"playing Indians"?
48673What do you think should go in a diary?
48673What good wind brings you here?"
48673What is a handicap?
48673What is composition?
48673What is the difference between the sentences in this extract and ordinary prose sentences?
48673What kind of animals?
48673What kind of history?
48673What makes popcorn pop?
48673What man is he that lustest to live, And would fain see good days?
48673What sentences shall come first?
48673What slang expression do you use most frequently?
48673What sorts of sentences should you try not to make?
48673Where are you?
48673Where have you been so long?
48673Which words in the following sentences should begin with capitals?
48673Why are fishhooks made in the form they are?
48673Why does a chimney"draw"?
48673Why does an ice house keep the ice from melting?
48673Why have you opened this wicked box?"
48673Why?
48673Will the seventh grade of your school join ours in a nature- study excursion to the river next Saturday?
48673Will these principles still hold if you speak your thoughts for others to hear?
48673Will you telegraph us if there is anything we can do to help you?
48673Will your debating society be willing to meet ours, on the 27th of this month, in our class room?
48673Would they not spare a little for the dumb creature that really had as much right to his small share of God''s bounty as they themselves to theirs?
48673You can test the unity of your paragraph by asking with respect to each sentence that you construct,"Does it relate to the subject of my paragraph?"
48673You remember my big cousin who goes to the State University, do n''t you?
48673You were saying that-- I suppose-- but why should I tell you?
48673_ A boy''s club should not study history._ What kind of boys?
48673_ All girls should learn to be housekeepers._ What do you mean by"housekeeper"?
48673_ Animals in captivity are better off than in their natural state._ What kind of captivity?
48673_ Composition is the subject that has to do with the best expression of thought by language._ But how, then, does composition differ from grammar?
48673_ It is not harmful for children to read fairy tales._ How about nervous, excitable children who can not sleep after a fairy story?
48673_ It is wrong to kill animals._ Do you include noxious and dangerous ones?
48673_ Unbroken._"Have you any money?"
48673a well sweep?
48673a windmill?
48673baseballs?
48673complex?
48673compound?
48673exclaimed Alice, in a startled tone, what do you mean?
48673glass?
48673gold leaf?
48673hairbrushes?
48673ink?
48673iron?
48673mirrors?
48673paper?
48673phrases?
48673said the caliph to the barber:"was not that your agreement?"
48673said the other, in great amazement;"who ever heard of such a bargain?
48673saws?
48673scissors?
48673sentences?
48673shingles?
48673steel?
48673wheels?
4051But really there''s nothing to think..."But do n''t you think he''d do for Hester?"
4051Like him? 4051 ''A bargain-- what?'' 4051 ''All right, eh, Biddy?'' 4051 ''An extraordinary thing--? 4051 ''And Leura- Jimmy?'' 4051 ''And did she tell you that she had been inhuman and insolent?'' 4051 ''And how do we know that?'' 4051 ''And if he had n''t, what about the glorious British record, and the March of Civilisation?'' 4051 ''And not so long before you came out here?'' 4051 ''And since when, Colin, have you become an observer of social obligations?'' 4051 ''And so-- all the rest have been-- experiments?'' 4051 ''And that''s your idea of-- love?'' 4051 ''And then?'' 4051 ''And then?--then?'' 4051 ''And what now about the gentleman from Leichardt''s Town, Mr McKeith? 4051 ''And you found that-- in your husband?'' 4051 ''And you... you... where were you?'' 4051 ''And you?'' 4051 ''And you?'' 4051 ''And your husband allowed this? 4051 ''Any admittance, Mrs Gildea, except on business, during working hours?'' 4051 ''Any news, Colin?'' 4051 ''Are n''t you going to say good- bye?'' 4051 ''Are you ready, Bridget?'' 4051 ''Biddy, what''s this I''m hearing about Wombo and that gin?'' 4051 ''Biddy-- my mate-- will you answer me a question-- truthfully?'' 4051 ''Boss no sit down long- a Humpey?'' 4051 ''But about the Socialism?'' 4051 ''But do n''t you see? 4051 ''But do you think,''said she confidingly,''that the cow would be after realising ME as an expression of the Divine Mind?'' 4051 ''But how-- how did you know I was going to burn the things?'' 4051 ''But how-- how did you know? 4051 ''But she''s in love with him-- she must be, or she would n''t write like that?'' 4051 ''But would n''t you care to hear Molly''s account of their visit to the Duke and Duchess of Brockenhurst to meet the King and Queen of Hartenburg? 4051 ''But you ARE getting over it, Biddy-- the disappointment about Mr Maule? 4051 ''But you could n''t have understood his position when you married him?'' 4051 ''But you saw-- Colin did you see-- the Tallants and-- their party? 4051 ''COULD one be mean or small in such conditions? 4051 ''Can I be of any use to you, Mr McKeith, in dealing with that nigger? 4051 ''Can not any man do what he is strong enough to do-- if he wishes it enough to persist?'' 4051 ''Can you make anything that''s satisfactory to you out of that?'' 4051 ''Can you ride?'' 4051 ''Colin, what are you thinking of?'' 4051 ''Colin,''she said abruptly,''was n''t it funking a little bit, do n''t you think-- running away?'' 4051 ''D''ye think she''ll marry the chap?'' 4051 ''D''ye think so? 4051 ''Did he steal the gun?'' 4051 ''Did they ever spear you?'' 4051 ''Did you have a good muster?'' 4051 ''Different from your London Life, eh? 4051 ''Do you think I can POSSIBLY reach your arm?'' 4051 ''Do you want any more tea? 4051 ''Does your husband play the game?'' 4051 ''Eh? 4051 ''Eh? 4051 ''Eh?'' 4051 ''Everything just how you feel at the time, eh?'' 4051 ''From HER?'' 4051 ''Go afterwards-- What do you mean? 4051 ''Go to Tunumburra to- morrow?'' 4051 ''Going away-- what is it?'' 4051 ''Good''uns, ai n''t they? 4051 ''Had a night of it, I suppose, Mrs Hurst?'' 4051 ''Has Wombo shot your husband with our gun?'' 4051 ''Has he told you, then, why he keeps on his station that insolent woman and her yellow- haired blue- eyed boy?'' 4051 ''Has it come to that? 4051 ''Has it ever occurred to you that Lady Bridget O''Hara might fall in love with Colin McKeith?'' 4051 ''Have you seen anything of your master-- or the postman?'' 4051 ''Horses all right, Bill?'' 4051 ''How could I-- I ask you? 4051 ''How do you know that the master will be here to- morrow?'' 4051 ''How do you know? 4051 ''How do you mean, Joan? 4051 ''How have I brought myself to the incredible enterprise of marrying an Australian bushman? 4051 ''I gave you this,''he said,''and you have kept it-- used it?'' 4051 ''I guessed it.... You wo n''t tell me her name?'' 4051 ''I suppose you made friends with some Socialists when you were in London?'' 4051 ''I''m Sisera, am I?'' 4051 ''If what is true? 4051 ''If you object to this, what WOULD you say to the store tobacco smoke when I''m in the Bush?'' 4051 ''In my room-- YOU? 4051 ''Is it only to- day that you have thought that?'' 4051 ''Is it really a letter? 4051 ''Is it that you are fretting after somebody over there who-- someone you ca n''t marry? 4051 ''Is that all you have to say? 4051 ''It''s a good thing you kept this humpey, Joan-- a little nest for the bird to fly home to, eh?'' 4051 ''Joan, then? 4051 ''May I ask what you propose to do?'' 4051 ''May n''t I be your squaw and help you to wash up?'' 4051 ''More than that.... Do you mean... can you mean that you could love Colin McKeith-- for himself?'' 4051 ''Must you go to Europe for a wife? 4051 ''My object in going round your district is to bring about a peaceful compromise between employers and employed-- Do you see....?'' 4051 ''No sign of my men?'' 4051 ''No-- no-- I was thinking only of him, Biddy, did you love that man?--really love him?'' 4051 ''No-- what? 4051 ''Now, what the deuce do you mean by elemental?'' 4051 ''Of course you want the black- boy to escape?'' 4051 ''Oh, Colin-- Won''t you speak to me?'' 4051 ''Oh, do you expect me to congratulate you?'' 4051 ''Oh? 4051 ''Or else-- what?'' 4051 ''Plenty water sit down along a creek?'' 4051 ''Rather clumsy and long, do n''t you think? 4051 ''SHE''S like that, is she? 4051 ''Satisfactory to me is it? 4051 ''Seen the paper this morning?'' 4051 ''Sentimental rot, d''ye call it?'' 4051 ''Shall we go for a ride?'' 4051 ''She''s a flirt, then?'' 4051 ''Sit down again, wo n''t you, Harris?'' 4051 ''So you stole-- a private communication that had been left in another person''s room, and was intended for his eyes alone?'' 4051 ''Sugar?'' 4051 ''Tea,''she asked,''or would you rather have whiskey and water? 4051 ''Tell me now,''she exclaimed,''Oh, Joan... Wo n''t your notes keep?'' 4051 ''Tell me, how does she take it?'' 4051 ''That''s something new, is n''t it?'' 4051 ''That''s true, is n''t it? 4051 ''Then, can there be any question of the bond between us? 4051 ''Was it a man?'' 4051 ''Well, I can spell my horse an hour or two, ca n''t I?'' 4051 ''Well, is it to be tea or whiskey?'' 4051 ''Well, so you''ve become the Governor''s unconstitutional adviser?'' 4051 ''Well, that''s quite simple, is n''t it?'' 4051 ''Well, what about Harris?'' 4051 ''Well, why not? 4051 ''Well-- and what do you thing of it, now that you are here?'' 4051 ''Well?'' 4051 ''Were n''t you a bit out?'' 4051 ''Were you really so surprised? 4051 ''What a marriage? 4051 ''What are we going to do for water?'' 4051 ''What are you sorry for, Colin-- that Rosamond Tallant is dead, and that you forgot to tell me, and let me hear it from-- Willoughby Maule?'' 4051 ''What are your immediate movements to be?'' 4051 ''What can they do?'' 4051 ''What do they do now-- to us squatters you mean?'' 4051 ''What do you call the truth?'' 4051 ''What do you mean byon the square"?
4051''What do you mean?
4051''What do you mean?''
4051''What for you been take- it stockwhip long- a me?
4051''What harm is there in my singing to Colin McKeith?''
4051''What has Wombo been doing?''
4051''What is it?
4051''What is the matter?''
4051''What is the matter?''
4051''What is the matter?''
4051''What makes me hate the Blacks?''
4051''What part of it?
4051''What the devil has that got to do with Wombo?''
4051''What were you asking?''
4051''What woman?
4051''What would you have done, Colin?''
4051''What''s a pity?''
4051''What''s the job?''
4051''What-- Who-- Who was it you saw--?''
4051''When are you coming home?''
4051''When did you start Socialism?''
4051''Where have you been all these three weeks?''
4051''Where would have been the use?
4051''Where''s Wombo now?''
4051''Which seems rather odd, does n''t it, in the circumstances?''
4051''Why did n''t kindness do?''
4051''Why do you always keep me at a distance?''
4051''Why does n''t the woman marry again?''
4051''Why is it so dark-- and the heat so stifling?''
4051''Why should I be explained?
4051''Why should I have hurt his feelings?
4051''Why should there be trouble with the Blacks?''
4051''Why to keep?''
4051''Why, worse luck?''
4051''Will you let me manage it my own way?''
4051''Will you let me try?''
4051''With your wife''s money?''
4051''Would you have married that man-- if everything had been on the square?''
4051''YOUR writing?''
4051''Yes-- well?''
4051''Yes-- why?''
4051''Yes?
4051''You WERE there, then?''
4051''You are off civilization, Biddy?''
4051''You are very kind.... Why are you so anxious to get rid of me?''
4051''You ca n''t mean that it would be a good thing for Biddy to marry Colin McKeith?''
4051''You came and looked at me?''
4051''You did n''t return it then?''
4051''You do hate them, do n''t you?
4051''You do n''t mean to say that you''re thinking of her like that?''
4051''You have not had any more fever?''
4051''You know I asked to be sent in with you-- it was rather bold of me, was n''t it?
4051''You know him then?''
4051''You mean that-- really?
4051''You must ask the heavens?''
4051''You put that woman before ME-- before your wife?''
4051''You''d despise my cigarettes?''
4051''You''ve got no sense of humour,''she said,''Do n''t you see that you and I are as incongruous as the duck and the kangaroo?''
4051''You''ve seen it?''
4051''You''ve tried it before-- that idea of bigger interests-- a different kind of life-- in other ways, Biddy, have n''t you?''
4051''Your mother?''
4051... As she made no answer, he asked sharply:''Do you understand, Biddy?''
4051... Perhaps you''d like to make the start to- morrow?''
4051... You''re not faint, are you?''
4051.... What is low?
4051A bad omen for your visit, is n''t it?''
4051A dandy go- cart, eh?''
4051All?''
4051And are they belted-- really?
4051And how about an Ideal dethroned from her pedestal and plumped down amid the crude realities of the nethermost Bush?
4051And how did you know, by the way, that I''d lived in a castle?''
4051And if I seem to be taking too much on myself-- or, on the other hand, deferring too much to Harris, you''ll trust me and not interfere?''
4051And now what''s this about the black- boy to do with my being unjust to that Organiser?
4051And then....''''And then?''
4051And yet the sight made Bridget happy for all its pain--''Colin, when I first saw Ninnis, do you know what I thought--?
4051And your talisman, Colin?
4051Are n''t Australian girls good enough?''
4051Are you angry with me for saying it?''
4051Are you coming with me?''
4051Are you frightened?''
4051As emotional interests, do they come to the same thing for elderly women?''
4051Ask him what the twenty- five notches on his gun stand for?''
4051At least, till her arm is healed and the danger past?''
4051Biddy, there WAS a man-- one man that you did care for?
4051Biddy-- if you feel like that now-- how will it be when you''re my wife?''
4051Biddy-- tell me honestly, my dear, if it''s anything of that sort?''
4051But Colin, do you really wish, it?
4051But again-- is that the question?
4051But from the point of view of"The Lady of Quality,"would he be a better husband?''
4051But had this complex, fastidious, physically- refined creature the least comprehension of what life on the Upper Leura might mean?
4051But was Biddy merely playing with the big primitive- souled bushman-- or was it possible that she, too, could be in love?
4051But what could you expect?
4051But you do n''t think it would be a dangerous experiment, do you?''
4051CHAPTER 11''And what are you going to do, Biddy?
4051COULD you ever really care?''
4051Can you not come to England to see her?
4051Confess now... are not my guesses correct?''
4051Could Mr McKeith give him any information about all that?
4051Could he have the hide- house?
4051Could it be that there was a chapter in Colin''s life of which she knew nothing?
4051D''ye like this, Biddy?''
4051Did n''t somebody say of Lady Something or Other that to love her was a liberal education?''
4051Did wild and dangerous Blacks still exist up north and in the interior of the Colony?
4051Do n''t you like the music of CARMEN?''
4051Do n''t you think it was a good plan?''
4051Do n''t you think, Joan, that in that case, all three come invariably to the same thing?''
4051Do women type letters?
4051Do you carry civil wars about with you?
4051Do you happen to own a gold mine, by the way?''
4051Do you know how it ended?''
4051Do you know?''
4051Do you remember Polly?
4051Do you remember that novel of Hardy''s, THE WELL- BELOVED?
4051Do you see how she has had to make herself up to hide the mosquito bites?
4051Do you see?''
4051Do you suppose we should not all be having spears thrown at us if the niggers were n''t afraid of Mr McKeith''s gun?''
4051Do you want to go back again to Government House?''
4051Do you want to know what he''s done to us boys?
4051Do you want your wife to be like a canary in a cage?''
4051Does that mean that you''ve been in the habit of letting men kiss you?''
4051Drink my health and my wife''s, d''ye see?
4051Eh?''
4051Fair or dark-- her hair now-- and her eyes?''
4051Five foot seven of height is my measure of a woman, and a good ten stone in the saddle-- What are you laughing at, Joan?
4051Got your traps fixed up?
4051Had Sir Luke been too over- poweringly pompous?
4051Had he discovered the flight of his prisoner?
4051Had he gone to the office for his gun?
4051Has Rosamond Tallant been telling you?''
4051Have I a rival?
4051Have you EVER really cared for any man?
4051Have you an army of Bachelors at Moongarr, and what do they do when they''re at home?''
4051He blurted forth instead?
4051He took her to the door of her room.... Was she as comfortable as she could be here, anyhow?
4051He''s the same as all the rest of the men, and they''re as like as a box of ninepins...""But what do you think of him...?"
4051Her face was turned from his as she answered:''What''s the good of your knowing, Colin?
4051How did you do your reading?''
4051How do I know that there was n''t?
4051How do you like the new buggy, my lady?
4051How does that sound?''
4051How far had officialdom penetrated into the back blocks?
4051How is the rest of HER?
4051How long are you going to stay with the Tallants?''
4051How long is it going to last?''
4051How was I to know that there was n''t some plot to cheat the law?
4051How?
4051How?
4051I daresay you could do with a nip, eh, Harry?''
4051I daresay, you guessed that, Lady Bridget?''
4051I must have been ill. What was the matter with me?''
4051I observe,''she added,''that you must have become rather friendly at Tunumburra?''
4051I should have thought you''d have been driven to it here to keep the mosquitoes at a distance....''Do you like my case, Joan?
4051I suppose it''s all right?''
4051I suppose you have n''t brought back any snapshots of Alexandra City and your wonderful Gas- Bore that Mr Gibbs could get worked up for his paper?''
4051I want to know why you looked so upset-- as if you were going to faint-- when that man came up to you to- day?''
4051I want you to tell me what determined you on marrying a rough chap like me?
4051I''m out there, I suppose?''
4051I''ve felt about marrying you that it would be a new baptism into a bigger, fresher, purer life-- do you see?''
4051In what way, can you tell me?''
4051Is anything the matter?''
4051Is dinner regarded in the Never- Never as a sacred ceremonial?''
4051Is it permitted to ask the reason?''
4051Is it quite fair to put it that way?''
4051Is n''t it a figure of speech?''
4051Is n''t that true also?''
4051Is n''t that true?''
4051Is that Colin back again?''
4051Is that all I can get out of you-- that grudging admission?
4051Is there any man in the world you care for more than you care for me?
4051It was on her that night, and if she had to be carried to her room in a fit of shaking, what business is that of yours?
4051It-- it''s all funny-- isn''t it?
4051Just tell me what''s worrying you?''
4051Lady Bridget asked suddenly:''I want to know, Colin-- what did that man mean by saying you had an insult ready for me at your Bachelor''s Quarters?
4051Lady Bridget roused herself and looked up at her friend rather wildly....''No.... What do you take me for?
4051Like me is n''t it?
4051Look here,''he said fiercely,''have you ever felt for any one of the lot of men you spoke about just like that?''
4051Mate, you DID understand?
4051May I ask how you and Mr McKeith come to be drinking tea together in my veranda?''
4051My darling, why do you look at me with those tragic eyes?
4051My dearest-- I''m so afraid of your being ill-- what can I do?''
4051My word, you think yourself a bloated fine gentleman now you''ve married into the British hairystocracy, do n''t you, Mister Colin McKeith?
4051Naturally, it would n''t be a good thing under ordinary conditions, but is she likely to do much better?''
4051Now the result is that Chris is able to bring in quantities of clients and gets a commission on all the wine he sells.... What''s the matter, Colin?
4051Of course you know Dr Plumtree?
4051Rather smart, was n''t it?''
4051Ready, Biddy?''
4051Same idea, eh?''
4051See?''
4051See?''
4051She went very white and repeated dully:''How-- things-- are to go on?''
4051Should I ever have had the strength to give him up?
4051So you are superstitious as ever?''
4051Sounds beastly vulgar, does n''t it?
4051Struck a dead- head that time, eh?...
4051Suddenly she said:''I wonder why you made the break of coming out to Australia-- why you did not stay in England and follow on your career?''
4051Suppose he had been making a fool of himself-- insulting his wife by unreasoning suspicions?
4051Surely you must understand?''
4051That what you did, eh?''
4051That you, too, had been warned in a dream?''
4051The end HAS come.... You''re sick of the whole show-- dead sick-- of the Bush-- of everything?--Aren''t you?
4051The fellow is what you''d call a bounder?''
4051The operation?''
4051The question is whether you want to make some money or not?''
4051The shooting or the flogging?''
4051Then come to the veranda and tell me how it is that Luke Tallant has allowed you to exchange Government House for the Never- Never?''
4051Then he said mechanically, like one walking out of a dream?
4051Then he said:''The buggy is waiting, will you come?''
4051There WAS somebody in especial-- a man you cared for and might have married if he had been a finer sort of chap than he turned out to be?''
4051They''re nonsense words, are n''t they?''
4051Too great a temptation, was n''t it?
4051Was Harris stirring?
4051Was Lady Tallant really cross?
4051Was he ever your lover, Biddy?
4051Was it not too much to believe that he had always been faithful to his ideal of the camp fire?
4051Was it possible that she had cared-- that she still cared?
4051We ai n''t got no use for you, Micky Phayle.... Ca n''t you see a lady as is a lady?''
4051Well, have you found the right sheets?
4051Well, how do you think now, that her ladyship would have stood up against these sort of conditions?
4051Well, if she was staying with him in London, and his wife is a friend of hers, why should n''t she come and stay with them out here?''
4051Well, one life is good enough for me, and as we ca n''t prove the other thing, what does it matter anyhow?
4051What about the colour of her eyes?''
4051What are you thinking of to talk like that?''
4051What business has Wombo to steal another man''s wife?''
4051What could he know?
4051What did he now behold?
4051What do the Blacks do now to you people to make you treat them unkindly?''
4051What do you mean?''
4051What do you mean?''
4051What for Boss shoot Oola?''
4051What for me no have''em gin belonging to me?
4051What for no all same black fellow?''
4051What have I done but cause you pain?
4051What have I done, a rough Bushy like me-- to win a woman like you?
4051What insult?''
4051What is high?
4051What is it about a duck or a kangaroo?
4051What is there to like?
4051What more can a wife do in the case of an over- insistent lover?
4051What price honest labour, you blamed scab of a squatter?
4051What right had he to do so?
4051What right had you to do that?
4051What was Pleuro?
4051What was going to happen when Colin McKeith set eyes on Bridget?
4051What was it?''
4051What was your picture of the lady- wife?
4051What would have been the good of my havering in that letter over my own feelings and the bad times I had struck?
4051What would there be left for me to live for?''
4051What?
4051Where''s your barbarism, Joan?
4051Where?
4051Who had been the old feller Mithsis?
4051Why had Joan never mentioned it?
4051Why should n''t the poor black- boy marry as well as you or anyone else?''
4051Why should you hesitate?
4051Why?
4051Will I be taking him up with me to the Bachelor''s Quarters?
4051Will I defy conventions and dine with HIM alone?
4051Will you take in Lady Bridget O''Hara?
4051Will you, as a favour to me, let them stay for a few days?
4051Wo n''t you tell me?
4051Would Colin ever find it there-- and would he understand?
4051YAN-- do you hear?
4051You ARE growing not to care?''
4051You became friends, then-- latterly?''
4051You do n''t imagine, do you, that they can go on the same?''
4051You do n''t mean to say that I''ve given you her letter?''
4051You know that brassy glare of the sun rising that means always scorching dry heat?
4051You understand?
4051You would care... really... even though they had cut the throats of your four best dray- horses?''
4051You''re not dead, are you?''
4051You''re positive about the fact?''
4051You''ve got an enormous piece of pretty good country, have n''t you?''
4051You''ve promised to teach me the first time we camp out how to make-- what do you call them-- johnny- cakes?''
4051and had Vereker Wells made any more blunders?
4051is n''t it all one huge regret?
4051off into the scrub?
4051what does it matter?''
45908A French orphan,she gasped,"What for?"
45908A button, was n''t it?
45908A girl like this might attract his attention if he saw her behind the counter of a cigar store--"Does she work in a cigar store?
45908A sort of Uncle of Amy''s, did n''t you say, Ruth?
45908All? 45908 Amy Lassell, how dare you?"
45908And what is the very least you think you could take in place of having Myrtle go to work?
45908And why in the world do you want Sally?
45908Are you going, Priscilla? 45908 Arrives?"
45908Awfully clever, are n''t they?
45908But what must Miss-- Miss Zall think of me?
45908But what_ did_ she take?
45908But why?
45908Buy lace, lady? 45908 Ca n''t her aunt afford to give her an education?"
45908Ca n''t you make allowances, Priscilla, for a man crazed with love and jealousy?
45908Chocolate or coffee?
45908Dick, you have n''t met Mr. Carey, have you? 45908 Did he want to go, Ruth?"
45908Did n''t it ever occur to you that two wrongs did n''t make a right? 45908 Did n''t you telephone me this morning?"
45908Do n''t what, Priscilla?
45908Do n''t you hate to go away and leave all these lovely things, Graham?
45908Do you know what I''ve been thinking about all week?
45908Do you know what present she stole?
45908Do you mean that Mrs. Philander has been begging you to do this for the last five years, and that this is the first we''ve heard of it?
45908Do you mean that is all?
45908Do you mean,she said in a level voice,"that you do n''t believe me?"
45908Do you think I ought to encourage Nelson to go, Peggy?
45908Do you think she can like him?
45908Does she know?
45908Forty dollars a year?
45908Getting sleepy are n''t you, little boy?
45908Got pen and ink handy?
45908Had n''t you better put on the supper, my dear?
45908Have you addressed all that pile to- day?
45908Have you answered that letter from Oklahoma?
45908Have you waited dinner for me? 45908 Have you, dear?
45908Horace Hitchcock here? 45908 How about ice cream?"
45908How''s the faculty to know?
45908I have n''t met you before, have I?
45908I suppose she could open the door for a caller, could n''t she?
45908I''m afraid you need some of those artificial ear- drums, Priscilla-- Why, what''s happened?
45908I''m not too early, am I?
45908I-- I-- what are you talking about Graham?
45908I?
45908If you had a little help, Miss Burns, I suppose you could manage, could n''t you? 45908 In love-- why, what, do you mean?"
45908Is Horace coming up to- night?
45908Is Miss Combs in?
45908Is he nice looking?
45908Is she his mother''s sister or his father''s?
45908Is that so, Ruth?
45908Is this place called Friendly Terrace?
45908Is-- do you think it is all right for girls to go there alone in the evening?
45908Isabel?
45908Know what day it is?
45908May I come in for a little while, Ruth?
45908Miss Priscilla,said Horace suddenly,"are you at all interested in Field Day?"
45908Nelson''s late, is n''t he?
45908Nelson, you do n''t mean you want to take that offer? 45908 Not to speak to me for a week?
45908O, did Isabel come from Chicago?
45908O, do n''t you think that is too much?
45908Oh, Priscilla,Horace was murmuring,"Do you not feel as I do, that we have met and loved before?
45908Oh, ca n''t we get away?
45908Oh, is it really time to start?
45908Oh, what is the matter?
45908Ought I to dress up, do you think, as long as I''m expecting a call?
45908Peggy Raymond, what on earth are you talking about?
45908Peggy Raymond, where have you been and what have you been doing? 45908 Peggy not a help?
45908Peggy, what was that woman saying to you?
45908Peggy, where''s the latch key to your front door?
45908Please tell me what you mean by his drawing the line?
45908Priscilla, do you realize that to- morrow is Commencement Day? 45908 Priscilla-- are you in love with him?"
45908Ruth, what was the matter with Nelson last evening? 45908 Sally?"
45908Shall you be glad when school opens, Myrtle?
45908Take dinner? 45908 The front door?"
45908Then why did you blush that way?
45908Think you could stand it?
45908Third?
45908Wanted to buy you out, did n''t he?
45908Well, Amy, I''ve no doubt that Nelson is a very fine fellow, as far as morals go, but his social position, you know--"What about it?
45908Well, is that such a tragedy?
45908Well?
45908What I do n''t understand,said Priscilla,"is if Mary was so lonely, why did n''t she call us up?"
45908What about her?
45908What are they for?
45908What did you say?
45908What do you mean by that?
45908What do you say, Peggy? 45908 What do you want me to do with it?"
45908What do you want me to do, Peggy?
45908What for?
45908What happened to detain Isabel?
45908What has all this to do with strawberries?
45908What was that?
45908What''s become of Peggy? 45908 What''s that, Miss Peggy?"
45908What''s the idea?
45908What''s the joke?
45908What''s the matter? 45908 What''s the matter?
45908What''s the matter?
45908What''s the use?
45908What''s this?
45908What''s your idea in that? 45908 What?
45908When-- when do they want you to go?
45908Who are the Careys? 45908 Who did you say it was?
45908Who is the caller?
45908Who is?
45908Who''s Hitchcock?
45908Why are n''t you going with the others?
45908Why not?
45908Why, Nelson,she cried,"What are you talking about?
45908Why, Peggy, what do you mean?
45908Why, is anything the matter?
45908Why, what do you mean?
45908Why, when was the second?
45908Why, where''s Nelson?
45908Why,Hildegarde almost screamed,"did n''t you ask us here to- night to meet her?"
45908Will you now? 45908 Will you promise not to be angry if I tell you something?"
45908Wo n''t it cost a great deal to adopt an orphan?
45908Wo n''t you let me be your escort?
45908Would n''t you like something hot to drink?
45908Would you rather work than go to school?
45908Yes-- Margaret?
45908You do n''t expect him, do you?
45908You do n''t mean he''s married?
45908You do n''t mean you''ve got the door open?
45908You girls call yourselves college women, do n''t you? 45908 You want to see Miss Peggy?"
45908You would n''t think of it, would you, Ruth, going out to that rough cattle country, a girl like you?
45908You''re coming out to help me, are n''t you, Amy?
45908You''ve got a nice- looking maid? 45908 Your friend Hitchcock is n''t here to- night, is he?"
45908And then if the article were something she really wanted, she would add,"Is n''t it lucky, Graham, that some one thought of that?
45908Are you coming up to- night, Nelson?"
45908As it was, he leaned close and said in her ear,"Who is that fellow?"
45908But I''ve got an idea-- Don''t you know that the impression a thing makes on you depends a lot on the background?"
45908But if I let myself think of that, I''ll spoil this, do n''t you see?
45908But nobody passed me, and then when she got to the old toll- gate--"Mr. Raymond interrupted,"You do n''t mean you followed her to the toll gate?"
45908But why the French orphan?"
45908CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I WHAT''S IN A NAME?
45908Could it be that, as the second of July drew near, Peggy had found herself unable to face the situation?
45908Did she ever say she had met me?"
45908Did you ever see an exhibition of cubist pictures?"
45908Do n''t you like your dessert, Peggy?
45908Do n''t you love outdoors when it''s still and cold like this?"
45908Do n''t you remember how scared we were, and how in awe of the Seniors?
45908Do n''t you think it would be rather over- doing it to call twice in one day?"
45908Do n''t you understand that we''ve been frightened to death about you?"
45908Duncan?"
45908For while they were talking of something entirely different, Peggy suddenly exclaimed,"Do you suppose it was the uniform that dazzled them?"
45908Fox?"
45908Frost, you mean?"
45908Have you any brothers?"
45908He suggested that I would enjoy taking him to-- what''s the name of the place?
45908How is she?"
45908How many nights this week have we been to a movie?"
45908I suppose you know you''re a very striking type, do n''t you?"
45908I''d adore to come, Peggy, but would it put you out if I brought my friend Virginia Dunbar?
45908If Horace comes, bring him over and I''ll try to get Peggy and Ruth--""Shall you ask Nelson Hallowell?"
45908If Peggy cried"Is n''t that beautiful?"
45908If six months was a long time, what of two years?
45908Is he flesh and blood, and responsible for the marauding thefts in the neighborhood?
45908Is he responsible for Prince Kassim''s murder?
45908Is he the ghost of the ancestral portrait, that hangs in Sir Robert Grainger''s strange library?
45908Is n''t it the queerest thing,"she added,"what Priscilla can see in him?"
45908Is n''t that it, Priscilla?"
45908It was Hildegarde who exclaimed,"Do n''t you wish you knew who he was?"
45908Meanwhile Peggy, tilting her head on one side like an inquisitive canary, was asking Graham,"What is it we are going to celebrate?"
45908Oh, Priscilla, not really?"
45908On each occasion Peggy started convulsively, but somehow or other choked back the cry that rose to her lips,"Oh, what is it?
45908Or is it only coincidence that one of the guests at the masked ball happened to wear the costume of the Red Cavalier?
45908Peggy, do you realize what it would have meant if we had let that poem of Ida''s go in?
45908Priscilla asked,"Or is she stingy?"
45908Shall we go?"
45908They were not the sort of girls who follow the crowd unthinkingly, nor had any of them contracted the fatal habit of asking,"What can one do?"
45908What am I going to do?"
45908What do you say?"
45908What do you think of a trip to the country along about Wednesday?"
45908What do you think of her asking the Bonds?"
45908What do you think, daughter, of having parents old enough to have been married twenty- five years?"
45908What does Nelson think?"
45908What had become of Peggy?
45908What happened?"
45908What he meant to say does not matter, since the discovery that Amy was in tears resulted in the inquiry,"What are you crying for, hey?"
45908What is the matter?"
45908What is the very least you could get along on and let Myrtle stay in school?"
45908What is there in that to turn you all colors of the rainbow?
45908What was Peggy thinking of?
45908What''s the damage?"
45908Where?
45908Which of them is the Red Cavalier?
45908Who had ever heard of four lively girls maintaining an unbroken silence for a week?
45908Who is he, anyway?"
45908Who is the mysterious Red Cavalier?
45908Who''s taking you?"
45908Why not?"
45908Why should I be angry?"
45908Will you take him upstairs Ruth?
45908Wo n''t you and Dick come along, Miss Coffin?"
45908Wo n''t you have some ice- cream?"
45908Wo n''t you marry me, Peggy, and go along?
45908You would n''t really like to go to Oklahoma, would you?
45908You''re going to leave school?"
45908You''re the Miss Potts who takes care of Mary Donaldson, are n''t you?"
45908was the the result of) Page 199,"upstair"changed to"upstairs"( upstairs Ruth?
57821Among American women,says the article referred to,"who has shown a courage and self- devotion to the welfare of others, equal to Harriet Tubman?
57821And how far is it now to Canada?
57821But is he a Roman Catholic, Harriet?
57821Have you been down to Old Ben''s?
57821Mas''r,said he,"habn''t I always been faithful to you?
57821Well, what_ is_ it, Harriet?
57821What do you want, Harriet?
57821What does Old Ben say?
57821What does Old Rit say?
57821What, Harriet?
57821Who cares?
57821You do? 57821 _ Shum?_ Ded- a- de- dah!
57821_ Twenty dollars?_ Who told you to come here for twenty dollars?
57821_ Twenty dollars?_ Who told you to come here for twenty dollars?
57821A long pause; then again,"Miss Annie?"
57821And with a great effort, she said,"Miss Annie, could you lend me a quarter till Monday?
57821At length she said,"Miss Annie?"
57821Do n''t you think we colored people are entitled to some credit for that exploit, under the lead of the brave Colonel Montgomery?
57821He tried again and again to steal out of the door, but a watchful eye was on him, and he was always arrested by the question,"Where you gwine, John?"
57821He went up the hill alone, however, and there who should he meet but Constable Becker?
57821How much do you want?"
57821I asked her"if God never deceived her?"
57821John saw the city, did n''t he?
57821Well, what did he see?
57821Who ob all dis congregation is gwine next to lie ded- a- de- dah?
57821_ Shum, David?_ Ded- a- de- dah!
57821how much does thee want?"
43657Are there not_ two_ married, and where is the one?
43657Are you a Metherdis, miss?
43657But,says some watchful woman,"has not Miss Garrett taken her degree from Apothecaries''Hall?
43657Did not your Massachusetts census for 1845 enumerate certain picklers and preservers?
43657Have they strength for the conflict,you ask,"or desire to enter such fields?"
43657How canst thou make me thy friend who in nothing am like thee? 43657 How did you get food?"
43657How long have you lived here?
43657How many men,asks Dr. Chapin,"would keep off death and conquer the Devil on such wages?
43657If you feel called to preach,said one minister to her,"why do you not go to the heathen?"
43657Is that the best you can do?
43657Shall she hear me jeer at what she deems holy? 43657 Sir,"said she,"will you lend me a Bible?"
43657What does the Lord thy God require of thee?
43657Who would shelter you?
43657Who,says Count Zinzendorf in Germany,--"who but my wife could have been alternately servant and mistress without affectation and without pride?
43657Why could she not have remained single?
43657Why do you bend such solemn brows on me? 43657 Why not leave it to be understood?"
43657Why not leave such work to man?
43657Why,asks Ernest Legouvé,--"why should not the immense variety of bureaucrative and administrative employments be given up to women?"
43657''Are you happy in this life?''
43657''But you do not always talk this way to men?''
43657--"And what made you come so far up?
43657A poor forsaken virgin who would deign To take in marriage?
43657A popular width of view we have certainly gained in the last half- century; but have we made secure progress in the right direction?
43657And from what literature, of ancient or modern growth, shall we match Jane''s answer, when passion presses, crying,"Who in the world cares for you?
43657And now, the building once ready for its inmates, was Mr. Vassar rewarded for the sacrifice he had made?
43657And what good would it do, if I bent, if I uptore, if I crushed her?
43657And who make this objection?
43657And why?
43657And woman, serener than Constance, may whisper back,--"Wherefore, since law is perfect wrong, Why should the law forbid my tongue to cry?"
43657And, if man has this right upon a simple human ground, how can you deny it to woman?
43657Are a Woman''s Clothes her own?
43657Are there seventeen students in Harvard College who take mathematical astronomy, do you think?"
43657As we withdraw our eyes from the past, it is natural to inquire, What late changes have taken place in Great Britain?
43657As you have followed me, has it seemed to you that we wanted more avenues for manual labor?
43657But what can either of you do alone?
43657But why should not the denizens of the fashionable world be atheists?
43657But, if Oberlin does such noble work, what need of Antioch?
43657But, if this subject must be treated at all, why should it not be left to men?
43657Can I utter without trembling the two names which sit upon the thrones of female power in the Old World and the New?
43657Can we wonder at the hideous coarseness of their language, when we remember the savage rudeness of their lives?
43657Can women deal with it abstractly and fairly?
43657Can you enter into such labors?
43657Can you guess how brave and pure a woman was needed to write those words?
43657Can you not bear to be called"women''s- rights women"?
43657Could she give up?
43657Could such a scene have taken place in the presence of women?
43657Could this be the book which had been so abused for half a century?
43657Cæsar and Cicero may be abstract nullities to our young student; but what can he learn from Ovid?
43657DANTE,_ from the_"_ Banquet._"Art thou not beautiful, my new- born Song?
43657Did you or I ever make a sacrifice which would compare with that?
43657Disliking one woman''s vulgarity, she said to her,"If you believe in the Holy Ghost, why not use the_ language_ that the Holy Ghost uses?"
43657Do n''t you like the meadow?"
43657Do you ask me the reason of this bad management, and whether I think it can be remedied?
43657Do you not envy her and her husband the happy English home secured by their united labors?
43657Do you object, that America is free from this alternative?
43657Do you object, that, under the present constitution of society, man can not find time for this fidelity?
43657Do you remember the exquisite drawings which once decorated the kerchiefs, the linen collars and sleeves, of a certain schoolroom?
43657Do you remember what I told you, the other day, of eighteen hundred and eighty women in New York who had never been taught to support themselves?
43657Do you smile at the expression?
43657Do you tell me that men of good feeling never act on such laws?
43657Does Power belong to Humanity or to Property?
43657Does any one ask me if I would justify the position in which she stood?
43657Does any one in this audience suppose that those women felt incapable of the duty?
43657Does it sadden you, that we should repeat such words?
43657Does not conscience enforce my plea?
43657Does this scene in Parliament, printed for all our girls to read, suggest any higher view?
43657Dr. Storer''s admirable pamphlet entitled"Why not?"
43657Has the American standard reached a safe altitude, or must we admit that it has the same limitations?
43657Have I commandment on the pulse of life?"
43657Have I kindled any interest in your minds?
43657Have Women Strength to Labor?
43657Have you strength or time or enthusiasm to spare?
43657Helps- meet for each other you were ordained: why hinder and obstruct each other''s pathway?
43657How can any one be found who will work by the hour or the day, in a cleanly, respectable manner, till a new servant can be deliberately chosen?
43657How can we estimate sufficiently the corrupting influence of the newspapers of the land?
43657How can we settle questions of right and wrong for remote periods, without knowing the faces of either in the street to- day?
43657How could it be otherwise?
43657How does the matter stand with Miss Garrett?
43657How has he ever degraded himself to such girls''work?
43657How is it now?
43657How shall any one honor Margaret of Parma, and pity poor crazy Joan in Spain, and have no heart for the heroism of Mary Patton?
43657How shall it be done?
43657How unravel with patient study the_ tracasseries_ of Elizabeth Tudor and Mary Stuart, yet ignore the complications of the life he himself lives?
43657How, then, did such a prejudice grow up?
43657If the ideal standard makes no headway against public opinion, what encouragement to our hopes does common life offer?
43657If, at my individual convenience, I might break them, what would be their worth?
43657In the first place, What are the defects in the intelligence- offices now in existence?
43657In what would our influence upon politics be better than that of men, if we resort to such measures?
43657In what"bosom of divinitye"does this law rest?
43657Is a conflict in the heart of a family a pleasant thing?
43657Is it Real or Nominal?
43657Is it at this moment above or below our average ideal?
43657Is it for abandoned women that the best men of any age are willing to entreat before a senate?
43657Is it indeed dead?
43657Is it not Godwin who says that"human nature is better read in romance than history"?
43657Is it not a far more terrible thought, that an innocent stranger can not seek her daily bread without running the risk of certain perdition?
43657Is it nothing, that a woman of advanced years, writing from an invalid''s chamber, feels herself competent to wield it?
43657Is it possible that a government which forbids the sale of a negro can not forbid the sale of a Saxon wife?
43657Is it possible that this catechism is still in general use?
43657Is that a Christian country which permits this style of thinking?
43657Is the woman supposed to be sold into wifehood or servitude?
43657Is there no spirit of caste in Massachusetts?
43657It does marvellously well, until the crucial question is asked,"Who is she?"
43657May not the mother, who receives her naked new- born child from the hand of God, fitly ask to understand the liabilities of its little frame?
43657Meanwhile, are you above temptation?
43657Nay, might not one man of the drowning crew she forced the captain of her ship to rescue, speak a noble word in her behalf?
43657Nine hundred miles from Paris, without the modern conveniences of transport, what do you suppose this woman did?
43657Now, what are our poor women doing, that they can not compete with this French trumpery, and give us at least dish- mops fit for use?
43657Obsolete?
43657Of what Law?
43657Once she fainted, and some one offered her gin; but the big, bad woman started forward:"Would you make her a devil like the rest of us?"
43657Ought not the ministers at large, of all denominations, and our overseers of the poor, to unite in prompt and efficient action in this regard?
43657Shall we blame them?
43657Should we not be more than repaid-- if pay we must have-- by the cheer and comfort added to the schoolroom in which our children are to be taught?
43657Soil the lips?
43657Stringent are they?
43657Suppose a housekeeper wants additional service, how can she secure it?
43657Suppose a maid of all work leaves a mistress alone early some busy Monday morning, where can her place be filled?
43657Suppose it_ well_ managed, representing ultimately a million of dollars: do you believe it would long remain without political power?
43657The Seat of the Law the Bosom of God?
43657The legal question brought before Judge Graham was,"Can a wife maintain a suit against her husband?"
43657The quiet turning- aside from women when matters of business, politics, or science are discussed; the common saying,"What have women to do with that?
43657There are twenty thousand workmen employed; and one- third, or about seven thousand, of these are"--what do you think?
43657To whom do we all, to whom does the Commonwealth, owe a sacred debt, if not to the teachers of the primary and the grammar schools?
43657To whom has the name ever been agreeable?
43657To_ what_ woman is it reserved to make the useful arts pay tribute?
43657Trained up under such a law, what could the Hungarian woman think who found herself for the first time in the power of the English law?
43657Was it as strong and generous as the sentiments she advocated?
43657Was it not all right?
43657We intend to claim, in words, the right of suffrage; and why?
43657What are the charges against her?
43657What are the earnings of our laundresses, seamstresses, and milliners?
43657What became of the womanly unfitness for letters and accounts in that case?
43657What better_ could_ we do than listen, while she embellished her thought with all wealth and variety possible?
43657What business had you to know the meaning of those pencil marks?"
43657What business have you or I with details that concern only judge and jury?
43657What could lay a better foundation for a better estimate on the part of the law?
43657What did common sense and right reason demand, but that these two persons should be treated alike by society, prudential committees, and so on?
43657What do we know of the women of the age of Augustus?--of the galaxy that spanned the sky of Louis XIV.?
43657What do you think the people said?
43657What does such a saying record,--her egotism or our selfishness, her insatiable demand or our bankruptcy?
43657What drives them to it?
43657What have we done to deserve a happier fate?
43657What have you to say in your defence?"
43657What honor do we pay the fair proportions of the simple truth?
43657What if the laws of Athens forbade a legal marriage with a foreigner?
43657What influence has the highest literary character of America, at this moment, on the popular idea of women?
43657What is better fitted than such a tribute to check the jeering scepticism of the crowd as to the ability and purity of the sex?
43657What is her_ civil position_?
43657What is the Standard of Education?
43657What is the country doing to answer this cry, to educate her five hundred thousand women?
43657What is thought of it in England?
43657What is to be said of a government which enforces it upon half its subjects?
43657What need to take these steps, if she were the woman Aristophanes would have us see?
43657What ought I to do?"
43657What propriety is there in assuming, in advance, that the sphere which married life opens has a stronger hold on one sex than the other?
43657What shadow of law sustains the custom?
43657What signifies it,"she continues,"that his reason disputes with them for empire, while his heart is still devotedly theirs?"
43657What signifies it?
43657What sort of pupils are likely to benefit by the education we offer?
43657What, then, was the character of the woman?
43657What_ is_ Public Opinion?
43657When people told her it was unbecoming, she drew herself up:"Are you ignorant,"she asked,"that an artist is a gentlewoman?"
43657When shall we have an institution for wealthy persons, of both sexes, with an outfit as splendid?
43657Where shall a Woman''s Children go to Church?
43657Where was there ever a country where the teacher was respected as she is in New England?"
43657Who among_ men_ contend best with the difficulties of life and society,--the strong- minded or the weak, the wise or the foolish?
43657Who are the people that have this college in charge?
43657Who best control and mould opposing circumstances,--the educated or the ignorant?
43657Who can get Lima beans or dried sweet- corn, that does not dry them from his own garden?
43657Who condemn women to the practical ignorance which makes them too uncertain of values to turn at once from a manifest overcharge?
43657Who could have maintained like her, in a democratic community, all outward and inward distinctions?
43657Who could have raised such sums of money, and acquitted them on her own credit?"
43657Who does not rejoice in the smallest detail of that sparkling and varied courtship?
43657Who ever heard of a French bonnet or a bridal trousseau that did not fit?
43657Who keeps the purse- strings of a family?
43657Who will say that this woman was irreclaimable?
43657Who would not seek a wife like Jane Eyre?
43657Who would wish for sons From one so wretched?
43657Who, without a murmur, would have met such peril?
43657Who_ else_ could be expected to understand it?
43657Why can it not be tried?
43657Why do they not lecture to these women?
43657Why do we not make these teachers our first care?
43657Why has not such actual progress been made as might have been expected?
43657Why has not the Standard advanced?
43657Why has she never done any of the bad things the law so confidently predicts?
43657Why not choose death, then?
43657Why not?
43657Why put it with our own hands into the desks of those in no way prepared to use it?
43657Why should not a peeress feel herself as properly placed among her peers as the Queen seated at her Council?
43657Why should not the"Comforter"have come to our churches, with some special significance, before this?
43657Why should we strive to sustain an institution at such a continual cost, if one already established is competent to do its work?
43657Why were we not left to writhe beneath the blows of the smith, or the outrage of a market- sale?
43657Why, then, does the"Englishwoman''s Journal"inform us, that, in Normandy and Western Africa, there actually are female barbers?
43657Why, then, should men of good feeling be unwilling to wipe them from the statute- book?
43657Why?
43657Why_ she_ knew better than_ they_, who shall tell?
43657Why_ should_ elections be scenes of tumult, or parliaments free fields for imbecile improprieties?
43657Will America ever offer to the world a nobler picture?
43657Will you go back to the property basis for your own franchise?
43657Will you say that she is not human,--that she has no soul?
43657Will you start, if I ask you who ever stated the Woman''s- Rights''argument with the serene force of the little lace- mender in the"Professor"?
43657Will you tread out the Nettles?
43657Women of a superior order are needed for such posts; and when will they be found?
43657Would she not want a seat in the legislature to protect her property, a vote to control appropriations and taxes?
43657Would these men have laughed, think you, if they had been asked how many_ pure wives_ could be found in their family circles?
43657Would we have it otherwise?
43657Would you have her grow shameless also?"
43657Would you have the history of that immortal marriage written truly?
43657Would you have wit and humor?
43657Would you quote St. Paul to her, and blush for her career, if she were your own daughter?
43657Would you shut those sacred lips because they are a woman''s?
43657Yet of what use to receive delegates, unless they feel free to join in discussion?
43657Yet what did they represent?
43657[ 17] You have seen that a necessity to live demands of you new fields for woman to work in; and the question arises, Is she fit for these new duties?
43657[ 5] And what have we to say of our own country?
43657and have not a few women at least been trained as sick nurses?"
43657and how many men of the world accept the stainless virginity of Christ as the world''s pattern of highest manliness?
43657and what is the strength of the reform tendency?
43657and why?
43657and, if_ not_, would it have been because they were capable of estimating the value of womanly virtue?
43657for all the time and thought bestowed on the outfit?
43657for saving life and property?"
43657how many such do the clergy save now?
43657or who will be injured by what_ you_ do?"
43657out of regard to what was once tender, quivering, human flesh?
43657said the world; but had the world been so just and kind to her, that we could expect her to resist the influence of a generous and courageous love?
43657shall we have a public willing to pay for common sense and pure reading alone?
43657she answered,"I chose it long ago for myself; but what shall I do for my mother and child?"
43657what office or employment is open to her?
43657where are the kindred of Fannie Blood and John Hunter, whose lives her generous efforts gladdened?
43657why has God sheltered_ us_ in quiet homes?
43657you will say,"is that kind?"
53225''Will the entertainment be consistent?''
53225Are you going to sell any of your hats?
53225But,I argued,"how could you do that?
53225Consistent?
53225Dear Mr. Grossmith,--Are you inclined to go on the stage for a time? 53225 Did I?"
53225Did you see that Mr.---- is writing his reminiscences?
53225Do n''t you think it rather a pity that he should do so?
53225Do you seriously want me to do that?
53225How much does a Mayor get here?
53225In what way?
53225Is there no change of costumes? 53225 Oh, I say, George, have you got a piece of sticking- plaister?"
53225Oh,said the clerk, a little puzzled,"one of the guests?
53225What first put it into your head to give entertainments?
53225What?
53225Why a pity?
53225_ Gaoler_( interpreting the learned magistrate): What have you got? 53225 ''Can Mr. Grossmith give an entertainment at Aberdeen on Jan.----?''
53225''Why not get Courtenay Clarke* to give you a lift, my boy?''
53225( To Seymour, the stage manager): Where''s Mr. Grossmith?
53225--"Shall I score the drum parts for you?"
53225:_ And seen it too?
53225:_ I beg your pardon; I fancy you must be well acquainted with that play?
53225:_ Well, if_ you_ do not know it well, I should like to know who does?
53225:_ You''ve heard it often enough?
53225After he finished the song, I said:"I presume you desire me to recommend you to Mr. Carte for the chorus?"
53225Are you afraid of the sea?
53225Are you going to give us any of your little funniments-- eh?"
53225At a quarter to five two ladies arrived, and at five the hostess, addressing me, said:"Would you mind commencing now?
53225At the conclusion of the sketch I said to the lady:"I hope I was not too long?"
53225Burnand promptly replied,"Oh, are you going to_ stick_ here all night?"
53225But the great thing is-- what sort of entertainment do you give?"
53225But the''mystery''is, how is it she is_ not_ telling the cards correctly?
53225Ca n''t you spend a Sunday with me?
53225Carte was so puzzled that he said to Mr. X.:"I thought you had shaved your moustache?"
53225Come and sup after the play next Saturday at Dover Street?"
53225Dear Grossmith,--Are you down in this neighbourhood to- morrow any time?
53225Did n''t you hear me do it?
53225Do n''t they know what to do?
53225Do n''t you require any scenery or footlights?"
53225Do you hear?"
53225Do you know nearly everybody takes me for Mr. Grossmith?
53225Do you understand me?
53225Do you want to try your song?
53225Do you?
53225Everybody dead?
53225Flowers:_ You would n''t have me punish a child like that, would you?
53225Flowers_( thinking this was the usual imputation on the evidence of the police): Then, if you did n''t do it, who did I should like to know?
53225Gilbert_( still politely): Mr. Snooks, do n''t you appreciate the difference between the accent on"counting"and the accent on"house"?
53225Grain?"
53225Grossmith?"
53225Grossmith?"
53225HAMLET(_ sitting up_)-- What?
53225Have you and Mrs. Grossmith any sharp spuds, and would you like to race me in a drill?
53225Have you?"
53225He enquired how mine was going at the Polytechnic?
53225He leered at me and asked,"What for?"
53225How are you?
53225How do I know who you are?
53225How_ can_ you think of all these things?
53225I do n''t say you are one: still, how am I to know you are_ not_ one-- eh?
53225I enquired what?
53225I enquired, as a matter of course, how his new song was going at the Gallery of Illustration?
53225I placed it hastily in my pocket, and was much amused by the lady approaching me shortly afterwards and saying,"Have you got it quite safe?"
53225I said:"Sticks, I believe you died of drink?"
53225I said:"Well, were n''t you bored with all the rot I''ve been talking?"
53225I thought a little, and then said:"Would you kindly explain the question?
53225I wonder if my friend Frank Thornton will be offended if I repeat an oft- told story about him?
53225Is it to be wondered at, that it attacked also the school of the Misses Hay?
53225Lots of people come to me and say,"I hope you wo n''t take me off?"
53225May I ask the favour of your vocal assistance?
53225Mr. Barrington has often come into my room just as I am going on the stage, and chaffingly said,"Why do n''t you make up?"
53225Mr. Grossmith, what are you doing here?
53225Mr. Gunn turned to the man and said:"What nationality are you?
53225My father said,"Topic?
53225My victim, seeing his chance, led the attack:"Anything more to say?"
53225Now ought I to have shaken hands with him?
53225One may well exclaim,"What''s in a name?"
53225Presently he said,"What do you want to change your clothes for?"
53225She departed with the baby, and soothed it with the following pleasant remark about myself:"Was''i m frightened by an ugly man den?"
53225She replied,"Oh dear, no; but did any lady really ask you that question?"
53225Sticks, I wish to ask you a few questions?"
53225Sticks, do not think I mean to be disrespectful; but are you drunk now?"
53225Sticks,"I asked,"is it possible to take too much drink in purgatory?"
53225Sullivan then sang,"My name is John Wellington Wells,"and said,"You can do that?"
53225Surely you have never heard it pronounced in any other way?
53225The Chairman replied:"Do you think so, Mr. Grossmith?
53225The Duke, who is tolerably well- known for his brusque and autocratic manner, addressing her Grace in my presence, said,"Has that fellow arrived yet?"
53225The butler continued reading:"''What will be his terms?''"
53225The butler made a note of the terms, and continued:"''Will the entertainment be consistent?''"
53225The first question was:"Can Mr. Grossmith give an entertainment at Aberdeen on Jan.----?"
53225Two days after, Carte saw him with his moustache on again; but, taking no particular notice, said:"Let me see, have you been to Barraud''s?"
53225What is it?"
53225What topic?"
53225What''ll be the terms?"
53225Who was John King?
53225Why Leamington?
53225Why, that wo n''t do; For who''s to speak the tag?
53225Will you sing now?"
53225X.?"
53225_ Clown_( handing back book): I do not quite follow you?
53225_ Prosecutor:_ Of course I would-- what have I had him brought in here for?
53225_ Prosecutor:_ What for?
53225everybody?
53225how long have I got?
53225what have I got?
41286Advice?
41286After being so anxious about one candidate, how can you be so sorry for the other? 41286 Afterwards?"
41286Am I dreaming, or is it you?
41286And Mr Ashburton, Lucilla?
41286Are there children?
41286Barbara Lake?
41286Before what, papa?
41286But Harry will be sure to come to call the first time he goes out, and you_ will_ not forget what I have said to you, Lucilla?
41286But what does that matter?
41286But you said when you were married to him?
41286But, my dear, are you sure you feel able for so much exertion?
41286By money?
41286Changed his name?
41286Dear Mrs Chiley, what should I have to tell you?
41286Did I come in at a wrong time, Lucilla?
41286Did I?
41286Did any one call me?
41286Did he never go to say good- bye nor anything?
41286Did he tell you anything, Lucilla?
41286Did n''t you see him? 41286 Did you hear how Mrs Chiley was?
41286Do n''t make a fuss, Rose; for Heaven''s sake, girls, ca n''t you say at once what you mean, and do n''t worry me to death? 41286 Do n''t you think Centum will be sitting up for you?"
41286Do n''t you think it is very odd?
41286Do you expect Mr Ashburton to- morrow, Lucilla?
41286Do you know that I have always been doing something, and responsible for something, all my life?
41286Do you mean you have found some one for him to marry?
41286Do you think it could be from_ him_; or only from him?
41286Do you think they are all by themselves?
41286Going for a-- what?
41286Has not the Doctor told you?
41286Have you a pair of goloshes, Mary Jane?
41286Have you ever considered whether you had any proof to support them?
41286Have you gone out of your senses, Tom?
41286Have you heard Woodburn talking of that great crash in town?
41286Have you murdered anybody?
41286Have you refused him, my dear? 41286 Have you robbed anybody?
41286Have_ you_ vexations, Lucilla?
41286Health all right, I hope?
41286Here?--ah-- eh-- what does she mean by here?
41286How can you help thinking about it, Lucilla?
41286How could I be engaged to a man who has been away ten years?
41286How could you ever think of such a thing? 41286 How do you like Lucilla?"
41286How do you think I can bear it, to see you getting everything done here, as if you meant to stay all your life-- when you know I love you?
41286How is it possible that either he or you can know the rights of it as I do, who was in the house at the time and saw everything? 41286 I am always afraid of a cousin, for my part,"said Mrs Chiley;"and talking of that, what do you think of Mr Cavendish, Lucilla?
41286I am ashamed to ask you, but do you know where Mr Cavendish is, Lucilla?
41286I am sure I beg your pardon for being so stupid; but whom were you married to?
41286I am sure I wish I had a vote,said Lucilla;"but I have no vote, and what can a girl do?
41286I have always been like a sister to you,said Lucilla;"how can you be so unkind as to say I do n''t care?"
41286I should like to know what papa is thinking of? 41286 I suppose Mr Beverley thought he was to blame?"
41286I suppose it is Lucilla you mean?
41286I suppose it is of no use asking you if you would join Lady Richmond''s party at the Blue Boar? 41286 I suppose you say so because you find me so changed?"
41286I told you I had almost done it, when that confounded old woman came in,he said:"that could not be called my fault?"
41286I want to know who Mr Kavan is?
41286I wish you would not be such a goose,she said;"who cares about your Honiton flounce?
41286If it had been something to eat, would it have pleased you better?
41286If it is anything new, tell me, but do n''t speak so of-- of----What is it? 41286 Is Miss Lake at home?"
41286Is it Rose?
41286Is it really you, Lucilla?
41286Is it you, Mr Cavendish? 41286 Is it_ he_ whom you call Mr Cavendish?"
41286Is not that what I am saying?
41286Is she pretty?
41286Is that what people call young nowadays? 41286 Lucilla, who is it?"
41286Lucilla,cried the unlucky fellow,"is it possible that you really have misunderstood me all this time?
41286Met-- who?
41286Miss Marjoribanks, do you know who that man is?
41286Mr Ashburton?
41286Mr Centum never listens to a note if he can help it,said the banker''s wife,"and how could he know whether she had a nice voice or not?"
41286My dear, what does this mean?
41286My sister wrote-- that is to say I heard-- I really do n''t remember how I got the news; a dean, or bishop, or something----?
41286Never come back again?
41286Not like you,said Barbara,"for you went because you pleased, and I went----""Why did you go?"
41286Oh, Lucilla, my dear?--and you?
41286Oh, but why, Lucilla?
41286Ought I to have accepted him when there was somebody I liked better?
41286Perhaps you think I am a professional singer?
41286She has suffered so much here; how can any one ask her to sacrifice herself to us?
41286So it is Evenings she means to have?
41286So you had Cavendish here to- day?
41286Then why do you stop a fellow short like that?
41286Tom,said Miss Marjoribanks, with indignant surprise,"how_ can_ you say I care little for you?
41286Was it the only fib you ever told that you repeat it so?
41286Was that pretty little creature a sister of hers?--or a friend?--or what? 41286 We-- ll,"Mrs Centum had replied, and made a long pause--"would you call Lucilla pretty, Charles?"
41286What brought him here? 41286 What can you be thinking of to let her stand so near the window?
41286What do you accuse me of? 41286 What do you know about the gentleman who went downstairs?
41286What do you mean by lying there?
41286What do you suppose she can know? 41286 What does the Doctor think?"
41286What had I done to deserve such a privilege? 41286 What have you been doing with yourself since you came that nobody has seen you?"
41286What in the world can you have been doing?
41286What is anybody to do?
41286What is it that she could not help feeling?
41286What is just as you thought?
41286What is odd, and what is true?
41286What should I want, do you think, but to be left quiet?
41286What subject?
41286What was a man to do? 41286 What were you doing, Lucilla?"
41286What?
41286Who are Mr Cavendish''s friends, papa?
41286Who are his friends?
41286Who did he take for himself, I wonder?
41286Who told you, Lucilla,said the Doctor,"that I meant to refurnish the house?"
41286Why did n''t you do it? 41286 Why should I?"
41286Why should not you come back? 41286 Why, Lucilla, I-- I thought-- wasn''t there something about the money being lost?
41286Will you have him or me?
41286Would she, I wonder?
41286Yes,said Lucilla reflectively,"but you are a little changed since then; a little perhaps-- just a little-- stouter, and----""Gone off?"
41286Yes,she said, turning her eyes upon him with a sort of abstract sympathy, and then she added softly,"Have you ever seen Her again?"
41286You do n''t understand it?
41286You have something to tell me, Lucilla?
41286You remember it like yesterday? 41286 You shall call me whatever you like,"said Mr Beverley;"when I am with the lady- patroness, what does it matter what I call myself?
41286You will stand by me if he calls me out?
41286_ Hearing_ of me,he said, and tried to laugh;"what have my kind friends been saying?"
41286A man does not seize a woman by the sleeve and ask,"Is it_ you_?"
41286After all, what is there to do?
41286After all,"said Lucilla, with fine satire, of which she was unconscious,"what does it matter what people think?
41286After dinner he thinks of nothing but an easy- chair and the papers; and, my dear Miss Bury, what can I do?"
41286After such a truculent statement, what was the peacemaker to do?
41286And I have come back----""You have not come back only for an hour, I hope?"
41286And I should like to know what right Lucilla Marjoribanks has to be kind to me?
41286And do n''t you remember how he put his hand on my shoulder that last night?
41286And now when he had bethought himself of his old ambition, had he possibly bethought himself of other hopes as well?
41286And then, if the town had such claims on his affections, why had he stayed so long away?
41286And then, what is a Conservative?"
41286And what could I do?
41286And where are you, you sulky little Rose?"
41286And why should Charles be in such a way?
41286And, by the bye, what are you going to wear?"
41286Any day, any hour, Lucilla might tell; and if the unlucky mother were put on her defence, what could she say?
41286Are you subject to headaches, Lucilla, or pains in the limbs?
41286As for Lydia?"
41286As for her singing, what does it matter?
41286As for the General, the tone of this exclamation was such that he too turned round on his chair, and said,"Yes?"
41286As if no one had ever heard of mistaken identity before?
41286But as for Lucilla, what could she do?
41286But what if, after all, Ashburton, who had the Firs, and lived there, and spent his money like a Christian, was the man for Carlingford?
41286But what is the good of pretending not to know what I mean?"
41286By the way,"Mrs Woodburn said, falling into her natural tone--"I wonder if anybody ever does get on with her husband''s family?"
41286Can they be coming upstairs already, do you think?
41286Cavendish, is this you?
41286Could it be a trick to thwart and startle her?
41286Could it be that Mr Ashburton had some other contest or candidateship in store for himself which he had not told her about?
41286Could it be true?
41286Did I ever tell you of the Italian nobleman that was so very attentive to me that Christmas I spent at Sissy Vernon''s?
41286Did he ever make any change to be somebody''s heir?
41286Did not you hear?
41286Did you really never know that he was here till to- day?"
41286Did you say anything about the furniture, my dear?"
41286Do come back with me, for I have something very particular to say----""To me?"
41286Do n''t you think so?
41286Do you know anything about him?
41286Do you like that dreadfully high music?''
41286Do you mean to say that you do n''t know?
41286Do you not understand that compassion is impossible in such a case, and that it is my duty to expose you?
41286Do you think Tom has turned out clever?"
41286Do you think it possible that I can pass over all this and let you keep what is not yours?
41286Do you think my uncle would wish to keep us unhappy all for an idea?"
41286Do you think they''ll bite?"
41286Do you think this would do?"
41286Do you?"
41286Does anybody know the man here, I wonder?
41286Even while she smiled upon the new- comer, she could not but ask herself, with momentary dismay-- Had_ she_ really gone off as much in the same time?
41286For my part, do you think I''d ever have gone to help Lucilla and sing for her, and all that sort of thing, if it had not been to better myself?
41286Go away again in a day or two?
41286Had Lucilla a right to ask the question she uttered so frankly?
41286Had he actually gone over to her adversary before her very eyes?
41286Had he been prudent for once in his life, and secured this sensible alliance and prop to his position?
41286Had he proposed, after all, without telling his sister?
41286Had he really passed and left her, she who had done so much for him?
41286He came into my head without my even thinking of him, all in a moment, with his very hat on and his umbrella, like Minerva-- wasn''t it Minerva?"
41286He said,"You are flushed, Lucilla?
41286How could any man have two opinions on the subject?
41286How could anybody wonder, after that, that things had gone against him, and that, notwithstanding all his advantages, he was the loser in the fight?
41286How could he be dead?
41286How had he been admitted?
41286How was she to get at this suitor of Lucilla''s?
41286I am nineteen-- how long is it since you were married, papa?"
41286I am sure he is honourable, but what has that to do with it?
41286I can not imagine how I could have said anything-- I ca n''t fancy what put such an idea----Mrs Mortimer, you are not going away?"
41286I could not be so ungrateful or so hard- hearted_ again_, as to send him away?"
41286I do n''t see any reason in the world why you should give in to her and let her stop your-- your Career, you know; why should you?
41286I feel as if I never could forgive my brother- in- law; that he should bring you up like this, and then----""What is it?"
41286I know quite well, of course, who he is, in the ordinary way; but do tell me what has he done to make people look like that whenever he appears?"
41286I meant to have asked you to come down to us, as we shall be all alone----""All alone?
41286I should like to know what she can teach anybody?
41286I suppose you did not want them both to win?"
41286I wonder if this fellow you are talking of is he?"
41286If Providence had ordained that it was to be Tom, how could Lucilla fly in the face of such an ordinance?
41286If it were for her good, do you think_ I_ would ever interfere?"
41286If she stood by and saw the prize snapped up under her very eyes, what account could she give to her son of her stewardship?
41286If she were to catch cold and lose her voice, what should we all do?"
41286If we were to make any mistake, you know----""What?"
41286If you please, am I to take my orders of Miss Lucilla, or of you, as I''ve always been used to?
41286Is it actually half- past one?
41286Is it one less than usual, Miss Lucilla?"
41286Is it true that somebody has left him a great deal of money, and he is going to change his name?"
41286Lucilla?
41286Mr Ashburton, do you know that old Mr Chiltern is dead?"
41286Mrs Mortimer did not directly answer this question-- she fixed her mind upon one part of it, like an unreasonable woman, and repeated"Other people?"
41286Mrs Woodburn, where is Mr Cavendish?
41286Must you go, Mr Ashburton, when lunch is on the table?
41286Of course it was for his advantage-- nobody denies that-- but you do n''t mean to say that a man is to reject everything that is for his advantage?"
41286Of course it was not to Charles Beverley the money was left: if it had been left to him, how could he have wanted me to go to law?
41286Of course you have heard of Harry''s coming home?"
41286Oh, Lucilla, why were you ever so foolish as to have her here?
41286Oh, do tell me, Lucilla, why?"
41286Oh, my dear, they said I was to prepare you, but how can I prepare you?
41286Poor Barbara is ill, and we ca n''t have any music, and what if people should be bored?
41286She asked, with a little anxiety,"What is the matter?
41286She had deceived everybody, and raised false expectations, and how was she to explain herself?
41286So her name is Barbara?
41286Such a thing was quite possible; but what had Lucilla in her mourning to do with worldly contingencies?
41286Supposin''as it comes to that, sir, what am I to do?"
41286Supposin''as things come to such a point, what am I to do?"
41286Tell me sincerely, do you think it has been a pleasant evening?"
41286Tell me, what would you go to law with him for?"
41286The question was, What did it mean?
41286Then where is the Archdeacon?"
41286There ai n''t nobody as knows better how----""What kind of a business, Thomas?"
41286They fill me with an infinite pity; but then what can one do?
41286Thursday, ai n''t it?
41286Two months, is it not?"
41286Was it an unexpected and generous auxiliary, or was it a foe accomplished and formidable?
41286Was it his mission to go about the world driving people into fits of terror or agitation?
41286Was it not clever of me to find her out the very first day I was in Carlingford?
41286Was it possible that even she had one point upon which she could be firm?
41286Was it possible that she could be in love with Mr Cavendish?
41286Was not she still Lucilla Marjoribanks?
41286What can have brought you out of doors on such a day?
41286What could Lucilla do?
41286What could a man have more?
41286What could she have to be confused about?
41286What did he want here?
41286What did it matter what other people might be doing or saying?
41286What had_ he_ to do in Lucilla''s drawing- room?
41286What harm was there in going to see her?
41286What has he been doing?
41286What have you got there?
41286What if there might be"other people"who had been fond of her before she ever heard of Mr Ashburton''s name?
41286What is the good of a man if he ca n''t save the woman he is fond of from all that?"
41286What is the good of being relations otherwise?"
41286What is the good of worrying yourself when you know I have taken it into my own hands?
41286What is the matter with poor Barbara?
41286What is the matter?
41286What is this Archdeacon, I would like to know, or what could he say?
41286What kind of man could this be, who thus struck down another victim without even so much as a glance?
41286What number was it?
41286What on earth is the use of Heaven''s- saking?
41286What reason had she to suppose that"any one"had arrived?
41286What right had Lucilla Marjoribanks to be kind to her?
41286What right had you to come and drag us to your great parties?
41286What should I do without you at such a time?
41286What was he to do?
41286What was he to do?
41286What was it she had thought up to the very last moment?
41286What was to be done with a man who had so little understanding of her, and of himself, and of the eternal fitness of things?
41286What will Aunt Jemima think of me if she knows I have let you stay talking nonsense here?"
41286What would Tom say?
41286When did you come?
41286When did you have anything to eat?
41286When_ did_ you come back?
41286Where did you come from?
41286Where has Cavendish vanished to, I wonder?"
41286Where is Barbara, I wonder?
41286Where were they to meet elsewhere?
41286Who could arrive in that accidental way, without a word of warning?
41286Who could ever have thought of your appearing like this, in such an altogether unexpected----?"
41286Who is he, for goodness''sake?
41286Who was it he wanted you to go to law with?
41286Who was she?
41286Whose fault was it that his friends had deserted him and Carlingford knew him no more?
41286Why did n''t you give us warning before we all went and committed ourselves?
41286Why did you ask_ us_ to your parties, Lucilla?
41286Why should n''t it be now?
41286Why should she make any change?
41286Why should she retreat and leave her native soil and the neighbourhood of all her friends because she was poor and in trouble?
41286Why should we do our best to make our women idiots?
41286Why the deuce do you let him go on with that tomfoolery?
41286Why, what can he say?
41286Will you have him or me?"
41286Will you play the accompaniment, or shall I?"
41286With pistols in a corner of Carlingford Common, or perhaps with their fists alone, as Mr Beverley was Broad- Church?
41286Wo n''t you come in?"
41286Would he come back again to- morrow, or was he gone for ever and ever?
41286Would he run the risk of coming, under the circumstances?
41286Would it be right to give up one''s own cousin if it should turn out to be Tom?"
41286You may think the liberty is pleasant at first, but if you had a Christian friend to watch over and take care of you----What is the matter?"
41286Your voice is just the very thing to go with mine: was it not a lucky thing that I should have passed just at the right moment?
41286a conspirator?"
41286and was it to the Archdeacon the money was left?"
41286but I do hope you are pleased now?"
41286could it be true?
41286cried Miss Marjoribanks;"if we had it all our own way it would be no fun;--a Tory, and a Whig, and a-- did you say Radical, Aunt Jemima?
41286had she begun to paint?"
41286has he asked you to marry him?"
41286he said--"that India house, you know-- I suppose it''s quite true?"
41286how can you speak so?
41286how can you trifle with me so?"
41286how could I help it?"
41286how could she explain her silence as to all_ his_ wishes and intentions, her absolute avoidance of his name in all her conversations with Lucilla?
41286is anything going to happen?"
41286is it possible that I have taken you quite by surprise?"
41286is there anything wrong at home?"
41286oh, tell me, do you see anything?
41286or could it be true?
41286or should he dare everything and face the Archdeacon, and put his trust in Lucilla, as that high- minded young woman had invited him to do?
41286or was it merely the excitement of a final decision which made that unusual commotion far away down at the bottom of Lucilla''s heart?
41286or, if he came, would he prostrate himself as he had done on a previous occasion, and return to his allegiance?
41286said Lucilla, with a little scream,"is it you?
41286said the candidate eagerly--"about Reform?
41286she is not very bad, I hope?"
41286she said, pounding Barbara down small and cutting her to pieces with infallible good sense and logic;"will that do any good?
41286she said,"I should like to know who you expect is to go mending up and washing every day for you?
41286she said;"my looks?
41286should he turn his back on the enemy once for all, and run away and break off his connection with Carlingford?
41286to- morrow?"
41286were you married to him as well?"
41286what Miss Lake?
41286what could the fellow do?"
41286what do you mean, ma''am?"
41286what do you mean?"
41286what does it matter about furniture and things when a man''s heart is bursting?"
41286what does she know?"
41286what is the matter?
41286why should you go and sacrifice to him the happiness of your life?"
41286why, for goodness''sake, did you let her come?"
531I say, my pretty girl, have n''t you some very old wine in your cellar?
531Who''s to pay? 531 ''And do you generally win? 531 ''Are you at play now?'' 531 ''At play? 531 ''At what game, pray, sir?'' 531 ''But will you give me leave to examine your present dress? 531 ''Do you play for anything?'' 531 ''Gentlemen?'' 531 ''How do you manage to pay it? 531 ''How has the chance stood since we met before?'' 531 ''How much have you lost?'' 531 ''How much have you won?'' 531 ''How so?'' 531 ''Indeed? 531 ''Is that all?'' 531 ''My friend,''said he to the latter,''where are the quarters of the Guards now- a- days?'' 531 ''Now here is a pack of cards,''he said;''there seems to be nothing remarkable about it, does there?'' 531 ''Reader, art thou of my own sex? 531 ''Then you wo n''t lend me a couple of pounds?'' 531 ''What security will you give me?'' 531 ''What, then,''says a writer at the time,''are the consequences? 531 ''When you win or lose, how do you settle accounts?'' 531 ''Who wins?'' 531 ''Why sell it?'' 531 ''Why, surely, you wo n''t refuse me a couple of sovereigns, after having lost so much?'' 531 ''You have a COW in your paddock, have n''t you? 531 ( 4)''How shalt THOU to Caesar''s hall repair? 531 Art thou a man? 531 As soon as he entered he exclaimed,''Well, I am filled, my pockets are full of gold, and here goes, ODDS OR EVEN?'' 531 But when had been marked upon his brow this harrowing care? 531 But whose fortune have I ruined?--whom undone? 531 Did he despair at this hideous catastrophe? 531 Did he tear his hair-- rush out of the room-- blow his brains out or drown himself? 531 Do n''t you recollect him now?'' 531 Do n''t you remember what she said about two constables beingafter you"?''
531Do you understand me?
531Does God take your money?''
531GENEROSITY(?)
531HOW MANY GAMESTERS LIVE BY PLAY?
531How are you to be paid?''
531How is it possible, therefore, that C and D should ever win a game without permission?
531I request you to say now what I hold?
531I request you to say quickly what I hold?
531I request you to say what I hold?
531I request you to say, reply, what I hold?
531I think, Simpson, I dropped a note here last night-- did you see it?
531In the midst of his excessive grief, H-- e said,''You have a HORSE, what is it worth?''
531Instantly, what I have in my hand?
531It is of no use now that the horse and cow are gone-- what is that worth?''
531O my dear wife, is not anything better than seeing me conveyed to Tyburn?
531OF WHAT TRADE IS A GAMING- HOUSE KEEPER?
531Oh, where?
531Or could he not make up his accounts properly?''
531Or would Lord de Ros have refused it if he had been the intended victim of a conspiracy?
531Or, if I hide a half- penny under a hat, and I know what it is, have you not as good a chance to guess right, as if it were tossed up?
531Pray, how stands your game now?''
531Quick, the hour?
531Reader, art thou a woman?
531Say and name what I hold?
531Say and try to say what I hold?
531Say now what I hold?
531Say quickly what I hold?
531Say what I hold?
531Say, reply, what I hold?
531Shall every man playe his twelve- pence while an apple roste in the fire, and then we will drincke and departe?"
531Tell me and try to say what I hold?
531Tell me now what I hold?
531Tell me quickly what I hold?
531Tell me what I hold?
531Tell me, reply, what I hold?
531The afflicted Job asks--''Can a man fill his belly with the east wind?''
531The learned counsel continued:--''A small boiled chicken and a glass of lemonade, perhaps?''
531Then speaketh the thirde to the honeste man that thought not to play:--"What?
531Then the counsel said,''I suppose you take but a slight dinner?''
531To my great astonishment, a person who I supposed was a proprietor, boasted the impenetrability of HIS house, and on what ground, think you?
531Was ever poor animal subjected to such indignity?
531Was he dead or not?
531Were any of these base enough to put their hands in and help themselves?
531What rack exceeds the torture of an excited brain and an exhausted body?
531What''s that worth?''
531Which?
531Why do n''t you bet him?''
531Will you play your twelve- pence?"
531With whom?
531Would a little coterie, who lived by gambling, have made this offer?
531how camest thou in hither, not having on a wedding garment?''
531said the caliph,''do n''t you see I am on the point of giving checkmate?''
531what is this?''
42354Doth not even nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him? 42354 Have we not power to take with us a Christian woman as a wife, as well as other Apostles?...
42354Have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? 42354 If the dead rise not at all, what shall they do who are baptized for the dead?"
42354If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing? 42354 Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ?
42354Some man will say, How are the dead raised up? 42354 What shall I say to you?
42354What shall_ they_ do who are baptized for the dead?
42354While one saith, I am of Paul, and another, I am of Apollos, are ye not carnal? 42354 Why stand we in jeopardy every hour?
42354--_i.e._, from the restless ambitions, and appetites, and longings of men who seek their all in this world?
42354A fertile and inventive man knows no bound to his progress; will God stand still?
42354And from a different point of view St. Paul replies,"Well, and what though you be losers?
42354And if the ear shall say, Because I am not the eye, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body?
42354And if they were all one member, where were the body?
42354And if they will learn anything, let them ask their husbands at home; for it is a shame for women to speak in the Church"?
42354And this is true, but how are we to get men to accept it?
42354And what preparation do they make?
42354And who shall say which teacher is most faithfully serving his Master?
42354And why stand we in jeopardy every hour?
42354Are all apostles?
42354Are not our minds yet made up that it is worth reaching, and that whatever does not help us towards it must be abandoned?
42354Are our holy days holidays, or do we endure holiness of thought and feeling mainly on the consideration that holiness is but for a season?
42354Are those who have by their vice committed a slow suicide to be clothed hereafter in an incorruptible and efficient body?
42354Are we likely ever to reach the goal thus?
42354Are we living a genuine and true life?
42354Are we living up to what we know to be the truth about life?
42354Are we nearer to it to- day than ever before?
42354Are we not but at the beginning of His works?
42354Are we the better for our services?
42354Are we to dine with our heathen relatives?
42354Are you striving to gain some?
42354Art thou bound unto a wife?
42354Art thou called being a servant?
42354Art thou loosed from a wife?
42354As Bunyan says,"Is it so much to be a fiddle?"
42354Behold Israel after the flesh: are not they which eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar?
42354But if it be undiscoverable by man, how does Paul come to know it?
42354But is it not possible to have both?
42354But is that any reason why you should at once call Him your Master and refuse to obey His precepts and follow His example?"
42354But knowledge?
42354But martyrdom?
42354But the body as a whole-- for what is it made?
42354But the question remains, What truths are to be made terms of communion?
42354But the whole question remains, What_ are_ the duties of the present state?
42354But was there any possibility of such an utterance being heard in a Christian Church?
42354But what follows death?
42354Can a man give any stronger proof of his faith than to give his body to be burned?
42354Can any one who looks at things as they are find it easy to believe in the final extinction of evil?
42354Can one promise himself or another a future body which shall be exempt from the pains which unrepented sin has introduced?
42354Can slaves continue in the service of heathen masters?
42354Can we apply the same reasoning to it?
42354Can we say with something of Paul''s conviction and joy,"Maranatha"--"The Lord is at hand"?
42354Come they not hence, even of the lusts that war in your members?"
42354Could they have had a more plausible pretext for exploding the Christian faith and stamping out the nascent heresy?
42354Did Paul then mean that such legal cases as are now tried in our civil courts should be settled by non- professional men?
42354Did he acknowledge as supreme that Person who had lived and died under the name of Jesus?
42354Did he employ his spiritual gifts for the furtherance of His kingdom and as one who was really endeavouring to serve this unseen Master?
42354Do they believe that a state of things ruled by the Spirit of Christ is to follow this?
42354Do they think of the future at all?
42354Do we not act wisely and well in so doing?
42354Do we not ourselves often become aware that the absence of this one thing needful is writing vanity and failure on all we do and on all we are?
42354Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy?
42354Do we see the straight track of a well- steered ship, which has deviated not a yard from its course nor wasted an ounce of power?
42354Do ye not know that the saints shall judge the world?
42354Do ye not know that they which minister about holy things live of the things of the temple?
42354Does Christ really represent us,--represent, by His devoted unworldly life, our earnest and hearty desire and intention?
42354Does not St. James come nearer the mark when he says,"Whence come wars and fightings?
42354Does not the Law say,"Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn"?
42354Does the work of Christ actually yield to us those grand results it yielded to Paul?
42354Does this then not settle the question?
42354Doth God take care for oxen?
42354Doth not even nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long hair, it is a shame unto him?
42354Doth the fruit show?
42354Else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all?
42354For if I by grace be a partaker, why am I evil spoken of for that for which I give thanks?
42354For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?
42354For what have I to do to judge them also that are without?
42354For what knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?
42354For what man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him?
42354For what purpose have we a body?
42354For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; we ye not carnal?"
42354For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that he may instruct him?
42354For who maketh thee to differ from another?
42354For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men?
42354Has every footfall been in direct advance of the last, and has all expenditure of energy brought us nearer the ultimate goal?
42354Has war taught nations moderation in their ambition?
42354Have all the gifts of healing?
42354Have the outward restraints of law made men more just or less avaricious?
42354Have we admitted to ourselves that it was for us He died?
42354Have we allowed the Cross of Christ to make its peculiar impression upon us?
42354Have we given it a chance to influence us?
42354Have we honestly laid bare our hearts to the love of Christ?
42354Have we in all seriousness of spirit considered what is presented to us in the Cross?
42354Have we in us this new affection which destroys selfishness and brings us into true and lasting relations with all we have to do with?
42354Have we not power to lead about a sister, a wife, as well as other Apostles, and as the brethren of the Lord, and Cephas?
42354Have we that in us which really knits us to God and our fellow- men and prompts us to do our utmost for them?
42354He would have every man answer the plain question, Do you discern the Lord''s body in the Sacrament?
42354His proof of his apostleship is summary:"Have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord?
42354How could he continue to speak of Christian love, if Christians were to bite and devour one another?
42354How is it then, brethren?
42354How is it with us?
42354If Paul meant to say, On the supposition that death ends all, what is the use of any one being baptized as proxy for a dead friend?
42354If a man is not to give_ exclusive_ attention to this world, how much attention is he to give to another?
42354If after the manner of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me, if the dead rise not?
42354If it is true that we are here only for a few years and in the future life for ever, why should we be here at all?
42354If others be partakers of this power over you, are not we rather?
42354If the foot shall say, Because I am not the hand, I am not of the body; is it therefore not of the body?
42354If the whole body were an eye, where were the hearing?
42354If the whole were hearing, where were the smelling?
42354If the whole were hearing, where were the smelling?"
42354If we do not love the Lord Jesus, what good thing can we love?
42354If we have sown unto you spiritual things, is it a great thing if we shall reap your carnal things?
42354In what sense then are we Christians?
42354Is Christ divided?
42354Is any called in uncircumcision?
42354Is any man called being circumcised?
42354Is any more heterogeneous structure anywhere to be seen than the Church of Christ?
42354Is it not entirely unreasonable to suppose that what we see and know is the measure of God''s resources?
42354Is it our chief aim in them to receive and promote an earnest religious spirit and a sincere service of Christ?
42354Is it out of the question to imagine that the disciples may have been similarly misled?
42354Is it possible that a man of such sagacity can have sanctioned or countenanced so absurd a superstition?
42354Is it so, that there is not a wise man among you?
42354Is it the true stay of our spirit that Christ rules, and will in His own time reconcile all things by His own spirit?
42354Is not that, most strictly speaking, edification?
42354Is schism or secession ever justifiable on the ground that error is taught in the Church?
42354Is there then no possibility of the disciples having been deceived?
42354It is no matter what we say, nor what rites and forms we go through; the one question is, Do we at heart wish to give ourselves up to God?
42354It is with something akin to horror that Paul goes on to ask,"Was Paul crucified for you?"
42354It may indeed be said, What harm can come of persons less enlightened being emboldened to do as we do if what we do is right?
42354Judge in yourselves: is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered?
42354Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump?
42354Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?
42354Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize?
42354Know ye not that we shall judge angels?
42354Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you?
42354Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ?
42354May it not be a merely superstitious or sentimental reverence?
42354May they not have been mistaken?
42354May they not have seen what they wished to see, as other men have sometimes done?
42354May we intermarry with those who are not yet Christian?
42354May we not reasonably suppose that a truly infinite expansion and development await God''s works?
42354Might they not by partaking of such flesh become partakers in the sin of idolatry?
42354Mine answer to them that do examine me is this, Have we not power to eat and to drink?
42354Must we say that there are men who have no ambition to experience perfect rectitude and purity?
42354Now if Christ be preached that He rose from the dead, how say some among you that there is no resurrection of the dead?
42354O death, where is thy sting?
42354O grave, where is thy victory?
42354Or I only and Barnabas, have not we power to forbear working?
42354Or I only and Barnabas, have not we power to forbear working?"
42354Or I only and Barnabas, have not we power to forbear working?"
42354Or is the greatest reality in this human world of ours wholly resultless so far as we are concerned?
42354Or saith He it altogether for our sakes?
42354Paul certainly was contemplating Christ, and not a creed, as the principle and centre of the Church''s unity, when he exclaimed,"Is Christ divided?"
42354Paul does not say, Was Paul your teacher in religion, and did he lead your thoughts to God?
42354Say I these things as a man?
42354Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an harlot?
42354So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken?
42354The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ?
42354The cup of blessing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ?
42354The knowledge of God and of Divine things in which good men delight, and which is esteemed the stamina of character-- is not this permanent?
42354The only question is, How was that belief produced?
42354The only question is, What change is desirable and possible?
42354The question remains, How far has he gone with his Leader?
42354The question therefore was, were they faithful, did they dispense what they had received in conformity with Christ''s purpose?
42354The question was not, were they eloquent, were they philosophical, were they learned?
42354The second confirmation of his rebuke St. Paul brings forward in the fifth verse:"Is there not a wise man among yourselves?"
42354These organs of nutrition fulfil their function when they lead you to eat such meat as sustains you in life; when does the body fulfil its function?
42354They had the Holy Ghost dwelling in them; might not they, as well as the men, edify Christian assemblies by uttering the inspirations of the Spirit?
42354They were one with Christ; men could have no higher honour: was it not obvious that they were on an equality with those who had held them so cheap?
42354They were perplexed and alarmed at the growth of the Church; what hindered them from bringing proof that there had been no resurrection?
42354This apparent eagerness to be holy, this professed devotedness to the cause of Christ-- are they not mere flourish?
42354This exceptional, unique work then-- what have we made of it?
42354This was reasonable; but then how about the other accompaniment of idolatry?
42354Trying to reach the truth about ourselves, do we find that we have attained to see and to love what is worthy?
42354Was it also a thing of indifference?
42354Was this not a monstrous anomaly, for which prompt divorce was the fit remedy?
42354We can not but ask in passing, What has become of all those inspired utterances with which the Corinthian Church from week to week resounded?
42354We do not understand the process; but is that the only thing we do not understand?
42354We read at present but one chapter in the history of life, and what future chapters are to unfold who can imagine?
42354What advantageth it me to risk death daily, and to suffer daily, if the dead rise not?"
42354What gain is it to be applauded, admired, courted, followed, compared with this one aim of not being disobedient to a heavenly vision?"
42354What gain is it to please the world, to please the great, nay even to please those whom we love, compared with this?
42354What idea was possessing their minds?
42354What is it then?
42354What is its object and end?
42354What is my reward then?
42354What is true existence but the recollection of us which survives in the hearts of those who love us?
42354What need of this mysterious process of passing from life to life and from body to body?
42354What relation does the Communion hold to our ordinary meals?
42354What response are we making?
42354What say I then?
42354What shall I say to you?
42354What then do the traces of our past life show?
42354What then is the reward he has, giving himself, as he certainly does,_ willingly_ to the work?
42354What then would he think of the state of the Church now?
42354What was that brotherhood worth that could not bear a little wrong?
42354What was the use of quibbling about the time and manner of his ordination, when the reality and success of his apostolic work were so apparent?
42354What was their intention or meaning in doing so?
42354What will ye?
42354What would Paul say did he now see the super- structure which eighteen hundred years have raised on the one foundation?
42354What?
42354What?
42354What?
42354What?
42354When he dies, people will ask, What property has he left behind him?
42354Where are our slain foes?
42354Where can His presence and Divine goodness and reality be more distinctly manifest than in Christ and those who are in any degree like Him?
42354Where is God to be found and to be known if not in men?
42354Where is the wise?
42354Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges?
42354Who shall determine whether this preacher or that is the better steward, most truly seeking his Lord''s glory, and careless of his own?
42354Who shall say which of these styles is most edifying to the Church?
42354Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed?"
42354Who without previous observation could imagine what would spring from an acorn or a seed of wheat?
42354Why are men of science so terrified by the word"miracle"?
42354Why do ye not rather take wrong?
42354Why might we not at birth have been ushered into our eternal state?
42354Will the goal come to us, or how are we ever to reach it?
42354With the unmarried man there need be no other consideration than this: How can I best serve Christ?
42354Would Mr. Holyoake think the amount of attention most Christians give to the other world excessive?
42354You have but touched the hem of His garment; what must it be to be clasped to His heart?
42354_ GOD''S HUSBANDRY AND BUILDING._"Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed, even as the Lord gave to every man?
42354_ MAINTENANCE OF THE MINISTRY._"Am I not an apostle?
42354_ ON GOING TO LAW._"Dare any of you, having a matter against another, go to law before the unjust, and not before the saints?
42354_ THE SPIRITUAL BODY._"But some man will say, How are the dead raised up?
42354am I not free?
42354and if the world shall be judged by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters?
42354and they which wait at the altar are partakers with the altar?
42354and what hast thou that thou didst not receive?
42354and with what body do they come?
42354and with what body do they come?"
42354are all prophets?
42354are all teachers?
42354are all workers of miracles?
42354are not ye my work in the Lord?
42354are not ye my work in the Lord?"
42354are we stronger than He?"
42354but"Was Paul crucified for you?"
42354came the word of God out from you?
42354d._, matters of property and of bargain?
42354did Paul by his life show you the beauty of self- sacrifice and holiness?
42354do all interpret?"
42354do all speak with tongues?
42354do not ye judge them that are within?
42354hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?
42354have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord?
42354have ye not houses to eat and to drink in?
42354he could not have used words more expressive of his meaning than when he says,"If the dead rise not at all, why are they then baptized for the dead?"
42354how much more things that pertain to this life?
42354know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is one body?
42354know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?
42354may we marry at all?
42354no, not one that shall be able to judge between his brethren?
42354now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it?
42354or came it unto you only?
42354or despise ye the Church of God, and shame them that have not?
42354or despise ye the Church of God, and shame them that have not?...
42354or how knowest thou, O man, whether thou shalt save thy wife?
42354or saith not the Law the same also?
42354or saith not the Law the same also?"
42354or were ye baptized in the name of Paul?
42354or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock?
42354shall I come unto you with a rod, or in love, and in the spirit of meekness?"
42354shall I praise you in this?
42354shall I praise you in this?
42354shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot?
42354that the idol is anything, or that which is offered in sacrifice to idols is anything?
42354was Paul crucified for you?
42354where is the disputer of this world?
42354where is the scribe?
42354who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof?
42354why are they then baptized for the dead?
42354why do ye not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded?
42354why do you not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded?
58136Are we sure,asks a French author,"that the ideas which flow from great men of genius are exclusively their own work?
58136[ 14] What, after all, is involved in the acceptance of such a conclusion? 58136 [ 30] Can an honest and unbiased thinker doubt that the first is the truer statement?
58136Can a man be possessed of love, greatness, nobility, courage, honour, at a word of command?
58136Can we be content to believe that no force exists that is not susceptible to physical analysis?
58136Do they not react to the same God?
58136How is it then that people even of the highest intelligence do not invariably agree about what_ is_ good or morally right?
58136Is it surprising, then, that morality is garbed in the changing coat of a chameleon?
58136Is it the search for truth?
58136Is not mind and matter subject to the same law?
58136It demands an answer to the eternal question: What is the Ultimate Good?
58136Or if he had done so that he would have attained as striking a result as by the fire of his oratory?
58136That what is held moral to- day is immoral to- morrow, and that what is held immoral here is moral elsewhere?
58136What is religion?
58136What is there to fear?
58136What matter, then, if we adopt the formula of Pampsychism and assert that"all individual things are animated albeit in divers degrees"?
58136Yet is it true to say that there can be no possible alternative to what the consensus of opinion in any one country considers morally right?
58136[ 20] Hastings Rashdall:"Is Conscience an Emotion?"
58136[ 23]"Is Conscience an Emotion?"
58136[ 24]"Is Conscience an Emotion?"
58136[ 63] But the distinction is superfluous and misleading: it is just that type of"genius"(?
58136or endorse the conclusion of Professor James Ward, who"finds no ground for separating organic life from psychical life"?
58417CHAPTER X REVIEW OF RESULTS Had the fighting round Rheims and the fighting north of the Aisne no result?
58417Did the plan drawn up by the German General Staff fulfil apparently all the conditions, both political and military, and did it promise swift success?
58417Do these episodes throw no light on the damage done to Rheims Cathedral?
58417From the military standpoint, victory or defeat is the answer to the question: Which side has accomplished the purpose it had in view?
58417The political inspiration and purpose being clear, how was that purpose, as regards France, most readily and with fewest risks to be realised?
58417The question now was: Which side could carry out its manoeuvre first?
58417Was the burden borne merely for the sake of peace, or for the sake of the original inspiration and policy?
58417Were the armies of von Kluck, von Bülow, von Hausen, and Duke Albert, the latter already badly mauled, sufficient to carry out the scheme laid down?
58417Were these combats, vast as they were, merely drawn combats?
58417What better proof could there be of total demoralisation?
58417What was the consequence?
58417What were its military features?
58417What were the German plans and why were they changed?
58417What, from facts such as these, is the inference to be drawn as to losses incurred?
58417Where was our intelligence branch?
58417Where were those decisive points?
58417Why, then, it may be asked, did the Germans not keep Rheims when they had it?
29219''What was she to do without a groschen?'' 29219 A Magrepha-- what may that be?"
29219A brilliant ball, last night, was it not?
29219A sign of what?
29219About being useful? 29219 Adelaide,"I expostulated,"why did you remain so long?"
29219Adelaide-- your nurse-- the Iron Cross?
29219Against you, Adelaide?
29219Ah,said Eugen, with a deep sigh( and his face had grown sad),"is n''t that the essence of sweetness and poetry?
29219All square?
29219Always the same answer?
29219Am I not going too fast?
29219An unreasonable fool to work hard?
29219And are they kind to you?
29219And do you like the prospect?
29219And do you love all who are kind to you?
29219And hate them that despitefully use you?
29219And have you no friends?
29219And how do you get there? 29219 And if I find it best to leave my Fatherland, and begin life quite anew?"
29219And if you will kindly tell me your address, too-- but how much money did you spend?
29219And not go on telling you stories like that of Munchausen, in Arabesks, eh? 29219 And spoken to her?"
29219And were you wounded?
29219And what are these vereins?
29219And what has caused it?
29219And what if it be so?
29219And which are you?
29219And who would think any the worse of you? 29219 And you are a student?"
29219And you dread and shrink from the idea of a repetition of this business?
29219And you fought?
29219And you have owned it to him?
29219And you think you would like to go to the Carnival Ball, hey?
29219And you will go back all alone and try to give lessons?
29219And you, Miss Wedderburn-- have you deserted Germany?
29219And you?
29219And, besides, how does any one know that I have a talent-- for-- for-- what you say?
29219Any relation of yours?
29219Are n''t you coming to the ball, Eugen?
29219Are they?
29219Are we not all sinners?
29219Are you a friend of Helfen''s?
29219Are you a painter?
29219Are you busy, Miss Wedderburn?
29219Are you composing a symphony? 29219 Are you fair in complexion?"
29219Are you fond of it?
29219Are you going to stay long in Elberthal?
29219Are you ill, Adelaide?
29219Are you quite alone?
29219Are you raving?
29219Are you ready for your lesson,_ mein Fräulein_?
29219Are you there, May?
29219Are you very musical, then?
29219Are you very tired?
29219Are your parents unkind?
29219Brothers and sisters?
29219Brought to reason,he resumed,"but how?
29219But Miss Hallam?
29219But are you quite alone?
29219But have you decided?
29219But if Miss Hallam consented, you would remain?
29219But never on a violin before?
29219But never, never?
29219But not like spring, is it?
29219But the child?
29219But the subject?
29219But what''s the end of it? 29219 But when you came out of the theater?"
29219But where can Adelaide be?
29219But where have you been, and what have you done?
29219But why do you go? 29219 But why?
29219But, Eugen--"Are you so struck with her, Friedel? 29219 But,"I interrupted, earnestly,"what do you mean?
29219Can there be any question as to which I should like to do?
29219Can you send and get one of them for me?
29219Choose what?
29219Come here, Miss Wedderburn; this is Hans, there is Fritz, and here is Franz-- a jolly trio; are n''t they?
29219Come, come,_ mein Herr_, what does that mean? 29219 Come,_ mein Junge_, tell me how old you are?"
29219Costumes-- what kind of costumes?
29219Could the lady make thee cry?
29219Could your cook have known, by any means in your knowledge, where your money was?
29219Couldst thou give up something very dear for his sake?
29219Countrified-- what is that?
29219Dare you leave him?
29219Decided what?
29219Did he never tell you?
29219Did he propose to you?
29219Did he? 29219 Did you enjoy it?"
29219Did you ever examine the Cologne railway station?
29219Did you ever hear of anything base-- anything underhand or dishonorable?
29219Did you have anything new? 29219 Did you not deceive me and draw me out for your amusement that day we met at Köln?
29219Did you not enjoy it?
29219Did you say good- bye to von Francius, May, yesterday?
29219Did you think of offering to relieve my solitude?
29219Did you, Miss Hallam?
29219Did you?
29219Didst thou, or didst thou not? 29219 Distance?
29219Do n''t you feel a stranger in these garments?
29219Do n''t you think so?
29219Do they? 29219 Do we not all know the forte of Herr von Francius?
29219Do you always hate it?
29219Do you believe in work?
29219Do you ever take a receipt from your girls when you pay them?
29219Do you feel equal to it? 29219 Do you get on with your music?"
29219Do you intend me to understand that you wish us to go to the ball?
29219Do you intend to make any stay?
29219Do you know him?
29219Do you know the facts of the case?
29219Do you know what is ringing in my ears and will not leave my mind?
29219Do you know what my idea of heaven would be?
29219Do you know where she is now?
29219Do you learn music? 29219 Do you like amusements-- concerts, and theater, and opera?"
29219Do you like me, Sigmund?
29219Do you live here, Sigmund?
29219Do you mean him?
29219Do you mean you or me?
29219Do you not know yourself?
29219Do you not?
29219Do you really admire the picture, Herr von Francius?
29219Do you suppose that the people who will be at the concert will be half as much alive to your defects as I am? 29219 Do you think I can?"
29219Do you think we shall go very far?
29219Do you think you could love me? 29219 Do you wish to know anything about him?"
29219Doctor?
29219Does she tackle you in that way every night?
29219Driven him here? 29219 Elberthal?"
29219Eugen, art thou asleep?
29219Eugen, what hast thou?
29219Eugen, what is it?
29219Eugen, why did you not tell me before? 29219 February, did you say?"
29219For you or for her?
29219For yourself,_ mein Herr_?
29219Forget you, Sigmund? 29219 Forgive thee what?"
29219Forgiven you what?
29219Friedel?
29219Fräulein May, will you have the patience to listen while I tell you a little story?
29219Fräulein, what are you dreaming about?
29219General melancholy?
29219Had you ever before detected her in any dishonesty?
29219Has she no counsel?
29219Hast thou been there?
29219Have I? 29219 Have I?
29219Have n''t you? 29219 Have you been here long?"
29219Have you been in England?
29219Have you found lodgings already?
29219Have you got into debt? 29219 Have you had bad news?"
29219Have you heard von Francius play?
29219Have you no blue ones?
29219Have you no one to--I stopped; I was about to add,"to be kind to you-- to take care of you?"
29219Have you read it?
29219Have you seen her before?
29219Have you seen the Dom?
29219Have you taken up any of your pay since you have been there?
29219Have you traveled far to- day?
29219He is a handsome fellow,_ nicht wahr_?
29219He will not be here at all?
29219He will sleep for a time here, wo n''t he?
29219He wo n''t fall off, will he?
29219Herr Courvoisier is gone?
29219Herr Courvoisier, have you forgiven me?
29219Herr Courvoisier, have you heard from your little boy?
29219Herr Direktor, Helfen will take my place,_ nicht wahr?_Von Francius bowed.
29219Herr Helfen refused it-- why, do you know?
29219How are you, Adelaide?
29219How can I serve you?
29219How can you say so? 29219 How can you?
29219How could I? 29219 How dare you, how dare you talk in that manner?"
29219How did you come here?
29219How did you know it?
29219How just like me?
29219How long does that take?
29219How much does she pay you a week?
29219How much is a thaler?
29219How much money?
29219How much?
29219How old are you?
29219How should I? 29219 How-- need?
29219How?
29219How?
29219I am always having private interviews with her,_ nicht wahr_? 29219 I asked her,''Will you not help me?''
29219I certainly was once very rude to him, but I should not have thought he was an ungenerous man-- should you?
29219I have known it-- and have thought about it-- so as to get accustomed to it-- see?
29219I really would n''t have intruded if I had known--"Known what?
29219I say, Eugen, did you see the young lady with Vincent and the others in the first row of the parquet?
29219I think we are exactly on the way to your house,_ nicht wahr_?
29219I think you have two sisters, have you not?
29219I thought you had left the probe?
29219I told you, Friedel, that I should have to leave him?
29219I wish to apologize--"For what?
29219I wonder what that town is?
29219I-- gifts-- what gifts?
29219I? 29219 I?"
29219If so,interrupted his brother before I could speak,"let me add my petition and that of my wife-- do you allow me, Hildegarde?"
29219If you did not do it, who did? 29219 In a crowd I lost my friends, and-- I was going to Elberthal, and I turned the wrong way-- and--""Have come to destruction,_ nicht wahr_?"
29219In short, you are firmly decided to be my wife some time?
29219In what town?
29219Is he asleep?
29219Is he asleep?
29219Is he clever?
29219Is he crying? 29219 Is he like thee?"
29219Is it far from here?
29219Is it perhaps disagreeable to you to eat in the saal? 29219 Is it pleasant anywhere?
29219Is it that you are thoroughly unamiable?
29219Is it?
29219Is n''t she pretty?
29219Is some one coming to live here?
29219Is that Friedhelm Helfen?
29219Is that artist- life?
29219Is that true, Friedel?
29219Is that you, Friedhelm?
29219Is there a piano in the house?
29219Is there any other girl of that name about here?
29219Is there no one else here but ourselves?
29219Is your mother well?
29219It is a dismal subject, is it not?
29219It is a lamb, ai n''t it?
29219It is an awful storm, is it not?
29219It is not merely that; but suppose it were, what then?
29219LIEBE MAI--it began--"Will you come and help me in my trouble?
29219Lahnburg!--I-- when you are there--_nein, das ist_--You are going to Lahnburg?
29219Like it? 29219 Like me?
29219Like what?
29219Live there?
29219Look here,_ alter Narr!_he added;"you''ve been going without anything to eat,_ nicht_?"
29219May I introduce the young lady? 29219 May, how is he?"
29219Milady is tired?
29219Miss Hallam-- what-- do you mean? 29219 Miss Luther,"I said,"why did you not inform your mistress at once of what you had seen without waiting for her to ask you about the lost money?"
29219Miss Wedderburn, will you try to compose yourself, and listen to something I have to say?
29219Missed the train?
29219Mrs. Naseby,said I,"when you first missed your money, had you any reason to believe that the prisoner had it?"
29219Must you know, friend?
29219My first violinist,_ nicht wahr?_Again I assented silently.
29219Nancy Luther, did you say that girl''s name was?
29219No mistakes?
29219No; have you?
29219No? 29219 No?"
29219Not alone, surely?
29219Not at all?
29219Not? 29219 Now dost thou understand, Sigmund, why he did not speak?
29219Now, could Nancy Luther have entered that room, if she wished?
29219Now, if you had had any wish to harm the prisoner, could n''t you have raised twenty- five dollars to put in her trunk?
29219Now, will you read this letter, also aloud?
29219Now,as he still held it fastened together, and looked half laughingly at me,"do you intend to keep it on or not?"
29219Oh, Miss Hallam, is it really true? 29219 Oh, has it?
29219Oh, is it?
29219Oh, sir, can you help me?
29219Oh, where is he? 29219 On our guard?
29219One more question: Have you known of the prisoner''s having used any money since this was stolen?
29219Only how can I begin unless you play, or tell me what you want to play?
29219Or children either?
29219Paint me?
29219Perhaps he''s got one already?
29219Perhaps they will return?
29219Practice what? 29219 Pretty plaything,_ nicht wahr_?"
29219Ready?
29219Remember a lady who has intimated that she wishes me to forget her? 29219 Seven: a very pleasant time to travel,_ nicht wahr_?
29219Shall I be paid?
29219Shall we not have some music?
29219Shall we try this''Traumerei,''Miss Wedderburn, if you are not too tired?
29219Should you have thought of searching her trunk, had not Nancy Luther advised you and informed you?
29219Sigmund,said I,"are you not proud to belong to these?"
29219Sigmund-- was that the dear little boy?
29219Singing lessons?
29219Sit down, man; do you think the poor little chap will hurt you?
29219So that is the truth?
29219So?
29219Sopran? 29219 Surely we can stand firm and faithful for a year?"
29219Tell me,said she;"where did you meet him, and how?"
29219The Dom-- what is the Dom?
29219The first you have seen? 29219 The man has dis-- What am I saying?
29219The mother of that child-- is she alive or dead? 29219 The question is-- will you still be at Elberthal when I return?"
29219The subject?
29219The young lady for whom the Herr Direktor had taken lodgings? 29219 Then it is settled?"
29219Then she may teach?
29219Then what is it?
29219Then why do you do it?
29219Then you are not afraid?
29219Then you did n''t have twenty- five dollars when you came there?
29219Then you have decided?
29219Then you have not laid up any money since you have been there?
29219Then you have seen her?
29219Then you will take the soprano solos?
29219There''s the moon,said he;"how brilliant, is she not?"
29219These look more like thy legs, Sigmund,_ nicht wahr_? 29219 They call you clumsy at home, do they?"
29219They tell me you are a good lawyer?
29219Very, but-- but-- you were not there?
29219WHERE IS MY FATHER?
29219Was I not? 29219 Was Sir Peter at the ball, Adelaide?"
29219Was an awful storm,_ nicht wahr_? 29219 Was he very down?"
29219We are very happy together, are n''t we?
29219We loved you-- why did you deceive us?
29219Wehrhahn, 39, Fräulein?
29219Well, Sigmund, wilt thou have legs like a stork, as these long stripes will inevitably make them, or wilt thou have legs like a zebra''s back?
29219Well, will you do it?
29219Well,_ gnädige Frau_, will you arrange this matter, or shall I?
29219Well?
29219Well?
29219Well?
29219Were you going to practice?
29219Were you going to starve yourself to death? 29219 Were you not happy when you were young?"
29219What ails thee, then, Karl?
29219What are you blushing so for, my pretty May? 29219 What are you going to do there?"
29219What are you telling me?
29219What can be the matter with him? 29219 What did he look like?"
29219What did he tell you?
29219What did you tell Hugo von Meilingen?
29219What do they do here?
29219What do you do all day?
29219What do you do at home?
29219What do you mean by''shady''?
29219What do you mean?
29219What do you mean?
29219What do you say?
29219What do you want?
29219What hast thou been doing?
29219What hast thou? 29219 What have you been doing all the morning?"
29219What is Mr. Arkwright to you, my dear? 29219 What is a_ Probe_?"
29219What is horrible?
29219What is it, Friedel?
29219What is it?
29219What is the German for captain?
29219What is the haupt- probe?
29219What is the matter? 29219 What is the matter?
29219What is the use of it all? 29219 What is your name?"
29219What makes you unhappy? 29219 What must I call this man?"
29219What on earth made you spend more than twelve hours without food?
29219What relation are you to the Herr Graf?
29219What shall I do?
29219What shall we call this meal?
29219What time is he coming?
29219What was that? 29219 What will be the end of me?"
29219What will you do to make you not have time?
29219What would you have done?
29219What you call Spring?
29219What you call''Spring''?
29219What''s failure or success to me? 29219 What, in Heaven''s name, makes you love me so?"
29219What? 29219 What?"
29219What?
29219When I am a man may I choose?
29219When does the_ Engländer_ come?
29219When is the carnival, and when does this piece of tomfoolery come off?
29219When it does, will you give him to me-- to my charge altogether?
29219When will he return?
29219Where are you going,_ mein Herren_?
29219Where did she place the lamp, while she did so?
29219Where did you fight? 29219 Where have you been all evening?"
29219Where is he?
29219Where is your shawl?
29219Where? 29219 Where?
29219Whether I am to be trusted?
29219Which of you does it belong to? 29219 Who can make him do anything he does not wish?
29219Who could oblige him to part with his own child?
29219Who in all that motley crowd would I wish to be?
29219Who is Anna Sartorius?
29219Who is Arkwright?
29219Who is he?
29219Who is she?
29219Who is that old lady?
29219Who is the best teacher?
29219Who spoke?
29219Who?
29219Whom have we here? 29219 Whose society?"
29219Why any more than to- day?
29219Why are they going, and what do they say?
29219Why did n''t you come before?
29219Why did you deceive us?
29219Why do n''t you know?
29219Why do n''t you print some of those impromptus that you are always making?
29219Why do you want to know how much?
29219Why dost thou not sleep, Sigmund? 29219 Why not at home too?
29219Why not?
29219Why, Eugen, do you mean to say that you are so very susceptible? 29219 Why, how can you know?"
29219Why, my child?
29219Why? 29219 Why?
29219Why? 29219 Why?"
29219Why?
29219Why?
29219Why?
29219Why?
29219Why?
29219Why?
29219Will you let me paint you?
29219Will you not take it, please?
29219Will you please tell me how much money you have spent for me to- day?
29219Will you show me the way back to the countess''s room?
29219Will you sing?
29219Will you tell me if you belong to this State?
29219Will you tell me that you are not studying for the stage?
29219Would it be asking too much of you to play the pianoforte accompaniment?
29219Would n''t you like something to put over him?
29219Would write-- to whom?
29219Would you like to go for a walk this afternoon?
29219Would you rather have wine or coffee, Fräulein?
29219Yes-- you may well ask; but first-- you have been in England, have you not?
29219Yes?
29219You are Herr Helfen,_ nicht wahr_?
29219You are cold?
29219You are exhausted with standing?
29219You are going to England?
29219You are going to Rothenfels, I presume?
29219You are going to sing well to- night,said von Francius, as he handed me up the steps--"for my sake and your own,_ nicht wahr_?"
29219You are not yet gone?
29219You are very kind,I said,"and I want you to tell me something, Frau Lutzler: how long have I been ill?"
29219You are young, and, I suppose, happy?
29219You correspond with him?
29219You do n''t understand it all, I suppose?
29219You do n''t wish to know what I can tell you about him?
29219You find it beautiful?
29219You have a home, I suppose?
29219You have sung that song before,_ gnädiges Fräulein_?
29219You love him, Adelaide?
29219You mean the young ladies in the chorus, do n''t you?
29219You quail before that?
29219You really care to hear? 29219 You saw him-- you spoke to him, perhaps?"
29219You say you looked through the keyhole and saw her take the money?
29219You see them not?
29219You think this world a hell, Eugen?
29219You will forgive my introducing the subject?
29219You will not shake hands? 29219 You will return to England now?
29219You will stay, May?
29219You wo n''t go-- quite certain?
29219You?
29219Your father?
29219Your name, if you will be good enough?
29219Your voice is what,_ mein Fräulein_?
29219_ Aber!_ What can she want at this early hour?
29219_ Aber, Fräulein May!_ What do you mean?
29219_ Ach, Fräulein!_ will you allow us the use of your piano for a few minutes?
29219_ Alle Wetter!_cried Karl Linders, impatiently-- that young man was much given to impatience--"what does von Francius want?
29219_ Als verlobte empfehlen sich_ Karl Linders and-- who else?
29219_ Bitte, mein Fräulein!_"If you could show me exactly where the train starts from, and-- could I get a ticket now, do you think?
29219_ Herrgott!_ Why?
29219_ Liebe_ Miss Wedderburn, will you do something for me? 29219 _ Lieber Himmel!_ Are you there?
29219_ Mein Vater_, who is the beautiful lady, and why did you speak so harshly to her? 29219 _ Mir ist''s nicht wohl._""What ails thee?"
29219_ Natürlich!_"What do you think of it?
29219_ Natürlich, mein Fräulein._ Where else should I have been?
29219_ Nicht wahr?_said the boy, with flashing eyes.
29219_ Nicht wahr?_said the other, softly.
29219_ Nicht wahr?_she persisted.
29219_ Nicht?_ Then you must have been astonished. 29219 _ Nun_, have you decided?"
29219_ Was ist denn mit ihm?_I heard Courvoisier say as he stooped over me.
29219( with voice growing gradually shriller),"nor Lieutenant Pieper?
29219--"_Nicht wahr_?"
29219A soldier, then?
29219After all, what could she do to harm me?
29219After all-- what was he?
29219After debating within myself for some time, I screwed up my courage and began:"Mr. Courvoisier-- your name is Courvoisier, is it not?"
29219Afterward?"
29219Against what?"
29219Almost the only words he exchanged with Adelaide were:"Have you seen this opera before, Lady Le Marchant?"
29219An actor?
29219An artist who painted pictures for his bread?
29219An unlucky love?"
29219And Sigmund?
29219And as what do you think of going, Adelaide?"
29219And at what time will you be back?"
29219And have you not the answer to all here?
29219And how did you like it?"
29219And then she explained how her brother- in- law had given her a check for a thousand thalers-- was it not kind of him?
29219And turning to the man, he added:"How were all when you left, Heinrich?"
29219And we came home; Vincent opened the door with his latch- key, said,"It has not been very brilliant, has it?
29219And were you-- but I heard you were, so where''s the use of telling lies about it-- at the Maskenball last night?
29219And what do you do all day?"
29219And what if they did?
29219And what was that I heard?
29219And where shall I send my bill to?"
29219And you also?"
29219And you mean to let her prevent you from following the career you have a talent for?"
29219And you will think sometimes of your old, fault- finding, grumbling master--_ja_?"
29219And you, Adelaide?"
29219And you?
29219And you?"
29219And-- excuse me-- are not your windows opposite to ours, and open as a rule?
29219Are you a lamb?
29219Are you anxious for him never to speak to you again?"
29219Are you aware that you have a very pretty north- country sounding name?"
29219Are you enjoying a little stroll?"
29219Are you ill?
29219Are you ill?"
29219Are you musical?"
29219Are you not dancing?"
29219Are you satisfied?"
29219Are you very well?
29219Are you"--her eyes said--"are you good enough for him?"
29219Are your sisters disagreeable?"
29219Arkwright?"
29219Art thou not well?"
29219At Sedan?"
29219Be cautious?
29219Before the furor of 1876, how many scores of provincial English had?
29219Besides, how do I know what your example is?
29219But I suppose you like it?"
29219But are you near- sighted?"
29219But how had he lived out these five terrible years?
29219But how to begin?
29219But perhaps you heard about that?"
29219But surely you have given me a thought now and then, have wondered whether I had a history, or sprung out of nothing?"
29219But thou,_ mein Vater_--""Well?"
29219But what art thou doing alone at the Ghost''s Corner on a stormy night?"
29219But what did Adelaide mean?
29219But what is such a lark?"
29219But what might the truth be?
29219But where have you been, for the probe must have been over for some time?
29219But where wilt thou be?"
29219But why?
29219But, on the other hand, every cool word he said gave the lie to his looks-- or did his looks give the lie to his words?
29219By paying?"
29219By the bye, Eugen, do you know, or have you ever known her?"
29219CUI BONO?
29219Can I not hear the music you practice, and shall I not believe my own ears?"
29219Can a fellow have no sense in his own head to find such things out?
29219Can not some of you sympathize a little with Satan and his struggle?"
29219Can you suggest a name?"
29219Canst not?
29219Come again,_ nicht wahr_?"
29219Could he be the same man who had behaved so coldly to me?
29219Could it be von Francius who was there?
29219Couldst thou have told him such a thing?"
29219Courvoisier himself?
29219Did I ever say that von Francius was an exceedingly handsome fellow, in a certain dark, clean- shaved style?
29219Did I ever say you did?"
29219Did I say unvibrating?
29219Did I?
29219Did he live at Elberthal?
29219Did he not dote upon her?
29219Did she love you?"
29219Did she, remembering my well- known susceptibility, fear that I might fall in love with him and compromise myself by some silly_ Schwärmerei_?
29219Did you leave the ball early last night?"
29219Did you love her?
29219Did you never throughout all this give a thought to the possibility that I might fall in love with you?"
29219Did you not know that she has the Iron Cross?
29219Did you take a walk in the moonlight?"
29219Do I look so countrified?"
29219Do n''t you remember the last time we tried it, it began to rain instantly?"
29219Do n''t you see?"
29219Do you know any of the circumstances under which Eugen von Rothenfels left his friends?"
29219Do you know many people in Elberthal?
29219Do you know that you are a person who makes joy?"
29219Do you know what you are giving up?"
29219Do you not grudge Death his prize?
29219Do you not know the mood?"
29219Do you not remember me?"
29219Do you suppose no one else ever had to do what they did not like?
29219Do you think my appearance will be a disadvantage to me?"
29219Do you think they will let me go?"
29219Do you want to have a row with Eugen?
29219Does thy head ache, Sigmund?"
29219Dost thou not wish to go?"
29219Eugen Courvoisier?
29219Fling it into the gutter?
29219For I ask myself,_ Cui bono?_""Like me,"I could not help saying.
29219For a short time she asked no more questions, then"Do you like town or country best?"
29219For the young gentleman?
29219From whom?
29219Give it to some one in need?
29219Granted that you have made some_ fiasco_--even a very bad one-- what is to prevent your making a life again?"
29219Had I not grieved with her?
29219Had I not proved the nobility of von Francius?
29219Had I not seen the dreadful struggle?
29219Had it been done in jest or earnest?
29219Had my husband signed it?
29219Had something within me changed during the last night?
29219Has she accepted the bottle- nosed oboist after all?"
29219Have n''t I been telling you all this time where I have been and what I have been doing?
29219Have you been or are you engaged to be married?
29219Have you enjoyed yourself?"
29219Have you ever given a thought to it?"
29219Have you had bad news?"
29219Have you had to send for a dress- maker already?
29219Have you seen-- or do you know-- Graf Eugen?"
29219Have you the means, or the chance, or the possibility of getting that training in England?"
29219He did not look like a man defeated-- but then, could he look like a man defeated?
29219He did not want me-- nor to know anything about me-- else, why could he laugh for very glee as his boy''s eyes met his?
29219He saw how it was with me and he helped me-- oh, why is he so good?
29219He started wide awake, with a look of wild terror, and gazed down into the darkness, crying out:"_ Mein Vater_, where art thou?"
29219He was wild and impatient of control, but who is not?
29219He would begin sudden conversations with me, starting with some question, as:"Friedel, do you believe in a future state?"
29219Her life was a great failure, and that failure had been brought home to her mind in a mercilessly short space of time; but of what use to bewail it?
29219Her repeated request that he would take that money-- what did it all mean?
29219Herr von Francius?
29219How I have thought-- well, how did you come here?"
29219How are you getting on?
29219How can I forgive that which I never resented?"
29219How can you say so?"
29219How could I ever attain it or anything near it?
29219How could he repulse her as he had done?
29219How dare you say so?"
29219How did he contrive to do it?
29219How did you get here?"
29219How do you know that you can marry?
29219How long did it endure?
29219How much do they cost the pair, Fräulein?"
29219How much?
29219How old are you, Eugen?"
29219How old are you?
29219How old are you?"
29219How shall I go through with it?"
29219How should I be able to make any better one?
29219How was I ever to help him to carry it out, and moreover, to bring up this child before me, and perhaps children of my own in the same rules?
29219How?
29219I am only telling you this to explain, and--""And you renounced me?"
29219I am sure it would be the best-- if-- do you think it would?"
29219I am sure she has everything to make her sing for joy; have you not, my dear?"
29219I asked what was Sir Peter''s motive in wishing it?
29219I asked, with some eagerness; for I, after all my unfulfilled strivings, had asked myself_ Cui bono?_"And what is the end of it?
29219I asked, with some eagerness; for I, after all my unfulfilled strivings, had asked myself_ Cui bono?_"And what is the end of it?
29219I had shown myself incapable of managing my own affairs-- was it likely that I could arrange his?
29219I have-- not quarreled with them exactly, but had a disagreement, because-- because--""Because?"
29219I never forgot how she stared me down from head to foot on the occasion of my first appearance alone, as if to say,"What do you want here?"
29219I quite fancied it was some girl--""What could make you think so?"
29219I suppose from that you have decided that I am to be trusted?"
29219I thought, perhaps, that you would accept it as a sign-- will you?"
29219I turned to the direktor, who was still near the piano, and asked timidly:"Do you think I may join?
29219I was as much amazed as Karl, if I did n''t show it so much, and after that--""After that?"
29219I was going to remain in Elberthal-- for what?
29219I was silent, and she went on:"I suppose you wish to go abroad, May?"
29219I was unwilling to face what I knew was coming-- and yet, how otherwise could the whole story have ended?
29219I wonder where they all are?
29219I-- do you think it strange that I should live there all alone?"
29219If I am happy-- how can I be happy?
29219If I might ask you a favor?"
29219If it were true, one would be anxious rather than not to conceal it; but as it is not true, do n''t you see?
29219If you can sing before me, surely you can sing before so many rows of--""Cabbages?
29219In the first place let me introduce myself; you, I think, are Herr Helfen?"
29219In what possible way could I be cautious?
29219In which part of the town?"
29219Is he not delightful?"
29219Is he not nice?"
29219Is it he or she?"
29219Is it not hard, you father of many children, to lose one of them?
29219Is it not so?"
29219Is it possible that you are nothing but a romp-- nothing but a vulgar tomboy?
29219Is my dress ready?"
29219Is n''t it possible that sometimes it may be right to do wrong?
29219Is n''t it strange?"
29219Is n''t there a reason for every one being somewhere?
29219Is n''t there a song something about my pretty May, my dearest May, eh?"
29219Is that the whole story?"
29219It is a boarding- house,_ nicht wahr?_"He nodded sedately.
29219It is arranged that you remain until you feel_ gené, nicht wahr?_""Oh, thank you!"
29219It may happen again,_ warum nicht_?"
29219It was called,''What would You do, Love?''
29219Karl Linders, after puffing away for some time, inquired, with an affectation of indifference:"How old is he--_der kleine Bengel_?"
29219Karl had not the subtlety to retort,"Ay, but does it say what we like?"
29219Let me see, what is it?"
29219Miss Hallam seemed to know this; she once asked me:"Would I return to Germany if I could?"
29219My performance was greeted with silence, which Miss Hallam at length broke, remarking:"I suppose you have not had much training?"
29219My very agitation gave calmness to my voice as I inquired,"Does Herr Courvoisier, a musiker, live here?"
29219Naseby?"
29219Neither willing nor unwilling was the tone, and the answer appeared to dissatisfy the other, who said:"''Yes, uncle''--what does that mean?
29219Never shall I forget the look she darted upon me-- the awful glance which swept over me scathingly, ere she said, in icy tones:"What do you mean?
29219No?
29219Not debt?
29219Now that she has learned the truth-- May, do you still care for me enough to marry me?"
29219Of course all has been right since he came here; but do n''t you think there may be something shady in the background?"
29219Of what use?
29219Oh, should we have time to see it?"
29219Oh, what will they think of me?"
29219Oh, why did not you trust me more?
29219Once and only once was Sigmund mentioned between us, and Eugen said:"Nine years, were you speaking of?
29219Once or twice I nearly made a fool of myself; that Carnival Monday-- do you remember?
29219One can not hear too much of such fine music; and when one''s friend sings, too--""What friend of yours is going to sing?"
29219Only if you mention it again to me it comes to a quarrel--_verstehst du?_""I meant no harm, and I can see no harm in it,"said he.
29219Or was he a musician-- what Anna Sartorius called_ ein Musiker_?
29219Otherwise--"Well, what should I like?
29219Our paths in life were destined to be utterly apart and divided, and what could it matter to you-- the behavior of an insignificant fiddler?
29219Perhaps you are the lady who is to take the solos?
29219Perhaps you will allow her to sing to- night?"
29219Pray what can we do in the way of work?
29219Rapidly reviewing my own circumstances and finances, and making a hasty calculation in my mind, I said:"Why ca n''t we arrange it?
29219Remember-- whom?"
29219Save me from what, and for what?
29219Say, good Mentor, does it matter?
29219Send it him by post?
29219Shall I go straight to Elberthal and send a drosky here for you, or will you try to walk home?"
29219Shall you make him into a musician too?"
29219She forged the signature of the Herr Graf--""Who forged the signature of the Herr Graf?"
29219She liked my dress, and was it_ echt Englisch_--also, how much did it cost?
29219She retires to find them, and a young lady who has been standing near us turns and observes:"Excuse me-- you want stockings for your little boy?"
29219She said,''What am I to do with him?''
29219She soon raised her veil, and looking at me, said, with a grave bow:"Herr Helfen, how do you do?"
29219She started slightly; then said, with a laugh which had in it something a little forced:"We are a contrast, are n''t we?
29219She will take a wrong view of my character, but what does that signify?
29219Should I go away again now that this disturbing element had appeared upon the scene?
29219Should I not be constantly shocking him by coarse, gross notions as to the needlessness of this or that fine point of conduct?
29219Strange, grotesque shapes loomed out in the uncertain, flickering light; but was it not a strange and haunted chamber?
29219Suppose you sit down-- yes?"
29219Supposing it ever came to pass that she acted Elsa to some one else''s Lohengrin, would she think of this night?
29219Tell me something-- did you never speculate about me?"
29219That is rather a tedious process,_ nicht wahr_?"
29219That is the story-- a black chronicle, is it not?
29219The companion of a few hours-- was he only that?
29219Their questions and remarks were much in this style:"Do you like Elberthal?
29219Then I said:"You are quite sure the parting must take place?"
29219Then it is impossible to be both in your country?"
29219Then what was it, what could it be?
29219Then where are they?"
29219Then, turning suddenly to Adelaide:"And what is this entertainment, my lady?"
29219Then-- hesitatingly--"Are you alone to- night?"
29219There are then four people-- you and I, and one whose name I will not speak, and-- may I guess once, Fräulein May?"
29219There is no reason why I should stay, is there?"
29219They break off engagements in England for a mere trifle, do n''t they?
29219Think of you, Adelaide, and think of you not too hardly?
29219This evening I set out, intending to hear the opera--''Der Fliegende Holländer''--very appropriate, was n''t it?"
29219This joy, so like a sorrow-- would I have parted with it?
29219This love of yours for me-- what will it carry you through?"
29219Thou wilt be a musiker like me and Friedel?"
29219Throw it into the Rhine, and wash it away forever?
29219Thy riding or fencing?"
29219To be approved by Sir Peter Le Marchant, could fate devise anything more horrible?
29219To be near thy father and see him, hear his voice, and touch him, and feel him near thee;_ nicht?_""Yes,"said he, in a scarcely audible whisper.
29219To marry him?"
29219To my relief he said:"Have you not seen her since her marriage?"
29219To my unbounded astonishment, she leaned forward and gave me a gentle kiss; then, still holding my hand, asked:"Do you still say your prayers, May?"
29219To what use all this toil?
29219To what use-- music?
29219Try to forget that none of you ever had a wicked thought or an unholy aspiration--"("Do n''t they see how he is laughing at them?"
29219Vincent speaking:"Last Thursday week, Courvoisier-- why did n''t you come?
29219Von Francius, with a sarcastic, ambiguous smile, turned to me:"And you,_ mein Fräulein_?"
29219Want me?
29219Was Herr von Francius there too?"
29219Was he looking past me?
29219Was he, could he be going to speak to me?
29219Was it a mere coincidence?
29219Was it an opportunity missed, or was it a brief glimpse of unexpected joy?
29219Was it possible that he might arrive this night?
29219Was it sleep or faintness, or coma?
29219Was not his father very fond of him?"
29219Was not the being able to"turn him round her finger"one of the principal advantages of her marriage?
29219Was not the tale of her virtues and her years-- seven- and- twenty only did she count of the latter-- there recorded?
29219Was our darling right or wrong in that persistent_ auf wiedersehen_ of his?
29219Was she perhaps wasted with passion and wicked thoughts?
29219Was she your wife?
29219Was that the same man, I wondered, whom I had seen the very day before, so strong, and full of pride and life?
29219Was the time long to him, or short?
29219We were waiting for you?"
29219Well, how was it?"
29219Well, what else can you do?
29219Well, will you sit to me?"
29219Were you in the hospital?"
29219Wert thou thinking of the distance, Sigmund?"
29219What ails thee?"
29219What are you doing in the dark?"
29219What can make you think so?"
29219What can there be so formidable about them?"
29219What could it possibly matter to Miss Hallam whether I were happy or not?
29219What did I know about the stage?
29219What did it cost the_ elle_?
29219What did it, could it, ought it to matter to me whether I ever saw him again or not?
29219What did you mean by that?"
29219What do I wish for?"
29219What do you charge?"
29219What do you mean?
29219What do you think of her?''"
29219What does it matter what becomes of me?
29219What does it mean?"
29219What does the fellow want at home?
29219What effect will my hatred have upon you?"
29219What good would it be to me to see him with strangers?
29219What grief not to be spoken or described?
29219What has become of the light- hearted sketchers?
29219What have you to say against it?"
29219What if she were a thousand times cleverer, wittier, better read than I?
29219What is the greatest joy of thy life?
29219What is the use of working hard?
29219What is there wrong in it?
29219What is this thing?"
29219What is to be done?
29219What is your Christian name?
29219What kind of education have we had?
29219What makes you look so down?"
29219What makes you suppose I am one?"
29219What may it portend?"
29219What might not the thing be with a whole chorus of sympathetic singers?
29219What more could they want?
29219What more dramatic, for instance, than what you have just sung, and all that goes before?
29219What must I say to Bruno?
29219What mystery is there in a man''s choosing to have private affairs?
29219What prompted her to talk in such a manner?
29219What sort of things might there not be in that water?
29219What sympathy should I get from any living soul by explaining my sick looks and absent demeanor with the words,"I love that man who is disgraced?"
29219What then?"
29219What throes of parting?
29219What to believe?
29219What was I to do with it?
29219What was I to do?
29219What was I to think?
29219What was I to think?
29219What was he?
29219What was it that Heinrich Mohr in''The Children of the World''was always saying?
29219What was it that preyed upon her mind?
29219What was it that seemed to make my senses as dull as my limbs, and as heavy?
29219What was passing there?
29219What was the feeling that clutched me-- held me fast-- seemed to burn me?
29219What was the meaning of the whole extraordinary proceeding?
29219What were you like?"
29219What will be the end of me?
29219What will he do when he finds out what a common clay figure it was he worshiped?"
29219What would be the use, where the pleasure, in singing to cabbages?
29219What''s this?
29219What, when I accepted the proposal of von Francius, had been my chief thought?
29219When I look back I ask myself-- was I not as blind as she, in truth?
29219When could he be here?
29219When that happens, will you forgive me if I break a rose from the bouquet before I toss it on to the feet of its rightful owner?
29219When the first chorus was over, he turned to me:"You have not sung in a chorus before?"
29219When the war was over--""Ah, you were in the war?"
29219When we had finished von Francius closed the book, looked at me, and said:"Will you sing the''Eva''music at the concert?"
29219When?"
29219Where did you meet, then?"
29219Where have you been, and what have you been doing?"
29219Where is he?
29219Where is my own father?
29219Where is our blood, that he whines after that hound-- that hound?"
29219Where is the score?"
29219Where to turn?
29219Which-- whom do you love best?"
29219While I-- why was I there, if not for his sake?
29219Who can take me away from him?"
29219Who could help seeing that I had sold myself to him?"
29219Who did not?
29219Who does have a merry Christmas now, except children and paupers?
29219Who expects to be happy?
29219Who has been made musik- direktor in place of Herr von Francius?"
29219Who has them?
29219Whoever heard of a pretty Jane?"
29219Whom have we here?"
29219Why am I here?
29219Why am I leading this life?
29219Why are you here?"
29219Why are you silent?"
29219Why did he veer round in this way, and from protecting kindness return to a raillery which was more cruel than his silence?
29219Why did not they write?
29219Why did you make her cry?"
29219Why did you not stop to think instead of rushing away from the thing like some unreasoning animal?"
29219Why do you not fetch him?
29219Why may we never hear one word of her?
29219Why not remain here?"
29219Why not?"
29219Why should I be a gentleman?
29219Why should I hesitate to say so?
29219Why should I resent it?
29219Why this silence, as of the grave?
29219Why was I ever born?"
29219Why was he so genial with those children and so harsh to me, who was little better than a child myself?
29219Why?"
29219Why?"
29219Why?"
29219Why?"
29219Will my voice do?"
29219Will you allow me to touch your hand before I retire?"
29219Will you come out with me?"
29219Will you come there with me as my companion?"
29219Will you give me a word of denial?"
29219Will you go home and stagnate there, or will you remain here, fight down your difficulties, and become a worthy artist?"
29219Will you have the goodness to read me a page of this book?"
29219Will you look after her?
29219Will you sing for me next season?"
29219Will you speak to my husband?"
29219Will you tell me again that you know nothing of him?
29219Will you?"
29219Wilt be happy till I come?"
29219Wilt thou come with me?"
29219With a laugh, in which, infectious though it was, I was too wretched to join:"Is that all?
29219Would I take her cab on to the bank and get a check cashed for her?
29219Would he pass, or would he come and speak to me?
29219Would he stand this test?
29219Would he understand me if I spoke to him?
29219Would she remember the great orchestra-- and me, and the lights, and the people-- our words-- a whisper?
29219Would you like some lessons?"
29219Would you like to come with me to see our woods and house?
29219Would you trust me to love those you love?"
29219You and_ der Vater_ and Friedel used to sit near together at the concert, do n''t you remember?
29219You do n''t surely mean that you thought me capable of stealing the book?"
29219You do not mean poverty?"
29219You have heard of Elberthal on the Rhine, I presume?"
29219You look a little-- a-- shabby, one might almost say, my dear-- a little seedy, hey?"
29219You must sing me that after lunch, and then we can see whether the song was pretty or not, my dear, eh?"
29219You say you behave yourselves; but how am I to know it?
29219You were offended with me at dinner,_ nicht wahr_?"
29219Your dress- maker, my lady?
29219Your sister?
29219_ Aber_--what does that mean?"
29219_ Cui bono?_ is a mental Delilah who will shear the locks of the most arrogant Samson.
29219_ Du lieber Himmel!_ What do you think of Herr von Francius?
29219_ Herrgott!_ And you do not know him?
29219_ Na!_ what if they did make a great noise?
29219_ Nicht wahr?_"A look was the only, but a very sufficient answer.
29219_ Schade!_ No officers?
29219_ Schrecklich!_ Did you get your dress in Elberthal?
29219_ Um Gotteswillen!_ What do you mean?
29219_ Was ist denn mit dir, mein Engel?_"said the poor countess, greatly distressed.
29219_ Willkommen!_ Have you brought my father?
29219and if so, did he belong to any of those various callings?
29219by my ill- defined ideas as to a code of honor-- my slovenly ways of looking at questions?
29219disgusting?
29219do n''t we make any like them in Germany?"
29219do you suppose that deceives me?"
29219far outstripping my lady, who had gone off dreadfully in her good looks, had n''t she, Arkwright?
29219higher or lower?"
29219in a trembling voice, and then, with a positive sob,"canst thou forgive?"
29219made better or worse?
29219not Hauptmann Sachse?"
29219or an opera buffa?
29219said I, at last,"if one could stay here forever, what would one grow to?"
29219said I, lending but an indifferent attention;"what is his name?"
29219said he,"you have found Sigmund,_ mein Fräulein_?
29219she said, how else are they to get what they want?
29219singing?
29219to which I answered,"Can you forgive?"
29219und so soll ich genesen?
29219what do you think of that?"
29219what?
29219where art thou?
29219you are competent to teach singing?
29219you have returned?
57205After a while Bett- Bett said � � What name, Missus? � I looked up to see her staring very hard at me, with a puzzled look on her face.
57205And the babies?
57205And what were Sue and I doing all this time?
57205As we rode from the yards to our camp, one of the men said: � Isn � t this June?
57205Did they wear clothes?
57205Have you ever heard of faith- healing?
57205She and Sue then grinned at each other as if to say, � Aren � t we clever?
57205Spose you tired fellow, what � s the matter all day come home? � Then I understood what was the grievance.
57205The little shiny- black piccaninnies?
57205The white man says you die of fright; but as it is the bone- pointing that gives the fright, it � s the bone- pointing that kills, isn � t it?
57205Was it tucker, or an animal, or somebody � s name?
57205Were they born white?
57205What name you all day gammon, eh? � for I was very angry indeed with them; they had given me a terrible fright.
57205likee this?
57205what name you? � Did you ever see a terribly frightened little black princess?
57205what name you? � Did you ever see a terribly frightened little black princess?
57205� And you will not chew tobacco? � I added.
57205� Bett- Bett, � I said, � will you be a good girl if I don � t paint you this time? � � You eye, Missus; straightfellow, � she sobbed.
57205� But where are they? � I said.
57205� Can � t you see that Rolly is not deadfellow? � At this everybody shouted with laughter.
57205� Do you like washing- days, Bett- Bett? � I asked, as she sat waiting for another dig into the tucker.
57205� Might it Sue bin catch him, eh? � � No more, Missus! � she said, grinning knowingly.
57205� Missus, � he said, � spose you come longa Debbil- debbil dance, eh? � � No, thank you, Goggle Eye, � I answered.
57205� Missus, � she cried, pointing to it, � I bin find bullocky. � � What name? � I said, wondering what was coming now.
57205� What about a Poolooloomee Show? � suggested the Maluka.
57205� What did the mark say? � she asked.
57205� What name him talk? � I said, for that was the way to ask him what message he was cutting.
57205� What name him yabber, Missus, this one A? � were the exact words she used.
57205� What name likee that, Bett- Bett? � I asked.
57205� What name this one talk, Goggle Eye? � I said, touching it with my finger.
57205� What name, Bett- Bett? � I asked.
57205� What name, Goggle Eye? � I asked, meaning that I wished him to explain it to me.
57205� What name, Jimmy? � I asked.
57205� What name, Topsy? � I asked at last.
57205� What name, what? � I said, wondering what she meant.
57205� What � s the matter now? � I said, as I went to meet them, for there was always something fresh happening.
57205� What � s the matter, Goggle Eye? � I asked.
57205� Whatever is the matter with you all? � I said, for I saw now they were not playing a game.
57205� Where are your trousers, Goggle Eye? � I asked, and, � Me bin knock up longa trousa, � was all he said.
57205� You naughty lubras, � I said, turning sharply to Biddy and Rosey; � what do you mean, telling such wicked stories?
57205� You old rogue, � I said, � what do you mean, playing tricks on your Missus like this?
453Are you a combination porter and prestidigitator?
453Are you sure that you want to buy of me?
453Are you sure?
453Brown? 453 Business?
453But if I win?
453But it was your plan-- you said you wanted me to be here when you came home and when you left, did n''t you? 453 But suppose-- just for the sake of argument-- that it does n''t strike them right this afternoon?"
453But what?
453But why did n''t you let me in on it sooner?
453But why?
453But, you foolish children, ca n''t I peek at her?
453By what power do you think those shears were moved across the cutting- table? 453 Ca n''t you see him, Emma, at the seashore?"
453Can I help?
453Clean up this-- this Bonez Areez, too?
453Coming or going?
453Dad would have enjoyed a morning like this, would n''t he?
453Did, huh?
453Do n''t you think it''s too-- too young?
453Do you do that often?
453Do you mean to say that I''m to be the entire audience at the premiere of this new model?
453Do you mean to tell me that you made this book out for me? 453 Do you really like it?
453Do you suppose I''d allow you to stand up before all those people?
453Do?
453Eh?
453Emma McChesney, you have n''t developed-- er-- claws, have you?
453Emma McChesney,he said steadily,"do you mean that?"
453Get that?
453Girl or boy?
453Good Lord, what is this? 453 Have I?
453How much?
453If I telephone my tailor that I ca n''t make it until four- thirty, will you promise to be back by that time?
453Inspiration working, Emma?
453Is it as bad as that?
453Is that a fair sample?
453Is that-- his office?
453Is-- I-- that is-- Mr. Buck is in, I suppose?
453It glows like a great, deep ruby, does n''t it?
453It is n''t just the money you want, Hortense? 453 Judy O''Who?"
453Just unhook this for me, will you?
453Klein cancel his order again?
453Like it?
453Like''em, Emma?
453Like''em? 453 Make a sketch of it, ca n''t you?"
453Me? 453 Miss it, do n''t you?"
453Mr. Buck? 453 Name?
453No? 453 Not so bad to get back to it, is it?"
453Now, now-- what is it, dear? 453 Now?"
453Pages,she repeated to herself, worriedly,"Pages?
453Send her in to us, will you? 453 She is with you, this business friend who is also so charming?"
453Sophy, who''s the prettiest girl in our shop? 453 Sure,"assented Koritz, head designer;"but when you get it cut you''ll find this piece is wasted, ai n''t it?"
453Sure? 453 T. A., if I had been what they call a homebody, we would n''t be married to- day, would we?"
453Tell a fellow what it''s going to be, ca n''t you?
453Tell me, Hortense,she said now;"what does Henry say to all this?
453Tell me, did you hit it off with the Ella Sweeneys and the Sadie Harrises of the great Middle West? 453 That ca n''t be-- you do n''t mean-- what-- what IS it?"
453That gives you the fulness without bunching, d''you see?
453That''s not one of the new ones, is it?
453Then you refuse to work with us? 453 Then, as a special favor to me, will you begin by trying to stand up straight, please?
453They''re-- they''re all like this?
453This? 453 Up at my apartment, all cozy?"
453Was n''t what?
453We''re not quarreling, are we?
453We- e- ell?
453Well, Emma?
453Well, Emma?
453Well, Mr. Bones, whom did you, and so forth?
453Well, but you told me to entertain them, did n''t you?
453Well, that settles it, does n''t it?
453Well, why do n''t you?
453Well?
453What actual first- hand information can you get about a country from books?
453What has all that to do with it?
453What kind of things?
453What makes you think I''m going back at all?
453What makes you think so?
453What will Jock say? 453 What''s the idea, Emma?"
453What''s the idea?
453What''s the joke?
453What''s the matter with the supply of new dresses? 453 What''s the matter?
453What''s your tailor''s name?
453Where is she?
453Where''s my baby?
453Where? 453 Why do n''t you pack a bag and run over to Chicago for a few days and see this marvel of the age?"
453Why not? 453 Why not?"
453Why, you''ve run up a partition there between Miss Casey''s desk and the workroom door, have n''t you?
453Why-- a-- mmmm-- yes-- oh, yes, we''re making''em up wide, but----"But what?
453Why?
453Will you let me bring her in to meet you, just to prove my point?
453Wo n''t you stay down and have dinner with me to- night, Emma?
453Worked? 453 Working side by side with him, seeing him day after day, how have you been able to resist him?"
453Yes; do n''t you?
453You are pleased with this-- this Indian Rio?
453You do n''t think I''m running down Henry, do you? 453 You knew plenty of home- women that you could have married, did n''t you?"
453You think it''s too wide, maybe, huh?
453You''ll have dinner with me to- night?
453You''re going to tell me now, Emma? 453 Your last diary?"
453''East is east and West is west and----''""Where''s that child?"
453A joke?"
453A man can have his own opinion, ca n''t he?"
453A new fastener?
453A.--tell me the truth: Do you think I''m old, and faded, and wistful and grandmotherly?"
453A.?"
453A.?"
453Am I an American designer, T. A., Billy?"
453And do you know what they''ve been wearing?
453And if you expect me to say,''Knew what?''
453And now you come to win the wager, yes?"
453And now-- what shall we do?"
453And the best dressed?"
453And then try me with the real surprise, will you?"
453And why ca n''t you make a fuss over me, I''d like to know?"
453And why come to- day, of all days, when I ca n''t make a fuss over you?"
453And you said they''d be ready when?
453And you will visit my establishment?"
453And-- well, if you''re not busy, you ca n''t be happy very long, can you?"
453And-- why, where are the boys''desks?
453Are n''t we using traveling men any more?"
453Are you sure?"
453As though thinking aloud, she said,"Have you grown thinner, or fatter or-- something?"
453At least, why did n''t you send back for me first?"
453Before we announced it, we had you all guessing, did n''t we?
453Besides, I never have a chance to take one from the office on Sunday, do I?
453Buck?"
453Buck?"
453Buck?"
453But do you really think any woman alive would be caught wearing a garment like this in these days?"
453But it''s sparking away there all the time, and it might as well be put to some use, might n''t it?"
453But we know better, do n''t we?
453But what''s that line about slaves hugging their chains?"
453But what''s the difference, if the chance is there?"
453But what?
453But why?
453Can you see a subway train full of hoop- skirted clerks, stenographers, and models?
453Cave- man stuff?"
453D''you know what I mean?"
453D''you see what I mean?
453Dear me; who could have hung the baby''s little shirt here?
453Did he make you feel-- different?"
453Dinner over,"Well, Emma?"
453Do n''t I know?
453Do n''t it look all right?"
453Do n''t you know that I''ve been longing to do just those things for years and years?
453Do you get me?
453Do you know what I mean?"
453Do you know what I''m going to do?
453Do you know what he''ll wire back?
453Do you mean to say that I have to cram on this like a kid studying for exams?
453Do you still love me?
453Do you suppose it can be that son of hers-- what''s his name?
453Do you think he may have exploded at the equator?
453Does Annie always cook enough for two?"
453Earned a living?
453Ever meet him?
453First- night curtains are always late in rising, are n''t they?
453For ten years I lived with head in a sample- trunk, did n''t I?
453Get that, dear?
453Going to have lunch with me to- day?"
453Guess whom I saw at the tailor''s?"
453Have I been neglecting business?"
453Have I?"
453Have you told him how you feel?"
453How did you hit it off with Ella Sweeney?
453How have the early buyers taken to it?"
453How long shall you want to speak?"
453How much you take for the rights to that skirt?"
453How''s business?
453How''s business?
453I like the green velours in the sitting- room, do n''t you?
453I''ll take it off your hands and push it right, see?
453If Maude Adams was to open on Broadway in''East Lynne,''they''d flock to see her, would n''t they?
453If it had not, where would I be to- day?
453Is T. A. in?
453Is business as bad as the howlers say it is?
453Is n''t there enough to go round?"
453Is n''t there some little cool fool place where I can be comfortable on a hot day like this-- where we can talk comfortably?
453Is that the way you pronounce it?
453Is this Mr. Meyers''tailor?
453It''s finished?"
453Mack?"
453Mc-- Buck?"
453Next week?
453No?
453Now run along into your own office-- won''t you, dear?
453Now, can you explain that?"
453Of course we''ve had a nice little order every few months, but what''s that from the biggest mail- order house in the world?
453Remember what you said about the Fifth Avenue girl?"
453Say, if I thought I was going to be like them in time, I----""Hortense, my dear child, you''re-- you''re happy, are n''t you?
453Say, where''s he been keeping himself all these years?
453She acts worried, does n''t she?
453She''s one of those thin, limp ones, is n''t she?
453Sunday?
453Tell me, you''re surely seeing our man, are n''t you?"
453Tell me: Have I grown old?
453That I''ll have to cater to the personality of the person I''m selling to?
453Then to Annie, who appeared in answer to the buzzer,"Will you tell Sophy Kumpf to come here, please?"
453Then, as the red surged up through the girl''s fair skin,"Well?"
453Then, his shrewd little eyes narrowing,"You want to talk business?"
453They think they''re so big and manly and all, and they''re just like kids; ai n''t it so?
453Used your wits and brains every day against the wits and brains of other folks?"
453Was that the new designer''s idea?
453Well, what happened?
453What are you doing away from your own job?
453What do you think I''m designing-- a doily?"
453What is it, anyway?
453What is this?
453What put that nonsense into your head?
453What would happen if I were to forget myself some day and come down to work in black velvet and pearls?"
453What''s your suit?"
453What?
453What?"
453Where the Argentine inertia?
453Where was the South American languor?
453Where?
453Who will picture Lower Fifth Avenue between five and six, when New York''s unsung beauties pour into the streets from a thousand loft- buildings?
453Why could n''t you make the trade get your viewpoint?"
453Why did n''t you wire me?
453Why had n''t she spent six months neglecting Skirts for Spanish?
453Why not?"
453Why take a cab to go home from the office on a-- a week day?"
453Why?
453Why?"
453Why?"
453Will you wait for us in New York?"
453Will you walk, please?"
453Would you like to have me tell you why?"
453You do n''t object to me on the same grounds that you did to Myrtle, do you?"
453You will not consent to Miss Orton- Wells''speaking to the girls in your shop this noon?"
453You''re on the New York train?
59448, which is to be the guiding principle in Emile''s case, changes its character where Sophie is concerned, and becomes:Quel effet cela fera- t- il?"
59448How d''ye do?
59448If the female tongue will be in motion, he says, after complaining of their_ copia verborum_,"why should it not be set to go right?"
59448Sérieusement, y a- t- il rien de plus bizarre que de voir comment on agit pour l''ordinaire en l''éducation des femmes? 59448 And who can be fitter for such a task than the girl''s own mother? 59448 But how is woman to be pleased? 59448 But supposing he should be right, to what cause would such a deplorable state of things be attributable? 59448 Even when married to a sensible husband, who thinks for her, what will be the fate of a woman who is left a widow with a large family? 59448 In deciding upon a course of action, the inevitable question was:What is the use?"
59448It is there that we must look for an answer to the question:"Did Rousseau look upon women as partakers of the faculty of Reason?"
59448Pray have you a fine Vauxhall and Ranelagh?
59448She asks him what he would have had her do?
59448Since they have the same improveable minds as the male part of the species, why should they not be cultivated by the same method?
59448The former he is rather inclined to excuse, for"where the lesson taught is but to please, can Pleasure be a fault?"
59448The lines: Shall Britain,_ where the soul of freedom reigns_, Forge chains for others she herself disdains?
59448The question may be put whether upon the whole this remarkable event was favourable to the cause of feminism?
59448The utilitarian question:"A quoi cela est- il bon?
59448Was liberty to be the portion of men only; and was woman to continue in her state of bondage?
59448Were all men to be partakers of Reason, guided by her only, whilst women had the use of that faculty denied them?
59448What, in comparison with the great end in view, were the inevitable horrors of the Revolution, produced by desperate and enraged factions?
59448Why did not Rousseau extend his excellent advice regarding outdoor sports and games to girls?
59448Why should reason be left to itself in one of the sexes, and be disciplined with so much care in the other?"
59448With him the ever recurring question is:"What will it profit the soul?
59448prevails in the morning, and"What''s trumps?"
47150A couch that''s made''midst buttercups, he''s shy on; The verdant sward how could a_ dandy lie on_?
47150Ay p''tee tas o der veeay?
47150O Sh''valiay,dit sar Bellay,"Cumbeang ler caffy newaur lar?"
47150Well, sir,says Smith to Bayes,"but pray, why all this whispering?"
47150Why so much cry about a little wool?
47150_ Dizzy? 47150 _ Tub_ be or not_ tub_ be?"
47150(_ Aside_) Look here, young Arthur(_ gives warrant_): can you understand This paper, written in a large text hand?
47150(_ Chaffingly_) Who is your favourite poet?--Hobbs?
47150(_ Hamlet about to protest_) Do n''t tell us-- let us guess-- the whips of time?
47150(_ Jessica and Lorenzo come forward._)_ Jess._ You pardon us, pa?
47150(_ Resumes_) For who would bear the whips and scorns of time----_ Ros._(_ as guessing a riddle_)_ Who''d_ bear the whips and scorns?
47150(_ Significantly_) When_ goes_ he hence?
47150(_ Sits and writes_)"Louis, old cock, how wags the world with you?"
47150(_ Writes_)"Dear brother, how''s your eye?
47150(_ aloud_) What''s your name, sir?
47150(_ in choked accents_) Doth not the voice of nature seem quite clear-- eh?
47150(_ she starts_) Start not-- ha, ha!--do I alarm you?
47150*****_ Rep._ I''m a military man, for I often have a shot At public foes with----_ Leofric and Godwin._ What?
47150A man of the world-- have you yet to be taught, sir, When your wife flirts behind you, to look straight before?
47150A riddle strikes me:"Why''s she thus behaving, Just like a bird of night?"
47150And is that_ all_ the sentence?
47150And was not the Adelphi fortunate, about the same time, in the possession of Miss Woolgar, Miss Mary Keeley, Keeley himself, and Paul Bedford?
47150And you''ll take out my tooth?
47150At the_ bal masqué_, Louis, meeting Emilie de Lesparre, says:-- Why are you here?
47150Avec lespree der Jernessay"Commongvoo portayvoo?"
47150But stay!--has anybody got a lever, To give a lift to this gigantic beaver?
47150By a devil and steam, of paper and----_ Leo._ Sulphur and brimstone?
47150Can no one tell me how or whence it came?
47150Canst thou then be two gentlemen at will?
47150Descend, ye hailstones, bumpers, thumpers, fizzers; It cuts you like a_ knife_, does n''t it, Nar-_scissors_?
47150Did great Bombastes strike no nonsense flatter?
47150Did not my thrice- renownèd Thomas Thumb, That mighty mite, make mouthing Fustian dumb?
47150Diplomacy?
47150Do you not know me, sir?
47150Elsewhere, O''Mustapha, who was a shoemaker, had to say:-- Business is dreadful bad-- what''s to be done?
47150Hast e''er a bone to give an old man squalid?
47150Have I a settlement, or_ vice versy?__ Pygmal._ Come to my arms!
47150Have you heard of any that hath wandered unfurnished of his squire and dwarf?
47150Have you seen his face, His air, his shape, his mien, his ev''ry grace?
47150He calls down thunder from the skies; and then follows this tirade:--_ Narcissus._ What means this sudden dreadful change, I wonder?
47150He strikes up a song, but soon stops it:-- What?
47150Hence thy strange misgiving-- For what''s a parson, boy, without his living?
47150Here, again, is the perversion of the famous scene between Hubert and the boy:--_ Arth._ Hubert, good Hubert, how are you to- day?
47150How many burlesque casts of our own time could lay claim to so much talent and beauty?
47150How march the Royal revels?
47150I wonder what''s become of our small party, Who, yesterday, were sailing well and hearty?
47150I, Arthur''s destined spouse?
47150If a horse does n''t win, why, who is to blame?
47150In despair the deserted one set to work and took in washing:-- You''ll ask,"why washing?"
47150In one place Alcestis, apropos of the marriage which is being forced upon her, cries bitterly:-- Why was I ever_ saddled_ with this_ bridal_?
47150In such a case, what course can I pursue?
47150Is Tilburina''s madness void of matter?
47150Is it not played with tolerable frequency at"benefits,"for the sake of the"exceptional casts"it can supply?
47150Is not that good?
47150Is there no ticket with the hatter''s name?
47150Is this a bailiff that I see before me, A capias in his hand?
47150Is this the way an''Arrow boy''s brought up?
47150Le Sh''valiay ay sar Bellay, Ker deetial Sir Grong Mossoo lar?
47150Let others delight in their_ eau de vie_-- What matter, what matter?
47150Logic?
47150Meanwhile, how were the librettists to be affected?
47150Most things go round, in fact; and who shall mock?
47150Must you with pinchers then take out my tooth?
47150My scheme is good-- but what if it wo n''t work?
47150Nature gave me but one tuft of hair, Yet wherefore, kind dame, should I flout her?
47150Need I quote it?
47150Need I say that I mean Gilbert Abbott a''Beckett( with whom Mark Lemon so frequently collaborated), Francis Talfourd, and the Brothers Brough?
47150Need I tell ye The works I read were those of_ Crabbe_ and_ Shelley_?
47150No_ dinner_?
47150Noirtier?
47150Of course I ca n''t_ disparage_ what you''ve done; But say, can I_ dis parish_ claim upon?
47150Of so familiar a piece, what is there to be said?
47150Oh, have I come all this way to be taught, sir, That folks who would thrive must keep looking before?
47150Once more:--_ Will._ What can you do?
47150Or art thou but a grim dissolving view-- A phantom officer-- in short, a_ do_?
47150Or must I trust of casual wards the mercy?
47150Or what is it thus makes My head to stoop and butt the ground incline, Unless the butt of beer or stoop of wine?
47150Parley voo frarngsay?
47150Pray who is the Mr. Somnus he''s so angry withal?
47150Psyche"comes down"and says:-- Now, stupid-- Why do n''t you speak the tag and finish, Cupid?
47150Puff?
47150Raly?_"Æneas comes on first as a begging sailor, with"I''m starving"inscribed on a paper suspended from his neck.
47150Remember, where the judgment''s weak the prejudice is strong, A stranger why will you despise?
47150Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo?
47150Salymenia says to the King''s favourite:-- Your conduct, madam,''s not at all correct: If you''re a Myrrha, why do n''t you reflect?
47150Say, what''s the earliest thing Boys learn at school?
47150Says one Gubbins:-- This Dragon very modish, sure, and nice is: What shall we do in this disastrous crisis?
47150Says the latter to the former:-- Why do you love the clock, good sister?
47150Send me to Westminster as your M.P., And you shall see----_ Crowd._ What?
47150Shall I to Honour or to Love give way?
47150Some lunatic, of course?
47150Some one says to a Welsh corporal:-- On Monday and on Tuesday you were queer: Why drink on Wednesday?
47150Something from my last new extravaganza-- Come now(_ to Clopin_), a trifling stanza shall I stand, sir?
47150Stop; who comes here?
47150The Duchess aforesaid asks him:-- How are you, Richmond?
47150The Monster''s first utterances were as follows:--_ Monster._ Where am I?
47150The name is not so bad-- what''s in a name?
47150Therefore---- But stay(_ glancing suspiciously around_)--are we alone?
47150Though it would cost my life, what is''t you need?
47150Thus, Kalyba''s handmaid says to her:-- Your hair, my lady,''s getting rather dry, Some of the Russian balsam shall I try?
47150To cope with all these horrors can I hope?
47150To which I''d add-- and what''s your little game, sir?
47150Was ever man in such a situation?
47150Was not that a truly strong company?
47150We shoot our bolts, our game, our foes-- what not?
47150Well,_ you_ look anything but Gay, But tell me-- whither have you wandering been?
47150What brings you here?
47150What can these presumably capable actors have thought of their_ rôles_?
47150What if I fail in spite of all my pains?
47150What is so simple as primitive Monkeydom, Born in the sea with a cold in its head?
47150What mean you?
47150What right have you with such advice to bore us?
47150What shall I give thee?
47150What shall it be?
47150What''s life without it?
47150What''s this material of which I''m made?
47150What''s to be done with me?
47150What, meanwhile, had been the_ personnel_ at the other houses of burlesque?
47150When, again, Actæon asks Endymion whether he ever shoots, he replies,"No, I do n''t care about it":--_ Actæ._ Not care for shooting, man?
47150Where did I get the spoons from?
47150Where left you Chrononhotonthologos?
47150Where''s the ink?
47150Where''s the necessity of that, Mr. Bayes?
47150Whether he''s bravest who will cut his throat Rather than suffer all--_ Guild._( L._ of chair_) Or suffer all Rather than cut his throat?
47150Whether it is nobler in a man to bear The stings and taunts of an outrageous fair, Or to take arms against a married life, And, by opposing, shun it?
47150While immured in Cheldric''s castle, she soliloquises:-- Shall I endure this state of things unjust?
47150While lesser demons, labelled-- Sugar, Tea, Malt, Hops, and kindred duties-- hover round And gibber,"Where''s your popularity?"
47150Who shall say when the spirit of burlesque first made its appearance on our stage?
47150Who''d bear them, eh?
47150Who''ll first at me, then, throw a stone For robbing around, around, around?
47150Who''s that?
47150Why roll your troubled eye about its socket?
47150Why should I live?
47150Why thus, by Styx, Are you, your staff and luggage, in a fix?
47150Wigan._ Have you so good a purpose, then, in hand?
47150Will some one kindly let down my back hair?
47150Wilt come?
47150Wo n''t you accept such plain doctrines instead?
47150You are his keeper-- are you up to snuff?
47150You ask me why she do n''t live with her mother, And I reply by asking you another-- Where is my husband?
47150You ugly, naughty man, Why do you thus torment the wretched Anne?
47150You''ll say, with history we freedom use; Well, do n''t historians write to suit their views?
47150You''re prettier far than she-- I''m not in joke, Miss; what did you say?
47150You_ pledge_ your princely word?
47150_ Actæ._ Why not?
47150_ Agl._ That''s very true-- and there what did you see?
47150_ Agl._ What wear they on their heads?
47150_ Apol._ But where is Shakspeare?
47150_ Apol._ By whom?
47150_ Apol._ Melpomene, Thalia,--still remain Your temples, I suppose, near Drury Lane?
47150_ Ari._ And where do you meet?
47150_ Ari._ Who taught you?
47150_ Ari._ You can sing, then?
47150_ Arietta._ What, musical?
47150_ Arth._ And will you?
47150_ Arth._ Why be so boisterous?
47150_ Beaumanners._ Suppose to this the other makes objection?
47150_ Beaumanners._ Where did you get the spoons from?
47150_ Burlesque._ Else wherefore breathe I in dramatic land?
47150_ Chat._ Well, never mind about singing and dancing; suppose we fix upon some game to pass away the time, at which we can all play?
47150_ Chatt._ What club?
47150_ Claud._ And of what fashion is the Prince''s play?
47150_ Dandi._ Then you''ll obey me till you''ve found La Donna?
47150_ Eup._ Or what''s that''s stuff-- For which, I saw the other day a puff?
47150_ Eup._ That mixture for the hair, what is it call''d?
47150_ Fernan._ Oh, why in battle did no friendly blow Finish her luckless parent long ago?
47150_ Fusbos._ And would a king his general supplant?
47150_ Godwin._ Baths and Washhouses?
47150_ Godwin._ Gunpowder?
47150_ Godwin._ Iron?
47150_ Ham._(_ annoyed at interruption, resumes_) To die-- to sleep----_ Ros._ It''s nothing more-- Death is but sleep spun out-- Why hesitate?
47150_ Hub._ Great king, you know I always lov''d you well, Then why not in a word your wishes tell?
47150_ Jul._ That you, My Romeo, should be a Montague, And I a Capulet-- and yet what''s in a name?
47150_ King._ Is he indeed with me?
47150_ King._ Why hang the clouds still on you?
47150_ Lady A._ Whom?
47150_ Leo._ Gun- cotton?
47150_ Leo._ Gutta Percha?
47150_ Lys._ Then does n''t it seem a sin and a shame To stop such a pleasant and easy game?
47150_ Macb._ The_ rest_?
47150_ Macb._ What mean you?
47150_ Macb._ You would n''t have me spifflicate the buffer?
47150_ Oli._ In our sweet bower of bliss what could we fear?
47150_ Pan._ What''s wine?
47150_ Pietro._ Are you not, my lad?
47150_ Proserp._ By- the- bye, Where is this place?
47150_ Psyche._ How so?
47150_ Puss._ I beg pardon, did I say_ upon_?
47150_ Queen._ If it be, Why seems there such a mighty fuss with thee?
47150_ Rep._ If I fire at you''twill be no joke, For you''ll hear the report, but see no smoke; And my charge is prepared with what do you think?
47150_ Robert._ But if their wicked deeds could so unnerve one, Why give them statues?
47150_ Rom._ What is a bother, sweet?
47150_ Rom._ What shall I swear by, then, to gain a seat In your affections?
47150_ Shy._ At large?
47150_ Skip._ And dance, too?
47150_ Skip._ What is your favourite dance?
47150_ Statue._ Well, having made me, what d''ye mean to do with me?
47150_ Thal._ Bless me, do n''t you know?
47150_ Thames._ Until I caught a fish----_ Win._ What sort?
47150_ Usher._ Alone, do you say?
47150_ Usher._ Who, he in grey?
47150_ Val._ Oh, did you Riviera such a thing?
47150_ Voulez- vous du boeuf?
47150_ Wat._ Am I a fool?
47150_ Wat._ Was I ever base corruption''s_ Toole_?
47150_ Æsop._ Am I?
47150also what-- or which-- or who?
47150come, will you o- ver- awe me?
47150come, will you o- ver- awe, eh?
47150do n''t you think me handsome?"
47150my faithful guards, where be''em?
47150no one here?
47150or_ Richmond''ill_?
47150shall Bombardinian take a blow?
47150strike me, dare you?
47150we''ll ne''er go to rest o''shore, eh?
47150well?
47150what have I done?
47150what light is that upon the wall Rising like yeast?
47150what?
47150what?
47150what?
47150what?
47150what?
47150what?
47150what?
47866''''Angry?
47866''''I have become very much attached to the little thing,''said I;''wo n''t you let me buy it of you?''
47866''''Is that man going the voyage with us?''
47866''''JUAN?''
47866''''May I make you a repetition of my offer?
47866''''May I see who that is?''
47866''''Shall I have you hanged at the yard- arm in half- an- hour?''
47866''''Vexed with you?
47866''''What says the gentleman?''
47866''''What was it, dear child?''
47866''''Who asked for work?''
47866''''Why do n''t you keep it alive?''
47866''''You are not vexed with me, Sir?''
47866''''_ Ay Caramba!_ but you will see me home in a carriage, when I arrive at Madrid, wo n''t you?''
47866''''_ Wished you to do?_''To mope, and wail, and lie on the carpet like a dead chicken?
47866''''_ Wished you to do?_''To mope, and wail, and lie on the carpet like a dead chicken?
47866''And she die, von, two, tree time?''
47866''And the money?''
47866''And the poem, Nella?''
47866''And you have charge of Kidd''s money?''
47866''Are you going to increase your disobedience by dishonesty?
47866''At what?''
47866''Attach?
47866''But can you tell me where it is?''
47866''Can any miser use his money?''
47866''Charles, what is it?''
47866''Did I ever talk brown to you, Sir, or blue, or any other of the devil''s colors?
47866''Did you hear the piece you took away from me?''
47866''Do they, little enthusiast?
47866''Do you know that man?''
47866''Do you want me?''
47866''Feel better, Sam?''
47866''Have you heard the news?''
47866''How do you bear yourself, my friend and reader, on the subject of_ winter_ generally?
47866''How many with our indorsement must be still out?''
47866''I?
47866''Is that_ so?_''asked three or four gentlemen, seated on a sofa, waiting their''turn.''
47866''Is this so?''
47866''Mother never knew of my coming till to- night; and where''s the harm?''
47866''Mother, did n''t you like to hear me play?''
47866''Must n''t say the_ truth_?''
47866''No; what news?''
47866''Nor Teunis Van Gelder?''
47866''On the keys?
47866''Papa, papa, where are you going?
47866''Perhaps you would have no objection to tell us exactly what you mean?''
47866''Pray, who is that remarkable woman?''
47866''Sa- a- y?''
47866''Several times?''
47866''Then you know what I was thinking of?''
47866''They were instantly killed, of course?''
47866''Was n''t that what you wished me to do?''
47866''Was the American Revolution a lie, because it had Arnolds, and Tories, and all sorts of scallawags?''
47866''Well, Uncle LEM.,''was the reply,''what would_ you_ do if you certainly expected the Last Day would come at twelve o''clock to- day?''
47866''Well, what do they say to you, the sirens?
47866''Well, what is it?''
47866''Well,''said Nick,''I did not think that they could increase the temperature there; but if they did kick you out, would you mind it?''
47866''What d''yeöu tax?''
47866''What does this mean?''
47866''What is this bird?''
47866''What matter what the path shall be?
47866''What was_ that_?''
47866''What''s, going on?''
47866''When did you first come?''
47866''Where''s the money?''
47866''Who is to tell them that you revealed it?''
47866''Who keeps your instrument in order?''
47866''Who taught you to play?''
47866''Who were they?''
47866''Why, how was_ that_?''
47866''Why, indeed?''
47866''Will you come and sing with me?''
47866''Will you come to my house after school?''
47866''Would you be so kind,''asks the latter, with much sweetness, but no fear,''as to let me put my fingers on the music?''
47866''You have been here before, then?''
47866''You know what my price is?''
47866''You''re not Kidd?''
47866''You''re resolved?''
47866''You?
47866''_ Once?_ I knew a woman who died_ thrice_ for_ hers_.''
47866*** CAN any of our readers or correspondents inform us who is the author of the ensuing stanzas?
47866***''_ A Conundrum by Induction_,''must have cost a good deal of hard work to make: WHY is a bee- hive like a bad potato?
47866-- Wall- street?
47866Albany, or Hudson, or Poughkeepsie, for instance?
47866Am not I an able editor, politician, social reformer, writer, thinker?
47866And all from what?
47866And then, my boy----But have n''t I told you?
47866And who wound it up?
47866And, if they say so much without sound, what do they say when their lips move?''
47866Are we settled of accounts, good gentleman?''
47866But as for ourselves, have we not been''through the mill?''
47866But concealing my feelings, I asked as unconcernedly as possible:''Well, who was JUAN?''
47866But if the firm of Charles E. Parkinson and Company did not speculate, what had it to fear?
47866But where will you find richer, pawkier humor?''
47866But you are not angry with me, for what I have said already?''
47866By all the powers in earth and heaven adored?
47866Ca n''t you do_ that_ much?
47866Can it be that taste poetic From the world has fled forever?
47866Can such lofty, moving numbers, Tire the reader in a second, Tire him in a fleeting second?
47866Can you call me that?
47866Can you?''
47866Cur''ous, was n''t it?''
47866Did I talk of dust and ashes?
47866Did n''t I blow the horn?
47866Did n''t I dance, shout, laugh, and cry altogether?
47866Did n''t you have any body to speak to: any body to_ love_?''
47866Did not the operation''fix''us?
47866Did we not lie down in a box like a coffin, and were we not then and there covered, from our''burst''upward, with a Plaster- of- Paris hasty- pudding?
47866Do n''t you think a man must be a blarsted old fool to believe in any such narsty stuff as this beastly_ my_-thology of yourn?
47866Do you know what a strange thing happened, just as you seemed speaking?
47866Do you know what it is to have a wife, who clings to you, quite safe in her protector, and young children, who look to''papa''as to OMNIPOTENCE?...
47866Does it make you happy to be wicked?''
47866Had she been unfortunate in any way?
47866Have n''t I heard one of the greatest men who ever lived say, that the only times when he had ever been a good man were when he was in love?''
47866Have n''t I seen that a few words of real interest and kindness from such a woman to a youth have changed the whole course of his thoughts for months?
47866Have n''t we''suffered''for the''science''of Phrenology?
47866Have you been at my trunk?
47866Have you had a teacher?''
47866Have you unlocked that, and got it?''
47866Heart of the forest, and soul of the rock, Star eyes in heaven that gleam, Voice of the wind that thrilled his heart, And are ye all a dream?
47866Heartless the trees, soulless the rocks, Nothing but wood and stones?
47866How did I come to this?
47866How shouldst thou be?
47866I do n''t believe_ that_; but who is going to shut his mouth up when he has a live baby?
47866I was second- story front, she second- story back, during all that time; and do you know that I became very well acquainted with her?''
47866If Love renewed have ever safe return To its far bourne, what matters it which way Our scarce- fledged hopes and blighted joys have fled?
47866Is Beppo mine, on these conditions?
47866Is it bosh and utter nonsense, Nonsense all, not worth the paper, Or the ink with which''tis printed?
47866It will be a''nut''for book- keepers:''YOU know ELIJE SCROGGINS, up here in White County?
47866Its publication would prove a jubilition to its author:''''SAID I,''HARRY, where did you get that slipper?''
47866Knowest thou not that there was a stuff in thee, and a spirit that has made thee an exception to the general rule?
47866Never to sing a note or eat a morsel?
47866No sympathy here for sorrowful hearts, No voices with gentle tones?
47866Now what was to be done with her?
47866OLDHAM, of Greystones''(''are you there, old TRUEPENNY?'')
47866Of what, of what can I be made?
47866Or how would you like a flamingo?''
47866Or why is it that we can not discern This last great truth, that our best treasures lie Beyond the silent barriers of the dead?
47866Should you ask us, gentle reader, Is it twaddle, sorry twaddle?
47866So you like this tinkling cymbal?''
47866Sounds well, do n''t it, to be prayin''to_ him_?
47866Tell us whence ye come, and why When ye reach us then ye die?
47866There''s a statue of VENUS now: Mighty putty-- an''t it?
47866Verrian?''
47866Wanzer,''said the other,''do you mean to break our bargain?''
47866Wanzer?''
47866Was it the accursed stone which struck the features Chiselled by PHIDIAS or SCOPAS?
47866Was it the shock of the earthquake?
47866Was there a snake in the grass-- a secret foe-- a disappointed creditor, perhaps, of 1837?
47866We have puzzled over the following and''give it up:''''What way of circumventing a man can be so easy and suitable as a period?
47866Well, you can get your courage up to stuff the bird, I suppose?
47866Were we not''manipulated?''
47866What are''your views?''
47866What could it mean?
47866What did I think of one of the river towns?
47866What do they tell you?''
47866What should I do?
47866When should he find his third Fate?
47866Where are you, my dear friend?
47866Where is our sable friend and correspondent of the Louisville Hotel?
47866Who spoke?
47866Whose hearts may they not thrill, when strung on the sonorous bridge of a cremona, guided to softest utterances by the master hand?
47866Why do n''t the wretch act so to me?''
47866Why is it, that though the mind may wander, the_ heart_ can never forget?
47866Why not?
47866Why should not these things be desirable and acceptable, and very enjoyable?...
47866Will ye never, never tell Of the regions whence ye fell?
47866With_ you_?
47866Would I take the painful office of breaking the intelligence to her?
47866Yes or no?''
47866Yes?
47866You came in, now, to tell me that I would not live till to- morrow, did you not, Orloff?''
47866You have fall in love viz zat e- scary- crow?
47866You have marri- ed her?''
47866You see zat viz your own eyes?''
47866and vat you do vith zat cursed Italian?''
47866and wilder blasts that wail Amid the ebon darkness, have ye known Man''s dark iniquity that thus ye moan In hollow accents through the lonely vale?
47866reader, do_ you_ know by experience any thing of the sensations produced by such an apparition?
47866replied the dear widow,''JUAN?
47866why had I not paid off that mortgage?
47866why?
47866working still?''
39768''Could he minister to a mind diseased?'' 39768 A German?"
39768A few hours ago,he said to himself,"I thought myself unhappy; but what is my suffering compared to his?
39768After all,he said in a livelier tone,"what right have I to bore you with this story of mine?"
39768All in the cause of science?
39768Alone?
39768An artful, managing fellow, not bold enough to make a direct attack?
39768And Richards knows him, too?
39768And am I chaos? 39768 And did not Mr. Stubb dare the fatal leap?"
39768And do you like it?
39768And have they not a great deal of truth?
39768And how if its time never come?
39768And now what would you recommend? 39768 And the Everills?"
39768And the arm chair?
39768And the candles?
39768And the domestic women?
39768And what good did that do you?
39768And what should be the results of the discipline of a dungeon on such a person?
39768And what would you advise me to do?
39768And why did n''t you say,''Good morning,''yesterday, eh?--when I met you in Boston, eh? 39768 And why not?"
39768And will you tell me what they are?
39768And would you have me confess them to you?
39768And you gave him money?
39768And you like Montrose?
39768And you mean to see them all?
39768And you of the other sort; art and history wedded to nature; at Tivoli, for example,--at the Lake of Albano; where else shall I say?
39768Are not women the source of nine tenths of our sufferings?
39768Are you at leisure? 39768 Are you going to Boston this afternoon?"
39768Are you in great pain?
39768Are you not tired to death of New Baden?
39768Are you quite in earnest?
39768Are you still bent on going off to- day?
39768Are you the villain to shoot innocent men in cold blood?
39768Are you thinking of another already? 39768 Business?"
39768But have you no idea where this will lead us?
39768But how did you manage to get out?
39768But how were those ideas acted on? 39768 But is not that very difficult and dangerous?"
39768But is there not some risk in being in communication with such a man?
39768But what about the clerk?
39768But what evidence is there that the German had any thing to do with the affair?
39768But what facilities will you find there for travelling?
39768But what news is there?
39768But where are you staying?
39768But why, in Heaven''s name,demanded Morton,"do you not break away from this miserable fascination?"
39768But, Chester,interposed Wren,"do n''t you ever mean to marry and settle down?"
39768But, Chester,urged Wren,"wo n''t the pure mountain dew be a sufficient inducement?"
39768But, Dick,said Morton, who had been laughing in his sleeve during the scene,"do you want to be considered as a Frenchman or an American?"
39768By what right am I doomed to this protracted misery? 39768 Can I rely on your promise to leave the country, and make no further drafts on Vinal?"
39768Can the sight of me still have so much power to move her?
39768Can you repeat it?
39768Charley,he exclaimed,"how do you do?"
39768Could I have welcomed you home with a sad face? 39768 Crawford,"said Meredith, when it was over,"have you had that sofa taken into my room?"
39768Did I?
39768Did Sharpe say that of me? 39768 Did Shingles tell you of my being here?"
39768Did he give his name?
39768Did n''t you just say,asked Rosny,"that Morton could n''t rest, if he tried?"
39768Did you ever observe this fellow that I''m riding? 39768 Did you not?"
39768Did you observe that man who passed us?
39768Did you observe,pursued Leslie,"what he says of figures of an urn and ball cut on the gravestone?"
39768Do you call it liberty to be day and night under the eye of the police-- to be dogged and watched every hour of their lives? 39768 Do you call yourself a democrat, and yet always wear that ring of yours?"
39768Do you find it so very bad?
39768Do you hear that, now? 39768 Do you know Horace Vinal?"
39768Do you know where he is now?
39768Do you mean that I speak the language of Babel?
39768Do you mean that she is here?
39768Do you mean that you thought that I laughed at you?
39768Do you mean----?
39768Do you remember Buckland?
39768Do you remember the old tavern, where we used to lunch, and the pretty girl that waited on the table?
39768Do you remember, Edith, when we last stood here?
39768Do you see that undergraduate at the end of the hall, standing by the last alcove, reading?
39768Do you see this?
39768Does it make you angry?
39768Does she affect naturalness, independence, and all that?
39768Eh? 39768 Even the tender and amiable,--is there risk even there?"
39768Ever crossed the pond before?
39768For how long a time is he sentenced?
39768Going already? 39768 Hallo, Max, where are you going?"
39768Hallo, colonel, where are you going at such a rate?
39768Has he any special spite in that quarter?
39768Has he left the city?
39768Has it a back?
39768Have n''t you eyes to see your friends?
39768Have the Primroses come home from Europe yet?
39768Have you any weapon besides your bayonet?
39768Have you no more of Vinal''s papers?
39768Have you seen him more than once in Boston?
39768Have you the letter for me?
39768He is Mr. Morton''s only child-- is he not?
39768How are you again, Dick?
39768How are you, Wren?
39768How came this fellow here?
39768How could I ever forget?
39768How could you gain such power over him?
39768How do you do, young gentleman? 39768 How do you like your friend in the diamonds?"
39768How far is it to New Baden?
39768How far?
39768How have I betrayed myself?
39768How long were you in Paris after I saw you?
39768How was that?
39768How will that be, Dick?
39768I beg your pardon; is it possible that you are the son of John Morton?
39768Is Miss Leslie at home?
39768Is Mr. Vinal here?
39768Is Professor Speyer at home?
39768Is any one with him?
39768Is he in New York now?
39768Is he living in New York?
39768Is he not thought a very promising young man?
39768Is it possible? 39768 Is the consul come?"
39768Is there a public house any where near?
39768Letters there for me?
39768Macknight on the Epistles,--that''s the name of the book?
39768Married!--to whom?
39768Married, or single?
39768May I ask,said Morton to his cousin,"who are your literary favorites?"
39768Miss Fanny Euston, will you pardon me for breaking in upon your reveries?
39768Miss Leslie, were you ever in a storm at sea?
39768Morton, what was the little old fogy in the white cravat saying to you just now in the library?
39768Mr. Meredith,murmured the horrified Mrs. Primrose,"pray who are those persons?"
39768Mr. Vinal and I are going on an excursion about town to- night,said Richards;"wo n''t you go with us?"
39768My dear Morton, are you demented? 39768 No?
39768Now, what the deuse is this young fellow stopping me for?
39768Now,demanded the deputy,"will you confess what you know, or will you die?"
39768Or a rocket without a stick?
39768Pray what domain may that be?
39768Pray when did Stubb see the Alps?
39768Pray, what is that?
39768Pray, who was this person? 39768 Shall I die, or not?"
39768Shall I take up your name, sir?
39768Shall we carry you to the---- Hotel?
39768Should I be sorry for it, or glad?
39768Stop there with me, will you? 39768 The Virginian?
39768The brilliant woman, then?
39768The girl that you raved about all the way home? 39768 Then why are they at liberty?"
39768Then why are you here in jail?
39768Then why is matrimony so dangerous?
39768Then why not change it?
39768Then why were we born in a commercial country?
39768Then,said Leslie,"you would not receive this as a proof of Mr. Morton''s death?"
39768To go whither?
39768Vinal-- what of him?
39768Was n''t he an Amerikin?
39768We are cousins-- are we not?
39768Well, monsieur, do you hear any thing from your friend?
39768Well, what about it?
39768Well, what is it?
39768Well, what was that?
39768Were the letters he gave your friend sealed?
39768Were you ever in England?
39768What about him? 39768 What are the rude heart and brain of a man to such exalted susceptibilities?
39768What are you doing there?
39768What can it mean?
39768What devil impelled me to speak as I did? 39768 What did you think of me this afternoon?"
39768What do you call this manhood, which you seem to hold in such high account?
39768What do you mean to do with yourself to- night?
39768What do you mean to do?
39768What do you mean?
39768What do you think of our boys?
39768What does this lane lead to?
39768What good did that do me? 39768 What is his name?"
39768What is it?
39768What is that man doing? 39768 What kind of man do you mean?"
39768What kind of plot?
39768What letters?
39768What of them?
39768What other extreme?
39768What place, or what career, could they find in a commercial country?
39768What rank do you hold in the service, Dick?
39768What reason have you to think so?
39768What sense is there in that? 39768 What shall our first move be?"
39768What shall we do?
39768What''s her name?
39768What''s that?
39768What''s that?
39768What''s the matter?
39768What''s the matter?
39768What''s the row?
39768What''s the word with you?
39768What, after you saw him with Vinal?
39768What, do you see its traces? 39768 What, for debt?"
39768What, have you an archery club at college?
39768What, have you lent money to Speyer, too?
39768What, in spite of that catalogue of feminine virtues which you delivered just now?
39768What, no profession, Mr. Morton? 39768 What, nothing ethnological?"
39768What, nothing since I went away?
39768What, one of the old Vassall race?
39768What? 39768 What?"
39768When did he come?
39768When was it?
39768When will they leave town?
39768When will you pay my fine?
39768When?
39768Where are all the rest?
39768Where are you going?
39768Where is he now?
39768Where is he to be found?
39768Where will you go?
39768Who can understand chaos?
39768Who can understand the language of Babel?
39768Who gave you leave?
39768Who gave you those flowers, Edith?
39768Who takes charge of her now?
39768Who the deuse is Richards''s friend, the professor?
39768Who was the person?
39768Who would not like them?
39768Who''s that?
39768Who, I? 39768 Who,"interrupted Morton,"taught you, a woman, to penetrate the nature of a man, and describe sufferings that you never felt?"
39768Why are you saying this?
39768Why at Giardini? 39768 Why do I delude myself?
39768Why do you come in without knocking? 39768 Why do you look at me so searchingly?"
39768Why do you say that?
39768Why do you say that?
39768Why do you smile? 39768 Why do you think me so?"
39768Why do you want to fight with John Bull?
39768Why should they be more ignorant of it than women?
39768Why should you ask me? 39768 Why should you imagine so?"
39768Why, Morton, what problem of ethnology are you at now? 39768 Why, do you know him?"
39768Why, should n''t I make a good president?
39768Why, what do you know about politics? 39768 Why, what need had John Morton of being managed?"
39768Why, what''s the matter with the ring?
39768Why?
39768Will not her being here induce you to stay?
39768Will you give me the money?
39768Will you swear?
39768Yes, thank God; for when I thought that you had forgotten me----"Then you_ did_ think so?
39768Yes; what about him? 39768 Yes?
39768You are American, then?
39768You are from Harvard-- are you not?
39768You do n''t want to go, then? 39768 You remember me, eh?"
39768You wish to see the people-- the different races-- is that it?
39768Your father has a crest painted on his carriage; but where did he get it? 39768 Your letters gave you no opportunity?"
39768Your letters were got for you by a friend of yours?
39768''By the way,''said he to me,''do you happen to remember a man named Spires, or Speyers, or some such thing?
39768--so his thoughts ran,--"why not obey what fate and nature dictate?
39768A charming evening-- isn''t it?"
39768A wild Arab racer without a rider?"
39768After all, when a fresh breeze comes, why should I not breathe it?
39768Ah, yes, you were at school in France, when you were a boy-- were you not?"
39768Am I turning philanthropist and busybody?
39768And do you think I''m going to renounce my birthright?
39768And how if it has no stick?"
39768And thou, my white and spotless offspring, what shall be thy fate?
39768And which of the two will have been the worse either for me to hear or for her to undergo?
39768And who could blame me?
39768And why should I not wish to gain her heart?
39768Are you called forth, from out a world of men, To slay the innocent?
39768Are you free at four o''clock?"
39768Are you here again?
39768Are you ill?"
39768Are you ill?"
39768Are you ill?"
39768Are you not glad to hear it?"
39768Are you not out of spirits to- night?"
39768Are you on terms with your friend''s mistress?
39768Are you sure that no Pequot blood ever got into your veins?"
39768Are you sure?"
39768Are you the fool to fling away your life in a fit of obstinacy?"
39768Are you turned dumb?"
39768Art thou so blind To fling away the gem whose untold worth, Hid''neath the roughness of its native mine, Tempts not the eye?
39768Ask the gentleman to come up.--No,--here,"--as the servant was retreating along the passage,--"where is he?"
39768Because I, and others, have known sorrow, should I turn my face into a homily, and be your lifelong_ memento mori_?"
39768Behind how many of those sharp and sallow features, furrowed with early wrinkles, lies the soul of a man?
39768But here we are; wo n''t you change your mind, and come in?"
39768But is he?
39768But may I ask, what book was entertaining you so much?"
39768But what becomes of your democracy?"
39768But what have we here?
39768But what impelled me to insult that wretch, who I knew dared not and could not answer me?"
39768But what''s the matter?
39768But when is your next journey to begin-- next week?"
39768But where are the rest?"
39768But where do you want to lead me?
39768But why did you think me so very critical?
39768But why do you look so troubled?"
39768But why do you smile?"
39768But why should I ask him?"
39768But, pshaw!--what am I talking about?
39768By what justice, when a refuge is at hand, am I forbidden to fly to it?
39768Can it be possible that this agent of his villany has become the instrument of his punishment?--that the Furies are already on his track?
39768Can not the fools draw reason out of the analogy of things?
39768Come, Chester, what do you mean to do?"
39768Could I be calm and cold, now that I have found what I thought was lost forever?--when the ashes of my life have kindled into flame again?
39768Did n''t I tell you so?"
39768Did not his servant say that he would come ashore from the frigate at about six?"
39768Did not old John Morton come from the same place?"
39768Did you ever eat a pompano?"
39768Do you find me scorched and withered?"
39768Do you imagine that we are to be deceived by your inventions?
39768Do you know I am beginning to be afraid of you?"
39768Do you remember his verses to the lady of his heart?"
39768Do you see how long and straight he is in the back?
39768Do you see this letter?
39768Do you take me for a bank that you can draw on at will?"
39768Do you think I am made of gold?
39768Do you want to speak to him?"
39768Does she still walk in the garden, and read under the grove of maples?
39768Had we not better turn back?"
39768Has any thing happened?
39768Has he been to you?"
39768Have they come home?"
39768Have you a mind to explore it?"
39768Have you any?"
39768Have you come armed and equipped-- rifle, blanket, hatchet, and so forth?"
39768Have you ever quarrelled with your friend?
39768Have you lost your speech?
39768Have you seen him since last evening?"
39768He has no proofs to show against you, unless he has other letters of yours;--is that the case?"
39768He is your friend-- is he not?"
39768He soon, however, contrived to whisper to Miss Leslie,"I shall go in five minutes-- will you meet me in the hall?"
39768Here, steward, you nigger, where be yer?
39768His lamp is out, his fire quenched; and what avails the stale, lack- lustre remnant of his days?
39768How are all the fellows?
39768How are you, Buckland?
39768How did you get off alive?"
39768How do you do, Edwards?"
39768How is Meredith?"
39768How long then should I lie here dying by inches?
39768How many among mankind have courage to face the naked truth?
39768How many of you can show lives governed by any generous purpose or noble thought?
39768How should I have borne such suffering?
39768How will a few years of suffering, with one deadening memory in their wake, compare with her life- long endurance?
39768I have a carriage below; will you have the goodness to accept a seat in it?"
39768Impatient and exasperated, Morton stepped behind him, touched his shoulder, and whispered in his ear,--"You fool, do you know your danger?
39768Is it a delusion, or the presage of some succor not far distant?
39768Is not that a little sudden?"
39768Is there any name in the English tongue too vile to mark you?"
39768It is n''t that, though-- is it?
39768Jacobs?"
39768Let alone your Latin, Greek, and mathematics; what the deuse is vacation made for?
39768Look here, Stubb,"--again facing the victim,--"what do you take me for?
39768Look here: do you see that crest, cut in the stone?
39768May I beg your services in the following particulars?
39768May I hope that you will reject them for an old friend''s sake, and let me be your partner?"
39768May not I have mine?"
39768Measure the distance from Shakspeare down to that fellow, and then from him again down to a baboon, and which measurement would be the longer?
39768Might he not be expected to offer them his escort?
39768Miss Leslie''s,--I will call her so still-- it is hers, is it not?"
39768Morton, skilled in the language of birds, construed these melancholy cacklings as follows:--"Whither does all this tend?
39768Morton?"
39768Morton?"
39768Morton?"
39768Morton?"
39768Morton?"
39768No one dreams that I had a hand in it; and why should they?
39768None whatever, sir?"
39768Now, to what place do you mean to go?"
39768Now, what the deuse have lace and ribbons to do in a place like this?"
39768Now, will you stand to it, and go with me?"
39768O Death, why now so slow art thou?
39768O, quha is this has done this deed, This ill deed done to me?
39768O, so you go in here, do you?"
39768Or art thou to be the germ of an existence wretched as my own, doomed to a ceaseless round of daily parturition?
39768Primrose?"
39768Quelle diable de fantaisie t''es tu allé mettre dans la cervelle?
39768Shall I go on?
39768Shall I illustrate from the legends of the saints?"
39768Shall I offer what is left of my heart?
39768Shall we take our places in the set?"
39768Something of Scott''s-- was it not?"
39768Tell me-- you are of the out- spoken sort-- are you not of my opinion?
39768The woman of taste and genius; where do you place her?"
39768The young man touched his hat with a careless smile, and half- turning his horse, asked,--"Padrone, has my man passed this way?"
39768To be steeped in hot water, and eaten with a spoon?
39768Vinal?"
39768Was that before you went away, or after?
39768What are you going to do below?"
39768What augury might he not draw from the pale cheek and fainting form of his companion?
39768What can you do when you get there?"
39768What can you gain by that?
39768What career is open to me there, that I could not better follow elsewhere?
39768What did it profit him that a conquered world lay already at his feet?
39768What did you wish to know of her, sir?"
39768What do they know or care for the troubles that are wearing me away by inches?"
39768What do you call this here?
39768What garden will thrive if every plant in it must be dug up every day, and set out in a better place?"
39768What good can be wrung out of a misery like mine?
39768What has become of the young man, or boy, rather, who was with you?"
39768What have you done with what I gave you then?
39768What homage is too much for him to render?
39768What if he should escape the trap?
39768What if those men to whom I have sent him are less an abomination in the eyes of the government than there is reason to think them?
39768What is a man fit for without his pipe?"
39768What is it for?"
39768What is it?
39768What is life without it?
39768What is my fate to Edith Leslie''s?
39768What is my offence?
39768What is there in me that you do not understand?"
39768What kind of man is he?"
39768What man of taste would leave matrimony out of his scheme of life?
39768What may I call you?
39768What next?"
39768What ought I to do?"
39768What reasonable girl would not be driven mad with Mrs. Primrose to watch her, and disapprove of her, and correct her?
39768What sense is there in that?
39768What sort of thing is that that you are smoking?"
39768What treasonable thought did you suppose me to harbor against the better part of humanity?"
39768What was his name?"
39768What were you saying?"
39768What will you find there worth seeing?"
39768What withholds me from grinding you like a scorpion under my boot- heel, or flinging you on the pavement to be stared at like a scotched viper?
39768What wretch, when misery falls upon him, will not cry out,''Take any shape but that?''
39768What!--you do n''t mean to say no, do you?--Is that the way you treat your friends?
39768What''s a piece of sheep''s skin to me?
39768Where did you pick up that cigar?"
39768Where is it?"
39768Where is she now?
39768Where is the evidence that doth accuse me?
39768Who can be a philosopher in such a climate?--or a poet?--or an artist?--any thing but a steam engine?
39768Who can blame him if he turn cynic?
39768Who can touch pitch and be clean?
39768Who could say that I destroyed myself?
39768Who shall measure the distance from the noblest to the meanest of men, or the yet vaster distance from the noblest to the meanest of women?
39768Who wants to be always paddling about on smooth water?
39768Who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being, These thoughts that wander through eternity?
39768Why am I forever penned up within these narrow precincts, amid low domestic cares, and sordid, uncongenial, unsympathizing associates?
39768Why am I not bound to lay bare this whitewashed lie?
39768Why are you in such a hurry?"
39768Why are you so angry?
39768Why do you want to root me up?"
39768Why does not Speyer write?"
39768Why is he so frightened?"
39768Why is it that I look so longingly towards America?
39768Why is it that, as you say, such men are out of date?"
39768Why is my happiness blighted, my aspirations repressed?
39768Why, what are all those folks moving for?
39768Why, what can you expect of a party that will take a coon for its emblem?
39768Will you allow me to ask to whom your letters were addressed?"
39768Will you be so kind as to let him have the use of it in my name?"
39768Will you come too?"
39768Will you dare deny that you wrote it?
39768Will you go with me?"
39768Will you go?"
39768Will you not let me hear your story from your own lips?"
39768Will you oblige me by seeing that my horse is led to the stable in---- Street?"
39768Will you play the coward?
39768Will you race with me?"
39768Will you walk that way?"
39768With a heart steeled by dangers, refined by sufferings, tempered in fires of anguish, what path need you fear to tread?
39768With health, liberty, self- respect, and a good conscience, what man has a right to call himself miserable?"
39768You are looking very pale; are you ill?"
39768You have friends?"
39768You have n''t lost property-- have you?"
39768You have nothing particular to do to- day-- have you?"
39768You have relatives?
39768You have wrung a proud tribute out of sorrow; but has it yielded you all its treasure?
39768You remember those old times-- don''t you?"
39768_ Cui bono?_ One chases after his object, and when he has got it, he turns from it, and chases another.
39768_ Deus vult._ Why should I fly in the face of Providence?"
39768_ Sev._ Quoi?
39768and what the devil do you take yourself for?
39768asked Morton--"did you think me ill, or bewitched, or turned idiot?"
39768began the latter;"are you bound for the Adirondacks, the Margalloway, or the Penobscot?"
39768cried Morton;"what noise is that?"
39768demanded the startled Morton;"who is Speyer, and who are the other men?"
39768do you see?"
39768ejaculated Meredith, as they entered;"have we come all this distance to find old faces again at New Baden?
39768exclaimed Morton, in anguish and despair;"why did n''t you get on the track, and stop the train?"
39768or do you stand between your friend and a fortune?"
39768pursued the small man,"and did n''t he have an Amerikin passport in his pocket?
39768repeated Morton;"has he been to Paris?"
39768the unity of the human race, and the descent from Adam-- science versus orthodoxy-- is that it?"
39768too progressive,--too wide awake,--too enlightened, ey?"
39768what advice do you give me?
39768what is it?"
39768what''s that?"
39768when a ray of sun comes, why should I not bask in it?
39768why fearest thou to smite?
32352A bargain?
32352After all, love,and I resolutely seated myself on his knee, and held him round the neck--"after all, you have not told me what_ are_ your arms?
32352And after all''s done, has anything gone?
32352And how did you know me-- I mean, did he point me out to you?
32352And now your bargain?
32352And then, if such slippers could be found, where''s the husband''s feet to fit''em? 32352 And to that momentous observation, allow me to add the profound inquiry,"How Are You?"
32352And what sort of a-- a gentleman?
32352And what would_ you_ put down, dear MR. PUNCH,said the Lady of the Revel,"if we began again?"
32352Another?
32352Are Irish?
32352Are not these lessons worthy of the giving? 32352 Are they in Austria?"
32352Are they in France?
32352Are they in Russia?
32352But how did you catch it, love?--where did you go?
32352But why should MR. TRUEPENNY be in such a twitter when he sees me? 32352 Certainly not, Ma''am; only to be so near France, and not to cross, what would people say?
32352Could he tell me--I asked--"the most likely road to take?"
32352Do it-- do what?
32352Do n''t you ever go to church, MR. TRUEPENNY? 32352 Do n''t you know?"
32352Do n''t_ you_ know?
32352Do you know MR. SO- AND- SO? 32352 Do you know OLD NICHOLAS?"
32352Going to see him off? 32352 HERE IS A THING, AND A VERY PRETTY THING, AND WHAT SHALL BE DONE BY THE OWNER OF THIS VERY PRETTY THING?"
32352Have I indeed? 32352 He has not killed his-- I mean the-- other gentleman?"
32352He''s now a walking-- or was a walking just by the-- but would you like to see him?
32352How can you possibly expect me to take the letters in time? 32352 I AX YER PARDON FOR STOPPING OF YE, SIR, BUT COULD YE LEND ME A GIRTH?
32352I hope,said I,"you will accompany us to church?"
32352I know; but LOTTY, my love, you have surely forgotten an old friend? 32352 I then asked,''Where are SATAN''S head- quarters?
32352I thought--said I--"that, for a lawful marriage, the wedding ring must have the Hall mark?"
32352I wonder what terms our families were on a thousand years ago? 32352 If you''ll receive young BLISS"--"But is it really true that MISS BLISS-- the young lady with the artificial flies-- is going to be married?
32352Indeed?
32352Is it true?
32352Is n''t it late?
32352Is there any Turkey left?
32352Is woman made only to sew on buttons? 32352 La, and if you please, how was that?"
32352MR. PUNCH, SIR,What next?
32352MR. PUNCH,--When will Sivilians learn to hold their_ assinine_ tongs about millitary affairs, I should like to know? 32352 Nevertheless"--for I was n''t to be put off--"what_ could_ you talk of till twelve o''clock?"
32352Not feel quite the thing, do n''t your Lordship, eh? 32352 Not going to have your fortune told?"
32352Now, Sir, I ask you, is such blazing ignoranse to be tollerated? 32352 Now, my dear FRED-- if I could only feel certain you were quite ashamed of yourself, you do n''t know how comfortable I should be?
32352Odd? 32352 Of course,"said FRED:"what else, my love?
32352Of course; for what is life if one does n''t enjoy it?
32352Perhaps, then--said FRED--"you''ll take a little walk towards the Steyne; and recover yourself?
32352Public writers and scientific men are unsuccessful:and what of that?
32352Shall we never bury the hatchet?
32352Then you know her?
32352They''ll both be here to- day; and, come, I''ll strike a bargain with you, LOTTY?
32352Think so?
32352Think so?
32352To be sure: why not?
32352Want a nosegay, Ma''am?
32352Well, but--for he had n''t told me--"but your descent, love?
32352Well, then, who told you to bring me that nosegay yesterday?
32352Well; and then?
32352Well?
32352What do I think of Pre- Raphaelitism? 32352 What now?
32352What occasion have we,he asked,"for Libra, the Balance, when we have already the scales of the Pisces?"
32352What on earth are you waiting for?
32352What strange visitant thus shocks All our ears at such a moment? 32352 What''s it about?"
32352What''s the matter, LOTTY? 32352 What''s this?"
32352What''s too much?
32352What_ are_ they?
32352Who knows when we get home? 32352 Who shall decide when jailors disagree?"
32352Why not?
32352Why not?
32352Why should he wish to get rid of me?
32352Why, what''s the use, FRED, when you always get the best of it? 32352 Why, you know, my love, that JOAN OF ARC was a shepherdess?"
32352Would you like to wash your hands, Sir?
32352Ye''ll to the Prince Royal o''Scotland-- Him the Southrons misca''s''Wales,''And ask him what gars his household Wear breeks aboot their tails? 32352 Yes: selected with taste-- great taste, an''t they?"
32352You do n''t think damp feet may have brought it about?
32352You''d never think of going home, Ma''am, without a peep at France?
32352You''ll not fail, TOM?
32352You_ did_?
32352_ Am I not your wife, dearest?_The EDITOR, moved, tears up LORD NAMBY MACPAMBY''S speech.
32352_ Dieu et mon Droit_,we will withdraw, The phrase is simple gammon;-- For"_ Dieu_"read_ £ s. d._,--since who Should be our God but MAMMON?
32352_ I beg your pardon, Sir, but is my Fare really a Sixpence?_]***** OUR HONEYMOON.
32352_ Likely to sit?_"_ Another hour-- Irish row._"_ Bless those Irish!_"_ Amen._They part--_exit_ Reporter to the House.
32352_ Why_ lucky?
32352_ Your fare''s Sixpence, I think? 32352 & c.& c. And then if I take a walk, there is scarcely a street in which I am not assailed by a pictorial Barmaid ejaculating''Sherry, Sir?'' 32352 ''Are they at Rome?'' 32352 ''Are they in France?'' 32352 ''Are they in Spain?'' 32352 ''Do you bruise your oats?'' 32352 ''Donte tell,''sez she''wot''s the gude of poleecin of i m? 32352 ''Have you been to---- emporium?'' 32352 ''Mortal BURNS(_ Cheers_)--Cotter''s Saturday Night(_ Immense applause_) Eh? 32352 ''Tis of haunch that you''re eating; and do n''t you know Currant jelly should always with venison go? 32352 ''Tis presumption to depend on such precautions and defences; Who can calculate their end on any further than expenses? 32352 ''What do I see?'' 32352 ''What name, Sir?'' 32352 ''What''s in a name?'' 32352 ''s, and orficers in the Guards, and dowagers, and debbytarntes, and all that? 32352 ( Do we not behold RAPHAEL on his bended knees,sincerely praying,"with the half- crown in his mouth?)
32352( Thus ran his peroration),"Where''s the highwayman grabbed, or the burglar nabbed, For all your big police- station?
32352( Walton).--How can that be?
32352( When did_ we_ not consult public opinion, and when did_ we_ claim any other authority than as representing the country at large?)
32352(_ Blandly._) D''ye happen to vant any fine oranges, SIR HAIRON?
32352(_ Loud applause._) The CHAIRMAN: And whose fault''s that?
32352)_ Can I get a man to carry my luggage?
32352)_ Oh!--but where to?
32352)_"DID YOU SOUND, SIR?"
32352*** WHAT DO THE BELLS SAY?
32352***** A GOOD GROUND FOR A BAD JOKE.--Why is a lodging on the ground floor a degradation?
32352***** A SERIOUS QUESTION TO COLONEL SIBTHORP.--Is the ghost of Pond Street, Chelsea, the ghost of Protection?
32352***** DID YOU EVER?
32352***** JOKE FOR THE STOCK- EXCHANGE.--Instead of asking"How goes the Enemy?"
32352***** QUERY FOR TABLE- TURNERS.--Have you ever turned a square table round?
32352***** SHALL LADIES HAVE VOTES?
32352***** THE CRY OF THE BRITISH HUSBAND.--"Do you bruise your wife yet?"
32352***** THE GOD OF THE RUSSIANS God of the Russians!--who is he?
32352***** THE OLDEST NOTE OF INTERROGATION.--A note, asking you if you are engaged on Christmas Day?
32352***** TO FIGHT OR NOT TO FIGHT?
32352***** WHAT IS A CABMAN''S MILE?
32352***** WHAT IS MAN?
32352***** WHAT IS THE HOUSE OF KEYS?
32352***** WHAT"CAN"THE POLICE BE ABOUT?
32352***** WHERE ARE THE RUSSIANS?
32352***** WHO IS THE MISCREANT THAT SENT US THE FOLLOWING?
32352***** WHO SENDS ALL THE CONSCIENCE- MONEY?
32352*****"WHO''S DAT A- KNOCKING AT DE DOOR?"
32352*****[ Illustration: THE MOUSTACHE MOVEMENT_ Augustus._"ARE YOU FOND OF MOUSTACHERS, EMILY?"
32352*****[ Illustration:"DO YOU BELIEVE IN THIS TABLE TALKING, MATILDA, THAT THERE''S SUCH A FUSS ABOUT?"
32352*****[ Illustration:_ Cobden._"WHO HAS THE DONKEY''S EARS, NOW?"
32352*****[ Illustration:_ Gipsy._"HAVE YOUR FORTUNE TOLD, MY PRETTY GENTLEMAN?"
32352*****[ Illustration:_ Nurse Ab-- rd-- n._"DID IT WANT A BIT O''TURKEY, THEN?"]
32352*****[ Illustration:_ Officer._"WELL, BUT LOOK HERE, OLD FELLOW; WHY NOT STOP ALL NIGHT?"]
32352--"A boat?
32352--"Is that your serious belief, my love?"
32352--"No?
32352--"Well, and wot then?"
32352--"What is a mile?"
32352--"Why, you know our honeymoon is n''t quite out; and"--"And what of that?
32352--"Why, your soul does n''t wear a nightcap, does it?"
32352--"Wot wo n''t do?"
32352--"Wot''s this here?"
32352--( How I thanked the girl for the words, though where_ could_ she have picked''em up?)
32352--Don''t you feel a little bitten?
32352--_Coppock._"What''s the use of my having a seat, if you will not allow me to sit down upon it?"
32352201 What is the House of Keys?
32352218 Whiskey above Proof, 70 Whisper in the Ear of Nicholas( A), 77 Who sends all the Conscience- Money?
3235234 What you may Hear in a Bell, 91 Where are the Russians?
323523493._ If a prisoner were very rebellious, would you whip him?
323523495._ Will you give the Committee your ideas of the mode in which prisoners should be treated?
323523496._ If a prisoner were very rebellious, would you whip him?
32352A Cabman, who does not approve of sixpenny fares, wishes to know if the Law will bury him now that it has screwed him down?
32352A baize board and a crafty''and, And a racing print or two; Did n''t we once just understand, The sporting gents to do?
32352A compatriot of my own here came up, and with the sportiveness allowable to intimacy, said,"What''s the row?"
32352A horse- shoe pin wore he:"Deposits on a race to''old Shall we no more be free?
32352A man steals, perhaps, to feed his family; but what does a blessed boy steal for?
32352AIR.--"_And shall_ TRELAWNEY_ die_?"
32352Abolish election music?
32352After that, what question can there be about the"agency"concerned in Table- moving?
32352Ai nt he ambitious?
32352All this is very splendid; but what is to become of the poor men, their year of glory out?
32352All this money gone in fire and smoke?
32352Am I right?
32352An then wots our remmydie?
32352And SHAFTESBURY to that repast invite?
32352And did you ne''er hear of a jolly old Waterman Who at the cabstand used for to ply?
32352And does Mr. Deane continue to hold a place on the Bench?
32352And for what purpose?
32352And for what?
32352And have done with him?
32352And have we not every temptation to sweep away the spiders?
32352And if our relics, one by one, are thus to disappear, What shall we have but narrow lanes to tempt a visit here?
32352And if you''re a leetle more German In these than I''d have you-- what is''t Beyond what a critic may term an Educational bias or twist?
32352And in like manner, why not every Scotch knight sit on his own Thistle?
32352And in that nosegay, what, JOSEPHINE--(and I watched her narrowly as I further questioned)--what do you think there was?"
32352And is it not so?
32352And now I think of it, FRED, what are_ your_ arms?"
32352And shall they scorn MEG, MATH, and"BEN,"And shall the system die?
32352And supposing you''d been killed?
32352And that clergymen should put up copies of the same in our churches, and almost anathematise as heathens those who prefer better drawing?
32352And what I say, your Lordship-- And I means to put it strong-- Is what was I brought''ere for, When I ha''n''t done nuffin wrong?"
32352And what has been the reward offered for his apprehension?
32352And what says ABERDEEN?
32352And what, I would ask, are the wild beasts for which Oxford is famous?
32352And where, I ask, am I now?
32352And why can not a wife inflict a"charring- day"upon her husband without the additional torture of a cold leg of mutton?
32352And with my arms"--"Yes;"I cried;"and what are they, FRED?"
32352And with whom?"
32352And yet, if haply thou''rt done up, and for thee we should yearn, Can the same law that cut thee off compel thee to return?
32352And you came in with the Normans?"
32352And''ave they fixed the where and when, And shall the system die?
32352And, Imperance, what odds is that to you?
32352And, hinstead of sayin''How air yer, old Boy?''
32352And-- as we have Orders of Eagles and Elephants, why not the ingenuous out- speaking significance, the Order of the Ass?
32352And_ Punch_ asks,"How can the hatchet be buried, when the peacemakers themselves so often throw it?"
32352Another wants to know,"Why pay more than sixteen shillings for your trowsers?"
32352Anything more to say, gentlemen?"
32352Are they in England?"
32352Are they in England?''
32352Are they of the same genus as those which my young neighbour BELLINGHAM GREY speaks of?
32352Are things raised again, though Protection''s no more?
32352Are you sure?"
32352As Christians, should we not be of charity and forgiveness all compact?
32352As a timid beginning, we have the Thistle-- wherefore not the Ass himself?
32352As for keeping the sun off, it is not needed for that purpose, for when is the sun ever seen in England?
32352As we know that the Russians require oleaginous food, is it not possible that, after devouring Turkey, the Czar may take a fancy to"Greece?"
32352At the Anti-- what d''ye call the place, on t''other side of the sun?
32352Bales marked with the well- known D.( oh, how could you, MR. DOWLAS, Sir?)
32352Being only grass and stubble, what of cleanliness neglected?
32352Both black?
32352Boys?
32352Breasts?
32352But I want to know, if you can inform me, who or what''RUSTOMJEE VICCAJEE and VICCAJEE PESTONJEE,''aforesaid are?
32352But how could any gent expect a pint of port under three- and- six?
32352But how shall we ever the sequel relate?
32352But in case the majority of the members are behind time, do the minority eat up the dinner provided for the whole number?
32352But in the chamber?
32352But is now the precise season to plant it in the soil of Scotland?
32352But my eye was opened-- A summons he did seek; And was n''t that a pretty case To bring before the Beak?
32352But open Crishpalace a Sun''ay and whosh''s become o''Cotter''s Sunday morrin''?
32352But then for gratitude, who''s to expect it?
32352But then what is to become of the Slummites?
32352But then, as it''s only London, what should Frenchmen know about it?
32352But we wonder how the servants pronounce it at an evening party?
32352But what is the noblest Cathedral in the possession of an ignoble clergy?
32352But what need of such clubs at all?
32352But what''s happened?"
32352But wherefore should I be so proud o''my clothes, And strut in''em so, stickin''up my old nose?
32352But who gets the hextra price of the coles and the factory goods?
32352But who is n''t here?
32352But why the heavy expense?
32352But you''re sure master''s safe, for he was to go out early, as I heard?"
32352But, guv''ner, wot can this''ere be?-- The fare of a himperial carridge?
32352CRUEL KING COAL shall we suffer more To blow himself out by extortion dire?
32352Ca n''t no one tell?
32352Cab to the Moon, Sir?
32352Call that my fare for drivin yer a mile?
32352Can no chemist tell us how to obtain a solution of the Eastern difficulty?
32352Can not that be done for a very small sum of money?
32352Can not the superior classes cultivate kindly feelings with their neighbours without being accused of inferior motives?
32352Can they?
32352Can you ask?
32352Can you describe the habits and haunts of the"Swedish Nightingale?"
32352Can you forgive me_, CORONETTINA?"
32352Can you polk better than you did?
32352Captain and Subaltern, Why my lads, do you not tighten your girdles?
32352Churchyards also, that employ afford so many people unto, Why not let us still enjoy, thus doing as you would be done to?
32352Cobden._ Why are the selfish agitators among the operatives like the works of a clock out of order?
32352Could any atmosphere be more salubrious than that air?
32352Could n''t answer the question,"Do you bruise your oats?"
32352Could n''t these dreadful penalties be paid by instalments?
32352Crasher._ Is it?
32352D''ye think I care for the blessed Bench?-- From Temple Bar to Charing Cross?
32352DINNA YE KEN THE WATTER''S FOR DRINK, AND NAE FOR BATHIN?"]
32352DON''T TAKE ANYTHING WITH YOUR''AM, DO YOU, SIR?"
32352Dem jewels, rings, thatins, and thilks, all in store Agin JACK with prizemoney comin''athore?
32352Dere never was Christianth behaved so afore, But who''s to depend on''em now, any more?
32352Did n''t know much about encampments, how should he?
32352Did you ever find a Continental shopkeeper whose"_ prix fixe_"might not be proved a_ lucus- a_-nonentity?
32352Did you ever find a"professional"win a game of billiards of you without assigning your defeat entirely to his"flukes?"
32352Did you ever hear a loo- player confess to having won more than"just a shilling or two?"
32352Did you ever hear of a clerical SERGEANT KITE?
32352Did you ever in your life hail a City- bound omnibus that was n''t going"a''most directly"back to Bayswater?
32352Did you ever know a cockney take to boating without dressing himself up_ Ã   la_ T. P. COOKE?
32352Did you ever know a hotel- keeper, whose"wax"lights would bear the test of a tallow- chandler?
32352Did you ever know a penny- a- liner who, in speaking of a fire, could abstain from calling it"the devouring element?"
32352Did you ever know a pic- nic go off without the awful apparition of a"wops?"
32352Did you ever know a strike which did not hit the workman harder than the master?
32352Did you ever know an"alarming sacrifice,"which in practice did not prove to be completely one of principle?
32352Did you ever meet a diner- out of sufficient strength of mind to ask for"cabbage?"
32352Did you ever start upon a railway journey without hearing the immortal observation"_ Now_ we''re off?"
32352Did you of enlightenment consider this an age?
32352Did you think that necromancy Practised now at the expense of any fool could be?
32352Dine?
32352Dirt!--how are they to come by it?
32352Do I need avow that I am the TAVERN FLEA?
32352Do I think the prize- suit such an honour to wear?
32352Do away with a great institution because it has been inefficiently carried out?
32352Do n''t for goodness sake Fire, Sir!_"]***** WHAT IS A MILE?
32352Do n''t mind my weed, eh?
32352Do n''t the talented EMERSON say We have got other debts, besides money, to pay?
32352Do n''t you see the ousemaids( pooty POLLIES and MARIES) Ven ve bring our urdigurdis, smilin from the hairies?
32352Do n''t you see the shildren in the droring rooms Clapping of their little ands when they year our toons?
32352Do n''t you think they would?
32352Do they change into anything, lie torpid, and then change again into something else, with wings?
32352Do they ill- use thee, Cabman?
32352Do they think it"low?"
32352Do ye know me now?
32352Do you think they could carry me to the Tower for having them in my possession, or would they send me to New South Wales?
32352Does he obey the Christian law by helping to lock a man up?
32352Does our Solicitor give advice gratis against going to law; even as benevolent doctors give advice against disease?
32352Does the evil spirit, then, flow out of the fingers''ends into the mahogany?
32352Does the solicitor make out his bill of costs according to the behest of the Prince of Peace?
32352Doth its wild unwonted motion then portend some dire mishap?
32352Doth some hidden danger threaten to our crown?"
32352Dreaming?"
32352Eh?
32352Enthrone Liberty in the Capitol, and the POPE, no doubt, would send_ her_ a relic; nothing less than"the Kiss of JUDAS?"
32352Ever kill them?
32352Ever see such dogs?--ever see such horses?--ever see such riding and driving?--ever see such grooms and coachmen?
32352FOURTEEN ON YE SLEEP UNDER THAT GIG UMBERELLER OF A THING?
32352For six months I''ve sought her-- all my money gone in advertisements and inquiries; but she is lost to me for ever!_""_ She?_""_ Yes!
32352For the reply we beg to refer his Imperial Majesty to our old friend Echo, who to the question,"Where is WAN- TING?"
32352For they are but paper-- is paper to bind The young Eagle to Earth, when to soar he''s a mind?
32352For whom then?"
32352For would you think it, LOTTY?
32352From carefully sifting an accumulation of evidence, patiently comparing and analysing hosts of facts?
32352Gentle Public, tell me why Do n''t you patronise a Fly?
32352Gentlemen, take up your_ Plutarch_, turn to the Life of AGESILAUS, and what do you read?
32352Glass of punch, Sir, of course, with the work you''ve got, You have surely been absent, Sir, have you not?
32352Guv''nor-- ow''s greens?
32352HOW THE DOOSE DO YOU MANAGE IT?"
32352Had it been a thing of wild or even of common garden flowers-- but it was a_ bouquet_ of exotics-- and how were gypsies to come by such things?
32352Had n''t you better shut up?
32352Had not the author better send a copy of it to the Registrar of the Prerogative Court of Canterbury?
32352Halloa!--Stationmaster-- Guard-- Hi-- you Sir-- Here; what''s the meaning of this?
32352Has he not been hunted from stand to stand, worse than a wild beast, by the policemen?
32352Has he not endured the taunts of vulgar minds without a retort?
32352Has he not sat quietly under the sarcasms of little boys, and never once used his whip to drive them away?
32352Has it anything to do with your Austrian friend''BOMBA?''
32352Have they got any legs?--if so, how many, or is the structure of their bodies annular?
32352Have we not seen him?--have we not noted him?
32352Have you ever seen the Hirish children sport When our velcome music- box brings sunshine in the Court?
32352Have you not read MR. TOULMIN SMITH''S great work on Centralisation?
32352Have you not sufficiently studied the volume you were reading from to recollect what it says about pearls and-- Limerick multitudes?
32352Have_ all_ their charioteers infirm health?
32352Having no bowels, how could it hurt him?
32352He is solicited to give his opinion on the best mode of"Opening the trade in spirits?"
32352He might have been killed, and what would MR. TRUEPENNY have cared?
32352Hearts?
32352Henceforth thou art estranged from me; And dost thou ask me why?
32352Hereupon the Railway Director, losing control over his feelings, indignantly demanded what was the meaning of all this?
32352Hey, ABERDEEN, are ye writin''yet, In hollow phrases delightin''yet, While on Danube''s banks Thae hostile ranks Are makin''ready for fightin''yet?
32352Hey?"
32352Hit in the vind!--I''m chokin-- give us air-- My fare?
32352How about the attorney?
32352How am I to afford a journey to China in order to get the right pronunciation?
32352How came liquor to the jury?
32352How can I say whether"toggery"is derived from the Latin word_ toga_?
32352How can the POPE get anybody to play billiards with him, unless he gets a Protestant, or a heathen?
32352How can you avoid selecting and rejecting?
32352How did it happen to this KING COAL That he came to be called by the name of Cruel?
32352How do you know your eight hundred would n''t be doubled?
32352How expiate with prayer or psalm, Deaf ear, blind eye, and folded palm?
32352How is it possible that any such promise can be kept by an old despot, who is so very irration- al?
32352How old are you?
32352How the_ next_ Bill?
32352How was it I got that kick o''the ed?
32352How was the beer supplied?"
32352How_ do_ they draw breath?
32352However, we lunched alone; paid the bill; and-- shall I ever forget how I jumped into the carriage?
32352I ai n''t hinsane-- not yet-- not yet avile!-- Wot makes yer smile?
32352I begin to be afraid of so much happiness-- can it last?
32352I met him with a smile; and_ did n''t I lock the door_?
32352I ought to know that the Museum is only open on certain days?
32352I wish to ask whether my brother SEPTIMUS is liable to be taken up?
32352I''d call assistance, constables-- And now it was broad daylight, and-- yes, surely, he_ was_ asleep?
32352I?"
32352ISN''T IT A CHEERFUL THING?"]
32352If he was obliged to consume his own smoke, how could he continue to diffuse fragrance in society?
32352If homogeneous self- antipathies come into conflict with inchoate rationalism, where will you draw the line between casuality and causality?
32352If no hemp, how do you get your Russian?
32352If no red- tape, how does Downing Street get her Englishmen?
32352If no wood, how do you get your Austrian?
32352If not, does there exist a law so atrocious as to warrant his committal?--if there is no such law, breathes there such a magistrate as MR. DEANE?
32352If smoke was such a nuisance, why did they make so much the other day at the review at Spithead?
32352If so, does one gentleman retire, or is one more taken in from the excluded set, and is the fortunate, or unfortunate, individual selected by lot?
32352If that is all his discovery, what is the use of making such a fuss about it?
32352If the leg is not to be treated with such"proper respect,"why is the trunk?
32352If wun of his dooties is taxin pore peepul''s coles, I wunder wot the others is, I sez, or air the Turks an Rooshans a goin to fite by steme?
32352If young NODDIES have writerships handed''em, And young BLOGGS Treasury clerkships, what then?
32352In a recent edict the Chinese Emperor asks indignantly,"Where is the LIEUTENANT- GENERAL WAN- TING?"
32352In any case, where do they expect to go to?
32352In fact, who was the goddess who first gave her countenance to Gin?
32352In other States of Greece the principal towns have walls-- but where are yours, dear AGESILAUS?"
32352In that case do they fly away, and where do they go to?
32352In the meanwhile, can he ever pass Bedlam, without a tender feeling for the future destiny of his footmen and coachman?
32352In what year of VICTORIA''S reign was the celebrated_ Bal Costumà ©_ given at Buckingham Palace?
32352Indede I do, Wot good did strikes hever do the pore?
32352Indeed, what is it to him whether you never go to bed at all?"
32352Is BLOGG less, though JOHN BRIGHT may have branded him, One of twenty- four"hon''rable men?"
32352Is he a good fellow?"
32352Is he quite certain it was n''t PETER?
32352Is he really a man I can trust?
32352Is it a bargain?"
32352Is it an extraordinary fancy for ugly people that seems occasionally to possess them like an evil spirit?
32352Is it because I''m worse than I was?
32352Is it because the public prefer Nature to Art?--or is it because the actors speak, and the animals do not?
32352Is it not just the thing to confound the deceivers, And confute all the slanders of vile unbelievers?
32352Is it possible that any churchman can speak upon better authority, from deeper experience of"things solid,"than the teacher of Fulham?
32352Is it so very historical?"
32352Is it the LORD MARE a fetherin of his nest by taxin of em, an callin it his dooty?
32352Is it the_ genius loci_ or the genius of Roman Catholicism that suggests this tanning of the hides of heretics?
32352Is it true, Sir?"
32352Is n''t that a funny man with a beard?
32352Is not this ready wit?
32352Is she sure she is in earnest?
32352Is the Reporter sure that it was ANNIE?
32352Is there a quaintness of form and manner which reminds one of the early Italian painters?
32352Is there any mistake here?
32352Is there any one from Marlborough House could do it as well?
32352Is_ he_ getting up your Parliamentary information for_ you_?
32352It can not be BARRY, the deathless Clown, who shall be snatched from us?
32352It is only another way of saying to him,"Why do n''t you follow his example?
32352It is still something else?
32352J. WHEELER BLASHBY( or some such name).--How can_ we_ tell you where to get a hippopotamus?
32352JENKINS?"
32352Like the roses?"
32352Live there?
32352Load with lead and iron; and do n''t taxes turn''em to gold?
32352MARTINGALE, what do you mean, Sir?
32352MR. COBDEN does not drink spirits; but, moderately, he drinks wine-- wine that cheereth the heart of man?
32352MR. MIALL says that he became"a convert to the principles of Homoeopathy"--whence?
32352MR. MONTMORENCI JONES: Do I know much about the City?
32352May hope still lift up her azure eyes to muffins?"
32352May this fact be accounted for on the supposition that roguery has an instinctive tendency to provide for itself?
32352Mention the names of the principal watering- places, and say which was considered the more fashionable of the two-- Margate, or Gravesend?
32352Must we take to guns and sabres?
32352My fare?
32352My fare?
32352My own fault?
32352Na''ca''zhat''scration o''Shabbas?
32352Need CECILIA apply?
32352No?
32352Nobby move, was n''t it?_"]***** GREAT SUCCESS OF CLAIRVOYANCE.
32352Not a Scosh quesh''n?
32352Not for half- a- crown?
32352Now there was such good sense in this, that what could I say?
32352Now, just to satisfy me, just for a moment suppose that?"
32352Now, where on earth is the harm of my lad wearing Wellingtons?
32352Of what use is it to read a good book and transgress its rules in the very act?
32352Oh, my countrymen, does not the brutal_ Times_, every day of its atrocious existence, offer more for a strayed cur-- a wandering puppy- dog?
32352On the field of battle lying, torn and mangled for his whim, Hear we not the tortured dying call down curses upon him?
32352On the question at the espousals being put to her,"_ An spondes?_"she instantly replied, with an arch smile,"_ Spondeo, sed nomen meum non est_ ANNE."
32352On their mothers''bussums do n''t you see the babbies crow And down to us dear horgin boys lots of apence throw?
32352On what model has the India Bill been formed?
32352One of the judges asked with very natural surprise,"Is not the man in prison?"
32352One thing is plain: that the advertisements of''Do you want luxurious hair?''
32352Or is it a toilsome elaboration of detail, which not one man out of a thousand could ever see without a glass?
32352Or is it his particular duty to rub up the Panorama of London that is viewed from its summit?
32352Or is the"Upholsterer"engaged to keep the flutes of the columns clean?
32352Or the bitters of the vat?
32352Or whether CLYTEMNESTRA, when she was on the point of stabbing her son, exclaimed"_ Au Reste_?"
32352Or whether a cross- examination is so called, because it generally has the effect of making a person"cross?"
32352Padre mine, Prithee tell me sin engaños why your old ciudadanos Twixt two large and fierce volcanoes chose to build this lordly town?
32352Pantropheon!--What does SOYER mean by that?
32352People said if Parliament objected to volumes of smoke, why did they publish so many Blue Books?
32352Perhaps on the first of April?
32352Pint or quart, who cares a jot?
32352Pray what is the amount of those revenues, and upon what tenure are they held?
32352Proceed with the_ next_ Bill-- the Lunatics''Care and Treatment Bill?
32352Punch._ You are also the member for Chatham?
32352Punch._ You are, CAPTAIN, I believe, the adapter of the drama called_ The Lancers_, performing at MR. CHARLES KEAN''S theatre?
32352Punch._ You intend to take your seat in the next Parliament, and do your duty by your constituents and the nation?
32352Punch_, what_ can_ be meant by''Bombardarum?''
32352Punch_, why does young BELLINGHAM GREY tell me tales of Traps, and Dog- carts, and Tandems, and Teams?
32352Punch_?
32352Quoth he:"Why spend our gains, in spring shutters and chains, Instead of in lawful traffic?"
32352ROMEO would never have asked"What''s in a name?"
32352ROSA MATILDA.--You ask me, my young lady, what is the best ink for writing love- letters with?
32352Really true?"
32352SCENE.--_A Tavern.__ Waiter._"''AM, SIR?
32352Scollan ev''tollate sush''scration o''Shabbash as zhash?
32352Seemed to him, as forth he journeyed, that the land was passing strange; Was it sooth, or was it glamour that had worked so great a change?
32352Shall any force of fasts atone For years of duty left undone?
32352Shall we let him continue to starve the poor By the tax that he takes from their bit of fire?
32352Should he do so, is it not probable that"GENUINE RUSSIAN BEAR''S GREECE"will no longer be a fiction?
32352Sleep?
32352So my altar,''the altar of HYMEN,''is at last erected in your places of worship, is it?
32352So you have got your juwaub, eh?
32352So you want to know what I''ve got to do?
32352Somebody asks us every day,"Who would be without a dressing case?"
32352Something like the following, eh?
32352State who was JULLIEN?
32352Stay?
32352Suppose MR. LUCAS were to present a petition from parishes in Meath, praying for the closure of butchers''shops on Fridays?
32352Synonymous with-- he would not say cheat, but with a sharp practitioner, in the mouths of their Christian fellow- subjects?
32352TUESDAY-- MAY 28, 18--, Shall I ever forget the day?
32352Tea, two for one?
32352The Bank issues light sovereigns-- why not repay it with Light five- pound notes?
32352The QUEEN''S perfumer may ask conundrumically:"Why is Royalty in such excellent odour in England?
32352The Russian who would have betrayed the victims of Austria: or the Turk, who at the cannon''s mouth protected them?
32352The ancient poet asks,"What exile from his fatherland can leave_ himself_ behind?"
32352The following dialogue ensued:"Where are the head- quarters of despotism?
32352The law dost thou deride?
32352The magistrate seems to have doubted his power, but could he not have dealt with the reverend revivalists as Boddy- snatchers?
32352The only question was, where to place the Statue?
32352The pouch he was particularly displeased with, asking somewhat snappishly,"What the devil it did at the back when it was wanted in the front?"
32352The question now is what man, by departure from his country, can hope to be free from his countrymen?
32352The table literally seemed frantic....''Do you know the Pope?''
32352The white is precisely where it should be, and"--"Is it truly?"
32352Then ventilated:--was not that enough That name''s purification to complete?
32352Then vot right''ave you to gash em?
32352Then why does he sport coat and breeks?
32352Then why not Chimney Sweep Rook?--Undertaker Rook?
32352There goes THREADPAPER of the Foreign Office, with his infant moustache( what the deuce does_ he_ want with a moustache, I should like to know?)
32352There is a little book called"What Shall I Do with my Money?"
32352There is just sufficient width to enable you to lift the hat with, and what more do you want?
32352There may be a few play- bills, also, and some steamboat placards; does"the Upholsterer"go every morning to hang these outside the railings?
32352These unnecessary difficulties imperatively call for a speedy answer to the puzzling question,"What is a Mile?"
32352They are great asses, are they not?
32352They would only make two ugly statues the more: and in so large and such a city, what are two?
32352Think ye, in this its temple The Law to flout and jeer, Getting in through the window Pots of illegal beer?
32352Think''st thou that it required the sulph''rous puff Of gunpowder, to make it wholly sweet?
32352This is in fine enough, is it not?"
32352Thus, can there be any doubt that the peace orators of the North will, in like manner, talk the Russian army out of its bayonets?
32352Time of the French Revolution?
32352To effort hath it strung you?
32352To give them is''t not well we use our might?
32352To go fighting and-- and after all, do you know for a certainty what he went fighting about?"
32352To keep them here, What price would England grudge to pay?
32352To preach a bully peace Would I don a suit of drab, With a white cravat and a broad- brimmed hat, And rely on simple gab?
32352To what end should we describe an ordinary Frenchman?
32352Upon the introduction of these illustrious characters to the Royal Commission the usual question--"Have you anything to say about the Corporation?"
32352Vat customers is dere dem vatcheth vill buy, As ve''ve got for the thailorth-- dem vatcheth to fry?
32352Vot his this''ere?
32352Vy, have n''t Cabmen feelings?
32352WHAT''S THE MATTER?"
32352WHEN the trumpet''s call to arms shall in Turkey''s quarrel sound, On the field of Europe''s war shall JOHN BULL be backward found?
32352Was I, last night?
32352Was a smarter old feller than I be e''er seen In these bright brass buttons-- this new quoat of green?
32352Was ever anything so provoking?
32352Was it for stealing mats that the prisoner was committed instead of being sent to gaol for selling them?
32352We are convinced that either of these ingenious individuals will undertake to dispose of the question,"Who shall keep the key?"
32352We inquired if there would be any harm in our trying if tables would move by the imposition of our hands?
32352We run this way and that; we cling to all that come With nostrum or defence; and as we fall We curse the watchers too, and ask,"Why were ye dumb?
32352We think that the question of"What is a Mile?"
32352We wonder if the Ipswich automaton would arrest an insolvent?
32352We wonder, in the name of everything that''s wonderful, what are the duties of this curious functionary?
32352Weak Superstition dead; knocked safely on the head, Long since buried deeper than the bed of the Red Sea, Did you not fondly fancy?
32352Well, I''m in a foolish good temper, so what is it?"
32352Well, we are at a very interesting point of our history; and who knows what may depend upon our voyage?"
32352Were Honour gone, How long would Peace and Plenty stay?
32352What actor, recently, has had anything like the success that for a whole season ran panting, pushing and squeezing after the Hippopotamus?
32352What are my perfumes?
32352What are you doing with my best Velvet Dress?_"Child.
32352What care we for Beer- kings''prices?
32352What class of creatures can it be that lives and thrives"in the midst of the matters complained of?"
32352What could put it into thy head Just now to abandon thy post?
32352What d''ye ask a week, Marm-- for the use of the flower- pot?
32352What did Margarate there, and is she a descendant of MARGARET OF ANJOU?
32352What did he mean by that cowardly, atrocious, ready- money transaction?
32352What do you mean by the"Crush- Room of the Opera;"and why is it so called?
32352What do you think of that, because a poor old woman wants to get back to her native country out of the way of the battle of Armageddon?
32352What does MR. FREWEN mean by this?--if the nonsense is his really?
32352What does our friend ORTOLAN say on this subject?
32352What has JACK JONES to do with the turf, or you either?"
32352What has Parson to do with Rook?
32352What has_ that_ to do with it?
32352What have arms to do with the heart?
32352What have you got to say?"
32352What if we put the last fragment on a save- all, and see it out at_ The Flitch_?"
32352What is better than a right of way through the Park?
32352What is debt?
32352What is good for my canary while it is moulting?
32352What is it that makes them so eager to take our money, if not its acknowledged superiority to theirs?
32352What is my court?
32352What is my feast?
32352What is my music?
32352What is poor BYRON made of, but a peg-- a mere peg-- whereon to hang the fine clothes of a_ Sardanapalus_?
32352What is the Curate expected to undertake for £20 a year and his victuals?
32352What is the furniture that is inside the Monument?
32352What is the reason of this strange preference?
32352What is there to hang, excepting the birdcage with the dingy canary, belonging to the porter, at the entrance door?
32352What is this but an action-- the Cossack, for the first assault, paying righteous costs?
32352What is your theory of partnership?
32352What makes you betray such tremendous anxiety To prevent the least peep into those haunts of piety?
32352What marvel France and England each deal are looking graver?
32352What marvel Russia''s play grows more brilliant and braver?
32352What mercy will he have for you?
32352What more can a fellow want to amuse himself?
32352What present, love?"
32352What right have we to turn our cabs into a library or bookcase?
32352What romance, what possible interest is there in any one of them?
32352What sorrow hath swoln and beclouded thine eye?
32352What then has become of the maxim"Set a thief to catch a thief?"
32352What then remains?
32352What then?
32352What to do?
32352What to us the size of bottles?
32352What was I?
32352What was the last elopement that created any sensation at Gretna Green?
32352What was the result?
32352What was the use of emancipating Blacks abroad if they was n''t to enjoy freedom at home?
32352What were the duties of the Ladies of the Bedchamber, and in what respects did they differ from the Maids of Honour at Richmond?
32352What will they do with the tallow?
32352What will they do with these 4,000 prisoners of war?
32352What''s luggage to letters?
32352What''s the matter, JOSEPHINE?"
32352What?
32352What?
32352What_ can_ have occasioned the tint of the rose To abandon that cheek for the end of that nose?
32352What_ can_ the loyal MRS. POTTS think of this?
32352When I have shuffled off this mortal coil-- what does it want, except to be put reverently underground?
32352When bad''s the best, what must the worst be?
32352When did flounces come into fashion, and state the lowest and the highest number a lady could wear?
32352When shall your eyes sparkle into mine, and set all the fireworks of my soul fizzing, and banging, and sparkling?
32352When you die where will your guilty sole go to?
32352When, and how am I to learn such words as will soon be expected of me?
32352When, thanks to his strong club,''ere the close of the first rub, He''s the nine points of possession scored already in his favour?
32352Where are you to find out?
32352Where else can such a group of beauties be found?
32352Where is it?
32352Where they serve you on plate which is mock as their turtle, Now fleecing the tourist, now maddening the_ Times_?
32352Where was GURNEY, the short- hand writer; where was SHERER, and what had become of MORTON?
32352Where was the BISHOP OF LONDON?
32352Where_ could_ he be?
32352Wherefore vex your souls, your spirits why should you, my friend, disquiet?
32352Who am I?
32352Who are my lieges?
32352Who can doubt the Christianity of an Emperor, who is at once the heart and soul of such a system?
32352Who dares gainsay my claims?
32352Who dares make fight''gainst Vested Right?
32352Who edited the"Book of Beauty?"
32352Who else would expect to have any chance with Infallibility?
32352Who ever saw or smelt any such thing as dirt in any the most remote connexion with a"Papist boy?"
32352Who goes ragged and wild?
32352Who has taken their lollipops out of their mouths?
32352Who knows what this patty has inside it?"
32352Who led their expeditions?
32352Who lives there but porters, junior partners, and warehouse cats?
32352Who lurks in the slums?
32352Who rides In a''bus that taketh twelve insides?
32352Who robbed them of their penny tarts?
32352Who said that I had given thee up?
32352Who said that thou wert sold?
32352Who shall correctly appreciate these things?
32352Who smokes To the great annoyance of other folks?
32352Who stops you?
32352Who succeeded WIGAN in the_ Corsican Brothers_?
32352Who was the better Samaritan?
32352Who were right and who were wrong, We, who hissed him all along, Or the folks that cheered and shouted After him who women knouted?
32352Who will indorse the sentence upon ARNOLD by causing his name to be carved on the monument of NICHOLAS?
32352Who would grovel amid lower dirt when he can nourish his essence with stuff so ambrosial?"
32352Who''d have thought to fight the brother of"--"The fisherwoman?
32352Who''s HELIOGABALUS, and what''s HELIOGABALUS to do with JOSEPH GUBBINS?
32352Who''s to trim it, I should like to know?
32352Whose gloves do you consider were the best?
32352Why Rook?
32352Why at a dinner party is it never thought permissible to call for cabbage except by its genteel synonym of"greens?"
32352Why by thirty years''toil-- and for whom, d''ye suppose?
32352Why can a young gentleman never take to yachting without strengthening his language with"fo''ksle"expletives?
32352Why can not a husband get home late from a dinner- party without assuring his wife he was"the first to leave?"
32352Why can not a"Constant Reader"write a letter to a newspaper without an allusion to its"widely circulated columns?"
32352Why can not musical critics speak of a voice without puzzling everybody by calling it an"organ?"
32352Why can not this great saving of money-- to say nothing of vice and misery-- be effected?
32352Why do fashionable people consider they lose_ caste_ by writing legibly?
32352Why do n''t some of those young swells come down from their room and do the passport business?
32352Why do people with the smallest rooms invariably give the largest parties?
32352Why does a cabman consider he degrades himself by acting civilly?
32352Why had the word Jew become synonymous--_ A Voice._ Eh?
32352Why in a lodging- house can you never get your shaving- water without ringing twice for it?
32352Why is it I''m rigged out so fine as this here?
32352Why is it not done on reasonable terms?
32352Why not apply poetry to the advertisement of wares as well as apply Art to their construction?
32352Why not go to be kissed at Windsor in all their innocent freshness?
32352Why not?
32352Why not?
32352Why ought we to know it better than them as hires us?
32352Why run from the vessel away That needs thee to weather the storm?
32352Why should he stop here?
32352Why should it cost a considerable sum to put a small piece of organic framework into earth?
32352Why should the"adamantine lips"of sixty- eight pounders salute those little babies?
32352Why should they be forwarded to their parents, new too from Scotland, smelling of gunpowder in which is so much brimstone?
32352Why sit o''er the fender in such an odd trim, With handkerchief stanching those red orbs that swim?"
32352Why urged ye not the warriors to the wall?"
32352Why waked ye not the sleepers with your call?
32352Why weep you''neath that leaden Polar sky?
32352Why wo n''t you, dear AL, by mamma be advised?
32352Why you stop the poor horgan man to get a little money?
32352Why you wil hart the pore horgan man that trys to get a honnest living, for you have plenty yourself money?
32352Why, does n''t England always fire golden balls?
32352Why, sisters, rest ye thus at peace together, Your ancient feuds and factions all laid by?-- Why smile you in that purple Asian weather?
32352Why, then, not save your wife''s health by furnishing your door with one of TUMBLER AND CO.''S Latch Locks?
32352Why, then, was the chief power of illustrations of the"solids"of this life merely required of SAMUEL OF OXON?
32352Why, what can you think me made of?"
32352Why, what dost thee think, man?
32352Why?
32352Will I state any?
32352Will MR. COBDEN, if only as an apostle of peace, help us, that we may exchange British metal for Gallic grape?
32352Will he, then, do his best that the masses of his countrymen may take a glass with him?
32352Will the honourable shareholder come round here and try?
32352Will the tyrant make us foes?
32352Will they melt it into candles, and send them as altar- offerings to the POPE to solicit his blessing on their Algerian campaigns?
32352Will you believe it, the fashionable world is now running,''like mad,''after two little monkeys they call_ Aztecs_?
32352Wit at the fingers''ends?
32352Without entering into the merits of either, we may say that in England the great question is,"How wages are?"
32352Without pluck, who could have a stake in any country?"
32352Wondered what next?
32352Word of Peace!--on Earth first spoken nigh two thousand years ago, Art thou at this moment broken?--and who dares belie thee so?
32352Wot did yer say, Sir, wot did yer say?
32352Wot''s this I''ve got?
32352Wot''s this''ere, Sir?
32352Wot''s this?--wot hever is this''ere?
32352Would CECILIA PUNCH be eligible for the vacant situation of organist to St. Helen''s parish?
32352Would any one but a Frenchman call such monkey- jabber conversation--_and like it_?
32352Would our solicitor act in a cause of action for unprovoked and brutal assault?
32352Would you like it with a deck?"
32352Would''st thou eat fire-- the fire of other days?
32352YESSIR?
32352Ye reverend Fathers, why make such objection, Why raise such a cry against Convents''Inspection?
32352You are ill?_""_ Ill, Jemima!
32352You call yerself a gentleman?
32352You call yourself a Gentleman, I s''pose?"
32352You have n''t got any Curaçoa I suppose?
32352You have no charity for the poor horgan man; what charity will God have for you in the next world?
32352You have not seen my picture-- an allegory of Peace?
32352You''d like to see Rouen?"
32352[ Illustration: I] It seems after all that the great_ casus belli_ between the Porte and Russia is"Who shall keep the key of the Greek Church?"
32352[ Illustration] The question of"What is a Mile?"
32352[ Illustration]"_ Ou est le pont, Messieurs?
32352[_ Fires, and pheasant falls._]_ King._ And Wallachia?
32352[_ Where are the Police?_]***** THE FALLACY OF EXTERNALS.
32352_ A Voice._ The Christians as talks is so much better, is n''t them?
32352_ Accomplished Cabman._"WILLIAM, VOOLY- VOO AQUA?"]
32352_ Aristocratic Old Gentleman( starting up in the cart)._ What''s that you say, you blackguard?
32352_ Cab- driver._ View on the subjeck?
32352_ Cabman( in dress coat, with straw- band to his hat)._ Wot''ll you take for the babbies, Marm?
32352_ Cheery Porter._ Now, Marm; jest sit up off the trunk, will ye--_ The Unprotected( suddenly awaking to a sense of her desolation)._ Oh!--where?
32352_ D-- s-- li._"HOW FAR TO DOWNING STREET?"
32352_ Driver of Butcher''s Cart._ Where to, Sir?
32352_ First Ditto._"WOT ODDS?
32352_ Frederick._"GOOD GRACIOUS, ANGELICA, YOU DON''T MEAN TO GO OUT WITH YOUR HAIR IN THAT STYLE?"
32352_ French Official._"YOU HAVE PASSPORT?"
32352_ Friend of Self- Government._ I give a shilling?
32352_ Indignant Gentleman._ Cabs struck?
32352_ J''moimer Ann._"HAS THEE FOWGHTEN, BILL?"
32352_ King._ And then, with war, what throne is safe?
32352_ London Merchant._"WHY, WHAT IS THE USE OF YOUR BEING IN A RESPECTABLE HOUSE OF BUSINESS IF YOU PROCEED IN THIS ABSURD, VULGAR MANNER?
32352_ Maria._"WELL, DEAR, NEVER MIND; BUT DO TELL ME,_ IS MY BONNET STRAIGHT_?"]
32352_ Official._"CHRISTIAN NOM?"
32352_ Official._"PROFESSION?"
32352_ Punch._ Well, my EX- LORD MAYOR, is PRINCE ALBERT to have a statue?
32352_ Q._ Of what wood should a Christmas Tree be composed?
32352_ Q._ What Member of the present House of Commons has really made himself a new name in the country?
32352_ Q._ When_ Othello_ killed_ Desdemona_, was he thinking of his Wife?
32352_ Railway Guard._"NOW, MA''AM, IS THIS YOUR LUGGAGE?"
32352_ Second Ditto._"WELL, WOT ODDS?"
32352_ Son and Heir._"HOW MANY OF US ARE THERE?
32352_ Sportsman( in Standing Beans)._"WHERE TO, NOW, JACK?"
32352_ The Chairman of the Committee to the Vulgar( fractional) Public._ AIR--_"Won''t you Come and take Tea in the Arbour?
32352_ The Judge._ JOSEPH GUBBINS, you have been very properly found guilty of stealing a pot-- I mean you will be in a moment-- eh gentlemen?
32352_ The Judge._ Now, JOE, have you anything to say?
32352_ Unprotected Female._ Oh-- how can you-- man?
32352_ Unprotected Female._ Oh-- thank you-- where?
32352also, whether he had anything to do with the soup that bears his celebrated name?
32352and another attempts to tickle our vanity by addressing to us the inquiry,"Do you keep livery servants?"
32352and can you mention the highest note it ever reached, and also why it sang in a Haymarket?
32352and can you set the pattern for ladies of"How to make a purse for your brother?"
32352and does MR. DIBDIN think that he has acted as the devil''s conductor?
32352and in Turkey,"How wages war?"
32352and under whose command Through dangers and through hardships sought they the promised land?
32352and where is it stowed away?
32352bless me-- how ill you turn, Ma''am, and when it''s all over?"
32352cried the landlord.--"Wot dy''e mean?"
32352demanded the other.--"Wot?"
32352dolt you bake ful so of be; You bolkey, preteldil that you diddlet see The state I ab ill; do you walt to be told?
32352for"What''s o''Clock?"
32352how became it like that, So that on it he uses to slice bacon fat?
32352how''s this?
32352is likely to take its place by the side of the important question"What is a Pound?"
32352my Cabman bold, what shall the public do, When rain is falling everywhere, wetting the public through?
32352rejoined the landlord;"wot dy''e mean this here for?"
32352retorted the cabman.--"Wot do you mean?"
32352returned the cabman;"why, it''s a fo''p''ny bit, is n''t it?"
32352roared the Prà ¦ tor,( And mirth was changed for awe)"How answerest thou this outrage On the majesty of Law?"
32352says I. Four- and- twenty farthings?
32352she may not only as in the days of RALEIGH, step on our cloaks, but our--- What do you think?
32352shouted the landlord.--"Wot are yer larfin''at?"
32352that rum cove d''ye twig?
32352the landlord repeated;"wot''s this here?"
32352though, probably,_ Othello_?)
32352venerable Peer, Dost thou again before the Public show?
32352we now ask,"How goes the EMPEROR OF RUSSIA?"
32352wery much I''m surprise Ven you take your valks abroad where can be your eyes?
32352what do you mean by uttering your shallow vulgar criticism on the greatest nation of Continental Europe?
32352what is it?
32352what''s that to the souls who rely On themselves, and the hiss of the world can defy?
32352who is this lady fine That falls on this lap of mine?
32352who is this snob so fine?
32352who''d dine At eight shillings a head, or even nine, With the heaviest price for the lightest wine?
32352who''d sleep Where a standing army their quarters keep, And in countless legions upon you creep?
32352who''d stay To be bitten and fleeced in this wholesale way, And live at the rate of a fortune a day?
32352who''ll expose their crimes?
32352why hast thou fled Precisely when wanted the most?
32352why not thoroughly drain the subject?
32352why?
32352wilt thou come with me, neglected young wretch?
32352wot''s this''ere?
32352would any one suppose, An Ant- eater could ever out of joint put my nose?
32352you young beggar, vere are yer?"
49391Age?
49391Ah,_ bon!_ Why are you here then?
49391And what about those others''là- bas?''
49391And why did you leave them?
49391And you''re a German, I suppose?
49391And your mother?
49391And,inquired the interviewer,"was there no period during the incident that you felt that the proposition was too big for you?"
49391But where are your parents-- your father?
49391Can you see the gun mounted forward of the bridge?
49391Did you hear how he circled around over us?
49391Do they want killing or what?
49391Do you hear it? 49391 Even the Boches?"
49391Father,he said, in a weak voice,"Father, am I going to die?"
49391France, Russia, or Engländer?
49391Have I been ill?
49391Have a smoke?
49391Have you a doctor, Captain? 49391 Have you any children?"
49391Have you any papers to prove your identity?
49391Have you had your dinner?
49391Have you seen what is happening with the Russian soldiers, taken prisoners?
49391House to house? 49391 How about the Rue Jeanne d''Arc?"
49391How can you swallow all that stuff?
49391How many are you?
49391How many more are there down the dug- out?
49391How so? 49391 May I go to the engine- room, Herr Captain- Lieutenant?"
49391Now take a look at her stern-- right by the second mast-- what do you notice there?
49391Shall we meet again?
49391Since you wish to enter an ambulance, it''s to work there?
49391Well, well-- um-- how can you be sure? 49391 Well,"said I,"what''s it to be?
49391What about it?
49391What do you say if we let''em have a bit?
49391What do you think of the case of Miss Edith Cavell?
49391What has that to do with it?
49391What in the world is straw fixed up that way for?
49391What is the trouble? 49391 What religion are you, Max?"
49391What''s your name?
49391What''s your name?
49391When shall we meet again?
49391When we came aboard the raider,the officer from the late_ Voltaire_ continued,"one of the Germans said to me:"''Where were you?
49391Where are all those prisoners?
49391Where do you come from?
49391Where does he come from?
49391Where have you come from?
49391Where?
49391Who?
49391Why did you leave Monaco for Belfort?
49391Why not?
49391Why''Todger''?
49391Why, Colonel,said I to the other,"are n''t you going to have a nap with your friend?"
49391Wo n''t that fill the bill?
49391You are married?
49391You know they''re no use?
49391You should have seen him, eh? 49391 You''ve come here, then, to enlist?"
49391_ Guten Tag._"_ Guten Tag, meine Schwester-- Hier habe ich quartier._"Are you not afraid of typhus?
49391_ Non, mon capitaine._"Are you French?
49391''Why, mother?''
49391***** From Morcourt in the department of the Somme on the seventh of November, 1914:"Shall we ever return?
49391-> Would the village we were holding be spared?
49391A captain of Alpini said to me:"France and Italy are one-- is it not so, sir?"
49391A close shave, what?
49391And did my children want war?
49391And may I tell you how the ever- present contrast came in here?
49391And over there?
49391And what are you going to do?
49391And who can say that his act was cowardly?
49391And who''ll volunteer to put them on?
49391And would they ever return?
49391Are you so dull and faint- hearted that it does not echo within you?
49391At last he said:"You are wounded?"
49391At what hour?
49391But is it the enemy?
49391But that evening I was not"begged"(?)
49391But what was that?
49391But where should I take the cart, which had to keep to the road?
49391Can I get out and have a packet at them?"
49391Can it be wondered that the Duke of Brunswick, who witnessed the tragedy, has since been reported as hopelessly insane?
49391Can you hear the 75''s singing?''
49391Can you hear the melodious song from below, you weakling nerves?
49391Carrying Wanda upstairs, trying to still her; heartbroken myself, what could I tell the little creature?
49391Come now, will you have some?"
49391Could he hold out till then?
49391Did I tell you that I was a bomber?
49391Did you ever breathe air foul with the gases arising from a thousand rotting corpses?
49391Dirt?
49391Do I think about honor and success?
49391Do you hear it?"
49391Do you not know the stimulating power which the thin metal voice below can inspire within you?
49391Do you remember the winter, five years ago, that I passed in Switzerland?
49391Do you think though that it was necessary to be mobilised in order to do what we are doing?
49391Do you want to be killed or taken prisoners?
49391Do you wonder that I am still proud that I fought there-- proud of the French Canadians?
49391Fit game for a Nero, was n''t it?
49391Food?
49391For Germany?
49391For a second my heart stood still-- where was my boy?
49391For my brickyard?
49391Gas?
49391Gloom?
49391Hardly had I crossed the threshold than one of them exclaimed:"What do you want here, boy?"
49391Have the heavy clouds which have obscured the night broken at last and will the sun appear?
49391Have you ever been in a bombarded town?
49391Have you ever seen a thousand men hurled to atoms by a giant blast?
49391Have you ever stood by the gate to the trains and watched the men come up to go back to the front?
49391He will ask, over and over again,"What time is it?"
49391He--""Do you believe that I am a loyal Russian?"
49391How can you assure me?"
49391How many did I rake in?"
49391How many did you rake in yesterday?"
49391I leant over him, and said with the instinctive gentleness which compassion inspires one with:"You are suffering, my child?"
49391I said, and he replied,"What do you mean?"
49391I said:"Will you kindly get a flask out of my pocket?
49391I wondered who the workers were, when what do you think I saw?
49391Is n''t that the very soul of France?"
49391Is the little girl ill also?"
49391Is there really typhus?"
49391It is gay the war,_ n''est- ce pas_, madame?"
49391It was then that an officer caught sight of me and cried out:"What''s that boy doing there?"
49391My dander was up, and I shouted to the officer,"What do you think of that, sir?"
49391Need I describe my home- coming?
49391Oh, what is then-- Lieutenant who?"
49391Old Gott and I had our telephones on and he said:"What about it, Lieutenant?"
49391One of the first things he said to me when the record was read was,''How the dickens did you do it, Jones?''
49391Or do you think that I intend to circle around those two rascals for hours?"
49391Or shall we not go home?
49391Or,"Only three o''clock?"
49391P. 96: Would our village we were holding be spared?
49391Presently he came back, and said,"Are you ready?"
49391Rats?
49391Should I make a clean breast of it and drag the mask from the rascal''s smiling face, or spring at his throat and shake the life out of him?
49391Stench?
49391Suddenly she asked:"Mammy-- why does God sleep?"
49391Surely there was nothing worse to come?
49391Tell me, why are we fighting?"
49391Tell me, why are we fighting?"
49391The professors did not believe he could live to finish the course, so why waste the time with him?
49391To be kept there with those men when my baby needed me every minute, but what was there to do?
49391Was it England after all instead of France?
49391Was it sufficiently deep to accommodate us?
49391Was it, too, a mass of dust and stones?
49391Were they put to bed like ordinary babies?
49391Were we to be shut out even as the gates of Paradise seemed to be opening to us?
49391Were we to have had all our toil in vain?
49391What about it?"
49391What am I going to do with this little lot?"
49391What am I searching for in the cold, dark night?
49391What answer could I make?
49391What chance had a prisoner to escape?
49391What could have happened?
49391What did I expect?
49391What did you ever read of the rats in the trenches?
49391What do you know of it, you people who never heard earth and heaven rock with the frantic turmoil of the ceaseless bombardment?
49391What does it matter?
49391What does one reply to such men?
49391What for?
49391What is this Russian doing here?"
49391What new plan of campaign could I evolve?
49391What soldiers ever fought more valiantly?
49391What was to be done?
49391What?
49391What?
49391What?
49391What_ are_ you?"
49391When the sergeant had gone he took me aside and said:"Have you eaten?"
49391When will this war end?
49391When will we go home again?
49391When?
49391Where do you come from?"
49391Where was the mother whom he had left there in the house they called their own?
49391Where were we going to?
49391Who am I?"
49391Who ever gave their lives in a noble cause more gladly?
49391Who ever met certain death more steadfastly and unafraid?
49391Who has experienced the horrors of Milton''s terrible vision or the slow tortures of Dante''s inferno?
49391Who would n''t have been disappointed at seeing a scheme that had arrived so near fruition come toppling down like a house of cards?
49391Why accuse me for no other reason than that I am a Russian?"
49391Why did we stop there?
49391Why does my eye stare so steadily into the dark?
49391Why?
49391Why?
49391Will you surrender?"
49391Would the village we were holding be spared?
49391You have seen the ice wagon dripping on a warm day?
49391You''re a Belgian, are n''t you?"
49391and say,"Only eleven o''clock?"
49391young man, you do n''t belong here?"
46341A clown? 46341 And does it not affect the lady''s social and professional standing?"
46341Are all those tickets for to- night?
46341Are yez the man that left the call for the five o''clock train?
46341But how will anyone know we''re going to play?
46341Did n''t you notice his condition?
46341Do n''t you know your own wife''s name?
46341Do you expect to find tomato cans as far down in the bowels of the earth as that?
46341Do you mean she is n''t going to get her divorce?
46341Do?
46341Does that apply to private life in Paris?
46341Governor,said Payne,"if we turn up aboard the ship to- morrow a bit squiffy or with a hold- over, you wo n''t mind, will you?"
46341Governor,said he,"why do n''t you write about this beautiful place in your new book?"
46341Granted,replied Barrymore,"but why censure the lady personally, a foreigner as well?
46341Have you any idea what the price of American beauties is?
46341He''s clever, quite; Whence came he? 46341 How can I write about a place when I ca n''t see?"
46341How did you get them then?
46341How do you know anything about my mental capacity?
46341How long did he cry?
46341How much a dozen?
46341I beg pardon, guv''nor,replied the cabby,"but where is your''ome, sir?"
46341Is he dead?
46341Is that known in Paris?
46341Is that right?
46341Maybe it will,I agreed,"but we have n''t done any wrong, any harm, so why should we worry?"
46341Shall I send you the script to read?
46341Tanked up to the collar button and skate? 46341 Tight?"
46341Well,said Charley,"you like him as an artist, do n''t you?"
46341What do you tell me all this for? 46341 What do you think of Gertrude''s suggestion?"
46341What do_ you_ think of it?
46341What in the world are you doing there, Charley?
46341What is it?
46341What kind of a part is mine?
46341What?
46341Where shall I drive you to now, sir?
46341Who is that chap?
46341Who is this boy?
46341Why did n''t you do this two days ago and save the coal?
46341Why did n''t you say Johnny Jones was coming? 46341 Why do n''t you do it at once?"
46341Why do n''t you go and witness a performance?
46341Why not?
46341Why not?
46341Why, oh why, do beautiful women marry Nat Goodwin?
46341Will that satisfy you and the members of your family?
46341Will you announce us to the public from the stage?
46341Winning?
46341Would we ever meet again?
46341You call that art,asked Lackaye,"a wanton, expounding her amorous successes?
46341You do n''t imagine I''m going to tell every common cabman my private address, do you?
46341You have n''t engaged her for Australia, have you?
46341127 XXV THE SKATING RINK 131 XXVI NUMBER TWO 134 XXVII A FIGHT WON(?)
46341283 LXVI ROBERT FORD 284 LXVII MORE PLAYS 286 LXVIII WILLIE COLLIER 288 LXIX HENRY MILLER 290 LXX WHAT''S IN A NAME?
46341A trifler?
46341After that what could a true- born American do?
46341Alone?
46341Also how about the returns from a revival of both?
46341Am I not to be envied?
46341And why not?
46341And why should I take myself seriously when nobody else does?
46341Are all the budding geniuses to be strangled at their birth, their dreams to be made delusions?
46341Are they to have no chance to gratify their ambitions, only the remote possibility of being one of an ensemble?
46341Are we?
46341Are you sure?"
46341As for our contemplated plunge into matrimony Gertrude asked,"Why deny that?
46341As he gave the imitation a friend of mine, seated in the front row, looked over and very audibly asked,"Well, what do you think of that, Nat?"
46341As we stood there I chanced to overhear this remark:"How could you possibly have married such a vulgar little person?"
46341At the end of every act I simply said,"Go on,"and at the finish,"When do we produce that play?"
46341But San Francisco asked,"How can a man be a hero and have red hair?"
46341But Time looks sadly down upon the merry makers and the measured swing of the pendulum of thought and argument questions,"How long will it last?"
46341But after all-- what''s in a name?
46341But do the masses know?
46341By what right has the modern actor forsaken his frock coat for the sock and buskin?
46341Can you imagine anything more ludicrous than these psalm singers making arbitrary laws about the temperature of our food?
46341Cowardly?
46341Did he ever cause a ripple of laughter to equal those ripples set running by delightful Willie Collier?
46341Did he ever hold you enthralled in a spell of reverence, as did Salvini or John McCullough in his address to the Senate in"Othello"?
46341Did the public go to see the players or the play?
46341Do n''t you think I am frightened enough without this information?"
46341Do n''t you think him rather amusing?
46341Does it ever occur to these psalm singers that people do this of their own volition?
46341During the several months before my wife finally won(?)
46341Everybody loved him and who could help it?
46341Finally one of them approached Goodi and pulling off his cap asked,"It''s all right, guv''nor, but what do we get for our time?"
46341HE: Did he talk remarkably well to- night?
46341HE: Does he-- really?
46341HE: In what way?
46341HE: Really?
46341HE: Were those stories he told at dinner supposed to be funny?
46341HOME 240 LVI NUMBER THREE 243 LVII WHEN WE WERE TWENTY- ONE AND OTHER PLAYS 248 LVIII AT JACKWOOD 254 LIX"WHY DO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN MARRY NAT GOODWIN?"
46341Had he built a playhouse, like the man of his hour and time, Edwin Booth?
46341Had he during the last decade created any characters?
46341Had he produced any original plays, made any production, or even leased a theatre, like Mansfield, or Sothern, Irving, or Possart?
46341Has he maintained the dignity of the drama?
46341He continued,"Well, you do drink, do n''t you?"
46341He doubtless ruminated,"I must produce it; but how?"
46341He finished his remarks with,"Do you and your enlightened countrymen consider Mr. Corbett a good actor?"
46341He just looked at me a minute, his black eyes nearly popping out of his head, then indicating the bills and silver in his hand said solemnly,"Me?
46341He listened to their patronizing suggestions as to a consummation of the deal and, pointing to Rob, asked,"Is my pal included in this?"
46341He looked at them for a moment, then turned to one of his companions, saying:"Where is the per- per- picture of our Saviour?"
46341He was standing in the wings and as I came off I said,"What can I do, Mr. Robson?
46341Holy?
46341How long will it last?
46341How many knew the author or Joseph Brooks who presented us?
46341Humor?
46341I said,"Surely, you are not going to make good a promise made in jest?"
46341I shouted,"What''s the matter?"
46341I simply asked,"How did Mr. Warren like me?"
46341I think it was the summer of 1898( but what difference does it make?)
46341I was about to leave friends, family and a woman who was sure to loathe my name when she heard of my act-- and all for what?
46341I wonder how many readers cut out the pictures of those little cherubs,"Alan Dale"and"Vance"Thompson, and paste them in their scrap books?
46341I wonder if people go to see clever George Cohan or George Cohan''s play?
46341I wonder?
46341If the commercial gentlemen who wield the sceptre do but command submission what does it signify who pays the price of admission?
46341If they draw the money, what matter to the booking agent what amount of money has been invested?
46341If we worshipped you down here, what must they be doing for you now?
46341In a word did Mansfield ever make you really laugh or truly sob?
46341Instead of either of them I brought back a manuscript of a comedy called"What Would a Gentleman Do?"
46341Irving quietly looked up and queried,"And was it?"
46341Irving, calmly wiping his glasses, looked at him for a moment and asked,"Why not try one of the Scilly Islands?"
46341Is he still going strong in America?"
46341Is he supposed to be a comic man in your country?
46341Is it a crime to be respectable?
46341Is it a crime to have an honest fireside?
46341Is there anything in that frank, boyish countenance which even suggests a cold blooded, conscienceless murderer?
46341Jefferson, who was very literal, asked,"Is Sol tired?"
46341John Daly, the gambler?
46341Lackaye said,"Where are you going to- night, Sydney?"
46341ME, bet on a prize fight?
46341Never?
46341No art?
46341Now they thoroughly understand the story and wo n''t you please come to- night and tell the story over again?"
46341Now, do n''t you think it''s wise for me to paper the house?"
46341Of course not?
46341Of whom does he remind you, Rob?"
46341Oh why did I not go to Washington?
46341Out of my mouth issued these words:"Wo n''t you please come in, Max?"
46341Possessed of subtlety?
46341Rob asked,"How did he take it?"
46341SHE: By way of anecdotes and funny stories?
46341SHE: Of course; did n''t you hear the guests laugh?
46341Said Jefferson,"What load is he carrying?"
46341Shall I ever again enjoy that pleasure?
46341Shall we be?
46341Shall we join them?
46341The manager looked at him and replied:"My boy, where could I get the thousand?"
46341The owner started after him, but Travers held him back, saying,"Nev- nev- never mind the d- d- dog, wha- wha- what''ll you take for the rat?"
46341The real reason?
46341The star''s wife turned to me and asked,"What is the matter?
46341Then I turned and with all the force at my command snarled,"How now?"
46341Then ensued the following dialogue:-- SHE: Do you think him vulgar?
46341Then some extremely clever reviewer of prize fights comes forth with this headline:--"Why do Beautiful Women Shake Nat Goodwin?"
46341They had no thought of her anguish, her future and as for me-- of what matter my end?
46341Think of it, gentle(?)
46341To gratify his wife''s ambition would I secure her an opening on the stage or put her with some good tutor?
46341To which does he turn?
46341True, the man''s personality always transcends the characterization, but is n''t that true of all great actors?
46341Was he,"The Dean,"anything like what the author intended Bob Acres to be?
46341Was it fair to break up this happy home?
46341Was it her acting or the unwholesome notoriety that preceded us that had opened his discerning eyes?
46341Was this fair to her?
46341Was this fair to the public, to the author, to anyone?
46341Were the others?
46341What are you talking about?"
46341What did they know of me except through the newspapers?
46341What does it matter after all?
46341What edification can that give?
46341What honest actor does not?
46341What is he?
46341What is it?
46341What of it?
46341What will man not do for gold?
46341What will the verdict be?
46341When he had finished, I said,"For the love of heaven, Cazauran, why did you select me to play that gruesome tragedy rôle?"
46341Where began his gentle schooling?
46341Where does he come in?
46341Which star do John and the brilliant men I have mentioned occupy?
46341Which will it be?
46341Who does not find a hazardous game attractive?
46341Who shall say it is not the fault of those who have pointed the finger of scorn at a woman seeking only to do right?
46341Why be fair with anything or anybody?
46341Why ca n''t---- do this?"
46341Why cause the Indiana flowers to cry for a gardener-- for who will sing their praises when dear Jim has gone?
46341Why clog"The Old Swimmin''Hole"with weeds?
46341Why did he concentrate his force upon one sister at that interview and demand obedience?
46341Why did n''t he shut up all the barber shops and revoke the Gillette Safety Razor patent?
46341Why did n''t you put it in the bad eye?
46341Why do we court conflict with Fate when we know Fate is merciless?
46341Why is it so many women are such consummate actresses off the stage and such impossible amateurs on?
46341Why make humanity weep and chill our hearts?
46341Why not kill her and her paramour?
46341Why not?
46341Why should he disguise the fact that he was her friend?"
46341Why, oh why, did my mad passion for fish cakes cause me to tarry at the Metropole?
46341Why?
46341Will history do the little corporal justice?
46341Will the world ever be rid of this form of human parasite?
46341With all her powers, envied by the many, rich in worldly goods-- did those searching liquid orbs denote complete happiness?
46341Wo nt you give me an appointment tomorrow?
46341Would she exchange one for the other?
46341Yet what physiognomist could read in this boyish face such dastardy as Robert Ford delighted in?
46341[ Illustration: COQUELIN_ Would he have gone in vaudeville?
46341_ Chapter LIX_"WHY DO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN MARRY NAT GOODWIN"?
46341_ Chapter LI_ ANTONY(?)
46341_ Chapter LXX_ WHAT''S IN A NAME?
46341_ Chapter XXVII_ A FIGHT WON(?)
46341before allowing him the privilege of taking her hand in marriage?
46341is this really Fletcher?''"
46341or the next day?
46341or the next?
46341them?
46341who is this young man?"
46341whom do you suppose I met in Paris, last week?"
43466''A live mouse? 43466 ''Have you many mice?''
43466But does not the free will come in when I decide whether to do good or bad things?
43466But,the penal moralist will demand,"if you propose to abolish blame and punishment, what do you propose to put in their place?"
43466Do you mean to say that tramp could not help doing that? 43466 Do you understand it?
43466I know--how do I know anything?
43466What? 43466 A Mrs. Manningdying game"--alas, is not that the foiled potentiality of a kind of heroine too?
43466A genius is a"sport"; and the question we are to answer here is: How does heredity account for genius?
43466All his family for a hundred generations back certified as having united"the manners of a marquis and the morals of a Methodist"?
43466And God is"The First Great Cause,"and how then can God justly punish any of His creatures for being as He created them?
43466And how can we expect the badly bred, badly trained, badly taught degenerate to succeed like the well- bred, well- trained, and well- taught hero?
43466And how can we say of John Smith that he is"good"or"bad"?
43466And how should they know, when their teachers in the church do not know?
43466And if a child gets bad training, how can free will save it?
43466And if he only bears prickles or poison, who is to blame?
43466And if men are"persuaded"to try, and succeed, to whom is the victory due?
43466And is it not clear that they are held to be good because they are felt to be unselfish?
43466And now what do we mean by the words"good"and"bad,""moral"and"immoral"?
43466And we?
43466And what is that persuasion, but a part of their environment?
43466And what is this charge of audacity which Dr. Aked brings against me for denying sin?
43466And what makes one man a sportsman and another a humanitarian?
43466And what pleasures have these people: what culture and beauty in their lives?
43466And when the doctrine of hell- fire was first assailed, what did the Dr. Akeds of the time declare?
43466And which is the better, to go back for a dozen generations blaming parents, or to begin now and teach and save the children?
43466And who in a game of whist would blame his partner for holding no trumps in his hand?
43466And why did he want to be safe?
43466And would he have been to blame?
43466And, when the change came, what was it that brought that change about?
43466Are facts true?
43466Are the wise men of all ages agreed that the possession of great wealth is a good environment?
43466Are we never to deviate from the beliefs of our forefathers, be the evidence against those beliefs never so strong?
43466Are you men?
43466As for the children-- why do not their parents take care of them?
43466As we do not blame a man for being born with red or black hair, why should we blame him for being born with strong passions or base desires?
43466Because it can not Why does a French peasant never speak English?
43466But are we to suppose that the first speech would discourage a boy who wanted to be a painter?
43466But did he?
43466But do we take any the less trouble to fight against diphtheria?
43466But he would have a conscience?
43466But is it any use?
43466But to drive our fellow- creatures into disgrace and crime beyond redemption, and then to hate them or to hang them; is that just?
43466But what causes him to wish?
43466But what had free will to do with it?
43466But what of Dick, the healthy baby?
43466But what of the other victims of heredity: the criminal, or immoral"degenerate"?
43466But what of the variation amongst brothers and sisters?
43466But what settles the choice?
43466But who did say anything so silly?
43466But, it may be asked, how do you account for a man doing the thing he does not wish to do?
43466But, my Christian friends, how do you find your system work?
43466But, someone asks,"where was his pride; where was his sense of duty; where was his manhood?"
43466CHAPTER FOUR-- THE BEGINNINGS OF MORALS WHAT do we mean by the words"sin"and"vice,"and"crime"?
43466CHAPTER SIX-- ENVIRONMENT WHAT is environment?
43466CHAPTER THIRTEEN-- THE FAILURE OF PUNISHMENT DOES it do a man any good to hang him?
43466CHAPTER THREE-- WHERE DO OUR NATURES COME FROM?
43466CHAPTER TWELVE-- GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY?
43466Can He not give man the power to create actions as God creates stars?
43466Can He, in short, create a kind of little God-- an"imago Dei?"
43466Can he bear wheat or roses?
43466Can not I please myself whether I drink or refrain from drinking?"
43466Can not a man be honest if he choose?"
43466Can social systems sin against man?"
43466Can we blame it for having no purple nor white beads in its composition?
43466Can we blame this"child"bottle for being made up of red, blue, black, and yellow?
43466Deprive virtue of its"dare nots,"and how many"would nots"and"should nots"might survive?
43466Did he ever do any work?
43466Did he make no dangerous friendships?
43466Did he read no bad books?
43466Did his father watch over him, or let him run wild?
43466Did his mother nurse him, or neglect him?
43466Do I speak truth, or falsehood?
43466Do we blame"the vegetable bacillus"?
43466Do you know Thomas Carlyle''s burning words concerning these tragic fates?
43466Do you mean to say I can not be good if I try?"
43466Do you mean to say he is not to be punished?"
43466Do you mean to say he is not to blame?
43466Does John deserve censure, and do his brothers deserve praise?
43466Does it do us any good to hang him?
43466Does it ever set him wheeling clay up a plank?
43466Does it tend to the moral elevation of a man to be like the"Chough"in Shakespeare,"spacious in the possession of dirt"?
43466Does not common experience support the charge?
43466Does not that show free will?"
43466Dr. Lydston, in_ The Diseases of Society_, says: The prospective criminal once born, what does society do to prevent his becoming a criminal?
43466GUILTY OR NOT GUILTY?
43466Gentlemen of the jury, is it nothing to you?
43466Has it not been often so?
43466Has it not been often so?
43466Has society not injured him?
43466Have law and morality not injured him?
43466He can give His force; can He give a little of his sovereignty?
43466Here is a rough sketch of the women in the East End slums: WOMEN IN THE METROPOLIS OF THE WORLD"Have you any reverence for womanhood?
43466Here is one reply given by an angry witness: Do you think it womanly work to push with a twenty- foot pole a boat laden with 30 tons of coal?
43466Hitherto all the love, all the honours, all the applause of this?
43466How Does Heredity Make Genius?
43466How can God blame man for the effects of which God is the cause?
43466How could there be white or purple beads in this bottle, when there were no white nor purple beads in the bottles from which it was filled?
43466How do cattle- breeders improve their stock?
43466How does he know that whisky is dangerous?
43466How is he to"overcome his environment and become good"?
43466How is it mediocrity does sometimes beget genius?
43466How is it that genius does not always beget genius?
43466How is it that genius does not always beget genius?
43466How is it that mediocrity breeds genius?
43466How many men have been hanged or sent to prison who ought to have been sent to lunatic asylums?
43466How was it that his will to fish changed to his will not to fish?
43466How was it that same manhood now served to raise him above the environment?
43466How was that theory met by the Dr. Akeds of the time?
43466How will he decide?
43466How, then, came he to reform his life, and to write his wonderful book?
43466How, then, can God justly blame man for the acts that reason or power"creates"?
43466How, then, can he be blamed if his ancestors give to him a bad heredity, or if his fellow- creatures give to him a bad environment?
43466How, then, can it be just to blame him for being that which he_ must_ be?
43466How, then, can we believe that free will is outside and superior to heredity and environment?
43466How, then, can we believe that man is to blame for being that which he is?
43466How, then, shall knowledge increase or progress be possible?
43466I appeal to your justice, to your pity--( A voice: How much pity had he for the child?)
43466If God can do all things, can He not make man free?
43466If environment can not permanently improve the breed, is that any reason for making the worst, instead of the best, of the breed we now possess?
43466If the will is free, how can we be sure, before a test arises, how the will must act?
43466If you sow hate can you reap love?
43466If you sow tares, can you reap wheat?
43466If you sow wrong can you reap right?
43466If you teach and practise knavery, can you ask for purity and virtue?
43466In how many cases are the poor features battered, and the poor skins bruised?
43466Is Dulcett''s fine musical ear due to any merit of Dulcett''s?
43466Is Mr. Chesterton in a position to inform us that his bold bad peer is not a degenerate?
43466Is Mr. Chesterton sure that he has not inherited a degenerate nature from diseased or vicious ancestors?
43466Is any human being in the wide world edified or bettered when a man is hanged?
43466Is it Jarman''s fault that he has no gift?
43466Is it any answer to tell me that I am presumptuous in opposing the beliefs of great men past and present?
43466Is it any wonder that such men, to repeat Mr. Chesterton''s poetical simile,"put forth sins like scarlet flowers in summer"?
43466Is it any_ use_ hanging men?
43466Is it because he would like another cigarette, but would not like another glass of whisky?
43466Is it necessary for me to answer the charge of presumption brought against me by Dr. Aked?
43466Is it not better to teach and to train each generation well, than to teach and train them ill?
43466Is it not clear that these acts are approved and held good?
43466Is it not due to the"persuasion"?
43466Is it not evident that you must have some good in you if you wish to try?
43466Is it not so, men and women?
43466Is it not so?
43466Is it not the same with personal as with racial traits?
43466Is it reasonable to blame the one for not being like the other?
43466Is it strange that some of our descendants should have what Winwood Reade called"tailed minds"?
43466Is logic true?
43466Is not that so?
43466Is not this, to our own knowledge, the kind of thing that happens to us all, in all kinds of self- training, whether it be muscular, mental, or moral?
43466Is the bundle of God''s making responsible for the failure of the power God made and sent to manage it?
43466Is the skinful of propensities created and put together by God responsible for the proportion of good and evil powers it comprises?
43466Is there a man in court can deny one statement I have made?
43466Is there a man in court can impeach my reasoning, or disprove my facts?
43466Is there any proof that Handel''s mother had not a good musical ear?
43466Is there any proof that she had not, lying dormant, some special gift for music, inherited from some ancestor?
43466Is there any quality of body or of mind that has not been_ inevitably_ evolved in man by the working of God''s laws?
43466Is there anything illogical in that?
43466Is there no sympathy with this unhappy victim of atavism, or of society?
43466It is a pretty picture, is it not?
43466It is the soul, then, that is responsible, is it?
43466Men and women, is it not true?
43466Men and women, is it not true?
43466Mr. Blatchford, being anxious to fight against the doctrine of sin, builds a fatalist rampart, looks over the top, and says:"Can man sin against God?
43466NOW, WHAT DO WE MEAN BY"HEREDITY"?
43466No consumption?
43466No diseases contracted through immorality or vice?
43466No drunkenness?
43466No gout?
43466No insanity in the family?
43466Now, how does the man decide whether or not he shall fire?
43466Now, what does all this show?
43466O, what say we, Cholera Doctors?
43466Of how many towns and villages in Europe and America might the same be said?
43466Of how many women are these terrible descriptions true?
43466On what does his decision depend?
43466Or do they not rather teach that luxury and wealth are dangerous to their possessor?
43466Or how can it be blamed for being bad?
43466Or should we take the sailor''s success as a matter of course, and give our pity to the landsman?
43466Ought we to be surprised that the continual struggle for the mastery amongst so many alien natures leads to unlooked- for and unwished- for results?
43466Practically nothing.... What is the remedy at present in vogue?
43466Presumptuous to deny what great men in the past believed?
43466Prove it?
43466Shall we blame a mongrel born of curs of low degree''because he is not a bulldog?
43466Should we blame a bramble for yielding no strawberries, or a privet bush for bearing no chrysanthemums?
43466Should we blame a rose tree for running wild in a jungle, or for languishing in the shadow of great elms?
43466THE BEGINNINGS OF MORALS In the Buddhist"Kathâ Sarit Sâgara"it is written:"Why should we cling to this perishable body?
43466TO WHAT DOES ALL THIS EVIDENCE TEND?
43466Take the case of a council, a cabinet, a regiment, composed of antagonistic natures; what happens?
43466Talk about the trouble of bringing up children: what is that to the trouble of educating one''s ancestors?
43466The kleptomaniac may be the most troublesome to the community; but is he more wicked than the others?
43466Then how is it his brothers do not drink?
43466There remains unaccounted for-- what?
43466They have no taste for anything higher?
43466This being so-- and we all know that it is so-- what becomes of the sovereignty of the will?
43466This:"Were they ever so anxious to''improve their minds,''what leisure have they, what opportunity?
43466To loathe and punish the victims of society, and never lift a hand against the wrongs that are their ruin, is that reasonable?
43466To what extent was he free?
43466WHAT HAD FREE WILL TO DO WITH IT?
43466WHERE DID MORALS COME FROM?
43466WHERE DO OUR NATURES COME FROM?
43466Was Lady Macbeth free to choose?
43466Was Macbeth free to choose?
43466We can tame wild beasts, and why not wild men?
43466We have hundreds of religions in the world; but how many teachers of true morality?
43466We walk round behind him and say:"Can man sin against man?
43466Well, my friends, how do we feel about a shark?
43466Were his companions all men and women of virtue and good sense?
43466What are the qualities that go to the making of a great composer?
43466What are"morals"?
43466What causes me to try?
43466What causes the fluctuations?
43466What causes these two free wills to will so differently?
43466What do these gibes mean?
43466What follows?
43466What for?''
43466What goes on in his mind?
43466What had changed the free will of Hicks from a will to work to a will to loaf?
43466What has changed this man''s free will to work into a free will to avoid work?
43466What is conscience?
43466What is his defence?
43466What is it most men strive for?
43466What is it tells him he did wrong?
43466What is it?
43466What is reflex action?
43466What is the cause of crime?
43466What is the cause of ignorance?
43466What is the cause of poverty?
43466What is the common assay for moral gold?
43466What is the lesson of Buddha, and of the Indian, Persian, and Greek moralists?
43466What is there in that paragraph that is inconsistent with my belief?
43466What is this"mysterious"double- self?
43466What is"psychic atavism"?
43466What kind of environment, what land of stamina can they give their children?
43466What kind of reasoning can we expect from men who have been taught that it is wicked to think?
43466What knowledge?
43466What made one do what the other refused to do?
43466What makes me wish?
43466What manner of man would he have been?
43466What says the man in the street?
43466What were his parents like?
43466What would they do, these women, were it not for the Devil''s usury of peace-- the gin?
43466Whence did he derive that defect of ear?
43466Whence, then, did Handel get his musical genius?
43466Where was the"still small voice,"the"divine guide to right conduct"?
43466Which is the more rational?
43466Which of us can assess his debt to such men as Shakespeare, Dante, Shelley, Dickens, and Carlyle?
43466Which of us does not admire and honour an innocent, graceful, and charming girl?
43466Which of you has spoken a word or lifted a hand to prevent this wholesale wrong?
43466Who amongst us has not fought with wild beasts-- not at Ephesus, but in his own heart?
43466Who amongst us is so pure and exalted that he has never been conscious of the bestial taint?
43466Who is answerable for a thing that is caused: he who causes it, or he who does not cause it?
43466Who shall be punished for the crimes of the law and of society against him?
43466Who would be readier to stab a rival, an English curate, or a Spanish smuggler?
43466Who would more willingly return a blow, an Irish soldier, or an English Quaker?
43466Who, then, is responsible for good and evil?
43466Why did he work?
43466Why does Dulcett play the violin so well?
43466Why does Jarman play the violin so evilly?
43466Why does an apple tree never bear bananas?
43466Why does he succeed?
43466Why does not Jones the engineer write poetry?
43466Why does not Robinson the musical composer invent a flying machine?
43466Why does not Smith of the Stock Exchange paint pictures?
43466Why has conscience thus changed its tone with me?
43466Why is John a drunkard?
43466Why is an English labourer deficient in the manners of polite society?
43466Why not?
43466Why?
43466Why?
43466Why?
43466Why?
43466Why?
43466Will He punish or reward us, then, for the acts of His agents: the agents He made and controlled?
43466Will any man on the jury say me nay?
43466Would he grow up with the ideas of to- day, or with the ideas of those who taught and trained him?
43466Would it have been his fault that he had never heard good counsel, but had been drilled and trained to evil?
43466Would it have been his fault that he was born amongst thieves?
43466Would not the effects be very different?
43466Would proper teaching have made a Jarman a proper player?
43466Would such books, so read, make no impression upon his impressionable mind?
43466Would that affect him naught?
43466Would the fierce religious atmosphere of Cromwellian camps have no effect upon his sensitive and imaginative nature?
43466You are not going to tell me that I am answerable or blame- able for the nature of matter and force, nor for the operations of God''s laws, are you?
43466You who are so anxious to punish crime, what are you doing to prevent it?
43466_ But what causes him to choose?_ That is the pivot upon which the whole discussion turns.
43466_ Quite_ sure that his failure was not due to bad environment instead of to bad heredity?
43466_ Quite_ sure the noble was_ not_ a degenerate?
43466_ Why?_ Because it is_ poison_.
43466and the tramp, and the harlot, and the sot; how were_ they_ brought up, and had they anything to love?
43466do you mean to say-?"
43466this suggest the wonderful possibilities of variation and atavism?
45887''Think you, mid all this mighty sum Of things forever speaking, That nothing of itself will come, But we must still be seeking? 45887 ''Where are your books?
45887A great man, did he say? 45887 A poet?"
45887And, indeed,asked he, very gravely,"what may be your object in making this inquiry?"
45887As if but yesterday departed, Thou, too, art gone before; yet why For ripe fruit, seasonably gathered, Should frail survivors heave a sigh? 45887 Ay, but what farmhouse, that''s the thing?
45887But you know what a ballad singer is?
45887Can I but relive in sadness? 45887 Can there be any doubt,"we asked,"that Scott is the author of Waverley?"
45887Clara, Clara Vere de Vere, If time be heavy on your hands, Are there no beggars at your gate, Nor any poor about your lands? 45887 Could he tell us of any other part of the city where Campbell had lived?"
45887Could it possibly be any body else?
45887D''ye think so?
45887Did she seem quite well here?
45887Did you see that?
45887Do n''t you know what a poet is?
45887Do you know what that is?
45887Do you think,said the general,"you can run a Frenchman through the body?"
45887Have those horrible reports,she eagerly inquired,"got into the papers, Miss Roberts?"
45887How do you like it? 45887 In what house?"
45887Is that a linden? 45887 Is that an inn?"
45887Lives there a reptile baser than the slave? 45887 Oh, I have been puzzling my brain to invent a new sleeve; pray how do you like it?"
45887Shall men for whom our age Unbaffled powers of vision hath prepared, To explore the world without, and world within, Be joyless as the blind? 45887 Silas, was n''t he a Cornish man?
45887Spirit all- limitless, Where is thy dwelling- place? 45887 Well, but has not Mr. Wordsworth written against the railroads?"
45887Well, what did the man say?
45887What are your Sir Robert Peels, your Grahams, and your Stanleys good for, if they can not stop the steam?
45887What could the bonny girl mean by being so urgent that I should take some of her whisky?
45887What do you come here for?
45887What, then, have you been doing with yourself this last month?
45887Who could forgive this? 45887 Who in the world could ever cut down a linden, or dare, in his senses, to break a twig off one?
45887Who is it?--Did he give his name?
45887Who is that? 45887 Why art thou so far from me, O my Lord?
45887Why should he not?
45887Why, who is that?
45887Why, who the d--- l are you?
45887With what arms will ye surprise Knowledge of the million eyes? 45887 Yet I, whose lids from infant slumbers Were earlier raised, remain to hear A timid voice that asks in whispers,''Who next will drop and disappear?''
45887_ Marvel._--What wants them more? 45887 ''Boy,''said the stranger,''wilt thou hold my steed, Till I walk round the corner of that mere? 45887 ''Kilmeny, Kilmeny, where have you been? 45887 ''Who sought''st to wreck my mortal ark? 45887 ''Why not set forth if I should do This rashness,[6] that which might ensue With this old soul in organs new? 45887 --Is it_ very_ rusty, sir?"
45887All honor to every man who fought in the good fight, but what honor should be shown to him who began it?
45887And if he wanted more income, had not he his pen, and was not he very popular with the periodicals?
45887And must she wake that poor o''erlabored youth?
45887And these roses, the fairest that ever were seen?
45887And what avails Renown, if their presumption makes them such?
45887And what, then, is the fundamental philosophy of Wordsworth?
45887And what_ will_ all those navies do when the railways are all made?
45887And whence arises this?
45887And why dedicate an orchard to his deceased parents?
45887Another, tottering with disease, ejaculated,"Can you tell, Silas, how many rose from the ranks?"
45887Are authors now what authors were in the days of Grub- street?
45887Are they, too, dedicated to his best of parents, or only to his poor brethren of mankind?
45887Are we then come to this?
45887But Achilles and Ajax, says some one, what do they here?
45887But are our spirits humbled?
45887But how can he expect that others should Build for him, sow for him, and at his call Love him, who for himself will take no care at all?
45887But what a scene was there?
45887But what care all sensible people what a man''s origin was, so that his career was honorable?
45887But what was the fact?
45887But where is the poet, who used here to live, and there to wander and think?
45887Can I the seats of wealth and want explore, And lengthen out my lays from door to door?"
45887Can measured lines these various buildings show, The Town- Hall Turning, or the Prospect Row?
45887Can she stop the steam, eh?
45887Can there be a doubt that he did so with Sheridan and Moore?
45887Cast the spell of his enchantment upon every stream?
45887Could he, who sung so well the Grecian Fleet, So well have sung of Alley, Lane, or Street?
45887Did there yet want any thing?
45887Did you feel the shot?
45887Do they mean that she can stop steam?
45887Do you call it playing, to be unhappy if you can not be a robber, happy if you can be one?
45887Do you call it playing, to plunder your guests and overreach your friends?
45887Do you want to weep over distress?
45887Do you wish for a sensation?
45887Does not that look very much like hypocrisy?"
45887Dost thou write one thing and think another?
45887Drawing near, he thus accosted Coleridge,"I say, young man, did you meet a_ tailor_ on the road?"
45887Eh?
45887Every gate is thronged with suitors, all the markets overflow, I have but an angry fancy,--what is that which I should do?
45887For why, good Lord?
45887Has he, like Wordsworth, woven his verse into almost every crevice of every rock?
45887Have n''t I bought the wool all over this country these twenty years?
45887He asks, Shall our great discoverers obtain less from sense and reason than these obtained?
45887He limns England as it was, and as it is; and asks the aristocratic and the millocrat if they are not ashamed of their deeds?
45887His peers, they scorn?--high dames, they shun him?
45887How can a mortal deem, how it may be, That being can ne''er be but present with thee?
45887How constantly do we see this effect in life, but where ever has it been, and in so few words, so fully expressed?
45887How did the reality agree with this fairy sketch?
45887How long was it since Miss Edgeworth sat by the little water- fall in the Rhymer''s glen, and gave her name to the stone on which she was seated?
45887I admire Wordsworth, as who does not, whatever they may pretend?
45887I exclaimed,"not know where your celebrated cousin was born?"
45887I know not my own being, how can I thine?
45887I wept, and always thought with myself, what is to hinder me from succeeding Burns?
45887If Elliott had chanced to die before Bowring had chanced to visit Sheffield-- what then?
45887If they do not blush at their philosophy; if they do not recoil from these scenes of woe, and crime, and ferocity, that they have created?
45887In what favorite scene has he not introduced the wind- flower?
45887Is it any wonder that the parents of these people took Coleridge for a spy, and Wordsworth for a dark traitor?
45887Is it not a glen most glen- icular?
45887Is it the same man you mean, think you?"
45887Is it true that thou knewest me befere I was born?
45887Is it true that thou sawest me ere I saw the morn?
45887Is this the scale of topic, and is this the tone to which we are reduced in this generation?
45887Kilmeny, Kilmeny, where have you been?''
45887Liar-- betrayer-- false as cruel, What is the doom for his dastard sin?
45887Made the hills, the waters, the hamlets, and the people, part and parcel of his life and his fame?
45887Mated with a squalid savage-- what to me were sun or clime?
45887Not less so the portraiture of the age:--"What is that which I should turn to, lighting upon days like these?
45887On this, Mr. Blanchard says, very innocently, how then could she possibly have got it?
45887One instantly asks-- where was Sir Walter''s taste?
45887Open an account?
45887Poets?
45887Quere?
45887See, there now is a man just gone, that will be a name these five hundred years hence; yet what does he come to me for?
45887Shall the cypress of Soma be without a rival?
45887Should n''t you like to live in the house over the way, where the doves are?
45887Sir Walter Scott?
45887So let her in calm oblivion lie; While the world runs merry as heretofore?
45887So much for the poetry, but still where is the poet?
45887Stop a moment; how shall we climb over these two enormous pines?
45887Such men, who that has spent his youth in the country, has not known, and has not loved?
45887Such seemed the whisper at my side:''What is it thou knowest, sweet voice?''
45887Tennant the author of Anster Fair?
45887That bonny snood o''the birk sae green?
45887That he loved the lakes and mountains around, there can be no question; but has he linked his poetry with them?
45887That nature must live in the light of thine eye?
45887The Cossack and the Bohemian-- did they not also carry away from it to their far- off lands tokens of their veneration?
45887The bricklayers?
45887The next question was,"How would you like to have them furnished?"
45887The old man, looking at him attentively, asked him if he had been in bed?
45887The''_ Where are they?_''was too bad.
45887There, dost thou see him, blue and shivering, stand, And lift at thee his little, threatening hand?
45887They attack old and bloody prejudices, and are asked if they are wiser than any one else?
45887To such a tribute, what can be added?
45887Were they so excessively fond of apples?
45887What could they be after there?
45887What does not the world owe to noble- minded women in this respect?
45887What does the fellow mean?--Where are they?''
45887What ears now are intent to hear of this vaunted boon of this great and good king''s visit sung by this paid poet, the pious Southey?
45887What else could they be going all that way for, to look at"the green sea,"and at great"valleys of stones?"
45887What had the Irish to bless this king for?
45887What has Locke to do in the chapter- house of a set of ancient friars?
45887What has all the society of ordinary city and literary life to equal that?
45887What has one learned?
45887What is it?
45887What is mightier than the wise?
45887What is this?
45887What long- drawn tube transports the gazer home, Kindling with stars at noon the ethereal dome?
45887What mind can embody thy presence divine?
45887What of the perpetual creed of L. E. L., that all affection brings woe and death?
45887What says Wordsworth?
45887What was Peter Bell to a comicalist?"
45887What were they but prose amplifications of his Lady of the Lake, his Marmion, and his Lord of the Isles?
45887What''s that?
45887What, with their animadversions, can they do like this?"
45887What_ is_ to become of the poor boatmen when there are nothing but steamers?"
45887Whence comes it?
45887Where gat ye that joup o''the lily scheen?
45887Where is his friend Poole?
45887Where was the judgment which guided him in describing Di Vernon, Flora MacIvor, or Rebecca?
45887Where would now be the fame of the Corn- Law Rhymer?
45887Which version of this story is the more correct, who shall decide?
45887Who are they that have ruined trade, made bread dear, made murder wholesale, put poverty into prison, and made crimes of ignorance and misery?
45887Who bids her soul with conscious triumph swell?
45887Who cares a button for the ancestors of Byron, of Milton, of Shakspeare, of Goëthe, or of Schiller?
45887Who guides the patient pilgrim to her cell?
45887Who shall say, after this, that Alfred Tennyson wants power?
45887Who, that has ever been into a cloth- weaving district, does not see the place and people?
45887Why not satisfy himself with some rational monument?
45887Why should I require so many more comforts than the bulk of my fellow- creatures can get?
45887Why, Montesinos, with these books, and the delight you take in their constant society, what have you to covet or desire more?''
45887Why?
45887With conscious truth retrace the mazy clew Of summer scents, that charmed her as she flew?
45887Yet why should he?
45887You may hear his voice, but where is the man?
45887_ Southey''s Ode on the King''s Visit to Ireland._ Who would not have believed that this was some virtuous monarch, the father of his people?
45887a confronting of two leafy banks, with a rivulet between?
45887and what do not women owe to the world and themselves in the consciousness of the possession of this authority?
45887and yet you come to see the house; and perhaps you have come a good way?"
45887art thou a man, Or but a wandering voice?"
45887as I met her the other day walking along the muddy road below here--''Is it a woman, or a man, or what sort of an animal is it?''
45887can she, think you?
45887can ye be base?
45887could all the clever turnkeys of York Castle, for fifty years almost to a day, have been showing a wrong room to thousands of visitors?
45887do they?
45887exclaimed a grave Quaker, who stood near--"why, dost thou make a difference between what is professional and what is real?
45887exclaimed a young, sentimental man,"you who have written so many volumes of poetry upon it?"
45887hath he virtues too?
45887have you bitterns here?"
45887how should you?
45887is Tennant dead then?"
45887is it not a public- house even?"
45887my dear, what must I call you?--Miss Landon, or who?"
45887oh where do thy wonders end?"
45887said Coleridge.--"Will you sell him?"
45887said Middleton,"See what?"
45887said the officer,"old Faustus ground young again?"
45887shall Frenchmen scorn a race Born in Hampden''s dwelling- place?
45887what do you want?"
45887what is that?"
45887what weight?
45887what, on purpose?"
45887why hidest thou thy face?
45887why not?
40024''What do you want for the jubilee?''
40024''Will be home on the 11.55 what do you want for the jubilee?''
40024A leak?
40024A question?
40024A rut? 40024 All ready?
40024Am I to talk to you on the way home, Granny, dear?
40024Am I?
40024And Joan?
40024And did you?
40024And do you think your great- grandson will remember his golden wedding without being reminded?
40024And how hot he is at the way the Germans have treated his country and his grand duchess? 40024 And will you please go over to the shop and ask Mr. Cabot if I may speak to him at once?"
40024Any new fox trots, Granny?
40024Are n''t you going to say that you are glad to see me?
40024Are n''t you ready, Rebecca Mary?
40024Are n''t you ready?
40024Are n''t you shaking in your shoes?
40024Are n''t you?
40024Are you Joan''s teacher?
40024Are you a prisoner, too, daddy?
40024Are you a prisoner, too?
40024Are you afraid?
40024Are you going in here?
40024Are you interested in this mysterious experiment, too? 40024 Are you ready to recite it?
40024Are you there, Miss Wyman? 40024 As pink as you expected?"
40024But can you tell me where River Street is?
40024But first give me that promise? 40024 But how am I going to find him?"
40024But how can we run away from Riverside?
40024But if I can not have your love I hope always to have your friendship?
40024But who was it?
40024But why is n''t he at the shop with the others?
40024But, honest, wo n''t you be through soon? 40024 Ca n''t she trust me?"
40024Ca n''t you fix it? 40024 Ca n''t you give me a clue?"
40024Can you change your eyes and your heart if you do n''t like the ones you have, like Mrs. Muldoon changed the bread one day? 40024 Can you do that?"
40024Can you keep a secret?
40024Can you put them back?
40024Can you?
40024Daddy?
40024Did n''t I see you at the Waloo the other afternoon?
40024Did n''t things go well?
40024Did n''t you love that new fox trot?
40024Did you ever see her father?
40024Did you see her father?
40024Did you see who he was?
40024Did you teach her to do that in the Lincoln school?
40024Do I?
40024Do n''t know?
40024Do n''t tell me you came empty handed, Peter Simmons?
40024Do n''t you hope it is?
40024Do n''t you know that''s why the Major brought the whole works down here?
40024Do n''t you know?
40024Do n''t you, Pierson?
40024Do n''t you?
40024Do n''t you?
40024Do you mean me when you say half a woman?
40024Do you mean to tell us that we ca n''t go when it is n''t our fault we''re here? 40024 Do you think it is always easy for a girl to know what to do?"
40024Do you wish to leave any message with me?
40024Does Mr. Frederick Befort live here? 40024 Does he actually mean that?
40024Does n''t Befort know that you are my girl?
40024Does she honestly expect me to remember that golden wedding present?
40024Eh?
40024Every man?
40024For ever?
40024Gentlemen hold a lot more than ladies, do n''t they?
40024Golf is no game for a girl, is it, Miss Wyman?
40024Great old mind reader, Dick Cabot is, is n''t he? 40024 Have n''t you?"
40024Have they been so unpleasant?
40024Have you come to rescue us again?
40024Have you had your breakfast? 40024 Have you heard anything from her father yet?
40024Have you heard from her father?
40024Have you missed me?
40024He did?
40024He did?
40024He''s very nice, do n''t you think so, Miss Wyman? 40024 Hello, who''s the chap in the Prussian uniform?"
40024How can it be otherwise?
40024How can they have any when men have so much?
40024How can they?
40024How could you run away without leaving a word for me?
40024How did I know you had n''t sent her?
40024How did you get in here?
40024How did you know? 40024 How do you like my great- grandmother?"
40024How many hours are there left until bedtime?
40024How shall we find out?
40024How?
40024How?
40024I do n''t bore you, do I?
40024I do n''t think that''s very interesting, do you? 40024 I have n''t lost it, have I?"
40024I hope you are not a settlement worker who will scold me for indiscriminate giving? 40024 I say what was old Wallie telling you before dinner that made you both howl?
40024I say, you''re not angry with me?
40024I suppose you''ve been there? 40024 I was there with daddy, was n''t I, Miss Wyman?"
40024I wonder if Cinderella''s coach went as fast as this?
40024I wonder if your husband gave you what you wanted on holidays and anniversaries?
40024I''ve seen them, have n''t I, Miss Wyman?
40024If you are to call on the Mifflin Bank do n''t you think you had better go?
40024If you feel that way,Rebecca Mary said impulsively,"why do you tease Granny?"
40024If you tell me you kept me in your heart, Rebecca Mary, I sha n''t mind how many men there were in your hand?
40024In Germany, you mean?
40024In what way?
40024In what way?
40024Is Mr. Befort at the shop?
40024Is it Santa Claus or Uncle Sam? 40024 Is it the same as being a nuisance?
40024Is it, Miss Wyman? 40024 Is n''t she a funny woman, Miss Wyman?"
40024Is n''t there something else you should take?
40024Is n''t this an attractive place? 40024 Is that all the present is?"
40024Is that young Peter with our jailor? 40024 Is there any reason why we should n''t drive out there to- morrow, Rebecca Mary?
40024Is your old heart getting younger, Granny?
40024It is a lovely golden wedding, is n''t it?
40024It is n''t from any question, is it? 40024 It might have been easier but would it have been as thrilling?"
40024It wo n''t hurt to do it that way, will it?
40024It would be more interesting to have rats than engines, would n''t it? 40024 Just how should I go to work?
40024Just what is this experiment which is going to mean so much to the world?
40024Like it?
40024May I ask where you are going?
40024May I speak to you?
40024May n''t I even telephone to my maid for clothes?
40024May we have some tea, Granny?
40024Miss Wyman,he said very formally,"I beg that you will honor me by becoming my wife?"
40024Mrs. Peter Simmons-- of Waloo?
40024Must I?
40024Must you go?
40024Not now----"He has n''t sold it?
40024Odd little thing, is n''t she?
40024Oh, do n''t you, miss?
40024Oh?
40024Or is it all gone?
40024Our hearts are young, are n''t they?
40024Pink plan?
40024Ready for what?
40024Rebecca Mary,to her great relief Granny chuckled as she turned to her,"did you ever hear of such a thing?
40024Rescue you?
40024Say you wo n''t?
40024Sha n''t I?
40024Shall I be afraid, Granny? 40024 Shall I twist a sheet and lower you from the window?"
40024Shall we go and play ball, Miss Wyman? 40024 Shall we?"
40024She is a dear, is n''t she? 40024 So this is where you grew to be such a big girl?"
40024So,he murmured as he hugged her,"I am romantic, am I?
40024Such as?
40024Suppose you sit in front with Richard? 40024 Tell me about your father?"
40024That is n''t exactly the way I''d state it, but it''s the way it is, is n''t it, Wallie? 40024 That is why he made you an eagle, is n''t it?"
40024That sounds very important, does n''t it? 40024 The suit case is in the car, is n''t it?
40024Then when he asks you to come for a row on the river you wo n''t go, will you?
40024Then you like to be with me as much as with Simmons?
40024Then you think it''s better not to have and want, than to have and not care for?
40024Then, perhaps Joan is right and you are really Count Ernach de Befort?
40024There''s Joan?
40024They call this the millionaires''retreat, do n''t they, Richard?
40024They name babies for kaisers but do they ever name them for jam?
40024Tired?
40024Tired?
40024Want fifty more?
40024Want to go faster?
40024Want to learn? 40024 Want to run over and have a fox trot?
40024Was Joan at school to- day?
40024Was it Befort?
40024Was n''t it?
40024Was there any rain in your dream?
40024We''ll keep the secret, wo n''t we, Miss Wyman? 40024 Were you ever a bad little girl?"
40024Wh- a- t?
40024What are you doing there?
40024What could happen?
40024What did father give you, Mother Simmons?
40024What did he say? 40024 What did he want?
40024What did she give you, Father Simmons?
40024What do you know about starch?
40024What do you mean, Joan?
40024What do you mean?
40024What do you really think yourself?
40024What do you say?
40024What does a flighty young thing like you want of a rest? 40024 What does that mean, dear Granny Simmons?
40024What else could I do?
40024What have you done to my Cousin Richard?
40024What is she engaged to?
40024What is that about pearls?
40024What is that down by the lake?
40024What is this great experiment?
40024What next?
40024What now? 40024 What should you have done, Judith, if there had been but one baby?
40024What was n''t a dream?
40024What will it do?
40024What would I do with a string of pearls? 40024 What would Peter be doing at the cross roads at that time of night?
40024What''s figure speaking?
40024What''s that?
40024When you are married you will want a golden wedding, wo n''t you?
40024Where are we?
40024Where are you?
40024Where did you come from? 40024 Where did you come from?"
40024Where did you get that?
40024Where have you been all afternoon? 40024 Where have you brought us, Rebecca Mary?"
40024Where is Mr. Cabot? 40024 Where was your old home, my dear?"
40024Where''s Mrs. Simmons? 40024 Where''s your grandmother?"
40024Where?
40024Wherever did you find that child?
40024Which shall we have, Rebecca Mary?
40024Who has been eating my strawberries?
40024Who is calling you names?
40024Who is it?
40024Who is she?
40024Who would want to teach school for ever?
40024Whose place do you think this is?
40024Why ca n''t she?
40024Why ca n''t she?
40024Why ca n''t we go? 40024 Why did n''t you tell me you wanted to learn?"
40024Why did you pester me so if you remembered?
40024Why not, Rebecca Mary? 40024 Why not?"
40024Why should I be angry?
40024Why should I send a woman, two women, to a place I had chosen for an important experiment which I wanted to work out in secret? 40024 Why should any one, least of all an old woman of sixty- eight, run away from a question?"
40024Will they? 40024 Will you be so very kind as to wish me luck?"
40024Will you give the old couples young hearts, Granny?
40024Will you keep Joan until then, Miss Wyman? 40024 Will you marry me, sweetheart?"
40024Will you, Rebecca Mary?
40024Will you?
40024Will you?
40024Wo n''t I talk to you?
40024Wo n''t he, Rebecca Mary?
40024Would you like to do it for me for ever?
40024Would you?
40024Yes, Miss Wyman, how can we keep our hearts young when there is always a birthday before us?
40024Yes, what did you give her?
40024Yes? 40024 Yes?"
40024Yes?
40024You are sure you can trust your men?
40024You ca n''t stay? 40024 You could tell me?"
40024You did n''t come empty handed?
40024You did n''t find any one to answer the bell, did you?
40024You do n''t need to be told, do you?
40024You do n''t trust me?
40024You have been away from your native country many months,_ mignonne_, but you have not forgotten which side of the Sure was your home?
40024You just the same as told me you had forgotten when you kept asking that foolish question--''What do you want?'' 40024 You know he has a_ croix de guerre_?"
40024You like Miss Wyman, do n''t you, Joan?
40024You never told him that, Pierson?
40024You searched all Germany?
40024You see?
40024You think a fat lot of yourself, do n''t you?
40024You''ll take me, Granny Simmons? 40024 You''re not?"
40024''At Riverside?''
40024''What side was you on in the late war?''
40024Ah hopes you gwine ter like the lower half of this spring chicken, Mrs. Simmons?
40024And Mr. Cabot?
40024And anyway what difference did it make when they reached Seven Pines?
40024And dear Miss Wyman has n''t found the payment for her insurance, have you, Miss Wyman?"
40024And there was Mr. Simmons----""Not old Peter Simmons?"
40024And what the deuce do you want?"
40024And when Rebecca Mary just sat there flushed and guilty, Peter went on with great determination,"Do you know what I am going to do?"
40024And who was the thruster?
40024Are n''t they any place but in fairy land?"
40024Are n''t they beautiful?
40024Are n''t you almost through?"
40024Are n''t you ashamed of the way you''ve been running about the country?"
40024Are n''t you glad?"
40024Are n''t you, Rebecca Mary?"
40024Are you afraid, Miss Wyman?"
40024Are you sorry?"
40024Are you through?
40024Are you, dear Miss Wyman?
40024As for German words, you know he was practically brought up in Germany?"
40024Befort?"
40024But how can I when it gets older every year?
40024But if he was n''t the Big Boss why had the men treated him so deferentially and taken him at once to the forbidden shop?
40024But if slumber had stolen insidiously over her how had they reached the old shed?
40024But life would n''t be worth much if we did n''t occasionally do something we should n''t, would it?"
40024But then who does in a town like Waloo where patches of four- leaf clovers are as scarce as paving stones are plenty?
40024But what could she do?
40024But whoever would have imagined that when I ran away from you I should run right into you?"
40024But why in the dickens were you and Granny and this half woman,"he pinched Joan''s cheek,"going to Seven Pines in the middle of the night?"
40024But you have n''t your young heart, have you, Granny?
40024CHAPTER XIV"Do you know what I am going to do?"
40024Ca n''t you be quicker?
40024Ca n''t you learn that an anniversary or a holiday is just a day, just one of the three hundred and sixty- five which make up a year?"
40024Ca n''t you let yourself enjoy life instead of fear it?
40024Cabot?"
40024Cabot?"
40024Can you repeat for Miss Wyman our national hymn,_ ma petite_?"
40024Could you-- do you care for me?"
40024Dear me, that makes it very serious, does n''t it?
40024Did he ask you to marry him, Rebecca Mary?"
40024Did n''t I tell you he was a great tease?
40024Did you know that old Mr. Simmons is the Big Boss?"
40024Did you know that we would have to stay for ever?"
40024Do n''t it to you?"
40024Do n''t the words want to tumble from your tongue?"
40024Do n''t you know that youth should enjoy things for old age to remember?
40024Do n''t you like to have your back shiver?"
40024Do n''t you want to help too, Miss Wyman?"
40024Do n''t you want to take a spin down the River Road before you go home?
40024Do you believe her?"
40024Do you know anything about this great work we''re doing here, Miss Wyman?"
40024Do you like the golden wedding?
40024Do you play tennis?"
40024Do you think she would rather have had a string of pearls?"
40024Do you think you can find any tea for these thirsty children?"
40024Do you think you''d like one of those?"
40024Does n''t he know that I brought you here to get you away from old Dick Cabot?"
40024Does n''t it cast a shadow like a fool''s- cap on the head of our friend, Wallie?"
40024Does n''t it seem restful and quiet, Rebecca Mary?
40024Does n''t she look like a princess?"
40024Does n''t that sound like Peter now?"
40024Echternach sounds German, does n''t it?
40024Erickson?"
40024Granny said sausage and waffles did n''t belong to dinner, but if we had them for dinner they would, would n''t they?
40024Has it seemed long to you?"
40024Have n''t you any clue?
40024Have n''t you finished yet?
40024Have you been studying your lesson, Miss Wyman?"
40024Have you mended the ball my father made me?
40024He wanted to know where----""You could n''t tell him that, could you, Pierson?"
40024He''s-- he''s a lot better than a potato masher, is n''t he?"
40024Horatio and Hiram are dreadful names, are n''t they?
40024How about it, Miss Wyman?"
40024How are you?''
40024How can I keep it young for ever?"
40024How could a man be anything but good to you?
40024How could she have made such a mistake?
40024How dared Cousin Susan talk to her like that?
40024How did they really know whether he actually had come from the Luxembourg side of the River Sure?
40024How did you pass the guard at the gate?"
40024How do you know that you wo n''t make your own fortune in some marvelous way?
40024How do you know you will live to grow old?
40024How does it feel?"
40024How is Granny?
40024How many years have you worn that suit?"
40024How much longer will it be before we may leave, Major Martingale?"
40024How the dickens did you get in?
40024How was he to know what one of them wanted for a golden wedding present?
40024How would you like that?"
40024I do n''t remember which thought of it first, do you, Peter?"
40024I do n''t suppose there is any way we could slip out?"
40024I hope you do n''t think it''s too much?"
40024I hope you do n''t think we are foolishly extravagant, Rebecca Mary?
40024I should think, Miss Wyman, dear, you would tell me who he is?"
40024I take exercise myself, do n''t I, Peter?
40024I think Germany will still make a try, do n''t you, Wallie?"
40024I wish you would promise me something?"
40024I wrote you that I''d met the wonderful Peter Simmons, did n''t I?"
40024ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGE She thrust the violets into Rebecca''s hand_ Frontispiece_"Do you mean to tell us that we ca n''t go?"
40024If Mr. Cabot comes up from the shop, or Mr. Peter, or even old Mr. Simmons, will you call me, please?"
40024Is he telling us the truth?"
40024Is n''t it funny how your names change?
40024Is n''t it good?"
40024Is n''t it kind of Mrs. Erickson to let me feed them?
40024Is n''t there something else you should take with you?"
40024Is that only two o''clock?"
40024Is there anything the matter with the car?"
40024It ca n''t be bad for a woman in a strange country to know that another woman is interested in her, can it?"
40024It is pleasant to think so, is n''t it, Joan?"
40024It means that we are going to be friends, does n''t it?"
40024Joan threw herself against him, clasping his legs in her arms, and gasped,"You wo n''t let him drown you, will you?"
40024Just what was Joan?
40024Listen-- is that the train?
40024May I come for you first, and will you go with me and Joan to my poor changed Luxembourg?
40024May I tell you that I love your frock?"
40024Miss Wyman was her teacher and teachers,--could they ever have been bad little girls?
40024Oh, dear, would n''t she ever overcome that silly conscious habit?
40024Oh, did you see that?"
40024Oh, what should she do?
40024Perhaps you have been bored but you''ve been a life- preserver just the same, has n''t she, Wallie?"
40024Peter, will you see if Karl is waiting?
40024Please promise?"
40024Quite comfortable?"
40024Rebecca Mary did n''t look as if she would promise any one anything, but she asked politely:"What would you like me to promise, Cousin Susan?"
40024Rebecca Mary, did you ever think that is what life really is, cutting down our desires to fit our necessities?"
40024Rebecca Mary, do you know what mother and I planned last night?
40024Rebecca Mary, why do you suppose he always asks me?
40024See that bush over there?
40024Shall I show you that I can throw my ball over the hedge?"
40024Shall I?
40024She seems to have made an impression on old Dick, Granny?
40024She was on guard and-- and what happens when sentries go to sleep at their post?
40024Should she turn to the right or the left or keep straight ahead?
40024Simmons?"
40024Simmons?"
40024So I ran just as fast as I could for I knew if I told you he never could drown you, could he?"
40024So when Richard asked her with a compelling mixture of curiosity and determination:"What''s in there?"
40024Some day you''ll know that I''m right, wo n''t she, Wallie?"
40024Suppose you talk to me?
40024That was why we bought Seven Pines, was n''t it, Peter?
40024The bride ca n''t be, can she?"
40024There is nothing to be afraid of, is there, Granny?"
40024This is the last week of school, is n''t it?"
40024Want to be the one?"
40024Was Granny going to ask Peter to take her home?
40024Was he jealous?
40024Was it a success?"
40024Was n''t it?"
40024We''ll be model prisoners if you wo n''t, wo n''t we?"
40024Well, we''ve had fifty pretty fair years together, have n''t we?"
40024What I want to know is, are you going to marry me?"
40024What are you doing here, Stanley?"
40024What could Marie Louise Adelheid do?
40024What did Mr. Simmons say, Pierson?"
40024What did Mrs. Cabot mean?
40024What did Mrs. Erickson say when you took the kitten back?"
40024What do you know about the Beforts?"
40024What do you mean?"
40024What do you think you are?
40024What does he do with so many?"
40024What does he mean by butting in, anyway?
40024What had Granny to do with it?
40024What have you done to him?"
40024What is it?"
40024What is old Peter Simmons here for anyway?
40024What is that in your hand?"
40024What is the use of going to new places if you do n''t try new things?"
40024What on earth did she mean?
40024What shall I do?
40024What should she do?
40024What should she do?
40024What was n''t a dream?"
40024What will be golden?
40024What will you do?"
40024What would Peter think?
40024What would he think when he came to- morrow, no, to- day, and found her gone?
40024What''s he doing down there I''d like to know?
40024What''s the use of thinking about things I ca n''t ever have?"
40024When Ah took the dinner out ter the shop Mr. Simmons, he sez what you gwine give Mrs. Simmons fer her dinner?
40024Where are you going in such haste?"
40024Where could it have come from?
40024Where do you think you are going?''
40024Where had it come from?
40024Where is your father now?"
40024Where would be a good place?
40024Where''s my bride?"
40024Which father would you have honored?"
40024Which would find her first?
40024Who do you think it was, Miss Wyman, a fairy or an ogre?"
40024Who was in the tea room that afternoon?"
40024Why ai n''t he in bed and asleep like the rest of folks?
40024Why are you going, Miss Wyman?"
40024Why did n''t you bring the wonderful Peter with you to- day instead of the First National Bank?"
40024Why did n''t you take me to Childs''?"
40024Why did n''t you tell Mrs. Erickson that?"
40024Why did you throw it?"
40024Why should Richard waste time calling her names when there was a spy in Major Martingale''s office?
40024Why should any one bring you?
40024Why should she always be so horribly self- conscious?
40024Why should they?"
40024Why, there was a moment when my whole future was wrapped up in ten yards of cheap swiss?"
40024Will you gwine have yo''dinner now, Miss Wyman?
40024Will you have cream or lemon in your tea?
40024Will you?"
40024Wo n''t he, Rebecca Mary?"
40024Would I like one?"
40024Would n''t you think, then, that he would n''t want any Germans here?
40024You are an American, I suppose, Mrs. Simmons, but your companions, what are they?"
40024You can drive it, ca n''t you?"
40024You did n''t forget, Peter?"
40024You do n''t think it was Major Martingale, do you?"
40024You have n''t anything to complain of, have you, Rebecca Mary?
40024You heard me tell that young man that we might stay until the twentieth?
40024You know Befort comes from Luxembourg?"
40024You know he tried to get into the service, any service?
40024You know you do n''t really care?"
40024You like to trot, do n''t you, Miss Wyman?"
40024You meet me at-- is six- thirty too early?
40024You understand, do n''t you, Rebecca Mary?"
40024You want to come, do n''t you, Joan?"
40024You''ll never leave me in Waloo?
40024You''ve seen them at state celebrations?"
40024You-- you----""Yes?"
40024[ Illustration:"DO YOU MEAN TO TELL US THAT WE CAN''T GO?"]
40024she groaned,"why did we ever come here?
5840Are you insane?
5840Bless your dear heart, Mary, I know that-- why is your father so obdurate?
5840Confound it, have n''t you got any judgment at''all? 5840 Have you ever edited an agricultural paper before?"
5840Now what sort of a way is that to do? 5840 Now, what do you think of that?
5840Oh, they do n''t, do n''t they? 5840 Tell you, you corn- stalk, you cabbage, you son of a cauliflower?
5840Think of it? 5840 Tired?"
5840What do you mean, John? 5840 What is the matter with the bottom of your feet and the back of your legs, that they are gouged up so?"
5840Will you let that be my business, and not meddle? 5840 And hungry? 5840 And why will you? 5840 But is fame nothing? 5840 But what am I to do? 5840 Did n''t you say you had six months to raise the money in?
5840Do you know what that wheeze means?
5840Do you know, I have been scared to death for the last two or three hours?
5840Do you want to ruin all the furniture on the place?
5840Have you had any experience in agriculture practically?"
5840He put the paper on his lap, and while he polished his spectacles with his handkerchief he said,"Are you the new editor?"
5840How could it help a poor wretch without name, capital, or friends?"
5840How on earth can you raise such a monstrous sum for me?"
5840I said:"Why, is it nobody but you?
5840If I had six centuries what good would it do?
5840Is it not a shame that we, who prate so much about civilization and humanity, are content to degrade a fellow- being to such an office as this?
5840Is the world coming to an end?
5840Now what was the most natural thing for me to do, to make men satisfy this wish?
5840Now who is knocking at that door?
5840The Petrified Man rose slowly to his feet, and said:"Honestly, is that true?"
5840Well, who said they did?
5840Were his thoughts with his heart, ten thousand miles away, beyond the billowy wastes of the Pacific?
5840What does that Arkansas ass know about it?
5840What wages do they pay you here?"
5840Who among us does not miss the gentle ministrations, the softening influences, the humble piety of Lucretia Borgia?
5840Who criticize the Indian campaigns?
5840Who do up the heavy leaders on finance?
5840Who does not sorrow for the loss of Sappho, the sweet singer of Israel?
5840Who edit the agricultural papers, you-- yam?
5840Who has given us a grander instance of self- sacrificing devotion?
5840Who is come to persecute me?
5840Who review the books?
5840Who was braver?
5840Who was more patriotic than Joan of Arc?
5840Who write the dramatic critiques for the second- rate papers?
5840Who write the temperance appeals, and clamor about the flowing bowl?
5840Why am I not a money- making bowelless grocer, instead of a divinely gifted sculptor with nothing to eat?"
5840Why, what put it into your head that you could edit a paper of this nature?
5840Will you leave the thing in my hands?
5840Will you pledge me to find no fault with my actions?"
5840Will you swear to submit to whatever I do?
5840among the ricefields and the plumy palms of China?
5840for I really suppose you wrote it?"
5840under the shadows of remembered mountain peaks, or in groves of bloomy shrubs and strange forest trees unknown to climes like ours?
5840why did n''t you tell me you did n''t know anything about agriculture?"
59649And give up the Cot? 59649 Can we do it?"
59649Do? 59649 Oh, Andrew, how can you speak so?"
59649Oh, Jessie, you would n''t, would you?
59649Tell me, Alec Barsbey,he exclaimed,"why on earth you dropped out of that race?"
59649We''re goin''to be reg''lar folks, ai n''t we?
59649Well,said Andrew, a little upset by her distress,"what''s the use?
59649What are we to do now?
59649What should we have done if you''d got into the quicksand, as we did?
59649Who won?
59649Why ca n''t we unship our rudders and back water till we get to the reeds?
59649Wo n''t the canoes sink with us?
59649You know best, of course,said Harry;"but what''s the use of taking in our sails before we turn around?
59649***** WHO WAS HE, AND WHAT DID HE INVENT?
59649Are you ready?
59649As he sat down on the bed she took his hand, saying:"What was it broke?
59649Do n''t you remember, you read it to me, and how we were wishing we could make some money to give?
59649Do you see that pile of boards?
59649How can you get along without her?
59649I suppose you told Miss Nellie what I was wishing for?"
59649In your answer to our letters you said,"Did we ever forget to come to dinner?"
59649Now, Semiramis, what have you to say for yourself?
59649On which action of your past life can you look back with most pleasure?
59649So, Andrew, wo n''t you finish your sticks?
59649Then turning to me, she said,''Why do n''t you get up, and not lie in bed this time of day; it is''most three o''clock?''
59649Very pale looked the little face, and sad the voice sounded that called just then,"Andrew, can you come here a minute?"
59649WHO WON THE BICYCLE?
59649What can it mean?
59649What did you do in your lifetime?
59649What was to be done?
59649What will you bid for him?"
59649What will you do?"
59649What''s the matter?"
59649Where did you live?
59649Who bids for Adonis?
59649Will you sell her to me?
59649You know how nervous mother is?
59649Your knife?
59649[ Illustration] Said they:"Why longer fear her power?
58965Ah!--then you thought it a long way, Sergeant?
58965Are you perfectly sure you know the road, dear, and that it will not be too much for you?
58965But what are you going to take, Laura?
58965But why can not we attend the race, with the escort, as spectators, and seize them?
58965For sale?
58965Half and half-- what do you mean?
58965Have you seen them?
58965How do you know?
58965How many Indians do you think you saw, George?
58965I?
58965In Princeton''s favor?
58965Mamma, ca n''t I stay up to the dance to- night?
58965May I look at the shoe, sergeant?
58965Mr. Gray, how pleasant you have made that room for Frank and me? 58965 Oh, Tommie, are n''t you awfully afraid of the bears they tell about up here?"
58965Oh, what made you wake me?
58965Papa,said Willie, as he entered his father''s room at the Mountain House,"can I join the band here?"
58965Shall we leave Mr. Washington here while we reconnoitre the front of the house?
58965That''s the''95 football team, is n''t it? 58965 They are n''t playing us a trick, are they, Frank?"
58965What are you doing here?
58965What do you think of it?
58965What have you to say in answer to this charge, sir?
58965What?
58965When you overtook us on the desert you said it was not far to Tyson''s Wells, and that we should soon be there?
58965Where is the Injun who brought that deer- meat here?
58965Why is it that you think they want to capture this house?
58965Would n''t you rather see the winning run made than dream about it?
58965( are you the Captain?)
58965Around outside Lance said,"What is your name?"
58965As they skip they sing, to the tune of"Auld Lang- syne,""Who''ll crown our queen, our merry queen, Who''ll crown our queen to- day?
58965As what-- bass- drummer?"
58965Do you think we''re going to win to- day?
58965Had the boy seen a mirage or gone mad?
58965Have you any boys of your own?"
58965Have you ever tasted fresh figs?
58965How John''s Father?
58965How is poor old Tom?"
58965I saw the game here with Harvard, which we won, and we had a fire, do n''t you remember?
58965May I ask you a question?"
58965Need I confess the emotions with which we realized the service this brave Arizona merchant had done us?
58965Oh, how can I wait for to- morrow to come, anyway?"
58965The chief approached me, and asked in mongrel Spanish:"Usto Capitan?"
58965The old man made his way up the ladder and kneeled before the Chief, who lifted him up, saying:"How John''s Father?
58965We missed him to- day, of course; but did n''t Blake play a magnificent game?"
58965What should he do?
58965What''s that-- the Glee Club?
58965When John opened his eyes some time after this, it was to meet Maquina''s triumphant gaze, and to hear that individual say:"How John?
58965Who''ll crown our queen, our merry queen, Who''ll crown our queen to- day?"
58965Why could n''t he make another?
58965Why, what''s the matter?"
58965Will Blake pitch?"
58965Would the rain hold off for ten minutes more?
58965You''ll spend the night, of course?"
5311----------------"McGill? 5311 And apple sauce?"
5311Andrew, is there any-- any message from Mr. Mifflin? 5311 Are you Miss McGill?"
5311Are you the Phoebus Apollo I scuffled with down the lane last night? 5311 But how often does any one come round here to sell you books?
5311Ca n''t you see that I want a little adventure of my own? 5311 Can she travel on it?"
5311Common sense?
5311Did you ever go to Brooklyn?
5311Did you sleep at all last night?
5311Do you know him, too?
5311Do you know this part of the country?
5311Do you know who wrote it?
5311Do you really make it pay?
5311Father Time, what o''clock is it?
5311Goin''back to prosecute him, I guess?
5311Hello?
5311How about Peg''s foot?
5311How about putting him off the scent?
5311How about your wife-- wouldn''t she enjoy a good book? 5311 How do you know that_ a m_ stands for ten cents?"
5311How do you like that?
5311How do you like the wild life of a bookseller?
5311I guess youse thought we was n''t covering our trail? 5311 I say,"he rejoined,"how old do you think I am, anyway?
5311I wonder if there is n''t something you need?
5311In what relationship do you stand to this Roger Mifflin?
5311Is it Carlyle?
5311Is this where Andrew McGill lives?
5311Look here, Helen,said Andrew,"do you think I propose to have my sister careering around the State with a strolling vagabond?
5311Madam,he said,"''Funeral Orations''( bound in sackcloth, I suppose?)
5311May I get in?
5311Oh, Brooklyn?
5311See here,he said,"I hope you''re not making a bad bargain?
5311Shall I see you in the morning?
5311Tell me first,I said,"where in the world are we, and what time is it?"
5311Tell me,I said,"does your Parnassus--_my_ Parnassus, rather-- contain everything I''m likely to need?
5311That''s the bus that pedlar sold you, ai n''t it?
5311Then do you withdraw the charge?
5311This your own bread, Miss McGill?
5311Thought you could bully us, did you? 5311 Want to buy any books?"
5311Was that Bock barking?
5311We''re almost there, are n''t we?
5311Well, sweetheart,said Roger,"shall we go and see what sort of rooms the hotel has?"
5311Well,I said,"what''s happened to Andrew?"
5311What did you say?
5311What do you do in winter?
5311What do you mean by a great book?
5311What do you mean?
5311What do you say, Emma, think we better buy a book or two? 5311 What do you want with Andrew?"
5311What have you done with the dog, you swine?
5311What on earth for? 5311 What on earth is this nonsense, Helen?"
5311What on earth shall I do?
5311What''s the matter?
5311What''s the matter?
5311Where and whom did you govern?
5311Where are you?
5311Where did Andrew go?
5311Where were you while I was at Pratt''s?
5311Where''s Andrew?
5311Where''s the Perfessor?
5311Whereabout do you come from, Miss McGill?
5311Which way are you going? 5311 Which way do you think you''ll go?"
5311Will you just step this way a moment?
5311Will you marry me? 5311 You any kin to that writer that lives up that way?"
5311You be back to denner?
5311You going away in that-- that''bus, Mis''McGill?
5311You going driving?
5311You have a prisoner here called Roger Mifflin?
5311You mean Andrew McGill?
5311You remember Abe Lincoln''s joke about the dog? 5311 You''re not another publisher, are you?"
5311( Remember how Bacon said that reading poets makes one witty?
5311A book of fairy tales for the little girl I see on the porch?
5311A horrible, condoling voice( have you ever talked to an undertaker over the telephone?)
5311A kidnapper?
5311And now-- had I lost it forever?
5311And now-- what was I to do?
5311And then the horrible noises I had heard in the night; had some tramp been hanging about the van in the hope of robbing me?
5311And where''s Mr. Mifflin?
5311And who is this-- this person you''re driving with?"
5311Are you always fighting?"
5311But after all, why should he mention it?
5311But where was the shoe?
5311CHAPTER ONE I wonder if there is n''t a lot of bunkum in higher education?
5311Did he get his money?"
5311Did he give you the autograph?"
5311Do I have to sit here any longer?
5311Do you suppose your husband would buy the outfit-- Parnassus, Pegasus, and all?
5311Do you think Mr. McGill will give chase?"
5311Does the Sage of Redfield ever run on like that?"
5311Down in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania....""Well, how about the horse?"
5311Each letter stands for a figure, from 0 up to 9, see?"
5311Finally he said,"Is there another town between Greenbriar and Port Vigor?"
5311Got a lift, did you?"
5311Had the tramp attacked Mifflin?
5311Has he sandbagged somebody for reading Nick Carter and Bertha M. Clay?
5311Have you taken over Parnassus?"
5311He''s fond of books, is n''t he?
5311How about some fairy tales for the children?"
5311How about that, parson?"
5311How could I learn the truth?
5311How do you expect to get back to Brooklyn?"
5311How much profit do you make out of it?
5311I guess we all fell asleep over his poetry, so then he started on readin''that''Treasure Island''story to us, was n''t it, Mother?
5311I guess we''d better sell them some books-- hadn''t we?
5311I hesitated a moment, thinking just how to phrase my attack, when the elderly gentleman called out:"Where''s the Professor?"
5311I see that several of you are fond of reading, so perhaps the topic will be congenial?"
5311I suppose this village ahead is Greenbriar?"
5311I suppose you''ll sell her when you return to the Sage?"
5311I wonder who cooked for Stevenson-- Cummy?
5311I''m doing the John Bunyan act, see?
5311If you call a tail a leg, said Abe, how many legs has a dog?
5311If you''re so afraid of your brother taking a fancy to her, why do n''t you buy her yourself and go off on a lark?
5311Is it stocked up with food and so on?"
5311Is there any good books we ought to read?
5311May I show you a copy?"
5311Mr. McGill, is he coming after you?"
5311Not very eloquent, was it?
5311Now is n''t that just like a medico?
5311Or a book about road making for your husband?
5311Or had Mifflin attacked the tramp?
5311Or stories of inventors for that boy who is about to break his neck jumping from the barn loft?
5311Pratt?"
5311Pratt?"
5311Seems kind of a shame, with a famous author at the next farm, not to read more, do n''t it, now?"
5311Shall we cart him over to the jail in Port Vigor, or shall we let him go?"
5311She used to mutter something about"Adventures in Discontentment"and ask why Harriet''s side of the matter was never told?
5311Suppose he had been in the wreck?
5311Surely that was the Professor, just disappearing round the corner with another man?
5311Surely the Professor would not leave without saying good- bye?
5311Surely there is something here you need?
5311Tell the Governor that, will you, when you see him?"
5311That wreck yesterday-- he might have been on that train-- I''ve been so frightened; do you think he was-- hurt?"
5311The mandarins of culture-- what do they do to teach the common folk to read?
5311The''Child''s Garden of Verses''was really a kind of kitchen garden, was n''t it?
5311They ca n''t be far off; you have n''t been away more than an hour, have you?
5311To bring it home to his business and bosom, as somebody says?
5311Was it just homesickness for Parnassus?
5311Was it you skulking around this wagon then?"
5311Was that the train the Professor had taken?
5311Well, I said to the Professor-- to myself I mean-- let''s see: what_ is_ a good book?
5311What I say is, who has ever gone out into high roads and hedges to bring literature home to the plain man?
5311What did he mean by prowling after me like a sleuth?
5311What did they think he was, anyway?
5311What do you mean by following me this way?
5311What if I had known him only-- how long was it?
5311What if he did n''t love me after all?
5311What if that should be the Professor?
5311What librarian can surpass us?
5311What on earth will Andrew do for breakfast?"
5311What right had Andrew to do that?
5311What the hell''s the matter?"
5311What was I doing-- a fat, middle- aged woman-- trapesing along the roads with a cartload of books I did n''t understand?
5311What''s he here for?"
5311Where is he now?
5311Which way do you want to go?"
5311Who had got the better of it?
5311Who was that doctor man who recommended anaesthetics for us at that age?
5311Why had all this been hidden from me before?
5311Why had the transcendent mystery of baking bread blinded me so long to the mysteries of sun and sky and wind in the trees?
5311Why not?"
5311Will that be all right?"
5311Will you come with me and make me the happiest bookseller in the world?"
5311was n''t her coffee awful?
489Ai n''t you goin''out, Tess?
489And what are you doing here in Chicago?
489Are you a schoolteacher, Emily?
489Are you going to tell Father?
489Are you there?
489Away? 489 But did n''t he?
489But did n''t you like her?
489But how could you know? 489 But how does it happen you''re keepin''it up, Emma, all this time?
489But the music?
489But why? 489 Ca n''t you take a joke?"
489Can you speak French?
489Could you,he said, his tones dulcet,"could you oblige me with the name of that last piece you played?"
489Do n''t let this go any further, see? 489 Do you mean to tell me that you screeched like that because my-- because I moved my elbow?"
489Do you want to come along, Ma?
489Does he look like he knew French? 489 Elbow?"
489Eugene?
489Fred?
489Have you had your lunch?
489Have you, Chuck?
489Having a good time, little beauty?
489How did you get here? 489 How long?"
489How much?
489How''s my boy?
489I suppose Mrs. Mooney''s going to call?
489I''ll read it to you, shall I? 489 If you do n''t get married do they say you''re poor?"
489If you want something to do, why do n''t you plant a garden in the back yard and grow something? 489 Is my Joey tired?
489Is n''t that so, Rube?
489Is n''t, huh? 489 Is she sick?"
489It''s-- why, it''s Ruby Watson, is n''t it? 489 Jo?"
489Left the farm, Ben?
489Like who?
489Matter?
489Me? 489 Me?
489Me? 489 Now?"
489Pa, will you look after Pearlie for a little while this morning? 489 Say, Mooney, is that right about Blanche Devine''s having bought the house on the corner?"
489Say, who''s the heroine of this picture? 489 Sight?"
489Sophy, how can you sit there like that? 489 Speculating with it, were you?"
489Tess, did you hear about Angie Hatton?
489That so? 489 That you, Jo?"
489Thing? 489 Think so?"
489Think you''ll know me next time you see me?
489This is better than playing for those ham actors, is n''t it, hon?
489Want to row?
489Well, Angie, it looks as if you''d found your job right here at home, does n''t it? 489 Well, didja go?"
489Well, then?
489Well, what in all get- out are you doing around here, Emma?
489Well,said Tessie, and gulped once,"well, how do you say in French:''Give me a piece of bread''?
489Wha''d he say?
489What about her?
489What am I doing here, Joe?
489What d''you mean, a job? 489 What d''you mean, screeching like a maniac?
489What do you mean, Della? 489 What in the world do you do with all that truck, child?"
489What you got to get?
489What you want to lop around here for? 489 What''d you and your husband quarrel about, Terry?"
489What''m I doin''with it?
489What''s that got to do with it? 489 What''s the matter with it?"
489What''s the matter, Hertz?
489What''s this thing?
489What?
489When did he ask you?
489When you get a line you like you stick to it, do n''t you?
489Where do you suppose he can be?
489Where you been, Tessie?
489Where''s Miss Schwimmer?
489Which one? 489 Which way was you going?
489Who gave you your job?
489Who is it, Dad? 489 Who is it?"
489Who with?
489Who wo n''t? 489 Who''s she?"
489Who''s the old bird?
489Why not? 489 Why not?
489Why not?
489Why-- did I fall asleep?
489Will you be glad, Tess? 489 Will you promise me not to do anything for a week?
489Y''are, huh? 489 You asked me to, did n''t you?"
489You''re Emma Byers, ai n''t you?
489You''re the new teacher, ai n''t you?
489''Spect to stay here till dark?"
489After each attack he would grip my hand and say,"Well, we made it that time, did n''t we, nurse?"
489Ai n''t you tickled to be home, Chuck?
489And he, wordlessly:"Will you wait for me, Tessie, and keep on thinking about me?
489And if he is, why, I step in, see?
489And my make- up''s one of these aviation costumes to go with the song, see?
489Are you just nervous or do you mean you do n''t want to marry him?
489At four o''clock, as she was in the chorus of"Is n''t There Another Joan of Arc?"
489At supper he passed her things, and stared, until everybody laughed again, and Eva said acidly,"Why do n''t you feed her?"
489Away from here, you mean-- to live?"
489Babe used to say petulantly,"Jo, why do n''t you ever bring home any of your men friends?
489Better stay home and-- and what?
489Boy, dear, do n''t you know it wo n''t make any difference with me how you look, or feel, or anything?
489But Chet only cast a languid eye upon it and said,"Yeh?"
489But I wo n''t have Adele associated in the minds of my friends with your hat store, understand?
489But a kind of an army camp room, see?
489But how?
489Ca n''t you read our letters, Dike, that you did n''t know we was here now?
489Ca n''t you talk about something else?"
489Can you beat that?
489Did you ever hear of toxins?
489Do n''t you know how to step into a boat?
489Do you hear me?"
489Do you mean that?
489Does he get any letters?"
489Does n''t he?"
489Funny-- ain''t it?
489Get me?"
489Give a man time, ca n''t you?
489Going to France, was she?
489Got an oilstove?
489Got any ipecac?"
489Have you got something I can read out here-- something kind of lively-- with a love story in it?"
489He and a bunch of fellows had been introduced to a princess or a countess or something-- it was all one to Tessie-- and what do you think?
489He just-- I-- it was---- Say, how did you know we''d quarreled?"
489He''s a bum, all right, but I knew it, did n''t I?
489Hm, Angie?
489Hm?"
489How about my evenings?
489How about the girls?
489How could he know that these very eggs were feeding the dull red menace in Terry Platt''s eyes?
489How could he?
489How could you?"
489How did you happen----?"
489How do I know you''ve quarreled?
489How many tons you used this winter?"
489Huh?"
489I ca n''t bear---- Have you had your breakfast?"
489I just been drillin''and studyin''and marchin''and readin''some---- Oh, say, what d''you think?"
489If that is n''t nothing, what is?"
489If the words----What are the words?
489It is ridiculous, though, is n''t it?
489It''s an aviation song, see?
489Just past the Burke House, where the residential district began, and where the trees cast their kindly shadows:"Can I see you home?"
489Like a wild woman?
489Listen Miss-- ah-- Miss----?"
489No Ben is going to buy my sister''s wedding clothes, understand?
489No half- shy"Can I walk home with you?"
489Now?"
489Oh, God, what''ll I do?
489Oh, well, what''s the diff?
489On the stage, see?
489Once Old Man Hatton interrupted with:"So that''s the kind of fellow they''ve got as escapement- room foreman, eh?"
489Or could make a rhyme?"
489Say it again, will you?"
489See that walking stick he''s carrying?
489See?
489See?"
489She thought of the refrain of a popular song:"What Are You Going to Do to Help the Boys?"
489Stop?"
489Stumpy Gans, up at the railroad crossing?
489Talkin''or playin''?
489Tessie, smiling a crooked little smile up there in the darkness, parodied the words deftly:"What''re you going to do to help the girls?"
489The following Thursday Eva would say,"How did you like her, Jo?"
489Their fathers would n''t prefer caviar to pork roast, would they?
489Their talk?
489Then what are you marrying for?
489Then,"But you do love me, do n''t you, Emily?"
489Then,"Like this, you mean?"
489We would n''t have him stay home, would we?
489We would n''t want him to do anything different, would we?
489Well, how goes it?"
489Well, how''s everything?"
489Well, whutya think I yam, anyway?"
489What I want to know is can you play by ear?"
489What are you paid for?
489What d''you say?"
489What day was it?
489What do I care?"
489What if he was old enough to be her father, with graying hair?
489What should a retired and well- to- do farmer of fifty- eight know of nerves, especially when he has moved to the city and is taking it easy?
489What was that story she had planned to tell?
489What was the name of that little small- time house me and Jim used to play?
489What''ll I do if I do n''t?"
489What''ll we talk about?"
489What''re you doing in this joint?
489What''s a woman like that want to come into a respectable street for, anyway?
489What''s ailing you?
489What''s that you''re playing?"
489What''s there to cry about?
489When she was ten Adele had said to her mother,"Why do you always say''Poor Sophy''?"
489When this is over and I come home, will you let me see you so that I may tell you more than I can possibly write?
489Where''s everybody?"
489Where''s my son that should have gone marching by today?"
489Which one, Emily?"
489Who''s there left?
489Who----?"
489Why did n''t you let me know?"
489Why do n''t you get out?"
489Why do n''t you put on your things and run downtown, or over to Cora''s or somewhere, hm?"
489Why not?"
489Why wo n''t they?"
489Will you come and have a little something with Ruby and me?
489Will you promise me?
489Will you?"
489Would n''t they?"
489You do n''t expect to marry a girl, do you?
489You were going the other way, were n''t you?"
489You''re the alderman of this ward, are n''t you?
6134Was there a man dismayed? 6134 And the Briton himself-- what became of him? 6134 If engines could be made to plough through the water, why might they not also be made to walk the earth? 6134 If such was the condition of the honest working poor, what was that of the criminal? 6134 Is it strange that the plantation in Massachusetts had fresh recruits? 6134 Is not every type of English manhood explained by such an inheritance? 6134 Was it not from their impious hands, that this new knowledge of the physical universe had been received? 6134 What sort of a race were they? 6134 What would be the need of a Parliament, if he did not require money? 59515 Are they going to hurt Thomas?"
59515Are they, Summer?
59515Boy a be Summer could how? 59515 Curious, is n''t it?"
59515Do they? 59515 Gus,"I said,"can you fellows help me find out who those people are we picked up in the park last night?
59515He is n''t, Summer he''s?
59515How about this?
59515How can she? 59515 How can you transfer that into terms of human beings?"
59515How do you know that?
59515Just fade away?
59515Was it so terrible?
59515What are you doing?
59515What did she say?
59515What did she tell you, Wyn?
59515What do you see?
59515What else should I see?
59515What will she do?
59515What''s Daddy going to do to Thomas?
59515What''s happening to us?
59515What''s the matter with you, young fellow?
59515What''s wrong? 59515 Why should I know you, and where do you come from?"
59515Wyn, what do you see?
59515Wyn?
59515You mean that story you told me was the truth?
59515And as for conversation, do you remember Summer ever answering a question directly?"
59515And how long must the wig have been originally, for her to have cut from it the long tresses I found later in the wastebasket?
59515But how about the fact that such a complicated creature as man is built by the action of the genes and chromosomes?
59515Do you suppose I have amnesia?"
59515Gracey?"
59515How did you know my name?"
59515I asked hurriedly:"What is wrong with Summer, Wyn?"
59515If Summer had not encouraged me, I would n''t have been bold enough to make any advances on my own account... and where would that have left Summer?
59515In the seven years I had known her, how could I ever have built up in my mind the picture of her as a mature woman?
59515Incestuous?
59515Is n''t it funny?"
59515Just narcissistic?
59515Living normally as a younger child in one place, and as we knew her in reverse?"
59515Me?
59515My motherless son?
59515My son?
59515Or, perhaps, Jovian?
59515What about Wyn?"
59515What''s happened?"
59515What''s wrong, Don?"
59515Where in my house had she found a wig to match her own hair?
59515Why should I be tied by a marriage ceremony I do n''t know anything about yet?"
59515Why?
58448Afraid of what?
58448But ai n''t he goin''to have a ride this mornin''?
58448Can I come in?
58448Did I call?
58448Do n''t you know it''s the Fourth of July, and we must get up and celebrate it? 58448 Do you want me?"
58448Well, who would you like to have been, Winnie?
58448What makes you afraid, anyhow?
58448What should I be afraid of?
58448What''ll Lawyer Gable an''that man think of me?
58448Where is it, Jennie?
58448Where is the key, Jennie, and the pitcher?
58448Who are you, anyhow, and what are you doing in my mother''s closet?
58448Who would you have chosen, Winnie?
58448Who, Jennie?
58448Wo n''t papa be sorry? 58448 ***** Did you ever wonder where the word etiquette came from? 58448 Another? 58448 Are you the only member of the family up at this time o''day? 58448 Dear Bessie, can not you put a new head on the poor dolly who has not any? 58448 Did not everybody know that the Rippler''s Junction Tunnel was uncommonly narrow, close, and continually shot by freight, coal, or passenger trains? 58448 Did you call?
58448Did you ever hear that a pussy was hatched, I''d like to know?
58448Do you know I have been a traveller?
58448Do you know what the Fourth of July is for?"
58448Do you live here?"
58448For an instant she stood as if paralyzed; then she would have sped like the wind, but a voice said,"Ca n''t you let me in?"
58448From which end was it approaching?
58448Got money enough for your fare?
58448Had not those dozen lectures as to walking on the railroad been given him?
58448Have you ever seen a Kansas dug- out?
58448How many readers of YOUNG PEOPLE know the date of the Independence- day of the United States of Mexico?
58448How was he to come up with any letter, I''d like to know?
58448It''s a pretty time of night for a fellow to be out, is n''t it?
58448No, indeed, she did n''t; but what was to be done?--waken poor Mrs. Jessup, and undo all the good that had been done?
58448Oh, Winnie, is it not dreadful to be sick?"
58448Shall I get it?"
58448This time a far- away"Who is it?"
58448Walter was a little hurt, and he began to whimper, but Georgie helped him up, saying,"Do n''t you know that soldiers never cry?"
58448Was there space enough for safety between himself and the train rushing down toward him?
58448Well, where''s your mother?"
58448What American boy does not love it?
58448What glorious thought, From the dim past caught, Their brave young hearts inspires?
58448What was that low dull rattle that echoed to the boy''s ears?
58448When we got to the new home, I was lifted out and set-- where do you suppose?
58448Where has the naughty mother hen gone?"
58448Where is the little girl who is not glad when it arrives?
58448Who taught him to cry and sing so cleverly?
58448Why march they so, With martial show, These sons of patriot sires?
58448Will you please give it to the Wiggle master?
58448Winnie turned as if to go-- were not Bob and Mary Graham waiting for her?
58448Wo n''t that frighten the old fellow?"
58448Would n''t you like to live in such a house, where it is a common thing for mice to tumble into the water bucket?
58448Would the boys like to hear the story?
58448You''re a pretty smart youngster, and I think you''ll have to help me-- eh?"
58448You''re not afraid?"
58448_ Are_ you all deaf this morning?
38237A gentleman?
38237Admirers getting entangled?
38237Am I permitted to express an old friend''s congratulations on your appearance?
38237Am I so very bad- tempered?
38237Am I such a terrible ogre?
38237And I wonder what you like them to call love?
38237And ca n''t you?
38237And did he cure him?
38237And have you ever seen anything in all the world so beautiful as the Mourne Mountains and Carlingford Loch?
38237And how could that have anything to do with me?
38237And how do you get on with Basil?
38237And if they do-- isn''t it a thundering good thing they''re wrong?
38237And she is going to marry a plain Mr Somebody now?
38237And supposing I were n''t an enemy at all?
38237And this-- er-- Miss Gwendoline Grant- Carew,with a slight curl of her lips,"you are engaged to her, or-- going to be?"
38237And what did you hear?
38237And what if I say I will never give in either? 38237 And what if they are?"
38237And what is it your favourite poet, Browning, says?
38237And what makes you think Miss Carew and I are engaged to each other?
38237And where would you be?
38237And yet?
38237And you will take it?
38237And you''ll accept it?
38237And you''ve known him all your life?
38237Answered him about what?
38237Anything like a snail squeezing out of a shell, or like falling out of a tree?
38237Are there any nice girls there?
38237Are they to go to The Ghan House?
38237Are you Colonel Masterman''s nephew who came yesterday?
38237Are you coming to my birthday party?
38237Are you going through this cross- examination with all your partners?
38237Are you quite sure they''re engaged?
38237Are you sure he asked for me?
38237Are you sure it was Miss Harcourt? 38237 Are you sure you must go away alone like this?"
38237Are you sure you would not rather lend them?
38237Are you warmer now?
38237But am I not right, Lawrence?
38237But could n''t you?
38237But how can I help it?
38237But how can you,he laughed,"when you do n''t even know her?
38237But how?
38237But if I was selling''em, how could I want for to buy''em?
38237But if being polite rests in suiting one''s conversation to one''s companion?
38237But it is still London, is n''t it? 38237 But surely she does n''t know you?"
38237But the aunties, Jack!--whatever will the aunties do?
38237But what do you think about?
38237But where to? 38237 But why?"
38237By the way, how''s that long- legged, broad- shouldered British bull- dog specimen who came to say good- by before going to South Africa?
38237Ca n''t a man have a chum''s photograph on his table without being engaged to her?
38237Can I give you a lift?
38237Can any one come to your surgery for medicine?
38237Can it be Eileen?
38237Could we ask him, do you think, sister?
38237Did I?
38237Did Miss Carew do it?
38237Did he tell you it happened a year last Christmas?
38237Did n''t I?
38237Did n''t you ever look in the shops?
38237Did ye see the new bell rope?
38237Did you say_ betters_?
38237Did you want me, uncle?
38237Do I dance with you next?
38237Do I understand you to say you did n''t bother to wear clothes, Aunt Jane?
38237Do n''t the aunties look lovely? 38237 Do n''t they say the same about Paris, and Berlin, and New York, and lots of other places?"
38237Do n''t you just hate to have to go away and leave it all again?--don''t you just hate it like the devil?
38237Do n''t you like her?
38237Do n''t you like it? 38237 Do n''t you play in London?"
38237Do n''t you remember when a certain father died, and you were in doubt? 38237 Do n''t you understand that I_ must_ thank you-- that it is the one and only return I can make?"
38237Do they?
38237Do you know I have taken a great liberty?
38237Do you know her?
38237Do you mean Paddy and the goody- goody girl?
38237Do you mean Uncle Frank?
38237Do you mean the big portrait?
38237Do you mind my cigarette?
38237Do you prefer the dining- car or dinner baskets?
38237Do you remember boxing my ears under the mulberry tree one Sunday afternoon? 38237 Do you remember the last time you were in my den?"
38237Does it need it so badly?
38237Er-- you do n''t know London, I believe-- er-- Miss Adair?
38237Feeling a bit love- sick, eh?
38237For good?
38237For high sums, I suppose?
38237For long?
38237Has Paddy gone alone, then?
38237Has he singed the end of his tail?
38237Has n''t he?
38237Have we been away three whole years?
38237Have you been ill?
38237Have you been playing billiards?
38237Have you been up here long?
38237Have you blankets?
38237Have you decided where to go?
38237Have you ever shot a snipe?
38237Have you heard that Lawrence is going to India in three weeks?
38237Have you seen Paddy again?
38237Have you seen him?
38237Her?
38237How are Eileen and I to be perfectly happy, thinking of you pining for fresh air here?
38237How are you? 38237 How did you like that photograph I sent you?"
38237How do you do, Paddy?
38237How do you do?
38237How do you do?
38237How do you know I am?
38237How do you know?
38237How does it feel?
38237How had they ever kept up at all?
38237How have I not? 38237 How many of them?"
38237How much is he hurt?
38237How you must hate it?
38237How?
38237How?
38237How?
38237I am quite warm,she said, and then suddenly discovered he was in his shirtsleeves, and exclaimed,"Where is your coat?"
38237I could n''t be expected to stay upstairs, with such delicious odours coming from the kitchen, could I now?
38237I hope you are prepared to be finely ordered about?
38237I suppose you''ll be going back soon?
38237I think you come from Omeath?
38237I thought you and Paddy were going across to Rostrevor this afternoon?
38237I wonder what Eileen would think of them?
38237I wonder what Paddy would think of it?
38237I wonder what sort of a reception I shall get?
38237I wonder where the opposite sex will come in? 38237 I''m coming to call on you if I may?"
38237I?--Why?
38237If I came with an ill, would you try to administer healing to me?
38237If I promise to play fair, will you talk?
38237If that were so, where would be the use of all its sacrifices, and conquests, and nobleness?
38237If you bought''em it seems as if they ought to be yours, do n''t it?
38237If you go, Lawrie, are you quite certain it would have to be the pretty one?
38237If you think I''m detestable, what do you suppose I think of you?
38237In what way?
38237In whatever capacity was that?
38237Is Jack Mr O''Hara?
38237Is James the overpowering individual who condescended to show me upstairs? 38237 Is Mr Blake''s friend someone staying with them?"
38237Is he coming home?
38237Is he there?
38237Is it anything to do with the little Irish girl?
38237Is it blowing great guns and glass bottles, to- night?
38237Is it that beastly dispensary?
38237Is it the tomato incident that is making you cross?
38237Is it true?
38237Is it unloaded?
38237Is n''t he perfectly scrumptious?
38237Is n''t it rather early to shoot snipe?
38237Is n''t it rather poor to judge the many by a few who may have disappointed you?
38237Is n''t she dressed yet?
38237Is n''t that a great deal?
38237Is n''t that so?
38237Is n''t there anything I could do?
38237Is she dark?
38237Is she ill?
38237Is she?
38237Is that all?
38237Is there anything wrong, dear?
38237Is your appointment at a church?
38237It is Lawrence, Paddy, is n''t it?
38237It must have been decided in a great hurry?
38237It was actually poor dear Lionel, one of Lady Dudley''s last kittens,continued Miss Jane,"and what do you think had happened to him?"
38237It would sound like an impertinence, would n''t it?
38237It''s awfully silly, is n''t it?
38237It''s just capital, is n''t it?
38237Jack,--there was a new note of tenderness in Miss Mary''s voice--"is there anything between you and Eileen?"
38237Lawrence Blake?
38237Many?
38237Mavourneen, are you ready?... 38237 May I bring you a birthday present this evening?"
38237May I sit down?
38237May I, as a special favour, be allowed first to mention a package in the hall, intended for your Serene Highness--?
38237May we leave it for the present?
38237Might I ask you the mutual friend''s name?
38237Must you go now? 38237 My dear, what do you mean?"
38237My dear,answered Mrs Blake,"did n''t you say he was not well?"
38237Need it have been so far?
38237No? 38237 Not any more than I do for the woolly lamb''s coronet?"
38237Now, why wo n''t you stay here and be happy, instead of going back?
38237Of course,exclaimed Gwen,"you would n''t have us grow as milk and watery and monotonous as the male sex, would you?
38237Oh, Eily, Eily,she cried,"you are engaged?--are you really engaged to Jack?"
38237Oh, do n''t you realise that I do n''t trust you? 38237 Oh, must we?"
38237Or, do you think, perhaps, just this once, sister?
38237Ought I to run away, daddy? 38237 Perhaps I can help?"
38237Perhaps if you would tell me what you want in a man--?
38237Perhaps, but it really is n''t worth while to worry now, it is? 38237 Perhaps, if you remembered what a boon it would be to the exile--?"
38237Put it in your pocket for the present,promptly"or are you afraid of spoiling the shape of your coat?"
38237Rather stormy this evening, eh?
38237Really?
38237Shall I get my head bitten off if I venture to escort you to the hall?
38237Should I meet a lot of nice, superior, cultured young men like you?
38237So Selloyd''s trying to get in the running there, is he?
38237So mamma is making a countess of me off- hand, is she?
38237So you live in London?
38237That''s the first time you''ve ever seen anything in me but a harum- scarum tom- boy, is n''t it, Jack?
38237The Mastermans at Carlingford?
38237Then she''s pretty, too?
38237Then we''ll change the subject,said Paddy, adding roguishly,"Do you like picture post- cards, Mr Masterman?"
38237Then we''ve all been happy, daddy, and that''s good, is n''t it? 38237 Then why not let well alone, and go to Ireland without me?"
38237Then you lost?
38237Then you were engaged,scathingly,"and with your customary changeableness have broken it off again?"
38237Then you''re sorry?
38237They look so pretty, do n''t they, in evening dress, with the big old hall for background and the firelight on their faces?
38237To whom?
38237Umph-- Insipid?
38237Very good of you, miss; but what would I be wanting with''em, when I be selling''em?
38237WHAT WOULD AN IRISH FUSILIER DO?
38237Was Lawrence very nice to- night?
38237Was it they sausages agen? 38237 Was n''t it?"
38237Was n''t that a good catch?
38237Was that all?
38237Was that really Paddy Adair, Lawrence?
38237We must n''t spoil him, must we?
38237We''d get mummie to come and smooth things over, would n''t we?
38237Well, how did you like it? 38237 Well, perhaps, just this once,"with a show of reluctance,"only it must n''t happen again, must it?"
38237Well, what were you going to say? 38237 Well, why do you?
38237Well,said her mother,"have you sent him away?"
38237Well?
38237Well?
38237Were you going away again, then?
38237Were you?
38237What about Kathleen and Doreen?
38237What are you going to do, Lawrie?
38237What are you going to do, Lawrie?
38237What are you going to do, Lawrie?
38237What colour is your room to be, Paddy?
38237What did you do with yourself in that deadly little Irish hamlet? 38237 What did you suppose I should do?"
38237What do you think I ought to do?
38237What do you think about when you sit here by yourself?
38237What does he want?
38237What does it matter?--what does anything matter? 38237 What happened?"
38237What has become of O''Hara?
38237What has happened between you and Paddy, Lawrence?
38237What has he ever done beyond taking a few degrees at Oxford?
38237What have I been doing now?
38237What have I done, Paddy?
38237What have I ever done or been that she should care for me? 38237 What in the name of fortune am I to do?"
38237What in the name of fortune are you doing up there?
38237What in the name of wonder do I look like?
38237What in the name of wonder is a dispenser?
38237What in the world are you going to do with fifteen pigs, Paddy?
38237What is Aunt Edith like, and how do you get on with Basil?
38237What is his name?
38237What is it?
38237What is it?--what is wrong with our boy?
38237What is she like?
38237What is your own idea, anyway?
38237What makes you think Miss Carew is going to marry me?
38237What shall I do, Paddy?
38237What shall I do, daddy? 38237 What shall we do, Paddy, walk or drive?"
38237What should he do?
38237What''s Captain O''Connor been saying to get her little temper up?
38237What''s it all about?
38237What''s the matter with Peter?
38237What''s the matter with my stockings?
38237What''s the matter, Paddy?
38237What''s the matter, chum?
38237What''s the matter? 38237 What''s the matter?"
38237What''s too bad?
38237What-- are they sisters?
38237Whatever did he say?
38237Whatever did they think of you?
38237When an iron safe sits on hymn books, what do you suppose hatches out?
38237When are you going?
38237When do you sail?
38237When shall we prepare your den for you, and duly banish your favourite enemies? 38237 When you''ve done going over my points?"
38237Where did you get all that hair from?
38237Where has everybody gone?
38237Where is he?
38237Where is the use of them?
38237Where''s his august majesty off to, in such a hurry?
38237Whew-- as bad as all that, is it? 38237 Who is here?"
38237Who is she?
38237Who is your aunt?
38237Who told you so?
38237Whose in the world are they?
38237Why Joan of Arc?
38237Why ca n''t he stay away,she said,"if he ca n''t behave like a gentleman?
38237Why did you try to?... 38237 Why do n''t you let your man do it?
38237Why do n''t you want to come?
38237Why do you go? 38237 Why do you go?"
38237Why do you look at her like that?
38237Why do you want me to go?
38237Why do you want to go?
38237Why for me particularly?
38237Why is n''t he having it with you as usual?
38237Why not choose a more public spot?
38237Why not have something in cream?
38237Why not?
38237Why not?
38237Why not?
38237Why not?
38237Why not?--O why not?
38237Why should she?
38237Why wasted?
38237Why will you not be friends? 38237 Why wo n''t you cry a truce, Paddy?"
38237Why? 38237 Why?"
38237Why?
38237Why?--how?
38237Why?--why?--why?
38237Will he be glad? 38237 Will he know it at once, I wonder?"
38237Will you tell me all about everything?
38237Would n''t it be better to make sure first? 38237 Would n''t she see me just for a few minutes?"
38237Yes, and what do I look like in cream, with my sallow skin? 38237 Yes, aunt, but he ca n''t help it, and we have to be kind to people''s failings, have n''t we?
38237Yes, but why worry about it now? 38237 Yes, did n''t you know?
38237Yes, only unfortunately we do n''t quite know where the beginning is, do we, Eileen?
38237Yes, why not?
38237Yes, why?
38237Yes,Eileen replied simply;"are n''t you?"
38237Yes; why not?
38237Yet you seemed happy enough here before?
38237You have not told me why you are going abroad?
38237You hit hard,he said at last; and then, with the slightest inflection of a taunt in his voice, added:"Why do n''t you look at me-- are you afraid?"
38237You mean you prefer London-- and the dispensary-- and the loneliness to Mourne Lodge, and the loch, and the mountains?
38237You wo n''t like that?
38237You would n''t have me go away and leave Aunt Jane and Aunt Mary weeping over my empty chair and old shoes and things, would you?
38237You''d think she ought to make a fortune with a face like that as an artist''s model for a comic paper, would n''t you?
38237You''re a-- er-- sportswoman then?
38237Your last attempt at a joke?
38237Your-- your-- shoe a little too tight-- did you say!--or was it your-- ahem-- divided skirt...?
38237_ You''ve_ got 20,000 pounds?
38237After three minutes she looked up in the most natural way imaginable and remarked,"Whatever can Goliath be doing?
38237Afterward, certainly, they had regained their old footing, but what about that long sleep?
38237Among such as these, how could she give such as Lawrence the place of honour?
38237And now he was to love her so much more than before, for had she not read and thought and studied, to make herself a fitter companion?
38237And then it''s splendid not having to teach, is n''t it?
38237And then that he could talk so calmly of her getting married and belonging to someone else?
38237And then would come the thought, suppose she gave up fighting?...
38237And, sweetest thought of all, for the time being she was in his care, dependent on him for warmth and safety, perhaps for life itself?
38237Another half- hour passed, and then Mrs Blake asked;"What made him go home with Paddy at all, Doreen?"
38237Are n''t you just dreadfully in love with both of them?
38237Are the beastly medicine bottles squirming on the shelf?
38237Are we going to say in this` throne- room''or what?"
38237Are you going to let an ancient thing like that come between us-- punish two people for a third one who is unhurt?
38237Are you quite sure there is no hope?"
38237Are you sure you mean it, Jack?--Isn''t it just a dream or something?"
38237Are you there?"
38237At least, I hope you wo n''t forget altogether?"
38237Be quick, wo n''t you?
38237Before she knew of his presence, he had walked up to her and said:"Paddy, do you know you are sitting under the mistletoe?"
38237But I warned her-- why did she come in?
38237But almost at the same moment, the door opened, and a soft voice said,"Are you here, Lawrence?"
38237But how London has smartened her up, has n''t it?"
38237But how is everybody at The Ghan House?
38237But how resist him?
38237But perhaps you did not recognise me?"
38237But then she ought to have been a boy, really, ought n''t she?
38237But then who should know a man better than his mother, if she happen to have been blessed with discernment?
38237But touching this Irish girl, what''s her name, Lawrie?"
38237But touching this blouse,"with a sudden change of voice,"why do n''t you ask my advice?
38237But what of it?
38237But where are the aunties?"
38237Ca n''t we leave it at that?
38237Could any more be expected?
38237Could anything, even mercifully, write"wild oats"over his heartlessness?
38237Could n''t I please you best by promising to be there in spirit?"
38237Daddy, daddy, ca n''t you hear me?
38237Daddy-- darling old daddy-- what would an Irish Fusilier do?"
38237Deep down in your heart you think so yourself, do n''t you?"
38237Did Gwen tell you I was dying or something?
38237Did he then care more than he supposed?
38237Did his love for Eileen make her no more of any account at all?
38237Did n''t I tell you?"
38237Did n''t you know I had n''t anyone else?--that I''d be just all alone?
38237Did ye notice the new tumbler o''wather for''is rivirence to drink from when''is sermons is too long- winded for''i m?
38237Did you choose it yourself?"
38237Did you ever see such a rag- tag and bobtail of odds and ends before?
38237Did you ever see such a scarecrow?"
38237Did you ever see such cool impudence?"
38237Did you expect me?
38237Did you notice her?
38237Did you say he went home with Paddy, Doreen?"
38237Disgusting to think of-- isn''t it?
38237Do n''t you admire my handiwork?"
38237Do n''t you know that my arms are aching for you?
38237Do n''t you realise it is_ impossible_?"
38237Do n''t you think Dante must wish he had thought of a Tube for his Inferno?
38237Do n''t you think so, Lawrence?
38237Do n''t you think so, Lawrie?
38237Do you feel you''ve been trapped here under false pretences?
38237Do you hear?
38237Do you know him?"
38237Do you live near?"
38237Do you never intend to take it in hand?"
38237Do you remember-- I said you had given me a new interest in life, and that I would subdue you some day?
38237Do you think I might mention it to her?"
38237Do you think it does n''t hurt me too--_now_?
38237Do you understand?"
38237Do you use the Tube much?"
38237Do you want someone hit?"
38237Does his lordship of the rectory hate me as cordially as ever?
38237Does n''t she like going out?"
38237Does n''t she look charming, Lawrie?"
38237For one second the girls looked at each other with the unspoken question,"Are you changed?"
38237Had he ever been?
38237Had he not lived in her thoughts and been the central figure of her dreams ever since he went away three years ago?
38237Have you actually arranged it?"
38237Have you ever seen Lawrence when he''s like a bear with a sore head?"
38237Have you promised too?"
38237Have you really been able to find entertainment in a goody- goody girl?"
38237He hesitated, then went on:"You slipped away this afternoon the moment I had finished reading your father''s will, did n''t you?"
38237He was thinking for the hundredth time how sweet she was, and how-- if only--?
38237He wondered if she had heard what he said in those first moments, and if that was why she so persistently kept her face hidden?
38237He''s rich, is n''t he?
38237His voice changed suddenly, as with a quick, keen expression he leaned toward her and asked:"Paddy, why did you run away?...
38237How could she be afraid?...
38237How did you manage to get such a cold, Gwen?"
38237How do you do, Colonel Masterman?"
38237How do you do, Mr Masterman?
38237How had the aunties ever kept up?
38237How proud we were, were n''t we?
38237How was she to meet him on that day, after the manner of their parting?
38237How, oh how, was she ever to face him with those recollections lying between them?
38237However did you make up your minds to come?"
38237I forgot,"slyly;"it covers a multitude of sins, does n''t it, to be Irish?"
38237I know that one of you will expect me to have the first dance with you, and all I ask is, which?"
38237I shall say,` They are still there, good people, but do n''t you observe that her hair has entirely effaced everything but itself?''"
38237I think he is very wise to go about and see the world while he can, do n''t you?"
38237I wonder if I''d better bring out my whole wardrobe and go through the hundred and one patterns again?
38237I wonder when they will be married?
38237I wonder which you would choose, Eily?
38237I''d never thought o''that; but how''s we goin''to keep''em in whiles we catches''em?"
38237I''ll clean my gun-- do you see?
38237I''m just a lump of obstinacy, and I do n''t want to climb down and meekly give in; do n''t you see how I hate that part of it?
38237I''m only thirty- five, and what are you?
38237If I could slay the spectre between us, and show you that I was to be trusted, would you marry me?"
38237If I do n''t say any more about the future, dear, will you just sit quietly there and rest until tea- time?
38237If Jack continued blind, she wondered vaguely, what would become of them all?
38237If it were arranged that the gift came from Eileen, they could hardly object, and, for the matter of that, why should they?
38237If she hates you, why did she go into your den, and why was she angry with me?
38237If they had n''t both been so obdurate long ago all sorts of things might have happened, eh, Jane?"
38237If you could trust me, you would let yourself go?
38237In an age of exclamation stops and interrogation marks, could n''t you support me in trying to be a semicolon for a little while?"
38237In desperation she put a detaining hand upon the mother''s arm:"You-- you-- are not going to Lawrence?"
38237Is he nice?"
38237Is it all put on for me, or for Lawrence?--or have you designs on my poor darling Goliath?
38237Is it an attack of liver, or the hundred- and- ninety- ninth love episode?
38237Is it that alone that stands between us?
38237Is that altogether my fault?
38237Is that so?"
38237Is that what I must do, daddy?
38237Is that what an Irish Fusilier would do?
38237It is something to be thankful for that you have been able to keep him out of an asylum so long, is n''t it?"
38237It sounds like playing a salmon, does n''t it?
38237Kitty was silent for a moment, then she asked suddenly,"Where''s Jack?"
38237Lawrence suddenly taxed her with looking pale and tired:"Are you ill?"
38237Lawrence was lackadaisically entertaining, with his old callous air, when Gwen suddenly said:"Why wo n''t your sister ever come here with you, Paddy?
38237May I introduce you to your other timely helper, Miss Grant- Carew?"
38237No letter from Africa this mail, I suppose?"
38237Nothing was said-- what was there to say?
38237Now I''m going to be a good son-- it sounds lovely, does n''t it?
38237Only what of it?
38237Only what was to come next?
38237Or shall I have a white- bordered thing, that is not particular and will go with just all of them?
38237Or would he row straight past and merely throw her a casual greeting?
38237Ought I have stayed?"
38237Paddy looked as if she were not quite sure whether to laugh or cry, and Lawrence asked:"What''s the matter, Paddy?
38237Paddy looked more puzzled than ever, but suddenly she leaned forward and exclaimed:"You do n''t mean that you have come in for a fortune, Jack?"
38237Paddy never bothers her head about any mortal thing-- why do you?"
38237Paddy said:"Is that a model of the_ Shamrock_?
38237Perhaps if you were to forget they were sisters?"
38237Perhaps, if my duties as host allow me another opportunity, you will again be kind?"
38237Shall I find everyone as unchanged as you, Eileen?"
38237Shall we go home now?
38237She fidgeted restlessly with a letter weight, and then asked again:"Are you going for long?"
38237She found him standing in the hall, and when he saw her he exclaimed,"Is that you, Paddy?--is that really you?"
38237She might have trampled down all bitterness, but did that make the wrong less wrong-- did it affect her, Paddy''s, view of the case?
38237She paused a moment, and then continued simply:"You have heard of old General Quinn, who used to live at Omeath Park?
38237She seemed surprised and asked"Why?"
38237She was not only beautiful to look at, but interesting to talk to, and a delightful listener, and for the rest-- well, what harm in it?
38237She was so tired-- so tired-- and what was there to say?
38237She would only worry herself ill. How are you?
38237She''s a cousin or something, do n''t you remember?
38237Should he rouse her and try to make the descent?
38237So Paddy was to be dispenser?
38237So instead, he asked with a smile:"Would it be too sentimental to say` thank you''for all you''ve done to make my holiday the best I''ve ever had?"
38237Tell me, Paddy?"
38237The mountains look specially beautiful to- night, do n''t they?
38237The strength of his passion stirred every fibre of her being, and the thought crossed her-- would she be able to withstand him for long?
38237The two little ladies looked at each other with vague dismay, and asked wonderingly,"What is this that has come upon us?"
38237Then why was there any difficulty?
38237There was a pause, then he asked:"I suppose you are fond of theatres?"
38237There was a pause, then she asked slowly:"Is that how you look upon human beings?"
38237There was a short silence, then he said:"You and Paddy are very different, are n''t you?"
38237Under what conditions had she been able to sleep thus peacefully in the midst of such discomfort?
38237Was it likely it could have been otherwise with him, after the way he had looked at her and sought her companionship?...
38237Was it possible he would not care the least little bit if his old playfellow could be the same to him no longer?
38237Was it possible the making up of medicines was to be her portion indefinitely?
38237Was it possible, she asked again, that he only wanted to break her will, and bend her as he bent all others?
38237Was it the something indescribable that suggested unscrupulousness?
38237Was it the subtle suggestion of strength?
38237Was it, perhaps, the age he lived in?
38237Was n''t it perfectly awful?
38237Was she glad or sad?
38237What are you going to do about it?"
38237What are you going to do?"
38237What did it mean?
38237What did it profit him to make other men seem tame and colourless in her life?
38237What do you think of that?"
38237What do you want?"
38237What if harm had come to her?
38237What if this, one of her beloved mountains, had turned upon her in pitiless treachery and swallowed her up in one of its treacherous bogs?
38237What in the name of fortune could have put such an idea into their heads?
38237What in the name of fortune did the guv''nor bring this whirlwind-- this tornado-- this positive monsoon-- into a suburban villa for?"
38237What in the world could I do with fifteen pigs?"
38237What is happening to England that you and Jack and Lawrence Blake and everyone must all go abroad?"
38237What is the joke?"
38237What more do you want?"
38237What of it?
38237What shall I do through all the long years to come?"
38237What should she do?
38237What was it in Paddy''s voice that made him turn away a moment and apply his handkerchief vigorously to his nose?
38237What was it in the aching pause that opened those eyes, wo nt to brim over with fun and laughter, wider and wider with dread?
38237What was there to say?
38237What''s the other like?"
38237What_ am_ I to do, with all my things different colours, that do n''t seem any of them to go together?
38237When I can talk to you, and dance with you, and gaze upon you here, why cross the sea to other climes?"
38237When did he come?"
38237When did he say he should be back?"
38237When did you hear?"
38237When her sister sought her upstairs, and asked in a quiet, firm way,"What is the matter, Paddy?
38237When she had finished he looked at her, with a slightly wistful look in his grey eyes, and said:"Now may I tell you about my affairs?"
38237When there was the slightest indecision about anything, it was always,"What do you think, sister?--will he want this?"
38237Where did you get it?
38237Which course was the least dangerous?--to crouch in the cold, damp shelter, or try and pierce the black gloom of the night?
38237Which do you mean?"
38237While she lay in his arms, and every nerve of his body was strained in serving her, could he ask more?
38237Who could help her?
38237Whom is he engaged to?"
38237Why are n''t you engaged to her?"
38237Why did n''t you come away sooner?"
38237Why do n''t you say you''re glad, Jack-- or do something to show it?"
38237Why do you hate me?"
38237Why do you make it harder for me?
38237Why do you remind me of it at all?"
38237Why do you treat me like this,_ when you love me_?"
38237Why does he say you''ve bought fifteen pigs?"
38237Why not now?"
38237Why not tell me straight I''m an ignoramus?
38237Why prolong my suspense?
38237Why this growing sense of a problem she could not solve?
38237Why was it more unsettled?
38237Why were you looking so woebegone when I came from the study, out here all alone in the hall?"
38237Why wo n''t you understand?"
38237Why, oh why, had they let her come to London alone?
38237Why?"
38237Why?"
38237Will you agree to stay here quietly, Paddy, if I promise not to worry you?"
38237Will you come out again afterward?"
38237Will you have a bet on it?"
38237With Eileen and Jack married and living at The Ghan House, and her mother with them, what was to be her place in the general scheme?
38237With half Calcutta at your feet abroad, and Lawrence at your feet at home, what could I possibly want more?"
38237Wo n''t you believe I am grateful for the other night, and leave it there?"
38237Would it be braver to retreat?
38237You ca n''t think how funny it looked-- in Regent Street of all places, too?"
38237You heard, I suppose, that your father lived almost entirely on his pension, and that the greater part of that ceased at his death?"
38237You must have heard about him?"
38237You wo n''t be angry with me?"
38237You''re not afraid of it, are you?"
38237_ Comprenez_?
38237_ If_ he had loved her, she might have made anything of him; yet-- but what if he did not?
38237asked Jack with due solemnity,"or has Lady Dudley been giving him a bad time because he stole her milk as usual?"
38237asked Paddy in bewilderment--"Who''s perfectly scrumptious?"
38237auntie, what did you do?
38237breaking off,"is n''t that your baa- lamb I hear?"
38237clinging to him with sudden weakness,"God might have made me a man, might n''t He?
38237did ye iver see sich a luvely place o''warship afore?
38237do you suppose I care two straws about risking my twopenny- halfpenny life when it is for you?"
38237eh-- what?"
38237exclaimed Jack, unable to resist laughing, while Eileen asked most anxiously,"But he got out again?"
38237he asked,"and where should he go?"
38237he began--"couldn''t you-- don''t you think--?"
38237he could not have meant that-- surely-- surely he could not... For if so, what could one ant be to him more than another?"
38237he exclaimed,"and turned Paddy into as much of a beauty as she could possibly get her?
38237how could I-- a great strong fellow such as I-- with my health and strength, take away the income of two frail women?"
38237not when he asked you if you''d have diamonds or emeralds?"
38237or maybe something at the grocers?
38237or some shoe laces for''is riverence?"
38237or"Do you think he would be likely to require silk handkerchiefs?"
38237or"Will he want a dozen suits of pyjamas"or"Three dozen pairs of socks?"
38237she asked with dread--"Eileen and Lawrence Blake?"
38237they were grand times, and I''d have liked you to go through them; yet where would I have been for a walking stick now?
38237turning to the drawing- room, from which came a sound of voices;"are they here yet?"
38237we all know there is n''t a man could be more fascinating when he likes, but how much does that go for beside scenes like this?"
38237what is it?--are you ill?"
38237why did she falter?
38237why were n''t you out with Paddy this afternoon?
38237with a little callous laugh;"sorry in spite of yourself, eh, Paddy?"
38237you have got your happiness, what do you know about mine?"
38237you rather enjoyed it, did you?"
592Friend Chang,I said,"San Francisco sleeps as the dead-- Ended license, lust and play: Why do you iron the night away?
592Pocahontas''body, lovely as a poplar, sweet as a red haw in November or a pawpaw in May-- did she wonder? 592 What will you do to end war for good?
592''The Craftsman'':"Has America a National Poetry?"
592And do his bauble- bells beyond the clouds Ring out, and shake with mirth the planets bright?
592And do you laugh, when Jim, from Huck apart Gropes through the rain and night with breaking heart?
592And who is here to say us nay?
592And why, until the dawning sun Are flames coming up from the ground?
592But do you laugh when Jim bows down forlorn His babe, his deaf Elizabeth to mourn?
592But who can dodge this genius of the stream, The Mississippi Valley''s laughing dream?
592Can it go on in the absence of its initiators?
592Deep in the ages, long, long ago, I was your sweetheart, there on the sand-- Storm- worn beach of the Chinese land?
592Do you remember, ages after, At last the world we were born to own?
592I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name-- do you remember The name you cried beside the tumbling sea?"
592II What marching men of Buffalo Flood the streets in rash crusade?
592In the breezes nod and wheeze?
592Is it his deacon- beard, or old bald pate That makes the band upon his whims to wait?
592O market square, O slattern place, Is glory in your slack disgrace?
592One crow asked the other crow a riddle: The muttering crow Asked the stuttering crow,"Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?
592Second Section America Watching the War, August, 1914, to April, 1917 Where Is the Real Non- resistant?
592Shall we be as weird as these?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WILL YOU BRING YOUR FINE PEACE TO THE NATIONS TODAY?"
592Was it a palace or a barn?
592What landlord, lawyer, voodoo- man has yet A better native right to make men sweat?
592Where are those oddities and capers now That used to"set the table on a roar"?
592Which of our freemen did she greet the first, Seeing him come against the fires accurst?
592While the monster shadows glower and creep, What can be better for man than sleep?"
592Who can surrender till death His words and his works, his house and his lands, His eyes and his heart and his breath?
592Who can surrender to Christ?
592Who can surrender to Christ?
592Who shall end my dream''s confusion?
592Why did they mumble, brood, and stare When the court- players curtsied fair And the Gonzago scene began?
592Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?"
592Why?
592Will you die for the nations, making them whole?
592Will you stand by the book- case, be nailed to the wood?"
592You were the heir of the yellow throne-- The world was the field of the Chinese man And we were the pride of the Sons of Han?
592does she remember-- in the dust-- in the cool tombs?"
59491Afraid?
59491Any houses on the road?
59491Are you too wounded?
59491Do you mean it? 59491 Ef he die, an''I go home, what I gwin''say when mistis come out and say,''Billy, wh''yar yo''Marse George?''"
59491Going to do?
59491How d''you like it, Reddy?
59491How is this, muchacho?
59491How much is that?
59491I wonder who the poor man was that was frozen here?
59491Is n''t there any this side?
59491Oh, really?
59491Suppose Houston''s scouts come upon us while we''re unsaddled and unbridled?
59491The postman does n''t bring out your letters, then?
59491Well, what are you going to do?
59491What can a boy like you do to protect the property?
59491Why do n''t you?
59491Why not give up playing Winston this year? 59491 *****Jimmie,"said Mrs. Hicks,"wo n''t you have some brown bread?"
59491*****"Pat,"said Tommie to the gardener,"what is nothing?"
59491*****"What is the baby crying about?"
59491A Western philatelic paper proposes the riddle,"What is the difference between stamp- albums and clocks?"
59491And then--"Whither go you,_ amigo_?"
59491Do not you?"
59491Have you got everything you need?"
59491He walked around the pony several times, and looked at her with a haughty air, as much as to say,"Where would you be now if it had n''t been for me?"
59491Instantly the small head was lifted from the grass, the small ears pointed forward, and the large intelligent eyes asked plainly,"Do you want me?"
59491Last night he said to me,''Can you not contrive to get this young Colonel over to see me?
59491Must a battery be captured?
59491Must a redoubt be carried?
59491Now tell me if this is what a true Mexican would do?"
59491Oh, may I beat it here?"
59491One of them was:"Grandma, if you was a centipede, would you always insist on putting on fifty pairs of rubbers before you walked on the grass?"
59491Should he wait and see who it was?
59491The recruit hastened to Morgan''s tent, shoved his head in through the flaps, and asked,"Does Jim Morgan live here?"
59491Then, curbing his impetuosity, lest it should excite suspicion, he added, quietly:"I suppose your Excellency will furnish me with a horse?
59491Think Editor Bolden''s going to trouble himself to get you out of the hole?
59491We met an Indian on foot, and Jack said to him,"Where can we get some water?"
59491What on earth should he do?
59491Where could he have got that horse?
59491Where will it find a man so experienced in military affairs-- one so renowned for patriotism, conduct, and courage?
59491Who has so great a knowledge of the enemy we have to deal with?
59491Who so much respected by the soldiery?
59491Who so well acquainted with their situation and strength?
59491Who, in short, so well able to support the military character of Virginia?
59491Wonder if I could n''t make the truth do as well?"
59491cried the other, exultingly,"then I win?"
59491said the General, suspiciously;"how comes a boy of your age to be so competent a guide?"
59491what was I born and raised on a ranch for?"
46010''But, what then do you think they will do, Herr Ernesti?'' 46010 ''Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty,''"quoted Walter,"and we need to be careful to exercise that, do n''t we, grandpa?"
46010Ah, you fear to trust me to do the work without the supervision of my capable young wife?
46010Ah? 46010 All by himself, papa, when it was just getting dark, too?"
46010And Hull meekly surrendered without any more ado?
46010And belong to you, papa? 46010 And can you not go to your berth for some hours''rest and sleep when you have finished your breakfast, my dear?"
46010And did Heald actually disregard such a warning as that?
46010And did the Americans go on chasing the British, papa?
46010And did the other officers submit to him then, Grandma Elsie?
46010And did they kill him and scalp him, papa?
46010And have not found it a nearly unendurable trial, I hope, Aunt Annis?
46010And he left the income of his property here to be used in educating students of Yale College, did he not?
46010And how is it with my dear eldest daughter?
46010And how wide is the river where they are, papa?
46010And now I wonder if my pupils can tell us most of the history of that city?
46010And that is the end of your sad little story, is it?
46010And that was the picture that we saw to- day, grandma?
46010And the American officers and men got nothing for their long chase, papa?
46010And there are a good many stories connected with them, are there not, papa?
46010And they did n''t let the Indians kill anybody, papa?
46010And they have kept it ever since?
46010And we shall have our usual service in the morning; we younger ones a Bible lesson with papa in the afternoon, wo n''t we?
46010And what became of the brave Proctor, papa?
46010And what did you see there?
46010And you would rather be living now, would n''t you, daughter?
46010Are we going to stop at any of them, papa?
46010Are we going to stop there, sir?
46010Are you feeling very tired, daughter?
46010As you are a pupil of mine, will you not let me count you as one of my family?
46010Bad doings of the British and Indians, grandma?
46010Beginning with the war of 1812, I suppose, as we have already gone over the story of the doings of Pontiac?
46010But I presume I may hope to come again some day?
46010But ca n''t you go to your berth now and take some hours of rest and sleep, papa, dear?
46010But did any of the British people disapprove of the employment of the Indians in the war of 1812, grandpa?
46010But did n''t he forbid you to try going on deck again before the wind dies down?
46010But how do you know it?
46010But it was n''t really true?
46010But oh, have n''t you been up all night? 46010 But that was n''t the worst for poor General Hull, was it, papa?"
46010But the sixteen who were brought ashore, did they live?
46010But there was a fort, was there not, papa?
46010But what became of Allen finally, papa? 46010 But what did he do with the boats, papa?"
46010But what was it he wanted of Perry?
46010But where did you learn all this, Molly?
46010But why did n''t he say what he meant, papa?
46010But you had a papa? 46010 But, to change the subject; there is a good deal that is interesting to be seen about here, is there not?"
46010By the way, I wonder where our bride and groom are by this time? 46010 Ca n''t you trust me to oversee and assist these younger folks?
46010Ca n''t you, Lu?
46010Camels, papa?
46010Can not I do that, mamma?
46010Cavalry?
46010Could n''t you give us all the same privilege, sir?
46010Daughter,he said in tender tones,"are you not forgetting these sweet words of Holy Writ:''He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life?''
46010Did M''Arthur do that way too, papa?
46010Did he deny it?
46010Did he do it, papa?
46010Did he kill people?
46010Did he name this Paradise Valley?
46010Did it become a large city very quickly, papa?
46010Did n''t the French people want to have the English king to be theirs too, grandma?
46010Did n''t they stop to rest a while, papa?
46010Did our soldiers like to go back without fighting the British first, papa?
46010Did the British go away too, papa?
46010Did they overtake her?
46010Did you say French folks live there, grandma?
46010Do n''t you suppose, papa, this eagle may have been the very same?
46010Do n''t you think so, father?
46010Do n''t you think we ought to love dear papa and do all we can to make him happy?
46010Do they belong to our country or to Canada, papa? 46010 Do they think we are about to cross the ocean?"
46010Do you not see that we are hurrying onward in that direction?
46010Do you see anything of His image in me, papa?
46010Do you think we are going to have a hard storm, papa?
46010Do you want company or prefer to go alone?
46010Do you?
46010Does God say that, Uncle Walter?
46010Doubt your dear love, mother? 46010 Folks,"he cried,"do you know that it is clearing off?
46010Grandma, wo n''t you please tell us now about things that have happened at Montreal and Quebec?
46010Had he taken the enemy''s vessels?
46010Had the British got Captain Brush with the soldiers and provisions, papa?
46010Has it ever been seen in this country, grandpa?
46010Have n''t you found out that for years it has been-- almost always just a pleasure to me to obey you?
46010Have you any doubt that you are mine?
46010Her baby? 46010 How about submission to despotism, Gracie?"
46010How about that, Neddie, my boy?
46010How and where do you want to go?
46010How can you suppose that any of us would be willing to see Max?
46010How could he see to row his boat?
46010How long did the British keep possession of Detroit, papa?
46010How many islands are there in the group, papa?
46010How would it do for grandma to take your papa''s place and tell you the story?
46010I was asking myself, as I have many times since my narrow escape of yesterday morning, Was I ready for heaven? 46010 In Venezuela''s exhibit?
46010Is it bad men that fight, grandma?
46010Is it not about time we were seeking our night''s lodgings?
46010Is it quite certain that he did?
46010Is that all of it there is now, grandma?
46010Is there a story about him, papa?
46010Is there a story to it?
46010Is there anything to be seen there-- on Tonomy Hill-- but the ruin of the little fortification?
46010It is an Indian name the island bears, is it not, captain?
46010It would have been even worse than rendering obedience to Captain Raymond has sometimes proved, eh?
46010Just to ride there, grandma?
46010Machines for making ice cream and candy would interest you, would n''t they?
46010Mamma, shall you and I walk together?
46010May I help, papa?
46010Me too, papa?
46010Montgomery''s death alone was a great loss to our country, was it not, papa?
46010My dear papa looks so tired, mamma,remarked little Elsie in regretful tones,"what has he been doing?"
46010Now,said Captain Raymond,"will any or all of you take a sail in the_ Dolphin_?
46010Of what kind? 46010 Oh, are you going to tell us the story of that picture I asked you about, grandma?"
46010Oh, did the man die too, grandma?
46010Oh, have you brought a carriage for us, papa?
46010Oh, is Max in Annapolis now?
46010Oh, papa, did n''t General Montgomery come to Montreal some time after the events you have been telling of?
46010Oh, papa, the truth is n''t flattery, is it?
46010Oh, then we can go up on deck, ca n''t we, grandpa?
46010Oh, was n''t he a very, very bad man, grandpa?
46010Oh, where are we, papa?
46010On which side is your vote to be cast, Violet, my dear?
46010Papa, did he get well and go back and fight some more?
46010Papa, is it not the largest city of Lower Canada?
46010Papa, was he ever here?
46010Papa,asked Grace,"how long did that battle of Lake Erie last?"
46010Papa,said Elsie,"who was he?
46010Papa,she asked,"had the British got their guns all ready to fire at the Americans when Colonel Miller and his men got back to Detroit?
46010Perry had difficulty in getting his vessels over the bar, had he not, sir?
46010Pizarro? 46010 Stowaways?"
46010Tecumseh with the rest, papa?
46010That includes your four children, I suppose, papa?
46010That was before our Revolution, was n''t it, grandma?
46010The English were unsuccessful at first, if I remember right, mamma?
46010The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? 46010 The capture of Mackinaw was a great loss to our country, was it not, father?"
46010The harbor is considered a fine one, is it not?
46010The one the British took in that war you told about, papa?
46010The uncle he is expecting to visit there is a brother of Cousin Annis, is he not?
46010The whole American army was not taken, if I remember right, papa?
46010Then the British could n''t get in to harm the folks, could they, papa?
46010Then we wo n''t stop at all of them?
46010There are a great many fine grapes raised here, are there not?
46010There is not nearly so much to be seen here as in Quebec, is there, papa?
46010There, do you hear, sir? 46010 They did n''t see you, sir?"
46010This wide expanse of water can not be the Welland Canal?
46010Those Sand Hills from behind which the Pottawatomies fired upon the whites are quite gone now, are they not, papa?
46010To the tongue of which of the Indian tribes does the name belong, sir?
46010Was Fort Dearborn strong and well built, mamma?
46010Was Major Denny still on the Canadian side, captain?
46010Was anybody hurt in either fight, papa?
46010Was he buried there-- in Canada?
46010Was he not the same Prescott who had command of the British troops in Rhode Island some two years later?
46010Was n''t it?
46010Was n''t that a bad, swearing word, grandma?
46010Was the British soldier that fired it named John Bull?
46010We are going to drive, are we, papa?
46010We will reach Detroit early this evening, I suppose, Brother Levis?
46010Well, Lu, have you had a good time since I left you?
46010Well, mamma and you girls, how shall we pass the morning? 46010 Well, my dear, what of what?"
46010Well, what is to be done to- day?
46010Were not the British still in possession of Detroit, papa?
46010Were the Kinzies with them?
46010Were there many killed in that battle, papa?
46010Were they shut up in jail, papa?
46010What did they mean by that, papa?
46010What is it, daughter? 46010 What is the name of that little island lying at the mouth of the bay, captain?"
46010What makes it look so white, papa?
46010What makes men fight so, grandma?
46010What picture was that?
46010What sort of condition would this country be in now had not our ancestors waged those two wars with Great Britain?
46010What''s desert, grandma, to run away without leave?
46010What, crying, Gracie darling?
46010When my papa wakes up?
46010When the flood was over?
46010Where have you two been? 46010 Where is Walter, mamma?"
46010Where is it, papa?
46010Where is that, and what particular claim has it upon our attention?
46010Where is that?
46010Where is the house he lived in?
46010Who killed him, papa?
46010Who was he?
46010Why did he, Lu?
46010Why this any more than the_ ignis fatuus_?
46010Why was it called by that dreadful name-- Bloody Bridge, papa?
46010Why, Rosie, do you think I could be such a goose as to attempt anything so foolhardy as that, when nothing was to be gained by it?
46010Why, how much are those coins worth in our money?
46010Why, that''s what we call Englishmen, do n''t you know?
46010Will we get there to- day, papa?
46010With a great many soldiers, Uncle Wal?
46010Would mine answer that description?
46010Yes, papa, but----"But what, daughter?
46010You visited Viamede some time ago, I remember, sir?
46010You will hardly make another stop in this part of Her Majesty''s dominions, captain, but go directly home, I presume?
46010''What?
46010And did n''t he discover the Gulf and River St. Lawrence?
46010And how would it be possible to do all that while struggling for your life?"
46010And you kept our counsel?"
46010Are n''t we, papa?"
46010As our stay is likely to be so short, I think, do not you, it will be best to unpack only such things as we are pretty sure to want while here?"
46010At that the light came back into the dim eyes of the dying hero and he asked,''Who run?''
46010But are not most of the ignorant and vicious those who have come in from foreign lands?"
46010But what did the silence mean?
46010But what say you, Annis, my bonny bride?"
46010But where is papa?
46010But why not send for your baggage and go on home with us?
46010But you do not think there is much if any danger, do you, papa?"
46010By the way, Brother Levis, was there not an attempt made by our troops, later on in the war, to repossess Mackinaw?"
46010By what law?
46010Can not I have and enjoy you both at once?"
46010Can you tell me the meaning of the name Detroit, Elsie, daughter?"
46010Do you not remember my telling you about it?"
46010Do you think he was really a coward and so very much to blame, papa?"
46010Do you think we might call there without seeming to intrude?"
46010Grace asked, as they neared them;"and to which State do they belong?"
46010Grandma Elsie, do n''t you want to tell us the whole story?"
46010Grandma, have n''t you another little story to tell us?"
46010Has he been up all night?"
46010Have we accepted His offered salvation and given ourselves entirely to Him?
46010Have we been to all the places of interest now?"
46010He had been wounded badly, and his horse shot under him, when he asked her,''Do you think they will take our lives?''
46010He jumped aside, shaking himself free, as well as he might, from the dust and rubbish, and exclaiming:''What de debble you doin''up dar?''
46010He turned quickly, asking,"And you are one of them?"
46010He was disabled and said to his friend, Dr. Theobald, one of his staff, fighting near him,''I am severely wounded: where shall I go?''
46010Is it not so?"
46010Is it that you are mourning for your friends lost in battle?
46010Is it, my dear?"
46010Mrs. Travilla explained, adding,"I suppose you have no objection to my redeeming my promise?"
46010Of course you all know and remember what were the causes of that second struggle with our mother country?"
46010Of what are you thinking?"
46010Of works?
46010Oh, father, can anyone be saved without time to think and repent of every wrong thought and feeling, and asking God''s forgiveness for it?
46010Oh, what can we do?"
46010Or is it that you are fasting?
46010Papa, are we going directly home now?"
46010Papa, how can I know it?"
46010Shall we not assign their use to your mother, grandparents, and the Lilburn cousins?"
46010Shall we not have our evening worship together and then retire to rest?
46010She ceased, and Walter went on:"''Where is boasting then?
46010That would be very selfish, would it not?"
46010The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?"''
46010The one important question is, are we really His?
46010Then her husband took it up:"''What shall we say then?
46010Then in a lower, livelier tone,"Mamma, are you not proud of your husband?
46010We will go to see it, papa, will we not?"
46010What could I ever do without my dear, big sister?"
46010What do you all say to the proposition?"
46010Where is that?"
46010Wherefore?
46010Why have you blackened your faces?
46010Would I have gone there if I had been drowned without time to think and prepare to meet my Judge?
46010Would you like to hear it?"
46010You have seen all the sights of Quebec, have you not?"
46010and did n''t anybody warn the poor fellows in the fort?"
46010and did the English hurt her for fighting for her own dear country?"
46010and did they begin at once?"
46010and give them those names?"
46010and shall it ever be A mortal man ashamed of Thee?"
46010and what did he do, Uncle Wal?"
46010and what have you seen that is worth telling about?"
46010asked Elsie in a tone of surprise;"and have n''t you been up there at all this morning?"
46010ca n''t you take some rest now?"
46010cried Walter;"but did the British never catch him at it?"
46010do they run already?''
46010exclaimed Grace in astonishment,"you surely did not venture up on the deck in this storm?"
46010exclaimed Rosie,"were ever such accommodating girls seen before?
46010grandpa is your papa, is n''t he?
46010she exclaimed, after the usual morning greetings had been exchanged,"are n''t you sorry it has turned out a rainy day?"
46010then did our soldiers turn round and run back to the others?"
46010under Montgomery and Arnold, was n''t it?"
46010was that you, grandma?"
46010where?''
46010who was he?
39982''Forsters Fenwicks and Musgraves they rode and they ran,''is not that the ballad?
39982A truce to your puns, and tell me what in the name of heaven has brought you to such a place at such an hour?
39982Ah, how true that is, Lady Arranmore,said Ellen;"is it not?
39982Am I not? 39982 And are you sunk so low, Edward L''Estrange, as to be the oppressor of her you once said you loved?
39982And can you ask, can you not guess, Ellen,--I mean Miss Ravensworth, for such is the name I suppose by which I should now address you? 39982 And did no one else see him since?"
39982And do you dare insinuate she is an accomplice to a damnable crime? 39982 And have you waited long?"
39982And how could you doubt me?
39982And how do you do when ladies keep you waiting, Captain de Vere?
39982And in what do you differ, Miss Ravensworth? 39982 And know you not that it is in the heart, and nowhere else that happiness must be found in order to enjoy life?
39982And may I not fear, my lord, you may thus treat me when tired of the charms you now flatter?
39982And never took her down to supper? 39982 And nothing else?"
39982And what if I do lose all, Captain de Vere? 39982 And what in the name of the foul fiend had you to say to me, my messmate?"
39982And what proof have I of the ingenuous nature of your story? 39982 And what proof have I this lady is Lord Wentworth''s choice beyond your prejudiced word?
39982And what should I have been had that fatal pistol shot not been intercepted by faithful Wilton?
39982And what sort of man is he?
39982And when I am out-- where am I to go?
39982And when do I go to Scotland?
39982And why have you left sunny Italy,asked the Earl,"and come to the cold North?"
39982And why not now? 39982 And why should I tell it, after all; is she not my rival?
39982Antonia, dearest Antonia, what is it all?
39982Antonia, what is this?--surely my life is charmed-- what now?
39982Apropos of changing the subject, how do you like the idea of our regiment going to Brighton?
39982Are you coming with us, Cap?
39982Are you going, Edie?
39982Are you not glad you told me all, you unbelieving fellow?
39982Are you unwell, Captain L''Estrange?
39982At the least you will then take a weed?
39982Bad man, do you dare show your false face? 39982 Battle is it?
39982Bravo, Pringle, bravo-- what do you think of it, De Vere?
39982But to- morrow?
39982But wo n''t you come, Arranmore?
39982But you spoke of another of your family: was Arthur your brother,--and is he, too, dead?
39982Can you doubt it?--can you then think I could be unhappy, with you so near me?
39982Could you not have steered elsewhere? 39982 Could you oblige me,"said the stranger,"by telling me where the churchwarden lives?"
39982Danger near, and of what kind?
39982Dare n''t I?
39982Dead dogs tell no tales, and why should I not? 39982 Dear me,"she exclaimed half aloud, as a pretty little timepiece on the mantelshelf struck ten--"how late they are!--I expected them an hour ago?"
39982Did he drive here, Johnny?
39982Do you believe him?
39982Do you know, Nelly, we have spent every Saturday there, and he so often inquired after you?
39982Do you not admire the prospect, sir? 39982 Do you not think we have too many in the plot?"
39982Easily; you remember the Italian boy, who played and sung-- that boy was I-- is it not now explained?
39982Egad, you have n''t turned blue, have you? 39982 Eh, sir, you are come at last: I hae been expecting you this lang while; and how are ye missy?
39982Ellen will be future mistress of Dun Eden Towers; do you not think I have made a good choice?
39982Fool,said the Captain,"your trial would implicate me; do you think I will let you hang?
39982Going where?
39982Good Heavens, and what shall we do?
39982Ha, my guide, you here?
39982Hallo, whom have we here? 39982 Halloo, my fine game cock, where did you learn to crow so loudly?"
39982Have I not? 39982 Have a glass of spirits, my lad-- whisky, or brandy, or what?"
39982Have you been long waiting?
39982Have you no pity? 39982 Have you then forgotten all?
39982He rode too? 39982 He will be hung, then?"
39982How am I to escape?
39982How are you again, my Lord Wentworth? 39982 How are you, Ravensworth?
39982How could they be else than melancholy, when the heart is sad?
39982How dare you enter a lady''s room?
39982How did you know it-- has Edith or Johnny told you?
39982How did you like the ball, John?
39982How did you like the news to- night, L''Estrange?
39982How did you like the picnic, Captain?
39982How do you do?
39982How do you know though?
39982How do you like it, my little man?
39982How is the Regent?
39982How now, old drudge-- dare you blaspheme?
39982How prevent him? 39982 How the devil should I know-- I am not Frank''s keeper?"
39982How will you prevent him, De Vere?
39982I am glad to see you looking so blooming, Miss Ravensworth; I hope you are now quite recovered?
39982I am sure I can not tell; one of the Duke''s sons?
39982I am sure my sisters will be delighted, wo n''t you Edie? 39982 I do,"said her sister;"and are you not glad Ellen will be our own sister, Florence?
39982I fear neither, most sage damsel; this evening I shall sup with his lordship; is there any message from his distressed lady love?
39982I hope you do n''t mean to compare her with Miss Ravensworth, a high born Scotch lady? 39982 I hope you found my brother''s cloak acceptable?"
39982I knew not you ever had another sister,said Ellen;"is it long since she died?"
39982I suppose so; you are going too, are you not?
39982I, how? 39982 If she is to die, it can not save her; if she is to live, why rob her of one tress?"
39982Indeed, sir, if I do not know it, I wonder who else does, considering I am its owner?
39982Is Captain de Vere of the party?
39982Is it not like the voice of God calling us to account for our wickedness?
39982Is my brother, the Earl, at home?
39982Is not this quite Swiss? 39982 Is that a finer one?
39982Is that your bag, sir? 39982 Is the lion at bay?
39982Is there any news, papa?
39982It is d-- d hot, is n''t it, Miss Ravensworth?
39982It is getting cold, Ellen, dear; had you not better descend to the cabin, now? 39982 It is needless, I can not accept; think you I could live so near him I loved so well, and see him love another?
39982John, have you nothing to say to our guest, Miss Ravensworth?
39982Just take a glass of port-- you will find it excellent, Mr. Lennox; you too, sir, will you not join us?
39982Know the Villa Reale?
39982Let me have it in my hands?
39982Let me see your blade; is it sharp?
39982Look you-- this here is my advice, trap him-- snare''im-- net him-- set another girl in his way-- a springe to catch woodcocks-- eh Ned? 39982 Look, papa, how it snows,"said Maude;"we shall have a cold drive; is n''t it early for snow in November?"
39982Madam, I am extremely sorry, but my orders are peremptory and immediate; will you come or not?
39982May I ask the reason of this interview, which seems so painful to you, Captain L''Estrange?
39982May I come to the church?
39982May I not send_ once_ more?
39982Miss Ravensworth?
39982Most of us ladies are going out riding; who will gallant us?
39982My brother''s marriage-- what do you mean, dear? 39982 Nonsense, Johnny, how will she be one?"
39982Not off yet?
39982Nothing but take yourself off as quick as you can? 39982 Nothing else, sir?"
39982Now we are all prepared,said the Earl;"do you know the new dance-- the waltz?"
39982Oh dear, yes; I do so long to see the wonderful pew; do you think, Wentworth, it will be altered all nicely now?
39982Oh, Ellen, hear me, it is false I vow by----"Perjure not yourself, my lord, is there not one-- Juana?
39982Oh, Johnny, what is it? 39982 Oh, Nelly, what has happened?"
39982Oh, my God, shield me; but what said you-- you do then know why I am here?
39982Oh, my God; what said you-- about Ellen-- where, where is my adored one? 39982 On what do you congratulate her?"
39982Perhaps you take the right view; but what can you know of sorrow, Lady Arranmore? 39982 Poor boy!--but what brought you hither?"
39982Presently; but you will at least take some wine?
39982Rode, and where the deuce did you leave your horse? 39982 Shall I, then, for ever keep my secret?
39982Show him in-- and begone: what the devil are you standing eavesdropping there for, you old blackguard?
39982So you have steered for old Bill, have you?
39982Take another glass-- and look you here, you know Cessford''s Peel?
39982That is what I came here for, to find out-- that is exactly what I do n''t know-- can you assist me? 39982 Then it is some cross in love, some blighted affection that makes you so melancholy, so unlike the Ellen I met last Christmas?
39982Then it was you, perjured woman, that betrayed our cause?
39982Then you know him, I suppose?
39982Then you wo n''t dance, John?
39982There is truth in it; but where the h-- is Tony? 39982 These are not terms, you compel me; but what security have I?
39982Think so? 39982 This is a riddle, Ellen-- tell me what it all means?
39982Till_ I_ came; what had I to do with it?
39982To- morrow? 39982 Trash-- who the devil has put this nonsense into your brains?
39982Well, De Vere,said Major Forster,"and how went jolly Christmas up in the North?"
39982Well, Floss,said John,"how many fellows did you dance with?"
39982Well, John, are you come to claim me for this dance?
39982Well, how did you like the ball?
39982Wentworth,he continued,"I sup with you to- night-- is eleven too early?"
39982What are you looking at?
39982What deed is done?
39982What did you dream, Lord Wentworth?
39982What do I mean? 39982 What excuse for flirting with a country girl, as you were doing just now?
39982What fool''s errand is this? 39982 What in the devil''s name could I know about the old villain-- a miscreant I never before saw in my life?"
39982What is he like?
39982What is it, Johnny?
39982What is that to you? 39982 What is the order of the day?"
39982What is this-- what is it all about?
39982What is to be done, Maude?
39982What is untrue?--who may be faithful still?--whom did you doubt?
39982What is wrong now?
39982What mischief can he be after now?
39982What news, John, about Wentworth''s proposal?
39982What shall we do for a musician?
39982What should make you suppose so?
39982What the deuce frightens you? 39982 What the devil had I to do with it?
39982What tomfoolery is this, Ned? 39982 What was it?"
39982What will you then do?
39982What, in Heaven''s name, do you mean?
39982What, indeed, would you do without me?
39982What-- where-- who''s she-- where is she gone?
39982When did you arrive? 39982 When did you ever hear him preach?"
39982When does the plot begin to work?
39982Where are you going, De Vere?
39982Where is the Captain?
39982Where the deuce has Antonia earthed herself?
39982Where, where is she?
39982Where? 39982 Who are those lovely creatures?"
39982Who can it be?
39982Who indeed?
39982Who is there?
39982Who says so?
39982Who was that remarkable looking individual you were addressing?
39982Who would have thought of his lordship''s pensioning you off so soon? 39982 Who, and what are you?
39982Who, and what are you?
39982Who, my lord?
39982Who? 39982 Who?"
39982Why does he not assist in the rescue?
39982Why not, Captain de Vere?
39982Why not? 39982 Why, Johnny, what is all this excitement about?
39982Why, what is all this?
39982You alarm me, Sheriff; this way, come along; what has happened?--nothing to Ellen Ravensworth, I hope?
39982You are undecided still?
39982You believe it not? 39982 You did not compromise me?"
39982You think it an abduction?
39982You were right, Lennox; who do you think it was?
39982You will come with me, girls?
39982You wo n''t tell though?
39982Your honour?
39982Zounds, and that''s true; but what the deuce has become of L''Estrange? 39982 ''Say not so,''I answered,''you are too young to die yet; stay with us,--do not leave us; why should you think you will die?'' 39982 *** he be dismayed By wild words of a timid maid?
39982--_Hemans._"Why, where have you two been?"
39982All my guests are now arrived: what should hinder us from taking a turn and joining my brothers and Arranmore, who are with the haymakers?"
39982Already her woe had softened her heart: was it the beginning of the stream which should"make glad the city of our God?"
39982And how came you to doubt my pledge, Ellen, or think my ring spoke falsehood?"
39982And now, Mr. Ravensworth, as I have guided you so well, will you reward me by an introduction to your fair daughter?"
39982And what are you going to do?"
39982And what have you to say, my Lord?"
39982And where is Mr. Lennox?
39982And who was her love?
39982And you, gentle Ellen, what will you think?
39982Are you going?"
39982Are you ill?"
39982Arranmore was there, and by G--, he drinks like a fish-- how did you get on?"
39982As soon as Mr. Ravensworth''s little page appeared he thus accosted him--"Is young Nimrod at home?"
39982At last he was ready to go down stairs; but how should he face Ellen Ravensworth, if she should be alone, as he had sometimes found her?
39982Beside his couch stood a form in white-- was it the vision of a troubled mind?
39982But first I will make myself sure; I said I could read faces; see you my sister Florence?
39982But how was he to effect his purpose?
39982But poor Mr. Scroop, and your poor Wilton, are they really dead?"
39982But what is that to you?
39982But what is the matter?
39982But what, in the fiend''s name, has that to do with Juana?
39982But why do I delay?
39982But why not?
39982But you are sure Wentworth gave her that ring?"
39982But you said your children were present-- where are they?"
39982By- the- by, how did you come out here?
39982Ca n''t you keep a dog like that still with your big body?"
39982Can I do anything else?"
39982Can our relationship extend no further?"
39982Can you not guess the reason?
39982Can you see a distressed maiden, can you see her tears, and yet feel no pity?
39982Cease your whining, you villain; I have you now, I''ll tie your arms up for you; there, is that jolly, you devil?"
39982Cessford''s Peel, said you?
39982Could Lord Wentworth have waxed cold?
39982Could her father forget, or had some fearful deception been practised on them?
39982Could she catch his eye?
39982Could she make the conquest?
39982De Vere?"
39982Did you not promise you would not?
39982Do none of you gentlemen know where he went to; has no one seen him?"
39982Do none of you know anything about him?"
39982Do not be frightened, my boy, they will not harm you; come, what will you have before you play?
39982Do you hear?
39982Do you not blush to own it?
39982Do you not know Alice''s age?
39982Do you remember the last time he supped with us, Musgrave?"
39982Do you think I am as great a fool as yourself?
39982Do you think with me you could really own a happy mind?"
39982Do you trust me?"
39982Do, dearest, do.--There, is not that pleasant?"
39982Egad I rode as if old Scratch was at my heels, and I am right glad I was in time: where is the rampart to storm?
39982Ha!--how like you that?"
39982Has the parson been here?
39982Have I lived to see one I ever thought worthy of the name of Briton stoop to be a woman''s oppressor?
39982Have you forgotten what you once were to me?
39982Have you nothing left?
39982Have you the dagger still?"
39982He had called her his dearest Ellen; had pledged his love with a sacred kiss; had invited her to his home,--what more did she want?
39982He knew him too-- why should not she?
39982He rose; he walked to the door; his hand was on the bolt,--what deterred him?
39982He swore vengeance on whom?
39982He waited till the crackling peal ceased, and then said in a light voice:"Hallo, Ned, how are you, old fellow?
39982Her head ached as if it would split, an awful load seemed to crush her very brain;--was it in a vice?
39982His plot was good, how was it to be carried out?
39982How are you, sweet one-- better-- able to drive?
39982How could he ever fancy a being so pure, so loveable, would love a thing of guilt like him?
39982How d''you do, Mr. Ravensworth; how d''you do, Johnny, and my little Maude?
39982How d''you do, my bully boy?
39982How full are our feelings, as we ask with the poet,--"Who shall fill our vacant places?
39982How shall I ever look again in your face?
39982How shall we dance without music?"
39982How would she rescue her from her coming danger, and what was that danger?
39982I am a free subject of his Majesty''s; you have no right, no power to touch me-- on what plea do you do so?"
39982I am myself English, though residing here-- such parks as Goodwood, in Sussex, for instance?"
39982I command you to depart: would you have me summon my servants to show you out?"
39982I dreamed then-- but mercy on us, where are we going to?"
39982I have not even been apprised of his presence yet-- he will perhaps step in; what is all this excitement about?"
39982I own I am yet too young in crime; once more,--will you yield to fair measures?"
39982I should know the voice-- I thought not mortal man could be so devoid of all human feelings-- are you a fiend incarnate?"
39982I thank thee,--then it was untrue; he may be faithful still; how could I doubt him?"
39982I wonder how long this weather will continue?
39982I wonder if he has drowned himself?"
39982If it concerns my family who has a better right to know it?
39982Is Antonia to do what I asked?"
39982Is that your fine secret?
39982Is that your son?"
39982Is there any news?
39982Is your dagger free in its sheath?"
39982Is your father come?
39982John, how can you frighten him so?"
39982John, you should n''t swear so,"said Lady Florence;"but where is Frank?
39982Juana, as we have already said, had strong feelings towards the Earl: what woman would not under her circumstances?
39982L''Estrange swore eternal hatred to whom?
39982Love you, Edward L''Estrange?
39982May I not think it a lure to work on my jealousy, and gain you back the love of which I judged you unworthy?"
39982Musgrave, will you see about Wilton''s remains?
39982My orders were implicit, and how dared you disobey them?
39982Now what do you think of this?"
39982Oh God, shall I be in time?"
39982Opposite her sat who?
39982Patience, by G--, I''m coming; what the devil are you kicking up such a devilish row about?
39982Perhaps you are not aware it is said you are not the only lady who holds a place in Lord Wentworth''s heart?
39982Perhaps you do not know it is whispered a fairer lady engrosses a larger share of the Earl''s love than you do?"
39982Pest, do you take me for a nincompoop, or fool, or what?
39982Ravensworth?"
39982Ravensworth?"
39982Remember you then promised nothing should change your love while she lived-- she is living still, but where is love?"
39982Shall I tell him Ellen Ravensworth spends the evening with her feere?"
39982She had asked for death,--was it come?
39982She had loved him once-- but now-- did she love him?
39982She hastily disrobed herself-- she could have fallen all the time: why did she not?
39982She smiled at this conceit and read on: what does she read?
39982She threw herself on her couch;--what was it glistened by her?
39982So soon?
39982Still the carriage rolled on, the horses still dragged it forward at a furious pace-- why were not the lights of Edina seen?
39982Summer gilds the smiling day, Summer clothes the tufted spray, Earth is green and heaven is gay, Wherefore should we not be jolly?"
39982Terms, said I?
39982The devil whispered, what will the Captain think?
39982The fire was there; what prevented her burning it?
39982The wife of Cæsar must be free even of suspicion,--Lord Wentworth''s bride should not even be suspected,--had she given any cause for this?
39982Then you too saw that absurd paragraph, and did you not see its refutation?
39982There was a peculiarity in this picture gallery-- can any of my readers guess what it was?
39982There, what do you think of that?"
39982Think you he would have left you so long unrescued had it not been so?
39982Was it a dream again in which she saw her father stand by her bed?--did she really feel him take her hand, and feel her fluttering pulse?
39982Was it not on this one condition I gave you house and money?
39982Was it only fancy, or had she heard that voice before?
39982Was this her evil genius?
39982Well I''m d-- d, Ned; who would have thought you would ever have come to this?"
39982Wentworth marry another-- if he must marry, why the devil not Ellen Ravensworth?
39982What did he care?
39982What do you think of that?"
39982What do you think, Johnny, of having a sister a countess?
39982What had he done all this for?
39982What in the name of Heaven has put such ideas into your brainpan?
39982What is your answer?"
39982What made you shoot Wilton, poor devil?"
39982What part of Italy come you from, my boy?"
39982What should I have done if I had found my Ellen dead?"
39982What will be your feelings?
39982What will be your grief, your horror?
39982What will you have?
39982What would you then say did I tell you, proud maiden, I have seen this lady?
39982What, lingering still?
39982When Arranmore had left the prisoner, the Captain whispered in his ear,"Never mind, Ned; do n''t I act well?
39982When one minute only remained, the Captain said,"One more only now,--is your mind resolved?"
39982When the patient became stronger, the first words she whispered to her father were:--"Where is the ring?"
39982Where hides she now?
39982Where the devil did you pick this rascallion Italian up?"
39982Which did you think the most grand scenery?"
39982Which is it?
39982Who comes with me?"
39982Who is that snake?
39982Who shall sing our songs to- night?"
39982Will they not regard you as more fickle than a woman-- a traitor too-- a base ingrate; have they not worked for you; for you risked everything?
39982Will you come, Captain?"
39982Will you come, Mr. Lennox?
39982Would he come up to her model?
39982You are not jealous of Jenny Forbes, I hope?"
39982You do n''t grudge the boy a dirty half- crown?"
39982You do n''t mean to say you walked out?"
39982You do not go to town on Monday I think, Ravensworth?"
39982You know not what a woman''s heart is-- let me go?"
39982You must have found it hot, did you not?"
39982_ Arthur._--"And will you?"
39982_ Arthur._--"Have you the heart?"
39982_ Childe Harold._"And can you rend, by doubting still, A heart so much your own?"
39982_ Lalla Rookh._"And thou my lover''s sister?
39982a common bout of thunder the voice of God,--anything else?"
39982a month ago there was a gay picnic here, how could you have been here?
39982a''richt noo?"
39982addressing the servant,"is the wine properly iced?"
39982ale-- whiskey-- or old Tom?
39982and can you speak your shame?
39982and do you really think she will keep awake for you?
39982and how came this scandal to your ears?
39982and if I am to know it some day, why not now?"
39982and nothing more?
39982and think you I fear an old rascal like you?"
39982and what became of the unhappy young woman who so neglected her charge?"
39982and what room is her prison?"
39982and who interrupted your pleasant converse?"
39982and you, Mr. Ravensworth?
39982are all your promises forgotten?
39982are they come?"
39982are you coming with me, girls?"
39982are you not coming home with us?"
39982can you not guess my motive in guiding you to this spot-- the spot where my father won his lady''s hand?
39982could she make a conquest of the young Earl''s heart?
39982cried Frank as he seized the reins from the terrified boy,"where_ are_ you going?"
39982cried Juana,"and have I lived to see his sister?"
39982cried the Captain, aside to L''Estrange,"who the deuce would have thought of that?
39982cried the Earl, in a tone of bitter irony;"what, sir, do you know of warrants who tell me so?
39982cried the frantic beauty;"it is, it is; where can it be?
39982did you say this was your brother''s?"
39982do you think so?
39982had Lord Wentworth seen his Ellen then!--would he have known her?
39982had they played him false?
39982have you no heart?"
39982have you no more than this to say to him who was once your lover, who is so still?
39982he exclaimed, his face livid with ire,"and who has dared touch a hair of her head?"
39982he said:"I thought I ordered a plain mahogany door, and how comes there one of sandal- wood?"
39982heavens, where is it?
39982hesitating again?
39982how are you, Johnny?
39982how do you do, Lennox?"
39982how shall I ever pay the debt of gratitude to dear Lady Arranmore?
39982how tired I am-- I would I were dead-- what is all now without thee?"
39982how would he receive the news that his promised bride was an inmate of the prison cell?
39982if the heart is sad, what shall make its bearer smile?"
39982is it true,--has he left me?
39982is that you, Lennox?
39982is there not sea- room enough without tacking here with your mummeries?"
39982it was surely on a sister evening to this that Lord Byron penned those beautiful lines in Childe Harold?
39982neither of the girls down yet?"
39982nor pressed her to take it home?"
39982nor spread your cloak over her fair shoulders?
39982our circumstances are then altered, but when did you sit here before?"
39982pouring some Eau- de- Cologne on her broidered kerchief which she held to Ellen as a restorative,--"you feel better now?
39982refuse the purse?"
39982replied Ellen, for by this name she only knew her;"how could I fly with such strict watchers?"
39982said L''Estrange, as he threw himself across the horse,"what made me delay?"
39982said Lady Florence, laughing;"are you sure that was all?
39982said Lady Florence;"you do not mean--?"
39982said his lordship, as the three gentlemen got out, followed by Johnny and Maude,"what in the name of all that''s holy has happened?"
39982said the Earl;"why where have you been?"
39982sets the wind that way?
39982thae puddocks are queery things, an''I had had the chance of petting my fingers on it, wad I hae refused?"
39982throwing down a coil of rope--"and of that?"
39982to what purpose, Antonia?"
39982was her mind going?
39982was it some horrid dream?
39982what are you doing to my Italian, making him cry?
39982what could it be but one?
39982what do you mean?"
39982what have I done?
39982what is the use of this loveless grandeur?
39982what stayed her hand from committing it to the flames?
39982what the deuce have you kept me so long for?"
39982what will Musgrave think?
39982what will they all think?
39982where are you running to?
39982where have they taken her to?
39982where is the warrant?--how did you see it?"
39982where ride you?"
39982which window?"
39982who are you, mysterious maiden?"
39982who the deuce would have thought of such a chance?
39982who?"
39982whom have we here?"
39982why did n''t you drop?"
39982yes; quite a young Tasso; does he know English?"
39982you seem to know more of her than you would make believe?"
32429''Cause I''m crooked like this- a- way?
32429''Pears like you find somethin''right interestin''in that book; be you readin''hit?
32429A bird? 32429 About''ow far do you think, ma''m?"
32429Ah, what is this?
32429An''you clum''up thar to heark to him?
32429And I would have stayed away and let you starve to death? 32429 And he have sont fer ye?"
32429And not a thrush?
32429And now about the bee tree?
32429And now wo n''t you say what you were going to say?
32429And that will be grand, wo n''t it, baby? 32429 And then, dear heart, what did you do?"
32429And then?
32429And then?
32429And we can go right on helping each other, as we have done all these weeks? 32429 And what did you think the interpretation was then?"
32429And what, Cassandra? 32429 And when is tea time here?"
32429And when was that?
32429And who put them in your hair?
32429And why because?
32429And you came from Canada?
32429And you do n''t feel in the least disturbed? 32429 And you never come up when I am at home?"
32429And-- you call yourself a poet?
32429Anything the matter?
32429Are n''t you a bit stupid, David, not to see? 32429 Are n''t you hungry, too?"
32429Are there many herb doctors here about?
32429Are they likely to come up here, do you think, those men?
32429Are you comfortable down there?
32429Are you comfortable? 32429 Are you doin''this fer her?"
32429Are you going to hit the''houn''''dog with the pretty ball, Frale?
32429Are you hurt?
32429Are you so tired?
32429B-- but what were you going to do about it?
32429Be Bishop Towah in the house?
32429Be I heap o''trouble to you? 32429 Be hit true, what he says, Cass?"
32429Be the doctah dade, maw?
32429Be they? 32429 Be ye''feared fer me, Cass?"
32429Be ye''feared''nough to give me your promise, Cass?
32429Before God, I promise--"What, Frale? 32429 But for you?
32429But if they called the truth to you-- what then?
32429But just try-- to please me? 32429 But now, David--""Ah, but now-- what?
32429But now, I mean, when you came up here?
32429But now-- what?
32429But these mountain people of yours, who are they anyway?
32429But why did you put mountains in the sea?
32429But why on earth have n''t you told him?
32429But why should she think she ought? 32429 But why?
32429But you do n''t have to, do you, Frale?
32429Ca n''t you get over the ground any faster, John?
32429Ca n''t you give me a few, a very few moments? 32429 Ca n''t you see it''s sin for you and me to sit here like this-- like we dared to be sweethearts, when you have shed blood for this?
32429Ca n''t you tell me all about it, dear?
32429Can I get a carriage here, do you know?
32429Can you give me your promise now, Cass?
32429Can you tell me how to reach a place called''Wild Cat Hole''? 32429 Can you, David?
32429Casabianca, was it?
32429Cassandra, do you realize that in fifteen minutes you will be my wife? 32429 Cassandra, what are you covering and holding back?"
32429Chances for what?
32429Cold?
32429David, are you out of your head?
32429Dead? 32429 Dearest, may I interrupt you?"
32429Did he ax ye a heap o''questions, Hoyle?
32429Did he fight in the Civil War, too?
32429Did n''t I this very evening, David?
32429Did-- did he come on the cyars with you? 32429 Do I mind?
32429Do I reckon who''s dead?
32429Do I remember? 32429 Do about it?
32429Do it? 32429 Do n''t I ever deserve a visit?"
32429Do n''t you have it also when happiness comes to you, as on this morning while we waited together?
32429Do n''t you know that''s all a girl of my age lives for-- matrimony and a kennel? 32429 Do n''t you like the thought of staying up here with me?
32429Do n''t you reckon she be mean to Doctah David, nevah to let on''at he have a son, and he a- growin''that fast? 32429 Do n''t you take milk in your coffee?
32429Do they ride that way where you come from? 32429 Do they think they will have bodies that can be hurt by any such thing in the next world?"
32429Do you feel in a hurry?
32429Do you love that baby?
32429Do you realize I''ve found here the two greatest things in the world, love and health? 32429 Do you stay long in England?"
32429Do you think I would not do all I can to keep from spoiling your life over there?
32429Do you want to know what he said when he saw it? 32429 Do you''low they''ll shoot Frale, suh?"
32429Do you, indeed?
32429Doc inside?
32429Doctah Hoyle, you remembeh that thar quare bunch of leetle sticks an''stones you put in my''quar''um first day you fixed hit up fer me?
32429Doctah, do n''t ye guess I can get up an''try walkin''a leetle?
32429Does Cassandra know she is to be married to- day?
32429Does he live down in there? 32429 Does it hurt you very much, Hoyle?"
32429Ef I had''a''been straight, brother David never would''a''took me up to you?
32429Ef he have come to hisself, you reckon I bettah wake''em up and give her a leetle hot milk? 32429 Everything good and beautiful-- but-- sometimes it comes again--""What comes?"
32429Finish what you were saying? 32429 Frale, are you there?"
32429Frale, did you see that man lookin''over the fence? 32429 Frale, do you know me all these years to think such as that of me now?"
32429Go back? 32429 Good thing to know; but you''re a hero, do you understand that?"
32429Good; what kind of work can you do?
32429Hain''t that pone done, Sally? 32429 Hain''t ye goin''to wait fer yer horse?"
32429Hain''t ye seed nobody?
32429Has Frale been a- pesterin''you?
32429Have n''t you one to send to your sister?
32429Have you anything else-- like this?
32429Have you ever seen Lord Thryng-- the new lord, I mean, ma''m?
32429Have you seen Frale?
32429Have-- have you been down to the house, Frale?
32429He''s gettin''on all right now, be he?
32429Helping his mother, is he? 32429 Her gran''paw''s paw?
32429Her-- her father? 32429 Heredity?
32429Hev ye? 32429 Him?
32429Hoke, if you were to find it necessary to go away anywhere, would you leave your wife behind to please Cassandra Merlin?
32429Hotel? 32429 How am I ever to repay you people for your kindness to me?"
32429How came you here, Frale? 32429 How did you come to try to make a picture of the sea when you never saw it?"
32429How do you mean? 32429 How do you mean?"
32429How do you mean?
32429How far is it?
32429How have you managed these days? 32429 How unmixed in your most horribly mixed and mongrel population?"
32429How was it? 32429 How''s doc?"
32429How''s doc?
32429How-- how is that? 32429 Hu come he in thar?"
32429I have no thought of shirking my duty, and am prepared to think and act also--"You wish it to be effective? 32429 I hope you''ll sleep well--""Sleep?
32429I mean before he did this, before she went away to study-- had she made him such a-- promise?
32429I reckon you are a- thinkin''to bide on here''long o''we- uns an''not carry her off nowhar else?
32429I reckon you find it hard because you are not used to living like we do; we''re soon there now, see yonder?
32429I say, do you know what a hero is?
32429I say-- do you love him?
32429I thank you, sir, for your trouble,--but now, Doctor, shall we return to your house? 32429 I will go down with you,"he said,"you thought it might be the voices?
32429In your heart it is sweet and peaceful, too, and waiting for something good to happen?
32429Is Cass thar now? 32429 Is Frale your brother?"
32429Is Lady Isabel the right sort?
32429Is he at their country home also?
32429Is it a boy? 32429 Is it in my eyes you see the long path of light?
32429Is it something I must not be told?
32429Is it to the country you wish to go, ma''m?
32429Is it whiskey?
32429Is it-- is it safe for you to come here, Frale?
32429Is mother all right?
32429Is n''t that''protection''enough? 32429 Is that a house up there?"
32429Is that the way you see the''charm to hit''? 32429 Is that your way when you are afraid to do a thing; you hurry to do it all the more?"
32429Is there any hurry?
32429It is a trouble, is n''t it? 32429 It is no longer as if we were separate, dearest; ca n''t you remember and feel that we are one?"
32429It-- would take a-- long time to go to her first?
32429Keep right on this way, do I?
32429Kin you hear hit?
32429Let me know when we come to Carew''s Crossing, will you?
32429May I keep these books a short time? 32429 Miss Cassandra, when you know I am at your service, and will do anything you ask of me, why do you hold something back from me?
32429More than for Frale Farwell?
32429Mother says will you sign here, please?
32429Naturally-- but how about that, anyway? 32429 Nature-- yes-- how do you account for it?
32429No, David-- only-- does it mean death?
32429Nothing, only her baby had been crying; but was n''t he a love?
32429Now are you happy?
32429Now, how shall I punish you?
32429Now? 32429 Oh, there is a difference?
32429Only the days when I am absent can you''get to go up''?
32429Or-- any friend like yourself? 32429 Promised?"
32429Promised?
32429Reckon the''re no good?
32429Reckon ye''ll come back hyar this evenin''?
32429Remember that hat?
32429Sha n''t I unpack your box for you now, ma''m?
32429Shall I call Hoke?
32429Shall we go to my hotel? 32429 Sho-- how I know anybody wan''see yo, hangin''''roun''de back do''?
32429So you really thought it was the''Voices''? 32429 Suppose I duck him in the water trough yonder?"
32429Sure that all is right when we belong to each other-- this way?
32429Tell me a little more? 32429 Tell me first-- do you want me to go?"
32429Tell me how she came by the spelling- book, will you?
32429Tell th''doctah hu- come hit happened, son; you hain''t afeared of him, be ye?
32429That you, Cass?
32429That you, Hoke? 32429 Then there is something?"
32429Then what do you keep it in your pocket for? 32429 Then what will you do?"
32429Then what would be the use of telling him, only to trouble him?
32429Then why did n''t it save you from killing Ferd?
32429Then why have you waited all this time to tell me?
32429Then why not for you?
32429Then why so silent and dubious?
32429Then, of course, you can see that she is one of the best of the mountain people, ca n''t you? 32429 They''d not reached the house when you saw them?"
32429To- day? 32429 To-- her?"
32429W''ot kind, ma''m?
32429Waal, now, why could n''t you have give me that word first off? 32429 Was n''t that what the''Voices''were saying last night when you followed?"
32429Was the basket full of books? 32429 We are about the same size, I think?
32429We do n''t want no magic man, do we, Doctah Hoyle? 32429 We may be good friends still?
32429We''ll be on a straight road for a piece after this hill; shall we hurry a little then?
32429Well, David?
32429Well, Frale?
32429Well, could you jump ovah this here house and the loom shed in one jump?
32429Well, mother?
32429Well, that will be a good deed, wo n''t it?
32429Whar war he at?
32429Whar''d you git him? 32429 Whar''s David?"
32429What about her?
32429What are all these drawings? 32429 What are these mounds here on either side of the sea?"
32429What are you thinking about, brother Hoyle?
32429What are you thinking now, David?
32429What be I quare fer?
32429What be that-- odd? 32429 What be they?"
32429What did Doctor Hoyle do when he was down here?
32429What did Doctor Hoyle say about it?
32429What did you say?
32429What do you mean by''the right sort,''David? 32429 What do you say?"
32429What do you see when you look off at the mountain like that?
32429What do you''low to do here in ouah mountains? 32429 What does he do here?"
32429What fer?
32429What have I got? 32429 What have you done to your thumb?"
32429What have you done with your dog, Frale? 32429 What have you done?"
32429What in God''s name will my wife have to do with England''s African policy? 32429 What is Cass doing to- day?"
32429What is a''bee tree''?
32429What is it, Cassandra? 32429 What is it, James?"
32429What is it, little mother, what is it?
32429What is it, mamma?
32429What is it? 32429 What is it?"
32429What is it?
32429What is it?
32429What is it?
32429What is the tragedy?
32429What is this? 32429 What little girl?"
32429What war you an''that old man feelin''me all ovah for? 32429 What was that little sound?"
32429What was the matter with his preaching?
32429What was the matter?
32429What were his s-- secrets?
32429What were you saying, mother?
32429What were you thinking, David, that you did not hear me? 32429 What would you do if you could c-- arry your head straight like Frale?
32429What you got in that thar gol''machine? 32429 What you want to hear my heart beat fer?
32429What''s a''charm to hit''? 32429 What''s in that bundle, mothah?"
32429What''s that you are tossing up in the air? 32429 What''s that you sayin'', child,''bouts the Lord twistin''yer neck?
32429What''s that? 32429 What''s the matter, Frale?
32429What''s the matter, Frale? 32429 What- all be they?"
32429What- all is this Frale say you have told him? 32429 What- all''s in hit?"
32429When I go back, you reckon I''ll find''em hanging on the bushes? 32429 When did Cass come?"
32429When did you come down f''om that thar country whar Doctah Hoyle lives at?
32429When did you read that book, Cassandra? 32429 When do people make visits here, in the morning or afternoon?"
32429When is she coming back?
32429Where are they?
32429Where be ye from?
32429Where is he?
32429Where is your sister, Hoyle? 32429 Where was Frale?"
32429Where''s Miss Cassandra now?
32429Where''s the footman?
32429Where''s the little chap?
32429Where''s the''houn''dog,''Frale?
32429Which one is y-- yours?
32429Who aire ye talkin''to?
32429Who be ye, anyhow? 32429 Who be ye?"
32429Who be ye?
32429Who did me up like this?
32429Who is it now, making so much of the estimates of the world? 32429 Why ca n''t your little brother sit back here with me?"
32429Why did n''t Martha come up this evening?
32429Why did n''t you call me?
32429Why did n''t you come to me with it?
32429Why did n''t you tell us when you were down? 32429 Why did she do it?"
32429Why did you do that? 32429 Why do you ask in that way, mothah?"
32429Why do you laugh?
32429Why do you talk so?
32429Why is it out of order? 32429 Why must there be''blood feud''now?
32429Why so sad for that? 32429 Why, Cassandra, does it hurt you for me to tell you that I love you?
32429Why, David?
32429Why, dearest?
32429Why, son, are ye cryin''that- a- way so''s you can get to go off an''leave maw here''lone?
32429Why?
32429Will you ask him for me, Cass? 32429 Will you go to Daneshead Castle itself, ma''m, or stop in Queensderry?"
32429Will you have a shave, my lord?
32429Will you sit there on the rock and enjoy the mountains while I see how he is?
32429Will you take me, Frale, if it''s a circus? 32429 Will you tell me, please, have you a sister?"
32429Wo n''t you finish telling me about the spelling- book?
32429Wo n''t you go back and make her understand that he is to be left absolutely alone? 32429 Wo n''t you let me go with you?
32429Wo n''t you share this game with me? 32429 Wo n''t you tell me what troubles you?
32429Would my son have been attracted to her else? 32429 Would n''t this be an ideal spot to spend a honeymoon?
32429Would you like me to become an invalid again so you could keep on in the way you began?
32429Yas, know him? 32429 Yas, you see me now, do ye?"
32429Ye reckon? 32429 Yes, dearest; but did n''t the remembrance come to you just now, when you saw the long path of light before us?"
32429Yes?
32429You admitted Cassandra has both beauty and charm?
32429You are listening, David?
32429You did n''t expect me to stay a little girl all my life, did you, David?
32429You do n''t object to this, do you?
32429You feel quite sure that if he could get down the mountain side without being seen, he would be safe; where do you mean to send him? 32429 You hain''t goin''to tie me up that- a- way, be you?"
32429You hain''t goin''to''low that, be ye, Hoke? 32429 You have Cassandra''s promise; what are you going to do about it?"
32429You have come back to explain?
32429You have come near losing that splendid eye of yours, do you know that, little chap?
32429You have taken a man''s life; do you know what that means?
32429You hear that, Doc? 32429 You knew her first husband, then?"
32429You know hu''come I got filled up with them things? 32429 You know it''s not right that this sort of thing should go on indefinitely?"
32429You made the chicken coops? 32429 You mean without you, dearest?"
32429You must go now, Frale, you hear? 32429 You must know that I am stronger than you?"
32429You promise, mothah?
32429You reckon God just gin my neck er twist so''t brothah David would take me to Canada to you, an''so''t maw''d''low me to go? 32429 You reckon I mount go in yandah whar he is at?"
32429You reckon doctah kin take off my hade an''set hit straight like you carry yours, Frale?
32429You reckon he would, Doctor?
32429You reckon he''s plumb dade?
32429You reckon p''r''aps I mount git changed some way outen this here quare back I got, so''t I can hol''my hade like otheh folks? 32429 You reckon she''d keer fer this''n?"
32429You reckon she''d like me if I war to give her this here balloon?
32429You reckon why he done hit?
32429You reckon you can tell me hu''come God''lowed me to have this- er lump on my back? 32429 You reckon you could jump as fer in one jump now as from here to t''other side the water trough yandah?"
32429You reckon you kin tell what''tis?
32429You remember him so well, wo n''t you tell me how he looked?
32429You remember that day we went to Cate Irwin''s? 32429 You run in an''tell yer maw thank you, fer me, will ye?
32429You tell me Cassandra has given you her promise? 32429 You told her to get them because you wished to make her think she was doing something for her husband, did n''t you?
32429You trust me?
32429You walked, did n''t you? 32429 You will heed when your own heart tells you the right way?"
32429You will not drink?
32429You will repent, Frale?
32429You will tell me this trouble-- now-- before you leave me? 32429 You would n''t say''it was me,''would you?"
32429You-- you seen a houn''dog on-- on a cent-- how could he be on a cent?
32429You? 32429 Your condition?
32429Yours is n''t large enough for such a flood, is it, sweet?
32429A thought struck him, and he asked:--"Do you know what they quarrelled about?"
32429Ah, could he never reach her?
32429Ah, she knew; for is not the little winged god a wonderful teacher?
32429Ah, what could he do?
32429And then it was me-- what?"
32429And then there is the terrible chance, after all, that he might go back and be like his father before him, and then what?"
32429And then what did you do?"
32429And what is Hoyle going to pay me for allowing him to ride Pete up and down while I plough?"
32429And what more could the bishop say?
32429And when the bishop next went up the mountain, might she accompany him?
32429And you could n''t say to her that she would help most by taking herself out of the way, could you?
32429And you wish me to help him get away?"
32429And you''ll rest now, wo n''t you, Doctor?
32429And you?"
32429Are we together in it?
32429Are you foh there, suh?"
32429Are you happy?"
32429Are you in trouble?"
32429Are you sure you can make them understand over there?
32429Are you visitin''these parts?"
32429Be Decatur Irwin as glad to lose his foot as I be to git my laig back?"
32429Be they more''n one devil?"
32429Be ye cryin''fer him, Cass?
32429Be ye most dade, honey?
32429Be ye''feared o''Frale, honey?"
32429Beautiful girl, does it?"
32429But David would know she did not need one; bringing him his little son in her own arms, what would he care for anything more?
32429But if they ask you a question, say politely,''Beg pardon?''
32429But perhaps he was waiting for her to speak first?
32429But what had he done?
32429But why should he care?
32429Ca n''t you see these have already served their purpose?"
32429Ca n''t you tell it to me?"
32429Ca n''t you tell me?"
32429Ca n''t you understand?
32429Can you drive a horse?
32429Can you make it out?"
32429Can you read that thar quare printin''?"
32429Can you suggest any one I might get to do that ploughing?
32429Can you tell what they be?
32429Can-- can you go up there and see why I ca n''t rest for thinking he''s a heap worse than he reckons?
32429Cassandra, have you loved that boy?"
32429Character?
32429Could he bear to live so near her?
32429Could he succeed in influencing her to set her young lover''s claims one side?
32429Could n''t they have him down?
32429Could n''t you patch it up among you, and keep the boy at home?
32429Could you let your head rest here and sleep as you did the other day?
32429D-- don''t we, though?
32429David spoke pleadingly,"You thought him a beautiful child?"
32429David was troubled indeed, but what could he do?
32429David, how did you ever dare marry me?"
32429David, what can we do?
32429Did Aunt Sally feed you?
32429Did Aunt Sally see?
32429Did Hoke tell you this morning?"
32429Did I never tell you that but for his death he would have been created bishop of his diocese?
32429Did he come often?"
32429Did it make a difference in his reception up above-- do you think?"
32429Did it move or not?
32429Did n''t I tell you in my letter?
32429Did not the old man say it was only gossip?
32429Did she know she was in that terrible flood?
32429Did they drop from the sky and fill the air like these?
32429Did this girl know him better than she-- his wife?
32429Did you know it was one of those bullets Frale tried to kill you with?
32429Did you say that word?"
32429Did you think I loved you and married you for your worldly knowledge?"
32429Did you- uns know him?"
32429Did your brother hurt you?"
32429Do n''t I do it right?"
32429Do n''t men love to go discovering?
32429Do n''t you guess''at he''s beginnin''to grow some?
32429Do n''t you like your fried cakes?
32429Do n''t you people here in the mountains do the same?"
32429Do n''t you reckon it''s time you and I were abed?"
32429Do n''t you remember anything he said?"
32429Do n''t you see you are still beyond my reach?
32429Do n''t you think so?"
32429Do the weights hurt you?"
32429Do they hang by ther tails, like''possums does?"
32429Do you know what for?
32429Do you like me this way, David?"
32429Do you mean dead?
32429Do you suppose I''ve lived all these years and not seen?
32429Do you think you can plough all that land?
32429Doctor Hoyle, you''ll accompany us?
32429Doctor, are they fighting there now?
32429Doctor, are you sure-- sure-- it was right for us to do what we did?"
32429Does he feel it in his own little heart that you are his father?
32429Does hit mean this''er lump on my back?"
32429Does n''t he, James?
32429Frale was annoyed to hear Cassandra thus spoken against, for was she not his own?
32429From whence did they come-- those new sounds?
32429Get some ready, will you?"
32429God and his own soul-- was that all?
32429Good night?
32429Good, hey, little chap?
32429Had he ever seen the man before?
32429Had he not a silver bullet for the heart of the man who would dare contest his rights?
32429Had he reached Nirvana?
32429Had not David said he feared them for her?
32429Had not evil things been said of David even on her own mountain?
32429Had she died, and was this her spirit trying to speak?
32429Had she divined he would not stop at the Fall Place this time, when in the past it had been his custom to do so?
32429Had she forgotten the happy moment?
32429Had she not read in_ Vanity Fair_ how Becky Sharp always had her maid?
32429Had she seen her before?
32429Had the impossible happened?
32429Hain''t hit?"
32429Has it never occurred to you how your avenues will be cut off if you marry a wife beneath your class?"
32429Has your country no claim on you?"
32429Have David writ fer you like Frale say?
32429Have ye been up all night, Cass?"
32429Have you been to the house?"
32429Have you been to your apartment?
32429Have you forgot?
32429Have you said anything to her maw?"
32429Have you seen anything of that girl or observed her much?"
32429Have you thought of everything-- all the consequences?
32429Have you thought this all out, Doctor?
32429He bent down to her and asked almost in a whisper:"Promised?
32429His child-- that doctor''s child?
32429His own or God''s?
32429How about that?
32429How air you, suh?
32429How came Cassandra there listening?
32429How came a youngster like you there alone with those beasts?"
32429How came it there?
32429How came you to think of it for me?"
32429How can you laugh?"
32429How come he thar?"
32429How could I ever have loved you, if you had been different from what you are?"
32429How did he act?
32429How did he see things?"
32429How did you get all these things together?"
32429How have you slept, suh?"
32429How is it we see so differently?
32429How long must it be-- how long?
32429How long since you have eaten?"
32429How many might she call friends?
32429How many of her old companions might she retain?
32429How many were to be hereafter thrust out as quite impossible?
32429How much money would accrue?
32429How old is he?"
32429How should it be spent?
32429How should she conduct herself?
32429How should she go?
32429How soon will I be expected to take my seat?"
32429How soon?"
32429How would she bear them?
32429Hu come he in thar?"
32429Hu''come she thar?"
32429Hu''come you thar?"
32429Huh?"
32429I can rely on you to be practically inclined, now that you are placed at the head of such a family?
32429I can''t--""My dear boy, your brother died for his country, and can you not give a little of your life for it?
32429I could not pass him by, you remember?"
32429I do not need to leave you?"
32429I have something up at the cabin would help to heal this, but--"he glanced about the room--"What are those dried herbs up there?"
32429I love you, Cassandra; do you understand?"
32429I may do that, may I not?"
32429I reckon you have suffered a heap, and repented a heap-- since you did that, Frale?"
32429I reckon you- uns do n''t have nothin''sich whar you come from?"
32429I-- I shall need you, I-- Can you leave Hoyle there and come back, David?
32429If David have n''t sont fer ye, an''ye go, ye''ll have to walk ovah me to get thar, hear?"
32429If I help you, and shield you here, what are you going to do?
32429If I should let you have this hand again, would you go so far away from me that I could not reach you?"
32429If he could get to come back, do n''t you guess he''d come right quick, anyway?
32429If he did not speak first, would she keep silent forever?
32429If so, how long ought she to remain silent?
32429Impatient he might be, nervous, and even irritable, but still what could he do?
32429In what way?"
32429Instantly he thought better of his request, yet who was here to criticise?
32429Is any coffee left in the pot?"
32429Is he ill or hurt?
32429Is he so very handsome, do you think?"
32429Is it a boy?"
32429Is it that I am like my father?
32429Is it this way all the time?"
32429Is it true, that word Frale said, that everyone says he nevah will come back?"
32429Is it with my condition?"
32429Is it, Frale?"
32429Is n''t he clever?
32429Is n''t he, though?"
32429Is n''t it a sweet little cry, David?"
32429Is n''t it absurd?
32429Is n''t it beautiful here, David?"
32429Is n''t she?
32429Is n''t that it, James?
32429Is she ploughing?"
32429Is that all?"
32429Is that it?"
32429Is that keeping your promise to leave whiskey alone?
32429Is there a hotel?"
32429Is there anything I can do now?"
32429Is there anything else?"
32429Is there no one-- no man whom we can get to come here quickly?"
32429Is they going to be a circus, Frale, is they?"
32429It was a-- a-- predicament, was n''t it?
32429It''s to be life and work for you, sir, and what are you going to do with her, I say?"
32429James, you know how often after the best you could do and all their promises, they go back to it?"
32429Jes''axed her whyn''t she hol''her head like I did?
32429Jes''go to sleep like, an''wake up straight like Frale?"
32429John, ca n''t we get on faster than this?"
32429Just a little?
32429Just as we were?"
32429Just hunt up my trousers, will you?
32429Kin I look, too?"
32429Kin ye remember what I tol''you to tell yer paw?"
32429Kin you feel yourn?
32429May I examine what you have been doing?
32429May I kiss you?"
32429May I not have a day-- a single day-- in which to mourn the loss of my splendid brother?
32429Maybe they''ll appreciate her, and maybe they wo n''t; maybe they wo n''t, I say; Understand?
32429Maybe you came to see the''ouse, ma''m?"
32429Maybe you knew him?"
32429Might I have a look at them?"
32429Might he reach out and partake of the Divine power?
32429Might not this idyl be a part of it?
32429Might she still hold him in her heart?
32429Might this be the shadow Cassandra had seen lying across their future?
32429Mothers and babies?
32429Muffins, ma''m?"
32429My uncle dead, and I-- I his heir?"
32429My uncle gone, too?
32429My uncle?
32429Now tell me first of all, why is this laid on you?"
32429Now we shall get on, sha n''t we?
32429Now what are you going to do with her, eh?"
32429Now what?"
32429Now, Miss Cassandra, what does this mean?
32429Now, how came you to find us the other day?"
32429Now, what do you know?"
32429Of what were they not capable?
32429Oh, are you at home?"
32429Oh, why should they seem like hopes to her who had put away from her all hope?
32429Oncet he was a worm in a kind of a hole- box, an''then he turned into a leetle beast- crittah; an''what''ll he be next?"
32429One kiss?
32429Only think of all this gorgeous display of nature just for these mountain people, and what is it to them?"
32429Or must you bide there, too?"
32429Ought he to leave the place?
32429Ought she then to arrive attended by a maid, carrying her baby?
32429Over here a man hides the sun with his own hand and then cries out,''Where is it?''"
32429Page 17._]"Did you hitch that kicking brute alone and drive all that distance?"
32429Paint?
32429Protection from what?"
32429Reckon you can find hit?
32429Reckon you r''aly could set hit straight an''get this''er lump off''n my back?"
32429Remember how you used to play it for me every evening after dinner, when I was a girl?"
32429Sacrifice myself?
32429Say half an hour,--will that do?"
32429See yonder that spot of cleared red ground?
32429See?
32429See?
32429See?
32429Sha n''t I help you unpack, ma''m?"
32429Shall I mend the fire?"
32429Shall we go on?
32429She had it to spend, and of what else were they capable-- those hands?
32429She hesitated--"I reckon I did n''t do right telling her that-- do you guess?
32429She was assured by the cabman, leaning respectfully down to her with his cap in his hand, that this was"the''ouse, ma''m,"and should he wait?
32429She was sure-- sure-- David had been moved by noble motives; why should she not trust him now?
32429Should he come into her life only to torment and trouble her?
32429Should he go down to her now and refuse to leave her?
32429Should he wait and see?
32429Should he will her to speak and of herself unfold to him?
32429Should she be allowed a kennel, or should her sporting tendencies be discouraged?
32429Should she go at once, or wait until the afternoon?
32429So that was the way I kept on following-- until I--""You came to me, dear?"
32429So they quarrelled, did they?"
32429Sometime, when your mother is stronger, you can take up your life again and go to school-- as you meant to live-- can''t you?"
32429Sometimes he would sit on a bank of moss under those trees-- see near the top by that open spot of sky a right dark place?
32429Sometimes she found herself holding her breath and listening,--half lifting her head from her pillow,--but listening for what?
32429Suddenly he called to her as if from his sleep,"Have I killed some one?"
32429Sweet, simple- hearted child that she was, why, indeed, should she not come?
32429Tears in them?
32429Tears?
32429Tell me, if-- if a man has done-- such a sin, is it right to help him get away?"
32429Tell me, what did Frale say or do to you to so trouble you and send you off?"
32429That one should be sent for you?
32429That will be fine, wo n''t it, baby?"
32429The book she had been reading-- what were English people really like?
32429The glasses seemed to quiver and shake, throwing dancing flecks of light; and the wine in them-- why did it make him think of blood?
32429The old servant was saying:"You''aven''t''appened to meet a Samuel Cutter in America,''ave you?
32429The stench from his establishment pollutes miles of country, but does not reach England-- why?
32429Them people Cassandry was expectin''from Farington, did they come to- day?"
32429Then if I let you take your arms away, will you come back to me?"
32429Then she said,''Whyn''t you hol''your hade like I do?''"
32429Then why do n''t you eat them?
32429Then will you please speak for it soon?
32429Then you''d be sorry, would n''t you, Frale?"
32429They say both families are keen for the match-- and why should n''t they be?
32429To be able to write those badly scrawled notes was in his eyes surely enough to distinguish him from his companions at home; of what use was more?
32429To what wild spot had the animal brought him?
32429Waal, why''n''t ye say?"
32429War you tryin''to make out hu''come my hade is sot like this- a- way?
32429Was dinner included in the rent, and the mule and the mule''s dinner?
32429Was he a creature of ideals only, or was he also a practical man, taking the wisest means of reaching and achieving results most worth while?
32429Was he called home by his mother to help her sustain a new calamity?
32429Was his mother practising for the future that she kept such rigid state?
32429Was it a buoyancy he had received from his mountain height and the morning air?
32429Was it fate?
32429Was it for love of him that you gave him your promise?"
32429Was it not in the nature of a Providence that David had been delayed until after her departure?
32429Was it right, Doctor?
32429Was it that this young usurper had stolen into his place?
32429Was it the presence of his mother and Laura?
32429Was it what I said about matrimony?
32429Was it wind among the trees, or the rushing of water?
32429Was she afraid?
32429Was she going to try to play upon it?
32429Was she on her way to him, then?
32429Was she really being swept from him?
32429Was she there?
32429Was she to be devoured by swine?
32429Was she, then, so utterly untouched by his masculine presence?
32429Was spring upon them?
32429Was there no other way?"
32429Was there the guidance of a higher will?
32429Was this your husband''s also?
32429Was your first husband born and raised here as you were?"
32429We''ll make a fight for him, wo n''t we, dear?"
32429We''re not really one until we see from each other''s hilltop, are we?"
32429Were her eyes searching for the mountain top?
32429Were they dead then-- all three-- his two cousins and his brother-- dead?
32429Were they heavenly sweet, like these sounds?
32429Whar be hit at?"
32429Whar is he goin''?"
32429Whar war he at?
32429Whar yo s''poses he be dis time de mawnin''?"
32429What aire ye here fer?
32429What are you doing here all by yourself?"
32429What are you going to do about it?"
32429What are you seeing now?"
32429What are you thinking about, James?"
32429What are you thinking and fearing?
32429What be hit, ye reckon?
32429What be they about, anyhow?"
32429What can we do?"
32429What did God make''em that- a- way fer?"
32429What did I sacrifice?
32429What did he do that fer?"
32429What did the flute say to you?
32429What did they say to you?"
32429What did you hit your thumb like that for?"
32429What did your father tell you?
32429What do you care most for in all this world?
32429What do you think she said to me about it when I went to reason with her?
32429What else could she do, and what could David do?
32429What had he accomplished?
32429What had he ever said or done to make her prefer a request in that way?
32429What had she done-- this flower?
32429What has Laura been doing these two months?"
32429What have you been dreaming lately?"
32429What have you been up to, anyway?"
32429What if it had hit me when you threw it up that way-- and-- killed me?
32429What improvements should be made in their country home?
32429What is it now?"
32429What is it, brother Hoyle?"
32429What is it?
32429What is the matter with the man?
32429What is the trouble?
32429What kind of a leader socially in your own class?
32429What more can a man ask?
32429What mysterious foreboding had caught her fingers and stayed them at her maiden name?
32429What number is your room?
32429What should he do?
32429What sort of a Lady Thryng will your present wife make?
32429What they had felt-- what they had thought and striven for-- was it all intensified and concentrated in him?
32429What was it all-- what was it?
32429What was it?"
32429What was life?
32429What was she doing now?
32429What was she?
32429What was their message, Cassandra?"
32429What were they, those sweet sounds?
32429What were they?
32429What were you wondering?"
32429What will his mother-- and the family over in England say?"
32429What would David say?
32429What ye bid''n here fer?"
32429What you all dressed up for?
32429What you want o''the beast on the mountain, anyhow?
32429What you wrapping them up for?
32429What''s Hoyle doing with the mule?"
32429What''s''get shet of him,''Frale?"
32429What- all have Frale been up to now?
32429What- all have he done the doctah this- a- way fer?
32429What- all is up now?
32429What?
32429When Laura''s coming out should be?
32429When at last he cried out,"But what of my son, mother, my little son, and the heir to all this grandeur which means so much to you?"
32429When does the boat leave?
32429When would David speak?
32429When you are well, we will go there, wo n''t we?"
32429When you comin''back, brothah David?"
32429Where did you find it?"
32429Where did you get your roses?"
32429Where was he?
32429Where was it?"
32429Where would I be now but for you and Hoyle here?
32429Where would you like to go, ma''m?"
32429Where''s Laura?"
32429Where''s your flute?
32429Where''s your horse?"
32429Who be ye?"
32429Who could know what the future held for him-- what this little spot might mean to him in the days to come?
32429Who''d ye think I be?"
32429Why ca n''t you go on in the old way?"
32429Why do n''t you pay attention to me?
32429Why do you put a wall between us?
32429Why had it been done?
32429Why had she not written her name fully in the travellers''book?
32429Why have you done it?"
32429Why need he know when the knowing will do no good, and when he will come to me as soon as he can, anyway?"
32429Why not?
32429Why not?"
32429Why on earth does n''t Doctor Thryng come home?"
32429Why should I make him unhappy?
32429Why should I make his heart troubled when he must stay there?
32429Why should I mind, if you do n''t''right nigh''spoil your back and wear yourself out?"
32429Why should he allow it to go on?
32429Why should he let that doctor help him?
32429Why should he not have a vineyard up on the farther hill slope?
32429Why should he succumb?
32429Why was he here, away from the active, practical affairs which interest other men?
32429Why was it?
32429Why was the machine out of order?
32429Why were they so long within?
32429Why were they?
32429Why, what was it to him what place she asked for?
32429Why,--why what ails you?"
32429Why?
32429Will they ever be reconciled?
32429Will you drive yourself, ma''m, or shall I ask for a boy?"
32429Will you have anothah, or shall I give hit to Cass?"
32429Will you have breakfast now, suh?
32429Will you lock them in your box, mother, and if anything happens to me, will you sure-- sure burn them?"
32429Will you put that thar under doc''s pillow whar he kin find hit in the mawnin''?
32429Will you tell me how, please?"
32429Will you?"
32429Will you?"
32429Will you?"
32429Will your mother consent?
32429Wo n''t they think this awfully irregular?
32429Wo n''t ye''light an''come in?"
32429Wo n''t you tell me so I may help you?"
32429Would he be able to rise from the swirling flotsam and ride free?
32429Would he come any sooner for his son than for me?"
32429Would he hunt the family up and learn if they were worthy or impostors?
32429Would there be time in that case?
32429Would you prefer to go with us?"
32429Would you trust him to me, dear?
32429Would-- would you go-- alone with him?"
32429Yes, she was a stranger, and had wisely taken herself back to her own place; what else could she do?
32429Yet now should he sit down in ecstatic dreaming?
32429You are doing a very beneficent thing, do you know, saving a man''s life?"
32429You are not used to this kind of a saddle, I know, but what''s the difference?
32429You are not, are you, honey son?"
32429You can ride cross- saddle as the young ladies do in the North, ca n''t you?"
32429You could n''t, could you?"
32429You do n''t think he would try to return?"
32429You do n''t want to kill anybody, do you, Frale?"
32429You go back there and work like you said you would--""Did n''t I tell you that thar houn''dog Giles Teasley war on my scent?
32429You guess I-- I''m goin''to git shet o''the misery some day?"
32429You hear, Frale?
32429You know, Doctor, from Mr. Belew''s telegram we were led to expect--""A death instead of a wedding?"
32429You must be unhampered-- free-- what can I-- what can we do?"
32429You reckon God''lowed me to have this er hump, so''t I could get to go an''bide whar you were at, like I done?"
32429You reckon I can go back with you?"
32429You reckon he followed you off?
32429You reckon hit looks like the ocean whar the ships go a- sailin''to t''othah side o''the world?"
32429You reckon hit''ll eveh git changed into something diff''ent-- some kind er a bird?"
32429You reckon if I tried right hard I could paint a picture o''th''mountain, yandah-- an''th''sea-- an''--all the-- all the-- ships?"
32429You reckon if I''m right good, He''ll''low me to make a picture o''th''ocean some day, like the one we seed in that big house?
32429You reckon so, Doctah Hoyle?"
32429You reckon that li''l''girl, she thought I war quare?"
32429You reckon that''s what ails me?"
32429You remember how they came to Joan of Arc, like we were reading last week?"
32429You remember what David Thryng wrote?
32429You say it is not the whiskey?"
32429You say you had no school; how did you learn?
32429You tell me straight, did David send fer ye, er did n''t he?"
32429You think he was lookin''for you, Frale?
32429You will let me have him a little longer, wo n''t you, David?
32429You wo n''t?
32429You would have been a--""You mean if a magic man should come by here an''just touch me so, an''change me into Frale, would I''low him to do hit?"
32429You''aven''t''appened to know a Samuel Cutter over there?
32429You''ll keep this quiet for me, Hoke?
32429You- uns hain''t been yandah to the fall, have ye?"
32429Your heart does n''t beat any harder nor your breath come quicker?
32429[ Illustration:_"Casabianca, was it?"
32429and what name?
32429he asked,"and Hoyle, here?
63224Is he Infidel or True Believer? 63224 Were there dervishes across the big water in Faringistan( Europe), and had the man- birds( aviators) come to Bagdad?"
63224What manner of man is this?
63224What will become of us all?
63224Why,he asked honestly enough,"is the horse put inside the box, and why does this strange creature prefer petrol to barley by way of food?"
63224But, one will ask, what were Dunsterville and his force doing in Persia at all?
63224How were the Caucasus to be reached-- by the Caspian Sea and thence by steamer to Baku?
63224Or overland from northwards, through the province of Azarbaijan to Tabriz and railhead?
63224Then he inquired,"Is it true that in Faringistan, as currently reported, men make themselves into birds and soar in the air like eagles?"
63224Who has not heard and read of Bagdad, of its former glory and its greatness?
63224Who knows?
63224Why, then, have I added this of mine to the already so formidable list?
59632''Is the wild- beast trade a reg''lar business?''
59632And you thought of that?
59632Are you the toll- gate keeper''s daughter? 59632 But where can that driver be?"
59632Can I do anything?
59632Did they tell you to shut the gate?
59632How did he get there?
59632How did they happen to do that?
59632How?
59632I wonder what I_ am_ good for, anyway?
59632Shall we try the window?
59632That makes me think,said Mr. Thompson, aloud, forgetting the presence of the owl,"that I wanted one of the young ones to take to Miss--""To who?"
59632Then is it fair to charge as much for a canoe as for a row- boat that weighs three times as much?
59632To Miss--"To who- o- o- o?
59632To who?
59632Was the gate shut?
59632What did you call him?
59632What made these fellows stop here?
59632What shall I do?
59632Who- o- o- o?
59632Whose music is it?
59632Why did n''t I think of that before?
59632Why do you want to let them get into Barrington at all?
59632Why not stop them at the toll- gate?
59632You do n''t usually shut the gate nights?
59632''Why do n''t you dye him black?''
59632And what do you think happened to this little sister that day?
59632And what was Dick to do now?
59632Are you crazy?
59632But I do n''t see any-- why, where is he?"
59632But how could a little girl arrest two armed and desperate men?
59632But if he should keep on, what would they say to him at the dà © pôt?
59632But what was it that she must or must not do?
59632Did n''t I tell you not to play in that water?
59632Did the men hear it too?
59632Did you have any coffee this morning, Polly?
59632Do n''t you hear me, Polly-- don''t you hear me talking to you?
59632HARRY A. W. Polly learned to scold because Auntie scolded her, did she?
59632How do I begin in training them?
59632How much does a row- boat weigh?"
59632I wonder where the nest is?
59632I''d get the young ones, and-- and--"and Mr. Thompson began to nod--"and give''em to--""To who- o?"
59632Just ask your father to step out here, wo n''t you?"
59632Oh, what shall we do the summer night through, When our own darling cuckoo is dying?
59632One day she cut all the buttons off a pair of shoes, and when discovered she screamed,"What you want, ma''am?
59632She was very fond of swinging on the clothes- line, and would begin to scold herself, saying:"What are you doing on that line, Polly?
59632So when she heard of the offer of the prize, she said to herself,"Brother will saw wood; why may not I take some patchwork?"
59632Was n''t that pretty good sport for one day?
59632What justice is there in charging as much for a fourteen- foot canoe as for a forty- foot shell?"
59632What was she to do?
59632What was to be done?
59632What''s the matter with you, Polly?
59632When were the robbers to be expected?
59632Why had not the connection lasted only a minute longer, when her instructions would have been complete?
59632Will that do?"
59632Would the others never come?
59632Would they not see the gate?
59632[ Illustration:"O NANNY, WILT THOU GANG WI''ME?"]
59632and how could he refer to the old lady, when she had forgotten to give him her address?
59632is that the central office?"
59632what you come here for?"
66032) Did the defendant commit the disseisin?
6603And the said John Solas is bound to the said Thomas Profyt in 100 pounds by a bond to make defence of the said lands and tenements by the bribery(?)
6603As an example, is anyone happier than a moron or fool?
6603For instance, it questioned what man would stick his head into the halter of marriage if he first weighed the inconveniences of that life?
6603Or what woman would ever embrace her husband if she foresaw or considered the dangers of childbirth and the drudgery of motherhood?
6603Shall they( think you) escape unpunished that have thus oppressed you, and I have been respectless of their duty and regardless of our honor?
6603What am I?
6603What am I?
6603What is this, if not to be mad?
6611But where did you pass the night?
6611So the black- coat and the woman- stealer have come to die before the Indian''s god?
6611What do you want? 6611 Could it really have been the devil? 6611 Has she the right to be? 6611 Have you not seen how shamelessly she favors your rival''s suit? 6611 If he does so will you set us free and become a Christian?
6611Pay?
6611Strange, is it not, that the thunder birds flap so heavily along the west at that moment and a peal of laughter sounds from the lake?
6611Was it conscience, craziness, or fate that led old man Baker to hang himself above the grave of his victim?
5633All right, then, is there any reason why the news wo n''t wait for the weekly?
5633Americanized?
5633And it never happened-- any of it?
5633And the Eager Soul?
5633And the French officer de liason between the French army and the American ambulance, what of him?
5633And the ending-- will you have a happy ending?
5633Any of your relatives in the war?
5633Any one hurt, Singer?
5633Are n''t the visions of the young men, and the dreams of the old always happy? 5633 But Germany?"
5633Did you leave the shell hole?
5633For both?
5633Fried chicken, do n''t you suppose?
5633Has her hair slopped over yet?
5633Have n''t you heard-- haven''t you heard?
5633How much,he asked,"will these be?"
5633How much?
5633Hurt badly?
5633Liberties rather than privileges?
5633Liberties?
5633Mrs. Chessman-- this is practically her hospital]"Nice sort?"
5633My-- what?
5633On leave?
5633Only bran?
5633Say, will you interpret for us?
5633Sprecken sie Deutsch?
5633Then he did it"Not that fellow?
5633Well, how?
5633What is that music?
5633What odds are you giving now, Bill?
5633What part of the states do you Canadians come from?
5633What''s this land worth an acre?
5633Where were her voices?
5633Where you whistled the''Meditation from Thais,''in the moonlight?
5633Where( read this line with feeling and emphasis)"is the abri?"
5633Who was this Gilded Youth?
5633Who-- that man? 5633 Why,"asked Henry of an English speaking bystander,"do n''t you put that in your daily newspaper; why keep up the old custom?"
5633Why?
5633You mean our ambulance boy who came over on the boat with you-- the multimillionaire?
5633Your husband, there?
5633Allen?"
5633And Henry, still in pursuit of useful social information, insisted:"Well, are they as nice in the war zone as they are-- on the boat?"
5633And he asked,"Have you heard the news from the big base hospital?"
5633And is n''t she a peach; and does n''t she kind of warm your heart and make up for the hardship of your youth?"
5633And one child edged up to him in awe and asked,"O sir, were you indeed born in a manger?"
5633And when he thanked us for our trouble, Henry asked again:"Did she tell you that the Gilded Youth was there at her hospital?"
5633And who could make a currant tart without these?
5633Any children?"
5633As he cranked up his car he asked rather too casually,"Have you seen our friend from the boat-- the pretty nurse?"
5633Bill,"sighed Henry,"what would you give if you could talk like that-- again?"
5633Bill-- Bill, you wo n''t ever tell this in Wichita, will you?"
5633But from me, drowsily, came this:"Henry-- do you suppose she will get around to that slapping tonight she promised him on the boat?
5633But with the men all gone what shall we do when we want to be petted?"
5633But--"THE GILDED YOUTH:"Well, Auntie-- would you mind telling me how--?"
5633Did he make no warning sign?"
5633Did you ever have a red- headed sweetheart in those olden golden days, Henry?"
5633Do you suppose they are going to leave after the war?
5633Does that not make them stand by the shop instead of working against it?
5633For his wounded hand?
5633For the Prussians?
5633For their Babylonian philosophy?
5633From me:"Is Mr. Allen in his room?"
5633From the hall boy:"He is, sir; shall I go for him, sir?"
5633Have a cigarette?"
5633He likes to distinguish between himself and his wound and is likely to reply to the doctor any fine morning,"Me?
5633Her strong fine face lighted with something kind enough for a smile, as she answered:"Could n''t you go out and see him?
5633How can they make love in such a place?"
5633How did they record local history?
5633How do they know about the scandal?
5633How do they know how to vote?
5633How often do you fellows polish Fritzie off and clean up the trench?"
5633Is education expensive in England?"
5633Is n''t it a developed middle class feeling that accepts the shop as''their kind of people''now?"
5633Is n''t that so?''
5633It is told of a Canadian who came across a squad of Germans with their hands up that he asked:"How many are you?"
5633It makes you into somebody else... you''ve died so many times you''re like a walking corpse... isn''t that just how you feel?''
5633Looking casually at it Henry asked:"Shall we require one of those?"
5633My hand was on the elevator button jabbing it fiercely, and my lips replied,"Yes-- yes-- say-- Do you know whether Mr. Allen is in our room?
5633Shall I get him?"
5633She listened to us for a moment, then hopped aboard our talk like a boy flipping a street car:"Kansas-- eh?
5633So Henry asked:"You received your letter?"
5633So I cleared my throat and said:''Well Medill, do n''t you think we''d better excuse ourselves to his majesty and go?''
5633THE GILDED ONE:"But you never mentioned it to me?"
5633The points break off, or are worn off-- what difference does it make?
5633The supreme councils of the Allies-- what are they?
5633They both shouted,''Oh, is Madame an American?''
5633WE:"Now, boys, does that always happen?
5633WE:"Well, how often?"
5633WE:"What''s this story about you Canadians not taking any prisoners?"
5633What did he care for the war?
5633What if your house and mine had ten or twenty fine soldiers in it, and we were away and our wives and daughters were there alone?
5633What were gardens made for in this drab earth, if not for sanctuaries of lovers?
5633What would happen in Wichita and Emporia-- or back East in Goshen, New York, or out West in Fresno or Tonapah?
5633When it occurred to me to ask:"What does your husband do for a living?"
5633White?"
5633White?"
5633White?"]
5633Who do you think is in the trenches now... is the bourgeois class?
5633Why are you so loose in your discipline?
5633Why do n''t the Americans GET in it if they are going to?
5633Why do n''t you treat your officers with more respect?"
5633Why not then let the story of this war and its barbarities die with this generation?
5633Why ruin it?"
5633Why should I?
5633Why should we for ever breed hate into the heart of our people to grow eternally into war?"
5633You go ask Mrs. Ritz if she will furnish soap for twenty?"
5633[ Illustration with caption:"Col- o- nel, will you please carry my books?"]
5633[ Illustration:"What part of the States do you Canadians come from?"]
54370Am I not to believe what I see with my own eyes, and hear with my own ears?
54370O, Sir,cried one of the islanders,"why can we not return to the old way and not have all these modern ideas?
54370Again, should a conqueror be classed among the great?
54370And do not all persons develop one or more faculties, and neglect others, without causing any change in the bones of the face?
54370And how do they do it?
54370And should they?
54370And that if she took any other drug, the effects would not be about the same as they are known to be in practically all cases?
54370And then what more can the gods require?
54370And what are we to do with this common enemy of mankind?
54370And, if so, would it take eight or ten years before this could be done?
54370Are not animals affected by disease as well as man?
54370Are our churches to encourage the vice at their fairs in order to make money to_ redeem_ the world?
54370Are we to allow gambling houses to exist in our midst, thus inviting our young men to become victims?
54370Are we to allow lotteries and petty gambling devices everywhere as we do now?
54370Are we to emulate the faults of the great, or their virtues?
54370Because some men will steal, should we license them and furnish them with ways and means to carry out their brutal instincts?
54370But hold,--other difficulties present themselves: Who would compel the organized industries( Trusts) to reduce the hours of work?
54370But what has Christian Science done?
54370But what were the forlorn islanders to do about it?
54370But, should we listen for a moment to those who seek to exterminate the Trust?
54370But, who may say?
54370Can a person be a gentleman part of the time and not all the time, or is he born one way or the other?
54370Can a person who was not born a gentleman acquire the title?
54370Can so immense a collection of bodies meet and combine with unanimity?
54370Can such an association or society be organized?
54370Do we not all know now what a gentleman is?
54370Do you wish to isolate yourself from your fellow men and separately make and raise everything you eat and wear?"
54370Do you wish to return to that?
54370Does it not require quite a stretch of a sacrilegious imagination to picture a clothing factory in the spiritual world?
54370For example, suppose the coal mines remained idle,--what if the operators refused to obey the national directory?
54370For that matter, who can?
54370Has not the burden of the world''s work been lightened and lessened by this combination and organization?
54370How can the phrenologist reconcile his philosophy to this stubborn fact?
54370How can there be when a gentleman is a_ perfect man_?
54370How can we conquer the giant without slaying him?
54370How do we know that a man is popular with the people?
54370How?
54370I have frequently been asked by believing friends,"How do you account for this?"
54370If God is able to prevent evil, and is not willing, where is His benevolence?
54370If God is both able and willing, whence then is evil?
54370If God is willing, but not able, where is His power?
54370If employment is all we seek, why not tear down the public buildings and then hire men to build them up again?
54370If not, how about Confucius who was yellow?
54370If so, who would say that their meager minds could cause it?
54370If the public is the majority, who is to say that they are wise or unwise, right or wrong, fools or philosophers?
54370Is a great hangman as great as a great divine, and is the greatest clown to be numbered among the greatest men of history?
54370Is a great shoemaker a great man?
54370Is it a matter of birth, a matter of character, a matter of conscience, a matter of dress, a matter of conduct, or a matter of education?
54370Is, then, the spirit world( heaven), no improvement on our own world?
54370It asks itself"What is right?"
54370It sometimes attaches to ignorance, for who is today more popular than our champion batter or prize fighter?
54370It sometimes attaches to immorality, for did it not adopt the infamous Pompadour and du Barry?
54370It sometimes attaches to trifles, for was there ever such a fuss made over anything as the Teddybear?
54370It sometimes attaches to tyrants, for were not Caligula and Nero more popular than Germanicus?
54370Must the constitution be amended in order that NATIONAL DIRECTION shall be put into effect?
54370Now, my friends, why do you keep these God- given advantages to yourselves?
54370On the other hand, versatility of genius is not uncommon, for was not Leonardo da Vinci master of all the arts?
54370Or a Lincoln, Grant or Lee?
54370Or, should we try to cure it of its faults by training it to do our bidding?
54370Shall Booker T. Washington''s name not go on the immortal list just because he is black?
54370Shall Jesus''name be written on the scroll and not Buddha''s or Mohammed''s?
54370Shall Theodore Roosevelt go on the list?
54370Shall we class Joan of Arc among the great?
54370Shall we give Socrates a niche?
54370Shall we nominate Diogenes?
54370Shall we put Martin Luther on, and not Voltaire?
54370Shall we stop all this and let man''s passions have full sway?
54370Somebody has said that the majority is usually wrong, but who is to decide whether the majority or that"somebody"is wrong?
54370Still here mean that Osteopaths have a certain magic touch which is so powerful and wonderful that it must be used with great caution?
54370Still says that Osteopaths adjust displaced muscles, does he not?
54370That this touch lets loose certain drugs or chemicals which the body needs to cure itself?
54370The question is asked: Will all of the milk dealers one day combine and form a Trust?
54370The question may be asked, What power can compel the Trusts to do that which they have been directed to do by the nation?
54370There is an old saw that runs--"What is a gentleman?
54370These are questions on every tongue, yet who may say the answer?
54370Was Caesar great?
54370Was there ever a more popular man than Dewey after the Manila victory?
54370What are the qualifications and requirements?
54370What can be done with this unmanageable monster to destroy its faults and yet not spoil its virtues?
54370What does all this show?
54370What is a gentleman?
54370What is a wedding, and a marriage, and why?
54370What is genius?
54370What is greatness?
54370What kind of a beard shall we wear?
54370What matter if all of that is true or false?
54370What object was sought, in the beginning, when custom demanded a marriage ceremony before cohabitation?
54370What people?
54370What then have bumps to do with his mind?
54370What would prevent them charging exorbitant prices?
54370Who are the great and the greatest men of the time?
54370Who or what is to be the court of last resort?
54370Who or what would prevent the captains of industry filling their own pockets and keeping the great profits to themselves?
54370Who or what would prevent the rich from growing richer, and the poor poorer?
54370Who were the greatest men of history?
54370Who would favor a"beardless youth"to Numa Pimpolius-- he of the magnificent flowing beard?
54370Who would know good horses if there were no heavy loads?"
54370Who would prefer a Shakespeare, a Longfellow, a Whitman, a Ruskin, a Charlemagne, shorn of their hirsute adornments?
54370Who would say that the Boston tea party_ caused_ the Revolutionary war, or that the firing on Fort Sumpter_ caused_ the"late unpleasantness"?
54370Why can we not go back to the old way?"
54370Why do n''t you exchange what you make or raise for the products of your neighbors?
54370Why do we cling to error so tenaciously?
54370Why does every new, occult fad soon attract a host of followers?
54370Why has that ancient custom followed man to every far corner of the globe, and why do all peoples resent any effort to destroy that custom?
54370Why is it that so many are willing to attribute occult powers to all magicians who perform inexplicable tricks?
54370Why so many different forms of ceremony, what do they mean, and why do they differ so?
54370Yes, who would not expect it?
54370Yet who would say, under those circumstances, that Mind has endowed those drugs with the powers to act on the system as they do?
54370You say that Julian argued arduously against the beard?
54370You say the ancient Egyptians wore no beards?
54370_ The Public_ Who or what are the public?
54370and was not our own Franklin equally famous for his several accomplishments?
54370did not Lord Brougham excel in everything, until they said of him"Science is his forte, omniscience his foible"?
54370exclaims Chamfort,"how many fools does it take to make the public?"
54370not"What will the public applaud?"
54370on all beards above a fortnight''s growth?
54370or, that of walking under a ladder, for how many times in a lifetime does a person have occasion to avoid doing so?
57423What is,I will ask in turn,"the only remedy for unhappy loves, the only anchor of salvation for betrayed loves?"
57423Which are the happy loves?
57423Adam loves Eve; Eve loves Adam; what can be more simple, what affinity more intense, what affection more inevitable than their union?
57423And do we not, too, offer as holocaust to love wealth, glory, science?
57423And how can not Socialism be a sacred thing if it is his religion?"
57423And if you have found a heroine, why make a martyr of her?
57423And is not love the greatest of idolatries?
57423And is this not prostitution?
57423And the beautiful Creole, who knew nothing of Darwin and sexual selection, would reply smilingly:"But why today?
57423And who can enumerate all the sublime puerilities, all the ardent tendernesses, all the insensate acts of the idolatry of love?
57423And who can say that he has possessed a woman entirely in one night of love?
57423And who does not believe himself a hero or a martyr at that age?
57423And who does not know similar stories?
57423And why do we love him?
57423And why, my boy, do you prefer that little girl to all the others?
57423And why, my pretty girl, do you allow yourself to be kissed only by the lips of that dark, impertinent little beau?
57423And, in fact, what is love if not the choice of the better forms in order to perpetuate them?
57423Are the rights of love equal in man and woman?
57423Are we, then, tyrants?
57423Are you not satisfied with the glory of doing homage to love?
57423Before the inappellable rudeness of this explanation what can science say, what can morality suggest?
57423But have we not the small and hypocritical polygamies of modern society, and those, most splendid and impudent, of the Orientals?
57423But in these various cases, was the presence of a new sentiment deemed necessary in order that the crime might be committed?
57423But, if this be really so, why does she not open her wings and fly away into the infinite sky?
57423Can anyone love anybody on earth more deeply than one''s own children?
57423Can you imagine ever having loved a woman whose name you know not?
57423Do you believe that a kiss given to that one whom you love and who is yours, through the petals of a rose, is a sin of lust?
57423Do you want to be the executioner of her whom you say you love?
57423For this, perhaps, Solomon used to cry out in his harem:"And who will find me a strong woman?"
57423Has Cæsar ever doubted of winning a battle?
57423Has Napoleon ever doubted of being immortal?
57423Have I really given my whole self to my king?"
57423Have they, those dear and happy young sparrows, carried into effect the republic of Plato?
57423Have we made ourselves big?
57423Have we not in man, as in very many animals, females who submit to love as to a duty, and males on whom love must be imposed?
57423Have we not in the world of man all the lasciviousness, all the ardors, all the possibilities of lewdness of the animals''world?
57423Have we not libertinism at the very side of chastity?
57423Have you ever thought of the various consequences of a caprice of infidelity, according as a man or a woman is guilty?
57423He shall defend it from rapacious animals: is he courageous?
57423He shall train and enrich his children: has he talent, ambition, tenacity of purpose?
57423How and when should the king of the universe ever change the style and the direction of his thought through the influence of a kiss or a caress?
57423How can we suddenly obliterate the ardent remembrances of the many years of love?
57423How can you love me if you do not feel for me the slightest jealousy?"
57423How many are these moral eunuchs?
57423How many men and women can love without desire?
57423If woman is a cup out of which every one may drink, why should there be jealousy?
57423Is he meditating, perhaps, upon the tremendous problem of the proletariate or on that of human liberty?
57423Is he, perhaps, dreaming of glory, of wealth?
57423Is it jealousy, then, the hatred that an animal manifests toward any creature which interrupts it in its loves?
57423Is it not true that above all you want to have for support that firm column called"an honorable man"?
57423Is there anything more that I can give thee?
57423No objection, no discussion; where love is present, who would give suggestions or counsel?
57423Oh, why can we not reduce love to a problem of hygiene and régime?
57423Oh, why did not heaven make us out of this blessed, soft, sweet paste?
57423One loves when one hurries to the mirror at every instant to ask of oneself,"Am I beautiful enough?"
57423Pray, O most gentle and divine companions, on what side does the scale of the balance fall?
57423Shall this eternally be a dream?
57423Shall we always threaten and assault men to make them better?
57423Shall we not have a medicine less cruel than sorrow to cure men of vice and crime?
57423The man shall build the nest: is he an architect?
57423This virtue only we ask of her; is it, perhaps, too much?
57423Throw a stone into it: will you be able to tell me a minute afterward where the stone broke that water?
57423Was it not Balzac who said:"It is recognized that in love all women have some''esprit''"?
57423What does it matter if the object of love is a disgrace in everybody''s eyes, spat upon by public contempt, set in the pillory of universal hatred?
57423What is her duty, then?
57423What is the difficult struggle that shall give her also the mark of character and make her equal to us, worthy to be our companion?
57423What phalanx attempts to advance when the finger of woman threatens and commands:"Stand back!"?
57423Which are the elements that make a woman seductive above all others?
57423Which are the paths that lead to the sacred temple?
57423Which are the true sources of love?
57423Which are the virtues that make a man fascinating above all others?
57423Who dares assert that he is stronger than the"no"of a woman?
57423Who doubts that air is necessary to live?
57423Who ever loses his time in discussing the beauties of the sun?
57423Who knows where all those rays end, where the heat of so many motions accumulates, where such a scattered force gathers again?
57423Why do we love her?
57423Why do we not also love in that way?
57423Woman, on the contrary, says oftener than we:"How can Democracy be respectable if he insults it every day?
57423and when one restlessly explores the abyss of one''s own conscience with the query,"Can I be loved?"
57666''A badly tangled skein is it not?'' 57666 ''Well,''he said,''I think it is fourteen years ago; but,''he added,''perhaps you will know this Testament?''
57666''What,''I said,''did I give you that?'' 57666 ''What,''said I,''have n''t you worn it out?''
57666Are the prisoners all safe?
57666Bourrienne,he said,"do you hear the acclamations still resounding?
57666But had you not the night also?
57666But, my dear young friend, do n''t you know that the angels have no pockets?
57666Did you intend those remarks for me, or were you meaning me?
57666Did you say thus in your sermon yesterday?
57666Do you see those two boys walking together?
57666Fear,said the boy,"I never saw fear; what is it?"
57666Have you the original?
57666How do you know that?
57666How much money would make you perfectly happy?
57666How was it done? 57666 How?"
57666I hope,said Nelson,"that none of our ships have struck?"
57666Is John Bunyan safe?
57666Is it generally fatal?
57666Is that all?
57666James,she said,"how will God provide for the dear children now?
57666My labors?
57666Nay, but have you the very self- same original copies that were written by the penmen of the Scriptures, prophets and apostles?
57666Oh, is it true, sir?'' 57666 Oh,"said the listener,"do n''t you know that old Sherman carries a_ duplicate_ tunnel along?"
57666Then you have no doubt about a future life?
57666Well, Hardy, how goes the battle?
57666Well, boys,he said, grasping them cordially by the hand,"you did not expect to see_ me_ here, did you?"
57666Wendell,said his father,"do n''t you get tired of this?"
57666What I wanted to know,he says,"was,''How can I get my sins forgiven?''
57666What do you mean?
57666What do you mean?
57666What is the matter?
57666What trouble, sir?
57666Where are you going?
57666Where is human nature so weak as in a book- store?
57666Who is that?
57666Whom do you regard as President?
57666Why do you speak angrily, sir?
57666Why not answer it yourself?
57666Why not do so? 57666 Why?"
57666Would you send your son to the war with an old- fashioned musket,he said,"instead of a rifle?
57666You do n''t expect conversions every time you preach, do you?
57666You see that fellow there?
57666''Is it true?''
57666After talking over the plan of battle with his officers, one of them said with enthusiasm,"If we succeed, what will the world say?"
57666All through these years the Royalists were plotting to return to the throne; for when did ever a king reign who did not think it was by"Divine right"?
57666Another Cambridge University man asked Bunyan,"How dare you preach, seeing you have not the original, being not a scholar?"
57666Being asked"Where?"
57666But I?
57666But what next?
57666Did he have more talent, more grace, more learning, than other men?
57666Did you see her?"
57666Do you know where I have been?
57666Do you still love me?"
57666Do you want to add to my regret?
57666Do you, who are one of the most valiant defenders of the country, accept it?
57666Does a man bare his head in some old church?
57666From here Mrs. Phillips writes to a friend concerning herself:"Now what do you think her life is?
57666Grant asked,"By whose orders are those troops going up the hill?"
57666He asked me,''Do you remember your mother?''
57666He asked,"If she would go to the West with him as a missionary?"
57666He criticised sharply, perhaps not always wisely,( for who can be infallible in judgment?)
57666He opened the meeting with prayer, and began to speak from the words,"Dost thou believe on the Son of God?"
57666He said to them,"Why have you not carried your ends before?
57666He who died for me, and who gave me you, shall I not trust Him through whatsoever new and strange paths He may lead me?"
57666He wrote an essay on the question,"What are the institutions most likely to contribute to human happiness?"
57666Her husband said,"Now ca n''t you trust God about a cow?"
57666His constant question of his deacons was, both there and at Waterbeach,"Have you heard of anybody finding the Lord?"
57666I sat in a pew with a gentleman, and when I got outside I said,''My dear friend, how are you?''
57666If it had no bottom, where did the people go to who dropped into it?
57666Immediately a little fellow in the front row jumped up, looked under the chairs, and shouted out,"Where is he?"
57666Is it any wonder that the ministry of the poor, uneducated tinker was a marvellous success?
57666Is it not rather to live?
57666Is the marriage ceremony, then, a curse, a hindrance to virtue and progress?
57666Is this to die?
57666Lincoln?"
57666Meantime, what had become of Sims?
57666Mr. Beecher wrote for the New York_ Independent_ a three- column article, entitled,"Shall We Compromise?"
57666Napoleon was indignant, and said to Bourrienne,"Why have they let in all that rabble?
57666Once he said, with great spirit, in an address in which he had spoken of bad feeling amongst the boys,"Is this a Christian school?
57666Phillips Brooks said to a friend in his study,"Who is this man who writes this letter?
57666Ropes gives an interesting account of this in the_ Atlantic Monthly_, June, 1881,"Who lost Waterloo?"
57666Seeing that the young man was armed, he begged him to remain in the ship, saying,"Should we both fall, Josiah, what would become of your poor mother?
57666Soldiers of Italy, shall you lack courage?"
57666The reply was,"Do n''t you see that the regiment is in the mob?"
57666The uncle wrote back,"What has poor Horatio done, who is so weak, that he, above all the rest, should be sent to rough it out at sea?
57666What misfortune threatens you?
57666What ruler ever wore it like this dead President of ours?
57666What shall we do for milk?"
57666What was the childhood and youth that ushered in this rare manhood?
57666What, then, are these boys?
57666When Charles X. was overthrown in 1830, he said,"Why was I not there to take my chance?"
57666When his eldest son-- he had already enlisted-- said,"Father, may I enlist?"
57666Where shall we look for her equal?
57666Who among living men may not envy him?"
57666Who can ever forget the description of Arnold in that natural and fascinating book,"Tom Brown''s School Days"?
57666Who wrote it?
57666Why should the pulpit become a goldsmith''s shop?"
57666Will you let our country perish in the hands of the pettifoggers who are ruining it?"
57666Would you like to take that pledge?''
57666You must come back with him; do you understand?
57666how did Mozart do it, how Raphael?
57666is it possible?''
57666said,"So young, and is there no remedy?
57666would have died fighting the battles of England in Zululand?
38684Brampton Bryan?
38684Did I not bid you write to Dillon that nothing of importance should go by the post?
38684Where is that?
38684''"What is your Prince''s religion?"
38684''A ballad?
38684''A note?
38684''A nursery rhyme?''
38684''A woman?''
38684''About a ballad?
38684''Afraid of the wars?''
38684''Am I?''
38684''An ace?
38684''And I am to be Lady Oxford''s spoil- sport?''
38684''And do you think I am leaving Mr. Scrope to follow you while I go quietly to bed?''
38684''And have you not?''
38684''And how came you, sir, to let them be burned?''
38684''And how do you know that the last secret is sold?''
38684''And how should I know that?''
38684''And how, then, did he come to hear that mad sermon of Mr. Kelly''s at Dublin?''
38684''And now, what is all this pother about?''
38684''And on what fortunate event does your ladyship congratulate me?''
38684''And the beautiful diamonds?
38684''And the reason of the quarrel?''
38684''And the view halloo that might have wakened the dead?''
38684''And then you will start for France?''
38684''And there are many mice?''
38684''And what is that?''
38684''And what of the ill wind and the sore throat that''s like to come of it?''
38684''And what reason?''
38684''And what will you do with it?''
38684''And what''ll I be doin''while you''re tyin''my hands?''
38684''And what''s that?''
38684''And what''s the warrant doing in the street?
38684''And when I am in the road?''
38684''And where did the Crow get the ballad?''
38684''And which is Mr. James Johnson?
38684''And who is to be your companion?''
38684''And why should George Kelly prefer to call himself James Johnson?
38684''And why should my Lady Oxford be the Judas?''
38684''And why that?''
38684''And would you be so mad?
38684''Are there so many fortunate events in the life of an Irish runagate and traitor?
38684''Are you sure of that?''
38684''Are you sure?''
38684''Are you sure?''
38684''Are you sure?''
38684''Are you?''
38684''But Colonel,''said Wogan in some disappointment,''why not to- night?''
38684''But for me?''
38684''But how can the Colonel know whether it is intended for me?
38684''But is it?''
38684''But tell me, is Jack to preach and is Charles to sing in this town of yours to- night?''
38684''But what if it were no pretence at all?''
38684''But what''s her husband for except to provide her with secrets when they are alone to which she can not listen without impertinence in company?''
38684''But wherein do you see the marvel?''
38684''But who is he?
38684''But who,''he pondered,''can answer for a woman''s motives when the devil of perversity sits at her elbow?''
38684''But you have a message for me, have you not?''
38684''But you?''
38684''But your wounds?''
38684''But, George, what do_ you_ know?''
38684''But, Mrs. Barnes, who signed the letter?
38684''But, Nick, is she doing nothing at all?
38684''But, Nick, what if they take you?
38684''But, my dear woman, where will I carry them to?
38684''But, sisters and brethren,''Mr. Bunton went on,''did I yield to these popish temptations?
38684''But_ what_ does that mean?''
38684''By the way, did you burn my lady''s invitation to her rout to- night?
38684''Can I undertake the business for you?''
38684''Colonel Montague, will you find a lady and be our opposite?''
38684''Colonel Montague-- lodges-- in the same house as myself?''
38684''Colonel Montague--''''What of him?
38684''Colonel, has fortune deserted you that you look so glum?''
38684''Cowardly, sir?
38684''D''ye see?
38684''D''ye think if she saw you she would run at you and butt you in the chest with her head?''
38684''Devil a doubt of it; but what then?''
38684''Did anyone mention me?''
38684''Did he name his friend?''
38684''Did she send you with this message to save your own skin?''
38684''Did you see anyone you knew, or rather did anyone that knows you see you?''
38684''Do n''t you comprehend, my friend,''exclaimed Wogan,''that Smilinda''s a nymph, an ancient Roman nymph?''
38684''Do the women preach in your new Church?''
38684''Do you know that saint, sir?
38684''Do you think,''asked Nick,''she will be in the best of tempers when she hears she is sung about in coffee- houses?
38684''Does her ladyship also wish to be reminded of the particulars of our acquaintance?''
38684''Does my speech betray me?
38684''Does the coachman know?''
38684''Does your ladyship wish to alarm us all by reading out the news?
38684''For my sake?
38684''For what services does your ladyship thank me?''
38684''France, madam?''
38684''French, my dear, and it means that fifteen years is the properest age for a woman to continue at, but why need one be five?''
38684''From General Dillon,''he said; and, reading the note through,''Ladies, will you pardon me?
38684''Gaydon?''
38684''Gentlemen,''he asked,''are you entirely sober?''
38684''George was her adorer?
38684''George, am I then to understand that something has come between the Cause and you?''
38684''George, what does this mean?
38684''George,''said he, as he directed his captive towards the house,''will you resolve me a theological quandary?
38684''Give satisfaction?''
38684''God, what''s a strong thing, then?''
38684''Have I no friends whose safety troubles me?''
38684''Have I to weep for my poor friend''s decease?''
38684''Have I your ladyship''s leave to try my powers of persuasion with Colonel Montague?''
38684''Have n''t I been thinking that myself?''
38684''Have n''t I borrowed half of your last sixpence before now?''
38684''Have you a Virgil in your pocket?
38684''Have you forgotten what I said?
38684''Have you had enough, do you think?''
38684''Have you no sense at all?''
38684''He has not opened it?''
38684''He is to collect the money from our supporters?''
38684''How d''ye do?''
38684''How did you make your way in here?''
38684''How does she look?
38684''How doth his Lordship?''
38684''How much have you placed?''
38684''How old is your lordship?''
38684''How shall a Catholic creep out of the Tower more easily than a Protestant?''
38684''How so?
38684''How?''
38684''How?''
38684''Hush, Mrs. Barnes, have you no sense?''
38684''I am at your commands, sir, but may I say that it is one of the morning, and the pipes play the reveillé at four?''
38684''I am in a great hurry, and would you tell him, if you please, the moment he comes, to run with all haste to his room?''
38684''I am most grateful to her,''she said,''and when did Lady Oxford show such a sweet condescension towards me?''
38684''I can not break it, can I, Rose?
38684''I daresay I ask a mighty silly question, but what is the rest?''
38684''I have heard, in France, of a bird called"the cuckoo Kelly,"''he said,''I wonder if this can be_ le cocu_ Scrope?''
38684''I understand,''he said,''that you are upon honour not to involve me in tampering with anything disaffected?
38684''I went no further with my work,''explained Wogan,''because I reflected--''''What, again?''
38684''I wonder what is the exact species this fine fowl may belong to?''
38684''If he had held you in such respect would he have sent you Lady Oxford''s miniature to wear at Lady Oxford''s rout?''
38684''In Heaven''s name, why?''
38684''In broad daylight?''
38684''In what esteem is she held?''
38684''Indeed and will you now?''
38684''Indeed?
38684''Indeed?
38684''Indeed?''
38684''Indeed?''
38684''Is Lady Oxford political?''
38684''Is Love her quarry?''
38684''Is it destruction you want?''
38684''Is it my father''s knock?''
38684''Is it the revered clergyman or the fighting captain?''
38684''Is it to lift the world?
38684''Is it your granny''s knock, Sam?''
38684''Is it yourself that''s the one person in the world to practise mysteries?
38684''Is it, Nick?
38684''Is my lady ill?''
38684''Is n''t there an infinity of images you could use?
38684''Is she there?''
38684''Is that your beauty?''
38684''Is the Parson in London?''
38684''Is this Elect Lady of these parts?''
38684''It has perhaps a secret to tell?''
38684''It was you who came to Philabe this morning?''
38684''It''s at Bristol you are to land?''
38684''It''s the Parson now, is it?''
38684''James,''he said to Talbot,''where did you get this thing?
38684''John Wesley, little Jack Wesley?''
38684''Madam, has not your mask?''
38684''Make her a Dryad in one of the trees of her own orchard, d''ye see?''
38684''Miss Townley?''
38684''Montague?
38684''Must the woman always owe, the man always pay?''
38684''My brocades?''
38684''My dear man, why did n''t you tell me of your intention and I would have written you out a fine sort of speech that you could have got by heart?''
38684''My likeness?''
38684''Nay, read sir,''she said boldly,''or must I imperil my own fingers with the foul thing?''
38684''Nick,''cries Kelly again, coming up to the bench,''what d''you think?''
38684''Nick,''said the Prince,''was that story all true?
38684''Nick,''says he,''will you listen to me, if you please?
38684''No man named Townley?
38684''No, but they are permitted to tell the story of their call, and to- night we shall hear the Elect Lady--''''Confess before the congregation?
38684''Nor he you?''
38684''Now what''s amiss with the poem?''
38684''Now which is Strephon?''
38684''Now will you fill them?''
38684''Now,''he thought,''how, in the name of the devil, did she hear of the box the King gave me, and I gave to Lady Oxford?''
38684''Of its appearance?''
38684''Of what kind?''
38684''Of what sort?''
38684''Oh, and have I?
38684''Oh, and in what battle was Mr. Johnson''s secretary wounded?''
38684''Oh, did he?''
38684''Oh, is it there you are?''
38684''Oh, is that a proverb?''
38684''Oh, my God, what can I do?''
38684''Oh, on her ear?''
38684''Oh, she told you that, did she?''
38684''Oh, what am I to do with you?''
38684''Oh, why is n''t Nick here?''
38684''Oh,''said Wogan,''she has forgiven you so much?
38684''Oh,''said she,''then he did not send you to make his peace with me?''
38684''Old Jeffrey?
38684''Or shall I ask Mr. Nicholas Wogan to write a ballad--"Strephon''s Farewell to his Smilinda"?
38684''Or would your ladyship go further?''
38684''Perhaps, Mr. Johnson,''she said in a well- acted flurry,''you will help me in the selection?''
38684''Scrope?
38684''Scrope?''
38684''Scrope?''
38684''Shall I oblige your ladyship?''
38684''Shall we ask the lady?''
38684''Shall we go on deck?''
38684''She called you-- Strephon?''
38684''She has hidden it, but you will not leave the girl?''
38684''She told you, did she?
38684''Since you have told me so much, will you tell me this one thing more?
38684''Sir?
38684''Slaint an Righ?
38684''Smilinda''s?''
38684''Smilinda''s?''
38684''Smilinda?''
38684''So she gambles?''
38684''So you are as poor as an Irish church mouse again, are you?''
38684''So you offered to kill him, did you?''
38684''So,''she said doubtfully,''he has lost your friendship too?''
38684''Sure man is born to it, and who am I that I should escape the inheritance?''
38684''Surreptitious,''said he,''and if you please what is the meaning of that?''
38684''The Duke of Ormond?''
38684''The Earl Marischal is for Scotland?''
38684''The King''s business?''
38684''The Queen''s portrait?''
38684''The man who fought against you at Preston siege?''
38684''The room was searched?''
38684''The young lady?''
38684''Then I''ll ask you to explain what these pretty boxes have to do with the muslin trade?''
38684''Then the coast is not clear?''
38684''Then what am I to be doing?''
38684''Then who wrote it?''
38684''Then you did something greater and braver yet, that is a secret for State reasons, or else, why does the King give you such rich presents?''
38684''Then you found our lurking luck?''
38684''Then you know other kings, for who else give diamonds?
38684''Then your Ladyship is acquainted with Lady Mary?''
38684''Then, in Heaven''s name, why do n''t you do it?''
38684''Then, what George knew the lady knows?''
38684''There is a new poem, is there not, from Lady Mary''s kind muse?''
38684''There is no more to do?''
38684''There it remains then?
38684''There was, then, no starving apothecary?''
38684''They are to carry my samples in,''replied Kelly readily enough; and then, as if to put Wogan''s questions aside,''Are you for England, too?''
38684''To his tune, to be sure,''grumbled Wogan;''but are you equally certain his tune is yours?
38684''To- morrow?''
38684''To- night?''
38684''Troth, is n''t my face a mirror, and reflects your rosy one, my Rose?''
38684''Vas you do dat for dam?''
38684''Was it to tell me this you called me back?''
38684''Was the poetry yours?
38684''Was there anything very pressing in these same letters of April 20, George?
38684''Was there need?''
38684''Well, and why not?''
38684''Well, have you nothing to say to me?
38684''Well, what of her?''
38684''Well,''said he,''was n''t that why you went for the salts?''
38684''What ails you, child?
38684''What am I to do to earn the packet which is mine?''
38684''What am I to do with you?
38684''What are you so thankful for?''
38684''What befell you with the Bishop?''
38684''What brings you here?''
38684''What can he do?''
38684''What cause, madam?
38684''What did my Lady Oxford mean by writing to Kelly?''
38684''What do you mean?''
38684''What do you mean?''
38684''What else can I do?
38684''What have I to do with Lady Oxford''s love- letters, or with his danger?''
38684''What in the world has Gaydon to do with Rose?''
38684''What is it then?''
38684''What is it?''
38684''What is it?''
38684''What is it?''
38684''What is it?''
38684''What is she doing?''
38684''What is she doing?''
38684''What is the matter?''
38684''What is the service Strephon can do?''
38684''What must be, must,''he said, after some moments of thought;''but what if I find the Messengers already in possession of your effects?''
38684''What put that notion into the prettiest head in the world?
38684''What ribaldry have you got now?''
38684''What was done with them?''
38684''What was the pistol shot we heard, Nick?''
38684''What will I do, Nick?''
38684''What will we do with it?''
38684''What''s Ugus but one of your cypher words, and you must needs stick it up on your mantelshelf for all the world to see?''
38684''What''s Ugus, Mr. Wogan?
38684''What''s that for?''
38684''What''s the world coming to?''
38684''What, both of you?''
38684''What, yet another Plot?''
38684''What?
38684''When I tell you that my honour hangs on it, that a witness is mere ruin, when I pray you by our old friendship?
38684''Where in the devil''s name have you taken us?''
38684''Where shall I have news of you?
38684''Where to?''
38684''Whither should they go?''
38684''Who else?
38684''Who''s Mr. Pope?
38684''Who?''
38684''Whose portrait but the Queen''s should it be that lies on your table?
38684''Why did I ever preach that sermon?''
38684''Why did n''t you, Nick?
38684''Why do you stay?''
38684''Why have you come back?''
38684''Why not?
38684''Why not?''
38684''Why, what do you mean?''
38684''Why?''
38684''Why?''
38684''Why?''
38684''Will you do that?
38684''Will you give me a back''?
38684''Will you kill Scrope,''she flashed out,''and you and I part friends?''
38684''Will you tell him, when he returns, that Mr. Hilton waited on him, and greatly desires to see him in his best before he goes to bed?''
38684''Will you tell me what I am to do when I am dressed?''
38684''Will you tell me, if you please, the name of her ladyship''s new friend?''
38684''Will you, Nick?''
38684''Will your worship tell me whether the prisoner meddled with any papers?''
38684''With the rest of the lady''s letters in my dispatch box?''
38684''With whom?''
38684''Within view of Smilinda''s windows?
38684''Wo n''t you come too?''
38684''Would I demean myself by reading the letters of a nasty trull?
38684''Would she?''
38684''Yes, Mr. Wogan, what of it?''
38684''Yes; but wherefore?''
38684''You are determined to follow?''
38684''You are in for a great stake?''
38684''You are not very rich, I suppose?''
38684''You are sure his name is Scrotton?''
38684''You can not intend to escape by promising a discovery?''
38684''You do not seem to be glad to see us again, sir?''
38684''You drive one afternoon up into Highgate Woods-- d''ye follow that?
38684''You have a mind to play?
38684''You have come late, Mr. Hilton,''she said;''and you have come, it seems-- alone?''
38684''You have done him no hurt?
38684''You have found a way?''
38684''You have heard the new ballad?
38684''You have no news?''
38684''You have the key of the Dean''s garden?''
38684''You have the salts?''
38684''You know me?''
38684''You mean to keep it?
38684''You prefer sunlight?
38684''You see Miss Rose?
38684''You told him about it?
38684''You want a little more?''
38684''You will be long in Paris?''
38684''You will warn the Crow to be on the wing?''
38684''You wo n''t be alone, then?''
38684''You would have me pay court to her?''
38684''You?''
38684''You?''
38684''You?''
38684''You_ have_ thought of us, sir?''
38684''Your lordship, then, hardly knows the gentleman?''
38684''Your worship let the prisoner take his sword?''
38684''_ Et après?_''''And the greater is the rage of the libelled.
38684( And here she added to his pleasure without taking anything from his confusion),''Tell me why you blush to find it fame?''
38684Am I a spy?
38684Am I then so contemptible a thing?''
38684Am I to hear,''he asked with honest indignation,''that one of you has debased himself to an apology?''
38684And did you burn the note?''
38684And do you know that she is a kinswoman of the minister, Mr. Walpole?
38684And how many of them are signed Ugus?
38684And if it came to the test of dealing blows, why there was Joan of Arc, and what had Mr. Wogan to say to her?
38684And what of the Parson, whom he had last seen, a sombre figure in the moonlight by the water of St. James''s Park?
38684And where''s the house with the carriage waiting at the door?''
38684And you?''
38684Are you blind?
38684Are you drunk, man?--are you drunk?''
38684Are you to have nobody to see fair and run for the surgeon while the other gentleman makes his escape?
38684At last Lady Oxford rose, and, coming towards him:''Well?''
38684But sure, Colonel, what if a constable pulls me off the carriage by the leg before we are out of London?
38684But was the nod meant for him?
38684But what are the rabble about?''
38684But what did she say?
38684But what is Whig justice?
38684But what of my lady?''
38684But what troubles you, George?''
38684But, Nick, how did you know my mind?
38684But, d''ye see, Nick, it was after all not the most honourable business in the world, and am I to make this great profit out of it?
38684By the way, Mr. Scrope,''asked Wogan, as an idea occurred to him,''the night is warm and you seem heated, do you swim?
38684Could he save Smilinda''s letters?
38684Could the French Regent be persuaded to lend any troops or arms or money, or even to wink?
38684D''ye think I should tell her of My Lady Oxford?''
38684D''you think it''s the Cause they ever give a thought to?
38684Did I live, like one of their self- righteous so- called saints, on crabs, acorns, and grass?
38684Did I retire to a cave?
38684Did Lady Oxford know?
38684Did Scrope lay information when he found us at Brampton Bryan?''
38684Did n''t I escort her to her chair?
38684Did n''t I feel her hand upon the sleeve of my coat?''
38684Did n''t he invoke his religion when he was tired of the lady, and so sail away with a clear conscience?
38684Did she give a reason for your meeting?''
38684Did she steal it?
38684Did she wish to embroil them in a quarrel to make Kelly''s ruin doubly sure?
38684Did they say, for instance, that the Blow was to be dealt, you and I know when?''
38684Did you despatch my letters of April 20 to the King and the others?"
38684Did you ever meet Gaydon, George?''
38684Did you meet any of your acquaintance by chance when you came visiting your friend Mr. Kelly?
38684Did you never wonder what brought Scrope to Brampton Bryan?''
38684Do I carry pistols and try to use them?
38684Do the doctors of your sect consider as binding a promise given to a person of a different faith?''
38684Do you not think so, Mr.--Hilton?''
38684Do you remember what Law said that night in Paris?
38684Do you think she will blame anybody but Kelly for blabbing?
38684Do you, perhaps, suspect that Mr. Nicholas Wogan needs, or has gone to procure, assistance?''
38684Everyone?
38684Farmer?''
38684Farmer?''
38684For a season, then, Mr. Kelly was the happy fool, and if the season was short-- why, is it ever long?
38684George, have you ever noticed her chin?
38684George, have you seen Rose?''
38684George, what did the Bishop tell you?
38684George, you know Mr. Scrope of Northumberland and Grub Street?''
38684Had he played his trumps amiss after all?
38684Had she lured him here to strike back?
38684Had the Czar been approached?
38684Have n''t we killed men more than once?
38684Have you not guessed it yourself?''
38684Have you not seen her leave the room the moment politics are so much as hinted of?''
38684He is a man of honour, I take it?
38684He is a very intimate friend of her ladyship''s?''
38684He put the box back amongst the news- sheets, and turning to Mrs. Kilburne,''But where is the man?''
38684He tapped George on the knee, and continued in a wheedling voice:''It is a matter of religion, d''ye see?
38684Hilton?''
38684Hilton?''
38684Hilton?''
38684Hilton?''
38684How can he know whether it is a real warrant at all?
38684How could I guess that it was Mr. Scrope who lay in a bush to watch an explanation between gentlemen?
38684How could he know where to look for me?
38684How dare the warrant be in the street when it is intended for a gentleman in the house?
38684How did it begin?
38684How did you get hold of it?''
38684How did you know that?''
38684How had she come hither?
38684How many of the English have loitered in the colonnades, and feasted their eyes upon the cathedral, and sauntered on the bridges of the Arno?
38684How many of them, I say, have drawn profitable thoughts and pleasurable sensations from the edifices of my great ancestor?
38684How much does your ladyship know?''
38684How shall I thank you?''
38684How shall an obtuse man follow her?''
38684How shall we be sure of her at all?
38684How, in a word, you came to know of the hidden Plot within the Plot?''
38684I have half- a- dozen well- disposed persons hiding in a clump of trees who will take care of your warder-- d''ye see?
38684I have only to extend my long arm, and where are you?''
38684I repeat, do you swim?
38684If he used that weapon aright, why should she not hear of him from France?
38684In Smilinda''s garden?''
38684In brief, George, what do you know?''
38684In the meantime, have you any money?''
38684Is it a ca nt name for an honest man?''
38684Is she reading?''
38684Is the Elect Lady handsome?''
38684It was intimated to him that he had a fine preposterous conceit of his sex, and would he be pleased to justify it?
38684Johnson at home?''
38684Johnson?
38684Johnson?''
38684Johnson?''
38684Johnson?''
38684Just listen, will you?''
38684Kelly asked,''What of the despatch- box, then?''
38684Kelly, then, was using the box-- but for what purpose?
38684Let her say a word, and she_ will_ say it, and where is Mr. Farmer''s affair?''
38684Man, are you so proud that your life can not make up for the humiliation?
38684May I ask how you secured the means of revenge?
38684Maybe we are on the same business, eh?''
38684Meanwhile how are you to lie hidden?
38684Mr. Hilton, are you a man?
38684Mr. Hilton, are you struck dumb?''
38684Mr. Kelly gave Lady Oxford his hand, and put his question:''Your Ladyship has no fear that I shall escape?''
38684Mr. Kelly, will you give me your arm to the house?''
38684Mr. Law, I have your permission?
38684Mr. Wogan had much ado not to shout''Hold your tongues, will you?
38684Mrs. Hewett,''she turned to her opposite,''will you be tallier to our table?
38684My Lord Oxford is here?
38684My Strephon has kept his oath?''
38684My case is desperate; what can be done for yours?
38684My motive for abstaining was bad; it was a suggestion of the Old Man--''''Qui donc est- il, ce vieillard bien pensant?''
38684Next, does your Reverence reckon it immoral to shake an elbow on occasion?''
38684Next, why had Kelly made himself such a beau?
38684Nick, who wrote the ballad?
38684No betrothal?
38684No daughter Rose?
38684No dog Harlequin?
38684No love- vows?
38684No nursing?
38684No wound?
38684No?
38684Not in tears?
38684Not of the rising?
38684Not of this immediate Blow?
38684Not that the sayings are in themselves at all clumsy-- how could they be, when she has such clever friends?
38684Now she comes on again just as carelessly, but perhaps the carelessness is a thought too careful, eh?
38684Now, how came she to have so particular a knowledge of your danger?''
38684Of what sort?''
38684Oh, she had forgotten, if you will, but if she had forgotten, who made her forget?
38684On the other hand, he will not go from London until he has met you; unless--''''Unless--?''
38684Or a nameless, obscene rhymer?
38684Or is it wit thus to affect an ignorance of our new conqueror, for whom women pine with love and men grow sour with envy?
38684Or very likely I am to meet you at Ranelagh?''
38684Perhaps you expect your friends on the scene?''
38684Political?''
38684Pope, the poet?''
38684Pope?''
38684Pope?''
38684Pope?''
38684Put a pen between his fingers, on the other hand, and what does he want to do but go away by himself and write down great thoughts?''
38684Rose,''and he stepped over to her,''I have no prospects whatever in the world, but will you take them?''
38684Scrope?''
38684Scrope?''
38684Scrotton?
38684Shall I take a message to her ladyship?''
38684Shall we meet to- night?
38684She gave him her fan to hold, her gloves to caress, and what more can a man want?
38684She had done her best to make Kelly seek safety, and he would not: could she do more?
38684She will give the ballad to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, and is n''t Kelly of Lady Mary''s friends?
38684Should he question Mrs. Kilburne, he asked himself?
38684Sir, in a word, you, and you only, can save that person; need I say more?''
38684Suppose we take up our conversation where we left it when last you ran away?
38684That she will do for a sure thing; and I think--''''What?''
38684That, I presume, is not a breach of my engagement with you?''
38684The only questions are, when, and how will she take it?
38684The scrutoire was shut, but were Smilinda''s letters still hidden there or were they safe in Montague''s pockets?
38684The three devotees stepped briskly through the grinning crowd that cried to Graden,''Come to buy brimstone, Scotch Sandy?''
38684This might be a generosity of Mr. Scrope''s( who had behaved as handsomely before), but again, what if Mr. Kelly''s first suspicions were true?
38684Though refreshed with Burgundy, his head felt weary enough when he turned to the question,''What was he, Wogan, to do next?''
38684To be sure, the Princess was a most natural woman, eh?
38684To use it?''
38684Walpole?''
38684Was he Was he carrying a cartel to his predecessor in Lady Oxford''s heart?
38684Was it anything like this?''
38684Was it but another piece of coquetry, he asked himself, or did she indeed wish to hinder him from discovering who she was?
38684Was it known, he asked himself, that he had sailed from Cadiz and landed in Scotland?
38684Was it relief which showed for an instant in Lady Oxford''s face?
38684Was n''t it always so?
38684Was the Elect Lady a prude?''
38684Was there a fourth behind them stealthily creeping in the shadow of the wall?
38684Was there anything to put fear on the Elector''s Ministers?
38684Well, how are we to know it''s done with now?
38684What am I to do at all?
38684What am I to do now?''
38684What am I to do now?''
38684What blow had she to strike?
38684What brings him here?
38684What brought him to Brampton Bryan?
38684What can he want with me?''
38684What card shall I choose?
38684What did she say, George?
38684What does he want to do but cut his neighbour right open from the chine to the ribs?
38684What have you been doing all day?''
38684What have you brought me?
38684What if Lady Oxford had learned something?
38684What if this rout were intended to enable her to savour her revenge for the ballad?
38684What if you give me the key to that pretty despatch- box?
38684What in the wide world had she seen?
38684What in the world made you meddle with such Tory nonsense?''
38684What is her latest quip?
38684What is the word, damme?
38684What is the word?''
38684What other deeds of arms had her warrior done?
38684What plot did you tell him of?
38684What say you to a little country air, with your humble servant for a companion?
38684What service would you have me do now?''
38684What took him away in such a mighty hurry?
38684What tragedy that we men endure or enact is like this?
38684What was he like?''
38684What would Thomas Wogan have done under the like contingency?
38684Whence got you the word?''
38684Where did it come from?''
38684Where did you get it?''
38684Where does he come from?
38684Where does this touch the affair?''
38684Which is the house?''
38684Who carried his valise after him?''
38684Who hates Lady Oxford no less than he hates me?
38684Who is it?''
38684Who of our enemies knew a word about Rose?
38684Who was at Avignon, spying on me, when I first met Rose?
38684Who was the first person he was likely to encounter at Lady Oxford''s?
38684Who would take the place of the Royal Swede?
38684Who wrote it?
38684Who wrote that rant?''
38684Who wrote the ballad?
38684Who, then, was M. de Strasbourg?
38684Whose name was the unhappy tippler trying to remember?
38684Why could n''t you lie quiet in a village and send me news of you?
38684Why did he fight Mr. Scrope?
38684Why did she begin her favours to- day?
38684Why did she invite you?
38684Why did you not tell it me in London, when I could have given her ladyship a chance of answering the slander?''
38684Why do you look so glum?''
38684Why do you tell me this now?
38684Why had Lady Oxford bidden both of them to her rout?
38684Why must she carry him off alone with her?
38684Why should two men fight for a hilding who had equally jilted and cheated the pair?
38684Why should we fear her at all?
38684Why speak to me now of him?''
38684Why was he wroth with you?
38684Why, in fact, did the Parson come to be lying on the flags, in receipt of a sword- thrust of the first quality?
38684Will she forgive you at all?
38684Will the author pardon me?''
38684Will they look for me at a tub- thumping match?''
38684Will you tell me why you have come back?''
38684Wogan poured out the wine and while pouring it:''Two glasses?''
38684Wogan, if I drew my sword and stood up before you without making a parry or a lunge, would you kill me?''
38684Wogan?''
38684Wogan?''
38684Wogan?''
38684Wogan?''
38684Wogan?''
38684Would she open the window?
38684Would she see them?
38684Would the Captain know him again?
38684Would there be a fourth to follow Wogan?
38684Would you prefer to lay down your weapon and come frankly to my embrace?
38684You agree with me?''
38684You are not haunting the fine ladies who pass these wares about?
38684You have had them repaired in Paris?''
38684You have read a certain ballad which the ignorant give to your ladyship?
38684You have your choice; safety and prose, or poetry and peril?''
38684You know Harlequin, Wogan?''
38684You know Talbot?''
38684You know who Smilinda is?
38684You observed that I remained some minutes with a lady to- night after you and the rest of her company had withdrawn?''
38684You perceive that we have no alternative?''
38684You remember our fond hugs at Brampton Bryan?
38684You too?''
38684You will begin it again?
38684You will take no advantage whatever that may give_ me_ the air of being concerned, to shelter yourself or your party?''
38684and you carry messages?''
38684asked Lady Oxford, and detaining him until Kelly had passed out of the room:''He gave you doubtless a reason for his coming?''
38684asked Wogan;''or shall I fall on you?
38684continued Wogan,''of what character is she?''
38684said she,''was Lady Oxford ruined by Colonel Montague?
38684was crowned?
6166And many friends?
6166Charles,said Coleridge to Lamb,"I think you have heard me preach?"
6166Have you read the noble dedication of Irving''s Missionary Sermons?
6166How could you permit him to go on and weary himself?
6166We have a sure hot joint on Sundays,he writes,"and when had we better?"
6166What did you give for it?
6166----[?]
6166And how, indeed, could it be otherwise?
6166And what can man do more?
6166Have I not enough, without your mountains?
6166Have you seen it?"
6166He had been invited by a gentleman in the Temple, Mr. R----( Robinson?
6166He said to me one day, with a face of great solemnity,"What must have been that man''s feelings, who thought himself_ the first deist?_"...
6166He speaks:"Well, boys, how are you?
6166I come, my dear-- Where is the Indigo Sale Book?
6166In writing to Coleridge about his house, which was"smoky,"he inquires,"Have you cured it?
6166Is it possible that the imitations could have been mistaken for originals?
6166Lamb?"
6166Must I write with pen unwilling, And describe those graces killing, Rightly, which I never saw?
6166Need I go over the names?
6166Once, when walking with his sister through some churchyard, he inquired anxiously,"Where do the naughty people lie?"
6166Once, whilst waiting in the Highgate stage, a woman came to the door, and inquired in a stern voice,"Are you quite full inside?"
6166Shall I praise a face unseen, And extol a fancied mien, Rave on visionary charm, And from shadows take alarm?
6166The first interview is made memorable by Godwin''s opening question:"And pray, Mr. Lamb, are you toad or frog?"
6166To Mr. Gilman, a surgeon("query Kill- man?
6166To Mrs. H., of a person eccentric:"Why does not his guardian angel look to him?
6166Well; who can disprove it?
6166What fun has whist now?"
6166What will you take?"
6166What''s the news with you?
6166Which of us has seen Michael Angelo''s things?
6166Why should we get up?"
6166yet which of us disbelieves his greatness?"
6804Were you not a noble?
6804What need is there for discussion,exclaimed a delegate,"where all are agreed?
6804( 3800?
6804(?-606 B.C.
6804?
6804ASSHUR- BANI- PAL( 668- 626?
6804As early as the times of Jeremiah, the permanency of physical characteristics had passed into the proverb,"Can the Ethiopian change his skin?"
6804As the slave advanced, Marius shouted,"Man, do you dare to kill Caius Marius?"
6804If the French people should be allowed to overturn the throne of their hereditary sovereign, who would then respect the divine rights of kings?
6804Indeed, who is strong enough to rule the world?
6804It is related that Caius had a dream in which the spirit of his brother seemed to address him thus:"Caius, why do you linger?
6804It was begun in 214(?)
6804Many thoughtful minds were hopelessly asking,"What is truth?"
6804The most noted of these form what is known as the Epic of Izdubar( Nimrod?
6804The state came to be known as Russia, probably from the word_ Ruotsi_( corsairs?
6804and finished in 204(?)
43583A hot drink?
43583A little bill? 43583 A nurse?
43583A son?
43583About what time was that?
43583Am I supposed to get dressed?
43583And are there plenty of young people?
43583And could n''t they tell you anything more about the fire?
43583And how do you feel today, dear?
43583And if you do n''t mind, Miss Stone, will you call me by my right name? 43583 And is your mother going to rebuild?"
43583And little Ethel?
43583And sometimes those fires spread farther than you want them to?
43583And that''s all you know?
43583And then what do I do?
43583And where is our next- door neighbor''s cottage?
43583And why did Tom Adams suspect that you knew anything?
43583And you saw two people on your way back, you said?
43583And you''d kind of like to prove Cliff Hunter is innocent, would n''t you, Jane?
43583Another fire?
43583Any news yet?
43583Anybody drowned?
43583Are you responsible for Cliff''s arrest, David McCall?
43583Beat me up?
43583Business is n''t any too good----"What would it have been without me to help?
43583But ca n''t he be arrested?
43583But do you think she could be setting the places on fire?
43583But how can we call on him if we do n''t know him?
43583But how could he?
43583But how do you know, Mary Lou?
43583But we''d have to quote prices, would n''t we?
43583But what are you going to do?
43583But what made you do that dreadful thing to Mary Louise?
43583But what makes you think you do n''t want to go over to the Reeds''with me?
43583But where is Hattie?
43583But where were you, Mary Lou?
43583But where''s Mary Lou?
43583But who are you?
43583But why?
43583But you did n''t see anybody?
43583But you have another week, do n''t you, David?
43583By the way,asked Jane,"where is David McCall staying?
43583Ca n''t we send for him?
43583Ca n''t you tell us where you were when that fire started?
43583Ca n''t you think of something you want?
43583Can they save it?
43583Can you show me where there is a well of clear water?
43583Can you take us over to the farm now, Ditmar? 43583 Card tricks?"
43583Could n''t you borrow one?
43583Could we go upstairs and see her when you take up her broth?
43583Could we talk to Rebecca?
43583Did Frazier expect to burn any more cottages?
43583Did I-- or did I not put money in your pocket?
43583Did n''t I tell you? 43583 Did n''t anybody see the flames-- or smell the smoke?"
43583Did n''t he save our lives that night we rode in Harry Grant''s car?
43583Did n''t you bring any bag, Rebecca?
43583Did n''t you go to bed that night?
43583Did n''t you have enough excitement and mystery at Dark Cedars?
43583Did n''t you say she is home now?
43583Did she happen to say?
43583Did they expect to go to the picnic tonight on the island?
43583Did you make a fire?
43583Did you need the work, Hattie?
43583Did you see anybody in the woods or around Shady Nook?
43583Did you see the boys or anybody around at all?
43583Did you see the boys this morning?
43583Did you show it to your husband?
43583Do n''t you love it?
43583Do n''t your patients have anything to do?
43583Do you believe that, Mary Lou?
43583Do you care that much about Cliff, Jane?
43583Do you know a woman with gray hair who calls herself Rebecca, Hattie?
43583Do you know any of the details, Freckles?
43583Do you make fires at all?
43583Do you really think her husband is guilty, Mary Lou?
43583Do you think Hattie will be back soon?
43583Do you think she could be starting the fires? 43583 Do you think you have all those things?"
43583Does burning people''s houses come into his plan?
43583Even when you reached your own dock, did n''t you smell smoke?
43583Fires?
43583Freckles, what do you think could have happened to Mary Lou?
43583From the kitchen?
43583From the river, I mean?
43583Had n''t you seen any flames?
43583Had you ever seen him before?
43583Has Mr. Frazier run away too?
43583Has anybody seen Freckles?
43583Has she been here?
43583Have n''t you ever heard of a bribe, Mary Lou?
43583Have n''t you gotten over that fad yet, Cliff?
43583Have you any engagement, or can I talk to you for a while?
43583Have you any plans at all, dear?
43583Have you any suspicions at all?
43583Have you had anything to eat?
43583Have you heard any news this morning?
43583Have you seen her since breakfast, Tom?
43583He can be arrested for signing that paper confining me to the insane asylum, ca n''t he, Dad?
43583He would n''t give up college?
43583Honestly?
43583How about Frazier?
43583How can I?
43583How could Cliff have anything to do with it when he was with us all evening?
43583How did it happen?
43583How did it start?
43583How did this come?
43583How did you boys find out about it? 43583 How do you know Lem Adams?"
43583How many bungalows did you say there are, Mary Lou?
43583How?
43583How?
43583I do n''t suppose you''d have time to play with us this afternoon, would you, Mary Lou?
43583I mean, how could a detective from Albany know about the fires here at Shady Nook-- let alone suspect Cliff?
43583I mean, what other families with young people?
43583I mean, when you finally left your camp?
43583I thought maybe you girls would come in my motorboat----"And lose the chance of winning a prize?
43583In all this heat? 43583 In my motorboat?"
43583Is Hattie home today?
43583Is Mary Louise here? 43583 Is he guilty?"
43583Is he here now? 43583 Is it anything dangerous?"
43583Is n''t Frazier guilty?
43583Is n''t there some way I can prove that I''m sane?
43583Is that because you expect to become a writer?
43583Is that where they hold the dances?
43583Is there any question you want to ask this criminal, Miss Gay, before we take him away?
43583It does look good, does n''t it?
43583Lemuel Adams?
43583Letting you in on all the thrills of solving a real mystery.... Well, are you coming or not?
43583Lost a tennis ball?
43583Mary Lou, you think David sent that wire, do n''t you?
43583May I break off two sticks from some bush?
43583May I come over to see you after supper?
43583May I come up and see you, Rebecca?
43583May I go with the boys now?
43583May I have a shower?
43583Mr. Adams,she said,"may I ask a question?
43583Mystery? 43583 No clues at all?"
43583No signs of anybody?
43583Now that I have finished my work, may I go out into the garden and practice my semaphore for an hour before lunch?
43583Oh, Mary Lou, you''re not hurt, are you?
43583Oh, what?
43583Oh, where is he?
43583Oh, why ca n''t he behave himself?
43583Oh, yeah? 43583 Oh, yeah?"
43583On a case?
43583On what grounds could you arrest him, then?
43583Or do the Hunters live on the other side of you?
43583Pare potatoes-- or something?
43583Popular?
43583Prepared for what?
43583Rebecca Adams?
43583Recognize them, McCall?
43583Regular hold- up men?
43583Remember the scout motto,''Be prepared''? 43583 Since the bungalow is gone, where would he stay?"
43583Small children? 43583 So I suppose we have to go to Four Corners this afternoon?"
43583So we ca n''t count on them for any fun?
43583So what did you do?
43583So you narrowed your suspects down to two people-- besides Tom Adams?
43583Some test I can take?
43583Somebody set it on fire-- on purpose, you mean, David?
43583Such as gypsies?
43583Suppose Watson had told Sherlock Holmes that he had a date with a girl and could n''t go on an investigation with him when he was needed?
43583Tell me,urged Jane,"which boy you really like best-- Cliff Hunter or David McCall or Max Miller?"
43583The Ditmars?
43583Then I sha n''t be competing against you if I go in Cliff''s launch?
43583Then I sha n''t need any fancy clothes-- like dance dresses?
43583Then we can count on you three?
43583Then what do you believe? 43583 Then who?"
43583Think you''ll make me fergit them hundred berries you owe me? 43583 This is n''t Clifford?"
43583Tired, dear?
43583Together?
43583Tom Adams? 43583 True.... Who''s your other suspect, Mary Lou?
43583Two?
43583Want a receipt?
43583Was Tom home?
43583We had supper at half- past five last night, did n''t we? 43583 We''ll look for you in the water, then.... And, by the way, you''ll come to the party on the island tomorrow night, wo n''t you?"
43583Well, if my brother comes back here, will you please send him right over to the inn?
43583What are you doing?
43583What can you possibly do about it?
43583What did he do?
43583What did you do that for?
43583What did you do the next day?
43583What do you mean by that?
43583What do you think about it?
43583What do you want, Mary Louise?
43583What does your mother think?
43583What for?
43583What have you on the program for today?
43583What idea?
43583What in the world did you do?
43583What kind of diabolical plot is this?
43583What makes you think there will be one tonight?
43583What paper?
43583What proof have you?
43583What time was she here?
43583What''ll we go in, Mary Lou? 43583 What''s happened?"
43583What''s that, dear?
43583What''s the youth''s name?
43583When did you find it?
43583When we wear our flossy dresses?
43583Where are the Smiths now?
43583Where are they now?
43583Where are you going?
43583Where are you?
43583Where can we buy food?
43583Where did your brother go?
43583Where do I take my bath?
43583Where was she going after she left you?
43583Where will the fire be tonight?
43583Where will the''Wild Guys of the Road''be today?
43583Where you goin''?
43583Where''s Mary Lou?
43583Where''s your sister?
43583Which one?
43583Who be you?
43583Who cares about that old stiff?
43583Who else are there besides the Hunters?
43583Who is he? 43583 Who is the leader?"
43583Who''s driving first?
43583Who''s she?
43583Who? 43583 Who?"
43583Who?
43583Who?
43583Whose accomplice are you?
43583Why did I ever try to be a detective?
43583Why did he want them burned down?
43583Why hot?
43583Why not Flicks''?
43583Why not stop for the Reed girls?
43583Why?
43583Why?
43583Will you come with me or play around with Cliff?
43583Will you dance with me after supper, Mary Lou?
43583Will you men come inside?
43583With her nurse?
43583With whom?
43583Would that be all right?
43583Would you like to come and join us?
43583You are Mrs. Ditmar, are n''t you? 43583 You do n''t mean David McCall, do you?"
43583You do n''t mind my doing it, Mother?
43583You do n''t suspect him, do you?
43583You found her, Gay?
43583You have a sister Rebecca, have n''t you, Adams?
43583You mean Lemuel Adams and his son?
43583You mean that now you have to turn in and do the cooking since Flicks''Inn is gone?
43583You really are serious?
43583You remember Mary Louise? 43583 You saw the ruins?"
43583You suspect Horace Ditmar, of course?
43583You think we''re as wicked as that, Mary Lou?
43583You were expecting it, David?
43583You''re not still mad at me, Mary Lou, are you?
43583You''re not still worried, are you, Mother?
43583You''re sure that''s the truth?
43583You-- have been thinking of putting Rebecca into an asylum?
43583Your brother-- or your father-- didn''t know anything about it, either?
43583Your father? 43583 A fellow who does odd jobs around the hotel sometimes?
43583Adams?"
43583And I''m going to miss Cliff dreadfully.... By the way, where was David McCall today?
43583And how about that threat they got?
43583And is n''t it nice I have my license, so you wo n''t have to drive all the way?"
43583And the other people who were boarding at Flicks''?"
43583And who wanted them burned down except Frazier, or possibly Horace Ditmar, who, as you know, is an architect?"
43583Any news?"
43583Any relation to Hattie Adams, who always waited on the table at Flicks''Inn?"
43583Are n''t I, Miss Stone?"
43583Are there many cottages on the other side of Flicks''?"
43583Big brute with light hair?
43583But how could Mary Louise possibly prove this fact?
43583But not boys as big as Freckles and the Smiths?"
43583But she must know something, or how could she predict when they are going to occur?"
43583But what do you want me to do about them, Jane?
43583But what had he done to Mary Lou first?
43583But who cares?"
43583But why would your mother suspect Mr. Ditmar of setting fire to her cottage?"
43583But, Jane, how can you take an interest in men when your own boy- friend is in such trouble?
43583But-- but-- can you prove anything?"
43583CHAPTER II_ Clifford''s Story_"What did he say?"
43583CHAPTER I_ The Burnt Bungalow_"For the whole month?"
43583CHAPTER VIII_ Danger_"Freckles,"said Mary Louise at supper that evening,"will you lend us your tent tonight?
43583CHAPTER V_ Freckles''Story_"What in the world are you doing?"
43583CHAPTER XIII_ The Threat_"Is there anything I can do to help you people?"
43583Ca n''t you get your tennis things on and play with us this morning?"
43583Ca n''t you, Mary Lou?"
43583Can you figure out how it happened?"
43583Could we ask him?"
43583Did Tom say anything about seeing her?"
43583Did n''t he pay you a certain sum of money to start those fires?"
43583Did n''t this storekeeper profit-- by getting extra business-- because Flicks''burned down?"
43583Did the Ditmars see you boys in the woods?"
43583Did the nurse believe her?
43583Did you stay there in the woods all day?"
43583Do n''t I always square up my debts?"
43583Do n''t you know what kind of place this is, Max?
43583Do n''t you remember?
43583Do n''t you want to wear your pink georgette?"
43583Do you happen to know Tom Adams?
43583Do you know, she warned Mary Louise day before yesterday there would be another fire?
43583Do you see him?"
43583Do you, Mother?"
43583Does your husband approve, Adelaide?"
43583Flick?"
43583Flick?"
43583Flick?"
43583Flick?"
43583Frazier?"
43583Gay?"
43583Had she-- and the rest of the staff at the asylum-- been accomplices to a hideous crime?
43583Had the girl taken any part in the plot?
43583Has it occurred to you, Mary Lou, that both fires started when everybody from Shady Nook was off on a party?"
43583Have a party and invite them over?"
43583Have you found a well of clear water?"
43583How are you feeling?"
43583How are you this summer?"
43583How could anybody help liking a boy like Cliff?
43583How could he?"
43583How could she sit there and talk like that?
43583How could they commit anybody to an insane asylum?
43583How do you know?"
43583Hunter?"
43583If it had, why would n''t Ditmars''and Robinsons''cottages have been burned?
43583If only my husband did----""Does n''t Mr. Ditmar like Shady Nook?"
43583If she had been responsible for the kidnaping of Mary Louise, why was the girl so polite to her?
43583Is it in the papers?"
43583Is it-- Cliff?"
43583Is n''t there some policeman we can get to watch our house?"
43583Is this a hospital?"
43583Is this man the criminal type, Cliff?"
43583Is this the grocery?"
43583It''s about my daughter Rebecca, ai n''t it?
43583Mary Lou, what can we do?
43583No-- but maybe----""Maybe what?"
43583Now you answer a question for me: Who do you think set the Hunters''bungalow on fire-- Cliff himself, or that Mr. Ditmar, the architect, or the kids?"
43583Now, can you think of anybody else?"
43583Oh, what shall I do?"
43583Or did the Flicks buy groceries from you anyhow?"
43583Pretty, is n''t she?"
43583Remember her?"
43583Remember that time we wanted to give an entertainment for the Red Cross and he tried to charge us fifty dollars for using his dining room?
43583Remember the time they locked that little boy in the boathouse and almost left him there all night?"
43583Remember?
43583She''s all right, ai n''t she?"
43583Should she add Hattie''s name too?
43583So will you tell us when you left Flicks''--and all you know about it?"
43583Suppose Jane and I run over?"
43583The canoe?"
43583The girl who saved France, you remember?"
43583The girl who saved the Smith baby in the fire?"
43583Turning to Tom she asked,"Is Hattie over at the farm?"
43583Want to come with me, Jane?"
43583Was Miss Stone joking, or did the patient really believe she was Joan of Arc?
43583Was this plan just another proof of the Ditmars''guilt in the burning of the cottages?
43583Was what she said the truth, or only a figment of her crazy brain?
43583We could hire Hattie Adams to wash dishes, and I could cook, and you and Jane could wait on the tables.... Would you, Mary Louise?"
43583We''ve got to cook our camp meals, have n''t we?
43583What could be simpler?"
43583What could have happened to Mary Louise?
43583What could he do?"
43583What did he care about those four fellows?
43583What gave you that idea?"
43583What had he done to Mary Lou?
43583What in the world did she want?"
43583What time do we start?"
43583What were they planning to do to her?
43583What, I asked myself, could the job be except setting those houses on fire?
43583When did I promise him?"
43583Where is he, Mary Lou?
43583Where shall we go first?"
43583Where?"
43583Who around here could owe you a hundred smackers?"
43583Who cares, anyhow?
43583Who is he?
43583Who would n''t have?
43583Who would n''t?"
43583Who''s your third suspect-- the one you called a possible chance?"
43583Whom should she inform first?
43583Why do n''t you come over and go in with the crowd, now that you have n''t any job?
43583Why do you think that there will be another fire?"
43583Why must girls always talk?"
43583Why?"
43583Why?"
43583Why?"
43583Will you be home then?"
43583Will you get me a drink of water, Mary Louise?"
43583Will you promise me that?"
43583Would n''t you rather walk by yourself than have these men carry you?"
43583Would you-- go into it with me, Mary Louise?"
43583You do n''t mind, do you, Jane?"
43583You do n''t want to be with them, do you?"
43583You know the two new bungalows that were put up here this year-- beyond Flicks''?"
43583You pay me by tonight, or I''ll----""You''ll what?"
43583You really do n''t think the Flicks''Inn was just an accident?"
43583You remember hearing Freckles describing a queer creature he saw last night on his way home from the woods?
43583You saw that?"
43583You were here when it happened?"
43583You would n''t mind-- if it was something about your family?"
43583You''ll sleep out with me, wo n''t you?"
43583You''ve heard of Girl Scouts, have n''t you?"
53943And Spuræna, and Caius Mutius, who wrote three epics in a year-- could Horace do that, or Virgil either?
53943Are they in truth so delicious?
53943Can we not see her?
53943Did you say she was Athenian?
53943How mean you, Sallust?
53943What can be worse policy,said Clodius, sententiously,"than to interfere with the manly amusements of the people?"
53943What is the design?
53943What think you of this new sect, which I am told has even a few proselytes in Pompeii, these followers of the Hebrew God-- Christus?
53943When is our next wild- beast fight?
53943Who was that?
53943Whom shall we get for him to eat?
53943Will you not be avenged on your ill- fortune of yesterday? 53943 You would know, sir,"he exclaimed, eyeing fiercely the hero of the British capital,"what is gouging?
53943Your cook is of course from Sicily?
53943''Oh George, George,''she murmured, clasping my neck with her arms, and sobbing bitterly,''how could you jest so cruelly with me?
53943Among all the young ladies in the city, residents or visiters, Miss---- was the only one who could at all manage a steed-- but what of that?
53943Among such is one victory an assured pledge of future and_ bloodless_ victory to the end of time?
53943Among the advocates of phrenology, have not some names, remarkable for ability and inquiry, been numbered?
53943And how can this be between two tribes of nearly equal force?
53943And is it_ here_ that the Hero lies, Whose name has shaken the earth with dread?
53943And is not literary immortality-- the mind set forth in visible, enchanting, and enduring forms-- far more desirable, than political?
53943And is there any thing so very ridiculous in this?
53943And is there nothing-- nothing at all-- to which it may be properly applied?
53943And is_ this_ all that the earth supplies?
53943And now, I ask, whence may we draw richer supplies of this than from the pages of ancient writers?
53943And what is it that gives weight to counsel, if it be not the adviser''s learning and reputation?
53943And what is there, then, that is so very"dangerous"in the Governor''s reasoning?
53943And what shall be said of that which is not even middling?
53943And where does he get this idea from again?
53943And who would deny but the south has genius which would do honor to the_ whole_ country in any walk?
53943Are not these suppositions effectually silenced by an appeal to the well- determined moral and intellectual qualities of those advocates?
53943Are these the limits of glory''s reign?
53943Are they appreciated?
53943Are we to doubt the truth of this illustration?
53943Autumn, how should that languid air That smoothed thy brow erewhile, Be( though a frown thou dost not wear) Mistaken for a smile?
53943Breathes not the soul of mystery in this?"
53943But are food and raiment the wages to which labor is every where stinted?
53943But how can the literary mind be thus stimulated, when the general feeling of society is diametrically opposite to its interests?
53943But is it the less crushing, because it is enforced by one from whose power there is no escape?
53943But is this a fair representation of the Governor''s reasoning?
53943But what is the general character of this branch of the press?
53943But who is Ione?"
53943But you are not laboring for Virginia alone: it is for the south-- the_ whole_ south; and might I not add, for the whole country?
53943Can Mr. Blackstone tell us which of the savage African chiefs began the game?]
53943Can you wonder that your neighbor(_ contemporary_ I believe is the word in fashion,) thought his letter but"_ so so_?"
53943Can, then, our colleges maintain their high, original standing?
53943Come, Patrick, clear up the storm on your brow, You were kind to me once,--will you frown on me now?
53943Comest thou to warn me from this life of pain?
53943Did AUSTRIA shed no remorseful tear, When ENGLAND''S FAITH, and thine HONOR, FRANCE, And thy FRIENDSHIP, RUSSIA, were blasted_ here_?
53943Did PRUSSIA cast no repentant glance?
53943Do such minds as Johnson and Addison, spread beauty and interest through their columns?
53943Do they awaken the fancy?
53943Do they clothe human thoughts in radiant and brilliant robes?
53943Do they create pure and soaring eloquence?
53943Do they promote mental research?
53943Do we desire a glorious immortality?
53943Do you think that beings superior to the laws of humanity have ever appeared to mortals or conversed with them?"
53943Does the tuft of long hair by which Houri hands are to draw the faithful into Paradise, differ from the unshorn locks of those around him?
53943For who doubts but that the Messenger is destined to call into active exertion the genius of the south?
53943From a nation, one of whose causes of quarrel with those masters, is their refusal to deal any more in that inhuman traffic?
53943Has the Governor written any thing which fairly suggests such a singular query?
53943Have not the Romans sworn never to obey a king?
53943Have oceans of blood and an age of strife, A thousand battles, been all in vain?
53943How can thy Destiny but happy be?
53943How could it be otherwise, when all that is beautiful in the heart, and sunshine in the intellect, is debased and destroyed?
53943How has the greatness and grandeur of all antiquity, been perpetuated?
53943How many breasts shall wildly throb for thee?
53943If the doctrines be untrue, how are these results ascertained by them to be accounted for?
53943In what part of the Report?
53943Is it a fountain from which flows the pure streams of knowledge?
53943Is it a friend to literature, or the efforts of original and powerful mind?
53943Is it a messenger of eloquent and exalted thoughts?
53943Is it asked why scientific individuals have not universally ranged themselves under the banners of this science?
53943Is it not rather a gross caricature of it?
53943Is it wonderful that its literature is unequalled?
53943Is such the moral of human life?
53943Is there nothing similar to the preceding quotation in this?
53943Is there nothing which the Legislature ought not to meddle with?
53943Is this a fair inference?
53943Might you not take a hint from this consideration?
53943Of all the Chieftains whose thrones he reared, Were there none whom kindness or faith could bind?
53943Of all the Monarchs whose crowns he spared, Had none one spark of his Roman mind?
53943Oh, is there not a sympathy of all- controling power The mother and her brood between-- old earth, weak man, frail flower?
53943Or was the Reviewer himself dreaming when he wrote?
53943Or, is the maxim itself utterly and absolutely false, to all intents and purposes whatever?
53943Say, little caged flutterer, say, Why mournful waves thy drooping wing?
53943Secondly, may not these advantages be gained by researches into our own literature?
53943See ye not, that while she is suffered to approach them, there is no salvation for either mother or children?
53943Shall the storm settle_ here_, when it from Heaven departs, And the cold from without find the way to our hearts?
53943So_ you''re changing your colors_, I see, master White, But say now d''ye think it is perfectly right?
53943Stevens, the Puck of commentators, asks"What has truth or nature to do with sonnets?"
53943That it might agonize and bleed At every suffering pore, The soft affections why decreed To centre in its core?
53943The Roman Catholic takes out four, And no man asks him, why?
53943The hapless bard who sings her praise, Now worships at the shrine of Anna?
53943Their names are unknown to a majority of the various classes of society?
53943They are not studied; and who, without studying, can master the real, pure meaning of a fine thought?
53943This, his condition, is compulsory and inevitable; and compulsory toil for food and raiment,--what is it but slavery?
53943Tho''fickle fortune frown, And wealth withhold her store, What is a jewelled crown?
53943Thou''dst ask me, why this quiet shade Which late a paradise I deem''d, Though still in verdant sweets array''d, A melancholy prison seemed?
53943Through the mask of this assumed garb what eye can detect the original Mussulman?
53943Thus he asks,"did any one ever dream that Kentucky had given cause of offence to her sister states by erecting an asylum for the poor deaf mutes?
53943To bid me hope we soon shall meet again?
53943Was it proper even to glance at such a martial topic in the amicable columns of the_ Literary_ Messenger?
53943We would ask, do they cause a full development of the mental powers?
53943We would ask, if there is no necessity of a change?
53943Were these men imposed on by the fallacies of the science, or did they wish to impose a fallacy upon the credulity of others?
53943What has most deeply interested the American mind?
53943What is the freeman''s equivalent?
53943What more do we?
53943What periods in the history of mankind, are most distinguished for mental superiority?
53943What preserves, in its original strength and grandeur, the rich and massy arch of German literature?
53943What scene is here?
53943What, in a just man''s practice, so softens down to our feelings all necessary roughnesses, as a secret veneration for himself?
53943When did Grecian literature assume its brightest charms?
53943Where was the oath which thy soldiers swore?
53943Where?
53943Whither should they fly?"
53943Who are delighted with the brilliant imagery, and chaste conceptions of_ Cooper_ and_ Irving_?
53943Who can be insensible to the fact, that our universal mind has already assumed a political character?
53943Who ever heard of infanticide by a slave?
53943Who is a Yankee poet that he should be honoured?
53943Who read the classic and eloquent orations of Webster and Everett, full of deep principles and splendid thoughts?
53943Who will compare the fame of Homer, the mirror- mind of the ancient world, with the most distinguished politician of antiquity?
53943Who will deny, that this political spirit is now, in many instances, the great stimulus of the American student?
53943Why look for rest on earth?
53943Why should mysterious Heaven bestow A warm and feeling heart-- Yet doom it naught but pain to know, And rankle in its smart?
53943Why silent sit, the live- long day?
53943Why then does he ask the question?
53943Why was it that the most eloquent of Grecians struggled for years to remove the defects of a faulty bearing, if no valuable end was to be attained?
53943Will any one deny the happy consequences of an urbane and modest deportment, in man''s intercourse with his fellows?
53943Wilt thou see me perish without pity, O son of my people?
53943Yet I own, on reflection, it is not so wrong, And the reason, I think, is sufficiently strong: Give it up?
53943Yet he asks,"Does he mean that a larger number could not be obtained if the public expense were proffered for their education and subsistence?"
53943but to whom is the English Bulwer unknown?
53943can this work be thine, Or are these sounds, these forms, indeed, divine?
53943how could I forget Its causes were around me yet?
53943of Milton, with that of Cromwell?
53943or tune the lyre of poesy to notes celestial?
53943shall we be less free than your ancestors?
53943then, since this is Nature''s style, Still changing from her birth, Why trust her false, deceitful smile?
53943thundered the monk:"will ye suffer the woman to steal two precious souls from heaven?
53943two members from our community?
53943what delicacy hast thou in store for us now, my Glaucus?"
59725Are not those dangerous sands off the coast of Kent supposed to mark the possessions of this designing earl?
59725Are they French and English?
59725But how did the ladies dress?
59725Can any of you tell me,enquired their aunt,"what celebrated building was erected in this reign?
59725Catherine of Aragon?
59725Catherine of Aragon?
59725Could not this young gentleman find one, mama?
59725Creci?
59725Did he derive his Saxon blood from his grandmother?
59725Did he lose his life?
59725Did he not,asked the children,"once wait on this same king at his supper?"
59725Did he receive money, and bury it?
59725Did not the Romans speak Latin, mama?
59725Did not the baby cry when he saw all those gentlemen?
59725Did the conquerors leave the poor savages, and return the following year?
59725Did the king,she asked,"die a year after his poor brother?"
59725Did you hear me say that the soldiers wore crosses?
59725Did you not say that those who were attacked by the English were thus screening themselves?
59725Did your hero aim at conquering England?
59725Do you mean Lady Jane Grey, aunt?
59725Every one of them was obliged to bring three hundred heads yearly, were they not?
59725Had four children the courage to go through such pains for their religion?
59725Had he a friend who was also reprieved at the same late hour?
59725Hooper or Ridley?
59725I fear we are all very stupid; uncle, can you guess?
59725I have it,said Emily;"but, Mary, how was the prince royally drest?"
59725I hope she did,added Emily;"but do you think, mama, there are such people as witches?"
59725I know,cried Willie;"but, dear mama, will you tell us what is the difference between a queen consort and a queen regnant?"
59725I long to see,he added,"what becomes of poor Charles I. I left him in prison; mama, will you tell me if he was ever made a king again?"
59725I never clearly understood the exact cause of the Admiral''s punishment, mama,said Willie;"will you explain it to me?"
59725I suppose the gentleman intended to pass for the lady whose clothes he assumed,said Edward;"but how did they contrive to hide his dark hair?"
59725If you have, mama,said Mary,"the murderer''s name was Felton; was it not?"
59725Is it the death of a queen?
59725Is that really in English history?
59725It is certainly an uncommon thing,said Willie,"for two monarchs to fight like schoolboys; is it really in English history?"
59725It was a Saxon king, was it not, aunt?
59725Mary, Queen of Scots?
59725May I tell a story, mama?
59725Oh, papa, did the poor child fall?
59725Poictiers?
59725She and her husband were shortly afterwards beheaded, were they not?
59725The Duke of Marlborough?
59725The battle of the Nile?
59725The person you mention was associated with some one else in the government of England, was he not?
59725Then I shall ask, was the bride the daughter of the king of Norway?
59725Then I think I know who they were,said Annie;"but did only bishops suffer?"
59725Was Archbishop Cranmer one of the sufferers, mama?
59725Was he a king?
59725Was he not very much attached to his wife?
59725Was he the only impostor obliged to relinquish his pretensions in that reign?
59725Was her name Anne, mama?
59725Was it Bolingbroke?
59725Was it Charles I.?
59725Was it bloody Mary, who had the poor little children burnt?
59725Was not one of the fugitives a woman, Edward?
59725Was not your hero disappointed of becoming a pope, mama?
59725Was she a queen?
59725Was she beautiful?
59725Was she not burnt as a witch?
59725Was the lady a queen, and mother to the person who forced away her companion?
59725Was the prisoner old or young, Mary?
59725Was the victim a king?
59725Were those the Romans going away, mama?
59725What was the flower the kind man wore in his helmet, mama?
59725What was this gallant seaman in appearance?
59725What was your hero like, Edward?
59725Whom can you mean, Annie?
59725But who can tell me what he exclaimed as he rushed on to the Earl of Richmond?"
59725Mama, are there not some curious accounts of their escapes?"
59725Mama, do you think he will be long?"
59725The next question was,"Do most of them agree in saying that he had one shoulder higher than the other, and was sometimes called Crookback?"
59725The question of"Was he not a king, and born in Wales?"
59725Was it Edward III.?"
59725Was it the battle of Trafalgar?"
59725Was the wound fatal?"
59725Were there old men, women, and children turned out, and taken care of by the besiegers?"
59725When the subject was more clearly made known, Annie asked,"Are there any wolves in Wales now, mama?
59725Who is my poor heroine?"
59725asked one of his cousins;"and had she not a young son who met her on this occasion?"
59725give Greenwich Hospital to disabled seamen?"
6867Además, esos centanares de miles perdidos no son de ellos, segun dicen: ¿ cómo los iban à tener si tienen voto de pobreza?
6867But what of it?
6867Did they, too, he questioned, suffer injustice as the people of his home town did?
6867Had men and women also to be servile and hypocrites to live in peace over there?
6867I ask only of those who say that I created discord among the Filipinos: Was there any effective union before I entered political life?
6867Quién sabe?
6867Rizal''s composure aroused the curiosity of a Spanish military surgeon standing by and he asked,"Colleague, may I feel your pulse?"
6867Tendría ese dinero mala procedencia?
6867Was the whip there used as freely, carelessly and unmercifully by the authorities?
6867Was there any chief whose authority I wanted to oppose?
6867What am I?
6867What matters death, if one dies for what one loves, for native land and beings held dear?
6867Why say that the first thing we need is to have money?
6867¿ Quién mejor que los dominicos para tener tanto valor, tanta audacia y tanta humanidad?
6867¿ Qué son cuatrocientos ó quinientos mil?
7348What is it the people like?
59993And again, what do we hear? 59993 How shall we know,"ask the opponents of the Prophet,"that he really saw a vision, or that he received authority from heaven?
59993Men and brethren,cried the assembled Jews on the day of Pentecost,"what shall we do?"
59993Men and brethren,they cried,"what shall we do?"
59993Then father asked this question:''If all that you tell me is true, why did you leave the Church?'' 59993 Where is the damned prophet?"
59993Yes,said Joseph;"what shall we do, Brother Hyrum?"
59993[ A] It is undoubtedly this manifestation that the Prophet has in mind when he writes in an address to the Church,And again what do we hear?
59993After reading the names of the witnesses, he continued,"Mr. Cowdery, do you believe this book?"
59993Again it may be asked, How can anyone bear corroborative testimony to the actuality of these visions?
59993Anciently, the Apostle James wrote to the saints"Is any sick among you?
59993And if this is so with finite men, how much more unready will the God of heaven be to approve His creatures''usurping His power and authority?
59993And what is the"Book of Doctrine and Covenants"?
59993And what is the"Book of Mormon?"
59993And what is this famous Section 132 of the Book of Modern Scripture?
59993And what really was the significance of this first vision?
59993And what was this Priesthood restored by the heavenly messenger, John the Baptist?
59993But why should they wait for further manifestations?
59993But why?
59993But ye say, Wherein have we robbed thee?
59993Can Joseph Smith be believed in these assertions?
59993Could he have been an imposter?
59993How can children so reared look with the least degree of favor upon the social evil-- divorce?
59993How can they wink at even the mildest forms of immorality and vice so common in the world today?
59993How does this Higher Priesthood differ from the Lesser?
59993How was it restored?
59993How, then can anyone bear corroborative testimony of the actuality of that vision?
59993How, then, can anyone bear corroborative testimony of the actuality of these visions?
59993I am a dying man, and what would it profit me to tell you a lie?
59993If you believe it to be true, why are you in Michigan?"
59993Is it a matter of wonder, then, that the name of Joseph Smith is known the world over for good or for ill?
59993Is it not possible that he was himself deceived about those things?
59993Is not one ascent as good as another?
59993Is there left to the world any excuse for not accepting his testimony?
59993Is there no chance for his es cape?
59993Now, what is the significance of this glorious vision of John the Baptist?
59993Now, what is the significance of this second vision-- or of this series of visions?
59993Of what consequence was a boy''s prophetic sight that the world should take cognizance of it?
59993Of what importance is it in the story of man''s relationship to God?
59993Of what importance is the family relationship either here or hereafter?
59993Or is it not possible even that he lied deliberately about them?
59993Or, what more, indeed, could now be given them?
59993Said the Lord again, through the prophet Malachi, rebuking the disobedient children of Israel,"Will a man rob God?
59993Shall the one become the partaker of glory and the other be consigned to hopeless perdition?
59993Some one said,''Here is Mrs. Johnson with a lame arm; has God given any power to men now on earth to cure her?''
59993Still perturbed in mind, the Prophet turned to Hyrum and asked,"Brother Hyrum, you are the oldest, what shall we do?"
59993The Reverend Mr. Lane of the Methodist church preached a sermon on the subject,''What Church Shall I Join?''
59993The living may by good chance hear it; but what provision has been made for the dead?
59993Then, if the Lord gave freely to those who asked, and upbraided not, why should he not ask?
59993Thereupon he turned to Porter Rockwell, and asked,"What shall I do?"
59993Was he an impostor?
59993Was there any need during the early part of the nineteenth century of the Christian era for a restoration of the Gospel?
59993Was there at that time any need for a re- establishment of the Church of Jesus Christ?
59993Was your testimony based on a dream, was it the imagination of your mind, was it an illusion, a myth-- tell me truthfully?''
59993What bearing has it on the story of the Restoration?
59993What became of that priesthood after the passing of the apostles?
59993What better or stronger testimony could be required?
59993What could be the matter that their prayers were not answered?
59993What did Joseph Smith do?
59993What great far- reaching truths did the vision contain, that the religious world should still writhe under it?
59993What is the nature of the marriage relationship in the sight of God?
59993What more could the Prophet and his companion await?
59993What more could they now expect?
59993What will be the condition of men and women in the future life?
59993Where was room for doubt?
59993Which time did you tell the truth?"
59993Why persecute me for telling the truth?
59993Would he not certainly exercise the utmost care not to prescribe any test whereby those revelations might be detected as false?
59993Would he then dare these men of superior literary ability to write a single revelation equal to the least of his?
59993Would not so bold a declaration tempt even men of superior wisdom to pit themselves against the reputed man of God?
59993Would not, rather, an intelligent impostor refrain from calling undue attention to his purported revelations?
43502''Appy? 43502 Dizzy?
43502Fear?
43502Got us----?
43502How did you get here so early?
43502I knew you''d be surprised-- wasn''t it clever of me to manage it? 43502 Intriguing to get hold of?"
43502Keep quiet, cawn''t yer?
43502Mrs. or Miss?
43502Political dynamite,eh?
43502W''y do n''t the men''elp ye to get your rights?
43502Women--"children"--wot about the_ men_?
43502Yes, how about_ that?_) MISS E. B.
43502_) MISS L. Accept it? 43502 ''E was awskin''me:''Ow would you like men to st''y at''ome and do the fam''ly washin''?"
43502''Elp us?
43502''Oo among you workin''men''as the most comfortable''omes?
43502''Oo are you talkin''to?
43502''Oo yer talkin''to?
43502''Oo''s Pilcher?
43502''Ow''re we goin''to know if you ca n''t tell us?
43502(_ A great shout._) Yes-- seems funny, does n''t it?
43502(_ Debating with herself._) You do n''t know about her, I suppose?
43502(_ Hastily._) At least the papers said so, did n''t they?
43502(_ He stares bewildered._ JEAN_ drops her hands in her lap and steadies her voice._) She went away from you, then?
43502(_ Her watchful eye, leaving her husband for a moment, catches_ MISS LEVERING''S_ little involuntary gesture._) What''s the matter?
43502(_ Hurries after_ MISS LEVERING_ as she advances to speak to the_ FREDDYS,_& c._) Why, God bless my soul, do you realise that''s_ drains_?
43502(_ Laughter._) MR. P. Per''aps''e does n''t know much about women?
43502(_ Pause._) After all... women are much more conservative than men-- aren''t they?
43502(_ Quite low._) Then do n''t you know you must pay me in kind?
43502(_ Raising his voice._) Why should I remind anybody of what I want only to forget?
43502(_ She is about to speak, he advances on her._) Do you deny that you returned my letters unopened?
43502(_ She stands looking out into the void._) One woman''s mishap?--what is that?
43502(_ Voice_:"Mill?
43502(_ With a sudden thought._) What has changed her?
43502(_ With sudden change of tone._) Why do I waste time over myself?
43502(_ goes straight on as if she had not heard_)--man asking: if the women get full citizenship, and a war is declared, will the women fight?
43502--don''t you think?
43502... To have lived through_ that_ when she was... how old?
43502A pilgrimage?
43502And did n''t he?
43502And if Geoffrey Stonor offered you-- what''s called"reparation"--you''d refuse it?
43502And it''s like that?
43502And it_ is n''t_ so?
43502And still no work?
43502And what did they decide?
43502And what difference did it make?
43502And why should n''t she?
43502And why"could n''t"you?
43502And you''re unchanged-- is that it?
43502Angelic?
43502Any complication?
43502Any men here belongin''to the Labour Party?
43502Are all who avail themselves of Lord Rowton''s hostels, are_ they_ all angels?
43502Are we down-''earted?
43502Are we down-''earted?
43502Are you quite ready?
43502Are you threatening me?
43502Are you?
43502Are-- you-- married?
43502Are_ they_ all''appy?
43502At the door I saw the helmets of two policemen, and I said to myself:"What sort of crime shall I have to sit and hear about?
43502Bless me, am I such a chicken?
43502But the time has come when a woman may look about her, and say,"What general significance has my secret pain?
43502But where did you go-- dressed like that?
43502But(_ pity and annoyance blended in her tone_)--you care about him still, Vida?
43502But_ how_ did you get here?
43502Ca n''t you do what the other four hundred have done?
43502Ca n''t you see that this crazed campaign you''d start her on-- even if it''s successful, it can only be so through the help of men?
43502Can you tell me, my man, which are the ones that-- a-- that make the disturbances?
43502Could n''t you see the men were at their old game?
43502D''you think_ we_ ought to st''y''ome and wash the dishes?
43502Did he say anything?
43502Did n''t Mr. Greatorex say women had been politely petitioning Parliament for forty years?
43502Did n''t know?
43502Did n''t the women sit quiet till ten minutes to closing time?
43502Did n''t you say the 1.10?
43502Did nobody want you to teach French or sing the little songs?
43502Did you hear what Mrs. Heriot said about him?
43502Did you know she''d got that old horror to give Lady John £ 8,000 for her charity before he died?
43502Did you mean you are ready to do that?
43502Did you want to?
43502Do I always talk about Stonor?
43502Do n''t you know there''s a third of the women o''this country ca n''t afford the luxury of stayin''in their''omes?
43502Do n''t you think_ they_ know there''s been more said and written about it in these ten days since the scene, than in the ten years before it?
43502Do you deny that you refused to see me-- and that, when I persisted, you vanished?
43502Do you know that out of every hundred women in this country eighty- two are wage- earning women?
43502Do you mean then that, after all-- it lived?
43502Do you reely think we tyke them there low wyges because we got a_ lykin''_ for low wyges?
43502Do you think the result should make us proud of our policy?
43502Does it''join on''to anything?"
43502Does she come every week- end?
43502Does the Government want to punish_ all_ women because they do n''t like the manners of a handful?
43502For what are you thanking God?
43502For what was Mrs. Freddy too happily married and all the rest?
43502For what?
43502Freedom?
43502Geoffrey Stonor is n''t going to be-- a little too old for you?
43502Geoffrey Stonor?
43502Go?
43502Had n''t it been just as"favourable"before?
43502Has Miss Levering come down yet?
43502Has she never paid it back?
43502Has_ she_ been seeing visions too?
43502Have I ever failed?
43502Have n''t you noticed that all their worst disturbances come when men are in charge?
43502Have you got your lesson(_ with a little broken laugh_)_ by heart_ at last?
43502Help you?
43502How d''ye do, Mr. Freddy?
43502How did the working man get the Suffrage, we asked ourselves?
43502How do they know what''s womanly?
43502How do you do, Mr. Stonor?
43502How do you do, aunt?
43502How do you do?
43502How do you do?
43502How do you do?
43502How do you do?
43502How do you know?
43502How do you know?
43502How do you know?
43502How do_ you_ know?
43502How many Platos are there here in this crowd?
43502How many Shakespeares are there in all England to- day?
43502How will he do that?
43502How_ are_ you to know if we ca n''t somehow manage to tell you?
43502How_ could_ you?
43502I began to say to myself:"Is n''t it time the women lent a hand?"
43502I forget, do you know Mr. Stonor personally, or(_ smiling_) are you just dazzled from afar?
43502I s''y, Miss,''oo killed cock robin?
43502I wonder if they did spit?
43502I?
43502I?
43502If I gave you that much-- for your little projects-- what would you give me?
43502If I hear that you persist in it I shall have to---- MISS L. What?
43502If everybody said we were nice, well- behaved women, who''d come to hear us?
43502If it wus only to use fur_ our_ comfort, d''ye think many o''you workin''men would be found turnin''over their wyges to their wives?
43502If the House of Commons wo n''t give you justice, why do n''t you go to the House of Lords?
43502If the vote ai n''t done us any good,''ow''ll it do the women any good?
43502If the women want the vote w''y ai n''t they''ere to s''y so?"
43502If women must be freed by women, we have need of such as--(_her eyes go to_ JEAN''S_ door_)--who knows?
43502In the case of this poor little abandoned working girl, what man can be the fit judge of her deeds in that awful moment of half- crazed temptation?
43502In_ our_ debt?
43502Is it a woman, I wondered?
43502Is n''t it angelic of him?
43502Is n''t she wonderful?
43502Is n''t that so?
43502Is n''t the phrase consecrated to a different class?
43502Is she here with you?
43502Is she here?
43502Is she one of them?
43502Is that true?
43502Is this a burglar coming along between the two big policemen, or will it be a murderer?
43502Is this the effect seeing Geoffrey has?
43502Is your grandfather worse?
43502It''s only an effort to meet the greatest evil in the world?
43502It''s so strange, Geoffrey, to see a man like you as much deluded as the Hyde Park loafers who say to Ernestine Blunt,"Who''s hurt_ your_ feelings?"
43502Just tell me, my child, is it all right?
43502Let me see, was n''t a deputation sent to you not long ago?
43502Let us see, how we shall put it-- when the time comes-- shall we?
43502MISS L. And now...?
43502MISS L. At eleven at night?
43502MISS L. At last?
43502MISS L. But for the tramp population less conducive to savouriness, do n''t you think, than-- baths?
43502MISS L. Do you picture the Suffragettes sitting in sackcloth?
43502MISS L. Do you?
43502MISS L. I-- I----(_ Stumbles and stops._)(_ Talking and laughing increases._"Wot''s''er name?"
43502MISS L. Is that what he says?
43502MISS L. Then why keep up that old pretence?
43502MISS L. To keep you and her apart?
43502MISS L. Well, have they primed you?
43502MISS L. What terrible thing?
43502MISS L. What?
43502MISS L. When did you write this?
43502MISS L. Why could that great, all- powerful body do nothing?
43502MISS L. Why do you think I know?
43502MISS L. You are_ not_ certain?
43502MISS L. You think we would n''t be glad to go straight to the goal?
43502MRS. F. Homeless women?
43502MRS. F. My friends?
43502MRS. F. Who got him to?
43502MRS. F. You are n''t saying you think it was a good way to get what they wanted?
43502MRS. F._ Here?_(_ Shrugs._) I do n''t beat the air.
43502MRS. H. How did_ you_ happen to be there?
43502May I?
43502Mine?
43502Miss Levering is?
43502Mr. Greatorex-- he''s a Radical, is n''t he?
43502My dear(_ to_ MISS LEVERING), have your things been sent down?
43502My engagement?
43502No?
43502Not down yet-- the Elusive One?
43502Not to your mother?
43502Nothing reprehensible in what_ she_ said, was there?
43502Now, are n''t you glad I brought you?
43502Oh, have you been hearing him speak?
43502Oh, is it question time?
43502Oh, is she?
43502Oh, is that true?
43502Oh, shut up, cawn''t yer?
43502Oh, was it like the papers said?
43502Oh, why did you do it?
43502Oh?
43502Oh?
43502Only one vacancy?
43502Or does wrong- doing in a man not matter?
43502Or(_ her eyes blaze_) did you dare to be afraid I would n''t?
43502Power!--_you?_ JEAN.
43502Rather too much, is n''t there, little girl?
43502Run away?
43502Said that, did he?
43502Shall I tell you a secret?
43502She went away from you?
43502Slight pause._)(_ The words escaping from her in a miserable cry_) Why did you desert her?
43502So that justice should n''t miscarry-- wasn''t it?
43502Soper?
43502Still talking over the Shelter plans?
43502Still, you_ are_ an advocate of the Suffrage, are n''t you?
43502Than men?
43502That she was four years older than you?
43502That you have very pink cheeks?
43502The only question is upon what terms shall she continue to be in?
43502Then what''s all the chatterment about?
43502They are often asked elsewhere; and I would like to ask in return: Since when was human society held to exist for its handful of geniuses?
43502They study music by thousands; where''s their Beethoven?
43502This afternoon?
43502Till----?
43502To- day?
43502Trent?
43502W''y do n''t you stop in it?
43502Was that because you would n''t marry her?
43502Was that why you... was_ that_ why?
43502Was there never a mysogynist of my sex who ended by deciding to make an exception?
43502We were so happy out there in the summer- house, were n''t we?
43502Well, Mrs. Freddy, what do you think of your friends now?
43502Well, did he get back alive?
43502Well, how spoilt is the great man?
43502Well, why should n''t a man- hater on your side prove equally open to reason?
43502Well----?
43502Well?
43502Well?
43502Well?
43502Were they Guelf or Ghibelline?
43502What a pity she has n''t got a husband and a baby to keep her quiet"?
43502What about my brother?
43502What about?
43502What advertisement is so sure of being remembered?
43502What can I do for you?
43502What did you do?
43502What do you call the greatest evil in the world?
43502What do you know about it?
43502What do you mean?
43502What do you mean?
43502What do you propose she shall do, poor child?
43502What do you say?
43502What do you say?
43502What do you think he was charged with?
43502What do you think she said to me in London the other day?
43502What does she do to tire her?
43502What excuse shall you make your own soul for not going straight to the goal?
43502What had he been stealing-- that small criminal?
43502What happened?
43502What if there is n''t?
43502What in the name of---- What has she been saying to you?
43502What is it you are asking of me?
43502What made her write like that?
43502What makes you think...?
43502What men?
43502What name?
43502What news?
43502What on the whole are the prospects?
43502What others?
43502What reason did she give?
43502What resolution?
43502What revolting views?
43502What sort of felon is to stand in the dock before the women whose crime is they ask for the vote?"
43502What they want?
43502What woman is tried by hers?
43502What''ave you done for yours?
43502What''s the use of your going on denying it?
43502What''s up?
43502What?
43502What?
43502What?
43502What?
43502What?
43502What?
43502What?
43502What_ could_ I do?
43502When did he do anything like that?
43502Where are you going?
43502Where are you going?
43502Where in all this were_ her_"peers"?
43502Where is she now?
43502Where''s the woman Shakespeare?
43502Where''s their Plato?
43502Whereabouts are you?
43502Which of us d''you mean?
43502Which?
43502Who cartoons people who are of no importance?
43502Who did?
43502Who do you think is motoring up the drive?
43502Who else?
43502Who has?
43502Who is Miss---- You do n''t mean to say there are other people?
43502Who is he when he''s at home?")
43502Who is the Elusive One?
43502Who tells you that?
43502Who told you that?
43502Who told you that?
43502Who?
43502Whose story?
43502Why are you catechising me?
43502Why are you saying goodbye as if you were never coming back?
43502Why are you so sure of that?
43502Why did men so long ago insist on trial by"a jury of their peers"?
43502Why did n''t you telegraph?
43502Why do you dislike her so?
43502Why do you say it like that?
43502Why does he behave like that?
43502Why does n''t she marry?
43502Why have n''t I seen her before?
43502Why is she intriguing to get hold of a man that, ten years ago, she flatly refused to see, or hold any communication with?
43502Why not realise(_ going quite close to him_) this is a thing that goes deeper than personal experience?
43502Why not?
43502Why not?
43502Why should it?
43502Why should it?
43502Why should you think that it''s only you, these ten years have taught something to?
43502Why was it, then?
43502Why, I thought you said you wanted me----?
43502Why, where is he, then?
43502Why?
43502Why_ will_ you go on talking of what''s so long over and ended?
43502Will that ghost give you no rest?
43502Will you come?
43502With Miss Levering?
43502With----?
43502Wot about the 96,000 textile workers?
43502Wot about the Yorkshire tailoresses?
43502Wot d''you expect from a pig but a grunt?
43502Wot next?
43502Wot''s the reason thousands do-- and the best and the soberest?
43502Wot''s_ politics_?
43502Would you have women magistrates?
43502Yes-- what''a''they ever_ done_?
43502Yes?
43502You are n''t serious?
43502You did n''t get it, then?
43502You know one another?
43502You may as well tell me-- do you mean to----?
43502You mean that rowdy scene in the House of Commons?
43502You must think he has a great deal of power---- MISS L. Power?
43502You never asked yourselves,"_ Wot''s a Liberal, anyw''y?_"A VOICE.
43502You remember Mrs. Freddy''s friend who came to tea here in the winter?
43502You think I do n''t recall it correctly?
43502You think that night of the scene-- you think the men did n''t_ mean_ to play fair?
43502You think they were just putting off the issue till it was too late?
43502You two still talking Soper?
43502You want me to have a_ real_ share in it all, do n''t you, Geoffrey?
43502You wanted it_ overlooked_?
43502You''ll remind her of that first of all, wo n''t you?
43502You''re trying to shield him---- MISS L. Why should I-- what is it to me?
43502You''ve come to realise, then-- after all these years-- that you owed me something?
43502_ Cleared up?_ JEAN.
43502_ Does_ he?
43502_ I?_ JEAN.
43502_ I_ did n''t know her name was Vida; how did you?
43502_ Is n''t_ it fun?
43502_ One?_ Oh- h!
43502_ Saw?_ Where?
43502_ Saw?_ Where?
43502_ W''y_ does any woman tyke less wyges than a man for the same work?
43502_ What!_ Then how in the name of Heaven do you know-- that she wants-- what you ask?
43502_ Whose?_ JEAN.
43502_ Will_ you?
43502_ You_ went?
43502_''Ome_ do you call it?
43502how am I ever going to be able to behave like a girl who is n''t engaged to the only man in the world worth marrying?
43502what are the women of this country coming to?
43502what can a woman like you_ know_ about it?
61177A lot of those poor devils will die?
61177And for what, might I ask?
61177Are you sufficiently wearied?
61177Are you sure you saw it?
61177But in the name of God, man,I said,"why do n''t they call a truce-- both sides-- and put that horror underground?"
61177But the bayonet wounds and the saber wounds?
61177Can not this thing be done more quietly?
61177Did n''t you have a pass to go through the lines?
61177Did you have any losses in the charge?
61177Do these things count in the sum total? 61177 Do you see that man?"
61177Get you?
61177Highly interesting, is it not? 61177 How about them?"
61177How far away are the Germans?
61177Hurt anyone? 61177 I say, what news have you from the front?
61177The British, then-- they must be there by now?
61177This war-- it is a most terrible thing that it should come on Belgium, eh? 61177 Well, if they are Americans, why do n''t they talk the American language then?"
61177What''s the news there?
61177When did he die?
61177Where is he?
61177Where was this?
61177Who killed him?
61177Who wanted to get you?
61177Why all the noise, Herr Lieutenant?
61177You had charge of another execution this morning, did n''t you?
61177You won that lately?
61177A German said to me afterwards:"Why do we win?
61177All goes well, eh?
61177All?
61177Are we giving the Germans a proper''iding all along the line?"
61177Assuredly many innocent ones will suffer then with the guilty; but what else can we do?
61177Bullet wounds?
61177But had anybody been killed?
61177Do you know what my men say?
61177Do you think I shall be permitted to enter Brussels and seek for my two daughters?
61177Had he beheld these things with his own eyes?
61177He said:"We had not our daily victory to- day, eh?
61177Hostile gun butts had splintered her front door; why not a stray bullet or two through her back window?
61177I buy me a swine-- what you call him?--a pork?
61177Is it not so, doctor?"
61177Is not that so?"
61177Shrapnel wounds?
61177So, then, I shall have the pleasure of seeing you in the morning, shall I not?
61177Speaking so low that we could scarcely catch his words, he said in broken English:"M''sieurs, the French are in Brussels, are they not?"
61177Then he added:"Could you tell us, sir,''ow''s the war going?
61177There might be some stupid, angry common soldier, some over- zealous under officer-- you understand me, do you not, gentlemen?
61177To him I put the question:"What have you done, now, to merit the bestowal of the Cross?"
61177What did he care for the code of war?
61177What do you want to know?"
61177Why should they?
61177Will you buy some postal cards, m''sieur?
61177Wounds from fragments of bombs?
61177Yes?
61177You heard about the case, did n''t you?"
46909''Our Father, who art in heaven,''what does that mean?
46909And what was he doing before that?
46909Are you crazy with your cocoanut? 46909 Are you ill?"
46909Are you unwell?
46909Barberou, I believe?
46909But if the father is an idiot?
46909But if we see metaphors everywhere, what will become of the facts?
46909Care of what?
46909Do you believe,said Bouvard,"that he composed the''Pentateuch''?"
46909Do you understand it?
46909Do you wish to defend the emperors?
46909For stains?
46909Good?
46909Have you read him?
46909How can we distinguish them from the genuine ones? 46909 How do you know whether He sets them aside?"
46909How do you make out that God spoke?
46909How?
46909However, sir, the morality of the Gospel?
46909I? 46909 If this drama is not a success, might not the erection of a public monument to his literary talent[ Bouilhet''s] be looked upon with disfavour?"
46909Is n''t she pretty?
46909Marriage having been established by Jesus Christ----Pécuchet stopped him:"In which Gospel?
46909On whom does her infallibility depend?
46909Once again, who affirms it?
46909Perhaps there was at the bottom a little yellow colour caused by humidity?
46909Perhaps they needed family life-- the care of a mother?
46909Since the flesh is accursed, how is it that we are bound to thank God for the boon of existence?
46909So you are at these fooleries?
46909Their country?
46909Well, it discharges you-- what next?
46909Well?
46909What do you say?
46909What is it they want, these creatures?
46909What is the meaning of that word? 46909 What proportion must be observed between the fear indispensable to the salvation and the hope which is no less so?"
46909What would you have?
46909What?
46909Where is the sign of grace?
46909Where was their father?'' 46909 Why do you groan during mealtime?"
46909Why do you wish to define it? 46909 Why foolery?"
46909Why is it wrong?
46909Why this novel, this drama? 46909 Why?
46909Why?--eh?--why?
46909You are witnesses, are you not?
46909You will accompany me?
46909You?
46909Your prudent Apollo, no doubt, passed through the stock exchange to reach the Parnassus? 46909 ''Mid all that I have seen and known,--peoples and thrones, loves, glories, sorrows, virtues-- what have I ever loved? 46909 ''s dragoons regarded decency?
46909***** What didst thou say?
46909A gentleman who asked me, on my voyage:"What kind of museums have they in Egypt?
46909A mark of submission towards the Church?
46909A matter of the proprieties?
46909A voice rejoined:"Where would be the harm?"
46909Admire here one of the polite ways of Providence which would be hard to believe: in whose house have I lodgings?
46909After Cannes, does not one usually return to Paris?
46909After such a scandal, why keep a young girl so corrupted?
46909Also, why did they adopt the children of a convict?
46909Am I imaginative?
46909Am I not good, eh?
46909Am I right?
46909And Sainte- Beuve-- do you see him?
46909And about_ La Servante_?
46909And how goes the volume of verse?
46909And of whom is he the pupil?
46909And then, why encumber ourselves with so many souvenirs?
46909And what besides all this?
46909And what devil possessed him to induce him to seek such a subject?
46909And what kind of philosophy?
46909And you, dear master, what has become of you and yours?
46909And you, good muse, dear colleague in all( colleague comes from_ colligere_, to bind together), have you worked well this week?
46909And, after all, what risk would they run?
46909Are there not two worlds entirely distinct?
46909Are to suffer and to think the same thing, then?
46909Are we in the twilight or in full dawn?
46909Are we to assume that there are as many stomachs in the stomach as there are varieties of taste?
46909Are you amusing yourself?
46909Are you in Paris, Nohant, or where?
46909Are you pleased?
46909Besides, has not research been exhausted?
46909Besides, how do you know?
46909Besides, what does one failure prove?
46909But does a previous injustice authorise subsequent wrongs?
46909But have you not noticed of how little value is the correspondence of the great men of that time?
46909But how can unjust men understand the cruelty of such a refusal?
46909But others-- have they also been solved?
46909But the other?
46909But what amusement could be provided for them?
46909But what is the use of living if one may not indulge in dreams?
46909But where shall you be?
46909But who did not love her?
46909But"Chic,"that modern religion, what would become of that?
46909Can you guess what occupies me at present?
46909Certain natures suffer not so much, and people without nerves are happy; but of how many things are they not deprived?
46909Corneille a celebrity?
46909Could it be that an intelligent country would cause these billows of blood?
46909Could it be that the children had no idea of justice?
46909Did he regret in the last years of his life that he had not followed the common route?
46909Did he think there would be as much interest taken in them as there was later in his own?
46909Did not one of your colleagues of the Academy of Rouen, at the meeting of Aug. 7th, 1862, praise Louis Bouilhet in flattering terms?
46909Do I make verses?
46909Do they mean to arrest Victor?
46909Do you base your changeable faith and your flexible probity on the mobility of the weather?"
46909Do you believe-- yes or no?"
46909Do you employ your preservatives, impure man?
46909Do you keep yourself informed as to the works of Renan?
46909Do you know that in the last number of the_ Review_ our friend Leconte was very badly treated?
46909Do you know what I found out to- day from his photographs?
46909Do you know whither the sadness of all this has led me, and what I should like to do?
46909Do you know, my boy, what I have had to endure to give you the extreme pleasure of watching, lyre in hand, which way the winds blow?
46909Do you not feel the perturbation of your soul, although its outward covering seems calm and happy?
46909Do you not find that, since''89, we struggle with trifles?
46909Do you not suppose that the soul of a Veronese imbibes colour like a piece of stuff plunged into the boiling vat of a dyer?
46909Do you remember when we wrote_ Solus ad solum_?
46909Do you think you may die on the way?
46909Do you understand?
46909Do you wish it?"
46909Do you wish me to speak of myself, my dear Edmond?
46909Dost thou complain,--thou, the most fortunate creature under heaven?
46909Dost thou repine, who some day in thy turn shalt disappear forever, after thou hast crushed the universe beneath thy horse''s feet?
46909Ezekiel devouring a book has nothing extraordinary in it; do we not speak of devouring a pamphlet, a newspaper?
46909First objection( I use the words as they were printed):"Can the committee modify the intention and substitute a fountain for a tombstone?
46909HAVE you still your tooth?
46909HOW goes it, dear old master?
46909Had Victor obeyed a sentiment of honour or of revenge?
46909Have I told you what a curate of Trouville said one day after I had dined with him?
46909Have we any time to write?"
46909Have you had a good laugh at the fast ordered by Her Majesty Queen Victoria?
46909Have you read it, and what do you think of it?
46909Have you read the third philippic of Sainte- Beuve?
46909Have you received my letter?
46909He has written this of me:"Can no one persuade M. Flaubert not to write any more?"
46909Hear ye the fanfares, whose sound reached even to Ostia; the clapping of the hands, the cries of joy?
46909How about Houssaye?
46909How about the_ Botanique_?
46909How comes on the_ Fracasse_?
46909How goes_ La Jeune Bourgeoise_?
46909How is it to be solved?
46909How is your health?
46909How long do you remain at Cannes?
46909How you love her, do you not?
46909How?
46909I say to myself; Is art worth so much trouble, so much weariness for me, so many tears for her?
46909I should much like to know, and with many details, why Saulcy refused Leconte''s article; what are the motives alleged?
46909I suppose''tis from the house below you were just coming?"
46909I, A MYSTERIOUS being, dear master?
46909IS THIS handsome conduct, dear master?
46909If it had been intended for one of the capitalists of our district, whose fortune runs into the millions, would you have refused it?
46909If the exceptions themselves are not true, what are we to put any reliance on?"
46909If the genuine ones, given as proofs, have themselves need of proofs, why perform them?"
46909If the value of a martyr depends on the doctrine, how could he serve to demonstrate its existence?"
46909If your good men have a hundred feet, your mountains should be twenty miles high; and what is the ideal if it is not a magnifying?
46909Ignatius?"
46909Is genius, after all, only a refinement of pain, that is to say, a meditation of the objective through the soul?
46909Is it because you are a great"man"or simply a charming being?
46909Is it expedient to teach them languages?
46909Is it not possible that I might dine with you?
46909Is it on this account that the illustrious Turgan calls me"the major?"
46909Is it understood, then-- Saturday?
46909Is it you?"
46909Is my request indiscreet?
46909Is that agreeable?
46909Is that all, sir?"
46909Is there anything new to say about that young person?
46909Is this a coincidence, or is it because when I was eighteen years old I read only Montaigne during a whole twelvemonth?
46909Is this not a great defect?
46909Is this presumption on my part,--an excessive sympathy that I feel for you?
46909It is not kind to say I do not think of my"old troubadour;"of what else should I think?
46909Look through your telescope, do you not see Guizot waning and Thiers coming to light?
46909M. de Mahurot seemed satisfied with it, and Madame de Noares said to him:"You will remember my_ protégés_?"
46909Many times, in the stillness of night, will he look vainly for his friend''s shadow, ready to question him:"Am I doing right?
46909May I expect you the day after to- morrow?
46909Must I die, now?
46909Must I give up my days of feasting and delight, my spectacles, my triumphs, my chariots and the applause of multitudes?
46909Must it not be from his worship of the true?
46909My head troubles me too much for me to continue now, and besides, what more can I say?
46909Nevertheless, while I was looking at the poor Pouchet, who was in torture, shaking like a reed in the wind, do you know what came up before me?
46909No doubt there were impediments?
46909Now that they had learned to read and write, what should they be taught?
46909Now, what do you remember from yesterday?"
46909O Rabelais, where is thy vast mouth?
46909Of obstructing your public by- ways?
46909Of what use is all this effort, perhaps to arrive only at mediocrity in the end?
46909Of what use is it?
46909On the other hand, is it not stupid?
46909One day Victorine asked,"How is it that wood burns?"
46909Passing to the Middle Ages, shall we compare the epics of the twelfth century, the comic and the morality plays?
46909Perhaps irony might have success with him?
46909Perhaps they were distressed by it?
46909Pierre?"
46909Poetry, is n''t it?
46909Pécuchet at first talked about indifferent subjects, then, having slipped out the word"martyr":"How many do you think there were of them?"
46909Science furnished a subject for sarcasms on his part:"Will it make an ear of corn sprout, this science of yours?
46909Shall I have a letter from you on awakening?
46909Shall I have the courage to live absolutely alone in a solitary place?
46909Shall you be in Paris from the first of August to the 25th?
46909Shall you remain at Nohant?
46909Should it be Nôtre Dame de Fourviers, de Chartres, d''Embrun, de Marseille, or d''Auray?
46909Since his time, what has been done?
46909Sometimes I would stop him and ask:"Was he good?"
46909Suppose his birthplace were unknown( history is not always decisive on this point),--what would you do?
46909That would have been a great compliment, eh?
46909The Bovary?
46909The justice of the peace made him sit down; then, addressing himself to the gamekeeper:"Do you persist in your declarations?"
46909The third was an invective to"An author who sold his poems": Why seek a famished passion to revive?
46909Then why not erect it in the street, house, or even room where he was born?
46909There creaks a pump which wets your legs; two boys are rinsing decanters; a parrot repeats from morning till night:"Have you breakfasted, Jacko?"
46909There is a certain ingenuousness about them, but why call the_ sperchius_,_ sperkhios_?
46909They say that_ Cadio_ is being rehearsed at the Porte Saint- Martin( are you very sorry, you and Chilly?).
46909This is all very easy to say in cold blood, is it not?
46909Under what constellation were you born, to have united in your person qualities so diverse, so numerous, and so rare?
46909Vindex revolts, my legions fly, my women flee in terror?
46909WHAT a charming article, my dear Théo, and how can I thank you for it?
46909WHAT has become of you?
46909Was it not enough that a thing was true and beautiful?
46909Was it only chance that had kept them from death?
46909Was it possible for them really to have such recreations?
46909Was it possible?
46909Was it their fault if they owed their birth to a convict father?
46909Was not Ronsard forgotten before Sainte- Beuve?
46909Was that a good way, after all?
46909Was this a hygienic measure?
46909We understand each other well, do we not?
46909What are we coming to?"
46909What are you doing now?
46909What are you doing?
46909What are you writing?
46909What can this phrase in your letter this morning mean in speaking of De Lisle?
46909What care should one take sometimes, in expressing an opinion on things of this world, not to risk being considered an imbecile later?
46909What could anyone say after you?
46909What could he laugh at, then?
46909What could he laugh at?
46909What do we know?"
46909What do you intend to do next?
46909What do you intend to do this evening?
46909What do you think of_ Salammbô_?
46909What does the form of belief matter?
46909What good is there in discussing, replying to, and angering him?
46909What good will it do?
46909What has become of the good Leconte,--is he progressing with his Celtic poem?
46909What has he out of the ordinary?
46909What have we?
46909What hurricane has hurled us into this abyss?
46909What is your price?
46909What must I do?
46909What news of your wife?
46909What shall you do now?
46909What tempest soon shall bear us away towards the forgotten planets whence we came?
46909What was that?
46909What was the gentleman"who has special charge of the fine arts"afraid of?
46909What was to be done?
46909What were they to do?
46909What would he not do to raise my spirits when I was sad or ill?
46909What''s this here?"
46909What, then, was the Emperor occupying his time with?
46909When shall I be able to do so?
46909When shall we meet again?
46909When wilt Thou cease creating?
46909When, Lord, shall thy great trumpet sound?
46909Whence come the black moods that sometimes sweep over us?
46909Whence comes this seduction of the past?
46909Where are there any prostitutes like Fantine, convicts like Valjean, and politicians like the stupid donkeys of the A, B, C?
46909Where are we?
46909Where did it come from?
46909Where has the rage for philosophic prose conducted him?
46909Where is his rival to be found?
46909Where is the bishop who asks a benediction from a convention?
46909Where is the factory that turns away a girl because she has a child?
46909Where now was the ardent desire of knowing quickly the thought that springs from the brain of a friend?
46909Where shall we see each other?
46909Where shall you be at five minutes before midnight?
46909Where were those beautiful years of youth?
46909Where will they lead us?
46909Where will you stop?
46909Where would you find readers?
46909Where, then, is the inspiration?"
46909Wherefore a public administration?
46909Who asked you to defend them?
46909Who is there that has not made a parody on the mediocre?
46909Who speaks in rhymes?
46909Why are we here?
46909Why can you not understand that it would be very painful to me to go to Mantes?
46909Why do you persist in irritating my nerves by saying that a field of cabbages is more beautiful than a desert?
46909Why have you made me fall in love with the mistresses of Louis XV.?
46909Why have you not sent me any news of yourself, you rascal?
46909Why is she at Versailles?
46909Why is this so?
46909Why not confess that we desire none at all?
46909Why seek you me in the dust?"
46909Why was I afraid that it would not be long?
46909Why?
46909Will Madame your mother devote herself always to the occupations of Thalia?
46909Will all the subscribers accept the substitution?"
46909Will that be convenient and agreeable?
46909Will you be kind enough to inform yourself discreetly of the state of the case when you are in Paris?
46909Will you believe me when I tell you that the ignoble realism you find in my story, the reproduction of which disgusts you, revolts me quite as much?
46909With what shall we sustain ourselves, then, if pride fails us, and what man can feel more of that for his mother than yourself?
46909Would you believe that even while following his coffin, I realised keenly the grotesqueness of the ceremony?
46909You practical?
46909You try to be polite to a scamp like that?
46909Yours?"
46909[ A] Who is this Mrs. Opie?
46909_ What is the condition of their public libraries?_"And when I demolished his illusions, he was desolate.
46909and St. Bartholomew?
46909and the massacres of the Albigenses?
46909and the revocation of the Edict of Nantes?"
46909and where have you found out these nice things?"
46909do not the wheels smoke yet?
46909of rhetoric?"
46909shall I sleep in my turn?
46909the champagne?
46909two thousand?"
46909where was the faith in each other?
48363''The three men''were the three Rutherford lads-- aren''t they tall creatures?
48363Age and muscle, or beauty and babyhood?
48363Ah, Roberta dear, how are you to- day?
48363Already?
48363And earn but six dollars a week, out of which you would have to pay your board? 48363 And if I am, what then?"
48363And if I do n''t do this?
48363And in the meantime?
48363And is n''t it great that your father has no more heart attacks?
48363And little Polly Flinders?
48363And so Sylvester is in danger?
48363And throw up the invention?
48363And what is Oswyth''s opinion?
48363And what kind of stories am I to tell, Frances? 48363 And would you have defrauded me?"
48363And you do n''t think that disgraceful, as you are situated?
48363Anything wrong?
48363Are n''t we perfect geese about our little grey house? 48363 Are n''t you forgetting that there are more necessary things than chair- covers?"
48363Are n''t you forgetting the state of your finances, and that you ca n''t afford the least extravagance? 48363 Are they spoiled?"
48363Boys, wo n''t you stand by me?
48363Bread? 48363 But I''m ravenous, dear folkses-- can''t you feed a poor wanderer, while she tells her story?"
48363But if I am a help to you, I wonder if I can get you to do something for me?
48363Can you hold him, Rob? 48363 Can you really paint, Bart?
48363Did the bugs and dry- rot attack only our potatoes?
48363Did you ever know anything so splendumphant?
48363Did you have a good time, children?
48363Do I smell coffee?
48363Do I? 48363 Do n''t you remember how you used to amuse all the rest of us children telling stories by the yard?
48363Do n''t you see how I must ache to get back? 48363 Do n''t you think there has to be that difference, Bruce?"
48363Do you expect to be a painter, Bart?
48363Do you feel ill, Sylvester dear?
48363Do you mean to say you are n''t dressed? 48363 Do you not remember that Patergrey said:''It must not be less than fifty thousand dollars to be accepted?''
48363Do you realize that it is now half past one, and that the Baldwins arrive at four? 48363 Do you remember how, when we reckon our resources, we put down two columns, one certainties, the other possibilities?
48363Do you want me now?
48363Does Bartlemy paint?
48363For pity''s sake, Mary,she cried,"has something else bad happened to you?
48363Goodness, Wythie, what is it now?
48363Had to practise the most fractional fractions ever since I was born-- why should n''t I be? 48363 Help walk northward through the prairie, help find the house, or help cut the grass, Rob?"
48363Honestly?
48363How are you, Grey ladies?
48363How can I ever thank you?
48363How can I help but try it, when it is all done for me? 48363 How can you understand that, Roberta?"
48363How did you get it this time?
48363How much did he offer? 48363 How were you taken?"
48363How''s the poor mite?
48363I think she''s well now-- don''t you, Mardy? 48363 I think you need n''t be alarmed, Roberta-- you said Roberta, did n''t you?
48363I wonder if you would mind-- Aunt Azraella, might I have them?
48363I wonder what would become of poor Elvira if Mrs. Winslow had n''t the little grey house as a safety- valve?
48363If I''m a tonic, Wythie must be cold cream, or something healing, and Prue-- what is Prudy? 48363 If she disapproved of our extravagance in having a kitten, what will she say to a child in the house?"
48363If you could be but one, which would you rather be, poor or genteel, Rob?
48363If you cut a few feet it would be the most that you could do, and what difference would it make out of so much?
48363Is it anything we could help?
48363Is it death, Mardy?
48363Is it so bad?
48363Is it?
48363Is n''t it queer how almost all American little boys are ashamed to do nice things? 48363 Is there any new reason for haste, any fresh pressure?"
48363Is there danger?
48363Is there really coal there?
48363Is this going to be a comic- opera, and are we taking part as stage peasants, or really working?
48363It''s all right now, is n''t it, Patergrey?
48363It''s more than wonderful, Mary,she said,"but who in the world could have foreseen it?
48363It''s signed William Armstrong; is that any of the gentlemen you saw, Rob?
48363Just four couples-- papa, will you dance?
48363Mad? 48363 Meaning me, or the goat?"
48363Mr. Baldwin''s office?
48363My Rob, my dear Rob, my brave, reliable daughter,said Mrs. Grey, fondly,"what can I say to you?
48363My portrait?
48363No, no-- oh, no,cried Wythie, hastily, while Rob said:"Do n''t you see what it is?
48363Not a bad little girl, is she?
48363Not another night, dear little Robin?
48363Not very hard to see through, the Lady Grey, is she?
48363Now, look here, Sylvester Grey, is there any use in my giving you orders, or are you going to do precisely as you please anyway?
48363Oh, Aunt Azraella, what do you think we are going to do? 48363 Oh, Rob, Rob, and if everything goes wrong?"
48363Oh, Rob, dear Rob,cried Prue, hysterically,"you mean well, but how can you be so obstinate?
48363Oh, Rob; how can you?
48363Oh, ca n''t you go on?
48363Oh, how do you feel, Patergrey?
48363Please tell me how to go to Broadway?
48363Poetry reminds me of the story- telling; are you going to keep it up another winter, Rob? 48363 Prue-- what?"
48363Read?
48363Rob, have you good news?
48363Rob, my dear, are you quite crazy?
48363See it over the telephone?
48363Shall I wear my bridle, Mardy?
48363So tired of us?
48363Suppose we take turns in dressing, and Rob and Prue go first?
48363Sylvester Grey, my old college mate? 48363 The machine?"
48363The offer? 48363 Then Roberta is the only one that stands out against good luck?"
48363Then would it disappoint you to lend me rather more than half of your wealth, to launch the bricquette machine? 48363 There are thirty- six yards here, fifty- four inches wide; do you think you need so much?
48363There''s no danger in our being as glad as we please, is there? 48363 This is----?"
48363Very likely,said Rob,"but what are we going to do now, this minute?"
48363Want to try, Wythie, or shall I?
48363Want to? 48363 We do n''t believe that only bad things happen outside of books, do we, Rob?"
48363We''re not afraid, are we, Rob, my son? 48363 Well, what have you to propose to me, Francie, a secretaryship to the President, or to write the best- selling book of the year?"
48363What are you up to, now, Sylvester man?
48363What did papa say, Polly?
48363What do you know about business, child?
48363What do you propose doing, then?
48363What form is it going to take, Rob?
48363What has happened, my dear?
48363What has happened?
48363What in all the wide world have you there, Wythie?
48363What is he?
48363What is it all about, Rob?
48363What is it, dear? 48363 What luck?"
48363What shall I do to earn money? 48363 What shall I do?
48363What shall we do to celebrate?
48363What shall we have for dinner that day? 48363 What were you doing, Prudence?"
48363What will be all right? 48363 What''s in the basket, papa?"
48363What''s that? 48363 What''s the use, Wythie?
48363Where did you get the little angel, Rob?
48363Where does your moral felon hurt you?
48363Where have you been''one morning, oh, so early, my beloved, my beloved?''
48363Where have you been? 48363 Where in the world should I get one, Wythie?"
48363Where shall we begin?
48363Where were you, Aunt Azraella? 48363 Where?
48363Which is the nicest?
48363Who''s first?
48363Who, may I ask, is the village chestnut?
48363Whose patent are we celebrating, I''d like to know? 48363 Why did n''t you tell us?"
48363Why do n''t we come here oftener?
48363Why do n''t you wish we could afford to hire a man to keep the place decent, like other people, while you''re wishing?
48363Why, no; are we?
48363Why, that''s true, Wythie; they wo n''t have to ask her, will they?
48363Will I? 48363 Will Sylvester join us?"
48363Will it be much, Sylvester?
48363Will it take long to place the bricquette machine when it is done?
48363Will you let me try a portrait of you, or wo n''t you, Prue?
48363Will you, or will you not, listen to reason and be guided by someone with judgment? 48363 Will you, say toward spring?"
48363Wo n''t you come in and rest?
48363Would Mr. Flinders cut it?
48363Would n''t I rather be Roberta Grey, your daughter, than the richest girl in the world with another father? 48363 You do n''t mean to say, Rob,"she exclaimed,"that you let those children swarm all over you?
48363You do n''t object, Lady Grey?
48363You do n''t suppose I''ll yield without striking a blow?
48363You must give it to her yourself; what have I to do with it?
48363You wo n''t write, Mary?
48363Your worthless father is not quite useless, is he? 48363 *****Oh, you''re up, are you, Rob?"
48363An''what''d your folks say?"
48363And do you realize how children love to be with you?
48363And the oldest Rutherford boy-- he looked nearly eighteen-- added:"Are you farming?"
48363And will you do my portrait?"
48363And wo n''t you get your hat and coat and go with me to invite them, Patergrey?
48363And you find out what can be done with the invention, you, a young, inexperienced girl?
48363And, Bart, would you mind very, very much if you were asked most politely to go and fetch Frances?"
48363Any kind that keeps them quiet?
48363Are n''t you forgetting something besides the heat, Mary?"
48363Are your sisters pretty, too?"
48363Baldwin?"
48363Been working hard, thinking hard?"
48363But I said:''O my Sweet, it will give you small feet, And wo n''t you consider the price?
48363CHAPTER TWO ITS NEIGHBORS"Wo n''t you come and see the new Rutherford boys, Mardy?
48363Can it do it, really, Patergrey?"
48363Can you carry them?"
48363Can you do this?"
48363Can you tell me?"
48363Cat days are nicer than dog days, are n''t they, Kiku- san?
48363Dearest children, you are so frightened, are n''t you?
48363Did n''t we look pretty, aunt?
48363Did you say that, Wythie?
48363Did you see what a pleasant one it was?"
48363Do n''t you know it costs something to feed animals?
48363Do you ever wonder if a lifelong affection, of a stronger sort, may grow out of this beautiful triple friendship?"
48363Do you know what it is?"
48363Do you know what that means-- to be a coal of fire?"
48363Do you suppose, can it be, girls-- and boys-- that this is n''t too good to be true?"
48363Do you think I can go home to- morrow?"
48363Do you think he knows your father has gone, this Marston of yours?"
48363Does she shut her eyes?"
48363Flinders?"
48363For long?"
48363From the golden veil in which this enveloped her she spoke:"Wants me for a servant to help Elvira?
48363Go back to Fayre to- night, or will you tell me which hotel to go to-- am I needed here longer?"
48363Have you any special use for the first hundred and twenty- five dollars from your story- telling?"
48363Have you told Mardy?"
48363He was right, but I fear you need it because Sylvester can counsel you no longer-- is this so?"
48363He''s got plenty money an''no one but us, an''if Maimie dies, what''s the use of it all?
48363How could we part with them?"
48363How much did you pay a yard for that material?"
48363I suppose we must n''t try to keep you a moment longer than can be helped, Bobs bahadur?"
48363I wonder how many times a day we do this?
48363I wonder if Mrs. Bonell would mind?
48363If he says take the four thousand, I am satisfied, but if he says not to, do n''t you see how well it will be that I went?
48363If we had anyone else to do it, we would let them, of course, but who is there?
48363Is he likely to go off again?"
48363Is my hair too crazy, and have I grass stains on my nose, Wythie?"
48363Is n''t it perfectly blessed?"
48363Is n''t that a comfort, after so long?
48363Is n''t the trailing arbutus the Mayflower?"
48363Is n''t truth more chestnutty than fiction?"
48363It ca n''t make much difference with the machine, and is n''t it worth three days''delay to relieve Mardy darling''s mind?
48363It is because your name is Grey, is n''t it?"
48363It''s sure and sure that the invention will go, is n''t it?
48363Mad?"
48363May n''t I ask the boys and Frances down to- night to rejoice with us, Mardy?
48363Mrs. Winslow held up her hands in horror, and Mrs. Grey said, reproachfully:"Rob, how can you?"
48363My father-- I am Sylvester Grey''s daughter; do you remember him?"
48363Now, Mary, how can you be so indulgent to these girls?
48363Now, what is there that sort of a young person could do to make her fortune and her family''s?"
48363Oh, Mardy and other girls, do n''t you hope it will be all right?"
48363Oh, for the land sakes, why do we talk about it as though she were a person to be listened to?
48363Oh, why are n''t all relations like you?"
48363Oswyth, will you come?"
48363Over and over, with growing desperation, she said to herself:"I must earn money, I_ must_ earn money, but how?"
48363Ready, Rob?"
48363Rob, my son, can I borrow you after this repast is over?
48363She''s got go and pluck, and did you ever see such a face for crinkling up?
48363Suppose you fail, and we lose not only the offer, but the expenses of your journey and your stay in the city?"
48363That man settled it, did n''t he?"
48363The singing grew louder, clearer, and at last developed into nothing more classic than the darky song,"Wo n''t you come home, Bill Bailey?"
48363There ye''ll take a downtown Broadway car-- see?
48363They ought to be done soon, I should think: how long does it take to put on a mortgage?"
48363Very valuable, is it?
48363Want a cayb, miss?"
48363We are fortunate to get money when we need it so sorely, and we shall pay off that mortgage in a short time; is n''t that true, Rob, my son?"
48363We know what treasures there are in the chests and horse- hair trunks up there, do n''t we, girls?"
48363What I want is to ask you how much that invention is really worth?
48363What am I going to tell them?"
48363What are you going to do with the money, Mary?
48363What did Mardy say?"
48363What do you mean?
48363What do you play all day-- do you play you''re a little turtle and this is your shell?"
48363What has she to do with it, anyway?
48363What on earth could you do with them?
48363What part of Broadway do ye be wantin''?"
48363What was Aunt Azraella going to do with those old curtains?
48363What''s that?"
48363What''s wrong with your tempers?
48363Where are you taking us?"
48363Where''s your mother?
48363Why did n''t you come in?
48363Why did you go for to do it?
48363Why do you say that to me?"
48363Will I not?"
48363Will Mr. Flinders let her go?"
48363Will you come often, and help us have good times?"
48363Will you do that?"
48363Will you help, Wythie and Prue?"
48363Will you see when you go up?"
48363Will you try it, Rob?"
48363Ye do n''t know N''Yawk?"
48363Yes, they asked me-- why?"
48363You accept that offer on the spot,_ on the spot_, do you hear?
48363You ca n''t mean to get your mother to dye them for curtains for your house?
48363You did n''t feel like playing house when I saw you after dinner, did you?"
48363You have come to me because your father told you that if you needed counsel, his old chum would gladly give it you?
48363You speak as though you were alone; are you boys all there are in the family?"
48363You wo n''t mind if you have to stay here alone with Hortense, do you?
48363You, Rob, alone?
48363_ Still_ happy?
48363cried three rapturous girl voices, and Wythie added:"It is n''t her lovely, white little Billee?"
48363demanded Bartlemy, and added, shaking his fist at the goat:"You old sign of the zodiac, I was n''t interfering with you, was I?"
54451And do you ever go without him?
54451And for no longer? 54451 And has it kissed you back, my dear?"
54451And so, my dear Mrs. Lawrence, you have not been five miles from L----, since my journey to Boston last August?
54451And what is the name of this beautiful stream, that flows between us, and the highlands?
54451But the children?
54451But what can we do for them, my dear husband? 54451 Did you ever hear of any body that did not?"
54451Do they, Sir Fop?
54451I know it, Horace, yet how can I help it? 54451 Love those that love you"--is not that the rule?
54451My dear Horace,said the greatly agitated Mrs. Lawrence,"what will Alpheus and Anna do?--what_ can_ they do?"
54451Nurse Bevey has promised to come and take care of them during our absence?
54451O, my dear friend, how can I ever be sufficiently grateful for your kindness? 54451 On what account?"
54451Undoubtedly you can; but why not pay some attention to fashion and elegance, both about your house and dress? 54451 Whence is it that we so frequently see this pernicious physical treatment, and its natural fruits?
54451Why will you thus grieve, my dear Ellen?
54451Will you take the trouble, my dear friend,said Mr. North,"to look in occasionally upon nurse, and see that she neglects not her duty?"
54451''"Is this possible?
54451( A sort of man- woman,) and how did she look?
544511834. Who reads an American book?
54451And can it be?
54451And has not his_ own_ experience taught him the advantage which a questionable title, or the folly of a ruler may give his subjects?
54451And if I grant, also, that the slave is happier than the free laborer, does it follow that his master may lawfully hold him as such?
54451And if slavery, then, was unlawful in its origin, must it not be so now, and continue to be so forever?
54451And is there a feeling more desolate still?
54451And is there aught beneath the sun Can wean my constant heart from thee, Thou lovely and beloved one?
54451And must not that, then, which is against this law in one age, be equally against it in another, and in every succeeding age, to the end of time?
54451And was not this much?
54451And what are the great, the ultimate purposes to be achieved after reaching these higher schools-- the colleges and universities of the land?
54451And what matters it under what part of that vast tablet, every where emblazoned with his glory, his bones repose?
54451And what of that?
54451And, by the way, do you know that I go to Boston, with Alpheus, in a fortnight?
54451Anne, my foolish fancy''s o''er, And I can not love you more-- Nay, sweet girl, why knit your brow?
54451But can we, then, plead a defect of theirs which is the consequence of our own act, to justify that act, in this way?
54451But can_ any_ principles, I ask, do this?
54451But how shall I make known the persons of whom I wish to speak?
54451But say that it is not so; and grant, if you please, for the sake of argument, that it is all"a specious fallacy"indeed; what then?
54451But the little boy, my dear Anna!--Are you not anxious to see him?"
54451But what is the fact?
54451But what need had Hercules of Homer?
54451But who compose this working class?
54451But who reads it?
54451But why does it not even settle the question?
54451But"who ever thought of blaming La Fayette?"
54451By what other term can we characterize the usual school appliances, to the chief of which I beg leave to invite your special attention?
54451Can not something like this be done in Virginia?
54451Could the spirit which tumbled his son from the throne, have prepared itself for explosion during her vigilant and energetic reign?
54451D''ye take me for a fool?
54451Did she talk like a book?
54451Did you not expect it?"
54451Do they not know that the odious tyranny, the folly, the weakness, and the cowardice of John gave birth to_ magna charta_?
54451Do we ask why, in this temper, they gained so little from William?
54451Do you know that for a month past, I have been dreading the approach of this week?"
54451Do you not carry your scrupulosity too far?"
54451Does he believe that the revolution so"cheering and refreshing"to his spirit, would have taken place, had Henri IV occupied the throne of Louis XVI?
54451Does he mean, at page six, to intimate that the"boldness of truth"was ONLY"_ not_ WHOLLY_ uncongenial_"to the character of La Fayette?
54451Does he see no beauty, no merit, no poetry, in the"Song of the Seasons?"
54451Does he think the reform now going on in England would have commenced under Elizabeth or her grandfather Henry VII?
54451Does it follow that slavery_ as it exists in our state_, was just and lawful_ in its origin_?
54451Does the question of right depend simply, or at all, upon the degree of happiness which the laborer enjoys?
54451For want of gratitude?
54451For want of love?
54451Forget?
54451Forget?
54451Had not this been extorted from him, could it have been wrung from the stern grasp of the first or third Edward?
54451Has it one single attribute of true poetry?
54451Have these things been lost on Mr. Adams himself?
54451How many of those who witnessed it, went home with hearts oppressed by a consciousness of something wrong?
54451How should he?
54451I wonder what the_ wind_ did in the meantime?
54451If any doubt it, let them inquire as impartially as they can, what manner of men those are in general who constitute the educated class?
54451Is any monument to Washington so appropriate as that reared by his genius, his toils and his virtues,--HIS COUNTRY?
54451Is it for want of reverence for his memory?
54451Is it less interesting because the prompting impulse of the hero is virtuous, not criminal?
54451Is it true?
54451Is moral and religious acquirement ever made a pre- requisite?
54451Is moral and religious conduct always rendered indispensable?
54451Is not such silence the most expressive praise; the silence imposed by a common sentiment, which all are conscious is felt by all?
54451Is not the law of nature, like its author, immutable, and eternal?
54451Is not the_ capitol itself_ too small?
54451Is not the_ thing itself_ worthier than the symbol?
54451Is not this at once evading and altering, as it were, the counsel of the Creator of all?
54451Is the principle of both laws the same, or entirely different?
54451Is there any thing wonderful in that?
54451Is''nt this horrible?
54451Know what?
54451Lawrence?"
54451May I never forget the deep debt of gratitude I owe to my Father in heaven?"
54451More dreary and heart- breaking even than this?
54451North?"
54451Now this seems to me to be pretty good logic; and how then does the Annotator answer it?
54451Now this, too, I have heretofore taken for very sound logic; and why is it not perfectly so?
54451Or what right can your assignee have to hold the prisoner under your assignment, one moment after your right itself has run out?
54451Or, can the mere lapse of time make it lawful?
54451Pardon me,"said Mrs. North,"but can domestic concerns_ ever_ be interesting?"
54451Perhaps you''d laugh at me?
54451Say, wouldst thou build a lasting seat, Secure from Fortune''s rage; A quiet and a safe retreat, To rest thy weary age?
54451Says Hal,"This Miss A----''s a charming young_ belle_, But has she a_ beau_, my dear Will, can you tell?"
54451Speak out!--but what?
54451Stuart once asked a painter, who had met with a painter''s difficulties,"how he got on in the world?"
54451That mans his breast in danger''s fearful path?
54451That nerves his arm to grasp the gory steel, Despising toil and hardship, wounds and death?
54451The spirit of the departed is in_ high communion_[ does this mean_ high mass_?]
54451Was it not because our local situation removed us far from war, and the entanglements of foreign politics?
54451Was she grave as a judge?
54451We must afford them all the assistance and consolation in our power?"
54451What are they?
54451What can be expected from eulogy in such a case?
54451What could come of all this; what did come of it, but failure?
54451What could the breath of man add to his glory?
54451What do you think of her being passed fifty, and yet not appearing as old as twenty- five?
54451What intelligent Virginian is there who does not feel inclined to co- operate in the attainment of so much good?
54451What is the fair inference from such facts?
54451What is the matter?"
54451What is the thought that prompts his studious zeal?
54451What is to become of them?
54451What means the white rose in my hair?
54451What more do we?
54451What need has La Fayette that one should tell his fellow of him?
54451What security that they will be content with these?
54451What then?
54451When will the great of Virginia deign this magnanimous descent?
54451Where would you place the monument?
54451Who feels it necessary to answer it?
54451Who feels it necessary to utter his praise, even in this simple question?
54451Who has written more quaintly and obscurely than Ben Johnson or Cowley; or to come nearer to our own time, than Wordsworth or Coleridge?
54451Whom do we know like old Ormond and his wife?
54451Whom like his noble son and his charming countess?
54451Whom or what does man rebuke?
54451Why did our fathers hope that the experiment of free government might succeed with us, though it had failed every where else?
54451Why do we see so many over- fed, gormandizing, ill- humored, selfish and self- willed children?
54451Why is none erected?
54451Why proclaim to the world what all the world already knows?
54451Why tell posterity what posterity can never forget, until man has lost the records of the history of man?
54451Why then do we so rarely meet with any narrative of facts which engages our feelings so deeply as a well wrought fiction?
54451Why then should we doubt their success among ourselves?
54451Why, my friends, why let me most earnestly demand of you, should not we Virginians,"go and do likewise?"
54451Will it be,"_ live and let live_,"or"_ live for self alone_?"
54451Will this practice be guided by the social or the selfish principle?
54451With tremulous lips, Mrs. North returned the kiss, and emphatically whispered--"O dear friend, may I never forget the impressions of this hour?
54451Would the Annotator think it exactly right to have such a principle carried home to himself?
54451Yet how, let me ask, are these momentous duties generally fulfilled, even by the best scholars, unless they are also moral and religious men?
54451You will receive them here when they arrive?
54451You''re a foe to all slavery, Harriet, you say; Then why do you talk in so charming a way?
54451You''re vowed to CHLORIS-- a''nt it true?
54451_ In_ the capitol?
54451because our monarch is elective, not hereditary; a man and not a child?
54451mother, whither do they lead This wretched form, this drooping frame?
54451replied Ormond,"what could your lordship dream of me?"
54451where?"
54451why not?
54451|Swear to love those that love you!--a''nt it just?
6361Ca n''t I hold it?
6361Could I please the patient and the friends?
6361Encouraged or hopeless?
6361Happy or sad?
6361How would I feel when I was leaving?
6361Is it really mine?
6361Oh, have we got a new baby? 6361 She wears heavy shoes,"or"She talks too much,"or"She is pretty and spends too much time over her front hair"--but why go on?
6361Would I do everything right?
6361Would the doctor be satisfied with my efforts?
6361A coal miner has, I suppose, a hard life, yet no one calls it a noble one; why?
6361A real baby?
6361A strange house looks so forbidding,"would this one ever look friendly?"
6361Ca n''t I use it right now?"
6361Can she tell what would interest the boys, or what a man would like to listen to?
6361Did Florence Nightingale have all the comforts of life when she did her great work?
6361Did any one ever do a grand work and have an easy time while doing it?
6361Did she suppose she was made of wrought iron and sole leather?"
6361Do they complain that they are kept from the presence of"Society?"
6361Do they not know when they enter the work that it is hard, do they not hear on every side that it is exacting and confining?
6361Do we not know what did it?
6361Do we want gratitude and appreciation?
6361Do you feel that your patient is cross or unreasonable?
6361Do_ we_ wonder, we who are nurses?
6361Does coffee keep her awake?
6361Does she hate the sight of gruel, or beef- tea?
6361Does she know humorous books, interesting histories, or biographies?
6361Does she know what books to suggest for the children?
6361Does she like much sugar in her drinks?
6361HOW SHALL A NURSE OCCUPY HER DAYS OF WAITING?
6361Has she a good list of books which most women would enjoy?
6361How did the French reward Joan of Arc?
6361If she likes milk, will she insist upon tea?
6361If they are not satisfied with the profession they have chosen, why do they not make a change and enter some other?
6361Is it complaints from the ministers that they are not appreciated, or that their life wears on their nerves?
6361Is it not foolish?
6361Is it not wrong for any sensible woman to talk thus?
6361Is it ours?
6361May it not be that the change in occupation has something to do with this unwillingness to remain with a patient when he is convalescing?
6361Not so, and why?
6361Suppose that this baby is the third or fourth, the mother knows what to do for the new little one, but how about the others?
6361They knew it perfectly well before they began, why then do they complain?
6361VII WHY DO NURSES COMPLAIN?
6361WHY DO NURSES COMPLAIN?
6361Was it not by her indomitable perseverance, her great patience, and her enthusiasm for others that she won such an honored place for herself?
6361What do we read in the medical journals?
6361What is the prevailing theme of the religious newspapers?
6361What is the soldier''s favorite tale?
6361What more do we want?
6361When you are asked a thousand questions as to,"Why does n''t the doctor do this, or why does he do that?"
6361Where did it come from?"
6361Where did you get it?
6361Where did you get it?"
6361Where is the heroism?
6361Why is it noble?
6361Why not say candidly,"I can not have such enthusiasm for my fellow- men that I can forget myself,"and then do something that is easier?
6361Would he ever speak of such things, except to show that a man can for a noble aim accept inconvenience, and laugh over it?
6361X HOW SHALL A NURSE OCCUPY HER DAYS OF WAITING?
6361You will say, perhaps:"Have I had all this training, and must I yet be told how to treat a patient?"
59383Ah Kate,said Tony,"you know how long and how ardently I have loved you; may I not, one day, drop that epithet of Cousin?"
59383But why not purchase the sheepskin, now that you_ have_ added the moments together?
59383Cousin Kate,said Tony,"Did you ever feel as if you would choke when you attempted to speak?"
59383Did Miss---- accompany her, or did she remain?
59383Did you hear Mr. Wilberforce was courting?
59383How_ can_ you?--how--_can_--you?
59383In the name of common sense,said the old lady,"good people what do you mean?"
59383My dear son,said she,"what in the world has got into you?
59383Tell us if he did get in, and how he contrived to?
59383What has been the course of your moral and religious instruction? 59383 What is it child?"
59383_ Must we sacrifice home and comfort, and real enjoyment, in order to_ sacrifice_ also to this heathen block[4] which sits upon the top of the dome? 59383 And does it not class emulations withidolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings,"& c.?
59383And have we not reason to believe that here as in other cases, custom renders one indifferent to that which at first would make him miserable?
59383And is it for this, I exclaimed within myself, that hundreds and thousands toil up craggy precipices and swelter under August suns?
59383Are the poor girls to blame for all this?
59383Are they favorable or not to domestic happiness?
59383Are they to be supposed to have but_ one_ mind among them, as the Sirens had but one tooth?
59383Besides-- has he not had his full share of the blessings of mortality?
59383But how stands the fact?
59383But when she ceas''d, with serious air The other made reply,"Shall he not also be my care?
59383Can it not sooth the heart to rest As it hath done before?
59383Canst thou forget, amidst the gay and heartless, One far away whom thou hast vowed to love?
59383Did_ each_ beauty but tarry the while We met-- love, by moonlight alone?
59383Do you mean to ruin yourself, Tim?"
59383Do you take a gentleman of my size and respectability into a room not larger than a closet?
59383Does any one doubt this fact?
59383Does she need_ but one_ firm principle of action?
59383Dost thou forget, or do thy blue eyes brighten Only with thoughts of his return to thee?
59383Dost thou the pains of absence seek to lighten, In scenes like this of mirth and revelry?
59383Doth not the virtuous soul still find in both a friend?"
59383Enable whom?
59383Feeling so doubly lone, Tim would again seek a partner to sympathize in his sorrows, and to whom could he go?
59383Has he the tender sensibility, the warm hearted sympathy that is ever alive in a female''s bosom?
59383Has it been both by precept and example, or by the first only; and what rank have your teachers assigned to such studies, in the scale of importance?"
59383Has the grim savage rushed again from the distant wilderness?
59383How many times a week or month have you received lessons on them?
59383I met thee by moonlight alone, My heart trusting wholly to thee: Was it prudent?
59383I replied fiercely,"do you take me for a strolling mendicant?
59383If nothing has been read specially on these all- important topics, what has been the manner in which they have been recommended to your attention?
59383In displaying anxiety for the breath of which he was at present so willing to get rid, might I not lay myself open to the exactions of his avarice?
59383May not I his pleasures share?
59383Might not this be the case with Mr. Windenough?
59383Need Memory e''er with Hope contend?
59383No fire either to warm my limbs in the chilly night air of these mountains?
59383Say, fellow citizens, what dreadful thought now swells your heaving bosoms?
59383She asked the carpenter what he was about?
59383She asked the painter what he meant by all this preparation?
59383She did''nt ask Tim, who he was to marry?
59383She inquired of the bricklayer what he was doing?
59383Some readers will say,"what difference would it make if aunt Tabby was present?"
59383The Moon-- were her silver rays gone?
59383Tim asked his mother if she was dissatisfied with the match?
59383Tim indeed could cry out in the agony of woe,"Have I not had my brain sear''d, heart riven, Hopes sapp''d, name blighted, life''s life lied away?"
59383Walking directly up to them, he calmly asked, which of them had thus addressed him?
59383We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons?
59383We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons?
59383What books have you read, or have been read to you on these subjects?
59383What do you know of the principles of Ethics and Christianity?
59383What is man worth in sorrow?
59383What is the aptitude of the means to the great purposes which parents should aim to accomplish?
59383What occasion could that give for philosophy?
59383What she was like?
59383What was I to do?
59383What was I to do?
59383What, but the most inordinate selfishness and vanity can be the fruit of such training?
59383Where is the balm to Israel blest, That Gilead gave of yore?
59383Where the young lady lived?
59383Whether she had a fortune or not?
59383Who do you think could have thus intruded and taken such a liberty, other than cousin Tony?
59383Who indeed would think of compassionating a shadow?
59383Why then, may it not be equally true in relation to the mind?
59383Why?
59383Will not all such things rather be insupportably irksome, if not actually disgusting?
59383_ Is it worth eight dollars per week to partake of this"villainous compound?
59383again at your pen Leontine?"
59383did the sky cease to smile?
59383said one;"Did you know Miss Catherine was engaged?"
59383tell me why?
59383to man-- cold calculating man?
59383what a morning?
45462''Are the Germans here?'' 45462 ''So, my fine fellow,''he said to me,''after saving my daughter''s life, you want to train my dogs so that they may get crippled, eh?''
45462''What do you want me to do?'' 45462 A month or two?"
45462Afraid?
45462And a splinter hit you?
45462And air?
45462And all confident of breaking through?
45462And the Germans?
45462And the Red Cross dogs?
45462And the boy?
45462And the boy?
45462And the girl?
45462And the map?
45462And the message dogs, how do you work them?
45462And the other armies, what gun have they got?
45462And the tanks do n''t mind it?
45462And then?
45462And this war?
45462And was our Spanish- American War a war of aggression?
45462And were you the only one hurt?
45462And what did you say, Aunt Abigail?
45462And where?
45462And you-- where do you go?
45462And you?
45462And your ambitions to become an artist?
45462Are there such heavy guns?
45462Are they near here?
45462Are they strongly armed?
45462Are they very different?
45462Are those German guns?
45462Are we going to stay here and be killed?
45462Are you English?
45462Aunt,said Horace,"suppose the Germans should take Beaufays?"
45462But could n''t Von Kluck surround Paris, then?
45462But did that poison gas do the Germans any good?
45462But do n''t we use it, too?
45462But how can they find that out?
45462But how?
45462But if they search you?
45462But if we are defending ourselves and there is such need for haste,said Deschamps,"why do I have to enlist as a soldier at all?
45462But is it fatal?
45462But is n''t a 6-inch a fairly big gun?
45462But what shall we be able to do, sir?
45462But what''s this other army in between?
45462But where is the schoolmaster who is teaching you now?
45462But why are trenches so twisty?
45462But why did n''t you ever write to me?
45462But why did you go to all this trouble to get here?
45462But why just exactly there,asked Horace,"if the position is so strong?"
45462But will Liége fall?
45462By Mother Canterre''s bakery?
45462Ca n''t I go at least as far as Embourg?
45462Ca n''t the Germans march either to the north or south of Liége and avoid the forts altogether?
45462Ca n''t we go with you part of the way, sir?
45462Ca n''t you keep it quiet?
45462Can we be of any service, Madame?
45462Can we do it?
45462Could n''t I stay and help to take care of Deschamps, sir?
45462Could you catch what they said?
45462Credentials?
45462Dear lad,she said, at once,"it is a hard thing for you to do, is it not?
45462Did he go?
45462Did it achieve any military gain?
45462Did you find out how it is that the masks really prevent poisoning?
45462Did you say that the schoolmaster had gone to the war?
45462Did you say that you were on your way to Liége?
45462Did you see any of the fighting?
45462Did you think that I would fail you,she said,"or try to hold you back?"
45462Do any of the men know about it?
45462Do n''t they use big shells, except on forts?
45462Do you dare ask it,he replied,"knowing that any one who fails or breaks his trust will be a traitor?"
45462Do you need it now?
45462Does Madame Maubin know as yet that you''re going, sir?
45462Does he bark when he hears something?
45462For the front, sir?
45462Fort Embourg?
45462Had n''t we better be going on?
45462Has any one gone that way?
45462Has the spring tightened at last?
45462Have any Germans passed here?
45462Have we deserved that you should distrust us, sir?
45462Have you any idea of what numbers we will have to face?
45462Have you any late news?
45462Have you ever seen a large shell burst?
45462Have you forgotten, my boy,the hunchback answered,"that, when I was a small urchin, I traveled with the circus?
45462Have you got your shoes on?
45462He is crippled?
45462Hit, sir?
45462How can Germany invade us, sir?
45462How could I be killed now?
45462How did you find out about it?
45462How do we know what they call them?
45462How long do you think the war will last?
45462How many men does that give us here at Liége?
45462How many shells have fallen in Embourg Village? 45462 How much longer do you expect to stay here?"
45462How on earth can it do that?
45462How?
45462How?
45462I had forgotten,she said,"it is a trust, yes?
45462I saw it? 45462 I wonder if I can trust you?"
45462I wonder if I can trust you?
45462If you could come with me to tell his folks?
45462In detail?
45462In your trust? 45462 Is Joffre doing that so as to weaken the German opposition to our rebound?"
45462Is he killed?
45462Is it for commerce or for territory?
45462Is it my boy?
45462Is it the end?
45462Is it the left wing?
45462Is it? 45462 Is it?"
45462Is n''t a howitzer a gun? 45462 Is n''t there a footpath, somewhere?
45462Is n''t there any way of stopping it?
45462Is that an English flag?
45462Is that what a shell sounds like?
45462Is that why trenches are made so narrow?
45462Is the enemy on this side of the hill?
45462Is there any road from here to Walcourt?
45462It is nothing, my little one,he said to Horace,"what if they come?
45462It is something of which we may be proud, is it not, when our children carry on the work which we have begun?
45462It''s a bully hiding- place,said Horace,"but how about food?"
45462It''s sometimes called the''strategic square,''is n''t it? 45462 Just what are you going to do there, sir?"
45462Just what is mobilization, sir?
45462Madame,he hazarded,"about Deschamps?"
45462Of course, but for what?
45462One minute,said Horace, as they were about to separate for the night,"where are the British?"
45462Or hear any details?
45462Shall a man be less a patriot for his Church than for his country?
45462So?
45462Swim, carrying this?
45462That I may be killed?
45462That, of course,said the Frenchman, simply;"what else would any one do?"
45462The blame is on the officers, then?
45462The invasion?
45462The river is guarded, I suppose?
45462Then America will come to the aid of Belgium, Madame?
45462Then it is all true?
45462Then the Germans ca n''t see us?
45462Then what are you waiting for?
45462Then what''s the army we passed yesterday?
45462Then you expect to retreat?
45462Then you think they will break through?
45462Then, if you''re an American, why did n''t you stay in Liége? 45462 Then, what?"
45462Then,he continued desperately,"what is a man to do?
45462There''s been a power of soldiers gone by this morning, has n''t there?
45462They may respect the flag,he said,"but suppose they do n''t?"
45462Think you that I am going to donate it for the Germans?
45462To the curé?
45462To- night?
45462Under whose command?
45462Was it you who caught the eagle?
45462Was our American Civil War due to that?
45462Well, sir?
45462Well, what about it?
45462Were you attacked this morning?
45462What are all the rest?
45462What are you looking for?
45462What are you talking about,he said,"to''guard the Kaiser''?"
45462What could you do?
45462What did the mayor say to that?
45462What did you do then?
45462What did you do to scare them all?
45462What do you know of bugle calls? 45462 What do you teach them to do?"
45462What does a dog do at a listening- post?
45462What for?
45462What good does it do to know that some one is driving a mine under you? 45462 What happened?"
45462What have you there?
45462What is this-- a school?
45462What of that,said the doctor,"when the gun itself is not there?"
45462What stopped them?
45462What was the dispatch, sir?
45462What would be the use of an operative corner if we did n''t retreat on the masses of maneuver?
45462What''ave you got in yer bonnet?
45462What''s a''Minnenwerfer''?
45462What''s happened?
45462What''s the difference?
45462What''s your plan?
45462When do we start?
45462When was it first used?
45462When?
45462Where are they? 45462 Where are you going, Horace?"
45462Where did you get it?
45462Where do you come from, boy?
45462Where does this go?
45462Where have you been?
45462Where in the name of wonder have you been?
45462Where is he?
45462Where is the bird?
45462Where is your schoolmaster?
45462Where now?
45462Where shall we take him, Doctor?
45462Where to, sir?
45462Where''s your commander?
45462Which is best?
45462Which is the best?
45462Which were the gases used at Ypres, where the poison gas business first began?
45462Who are in it?
45462Who will take the school, sir?
45462Why did n''t you dodge?
45462Why did n''t you go to Holland?
45462Why did you do that?
45462Why did you shoot?
45462Why do you suggest such a roundabout way?
45462Why here?
45462Why is Belgium supposed to be neutral? 45462 Why not go directly to the French frontier?"
45462Why not to Holland?
45462Why not use ferrets to drive the rats out the trenches, just as they do to drive them out of granaries and warehouses in the city?
45462Why not?
45462Why those two?
45462Why, Doctor, what is it?
45462Why, then, do our fellows go ahead in short bursts? 45462 Why?"
45462Why?
45462Why?
45462Why?
45462Why?
45462Why?
45462Will it go far?
45462Will it take us much out of our way to go down by Poulseur?
45462With dispatches?
45462Wo n''t they even try to save the guns?
45462Would I have been safe?
45462Yes?
45462You are of Belgium, Madame?
45462You dare? 45462 You do n''t think I''d leave that, do you?"
45462You do n''t think a day will make any difference, do you, M. Maubin? 45462 You mean the tanks?"
45462You mean-- scared?
45462You ride a motor- cycle also?
45462You saw something?
45462You will drink a cup of milk before you go, wo n''t you?
45462You''re French, are n''t you?
45462You''re not going to carry that cage all the way to France, surely?
45462You''re sure you ca n''t tell me where they came from, who commands them, or what regiments they are?
45462You''ve heard the story of the Zouave Bugler''s last call?
45462You''ve heard the story of the tattooed draughtsman?
45462Your arm?
45462Your name?
45462Your news?
45462[ 11]And she?"
45462[ 1]By what right?"
45462_PLEASE, COLONEL, CAN''T I JOIN?"
45462A bullet?
45462Accident case?"
45462All the heroism, the courage, the mad endeavor, the agony, the slaughter, what has it brought to either side?
45462And where does Belgium come in?"
45462And why not you, too?
45462Are the Germans returning?
45462Are we going to give those dogs of Boches all of France?"
45462Are you ready?"
45462Aye, gone indeed, but where?
45462Burn and steal and murder?
45462But if we clear out from here, where do you plan to go?"
45462But perhaps, after school hours, if there are any of the younger children who need help in their lessons, they may come here?
45462But she shook herself out of her fixity of pose and continued,"And the school is closed?"
45462But the infantry?"
45462But the third wave?
45462But was n''t it a lot of work?"
45462But-- where were the others?
45462CHAPTER V THE DISPATCH- RIDER"Do you suppose,"said Horace, after the veteran had gone,"that they''d let me join in the fight?
45462Ca n''t our regular army hold the forts?"
45462Ca n''t she go to war?
45462Could it be true that one might look into the future?
45462Do you desert the trench, then, until they blow it up?"
45462Do you think I would let fear stop me from revenge?"
45462Do you want to go?"
45462Has nothing been gained?
45462He behaved like a brute and--""Well?"
45462He is dead?"
45462How do we get there?"
45462How long was it-- how many days, how many weeks-- since he had passed by the school in that walk to Liége in the twilight?
45462How much do you know about cavalry maneuvers?
45462If four shells had missed him, why not forty, why not four hundred?
45462If they''re not in sight of the Germans, what difference does it make if they stand up or lie down?"
45462In the boys''keeping?"
45462Is n''t she an independent country?"
45462Is not that best?"
45462Is that it?"
45462Is that the work of men--"she pointed to the foot of the cross,"or of drunken, ignorant and fear- ridden brutes?
45462It took the three of us, the curé, my brother, and myself--""The curé helped you?"
45462Maubin that I went on to Liége in the company of Dr. Mallorbes?
45462Maubin?"
45462Maubin?"
45462Monroe, is he not?"
45462Now what''s the French idea?"
45462Now, just what shall I do with you?"
45462Said another, when the surgeon told him that one leg would have to be amputated,"Only one, my doctor?
45462Shall I tell them, or will you?"
45462Suppose you want to move five army corps-- that''s a quarter of a million men-- how long do you think it would take?
45462Then, knotting his forehead, he asked,"Who is next in rank after you?
45462Then, turning to Croquier, she added,"You have the bird safe?"
45462Was he ambushed?
45462Was it a symbol?
45462Was this a personification of the ravening invader?
45462What did this waste of life mean?
45462What good will it do then, unless the men have, first, the spirit to fight, and second, the skill to fight?
45462What had happened?
45462What happened to the girl whose life you saved?"
45462What if his heart seemed to beat as loudly as the exhaust of the motor- cycle itself?
45462What is it?
45462What is that-- a shout?
45462What is that?
45462What men were these?
45462What practice have you had with a saber?
45462What then?
45462What would the morrow bring?
45462What''s Germany got to do with Servia?
45462What''s going to be done with the school?"
45462What''s the difference between them, anyway?"
45462Where are they?"
45462Where could they get the information?"
45462Where were the cavalry charges when squadrons with saber or with lance clashed in a deadly but glorious shock?
45462Where were the gallant fights to save the guns, when men met in open combat under the open sky?
45462Where were the men?
45462Where were the men?
45462Where were the shouting hosts charged with valor, such as those who had driven forward at La Fère Champenoise, when Foch''s army saved France?
45462Who knows?"
45462Why ca n''t I just take a rifle and join in?"
45462Why do you ask?"
45462Why is there such a hurry, sir?
45462Why should I expect to escape?
45462Why?
45462Will it turn into a Holy War?"
45462Will that farmhouse be shelled in the next half- hour?
45462Will you take it?"
45462You are not afraid?"
45462You do not go all the way?"
45462You give me your word of honor?"
45462You have a boat?"
45462You have not breakfasted?"
45462You remember how the forts of Liége tied up everything, even after the city was taken?"
45462You understand the positions?"
45462You understand?
45462You understand?"
45462You were not born in Belgium, Monroe, were you?"
45462You were there, were you not?"
45462asked the boy in surprise,"you''re far enough in the rear to escape poison gas, surely?"
45462queried Horace,"why?"
51206''_ Wer ist da?_''we hear again. 51206 After the war you going to Mokka, Johnnie?"
51206And the British?
51206And to the Irishman?
51206And what are you in private life?
51206And where are you going to drive them?
51206Any of you blokes speak English?
51206Are you quite sure? 51206 Art thou there?
51206Baas, have you a flask?
51206Been havin''a sing- song?
51206Bread? 51206 Buddha, Johnnie?"
51206But yet-- but yet----Why does he feel that way about it?
51206But you?
51206D''ye ken it''s been my life''s dream to see yon London? 51206 Do n''t you see, Little Brother?"
51206Do you know what we shall do with them-- with all these patriots?
51206Do you know where we are?
51206Do you remember when they called the 1917 class a year ahead of time? 51206 Does''e bite?"
51206German?
51206Get him? 51206 Get the idea?
51206Gunga, Johnnie?
51206Has he changed his mind?
51206Have n''t I?
51206Have you ever seen a_ tir de barrage_? 51206 Have you found out yet?"
51206Have you reflected? 51206 Ho, that?
51206Ho,_ are_ they?
51206How about Winnipeg?
51206How can anybody go through that and come out sane?
51206How is it changing them most?
51206How is it that he has found so much favor in the eyes of his commander as to be sent as a parlamentaire to the enemy?
51206How many?
51206Is he goin''to waltz in and take that redoubt on his ownsum?
51206Is it a conundrum, Kentuck?
51206Is that so, Little Brother?
51206Is there any reduction for a return?
51206It is sad, monsieur, is n''t it?
51206Lost?
51206Mahomet, Johnnie?
51206May I not have a little pastry, perhaps?
51206Mecca?
51206Might I hope to hear you repeat it, if there is time before the train starts?
51206Mon,I says,"I''m not fashing maself about Berlin, but if I go in the Army shall I go to London?"
51206My lad,says he,"do n''t you wish to serve your King and Country?"
51206No go Indee?
51206Ought n''t you to''ave''i m on a leadin''string?
51206Ought n''t you to''ave''is muzzle on?
51206Prussians at Martagny?
51206Prussians in the Forêt de Lyons? 51206 Sure, wo n''t the ould mother be glad to see me?"
51206Tell me, madame, we will get to their country, wo n''t we, wo n''t we?
51206The other one?
51206W''y do you suppose they makes the dugouts open at one end?
51206Want the Bank, Sandy?
51206Well, Hias,I said,"what can we do?
51206Well, wot abaht it? 51206 Wha- what is it?"
51206Wha- what, monsieur le Baron?
51206What are ye wanting?
51206What are you doing here?
51206What could I do?
51206What d''yer say, sir?
51206What did he do?
51206What do you estimate the strength of the attacking force in our section to be?
51206What do you know about the war?
51206What do you mean?
51206What do you want with me? 51206 What is it?"
51206What is this?
51206What''s that?
51206What''s the matter with you, my child? 51206 Where are those seven Austrians?"
51206Where are your rifles? 51206 Where is your weapon?"
51206Who are you? 51206 Who has any better right?
51206Why did n''t I think of it before? 51206 Why did you do that?"
51206Why do n''t you take these too?
51206Why should I lose a day? 51206 Why were you not back in time?"
51206Why?
51206Will you have a_ vin blanc_, old chap? 51206 Wo n''t you permit me to go?"
51206Wot''s all the buzz about be''ind us?
51206Wot, nothin''at all?
51206Yes;--you go Indee, sergeant?
51206You been to France, Johnnie?
51206You blokes just takin''''i m out for an airin''?
51206You ever hear of Rabindranarth Tagore, Johnnie?
51206You go Benares, Johnnie?
51206You know Kashmir, Johnnie?
51206You live in Kashmir?
51206You remember, monsieur, the sand dunes by Blankenberghe and Knocke on the Belgian coast? 51206 You understand, Baas?"
51206_ Eh bien!_ How have you been getting on at Verdun lately?
51206''Are they numerous?''
51206''Have we exterminated them all?''
51206''What can this mean?''
51206( They had their reward off the Dutch coast, eh?)
51206*****"What is the war doing to the soldiers?"
51206A little bit of all right, eh?"
51206After death is there only nothingness?
51206After that---- Oh, is that your train, mon?
51206Ai n''t you got no sooverneer?"
51206All those sublimities: how can they be explained without losing their soul, without taking away their value, which is of mystery and miracle?
51206Am I really in jeopardy myself?
51206Am I really killing men day by day?
51206An''at''ome they''re a- s''yin'',''W''y do n''t they get on with it?
51206And did you destroy the enemy''s guns?
51206And he replied,"Is there anny wonder, Sir, wid that scrap o''paper there?"
51206And in front, whither should they go?...
51206And was I really the budding novelist in New York?
51206And would your Honor hide in the forest like them-- like the Germans?"
51206Armentières is called"Armenteers"; Balleul,"Ballyall"; Hazebrouck,"Hazy- Brook"; and what more natural than"Plug- Street,"Atkinsese for Ploegsteert?
51206At last the Englishman can keep silent no longer and asks:"Will they treat us very severely?"
51206Black bread?"
51206But can one demand that of the others?
51206But did he not instruct you to return to Berlin?"
51206But he asks aloud:"Finished?"
51206But it is nothing to us, eh?
51206But of what avail were cupboards to a jam- loving and jam- fed British army living in open ditches in the summer time?
51206But suppose he should be greeted, before ever he can introduce the topic himself, with the genial inquiry,"And how are your stanchions lasting?"
51206But the men?
51206But when will these barbarians be entirely driven away?
51206Can I be of any service to you?
51206Can you imagine that a person as peaceable as I could find it possible to drive a horse to death with whip and spurs?
51206Can you imagine what that meant to me?
51206Can you picture that?
51206Captain Herail went into the next room and addressed his wife:"You have heard what he has said?
51206Could it by the furthest stretch of imagination be considered as giving information to the enemy?
51206Could there be any harm in granting me those favors?
51206D''ye hear thot?
51206D''you remember the birthday three years ago when we set the victrola going outside your room door?
51206Did one ever hear of such tyranny?
51206Did such attractive girls still come in and sing and dance as those whose pictures stared at him out of the pages of the last number of the_ Nida_?
51206Do they get paid by the minute?
51206Do you say to yourself that"this terrible war"has robbed me of all my estimable"woman''s weaknesses?"
51206Do you shudder when I write to you of these things?
51206Do you think so?
51206Does it please you to remain here?"
51206Does one see more truly life''s worth on a battlefield?
51206Everybody in France remembers the sad question of the little girl who asked her mother,"Will Santa Claus bring me back my hands for Christmas?"
51206First of all, where are you from?"
51206From the side where the firing comes from, beyond and to the right, they are yelling at us, both in German and Russian,''What''s the matter?
51206Have they then altered the text of the Holy Books?
51206He ran away a month ago, you say?"
51206He then murmured:"Why are you so good to us, madame?
51206He was taken to the sick bay and after drinking his tea, he turned to his commander and said:"Why should n''t we get into these cots, sir?"
51206Hear anything?"
51206How do these and the many other brave men who have been reported in the present war compare with the heroes of antiquity?
51206How long would it take the Burgomaster to produce the money?
51206How?"
51206However, I remembered Hindenburg''s injunction:"Tell Cämmerer to be kind to him,"so what did I care for a mere captain?
51206I said:"Not near, my boy?
51206I shook him up with,"Why, what''s the matter that a French soldier makes such a face?
51206I turned toward the child:"Who gave you that?"
51206I was taking heavy risks, but what else could I do?
51206I-- TRAGIC STORY OF A NIGHT FIGHT"We were creeping across the snow, when we hear a frightened''_ Wer kommt da?_''"''Hold on, Germans!
51206I-- WHO IS THE BRAVEST MAN IN THE WAR?
51206II-- HIS MAJESTY''S LAND SHIP--"WE ARE HERE""An''wot''s the next item o''the program, I wonder?"
51206II-- WAS HE GOING TO BAYONET HER?
51206In a tone of voice that left no chance for the familiar War- Office question:"Have you an appointment, sir?"
51206Is it no?"
51206Is the contempt that is hourly shown for life the real standard of life''s worth?
51206It speaks well for an English watch, does n''t it?
51206Just the same, I will never in my life forget his first words in Russian, as he asked us, by order of the officer:"Who are you-- brothers?"
51206Man, is it no fine?"
51206Maybe the day- shift''s having breakfast and not started yet?"
51206Not a bad trick, was it, madame?"
51206Not as easy as all that, but why?
51206Not bad, wot?"
51206Not one of them will escape, Moreau?"
51206Our question to them was always the same,"Where are the Germans?"
51206Shall I find a soul left?"
51206Shall I send one on whose face are the imprints of all the Devil''s ten fingers?
51206Shall he return to the camp?
51206Should not this thought alone be sufficient to dry your tears and to fill you with unspeakable joy?
51206Staff- Surgeon Sawdy came up to me, after Dr. Martin had procured me a lifebuoy, and said,"Shall I come with you, Padre?"
51206Stain his hands, too, with the blood of these innocents?
51206The following are some of the captain''s questions, and our answers:"Where were you men?"
51206The surgeon approached then, and leaning over the now visible palpitating lung murmured:"What can be done?
51206Then the Colonel asked:"Who will go to work?"
51206Then the Colonel came and asked in Russian:"Why do n''t you want to work?"
51206Then thou wilt be happy again, eh?"
51206They asked,"How did the General die?"
51206They do n''t move, or are they pretending?''
51206This general, instead, would say:"Are there two men who would like to come with me to- night and inspect the enemy''s barbed wire entanglements?"
51206V--"THEY ARE ALL DEAD NOW"What have I seen?...
51206VII--"THE CHILDREN WHO ARE MUTILATED"But they-- what are they doing with our little children?
51206W''y do n''t they smash through?''
51206Was he going to kill her?
51206Was it a sort of hint, one wonders, that"the pen is mightier than the sword"--that the soldier''s reign would be a brief one?
51206Was it imagination?
51206Was it still going so comfortably back in Petersburg( he stopped suddenly and substituted Petrograd) with those rascals of civilians and war cripples?
51206We must rise above that too delicate conscience which says:"Speak?
51206Wearied of my efforts at conversing in a foreign tongue, I went over and said:"Do you really speak English?"
51206Well, have you any such''steed of God?''"
51206Well, what was it to us?
51206What are you doing here?"
51206What could one answer?
51206What did I see in this camp?
51206What do the soldiers do, I wondered, when this is happening?
51206What do you think?
51206What good was my letter of introduction from the General''s dear nephew?
51206What good will it do?
51206What happened to your uniforms?"
51206What was he going to do to her?
51206What?
51206When we had gone on a little way he said:--"Ai n''t it a proper beauty parlor?
51206When will words be found simple enough and infinite enough to tell of so much heroism, so much sorrow, so much beauty, so much terror?
51206When would they see those homes again?
51206Where are you?''
51206Where the devil do they come from?''
51206Who is the bravest man that the war has produced?
51206Who would have thought that they would consent to be commanded by a woman?
51206Why did n''t I think of it before?
51206Why did n''t the French take him away?
51206Why did they not get O''Leary, who was running out alone ahead of his companions?
51206Why had I come to Lötzen?
51206Why is he allowed to run around without any guard in particular?
51206Why should the six centuries of European history be destroyed because of the acts of a few patriots acting under the impulse of terror or indignation?
51206Why should these individual deeds have been visited on thousands of innocent and inoffensive people?
51206Why should those deeds have been visited on monuments of brick and stone?
51206Why should treasuries of learning and shrines of religion be destroyed?
51206Will those people over there shoot down their own subjects?"
51206Will ye give us a hand with these straps, laddie?"
51206Wo n''t you look me in the face and make me a nice smile?"
51206Would I condescend to wait?
51206Would I prefer to wait here or come in his office, where the stove was lit?
51206Would it not be better to surrender?''
51206You are the man General von Schlieffen telephoned about yesterday?
51206You do n''t know him?
51206You mean to s''y you ai n''t got any graybacks?"
51206was the rejoinder;"and where did_ you_ learn it-- in the Tottenham Court Road?"
58373A boat and a mule?
58373A hat?
58373And who saved me?
58373D''you s''pose,said he,"that''f I had any brains I''d be sawing wood in this land of silver?"
58373Did I leave out something I ought to have folded down? 58373 Did he say that?"
58373Did you lose your head?
58373Did you twist her arm or pinch her?
58373Do n''t think they''d object, do you?
58373Do you always move in a caravan like this?
58373Do you live here?
58373Do you,sobbed Joan--"do you think father will be harsh with him?"
58373Does father want me to go to work half educated, as he did? 58373 Does their nurse think the children should go out?"
58373Eh? 58373 Fake, eh?"
58373Father,said Joan, as she turned-- her voice cooed like a wood- pigeon''s--"did you ever see such a perfect picture?
58373Fritty?
58373Godfather, we can play here, ca n''t we?
58373Had you considered that I might refuse, sir?
58373Have you thought it over, mother?
58373How did you fall, Patrick?
58373How is it with Joan of Home?
58373I know why the Chinese send all their fire- crackers over here?
58373Is Joan to keep your house?
58373Is it frightfully hard for you?
58373Is n''t it funny, mamma, that these eels live in the wide, wide ocean?
58373Is n''t that extremely dangerous?
58373Is this the nurse you expect to keep?
58373Joan,said Tom, in a still voice,"what are you crying about?
58373Joining you, Alec? 58373 Lolly?
58373My dear, where do you get your first foothold?
58373Oh dear father, is it true? 58373 Oh, Tom, why do you say that; what have I said?"
58373Oh, just one minute,begged Joan,"Father, what about Tom?"
58373Oh, what is all this?
58373Play here? 58373 So that''s the plan for you and the kids, eh?
58373Tom, do you think they''ll behave decently?
58373Tom,_ would_ you like it?
58373Was he?
58373Was n''t that fine? 58373 Well, do n''t you?"
58373Well, do you know Professor Woerts?
58373What did you say his name was?
58373What is a hump- durgin?
58373What is it?
58373What is there to prevent my refusing? 58373 What time did it happen?"
58373What were you eating?
58373What would you think of a battle, fellows?
58373What''s fritty, pray?
58373What''s going on in there?
58373What''s going on?
58373What''s that-- a good receipt for a noise?
58373What''s the matter with you fellows, anyhow?
58373What''s the matter?
58373Where are we going to, anyway?
58373Where''s your thinking- chair?
58373Who are you?
58373Who is he?
58373Why not?
58373Why, Willie?
58373Why, father dear, what ever''s the matter? 58373 Why?
58373Would n''t you miss Joan sadly if she were to be sent away?
58373Yet you think she ought to go elsewhere?
58373You would not like that?
58373An academy officer passing spotted him, and the cadet, seeing that he had been observed, whispered to his new acquaintance,"Will you be my uncle?"
58373And do you remember, too, how we watched out for policemen before touching off our crackers?
58373Anyhow, what good does it do a man to know how to serve a dinner?
58373Are n''t you just a little severe on them?"
58373Are the men safe?"
58373Are we to have a celebration?"
58373But the child has a lovely face when she sleeps awake, has n''t she?"
58373But what would be done with the rest of the day?
58373By- the- way, why are n''t you children blowing off your fingers and your heads on this glorious Fourth?
58373Ca n''t the children go out now?
58373Could you''decide things''without Aunt Jane?"
58373Did I ever show you any of his letters to me?
58373Did you know Aunt Milly wanted to adopt me?"
58373Do n''t some of the Round Table Knights and Ladies think this an error?
58373Do n''t you know that?"
58373Do you happen to know how father got his first promotion?
58373Do you really want to climb this tree, godfather?
58373Do you remember how one year ago to- day you were laying down the law to the young rebels?"
58373Do you suppose it can have anything to do with that smuggling business?"
58373Do you think I have improved at all?
58373Do you think she ought to run wild like that?
58373Do you think you know him?"
58373Do you?"
58373Has she had a run yet?"
58373Have players ever heard that when rosining the bow they should not draw the bow up and down rapidly?
58373Have you?"
58373How could you respect my cloth if you should see me in flannel?
58373I do n''t think I left out the name of the college, did I?
58373I suppose, Tom, you are not thinking of marrying again?"
58373I wonder how he ever got hold of it?
58373I wonder how it will end?"
58373I wonder if his boy will ever make him another declaration of independence?"
58373I''ve told you that so often, why do n''t you stop it?"
58373It would be a nice way for you to celebrate the Fourth of July, would n''t it?"
58373Joan, do you know we have both changed in this year?
58373Let''s look at the thing,"Gibb said, entering cautiously,"What under the sun is it?"
58373Lord Bishops wear aprons, Tom, do n''t they?"
58373One of the younger boys was noticeably uneasy, and in reply to the question,"Do n''t you want the procession?"
58373Shall we go to luncheon?
58373Suppose his mother should agree to let him go to Greenway with the Earl and then come back by way of Mount Vernon?
58373There''s good shooting down there, is n''t there?"
58373WHAT IS A HUMP- DURGIN?
58373What do you say to joining me?"
58373What do you say?
58373What do you think as you look at the Maid?"
58373What is it?"
58373What is to prevent my acceptance of Aunt Milly''s offer of adoption?"
58373What ith it?"
58373What shall I do?"
58373Who goes up with me?"
58373Why have n''t you talked Joan over with your father?"
58373Will Sir Max also add the name of lens and plate used?
58373With all your learning do n''t you know what a hump- durgin is?
58373You are sure you will not fail me, boys?"
58373You have n''t had any lunch, have you?
58373You know the location?"
58373You should have seen last night--""Should''ve seen what?"
58373You''d have been willing, would n''t you?"
58373[ Illustration:"HAD YOU CONSIDERED THAT I MIGHT REFUSE, SIR?"]
58373[ Illustration:"ISN''T THAT EXTREMELY DANGEROUS?"
58373ai n''t this excitin''?"
58373does n''t it move easy?"
58373what do you suppose is going on in there, anyhow?"
45924''Member''bout that feller who fell through the ceilin''into the butter- tub?--or was it a churn he fell in?
45924A cross?
45924Afraid?
45924Ah, yes-- do you know my son, Andrew Francis Biron?
45924Ai n''t I strikin''out?
45924All this was very long ago?
45924Am I a love- sick puppy? 45924 And do you intend to lick André François until he gets all right?"
45924And he had no gun?
45924And then?
45924And then?
45924And what became of them?
45924And what do you think of-- er-- André François?
45924Are n''t I good enough for you?
45924Are you interested in poetry, sir?
45924Are you not afraid to speak in such a tone to me?
45924But why are you here? 45924 Can a man trek to hell?
45924Can you tell me that all this is not so?
45924Did you not realize----?
45924Do n''t you-- don''t you understand, Moss?
45924Do you know what county he came from?
45924Do you know why I have come, Miss Nevers?
45924Do you know your father''s name?
45924Do you really love me?
45924Do you remember,she sat fairly down before the keyboard, and preluded while she talked,"the last time?
45924Do you then imagine,he asked,"that you have murdered all the Marats?"
45924Don''you?
45924Eh?
45924Father,he asked timidly,"are you familiar with the manly art of self- defense?"
45924For the Lord''s sake, Captain, what do you take me for? 45924 Harper?"
45924Has he given you any trouble?
45924Has he made me happy?
45924Has he?
45924Have we trekked too far?
45924Hello, sissy-- are yer lost?
45924How can it have come here? 45924 How dare you speak of God?
45924How in Tophet did you come by this stuff, Sergeant?
45924How long''go?
45924How?
45924I do n''t understand him? 45924 I suppose I''m not good enough to speak to you, eh?"
45924I''ve no use for a poet, I was thinkin''of Terry-- what?
45924Is he still living?
45924Is it beautiful? 45924 Is it so easy for me to be brave?"
45924Is it, Pen,--to you-- at fifty- five?
45924Is that all you had ter say ter me? 45924 Is that not a cross, father?"
45924Kin I have the job, then?
45924Kind of sudden, was n''t it, Angélique?
45924Look here, Mr. Brown, will you do me a favor? 45924 May I come in?"
45924Mis''Pen, will you sot up a li''l''tombstone on her grave? 45924 Mrs. Bronson?
45924Not the one that mah''d Marse Willie Hahpeh?
45924Now,said Klein Piet, rising from his knees;"who will tell me what the other end of that chain is fast to?"
45924Now,said Klein Piet, when they were alone;"what was it you saw?"
45924Of you?
45924Or do you think him complicated? 45924 P. S.--Can you bring some of the Lyceum armour with you, and two hard- boiled eggs?"
45924Pen, do you know you''re just in time to save the gov''neh of Kentucky from a spell of the blues? 45924 Perhaps you would rather be alone?"
45924Proud, are you?
45924Quamquam ridentem dicere verum quid vetat?
45924S- a- a- y,he said,"yer wanter git licked again, d''yer?
45924Say, yo''runnin''a pumpin''-station, Jerry?
45924See this, Jimmie?
45924So you are back again, citizeness?
45924Soldier of fortune, pyo''an''simple, he is,said Whitney;"always on the go; an''do yo''think he''s goin''to pin himself down anywhere?
45924Sure? 45924 Then I saw a spirit?"
45924Then you think three years of marriage not instructive?
45924This you''Secum Reader, sonny?
45924Well, what''s up, hombre?
45924Well? 45924 Well?"
45924What can be the matter?
45924What did you see?
45924What do you do for recreation? 45924 What do you mean, then, insinuating that you have?
45924What do you mean?
45924What do you say to that, eh?
45924What do you think of it, my son?
45924What has happened?
45924What is it?
45924What is that?
45924What parts are you and Polly now playing? 45924 What sound is that?"
45924What the devil are you doing?
45924What will happen then?
45924What''s the use of making all this fuss?
45924What?
45924When it comes to contending with the evil mind of the world, how can one hope to do it? 45924 When you think you gwine be awdained?"
45924When''s the weddin''?
45924Where do you come from?
45924Where''d yer git that suit?
45924Where''s nursie, Annie?
45924Who are you?
45924Who can tell?
45924Who? 45924 Why do you say all this to me?"
45924Why do you treat me like this?
45924Why?
45924Will you accept this?
45924Will you look at my glove?
45924Will you not sit down?
45924Will you please explain to Tom about that photograph of the family group which I promised him? 45924 Would n''t he, though?"
45924You are sorry for a murderess who receives her just deserts?
45924You are sure he was white, father?
45924You are sure it was a man you saw?
45924You done paid Fitzpatrick the rent to- day?
45924You read these?
45924You really thought it was all done with? 45924 You see?
45924You show him that hole in the flo''?
45924You think you lak the country better as you do the city?
45924You wanted ter see me?
45924You were at the trial?
45924You will forgive my meddling and will do what I ask? 45924 Your grandfather?"
45924_ Recruits!_ You do n''t mean to say there''s_ two_ of''em?
45924''Cause why?
45924''Member Sergeant Johnson?
45924AIN''T YOU GWINE TO COME?
45924After that scene of blood and tears, you poor sweet thing, how you played for me, so dearly obliging as you were?
45924Already?
45924And I run into some sympathetic woman who is fond of me, and she cries out''Marie- Aimée, my poor child, what is the matter with you?''
45924And for that you are willing to give up all that I know you are losing?"
45924And is a boy unworthy of one''s love?
45924And is it not truly innocent enough?"
45924And so----"she ended feebly,"do you wonder?"
45924And the adventure of the face- wash and the curling- irons?
45924And the length of it?
45924And the night of the great thunderstorm?
45924And yet, even now, I sometimes ask myself doubtfully,"Did I do everything that was within the bounds of possibility to prevent it?"
45924And you do see, do n''t you?
45924And you, will you tell me what you are getting?
45924And you?"
45924Are n''t they rich?
45924Are such aims important enough to justify the great sacrifices that war will demand?
45924Are there any more sissies in town?"
45924Are you completely a fool, my dear, and blind as a mole, or-- do you see more than we do?
45924Are your words of sympathy nothing?"
45924Biron?"
45924But I did not mean it-- did I?
45924But I suppose you have no objection to my sitting?"
45924But can I not intimate the good news to him, just to keep up his courage?"
45924But help a feller out a bit, wo n''t you?
45924But how prevent it?
45924But look here, kid; if I can work a pull for you,--an''I''ll do the best I can,--will the lady have you, after all?"
45924But on the barest possibility of the sort, how could I continue obstinately fixed in my position?
45924But she_ has_ bought a superb place out of town?"
45924But that one about your lady- friend, now; is that straight goods or is it a poet''s pipe- dream?"
45924But to whom-- dear me, to whom am I saying this?"
45924But what did we hear?
45924But what other candidate was there to oppose to Mr. Loan?
45924But why did not this bold and clear- sighted accuser protest against the decision of the Port Arthur council?
45924But why not?
45924D''yer mean it?
45924D''you want to fight?"
45924Decided?"
45924Did others make up this fable, or did you?"
45924Did the old woman mean that Estelle drank?
45924Do I_ look_ as if I were interested in poetry?"
45924Do old friends need to see each other constantly to be assured nothing is changed?
45924Do you know who he was?"
45924Do you mean it, girlie?
45924Do you mind his comin''in, kid?
45924Do you really believe that I have never tried?
45924Do you really mean it?"
45924Do you s''pose he means a hawse or a dishono''able discharge?"
45924Do you think I can not see what a coward you are at heart?"
45924Does he intend to play a man''s part in helping to solve them?
45924Does he know what they are?
45924For it will in part explain.... Do n''t you agree with me that laughing together makes a stronger bond than even weeping?
45924For the rest, ideas?"
45924Had she changed?
45924Have n''t you noticed?
45924Him?
45924Him_ fight_?
45924Honor my beautiful shape, will you?
45924How can he help it, unhappy man, if I am made this way?
45924How could he but satisfy any woman?
45924How could it have been otherwise?
45924How did he acquire the extraordinary power that he evidently exercised in the Far East?
45924How much you get for it?''
45924How otherwise would I have come back?"
45924How should any but feel honored to be his servant and worshipper?
45924I am listening, but is it not likely that I know already all you are intending to say?"
45924I did gymnastics, I walked, I dosed myself, I gave up eating everything I liked, and you see the result?
45924I do n''t?"
45924I have made it all right?
45924I have made the whole thing plain?
45924I knew blame well he had n''t lost it, so I said right quick,''That so?
45924I showed you Ryan''s poetry-- an''you remember that one about his lady- friend?
45924I wonder if Henry and I could have done more with it?
45924If Estelle_ should_ have gone out for a drink, and had had no money,--as he believed to be the case,--would she not have come to Fitzpatrick''s?
45924If I were removed to- morrow, do you imagine he would by any chance marry you?
45924Is he hurt?"
45924Is it not of a seriousness to be wound''in the pride?
45924Is murder, cold- blooded murder, a practice that commends itself to modest persons?"
45924Is n''t it Horace who says that there is nothing to prevent the man who laughs from speaking the truth?
45924Is n''t it strange?"
45924It was ambitious, surely; but then, was not Joan of Arc a girl?
45924Its good opinion?
45924Jones?"
45924Juss a li''l''one, so I kin fine it some day, when I gits out?"
45924Kate Cheriton that was?"
45924Last January, at Cooper Institute, he said to an audience of workingmen:"Now what is the right of the labor unions with respect to the strike?
45924Meanwhile, can I do anything for you-- take any word to Benjy?"
45924Must we, in order to make our pyramid stand on its narrow Korean end, break the Russian Empire?"
45924Pardon me, Marie- Aimée, but in those three years at the convent, what were you doing?
45924People exaggerate, you think?
45924Savvy?
45924Say that Anthony Bronson remained all his life a boy, and who will contradict you?
45924Say, do yo''think Hansen''s in earnest over that?"
45924Say-- is that what you just said on the dead square?"
45924Shall I ever forget it?
45924She was really coming back?
45924Should I ever be able fully to pay my debt of gratitude to this country, and to justify the honors that had been heaped upon me?
45924Should he pin the brooch on her night- dress, and then, when she discovered it, overwhelm her with the good news?
45924Should he wait for her?
45924So why do you give me the cold sholder Cora Is it becaws you re shi or love another?
45924Talent?
45924That freckled kid?
45924The leetle man tank she iss so sweet and innocent a leetle girl, I am not fit to speak of her-- yess?
45924There have been ships here, once; ca n''t you_ feel_ that there have been ships hereabouts?"
45924They talked in dreary undertones, and ended asking each other"Now, can you understand it?"
45924They were killed, but who is to say what became of them?"
45924This thwacking, rough- and- tumble, Rabelaisian horse- play Shakespeare?
45924To be insult''?
45924Was it Caucasian fleering at Ethiopian-- white blood mocking black?
45924Was it a sail they saw, a ship that heeled to the brisk wind and was screened from sight by the rain?
45924Was the combination of Debs and his associates illegal?
45924Was there ever such a fool?
45924What angel sent you?"
45924What could I say?
45924What do you think of it?"
45924What do you want with me?"
45924What has happened?"
45924What he say?"
45924What kafir is this?"
45924What possible comparison could there be, for instance, between Harper Hall and Goosefoot Lane?
45924What shall it be?"
45924What sport do you have now, for instance?"
45924What was that far- spread anecdote that you had come out because it was all over, lived down, you were cured, immune?
45924What you got there?
45924What you talkin''about?
45924What''s all this?"
45924What, then, are the aims that may involve us in war with Japan and China?
45924When did you know such things of me before?
45924Where the deuce is that bloomin''ode,''To my Lady- Frend''?"
45924Who ever heard of a big boy of ten with a nurse, anyway?"
45924Who gets the sergeancy?
45924Who was I, to presume to be a candidate for the Senate?
45924Who was Mr. Jones?
45924Why should he be so blue?
45924Why was"everybody"--including the Minister of War--"afraid of him"?
45924Why, only yesterday he came over to me an''said,''Say, make me out a afferdavid, will you?
45924Why?
45924Will any of us?"
45924Will yo''leave yo''vuhses?
45924Will you look at this?
45924Will you please see that he is admitted the moment he arrives?"
45924Will you tell Mr. Ryan that if he can run over here early to- morrow mornin'', I got somethin''I want ter give him?"
45924Wo n''t you do that?"
45924Wonder if an''''unwiling pennence''meant a reluctant pen''cause he did n''t care to mention Spurs an''had to have a rhyme?"
45924Wonder where he got that about the village clock?
45924Would I not call upon him at my earliest convenience some evening?
45924Would not that be downright knavery and a crime before God and men?
45924Yesterday I reported again your ideas with regard to the reinforcement of the garrison and also with regard to the artels( chasseurs or artillery?)
45924Yet let it be as a bargain between us, will you?
45924Yet why?
45924Yo''goin''to show these to Shorty?"
45924You can put yourself in my place, ca n''t you?
45924You can stand the work that long, ca n''t you, knowing that we are waiting for you, ready to give you a home?"
45924You do n''t mind?
45924You get married next week; do you hear?
45924You honestly felt sure of yourself?"
45924You see it?
45924You see my folly?
45924You t''ank, because Cora go with you a leetle, you can come it ofer me here, too-- not?"
45924You?"
45924[ Illustration:"''ARE YOU INTERESTED IN POETRY, SIR?''
45924[ Illustration:"''HE USED LANGUAGE TO ME, SIR, AND I AM HISS SERGEANT''"]"What do I think about''em, kid?
45924[ Illustration:"''I''D BE GLAD TO DO IT AS A FAVOR,''HE SAID"]"What is your name, my lad?"
45924[ Illustration:"TERRIBLE TALES OF BLOODSHED AND INJUSTICE REACHED THE LITTLE SUN- KISSED VILLAGE OF CAEN"]"The criminal, Charlotte Corday?"
45924_ Ciel!_ how can one make heem to look like the little prince when thees so savage boys tear off his clothes?
45924_"Must We Break the Russian Empire?
45924asked Mr. Biron with a gleam of hope,"would he fight?"
45924asked the boy eagerly,"on a matter o''business?"
45924is it modest to force one''s way into a man''s bed- room?
45924she asked,"to leave the sunshine, to say goodby to all the bright and beautiful things of this world, to life and love?
45924she gasped,"is he hurt?"
45924to have ultimately more weight than the question"will this be profitable?"
7082And did you not bring away something from his house?
7082For what purpose am I called?
7082What is it you demand to have done?
7082Wherefore am I called?
7082Who are you?
7082''How now?''
7082And how is this devil employed according to sir Matthew Hale and sir Thomas Browne?
7082And, if these poor women were too obtuse of soul entirely to feel the pang, did that give their superiors a right to overwhelm and to crush them?
7082Are all the Gods subject to this control, or, is there one God upon whom it has power, who, himself compelled, compels the elements?
7082Do they yield from necessity, or is it a voluntary subjection?
7082He said, he was not guilty; but, being asked how he would be tried?
7082How can I be secure from the false accusations of the unprincipled informers who infest your court?
7082Is it the piety of these hags that obtains the reward, or by menaces do they secure their purpose?
7082Macduff pursued him, and was hard at his heels, when the tyrant turned his horse, and exclaimed,"Why dost thou follow me?
7082Now the first circumstance that strikes us in this affair is, why the crime was not expressed in more perspicuous and appropriate language?
7082Now what are the premises on which they proceed in this question?
7082The wife in great terror asked,"Were you not at Dr. Lamb''s to- day?"
7082We hear there is likely to be a battle shortly: what, fled from your colours?''
7082Well may they exclaim, like the ghost of Samuel in the sacred story,"Why hast thou disquieted me?"
7082What can be more tyrannical, than an inquisition into the sports and freaks of fancy?
7082What is, to a proverb, more lawless than imagination?
7082What more unsusceptible of detection or evidence?
7082What shall we say to the story of his various transmigrations?
7082When Mr. Thoroughgood saw his friend Lindsey come into his yard, his horse and himself much tired, in a sort of a maze, he said,''How now, colonel?
7082Why, for example, was it not said, that the first and chief branch of treason was to"kill the king?"
7082Wot ye not that such a man as I could certainly divine?"
7082Yet what so irrational as man?
7082[ 19] They brought the strangers again into the presence of Joseph, who addressed them with severity, saying,"What is this deed that ye have done?
7082said Cromwel,''What, troubled with the vapours?
7082said he,"and what is it that you demand?"
6705Is there no hope?
6705And did they show themselves capable of replacing a fond and anxious mother?
6705And need there be much surprise at the subsequent occurrences, and much discussion as to the right or wrong in the case?
6705And now what was left to be done?
6705And then, is not Claire in North Devon?
6705But who would alter the workings of destiny?
6705Did he not foresee tyranny worked out and resistance complete, and his own favourite republic succeeding to the death of tyrants?
6705Did they love the less for not loving"in sin and fear"?
6705Does not the finest Lacryma Christi grow on the once devastated slopes of Vesuvius?
6705Does not this give an unreality to the style incompatible with art, which ought to be the mainspring of all imaginative work?
6705Evidently the embarrassment was too great to settle how to account for the poor child longer in England; and had not she a just claim upon Byron?
6705From Cervantes we pass on to Lope de Vega, of whose thousand dramas what remains?
6705How could the fashionable idlers at the Baths find time to drink in inspiration from the poet and his wife?
6705Iago would never have found a better representative than that strange and wondrous creature whom one regrets daily more; for who can equal him?"
6705If Shelley has let her know where he is, is she not sure to join him if she think he is alone?
6705In the meantime, what had been passing in Godwin''s house?
6705Is she not rather likely to be remembered as a type of self- abnegation?
6705Is this the way, my beloved, we are to live till the 6th?
6705May not this poem have been his self- vindication as exhibiting what he might have become had he not followed the dictates of his heart?
6705Might he not"change his mind, or go to Greece, or to the devil; and then what happens?"
6705Might not Eliza be inclined to take an exaggerated view of any attention shown by Hogg to her sister, and have persuaded Harriet to the same effect?
6705Still hope was not dead; might not their husbands be at Corsica or Elba?
6705The idea of seeing Hunt for the first time after four years, to ask"Where is he?"
6705Was I the same person who had lived there, the companion of the dead-- for all were gone?
6705Were not the eyes of Godwin and his wife blinded for the time, when still reconciliation with Harriet was possible?
6705Were the mothers to be provided for likewise, and to be considered more by Shelley''s respectable family than his lawful wife?
6705What could be the outcome of such a marriage?
6705What had they done to merit such a treasure?
6705What is to be done?
6705What might be the future consequences to humanity of the existence of such monsters?
6705What prudent parents would have countenanced such a visitor?
6705What stronger expression of feeling could be needed than this, of a woman speaking from her heart and her own experiences?
6705What was needed but this to draw still closer the sympathies of the poet, who had not been exempt from like straits?
6705When shall we be free from fear of treachery?
6705Who can imagine the effect but those who have passed innocently through the ordeal?
6705Who could tell how he might change his mind if there be much delay?
6705Why can not I be with you, to cheer you and press you to my heart?
6705Why do I say this, dearest and only one?
6705Why then should you be torn from the only one who has affection for you?
6705Will you be at the door of the coffee- house at five o''clock, as it is disagreeable to go into such places?
6705Yet how, with all he knew, could that be suffered to proceed?
6705Yet what shall I write-- that I love the author beyond all powers of expression, and that I am parted from him?
8505There is a most imposing pulpit surmounted by a canopy where a female figure seated on a globe is surrounded by cherubs, clouds( or are they rocks?)
56306Cigars?
56306Does he think he can change our opinions by that silly act?
56306Got who?
56306How are you getting along with it?
56306What man?
56306What shall I say, brave Admir''l, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn?
56306What''s the use?
56306Where are you going in such a hurry?
56306Where is he?
56306Why not leave well enough alone? 56306 --save the mark-- as some students do? 56306 2. Who could ever resist the radiating influences of a Mark Tapley, such as Dickens so vividly pictures? 56306 A light? 56306 Afraid of men, of starvation, of opposition, of censure, of hatred, of ostracism? 56306 Again I ask, How can we? 56306 Am I doing anything to pass on these high inspirations to endeavor and ambition? 56306 And how can I do other than radiate a large and tremendous discontent at the suffering and woe of the unfortunates of life? 56306 And the bars of gold that build the porch of heaven? 56306 And when we remember, why should we not wish, instead of adding to their burdens, to lighten or help remove them? 56306 And whom will he serve? 56306 And why should not old age be the best part of life? 56306 Are men, women, and innocent children to bedamned"on this earth-- as well as in the future-- because morally they have been weak and unfortunate?
56306Are you a man, a woman, a human soul, made in the image of God and given powers of thought, of discernment, of decision?
56306Are you perfect?
56306Are you radiating such courage so that your children feel it?
56306Are you using them now?
56306Are yours alert for all the sweet, the pleasant, the comforting, the joyous, the sublime sounds that might come to them now?
56306As he rose to go, he said,"What can I do for you to show my gratitude for what you have done for me?"
56306As to being afraid of men, why should one man ever be afraid of another?
56306Brave Admir''l, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?"
56306Brave Admir''l, speak; what shall I say?"
56306Browning in his_ Prospice_ opens with the bold and daring interrogative:"Fear death?"
56306But does this make him lose heart, or cease to work for the new cases that come?
56306But you ask: How am I to know this moral multiplication table?
56306CHAPTER XX RADIANCIES OF THE"ETERNAL NOW"Is there any past, any future, in our lives?
56306Can I harmonize them all?
56306Can I ignore the degradation of their debauchery?
56306Can we not learn as the years roll along?
56306Can we not try to feel it?
56306Can we play fast and loose with eternal principles?
56306Can you imagine a man like Muir ever having wanted to engage in such a disgraceful and degrading scene?
56306Can you imagine the results?
56306Did he?
56306Did you never meet with such people who were always bright and sunny, who always gave forth a cheery word, always radiated optimism?
56306Do I agree with them all?
56306Do I attempt to reconcile them?
56306Do we grow more foolish as we grow old?
56306Do you read simply to say that you have read, to be able to give expression to the usual fashionable gabble on so- called"current literature"?
56306Do you see the thought?
56306Do you think Muir had anything of that kind in mind when he said he wanted to go to college?
56306Do you try to keep up with all the latest books?
56306Do you want to be a slave to your own purpose?
56306Do you want to_ do_ the things that you have willed to do?
56306Do you?
56306Does experience count for nothing?
56306Does he feel slighted, hurt, neglected?
56306Edison?"
56306From what laboratory does it extract those exquisitely delicate and delicious odors?
56306From whence does it gain those delicate tints, tones, and colors?
56306From you, reader?
56306Granted there are pleasures in the ballroom, and they are doubtless great, but can they begin to compare with the delights of out- of- doors?
56306Have you experienced these blessings in the air?
56306Have you felt these benedictions in the dew?
56306Have you seen the exquisite robes of the lilies?
56306Have you seen the ships of gold sailing through the silver seas?
56306How about the doctrine of the brotherhood of man?
56306How can I be cheerful when I am out of work and sick and have no friends?"
56306How could he, the poor and humble shepherd lad, ever hope to see and know these people?
56306How could she be otherwise?
56306How dare we?
56306How does it shape all that beauty?
56306How shall one know it when he sees it?
56306How then can I best radiate the inspiration for growth in them?
56306How_ can_ we?
56306How_ dare_ we?
56306I swam,--why should not they?
56306If I look back upon the past, or anticipate the future, whether with joy or pleasure, do I not do it in the_ now_?
56306If evil, why?
56306If good, am I radiating as much as I might and should?"
56306If so, from whom shall I gain good?
56306If we can do so much better than those we criticise, why, in the name of heaven and suffering humanity, do we not go ahead and do it?
56306Is a good start all that is needed?
56306Is he a moral hero who taboos such subjects, who refrains from discussing them in the pulpit because they are not"gospel"subjects?
56306Is he a true man who waits, pauses, hesitates, wavers in such conflicts,"till the judgment hath passed by"?
56306Is it clear?
56306Is it not better consciously to radiate that which you wish than unconsciously( or thoughtlessly) to radiate that which you do not wish?
56306Is it not glorious to live in such a realm of high spiritual courage?
56306Is it only a walk of ten blocks( or five) to the store, or office, or school?
56306Is it the tender star of love?
56306Is not this a quality of soul to be highly desired?
56306Is the moon in the heavens dimming the stars but flooding the earth with dream- light?
56306Is there no infallible, certain, sure way of doing things?
56306It is a great temptation when I come into the presence of such people to ask,"What is your price?"
56306Joaquin Miller expresses the same thought in his beautiful and strong poem on Father Damien when he says: Why do ye not as he has done?
56306La Farge?
56306Like the aimless, helpless, hopeless, did I drivel-- Being-- who?
56306Now, here is the crucial question-- How can you know that you are right?
56306Now, what can I do?"
56306Of learning things?
56306Or are you a mere puppet to be worked by the string of other men''s thoughts, other men''s ideas, other men''s opinions?
56306Or are you like the"fools and blind"who will sit at a Boston Symphony concert and gabble gossip or retail slander?
56306Or is the sky dark and lowering with black clouds so that you can see nothing as yet?
56306Post 8vo 1.50 IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD?
56306Reader, what are you radiating?
56306Reid?
56306Shall I be any the less a man than they?
56306Shall I cease to be his friend, in order to protect myself?
56306Shall I have received so much, and then be craven and pass on so little?"
56306Shall I hesitate to render service because I myself am not perfect?
56306Shall I refuse to accept good except from those who are perfect?
56306Shall I refuse to give the shivering and hungry beggar on the street a twenty- five cent meal ticket because I myself am not free from debt?
56306Shall I refuse to guide the lost wayfarer because I myself do not know all the winding pathways of life?
56306Shall we ignore the evil and see only the good?
56306Shall we ignore the good and see only the evil?
56306Should not such men hear the gospel plainly and without equivocation?
56306That they are influenced by it?
56306The hindrance to life of smug and ignorant contentment, the dwarfing power of self- complacent assurance, who can tell?
56306The main test of any system of religion or code of life is: Does it work?
56306The questions, then, that every true- hearted man and woman must, and will, ask are:"Am I radiating good or evil?
56306The star of love and dreams?
56306The whole question thus resolves itself to me: Shall I refuse to accept the good of certain men because they do many evil things?
56306Then the questions I constantly ask myself are:"What are you doing to add to these liberties to hand on to future ages?
56306Therefore why should he be afraid?
56306They passed; they sat a grass- set hill-- What king hath carpets like to this?
56306Tintoretto?
56306Titian?
56306To do unconsciously?
56306To eat and drink, sleep and satisfy our appetites and then die like other mere animals who do the same thing?
56306To_ be_ unconsciously?
56306Turner?
56306Velasquez?
56306What are we here for?
56306What chance do I have of exercising moral courage?"
56306What colorist of earth can ever equal them?
56306What do_ you_ want to be?
56306What does starvation of the body mean to the man whose soul is uplifted into the presence of the Most High?
56306What grander sight could you ask for?
56306What had we to do with dignity?
56306What is fashion, anyhow?
56306What is it?
56306What is one failure or ten, to one success or ten?
56306What is religion?
56306What is the purpose, the object of life?
56306What is the result in many cases?
56306What sense, what manliness, what dignity, is there in allowing a"fashion- designer"to thus have the opportunity of ruining our health?
56306What shall I radiate to such a man-- to all such men?
56306What should be our mental attitude toward those who give such conflicting radiancies?
56306What though oftentimes the people who dwell in these places are brought thither by their own misconduct?
56306What was the result?
56306What will you do if this fails?
56306What would become of the chick in the egg if the mother hen did not brood over it?
56306What, then, is the upshot of the whole matter?
56306Whence came this radiant courage and power?
56306Whence comes true art?
56306Who can not see that such a man is a fool?
56306Who has kept them in bondage so long?
56306Who has not been thrilled with the doings of the live- saving service, and the lighthouse keepers?
56306Who has not seen the keen readiness of a horse to"sense"the mental condition of the man who was driving him?
56306Who is to give it?
56306Who won these charters of our liberty?
56306Who would not like thus to fill up the mind and the soul with such wonderful facts and beautiful truths deduced therefrom?
56306Who would not observe in this fashion?
56306Who would not reign in such a realm?
56306Who would think of learning anything from the mists?
56306Whose fault is it?
56306Why does the wind blow so fiercely?
56306Why is it that this_ ignis fatuus_ has such power of allurement?
56306Why let fashion dictate what we shall wear?
56306Why not especially radiate cheerfulness to the fullest possible extent to those who have less of this world''s goods than ourselves?
56306Why not help them bear the burdens of life by your radiant optimism?
56306Why run the risk?
56306Why should fashion ride rough- shod over the wisdom of men and women?
56306Why should we be afraid to lose a few cents, when our hands are filled with diamonds, and rubies, and pearls, and nuggets of gold?
56306Why should we ever have yielded to them?
56306Why should we fear men, when we have the courage of our convictions?
56306Why waste words asking the questions?
56306Why will men rely more upon written words than upon the flashes of illuminated truth that come to their own souls?
56306Why?
56306Why?
56306You have received freely; how are you giving?
56306You may ask,"Why with stronger fervor?"
56306and then, if the soldier were a stranger, he would ask:"Do you use tobacco?"
713At what time this morning will you take your departure?
713How long a time first?
713How long did Carrots live with you?
713How long was that before your death?
713How was the poison administered, in beer or in purl?
713Sie sprach zu ihm behende, Wie lasst du mich so lang In der Obrigkeit Hande? 713 What would you have of me?"
713''How is it,''said Anselme to him,''that you, whom I saw lying dead on the field of battle, are full of life?''
713*** Who''s there, i''the devil''s name?
713***"Be these the fruits of common secrets, common dangers?"
713--''But whence,''resumed Anselme,''comes that strange brightness that surrounds you?''
713Afterwards, when the child could speak, this examinant asked her what she saw at the time?
713And has he not within a year Hang''d threescore of them in one shire?
713Another time they both cried out upon Amy Duny and Rose Cullender, saying,''Why do n''t you come yourselves?
713Help me from this anguish, O thou dearest devil( or lover), mine?"]
713Hilf mir aus ihren Zwang, Wie du mir hast verheissen, Ich bin ja eben dein, Thu mich aus der Angst entreissen O liebster Buhle mein?
713In such a state of fear and anxiety, how could Alexius comport himself with dignity and like an Emperor?"
713Is that the city?"
713Justice:"How now?
713Many of the latter were asked upon the rack what Satan had said, when he found that the commissioners were proceeding with such severity?
713Might not the great enemy have put false testimony into the mouths of the witnesses, or might not the witnesses be witches themselves?
713Now what was the grand result of all these struggles?
713Nuremberg, Geneva, Paris, Toulouse, Lyons, and other cities, their two hundred?
713She also asked the ladies, who had been drawn to their windows to witness the procession, what they were looking at?
713She said to him quickly,"Why hast thou left me so long in the magistrate''s hands?
713The Judge then asked them whether they found her guilty upon the indictment of conversing with the devil in the shape of a cat?
713The first question he put to them was, whether they would serve him soul and body?
713The inquisitors were required to ask the suspected whether they had midnight meetings with the devil?
713Why do you send your imps to torment us?''"
713and whether they had sexual intercourse with Satan?
713dost thou think King Richard is in the bush?"]
713knock!--Never at quiet?
713knock****** Who''s there, i''the name o''Beelzebub?
713neighbour Banks, are you a ringleader in mischief?
713that Cologne should for many years burn its three hundred witches annually?
713the district of Barnberg its four hundred?
713whether they attended the witch''s sabbath on the Brocken?
713whether they could raise whirlwinds and call down the lightning?
713whether they had their familiar spirits?
42137A great castle for poor little me?
42137A shoe? 42137 A shoe?"
42137Afraid? 42137 Am I to stand there to be stared at?
42137And I suppose,there was bitter sarcasm in the director''s voice,"she will sing the part when that night comes?"
42137And does the great Fernando Tiffin do his work here, too?
42137And have you money for her, a great deal of money?
42137And if it can be, will you let me know?
42137And if she did?
42137And if they arrest me, what then?
42137And in the meantime?
42137And now,came in a polite tone from the corner,"if I may have a word with Petite Jeanne?"
42137And she never recognized you?
42137And that dark- faced one? 42137 And that was her home?"
42137And the girl went in there?
42137And these are your friends? 42137 And was she telling me I might keep them?
42137And what does this mean? 42137 And what will you see after that?"
42137And where are we?
42137And where''ll we go? 42137 And where''s Blackie?"
42137And who knows,she had clasped her hands in ecstasy,"who knows but that in some mysterious way my opportunity may come?"
42137And who taught you?
42137And why not? 42137 And will you tell them why?"
42137And you thought because you found''em they were yours?
42137And you will be our diva?
42137And, after all, how could she help believing that I took them? 42137 And, after all,"she heaved a deep sigh that was more than half filled with contentment,"who''d object to that?
42137Angelo? 42137 Are you Pierre?"
42137Are you not afraid to be on the streets at night?
42137Arranged?
42137At night?
42137Besides, how could she know? 42137 Borrow it?
42137But are you not afraid?
42137But did you not endeavor to make a call at this strange home?
42137But how could they?
42137But how did these get in?
42137But how now is it all to end?
42137But if this is true, why did I go unmolested? 42137 But inside?"
42137But ought you not to open the package? 42137 But out there on that vacant lot, in the cold and dark-- you have not forgotten?"
42137But the way out?
42137But then?
42137But what can you do?
42137But what place_ is_ this?
42137But what?
42137But where is she? 42137 But where is the necklace?
42137But why all this?
42137But why did you ask about the scar?
42137But why did you run? 42137 But why do they pour it out?"
42137But why such cruel, cruel contrasts?
42137But why the masquerade?
42137But why then did he not come that night and deliver it?
42137But why?
42137But would I wish to live here?
42137But, Aunt Bobby,she exclaimed at last,"what can you be doing here?
42137By whom?
42137Can I do it?
42137Can it be that this place is left unguarded, and that it is being robbed?
42137Deep down there?
42137Did she?
42137Do you?
42137Does he not hate you?
42137Does she believe I took the pearls?
42137Dreaming?
42137Eyes?
42137For me?
42137For what will they arrest me? 42137 From France?"
42137Got it?
42137Guards? 42137 He-- he wo n''t eat it?"
42137Hear what?
42137Here? 42137 How can she dare to visit this desolate spot alone?"
42137How can you have seen it?
42137How could I forget?
42137How could he know?
42137How many?
42137How''d you know that?
42137I wonder if she heard?
42137I wonder what he meant?
42137I wonder why he put it where he did?
42137I?
42137If so, why did he not return?
42137Is it for this that I am here?
42137Is this Petite Jeanne? 42137 Is this little Frenchman after all but a tool of the police?
42137Jeanne,Florence stood in the door of her room,"did that man, the dark- faced one with the evil eye, did he have a scar on his chin?"
42137Lights and shadows?
42137Lost his way? 42137 May I speak with her?
42137Meg,said Jeanne imploringly,"have you a dress to loan me?"
42137Midnight? 42137 No?
42137Now why did I do that?
42137Now why did she do that?
42137Oh, could n''t I? 42137 Oh, why did I run away?
42137Petite Jeanne,Florence spoke with sudden earnestness,"have you no people living in France?"
42137Romantic? 42137 Shall they know?"
42137Shall we arouse the garrison? 42137 Shall we wake him and suggest it now?"
42137So late as this?
42137So this is where you work?
42137Sometime? 42137 Sometimes we have good fortune, is it not so?
42137Swim?
42137Tell me truly,she said to her companion,"he would not eat him?"
42137Tell me,said Florence, as the hot tea warmed the white- haired one''s drowsy blood,"why did you weep at the loss of a shoe?"
42137Tell you? 42137 That your net?"
42137The music,she whispered to Swen,"you will do it?"
42137Then how can you go back?
42137Then why--?
42137Then will you please ask Pierre if it will be possible for him to meet me at the Opera House stage door at three this afternoon?
42137This place, do you ask?
42137Uncles and aunts, cousins, grandparents?
42137Unless what?
42137Wa- all,came in a not unfriendly voice,"what is it y''want?"
42137Was there ever such another night?
42137We-- we''re here,Florence panted,"but where are we?"
42137Well, ai n''t they?
42137Wh- what''s happened?
42137Wh-- where are we?
42137Wha-- what is it?
42137What am I to wear?
42137What can be keeping her?
42137What can she mean, always dogging my footsteps?
42137What did I tell you? 42137 What do you care?"
42137What does it all mean?
42137What is poverty when one has friends?
42137What is to happen?
42137What must a terrific thunderstorm mean to that teaming mass of humanity?
42137What must he be when he gets his second plumage? 42137 What was it like?"
42137What was that number?
42137What would a boy wear? 42137 What you want?"
42137What''s pleasing you, sister?
42137What''s your name?
42137What, indeed?
42137What?
42137When will it break up?
42137When?
42137Where are we?
42137Where are we?
42137Where did you learn to ride so well?
42137Where does she live?
42137Where else could she have gone?
42137Where the pigeons are always bathing?
42137Where?
42137Who are you? 42137 Who better than I can feel as that poor juggler felt as he gave all this up for the monastery''s narrow walls?"
42137Who but the gypsies?
42137Who called it?
42137Who can he be?
42137Who can say?
42137Who can tell? 42137 Who can tell?"
42137Who can these men be?
42137Who could doubt it?
42137Who could it be?
42137Who could not know? 42137 Who could that man be?"
42137Who else would wave his arms so wildly?
42137Who knows? 42137 Who knows?"
42137Who would not?
42137Who-- who was that?
42137Who? 42137 Why Pierre?"
42137Why all this late unpleasantness?
42137Why am I afraid?
42137Why did I promise so much?
42137Why did I say midnight?
42137Why did we come this way?
42137Why did you say all this was''a form of life''?
42137Why go back at all?
42137Why not? 42137 Why not?
42137Why not?
42137Why think of to- morrow? 42137 Why was I afraid then?
42137Why weep when there is so much to be glad about? 42137 Why, how-- how could you know?"
42137Will she truly allow me to be her understudy, to go on in her place when the''Juggler''is done again?
42137Will they truly arrest me?
42137Will wonders never end?
42137Will you hand it over, or shall we take you in?
42137Will you try?
42137Will you?
42137Will you?
42137Yeah?
42137Yeah?
42137Yes, why?
42137Yet, who knows but that some golden opportunity may come to you? 42137 You are Jeanne''s lady in black?"
42137You know those people?
42137You saw him yesterday?
42137You saw that? 42137 You saw that?"
42137You say two men followed him?
42137You see?
42137You will go there with me after the opera?
42137You wish this person''s address? 42137 You wished to see?"
42137You-- you think it could be made into a thing of beauty?
42137A castle?
42137A grandmother?
42137Ah, well, what did it matter?
42137Ah, yes, who could?
42137Alone?
42137And again,"I wonder who that man could be?
42137And always I think,''What if the walls should crumble?''"
42137And did they find mystery and great adventure in Jeanne''s vast castle?
42137And how can I know why?"
42137And how could she know?"
42137And how did such a strange home as this come into being?"
42137And if they did?
42137And if we rest beneath his rays much of the time, does he not give us a more abundant life?"
42137And the dark one who is only a voice, she says:''Do you like the opera?''
42137And then--""Yeah?
42137And then?"
42137And was not France her native land?
42137And what of that curtain?
42137And what other hour could one be sure of?
42137And where was one to look for him save in his old haunts?
42137And where was the man now?
42137And who is she?
42137And who knows what the French are like?
42137And who may you be?
42137And why not?
42137And why should they fail?
42137And will you have the chair, so?
42137And yet, what did she mean?
42137And, after all, how is one to find a shoe in such a place of madness?"
42137Are they having it?
42137Are we not the glory that is America in all her wealth and power?"
42137As it was, she asked but a single question:"Who is he?"
42137As she left the box during an intermission the rich girl turned a bright smile full upon her as she said:"What is your name?"
42137But Jeanne?
42137But Petite Jeanne?
42137But how could she know?
42137But if not a detective, what then?"
42137But was it Jeanne?
42137But what am I to wear?"
42137But what could have kept you?"
42137But what is this?
42137But what is this?
42137But what of the business- like little Frenchman?
42137But what of the days that were to follow?
42137But what shall I be?"
42137But what was this?
42137But what was this?
42137But what was to happen after that?
42137But what''s a shoe?
42137But where can they be going?
42137But where were they?
42137But who knows?"
42137But who wants so grand a castle that is cold?
42137But who were these people?
42137But who would hew planks by hand in this day of steam and great sawmills?"
42137But would she make it?
42137But would there?
42137But would they?
42137Can you blame me?"
42137Can you see them?
42137Could I be searched?"
42137Could one borrow it?"
42137Could they find it?
42137Did I take the necklace?
42137Did Jeanne tire of studying opera"forever and ever"and did she return to America?
42137Did a hand touch her foot?
42137Did he truly bear a message of importance?
42137Did he, then, see through her own pretenses?
42137Did she hear footsteps?
42137Did she pray, or did she but surrender her soul and body to the forces of nature all about her?
42137Did that little company indeed journey all the way to Paris?
42137Did this figure''s head turn?
42137Do you hear it?"
42137Do you not hear it flowing?"
42137Do you think I might see it, two or three friends and I?"
42137Do you think you could arrange it?
42137Does he hope to trap me and secure the pearls-- which I do not have?
42137Does not the sun give us life?
42137Does one sometimes serve himself best by serving others?
42137Does she suspect?
42137Got her address?"
42137Had he passed through?
42137Had she committed a dangerous blunder?
42137Had she forgotten?
42137Had the curtain consumed him?
42137Have n''t you unwrapped it?"
42137Have you seen him?"
42137Have you seen the fountain by the Art Museum?"
42137He--""Could a guilty person sleep so?"
42137Help me?"
42137How could he?
42137How could that be?"
42137How could they be implicated?
42137How could they?
42137How do you dare tamper with my property, to put on my costume?"
42137How had this come about?
42137How is it done?
42137If so, what was the message?
42137If so, whom had he apprehended, the dark- faced one or the little Frenchman with a military bearing?
42137In the meantime, the dark, slim man was saying to the stocky one:"Can you beat it?
42137Indian canoes?
42137Is it not so, Marjory Dean?
42137Is it not so?"
42137Is that enough?
42137Is this not strange?"
42137It does not matter?''
42137It is like, shall I say, like seeing God?
42137Jeanne had told her story and Florence had done her best to reassure her, when the little French girl exclaimed:"But you, my friend?
42137May I now have a word with you?"
42137Me?
42137Money?
42137Must I now lose you, oh, my royal treasure?
42137Now, what do you make of that?"
42137Oh, why did I accept?"
42137Oh, yes, indeed, they say:''What is your name?''
42137Or did our old friend, Florence, forgetting her blonde companion of many mysteries, go forth with others to seek adventure?
42137Or floating logs?
42137Or is he with that evil one with the desperate eyes?
42137Or is it Pierre?"
42137Or is it true that he came but now from France and bears a message for me?"
42137Or so?
42137Or will you wear it?
42137Petite Jeanne had hardly disappeared through the door leading to the stage when two whispered words came from behind Florence''s back:"Remember me?"
42137Remember?"
42137Scarcely had she regained her composure when a voice behind her asked:"Are you fond of the opera?"
42137See?
42137See?"
42137Shall I remove your sable coat?
42137Shall we try to go in?"
42137She wanted to rush down the stairs and call to him; yet she dared not, for were not those sinister figures lurking there?
42137Should she ask the driver to remain?
42137Should she say:"I am Petite Jeanne?"
42137Should you be afraid of God if you saw Him?"
42137Some from a broken ship and some from who knows where?
42137Somewhere?"
42137The cause?
42137The lady in black?
42137The stellar role?
42137This Petite Jeanne?"
42137This farewell was destined to end unfinished for suddenly a great bass voice roared:"What is this?
42137Thought you''d keep me out, eh?
42137To follow a dangerous criminal?
42137To frustrate his plans single- handed?
42137To- morrow?
42137Turning to a white- haired, distinguished- looking man close beside him, a man whom he had never before seen, he had said:"Is this life?"
42137Was it an"Exit"light?
42137Was it held in the hand of the unwelcome stranger?
42137Was it not France as she knew it?
42137Was she right?
42137Was she?
42137Was someone preparing to seize her?
42137Was this not their night of nights, the night of the"Grand Parade"?
42137Were there men about the place within the palisades?
42137Were they coming out?
42137Were those good days, better days than we are knowing now?"
42137What ails the fire?"
42137What are pearls among friends?"
42137What are you doing here?"
42137What can he want?"
42137What can he want?"
42137What could be more certain than this?
42137What could have been the reason?"
42137What did it matter?
42137What do you say to that?"
42137What does one wear in jail?"
42137What does that packet contain?"
42137What else can matter?
42137What good could possibly come of that?"
42137What had happened?
42137What had happened?
42137What interest could he have in a mere boy usher of the opera?
42137What is it?
42137What is she saying?
42137What is that on the lake?
42137What matter that some are left behind?
42137What more could he ask?"
42137What more could one ask?"
42137What more could one ask?"
42137What more, indeed?
42137What more, indeed?
42137What must we say, then, of Petite Jeanne?
42137What of her promise?
42137What shall the answer be?
42137What should she do?
42137What sort of people were these, anyway?
42137What strange new acquaintance shall I make; what adventures come to me?"
42137What was it she planned to do?
42137What was it?
42137What was it?
42137What was she letting herself in for?
42137What was she to expect?
42137What was this light?
42137What was this so wonderful thing you saw there?"
42137What was this?
42137What was to come of it all?
42137What was to happen?
42137What were these thoughts?
42137What will be the verdict?
42137What will these people see?
42137What will you have?"
42137What wonder that Petite Jeanne knew every word of this charming opera by heart?
42137What wonder, then, that these two bewildered and frightened ones, at sight of a glowing fire, should leap forward with cries of joy on their lips?
42137What would the answer be?
42137What you doing?
42137What''s it worth to you?
42137Where is she?
42137Where was Rosemary?
42137Where was he?
42137Where?"
42137Who can doubt it?
42137Who can doubt it?
42137Who can have requested it?
42137Who can say but that these two are the same, or at least that their effect is the same?
42137Who can tell?
42137Who could have planned all this and brought it into being?
42137Who could it be, at this hour of the night?
42137Who could it be?
42137Who could say?
42137Who could tell?
42137Who could tell?
42137Who did take it?"
42137Who else can matter?"
42137Who is he?
42137Who knows how Providence may assist me?"
42137Who wants to sit and grow roots like stupid little cottonwood trees?"
42137Who was he?
42137Who would tell her?
42137Who would wish for a grandmother who did not bend nor smile?
42137Whom shall I see?
42137Why Grand Opera?
42137Why are you not rehearsing your part?"
42137Why be afraid?"
42137Why did I run away?"
42137Why did they put it here?"
42137Why do you lock the gate?
42137Why does he not give us a ring?"
42137Why had he never returned to ask Pierre, the usher in the boxes, the correct address of Petite Jeanne?
42137Why not Marjory Dean?"
42137Why not go down with the tide?
42137Why not one good cup of black tea?
42137Why not, indeed?
42137Why not?
42137Why not?
42137Why should I?
42137Why should he not hear it when he chooses?
42137Why should he not?
42137Why should one fear Love?"
42137Why should one struggle?
42137Why was he here?
42137Why was it here?
42137Why was nothing said to her regarding the pearls?
42137Why was she not arrested?
42137Will it be a success?"
42137Will the lawyers and the judge make a joke of my misfortune?"
42137Will you explain something?"
42137Will you help me?
42137Will you, Marjory Dean?"
42137Would she go with them?
42137Would she not do so much for me?
42137Would you care to go a little way with me?"
42137Yet, as a means to an end, had she taken the necklace, intending later to return it?
42137You are a sun worshipper, are you not?"
42137You have been on the island?"
42137You know how long a freighter is?"
42137You know the people living on that curious man- made island?"
42137You recall that?"
42137You will be ready?
42137You''d not expect to find respectable people living there, would you?"
42137_ Mon Dieu!_ How is one to say how much?
42137_ Voila!_''"Who can say it is not going to be dramatic?
8380But how do you know you killed that many?
8380My contract requires me to stop on here until December of 1898, but it does n''t sound so long if you say''a year after this,''does it?
8380Akers, of the_ London Times_, and_ Harper''s Weekly_, who has held two commissions from the Queen?
8380But why should we not go a step farther and a step higher, and interfere in the name of humanity?
8380For what voice crying in the wilderness are they still waiting?
8380Is it likely, having risked such a price for it that they would lie about what they have seen?
8380Is it that the American people doubt the sources from which their information comes?
8380It will not do to put it aside by saying that"War is war,"and that"All war is cruel,"or to ask,"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
8380Now suppose the troops are sent at short notice from the military camps along the line to protect any particular point?
8380Or if the members of the Senate and of Congress can not visit Cuba, why will they not listen to those who have been there?
8380What further manifestations are needed?
8380What will convince them that the time has come?
8380Why should we tolerate Spanish savages merely because they call themselves"the most Catholic,"but who in reality are no better than this naked negro?
8595There is a most imposing pulpit surmounted by a canopy where a female figure seated on a globe is surrounded by cherubs, clouds( or are they rocks?)
6797Smelt by the king ere long, He sharpened up his tooth, And thus addressed the throng( Full angrily, in truth):''The robbers is''t we see?
6797Speak out, old horned boor What charms canst thou display? 6797 Who ever would kiss thee, Thou ugly, dirty dunce?
6797A man like me-- pray where''s his head?
6797A sonnet to have made?"
6797A. Eh?
6797And ye ask for worship in the dust, Since the blind jade, Fate, a world has thrust In your purse, perchance?
6797Art thou charmed by the tale of my robber?
6797But what now?--Are even princes dumb?
6797Could this thing be?
6797Didst see the Roman, proud and stern, Sitting on Afric''s shore?
6797Do I his numerous train descry?
6797Do I long with Roman blood to spring, When my Hermann calls?
6797Do I still or pride or grandeur show?
6797Do my pulses, at my country''s name, Proudly burst their prison- thralls?
6797Do not the spacious heavens encompass me?
6797Doth the laurel still allure me on?
6797Doth thy lyre, Apollo Cynthius?
6797Drink I, eagle, still the fiery rain Of thine eye, that burneth to destroy?
6797Graving the while With the lightning''s style"Creatures, do ye acknowledge me?"
6797Has a diploma?
6797Have I escaped from my prison so drear?
6797Hear I still bright glory''s thunder- tone?
6797Hear''st thou the horn of the hunter resound, Wakening the echo through forest and plain?
6797How we''re fastened to a string, Whirled around in giddy ring, Making all like night appear, Filling with strange sounds our ear?
6797I''ll dream that I am free and blest Why should I waken from a dream so bright?
6797I?
6797If fair boys were''mongst the band, How came they to be-- This I can not understand,-- In such company?
6797In Suabia may such things be got?
6797In my breast no echoes now arise, Every shamefaced muse in sorrow flies,-- And thou, too, Apollo Cynthius?
6797Is it the genius whom the gladsome throng obeys?
6797Kings''dissensions wherefore dread I, Why the fortune of the fight?
6797Kinsman, once so full of glee, Kinsman, where''s thy drollery, Where thy tricks, thou cunning one?
6797Learn''st thou now, licentious wight?
6797Let me hence, let me hence, girl, I pray thee?
6797Maiden, stay!--oh, whither wouldst thou go?
6797Maiden, was it right?
6797Not an answer-- hushed and still is all-- Does the veil, then, e''en on monarchs fall, Which enshrouds their humble flatt''rers glance?
6797Praying, singing, I have tried, Wouldst thou have me swear?
6797Seest thou how our tongues and wits Thou hast shivered into bits-- Seest thou this, licentious wight?
6797Seest thou now, licentious wight?
6797Shall I no more in my sad dungeon pine?
6797Shall I still be, as a woman, tame?
6797She finds that I''m a man-- then, why By her is pity sought?
6797Smil''st thou?--No?
6797Stands the seven- hilled city as of yore Oft her orphaned lot awakes my tear, For alas, her Caesar is no more?
6797The god of pills, in sore surprise, A spring then backwards took:"Is this his highness''usual guise?
6797The world I proudly wander o''er, And plume myself and sing I am a man!--Whoe''er is more?
6797They who ruled o''er north and east and west Suffer now his ev''ry nauseous jest, And-- no sultan threats?
6797This heart, by heavenly glory graced,-- Dares it with earthly love to beat?
6797This tree-- what can it mean?
6797Thou, too-- Brutus-- thou?
6797Toward the hero doth this heart still strain?
6797What land, perchance?''
6797What mean the joyous sounds from yonder vine- clad height?
6797What say you?--Shall I try to ascertain?
6797What so good for banishing sorrow As women, theft, and bloody affray?
6797What the exulting Evoe?
6797What trade?
6797What, has there e''er escaped a poet?
6797What?
6797Wherefore make me ply with ardor This vocation, terror- fraught?
6797Who hath, dead one, summoned thee to light?
6797Who, alas, will teach thine infant truly Spears to hurl, the gods to honor duly, When thou''rt buried''neath dark Xanthus''wave?
6797Who?
6797Whom is''t that I, with pinions light, Swinging the lofty Thyrsus see?
6797Why for Elysium care a rush?
6797Why sorrows she so?
6797Why weeps the maiden?
6797Will she, perchance, for pity cry, If unawares she''s caught?
6797Wilt thou, Hector, leave me?--leave me weeping, Where Achilles''murderous blade is heaping Bloody offerings on Patroclus''grave?
6797Would I boast the eagle''s soaring wing?
6797Wouldst thou a gallant be, As Midas was Apollo once?
6797[ 63] Why glows the cheek?
6797if by no vision I''m misled,''Tis the footstep of a child of Rome.-- Son of Tiber-- whence dost thou appear?
6797if the cat once turned her back, Pray where would be the mice?
6797in my bosom chaste Can mortal''s image have a seat?
6797shall I strike the golden string, When, borne on by exultation''s wing, O''er the battle- field your chariots trail?
6797shall peace''neath crowns be now my theme?
6797what''s this now From the window shoots?
6797why didst thou ever From thy branches speak to me?
63704And how would I live and I an old woman if I had n''t a bit of a farm with cows on it and sheep on the blackhills?
63704How did she acquire her knowledge of''The Gascony''?)
63704The question is,said Boswell to Dr. Johnson and Mr. Cambridge,"which is worst, one wild beast or many?"
63704Why did Synge''s Nora marry her husband?
63704( I leave out of consideration such questions as:"Where did she obtain the fine clothes?"
63704(_ Then, with that queer expression on her face which prefaces her desperations._) You do n''t want me now, I suppose?
63704... Now what do you think of me, Miss Ellie?
63704And have we not seen how men of lofty ideals can tumble into cruelty and become brutal ruffians in the name of patriotism?
63704And if a life of thought without action does not attract my fancy, how can I be expected to aspire to it?
63704And is not the desolation of desolations a religious faith in which there is no certainty and very little hope?
63704And since every one knew already of the affairs, what possible harm could there be in his putting them into perfect and publishable prose?
63704Because she loved him?
63704Because she wished to be married and no one else had asked her?
63704But how did Mr. Moore, the son of a prosperous Irish landowner of aristocratic origin, acquire his close intimacy with the details of such life?
63704But what is there in human affairs to justify any man in assuming that the mass of men are likely to be long- suffering in idealism?
63704But why did Clare Dedmond marry her husband?
63704But why?
63704But would he?
63704CAPTAIN SHOTOVER: Do?
63704CHRISTY: What would any be but odd men and they living lonesome in the world?
63704Can any one find ground for sneering in such behaviour as that?
63704Can you typewrite where you are?
63704Did the Irish peasant farmer remember those claims on his gratitude?
63704Divine optimism, but what is there in peasant society to justify it?
63704Do any of us profit by our experience?
63704Do you think the laws of God will be suspended in favour of England because you were born in it?
63704For money?
63704HECTOR: And what may my business as an Englishman be, pray?
63704Had he not paid tribute to privacy by omitting names or inventing others than the proper ones?
63704Has not the war that was to end war made war seem more probable?
63704Having listened to the preachers and propagandists, Mr. Beerbohm turns to his guide and says,"But where are the artists?"
63704He stood in the hall, holding the door, looking very tall and dark, and said in that peculiar, tired and plaintive voice of his,"Who is it?"
63704How can it be broad to be the same thing to everyone, and narrow to be everything to someone?
63704How can one be too fine to endure a thing and yet not fine enough to endure it?
63704How far would a rope help him to realize his desire?
63704How, when you contemplate the miseries and inequalities and cruelties of existence, can you believe in an All- Powerful God?
63704If she were capable of selling her embraces, why did she shiver and twitch when Malise kissed her?
63704If she were prepared to endure that last of all defilements, why did she run away from her husband?
63704In what respect does it differ from the most devastating and blasting form of Calvinism?
63704Is it not ungracious to make complaint, even if the complaint be a slight one, of a man who can make the invisible world so powerfully felt as that?
63704Mr. Chesterton begs us to observe how happy is the former compared with the latter, but is he one- half so happy?
63704Mr. Pendyce ejaculates, on hearing that his son has gone after illicit love,"What on earth made me send George to Eton?"
63704One does not ask:"Why did Ibsen''s Nora marry her husband?"
63704One imagines him, in the days before the Battle of Jutland, asking in puzzled fashion,"What do you mean when you say you_ feel_ things?
63704PEGEEN: What call have you to be lonesome when there''s poor girls walking Mayo in their thousands now?
63704The reader feels certain that whatever else Mr. Pendyce may have said on that occasion, he did not say,"What on earth made me send George to Eton?"
63704The test of honour is, not what will you do for yourself, but what will you do for other men?
63704The two"loutish boys"shout after him,"Wot price the little barstard?"
63704This soul''s prison we call England?
63704To escape from her parents?
63704True, everyone knew who were the persons portrayed, but was that his fault?
63704What also, he might have added, would become of Belfast and Dublin, deprived, the one of its Lough, and the other, of its Bay?
63704What am I to do?
63704What combat could have seemed more unequal than that?
63704What is she to do?
63704What was truth?
63704What, some one jestingly demanded, would become of that great port when deprived of its"pool"?
63704What?
63704What_ is_ feeling?
63704When he tells me that the peasant will fight for his own land, I ask him whether the peasant will fight for his neighbour''s land?
63704Where are the generous ideals of 1914 now?
63704Who was I, I demanded of myself, that I should thrust my unimportant person on the notice of a genius?
63704Why is it certain that democracy will prevail in Ireland?
63704Why should it ever be_ private_?"
63704Why should they have friends?
63704You care?
63704You mean it?
63704You_ do_?
63704but never with a"How are you?"
63704did she?
63704you are unfaithful to me?"
33612A match?
33612About what?
33612About what?
33612Afraid, is ut?
33612After you had signed it and French had witnessed it?
33612Ai n''t they givin''even money against the field? 33612 Am I?"
33612Am I?
33612An''wud I that has lived wid four men be afraid iv a bear? 33612 And I''m like them, you think?"
33612And Jerry and Larry, too?
33612And admitting that,Angus returned,"will you act like a sensible girl?"
33612And do you want Mackay to kill you?
33612And have you known this girl friend of hers, long, too?
33612And how about:''But the word, the word is mine When the order moves the line, And the lean, locked ranks go roaring down to die,''?"
33612And how is the patient?
33612And how the devil do you know that I can or will tell you what you want to know? 33612 And is Mr. Foley here on the ranch?"
33612And let you walk? 33612 And what has that got to do with the levels of this land?"
33612And what is it this morning, judge?
33612And what is that?
33612And what sort of medicine is it for me to have a drunken blackguard of a brother run out on the street to hold up the rig I''m driving in?
33612And why could n''t ye say so before?
33612And you did n''t believe it?
33612And you want to know why I''m here?
33612Angus,she said,"what has Turkey done?"
33612Any advance? 33612 Any special one?"
33612Are you going to keep me waiting seven years, as Rebecca kept Joseph?
33612Are you hurt much? 33612 Are you ill?
33612Are you sure this is right?
33612Are you sure?
33612Are you telling me to mind my own business?
33612Are you that strong?
33612Are you the Mr. Mackay who has a ranch somewhere near here?
33612Are you threatening me with a lawsuit?
33612Are you threatening me?
33612Are you trying to blackmail me?
33612Are you trying to kid me? 33612 Are you trying to tell me to play it safe?"
33612Are you?
33612Before I leave here,Angus said,"you will tell me what I want to know, or--""Or what?"
33612Both of''em?
33612Braden fixed them, did he?
33612Bus''ness?
33612Busy?
33612But Angus, what are you going to do?
33612But I do n''t want--"Yez want coin, do yez? 33612 But a man who is out of a place does n''t work, does he?"
33612But at all events within, say, forty- eight hours?
33612But could n''t we find the corner- posts if the land was surveyed?
33612But how can he account for the existence of two sets of deeds?
33612But if French paid only about three dollars for the land and split the difference with somebody, could n''t Miss Winton claim the difference?
33612But if it is my land, how can Mr. Braden say it''s his?
33612But if you knew that, why the deuce did you play with them?
33612But suppose he does n''t resist arrest?
33612But suppose you do n''t get clear?
33612But what are we going to do about it?
33612But what are you working at? 33612 But what seems to be the matter with you?"
33612But what work could I do for you?
33612But where did he get the money?
33612But who did this? 33612 But who would do it, Angus?"
33612But who would rustle them?
33612But why did n''t you tell me these things before?
33612But-- can you afford it?
33612Ca n''t I?
33612Ca n''t we get him to come back, Angus?
33612Can they make it?
33612Can you come in to- morrow? 33612 Come through with that money, or----""Or what?"
33612Cost?
33612Could they have gone farther?
33612Could you see what it was?
33612Cruising?
33612D''ye think we''re going to be cold- decked by a bunch of hicks?
33612Damn it, Kit,her brother replied,"why did n''t you say something like that before?
33612Did I say so?
33612Did I-- What makes you ask that?
33612Did he ever tell you why his remittances had stopped?
33612Did n''t you just see me raise him out? 33612 Did n''t you know it?"
33612Did she say I was homely?
33612Did up Braden?
33612Did what?
33612Did you ever hear of anybody gettin''plum''through, say to Cache River, that way?
33612Did you go to see that fight you was speakin''of?
33612Did you say I was skinny?
33612Did you see him?
33612Did your mother make them?
33612Do I know the land?
33612Do I mean it?
33612Do I not know ye for what ye are-- a little lady born an''bred, pure- minded an''high- minded? 33612 Do n''t they?
33612Do n''t you compare conveyances before execution in your office?
33612Do n''t you like to pick peas with me?
33612Do n''t you read things over before you sign and have your signature witnessed? 33612 Do n''t you s''pose I''ve been in the game long enough to know it?
33612Do you do anything?
33612Do you have any fun at all?
33612Do you know anything about it?
33612Do you know anything about the horses?
33612Do you know how strong you are?
33612Do you know that you are lucky not to be badly hurt?
33612Do you know the land?
33612Do you know what I weigh?
33612Do you know what he is going to do in this country?
33612Do you know what my trunk weighs?
33612Do you mean Blake French?
33612Do you mean Turkey?
33612Do you mean he gets away with it?
33612Do you mean he''s dead?
33612Do you mean old Godfrey French''s ranch?
33612Do you mean that I shall marry for money?
33612Do you mean that he is dead?
33612Do you mean that you question the truth of my words?
33612Do you mean that?
33612Do you mean the old Tetreau place?
33612Do you mean to tell me,Faith accused him severely,"that on top of all your deceptions you have a title?
33612Do you mean you bluffed him?
33612Do you mean,he queried with a scowl when Mr. Braden had stated the case succinctly,"that the ranch will be sold?"
33612Do you suppose it''s so?
33612Do you think I''m such a dashed cad as that? 33612 Do you think she can succeed-- make the ranch pay eventually?"
33612Do you think the land is worth more than I have offered?
33612Do you think you can make me do things merely because you''re stronger?
33612Do you want me to handle you?
33612Do you want to hang?
33612Does it go?
33612Does n''t that make my offer all the fairer?
33612Drunk, is he?
33612En bloc?
33612Even if I am a pilgrim?
33612Even money against the field?
33612Everything all right, Davy?
33612Faith Winton French?
33612Folks depending on you?
33612For Blake?
33612For instance?
33612For sale?
33612For taking the gift of a good horse?
33612For what?
33612For what?
33612Gavin French, did you kill my father?
33612Get me, will you?
33612Go and saddle Pincher for me, will you? 33612 Gone out?
33612Good as that? 33612 Good heavens, is there_ that_?
33612Good race, was n''t it?
33612Good travelin''?
33612H-- how?
33612Has any one made you an offer?
33612Has anybody asked you to?
33612Has he bought any land yet?
33612Has she made it up with Chetwood yet?
33612Have you any connection with Braden?
33612Have you any idea what you will do? 33612 Have you any money left to bet on that?"
33612Have you ever thought of selling the land instead of ranching it? 33612 Have you had any trouble with Blake?"
33612Have you heard anything fresh lately?
33612Have you nerves, too?
33612Have you seen any of my brothers? 33612 Have you the consummate impudence to imagine that my niece would think twice of an ignorant young hawbuck without birth or education?
33612Have you told my niece that in your opinion the land is worthless?
33612He has the title papers?
33612He''s not-- dead-- Jean?
33612He''s-- well, we thought he might feel better if--"Is he dhrunk, bad scran till him?
33612Heavy?
33612Hey, Dave?
33612Him cooley kuitan, hey?
33612How about a get- away now?
33612How about lending me this money?
33612How about yourself?
33612How are we going to get onto it?
33612How are you fixed for matches and smoking?
33612How did Braden know?
33612How did I know I was butting in?
33612How did it happen?
33612How did you get lost, and where from?
33612How did you get lost?
33612How do you know it now?
33612How do you know we can?
33612How do you like this Chetwood?
33612How do you spell it?
33612How far have you ever gone yourself?
33612How high will you go?
33612How long are we going to be chased all over these hills? 33612 How long do you s''pose it''ll take to put in this flume?"
33612How long''s he been actin''that way, Dave?
33612How many brothers and sisters have you?
33612How much do you want to bet?
33612How much have you got here?
33612How much?
33612How on earth did you get this?
33612How on earth did you know I was thinking of that?
33612How was his wind to- day when you exercised him?
33612How''s McLatchie?
33612How?
33612I am Faith Winton, but how do you know? 33612 I did n''t know you then,"said Turkey,"but do you know what I thought?"
33612I do n''t know what you mean?
33612I do n''t s''pose you''d eat these, would you? 33612 I mean phwat religion are ye, or ai n''t ye?"
33612I say, what was all the row about?
33612I say,he exclaimed,"I do n''t wish to seem impertinent, but is there any personal reason why I should let Braden suppose I am doing this on my own?"
33612I suppose you know that your father would n''t like it?
33612I wanted to ask you if you could do with another man on your ranch?
33612I wonder if I would know her?
33612I wonder if Jean knew?
33612I wonder if he''s putting something over; I wonder if she_ does_ own this, and Braden has framed something on her?
33612I wonder if that old blighter, Braden, knew this?
33612I''ve felt like telling you before, but what was the use? 33612 I''ve got to get out of these mountains, have n''t I?
33612If a man has those qualities, is n''t he a gentleman?
33612If it is in my interest not to buy is n''t it in my niece''s interest to sell?
33612If it is obvious why is n''t your mind made up?
33612If they keep on for the head waters they get into mighty bad country, hey, Dave?
33612If ye know so much, why ai n''t ye got a half section or bether of yer own, instid of dhrillin''along a hired man?
33612If you would take Finn? 33612 If you''re such a darn''wise gazabo, why do n''t you find''em?"
33612Iktah mamook?
33612In that case would you consider it your duty to warn the intending purchaser?
33612In the quaint idiom of the country, far be it from me to horn in, but if I''m not impertinent, how did you do it?
33612In what particular?
33612In what way?
33612Is Mackay th''name iv ye? 33612 Is Miss Winton at home?"
33612Is he crazy? 33612 Is he hurt?
33612Is he that? 33612 Is it anything I''ve said?"
33612Is it?
33612Is n''t what?
33612Is she going to sell? 33612 Is she pretty, Angus?"
33612Is that so, Bill?
33612Is that so?
33612Is that so?
33612Is that so?
33612Is that so?
33612Is that what you were running your horse for? 33612 Is that you?"
33612Is that your trouble?
33612Is there anything I can do?
33612Is this young fellow bidding for you?
33612It ain''t-- what?
33612It looks like it,Angus admitted,"but still I do n''t understand--""What?"
33612It was n''t so bad, was it?
33612It will be like turning the knife, wo n''t it?
33612It''s not my fault, is it?
33612It''s you, is it?
33612It''s you, is it?
33612Just as it stands-- stock, implements and all?
33612Just finding out that old Doughnuts can travel when he has to?
33612Kissing each other?
33612Knocked the loan, hey? 33612 Like his looks, Pete?"
33612Like this? 33612 Look here,"he said,"are you going to make trouble for me-- I mean are you going to try to?"
33612Look here,said Kathleen French,"has Blake been drinking?"
33612Lost, are you?
33612Lying, am I?
33612Make a stand, hey?
33612May I call you''Turkey''?
33612Me name, is ut? 33612 Me?
33612Mebbe- so you catch white boy to ride um?
33612Mebbe- so you like pray?
33612Mortgage?
33612My deeds? 33612 Myself?
33612Next time?
33612Nice ranch, this,said the driver,"Yours?"
33612No cold-- no stoppage of the nostrils?
33612No? 33612 Nor can you positively identify the documents you saw Braden abstract from French''s safe?"
33612Not dead?
33612Not really?
33612Now what do you think of that?
33612Now what misguided idiot thought a law office worth robbing? 33612 Now what the devil is up?
33612Now what''s the next play?
33612Of what, Billy?
33612Oh, are you badly hurt? 33612 Oh, are_ you_ here?"
33612Oh, is that it?
33612Oh, you think it funny, do you? 33612 On a visit to Jean?"
33612On what? 33612 Or was he just trying to hang something on Gavin?"
33612Ought I?
33612Perhaps your stenographer might remember? 33612 Phwat gyurl friend?"
33612Pleasant evening, what?
33612Poole a competent man?
33612Pup, hey?
33612Say what? 33612 Say,"he said,"do you know a hard- faced bird, near as big as you are but older and heavier, that looks like a bad actor and likes the juice?
33612Say--"Well?
33612Shake?
33612Shall I call you''Angus''?
33612Shall I send him home?
33612Shall we sit down and talk? 33612 She''s living here now, is n''t she?"
33612Should n''t we be making some definite plans?
33612Singing?
33612Skookum, you?
33612So that''s the ground you take, is it?
33612Somethin''doing''?
33612Sore, are you? 33612 Sponges?"
33612Strong?
33612Suppose French, feeling his end approaching, gave it to his niece?
33612Suppose I forgot it?
33612Suppose he had given her the others, where would you be?
33612Suppose we do n''t win?
33612Suppose you tell me what the idea is?
33612Th''barkeep?
33612That you, Chetwood?
33612That''s the outfit that owns this Flambeau horse, ai n''t it?
33612That''s your last word, is it?
33612That''s yours, is n''t it?
33612The gift?
33612The gun? 33612 The old man?"
33612The pipes? 33612 Then I wonder what she''d have said about my figurehead if I had n''t?"
33612Then the size of it is, that we lose the ranch?
33612Then what on earth are you doing with the horse?
33612Then what on earth made you work as a ranch hand?
33612Then what the devil does?
33612Then who discovered the error?
33612Then why does Braden ask so much?
33612Then why does he want to buy the ranch now?
33612Then why does n''t one do something?
33612Then why have n''t you got a ranch of your own, instead of hoboing it around, renting places?
33612Then why is n''t Blake here?
33612Then why not advise her to get rid of it?
33612Then why not this? 33612 Then you think it a good investment?"
33612Then, Miss Mackay,Chetwood demanded,"what is the meaning of your conduct?"
33612Then, instid of feedin''him why do n''t ye t''run him out?
33612Then,said Angus,"this survey wo n''t take in that round mountain at all?"
33612Then--?
33612They accused you of cheating, what?
33612They would n''t hey?
33612They''re the same, are they?
33612This was one of the things you could make me do because you were stronger, was it? 33612 Throw me out, hey?
33612To do? 33612 To hurt me?
33612Trail?
33612Trying to get rid of me, are you? 33612 Twelve thousand?"
33612Very hard situation, is n''t it?
33612Violent? 33612 Was that right sir?
33612Was the horse uneasy before that?
33612Wedding? 33612 Well, Angus, do you want any Flambeau money?"
33612Well, glory be, an''what else is a gyurl''s waist an''a man''s arrum for?
33612Well, what about it?
33612Well, who are you?
33612Well, why should I think of you?
33612Well, why the devil should I help you stand off that bunch, then? 33612 Well, would n''t that show that both deeds were drawn seven years ago?"
33612Well,he said,"what you lookin''at?"
33612Well,said the lady in accents which left no doubt of her nationality,"well, misther man, an''phwat will yez be wantin''?"
33612Well,she asked,"what do you think?
33612Well,snapped Mr. Braden,"what would you have me do?
33612Well?
33612Well?
33612Well?
33612Well?
33612Well?
33612Well?
33612Well?
33612Were n''t you game, sis?
33612Were your husbands_ all_ Irish?
33612What about it? 33612 What about it?"
33612What am I offered for this property?
33612What are all these things and all this work going to cost?
33612What are those marks on your throat?
33612What are you going to do about it, Mac?
33612What are you thinking of?
33612What are you trying to do?
33612What are you up to, anyway?
33612What could they do with them? 33612 What did I tell you?"
33612What did you do that for?
33612What did you quarrel about? 33612 What did you say?"
33612What did you think I was?
33612What do I care about your clothes? 33612 What do you call fair?"
33612What do you hold it at?
33612What do you know about it?
33612What do you know about work?
33612What do you mean by that?
33612What do you mean?
33612What do you say?
33612What do you take me for, anyway? 33612 What do you think of this lay- out?"
33612What do you think, Dave?
33612What do you want here?
33612What do you want that for?
33612What do you want them for-- if they''re no good?
33612What do you want?
33612What does he know about Flambeau?
33612What does your father do for a living?
33612What does your uncle think about it?
33612What for-- if he ca n''t talk?
33612What for?
33612What happened? 33612 What happened?"
33612What has that to do with the coal?
33612What have you got there?
33612What have you got to say about it?
33612What is it?
33612What is there?
33612What is this?
33612What is your name, please?
33612What kind of a con game is this? 33612 What made her think she owned the thing?"
33612What made you alter your advice?
33612What made you think that?
33612What makes you think it would be best to rent the place-- to a competent man?
33612What makes you think they did it?
33612What men? 33612 What on earth do you know about love, Angus Mackay?"
33612What sort of an accident?
33612What started it?
33612What started it?
33612What the devil are you croaking for? 33612 What the devil are you doing with him?"
33612What the hell can you do with a woman, anyway?
33612What was the hurry, old girl? 33612 What was the-- er-- cause of death?"
33612What were you trying to do-- kill me?
33612What will he have to do with it?
33612What will it be worth?
33612What would you like?
33612What you got? 33612 What you mamook?
33612What''s a kid like you doing away out here?
33612What''s an Injun doin''any place?
33612What''s an Injun doin''here?
33612What''s th''racket bechune yez?
33612What''s the hurry?
33612What''s the matter with it?
33612What''s the matter with you and me and maybe Dave going up there and standing up the bunch and running them off?
33612What''s the matter with_ you_?
33612What''s the matter, Mary?
33612What''s the matter, kid?
33612What''s the matter?
33612What''s the matter?
33612What''s the matter?
33612What''s the matter?
33612What''s the matter?
33612What''s the matter?
33612What''s the rush, Dave?
33612What''s the use of supposing that?
33612What''s the use of this?
33612What''s this?
33612What''s wrong?
33612What?
33612What?
33612What?
33612What?
33612Whatever are you reading? 33612 Whatever is the matter?"
33612When shall I see you again?
33612When_ is_ the wedding?
33612Where are they?
33612Where are they?
33612Where are they?
33612Where are those deeds? 33612 Where did you get it?"
33612Where did you get the hay to fill Dolly''s manger?
33612Where did you get these?
33612Where did you go last night-- to Faith''s?
33612Where did you meet him?
33612Where do ye get this gyurl friend thing, anyway?
33612Where do you come in?
33612Where is Blake? 33612 Where is all the blood coming from?"
33612Where is the polish, anyway?
33612Where is this land?
33612Where would he get it?
33612Where would your line run?
33612Where''d you put in that shot, Gus, when you was tryin''to shake her?
33612Where?
33612Which way has she gone?
33612Whining?
33612Who are you?
33612Who asked ye to do ut? 33612 Who bought him?"
33612Who did it?
33612Who else? 33612 Who gets it?
33612Who gets it?
33612Who got you drunk?
33612Who holds the mortgage?
33612Who is he?
33612Who is the remarkable liar?
33612Who is there?
33612Who opened it this far on that water?
33612Who stays with the horses?
33612Who were you with?
33612Who would do a trick like that?
33612Who''s the other fellow?
33612Whose orders?
33612Why ca n''t we?
33612Why did n''t you call me?
33612Why did n''t you destroy the other one?
33612Why did n''t you get a loan somewhere and pay him off?
33612Why did n''t you tell me what she was like?
33612Why do n''t you tell me to mind my own darn business?
33612Why do you want to know?
33612Why does he want to buy?
33612Why else?
33612Why not Blake, if it is a breed?
33612Why not let it come to a show- down now?
33612Why not? 33612 Why not?
33612Why not?
33612Why not?
33612Why should I care whether you work or not?
33612Why should he do that?
33612Why should n''t you? 33612 Why were you and French trying to buy my wife''s property?"
33612Why, Jean?
33612Why, they''re not married, are they?
33612Why, what''s the matter with him, Dave?
33612Why,she exclaimed, her brown eyes opening wide,"do you suppose that hail struck the ranch?"
33612Why? 33612 Why?"
33612Why?
33612Why?
33612Why?
33612Why?
33612Why?
33612Will he give you a fair price?
33612Will it leave you stranded?
33612Will it?
33612Will that be why you will marry-- some day?
33612Will you answer me one question straight?
33612Will you carry sweet peas?
33612Will you come to work now?
33612Will you get on your horse and pull out?
33612Will you pick those spuds?
33612Will you please let go my hand?
33612Wind? 33612 With horses?"
33612Wo n''t you wash your face and hands, please?
33612Would you like me to carry you, too?
33612Would you like me to work?
33612Ye run th''ranch f''r th''ould man, did ye?
33612Yes, would n''t it? 33612 Yes,"Angus replied,"why should n''t she?
33612You ai n''t heard? 33612 You are able to meet them?"
33612You are going away?
33612You believe in that?
33612You can see for yourself, ca n''t you?
33612You catch um jock?
33612You could n''t tell who it was?
33612You did n''t come here to say that, did you?
33612You did n''t recognize any of them, of course?
33612You do n''t like the idea? 33612 You do n''t think I''m afraid, do you?"
33612You do n''t, hey?
33612You do, hey?
33612You feel skookum to- day?
33612You have n''t sold anything yet?
33612You have your title deeds all in order, in case you should want to sell?
33612You know the conditions of sale, young man?
33612You mean he paints pictures?
33612You mean you think Braden was trying to get back the original deeds?
33612You mean you''ll lend me the money?
33612You nanitch good for them moos- moos? 33612 You saw him-- kiss me, Angus?"
33612You think Injun kapswalla them moos- moos?
33612You wo n''t mind waiting till Larry comes back, Mr. Braden? 33612 You''ll take me there, wo n''t you, like a nice boy?"
33612You''ll tell him, will you?
33612You''re damned anxious to sell the ranch, are n''t you?
33612You''re going to buy a wedding ring and you do n''t know when you''ll be married?
33612You''ve heard nothing about the-- er-- deeds since you gave them to her?
33612You?
33612Your dope on what?
33612A coward?
33612A match, is ut?
33612Able to drive, is he?
33612All set?"
33612An''f''r why should a young widdy woman like yerself go lonely all yer days?"
33612And at last-- Do you know what there is at last, Angus?"
33612And he added wickedly:"Do n''t you know these woods are full of grizzlies and cougars and wolves?
33612And how is your father?"
33612And is it yours, or-- remittances?"
33612And then s''pose she goes out again?"
33612And then, on top of it all, what do you think Angus is going to do?"
33612And what of it?"
33612And what''s this about his working for Mackay?"
33612And who gave you the authority to fix my fee?"
33612And why for no, father?"
33612And why was Braden talking to him?
33612Any of the French boys in the house?"
33612Any of your bunch get it hard?"
33612Any other offers?"
33612Anybody else want it?
33612Anything else?"
33612Are there any other offers?
33612Are you betting on him?"
33612Are you in the habit of picking up trunks like that as if they were meat platters, and girls as if they were babies?
33612Are you sure this is the property his daughter meant?"
33612Are you too proud to do me that kindness?"
33612Blake, do you want to quit us?
33612Bright thought, what?"
33612But had he actually seen a face, or was it some freak of vision?
33612But how could he know who had the deeds?
33612But if it belonged to her or to her father how could Braden sell it?
33612But if it is-- what then?"
33612But in some families-- What do you think of our family?"
33612But is_ she_ pretty?"
33612But meantime who pays the mortgage?"
33612But phwat''s a muckstick to knives?
33612But that is why people get married, is n''t it?"
33612But what do you think of my humble home?
33612But what do you want to do yourself?
33612But what sort of a run do you think I''ll get for it?"
33612But what the devil is the use of cake if you do n''t eat it?
33612But what was the use of going on?
33612But what was this about the ditch?
33612But what_ are_ you going to do?"
33612But who can speak with greater authority-- I, or the man who never took a drink in his life?"
33612But who could be using powder on her property?
33612But why had Blake quit them?
33612But wo n''t you ask him?"
33612But would n''t you like to know me better?"
33612Buy it?
33612Ca n''t you get it through your head that you''re almost a man?"
33612Ca n''t you take a little help from a friend who would take it from you?
33612Can you do that, hey?"
33612Can you take a drink of water?
33612Can you understand such foolishness?"
33612Can you understand that, Angus Mackay?
33612Chetwood offered to lend it to me or endorse my note, but----""Chetwood, hey?"
33612Could n''t one of you have come?"
33612Did I ride him too hard?"
33612Did he mention any amount that he was prepared to invest?"
33612Did you ever hear of Sir Eustace Chetwood?"
33612Did you see his face when he saw that he would be overbidden?
33612Do n''t you like me?"
33612Do the Indians know this white man?"
33612Do they know she''s bad up there?"
33612Do you get that, Blake?
33612Do you get that, Garland, and you, Poole?"
33612Do you get that?"
33612Do you know I hold your note?
33612Do you know what it means?"
33612Do you mean that my explanations are not satisfactory?"
33612Do you mind answering one or two questions?"
33612Do you mind it very much?"
33612Do you suppose I thought Garland was putting up himself?"
33612Do you suppose he could rent the place, no matter whether I wanted to or not, or was he only running a sandy?"
33612Do you think I do n''t know where the money came from for a lot of things-- for blowing Mackay''s ditch for instance?
33612Do you think I''d wear it if I did n''t?"
33612Do you think I''m not wise to you?"
33612Do you think, after telling him that, I''d marry him now that he has money?
33612Do you understand that?"
33612Does that go?"
33612Faith whispered,"Who is he?"
33612Feel the blood starting yet?"
33612For instance, there is a rancher named Poole-- know him?"
33612Had Garland, after all, made a dicker with Mackay?
33612Had Mackay got those infernal deeds?
33612Had he paid ten dollars of Winton''s money?
33612Has any one ever tried to sell it for you?"
33612Has somebody been breaking into Dry Lodge?"
33612Has your father come here to paint?"
33612Have you much money?
33612Heavens, Angus, what''s wrong that you forget your meals?"
33612Hey?"
33612Him all got brand?"
33612How about water?"
33612How badly was he hurt?
33612How could he do that when it was n''t his?"
33612How did you know your boundaries?"
33612How did you recognize me?
33612How does it feel to be a grass widow?"
33612How in the name of all bad luck had this happened?
33612How long did they feed the fire o''nights, and listen alone to the noises of the dark?
33612How old are you?"
33612How the devil could she expect a white man to marry her?
33612How''d that suit you, you dam''four- flush?"
33612How?"
33612How_ did_ you know I wanted to say something?
33612I could n''t give my brothers away, could I?
33612I mean to stay boss, and while you''re on this ranch you''ll toe the mark after this, understand?"
33612I rode your pony years ago, when I was a little, lost girl--""What are you now?"
33612I say-- you''ll pardon me, I''m sure-- but in the expressive idiom of the country, will it throw a crimp into you to do it?"
33612I suppose he''s dead?"
33612I told her I thought you were a big, fine- looking young man, and what do you think she said?"
33612I want--""An''do I care phwat yez want, ye black- avised bo?"
33612I wonder how it would be on a show- down, Dave?
33612I wonder if it ever did happen?"
33612I wonder if that was why your uncle was trying to buy you out?"
33612I wonder if you and I ever sat before a fire in a cave, together?"
33612I wonder if you know how becoming that slicker hat is?"
33612If it gets any more shocks like this-- But what am I to tell Jean?
33612If old Godfrey French was her uncle, why in blazes did n''t some of the French boys take care of this kid?
33612If they had been made years ago, why had n''t they been handed over?
33612Insist on my interest and rob these poor children of their chance of life?"
33612Inspiring thought and all that sort of thing, what?
33612Is it a boy or a girl?"
33612Is it fair, or shall I jew old Braden down a bit?
33612Is it yes or no, Faith?"
33612Is n''t that common sense?"
33612Is n''t that my property--_our_ property?"
33612Is that a banjo and do you play it?"
33612Is that clear enough for you?"
33612Is that clear to you?"
33612Is that it, my son?"
33612Is that plain enough for you?"
33612Is that right?"
33612Is that so?"
33612Is that what you will tell my husband?"
33612It is the key to Success, which, when Opportunity knocks at the door-- What the devil are you grinning at?"
33612It''s time--""It''s time you went,"Angus told him,"and you''re going, do you savvy?
33612Jean, darling, how long are you going to keep me in suspense?"
33612Kind lady, having been a girl yourself, will you please tell me what I am to do about it?"
33612Let it go, wo n''t you?"
33612Local big bug, is n''t he?
33612Mackay?
33612May th''divil-- But phwat''s the use?
33612Mebbe I better put in leetle shot up dere an''fetch him now?
33612Might he not be responsible?
33612Mr. Braden exploded angrily,"do you know I hold a mortgage on your ranch?
33612Now about this ring--""Do you think you should buy one-- now?"
33612Now what do you think of it?"
33612Now what story will hold water?
33612Now you can go plumb, understand?"
33612Now, could I?
33612Now, instead of crazy bidding, ca n''t we come to an arrangement?"
33612Now, what is the most natural mistake, the most everyday, common mistake?"
33612Of what profit was it to traverse this sea of mountains and emerge with these hunters at their heels?
33612Old Murdoch McGillivray--""Who was he?"
33612One good turn deserves another, hey?"
33612Or had he merely a suspicion, which Riley was trying to confirm by a fishing trip for a damaging admission?
33612Or has he had it?"
33612Or your clerk?"
33612Phwat belief are ye, ye big Swede?"
33612Savvy?"
33612See what I''m gettin''at?
33612Sewell Winton?
33612Shall I offer him ten dollars?"
33612She does n''t want to sell, and in that I am under the impression that she is acting on your advice?
33612She said--""Miss Winton?"
33612So I''ll be an extra hand you''ve hired, see?
33612Talk up, ca n''t you?"
33612Tea, coffee or cocoa?"
33612That little ex- jockey knows his business?"
33612That''s ample, what?"
33612That''s subsisting, is n''t it?"
33612The second was n''t prepared subsequently and dated back?"
33612Then a straw man would have made an offer for the place, d''ye understand me?
33612Then it''s got to be an Injun, ai n''t it?
33612Then let us ask what to- day is the great essential of success?
33612Then what the dickens was the junk he had in his pocket?
33612Then why do n''t ye let love take its coorse?"
33612Then why is he workin''as a hired man onless f''r love of ye, tell me that?"
33612Then you think nothing can be done to help Miss Winton?"
33612Then, as I understand it, you had a new conveyance prepared, and delivered it to French, and that''s all you know about it?"
33612Think these French boys would know enough to make a trip like that?"
33612To prove it I will say what I never thought to say, meaning it: Will you come back to the ranch?
33612Understand?"
33612Was anything else missing?
33612Was everybody abroad that night?
33612Was his continued absence in some way due to them?
33612Was it Braden?"
33612Was it possible that he was dickering with Mackay?
33612Was there no way of escape?
33612Wasters, rotters, what?"
33612We do not want friction, do we, my boy?"
33612Well, what about it?"
33612Well-- what happens now?"
33612Well?"
33612What about it?"
33612What am I doing about that time?"
33612What are you doing?"
33612What business had this girl to call him black?
33612What business have you hanging around here?
33612What department are you in?"
33612What do you charge, judge?"
33612What do you know about him?"
33612What do you know about levels?
33612What do you mean?"
33612What do you mean?"
33612What do you say?"
33612What do you see?"
33612What do you take me for?"
33612What do you think is the best thing for you and your sister and brother?"
33612What do you think of that, Angus?"
33612What do you want?"
33612What do you want?"
33612What does he want me for?"
33612What does it matter when you die, if you die well?
33612What good does it do us to keep going?
33612What gun you takin''?"
33612What happened to those ancient women whose men went out never to return?
33612What is the matter with my land?"
33612What is your own name?"
33612What kind of a mine?"
33612What on earth was keeping Angus?
33612What say, Dave?"
33612What started him?"
33612What the devil does he think this country is?
33612What time has this race been run in, other years?"
33612What was Braden doing with them?
33612What was Garland up to, anyway?
33612What was Garland waiting for?
33612What was the use?
33612What were they doing?
33612What would be plausible?"
33612What would happen next?
33612What would he do?
33612What would you think?"
33612What you do?"
33612What you gettin''at?"
33612What''ll we do with them, Gan?"
33612What''s holding me?
33612What''s on me?"
33612What''s the amount against the property?"
33612What''s the matter with your hair?
33612What''s the use?
33612What''s worryin''you, old boy?"
33612What-- what do you mean?"
33612When did it happen?"
33612When the old boy died--""What old boy?"
33612When will the Mackay ranch be sold?"
33612Where had he heard that faint lisp, that slurring of the sibilants?
33612Where him Angus?"
33612Where is he, do you know?"
33612Where is she now?"
33612Where would I get you a jockey?"
33612Where would you get off at then?"
33612Where''s Angus?"
33612Where?"
33612Which one of them am I to marry, please?"
33612Who asked you to horn in?"
33612Who bought the ranch?
33612Who has them?"
33612Who shot you?"
33612Who the deuce was this McGinity?
33612Who would care a curse if_ you_ died?"
33612Who would have an interest in taking it, as well as deeds affecting the coal lands?
33612Who''ll do your work when you''re dead?"
33612Who''s this young fellow?
33612Why did Godfrey French want to buy that dry ranch?
33612Why did n''t it strike you then?"
33612Why did n''t you come to see me once in awhile?"
33612Why do n''t you buy him?
33612Why do n''t you make it up with him, Angus?"
33612Why do you do it now?"
33612Why do you pronounce your name''McKi''?"
33612Why favor me?"
33612Why had Braden swiped them from French?
33612Why had he been such a fool to carry nearly twenty- four hundred dollars in his pocket?
33612Why had he given a reason which was not a reason?
33612Why had he lied about Blake?
33612Why had n''t Braden or French given her these deeds?
33612Why is it?"
33612Why not?"
33612Why not?"
33612Why not?"
33612Why should Braden who had two perfectly good machines in his office below, go out the back way and bring in a machine from an old shed?
33612Why should there be two sets of deeds?"
33612Why?"
33612Why?"
33612Will you answer my question?"
33612With me when?"
33612Would Turkey deliberately lend himself to a plan to deprive not only Angus but Jean and himself of the ranch?
33612Would you marry for any other reason?"
33612Would you mind very much if I kissed you?"
33612You are aware that she claims ownership of the land on which coal has been found?"
33612You are sure of what you say-- that the land could have been bought for so much less then, and that I ca n''t get water on it now?"
33612You did it, did you?"
33612You do n''t believe it?"
33612You do n''t know much about girls, do you?"
33612You mean they were waiting for me?"
33612You say that the two sets of papers were drawn on the same day?
33612You see um Blake French?"
33612You think because you stole that old note and statement of yours when you took the deeds that I''ve no strings on you?
33612You think it''s the old buck?"
33612You try to take a single head of my stock off the range, and you''ll do it in the smoke, do you savvy that?"
33612You were always kind, helpful, but never like-- like--""Never like a lover?"
33612You wo n''t enter into any arrangement?"
33612You would fight to the death for me, would n''t you?"
33612You''re awake for sure, are you?
33612You''re not that sort, surely?"
33612You''re sure he ai n''t stolen?
33612You''re sure you''re quite all right, old man?"
33612You?"
33612Your wife has her deeds, has n''t she?
33612Yours should be Donald, or Duncan, or Murdoch?"
33612Yours?
33612do you think I''m a child?"
754Is it worth while,so they ask,"to work and slave for the benefit of creatures who have not yet passed beyond the stage of the earliest cave men?"
754There,he would say, pointing to a bend of the river,"there, my boy, do you see those trees?
754This is very well as far as it goes,said the next critic,"but how about the Puritans?
754Are not the social changes of the nineteenth century of greater importance than the career of an ill- balanced woman who had better be forgotten?
754But there can be no union without a strong leadership, and who was to be this leader?
754But was it a time of darkness and stagnation merely?
754But was there a way out?
754But what could they do?
754But what does the word really mean?
754But what was one to do?
754But what will they think of those short four thousand years during which we have kept a written record of our actions and of our thoughts?
754But what?
754But who cared?
754But who was to be commander- in- chief?
754Could they change the existing order of things and do away with a system of rivalry which so often sacrificed human happiness to profits?
754Did anybody object?
754Do n''t you see how these surroundings must have influenced a man in everything he did and said and thought?
754From one blunder to another, until one gasps and exclaims"but why in the name of High Heaven did not the people object?"
754He was vain( who would not be under the circumstances?)
754How about the Church, the second great power in the world?
754How could they realise the threatened danger?
754Indeed, and why not?
754The Serbians remembered their ancient glory as who would not?
754The question then became where was this money to be found?
754To JIMMIE"What is the use of a book without pictures?"
754Upon this subject, the Abbe Sieyes then wrote a famous pamphlet,"To what does the Third Estate Amount?"
754What did you find?
754Where could he find this gold?
754Where did the stars come from?
754Where do we come from?
754Which side should a dutiful subject and an equally dutiful Christian take?
754Whither are we bound?
754Who are we?
754Who made the noise of the thunder which frightened him so terribly?
754Who was he, himself, a strange little creature surrounded on all sides by death and sickness and yet happy and full of laughter?
754Why defend something which meant nothing to them but a temporary boarding house in which they were tolerated as long as they paid their bills?
754Why did I leave out such countries as Ireland and Bulgaria and Siam while I dragged in such other countries as Holland and Iceland and Switzerland?
754Why is he so curious about the insides of fishes and the insides of insects?
754Why not do it now?
754Why not indeed?
754Why should he not be contented with our Latin- Arabic translation which has satisfied our faithful people for so many hundred years?
754Why should they work and exert themselves?
754Why should we ever read fairy stories, when the truth of history is so much more interesting and entertaining?
754Would he please come and teach them?
754Would it not be a good idea to consult the representatives of the people?
754You desired proof of this?
754You may ask why I tell you this story in such great detail?
5090And are you not satisfied?
5090And how do you substantiate this statement, Citizen- Deputy?
5090And now, shall we join the ladies?
5090And she allowed them to say all this?
5090And she?
5090And she?
5090And that she will be tried to- morrow?
5090And yet you''ll not help us to rescue the Queen?
5090And you are prepared to forgive?
5090And you wished to send one of them to the guillotine in order to make way for the other? 5090 And you, Citizen Merlin,"queried Lenoir,"will you help the Republic to the best of your ability to be rid of a traitor?"
5090Anne Mie,he said firmly,"what is it?
5090Any visitors allowed?
5090Are you frightened, my beloved?
5090Are you going away then?
5090But how did you know where to find me?
5090But how? 5090 But would you leave her to her fate?"
5090But you yourself, friend?
5090But your popularity-- your life-- if you befriend her?
5090But-- if it be love, then that love is strange and unwomanly; it is a love that will not be for his good..."Why should you think that?
5090Could you not have asked me to come with you?
5090Did she seek it, then?
5090Did you know anything of this?
5090Did_ you_ know, citizeness, that this street had been specially made for aristos to pass along?
5090Do you know that you brought me here on a fool''s errand?
5090Do you know where he lives, my jewel?
5090For England?
5090For form''s sake, monsieur, will you choose your seconds?
5090For you?
5090Fun, you call it?
5090Godspeed?
5090Gone? 5090 Gratitude?
5090Had I any?
5090Have I made you anxious?
5090Have you instructed an advocate to defend you, according to your rights of citizenship, which the Law allows?
5090Have you not yet learned the lesson of never putting your hand to paper?
5090How can I help it? 5090 How can I help it?"
5090How could I tell?
5090How did you know?
5090I am in a hurry, will you let me pass at once?
5090I as the Governor, followed by one of my guards..."To go whither?
5090I hope you said No, Anne Mie?
5090I suppose you know where they were found?
5090If I furnish you with such proofs, Citizen Tinville,retorted the other,"will you, as Public Prosecutor, carry the indictment through?"
5090If somebody did not talk, Citizen Tinville-- is that your name?
5090In what way?
5090In whose name shall I take the message, mademoiselle?
5090Is Sir Percy Blakeney one of those whom I had best mistrust?
5090Is it love to worship a saint in heaven, whom you dare not touch, who hovers above you like a cloud, which floats away from you even as you gaze? 5090 Is n''t it an instinct?"
5090Is there anything more I can do for you now, mademoiselle?
5090Juliette Marny? 5090 Let her pass?
5090Let me see, you asked me to be kind to Mademoiselle Marny, did you not?
5090My treasure, my jewel,exclaimed Pétronelle in alarm,"have those devils...?"
5090Not without Juliette Marny, shall we say?
5090Now, would you believe it, my fine madam, but my legs are bare underneath my kirtle?
5090Perhaps you can not quite trust me?
5090Presumably because..."Because she is in love with Paul?
5090Questions? 5090 Questions?"
5090Save her? 5090 Shall we join my mother for a moment, Blakeney?"
5090She does not love me-- would she have betrayed me else?
5090She said so? 5090 So soon?"
5090Still?
5090Surely you do not hesitate, Juliette, with your dead brother''s body clamouring mutely for revenge? 5090 That man Lenoir, meseems, is too eloquent-- eh?"
5090That you will avenge your brother''s death on his murderer?
5090The way to the Rue du Temple, citizen?
5090The whole thing is a farce, and that young man is a fool; but I have been in the wrong and..."You would wish to apologise?
5090Then why did you come?
5090Then you are in a state of grace, my child?
5090These are yours?
5090They would have half- killed you, if..."Will you tell me where I am?
5090To-- What shall I say, my friend?
5090Wait?
5090Was that it?
5090Was that presumptuous?
5090We all know that the Deputy Déroulède is a traitor, eh?
5090Well, and what does that prove?
5090Well? 5090 Well?
5090Well? 5090 Well?"
5090Were the letters from him?
5090What are they?
5090What are you going to do?
5090What could I have done?
5090What could he have done? 5090 What do they call you, mademoiselle?"
5090What do you mean to do?
5090What does he mean?
5090What is it?
5090What is that paper? 5090 What is your advice then, Citizen Lenoir?"
5090What is your advice?
5090What makes you think we are doing that?
5090What say you, citizens?
5090What were these papers which you burnt?
5090What were these papers?
5090What, father?
5090What?
5090When do you leave?
5090When?
5090Where does she live?
5090Where is that ass Brogard? 5090 Who is Juliette de Marny, and why did she seek an entrance into Paul''s house?"
5090Who is Pétronelle?
5090Who killed my son, M. le Marquis?
5090Who was your lover?
5090Who''ll take my bet that my blood turns out to be bluer than his?
5090Why did you burn your love letters?
5090Why does she not go? 5090 Why hopelessly?"
5090Why, what in the world did you want to say him?
5090Why?
5090Will you forgive me, madonna?
5090Will you look through these?
5090Will you not let me arrange your hair?
5090Will you not wish me godspeed, mademoiselle?
5090Will you please let me pass?
5090Will you swear, my child?
5090Will you tell him, Pétronelle?
5090Will you tell me your plans?
5090With Blakeney?
5090Without proofs? 5090 Would any Frenchman care to save his own life at the expense of a woman''s honour?"
5090Would you have me coarse and grimy to be a fitting match for your partisans?
5090Yes, yes,she replied hastily;"a small errand, I...""Is it anything I can do for you?"
5090Yes? 5090 Yes?"
5090You are going out, mademoiselle?
5090You are not happy, Anne Mie? 5090 You declare her to be pure and chaste?"
5090You do n''t understand what I mean, citizens; you think I am mad, or drunk, or a traitor like Déroulède? 5090 You had more than one lover, then?"
5090You had more than one lover, then?
5090You have been to confession lately, Juliette?
5090You have two more men with you?
5090You knew he was Innocent?
5090You know that she is in the Luxembourg Prison?
5090You love her still, then?
5090You mean, Monsieur le Colonel?
5090You pity her?
5090You think he loves her?
5090You think you can quit Paris unrecognised-- then why not the Queen?
5090You thought we could arrest him on mere suspicion?
5090You went to him sooner than to me?
5090You will be kind to my guest, Anne Mie, wo n''t you? 5090 You''ll take the prisoners quietly across to the Prison of the Temple--you understand that?"
5090After that, friend?"
5090An apology?
5090And now whither was she going?
5090And now?"
5090And what did he say?"
5090And what did he suggest?"
5090And what of him-- the man she had so remorselessly, so ruthlessly betrayed to a tribunal which would know no mercy?
5090And who would cook for her and iron out her kerchiefs, I''d like to know?"
5090Anne Mie, Anne Mie, are you quite sure?"
5090Are we aristocrats that we should hesitate to play the part of jackal to this cunning fox?
5090At last she made an effort to speak, and in a toneless, even voice she contrived to murmur:"You are not going for long, Citizen- Deputy?"
5090Be her little maid?
5090But I want to be alone for a few moments-- will you go down to the kitchen until I call you?"
5090But can you do it to Marie Antoinette?
5090But his friend?
5090But how to get out of Paris?
5090But how?"
5090But if my darling is allowed to go free, then what would become of her in this awful city without me?
5090But what of Juliette?
5090But why should you be anxious about me?"
5090But will you allow me to arrange for your safety, as I am arranging for that of my mother and Anne Mie?
5090But you are bound to fail, and then who will help you all, if we too are put out of the way?"
5090Can you take hold of Marie Antoinette by the shoulders, shove her into the bottom of a cart and pile sacks of potatoes on the top of her?
5090Can you tell me, citizeness?"
5090Did she hate him, then?
5090Did those wretches attack you?
5090Did you know that, when you wrote out that denunciation?"
5090Do you attribute supernatural powers to me, then, or to The League of The Scarlet Pimpernel?"
5090Do you think you need appeal to the sense of chivalry of my league?
5090Does a young girl calculate, citizens?
5090Ergo, he had been her lover, whom she wished to be rid of-- why?
5090Everywhere the same shrug of the shoulders, the same indifferent reply to his eager query:"Juliette Marny?
5090Had Charlotte Corday considered her own sensibilities, when with her own hand she put an end to Marat?
5090Had not her father said to her that when the time came, God would show her a means to the end?
5090Had the sword of Damocles, which she herself had suspended, already fallen over the heads of those who had shown her nothing but kindness?
5090Has humanity really such a scum?
5090Have I said that I aspired to gain your love?
5090Have you not worshipped them in your hearts, for those sublime impulses which put all man''s plans and calculations to shame?
5090Have you thought of asking M. Déroulède for them?"
5090He eyed her up and down as she passed under the narrow doorway, then murmured one swift query to Merlin:"Dangerous?"
5090He has such a beautiful voice that he can make anyone listen to him, and...""And you are fond of him, mademoiselle?"
5090He hinted that-- that...""That I was her lover too?"
5090He no longer said:"She does not love me-- would she have betrayed me else?"
5090He provoked me as no man was ever provoked before...""Is it necessary, M. Déroulède, that you should tell me all this?"
5090Her father was awake then?
5090How could two soldiers of His Majesty''s army identify themselves with such doings?
5090I know that I am still in peril and that I owe my safety to you...""Do you also know that your brother owed his death to me?"
5090I shall hope to return before the equinox, but-- who can tell?"
5090I thought...""Is a wretched, deformed creature ever happy?"
5090I wonder if I have ever dreamed it?
5090I-- I would wish to have five minutes''talk with you-- may I?"
5090Is n''t every one kind to one who is young and beautiful, and has great, appealing eyes, and soft, curly hair?
5090Is n''t that so, Monsieur Merlin?"
5090Is that a crime?
5090Is that your name?
5090It frightened me, for you will have to go through the north- west barrier, and...""Well?"
5090It should be easy, for I have a strong fist, and after that...""Well?
5090Let her pass?
5090Let me suppose that we have reached the moment when the woman-- what is her name?
5090M. Déroulède, would you come and reassure her?"
5090May I speak two words to my friends before I go?"
5090Nay; why should we say that love and pity are akin?
5090Of what kind?"
5090Of what-- of treason to the Republic, to the people?
5090Patriots, friends, brothers, I ask you, what could he have done?"
5090Shall I fill in the details of the picture?--the guard twenty- five strong outside the Conciergerie, how will you pass them?"
5090Shall we leave the judges here to conclude the farce, and arrange for its sequel ourselves outside the''Tigre Jaune''?"
5090Shall we try and find a better spot?"
5090She has none in court; but think you Déroulède would not step forward, and bring all the fervour of his eloquence to bear in favour of his mistress?
5090She scrutinised her own face carefully; why?
5090Should God speed him to a mock trial and to the guillotine?
5090Soothe her nerves or what?
5090That man Merlin found some ashes and scraps of paper in her room...""Ashes?"
5090The same spirit, no doubt, actuates you to maintain that the accused knew nothing of the papers which you say you destroyed?"
5090Then at last Foucquier- Tinville, the Public Prosecutor, spoke:"And who is that man?"
5090Then he resumed:"Then, Citizen Déroulède, what have_ you_ to say, why sentence should not be passed upon the accused?"
5090Therefore what mattered life to him now?
5090Twenty strong at most-- what was that against such a throng?
5090Wait on her?
5090Was it not he who had framed the indictments against General Custine for having failed to subdue the cities of the south?
5090Was it not the supreme lord and ruler of the land, the arbiter of the Fate of this great, beautiful, and maddened country?
5090Was not that very crowd the great bulwark of their safety?
5090Was she a relative, or a superior servant?
5090Was that it?"
5090Was_ that_ a crime, citizens?
5090What did it all mean?
5090What do you want me to do, Paul?
5090What had the future in store for them, in that beautiful, strange land to which the graceful yacht was swiftly bearing them?
5090What have I done?"
5090What is that paper you are holding, my dear?"
5090What mattered the yelling crowd, the noise and tumult of this sordid world?
5090What of this wild, passionate, romantic creature tortured by a Titanic conflict?
5090What right had He to demand a girl of her years to endure so much mental agony?
5090What say you, citizens?
5090What were they?"
5090What wrong had you done to anyone?"
5090When you are ailing, do not your mothers, sisters, wives tend you?
5090Where?"
5090Who could help but follow this brave and gallant adventurer, with the magic voice and the noble bearing?
5090Who had ever dreamed of Paris being stormed from within?
5090Who knows what pictures were conjured up before that enfeebled vision?
5090Who knows?
5090Who said there were no proofs?"
5090Who shall tell what he whispered?
5090Who?
5090Why?"
5090Will he admit in open court that the burnt correspondence was another lover''s letters?
5090Will you all don them as quickly as you can?
5090Will you attend to maman?
5090Will you deign to forgive me?"
5090Will you let me see it, Anne Mie?"
5090Will you swear, my child?"
5090Would God''s finger point again, and show her what to do next, how best to accomplish what she had sworn to do?
5090Would a man betray his friend?
5090Would you extract vinegar from rose leaves?
5090Would you love them so dearly but for the fickleness of their moods?
5090You heard his name, Juliette?"
5090You understand that?
5090You''ll not forget it?"
5090against General Westerman and Brunet and Beauharnais for having failed and failed and failed?
5090he asked once or twice, or:"Have they hung the traitor yet?
5090he asked viciously;"that the Citizen- Deputy Déroulède can not be sent to the guillotine on mere suspicion, eh?
5090rejoined Sir Percy earnestly,"after that?
5090shall I pledge you my word that Déroulède shall come to no harm?"
5090so you have, but''one of your guards''--eh?
5090that''s it, is it, friend Déroulède?
5090we''ve got so far, friends, have n''t we?"
5090what would you have me call it?
5090when you are seriously ill, would they not give their heart''s blood to save you?
5090where did it come from?
5090who wreaks such idle vengeance on so poor an enemy?
5090why did n''t you tell me to burn your papers for you?
5090you had not thought, I trust, that I would leave Mademoiselle Juliette in such a demmed, uncomfortable hole?"
699''AY?''
699''Am I so much?''
699''And what,''said he,''brought_ you_ to England?''
699''Have you a written commission?''
699''I think you know me?''
699''If?''
699''Is he thrown to the ground?''
699''Is he wounded?''
699''Is my son killed?''
699''King,''says Wat,''dost thou see all my men there?''
699''No more?''
699''No?''
699''On what errand dost thou come?''
699''What bell is that?''
699''What care I?''
699''What does the fellow mean?''
699''What hast thou done to me?''
699''What have I done to thee that thou shouldest take my life?''
699''What will he give to my friend the King of Norway?''
699''Where is the Prince?''
699''Where is the traitor?''
699''Who are you, friend?''
699''Who is that man who has fallen?''
699''Why?''
699''Would it not be a charitable act to give that aged man a comfortable warm cloak?''
699''You only think so?''
699And the Bishop of Hereford, who was the most skilful of her friends, said, What was to be done now?
699And you?''
699As the morning was very cold, the Sheriff said, would he come down to a fire for a little space, and warm himself?
699At last, when one gruff old gentleman had said to Joan,''What language do your Voices speak?''
699But when they cried,''Where is the Archbishop?''
699But, the foreigners only laughed disdainfully, and said,''What are your English laws to us?''
699Did you ever hear of a king who was drowned?''
699Dost thou think King Richard is behind it?''
699He seemed a little troubled to find that it was so low, and asked,''if there were no place higher?''
699Here was an imbecile, indolent, miserable King upon the throne; would n''t it be better to take him off, and put his son there instead?
699Is it not so?''
699Next day, when Davison told her it was sealed, she angrily asked him why such haste was necessary?
699No one speaks, and then he asks the Speaker of the House where those five members are?
699One asked the other who he was?
699One of the bishops who performed the ceremony asked the Normans, in French, if they would have Duke William for their king?
699Says Jack to the Lord Mayor and judges:''Will you be so good as to make a tribunal in Guildhall, and try me this nobleman?''
699She begged the executioner to despatch her quickly, and she asked him,''Will you take my head off before I lay me down?''
699Some have supposed that when the King spoke those hasty words,''Have I no one here who will deliver me from this man?''
699That presently the Emir sent for one of them, and conjured him, by his faith in his religion, to say what kind of man the King of England truly was?
699The King required to know whether the clergy would obey the ancient customs of the country?
699The King said was she a large woman, because he must have a fat wife?
699The question now was, what to do with her?
699Then, said those noblemen, would they love and serve young Edward?
699They asked her once again that day, after she was speechless, whether she was still in the same mind?
699Thomas a Becket said, at length,''What do you want?''
699Was Canute to be King now?
699What is the name of that castle yonder?''
699What time is there to make merry here, and yet reach England with the rest?''
699When Bruce came out, pale and disturbed, the friends who were waiting for him asked what was the matter?
699When he was bent down ready for death, he said to the executioner, finding that he hesitated,''What dost thou fear?
699When the year was out, the King, turning suddenly to Gloucester, in the midst of a great council said,''Uncle, how old am I?''
699Where is it?''
699Where shall we get another, when he is gone?''
699Where were the Conqueror''s three sons, that they were not at their father''s burial?
699said the Duke of Gloucester;''do you talk to me of ifs?
699said the Jews upon the walls,''when, if we open the gate by so much as the width of a foot, the roaring crowd behind thee will press in and kill us?''
699shall we let our own brother die of thirst?
699wo n''t resign?
46436''And that''s what you call being neutral?'' 46436 ''But what is the logical result of this story of teaching on the minds of the people who teach it?
46436''How do you know?'' 46436 ''Sabinsport?''
46436''Yes-- my wife, children there, Miss Cowder?'' 46436 And what am I to do?
46436And what are they jumping on poor little Serbia for, a big one like Austria? 46436 And what is it, Mr. Barker?
46436Are we?
46436But I asked you to marry me now-- before I go-- next week-- will you?
46436But how?
46436But if these ideas were being scattered and watered by the paid agents of Germany, how would you feel about it? 46436 But what kind of a government is it that can not control its people?
46436But what-- what do you mean?
46436But who, who in Sabinsport sees this as it is? 46436 But why?
46436But, Katie, what put that nonsense into your head?
46436But, Ralph, who started this thing here? 46436 Can you give me a few minutes, Reverend?"
46436Did Otto ever mention this to you, Ralph?
46436Disturb me, Mr. Cowder? 46436 Do n''t I know all about it, and me a widder and him me only one?
46436Do n''t you think it''s a matter of concern to Sabinsport whether the mills are open or shut this winter, whether we have half or full time?
46436Do you ever go up to his door of an evening?
46436Do you know who paid for that coal; most of it at least?
46436Do you mean,cried Dick, springing up,"that Austria has declared war?"
46436Does Patsy know I''m coming?
46436Doing to Dick?
46436Have you seen Ralph''s editorial? 46436 How could you ever make soldiers of such material?"
46436How should I know the vagaries of Patsy''s mind?
46436How? 46436 I wonder,"said Ralph inadvertently,"if Patsy has heard from that Henry Laurence she wrote so much about?"
46436Is it Mikey you''ve news of?
46436Is it true, the war?
46436It''s the same hand that does this, Ralph; what do you think?
46436Jim goes to work to- morrow, can you trust me for a boiling piece?
46436Oh, yes,said Nancy,"but what is twenty- five miles with our factories full of girls, and the town wide open?
46436Only three weeks ago,Dick said to himself, shuddering, when the letter came to him,"and what is going on in Dinant to- day?"
46436Reuben Cowder and Jake Mulligan have$ 500,000 a year income if they have a cent; do you suppose they earn it?
46436Sees what?
46436They must find out that they are in love,he said quite decidedly to himself,"and who''s to help them to it but me?
46436What ails them?
46436What do you mean?
46436What do you mean?
46436What has happened?
46436What is it you want?
46436What is this I hear about that sermon of yours yesterday, Ingraham? 46436 What shall we do?"
46436What turned the town in this direction? 46436 What''s that, Mr. Dick?
46436What''s the matter? 46436 Where in hell did it come from?"
46436Who is this Laurence anyway?
46436Why is there so little pride in the achievement? 46436 Why set the town by the ears again, Ralph?
46436Why, Patsy,he said,"what''s the matter?"
46436Why, Ralph Gardner, what do you mean?
46436Why, what do you mean?
46436Why, why should he give his days to men of whom she had never heard? 46436 You believe we will go in?"
46436You do n''t believe the time has come?
46436You get this started,they told the pair,"and what does it mean for all of us?
46436You know the man, what about his family?
46436You mean you wo n''t help me to get it?
46436You meant it, Nancy?
46436''America?''
46436''But, suppose you ai n''t able to ship to Sweden?''
46436''Hate money made from munitions?''
46436''Love peace?''
46436''Nancy Cowder,''she said,''do you think I could be used at the camp?''
46436''Well, never mind-- I''ll see to that,''and, would you believe it?
46436A million a year coming here to be reconstructed and Americanized, why should we bother about what Europe thinks or does?
46436A useless bit of drifting wreckage, why live?"
46436Afraid?
46436Alone he sang through the first verse, then the wonderful refrain was taken up,"Joan of Arc, Joan of Arc, Do your eyes From the skies See the foe?
46436An indirect and unwilling cause, to be sure, but would Mikey have found his way to France without him?
46436And could it be that she cared for him?
46436And he?
46436And if not, what should Sabinsport do about it?
46436And if this was the truth, what was the use of Sabinsport''s going in?
46436And now what was he?
46436And now?
46436And then quickly the thought came,"I wonder if Nancy will feel as they do?"
46436And then, darn it, Mother, have n''t you any feeling for France?
46436And why should he expect anything else?
46436And why were they so stirred up?
46436And you remember four years ago when I turned front on compensation-- time of the big accident in the''Emma''?
46436Are we going to let this thing go on?
46436As for Annie''s loving him?
46436At the banks, and in the offices of the mills and factories, men sniffed or swore,"Does n''t a man know when he is well off?
46436But how could it be helped?
46436But how were they going to do it?
46436But the Balkans?
46436But what can I do?
46436But what for?
46436Ca n''t you hear the tears of Normandy?
46436Ca n''t you see it, Ralph?"
46436Ca n''t you understand, Mother, why a fellow wants to get into the big things?
46436Can you put it through?"
46436Could he make it up?
46436Could he see her?
46436Could it be that they had been mistaken, that he really was at heart a pacifist?
46436Could n''t you stop him?"
46436Could this determination, which he believed was in her, carry her through the period of sacrifice and effort?
46436Could you get at him?"
46436Dick was still in his study when the telephone rang:"Is it you, Dick?"
46436Dick?"
46436Dick?"
46436Did I forget your towels?"
46436Did Nancy Cowder care for Otto Littman?
46436Did all natural people take war this way, neither revolting nor lamenting?
46436Did n''t they divvy in Washington?"
46436Did not Namur have encircling forts?
46436Did she mean her last heated declaration?
46436Did the War Board_ care_?
46436Did these things concern her and her business?
46436Did they concern themselves about the worker when things were going well?
46436Did they study a proper division of the returns of labor?
46436Did you ever hear of Jake''s celebration when the water works were finished in the''90''s?
46436Did you see him?
46436Do n''t that sound noble?
46436Do n''t you see the drooping fleur- de- lis?
46436Do n''t you think I''m easier in my mind for knowin''there''s ambulancers like him to pick up my Mikey if a dirty German sticks him?
46436Do n''t you think we better drive out and see if the old folks have heard from her?"
46436Do you call that neutrality?"
46436Do you suppose I would have taken any stock in a German effort to stop munition making here?
46436Do you suppose our Kaiser would tolerate that kind of weakness?
46436Do you suppose that hits Patsy?
46436Do you suppose we are going to let as good and prosperous an agent as you are, with a father above all suspicion, go when we''ve got him?
46436Does it?
46436Does n''t it make you want to fight yourself?
46436Does n''t it sound like a comic opera, Mother dear?
46436For what had she been making all her great effort?
46436Had he waited too long?
46436Had she not little Ralph, who, so they had both agreed, was one day to carry on his father''s work for justice and peace among men?
46436Had she not seen their guns and heard tales of their strength, and had not the Germans_ walked_ into Namur?
46436Has anything happened at the mines, do you know?"
46436Has it no essential relation to the world''s movements?
46436He can write me, ca n''t he?"
46436He could not remember a time in all these years of speaking to them that his sermons had not met with kindly appreciation, and now?
46436He has had a great blow--""What?
46436He meant to get well and come back to Sabinsport-- Sabinsport, whose grief and anxiety over his illness had touched him to the heart?
46436He stopped and quite instinctively inquired,"What''s the news?"
46436He was always thankful that it was in the dark that he heard the words at her door,"Miss Annie?
46436He went into the vestry room, saying to himself,"What is the matter?"
46436How are they to be made to see it?
46436How are we ever going to do anything in time?
46436How are we going to get it to the people?
46436How can she be?"
46436How can you expect the world to give you right of way?
46436How could he console poor Katie-- he, the cause of her grief?
46436How could it be that a town, seemingly so unstirred, would so completely strip itself as Sabinsport was asked to do?
46436How could such things be?
46436How did he know he was wanted?
46436How far would Sabinsport go?
46436How were we ever going to make an army from such stuff in time to do anything?
46436How, Dick asked himself, could he go to the woman whose only son had given his life in doing his work?
46436How, in heaven''s name, can you suppose your conclusions are the final and supreme ones?
46436How?"
46436I cried,''you know Sabinsport?''
46436I go now, but what I do with my place?"
46436I was giving my address, promising to raise money in America, when a girl standing near said,''Did you say Sabinsport?
46436If I could get the proofs that they opened those ballot boxes, do you suppose I''d be quiet?
46436If Paris is to be ravished like Louvain, are we going to sit quiet?"
46436If so, was that not the common man''s battle?
46436If they had as deliberately walked between the firing lines in battle, would we have condemned the combatants if they lost their lives?"
46436If this be so-- if she does so love civilization, why then, when she sees the complete success of civilized machinery, is she so sore?
46436If twenty were alive, might it not be that the other hundred were?
46436In the day things said,"What''s the use?
46436Is anybody dead?"
46436Is it an episode which drains the forces and leaves a dreary wreck behind?
46436Is it something incompatible with the free and joyous development of one''s talents?
46436Is it something that can not be organized into a profession of dignity and opportunity for service and for happiness?
46436Is n''t he here?
46436Is n''t it glorious?
46436Is n''t it splendid?
46436Is something going wrong?
46436Is there a war?"
46436Is there no place in it for economic independence?
46436It do n''t say how many he killed?"
46436It is your home?
46436It was only now and then that a jealous pang seized him, and he said,"Why, why is there no one for me?
46436Just ca n''t be dishonest-- oh, Dick, do you think I might call him up and tell him so?
46436Make a note of their going, wo n''t you?"
46436Man, do n''t you know what that means?"
46436May I have a talk with you?"
46436May I tell her Miss Cowder is nursing him?"
46436Might it not be that he would discover that he must give up this lovely thing that he had been treasuring in his heart?
46436Mikey, he''s dyin''for love of France, could you beat it?"
46436Now that Ralph had fairly put the question,"What''s the matter with me?"
46436Or to Joffre,"Feeling pretty good to- night, ai n''t you, Papa Joffre?"
46436Read about the doughboy and his mules?
46436Shaking his hands-- begging for the truth-- Was Nancy alive?
46436She had a great distaste for the conclusion, but a fact was a fact, and what reason had you to suppose she could be held when once she advanced?
46436She looked at me in such a curious way.--''Need me?
46436She was calling out an army, but what for?
46436Should such things be?
46436Somebody would make munitions, why not Sabinsport?
46436Stop munition making, close the wire mill, and what were the workmen to do?
46436Sure of what?
46436The first instinctive thought of every man and woman who had debts to pay or projects to carry out was,"Where will I get the money?"
46436The question was, Would it work?
46436The shops?"
46436The war-- why, what had the war to do with their love?
46436The world was full of wrongs calling for vengeance, was the_ Lusitania_ the one out of all these many where Sabinsport must act?
46436There''s an ugly report here of the sinking of a vessel with big loss of Americans-- anything in it?"
46436They would leave Serbia as early as possible in October, could n''t Reuben Cowder meet then in London?
46436Was he never to see her again?
46436Was it all to be like this-- failure, sorrow, shame, suffering?
46436Was it not the truth?
46436Was it something they knew by instinct to be one of the inevitable tragedies of human existence, like sickness and death, storms and pests?
46436Was it too late?
46436Was it true they"had"him?
46436Was n''t I in Belgium when--""Good Lord, Patsy, ca n''t you ever for a moment forget Belgium?
46436Was she never to see anything orderly, sufficient, successful?
46436Was she to have none of the help of pride, the consciousness of a great cause?
46436Was their sudden interest and sympathy ridiculous?
46436Was there nothing in war that was brave, glorious and stirring?
46436Was war one of the universal facts accepted by simple people, to whom life is all reality and almost nothing of speculation and theory?
46436Were not the Allies fighting to put an end to them, to punish those that dared attempt them?
46436Were not these war times?
46436Were we too late?
46436What I ca n''t make out is, Who''s doing it?
46436What ails me?"
46436What assurance can I have that he wo n''t fly into a rage and berate me for knitting-- for I shall bring my knitting?"
46436What but war are those campaigns of yours in the_ Argus_?
46436What can they do?"
46436What could Germany do when she knew that and knew Belgium had sold herself?
46436What could I do?
46436What could ail him that he should do this mad thing?
46436What could he do?
46436What could make Reuben Cowder look so grim when Otto was present or when his name was mentioned but his belief that she did care?
46436What could make her so interested but-- caring?
46436What do you say?"
46436What does it mean?
46436What for?''
46436What had come over her?
46436What has done it?"
46436What has it got to do with us in Sabinsport if Austria has declared war on Serbia-- what''s Serbia anyhow?
46436What if Germany gets in, as you said it would be the other day; what''s that?
46436What if they carried it out-- these explosions that they threatened-- how could he escape complicity?
46436What in the world could it mean?
46436What in the world had he done?
46436What is it?"
46436What is your way or mine to the sweating world?
46436What more probable?"
46436What nation on earth equaled them-- in effective action, in restraint, in fidelity, in valor, in bigness of vision?
46436What other nation was worthy to rule the earth?
46436What part of Serbia?
46436What right had the war to touch it?
46436What was it?
46436What was the human race, after all, but a set of selfish, limited bunglers?
46436What was the matter?
46436What were they in all this thing?
46436What would Sabinsport do?
46436What would they have to do with Sabinsport, with the City within five miles?
46436What''d you done if you''d got up in the mornin''and found him gone and nothin''but a letter left?
46436What''s Mikey been doing now?"
46436What''s going on in England and France?
46436What''s the matter with me?
46436What''s the matter, that I ca n''t get my fingers on this war, that I ca n''t feel it my affair?
46436What''s the news?"
46436What''s the row?
46436What''s the use of it all?
46436What''s the use of it all?
46436What''s the use of it all?"
46436What''s the use of it all?"
46436What''s the use when your best friend''s like that?
46436What''s up?
46436What, then, would become of Nancy?
46436When you did your levelest to stir the wire mill to strike two years ago, what was that but war-- gaining a point by force?
46436Where did it come from?
46436Where do we go from here?"
46436Where was it all to come from?
46436Where was the pugnacious, intolerant, scoffing Ralph she had fought with for two years?
46436Where''d you get that?"
46436Where''s the other by in Sabinsport that had the right to get up and go?
46436Where, where were the Americans?
46436Who cares any more in Sabinsport whether it''s right or wrong to let two men gobble up the franchises?
46436Who could have guessed it from the gossip of this benighted town?"
46436Who is going to support the shops, buy the farmers''produce?
46436Who is going to take care of his family?"
46436Who printed those handbills that rained all over town the morning of Registration Day, denouncing the draft as a form of slavery?
46436Who would have thought the cheerful, welcoming voice was the same that so lately had vibrated and broken over the''phone?
46436Who''s going to think about hours and wages and safety and social insurance with that thing going on over there?
46436Why ca n''t we get our fingers on them?"
46436Why not settle down?
46436Why not?
46436Why should Austria set out to annihilate a people?
46436Why should he be so eager, so enthusiastic, so indefatigable, in this work?"
46436Why should he have been forced to do this?
46436Why should she resist?
46436Why should the War Board harbor suspicions of him?
46436Why should we preach neutrality and make for one antagonist what circumstances made it impossible to make for another?
46436Why talk about democracy?
46436Why talk about ideals?"
46436Why were there such alarms of revolt before, if in the end there was to be complete acceptance?
46436Why, but to stay the invading hordes?
46436Why, what did it mean?
46436Why, why, he asked himself, had he not done this before?
46436Why?
46436Why?
46436Will you see me?"
46436Will you tell my father you saw me, that I am well, and that he is not to be anxious?''
46436With these burdens on his heart, why should he mind a little thing like the_ Argus_?
46436Wo n''t that shut up those neighborhoods in the State that are taking pains to say how depraved this burg is?
46436Wo n''t you come down and help me?"
46436Would Nancy say, like Ralph,"All this does make me understand Germany better, Otto"?
46436Would he go down?
46436Would she dismiss the suspicions which connected Otto Littman''s name with the intrigues as unfounded and unworthy?
46436Would she foregather at the Opera House?
46436Would she still think so when he told her?
46436Would she understand the feeling about him?
46436Would the intangible thing which followed him in the street find Nancy Cowder in Serbia and poison her loyal and honest mind against him?
46436Would they accept him?
46436Would you break the by''s heart-- and me that proud of him?
46436You are returning?''
46436You know Katie Flaherty, of course-- takes care of you, does n''t she?
46436You know how Ralph despises me?"
46436You say you wo n''t countenance war, but what have you waged but war?
46436You''ll come?"
46436_ Gott in Himmel!_ what does he expect?--that Germany will tolerate such nonsense from any country on the globe?
46451''Dot wart? 46451 Am I dot man?
46451And Jennie?
46451And Nancy?
46451And after you land safely in New York?
46451And are you content with the change?
46451And get it into your stomach?
46451And is the Them Shanghais?
46451And what are your wages?
46451Are you in arrears for rent?
46451Are you in earnest, Herr Caspar?
46451Are you not exaggerating?
46451Are you one of the new servants?
46451Are you satisfied to work for so many hours for so little money?
46451But how shall we get the corpses?
46451But if the performance is so hazardous, and she should be killed, would it not entail a heavy loss upon you?
46451But suppose you die too suddenly to repent?
46451But the children were eaten by the bears?
46451But what am I to do?
46451But who are you, anyhow?
46451By the way,he stopped to say,"are the Argyle rooms in London actually closed, and is the Mabille in Paris as lively as it used to be?
46451D''ye ever meet Ned Sothern? 46451 Did she hurt herself?"
46451Did you enjoy this trip to the land of Tell?
46451Did you know what that Frenchman was saying last night?
46451Did you pay it?
46451Did you succeed?
46451Do my eyes deceive me?
46451Do people enjoy such perilous feats?
46451Do people live in such places?
46451Do you forge this shaft originally?
46451Do you permit your pupils to attend your rival''s exhibition?
46451Do you speak English?
46451Eh, Monsieur? 46451 Eh?
46451Fife francs? 46451 Have You Tobacco or Spirits?"
46451Have you been to the Louvre?
46451How Long Must I Endure This?
46451How are you getting on?
46451How could he have got out on the street, if he had pawned all his clothes and his boots?
46451How do you live?
46451How does any one know that there was no Tell? 46451 How far have we to go before we come to one of the houses you spoke of?"
46451How long does it take you to cut this slot in it?
46451How long does it take you to get out upon the street?
46451How many hours do you work?
46451How much for that lobster?
46451How much?
46451How shall we get water? 46451 How too religious?"
46451I trust, Mrs. Thompson,he said, professionally,"that you are prepared to die?"
46451I was called to it,was the answer,"what would these poor people do without me?"
46451If he do n''t like the country and the laws, why do n''t he get out of it?
46451In the name of all that''s good what_ is_ all this about?
46451Is it good?
46451Is it on Mickey Doolan''s farrum?
46451Is this safe?
46451Jim, me boy, and is them the Shanghais? 46451 Know Ned Stokes?
46451May I ask what part of the Great Republic you are from?
46451Must you go? 46451 Pay it?
46451Suppose you do n''t pay the rent, then what?
46451The clerk?
46451The maiden leaped from this spot?
46451The poor man is sick,quoth the kindly dame,"why do n''t you help him?"
46451Then the prevailing impression is that everybody in the world is a thief? 46451 Then why do n''t you have the piece of iron forged with this slot made down to within say a quarter- inch and save nine- tenths of this time?"
46451To what swindling scoundrel do you refer?
46451Vat dey vant? 46451 Was he actually dangerous?"
46451Well, how in the world can you raise enough on such a holding to pay such an exorbitant rent?
46451Well?
46451What am I here for, anyhow? 46451 What are you doing?"
46451What are you intending to do when you are older?
46451What are you sobbing so for?
46451What do these items mean?
46451What do you know about it? 46451 What do you pay for the rooms?"
46451What do you pay for this apartment?
46451What is his prayer? 46451 What is the matter?"
46451What is the price of it?
46451What is this for?
46451What is''Oui Monsieur''in English?
46451What is''stirabout''?
46451What kind of a banker was he?
46451What rent do you pay for this place?
46451What will you do if he dies?
46451Where are your classes to- day?
46451Where were you born?
46451Who Put that Ribbon in your Cap?
46451Who gave you permission to make a ditch on my land?
46451Who put that ribbon in your cap?
46451Who was Joan of Arc, anyway?
46451Who?
46451Why did you ask him ten francs when you only asked me five to begin with, and intended to take two?
46451Why do n''t you go up the Alps?
46451Why do n''t you lecture on temperance?
46451Why do you,I asked,"a man capable of doing so much in the world, stay and do this enormous work, for nothing?"
46451Why does he sign a lease, the conditions of which he can not fulfil?
46451Why have you quit the hotel?
46451Why join a wholesale liquor dealer?
46451Why not now?
46451Why not? 46451 Why not?
46451Why this condition of things, then?
46451Why,said I to the waterman,"do you make us pay for doing what those men do for nothing?"
46451Will they? 46451 Will you let me see your memorandum book?"
46451Would You Oblige Me?
46451Would it not have been better for you had you followed a more reputable career?
46451Yis, sor, what is it?
46451You are to marry her?
46451You do n''t mean to say that these people actually live on that fare? 46451 Your business?"
46451Ze yellow fevair and General Butlair in one season? 46451 ''City of Paris?'' 46451 16th? 46451 A death bed repentance is all very well, but suppose you die too suddenly to repent?
46451A dirty, squalid, beggarly- looking street is Judengasse, but who knows what wealth is hidden behind all this apparent poverty?
46451A funeral procession was passing:--"Who is it that is dead?"
46451Am I a baby in my A B Abs?
46451Am I like any grandson you have?
46451And as for the expense, what is it?
46451And as for the names of the places, havn''t I got a guide book, and ca n''t I read?
46451And do you remember when you gave out at the foot of the first glacier how I pulled you up?''
46451And she took my effects?"
46451And then why should Satan be perpetually swindled?
46451And there''s Chet Arthur; who''d ever spose that Chet would ever have got to be President?
46451And who that cockade in yours?"
46451And, as they all lie about it, anyhow, why not, if you are going to lie, commence lying at the beginning, and save labor?
46451Another expressive shrug, as if to say"Who knows?"
46451As if the favorite should say:"Your majesty, what shall we do with Sir Thomas Buster?
46451Behead him?"
46451But ai n''t the dear departed inside the lion?
46451But how did this woman get it?
46451But how ish dot wart to be got off?
46451But how to get rid of Adolph?
46451But what are you going to do about it?
46451But what becomes of the English investors?
46451But what is he in Ireland?
46451But what of that?
46451But where is it to come from?
46451But where is the necessity of supporting them at all?
46451But why am I thus?
46451But why not?
46451But, Henri, should you fall, what would become of me?"
46451By the way have you met any of the nobility?
46451By the way, is she paying enough?"
46451Ca n''t you_ stand_ another one?''
46451Can I tell?
46451Can a country afford to fit out costly armaments and maintain vast armies for such purposes?
46451Can there be any way of making a great estate so delightful as this?
46451Can you tell?
46451Come to think of it, wuz it Elijah, or Elisha?
46451Could a saint, be she ever so devout, find that number in Cologne now?
46451Could she, a plain country girl, with no dowry to speak of, hope to we d a man with a fortune of sixty- eight dollars and fifty cents?
46451Could there be modeled a more vicious face?
46451Did I ascend any of these mountains?
46451Did all this happen?
46451Did n''t I scoop in that jack pot nicely last evening?
46451Did you write down your impressions of the places you visited?"
46451Do I resemble any friend of yours?
46451Do n''t I know the difference between a Western prairie and an Alpine peak?
46451Do you know Billy Vanderbilt?
46451Do you know the hour at which the tide comes in at New Haven?
46451Do you know the hour the tide serves to enter Dieppe?
46451Do you remember Dickens''Montagu Tigg in Martin Chuzzlewit?
46451Do you want a glass of water?
46451Do you?
46451Does he get anything for the making of the land?
46451Does he shoot it?
46451Does it not inculcate a great principle just the same?
46451For instance, if we should lose our propeller what would happen?
46451For instance:--"Thompson, do you know how many States there are in the Union?"
46451Has your company any interest in the ham sandwich and beer counter in New Haven?
46451Have these people from first to last ever added one penny to the wealth of the world?
46451Have ye a job ye can give me?"
46451Have you anything better in Germany?"
46451Have ze great God no maircy, zen?"
46451Havn''t I got eyes?
46451He can be happy with rags and a crust, and what is money to such a being?
46451How can I bring up children for France on nothing and encumbered with a five- foot four husband with sandy hair, a pug nose, and bandy legs?
46451How could a man get a glass of water into his stomach without its going down his throat?
46451How could she fall five huntret veet and not hurt hairselluf?"
46451How do you know but what the Indians are older than the Gauls?
46451How many hats, coats and walking sticks would be left by the time the entertainment was over?
46451How many landlords have been shot?
46451How much do the little Princes and Princesses cost the Nation?
46451How much do you suppose it cost Mr. Foote to have this trifle of work done?
46451How much does the Queen receive?
46451How much the Dukes and Dukelings, the Right Honorables and the Generals and Colonels, and the Secretaries and all that?
46451How, possibly, could a government send out a complement of wives, sisters, cousins and aunts to nurse and weep over each wounded individual?
46451How?
46451I could have done anything that I wanted to, but to what purpose?
46451I have just come from one, at which--"You are not going to send this infernal aggregation of lies to your mother, are you?"
46451I overheard this conversation between two young ladies one morning:--"Mary, dear, where did you go last evening?
46451I remember one night--""Where are you from?"
46451I will, you bet?"
46451If French phrases must be used in English writing, why not take them from a bill of fare?
46451If I give one hundred and ten thousand francs to one, what will become of the others?
46451If rags and apple cores suffice, why more?
46451If so, could you, for the sake of the resemblance, lend me a hundred francs?"
46451If so, why not give us the five and a half hours that were consumed in useless waiting at New Haven and Dieppe, in London?
46451If tongue work is to do it, why not use your tongue, and save your legs?
46451If we berry the lion, do n''t we berry the dear deceast?
46451In the coming years what may happen to me?
46451In the name of all that''s good, what does the Queen of England want of eight ladies of the bed- chamber, and thirteen women of the bed- chamber?
46451Is the Chicago& Northwestern in this row?"
46451Is there any one thing they have ever done to push forward the progress of the nations?
46451Is yours in pants yet, or is he in kilts?
46451It would be easier to answer the question, What do n''t they do?
46451Lemuel stared at him and replied:--"Are you addressing me, sir?"
46451Let''s see, where was I?
46451May I ask your name, and why you address me, a perfect stranger?
46451No?
46451No?
46451No?
46451Or,''What day of the month is this?
46451Possibly St. Ursula was skillful enough to corner that number of virgins; but would the Huns have slain them all?
46451See?
46451See?
46451Send it?
46451Shall I put it into your basket?"
46451Shall I say three francs?"
46451She said to herself,"I could marry, by virtue of my face and figure, a grand gentleman, but-- what then?
46451Should I go into business, and make a great fortune?
46451Should I go into literature, and make myself an imperishable name?
46451Should I go into politics, and control the destinies of nations?
46451Should I live?
46451Speaking of monuments and commemorative structures, how many has the United States?
46451Suppose I should n''t come back with it?"
46451Suppose Tell did n''t shoot the apple?
46451Suppose he had always lived a perfectly correct life, and some emergency should come to him that demanded economy, what would he have to economize on?
46451That the feat is possible every schoolboy knows, for have we not all seen Buffalo Bill do the same thing in the theaters?
46451The old alleys were good enough for their fathers, and why not for the present generation?
46451The priest asked:--"If you get that earth back by Monday morning, will you hold the land?"
46451The question is, where do all these things come from?
46451The question was, what should I do?
46451The seller says it was, and if he happens to be mistaken, what difference does it make so that you believe it?
46451The translation is so good(?)
46451Their fathers were scarified, and why should they not be?
46451Then with an inflection in my voice that had something of sarcasm, I suppose, in it, I asked:--"Is that all?"
46451They at least have meat with their potatoes?"
46451They know you to be an American at once, and one introduces himself, claiming to have seen you in the States:"What are you doing here?"
46451They simply said:"Avez vous tabac ou liquers?"
46451They were satisfied with themselves for a while, at least, and when happiness can be had for a penny, why should any one be miserable?
46451This is war, and what was this war all about?
46451To whom could he sell the corn at a profit?
46451Under such circumstances who would care to own a city, or to possess in fee simple the cattle on a thousand hills?
46451We were hungry, it''s true, but what was hunger to the delight of waiting three hours in an abominable steamer?
46451Were we over with it?
46451What Shall We Do with Sir Thomas?
46451What are you doing here?"
46451What became of them?
46451What becomes of them?
46451What can Pat do?
46451What could Mr. Bartleman ask more?
46451What could be better than this?
46451What did I sail across the Atlantic, and come to Switzerland for?
46451What did the old folks do about it?"
46451What difference does it make if it is a fable?
46451What do all these people do?
46451What do you suppose this liquid is?
46451What do you suppose this magnificent man gets for all this?
46451What does he pray about?"
46451What does she want of all these people about her?
46451What does that prove?
46451What earthly good would all this do me?
46451What good of making a name, and what earthly use was there in controlling the destiny of nations?
46451What good of piling up money?
46451What happened to the''City of Boston?''
46451What happens to him then?
46451What is a man with rheumatism, inflammatory or otherwise, to five men trying to mend their ways?
46451What is a waterfall, anyway?
46451What is an old lady in silver spectacles on a farm thirty miles from any water more than a well, going to know about a steamer?
46451What is beef going to be worth then?
46451What is he now?
46451What is it?
46451What is the amount paid the drones of England in the form of pensions?
46451What is the reason for this?
46451What is to prevent the Jew at the table who has a paper before him containing, say, two hundred diamonds, from secreting one or two?
46451What kind of an infamy is it that will not permit a mother to mourn the death of her first born without connecting it with"rint?"
46451What kind of an infernalism is it that grips the hearts of women, that lays its icy iron finger upon the tenderest chords in a mother''s heart?
46451What must be the condition of the poor if such as she were paying to support them?
46451What necessity is there for their existence?
46451What on?
46451What sense was there in laying traps for Caspar when Caspar was doing his level best to get to him anyhow?
46451What should be the plan of my life?
46451What should the citizen of Terre Haute, Ind., know of the value of bronzes?
46451What then?
46451What to My Lord is Nancy and her woes or her hopes?
46451What was duty?
46451What was the matter?
46451What will become of me?"
46451When the earth melts and the sky is rolled up like a scroll, where is your Shakespeare?
46451Where did you get that lace?
46451Where is Milton, Byron, Burns, and the long list of men who have written that their names may be everlasting?
46451Where is your cheapness now?
46451Where was you born?
46451Who can analyze that subtle and unknown thing we call mind?"
46451Who can control tastes?
46451Who could tell?
46451Who has not heard of Bond''s, the great resort of boating parties on the Thames?
46451Who is responsible for what happens to him?
46451Who knows?
46451Who shall say?
46451Who went to Mabille?
46451Who would cut a throat for oroide gold with imitation stones?
46451Why buy twinty gondolas, to- wanst?
46451Why ca n''t everybody have spirit?
46451Why did I spring from that couch and break open the window?
46451Why do you and that other weazened monkey interrupt me when I am contemplating nature, by calling my attention to it, and asking me to note it?
46451Why keep all the good things for the nobility?
46451Why not Petticoat Lane?
46451Why not buy two-- a male and a faymale, and breed thim ourselves?"
46451Why should he go to the trouble of helping them, when he knows perfectly well that he will get them, anyhow?
46451Why should it be the exclusive property of women?
46451Why will such men come to places intended as reformatories?
46451Why?
46451Why?
46451Why?
46451Why?
46451Will you go over now, and see for yourself if I have exaggerated?"
46451Without the Opera the rich American would not come to Paris, and then what would trade be?
46451Would he not throw the money in my face and feel so insulted that he would throw up my case?"
46451Would you mind lending me five pounds till Saturday?"
46451You are not going to send this to your mother?"
46451You are not surely going to send that?"
46451You can do it, but you know the terms?"
46451You have done it?
46451You have kept a diary?"
46451You know Filkins& Beaver, of Buffalo?
46451You promise?"
46451You understand?"
46451[ Illustration: HAVE YOU TOBACCO OR SPIRITS?]
46451[ Illustration: WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH SIR THOMAS BUSTER?]
46451[ Illustration:"HOW LONG MUST I ENDURE THIS?"]
46451[ Illustration:"JIM, MY BOY, AND IS THEM THE SHANGHAIS?
46451[ Illustration:"WHO PUT THAT RIBBON IN YOUR CAP?"]
46451[ Illustration:"WOULD YOU OBLIGE ME WITH A HUNDRED FRANCS TILL SATURDAY?"]
46451[ Sidenote: WOULD THE QUEEN ACCEPT A TIP?]
46451_ Perfide!_ But we die for France all the same?"
46451and is this delay in that most uninteresting place for the purpose of compelling the waiting passengers to leave a few more shillings in England?
46451do n''t I vish I''ad just''arf of vot ails him?"
46451how long must I endure this?''
46451into cash and take a shy at it, as Wall street would say, and set up his carriage on the profits?
46451said he to himself, as he took one last look at her, curled up gracefully on the floor,"shall I leave her thus?
46451that they have nothing else?
46451was my reply,"do you say that I, a perfect stranger to you, may carry off a ring worth forty pounds?
46451where is the inscription?
46451will the grave and great man take twenty francs?
46451you were taken in, were you?"
8682Have you any eels?
8682O-- oh-- what is the matter with William?
8682Where are you shoving to?
8682But is it the kind of ground which would pay a fair return on the cost of"inning it"to- day?
8682But who could have counted them so fast?
8682Can this difference be accounted for by evaporation alone, which is certainly more prevalent in the bottoms?
8682Could not the national river be placed under similar guardianship?
8682FOUNTAINS AND SPRINGS Is it true that our fountains and springs of sweet water are about to perish?
8682I ca n''t get out!"?
8682If the kingfisher can find a living and abundant fish in our rivers and brooks, why does the dabchick migrate?
8682If these little gems of beauty come out of the London river, what may we not expect in the upper waters of the silver Thames?
8682Or would he allow himself to be shut off from access to his own river, or forbidden to walk along the path by its side, supposing that one existed?
8682The landlord, after inquiring about our shooting luck, went out and came back into the parlour, saying,"Now, sir, will you look at my sport?"
8682There was a popular song which had for chorus the question,"Did you ever see an oyster walk upstairs?"
8682What, then, was the"great commodity"given by them to the city?
8682Where were they?
43741And Mrs. Jennings is quite right about the latter statement, is she not?
43741And after that time Fitzwilliam is to be summoned home with all speed, I suppose?
43741And are your brother and his pretty wife in Bath this spring? 43741 And did you think of Mr. Morland?
43741And how was the young officer, my dear? 43741 And so you are very happy here, Kitty?
43741And what is it to be?
43741And why should I hide it, may I ask?
43741And you express no contrition, you shameless, you bad- hearted girl?
43741Are you making a long stay here, may I ask?
43741Are you sure it is entirely out of the question?
43741Are you, Cousin Robert? 43741 But Captain Price, you are not going already?"
43741But do not let us concern ourselves with him, Georgiana; what about the walk in Kensington Gardens that we had thought of? 43741 But do you actually not know?
43741But does he so?
43741But if you found you positively had to do them, and there was no way out, then you would decide to like them, would you not? 43741 But what about your engagement-- the day at Clifton?"
43741But who is leaving to- morrow? 43741 But you surely will not attempt to get to Winchester to- night?"
43741By the way, have you noticed what a wonderful girl she is for asking questions? 43741 Can you understand people advertising their affairs so freely beforehand?
43741Colonel Fitzwilliam has a great power of self- effacement, has he not? 43741 Colonel Fitzwilliam is very fond of music, is he not?"
43741Could you imagine a greater contrast? 43741 Darcy,"she exclaimed, rising and going to her husband, who was occupied with the newspaper,"can you listen to me?
43741Dear Cousin Robert, I am so sorry; I wish you need not... would you not go to Pemberley? 43741 Did I ever tell you, Miss Darcy, about that one time when we attempted to do a little acting at my father''s house-- at Mansfield Park?"
43741Did you hear of that dinner- party?
43741Did you indeed?
43741Did you know, Elizabeth, that we went to see the amateur theatricals at Ashbourne? 43741 Do n''t be a fool, Nancy,"was Lucy''s answer, in somewhat discouraging tones;"what''s the good of expecting a man like that to look at you?
43741Do they? 43741 Do you mean that Georgiana has seen someone whom she might prefer?"
43741Do you really think it is so? 43741 Do you think Miss Crawford very pretty?"
43741Do you think so? 43741 Do you think that they are really happy in their engagement?
43741Early? 43741 Elizabeth, when I am married, shall I have to go and stay at Rosings without you?"
43741Fitzwilliam? 43741 Forget Miss Bennet?"
43741Georgiana tired?
43741Georgiana, what must he have thought?
43741Happier? 43741 Has Miss Bennett become engaged to be married, by any chance?"
43741Have you indeed? 43741 Have you seen anything of Fitzwilliam, Louisa?"
43741He is a very handsome man, and extraordinarily young- looking; he is nearly forty, is he not?
43741He is in London, I believe?
43741He really does like it, does not praise it out of mere politeness?
43741How came Mrs. Wentworth to be acquainted with these events?
43741How can you say such a thing, Caroline? 43741 How could you have guessed it?"
43741How dare you speak so to my poor sister?
43741How did it happen? 43741 How do you do, Miss Crawford?
43741I am sure I shall not; I do n''t want to see him: how can I think anyone nice when I am away from here? 43741 I am very glad you have seen something in him, for I am sure you must all have liked him, do you not?"
43741I could not help it, now, could I, Georgiana? 43741 I see; and your cousin is with you there just now?"
43741I suppose Kitty''s preference for him was very clearly marked?
43741I suppose he is often at the Portinscales''?
43741I thought Eleanor told me all was forgiven?
43741I wonder what he would be like if he were ill? 43741 In Bath?
43741In God''s name, Bertram, say he is still living? 43741 Indeed, indeed, I will, but may I not tell them anything more?
43741Indeed, yes, it is with Miss Bennet that I must plead my own cause; but you will not refuse me your sanction?
43741Is Bingley going to town? 43741 Is he your cousin?"
43741Is it not kind of Mrs. Gardiner to have lent Kitty to me for so long, Miss Darcy?
43741Is it true then,asked Fitzwilliam, summoning all his fortitude,"that Sir Walter Elliot is going to be married?"
43741Is it? 43741 Is she engaged, Mr. Price?
43741Is there anything against it? 43741 Is there nothing I can do, nothing I can put right?
43741It has been an evening of surprises, has it not, Elizabeth? 43741 It has been arranged, then?
43741It is hardly fair, is it, to ask me a question which he has never asked?
43741It is her expression, is it not?
43741It is not a matter of fortune, is it? 43741 It is your own parish that you mentioned?"
43741It was better than the Bath assemblies, I gather?
43741Lord, my dear,cried Mrs. Jennings,"why did you not stop me?
43741May I again request that you will ask for our carriage?
43741May I call on you to- morrow, at an early hour? 43741 Mine?
43741Miss Crawford, will you do us the kindness of playing again? 43741 Mr. Price, do you know what you have done?
43741Mrs. Jennings is a great talker, is she not?
43741My dear fellow,retorted Ferrars,"what on earth did that matter?
43741Of course she goes about; why should n''t she?
43741Oh, Georgiana, why did you tell Mr. Price? 43741 Oho, William, you sly fellow, so it is Miss Darcy you are come to see?"
43741Or she used to think so, perhaps?
43741Quite true, Kitty; so a ball is in your mind; and what made you think of it just now?
43741Really?
43741Riding? 43741 Shall we go and make your excuses then, Fitzwilliam,"he continued,"if our guests will kindly excuse us for a moment?
43741Shall we join Lady Catherine? 43741 She must be charming, from all you say,"commented Georgiana, and then asked rather shyly and with a deep blush:"Did Cousin Robert like her too?"
43741That is a nice arrangement; and you are better for coming to Bath?
43741That is your friend of whom you told me, is it not, Elizabeth? 43741 The eight o''clock coach?"
43741There can be no doubt of it, I suppose?
43741They are genuinely old, are they not? 43741 To- morrow, then, at eleven o''clock, you are sure suits you?"
43741Very well, I thank you, madam; and I hope the same may be said of your fair sister, Miss Crawford-- but perhaps she is no longer Miss Crawford?
43741Well, Elizabeth,he began,"and how do you find Kitty?
43741Well, how have you been getting on?
43741Well, we congratulate you upon your good sense, do we not, Anne? 43741 Well, what do you want my opinion about?"
43741Were there balls so often?
43741Were you-- has it actually happened to you?
43741What can he want with my father?
43741What did you say, Robert?
43741What do you think of it all, Miss Darcy? 43741 What do you think of that now, my dear?"
43741What else has gone well?
43741What fancy is this you have taken into your head, Elizabeth? 43741 What has become of Georgiana and Fitzwilliam?"
43741What have I been telling you all along? 43741 What is this, Kitty?"
43741What is this?
43741Why did Jane ask me that unfortunate question, just at that time? 43741 Why should she not like him, I wonder?"
43741Why should you want to walk? 43741 Would it have greatly signified if there had been a breach?"
43741Yes, certainly, why not? 43741 Yes, is it not a pity she has to go?
43741Yes, it is a very ungallant thing, is it not, Miss Darcy? 43741 Yes,"said Elizabeth,"and, dear Darcy, do you not think we should be prepared to take it?
43741You are a lover of country sports?
43741You are staying with your aunt, Lady Catherine de Bourgh?
43741You are sure there is nowhere you would like to go, if not Desborough?
43741You did not see, did you, Robert? 43741 You had been with them at Bath, and it was difficult to free yourself from the association when you met again?"
43741You had? 43741 You know her well, do you not?"
43741You think not? 43741 You think so far favourably of my suit that you will place no bar in the way of my-- I trust I may in time say_ our_ perfect happiness?"
43741Your husband is here this evening?
43741All your rehearsing in the charades will come in useful now, wo n''t it?
43741Am I shy of him, or is he shy of me?
43741And has Jane told you about my young friend in London, who, it appears, is an admirer of hers?
43741And now, do tell me, for I have been longing for an opportunity to ask you, what was the result of your conversation, if I may be allowed to hear it?"
43741And your dress, my dear, what did you say it was going to be?"
43741And, besides, is n''t he engaged to Mr. Darcy''s sister?"
43741Annesley?"
43741Annesley?"
43741Besides, who knows when we shall have another such a delightful evening as this again?
43741Bingley''s?"
43741But congratulations on a thing that has_ not_ happened are rather difficult to receive at any time, are they not?
43741But granting that it is so, I gather that you are prepared to forgive them this little weakness?"
43741But how could anyone separate Miss Crawford from Colonel Fitzwilliam, if she really loved him, he so noble, so kind, so true?
43741But one thing followed another, and, of course, people are bound to hold by their relations, are they not?"
43741But perhaps you yourself, Miss Darcy, are a student of motives-- perhaps your own actions are determined by a clear purpose?"
43741But what if it had all arisen through a misunderstanding?
43741But who were the partners who contributed to such enjoyment?
43741But why in the world did you not come down weeks ago, when you had the chance?"
43741By the way, Robert, how do you stand with my aunt?"
43741Can not anything be done?
43741Can nothing be done for him?
43741Can you forget Miss Bennet for one moment, and tell me if, apart from all that, there would be the slightest hope for me at some future time?
43741Can you not feel how horrible it is?
43741Could it be possible that it was barely two hours since Mr. Bertram''s arrival?
43741Could she avoid seeing Mr. Price again?
43741Could you not make him Mr. Ferrars''s curate, or something?"
43741Could you not persuade her to give you a statement of what she owes?
43741Darcy paused, and Elizabeth asked:"Is that all the letter, Fitzwilliam?"
43741Darcy was too much overwhelmed to speak for some moments, till with a sudden start of recollection he exclaimed:"And you, Bertram?
43741Did Miss Crawford perhaps not care for him?
43741Did he not return-- did you not see him that evening at my aunt''s?"
43741Did he talk to you, Georgiana?
43741Did he tell you why not, Georgiana?
43741Did not the mistakes she had made in the past show that she was merely drifting, lamentably weak, and having no sound judgment of her own?
43741Did she ride at Bath?
43741Did you mean that it might be happiness to you, if all this were cleared up?
43741Did you not give her to understand that you meant Miss Bennet?"
43741Did you see him?"
43741Do I wrong in speaking to you first?
43741Do n''t you care about the charades, and about putting a stop to the whole thing?
43741Do n''t you think I am the most obedient patient you ever saw?
43741Do n''t you think so, Mr. Darcy?
43741Do tell me how you would console yourself if you slipped down now and broke your leg, so that you could not dance any more for a long time?
43741Do you happen to know anything about the breaking of this little mandarin?
43741Do you know our part of the world at all?
43741Do you know to whom it is?"
43741Do you mean to say that sister of hers is really here, going about in Bath?"
43741Do you remember him, Cousin Robert?
43741Do you remember how Colonel Brandon used to talk to us of his travels in the East, ma''am?"
43741Do you see that short, stout young man over there?
43741Do you start so early to- morrow?
43741Do you think I have gained it?
43741Do you think she can possibly be caring for Cousin Robert all the time, and not know it till now?
43741Do you think you could persuade Mrs. Annesley to bring you?"
43741Do you think you would recognize him if you saw him?"
43741Do you understand yours?"
43741Does he still think I am to marry Sir Walter Elliot?"
43741Elizabeth disclaimed; but Mrs. Ferrars continued perseveringly:"You prefer instrumental music, perhaps?
43741Elizabeth felt her fears returning, and inquired:"Did she manage to find questions to ask_ you_, Robert?"
43741Elizabeth hesitated no longer, pausing only to say:"Dear Georgiana, would you mind going to sit with Mr. Bertram?
43741Elizabeth pondered, and to gain time inquired:"Did he speak as though he hoped to see you again while he was there?"
43741Elizabeth preferred to waive this question, and continued:"I suppose she goes on to ask you for money?"
43741Even the wisest of us may sometimes be mistaken in our estimates of one another, may we not, Elizabeth?"
43741Excuse my asking-- I can not quite understand-- does he live with you or with your aunt?"
43741For the woman he knew her to be, what happiness could be in store?
43741Georgiana unconsciously yielded her hand to his, but shrank back a little as she faltered:"But-- but Kitty?"
43741Georgiana, do you believe in love at first sight?"
43741Good God, what is this?"
43741Had he changed his mind?
43741Has Kitty mentioned the matter to you?"
43741Have I the least chance-- any chance at all?"
43741Have I your permission, Mrs. Bingley?
43741Have you ascertained whether Kitty can cook, make her own gowns, and trim hats?
43741Have you heard anything of her lately?"
43741Have you never heard all about her and her brother?
43741Having read it, he handed it back to her, saying gravely:"What are you going to do now, Elizabeth?
43741He feared he could not be ready before twelve noon-- would not Colonel Fitzwilliam delay in starting, and accept of a seat in his curricle?
43741He had scarcely moved away when William began:"Miss Darcy, should you mind not standing up for this one?
43741He is not much like his cousin, is he?"
43741He was invited for Miss Darcy, was n''t he?
43741Her friends-- what were they about?
43741His friends seemed to notice nothing in his agitated manner of asking"Are you sure?"
43741How can those people have nefarious schemes or designs against her?
43741How could I do anything else but refuse him outright?
43741How could she ever think of being happy as long as that friend suffered?
43741How did it happen?
43741How do you do, Mr. Darcy?
43741How have you got the idea, Miss Darcy, that we poor men of the sea are so fickle?"
43741How long were you with the Gardiners?"
43741How long will it take to get to him?"
43741How would one ever steer a ship, unless one kept one''s eyes fixed on the course ahead?
43741I am sure you have placed words in her mouth which she never uttered, has he not, Miss Darcy?"
43741I beg your pardon, Mrs. Knightley, I am shockingly ill- mannered; what must you be thinking of me?
43741I came back-- I could not help it-- everything is all right-- you will let me speak now-- am I too late?
43741I consider it infinitely preferable to the autumn season, do not you, Mr. Darcy?
43741I forgot to ask you, do you not think he dances exquisitely?
43741I hope I am so fortunate as to recall myself to your remembrance?"
43741I hope he will not be, for he would have to join the ship immediately, but would not_ Captain Price_ sound well?"
43741I suppose the way is so clear that you do not need to seek any further motives, as to why you want to do the thing so much, for instance?"
43741I suppose you can not remember the time when we were engaged, Darcy, and Bingley and Jane also?"
43741I was a laggard, I suppose, and I threw my chance away in Bath; and how could she wait until I had reinstated myself?
43741I will not torment your sister, but-- you will not close your door on me without at least explaining the reason for this dreadful change?"
43741I wonder if Miss Darcy feels that too?"
43741I''m afraid it sounds like a long absence this time, but you never mind that, do you?"
43741If my cousin had put his fate to the touch while he was in London, would he have had the answer, or any hope of answer, that he desired?"
43741If she were ill, or out of the house, or gone home again?
43741In a postscript he added:"Will Darcy trust me to choose him a horse?
43741Is Captain Price not able to come?"
43741Is anything the matter, dear Miss Crawford?
43741Is he not all I said?"
43741Is he not delightful?
43741Is he not handsome, and a noble creature?
43741Is he not heir to some great property?
43741Is her name on the programme?
43741Is there any one thing, any incident, you could tell me of, by which you may have been inadvertently misled?"
43741Is there no one who has never been there?
43741It all points the same way, does it not?
43741It is not often that I go out of my way to take notice of strangers--""My dear aunt,"interrupted Darcy,"had we not better start?
43741It is possible that you thought I was paying attentions to Miss Bennet?
43741It was then Emma''s turn to be astonished:"Going to sea again, Captain Price?
43741It will be most unfriendly of you not to, for how else shall we see you again, since you positively decline to go with us to- morrow?"
43741Knightley?"
43741Mary replied after a minute or two, in a stifled voice:"I would send him such a message, but do you think he would care to have it?"
43741May I introduce myself, as Mr. Durand has gone away?
43741May I not hope to be allowed to call upon your sister, if only for a few minutes?
43741May I present you to her?"
43741May we hear some more particulars, now that we have got over the first shock?"
43741Meanwhile Georgiana was eagerly asking:"What does Aunt Catherine mean, Darcy?
43741Miss Steele, may I help you into the gig?
43741Mr. Morland, have you been to Clifton?
43741Not Miss Bennet and Miss Darcy?"
43741Now, do look; is not that beautiful?
43741Now, for the sake of this connection, would it be better for me to break off entirely with the Thorpes by degrees?
43741Now, shall we walk about a little?
43741Now, whom could you get in her place?
43741Oh, I wonder what Kitty would like me to say?
43741Oh, dear Elizabeth, is it not dreadful to think it may be too late?"
43741Oh, if I could only see Price once more, just once more, to make sure; but as he says, how can one ever see anybody down in the wilds of Derbyshire?"
43741Price?"
43741Price?"
43741Price?"
43741Probably she is intending to come all the time, if the truth were known; how can you tell she is not?"
43741Shall I see you again before I leave town?"
43741Shall they drive on?"
43741Shall you come from there?"
43741She had taken it all as intended for Kitty; why had they not seen the truth?
43741She had, however, nothing to envy Georgiana, for had she not achieved the distinction of being the first of the three brides?
43741She is going to the Hursts'', is she not?
43741She must want us to be all friends together, must n''t she?"
43741She writes strangely, does she not?
43741Some music?
43741Surely Mrs. Knightley did not tell you that?
43741Surely you must know Mrs. Darcy, at least, better than to include her in such a condemnation?"
43741Surely you will be able to put it all right again some time, will you not?"
43741That is a very ungallant thing to say, is it not?
43741The Wentworths live at Winchester, do they not?"
43741Then I wonder if it could possibly be arranged for him to escort Georgiana?
43741Then that is settled?
43741There is a gleam of sunshine now, so shall we take a turn in the garden?"
43741This acting, I suppose was the young man''s idea?
43741Two Mr. Prices you have mentioned, Captain Carter and Mr. Dixon; who else?"
43741Was he a pleasant neighbour?
43741Was he ceasing to care?
43741Was he not a fine young man, and did they not make a nice couple?"
43741Was it in action?"
43741Was it not the most extraordinary stroke of good fortune which had led him to meet Mr. Knightley that evening?
43741Was she-- I hope, I hope, Tom, that Miss Darcy did not hear any of this?"
43741Was that the regular clergyman?
43741Was that, then, why she had seemed not to wish to be too friendly-- because it was too late?
43741Was there ever such an ill- mannered family?
43741We have not heard the last of these charades yet, for many a long day, have we?
43741Wentworth?"
43741Were there friends or relations influencing her?
43741Were you at home?
43741Were you aware that I knew them both?"
43741What better arrangement could there be?
43741What can I do, Miss Darcy, to prove to you my innocence?
43741What can anything mean?
43741What can you be thinking of?
43741What could he or anyone else do?
43741What could it all mean?
43741What do you think of her inviting Kitty to go to the West Indies with her, my father, of course, paying all expenses?"
43741What do you think of it, Georgiana?
43741What does it matter about Mr. Yates?
43741What has Georgiana been saying to you?"
43741What have I done, or what has Mrs. Jennings done?
43741What have you brought?
43741What if he did not find her?
43741What is to be done?"
43741What shall I do if he is prevented?
43741What, then, could anyone do for him now?
43741What?
43741What_ can_ you mean?
43741Where is he?
43741Which of us has not looked forward, some time or another, to receiving a letter which we are convinced will have an important effect upon our minds?
43741Who knows?
43741Who should know Colonel Fitzwilliam well, if not his old friends?
43741Whom can she be introducing him to?
43741Why does he not care for me?
43741Why should Mrs. Ferrars and Miss Steele concoct a story to tell me?
43741Why should it be in their interest to vilify Miss Crawford?
43741Why should they not be friends and nothing more?
43741Why was it such a joy, though an indescribably painful one, to recall these things, to live again through the moments spent in the gallery?
43741Why, what is going on?
43741Why, where have you been, to be out of the way of such a piece of news?
43741Will Mrs. Annesley very kindly let me escort you both there this delightfully fine morning?"
43741Will it be to- night, I wonder, or to- morrow night?
43741Will you forgive me when you hear that I only just received it?
43741Will you give Mrs. Ferrars your arm?
43741Will you give them my love, Georgiana, when you are next writing, and tell them of my movements?
43741Will you kindly come this way?"
43741Will you let me speak to you for a moment?
43741Will you mention it to her, and say how glad we should be if ever she was disposed to come in this direction?
43741Will you not sit down?
43741Will you tell me what I may say?
43741Will you tell us, or are you disposed to wait for the presence of Mr. and Mrs. Darcy?
43741Would this interminable evening, with its shocks, surprises and disturbances, and yet more surprises, ever draw to a close?
43741Would you allow me to present to you my cousin, Miss Darcy?
43741Would you not really care to go to Desborough for a little, Georgiana, and see if it does you good?"
43741You are not leaving town with Miss Bennet, are you?"
43741You ca n''t?
43741You can judge now, can not you?
43741You do not expect to receive the command of the Mediterranean squadron, do you?"
43741You have not happened to meet him since you were in London?"
43741You know Lady Catherine, Miss Darcy?
43741You mean you are engaged, or just about to be?"
43741You really think she is better?"
43741You return to the Hursts to- day, do you not?
43741You see that, too, do you not?"
43741You smile, but do you know I am near my thirtieth birthday?
43741You were not in Bath this year, were you?
43741You will come too, will you not, Robert?"
43741You will keep your promise and come to us this summer, will you not?"
43741Your aunt?
43741a good preacher?
43741and how come you are here now?"
43741as she turned over a page,"if she had not told me herself, I could never-- was there ever anything so unexpected?"
43741broke from Fitzwilliam;"but she does not consider my cousin in any way to blame for this behaviour of my aunt''s?"
43741can such things be said without impunity?"
43741cried Elizabeth, as they opened the door,"did Aunt Catherine mind?"
43741exclaimed Colonel Fitzwilliam, placing himself beside that lady as she followed her sister,"you will allow me to come and see you?
43741exclaimed Darcy, glancing round,"what business have you up at this end?
43741how came you to be there?
43741how could you think such a thing?"
43741inquired Darcy, approaching;"something Mrs. Jennings has taught you?"
43741not to- day, I know, but to- morrow, or the next day?
43741questioned the Colonel;"of riding and driving?"
43741she cried,"what do you think has happened?
43741she did not know that that was Lady Catherine de Bourgh?
43741so little will suffice; or would you rather write it?"
43741the least chance of your having some faith in me, to enable me to strive to win you as I long to do?"
8881But why is thy hair over thine eye?
8881The back of thy head, why is it bald?
8881Why hast thou double wings on each foot?
8881Why standest thou on tiptoe?
8881An ancient legend gives us a more vivid idea of the significance of the statue:"Who art thou?"
8881Could anything be more indicative of a slight but general insanity than the aspect of the crowd on the streets of Chicago?"
8881To what boy at school does not the doleful history lesson assume a more brilliant aspect when the adventures of Columbus are taken up?
8881What constitutes a state?
48690Irreligion,she cried,"was rampant; was this a moment for bringing forward such a motion?
48690''Algernon,''he said feebly,''have you come to your right mind?''
48690''Algy,''said Lord Chester cheerfully,''what are you thinking of?''
48690''And do not your friends know or suspect?''
48690''And we-- what shall we do?''
48690''And what are we doing?''
48690''And what then?''
48690''And when do you see her?''
48690''And why,''cried the Duchess sharply, and dropping her stick--''why should it not be continued?''
48690''And you are so much occupied in teaching that you never learn?
48690''Anything important?
48690''Are they good- tempered?
48690''Are they pretty, your old women?''
48690''But how,''asked the neophyte,''came this wonderful religion to be lost?''
48690''But is he,''asked another lady,''is he quite-- are you sure of what you say, Professor, about his orthodoxy?''
48690''But the girls, Harry, who have lost their lovers,--your own girl, what will she do?''
48690''But were the men happy?''
48690''But where is the uncertainty?
48690''But,''said Lord Chester,''is that wrong?
48690''Constance,''he whispered,''you will not forget--_all_ that I said?''
48690''Cousinship, incompatibility of temper, some legal quibble-- who knows?
48690''Do I understand,''asked Lady Carlyon,''that you refuse to receive my proposal?
48690''Do they remember, Harry, that a Chester once ruled this country?''
48690''Do you learn much,''asked the Professor,''of your country tenants?''
48690''Do you not envy me my happy lot?
48690''Do you speculate often,''asked his tutor,''in these theological matters?''
48690''Does he... does he... express any unwillingness?''
48690''Edward, what can you do?''
48690''Has your ladyship any more news?''
48690''Have I?
48690''Have my lessons borne so little fruit that you should ask that question?''
48690''Have we not had enough of that nonsense?
48690''Have you nothing to say, Constance?''
48690''He is better- looking,''he overheard one schoolgirl whispering to another,''than the fellow on the canvas, is n''t he?''
48690''He is in love with the girl, is he?''
48690''How can I help to restore knowledge,''asked the young man,''being myself so ignorant?''
48690''How can we ever restore the busy past?''
48690''How can you reconcile it with the precepts of morality?
48690''How goes it, Tom?''
48690''How would it do?''
48690''Is it not time, therefore, to let me know this mysterious purpose?''
48690''Is it possible that you... you... our own brother, should use these words?''
48690''Is it,''asked Lord Chester,''impossible to be religious without becoming such a creature as_ that_?''
48690''Is not Oxford still the seat of learning?''
48690''Is there nothing good at all?''
48690''Lord Chester in love?
48690''May I ask your Grace what is astonishing about this proposal?
48690''May I ask,''said Lord Chester quietly,''if I may express my own views on this somewhat important matter?''
48690''Must we, then,''she asked,''cease to believe in logic?''
48690''My acquiescence?''
48690''My dear Constance,''interrupted the Professor,''was it judicious to show your whole hand at once?
48690''My dear, what is there to forgive?''
48690''My dear, who manages the farm?''
48690''Nay, Lord Chester; what will_ you_ do for them?
48690''Only a year: and the hay again Lies in swathes, like the weed on the shore; Lone he wanders with troubled brain, Crying,"When will she come again?"
48690''Respect?''
48690''Run away?
48690''The fun?''
48690''This is beautiful to think of, is it not?''
48690''What are these?''
48690''What are we doing but talk?
48690''What did he say, papa?''
48690''What did she reply?''
48690''What do you think of that, brothers mine?''
48690''What dreadful thing is this?
48690''What else, Julia?
48690''What has happened now, Edward?''
48690''What is it now?''
48690''What is it, Constance?
48690''What is it?''
48690''What is that?''
48690''What is the use of talking about leaving town when Lady Boltons is ill?''
48690''What is your message?''
48690''What martyrs of religion would ask for a more noble opportunity,''he asked,''than to marry this old woman?''
48690''What punishment is there for women who make slaves of their husbands, lock them up, kill them with work?
48690''What purpose?''
48690''What shall I do?''
48690''What shall we do?
48690''What then?
48690''What would boys do with such a splendid place?''
48690''What would you do with them?''
48690''Where-- where-- where is the Army?''
48690''Who asked you,''cried Lord Chester,''if you wanted to marry an old woman?
48690''Who drives the cattle, sows the seed, reaps, ploughs?''
48690''Who have run away?''
48690''Who wrote these?''
48690''Whose is the wedding- present?''
48690''Why do you laugh, Professor?''
48690''Why do you not teach them, then, Professor?''
48690''Why not in your parish?
48690''Why not?
48690''Why will the boy do these wild things?
48690''Why, who could respect you, Constance, more than I do?
48690''Wiser than_ you_, Professor?
48690''Would you and I have thought of such a trick?
48690''Would you like the Duke of Dunstanburgh to horsewhip stable- boys?''
48690''Would you make a revolution, and upset everything?
48690''Yes,''he replied gaily, as if it had been a question of some simple act of petulance;''it is a good thing, is n''t it?
48690''You are come to try your powers, I suppose?''
48690''You are well this morning, Constance?''
48690''You have not yet heard, then,''the Earl replied,''of the great honour done to me and to my house?''
48690''You have quite made up your mind, Duchess?''
48690''You like our pictures?''
48690''You mean the Convict Wardens?
48690''You?
48690''You?''
48690''Your husband?''
48690''Your men?
48690''_ You obey your husband?_ This is most wonderful.''
48690*****''Constance,''he said holding her in his arms,''you believe that I have always loved you, do you not?''
48690After all, though, what could she put in its place here?''
48690And as for that sermon you spoke of----''''Well, Professor?''
48690And the soldiers!--saw one ever such men before?
48690And this of the Duchess of Dunstanburgh?
48690And yet-- what did this mean?
48690Another charged me with trying to be thought the loveliest woman in London; can we even listen to such things without shame?
48690Are they pleasant to live with?''
48690Are we always to go on producing the same pictures?''
48690Are we, then, fallen so low, that at the first movement of an enemy we have nothing but tears and recrimination?
48690Are you aware that the boy has been properly brought up?
48690Are you aware that the least of these charges is actionable at common law?
48690Are you mad, Julia?
48690Are you proposing to seek a prison at once?
48690Are you ready to die with me?''
48690Are you softening in the brain?
48690Are you still of the same mind?
48690Are you still of the same mind?''
48690As for that third husband-- could one expect the poor young man to fall in love with a woman already fifty- eight when she married him?
48690Astronomy, which widened the heart, is neglected; medicine has become a thing of books; mechanics are forgotten----''''But why?''
48690Beer, my lord?
48690Besides, is it in reason that he should have made such a declaration?
48690But suppose they would not rise?
48690But the Upper?
48690But what are we to do with them?
48690But what are you going to do?
48690By your authorised statement of mutual affection?''
48690Can any one believe that he could have contemplated the proposed union without repugnance?
48690Can any one believe that the judgment of the House would have been given for the happiness of the young man?
48690Can no one place truth before us in words of freshness?''
48690Can we not devise some means of dying gracefully?
48690Can you doubt what was that hope?''
48690Cheeks hot- burning, and eyes down- dropped,-- What did he think when she suddenly stopped, And gave him her hand-- to hold?
48690Could Lord Chester have fled with all his men?
48690Could anything be more delightful?
48690Could she have believed it possible that the will of a man should thus be able to overpower her?
48690Could they do nothing, then?
48690Could we have a ballad showing how a young lady-- she must be young-- pined away and died for love of a man who broke his promise?''
48690Did any girl ever really_ like_ reading law?
48690Did any of you choose her for yourselves?
48690Did one ever see a man with such shoulders, and yet with such a waist and such a hand?
48690Do you hear, Algy?
48690Do you mean the Perfect Woman herself?''
48690Do you observe?''
48690Do you think I have no enemies?
48690Do you think all women have kind hearts and pleasant tongues?''
48690Do you think young Lord Chester can go anywhere without being seen and reported?
48690Does any educated woman now believe in the Perfect Woman, except as a means of keeping men down?
48690Forget?
48690Had he a spell?
48690Had he been walking and living among conspirators?
48690Had she ever before, in all her life, trembled?
48690Had she heard aright?
48690Hag?
48690Have I not Constance?
48690Have not Oxford and Cambridge proclaimed this from a hundred pulpits and in a thousand text- books?
48690Have you any more hearsays?''
48690Have you not been taught the wickedness of expressing, even of allowing yourself to feel an inclination for any young lady?''
48690Have you nothing to say to me?''
48690Have you seen Lord Chester''s gift, sisters?''
48690His name?
48690How am I to meet such stories as this?
48690How ask men to rebel when their eternal interests demanded submission?
48690How came you here?''
48690How can I make you understand?
48690How can any line be continued except through the mother?
48690How could he continue to worship the Perfect Woman when he was thrusting woman out of her place?
48690How could he remain a faithful servant of the Church, and yet rebel against the first law of the Church?
48690How could the Grand Revolt be carried out in the teeth of the most sacred commandments?
48690How could the sympathies of the people be otherwise than on her side?
48690How long are you going to stand it?
48690How long will you stand it, I say?''
48690How many can we reckon on?''
48690If I was a man, and strong, would I let the women have their own way?
48690If I_ am_ an old woman, and like to die, you shall never have him-- do you hear?
48690If that was so, would no one find a compromise by which they could restore that part, at least, of the former rà © gime?
48690If they saw a chance, if they thought they could get their sweethearts back again, would they not rejoice?''
48690Is he dressed?''
48690Is it not a time to act?
48690Is it their fault that they become vacuous, ill- tempered, discontented, the bane of the house which their virtues ought to make a happy home?
48690Is that a pleasant thing for you?''
48690Is that all, Julia?
48690Is the world turning upside down?''
48690Is there anything else you can tell me?''
48690Is this a time to accuse me-- ME-- of forcing the rebel chief into rebellion?
48690It''s obstructing law-- it''s threatening the executive: what will the justices say?
48690Lady Boltons is his guardian; who would be safer?
48690Life was dull and monotonous; but how could it be otherwise?
48690May we look for your devotion-- even if we fail?''
48690Meantime, what were the Army of Avengers doing?
48690Mother says she is worthy to become-- to be raised-- to be----''''What?''
48690My Lord Bishop, are you contented with your pupils?''
48690Of what good is a man''s life to him, if he does not give it for the sacred cause?
48690Oh, what was the Government about?
48690On what plea?''
48690Professor Ingleby has been his tutor; who could be more discreet?''
48690Professor Ingleby, have you anything to advise?
48690Shall we run away together?''
48690She was going to add,''Who is it?''
48690Should such wretches be allowed to live?
48690Silence?
48690Stand aside.... You, Susan, will you come with me and your old sweetheart?''
48690Suppose all young men were allowed to run about alone?''
48690The most powerful mind, coupled with the highest rank,--how should that fail to attract and fix the affection and gratitude of a man?
48690The new groom?''
48690The next steps, are they not written in the Books of the Chronicles of the country?
48690Then we need not expect the Horse Guards to- morrow morning?''
48690These two men in the plot?
48690Tom, what do you say?''
48690Was it not infinitely better to be wooed and made love to when one was young, than to woo for oneself when one had already passed her best?
48690Was it true, the girls asked, that formerly the women ruled at home, while the men did all the work?
48690What are the feeble strains, the oft- repeated phrases of modern music, compared with the grand old music conceived and written by men?
48690What are we to do?
48690What are we to do?''
48690What better thing could there be for us, my children, than to die in this attempt?
48690What could he have to tell her except one thing-- the one thing which she had been dreading for two or three years?
48690What did the tract say?
48690What did you intend to say?''
48690What do I care for my reputation?''
48690What do they know about Ancient History?''
48690What do you find to remark upon, most of all?''
48690What does it mean?
48690What else can we expect?
48690What had he learned since he left London?
48690What have we done with Love?''
48690What matter?
48690What more could they do?
48690What next?
48690What next?
48690What next?
48690What nonsense is this, Julia?
48690What then, had become of the Guards?
48690What use to say now what should have been said at another time and at a more fitting opportunity?
48690What was before him?
48690What was the good of paying wages to this wife, when her husband took from her what he wanted for himself?
48690What was the horse saddled for?
48690What was the use of the Convict Wardens, unless they were to be sent out to arrest the leaders, and shoot all who refused to disband and disperse?
48690What was to be done?
48690What will be your fate?''
48690What would constitute a favourable opportunity?
48690What would happen, now that they were victorious?
48690What would the boy want?
48690What, however, if the men refused to rise and follow?
48690What, it was asked, would happen if the men did come?
48690What, then, were they doing?
48690What_ could_ men be like that they should so lightly pass from one extreme to the other?
48690When can you start?''
48690When these are dispersed, where will they find a new army?
48690When?''
48690Whence the early falling off into fat cheeks and flabby limbs?
48690Where were the preachers?
48690Where were they all at this most fatal moment?
48690Where, for their own part, could they look for soldiers?
48690Where, oh, where, did you learn to talk-- to think-- to dare such dreadful things?''
48690Where, then, was Woman?
48690Which of us believes any more in the Church?
48690Who believes it?
48690Who is she?
48690Who will follow me?''
48690Who would not prefer liberty and seeing the men work?
48690Whom, then, could we acknowledge as head but the Perfect Woman?
48690Why did they run away?''
48690Why should we accept statements on Authority?
48690Why should we doom them to a long life of forced inaction?
48690Why should women do all, as well as think for all?
48690Why, Professor?''
48690Why, what if a few hundreds of dead men strew this field to- morrow provided the Right prevails?
48690Why, when there were girls in the village, sweet and young and pretty, longing for your love, is it likely you would take an old woman?''
48690Why?
48690Will you leave Lord Chester with me, my dear?''
48690Would Lord Chester escape?
48690Would they fight for the Government?
48690Yet what could they do?
48690Yet, what help?
48690_ He does not forget._''''What do you mean?''
48690and next?
48690and what would be the best way to take advantage of it?
48690and which among us does not know that the Religion of the Perfect Woman was only invented by ourselves for the better suppression of man?
48690and you can look unconcerned?''
48690are you mad?
48690asked Lord Chester, smiling,''to invert the thing?
48690cried Constance, giving her cousin her hand,''is this prudent?
48690old?
48690or for old women who marry young men against their will?''
48690or would they come over?
48690painted?
48690ruddled?
48690she repeated in mockery;''what is the good of people going to church if they fly in the face of all religion?
48690was he a wizard, this lover of hers?
48690what can they do?''
48690what could be said?
48690what did you expect?''
48690what fate are you preparing for yourself?''
48690what would he have?
48690what would the Duchess say?
48690whence the apathy at Church services?--whence should they come but from the forced idleness, the lack of interest in life?''
48690whence the love of the table-- that vice which stains our manhood?
48690would you not follow me?''
8952And now the query is, What caused the disaster?
8952And was it won merely for men of science?
8952Facts in Natural History-- Will a horsehair become a snake?
8952Whence the combustion?
8952Where, then, does all the Orange county butter come from?
8952Who believes Phrenology?--Are there among its followers persons of eminence and influence?
8952Will some one explain?
59456And what are pretty skies to us?
59456And why not for us, as for others?
59456By competitive examination of course?
59456Cultivating huge farms for himself with abundant machinery;--Is that Lord Derby''s ideal also, may it be asked?
59456If they''ve guaranteed the payment, why do n''t they pay?
59456Next? 59456 Shall there be dew upon the fleece only?"
59456The country is getting rich again,says the Spectator; but then, if the April clouds fail, may it get poor again?
59456The happier certainty?
59456Wasted time and hammer- strokes,say you?
59456What business had you, in your idleness, with their earnings then?
59456What did you buy it for, then?
59456You have nothing to do with it-- you are very sorry for it-- and Baron Liebig says that the power of England is coal?
59456A few things might be"inquired,"one should think, and answered, among honest men, now, to advantage, and openly?
59456A thousand down, I say; but down where?
59456And if He was, what is that to you?
59456And she said, certainly not; but what could be done?
59456And when it again becomes poor,--when, last 25th of June, it was poor,--what becomes, or had become, of the money?
59456And you can not be simple enough, even in April, to think I got my three thousand pounds''-worth of minerals by studying mineralogy?
59456Any of you, Landlords or Tenants?
59456Any tenants, any workmen, who can be true to their leaders and to each other?
59456Are there any landlords,--any masters,--who would like better to be served by men than by iron devils?
59456Are there any of you who are tired of all this?
59456Are there any of you who care for this old England, of which the map has remained unchanged for so long?
59456Are you again indignant with me?
59456Are you the better for what she replied?
59456As might be expected, James cried out,"How can you think of such a thing, William?
59456Both French and English agree to have no more Titians,--it is well,--but which is to have the Cotton- Mill?
59456But I said,"That was very pretty, too; and what more?"
59456But how, if it begin to march and countermarch?
59456But if Mr. Mill had said so much, simply, you might have been tempted to ask farther--"What things are useful, and what are not?"
59456But suppose it should come into his head, in any less windy month than this April, that he had better bring me none of the price of his chimneys?
59456But what I want you to reflect upon, as of moment to you, is whether you really care for the hyacinthine Elysium you are going to?
59456But what are we to do against powder and petroleum, then?
59456But what shall I buy, then, with the next thirty pieces of gold I can scrape together?
59456But what was the message, and what the answer?
59456But when I had got the sixty or the hundred pounds-- what should I have done with them?
59456But whence, then, did it filter down to us, the actual idlers?
59456But where does it come from?
59456But who pays that?
59456But why are they not seeking for some advancement now, after opening of the heavens to them?
59456But will you be good enough to make up your minds, once for all, whether it is really work that you want, or rest?
59456But you think it was at least the Emperor Napoleon''s fault, if not theirs?
59456Can no economist teach us to keep it safe after we have once got it?
59456Did I know, she asked, what a country clergyman''s life was, and that he was the poor man''s only friend?
59456Did you chance, my friends, any of you, to see, the other day, the 83rd number of the Graphic, with the picture of the Queen''s concert in it?
59456Do n''t you know that a loan ought to be gratuitous?
59456Employers or Workmen?
59456First, women generally do little, who are the half of mankind; and, if some few women are diligent, their husbands are idle: then,--..."What then?
59456For himself?
59456For instance,"Was not Rahab the harlot justified by works, when she had received the angels, and sent them forth another way?"
59456God with us!--how often, you tenderly- minded Christians, have you desired to see this great sight,--this Babe lying in a manger?
59456Had they not been blind long enough, under their mole- hillocks, that they should shriek at the first spark of"Inquisition"?
59456How much, think you, did the gilded flourishes cost round the gas- lamps on Westminster Bridge?
59456I am taking the name of God in vain, you think?
59456I repeat, are you indeed sure He was?
59456I thought you rather objected to your quantity of work;--that you were all for having eight hours of it instead of ten?
59456I want to know why it is assumed so quietly that your brains must always be at a low level?
59456I was but a fool to give good money for such things, you think?
59456If I had n''t bought it, what would you have had me do with my money?
59456If a wretch spit in your face, will you answer by spitting in his?--if he throw vitriol at you, will you go to the apothecary for a bigger bottle?
59456If it is only occupation you want, why do you cast the iron?
59456If the shadow of a King can thus hold( how many?)
59456In fact, where are they now?
59456Is India the better for what you said to her?
59456Is he to eat the cornricks then?
59456Is it inconceivable that you should employ-- yourselves?
59456Is not that a prettier notion of horses than you will get from your betting English chivalry on the Derby day?
59456Is that, indeed, your issue?
59456It is very wrong of you; but, do they want to work all day, themselves?
59456Might you not, for the present, think less of praising, and more of pleasing Him?
59456My friends, I repeat my question: Do you not think you could contrive some little method of employing-- yourselves?
59456No doubt; but who is to pay the five per cent.?
59456Of course it was; is not that the very thing I am telling you?
59456Only now, as I have candidly answered all your questions, will you answer one of mine?
59456Or Count Bismarck''s?
59456Or if you can not do so much as that, can you convince even themselves of it?
59456Shall we consider of it, with the help of the Cambridge Catechism?
59456Shall we consider, a little, what, at all events, it was to the people of its time; and so make ourselves more clear as to what it might be to us?
59456So I said,"That was very pretty; but what more?"
59456Stand in the streets, and say to all who pass by: Have you any vineyard we can work in,--not Naboth''s?
59456Suppose it should occur to you, any summer''s day, that you had better not?
59456Surely such a beau ideal is more Utopian than any of mine?
59456That much, perhaps, you thought you knew?--but you did not think we Communists of the old school knew it also?
59456The little pool of Samaria!--shall all the snows of the Alps, or the salt pool of the Great Sea, wash their armour, for these?
59456Then, how would you live in it most comfortably?
59456There are indeed said to be republican villages( towns?)
59456They can not do without these long purses, say you?
59456This is all, then, is it, that your Liberal paper ventures to say for you?
59456W. Very well, then; I ask you to do me a service; what service do you ask me in return?
59456Was it verily lost, or only torpid in the winter of our discontent?
59456We have seen the city of Paris( what miracle can be thought of beyond this?)
59456Well, if I do you this service, what will you do for me in return?"
59456Well, when you had learned all that, what would you do next?
59456Well,--what better thing could it be?
59456Were you not told to come out and be separate from all evil?
59456What Light is there, for your eyes, also, pausing yet over the place where the Child lay?
59456What do the upper classes fight for, then?
59456What does it matter, say some, whether he spends this £ 50 in lace or whether he uses it to employ more labourers in his own business?
59456What is the cost to you then, of your railing, of which you must feed the idle bars daily?
59456What is this Christmas to you?
59456What is, or may be, this Nativity, to you, then, I repeat?
59456What it is?
59456What shall we say of labour spent on lace such as that?
59456What should he have been out of humour for?
59456What, then, let me ask you, is its truth to you?
59456When we are in a panic about our money, what do we think is going to happen to it?
59456Where can I put it to be safe for us?
59456Where is it now, except as a chronic abstraction from other people''s earnings?
59456Where would my seven thousand pounds be?
59456Who else will help, with little or much?
59456Will you be at the pains, now, however, to learn rightly, and once for all, what Communism is?
59456Will you give some little time therefore, to think of it with me to- day, being, as you tell me, sure of its truth?
59456Will you note carefully that they only think of seeing, not of worshipping?
59456Would not you fain know what this angel looked like?
59456Yet are you sure it is necessary, absolutely, to look to superior natures for employment?
59456You are sure of that, you say?
59456You see now-- do not you-- a little more clearly why I wrote that?
59456You tell me not to be wise above that which is written; why, therefore, should you be desirous, above that which is given?
59456Your English power is coal?
59456and apply its spikes horizontally?
59456and in the times of drought between the showers, where does it go to?
59456and to keep me from getting my money at all, while his lawyers are asking which is the right stamp?
59456and what"useful things"you should command them to make for you?
59456millions of men, by their own confession, helpless for terror of it, what power must there be in the substance of one?
59456or are you only on a curiously crooked way to it?
59456or that their parents had sinned more than you?
59456or the''openwork''of iron railings generally-- the special glories of English design?
59456or was it sown and buried in corruption, to be raised in a multifold power?
59456perhaps you will ask me:"or what have they to do with the behaviour of that crowd on Margate Pier?"
59456to share in mortal woe?
59456what strain there is on the untaught masses of you to revenge themselves, even with insane fire?
59456who can vow to work and to live faithfully, for the sake of the joy of their homes?
59456will you answer me so, and take my fear for you as an insult?
4937( Quoth she) Mum budget Think''st thou''twill not be laid i''th''dish Thou turn''dst thy back?
4937-- How would''st th''have us''d her, and her money?
4937-- Quoth Wizard, So In Virgo?
4937------------------------------------------------- When civil dudgeon< a> first grew high, And men fell out they knew not why?
4937110 For what can earth produce, but love To represent the joys above?
4937120 Or heav''n itself a sin< f> resent, That for its own supply was meant?
49371220 Why did thou chuse that cursed sin, Hypocrisy, to set up in?
49371270 What makes y''encroach upon our trade, And damn all others?
49371280 What makes the breaking of all oaths A holy duty?
49371290 But yet we are beside the question Which thou didst raise the first contest on; For that was, Whether Bears are better Than Synod- men?
4937140 Was not the cause at first begun With perjury, and carried on?
4937150 For having freed us first from both Th''Allegiance and Supremacy Oath, Did they not next compel the Nation To take and break the Protestation?
4937170 Do not nor great Reformers use This SIDROPHEL to forebode news?
4937170 For Protestant Religion vow, That did that vowing disallow?
4937180 Made Mars and Saturn for the Cause The moon for Fundamental Laws?
4937210 To run from those t''hast overcome Thus cowardly?
4937230 For what romance can show a lover, That had a lady to recover, And did not steer a nearer course, To fall a- board on his amours?
4937330 But though you can not Love, you say, Out of your own fanatick way, Why should you not at least allow Those that love you to do so too?
4937330 Mould''em as witches do their clay, When they make pictures to destroy And vex''em into any form That fits their purpose to do harm?
4937340 Can they not juggle, and, with slight Conveyance, play with wrong and right; And sell their blasts of wind as dear As Lapland witches bottled air?
4937380 Why is''t not damn''d and interdicted, For diabolical and wicked?
493740 Nor putting pigs t''a bitch to nurse, To turn''em into mungrel- curs, Put you into a way, at least, To make yourself a better beast?
4937505 The Cause for which we fought and swore So boldly, shall we now give o''er?
4937555 And is this all?
4937585 Have they invented tones to win The women, and make them draw in The men, as Indians with a female Tame elephant inveigle the male?
4937625 Shall we that in the Cov''nant swore, Each man of us to run before Another, still in Reformation, Give dogs and bears a dispensation?
4937630 What will malignants say?
4937650 Prevent what he designs to do, And swear for th''State against him?
4937700 When fiends agree among themselves, Shall they be found the greatest elves?
4937730 Made mountains with our tubes appear, And cattle grazing on''em there?
4937750 What can our travellers bring home, That is not to be learnt at Rome?
4937760 Or do they teach to sing and play O''th''gittar there a newer way?
4937770 And if w''out- do him here at home, What good of your design can come?
4937840 What med''cine else can cure the fits Of lovers when they lose their wits?
4937840 Who made the Balance, or whence came The Bull, the Lion, and the Ram?
4937845 Or who made Cassiopeia''s chair?
4937880 Was not young FLORIO sent( to cool His flame for BIANCAFIORE) to school, Where pedant made his pathic bum For her sake suffer martyrdom?
4937965 Cou''d not the whipping- post prevail With all its rhet''ric, nor the jail, To keep from flaying scourge thy skin, And ankle free from iron gin?
4937970 Are not these fine commodities To be imported from the skies, And vended here amongst the rabble, For staple goods and warrantable?
4937< a> Meet with the Parliament''s Committee 165 At WOODSTOCK on a pers''nal treaty?
4937< m> When CAESAR in the senate fell, Did not the sun eclips''d foretel, And, in resentment of his slaughter, Look''d pale for almost a year after?
4937< x> Like money by the Druids borrow''d, 975 In th''other world to be restor''d?
4937A just comparison still is Of things ejusdem generis; And then what genus rightly doth Include and comprehend them both?
4937Ad what would serve, if those were gone, To make it orthodox?
4937Address and compliment by vision; 115 Make love and court by intuition?
4937Am not I here to take thy part?
4937And HUDIBRAS or me provoke, Though all thy limbs, were heart of oke, And th''other half of thee as good To bear out blows, as that of wood?
4937And as they please, make matter of fact Run all on one side, as they''re pack''t?
4937And burn in amorous flames as fierce As those celestial ministers?
4937And do they not as triers sit, To judge what officers are fit Have they--?
4937And has not he point- blank foretold Whats''e''er the Close Committee would?
4937And if they use their persons so, 955 What will they to their fortunes do?
4937And set th''a task, with subornation, To stitch up sale and sequestration; 725 To cheat, with holiness and zeal, All parties, and the common- weal?
4937And shall all now be thrown, away In petulant intestine fray?
4937And shall we turn our fangs and claws Upon our own selves, without cause?
4937And sung, as out of tune, against, As Turk and Pope are by the Saints?
4937And that which was prov''d true before, Prove false again?
4937And when the work was carrying on, Who cross''d it, but yourselves alone?
4937And where''s your liberty of choice, And our unnatural No Voice?
4937And with bull''s pizzle, for her love, Was taw''d as gentle as a glove?
4937And with their consorts consummate 845 Their weightiest interests of state?
4937And yet do nothing in their own sense, But what they ought by oath and conscience?
4937Are not our liberties, our lives, The laws, religion and our wives, Enough at once to lie at stake 735 For Cov''nant and the Cause''s sake?
4937Are sweating lanthorns, or screen- fans, Made better there than th''are in France?
4937Are there not myriads of this sort, 705 Which stories of all times report?
4937Are things of superstitious function Fit to be us''d in Gospel Sun- shine?
4937As seamen, with the self- same gale, Will sev''ral different courses sail?
4937Bribe chamber- maids with love and money, 865 To break no roguish jests upon ye?
4937But didst thou scourge thy vessel thus, As thou hast damn''d thyself to us?
4937But didst thou see no Devils then?
4937But granting now we should agree, What is it you expect from me?
4937But what a vengeance makes thee fly From me too, as thine enemy?
4937But what cou''d single valour do Against so numerous a foe?
4937But what malignant star, alas Has brought you both to this sad pass?
4937By sauntring still on some adventure, And growing to thy horse a< a> Centaure?
4937Can I bring proof Where, when, by whom, and what y''were sold for, And in the open market toll''d for?
4937Can not the learned counsel there Make laws in any shape appear?
4937Can they make plays there, that shall fit The public humour, with less wit?
4937Canst thou refuse to hear thy part I''th''publick work, base as thou art?
4937Commit the censure of its cause To any but its own great laws?
4937Could they not tell you so as well As what I came to know foretell?
4937Could thine impertinence find out To work t''employ itself about, Where thou, secure from wooden blow, 700 Thy busy vanity might''st show?
4937Did Saints for this bring in their plate, And crowd as if they came too late?
4937Did he not help the< x> Dutch to purge At ANTWERP their Cathedral Church?
4937Did no committee sit, where he Might cut out journey- work for thee?
4937Did not a certain lady whip 885 Of late her husband''s own Lordship?
4937Did not our Worthies of the House, Before they broke the peace, break vows?
4937Did not th''illustrious Bassa make Himself a slave for Misse''s sake?
4937Did not the Devil appear to MARTIN 155 LUTHER in Germany for certain; And wou''d have gull''d him with a trick, But Martin was too politick?
4937Did not the great LA MANCHA do so 875 For the INFANTA DEL TOBOSO?
4937Did not we here the Argo rig, Make BERENICE''s periwig?
4937Did they for this draw down the rabble, With zeal and noises formidable, And make all cries about the town 530 Join throats to cry the Bishops down?
4937Did we not bring our oaths in first, 145 Before our plate, to have them burst, And cast in fitter models for The present use of Church and War?
4937Did you not lose?
4937Didst thou not love her then?
4937Discover''d sea and land, COLUMBUS And MAGELLAN cou''d never compass?
4937Discover''d th''enemy''s design, And which way best to countermine?
4937Do not your juries give their verdict 365 As if they felt the cause, not heard it?
4937Does not in chanc''ry ev''ry man swear What makes best for him in his answer?
4937Dost not remember how this day, Thou to my beard wast bold to say, That thou coud''st prove bear- baiting equal 1085 With synods orthodox and legal?
4937Else why should tumults fright us now, We have so many times come through?
4937For Privilege of Parliament, In which that swearing made a rent?
4937For in what stupid age, or nation, Was marriage ever out of fashion?
4937For lilies limn''d on cheeks, and roses, With painted perfumes, hazard noses?
4937For what bigot durst ever draw, By inward light, a deed in law?
4937For what can we pretend t''inherit, Unless the marriage- deed will bear it?
4937For what design, what interest, Can beast have to encounter beast?
4937For what mad lover ever dy''d To gain a soft and gentle bride?
4937For what secures the civil life, But pawns of children, and a wife?
4937For who first bred them up to pray, And teach, the House of Commons Way?
4937For why should ev''ry savage beast Exceed his great lord''s interest?
4937Has Saturn nothing to do in it?
4937Have all these courses, these efforts, 620 Been try''d by people of all sorts, Velis& remis, omnibus nervis And all t''advance the Cause''s service?
4937Have freer pow''r than he in grace, And nature, o''er the creature has?
4937Have its proceedings disallow''d, or 305 Allow''d, at fancy of Pye- Powder?
4937Have not the handmaids of the city Chose of their members a committee, 810 For raising of a common purse Out of their wages to raise horse?
4937Have these bones rattled, and this head 205 So often in thy quarrel bled?
4937Have they told Prov''dence what it must do, 590 Whom to avoid, and whom to trust to?
4937Have we not enemies plus satis, That Cane& Angue pejus hate us?
4937Have you not power to entertain, And render love for love again; As no man can draw in his breath 315 At once, and force out air beneath?
4937He gave him first the time o''th''day, And welcom''d him, as he might say: 500 He ask''d him whence he came, and whither Their bus''ness lay?
4937He that imposes an oath, makes it, Not he that for convenience takes it: Then how can any man be said To break an oath he never made?
4937He who was us''d so unlike a soldier, Blown up with philters of love- powder?
4937How durst th'', I say, oppose thy curship 960''Gainst arms, authority, and worship?
4937How easy is it to serve for agents, 1355 To prosecute our old engagements?
4937How shall I answer hue and cry, For a roan gelding, twelve hands high, All spurr''d and switch''d, a lock on''s hoof, 695 A sorrel mane?
4937How will Dissenting Brethren relish it?
4937I grant, all courses are in vain, Unless we can get in again; The only way that''s left us now; 1325 But all the difficulty''s, How?
4937If matrimony and hanging go By dest''ny, why not whipping too?
4937If nothing can oppugn love, 385 And virtue invious ways can prove, What may he not confide to do That brings both love and virtue too?
4937If that were all, for some have swore As false as they, if th''did no more, Did they not swear to maintain Law, In which that swearing made a flaw?
4937Is it not ominous in all countries When crows and ravens croak upon trees?
4937Is not the winding up witnesses And nicking more than half the bus''ness?
4937Is there a constellation there, That was not born and bred up here?
4937Is there an officer of state 315 Untimely rais''d, or magistrate, That''s haughty and imperious?
4937Is this the end To which these carr''ings on did tend?
4937Is''t fitting for a man of honour To whip the Saints, like Bishop Bonner?
4937Is''t not ridiculous, and nonsense, A Saint should be a slave to conscience, That ought to be above such fancies, As far as above ordinances?
4937It is a kind of rape to marry One that neglects, or cares not for ye: For what does make it ravishment, 325 But b''ing against the mind''s consent?
4937Leap''d headlong int''Elysium, Through th''windows of a dazzling room?
4937Look on this beard, and tell me whether Eunuchs wear such, or geldings either?
4937Made all the Royal Stars recant, Compound and take the Covenant?
4937Make wicked verses, treats, and faces, And spell names over with beer- glasses 860 Be under vows to hang and die Love''s sacrifice, and all a lie?
4937Marriage, at best, is but a vow, 155 Which all men either break or bow: Then what will those forbear to do, Who perjure when they do but woo?
4937My''Squire, or that bold Sprite That took his place and shape to- night?
4937Not true?
4937Now whether I should before- hand, 645 Swear he robb''d me?
4937Only to stand by, and look on, But not know what is said or done?
4937Or bring my action of conversion And trover for my goods?
4937Or could hold forth, by revelation, 495 An answer to a declaration?
4937Or do you love yourself so much, To bear all rivals else a grutch?
4937Or does the man i''th''moon look big, And wear a huger perriwig, Shew in his gait or face more tricks, Than our own native lunaticks?
4937Or for a lady tender- hearted, 25 In purling streams or hemp departed?
4937Or from the pillory tips of ears 825 Of Rebel- Saints and perjurers?
4937Or if''tis better to indite, And bring him to his trial?
4937Or what relation has debating 855 Of church- affairs with bear- baiting?
4937Or what, but riches is there known, Which man can solely call his own In which no creature goes his half; Unless it be to squint and laugh?
4937Or whether he that is defendant In this case has the better end on''t; Who, putting in a new cross- bill, 655 May traverse th''action?
4937Or who but lovers can converse, Like angels, by< e> the eye- discourse?
4937Or wilt thou rather break thy word, And stain thine honour than thy sword?
4937Or witches simpling, and on gibbets Cutting from malefactors snippets?
4937Or, vent''ring to be brisk and wanton, Do penance in a paper lanthorn?
4937Pledge?
4937Possess''d with absolute dominions 855 O''er brethren''s purses and opinions?
4937Prescrib''d what ways it hath to work, Or it will ne''er advance the Kirk?
4937Quis miretur ejusmodi convicia homini Epicureo atque Pagano excidisse?
4937Quoth HUDIBRAS, I''m beforehand 665 In that already, with your command For where does beauty and high wit But in your constellation meet?
4937Quoth TRULLA, Whether thou or they 905 Let one another run away, Concerns not me; but was''t not thou That gave CROWDERO quarter too?
4937Quoth he, O whither, wicked Bruin Art thou fled to my-- Eccho, Ruin?
4937Quoth he, That honour''s very squeamish That takes a basting for a blemish; For what''s more hon''rable than scars, Or skin to tatters rent in wars?
4937Quoth she, I grant the case is true And proper''twixt your horse and you; But whether I may take as well As you may give away or sell?
4937Quoth she, What does a match imply, But likeness and equality?
4937Rack''em until they do confess, 335 Impeach of treason whom they please, And most perfidiously condemn Those that engag''d their lives for them?
4937Say, will the law of arms allow I may have grace and quarter now?
4937Shall SAINTS in civil bloodshed wallow Of Saints, and let the CAUSE lie fallow?
4937Shall love, that to no crown gives place, Become the subject of a case?
4937Shall precious Saints, and secret ones, Break one another''s outward bones, And eat the flesh of Brethren, Instead of Kings and mighty men?
4937Some busy indepenent pug, 105 Retainer to his Synagogue?
4937Tell all it does, or does not know, For swearing ex officio?
4937The Ram, the Bull, and Goat declare Against the Book of Common- Pray''r?
4937The Scorpion take the Protestation, 185 And Bear engage for Reformation?
4937The fundamental law of nature, 95 Be over- rul''d by those made after?
4937The question then, to state it first, 1265 Is, Which is better, or which worst, Synods or Bears?
4937Then how can any thing offend, In order to so great an end?
4937Then what has quelled thy stubborn heart?
4937Then when he is compell''d by her T''adventures he would else forbear, 200 Who with his honour can withstand, Since force is greater than command?
4937Then wherefore should they not b''allow''d In love a greater latitude?
4937Then wherefore way not you be skipp''d, And in your room another whipp''d?
4937Then why should more bewitching clamour Some lovers not as much enamour?
4937Then why should we ourselves abridge And curtail our own privilege?
4937Then, HUDIBRAS, why should''st thou fear To be, that art a conqueror?
4937This any man may sing or say, I''th''ditty call''d, What if a Day?
4937Thought he, how does the Devil know 1385 What''twas that I design''d to do?
4937To Spirit her to matrimony?
4937To change the property of selves, As sucking children are by elves?
4937To keep the Good Old Cause on foot, And present power from taking root?
4937To pass themselves away, and turn Their childrens''tenants e''re they''re born?
4937To stuff thy skin with swelling knobs 1345 Of cruel and hard- wooded drubs?
4937To swear, and after to recant 155 The solemn League and Covenant?
4937To wait on drunkards, thieves, gold- finders, And lovers solacing behind doors, 820 Or giving one another pledges Of matrimony under hedges?
4937To write of victories next year, And castles taken yet i''th''air Of battles fought at sea, and ships 175 Sank two years hence, the last eclipse?
4937Was no dispute a- foot between The caterwauling Brethren?
4937Was there an oath the Godly took, But in due time and place they broke?
4937Was there no felony, no bawd, Cut- purse, no burglary abroad; 715 No stolen pig, nor plunder''d goose, To tie thee up from breaking loose?
4937We, who have nothing but frail vows Against your stratagems t''oppose; 170 Or oaths more feeble than your own, By which we are no less put down?
4937Were the stars only made to light Robbers and burglarers by night?
4937What churches have such able pastors, And precious, powerful, preaching masters?
4937What fate can lay a greater curse Than you upon yourself would force?
4937What hast thou gotten by this fetch; 1340 For all thy tricks, in this new trade, Thy holy brotherhood o''th''blade?
4937What honours or estates of peers, Cou''d be preserv''d but by their heirs 840 And what security maintains Their right and title, but the banes?
4937What laws and freedom, persecution?
4937What made thee break thy plighted vows?
4937What made thee pick and chuse her out, 1195 T''employ their sorceries about?
4937What made thee venture to betray, 1175 And filch the lady''s heart away?
4937What made thee, when they all were gone, And none but thou and I alone, 150 To act the Devil, and forbear To rid me of my hellish fear?
4937What makes a church a den of thieves?
4937What makes a knave a child of God, And one of us?
4937What makes all doctrines plain and clear?
4937What makes morality a crime, The most notorious of the time; 1290 Morality, which both the Saints, And wicked too, cry out against?
4937What makes rebelling against Kings 1275 A Good Old Cause?
4937What politicks, or strange opinions, That are not in our own dominions?
4937What renders beating out of brains, 1265 And murder, godliness?
4937What revelations, or religions, That are not in our native regions?
4937What science can he brought from thence, 755 In which we do not here commence?
4937What then( quoth HUDIBRAS) was he 135 That play''d the Dev''l to examine me?
4937What time,( quoth RALPHO), Sir?
4937What trade from thence can you advance, But what we nearer have from France?
4937What''s liberty of conscience, I''th''natural and genuine sense?
4937What''s orthodox, and true, believing Against a conscience?
4937What''s tender conscience?
4937Where had they all their gifted phrases, 635 But from our CALAMYS and CASES?
4937Who gave thee notice of my danger?
4937Who shall wonder that this kind of cutting caused an outcry by Epicureans and Pagans?
4937Who would not rather suffer whipping, Than swallow toasts of bits of ribbon?
4937Whose liv''ry does the Coachman wear?
4937Why are you fair, but to entice us To love you, that you may despise us?
4937Why didst thou forge those shameful lies Of bears and witches in disguise?
4937Will not fear, favour, bribe and grudge 345 The same case sev''ral ways adjudge?
4937Will you employ your conqu''ring sword To break a fiddle and your word?
4937With china- oranges and tarts And whinning plays, lay baits for hearts?
4937With that he rouz''d his drooping heart, And hastily cry''d out, What art?
4937Without whose sprinkling and sowing, Who e''er had heard of NYE or OWEN?
4937Write wittier dances, quainter shows, 765 Or fight with more ingenious blows?
4937Yes,''tis clear 455''Tis Saturn; but what makes him there?
4937Your lives are now at my dispose, To be redeem''d by fine or blows: But who his honour wou''d defile, To take or sell two lives so vile?
4937is it to us, 745 Whether i''th''Moon men thus or thus Do eat their Porridge, cut their corns, Or whether they have tails or horns?
4937quoth he, what dreadful wonder 425 Is that appears in heaven yonder?
4937quoth she, can that be true?
4937to fancy Thyself, and all that coward rabble, T''encounter us in battle able?
4937what fury Doth you to these dire actions hurry?
4937what is''t t''us, Whether''twas said by TRISMEGISTUS, 660 If it be nonsense, false, or mystick, Or not intelligible, or sophistick?
8523( A lively piece,"pezza gagliarda") Barry of( how many?)
8523A man to be enquired about, is not he?
8523And then, even if we know what the quarry bedding is, how are we to keep it always in our building?
8523Are we, then, also to be strong by following the natural fact?
8523Argent; a needle,(?)
8523As the_ eyes_[ 1] of the building, what?
8523Azure; a lion( passant?)
8523But now, what opposition is there between their divine natures?
8523Do you see how important the word"Capulet"is becoming to us, in its main idea?
8523Do you see, by the way, how perfectly the image is carried out by Sir Walter in putting his Diana on the border country?
8523Do you suppose I ought to have said carelessly?
8523First, how_ do_ they lie in the quarry?
8523Have you ever considered the infinite functions of protection to mountain form exercised by the mosses and lichens?
8523Him England had contrived to realize: were there not ideas?
8523His mouldings may be careless, but do you think his joints will be?
8523His mouldings may be cut hastily, but do you think his_ joints_ will be?
8523How do they lie in the quarry?
8523How do you judge that Christian architecture in the deepest meaning of it to differ from all other?
8523Hubert of Lucca-- How came they, think you, to choose_ him_ out of a stranger city, and that a poorer one than their own?
8523If men like these submit to the merchant, who shall rebel?
8523In this endeavour to teach they almost unawares taught themselves; the question"How shall I represent this most clearly?"
8523Is Vasari entirely wrong then?
8523Is it altogether, think you, by blundering, or by disproportion in intellect or in body, that Theseus becomes St. Athanase?
8523Is not that a greater difference, think you, than one of mere decadence?
8523Jehu the son of Nimshi is not swifter of answer to Ahaziah''s messenger than the fiery Christian king, in his''What hast thou to do with peace?''
8523Perhaps you like this''improved''action better?
8523Secondly, how can we lay them so in every part of our building?
8523The King answered wisely,"It does not appear to me Arab''s money; you Pisans, what golden money have_ you_ got?"
8523The"long- drawn aisle"is here, indeed,--but where is the"fretted vault"?
8523This''maniera goffa e sproporzionata''of Vasari is not, then, merely the wasting away of former leonine strength into thin rigidities of death?
8523Thou art a strange fellow-- a tailor make a man?
8523Unnatural, perhaps, to Niccola?
8523Very wicked, you think, of the Pope''s legate, acting thus against quasi- Protestant Florence?
8523Was he never, then, in those fleets that brought the marbles back from the ravaged Isles of Greece?
8523Was there no Florentine then, of all this rich and eager crowd, who was fit to govern Florence?
8523What logos,_ about_ this Logos, have they learned, or can they teach?
8523Yes; but when is that?
8523You have seen such cusped arches before, you think?
8523You may have been a little impatient,--how could it well be otherwise?
8523You may lay the stones of a wall carefully level, but how will you lay those of an arch?
8523You think at first that this is remarkably like the course of republican reformations in the present day?
8523became to themselves, presently,"How was this most likely to have happened?"
8523was he at first only a labourer''s boy among the scaffoldings of the Pisan apse,--his apron loaded with dust-- and no man praising him for his speech?
7800Song of the WellWHAT IS LITERATURE?
7800''But dost thou love life?
7800***** ALEXANDER POPE( 1688- 1744) It was in 1819 that a controversy arose over the question, Was Pope a poet?
7800Al be I not the firste that dide amis, What helpeth that to doon my blame awey?
7800And he said,''What shall I sing?''
7800And these things I see suddenly, what mean they?
7800Art thou rich, yet is thy mind perplexed?
7800As we read we seem to hear the question,"What readest thou, Hamlet?"
7800At least one novel in each group should be read; but if it be asked, Which one?
7800Can wisdom be put in a silver rod, Or love in a golden bowl?
7800Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas?
7800Does a flower appeal to him?
7800Dost laugh to see how fools are vexed To add to golden numbers golden numbers?
7800Frets doubt the maw- crammed beast?
7800He is a proper man''s picture, but, alas, who can converse with a dumb show?
7800Hwarof kalenges tu me?
7800INTRODUCTION: AN ESSAY OF LITERATURE What is Literature?
7800If it be asked, What is Milton''s adjective?
7800If it be asked, What novels of the early type ought one to read?
7800If it be asked,"What is a ballad?"
7800If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rang the bell, What would you buy?
7800In a single stanza of his"Dream Pedlary"he has reflected the spirit of the whole romantic movement: If there were dreams to sell, What would you buy?
7800Is it the prophet''s thought I speak, or am I raving?
7800It is also one of the best answers ever given to the question, Is life worth living?
7800Many have read this story and found pleasure therein; but others ask frankly,"Why bother to write or to read such palpable nonsense?"
7800Many of his lines are rather gritty: Irks care the crop- full bird?
7800O Love, has she done this to thee?
7800Of what blamest thou me?
7800Prithee why so pale?
7800Should it be asked,"What did he do that had not been as well or better done before him?"
7800So also does"Pioneers,"a lyric that is wholly American and Western and exultant: Have the elder races halted?
7800Some readers, meeting with Bunsby, are reminded of a walrus; and who ever saw a walrus without thinking of the creature as nature''s Bunsby?
7800Swim''st thou in wealth, yet sink''st in thine own tears?
7800The"Prelude"begins almost spontaneously, and when it reaches the charming passage"And what is so rare as a day in June?"
7800Then hey noney, noney; hey noney, noney!_ Canst drink the waters of the crisped spring?
7800There were brave men among them, but of what use was courage when their weapons were powerless against the monster?
7800These also have their value; for who ever read them without asking, What would I have done or thought or felt under such circumstances?
7800These yearnings why are they?
7800Thus, Suckling habitually made love a joke: Why so pale and wan, fond lover, Prithee why so pale?
7800To the question, Which of these essays should be read?
7800Wants not a fourth Grace to make the dance even?
7800What do I know of life?
7800What matter how the north- wind raved?
7800What matter where, if I be still the same, And what I should be, all but less than he Whom thunder hath made greater?
7800What say you, then, to Falconbridge, the young baron of England?
7800When asked why he liked the poem his face lighted:"W''y I lak heem, M''sieu Whittier?
7800When they read of the winter scenes, of the fire roaring its defiance up the chimney- throat at the storm without, What matter how the night behaved?
7800Whose fault?
7800Why are there men and women that while they are nigh me the sunlight expands my blood?
7800Why are there trees I never walk under but large and melodious thoughts descend upon me?
7800Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe?
7800Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight, and not of tradition?"
7800Why when they leave me do my pennants of joy sink flat and lank?
7800Why, rising by the roadside here, do you the colors greet?
7800Will, when looking well wo nt move her, Looking ill prevail?
7800[ Sidenote: PLAN OF THE FAERY QUEEN] What, then, was Spenser''s object in writing_ The Faery Queen_?
7800[ Sidenote: THE POET] And Bryant''s poetry?
7800[ Sidenote: THE QUALITY OF GREATNESS] To the inevitable question, What are the marks of great literature?
7800[ Sidenote: WHAT TO READ] If it be asked,"What shall one read of Poe''s fiction?"
7800and another answers,"What did he do that was not cleverly, skillfully done?"
7800and half his blank verse is neither prose nor poetry: What, you, Sir, come too?
7800become of me?
7800hwat heved heo ionswered?
7800the very stars are gone: Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?"
7800these thoughts in the darkness why are they?
7800this mournful gloom For that celestial light?
7800what of myself?
7800what would she have answered?
7429Did I not tell you that I would go through with you?
7429Did I not tell you that you were going to pass through deep waters?
7429Do you doubt my having been tired?
7429Do you doubt the Lord''s resting me?
7429Do you know what came to me first?
7429Do you know what the matter is then?
7429Do you know what you have to do?
7429Do you want to know why it is not clear to you now?
7429For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? 7429 Has he not shown you that that is your future work?"
7429Have I not done as I promised?
7429If I can get a congregation together,said she,"will you talk to them?"
7429Jeremiah, what patent medicine have you been taking?
7429Mama, are n''t you better now?
7429Mary, why do n''t you set a better example?
7429Mother, wo n''t you forgive me?
7429Mother,said I,"what makes that light?"
7429Shall I go across first and see how deep the water is?
7429Sister Cole,said he,"what do you think about baptism: is it a commandment of God?
7429Sister,I asked,"do you call this death?"
7429There,said my brother,"can you take that?
7429Well,said they,"what will you do if God does not give you the means?"
7429What are you doing that for?
7429What commandments?
7429What have you there?
7429What kind is that?
7429Where did you get it?
7429Why did you not tell us?
7429A few minutes later, when one of my brothers went to the barn, Father said to him,"What is that noise at the house?"
7429After I had read the line to her she said,"Mary, ca n''t you adopt the next line as yours?
7429After I was vaccinated, some one said to me,"Now you feel more safe, do n''t you?"
7429After prayer she said,"Mama, are you better now?"
7429After the little girl had prayed the third time, she said,"Mama, are n''t you better now?"
7429And he said,"Do you mean that he has healed you or that he has healed that sore on your face?"
7429Are you not willing to be coworkers with others for the Lord?"
7429Are you not willing to plant and let some one else water?
7429Are you willing to fight in it?"
7429As I was lying on the couch trying to rest, my brother said,"Mary, is there anything you want from the Lord?"
7429As she finished her story, we asked,"Is there anything we can do?
7429Before leaving us, the sister said,"What are you going to do after we are gone?"
7429Can we think that it pleases His loving heart To cause us a moment''s pain?
7429Can you accept the lesson the Lord wants to give you?"
7429Collections were taken up for the ministers and for the general expenses of the meeting, but no one ever said to me,"Do you need any means?"
7429Do you not think he will do to trust?
7429Do you not think we should be very thankful since we are the most highly favored people on earth?
7429Do you think it would be a good idea to have a day of fasting and prayer?"
7429Do you think it would be all right for me to open my heart to you and tell you my burden?"
7429Does not the"all"include the women present?
7429During my discourse, I said,"Fools make a mock at sin, but who is it that mocks God?"
7429Finally, Mother, who had been listening to the conversation, said to him,"Can you eat a raw egg if I get it for you?"
7429God cut my excuses short with,"Who made man''s mouth?
7429He now brought me face to face with the question,"What will you do?"
7429Her older sister said to her one day,"Rebecca, our dear mother died a Universalist; are you going to forsake her faith?"
7429How can we do this if we do not open our hearts to others and tell what our burdens are?
7429I have heard Brother Warner say when he met those who seemed to have no praises stirring in their souls,"Have you no calves this morning?"
7429I often sat beside my mother and cried,"Mother, why ca n''t I die?
7429I opened it and as God would have it, my eyes fell on these lines:"And will you basely to the tempter yield?"
7429I thought,"Why does he talk that way?
7429If so, what is the correct mode?"
7429Is not the servant of the church the minister?
7429It came to me,"How do you know but that the shoes are downstairs waiting for you?"
7429My Mother, who was sitting by, said,"Mary, what are you doing?"
7429Not knowing how my soul had been longing for God and a new life, he said,"Mary, what has broken loose?"
7429Noticing what I was doing, she said,"Mary, what is the matter?"
7429On the Wednesday after I was healed, I found him lying before the fire and said to him,"Oh, Marion, have you heard the good news?
7429One day he said to me,"Mary, did not the Lord call you to preach his gospel?"
7429Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?"
7429Peal after peal of the heavenly anthem struck upon my ear, and in my dream I exclaimed,"Is heaven so near the earth as this?
7429She said,"Why, Mary?"
7429So I called on God earnestly:"O Lord, why is it that I am left here to burn to death alone?"
7429The Father gave the Son, heaven''s best gift, and did he leave out the minor gifts?
7429The blacksmith stood thoughtful for a moment and then said,"Yes; why should n''t I thank the Lord that it is just as it is?"
7429The brother replied,"Ca n''t you thank the Lord that it is as it is?"
7429The great- grandfather said to his cousin,"Pat, Pat, what kind of a world have we got into?
7429The voice of God''s Spirit spoke directly to my soul,"If I send you consolation in a dream, will you accept it?"
7429Then I said,"Lord, what next?"
7429Then I would think,"I do not want to tempt God; what shall I do?
7429Then came the question:"If you should die now, without a moment''s warning, do you know that you are ready?"
7429Then comes the temptation,"Has God called me, or am I trying to push out without any calling?"
7429Then he confronted me with this question,"Will you consecrate yourself to go out as a life- worker for me?"
7429Was not their speaking as the Spirit gave utterance the act of a minister in preaching?
7429What was I to do?
7429When I awoke I said,"Lord, what is there in this dream for me?"
7429When Mother cooked the eggs, he looked at her and said,"Mother, have you any meat?"
7429When we reached the other side, the brother broke into a hearty laugh:"Sister Cole, did you think I was trying to drown you?
7429Why did I not die when I was a child?
7429Will he not with him freely give you all things?
7429Wo n''t you read and pray?"
7429said I,"why have you let me come to a place like this?"
7429why did you come through this heat?"
7429why is it that after you have used me in the salvation of souls, some of whom no doubt are in the glory- world, I must now be lost?"
6359Are they mad?
6359But where,and I turned to our crew--"where are the lovely women that danced beneath the awning of flowers and clustering corymbi?
6359Do they woo their ruin?
6359Do you see_ that?_I said to the coachman.--"I see,"was his short answer.
6359I say,he cried out in an extempore petition addressed to the Emperor through the window--"I say, how am I to catch hold of the reins?"
6359Say, all our roses why should girls engross?
6359Would you examine me as a witness against myself?
6359102 17 WHO IS THIS THAT COMETH FROM DOMRÉMY?
6359:"Chevalier, have you fed the hog?"
6359A Welsh rustic, sitting behind me, asked if I had not felt my heart burn within me during the progress of the race?
6359A glory was it from the reddening dawn that now streamed_ through_ the windows?
6359And, besides, of what use was it?
6359But could I pretend to shout like the son of Peleus, aided by Pallas?
6359But she, the child that, at nineteen, had wrought wonders so great for France, was she not elated?
6359But what of that?
6359But what was Cyclops doing here?
6359But why should_ that_ delight me?
6359But why?
6359Ca n''t they take a lesson upon that subject from_ me_?
6359Could I not seize the reins from the grasp of the slumbering coachman?
6359Could it be expected to provide tears for the accidents of the road?
6359Deny it,_ mon cher_?
6359Did I tell her the truth?
6359Did I then make love to Fanny?
6359Did my vanity then suggest that I myself, individually, could fall within the line of his terrors?
6359Did ruin to our friends couch within our own dreadful shadow?
6359Did she not lose, as men so often_ have_ lost, all sobriety of mind when standing upon the pinnacle of success so giddy?
6359Do you give it up?
6359Do you suppose, reader, that the junior lords of the admiralty are under articles to darn for the navy?
6359Easy was it?
6359Easy was it?
6359Epilepsy so brief of horror, wherefore is it that thou canst not die?
6359For if he were king already, what was it that she could do for him beyond Orleans?
6359For one night more wherefore should she not sleep in peace?
6359France)?"
6359Had I the heart to break up her dreams?
6359Had the medical men recommended northern air, or how?
6359He will die no less: and why not?
6359How catch the reins?
6359How, if it be published in that distant world that the sufferer wears upon her head, in the eyes of many, the garlands of martyrdom?
6359I exclaimed,"shalt thou be the ransom for Waterloo?
6359I:"Who is this that cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah?"
6359If you_ can_ create yourselves into any of these great creators, why have you not?
6359In the forests to which he prays for pity, will he find a respite?
6359In what regiment?
6359Is a prison the safest retreat?
6359Is it a martyr''s scaffold?
6359Is it, indeed, come to this?
6359Knowing that she would reap nothing from answering her persecutors, why did she not retire by silence from the superfluous contest?
6359Meantime, what are we stopping for?
6359Might I not sound the guard''s horn?
6359Might it not have been left till the spring of 1947, or, perhaps, left till called for?
6359My lord, have you no counsel?
6359Not one of these men was ever capable, in a solitary instance, of praising an enemy( what do you say to_ that_, reader?
6359Or can it be fancied, amongst the weakest of men, that the bodies of the criminals will be given up to their widows for Christian burial?
6359Passing so suddenly into darkness, wherefore is it that still thou sheddest thy sad funeral blights upon the gorgeous mosaics of dreams?
6359Pomps of life, that, from the burials of centuries, rose again to the voice of perfect joy, did ye indeed mingle with the festivals of Death?
6359SECTION II-- THE VISION OF SUDDEN DEATH What is to be taken as the predominant opinion of man, reflective and philosophic, upon SUDDEN DEATH?
6359Shall my Lord of Beauvais sit again upon the judgment- seat, and again number the hours for the innocent?
6359Speaking or acting, what help can I offer?
6359St. Peter''s at Rome, do you fancy, on Easter Sunday, or Luxor, or perhaps the Himalayas?
6359Such being, at that time, the usage of mail- coaches, what was to be done by us of young Oxford?
6359That is to say, what more than a merely_ military_ service could she render him?
6359The rear part of the carriage-- was_ that_ certainly beyond the line of absolute ruin?
6359This mutinous individual audaciously shouted,"Where am_ I_ to sit?"
6359Was he not active?
6359Was he not blooming?
6359Was it from the bloody bas- reliefs of earth?
6359Was it from the crimson robes of the martyrs painted_ on_ the windows?
6359Was it industry in a taxed cart?
6359Was it sorrow that loitered, or joy that raced?
6359Was it youthful gaiety in a gig?
6359Was our shadow the shadow of death?
6359What are they about?
6359What building is that which hands so rapid are raising?
6359What could be done-- who was it that could do it-- to check the storm- flight of these maniacal horses?
6359What else but her meek, saintly demeanour won, from the enemies that till now had believed her a witch, tears of rapturous admiration?
6359What else drove the executioner to kneel at every shrine for pardon to_ his_ share in the tragedy?
6359What else, I demand, than mere weight of metal, absolute nobility of deportment, broke the vast line of battle then arrayed against her?
6359What evil has smitten the pinnace, meeting or overtaking her?
6359What is an opium- eater?
6359What is to be thought of_ her_?
6359What power could answer the question?
6359What reason is there for taking up this subject of Joanna precisely in the spring of 1847?
6359Wherefore should we grieve that there is one craven less in the world?
6359Wherefore_ was_ it that we delayed?
6359Whither have fled the noble young men that danced with_ them_?"
6359Who admires more than myself the sublime enthusiasm, the rapturous faith in herself, of this pure creature?
6359Who and what could it be?
6359Who else is to do it?
6359Who is she in bloody coronation robes from Rheims?
6359Who is she that cometh with blackened flesh from walking the furnaces of Rouen?
6359Who is this that cometh from Domrémy?
6359Why, then,_ did_ she contend?
6359Will the post- office lay its hand on its heart, in its moments of sobriety, and assert that ever it waited for me?
6359Will these ladies say that we are nothing to_ them_?
6359Will they burn the child of Domrémy a second time?
6359Would Domrémy know them again for the features of her child?
6359Yet, how should this be accomplished?
6359Yet, why not?
6359can these be horses that bound off with the action and gestures of leopards?
6359or a lunatic hospital?
6359or the British Museum?"
6359that from the crimson altar and from the fiery font wert visited and searched by the effulgence in the angel''s eye-- were these indeed thy children?
6359to saying,"_ Pucelle d''Orléans, as- tu sauvé les fleurs- de- lys_?"
6359what are you about?
6359what is it that I shall do?
6359wherefore have we not time to weep over you?"
9173What would you like to be in an imaginary new city?
9173Who,asks Swift,"were the forty- one above him?"
9173But is it a gain to substitute a letter for a visit, to try to give written precedence over spoken forms?
9173Here the child reverences what is not understood as authority, and to the childish"Why?"
9173How now should this common element of union be taught?
9173How then can we ever hope to secure proper training for the will?
9173Is heaven a bribe?
9173Is it the warm sun?
9173Miss Patterson[20] collated the answers of 2,237 children to the question"What does 1895 mean?"
9173The end had ceased to charm, and how could there ever again be any interest in the means?
9173Twenty- three shock expletives, e.g., are,"Would n''t that---- you?"
9173We should ask, however, What is nature''s way at this stage of life?
9173Where is due the weariness or satiety?
9173Why did all profess and no one believe religion?
9173Why is God so stern and yet so partial, and how about the Trinity?
9173[ 26] Is it the sweetness of flowers?
8898Do you not feel lonely in these long walks in the dark?
8898Who are these?
8898''Could you find your way back if the lights were put out?''
8898''Now do you understand?''
8898''What for?''
8898And why should he wish to change so long as these were available?
8898But how was it entered and left in ancient times?
8898But if so, how was it balanced, or how secured?
8898But on what did these spectral moths feed?
8898But were they undisputed masters?
8898But who was the party?
8898But who was to bell the cat?
8898But_ quis custodiet custodies_?
8898From his grave Angantyr replies:--"Hervör, my daughter, Wherefore disturb me?
8898From whom came the ransom of King John and of the nobles taken at Creçy and Poitiers?
8898How did they descend to it and mount again?
8898How impose respect and obedience on so many daring men?
8898How was his body carried down the stair?
8898Is the story true or_ ben trovato_?
8898It is a miraculous structure dating from the Creation of the World:"Who will doubt that it was built by the hand of the Almighty?
8898The salt had lost its savour, wherewith could it be seasoned?
8898To what date, or period rather, do they belong?
8898What are these frontier fortresses but the same on an extensive scale as the Gué du Loir, the Roche Corail, and the Rochebrune?
8898What beasts did he slay?
8898Where could he find the means to repress these flayers of the country, these terrible little kings of castles?
8898Where did man first appear?
8898Where was the Garden of Eden?
8898Whither had they gone?
8898Who paid for the gay accoutrements of the knights?
8898Who were the real victims of the incessant wars?
8898Why was it that every city-- nay, every little town-- had to be not only walled about but to have its outposts?
8898do?
8898whereupon a voice answered from the tomb,"What do you want?"
7170THE SNOW IMAGEThe question now was, what next?
7170''And what would they have you do?''
7170''Did you not pinch Elizabeth Hubbard this morning?''
7170''Do you go through the trees or over them?''
7170''How did you go?''
7170''What attendants hath Sarah Good?''
7170''What meat did she give it?''
7170''Why did you go to Thomas Putnam''s last night and hurt his child?''
7170''Why did you not tell your master?''
7170''Would you not have hurt others, if you could?''
7170And if he accused her of that only, why should he suffer perpetual remorse on account of her death?
7170But if the wings of the archangel are torn and soiled in his conflict with sin, does it not add to the honor of the victory?
7170Can you tell me, sir?"
7170Did it occur to him that the lightning might strike in his own house?
7170Do not the characters in"Don Quixote"and"Wilhelm Meister"spring up as it were out of the ground?
7170Do not we all feel at times that the search for abstract truth is like a diet of sawdust or Scotch mist,--a"chimera buzzing in a vacuum"?
7170Do not we all require it?
7170Does not romance come originally from Roma,--as well as Romulus?
7170He also adds Goethe and Swedenborg, and remarks of them:"Were ever two men of transcendent imagination more unlike?"
7170Horse, how are you to- day?''
7170How can we possess clear and definite ideas of the grand mystery of Creation?
7170How did it happen that Hawthorne was an exception?
7170How far shall we agree with him?
7170I am perfectly aware that he has taken a good deal of interest in you, but when did he ever do anything for you without a_ quid pro quo_?
7170If Franklin Pierce was desirous of preserving the Union, why did he give Jefferson Davis a place in his Cabinet, and take him for his chief adviser?
7170If there is sometimes a melancholy tinge in their writings, may we wonder at it?
7170In his account of"Sunday at Home"he says:"Time-- where a man lives not-- what is it but Eternity?"
7170Is it not much the same in America?
7170Is it not perfectly natural that Everybody should understand Everybody''s business as well as or better than his own?
7170Is it possible that this is connected in a way with the rarefied atmosphere of Lenox, in which distant objects appear so sharply defined?
7170Is this not an induction from or corollary to the preceding?
7170Is this the consummation of your experiment?"
7170It may also be asked, why should Small have disposed so readily of this manuscript to Symmes after preserving it sedulously for more than forty years?
7170Matthew Arnold spoke of his commentaries on England as the writing of a man chagrined; but what could have chagrined Hawthorne there?
7170Perhaps he might have accomplished as much for Hawthorne; but how was Hawthorne in his retired and uncommunicative life to know of him?
7170Raphael''s tomb has been opened, and why should not Shakespeare''s be also?
7170The latter often happens in American life, and although it commonly results in more or less family discord, are we to condemn it for that reason?
7170The magnitude of the evil of course makes a difference; but do we not all live in a continual state of sinning, and self- correction?
7170The scientists tell us that all these happen according to natural laws: perfectly true, but WHO was it that made those laws?
7170Then what shall we say of the sympathetic relation between a mother and her child?
7170There are Dombeys and Shylocks in plenty, but who has ever met a Hamlet or a Rosalind in real life?
7170WHO is it that keeps the universe running?
7170Was it President Jackson, or Senator Benton, who said that fighting a duel was very much like making one''s maiden speech?
7170Was it through a natural attraction for the primeval granite that they landed on the New England coast?
7170Was the sword- fish roused to anger when the ship came upon him sleeping in the water; or did he mistake it for a strange species of whale?
7170Was there nothing more than the trick she had attempted upon Priscilla?
7170What New England girl would behave in the manner that Hawthorne''s son represents this one to have done?
7170What could Bridge do, in the premises?
7170What do we know of the boyhood of Franklin, Webster, Seward and Longfellow?
7170What do we know of the religious belief of Michel Angelo, of Shakespeare, or of Beethoven?
7170What do you think of my becoming an author, and relying for support upon my pen?
7170What is there outside of the universe?
7170What shall we now do for bread?"
7170What should he do; whither should he turn?
7170What young gentleman would have listened to such a communication as he supposes, and especially the reserved and modest Hawthorne?
7170When will parents learn wisdom in regard to their children?
7170Which of Shakespeare''s male characters can be measured beside George Washington?
7170Who besides Homer has been able to describe a chariot- race, and who but Hawthorne could extract such poetry from a farmer''s garden?
7170Who but his uncle could have written that inscription?
7170Who can describe it-- that clairvoyant sensibility, intangible, too swift for words?
7170Who can tell?
7170Who has depicted it, except Hawthorne and Raphael?
7170Who knows what a heart there may have been in William Symmes?
7170Why did he go out of his way to see so little and to miss so much?
7170Why should he not?
7170Why, as he was true to the Northern character in all things else, did he swerve from his Northern principles in this final scene?"
7170Would it have made a difference in the warp and woof of Hawthorne''s life, if he had happened to ride that day in the same coach with Longfellow?
7170Would it not be so among the dead?"
7170Would not the Count of Monte Beni be a cousin Italian, as it were, to the Count of Monte Cristo?
7170_ Fate_ is the spoken word which can not be recalled, and who can tell the good and evil consequences that lie hidden in it?
7170reduced to private life?
36360''And what will monsieur do until I return to England?'' 36360 ''Calembours,''whines the slave,''why need you trample on a down man?
36360''He is satisfied, is he not?'' 36360 ''Until?''
36360''Was monsieur a soldier or a knight of the pen?'' 36360 ''What are my duties?''
36360''Will you go, then?'' 36360 After many adventures, she found him in this city, and what think you were the titles which this little tailor had assumed?
36360Ah, was she?
36360Ah, your funds have run low, and you are here to replenish them?
36360Alfred says you have?
36360All ready, Purcell?
36360Am I here too soon for you, madam-- how long did you want me to stay?
36360Am I to accept praise from the enemy of St. Udo Brand? 36360 An attempt at burglary?
36360And in return, what do you expect?
36360And to marry St. Udo? 36360 And what must be done before the twenty- eighth?
36360And where are you going?
36360And where is Bignetta to send your boxes, and where is my father to send your salary?
36360And who are you?
36360And will she think of your former insults when you say,''Margaret, I wo n''t accept one penny piece of the Brand property unless you be my wife?''
36360And would you condemn a man upon such accidents of memory as these?
36360And you betrayed him, knowing him to be all this?
36360And you here?
36360And you out of your pittance-- you have nursed me through all this?
36360And your indifference broke her heart-- she died for love of you?
36360And-- what have you to tell me?
36360And_ ma foi!_ what do I find? 36360 Another raid into Thoms,_ mon ami_?"
36360Anyting I can to for you, my tear laty?
36360Ar''n''t you, dear?
36360Are they to be taken down in legal form?
36360Are we friends?
36360Are you a thief, or an assassin?
36360Are you better?
36360Are you coming up to Castle Brand?
36360Are you dead or living in there?
36360Are you going to forget my naughty petulance? 36360 Are you surveying, or inveighing?"
36360Are you there, girl, or am I talking to an empty room?
36360Are you tired of reading all the condolence that comes to me, or do you think it is some insolent bill?
36360Are you up, Miss Margaret, dear?
36360Beg pardon, Miss Walsingham, did you speak?
36360Better send for her, eh?
36360Better, good Monsieur Schmolnitz?
36360Brave, did mademoiselle say?
36360But if I had died, who would make up to you the doctor''s bill, or your own ease?
36360But if she did n''t wish it?
36360But if she did?
36360But it was not as a knight of the ferule that you won this mark of distinction?
36360But we sha n''t permit any foul play, shall we?
36360But why did n''t you raise the house? 36360 But will you allow her to do it?"
36360But would n''t you rather go North, out of the scrape?
36360But-- how-- what is your reason, my dear?
36360By what unworthy means have you ascertained my movements?
36360Can I possibly defy him for three hours? 36360 Can it be doubted that my guardians have been purposely sent out of the way, that I may not appeal to them for protection?"
36360Can you forgive such perfidy as his?
36360Changed?
36360Come tell me why you sent me to Bala?
36360Come to us? 36360 Come, now-- what do you expect?
36360Come, tell me you are satisfied with my arrangements for you?
36360D''ye see that great house among them trees?
36360Dear Margaret,sneered the man, bending near her dead white face,"why will you hold your slave at such a distance?
36360Dear count, will you not make a guess? 36360 Dear one, was it really_ me_ you were trying to hold in your sleep?"
36360Did Colonel Brand say I was not to leave the house?
36360Did I bring you here to be my mentor?
36360Did I ever suppose that you could meddle with my destiny? 36360 Did he leave no message for me?"
36360Did my darling try to speak?
36360Did n''t she call me by name, the blessed lamb?
36360Did she think of your former insults when she came here at the risk of her life to find you, and to nurse you out of the fever?
36360Did you come here to- day expecting to find Colonel Calembours?
36360Did you ever hear of a fellow called Brand being here?
36360Did you give him my letter yourself?
36360Did you not suspect who Thoms was, especially as Mortlake sent him to you?
36360Did you notice the pretty madam, your_ vis- a- vis_ at_ dejeuner_?
36360Did you say you felt better?
36360Do n''t let them put you in a hasylum, deary love; be careful what you say, now wo n''t you?
36360Do n''t you know where he has gone?
36360Do n''t you know your nurse, who has been with you for two weeks? 36360 Do you belong to Lynthorpe?"
36360Do you hear, sir?
36360Do you know what it suggested to me? 36360 Do you know why I am here?"
36360Do you read nothing in this reminiscence beyond a woman''s idle vagaries of fancy? 36360 Do you remember all that, Margaret Walsingham?
36360Do you say so? 36360 Do you surrender?"
36360Does St. Udo expect to see me?
36360Does he dally with Fortune''s train, or does he brush by her robes and seize the treasure which she guards? 36360 Does he indeed?"
36360Eh, bless me, what for?
36360Eh? 36360 For or against my cause, fair lady?
36360Good Heaven-- is my own darling, that Miss Walsingham?
36360Good gracious, what do you mean?
36360Ha,cried Margaret, with a flash of triumph,"then you utterly deny having ever written to me?"
36360Had St. Udo Brand that cowardly glance, that crime- darkened visage, that crawling, scheming softness?
36360Had you not better wait till the morning?
36360Harriet, will you come here?
36360Has Colonel Brand left the castle?
36360Has Colonel Brand left the house?
36360Has Symonds got the carriage ready?
36360Has she been my nurse?
36360Have I been mistaken in my Margaret?
36360Have I been three weeks ill?
36360Have I bridged at last the chasm of mortality, and is this my fate in the immortal world? 36360 Have I checkmated you?"
36360Have I ever been forgetful of you?
36360Have I thrown the gauntlet of defiance at him? 36360 Have you been crushed?"
36360Have you been meddling with the pockets of this coat?
36360Have you made a deed of gift of Seven- Oaks to St. Udo, and are you here for more testimonials?
36360Have you made anything of this queer business?
36360Have you seen her?
36360Have you seen the pretty river Theiss?
36360Have you slipped, with your confounded cleverness, out by some side door?
36360Having a walk about the oaks, sir? 36360 Heaven help me, what does this mean?"
36360Homeless, nameless, incumbered with a boy twelve months old, what could the poor wretch do? 36360 How am I to follow out the intricacies of that wretch''s plot?
36360How came you, Miss Blair, to be so well informed about Captain Brand''s writing?
36360How can I most suitably thank Miss Blair for her services to my daughter?
36360How can it be that you, a stranger have become acquainted with my concerns?
36360How comes it that you have had yellow fever? 36360 How could he have concealed his real nature from everybody so successfully?
36360How could you ever think that of me?
36360How could you, when St. Udo was not really slain by him?
36360How dare you molest me sir?
36360How dare you think to step into St. Udo''s shoes and expect to cheat me?
36360How did I come to be here? 36360 How do we know that this plot, if sifted well, would not reveal in the suitor you sent me to- night a red- handed assassin?
36360How does he look?
36360How is it that I am here?
36360How is the fair lady after her week''s seclusion?
36360How long have we loved each other, Perdita? 36360 How shall I get back my composure?"
36360How was my dear Miss Brand choked by a parasite?
36360How you have that power is my secret, mademoiselle; shall I tell it you for one thousand pounds?
36360I am more beautiful than that creature who loved him long ago on the banks of the Theiss, am I? 36360 I ca n''t blame myself for anything in the affair; was it my fault that I was born with a wrong to avenge?
36360I do not know-- was I playing?
36360I must have recourse to you again, my tiny talisman?
36360I think this is Miss Walsingham?
36360If I yielded, would I be safer than if I was obstinate?
36360Incomparable madame, where have we met before?
36360Intending to find me before I started-- do you think?
36360Is London very gay just now, my lady?
36360Is Margaret Walsingham in Key West?
36360Is Mortlake the crawling demon who crouched over the brave colonel in the dark and stabbed him? 36360 Is Richard O''Grady in this car?"
36360Is he aware that I was to come?
36360Is he choked by a skein of thread? 36360 Is he dying, do you think?"
36360Is he here?
36360Is he in this house?
36360Is he waiting for an answer?
36360Is his grace on board then?
36360Is it Betsy and me that you want to be thankful for? 36360 Is it generous thus to trample on a fallen man?
36360Is it possible that it was an impromptu?
36360Is it the_ plague_?
36360Is not that captain St. Udo Brand, of the Guards?
36360Is she not the high, heroic soul I deemed her?
36360Is that a declaration of war?
36360Is that a threat? 36360 Is that credible?
36360Is that my darling, standing on the threshold? 36360 Is the colonel at Seven- Oak Waaste?"
36360Is the man found?
36360Is there no letter lying here for Miss Walsingham, of Regis, Surrey?
36360Is there no possibility of trapping him out of his own mouth?
36360Is this St. Udo Brand?
36360Is this a snare for me also?
36360Is this letter forged?
36360Is this man whom you met to- night changed from the man to whom you were engaged?
36360Kind John Doane, how shall I repay you?
36360Knew Captain Brand? 36360 Know you why?"
36360Lady, why have you been so kind to me?
36360Lady, will you not tell me your name?
36360Let me come in a moment?
36360Let_ him_ be Ethel Brand''s heir? 36360 Let_ him_ wear the dead St. Udo''s honors?"
36360Little mother, why do you weep?
36360MY DEAR WARD:--I write more for the purpose of giving you time to prepare your answer, and( may I presume it?) 36360 Mademoiselle loves the brave man who was murdered?"
36360Mademoiselle understands that what follows is for sale?
36360Mademoiselle will remember my modest request?
36360Mademoiselle, shall I tell it you for one thousand pounds, or shall I go back to America, and bury the secret in oblivion?
36360Married to that impostor, who hoped to fill your shoes? 36360 May I ask, my dear Miss Walsingham, may I ask to what you refer?"
36360May I entreat the honor of a private interview?
36360Mercenary? 36360 Miss Blair?"
36360Miss Walsingham?
36360Monsieur Estvan is fighting like the devil against the Northerners, is he not,_ pauvrette_?
36360Most illustrious heroine, shall I resume the chronicles? 36360 Must I introduce Colonel Brand?
36360Must you go, Perdita, after your promise?
36360My Julie will pity her poor slave in his new chains?
36360My Perdita?
36360My dear lady,ejaculated that functionary, arising in consternation,"what brings you here?
36360My dear,said the lawyer,"is n''t all this going to lead us to Colonel Brand?"
36360My lord duke, what day of the month is this?
36360No family ties to break, should I wish, if it were possible, for you to stay with me always?
36360No, what are_ his_ assurances? 36360 No?
36360Now, do n''t you see how penetrating Alfred was, to find her shallowness out when she was trying her best to captivate him? 36360 Now, what am I to think?"
36360Now, who is this woman?
36360Now,_ mon enfant_, where is madam?
36360Of course you did not; how should you? 36360 Oh, Juggernaut of good people''s lives, what unwilling victims do ye crush beneath your wheels in your heavenward march?"
36360Oh, Miss Margaret, dearie, them same words?
36360Oh, Mrs. Chetwode, have you let him escape?
36360Oh, chevalier, is there ever a man on this stale old globe who can show a heart like faithful Margaret''s?
36360Perhaps we had better defer this matter until we have each had time to decide upon the wisest course?
36360Pray, madam, has Colonel Brand anything to do with your change of purpose?
36360Pshaw, you Calembours again-- what sets you prowling about again like a cat on the leads, or, rather a hungry jackal in a graveyard?
36360Purcell, do you know me?
36360Shall you consider her ladyship''s proposal?
36360Shall you see him to- day?
36360She was only affectionate?
36360So monsieur was born in Hungary?
36360Surely Colonel Brand will give me fair play? 36360 Surely you are not going to hide yourself from all your friends?
36360Tell me first, dear lady Julie,she exclaimed,"if Captain Brand is a friend of yours?"
36360Tell me who you are?
36360Thanks, you are very kind,said she,"but why ca n''t I stay here?
36360The library glass door?
36360The would- be- colonel, where is he?
36360Then you have decided to marry me, after all, and let us both have the lands?
36360There was a railway accident, you remember? 36360 There was living in the town of Raleigh, some twenty years ago, a remarkable girl called-- shall we say for the present-- Dolores?
36360There, do you hear that?
36360Think I''d send you off alone, Miss Margaret?
36360This is very extraordinary, after your last expressed decision that you would never enter Castle Brand-- is not that what you said?
36360This vision is a woman? 36360 To act sheep- dog?"
36360To be sure? 36360 To my surprise my friend writhes with anger-- half chokes over this:"''His castle and his Marguerite?
36360To see the dear mademoiselle whose actions so wise, so unselfish, so_ heroique_, have won my heart?
36360Too early? 36360 Was he so?"
36360Was it not a wonderful plot, mademoiselle? 36360 Was-- was he a thief, miss, and did he rob us?"
36360We are quite good friends?
36360We part good friends, though, for are we not necessary to each other? 36360 Wearied monsieur, did she?"
36360Well, what think you of woman''s wit after this?
36360Were you with the colonel the night he was stabbed?
36360What are you going to do?
36360What are you standing there for, rooted to the spot?
36360What can Miss Blair have to do with Captain Brand?
36360What can he be thinking of?
36360What can you mean? 36360 What date was it, dear miss, that you was lost on the moor?
36360What did he say to my message?
36360What did he say?
36360What did you want with my private album? 36360 What do I want of a man who is stripped of his position?"
36360What do you say to this charge?
36360What do you want here?
36360What does all this mean?
36360What does it matter now?
36360What duty chevalier?
36360What else?
36360What has occurred, I wonder?
36360What have I dared to do?
36360What have you to say of it?
36360What hour will yer master be at home?
36360What is it that you have to communicate?
36360What is it, Reed?
36360What is monsieur''s programme?
36360What is my life worth to me without fame to gild it?
36360What is this, dear child? 36360 What is yours?"
36360What made you think such a queer thing, dearie?
36360What promise, dear love?
36360What regiment is yours?
36360What tender face is this that is bending over me? 36360 What the duce do you want, confound you?"
36360What the duse do you mean, young lady?
36360What though I have thrown behind me an illustrious life, titles, honors, pleasures, for to give these dogs my nameless services? 36360 What was it, my darling?"
36360What would you care for me when you were strong and well?
36360What would you like us to do, Miss Margaret?
36360What''s all this, colonel?
36360What''s the matter, woman? 36360 What''s up?"
36360What? 36360 What?"
36360When am I to see you again, Miss Walsingham?
36360When did he go-- you surely know that?
36360Where Colonel Brand, the lion of chivalry raged, was not I, Colonel Calembours, ever at his side, the unwearied partner of the perilous speculation? 36360 Where did he go?"
36360Where did you disappear to? 36360 Where did you see it?"
36360Where has that great spirit fled which cried for help to save itself from ruin at the hands of Juliana Ducie? 36360 Where has your mistress gone, my man?"
36360Where is Colonel Brand?
36360Where is Miss Walsingham? 36360 Where is he?"
36360Where is that St. Udo Brand I mourned for?
36360Where is that fiend in human shape who calls himself Colonel Calembours?
36360Where is the colonel?
36360Where is the noble girl?
36360Where is your birthplace?
36360Where now, miss?
36360Where was you when you was took bad?
36360Where? 36360 Who are your friends?"
36360Who brought that letter?
36360Who has arrived?
36360Who has been grieving you, then?
36360Who is it?
36360Who is it?
36360Who is that devil?
36360Who is that lady in the black velvet?
36360Who is this generous man?
36360Who knows whether I shall live until it could be answered?
36360Who says a woman ca n''t scheme, and cleverly, too? 36360 Who speaks with these accents?
36360Who would have expected this happy deliverance out of all our troubles? 36360 Who-- who?
36360Who? 36360 Whom have I to meet this time?"
36360Why compare him with St. Udo Brand?
36360Why do n''t you open it and read its contents?
36360Why do you ask? 36360 Why do you come to me with this request?
36360Why do you haunt me day and night? 36360 Why do you put me through such an inquisition?"
36360Why should he expect such an unheard of thing from me, if he has lost Castle Brand and Seven Oak Waaste?
36360Why should you espouse Captain Brand''s cause?
36360Why should you talk that way to me? 36360 Why, darling, do you know me, then?
36360Why, what can you mean?
36360Why, where are we to travel, my Perdita?
36360Will she go before seven?
36360Will she live thirty minutes?
36360Will you honor me with a word or two?
36360With me for your Dromio of Syracuse, you varlet?
36360With you?
36360Would you cause an innocent man to lose his life?
36360Would you say so, sir?
36360Yes, yes-- was that it? 36360 You are determined, then?"
36360You are en route for America? 36360 You are not pure French?"
36360You are wondering what a woman of the world like me wants with a saint like yourself, are you not?
36360You believe in your Perdita''s love?
36360You do n''t intend to say that he is not dead?
36360You do n''t mean to say that you are going to offer me some paltry compensation instead of submitting quietly to the terms of the will?
36360You dread the delay of four weeks? 36360 You knew him at home here?"
36360You know me, do you not?
36360You mean by that, I suppose, that you will submit to the conditions of the will?
36360You met me in your delirium often enough, do n''t you remember?
36360You must go? 36360 You must tell me what he said, Purcell?"
36360You never used the word then?
36360You omit England?
36360You refer to the unlucky note I was insane enough to write to you, the night upon which I left Castle Brand?
36360You refuse to help me, then?
36360You repudiate me once more?
36360You say that the Confederate, not you, fired that pistol- shot?
36360You ton''t say that, matam? 36360 You will return to me?"
36360You wish me to be utterly silent on the subject?
36360You wish me to marry Mortlake, do you?
36360You would be quite willing to marry_ that_ person, would you, Lady Juliana?
36360You''ve overcrowded him, have you, my clever wench?
36360You, exquisite madame?
36360You? 36360 Your husband is dead?"
36360_ Diable!_ what mean you? 36360 _ Machere_, whose house is this?"
36360_ Ouais!_ are not the journals teeming with great news? 36360 _ Sacre, mon Dieu!_ Has he gone mad?"
36360''What have I to do with him, or with Castle Brand, or with Miss Walsingham?
36360--with a mocking smile--"the residences of the counts are particularly magnificent in that city, are they not?"
36360A Confederate?"
36360A consignment of tough beef?"
36360A jackal among_ les cadores_?
36360A mutiny between her subjects?"
36360A night cat?
36360A spirit, was she?
36360A watch at your door?"
36360A young and handsome man without a wife?
36360Ah, is she dead?"
36360Aha, you do n''t like it,_ miladi_, do you?
36360Ai n''t there another drop than this, John?
36360Am I St. Udo Brand, who was at odds with all the world?
36360Am I done with earth and sin, and entered into rest upon your hallowed heart?
36360Am not I the one obstacle between her and the fortune she has lain in wait for during four years?
36360And Chevalier de Calembours left his princely fortune behind when he came here to fight?"
36360And have n''t every one of the nine of us, down to the babby, felt as if we had a angel under the roof for the last three weeks?"
36360And if he takes it up, what will become of me?
36360And if she still entertained the idea of an elopement, would she meet him on board the convict- ship which took him back to Tasmania?
36360And that Providence is pointing out, for the second time, the path we ought to pursue?"
36360And what was that fresh command which the accomplice received per telegraph from Mortlake?"
36360And why?
36360And, being true, how do we know that Mortlake''s hand was not the hand that destroyed the heir of Castle Brand?
36360And_ Voila!_ he shall give you an English hand- grip yet-- shall he not?
36360Are you afraid of meeting strangers, Colonel Brand?"
36360Are you better?"
36360Are you going to be the mistress of Seven- Oak Waaste after all?"
36360Are you going to send, then, for Miss Walsingham''s friends?"
36360Are you in pain?"
36360Are you well educated?
36360Are you willing that we should be friends?"
36360Brand conscious yet?"
36360But again, would she be concealed from the terrible St. Udo Brand''s possible persecutions at the Marquis of Ducie''s residence?
36360But here she sat, chilled, bitter at heart, coolly asking herself:"Is it well for me to be too hasty?
36360But how am I to do it?
36360But now tell me, what is this wonderful matter of life and death?"
36360But pray, what has all the cunning ended in?
36360But what brings you to Key West?
36360But what could bring a battery there-- and at that hour?
36360But you have not told me how you came to know Captain Brand''s writing?"
36360But, Monsieur St. Udo, I have not been mercenary with you, have I?"
36360But, mademoiselle, you tremble and are pale as the winter moon; wherefore?
36360But, now, has not heaven thrown us together in the most marked manner by sending us three thousand miles across the sea in the same steamer?
36360Can I see her?"
36360Can ye mind that?"
36360Can you blame her, dear count?
36360Can you name such a person?"
36360Can you read characters by writing, or do you care to examine it, Miss Walsingham?"
36360Can you send a messenger with it to the village immediately?"
36360Captain Brand did n''t come after all?"
36360Changed?
36360Changed?
36360Chetwode?"
36360Chetwode?"
36360Come, now, will you go with Brand, and win some cool thousands by the speculation?''
36360Come-- do you play?"
36360Could anything be more appropriate, I wonder, than for her to faint at sight of me?
36360Could he have crawled round his purpose under the disguise of a body- servant, touching daily the man whom he meant to murder?
36360Could he not find it in his soul to conceive of strict justice?
36360Could it be that her enemy was at the window?
36360Could such a face belong to St. Udo, the dare- man and dare- devil?
36360Could such belong to the gallant soldier who had stormed the Rocky Ridge, and braved the cannon''s mouth in the thickest of the fight?
36360Dear Miss Walsingham, will you make me immeasurably happy by bestowing your hand upon me?"
36360Did I not read it in the loathing eyes and shrinking figure before ever I opened my mouth?
36360Did I not squander all my little gains for to get your rights in England?
36360Did he not know the meaning of generosity?
36360Did his character suffer by it?
36360Did you find our friend Davenport at his post my dear lady?"
36360Did you see the gallant mention of him in the latest_ American War Gazette_?
36360Did you take it from me, and give it back to me now when you laid my head upon your bosom?"
36360Did you walk all the way, and so light of head like?"
36360Did you?"
36360Do I suspect_ you_ of enough pluck to crush a snake?
36360Do n''t you know that when it drops you will suffocate?
36360Do n''t you know?
36360Do n''t you remember how you made me hold you-- just so-- when the fever- phantoms were chasing you?
36360Do n''t you remember saying that?"
36360Do they know it here?"
36360Do you bring me news of Colonel Brand?"
36360Do you suppose a consignment of anything could bring me to this_ inferno_ of yellow fever and negroes?
36360Do you think I would have come to you on mere suspicion?
36360Do you think she is dead, madam?
36360Do you wish your picture taken?
36360Doane?"
36360Does it not convince you that my suspicions have a just foundation?
36360Does not his quailing eye speak of a vile history, of which he is such a coward as to fear the exposure?
36360Does she consider it possible to say''yes''to this proposal?"
36360Does that please you?"
36360Does that suit better?"
36360Does the blood of good Ethel Brand flow in the veins of such a hound as yonder schemer?
36360Eh, mademoiselle?"
36360Eh, mademoiselle?"
36360Eh?
36360Entry the third still more expressive of alarm:"What''s this I hear?
36360Felled by a thimble?
36360Fever?"
36360Fie, Colonel Brand, is it possible that the few words which have ever passed between us could have slipped your memory?
36360For what was I reserved?
36360Gay displeased you?"
36360Gay, and taking up my abode at Seven- Oak Waaste?"
36360Gay, from Regis, Surrey, been here, yesterday or to- day?"
36360Gay, it can not be possible that the doctor has gone away without letting me know?"
36360Gay?
36360Gay?"
36360Had a fit of laughter seized him, or was the man crying?
36360Had he ever harmed you, chevalier?
36360Had she loved him?
36360Has he anything to do with the sudden end of that life?
36360Has he murdered St. Udo Brand?
36360Has he very long to live?
36360Has she taken anything into her head against_ me_?
36360Have I been meddling much with your family duties by this long monopoly of you?"
36360Have I employed you here to be my rival, Miss Walsingham?
36360Have I lost him?
36360Have I met him first upon the steps of Castle Brand-- second in my vision of St. Udo''s death, and last in my treacherous lover of to- night?
36360Have I set you over myself?"
36360Have we used him badly?"
36360Have you been comfortable?"
36360Have you been ill?"
36360Have you been weeping?"
36360Have you come to bid me good- by?''
36360Have you heard anything in the town?"
36360Have you let her leave the castle after all?"
36360Have you not been paying court to the Marquis of Ducie''s daughter all summer?
36360Have you the presumption to refuse to send a messenger at my request?"
36360He looked back upon the friends he had expected fidelity from-- which of them had not betrayed his trust?
36360Heh?
36360Her enemy?
36360How are you now, Miss Margaret?"
36360How came she there?
36360How came that there?"
36360How can this paradox be explained?
36360How could I fight against fate?
36360How could an imposter act out St. Udo Brand''s history?
36360How could he stoop to such insincerity, who used to glory in his haughty plain speaking?
36360How could one living being rehearse so faithfully the part of another?
36360How do we know that the news of his being killed in battle was not true?
36360How fared it with poor Margaret?
36360How had she wronged him by her terror of him?
36360How long is this farce of yours to last, Miss Margaret?
36360How mean, then, was his heart, which ascribed such abject meanness to her?
36360How much did Miss Walsingham agree to give you?
36360How was it that he cringed in the doorway there and with a forced stare met her gaze of bewilderment?
36360How was it you got away from my hand?"
36360How would you like to receive letters from your Julie, sealed with a ducal coronet?"
36360How_ could_ she have cast that reproachful thought at Heaven and believed herself forsaken?
36360Howdo, Julie?"
36360I ca n''t help my face being like twenty other people''s in a breath, can I, Miss Walsingham?
36360I have been a great bother to you from first to last, have n''t I?
36360I lost you ages ago, you know-- ages ago, when I was pure and loving as yourself; and see what I am now for want of you, Perdita?"
36360I say, Miss Margaret, what took me-- a fit?"
36360I suppose you want to hear what induced me to fly off at a tangent to the other side of England, do n''t you?
36360I was sure enough he''d have to eat his own words some time, but sure, now, what will ye say to hear that he was right?
36360I who hope to be co- heir of that goodly pile beyond us before this year is out?
36360I''m afraid you''ll say you''re not, but do n''t if there''s the ghost of a chance when I ask you-- are you open to offers?"
36360If he had given me his dear company when I fled to Richmond, he would not have been to- day where he is; but would he?
36360In honor of the day, eh?"
36360In the first place, what was that extraordinary piece which you played?"
36360Is Miss Walsingham sufficiently wrapped for this cold wind?"
36360Is he dead and gone forever?
36360Is he in?"
36360Is he much enamored with you?
36360Is his memory so short?"
36360Is it long ago?"
36360Is it only to tease me?
36360Is it possible that I have been so insanely mistaken in the man as this?"
36360Is it possible that this can be you?"
36360Is she here?
36360Is that what you wish to say?"
36360Is that you, miss?"
36360Is there in the whole world a more useless, ruined wretch than myself?
36360Is this a revised and improved edition of St. Udo?
36360It is better than the death by treachery, is it not?
36360It seemed to be the Brand coat of arms; and yet who would use this crest when all the Brands were dead but one?
36360It seems as if we were destined for each other, does it not?
36360Let me be of service to you?"
36360Let me read it here?"
36360Lucky dog, who is to be his successor?
36360Madam asks will you have refreshments?"
36360Madam,"with grim pleasantry,"shall you banish me to the top of Mont Blanc in your next letter about a mythological Colonel Brand?"
36360Mademoiselle does not wish M. Mortlake to escape with his life?"
36360Margaret Walsingham, how can you be so foolish?"
36360Margaret was gazing breathlessly in the brilliant, heartless woman''s face, and her voice faltered, as she asked:"Can you send me on that enterprise?
36360Marguerite, to you, when she might have been the countess, when she might have loved me?
36360May I ask the name of the lady under whose kind charge I leave Lady Julie?"
36360May I?"
36360Maybe you''ve heard of Reed, who served the colonel for a while?"
36360Miss Walsingham, where are you to go?"
36360Miss Walsingham?
36360Must she leave her giddy darling, Lady Julie?
36360My dear madam, do I describe the scene accurately?
36360My hours devoted to finding out the world, and presided over by idiot Credulity?
36360My poor child?
36360My visions of fame-- of love-- of happiness?
36360Not even walk through the Polonaise with me?
36360Nothing about how I enjoyed my trip, or stood it after my illness; only''Have you seen her?''
36360Now do tell me, Margaret, dear!--there is nobody half as much interested as I am-- are you really going to marry him after all?
36360Now why was I not murdered, according to their agreement?
36360Now, Miss Walsingham, darling, wo n''t you take a friend''s advice and wear a ducal coronet?
36360Now, am I to suffer an impostor to personate Colonel Brand, because I am a woman and feel a natural terror of the villain?
36360Now, d''ye see, Calembours, how we can turn his tomfoolery to account?''
36360Of course you will be going away in the morning?"
36360Oh my heart; why was I doomed to be the Marplot of his life?
36360Oh, do I see Miss Walsingham?"
36360Oh, my darling, ca n''t you save St. Udo from ruin for my sake?--do you grudge to do something for my sake?"
36360Oh, with Harry Falconcourt?
36360Or are you anxious to go in this absurd manner so that you may blason to the whole world how badly I have treated you?"
36360Or my hours devoted to revenging my injuries upon the world, and presided over by the great Father of lies?
36360Perhaps a burglar?
36360Perhaps-- who knows?
36360Perhaps_ you_ fear that the laurels of a whole army would not cover your deficiencies?"
36360Shall I interfere?
36360Shall I turn round and tell Mrs. Chetwode that Colonel Brand has threatened me because I can not promise to accept him without deliberation?"
36360Shall_ mon ami_ live the short and merry life of conviviality with me in New York, or shall he choose the short and beastly bad career of a soldier?"
36360She longed to go with this dove- like creature whom she had saved from death; her heart clung to her-- how could she leave her?
36360She was a waif sent wandering through a world which shrank from her as if Cain''s mark burned upon her brow?
36360Should n''t she be here?"
36360Should she trust to the blood- thirsty brute, or to the blood- thirsty man?
36360So the future I offer you is this: Will you wait patiently and constantly for the man you swore to be true to forever?
36360So you expected me to be caught by Lady Juliana Ducie, did you?
36360Stabbed by a tailor''s needle?
36360Suppose then, you run off from the colonel and come to me?
36360Surely we are old friends by this time?"
36360Surely you believe now that we have found him?"
36360Surely you ca n''t be well?"
36360Surely you will not let her die before that wish is fulfilled?"
36360Tears, my darling?
36360The grand lion- hearted king, by the hand of a fawning slave?"
36360The next entry was written with the sneer of a triumphant demon:"Thought you would trip me, did you?
36360Then the fortune will doubtless revert to the rightful heir if you are sincere in refusing it?"
36360Then these songs, so wild, so caroling, so purely joyous-- could Sappho sing more burningly of happiness and love?
36360Then you did n''t send the doctor off, did you?"
36360WAS IT A RUSE?
36360WILL HE BETRAY HIMSELF?
36360Was Thoms Roland Mortlake?
36360Was ever yet a woman more completely in a murderer''s power?
36360Was he not too brave to fall by treachery?"
36360Was it Heaven''s will that all whom she loved should sting her thus?
36360Was it Perdita whom you wished so much to keep by you?"
36360Was it a perception of evil, slow creeping toward him from the gloomy future-- slow, but sure to come as death himself?
36360Was it my fault that my father gave me opportunity to hate him and his, by his unjust treatment of me?
36360Was n''t it a burglar?"
36360Was that calm good- by to him from a heart indifferent?
36360Was there no way by which she could extinguish it and leave herself in the friendly darkness?
36360Was this the hero of her dreams, this evil- faced man who looked at her so insolently?
36360We will be brother colonels,_ mon ami_, and Thoms-- what shall you do?"
36360Well will you please ask Mr. Davenport to come?
36360Well, how did your adventure end?"
36360Well, well, do n''t be so stiff with me, your Julie-- why should you?
36360What are you doing here alone?
36360What better life does a brave soldier expect?
36360What brought you to Key West, and what have you to do with me?"
36360What can this mean?
36360What could it be?
36360What day of the month is this?"
36360What did he take her for?
36360What did she want of me?"
36360What do you say of the declaration I have made as to the man''s identity?"
36360What do you say to this, sir?"
36360What do you say?"
36360What do you suppose has occurred, Miss Walsingham?
36360What do you think of all this, eh?"
36360What do you think of that for a little romance?"
36360What do you want with such a history?"
36360What does she expect to end in?"
36360What does that mean?
36360What does that necessitate, then?
36360What else would he say to revenge his death, I''d like to know?
36360What fool ever called hers the softest sex?"
36360What for we remain under fortune''s ban?
36360What for you wear that face of parchment when I come to preside over the hand- grip, and to bless, and to be the good fairy?
36360What had frozen the generous words on her lips?
36360What had he done to her that had thrown her into this helpless lethargy?
36360What had she done?
36360What has Mortlake done with St. Udo Brand?
36360What is it that she says?"
36360What is that?"
36360What made me suppose for an instant that I was back to earth?
36360What may the nature of her ravings be?"
36360What obstacle can there be?''
36360What of this last bagatelle of a victory to- day?
36360What part?"
36360What say you, my Brand?
36360What seraph is this who is bearing me upon her bosom after my fight with the throes of death?
36360What shall I do?"
36360What shall I do?"
36360What shall I tell you of?
36360What soft bosom is this upon which my head is lying?
36360What was this Confederate soldier about?"
36360What will you have?"
36360What would she not give to win the sweet girl''s love?
36360What''s in my mouth?
36360When I began to scream and jump up, you held me, did n''t you?"
36360When did you come here?"
36360When did you find me?"
36360Where are my brilliant prospects now?
36360Where came she from, who had lain entombed in a holocaust of flame?
36360Where did you get the sorry rascal, Calembours?"
36360Where did you go?"
36360Where had she seen that figure in the clay- colored smock before?
36360Where had she wandered to?
36360Where is he?"
36360Where was he all that night after she went off, I''d like to hear?
36360Where?
36360Which is the greater charm, do you think?"
36360Which of us is likely to triumph?"
36360Who cared for Margaret Walsingham?
36360Who has been vexing you, child?"
36360Who was lurking about so late?
36360Who was she?
36360Who would think to look for her in Lady Juliana''s companion?
36360Who would weep for her if she died?
36360Whose bed was she lying in, hung with red calico curtains?
36360Why are you not more ambitious?
36360Why are you so pale and troubled?
36360Why attempt any exposure at all?
36360Why did I not saber him in those days in Virginia?
36360Why did his lurid eyeballs shift and shrink, and grow small and hare- like, when they had ever met hers, with the full glare of an eagle?
36360Why did n''t you come to me immediately, papa?"
36360Why did she let him rush to every conclusion but the right one?
36360Why did you write me this letter, Miss Margaret Walsingham?"
36360Why do these deep gray eyes hide themselves from me?
36360Why do you run upon my trail like a sleuth- hound?
36360Why does that flush creep to brow and gentle cheek?
36360Why had he not brushed the cobweb off before?
36360Why had she lit the tell- tale candle?
36360Why had she not rather turned her from these castle doors, four years ago, than reserve her for such a fate as this?
36360Why not glean the benefit then?
36360Why not keep his promise?
36360Why not sooner suggest pleasure, duty, or what say you to friendship for you,_ mon camarade_?"
36360Why not?
36360Why should I?
36360Why vill you turn the back upon our merry company?
36360Why-- why did you enter the army, Edgar?"
36360Will nobody but Rufus Gay and Andrew Davenport do to make up side actors for your serio- comic tomfooleries?"
36360Will you come to the conservatory?
36360Will you drive me over after breakfast, if you please?"
36360Will you have pistols or sabers?''
36360Will you implore him to come?
36360Will you let a possible murderer escape you because a woman points him out?
36360Will you let me stand here while you stand without, and describe to me the scene which passed upon the occasion of our first meeting in this room?"
36360Will you not, Lady Julie?"
36360Will you permit me to amuse myself with an experiment?
36360Will you see the colonel to- night?"
36360Will you wait a few minutes longer?"
36360Will you walk with me, and let me have a conversation with you?
36360Will you, jointly with Mr. Emersham, undertake the charge of these documents for two days?"
36360With such a model before them, who could remain a boor?"
36360With what plausible excuse can he have duped the suspicious Davenport, and the humane Gay, that they have both left me in his power?
36360Without bidding his grace farewell?
36360Wo n''t you have me for a sister?"
36360Would I let my brother drop Seven- Oak Waaste through his fingers?
36360Would you not like to be the mistress of Castle Brand, and the owner of Seven- Oak Waaste, my proud Margaret?"
36360Would you not love to pull the eyes out of Mademoiselle Marguerite with those pretty_ leetle_ nails?"
36360Would your dog recognize you by the name of St. Udo Brand, do you suppose?"
36360You do n''t mean to be so insane as to marry him, Miss Walsingham, darling?"
36360You have risked your life nursing me through this infectious plague; what have I ever done to you that could merit such repayment?"
36360You really expect me to treat him as if he was St. Udo Brand?"
36360You remember the person who sat opposite you in the cars?"
36360You see this_ bourse_?
36360You will give him your fortune, and live on your wits in future?
36360You will let me know where you purpose residing until you procure the situation you are in search of?"
36360You will remember, Mr. Mortlake?
36360You will stick to your colonel in spite of my advice?
36360You will wait in New York for news of me, wo n''t you?"
36360You wo n''t object to sitting by my nice warm fire here until I come back?
36360You''ll waltz with me?"
36360_ Allons_, monsieur, will you meet me in the court out there?''
36360_ Can this be St. Udo Brand?
36360_ Ma foi!_ shall I refuse it when it comes begging at my door?
36360_ Mon Dieu!_ did not the jade, Madame Hesslein, take the bread out of my mouth in the amplitude of her revenge?
36360_ Mon ange_, what more can I say?"
36360_ Ouf!_ how can it be?
36360_ mon camarade_, and do you call yourself a man, prying into Madam Fortune''s good graces?
36360am I to unvail an impostor and find an assassin in this man?"
36360and did n''t nobody give ye a seat in their wagon down here?
36360and loose monsieur''s neck- cloth, which was to strangle him?"
36360are you rehearsing a part?
36360breathed the lady, with bitter tears,"will you cast me off for the third time?
36360but you will return to your estates?"
36360can such a monster escape justice?"
36360comrade, what then will the inside of the_ maison_ be?
36360count, could you believe that a fiend in man''s form could be so dastardly?
36360exclaimed Lady Dora scornfully,"and is it you, mavourneen, that I see with the blush of shame on account of him?
36360ha?
36360has my_ fiance_ nothing to say?"
36360have I lost my prize at the last trick, my Castle Brand, my good luck, my fair play, my amends for seven months of toil under his boot- heel?
36360he roars,''did I ask you to have anything to do with that?
36360he will play eavesdropper, will he?"
36360how shall I escape your vengeance?"
36360is he not here?
36360is this Christ- like care for me at your King''s command?
36360might_ she_ not hallow to him his resurrection by bands of love?
36360moaned poor Margaret, bursting into tears;"and oh, what shall I do?
36360moaned the woman, in harrowing tones,"must you go?
36360mused St. Udo,"and what does she know of my friend, the chevalier?
36360my dear?"
36360or did it hide beneath its cold exterior the smoldering passion which sometimes her eyes had seemed to express?
36360or have I been changed into a man with a human heart, to be prized by a noble woman?
36360prison fare?''
36360said Lady Juliana, fretfully,"and see my father before you go?
36360she ejaculated,"what is this?
36360she thought,"Can I not force him to betray himself?"
36360so suddenly?
36360the nurse that you have clung to, and moaned for when your glazed eyes could not see me?
36360the rascal has escaped, has he?"
36360trembled Margaret;"if she insisted on giving it up to you, and rejecting all claim to it?"
36360trust my unwary heart to the red- hot fingers of a Torquemada?
36360what do you take us all for?
36360what necromancer''s dream was this?
36360what was that?
36360where?
36360whispered she, at last;"is he not very weak and ill?"
36360who is it that will not be gulled by Ludovic de Calembours?"
36360why has she taken such a dislike to me?"
36360why is love so deathless in a woman''s breast when it is ever her curse, her ruin?
36360yes; had she been blind to read such nobility in yon ill- favored face?
36360you Thoms, why did I not kick you oftener?
36360you are my wife, are you?"
36360you deny the imputation?
36360you did n''t surely make that hole yourself?"
36360you did not expect this chapter in the story, did you?
8579Am I to fall in China, and see my friends no more? 8579 Am I to sleep in such a grave?
8579Is there one here who wishes to be excused from this work? 8579 Must I be born again?"
8579One who stood near her said,''O Death, where is thy sting? 8579 Scenes of sacred grace and pleasure, Holy days and Sabbath bell, Richest, brightest, sweetest treasure, Can I say a last farewell?
8579Who will resign his place in the missionary ranks, and let us go forth to do battle for the truth?
8579Who would not wish to die like those Whom God''s own Spirit deigns to bless? 8579 Why do we mourn departing friends, Or shake at death''s alarms?
8579''Did Christ o''er sinners weep?
8579And how can I stay?
8579And required it, think you, no effort to bring her mind into this godlike state?
8579And shall our cheeks be dry?''"
8579And shall we weep?
8579And where are they now?
8579Are_ all_ from the town?''
8579But how could she part with her darling one?
8579But who does not know that Jehovah is able to accomplish more by our deaths than_ we_ are able to accomplish by our lives?
8579Can I leave you, Far in distant lands to dwell?
8579Cost it no toil to discipline the heart to such sore trials?
8579Could they not be obtained?
8579Death found her ready, and led a_ willing_ victim down into the sepulchre, who exclaimed, as she entered it,"O Death, where is thy sting?
8579Have I looked upon the shores of America for the last time?"
8579Her language was,--"Shall I be carried to the skies On flowery beds of ease, While others fought to win the prize And sailed through bloody seas?"
8579Her last words were,"How long, O Lord, how long?"
8579How can I go with but little prospect of return?
8579How can I leave my mother here while oceans roll between us?
8579How could she behold him borne away to a distant land, to see her face no more?
8579How could she leave all these?
8579How could she leave that parent?
8579How could she say"Farewell,"and do it with the consciousness that she should gaze upon that mild countenance and that loved form no more?
8579In the service of such a Master, who of his followers would talk of sacrifice?
8579Is it no privilege to aid in forwarding the only cause for which the world was made and for which all nature stands?
8579Is it no_ privilege_ to help forward that cause which has engaged the hearts and hands of all the wise and good of every age?
8579Just converted, fresh from the public vows of consecration, the anxious question,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?"
8579O Grave, where is thy victory?
8579O Grave, where is thy victory?"
8579O, has earth ever witnessed such a spectacle as that?
8579O, when will they turn and live?
8579The old man, with his white locks and streaming eyes, asked,"What shall I do to be saved?"
8579The whole city felt the influence of the work of grace; and the sceptic, in amazement, asked,"What do these things mean?"
8579There, beneath the cool breath of autumn, they united in singing,--"When shall we all meet again?
8579To a friend in Beverly she writes as follows:"How can I go and leave those who have done so much for me, and who will be so sorry for my loss?
8579To the question,"Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?"
8579What can_ I_ do to believe?
8579What shall I do?''
8579When shall we all meet again?
8579While in the agony of death she said,''Why can not I be released?''
8579Who can wish her back to earth?
8579Why, my brother, would you be excused?
8579Years ago the question was,"Who will go?"
8579be buried away from home, with such a tree as this to wave over me?"
8579but now the question is being asked,"Who will stay at home and let_ me_ go?"
60222And he-- this Paul himself?
60222And the best motive power?
60222And there were many in the ship?
60222And this Paul-- tell me-- what teacheth he concerning women?
60222And while they were away the men would have a quiet time, eh?
60222And you are helping-- you are one of them?
60222By the way,said Sir Robert, casually, as they resumed their seats,"is Wardlaw with us?"
60222Can we last as long?
60222Do you believe in the theory of pre- existence?
60222Dog of a Christian, are thy head and heart of stone?
60222Eh, what d''ye mean?
60222Father,cried the girl passionately, as she closed the Book,"Why did you keep it from me?
60222How can a man love''em when he sees the mischief they''ve done by their ambitions and pertinacity?
60222I''ll ask you one question,she exclaimed, in tones so shrill that here and there a laugh broke out:"Are we inferior to poor Tommy Atkins?"
60222In whom thou dost believe?
60222Is Mr. Renshaw still living-- is it_ really_ true that he is still alive?
60222Is it your pleasure that this lady be heard further?
60222Is not Paul the Apostle of Him who blessed the marriage feast of Cana?
60222Is there danger?
60222Is there no more to tell?
60222Is this the first time you have felt like this?
60222It is your advice?
60222Must I, to- night?
60222Once,she went on, hesitatingly,"the first time we went up in the_ Bladud_, you remember that night...?"
60222See that, sir? 60222 See that?"
60222So you''ve made the young lady''s acquaintance on the river?
60222The storm had lasted long?
60222Then he forbiddeth not to marry?
60222Then why, O Lucius Flaccus, hast thou built here an altar to our Goddess Sul?
60222We ca n''t get down?
60222What about the Corps of Commissionaires?
60222What about the old Household troops?
60222What age would Renshaw be by this time?
60222What do you mean?
60222What does it mean?
60222What would you do? 60222 What''s that?"
60222What, I wonder, is the true philosophy of life?
60222Where is he now-- is he ill, is he safe?
60222Why do n''t you answer? 60222 Why not?"
60222Why the devil do n''t you speak? 60222 Will the speaker favour us with the authority for her quotations?"
60222Will you not cry out?
60222Will you trust yourself to me?
60222Would anyone like a sail?
60222Yes, yes?
60222You can steer?
60222You mean your father?
60222***** How and why had this dastardly combined attack on England come to pass?
60222And everywhere the question was asked:"Where is he?
60222And if by any chance it should come to fighting at close quarters, had woman shown herself lacking in courage, or even in ferocity in such encounters?
60222And now that the lifeless hand of the President had dropped the real sceptre, whose hand was to take it up?
60222And what should she give in exchange for that submissive tender love of wife for husband which the Sacred Book declared to be the law of God?
60222And, worse still, what might not she dare and do, as the champion and inciter of woman, if the head of the Government should die?
60222But how''s the worm going to manage it?"
60222But now?
60222But what can we do without a leader in Parliament?
60222But where was the leader of men?
60222Call these creatures men?
60222Come, man, what the deuce are you driving at?"
60222Could these things be reconciled in the light of the revelation that had come to her?
60222Did not a certain abbot of Iona go to Ireland to organise a movement against the custom of summoning women to join the standard and fight the enemy?
60222Did not the crime of which she was convicted strike at the root of the religion of the people?
60222Did you ever read how Balmerino faced the headsman after Culloden?
60222Do you suppose we want an army of Amazons armed with lethal weapons to keep in order?"
60222Does n''t that suggest an opportunity?"
60222God in heaven, could it be truly that?
60222Great God in heaven!--men call upon the name of God even when they profess to be agnostics-- could she be going to die?
60222Had any confidential information been received from certain oriental visitors who, from time to time, had come to this country?
60222Had he not sought by magical aid to soar aloft like the eagle, only to fall and be dashed to pieces on Minerva''s altar?
60222He glanced at Wilton:"Ready?"
60222He swore irritably, and then roared an inquiry:"Are you there?
60222History has illustrated that over and over again?"
60222How are we going to regulate international commerce?
60222How shall he face the unfathomable whirlpool that yawns for the frail boat in which he is compelled to trust?
60222I have read it, or did I dream it?"
60222If he did not look out he would go there and get killed himself presently, and that would be a nice thing to happen, would n''t it?
60222If one had repeated to most of these globe- trotters Gloster''s question in King Lear:"Dost thou know Dover?"
60222In love with whom?
60222Is it true he is still alive?"
60222Is n''t nearly every man, in both services?
60222It was her own voice that died away, and what was this mysterious sound-- rising from the valley with the mists that melted at the break of day?
60222Linton, raising his own cap, turned towards the illustrious passenger:"Shall we start, sir?"
60222Or could it be that they were running short of ammunition?
60222She sighed and looked at him wistfully, then said appealingly:"You will come upstairs?"
60222THE COUP D''ÉTAT?
60222The voice that spake to the woman in the garden seemed to be speaking still:"What is this that thou hast done?"
60222Then came another problem-- what was the right sort of motor?
60222Then once more the Vice- President vehemently appealed to the audience:"Who will join the Amazons of England?"
60222Then the Vice- President, in tones now piercing and tremulous, cried out:"Who will join the First Regiment of the Amazons of England?"
60222There is something I can do for you in your trouble?"
60222To what purpose do we expose our lives in war?
60222To- morrow we''ll be just the same as ever, wo n''t we?
60222Was it not an American, not an English, Admiral who had come to the rescue of the British colony?
60222Was it the word"Forgive?"
60222Was not blood thicker than water?
60222Was the reign of woman to be inaugurated on new and bolder lines; or would man, in the nick of time, re- assert himself?
60222Were not the American people our own kith and kin?
60222Were they in for a lecture on geography?
60222What about imports and exports?
60222What could it mean?
60222What did Wilton want?
60222What did he say?
60222What did these things betoken?
60222What do you think?
60222What is his good, and what is his evil?
60222What is man in presence of the waterspout that towers from the ocean to the clouds?
60222What is your advice?"
60222What mad idea was this?
60222What might not Lady Cat accomplish in the temporary absence of the President?
60222What more natural than that most of the passengers should land and fill up the time by the inspection of the points of interest in the town?
60222What of the Empire?
60222What part of the coast is that down there?"
60222What was he doing now?
60222What was he trying to do?
60222What was that silent log- like thing the waves were rolling yonder in the semi- darkness?
60222What was there to be afraid of?
60222What was this?
60222What would it profit a woman to force herself out of her ordained place in the plan of creation?
60222What''s the best air- ship that ever was built against a wind like this?"
60222What''s this I hear about the Fort?"
60222What, he vaguely wondered, was Wilton doing now?
60222What, then, would be likely to limit her revenge or curb her ambition if an opportunity like the present could be made to serve her purpose?
60222What?
60222Where''s my book?"
60222Which mine would be exploded first?
60222Which shall it be?"
60222Who are you?"
60222Who can limit the life of the ego-- fix its beginning, or appoint its end?"
60222Who could possibly credit such a tale?
60222Who is it?"
60222Who wants an air- ship calling for his parlour- maid at the attic window?
60222Who wants thieves sailing up to his balcony?
60222Who would dare to deny that women were as brave as men?
60222Why did you do it?"
60222Why do we defend our wives and sisters from a foreign enemy if Rome has tyrants who incite the people to violent and vindictive acts?
60222Why had he not used it before?
60222Why not?"
60222Why not?"
60222Why should you help me, unless I tell you all, everything-- everything, fully and frankly?
60222Why was he sawing frantically, convulsively, at that tightened cord?
60222Will you read this?"
60222Would it be his turn next?
60222You shall be very nice, and I shall forgive you, because, after all, I do love you, do n''t I?"
60222and suppose, after all, poor Renshaw is dead?"
60222exclaimed Herrick, springing to his feet,"do n''t you see one over yonder?"
60222exclaimed the General,"were Thackeray and Dickens prejudiced?
60222is that the_ Bladud_?"
60222she asked, abruptly,"do you think it possible that in some former state of being you and I or others can have met before?"
60222still the gods?"
60222what was the matter?
8108And who was Washington, mamma?
8108John,said his grieved father,"is this dreadful thing true that I hear of thee?
8108What book was that?
8108_ Is_ there anybody in the old house?
8108Are these names familiar to the readers of this essay?
8108But can we say with honest reproach,"forgotten poets"?
8108But how much is he read, compared with the contemporary singers?
8108But what then?
8108But who knows what was the verdict in Cooper''s lawsuits to vindicate himself, and who cares?
8108But who would accost the Moses of Michael Angelo, or believe the sitting Medici in his chapel to have speech?
8108Did anybody say so?
8108Did it enable us, also, to inform England that in Robert Browning she had another poet?
8108Do Dab and Tab expect to gather pears from peach- trees?
8108Do you wonder, as you see him and hear him, that your heart, bewildered, asks and asks again,"Is he human?
8108For what is the dramatic art, like all other arts, but a representation?
8108Has thee ever been to see the play- actress Frances Kemble?"
8108Hawthorne?"
8108He does not chide you if you spend effort and life itself in the ardent van of progress, but he asks simply,"Is six so much better than half a dozen?"
8108He fancied that he ought to inform the men of the fact, but then he was stopped by the reflection-- who was to provide for them if they became free?
8108He only says, with that glimmering smile,"So soon?"
8108His look and manner and habit of thought cry"Who goes there?"
8108How can these poor beings find food and shelter away from home?''
8108How could Thackeray not think Swift a misanthrope and Sterne a factitious sentimentalist?
8108How could it be otherwise?
8108How many of them really survive in the anthology only?
8108How much of their poetry can those readers repeat?
8108How, then, can he help what we call satire, if he accept Mrs. Rawdon Crawley''s invitation and describe her party?
8108Is Milton a forgotten author?
8108Is Plato forgotten?
8108Is anything of literature lost that deserves longer remembrance?
8108Is crime never romantic, then, until distance ennobles it?
8108Is he a man?"
8108Is it a hard fate to give pleasure to those who listen because those out of hearing do not applaud?
8108Is it because the earliest impressions, made when the mind is most plastic, are most durable?
8108Is it not the perpetual surprise of all Jane''s friends that she should love Timothy instead of Thomas?
8108Is it nothing to please those who listen, because those who are out of hearing do not stop and applaud?
8108It is easy to summon spirits-- but if they come?
8108Its charm is perennial and indescribable; and why should it not be, since it was written at a time in which, as he says,"I was happy?"
8108Presently he said to me, politely,"You are English, no?"
8108Reversing the question,"Where be the bad people buried?"
8108Shall we say that this is the sum of his power, and the secret of his satire?
8108She said, I do not know; how should I know?
8108Sydney Smith''s question,"Who reads an American book?"
8108That is to say, what is there in the verse of Percival that should command interest and attention to- day?
8108The Muse of New England was staid and stately-- or was she, after all, not a true daughter of Jove, but a tenth Muse, an Anne Bradstreet?
8108The lines to the katydid, with"L''Inconnue"--"Is thy name Mary, maiden fair?"
8108Then, should Dab and Tab, the eminent critics, step up and demand that her eyes be a pale blue, and her stomacher higher around the neck?
8108Three years after he graduated, in 1828, he published anonymously a slight romance with the motto from Southey,"Wilt thou go with me?"
8108What are these tales of supernatural appearances, as well authenticated as any news of the day-- and what is the sphere which they imply?
8108What could she do?
8108What is the more subtle intellectual apprehension of fate and its influence upon imagination and life?
8108What was Hero''s-- what was Francesco di Rimini''s-- what was Juliet''s?
8108Why had she shot from her sphere in this silly way?"
8108Why should not Percival be a forgotten poet?
8108Yet how many know him except by name?
8108is he human?"
8108is it weed or fish or floating hair-- A tress o''golden hair, O''drowned maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea?
8108or because youth is that golden age bounding the confines of memory and floating forever-- an alluring mirage as we recede farther from it?
8108or, more properly, can it be lost?
8108the wondering pilgrim in the Park asks,"Where be Irving and Bryant and Cooper?"
38413''Jones invited us?''
38413''Well, Jones, how do you like Damtidam?'' 38413 A fellow- Director, I suppose?"
38413A seat in his box?
38413Ah, but if you vas me,said Yankelà ©,"vould you rader marry a Tedesco or a Sephardi?"
38413Ah, vy can I not hope to call you fader- in- law?
38413Ai n''t he been in, sir?
38413All?
38413Am I a dog?
38413Am I a thief that you should go over my pockets? 38413 Am I dreaming, sire?"
38413And could n''t all that be done at the theatre?
38413And do you think I do not feel the shame as deeply as you?
38413And does_ she_ know?
38413And how d''ye think the words should sound, coming from the creature''s belly? 38413 And if I have?"
38413And my compensation?
38413And paid before the wedding, mind?
38413And so thou hast employed this pigeon as a carrier between thee and this suburban young person?
38413And suppose? 38413 And supposing?"
38413And this is how one helps a brother in Israel?
38413And vat about de province in England?
38413And vat of dat?
38413And were you not called to the Law after me? 38413 And what hast thou to laugh at?"
38413And what more do I want? 38413 And what of my profit?"
38413And what prevents you taking your turn in the graveyard watches?
38413And when shall we tell thy father?
38413And who is the debtor?
38413And why dost thou not have her?
38413And you do n''t want to?
38413And you have experienced that?
38413And you never ran away with Lefkovitch?
38413And, pray, how came you to carry his box?
38413Are not these your ten items?
38413Are there not persons in the world who would jump at the chance of acquiring it? 38413 Are you Mr. da Costa?"
38413Are you at home, miss?
38413Are you forgetting what we shall be needing our savings for?
38413Are you too lazy to come here?
38413Are you unsound in the head? 38413 At this very moment Sugarman is trying to persuade him-- not so?
38413Because I am a lord?
38413Brute?
38413But are they in the pink of fashion?
38413But are they safe? 38413 But d''ye no ken this is a speakin''part?"
38413But do you mean to say he has saved fifty pounds?
38413But do you tell this to da Costa the father or da Costa the marriage- broker?
38413But do you think you''re the only acquaintance who''s not contented with his street and number? 38413 But dost thou think he will have me, little father?"
38413But have you the courage to look Jones in the face and tell him that?
38413But how can you do dat?
38413But how do you know anyone will bring it out?
38413But how do you know she''ll come?
38413But if I do n''t want one?
38413But is he?
38413But is n''t it of value to anybody_ but_ the owner?
38413But suppose I lose it all?
38413But this is gross treachery-- what right hadst thou to make these underhand advances in our absence?
38413But what is a man to do? 38413 But what necessity was there for that?"
38413But what says the Midrash? 38413 But what was his motive?"
38413But what?
38413But where will he be getting this money from?
38413But who are you, that I should give you money for the Synagogue?
38413But whom have you got in your eye?
38413But why did you give it up?
38413But why do you come to me?
38413But why is it called_ The Learned Pig_, and how has it escaped publication?
38413But why not?
38413But will he consent?
38413But wo n''t you come in? 38413 But you be coming, too?"
38413But you came to me for one?
38413But you care for that soldier I saw you out with last Sunday?
38413But you have n''t got no orders?
38413But''ow is it_ I_ never gets no presents like I''ears yer say_ you_ does?
38413But''ow vos I to know, sir?
38413But, seriously, what''s all the row about? 38413 But, then, where does the satisfaction come in?"
38413But,I gasped,"even if it was possible, why should you give away what you do n''t want?
38413By the way, how is the dowager- duchess?
38413Ca n''t we work the joke without such a lot of capital? 38413 Ca n''t you come back for them?"
38413Ca n''t you see the President wants a glass of water?
38413Call me an actor?
38413Can not you understand that I have donated it to the Synagogue?
38413Can you see anything?
38413Come with you? 38413 Compensation for what?"
38413Confess what?
38413Could I do less?
38413Could n''t we have the operation performed here?
38413Could you bring her round to my house to- night?
38413D''you mean to say I may get noting?
38413Did I ever say I was a single man?
38413Did I not get rid of him cleverly?
38413Did I not say work was uncertain?
38413Did I not say you be a superior race?
38413Did I not tell you that he always supped with me on Friday evenings?
38413Did n''t I say there was something sticking behind?
38413Did n''t you hear me calling?
38413Did n''t you?
38413Did you come here to insult me?
38413Did you think I was going to pay?
38413Did your lordship say Damtidam?
38413Dinna ye hear me growlin''and grizzlin''and squealin''and skirlin''?
38413Do I hear aricht?
38413Do I understand that you wish to break off the engagement?
38413Do I understand you have travelled about the country by yourself?
38413Do n''t you know?
38413Do n''t you remember me-- Mr. Pry-- from the Bachelor''s Club?
38413Do n''t you see, I have already dodged Death? 38413 Do n''t you think so, Miss Harper-- Ethelberta?
38413Do n''t you? 38413 Do n''t you?"
38413Do you begin that again?
38413Do you come my way, Yankelà ©?
38413Do you deny that your daughter is a traitress? 38413 Do you forget it is a Synagogue fund?
38413Do you forget that Yankelà © has broken bread at your table? 38413 Do you forget to whom you are talking?"
38413Do you hear what I say?
38413Do you know what I have a mind to do? 38413 Do you know what I''ll tell you?"
38413Do you mean I am to publish it under your name?
38413Do you mean to say I am not to pay this money?
38413Do you mean to say he bequeathed him to you?
38413Do you mean when he commemorates the anniversary of the death of one of his family? 38413 Do you not perceive that you are disconcerting my hairdresser?"
38413Do you not recognise the arms of my friend, Beau Belasco?
38413Do you question the first principle of our constitution?
38413Do you still entertain the possibility of his innocence?
38413Do you think I can not do simple addition?
38413Do you think I''m an accessory after the fact?
38413Do you think, gentlemen, that I have not suffered from this passion of a Tedesco for my daughter? 38413 Do you wish to have the neighbours hear you again?"
38413Do you-- do you-- mind my looking?
38413Dost thou accuse me of unfairness?
38413Dost thou dare say the King hath spoken untruth?
38413Dost thou expect to keep the creature off our coasts by guarding the head of the river?
38413Dost thou think to feed the Serpent with thy pigeon?
38413Dost thou think to find the Serpent of the Sea in the air?
38413Eh? 38413 Eh?
38413Eh?
38413Elevenpence?
38413For what? 38413 From me?"
38413From whom else? 38413 From whom?"
38413G- g- one out?
38413Good afternoon, Jonathan,said Grobstock jovially,"I''ll take that salmon there-- how much?"
38413Good evening, hast thou er-- scotched the Serpent?
38413Had you not better take the salmon home to your wife first?
38413Has any of you his equipage without?
38413Has n''t he, Mr. da Costa?
38413Has the Green Prince had his?
38413Have I?
38413Have n''t I been here all the time? 38413 Have you already died?"
38413Have you invited my friends to dinner?
38413Have you looked under the bed?
38413Have you not confessed?
38413Have you property in de Holy Land?
38413He has saved it?
38413He is young, strong, God- fearing--"Has he any money?
38413Hired?
38413How came you to send him to her?
38413How can I live midout you for a fader- in- law?
38413How can I live with an old witch like that?
38413How can I? 38413 How can I?
38413How can you know so exact?
38413How can you say so? 38413 How can you?"
38413How could I?
38413How dare you?
38413How darest thou read my letters?
38413How did it begin?
38413How do I know your taste?
38413How do you know my name?
38413How do you know they are not dead?
38413How do you make dat out?
38413How do you propose to do it?
38413How do, Lucy? 38413 How long have you been in England?"
38413How many hours do you give me?
38413How much did you vow on my behalf?
38413How much do you think it would be?
38413How much less?
38413How much vill it be?
38413How much will he have?
38413How should I know, sir?
38413How so?
38413How so?
38413How so?
38413How, then?
38413How_ are_ you, dear Miss Newell?
38413I am sorry if I misunderstood,murmured the poor President,"but how, then, do you owe the money?"
38413I did n''t catch-- how much was that?
38413I have come for my ten pounds,he said, and reminded him of his promise(?).
38413I have not shed their blood-- have I not given freely of my hard- earned gold?
38413I presume you will not be taking your meals in public?
38413I say, old fellow,exclaimed Towers reproachfully,"is n''t this just going it a little too far?"
38413I see from your light you are still working; but is n''t it time my Emanuel left off?
38413I see; but still, why not tell the truth about it? 38413 I suppose you have found out how to make the memory- transferring machine?"
38413I thought you did not know the Rabbi, Mr. da Costa?
38413I wonder what they''ll tot up to?
38413I-- I-- mean,stammered Grobstock--"why should I contribute to a Portuguese Synagogue?"
38413I? 38413 I?
38413I?
38413I?
38413If I do not buy salmon when I have two guineas,he answered quietly,"when shall I buy salmon?
38413If I only chose?
38413In Mr. da Costa''s box, I suppose?
38413In what other sense? 38413 In your box?"
38413Invite a man to lunch, and expect him to square the bill?
38413Is dere no vay for me to be converted to Spanish Judaism? 38413 Is father dead?"
38413Is it excommunication you threaten?
38413Is it fines you are thinking of?
38413Is it not obvious? 38413 Is it not written on my face, even as it is written on yours that you are a Tedesco?
38413Is it only when your descendants are in trouble that you are allowed to visit them?
38413Is it that thou likest me better?
38413Is n''t there a Rabbi in your community whose stinginess is proverbial? 38413 Is not the hospitality of Moses Bernberg''s beautiful daughter a proverb?"
38413Is she pretty?
38413Is that all? 38413 Is that lunch?"
38413Is that you, dear old chap? 38413 Is there anything I do not want?"
38413Is there anything I would not do for Heaven?
38413Is this the way you speak of your guests?
38413Is this the way you steal my salmon, after all?
38413Is this your faith, your loyalty-- to sneak back home like a thief-- to peep through the keyhole to see if I was a good little girl--?
38413Is-- is-- are_ you_ going with the carriage?
38413It is all very well to say take them away,replied Manasseh, with a touch of resentment,"but what am I to take them in?"
38413It''s an awful bore,I yawned;"but I''m afraid they''d be annoyed if I ate up here alone, so--""You''ll invite them up here for all meals?
38413Leah, the boot and shoe manufacturer''s daughter?
38413Let me introduce you-- Mr. Redhill, Mr. Spanner, you have heard of Mr. Spanner, the celebrated author and stage- manager?
38413Like a duty dance, but you do not love me?
38413Marriage certificates, my lord?
38413Me take another woman''s leavings? 38413 Me?"
38413Mother, are you mad? 38413 Mr. da Costa, you vos a- sayin'', I think?"
38413Must you go?
38413Nay, how couldst thou discover that? 38413 Nay, nay, sir, what can be more momentous?"
38413Nay, why waste them on the heathen?
38413Never left England?
38413Never thought what?
38413No treasury, do n''t you know? 38413 No?"
38413No?
38413No?
38413No?
38413Not able? 38413 Not even the five pounds I vowed on behalf of Yankelà © himself-- one of your own people?"
38413Not even when you die?
38413Not in so many words,I admitted;"but why did you let me call you Ethelberta?"
38413Not yet,admitted Manasseh, rising to go;"but when the time comes, where will you find a better marriage broker?
38413Oh no, Emanuel, love, do n''t say that; not after all these months?
38413Oh, Joseph, did n''t you have enough of Dan Mendoza at supper last night?
38413Oh, but why not?
38413Oh, but you believe in_ something_?
38413Oh, is n''t it?
38413Oh, is that all? 38413 Oh, is that why you took so much trouble?"
38413Oh, on_ that_? 38413 Oh, well, you need n''t let out, sir, need you?
38413Oh, why did you not write to me of your difficulties?
38413Oh,he said,"is that you?
38413On what?
38413On your faith?
38413Only will any of the others work for nothing?
38413Orders? 38413 Ought I to listen to financial details on the Sabbath?"
38413P''raps you call that vork?
38413Pommery Green- oh or Hideseek, my lord?
38413Really?
38413Say, you''re not an hereditary legislator?
38413Suppose the book''s a frost?
38413Surely you do n''t mind people knowing who you are?
38413Tell me,he said brokenly,"have you made a living?"
38413Then how do you know she will have you?
38413Then how the devil--?
38413Then why not speculate yourself?
38413Then, why do you say you did not know what was in them? 38413 This masquerade?"
38413To a Christian?
38413To gossip with your servants? 38413 Vat helps me dat dere be other_ Schlemihls_( unlucky persons)?"
38413Vat is strange?
38413Vat more proof do you vant of my begging powers?
38413Vat vould dis dowry be?
38413Vat you vant?
38413Vell, ven do I get de money your daughter gets from de Synagogue?
38413Ven can I come into possession?
38413Vere vould be de good of going to him?
38413Vhere''s your ticket?
38413Vork?
38413Vy at dat rate you vould make out dat de minister vorks? 38413 Vy not?
38413Vy not? 38413 Vy not?"
38413Vy not?
38413Vy, does n''t it deserve dem?
38413Was it the cholera?
38413Was it to insult me that you called me back? 38413 We thought of starting a journal at Grodno,"said the Rabbi,"only the funds--""Be you den a native of Grodno?"
38413Well, but what''s a man to do?
38413Well, but''ow is_ you_ goin''to get presents from the sky?
38413Well, how do they know then?
38413Well, sir, you''ll keep the rest dark, wo n''t you? 38413 Well, well-- who is he?"
38413Well, what do you say to a literary career?
38413Well, what is better, in the event of a quarrel? 38413 Well, what more have you to say?"
38413Well, would that be much?
38413Well?
38413Wh- what, did n''t you g- get a card?
38413What are you about to do?
38413What are you crying about?
38413What are you doing here? 38413 What are you doing?"
38413What box is it, please?
38413What can I do for you?
38413What do you mean?
38413What do you mean?
38413What do you mean?
38413What do you want?
38413What does that matter, Mrs. Windpeg? 38413 What does that prove?
38413What does the Synagogue want of me? 38413 What fog?"
38413What greater luxury is there than that of doing good?
38413What have I done?
38413What have they to say against a Sephardi marrying a Tedesco?
38413What have you done with Wilkinson?
38413What in creation made you take these howling apartments?
38413What in the devil do you want now?
38413What is all this moonshine?
38413What is it now?
38413What is it, Robert?
38413What is it? 38413 What is it?
38413What is it?
38413What is it?
38413What is that you are saying, Mr. da Costa?
38413What is that you say? 38413 What is that you say?"
38413What is the matter with Peters?
38413What is the matter with you?
38413What is the matter?
38413What kind of beauty do you like best?
38413What makes you so astonished?
38413What mistake?
38413What of that? 38413 What of that?
38413What prevents me?
38413What right have you to move and put all your friends to trouble?
38413What salmon was that?
38413What shall I do? 38413 What shall we do, then?"
38413What then? 38413 What then?
38413What then?
38413What was this thought?
38413What''s a man to do?
38413What''s that?
38413What''s the good of a loan to an honest man?
38413What''s the matter?
38413What''s this howling wilderness of shirt- front?
38413When could I see her?
38413When do you want me to marry you?
38413Where are we to get it from?
38413Where are you living?
38413Where are your credentials?
38413Where have you been then?
38413Where is Emanuel?
38413Where is Rachel?
38413Where is da Costa?
38413Where is the difficulty?
38413Where would Providence be without its women- defenders?
38413Where''s the compromise?
38413Where''s your ears, mon?
38413Which box should it be? 38413 Who else moves among better circles-- would be more easily able to find her a suitable match?"
38413Who is George?
38413Who then?
38413Who would believe it? 38413 Why are ye sae anxious to stand in my shoon?"
38413Why are you hustling this poor man?
38413Why did n''t you think of the bill before?
38413Why did you kill so many people?
38413Why did you let her go out? 38413 Why do n''t you go to your own clergyman?"
38413Why do n''t you speak English? 38413 Why do you always come to me?"
38413Why do you suppose Jones sat her next to you, if not as a prerogative of nobility?
38413Why else? 38413 Why is it impossible?
38413Why not wire?
38413Why not? 38413 Why not?"
38413Why should I write? 38413 Why waste the Synagogue''s money on hired vehicles?
38413Why were you so cruel?
38413Why-- how--?
38413Why? 38413 Why?"
38413Will you do as we do?
38413Will you have a cup of coffee?
38413With Wilkinson, my dear? 38413 With whom?"
38413Wo n''t you be cold?
38413Wo n''t you come in and see the bride, and wish her joy?
38413Would n''t it be simpler to tell him the truth?
38413Would you come with me?
38413Would you give him up?
38413Would you have had me tell him the real reason I called him was that his master was a thief? 38413 Would you have me steal salmon?"
38413Would you like to see it?
38413Wouldst thou have us repudiate our solemn treaty?
38413Wouldst thou, indeed?
38413Yes, but suppose I took you away from here?
38413Yes, but what makes the window look red?
38413Yes-- are we not far richer than your community? 38413 Yes-- aren''t you?"
38413Yes-- do you not see they are returning to the India House in Leadenhall Street?
38413Yes?
38413Yes?
38413You accuse me of having stone figures in my house,he said boldly,"but what about the lions in front of yours?"
38413You are married?
38413You be already a fader to me-- vy vill you not be a fader- in- law? 38413 You believe in a God, do n''t you?"
38413You called me, sir?
38413You called me?
38413You did not expect me to wear them? 38413 You do n''t care for anyone else in the house?"
38413You do n''t mean to say you do n''t keep it?
38413You do n''t want any?
38413You do not object to my selling it, den?
38413You do not suspect me of that?
38413You have gone on the stage?
38413You have not heard from Everard?
38413You knew I was in trouble?
38413You make them to- day-- but to- morrow? 38413 You shamed her before strangers, and she has gone out-- to drown herself-- what do I know?"
38413You wo n''t charge me more than a sovereign?
38413You would?
38413You''ll be very nice to him at tea, wo n''t you?
38413You''re quite sure you do n''t care for anyone but me?
38413You''ve hit it-- now that I hear about this peerage business-- why did n''t you tell me before? 38413 You-- you-- know me?"
38413You_ are_ fond of me a little bit,the graceless Tom whispered,"are n''t you?"
38413Your Emanuel?
38413Your cast- off clothes?
38413Your daughter, Deborah,Yankelà © ventured timidly,"do she ever go to de play?"
38413Your life is precious-- if_ you_ die, who vill console de community?
38413_ Eureka!_"What is the matter?
38413_ Gott in Himmel!_ Do you mean to say you do not see what an advantage it is to have a wife unable to accompany you in all your goings?
38413''How does it taste, sir?''
38413''It''s what they call an acquired taste, ai n''t it, sir?''
38413''Well, but how is Lord Everett to know?''
38413''Would you like to have a drop?''
38413A Tedesco_ can_ marry a Sephardi, not so?
38413After I had disembowelled it; after I had shown it was a stale sausage stuffed with old and putrid ideas?"
38413Although it was only a Wednesday, why should they not have a goose?
38413And Flutter- Duck, outraged by this childish insolence, would exclaim,"Thou hearest, Lewis, love?"
38413And did you not donate money?"
38413And does her father know?"
38413And have you not put me to shame-- if anyone had witnessed your almsgiving, would he not have laughed in my beard?"
38413And how is his young brother, Samuel?"
38413And if I have a Tedesco at my table, why should I draw the line there?
38413And once you begin to work, where are you to draw the line?"
38413And yet where could you find a better man to keep your daughter?"
38413And you wept over her so in your letters?"
38413And, of course, five per cent on the dowry?"
38413Any children?
38413Any of your literary friends will get you a publisher, and where could you get a more promising ghost?"
38413Anything in the musical line this morning, signor?
38413Are we not all the happier for having waited for each other?"
38413Are ye fou again, or hae ye tint your senses?"
38413Are ye willing to set forth separately upon this knightly quest?"
38413Are you mad?
38413Are you not a bachelor?
38413Are you not his employer?
38413Are you weak- minded enough to believe that?
38413As it is written,''Who is rich?
38413As much as that?"
38413At Baron D''Aguilar''s mansion in Broad Street Buildings there is a retinue of twenty- four servants, and they--""And what is your second claim?"
38413At all costs he must revoke the invitation(?).
38413Be you not my benefactor?"
38413Before he left that night Rose said to him:"Art thou sure thou wouldst not rather have Leah Volcovitch?"
38413Besides, had I not seen she was a flirt?
38413Boy or girl?
38413But are there enough Year- Times, as you call them, in your Synagogue?"
38413But he managed to whisper angrily,"Why did you tell Wilkinson I ordered him to carry your box?"
38413But if you believe in a God, that''s enough, ai n''t it?
38413But where am I to find a ghost with the requisite talents?"
38413But why did you not go to Rabbi Sandman?"
38413But why did you sell my clothes?"
38413But you?
38413Can I do anything more for you, mum?
38413Cold, eh?
38413Could he have been the victim of a practical joke, a prank?
38413Did I not let Providence select who should have the silver and who the gold, who the copper and who the emptiness?
38413Did n''t you, Wilkinson?"
38413Did not a natural aristocracy ooze from every pore of his mysterious visitor?
38413Did you assure your life?"
38413Did you not give me the money as a free- will offering, for the good of your wife''s soul?
38413Did you not quote,''Charity delivers from death''?
38413Did you see his house?"
38413Do I look a knave?
38413Do I look the sort of person who is content with a box on the ceiling?
38413Do n''t I look ripping?"
38413Do n''t you remember me?"
38413Do n''t you think I was right?
38413Do n''t you think I would have fallen on that man''s-- or woman''s-- neck, and watered it with my tears?
38413Do not I, Manasseh Bueno Barzillai Azevedo da Costa, have at my Sabbath- table every week Yankelà © ben Yitzchok-- a Pole?
38413Do you ask me that again?"
38413Do you deny it?"
38413Do you forget what the next verse says:''Bloodthirsty and deceitful men shall not live out half their days''?
38413Do you hold words spoken solemnly in Synagogue of no account?
38413Do you note how they fit?"
38413Do you take me for a beadle, a brusher of gaiters?"
38413Do you think I could submit to government by a prig?"
38413Do you think I do not know your financial relations with the Court?
38413Do you think I waste my substance on solicitors?
38413Do you think the Almighty will suffer His money to be lost?"
38413Do you wish to bring the Synagogue institutions into contempt?
38413Do you-- a man already once stricken by Heaven-- invite its chastisement again?"
38413Do you--?"
38413Does Gabriel the cantor still suffer from neuralgia?"
38413Egad, do you think your members would for a moment tolerate your penalties, if they did not know the money was laid out in''good deeds''?
38413Even in the terrible oppression of the dream she could not resist saying, woman- like:"Did I not warn you against him?"
38413Finally, who but a_ Schnorrer_ would wear this overcoat cloak- wise, with dangling sleeves, full of armless suggestion from a side view?
38413Flutter- Duck''s husband was a furrier-- a master- furrier, for did he not run a workshop?
38413Gladstone has done so; and why not I, in my humble degree?"
38413Granting that more than one life was impossible upon this planet, why should it not be differently distributed?
38413Grobstock?"
38413Had he been drowned on the passage to his land of exile?
38413Had he not even heard of people dying from joy?
38413Had n''t you better put off publication for a century or two?"
38413Hang it all, my boy, are you a millionaire?
38413Has Mendelssohn, the stonemason, got many more girls?"
38413Has not the beadle of your Synagogue boasted to me that you have given him a guinea for brushing your spatterdashes?
38413Hast thou scotched the Serpent?"
38413Have I not had to do it?
38413Have we ever legislated against marrying Christians?"
38413Have you always been a bachelor, by the way?"
38413Have you got a little phial?''
38413Have you no great- grand- filial feelings?"
38413Have you not told Grobstock you be de first of marriage- brokers?"
38413He had fixed the standard in gold for that day at least, and who knew what noble emulation he had fired for the future?
38413Heavens, are women to have no lives of their own?"
38413How about Robins?
38413How can a man allow his daughter''s future happiness to repose on a basis so uncertain as work?
38413How can it possibly have penetrated to these parts yet?''
38413How can you call that vork?
38413How can you have the face to go and spend two guineas-- two whole guineas-- all you have in the world-- on a mere luxury like salmon?"
38413How could he expect a livery servant to tolerate such a guest?
38413How dare you?
38413How much is it?"
38413How should I?
38413How was he to know we had quarrelled?
38413However, he only murmured:"How came you to think of it so suddenly?"
38413I am glad to have seen you again-- we shall finish our chat at your house some evening, shall we?
38413I came here expecting your sympathy, and do you offer me reproach?
38413I have n''t any literary ability, have I?"
38413I must laugh, Frank, old man, it_ is_ so funny-- what about the Principal Boy?
38413I passed through the selling department, catching a babel of cries from the counter- jumpers--"Two gross anecdotes?
38413I presume your lordship would like a spirited one?
38413I says,''How much?''
38413I suppose you have n''t got Damtidam in stock?''
38413I wonder how it is, sir?"
38413If I could not rely on your honour, would I dream of you as a son- in- law?"
38413If he did try to keep you from marrying a penniless, friendless girl, if he did force you to work long years for me, was it not all for the best?
38413If, as not infrequently happened, the person deceased was a stranger to him, he would enquire in the passage:"Was it man or woman?
38413If, on the other hand, I find anything that is of value to me, do you fear I will not keep it?"
38413Is it not further forbidden to go over the boughs of thy olive- tree again, or to gather the fallen fruit of thy vineyard?
38413Is it not he?
38413Is it thus you would palter with the sacred texts?
38413Is not a vife a creature comfort?
38413Is there any other attraction about the shanty?"
38413Is there nothing I can give thee?"
38413Is this the house?"
38413Is this the way one treats a father?
38413Is your last place let?"
38413Is your property in Jerusalem only a casket of earth?"
38413It said:"Have you really the face to come to me again with an ideal man?"
38413It was with a sense of partial disenchantment that I continued the conversation:"So you have been in Paris?"
38413Let me see, what''s his name?"
38413Let me see-- what was it the Oracle said?
38413Married or single?
38413May I ask you, sir,"he concluded,"to proceed with the business for which you have summoned me?
38413May I call you Ethelberta?"
38413Me?
38413Mr. Spanner wo n''t mind talking business before you, will you, George?
38413Nay, had he not misjudged her?
38413Now that his fortune has been swept away, where would you be without money or occupation?"
38413Now, what is it to be?
38413Of course, you will not mind allowing me a pound more for finding you so economical a son- in- law?"
38413Oh, what shall I do?"
38413On hearing this death- rattle, anyone who felt curious would ask the_ Schnorrer_:"Who''s dead to- day?"
38413Perhaps you''d like a brandy and soda better?"
38413Presently the Rabbi looked up:"You''re quite sure all these people are dead?"
38413Shall He be less well served than an earthly monarch?
38413Shall I put you to all that trouble which should rightly be mine?
38413Shall I send a squib your way?"
38413She looked so frail, so little, so childish, what guile could she know?
38413Since Manasseh_ would_ be his guest, was it not imprudent to give him away to the livery- servant?
38413So he waited outside, shivering, till a pretty little girl and boy came out, when he said to them:"Please, can you tell me where Santa Claus lives?"
38413Stands it not in the Talmud that he who shames another is as one who spills his blood?
38413Still undecided, the Rabbi muttered,"You want me to marry you?"
38413Suddenly the baby turned his blue eyes full on me, and said:"I suppose it''s all up, doctor?"
38413The King asked her a plain question:"Which is my eldest son?"
38413The Rabbi dared not make further protest: he turned to Yankelà © and asked,"Well, now, what''s this about your marriage?"
38413The man had nice clothes and looked rich, but what proof was there he had stockings on?
38413The patient paid well to have it off his mind, but I am afraid I shall miss the usual second profit, for who will buy it again?"
38413Then do you think anyone may trample with impunity upon our ancient_ Ascamot_?"
38413Then with a sudden dread in his voice:"You''re not a Catholic clergyman?"
38413Then, turning to the Blue Prince, who seemed lost in meditation, the King said:"Why art thou silent, my son?
38413There is no rule against that, I presume?"
38413There must be a sack somewhere--""And do you think I would carry them away in a sack?
38413This is a second edition, is n''t it?"
38413Towers do?"
38413Vat is dat?"
38413Vat is dis blood dat it should divide Jew from Jew, dat it should prevent me becoming de son- in- law of de only man I have ever loved?
38413Vat?"
38413WHAT''S THIS?''"]
38413Was everything then to end happily after all?
38413Was he never to be done with the man?
38413Was he quite sane?
38413Was his gift to be flouted thus?
38413Was it fair fighting?
38413Was it fair of Manasseh to handicap him thus?
38413Was it likely he was utterly ignorant of Everard''s movements?
38413Was it possible he had foisted his charity upon an undeserving millionaire?
38413Was it the tricksy play of the moon among the clouds, or did a shade of disappointment flit across her face?
38413Was it to be_ da capo_ again?
38413Was not every tone, every gesture, that of a man born to rule?
38413Was not the money spent in honour of the marriage of a German Jew?
38413Was she to spend her New Year''s night surrounded by love and luxury, instead of huddling in the corner of a cold garret?
38413Was she-- the shabby old starveling-- to be restored to comfort and fine clothes?
38413Was that the Greenbaum on''Change, who was such a rascal with the wenches?"
38413Was the voice, indeed, Lucy''s?
38413Well, my boy, what do you think of it?"
38413Were her words genuine, or was she only a coquette?
38413What are you looking at?"
38413What are you talking of, sir?"
38413What becomes of all the old stockings?
38413What could be done?
38413What could the other offer of fresh, of delightful?
38413What date will be most convenient to you?"
38413What do you call it?"
38413What do you make by your district visiting?
38413What do you want?"
38413What ensures respect for your constitution?
38413What has happened?"
38413What is it?"
38413What is life but a series of mistakes, whose fruit is wisdom, maybe, but wisdom overripe?
38413What is that, sir?''
38413What is the use of beginning at the beginning?"
38413What is this about your getting married?"
38413What is this masquerade?"
38413What keeps your community together?
38413What makes every man do his duty?
38413What right had you to propose to Rose Green?"
38413What rules this very Mahamad?
38413What say you, Yankelà ©?"
38413What says Deuteronomy?
38413What shall I do?"
38413What wonder if the Dragon lost his head completely?
38413What would you say if_ I_ presumed to interfere in your financial affairs-- if I told you to issue these shares or to call in those?
38413What''s that?"
38413What, in a company?
38413What, in your togs?
38413What?"
38413What?"
38413When are you going to get a lift, Jones?"
38413When grace was over he turned to Manasseh and said,"And what was this way you were suggesting to me of getting a profitable Sephardic connection?"
38413When he did protest, Jimmy said,"What are you jawing about?
38413When she came through those doors, what would be the effect of his presence upon her?
38413Where d''ye come in for the fight with St. George-- is it R 2 E or L U E?"
38413Who told you dat?"
38413Who would quail before a woman with a squint?"
38413Who would suspect that the fish and even the bag belonged to the porter, though purchased with the gentleman''s money?
38413Why did n''t you look after her?"
38413Why did n''t you wait a moment?"
38413Why had he not prepared her for his return, if only to the tiniest extent?
38413Why have snails been privileged with a domiciliary constancy denied to human beings?"
38413Why not tell the easy lie and be done with the whole business, and marry the dear, devoted boy?
38413Why should I not permit you, a Tedesco, to return the hospitality to me, a Sephardi?
38413Why should n''t we make a match of it?"
38413Why should n''t we make a match of it?''"
38413Why, what good can I do?"
38413Will you do me the pleasure of accepting a seat in my box?"
38413Wo n''t you come down, and give your patients a chance?"
38413Wo n''t you have a cigar?"
38413Wo n''t you take a chair?"
38413Wo n''t you take a score?
38413Would not the sudden shock, joyful though it was, upset the fragile little beauty?
38413Would you have me break my solemn vow?
38413Would you have me look like an old clo''man?
38413Would you think of offering_ him_ a packet?
38413You admitted you were wrong before; shall I be less magnanimous now?
38413You did n''t expect it would be a casket of diamonds?"
38413You mean that I am to take advantage of my influence to get some other fellow work, and take a commission for the use of my name?
38413You refuse me this beggarly five pounds?"
38413You refuse, then, to contribute to this fund?"
38413You''d swear to that in the box?"
38413You''re sure you''re not a Roman Catholic?"
38413You?"
38413Young''uns or old''uns?"
38413[ Illustration:"''BUT D''YE NO KEN THIS A SPEAKIN''PART?''"]
38413[ Illustration:"''TWO GROSS ANECDOTES?''"]
38413[ Illustration:"''VAT MORE PROOF DO YOU VANT?''"]
38413[ Illustration:"''WHAT IS THE MATTER?''"]
38413_ With_ you?"
38413are you mad?"
38413but what of carriage- sails and yacht- drives?"
38413cried the Infant, looking up with ingenuous surprise,"I thought you came down here on a holiday?"
38413cried the Infant,''what would Lord Everett say?''
38413did n''t you notice it, sir?"
38413gasped the Infant,"chuck up the sponge?
38413how can you think of all that now?
38413is n''t she here?
38413my lord?"
38413or de preacher?
38413ven?"
38413what could the gentle little bread- winner do?
38413what''s this?"
38413you do n''t mean to say you have n''t even heard of it?''
38413your vaunted community hard up?"
5351A week, sire?
5351Am I awake? 5351 And if we refuse, Sir Herald?"
5351And my rival for royalty?
5351Are we all here?
5351Are we free?
5351Are you François Villon?
5351Are you a happy woman, mistress?
5351Are you content with me?
5351Are you going to let him think he is king, sire?
5351Are you good citizens, sirs?
5351Are you in a maid''s mood, or a mood for a maid?
5351Are you less eager to serve me than you were?
5351Are you pander as well as pilgrim? 5351 Are you so dashed by the death of a wanton?"
5351Are you so fond of life? 5351 Are you sure of the lay of the land?"
5351As I will, sire?
5351But who is this astrologer?
5351Can I do with them as I wish?
5351Can a king be such a cur? 5351 Can you be content to- day?
5351Can you command some safe rogues of your kidney who think better of Burgundian gold than of the fool on the throne?
5351Did he know you? 5351 Did the pink and gold popinjay beat you?"
5351Did they frighten you, mammy?
5351Did this Villon fight him for his treason?
5351Did ye miss me, lads; did ye miss me, lasses?
5351Did you think she would come to your whistle like a bird to a lure?
5351Do I look like a ghost?
5351Do I not know you?
5351Do n''t sneer, gossip, but instruct, who are these people?
5351Do you by any chance love this Villon?
5351Do you leave me nothing?
5351Do you make eyes at my man?
5351Do you never tire of these sky doctors?
5351Do you think he will come?
5351Do you think that if he cheated me your pig''s eyes could read the riddle? 5351 Does lovely Katherine come to meet Thibaut?"
5351Even when you are the woman? 5351 Fair ladies,"he said;"shall we go to the great hall where the Italian players gambol?"
5351For the last time?
5351For whom?
5351For your lover?
5351François, you dear devil, where have you been this thousand years? 5351 Gentlewomen, messire?
5351Give it to me to spend on masses?
5351Good afternoon, Lord Constable,Louis said amiably, and as Villon dropped respectfully on his knee, he questioned:"Does power taste well?"
5351Gossip Tristan,he asked,"do you know why I have come to this hovel to- night?
5351Has Master François Villon been here to- night?
5351Has he, indeed, pretty minion?
5351Have we ever met before?
5351Have we no landlord here? 5351 His name, sire?"
5351How do you know all this?
5351How does the balance go?
5351How is your garden, friend?
5351How,he thought,"if my lady Virtue, who flouted me, could be lured to love this beggar- man?"
5351I? 5351 In God''s name, sire, what have I done that you should torture me thus?"
5351Is Master François Villon in this company, sir?
5351Is she of my feet, favour, years and savour?
5351Is she tall or short, young or old, dark or fair, sweet or sour?
5351Is she the girl he spoke of? 5351 Is that he?"
5351Is this a Court of Love?
5351Is this the eyrie?
5351Is this the good king''s counter?
5351Just because I show a smooth face?
5351King, is this justice?
5351May I ask you a question?
5351May I support the lady''s prayer,he said,"unless a stranger''s presence distresses you?"
5351May I vend you a benevolence, gentleman?
5351May we not hear it, Master Poet?
5351May we take our leave, monseigneur?
5351Messire Noel, if you and I had a mind to pluck the same rose from this garden, which of us would win?
5351Mistress, what does this mean?
5351Monseigneur,he said,"how did this happen?"
5351My lord,she cried,"will you listen to a distressed lady?"
5351No doubt you could do better than the king if you wore the king''s shoes?
5351No more?
5351Oh, it was he?
5351On your word of honour, sire?
5351Only wounded, sire?
5351Pitiful traitor, why did you live this lie?
5351Shall I hang him to- morrow?
5351Since when, sir? 5351 Sire, sire, is this true?"
5351So that you and Noel what''s his name may live happily ever after?
5351Then, why do you keep my service?
5351Through no fault of your own, of course?
5351Was she a foolish virgin to mistrust your majesty?
5351Well, Hearts of Gold, how are ye?
5351Well, Tristan?
5351Well, friend, what has the wizard told you?
5351Well, goodman barber, what of François Villon?
5351Well?
5351What are we going a- riding for?
5351What are you doing here, Abbess?
5351What are you talking about?
5351What are you trying to tell me?
5351What colour has money now- a- days, Master François?
5351What do you care for the fate of this fellow?
5351What do you hope to gain by this?
5351What do you say, Goliath?
5351What do you say?
5351What do you seek here?
5351What does he mean? 5351 What does it matter to you what they do with the fool king?"
5351What game?
5351What harm,Villon retorted,"if you give me responses?"
5351What has come to Master François Villon?
5351What have you now to do?
5351What is this tumult?
5351What jest is this?
5351What prisoners?
5351Where are the lovers of yesterday?
5351Where are you going, girl?
5351Where did you learn wisdom?
5351Where do you lodge?
5351Where have you been, little monkey?
5351Where''s the interest?
5351Who are the men?
5351Who are you,he growled,"who dare to interfere with the king''s justice?"
5351Who are you? 5351 Who better?
5351Who cares? 5351 Who is this man?"
5351Who is this woman?
5351Who is this?
5351Who knows?
5351Why do you ask?
5351Why do you follow me?
5351Why do you not salute gentry when they honour your pot- house? 5351 Why little sister?"
5351Why not your yellow- haired, pink- faced lover?
5351Why not?
5351Why should I not deserve her? 5351 Will it teach you not to play the fool again?"
5351Will the worse come to the worst?
5351Will you come, François?
5351Will you watch the players?
5351Will your dignity deign to linger awhile in this rose arbour?
5351Would you pity me if I told you that I loved you?
5351You all had mothers, I suppose? 5351 You are not a church- goer, sir?"
5351You are resolved?
5351You are sure this is the place?
5351You are sure?
5351You are the Castor and Pollux of purity? 5351 You come with clean hands?"
5351You did n''t expect to be taken at your word?
5351You have outgrown me?
5351You know me?
5351You love me very much?
5351You mean it?
5351Your pleasure, sweet princess?
5351''Are you such a one?"
5351''If François were the king of France,''eh?"
5351A faint, exultant smile flickered over the king''s face as he asked:"Now, friends, where is your idol''s supplement?
5351Abbess, for the old sake''s sake, will you keep me a secret?"
5351Am I asleep?
5351Am I mad to hope it?
5351And does my exalted position carry with it any agreeable perquisite in the way of pocket money?"
5351And here?"
5351And must I now believe that he can out- love me?"
5351Are there not better things to do with Master Villon than to hang him?"
5351Are you cutting purses?
5351Are you not Grand Constable, chief of the king''s army?
5351Are you plucking mantles?"
5351Are you so poor a thing that you prize your garret and your kennel, your tavern and your brothel so highly?"
5351Are you still angry with me for the trick I played on you?"
5351As he spoke the inn- door opened a little and the king, hearing the click of the catch, asked:"Is that he?"
5351But is he not amazed?"
5351But why he had gone to a dungeon?
5351CHAPTER X UNDER WHICH KING?
5351Ca n''t you, old rabbit?"
5351Can he out- dance me, out- drink me, out- courtier me, out- soldier me?
5351Can he stride a horse, or fly a hawk better?
5351Can not you do the like?"
5351Can you not gain time, postpone, promise?"
5351Can you only woo in silk and win in velvet?
5351Come, who will slip neck in noose for the sake of a hero?"
5351Could you give me your heart now if I bent my knee?"
5351Did he give her some philtre, some elixir, do you think?
5351Do n''t you know François Villon in spite of this new spirit shining in his eyes?"
5351Do we catch her tripping?"
5351Do you doubt me?"
5351Do you remember the night of last Shrove Tuesday and the girl you carried off to Fat Margot''s and held to ransom?"
5351Do you see nothing there that reminds you of other hours?"
5351Do you understand?"
5351Does he live?"
5351Does not Thibaut d''Aussigny woo you?"
5351Does your astrologer know his lesson?"
5351Does your devotion falter?
5351Had I ever the honour to serve you?"
5351Has Master François Villon any reason to urge, any plea to offer, why the sentence should not be carried out?"
5351Has some great lady bewitched you?
5351Have you aught to offer that is good alike for purse and palate?"
5351Have you found your lost sheep?"
5351He asked quite quietly:"Does Master François Villon ask his life?"
5351He crossed himself as he questioned in a voice that sounded strangely alien to him,"Are you real?"
5351How did Thevenin Pensete come to his death?"
5351How did you find me out?"
5351How do I know that you are a true man?"
5351How do I know you are an honest soldier?
5351How do such men as you kill each other?"
5351I suppose we must take something for the good of the house?"
5351I suppose, good master Long- toes, that a person in my exalted rank has a good deal of power, influence, authority, and what not?"
5351I was knocked so silly that-- well, what do you think was the silly thing I did?"
5351If Villon had run up a heavy reckoning with the king at the Fircone Tavern, must he wipe out the score with his life- blood?
5351If the kernel be sweet, what does the husk matter?
5351Is it the thing they call the better self, or merely this purple and fine linen?"
5351Is there anything I can do to please you?"
5351Is your heart failing?
5351Is your pulse flagging?"
5351Katherine murmured pensively to herself:"Where are the snows of yesterday?"
5351Katherine requested:"Have I your majesty''s leave?"
5351Katherine whispered to him:"François, will you not take life at my hands?"
5351Lore, will you marry me here at the foot of the gallows?"
5351Louis answered imperturbably:"Are the fools so fond of the fellow?
5351Louis came very close to the pale girl and whispered:"Are you so hungry for your devotions that you can not waste some worldly words on me?
5351Louis turned upon him and snarled at him:"Good Lord, did your vanity credit a permanent appointment?
5351Montigny, leaning forward, gave Villon a clap on the back which made him shrink, and shouted"What was the answer?"
5351Noel advanced questioning:"Is the star- gazer here?"
5351Noel looked after her fretfully:"Why are the women all sunflowers to this scaramouch?"
5351Pair by pair The Wind has blown them all away: The young and yare, the fond and fair: Where are the Snows of Yesterday?"
5351People of Paris, shall I not speak to my lover before I die?"
5351Shall I send you the prisoners?"
5351Shall I win this wonderful woman?
5351Shall the man who led us to victory die a rogue''s death?"
5351She shaded her eyes and peered at it, asking:"For whom do you build this gallows?"
5351Since last night?"
5351The first pilgrim questioned again:"What do you carry in your hand?"
5351The first pilgrim questioned the other,"What do you carry in your scrip?"
5351The king was by her side in an instant and whispering into her ear:"Is this the course of true love?"
5351The rogues rattled away to their table again, and Villon was left alone with Louis, who questioned him drily:"You call yourself a patriot, I suppose?"
5351There was a moment of intense silence; then the voice of Huguette cried out of the blackness:"Are you ready?"
5351Those four doxies?"
5351Villon answered her sadly,"Free?
5351Villon asked himself as he went:"Why, in God''s name, does the world appear so''different to- day?
5351Villon leaned over a little nearer to his victim and breathed a question into his ear:"Do you know the Church of St. Maturin, Master Tabarie?"
5351Villon looking up into her eyes, questioned her:"Do you think I''m worth it, Kate?
5351Villon took no notice of her petulance but repeated his question:"What are you doing here, Abbess?"
5351Was that splendid gentleman their old friend, François Villon?
5351Well?"
5351Were you mocking me and him?"
5351What are you going to do with me?"
5351What can this fellow do that is denied to me?
5351What do you grow in your garden, Sire de Montigny?"
5351What may I not accomplish?
5351What shall I rhyme about?"
5351What skill of Villon''s could hope to avail against the mighty sweep of that huge soldier''s weapon?
5351What''s the good of building a noble gallows if nobody looks at it?
5351When the girls were close to him, Villon spoke:"Well, young ladies, what is this trade of yours that has brought you into trouble?"
5351Where are the Girls of Yesterday?
5351Where are the rascals of last night?"
5351Where did you steal so much splendour?
5351Where have you been these three days?"
5351Which of you will redeem it?
5351Who cares what he seems?"
5351Who will be his lieutenant, who will be heir to his heritage of a cross bar and a rope?
5351Why do you go thus?"
5351Why should a woman love you?"
5351Why, he told me--""Enne, a miracle; he reminded me--""Why, he knows--""What do you think he said?"
5351Why?"
5351Will God forgive me?"
5351Will Louis come?"
5351Will you visit me?"
5351Will you wait here till he comes, pretty lady, for I never saw him?
5351Will you wear this ring for my sake?
5351Would you mind telling me again who I happen to be?"
5351Yet again the first speaker queried:"Will you drink the king''s health?"
5351You all love this man?
5351You understand?"
5351asked Louis of Tristan,"whose coming seems so to flutter these night- birds?"
5351do you know who that was?"
5351he piped,"How is your suit with the Lady Katherine?"
5351he shouted--"where are my keys?"
5351show a brighter sword in quarrel, or tune a smoother lute in calm?
45045''Where the streets were so wide and the lanes were so narrow?''
45045Ah-- can''t you bring him out here?
45045All are well, I suppose?
45045Am I changed?
45045Am I? 45045 And Annis?"
45045And I can come now and then as a friend?
45045And Louis-- is everybody safe?
45045And Varina? 45045 And do you remember we came up to Mr. Madison''s inauguration and went to the Capitol?
45045And if you stay for the ball will you not come over again? 45045 And is Marian as happy as you?"
45045And is n''t the husband always the oldest, papa? 45045 And no dear ones are lost?
45045And not President?
45045And now are we to crawl through this dismal glade? 45045 And now you are on my side?"
45045And ride by moonlight?
45045And that dainty little Annis? 45045 And the doctor?"
45045And the visit?
45045And we can not always keep up to the mark-- is that what you mean me to infer?
45045And what did you say? 45045 And what do you think, Annis?"
45045And when are you coming up to Georgetown?
45045And why did n''t you go to Philadelphia?
45045And you are very happy? 45045 And you have n''t been trying your strength leaping over five- barred gates or jumping ditches, or perhaps riding too much?"
45045And you leave me in the lurch?
45045And you love me?
45045And you mean to wait for that?
45045And you think you can not come?
45045And you will love me better than anyone else?
45045And you-- must you be mother to_ all_ the children? 45045 And your grandmother?
45045And, papa, can he marry her?
45045Angry?
45045Annis, do you love him? 45045 Annis,"he exclaimed regretfully, resignedly,"I do not suppose you ever could marry me?"
45045Are you glad to come here and do you like them all?
45045Are you glad to see me?
45045Are you going to hold an auction?
45045Are you going?
45045Are you happy and satisfied, Marian, or miserable?
45045Are you not going to stay to the supper?
45045Are you really going to stay single forever?
45045Are you still angry with Jaqueline?
45045Are you very angry still?
45045But I suppose you have a surfeit over the Potomac?
45045But I wonder-- oh, Jaqueline, do you suppose I will have to marry Mr. Greaves? 45045 But I''ll be sure to get well, wo n''t I?"
45045But Marian and-- Annis-- can they not join us?
45045But Marian?
45045But did you ever love Mr. Greaves, Marian?
45045But he is always asking me about Marian, and why she does n''t come?
45045But he ought to be able to tell whether one is pretty or not, ought n''t he, Eliza?
45045But if I should never marry?
45045But if Jane does?
45045But if she loved him?
45045But mamma?
45045But were you not afraid?
45045But what did you spend your time at-- if you did n''t go to school?
45045But where to in such fine feather?
45045But why do you not like her?
45045But you could n''t have done it at first?
45045But you promised to ride with me, did n''t you, Annis? 45045 But you will stay and have some supper with us?
45045But, then, you have your country''s good at heart?
45045But-- what will-- Rene do?
45045Ca n''t I walk where I like? 45045 Ca n''t little girls ever see anything?"
45045Ca n''t you give me mamma''s welcome also?
45045Can I say just what I should like?
45045Can you wonder at it?
45045Chloe, have you made preparations for a host at supper, and a hungry host again about nine o''clock? 45045 Collaston, has anything been heard of Ralston?
45045Could I ever have been so silly, Jaqueline?
45045Could n''t she have come here for a week or two, before we start?
45045Dear Jaqueline,she said with a tender accent,"do you think you will like my going to the ball?
45045Did I frown?
45045Did he write? 45045 Did n''t Annis want to come with you?"
45045Did they bring the baby? 45045 Did you ask her?"
45045Did you get tired of the nonsense?
45045Did you go to the ball?
45045Did you guess that Lieutenant Ralston cared? 45045 Do you dare to tell me there was no underhand plan in all this?
45045Do you know whether Marian had a letter from him soon after the holidays?
45045Do you know, Marian, I consider you a very foolish girl-- superstitious, as well? 45045 Do you mean that Jaqueline does n''t care for any of them?
45045Do you mean to make us marry whoever you like?
45045Do you not think I had better accompany you?
45045Do you remember,said Varina laughingly,"that I used to oppose a marriage between you and Annis?
45045Do you suppose I am coward enough to relinquish the woman I love in such an emergency as this? 45045 Do you suppose grandpapa is in real earnest?
45045Do you suppose she gave the letter to him?
45045Do you suppose this gold- thread embroidery will look like that imported stuff?
45045Do you suppose we''ll be asked to the wedding?
45045Do you want all of her back? 45045 Does a young man appreciate his inestimable privileges when he has a sister on whom he can practice?"
45045Does she not look well, Roger? 45045 Does the doctor think he_ will_ recover?"
45045Finer than Philadelphia?
45045Has Charles been cross to you?
45045Has Miss Mason any relatives in the war?
45045Has it been foolishness? 45045 His devotion to me?
45045How could we help it, when our poor sailors were snatched from their own vessels and made to fight against us or be beaten to death? 45045 How did he fall?"
45045How did that come about? 45045 How many days has it been?"
45045How would we have sent her back?
45045I am very glad I am not an English child, are n''t you, Eliza? 45045 I do believe I was the first one to take a real fancy to you; and do you remember how Rene quarreled with you about the babies?
45045I do wonder if it would be wrong to give Ralston an inkling of how the case stands? 45045 I do wonder if you really love me?"
45045I do wonder what grandmamma will give me? 45045 I have taken you to my heart and home-- doesn''t that count?
45045I suppose Dolly is really in love?
45045I suppose the lieutenant is quite crowded out of it all?
45045I suppose, mamma, I could n''t go with you?
45045I tried-- oh, yes, I did; but I_ was_ weak----"Is it too late to go back?
45045I was playing with the babies----"Surely it was n''t Aunt Jane?
45045I wonder if I might see him?
45045I wonder if there is a little fate in that?
45045I wonder if you could be induced to take the young ladies to a reception to- morrow evening?
45045I wonder if you will ever feel friendly enough to invite me? 45045 I wonder when you will see Miss Floyd?"
45045I''m not teasing you, Annis, am I? 45045 In an hour?"
45045Is Annis my sister truly, papa?
45045Is Patricia getting ready?
45045Is n''t it time I grew? 45045 Is the world going crazy?
45045Jane,_ do_ you think you can manage these girls for a few days and keep them out of the clutches of the young men? 45045 Jaqueline, ca n''t you think of the magic touch that will bring these two together?
45045Jaqueline, have you any idea of how fortunate you are? 45045 Let me see-- is there anyone near here that answers the requirements?"
45045Mamma-- don''t_ you_ want me?
45045Miss Mason,he began abruptly,"when have you seen Miss Floyd?"
45045Money again? 45045 Mrs. Jettson would be likely to know-- of a visit?"
45045Must we go to- day?
45045Not in case of necessity?
45045Of course Jane means to join the family party?
45045Oh, Louis, why do you tease the children so?
45045Oh, are you ready?
45045Oh, dear, can one learn so much?
45045Oh, do you think it was_ that_?
45045Oh, do you think we shall all be burned up?
45045Oh, does n''t it? 45045 Oh, little Annis, have you thrown me over?
45045Oh, what can I do? 45045 Oh, where is mamma?"
45045Oh, will they jump over the candles?
45045Ought she not, Cousin Preston? 45045 Papa,"said Charles after a pause,"shall you leave the plantation and everything to Louis because he is the oldest?"
45045Papa,she said in a plaintive tone a day or two after Stafford''s visit,"should you be very sorry if I-- were to-- stay single-- always?"
45045Polly-- you will come to- morrow?
45045Shall I go or write?
45045Shall I write to your father, or come?
45045Shall we go within?
45045She wo n''t love you best, will you, Annis? 45045 Still, you will say it?"
45045Suppose I do not care to be hurried by a fit of anger on your part? 45045 Suppose it were Jaqueline?"
45045Suppose the Indians had come?
45045Suppose we go up and have a look at this wonderful flag? 45045 Tell me the truth, sir?
45045The headaches? 45045 Then why do n''t you ask Jaqueline to love you again?
45045Then you could not persuade Miss Floyd?
45045Then you have a conscience?
45045Then you think I have been angry long enough?
45045To see me?
45045Was n''t Mr. Adams over there a long while-- and the great Mr. Benjamin Franklin, and Mr. Jay, and ever so many others? 45045 We do n''t want papa changed any, do we?"
45045We think to some purpose, too, do n''t we? 45045 We?
45045Well, what is it?
45045Well,_ what_ did he say?
45045Well-- what else?
45045Well-- why do you not answer?
45045Well-- will you bid him welcome and Godspeed?
45045Were you very cross and stern, papa?
45045What Virginia girl does not?
45045What are Jaqueline''s plans?
45045What can the wretched little army do against four thousand trained British soldiers? 45045 What did I look like, dropping at your feet?
45045What do you know about the sea?
45045What do you most desire?
45045What happened?
45045What happened?
45045What is it, little Annis? 45045 What is this?"
45045What makes you think she was sorry?
45045What was that for?
45045What-- down to the marsh? 45045 Whatever is the matter?"
45045Where are the Admiral and General Ross?
45045Where are the girls?
45045Where is Louis? 45045 Where is Roger?"
45045Where is the doctor? 45045 Why ca n''t you move up to Washington?
45045Why can I not go? 45045 Why do you want to go away, then?"
45045Why not?
45045Will you give my congratulations to your sister?
45045Will you not come downstairs?
45045Will you read this note?
45045Wo n''t you take me out with you?
45045Would n''t they? 45045 Would you be afraid to go to England?"
45045Would you want an old maid?
45045Wrote again-- then he did not forget?
45045Yes; where is that deceitful girl? 45045 You are quite sure you ca n''t remember any fall down there at Williamsburg?"
45045You do love me, little Annis, do you not?
45045You do n''t mean that he is in real earnest about that widower and the houseful of children?
45045You do n''t mean that you still consider yourself engaged?
45045You do n''t really want to tell me that you have a fancy for this wretched old fellow?
45045You love Charles as much as ever, then? 45045 You mean Lieutenant Ralston?"
45045You ride, of course?
45045You saw Ralston that dreadful morning?
45045You were down there?
45045You would n''t make me marry him?
45045After this show of proper and ceremonious behavior you can not refuse her permission?"
45045All these years he had been bitter and resentful, but if he were dying----"Can you not fly at once?
45045Am I never to have you any more?"
45045And I suppose it was a matter of satisfaction to leave that wild land behind you and return to the home of your childhood?
45045And all these large children?
45045And are you sure the lieutenant was in earnest?"
45045And do you know Charles is ill and in the doctor''s hands at Philadelphia?"
45045And does n''t he love Marian any more?"
45045And how do you know but that I''ll marry her myself?
45045And how was it_ he_ should come at this particular juncture?"
45045And if we should beat England again, would n''t it be magnificent?
45045And is it quite fair, do you think?
45045And jumping over the candles-- do you remember that, Polly?
45045And now have I not bored you enough?
45045And now, little Annis, is n''t it all made up?
45045And so you want Annis for a sweetheart, Charles?
45045And was n''t Jaqueline glad to see Lieutenant Ralston again?
45045And what if I_ had_ loved him?"
45045And what then?
45045And when he thinks a woman''s love has failed----""Do you speak from experience?"
45045And where would one find a more devoted couple than the President and his wife, who had had her youthful love and misfortunes and sorrows?
45045And why could he not have the same trust in her?
45045And why not accept our hospitality for the night?"
45045And why should I be so desperately glad?
45045And would she need to take sides anywhere?
45045And you like me, do n''t you, Annis?"
45045And you will be up often this winter?
45045And, Patricia?
45045And-- are you going next week?"
45045Annis belongs to me, do n''t you, little girl?
45045Annis, what will you do?"
45045Annis, why do you change color?"
45045Are n''t the cookies good enough to be peacemakers?"
45045Are you almost frozen?
45045Are you anywhere in her vicinity?
45045Are you going to stay long enough to go to a ball?
45045Are you not proud of your country?"
45045Are you quite sure you will not prove a tyrant?"
45045Are you to go to the levee?"
45045Are you very homesick?"
45045Aunt Catharine was good, but she fussed so much, and she''s always saying,''Now, do n''t you think you ought to do this, or give up doing that?
45045Bricks, was n''t it?
45045But I suppose you are not afraid of him, since his heart is-- oh, can you tell where it is?
45045But he was Roger''s friend as well?
45045But if_ you_ had left four children you would n''t want me for their stepmother, would you, now?
45045But tell me, did they really put out Prince Arthur''s eyes?
45045But what could anyone say about such a new country?
45045But what have_ you_ done in this matter?"
45045But what mattered when they came back to the level of love?
45045But, oh, was her own dear mother not hers any more?
45045But, then, what country is not?
45045Can I do anything for you?
45045Can Jaqueline be moved?"
45045Can you not lay an embargo on them?"
45045Carrington?"
45045Charles, have you seen enough of Washington?"
45045Chloe knew all about the bed and table linen: did n''t she bleach it up every spring in May dew?
45045Come, do n''t you want a little ride with me before I go to town?"
45045Come-- you do like us a little, do you not?"
45045Could anyone be a lady- love to two persons?
45045Could he not call on her?
45045Could her father have made_ her_ give up her lover?
45045Could she not see?
45045Did Jaqueline really love him?
45045Did Ralston know that he had been considered a sort of marplot?
45045Did anyone have a more beautiful frock?
45045Did he half envy Roger Carrington?
45045Did n''t Shakspere call it nimble wit?
45045Did not money measure most of the things in this life?
45045Did not you find it sweet?
45045Did she mean to be a schoolmistress?
45045Did she really want to go?
45045Did she think he had forgotten all?
45045Did she truly belong to father Mason?
45045Did you hear that poor Mr. Greaves is dead at last?
45045Did you never have any brothers or sisters?"
45045Did you not bring that scheming adventurer down here to meet Marian?"
45045Did you see much that was new in Baltimore, Madam Patricia?
45045Did you take enough exercise?"
45045Did you think me queer and strange that Christmas?"
45045Do I interrupt anything important?"
45045Do I look as if I had no courteous speeches at my command?"
45045Do I really look old enough for a grandfather?"
45045Do n''t you know Jack told you we were always taking sides?"
45045Do n''t you remember you used to wish for a sister like Sallie Reed?
45045Do n''t you sometimes feel a little afraid of them?"
45045Do n''t you think it hard for a little girl to be giving up her mother continually?
45045Do n''t you think they might both have been made handsomer without any great detriment to the world?
45045Do they let you go to balls as young as this?"
45045Do you feel sure that we will?"
45045Do you imagine they kindled the fire on the rocks and boiled the kettle as we do when we go off in the woods for a day''s pleasure?"
45045Do you know whether she has a lover?
45045Do you know whether the Masons, like the old Scotch woman''s ancestors, had a boat of their own at the time of the flood?"
45045Do you not think it would be better to send her over to the convent to steady her, Patty?"
45045Do you really mean me to have it?
45045Do you suppose he would if he knew it?
45045Do you suppose she will?"
45045Do you suppose they will go on as we work a sampler, make little letters and then Old- English text?
45045Do you suppose we can stand_ everything_?
45045Do you think Miss Floyd may have told her father?"
45045Do you think they will be likely to discharge me, Annis?"
45045Do you want to stay for the dancing?
45045Does n''t it seem funny to have Patty among the big people and going to the White House to dinner?
45045Does she read you lectures?"
45045Greaves?"
45045Had he expected to see her faded and worn in this brief period?
45045Had he loved her own mother in that fashion?
45045Had he not fought for the country,_ her_ country?
45045Had he really accepted her desire without a protest?
45045Had he sneered over it?
45045Had she given herself away when father Mason had put a ring on her finger and called her his wife?
45045Had she not put off the marriage on one pretext and another?
45045Had they taken all her sweetness?
45045Had we not better all return to the drawing room?"
45045Has your mother nothing?"
45045Have I been a very foolish, love- stricken swain?"
45045He looked very resolute, did n''t he?
45045He was trying to find her hand; did it come out of the great muff quite as broad as her slim figure, all soft and warm, to be pressed to his lips?
45045Housekeeping is a womanly grace or virtue or acquirement-- which do you call it?"
45045How can I thank you?"
45045How could he be content with this one brief sup of happiness?
45045How could they be so cruel?"
45045How fares it with her?"
45045How many are there?"
45045How many disconsolates did you leave at Williamsburg?"
45045How many lovers have you had?
45045How much ought she to admit?
45045I do n''t believe father would mind-- would you?"
45045I do n''t suppose anything would induce father to give up the estate here?"
45045I do n''t suppose you ever will take us to London, papa?"
45045I do n''t suppose you have heard from Marian?"
45045I do wonder if there is any real danger?"
45045I mean honest to-- to enjoy it all?
45045I suppose Lieutenant Ralston was in the thick of the fight?"
45045I suppose you know I met the Masons at the inauguration?
45045I was n''t very daring-- Annis, was n''t I something of a babyish boy?"
45045I wonder if I will have time to finish that flower in the morning?"
45045I wonder who will come along for me?
45045Is he likely to recover?"
45045Is it Mr. Ralston?
45045Is it a historical fact or a Shaksperean apothegm?
45045Is n''t it a bit of patriotism to want to build up one''s own city?
45045Is n''t that rather choice and fit and elegant?
45045Is she like her mother?"
45045Is there anything else?
45045It kills people sometimes, does n''t it?"
45045It seems ages ago, does n''t it?
45045It would be very disagreeable to be bad friends?"
45045It''s the most beautiful baby in the world, is n''t it?"
45045Jack, was their meeting here pure accident?
45045Jack,_ did_ you plan it?"
45045Jaqueline, ca n''t we go to Washington some time and really see it?
45045Jaqueline, have you ordered the horses?"
45045Jaqueline, how do you do?
45045Jaqueline, where did you find him?"
45045Jaqueline, who is your letter from?"
45045Jaqueline, you do n''t mean to marry Lieutenant Ralston yourself, after all?
45045Jaqueline,"hesitatingly,"does anyone love you too much?
45045Lieutenant Ralston, shall we ever have a Capital worthy of the nation?"
45045Lieutenant Yardley is one of the country''s heroes, and you----"How should she put it?
45045Look at that fire bird-- isn''t he gorgeous?
45045Madison?"
45045Marian, did you know that Mr. Ralston wrote again?"
45045Marian, if it comes a second time you will not refuse?"
45045Mistress Annis Mason, may I have the pleasure of escorting you to the grand naval ball?
45045Now shall I go further back and tell you of all the downfalls I have had?
45045Oh, Patty, do you remember our first visit here?
45045Oh, did you see that exquisite lace Aunt Catharine sent her?
45045Oh, do you truly think the country will go to ruin and split up into fragments?"
45045Oh, papa, ca n''t something be done?
45045Oh, you will make up friends?"
45045Oh, you_ do_ believe that?
45045Only what do you think?
45045Only you were wrong about----""Ralston?
45045Or did you have mischief in your mind?"
45045Or was it her salvation that no rich lover came to hand?
45045Or was it really fear?
45045Our little wasp?"
45045Perhaps we might go as a party-- would you mind?"
45045Perhaps we seemed dull to you?
45045Rene, do you not want to go along?"
45045Roger?"
45045Shall I commend this young lady to your care?
45045Shall I give you my best, my most heartfelt wishes?
45045Shall I run up to the house for anything?"
45045She had a kind of shy way-- looking back and forth; do you remember it?
45045She had thought a three- or four- days''separation very hard-- how would she stand weeks and months?
45045She took his hand-- did she make a confession in the pressure?
45045Since Washington was a heap of ruins and would have to be rebuilt, why not remove it to some more advantageous location?
45045Suppose he had wanted to take part in a play with a girl she had not liked?
45045Suppose we keep her for the next year or two?"
45045Surely Patty or Jacky have not been scolding you?
45045That is, when she is in her true home?
45045The pearls and the rubies are bespoke, and she has a diamond cross that has been in the family-- how long?"
45045The whip- poor- wills called to each other, the mocking bird flung out a note now and then as if he said saucily,"_ Did_ you think I was asleep?"
45045There are a good many grand men in the world, are there not?
45045There will be an election in the coming autumn, and how do you know but we may be plunged into war and need you for our own defense?
45045There, is n''t that lovely?"
45045Think of a man asking for-- what were they building the tower out of?
45045Was it her desire?
45045Was it not a dream?
45045Was it not nearly the center?
45045Was it prettier because it was on a ship?
45045Was it true that a girl found pleasure in variety rather than constancy?
45045Was it utter indifference?
45045Was n''t it all grand?
45045Was not that dutiful?"
45045Was she anything but a volatile, teasing girl, with no deep feelings?
45045Was she in any way relieved?
45045Was she much homesick after her mother?"
45045Was she staying with her sister?
45045Was there any real danger?
45045We were altogether in the right, were n''t we, Eliza?"
45045Well-- and what did Cato say?"
45045Well-- you will go, then?"
45045Were most girls reluctant to marry?
45045Were they all on her side?
45045Were you very much frightened?
45045What are you smiling at?"
45045What can I do?
45045What does Annis say to all this?"
45045What has happened to you?"
45045What if they should continue their work of devastation in this direction?
45045What is that despondent song you sing so much?
45045What is this invitation, pray?"
45045What is youth for but a time to be merry and glad and to have good times?
45045What shall I do?"
45045What will you do when Jaqueline refuses some nice, suitable, prosperous young man and sets her heart on a spendthrift-- a ne''er- do- well?"
45045What would you have done in your youth?"
45045Whatever happens, you will always love me, Annis?"
45045When I feel quite sure I love you----""Is there any such blessed moment?"
45045When did you return?
45045When is it to be?"
45045Where have you been all this long time?"
45045Where was her mother?
45045Where''s father?
45045Which is it, Jaqueline?"
45045Who is this wonderful new poet?
45045Who?"
45045Why birds should borrow plumes-- I am shamefully ignorant, am I not?"
45045Why ca n''t papa build on Virginia Avenue, and have a nice garden, and keep horses, and----"What else was there for him to do?
45045Why could n''t he have given his daughter to the young fellow who loved her?
45045Why did he not"ask Jaqueline to love him again"?
45045Why do n''t they come to breakfast?"
45045Why do you all look so queer?
45045Why do you suppose Jacky did n''t marry Mr. Carrington?
45045Why should he not put his fate to the touch, like a man, or dismiss her from his mind?
45045Why should he want Annis?
45045Why should n''t we be as proud as of old_ Mayflower_ tables and cups and cloaks that the New Englanders dote on?"
45045Why, then, was she not ready to step into his life and make it glad with a supreme touch of happiness?
45045Will it be out of order for you to dance, I wonder?
45045Will that satisfy your lordship?
45045Will you amuse yourself while I find him?
45045Will you tell Mrs. Jettson the result of my letter?
45045Wo n''t you make some of your relatives bring you over to Annapolis?
45045Would a line from her bring him back?
45045Would it be very unwomanly?"
45045Would you have me turn haughty now?"
45045Would you like to come upstairs with me?"
45045Would you take her away?"
45045You are mothering her?
45045You can wish me success-- I hope?"
45045You could n''t refuse altogether?"
45045You do n''t know----"Did she really know Marian herself?
45045You go to the Pineries quite often?"
45045You knew my plans concerning my daughter Marian?"
45045You think he will recover?"
45045You were here on a visit-- when, Patricia?"
45045You were of the Moore branch, I believe, kin to my son''s first wife?"
45045You will like the pink, wo n''t you?
45045You will not want to go away?"
45045You wo n''t feel lonesome, little Annis?"
45045You would n''t believe that I was once quite as slim as you?"
45045Your mamma''s maiden name, perhaps?"
45045cried Jane,"did you have a dreadful time when father was down here?
45045she cried,"do you remember the young midshipman at the naval ball when there was such an excitement?
45045what is this all about?"
45045wondered Patty;"and what a farce congratulations would be?
7300Do you refer to polygamy?
7300Now, was ever a cause fought for under conditions more conducive to success? 7300 What is the pleasure of the convention?"
7300A question constantly and properly asked is:"How does woman suffrage work where it is exercised?"
7300And the Czar, and the erratic German Emperor, are they in the evolutionary agreement?
7300As to the other British colonies, what is the situation?
7300At the time of the passing of Mrs. Stanton''s resolutions she said:"But what is marriage?
7300But a question of real interest is, must the political demand made by women be counted as the chief influence in modifying the laws?
7300But has any Suffrage speaker or meeting denounced them, or deprecated the result of the election?
7300But whom do the women propose to substitute?
7300But, suppose all those mentioned were really exempt, how would that apply to women?
7300Can women marry a ballot, or embrace the franchise, otherwise than by a questionable figure of speech?
7300Could union be more completely pictured?
7300Did they do anything of the kind?
7300Did they mean that their property was taxed, and they had no redress?
7300Do I mean by this that every working- woman in the country sees her own value so clearly that she demands enfranchisement?
7300Does Dr. Jacobi mean that in asking for suffrage she does not ask to be as much an independent sovereign as any masculine voter of them all?
7300Does she mean to say that the lawmakers have asked the women if they would consent to remain unfranchised?
7300For, after all, what is government, and what are taxation and representation?
7300Has England consented to it?
7300Has Spain mentioned her resignation of a right to appeal to arms in case she was not pleased with the conduct of our Government in regard to Cuba?
7300Hear you, or not?
7300How came there to be"general improvement in our institutions?"
7300How can that be, when the women who inspired the Suffrage movement, and who began it and still carry it on, proclaimed this as a necessary part?
7300How could men, admitting these words to be divine revelation, ever have preached the subjection of woman?
7300How far was its introduction into these States the result of advanced legislation in accord with true republicanism?
7300How have these bodies answered this long appeal?
7300How long is it since this comfortable state of things was evolved?
7300IS WOMAN SUFFRAGE DEMOCRATIC?
7300IS WOMAN SUFFRAGE DEMOCRATIC?
7300If it was his selfishness that procured woman civil rights and privileges, was it his unselfishness that formerly denied them?
7300If man wanted clinching arguments to prove his superiority, could he find another to match this one which suffrage has furnished him?
7300If women cease to"weep and wail,"will men not cease to be willing to be"furnished by them to the army?"
7300In speaking of the proprieties of life, Paul said:"Does not nature herself teach you?"
7300In the"History"they say:"It is often asked if political equality-- would not arouse antagonism between the sexes?
7300In which have women made most progress, and showed themselves most likely to understand their rights, privileges and duties?
7300Is it likely, then, that he was taking steps in the direction of the destruction of his own home?
7300Is it the"appropriate legislation"that gives to Congress, or to any other body, the power to enforce the article decided upon by a majority?
7300Is there a ruder mind anywhere than one that could not only think but write a sentiment so revolting and so false?
7300Is this the Individualism of Democracy?
7300It has been asked"If it would be best for man to make over half his sovereignty to woman?"
7300It will show the drift of her work in one direction:"''Is my errand sped, and am I a master on earth?''
7300Modern adherents ask,"Is not the next new force at hand in our social evolution to come from the entrance of woman upon the political arena?"
7300Must adultery and infanticide necessarily be favored by the decisions of female jurors?
7300Of course it can be said at once:"Why, multitudes of men never hold office, why should women?"
7300Or speak I to the deaf?"
7300Other women?
7300Senator Hayes asked him if there was no"difference between a person who was disfranchised and one who never had been enfranchised?"
7300She records that"at length President Davies stepped to the front and said in a tremulous, mocking tone,""What will the lady have?"
7300So the question comes, could American women be soldiers?
7300The real test of the working of woman suffrage is to be found in the answer to the question whether better laws have been framed as a consequence?
7300Then, as the historical fact is reversed in our day, and the man is now of the woman, shall his place be one of subjection?
7300Think you, women thus educated would long remain the weak, dependent beings we now find them?
7300To do this would raise the character of man.... Why may not housewifery be reduced to a system as well as the other arts?
7300Utah and New York, Wyoming and Massachusetts, which States do Americans hold up as nearest their model?
7300We control the State.... What am I going to do with my children while I am making the laws for the State?
7300What bearing do these facts have upon my claim that woman suffrage is undemocratic?
7300What did that just accusation mean when our fathers uttered it in regard to English tyranny?
7300What has your chivalry done for the weaker sex?
7300What is its record?
7300What is the verdict?
7300What was the Woman- Suffrage Association doing?
7300When and how did society consent to be governed?
7300When did it agree to be taxed and to be represented?
7300Which State can claim that its action rings truest to the stroke of honest metal in finance and in defence of national honor?
7300Who has shorn man of all his portentous rights?
7300Who were trained by women at the fountain sources and household shrines?
7300Who would enforce it?
7300Who would establish the"special plea"for so large a proportion of the voting population?
7300Why do they not try this way of settling their difficulties?
7300Why not take the shorter course, and ask to have the men do for us what we might do for ourselves if we had the ballot?
7300Why, if woman is a greater political power for good than man, did she not turn it for the principles which the State had held were best?
7300Will any one contend that in the past the married woman has been held in less honor than the unmarried?
7300Would any Suffragist hold that a clergyman was the inferior of men who do sit in the House of Commons?
7300Would the majority of men submit to the minority of men associated with non- combatants?
7300Would the women be any better off, if the men chose that they should not exercise the vote?
38816A constitutional?
38816A monkey?
38816A monkey?
38816A woman?
38816After all, what is Christmas?
38816After all, what is Christmas?
38816Ah, is that tea?
38816Ah, they told you?
38816Ah, you noticed it, did you?
38816Am I?
38816And Edith?
38816And I say, what is the Foreign Office? 38816 And I suppose,"said John, angrily,"that between you all you''ve perpetrated some discreditable fraud, what?
38816And how do you think Jimmie''s lookin''?
38816And how is Miss Merritt?
38816And now, have you decided upon this soliloquy for Joan in her dungeon?
38816And she''s given up biting her nails since Uncle John came home, have n''t you, dear?
38816And those are the Five Points?
38816And to me?
38816And what about mahogany?
38816And what have you done since I''ve been away?
38816And what is a Buff- tip?
38816And when do you want to move in to Ambles?
38816And who helped you to choose it? 38816 And who may Miss Hamilton be?"
38816And you will go, eh?
38816Another drum? 38816 Any Henty''s, I mean, or anything?"
38816Anybody can be a diver, ca n''t they, V?
38816Are these French beans from our own garden?
38816Are they dirty?
38816Are you dissatisfied with me?
38816Are you going to have Joan''s scaffold right center or left center?
38816Are you going to marry Miss Hamilton?
38816Are you really making a will? 38816 Are you really?
38816Are you supposed to be warning me against my secretary?
38816Are you thinking of writing it?
38816Are you, Bertram?
38816B.H.?
38816But ca n''t we arrive at a compromise?
38816But can Hugh count on your support?
38816But did n''t I explain to you that tobogganing can only be carried out after a heavy snowfall?
38816But do n''t you want to go back to your father?
38816But his breakfast?
38816But is n''t that putting in his way temptations of a more positive kind?
38816But is this really to take effect when you''re dead? 38816 But it is n''t a real service, is it?"
38816But the future of logwood and mahogany?
38816But were you in service with Mr. Hamilton? 38816 But what about Hilda?"
38816But what did he leave me?
38816But what is the use of that?
38816But what shall I say to Miss Cartright, who you_ must_ remember is a former member of my company, as well as your sister- in- law?
38816But where are we going to elope to?
38816But why do you want to leave your own vicarage?
38816But would n''t you rather wear a pretty brass helmet?
38816But you do n''t propose that Bertram and Viola should spend six weeks here?
38816But you wo n''t be gone before I get back?
38816By Jove, that will cause a terrific scandal, eh?
38816By marrying me?
38816By the way, I wonder if Janet Bond has good legs?
38816By the way, what''s that rascal, Hugh, been doing? 38816 Cahmehra Squah?"
38816Can I bring my blow- pipe?
38816Can I produce_ Joan of Arc_?
38816Can people only see from Heaven or can they hear?
38816Clear away?
38816Could I see her?
38816Did Eleanor Cartright tell your friend this?
38816Did Mr. Touchwood get my message?
38816Did he ask_ why_ I was coming?
38816Did he tell you why?
38816Did he, Mrs. Worfolk, did he?
38816Did he?
38816Did n''t you hear what Uncle Laurence said, darling?
38816Did n''t you make it clear to Hilda that as much of the vicarage furniture as is required can be sent here immediately? 38816 Did n''t you mean me to take you at your word?"
38816Did she? 38816 Did they, Maud, did they?"
38816Did you ever think of writing a play about Polonius''s wife?
38816Did you hear?
38816Did you, Bertram, did you? 38816 Disgrace the family name?"
38816Do I look like a poet?
38816Do n''t you suppose that perhaps her uncle is all the fonder of her because of this independence?
38816Do n''t you?
38816Do you know shorthand?
38816Do you know that in some ways you yourself remind me of Joan?
38816Do you know what I''m doing?
38816Do you know what it is, Johnnie?
38816Do you mean outwardly?
38816Do you really want to know who wrote this article?
38816Do you think that Mrs. James could control them?
38816Do you think these new things are a success, Maud?
38816Does Miss Hamilton herself wish to leave me like this, or is it only you who think that she ought to leave me?
38816Does Mrs. Fenton know anything of this?
38816Does my work really seem like gimcrack gothic?
38816Down at your place in Hampshire, is n''t he? 38816 Dressing up?"
38816Ees thees ze vay to Cahmehra Squah?
38816Eh? 38816 Eh?"
38816Eh?
38816Father used to shoot elephants, did n''t he?
38816Flowers- and- honey? 38816 Forgery?"
38816Give up your post?
38816Going out, Touchwood?
38816Good heavens, my boy, what in creation are you trying to do?
38816Good heavens, what are you trying to suggest?
38816Good lord, it''s incredible, is n''t it? 38816 Had n''t the carrier better bring it, sir?"
38816Have I in fact been too impulsive in this friendship? 38816 Have n''t you another cap?"
38816Have we got to go back to rotten old Earl''s Court? 38816 Have you decided to introduce those wolves in the first act, because I think I ought to begin making inquiries about suitable dogs?"
38816Have you got any decent books?
38816Have you got everything you want?
38816Have you got good terms from Worrall?
38816Have you no sense of shame at all? 38816 Have you noticed the one constant factor in these letters?
38816Have you seen two children?
38816Her health?
38816How are you, little stranger?
38816How are you, mother? 38816 How dare you be so daring?"
38816How do you know that he guesses?
38816How is Hugh, by the way?
38816How is Hugh?
38816How long has he been a member?
38816How much do you owe her?
38816How much do you owe her?
38816How much?
38816Hullo, is that you, John?
38816I beg your pardon?
38816I do n''t think you really want to get married, do you?
38816I do n''t, do I, Frida?
38816I like the old- fashioned style, do n''t you know?
38816I say, V, can you twig what Uncle John says?
38816I say, what is this parcel like a long drain- pipe?
38816I say, what steps_ are_ you going to take to- morrow?
38816I say, you''re ragging me, are n''t you? 38816 I suppose I am involved in the general condemnation?"
38816I suppose a private secretary ought not to say''what nonsense''to her employer, but really what else can I say? 38816 I suppose she''d object to your going to France with me to finish off the play?"
38816I suppose the usual outfit for hot climates will be necessary?
38816I suppose you are comparing me to a peewit now?
38816I suppose you mean she''s gone to church? 38816 I suppose you would n''t care for a constitutional, George?"
38816I suppose your young woman is responsible for this sudden solicitude for Hugh''s career? 38816 I think Maud''s a darling, do n''t you, Uncle John?"
38816I think it would make a jolly good play, do n''t you?
38816I think this is rather a ripping room, do n''t you, V?
38816I think you told me this was your first visit home in fifteen years?
38816I thought it was rather good, did n''t you, Johnnie?
38816I wonder if we might n''t ask Maud to open half- a- bottle of champagne? 38816 I''m not accusing your young woman-- how old is she, by the way?
38816I''m so sorry, dear, why did n''t you ring?
38816I''m your secretary, are n''t I?
38816If you want to give him something to do, why do n''t you intrust him with getting ready the house for your Christmas party? 38816 In what capacity?"
38816Is Harold there?
38816Is he? 38816 Is it Andromà © da or Andrómeda?"
38816Is it really? 38816 Is n''t he in a nasty, horrid, cross mood?"
38816Is n''t that a rather desirable quality in a secretary?
38816Is that a pi book?
38816Is that some special kind of porous overcoat?
38816It sounds a little trivial for such a serious subject, do n''t you think?
38816It was n''t James?
38816It would make Ambles so much larger, would n''t it?
38816It''s not easy to talk on a motor- bus, is it?
38816Jew ring?
38816Laurence dear,said Edith mildly,"is n''t it time we were going?"
38816Laying for lunch?
38816Likes wasps?
38816Look here, have I done anything to offend you?
38816Look here, what stories have you heard about me? 38816 Look here, what''s all this about British Honduras?"
38816Look here,he cried,"have you nearly finished?
38816May I inquire exactly what you have heard about me and my private life?
38816Miss Hamilton?
38816Mr. Touchwood was the name?
38816My brother, James?
38816My dear, how could I ring without letting my materials drop?
38816No doubt,he added,"you will overlook it this time?
38816No, really?
38816No?
38816None of the guests at Halma House keeps a tame calf?
38816Not Beatrice?
38816Not too delighted, eh, darling? 38816 Noticed it?
38816Now am I attributing to Miss Hamilton more discretion than she''s really got?
38816Of course, you got the idea from Kingsley? 38816 Of what importance is my health?
38816Oh dear, are n''t we sarcastic this afternoon?
38816Oh, Harold''s with you?
38816Oh, Uncle John,she cried,"would n''t that be glorious?"
38816Oh, but wo n''t you allow that she''s a great actress?
38816Oh, you can, sir, can you?
38816Oh, you have a mother?
38816Or bound up Boys Own Papers?
38816Or call?
38816Or is it due to my obsession that relations should never see too much of each other?
38816Over what?
38816Pass the salt, will you, George, old boy?
38816Perhaps you''d like me to bring up your tea, dear, so that you wo n''t be disturbed?
38816Really? 38816 Really?
38816Really?
38816Rot?
38816Safety razor, sir?
38816Satisfactory?
38816Say it again, will yer?
38816See her, Mr. Touchwood? 38816 See her?"
38816Shall I give you an arm up the steps, sir?
38816Shall I stick it in the book?
38816Shall we have Hugh in?
38816Shall_ I_ drive in to meet her?
38816Should I? 38816 Sir Percy?"
38816Sir Percy?
38816Sir Percy?
38816Skin tender?
38816So that if I''m arrested for forgery,Hugh asked,"you wo n''t mind?"
38816Sort of Max Nordau business?
38816Strong is it? 38816 Suppose I insist upon having your advice?"
38816That will be nice, wo n''t it, Uncle John?
38816The actress?
38816The fourth act of what?
38816The fourth act?
38816The prospect of your children''s passing the night in the Zoo leaves you unaffected?
38816The what?
38816Then what have I come down to Hampshire for?
38816Then who more able to advise a niece? 38816 Then why should I be invited to lose my money over it?"
38816Then would you please tell Mrs. Worfolk that we can have the calf''s head?
38816There''s nothing else you''ll be wanting this morning, sir?
38816There''s nothing you particularly recommend?
38816Time for a shave before lunch, steward?
38816To me?
38816To- morrow?
38816Touchwood?
38816Truly?
38816Was he a friend of the gentleman who keeps the shop where you bought it?
38816Was he indeed?
38816Was he?
38816Was n''t there a good deal of talk about the scantness of some of the ladies''dresses?
38816Wednesday at Princes? 38816 Well, I suppose you two girls have settled it between you?"
38816Well, are n''t you an old prude? 38816 Well, can I bring it?"
38816Well, if nobody wants to climb Shalstead Down,said John beaming happily,"what do you say, Miss Hamilton?"
38816Well, in Camera Square, would n''t you?
38816Well, is n''t it in a sick state?
38816Well, it''s very jolly down here, is n''t it?
38816Well, rats or cats, what does it matter, you naughty girl? 38816 Well, shall I bring_ Ants_,_ Bees_, and_ Wasps_?"
38816Well, that''s part of the story, eh, Aubrey?
38816Well, why should more people read your paper? 38816 Well, why write a book about them?
38816Well, women do n''t understand about money, do they? 38816 Well, you wo n''t mind having them here for a short visit?
38816What a fuss they make about nothing, do n''t they?
38816What about dictating your letters? 38816 What about our food?"
38816What and never come to us ever again?
38816What are they doing?
38816What are you carrying?
38816What are you going to call this further unnecessary burden upon our powers of assimilation?
38816What are you looking for, Uncle John?
38816What did I say? 38816 What did he do?"
38816What do you feel about it?
38816What do you mean by a dose of dramatic nux vomica?
38816What do you mean-- pleasure?
38816What do you want her to do? 38816 What does this gross impersonation mean?"
38816What for? 38816 What for?
38816What happened to him when he grew up?
38816What have dog- roses got to do with my post?
38816What is Laurence''s latest?
38816What is it?
38816What is that pernicious mess on the front lawn?
38816What is your advice about the forefinger of my left hand? 38816 What on earth can they find to enjoy in this awful smell?"
38816What on earth has he been doing now?
38816What shall we gain by doing that? 38816 What skin is that, my boy?"
38816What skin is this, Uncle John?
38816What was the row about?
38816What would you like then?
38816What would you like to do to- morrow?
38816What''s he suffering from? 38816 What''s that little boy doing with a spoon?"
38816What''s that?
38816What''s the good of having a confidential secretary, if I ca n''t ask her advice about confidential matters?
38816What''s the good of your dressing up as a diver? 38816 What''s this I hear about Hugh going to Sierra Leone?
38816What?
38816What?
38816What?
38816When are Cousin Bertram and Cousin Viola coming?
38816When will it snow?
38816When?
38816Where am I?
38816Where did you pick up your lady- help?
38816Where is it likely to be?
38816Where''s the path got to now? 38816 Which I suppose one ought to tell in full, eh, Aubrey?"
38816Which one is that?
38816Which you were not prepared to go beyond, I think you said?
38816Who is that youth?
38816Who on earth told you that?
38816Who shot it?
38816Who was it that first said''Charity begins at home''? 38816 Who was you thinking of, sir?"
38816Who will deny it? 38816 Whose name have you forged?"
38816Why ca n''t he see to read?
38816Why did n''t she complain to me?
38816Why do n''t you come and camp out with me, too?
38816Why do n''t_ you_ come out to us? 38816 Why do you want them?"
38816Why does she take taxis?
38816Why not the dining- room? 38816 Why not?"
38816Why not?
38816Why should I want you to die?
38816Why should n''t she lend her parrot?
38816Why, has he been misbehaving himself again?
38816Why, what has he been doing?
38816Why, who''s to get the house ready if we all go trooping down on Christmas Eve? 38816 Why?
38816Why? 38816 Why?"
38816Why?
38816Why?
38816Will anything make you stop crying?
38816Will no one stop the child?
38816Will you wait in the drawing- room, sir?
38816Wo n''t there be room there?
38816Wo n''t you light up before you begin?
38816Wonderful how Stevie acts up to the part, is n''t it?
38816Would it?
38816Would n''t it be better,he suggested, mildly,"to submit your play to a manager before we-- before you try to put it on yourself?
38816Would n''t you?
38816Would you have any erbjections if I give it to my nephew, sir?
38816Would you like Elsa to hot you up something?
38816Would you like to see me shoot at something?
38816Yes, I did, did n''t I?
38816Yes, but what about my unwritten contract with the public?
38816Yes, it''s a pity, is n''t it?
38816You are back in town then?
38816You can understand, can you, how it affects me to be saddled with brothers like these and port like this?
38816You do agree with me that they were going too far?
38816You do n''t know my mother, do you? 38816 You do n''t mean to say that you''ve got_ them_ with you?"
38816You do n''t mind going as far as Sloane Square by motor- bus?
38816You do n''t mind my laughing? 38816 You do n''t mind?"
38816You do n''t preserve?
38816You do n''t really want me to stick in this paragraph from_ High Life_?
38816You do n''t seriously suggest that she is in love with him?
38816You enjoyed taking her?
38816You feel it terribly, do n''t you, dear Johnnie?
38816You have no qualms, George, at the notion of their wandering for hours upon the outskirts of Regent''s Park?
38816You hear that, Doris? 38816 You know there''s a medicine called Easton''s Syrup?
38816You like rivers, do n''t you, Fenton? 38816 You wo n''t allow the suburbs to be touched by poetry?"
38816You would n''t care to-- er-- come down and give a look round yourself, Mrs. Worfolk? 38816 You''ll trot in and say ta- ta to the mater?"
38816You''re not happy there?
38816You''re not keeping anything from me, George? 38816 You''re not meditating marriage, are you?"
38816You''re very much married already, are n''t you, John?
38816You''ve never had any longing for the tropics?
38816You''ve put the summerhouse in hand?
38816Your wife''s current account was n''t flowing quite strongly enough, was it?
38816_ Do_ you allow Bertram to behave like this?
38816_ The Fall of Nineveh_, was n''t it?
38816*****"You agree with these suggestions?"
38816After all, why not?
38816All right, if you insist, I must obey-- or lose my job, eh?"
38816Am I right, Aubrey?"
38816Am I unduly proud of my work if I say that it seems to me a more worthy medium than British Honduras or weekly papers?"
38816And I''m to give them their dinners the same as if you were here yourself?
38816And even if I do rosify things, well, what is it that Lady Teazle says?
38816And even if he did not say anything about the past, ought he to compromise her more deeply in the future?
38816And had his short experience of her made him so reckless that nothing but his spectacles were found by the rescuers?
38816And has he found out?
38816And how many bottles of champagne shall I open?
38816And the children, how could they be expected to feel the loss of the old lady?
38816And the children?
38816And this letter you want handed to Mr. James to be read to the family on your birthday?
38816And what did I say about my family?
38816And what of it?
38816And what right had Hilda to object?
38816And who was her companion?
38816And why did n''t I offer to pay for Eleanor''s taxi?
38816And why not?
38816And why should n''t he get married?
38816And you expect to be back in June?
38816And your scheme for a real Joan of Arc?
38816Another time?
38816Are you utterly callous?"
38816As a matter of fact, I think it''s rather funny, do n''t you?
38816Bear?
38816Beat them?"
38816Bertram, why do n''t you and Viola take Harold down to the river and practice diving?
38816Besides, did she even know shorthand?
38816Besides, was n''t he going to British Guiana?"
38816Besides, what are we going to do?"
38816Bit tough, is n''t it, sending him over to a plague spot like that?
38816But Hugh?
38816But as I always said to them,''What is the use of proposing to my daughter?
38816But did n''t you write_ The Walls of Jericho_?
38816But do you think that Edith objects?
38816But had she ever contemplated the notion of becoming a confidential secretary?
38816But how had she avoided being a poor relation?
38816But how is one to encourage shorthand?
38816But how much did I tell her of my scheme for_ Joan of Arc_?
38816But if there was a genuine criminal streak in the Touchwoods, how was he ever again to feel secure of his relations''honor?
38816But is it wise?
38816But is she less psychologically interesting on that account?
38816But of course everything depends on your inclination, or should I say inspiration?
38816But suppose he asks me how I found out?"
38816But suppose my wife were upstairs?
38816But what had Daniel Curtis seen in Hilda?
38816But what made you ask about a calf?
38816But who is it?
38816But why do you want me to leave England?"
38816But wo n''t it seem as if I am overlooking his abominable behavior too easily?"
38816But would she accept such a post?
38816But would the presence of Beatrice exercise an effective control upon this dressing up, and could he stand Beatrice for six weeks at a stretch?
38816By the way, Hilda, is there any accommodation for a monkey?
38816By the way, has your mother been girding at you lately?"
38816By the way, is your taxi waiting?"
38816By the way, when am I to congratulate you?"
38816Can he have the dog- cart?"
38816Can you trust his taste?
38816Cigar gone out?
38816Come in and have some grub, wo n''t you?
38816Copy?"
38816Could that suggestion of Hilda''s have had any truth in it?
38816Did I say dog- roses?
38816Did James complain to her about my taking the portraits and the silver?
38816Did he live in Huntingdonshire?"
38816Did he not give the impression that he was stretching his legs after sitting still in one position for too long?
38816Did he want such an honor?
38816Did n''t I explain that she was in bed?"
38816Did n''t it come in a taxi?"
38816Did you know that Ambles is built on a gravel subsoil, Uncle John?
38816Do n''t you think he''s lookin''very well, Jimmie?
38816Do we find any sex obsession in her?
38816Do you disapprove of wives''helping their husbands?"
38816Do you know why Beatrice goes to church?
38816Do you think I would write plays like yours?
38816Do you think that I could work with two children careering all over the place?
38816Do you want one?"
38816Does he know who did it?"
38816Does it?
38816Does it?
38816Does she hear Frida kicking the table, or does she only see her?"
38816Does this strike you as too heavy a task?
38816Easton''s?"
38816Easton?"
38816Eau- de- quinine?
38816Eh?
38816Eh?
38816Eighty- one pounds you said?
38816Even if I do send him for a sea- voyage, how will he spend his time?
38816Few currants?
38816For her sake?
38816Getting drunk, I suppose?"
38816Good gracious me, ca n''t I take my secretary abroad without bring accused of ulterior motives?"
38816Good heavens,"he added to himself when his housekeeper had left the room,"why should n''t I be allowed a country house?
38816Great heavens, had he ever yet envisaged Hugh listening abjectly( or worse impudently) to the strictures of a scornful judge?
38816Had he yet imagined the headlines in the press?
38816Had not the children talked of finishing Robinson Crusoe and alluded to his own lack of suitable fur rugs?
38816Had she not prophesied even that he would be another Dickens?
38816Has Bill Bailey been out for his run?"
38816Has n''t their luggage arrived?
38816Have I not read somewhere that the great Edmund Kean did not disdain to play the tail end of a dragon erstwhile?
38816Have I told you that I''m considering a brief experience of the realities of the stage?
38816Have I?
38816Have another cigar, wo n''t you?
38816Have another glass of port?
38816Have you ever been to a police station?
38816Have you heard my new name for your habit of mind?
38816He found himself glibly thinking of her as a type; but with what type could she be classified?
38816He honored his brother''s intellectual sincerity, why could not his brother do as much for his?
38816He''s beginning to show his age, eh?"
38816He''s not actually under arrest?"
38816Hear that?
38816How can I put your name on my programme as the author of_ Joan of Arc_?
38816How can I think about Joan of Arc?
38816How can I, John Touchwood?"
38816How d''ye do?
38816How does it begin?
38816How many people read your books?"
38816How''s work?"
38816I cut out the enclosed photo of you from_ The Tatler_, and, would it be asking too much to sign your name?
38816I dare say James was in the wrong; but is it a part of a secretary''s duties to manage her employer?
38816I do n''t suppose anybody in England has taken so much trouble as Jimmie over dragon- flies, but what is a dragon- fly?
38816I hope you made it quite clear to your mother you had no intention of leaving me?"
38816I hope you were sympathetic?"
38816I suppose it''s she who has persuaded you that he has possibilities?
38816I suppose you do n''t remember a piece at the old Prince of Wales?
38816I suppose you found many changes in Balham on your return?"
38816I suppose you''ve been ordering shirts in my name as well as selling port, eh?
38816I surely never gave him the least idea that I was going to back his confounded play, did I?"
38816I think letters are a beastly fag, do n''t you?"
38816I think that''s the correct formula?"
38816I wonder if you could advance me ten guineas?
38816I wonder why people wiggle so when they make a path?
38816I''m not going to reason with you....""Ah, indeed?"
38816I''m so afraid that you''ll make Joan preach, and of course she must n''t preach, must she?"
38816I''m so sorry....""Going to work, are you?"
38816I''m very grateful to you for forking out-- by the way, I hope you noticed the nice little touch in the sum?
38816If James despised his romantic plays, why could he not be consistent and despise equally the wealth they brought him?
38816If you sent out an Australian company, do n''t you think I might play lead?
38816Infantile paralysis?"
38816Is it from any standpoint conceivable that my own behavior did hasten her end?"
38816Is it very cold out?"
38816Is it wise?
38816Is n''t Hugh rather too real for one of your Christmas parties?"
38816Is that surprising?
38816Is this a family quarrel?
38816It does look untidy, does n''t it?
38816It was either at the Prince of Wales or the Strand, or, by Jove, was it Toole''s?"
38816John hurried away in a rage and walked up the Strand muttering:"What_ was_ the name of that mahogany- planter?
38816John threw a glance at Miss Hamilton, which was meant to express"What did I tell you?"
38816John who was still sensitive to Edith''s truisms tried to cover her last by incorporating Hilda in the conversation with a"What room do you advise?"
38816Johnnie, is it fair to let a complete stranger make mischief among relations?"
38816Just as he reached the door, he heard number one exclaim:"Hulloa, see who that was?
38816Let me see, the tube- station is on the left as I go out?
38816Let me see, you_ will_ be having lunch at home I think you said?"
38816Little Frida here?"
38816Look here where_ are_ we going to lunch?
38816Moreover, was it logically possible to find two children, any more than it was possible to find a lost train?
38816Mother said it was too far for me; but it is n''t, is it, Uncle John?"
38816Mother, you wo n''t, will you?
38816Must you really be going?"
38816My confidential secretary?
38816My father was always a bit of a recluse, do n''t you see?"
38816My wife?
38816My wife?
38816No, really, what is the Foreign Office?"
38816No?
38816Not your first crossing, I take it?"
38816Nothing about my plans for the near future?"
38816Oh, not to stint them?
38816Or perhaps a friction?
38816Or was it already too late?
38816Or was it?
38816Or will you have another muffin?"
38816Ought he, indeed, to make her aware to- morrow morning of what was being suggested?
38816Parting on the left''s it, I think?"
38816Perhaps there wo n''t be room for them?"
38816Perhaps you may remember me once passing the remark that I''d been in service with a racing family?
38816Perhaps you''ve heard of the Home for Epileptic Gentlewomen?
38816Perhaps, Eleanor, you will introduce me to some of your theatrical friends after the holidays?
38816Rather good, eh?
38816Remember what Horry Walpole said about the country?"
38816Shave you close, sir?"
38816Shave yourself, sir?"
38816Should I enjoy a woman''s bobbing in and out of my room all the time?
38816Should he visit James and Beatrice, and take them out to lunch with a Symphony Concert to follow?
38816So I faked his signature-- you know how to do that?"
38816So will you arrange for Maud to take her every Tuesday and Friday?
38816So you''ve had another success?
38816Suppose I marry and never have any children?
38816Suppose he did invite Doris Hamilton, but, of course, that was absurd-- suppose he did invite Beatrice, would Doris Hamilton-- would Beatrice come?
38816Suppose she had been laughing at him all the time?
38816Suppose that Stephen should be seized with one of those moral crises that can only be relieved by making an example of somebody?
38816Suppose that even now she was laughing at him with Miss Merritt?
38816Surely you got my letter?"
38816That''s a good phrase, Aubrey?"
38816Then exchanging his tone of polite martyrdom for the suave jocularity of a vicar, he continued:"And when are we to expect our Yuletide guests?
38816Then seeing that Laurence seemed rather indignant, he added quickly,"Did I say the compass?
38816There''ll always be the cold beef, wo n''t there?"
38816Things we should like to know, do n''t you know?
38816This article was entitled_ What Is Wrong With Our Drama?_ and was signed with some obscurely allusive pseudonym.
38816This walk has given me a tremendous appetite, and I do feel that we''ve made a splendid start with the fourth act, do n''t you?"
38816Touchwood?"
38816Tramps very often ask for old boots, do n''t they?
38816Was George never coming?
38816Was Mama worried to death by Hugh''s going abroad?
38816Was n''t she working at a girls''club or something?
38816Was n''t there a Saint Laurence who was grilled?
38816Was not his collection of humming birds enough?
38816Well, Beatrice, did you enjoy the sermon?"
38816Well, I mean to say, when any one packs up some luggage and sends it off in a taxi, whoever expects to see it come back again almost at once?
38816What about the fourth act?"
38816What am I?
38816What are you doing?"
38816What could it all be about?
38816What did it matter if the streets were empty?
38816What did she talk about?"
38816What does the British public care for criticism?
38816What had been the result?
38816What had he got against the Shah?"
38816What is a trivet by the way?
38816What is her name?"
38816What is my work, after all?
38816What is the word for outsiders of standing who are called in to assist at the settlement of a trade dispute?
38816What is your experience of women?
38816What the deuce does it matter to me if people do stare?
38816What the devil are you doing?"
38816What was her work?
38816What was it called?
38816What was my circulation as a realist?
38816What was unpremeditated arson compared with deliberate forgery?
38816What woman, John wondered, might serve as a comparable deterrent?
38816What would England be without Shakespeare?
38816What''s four thousand?
38816What''s that?"
38816What''s the good of having all those jolly hills at the back of the house if you do n''t use them?"
38816What, another new cap?"
38816What-- er-- skin do you prefer?
38816What?
38816When does he pester her?
38816When will_ Lucrezia_ be produced in London, and where?
38816Where are we going to lunch?"
38816Where do you say you dropped it?"
38816Where is Frida?"
38816Where is that confounded boy?"
38816Where was I?
38816Where was I?"
38816Where''s Beatrice?"
38816Where''s Bertram?
38816Where''s mine?"
38816Where?"
38816Who knows?
38816Who knows?
38816Who knows?
38816Who was it this time-- Lucretia Borgia, eh?"
38816Who would ever think that you had any sort of connection with the stage?
38816Who would you like it given to?"
38816Who''s there at present?"
38816Why are you glad?"
38816Why ca n''t I see myself as a husband?
38816Why did n''t Maud come and draw those curtains?
38816Why do you suppose she is always trying to make me give up working for you?
38816Why not The New Way to pay Old Scores?
38816Why should he come to you to get him out of a scrape?
38816Why should he not visit James and Beatrice this very evening?
38816Why should n''t I join you on the day after?"
38816Why was she coming home to England?
38816Why worry?
38816Why?
38816Wo n''t you lunch with me one day?"
38816Wo n''t you, dear?"
38816Worfolk?"
38816Worfolk?"
38816Would it not be as well to go down at once to his place in the country and try to square matters, unembarrassed by Hugh''s brazen impenitence?
38816Would n''t_ Saint Thomas_ be better, and really rather more respectful?
38816Would not Miss Hamilton decide that her post approximated too nearly to that of a governess?
38816Would you like something to brisken up the growth a bit?
38816Yet suppose that she''s just an ordinary young woman and goes gossiping all over England about meeting me?
38816You did n''t find that did you?"
38816You do n''t advise me to try for the 9:05?"
38816You do n''t mind if I rush off and leave you to finish your cheese alone?"
38816You do n''t mind my criticizing you?"
38816You do n''t remember the piece?
38816You know my brother, do n''t you?
38816You know that Laurence has recently become very broad?
38816You know what people are saying?
38816You remember Major Downman, John?"
38816You remember he always regarded me as a bit of an infant prodigy?
38816You remember poor Miss Moxley, John?"
38816You remember the dancing- lessons you arranged for?"
38816You saw that paragraph in_ The Penguin_?
38816You understand me?
38816You understand, do n''t you, that I intended to say nothing about it and to blame myself in silence for my carelessness?
38816You''ll help me with my shopping next week?
38816You''ll remember me to Miss Merritt?"
38816You''re goin''to stay to supper, of course?
38816You''ve nothing else to ask me?
38816You''ve seen my performance, of course?"
38816_ But, after all, should we take Mr. Touchwood seriously?
38816_ Enter from the left the Virgin Mary._""Enter who?"
38816_ October 10, 1910._ DEAR MR. TOUCHWOOD,--I wonder if you have forgotten our talk at Sir Herbert''s that night?
38816_ Was_ it Raikes or was n''t it?
38816is n''t that Harold calling?"
38816or are you only playing a joke?"
7352Anything else I can do? 7352 Anything else?"
7352Are there any wild boars in this forest?
7352But what do these brutes,he said, alluding to his fellow- countrymen,"know of enlightenment?
7352Certainly,he said,"certainly; but about those forms?"
7352Did he, indeed?
7352Do you know Africa?
7352Four to_ what_?
7352Have you a plan or anything I could watch?
7352How did you get to it?
7352How do you mean?
7352How do you mean?
7352How do you mean?
7352I do,said the old man simply;"would you like a game?"
7352No,said I,"I have n''t got one; it''s a pity, but I''ll tell you who will give you one; you know the place opposite, where the bills are drafted?"
7352Now,said he genially,"what''s it to be?"
7352Well now,I went on, full of the chase,"you will naturally ask me who are you to go to?"
7352Well,I said,"you did n''t suppose they supplied them, did you?"
7352Well,said the young man like one who expounds new mysteries,"do you know piquet?"
7352What was that?
7352What would you do?
7352Which way did you walk?
7352Why not?
7352Why, what would you do to try and get it taken up and talked about?
7352Why,said I,"do you believe that parallel straight lines_ converge_ or_ diverge_?"
7352You are, then,said I,"an old- fashioned adherent of the theory of the parabolic universe?"
7352You know the Fusionary Office, as we call it? 7352 You know what a speedometer is?"
7352You''ve got it all clear, I hope?
7352A white mark of the number 90?"
7352Accustomed by many years of travel to this type of response, I continued:"How much do you charge?"
7352And how much did they feel that here they were now physically caught by the moving tides that bore them in the whole movement of things?
7352And when I asked him,"Of what?"
7352Are not this and I bound up inextricably?"
7352Are these phenomena( which undoubtedly happen) what modern people call subjective, or are they what modern people call objective?
7352Are they indeed blessed in this, the great poets?
7352As they shuffled again the young man said:"What did you mean by the little bits stopping, or whatever it was?"
7352But as Europe fades away under the African wound which Spain suffered or the Eastern barbarism of the Elbe, what happens to cheese?
7352But how shall I begin, or how express to you what not distance but a slow and bitter conclusion of the mind has done?
7352But what is the mere soil of the field without them?
7352But what knowledge?
7352But where are the new things that are also the old?
7352Can a priest tell me how to build, or how to light my house?
7352Can you separate me from this?
7352Do you not notice how the intimate mind of Europe is reflected in cheese?
7352Eh?
7352He is a useless and a lying mouth, why should I feed him?"
7352He said to me:"Have you noticed any special mark upon the trees?
7352He turned to his senior, who was watching him in a very paternal and happy manner, and said formally:"I hope you do not mind my smoking, sir?"
7352His face was pained and wrinkled as he heard me, but he said,"I beg your pardon... but shall I have it all explained to me at the office?"
7352How can it have been worth while to cart away the marble columns?
7352How can the stones have gone?
7352How is he to distinguish when that course is rightly drawn from when it is wrongly drawn?
7352How much, I wonder, did they think themselves enlarged?
7352I met him in his farmyard, and I said to him:"Is it you, sir, that drive travellers to Bavai?"
7352I said,"Eh, what?"
7352I would have hesitated, did I say?
7352If I am ill, can a priest cure me?
7352In old- fashioned English, Are the ghosts really there or are they not?
7352Is it not a miracle that he has failed?
7352Is it not an enormous business merely to stand in such a place?
7352Now how does one get loose and away?
7352The River Severn, the River Wye, and a third unimportant river, or at least important only for its beauty( and who would insist on that?)
7352The first farmer said to the second in the railway carriage when we had all got in:"Where''d he come from?"
7352The very first question a plain man would ask about the case would be,"What were the distances involved?"
7352Then he added,"Of what use are wars?
7352Then let him travel, and what will he come across?
7352Then there is your Parmesan, which idiots buy rancid in bottles, but which the wise grate daily for their use: you think it is hard from its birth?
7352This little note of the Newcastle men, and of the flowing and the ebbing of their sea, is to be found, you say, in the archives of England?
7352What are we?
7352What criterion can the ordinary reader choose when he is confronted by difficulties of this sort?
7352What did the faun in the beginning of time when a god surprised him or a mortal had the misfortune to come across him in the woods?
7352What do they tell you of the social truth?
7352What do you think it is?"
7352What happened to all that mass of local documents whereby we ought to be able to build up the territorial scheme and the landed regime of old France?
7352What has happened to the High Goddess whom that youth followed, and worshipped as they say, and what to the Gods whom their enemies defended?
7352What has happened?
7352What is all this business?
7352What meaning has it save for their presence?
7352What other cheese has great holes in it like Gruyere, or what other is as round as a cannon- ball like that cheese called Dutch?
7352What shall it be?"
7352When did anyone in the Middle Ages pull out a Jew''s teeth for money?
7352When on earth did the"Middle Ages"lay down that a"few words over lifeless clay determined the fate of the soul for all eternity"?
7352Which did you mean?"
7352Who could have guessed that one of its chief results would be the furnishing of a free refuge for the Irish?
7352Who quarrelled with the Public in the old days when men lived a healthy corporate life, and painted, wrote, or sang for the applause of their fellows?
7352Who that knows anything of the sea will claim certitude in connexion with it?
7352Why are there no broken statues on such a ground, and no relics of the gods?
7352Why does the mere space remain and all the rest dissolve?
7352Why is this egregious nonsense?
7352Why?
7352Why?
7352Would you?"
7352one wonders whether, after all, if he does travel, he will see the things before his eyes?
9975I rang up a friend on the telephone, and began, as usual:''Hullo, is that you?'' 9975 What nation could be more fitted than the United States to take the lead in the peace negotiations?"
9975Where did you see that?
9975And what if they are?
9975How will she use it?
9975Shall we win?
9975The Belgian authorities asked at the French headquarters:"What shall we do with him?"
9975The maid slyly asked:"Is that the road to Paris?"
9975What if we were yet to be defeated again and again?
4770''Drownded?'' 4770 Ai n''t they becoming?"
4770All well at home?
4770Am I also expected to clean his boots?
4770Am I much changed since you first knew me?
4770Am I to understand that as your final answer, Miss Devon?
4770And if I asked you to come back to the home that has been desolate since you went, would you come?
4770And if I dared to say I loved you?
4770And if I had refused, you would have let me go and held fast to Letty?
4770And so you thought I cared for Kitty?
4770And there is no hope?
4770And these?
4770And this is how you came to be the cheerful, contented woman you are?
4770And what is to become of me?
4770And who is he?
4770And you found him?
4770And you?
4770Are you ready for the new experiment?
4770As he did me?
4770Bartlett''s dying, marm: could you come and see to him?
4770Bless and save us, what do you mean, child?
4770But do n''t you think a man who had only follies to regret might expect a good woman to lend him a hand and make him happy?
4770But how will it end? 4770 But where will she go if you send her away?
4770But you are not in earnest?
4770Can nothing save her?
4770Christie, what is it? 4770 Dance, of course?"
4770Dangerously you said?
4770David, did you see that I cared for you?
4770Did Letty tell you what she had done for me?
4770Did all your troubles go down with the pig?
4770Did n''t you see it? 4770 Did they follow your advice?"
4770Did you ever hear him, or read any of his writins?
4770Did you?
4770Do n''t you think you could be contented any way, Christie, ef I make the work lighter, and leave you more time for your books and things?
4770Do you care for flowers?
4770Do you ever regret it?
4770Do you see it at last?
4770Do you sing?
4770Ef you fall sick or die, what then?
4770Ever on before?
4770For the better or the worse?
4770Forgive me,--how could I know? 4770 Had n''t you any doubts about it, any fears of going wrong or being sorry afterwards?"
4770Had n''t you better rest a little before you begin any new task, my daughter? 4770 Had you rather have her here than me?"
4770How are you goin''to eddicate the little gal? 4770 How came he here?"
4770How can I sleep in such an Inferno as this?
4770How could I help it when she was so young and pretty and fond of you?
4770How did that get there?
4770How did you find me?
4770How do you know that?
4770How do you know?
4770How do you like him?
4770How is Helen to- day, Nurse?
4770How is he wounded?
4770How, Bella?
4770How?
4770How?
4770I do n''t think I can improve it, unless I add another sort of flower that seems appropriate: may I?
4770I do: can you be spared so soon?
4770I s''pose you thought of that when you come so quick?
4770I think it would comfort you if I washed your face: can you bear to have it done?
4770I want to go to your hospital: where is it?
4770I wonder if that means anything?
4770I wonder if you''d think me vain if I asked you something that I want to know?
4770I''m glad of that; and how do you mean to spend these long years of yours?
4770Is he here?
4770Is n''t forty elderly?
4770Is this the stage? 4770 Just take a turn across the stage, will you?
4770Lucy is happy, virtuous, and independent, why ca n''t I be so too if I have any talent? 4770 Lucy, did you hear that impertinent''my dear''?"
4770Mother wants eggs: will you come to the barn and get them? 4770 Mr. Power helped you: did n''t he?"
4770Mr. Power is waiting: are you ready, love?
4770Mr. Sterling is all right I hope?
4770Mrs. King, are you sure of this?
4770Mrs. Saltonstall is well, I hope?
4770My dear, my dear, what drove you to it? 4770 My dearest girl, did you ever know a man in love do, say, or think the right thing at the right time?
4770Next time, I shall come not as a stranger, but as a former-- may I say friend?
4770No bad news I hope, ma''am?
4770No bridal white, dear?
4770No one cares what I am, so why care myself? 4770 Not even though he has''heavenly eyes,''''distracting legs,''and''a melting voice?''"
4770Not wounded yet? 4770 Now you will come home?
4770Now, what are we to do next?
4770Now, what shall we play?
4770Now, will thee take that pitcher of water to David''s room? 4770 Nurse, who is that?
4770O David, what is it?
4770Oh, Christie, may I hope it? 4770 Oh, David, how?"
4770Oh, she''s goin''to marry for a livin''is she? 4770 Oh, there''s another lover, is there?"
4770Oh, you mean I''m to be strong- minded, to cry aloud and spare not, to denounce their iniquities, and demand their money or their lives?
4770Poor fellow, is he dead?
4770Sir?
4770Six young children is harder: ef I went fifin''and drummin''off, who''d take care of them I''d like to know?
4770Some one ill, I fancy? 4770 Thank you for my share of the compliment; but why say''only digs''?
4770That is a rash promise: I am a woman, and therefore curious; what shall you do if I take advantage of the privilege?
4770The old lady has to have some on''t, do n''t she?
4770Then I may love you, and not be afraid of offending?
4770Then I may really go?
4770Then the past, now that you know it all, does not change your heart to us?
4770Then what shall I do?
4770Then you are quite willing to try the third great experiment?
4770Then you think Jane was a fool to love and try to make a saint of him, I suppose?
4770Then you would n''t advise my friend to say yes?
4770Those are not for a wedding, then?
4770Tried your own way? 4770 Was I going to drown myself?"
4770Was she pretty?
4770Was she?
4770We will: what can I do for you, Davy?
4770Well, and how goes it? 4770 Well, how do you like her as an actress?"
4770Well, what is it? 4770 Were you afraid of him?"
4770What can I do for you? 4770 What can I do for you?"
4770What did Mr. Sharp say?
4770What did he mean?
4770What did you do then?
4770What do I look like?
4770What do you want, child?
4770What have you got? 4770 What have you there so interesting?"
4770What is it, David?
4770What is your name, dear?
4770What is your opinion of Rochester?
4770What made you ill? 4770 What more, David?"
4770What part does Mr. Power do?
4770What promise?
4770What shall we do?
4770What shall you have?
4770What took you there first?
4770What''s the joke?
4770What''s the matter, dear? 4770 What''s the matter?
4770What''s the matter?
4770Where is he?
4770Who are you making that for? 4770 Who is he?"
4770Who told you that?
4770Who''s that?
4770Whose fault is that, sir?
4770Why did n''t you choose Juliet: St. George would do Romeo so well?
4770Why did n''t you go back after the accident?
4770Why do n''t he offer to put up a swing for me, or get me a doll? 4770 Why not?
4770Why not?
4770Why not?
4770Why should I work and suffer any longer for myself alone?
4770Why, Hepsey, were you ever a slave?
4770Why, Kitty, what''s the matter now?
4770Why?
4770Why?
4770Will you show me the new picture? 4770 Will you wear this, my darling?
4770With you, Rachel?
4770Wo n''t you wear the pretty silvery silk we like so well?
4770Yes, sir; but is n''t it natural for a young man to have some personal aim or aspiration to live for? 4770 You a Quaker, and express such a worldly and dreadful wish?"
4770You are an American?
4770You know the people?
4770You mean it?
4770Your age?
4770Your mother, Bella? 4770 ''How so?'' 4770 A fine actress perhaps, but how good a woman?
4770A surgeon was bending over the low bed, and when a hoarse voice at his elbow asked:"How is he?"
4770Ai n''t it beautiful?"
4770All these things he can give me: all these things are valued, admired, and sought for: and who would appreciate them more than I?
4770And how does David wear?
4770And what compensation do you require?"
4770Are we still happy and contented here?"
4770Are you hurt?
4770Are you very tired, Aunty?"
4770As he handed Christie a book, he asked with a significant smile:"Have you found him yet?"
4770As she shut the door, Christie heard Kitty say softly:"Now we''ll be comfortable as we used to be: wo n''t we?"
4770As the girl paused, with a decided thump, the old lady exclaimed:"What crazy idee you got into your head now?"
4770As they rose from table, Mrs. Sterling said:"Davy, does thee want any help this afternoon?"
4770Aunt Letty, how''s that darlin''child?
4770Be these folks you tell of young?"
4770But tell me, Bella, what Harry means to do?
4770Can I help in any way?"
4770Can you bear it, love?"
4770Can you begin to- day?"
4770Could you sing when your heart was heavy with the knowledge of a sin about to be committed by those nearest to you?
4770Dear soul, when shall I see her again?"
4770Dear, ought I to let you do it?"
4770Did n''t you when you were a girl?"
4770Did you think it very rude?"
4770Do n''t I look a different creature from the ghost that came here three or four mouths ago?"
4770Do n''t send me away, Christie: I shall not be a trouble long; surely David will let you help me die?"
4770Do you feel inclined to try the place?
4770Do you know I think that old Fletcher was a sneak?"
4770Do you like pussy- pillars, and know how they do it?"
4770Do you think it''s right to ask it of me?"
4770Do you understand, Bella?"
4770Does she know I am the woman she once saved?
4770Does that make the matter any clearer?"
4770Does that suit you?"
4770Every thing else is used up; why not try this, and make the most of my last chance?
4770F.?"
4770Harry turned reckless; for what had he to look forward to?
4770Has Mrs. S. been scolding?
4770Have you been ill and wretched too?
4770Have you forgotten it?"
4770He always found her out, gave her the posy she best liked, said cheerfully,"How goes it, Christie?"
4770How be you, dear?"
4770How could she be his friend if she was Mr. Fletcher''s wife?
4770How could we live without her?"
4770How do you do?"
4770How do you mean?"
4770How much longer will this last?"
4770How shall I know God?
4770How will it end?"
4770How would you answer such a letter, Christie?"
4770I am sure you agree with me?"
4770I did not seek you, did I?
4770I do n''t believe he loves me: how can he?
4770I must love somebody, and''love them hard,''as children say; so why ca n''t you come and stay with me?
4770I never thought it degradation to do it for her, so why should I mind doing it for others if they pay for it?
4770I should like to know who''s got a harder family to leave than that?"
4770I tried to be cold and stiff; never asked for love, though starving for it, till you came to me, so kind, so generous, so dear,--how could I help it?
4770I wonder if he will come again?"
4770I wonder if they would n''t let me have this room, and help me to find some better work than sewing?
4770I''m in no hurry to be married; and you wo n''t make me: will you?"
4770If that is not true piety, what is?"
4770If three years of this life have made me this, what shall I be in ten?
4770If you do n''t mind tellin'', what have you got to live on?"
4770In that case you will find me a proud, impetuous, ambitious fellow, Christie, and how will that suit?"
4770Is Mr. Sterling an agreeable old man?"
4770Is it possible?
4770Is n''t it enough to know that''baby''s dead,''as the poor man said, to make one feel for them?"
4770Is n''t it fitter for a soldier''s wife than lace and silk at such a time as this?"
4770Is that enough?"
4770Is that to be his profession?"
4770Is there any thing I can do to make you comfortable?"
4770It is not interesting, mind you,--only a grim little history of one man''s fight with the world, the flesh, and the devil: will you have it?"
4770It was dark when she arrived at the appointed spot; but Elisha Wilkins was there to receive her, and to her first breathless question,"How is David?"
4770It would n''t be so pleasant to see the right one come along after she''d went and took the wrong one in a hurry: would it?
4770Johnson?"
4770Leaning in at the window, he asked abruptly, but with a look she never could forget:"Will nothing change your answer, Christie?"
4770May I come again, Miss Devon?"
4770May I do it now?"
4770May I do it?"
4770May I, Christie?"
4770May I, Christie?"
4770May not her jealousy make her unjust, or her zeal for you mislead her?"
4770Mrs. Stuart read, listened, and then demanded with queenly brevity:"Your name?"
4770Now it was like a dash of cold water on her enthusiasm, and her face fell as she asked quickly:"How do you mean, sir?"
4770Now will you ask me to sing and smile, and sit calmly by while this wrong goes on?
4770Oh, how could I help it then?"
4770Or have the children been too much for you?"
4770Perhaps you would like to see the children?
4770Rested well, I hope?
4770Shall I ever find Him?"
4770Shall I try now?"
4770She felt as if the springs of life were running down, and presently would stop; for, even when the old question,"What shall I do?"
4770She owed him all the truth, yet how could she tell it?
4770She sighed without knowing it, and Mrs. Sterling asked quickly:"Is thee tired, my dear?"
4770So Edward tore himself away, although it broke his heart, and I-- do you see that?"
4770Sterling?"
4770Sterling?"
4770Such a pretty child; such a gay, sweet girl; how could I help it, when she was so fond of me?
4770Tell me how you found her?
4770Tell me what some of them mean: will you?"
4770That is the truth, I believe: now, what shall we do about it?"
4770That ought to satisfy me; for what is nobler than to live for others?"
4770That''s not a common revenge, is it?"
4770The gentleman bowed, and as Christie sat down he got up, saying, as he sauntered away with a bored expression:"Will you have the paper, Charlotte?
4770The old lady obediently turned her spectacles that way; and Christie said in a tone half serious, half playful:"Do you see those two logs?
4770The question,"What curse?"
4770Then memory helped her; and she said, half incredulously, half joyfully:"Is it my Rachel?"
4770Then quite steadily she added:"Will you be kind enough to write, and ask Mrs. Sterling if she can spare me?
4770Then she asked,"What next?"
4770They are both a- burnin''where they are put, and both will be ashes to- morrow; so what difference doos it make?"
4770This way, ma''am; be we goin''too fast for you?"
4770WHICH?
4770WHICH?
4770Was it this that made you''a brother of girls,''as Mr. Power once called you?
4770Was n''t that a good sign?"
4770What are you thinking about?"
4770What can I do to thank you for it?"
4770What can you give me but money and position in return for the youth and freedom I should sacrifice in marrying you?
4770What else is there?"
4770What have I ever done to be so desolate and miserable, and never to find any happiness, however hard I try to do what seems my duty?"
4770What is it, Christie?"
4770What next, Christie?"
4770What shall I do to keep it still?"
4770What shall you choose, Davy?"
4770What stranger will believe in her if we, who have known her so long, fail to befriend her now?
4770What would he say if she went calmly to destruction by that road?
4770When can you come?"
4770When shall I go?"
4770Where can I put you?
4770Where have you been so long?
4770Where shall I live?"
4770Who did you hear?"
4770Who is the queen?"
4770Who will employ her if you inform against her?
4770Who will tell me where to find Him, and help me to love and lean upon Him as I ought?"
4770Why did n''t she stay?"
4770Why did you pay such a price for that girl''s liberty?"
4770Why not accept him, and enjoy a new life of luxury, novelty, and pleasure?
4770Why not go on and get as much fame as I can?
4770Why not try it, Kitty?
4770Why were you never so to me?"
4770Will you be my friend, and let me be yours?"
4770Will you come out now for an early drive?
4770Will you do this, and let me sew for less, if I can pay you for the kindness in no other way?"
4770Will you give it a touch?
4770Wo n''t you have a drop of something jest as a stand- by before you see him?"
4770Would you like to do it?"
4770Would you like to help a Quaker lady with her housework, just out of town?"
4770Would you mind telling me about it?
4770You do n''t know it, then?
4770You will believe this and love me still, though I go away and leave you for a little while?"
4770You will come, of course?"
4770You will let me come again?"
4770You''ve ben round among the charity folks lately accordin''to your tell, now what would you do if you had a tidy little sum to dispose on?"
4770Your running away when Kitty came confirmed my fear; then in came that-- would you mind if I said-- confounded Fletcher?"
4770ai n''t it fillin''?
4770ai n''t the creater old enough to know her own mind?
4770ai n''t you drownded?''
4770are you going away?"
4770can you remember what Hepsey told us, and call them poor, long- sufferin''creeters names?
4770do n''t it give you a kind of spirital h''ist, and make things wuth more somehow?"
4770do n''t you know me?"
4770do you expect me to give you low comedy and heavy tragedy all alone?
4770ejaculated Christie, so fervently that David looked suddenly enlightened and much amused, as he said quickly:"What becomes of Fletcher?"
4770for I s''pose she''s the one in the quanderry?"
4770has he, though?"
4770how dare you lay plots, and then exult over me when I ca n''t find words to thank you?
4770how is she, and where?"
4770it is hard to have to run away so much: is n''t it?"
4770said David, and then added persuasively:"But you will play for me some time: wo n''t you?
4770she thought;"why wear out my life struggling for the bread I have no heart to eat?
4770this experiment that needs so much, and yet which you think me capable of trying?"
4770was her first question;"How will he behave to me?"
4770what should we all do without him?"
4770what''s that?"
4770why do n''t they do or say something new and interesting, and not keep twaddling on about art, and music, and poetry, and cosmos?
6276About-- monsieur le juge?
6276Ah, Monsieur Masson,very officially and decorously replied M. Fille,"but is it defamation of character?
6276Ah, monsieur, how can I explain such things? 6276 Ah, my little Confucius,"he said gently,"have you seen and heard me so seldom that you do not know me yet, or what I really think?
6276Ah, not of the best? 6276 And if I had killed him that way?"
6276And leave our little philosopher-- miller also alone?
6276And so you whisked me into your office with the talk of urgent business and--"Is not the business urgent, monsieur?
6276And when you go to the gallows, your child''s life-- you did not think of that, eh? 6276 And you would give me over to the law?
6276Are n''t you well?
6276Are you thinking of offering him another place at the Manor?
6276As things might be, if you were the man you were yesterday, willing to throw up everything for me?
6276But you would not let a man judge for himself, would you, ma''m''selle?
6276Do n''t you think it would kill him or cure him?
6276Do you want to make me a present?
6276For instance--about what?
6276Granada, Granada, oh, when shall I see My love in thy gardens, there waiting for me? 6276 Has a weak character?"
6276Has he a family?
6276Has no good reputation hereabouts?
6276Have n''t we always been friends?
6276Have you quite finished, m''sieu''?
6276How did you find out that the workmen go tomorrow, maitre?
6276How do you mean to save me money-- by getting the Judge to give decisions in my favour? 6276 How long ago was that?"
6276How old is he?
6276How would you like to be a judge?
6276If mother does n''t think it''s sensible, why do it, father?
6276If what thing is true?
6276It is no more and farewell then? 6276 M. Fille saw, did he, from Mont Violet?
6276Monsieur-- monsieur le juge, you mean that I shall do this, shall see George Masson and warn him-- me?
6276Name of God, is it not enough what there has been?
6276So the thing-- the comedy or tragedy will come to an end to- morrow?
6276The little Zoe-- is she well?
6276The matter is urgent, you will admit, monsieur?
6276Then he does not drink or gamble?
6276Well, why do n''t you look at me?
6276What are you going to do now?
6276What chance had I when he robbed me in the dark of what is worth fifty times my own life to me?
6276What do you know of the reasons for the abstention of madame? 6276 What do you know-- what is the''all''?"
6276What else was there to do?
6276What else would you do if you were a judge?
6276What had you done that you should lock yourself in?
6276What is all? 6276 What is it, Jean Jacques?"
6276What sort is he?
6276What thing?
6276What would you do with the bad people?
6276Where do you come inhere? 6276 Where-- where is he?
6276Who else? 6276 Why do you ask?"
6276Why is n''t the morning good? 6276 Why should I wait, devil and rogue?"
6276Would n''t he like to be nearer you and Zoe? 6276 Yes, yes, but where did she come from?
6276You are going home, dear madame? 6276 You did not fight him-- why?"
6276You did not kill him?
6276You saw what, M''sieu''la Fillette? 6276 You will inform the Court that the prisoner refuses to incriminate himself, eh?"
6276You will not heed the warning I give?
6276You will tell-- you will give me up?
6276You would judge for the man what was best for him to do?
6276A man has come to disturb the peace of Jean Jacques, our philosophe, eh?"
6276A pitch- fork and a dung- heap?
6276Also, outside there in the street, if our neighbours should come to know of the trouble, what would they say?
6276Apart from his morals, what class of creature is he?"
6276Behind a tree?"
6276But the new curb, M. Savry, was not like the Old Cure, and, besides, was it not stepping between the woman and her confessional?
6276But what had he done-- what had he done?
6276But what then-- what do you want?"
6276But will that give you anything?
6276But would the work he had been doing all be finished then?
6276CHAPTER XI THE CLERK OF THE COURT KEEPS A PROMISE"Well, what is it, M''sieu''Fille?
6276Can you not guess what would be given in a court of the Catholic province of Quebec, against the violation of a good man''s home?
6276Could such a man be unhappy?
6276Did you bring her presents?
6276Did you ever do that?
6276Did you ever think what will become of your child, of your Zoe, if you go to the gallows?
6276Did you say,''Come along, we will make a little journey to see the world?''
6276Did you take her where she could see the world?
6276Do you consider that your conduct is not criminal?
6276Do you not know that a vow may be a thing that ruins past redemption?
6276Do you not see that the business is urgent?"
6276Do you think she''d have looked at me if you''d been to her what she thought I might be?
6276Does beauty in itself express authority, just because it has the transcendent thing in it?
6276Does the perfect form convey something of the same thing that physical force-- an army in arms, a battleship-- conveys?
6276Drinks?"
6276Finding within himself his satisfaction, his fountain of appeasement, why should not his days be days of pleasantness and peace?
6276Had he come?
6276Had he then seen what he had seen?
6276Has he gone down the river?
6276He knows as much of women or men as I know of--""Of the law-- hein?"
6276Her father?
6276His temper-- his disposition, what is it?"
6276How do you know that?"
6276How had she gone through it all so long, she asked herself?
6276How is that, m''sieu''?
6276How should it be done?
6276I do n''t only need to save money, I need to make it; so if you can help me in that way I''m your man, M''sieu''la Fillette?"
6276If I get up early enough in the morning, or if I am let stay up at night late enough, I see him; but that is not enough-- is it, mother?"
6276If M. Fille here set fire to a house, you would drop him on the prairie far away from everything and everybody and let him''root hog or die''?"
6276If the thing is true, then what is the judgment?
6276If you take it away, will you be happier?
6276In fact he neglects her-- is it not so?"
6276Is he good- looking?
6276Is it but the one thing that the world says must part husband and wife?
6276Is it that you say one must go to confession, and in order to go to confession it is needful to sin?"
6276Is n''t the Clerk of the Court a man as well as a mummy?
6276Is she not a figure of a woman?
6276Is that all?
6276It is bad enough to see him here in the office of the Clerk of the Court, but to see him alone-- what would Monsieur Jean Jacques say?
6276It''s all right, is n''t it?"
6276Ma''m''selle, we must be friends-- is it not so?"
6276Monsieur Masson, is it not so?"
6276Monsieur and Mademoiselle Zoe, they are with you?
6276Of what good was fidelity if he that was faithful desired no longer as he once did?
6276Poison?
6276See the walk of her-- is it not distinguished?
6276Shall it be tomorrow?"
6276Since then?"
6276Spit it out-- what did you see?"
6276Tell me, has he a balance- wheel in his home-- a sensible wife, perhaps?"
6276The Judge could feel his friend''s arm tremble with emotion, and he said:"Come, now, my Plato, what is it?
6276The mirror gave her a look of dominance-- was it her regular features and her classic head?
6276The other room-- eh?
6276Then why the vows of the Church at baptism, at confirmation, at marriage?
6276There was death, there was accident occasionally-- had his own people not gone down under the scythe of time?
6276They will also come in perhaps?"
6276This Sebastian Dolores, where is he?"
6276Voila-- do you not see?"
6276Was he himself not stricken by it?
6276Was it the revival of the maternal instinct?
6276Was there not a terrible sickness in his house, and had not that woman, his wife, her mother, brought the infection?
6276Well?"
6276What did you do?"
6276What do you want with me?
6276What is his appearance?"
6276What is my life?
6276What rights had a man who had stolen what was nearer and dearer than a man''s own flesh, and for which he would have given his own flesh fifty times?
6276What sort of a man is he to look at?
6276What was it the woman wished to do?
6276What was the field where she grew?"
6276What would the man do?
6276What''s his history?"
6276What''s your standing in the business?"
6276When?
6276Who but you then to do it?"
6276Why had she said that-- she who had deceived, betrayed him?
6276Why is n''t it good, Carmen?"
6276Why should it all end to- morrow simply because the work was finished at the flume?
6276Why should she not be well?
6276Why should they be mirthful while her life was being swept by a storm of doubt, temptation, and dark passion?
6276Why the vows of the priests, of the nuns, of those who had given themselves to eternal service?
6276Why was it?
6276You say the thing happened three days ago-- now, when will the work be finished?"
6276You think she will not find out?
6276You would send me to the gallows-- and spoil your child''s life?"
6276Zoe-- ah, where was Zoe?
8511And so you nearly missed the train, my child?
8511And what is your name, my child?
8511And you, my child, what do you do?
8511Are you in great suffering?
8511Are you thirsty?
8511Is it not so, Monsieur l''Abbe?
8511Is not suffering the best awakener of souls? 8511 Shall we lay you down again at once?"
8511So it was of some injury to the foot that the Blessed Virgin cured you?
8511Tell me,again asked Sister Hyacinthe,"how do you find him?
8511Then how did you manage?
8511What is the matter, my jewel, my treasure?
8511What is the poor little thing suffering from?
8511Would she eat a few grapes?
8511Would you like another example, monsieur? 8511 You do not belong to the town of Poitiers?"
8511/Mon Dieu!/ what will become of us?"
8511Am I not sensible?"
8511And was she not also the Health of the weak, the Refuge of sinners, the Comforter of the afflicted?
8511And why should he have saddened her by his doubts, since he was so desirous of her cure?
8511And, turning towards the child, Madame de Jonquiere added,"But she will show you her foot-- won''t you, Sophie?
8511But it would be unnatural, would it not, that he should go off before her, especially as she is so ill?
8511But that unfortunate creature seemed on the point of expiring, so how could she leave her all alone, on the hard seat of that carriage?
8511Can you put them into your mouth?"
8511Could you not revive him a little?"
8511Did not simple rectitude require that he should throw off the cassock and return to the world?
8511Do you find him so very low?
8511Do you know it?
8511Do you know the story of Pierre de Rudder, a Belgian working- man?"
8511Do you really think me worthy of such a favour?"
8511For although they had found one another again, what availed it, since she was but a corpse, and he was about to bid farewell to the life of the world?
8511For if the world failed them, did not the Divinity remain to them?
8511Had she dreamt in that fashion during the previous night?
8511How can one do otherwise than place oneself in God''s hands, on seeing so much suffering cured or consoled?"
8511How could the belief in miracles have germinated and taken root in this man''s brain?
8511In which illustrated book belonging to her foster- mother''s brother, the good priest, who read such attractive stories, had she beheld this Virgin?
8511Is it not so, Pierre?
8511Monsieur Ferrand, is it you?"
8511One would think that that gentleman is dangerously ill.""Which one, my dear child?"
8511Or rather what faulty medical diagnosis, what assemblage of errors and exaggerations, had ended in this fine tale?
8511Raymonde smiled and gave her mother a reproachful glance:"Mamma, mamma, why do you say that?
8511She began to laugh, and then resumed:"Yes, Madame Volmar, we will try to sleep, wo n''t we, since talking seems to tire you?"
8511So she, Bernadette, had seen something then?
8511That is understood, is it not?
8511The others were already pulling long faces and were about to protest, when Sister Hyacinthe exclaimed:"What, is it you, Sophie?
8511There was an interval of silence, and then Madame Vincent inquired:"And you, madame, it''s for yourself no doubt that you are going to Lourdes?
8511Was this the continuation of some forgotten dream?
8511Well, and where is Father Massias?"
8511Were they reaching Poitiers?
8511What could be the use of that physiological inquiry into Bernadette''s case, so full of gaps and intricacies?
8511What could it be,/mon Dieu/?
8511What is his illness?"
8511What should he do?
8511What unknown force had acted in this case?
8511What was it?
8511What was the matter?
8511What was to be done,/mon Dieu/?
8511Where was the pressure, then, where the lesson learnt by heart?
8511Where were the witnesses?
8511Who, then, would dare to impute his loss of faith to him as a crime, even if this great misfortune should some day become known?
8511Why should he not accept her as a messenger from the spheres beyond, as one of the elect chosen for the divine mystery?
8511Wo n''t you, my darling?
8511Yet why should he not believe some day?
8511You will tell us what the Blessed Virgin did for you?"
8511not there?"
8511you saw her foot before and after the immersion?"
6844Alas, poor child, has it come to this? 6844 Am I wrong?
6844And, what of that, ye cruel winds of Autumn? 6844 But, see their glassy bosom, what scene could be more bright?
6844Child of my love, why wearest thou That pensive look and thoughtful brow? 6844 Doctor, I''m better, am I not?"
6844Dost cling to it? 6844 Now, brother, thou''lt have none to share thy sports till I return,-- Say, what shall be the glitt''ring prize that I afar must earn?"
6844Perhaps''tis music thou seekest, child? 6844 The White Lily surely speaks in jest, For has she not seen me gaily dressed?
6844What are now its broad rich acres to me, Stretching out as far as my gaze can see? 6844 What dost thou dare avow?
6844What!--a crown? 6844 You all seem doubtful, and a smile of scorn your features wear, Look on my gems, and say if yours are but one half as fair?"
6844A shudder runs through her-- what does it tell?
6844A smile lit up the sleeper''s face, but soon it softly fled, The rose leaf cheeks and lips grew wan-- could it be the child was dead?
6844Ah, what do we reap from flirting But heartaches, mutual pain?
6844And thou, wilt thou not promise me Thy heart will never change, That tones and looks, so loving now, Will ne''er grow stern and strange?
6844And, ere I shall return oh say, what goal must I have won-- What is the aim, the prize, that most thou wishest for thy son?"
6844And, turning towards him that God like brow, He asked the suppliant,"What wouldest thou?"
6844Art toiling for some worldly aim, Or for some golden prize, Devoting to that glitt''ring goal Thy thoughts, thy smiles, thy sighs?
6844At length he paused, then questioned:"Brother, thou dost not speak; In the vague bright page of the future To read dost thou never seek?"
6844Autumn winds, what means this plaintive wailing Around the quiet homestead where we dwell?
6844But paupers-- came they to our shores, Want, sickness, death to leave?"
6844But the sisters who had brightened once the home now desolate-- Lived they to mourn each brother''s loss?
6844But voices breaking the silence Are heard, fast drawing nigh, And falls on his ear the clamor Of vast crowds moving by:"What is it?"
6844But was she happier?
6844But what does he see?
6844But why dost thou watch me in doubting surprise, Why thus dost thou raise thy dark, deep, melting eyes?
6844But, Azof, did not thought of him some passing joy impart; Did not the memory of his love bring gladness to her heart?
6844But, say, what were the visions sweet that filled that gentle heart?
6844Can''st gaze abroad on this world so fair And yet thy glance be fraught with care?
6844Could a whole life''s praises thank_ Him_ For the wonder He had wrought?
6844Did He answer?
6844Do I hear right?
6844Do they not tell thee, my peerless one, Thou''rt lovelier far than they?"
6844Dost love its bright- dyed birds and flowers, its radiant golden sun?
6844Dost thou wonder at my daring Thus to seek thy sacred shrine, When the sinner''s lot despairing, Wretched-- hopeless-- should be mine?
6844Enough, my sister, wouldst make me sad, When my smile should be bright and my heart be glad?
6844Every thought for siren pleasure, And its sinful, feverish mirth; Who can find one moment''s leisure For aught else save things of earth?
6844Fond, tender voices, press me to stay-- Think''st thou from them I would pass away?
6844Has she, too, heard the voices That are calling me away?
6844His soiled and shattered crest he laid low at his father''s feet, And sadly said,"''Tis all I have-- is it an off''ring meet?
6844How solace him beneath his trial sore?
6844In silvery tones she murmurs forth"My heart is light and glad, Youth, beauty, hope, are all mine own, Then, why should I be sad?
6844Is it not better I should seek To win the name he bore, Than waste my youth in pastimes weak Upon the tiresome shore?
6844Is it not bliss to know what e''er Thy future griefs and fears, They will be never dimmed like thine By sorrow''s scalding tears?
6844Is she not the child of fortune, fortune''s pet and darling bright, Yes, the beauteous, courted heiress-- heroine of the gala night?
6844Is there none but this one stranger-- unlearned in Gods ways, His name and mighty power, to give word of thanks or praise?"
6844Let no rich worldling dare to say:"For them why should we grieve?
6844Man, in the wane of thy stately prime, Hear''st thou the silent warnings of Time?
6844Montreal, Jan. 27, 1864 WHEN WILL IT END?
6844Must he take his darling''s life?
6844Mutely the bridegroom caught her up after that touching appeal; Why refuse her prayer when on her brow was already set death''s seal?
6844O say, dear sister, are you coming Forth to the fields with me?
6844Of many gifts bestowed on earth To cheer a lonely hour, Oh is there one of equal worth With music''s magic power?
6844Or shall we loll on the grassy bank For hours dreamy, still, To draw from its depths some silv''ry prize, Reward of angler''s skill?
6844Our chief-- our Sachem?
6844Rising from hillside and lowly vale,-- Say, what can its meaning be?
6844Roses still bloom in glowing dyes, Sunshine still fills our summer skies, Earth is still lovely, nature glad-- Why dost thou look so lone and sad?"
6844Sad age, dost thou note thy strength nigh, spent, How slow thy footstep-- thy form how bent?
6844Say, art thou angry?
6844Say, does she rave?
6844Say, was there none o''er that young chief to shed one single tear, To sorrow o''er the end of his untimely stopt career?
6844Say, what is it all?
6844Say, when will thy sex learn that man can forget?
6844See my gentle mother softly To me approaches now, What is the change she readeth Upon my pale damp brow?
6844See''st thou yon angel fair, With flowing robes and starry crown Gemming her golden hair?
6844See, yonder wait our gallant crew, So, weep not, mother dear; My father was a sailor too-- What hast thou then to fear?
6844Shall we hie unto the streamlet''s side To seek our little boat, And, plying our oars with right good will, Over its bright waves float?
6844She clasps her hands in anguish Whose depth no words might say?
6844Slowly questioned him the Saviour, with majesty divine:--"Ten were cleansed from their leprosy-- where are the other nine?
6844That thou''lt be kind, whatever faults Or failings may be mine, And bear with them in patient love, As I will bear with thine?
6844The merry smile her words had raised fled, as with falt''ring voice, He asked of her, the best beloved,"Mother, what is_ thy_ choice?"
6844Themselves upon the ground they throw, Cheeks pillowed on each rounded arm-- And fall asleep soon, murmuring low, And wondering"why it is so warm?"
6844Then say what is the fairy spell, Around her beauty thrown, Lending a new and softer charm To every look and tone?
6844Thou art accused of worshipping Jesus the Nazarene-- Of scorning Rome''s high, mighty Gods,--speak, say if this has been?
6844Thou hast spirit, brother; Say, of laurels will it be?
6844Thou wast not there?
6844Was young bride in her beauty ever clothed in robe as bright?
6844What are the laurels of earth beside The joys of bliss divine?
6844What do I wish thee, darling, say?
6844What doth he at this lowly shrine?
6844What horrors drear Are those that meet his eye, For he springs aside and shades his brow With a sharp, though stifled, cry?
6844What mattered it that an antique vase Of_ Sèvres_ costly and old, Was destined, henceforth, in royal State, Its fair young form to hold?
6844What mattered it that the richest silks Of the far famed Indian loom, With priceless marbles paintings rare, Adorned its prison room?
6844What mean those prayers and sighs, The tearful mist that dims the light Of his flashing, eagle eyes?
6844What strange and holy magic seems earth and air to fill, That worldly thoughts and feelings are now all hushed and still?
6844What was my crime?
6844What would''st thou?
6844Whence comes the awe- struck feeling that fills the gazer''s breast, The breath, quick- drawn and panting, the awe, the solemn rest?
6844Who might know?
6844Why add by such sad words unto thy grey haired father''s woe?
6844With silence and gloom where''er you roam, What then, what then, of your forest home?"
6844Yet why should sorrow fill thus each breast?
6844Yet''mid those guilt- stained men could any vile enough be found To harm the victim who there stood, in helpless thraldom bound?
6844am I not as lovely in my garb of spotless white?
6844and her eyes gleam forth A flashing, fearful ray,"I, young, rich, lovely, from this earth To pass so soon away?
6844and must it be?
6844by aim more pure and holy Say, could soldiers be enticed?
6844calm thine anxious fears-- What dost thou dread for me?
6844cast away the gems and flowers That bind thy thoughtless brow, Where will their gleam or brightness be In a few short years from now?
6844dare to rail at our snow- storms, why Not view them with poet''s or artist''s eye?
6844do you see in yon sunset sky, That cloud of crimson bright?
6844dost find this earth a fair and lovely one?
6844dost hear that mournful wail''Bove the joyous revelry?
6844her father, didst thou say?
6844in that last moment drear How looked she?
6844my child, what right have I to smile And whisper, too dearly bought, By wand''ring many a weary mile-- Dust, heat, and toilsome thought?
6844need we ask?
6844rest thee from the idle chase, With no bliss can it endow; Of fame or gold, what will be thine In a few short years from now?
6844say must I leave this world of light With its sparkling streams and sunshine bright, Its budding flowers, its glorious sky?
6844say, say, wilt though repine If I tell thee that those cherished hopes have all proved vain but thine?
6844sister fair, What lot with thine can now compare?
6844unguessed thy secret yet?
6844was theirs a happier fate?
6844what are those voices Heard on the midnight air, Of strange celestial sweetness, Breathing of love and prayer?
6844what is this?"
6844what means that look so weary, that long- drawn and painful sigh; And that gaze, intense and yearning, fixed upon the starlit sky?
6844what wilt thou do with thy heart, my child?
6844where is he?"
6844where may the heart seek, in moments like this, A whisper of hope, or a faint gleam of bliss?
6844why wilt thou grieve me so?
3633A bottle?
3633A clerk in the business?
3633A drab of a housekeeper? 3633 A great day?
3633A thief?
3633A walk, mamma? 3633 Ah, Jack, that was a great day in your life, was n''t it?"
3633Ah, indeed? 3633 Ah, indeed?
3633All right for the night?
3633Am I a jolly fellow, or am I not? 3633 Am I in the way, mamma?
3633Am I in the way, sir?
3633Am I right in believing that he was one of the governors of Bethlehem Hospital?
3633And Mistress_ is_ Mistress here, like she is in London?
3633And at other times?
3633And can you tell me where he is now?
3633And did he tell you what the proper dose was?
3633And have you found some employment for him?
3633And how is my boy Fritz?
3633And leave Mistress?
3633And nothing to do with managing the Deadhouse?
3633And now tell me, David, do you come to us on business or do you come to us on pleasure?
3633And she found the bottle?
3633And there''s a business here, like the business in London?
3633And this is the result?
3633And what I want to know is-- Am I to be Keeper of the Keys here?
3633And what did Mistress do with you when she brought you home?
3633And what did the lawyer say to it?
3633And what have you done with your new gloves?
3633And where is Jack Straw?
3633And where is Jack Straw?
3633And who is this lady?
3633And yet you wish to see him?
3633And you did n''t think of asking him?
3633And you have actually discovered the meaning of these hieroglyphics?
3633Angry?
3633Any report for the night, Duntzer?
3633Anything the matter with you?
3633Anything wrong?
3633Are Yarcombe and Foss on duty on the south side?
3633Are you a stiff Englishman? 3633 Are you coming to join us, mamma?
3633Are you going to see the body laid in the Deadhouse?
3633Are you in love, David?
3633Are you in pain, mamma? 3633 Are you just as fond of Fritz as ever?
3633Are you not going out this evening, David?
3633Are you not going with them to the cemetery?
3633Are you not thirsty now?
3633Are you off duty, early or late this evening?
3633Are you sure that she is poisoned?
3633Are you worthy of any sacrifice that a mother can make for her child?
3633Are_ you_ acquainted with chemical science?
3633As things are, then,she resumed,"I am to understand, sir, that the marriage is put off to the thirteenth of January next?"
3633At least I may show my aunt the letter from Bingen, sir?
3633Aye, aye? 3633 But where are you going, Minna?"
3633But why are you going out?
3633But why?
3633But you must have seen something?
3633Call?
3633Can I get the money back from the man to whom it was paid at Wurzburg, when my note fell due on the last day of the old year? 3633 Can you do nothing for her?"
3633Could an imitation be made, sir?
3633Dear, sweet mamma, how can you think me so hard- hearted and so ungrateful? 3633 Did I ever do either of those two things in London?"
3633Did I steal anything at the University?
3633Did I tell you what happened yesterday evening, before Jack was brought home by the nurse''s brother? 3633 Did he ask to see Madame Fontaine?"
3633Did he mention Madame Fontaine''s name?
3633Did he talk of taking the lodgings?
3633Did my master the Doctor say that?
3633Did she encourage you to ask her?
3633Did the man ask to see the lodgings?
3633Did they have any effect on her?
3633Did you bolt your door when you went to bed?
3633Did you discover the resemblance to Mr. Keller''s illness?
3633Did you ever hear anything like Fritz? 3633 Did you ever hear of a jolly fellow, who left his friend at the public- house door?"
3633Did you go farther than Hanau?
3633Did you mean me to hear what you have just said?
3633Did you see the letter?
3633Did you throw away what was in it? 3633 Disappearance?"
3633Do I look stupid- mad?
3633Do I surprise you, David?
3633Do n''t you know that there are exceptions to all rules?
3633Do n''t you remember me, Hans?
3633Do you admire the widow, sir?
3633Do you hear the clock? 3633 Do you hear?
3633Do you know this person?
3633Do you know what I am thinking?
3633Do you know what you are saying? 3633 Do you know, ma''am, when Mr. Keller will be back?"
3633Do you know,she resumed,"that I actually hesitate to write to Engelman?
3633Do you like it, now it''s done?
3633Do you love me with all your heart and soul?
3633Do you mean that he is ill?
3633Do you mean the nurse?
3633Do you mean to say, David, you have never heard what situation I held in the London office?
3633Do you mind going back with us?
3633Do you really think you can mystify_ me? 3633 Do you refer, madam, to Mr. Wagner''s political opinions?"
3633Do you remember it?
3633Do you remember me?
3633Do you remember what it was?
3633Do you see any objection to what I propose?
3633Do you see anything objectionable in my letter?
3633Do you see anything remarkable in me?
3633Do you see her, resting on her little sofa till she recovers? 3633 Do you see that?"
3633Do you see this?
3633Do you still expect me to resign my position here as director of the household, on the day when Fritz and Minna have become man and wife?
3633Do you think I might taste it?
3633Do you think I should have exposed myself to the insults that you have heaped upon me if I had_ not_ tried?
3633Do you think I would condescend to take anything that did n''t belong to me?
3633Do you think it quite discreet,I ventured to ask,"to add those words?"
3633Do you think the correspondence will delay your aunt''s departure from England?
3633Do you think we ought to mention it?
3633Do you think you are likely to want some of it yourself?
3633Do you think your eyes will tell you?
3633Do you understand the subject? 3633 Do you understand writing in cipher?"
3633Doctor Dormann, do you suspect there is a poisoner in my house?
3633Does Minna wish it?
3633Does he understand French?
3633Does her illness remind you of anything?
3633Does it relate in any way to the will?
3633Does my hand cool it?
3633Does that belong to you, or to Madame Fontaine?
3633Does that mean that you do n''t believe me?
3633Does the lady live in this city, sir?
3633Drink by myself?
3633For what reason do you refuse?
3633For what reason would you have objected?
3633Had you noticed anything remarkable in Madame Fontaine,I asked,"before Fritz spoke to you?"
3633Hard on you?
3633Has anybody behaved harshly to you?
3633Has she taken it?
3633Has the lady got well again?
3633Has the young man arrived yet?
3633Have I anything by me,she thought to herself,"in which I can keep the bottles?"
3633Have n''t I told you already? 3633 Have n''t I told you that you have improved?
3633Have n''t you seen me examine everything? 3633 Have you also written to your aunt?"
3633Have you any Scotch blood in your veins, David? 3633 Have you any necklace of imitation pearls which resembles my necklace?"
3633Have you cleaned them yet?
3633Have you had a present lately,I asked,"or are you extravagant enough to spend your money on buying jewelry?"
3633Have you replaced the money?
3633Have you replaced the money?
3633Have you seen Minna?
3633Have you seen him lately?
3633Have you tried?
3633How are you to pay it back?
3633How can I tell? 3633 How can explanations pass between you and me?
3633How can you say so?
3633How dare you let a woman physic you, when you''ve got me for a doctor? 3633 How did he know that she lived here?"
3633How did you empty it?
3633How did you get in?
3633How do you know who I am?
3633How does it strike you, David? 3633 How were you brought up?"
3633I beg your pardon, sir,he ventured to say,"you''re not a member of the city council, are you?"
3633I dare say you have mentioned it to Keller?
3633I ought to be looking at the pictures, you think? 3633 I suppose you do n''t know what two drachms mean?"
3633I suppose, sir, you grant loans on valuable security-- such as this necklace?
3633I think we ought to put the question, in the first instance, to the bride?
3633I think you were the first person,he said,"who saw Mr. Keller, on the morning when he was taken ill?"
3633I wonder whether I could manage without my colors?
3633I wonder whether we are united by a third bond?
3633If I write to Mr. Keller under your own eye, do you object to take charge of my letter?
3633If Minna was not going to be married,I suggested,"she would just do for one of your young- lady clerks, would n''t she?"
3633If it was medicine,asked the poor creature vacantly,"what is the medicine good for?"
3633If you ca n''t tell me what is the matter with him, can you tell me where he is? 3633 In her room?"
3633In other words, it is impossible for my sister to be with us, on the day of my son''s marriage?
3633In plain words on my side, I ask why?
3633In that case, Madame Fontaine, would you have objected to change the day of the marriage?
3633In what capacity am I to have the honor of accompanying you?
3633Intimate enough, perhaps, to ask a favor or to introduce a friend?
3633Is Madame Fontaine ill?
3633Is all done now?
3633Is he at work?
3633Is he indeed?
3633Is he waking or sleeping?
3633Is it possible that you trust that crazy creature with the key of your desk?
3633Is it possible you have n''t heard?
3633Is it true, Jack, that you were once poisoned by accident, and nearly killed by it?
3633Is my brain softening?
3633Is my objection, as Minna''s mother, not worthy of some consideration, sir, without any needless inquiry into motives?
3633Is n''t that rather selfish?
3633Is she coming back?
3633Is she dead or alive?
3633Is that his drink?
3633Is the alarm- bell set?
3633Is the reference absolutely necessary?
3633Is there any objection to my asking Jack for the particulars?
3633Is there any objection to my seeing it too?
3633Is there any water here?
3633Is there danger?
3633Is this really true?
3633Is this to be got in Frankfort?
3633Is your experience infallible? 3633 Is your sister married?"
3633Let me go with you?
3633Madame Fontaine and her daughter?
3633Madame Fontaine?
3633Mainly on business, no doubt? 3633 May I ask another question?"
3633May I ask how you came to know of the opportunity, Madame Fontaine?
3633May I ask how?
3633May I ask if the symptoms of my illness resembled the symptoms of Mrs. Wagner''s illness?
3633May I ask what he wanted here?
3633May I ask what it is, sir?
3633May I ask what the delusion is, Madame Fontaine?
3633May I ask, Madame Fontaine, in what you think his character peculiar?
3633May I ask, sir, if you are acquainted with Mr. Keller''s son?
3633May I beg you to be so good as answer my question plainly?
3633May I call and see you to- morrow?
3633May I examine these glorious pearls?
3633May I go upstairs to Mistress?
3633May I help myself?
3633May I offer you my arm?
3633May I send to my foreman, and let him see it?
3633May I take the necklace upstairs,she asked, with the most charming inconsistency,"and see how it looks when I put it on?"
3633May I wait outside her door, sir? 3633 May I whisper?"
3633Medicine?
3633Might we be pardoned, do you think, if we ventured to peep into Mr. Keller''s room?
3633My aunt is well, I hope?
3633My dear boy, tell me frankly, do you notice any change in Keller?
3633My dear,he said,"what would you think of me, if I requested you to put off your marriage for two whole weeks-- and all on account of an old woman?"
3633My poor boy,she said gently,"what is it that troubles you?"
3633My sympathy? 3633 No alarming news of my sister, I hope?"
3633Nobody?
3633Not even one little kiss, mamma?
3633Not if I ask you?
3633Not ill, I hope?
3633Not the mother of the girl whom Fritz wants to marry?
3633Of course you asked her for the prescription?
3633Oh, what hope is there for us,she whispered,"with such a man as that?"
3633One of our patients of the higher rank, I suppose?
3633One person only?
3633Ought I, in this hard case, to have diminished my expenditure to the level of my reduced income? 3633 Perhaps you''ll be able to pipe a little higher, ma''am, if you come back, and sit down?
3633Perhaps your walk has given you a little appetite?
3633Perhaps, I shall find it in here?
3633Perhaps_ I_ can tell you what you want to know?
3633Quite right, little man, how should you know who she is? 3633 Remember?"
3633Reminds you of something that happened at Wurzburg?
3633Shall I leave you something to keep for me until I see you again?
3633Shall I measure it out, and show you?
3633Shall we step into the dining- room?
3633She has n''t bitten you, has she? 3633 So there is a true heart under that splendid silk dress of hers?"
3633So you have written to Fritz?
3633Suppose I make him a comfortable English cup of tea?
3633Suppose Mr. Keller should come back?
3633Suppose my daughter changes her mind, in the interval?
3633Suppose you come along with me?
3633Suppose you try it?
3633Surely I can give it to her, now it''s ready?
3633Surely you forget what I told you?
3633Surely, we might make this trifling sacrifice?
3633Talking of power, have you read the account of the execution last year of that wonderful criminal, Anna Maria Zwanziger? 3633 Tell me this, if you please: Was n''t Mr. Keller cured out of the blue- glass bottle-- like me?"
3633Tell me this: does he do his duty without being paid for it?
3633Tell me what you know about this poor man?
3633Tell me, David,she began, as soon as the first greetings were over,"what do you think of Jack Straw?
3633That is what I want to speak about?
3633The Abstracts will rake up less time to examine,he said to Mrs. Wagner;"you have them in your desk, I think?"
3633The cells are all empty to- night, Duntzer, are they not?
3633The immediate removal?
3633Then what interest can you have in interpreting the cipher?
3633Then why wo n''t you let me come to you?
3633Then you are Mr. Wagner''s clerk?
3633Thinking of what?
3633To what place?
3633Under your influence?
3633Visitors?
3633Was it not you, David, who considerately thought of Minna when the post came in? 3633 Was she a relation of yours?"
3633Was she very fond of him, David? 3633 Was that all that passed between your mother and Joseph?"
3633Was that poor creature''s madness violent madness, when Mrs. Wagner took him out of the London asylum?
3633We understand each other-- don''t we?
3633Well,he asked,"have you brought it with you?"
3633Well?
3633Well?
3633Were there any guests to meet you at the dinner- party?
3633Were you thirsty in the night?
3633What are you doing here?
3633What are you looking at?
3633What are you quarreling about?
3633What are you waiting for? 3633 What danger are you afraid of?"
3633What did I tell you,he asked,"when we first heard that Mr. Wagner''s widow was appointed head- partner in the business?
3633What did Mr. Keller say?
3633What did you ask David?
3633What did you say of wine, when I drank with you the other night?
3633What did you say?
3633What difference could it possibly make to_ you? 3633 What divine being made this?"
3633What do I care about the crazy wretch''s keys?
3633What do you mean by impossibilities? 3633 What do you mean?"
3633What do you mean?
3633What do you want, Jack?
3633What does he mean?
3633What does it matter now?
3633What for, my love?
3633What has become of the key of your door?
3633What has become of your leather bag? 3633 What has gone wrong between you and Madame Fontaine?"
3633What is it, my dear?
3633What is it?
3633What is there to laugh at in my forgetting to keep my pipe alight?
3633What is to be done, then?
3633What makes you so curious to see what the dose is?
3633What makes you think so?
3633What must we do? 3633 What other women are likely to impose on me?"
3633What risks?
3633What sort of journey from London have you had?
3633What time could you give them, madam?
3633What will Mrs. Wagner''s friends think?
3633What''s that steel thing there, under the brass cover?
3633What''s the matter with me?
3633What''s the use of asking?
3633What''s this I feel under my hand?
3633What''s wrong now?
3633What''s yours?
3633What_ can_ he mean?
3633Where can I find writing- materials? 3633 Where have you been all this time?"
3633Where is Fritz?
3633Where is Miss Minna?
3633Where is it?
3633Where is my necklace, mamma?
3633Where is the gentleman?
3633Where was it?
3633Where were you born?
3633Which of the two hotels here are you staying at? 3633 Which of the two ladies do you mean?"
3633Who can we find?
3633Who is the letter from?
3633Who is your sister?
3633Who knows what may happen,he cried gaily,"when we have young ladies in the office for clerks?"
3633Who says that?
3633Who told you to take it?
3633Who was the doctor?
3633Who''s the right doctor now?
3633Who''s there?
3633Why did you ask if you were in the way? 3633 Why did you start up, as if you were afraid of me, when I came in?"
3633Why do I trouble you with these nauseous details? 3633 Why do I trouble you with these ravings?
3633Why do they call it by that name?
3633Why do you always come in without knocking?
3633Why do you object to the customary delays, dear Fritz?
3633Why do you open that bottle, before you are sure it will be wanted?
3633Why have I left your kind letters from America without reply? 3633 Why have_ you_ always got your arm round her waist?"
3633Why is she not put in her coffin, like other dead people?
3633Why not spare my aunt the fatigue of the journey? 3633 Why not?"
3633Why not?
3633Why not?
3633Why not?
3633Why, Jack?
3633Why, my good creature, what has made you climb the stairs, when you might have rung for Joseph?
3633Why?
3633Why?
3633Will you allow me to show you the way?
3633Will you kindly tell me, sir, to what address I can return the money when I get home?
3633Will you tell me who emptied the bottle? 3633 With money?"
3633Without an answer to my entreaties? 3633 Without explanation or apology?"
3633Without the key?
3633Wo n''t you wish me good- night?
3633Would she be fit to travel,he asked,"if we put off the marriage for a month?"
3633Would you have objected to grant the fortnight''s delay?
3633Would you run such a risk as that?
3633You are fond of flowers, David?
3633You are_ not_ a friend of Madame Fontaine?
3633You do n''t mean to tell me he is coming into this house?
3633You do n''t mean to tell us,exclaimed the cook,"that the doctor said she was n''t dead?"
3633You foolish child, do you take me for a tigress?
3633You foolish child,she said,"will you never understand that your poor mother is getting old and irritable?
3633You judged, I suppose, from the appearance of the book?
3633You refer to Madame Fontaine, I suppose?
3633You take the responsibility of the couch, doctor, if the authorities raise any objection?
3633You were too late, of course, to find the man there?
3633You will take it from poor Jack, wo n''t you?
3633You''re my visitor, ai n''t you? 3633 You''ve got some money about you, I suppose?"
3633Your aunt? 3633 Your daughter informed you of my sister''s illness, I suppose?"
3633Your poor lips look so parched,she said;"let me give you some lemonade?"
3633Your son, I believe, sir? 3633 ''A bad opinion,''Mr. Keller repeated,''of a woman I do n''t know? 3633 ''A nice- looking girl,''he said;''but what does Mother Barbara say to her?'' 3633 ''But who has been my nurse?'' 3633 ''Do the doctors understand what is the matter with him?'' 3633 ''Do you know of some discreditable action on the part of Madame Fontaine, which has not been found out by anyone else?'' 3633 ''God help me, what can I do?'' 3633 ''Well?'' 3633 ''What can I do?'' 3633 ''What remedy does he mean? 3633 ''Which way did he turn when he left you-- towards Mr. Keller''s house or the other way?'' 3633 ''Who is she?'' 3633 ''Who''s this?'' 3633 ''Why am I not allowed to express my gratitude? 3633 ''Why should you distress yourself, mamma?'' 3633 ( Who had told him this? 3633 --Don''t you think that rather a strange reply?
3633--nice language to use to a respectable servant, eh?--"You wretch"( she says),"how did you come by this?"
3633A fond mother?
3633A most liberal lady, is n''t she, sir?"
3633Am I not even worthy of an answer?"
3633Am I right?"
3633Am I speaking poetically for the first time in my life?
3633And did you not send the man- servant to us, with her letter from Fritz?"
3633And did you utterly forget your husband, when the little darling was first put into your arms?
3633And if you heard of a housekeeper''s place vacant, would you tell me of it?"
3633And what did Madame Fontaine lose, by failing to inform herself of such trifles as these?
3633And what did it do?
3633And what do you advise?"
3633And what do you suppose her excuse was?
3633And what do you think I am?
3633And who do you think followed him out of the house, David, when I sent for Madame Fontaine?
3633And who takes care of the great business now?"
3633And why had she declined to despatch her letter to him, when the opportunity offered of sending it by the boy?
3633And would she cast him off, without ceremony, when he had served her purpose?
3633And, even if I did venture, how am I----?"
3633And, without proof, how could I, how dare I, open my lips?
3633Anything more?"
3633Are my tests insufficient?
3633Are such redeeming features unnatural in an otherwise wicked woman?
3633Are you as cold- blooded as he was?
3633Are you aware of the circumstances?"
3633Are you content, David, to leave such a man for the rest of his life to the chains and the whip?''
3633Are you lost to all sense of decency?
3633Are you quite sure that she does n''t expect something more of you?"
3633Are you stupid enough to suppose that Mistress is dead?
3633Are you sure, David, it is only a little illness that makes her shut herself up in her room, and look so frightfully pale and haggard?
3633As for the other, what do you think he did?
3633At what time can I say two words to you in confidence?"
3633Besides, how do I know that some other unlucky circumstance may not cause more delays; and perhaps prevent the marriage from taking place at all?"
3633Besides, was it likely that anything I could say would have the slightest effect on the deluded old man, in the first fervor of his infatuation?
3633Brandy, if you like?"
3633But perhaps you are a friend of hers?
3633But suppose he was her accepted husband?
3633But tell me, what are you going to say to Madame Fontaine?"
3633But what sort of witness against her was this abusive old lady, the unscrupulous writer of an anonymous letter?
3633But who could have been cruel enough to say so, at that moment?)
3633But who was the gentleman?
3633By what possible motives could the widow have been animated?
3633Can I appeal to the sympathy and compassion( once already refused in the hardest terms) of my merciless relatives in this city?
3633Can I get you anything?"
3633Can we carry her home between us?
3633Can you certify to that?"
3633Can you come with us?"
3633Can you guess on what chance I calculated, when I consented to interpret the cipher?"
3633Can you guess what that meant?"
3633Can you spare me a few minutes?"
3633Could it be fear?
3633Crying?
3633David?"
3633David?"
3633David?"
3633Did I, or did I not, begin with the ancient Egyptians, and end with Doctor Bernastrokius, our neighbor in the next street?"
3633Did it matter to her what the sordid old merchant said or thought, after Minna had become his son''s wife?
3633Did n''t you hear what I mentioned just now?
3633Did she feel it now?
3633Did she know what had become of the medicine- chest?
3633Did she want to sell it?
3633Did the subject turn up?
3633Did you give it to anybody?"
3633Did you hear of anything that was going on there?"
3633Did you say you wished to go out with me?
3633Do I know anybody who will lend me five thousand florins?
3633Do I make myself understood?"
3633Do I see the sun rising, up there in the skylight?
3633Do my tears speak for me?
3633Do n''t you admire Fritz''s taste?
3633Do n''t you feel it?"
3633Do n''t you know that I''m watching and waiting here till she wakes?
3633Do n''t you know that women will lose their patience sometimes?
3633Do n''t you mind the cold?"
3633Do n''t you remember,"she added, cautiously leading him back to the point,"I used to make your lemonade when you were ill?"
3633Do you believe me?"
3633Do you give him up as incurable, when he can do that?"
3633Do you know anything about her affairs?
3633Do you know how she has returned the insult?
3633Do you know what he did with dear Madame Fontaine''s letter?
3633Do you know, Minna, if they have found a room for him?"
3633Do you mean to tell me I am bound to obey my father, when his conduct is neither just nor reasonable?"
3633Do you object to the young lady?"
3633Do you remember my once writing to you about a mysterious Hungarian, whom we found in the University?
3633Do you see my tears?
3633Do you see that bell?"
3633Do you see the brown earth of the grave dropping from him, and the rope round his neck?
3633Do you still insist on my replacing what I have taken, by the morning of the sixth of this month?"
3633Do you suppose I was going to wear her gloves after that?
3633Do you suppose me capable of presuming on your aunt''s kindness-- of begging for favors which it may not be perfectly easy for her to grant?
3633Do you think I am exaggerating?
3633Do you think I do n''t know what you are longing to do?"
3633Do you think I would behave harshly to you?
3633Do you think I''m going to let housekeeper''s cat- lap be drunk at my table?
3633Do you think Madame Fontaine noticed me?"
3633Do you think it was for your sake-- not to be hard on You-- that I have consented to this intolerable sacrifice?
3633Do you think my friends owned they had been mistaken?
3633Do you think she will die?"
3633Do you think she will follow the hearse to the Deadhouse, with Mr. Keller and the doctor?"
3633Do you understand, now, why I am compelled to speak unjustly of poor Jack?"
3633Do you want to know what reply I received?
3633Do you?"
3633Does that imply a doubt of the voluntary confession----?"
3633Does your mother know of this letter?"
3633Does your sister propose a day for the wedding?"
3633Engelman?"
3633Engelman?"
3633Excuse me-- I hope it has got plums in it?"
3633Fifty or sixty?"
3633Got it?
3633Had a hair got into the pen of the head- clerk, who had made the entry?
3633Had he been drinking?
3633Had he bought it himself?
3633Had he committed indiscretions which might expose him to ridicule if they were known?
3633Had it been given to her?
3633Had it influenced him, in some unseen way?
3633Had she any reasonable hope of success, if she asked for a few days''leave of absence, and went to Wurzburg?
3633Had she been careful to keep the sealed box so safely that no other person could get at it?
3633Had she seen her way to trying what Mr. Engelman''s influence with his partner could do for her?
3633Had she seen some frightful thing?
3633Has Fritz mentioned that among Madame Fontaine''s other virtues, she has paid her debts?
3633Has Mr. Engelman killed a man in a duel?
3633Has anybody seen Madame Housekeeper?
3633Has he ever betrayed it in your presence?"
3633Has he kept his promise?
3633Has he told you why his father sent him away from the University?"
3633Has it the same effect on me?
3633Has she come?"
3633Has she got into some difficulty since she refused him?
3633Has the madman anything to do with it?"
3633Have I fallen in love, as the saying is?"
3633Have I not spoken plainly enough already?
3633Have we any other sympathies in common?
3633Have we given the emetic too late?
3633Have you any music in London?
3633Have you any objection to be the representative of the house in this matter?"
3633Have you forgotten already how I have consented to degrade myself?
3633Have you never had parents or friends to be kind to you, my poor fellow?"
3633Have you never made a mistake?"
3633Have you, or have you not, complied with the conditions on which I consented-- God help me!--to be what I am?"
3633He looked at her searchingly, and added,"Do_ you_ go as a friend?"
3633He will be one of the party at the wedding, of course?"
3633How am I to get a hearing?
3633How can she help us?"
3633How could I advise?
3633How could I foresee that coming events in the future life of my aunt would prove the lawyer to be right?
3633How could I object to the letter?
3633How did you get the blue- glass bottle?
3633How do I know that judgment has not been pronounced already?
3633How had she got the necklace?
3633How is it that I have neither heard nor seen anything of him?"
3633How many opinions of philosophers on the moral and physical incapacities of women did I quote?
3633How old should you guess me to be to- night?
3633How will he come back, I wonder?"
3633How would Frau Meyer have interpreted Joseph''s blushes, and the widow''s liberality?
3633I am afraid you have had reason to complain of his conduct yourself?"
3633I am sure you agree with him?"
3633I do n''t deny that she is a fond mother; but is the maternal instinct enough of itself to answer for a woman?
3633I do n''t know whether I make myself understood?"
3633I had a right to go, if I liked-- hadn''t I?"
3633I have had some happy minutes with Minna-- and( would you believe it?)
3633I hope you think I have done right, madam?"
3633I presume this will afford plenty of time( I speak ignorantly of such things) for providing the bride''s outfit?"
3633I said at once,"I believe I have the honor of speaking to Miss Minna Fontaine?"
3633I said piteously,"Must I really leave Frankfort?"
3633I said,"Civility costs nothing, ma''am; and sometimes buys a great deal"( severe, eh?).
3633I suppose you are in his confidence?
3633I wonder when I shall pay for the earrings?
3633IV"Do you remember how Mr. Keller''s illness was cured?"
3633If the corpse- bell rang, would the stroke of it be like the single stroke of the clock?
3633In the drawing- room?
3633Is Fritz in the business, David?
3633Is he at home?"
3633Is he young or old?"
3633Is it indiscreet to ask if you slipped in a little word about the hopes that I associate with Mrs. Wagner''s arrival at Frankfort?"
3633Is it just, is it reasonable, to condemn a woman without first hearing what she has to say in her own defense?
3633Is it not dreadful?
3633Is it possible that you smoke?"
3633Is it possible, Mr. David, that she may one day take the journey to Frankfort?"
3633Is it the close air of the theater, do you think?"
3633Is it the writing of a woman or a man?"
3633Is it true that he was cured out of the blue- glass bottle?"
3633Is it true that you are, all three of you, going to the theater to- night?"
3633Is it wonderful that I feel baffled, disheartened, helpless?
3633Is it----?"
3633Is n''t Miss Minna a charming girl?"
3633Is n''t it infamous, without an atom of evidence against her, to take it for granted that she is guilty?
3633Is n''t it odd?
3633Is that bottle of lemonade for me?"
3633Is there any wine in it?"
3633Is there anything I can do for you, Madame Fontaine?"
3633Is there anything Jack may have said to you about me, which seems to require an explanation-- if I can give it?"
3633Is this true?"
3633It would never have entered your head, Fritz, would it?"
3633Just read that letter, will you?
3633Keller''s?"
3633Keller''s?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Keller?"
3633Madame Fontaine, do you think?"
3633May I ask if you have lately observed any signs of excitement in him?"
3633May I call you David?
3633May I offer you a nosegay which he allowed me to gather?"
3633May I sit down for a moment?"
3633Mr. Keller''s voice answered from within,"Who is there?"
3633Mr. Keller?
3633Must I once more remind you of_ my_ position?
3633Must I try a little gentle persuasion before you will come back to your chair?"
3633My aunt?
3633No, you wo n''t?
3633Now?"
3633Now?"
3633Oh, why am I only a little man?
3633Once for all, have you anything to say which it is absolutely necessary that I should hear?
3633One of you saw the nurse''s brother give it to me, I think?
3633One word more-- are there any obstacles in your way?"
3633Or had the widow warned him not to be too ready to take me into his confidence?
3633Or have I made a complete mistake?"
3633Or somebody in the solitary offices below?
3633Perhaps I had better ascertain what Mr. Engelman''s wishes are, before we decide?"
3633Perhaps it was not so strong as Mr. Keller''s wine?
3633Please tell her so, with my duty-- or, may I be bold enough to say already, with my love?"
3633Pretty, is n''t it?
3633Shall I confess what my emotions were?
3633Shall I tap at the window and call him back?"
3633Shall I tell Mistress, when we have done work?"
3633Shall I tell you what has happened, Fritz?"
3633Shall I tell you what is the greatest blessing in the world?
3633Shall I tell you what my husband earns at the University?
3633Shall we move a little further on?"
3633Shall we open the door?"
3633She has been talking of me in the kindest terms?
3633She is here for a short time only, I believe?''
3633She said to the landlady,''How long ago did this happen?''
3633Somebody in the empty bedrooms above?
3633Suppose I fail to replace the five thousand florins in your reserve fund?"
3633Suppose one of these men happened to be in Frankfort?
3633Suppose she refused to let him have the"remedy"?
3633Suppose the housekeeper should return, and see the key in the cupboard, and the chest with one of the bottles missing?
3633Suppose the legal decision goes against the widow?
3633Suppose the widow happened to be in her room?
3633Surely I have asserted some claim to your pity, at last?
3633Surely he will not let this madman loose on us, with nobody but your aunt to hold the chain?
3633Tell me, friend David, may I speak to you with the freedom of a supremely wretched man?"
3633Tell me, honestly, am I expecting too much, if I hope that your aunt will persuade Fritz''s father to see me?"
3633The question in our case was,_ How_ will it end?
3633The superintendent merely repeated, I suppose, what Jack had told him?"
3633Then why did she want to get out of my hearing?
3633Under what influence?
3633V"Whose writing is this?"
3633Wagner?"
3633Wagner?"
3633Wagner?"
3633Wagner?"
3633Wagner?"
3633Was it Jesuitical to doubt the disinterestedness of her advice?
3633Was my poor dear husband not right?
3633Was she downstairs at dinner to- day, Joseph?"
3633Was she merely keeping up appearances, on the chance that he might yet be useful to her, in some other way?
3633Was the letter which I had sent upstairs a reply to the letter which Minna had seen her mother writing?
3633Was the punishment of my offense severe enough, when I heard those words?
3633Was the widow now informed that the senile old admirer who had advanced the money to pay her creditors had been found dead in his bed?
3633Was there any person in the house, from the honest servants upwards, whom it would be reasonably possible to suspect of theft?
3633Was this likely to occur, after the fright she had already suffered?
3633Was this the sort of man who would postpone the payment of his just dues?
3633We part as friends who understand each other, do n''t we?
3633Well, and what did your aunt say?"
3633Were you as fond of your first child, I wonder, as I am of mine?
3633What about the Keys?"
3633What can I do for you?"
3633What can we do for you, ma''am?
3633What conceivable object had the widow to gain by Mr. Keller''s death?
3633What could I say?
3633What did she do?"
3633What did she really say, when you left Jack, and had your private talk in the reception- room?
3633What did that new allusion to Mr. Engelman mean?
3633What did the landlady say?"
3633What did you ask David?"
3633What do you mean by talking of a voluntary confession, after that?"
3633What do you mean?"
3633What do you say to using half of the customary fund for investment?
3633What do you say?
3633What do you think of Madame Fontaine?"
3633What do you think of a furious person who insults me, suddenly turning into a funny person who shakes hands with me and bursts out laughing?
3633What do you think of that?"
3633What does it matter?
3633What does the ledger say?"
3633What does_ that_ amount to?
3633What has she done to deserve that you should call her thoughtless?"
3633What if the housekeeper came in, and saw the blue- glass bottle?
3633What influence had wrought the transformation?
3633What influence would be most likely to persuade her to deceive Fritz''s father?
3633What is a loan of five thousand florins to you?
3633What is it?"
3633What is the matter with him?"
3633What is there to alarm you?
3633What is your name?"
3633What lies has she been telling you of me?
3633What proof had I that she had lied to me about the sketch and the mantlepiece?
3633What right had I to impute self- seeking motives to such a woman as this?
3633What sort of man was he?"
3633What was he to do?
3633What was the lady''s name?
3633What will Fritz say, if you take her away just when he has come home?
3633What will the bridegroom say?"
3633What will you do?"
3633What wonderful influence brought you to my feet, and made you the eager benefactor of my child?
3633What would Fritz think, when he knew of it?
3633What would Mr. Keller say when he recognized his nurse, and when he heard that she had saved his life?
3633What''s that outside?
3633What''s your name?--Jack?
3633What?
3633When had I last heard that commonplace phrase?
3633Where are you going to?
3633Where could he hide it?
3633Where did she live?
3633Where had it been made?
3633Where is Mr. Engelman?
3633Where was she to find such a reference?
3633Where was the harm in saying to her,''A letter, mamma, from Wurzburg''?
3633Where was the money to be found?
3633Where''s my sister''s bag?"
3633Where''s the fire?
3633Where''s the mug?"
3633Who among us knows the capacity for wickedness that lies dormant in our natures, until the fatal event comes and calls it forth?
3633Who but a fool, in her critical position, would run the risk of even one chance in a hundred turning against her?
3633Who can I go to for the key?
3633Who could have been near enough to hear the alarm?
3633Who could have presumed, at that moment, to express sympathy in words?
3633Who could say, looking at the future of such a life as hers, that she might not have some need of it yet-- after it had already served her so well?
3633Who emptied it?"
3633Who got the flowers?
3633Who is ill?
3633Who is it?"
3633Who is the slanderer who has said that of me?''
3633Who wants him?"
3633Why did I find Gluck''s magnificent music grow wearisome from want of melody as it went on?
3633Why did n''t I bring my sketch- book with me?
3633Why did n''t you return, Jack?
3633Why had she brought it to the Judengasse?
3633Why have I taken you into my confidence, under_ these_ circumstances?
3633Why have n''t you put her into a coffin like other people?"
3633Why is n''t she here?''
3633Why not throw the bottle into the river?
3633Why should n''t I have told Mrs. Housekeeper how I lost my keys in the night?
3633Why should n''t I look at the postmark?
3633Why was I still not at my ease?
3633Why, a cat is a fond mother!--What''s the matter?"
3633Why?
3633Will my father do it?
3633Will the parson marry Minna and me, without being paid for it?"
3633Will you excuse me for a few minutes?
3633Will you lie down on the bed?"
3633Will you write to him, or shall I?"
3633With floods of tears, with eloquent protestations, with threats even of self- destruction, could she venture on making the confession now?
3633With the necklace in pawn, and with no substitute to present in its place, what would Minna say, what would Mr. Keller think?
3633Wo n''t you show me the keys now?"
3633Would she mention her name?
3633Would the holder of the bill allow her to renew it for a fortnight?
3633Would you believe it?
3633Would you like to see the Deadhouse, some night?
3633Would you like to see where the mad watchman hung himself?
3633Yes, or No?"
3633You do n''t deal, I hope, at the public- house up that way?
3633You do n''t suppose she made this?
3633You do n''t want to ruin a well- meaning lad, by getting him turned out of his place?
3633You must have seen for yourself that we are very poor?"
3633You saw what sort of place I lived in and slept in at the madhouse, did n''t you?"
3633You see how well she is taken care of-- and you will behave sensibly, I am sure?
3633You will make allowances for her as I do-- won''t you?"
3633You will not make mischief, Mr. David, by mentioning my act of artistic invasion to either of the old gentlemen?
3633You will stay and drink tea with us, Mr. David?
3633_ Is_ it an opera- dancer?
3633_"Now_ do you understand what I did when I got into my new room?
3633_"Will_ you be quiet, and let me speak?"
3633am I never to know a moment''s pleasure again without something to embitter it?
3633and could he, by the barest possibility, be of any use in helping her out of it?"
3633and have I not done well to prove it?"
3633and suppose he saw the stolen chest in the locksmith''s shop?
3633and suppose the note fell due before Minna was married?
3633and that her promissory note had passed into the possession of the heir- at- law?
3633and why did I remember it so readily when I now heard it again?
3633and, if so, who had given it?
3633ca n''t you forget the day when I locked you out of my room?
3633could n''t you introduce me to her?"
3633cried my aunt,"what does all this mystery mean?
3633do you want to be at it again?"
3633had I not surprised her standing close by the table on which the night- drink was set?
3633had she heard some dreadful sound?
3633he asked of Mr. Engelman--''is she a new servant?''
3633he cried,"would you mind letting me kiss you?"
3633he cried,"you''re not deaf, are you?"
3633he exclaimed,"is Mrs. Wagner dead?"
3633he exclaimed;"are you aware that Jack Straw is one of the most dangerous lunatics we have in the house?"
3633he has left his opera- glass behind him?
3633he inquired;''surely not this young girl?''
3633he said to himself, as he paced up and down the hall,"what will become of him, if she does die?"
3633he said,"are you jealous of me already?"
3633he said,"who is that glorious creature?"
3633how am I to approach him?
3633is there nothing I can do to help you?"
3633is there nothing I can do to help you?"
3633mamma asked,''and what did he say when he heard that?''
3633or Father Schwartz?
3633or had he carried it off from the housekeeper''s room?
3633or run away with an opera- dancer?
3633or squandered the whole profits of the business at the gambling- table?
3633or to borrow money on it?
3633or was there some trifling defect in the paper, at that particular part of the page?
3633or what?
3633she cried innocently,"has Fritz not forgotten me?"
3633she exclaimed,"do you really suppose I am cold- hearted enough to want time to think of it?
3633she said, in tones of gentle reproach,"did n''t I nurse you at Wurzburg?"
3633there are other people then who agree with me?"
3633what brings_ him_ here?"
3633what does that sulky face mean?"
3633what have I done to offend you?"
3633when I came to tell you of your marriage, why did you ask me if you were in the way?
3633where are there words that are big enough to speak about it?"
3633whether he receives your letter or not?"
3633why am I not strong enough to fling the brutes out of the window?
3633would it break your heart if you lost him?"
3633you suspected foul play in my case too?"
3633you want facts, do you?
8210, find it convenient, to be the purchaser? 8210 God is everywhere,"I have exclaimed, and works everywhere, and where is there room for death?
8210Why did you not give it me?
8210** Believe me, dear Poole, your affectionate and mindful-- friend, shall I so soon have to say?
8210*** Is not March rather a perilous month for the voyage from Yarmouth to Hamburg?
8210*** Is there an emigrant at Keswick, who may make me talk and write French?
8210*** What then remains?
8210---------"I read the"Star"and another paper: what could I want with this paper, which is nothing more?"
8210--in other words,"Is thinking possible without arbitrary signs?
8210And, lastly, to whom would you advise me to apply?
8210Are you not laying out a scheme which will throw your travelling in Italy, into an unpleasant and unwholesome part of the year?
8210Are your galvanic discoveries important?
8210Besides, are we not all in this present hour, fainting beneath the duty of Hope?
8210Besides, is it not somewhat improbable that Talleyrand should have preferred prose to rhyme, when the latter alone''has got the chink''?
8210But who her evening hours could cheer?
8210But why do I calumniate my own spirit by saying I would rather?
8210Can you give me a general notion what terms I have a right to insist on in either case?
8210Did Carlisle[1] ever communicate to you, or has he in any way published his facts concerning"pain", which he mentioned when we were with him?
8210Did there appear to you any remote analogy between the case I translated from the German Magazine and the effects produced by your gas?
8210Did you get my attempt at a tragedy from Mrs. Robinson?
8210Do you know aught about it?
8210Does not that man''mock''God who daily prays against temptations, yet daily places himself in the midst of the most formidable?
8210For God''s sake, my dear fellow, tell me what we are to gain by taking a Welsh farm?
8210Hartley sends a grin to you?
8210Have I estimated my own performances rightly?
8210Have you ever thought of trying large doses of opium, a hot climate, keeping your body open by grapes, and the fruits of the climate?
8210Have you heard from him lately?
8210Have you read over Dr. Lardner on the Logos?
8210Have you seen Mrs. Robinson[ 2] lately-- how is she?
8210Have you seen T. Wedgwood since his return?
8210Have you seen the second volume of the''Lyrical Ballads'', and the preface prefixed to the first?
8210Her long and solitary evening hours?-- Talk her, or haply sing her, to her sleep?
8210How much money will be necessary for"furnishing"so large a house?
8210How much necessary for the maintenance of so large a family-- eighteen people-- for a year at least?]
8210I can think of no other person( for your travelling companion)--what wonder?
8210I fear that it may extend to seven hundred pages; and would it be better to publish the Introduction of History separately, either after or before?
8210If I go into Scotland, shall I engage Walter Scott to write the history of Scottish poets?
8210If any place in the southern climates were in a state of real quiet, and likely to continue so, should you feel no inclination to migrate?
8210If the former, would you advise me to sell the copyright at once, or only one or more editions?
8210In short, should I be right in advising Longman to undertake it?
8210In what line of Life could I be more''actively''employed?
8210In your poem,[2]"impressive"is used for"impressible"or passive, is it not?
8210Is it not possible to get 25 or 30 of the"Poems"ready by to- morrow, as Parsons, of Paternoster Row, has written to me pressingly about them?
8210Is it quite clear that you and I were not meant for some better star, and dropped, by mistake, into this world of pounds, shillings, and pence?
8210Is the march of the human race progressive, or in cycles?
8210Is your Sister married?
8210Is your dear Mother well?
8210Lastly make Morning seem morning with a daughter''s welcome?
8210My London friends?
8210My dearest Poole, can you conveniently receive Lloyd and me in the course of a week?
8210My friend, T. Poole, begs me to ask what, in your opinion, are the parts or properties in the oak which tan skins?
8210Now will you undertake this?
8210Or shall I laugh, and teach him to insult the feelings of his fellow men?
8210Ought children to be permitted to read romances, and stories of giants, magicians, and genii?
8210Pray did you ever pay any particular attention to the first time of your little ones smiling and laughing?
8210Read to her?
8210Said he,"Why----[ 3] what letter is this for me?
8210Shall I add my Tragedy, and so make a second volume?
8210Shall I be grave myself, and tell a lie to him?
8210Shall I not be an Agriculturist, an Husband, a Father, and a''Priest''after the order of''Peace''?
8210Smooth her pillow?
8210The snatching at fire, and the circumstance of my first words expressing hatred to professional men-- are they at all ominous?
8210Then I say, shall I suffer him to see grave countenances and hear grave accents, while his face is sprinkled?
8210This I"know"to be fact; and does the spirit of meekness forbid us to tell the truth?
8210To whom shall a young man utter"his pride", if not to a young man whom he loves?
8210What did you think of that case I translated for you from the German?
8210What do they lead to?
8210What does all this mean?
8210What good can possibly come of your plan?
8210What harm can a proposal do?
8210What have I done in Germany?
8210What think you of the stings of bees?
8210Whether such a farm with so very large a house is to be procured without launching our frail and unpiloted bark on a rough sea of anxieties?
8210Why is he not in England?
8210Why we a''nt at"church"now, are we?
8210Would an eulogist of medical men be inconsistent, if he should write against vendors of( what he deemed) poisons?
8210Would you think him an honest man?
8210Yet in whose poems, except those of Bowles, would it not have been excellent?
8210You ask me,"Why, in the name of goodness, I did not return when I saw the state of the weather?"
8210You know your old Poems are a third time in the press; why not set forth a second volume?
8210[ 1]"What, and not to Fanny?"
8210[ 2] What tie have I to England?
8210[ Footnote 1: To this letter Mr. Lloyd seems to have returned the question, How could Coleridge live without companions?
8210an''hireless''Priest?
8210and is cold water a complete menstruum for these parts or properties?
8210and what titles, that are dear and venerable, are there which I shall not possess, God permit my present resolutions to be realised?
8210are not words, etc., parts and germinations of the plant, and what is the law of their growth?"
8210either to print it and divide the profits, or( which indeed I should prefer) would you give me three guineas, for the copyright?
8210for what have I left them?
8210more insufferable reflectors of pain and weariness of spirit?
8210on my account?
8210or how far is the word arbitrary a misnomer?
8210or how interrupt, or cast a shade on your good spirits, that were so rare, and so precious to you?
8210or shall I pursue my first intention of inserting 1500 in the third edition?
8210to write of Charles Lloyd with freedom?
52055Am I not more to thee than ten sons?
52055''A friend of Wantley''s?''
52055''After our marriage-- such a queer, quiet wedding----''''Was Penelope there?
52055''Alone?
52055''Am I unhappy?
52055''And Lady Wantley''s mother, what of her?''
52055''And do you actually see him now?
52055''And does she approve of the Settlement?''
52055''And has there been a Florizel?''
52055''And have you read all these right through?''
52055''And if you see anyone, you will not speak?
52055''And out there-- in Persia, I mean-- did you never come across him?''
52055''And pray, why not?''
52055''And so this woman,''he said,''became a mother in Israel?
52055''And the niece, the young lady who is to be my special charge?''
52055''And then you went on to Monk''s Eype?''
52055''And then''--Cecily spoke softly--''Penelope was born?''
52055''And then?''
52055''And when in Persia, in Teheran, what sort of life does he lead there?''
52055''And who,''asked Cecily with some eagerness--''who is David Winfrith?''
52055''Are you sure that you are acting wisely?
52055''Boxes not too large to go on mules?
52055''But if he is married,''said Cecily slowly,''how can you go away with him like that?''
52055''But to such a one surely human love would be denied, even in Persia?''
52055''But what would Mr. Winfrith have to do with it?''
52055''But why does she think he has turned from her?''
52055''But why should she marry at all?''
52055''But,''he said deferentially,''is n''t that a little awkward sometimes, even for you?''
52055''Can not you imagine any other''--Wantley''s voice shook a little in spite of himself--''any other person who might wish to give you pleasure?''
52055''Cecily?''
52055''David?''
52055''Do I?''
52055''Do you know what those are?''
52055''Do you know, my dear, what day this is-- I mean, what day this is to me?''
52055''Do you mean that Lord Wantley is penniless?''
52055''Do you mean that Sir George Downing is actually staying with you?''
52055''Do you mean that my affairs have been discussed?
52055''Do you mean those books?''
52055''Do you not think there is a great likeness between them?''
52055''Do you really believe in lucky numbers?''
52055''Do you really think that she likes being with me?''
52055''Do you remember,''she asked, rather shyly,''your first visit to Oglethorpe, when I was a little girl?
52055''Do you, then, mean to sell Monk''s Eype?''
52055''Does she seem''--sought for a word, weighed one or two, rejected them, and finally chose''bewitched?''
52055''Does she_ know_?''
52055''During all these past years it never came again?''
52055''From Kingpole Farm?''
52055''George Downing?
52055''Has he any special way of guarding himself from attack?''
52055''Has not the time now come when you should try and forget?
52055''Has she been too much left alone?
52055''Has she often had occasion to chaperon you, and-- and-- a friend, on a similar excursion?''
52055''Her grandmother?''
52055''How can my aunt''s headache get better as long as you sit there?
52055''How do you mean?''
52055''How does he escape?''
52055''How long has Miss Purdon been at the Settlement?''
52055''I have thought that you, perhaps, would consent to speak to Sir George Downing?
52055''I suppose Lady Wantley is like her daughter?''
52055''I suppose that he really_ has_ lived alone?''
52055''I suppose you show them how to sew and mend, and darn and cook?''
52055''I suppose,''he said,''that you do n''t feel_ you_ could tell her, Motey?''
52055''I suppose,''said Wantley, turning to his cousin,''that you have arranged for Winfrith to come over to- morrow, or Monday?''
52055''I suppose,''she said hesitatingly,''that the Settlement would not be affected should Penelope marry again?
52055''I take it that you have said nothing to your daughter-- to Penelope-- as yet?''
52055''I thought you were so fond of the spring in London?''
52055''I wonder,''he said reflectively,''what limitation you would put to their power?
52055''Is Ludovic here?''
52055''Is any one coming?''
52055''Is it likely that I should let you go alone?''
52055''Is it well with my child?''
52055''Is n''t everything-- of that sort-- a little awkward, sometimes, for all of us?''
52055''Is she?''
52055''Is that quite true?''
52055''Is there any place downstairs where your lordship could arrange for us to put the body?
52055''Is this a monastery or convent?''
52055''Is young Lord Wantley a Roman Catholic?''
52055''Leaving soon?
52055''Lord Wantley is Catholic, is he not?''
52055''Me?
52055''Motey, what do you mean?''
52055''Motey, you remember the French count we met in Switzerland last year?''
52055''My dear,''he said, deeply troubled,''what is it?
52055''Oh no,''she said in her gentle, rather drawling voice;''I ca n''t sew myself, so how could I teach others to do so?
52055''Oh, is he here, too?''
52055''Our discussion?
52055''Penelope?
52055''Perhaps you forgot to bring your notes in here with you, or-- wait a moment-- what is that you are holding in your hand?''
52055''Perhaps you remember the Tobutts-- the man who got crushed by a barrel?
52055''Pope and all?''
52055''Surely you have heard of such occurrences?''
52055''Surely you were thinking of David Winfrith?''
52055''Surely your mistress did not intend to stay out so late to- night?''
52055''Surely, Lord Wantley, now that I have suggested the idea, you must admit that they are greatly interested in one another?
52055''Surely,''she cried,''you can understand how it is with me?
52055''Tell me what you think, what you know of her?
52055''Tell me,''he said quietly and while in the act of putting down his hat,''did you ask Mr. Fetter to arrange for my return here?''
52055''The Melancthon Settlement?''
52055''The Persian man?''
52055''The new Under- Secretary for Foreign Affairs?''
52055''The old nurse was there, you say?
52055''The sort of thing a trustee would suggest, eh, George?''
52055''The truth?''
52055''Then I only once forfeited my chance?''
52055''Then I suppose you advised restitution to young Lord Wantley?''
52055''Then there are no servants here?''
52055''Then you have seen him?''
52055''Then, he does not live at the Settlement?''
52055''There was some story, was n''t there, when Sir George Downing was a young man?
52055''Together?''
52055''Undoubtedly that is what the Christian means by the word, but is there not the higher degree of perfection involved in the French saint''s dictum?''
52055''Unlit?''
52055''Valet?
52055''Was he a friend of Penelope''s husband?
52055''Was it about the Settlement?''
52055''Were they together then?''
52055''Were you afraid?
52055''What do you mean?''
52055''What does she think?
52055''What led you to suppose for a moment that my daughter has gone to Kingpole Farm?
52055''What made me think of it?''
52055''Why all this haste?''
52055''Why did you not ask us to come before?''
52055''Why that?''
52055''Why was I smiling?
52055''Will you come and lunch with me to- morrow?''
52055''Will you come in and rest?''
52055''Will you please go on, sir?
52055''With the exception of this place?''
52055''Would the ghost of that old story of disgrace and pain never be laid?''
52055''Would you please ask Mrs. Mote to come to me here?''
52055''Yes, the young lady will require to have a great many dollars-- eh, my dear?''
52055''Yes,''he said;''there must be times when guardian angels must feel inclined to edge off somewhat, eh?
52055''You ask me what happened?''
52055''You do n''t know''em, do you?''
52055''You have not brought your wife?
52055''You have not shown her that?''
52055''You have understood?''
52055''You mean St. Mary Magdalen, Penelope?
52055''You mean the marriage of her daughter?''
52055''You never told me it was such a-- a----''''Magnificent pile?''
52055''You will wait here, will you not, till I come to you?''
52055''You will write to him?
52055''You''ve been having trouble with the nurses?''
52055''You, Ludovic, will of course lunch with mamma?''
52055--she spoke softly--''how can you be so foolish?
52055A holiday?
52055Again and again, during Mrs. Robinson''s brief absences from the villa, Motey had sought to find-- what?
52055Aime- tu ça?
52055And as Cecily looked at her, bewildered, she added:''I wonder what you thought of Daphne Purdon?
52055And as he came forward,''Are there not candles,''she asked him--''candles which should be lit?''
52055And how did the traveller returning strike Mr. Julius Gumberg?
52055And now?
52055And she had added, as if to herself:''But how could she be otherwise?
52055And so I showed it you, did I?
52055And then she was comforted, for''Shall I come with you?''
52055And then, seeing that she must speak yet more plainly:''I suppose-- I mean, was there anything against his private character, out there, in Teheran?''
52055And when, may I ask, is this work of mercy to take place?''
52055And why have you always refused to have anything to do with the Settlement?''
52055And yet she had surely heard what her companion had been saying--''A good girl?''
52055And, Ludovic, you know what I told you to- day-- of my awful loneliness, of my desolation of body and spirit?''
52055Are you aware of his presence?''
52055As Cecily made no answer, he added:''You will not refuse to take them from me?''
52055As he looked at her, perplexed, she added:''You do n''t know the expression?
52055As she felt his arms tighten round her, she again lifted her face, and asked:''Are you shocked?
52055But doubtless he could not help it-- how do I know what you said to him?''
52055But now?
52055But should I have the right to ask a woman to share, not only the actual risk, but also the mental strain?
52055But then,''added Downing, fixing his eyes on his companion, and speaking as if to himself--''but then comes the question, What is renunciation?
52055But what have you seen?
52055But what mattered to David Winfrith the young girl''s good opinion?
52055But when one evening Mrs. Robinson asked suddenly,''Motey, how would you like to see me become a French Countess?''
52055But where''s your interest in these people, George?''
52055But why should I try and prompt you?
52055But, as he heard her, Downing relaxed his hold on her, and with something like a groan he said:''Why did I not know this before?
52055CHAPTER XI''Est- ce qu''une vie de femme se raconte?
52055CHAPTER XIV''When Man and Woman are agreed, what can the Kazi do?''
52055Cecily had time to wonder why she herself felt so far from content; surely the kind words just uttered should have filled her with joy and peace?
52055Could it be for her, Penelope''s sake?
52055Could such a scene have ever taken place?
52055Could such an invitation have been made-- and refused?
52055Could you not point out to him how greatly this would injure him with those whose good opinion he wishes to retain?
52055David Winfrith?
52055Did Mrs. Delacour, with the strange prescience of the blind, divine something of what was passing in the other''s mind?
52055Did my father ever treat you as a son?
52055Do I seem unhappy?''
52055Do n''t you see-- or is it, as I sometimes suspect, that you wo n''t see?''
52055Do you know how long I myself had to wait?''
52055Do you know it?''
52055Do you remember the exact terms of the deed-- I know you have seen it-- in which were arranged all the money matters connected with the Settlement?''
52055Do you suppose it will be hard for me to undo with him any evil you have done?''
52055Do you think it was wrong?
52055Do you think my aunt would like to see me now, at once?''
52055Do you, for instance, object to my father being told?''
52055Does it not remind you of the Franciscan habit?
52055Eh?
52055For a moment they gazed at one another fixedly, then''Is it true,''she asked briefly;''is it really true, Mr. Ludovic?
52055George Downing and Penelope Wantley?
52055Give me the yellow- haired, pink- cheeked kind, out of which one could shake the sawdust, eh?''
52055Had he anything to suggest, for instance, concerning the money arrangements which must now be made about the Melancthon Settlement?
52055Had they gone forward or turned back?
52055Have n''t you heard the expression before?
52055He added, with an air of studied indifference:''May I ask how long you wish your engagement to be kept secret?
52055He asked abruptly:''How much of the six months-- I do n''t think it was more-- did Penelope actually spend at the Settlement?
52055He brushed aside her last words, and brought himself to consider her material interests, and so,''You realize what all this means?''
52055He heard her say,''This is milk money; you will not spend it on anything else, will you?''
52055He unfortunately added:''Since I have seen him, I have wondered whether he will stand our friend?''
52055Her next words confirmed his feeling of uneasy astonishment, for,''You wo n''t ever set her against me,''she asked,''whatever happens, will you?''
52055How could he influence the disposal of the Robinson fortune?''
52055How could she, Cecily Wake, who owed so much-- nay, her very acquaintance with Wantley-- to Penelope, go against her in so serious a matter?
52055How could the other, this wraith- like woman, tell this to her?
52055How could you believe that he, alive, would have let your letters to him go out of his possession?
52055How could you think such a thing, even of me?''
52055How would you like it if, when acting the part of a traitor to your party, you were always being praised for your loyalty?
52055I ca n''t understand that feeling, can you?
52055I did n''t say too much, George, did I?
52055I mean, of course, between her wedding- day and poor young Robinson''s death?''
52055I say,"Have you ever read a Blue- Book?"
52055I wonder, though, whether you would care to look into our Founder''s room?
52055Indeed, her eyes, her mouth, set in stern lines, seemed to say:''Can not you go away, and leave me in peace?
52055Is it possible that you really believed that any interference or effort on your part could separate two such people as Sir George Downing and myself?
52055Joan of Arc?
52055Lewis?''
52055Mary Queen of Scots?
52055Mason?''
52055Melancthon Wesley Robinson-- what a handicap, eh?
52055Motey had repeated, bewildered, and then with painful sarcasm had added,''I suppose, ma''am, that is why you are learning to do your own hair?''
52055Mr. Gumberg sighed a little heavily; then, with a certain regret,''So you know all about that strange creature, Rosina Bellamont?''
52055No?
52055No?
52055Now, do you suppose that this baby''s guardian angel provoked, by some way best known to itself, your excellent aunt''s headache?''
52055Oglethorpe?"
52055Oh, my lady, how is it you''ve not seen, that you have n''t come to understand, how it is with her?
52055Perhaps you have heard of it?
52055Perhaps you knew already that David Winfrith was with her?''
52055Shall I tell you what I have made up my mind to do during the last few minutes?
52055She never left her mistress, eh?''
52055She wished to consult him about a home for emigrant children, and I heard-- now what did I hear?''
52055She_ is_ a beautiful creature?''
52055Should I''--Penelope''s voice altered, became curiously introspective, questioning--''should I have taken money from a stranger?''
52055Suddenly Mrs. Robinson turned, and, addressing the curly- headed girl, said quickly:''Daphne, will you show Miss Wake round the Settlement?
52055Suppose I were to come in to- morrow morning and ask Miss Wake to let you go there with me?
52055Supposing I do as you wish, can we expect Downing to draw back now, if she-- Penelope-- has made up her mind to go on?
52055Surely you should try and put the past out of your mind, if only for Penelope''s sake?''
52055Tell me why Penelope is not to remain as she is if she wishes to do so?''
52055Then a whimsical notion presented itself to his mind:''Why are you smiling?
52055Then he asked himself, none too soon, what had brought Persian Downing to Monk''s Eype?
52055Then he said, rather sharply:''Well, what is it you want me to do?
52055Then, do you think these pearls are a gift from my cousin?''
52055Then, in a more natural tone, he added:''I suppose it''s really unique?''
52055This, then, was the new scheme?
52055Toi?"
52055Vous reviendrez demain, n''est ce pas, madame?''
52055Was it fancy that made Mrs. Robinson feel that the few words were uttered very coldly?
52055Was it one of dissatisfaction, of slight jealousy, or simply of surprise?
52055Was she not, even before her birth, dedicated to the Lord in His temple?''
52055We can talk over Settlement affairs there, if we meet, as I suppose we shall?''
52055Were you able to make any impression on his mind?''
52055What can I do for you?''
52055What else could mean her strange, obliquely stabbing phrases?
52055What glance, what word on his companion''s part, had brought it there?
52055What had signified her odd words, her pleading look, so full of unwonted humility?
52055What have you heard?
52055What have you understood?''
52055What if anything said by her provoked a sudden separation from her mistress?
52055What man so situated does not do so?
52055What sort of day would he, Lady Wantley, and Downing, spend together?
52055What sort of life would be Penelope''s after she had cut herself adrift from her own world?
52055What was the truth of it all?''
52055What wilderness with her but would be Paradise?
52055When I lie down I say,"When shall I arise and the night be gone?"
52055When had he last seen Penelope weeping?
52055Who else would think of giving me anything of the kind?''
52055Why did he keep this gentle, kindly woman in suspense?
52055Why did n''t his lordship let her have Master David?
52055Why should I have had to wait till now to learn such a thing from you?''
52055Why should he be?
52055Why this great haste, this sudden hurry to be quit of the farmhouse?
52055Winfrith?''
52055Would not the marriage be a suitable one?
52055Would strange, self- centred Persian Downing compensate her for all she was about to lose?
52055Would this maker of great schemes, this seer of visions, forget himself, in order to be everything to her?
52055Would you have him put on her so mortal an affront?''
52055You always seemed quite content----''''Did I?''
52055You know my cousin Penelope?''
52055You love Ludovic-- supposing that you suddenly heard, now, that he was married-- what would you do?--how would you feel?''
52055You see the idea?
52055You understand, eh?
52055You----''''I suppose I have the right to change my mind, to be guided by circumstances?
52055and what should I do with a holiday?''
52055he cried,''I think it''s my turn now to ask you how you could think such a thing, even of me?
52055how could I have found time?
52055how could you think of such a thing?''
52055or do you think they fly off for rest and change when their charges annoy them by being contrary?''
52055said Mrs. Robinson,''did he?
52055said Wantley, looking at her,''and what is the truth?
52055she cried, and as she spoke she put her arm round the girl''s shoulders,''did you think-- did you believe, that I could feel anything but glad?
52055she said at last, and with apparent inconsequence she added;''Does your ladyship remember Mrs. Winfrith, and what happened to her?''
52055what does the old nurse say to it all?''
52055you will remain absolutely silent, for the sake of your daughter, of poor Penelope?''
6473Can I sell or use the property to good advantage?
6473Have I the money to invest?
6473How do you know it will?
6473How does it affect the college as a whole?
6473How much pleasure shall I derive from it?
6473What makes you think so?
6473What will be its effect upon bossism?
6473Will the system encourage bribery and graft, or will it tend to do away with these evils?
6473( 2)_ Is the evidence first- hand or hearsay evidence?_ It is universally recognized that hearsay evidence is unreliable.
6473( 3)_ Can the evidence be considered as especially valuable?_( a)_ Hurtful admissions_ constitute an especially valuable kind of evidence.
6473ARGUMENT AND BRIEF SHOULD IMMIGRATION BE RESTRICTED?
6473An argument on government ownership of railroads would have to answer the question,"Under which system will fewer accidents occur?"
6473And he answered and said unto them, I also will ask you a question; and tell me: The baptism of John, was it from heaven, or from men?
6473And they reasoned with themselves, saying, If we shall say, From heaven; he will say, Why did ye not believe him?
6473And third, where shall Greek be taught?
6473And when in Manchester I saw those huge placards,"Who is Henry Ward Beecher?"
6473Are both premises true?
6473Are the present laws satisfactory?
6473But is this really the case?
6473C. Can the evidence be classed as especially valuable?
6473C. Is the control of Egypt by England a benefit to the whole world?
6473C. Is the witness prejudiced?
6473Could the observed effect have resulted from any other cause than the one assigned?
6473D. Does the witness have a good reputation for honesty and accuracy?
6473DOES COLONIZATION PAY?
6473DOES THE PRESENT SYSTEM CONTAIN SERIOUS EVILS?
6473DOES THE PROPOSITION STATE A POSSIBLE TRUTH?
6473DOES THE PROPOSITION STATE A PROBABLE TRUTH?
6473Do the combined tests of argument from effect to cause and from cause to effect hold?
6473Do the issues, taken collectively, consider all phases of the proposition?
6473Does each issue comprise only disputed matter?
6473Does each issue really bear upon the proposition?
6473Does football benefit or injure the college as a whole?
6473Does football benefit or injure the player?
6473Does he have any personal interest in the case?
6473Does it consist of hurtful admissions?
6473Does it reform the criminal?
6473Does the present system contain serious defects?
6473Does the student in the lonely country college form more lasting friendships?
6473Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine?....
6473For instance, if he considers the purchase of a certain piece of real estate, he says to himself:"Is the price fair?"
6473HOW HAS THE PLAN SUCCEEDED WHERE IT HAS BEEN TRIED?
6473Has the government the right to take the roads without the consent of the present owners?
6473Have enough instances been investigated to establish the probable existence of a general law?
6473Have enough instances of the class under consideration been investigated to establish the existence of a general law?
6473Have the results of the laws been satisfactory?
6473IF THE PRESENT SYSTEM CONTAINS SERIOUS EVILS, IS THE PROPOSED SYSTEM THE ONLY REMEDY?
6473IF THE PRESENT SYSTEM DOES CONTAIN SERIOUS EVILS, WILL THE PROPOSED SYSTEM REMOVE THEM?
6473IS THE PLAN PRACTICABLE?
6473IS THERE ANY DIRECT EVIDENCE BEARING ON THE PROPOSITION?
6473If an inspector condemns a bridge as unsafe, the question arises,"What has made it so?"
6473If so, in what way should the check or limit be applied?
6473If there is such a need, would the educational test accomplish this further restriction in a proper manner?
6473In arriving at a decision, they are confronted with these questions:"Is the game beneficial or detrimental to the player?"
6473In the light of such conflicting advice, what will determine the proper course for a student to follow?
6473Is Egypt benefited by the control of England?
6473Is coeducation a benefit to both sexes?
6473Is compulsory education practicable?
6473Is each issue a subdivision of the proposition, or is it the proposition itself formulated in different language?
6473Is it an anchor which fastens the ship of state in one place, or a rudder to guide it on its voyage?
6473Is it first- hand evidence?
6473Is it for the advantage of the United States that immigration be further checked or limited?
6473Is it negative evidence?
6473Is it undesigned evidence?
6473Is the assigned cause adequate to produce the observed effect?
6473Is the assigned cause of sufficient strength to produce the alleged effect?
6473Is the evidence consistent( a) with itself,( b) with known facts,( c) with human experience?
6473Is the fact stated in the minor premise an instance of the general law expressed in the major premise?
6473Is the government financially able to buy the roads?
6473Is the proposed plan practicable?
6473Is the reformatory system practicable?
6473Is the student able to enter athletics?
6473Is the suzerainty of England over Egypt the only practical solution of the problem?
6473Is the witness an acknowledged authority on the subject about which he testifies?
6473Is the witness competent to give a trustworthy account of the matter?
6473Is the witness willing to give an accurate account?
6473Is there a need for further restriction of immigration?
6473Is there any fundamental difference between the case in hand and the case cited as an example?
6473Is vivisection humane?
6473Is vivisection of great assistance to medicine?
6473Is voting a privilege or a natural right?
6473Is woman''s education as important as man''s?
6473May some other cause intervene and prevent the action of the assigned cause?
6473Now the question arises, How is it possible to conciliate the audience?
6473On the other hand, a man well off-- how is it with him?
6473Ought illiterates to be excluded from the polls?
6473SHALL GREEK BE TAUGHT IN HIGH SCHOOLS?
6473SHOULD IMMIGRATION BE RESTRICTED?
6473Second, if so, in what way should the check or limit be applied?
6473Should the motorman anticipate that persons of mature age will station their wagons across the tracks?
6473Such would be the error if the question,"Would the change be desirable?"
6473The arguer must ask,"Is any direct evidence available?"
6473The issue may take some such form as,"How will the system affect the country politically?"
6473The only question left to be settled now is: Are women persons?
6473The points to be considered in determining the somewhat mercenary question,"Does Colonization Pay?"
6473The question of national expansion presents the issue,"Will such a course add to the glory, the prestige, or the wealth of the nation?"
6473The question that now confronts us is,"Which plan should be adopted?"
6473The real question to be answered is, Should the direct method be substituted for the present method?
6473To the ignorant and poor, or to the educated and prosperous?
6473To whom do the tradesmen of Liverpool sell the most goods at the highest profit?
6473WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A MATERIAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT?
6473WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A MORAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT TO THOSE CONCERNED?
6473WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A PHYSICAL BENEFIT OR DETTRIMENT?
6473WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE A POLITICAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT?
6473WILL THE PROPOSED PLAN BE AN INTELLECTUAL BENEFIT OR DETRIMENT?
6473Was there ever a formal and regular laying out of a street here?
6473What are the conclusions to which the view of these facts brings us?
6473What is the result?
6473What must be the result?
6473Which college location is more favorable to health and intellectual development?
6473Which is the better location?
6473Which is the cheaper?
6473Which method would have the better effect upon the general welfare of the nation?
6473Which side has the better analysis?
6473Which side has the better delivery?
6473Which side has the stronger proof?
6473Which side offers the better refutation?
6473Which would be the more practicable?
6473Which would give the voter fuller enjoyment of his right of suffrage?
6473Who are the Northern laborers?
6473Who can now say that education does not injure the negro?
6473Why not then open our doors to her and admit her products?
6473Why, then, not get our lumber from Canada and preserve what few forests we do have?
6473Why?
6473Will compulsory education benefit the child?
6473Will it benefit the people?
6473Will the proposed system remove these defects without bringing in new evils equally serious?
6473Would it assist or retard the growth of other qualities which a college course should develop?
6473Would it not be of distinct advantage to us?
6473Would the system raise or lower the standard of scholarship?
6473and"If there is any, what is its value?"
6473and"Is the enlargement of the army the_ only_ means of rendering the nation safe from invasion?"
6473and"Should a murderer be punished by death?"
6473c. Is coeducation a benefit to the college?
6473c. Is it right for us as human beings to sanction the many forms of needless and excessive cruelty practised by vivisectors?
6473c. What has been its success thus far?
6473c. Will compulsory education benefit the public?
6473c. Would a change be wise?
6473c. Would the test be unfair to any class of citizens?
6473d. Could such a test be easily incorporated into our laws?
6473d. Is it in accordance with modern civilization?
6473d. Is the desirable system of separate education worth the extra money it costs?
6473or was there ever a regular and sufficient dedication and acceptance?
6473or who is he that gave thee this authority?
6473second, if so, in what way should the check or limit be applied?
6135But how may I certainly know what God wants of me?
6135But will not people walk over us, if we do not stand up for our rights?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135HAVE YE RECEIVED THE HOLY GHOST SINCE YE BELIEVED?
6135Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed?
6135Have you done that this morning?
6135Have you received the Holy Ghost? 6135 Have you received the Holy Power?
6135How can ye believe, which receive honour one of another, and seek not the honour that cometh from God only?
6135How may I know the guidance of the Holy Spirit?
6135How then before Thee shall I dare To stand, or how Thine anger bear? 6135 Light obeyed increaseth light; Light resisted bringeth night; Who shall give me will to choose If the love of light I lose?
6135My soul, ask what thou wilt, Thou canst not be too bold; Since His own blood for thee He spilt, What else can He withhold?
6135Reader, have you made such a consecration as this? 6135 Shall I, for fear of feeble man, The Spirit''s course in me restrain?
6135Should I be silent? 6135 What wilt thou that I shall do unto thee?"
6135Where is the wise? 6135 Who hath made man''s mouth?"
6135Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? 6135 5)? 6135 And Washington and Lincoln? 6135 And are you conscious of His helpful, sympathising, loving presence with you? 6135 And did He not call Joan of Arc to her strange and wonderful mission? 6135 And if they knew Him, may not we? 6135 And if we know the words, may we not know the Teacher of the words? 6135 And is there not a science of salvation, of holiness, of eternal life, that requires the same absolute loyalty tothe Spirit of Truth"?
6135And then, were they not to be His Ministers of State and chief men in His Kingdom?
6135And what power is that?
6135And what was the standard of unity to which He would have us come?
6135And"How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?"
6135Are they true?
6135Are you careful and have you victory in this matter, my comrade?
6135Are you ever cast down and depressed in spirit?
6135Are you filled with the Spirit?
6135Awed by a mortal''s frown, shall I Conceal the word of God most high?
6135Because the Bible tells us so?
6135Because the Church teaches it in her creed, and we have heard it from the catechism?
6135But already they were troubled, for what could this death and departure mean but the destruction of all their hopes, of all their cherished plans?
6135But how can this be in a world such as this?
6135But how can this be?
6135But how shall I know that I have met these conditions in a way to satisfy Him, and that I am myself saved?
6135But what can fit a man for such sacred work?
6135But what was the secret of David and Moses?
6135But, may we not?
6135But, then, consider well, Hugh, dost thou not know from whence thou comest?
6135Can these be reconciled?
6135Can you, my brother?
6135Charles Wesley expresses this in one of his matchless hymns:--"How can a sinner know His sins on earth forgiven?
6135Do you ask,"How can I get such a blessing?"
6135Do you say,"I can not understand it"?
6135Do you think the temper is destroyed or sanctified?
6135Do you want the witness to abide?
6135Do you want this blessing, my brother, my sister?
6135Dr. Daniel Steele tells of a Jew who was asked,"Is it that you_ can not_, or that you_ will not_ believe?"
6135Has He called you into the work, my brother?
6135Hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?"
6135Have you this power?
6135He asked the first one upon whom he called,"How is it with you this morning?"
6135He asks,"or who maketh the dumb, or deaf, or the seeing, or the blind?
6135He must be some august Divine Person, and not a mere influence or impersonal force, for how else could He take and fill the place of Jesus?
6135He said to Ananias,"Why hath Satan filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost?"
6135He was ordered into the king''s presence, who, with a stern voice, asked:"How dared you thus offend me?"
6135How can fire dwell in a piece of iron until its very appearance is that of fire, and it becomes a fire- brand?
6135How can my gracious Saviour show My name inscribed in Heaven?
6135How can one be always hopeful, always abounding in hope, in such a world?
6135How can the electric fluid fill and transform a dead wire into a live one, which you dare not touch?
6135How can they know when I have in my heart repented and believed, and when His righteous anger is turned away?
6135How can we do this?
6135How can we find truth and know it?
6135How could their poor hearts be otherwise than troubled?
6135How do we know Jesus Christ is divine?
6135How does God guide us?
6135How else could it be said that it was better to have Him than to have Jesus remaining in the flesh?
6135How much more when the friendship is heavenly?
6135How shall I know that I am accepted of God?--that I am saved or sanctified?
6135How then?
6135How, then, shall I know that I am justified or wholly sanctified?
6135How, then, shall we escape error and be"sound in doctrine"?
6135IS THE BAPTISM WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT A THIRD BLESSING?
6135IS THE BAPTISM WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT A THIRD BLESSING?
6135In Him was all their help, and what would they do, what could they do, without Him?
6135Is Jesus Christ divine?
6135Is Satan a personal being, and is there a Hell in which the wicked will be for ever punished?
6135Is it God''s will that the tides of the Atlantic and Pacific should sweep across the Isthmus of Panama?
6135Is man a fallen creature who can be saved only through the suffering and sacrifice of the Creator?
6135Is sin omnipotent?
6135Is the Bible an inspired Book?
6135Is there, then, confusion here?
6135Is this your spirit?
6135Leaving her he called immediately upon the other sister, and asked,"How are you to- day?"
6135My brother, my sister, what is your experience just now?
6135Now, what saved the child?
6135Or are they only fancies and falsehoods, or figures of speech and distortions of truth?
6135Or is the old man still warring against Him in your heart?
6135Reading his text, he commenced thus:''Hugh Latimer, dost thou know before whom thou art this day to speak?
6135Shall I, to soothe the unholy throng, Soften Thy truth, or smooth my tongue?
6135That men should run under the Alps?
6135That thoughts and words should be winged across the ocean without any visible or tangible medium?
6135The truth pierced them as a sword until they said,"What shall we do?"
6135Then"they asked of Him, saying, Lord, wilt Thou at this time restore again the kingdom to Israel?"
6135Thoughts, desires, that enter there, Should they not be pure and fair?
6135To this Jesus replied with gracious kindness and searching logic:"How can Satan cast out Satan?
6135Upon whose message thou art sent?
6135WHO IS HE?
6135WHO IS HE?
6135What did Peter and James and John care for the great places in the kingdoms of this world after they were filled with the Holy Ghost?
6135What does Paul teach us here?
6135What is his secret?
6135What is it that cleanses or sanctifies, and how?
6135What is truth without love?
6135What kind of preaching is this?
6135What men have loved and laboured and sacrificed as these men?
6135What truth?
6135What was his secret?
6135What was the secret?
6135What was the secret?
6135What, then, was his secret?
6135When will the Lord''s dear children learn that the religion of Jesus is a lowly thing, and that it is the little foxes that spoil the vines?
6135Whence the superiority of these men?
6135Where is the disputer of this world?
6135Where is the scribe?
6135Who can explain_ how_ food sustains life; how light reveals material objects, how sound conveys ideas to our minds?
6135Who can understand it?
6135Who have been the mightiest and most faithful preachers of the gloom and terror and pain of a perpetual Hell?
6135Who is He?
6135Who is this other One-- this Comforter?
6135Why do men deny the divinity of Jesus Christ?
6135Why do men dispute the inspiration of the Scriptures?
6135Why do men doubt a Day of Judgment, and a state of everlasting doom?
6135Why do people seek for guidance and not find it?
6135Why should they be troubled?
6135Will there be a resurrection of the dead, and a day in which God will judge all the world by the Man Christ Jesus?
6135Would these men, who denounce us so, be willing to forgo their religious ecstasies and spend their lives in such lowly, unheralded service?"
6135Would they now admit His claim to be the Son of God, their promised and long- looked- for Messiah?
6135_ The Doctrine._--What is the teaching of God''s word about holiness?
6135and why art thou disquieted in me?
6135have not I the Lord?
6135or who shall stand in His holy place?
6135when the Friend is our Lord and Saviour, our Creator and Redeemer, our Governor and Judge, our Teacher, Guide, and God?
40141Am I not the sort of woman? 40141 Am I really like yon?"
40141An''what will that be about?
40141And Captain Macleod refused?
40141And I would have tried to be a good wife; but----"Well?
40141And Lady George,she asked, categorically, magisterially;"has she also claims to be consulted?"
40141And Mary? 40141 And after that?"
40141And if I do, what is that to you?
40141And marriage, Miss Carmichael?
40141And men should not; but are dangerous things necessarily foolish?
40141And that is a fact, Donald?
40141And that is a fact, of course?
40141And that red thing in your buttonhole?
40141And the admirable underhand cast was a chance also?
40141And to Alice? 40141 And what does he say was his own part in the business?"
40141And what good will it do to you when you have seen it?
40141And what immorality is there in suicide, Miss Carmichael? 40141 And what''s hindering him but sloth?"
40141And why?
40141And women who have been brought up by men?
40141And, then?
40141And-- and were you right?
40141Any for me?
40141Anything against him? 40141 Are you afraid that I am angry?
40141Are you going without saying good- bye, Jeanie? 40141 Are you mad, Paul?
40141Are you mad? 40141 Are you not coming, Violet?
40141But if I canna know them without breaking a covenant? 40141 But if I''m no content?"
40141But there was no entry in the register, was there, which would account for old Peggy''s anxiety that you should have it?
40141But to think of it? 40141 But we are going to Scotland first; did n''t mamma tell you?
40141But where did Mrs. Macniven hear it?
40141But where did you go? 40141 But why Iona?"
40141But why the Moth?
40141But why, in heaven''s name, Maria? 40141 But why?
40141But why?
40141By the way, Paul, what are they in Scotland?
40141Ca n''t you let me be-- surely you have done mischief enough already?
40141Can you no answer a straight question wi''a straight answer? 40141 Can you swim?"
40141Can you? 40141 Captain Macleod,"she called aggressively,"have you caught anything?"
40141Certainly-- but-- but why? 40141 Cross?"
40141Did you not? 40141 Did you wish me to give the man his_ congà ©_, my dear?"
40141Do I look nervous? 40141 Do I?"
40141Do n''t you think that with you trying to be a good husband and I trying to be a good wife, life would have been a little dreary-- sometimes?
40141Do you ever find niggerheads about here now? 40141 Do you really think so?"
40141Do you think it wiser?
40141Do you think she''ll assuade him, Evie? 40141 Done what?"
40141Father had a letter from Captain Macleod this morning, had n''t he? 40141 Foolish?"
40141Great news-- I may say, good news-- is-- is it not?
40141Happy?
40141Has there not? 40141 Haud your whist, minister,"interrupted Mrs. Cameron, tartly;"what will you be knowing o''a woman''s heart?
40141Have I forgotten you? 40141 Have you been there long?"
40141He is very good- looking, I think,said the echo diligently,"and I hear----""What is that?"
40141Heard I ever the like?
40141How about your theory of the cruel hook and the poor fish?
40141How can I tell? 40141 How can you tell; you need no guidance?"
40141How long?
40141How many? 40141 How on earth do you make that out?"
40141How''s the patient?
40141I always said you had antennae, Violet,he replied, with a flush;"but how on earth have you found that out already?"
40141I am not like other girls, thank you----"Do you think I ca n''t see that?
40141I can not, Paul-- I can not,she almost wailed; then remembering herself, she went on,"How can I, when there is nothing to tell?"
40141I did not know myself,she answered, and her voice had a ring of pain in it;"how could I know?
40141I know that-- anything more?
40141I know-- anything more?
40141I mean why did they want to be buried in sight of it?
40141I should like to know, if I may?
40141I think you must have heard what I said just now, did n''t you?
40141I used to do it before,she whispered,"and it seems to soothe him-- do you think it foolish?"
40141I was going to say,she put in, unmoved,"that I did not know she was the sort of person----""I would fall in love with?
40141I was wondering if it was worth it?
40141I wonder how I shall like it?
40141I wonder if it will be what I have fancied it?
40141I wonder why I fancied this one was tied with thread?
40141I would n''t mind giving three shillings if it were worth it; so go on, Tom, why should you be bashful?
40141If he likes it, why not? 40141 In Paris?"
40141In that case, what becomes of courage?
40141Is Paul a common name about here? 40141 Is it not enough that what you did made me love you?"
40141Is it not? 40141 Is it one of the mortal sins, Miss Carmichael?"
40141Is it time?
40141Is it what the laird is like?
40141Is n''t it? 40141 Is that you, Miss Carmichael?"
40141It is all very well for you to talk of functions,continued his sister, in aggrieved tones,"but the question is, what is a function?
40141It would be a miracle if it did, would n''t it, Peggy?
40141Look?--what?--where?
40141Macleod?
40141Miss Jones, or is she Miss Smith? 40141 More to the purpose why he refused his dinner?
40141My advice?
40141Needlessly dangerous things are so, surely?
40141Not all? 40141 Not so clever as the Kashmir bear, Donald?"
40141Nothing more?
40141Oh, Alice wo n''t mind,said Paul, cheerfully;"she likes sailing, do n''t you, Alice?"
40141Oh, she is that sort of person, is she? 40141 One ca n''t have too much of a good thing, and it has been pleasant, has n''t it?"
40141Ought I?
40141Paul,she said,"I believe Miss Carmichael used to set you copies-- or is it Miss Woodward?
40141Promise what?
40141Put up with you? 40141 Queer start, children-- aren''t they?"
40141Really? 40141 Secrets,"he echoed;"why should there be any?
40141Sell himself instead of his property?
40141Shall I black my face or stand on my head and sing a comic song? 40141 Shall I put it away for you in a safe place?"
40141Shall I?
40141She married---- Then little Paul?
40141She will have plenty of toiling and spinning by and bye; why should n''t she be a flower and do credit to us all for one evening?
40141She would not be dull, but I should, and then how could I cheer you up? 40141 So I have; what then?"
40141So Mr. Paul is to come hame again?
40141So they are going to have theatricals, are they? 40141 So why should you think it would answer with a soul?"
40141So you wanted to see mother, did you? 40141 Spinning chairs?"
40141Splendid shot, was n''t it?
40141Surely he is not worse?
40141Taking him in? 40141 That I will come home to rest if I am tired?
40141That is better than nothing, is n''t it?
40141That is the wrong way about, surely?
40141The Bishop,he began,"and Lady George did n''t seem to-- to think----""Then I am to understand that you have consulted them?"
40141The Long Pool,he echoed,"which is that?
40141Then how shall I steer?
40141There is no Sahara in Lorneshire, and you have been here for three weeks-- or is it a month?
40141There will be plenty of water, I suppose?
40141Understand what? 40141 Was she unconscious when you came?"
40141We come to see our darlin''mummie, did n''t we, duckums?
40141We should not come into the drawing- room with dirty boots if we did, should we, Alice dear? 40141 Well, what does he say?"
40141Wet? 40141 Wha kens?
40141What about Jack, mamma?
40141What are you staring at so, Miss Carmichael?
40141What could you suspect?
40141What day is it?
40141What did you do with them?
40141What has business to do with that?
40141What has society to do with it? 40141 What is he like inside?"
40141What is it to any woman unless she stoops to care? 40141 What is it to me?"
40141What is it, Violet? 40141 What is it, dear?"
40141What is it? 40141 What is it?"
40141What is it?
40141What is it?
40141What is nice?
40141What is the difference between a picker and a sucker, Donald?
40141What is the lassie talking about?
40141What shall I tell him?
40141What she?
40141What sort of thing?
40141What was the proper thing?
40141What will she be, I wonder?
40141What would Father Macdonald be saying?
40141What would become of me if I were afraid?
40141Where does that come from? 40141 Where is Will?"
40141Where will the white rock be?
40141Wherefore?
40141Who can say? 40141 Who is he?"
40141Who is he?
40141Who said so? 40141 Who wants it to be more?"
40141Who was the beautiful model?
40141Who?
40141Why did n''t you go down with the others?
40141Why did n''t you shoot, Captain Macleod?
40141Why did n''t you shoot, Captain Macleod?
40141Why do you always wear jasmine, Tom?
40141Why does n''t he-- Captain Macleod I mean-- put on a new one?
40141Why not go further back, and wish you had n''t interfered to safe my cast? 40141 Why not?
40141Why should I be safer with you? 40141 Why should I remember when you do it so much better than I?
40141Why should I? 40141 Why should you forget it?"
40141Why should you have a tombstone at all?
40141Why should you miss them?
40141Why should you say that? 40141 Why should you say that?"
40141Why should you say that?
40141Why should you trouble?
40141Why, Jeanie, what''s the matter now?
40141Why? 40141 Why?
40141Why? 40141 Why?"
40141Why?
40141Why?
40141Why?
40141Will you be taking it with you, or shall I be giving it to Donald, here?
40141Will you not finish the task you began? 40141 Would it do any good if I apologised?"
40141Yes, to- morrow, Marjory?
40141You ask me to tell you the truth,she read,"but how can I when I do not know it myself?
40141You have been ill,he said quickly;"why did n''t you let me know before?"
40141You have done it before then?
40141You''re no pokin''fun at me?
40141Your name is not Alphonse, is it?
40141_ Ben trovato!_ Who would have thought of finding you here?
40141_ Dieu mercie, Monsieur!_she laughed,"the temptation would be too great, I suppose?
40141A fast, say I?
40141A pretty face, a dress from Worth''s, a---- Is that the end?
40141After all, if he liked her, why should they not marry?
40141After all, why should she not comply with Captain Macleod''s urgent invitations?
40141Am I right, Benedict?
40141An''if you coudna answer them, what then?"
40141And Alice Woodward can not spin webs as I do; she will never be able to keep you, and then----?
40141And he?
40141And how is the pain?
40141And if it is so, even among a crowd of eager helpers, what was it here in the little circle of dim light hedged in by darkness?
40141And is not a man in lawn sleeves a disturbing element in a remote Highland glen, where half the people are rigid Presbyterians?
40141And it is very selfish----""Do you mean to say that it is selfish of me to love you?"
40141And just as she got so far in her reminiscences Alice was saying to Jack pleasantly,"I shall miss these rides of ours, Jack, sha n''t you?"
40141And now, if I meet him again, Tom, what will happen?
40141And she?
40141And then the Green Ray?
40141And then, do you remember----?"
40141And we have had a good time, have n''t we?"
40141And wherefore not, since she had seen three generations of Macleods come and go?
40141And wherefore not?
40141And wherefore not?
40141And wherefore not?
40141And yet, how could he answer for her nature as well as his own?
40141And yet, when they reached the high road a sudden desire to make her also understand it, made him say, abruptly:"When do you begin work?
40141And yet?
40141And you will like the change, wo n''t you, darling?"
40141Are n''t they, John?"
40141Are you afraid that I care-- about_ that?_ Paul!
40141Because you kissed her?
40141Besides, I should not anyhow see much of you if you lived at Gleneira; and you will have to do so, wo n''t you, till Mr. Woodward recovers himself?"
40141Better for that liniment I rubbed in yesterday?"
40141Blasius, how could you think of such a thing?"
40141Books?
40141But Paul-- was that a knife he had in his hand?
40141But for the girl-- why not consider her comfort?
40141But have friendship and what the world calls love any real connection, and what part have they to play in marriage?
40141But how came she here still, and with the Camerons?
40141But now?
40141But safe?
40141But the day was indeed to be a fateful one, for was not this Paul''s last chance of speaking to Alice?
40141But what if it was something more?
40141But what of that?
40141But what reason have you to think she will?
40141But when was our dear lady ever cross?"
40141But, then, why should they not be turned to something better?
40141By the way, I suppose Miss Carmichael is still at Gleneira?"
40141Ca n''t you see it, Paul-- can''t you understand?
40141Ca n''t you suggest something more concrete?"
40141Ca n''t you suggest something to cheer us up?
40141Cameron?"
40141Can you not find a less objectionable phrase?"
40141Captain Macleod?"
40141Clare?"
40141Could you?"
40141Dada will give you a biscuit, Blasius, and then you can go back to bed, like a dear, ca n''t you?"
40141Did he not know his own nature, and was not that enough?
40141Did he not know it?
40141Did it ever strike you how unnecessarily ugly we all are?
40141Did you see anything?"
40141Do n''t you agree with me, James?"
40141Do n''t you agree with me, Miss Carmichael?"
40141Do n''t you remember how you used to lie on the sofa after that fever and declare that a wife''s first duty was to be able to play to her husband?
40141Do n''t you remember my reading that to you the other day?"
40141Do n''t you think that quite the best thing we have seen of Captain Macleod''s doing?"
40141Do you know, Tom, that I always hearten myself up by saying that if I am tired I can always ask you to let me rest, and you would, would n''t you?"
40141Do you remember at Constantinople, Captain Macleod, everyone agreed that there was a decided advance on Venice?
40141Do you think I should fetch a fair price?
40141Do you think I would let any other soul alive speak to me as you have done to- night?"
40141Do you think you have, Paul?"
40141Do you want me to marry----_her?_ You know you do n''t.
40141Does it make it easier to understand why the heart beats, to know that we can stop its beating?
40141Does that satisfy you?"
40141Duncan?"
40141Else how is it possible to hold love sacred?
40141Equally, did I say?
40141Everyone missed you; and yet----""And yet?
40141First he washted me, and then I washted him, an''then we washted each other, did n''t we, Blazes?
40141For Tom must surely have felt that storm and stress before he could portray it so vividly?
40141For how could it be so?
40141For it was Will''s fault, of course; had not the lad been a perfect dispensation ever since he was born?
40141For this colourless girl who would never understand his odd mixture of sentimentality and worldliness?
40141For when you strip away the pink, sheathing petals, is there not inside a man in full white lawn sleeves?
40141From what?
40141George, how could you?"
40141Gillespie?"
40141Had he not been happy?
40141Had he not in a way taught her to know them?
40141Had he not, even at the time, repented him of the evil in regard to Jeanie Duncan; yet had not a Nemesis grown out of his very repentance?
40141Had her wish been fulfilled?
40141Had she not a right to have other lovers besides Jack?
40141Had the child no better confidante than that musty, fusty old book?
40141Have I forgotten your kindness?
40141Have n''t you, Paulie?"
40141Have you forgotten your own handiwork already?
40141He is n''t fit for ladies''society, is he?"
40141He watched her as she flew off, singing as she went like any blackbird out of sheer lightness of heart, and asked himself if this were not enough?
40141Her little boy would n''t like to grieve his mummie, would he?"
40141Here, let me look at that tray, will you?
40141High time, is it not, dear Mrs. Woodward, for our absentee landlord to repair his neglect?"
40141His grandmother''s cottage is just below the point there, is n''t it?
40141How came it that he understood so quickly, that she followed him so clearly?
40141How came you not to see?
40141How can I help it when, everything keeps coming into my mind, and no one thinks or cares?"
40141How can I help it without money?"
40141How can she tell her_ metier_ if she only keeps to one?
40141How can you expect the child to forget it?
40141How can you tire of the only thing worth anything, and of the search for truth?"
40141How could it be otherwise with a girl like Marjory-- a perfect iceberg of primness and propriety?
40141How could she?
40141How could there be?
40141How is it possible to believe in it?"
40141How many runs did you make?"
40141How many years, he wondered, was it since he had last thought of niggerheads?
40141How much was it, Cameron, that the hook- and- eye man offered me for Gleneira?
40141How would she ever put up with him?
40141I believe you wrote that-- now did you?
40141I could n''t say without reading it; shall I?"
40141I could see that, at a glance; but-- Tom, did Mrs. Vane choose it?"
40141I could swim ten times the distance ten times over; besides, I''ll bring him back with the oars if that will satisfy you?"
40141I do n''t believe in the steel loops, though, do you--?
40141I do n''t know how it is, Mademoiselle Grands- serieux, but my philosophy invariably ends in paradoxes of doubtful propriety-- now, does n''t it?"
40141I have never been accustomed to it, and I might not be contented, and then how could I be a good wife if I were not happy?
40141I have refused him, do you hear?
40141I might just let the letter bide, maybe?"
40141I wonder if he is much changed?"
40141I wonder which of us three unfortunate males she will choose as her victim to- day?"
40141I''ll say''good- bye''here, Paul, here in the very spot where you said good- bye before-- do you think I could forget it?
40141If I had had a mother, if I had been brought up with other girls, should I have gone on as I did, using a wrong terminology?
40141If I had known what I know now when my holiday began would it have made any difference?
40141If a lassie''s bonnie?"
40141If he were bound to wait for something more?
40141If she did not understand him, who could?
40141If you are going back to the ball- room may I give you my one arm?"
40141In London, is n''t it?"
40141In the housekeeper''s room?
40141In very truth, had he even thought of the world and its ways, of himself and his instincts, when he was beside her?
40141Inarticulate, hysterical sobbing about Pauline-- or was it Paul?
40141Is it my fault if I do things quicker than other people?
40141Is it my fault if I see things more clearly?
40141Is not that enough?
40141Is that unkind?
40141Is there danger?
40141It is always a disagreeable thing to refuse, and a man who forces a girl into that position without due cause is----""Is what?"
40141It is surely possible she may be in love with the man?"
40141It is to have an initial letter, is it not, dear?
40141It is very uninteresting-- don''t you think so?"
40141It must mean something-- what?
40141It put me in mind of India; you sent the seed home from our garden, I think, did n''t you, Captain Macleod?
40141It was his turn now to put that terse, unconditional"Why?"
40141It was very well of William to smile, and for the laird to say he did n''t mind; but what would Lady George say to the cook?
40141Kennedy?"
40141Kennedy?"
40141Known what?
40141Lord George?
40141Mamma Woodward?
40141Maria, what do you mean?
40141Marriage?
40141Master Woodward?
40141Miss Marjory, wass I no tellin''you he was bonnie, and iss he not bonnie, whatever?"
40141Mrs. Vane''s hand holding the letter fell to her side, and Dr. Kennedy''s voice said gravely:"Strange, is n''t it, that the letter was never opened?
40141My dear, by the way, have you any idea when the engagement is likely to-- ahem-- er-- come off?"
40141Not even when Paul whispered"Ready, Cameron?"
40141Now confess, were you not?"
40141Now what part of the beast is an aitchbone?"
40141Now, had Miss Carmichael chosen that photograph for herself; and, if so, why?
40141Now, what are you all laughing at?"
40141Now, what we have to face is this: Do you think my daughter is suited to be the wife of a poor man-- even a possibly poor man?
40141Of what?
40141On which of the crowned heads of Europe have you set your young affections?
40141Only why repeat the mistake?"
40141Ought she to have known this sooner?
40141Papa Woodward?
40141Paul, dear, how came you never to mention this, you bad boy?"
40141Paul?"
40141Perhaps; and yet, how could she when neither her own nature or her education had given her a hint of this thing?
40141Pictures?
40141Shall we say number four or six for ours?"
40141She had done it to save him; for what?
40141She surely did not believe in pixies?
40141She waited till they had moved out of sight, and then turned to Paul, almost passionately:"And you-- you are engaged for this dance, I presume?"
40141She was no hardened criminal, and for the first time she found herself really facing the question:"Am I to do this thing, or am I not to do it?"
40141Should he, or should he not, go the commonplace way of the world, and take what he could get?
40141Should she put those letters in the fire and say no more about them, or should she tell the truth?
40141Since you have such strict notions on the subject, I presume you have explained to Mr. Woodward the exact state of affairs at Gleneira?
40141Six?
40141So I will only ask him if he remembers the jasmine bush at the Château Saumarez?"
40141So this is the way you hold high holiday?"
40141Still, a bargain is a bargain, is n''t it?"
40141Supposing she were to accept you; what then?"
40141The dearest fellow in the world, is he not?"
40141The mackerel, it is true, were not to be beguiled, but what matter?
40141Then as she came forward with them in her hand, the deadly anxiety in her would brook no delay, and she asked,"Do you miss anything?"
40141Then he glanced at the superscription, and pointing to it, said,"Why did you read it?"
40141Then why should you have schemed to give me pain?"
40141There is a syren about somewhere; I heard her just now; did you?"
40141There was no denying it, and, after all, why should it be denied?
40141They generally are at the end of the season, are n''t they?"
40141They were all so kind, and Mrs. Vane-- I suppose in your world, Tom, there are heaps of women like that?"
40141Think, Paul, did not I?
40141This is yours, I suppose, Miss Woodward?"
40141Tom, are all men alike?"
40141Touching tributes; but what gender is truth?"
40141Was he not worth it?
40141Was he so eager for her to realise the new position that he must needs enforce the knowledge of it upon her in this fashion?
40141Was his brain softening that he should see visions and dream dreams?
40141Was it for my own sake that I gave you up-- that I sent you away?
40141Was it worth it all?
40141Was it worth it?
40141Was it worth paying a penny on the chance of being the first to spread news?
40141Was it worth while?
40141Was it?
40141Was n''t it yourself was lilting the''Beggar- Maid''at me the morn?"
40141Was she sorry?
40141Was that all she had to say?
40141We heard her telling nurse, did n''t we, Adam?"
40141We might go back and look at it now, and return by the beach, might n''t we?
40141We used to do it against each other for hours, did n''t we, Will?"
40141Well, where were we?
40141Were they not happy, alive to the uttermost, ready to face the unknown, eager for the experience which the world seemed to find so dreary?
40141Wha minds a bit pauper body but the pairish?
40141What could she say but that it served him right?
40141What danger do you know that I do not?"
40141What did it mean?
40141What do you know about my life?
40141What does it matter?
40141What else could it be in such surroundings, and with a girl who had n''t a notion what love meant?
40141What else is there to be done now that you have come back to me?"
40141What had he done?
40141What has that to do with marriage?
40141What has that to do with mental sympathy?
40141What has the child been doing now?"
40141What if she died, and carried the secret with her, just when it was most needed?
40141What is he like, Will?"
40141What is it meant to be?"
40141What is it?
40141What is it?"
40141What is the use of having you, Tom, the best, the kindest, if I do n''t make use of you?
40141What more can anyone want?"
40141What on earth is he up to now?"
40141What postcard?"
40141What right had this man to thrust himself into her holy of holies and smirch the romance-- the beauty of it all?
40141What the dickens does a man mean by coming to the West Highlands without a waterproof?
40141What then, I say, what then?"
40141What then?
40141What then?
40141What was it like, Miss Marjory?"
40141What was it, this feeling which had come to her unbidden, unrecognised?
40141What was there to quarrel about?
40141What was to be done?
40141What were you doing?
40141What would the girl say?
40141What''s up wi''you, lassie?"
40141What, do you call it straightforward to let me hang round you as I have done?"
40141What-- what have you been doing?"
40141When does he expect us?"
40141Where are they?
40141Where did the news come from?"
40141Where is he, Grierson?
40141Where was Mary?"
40141Where''s Gillespie?
40141Wherefore, my dear Marjory?
40141Wherefore?
40141Which is best?
40141Who cares?
40141Who could help it in such case?
40141Who could really be angry with him for such a trifle?
40141Who did she marry?"
40141Who is she?"
40141Who or what is flying in the face of Providence?"
40141Who, in fact, would not enjoy talking to so brilliant and charming a woman?
40141Who, loving the man, would not forgive?
40141Why did n''t I tell him I was rich now, instead of waiting like a romantic idiot to see if he could still care for me?
40141Why did you hide yourself from me?"
40141Why do n''t they teach us this when we are young?
40141Why had he ever seen it to give him needless pain, and be a miserable memory?
40141Why had he given up paradise?
40141Why have you made me feel like this?--why would you never see me as I really am?--why would you always believe me better than I was?"
40141Why not?
40141Why should he rob Paul-- her handsome, kindly Paul-- of his birthright?
40141Why should she not love him?"
40141Why should such devotion be sacrificed to the Moloch of position?
40141Why should they be saddened by things which were not as_ they_ were; which had had their day, or did not care to have it?
40141Why should you bother, Blanche?"
40141Why should you slander yourself?"
40141Why, for instance, should he cackle, as if he had laid an egg himself?"
40141Why-- why had he done these things?
40141Why?
40141Why?"
40141Why?"
40141Why?"
40141Will Marjory do as much for you?
40141Will he not?
40141Will it be as bonnie as the Beggar- Maid?"
40141Will she say,''I love you, but I will not injure you by marrying you''?
40141Will there be something on it that shoudna be broken?"
40141Will you allow me to come over and help?"
40141Without that something what was it?
40141Wo n''t we?"
40141Wo n''t you come and sing for us?"
40141Women have such curious notions of honour, at least, Blanche----""So Lady George has been taking you to task, has she?
40141Woodward?"
40141Woodward?"
40141Woodward?"
40141Would it not be better to leave things as they were?
40141Would not any man have been a fool to think twice of the future with Jeanie Duncan''s face ready to be kissed?
40141Would not this go further towards raising our instincts out of the mire than all the romance in the world?
40141Would you have me break my word because my promised wife had a few pounds less than I expected?"
40141Would you, if you were in his place?
40141Yet could she help its flashing?
40141Yet what could he do with such a part?
40141Yet what had come over him?
40141You agree with me, do n''t you, Miss Woodward?"
40141You agree with me, do n''t you, Miss Woodward?"
40141You are not sorry?"
40141You are not----""How can you know what I am?"
40141You may be thankful it was n''t_ boulders_, for then the pillows would have gone, and what would you have said to that?"
40141You must take it easier, or we shall be having you laid up----""And then what would Paul Macleod do?"
40141You remember who I mean, of course?"
40141You-- you were quite a boy then, were n''t you?"
40141Your Miss Woodward?
40141Your sister?
40141\> Ai n''t he a weally naughty little boy?"
40141a rondelet-- that is the thing with very few words and a great many rhymes, is n''t it?
40141ai n''t he a welly greedy little boy?"
40141and did not Mrs. Woodward, for all her conspicuous calm, show to the watchful eye that she also was aware of the fact?
40141and do you fancy a desert island?
40141and had he left memory behind in the Valley of the Shadow, where he had left so much of the old Paul?
40141and, if there was anything in the thought, might not the knowledge strengthen her hand in the coming fight?
40141are you ill?"
40141cried his wife, reproachfully,"how can you expect to train up children in the way they should go if you are so impatient?
40141cried poor Blanche, aghast, to the stately figure, descending behind the stumbling, bumping, yet swift offender,"what does this mean?
40141did she marry a Macleod after all?"
40141do n''t say that; what does it matter?
40141does that mean you consider beauty and goodness to be the same, or simply that you deny the value of physical beauty altogether?"
40141has he had his tea?
40141he cried passionately,"I do n''t deserve it, but I ca n''t miss it-- if you will put up with me?"
40141he echoed,"that is the tall, handsome fellow, is n''t it, who used to hang round you before I came up from the works?"
40141he exclaimed, half aloud;"what can she have to do with me?"
40141he said,"is n''t it cold?
40141how long will it be afore Duckum''s mummie has to ring the bell?"
40141interrupted the old woman, with a sinister chuckle,"but when they''re written to bit pauper bodies like me?"
40141is it true that you love me?"
40141is it true?
40141is it you?"
40141is n''t that like a man?"
40141is not that worth the climb?"
40141it was rather funny, was n''t it?"
40141no doubt five minutes is short; it will not suffice to tell me all you have to tell, will it?
40141not the famous Dr. Kennedy-- Tom Kennedy of Paris?"
40141or is it a compliment to the laird?"
40141or will you force me to say it all over again?
40141repeated Paul Macleod, watching the rapid changes in her vivid face with amused admiration;"if a lassie''s bonnie, what happens?"
40141she asked;"did he come with you?"
40141she cried across the boom of the river,"is that you?
40141she echoed;"my advice?
40141she said at last;"was there ever anyone so good, so kind as you are?"
40141so far was easy; but afterwards?
40141surely I deserve something after all these years?
40141that boy Jack?"
40141they look a charming couple; for he is wonderfully handsome-- handsomer than when he was younger-- don''t you think so?"
40141what a welly greedy little boy, ai n''t he, Evie?"
40141what are you going to do?"
40141what did it cost?"
40141what has Blasius been doing now?"
40141what has Jack to do with it?"
40141what is that?"
40141what is the matter?"
40141what then, Marjory?"
40141what''s that?"
40141wherefore?
40141who is for the burying- ground?
40141who told you to gallop it like that?"
40141why could n''t Lady George have put it off, and why wo n''t you let me stay at home?"
40141why-- why did I not know?
40141yet, was not recklessness in the blood?
40141you are something of a man of the world; did you ever know of anyone like you keeping up a friendship with anybody like me after his marriage?
40141you welcomed me here-- though I never thanked you for so doing, did I?
6636But what can I do?
6636Have you eyes to see? 6636 Ah, girls, girls, do you really know what she is, or what she may become? 6636 And could I not describe the marriage of a jilt? 6636 And how, indeed, can boys and girls grow in character without friends? 6636 And why not make Margaret give you her opinion of Wagner or of Beethoven? 6636 And, do n''t you see, we never quite know what our own thoughts are till we come to try to make them clear to others? 6636 And, pray, has God made any object which is not worth a thought? 6636 And, pray, what is friendship but a mutual giving and taking of the best parts of character? 6636 Are mathematics your choice? 6636 Are n''t we always trying to blame some one else? 6636 Are the wild flowers so abundant? 6636 Are they not in any profession? 6636 Are you looking about to see where she is? 6636 Are you moody? 6636 Are you reading Emerson''s shorter essay onNature"?
6636Are you to wear your choicest attributes as you do your clothes?
6636Are you translating from this or that author?
6636Because a woman is a doctor, why need she use slang or profanity?
6636Because it is expected of you?
6636Because she holds certain great, liberal truths in regard to woman, why must she wear a stiff derby, swagger, and strike attitudes?
6636Blues, dumps, megrims, odd spells,--do they ever visit you?
6636But I suppose you think that persons, rather than objects, are commonplace,--that even some girls are so?
6636But if a peach pie is almost"divine,"and the Hudson River"awfully lovely,"what can be said of the New Testament and Niagara Falls?
6636But suppose you are to talk with a gentleman?
6636But what do you mean by"intimate"?
6636But, in whatever I attempted, I should repeatedly say to myself, Am I keeping my womanhood strong and real, as God intended it?
6636But, really, do we enjoy moods?
6636Can it be because boys are less sensitive, and more sufficient for themselves?
6636Can you have more than one intimate friend among the girls?
6636Comes down to your comprehension?
6636Could I not picture to you the_ mariage de convenance_ in America?
6636Could I not unfold pitiful stories about girls who marry fine wedding receptions and the servitude of reverses?
6636Could you predict that from the plants lying in the stagnant pool such a perfect flower as a lily would spring?
6636Do n''t you think you may be looking for something above your heads which really lies under your hands?
6636Do we have any respect for ourselves while in them?
6636Do you begin to think, girls, I would have you always prosaic, plodding, self- satisfied, unambitious?
6636Do you know that beautiful sketch by Charles Kingsley called"My Winter Garden"?
6636Do you know what Mr. Ruskin says about such an apparently insignificant thing as a blade of grass?
6636Do you know why the pine is so sad a tree?
6636Do you live out of town, and quite removed from the attractions of a metropolis?
6636Do you not have troubles?
6636Do you not suppose an artist sees more in a birch swamp than we do?
6636Do you not think we should all be happier, girls, if we took more time to appreciate the commonplace?
6636Do you remember that this very class of people have been the greatest reformers, thinkers, workers, rulers, everywhere?
6636Do you see all those soft green points looking down on you while the tasselled branches gently sway?
6636Do you think the naturalist''s search stopped then?
6636Do you think you ought to do that?
6636Does it ever come from peculiarity of temperament in the case of both boys and girls, there being girl- boys and boy- girls?
6636Does n''t it bow to you when you pass, and curve and sweep before you?
6636Does n''t it entertain you by showing you beautiful pictures and forms, and does n''t it furnish you with music?
6636Does n''t it offer you rest and refreshment in its shade?
6636Enrolled, would not they swell the number of workers by several hundreds of thousands in Massachusetts alone?
6636Girls, in the great work of the future, in the reformation of the present, can you not do most?
6636Girls, what do you think about shirking work?
6636Girls, why do so many of you indulge in so much smaller talk with men than with women?
6636Have they no valuable calling?
6636Have you made the most of what you already possess?
6636Have you never made the mistake of replying carelessly to one whom you thought was stupid, but whom you discovered to be a person of marked ability?
6636Have you never noticed Albrecht Durer''s drawing of Praying Hands?
6636Have you never read Curtis''s"Prue and I"?
6636Have you not met certain men and women who, when they opened their mouths to speak to you, conferred a favor on you?
6636How am I sure the tree is alive and friendly?
6636How are you to get work, if you do not seek it, and try with all your might to find it?
6636How are your surroundings to be improved, if you do not go to work?
6636How can I fully appreciate the oratory of the American Revolution, if I know nothing of the war between England and the Colonies?
6636How can I hope to like or even comprehend an English version of Caedmon, or, later, Chaucer, if I can not yet see the beauty of Whittier?
6636How can she do this, if she is always thinking, Maybe he loves me?
6636How is the doctor to help your body, if you do not help your spirits?
6636How is trouble to be lessened or endured, if from it we do not reach to higher, nobler living?
6636How to get through?
6636I do not believe in crazes,--do you?
6636I feel you are berating me, girls, so far as your natures will allow; but, then, do I not speak the truth?
6636I had better go to the far West, and settle in the gold diggings, had n''t I?
6636I should not ask is this man''s work or woman''s work; but, rather, is it my work?
6636I wonder how they ever came by their name?
6636If you are studying epochwise, why not read choice selections from the prose of the nineteenth century,--some of its masterpieces?
6636If you were passing a low, thatched cottage made of rough stone, its only pretence being a coat of whitewash, would you guess it held a poet?
6636Is it because that seems a genteel way to get a living, and does not seem so hard as other callings?
6636Is it not better to break one''s heart than to break one''s soul?
6636Is it not much to be grateful for, that so many of you girls not only can go to college, but really do go?
6636Is it not wonderful?
6636Is n''t it remarkable how boys change?
6636Is n''t that deplorable?
6636Is not even he likelier to be successful in painting new wonders in the commonplace than in trying to show objects we seldom see?
6636Is not that a beautiful thought?
6636Is the grass so soft and green?
6636Is the sky so blue at home?
6636Is your home by the ocean, on some sterile length of sand or rock, and amongst sea- faring people?
6636May I here appeal to you, dear girls, to hasten this return?
6636May I remind you here, girls, of the harm arising from loud talk in public places?
6636May I urge you not to slight even the sinful?
6636May I warn you not to despise the small amount of work you can accomplish, as compared with what others are able to do?
6636Now, girls, why do you, of all people in the world, allow yourselves to be mastered by freaks?
6636Now, what does a girl prize most in another girl whose friendship she enjoys?
6636Oh, how, girls, shall we get this womanliness into our characters, or, rather, how shall we make it shine out of them?
6636Ought girls to have intimate friends?
6636Ought you to marry him?
6636So, girls, you do not suppose that, in a condition of such positive ignorance, I am able to talk with you about the boys?
6636Some one asks me, just here, if she is never to feel serious?
6636Sometime will you read from Carlyle''s"Past and Present"his chapters on work, particularly that on"Labor and Reward"?
6636Suppose you do not know the group amidst which you are seated in a drawing- room, and it is expected you will all become acquainted?
6636The fact is,--shall I speak it right out loud?
6636Then why not ask Mary if she has noticed the beautiful woodcuts in the last Harper''s, or seen the new edition of Hawthorne?
6636There is very deep happiness sometimes in thoughtfulness,--do you not know it?
6636WHAT CAN I DO?
6636WHAT CAN I DO?
6636Were it not better to call all things ordinary, or else nothing common?
6636What are gloomy moods good for?
6636What are they not bad for?
6636What do you think about the furnishings of college girls?
6636What is it which makes us love some women''s faces the moment we see them?
6636What is to be done?
6636What is to become of the poor innocent words in the English language which mean only delicious and beautiful?
6636What makes us blame the weather so much for our moods, girls?
6636What makes you want to shut your eyes, and to throw away the mask of seeming, when some one sings the song you love?
6636What worthy pursuit can you not, by excellence, raise into honor and esteem?
6636Where did she ever get the courage?
6636Why are they not just as entertaining as progressive euchre clubs?
6636Why are we always making excuse for entertaining such company?
6636Why do they not study English literature, paying heed to its history, its rhetoric, but more especially to the works of its greatest authors?
6636Why is it so many of you girls try teaching?
6636Why is it that the friendships of boys usually last longer than those of girls?
6636Why is it that, when a woman begins to do the work a man has been accustomed to perform, she cultivates a man''s ways?
6636Why is this susceptibility?
6636Why not ask Ruth how she made those delicious rolls, and how she prepared the coffee, or how she manages to make her room look so cheerful and cosey?
6636Why not inquire of Sallie about the last matinee and the last hop?
6636Why not, then, do your part to make it nobler, friendlier, truer?
6636Why should they not give much time to the care of poultry?
6636Why, in one epoch, do we have men writing on classical subjects in a way which represents form as more important than matter?
6636Why, of course, it will not harm her; but why not be more economical of time and strength?
6636Why, what is commonplace?
6636Work with the boys she must: join in merry- making and in whimsical enjoyments, why should she not?
6636Would not Elizabeth have given years of her life and reign for the possession of one true friend?
6636You feel the necessity of earning money, and so must take whatever work you can get?
6636You know it; but the question comes, How to make the most of the gift?
6636You know the story Walter Scott tells about the head boy?
6636You think there is less chance for girls to work than for boys?
6636You think this is all fancy, and believe persons must be very imaginative to find such friends in Nature?
6636about young women who are vain enough to think there can be no union of hearts without union of intellects, and so lay snares for college students?
6636am I working womanly?
6636and what makes you feel a kind of dead, low, dreadful pause, when the reader''s voice ceases, and the story conies to an end?
6636and why, in another age, are writers turning from an artificial to a natural style?
6636and, when they spoke, have you not felt the benediction descending on your heads?
6636but who can judge, or even know, the inner life of one''s past acquaintances?
6636do you not hear it now?
6636or is it because they are less intense, less confidential, and move along more slowly and suspiciously?
6636or, rather, what should she value in her most?
6636try for fine breeds, and for eggs that bring the highest prices?
6636what is it but an intellectual abstraction, after all?
8459''Garçon,''says he,''if I ask you a question will you tell me the truth?'' 8459 ''What are these fireworks for?''
8459''What do you want of me?'' 8459 ''_ Oui, monsieur; certainement._''"Well, how much was the largest tip you ever received?"
8459As they were coming away the great Mr. Lamar said to the poor landlady,''Madam, have you lived long in Washington?'' 8459 But,"says Bill,"did you see him?"
8459Did you ever hear The Frenchman tell that story about Sophonisba?
8459Did you see that?
8459Do you think that the committee have found you out?
8459How so?
8459How you expect an old sport like me to bet upon a certainty?
8459I understand,I said in an address to the assembled delegates,"that you are all for Grover Cleveland?"
8459If,I ended my sketch,"out of the mouths of babes and sucklings, why not out of the brain of this crazed old woman of the South?"
8459In what way do you consider it unfair, your Majesty?
8459Is it a free fight?
8459Is that all?
8459Lamar,he exclaimed,"do n''t you think you have heard the greatest speech to- night that was never delivered?"
8459My God,without a pause he continued,"is n''t that great?"
8459That is good, is n''t it? 8459 The first thing I want to ask,"said he,"is whether that old woman was a real person or a figment of your imagination?"
8459To whom are you referring?
8459What do you take me for-- confidence man?
8459What do you think of that?
8459What do you think of this vintage?
8459What was it?
8459What would you do,he once said,"if you owned the Herald?"
8459What would you suggest?
8459What-- at the d''Orient?
8459Where do I come in?
8459Why,I answered,"I would stay in New York and edit it;"and then I proceeded,"but you mean to ask me what I think you ought to do with it?"
8459''Ace high,''says the Jedge;''what you got?''
8459''Do you remember,''the statesman, soldier and orator continued,''a young and handsome Mississippian, a member of Congress, by the name of Lamar?''
8459''What you got?''
8459''Will you,''he abruptly interjected,''accept the chairmanship of the board of visitors to the academy this coming June?''
8459A little group of such men formed itself about Schurz-- then only forty- three years old-- to what end?
8459And how?"
8459And then life tenure after the manner of the Caesars and Cromwells of history, and especially the Latin- Americans-- Bolivar, Rosas and Diaz?
8459Are they willfully dense?
8459Are we on the way to another terrestrial collapse, and so on ad infinitum to the end of time?
8459But before her time what had he been, what had he done?
8459But what was he to do?
8459But which among us keeps or has ever kept the middle of the road?
8459But which page of the court calendar made you a plural?
8459Could mortal ask for more?
8459Could there be a stronger argument in favor of a world to come than may be found in the brevity and incertitude of the world that is?
8459Could you not substitute some other expression?"
8459Did Washington, when he was angry, swear like a trooper?
8459Do the people grow degenerate?
8459Does this make me a Baptist, I wonder?
8459He came down from the Castle on the hill to the marketplace in the town and says he:"What do you galoots want, anyhow?"
8459He stood quite at the head of our literature, giving the lie to the scornful query,"Who reads an American book?"
8459He was, for all his self- sufficiency and pride, short- sighted; and yet, until they arrived, how could he foresee the developments of artillery?
8459How could such a mà © nage last?
8459How much does old Sam Johnson owe of the fine figure he cuts to Boswell, and, minus Boswell, how much would be left of him?
8459I wonder if that can be justly said of the President?
8459I wonder shall we ever get any real truth out of what is called history?
8459I wonder where they got it?
8459In what was he a black sheep, for that he had been one seemed certain?
8459Mr. Barksdale said:"Would not the words''We have received with the deepest sensibility Mr. Tilden''s letter of withdrawal,''answer your purpose?"
8459Neither shall I make apology for this long quotation by myself from myself, for am I not inditing an autobiography, so called?
8459On one occasion I said to her:"Ellen, why do you pursue this man in this cruel way?
8459Once after a concert he suddenly exclaimed:"Do n''t you think Wagner was a---- fraud?"
8459Once out of the White House-- what else and what----?
8459Only names?
8459Pryor?"
8459Senator Gwin of California, the eighth of February, 1858?''
8459Ten minutes later,"Is it still a free fight?"
8459Ten thousand heads were chopped off during the Terror in France to make room for whom?
8459The challenge underlying prohibition is twofold: Does prohibition prohibit, and, if it does, may it not generate evils peculiarly its own?
8459Then he asked:"What do you want for Winchester?"
8459Then it appeared that the designated thesis read:"Which political party offers for the workingman the best solution of the tariff problem?"
8459To what end?
8459Was it for this that he had fought with tongue and pen and sword?
8459Was it for this that oceans of patriotism, of treasure and of blood had been poured out?
8459We owe a great debt to Washington, because if a third why not a fourth term?
8459We sat together at table and suddenly he turned and said:"How are you getting on with your bill?"
8459What are you hanging round Washington for anyhow?
8459What boots it?
8459What did the President know or care about foreign appointments?
8459What do they know or care about the origins of wealth; about Venice; about Cadiz; about what is said of Wall Street?
8459What do you want?"
8459What else and what next?
8459What had he done to be ashamed about or wish to conceal?
8459What is CÃ ¦ sar to us, or we to CÃ ¦ sar?
8459What is to be done about it?
8459What of that?"
8459What possible good can it do you?"
8459What was it I was saying about statues-- that they all look alike to me?
8459What was the matter with Nero?
8459What was there for Webster, what was there for Clay to quibble about?
8459When I had finished he said:"What are you doing about Winchester?"
8459When will the world learn to discriminate?
8459When, having failed to provoke a fight, he had taken himself off, an onlooker said:"Bill, I thought you were going to do him up?"
8459Where must an old- line Democrat go to find himself?
8459Where this side of heaven shall we look for the court of last resort?
8459Where will it end?
8459Who among us has the single right to claim for himself, and the likes of him, the divine title of a workingman?
8459Who shall tell us the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, about Hamilton; about Burr; about CÃ ¦ sar, Caligula and Cleopatra?
8459Who that heard them shall ever forget them?
8459Who this side of the grave shall be sure of anything?
8459Whom do you mean by"we"?''
8459Why did n''t you hold back your statement a bit?
8459Why might I not put a head and tail to this-- a foreword and a few words in conclusion-- and make it meet the purpose and serve the occasion?
8459Why not?"
8459Why should not you and I call him Master and kneel together in love and pity at his feet?"
8459Wo n''t you manage it for me?"
8459Yet have we the record of any moment when it was not so?
8459Yet how could I accept it with the work ahead of me?
8459Yet, to come again, d''ye mind?
9896And your comrade?
9896But what am I to do?
9896How is that?
9896How much do you want?
9896I dare say you would have been glad if French and English had fought side by side in this war?
9896Is it a little pig?
9896Is it a young pig?
9896Is it sucking- pig?
9896So you want me to be shot?
9896Well,said the suspicious private,"have you not noticed that every time he orders us to march forward we invariably encounter the enemy?"
9896What is the matter, my dearest?
9896Who did it?
9896Why did they do it?--was it because your men had cut the telegraph wires and destroyed some of the permanent way?
9896You know me, then?
9896You know the Lei- ces- terre Square? 9896 Are n''t you going to leave with the others?
9896Come, what is it, tell me?"
9896Could Trochu''s plan and Bazaine''s plan be synonymous, then?
9896Did the Empress at that moment wonder when, where, and how she would next see them again?
9896Do you know London?
9896Do you know Regent Street?
9896Do you know the Soho?"
9896Had we not bought at least a dozen newspapers?
9896How would they dress, even supposing that they should contrive to dress at all?
9896How''s that?"
9896It is young Vizetelly, a friend of my son''s,"adding,"Did you wish to speak to me?"
9896Many a time in the course of the next few years did I hear foreigners inquire:"What do the London papers say?"
9896So saying, the officer produced the small bottle which had been taken from the unfortunate traveller, and added:"You see this?
9896The question which immediately arose was-- could we catch it?
9896To what despair would not millions of women be reduced?
9896We occasionally procured English ale from him, and one day, late in October, when I was passing his establishment, he said to me:"How is your father?
9896What name is the music- hall there?"
9896Why a dozen, when sensible people would have been satisfied with one?
9896Why had Chanzy brought his army there?
9896You are the young English correspondent who was allowed to make some sketches at Yvré- l''Evêque, are you not?"
5155''Why,"said I,"did you not give Mr. Frank Montgomery the money to purchase it, and tell him to have the deed made out to my father?"
5155''Why,"said I,"do you pretend you do not know Mr. Frank Montgomery, who brought me your deed of gift?"
5155''Why,"said she,"what on earth are you talking about?
5155''Behind what business, my lord?'' 5155 ''Can you tell me anything about the other?''
5155''Christina,''I said,''suppose I had really been Frank Montgomery, the printer, would you have driven me away from you thus?'' 5155 ''Does he not hurt himself sometimes?''
5155''How,''she said,''can I trust you? 5155 ''I am glad to hear it,''I said;''did you know that the Prince has discovered her, and has just sent me for her?''
5155''I will do so,''she said;''tell me what I can do now?'' 5155 ''If I place my life in your hands, will you be true to me?''
5155''In the first place,''I said,''you regard me as your friend, do you not? 5155 ''Is it you,''she said--''you, the dealer in human flesh and blood, that has bought me?
5155''Is she alive?'' 5155 ''Isaacs,"I said,"is a Jewish name?"
5155''Rudolph,''he said, when I appeared,''who is this Estella Washington that you brought into the house some weeks since? 5155 ''Well, little one,''he said, chucking her under the chin,''how have you been?
5155''What does the doctor say?'' 5155 ''What does this mean, Christina?''
5155''What does this mean?'' 5155 ''What interest have you in this girl?''
5155''What is the matter, Christina?'' 5155 ''Which one is that?''
5155''Who has told him of her?'' 5155 ''Who is she?''
5155''Who will break down that door,''he asked,''and bring out that woman? 5155 And may I ask,"I said,"what is the nature of your society?"
5155And what is Love? 5155 And what lesson does this learned and cultured age draw from these facts?
5155And why do they do this? 5155 Are the members of the Executive Committee all going crazy together?"
5155Are they armed?
5155Are they not the rarest and most valuable productions of the world?
5155Are they well guarded?
5155Are you blind? 5155 Brothers,"he asked,"what is your judgment upon the spy?"
5155But I must fly,she cried out,"and how-- where?"
5155But amid such numbers,I said,"there must certainly be some traitors?"
5155But are they not more beautiful than other metals? 5155 But have not the Oligarchy standing armies?"
5155But how will you accomplish that?
5155But what are we to do with the coming outbreak?
5155But what can we do?
5155But what could he do? 5155 But what is your remedy?"
5155But why should I be punished with a long term of imprisonment? 5155 But,"I cried out,"do you want to destroy civilization??"
5155But,I cried out,"do you want to destroy civilization??"
5155But,I said,"are we not in great danger?
5155But,I suggested,"will they not identify the man who rented the houses?"
5155But,said I,"may not the Oligarchy find you out, even here?"
5155But,said Maximilian,"how would the men get along who wanted to borrow?"
5155But,said Maximilian,"is it not right and necessary that the intellect of the world should rule the world?"
5155But,said he,"would not your paper money have to be redeemed in gold or silver?"
5155Can that be possible?
5155Can this be possible?
5155Can we not take her up?
5155Can you come here Wednesday night next and tell us what you learn during your visit to their''Council of One Hundred''?
5155Certainly,I replied;"but what is intellect?
5155Civilization,he replied solemnly;"what interest have we in the preservation of civilization?
5155Could I have a private conference with you?
5155Did the neighbors know of any place, suitable for them, which they could rent? 5155 Did these wonderful utterances and most significant statistics,"I asked,"produce no effect on that age?"
5155Did you ever see that man before?
5155Did you have any signal agreed upon with them?
5155Do these people ever marry?
5155Do you desire to ask the witness any questions?
5155Do you suppose that if heaven were blown to pieces hell would be any worse off? 5155 Do you think any of these men would tell your story to any one else?"
5155Do you think,I asked, after a pause,"that she will be safe until to- morrow night?
5155Have there been,I asked,"no later notes of warning of the coming catastrophe?"
5155Have you an abundant supply of the death- bombs on hand?
5155Have you any further questions to ask General Quincy?
5155Have you any idea who they were?
5155Have you any reason to distrust this good man, Rudolph? 5155 Have you ever seen this man before?"
5155How did you come here?
5155How did you reach it?
5155How do you make that out?
5155How would you help it?
5155If I tell you where you can find a hundred thousand dollars, will you drive my knife through my heart?
5155If they have set love and justice adrift and depend only on force, why should we not have recourse to force also?
5155Indeed,I asked,"how does that happen?"
5155Is that all?
5155Is that the explanation,I asked,"of the policeman releasing his grip upon my coat?"
5155May I ask the number of your membership?
5155May I ask who were the men to whom you spoke of the matter?
5155May I inquire,I said,"what were your reasons for hurrying me away so swiftly and mysteriously from the gate of the Park?"
5155No,I said;"how should I?
5155No,he replied;"have you not already made the test?
5155Now,said I,"who is this Prince Cabano, and how does he happen to be called Prince?
5155Otherwise you would feel,I said,"that your time was wasted listening to me?"
5155Richard,said the cripple,"did you hear that?"
5155She took her tablet and wrote:''What good would it do to send that poor, foolish boy to prison for many years?
5155Speak,said Cæsar,"is that the man?"
5155Then you do not know,he replied,"whose driver it was you horsewhipped?"
5155Then, Mary, tell me, is Frederika the Prince of Cabano''s niece?
5155There,said my companion,"what do you think of that?"
5155We must see Estella; can you manage it for us?
5155Well, what''s the matter with''em, then?'' 5155 Well,"said Maximilian,"having abolished usury, in your Utopia, what would you do next?"
5155Were you present in the council- chamber of the Prince of Cabano last night? 5155 What a powerful impulse is this Love?
5155What are their plans?
5155What became of the men?
5155What brother vouches for this stranger?
5155What can we do?
5155What did you come here for?
5155What do you mean?
5155What do you propose?
5155What does it mean?
5155What effect has his flight had on the mob?
5155What for?
5155What great reform have they not opposed? 5155 What has caused such a vast movement?"
5155What has happened?
5155What is civilization worth which means happiness for a few thousand men and inexpressible misery for hundreds of millions? 5155 What is it?"
5155What is she doing in his house, then?
5155What is that?
5155What is the matter, Max?
5155What will they do next week?
5155What, then, do you advise?
5155When and where?
5155When have your churches helped man to improve his condition? 5155 When will the outbreak come?"
5155Where are they? 5155 Where did he go?"
5155Where, in heaven''s name, is the man with the bombs?
5155Where?
5155Who are they?
5155Who can tell? 5155 Who is the third?"
5155Who represents your organization?
5155Why could I not serve the purpose?
5155Why do you say so?
5155Why, then, are they used as money?
5155Why, what is the matter?
5155Will not civil government rise again out of this ruin?
5155Will they be faithful to their bargain?
5155Would you go with me to- morrow night and tell this tale to the council of our Brotherhood? 5155 Would you kill a man for a hundred thousand dollars?"
5155You anticipate an outbreak?
5155You believe him, then, to be a truthful witness,asked the cripple,"and that he was present at your interview, with the Council of the Plutocracy?"
5155You have often seen her write?
5155Your air- vessels are in perfect order?
5155''''''My God,''she said,''what shall I do?''
5155''Do you entertain friendly sentiments to Miss Estella?"
5155''What will it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?''
5155''Where did she come from?''
5155''Would you not be glad to see Estella safely out of this house?''
5155A week hence?
5155After a pause she said:"And, Mary, who are the other young ladies we call the Prince''s cousins-- Miss Lucy, Miss Julia and the rest?"
5155After a pause, for I saw he was strangely disturbed, I said to him:"How comes it that the people have so long submitted to these great wrongs?
5155After seating her I said:"''Miss Frederika, will you pardon me if I ask you a few questions upon matters of importance to both of us?''
5155And I said to myself,"Why should a God condescend to such a work as man?"
5155And are they not used as money because acids will not corrode them?"
5155And for what purpose?
5155And how could I still further take advantage of her lonely and friendless condition to press my suit?
5155And if I said a word against Miss Frederika, out I would go, and where would I find another place?"
5155And if government, on the old lines, did not yield these results, should it not have been so reformed as to do so?
5155And it seemed to me as if a voice pierced my heart, crying out through all its recesses, in strident tones,"How long, O Lord, how long?"
5155And the thought forever presses on me, Can I do nothing to avert this catastrophe?
5155And then came the question they feared to ask: What was the rent?
5155And upon how many such men have the prison doors of the world closed-- never to open again?
5155And what do we miss in all this joyous scene?
5155And what is to arrest the flow of effect from cause?
5155And where else can you turn?
5155And who is to employ them?
5155And who was he?
5155And why did you move into that house the same day we rented it from you?
5155And why not?
5155And why should they marry?
5155And why should they steal?
5155And you smiled and said to one another, in the words of the first murderer, when he lied to God:"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
5155Are his wages increased in due proportion, to fifteen dollars per day, or even to five dollars per day?
5155Are not their active and powerful brains at the back of all progress?
5155Are not these the highest objects for which governments can exist?
5155Are these men not necessary to society?
5155Are they not your brethren?
5155Are we better than Nature?
5155Are we wiser?
5155Are you the men who boast of your toleration?
5155At last he said:"Gabriel, would you be willing to do something more to serve me?"
5155At last one of these-- a fellow of the same kidney, but with more enterprise than himself-- said to him:''Why do n''t you carry her off?''
5155At last the Prince spoke up:"Andrews,"said he,"what did you learn about the leaders of this organization?"
5155But I heard one officer cry out to another, as they passed below me:"What''s the matter with the Demons?
5155But do you know what he has done to her?
5155But first, let me ask, did you see him clearly, and do you think you will be able to identify him?"
5155But had you not lived in it for years?
5155But is there any one of the servants in whom you have more confidence than all the others?"
5155But look a little farther, my brethren, and what do you behold?
5155But may I not request the name of the gentleman to whom I am under so many obligations?
5155But now and then the flames rise up-- perhaps a thief kindles the blaze-- and it burns and burns; for who would leave the glorious work to put it out?
5155But of what kind?
5155But oh, my friend-- you have a broad mind and a benevolent soul-- tell me, is there no remedy?
5155But what are we?
5155But why dilate upon the dreadful picture that unrolled beneath us?
5155But why do you ask such questions?"
5155But why not?
5155But why this disguise?
5155But, if the Brotherhood failed, might not the Prince recover her, and bear her back to his hateful palace and his loathsome embraces?
5155But, my brethren, does Nature preach that gospel to the cat when it destroys the field- mouse?
5155Can not the day of wrath be averted?"
5155Can the brain of man flourish when the heart is dead?"
5155Can you give me any advice?"
5155Can you not speak plainly?"
5155Can you tell me anything about her?"
5155Come, what do you say-- shall I speak to Jobson?''
5155Could I not see Rudolph and have her descend the rope- ladder, and I meet her and bring her here?"
5155Could she make a free choice unless she was herself free?
5155Could we survive another night of horrors?
5155CÆSAR ERECTS HIS MONUMENT"What other news have you?"
5155Did God die for a machine?
5155Did he not help to cause it?
5155Did the world drift blindly and unconsciously into this condition?"
5155Did they not resist?"
5155Did you not observe that I permitted about a dozen hacks to pass me before I hailed the one that brought us here?
5155Did you think she would breed angels?
5155Did you think the great Father of Cause and Effect-- the All- knowing, the universe- building God,--would pass you by?
5155Did you think to escape him?
5155Do they not create occasion and opportunity for labor?
5155Do you complain if her monstrous progeny is here now, with sword and torch?
5155Do you dream that it is a Mohammedan land?"
5155Do you hear?
5155Do you love me sufficiently to tell me the truth if I ask you some questions?"
5155Do you not know that in testifying to the truth he runs the risk of his own destruction?"
5155Do you recognize the justice of my reasoning?"
5155Do you think they are capable of the delicate task of readjusting the disarranged conditions of the world?
5155Do you think they would be willing to relinquish one- tenth of their pleasures, or their possessions, to relieve the distresses of their fellows?
5155Does not the great doctrine of Evolution, in which you believe, preach this gospel?
5155GABRIEL''S UTOPIA"But what would you do, my good Gabriel,"said Maximilian, smiling,"if the reformation of the world were placed in your hands?
5155Gentlemen,"he said, turning to his associates,"have you any further questions to ask this man?"
5155Have I not always shown a disposition to serve you?''
5155Have they not souls like yourselves?
5155He addressed the prisoner:"Were you followed to this place?"
5155He did not answer me for a time, but looked down thoughtfully; and then he glanced at me, furtively, and said:"Is not revenge right?
5155He may accumulate more money than the thousand men he sets to work; but has he not done more?
5155How are you to prevent these men from becoming richer than the rest?"
5155How comes it I have never seen her?''
5155How comes it, however, that she has been in the house and I have never seen her?''
5155How could she support life in the meantime?
5155How dare you bring these men here with such falsehoods?"
5155How many men knew of your visit?"
5155How should we choose between the conflagration and those terrible streets?
5155I am to come to them, if I need their help, and say:''Good evening, what time is it?''
5155I am willing to we d''Christina Jansen''--but what am I to do with''Christina Carlson''?
5155I ask myself;"or will old loyalty and faith to their masters rise up in their hearts?"
5155I asked him:"Are the degraded, and even the vicious, members of your Brotherhood?"
5155I exclaimed, in astonishment;"what do you mean?"
5155I exclaimed;"what are you talking about?
5155I said to Max:"What will those millions do to- morrow?"
5155I said to Maximilian while he paced the room:"How did this dreadful state of affairs, in which the world now finds itself, arise?
5155I said to him:"''How much a week do you pay Christina?''
5155I said to myself:"Where is it all to end?
5155I started, and exclaimed:"Nonsense; highway robbery to whip a blackguard?"
5155If he perished in the battle what would become of Estella, in a world torn to pieces?
5155If she had compromised her maiden reserve in that particular, how could I take advantage of it?
5155If she intended that all men should be happy, why did she not make them so?
5155If so, tell us what you saw and heard?"
5155If that is not highway robbery, what is it?
5155In civilized life the many must work; and who among these liberated slaves will be ready to lay down their weapons and take up their tasks?
5155Is it not all their own?
5155Is it not evident that our present tendencies are in the wrong direction?
5155Is it not simply justice?"
5155Is it to the halls of legislation?
5155Is it to the newspapers?
5155Is not his intellect immeasurably more valuable than all those unthinking muscles?"
5155Is not that liberal?''
5155Is there no hope?
5155Might she not mistake gratitude for love?
5155Moreover,"he continued,"how can reformation come?
5155Multiply them by the years of another century, and who shall say that the events I depict are impossible?
5155Neither was I a despairing lover; for had she not, at a time when death seemed imminent, avowed her love for me?
5155On his return I resumed:"But now that I have told you who I am, will you be good enough to tell me something about yourself?"
5155One man cried out:"''What would you have us do?''
5155One of our men came to me at midnight, and said:"Do you hear those shrieks?"
5155Ought not men of good will to consider how they shall receive it, so that its coming may be peaceable?
5155Plunkett?"
5155Shall I send for him?"
5155Shall we rebuke the Great Mother by caring for those whom she has abandoned?
5155Should I not go to her at once?
5155Should I presume upon it?
5155Should I take advantage of her distress to impose my love upon her?
5155Should he overcome his scruples and ask the lady of his love to we d him; or should he invite her to accompany him as his friend and sister?
5155The Prince said:"Well, who are the others?"
5155The dread came upon me: What if some wretch should fire a house in our block?
5155The mere thought works in me like a convulsion; what must the inexpressible reality be?
5155There swept over me, like the rush of a flood, the dreadful thought:"What will become of Estella?"
5155To- morrow?
5155To- night?
5155True, I tried to pooh- pooh away the sentiment, and said to myself:''Why bother your head about her?
5155Was he considering-- too late!--whether it was right to have helped produce this terrible catastrophe?
5155Was man the joint product of an angel and a devil?
5155Were there no warnings uttered by any intelligent men?
5155What a gap would it have been in nature if there had been no such growth, or if, being such, it had been poisonous or inedible?
5155What am I in the presence of such a catastrophe?
5155What are we to expect of a race without heart or honor?
5155What can we do to make their lives bright and happy?"
5155What can you or I do?
5155What could I do?
5155What dark perversity was it in the blood of the race that made it wrap itself in misery, like a garment, while all nature was happy?
5155What did it all mean?
5155What do they ask?"
5155What else did you expect?
5155What force is it that brings it up, green and beautiful, out of the black, dead earth?
5155What if General Quincy refused to do as he had agreed, for no promises were likely to bind a man in such a dreadful period of anarchy?
5155What if our messengers had all been slain?
5155What is it but beastliness?
5155What is she like?''
5155What is to prevent the coming of the night if the earth continues to revolve on its axis?
5155What joys of life does he possess?
5155What may we look for when the powers of the highest civilization supplement the instincts of tigers and wolves?
5155What new discoveries in science have they not resisted?"
5155What say you, gentlemen?"
5155What shall I do?
5155What should he do?
5155What should make them so?"
5155What the sobs of the mother torn from her child-- the wife from her husband-- on the auction block?
5155What was the cry of the bondman to them?
5155What will it avail the world if we rush into the flames and perish?
5155What would happen to heaven if you took down the fence between it and hell?
5155What would they buy them with?
5155What would you do with the accumulations of the rest?"
5155What would you have me do?"
5155When comes it?
5155Where could these men buy such weapons?
5155Where were the rat- killers?
5155Where would they hide them?
5155Who among them cared for the lacerated bodies, the shameful and hopeless lives?
5155Who can doubt that there is another life?
5155Who can fix a limit to the intelligence or the achievements of our species?
5155Who can say?
5155Who is it that is satisfied with the present unhappy condition of society?
5155Who is she?''
5155Who is there that would take back his watch and purse at the cost of changing places with one of these wretches?
5155Who made it succulent and filled it full of the substances that will make flesh and blood and bone for millions of gentle, grazing animals?
5155Why are they not here?"
5155Why could n''t you keep quiet?
5155Why did rich and poor alike mock me?
5155Why did they not listen to me?
5155Why should he be happy when there is so much misery?
5155Why should the military renew the fight in the midst of the awful doubt that rests upon their souls?
5155Why should we not enjoy the sunshine, and that glorious light, brighter than all sunshine-- the love of woman?
5155Why, then, should we concern ourselves about the poor?
5155Why, where are the wolves, that used to prowl through the towns and cities of the world that has passed away?
5155Why?
5155Will it arrest the moving evil to ignore its presence?
5155Will not that hackman, for the sake of the reward, inform the police of our whereabouts?"
5155Will not this dreadful nightmare pass away?"
5155Will ye not come up to the help of the people against the mighty?
5155Will ye not help us break the jaws of the spoiler and drag the prey from between his teeth?
5155Will you step to the platform?"
5155Would it not be better to be ashes and cinders, than to fall into the hands of that demoniacal mob?
5155Would it not be unmanly of him to take advantage of her misfortunes and frighten or coax her into becoming his wife?
5155You bought me and brought me here; and who are your friends?
5155_ Destruction!_ What is it?
5155he repeated,''who is Estella?''
5155said I,''and so, that is your position?
4017''The first is so conceived to revenge myself on the King--''What can that mean?
4017A cap?
4017A cart? 4017 A horse- drawn vehicle, then?"
4017A part?
4017A servant? 4017 A yellow leather cap?
4017Absolutely free?
4017Ah, of course, you know the object of the theft?
4017All my acknowledgements-- and no ill will on your side, I trust?
4017Am I the sort of man who dies? 4017 And I should doubtless have enjoyed the enormous advantage of undergoing the same fate as M. Ganimard and Mr. Holmlock Shears?"
4017And after that?
4017And can you say nothing more about this strange patient?
4017And did he find out?
4017And do you see nothing more?
4017And he went away?
4017And if he dies?
4017And if they do n''t fit in?
4017And if you drop behind?
4017And is no one living there at present?
4017And it was I?
4017And next?
4017And on what day did this happen?
4017And the motive of his theft?
4017And the place where he is concealed, perhaps?
4017And the third man?
4017And then?
4017And then?
4017And then?
4017And this morning?
4017And was the operation successful?
4017And what is your reasoning?
4017And what was the object of the journey?
4017And where are you going now?
4017And where did the cart come from?
4017And where does he live?
4017And where does he live?
4017And with you?
4017And you read it?
4017And you, mademoiselle?
4017And, according to you, the facts which we have just ascertained carry their own explanation?
4017Are you afraid?
4017Are you coming, Beautrelet?
4017Are you coming, Ganimard?
4017Are you convinced? 4017 Are you expecting some one?"
4017Are you going?
4017Are you sure of the way?
4017Are you sure that I know it?
4017Are you there, Beautrelet?
4017As a place of refuge, then?
4017At first sight, do you suspect no one?
4017At night?
4017Beautrelet-- he is there--"Eh?
4017But did he leave bare- headed?
4017But he got up again?
4017But his friends were able to take him away afterward?
4017But how can Lupin have known this detail?
4017But how can they hope to keep a secret like this? 4017 But how is he living?
4017But how? 4017 But no, you''re not coming-- What''s the matter with you?"
4017But some day or other--"Some day or other, the fraud will be discovered? 4017 But the runaway, the wounded man?"
4017But was he there on the day before, two days ago?
4017But what about the dogs? 4017 But what would he say if you delivered Arsene Lupin into the hands of the police?"
4017But where, confound it all?--In what corner of Hades--?
4017But where, confound it, where did they go through? 4017 But who can have done it?
4017But who? 4017 But, surely, you are not going down, miss?"
4017By which you mean to say--?
4017By whom? 4017 Can I see the Baron de Velines?"
4017Could you describe him to us?
4017Could you repeat it to us?
4017Did he come to your house?
4017Did he see you?
4017Did n''t they say anything before you-- something that might help us?
4017Did the old guard surrender?
4017Did you think that you knew me for good and all because you had seen me in the guise of a clergyman or under the features of M. Massiban? 4017 Do n''t you think so yourself?
4017Do you know which is her room?
4017Do you mean that he has not left it?
4017Do you still want me?
4017Do you think so? 4017 Do you think so?"
4017Do you want more proofs? 4017 Easier, really?"
4017Eh? 4017 Ever since this morning?"
4017For dinner? 4017 For instance?"
4017Get on? 4017 Have you any proofs?
4017Have you discovered the traces of a third accomplice who disappeared before the arrival of the young ladies?
4017Have you it there-- on you?
4017Have you your credentials?
4017He asked for food in the kitchen, ate his lunch and then--"And then--?
4017He is still a young man--"Yes, with very expressive eyes, fair hair--"And a beard?
4017He lives in it, then?
4017He lives over there, all alone-- on the slope-- the hovel that comes next after the churchyard.--Shall I go with you?
4017Here-- is it possible?
4017How can I trouble it now?
4017How do you know?
4017How long did it take?
4017How so?
4017How would you communicate with them?
4017How?
4017Hullo, young man, what are you doing here? 4017 I hope you wo n''t let that prevent you--""From telling you what I know?
4017I''m afraid--"You''re afraid?
4017I?
4017In that case, I do n''t understand.--Well, who is the murderer of Jean Daval?
4017In that case, what is your name? 4017 In that case--?"
4017In what circumstances?
4017Is he dead, too?
4017Is it deep?
4017Is that how he appeared to you, mademoiselle?
4017Is the article in the printer''s hands?
4017It ca n''t be I, because I''m dead, eh?
4017It was, no doubt, the knife which I saw on the drawing- room mantelpiece, next to a leather cap?
4017Look, here''s one little fact: what are the initials under which those men correspond among themselves? 4017 Marie Antoinette''s book of hours?"
4017Next? 4017 Next?"
4017No, governor-- only--"What?
4017Nor M. Daval either?
4017Nor the room disturbed in any way?
4017Nothing more than that?
4017Nothing-- it''ll pass off--"But what is it?
4017Now,continued Isidore,"what was there in this room that could arouse the covetousness of the burglars?
4017On the Route de Valognes, is it?
4017On what day are those others coming?
4017On what day? 4017 Orders from whom?"
4017Really, M. Beautrelet-- do you think so? 4017 Really?"
4017Robbery? 4017 Shall we separate?"
4017Should I be indiscreet, if--?
4017Since when?
4017So I may take it, mademoiselle, that your evidence is positive?
4017So it was between seven o''clock in the evening, on the day before yesterday, and six o''clock on yesterday morning that he disappeared?
4017So you were really able to succeed because I screened you and assisted you?
4017The Englishman of this morning?
4017The front page-- what does the front page say?
4017The little door?
4017The motive? 4017 The prefect of police?"
4017The prime minister?
4017The young ladies--"The young ladies may have been dreaming, you think? 4017 Then what can save him?"
4017Then what conclusion do you draw, Beautrelet?
4017Then why are you thinking of that man rather than another?
4017Then--?
4017Then?
4017There''s a style about it, is n''t there? 4017 Think?
4017This morning? 4017 To treat?"
4017Took what?
4017Was it pretty well contrived, or was it not? 4017 Was the bed disarranged in his room?"
4017We''re sinking, eh?
4017Well, did you see the hatter?
4017Well, then, who killed Jean Daval? 4017 Well, what do you say to that?"
4017Well, what is it? 4017 Well, what is it?"
4017Well, what? 4017 Well, young man, are you satisfied with the results of your campaign?"
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017Well?
4017What about him?
4017What are you locking us in for?
4017What are you talking about? 4017 What are you waiting for?"
4017What business?
4017What did I tell you? 4017 What do you conclude?"
4017What do you say to that, master?
4017What do you say to the way I have arranged my little home, Beautrelet?
4017What do you think of it, Monsieur le Juge d''Instruction? 4017 What do you want?"
4017What does the key open?
4017What has become of him? 4017 What have you to say, sir?"
4017What is it?
4017What is it?
4017What of?
4017What proof have you?
4017What proof have you?
4017What sort of face had he?
4017What sort of fly was it?
4017What was this''rest''? 4017 What would you have it be, darling?"
4017What''s that you say?
4017What''s that?
4017What''s the matter with you?
4017What? 4017 What?
4017What?
4017What?
4017What?--What?--What''s that you say?
4017When will the museum be open?
4017When you read it, were those two pages missing? 4017 When?
4017Where is it? 4017 Where on earth can he be?
4017Where''s the cabman?
4017Which coat?
4017Which was that?
4017Who are you, sir?
4017Who are you?
4017Who are you?
4017Who are you?
4017Who reckoned by metres in those days? 4017 Who then?"
4017Why delay?
4017Why did n''t you say so?
4017Why do n''t you help, Beautrelet?
4017Why do n''t you shoot him, instead of staring at him like that?
4017Why do you suppose that he requires to escape?
4017Why do you suppose that he will escape?
4017Why not?
4017Why so late?
4017Why, Monsieur le Juge d''Instruction, I write for a number of papers-- all over the place--"Your credentials?
4017Why, how do you think? 4017 Why, what''s the matter with you, Beautrelet?"
4017Why?
4017Why?
4017Will it be for long?
4017Will you give me until the Sunday?
4017With a false beard?
4017With his fly?
4017Yes, but the key of the door--?
4017Yes, sir?
4017Yes, you: what paper do you belong to?
4017Yes-- I understand--''Cherbourg''-and then?
4017Yes-- a name-- like Chateau--"Chateaubriant?--Chateau- Thierry?--"No- no--"Chateauroux?
4017You do n''t mean to say you think--?
4017You have no enemy?
4017You have not doubted either, for a moment have you, that he managed this business?
4017You knew it, then?
4017You know nothing more?
4017You know the murderer''s name?
4017You know what they contained?
4017You remember Victoire, Lupin''s old foster- mother, the one whom my good friend Ganimard allowed to escape in a sham prison- van?
4017You''ve met no one at all suspicious- looking?
4017Your occupation?
4017''And does it get there?''
4017*****"That''s interesting, eh?
4017A burst of shrill laughter interrupted him:"Why, you highwayman, do n''t you understand,"cried Beautrelet,"that I have taken my precautions?
4017A clever notion, what?
4017A coincidence?
4017A dram of rum?"
4017A further proof?
4017A half- brother of Louis XIV., as Voltaire maintained, or Mattioli, the Italian minister, as the modern critics declare?
4017A man still young, rather grave and solemn- looking--?"
4017A proof?
4017A theft in which nothing had been stolen; an invisible prisoner: what could be less satisfactory?
4017A van?"
4017A work of art, a curiosity?
4017ARSENE LUPIN"Whose name will figure after ours?"
4017After all, why should I not be honest?
4017After an exchange of compliments, he said to Shears:"I suppose that you are here-- because of''him''?"
4017After being piously preserved in the count''s family, it has been, for the last five years, in a glass case--""A glass case?"
4017Ah, Beautrelet, will she ever forget that I was once Lupin?
4017Already taken in by one of the confederates, was he now going to let himself be tricked by this self- styled schoolboy?
4017Am I to leave you?"
4017An accomplice?"
4017An enemy?
4017And at full speed, do you hear?
4017And by what means?
4017And can you make me these startling revelations now?"
4017And he never omitted to insinuate, slily:"What about the Needle?
4017And his best girl has no secrets for Lupin.--What did I tell you?
4017And one of them exclaimed:"Funny, is n''t it, that we should all have had the same idea?
4017And since when?"
4017And the question resolves itself into this: what has become of the Queen''s book of hours?
4017And what conclusion do you draw?"
4017And what road had been taken by the motor car in which they were carried off during the night?
4017And what sort of scene was I about to assist at: dramatic or comic?
4017And what was the scene of the whole of the present tragedy?
4017And where could they have moved him to?
4017And why did he wish to divulge it?
4017And yet that figure 19?
4017And, addressing the servant,"Charolais, did you lock the staircase doors behind the gentleman?"
4017And, as he did not reply, I repeated,"Who are you?
4017And, even then, once you were inside, who would guide you?
4017And, if I asked you the name of the murderer?"
4017And, on the other hand, where was Raymonde?
4017And, with a laugh like a child''s, revealing his white teeth:"Are you convinced now?"
4017And, with fellows like that, what would have become of me, by Jove, with four to one against me?"
4017Any clues?"
4017Are we enemies because circumstances bring us into opposition?
4017Are you asleep?"
4017Are you sure?"
4017As it is, Lupin is saved; and saved by whom?
4017At a sign from him, the clerk left the room; and the magistrate exclaimed:"Why, what have you been doing to yourself, M. Beautrelet?
4017At last, the boy asked:"Is there such a thing as an inn called the Lion d''Or at a short league outside the town?"
4017Beautrelet at once asked her:"You found this volume upstairs, madame, in the library?"
4017Beautrelet could not help asking:"When you arrived, was it empty?"
4017Beautrelet gave a start:"What''s that?
4017Beautrelet nodded his head:"Yes, but what do you want?"
4017Beautrelet reflected and then said:"What next?"
4017Beautrelet stopped:"Do you really want to know, Monsieur le Juge d''Instruction?"
4017Bedtime--?"
4017Besides, why resist?
4017Bless my soul, what for?"
4017Bombard the Needle?
4017But Lupin?"
4017But could he pass?
4017But do you attach any value--?"
4017But how did he know it?
4017But how were you able to discover--?"
4017But how will you find it?
4017But look, over there, in the offing, that black line, level with the water--""Well?"
4017But on the side of the land?
4017But what did it matter?
4017But who could the newcomer be?
4017But why did n''t I guess earlier?"
4017But, admitting that he was up, why did he disarrange his bedclothes, to make believe that he had gone to bed?
4017But, if that were so, would I not have slipped away at the right moment, following the example of my fellow- criminal?"
4017But, in that case, how had the wounded man succeeded in escaping the eyes of Raymonde, Victor and Albert?
4017Can you ever forgive me?"
4017Can you picture the situation, supposing my tenant were not Arsene Lupin?"
4017Come, who could be interested?"
4017Could he be a descendant of the marquis?
4017Could it be?
4017Cry for help?
4017Did he fear that the character of the paper itself, or some other clue, could give me a hint?
4017Did he hope to escape from Ganimard?
4017Did not the two letters D and F, so plainly cut, point to it and admit to it, with the aid, perhaps, of some ingenious piece of mechanism?
4017Did the castle contain the key to the mystery?
4017Did you hear--?"
4017Do n''t you know me?
4017Do n''t you know that?"
4017Do n''t you know, you ass, that I''m uttering historic words and that Beautrelet is taking them in for the benefit of posterity?"
4017Do you believe that?"
4017Do you grasp the situation now?
4017Do you hear, driver?
4017Do you remember the Louvre scandal, the tiara which was admitted to be false, invented and manufactured by a modern artist?
4017Do you suggest that you have your little solution of the riddle ready?"
4017Do you think I would die like that, shot in the back by a girl?
4017Do you think so?"
4017Do you think--?"
4017Do you understand how you succeeded in getting as far as this?
4017Do you understand that I had given each of my men his share of the plunder when you met them the other night on the cliff?
4017Down there-- under his present conditions--""Bad conditions?"
4017Enemies?
4017Filleul?"
4017For that matter, chance served him without delay:"A letter posted on Wednesday last?"
4017For what hidden reason was Lupin confessing his love and the failure of that love?
4017Ganimard?
4017Granting that it was impossible to find them for the moment, might one not discover the road by which they had disappeared?
4017Had Lupin not won the game in advance?
4017Had he heard Lupin''s words?
4017Had he not discovered and handed over the Hollow Needle?
4017Had he not the right to humor the irresistible sympathy with which, in spite of everything, this man inspired him?
4017Had he seen them?
4017Has destiny not accepted the issue which I selected?"
4017Has it a name?"
4017Have I changed so much?"
4017Have we mastered the secret at last?"
4017Have you been robbed of something, then?"
4017Have you been taking lessons?
4017Have you spoken to anybody of that document which Sergeant Quevillon picked up and handed you in my presence?"
4017He asked him, in a less peevish tone:"And are you satisfied with your expedition?"
4017He asked, gruffly:"What are you doing here?"
4017He asked:"What is the name of the castle over there, behind the trees?"
4017He asked:"Why did you do it?
4017He let her cry and, after a while, said:"It was you, was n''t it, who did all the mischief, who acted as go- between?
4017He looked at Beautrelet with an air of absolute bewilderment, hesitated a moment and then took his cap:"Are you coming, Charlotte?"
4017He looked at me and said:"Do n''t you know me?"
4017He read:***** Will these lines ever reach you, my dear son?
4017He returned with a letter:"Will you allow me, gentlemen?"
4017He stopped in front of Lupin and defied him, like a child making faces at his playmate:"What do you say to that, master?"
4017He unfolded the paper and, at once, raising his eyes, murmured:"What does it mean?
4017He walked on and said to Beautrelet:"This makes me uneasy-- is it Shears?
4017He was silent for a few minutes and resumed:"My father had n''t shown you that snapshot yet?"
4017His linen is marked with the initials E. V. That ought to be sufficient proof, I think: do n''t you?"
4017How can you assert--?"
4017How could M. de Gesvres, who had fainted, know, on waking, that Daval had been stabbed with a knife?"
4017How did they carry him off?"
4017How did you get in?
4017How did you know me?"
4017How is that?"
4017How much exactly did he know?
4017How was it possible for two attempts of this kind to take place?
4017How will he keep alive?
4017How would you get into the castle?
4017How, after that, is it possible to suspect her?
4017How?
4017How?
4017However, it''s only a few minutes-- but what''s the matter?
4017I admit that your solution is correct, because it needs must be; but how does it help us?"
4017I did not insist and, changing the conversation:"How did you get in?"
4017I do n''t have an opportunity of lecturing at the Institute ever day!--Faster, chauffeur: we''re only doing seventy- one and a half!--Are you afraid?
4017I feel quite weak then, and I should like to cry--"Was he crying?
4017I have collected indisputable proofs--""But the body?"
4017I heard them talking about it--""And what road did they take?"
4017I know you, you''re from the Havre.--Guns''crews to the guns!--Hullo, there''s the commander!--How are you, Duguay- Trouin?"
4017I thought M. de Gesvres had bought two almost wild sheep- dogs, which were let loose at night?"
4017I''ve made you feel, anyhow; your eyes are quite wet!--Friendship betrayed: that upsets you, eh?
4017I?
4017II; Arsene Lupin in Prison The Thibermenil case?
4017If the walls that surround our private lives be not respected, what is to safeguard the rights of the citizen?
4017In all probability, his confederates removed his corpse at the same time that they carried away the girl; but what proof have we?
4017In the face of that colossus of pride and will- power which called itself Holmlock Shears, of what use were threats?
4017In the letter from old man Harlington to M. Etienne de Vaudreix, or rather to Lupin--""The intercepted letter?"
4017In the next holidays--""Whitsuntide?"
4017In two days of liberty, you must have carried them pretty far?"
4017Inspector?"
4017Is Monsieur le Procureur General downstairs?"
4017Is he tumbling down the other staircases to bar the entrance to the tunnel against me?
4017Is it the one which Beautrelet has held in his hands and which Lupin recovered from him through Bredoux, the magistrate''s clerk?
4017Is n''t it fine?
4017Is n''t it gorgeous?
4017Is n''t it grand?
4017Is n''t it immense?
4017Is the adventure of the Hollow Needle not over?
4017Is the man alive?
4017Is there anything there that seems obscure?
4017Is your old friend great on the tight- rope, or is he not?
4017Isidore Beautrelet appeared nonplussed:"I, mademoiselle?
4017Isidore gave a start:"The sixth time, you say?
4017It has something to do with a book about a needle, has n''t it, a book which is supposed to have come down to me from my ancestors?"
4017It was the name of a town, was n''t it?"
4017It was very probably the same car; but then the question cropped up again: what had become of the four Rubenses?
4017It was you who took him the photograph?
4017Jewelry?
4017Lastly, who was that strange personage?
4017Let''s go upstairs, shall we?
4017Lift the tiara of Saitapharnes, Beautrelet.--You see those two telephones?
4017Lupin asked:"Any news, Gomel?"
4017Lupin rushed up to her:"What is it?
4017Lupin seized Beautrelet roughly by the arm and in a cold voice, looking him straight in the eyes:"You''re going to keep quiet now, are n''t you?
4017M. Filleul rose:"Anything new?
4017M. Filleul turned to the other reporter:"And you, sir?"
4017May I ask what you have learned?"
4017My beard, perhaps?
4017My client was very fond of it; and, unless he has changed his mind--""Can you give me his name and address?"
4017No danger of our being observed, I suppose?"
4017No one?
4017Nobody?
4017Not so bad, is she?
4017Now at which spot is the ambush laid?
4017Oh, I must n''t touch those on any account!--But what''s the matter?
4017Oh, you, by the way, hand me back my hundred- franc note, will you?
4017On which side is he to attack him?
4017Only you must tell me everything that can be of use to me.--Did you catch anything-- any remark made by those men?
4017Only--""Only what?"
4017Only--""Only what?"
4017Or is it still in Marie Antoinette''s book of hours?
4017Or that forest?
4017Or the houses of this hamlet?
4017Or was it a superhuman work executed by human beings, Gauls, Celts, prehistoric men?
4017Or was it among the insignificant phrases spoken by that peasant yonder that he might hope to gather the one little illuminating word?
4017Or were they two magic words which could compel the whole great adventure of Lupin the great adventurer to assume its true significance?
4017Ought this hill- slope to be questioned?
4017Raymonde called the other servant:"Albert, do you see him down there?
4017Run after them and let me be-- if not!--It''s settled, is n''t it?"
4017Shall I be there for lunch?"
4017Shall I ever be able to wipe out from her memory the past which she loathes and detests?"
4017Shall you have guns?"
4017She leaned over one of them:"Father!--Father!--Is it you?
4017She smiled bitterly and the officer caught the words:"Why so late?"
4017She was feeling her way there, when Suzanne, her cousin, came out of the room and fell into her arms:"Raymonde-- is that you?
4017Shears?"
4017Should they call out?
4017So you''re not asleep?"
4017Some aid?
4017Suzanne, scared to the verge of swooning, fell on her knees, stammering:"Let us call out-- let us call for help--""Who would come?
4017That being so-- what can you do?
4017That is all he wanted to know and so he is going-- where?
4017That''s right!--And the boat?"
4017The Gruchet, Montigny, Crasville burglaries?
4017The Indre?"
4017The affair of Baron Cahorn?
4017The answer took away his breath:"The Chateau de l''Aiguille?--Oh!--But in what department are we?
4017The boy asked:"And the treasure?"
4017The business is done''?"
4017The father dressed himself, but, as they were leaving the room, he whispered:"I am not alone in the castle--""Ah?
4017The legend of the Hollow Needle?
4017The magistrate said:"Monsieur le Comte, am I to believe that this version is correct?"
4017The miracle by which your father was taken out of Cherbourg Arsenal, in spite of his twenty body- guards?
4017The next day, he asked Beautrelet:"What are you doing here, eh?"
4017The stranger smiled:"Do n''t you recognize me?"
4017The way in which the operation was performed?
4017The word''luggage''?
4017Then what''s the use of wasting your time and energy?
4017Then why?
4017There are five charges left, one of which would be enough to send me ad patres.--Well, so you''re putting it in your pocket?
4017There are two pages torn out; but you read them, did you not, madame?"
4017There was no regular agreement, just a letter--""But you know the baron?"
4017These, no doubt, were insoluble questions; and what did it matter?
4017They are queer people--""Do you think your client would consent to sell his castle?"
4017They offered you money, I suppose-- to buy ribbons with a frock--?"
4017They went down and down, Isidore in silence, Lupin still bubbling over with merriment:"I should like to know what Ganimard is doing?
4017Till Monday, then?"
4017To give up the Needle was all very well; but why was he giving up himself?
4017To go upstairs alone and release the prisoner?
4017To pass in spite of all?
4017To the castle?"
4017Try and remember: the two pages following this table of figures and dots?"
4017Twice over, he asked:"You have n''t seen anything of young Beautrelet, I suppose?"
4017Upon what action was he resolving?
4017Was he aware of the danger he was running?
4017Was he ignorant of the presence of Ganimard and his men?
4017Was he really nearing the end of his race?
4017Was he speaking seriously?
4017Was he, for the sake of an absurd idea, to renounce happiness at the very moment when it seemed within his reach?
4017Was it a fairy tale?
4017Was it a meaningless expression, the puzzle of a schoolboy scribbling with pen and ink on the corner of a page?
4017Was it a natural phenomenon, an excavation produced by internal cataclysms or by the imperceptible action of the rushing sea and the soaking rain?
4017Was it an accomplice who had come back to investigate?
4017Was it even an adversary?
4017Was it possible that the vanquished and yet invisible adversary, whom they had been hunting in vain for several days, could really be Arsene Lupin?
4017Was it possible?
4017Was my make- up as old Massiban so good as all that?"
4017Was the result not certain?
4017Was the war not over?
4017Was there no bolt closing it on the other side?
4017Was this not a trap laid for him by his infernal enemy?
4017Was this the gun you fired, mademoiselle, and from this window?"
4017Well, could not Beautrelet confine himself to the same ground?
4017Well, have you got it?"
4017Well, then, what?
4017Well, then--?
4017Well?"
4017Were they to suppose that the leader of the gang had not left the cloisters or the neighborhood of the cloisters?
4017What are you here for?"
4017What are you talking about?"
4017What can he do, a single, unarmed stripling, against that phenomenon of energy and strength?
4017What did he care about the rest?
4017What did the mystery consist of?
4017What do you mean?
4017What do you say to that, baby?"
4017What do you think of it, my dear chap?"
4017What do you think of my cockle- shell, Beautrelet?
4017What do you think of my cockle- shell, Beautrelet?"
4017What do you think, Beautrelet?"
4017What for?
4017What had become of them?
4017What happened between them?
4017What has become of this paper?
4017What has been happening during the past two months at the Chateau d''Ambrumesy?
4017What has happened to you?"
4017What has happened?
4017What is it?"
4017What is the value of this pamphlet?
4017What is there to prevent my being a sixth- form pupil at the Lycee Janson?
4017What prevented him from putting them on rather than his heavy nailed boots?"
4017What then?
4017What then?
4017What time is it?"
4017What was he going to do?
4017What was his plan?
4017What was the motive for this particular letter?
4017What was the use of an impossible struggle?
4017What were his thoughts?
4017What were those elements, those means, those chances?
4017What will Duguay- Trouin do?
4017What will she do?
4017What would my worthy parent say?"
4017What''s that?"
4017What''s your plan?"
4017What?"
4017When do we deliver the assault?"
4017When you arrived--""And where is it?"
4017Where are we going?
4017Where are your papers?"
4017Where does he select his site?
4017Where is he hiding?"
4017Where should she hide this dangerous document?
4017Where to get at him?
4017Where to wound him?
4017Where was Holmlock Shears, Lupin''s prisoner, put on board ship?
4017Where was Lupin going when he was attacked and bound hand and foot, in his compartment by Pierre Onfrey, the Auteuil murderer?
4017Which of the two was to strike it?
4017Which was the entrance to the underground passage?
4017Which way did they carry him off?
4017Who could discover it?
4017Who could ever learn the impenetrable secret of the Needle?
4017Who else?
4017Who knows if the trap into which you will inevitably fall has not already opened under your footsteps?"
4017Who was able to get into my house?"
4017Who?"
4017Why 45, when the figure in the document is 44?
4017Why conceal an act which you were lawfully entitled to commit in defense of your life?"
4017Why did he not go on with the case?
4017Why not say King of Yvetot at once?
4017Why this display of anger?
4017Why use threats?
4017Why was Lupin so fiercely bent upon snatching the document about the Hollow Needle from me?
4017Why?
4017Why?"
4017Will she also give him up?
4017Will she give up the man she has wounded?
4017Will that suit you?"
4017Will those who differ plead the higher interest of truth?
4017With a man like that, of what good could it be to look elsewhere than in the domain of the enormous, the exaggerated, the superhuman?
4017With whom on earth could he have made an appointment?
4017Without hesitation, Isidore sat down beside the man and said:"Yes, that is my name-- but who are you?
4017Would Isidore decide to give the finishing stroke to the defeated enemy?
4017Would Lupin not try to resume the offensive?
4017Would he accept with a good grace the irretrievable loss of the woman he loved?
4017Would his, Beautrelet''s efforts have the same victorious results?
4017Would n''t you like a sugar- stick apiece to screw your courage up?
4017Would she speak?
4017Would she speak?
4017Would the door open without an effort?
4017Would you be so good as to examine the pictures and to tell us if you recognize them as genuine?"
4017Would you like details?
4017Would you mind reading this scrap of paper, which I have just found in the pocket of the coat?"
4017You admit it, do n''t you?
4017You do understand, do n''t you?
4017You leave me alone?
4017You proclaim yourself beaten, do you?
4017You remember the story of the coronet, the story of the Duc de Charmerac?
4017You saw me yesterday?"
4017You shall say so, above all, because, if you do not say so--""Because, if I do not say so--?"
4017You''re looking to see if it''s loaded?
4017Your father-- and if there are more of them left-- and they throw themselves upon him--?"
4017Your name?"
4017a.. What words could come before Etretat?
4017and bequeathed by the queen to her fervent admirer?
4017de Gesvres''evidence and is in the official report:''I am not wounded.--Daval?--Is he alive?--The knife?''
4017de Saint- Veran shot at, the man who fell in the park and whom we are looking for: do you suggest that he is not the man who killed Jean Daval?"
4017de Saint- Veran, why did n''t they murder her in her room?"
4017de Villemon:"Will you forgive me, madame?
9098Incommodi quid erit, sive Tacito tribuamus; sive M. Fabio Quinctiliano, ut mihi olim visim? 9098 Quid Camillus?
9098Responde, Blaese,_ ubi_( quo?)
9098cadaver abjeceris?
90982& 3), because Titus had an amorous disposition?
909871)?
9098And how long would he have been engaged in its composition?
9098And whom were the"sycophants,"that is the Senators, flattering?
9098And why this uncertainty?
9098And"who shall decide"when a lexicographer and a bishop"disagree?"
9098Another entitled"An Seni sit Uxor ducenda"?
9098Are we to believe that that could have been so?
9098Blaesus?
9098But how about the next sentence?
9098But who, for a certainty, knows the inventor of printing?
9098But why should he put such a Tacitus in the hands of a transcriber?
9098But why should the manuscript have been written in Lombard characters at all?
9098For had he children like himself?"
9098For what book can be transcribed, if there be not the parchment?
9098For where was this multitude of consuls, this multitude of dictators?
9098Forgetfulness or remembrance in his hatreds?
9098Hence his remarks:"raking up and relating this,"( namely, how the Roman government never worked well at any time,)"will be of benefit,"( to whom?
9098How can we believe that Tacitus was ignorant of such an ordinary native ceremony, and one, too, that must have come repeatedly within his ken?
9098How could this be?
9098If Bracciolini could get so much for an incomplete copy of Livy''s History, what might he not hope to get for a complete one?
9098If some learned monk, made abbot or prior of a convent of Germany or Hungary?
9098If unknown, can he not be discovered?
9098In a conversation with one of the king''s courtiers Apollonius asks the question:"What year that was since Bardanes had recovered his kingdom?"
9098In what was he not supported?
9098Nam sui similes liberos habuit?"
9098Now, are the History and the Annals incomplete, when separated?
9098Now, how long would he have been on that separate history?
9098Of what consequence was it whether his horse was known or not?
9098Or Germany in the person of Mentel, the nobleman, of Strasburg?
9098Or Guttenberg, the goldsmith, of Mayence?
9098Quid quaeris?
9098Shall we say at ten years of age?
9098The question arises,--Who was this wonderful man?
9098The question now arises when did Polentone write this?
9098The question then arises,--Was the author of the Annals cognizant of the existence of such people as"Gipsies"?
9098Then at what age could he have commenced the Annals?
9098Tiberius?
9098Ubi enim isti tot consules, tot dictatores?
9098V. 2)?
9098Was he ever a Praefectus Praetorio?
9098Was it Holland in the person of Coster of Haarlem?
9098Was it neither of these countries?
9098What are we then to suppose?
9098What authority have we that he did this?
9098What more do you want?
9098What then is the characteristic of Tiberius?
9098Where is the mistake?
9098Who took them from Italy, Greece, or other enlightened parts of the globe?
9098Why, also, should there have been any written declaration on the part of Salustius, that he had revised the copy?
9098[ Endnote 303] Qui enim potest liber transcribi desint Pergamenae?
9098in a slowly revolving cycle of 1,000 years and more?
9098or complete in themselves?
9098or eight?
9098or none of these men?
9098or six?
9098or the country of its origin?
9098or when he was in his cradle?
9098that Bracciolini had formed a very lofty, or a very indifferent estimate of the Papacy?
8638Ah, James Lordick?
8638Are you MUCH hurt, Hawser?
8638Are you REALLY John Lordick, the brother of James? 8638 Are you a Frenchman?"
8638But he surely does not know the estate is so unhealthy?
8638But, sir, will it be RIGHT for me to carry in an account so greatly exceeding in amount what is my due?
8638Can I enter that harbor?
8638Can it be that I have changed so much within a few short years? 8638 Deceived?
8638Did you ever do any thing but go to sea?
8638Do you belong to the sloop which is anchored in the bay, my lad?
8638Do you think so, Hawser?
8638Has he entirely recovered?
8638Has there been any naval engagement? 8638 Have you any spare rigging on board?"
8638Have you any strangers on board?
8638Have you not seen him? 8638 He should have been in Savannah before this?
8638How SHOULD I reply?
8638How does it happen that you are so poorly off for clothing?
8638How is Strictland?
8638If the estate is so unhealthy as you represent, why are YOU willing to remain here?
8638IndeedThen addressing me abruptly, he inquired,"Where do YOU belong?"
8638Indeed, sir,said I, with a faltering voice, as from his cheerful bearing I anticipated unfavorable tidings;"what is the character of the news?"
8638Is Canada captured by the Americans?
8638Is fever a common occurrence on this plantation, or is this sickness of the manager an extraordinary case?
8638Is he dead, or is he alive? 8638 My name?"
8638Nicholas Van Vert? 8638 Not know it?
8638So you are John Lordick? 8638 This the man?"
8638To Saba? 8638 Well, what of that?
8638What can it be?
8638What can that fellow want?
8638What does it mean? 8638 What does this bode?"
8638What has become of your cousin, Mark Haraden? 8638 What is all this?"
8638What is going on there, sir, that requires my presence?
8638What is the meaning of all this?
8638What is the name of the sloop?
8638What is the news, captain?
8638What is your important business?
8638What part am I to play in this mysterious drama? 8638 What''s in the wind now?"
8638What''s the matter now?
8638When do you expect him?
8638Where are these men''s protections?
8638Where are you bound, captain?
8638Where are you from last?
8638Where does the Lapwing belong?
8638Where is your roll of equipage?
8638Which gained the victory, sir?
8638Who said,''Ay, ay''?
8638Whom did your sister marry?
8638Why, sir, what can I do better? 8638 You scoundrel,"said he,"what do you mean by this conduct?
8638After a brief pause, my tormentor continued"Do you recollect me?"
8638After he had completed the examination of my person, he mildly inquired,"How much wages do you expect?"
8638Already in sight?
8638An American, is he?"
8638Any American frigates taken, hey?"
8638Are there not ships enough in port to take you home without singling out mine?"
8638Are you tired of reading, Hawser?"
8638Bohun not know it?
8638Captain Adams remarked, in a soliloquizing strain,"The Dead Man''s Chest?
8638Captain Jarvis: How fast does she go now, Mr. Popkins?
8638Captain Jarvis: How fast does the old ship go, Mr. Popkins?
8638Could he be inventing some paltry excuse for getting rid of what he might consider my importunities?
8638Could it be a cloud?
8638Do n''t you KNOW where he is?"
8638Do n''t you know how to reply to an officer in a proper manner?"
8638Do you hear, Mr. Popkins?
8638Do you, indeed?"
8638Had we not better put back?
8638He asked the question,"Are you all well on board?"
8638Hey?
8638How could he have been so grossly deceived?"
8638How is old Captain Wagner as hale and hearty as ever?"
8638How is your sister, Bertha, and all the rest of the folks?"
8638In about a quarter of an hour Stetson took another look down the scuttle, and bellowed out,"Allen, are you coming on deck or not?"
8638Is he as lively and good- humored as ever?"
8638Know''st thou it well?"
8638Might it not exist only in imagination?
8638Or had my imagination conjured up a spectre?
8638She came muttering to my bedside, and inquired what was the matter?
8638The captain was on the quarter- deck, and responded to the announcement by the inquiry of"Where away?"
8638The captain, after gravely staring me in the face a moment, as much as to say,"What do YOU know about newspapers or politics?"
8638The question now came up,"What shall I do to improve my condition and gain a livelihood?"
8638The rest of the men make no objections to putting a little money in their pockets, and why should YOU?
8638There is roguery somewhere?"
8638Thinks I to myself,"Can he be offended because a vagabond like myself has dared to differ with him on a question of fact?"
8638Thus we have the INO, and the GUESS; awkward names to repeat when asked,"What is the name of that ship?"
8638Was I laboring under the effects of a dream?
8638Was this an illusion?
8638Well, who cares?
8638What SHALL we do, Mr. Bowen?
8638What do you think of that?"
8638What does the consul mean by sending such a chap as YOU home in my ship?
8638What has become of her?"
8638What has he been doing away there in the Gulf Stream?
8638What is the meaning of those horrible- looking, unearthly eyes?
8638What is the name of your captain?"
8638What is your name?"
8638What makes you think so?"
8638What shall I say of our bread?
8638Where is Nicholas Ven Vert now?"
8638Where- away?
8638Which do YOU think gained the day?"
8638Who is the happy man?"
8638Who knows whose turn it may be next?
8638Why DON''T you put the helm hard up?
8638Why DON''T you speak?"
8638Why do n''t you put the helm hard up?"
8638Will you let other people do your work?
8638You belong to Saba?
8638and the"Catch me if you can,"and the"What d''ye think''tis like?"
8638exclaimed Uncle Jonas,"what has become of the Bank?"
8638replied the Swedish captain, screaming with passion,"how do you expect me to spare even one man, when my own vessel may strike adrift at any moment?
7228Ah, is it you, my friend? 7228 Ah, my friend, thou little knowest That a step I can not take; Thou art blind; what should we gain then Of two burdens one to make?"
7228And all alone?
7228And who shall warn Fitzgibbon? 7228 And why, my husband, why so pale?"
7228Ca n''t you do more, my friend?
7228Can I see Jack?
7228How soon will he be coming back? 7228 O sister,"cries the widowed dame,"What trouble brings you here?
7228Younger than I,Saith Fable,"are you?
7228''Tis Mrs. Secord, Captain Secord''s wife; What can her errand be?
7228''What news, Clibborn?
7228''Wherefore?''
7228A brush Is imminent, and one must win, you know Shall they?"
7228A man Could scarce get through, how then shall you?
7228Ah, dearest wife, thou dost not realize All my deep promise,"guard thee as myself?"
7228Alone?
7228And I have heard That once Achilles donned the woman''s garb: Then why not I the student''s cap and gown?
7228And dark despair; Or paints us blessed islands far from care or pain?
7228And is it then a good disguise?
7228And may I ask on what authority To trust such startling news?
7228And now to its farthest limit They will listen and hear our cry; How could the Colours be lost, I say, While one was left to die?
7228And pray where did you hide?
7228And shall Macaulay''s proud New Zealander Thus sit on me?
7228And shall not he, your Mayor of''Sixty- two, Monroe, stand side by side with them?
7228And shall this land, That breathes of poesy from every sod, Indignant throb beneath the heavy foot Of jeering renegade?
7228And then how got you here?
7228And then the cap?
7228And then you stayed to see the end of it?
7228And was there ever one?
7228And what about her, Sergeant?
7228And whence should approbation come Did not the gods incline?
7228And whispered it low in England, With the deeds of that awful day?
7228And you, chief, What will you do?
7228Are you better now?
7228As he sat up on his low mattrass he said,''What is the matter?''
7228At this hour?
7228But Mistress Truth, Why did you brave the light in such scant robe?
7228But bravery of women-- what is that To bravery of man?
7228But how essay it in the street and hall?
7228But how shall I explain to prying folks Thine absence?
7228But how, wife?
7228But thou!--O, where art thou, sweet early Rain, That with thy free libations fill''st our cup?
7228But where''s your milking pail?
7228But who comes hither?
7228But who''s this, now?
7228But why raise up these phantoms of dismay?
7228But you, oh; madam, how shall I thank you?
7228But-- but-- you''re agitated, dear; what''s wrong?
7228Can draw soft tears, or concentrate them hard To form a base whereon the martyr stands To take his leap to Heaven?
7228Can it be those mournful plaints Came from heart so lightly kept?
7228Can soldiers march to that?
7228Can they have spirit, honour, or do great deeds With such a tune as that to fill their ears?
7228Can you forgive me?
7228Can you wonder?
7228Chief, will you also rest?
7228Dear wife, what is''t?
7228Did He who blest That infant band that crowded round His knee, See, in a face like thine, a tender memory Of that dear home He left for our sakes?
7228Did I not so?
7228Did James consent to have you go?
7228Did not your fathers know them?
7228Did you not?
7228Doth Jamie ail?
7228Even of their quarrels Miss I now the noise, Angry or disdainful,( What are they but boys?)
7228Fine- looking fellow Nelson- was, I guess?
7228Footsteps, voices, faces, Where are ye to- night?
7228For why?
7228Freeze the stopt blood, or send it flowing on In pleasant waves?
7228Hath aught arisen To mar your fettered cheer?"
7228Have you news?
7228He is, but can you wonder?
7228Hear ye, how in their ancient urns The ashes of our heroes wake?
7228How can I let thee go?
7228How do?"
7228How got you leave to come?
7228How got you past their lines?
7228I thought you fast Within the lines: how got you leave to come?
7228I, who for thee would pour my blood with joy-- Would give my life for thy prosperity-- Most I stand by, and see thy foes prevail Without one thrust?
7228If I obtain The honours hung so tantalizingly Before us by the University, Will you defray the cost, as hitherto You''ve done, like my own kind papa?
7228If no word Reaches Fitzgibbon ere that murderous horde Be on him, how shall he save himself?
7228Is it too early for the invalid?
7228Is there a husband kept from wife and bairns?
7228Is there a lonely one with none to love?
7228Is there a piquet?
7228Is there no Eden that thou enviest not?
7228Is''t that he fears to yield, Lest from his laurelled brow the wreath should fall And light on ours?
7228It''s Roaring Bill, sir; shall I stop him?
7228Madam, how know you this?
7228Madam, how may I serve you to secure Your safety?
7228Madame?
7228May I thus trust?
7228My child?
7228Nay now, why starts she in her path, By yonder tangled brake?
7228Nelson turns, His stump a- goin''as his arm was used Afore he lost it, meets the officer, as says,"Sir, Thirty- nine is out, shall I repeat it?"
7228No clanging bell, with hasty din, Precedes the shout,"Is Bertie in?"
7228No purity thou would''st not smirch with gall?
7228No rest thou would''st not break with agony?
7228No wine?
7228None of my business, eh?
7228Nor bridge, nor stone, nor log, how shall I cross?
7228Now wherefore halts that sentry bold, And lays his piece in rest, As from the shadowy depths below One gains the beechen crest?
7228Now wherefore trembles still the string By lyric fingers crossed, To Laura Secord''s praise and fame, When forty years are lost?
7228Now-- Is''t now, in this thy dearest strait, I fail?
7228O blessed angel of the All- bounteous King, Where dost thou stay so long?
7228O know ye not proud Canada, With joyful heart, enfolds In fond embrace, the royal boy Whose line her fealty holds?
7228O whither shall I fly?
7228O, Death, could none but him suffice thy cold, insatiate eye?
7228O, sweet voice, When shall I hear you next?
7228Oh what is earth Without a home?
7228Oh, James, where have you been?
7228Oh, where are all the madcaps gone?
7228Oh, wherefore drops she on her knees, And spreads imploring hands?
7228Or"Where is Fred?"
7228Ours?
7228Presently he calls out,"What''s flying now?"
7228Rather a hard nut to crack, is n''t it?
7228Rememberest thou that tender wife, Dearest companion of my life?
7228Running up to him, I enquired,''Are you much hurt, sir?''
7228Said I one word To keep you back?
7228Scream, and betray my sex?
7228Should we not Show our respect for one has done so much For us?
7228Since when, I pray you, dates the tie?"
7228Some twenty miles away, A check upon proud Dearborn''s hopes, Was fixed upon for prey?
7228That by a small inflection wakes the world, And sends its squadroned armies on To victory or death; Or bids it, peaceful, rest, and grow, and build?
7228That reassures the frighted babe; or starts The calm philosopher, without a word?
7228That with your little handful you have caught Five hundred enemy?
7228That, in the song of little bird speaks glee; Or in a groan strikes mortal agony?
7228The Queen took it keenly, and asked the Duke of Wellington if there was no possible plea on which the man could be respited: had he_ no_ good quality?
7228Then is that all that thou art To me, thy husband?
7228Then what is sound?
7228There Cecil lies-- say where the grave More worthy of a Briton brave?"
7228To look at?
7228To- night?
7228Too soon?
7228Was that--?
7228We bear their vile trammels?
7228Well, mamma, how much would be gained by a separate building?
7228What better is it?
7228What component of being doth it touch That it can raise the soul to ecstasy, Or plunge it in the lowest depth of horror?
7228What does woman want here?''
7228What doth make The points of difference in the simple terms?"
7228What friend?
7228What have you got to feed these fellows, Flos?
7228What is it, what, this sound, this air, this breath The wind can blow away, Nor most intricate fetters can enchain?
7228What is this sound that, in Niagara''s roar Brings us to Sinai; Or in the infant''s prayer to Him,"Our Father?"
7228What is your strength?
7228What more would they know in England?
7228What must the night have been to him?
7228What news, man?
7228What now, Pete?
7228What saith_ the Book?_"THE GOOD, with all thy soul and mind and strength; Thy neighbour as thyself."
7228What will you do, dear?
7228What will you do?
7228What wonder that her heart should glow, Oblivious of the years?
7228What wonder that her kindling eye Should fade, suffused in tears?
7228Where are all those sacred vows,-- All those tears at parting wept?
7228Where is he now, Lieutenant?
7228Where is your pass?
7228Who goes there?
7228Who goes there?
7228Who said we had lost the Colours?
7228Who than ye better knew His bravery; his lofty heroism; His purity, and great unselfish heart?
7228Who''s that?
7228Who?
7228Why blanches that courageous brow?
7228Why do n''t you kill that lamb, Ma''am Secord?
7228Why do you stop me?
7228Why is the house so drear and lone?
7228Why, what is this, Fitzgibbon, that I hear?
7228Why, what''s the matter, Kate?
7228Will you proceed on the third article?
7228You are the Captain, sir?
7228You got my message: what''s to eat?
7228You surely did not come alone?
7228You?
7228Your wings, are they not such as these?
7228_ And shall that country let her memory die_?]
7228and are you crazed?
7228and must you risk your life, Your precious life?
7228how?
7228strike off now and lose the day?
7228they cry,"What can it be he died of?
7228thou take a task at which a man might shrink?
7228was immediately silenced by the appropriate observation of another at some distance from him,''Why, damn it, they have, have n''t they?''"
7228we become slaves To an alien foe?
7228what is that he says?
7228what woman want?
7228what woman want?"
41542''Death strikes down all, Both great and small--''Place of residence, ma''am?
41542''Most there, driver?
41542''Most there? 41542 ''The children,''asked I, in surprise,''are you going to send the children away?
41542''Who could have done that?'' 41542 Adversity?"
41542Ah, Anne, you there,said a voice at the door,"and busy as usual?"
41542Ah, Timmins, is that you? 41542 Ah, yes-- always an excuse; but do you know that I am the matron of this establishment?
41542Ah-- how d''ye do, Howe? 41542 And believed herself married to you, I suppose?"
41542And so you will not give me the poor satisfaction of punishing and exposing the scoundrel who has treated you so basely?
41542And wash the parlor looking- glass?
41542And what do you intend to do with him, child?
41542And you never heard from her, after this?
41542And you would not give him up to me?
41542And you, then, are the mother of the beautiful child, I wish to adopt?
41542And, Patty?
41542Anne, do you know I can not think of any thing but that beautiful child? 41542 Are you in your dotage, Timmins, to bring such a frivolous thing as a bouquet into a school- room?
41542Are you? 41542 Are you?
41542Are you_ sure_ it was just as well for Tibbs to die alone? 41542 Are_ their_ mothers dead, too, Timmins?"
41542Bless''em?
41542Bless''em?
41542But did you cry because your mother was dead?
41542But tell me,said Rose,"is there no bright side to this subject you can depict me?"
41542But, captain, who is this pretty stewardess you have on board? 41542 Buy some books, sir?"
41542By no means,said the doctor,"is it your child?"
41542Ca n''t they?
41542Ca n''t you ever get away from the place where they send you?
41542Call_ her_ pretty?
41542Can you tell me, madam, how far it is to the nearest inn?
41542Certain,said Miss Snecker;"well, what became of the girl?"
41542Chloe?
41542Could this be_ he_?
41542D''ye hear?
41542Dean?
41542Did I not tell you that old age was beautiful?
41542Did any one ever die whom you loved?
41542Did n''t I tell you dat Massa Charley be born wid a silver spoon in his mouf? 41542 Did n''t I tell you dat missis could n''t lose sight of him?
41542Did n''t I tell you to send away all beggars, Patty?
41542Did n''t my mamma hear what I said to her?
41542Did thee ever roll down that precipice?
41542Did thee ever try it, ma''am?
41542Did these bitter taunts crush me? 41542 Did you come to see John?"
41542Did you come to see me?
41542Did you cry?
41542Did you hear me, child?
41542Did you say any thing to your mamma about it?
41542Did you see that sweet child, George, in Dolly Smith''s pew to- day?
41542Did you tell her that it was all finished but the cap frill?
41542Did_ your_ mother die?
41542Dimmed for me is earthly beauty, Yet the spirit''s eye would fain Rest upon Thy lovely features-- Shall I seek, dear Lord, in vain? 41542 Do I?"
41542Do n''t you think so, ma''am?
41542Do n''t you think you are a l- i- t- t- le hard on Rose?
41542Do you hear that?
41542Do you know a prayer, Watkins?
41542Do you know this is the last day of June?
41542Do you mean to tell me that sickness has injured my mind?
41542Do you stay long in the city?
41542Do you suppose,said Gertrude,"that they whose houses are built on such a sandy foundation will quietly see them undermined?
41542Do you think Mrs. Markham is a good woman?
41542Do you think his father would object?
41542Do you think so?
41542Do_ you_ like her?
41542Fall fashions open to- day, eh?
41542For good gracious''sake, who''s that?
41542Fritz?
41542Gertrude, do you know that your nature would never have fully developed itself in prosperity? 41542 Gertrude,"said John, reprovingly,"do you remember what Solomon says--"''A_ wise_ woman have I not found?''"
41542Good heaven''s, Mr. Howe,shrieked his wife--"you do n''t mean to mention_ them_ to the corporation?"
41542Had n''t you better lie down, missis?
41542Had you not better let us stay where we are?
41542Hard on her? 41542 Has that old woman gone?"
41542Have n''t you got no folks?
41542Have you the''True guide for travelers to preserve their temper?''
41542He can not be moved, then?
41542He made believe marry you, then, did he?
41542Her name? 41542 How came that rocking- chair up here, I should like to know?"
41542How can I describe to you my gradual waking up from this delusion? 41542 How can I?
41542How did I know that?
41542How do you like that?
41542How early did your artistic talent develop itself?
41542How long before he will be able to be moved?
41542How long has this admirable spouse of mine been here?
41542How much did you put in, Aunt Dolly?
41542How on earth came that green trash on my desk?
41542How was this discovered?
41542How''s that? 41542 How?"
41542How_ did_ you come by green tea in the kitchen?
41542I am sorry,said Rose,"I was trying to learn how you made that crust-- how much butter is there there, Aunt Dolly?"
41542I can fancy it,said John, laughing;"did you answer him?"
41542I can tell them they wo n''t raise any funds out of me,said Dolly--"Do I ever go to the springs?
41542I dare say though, you do n''t like her at all, do you?
41542I did n''t think of that,replied Dolly,"perhaps she would-- Rose?"
41542I feel as if my gastronomic region had been scooped out, and rubbed dry with a crash- towel; how long before we stop, hey?
41542I know you would n''t run away from it, if it looked so sweet and loving at you,said Rose;"but why did it not come nearer to me?
41542I see the whole game; well, what did you say about it? 41542 I shall whip you till you get up and ask my pardon, d''ye hear?"
41542I wonder do the Irish never feed on any thing but rum and onions?
41542I wonder,continued Gertrude, after a pause,"could one ever_ get used_ to Niagara?
41542I''ll-- I''ll--"Wo n''t you ever say another word to me again about going to school, as long as you live?
41542I''ve just thought what I wanted to say, Patty: did you clean the silver, this morning?
41542If it were? 41542 Is Mr. Howe not yet in?"
41542Is it a mother who speaks to a mother such words as these? 41542 Is it?"
41542Is n''t he, though?
41542Is n''t there any rule?
41542Is not this little Rose?
41542Is she wealthy?
41542Is that you, John? 41542 Is the baby well enough?"
41542Is this baby''s mother a widow, Chloe?
41542Is this your final answer?
41542Is this your last trophy?
41542It is-- Mr.----, Mr.----Fin-- Tin--"Finels?
41542It opens and shuts its eyes, do n''t it dear, just like the waxen dolls? 41542 Jaw- bone broke, ma''am?"
41542Jaw- bone fractured? 41542 John,"mimicked Gertrude,"do you know the reason of Solomon''s failure?
41542John?
41542Just one,said John,"Why?"
41542Land''s sake, did n''t you have nothing to eat?
41542Looking pale, is she?
41542Lor'', ma''am, I ca n''t help it; I ca n''t see nothing, and you wo n''t speak to me, and how am I going to know that you are there?
41542Love that lunatic? 41542 Maria?
41542Maria? 41542 May God forgive her,"she said, at last;"ca n''t you say it, dear?
41542May I go to the evening school?
41542May I tell Tommy Fritz that?
41542Mother''s little Rose?
41542My_ dear_ lady,seizing her hands--"as if we-- I-- we-- could think so-- and of_ you_?
41542No folks? 41542 No one else heard?"
41542No, of course you can not; how should you?
41542No, of course, you would n''t, missis; but would n''t it be a fine thing for_ you_, Massa Charley?
41542Now I''d just like to know, miss, where you have been without leave?
41542Now, John,said his wife,"where did you pick that up?
41542Of course I put you there, but did I tell you to learn all the bad things you saw?
41542Of course,said Dolly;"letting alone the gown, which was bran new, what was the use of her learning a language that was dead and out of fashion?
41542Oh, Dolly,said Daffy, shrinking away from her cutting tone,"how can you?"
41542Oh, I was n''t complaining, at all,said Dolly;"they are eddicated people, it is n''t at all strange; how''s your folks?"
41542Oh, John, is not_ he_( pointing to Vincent) all of our papas? 41542 Oh, ma''am-- oh, ma''am-- she''s gone-- all alone, too-- oh, Mrs. Markham--""Who''s gone?
41542Oh, missis, is that you? 41542 Orphan Asylum, eh?"
41542Other children?
41542Our Father----"Got all through?
41542Patty?
41542Poor John, what is it?
41542Possible?
41542Propound that question, most innocent Joseph, at our next club- meeting, will you? 41542 Rose,"again repeated the doctor, without heeding her confession,"will you be my wife?"
41542Rose,said Dolly, about half an hour after,"do n''t your hair trouble you when you are sewing?"
41542Rose? 41542 Rose?"
41542Rose?
41542Sh-- sh-- didn''t I tell you to shut up? 41542 Shall I always live here?"
41542Shall I go take my sewing?
41542Shall I make a cup of tea for Rose, agin she wakes up?
41542Shall I set a plate for her too?
41542Shame-- shame-- was_ his_ manly heart powerless to bear what_ she_, whom he so loved, had borne in all her woman''s feebleness?
41542She ca n''t mean Rose?
41542She was dreadful mortified about her niece Rose; suppose you know all about that? 41542 Sick now, the very first day,"exclaimed Dolly, turning to Daffy,"now ai n''t that enough to provoke any body?
41542So you think the little boy will get along?
41542Sometimes I think--"What?
41542Stand up straighter, ca n''t you?
41542Stop that child, will you?
41542Suppose Mrs. John Meigs should come in after that new bonnet of hern? 41542 Tell Betty-- where''s my other slipper?
41542Thar-- will you hab some water, missis? 41542 That does not follow,"answered Grey;"do n''t you believe that there are virtuous women?"
41542That? 41542 That_ her_?"
41542The usual quantity; how do you suppose my pies would taste, if I made them helter- skelter?
41542There now, Mrs. Howe-- do you hear that? 41542 There-- didn''t I tell you so?"
41542They had some, did n''t they?
41542They liked you, then?
41542Think so?
41542To whom shall I be bound out?
41542Wall, then, what was the matter with you? 41542 Want my mournful services, ma''am?
41542Was she sensible when she died, Timmins?
41542Was this to be the end of all Rose''s sufferings? 41542 We are all great sinners, are we not?"
41542Well, Mary, what is wanted?
41542Well, how much did I put in? 41542 Well, the other night Harry and I-- you remember Harry?
41542Well, what did you see in the city, Dolly?
41542Well-- to change the subject, what have you to show Rose and me, here in Boston?
41542Were you ever on a committee of an Orphan Asylum?
41542Were you?
41542Whar''s his frocks and pinafores? 41542 What am I doing, hey?
41542What are the summer fashions? 41542 What are you crying for?"
41542What did you come to see me, for?
41542What did you do all day at your mother''s grave?
41542What did you do that for?
41542What do you mean? 41542 What do you suppose it is, for mercy''s sake?
41542What do you think of my turning authoress?
41542What if I do not want to be loved?
41542What is a committee?
41542What is all this?
41542What is her name? 41542 What is it?
41542What is it?
41542What is that?
41542What is that?
41542What is the matter with you?
41542What o''clock is it?
41542What on airth made you carry on so like sixty about my washing you? 41542 What on earth is this?"
41542What on earth is this?
41542What other things, I''d like to know? 41542 What shall I do?
41542What the deuce has that to do with us?
41542What time does the stage go to Exeter?
41542What will you bet on that?
41542What''s that?
41542What''s-- that?
41542What?
41542What_ did_ ail you, then? 41542 When did he die?
41542When will my time come?
41542When you went to bed, did you think you saw her face with a cloud all around it, and did you call''Mother?'' 41542 Where did she bring you from?"
41542Where did you come from, you beautiful creature?
41542Where did you get this, Rose? 41542 Where does his mother live, Chloe?"
41542Where was Charley born, Gertrude?
41542Who can be coming a visiting in such a rain as this? 41542 Who can she mean?"
41542Who is Aunt Dolly?
41542Who is he?
41542Who is?
41542Who, my darling?
41542Who_ is_ that pretty girl you have there in the shop?
41542Whose lovely baby is that?
41542Why are you crying?
41542Why did you do it, then?
41542Why did you not anticipate him, Gertrude? 41542 Why did you stand some of the pies up on bricks in the oven, and set others on the oven floor?"
41542Why did you strew flowers on my baby, dear?
41542Why not, I should like to know?
41542Why, in the name of common sense, could n''t he have called Saturday?
41542Why, those two pieces, do n''t you see? 41542 Why-- don''t you?"
41542Will you be a very, very good girl, and do every thing I tell you, always?
41542Will you have the goodness to show me to the pump in the yard?
41542Wo n''t I?
41542Wo n''t you come in, ma''am, and look at the child?
41542Yes-- but what house did you live in when she took you?
41542Yes-- who''s that? 41542 Yes; pretty name, was n''t it?
41542You do n''t believe me? 41542 You do n''t really believe she, nor Maria, as you call her, could help it, do you?"
41542You do? 41542 You forget how much we have had to do, do n''t you, Dolly?
41542You remember old Aunt Hepsy, John? 41542 You think so, do you?
41542You thought her an angel, and_ she_ thought that_ you_ thought the children under her care were well cared for, when they were not; is that it?
41542You would n''t be afraid of your own dear mamma, would you?
41542Your mistress is sick?
41542_ Mr._ Howe,said that gentleman''s wife, in a muffled voice from behind the handkerchief,"how_ can_ you?"
41542_ Rose!_Was it fancy?
41542_ You_ look out, Timmins?
41542Age of the corpse, ma''am?"
41542Ah!--why that suppressed cry of joy?
41542Ah, where''s May?
41542Ah, who shall say into what pits of selfish and unhallowed pleasure that look shall haunt the recipient?
41542Ah-- who glides so gently, so tirelessly up stairs and down, bearing burdens under which her feeble frame totters?
41542Amid its motley population should she find him whom she had come to seek?
41542And what child is that she has the care of?
41542And when I feel displeased with Mrs. Howe''s heartlessness, I say,_ money_ might have turned_ me_ aside too-- who knows?
41542And when death''s shadow falls, can they forget the night- watch nestling of that little velvet cheek?
41542And who, when she has done her best to please, bears the querulous fretfulness of disease and ill temper, with lamb- like patience?
41542And wo n''t Massa Charley make''em all step round, one of dese days, wid dem big black eyes of his?"
41542Anne, is that you?
41542Any thing new?
41542Are not our trunks all emptied into that cursed brook?
41542Are you hungry?
41542As your_ wife_ I must appear in society; how would you bear the whisper of malice?
41542Balch moved his chair nearer to Gerritt, and shutting his teeth very closely together, hissed through them,"The very d-- l.""Is that all?"
41542Bond,''and wants to know if she can see the young woman, and the sick baby; shall I show her up there?"
41542But I have not seen her for two or three days; is she sick?"
41542But how did you find it all out, Annie?"
41542But how happened it?"
41542But what wild dream was her brain weaving?
41542But when was she not a picture?
41542But why did you not speak of it before?"
41542Ca n''t I stay here, dear, with you, and the little doll, little Rose?
41542Can such chords be rudely snapped without a jarring discord?
41542Can they spare"the baby"even though other children cluster round the hearth?
41542Can you give me your arm down street?"
41542Certainly;--now do you suppose he does all that for nothing, Mrs. Howe?
41542Could its roar be one''s cradle lullaby and the spirit not plume itself for lofty flights?
41542Could the long- hoarded hope of years be relinquished without a struggle?
41542Could this be the first leaf turned over in Nature''s book to the infant''s eye, and_ not_ make it unshrinking as the eagle''s?
41542Daffy, do n''t it make you laugh to see what a fuss widowers make_ trying_ to grieve for their wives?
41542Daffy, is the Bible on the light stand?
41542Daffy-- Daffy, here-- where''s my scalloped petticoat and under- sleeves?
41542Did I want to come on this journey?
41542Did Miss Snow come here last night, after I went out, for her bonnet?"
41542Did n''t she go home in the full belief that she had up to that time been terribly underrated by her folks at home?
41542Did she think he could leave her to traverse the crowded streets of that great Sodom, with no defense but her helplessness?
41542Did she think it could die out though no encouraging breath of her''s fanned the flame?
41542Did she think that a rejected lover could not be a trustworthy, firm, and untiring friend?
41542Did she think that, like other men, he would mete out his attendance, only so far as it met with an equivalent?
41542Did she think, poor child, that his love could be chilled by aught but unworthiness?
41542Did she whose courage had parted the stormy waters of trouble, and who had come out triumphant, turn a deaf ear to that wail of despair?
41542Did you buy that little doll for me to play with?"
41542Did you ever love?
41542Did you ever see such a stupid thing?"
41542Did you see the effect it had on the silly old thing?
41542Did your husband leave you property?"
41542Dinner going on, Patty?
41542Do I ever get low- spirited?
41542Do n''t I hate journeying?
41542Do n''t my head feel as if Dodworth''s brass band were playing Yankee Doodle inside of it?
41542Do n''t you like me?"
41542Do n''t you think his resemblance to our Vincent very remarkable?"
41542Do n''t you think my boy will be well soon?"
41542Do n''t you think so, madam?"
41542Do not priests and parents every day legalize the prostitution of youth to toothless Mammon?
41542Do they trim bonnets with flowers or ribbons?
41542Do they wear heels on the shoes or tread spat down on the pavement?
41542Do you know Dolly?
41542Do you know Dolly?
41542Do you know that you must do exactly as I and the committee say?
41542Do you say those things a purpose, or do they come by accident, like?"
41542Do you suppose I can afford to find you in shoes at that rate?"
41542Do you suppose there is no man who has sense enough to love you for yourself alone?"
41542Do you suppose you will be forgiven for writing a_ good_ book?
41542Do you understand?"
41542Does he still keep up the show of piety?"
41542Fear found no place in her throbbing heart, and if it had, was there not an angel in her arms?
41542Flounces worn, I suppose?
41542For mercy''s sake, did n''t you have Rose to help you?
41542For my child''s sake should not I accept such a comfortable home?
41542Fritz?"
41542Get out of the way there, ca n''t ye?"
41542Going to the head of the stairs, she calls,"Daffy?"
41542Had cousin John no war to wage with self?
41542Had he not told her so?
41542Had n''t I better open the door and peep in?"
41542Had she been dreaming about Vincent''s death?
41542Has it any interest for you?"
41542Has your pa got over his pleurisy?
41542Have n''t I been obliged to go a whole day at a time with next to nothing on my stomach?
41542Have n''t I been poked in the ribs every fifteen minutes for the conductor to amuse himself by snipping off the ends of my railroad tickets?
41542Have you any other children?"
41542Have you seen the new danseuse, Felissitimi?
41542He could not have deserted her?
41542He drained it, poison and all, to the dregs-- why not?
41542He loved her?
41542He sneaks through life, with the consciousness that he has played the part of a scoundrel-- what could even you add to this?"
41542He writhed-- why not?
41542How am I to know who it is?
41542How can I bring such a misery on the heart to whose kindness I owe so much?"
41542How can I live without love?
41542How can I prove to you my gratitude for your kindness to me and mine?"
41542How can I thank you for it all?
41542How could he give her up?
41542How did you find us?"
41542How do you know it is the right thing to do with the child?"
41542How do you like this ribbon?
41542How do you like your new place, Alvah?"
41542How easy to''obey''when the heart can not yield enough to the loved one?
41542How many children has he, Daffy?"
41542How think of her in the great, busy, wicked city, to which she was going, unfriended and penniless?
41542How''s the wine, Grey?"
41542Howe?"
41542Howe?"
41542Howe?"
41542Howe?"
41542I do n''t look much like your_ gentle_ mother, as you call her, do I?"
41542I found it in the drawer, and_ may_ I have it?"
41542I get_ so_ tired,_ so_ tired-- dearie me-- dearie me-- where''s little Rose, Maria?"
41542I hope I shall have grace to forgive that woman, but I do n''t know, I do n''t know; who could have believed it?"
41542I ran down to speak to Mrs. Markham, and-- and--""She did n''t die alone?"
41542I suppose you did not content yourself with resigning?"
41542I wonder are they_ really_ all little worlds?
41542I wonder how_ long_ have they shone?
41542I wonder what ailed Mrs. Sharp?
41542I wonder what ever became of her?
41542I wonder what is our family coat- of- arms?
41542If Vincent''s mother knew not how to instill these into her own son, might she not wreck Charley on the same fatal rock?
41542If he likes country fare he shall have it-- why not, as well as your superfine Finels his olives, and sardines, and gimcracks?
41542If women are virtuous, why do they give the cold shoulder to steady moral fellows, to smile on a reckless dog like me?
41542Is Rose?
41542Is it bad not to have a papa, cousin John?"
41542Is she fond of flowers?"
41542Is the parlor all right, Mary?"
41542Is woman_ always_ the bitterest foe of her crushed sister?
41542Is_ their_ love the less when disease lays its withering finger on the roses of its cheek and lip?
41542It is very dull, being a widow; do n''t you think so, dear?
41542Looking thoughtfully on the ground a few moments, he said--"Was my papa good, cousin John?"
41542Mantillas worn, or shawls?
41542Maria, what makes you call your mother grandmother?
41542Maria, where''s Rose?
41542Markham!--what''s that groan?
41542Markham?"
41542Markham?"
41542Markham?"
41542Markham?"
41542Married her?"
41542May n''t I run and tell Tommy Fritz?"
41542May there not be something in the strong brave element on which he rides to quicken what is grand and noble in his nature?
41542Mind you do n''t make a mistake, now; had you not better write it down?
41542Must it always be so?
41542Now ai n''t you ashamed, you great baby, to be bawling here in the street, as if I was some terrible dragon making off with you?
41542Now that poor little Rose-- she clung to the belief that her lover had neither betrayed nor deserted her-- isn''t it odd now?
41542Often he had been sick and suffered for medicines not within my means to procure; was I not selfish in declining?
41542Oh, Watkins,_ could_ I help it?
41542Oh, was death to divide them then?
41542Oh, where was Vincent?
41542Old maids have their little thoughts; why not?
41542Opening the door, she said, coaxingly,"Why, Betty, are you in here?
41542Peace was lost, heaven was lost; what should hold me back?
41542Poor children!--for what was Rose but a child?
41542Rose has beauty-- has she?
41542Rose''s Vincent?
41542Shall I close the blinds for you?"
41542Shall I love my son the less that through days and nights of tearful anguish his smile, his love, was all of heaven I ever dared to look for?"
41542Shall I tell her to go away with it?"
41542Shall I, think you, love_ my_ son the less that_ your son_ deserted him?
41542Shall not He, who feedeth your never- consuming fires, yet make every crooked path straight, every rough place plain?
41542She could not, would not deceive Madam Vincent, and then would there not be a revulsion of feeling when the proud old lady knew the truth?
41542She might last along for ten years to come-- who knew?
41542She wondered if she could be worse off if she ran away, with the earth for her pillow, the skies for her shelter?
41542Should she, regardless of her strong maternal feelings, yield him up?
41542Stahle, from the other side of the room, looked coolly on, and, with a Satanic smile, said,''Why do n''t you pull again?''
41542Strong, is she?
41542Supposing he should die?
41542Tell me, ye who have made earth- idols only to see them pass away?
41542The evening star gemming the edge of a sunset cloud?
41542Then he described his life at that point,_ our_ life--(I wonder if he saw_ me_ there?)
41542Those sighs, those tears, went they not up to heaven as swift witnesses against him?"
41542To- day I knew was bliss-- the future, what was it?
41542Turning to give his ex- passengers a parting glance, he said:"Wonder if that girl_ is_ the child''s mother?
41542Understand?
41542Vincent fancied her-- did he?
41542Was I to become, through despair, the vile thing Stahle and his agents wished?"
41542Was he still"at his father''s dying bed?"
41542Was he, indeed, such a poor, selfish driveler that the happiness of her whom he loved was less dear to him than his own?
41542Was it indeed so?
41542Was it no joy to see that sweet eye brighten with hope, though kindled by another?
41542Was it nothing that Charley''s little heaving heart had found his own papa?
41542Was n''t it a joke?
41542Was the watchman''s midnight cry,"All''s well,"beneath the window, a prophecy?
41542Was there ever any thing so seducing?
41542Was there no way he could be of service to her?
41542Was your sister like you, Dolly?"
41542Well, how about Charley?
41542Well, what did Finels say of her?"
41542Well, where should I wash?
41542Whar''s your salts?"
41542What alliance could purity have with pollution?
41542What can that little scar be on her left temple?"
41542What do you think of that-- hey?"
41542What does she mean?"
41542What else is left me, when my heart wearies even of_ your_ kindness, wearies of poor Charley?
41542What if the law of nature should set aside all other law and bring in a verdict for Charley?
41542What is it,_ ma petite_?"
41542What is so lovely as a sleeping babe?
41542What is the mad love of youthful blood to the sun- set effulgence of their setting lives?
41542What is there in the touch of her own flesh and blood to blanch her lip and palsy her tongue?
41542What is there new for sleeves?
41542What is this modern clamor about''obedience''in the marriage relation?
41542What is your name, child?"
41542What kind of servants have you, dear?
41542What made you stay away such a long time, Maria?
41542What matters it by what longer or shorter road we travel, so that heaven be gained at last?"
41542What night shall be dark enough to hide it, what day bright enough to absorb its intensity?
41542What o''clock is it?"
41542What pen can do justice to the atmosphere of a stage, omnibus, or railroad car, of a rainy day?
41542What place of sepulture can compare with it?
41542What should you love her for, I''d like to know?"
41542What was in store for him?
41542What was to be done?
41542What was wealth and position compared to high moral principle and a pure life?
41542What were you saying, Chloe, about Charley?"
41542What will the doctor say?
41542What will you have, Charley?"
41542What''s that?
41542What''s this?"
41542What_ would_ editors do, I wonder, without these dreadful casualties?
41542Where are they going?''
41542Where could I have heard it?
41542Where is the feast at which there is no skeleton?
41542Where is your husband, dear?
41542Where was she?
41542Where''s my other under- sleeve?
41542Who but Rose?
41542Who can set bounds to the vanity of woman?
41542Who can this''big Fritz''be, John?
41542Who could help it?
41542Who shall say that hallelujahs shall not yet tremble on the lips where erst were curses?
41542Who was the father of her child?
41542Who would ever suspect_ me_ of falling in love?"
41542Whose child is it, Chloe?"
41542Whose work is that I''d like to know?
41542Why do n''t it grow bigger, Maria?
41542Why do n''t you move into the city?"
41542Why those fast- falling tears, and heart- beaming smiles?
41542Why those passionate kisses on the insensible canvas?
41542Why weary you with a repetition of its repulses-- of my humiliations, and struggles, and vigils?
41542Why, there''s that bowl full,"said Dolly,"have n''t you got eyes?"
41542Will you not accept_ for life_, my services on those terms?"
41542Wo n''t you please let me have it?
41542Would Vincent never come to claim her?
41542Would a life of purest rectitude_ never_ meet its reward?
41542Would he grow up to blush at his mother''s name?
41542Would he never return, as he had promised?
41542Would he take the pain from out her young heart?
41542Would his hand be raised in deadly fray to avenge the undeserved taunt which yet he knew not how to repel?
41542Would the cloud never roll away?
41542Would the sweet fount of her boy''s life be turned to bitterness?
41542Would the world''s scornful"Magdalena"be her earth- baptism?
41542Yes-- what are the refreshments?
41542Yet why should they feel thus?
41542You do n''t expect me to wear this gimcrack?"
41542_ Have n''t_ I got a papa, cousin John?"
41542_ Was_ Gertrude''s heart"tamed?"
41542always the first to throw a stone at her?
41542and Gertrude seated herself on the lounge beside him, and laid her cheek against his,"what is it, John?"
41542and all of''em, and every body?
41542and did the eyes look sad at you, but stay still where they were?
41542and little Rose?
41542and now-- what availed change of place, when, go where I might, the arrow was still quivering in my heart?
41542and people in them?
41542and that you must never answer me back, in that way?
41542and the hymn- book too?
41542and what has beauty ever brought its possessor, but a broken heart?
41542and when you went up toward the cloud and the face, did it all go away?"
41542and where could he have known Rose?"
41542and why did it all fade away when I put out my arms to clasp it?
41542and you a family- man, too; eh, captain?
41542any scars on your body, or any thing?"
41542asked Rose, despondingly;"how shall I know when I get it right?"
41542asked Rose,"are there more children here?
41542asked the child;"wo n''t I go to Heaven and be with my mother?"
41542but where?
41542claim her, and his boy?
41542did Dolly make you cry too?
41542do n''t you know?"
41542do you mean to resist me?"
41542does Dolly strike_ you_?
41542exclaimed Timmins;"have n''t you never heern about being bound out?"
41542exclaimed madame, with a pleased laugh;"do you know Anne I have about made up my mind to adopt him?
41542for I''m curious to know; why did n''t you want me to wash you?"
41542for how could Rose mention the great wrong she had suffered, and not wound the doting mother''s heart?
41542gasped the poor sick woman, recovering herself, and looking about for her child;"where''s May?"
41542going, John?"
41542have you quite decided not to part with him?"
41542how can I?"
41542how can it be right the innocent should thus suffer?"
41542if she ai n''t asleep,"said Timmins;"what if Tibbie_ should_ come back?
41542nine needles, sharps, if you please-- have you heard the news?"
41542no relations, like?"
41542or how could she yield up Charley to one who would ignore his mother?
41542or leave him there to grope, while he wooed the blessed sun- light for his own path?"
41542or whether it is worth while to make any change in my dress or not?"
41542plead for me,"said the doctor, as he raised the beautiful child in his arms;"who shall pilot your little bark safely?
41542repeated the doctor, looking disappointed,"Dean?
41542repeated the matron, again, in the same sneering tone;"well-- who was mother?"
41542said Dolly, turning to Daffy,"did you see what a bright color she had when she came in, and how her eyes sparkled?"
41542said Rose, coming in with her face all a- glow,"will you please tell me is this my mother''s thimble?
41542screamed Kip;"to whom?"
41542screamed Mrs. Howe, sticking her needle vigorously into Moses,"how came Finels to see Rose?"
41542she can not face death, who could gaze with stony eyes on misery worse than death?
41542she exclaimed as the door creaked slightly on its hinges;"where did you come from, you delicious little cherub?"
41542should he lead him out of this labarynth of doubt?
41542surely, John, love like this perishes not with its object-- dies not in this world?
41542the bent lily too heavy with dew to chime its silver bells to the night wind?
41542the closed rose- bud whose fragrant heart waits for the warm sun- ray to kiss open its loveliness?
41542the imploring look of that fading, upturned eye?
41542touch up yer hosses, ca n''t you?
41542visitors?
41542was there ever the like of that?"
41542what are you talking about, Timmons?"
41542what for?
41542what is that?
41542what is that?"
41542what new treason now?"
41542when could I have a better time to plead for my brother''s happiness, for yours, for my own?
41542when was ever a sailor''s heart callous to the touch of sorrow?
41542where is little Rose?"
41542who ever heard of such a folly?"
41542why do n''t you speak?
41542will thy sky_ ever_ be clear?
41542without Rose''s love?
41542wo n''t this pump do as well?"
41542you do n''t expect me to sleep in that room, do you?"
41542you do n''t mean to say you have been up_ here_ all this time, Rose?"
41542you have seen her, then?"
41542you wo n''t go away again, will you?--_you_ wo n''t strike me, will you?
15338''And he puts in the capital?'' 15338 ''And what''s there to be reticent about, ma''am?''
15338''And why,''said the uncle, with an amused smile,''why, Tommy, do you desire me to make a noise like a frog?''
15338''And you know your Bible?''
15338''Any of you men want to go to work?'' 15338 ''Are you guilty or not?''
15338''Besides,''my son? 15338 ''Could you perhaps tell me something that is in it?''"
15338''Do n''t want to risk it, eh?'' 15338 ''Do n''t you want to be on the winning side?''
15338''Do you put in much capital?'' 15338 ''Ere, you,"he said to a man on top,"do n''t you want Westminster Abbey?"
15338''Got to? 15338 ''How do you know ours will be the winning side?''
15338''I wonder,''she said, with an embarrassed laugh,''if these ultra- short skirts will ever go out?'' 15338 ''Is that so, uncle?''
15338''Power of initiative, my lord?'' 15338 ''So you attend Sunday- school regularly?''
15338''Uncle, give me that colt, will you?'' 15338 ''Well, my lad,''said the sergeant,''you know the Germans have been trying for more than a year and a half to win and have failed, do n''t you?"
15338''What do you want of the rag- bag?'' 15338 ''What kind of a place is it?''
15338''Why not?'' 15338 ''With what hand did you do it?''
15338''Wot''s this here feller charged with?'' 15338 A bookseller?
15338A fowl? 15338 A hunting license?"
15338A_ red_ one-- can''t you find it_ now_?
15338Age?
15338Ah, how many loads do you take in a day?
15338Ah, the Americans,said a Frenchman standing by,"Where have they not been?"
15338Ah,replied the good man with a grateful expression on his face,"and you have come back to repay me?"
15338Ai n''t de license all right? 15338 Ai n''t got no sense?
15338Ai n''t they fer sale?
15338Ai n''t what nice?
15338Ai n''t you''fraid when it thunders?
15338Am I as sick as all that?
15338Anwas she spanked, too, when she was bad?"
15338An''why should I get out of the way?
15338An''ye think he was mair clever than Rabbie Burns?
15338And I suppose you are both pretty highly valued, George, eh?
15338And about how long do you keep it up?
15338And are the divorce laws so very liberal in your section?
15338And can you tell us what George Washington was remarkable for?
15338And did her mother spank her?
15338And did n''t I do it?
15338And did they tell you their age?
15338And did you actually go to Rome?
15338And did you catch my hired man in motion?
15338And did you post it?
15338And do you not know that you can accomplish more with animals by speaking to them?
15338And do you set the alarm?
15338And how are you today?
15338And how does it work?
15338And how is that?
15338And how is your husband keeping?
15338And how long have you been in domestic service?
15338And is your husband at work?
15338And now does n''t he threaten to split your head with an ax?
15338And now, sir,turning to the other,"What have you to say?"
15338And should I go to heaven?
15338And the Egyptians?
15338And this expression,''The banquet- table groaned''--do you think that is proper?
15338And what did my little son learn about this morning?
15338And what do they boil locomotives for?
15338And what is a farmer?
15338And what is a man who does both?
15338And what under heaven do you expect from that?
15338And what''s that?
15338And when can you come?
15338And where are the Jews?
15338And where did you hide it?
15338And who are you?
15338And why should that make you so sad?
15338And would the bear have to go too?
15338And you did n''t answer it?
15338And you had a position as watchman once, did n''t you?
15338And you know your way to announce?
15338And you lost the cat all right?
15338And you worked a while as a caretaker, did n''t you?
15338And you would n''t begin a journey on Friday?
15338And you?
15338And young?
15338And your pals sitting at the next table-- would they also not shoot the Germans if they tried to invade this country?
15338And, the plural of child?
15338And,continued the woman anxiously,"do you make any inquiries as to the origin of the fire?"
15338Any damage done your way?
15338Any news, Brown?
15338Anything going on here tonight?
15338Are caterpillars good to eat?
15338Are green bananas full of starch?
15338Are n''t you afraid America will become isolated?
15338Are n''t you ever going home?
15338Are oysters good to eat in March?
15338Are there no short cuts, father?
15338Are they wild oats,queried the youth,"that you''ve got to sneak up on''em in the dark?"
15338Are ye sure it was lost, Sandy?
15338Are you a lawyer?
15338Are you aware,he remarked to the milkman,"that we require this milk for the hitherto recognized purposes?"
15338Are you going away?
15338Are you hurt?
15338Are you interested in a loose- leaf encyclopedia?
15338Are you mamma''s mother?
15338Are you of the opinion, James,asked a slim- looking man of his companion,"that Dr. Smith''s medicine does any good?"
15338Are you one of the heroes?
15338Are you sure of that?
15338Are you sure you can prove my client is crazy?
15338Are you sure your auditors understood all of your arguments?
15338Are you taking me by the hour or by the day?
15338Are you willing to swear that you know more than half of them?
15338Arrah, Biddy,said one,"did ye hear him last Sunday when he preached on''Hell''?"
15338Aw, why ca n''t I just powder it like you do yours?
15338Be you our preacher?
15338Been hunting today?
15338Beg pardon, but where is the sea?
15338Big job, was n''t it?
15338Bobby, do you know you''ve deliberately broken the eighth commandment by stealing James''s candy?
15338Boy, have you got a handkerchief?
15338Boys,she said,"do n''t you know that it is Sunday and you must n''t play ball in the front- yard?
15338But I thought I saw one in your kitchen?
15338But are you sure? 15338 But do n''t you hear the alarm in the morning, Rufus?"
15338But it is broken?
15338But surely you have heard of Puddin''head Wilson?
15338But what do I want with money?
15338But what in the world made you think that?
15338But where is the saucer?
15338But who will take me out,she sighed,"And who will glove my hands, And who will kiss my ruby lips When you are in foreign lands?"
15338But why should I work?
15338But why the hurry?
15338But why would you not shoot the Germans?
15338But you got it?
15338But your fiancà © has such a small salary, how are you going to live?
15338But, Maria,demanded Uncle Josh,"how can you blame them two Rhode Island Reds for what happened twenty- five years ago?"
15338But, Mollie,she demanded,"do n''t you trust him?"
15338But, Sandy, man,objected the host,"ye''re not going yet, with the evenin''just started?"
15338But, doctor, do n''t you think I''m a bit crazy?
15338But, father, what am I to do without a riding habit?
15338But, laird--"Will ye listen to me, Donald? 15338 But,"interrupted the famous director,"can you_ act_?"
15338By indulging in foolish pleasures, I suppose?
15338By the way, did you mail the letters I gave you yesterday?
15338Ca n''t see anything, hey?
15338Ca n''t you cash your check in the mornin''?
15338Ca n''t you do without them?
15338Ca n''t you make it any sooner?
15338Ca n''t you pull a tooth without a rehearsal?
15338Can you lend me a postage- stamp?
15338Can you make anything out of the news from Europe?
15338Can you remember the title?
15338Can you sign your name?
15338Can you support a family?
15338Can you tell me what a smile is?
15338Can your little baby brother talk yet?
15338Certainly,said the real- estate dealer calmly,"and you have n''t, have you?"
15338Civics? 15338 Come, find my book-- why make a row?"
15338Corn bread? 15338 Could you not have settled your differences by a peaceful discussion of the matter, calling in the assistance of unprejudiced opinion, if need be?"
15338Dark breakfast? 15338 Dat thing?
15338Did Brummell wear a satin vest?
15338Did any patient order a postage stamp?
15338Did he leave any address?
15338Did he tell you to go prowling round all night?
15338Did n''t anybody criticise you for filming an automobile in ancient Babylon?
15338Did n''t that fetch him?
15338Did nature make you, papa?
15338Did they feed you well?
15338Did what?
15338Did you ever hear about that home brew blowing up?
15338Did you ever hear the story of the deacon''s daughter? 15338 Did you go to the fight last night?"
15338Did you hear about the defacement of Mr. Skinner''s tombstone?
15338Did you hear me come downstairs this time, mamma?
15338Did you imagine that was within the right of a tenant?
15338Did you laugh him to scorn?''
15338Did you not strike it repeatedly with a club?
15338Did you read it?
15338Did you scream?
15338Did you see the girls next door,she asked--"The Hill twins?"
15338Did you try the simple plan of counting sheep for your insomnia?
15338Died at second?
15338Dinah, did you wash the fish before you baked it?
15338Do Englishmen understand American slang?
15338Do I get all this for my dollar?
15338Do der minister lif in dis house?
15338Do n''t you enjoy your meals?
15338Do n''t you ever feel sick going up and down in this elevator all day?
15338Do n''t you ever say anything when you have nothing to say?
15338Do n''t you find it hard these times to meet expenses?
15338Do n''t you know I''m a''painless dentist''?
15338Do n''t you know that you should always hand me notes and cards on a salver?
15338Do n''t you know, dear,said the mother,"that it is very wicked to behave so?
15338Do n''t you object to all this talk about the high cost of everything?
15338Do n''t you remember that Macbeth said to him,''Thou canst not say,I did it"''?"
15338Do n''t you see my signature there on the register?
15338Do n''t you think it''s great?
15338Do n''t you think our friend Crossum might loom up as a dark horse?
15338Do n''t you wind it up?
15338Do you act toward your wife as you did before you married her?
15338Do you believe honesty is the best policy?
15338Do you consider yourself financially able to do so?
15338Do you drive it yourself?
15338Do you find public office an easy berth?
15338Do you find that prohibition has deprest Crimson Gulch?
15338Do you imagine I could be so hard- hearted as to deprive you poor fellows of your employment?
15338Do you keep any servants?
15338Do you know what it is to go before an audience?
15338Do you know who''s talking in there now?
15338Do you know,asked the guide,"that it took millions and millions of years for this great abyss to be carved out?"
15338Do you know,remarked the girl,"you remind me strongly of Banquo''s Ghost?"
15338Do you like codfish?
15338Do you like it?
15338Do you like that?
15338Do you mean that little weedy, undersized creature?
15338Do you mean to say you do n''t know?
15338Do you mean to tell me that is a finished painting?
15338Do you mean to tell this court,he demanded,"that you can determine the make of a car by studying its track?
15338Do you really mean to call me a liar?
15338Do you say''two- spot,''or''the deuce''?
15338Do you think that I am going to let any foreigner lick me?
15338Do you think the motor will entirely supersede the horse?
15338Do you understand what you are to swear to?
15338Do you want a narrow man''s comb?
15338Do you want a steak for a dollar or a dollar and a half?
15338Do you want a ticket one way or one that will take you there and back?
15338Do you want to sell a mule?
15338Do you wish me to vote for the same candidate that you do?
15338Do you wish to wear a surplice?
15338Do you wonder why?
15338Doan yo''''membeh whut de good book sez''bout turnin''de odder cheek?
15338Doctor''s orders?
15338Doctor,she gasped,"you''re a good fellow, are n''t you?
15338Doctor,she inquired of a country physician,"can you tell me how it is that some folks be born dumb?"
15338Does nobody know?
15338Does what you see here today please you?
15338Does your family have any trouble with servants?
15338Does your husband ever lie to you?
15338Does your wife neglect her home in making speeches?
15338Done? 15338 Eh, what do you say?"
15338Eh, what?
15338Eh?
15338Enjoy my meals?
15338Er-- aw-- what was the denomination of the bill you loaned me?
15338Er-- what were you-- er-- talking about?
15338Exactly how far is it between the two towns?
15338Excuse me, madam, would you mind walking the other way and not passing the horse?
15338Father, is the zebra a black animal with white stripes or a white animal with black stripes?
15338Father, what is a convalescent?
15338Father,asked Prince Edward, placing his finger on the Colonel''s picture,"Mr. Roosevelt is a very clever man, is n''t he?"
15338Father,said he, thoughtfully,"what part of speech is woman?"
15338Father,she said at the close of his lecture,"when you see a cow, ai n''t you''fraid?"
15338Fine attitude, eh?
15338From your husband? 15338 Give up my nice, pleasant office and stay home?"
15338Going fishing?
15338Had any experience acting without audiences?
15338Haf you Der Hohenzollernspiel?
15338Happy? 15338 Hard?
15338Has Bobbie been eating between meals?
15338Has Jobkins any money?
15338Has Owens ever paid back that$ 10 you loaned him a year ago?
15338Has it?
15338Has n''t he choked you into insensibility?
15338Has n''t he dragged you the length of the room by your hair?
15338Has the line been busy?
15338Has this bill been endorsed by the Prohibition party?
15338Has your publicity man written the usual biographical notices and arranged for a series of dinners in my honor?
15338Have they found it out yet?
15338Have you a book called''Shapes of Fear''?
15338Have you a life of Sairy Gamp?
15338Have you a visiting card?
15338Have you any alarm- clocks?
15338Have you any cooks on hand?
15338Have you any flesh- colored stockings in stock?
15338Have you any references?
15338Have you been touching the barometer, Jane?
15338Have you consulted your doctor, Rufus?
15338Have you ever had any experience in handling high- class ware?
15338Have you ever had appendicitis?
15338Have you ever taken a tail- spin in an airplane?
15338Have you fed the pigs, Biddy?
15338Have you found one?
15338Have you heard my last joke?
15338Have you looked by your pockets?
15338Have you lost half a crown?
15338Have you never noticed the lady on the dollar?
15338Have you poured water on her head?
15338Have you seen the announcement of my death in the paper?
15338Have you the rimes of Edward Lear?
15338Have you?
15338Have your great minds selected a title for my forthcoming work?
15338Have your salesmen,he asked,"prepared for their semi- annual trip among the down- trodden booksellers?"
15338Having any success with your garden?
15338Hear the boss has had a fever? 15338 Here, boy,"said the man to the boy who was helping him drive a bunch of cattle,"hold this bull a minute, will you?"
15338Hollerin''for who?
15338Hoo dae ye mak''that oot?
15338Hoo is''t, Geordie,asked a customer,"ye''ve altered the smaal clock and not the gran''faither''s clock?"
15338How are you getting on at your new place?
15338How can you tell when a woman is only shopping?
15338How come, I''se out?
15338How come, niggah?
15338How could I?
15338How could you do that when you had no letters?
15338How could you say those are fine biscuits?
15338How d''you make that out an epigram?
15338How did Cranbury ever manage to get so deeply in debt as he is?
15338How did that private ever get in here?
15338How did you earn your dollar?
15338How do the Joneses seem to like their little two- room kitchenette apartment?
15338How do you get down?
15338How do you know that Blinks has had a raise in salary?
15338How do you know that I have been swimmin''?
15338How do you know?
15338How do you know?
15338How do you know?
15338How do you like my pound cake, dearie?
15338How do you manage to remember all these things, Rose?
15338How do you manage to sell so many fireless cookers?
15338How do you mean a letter from your wife? 15338 How do you pronounce''pneumonia''?"
15338How do you sell your music?
15338How do you spell Schenectady?
15338How do you spell''anemic,''please?
15338How does it work?
15338How does she get along with her family?
15338How does your boy Josh like his job in the city?
15338How far have you studied, Johnny?
15338How fine?
15338How is he?
15338How is it, Jimmy, that you alone out of my entire staff seem to have a pocketknife with you?
15338How is it?
15338How is that?
15338How is the missus?
15338How is this, William?
15338How is your little brother, Johnny?
15338How long do you want them?
15338How many fish yer got, mister?
15338How many head o''live stock you got on the place?
15338How many miles behind?
15338How many revolutions does the earth make in a day? 15338 How much did Daniel Lambert weigh?"
15338How much do I owe you?
15338How much do you want?
15338How much for vun?
15338How much is it?
15338How much is the deficit that you expect my subscription to meet?
15338How much life insurance do you think a man ought to carry?
15338How much shall we make out of it?
15338How much vas dose collars?
15338How much will it be?
15338How much?
15338How muchee Melican monee?
15338How mush do I owe you?
15338How now am I to do it?
15338How now?
15338How old, I pray, was Sister Ann?
15338How so?
15338How so?
15338How was it, then, Pat, that I saw you pass the factory on your bicycle during the morning?
15338How was that?
15338How was the trip over?
15338How will you have your roast beef?
15338How''d that city hired man of yours pan out?
15338How''s business?
15338How''s business?
15338How''s that?
15338How''s this, waiter? 15338 How?"
15338How?
15338How_ do_ you use this catalog?
15338Huh?
15338I ask if you can write your name?
15338I beg pardon?
15338I guess you do n''t remember me?
15338I hear you are going to marry Archie Blueblood?
15338I say, Hodge, why do you always put''dictated''on your letters? 15338 I sent the first stanza to the editor of the Correspondence Column with the inquiry,''Can anyone give me the rest of this poem?''
15338I suppose you ai n''t the chap that pulled the cord?
15338I suppose you do not know where Boston is?
15338I suppose you get home once in a while?
15338I sure have,admitted the Celt,"and did n''t you see me running home to get the money to pay for it?"
15338I understand,said the clerk,"You mean one of our porous plasters?"
15338I vas standing on the street corner the other day and a cop came along and said to me,''Holy Moses, are you here again?''
15338I wonder how that idea originated?
15338I''m thinking of getting married, pa. What''s it like?
15338I--"Did n''t I tell you to get a report on any and every man asking for credit?
15338I? 15338 If a man brings his car to me to be repaired, and it costs me sixty cents, and I charge him sixteen dollars, what per cent profit would I be making?"
15338If the lamb had been good and sensible,said the little boy, gravely,"we should have had him to eat, would n''t we?"
15338Ikey,said the teacher,"can you give me a definition for''a bargain''?"
15338In January?
15338In Washington, Lieutenant de Tessan was approached by a pretty American girl, who said:''And did you kill a German soldier?''
15338In a bad way?
15338In recognition of his heroic service, I suppose?
15338Indeed,said the lady, quick as a flash,"and pray what are you doing there?"
15338Is Judge David Poggenburg stopping here?
15338Is Mr. Smith in the audience?
15338Is dem you- all''s chickens?
15338Is dis whar de redemtion bo''d is at?
15338Is he after me or my vote?
15338Is he in the habit of beating you? 15338 Is hero- ing a criminal career?"
15338Is it an accident? 15338 Is it the motion going down?"
15338Is it the stopping that does it?
15338Is it true?
15338Is my son getting well grounded in the classics?
15338Is n''t my society good enough for them?
15338Is n''t she? 15338 Is that all?
15338Is that all?
15338Is that the Dickel Liquor Company?
15338Is that where we got our green cook?
15338Is the barrel full, my lad?
15338Is the show this evening fit for church women to see?
15338Is the world safe for democracy now, papa?
15338Is there any one there?
15338Is there anything you do n''t understand?
15338Is this the hosiery department?
15338Is this your essay? 15338 Is this your little boy, Aunt Liza?"
15338Is your husband a good provider, Dinah?
15338Is your husband in?
15338Is your wife cheerful about it?
15338Is your wife''s mother enjoying her trip to the mountains?
15338It vos bretty big vactory?
15338John, are you happy there?
15338John,she remarked,"do you know that next Sunday will be the twenty- fifth anniversary of our wedding?"
15338Judge, Your Honor,cried the prisoner at the bar,"have I got to be tried by a lady jury?"
15338La, Miss Daviess,he replied,"don''you- all know colored folks well''nough to know dat dey don''need no''casion foh a p''rade?"
15338Large on the top, sir, and small at the bottom?
15338Law, ma''am, what''s de use ob washin''er fish what''s lived all his life in de water?
15338Liberal? 15338 Little boy- eh?
15338Little girl, why are n''t you provided with an umbrella?
15338Live stock?
15338Ma, do cows and bees go to heaven?
15338Ma, is Mr. Jones an awfully old man?
15338Ma, what does the''home- stretch''mean?
15338Madam,said the professor,"can we get corn bread here?
15338Maggie, dear,he said,"had n''t you better take some fiction with you to while away the time?"
15338Mamma, if a bear should swallow me, I should die, should n''t I?
15338Mamma, what does it mean when you''re wined and dined?
15338Mamma,she asked,"what''s to keep them from crawling up his other arm?"
15338Mamma,she sobbed,"did Gran''ma spank you when you was little?"
15338Married?
15338Marry him?
15338Mary,he said to the Irish waitress at the hotel where he was stopping,"you''ve been in this country how long?"
15338May I ask whar yo''live, sah?
15338May I take this book home please, or is n''t it a_ running_ book? 15338 Morris,"he said,"your oldest daughter was married about five years ago, was n''t she?
15338Mother,asked Tommy,"do fairy tales always begin with''Once upon a time''?"
15338Mother,he asked,"will Charlie Chaplin go to heaven?"
15338Mother,said he, finally,"what does D-- d stand for?"
15338Mourning?
15338Mr. Brown, are you married?
15338Mr. Brown,he began,"what is a popinjay?"
15338Mr. Toppan, what is law?
15338Mrs. Johnson, you know Mrs. Wilson, do you not?
15338My boy, how came you by those?
15338My boy,said the minister, when they were closeted together,"who is that elderly gentleman you attend church with?"
15338My man,he said,"What is the matter?"
15338Need more exercise?
15338Never boast? 15338 No way for me to git in it, then?"
15338No, there is nothing I want today,said the customer,"But will you just examine my line of goods?"
15338No, what was it?
15338No,said Blathers,"I ca n''t do that; but suppose you give me five hundred dollars and keep the car, eh?
15338No,said his father;"what makes you ask a question like that while we are eating?"
15338Not bad, is it?
15338Nothin'', eh?
15338Now can any of you give me the name of a town in France?
15338Now then, Tommy,he exclaimed,"what are you doing?"
15338Now will this train reach its destination on time?
15338Now, Britzmann, what do you make in the factory?
15338Now, Britzmann,said the lawyer for the plaintiff,"what do you do?"
15338Now, Harold,said the teacher,"if there were eleven sheep in a field and six jumped the fence how many would there be left?"
15338Now, Mick,asked the plater,"what size is the plate?"
15338Now, Tommy,she pursued,"if your father were busy all day and said he would have to go back to the office at night, what would he be doing?"
15338Now, tell me,she said, at the close of the lesson,"who will get the biggest crown?"
15338Now,continued the teacher when Jimmy had finished writing,"can you find a better form for that sentence?"
15338Of course he''d say that; but what did you do?
15338Of course you have your little theory about the cause of the high cost of living?
15338Of what were you accused?
15338Oh, is n''t he? 15338 Oh, it is, is it?"
15338Oh, say, who was here to see you last night?
15338Oh, she broke it?
15338Oh, we all must have-- but have we?
15338Oh, were you?
15338Oh, what''s the matter, ma''am?
15338Oh,said she, turning a wrathful tearful face to her mother,"Why do n''t you obey your mother?"
15338Oh-- who won?
15338Or are you just going in?
15338Ou est, m''sie, la grand Larousse?
15338P. S.--Do you furnish clothes for your vampires? 15338 PRACTICAL"BUSINESS MAN( sneeringly)--"You''re a holier- than- thou guy, eh?"
15338Pa, a man''s wife is his better half, is n''t she?
15338Pa, what are ancestors?
15338Pa, what is a retainer?
15338Pa, what''s an actor?
15338Pa, what''s phonetic spelling?
15338Pa,inquired a seven- year- old seeker after the truth,"is it true that school- teachers get paid?"
15338Papa, you there?
15338Papa,said Evelyn, solemnly,"ai n''t you''fraid of nothing in the world but mama?"
15338Pardon me,said he to Jones,"but what would you say if I sat on your hat?"
15338Parson, you are n''t by any chance a Baptist, are you?
15338Pat, what''s that piece of blank paper you have in your hand?
15338Paw, what is an advertisement?
15338Paw, what''s the longest period of time?
15338Pay yo for what, boss?
15338Phwat''s this fince for?
15338Please send me,he shouted,"a bicycle, a tool chest, a--""What are you praying so loud for?"
15338Please, Jedge,interrupted Mrs. Rastus from the rear of the court room,"will yo''Honah jes''kinder split dat sentence?
15338Please, ma''am,Edgar piped out,"do you want us to draw a hen or a rooster?"
15338Please, which is right? 15338 Pop, what do we mean by a good listener?"
15338Pop, what is a promoter?
15338Postman?
15338Pretty? 15338 Rastus, how is it you have given up going to church?"
15338Ready to give him an argument, eh?
15338Rufus, are n''t you feeling well?
15338Sah?
15338Samantha, what''s thet chune the orchestry''s a- playin''now?
15338Say, Sam, why do you- all carry that parrot around with you on the wagon?
15338Say, dad, what keeps us from falling off the earth when we are upside down?
15338Say, mama, was baby sent down from heaven?
15338Say, mister, where''s the telephone?
15338See here, what''s wrong with you anyway?
15338See those people?
15338Shall I call you''doctor''or''professor''?
15338Shall I show him in?.
15338Shall it be said we are clothed in male armor?
15338Shall you need it a long time?
15338She called Sammy up to the desk and said,''Sammy, do n''t you know that was very anti- social?''
15338Shot anything?
15338Shure, he does; vy not?
15338Sick, eh?
15338Sir,screeched the wild- haired man,"are you opposed to free speech?"
15338Six?
15338Smith, what do you intend to do when you are released from the service?
15338So that is O''Ryan, is it?
15338So you got your poem printed?
15338So you kicked your landlord downstairs?
15338So you want to marry Alice, do you?
15338So you want to marry my daughter, eh?
15338So you''re a moonshiner?
15338So?
15338Some un sick at yo''house, Mis''Carter?
15338Speculating?
15338Still looking for an honest man?
15338Stranger in the town, sir?
15338Suppose success do n''t come at first, What are you goin''to do? 15338 Suppose you jack it up and run a new car under it?"
15338Suppose,said the dealer,"you accidentally broke a very valuable porcelain vase, what would you do?"
15338Suspicious actions?
15338Sworn off?
15338T- t- t- tough or t- t- tender?
15338Tell me,then said the child,"how many children have you got?"
15338Ten minutes?
15338Thank you, missy,replied the colored woman, smiling broadly,"but which gen''man''s lap was you sittin''on?"
15338Thankful? 15338 That so?"
15338That so?
15338That so?
15338That? 15338 The Argonne?"
15338The conductor, who was departing, looked back and snarled:''What''ll you do?
15338The flu?
15338The interrogation''Where did you get it?'' 15338 The motion going up?"
15338The right of way is ours, is n''t it?
15338The ruin, my lord?
15338Them was nice folk you waited on, Mamie, ai n''t they?
15338Then if a man marries twice there is n''t anything left of him, is there?
15338Then the small favor I am about to ask you will no doubt be granted?
15338Then what do you sell them for?
15338Then what do you want me to write about?
15338Then what is it?
15338Then where is the general passenger agent?
15338Then why did n''t you ask him to go home?
15338Then why did you not bring some of them with you?
15338Then why have n''t you paid up?
15338Then why were n''t you drowned?
15338Then you lost?
15338Then you understand it thoroughly?
15338Then, why do n''t you stop butting in?
15338Then,he retorted promptly,"may I not claim my reward as an astronomer?"
15338Then,said Beryl, looking at him and then at her reflection in the mirror,"do n''t you think nature is turning out better work than she used to?"
15338Then,said the salesman meekly,"will you let me use a part of your counter to look at them myself, as I have not had the opportunity for some time?"
15338There was a dead silence for a few moments, when one of the loafers spoke up and queried,''What doing, and what do yer pay?'' 15338 These''ere, guv''nor?"
15338Thet so, Hiram? 15338 Think so?"
15338This car cost me thirty- five hundred dollars, Blathers, but I''ll let you have it for two thousand, eh? 15338 To those high food prices?"
15338To what do you attribute your long life, Uncle Mose?
15338To which party do you refer?
15338Tommy,said the Sunday- school teacher, who had been giving a lesson on the baptismal covenant,"can you tell me the two things necessary to baptism?"
15338Twenty or thirty bushels?
15338Twenty or thirty dozens?
15338Two dozen?
15338Vell, vy do n''t you look in dot?
15338Very good,said the polite clerk,"and how long did you wish to take it for?"
15338WILLIE,asked a New York teacher of one of her pupils,"how many make a million?"
15338Wa- al, say,inquired the farmer in surprise,"what time air I goin''ter git ter see the town?"
15338Wal, you''re goin''to be, ai n''t ye?
15338Want any''elp, chum?
15338Was he, indeed? 15338 Was it you wot did dat trick?
15338Was papa the first man who ever proposed to you, mama?
15338Was that God?
15338Watcha doin''wi''thet thar thermometer, boy?
15338Water?
15338Well, George,asked the man of law, when the waiter was shown in,"what can I do for you?
15338Well, George,said the president of the company to old George,"how goes it?"
15338Well, Jimmy,said the patient, when the boy came to report,"what did they say?"
15338Well, John,asked the boss,"which did you find the stickiest?"
15338Well, John,asked the teacher,"what is it?"
15338Well, John,she said finally,"tell me_ why_ you want your Ford car buried with you?"
15338Well, Maria,said Jiggles after the Town Election,"for whom did you vote this morning?"
15338Well, Rena?
15338Well, Sam, what crime did you commit to be put in those overalls and set under guard?
15338Well, about how hard?
15338Well, auntie, have you got your photographs yet?
15338Well, boys, how do you like it?
15338Well, did he run fast?
15338Well, do you think she''d like you to have two pieces here?
15338Well, have you seen any without a little boy?
15338Well, how did folks stay on before the law was passed?
15338Well, how do you pronounce it?
15338Well, my little man, did you want to see me?
15338Well, now,said Ian Hay,"is n''t that provoking?
15338Well, since you do n''t pay rent, why not get something better?
15338Well, then, why do n''t they trade back?
15338Well, well,replied the man, rubbing his hands,"if it had n''t been for an apple where would the clothing business be today?"
15338Well, what about the hundred bones?
15338Well, what did she say?
15338Well, what do you want?
15338Well, what does he do now?
15338Well, what have you done, anyway?
15338Well, what is a middleman, Pop?
15338Well, what is your sentence, Tommy?
15338Well, where you been?
15338Well, where''s the general superintendent?
15338Well, who started this blamed thing anyhow?
15338Well, why not?
15338Well, why should a dozen or so be trying for it? 15338 Well, will you buy a carload?"
15338Well,commented the Fool,"if this is true, why do n''t we learn to expect it?"
15338Well,he asked,"how do you get on with the ladies?"
15338Well,mused six- year- old Harry, as he was being buttoned into a clean white suit,"this has been an exciting week, has n''t it, mother?
15338Well,queried the landlady in a peevish tone,"have you anything to say against the coffee?"
15338Well,replied the clothing- dealer,"I guaranteed it to wear like iron, did n''t I?"
15338Well,responded Senator Sorghum with deliberation,"what is a majority?
15338Well,said the manager after a moment''s thought,"suppose we call it$ 5,000 a week?"
15338Well,said the storekeeper,"why do n''t you exchange your little sister for a boy?"
15338Well,said the"Tommy"who was escorting him,"what about me?
15338Well?
15338Well?
15338Well?
15338Well?
15338Went on a furlong? 15338 Were you happy when you started for France?"
15338Were you very sick with the''flu,''Rastus?
15338Were you-- er-- the proprietor?
15338Wha''s you will- power?
15338Whaddy ya want-- pink, yellow, or black?
15338Whar yo''all ben scrappin''in dis yar war, boss?
15338What about it?
15338What about?
15338What are all those flowers, straw hats and palm- leaf fans scattered about for?
15338What are the boys doing now?
15338What are the directions?
15338What are the luxuries of life?
15338What are their names, Lindy?
15338What are those posts sticking out all the way up?
15338What are you cutting out of the paper?
15338What are you doin''of, James?
15338What are you doing there, Robert?
15338What are you doing, my little men?
15338What are you going to call it?
15338What are you going to do next?
15338What are you going to do with it?
15338What are you going to make of your son Charley?
15338What are you hunting, bub?
15338What are you looking for now, then?
15338What are you making such a noise for?
15338What are you raising?
15338What are you saying?
15338What are you?
15338What are your reasons for wanting a divorce, madam?
15338What brought you here, my man?
15338What can he do?
15338What coal is it? 15338 What code is that?"
15338What color is your body?
15338What d''ye mean by live stock? 15338 What d''yo''-all want?"
15338What dictionary is the best?
15338What did he say?
15338What did he talk about?
15338What did he tell you, Mose?
15338What did she say?
15338What did you learn at the school?
15338What did you realize on it?
15338What do you call this stuff?
15338What do you do that for?
15338What do you have reference to?
15338What do you mean by making a silly blunder like that?
15338What do you mean by treblin''your price on me? 15338 What do you mean,"said Bill,"by bringing me in cold cakes?"
15338What do you mean?
15338What do you mean?
15338What do you pay for them?
15338What do you sell them for?
15338What do you think he did?
15338What do you think is the matter with you this morning?
15338What do you think is the most difficult thing for a beginner to learn about golf?
15338What do you think of my library?
15338What do you think of the animals?
15338What do you think of the candidates?
15338What do you think of this disarmament idea?
15338What do you wish?
15338What do you wish?
15338What does autosuggestion mean?
15338What does he want to talk for when all he has to do is yell a while to get everything in the house that''s worth having?
15338What does he want?
15338What for, my boy?
15338What for?
15338What for?
15338What good,asked the angry would- be passenger,"are the figures set down in these railway time- tables?"
15338What has happened now?
15338What has mamma''s darling been doing this morning?
15338What has that got to do with being a detective?
15338What has that got to do with it? 15338 What has that got to do with it?"
15338What if we loses this blinkin''war after all, Bill?
15338What in the world are you doing with them?
15338What in the world are you talking about, my dear?
15338What is a Gorgonzola cheese?
15338What is a complete sentence?
15338What is a gardener?
15338What is considered a good score on these links?
15338What is equity?
15338What is it, Bridget?
15338What is it, Edgar?
15338What is it?
15338What is it?
15338What is new?
15338What is poetry of motion?
15338What is that?
15338What is that?
15338What is the fare to Kokomo?
15338What is the littlest one named?
15338What is the matter, little girl,he kindly asked;"are you hurt?"
15338What is the plural of man, Willie?
15338What is the square of 96?
15338What is this leathery stuff?
15338What is this wonderful machine?
15338What is worrying you now?
15338What is your last name then?
15338What is your last name?
15338What is your name?
15338What is your name?
15338What is your opinion of relativity?
15338What kind of a boy does youse want?
15338What kind of a factory?
15338What kind of a license?
15338What kind of a plant is the Virginia creeper?
15338What kind of a time is he having on his motor- trip?
15338What kind of coal do you wish, mum?
15338What makes you think so, Samanthy?
15338What makes you think that?
15338What might you be trying to do?
15338What name are you calling?
15338What names do you wish?
15338What occupation have you here in Baltimore?
15338What of it?
15338What of that?
15338What position is that, my dear?
15338What prompts you to make such a ridiculous request?
15338What puzzles you?
15338What reward?
15338What seems silly?
15338What seems to be the matter, Jones?
15338What shall we say of the former Senator?
15338What should one do if cats have fits?
15338What sort of a chap is Bill to camp out with?
15338What streets have you?
15338What wages do they give you here?
15338What was her name?
15338What was it?
15338What was the epitaph?
15338What will it cost?
15338What woman first invented mitts?
15338What would be a good way to raise revenue and still benefit the people?
15338What would my husband say?
15338What would you say,began the voluble prophet,"if I were to tell you that in a very short space of time all the rivers will dry up?"
15338What you- all doin''?
15338What''s Blinks going to do with his new noiseless typewriter?
15338What''s a''hoosit,''Katje?
15338What''s an optimist?
15338What''s become of your chauffeur?
15338What''s civics?
15338What''s coming off out in front there?
15338What''s it about?
15338What''s that piece of cord tied around your finger for?
15338What''s that?
15338What''s the difference between valor and discretion?
15338What''s the difference,she asked the solemn man at the end of the table,"between a turkey dinner and a mess of stewed prunes?"
15338What''s the difference?
15338What''s the idea?
15338What''s the matter, do n''t you like nuts?
15338What''s the matter, old man? 15338 What''s the matter?"
15338What''s the matter?
15338What''s the matter?
15338What''s the occasion for the parade, Tom?
15338What''s the score, Jim?
15338What''s the trouble?
15338What''s yer bill o''fare?
15338What''s your time?
15338What''s yours?
15338What,she asked,"do you think is the most wonderful thing man ever made?"
15338What?
15338What?
15338Whatever put such an idea into your mind?
15338When does this occur?
15338When will we have peace, papa?
15338When you see a bumblebee, ai n''t you''fraid?
15338When you sold me this house, did n''t you say that in three months I would n''t part with it for$ 10,000?
15338When''s the bloomin''war goin''to end?
15338Where are you going?
15338Where are you speaking from?
15338Where are you working now?
15338Where did you get that, Scotty?
15338Where do you live in the city-- close in?
15338Where do you work?
15338Where is Tough Jim?
15338Where is he? 15338 Where is that book I used to see?"
15338Where is that clock I gave you?
15338Where is the general freight agent?
15338Where is the general manager?
15338Where is the head of the legal department?
15338Where is the prisoner?
15338Where is your lawyer this time?
15338Where shall I put this apple peel?
15338Where''s Asia?
15338Where''s that hotel that used to advertise,''All the Comforts of Home for One Dollar''?
15338Where''s the boy?
15338Which do you prefer?
15338Which side is it best to lie on, Doc?
15338Who are you?
15338Who are you?
15338Who can furnish a clear definition of a politician?
15338Who done it? 15338 Who ferried souls across the Styx?"
15338Who goes there?
15338Who goes there?
15338Who goes there?
15338Who goes there?
15338Who is your family doctor?
15338Who led the army in that recent expedition?
15338Who said that?
15338Who said''To labor is to pray?''
15338Who told you that?
15338Who was it, Willie?
15338Who was that?
15338Who was the patron saint of Ireland?
15338Who were they from?
15338Who won the war?
15338Who''s running the blame railroad, anyway?
15338Who,asked the officiating clergyman, formally but impressively,"gives this bride away?"
15338Whose?
15338Why are school- teachers like Ford cars?
15338Why are you dressed like that?
15338Why are you driving that second nail?
15338Why are you fighting so?
15338Why are you so pensive?
15338Why did n''t you get out of the way?
15338Why did n''t you stop when I signaled you?
15338Why did you kick John?
15338Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson, if I may be permitted to ask?
15338Why did you make off with the pocketbook you saw this lady drop in the street?
15338Why did you think that?
15338Why did your wife leave you?
15338Why do n''t you advertise a thousand reward and no questions asked?
15338Why do n''t you get out and hustle? 15338 Why do n''t you get rid of that mule?"
15338Why do n''t you move into more comfortable quarters, old man?
15338Why do n''t you pay your bills?
15338Why do you always look in the glass?
15338Why do you bring a check with the cocktails?
15338Why do you do that?
15338Why do you feed every tramp who comes along? 15338 Why do you have an apple as your trade- mark?"
15338Why do you look so sorrowful, Dennis?
15338Why father, that''s just what you put in, was n''t it?
15338Why have I never married?
15338Why have words roots, pa?
15338Why is dat, boss?
15338Why is it you never get to the office on time in the morning?
15338Why is it, Bob,asked George of a very stout friend,"that you fat fellows are always good natured?"
15338Why is it, Sam, that one never hears of a darky committing suicide?
15338Why is it, Sam,he said, addressing the waiter,"that poor men usually give larger tips than rich men?"
15338Why is that?
15338Why not? 15338 Why not?"
15338Why not?
15338Why not?
15338Why not?
15338Why on earth does n''t somebody write a book on how to get a seat after you do get in?
15338Why should n''t you?
15338Why so?
15338Why worry?
15338Why''s that?
15338Why, Auntie,exclaimed the officer,"why do n''t you want me to take it down?"
15338Why, Doc? 15338 Why, Henry,"asked the statesman,"why are you eating out here alone?"
15338Why, Johnny,exclaimed the shocked teacher,"do you mean to say that you do n''t want to go to heaven?"
15338Why, William,replied his teacher,"what would it take to make you happy?"
15338Why, dad,said he, in an injured tone,"do n''t you know that everything is marked down after the holidays?"
15338Why, er- er- er,stammered Mr. Newlywed,"I do n''t think you pounded it enough, did you?"
15338Why, grandma?
15338Why, how could that be?
15338Why, look here,said the merchant who was in need of a boy,"are n''t you the same boy who was in here a week ago?"
15338Why, my little girl?
15338Why, so it is, father,--whose wife shall I take?
15338Why, what class?
15338Why, what''s this?
15338Why, who invited you here?
15338Why, you''re perfectly capable of doing your own wishing, are n''t you?
15338Why,asked the good man, with an anxious look,"is she dead?"
15338Why,said the witness, with a beaming smile,"are these men interested in the case, too?"
15338Why? 15338 Why?
15338Why?
15338Why?
15338Why?
15338Why?
15338Why?
15338Will I be likely to see him again?
15338Will that be all?
15338Will the nations always fight to have peace, papa?
15338Will we make it up before we reach New York?
15338Will ye, now?
15338Will you be back?
15338Will you be my wife?
15338Will you be my wife?
15338Will you have me for your wife?
15338Will you mend it?
15338Will you,fiercely demanded the general,"show the white feather in a season when feathers are not worn?"
15338William,asked the teacher of a rosy- faced lad,"can you tell me who George Washington was?"
15338Willie,said the teacher sternly,"what did I whip you for yesterday?"
15338Witnesses?
15338Women,she cried,"will you give way to mannish fears?"
15338Wot''s up?
15338Wotcher wages?
15338Would you like me to ask your mother first?
15338Would you like some views of the hotel to send to your friends?
15338Would you shoot on the Germans if they invaded Switzerland?
15338Would your Majesty deign to tell me the value of the cross?
15338Ye think a fine lot of Shakespeare?
15338Yes, Sue? 15338 Yes, mother,"said the boy obediently;"and shall I take that vase you won at Mrs. Jones''whist party, and give it back to her?"
15338Yes,replied the friend;"the kind we feed to our horses?"
15338Yes,replied the sympathetic friend,"but what has that to do with the wobegone expression on your face?"
15338Yes,said the Judge;"and what will happen if you do not tell the truth?"
15338Yes; but where were you born?
15338Yes; but why do you ask?
15338Yes?
15338Yes?
15338Yess? 15338 You are an actor?"
15338You are one of those''read''men, ai n''t you Henry?
15338You are sure he ran?
15338You been to school, ai n''t you?
15338You did n''t do it on your employer''s time, did you?
15338You do n''t find nothing wrong with me, doctor?
15338You do n''t make anything at that?
15338You do n''t say?
15338You had a job as janitor once, did n''t you?
15338You mean you sell me a ticket to get to a certain place by a certain time and then you give me no assurance I''ll be there at that time?
15338You mind if I leave baby here?
15338You must have heard the bell, boys; why did you not come?
15338You say Henry ran?
15338You say this doctor has a large practice?
15338You say you have good references?
15338You shall have it,said Buddha, and turning to the Protestant,"What do you wish?"
15338You there?
15338You vant to know vot I make in der vactory?
15338You would like to know what meal it was?
15338You wrote this report of last night''s banquet, did you?
15338You''re not going to sell him, are you, daddy?
15338Your Honor,he asked,"will you charge the jury?"
15338Your Honor,he said,"I beg your pardon; but do you follow me?"
15338_ Going Up_SMITH--"Do you realize that we are beholding the completion of a great cycle in history?"
15338''18( otherwise)--"Think about it?
15338''Arrison?"
15338''For the third and last time, as a gentlemaun,''I sez,''will ye gie me thot watch?''
15338''How would you define power of initiative?"
15338''Now, Sam, what have you to say?''
15338''Ow do I know?
15338''Well, boss,''he finally said,''ai n''t dat the very thing we''re about to try?''"
15338''What do you think of that?''
15338''Wo n''t you please give me this colt, then, and pray for one for yourself?''"
15338''Wull ye gie me it?''
15338--_E.H._"Do you think there''s a chance of prohibition''s being repealed, after all?"
153381921--"Did you see that movie called''Oliver Twist''?"
15338A colored woman one day visited the court- house in a Tennessee town and said to the judge:"Is you- all the reperbate judge?"
15338A comrade communicated the sad news to another gallant Scot, who asked, anxiously:"Where''s his head?
15338A fire to call the engines out?
15338A homebrew Bacchus''raisin dance?
15338A little boy''s mother in the congregation whispered to her son,"Is n''t it wonderful?
15338A salesman stopping in one of the towns asked the old darky bus driver about it:"Say, uncle, why have they got the depot way down here?"
15338A second car approached and stopped, whereon the tourist reached for his pocketbook and asked in an embarrassed manner,"How much?"
15338A skidding auto turned about?
15338A stranger, having admired the animal, asked the farmer:"What will you take for your cow?"
15338A street car left the track perhaps?
15338A suburban housewife relates overhearing this conversation between her Cape girl and the one next door:"How are you, Katje?"
15338A.--"Does your husband consider you a necessity or a luxury?"
15338ACCIDENTS Hearing a crash of glassware one morning, Mrs. Blank called to her maid in the adjoining room,"Norah, what on earth are you doing?"
15338ACTORS AND ACTRESSES FIRST ACTRESS( behind the scenes)--"Did you hear the way the public wept during my death scene?"
15338AD WRITER--"When do you want me to prepare that copy for the sale of antiques you have been planning?"
15338AFFABLE WAITER--"How did you find that steak, sir?"
15338AGATHA-"Is your former cook happy since she inherited a fortune?"
15338AGE HE--"How old are you?"
15338AGRICULTURE"Crop failures?"
15338ALIBI TEACHER--"What is an alibi?"
15338ALICE--"Did that make you want to marry her?"
15338ALICE--"You''d take me out with you, if you had, would n''t you?"
15338ALIMONY_ Or Go to Jail_"Is there any way a man can avoid paying alimony?"
15338ALPHABET MOTHER( who is teaching her child the alphabet)--"Now, dearie, what comes after''g''?"
15338ANTICIPATION"Mr. Blinks,"said she,"do you think that anticipation is greater than realization?"
15338APPLICANT-"Do you happen to have a daughter, sir?"
15338ASKER--"Could you lend me a V?"
15338ASKER--"Have you a friend that would lend me a V?"
15338ASSISTANT--"Are there any others you wish for?"
15338ASSISTANT--"What are you going to do?"
15338AUNT--"You''ll be late for the party, wo n''t you, dear?"
15338AUTOMOBILE TOURISTS"Why do you turn out for every road hog that comes along?"
15338AUTOMOBILES AND AUTOMOBILING"Has this car got a speedometer?"
15338AVIATION TOMMY( to Aviator)--"What is the most deadly poison known?"
15338AVIATOR--"And that is--?"
15338Abner, ai n''t that nice?"
15338Accordingly, the teacher started off with the question:"Now in this present terrible war, who is our principal ally?"
15338After another block there was the same performance:"''Scuse me, boss, but whar d''you say you wanter go?"
15338After he had climbed in, the cabby leaned over and asked,"What street do you want?"
15338After tea Mrs. Timson asked:"Did you remember about the water, Thurza?"
15338After the first hole the Englishman asked:"How many did you take?"
15338After the kiss the little girl drew back sharply, sniffed and said:"''Why, mamma, you''ve been using father''s perfume, have n''t you?''"
15338After the man had driven on the mother asked:"Why did n''t you take the nuts when he told you to?"
15338After walking some distance the boy noticed his father was very silent evidently pondering over something, so he said,"Father, how much did you get?"
15338Ai n''t they got any health laws in that town?"
15338Alarm- clock:----?
15338Alcott?"
15338Along comes a flivver and the driver uncranks himself, gets out and stretches, and asks:"How far is it to Kansas City?"
15338Already?
15338Among other questions, the specialist asked,"Do you ever hear voices without being able to tell who is speaking, or where the sound comes from?"
15338An English clergyman turned to a Scotchman and asked him:"What would you be were you not a Scot?"
15338An Irishman who was rather too fond of strong drink was asked by the parish priest:"My son, how do you expect to get into Heaven?"
15338And addressing again the soldier, he asked:"Is this generally the view held in the Swiss Army in regard to a possible German invasion?
15338And came another wire in mid- afternoon:"How much snow there now?"
15338And did n''t I tell you then that I wanted an older boy?"
15338And discretion?"
15338And how much does he put away every Saturday night, my dear?"
15338And if we save or lose an hour or two what''s the odds?
15338And what is his business?"
15338And when do you expect to strike it, my good man?"
15338And where would you like your spirit to sit?
15338And who can pay a gardener?
15338And you, sir?"
15338Andrew ran up to his mother in great excitement and said:"Mamma, is that one a collector?"
15338Answering the question,"When is a woman old?"
15338Are all the Swiss soldiers so Germanophil?"
15338Are n''t you quick at anything?"
15338Are n''t you willing to trust your doctor, Rufus?"
15338Are there various kinds?"
15338Are things going badly?"
15338Are you a teetotaler?"
15338Are you able to sit up?"
15338Are you sure he said in January?"
15338Are you the president or the vice- president of the society?"
15338Are you trying to climb where the chosen are, Where the feet of men are few?
15338As a friend, and man to man, who do you think stands the best chance of getting the property when I am gone?"
15338As soon as I took yere note ye''d draw the twenty poonds, would ye no?"
15338At last he voiced his trouble:"But were they all Disciples?
15338At the close of her discourse, she put this question to the class:"What high office in a nation could such a wonderful man fill?"
15338At the wedding reception the young man remarked:"Was n''t it annoying the way that baby cried during the whole ceremony?"
15338BAGGAGE TOMMY( just off train, with considerable luggage)--"Cabby, how much is it for me to Latchford?"
15338BAILIE--"An''what will ye be daein on Saturday?"
15338BALDNESS BALD HEADED GUEST--"Well, sonny, what is it that amuses you?"
15338BAPTISM"You do n''t know me, do you, Bobby?"
15338BEAUTY, PERSONAL"Is she very pretty?"
15338BELLEVILLE--"Is Glenshaw getting ready for the fishing season?"
15338BESSIE--"Then why did n''t he say walk?"
15338BILLS COLLECTOR--"Did you look at that little bill I left yesterday, sir?"
15338BLONDINE--"Isn''t Bennie Beanbrough the thick one?"
15338BLUCK--"Why do vessels leaving New York make the greatest speed the first three miles?"
15338BLUFFING VISITOR( at private hospital)--"Can I see Lieutenant Barker, please?"
15338BOXCAR HARRY--"Beg pardon, ma''am, but do you happen to have some pie or cake that you could spare an unfortunate wanderer?"
15338BREATHLESS VISITOR--"Doctor, can you help me?
15338BRIGHT CHILD--"And when are they going to burn Mr. Lloyd George, daddy?"
15338BROOKLYN"Where can I find a map of Brooklyn, old man?"
15338BROWN( angrily)--"Why do n''t you see my wife about it and not come to me?"
15338BULL--"How do I know?
15338Be this the place?"
15338Born?
15338Brown?"
15338Brown?"
15338Business?
15338But how am de wireless telegraph?"
15338But how can I give it to him when he''s dead?"
15338But how did you know where I''m from?"
15338But if I had one I''d want to cash it when I wanted to, would n''t I?
15338But is he required to chase it, too?"
15338But suppose we are bad, then what will become of us?"
15338But tell me, do you libr''yites Believe in fairies too?
15338But what can you expect?
15338But where are the guests''rooms?"
15338But why does n''t she?"
15338By the way, where is he going?"
15338CALLER--"Is your mother at home, Elsie?"
15338CANDIDATES TED--"So you think I''m wasting my time making love to that rich girl?"
15338CANDOR"How is your wife this morning, Uncle Henry?"
15338CANVASSER--"May I have a few minutes of your time?"
15338CAPITAL AND LABOR WILLIE--"Paw, what is the difference between capital and labor?"
15338CAPTAIN( speaking to raw recruit trying to drill)--"What was your occupation before entering the army?"
15338CARD INDEX MINING- STOCK PROMOTER--"Where can I hide?
15338CHEMIST--"Are they both for the same person, or shall I wrap them up separately?"
15338CHICKEN STEALING An old negro was charged with chicken- stealing, and the judge said:"Where''s your lawyer, uncle?"
15338CHILD LABOR SOUTHERNER--"Why are you Northerners always harping on the children employed in Southern factories?"
15338CHILDREN JOHNNY--"What makes the new baby at your house cry so much, Tommy?"
15338CHRISTMAS GIFTS"Is n''t this too absurd?"
15338CHURCH ATTENDANCE"What''s the idea of free pews?"
15338CHURCH SCOTT--"What is your notion of an ideal church?"
15338CLASSIFIED AD MANAGER--"Do you want this placed under Business Opportunities or Matrimony?"
15338CLEANLINESS"Ma, do I have to wash my face?"
15338CLERK--"Why, sir?"
15338CLIENT--"And how much will the real thing cost, with lots of publicity and everything?"
15338COHEN, THE DEBTOR--"Cash, you say?
15338COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES SOPH.--"How does it happen you came to Harvard?
15338COMEDIAN--"My memory is n''t very accurate, but is n''t there a book called''Alice Threw the Looking- glass''?"
15338COMMANDER--"What''s his character apart from this leave- breaking?"
15338COMMITTEE BOBBIE--"What is a committee, pa?"
15338CONDUCTOR--"Do you mind if I put your bag out of the way, sir?
15338CONGRESS"How is the law made?"
15338CONSCIENCE Wilson and Wilton were discussing the moralities when the first put this question:"Well, what is conscience, anyhow?"
15338CONSOLATION FIRST WALL STREET BROKER--"Anything to do today?"
15338CONVIVIAL GENT--"Wha''she call- calling me; Billy or William?"
15338CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS_ The Stamp of Learning_"Pa, what''s a postgraduate?"
15338COURTESY"How do you like your new music- master?"
15338COW--"Can you beat it?
15338CRABSHAW--"Why do you wish to leave school and go to work when you''re so young?"
15338CREDIT FIRST CREDIT MAN--"How about Jones of Pigville Center?"
15338CUBIST TEACHER--"Can anyone give an impressionistic definition of New York?"
15338CURES_ A Testimonial_ DOCTOR--"Did that cure for deafness really help your brother?"
15338CURRENT EVENTS MRS. BARR--"Henry, what are current events?"
15338Ca n''t the leading man act as if he were in love with the star?"
15338Ca n''t you see one is black and the other brown?"
15338Can I book your order?"
15338Can I have his house?"
15338Can any one give me another example?"
15338Can you arrange it for him?"
15338Can you fix it?"
15338Can you promise that?"
15338Clean saving of a thousand, eh?
15338Corn bread, did yo''say?"
15338Crawley- Smith?"
15338DAD--"Postscript?
15338DAYLIGHT SAVING"Is your husband in favor of daylight saving?"
15338DEAF- AND- DUMB BEGGAR--"Do you think it looks like rain, Bill?"
15338DEMAGOG"Father,"said the small boy,"what is a demagog?"
15338DENTIST( inserting rubber gag, towel, and sponge)--"How''s your family?"
15338DEPARTING GUEST--"Enjoyed ourselves?
15338DETECTIVES HOKUS--"How does Sleuthpup rank as a detective?"
15338DIAGNOSIS FRIEND--"What is the first thing you do when a man presents himself to you for consultation?"
15338DIBBS--"How do you make that out?"
15338DICKEY--"Yes; why?"
15338DIPLOMACY"Father,"said the small boy,"what is an overt act?"
15338DISCRETION WILLIE--"Pa, what is discretion?"
15338DOCTORS"What is your greatest wish, Doctor, now that you have successfully passed for your degree?"
15338DOMESTIC FINANCE LITTLE TOMMY--"What does''close quarters''mean, Ma?"
15338DOMESTIC RELATIONS HUSBAND( newly married)--"Don''t you think, love, if I were to smoke, it would spoil the curtains?"
15338DORA-"How did you vote?"
15338DREAMS"Mother, was n''t that a funny dream I had last night?"
15338DRUGGIST--"Something else, miss?"
15338Dentist, speaking to patient about to have a tooth extracted--"Have you heard the latest song hit?"
15338Detroit a reliable car?"
15338Dickson?"
15338Did he enjoy it?"
15338Did n''t I promise you a nickel a week to keep him awake?"
15338Did n''t you feel shaky?"
15338Did n''t you hear me say we were out against four to one?"
15338Did n''t you stop and spell your names, as I told you?"
15338Did you ever try gin and ginger ale?"
15338Did you ever try to sell any?"
15338Did you have any luck?"
15338Did you put anything like that in this prescription?"
15338Did you say sun was or was not shining?"
15338Dis razor hurt you, sah?"
15338Do n''t forget to tell her I called, will you?"
15338Do n''t it trouble you?"
15338Do n''t the Bible say plain and flat:''What God hath j''ined togither, let not man put asunder''?"
15338Do n''t they teach you the common abbreviations in school?"
15338Do n''t you know his name?"
15338Do n''t you know that drink is mankind''s worst enemy?"
15338Do n''t you like the beautiful country?"
15338Do n''t you see dar''s nowhere else to put you?"
15338Do they?"
15338Do you believe in them?"
15338Do you ever tell lies?"
15338Do you expect company?"
15338Do you hear dot?"
15338Do you keep them all clean?"
15338Do you know that when Woodrow Wilson was your age he was head of the school?"
15338Do you know why a sane man will whimper and cry And weep o''er a ribbon or glove?
15338Do you know?
15338Do you long for"a job that is worth one''s while?"
15338Do you mean to say your parents did not come from Ireland?"
15338Do you think I''m a cold- storage plant?"
15338Do you think she is reliable?"
15338Do you think that you can manage it?"
15338Do you want a colt so very badly?''
15338Do you want the earth with a little red fence around it for a cent?"
15338Do you want to win?
15338Does a sweetheart, or a wife, Love you, little star of"Life?"
15338Does he dig in a ditch, or blaze a trail, Where the dreams of men may run?
15338Does that young man never go to church, then?"
15338Drink?
15338During the conversation that took place, the politician asked,"And I may count upon your support, may I not?"
15338ED--"Have you forgotten you owe me five dollars?"
15338EDITH--"Dick, dear, your office is in State street, is n''t it?"
15338EDITH--"How does Fred make love?"
15338EDITORS"An editor is a man who puts things in the paper, is n''t he?"
15338EMPLOYER( coming upon colored porter looking through the dictionary)--"What are you doing, Sam; looking up some more big words for another speech?"
15338EMPLOYER--"Too strict, is she?"
15338ENTHUSIAST--"Don''t the spectators tire you with the questions they ask?"
15338ENTHUSIASTIC AVIATOR( after long explanation of principle and workings of his biplane)--"Now, you understand it, do n''t you?"
15338EXCITABLE PARTY( at telephone)--"Hello?
15338EXE--"Why not plead that you have a previous engagement?"
15338EXPERIENCE"Did you ever realize anything on that investment?"
15338EXTRAVAGANCE"What made you a multi- millionaire?"
15338Early in the morning one winter''s day, came a wire from a friend in Chicago:"How''s the weather today out there?"
15338Easy, is n''t it?
15338FAILURES BROWN--"Back to town again?
15338FAIR CUSTOMER( to salesman displaying modern bathing suit)--"And you''re sure this bathing suit wo n''t shrink?"
15338FANNING--"What''s become of that rubber stamp,''Dictated, but not read,''that you used to use on your letters?"
15338FASHION"Is n''t your wife dogmatic?"
15338FATHER--"Who is he this time?"
15338FINANCE"Dad,"said little Reginald,"what is a bucket- shop?"
15338FIRST ARTIST--"The umbrella you lent me?
15338FIRST COMMUTER--"Do you have to take such an early train as this?"
15338FIRST LABORING MAN--"Wot''s a minimum wage, Albert?"
15338FIRST LADY--"Did you vote with all those vile people?"
15338FIRST LITTLE GIRL--"What''s your last name, Annie?"
15338FIRST MERCHANT( as reported in the New York"Trade Record")--"How''s business?"
15338FIRST OFFICER--"Did you get that fellow''s number?"
15338FIRST SOUTHERNER--"Were you in New York long enough to feel at home?"
15338FIRST TRAVELER( cheerily)--"Fine day, is n''t it?"
15338FIRST WAR- CORRESPONDENT--"Did your dispatch get past the censor?"
15338FISH The teacher asked,"Who can tell me what an oyster is?"
15338FISHING UNLUCKY FISHERMAN--"Boy, will you sell that big string of fish you are carrying?"
15338FOOD CONSERVATION"Well, Ezri, how''d jer make out with yer boarders this year?"
15338FOOD DINER--"See here, where are those oysters I ordered on the half shell?"
15338FOOLS"Did you really call this gentleman an old fool last night?"
15338FORDS"So you bought one of those automobiles they tell so many funny stories about?"
15338FOREIGNERS TEACHER--"Who was the first man?"
15338FORESIGHT"Are you going to pay any attention to these epithets that are being hurled at you?"
15338FORTUNE- TELLER--"You wish to know about your future husband?"
15338FRANK--"When you proposed to her I suppose she said:''This is so sudden?''"
15338FREE VERSE YOUNG THING--"I wonder why they call it free verse?"
15338FRENCH LANGUAGE"Does your son who is abroad with the troops understand French?"
15338FRIEND--"After you got through, how did you find out what it was?"
15338FRIEND--"But, I say, that was written about autumn, was n''t it?"
15338FRIEND--"To what do you attribute your rapid rise in your profession?"
15338FRIEND--"What do you learn from that?"
15338FROSH--"Yes, and say, would n''t that make a peach of a book?"
15338Father Duffy is credited by the New York World with this after- dinner story:"An old sexton asked me,''Father, were n''t the Apostles Jews?''
15338Favorite living master?
15338Finally one day he called and said:"How iss my wife?"
15338Finally, she turned to a young man who was showing her through, and asked:"What is that big thing over there?"
15338Five hundred dollars for that antique?
15338Fixing the man with his eye, the admiral asked:"Did you get that medal for eating, my man?"
15338Fogarty?"
15338GARAGES"What do they sell in that last garage besides gasoline, father?"
15338GARDENING"I suppose you are going to raise potatoes in your garden?"
15338GAS DISSATISFIED HOUSEHOLDER--"Do you mean to say that this meter measures the amount of gas we burn?"
15338GENIUS WILLIE--"Paw, what is the difference between genius and talent?"
15338GILLIS--"Who are they?"
15338GIRL( to druggist)--"Could you fix me a dose of castor oil so as the oil wo n''t taste?"
15338GIRL--"Well, your chair is n''t nailed to the floor, is it?"
15338GOSSIP"They say--""Who say?"
15338GRAMERCY--"Why do n''t you have your old car repainted?"
15338GREENE--"And did he?"
15338GRIGGS( obliged to face him)--"Just what were you saying?"
15338GUEST--"Who is the next speaker?"
15338George Washington Jones, colored, was trying to enlist in Uncle Sam''s army, and the following conversation ensued with the recruiting officer:"Name?"
15338Get her a new dress?"
15338Give it up?
15338Going up to Moses, he demanded harshly,"Moses, do you know the Ten Commandments?"
15338Golden star and star of blue-- With one soul God gave to you-- Do you know how proud we are Of the golden service star?
15338Grievous the pain; but, in the day When all the cost is counted o''er, Would it be best that ye should say:"We lost no loved ones in the war?"
15338HAPPY--"How''s that?"
15338HE( cautiously)--"Would you say''Yes''if I asked you to marry me?"
15338HE--"Hadn''t you better practise while your father is supplying the raw materials?"
15338HE--"Not quite a lady, is she?"
15338HENLEY--"How are you getting on with your writing for the magazines?"
15338HERBERT--"Why do you say that?"
15338HEREDITY"What is heredity?"
15338HEWITT--"Don''t you think I stand a good chance of making a fortune out of that mine?"
15338HIX--"For a vacation, I suppose?"
15338HOME BREW TIPS--"Why not try a home- brew receipt?"
15338HOSTESS( at party)--"Does your mother allow you to have two pieces of pie when you are at home, Willie?"
15338HOWELL--"What sort of a fellow is he?"
15338HURRY--"Has he crashed?"
15338HUSBAND--"Why do n''t you give it to the laundress?"
15338HUSBAND--"Will it be ready then?"
15338Hair?
15338Has not your mother said something to you about this habit of his?"
15338Has the strike been settled?"
15338Have you any witnesses to stand for you?"
15338Have you ever been fired?
15338Have you got the engineer''s plans for the new bridge?"
15338Have you read it?"
15338Having tasted it, he exclaimed:"Which did you put in first, the whisky or the water?"
15338He asked, pointing to the lettering:"That''s my name, I suppose?"
15338He came back home, and his brother meeting him at the depot said:"Vell, Abie, did you find out vat ditto is?"
15338He knew if he had the million you''d be easy,"FOUNTAIN PENS"Why do they call''em fountain pens?
15338He must read the day''s record through, Then would n''t one sigh, And would n''t he try A great deal less talking to do?
15338He said,''Littul man, how do you feel?''
15338He turned excitedly to his steward:"Look here, where''s the ruin, man?"
15338He went out and met a friend, and the friend said:"Well, how is your wife?"
15338Healthy?
15338Hearst?"
15338His brother said:"I buy ditto?"
15338His mother, noticing a troubled look on his face as he looked about, said:"What''s the matter, dear?
15338His question, innocent enough in appearance, dear knows, was this:"''Would you mind making a noise like a frog, uncle?''"
15338His strong- minded fiancà © e looked sternly at him for a moment and replied,"Good enough for me?
15338How can you say that no one knows it?"
15338How did he do it?"
15338How did it happen?"
15338How did this policeman get here?"
15338How did you know it was a Ford?"
15338How do I know, for example, that you''re honest?"
15338How do you account for it?"
15338How do you know that it is any good?"
15338How do you like my hat?"
15338How do you like your editor?
15338How does it feel?
15338How does that old saying go:''Of two evils always choose--?"
15338How far are they from here?"
15338How far is it to Lexington?"
15338How high did you say?
15338How in the world did you happen to call him that?"
15338How long must I wait for the half- portion of duck I ordered?"
15338How many hods of mortar have yuh carried up that ladder today?"
15338How many shares do you want?"
15338How many?"
15338How much did it bring you in?
15338How much water at this rate have you hauled in all?"
15338How much will such a course cost, and how long will it take?"
15338How shall I classify it?"
15338How shall I get rid of my present husband?"
15338How so?''"
15338How was that?"
15338How was that?"
15338How''s his temperature today?"
15338I asked him why?"
15338I did not know your mother was ill."LITTLE GIRL--"No, it is my aunt who is ill."NEIGHBOR--"What is the matter with your aunt?"
15338I have n''t seen him for weeks?"
15338I sez,''Who d''yer blinkin''well think you''re a- talkin''to?
15338I suppose you know the man who''s running against me?"
15338I''m sorry-- was it a secret?"
15338INDUSTRY Andrew Carnegie was once asked which he considered to be the most important factor in industry-- labor, capital, or brains?
15338INQUIRER( at South Station)--"Where does this train go?"
15338INSOMNIA BARK--"So you have been cured of your insomnia?
15338INSTALMENT PLAN"I wonder will Smithers always allude to his wife so lovingly as''my own''?"
15338INTERVIEWER--"What is your wife''s favorite dish?"
15338INTRODUCTION What can be more fitting than that a compiled book should have a compiled introduction?
15338If a man dies, does lie live again?
15338If any over- critical reader fails to find them humorous, may not the fault possibly be due to his own imperfect sense of humor?
15338If we never had to utter,"Wo n''t you pass the bread and butter, Likewise push along that platter Full of meat?"
15338In fact, as she was leaving his cell she said:"May I ask you why you are in this distressing place?"
15338In his rapture he exclaimed,"But do you think, my love, I am good enough for you?"
15338In the course of his examination these questions were put to an old negro who was appearing as a witness:"What is your name?"
15338In trouble?"
15338Instead of sitting at a desk''Mid undone labours, grimly lurking-- Oh, say, what is there picturesque In working?
15338Is dere much money in dat?"
15338Is he running on the Progressive ticket?"
15338Is it immoral?"
15338Is it love?"
15338Is journalism with you a life- work or merely a means to a higher literary end?
15338Is n''t that Smithson who just went by in his automobile?
15338Is n''t that so, Sam?"
15338Is n''t that something?"
15338Is that it?"
15338Is that my dog?"
15338Is there any one here who knows how to pray?"
15338Is this a party wire?"
15338Is this hotel American or European?"
15338Is this lady your wife?"
15338Is this you, mother, dear?"
15338Is you?"
15338Is your heart for success athrob?
15338It is n''t so hard, is it?"
15338It is only that each has forgotten Something he used to remember: Black bat goes searching... searching.... White owl says over and over Who?
15338It''s a fine line ye''re keeping, is n''t it?"
15338JACK--"Did you tell her that what you said was in strict confidence?"
15338JANITOR--"Down to zero, is it?
15338JEEMS--"Yes; but do n''t you teach us to love our enemies?"
15338JEWETT--"How is that?"
15338JEWS Pat, answering questions in applying for a job as keeper of the pound, came to the query,"What are rabies and what would you do for them?"
15338JOHNNY--"Ten hours a day?
15338JONES--"How much were you beaten by?"
15338JONES--"How so?"
15338JONES--"Took a drop?
15338JONES--"Well, if a haitch, a hay, two hars, a hi, a he s, a ho and a hen do n''t spell''Arrison, then what does it spell?"
15338JOURNALISM"I represent The Daily Scoop, At what time did his lordship die?"
15338JUDGE--"You let the burglar go to arrest an automobilist?"
15338JUNKMAN( smiling)--"Any empty bottles?"
15338JUNKMAN--"Any rags, paper, old iron to sell?"
15338Johnson?"
15338Jones?"
15338Jones?"
15338Junkins?"
15338Just what does Scribbler write?"
15338Know''st thou not all germs of evil In thy heart await their time?
15338LABOR AND CAPITAL"What''s the difference between capital and labor?"
15338LADY( to small boy who is fishing)--"I wonder what your father would say if he caught you fishing on Sunday?"
15338LADY--"You say your father was injured in an explosion?
15338LANDLADY--"Just when are you going to pay your arrears of room rent?"
15338LAUNDRY"Did the laundry man find those cuffs he lost last week?"
15338LAWYERS LAWYER--"Are you aware, sir, that what you contemplate is illegal?"
15338LAZY MIKE--"You know the fellow that goes alongside the train and taps the axles to see if everything''s all right?
15338LEA--"I wonder if Professor Kidder meant anything by it?"
15338LEAGUE OF NATIONS"Why do you object to the League of Nations?"
15338LEGISLATION"Have you made any resolutions or turned over a new leaf or anything like that?"
15338LEGISLATORS"Do you think we are happier for the conveniences of telegraph and telephone?"
15338LEISURE THE CHILD--"Mother, what is''leisure''?"
15338LIBRARIAN--"Oral, of course?"
15338LITTLE WILLIE--"What is a lawyer, pa?"
15338LOST AND FOUND OLD GENTLEMAN( in street car)--"Has anyone here dropped a roll of bills, with a rubber elastic around them?"
15338Little Marie was sitting on her grandfather''s knee one day, and after looking at him intently for a time she said:"Grandpa, were you in the ark?"
15338Little kiddies over there-- Solemn eyes and tangled hair-- Ten years old?
15338Look here, mister, how do you know my husband is n''t at the club when I have n''t told you my name?''
15338Lovers are plenty, but fortunes are few Why lose wages that carry me Better by far than a husband could do?
15338Lucky we do n''t live in those times, what?"
15338M.D.--"Would you have the price if I said you needed an operation?"
15338MA--"Really?"
15338MACPHERSON( at the box office)--"Will ye kindly return me the amount I paid for amusement tax?"
15338MAG.--"Wot is''platonic affection,''Liz?
15338MAGISTRATE( to policeman)--"Officer, what is this man charged with?"
15338MAGISTRATE( to prisoner)--"What is your name?"
15338MAGISTRATE--"Where do you live?"
15338MAJORITY"You do n''t mean to tell me you ever doubt the wisdom of the majority?"
15338MAMMA--"How do you feel this morning, Robert?
15338MAN FROM MISSOURI--"Have you never been seasick?"
15338MANAGER--"Can''t you find some way to make yourself busy around here?"
15338MANDY--"Rastus, you all knows dat yo''remind me of dem dere flyin''machines?"
15338MARJORIE--"Will I get everything I pray for, mama?"
15338MARKSMANSHIP"Why do you compare my marksmanship with lightning?"
15338MARRIAGE"Hubby, if I were to die would you marry again?"
15338MASCOTS"Does a rabbit''s foot really bring good luck?"
15338MAUDE--"And now?"
15338MAUDE--"What makes you think his intentions are serious?"
15338MAYOR OF TOWN--"Why so, Mooney?
15338MEDICINE DOCTOR--"What?
15338MIKE--"How is that, Pat?"
15338MIKE--"Would ye trust such a party as thot?"
15338MISTRESS( to butler)--"Why is it, John, every time I come home I find you sleeping?"
15338MOTHER( after visitor had gone)--"Bobby, what on earth made you stick out your tongue at our pastor?
15338MOTHER--"Joan, darling, run and call Fido, will you?"
15338MOTHERS Answers to the question"what is Mother?"
15338MOVIE OPERATOR--"What shall I do with this film?
15338MR. EXE--"Did you tell the cook that the beefsteak was burned?"
15338MR. GOODTHING--"How does your sister like the engagement ring I gave her, Bobby?"
15338MR. ISOLATE( wearily).--"Purgatory?
15338MR. MEEK--"Doctor would you mind telling her yourself?"
15338MR. NEWLYWED--"Did you sew the button on my coat, darling?"
15338MR. NEWRICHE--"What makes you think so?"
15338MRS. BROWN--"And what did you say to him?"
15338MRS. CASEY--"An''phwat are yez doin''wid thot incoom- tax paper, Casey?"
15338MRS. GLABBERDEEN--"Of course you, too, must often change cooks?"
15338MRS. HOMESPUN--"What''ll we contribute to the minister''s donation- party?"
15338MRS. KNAGG--"Did the doctor ask to see your tongue?"
15338MRS. LESSNER--"Do you think it''s true that poor Lydia has n''t smiled since her marriage?"
15338MRS. SMYTHE DE WILLOUGHBY--"Was the grocer''s boy impudent again this morning, Clara, when you telephoned the order?"
15338MRS. SUBBUBS( to tramp)--"Out of work, are you?
15338MULES"Is you gwine ter let dat mewel do as he pleases?"
15338MUSICAL STUDENT--"That piece you just played is by Mozart, is n''t it?"
15338Married or single?
15338Masefield?"
15338May I ask if you''re a relative?"
15338May I borrow yours, sir, to keep me dry while I run to the station?"
15338Mayor, do you see any objection to my being put in poor Tom Smith''s place?''
15338Miss SNOWFLAKE--"What did Jim Jackson git married for?"
15338Moses scratched his chin for a moment, and then, in an equally harsh voice, said:"Parson, yo''do n''t think yo''kin beat me do yo''?
15338Mother asked"Why?"
15338Must our play day Be a gray day Locked behind a prison wall?
15338Must our proud day Be a shroud day With rehearsals once a week?
15338Must the Sun day Be the one day When the sun is banned to all?
15338Must the feast day Be the least day, Robbed of all the things we''d seek?
15338Must the rest day Be a pest day?
15338Must we backward turn to find The kind of day To while away The stalwart modern mind?
15338Must we bore ourselves to death By boding ill From sitting still To curb each merry breath?
15338My dear, do n''t you know?
15338NAMES, PERSONAL"Why do you call the baby Bill?"
15338NATIONALITY"But are you an American citizen?"
15338NED--"But you got a check did n''t you?"
15338NEIGHBOR''S MAID--"And what did they talk about?"
15338NEIGHBOR--"Got much money in your bank, Bobby?"
15338NEIGHBOR--"How is your mother this morning?"
15338NEW MAN ON THE ROAD--"What is the best time for me to see the head of this firm I''m working for, boy?"
15338NEW MISTRESS--"How about the afternoon off?"
15338NEWSPAPER PROPRIETOR--"Well, what''s your idea?"
15338NODD--"Are you sure your wife knows I''m going home to dinner with you?"
15338NULLERFORD--"Do you know anybody who favors government control of the railroads?"
15338NURSES FREDDIE--"Are you the trained nurse mama said was coming?"
15338New car?"
15338Not bad, is it?"
15338Now I understand the three years all right; but what the ten days were for I''d like to know?"
15338Now play one of your own, wo n''t you?"
15338Now that the good times are over, how about a little honest business?"
15338Now what does that word mean to you, children?"
15338Now, I ask you, would you like a husband you had to keep in an aquarium?"
15338Now, can you say all that?"
15338Now, do you understand?"
15338Now, how about it?
15338Now, how do you spell''mouse''?"
15338Now, what does that prove?"
15338O''HOULIHAN--"Pwhut''s a pessimist, Mike?"
15338OCCUPATIONS PAPA--"But has n''t your fiancà © got a job?"
15338OCEAN TRAVEL"Terribly rough, is n''t it?"
15338OFFICE BOY--"Gee whiz: Am I expected to do the work and find it, too?"
15338OFFICE BOYS Boss--"Can''t you find something to do?"
15338OFFICER( to private)--"What are you doing down in that shell- hole?
15338OFFICER( to recruit)--"Goodness gracious, man, where are all your shots going?
15338OFFICER--"Is that soup ready, Jones?"
15338OKE--"Would you be satisfied if you had all the money you wanted?"
15338OLD LADY( to motorman on her first drive on an electric car)--"Would it be dangerous, conductor, if I was to put my foot on the rail?"
15338OPPORTUNITY"But did n''t Opportunity ever knock at your door?"
15338OUIJA BOARD"Do you think Mrs. Spinnix cheated at the ouija board?"
15338On coming to himself, he asked faintly,"What was it?"
15338On profits tightens all the reins, Who has to suffer all the pains?
15338On the man replying"No, sir,"the admiral rapped out:"Then why the deuce do you wear it on your stomach?"
15338One day I proposed marriage to her, and what do you think she did?
15338One day he said to his mother:"Mama, how did uncle grow so big and tall?"
15338One day she said:"Mother, do you know that it is better to be a Christian Scientist than anything else?"
15338One morning Jorkins looked over his fence and said to his neighbor, Harkins:"What are you burying in that hole?"
15338One morning it was absent, as usual, and I said,''Maggie, where is the stepladder?''
15338One morning she said to her husband:"Did you have any mail this morning, dear?"
15338One of them asked,"Why is the pancake like the sun?"
15338One of them thought she would have some fun, and called to a little girl standing near,"Are there any shows in town?"
15338Or a mother, proud but sad, Who gave all, her only lad?
15338Or have they gone in search of the Fourteen Points?
15338Out in Kansas, for instance, a native observed a stranger looking around and ventured to say,"Good morning, sir, House hunting?"
15338PARSON BLACK( sternly)--"Did you come by dat watehmelyun honestly, Bruddeh Bingy?"
15338PARSON WHITE--"Brudder Lamkins, how did yer son come outen de trial?"
15338PASSENGER( after first night on board ship)--"I say, where have all my clothes vanished to?"
15338PASSENGER--"Are you blind, man?
15338PATIENT--"And will my nerve be as good as yours then?"
15338PEACE"Why were all the nations fighting, papa?"
15338PENFIELD--"What do you know about Bestseller''s new book?"
15338PENMANSHIP Mr. Brown had just registered and was about to turn away when the clerk asked:"Beg pardon, but what is your name?"
15338PERKINS--"By what?"
15338PERSUASION"Mother,"said a twelve- year- old of Baltimore,"did you tell father I wanted a new bicycle?"
15338PESSIMISM TED--"What''s the difference between a pessimist and a cynic?"
15338PHIL--"Was he glad to see you?"
15338PITTSBURG PITTSBURG MAN( telephoning to Long Island from New York)--"Ten cents?
15338POLICE"Why does n''t the policeman pay his fare?"
15338POLICEMAN--"Lost yer mammy,''ave yer?
15338POLITICIANS"And why is he here?"
15338POLITICS GREEN--"What is the hardest work you ever did?"
15338POSTAL SERVICE WILLIS--"What did you think of that fellow''s carrying the message to Garcia?"
15338PREPAREDNESS GRUBBS--"Are you planning to make any good resolutions?"
15338PRICES"Have any trouble in getting your money back?"
15338PRISON VISITOR--"What terrible crime has this man committed?"
15338PRISONER--"How can that be, your honor, when I was arrested for getting rid of it?"
15338PROF.--"What happened to Babylon?"
15338PROF.--"What happened to Tyre?"
15338PROFESSOR AT AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL--"What kinds of farming are there?"
15338PROFESSOR--"So, sir, you said that I was a learned jackass, did you?"
15338PRONUNCIATION"Was n''t it_ fearful_ about the Reims cathedral?"
15338PROSECUTING ATTORNEY( investigating election fund)--"Dave, what happened to you before you reached the polls?"
15338PROSECUTOR--"Did you take that money, too, Dave?"
15338PROSECUTOR--"Did you take the money?"
15338PROSECUTOR--"Then, Dave, how did you vote?"
15338PSYCHOLOGY"Father,"said the small boy,"what is psychology?"
15338PUNCTUATION"Ca n''t you stretch a point?"
15338PUNS"Have you a little fairy in your home?"
15338PURGATORY MARMADUKE ISOLATE( of Lonelyville).--"Pa, what is Purgatory?"
15338Paper, mister?"
15338Parents alive yet?
15338Presently, seeing the visitors glancing around the room, he said:"Well, what do you think of our stuff, anyway?"
15338Previous experience?
15338Put them up to look as if they''d been caught today, will you?"
15338Puzzled, he demanded:''Then how the deuce did the Jews let go of a good thing like the Catholic Church and let the Eytalians grab it?''"
15338Q. Nativity?
15338QUESTIONS"You understand your duties thoroughly, do n''t you?"
15338RAILROADS"Where''s the president of this railroad?"
15338RASTUS-"How''ll it be if Ah pays seben- fifty, Jedge?
15338RASTUS--"How much, boss?"
15338RASTUS--"No, Mandy, how''s dat?"
15338RAYMOND--"What the deuce do you mean by telling Joan that I am a fool?"
15338RECRUITING POLICEMAN( rounding up draft suspects)--"Have you got a card?"
15338REGRETS_ Who Am I?_ I am frequently most potent in the morning, but I am willing to abide with you at any time.
15338RELATIVES"Have you any relatives living in the country?"
15338REPARTEE"Pa, what is repartee?"
15338ROADS"How are the roads in this section?"
15338RUPERT--"What did you do with the cuffs I left on the table last night?"
15338Roe?"
15338Roosevelt then said:"Then if your father had been a horsethief and your grandfather had been a horsethief you would be a horsethief?"
15338SACRIFICES"George, where are your school- books?"
15338SALARIES"And about the salary?"
15338SALES MANAGER--"Had much experience?"
15338SALESMEN AND SALESMANSHIP"Hey, what did you go and sell them apples fer?"
15338SAM--"Something easy?"
15338SAM--"Who was the first Kaiser?"
15338SAVING SON--"Dad, what is a savings account?"
15338SCEPTIC--"If you have such an infallible remedy for baldness, why do n''t you use it?"
15338SCHOLARSHIP"What''s the matter?
15338SCHOOL- TEACHER( to little boy)--"If a farmer raises 3,700 bushels of wheat and sells it for$ 2.50 per bushel, what will he get?"
15338SECOND HE--"Why do you say that?"
15338SECOND LOAFER--"Wat''ave they struck for?"
15338SECOND NAVVY--"Why?
15338SECOND( more hopefully)--"Why do n''t you tell the truth and get a good night''s rest?"
15338SECRETS"Can you keep a secret, Peggy?"
15338SENATORS"What is your position on this great question?"
15338SETTLEMENT WORKER( visiting tenements)--"And your father is working now and getting two pounds a week?
15338SHE( fluttering visibly)-"Oh, did you?"
15338SHE( still more cautiously)--"Would you ask me to marry you if I said I would say''Yes''if you asked me to marry you?"
15338SHE( thoughtfully)--"Did you ever think much about reincarnation, dear?"
15338SHE--"How will I know until I get it?"
15338SHE--"I wonder why men lie so?"
15338SHE--"Tore it up?
15338SHE--"What makes you imagine I should ever want another like you?"
15338SHE--"What''s the man running for?"
15338SHE--"Why do n''t you talk of higher things once in a while?"
15338SILAS( in a whisper)--"Did you git a peep at the underworld at all while you wuz in New York, Ezry?"
15338SLAPSTICK DIRECTOR--"Can''t you suggest a novel from which we could adapt a comedy?"
15338SMALL SCOUT--"Dad, what are the silent watches of the night?"
15338SMITHSON--"Do you know that Noah was the greatest financier that ever lived?"
15338SMOKING"Have a cigar?"
15338SOCIALISTS"What''s the difference between a socialist and a plutocrat?"
15338SOCIETY"Dad, what''s a social scale?"
15338SPELLING If an S and an I, and an O and a U, With an X at the end spell"su,"And an E and a Y and an E spell I, Pray what is a speller to do?
15338SPINSTERS"Helen,"said the teacher,"can you tell me what a''myth''is?"
15338STENOGRAPHERS"How many stenographers have you?"
15338STEWARD--"Where did you put them last night?"
15338STRANGER--"Upon what plan are your city institutions conducted?"
15338STRATEGY WILLIE WILLIS--"Pa, what''s strategy?"
15338STUDENT( writing home)--"How do you spell''financially''?"
15338SUBURBS"Pa, what is a suburb, anyhow?"
15338SUBWAYS"There''s no danger in riding in these subways, is there?"
15338SUNDAY SCHOOLS"Ef yo''had your choice, Liza, which would yo''rather do-- live, or die an''go to heaven?"
15338SURPRISE"Do you think Gladys was surprised when I proposed to her?"
15338SYNONYMS TEACHER--"Hawkins, what is a synonym?"
15338Said A to B:"I do n''t believe you even remember the Lord''s Prayer, do you?"
15338Salary expected?
15338Same kind as you sent me last?"
15338See?
15338Senator Hoar used to tell with glee of a Southerner just home from New England who said to his friend,"You know those little white round beans?"
15338Shall I accept him?"
15338Shall I chase them away?"
15338Shall I make some apple sauce out''n hit, mum?"
15338She explained her dilemma and the colored woman listened in silence, then she said:"Where do yo''live, missus?"
15338She looked at him and said,"Are you shaving?"
15338Should I wake him?"
15338Since then in every sort of place I''ve met with Mark and heard him joke, Yet how can I describe his face?
15338Skinner?"
15338So she makes that up too, does she?"
15338Suddenly he called to the new clerk:"Did you give George Callahan credit?"
15338Suddenly he turned to the priest:"See here, old chap,"he demanded,"is this thing perfectly safe?"
15338Surprised, she asked:"Did you really do that?"
15338TARDINESS MR. PECK--"Would you mind compelling me to move on, officer?
15338TEACHER--"And what was Nelson''s farewell address?"
15338TEACHER--"Do you know the population of New York?"
15338TEACHER--"In what part of the Bible is it taught that a man should have only one wife?"
15338TEACHER--"Thomas, will you tell me what a conjunction is, and compose a sentence containing one?"
15338TEACHER--"What lesson do we learn from it?"
15338TEACHER--"You remember the story of Daniel in the lion''s den, Robbie?"
15338TEACHERS FATHER( meaningly)--"Who is the laziest member of your class, Tommy?"
15338TELEGRAPH"Why did you strike the telegraph operator?"
15338THE COURT--"Considering that you are the wife of the prisoner, do you think you are qualified to act as a juror in this case?"
15338THE FATHER--"But have you enough money to marry my daughter?"
15338THE LADY-"So you''re really one of the strikers?"
15338THE PUBLISHER--"How are you going to introduce accurate local color in your new story of life in Thibet?
15338THE TOMBSTONE MAN( after several abortive suggestions)--"How would simply,''Gone Home''do?"
15338THE VISITOR--"Does your new baby brother cry much, Ethel?"
15338TILDA--"How come I say mo''''lasses when I ai n''t had none yet?"
15338TODAY--"What do we care for prices?
15338TOMMIE--"What makes you think that?"
15338TOMMY--"Father, what''s the future of the verb''invest''?"
15338TOMMY--"How much does it take to kill a person?"
15338TOMMY--"How much for my luggage?"
15338TOMMY--"Why do the ducks dive?"
15338TOMORROW--"What do we care for prices?
15338TOURIST( in village notion- store)--"Whaddya got in the shape of automobile- tires?"
15338TRADE UNIONS TEACHER--"If a man gets four dollars for working eight hours a day, what would he get if he worked ten hours a day?"
15338TRAMP--"That so, mum?
15338TRIGGS--"What are they?"
15338Taking in the size of the boy and then glancing back at the book she remarked,"This is rather technical, is n''t it?"
15338That so earnestly ye lean From the spirit to the clay?
15338The Function of Humor In an article entitled"Why Do We Laugh?"
15338The Irishman looked at him suspiciously for a moment, then said:"What the devil do I want a ticket there an''back for when I''m here already?"
15338The Tax?
15338The boarder watched him a little while and then said:"What on earth are you howling for?
15338The canny Scot replied with a merry twinkle in his eye,"Which is the most important leg of a three- legged stool?"
15338The couple agreed, and at the proper moment the clergyman said:"Will those who wish to be united in the holy bond of matrimony please come forward?"
15338The deft designer, what of her?
15338The editor of The Reporter humbly submits to the editor of The Digest this bit of pathos:"What shape, madam, was the pocketbook you lost?"
15338The farmer scratched his head for a moment, and then said:"Look a- here, be you the tax assessor or has she been killed by the railroad?"
15338The following is reported as an incident to his vigil:"Who goes there?"
15338The host''s son was at the table, and one of the New York clergymen said to him:"My lad, what did you think of your father''s sermon?"
15338The minister noticed that the pigs were very strange in their manner, so he said:"My good lady, why are the pigs so excited?"
15338The minister, surprised and confused, turned to the keeper and said:"Shall I stop speaking?"
15338The mother, quite anxious, exclaimed,"Where can Aunt Mary be?"
15338The teacher had asked,"Why did David say he would rather be a door- keeper in the house of the Lord?"
15338The workman was busily employed by the roadside, and the wayfarer paused to inquire,"What are you digging for?"
15338The young man reflected a moment, and then asked,"How many are there of you, sir?"
15338The young woman urged the child to come to her, saying again:"Wo n''t you give me a kiss?"
15338Then comes a Buick and the chauffeur says:"How far is it to Kansas City?"
15338Then he anxiously turned to his mother and exclaimed:"Ma, which one are you going to keep?"
15338Then he remarked bitingly:"How will you have your tea, Miss Brown?"
15338Then he said"Then perhaps you knew Tom Sawyer?"
15338Then the clergyman turned to a gentleman from Ireland and asked him:"And what would you be were you not an Irishman?"
15338Then what did you have your eyes closed for?"
15338Then why do n''t you light it again?"
15338Then why is it people brag about them?"
15338Then, the following colloquy occurred:"Did n''t you get my letter?"
15338Then:"Mother, why do n''t you boil daddy?"
15338There ca n''t but one be elected, can there?"
15338They ask,"What does that represent?"
15338They charged the bug with bigamy; Now what could the poor thing do?
15338They like to have it quiet up there, do n''t they?"
15338They thought she was going blind, and so a surgeon operated on her and found--""Yes?"
15338Throw down your pole, chuck out your bait And say your fishin''s through?
15338Throw up the sponge and kick yourself And growl, and fret, and stew?
15338To the woman who was bending over the washtub he said:"Madam, I am the census- taker; how many children have you?"
15338Troubled with sleeplessness?
15338Turning to the daughter of the house, he asked sternly:"Do you yourself, Miss Fuller, think the girls who dance these dances are right?"
15338Turning to the mother, he inquired,"What is the name of the child?"
15338Two bootblacks nabbed for shooting craps?
15338Two nurse- maids were wheeling their infant charges in the park when one asked the other:"Are you going to the dance tomorrow afternoon?"
15338UNFORTUNATE PEDESTRIAN( who has been knocked down and dazed)--"Where am I?
15338Understan'', Rastus?"
15338VEGETARIANS"Ever bothered with tramps out your way?"
15338VISITOR--"What about?"
15338VISITOR--"What''s that new building on the hill yonder?"
15338VISITOR--"Why does your servant go about the house with her hat on?"
15338Voice?
15338WAITER( confidently)--"Would you mind just letting me''ave another look at the bill, sir?"
15338WAITER--"And will you take the macaroni au gratin, sir?"
15338WAITER--"What strike, sir?"
15338WARD HEELER--"Are women trying to reform politics?"
15338WATKINS--"Just what is democracy, anyway?"
15338WEARY RHODES--"What ja gona do?"
15338WHAT HE SAID TO HIS PARTNER--"Well, how''s the garden coming along?
15338WIFE( trying to think of The Hague)--"Let''s see, what is the name of the place where so much was done toward promoting peace in the world?"
15338WILLIE( doing his homework)--"What is the distance to the nearest star, Auntie?"
15338WILLIE--"Paw, why is the way of the transgressor hard?"
15338WILLIS--"Did the war do anything for you?"
15338WILLIS--"Going to the party?"
15338WILLIS--"What makes you think it is easier for a rich man to land in Society than for an immigrant to land in America?"
15338WISDOM"Father, have you cut all four of your wisdom teeth?"
15338WIVES"Are you the captain of your soul?"
15338WORRY"Did n''t you use to belong to a Do n''t Worry Club years ago?"
15338Walk?''
15338Was he a steady chap Ryan?"
15338Was n''t there something said about a movement to have it reduced?"
15338Was there a dull thud?
15338We''ve been at Gallipoli, Mesopotamia, the plains of Bethlehem, and--""The plains of Bethlehem?"
15338Were n''t there_ any_ Methodists?"
15338Were they lost?"
15338What are they for, I should like to know?"
15338What are those things you are driving?
15338What are ye daein the morrow nicht?"
15338What are you going into?''
15338What are you locked up here for?"
15338What are your qualifications?"
15338What can I do for you?"
15338What causes winter underwear?
15338What d''ye want a watch fer?
15338What did he say, pet?"
15338What did she die of?"
15338What do I know about surplices?
15338What do you call her Postscript for?"
15338What do you expect us to do?
15338What do you mean, child?"
15338What do you suppose I came to consult you for?"
15338What do you think I am, a college graduate?"
15338What do you think it was?"
15338What do you think of him?"
15338What do you think of mine?"
15338What do you think the servants are for?"
15338What do you want to do with this extra one?"
15338What do you want?"
15338What does Ghoughphteightteau spell?
15338What does this mean?
15338What drove our honest pen to rhyme?
15338What else do you want to know?"
15338What happened?"
15338What happened?"
15338What have I to be thankful for?
15338What have the various expeditions to the North Pole accomplished?"
15338What have you done it for?"
15338What have you to say in your defense?"
15338What in the world gives you that idea?"
15338What in thunder is a poor editor to do anyhow?
15338What is he doing?"
15338What is he suffering from?"
15338What is it men in ev''ry clime, Will talk about till end of time?
15338What is it moulds the life of man?
15338What is it, anyhow?''
15338What is it?
15338What is it?"
15338What is it?"
15338What is the title of it?"
15338What is your income from art?
15338What is your motto, my son?"
15338What is your name, age, and salary?
15338What is your proposition?"
15338What is yours?"
15338What makes some black and others tan?
15338What makes the Cost of Living high?
15338What makes the Libyan Desert dry?
15338What makes the Zulu live in trees, And Congo natives dress in leaves, While others go in fur and freeze?
15338What makes the summer warm and fair?
15338What makes us rush and build a fire, And shiver near the glowing pyre-- And then on other days perspire?
15338What makes you ask?"
15338What makes you think so?"
15338What marvel from the fabled isles That drew the eye from Paris styles?
15338What number immediately comes into your mind?"
15338What number was it you wanted?"
15338What on earth could I do with him?
15338What poems have been written by just looking through a window; and as for literature in general, who does not remember the window in Thrums?
15338What seed did you use?"
15338What swayed the living mass?
15338What then?"
15338What was the best interview you ever wrote?
15338What was the nature of the trouble you consulted him about?"
15338What would a policy for$ 20,000 cost?"
15338What would you think of a soldier without a gun?"
15338What would you want to go for, anyhow?
15338What''s happened to your box for the blind?"
15338What''s he done got de matter of''m?"
15338What''s he want of such a speed demon?"
15338What''s that mean?"
15338What''s the difference between the city and the country?"
15338What''s the matter?
15338What''s the secret?"
15338What''s up?
15338What''s your notion of a hospitable house?"
15338What?
15338What?
15338What?"
15338When I made a mistake yesterday he said:''Pray, mademoiselle, why do you take so much pains to improve upon Beethoven?''"
15338When I want a shirt mended I take it to my wife and flourish it around a little and say,''Where''s that rag- bag?''
15338When Paderewski was on his last visit to America he was in a Boston suburb, when he was approached by a bootblack who called:"Shine?"
15338When did he get a car?"
15338When he had sufficiently gained his breath he spoke:"Which one?"
15338When his brother arrived he showed him the bills and said:"Vat do it mean you shall buy ditto for a closing( clothing) business?"
15338When labor gets dissatisfied, And would conditions override, Who gets submerged beneath the tide?
15338When lovely woman wants a favor, And finds, too late, that man wo n''t bend, What earthly circumstance can save her From disappointment in the end?
15338When managers and actors fight And theaters are closed at night, Who sees amusement out of sight?
15338When street- cars cease to run, and balk At all conciliation talk, Who has to pay the freight and walk?
15338When strikes put up the price of food, And each side holds firm attitude, Who always has to make loss good?
15338When, after much labor, the document was completed, the client asked:"Have you fixed this thing, as I wished it, tight and strong?"
15338When, where, and why did you paint it?
15338Where am I?"
15338Where are the clothes of yesteryear-- And of the year before?
15338Where are the clothes of yesteryear?
15338Where are you-- out driving or at a four- o''clock tea?"
15338Where does he live?
15338Where have you been since you took my order?"
15338Where is it?"
15338Where would you go to dig a can of worms?"
15338Where''d you get that idea?"
15338Where''ll I begin?"
15338Where''s the lady?"
15338Where?
15338Where?
15338Which of your paintings do you consider your best work?
15338Whit wad ye say to Union Street?"
15338Who in disputes which rise each day, Is not permitted any say, But always loses either way?
15338Who is she?"
15338Who is this, I say?"
15338Who is this?
15338Who is your favorite dead master?
15338Who knows?
15338Who outspoke you?"
15338Who will forget his smoking bout With Mount Vesuvius-- our cheers-- When Mount Vesuvius went out And did n''t smoke again for years?
15338Who would venture to predict a woman''s ballot twenty- four hours before election?"
15338Who''s chickens did you''spose dey was?"
15338Whose?"
15338Whut''s dis yere haid for?"
15338Why a cook will put sugar for salt in a pie?
15338Why an ostrich will travel for miles?
15338Why are jokes preceded by the so- called title, which is virtually the conclusion, or what Twain termed the"nub"?
15338Why ca n''t I cease a slave to be, And taste existence beatific On some fair island hid in the Pacific?
15338Why did n''t yer keep hold of her skirt?"
15338Why did n''t you stop?"
15338Why did she leave you?"
15338Why do n''t you get a more interesting preacher?"
15338Why do n''t you have him arrested?"
15338Why do n''t you keep your account in a bank that has plenty of money?"
15338Why do n''t you leave him?"
15338Why do n''t you try my plan?"
15338Why do n''t you want a lawyer?"
15338Why do you ask that question?"
15338Why do you want job?
15338Why have n''t you sent us anything?
15338Why is n''t every one happy?"
15338Why learn to economize in politics?
15338Why should one with great pains and poor prospects of success attempt to do what has already been well done?
15338Why should the teachers get paid when us kids do all the work?"
15338Why should they strangely disappear-- All the old clothes of yesteryear?
15338Why the tigers and lions creep out of their lair?
15338Why, how''s that?
15338Why?"
15338Why?"
15338Why?"
15338Will it ever make a change for the better?
15338Will you lend me one?"
15338Will you take yer heggs fried, same as this''ere gentleman?"
15338William thought this over seriously for a few minutes, then said:"Mama, what kind of a boy was papa?"
15338With but three minutes to catch his train, the traveling salesman inquired of the street- car conductor,"Ca n''t you go faster than this?"
15338With the sobs rising in her throat, she held up her plate as high as she could and said:"Does anybody want a clean plate?"
15338Without windows there would be no ghost stories, for how could the rain beat on the pane, or the wind come in short gusts through the cracks?
15338Wo n''t you have a glass of soda while waiting?"
15338Wo n''t you see if you ca n''t fix it so I can use them privately?
15338Wonder who it belongs to?"
15338Would n''t some bread and butter do?"
15338Would n''t you like to add a little to the amount?"
15338Would the butcher, baker, grocer Get our hard- earned dollars?
15338Would you mind telling me about how much the wedding cost you?"
15338X.--"Bothered with time- wasting callers, are you?
15338Y.--"But suppose it''s some one you want to see?"
15338Y.--"What is your plan?"
15338YOUNG HOPEFUL--"Father, what is a traitor in politics?"
15338YOUNG HOPEFUL--"Well, then, what is a man who leaves his party and comes over to yours?"
15338YOUNG LADY--"What makes it stay up?"
15338YOUNG SON--"What is luck, father?"
15338YOUNG WOMAN( to be neighbor at dinner)--"Guess whom I met today, doctor?"
15338You know everything- what''s a cosmopolitan?"
15338You know something about punctuation, do n''t you?"
15338You make me stop and wonder Why I find you there to- night, Is it some worry or some fright That leaves you colorless, and oh, so white?
15338You may analyze this and say, what is there in it?
15338You remember things now?"
15338You want to know''oo told me that, mum?"
15338You- all do n''t s''pose Uncle Sam is gwine to put a$ 10,000 man in the first- line trenches, do you?"
15338Young M.D.--"Well, Dad, I''m hanging out my shingle; ca n''t you give me some rules for success?"
15338_ Consolation_"How did your novel come out?"
15338_ Cupid_ Why was Cupid a boy, And why a boy was he?
15338_ Do You Believe In Fairies?_ The world is full of people Who are under the impression That libr''ry work in general Is the easiest profession.
15338_ Fishin''_"Supposin"fish do n''t bite at first, What are you goin''to do?
15338_ Hard to Find_ LIBRARIAN--"What kind of book do you want-- fictional, historical, philosophical--?"
15338_ I And Me_ I wonder just what kind of guy Am I?
15338_ Its Friendly Way_"How are we to meet the high cost of living?"
15338_ Sunday the Thirteenth_ Must the new morn Be a Blue morn?
15338_ Superfluous_"What''s that you''re goin''to give Bill?"
15338_ Twenty- One Plus_ FIRST SUFFRAGIST--"How old do you think Mabel is?"
15338_ Unseen, Unheard_ TEACHER--"What does a well- bred child do when a visitor calls to see her mother?"
15338_ Up- to- date_ KIND STRANGER--"How old is your baby brother, little girl?"
15338_ Who Can Tell?_ Dear Sirs,--About the engine.
15338_ Why_ Do you know why the rabbits are caught in the snare Or the tabby cat''s shot on the tiles?
15338_"How?
15338and the Bolsheviki?"
15338are you not a member of the African Church?"
15338exclaimed his mother;"do n''t you know it''s wicked to play marbles for''keeps''?
15338exclaimed she,"what in the world has happened to you?"
15338exclaimed the physician,"are you old Tom''s son?"
15338he demanded,"that you stand so much lower in your studies for the month of January than for December?"
15338he was asked;"what is the Spanish flu like, Sam?"
15338how long has this been going on?"
15338how shall I define Thy shapeless, baseless, placeless emptiness?
15338no supper ready?
15338queried his Honor"What was he doing that seemed suspicious?"
15338replied the recruit;"if he''d do that to Lord Roberts, what would he do to plain Mike Flanagan?"
15338said Sam;"do n''t you all know what de flu is?
15338said a hearer, in sympathetic tones;"and what were you in for?"
15338said the sergeant,"why did n''t you answer right when the sentry challenged you?"
15338she persisted,"does it make any difference which of these cars I take to Greenwood Cemetery?"
15338shouted the irate farmer,"Well, why does the sign say,''Fine for Hitching''?''"
15338so much and go round with a straw in your mouth?"
15338so you want a job, eh?
15338the lady exclaimed,''You''re mighty sure about it, are n''t you?
15338to''lend''or''loan''?"
15338what is the matter with you?"
15338why should I marry me?
15338wo n''t you- all tell Marse Bob please not to go out no moh till I kin git his clo''es round to him?"
15338you broke the Sabbath?"
6081And of himselfe imaginid he ofte To ben defaitid, pale and woxin lesse Than he was wonte, and that men saidin softe, What may it be? 6081 And what, Sir,"he said, after a short pause,"might the cost be?"
6081Only three guineas for selling a thousand copies of a work in two volumes?
6081Queen of all harmonious things, Dancing words and speaking strings, What god, what hero, wilt thou sing? 6081 STATUE- GHOST.--Will you not relent and feel remorse?
6081Was not this love? 6081 What then are we to understand?
6081--"Thirty and two pages?
6081--a sophism, which I fully agree with Warburton, is unworthy of Milton; how much more so of the awful Person, in whose mouth he has placed it?
6081--or have brought all the different marks and circumstances of a sealoch before the mind, as the actions of a living and acting power?
6081--or have spoken of boys with a string of club- moss round their rusty hats, as the boys"with their green coronal?"
6081A man of fortune?
6081Alexander and Clytus!--Flattery?
6081Alexander and Clytus!--anger-- drunkenness-- pride-- friendship-- ingratitude-- late repentance?
6081And by the latter in consequence only of the former?
6081And by what rules could he direct his choice, which would not have enabled him to select and arrange his words by the light of his own judgment?
6081And how came the percipient here?
6081And how can I do this better than by pointing out its gallant attention to the ladies?
6081And how much, did you say, there was to be for the money?"
6081And since then, Sir--?
6081And to what law can their motions be subjected but that of time?
6081And what is become of the wonder- promising Matter, that was to perform all these marvels by force of mere figure, weight and motion?
6081And yet, though under this impression, should have commenced his critique in vulgar exultation with a prophecy meant to secure its own fulfilment?
6081Anna mia, Anna dolce, oh sempre nuovo E piu chiaro concento, Quanta dolcezza sento In sol Anna dicendo?
6081Are they the style used in the ordinary intercourse of spoken words?
6081As eyes, for which the former has pre- determined their field of vision, and to which, as to its organ, it communicates a microscopic power?
6081But I must yield, for this"( what?)
6081But Milton-- D. Aye Milton, indeed!--but do not Dr. Johnson and other great men tell us, that nobody now reads Milton but as a task?
6081But are books the only channel through which the stream of intellectual usefulness can flow?
6081But are such rhetorical caprices condemnable only for their deviation from the language of real life?
6081But is this a poet, of whom a poet is speaking?
6081But is this the order, in which the rustic would have placed the words?
6081But now, perplex''d by what the Old Man had said, My question eagerly did I renew,''How is it that you live, and what is it you do?''
6081But tell me, do tell me,--Is I not, now and den, speak some fault?
6081But what is there to account for the prodigy of the tempest at Bertram''s shipwreck?
6081But where are the evidences of the danger, to which a future historian can appeal?
6081But where findeth he wisdom?
6081But why need I appeal to these invidious facts?
6081But why should I say retire?
6081But why then do you pretend to admire Shakespeare?
6081By meditation, rather than by observation?
6081By reflection?
6081CHAPTER XXIII Quid quod praefatione praemunierim libellum, qua conor omnem offendiculi ansam praecidere?
6081Can any candid and intelligent mind hesitate in determining, which of these best represents the tendency and native character of the poet''s genius?
6081Coleridge?"
6081D. But do you not know, that he has distributed papers and hand- bills of a seditious nature among the common people?
6081Dear, could my heart not break, When with my pleasures ev''n my rest was gone?
6081Devils, say you?
6081Does e''en thy age bear Memory of so terrible a storm?
6081Does he not send for a posse of constables or thief- takers to handcuff the villain, or take him either to Bedlam or Newgate?
6081Does not the Prior act?
6081E che non fammi, O sassi, O rivi, o belue, o Dii, questa mia vaga Non so, se ninfa, o magna, Non so, se donna, o Dea, Non so, se dolce o rea?
6081For surely these words could never mean, that a painter may have a person sit to him who afterwards may leave the room or perhaps the country?
6081For to what law can the action of material atoms be subject, but that of proximity in place?
6081For wherein does the realism of mankind properly consist?
6081Had she remained constant?
6081Harp?
6081Hast sent the hare?
6081Have we not flown off to the contrary extreme?]
6081Here then shall I conclude?
6081How can we make bricks without straw;--or build without cement?
6081How convened?
6081How is the reader at the mercy of such men?
6081How shall I explain this?
6081How then?
6081How, therefore, is the poor husband to amuse himself in this interval of her penance?
6081How?
6081However, as once for all, you have dismissed the well- known events and personages of history, or the epic muse, what have you taken in their stead?
6081I began then to ask myself, what proof I had of the outward existence of anything?
6081I know all about it!--But what can anybody say more than this?
6081IMOG.--(with a frantic laugh) The forest fiend hath snatched him-- He( who?
6081If a man be asked how he knows that he is?
6081If he continue to read their nonsense, is it not his own fault?
6081If it be asked,"But what shall I deem such?"
6081If possible, what are its necessary conditions?
6081In fancy I can almost hear him now, exclaiming"Harp?
6081In the assertion that there exists a something without them, what, or how, or where they know not, which occasions the objects of their perception?
6081In what sense does he read"the eternal deep?"
6081In what sense is a child of that age a Philosopher?
6081In what sense is he declared to be"for ever haunted"by the Supreme Being?
6081Is I not in some wrong?
6081Is I not speak English very fine?
6081Is it comedy?
6081Is it obtained by wandering about in search of angry or jealous people in uncultivated society, in order to copy their words?
6081Is it, perhaps, that you only pretend to admire him?
6081Is the diffusion of truth to be estimated by publications; or publications by the truth, which they diffuse or at least contain?
6081Is there one word, for instance, attributed to the pedlar in THE EXCURSION, characteristic of a Pedlar?
6081Is, is-- I mean to ask you now, my dear friend-- is I not very eloquent?
6081It can not surely be, that the four lines, immediately following, are to contain the explanation?
6081JOHN.--Are these some of your retinue?
6081Lastly, if you ask me, whether I have read THE MESSIAH, and what I think of it?
6081Learning, Sir?
6081Lyre?
6081Metre in itself is simply a stimulant of the attention, and therefore excites the question: Why is the attention to be thus stimulated?
6081Muse, boy, Muse?
6081My beauty, little child, is flown, But thou wilt live with me in love; And what if my poor cheek be brown?
6081Need the rank have been at all particularized, where nothing follows which the knowledge of that rank is to explain or illustrate?
6081No!--A clerk?
6081No!--A merchant''s traveller?
6081No!--A merchant?
6081No!--Un Philosophe, perhaps?
6081Only fourteen years old?
6081Or between that of rage and that of jealousy?
6081Or even if this were admitted, has the poet no property in his works?
6081Or have represented the reflection of the sky in the water, as"That uncertain heaven received into the bosom of the steady lake?"
6081Or in the IDLE SHEPHERD- BOYS?
6081Or in the LUCY GRAY?
6081Or is wealth the only rational object of human interest?
6081Or must he rest on an assertion?
6081Or not far rather by the power of imagination proceeding upon the all in each of human nature?
6081Or on the other, that they are not prosaic, and for that reason unpoetic?
6081Or that it is vicious, and that the stanzas are blots in THE FAERY QUEEN?
6081Or where can the poet have lived?
6081Our whole information[ 84] is derived from the following words--"PRIOR.--Where is thy child?
6081Over what place, thought I, does the moon hang to your eye, my dearest friend?
6081P. But I pray you, friend, in what actions great or interesting, can such men be engaged?
6081P. It is your own poor pettifogging nature then, which you desire to have represented before you?--not human nature in its height and vigour?
6081Pierian spring?
6081Quid autem facias istis, qui vel ob ingenii pertinaciam sibi satisfieri nolint, vel stupidiores sint, quam ut satisfactionem intelligant?
6081Say rather how dare I be ashamed of the Teutonic theosophist, Jacob Behmen?
6081Sir, the men are without number, and infinite blindness supplies the place of sight?
6081Such a position therefore must, in the first instance be demanded, and the first question will be, by what right is it demanded?
6081That there exist no inconveniences, who will pretend to assert?
6081The grammar, Sir?
6081To their question,"Why did you choose such a character, or a character from such a rank of life?"
6081Vel-- and vat is dhat?
6081Was it ambition?
6081Was it his spirit, by spirits taught to write Above a mortal pitch that struck me dead?
6081What God?
6081What Man shall we celebrate?
6081What can be more accurate yet more lovely than the two concluding stanzas?
6081What happy man to equal glories bring?
6081What has a plain citizen of London, or Hamburg, to do with your kings and queens, and your old school- boy Pagan heroes?
6081What have you heard?
6081What heroes has she reared on her buskins?
6081What if he himself has owned, that beauties as great are scattered in abundance throughout the whole book?
6081What literary man has not regretted the prudery of Spratt in refusing to let his friend Cowley appear in his slippers and dressing gown?
6081What then did he mean?
6081What then may you be?
6081What then shall we say?
6081What?
6081Whence gained he the superiority of foresight?
6081Whence then cometh wisdom?
6081Where dwelleth understanding?
6081Where is the place of understanding?
6081Where is thy child?
6081Who also can deny a portion of sublimity to the tremendous consistency with which he stands out the last fearful trial, like a second Prometheus?
6081Who can listen to you for a minute, who can even look at you, without perceiving the extent of it?
6081Who dares suspect it?
6081Who dies, that bears Not one spurn to the grave of their friends''gift?
6081Who lives, that''s not Depraved or depraves?
6081Whom has your tragic muse armed with her bowl and dagger?
6081Why dost thou urge her with the horrid theme?
6081Why need I be afraid?
6081Why, I repeat, do you pretend to admire Shakespeare?
6081Will it be contended on the one side, that these lines are mean and senseless?
6081Would then the mere superaddition of metre, with or without rhyme, entitle these to the name of poems?
6081Yet will Mr. Wordsworth say, that the style of the following stanza is either undistinguished from prose, and the language of ordinary life?
6081and are they by no other means to be precluded, but by the rejection of all distinctions between prose and verse, save that of metre?
6081and what are they?
6081and what do you know of the person in question?
6081are not our modern sentimental plays filled with the best Christian morality?
6081by conscious intuition?
6081by knowledge?
6081does he ever harangue the people?
6081e qual pur forte?
6081have his daughters brought him to this pass?
6081is--?
6081non vonne errando, E non piango, e non grido?
6081only three guineas for the what d''ye call it-- the selleridge?"
6081or by any form or modification of consciousness?
6081or hast thou swallow''d her?"
6081or how can it be called the child, if it be no part of the child''s conscious being?
6081or so inspired as to deserve the splendid titles of a Mighty Prophet, a blessed Seer?
6081or, if convened, Must not the magic power that charms together Millions of men in council, needs have power To win or wield them?
6081the fiend or the child?)
6081the sentimental muse I should have said, whom you have seated in the throne of tragedy?
6081thou hast something seen?"
6081what Hero?
6081what could this mean?
6081what man to join with these can worthy prove?
6081who can the sothe gesse, Why Troilus hath al this hevinesse?
6081without some lehrning?
9403[ 127] But is this what is actually seen? 9403 ''Are you the----?'' 9403 ''Is that Siegwart? 9403 ''Why'', do you venture to ask? 9403 A new task was needed to make life tolerable, but what should it be? 9403 A valuable capital for him that knows how to profit by it.--Conscience? 9403 An excellent scarecrow with which to frighten sparrows from cherry- trees.--Filial love? 9403 And Humboldt replied:''How shall I thank you for the indescribable pleasure that your poem has given me? 9403 But could anything worth while have been done with the heroics of friendship after''Don Carlos''? 9403 But how was a prince to enjoy tranquillity without the necessaries of life? 9403 But to what end serves that nobility of which their descendants are so proud, unless it be to prove the robberies and infamy of their ancestor? 9403 But was it necessary for him to deceive and torture the wife to whom in the end he appears loyally devoted? 9403 But what was the purpose to be in this case? 9403 But what was to be done with a helpless captive who was not free to shape her own fate? 9403 But what would Jean Paul have had? 9403 But where to find a subject? 9403 But who shall dare to say that it was so in reality? 9403 But why should Louise wish to quit this life? 9403 But why so large?'' 9403 Commit suicide in order to stultify the oracle, or resolve to kill no man and to marry no woman? 9403 Could not Göschen be persuaded to undertake a new and authentic edition of the published plays and to advance a sum of money on the prospects? 9403 Did Schiller intend this effect, or is it due to the fact that he could not have portrayed her differently? 9403 Did he feel that his hot- blooded Italian should not be made too much of an idealist in his relation to women? 9403 Did he think of me at all? 9403 Did he wish it to be understood that Fiesco is honestly infatuated with the voluptuous Julia until he learns of her attempt to poison his wife? 9403 Did he withhold the letter too long and then show it? 9403 Did my father beget me because he loved me? 9403 Do you think I shall yet be able to make up for lost time? 9403 Family honor? 9403 Had he taken a lesson from the maidenly reserve of Lotte von Wolzogen and the prudential scruples of her mother? 9403 Had she never reflected upon the august foundations of the social order? 9403 Had she resisted Ferdinand''s suit and warned him that he must be content with a yearning friendship on earth and a union of souls in heaven? 9403 How does it affect the glory of one''s country or the good of mankind? 9403 How shall I enter Moscow amid the plaudits of the people, with this lie in my heart? 9403 How shall I meet the Czarina? 9403 If the good Spirit above the stars is to pardon everybody, what becomes of the incentive to a militant life? 9403 In what consists then the honor of that nobility of which you are so proud? 9403 Is it not quite enough for a light- house to be high and far- shining? 9403 Is it not rather true that Schiller makes but little out of the matter of ancestral guilt? 9403 Is there anything holy in his gratification of carnal appetite? 9403 Is this what Schiller intended? 9403 Is''t possible? 9403 Is''t true? 9403 It_ seems_ to recommend a quietistic, contemplative life; for how else shall one escape from the actual into the ideal? 9403 May not the queen of England-- so one is inclined to speculate-- be moved to pity? 9403 May she not at least postpone the execution of the death- sentence and gradually increase her prisoner''s liberty? 9403 May she not be persuaded that policy is on the side of mercy? 9403 Of a rank that makes its boast of slavery and wherein men blush to be men? 9403 Of his dramatic power there could be no doubt, but had he the higher gift of the great poet? 9403 On one occasion the duke gave out the theme:''Who is the meanest among you?'' 9403 One can not help asking: Where were Louise''s scruples then? 9403 Or did Schiller''s own courage fail him after he had received a hint of favor? 9403 Or shall I love him because he loves me? 9403 Or was Margarete herself disinclined,--piqued perhaps by Schiller''s neglect of her, or by his passion for Charlotte von Kalb? 9403 Our drama seems to wish to impute to Posa a lovable personality; else how account for the spell that he casts over all three of the royal personages? 9403 Perhaps there are better men, but where are they? 9403 Shall I undeceive the people? 9403 Shall we then take refuge in the position that the Maid''s story is not adapted to dramatic treatment at all? 9403 The corresponding passage in Schiller runs: Can it be? 9403 The result was a long letter of wild expostulation in this vein: What was the bond of our friendship? 9403 This is his mode of reasoning: Why did nature put upon me this burden of ugliness-- this Laplander''s nose, this Moorish mouth, these Hottentot eyes? 9403 Thou who didst summon earth and sky, And earth and sky came forth; Who sayest the word and worlds arise, Who art thou, mighty thing? 9403 Thus what can one make of a plain fisherman who talks in this wise about a rainstorm? 9403 Was Schwan''s memory also at fault? 9403 Was it an earthly, vulgar, or a higher, immortal, celestial bond? 9403 Was it folly? 9403 Was it frivolity? 9403 Was it selfishness? 9403 Was she ignorant of her father''s prejudice or resolved to brave it? 9403 Were the overruling powers malign or benevolent? 9403 What advantage will he have then over his sweetheart? 9403 What can one think, for example of a pair of ecstatically faithful lovers to whom it has evidently never occurred to write to each other? 9403 What can one think, indeed, except that this supernal maiden has been reading Klopstock''s famous''Ode to Fanny''? 9403 What could be better for his purpose than a daring conspiracy, led by a Plutarchian hero who was at the same time a single- minded patriot? 9403 What has become of it?... 9403 What is he to do? 9403 What more natural than that the shrewd intendant, with an eye to better houses, should bethink him of the pen that had written''The Robbers''? 9403 What should Demetrius do? 9403 What should he do? 9403 What should the passing of a single dreamer signify in the stirring epoch of Austerlitz and Jena? 9403 What were the world and a poet''s fame in comparison with happiness? 9403 What? 9403 Where art thou, beauteous world of story? 9403 Where is the obligation? 9403 Whither shall he look for help? 9403 Who could tell what might come of it? 9403 Who shall say that it was not better so? 9403 Who shall say, remembering the Greek proverb that a man is not educated save by flaying? 9403 Who, for example, would abate a jot or tittle from the delicious nonsense of Romeo? 9403 Why should one strive and cry and get into a feaze about tyrants and liars? 9403 Why then should he have been more timid than the author of''Lear''and''Macbeth''? 9403 Will you presume to boast, in a republic, of a rank that Is destructive to virtue and humanity? 9403 Wouldst thou soar heavenward on its joyous wing? 9403 [ Footnote 101: Nun, was denkt ihr vom Reiche der Schatten? 9364 A thousand thanks, and the Señor?"
9364And how many are here?
9364And what shall I say of their souls? 9364 And who may_ Cola de plata_ be?"
9364At your disposal, and you?
9364At your service, and you?
9364But what hath such an hour of such a day To do with human crimes, or earthly gloom? 9364 Cheese and honey?"
9364Curd- cakes?
9364Did no servant pass in or out during the transaction?
9364Did she give you a case of jewels in pledge?
9364Did you lend her eight hundred dollars, at such a date?
9364Does he take snuff?
9364Does your compadre smoke?
9364Gorditas de horna caliente?
9364Had you no witnesses?
9364Have you an apostolical mandate?
9364Hay cebo- o- o- o- o- o?
9364How are you? 9364 How many monks have you in your convent, father?"
9364How much sugar have you made to- day?
9364I am rejoiced, and how are you, Señora?
9364If this be the case in December,says he to himself,"what will it be in May?"
9364Il faut souffrir pour être belle,but_ à quoi bon être belle?_ if no one sees it.
9364Little fat cakes from the oven, hot?
9364Requesón and good honey?
9364Stuart? 9364 What are we doing?"
9364What do you suppose the Mexicans will be doing now?
9364What will your countrymen be doing now?
9364Who gives light to this house? 9364 Who wants mats from Puebla?
9364_ Quien sabe?_( Who knows?)
9364_ Quien sabe?_( Who knows?)
9364A husband and children?
9364And what do you think was the purport of their visit?
9364Are you acquainted with the Señora de-----?"
9364Are you well?"
9364As generals, as statesmen, as men of literature?
9364At dawn you are awakened by the shrill and desponding cry of the Carbonero, the coalmen,"Carbón, Señor?"
9364But now, Jesús knowing all things that should come upon him, went forth and said unto them, Whom seek ye?
9364But they have no facilities for transport, and at what market could the silk be sold?
9364But, if he had, would he not have killed the_ alacrans_, and_ chicaclinos_, and_ coralillos_, and_ vinagrillos_?
9364Come estás, como te va?
9364Como has pasado la noche, No has tenido novedad?
9364Did Saint Patrick go round from the Emerald Isle by way of Tipperary?
9364Distinguished in what way?
9364Do I, on this account, deserve the national gratitude and munificence manifested by such distinguished rewards?
9364Donde está de Carlos La perfida hueste?
9364H---- in his last letter asks what distinguished men we have in Mexico?
9364Had this plan of Iguala taken effect, what would have been the result in Mexico?--what its present condition?...
9364Have you met with nothing new?
9364Her family?
9364How are you?
9364How have you passed the night?
9364How many ounces were there in the bag you lost?"
9364How many regal tyrannies combined, So many fields of massacre have strewed As you, and your attendant cut- throat brood?
9364If Sweet Kitty Clover is genuine Irish, as who can doubt, how did these Indians get hold of it?
9364If it is in the morning, there is the additional question of"How have you passed the night?"
9364If she does so to conceal her disgrace is it not seen that a woman will stop at no cruelty, to obtain this end?
9364In what other city in the world would they not have taken part with one or other side?
9364Is it that they do not care for reading, or that less attention is paid to them than to the French or American passengers?
9364It is the President?
9364Just recovered from the smallpox, after being severely ill."Not dangerously?"
9364Land, whose new beauties I behold revealed, Is this not true, and bitter as''tis true?
9364Little dove, what are you doing there leaning against that wall?
9364Of all who sing the praises of the moon, who should love her blessed beams from his inmost heart like the seaman?
9364One little girl sidled up to me, and said in a most insinuating voice,"_ Me llevas tu?_""Will you take me away with you?"
9364One little girl sidled up to me, and said in a most insinuating voice,"_ Me llevas tu?_""Will you take me away with you?"
9364Quien la llena de alegria?
9364The master of the house?
9364The mother who leaves her child at the_ Cuna_, would she not abandon it to a worse fate, if this institution did not exist?
9364The translation of the Palomo is as follows:"What are you doing, little dove, there in the wineshop?
9364Then passes by the_ cambista,_ a sort of Indian she- trader or exchanger, who sings out,"Tejocotes por venas de chile?"
9364Thou when absent how deplored, And when received, how wasted, till thy name Grows tarnished; shall mankind, ne''er cease to work thee shame?
9364Towards evening rises the cry of"Tortillas de cuajada?"
9364We were therefore somewhat startled when he advanced towards us with long strides, and in an authoritative voice shouted out,"Do you know who I am?
9364What boots it that her buried caves are bright With wealth untold of gold or silver ore?
9364What convents had I seen?
9364What could I have done, that thus the generous hand of the representatives of the Mexican people should load me with honours?
9364What did I do, your Excellency, in those days, that any one of my countrymen would not have done better?
9364What does she lose?
9364What if thy heart should change, thy spirit fail?
9364What motives have ye had to leave me thus?
9364What will such a man do but go upon the road?
9364Where had I lived?
9364Where is the perfidious Army of Carlos?
9364Where was I born?
9364Which did I prefer, the convents in France, or those in Mexico?
9364Which had the best garden?
9364Which of these evils has been remedied?
9364Which way shall I go?"
9364Which were largest?
9364While, checked by anarchy''s perpetual blight, Industry trembles''mid her hard- earned store, While rapine riots near in riches stained with gore?
9364Who can resist the magic of their song, always sweet, always gentle, and always natural?
9364Who fills it with joy?
9364Who kindles faith in it?
9364Why have you left your mother''s side?
9364Why?
9364Y quien la abraza en la fé?
9364and so much difficulty in keeping the party together?
9364and that, strong as maternal love is, the dread of the world''s scorn has conquered it?
9364as exposure of her infant, even murder?
9364for whom?
9364how do you do?
9364how is the wind?"
9364mats of five yards?"
9364or,"Do you take nuts?"
9364which, as he pronounces it, sounds like"Carbosiu?"
9364who is that girl?
6192A college? 6192 About hospital cases?"
6192About what?
6192Amuse you?
6192And Galt Roscoe, who was he?
6192And he said, My God forbid it me that I should do this; is not this the blood of the men that went in jeopardy of their lives? 6192 And she had been a true wife to him before that?"
6192And the disguise-- your dress?
6192And who made you omniscient, Dr. Marmion? 6192 And why do you tell ME this, Hungerford-- a secret you''ve kept all these years?
6192And you think of going in the disguise of a gentleman? 6192 And you-- does not sleep concern you in this matter of madame?"
6192Are you going to relatives in France?
6192As I wish to join the chorus to so notable a compliment, will somebody pass the claret?
6192As Portia?
6192Because I have met many men like him, but no one quite like his daughter, or Mrs.--what is her name?
6192But did it resemble any one you had ever seen?
6192But might not a man fall by the same rule of vanity?
6192But suppose he knew that she loved ease and pleasure?--that he feared her anger or disdain if he did not minister to her luxuries?
6192But suppose she had loved him? 6192 But which is Miss Treherne?
6192But-- here I thought her voice had a touch of breathlessness--"but who is the officer?
6192Did you ever see a Spanish- Mexican woman dance?
6192Do n''t you think-- as a woman, not as a theorist-- that Mrs. Anson might at least have come to him when he was dying?
6192Do you think she would have had the pleasure at the price? 6192 Does he suffer much?"
6192Does it not strike you that this is irrelevant? 6192 For whom is that demonstration?"
6192From the what?
6192Have you no human feeling?
6192Have you talked with her?
6192He died, did he?
6192He was your brother?
6192How rude were you to him?
6192I as Menelaus the Greek?
6192I have been ill?
6192I need nothing-- not even you; and can you fancy that, after waiting all these years for this hour, money would satisfy me? 6192 I suppose, too, you are a good practical sailor-- that is, you understand seamanship, if you have travelled much?"
6192I think you gentlemen know each other?
6192I will speak to her about it, if you will let me?
6192If all admire, half are envious, some are jealous, and one is devoted-- is n''t that enough?
6192If anything happened? 6192 In Australia?
6192Indeed, why?
6192Indeed? 6192 Is he very ill?"
6192Is n''t this an unusual occupation for you, Hungerford-- this Swift- like criticism?
6192It is so many years since we had met, and--"And it is so easy to forget things? 6192 It was funny about those verses coming to my mind, was n''t it, Marmion?"
6192Justine is better?
6192Lost? 6192 Mademoiselle, will you pardon me?"
6192Marmion, are your brains softening? 6192 May I accompany you?"
6192Mr. Roscoe, I think?
6192No? 6192 Not even when he has repented and atoned?"
6192Oh, monsieur, is it possible that you are my brother''s friend and rescuer?
6192On what?
6192Perhaps your husband is a naval man?
6192She has told you?
6192She was beautiful?
6192Swift- like, is it? 6192 That he shall appear well in their eyes, that their vanity in turn should be fed, might he not commit a crime, and so bring misery?"
6192To what do you reduce honour and right?
6192Well, Hungerford,I said,"to what does this lead?"
6192Well, then, a college?
6192Well, you''ll not forget about Miss Treherne, will you? 6192 Well,"said I, at idle venture,"if not a hospital, what about a gaol?"
6192Well,she said, with a curious coldness,"what use shall you make of your special knowledge?"
6192Well?--Well, was not that enough? 6192 What about fifth officers?"
6192What did she say?
6192What did you read?
6192What is the matter, Hungerford?
6192What is there so uncommon about Miss Treherne? 6192 What was the woman''s face like, Hungerford?"
6192What was this officer''s vessel?
6192What would come of that, Hungerford?
6192What would such a selfish woman do in such a case, if her pleasure could not be gratified?
6192When did you see that picture on his breast?
6192When you consider a patient,he said,"do you arrange a diagnosis of a type or of a person?
6192Where did you join her?
6192Who is Mr. Charles Boyd?
6192Why not include the father in the list of the most interesting persons?
6192Why, what wrong did she do?
6192Why?
6192Would that accomplish the purpose?
6192Yes, I can see that,I said; and then I added:"Why did you not speak to her before you both came on board at Colombo?"
6192Yes, and you like money so much?
6192Yes, yes, I know that; but when did she fall asleep?
6192Yes,said I;"and what do you wish me to do?"
6192Yes? 6192 You do not wonder at what?"
6192You have not come from the Islands now, I suppose?
6192You have travelled much?
6192You know what a kangaroo battue is, do n''t you?
6192You must have found it a romantic life in those half- barbaric places?
6192You remember we passed the''Porcupine''in the Indian Ocean?
6192You seemed to enjoy Miss Treherne''s singing?
6192You still think this wise?
6192You think so-- in his proper place?
6192You understand?
6192You would prefer complete absorption-- as of the ocean?
6192......................... Is there unhappiness anywhere?
6192After a moment he opened them, and said, looking at Justine:"You have helped to nurse me, have you not?"
6192After a moment''s pause she continued, I thought, abstractedly:"As what should you go?"
6192After a moment, however, she remarked evenly:"He is likely to be delirious?"
6192After a time, in which we sat silent, I said to Madras:"But suppose she should be frightened?--should-- should make a scene?"
6192And Mrs. Falchion?
6192And so, wondering what I should say next, I remarked in desperation:"Do you like the sea?"
6192And was this man so much better than Boyd Madras?
6192And why?"
6192And you will tell me all you knew of him-- all that he said and did before he died?"
6192And, I say, Marmion, ask Miss Treherne to keep a dance for me-- a waltz-- towards the close of the evening, will you?
6192Are we to be friends, and not lovers?
6192At this she said,"I suppose I should be grateful,"and was there a slightly softer cadence to her voice?
6192Belle Treherne, noticing the direction of my glances, said:"Have you known Mrs. Falchion long?"
6192Beneath this was the simple line:"Why, what evil hath he done?"
6192But have n''t we had enough of horror?
6192But who was the man first to go overboard-- and who was it first gave the alarm?
6192But you will listen to me, my wife?
6192By that memory, then, of the time when they took each other for better or for worse, until death should part them?"
6192Ca n''t you tell me your trouble?
6192Caius Cassius was that, was n''t he?"
6192Callendar?"
6192Can you not hear the curses?"
6192Children clasped their mothers''hands and said,"Mother, was it the poor quartermaster?"
6192Did n''t you?"
6192Did you ever see anything so thrilling, so splendid, that you felt you must possess it?"
6192Do n''t you know your duties better?
6192Do you know me altogether, from your knowledge of that one thing?
6192Do you know, it is just four years ago tomorrow since I found Boyd Madras on the No Man''s Sea?"
6192Do you know,"he continued slowly and musingly,"I can look upon you now--yes, at this moment-- with more indifference than you ever showed to me?
6192Does it pay?
6192Falchion--''if''?"
6192Falchion?"
6192Falchion?"
6192Falchion?"
6192Had Madras miscalculated this woman?
6192Had he then gone out of the world in the garb of a mummer?
6192Had she no nerves at all?
6192Have I?
6192He gasped,"Does she think I am drowned?"
6192He had found one man-- but dead or alive?
6192He had made his exit?
6192He had satisfied the code at last?
6192He lay silent for a long time, then he turned to me and said:"Do you remember that tale in the Bible about David and the well of Bethlehem?"
6192He saw my mood, however, and said quietly:"Give me a light for my cigar, will you?
6192He says as much in his books.--Have you read his''A Sweet Apocalypse''?
6192Here Miss Treherne paused, and then added meditatively:"Do you know, she impressed me as having singular frankness and singular reserve as well?
6192How can there be atonement?
6192How then can she forgive?
6192How?"
6192How?"
6192Hungerford squeezed my arm again violently, and added:"Look here, Marmion, we understand each other in this, do n''t we?
6192Hungerford was passing just then, and I said:"Have you any idea what vessel it is, Hungerford?"
6192I excused myself, went over to her, and said:--"Miss Caron, you are in trouble?"
6192I handed her the medicine, and then asked:"How long have you known Mrs. Falchion, Miss Caron?"
6192I mean, what is his name?"
6192I motioned him aside where there was shadow, and said:"Well, you have determined to see her?"
6192I rose to get a cigar, thus turning my face from him, and said:"Well?"
6192I said to her:"You have been worried, Miss Caron?"
6192I suppose you are familiar with it and all of its kind?"
6192If you could give me a chance, and come with me to America-- anywhere, and let me start the world again?
6192Ill?
6192In a moment she said"You have met him?"
6192Is n''t it a little affectation on the part of the stage- struck committee?
6192Is n''t it-- inconsequent?"
6192Is not catastrophe dead, and the arrows of tragedy spilled?
6192Is that in perfect gallantry?
6192Justine here murmured:"Shall I tell her?"
6192Marmion?"
6192May I ask where that was?"
6192May I ask you what you mean?"
6192Maybe you have seen the Dervishes, or the Fijians, or the Australian aboriginals?
6192Need I tell you that I am Boyd Madras?"
6192No?
6192Now, frankly, am I not right?"
6192Now, frankly, are you speaking of Miss Treherne, or of some one of whom she is the outline, as it were?"
6192Oh, my dearie, do you love me still?
6192One can only guess, but white men take what are called native wives there very often--and who can tell?
6192Or does the secret wear on you, and-- Mr. Hungerford?
6192Or shall you cherish enmity against me?
6192Or, worse still,"--and here she laughed, I thought, a little ironically,--"avoid me, and be as icy as you have been-- fervid?"
6192Presently he continued:"See, Miss Treherne is sitting there with the Tasmanian widow-- what is HER name?"
6192Roscoe?"
6192Shall I be able to use my hand very soon, monsieur?"
6192She deliberately placed the paper in the belt of light, and, looking at it, remarked mechanically:"This is the head, is it?"
6192So I added quietly:"You perhaps had come from New Caledonia?"
6192So, he had disappeared from the play?
6192So, there was some mystery again?
6192Some one said to her:"Did you know the man who committed suicide?"
6192The weakness lasted only for a moment, and then, steadying herself, she said to both of us:"I hope you will say nothing of this to madame?
6192Was I, like the drunkard, coming surely to the time when I could no longer say yes to my wisdom, or no to my weakness?
6192Was it necessary to seek HIS help in keeping it?"
6192Was she altogether soulless?
6192Was she, thought I, the good wife of some convict-- some political prisoner?--the relative of some refugee of misfortune?
6192Was this woman never to be dissociated from enigma?
6192Well, why rush blindly at the impossible?
6192What IS the use of bringing up unpleasant subjects?
6192What can you do?
6192What could I say?
6192What had they to do with Mrs. Falchion?
6192What return does one get?"
6192What should happen?
6192What time shall we see you on deck?"
6192Who was it: she, or I, or the refugee of misfortune, Number 116 Intermediate?
6192Why do n''t I keep it to myself?
6192Why do you speak in that way?"
6192Why does he shadow a woman who would n''t lift her finger to save him from battle, murder, or sudden death?"
6192Why should you not appear as Portia?"
6192Women do n''t dislike being bullied, if it is done in the right way-- haven''t I seen it the world over, from lubra to dowager?
6192Would it be permanent?
6192Would melodrama supervene after all?
6192You have heard of music stirring the blood; of savage races-- and others-- working themselves up to ecstatic fury?
6192You lived there?"
6192You mean, on board ship?"
6192You will say at least that you forgive me the blight and ill I brought upon you?"
6192You''ve met her father, I suppose?"
6192before THAT day?"
6192he said"no heart in you at all?
8820There is dust in my eyes, for I can not see,-- Is that my Michel to the right of thee, Soldier of France?
8820''T was more than I could compass, For how was I to think With such infernal rumpus In such a blasted stink?
8820All morning I heard him fret:"Oh, when will she come, Fleurette?"
8820And how shall I repay?
8820And in the land they guard so well Is there no silent watch to keep?
8820And shall my wreath return to dust?
8820And they who lead, who hold the van?
8820And what makes she, I wonder, Of the horror and the blood, And what''s her luck, to sunder The evil from the good?
8820And what was the next thing that she required?
8820And who will bring white peace That he may sleep upon his hill again?
8820And,"What do you call it?"
8820Art thou no more, O Maiden Heaven- born O Peace, bright Angel of the windless morn?
8820Blood on the sword, our eyes blood- red, Blind in our puny reign of power, Do we forget how soon is sped Our little hour?
8820Brave souls... but who remembers The flame that fired your embers?...
8820But in what Spartan school of discipline Did you get patience, boy?
8820But what would you have?
8820But when can me or my mates forget, When the Guards came through?
8820Can much pondering so hoodwink you?
8820Can you wonder now I am gay?
8820Dash the bomb on the dome of Paul''s-- Deem ye the fame of the Admiral falls?
8820Do I miss it?
8820For_ she_, was_ she_ not dear?
8820Fresh from the trenches and gray with grime, Silent they march like a pantomime;"But what need of music?
8820Ghosts do not say,"Come, what was your record when you drew breath?"
8820Guns of Metz they grumble,"When?"
8820Has your last word of sophistry been said, O cult of slaves?
8820He Who has given them-- are they not His?
8820He whistles down the day- long road, And, when the chilly shadows fall And heavier hangs the weary load, Is he down- hearted?
8820Heard ye the trumpet sound?
8820His face?-- His hands?
8820How did you learn to bear this long- drawn pain And not complain?
8820How does he escape them?
8820How long will the others dream and stare?
8820How should I pay for one poor graven steeple Whereon you shattered what you shall not know?
8820How should I pay you everything you owe?
8820How should I pay you, miserable people?
8820How should we kneel, in this dread hour?
8820How should we seek to Thee for power Who scorned Thee yesterday?
8820I could only stare, I was taken so by surprise, When gently she bent her head:"_ May I kiss you, sergeant?_"she said.
8820Is it a purblind prank, O think you, Friend with the musing eye Who watch us stepping by, With doubt and dolorous sigh?
8820Is it a purblind prank, O think you, Friend with the musing eye?
8820Kaiser, face a question new-- This-- does God approve of you?
8820Mrs. Grace Ellery Channing Stetson and the New York_ Tribune_:--"_Qui Vive_?"
8820Oh, might I lie on the wind, or fly In the wilful sea- bird''s track, Would I hurry on, with a homesick cry-- Or hasten back?
8820Oh, then where is he?
8820Pry the stone from the chancel floor,-- Dream ye that Shakespeare shall live no more?
8820Regret?
8820Restless with throbbing hopes, with thwarted aims, Impulsive as a colt, How do you lie here month by weary month Helpless, and not revolt?
8820Rudyard Kipling_ MARE LIBERUM You dare to say with perjured lips,"We fight to make the ocean free"?
8820Shall I ever smile or feel again?
8820She had to ask,"What was it, dear?"
8820She had to look-- to ask,"What was it, dear?"
8820THE AMERICAN PEOPLE: What guff are you giving us, Captain?
8820The fool hath said...._ And we, who deemed him wise, We who believed that Thou wast dead, How should we seek Thine eyes?
8820The grass is waking in the ground, Soon it will rise and blow in waves-- How can it have the heart to sway Over the graves, New graves?
8820The sun turns north, the days grow long, Later the evening star grows bright-- How can the daylight linger on For men to fight, Still fight?
8820Though I forgave, would any man forget?
8820Though the dividing sea My leg?
8820Under the boughs where lovers walked The apple- blooms will shed their breath-- But what of all the lovers now Parted by Death, Grey Death?
8820Unhappy, can I give you back your honour?
8820Was n''t she glad now?
8820Was there grief once?
8820Was there grief once?
8820Was there love once?
8820We can but give our tears-- Ye dead men, who shall bring you Fame in the coming years?
8820We have not lived in hate What have I given What is the gift we have given thee, Sister?
8820What approaches there?
8820What are the bounds of No Man''s Land?
8820What can I give, O soldier, leal and brave, Long as I live, To pay the life you gave?
8820What canst thou do but bow to me and kneel?"
8820What for all time will the harvest be, Sister?
8820What is the price of that dead man they brought me?
8820What is the price of that red spark that caught me From a kind farm that never had a name?
8820What is the trust we have laid in thy hand?
8820What joy can these monotonous days afford Here in a ward?
8820What matter?
8820What new- wing''d world, or mangled god still- born?
8820What of the faith and fire within us What was it kept you so long, brave German submersible?
8820What richly moves, what lightly stirs, Like a noble lady in a dance, When all men''s eyes are in love with hers And needs must follow?
8820What song shall be worthy to sing of them-- Braver than the brave?
8820What sound the ear dismays, Mine Italy, mine Italy?
8820What soundless tumult, what breath in the air Takes the breath in the throat, the blood from the heart?
8820What tithe or part Can I return to thee, O stricken heart, That thou shouldst break for me?
8820What was joy?
8820What was pain?
8820What whispers, thrills, exults up there?
8820What will spring up from the seed that is sown?
8820When we have bled at every pore, Shall we still strive for gear and store?
8820Where are her sons who waged at cricket Warfare against the foeman- friend?
8820Where are the teams of last December?
8820Where do those strong young feet now stand?
8820Where is the giant shot that kills Wordsworth walking the old green hills?
8820Who called?
8820Who dies if England live?
8820Who is that_ malheureux_?"
8820Who moves-- what stirs in the startled air?
8820Who stands if freedom fall?
8820Will he live-- will he last-- will he make it?
8820Will it be Heaven?
8820Will it be Hell, When there is Peace?
8820Will it ever peal again?
8820Yea, when the sick world cries, how can he sleep?
8820Yet Pity whispered,"Why?"
8820You have heard?
8820You have heard?
8820_ Florence Earle Coates_ TO FRANCE What is the gift we have given thee, Sister?
8820_ Frederick George Scott__ In a Field near Ypres__ April, 1915_ TO OUR FALLEN Ye sleepers, who will sing you?
8820_ Frederick George Scott__ QUI VIVE?__ Qui vive?_ Who passes by up there?
8820_ Frederick George Scott__ QUI VIVE?__ Qui vive?_ Who passes by up there?
8820_ Frederick George Scott__ QUI VIVE?__ Qui vive?_ Who passes by up there?
8820_ Herbert Asquith__ 1915_ THE DEBT UNPAYABLE What have I given, Bold sailor on the sea, In earth or heaven, That you should die for me?
8820_ Qui vive?_ Who comes?
8820_ Qui vive?_ Who comes?
8820_ Qui vive?_"The Flags of France."
8820_ Robert Ernest Vernède_ FULFILMENT Was there love once?
8820_ Robert Haven Schauffler_ FLEURETTE THE WOUNDED CANADIAN SPEAKS: My leg?
8820_ Who_ comes?
8820_"Qui vive?
54247About''Us,''the spiritual club, in which the dead and the living are members on the same footing? 54247 Ages?"
54247Am I late, mother?
54247And are they really going to live in the house in Portland Place?
54247And did n''t you?
54247And do they appear to you? 54247 And he found you together, and you killed him?"
54247And is not that a pose? 54247 And now the time has come?"
54247And of that colossal income-- which you have enjoyed for five years-- you have nothing left? 54247 And then I shall be with him again, where they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but where they are as the angels of God in heaven?"
54247And then?
54247And was she saying the outrageous things?
54247And yet you ask her to your house?
54247And you believe in him?
54247And you had tea with Vera Provana?
54247And you will never take the liberty I give you for a letter of license?
54247Are n''t you coming back?
54247Are n''t you coming, Vera? 54247 Are n''t you glad to be home?"
54247Are their voices heard-- do they speak to you?
54247Are you a heavy sleeper?
54247Are you giving me a letter of license?
54247At what time had she fallen asleep after her return from Fulham Park?
54247Because she does not love you? 54247 But are there not some mild pleasures left in the years that bring the philosophic mind?"
54247But considering that she was carrying on with Rutherford years before Provana''s death?
54247But he might have had a secret enemy without your knowledge?
54247But is there really, really no hope of saving her?
54247But why take so much trouble?
54247But you did n''t mind? 54247 But you have Susie Amphlett?"
54247But you were not in love with him?
54247By the by, Lady O. told me you have had the Princess Hermione?
54247Can you forgive me for calling at such an unorthodox time? 54247 Can you promise as much as this, Vera?
54247Can you suppose the loss of money would change my feeling for him? 54247 Claude, are you mad?"
54247Claude, do you ever keep a promise?
54247Dangerous?
54247De gustibus? 54247 Dear child,"exclaimed Lady Okehampton,"can you ask?"
54247Did I hear somebody talking of me?
54247Did I?
54247Did he leave his card?
54247Did none of the other men hear anything?
54247Did not Desdemona dote upon Othello?
54247Did you hear nothing between six and half- past eight o''clock?
54247Do brothers tell old love stories? 54247 Do n''t I tell you they are like Paul and Virginia?"
54247Do they take that lad with them to play propriety?
54247Do you believe they think of us, sometimes, those who have gone beyond?
54247Do you know what they say of him?
54247Do you mean too handsome, too attractive?
54247Do you remember our walks in the woods, and the afternoon we lost our way and could not get home for the nursery tea?
54247Do you suppose I am never tired of things? 54247 Do you think any man cares how his coat is cut, or who made his boots, when he may be dead at the bottom of a ditch before the end of the run?"
54247Do you think her so remarkably pretty?
54247Do you think that Tennyson is dead? 54247 Do you want a mission?"
54247Do_ you_ feel the want of children?
54247Does anything last in this decadent age? 54247 Does she not look like a poet''s daughter?"
54247Does that mean when one is eighty? 54247 Does the doctor prescribe them?"
54247Gratis?
54247Grisly thoughts?
54247Had not Mrs. Provana been awakened by the sounds of voices and footsteps on the landing?
54247Has he made up his mind?
54247Has it dawned upon you at last?
54247Has she complained of him?
54247Have n''t I told you, my dear friend? 54247 Have you discovered that we have been living apart; that we have been man and wife only in name?"
54247Have you ever thought of those who have to come after you? 54247 Have you nice people on your first floor, Madame Canincio?"
54247Have you not? 54247 Have you sampled all the people?
54247How can I blame you when his mother was the active agent? 54247 How can I help you?"
54247How can you be essential? 54247 How can you be so heartless, and how can you use that odious expression''up- to- date''?"
54247How can you imagine anything so impossible?
54247How could I ever forget that she was going to die?
54247How could I refuse? 54247 How did I know?
54247How did he call himself?
54247How do you mean?
54247How is Provana?
54247How old is the girl?
54247How old was he? 54247 How should he object?
54247How was it that he came home so unexpectedly?
54247I am always hearing of Mr. Symeon and his spook magazine; but what does he do? 54247 I am glad you are glad,"he said,"but can that mean that you have missed me?
54247I love to be with you; but I may slip away for the Cambridgeshire?
54247I suppose you have heard nothing of Signor Provana since he left?
54247I think it is one of your favourites, ma''am?
54247I wonder which of us two is the more unhappy?
54247In this house?
54247Is Mrs. Bellenden here?
54247Is death so great an evil? 54247 Is modern London so like Babylon?"
54247Is n''t it always the elderly Colonel''s second wife?
54247Is n''t it strange that in so small a party there should be such a prodigious amount of dullness?
54247Is n''t she simply wonderful?
54247Is n''t she too killing?
54247Is n''t this delicious?
54247Is she resting after her journey?
54247Is there no hope-- no hope?
54247Is your love quite dead?
54247It must have been sudden?
54247Like it?
54247Mais où donc est Madame?
54247Mais, madame, pourquoi ne pas sonner? 54247 May I sit by your side for a few minutes?
54247May I walk with you as far as your lodgings?
54247My God, what do you mean? 54247 My cousin Claude?
54247Not after six years as the wife of a financial Croesus?
54247Not ill, I hope?
54247Not meant? 54247 Of course,"echoed Susan;"why should n''t he be there?
54247Oh, it is all over? 54247 Oh, my dearest, why did you not stand firm?
54247Our future?
54247Pardon?
54247Perhaps you never were really in love with your second husband?
54247Provana''s heirs? 54247 Really?"
54247Rutherford was there, of course?
54247Serious?
54247Shut, but not locked?
54247So soon?
54247That''s what they always say about women; but is it true in her case? 54247 The not- out daughter?"
54247The room in which the shot was fired has a door communicating with your bedroom?
54247Then why are you unhappy?
54247Then you will help me?
54247They are bored?
54247Tired of it? 54247 Tired of you?
54247To what end? 54247 To what should I come back?
54247Tyrol, Engadine, Courmayeur? 54247 Vera,"Mrs. Rutherford cried passionately,"have you no compassion for me?
54247Was Signor Provana there?
54247Was he called after Don Quixote''s Sancho?
54247Was it likely that he would tell me, if he did not tell his mother?
54247Was it you who inspired this extraordinary resolve?
54247Was our walk through the streets too much for you? 54247 Was that door shut?"
54247Was that so easy?
54247Was there an inquest?
54247Was there ever anyone so feather- headed, so feckless? 54247 Was your maid in attendance upon you when you went to bed?"
54247Well, did n''t she bring her dog?
54247Well, what do you want of me now?
54247What can I do for him but remember him and regret him?
54247What can you mean by thoughts going backward?
54247What could happen? 54247 What could have been the motive for such a murder?"
54247What do you mean?
54247What do you want me to do for you?
54247What does he do?
54247What does it matter?
54247What else could he say? 54247 What grief can she have?"
54247What had become of the devoted husband you used to tell us about?
54247What has Mrs. Bellenden done to risk her future status?
54247What has made you so pale?
54247What have I done?
54247What have I to confess? 54247 What have you been doing with yourself this afternoon, dearest?"
54247What is that?
54247What is the good of trying, when one must always fall short of Turner?
54247What is the matter?
54247What is the use of making a fuss? 54247 What kind of things?"
54247What would you do if the great house of Provana were to go down like a scuttled ship? 54247 What''s the matter, Susie?
54247What''s the matter?
54247What''s the use of marrying a rich woman if you do n''t get some of the stuff?
54247What''s your hurry?
54247What, are you as bad a sleeper as ever?
54247What, you''ve caught my fear?
54247What? 54247 When was Madame Provana informed of her husband''s death?"
54247Where was Rutherford?
54247Where was the disgrace, more than in all such cases? 54247 Where was the disgrace?"
54247Which next world? 54247 Which woman?"
54247Which? 54247 Who can remember half the things people say of a genius who lays himself out to be talked about?"
54247Who told you that I ca n''t sleep?
54247Why did n''t you keep him? 54247 Why did not you tell me of your past life?
54247Why do I wonder? 54247 Why do we do these things and call them pleasures?"
54247Why have you done this?
54247Why not go to him at once and make your confession? 54247 Why not?
54247Why should n''t they waltz? 54247 Why should we forbid you?
54247Why should you make a martyr of yourself?
54247Why? 54247 Why?"
54247Will you make me happy, Vera? 54247 Will you walk a little way with me-- until five o''clock?"
54247With heart and mind?
54247Would I mind?
54247Would it not be better to rest for a few days in this quiet place?
54247Would the happy spirit descend From the realms of light or song, Should I fear to greet my friend Or to say''Forgive the wrong''? 54247 Would these bonds be easily convertible into cash?"
54247Would they let me see her?
54247Would you like it?
54247Would you mind if we were not able to stop them on this side of the sea?
54247Would you prefer them if they were poisoners, like the Borgia?
54247Yet you never ask a friend to help you out of a fix?
54247You admired the actor?
54247You ask me no questions, Father?
54247You have heard my moralities-- I wo n''t call them sermons?
54247You have known...?
54247You knew?
54247You know Rome?
54247You want to fall in love with me again? 54247 You were with her that night when Provana came home unexpectedly?"
54247You''d like them kept to look at, eh?
54247Your faces-- You mean those portraits?
54247Your society?
54247_ I?_ No, indeed. 54247 _ Ninon, que fait tu de la vie?_"Memory brought back every tone of the fresh young voice.
54247_ Now_ will you believe that Claude Rutherford was a devoted husband, and that he broke his heart when his wife died?
54247''Dear Lady Sue, would you call no trumps if?''
54247--and would you do this and t''other?
54247A wicked woman, a foolish young man-- very young, was n''t he?"
54247After only three years?
54247All their talk began with"Do you remember?"
54247Am I to walk about like a dead man for ten or twenty or thirty years?
54247And now what was to be her doom?
54247And then, after a little more doctor''s talk, soothing, and rather meaningless, she asked abruptly:"What time of year is it?"
54247Answer, love, can you trust me?"
54247Are n''t you pleased to be home, Vera, in these cosy drawing- rooms?"
54247Are we to let her die?"
54247Are you capable of renouncing that hope by burying yourself in a cloister?
54247Are you equal to the sacrifice?
54247Bizet?
54247But it''s the modern way, is n''t it?
54247But oh, what shall I do without him?
54247But why conjure up the memory of things that were sad?
54247But why?"
54247But your accumulations?
54247By what authority?
54247CHAPTER VII"Well, now your whim has been gratified, I should like to know what you think of Francis Symeon?"
54247Can anything be more romantic, when one considers the woman she is and the man he is, and that they absolutely dote upon each other?"
54247Can you forget that when your wife dies her fortune dies with her?"
54247Could he have told her more absolutely that his love was dead, and that no charm of sweetness in her could make it live again?
54247Could it be strange that she loved the girl who had begun by loving her, and who was her first girl friend?
54247Could love that had begun in ecstasy close in this grey calm?
54247Could she be happy if he left her for ever?
54247Could she give up all the world for him, as he would for her?
54247Did she love him?
54247Did the witness know of any incident in her husband''s life-- in England or in Italy-- which might suggest a motive for the crime?
54247Do you mind?
54247Do you not despise me, Vera?"
54247Do you remember all we talked about when you were last in this room-- a long time ago?"
54247Do you remember the night we walked home together from Portland Place?
54247Do you see them as they were on earth?"
54247Do you suppose they do n''t ask to be considered?
54247Do you understand?"
54247Does he float up to the ceiling, as Home did?
54247Does he look through death to the Spirit- world beyond?
54247Does he realise the After- life as Christ realised it when He talked with His disciples?"
54247Does she never see gardens and meadows?
54247Duplicity-- an old man''s heart broken-- Isn''t that enough?
54247Ever so far away?
54247Father, have you forgotten those two lost souls Dante saw, driven through the malignant air; they who had stained the earth with blood?
54247Had Giulia lived, would everything have been different?
54247Had Mr. Provana a quarrel with anybody, either in his social or business relations?
54247Had he gone for ever?
54247Had she anything in this world to be glad or sorry about, except her son?
54247Had she enjoyed her walk?
54247Had she, too, come to winter there?
54247Had they come, like her, for a refuge from the tragedy of life?
54247Has anything happened while I have been away, anything to make you unhappy?"
54247Have I not loved you?"
54247Have n''t you enough frocks?
54247Have you made your will?"
54247Have you neither eyes nor understanding that you do n''t try to help me?"
54247Have you no thought of my grief?"
54247He could take such a step without consulting you, without confiding in you-- his closest friend?"
54247He who was neither soldier nor senator, who had no rag of reputation to bequeath: what should he want with an heir?
54247Her twelfth year?
54247Here they could say to each other,"Do you remember?"
54247How can a woman like Fanny, eaten up with spiritualism, look after a daughter?
54247How can you say such a thing?"
54247How could I know that Death was the only security from sin?"
54247How could she ever have feared him?
54247How could you be such a fool?"
54247How much of her millions had Mrs. Provana settled upon Rutherford?
54247How should you know the measureless love in the heart of a man of my life- history?
54247I hardly like to speak of such things; but has she not been just a little talked about lately?
54247I sometimes wonder how I could bear it?"
54247I suppose you and the little girl are soon going into the country?"
54247If Lord Avebury could devote his days to watching bees and wasps, do you wonder that I am interested in watching my fellow- creatures?
54247If you are to be in Rome in November, why not spend the interval in Italy, at Varese, for instance, a charming spot, with every advantage?"
54247If you do n''t care for society, what are the things that make your idea of happiness?"
54247If you think poor little Vera is in danger, why do n''t you contrive to see a little more of her?
54247Is blood to be no thicker than water?
54247Is death to take her from me and leave me in this black world alone?
54247Is he ill?"
54247Is it because I am a failure that you have cut me?"
54247Is it near him?
54247Is it thought- reading, slate- writing, materialisation?
54247Is it--"her voice became tremulous,"is it anything about Claude?
54247Is not that dreadful?"
54247Is that nothing?"
54247Is that the reason for not coming?"
54247Is that the reason?"
54247Is that to be the end?
54247Is the bond of our childish affection to go for nothing?
54247Is there anything wrong?"
54247Is this how you help me?"
54247It is a comfort to know that,_ n''est- ce pas, mein Schatz?_""Yes, of course it is a comfort.
54247May I call you by your pretty Christian name?"
54247Mrs. Rutherford had called her cruel, but was not the cruelty far greater that submitted her to that heart- rending ordeal?
54247My story would not bear telling-- and why should you want to know?"
54247Oh, God, was it her old woman''s preaching that had brought him to this living death?
54247Oh, who will care take of my father when he is old; who will love him as I have done?
54247Or Browning, who has gone to the very core of religion, whose magnificent mind grasped the highest and deepest in Divine love and Divine power?
54247Perhaps you are a member?"
54247Pleasure?
54247Rome?
54247Shall we go away?
54247She had shown herself heartless as a daughter, and how could she expect softness in her mother?
54247Stale, barren stories of loves that are dead?"
54247Symeon''s?"
54247That crouching form with contracted shoulders, and wasted hands stretched above the feeble fire- glow-- could that be Claude Rutherford?
54247That is enough, Claude, is it not?
54247The club that elects, or selects, Confucius or Browning one day, and Lady Fanny Ransom-- mad Lady Fanny as they call her-- the next?"
54247The orthodox Christian talks of the life beyond; and we must give him credit for sometimes thinking of it-- but does he realise it?
54247The truth?
54247Then you have not forgotten?"
54247They quite took you up, did n''t they?
54247To whom can I submit myself?"
54247To- day she must see no one but her nurse-- not even me; but if she should be a shade better to- morrow, will you come to her?
54247Vera, why have you come between me and my God?"
54247Vera, will you be my wife?"
54247Wagner?
54247Was he always good?
54247Was he always kindly treated?"
54247Was it indeed the end?
54247Was not that enough for happiness?
54247Was not that sublime vision something more than a dream in a stuffy Methodist chapel?
54247Was there any other love left her now quite as real as this?
54247Was there ever a servant who confessed to being anything else?
54247Was there one among them all whose love she could believe in as she could in her Irish terrier?
54247What are you two talking about,_ entre chien et loup_?
54247What can I do for you?
54247What can I do?
54247What can she have in common with such a man?"
54247What could be Mrs. Rutherford''s trouble?
54247What could be more diverse than those?
54247What could it mean but a sneer at my poverty?"
54247What danger could there be in such a friendship?
54247What does the house matter?"
54247What else?
54247What had tragedy to do with Claude Rutherford?
54247What has become of our past, Vera?
54247What have you been doing since six o''clock?
54247What ignorant sin have I committed that it should be''Darwaza band''when I call in Portland Place?
54247What is her misery measured against mine?"
54247What more could any woman want of wealth, than to be able to draw upon the purse of a triple millionaire?
54247What more could be wanted?"
54247What more was left but to be happy in her own way?
54247What must it be to a girl to be loved so fondly by that great strong man?
54247What wife, who cared for her husband, could help being angry if she saw him near such a creature?
54247What''s the matter?"
54247When did you make your last confession, Claude?"
54247When had the fatal change begun?
54247Where are they found, as a rule, when they do get nicked?
54247Where can I go?
54247Where could they get such rooms, such air and space?
54247Who could say precisely what made the separation?
54247Who has told you that she is in failing health?
54247Whoever said she was to be cremated?"
54247Why do n''t you never come down to the drawing- room of an evening?"
54247Why had she come there?
54247Why should I have been afraid of truth in those days?
54247Why should I make a will?
54247Why should he shut himself in a monastery to find forgiveness for trivial sins, and neglect of religious forms?
54247Why should not people want to see the old church at Allersley?
54247Why?
54247Will you come?"
54247Will you let mine be the hand to lead you along the passive way of light and love, the way that leads to pardon and peace?"
54247Will you trust your life to me?
54247With all her heart and soul?
54247Would Mario have loved and married her, and would they three have lived in a trinity of love?
54247Would n''t you like a country holiday, Veronica?
54247Would there be no looking back, no repentance?"
54247You all know the sequel, so why recapitulate?
54247You did n''t mean that for me?"
54247You remember what Macbeth said to his physician?"
54247You will let her come, wo n''t you,_ cara_ Grannie?"
54247You will let us be friends, wo n''t you,_ cara_ Grannie?"
54247Your surplus income?"
54247_ A riverdervi, Madre mia._""Where are you going?"
54247_ Non è vero, Padre?_"He looked at her with his fond parental smile.
54247_ That_ is the noblest kind of nobility--_non è vero_, Grannie?"
54247_ Welt Schmerz._ Is n''t that enough?"
54247and was it not a delicious evening?
54247she gasped, amidst her sobs;"you know I need pardon?"
54247to new worlds-- to places where the stupendous phenomena of Nature, and the things that men have made, will take us out of ourselves?
60740''Bucky''Harrison?
60740A bad motive? 60740 Am I a good scout?
60740And did he survive that?
60740And for what?
60740And what are you doing roosting on that heap of furniture like a crazy hen? 60740 And what brought you way down here from Wolverton?"
60740And what then?
60740And you are going to mix up in another revolution? 60740 And you are sure that young Goodwin is in serious danger?"
60740And you were the regular pitcher?
60740Anybody killed?
60740Are n''t you taking a lot for granted? 60740 Are you going to report what I found out-- that the commissary stores were smuggled on board the_ Juan Lopez_?"
60740Are you honestly alive?
60740Are you killed?
60740Are you now going home or are you returning?
60740Are you really all right, Walter?
60740But could n''t you come home every week?
60740But do you honestly think he has any intention of giving me a job on the gold roll?
60740But what about Goodwin?
60740But what about that checker? 60740 But you will give me a chance to talk it over with you?"
60740Can we see him to- night?
60740Can you find him to- night?
60740Can you quit work at once and come over to the hotel with me?
60740Can you recommend him?
60740Dear me, why did we let him make the trip to New York alone?
60740Did he really want to see me?
60740Did my letters help you?
60740Do you know what that means? 60740 Do you mind shouldering this confounded bag?
60740Do you really think there will be something for me to do?
60740Does Major Glendinning know I have been put out of commission?
60740Does this Captain Brincker live in Panama?
60740For twenty cents an hour? 60740 Has base- ball anything to do with your lively interest in this young man?"
60740Has he got himself into a scrape, or ca n''t ye get anny word from him at all?
60740Have you found another pitcher?
60740Horatio, what_ is_ the matter with you?
60740How long will Quesada wait for you? 60740 How many men were there on the_ Juan Lopez_?
60740How old are you?
60740If I had n''t set out to find you and stuck to it like a terrier at a rat- hole, where would you be now?
60740Is it as bad as that?
60740Is the child dreaming?
60740Is there any way, if a fellow ca n''t afford to pay his passage, for him to get to the Isthmus of Panama?
60740Is this what you have been leading up to?
60740It looks as if his face had been stepped on, but the firmly moulded chin is quite well done, do n''t you think? 60740 Lost it before you found it, eh?
60740My employer?
60740Officially? 60740 Pretty exclusive, are n''t you?"
60740Put them in my straw hat? 60740 Quesada will not dare to knock Goodwin on the head and throw him into the bay, will he?
60740Quesada, eh?
60740Something diplomatic in the wind?
60740The owner is General Quesada?
60740There is to be a revolution somewhere?
60740To Colonel Gunther?
60740To take me home with you?
60740Um- m, he will, will he?
60740Was he-- was he blown up?
60740What about his trying to shoot Señor Alfaro?
60740What about the base- ball practice?
60740What about this arm?
60740What can I do for you?
60740What did I tell you?
60740What did he say he was going to do with me?
60740What do you mean by saying we ca n''t keep him?
60740What do you want to say to me?
60740What if I drop a box of it?
60740What right have you to ask my business?
60740What will you do with the cablegram?
60740What will you do? 60740 What''s the matter with him?"
60740What? 60740 When can you start?
60740Who cares about you?
60740Who is not? 60740 Who purchased the_ Juan Lopez_?"
60740Why do n''t you help me get out of the house?
60740Why not bunk with me for a few days? 60740 Why not?"
60740Will General Quesada fight?
60740Will he let you talk to him? 60740 With your arm in a sling?
60740You are going to consult with the police?
60740You fear the_ Juan Lopez_ may again annoy the politics of your fair country of Colombia?
60740You mean to insinuate that there might possibly be an opening for a first- class accountant and book- keeper in the canal organization?
60740You_ would_ steal Uncle Sam''s groceries and go skylarking off to start trouble in the cute little republic of San Salvador, would you?
60740Alas, is it serious?"
60740Alfaro smiled rather sheepishly as he remarked:"It was not very diplomatic?
60740And I do n''t want them to worry----"Naughton nodded gravely and suggested:"Shall I tell them about your impressions of the canal?
60740And I found you, did n''t I?"
60740And have you ever seen that man with the gray mustache before?"
60740And how fast is she?"
60740And how is that dear family of yours?
60740And what about the tug and the rest of the outfit?"
60740And what becomes of Goodwin in the meantime?"
60740And what does Captain Brincker do on board?"
60740And when will she make another high record?"
60740And you say that Captain Brincker has been living with him?"
60740And you think he can pitch winning ball for Cristobal?"
60740Anything serious?
60740Anything wrong with th''strappin''lad that went sailin''off to make his forthune?
60740Anything wrong?"
60740Are you a real ball- player?
60740Are you afraid I''ll bite ye?
60740Are you man enough to resent it?"
60740Are you not old enough to mind your own business?"
60740Are you really looking for a job, my boy?
60740Are you really looking for hard work at silver wages?"
60740Are you tough enough to shovel coal all day?
60740Are you very anxious?"
60740As Devlin left the office he said to Alfaro:"What did I tell you, my son?
60740At any rate, the checker was guilty, and why had the two of them come straight to this house from Balboa?
60740At length he grumbled:"What are you going to do about it?"
60740At the episode of the parrot and broomstick, the steam- shovel man violently interrupted:"General Quesada?
60740Better lay off and take it easy for the day, had n''t you?"
60740Between us, as man to man?
60740Ca n''t you see it for yourself?
60740Ca n''t you take me on to help clear this mess?"
60740Can you pitch?
60740Can you steer clear of landslides and revolutions for a while?"
60740Captain Bradshaw, strolling through the ship on a tour of inspection, noticed the gloomy young seaman and kindly inquired:"Lost anything?
60740Captain Brincker advanced swiftly, confronted him, and asked in a heavy voice:"Were you looking for somebody?"
60740Curious in his turn, he asked:"Is your office on the wharf?"
60740Devlin was feeling the nervous strain, and with a yawn he suggested:"What about making some black coffee, Captain Brincker?
60740Did n''t we have a lot to do with getting him back?"
60740Did you have a pleasant trip?"
60740Do I look like a fever- stricken wreck?
60740Do you believe I am telling the truth?"
60740Do you expect to whip those hard- hitting rascals from Culebra?"
60740Do you honestly mean it?"
60740Do you know where to find a launch in a hurry and a man to run it?"
60740Do you see the pretty young girl with the fair hair and the pink cheeks?
60740Do you think I would stand any show of getting a job on the Panama Canal?"
60740Do you want to go home to the States?
60740Do you want to notify any friends?"
60740Does he think you are incapable of taking care of yourself?"
60740Does it sound crazy to you?"
60740Does your father need you in his own business?"
60740Goodwin was working his passage to the Isthmus to look for a job and----""Why did n''t he let me know it on shipboard?"
60740Grasping him by the shoulders, Devlin hoarsely demanded:"Could you tell if Goodwin was on board?"
60740Harrison thumped him on the back and jubilantly shouted:"Was n''t that easy?
60740Has he been forgettin''to write to ye?
60740Have a cup of tea or a bottle of ginger- ale?"
60740Have you any clews?"
60740Have you dug Twenty- six out of the slide?
60740Have you enough ready money to finance th''journey?
60740Have you landed a job?
60740He bided his time until Major Glendinning, passing through the warehouse on a tour of inspection, halted to ask:"How are you going to like the job?"
60740He picked up the revolver, eyed Walter and the broom- handle with a comical air of surprise, and inquired:"Who started this circus?
60740He was among his own countrymen, but where was there any place for him?
60740He was living with one of the surgeons at Ancon?"
60740High wages?
60740His father asked, when the excitement had subsided:"Well, what luck, my son?"
60740Horatio, do you suppose a batch of my doughnuts would keep if I put them in a tin cake- box?
60740How in the world did you happen to get on my trail?
60740How is the arm?
60740I am catcher of the Culebra nine, do you see?"
60740I can not let you come into this house, do you understand?"
60740I do n''t look like a very dangerous person, do I?"
60740I will find you at your office in the Zone?"
60740If you want the good salt wind, why do n''t you run over to Balboa docks?
60740In the mending basket?"
60740Is he all mended?"
60740Is it a revolution?
60740Is it impossible?"
60740Is it not so?"
60740Is it you or somebody else?"
60740Is that clearly understood?"
60740Is there anything bigger to see?"
60740It must not be mournful, must it?
60740It sounds perfectly awful, does n''t it?"
60740It was a revolution?
60740Mr. Naughton whistled, cocked a scrutinizing eye, and observed:"So you got into trouble with the Spiggoty police?
60740Naughton?"
60740Need any money?
60740Need any money?"
60740Nice, clean- built chap, is n''t he?
60740Now that you have begun, will you be so good as to let the cat all the way out of the bag?"
60740Now what can I do for you?
60740Now, what about young Goodwin?
60740Rather chagrined to hear diplomacy dismissed so scornfully, Alfaro timidly ventured:"The civil administration of the Canal Zone?"
60740Recognizing Jack Devlin, Walter managed to find his voice and called feebly:"Is this what you call a great place for a husky young fellow?"
60740Resorting to strategy, he said to his father when next they met:"Now that you are here, why do n''t you spend a week in seeing the canal?
60740Say, Mr. Naughton, how old must a man be to run a steam- shovel?"
60740Say, father, we Americans ought to be proud of the Panama Canal, do n''t you think?"
60740Seventy- five dollars a month, and there are various jobs I am capable of filling----""Is this a fairy story?"
60740Shall I come back to this house?"
60740Shall I convoy you into the kitchen?
60740Shall I telephone the Zone police department?
60740She looks perfectly ridiculous, does n''t she?
60740So he wanted him to pitch for Cristobal?
60740Supposing one of those horrid mosquitoes that carry yellow- fever should fly in and bite him?
60740Tell me, what is Captain Brincker doing here?
60740Tell me, where is Goodwin?"
60740Tempted by the amicable drift of the interview, Walter ventured a dangerous question:"Your employer-- who is he?"
60740That man?
60740The address of General Quesada''s house in Panama?
60740The arm?
60740The elderly gentleman leaned forward in the saddle and eagerly inquired:"Bless me, is that true?
60740The merchandise would be missed later, but what proof was there that it had been slipped aboard the Chilean steamer?
60740The steam- shovel man loudly summoned them, adding with tremendous gusto:"Did n''t I tell you that Goodwin was the finest lad that ever happened?
60740The victor''s nose was bleeding, but he looked pleased as he gustily observed:"Too speedy for you, eh?
60740These letters were meant to deceive us?"
60740Wake up the American minister in Panama?
60740Walter shied like a frightened colt, and stammered with sudden loss of enthusiasm:"A whole s- ship- load of d- dynamite?
60740Want to write a letter home?"
60740Was he quite sure the melting snow had not wet his feet?
60740Were you looking for me?"
60740What about it?"
60740What about that?"
60740What are your plans?"
60740What did we tell you?"
60740What do you hear from them?"
60740What do you think of him?"
60740What else?"
60740What has he done with him?"
60740What have you done with him?
60740What have you done with him?"
60740What is it they do to sailors, Horatio?
60740What is your business?"
60740What kind of a riddle is that?"
60740What makes you think of taking such a long jump from home?"
60740What''s on your mind?"
60740What''s the evidence?
60740What_ is it_ all about?"
60740When Alfaro returned, he asked him excitedly:"Do you know anything about this_ Juan Lopez_ steamer alongside?
60740When does a ship sail to the place ye want to go to?"
60740Where are father''s clean socks, mother?
60740Where are you living?"
60740Where had he found funds to finance a Central American revolution?
60740Where have you been?
60740Where is he?
60740Who ever dreamed the beggars would do anything but surrender?"
60740Who is he?
60740Who knows?
60740Why do you ask with so much interest, Goodwin?"
60740Why not go to Culebra with me to- morrow morning and see some of the canal work?
60740Why will ye go messin''around and wastin''time tryin''to raise money?
60740Will he bother himself with this affair of ours?"
60740Will it be all right if I telephone you by seven o''clock?"
60740Will three hundred be enough?
60740Will you come back to Ancon with me and dine at the Tivoli Hotel to- night?"
60740Will you go on board with me?"
60740Will you tell him, with my compliments, that I greatly admire the behavior of his son?"
60740Would the colonel help straighten it out?
60740Would you like to take a position on the wharf at Balboa?"
60740You are scheduled to play ball for Cristobal, understand?"
60740You are working your passage as a lark?
60740You get that launch and you look for the_ Juan Lopez_, understand?
60740You say you saw this gray- headed beach- comber in Guayaquil one time?
60740You w- want me to help handle it?"
8932''Tis true, his nature may with faults abound; But who will cavil when the heart is sound?
8932Can sackcloth clothe a fault or hide a shame? 8932 Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased; Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow; Raze out the written troubles of the brain?"
8932If God so clothe the grass which to- day is, and tomorrow is cast into the oven,then what, Mr. Emerson?
8932Say, what is honor? 8932 Ye shall know them by their fruits: Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?"
8932All this is very unpleasant for New Bedford; but are we to have no more oil?
8932Are the facts as they are represented to be?
8932Are they Christian men?
8932Are they men of charity?
8932Are they men whom we love?
8932Are we who sing and shout mere brawlers, who get a little strength of lungs by the exercise?
8932Around this idea the poets have woven their noblest songs; but again we ask what are the facts?
8932But if bigotry be such a bar to the correct perception of truth, what shall be said of self- interest and personal vices of appetite and passion?
8932But suppose literary culture be the central force of this society-- has the aspirant any fitness for, or sympathy with it?
8932But what has this fact to do with the matter of right in the premises?
8932But who gave man the right to set up his needs as the law of woman''s life?
8932Can he meet those who form this society as an equal, or mingle in it as a thoroughly sympathetic element?
8932Can it be because He wishes by means of it to produce some desired effect in us?
8932Denouncers of bigotry, are they not the most fiercely bigoted of any men we know?
8932Did I sigh?
8932Did I sigh?"
8932Did you ever try?
8932Do we feel attracted to their society?
8932Does a severe and constant tax upon the muscular system repress mental development, and tend to make life hard and homely and unattractive?
8932Does he dress expensively, and is he able to give costly entertainments?
8932Easier to preach than practise?
8932Easy to preach, you say?
8932Every thing in their life is brought down to the animal basis, and why should it not be?
8932From how many exhibitions of stern and unrelenting injustice have these children suffered?
8932Had it not faded to little more than the repetition of old inanities, traditional mannerisms, stereotyped lies?
8932Had not art become superstitious and infidel and missionless?
8932Has he a fine house and an elegant turnout?
8932Has it not criticized half- finished work, and condemned, not only the work, but Christianity itself, because this work was not up to the sample?
8932Has she not been made unfit for her place by the influences of the public school?
8932Have not her comfort and her happiness been spoiled by those influences?
8932Have you ever systematically tried to do this?
8932He is a cripple for life; yet his face is as bright and cheerful as the face of the morning itself; and what do you think he is singing?
8932How broad are his sympathies?
8932How large a man is this?
8932How long would he be worth any thing for labor?
8932How much unreasonable restraint has been exercised upon those children?
8932How wide is his knowledge?
8932If all women should prefer hoeing cabbages to spinning flax, or any variety of yarn, who shall hinder them?
8932If he-- the peerless, the prince-- could fall, and forsake, and forget, who would not?
8932If it were fashionable for woman to sing bass, how long would it be before the lower tones would find full development?
8932If she prefers hoeing cabbages to spinning flax, who shall hinder her?
8932If such men fall, where are we to look for those who will not?
8932If the temporary diversion of the nervous energy from the brain have this effect, what must a permanent diversion accomplish?
8932Is he prepared to unite, on a plane of perfect equality, with those who give the law to this society?
8932Is her reluctant service of any value to those who pay her the wages of her labor?
8932Is it because that among the American girls there are none of poverty, and of humble powers?
8932Is it because they are not wanted?
8932Is it not notorious that a minister who has fed exclusively upon religion is a man without power upon the hearts and minds of men?
8932Is it your regular aim, after you have discharged the business of the day, to throw off care until the next day''s business is undertaken?
8932Is nature failing?
8932Is not invective the chosen and accustomed language of their lips?
8932Is the philosophy sound?
8932Is there no hearing of this praise in Heaven?
8932Is this the kind of life generally which the American farmer leads?
8932Methinks thou hast a singular way of showing Thy happiness-- what ails thee, cousin of mine?
8932Must the human soul lack food-- fresh food-- because a generation long gone has decided that only certain food is fit for the human soul?
8932Needed by man?
8932Needed by whom?
8932No?
8932Now I ask what kind of a spirit she can carry into her service, except that of surly and impudent discontent?
8932Now why should God want praise of us?
8932Or do thy hands make Heaven a recompense, By strewing dust upon thy briny face?
8932Or is it because they have become unfitted for such services as these, and feel above them?
8932Preachers of love and good will to men, do they not use more forcibly than any other class the power of words to wound and poison human sensibilities?
8932Reader, did you ever drive a horse that had the mean habit of shying?
8932Should I ever be willing to let another man into my heart?
8932Should I not be humiliated?
8932Should I not feel disgraced?
8932Teachers of toleration, are they not the most intolerant of all men living?
8932That''s your Christianity, is it?"
8932The question comes to us:"What is there in our present life to repay us for this loss?"
8932The truth of the statement is admitted, but what do you know of the home life of that family?
8932Then how do you know whether it is easy or not?
8932This is a very splendid sort of a ballot- box, and he is a very fine sort of an American who sings about it; but what are the facts?
8932Was there not need of him?
8932What cares he for birds, unless they pull up his corn?
8932What cares he for skies, unless he can make use of them for drying his hay, or wetting down his potatoes?
8932What heart of man Is proof against thy sweet seducing charms?"
8932What laxity of discipline and carelessness of culture have reigned in that family?
8932What relation does he bear to the great world of ideas among which this is only one, and very likely a comparatively unimportant one?
8932Which is the better and the more truthful Indian-- that of the poet, or he who drank the rum of our fathers and then scalped them?
8932Who has not sighed, as he has seen how easily the simple wants of certain simple natures are supplied?
8932Who would not deem the ermine degraded by a chief justice who should be constantly twitching about upon his bench?
8932Why can death alone teach us that those whom we love are dear?
8932Why didst thou sigh so deeply?
8932Why do not men trust in Providence?
8932Why is it that no more have left a name behind them?
8932Why is this?
8932Why must they be placed forever beyond our sight before our lips can be unsealed?
8932Why was this harsh judgment uttered?
8932Why was this?
8932Why?
8932Will the time come when people must sit in darkness?
8932Would he feel happy and at home in a literary atmosphere?
8932You fail to do it, and what is the natural conclusion?
8932must one swear to the truth of a song?"
9391A noble gentleman, Faith,--was he not?
9391Am I so changed?
9391But can you achieve it safely?
9391But how is life to be sustained for any considerable time in that rarefied medium?
9391But where am I? 9391 But would the heavier nether air flow in that direction?"
9391By what means,he asked,"do you expect to conquer America?
9391Can I do something for you?
9391Do n''t you think it would injure_ him_, if I should?
9391Do n''t you want to come and sit out in the lot?
9391Do you know why_ dat ar_ neber was married?
9391Does your mother know anything about it?
9391Has? 9391 How did he look then?--did he look surprised?"
9391How do you find yourself?
9391How does thee do, Keziah Janes? 9391 I don''t.--What is your name?"
9391I have n''t much faith in these stories of old times,--have you, girls?
9391Ichabod Widdrinton?
9391Is she ill?
9391Love him?
9391May I say one thing more?
9391Shall I have the pleasure of seeing your fair companion this morning?
9391So you think, the less you see of a husband, the better?
9391So you will go down in your little spinning- toilette,_ mimi_? 9391 Surely, surely, Keziah; and now, Phineas, I suppose thee will see at once about this poor man, wo n''t thee?"
9391Thee means my daughter? 9391 Thee will soon get rested now, friend, and go to sleep,--won''t thee?"
9391Thy room, child?
9391Well, and what did he say to that?
9391Well,said Mary, mildly,"do you think you really love him?"
9391What did you tell him?
9391What does thee mean, friend?
9391What will you tell him, my heart?--tell him that I am ill, perhaps?
9391What''s wrong now?
9391Where is it?
9391Why was n''t she?
9391Widdrinton,--who''s he?
9391Will the sea- nymphs punish the rash presumption of a mortal who intrudes?
9391Would you see me fall dead at your feet, while attempting to do for myself what you refuse to do for me?
9391You know that it is best, Virginie; do you not?
9391''And besides,''says I,''what will everybody think?''
9391A moment after, a slender, dark- eyed girl, about twenty years of age, entered the room, and said cheerfully,--"What is it, mother?"
9391Ah, well, what shall Virginie do now?"
9391And the man at the helm, where was he?
9391And when we say that, we say a great deal; do we not?
9391And who had been the real hero of this day?
9391As to the protection of England, what is that but the privilege of contributing to her wars?
9391But in our evening''s programme, tea has been omitted; now, what availeth a Bostonian without his tea?
9391But is it not more probably a corruption of_ bagasse_, which, as applied to the pressed sugarcane, means simply something worthless?
9391But thee must certainly have Betty here, and promise to send her to call me, if Ichabod should be worse,--won''t thee?"
9391But what of Man, who weathered safely the storm of storms in that same Ark?
9391But what would anybody say, if_ I_ should do such a thing?"
9391But why should it not be true?
9391Captain Basil Hall denied that our people had humor; but did he possess it himself?
9391Coffin?"
9391Did he always feel the point of what was said to himself?
9391Did we invent it, or borrow it from the_ Stad- huys_( town- hall) of New Amsterdam?
9391Did you notice the delicate way Whereby, with the trencher and cup, Comes a hint of the matter of pay, In a counter laid_ blank side up_?
9391Do we stop loving ourselves when we have lost our own self- respect?
9391Does the living intelligence Die in them with the dying sense?
9391Earth- existence the all they know?
9391Faith, does thee wish to stay?
9391From what cliff was it broken?
9391Got his witch grandmother mummied in it?
9391Had he been carried away by the snow- slip?
9391Had he brought me the newspaper he promised, not yet eight days old, from San Francisco?
9391Hear what happened to Joe?"
9391I look like it, do n''t I?"
9391If you could not effect it in the summer, when our army was less than yours, nor in the winter, when we had none, how_ are_ you to do it?
9391In my own years of widely diversified experience, what had I met with to compare with this?
9391Is it not delightful to think of them and know them in their precious old corners and over their dear old altars?
9391Is there an inner apartment that I have not seen?
9391Is there anything more wonderful in the transmutations of fiction than this?
9391Is there, I wonder, no other place Whence they come or whither they go?
9391Marvyn?"
9391Oh, Keziah, what did thee do?"
9391On what beach rolled by the waves of what ocean?
9391Or, from the body passing hence, Does it find in another sphere Being in higher form than here?
9391Sleep comes; but what is this that murders sleep?
9391They said the doctors would want my skeleton when I was dead.--You are my friend, if you are a doctor,--a''n''t you?
9391Walk in, Miss Janes, and see my woman,--won''t ye?"
9391Was n''t that a pretty neck to slip a hangman''s noose over?
9391We heard him say once,--"Do you want to know when a Unitarian"( we think it was)"will get into heaven?
9391We must own he appeared very well there; did he not?"
9391What did he say,_ mimi_?--did he ask for me?"
9391What do those mean?
9391What do you think was kept under that lock?
9391What is the destiny of his race?
9391What is the use of striking your right hand with your left?
9391What shall I do?"
9391What time in the morning was it that you dreamed it?"
9391What will this woman''s life be?
9391Where is the girl so angelic as not to feel a slight curiosity to know how she shall look in a new and strange costume?
9391Who but Roque, fresh from town, with his experience of Carnival, and his own accounts of the masked ball, the Paseo, and the Señorita''s beaux?
9391Who said he was a man?
9391Why do I talk of what may not be?
9391Would it wake her from her trance?
9391_ Ave María santísima!_ did one ever see such spirit?
9391_ Santísima Trinidad!_ is there such fighting in all Matanzas?"
9391and would she see me in the flush of my stolen triumph, and hate and despise me ever after?
9391but where was it?
9391exclaimed her mother,"how can you go on so?"
9391inquired Farmer, as he glanced at the animal''s knees;"been down, I guess; did Old Horse ball?"
9391or had thee rather I should?"
9391or was his mangled corse below us among the black crags laid bare by that catastrophe?
9391said I,"are you intending to land us on this Atlas- top?"
9391this''ere?"
9391we do n''t know how much they are tempted; and who can wonder that they are a little spoiled?
4945A bomb threat?
4945A nice hard tack hammer?
4945Absolutely,replied Judith,"but you are not slighting me?"
4945Am I my chum''s keeper? 4945 And I suppose, Janie, you are blaming me for holding you back in the attic?"
4945And Jane, will you be so good as to bring a few sample apples that came in that last parcel post from Montana?
4945And THAT''S the ghost?
4945And Teddy is your brother?
4945And did you notice Shirley was blaming little Sarah for whimpering? 4945 And did you really see a ghost?"
4945And do you know what Ted called Kitten when she came down from presenting the flowers?
4945And the glass smashed?
4945And then think of the fun of actually hearing her give the famous screech as exhibit A?
4945And what happened to the five?
4945And whom do you think we saw out with a stable horse and instructor?
4945And would n''t it be wonderful, Judy, if she turned out worth while after all?
4945And you both thought this an unpardonable offense?
4945And you do n''t mind being called Bobbie?
4945Are we debarred? 4945 Are you girls sure that keyhole is sealed and the door still impregnable?"
4945Are you sure this stuff is no world''s war relic? 4945 Bad as all that?"
4945Because-- oh, I ca n''t just explain, but wo n''t you please excuse me?
4945Besides, we have n''t a thing to eat in our quarters and what''s a good yarn without grub? 4945 But I have n''t decided to go?"
4945But I would much prefer a chuckle, would n''t you Ted?
4945But Ted and the dance?
4945But didn''t-- little Sarah try to help you?
4945But do n''t you like my Ray?
4945But girls,spoke Dozia,"did you notice the little fat fireman who held that big hose nozzle?
4945But he would have to introduce us to his boy friends?
4945But how could a girl coming in on scholarship have money to squander?
4945But how could she ever get two hundred dollars for brother Ted?
4945But how could she get up there, Dozia, when we know positively she was not on the campus the night of the big alarm?
4945But how did she get the chance to go up in Lenox attic?
4945But if we did come back and the girls knew it? 4945 But is n''t he very nice?"
4945But is n''t it dreadful she has such influence over that rebel freshman?
4945But just suppose Jane or Judy should drop in on us this afternoon and see the things packed up?
4945But she said she was not related to Bobbie?
4945But the rest of us?
4945But what about all our things? 4945 But what about this last episode?"
4945But what happened? 4945 But what have they to do with the fighting messengers?"
4945But what is this all about?
4945But what puzzles me is how that girl ever won the scholarship?
4945But what was it all about?
4945But what would you shoot in daylight?
4945But why did old Sour Sandy lay hands on you?
4945But why does she tell the girls such horribly weird stories?
4945But why should they want to go now?
4945But you did n''t have the box?
4945But you do n''t want to?
4945But, Jane, it may be some dangerous prowler--"How could he get in here? 4945 Can we carry her?
4945Can we go up to your room for a few minutes?
4945Can you imagine college running in her family?
4945Can you imagine us going, and bound for such a good time?
4945Capable at math?
4945Carry us around?
4945Could n''t I kiss a few of the girls for you so as to save time later?
4945Could we go to the Town Hall and find out what happens? 4945 Cute little rompers, are n''t they?"
4945Dear me, must we really leave?
4945Did n''t you-- couldn''t you ask them outright Janie? 4945 Did you ever see anything prettier?"
4945Did you hear that scream?
4945Did you meet any little fairy in your walk? 4945 Did you really want to be arrested?"
4945Disappointed?
4945Do I honestly look-- well?
4945Do I know it? 4945 Do n''t I give you enough?
4945Do n''t you know, do n''t you understand what it means for a student to deliberately flunk? 4945 Do n''t you like it?
4945Do n''t you really know you are stunning?
4945Do n''t you see how simple it is? 4945 Do tell?"
4945Do they really mean to sleep in the recreation room?
4945Do you actually mean to say she has set up the College Beauty Shop at our very door?
4945Do you expect me to get in under that scrap iron works?
4945Do you know why I have never spoken of my companion on that hateful ride?
4945Do you mean to say, Jane, that the dean would ever understand and condone all this?
4945Do you realize Judith may have been taken to that horrible old station house? 4945 Do you realize we have spent one hour talking?
4945Do you really think they will attempt to run away?
4945Do you think you can kick out and leave me without warning? 4945 Does anyone know where Miss Duncan is-- Miss Shirley Duncan?"
4945Does it all seem so hideous still?
4945Does n''t it seem silly?
4945Does n''t it? 4945 Does n''t that sound like a class yell?"
4945Does your head hurt?
4945Escape?
4945Ever hear that little word before?
4945First tell us, please,insisted judicial Judith,"how do you know how it is fitted up?
4945Girls,she panted,"what ever do you think?
4945Gone? 4945 Had you finished your Lat?
4945Has anything happened to your baggage?
4945Have I kept you waiting?
4945Have you not openly solicited Wellington patronage?
4945Have you seen my dance frock? 4945 Here she is, and does n''t her gown go wonderfully with the golden ball chrysanthemums?"
4945How about you? 4945 How are we going to stop it?"
4945How dare you force your way in here?
4945How did I make out?
4945How did YOU get over here?
4945How do I look, anyhow?
4945How do you suppose Zeezie came into Sour Sandy''s clutches?
4945How much do you want for your money? 4945 How on earth did she ever make Wellington?"
4945However did he keep the lark up at the dance?
4945I have been indoors so much today,she replied,"and our lovely days are flying so, suppose we go over to the rose summer house?
4945I hope you are not doing uplift for anything like that this year?
4945I know YOU could have come here without that plan, but what could have put ME through? 4945 I know about the noises and I do believe they are really uncanny,"said Judith,"but what can we do away over at this end of the campus?"
4945I know the racket was in that wing, and see how the round tower begins here and shoots up past all that outside plumbing? 4945 I suppose it is perfectly proper for a mere freshie to do so?"
4945I suppose she considers the ghost her opponent?
4945I suppose we should hardly have read the letter--"Why not? 4945 I was so provoked-- why, Jane, what is the matter?
4945I-- wonder, Dozia, could she be in partnership with Dol?
4945If school did n''t start just now,commented Norma Travers,"I wonder what we would do?
4945In your shoe?
4945Is Miss Stearns here?
4945Is it too early to suggest science?
4945Is n''t it just wonderful to know you could n''t break away even though you tried so flagrantly?
4945Is n''t it lovely to have you all here? 4945 Is n''t it?
4945Is not that rather boisterous for indoor play?
4945Is not this a public shop?
4945Is she-- did you hurt her?
4945Is that Teddy your brother? 4945 Is that so?
4945Is this ghost a person of regular habits? 4945 It''s I-- are you up, Jane?"
4945Jane, will you help us organize a ghost raid? 4945 Jane,"called back Bobbie,"do n''t you remember how you used to question that name Shirley?
4945Janie dear, why the clouds? 4945 Just look at that?"
4945Like this? 4945 May I get a shampoo?"
4945May I speak?
4945No-- I''ve wondered?
4945Not wet it?
4945Oh, can we have it?
4945Oh, did she eat you up? 4945 Oh, did you?"
4945Oh, what was it?
4945Oh,moaned Jane, when the two finally reached their own quarters, room 19,"was n''t that an ordeal?"
4945Sally?
4945Sandy, what do you mean by disturbin''and loiterin''?
4945Say, girls, tell me,implored the youth, letting his critical eye scale the crowd of pretty girls,"what''s this your name is?
4945She has been declared insane?
4945She might, but would n''t that mean an outlay?
4945She ran first after a boy, then after a girl, and I seen the package go through the air----"Flyin''? 4945 She told me she lost a lot-- by the arrest of Madam Z, and do you know, Bobbie, that woman was a real lunatic?"
4945She whose pater is a benefactor of Wellington?
4945Shirley?
4945Sold it?
4945Suppose we should get walled up in here, just two babes in the tower?
4945That your father should give this college a scholarship each year is a noble thing, and how can you tell who may win it? 4945 That''s your college, darter, ai n''t it?"
4945Then what''s the charge and who makes it?
4945They wo n''t, eh?
4945This looks a little like a joke but who is the joker? 4945 Tonight at Lenox, what for?"
4945Truants,said Jane,"where have you been?
4945Volunteers?
4945Was it the tack hammer or the spindle chair or the fat girl? 4945 Was n''t it wonderful?"
4945Was n''t she furious? 4945 We have got to, but now, how can we do it?"
4945We may be breaking the spell by raiding the secret chamber, but suppose the old spook breaks out in a new spot?
4945Were you afraid of him?
4945What a night we have had? 4945 What a pity they made the hearing private?"
4945What a shame we did n''t know she was making her exit by way of the dummy?
4945What am I going to do about it?
4945What are deans for?
4945What are you two thinking of?
4945What can you do with that letter? 4945 What did it hit?"
4945What did you do with it?
4945What do you make of it?
4945What does this mean?
4945What hit you?
4945What in the world are you watching that door for?
4945What say?
4945What was it? 4945 What''s a mere skirt compared with that?"
4945What''s new?
4945What''s that, Jane Allen?
4945What''s that?
4945What''s the excitement?
4945What''s up?
4945What''s your hurry just now Bobbie? 4945 What?
4945What?
4945Whatever can that innocent little thing be doing around here?
4945Whatever has happened and where is Judith?
4945When can we make the raid?
4945When?
4945Where did you get that wonderful robe, Dozia?
4945Where have I heard the line before?
4945Where have you been and what have you been doing?
4945Where is Sally?
4945Where is it?
4945Where is it?
4945Where is she?
4945Where''s the fire?
4945Where? 4945 Who gave the alarm?"
4945Who is that running from the back driveway?
4945Who pulled that box?
4945Who would dare trust a live and workable phiz to that-- traitor?
4945Who''s the golden girl over by the punch bowl?
4945Who? 4945 Why are chains more formidable than ropes?"
4945Why ca n''t we withdraw and do as we planned, Bobbie?
4945Why could n''t she stick to the theater for rehearsing?
4945Why did n''t we try to save her from those reckless strangers? 4945 Why did the girls abandon their plans for the ghost show?"
4945Why do n''t you call me Shirley? 4945 Why do n''t you trust me?"
4945Why do n''t you try it, Bobbie? 4945 Why need she?
4945Why never again? 4945 Why not install a ghost in Madison if you are all so keen on it?
4945Why not invite both Bobbie and Sally over here and have them remain all night?
4945Why not tell some of the other girls, and get them to help us?
4945Why not? 4945 Why so-- frightened?"
4945Why?
4945Why?
4945Why?
4945Without a saddle?
4945Wo n''t Judy and Dozia just howl? 4945 Worried, and on our very first lovely day?
4945Would you expect company to do all the lugging? 4945 Yes, and you know the Rumson place?
4945Yes, does n''t it? 4945 Yes, is n''t it just dreadful?
4945Yes-- but-- how does anyone get up there?
4945You are sure Ted has his lesson all clear and that our-- masquerade will not be spoiled?
4945You call it that? 4945 You caught this here flying joo- ell- ry?"
4945You did not ask to see me just to be offensive?
4945You girls will stick around a stuffy old gym, will you? 4945 You know the conditions, Bob?
4945You rode-- that way?
4945You would never have known the fun we have had here, if you had n''t come, and is n''t it heaps better to pay now than never to have known it?
4945Your cousin?
4945Your cousin?
4945''"I thought it was a rule to stay in your own dorm when a first alarm fire gong sounded in another building?"
4945Also the affectionate"Kitten"and"Bobbie"?
4945Also they had been promised a solution of the noise mystery and was not that in itself sufficient alleviative?
4945Also who could have been sobbing in the room back of the parlors?
4945Also, who let out that wild scream we heard on that first night?"
4945And I would be a coward?"
4945And begging me for something?"
4945And could you blame the Wellingtons present for shaking hands with Chief Hadfield?
4945And did you see Miss Allen stare when you called me Bobbie?"
4945And how was that charming little thing implicated with the ghost of Lenox Hall?
4945And if you WERE a little rebel at first, does n''t that explain it?
4945And suppose I did, where would it land me?"
4945And that this super- conscious fired janitor or furnace man is operating against her?"
4945And this was what both had planned and worked for-- to leave Wellington at midyear?
4945And to bribe her with money?
4945And what a mercy you happened to be within call?
4945And what you are expected to do today?"
4945And who has n''t for the dance?"
4945And why did Sally so promptly surrender him to all other partners?
4945Any pulleys loose around this place?"
4945Are n''t they an unruly lot?"
4945Are n''t you satisfied?
4945Are you coming over with me tonight, Judy?"
4945Are you sure?"
4945As you say, yes, I did turn her loose, and do you know that now she has been sent away?
4945Been in all the sheds and corners, Ben?"
4945Bobbie, you did want to come to college, that is always a laudable ambition, and think of the thousands who fail every year?"
4945Break your necks or anything?"
4945But I suppose you know that long lanky friend of yours, they call some foolish name like Doses, hit me on the head with her hammer the other night?"
4945But are n''t you ashamed to treat juniors this way?"
4945But do tell?
4945But how about our mail?
4945But what about the others?"
4945But where is Jane Allen?
4945CHAPTER IV THRILLING NEWS Did you read your note, Dinksy?"
4945CHAPTER XV THE PICKET AND THE SPOOK Not going to bed at all, Janey?"
4945CHAPTER XX TOUCHSTONE"Have you noticed, Judy,"asked Jane,"what a miraculous improvement is manifest in our two pet freshies?
4945CHAPTER XXI CRAMMING EVENTS"Now, what can we do?
4945Ca n''t Jane attend to her own mortal baggage without incurring the wrath of the multitude?"
4945Ca n''t you see his stenographer kicking his shapely shins as he dictates?
4945Ca n''t you see how much Ted Barrett looks like Sally Howland?"
4945Can I help you?"
4945Can you comprehend the audacity?"
4945Can you fancy that accusation on this poor head?"
4945Can you guess who they may be?"
4945Can you imagine ghost stories having that effect in this staid, solid, absolutely reliable old college?"
4945Can you make her apologize?"
4945College boys adore jokes, do n''t they?"
4945Coming to the gym?"
4945Could I not allow her to live a little when she paid me?
4945Could n''t I help you?"
4945Did n''t I ride horseback with her?
4945Did n''t you see we had company?"
4945Did you catch him?
4945Did you ever see so many new girls?
4945Did you ever yet meet a case in which the written word played no part?
4945Did you hear Miss Roberts, the real Noah Webster of Wellington, rave about her thesis?"
4945Did you manage to deliver the box safely?"
4945Did you see that beauty with the shiny gold hair?
4945Do I resemble a movie queen?
4945Do n''t mind do you?"
4945Do n''t mind if I take a rest, do you?
4945Do n''t they chime beautifully?"
4945Do n''t you see how magically it has all turned out?"
4945Do n''t you want to jump on Firefly and ride him over to the stable?"
4945Do n''t you wonder how it was we used to love that unladylike game?"
4945Do we have outposts, and pickets, and- trench companies?
4945Do you expect to get off scot- free if you smash anything with that golf stick?
4945Do you feel a little better?"
4945Do you imagine Miss Gifford has materialized some domestic enemy in her change of staff?
4945Do you know that Dol Vin is actually sending bills to my innocent dad for her entertainment of the country folks?
4945Do you know where you are, Judy Stearns?
4945Do you like to get in the open path of tack hammers?"
4945Do you suppose Ethics will be easier?
4945Do you want to claim the Grand Central Station?"
4945Does he take exercise every night?"
4945Does our plumber plumb there?"
4945Even Dol Vin would succumb to such an onslaught of orders, but--"Suppose she charges us some dreadful price-- like five dollars each?"
4945Girlie,"dragging Jane down into a chair,"have you noticed that ugly, fat, common country girl, with the wire hair and gimlet eyes?
4945Had it wings or was it a toy balloon?"
4945Has some college burned down since last year?"
4945Have I told you about him, Jane darling?"
4945Have you analyzed that?"
4945Have you ever seen a mouse run from a cat and a dog after the cat and a boy after the dog?
4945Have you heard from home lately, Dinks?"
4945Have you seen a ghost anywhere?"
4945Have you seen who Dozia is lugging around?
4945Honestly, did you ever see so ordinary a girl in Wellington?"
4945How about that for stunt night with the sophs?"
4945How are you getting on with your cramming?
4945How can you dare say to me that such a trick was ever countenanced by us?"
4945How can you tell what''s in that other place?"
4945How could we possibly have guessed that the very girl and her group we expected to antagonize should be our deliverers?"
4945How did it happen?"
4945How did this girl win the scholarship?
4945How differently things have turned out from our expectations?
4945How on earth do you expect to obtain permission to stay at Lenox without giving the whole thing away?"
4945How strange I never heard anyone mention her talent?"
4945However are we going to get out of this?"
4945However do you children expect to maintain the honor of Wellington if you do not keep fit?
4945I have n''t any brother, you know, Jane dear, but it always sounds better to blame one''s slang on him, do n''t you think?"
4945I heard there was no more hazing allowed in colleges?"
4945I just wonder how it will strike our rebel Shirley?"
4945I wonder if one of us should run up to Madison?"
4945Is n''t a fire and a volunteer fireman''s comedy enough?"
4945Is n''t everything going lovely?"
4945Is n''t it awful to have to work off a condition?
4945Is n''t she tragically pretty?"
4945Is n''t that a swell enough name?"
4945Is the day bed translated?"
4945It said plainly:"Now is n''t he lovely?
4945It''s fitted up----""Were-- you in?"
4945Jane Allen, do you realize this is a cold, bleak, dreary night, and you are tempting ghosts to parade in--bathing suits or nighties?"
4945Jane did not relish yielding; she had passed that childish stage, when"to give in"seemed noble; it was now a question of expediency, which was best?
4945Jane must have dozed when she suddenly became conscious of something-- Was it a noise?
4945Jane was waiting, listening for what?
4945Jane, may I have the honor of your company?"
4945Jane, tell me, is she the scholarship?"
4945Jane, what has happened?
4945Judith Stearns knew a good thing when it came her way, and what could be better than this?
4945Judith, quick to interpret Jane''s moods, knew the excuse covered a more serious consideration and stepped back to ask"why?"
4945Judy, where is Jane?"
4945Know this line?
4945May I act as your honorable secretary?"
4945May I have the next?"
4945May I see the paper, Jane?
4945May I use your telephone?"
4945Not even to try?"
4945Now what are you going to do about it?"
4945Now what can a girl do in a case like that?"
4945Now where is Judith?"
4945Now, girls, are you fully satisfied the ghost is annihilated?"
4945Now, how do you suppose one reaches the other side?"
4945Now, where does she get it, and after that poor boy''s letter?"
4945Oh, how good it all seems here today?
4945Or did she carry the dress on a broomstick?
4945Or put horns on you?
4945Or turn you into a goat?"
4945Or would a bathrobe drill answer as well?"
4945Our change of names?"
4945Our hats and coats?"
4945Perhaps it would have been simpler to have avoided the final reckoning?
4945Sallylun, why do n''t you try to finish?
4945See how steadily the girls carry you?"
4945See the trail of ashes over there?"
4945See those footprints, Jane?"
4945She dropped Jane''s arm and all but gasped:"When did you see me there?"
4945She has friends who are not in the freshman ranks?
4945Should we have risked our precious lives up in that attic and then turned down this important clue?
4945Since when had plain Dol Vin become so foreign?
4945Some one who has promised immunity?
4945Spot any stars?"
4945Suppose she did meet some of the girls and attempt to tell what she knew of Sally''s secret?
4945Suppose we have to go on picket duty?"
4945Suppose"( Jane had in mind the tearful face of little Sally)"you give us one more night before you turn the alarm in to Miss Rutledge?
4945That ivory blonde, the timid one with a most atrocious name, Sarah Something, I just love her, do n''t you?"
4945That old stone mansion right in the heart of the country folks settlement?"
4945That was what knocked friend Virgil, or was it Cicero?
4945The one who stood under the hemlock alone during the cheering?
4945Then I tripped along--""Not scared or anything?"
4945Then Sally''s attempt to forestall the midnight noises by taking the shunned room at the very foot of the dreaded attic stairs-- what could that mean?
4945Then"Shirley?"
4945There, that sounds as if I have learned a little English, does n''t it?
4945These details were visible from the exterior, and what, oh, what might the interior look like to correspond?
4945Things flew--""Hair brushes and sponges?"
4945Think of hearing all the reports read and not being able to take up our exams?"
4945Too old and cranky or something like that?"
4945Trying to duck me?"
4945Was it any wonder ghosts had been crowded out of the day''s or night''s programme?
4945Was n''t he from Montana and did n''t his mistress train him to go as she chose without foolish restrictions?
4945Was n''t it lucky I had called in my head and that she did n''t leave me with one side done and one side undone?
4945Was n''t she all nicely arrested and tried at a regular police court?
4945Was not this expelled pupil actually trespassing even to be upon Wellington grounds?
4945We heard it?
4945What about the ghost?
4945What are you talking about?"
4945What did little Sally Howland mean about taking a room at the attic stairs?
4945What do you propose to do, and when are you going to do it?
4945What do you suppose WILL happen at mid- year?"
4945What do you think Miss Rutledge will say?"
4945What do you think of the crowd this year?
4945What does all this mean?"
4945What if Ted Guthrie, the fat, funny, facetious Ted, did slide down a hill and take most of the hill with her?
4945What is there more delightfully elastic than the mind and the heart of the young college girl?
4945What music can compete with the simple inspiration of hand clapping?
4945What shall we do?"
4945What time is it, anyhow?"
4945What time is it?"
4945What was it all about?"
4945What was the secret spring of her prodigious income?
4945What was the threat or power Shirley held over little Sally?
4945What''s up?
4945What''s up?
4945Where are you going?"
4945Where did I put that piece of paper?"
4945Where does the big noise seem to come from?"
4945Where is Jane?
4945Where is it?"
4945Where is it?"
4945Where might we find the bed clothes storeroom?"
4945Where was Judith Stearns and what was the meaning of Dolorez Vincez''sinister statement, about running down poor messenger boys?
4945Where''s the Logic?
4945Where''s the crowd?
4945Which room might be one in proximity?
4945Who can they be?
4945Who got up in that place and rattled these nightly?
4945Who is he and who saw him?"
4945Who knows?"
4945Who was this boy''s relation?
4945Who''s this guy Bed, I heard you mention?
4945Who''s to set up the billet?"
4945Why did n''t I know four months ago just a few of the precious things I see so vividly now?"
4945Why did n''t we beg her to give up the company of Dolorez Vincez?"
4945Why do you suppose they have sneaked off like that?"
4945Why has Shirley become Bobbie?"
4945Why have we never discovered it before?"
4945Why not go inside for a shampoo?
4945Why not?"
4945Why should Jane deceive them?
4945Why?
4945Will you enter?"
4945Will you just step in here, dear?"
4945Wo n''t she look stunning on a bronco, Sally?"
4945Wonder if we will notice any painfully deserted blondes in her wake?"
4945Would anyone stand by and listen?
4945Write your letter, or shall I do it?
4945You are not insinuating anyone here might be superstitious?
4945You did not try to hit her with the hammer I hope?"
4945You know her so well, can you suggest a way?"
4945You know who he thinks bears that relationship to me, of course?"
4945You really look worried,""Not really?"
4945You seem tragically jolly?"
4945You"( to Sally)"are Shirley Duncan, and you"( to Bobbie)"are Sally Rowland?"
4945Your dad would care?
4945charged Jane, noting her sudden preoccupating,"are you seeing things?"
4945more shoulder shrugging and a futurist pose of the black satin"clinger,""What else, then, might the Lady Stearns be doing at my place?"
4945or if Nettie Brocton climbing a tree for dogwood berries attempted to fly by the merest accident?
4945said Jane lightly, following the hushed tone of voice,"but where did you think the fire was?"
4945whispered Dozia from her side of the big double bed,"what do you think Judy will say to all this?"
33907Be you color sergeant?
33907Do n''t I look it?
33907Fair hair and...eyes?
33907How now?
33907Me? 33907 Now?"
33907Upon what vile bodies shall we experiment?
33907What be you laughin''for?
33907What one hears?
33907Whoever is this man Wurzel- Flummery?
33907''Ave a woodbine?
33907''Can I tell when they begun?''
33907''Ow long did you rent the pub for, Toffy?
33907''Ow long did''e rent the pub for?
33907A Stratford lad?
33907A doss?
33907A garden there?
33907A little wind in the avenue?
33907A mask, arch- wit?
33907A riddle, yet?
33907A rope is it?
33907A rope, is it?
33907A show and I not there?
33907A what?
33907About the knight who rode to Amiens Town?
33907About them spots, now?
33907After all, as William Shakespeare says,"What''s in a name?"
33907Agrarian crime, no doubt?
33907Ah, mermaid, is it you?
33907Ah, you have heard that she is beautiful?
33907Ai n''t these steps soft enough for you?
33907Ai n''t you and me been talking familiar with her for the last ten minutes?
33907Albert, Albert, what is this?
33907All the day long?
33907Almost?
33907Am I facing the glass door?
33907Am I facing the glass door?
33907Am_ I_ here?
33907An old flame perhaps?
33907An"escape"?
33907An'', lad dear, do ye think if anythin''was to happen to ye to- night,--yiss,_ this_ night,--that ye''d take any grudge against me away with ye?
33907An''dressed in your best?
33907And I-- ah-- gather that you do n''t think it will affect my career?
33907And Mr. Crawshaw too?
33907And can you grant me such a length of time?
33907And do the swallows bring all the dreams?
33907And do you think she thanks you?
33907And does the Queen ever come?
33907And dost thou know the meaning of my name?
33907And every time he speaks, do you feel little chubby hands on your breast and face?
33907And go with us all over England on hard journeys to play to ignorant rustics?
33907And has it made a difference in you?
33907And have you noticed his smile?
33907And how do you know?
33907And how fare they, sir?
33907And how much longer will he keep us here?
33907And how oft?
33907And is n''t it a pitiful thing when there is nothing left of a man who was a great rower and fisher, but a bit of an old shirt and a plain stocking?
33907And it is because of her beauty that you drag her to the guillotine?
33907And lonely, of course?
33907And no doubt it was her beauty that made her a Republican?
33907And now do you lay a wreath at Jeanne''s feet?
33907And now-- Oh, Will, Will-- I know well how thou''st longed to go from here-- and now thou must-- what shall I do, lacking thee?
33907And she will speak to me?
33907And so Eloise d''Anville should have her head cut off?
33907And so you''re in love with him, and he does n''t care a little bit about you, eh?
33907And that?...
33907And the niece, I take it, is in your other room yonder?
33907And then?
33907And what a''you going to do?
33907And what about moving?
33907And what did he want killing Jack Smith?
33907And what did you want to get married on?
33907And what have you to say now, Bartley Fallon?
33907And what is it you yourselves are talking about?
33907And what then, Toffy?
33907And what time would a man take, and he floating?
33907And when thou''rt alone?
33907And when?
33907And who is that sitting there?
33907And why?_ Now that the moon is turned to blood.
33907And yet, I will not go...[_ Coming down slowly._] Well, headsman?...
33907And you do not see anyone?
33907And you have not been contemplating another departure from Boulogne?
33907And you have the impudence to propose, sir, that I should take a made- up name?
33907And your sister has not come?
33907And your sister is not here?
33907And-- and Eloise-- d''Anville?
33907Anne, bist asleep?
33907Answer me, what are you up to?
33907Any dispute about land?
33907Anything in the paper?
33907Are all the windows open, Ursula?
33907Are n''t ye goin''to Pally Hughes''s?
33907Are n''t you tired yet of the Palais Royal platitudes?
33907Are not the nightingales beginning to sing again, Ursula?
33907Are there nails with them?
33907Are they putting out the light?
33907Are they rosy?
33907Are ye no goin''?
33907Are ye no goin''?
33907Are ye not goin'', Uncle?
33907Are ye sick?
33907Are you dreaming?
33907Are you going to sing it at the show?
33907Are you sure it''s real love?
33907Are you sure we must have a separate permit to embark?
33907Are you telling me that it is not a real name at all?
33907Are you the inn- keeper?
33907Ark, eh?
33907Arrayed in innocence, what touch of grace Reveals the scion of a courtly race?
33907Art thou so sure, Princess, the Child was wrong?
33907Art thou so sure, Princess, the world is dark?
33907Art thou so sure, it was all dark before?
33907Asleep, Lisetta?
33907At the door of this house?
33907Aye, I see ye''re ill?
33907Aye, and he said?
33907Ballad, sir?
33907Ballad, sir?
33907Ballads, gentlemen?
33907Ballads, new ballads?
33907Be I to lose my loongs over''ee?
33907Bears, say you, bears?
33907Bit stuffy for you here, dear, is n''t it?
33907Body o''me, shall I scent ale again?
33907Boycotting?
33907Business, is it?
33907But Catherine?
33907But he is not absolutely blind?
33907But he was not always like this?
33907But how can we get married if he does n''t take the money?
33907But how is one to tell it?
33907But if he died and left it to you,_ then_ you would?
33907But in London?
33907But is that legal?
33907But our gude- wife, did she bid in the neighbors To prove them that her husband was no myth?
33907But speak, my man; If she be virtuous, and the tale a true one, Can she not do''t in prose?
33907But supposing one of these fine ladies were to marry him?
33907But tell me this, do you think I shall find her?
33907But the nurse is with him?
33907But what about?
33907But what should we be afraid of?
33907But where''s the inn- keeper?
33907But why are you all silent?
33907But why are you not speaking?
33907But why is it that Pierrot can wake up all this poetry in you?
33907But you have-- ah-- full legal authority to act in this matter?
33907But your Aunt Kats?
33907Byunt''e later''n common?
33907Ca n''t we have a little fun as we go along?
33907Came into the house?
33907Can it pass?
33907Can it soon be taught?
33907Can not you, who were baptized in it?
33907Can ye see her, lad?
33907Can you bind him when you find him; Prithee, where?
33907Can you no comfort me?
33907Can you not see me shrunk?
33907Can you picture it--_Marquis?_[_ She hurls his title at him, and draws herself up in icy splendor._] I am a woman of the Republic!
33907Can you see him, Ursula?
33907Can you see the avenue?
33907Canst hear nothing-- a lilt afar off?
33907Cat- nappin''was I, Polly?
33907Catherine, Vavasour, are ye in?
33907Come, you''re not melancholy?
33907Common assault?
33907Cool is the night, what needs it?
33907Dare to say her mouth is wide?
33907Dead at twelve?
33907Deceive you?
33907Der Bub''--die baby hat typhus?
33907Dick, is n''t he lovely?
33907Dick, what is it?
33907Did Bartley overtake him?
33907Did he say what way they were found?
33907Did n''t the young priest say the Almighty God would n''t leave her destitute with no son living?
33907Did she know, Uncle?
33907Did ye have a fine time at Pally''s?
33907Did ye think I was n''t goin''to be?
33907Did you ask him would he stop Bartley going this day with the horses to the Galway fair?
33907Did you believe them?
33907Did you climb up there?
33907Did you forge that passport?
33907Did you hear a noise in the north- east?
33907Did you hear that, Cathleen?
33907Did you hear?
33907Did you know they were here, Toffy?
33907Did you not hear?
33907Did you sail far?
33907Did you see Bartley?
33907Did you see him riding down?
33907Did you see that girl after the show?
33907Did you want me, Robert?
33907Didst call me, Poetry?
33907Didst not play in Coventry three days agone,"The History of the Wicked King Richard"?
33907Didst thou not read the warning on the scroll?
33907Dies ist nicht Ihr Bube?
33907Dies ist nicht Ihr Gepäck-- pag?
33907Dis is nod your baby?
33907Do I know the town?
33907Do I seem so useless?
33907Do all the lads find in you such a defender, or only--?
33907Do n''t I look it?"
33907Do n''t you believe in human nature?
33907Do n''t you need them?
33907Do n''t you understand it all?
33907Do n''t you want to fly up to the roof of heaven and sing among the stars?
33907Do n''t_ you ever_ picture an ideal man?
33907Do not I hear you all sobbing?
33907Do they read Tolstoi in your country?
33907Do they say what way did he die?
33907Do you believe that?
33907Do you dream that I_ meant_ it?
33907Do you feel a draught?
33907Do you give it as an order, Citizeness?
33907Do you guess what all this bluster-- this tirade upon the wickedness of beauty-- makes me think?
33907Do you hear that, Shawn Early and James Ryan?
33907Do you hear that, Tim Casey?
33907Do you hear that, Toffy?
33907Do you hear the nightingales?
33907Do you know this town well, my good woman?
33907Do you not ask me why I''m here?
33907Do you not feel anxious?
33907Do you pretend not to know what she is?
33907Do you spell it like that?
33907Do you tell me so?
33907Do you think Pierrot is worth your tears?
33907Do you think R. M. F. would do, or would it have to be R. M. W. hyphen F.?
33907Do you think he would be very sympathetic, dear?
33907Do you want anything?...
33907Do you want to be Mrs. Wurzel- Flummery?
33907Do you?
33907Does he know all?
33907Does it go any farther than that?
33907Does it suffer, do you think?
33907Does it, Toffy?
33907Does not monsieur agree that it is irresistible?
33907Does she know it?
33907Does the Committee of Public Safety betray the same intelligence in the appointment of all its agents?
33907Does the French Republic persecute widows and orphans?
33907Dost know my name?
33907Dost know thou''rt in my chair?
33907Dost think players are as lords?
33907Dost think to become a great player at once?
33907Dost thou hear The measured footsteps of approaching Fate?
33907Dost thou not know me, Douce- coeur?
33907Dost thou persist?
33907Dost truly think so?
33907Down at last?
33907Eh?
33907Eloise d''Anville proscribed?
33907Er--[_PAUL salutes._] Oh-- er-- c''est ici la statue de Jeanne d''Arc, n''est- ce pas?
33907Every time you think of Pierrot, do you hear the patter of little bare feet?
33907Firing into houses?
33907Flower, mademoiselle?
33907Follow Love and find his guerdon In no maiden whatsoever?
33907For example-- is it your opinion that we should kill off the weak and diseased, and all that ca n''t jump around?
33907For me?
33907Forward?
33907Four?
33907Go with me?
33907God forgive you; is n''t it a better thing to raise your voice and tell what you seen, than to be making lamentation for a thing that''s done?
33907God help us, Mrs. Fallon, what happened your basket?
33907Gone?
33907Good, now: whar''s your marker?
33907Grumpy, is he?
33907Guido, sawest thou him?
33907Guido, what said he?
33907Guilty, was it not so?...
33907Ha?
33907Had n''t the idol any other on him?
33907Had n''t we better draw the curtains?
33907Hang me if I''d shake a whip at birch, for ox- yokes.--Polly, are ye thar?
33907Happen to_ me_, Catherine?
33907Has she red cheeks and a string of great beads?
33907Hast had a splendid day?
33907Hast heard?
33907Hast thou Somewhat that I may eat?
33907Hast thou no craving less remote than this?
33907Hath not London enough a''ready?
33907Have I ever been anything but patient with you?
33907Have I learned''em right?
33907Have I not been patient with you?
33907Have I not heard bereavèd mothers weep?
33907Have I not heard the children weep?
33907Have a game of poker?
33907Have n''t I said it often enough?
33907Have n''t you finished, Louis?
33907Have n''t you often wondered where the swallows go to in the autumn?
33907Have ye been drinkin'', Uncle?
33907Have ye been drinkin''whatever?
33907Have you forgot Who made it?
33907Have you found it, dear?
33907Have you never reflected that there might be something for me to forgive you?
33907Have you not heard That other Guido of Perugia How he is grown?
33907Have you seen the police?
33907He calls loudly and desperately._] Kats, Kats darlin'', I can not let you go without tellin''ye that-- Kats, do ye hear?
33907He can not hear us?
33907He carefully wipes off his plum- colored sleeves and speaks indignantly._] Well, man, are ye crazy, keepin''me out in the rain that way?
33907He charmed my fancy... for the moment,--ay The shine of his fortunes too, the very name Of Pembroke?...
33907He is asleep?
33907He is asleep?
33907He is quite alone in the room?
33907He mows by night?
33907He must, must n''t he?
33907He say: Why did you a baby with typhus with you bring out?
33907He sets them down on a small table; this he pushes towards THE PLAYER, who turns at the noise._] So...?
33907He''ll not believe.... What can I do?
33907He''ll return?
33907Help?
33907Here in the Square where it is dull and lonely?
33907Hey, boy?
33907Ho, would you squinch us?
33907Honor?
33907How are you getting on?
33907How came she here?
33907How can I help but listen?
33907How can he take charge of her?
33907How can they tell like this which of us has it?
33907How can we discuss a name like Wurzel- Flummery seriously?
33907How could she refuse to speak to you if you gave her that?
33907How could she so?
33907How could_ she_ protect anybody?
33907How did it eventuate?
33907How did you do it, Albert?
33907How do I know she is n''t the very woman of my dreams?
33907How do you do, Mr. Clifton?
33907How do you know?
33907How else prove aught?...
33907How long ago was it?
33907How long do you think I''ve been trotting about?
33907How many lonely twilights will there be Ere God will spare me?
33907How many shall we say?
33907How much?
33907How now, what noise is this?
33907How now?
33907How wan and pale do moon- kissed roses grow-- Dost thou not fear my kisses, Pierrot?
33907How would he go the length of that way to the far north?
33907How would it be washed up, and we after looking each day for nine days, and a strong wind blowing a while back from the west and south?
33907How would the like of her get a good price for a pig?
33907How would they be Michael''s, Nora?
33907How would you know it?
33907How would you like"All on an April Day?"
33907Hush, what''s that?
33907I am not wo nt to sue: and yet to- day I am your suppliant, I am your servant, Your link- boy, ay, your minstrel: ay,--wilt hear?
33907I am so ignorant-- but what is this?
33907I am to understand that you refuse the fifty thousand pounds?
33907I ask you, for the third time, where is he?
33907I asked him"Art thou happy?"
33907I ca n''t show you more than this, can I?
33907I did warn you, did n''t I, that I was bad at breakfasts?
33907I did?
33907I do n''t jest like t''talk about my legs.-- Be you a- goin''to take your young school folks, Polly?
33907I do n''t know, father; do you want her?
33907I do not know, grandfather... perhaps my sisters are trembling a little?...
33907I mean like a wurzel and like flummery?
33907I mean the one who''s left you the money?
33907I mean what trade have they?
33907I said I thought that I remembered-- Margaret, can you find Burke there?
33907I saw you all right, and you saw me?
33907I say, did you see that girl to- day?
33907I say, that''s rather silly, is n''t it?
33907I say, you''re not on duty, are you?
33907I see.... Look here, may I ask you a few questions?
33907I should like to know just how you feel about the whole business?
33907I suppose there is a good deal of disorder in this place?
33907I will tell no lie; where would be the use?
33907I wonder now who will take the expense of the wake for poor Jack Smith?
33907I wonder why I used to be so glad?
33907I would I had been slower to outdo The pranks of Mary Fytton.... You know her, sir?
33907I would surmise you have created babies in your leisure moments, sir?
33907If I should stew in milk the peas, maybe-- Do you think the child would eat it?
33907If a man said to him,"Would you like to make fifty thousand this afternoon?"
33907If it was a hundred horses, or a thousand horses you had itself, what is the price of a thousand horses against a son where there is one son only?
33907If you''re a gentleman, why do n''t you go about among gentlemen instead of the likes of us?
33907In the legal profession?
33907In_ Spreading the News_, the curtain is barely up before Mrs. Tarpey is telling the magistrate:"Business, is it?
33907Is anything the matter?
33907Is he long in his abiding Anywhere?
33907Is he now?
33907Is he still there?
33907Is he trying to get rid of me, Mrs. Crawshaw?
33907Is it Bartley it is?
33907Is it Patch, or Michael, or what is it at all?
33907Is it a compact?
33907Is it a crime to return from Paris?
33907Is it a crime?
33907Is it a folly, Is it mirth, or melancholy?
33907Is it a woman baby?
33907Is it about my man Bartley Fallon you are talking?
33907Is it absolutely incurable?
33907Is it alive you are, or is it dead you are?
33907Is it back from the grave you are come?
33907Is it dead he is?
33907Is it for me?
33907Is it killed he is?
33907Is it kind of boiled- looking?
33907Is it letting on you were to be dead?
33907Is it lies about him you are telling, saying that he went killing Jack Smith?
33907Is it light outside?
33907Is it still there?
33907Is it to put trouble on me and to destroy me you want?
33907Is it true?
33907Is it very dark in this room?
33907Is it worth a thousand pounds?
33907Is it your sister or a priest?--You should not try to deceive me.--Ursula, who was it that came in?
33907Is it your wits you have lost or is it I myself that have lost my wits?
33907Is it yourself at all that''s in it?
33907Is love all schooling, with no time to play?
33907Is my reckoning ready, girl?
33907Is my wife really so ill?
33907Is n''t he coming here?
33907Is n''t it a hard and cruel man wo n''t hear a word from an old woman, and she holding him from the sea?
33907Is n''t it sorrow enough is on everyone in this house without your sending him out with an unlucky word behind him, and a hard word in his ear?
33907Is n''t tea ready yet?
33907Is n''t the deafness the great hardship?
33907Is not my heart torn with their piteous cries?
33907Is she a somnambulist?
33907Is she coming to the pier?
33907Is she crying?
33907Is she gone round by the bush?
33907Is she pretty?
33907Is she there?
33907Is that a fact?
33907Is that a step at the door?
33907Is that it, Bartley?
33907Is that old Noah?
33907Is that the tone?
33907Is that what you are saying, Bridget Tully, and is that what you think?
33907Is that you?...
33907Is the carpenter coming to- morrow?
33907Is the girl a- brewing it?
33907Is the oration concluded?
33907Is the sea bad by the white rocks, Nora?
33907Is the window open?
33907Is there a league between here and Paris over which he has not dogged us?
33907Is there any other possible hope for us?
33907Is there any other possible way to gain even a little time?
33907Is there anybody here that can understand Amurrican?
33907Is there aught else?
33907Is there no oracle, no voice to speak, Interpreting to me the word I seek?
33907Is there no priest here, no devoted maid?
33907Is there nothing for him who stands at yours now, begging for a word?
33907Is there nothing in your heart for me?
33907Is there room?
33907Is this a joke, Mr. Clifton?
33907It continues at intervals for some time._]} Hey, lads?
33907It is likely you do n''t know that the police are after the man that did it?
33907It is not so bad then, after all?
33907It really comes to this, does n''t it?
33907It still is there?
33907It was open?
33907It''s Michael, Cathleen, it''s Michael; God spare his soul, and what will herself say when she hears this story, and Bartley on the sea?
33907It''s fonder she was of Michael, and would anyone have thought that?
33907It''s the life of a young man to be going on the sea, and who would listen to an old woman with one thing and she saying it over?
33907Jim would have none of my plans, and where''s Jim?
33907Joys above, Are there many, or not any?
33907Kats, are ye here, really here?
33907Kats, ye mind about comin''home?
33907Katy, do ye recall Pastor Evan''s sermon, the one he preached last New Year?
33907LINK starts._] What''s that?
33907Lad, lad, what is it?
33907Leave the poor ill baby here alone?
33907Length?
33907Like a May- day catch?
33907Link done that: Link-- the spry boy, what they call Chipmunk: you ai n''t forgot his double- step, have ye?
33907Living here alone, and also"with"--whom?
33907Lord God, you ai n''t forgot the boys, have ye?
33907MISTRESS S. Why didst not come home-- and what dost thou want with this stranger?
33907Maiming of cattle?
33907Man alive, wouldst have her like your blowsy wenches here, that lie i''the sun all day?
33907Map?
33907Margaret, what do you really feel about it?
33907Married?
33907Marry, what mars the song?
33907Marry, your friend?
33907Matches?
33907May I put my feet on the fender?
33907May I?
33907Maybe you do n''t hold with the clergy so?
33907Meant to strangle me?
33907Messieurs return to fight?
33907Michael is after being found in the far north, and when he is found there how could he be here in this place?
33907Might I have a glass of beer?"
33907Miss Viola Wurzel- Flummery-- I mean they''d have to look at you, would n''t they?
33907Money is a great help in politics, is n''t it?
33907Monsieur?
33907More?
33907Mother, thou''rt not angry?
33907Must I go, Toffy?
33907Must go, Will?
33907My Will?
33907My dear Mr. Crawshaw, you did n''t think-- you did n''t really think that anybody had been called Wurzel- Flummery before?
33907My feet are lead, but dance on if thou wilt, What can the future hold for me and thee?
33907My home?
33907N''avez- vous pas des affaires?
33907Nay, are you?
33907Nay, do you turn your face To give me some small leeway of escape?
33907Nay, is it so, indeed?
33907Nay, what?
33907Need what?
33907No jesting.... What?
33907No one came in just now?
33907No one has come into the room?
33907No one has come?
33907No poacher, eh?
33907No strangers?
33907No visitors?
33907No word?
33907No; why should she be crying?
33907No?
33907No?
33907Not goin''to Pally Hughes''s on Allhallows''Eve?
33907Not good enough?
33907Not in the avenue?
33907Not really?
33907Not so fast, you there; Who gave you holiday?
33907Not your late husband?
33907Nothing but names?
33907Now is this to the point?
33907Now where did I put those papers?
33907Now, here''s a proposition that brings it nearer the bone: Would you step out of your way to help them when it was liable to bring you trouble?
33907Now?
33907O Mother of God, When wilt thou send me death?
33907O beggared soul--Foul Lazarus, so starved it can make shift To feed on crumbs of honor!--Am I this?
33907O sweet sir, How can I tell you?
33907Of course it was very nice of him, but if you did n''t know him-- Why do you think he did, dear?
33907Of what, my friend?
33907Of whom?
33907Oh, Bartley, what did you do at all at all?
33907Oh, I say now, lady, go easy with that wreath, wo n''t you?
33907Oh, Pierrot, what is it?
33907Oh, Will, why long for them?
33907Oh, but do read it now, wo n''t you?
33907Oh, it''s a lady, is it?
33907Oh, sir, how could you wish to lead the lad away?
33907Only one?
33907Or seeing, cares?
33907Ought n''t I to call him that?
33907Our lot and yours we''re going whacks in licking the Germans, ai n''t we?
33907Perhaps you''d like to locate her somewhere else?
33907Perhaps, after all, we can manage something about-- Ah, Viola, did you want your mother?
33907Pia, think you I did not know?
33907Pierrette is a charming comedienne of twenty, with..."what color hair?
33907Pierrette, have you got supper in?
33907Pierrot, wo n''t you tell me?
33907Pilgrim, who art thou?
33907Poor, of course?
33907Pray you, what''s yours?
33907Prithee where, Goes Love a- hiding?
33907Proscribed?
33907Quite so; but that if it were ten thousand pounds, you would take it?
33907Reckon you would know what that means?
33907Reckoning now, sir?
33907Reverend yeoman, say, how thrive the sheep?
33907Richard, why do n''t you get something to do?
33907Robert, whoever is he?
33907Said I not, sir, he would fight?
33907Saw her?
33907Say, how came she here?
33907Scart?
33907Send out a street- crier for an accomplished forger?
33907Seven?
33907Shall I chain up that big black dog?
33907Shall I give you a third verse for your song?
33907Shall I look forth and find some trusty boy To attend you to the river?
33907Shall I put the gear on?
33907Shall I so?
33907Shall I spell it?
33907Shall I--?
33907Shall there be no faith left?
33907Shall we discuss it seriously, or shall we leave it?
33907Shall we go on to the terrace, or stay in this room?
33907Shall you and I transact a little business?
33907She can not hear us?
33907She had beauty, she had form, but had she soul?
33907She has come in?
33907She is-- so vain-- then?
33907She''s so unlike.... How long shall I be here To wait and wonder?
33907Should you?
33907Sie haben einen Buben gestohlen?
33907Sie wollen den Herrn accusiren?
33907Sir?
33907Six years?
33907So fine?
33907So he smiles at others, does he?
33907So of course he must take it, must n''t he, father?
33907So rude?
33907So sure?
33907So that''s old Noah''s wife, is it?
33907So,_ do_ ye?
33907So?
33907So?
33907Society?
33907Some Puritan preacher, nay, some journeyman, To make you sup the sweeter with long prayers?
33907Some music there?
33907Some quiet now.... Why should I thirst for it As if my thoughts were noble company?
33907Something untoward, without: or is it rather The tumult of some uproar incident To this... vicinity?
33907Sooth, at once?
33907Sorry for me, is it?
33907Sorry, do I interrupt a family meeting?
33907Speak: what are you?
33907Stage- plays-- no good end?
33907Still you do n''t see him?
33907Stop a minute, Shawn Early, and tell me did you see red Jack Smith''s wife, Kitty Keary, in any place?
33907Stranger, who art thou?
33907Stratford?
33907Suppose a stranger came up in the street to you and said,"My poor man, here''s five pounds for you,"what would you do?
33907Sure ye do n''t want to jine the celebratin''?
33907Sure you do n''t think he''d turn souper and marry her in a Protestant church?
33907Surely I''ve told you that before.... Viola, do you really think it would make a difference?
33907Surely, gracious madam; My duty;... what besides?
33907Surely, she is an orphan?
33907THE PLAYER goes to the casement, pushes it wide open, and gazes out at the sky._] Is there naught else?...
33907THE THREE SISTERS kiss each other._] What is that I hear now?
33907Tea all right?
33907Tears quiver on thy lashes, hast thou pain?
33907Tell him to go to the devil, I suppose, would n''t you?
33907Tell me is herself coming, Nora?
33907Tell me of what?
33907Tell me, Lady, shall I never Rid me of this grievous burden?
33907Tell me, logician, was it not her beauty that inspired her to give her property to the Nation?
33907Thanks, but what''s the good of it?
33907That all?
33907That is all very well, but who''s going to look about for stray dreams?
33907That song... thou wilt sing that?
33907That was n''t a name, was it?
33907That''s not alarming, is it?
33907That''s you, ai n''t it?
33907The Emmetsburg road''s thar.--Whar was I,''fore I fell cat- nappin''?
33907The Germans?
33907The bear?
33907The documents in the case?
33907The man reproaches me?
33907The motive, is it?
33907The police after them?
33907The servant?
33907Then I am to understand that you refuse the legacy, Mr. Crawshaw?
33907Then have I ventured and encountered Love?
33907Then thou dost not poach?
33907Then what''s the good of trying?
33907Then who was it that opened it?
33907Then whoi cunst thee not bustle?
33907Then why does he say it?
33907Then why should my dishonor trouble me, Or broken faith in him?
33907Then you are certain that we are safe?
33907Then you believe that she will speak?
33907Then you think we_ could_ have that second car and the house in Curzon Street?
33907Then, of course, you''ll accept it, dear?
33907There ai n''t any more, Bill, are there?
33907There be few Constables And such unhallowed fry.... An thou wouldst lay Thy wit to mine-- what is''t we could not do?
33907There is nobody at the glass door?
33907There, there, Kats, let''s have a bit of a wassail to celebrate our Allhallows''honeymoon, shall we?
33907They are an old Hampshire family-- that is so, is n''t it, Robert?
33907They goin''to pinch him after all?
33907They kind of know, Albert?
33907Thine?
33907This is Decoration mornin'': you ai n''t forgot?
33907This misunderstanding must be put an end to.--Would you?
33907This will be the first time she has been here?
33907Those big eyes, How could they miss me, peering as she was For some familiar face?
33907Thou hast slept well?
33907Thou wilt be always minding of the fire... Wilt thou not?
33907Thou''lt be making poetry before long, eh, Will?--Will?
33907Thou, whom I sought, dear Dryad of the trees, How art thou designate-- art thou Heart''s- Ease?
33907Thou?
33907Though all love''s lessons be a holiday, Yet I will humor thee: what wouldst thou play?
33907Thy coming caused Queen Sorrow to depart; What right hast thou to drive my friends from me?
33907Time?
33907Time?
33907To ask of my poor calling?
33907To play in London?
33907To tell you what?
33907To what?
33907Toffy, must I go?
33907Toffy, old man... what are we to do?
33907Toffy.... How did they get here?
33907Too clever for them?
33907Troubled, lass?
33907Tut, lad, are_ ye_ here?
33907Tut, tut,''tis no matter, an''I''m not ill-- not ill at all, but Eilir, lad, ye''re kin, an''--could ye promise never to tell?
33907Typhus?
33907Uch, dearie, what is it, what is it, what ails ye?
33907Uch, lad,_ can_ ye forgive me?
33907Uch, what have I done?
33907Uncle Link, you want that I should steam this longer?
33907Under whose protection?
33907Vavasour, how does it happen that the callin''is set aside, an''that ye''re really here?
33907Vavasour, lad dear, is that the wind in the chimney?
33907Vill nobody dake ze Bub''?
33907Viola had better know, had n''t she?
33907Viola, where''s your mother?
33907Vous n''êtes pas de garde?
33907WAT shambles in and sees THE PLAYER._] What, you sir, here?
33907Wa''n''t you never scart and wished you''d stayed t''home?
33907Waiting for what?
33907Want to turn informer, Sniggers?
33907Warum haben Sie einen Buben mit Typhus mit ausgebracht?
33907Was I asleep?
33907Was I not patient with you five years ago when you first harangued us on your"Rights of Man"and your monstrous republicanism?
33907Was I that?
33907Was ist das?
33907Was it money?
33907Was there anything in your heart for the peasants who starved in your fields?
33907Was there anything in_ your_ heart for the beggar who stood at your door in the old days?
33907Was this included in thy comedy?
33907Was zu thun?
33907Watch?
33907Water?
33907We bait to- morrow, sir; Will you come see?
33907We can have the second car now, dear, ca n''t we?
33907We must attract another guest.... Now, are you ready?
33907Well fed and groomed?
33907Well, I will warn him, though, I fear, too late-- What Pierrot ever has escaped his fate?
33907Well, have you told him?
33907Well, man, what ails ye; did ye think I was a ghost?
33907Well, now, had n''t Bartley Fallon great venom in him?
33907Well, she thought she was in politics, did n''t she?
33907Well, then, what''s the matter?
33907Well, what ails ye?
33907Well, what do you say to that?
33907Well, what shall I sing?
33907Well, what then?
33907Well, what''s the news?
33907Well, youngster?
33907Well-- ah-- wouldn''t_ you_ take ten thousand pounds if it were left to you by a stranger?
33907Well?
33907Well?
33907Well?
33907Well?
33907Whar did Ye git my legs?
33907What about it?
33907What about the ruby, Bill?
33907What am I, then?
33907What are the games that small moon- maids enjoy, Or is their time all spent in staid employ?
33907What are ye gazin''at the clock for?
33907What are you driving at?
33907What are you saying, Mary?
33907What business would the people here have but to be minding one another''s business?
33907What business would the people here have but to be minding one another''s business?"
33907What can I tell?
33907What canst thou do in London?
33907What canst thou know of play- making?
33907What circumstance?
33907What did he do at all, or is it bewitched I am?
33907What did poor Jack Smith ever have in his pockets unless it might be his hands that would be in them?
33907What did the harvest yield you?--Did you count The cabbage heads?
33907What did the span- new mister say to that?
33907What did they do to him?
33907What did you hope?
33907What did you say she was doing?
33907What do we next?
33907What do you mean, sir?
33907What do you mean?
33907What do you want to watch for here?
33907What do you want, grandfather?
33907What do you want?
33907What does he say?
33907What does it matter?
33907What does that body- snatcher say?
33907What does this mean, Richard?
33907What else would be useful?
33907What else?
33907What happened since?
33907What has happened?
33907What has he seen?
33907What has that woman on her stall?
33907What have you to tell?
33907What holds me?...
33907What if or salt or fresh?
33907What is Love?
33907What is it ails you, at all?
33907What is it the whole of the town is talking about?
33907What is it worth, Toffy?
33907What is it you have?
33907What is it you seen?
33907What is it, Mrs. Tarpey?
33907What is it, Toffy?
33907What is it?
33907What is it?
33907What is its chief business?
33907What is love?
33907What is my crown to thine?
33907What is my wealth to thine?
33907What is that I hear now, Ursula?
33907What is that I hear, Ursula?
33907What is that man doing?
33907What is that?
33907What is the duty?
33907What is the matter, grandfather?
33907What is the name, mother?
33907What is this light, and whither am I come To sleep beneath the stars so far from home?
33907What is this petulance?
33907What is to do, Do quickly.... Do you wait for some reprieve?
33907What is your name?
33907What is''t you miss?
33907What kind of an old baby is it, anyway?
33907What lacks?
33907What light is there for those who strive and fail?
33907What more can we want than that?
33907What more, zur?
33907What more,--what more, you... man?
33907What must I do, mademoiselle, to hear her voice?
33907What must I do?
33907What must I next?
33907What need of further oaths?
33907What now?
33907What o''clock is it, Ursula?
33907What put that in your head?
33907What said I?
33907What say you?
33907What seats would you like?
33907What shall we do while we are waiting?
33907What shall we do?
33907What should we say, since you will not believe us?
33907What sort of a night is it?
33907What sort of a physiognomy has it, anyway?
33907What stick?
33907What then?
33907What then?
33907What use would there be in that?
33907What visitants across his spirit glance, Lying on lilies, while he watch me dance?
33907What was God a- thinkin''of, t''allow the created world to act that awful?
33907What was that?
33907What was the motive of this crime?
33907What was the play?
33907What way was he drowned?
33907What way will I live and the girls with me, and I an old woman looking for the grave?
33907What will you do when they come in?
33907What would be the good of deceiving each other?
33907What would my wife want bringing Bartley Fallon to America?
33907What wouldst thou now?
33907What wouldst thou of the maiden of the moon?
33907What you did n''t like?
33907What"final stroke"could she have"dealt"him?
33907What''ll we do?
33907What''s his idea, I wonder?
33907What''s nonsense?
33907What''s nonsense?...
33907What''s thar?
33907What''s that I used to sing ye?
33907What''s that?
33907What''s that?
33907What''s that?
33907What''s the gentleman in buttons for?
33907What''s the good of harping on that?
33907What''s the matter?
33907What''s the matter?
33907What, good Pia?
33907What, then?
33907What?
33907What?
33907What?
33907What?
33907What?
33907What?
33907What?
33907What?
33907When all''s done.... What''s yet to do?...
33907When flowers fade, have you never wondered where their colors go to, or what becomes of all the butterflies in the winter?
33907When thou turn me from this portal, Whither shall I, hapless mortal, Seek love out and win again Heart of me that thou retain?
33907When will the doctor come?
33907When will they come?
33907When will your sister come?
33907When wilt thou, from war returning, In whose breast true love is burning, Come and change to joy my mourning, By day and night?
33907When?
33907Whence came, dear Queen, such magic melody?
33907Where are his songs, The great renown that waited him?
33907Where are you at all, Bartley, till I bring you out of this?
33907Where are you?
33907Where could we go?
33907Where did you get it?
33907Where do you want to go?
33907Where else should Jeanne be but on her pedestal?
33907Where is Bartley Fallon, Mrs. Fallon?
33907Where is Jack Smith?
33907Where is he itself?
33907Where is he, indeed?
33907Where is he, is it?
33907Where is our passport from Paris?
33907Where is she?
33907Where is the bit of new rope, Cathleen, was bought in Connemara?
33907Where is the mother?
33907Where shall I find her?
33907Where shall I get it?
33907Where will we put them?
33907Where would you like to go, grandfather?
33907Where''s Catherine?
33907Where''s Catherine?
33907Where''s herself, Jack Smith?
33907Where''s the mother?
33907Where?
33907Whereabouts?
33907Which end up is it?
33907Which of these"permits"is the best?
33907Who are you?
33907Who are you?
33907Who art thou, Stranger, in a pilgrim''s guise Who comest unattended, unannounced?
33907Who art thou, lady?
33907Who art thou?
33907Who can say?
33907Who can tell?
33907Who follows on?
33907Who had it first?
33907Who is he, now?
33907Who is he, think you?
33907Who is it says it?
33907Who is it sighing like that?
33907Who is it?
33907Who is it?
33907Who is that walking round us like that?
33907Who is that who got up?
33907Who is that?
33907Who is thinking of deceiving you?
33907Who is this mortal Who ventures to- night To woo an immortal?
33907Who is-- there?
33907Who knows to what fair land rough seas may lead?
33907Who made that noise?
33907Who put that wreath on it?
33907Who sees?
33907Who told them you had the ruby?
33907Who under heaven ever told you that?
33907Who was so witless as to call me wise?
33907Who was telling you?
33907Who was telling you?
33907Who was the man that understood Beauties?
33907Who''s madame?
33907Who''s raving?
33907Who?
33907Whose charge is that?
33907Whose honor?
33907Why are the English here in France?
33907Why are you all three trembling, girls?
33907Why are you always trying to picture an ideal woman?
33907Why art sad, sweet Moon?
33907Why art thou pale, fond lover of the moon?
33907Why art thou sad?
33907Why ca n''t we here?
33907Why could I not see my poor daughter to- day?
33907Why did n''t you give''em in charge?
33907Why did n''t you lie safe in England?
33907Why did n''t you take the lace- maker with you?
33907Why did n''t you tell us?
33907Why did you not say instead that she was-- shaving?
33907Why do I see so many of them?
33907Why do n''t you stay in by the fire?
33907Why do n''t you write a song without any end, one that goes on for ever?
33907Why do you insist on dragging me out of the country?
33907Why do you say that?
33907Why do you want to deceive me?
33907Why dost thou look so long upon the door?
33907Why have you put out the light?
33907Why not, Albert?
33907Why not, Toffy?
33907Why not?
33907Why not?
33907Why poor?
33907Why should I be so musical and sad?
33907Why should I go with you?
33907Why should he leave any money to you?
33907Why should the English bring a wreath to me?
33907Why should we deceive you?
33907Why should we feel anxious?
33907Why was it open at this time of night?
33907Why were those walls so dense?
33907Why were you not So stern a long time since?
33907Why were you not That beauty that you seemed?...
33907Why were you talking under your breath just now?
33907Why will you mock yourself And all your fine deceits?
33907Why would anyone be sorry for me?
33907Why would he have made an end of him if he had not?
33907Why would n''t he get a wake as well as another?
33907Why would n''t he injure him?
33907Why would n''t you give him your blessing and he looking round in the door?
33907Why would you have me bring you?
33907Why"puzzling"?
33907Why, so it is.... Is''t not a marvel, sir, The way she hath?
33907Why, what is the matter with the door, my children?
33907Why?
33907Why?
33907Why?
33907Why?
33907Why?
33907Why?
33907Widow Balsage, if you intend no journey, why have you this forged permission to embark on the Jeune Pierrette?
33907Widow Balsage, who is the Citizen Balsage?
33907Will I be in it as soon as himself?
33907Will she be alone?
33907Will she see it was crying I was?
33907Will the niece of Widow Balsage explain why it does not?
33907Will ye lead by here?
33907Will you be here when I come back?
33907Will you be kind to me and tell me something?
33907Will you buy a flower, monsieur?
33907Will you not buy a flower for the Maid?
33907Will you put by your Music?
33907Will you shut your mouth and hear me speaking?
33907Will you step hither?
33907Will you yourself take it, James Ryan?
33907Will, canst not see?
33907Will, what is it?
33907Will, where are thy wits?
33907Willoughby Run: whar''s that?
33907Wilt ha''the pastry or--?
33907Wilt thou hold my heart for ever?
33907Wilt thou not bide?
33907Wilt thou not eat the broth?
33907Wilt thou not read one song of these to me?
33907Wilt thou--?
33907Wilt turn''t about?
33907Wise?
33907With one so young what are thy spells to mine?
33907With what authority?
33907Would it be impudent to beg a kiss?
33907Would it not be better to stay here?
33907Would n''t I?
33907Would you begrudge him that much?
33907Would you consider yourself a fool?
33907Would you like to go into your daughter''s room?
33907Would you like to see the warrant for her arrest?
33907Would_ you_ take it?
33907Wouldst thou?
33907Yes, Robert?
33907Yes, dear, did n''t I say that?
33907Yes, yes, I know, whom sawest thou?
33907Yes-- er-- h''r''m-- Richard-- er-- what are your-- er-- plans?
33907Yes; someone came in just now?
33907Yes?
33907Yiss, that is are we_ both_ here?
33907Yiss, yiss, dear, did n''t he say that the Lord was mindful of us-- of our difficulties, an''our temptations an''our mistakes?
33907You are all round the table?
33907You are beginning to comprehend?
33907You are here, Ursula?
33907You are joking?
33907You are there, Geneviève?
33907You are there, Gertrude?
33907You are there, Oliver?
33907You are there, Paul?
33907You ask not why I came here, Clouded Brow, Will you not ask me why I stay?
33907You bestow your gracious pardon upon me, do you?
33907You can not see anyone?
33907You can sell flowers at this hour when it is nearly midnight?
33907You did n''t give him his bit of bread?
33907You do n''t believe in it?
33907You do n''t know he was followed and that he was laid dead with the stab of a hayfork?
33907You do n''t know that yourself, I suppose, Bartley Fallon?
33907You do n''t know, I suppose, that the body was found in the Five Acre Meadow?
33907You do n''t know, maybe, that he was made away with for the sake of Kitty Keary, his wife?
33907You do not take many journeys?
33907You doubt?
33907You failed, did n''t you?
33907You find something amusing?
33907You give''em the slip, Albert?
33907You go with us, sir?
33907You have had a nice sleep, grandfather?
33907You have no call to be leaving the fair for a while the way I have, and how can I go till I''m rid of this fork?
33907You heard the same story from everyone you asked?
33907You know those fields of Domremy?
33907You may have heard that she was betrothed first to Louis and later to several others?
33907You mean as a-- a reward?
33907You mean you''re too weak to carry it?
33907You mean-- you do n''t want me?
33907You must not try to deceive me; I know what I know.--How many of us are there here?
33907You never lost a game?
33907You recall this woman, Dossonville?
33907You saw her too?
33907You saw?
33907You see nothing coming, Ursula?
33907You think she will?
33907You think that she will speak to me?
33907You were just"Viola"--the girl I''d seen at odd times since she was a child; and now-- oh, why wo n''t you let me tell your father?
33907You''ll say good- by?
33907You?
33907You?
33907You_ are_ going to take us back to Paris, then?
33907Young Guido of Perugia, thy friend?
33907Your Music,--very Music?...
33907Your sister is at the door?
33907Your sister is older than you?
33907Zwei Kaffee?
33907[_ Absently he picks up a lily which has fallen to the ground, and repeats._] Why came I here, and why am I Pierrot?
33907[_ Again he cries out, beseechingly._]-- My God, why do You keep on marchin''and leave him settin''here?
33907[_ Aloud._] But you seek... you need Some rest-- some cheer, some-- Will you step within?
33907[_ Apart._] Did she hear that, I wonder?
33907[_ Bitingly._]"Can any good come out of Stratford?"
33907[_ Brusquely._] Do you understand that?
33907[_ Calls out._] Why did n''t you tell me that before, Shawn Early?
33907[_ Catching sight of the WAITER appearing in the doorway._] Waiter, where to h-- ll is that flash of beer?
33907[_ Coolly._] That''s what you''re going to do, is n''t it?
33907[_ Crossing to him._] Will you have music, good my lord?
33907[_ Disconsolately_] And I must bide in Stratford?
33907[_ Drumming the floor with her foot._] What does it matter?
33907[_ Exit DICKON into tap- room._][_ To THE PLAYER, suavely._] Well, headsman?
33907[_ Going out._] Did anyone see Bartley Fallon?
33907[_ He goes to his old seat on the fender._] Been left a fortune?
33907[_ He kisses the top of her head lightly and goes round to the club fender, where he sits with his back to the fireplace._] How did you know?
33907[_ He partly opens the little door; THE SERVANT remains outside in the opening._] Where are you?
33907[_ He returns to table._] THE TOFF[_ laying his hand very gently on SNIGGERS''s arm, speaking softly and winningly._] What was it, Sniggers?
33907[_ He sighs._] To them that hath-- But what on earth do you want my advice about?
33907[_ He takes out the field- glasses slung around him and adjusts them on the BABY._] MOTHER[_ bewildered_], Mei''Bubi-- Typhus-- aber Typhus?
33907[_ He turns to go, but first says to MERITON._] So you''re taking the money, Mr. Meriton?
33907[_ He turns to the red- cheeked youth._] What do you opine, sir?
33907[_ He walks up to BARTLEY, folds his arms, and stands before him._] Here, my man, do you know anything of John Smith?
33907[_ His whole manner changes and he jumps up eagerly._] A player?
33907[_ Laying the hoe down, she approaches._] The yoke done?
33907[_ Leaning feebly upon DOSSONVILLE''s shoulder._] Do you hear, my Dossonville?
33907[_ Looking doubtfully at his clothes._] Er-- it is Mr. Denis Clifton, the solicitor?
33907[_ MISTRESS SHAKESPEARE sinks down in a chair._] MISTRESS S. What o''me?
33907[_ PIA kneels by the bed._] Can you not see How much I love?
33907[_ Reading and glancing at her._]"Eyes that say''I love you''; arms that say''I want you''; lips that say''Why do n''t you?''"
33907[_ Sharply._] How long have you lived here?
33907[_ She goes over to the table with the bundle._] Shall I open it now?
33907[_ She looks through some clothes hanging in the corner._] It''s not with them, Cathleen, and where will it be?
33907[_ She rises to face him._] Did you ever find anything in your heart for the soldiers you ordered tied up and flogged?
33907[_ She runs her fingers up the strings, one by one, and listens, speaking to the lute._] Is it not so?
33907[_ She sings under- breath, fantastically._]_ Say how many kisses be Lent and lost twixt you and me?
33907[_ She smiles lovingly at him, and then says aloud._] Oh, wo n''t it?
33907[_ She springs to the desk and begins to tear the discarded sheets into minute fragments._] Is that door fastened?
33907[_ Shouts._] Did you hear that news, Mrs. Tarpey?
33907[_ Shrewishly._] And then, my worthy young man?
33907[_ Sits up and wipes her eyes._] I suppose they''ll wake him the same as another?
33907[_ Stops her ears._] Oh, is n''t he the treacherous villain?
33907[_ Taking the flower._] How can I thank you?
33907[_ The LITTLE MAN smiles._] Do you''ear?
33907[_ The WAITER turns._] Might I have a glass of beer?
33907[_ To ELOISE_] My cousin, in this amiable populace which you champion, do you never scent something of-- well, something of the graveyard scavenger?
33907[_ To MRS. TARPEY, raising her voice._] What was it rose the dispute at all, Mrs. Tarpey?
33907[_ To ROBERT._] Are you, dear?
33907[_ To SHAWN EARLY._] Was it you?
33907[_ To THE SERVANT._] Who was that, that came into the house?
33907[_ To THE TOFF._] We''re going, do you hear?
33907[_ To TIM CASEY._] Was it you said it?
33907[_ To his wife, in an Oxford voice._] Sugar?
33907[_ To the LITTLE MAN._] I judge you go in for brotherhood?
33907[_ To the LITTLE MAN._] What is your nationality, sir?
33907[_ Turning sharply upon him._] You are assuming the right to criticize me, are you?
33907[_ Turns and sees him._] What in the earthly world do I see before me?
33907[_ When she speaks to him again it is with encouraging condescension._] Surely you''ve been at Whitehall, Master Player?
33907_ All''s beautiful indeed and all unsure?__"Ay"_...( Did you hear?)
33907_ All''s beautiful indeed and all unsure?__"Ay"_...( Did you hear?)
33907_ Boum!_[_ She snaps her fingers._] And of course she bathes in the blood of little children?
33907_ Can he love aught So well as his own image in the brook, Having once seen it?_ HERBERT.
33907_ He''s fair and faithless?
33907_ Must_ you?
33907_ Oracle, can he love aught So dear as his own image in the brook, Having once looked_?...
33907_ What is it suffers?
33907_"When daisies pied and violets blue And lady- smocks all silver- white"_-- How now?
33907but how fair he is, Would it be wrong to rouse him with a kiss?
33907in that enchanting strain, Days yet unlived, I almost lived again: It almost taught me that I most would know-- Why am I here, and why am I Pierrot?
33907is n''t it a queer hard thing to say if it''s his they are surely?
33907poor scholar, wast thou never taught A little knowledge serveth less than naught?
33907what is the matter with you?
33907when, be it soon or late, What Pierrot ever has escaped his fate?
33907{ O- oh, the Queen?
8645''My son, are you not human?'' 8645 And how?"
8645And what do I know of Aurelia, or any other girl?
8645Are we really going there?
8645Are you going far?
8645But can I leave myself outside?
8645But can you tell me if I am looking for a fountain?
8645But is it possible to get home?
8645But seriously, Prue, how is it about my summer wardrobe?
8645But what is it that you wish to leave behind?
8645But why are you here at all, then; and why do n''t you stop?
8645But why have they set the studding- sails?
8645But why is it so impossible,I ask,"if you go to Italy upon a magnolia branch?"
8645But, my dear Titbottom,said I,"what is the matter with you this morning, your usual sedateness is quite gone?"
8645Can there be any doubt of it?
8645Can this be a California steamer?
8645Can you tell me to what port we are bound?
8645Could Cleopatra smile upon Antony, and the moon upon Endymion, and the sea not love its lovers?
8645Could I be misanthropical when I saw such fidelity, and dignity, and simplicity? 8645 Do you not know that all Bourne''s money would not buy the yacht?"
8645Do you suppose any true love is in vain?
8645Does Bourne own the sun and sky? 8645 Famous for what?"
8645Gentlemen,said the reverend passenger for Eldorado,"I hope there is no misapprehension as to our destination?"
8645I beg your pardon, but where did you say I was going?
8645If I should board this ship,I asked myself,"where should I go?
8645Is it so grievous a fate to see?
8645Is n''t that where I was going? 8645 Is that the golden fleece?"
8645It certainly is not a fishing smack?
8645It is an extraordinary place to anchor,I said to myself,"or can she be ashore?"
8645May I ask what you are here for,inquired I;"perhaps your health, or business of some kind; although I was told it was a pleasure party?"
8645Mr. Bourne, have you any castles in Spain?
8645Mr. Bourne, will you take five thousand at ninety- seven?
8645No,I replied;"but how came you to take passage without inquiry?
8645Nor where I am going?
8645Not got abroad, and yet you have been everywhere?
8645Or is home Eldorado?
8645Ought I to go when I have such a debate about it?
8645Ought I to have gone alone?
8645Strolling about?
8645Well, gentlemen,continued the Alchemist,"where shall we go, or, rather, where are we going?"
8645Well,said I,"Stunning failed?"
8645What can be better than this? 8645 What do you think of the summer- wardrobe now?"
8645What hole is that?
8645What is it, sir?
8645What''s the matter?
8645Where be all the bad people buried?
8645Where is it going?
8645Where should we be going, if not there? 8645 Where?"
8645Where?
8645Who is that?
8645Why,I answered,"I thought this was part of Bourne''s property?"
8645Yes, again; but,says Titbottom when he hears the remark,"how, if one''s grandmother were a shrew, a termagant, a virago?"
8645You will come and dine with us, Titbottom?
8645(_ snuff, snuff._) Has the baker been making(_ snuff_) ginger- bread?
8645After all this proving and refining, ought not the last child of a famous race to be its flower and epitome?
8645And now what do I hear?
8645And when we reach the last portrait and our own times, what is the natural emotion?
8645And yet, if Adoniram should never marry?--or if we could not get to Spain?--or if the company would not come?
8645Are they hale and happy still?
8645Are they popes or cardinals yet?
8645As I sat staring at it I could not but wonder whether Bourne had seen this sail when he looked upon the water?
8645Bourne owns the dirt and fences; I own the beauty that makes the landscape, or otherwise how could I own castles in Spain?"
8645But is not monotony the destruction of art?
8645But tell me one thing, how soon, after getting into the Hole, do you think we shall get out?"
8645But where are you going?"
8645But who could this be, to whom mere human sympathy was so startlingly sweet?
8645But, after all, what girl is complimented when you curiously regard her because her mother was beautiful?
8645Can Christopher bring Italy home?
8645Can a man be too far- sighted?
8645Can you find comfort here, lovers, whose mistress has sailed away?
8645Can you not make the application to the case, very likely to happen, of some disfigurement of that exquisite toilette of Aurelia''s?
8645Could a man be named Sidney, and not be a better man, or Milton, and be a churl?
8645Could even the irreproachable elegance of your manners have contemplated, unmoved, a grease- spot upon your remembrance of the peerless Aurelia?
8645Death?
8645Did I not feel the melancholy of that solitary bark?
8645Did I not see those sails,"thin and sere?"
8645Do people go on gold- fleecing expeditions now?"
8645Do they feast with Lucrezia Borgia, or preach red republicanism to the Council of Ten?
8645Do they laugh at Ulysses and skip ashore to the Syrens?
8645Do they sing,_ Behold how brightly breaks the morning_ with Masaniello?
8645Do you know whether there are any children upon your grounds?"
8645Do you not guess it, seeing that I did not name, first of all, Elia, who assisted at the"Rejoicings upon the new year''s coming of age"?
8645Do you suppose Aurelia would not note the slightest deviation of heart in her lover, if she had one?
8645Does Bourne own that sailing shadow yonder?
8645Does Bourne own the golden lustre of the grain, or the motion of the wood, or those ghosts of hills, that glide pallid along the horizon?
8645Does he run races with Ptolemy, Philopater and Hiero of Syracuse, rare regattas on fabulous seas?
8645Does he see such sights every day, because he lives down here?
8645Does not the flash of Orion''s scimeter dazzle as we pass?
8645Fairy- times are over, are they?
8645Famous for what?"
8645Friends of my youth, where in your wanderings have you tasted the blissful Lotus, that you neither come nor send us tidings?
8645Has Mesrour, chief of the Eunuchs, caught them with Zobeide in the Caliph''s garden, or have they made cheese cakes without pepper?
8645Has he fallen exhausted from the post into the water?
8645Has the roof of his cabin a carved golden face, and is his sail linen with a purple fringe?
8645Have I not said that I defy time, and shall space hope to daunt me?
8645Have his powers been wasted?
8645He is a rich, man, too, and why should not a New York merchant do what a Syracuse tyrant and an Egyptian prince did?
8645He paused a moment, then said slowly--"How is your wife?"
8645He smiled quietly as he spoke, and it was then I asked:"But, Titbottom, have you never discovered the way to them?"
8645He stood looking over the side for some time, and at length added,"Do n''t you think we ought to arrive soon?"
8645How can they, since Aurelia does not know of my existence?
8645How could I have thought it a steamer?
8645How should I explain or understand, I who am only an old book- keeper in a white cravat?
8645I answered, with the blood streaming into my face; and, heedless of Prue, pulling my glove until it ripped--"what is it?"
8645I believe it is; I wish I knew; I think that''s what it is called, Where is home?"
8645I found myself asking:"Ought I to have come?"
8645I knew that each asked himself the mournful question,"Is this parting typical-- this slow, sad, sweet recession?"
8645I saw in her eyes that she would ask her question, And as Titbottom opened the door, I heard the low words:"And Preciosa?"
8645If Aurelia is at last engaged,( but who is worthy?)
8645In that soft afternoon, standing in mournful groups upon the small deck, why did they seem to me to be seeing the sad shores of wintry New England?
8645Is his life, therefore, lost?
8645Is it any better, now you are seated at table?
8645Is it not perhaps a magic yacht of his; and does he slip off privately after business hours to Venice, and Spain, and Egypt, perhaps to El Dorado?
8645Is it not, therefore, rather your loss?
8645Is life only a game of blindman''s- buff?
8645Is not this the vessel that shall carry me to my Europe, my foreign countries, my impossible India, the Atlantis that I have lost?"
8645Is that handkerchief, bleached and rent, still pendant upon that somewhat baggy umbrella?
8645Is their hair gray, and have they mustachios?
8645Nay, have I not resigned them all for ever, to live with that portrait''s changing original?
8645Or have they taken to wigs and crutches?
8645Or, in the case that he does not chance to be so, is it not better to conceal the family name?
8645Ought I wilfully to deprive us both of this various enjoyment by aiming at a higher, which, in losing, we should lose all?
8645Over what distant and tumultuous seas had this small craft escaped from other centuries and distant shores?
8645Prue says that brides are always beautiful, and I, who remember Prue herself upon her wedding- day-- how can I deny it?
8645Prue?"
8645Sculpin?"
8645Sea- side lodgings are not very comfortable, I am told; but who would not be a little pinched in his chamber, if his windows looked upon the sea?
8645Shall I betray a secret?
8645Sitting upon the earth, do we not glide by all the constellations, all the awful stars?
8645They are all very pleasant subjects, but do you suppose Ixion talked Thessalian politics when he was admitted to dine with Juno?
8645This is our only relation; and do you wonder that, whether our days are dark or bright, we naturally speak of our cousin the curate?
8645Was it longer ago than yesterday that I walked with my cousin, then recently a widow, and talked with her of the countries to which she meant to sail?
8645Was it not all Hood had sung?
8645Was this a barge for summer waters, this peculiar ship I saw?
8645Was this grave form, Columbus?
8645What attenuated consumptive, in whom self- respect is yet unconsumed, delights in your respect for him, founded in honor for his stalwart ancestor?
8645What conscience with relentless sting pricked this victim on?
8645What do you say?''
8645What romance can such a life have?
8645What sounds of foreign hymns, forgotten now, were these, and what solemnity of debarkation?
8645What stories can such a man tell?
8645What sumptuous sultan was I, with this sad vizier?
8645What then?
8645What was he flying?
8645What work or pain have we here?
8645Who crowded the boats, and sprang into the water, men in old Spanish armor, with plumes and swords, and bearing a glittering cross?
8645Who was he standing upon the deck with folded arms and gazing towards the shore, as lovers on their mistresses and martyrs upon heaven?
8645Who where those coming over the side?
8645Why did you not bring home Mr. Titbottom to tea?
8645Why do n''t the English Admiralty fit out expeditions to discover all our castles in Spain?"
8645Why does it bring me doubts and fears now, that brought such bounty of beauty in the days long gone?
8645Why not?
8645Why should they go to the South?
8645Would Aurelia surrender to a blear- eyed foreigner in a moustache?"
8645Would he not feel richer than the Poets, when his eyes rose from their jewelled pages, to fall again dazzled by the splendor of his wife''s beauty?"
8645Would her husband regret the opera if she sang''Allan Percy''to him in the twilight?
8645asked he, in a bewildered manner;"''do people stroll about, now- a- days?"
8645is it one of the prices that must be paid for wealth, the keeping up a magic yacht?"
8645my son,(_ snuff, snuff,_) where have you been?
8645of droll cross- purposes?
8645poor lovers; I wonder if they are watching still?
8645said I, at length, holding his arm paternally;"what do you wish to escape?"
8645said I,"how did they go?"
8645what should I see?
8645whom should I meet?
8645why does the sea imprison you so far away, when will you return, where do you linger?
53891A waiting- list?
53891Alec, what do_ you_ think about my going away?
53891Am I speaking to Miss Lucy Vars?
53891And Nellie?
53891And does Will like him?
53891And go and see Edith very soon?
53891And how much has Will already given you?
53891And was n''t I horrid?
53891Are n''t you going to lend it to me?
53891Are you? 53891 Aunt Sarah,"I asked, annoyed,"_ why_ do you sit there and cry?"
53891Back from one of your walks''all by your lone''?
53891Bobbie and_ you_?
53891But what do you want so much money for?
53891But what for? 53891 Ca n''t you keep that hair a little smoother?"
53891Ca n''t you see?
53891Ca n''t you telephone to the family not to come home this noon? 53891 Ca n''t you tell me what you need it for?"
53891Can Breck supply your intellect with what it demands?
53891Can you be torn away from your precious books for a while, Will?
53891Can you possibly come in and have lunch? 53891 Can you put us up?"
53891Can you think of any possible way for a girl who ca n''t do a thing on earth but scrub and darn stockings, to earn a fortune?
53891Could n''t I sit alone somewhere, off in a corner? 53891 Could you tell me-- I''m sorry to stop you-- but does Oliver Vars room here?"
53891Did I? 53891 Did we?"
53891Did you ever hear of Benedict Graham?
53891Did you have a long trip?
53891Did you make it?
53891Did you quarrel very badly?
53891Did you see the diamond pendant?
53891Did you want to see him?
53891Do I, funny Bobbikins?
53891Do n''t you approve of him, brother William?
53891Do n''t you see, little simpleton, if they are together, people can tell how many plateaus you have at a glance? 53891 Do you love Breck Sewall?"
53891Do you mean to say, Lucy, that you''re going back to that school?
53891Do?
53891Do_ you_?
53891Does that mean,I said,"that he is-- is--"I could n''t say it--"is worse than very ill?"
53891Ears been burning? 53891 Edith?"
53891Fifty cents an hour?
53891For the love of Mike, what''s that?
53891Good Bobbie, you''d keep us straight if you could, would n''t you?
53891Gorgeous day, is n''t it?
53891Got a thimble?
53891Had n''t_ I_ better?
53891Hannah,I asked, and my voice was strange and hoarse,"where''s Juliet?"
53891Has Al told you?
53891Has Mrs. Percival called on me? 53891 Has any one heard of it?"
53891Has the business failed, Alec?
53891Have n''t you heard?
53891Have n''t you some one to help you out? 53891 Have they come?"
53891Have you consented?
53891Hello,he called cheerfully;"how do you like the new lights on the picture?"
53891How did the lavender room turn out?
53891How did you know? 53891 How is the little chap?"
53891How many of those calls have you returned?
53891How much do you need for your railroad fare?
53891How much were you paid?
53891How''s everything at your establishment?
53891How''s this for a haul?
53891I better help you carry some of these home, had n''t I?
53891I know how hard it is to give up school,she said sweetly,"but they do need you, do n''t they, dear?
53891I wo n''t, my dear; and by the way, sometime when you are in Hilton, will you let me know? 53891 Instead of connections?"
53891Insulting?
53891Is Madge able to see people yet?
53891Is it finished yet? 53891 Is it in the paper?"
53891Is it_ you_?
53891Is n''t it splendid to live on in the way Father does?
53891Is n''t it?
53891Is n''t this world just the smallest place you ever heard of, Mrs. Vars? 53891 Is she going to live here?"
53891Is she leaving without notice?
53891Is that so?
53891Is that twelve- thirty, one, or one- thirty? 53891 It was at Mrs. Jaynes''bridge- party last week,"she went on;"do n''t you remember?
53891It would be a big relief to me-- but are you sure?
53891Lucy Vars, has Oliver''s wife a little girl? 53891 Lucy, Lucy, you up there?"
53891Me?
53891Mercy,she said, simply disgusted,"why get so everlasting mad?"
53891Miss Campbell,I asked,"how did you come to want to marry Alec?"
53891Miss Lucy Chenery Vars, of 240 Main Street, Hilton, Mass.?
53891Not in bed yet?
53891Not in bed?
53891Not live here?
53891Now is n''t this luck?
53891Of Bobbie?
53891Oh, I simply decided to,Ruth replied shortly; and as if the subject were closed, she inquired,"How''s the new house?"
53891Oh, Lucy,she said in her musical voice,"will there be time for me to run over to the postoffice with some letters before lunch?"
53891Oh, Ruth,I exclaimed,"is n''t it_ fine_?
53891Oh, do you think she will?
53891Oh, how do you do?
53891Oh, why hash the whole thing over?
53891Oh,I said,"did n''t Mrs. Sewall approve?"
53891Oh,I said,"this?
53891Really, Ruth?
53891Really?
53891Really?
53891Really?
53891Say, Bobbikins,he broke off,"would you be very much surprised to know that it is-- all right between Edith and me?"
53891Say, is n''t it corking about Alec? 53891 Say, would you mind,"I said jovially enough,"just removing your hundred and seventy- five pounds off my left foot there?
53891Say,asked Alec,"is n''t this a good deal better than last night when Nellie''s cap fell into your butter?"
53891See?
53891Seen the paper?
53891She has been married only since June,I said to Edith;"why not invite the poor thing to the dance?
53891Short?
53891Sincere? 53891 Sit down, wo n''t you?"
53891That''s it, is it? 53891 That''s six hours, is n''t it?"
53891Then why--?
53891To room, Ruth? 53891 Unnatural girl,"she answered,"have you no heart, no tears?
53891Very bad?
53891Want a drink of water?
53891Was n''t I horrid about helping? 53891 Well, Lucy?"
53891Well, what is it then? 53891 Well, what,"I continued,"have you all been saying about_ me_?"
53891Well,I exclaimed,"do you like it?"
53891Well,I said,"what do you think of her?"
53891Well,he asked,"what do you think of her?"
53891Well,he said,"does this close our business transactions?
53891What are you two up to? 53891 What are you up to?"
53891What do you mean?
53891What do you think of these?
53891What does this mean?
53891What explanation have you for this-- step of yours?
53891What in the world is the matter now?
53891What is it, Miss Lucy?
53891What profession would you follow?
53891What shall I do to you?
53891What shall I do, Father?
53891What shall I do?
53891What shall I say when I am introduced? 53891 What shall we eat?"
53891What sort of a passage was it?
53891What time is it?
53891What''s happened to my father, Miss Brown?
53891What''s hard about it? 53891 What''s the matter, Gabriella?"
53891What''s the matter?
53891When is there a train?
53891When she came in to say good- night did you see the horrid old red worsted bedroom slippers she had on?
53891Where''s Alec?
53891Who says you and I are n''t perfectly happy?
53891Who''s that? 53891 Why did you need so much money?"
53891Why do you want to frighten me to death? 53891 Why, what do you mean, Bobbie?"
53891Why, what''s the matter?
53891Why, where shall we live? 53891 Why, who then,"I asked,"will take her place?"
53891Will it be all right?
53891Will you come home with me, Ruth?
53891Will you hook this up please?
53891Will''s initials, Lucy?
53891Will,I said all weak in my knees,"where''s Madge?
53891Will,she said,"I''m so different from any one you ever knew that you ca n''t understand me, can you?
53891Wo n''t Oliver be just too cute with a daughter?
53891Would you mind,I said as he opened the front door for me,"waiting just a minute?
53891Yes, is n''t it?
53891Yes?
53891You heard her say that? 53891 You mean it?
53891You see, I had to come in and tell my partner, did n''t I? 53891 You wanted me?"
53891You''ll be here, wo n''t you?
53891You''re not in favour of it?
53891You, Bobbie? 53891 You?"
53891Your letter did n''t come till this morning, and-- isn''t the meeting to- day?
53891Your sister? 53891 _ You_ and Bobbie?"
53891All the way to the station I kept thinking,"Why could n''t Alec have believed me worthy of good motives too?
53891And I--""Are you glad?"
53891And do n''t you dress for dinner, Lucy?"
53891And does she think we also would n''t be prouder of a little child than of your discoveries?
53891And say-- isn''t she pretty?
53891And so have we, Bobbie, do n''t you think?
53891And why under the heavens all this old furniture?
53891Any one at all?"
53891Anyhow what can_ you_ know about it?
53891Are you all fixed up now?"
53891Are you back again on that old subject which your precious saint of a professor here raised up out of the past?
53891Are you crazy?"
53891Are you related?"
53891Are you up there?"
53891Back into service again, hey?
53891Bobbie, is n''t it nice Delia left?"
53891Breck smoked in silence for half a minute, then he asked, removing his cigarette,"Say, what''s the matter with you to- night?
53891But instead I remarked quite calmly,"You engaged?
53891But what about his wife?
53891But what can any one do on my income?
53891By the way, do n''t you prefer butter without salt?
53891By the way,"he broke off,"did n''t you get an invitation to the Omsteds''affair last week?"
53891Can any one realise the torture of my mind during the long dark hours of that night?
53891Comprenez- vous?"
53891Could Ruth run a vegetable garden, do you think?
53891Could her boarding- school friends go into the village store and run the accounts when the regular girl''s off on a vacation?
53891Could you imagine me in such a position?"
53891Did I ever tell you how she can cook?
53891Did she do it often?
53891Did she know already?
53891Did you ever notice the row of old- fashioned family pictures on the back of her chiffonier?"
53891Did you get on to that?"
53891Did you never suspect that I closed Grassmere three years ago, simply to separate my son from your sister?
53891Did you say a girl?"
53891Did you say_ my_ father?"
53891Do n''t I know it?
53891Do n''t I_ know_ it''s a perfect place for children?
53891Do n''t you know every one will be dropping in at all hours during these last days?"
53891Do n''t you know you''re married?
53891Do n''t you know your father has died?"
53891Do n''t you remember up there in Glennings Falls how you used to bring Oliver his lunch at noon?
53891Do n''t you see, my dear, that, independent of weddings, a man can put a little life into a dead business if he wants to?"
53891Do you hear me?
53891Do you hear me?
53891Do you know what I mean?
53891Do you know what you''ve done?
53891Do you know who it was told me you were here?
53891Do you realise that having that baby has simply made that girl over?
53891Do you suppose, Will, that you could find a place for me to room somewhere around here?"
53891Do you think a man wants to be married to a person who is not received-- absolutely ignored, as if something was the matter with her?
53891Do you think it absolutely ridiculous?"
53891Do you want to go?"
53891Do you wonder then, that I trembled in anticipation of this occasion?
53891Does she need any outside help in building up her beautiful city?
53891Eliza who came to the door explained that Dr. Maynard had gone out horseback riding, but would n''t I come in and wait?
53891Finally I was able to ask,"Alec, were you at the bottom of this?"
53891For heaven''s sake, Bobbie, what are you here for?"
53891For what is there for you to say?"
53891Going home Will said to me,''Why do n''t you send that little wild- cat sister of yours away to school?''
53891Had it been Ruth whom I had seen with my own eyes smoking a cigarette in my living- room?
53891Had it been my own little sister?
53891Had my awful words been telegraphed to Miss Brown''s office?
53891Had she done it before?
53891Has Alec ever told you much about the business?"
53891Has n''t she grown up?"
53891Have n''t I explained that to you a dozen times?"
53891Have n''t you a gorgeous afternoon?
53891Have you La Rochefoucauld?
53891Have you and Will really talked it all over?
53891Have you lost your mind?
53891How can a woman read poetry with a man who has just been grumbling at the price of her prettiest gown?"
53891How did I know but that some good- looking young chap would come along and snatch you up?
53891How did you guess?"
53891How is she?
53891How much does it weigh?
53891How old are the ruins of that old mill at the upper end?"
53891I had n''t been alone with him before, and when his head pushed up through the trap door and he asked,"You here?"
53891I hate even to speak about so delicate a thing-- but, Breck, why has n''t your mother written to me?
53891I mean could any one sleep in it-- to- night?"
53891I must seem to have no pride at all, but-- but-- can you lend me nineteen dollars?"
53891I remember I just said,"Hello, Juliet, how''s basket- ball and high school?"
53891I replied to my aunt,"Aunt Sarah, do n''t you know you should n''t speak like that before Ruth?
53891I said, as if I did n''t much care if she had, and then after I had taken a swallow of tea I asked,"How did that happen?"
53891I simply said very gently,"Want me to read aloud to you?"
53891I wanted to call out,"Ruth Chenery Vars, what are you doing?
53891I''ve got you, have n''t I?
53891If you ca n''t get it from Alec, ca n''t you borrow it out of the Household Account which you have charge of?
53891If you''ll come with me perhaps-- Must you see him right off?"
53891Impersonal?
53891Is Lizzie better?
53891Is it not so?
53891Is n''t it exciting?"
53891Is n''t it too nice for anything?
53891Is n''t it too silly?
53891Is n''t it_ great_?
53891Is n''t she simply-- lovely with the kid?
53891Is she dreadfully disappointed?
53891It does seem odd that he did n''t send cards up to us too, does n''t it?"
53891It was Will, turning from fastening the windows, who blurted out bluntly,"Are you still keeping up your connections with that man?"
53891It was when Will had gone to the kitchen for some water that Edith leaned forward and said to me:"How''d you happen to take_ this_ house, my dear?
53891It''s awfully nice, all around, is n''t it?
53891Just gotten here, have n''t you?
53891Last night?
53891Look here, Alec,"he asked,"do you intend to allow Bobbie to neglect us in this fashion?"
53891Lucy, do n''t you think that Bob''s_ awfully_ nice- looking?"
53891M.?"
53891Me?
53891Mrs. Fullerton, I believe?"
53891My son?
53891Now why in the world should n''t Alec get married?"
53891Oh, dear, I-- What do you think of Bob, Lucy?"
53891Omsted?"
53891Or by any chance in New York?
53891Or was it Nibbles who had the typhoid?"
53891Or will the twins meet you?"
53891Really,"she asked,"do you want me?"
53891Really?
53891Say--"his face brightened,"do n''t you want some hot chocolate?"
53891Shall I come over to- morrow with your first relay?"
53891She giggled at that; then she asked, trying to appear at ease,"Well, are n''t you going to introduce me around, Oliver?"
53891She started to go, but turned back and added,"Why in the world are n''t you more enthusiastic, Lucy?
53891Should n''t a girl be glad on the night of her betrothal?
53891Should n''t she long for the sight of the man whom she had promised to marry?
53891Should n''t there be ardent looks, passionate words, tender caresses for her to live through again in thought?
53891Tell me again-- did you say a girl-- really a_ girl_?"
53891That was all, but do you think then I would have failed?
53891The door was slightly ajar, and as Ruth passed it on her way to bed she stopped just outside, and asked softly:"Are you both still up?"
53891The hero kept looking right straight at me all the time and what do you think?
53891Then arming herself against a dreaded blow she gasped,"Which is it?"
53891Then as if she had forgotten it up to this time, she suddenly asked,"Wo n''t you sit down?"
53891Then desperately, at the breaking point, I gasped,"Is it cold out?"
53891Then he added,"Well, what do you think?"
53891Then he added,"_ You_ want to help?"
53891Then in a low voice with the play and banter all gone out of it he said,"Could you live with_ me_, Lucy?"
53891Then she added,"Gracious, Lucy, where in the world did you resurrect that old dress?
53891Then,"Will you get my overcoat and hat?"
53891There was a dead silence for an instant, then Alec asked quietly:"What does this mean?"
53891Things had always come her way, had n''t they?
53891This is n''t a joke?"
53891This is what he wrote, all cramped up in a little bit of space, after he had signed his name:"How is San Francisco progressing in her reconstruction?
53891To Edith Campbell?
53891Was n''t it awful?
53891Was n''t it disgusting when we were n''t planning to sail for six weeks?
53891Was n''t it stupid?
53891Was she thinking how funny and young I looked?
53891We laughed until it hurt; we simply roared; and suddenly Elise gasped, when she was able to get her breath:"Was n''t it funny?
53891We stand for good plain things and why could n''t Tom get something plain?"
53891We''re looking pretty fine around here, are n''t we?
53891Well, how''s this?
53891Well, well, is it_ possible_?"
53891Well, well,"he glanced swiftly around the room,"all here, are n''t you?"
53891Were n''t they the right kind of flowers?"
53891Were you?"
53891What are you all doing?
53891What do you suppose the men will think?
53891What do you suppose?
53891What harm would it do?
53891What have we here?"
53891What if her ambitions do seem to me unworthy?
53891What if she has crowded me out of my little niche?
53891What if the customs and the things I liked are desecrated before my very eyes?
53891What if, indeed, Edith has robbed me of Alec, and Ruth too?
53891What kind of a hand do you write?
53891What other awful news have you to break to me, William?"
53891What shall I do about Oliver?"
53891What shall I say?
53891What shall I say?"
53891What will you do?"
53891What''s happened?"
53891What''s the matter with you all, anyway?
53891What''s the trouble anyhow?
53891What_ should_ I say to a person whose very picture that had been taken for just me to put on my bureau, had appeared in two magazines that month?
53891When Nellie came back I asked,"What did she want?"
53891When he let me go, he said calmly,"Do n''t you want to come and see Father?"
53891When is her precious baby expected?
53891When was it?
53891Where are all those stunning plateaus?"
53891Where else?
53891Where is the woman, anyhow, who discusses her soul with her husband?
53891Where under the heavens were you, Lucy?"
53891Who is she?"
53891Who was Miss Beresford?
53891Who''s dead?
53891Whom in the world do you know here, anyway?
53891Why could n''t Alec have surmised and understood?
53891Why could n''t Tom have married somebody like ourselves, some jolly good sport who would n''t be afraid to hurt her clothes?
53891Why could n''t it have been my brother who trusted and had faith?"
53891Why did n''t you mail it?"
53891Why did she have to die so long ago?
53891Why has n''t she set a day for me to come and see her?
53891Why is n''t Ruthie in bed?
53891Why not let me go with you?
53891Why not to- night when you go back to the hotel?
53891Why should I be going home-- hungry and faint, and ashamed-- while every one else was thronging in the other direction?
53891Why should I have to work so hard, and wear ugly black?
53891Why should I pay for Miss Beresford''s good time?
53891Why should I put handcuffs on myself again, now I was once free from a bondage that I loathed?
53891Why should n''t I marry him?"
53891Why should you, Edith, come here and try to upset the whole universe?
53891Why, Bobbie,"he said very softly,"what shall I do to you?"
53891Why, I know some of your horses by name even-- Regal, for instance-- the one that threw Hugh-- do you remember?"
53891Why, Lucy, do n''t you remember Sarah Platt?"
53891Why, Lucy, you old trump, how are you anyway?
53891Will leaned forward then, and said playfully, but with a queer little sure sound in his voice,"What was your impression of Mrs. William Maynard?"
53891Will you go down and see about it?"
53891Will you stop sewing?"
53891Wo n''t you come to my Class- Day?"
53891Would Dr. Maynard like a sofa- pillow for his room?
53891Would Oliver buy her a stunning bunch of flowers to wear at her waist?
53891Would she wear coon- skin and velvet?
53891You are n''t fooling?
53891You are sure?"
53891You went to my room, did n''t you?
53891You_ are_ happy, are n''t you, Bobbie?"
53891_ She_ never did the ignominious thing, did she?
53891_ What_ are you doing?"
53891he inquired, irrelevantly, and when I had told him he asked,"And what time does your train leave?"
53891he said,"Where did you--?"
53891he said; and after a long pause,"Do you like school?"
53891he''d say to me, and"Is n''t there a good deal of trimming on that dress?
8580Are you serious?
8580Can we have beds?
8580Can we have some straw on which to lie?
8580D''ye think so?
8580Do you mean to give the letter to me, with its ponderous contents?
8580How do you go?
8580I think I have,said the"geographer,"ashamed of being thought ignorant,"Silas, was''nt he a Cornish man?
8580Is thy Burns dead? 8580 My young man,"said he,"what is your name?"
8580Pray young man,said the captain,"who are you?"
8580Well,I replied,"when do you set sail?"
8580What can we have to eat?
8580What,said Mr. Coleridge,"the man with the great sword?"
8580Why, man, who are you?
8580Will he?
8580''God is everywhere''I have exclaimed, and works everywhere, and where is there room for death?
8580''I gave thee so many talents, what hast thou done with them?''
8580''Why did you not give it me?''
8580... Is not March rather a perilous month for the voyage from Yarmouth to Hamburg?
8580Ah, replied my gentle fair, Beloved, what are names but air?
8580And shall he die unwept, and sink to earth, Without the meed of one melodious tear?
8580And what became of him?
8580And what other definition could Mr.---- himself give of a sceptical Socinian?
8580Another, tottering with disease, ejaculated,"Can you tell, Silas, how many rose from the ranks?"
8580Are ligament and exterior combination indispensable pre- requisites to the sovereign influence of mind over mind?
8580Are there never any calm moments, when you impartially judge of your own actions by their consequences?
8580Are you familiar with Leighton''s Works?
8580Are you not laying out a scheme which will throw your travelling in Italy, into an unpleasant and unwholesome part of the year?
8580Art thou fearful of the end?
8580As soon as the ship had cleared the port, Mr. Coleridge hastened down to the cabin, and cried,"my dear captain, tell me how you obtained my passport?"
8580But Miss Christal, have you seen her Poems?
8580By what law is this solution produced, so that the law of gravity should be suspended?
8580By what sweet name from Rome or Greece; Iphigenia, Clelia, Chloris, Laura, Lesbia, or Doris, Dorimene, or Lucrece?
8580By- the- by, what do you( Unitarians) mean, by exclusively assuming the title of Unitarians?
8580Can no one hear?
8580Can you withhold so small a sacrifice?
8580Clayfield came from the closet with the letter in his hand, and asked,''Is not this your hand- writing?''
8580Could such incongruous materials coalesce?
8580Did ye not see her gleaming through the glade?
8580Did you ever hear of Jesus Christ?
8580Do you know Dr. Fox?
8580Do you suppose, Cottle, that I have forgotten those true and most essential acts of friendship which you showed me when I stood most in need of them?
8580Does the example of such a man nobly bearing up against the pressures that surrounded him inflict obduracy on our hearts?
8580From Nottingham I go to Sheffield; from Sheffield to Manchester; from Manchester to Liverpool?
8580Gnawing what?
8580Had you not better substitute rustic, for scythesman?
8580Hartley sends a grin to you?
8580Has Mr. Wade called on you?
8580Has thy Father''s house no charms?-- There to join the Saints in Light?
8580Have I written to you since I was bug- bitten in France, and laid up in consequence, under a surgeon''s hands in Holland?
8580Have we not one common sire?
8580Have we not one home in sight?
8580Have you ever thought of trying large doses of opium, a hot climate, keeping your body open by grapes, and the fruits of the climate?
8580He may find men who will give him board and lodging for the sake of his conversation, but who will pay his other expenses?
8580How came the matter of flint to invest those plants which most need it, and not others?
8580How do you manage this?"
8580How is the copyright to be disposed of when you quit the bookselling business?
8580How is your brother?
8580I asked my fair one happy day, What I should call her in my lay?
8580I can think of no other person[ for your travelling companion]--what wonder?
8580I saw him open his mouth-- an''t that enough?"
8580I see a brother sinning a sin unto death, and shall I not warn him?
8580I then asked,"Can you afford it?"
8580I then inquired,"Are you of age?"
8580If any place in the southern climates were in a state of real quiet, and likely to continue so, should you feel no inclination to migrate?
8580If the attention of posterity rested here, where were the lessons of wisdom to be learnt from his example?
8580If the silex be derived from the earth, by what vessels is it conveyed to the surface of the plants?
8580If the silex proceed from water, where is the proof?
8580If you should advise a second volume, should you wish, i. e. find it convenient, to be the purchaser?
8580In such a case, what is to be done?
8580In the fourth stanza, why do you introduce the old word''Lavrac''a word requiring an explanatory note?
8580In the poem which thus arose, what can be more touching than these lines in his dedication to his brother?
8580Infinite Wisdom deemed clearer manifestations inexpedient; and is man to dictate to his Maker?
8580Is it derived from the air, or from water, or from the earth?
8580Is it expedient; is it lawful; to give publicity to Mr. Coleridge''s practice of inordinately taking opium?
8580Is it not possible by the appearance of a river to tell what fish are in it?
8580Is not the great test in some measure against you,''By their fruits ye shall know them?''
8580Is the march of the human race progressive, or in cycles?
8580Is this true?
8580It moves, and stirs in its prison; Lives with a separate life, and"Is it a spirit?"
8580Let the grand question be determined.--Is, or is not the bible_ inspired_?
8580Mighty men in grand array, Magnates of the ages past, Kings and conquerors, where are they?
8580Now will you undertake this?
8580On what grounds can such a subscription as you propose raising for Coleridge be solicited?
8580On which Mr. Coleridge cried out,"Are the Hessians Christians?"
8580Once whose frown a world o''ercast?
8580One in the company now remarked,"Of what service is it to boast a pioneer, if we do not avail ourselves of his services?"
8580Pray did you ever pay any particular attention to the first time of your little ones smiling and laughing?
8580Quoth Dick,"What, can you hear him?"
8580Said he,''Why---- what letter is this for me?
8580Shall I add my Tragedy, and so make a second volume?
8580Sir?
8580Swifter than the eagle''s flight; What the boasted age of man?
8580That he came into the world to save sinners?
8580The acute reasoner-- the fiery politician-- the eager polemic-- the emulous aspirant after fame; and many such have I known, where are they?
8580To what then was the relapse owing?
8580Was it a spirit on yon shapeless pile?
8580Was it to abase the pride of human intellect and genius?
8580Was the far larger proportion of this £ 300 appropriated to the discharge of Opium debts?
8580We inquired if she still possessed any writings of her brother''s?
8580What answer shall I make to your exhortations?
8580What good can possibly come of your plan?
8580What have I done in Germany?
8580What if her epistle to you were likewise printed, so as to have two of her poems?
8580What is life?
8580What is to become of him?
8580What make us angry, but our own faults?
8580What more can I say?
8580What of''Joan?''
8580What should grieve us, but our infirmities?
8580What was to be done?
8580What was to be done?
8580What, could you not write one letter?
8580When and where are such descriptions as the preceding and the following to be found?
8580Whence does this silex come?
8580Where are childhood''s sighs and throes?
8580Where are manhood''s thousand woes?
8580Where are youth''s tumultuous fears?
8580Whether God loves a lying angel better than a true man?
8580Whether an immortal and amenable soul may not come to be condemned at last, and the man never suspect it beforehand?
8580Whether honesty be an angelic virtue, or not rather to be reckoned among those qualities which the school- men term''Virtutes minus splendidae''?
8580Whether pure intelligences can love?
8580Whether the archangel Uriel could affirm an untruth, and if he could, whether he would?
8580Whether the higher order of Seraphim illuminati ever sneer?
8580Who that has ever heard can forget him?
8580Why did you not sign your notes?
8580Why not say at once, sky- lark?
8580Why these half subdued alarms-- At the prospect of thy flight?
8580Why was such a sad phenomenon to come in sight on earth?
8580Will you never come and visit me, and see how that hair looks, which I doubt not keeps its colour so well in Vandyke''s portrait?
8580With a proud spirit, that forgets its own contracted range of thought, and circumscribed knowledge, who is to limit the sway of Omnipotence?
8580Would not''foolish''be simpler and better than''poor fond?''
8580Would you think him an honest man?
8580You ask me,''Why, in the name of goodness, I did not return when I saw the state of the weather?''
8580You had, and still have, an acute sense of moral right and wrong, but is not the feeling sometimes overpowered by self- indulgence?
8580[ 50] Did the report of the"still,"in the former page, originate in this broken bottle of brandy?
8580and how is the superficial deposit effected?
8580and in 1814, who still pronounced himself the endurer of all that was"wretched, helpless, and hopeless?"
8580and yet will you not be awakened to a sense of your danger, and I must add, your guilt?
8580either to print it and divide the profits, or( which indeed I should prefer) would you give me three guineas, for the copy- right?
8580for what have I left them?
8580more insufferable reflectors of pain and weariness of spirit?
8580or how interrupt, or cast a shade on your good spirits, that were so rare, and so precious to you?
8580or mind over matter?
8580or passage?
8580or shall I pursue my first intention of inserting 1500 in the third edition?
8580said the officer,"old Faustus ground young again?"
8580when Mr. Coleridge said,"is it_ very_ rusty, Sir?"
7845And after that?
7845But they never did, Perhaps they threw your cabinet tools away?
7845How can it be,I hear them over and over,"There never shall be eyes for me again?"
7845Is it not true? 7845 Sir Galahad?
7845What mission fair and true, While I am sleeping, brings you? 7845 Where do I flow and to what end?
7845Where is the holy sepulchre?
7845Why do you keep, O spirit beautiful and swift, this guard About my slumber? 7845 ***** And yet is not the time gone by? 7845 ***** Do you remember that delightful Inn At Chester and the Roman wall, and how We walked from Avon clear to Kenilworth? 7845 ***** Faith, if it be, said Old King Cole, There is a word that''s more: Who is it goes to Spain and Troy? 7845 ***** How may I justify the hope that rises That I am giving you to a world of pain, And am a part of your love''s sacrifices? 7845 ***** Is it not written at the last day Heaven and earth shall roll away? 7845 ***** Then said Pantagruel: Heard you not? 7845 ***** What may not happen In this place of summer loneliness? 7845 ***** Whoever they be, said Pantagruel, Why stand at the window and drool? 7845 ***** Why do we thirst for urns beyond urns who know How sweet they are, yet bitter, not enough? 7845 ... CHRISTMAS AT INDIAN POINT Who is that calling through the night, A wail that dies when the wind roars? 7845 ... Do n''t you understand?
7845A crown for blood''s sake?
7845A portion of the royal blood of Europe?
7845Am I of Thee, or do I blend Hereafter with Thee?"
7845And Anne arose, began to keel the pot, But was she answered, Ben?
7845And did not Festus, Before whom Paul stood speaking for himself, Call Paul a mad man?
7845And do you wonder, Seeing what I am, what my fate has been?
7845And even geometries in some brain Before old Gutenberg?
7845And his spirit looks Over the land he loved, with what result?
7845And in that lonely cavern dark and chill I heard again,"Then what is life?"
7845And so his color fades, it well may be The crisis of a long neurosis, well What caused it?
7845And the springs march before me, say,"Behold Here are we, and what would you, can you use us?
7845And the train had gone Five miles or so when I said:"Where you going?"
7845And then the Emperor said:"What have I claimed?
7845And then you say: What is the difference?
7845And they hated you for it, hunted you all over Europe-- Why should they not hate you?
7845And what are Greek and Latin, The lore of Aristotle, Plato to this?
7845And what are we but streams and springs Through which He takes His wanderings?
7845And what cares he for Memphis town, Merneptah the bloody, or Books of the Dead, Pyramids, philosophies of madness or dread?
7845And what is time but an infinite whole Revealed by the breaks in thought, desire?
7845And what''s the hedgerow, what''s the pond?
7845And who to Elsinore?
7845And''tother day, poor Anne Looked long at me and said,"You say,''Tra- la''Sometimes when you''re asleep; why do you so?"
7845Another drink?
7845Are they an asset?
7845At fifty- two, or fifty- five or sixty The life is in the seed-- what''s spring to you?
7845But anyway the lamp is very bad, And every bone in me aches-- and why always Must one be either reading, knitting, talking?
7845But first what have we for the composition of these daughters?
7845But have you thought If you should find it it would only be A tomb like other tombs?
7845But tell me What to omit, and what to stress?
7845But tell me now, have you come together?
7845But the lion of Tennessee asks: Would you take from Spain The land she has lost but in name?
7845But these tears-- for whom Or what are tears?
7845But to resume his argument was this: God is or God is not, but if God is Why pestilence and war, earthquake and famine?
7845But who was England then?
7845But who was England?
7845But who was rested?
7845But you do n''t call this Hamilton an artist And Paine a mere logician and a wrangler?
7845But, fair friends, What strength in place of sex shall steady me?
7845Could he laugh As mother laughed?
7845Did France bar her door?
7845Did old Walt Whitman smoke or did he drink?
7845Did you give up three years of your life To wipe out the sentence that burned the wracked body of Calas?
7845Do n''t you understand?
7845England expended millions on her libels To poison Europe''s mind and make my purpose Obscure or bloody-- how have they availed?
7845FLORENCE And why not on this street?
7845FLORENCE Say, Jack, what is the matter?
7845FLORENCE What''s that?
7845For England of to- day is freer-- why?
7845For what can I do with strife, or what can I do with hate?
7845From time eternal was this earth?
7845God is or God is not, but then what God?
7845Has it not served you?"
7845He tried to find The mother''s laugh and secret for the laugh Which kept her to the end-- but did she laugh?
7845Her will, you say?
7845Here was I locked in And given dope to keep me still lest I Cry out and wake the copper- who''s the copper For such as I was?
7845His mother Lay in that corner there, what if she did?
7845His wife looked up and said,"That man is crazy, ai n''t he?
7845Hold me so bear- like, take my lips with yours, Bury your face in these my russet tresses, And yet not lose your vision?
7845How can you be so?
7845How did it come here?
7845How did the sculptor detain you, you ever so restless, You ever so driven by princes and priests?
7845How does it happen people Are born into the world to read these stories?
7845How shall I tell him Which is the actual and the larger theme, His hero or his hero''s enemies?
7845How should I believe Paul''s story, not my own?
7845I ached all through For my hard labor, why did muscles grow not To hardness and cure body, if''twere body, Or soul if it were soul?
7845I am not sure, but then Which will is better, mine or hers?
7845I could go on, but wherefore tell you more?
7845I desire her, her desire Is not toward me, which of these two desires Shall triumph?
7845I have died A thousand times, and with a valiant soul Have drunk the cup, but why?
7845I hopped from bed, and says,''Who is it?''
7845I know of one: Where is it that it says that"Jesus wept"?
7845I love this woman, but what is love to you?
7845I used to quote:''Who is my mother and who are my brothers?''
7845I warned her against you, but how could I tell her Why you were not for her?
7845I wonder why I did it?
7845I''ll ask you something-- As if I were a youth and you a girl-- How were you ruined first?
7845IV Widow La Rue has returned And is rocking on the porch-- What is about to happen?
7845If I die, Slip out of this with Bacchus for a guide, What soul would interdict the poppied way?
7845If he heard me cry How could he raid the magazine?
7845If he raided Where was the court to take me and the rest-- That''s it, where is the court?
7845Is it German, or Russian, or French?
7845Is it so little if I see you not again?
7845JACK No quarreling-- What is the time?
7845JACK What corresponds to marriage To take me from slavery?
7845JACK What time is it?
7845JACK Where are you going, Florence?
7845JACK Why not?
7845Just think for a minute, how the negroes excel, Can you beat them with a banjo or a broiling pan?
7845Look you at Europe, What were it in this day except for France, Napoleon''s France, the revolution''s France?
7845NEANDERTHAL"Then what is life?"
7845Nay, truthful with whom, to what end?
7845No meal has been prepared, where have you been?
7845No?
7845No?
7845Now what''s the good of seeing it?
7845Now what''s the motivating principle Of such a mind?
7845O fie, Ben Jonson, If I am nature''s child am I not all?
7845Once upon the ship, He thinks he''s bound for England, and why not?
7845One can not have them and live, but if one die It might be better than living-- who can say?
7845Or a bit of asafoetida hidden in your pie?
7845Or a little Paris green in your cheese for chard?
7845Or something in your coffee to make your stomach froth?
7845Or the city, or life, or fame, or love or fate?
7845Or the law that drives the weak from the temple''s door?
7845Or the struggle since time began of the rich and poor?
7845Or was it your husband you saw, As he lay by the gate so long ago?
7845Over all How comes it that a sudden feel of life, Its wonder, terror, beauty is like father''s?
7845Pleading,"How canst thou still aver, I love thee, being yet unkind?
7845Rather why is it You master me, even as I mastered him?
7845She had married him-- but why?
7845Shelley, from the deep Why do you come with veiled face, mighty bard, As that unearthly shape was veiled to you At Casa Magni?"
7845So I asked"Were you in Palestine?"
7845So the landscape changes, wills All the changes, did it try Its promises to justify?...
7845Sweet aches are in our breasts: Is it spring, or God, or music, is it you?
7845THE LETTER What does one gain by living?
7845Tell me your desire And what you are?"
7845That lantern on the wall''s the very one They came to see the child with from the inn-- What of it?
7845The bag falls to the floor, and lies there still-- Who now shall pick it up, re- fasten it?
7845The bishop asked:''You''ve brought some money, how much have you brought?''
7845The friendly clerk-- I knew him always-- said''What will you have?
7845The judgment in English condemns you, where is there a judgment To save you from this?
7845Then I said to my friend:"Suppose he''d up and stick A knife in your side for raggin''him so hard; Or how would you relish some spit in your broth?
7845Then it seemed That smile of hers not wilting me she clapped Hands over eyes and said:"I am afraid-- Oh no, it can not be-- what would they say?"
7845Then why marry him?
7845There are cool spaces of sky between white clouds-- But what are flames and spaces but eyes of blue?
7845This globe may last and breed The race of men till Time cries out"How long?"
7845WIDOW LA RUE I What will happen, Widow La Rue?
7845Was I ill or sick in mind?
7845Well, I must die sometime, And who will get it then?
7845Well, why did she descend And almost lose the money?
7845Were not brains before books?
7845What are these phantasies I have?
7845What by dying Is lost worth having?
7845What good is air if lungs are out, or springs When the mind''s flown so far away no spring, Nor loveliness of earth can call it back?
7845What good, Ben Jonson, if the world could see What face was mine, who wrote these plays and sonnets?
7845What have we seen?
7845What is a man to do whose work is done And does not feel so well, has cancer, say?
7845What is it to your laws or courts?
7845What is the matter?
7845What is the motive of this higher mount?
7845What is this room of mirrors?
7845What matter if your thought Outsoared the Phoenix?
7845What shall I do with it?
7845What should my care be when I have no power To save, guide, mould you?
7845What soul dissatisfaction, sense of wrong, Of being thwarted, stung you?
7845What the daily things Lived through together make them worth the while For their sakes or for life''s?
7845What was Camden like?
7845What was it?
7845What was there to oppose possession?
7845What were you at the start?
7845What will it be as time goes on but peoples Made free through France?
7845What''s on your mind?
7845What''s that?
7845What''s the matter?
7845What''s this?
7845Where do my labors end?
7845Where is my watch?
7845Where''s the denying Of souls through separation?
7845Which has rights above The other?
7845Which will Deserves achievement?
7845Who can say?
7845Who gives her these, The thought ran through me, for her joy alone And not for mine?
7845Who is Sir Galahad?"
7845Who is the Gardener then?
7845Who know a woman?
7845Who was England then?
7845Who was it here before me?
7845Who writes these stories?
7845Why did I do it, eh?
7845Why did I do it?
7845Why do n''t you see?
7845Why look at this: Here is the very manger where he lay-- What is it?
7845Why not sit quietly and think?
7845Why should you not follow your light?
7845Why tell you details And ways with which I maddened him, and whipped The energies of love?
7845Why that bulging brow And analytic keen if not for greatness?
7845Will?
7845With a breed such as lived In your day and your place?
7845Would they lay hands upon you?
7845Would you rise over death like a god?
7845Would you stop war?
7845Yet am I blind to you?
7845You do n''t care, you say, for all I''ve told you?
7845You know these too?
7845You stride about my rooms and open books, And say when did he give you this?
7845You wonder at war?
44262A little more softly, may I implore of your Excellency? 44262 A muleteer?
44262Already we are all asking,''And then?''
44262Always supposing,said Munebrãga himself,"that he formally denies the crime laid to his charge.--Do you?"
44262And a cassock and gown?
44262And did he hear you?
44262And give up Beatriz for ever? 44262 And how know you that, Señor Don Carlos?"
44262And how, in God''s name, is that to be accomplished? 44262 And if at last-- at last--_I_ can,--I, whose anger was fierce, and whose wrath was cruel, even unto death,--is not that His own work in me?"
44262And in Our Lady, Mary, Mother of God?
44262And shall I fear the coward fear of standing all alone To testify of Zion''s King and the glory of his throne? 44262 And stand at the stake beside a vile caitiff, a miserable muleteer, convicted of the same crimes?"
44262And the golden country you had discovered-- was it not the truth as revealed in Scripture?
44262And those noble, devoted men who remain at San Isodro?
44262And those purposes, are they not mercy and truth unto our beloved land?
44262And what I have said-- is it not in accordance with the Word of God?
44262And what do you believe?
44262And what is it that you would do then?
44262And what madness brings_ you_ here?
44262And what of all that?
44262And wherefore can you not write to him yourself, Señor Licentiate?
44262And wherefore not, Señor Don Juan?
44262And whither would you send your own sinful soul?
44262And who taught you this accursed-- these doctrines?
44262And who would not do more than that for so pleasant and kind a young master?
44262And yet, Dolores-- tell me, would it break your heart if I sold this place-- you know it is mortgaged heavily already-- and quitted the country?
44262And you, my brave, true- hearted Dolores?
44262And you?
44262And yourself?--whither do you mean to go?
44262And-- Fray Constantino?
44262Are ye resigned that they be spent In such world''s help? 44262 Are you acquainted with the young lady''s sister, Doña Maria de Bohorques?"
44262Are you content with it yourself?
44262Are you moonstruck, Cousin Don Carlos?
44262Are you then a heretic?
44262Art thinking still of the prisoner in the Triana?
44262Ay, and can they not, your worship? 44262 Because, forsooth, to spare my aunt''s selfishness and my cousin''s vanity, she must not be seen at dance, or theatre, or bull- feast?
44262Blood? 44262 Boy, how can you ask?
44262Brother, are you not glad she did not feel the fire? 44262 But Carlos,"he questioned suddenly, and with a look of alarm,"does not he know everything?"
44262But are you sure then that it is the truth?
44262But do you count the wound part of your good luck?
44262But have you no fear of the anguish-- the doom of fire?
44262But how is that to be done?
44262But the peril?
44262But then, what of those long years in which I forgot him?
44262But what can_ I_ do for him?
44262But what if the Fray should catch us using our great Horace after such a fashion?
44262But what in the world,asked Juan hastily,"has induced thee to bury thyself here, amongst these drowsy monks?"
44262But whereto will ink serve us without pen and paper?
44262But which shall I summon?
44262But who besides thee?
44262But will you not look? 44262 But you will not go?
44262But you would not have those days back again, would you, my father? 44262 But-- forgive the question, señor-- does it make you happy?"
44262Can I do anything for you?
44262Can I do anything more for you, señor?
44262Can I do nothing more for you?
44262Can you ask? 44262 Change with_ them_?
44262Come and tell me, if thou canst, what are these doctrines of thy Fray Constantino, and wherein they differ from the Lutheran heresy? 44262 Come-- that is-- believe?"
44262Could you not persuade him to consult your friend, Doctor Cristobal?
44262Cousin, do you know what my life has been?
44262Did I hear you say you are under sentence of death?
44262Did I not judge well,asked the father,"that it was time to give over writing, when I could stoop low enough to record such trifles?
44262Did he leave no message, not one word, for me?
44262Did he leave no message-- no word for me?
44262Did he not make a voyage to the Indies in his youth?
44262Did my mother ever read to you as I have done?
44262Did my parents reside long in Seville?
44262Did she speak? 44262 Did you not receive my letter, praying you to remain at Nuera?"
44262Did you?
44262Do I look young-- even yet? 44262 Do I?
44262Do you desire_ any_ help they can give, either for your soul or for your body?
44262Do you know where he is now?
44262Do you not know that next month they say there will be--_an Auto_?
44262Do you think I mean to harm you?
44262Do you think it is true-- what we have all been told-- of his death in the Indies?
44262Do you wish to examine my apartment? 44262 Does he know it?"
44262Does my sister really believe that compassionate word a sin in God''s sight?
44262Does your physician give hope of your recovery from this seizure?
44262Dost thou mourn that the shores of our Spain are fading from us?
44262Dost thou not think so, my brother?
44262Dost thou take me for a barefooted friar or a village cura? 44262 Dr. Cristobal Losada?"
44262Faith?
44262Father, tell me, I pray you, to escape what anguish of mind or body would you set your seal to a falsehood told to her dishonour?
44262Father,he said,"you will love your son?
44262For instance?
44262Give you what?
44262Gone!--whither?
44262Gospel, gospel? 44262 Has it?"
44262Have I not said that I desire no protestations from you? 44262 Have they been urging the suit of Señor Luis upon thee again?
44262Have you anything else to say?
44262Have you been two years, then, in prison? 44262 Have you ever crossed the Santillanos, or visited the Asturias?"
44262Have you ever heard the names of any of those who were his friends or patrons?
44262Have you ever thought since on the message_ he_ sent you by me?
44262Have you nothing more direct? 44262 Have you seen a little treatise by the Fray, entitled''The Confession of a Sinner''?"
44262His LIVING face? 44262 His truth is sometimes offered twice to individuals, why not to nations?"
44262Holiness?
44262How am I to know? 44262 How can I give thee up?"
44262How could it possibly hurt him, my tender- hearted cousin?
44262How could you, in so short a time, accomplish such a task?
44262How did you hear it?
44262How long since was all this?
44262How shall_ I_ succeed in finding it?
44262How should I know the difference?
44262How was that, señor?
44262How was that?
44262How? 44262 How?--What do you say?"
44262I hope the babe about whom his worship showed such amiable anxiety recovered from its indisposition?
44262I think you have a wife, perhaps a child?
44262I thought you had faith, Carlos?
44262If it please your worship, what may that fine word theology mean?
44262In Heaven''s name, what brings you here, Fray Sebastian?
44262In that they suffer these things?
44262Is it any of our acquaintances?
44262Is it possible, señora, that you know not what has happened?
44262Is it_ still_ your wish to remain here,she continued;"or will you go abroad, and wait for better times?"
44262Is my brother in the house?
44262Is there any news in the city?
44262Is this what you mean?
44262It may be Christ is asking another question-- Are we amongst those who follow him_ whithersoever_ he goeth?
44262Knowest thou not of old, little brother, that when thy parables begin I am left behind at once? 44262 Let your worship excuse a plain man''s plain question-- Señor,_ do you know God_?"
44262Light of my eyes, life of my life, what mean you by these words?
44262Lost that peace, my father?
44262May I read it, my father?
44262My cousin,she said, turning to Beatriz as soon as the page left the room,"do you not know your cheeks are all aflame?
44262My father, are you still in peace, resting on him?
44262My friend,said Carlos kindly, as he took it from him,"do you know what you dare by offering this to me, or even by keeping it yourself?"
44262My parents led a pious life, you say?
44262My sympathy? 44262 Nay, señor, and wherefore not?
44262Nephew Don Carlos,said Don Manuel one day,"is it not time you thought of shaving your head?
44262No word? 44262 No?
44262Not seriously, I hope?
44262Now Heaven help us, Don Juan; are you mad? 44262 Oh, did he?"
44262Oh, is he? 44262 Our family physician, or Don Garçia''s?"
44262Perhaps you are not sorry to part with it?
44262Señor Don Carlos, what ails your face?
44262Señor,she said, entering somewhat hastily,"will it please you to see to those men of Seville that came with your Excellency?
44262Shall I ever look upon his face again?
44262Shall I go and fetch a physician?
44262Share_ that_ fate?
44262Some matters, small in bulk, yet costly, which I am bringing for a Seville merchant-- Medel de Espinosa by name, if your worship has heard of him? 44262 Still-- you kept my charge?"
44262Tell me, señor, if I may ask it, how long have you been here?
44262Tell me-- has rumour named in your hearing-- Doña Maria de Xeres y Bohorques?
44262That such a holy man should feel so deeply his own utter sinfulness? 44262 The Duke of Savoy?"
44262The knowledge of God in Christ,began Carlos eagerly"gives me joy and peace--""_ Is that all?_"cried Don Manuel with an oath.
44262The-- what?
44262Then his words were received by some?
44262Then she did not suffer? 44262 Then what will he do with Gonzales de Munebrãga?"
44262Then you love its words?
44262Then you mean--_murder_?
44262To be a heretic?
44262To leave the ship-- his Church? 44262 To save his body or his soul?"
44262To- morrow night?
44262Truly? 44262 Was my noble father, then, more like what my brother is?"
44262Was not this room my father''s favourite place of study?
44262Was the bone broken?
44262Weak-- timid?
44262Well?
44262Were there left behind in the world any that it wrung your heart to part from?
44262Were you acquainted with him?
44262What art thou pondering?
44262What did you say?
44262What do you mean?
44262What do you wish for most?
44262What else but to find my father?
44262What find you''passing strange,''señor?
44262What is Spain to me-- Spain, that would not give to the noblest of them all a few feet of her earth for a grave?
44262What is Truth? 44262 What is it, Dolores?"
44262What is that on thy hand?
44262What is that?
44262What is your name?
44262What may be the theme of your merriment?
44262What news?
44262What shall we do?
44262What then? 44262 What think you?"
44262What was the task to which thou and I vowed ourselves in childhood, brother?
44262What?
44262When did this malady seize you?
44262When was it?
44262When your parents died, did you return to my mother?
44262Where did you get this strange learning?
44262Where does he reside?
44262Where is Señor Cristobal?
44262Where is my brother?
44262Where is my brother?
44262Where is the muleteer who was here last night?
44262Where shall I begin?
44262Where shall I find him, then?
44262Wherein is Friday worse than Thursday?
44262Whither do you wish to go?
44262Whither shall we bend our steps?
44262Who else?
44262Who is it that I have the honour to address?
44262Who is taken?
44262Who told you?
44262Who was their teacher? 44262 Whom do you mean?
44262Why can you not rest content with his teaching, then, instead of going to look for better bread than wheaten, Heaven knows where?
44262Why did they bring you here?
44262Why did you not speak to Losada?
44262Why do you ask?
44262Why is he rich when we are poor, Juan? 44262 Why should I?"
44262Why such haste? 44262 Why take such a circuit?"
44262Why? 44262 Will it please your worship to look at these Indian pinks?"
44262Will you promise to fly-- to leave the city_ now_, before suspicions are awakened which may make flight impossible?
44262Will you promise, on the faith of a gentleman, not to betray me?
44262Will you, then, do me a great kindness? 44262 Yet for the Truth''s sake, my father, would you not be willing to make even this sacrifice, and to go forth in your old age into exile?"
44262You acknowledge there is peril--_to you_?
44262You allude to these discussions about the sacrifice of the mass now going on so continually amongst us?
44262You are advising me to seek peace in religion?
44262You have heard of the marriage of Doña Juana de Xeres y Bohorques with Don Francisco de Vargas?
44262You have kept your secret as your life? 44262 You noticed the pretty girl who led in my little Inez?
44262You plead not guilty?
44262You see not? 44262 You see this cross, Don Juan?"
44262You trust him, then, so completely? 44262 You will be searched,"Gonsalvo whispered hurriedly;"have you aught about your person that may add to your danger?"
44262You will?
44262You would come with us?
44262[ 14][ 14] Who is there? 44262 _ Content_ me?
44262_ For me?_"Yes; it is this thought that gives strength and peace.
44262_ No?_"No, señor; in very truth. 44262 _ Which?_"cried Gonsalvo, in tones that turned the gaze of all on his livid face and fierce eager eyes.
44262''the clattering horse- shoe ever wants a nail''--here have I been naming heresy,''talking of halters in the house of the hanged?''"
44262After a pause he added, as if speaking to himself,"Lord, to whom shall we go?
44262After some merely formal questions, he asked him whether he knew the cause of his present imprisonment?
44262And Juan, my beloved, my honoured brother-- what will he think?"
44262And do you dream that such a mad achievement( suppose you even succeed in it) will open prison- doors and set captives free?
44262And for what?"
44262And have you heard his last whim?
44262And he told himself that he knew( how did he know it?)
44262And now, the Auto--""What of that?"
44262And then?"
44262And what could the physician know about him of whom his own children knew so little?
44262And what wares do you carry?"
44262And why should it be a marvel in your eyes that I rejoice to give my life for him who gave his own for me?"
44262And yet, after all,_ would_ it have been well for him?
44262And yet, wherefore seek a sign?
44262And yet-- you understand?"
44262And you, Dolores,"he added,"are you not also going to hear mass?"
44262And you, my beloved?"
44262And you-- are your hearts human, or are they not?
44262And you?"
44262And you?"
44262And, moreover, is it not a joy for us to show, in any way he points out to us, our love to him who loved us and gave himself for us?"
44262Are not those thousands really for_ us_, and for truth and freedom?"
44262Are not thy treasures more able to enrich me than all the debt of Adam to impoverish me?
44262Are we hungry?
44262Are we oppressed with sin?
44262Are we then Lutherans?"
44262Are you certain, or is it only dream, hope, conjecture?"
44262Are you content that you, and she for whom you give your life, should be sundered throughout eternity?"
44262At last Fray Fernando asked,"What do_ you_ think, señor?"
44262At last Juan said,--"Perhaps, if you could, you would gladly share her fate?"
44262At last, however, some one inside cried,"_ Quien es_?
44262At length he ventured to ask,"Whither are you leading me?"
44262Ay, and even worth seeing; will they not?"
44262Before he had gone far, Don Juan started, half- raised himself, and exclaimed in surprise,"What, and you!--_you_ too-- once loved?"
44262Blanco?"
44262But God forgive me these words; and God keep me, and all of us, from the subtle snare of mixing with the question,''What is his will?''
44262But I should like better still--""What?"
44262But did his duty to the Faith and to Holy Church require that he should hunt the remaining brother to death, and thus"quench the coal that was left"?
44262But for_ thee_, Carlos, what shall I say?
44262But from whose lips?
44262But go on, Dolores, and tell me how did comfort come to you?"
44262But had he nothing to counter- balance these pangs of fear and shame, these manifold dark misgivings?
44262But he merely asked,"What have the brethren resolved?"
44262But how can simple men and women tell whether they are keeping all the commandments of God and Holy Church?
44262But how will you endure the loneliness of the long hereafter, away from God''s presence, from light and life and hope?
44262But is it not another thing_ to know God_?
44262But presently turning again, she asked,"Will your Excellency please to tell me, is it that book that is driving you into exile?"
44262But should he be absent or engaged?"
44262But speak, brother; how do you know it?
44262But take him from his wealth, and his pomp, and his sinful luxuries, all defiled with blood, and what remains for him?
44262But the lady of my heart will not heed their idle words?"
44262But was it indeed the next morning, or was it ten years, twenty years afterwards?
44262But what can a man do with a_ thing_ like that, save let him alone for very shame?
44262But what mattered rules and canons to the members of a secret and irresponsible tribunal?
44262But what mattered the antipathies of a prisoner of the Holy Office?
44262But what possible benefit to Doña Maria would be gained by his throwing himself into the jaws of death?
44262But what then did he intend?
44262But what would that avail me?
44262But where were truth and freedom now, with all the bright anticipations of their ultimate triumph which he had been wo nt to indulge?
44262But wherefore mourn them?
44262But which of us is always in the right?
44262But who ever stoops to drink from that well in the parching thirst of the first hour of such a grief as his?
44262But why should I fear to tell thee--_thee_, who hast good cause to be the death- foe of Inquisitors?
44262But why so early?
44262But you, Carlos-- speak out, for I confess you perplex me-- what do_ you_ wish and intend?"
44262But, Dolores, tell me truly-- have you never heard anything further of, or from, my father?"
44262But, after all,_ was_ he in the grave?
44262But, fiends that you are, would no one serve you for a victim save my young, gentle, unoffending brother; he who never harmed you nor any one?
44262But--""Well?
44262But_ you_--are you in love with destruction yourself, that, when you were safe and well at Nuera, you must needs comes hither again?"
44262Can that be true?
44262Can they not, and we for them, be content with this?"
44262Can you not thank God for it?
44262Can you tell me anything more than the name, Juliano Hernandez, which I repeat every day when I ask God in my prayers to bless and reward him?"
44262Carlos rose at once at the summons, saying to Dolores--"Where is the boy?"
44262Carlos stirred at last, and murmured,"Where am I?
44262Carlos watched him wistfully; would he turn for a last look?
44262Carlos went up to him and asked gently,"Father, what ails you?"
44262Carlos, have we any wine?"
44262Carlos, how couldst thou even doubt of this?"
44262Carlos, who was standing close to it, responded by an eager"_ Chien es?_""A friend.
44262Could he stoop to this?
44262Could it be aught but joy to me, for instance, to lie in a dark dungeon, or even to be hanged or burned, if that could work out_ his_ deliverance?
44262Could it be possible He_ had_ done this?
44262Did Dr. Egidius confirm their faith?"
44262Did he expect his brother to retract?
44262Did he not know I was lame?"
44262Did he_ wish_ him to do it?
44262Did she reveal anything to you?"
44262Did the rest of that devoted band share the agony of apprehension that filled those lonely midnight hours with passionate prayer?
44262Did the writer wish to inform him that his cousin intended betraying him to the Inquisition?
44262Did you learn from him?"
44262Did you say to- morrow?"
44262Did you say your mother?
44262Do you fear that such a terrible doom has gone forth over our land, my father?
44262Do you know his dwelling?"
44262Do you know that he has given money-- he that has so little-- more than once to Señor Cristobal for the poor?"
44262Do you not know my brothers?"
44262Do you not know that every great cause must have its martyr?
44262Do you not remember them?"
44262Do you not understand me, father?"
44262Do you not, my beloved?"
44262Do you then read Latin?"
44262Does Benevidio''s own child help you to comfort his prisoners?"
44262Does Juan, my Juan Rodrigo, know and love the Word of God?"
44262Does death only visit the free?"
44262Don Balthazar, the empleado, was not present at its commencement, but soon came in, looking so much disturbed that his father asked,"What is amiss?"
44262Dost thou remember how I said, as a boy, that I should take a noble prisoner, like Alphonso Vives, and enrich myself by his ransom?
44262Doth not He say, of whose tenderness thou tellest me ours is but the shadow,''He will_ be silent_ in his love''?
44262Doña Maria de Bohorques?"
44262Else why had new and severe decrees against heresy been recently obtained from Rome?
44262Ere long he questioned,"Is it not near Christmas now?"
44262For I supposed them good words; how could they be otherwise, since you spoke them?
44262For how could he long for the loved faces of former days, when day and night Christ himself was near him?
44262For was not Don Juan hers, all her own, her own for ever?
44262For who would accuse a tiger, reproach a wolf?
44262Fray Cassiodoro?"
44262Fray Sebastian drew near at the moment, and happening to overhear the last words, he asked,"Have you any plan, señor, as to whither you will go?"
44262Fray Sebastian told me--""Ay,"cried Gonsalvo eagerly,"what did Fray Sebastian tell you of_ him_?"
44262Had Gonsalvo, in the depths of his misery, remorse, and penitence, actually found something which Don Juan Alvarez still lacked?
44262Has any evil come upon him?
44262Has not thy blood sufficient virtue to wash out the sins of all the human race?
44262Have they murdered him too?"
44262Have you a mother?
44262Have you and your friends a secret?"
44262Have you realized what a span is our life here compared with the countless ages of eternity?
44262Having given him a little, he asked,"Do you feel pain to- night?"
44262He asked,--"But why did you detain him?
44262He half raised himself, grasped the penitent''s hand, and cried aloud,"_ My father!_""Are you better, señor?"
44262He questioned, mildly enough,"How was it you did not know it?
44262He said,"Do you really think, señor, that these long years of lonely suffering are less hard to bear than a speedy though violent death?"
44262He thanked the prior accordingly; adding,"May I be permitted to ask the name of this companion?"
44262How can we?"
44262How could he bear it?
44262How could he bear to see that noble brow clouded with anger-- those bright confiding eyes averted from him in disdain?
44262How could he tell who might be within hearing?
44262How could it be otherwise, when he had lost not only his happy art of indirect ingenious flattery, but his power to be commonly agreeable or amusing?
44262How could they quicken the feeble pulse, or send back life and energy into the broken, exhausted frame?
44262How dare you put your accursed fishing- smack to shore in my lord''s garden, and under his very eyes?"
44262How did you come to know at all of his intended flight?"
44262How have you come hither?
44262How is it you can not pity yourself?"
44262How long is it since you came here, Carlos?"
44262How should I know just where the good Catholic words end, and the wicked ones begin?
44262How should he endure the horrible loneliness of the present, the maddening terror of all that was to come?
44262How was he to bear the never- ending pain, the aching loneliness, of such a lot?
44262How would it have been possible for me to consult for my own safety, leaving him, alone and unaided, in such fearful peril?"
44262How?"
44262I have doubted-- nay, why should I shrink from the truth?
44262IS IT TOO LATE?
44262If I tell you, will you promise the strictest secrecy?"
44262In the name of man''s honour and woman''s loveliness, are there, in our good city of Seville, neither fathers, nor brothers, nor lovers left alive?
44262Is it too Late?
44262Is such a resurrection possible for_ it_?
44262Is that all you have to say?
44262Is that why it must leave me as hers did?
44262Is the worst pang earth has to give that of witnessing the sufferings of our beloved?
44262Is there a man here who witnessed-- what was done yesterday?"
44262Is there really a meaning in this madness?
44262Is this the youth whom you assured us a few months of solitary confinement would render pliant as a reed and plastic as wax?
44262It may be asked by some thoughtful reader who has followed the narrative of the foregoing pages, How much is fact, how much fiction?
44262It was afterwards that he asked himself how were long years to be dragged on without the face that was the joy of his heart and the life of his life?
44262It would have broken his heart to be scorned by any man; and was it not worse a thousand- fold to be thus scorned by himself?
44262Juliano Hernandez?"
44262Know you not that of all the prisoners the Holy House receives, scarce one in a thousand goes forth again to take his place in the world?"
44262Laying his hand on her arm, and looking steadily in her face, he asked,--"Dolores, are you sure my father is dead?"
44262Looking up, after a little while, from his self- imposed task, he asked, with an air of perplexity,--"But when was it?
44262May a brother ask what that means?"
44262Moreover, had he not taught at the College of Doctrine, under the direct patronage of Fernando de San Juan, another of the victims?
44262My uncle and his family suspect nothing?"
44262Nay, that is nothing; who am I to curse?
44262Nay, what would become of the infallibility of Mother Church herself?
44262Nay; what dost thou mean?
44262No man who thinks the sweetest eyes ever seen worth six inches of steel in five skilful fingers?
44262No thing was certain; but what was only too probable?
44262Not his living face?"
44262Oh, my cousin, is it possible you can dream that prayer of yours will soften hearts harder than the nether millstone?"
44262Or had he a bribe to offer?
44262Or is there yet one keener, more thrilling?
44262Or these:"Whom have I in heaven but thee?
44262Or was he a great saint or holy hermit in disguise?
44262Or was he a heretic?
44262Pausing at last in his walk before the place where De Seso sat, he asked,"And you, señor, have you considered whither this would lead?"
44262Prithee, Dolores, and lest I forget, hast thou something savoury in the house for dinner?"
44262Quentin?"
44262Shall I recite the evening psalms for the twelfth,''Te dicet hymnus''?"
44262Shall_ you_?"
44262She looked piteously up at him, repeating,"Save Don Juan?"
44262Something in her half- averted face and the quick shrug of her shoulders prompted him to ask,"Do you think they mean me mischief?"
44262Speak-- what is it?"
44262Starting up suddenly, and seeing Fray Sebastian standing before him with a look of terror, he asked in alarm,"Any tidings, Fray?
44262Surely you do not fear that they suspect anything with regard to us?"
44262Tell me, what is it?"
44262Tell me,_ is that charge true_?"
44262Tell me-- have you spoken to my brother?"
44262That bitterness, what is it, after all, but the fruit of pain?
44262The Lord is the strength of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?"
44262The devil''s own work, or"----he broke off suddenly and resumed in a different tone,"Señora mia, have you thought of the hour?
44262The long eager gaze of her wistful eyes asked mournfully,"Is this_ all_ you can tell me?"
44262The muleteer who brought the books, and gave you that Testament?"
44262The voice of Carlos faltered as he asked at last,--"Have Fray Cristobal or Fray Fernando gone?"
44262Then Dolores said, in an eager breathless whisper,"You will go, señor?"
44262Then he asked,--"But why was I not summoned?
44262Then, in a higher key and with more hurried intonation,--"Who gave him the last rites of the Church?"
44262Then, with a start, he asked himself,"_ Where am I?_"The answer brought an agony of fear, of horror, of bitter pain.
44262They could stanch wounds and set dislocated joints, but when the springs of life were sapped, how could they renew them?
44262They walked along in silence; at last Gonsalvo asked, abruptly,--"Have you heard the news?"
44262Thirsty?
44262This unheard- of calmness and composure, whence is it?
44262Those heroic men and women, whom he watched as they passed along so calmly to their doom, had he no bond of sympathy with them?
44262To which Carlos added a heartfelt"Amen,"and resumed,--"Then, brother, you think we are justified in taking this joy to our hearts?"
44262Turning from his own thoughts as if they had been guilty things, he asked quickly,--"But how did you obtain leave of absence?"
44262Was he free?
44262Was he permitted to see Juan?
44262Was he, after all, a madman?
44262Was it, then, an accidental likeness to some familiar face that so fixed and haunted him?
44262Was not every word of his brother''s message burned into his heart?
44262Was the man mad?
44262Was the newly- awakened spirit wearing out the body?
44262Was the resurrection of dead and buried faculties possible for_ him_?
44262Was the story true; or were the family keeping back evidence which might compromise one or more of its remaining members?
44262Was their labour in vain?
44262Was there no word spoken?"
44262Was this the mother''s contrivance, lest by spell of word or gesture, or even by a kiss, the heretic might pollute or endanger the innocent babe?
44262We did all we could--""For Heaven''s sake, señor, will you answer me?"
44262Weary?
44262Were"important revelations"only a blind to procure his admission?
44262What are you doing, my father?"
44262What availed it me that I loved a star in heaven-- a bright, lonely, distant star-- while I was earthy, of the earth?
44262What brought my brother to his room?"
44262What could I do?
44262What did it all mean?
44262What did it all mean?
44262What did that mean?
44262What do you mean to do?
44262What doctrine does your Fray Constantino preach in the great Church every feast- day, since they made him canon- magistral?"
44262What does my orphaned Juan Rodrigo there, I wonder?"
44262What good fortune is coming now?
44262What good will Truth do me if those cruel men drag you from your bed at midnight, take you to that dreadful place, stretch you on the rack?"
44262What had brought him there?
44262What hast thou seen, what dost thou see, that makes this thing possible to thee?"
44262What heard you from Señor Cristobal?"
44262What if a dreadful unexplained something, linking his fate with that of a convicted heretic, were yet to be learned?
44262What if he and Pepe should fail to meet?
44262What if thou and I have been, like children, seeking for a star on earth while all the time it was shining above us in God''s glorious heaven?"
44262What if-- if they should_ torture_ him?
44262What is it?"
44262What is there that is said, somewhere in the Scriptures, about Noah, Daniel, and Job?"
44262What is wrong with thee?"
44262What is_ my_ life worth?"
44262What know we of his dealings?
44262What more could they do to him?
44262What possible tie could link his father''s name with the hideous thing they were gazing at?
44262What then would it appear to one who loved the name of Santillanos y Meñaya far better than her life?
44262What think you?"
44262What thinkest thou, then, of the Church?"
44262What though the guilt of all had been mine?
44262What was he doing in this place?--what_ could_ he do for his Master''s cause or his Master''s honour?
44262What was it?
44262What would become of private masses, indulgences, prayers for the dead?
44262What, then, had they which he had not?
44262When they had nearly reached the spot where they were to part, Carlos said,"You have heard Fray Constantino, as I asked you?"
44262When was a victory won, and no brave man left dead on the field; a city stormed, and none fallen in the breach?
44262Whence this ominous silence of the apostles and evangelists upon so many things that the Church most loudly proclaimed?
44262Where does he get all his money?"
44262Where have you been all these years?"
44262Where was the adoration of the Virgin and the saints?
44262Where were works of supererogation?
44262Where, in his Book, was purgatory to be found at all?
44262Who can tell the exact moment when his bark leaves the gently- flowing river for the great deep ocean?
44262Who cares for that?
44262Who could dare to triumph in the abode of misery, the very seat of Satan?
44262Who is taken now?"
44262Who was the second?
44262Who was with him when he departed?"
44262Who will be safe now?"
44262Whose Word saith,''When ye see the fig- tree put forth her buds, know ye that summer is nigh, even at the door''?
44262Why could he find no answer to a question so simple and natural as the one she had asked him?
44262Why did not the golden gate open for him as well as for them?
44262Why did the Book, which had solved so many mysteries for him, shed not a ray of light upon this one?
44262Why should he feel anger?
44262Why then had he not sought information, which might have proved so deeply interesting to him, directly from Losada himself, his friend and teacher?
44262Why, in Heaven''s name, have you thus involved yourself?
44262Why, then, was he left so long, like one standing without in the cold?
44262Will it be nothing in his sight that millions of the souls for whom he died have been driven to hate his Name-- that Name so unutterably precious?
44262Will it rain for ever?"
44262Will my generous cousin add to her goodness by giving my brother, when it can be done with safety, a hint of how it has fared with me?"
44262Will not that content your Excellency?"
44262Will you add to your kindness by bidding him immediately procure for us fresh horses, the best and fleetest that can be had?"
44262Will you be a_ priest_ or a_ man_?
44262Will you take what you wish, or let your chance slip by, and then sit and weep because you have it not?
44262Will your Excellency deign to bear me company for a little time?
44262Would not the sun shine on still, and the blue sky, the emblem of eternal truth and love, still stretch above his head?
44262Would the preceding entries throw any light upon_ that_ saying?
44262Would torture do it?
44262Would you change, even this hour, with Gonzales de Munebrãga?
44262Yet stay; have you patience for one word more?"
44262Yet, how could he, how dared he, acknowledge defeat, even to himself, when with the imperilled doctrine so much else must fall?
44262You are a Grecian?"
44262You have been in France, then?"
44262You have doubtless heard of Juliano El Chico?"
44262You perceive it clearly, Don Juan?"
44262You promise, mother?
44262You promise?"
44262You remember what our blessed Lord saith of those who confess him before men, how he will not be ashamed to confess them before his Father in heaven?
44262You understand, señor?"
44262You will deal gently with his dust, will you not?
44262You, my pious cousin, licentiate of theology and all but consecrated priest-- you will carry a taper, no doubt?"
44262Your Excellency is well acquainted with his history, doubtless?"
44262[ 34] Yes, yes; I do bless thee-- But who am I to bless?
44262_ He_, the son of a simple hidalgo, to dare lift his eyes to Doña Beatriz de Lavella?
44262_ You_ could never have dreamed that such a thing was possible, could you?"
44262asked Carlos;"and whence do you come?"
44262cried Carlos;"what of him?
44262have we not had enough of it all?"
44262have you got it with you?
44262how you startle one.--Do you mean these horrible arrests?"
44262or have you any request you wish to make?"
44262she has been discovered?"
44262that other question,''What will be our fate if we try to do it?''
44262we who all these dreary months have been mourning for and pitying his prisoners, to- morrow to be his crowned and sainted martyrs?
44262what do you mean?"
44262what is this?"
44262who can doubt it?"
44262who or what are you?
44262who, past the age of infancy, would kneel to the storm to implore it to be still, or to the fire to ask it to subdue its rage?
44262you will bless him, will you not?
69310, for mercy''s sake, why do you stop here?
6931A packer?
6931Am I not one of the people? 6931 Am I not one of you?"
6931And are these buildings successful in a pecuniary point of view?
6931And do n''t you admire them?
6931And do n''t you want to go to America?
6931And how did you like him?
6931And what is to be done here, then?
6931And what''s Playford Hall?
6931And where,said I,"are these young mechanics taught to read and write?"
6931And why did you go to see it?
6931Are the race often as good looking?
6931At what hotel do they stop?
6931But what could they do with their chimney- hood?
6931But, at any rate, let us go to Wittenberg,said I;"get a guide, a carriage, can not you?"
6931Can one find any thing there to eat?
6931Canst thou understand the balancing of the clouds? 6931 Dear me,"said I, with apprehension,"what is the matter with it?"
6931Do ministers ever hold slaves?
6931Do the avalanches ever bring rocks with them?
6931Do they pay their own way?
6931Do you think so? 6931 Does monsieur''s wish to go to the station house?"
6931English?
6931H., is there no other professor we want to see?
6931H.,said C.,"did the Germans use to smoke in Luther''s day?"
6931Have you considered how cold it is up there?
6931Here,they replied,"to- day?
6931Indeed,said C., examining it with great interest;"where are the rest of them?"
6931Is Luther''s Bible here?
6931Is this all?
6931Is this lake always frozen?
6931Messieurs,said I,"will you be so good as to inform me if the emperor is to be here to- day?"
6931Monsieur has friends residing in Dresden?
6931No directory? 6931 O, is that the Arveiron?"
6931Paris?
6931The rest?
6931Those girths-- won''t they break?
6931Up there?
6931Well, H.,said I,"have you drank deep enough this time?"
6931Well, I see it,said I;"it is good-- it is perfect-- it can not be bettered; but what then?
6931What cascade? 6931 What is it?"
6931What is that for?
6931What is that?
6931What is this?
6931What is this?
6931What make you from Wittenberg?
6931What makes them go there?
6931What''s that?
6931What, you too?
6931Where''s his mother?
6931Why do people build houses in the way of them?
6931Why not?
6931Why not?
6931Why, where did you come from? 6931 Will monsieur allow me to give their description to the police?"
6931Wo n''t you?
6931Yes; I think there were six of them; where are they?
6931_ Et Genève?_"Geneva is free also!
6931_ Monsieur veut aller à Pan''s, n''est ce pas?_"Going to Paris, are you not, sir?
6931_ Monsieur veut aller à Pan''s, n''est ce pas?_"Going to Paris, are you not, sir?
6931_ Oui._"Is monsieur''s baggage registered?
6931_ Qu''y a- t- il?_said I, standing up by the driver--"What''s the matter?"
6931_ Qu''y a- t- il?_said I, standing up by the driver--"What''s the matter?"
6931_ Wo ist mein-- basket?_he cried, giving them English; they shook their heads still harder.
6931_ Wo ist mein-- pannier?_exclaimed he, giving them the French synonyme.
6931( 0, ho, thought I; that is your directory, is it?
6931Above all, has not our climate, with its alternate extremes of heat and cold, a tendency to induce habits Of in- door indolence?
6931Ah, culpable sirens, if the pangs ye have inflicted were reckoned up unto you,--the heart aches and side aches,--how could ye repose o''nights?
6931Am I not competent to judge because I am not an artist?
6931And Young makes his high- born dame inquire,"Shall pleasures of a short duration chain A_ lady''s_ soul in everlasting pain?"
6931And are painters any greater artists than God?
6931And in that infant face there seemed a foreshadowing of the spirit which said,"Now is my soul troubled; and what shall I say?
6931And now, what am I to do?
6931And what did I see there?
6931And when I asked him,"Who supports you in your labors?"
6931And why has not a man a right to dramatize in marble as well as on canvas, if he can produce a powerful and effective result by so doing?
6931Are not God''s works the great models, and is not sympathy of spirit with the Master necessary to the understanding of the models?
6931Are not all these vines rooted in the lava and ashes of the volcano side?
6931Are they not the pride and glory of our country?
6931Art thou the first man that ever was born?
6931But after all, what is it?
6931But did not He who made the appetite for food make also that for beauty?
6931But how can they be Christians?"
6931But how do I know Murillo has no earnestness in the religious idea of this piece?
6931But the mountains-- how shall I give you the least idea of them?
6931But who shall describe the social charms of our dinner?
6931By a strange perversity, people seem to think that the Author of nature can not or will not inspire art; but"He that formed the eye, shall he not see?
6931By a very natural impulse, I exclaimed,"What does become of the little children there?
6931C.?"
6931Can not a bonnet cover your head, without the ribbon and the flowers, say they?
6931Could I have expected dear old England to make me so much one of the family as to treat my humble fortunes in this same public manner?
6931Could we feel in this parting that we were leaving those whom we had known for so brief a space?
6931Did the priestly miscreants of the middle ages ever represent among the torments of purgatory the deck of a channel steamer?
6931Did the worship of Egypt ever sink lower in horrible and loathsome idolatry?
6931Did you ever hear a bore complained of when they did not say that he was the best fellow in the world?
6931Do I, then, like it?
6931Does he not assume, in the most graceful way, the language of inspiration and holy rapture?
6931Does he suppose me so lost to all due sense of humility as to take out of his hands a cause which he is pleading so well?
6931Does it affect me?
6931Father, save me from this hour?
6931Get down and look at them?
6931Goethe''s house was a very grand one for the times, was it not?
6931Had it two shores?
6931Had some prodigious monster swallowed me, and, like another Jonah, had I"gone down beneath the bottoms of the mountains"?
6931Had we not seen the people walking about in them, and enjoying themselves?
6931Have not our close- heated stove rooms something to do with it?
6931Have not the immense amount of hot biscuits, hot corn cakes, and other compounds got up with the acrid poison of saleratus, something to do with it?
6931Here, perhaps, said I to myself, I shall answer, fully, the question that has long wrought within my soul, What is art?
6931How can I describe it?
6931How can we ever be sure on this point, when we admire what has prestige and sanction, not to admire which is an argument against ourselves?
6931How could any one, who had a soul to understand that most noble creation of Raphael, turn, the next moment, to admire this?
6931How do I know but she has fallen into a_ crevasse_?
6931How do I know but that a cliff, one of those ice castles, those leaning turrets, those frosty spearmen, have toppled over upon her?
6931How do I know, when reading Pope''s Messiah, that_ he_ was not in earnest-- that he was only most exquisitely reproducing what others had thought?
6931How wonderful these old Greeks I What set them out on such a course, I wonder-- anymore, for instance, than the Sandwich Islanders?
6931I asked him to what extent the element of scepticism, with regard to religious truth, had pervaded the mind of England?
6931I could not but observe with regret the evident fragility of Lady Byron''s health; yet why should I regret it?
6931I had met Macaulay before, but as you have not, you will of course ask a lady''s first question,"How does he look?"
6931I said to the coachman,"Why do they not cry,''_ Vive l''Empereur_''?"
6931I said,"How are you doing now, in that part of the country?
6931I thought to myself,"Now, would it be possible to give to one that had not seen it an idea of how this looks?"
6931In the exterior of both this and Strasbourg I was disappointed; but in the interior, who could be?
6931In what mood of mind were they conceived by the great Artist?
6931Is it not so?
6931Is it possible?
6931Is it the captive, to whom the ray of heaven''s own glory comes through the crevice of his dungeon walls?
6931Is it the conservative power of sea fogs and coal smoke-- the same cause that keeps the turf green, and makes the holly and ivy flourish?
6931Is it the exiled spirit, yearning for its own?
6931Is there a train?"
6931Is there not a high poetic merit in the mere conception of these two scenes, thus presented?
6931Is this the way you make the tour of Switzerland?"
6931It reminds one of such expressions as these in Job:--"Have the gates of death been open to thee, or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death?"
6931Laplace, Geoffroy St. Hilaire, Cuvier, Des Cartes, Malebranche, Arago-- what were they?
6931Must she send missionaries abroad to preach despotism?
6931Of what practical value to most students is geometry?
6931Only, what could they do with themselves?"
6931Or wast thou made before the hills?"
6931Or with speeches that can do no good?
6931Other women can play gracefully the head of the establishment; but who, like them, could be head, hand, and foot, all at once?
6931Our guide steps forth, unlocks the gate?
6931Said I,"Are people imitating these lodging houses very rapidly?"
6931Said I,--"C., do you think that can be the cathedral spire?"
6931Seeing by our looks that something was amiss, he repeated the question more emphatically in German:"Can I smoke?
6931Shall we destroy our most glorious possession in the first hour of its passing into our hands?"
6931Should he reason with unprofitable talk?
6931Sir, it has been said to me, more than once,''Where will you stop?''
6931Sooner or later it must end in revolution; and then what?
6931Take them all up, and carry them with you?
6931Tell us, Muses and Graces, what can it be?
6931The eye is not like the hand, nor the ear like the foot; yet who condemns any of them for the difference?
6931The first is mutilated; but if_ disarmed_ she conquers all hearts, what would she achieve in full panoply?
6931The generous Henri IV., the noble Sully, and Bayard the knight_ sans peur et sans reproche_, were these half tiger and half monkey?
6931The statue is really majestic; but was Goethe so much, really think you?
6931Then how shall we contrive to find our friends?"
6931There was a conflict of emotion in that mother''s face, and shadowed mysteriously in the child''s, of which I queried,"Was it fear?
6931There was not a hat taken off, not a single shout, not a"_ Vive l''Empereur_?
6931These palaces-- did not the king keep them for the people?
6931These splendid works of art, are they not ours?
6931They say that somebody came and told Thiers,''Do you know the people are rummaging the archbishop''s palace?''
6931Was not that a chime?
6931Was that the picture?
6931Well, you will ask, why are you going on in this argumentative style?
6931Were John Calvin and Fénélon half tiger and half monkey?
6931What am I, and what is my father''s house, that such distinction should come upon me?
6931What can be more brilliant than the rainbow, yet what more perfectly free from earthly grossness?
6931What can be the reason?
6931What can you do with them?--you want to do something, but what?
6931What chamois?
6931What city in the world can compare with thee?
6931What do we see in our own history?
6931What does possess botanists to afflict the most fragile and delicate of earth''s children with such mountainous and unpronounceable names?
6931What gnome''s cave is this Antwerp, where I have been hearing such strange harmonies in the air all night?
6931What has happened?
6931What head conceived those harmonies, so ghostlike?
6931What parent was ever far from home that did not espy in every group of children his own little ones-- his Mary or his Nelly, his Henry or Charlie?
6931What was in this man''s head when he painted this representation of the hour when his Maker was made flesh that he might redeem a world?
6931What will become of you?
6931What, then, must he think of the Almighty Being, all whose useful work is so overlaid with ornament?
6931Where is H.?
6931Where was I?
6931Where would Shakspeare''s dramas have been, had he studied the old dramatic unities?
6931Who can paint the air-- that vivid blue in which these sharp peaks cut their glittering images?
6931Who doubts you?
6931Why do n''t storks do so in America, I wonder?
6931Why do the Germans leave this place so dirty?
6931Why do they not cry out?"
6931Why not on the Seine, as well as on the Thames?
6931Why should not the yeasty brain of man, fermenting, froth over in such crestwork of Gothic pinnacle, spire, and column?
6931Why so?
6931Why wish to detain here those whose home is evidently from hence, and who will only then fully live when the shadow we call life is passed away?
6931Why, then, do not we go up?
6931Why?
6931Why?"
6931Why?--why this veil of dim and indefinable anguish at sight of whatever is most fair, at hearing whatever is most lovely?
6931Will not something eventually grow out of this?
6931Will they leave out Cromwell?
6931With a passionate agony he seems to say,"Am I not right?
6931Yes; and could not a peach tree bear peaches without a blossom?
6931Yet if we_ could_, would we efface from the world such cathedrals as Strasbourg and Cologne?
6931Yet what painter would dare attempt the same?
6931Yet, with this, was there not a solemn triumph in the thought that she alone, of all women, had been called to that baptism of anguish?
6931a chime of chimes?
6931and if they did n''t do it, would n''t somebody else?"
6931and is it not the word of God?"
6931and what can it do?
6931and while the former will perish with the body, is not the latter immortal?
6931could nothing suit him so well as Goethe''s coat of arms?
6931did he not bear all the expense of caring for them, that they might furnish public pleasure grounds and exhibition rooms?
6931do not all persons feel themselves competent to pronounce on the merits of natural landscapes, and say which of two scenes is finer?
6931does not this word say it?
6931he that planted the ear, shall he not hear?"
6931is it thus America fulfils her high destiny?
6931said I;"but do n''t avalanches generally come in the same places every year?"
6931stirred their sugar into their tea, and went on as before, because, what was there to do?--"Hadn''t every body always done it?
6931the ruling of the glorious, dazzling forces of nature?
6931the wondrous ways of Him who is perfect in wisdom?"
6931was it a presage of the hour when a sword should pierce through her own soul?
6931was it adoration and faith?
6931was it sorrow?
6931was that channel a channel at all?
6931what''s that?
6931who shall say that Claude is finer than Zuccarelli, or Zuccarelli than Claude?
6931yet what sinning, suffering soul could find sympathy in them?
8221''Shall I call thee Bird, Or but a wandering Voice?'' 8221 Ah, but where is it?
8221And afterward, what else?
8221Are these children who are playing in the sunlight,said Fromentin,"or is it a place in the sunlight in which children are playing?"
8221Did we not imply,asks the Athenian Stranger in Plato''s_ Laws_,"that the poets are not always quite capable of knowing what is good or evil?"
8221Every cradle asks us,''Whence?'' 8221 Have the elder races halted?
8221Iambicwith initial truncation or"trochaic"with final truncation?
8221Why should we fear that which will come to all that is? 8221 ( b) What sort of imaginative transformation of the material furnished by the senses? 8221 ( c) What degree of technical mastery of lyric structure? 8221 *****Our frigate takes fire, The other asks if we demand quarter?
8221And are there not characteristic activities of the poetic imagination which antedate the fixation and expression of images in words?
8221And does not each of the other poems release and excite the lyric mood?
8221And what is it which the preferable face or tree or color stirs or awakens within us as we look at it?
8221And who cares?
8221And why?
8221And yet,_ to me_, what is this quintessence of dust?"
8221Are these plays in harmony with Tennyson''s theology, as indicated elsewhere in his work?
8221Are you instantly on horseback?
8221As an object for aesthetic contemplation, is the average lyric too small to afford the highest and most permanent pleasure?
8221Because they spoke, must we be dumb?"
8221But are there not functions of the poet''s mind preceding the formation of verbal images?
8221But do such lyrics lack"adequate magnitude"?
8221But do they?
8221But how far are words capable of embodying emotion in permanent form?
8221But how?
8221But is there any real antagonism between the elements of form and significance, beauty and expressiveness?
8221But what have you to say?"
8221But who shall correct them?
8221But why lengthen this list of truisms?
8221But, alas, who can constrain love?
8221By her composite effects?
8221C"EXPRESSION"What is to be said of the range and character of the poet''s vocabulary?
8221C. What may be said in general of Tennyson''s handling of the dramatic form?
8221Can one go farther?
8221Can you see her?
8221Choice of metres?
8221Compare with this the sprightly egotism of the lyric poet''s"If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?"
8221Did not the peaceful Robert Louis Stevenson confess his romantic longing to"knife a man"?
8221Do I talk nonsense, or do you understand me?"
8221Do the later narratives show an increased proportion of tragic situations?
8221Do these plays give evidence of a genuine comic sense?
8221Do they contain any clear exposition of the problems of the religious life?
8221Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas?
8221Do you count waves from crest to crest or from hollow to hollow?
8221Do you feel in this poem the presence of a creative personality?
8221Do you hear it as clearly as you can hear"_ The tambourines Jing- jing- jingled in the hands of Queens_"?
8221Do you hear the tune?
8221Do you regard Tennyson''s previous literary experience as a help or a hindrance to success in the drama?
8221Do you think he has the power of creating a character, in the same sense as Shakespeare had it?
8221Do you think that these themes offer promising dramatic material?
8221Do your eyes feel that pressure?
8221Does Tennyson''s lyric poetry reveal a sense of spiritual law?
8221Does Tennyson''s narrative poetry throw any light upon his attitude towards contemporary English society?
8221Does a lyric possess"an adequate magnitude?"
8221Does his allotment of poetic justice show a sympathy with the moral order of the world?
8221Does his exhibition of action fulfill dramatic requirements?
8221Does his use of narrative material ever show a deficiency of emotion; i. e., could the story have been better told in prose?
8221Does it always have a subordinate place, as a part of the setting of the story?
8221Does it ever retard the movement unduly?
8221Does it overlay the story with too ornate detail?
8221Does not a book of lyrics often seem like a plantation of carefully tended little trees, rather than a forest?
8221Does she know Katharine Tynan''s verses about"Planting Bulbs"?
8221Does the author''s power of artistic expression keep pace with his feeling and imagination?
8221Employment of figurative language?
8221Evidence of the artist''s caring for either form or content to the neglect of the other?
8221FORM/ CONTENT A"IMPRESSION"_ Of Nature._ What sort of observation of natural phenomena is revealed in this poem?
8221Feeling and Imagination_ What is feeling, and exactly how is it bound up with the imagination?
8221From contact with men through the medium of books?
8221From introspection?
8221Has he the story- telling gift?
8221Has he"the dramatic sense"?
8221Have the lines been fused into their rhymed grouping by passionate feeling, or is their unity a mere mechanical conformation to a pattern?
8221Here the stark truthfulness of the images does not prevent an instinctive"Well, what of it?"
8221How can the body touch the flower which only the spirit may touch?"
8221How clearly do his lyrics reflect the social problems of his own time?
8221How do the other arts convey feeling?
8221How far does he identify himself with his race?
8221How far is Tennyson''s personality indicated by these instinctive processes through which his poetical material is transformed?
8221How is it that they cross the gulf which separates the enjoyer from the producer?
8221How much of his dramatic work do you consider purely objective, i. e., untinged by what was called the lyric egoism?
8221How much of his lyric poetry seems to spring from direct contact with men?
8221I asked an American composer the other day:"Is there anything at all in the old distinction between secular and sacred music?"
8221If most words are perishable stuff, what is it that keeps other words from perishing?
8221If not, what other relationships or associations are involved?
8221If our colors are struck and the fighting done?
8221Imitative effects?
8221Impressions of movement, form, color, sound, hours of the day or night, seasons of the year; knowledge of scientific facts, etc.?
8221In general, is there harmony between form and content, or is there evidence of the artist''s caring for one rather than the other?
8221In his later lyrics are there traces of deeper or shallower interest in men and women?
8221In idealization?
8221In patriotism?
8221In power of representation through images?
8221In power of representation through images?
8221In the historical dramas, can you trace the influence of the poet''s own personality in giving color to historical personages?
8221In the love- lyrics, what different relationships of men and women?
8221Is his lyric egoism a noble one?
8221Is his lyric passion always genuine?
8221Is his vocabulary suited to stage purposes?
8221Is it a delusion?
8221Is it superior organization and arrangement of this fragile material,"fame''s great antiseptic, style"?
8221Is it true poetry or only verse?
8221Is the lyric passion sustained as the poet grows old?
8221Is the poet''s own attitude clearly evident?
8221Is the"motive"of this lyric purely personal?
8221Is this a"painter- like"subject?
8221Is this poem consistent with his other poems?
8221Lyric Expression_ Is it possible to formulate the laws of lyric expression?
8221Me laetum quando facies, Ut vultu tuo saties?
8221Modification of rhythm and sound to suggest the idea conveyed?
8221Modification of rhythm and sound to suit the idea conveyed?
8221Noticeable words or phrases?
8221Occasional use of presentative rather than representative language?
8221Of conceiving characters in complication and collision with one another or with circumstances?
8221Of greater or less faith in the progress of society?
8221Of his management of the web of circumstance in which the characters are involved and brought into conflict?
8221Of his technical skill in suiting rhythm and sound to the requirements of his story?
8221Of knowledge of man gained through acquaintance with Biblical, classical, foreign or English literature?
8221Of those having a historical basis, how many are drawn from English sources?
8221Or that the second stanza of the"Ode to a Nightingale"runs on four sounds instead of five?
8221Or, take Calverley''s parody of Robert Browning:"You see this pebble- stone?
8221Precisely what is their racial reaction to a lyric of Sappho?
8221Religious attitude?
8221Selection of metre?
8221Self- knowledge?
8221Subordination of material to unity of"tone"?
8221TOLSTOY, L._ What is Art_?
8221Taken as a whole, is the form of the various plays artistically in harmony with the themes employed?
8221The Chaucerian stanza rhymes_ a b a b b c c_:"''Loke up, I seye, and telle me what she is Anon, that I may gone aboute thi nede: Know iche hire ought?
8221The Nature of Rhythm_ And why must the words begin to dance?
8221The Special Field_ What then do we mean by the province of poetry?
8221The sea?
8221The walls re- echo''d:''Where is the General of the Nation?''"
8221To a Scotch ballad?
8221To an Anglo- Saxon war- song of the tenth century?
8221To one of Shakspere''s songs?
8221To what extent do you find his narrative work purely objective, i. e., without admixture of reflective or didactic elements?
8221To what extent does he find a lyric motive in friendship?
8221To what extent is the lyrical emotion called forth by the details of nature?
8221Tweedle- dum or tweedle- dee?
8221Upon sensitiveness to successive experiences?
8221Use of rhymes?
8221Use of rhymes?
8221Was it''Come, shepherds, deck your heads''?
8221What arrangement or rhythmic ordering of facts do they use in this process?
8221What can Lessing''s"space- arts,"sculpture and painting, do with the material furnished by the Orpheus myth?
8221What can the musician do with the theme?
8221What can you say of Tennyson''s mastery of distinctly narrative metres?
8221What can you say of Tennyson''s power of observing character?
8221What devices of rhythm or sound to heighten the intended effect?
8221What evidence of poetic instinct in the selection of characteristic traits?
8221What evidence of poetic instinct in the selection of characteristic traits?
8221What is the impulse which urges certain persons to create beautiful objects?
8221What kind of imagery?
8221What kind or degree of sensitiveness to the facts of nature?
8221What may be said in general of his handling of the lyric form: as to unity, brevity, simplicity of structure?
8221What song was it, I pray?
8221What sort of inner mood or passion?
8221What takes place in us as we confront the work of art, or, in other words, what is our reaction to an artistic stimulus?
8221What themes are of mythical or legendary origin?
8221What tragic forces seem to have made the most impression upon Tennyson?
8221When you count the links in a bicycle chain, do you begin with the slender middle of each link or with one of the swelling ends?
8221Wherein lies the difference, as far as the objects themselves are concerned?
8221Wherein lies the difference?
8221Who can strain the blue from the sky?
8221Who knows precisely where that"guarded mount"is upon the map?
8221Who walks?
8221Why do you not write an opening paragraph, for better for worse, instead of looking out of the window and quoting Katharine Tynan?
8221With humanity?
8221Wo n''t beauty go with these?"
8221Would you learn who won by the light of the moon and stars?
8221[ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree.
8221[ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree.
8221[ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree.
8221[ Illustration: M?----- C?----- H?----- C?---- S]"Thus, a tired wayfarer on a hot day throws himself on the damp earth beneath a maple- tree.
8221_ General Characteristics._ After classifying Tennyson''s narrative poetry, how many of his themes seem to you to be of his own invention?
8221_ General Characteristics._ Does the freshness of the lyric mood seem in Tennyson''s case dependent upon any philosophical position?
8221_ Of God._ Perception of spiritual laws?
8221_ Of Man._ What evidence of the poet''s direct knowledge of men?
8221_ Of Man._ What human relationships furnish the themes for his lyrics?
8221_ Of Nature._ How far does the description of natural phenomena, as outlined in Topic II, A, enter into Tennyson''s narrative poetry?
8221_ What is Poetry?_ New York, 1900.
8221_ What is Poetry?_ edited by Albert S. Cook.
8221and every coffin,''Whither?''
8221or,''As at noon Dulcina rested''?
8221or,''Chevy Chase''?
8221or,''Johnny Armstrong''?
8221or,''Phillida flouts me''?
8221or,''Troy Town''?"
8221predominant verse rhythms, with occasional emphasis upon metrical feet:"Would you hear of an old- time sea- fight?
8456''F.M.T.,''echoed Mrs. Barlow,"why, who can that be?"
8456''Mawnin'', missy; an''who be you?
8456A home of our own? 8456 Ah,"said her father,"you begin to see my drift, do you?
8456All right,said Uncle Ted, cheerily;"is there anything in the house to eat?
8456All right,said his father, who was ever ready for a frolic,"what can we do out of the ordinary?"
8456An hour? 8456 And now what else do young people eat?
8456And what do you do? 8456 Are n''t you?
8456Are you? 8456 But who sent me that telegram?
8456But why do n''t you have a tea- party, girls?
8456But, mumsey, I''m awful hungry; are n''t we going to have any dinner? 8456 But,"said Patty, coming nearer, and still unable quite to comprehend it all,"why do n''t you have any hair yourself?"
8456Can I help you, Cousin Barbara?
8456Cousin Elizabeth is an author, is n''t she?
8456Crazy Nan,said Bumble,"you''ve spoiled your clean dress, and you ca n''t swim with your shoes on, anyway, can you?"
8456Did Frank do all this for me? 8456 Did it really?"
8456Did we invite the Harlands?
8456Did you think I was still an infant, and were you going to buy me a new dolls''house? 8456 Did you wish to see me?"
8456Do you like to dance?
8456Do you suppose I''d leave you out, my dearest chums? 8456 Do you think I''ll stay at home and grub in the schoolroom while she''s having a good time in the city?
8456Does n''t my hair look nice?
8456Fourteen, papa,--why?
8456Gertrude, dear,she said,"if the house_ should_ get on fire, what would you want to save most?"
8456Gilbert, dear,she said,"sit down in the middle of the boat, and be quiet until I call papa, will you?
8456Good- morning,she cried,"are you here already?
8456H''m,commented Miss Powers,"that would be a good kind of a carpet to have at housecleaning time, would n''t it?"
8456Have you? 8456 How do you do, Grace?"
8456How many shall you invite?
8456How old is she?
8456Howdy, Uncle Robert,she said, in her pretty southern way,"are you looking for me?"
8456I did n''t say it was, did I?
8456I did n''t say you did say so, did I?
8456I did n''t say you said I said so, did I?
8456I do n''t seem to be included in the secret,said Marian;"but come with me, Patty, wo n''t you, until mamma is ready for you?
8456I have n''t got a shrill voice,retorted Ethelyn,"have I, Patricia?
8456I knew you''d fix it, Aunt Alice,said Patty, beaming,"wo n''t that be just right, girls?"
8456I say, mother, are n''t you going to give a party for Patricia?
8456I suppose if you had n''t had any paper you would have dumped it into your pocket, eh?
8456I think it''s wonderful,she said,"is it just like your own hair was?"
8456I''ll fix Patty,said Uncle Charlie,"have n''t some of you girls a big blanket- shawl that wo n''t be spoiled if it gets wet?"
8456I''ll sleep on the top shelf,she said, gleefully,"may I, Miss Powers?"
8456Is it for me? 8456 Is there anything you want saved particularly?"
8456It''s like the enchanted carpet, is n''t it, Miss Powers?
8456Mamma,said the child,"shall I pick you some pretty flowers?"
8456May I come in?
8456May n''t I, mamma?
8456Mother mine, are you going to monopolize our Patty? 8456 Mumsey, do you s''pose we''re going to have any dinner to- night?"
8456Never mind,said Bob,"I do n''t care much for bread, anyhow, do you, Patty?
8456No jewelry? 8456 No?
8456Now can I go in the parlor, Frank?
8456Now, what would you like to eat?
8456Of course they''ll meet me in a sleigh, wo n''t they, papa?
8456Oh, Ethelyn,she said,"how can you speak to your teacher so?
8456Oh, Miss Morton do n''t mind, do you?
8456Oh, Uncle Robert,she cried,"is this your home?
8456Oh, is Ethelyn here?
8456Oh, that will be fun, I love letters; and here comes Clara, may I tell her about it?
8456Oh, what is it?
8456Oh, you do n''t know me yet,laughed Aunt Alice;"did n''t I tell you I was a tyrant?
8456Oh,said Patty, quite awestruck at this bright and novel scene,"what is it all for?"
8456Oh,said Patty, with great interest,"ca n''t you speak to people when they''re writing novels?"
8456Oh,screamed Miss Fanny, hopping out of bed and rushing wildly around the room,"which window?"
8456Oh,thought Mrs. Barlow, as she went to greet them,"who_ has_ Fanny brought with her?"
8456Only girls?
8456Or suppose it should run away and never come back?
8456Ruth, who is she?
8456That''s a fine idea,said Aunt Alice;"do you agree, Charlie?"
8456That''s right, my boy,said Uncle Charlie, catching Gilbert up in his arms and setting him on his shoulder,"and after Patty is gone, what then?"
8456Then wo n''t you sing now?
8456This is the idiot,she said,"but is n''t it a pretty cat?
8456We_ do_ like,cried Bumble,"and after we buy the things, wo n''t you take us to the Zoo, to see the baby hippopotamus?"
8456Well, I''m going to coax him, anyhow,--and now Aunt Alice, I''m going to ask you a big, big favor, may I?
8456Well, Patricia,said Uncle Robert, who had been warned against using the objectionable nickname,"how do you like Villa Rosa so far?"
8456Well, Patty cousin, have you come at last?
8456Well, Patty, how do you like it, so far?
8456Well, my girl, you''ve made out a pretty strong case, have n''t you?
8456What about school, papa?
8456What about the water, Uncle Ted?
8456What are you talking about?
8456What do you mean?
8456What is it, Aunt Hester?
8456What is it, papa?
8456What is she like?
8456What is? 8456 What would you like for your dinner, child?
8456What?
8456When is Uncle Fred coming?
8456Where are you going with your hat on?
8456Where is it you''re going?
8456Where''s Nan?
8456Where_ can_ we put her to sleep?
8456Which room are the Carletons in, Patty?
8456Who is Geraldine?
8456Why ca n''t it?
8456Why not?
8456Why, Grace,exclaimed Mr. Barlow,"what are you doing?
8456Why, Patty Fairfield, where are you going?
8456Why, are my aunts all so different, papa?
8456Why, of course we will; would you like to hear some of our original songs?
8456Why,said Patty, looking at her cousin in surprise,"are n''t people fit for you to know unless they''re rich?"
8456Will I interfere with the pigs if I stay here, Cousin Barbara?
8456Yes, do,growled Reginald;"how can a fellow study when you''re chattering away with your shrill voice?"
8456Yes,--and what has all this to do with Aunt Isabel? 8456 You do n''t?
8456''Oh''said I,''if you mean dotted Swiss muslins, why do n''t you say so?''
8456A Welcome Guest Patty Fairfield CHAPTER I HER FATHER''S PLAN"How old are you, Patty?"
8456Ah, Barbara,"as her sister bustled into the room, and dropped into a chair at the table,"how are the bootblacks?"
8456And I say, Patty, get my camera out of my room, will you?
8456And Ruth, where is she?"
8456And ca n''t we have jam in some of them, as well as chicken and ham?"
8456And did you get the cheese and fruit as I asked you to?"
8456And how can we manage those without boys?
8456And if you had all tables in your house, and no chairs or bedsteads or bureaus, there''d be too great a proportion of tables, would n''t there?"
8456And was n''t it fortunate?
8456And we''ll build a fire, and make coffee, shall we mother?"
8456And your letters help me too, so write just as often as you can, wo n''t you?
8456Any ob de fam''ly''round yit?"
8456Are they on the bill of fare?
8456Are they rich, Patricia?"
8456Are you asleep?"
8456Are you familiar with Bacon?"
8456Are you hungry?
8456Are you literary?"
8456But really, did n''t you get an invitation?
8456But she thought, what is the use of objecting?
8456But the water is fine, to- day, is n''t it, Patty?"
8456But where is Tom?"
8456But, Aunt Grace, what do you want to save?
8456CHAPTER XIII HOME- MADE MUSIC"Why do you call this the music- room?"
8456Ca n''t I go into the library and look at some of the books?"
8456Ca n''t I wait until next fall and we''ll go together?"
8456Ca n''t you make a salad?"
8456Ca n''t you throw on some water up there?
8456Can any of you boys swim?"
8456Did n''t you get it?
8456Did n''t you know I wore a wig?
8456Did n''t you say so, mamma?
8456Did you hear me tell Marian to remember the Basket Drill?
8456Do have some more, wo n''t you?"
8456Do n''t forget it, will you?
8456Do n''t you think I am like papa?"
8456Do you hear?"
8456Do you know how to sew, Patty?"
8456Do you know what proportion means?"
8456Do you make songs yourself?"
8456Do you remember her at all?"
8456Does she put too much baking- powder in her cake, or has she nothing but tables in her house?"
8456Florelle is the only one who is behaving nicely, are n''t you, darling?"
8456Great consternation was felt by all, and suddenly Patty said,"Who mailed those invitations?"
8456Have you been here long?
8456Have you breakfasted?"
8456Have you your trunk check?
8456How did you manage?
8456How do you do, Cousin Patricia?"
8456How do you do, Patty?
8456How old are you?"
8456I rescued some of them, though-- Elizabeth, ca n''t you go to see the Common Council this afternoon about that Statue Fund?
8456I will have her sent away if she preaches at us,''cause I hate it; but she wo n''t preach any more, will you, Morty?"
8456Is it possible?
8456Is n''t it nice, Clara, to have so many aunts?"
8456Is n''t it pretty?
8456Is n''t that grand?"
8456Is the fire burning the hall carpet much?"
8456Is this Patty?
8456Is this mine?"
8456Is this_ my_ balcony?"
8456It''s becoming, do n''t you think so?
8456Let me see, what did she do?
8456Marian, why do n''t you take Patty down and show her the Falls?
8456Mother, what are your plans?"
8456Not a very pleasant day, is it?
8456Now how much of it would you use?"
8456Now why do n''t ye go and lie down and rest yerself?"
8456Now, how shall we decorate it?"
8456Now, how would it do to give Miss Gertrude our room, and you and I go in with Nan?
8456Of course, if a lot of company comes, we may ask you to give up this, and take a smaller room, but you would n''t mind that, would you?"
8456Oh, Patty, would n''t that be just fine?"
8456Oh, Uncle Teddy, is n''t the sea gorgeous?
8456Or were you going to take me to the circus?
8456Patty, would you mind giving up your room for a time?"
8456Right in the middle, do you hear?
8456Run up- stairs, Patty, and find your Uncle Ted, and ask him what is to be done about it?"
8456Ruth, what have you on hand for this afternoon?"
8456Shall we go to Foster''s Woods?"
8456Soon they heard Frank''s voice calling,"Father, wo n''t you please come here a minute and help us get this swing down?"
8456Suppose we have the party on Thursday; can you all be ready by that time?"
8456Suppose you were to make a cake, an ordinary sized cake, you know, how much yeast would you put in it?"
8456Teas are ever so much stylisher than evening entertainments, are n''t they, mamma?"
8456That is n''t good proportion, is it?
8456There''d be a too great proportion of baking- powder, would n''t there?"
8456There, Miss Patty Fairfield, how do you like that?"
8456There, how do you like that?"
8456Those American Beauties are fine, are n''t they?"
8456Unless we can help you unpack, may we?
8456Wait, I have it, Patty; I''ll send you home by a messenger; you do n''t mind, do you?"
8456Was it possible that she had left her father only the day before?
8456Was n''t it lucky I went over?"
8456We have a pretty fine sleigh, eh, Ethelyn?"
8456We''ll be awfully good chums, wo n''t we?"
8456Were all those fine clothes really meant for her?
8456What are you going to wear?"
8456What do you say, Patty?"
8456What has happened?"
8456What is a''Dewey Punch''?"
8456What is it, Martha?"
8456What made you think of wrapping up ink in paper?"
8456What shall I do?
8456What shall I do?
8456What_ can_ we do?"
8456Whativer will happen to us?"
8456When do you expect to learn anything?"
8456Where are you in history, Patricia?"
8456Where do they live, Patty?"
8456Where''s Bumble?"
8456Where''s Hopalong?"
8456Where''s my girl?"
8456Where''s papa?
8456Who did it all?"
8456Who is this pretty child?"
8456Why did n''t you tell us?"
8456Why do n''t we say jamwiches, hamwiches and chickwiches?"
8456Will you forgive me?
8456Will you see that she has a hot bath, and a steaming hot drink made after one of your good old recipes?
8456Will your secret keep that long?"
8456Wo n''t papa be pleased?"
8456You poor child, why did n''t you tell me?"
8456You remember Uncle Robert, your mother''s brother, who was here four or five years ago, do n''t you?"
8456You''ve never traveled any, have you, Puss?"
8456_ Do_ you believe he will, Aunt Alice?"
8456and who is Helen?"
8456are you there, Patty?
8456exclaimed Ethelyn, just as Patty could stand it no longer and was about to ask what it meant,"what can be the matter with Florelle this time?
8456exclaimed Mr. Barlow,"what are you talking about?
8456said Marian,"are n''t we going to have any boys?
8456said Patty,"is there any one else in the family?"
8456said her mother, reprovingly,"how many times must I tell you not to use slang?
8456she cried as she caught up with him,"where are you going?"
8456what carpet?"
8456what does this mean?
37042A Puritan, or like unto the swashbucklers which I am told throng the king''s court?
37042A grand place to bury a secret, eh? 37042 A lover, eh?
37042A quiet hour, young man?
37042Afraid, Master Roland, eh? 37042 After Denman''s wife tried to send him to heaven?"
37042Ah, I see; but you hope, eh-- you hope?
37042Ah, Peter, whither goest thou?
37042Ah, ah,I heard him cackle,"so you discover that Old Solomon still hath his wits, eh?
37042Ah, but which?
37042Ah, could I not?
37042Ah, how is that? 37042 Ah, it is you, Master Stranger?"
37042Ah, no one has left you to- day?
37042Ah, whither go you, Peter?
37042Ah, why the change? 37042 Ah, why?"
37042Ah-- and what is that?
37042Am I a constable,I heard one say,"and shall I see such goings on?
37042Am I afraid of King Charles? 37042 Am I not the father of the town?
37042Am I to be bearded by a boy? 37042 An old man?"
37042And Sir Charles?
37042And after that?
37042And all the old families will receive the new king with open arms?
37042And am I to remain in gaol?
37042And are all the people loyal around here?
37042And be there many Nonconformists?
37042And did Sir Charles Denman accompany you?
37042And did not men hide their faithful friends in the time of Mary?
37042And do others know of this secret, Katharine?
37042And do you mean that he is the next heir to the English throne?
37042And have you no special friend now?
37042And his daughters,I cried,"know you aught of them?"
37042And how did you find it out?
37042And how is that?
37042And how is that?
37042And how long ago?
37042And how may that be, Master Sturgeon?
37042And if I allow you to accompany me you will ask me no questions?
37042And if I do, and if I do, little Constance, what then?
37042And if I do, what then?
37042And if I do?
37042And if I told Your Majesty?
37042And if I will not tell you?
37042And if I will not?
37042And if it be not brought to light?
37042And if such a woman hath been there?
37042And if you did this what would you do?
37042And is it Pycroft you thought of buying, young master?
37042And is it not right to drink the king''s health?
37042And is not she innocent?
37042And know you aught of Mistress Constance Leslie?
37042And no one lives at Pycroft Hall, I suppose?
37042And now tell me what you promised to tell me?
37042And she is wedded, I hear, to one Sir Charles Denman?
37042And that is your reason for following me?
37042And the king says it is a forgery?
37042And the other sister?
37042And the woman is gone?
37042And the woman-- what was she like?
37042And then you searched no more?
37042And then?
37042And then?
37042And they followed you?
37042And they, Your Majesty?
37042And this is true?
37042And thou hast come to bid me welcome, Master Roland?
37042And was the constable sure it was she?
37042And were there any evidences that any one had been there through the night?
37042And what did your wife and children do while you were in prison?
37042And what do you know?
37042And what do you say it was?
37042And what do you think will be the end of this visit?
37042And what hath become of Goodlands?
37042And what hath become of the old man who shewed the great lord the thing?
37042And what hath become of you since you were driven from your parish?
37042And what hath become of your wife and family?
37042And what have you found?
37042And what have you to do with this?
37042And what is that to you, young master?
37042And what is the news from London?
37042And what is the thing you can not understand?
37042And what may be the signs which show forth that one loves the Son of God?
37042And what may your name be?
37042And what will you do to- night?
37042And when do the king come, Mester Roland?
37042And when you went to the place again?
37042And where go we now-- Lady Denman?
37042And where is your guilty daughter?
37042And which might that be, if I am not making too bold in asking?
37042And whither go you?
37042And who do you blame for all this?
37042And who is Master Burnbridge?
37042And who is Master Elijah Pycroft?
37042And who is this brave youth? 37042 And why prithee?"
37042And why, Master Malapert?
37042And why?
37042And why?
37042And you believe it?
37042And you desire only to see me safe from harm?
37042And you do not know where he is now?
37042And you have a suspicion where he is now?
37042And you have heard of her son, a lad who goes by the name of James Croft?
37042And you took them to be men of quality?
37042And you will not interfere with me?
37042And you will not tell?
37042And you will remain here hidden from sight?
37042And you, father,I said,"what have you done?"
37042And, second, you wish me to promise that whatever advantage may be gained by what I shall find out shall be shared by you?
37042Another land?
37042Are they to be brought before the king''s guests?
37042Are you guilty or not guilty of attempting the life of General Monk?
37042Are you hurt?
37042Are you one of the Lord''s children?
37042Are you prepared to pay the price of entrance?
37042Are you sad, Constance?
37042As for you, Constance, will you make yourself ready for the journey?
37042As to that,I made answer,"are not his chances small?
37042At midnight?
37042At what hour am I to be brought before the justices?
37042At what time?
37042Ay, I have seen him; but who is Master Burnbridge?
37042Ay, and what can you do?
37042Ay, and what would you, Roland?
37042Ay, and who''ll take him?
37042Ay, ay, I should a''known,I heard her mumble,"I should a''known, for did not Katharine tell me?"
37042Ay, but how can an ignorant man like thee be fit to preach?
37042Ay, but there are no edicts out against him?
37042Ay, but where is it?
37042Ay, but,I urged,"the governor of the gaol is not the constable who caught her coming hither?"
37042Ay, can not a man speak his own mind? 37042 Ay, what would you?"
37042Ay, who else?
37042Ay? 37042 Be you going to the church?"
37042Beautiful, is n''t she?
37042Beneath here? 37042 Besides, am I not the governor?
37042Besides, it would not be safe for me to go until I know the old man''s thoughts: he might betray me, and then what would happen to you?
37042But all will be changed now?
37042But are you one who hath also suffered for God''s work? 37042 But can you do aught?
37042But can you?
37042But did she tell you where the marriage contract was?
37042But did you not know?
37042But didst thou go to church when thou wert what thou sayst?
37042But do you know that such a meeting is unlawful?
37042But from whom did this old man Solomon get the house?
37042But had she no protector?
37042But hath this woman converted you?
37042But have you discovered aught?
37042But have you no property at all?
37042But he would have sheltered her, ay, and have sought to hide her, had she reached his house?
37042But how came Katharine Harcomb to come to you with her news?
37042But how could you gain entrance?
37042But how could you have crept out by the windows?
37042But how dare he ride to the_ Barley Sheaf_ while it was yet daylight?
37042But how dare she ride abroad?
37042But how did you do this?
37042But how do you know the truth of this?
37042But how may that be? 37042 But how?"
37042But how?
37042But if I am thrown into prison?
37042But if I were to love another, and we d him, what then?
37042But if she hath been there, and is gone?
37042But if this is all for the good of religion?
37042But if you are in danger there?
37042But if you can not serve me?
37042But is he in bed?
37042But is she there?
37042But may a man not need instruction in Holy Writ?
37042But perchance you do not know all that hath taken place,I said;"you do not know what the king would have had me do?"
37042But suppose that one be led in reading the Scriptures to hold views different from those of those set in authority over us?
37042But surely there must be means whereby a man may carve his way to fortune?
37042But tell me, hast thou done aught?
37042But they were innocent?
37042But think you that I have not other potions, potions which would resist the action of the fumes which would arise from the pot?
37042But to whom did she give this precious document?
37042But was he not punished by the king?
37042But what about the Act of Oblivion?
37042But what about the coming of the king?
37042But what could he do?
37042But what did he look like?
37042But what did they say?
37042But what is it?
37042But what is it?
37042But what is the cause of all this?
37042But what is the use of loving me?
37042But what of the Church, young master, what of the Church?
37042But what was the occasion of your being imprisoned?
37042But what would you have me do?
37042But what would you?
37042But what would you?
37042But where is Constance now?
37042But where is the warrant for this?
37042But where? 37042 But who is Katharine Harcomb?
37042But who shall I find there? 37042 But why are you here?"
37042But why can you not go yourself?
37042But why could you not obey the law?
37042But why did you make yourself known at Dorking?
37042But why have you chosen me?
37042But why should the king fear me? 37042 But why should you be put in a London gaol?
37042But why wish you this quiet hour, young master?
37042But why?
37042But why?
37042But will you on your part first tell me something?
37042But you can make a shrewd guess? 37042 But you have heard of the proofs?"
37042But you would not do this?
37042By whose authority hath this been done?
37042Ca n''t be who?
37042Can the death of a woman who hath attempted murder be called martyrdom?
37042Danger?
37042Daughter of Master John Leslie, of Goodlands?
37042Did I not tell you from your earliest childhood that no man would do aught for you, except that which would help forward his own plans? 37042 Did I say that?"
37042Did any smoke come out of his nostrils?
37042Did either say aught?
37042Did he say aught?
37042Did he say that?
37042Did he see you?
37042Did he tell you his name?
37042Did not the early Christians hide each other in Rome?
37042Did she tell you of what she was accused?
37042Did they trouble you much in Cromwell''s days?
37042Did you take advice from any man before you sought admission within these walls, young master?
37042Do I ride like one, Roland?
37042Do not like what?
37042Do you assert that this is not a proper tribunal?
37042Do you believe in the new king?
37042Do you believe that what I saw is the real contract of marriage between the king and Lucy Walters?
37042Do you fear they will?
37042Do you know his name?
37042Do you know you run great danger?
37042Do you love God, young master?
37042Do you not fear me?
37042Do you not know that even now I hear the footsteps of the dead?
37042Do you not know the rest?
37042Do you realize what you are doing?
37042Do you see anything?
37042Do you think he''s dead?
37042Do? 37042 Does not my presence in Bedford to- night prove it?"
37042Doing? 37042 Dost thou love this boy-- my boy Roland?"
37042Doth not exist? 37042 Doth the thing exist at all?"
37042Doubtless you have received pleasant news, Master Rashcliffe?
37042Else why should I have flown from General Monk''s anger?
37042Else why should you gallop across hedges and ditches as though the devil were behind you? 37042 Even if the teachers of the Church command otherwise?"
37042Even in the face of death?
37042Every rag upon his body?
37042For what are His Words? 37042 For what is the truth?
37042From the king?
37042From whence did she come?
37042Has the person who caused the light to shine there power over you?
37042Hath Master Rashcliffe yet arrived?
37042Hath he paid his count?
37042Hath some one been meddling with my stirrups?
37042Have a care for whom?
37042Have any of the kitchen wenches seen her?
37042Have n''t you heard? 37042 Have you any of these Puritan beliefs?"
37042Have you been in prison?
37042Have you ever seen him?
37042Have you found it?
37042Have you heard aught concerning what will be done to those who took part in the king''s father''s death?
37042Have you not heard? 37042 Have you seen a little girl about ten, accompanied by a boy of twelve?"
37042Have you sold yourself to the devil?
37042He will not; but if he does, what then? 37042 He-- he doth not know a word of English-- that is-- how do you know there is such a man?"
37042His fear?
37042His name, young master, his name?
37042His wife?
37042How came I to be commissioned with this work?
37042How came you here?
37042How came you to know these things?
37042How can I be offended, when you have tried to be my friend?
37042How can it be otherwise?
37042How did she get her horse and her attire?
37042How did you know?
37042How do I know that you are Master Pycroft? 37042 How do I know?
37042How do I know? 37042 How do you know?"
37042How do you know?
37042How do you know?
37042How fares it with you, Roland, my son? 37042 How many are to be tried?"
37042How many gaolers have you here?
37042How many?
37042How many?
37042How may a man do that?
37042How old are you?
37042How old?
37042How will you live?
37042How?
37042I have heard this,I cried;"but what hath it to do with the whereabouts of Constance?"
37042I hear that you have a sister?
37042I think I have heard of a Master Pycroft,I said,"know you him?"
37042I?
37042If Charles dies, will he not claim the crown? 37042 If Constance were my mother and you were my age, what would you do?"
37042If mother were where Constance is, what would you do?
37042If your home is at Epping Forest, what are you doing at Folkestone?
37042In French?
37042In my power?
37042In what way have I behaved in an unruly way?
37042Is aught ill with the place?
37042Is his home at The Hague? 37042 Is it for pleasure?
37042Is it your will that I shall tell you this, Your Majesty?
37042Is she to be brought here at the same time? 37042 Is she your elder sister, or is she younger than you?"
37042Is she, then, so very beautiful?
37042Is that all you know?
37042Is that what men are saying?
37042Is that your desire? 37042 Is there no hope then?"
37042Know what?
37042Know you aught of Sir Charles?
37042Know you aught of her, young master?
37042Know you aught of her?
37042Know you aught of this woman?
37042Know you of a good hostelry there?
37042Know you of aught, that you say this?
37042Know you who that is?
37042Know you, James Bilsom?
37042Like that?
37042Long ago, young master? 37042 Look like?"
37042Master Leslie hath other children, then?
37042Master Roland Rashcliffe?
37042Men have it that Constance, daughter of John Leslie, together with her husband and father, plotted the murder of Monk, have they? 37042 My father,"I said, to Caleb,"is he here?"
37042My own fault, father?
37042Nay, but I am told he is the best swordsman in the kingdom, that he is deadly with the pistol, and that he shews no mercy anywhere?
37042Nay, man, how could he do that?
37042Nay?
37042No Pycroft Hall? 37042 No horses here beside mine, ostler?"
37042No, but if you need me?
37042No, why do you ask?
37042Nor given you hint of it?
37042Nor his horse? 37042 Nothing?
37042Now tell me, is my father here?
37042Now then, Peter Blewitt, surely you are not afraid of a boy''s popgun? 37042 Now then, suppose I promise to look favourably on this match, will you tell me where you believe this maid''s sister is?
37042Obey you?
37042Of Epping?
37042Oh, you laugh, do you?
37042On me, Your Majesty?
37042On the 15th of January you were wedded to Sir Charles Denman?
37042Remove your hats and cloaks, will you?
37042Right? 37042 Roland Rashcliffe,"she said,"will you undertake this thing?"
37042Roland, is it you?
37042Roland,he said when at length I went to him,"will you come with me into the library?"
37042Roundhead, or Cavalier?
37042Shall we go back?
37042Shall we stay and meet them boldly?
37042Shall we take his money? 37042 She is gone,"I cried out like one bewildered,"but whither hath she gone?
37042She told you that?
37042Signed by Charles Stuart?
37042Signed by me?
37042Since what hath come to pass?
37042Sir Charles Denman, who is he?
37042Sir Charles hath many friends; besides, what kind of man did you see?
37042So your sins, like chicken, have come home to roost?
37042Stay you long in Bedford, young master?
37042Suppose by this means we obtain from the king all we desire? 37042 Suppose, I say, suppose she had killed General Monk, would the king have been welcomed back?
37042Surely, we''ve not killed him?
37042Swear what?
37042Tell me about it?
37042Tell me what interest you have in all this?
37042Tell me who you are? 37042 Tell me, boy, is your father an honest man?"
37042Tell me, do you believe, do you think, have you a fancy that you know where she is hiding?
37042Tell me, young master,he said eagerly,"hath the king sent you here?
37042Thank you, Your Majesty, then you pronounce me innocent?
37042That is well,I replied;"will you follow me?"
37042The company?
37042The end, Father Solomon?
37042The king?
37042The name o''t, young master?
37042The question is, do you go to the parish church?
37042The son of Master Philip here?
37042The wife of Sir Charles Denman hath never been captured then?
37042Their names?
37042Then I may enter?
37042Then I may even go my ways and rid Your Majesty of my presence?
37042Then I may leave this place?
37042Then I repeat the question,''Do you know where this maid''s sister is?''
37042Then do you plead guilty to the charge?
37042Then how came you to be accused of this crime?
37042Then how was the woman who was brought here with me last night taken prisoner?
37042Then that lad, James Croft, is next King of England?
37042Then what do you seek?
37042Then what led you to enter these walls?
37042Then what meaneth all this turmoil? 37042 Then what would you do with your power?"
37042Then what would you have me do father?
37042Then why did he leave me?
37042Then why go?
37042Then why should you desire to befriend me?
37042Then wilt thou kiss me, my child?
37042Then you do not fear what the king may do?
37042Then you know where your sister is?
37042Then you_ are_ a spy?
37042There must be some trace of him somewhere; how can I find it?
37042Think you that aught will be done to those who fought against the new king''s father?
37042Think you there is any truth in the stories about Sir John Leslie''s daughter?
37042Think you there is aught beneath here?
37042This is rare sport, eh? 37042 This is the youth?"
37042This son of yours hath never fought in the wars?
37042Thou knowest then that this maid, Mistress Constance Leslie, hath again refused to obey her king?
37042To me?
37042To whom do they belong?
37042To whom-- God or man?
37042To- morrow?
37042Two weeks?
37042We are not far from Bedford, I take it?
37042Well now, wilt thou not promise to be a decent fellow again? 37042 Well, and what of that?"
37042Well, and why not, Master Rashcliffe? 37042 Well, what are we to do?"
37042Well, what do you want to know?
37042Well, what have you found?
37042Well, what then, sir?
37042Well, what then?
37042Well, what would you, Master Pycroft?
37042Well, what''s the harm in that?
37042Were you requested to take back an answer?
37042What are they doing with her?
37042What are you going to do with me?
37042What are you going to do?
37042What are you?
37042What black box?
37042What church?
37042What commands?
37042What danger, young sir?
37042What did it say?
37042What did she there?
37042What did you see?
37042What do you know of the man who sent me?
37042What do you mean, father?
37042What do you mean?
37042What do you mean?
37042What do you think the king will do with him?
37042What do you wish?
37042What evidence have you whereby you can prove your innocence?
37042What good will it do?
37042What hath happened to her?
37042What hath she done?
37042What have these questions to do with the crime of which I am accused?
37042What have you in your mind?
37042What have you to say?
37042What is she to you?
37042What is that?
37042What is the house noted for?
37042What is the meaning of this?
37042What is the name of the priest?
37042What is your name?
37042What is your reason for believing that?
37042What kind of a woman?
37042What mean you, young malapert?
37042What mean you?
37042What of that? 37042 What other things?"
37042What parish were you in?
37042What provisions?
37042What say men in London town?
37042What shall I gain?
37042What shall we do with him?
37042What sights?
37042What talk?
37042What then?
37042What things?
37042What was his father''s oath worth? 37042 What was the name of the miser?"
37042What were they like?
37042What will you drink?
37042What would you do if you were in my place, father?
37042What would you have had me do?
37042What''s o''clock, good dame?
37042What, Roland?
37042What, from the county gaol?
37042What, mix with the other prisoners?
37042What, towards the prison?
37042What, you do not answer me? 37042 What?
37042What?
37042When and where is the trial to be?
37042When did the parson go up?
37042When was this?
37042When were such commands given?
37042Where is he? 37042 Where is he?
37042Where is it, if it exists?
37042Where is it?
37042Where is it?
37042Where is it?
37042Where is she?
37042Where is what?
37042Where is who gone?
37042Where was this?
37042Where were you at the time?
37042Where were you then?
37042Where?
37042Which way would you go?
37042Which would you rather I became?
37042Whither do you lead me?
37042Whither go you, dame?
37042Whither?
37042Who am I?
37042Who among the living hath he hanged?
37042Who are the teachers of the Church?
37042Who are their worships on the bench?
37042Who are you and where go you?
37042Who are you, and where go you?
37042Who are you?
37042Who could find us here, Master Roland?
37042Who goes there?
37042Who hath he sent?
37042Who is he?
37042Who is there?
37042Who is there?
37042Who is there?
37042Who is this woman called Constance?
37042Who is this?
37042Who knows?
37042Who told thee?
37042Who''s to tell you?
37042Who?
37042Who?
37042Whose wife is she then?
37042Why did he send thee to find out if there was any truth in the lying story that his Majesty married the wench Lucy Walters?
37042Why did you do this?
37042Why do I go up to the old house in Pycroft woods?
37042Why do you laugh?
37042Why do you think so?
37042Why is it wrong?
37042Why not?
37042Why not?
37042Why should I see Master Wellwood?
37042Why should you do it?
37042Why should you?
37042Why then have you been made happy?
37042Why would you not conform?
37042Why, do you think the king will relent?
37042Why, what did they see?
37042Why, what hath he done?
37042Why, what have I done?
37042Why, what is the matter?
37042Why, you think I am a footpad?
37042Why? 37042 Why?
37042Why? 37042 Why?
37042Why? 37042 Why?"
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Wife or maid, who is she?
37042Will it please you to pass on?
37042Will the eldest son of Charles I ever reward an honest man? 37042 Will ye''a''more, young master?"
37042Will you be pleased to pay my humble respects to Sir William, and to tell him that I only seek to do my duty?
37042Will you not promise to send for me if you need me?
37042Will you show me to the best inn the town affords?
37042Will you stand here?
37042Would you do this?
37042Yes, but you know nothing of those who live at the house?
37042You are not afraid, Constance?
37042You are not angry with me, are you?
37042You are not one that fears the devil, young master?
37042You are still determined to enter this old house?
37042You are sure you''ve searched him thoroughly?
37042You are then an Independent preacher?
37042You be from London, young master?
37042You believe the old man hath it?
37042You can take me outside these prison walls?
37042You can take your oath to this?
37042You could take your oath on this, Albermarle?
37042You defy me, eh?
37042You desire not to harm me?
37042You desire to help me?
37042You do not know my name-- nor his name?
37042You do not know? 37042 You fancy you are in love with her?"
37042You fear?
37042You have a friend who will help you to- morrow night?
37042You have heard of the Welsh girl, Lucy Walters?
37042You have heard?
37042You have not seen a woman leading two little children, have you?
37042You have seen it? 37042 You have seen it?"
37042You have spent your life in idleness?
37042You hear what the clerk saith?
37042You knew of this when I arrived at Dover?
37042You know French then?
37042You know her hiding- place?
37042You know nothing about me beyond what you have said?
37042You know of what I am accused now?
37042You know where this maid''s sister is?
37042You love books then?
37042You mean that your pursuers were such fools?
37042You mean the gentleman who rode a grey horse with a grey feather in his hat, and carried a jewelled hilted sword?
37042You mean the new king''s brother?
37042You say she hath escaped?
37042You say you can prove that you were not in London at the time of the attempted murder?
37042You say you can prove this?
37042You say you did this?
37042You say you heard the noise yourself?
37042You say you saw this contract?
37042You see that stile there?
37042You speak of the Duke of York?
37042You still persist in going?
37042You swear this?
37042You think you will gain the favour of the king?
37042You were married, were you not, on the 15th day of January, to Sir Charles Denman?
37042You will not tell me where your sister is?
37042You will then be twenty on your next birthday?
37042You will, and who are you?
37042You wish me to promise not to learn the secret of your life, to seek to know nothing more about you than I know now?
37042You would seek to place the-- the boy on the throne?
37042Young Master Rashcliffe is better, eh?
37042Your age?
37042Your father''s house? 37042 Your name is Mistress Constance Leslie, daughter of one John Leslie, who is by right of descent a baronet, although he useth not his title?"
37042Your name, worshipful master, what might your name be?
37042Your name, young master?
37042''If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?''
37042A ROMANCE WEAPONS OF MYSTERY MISTRESS NANCY MOLESWORTH THE BIRTHRIGHT: A ROMANCE AND SHALL TRELAWNEY DIE?
37042AND SHALL TRELAWNEY DIE?
37042Ah, who knows?
37042Am I Elijah Pycroft come to life again?
37042And I believed that he had done this, else why was I treated differently from all others who were immured within those grim walls?
37042And besides-- will not this drag him down, and lift me up?
37042And can they, ah, can they?"
37042And did I not trust you to make a wise use of your knowledge?
37042And have they not been drinking the king''s health, even as I have?"
37042And more, whither had they gone?
37042And then what would your swords and pistols avail, my young bantam?"
37042And this among others: If my father, and Katharine Harcomb, and Lucy Walters''mother had heard of Pycroft Hall, and of Elijah Pycroft, why not others?
37042And was this woman the one who had been associated with him?
37042And what connection had he with the person to whom Katharine Harcomb had referred?
37042And what favour dost thou ask?"
37042And what is true religion?
37042And what would you?
37042And why should I seek to rescue a woman from prison who thought so little of my help that she had treated my offer with but little respect?
37042Anything would be safe here, eh?
37042Are you going to the trial to- morrow?"
37042Are you here for anything like statecraft?"
37042Art thou not my own son?
37042As a witch?
37042As for the Puritans, could you play the knave in order to gain their favour?
37042At this I was silent, for in truth what could I say?
37042Ay, and what happened then?
37042Ay, and what will befall you?"
37042Ay, and you saw the pretty Constance too, did you?
37042Ay, but who is the judge that would dare to anger me?"
37042Because-- but what is that to you?
37042Besides, might not the woman have succeeded?
37042Besides, think you that James, Duke of York, would be idle?
37042Besides, what report should I have to give to my father, the man who knew no fear and who would be ashamed of a son who believed in old wives''fables?
37042Besides, who was he, and what was his relation to this woman?
37042Besides, why should you?
37042But ca n''t you be religious in the right way, go to church regularly, and drink your ale in moderation?"
37042But did you not see him go away with Master Sturgeon?"
37042But even if he doth not, and Charles were to come back, would such as I be benefited?
37042But for the Word of Life I could not bear my troubles, and who am I that I should keep it from others?"
37042But how did you escape them?"
37042But how have you fared, good wife?"
37042But how?
37042But say, what are we to do with this young jackanapes?"
37042But stay, tell me who you are?
37042But tell me,"she cried, and it seemed as though she had remembered something else,"can you get away in safety?
37042But the woman, who was she?
37042But there is the other matter; tell me what you know concerning that?"
37042But was he?
37042But what happened to her afterwards?
37042But what hath happened?
37042But what of that?
37042But what of that?
37042But what were the means she had used?
37042But what would that mean?
37042But where is that true Protestant religion to be found?
37042But who shall say they have heard no word from James Stuart?"
37042But why had he sent her?
37042But why should it displease me?"
37042By what means did you obtain knowledge of these things?"
37042CHAPTER XIX THE SCENE AT THE PARISH CHURCH"What place is this?"
37042Can I be sure you will tell me what I want to know?
37042Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?
37042Come, Master Rashcliffe, can you tell us where Mistress Constance''s sister is?
37042Could I be silent when God had commanded me to preach?
37042Could you mimic their pious whine, and curse both bishops and Prayer- book?"
37042Did I not note his looks of uneasiness, and did not the inquiries I made concerning him lead me to place men along the roads to London?
37042Did he seek to find the king''s marriage contract as well as I?
37042Did the thought that I was near give her comfort or help?
37042Did they not kill the king''s father?
37042Did this man know aught of what had been told me?
37042Did you bid good- bye to all you hold most dear?"
37042Did you see her there?"
37042Do you also say that it is not she who hath attempted the life of General Monk?"
37042Do you go to church?"
37042Do you know that for three days following I have dreamt that I shall have a youth, brave and strong and wise, like you, who shall be my friend?
37042Do you know this place, Master Roland?
37042Do you know what it would cost to be my friend?
37042Do you know where you are?
37042Do you know?"
37042Do you mind when John Bunyan was tried?
37042Do you realize that, Master Rashcliffe?
37042Do you think Charles Stuart would take no steps to punish the man who gave birth to such a lie?"
37042Do you think I would be here else?
37042Do you think he would remember that I, Philip Rashcliffe, am impoverished by fighting for his father?
37042Do you think that Charles Stuart would ever we d such as she?"
37042Do you think you''ll ever see daylight again, Master Roland?"
37042Dost thou know where this sister of thine is now?"
37042Every house is watched; besides, how can she get meat to eat?"
37042For myself I care not, but I grieve for my wife and children, for what will they do without house and home?"
37042For what could I do?
37042For what purpose did you seek to set this maid at liberty when she was first put into Bedford Gaol?"
37042For what saith her father?
37042For what was she dressed like, think you?
37042For who are the king''s enemies?
37042For who was it then?
37042For who was the old man of Pycroft?
37042From London?
37042From whence come you, master?"
37042From whom did you hear of it in the first place?"
37042General Monk is now Duke of Albermarle, is he not?"
37042H.]"How old is the king''s son?"
37042Had he come hither to find me, and being unable to do so had he been stricken with fear?
37042Had she told you that she was innocent of the charge laid against her?"
37042Hath a woman come to your father''s house this day?"
37042Hath any law been passed against the Presbyterians or Puritans or Dissenters?
37042Have I not told you that I have been over- busy to- night?"
37042Have you a sister?"
37042Have you any suspicion where she is?"
37042Have you by chance ever visited this neighbourhood before?"
37042Have you heard about the king''s oath?"
37042Have you not heard it is haunted?
37042Have you, Master Roland Rashcliffe, discovered aught concerning this supposed marriage contract between the king and Lucy Walters?"
37042He stood still for a minute without speaking, then he said quietly--"And have you heard aught concerning the probable fate of this maiden?"
37042How came you to find out this place?
37042How can he, seeing the life he lives?
37042How can she be?
37042How can you call that a church?"
37042How could I doubt after the way she had sobbed out her love for me in Master John Day''s cottage?
37042How could I doubt it when for me she had defied the king?
37042How could I?
37042How could he help it?
37042How could it be otherwise?
37042How could she?
37042How could she?
37042How did you hear of her imprisonment?"
37042How do I know that you are not some other man, one perhaps a thousand times more dangerous?"
37042I asked,"and where is it now?"
37042I cried,"hath he been put to death?"
37042I was silent, for what in truth could I say?
37042I was silent, for why should I speak?
37042If I had been led to try and obtain power over the king might not others?
37042If I had not given you my name, where would you be now?"
37042If Monk was killed, Lambert would have power-- you follow, Master Roland?
37042If he confesses to the marriage, then----""Do you dare to doubt that my Lucy was a lawful wedded wife?"
37042If he was, who am I?
37042If she were captured again, should I not, by the possession of this precious document, have means in my hand whereby I could render her service?
37042If this be done at this time, what will be done when the hosts of Belial have passed their laws?
37042If you had a sister, bound to obey a bad man, as his wife, would she not be justified in having evil in her heart?"
37042Instead, what dost thou do?
37042Is a man likely to do aught but for self?
37042Is he gone?"
37042Is it not about that time, young master?"
37042Is it the home of a band of robbers?"
37042Is not the house a good one?"
37042Is that not so, my young springald?"
37042Is that the talk in London town?"
37042Is that you, Master Roland?"
37042Is the horse in the stable?"
37042Is there aught in the way of information we can give you, Master Rashcliffe?"
37042Is your sister as fair as you?"
37042Know you I am a constable and carry a truncheon?
37042Know you aught of him?"
37042Know you that you do wrong in making me angry?
37042Know you?"
37042Knowing what you know of me, do you wish to endanger yourself for me?"
37042Master Roland; but Master Roland what?"
37042May I take your arm, Master Rashcliffe?"
37042Might not my own quest be associated with hers?
37042Might not this be the same woman?
37042Moreover, how could I help this woman-- for this I had determined to do-- unless I knew the reasons of her obedience?
37042Moreover, was it not I who had Master John Leslie watched?
37042Moreover, what might be the significance of her desire to go to Bedford?
37042My earnestness impressed him too, for he turned somewhat hurriedly to me and said--"Have I not said that you may be a youth worth considering?
37042Nay, I rejoiced in them: who would not, when the fate of the country depended on my success?
37042No?
37042Now had you not better go back and leave me?"
37042Now then, what led you to go to Pycroft?"
37042Now, how could I do that?
37042Now, why not be as you were before?
37042Now, will you tell me?"
37042Of course they be fools, for why can not they swallow their scruples and be done with it?
37042Oh, his father fought for the Royalists in the time of the king''s father, did he?"
37042Shall we doubt the Lord, dear friends?
37042She mumbled some words which I could not understand; then looking up at me, she said,"And who may you be, young master?"
37042Since God hath led you to deliver me from Bedford Gaol, even when hope had died within my heart, will He forsake me now?"
37042Suppose I tell you what you ask, and you have sucked the orange dry-- what then?
37042Suppose he gives you back our lands, and a place in the nation''s life, are we to keep quiet concerning this thing?"
37042Suppose the ignorant fools which inhabit this countryside cry out for my death?
37042Tell me what you want?"
37042Tell me where?"
37042Tell me, I pray thee, how thou didst accomplish this, and how thou didst so long evade thy pursuers?"
37042Tell me, did the king speak to you?"
37042Tell me, do you expect to win the fair Constance''s love?"
37042That he hath not sold himself to the devil for naught, eh?
37042That his bow hath many strings, eh?
37042The question is, Master Roland, will you undertake the work of bringing it hither?"
37042The question was, who was to do the deed?
37042Then turning to me, he said in a hoarse whisper,"Listen I do you not hear them coming?
37042Then with a flash as quick as light she said,"Do you boast of gentle blood, young sir?"
37042Then you have seen the new king?"
37042Then, when Charles was beheaded, could I allow my son to fight under Cromwell?"
37042Therefore think you I make terms with a nameless boy?"
37042Therefore what is there to tell you further?"
37042Think you that the new king will forget the name of those who killed his father?
37042This she said, as I thought, involuntarily, for she quickly went on:"How do you know I have been sent?
37042This, however, seemed impossible, for how could she, who must keep in constant hiding, be able to help others?
37042Was it not natural, therefore, that some understanding existed between them?
37042Was it not possible that she had escaped thither, and was still in hiding?
37042Was not her place at his side?
37042Was not this mighty clever on my part?"
37042Was not this the place to which Constance had flown?
37042Was that motive fear or interest?
37042Was this an empty threat, or was there some meaning behind it?
37042Was this man Sir Charles?
37042Well, and what game are you playing, young master?"
37042Well, that may happen any day, and then what shall we see?
37042Well, what then?
37042Well, what then?
37042Well, what were his name and identity to me?
37042Were these men agents of the duke, and had they discovered that I had found out where the marriage contract was?
37042What charge have you against me?"
37042What did all this mean, and what had I to do?
37042What did it mean?
37042What did she tell thee?"
37042What did the parson say on Sunday?
37042What did this mean?
37042What did you discover at the lonely house, and what did you bring away?"
37042What do you mean?"
37042What do you think the king will say?
37042What have you been doing with yourself since?"
37042What if he awoke, and discovered that I had locked him in his room?
37042What in truth could I say?
37042What is the purpose you have in your mind?
37042What is the son''s oath worth?
37042What is your name?
37042What led her to Folkestone, and what connection had she with the old man with whom I had had such strange experiences at Pycroft Hall?
37042What led him to help the girl out of prison?"
37042What matters whether the thing is a forgery or no?
37042What saith the king?
37042What say you, Your Grace?
37042What then becomes of the old man who haunts it through the night?
37042What was it?
37042What was the link that bound the woman I had accompanied hither with this strange old creature?
37042What was the meaning of it all?
37042What was the meaning of it?
37042What was the meaning of the other woman entering?
37042What was the secret of that old house?
37042What will he do?"
37042What would you do with it?
37042What, I reflected, if Master Sturgeon was not as drunk as he appeared?
37042Where can I send?"
37042Where can we find them?
37042Where had she been all these years?
37042Where have you seen it?"
37042Where is he?"
37042Where is she imprisoned?"
37042Where is she?"
37042Where is this Puritan sister of thine?"
37042Where is your horse?"
37042Where was he now?
37042Where?"
37042Where?"
37042Whither can you go if I cease to protect you?
37042Who am I?
37042Who are you, and why came you to Bedford?
37042Who dares ask me questions?
37042Who hath done this?
37042Who is Monk?
37042Who is he?
37042Who is he?
37042Who schemed to bring him back?
37042Who was that old man?
37042Who was this old man?
37042Whoever dreamed of gold being found five miles from Folkestone?
37042Why did he live there all alone?
37042Why did the man send her hither?
37042Why did you go there?"
37042Why had I allowed my opportunities to slip through my hands?
37042Why had I come to a town of which I knew nothing?
37042Why had she come hither, and who was that other woman who had come into the room?
37042Why hath she been captured and brought hither?"
37042Why hath the warrant been issued?
37042Why should I seek to befriend the wife of another man?
37042Why should the brother of the king desire to see me?
37042Why think ye that the young King''s mother, the old dowager queen, would have taken the boy if there was no marriage?"
37042Why where have you lived, young master?
37042Why?
37042Why?
37042Why?"
37042Will this be an augury of my reign?"
37042Will you answer?"
37042Will you shield me from him?"
37042Will you, Constance?"
37042Wo n''t you drink, young master?
37042Would I have him made a sour- faced follower of old Nol, learning to make pious speeches in order to gain promotion?
37042Would I have him taught to cry''down with the Prayer Book''?
37042Would I have my son become a psalm- singing hypocrite?
37042Would he not cry aloud, and arouse some sleepy official, who would be doubtless within call?
37042Would he, having given such commands, depart at midnight leaving her alone and helpless?
37042Would not the very fact that I knew the hiding place cause the old man to remove it?
37042Would the new king see to it that my estates were restored to me?
37042Would you go to the king, and say,''Look, here is the marriage contract between you and Lucy Walters''?
37042Would you like to see it?
37042Would you mind taking my arm, young master?
37042Would you not?"
37042You are the sole master here?"
37042You believe you know where she is?"
37042You can call me Father Solomon; what may I call you?"
37042You found out that the royal arm can strike far, eh?
37042You have heard of nought that took place after the night when you behaved like a fool before the king, and were sent hither?"
37042You know French, you say?"
37042You learnt that you can not hunt in royal domains without being bitten by the keeper''s dogs?
37042You may do your worst, but I can gain the ear of the king, and then-- pouf!--what can you do?"
37042You say you have no one above you in this gaol, Master Sturgeon?
37042You say you saw the woman; can you assert that it was those pretty hands which held the bloody knife?"
37042You see those trees?
37042You think crowns are played for with plans no weightier than boys''dice, do you?
37042You understand that?
37042You will promise these two things?"
37042Youth and age, strength and wisdom together, what can withstand it?"
37042and more than all, why had she chosen my father and myself as the men to whom she could disclose this momentous secret?
37042do you not hear them?"
37042he cried, as I stood before him,"hast thou heard aught of the conversation between me and this maid?"
37042he cried,"you discovered that you could do nought without discovery, eh?
37042he made answer,"and you have seen that I am a man of no mean import in the town?
37042he replied solemnly,"not many; besides, doth not the king ride to London to- day?
37042he went on,"Did you commend your soul to your Maker?
37042is your business of import?"
37042replied old Adam;"it ca n''t be she?"
37042she asked;"but did you not tell me that you spoke the French tongue?"
37042what hath happened to her?"
37042what is that?"
37042what were her motives in seeking out this mystery?
37042where can we find it?
28039But Theodore is not a weekly; why did he not come to the Convention and tell us what he thought?
28039But what is we to do? 28039 But would you have woman hold elections like ours"?
28039But,I said,"did n''t he know how black you were before he married you?"
28039But,said Ting,"what is the special object of your preaching Christianity?"
28039Can you let me stay anywhere?
28039How many have you?
28039Is she to be taxed in South Carolina to support the aristocracy?
28039Shall Maria pay a tax and have no voice?
28039Shall this softer, gentler, more fragile creature be the equal of the ruder, stouter man?
28039Well, dare you?
28039Well, then, why do you try to convert the women?
28039Well,said I,"why do n''t he support the children?"
28039What does it mean? 28039 What have you done?"
28039What next?
28039What relations?
28039Why has he left you?
28039Will you walk into my parlor, said the spider to the fly?
28039Would you have a woman participate in the scenes preliminary to an election?
28039''Who has we but the Lord and you?''
28039''s misapprehension of his rights justify his act?
28039..."What then, is the next step,"he asks,"in the progress of reconstruction?"
280392. Who may act as attorneys?
280397: Secondly, who are capable of becoming agents?
28039A LADY: I want to ask the lady who just spoke if the women of the Revolution found it necessary to form Loyal Leagues?
28039A LADY: If the men would give themselves, why not freely?
28039A MAN IN THE AUDIENCE: The question was asked, as I entered this house,"Is it right for women to meet here and intermeddle in our public affairs?"
28039A VOICE: Allow me to inquire if men have a right to vote on this question?
28039A VOICE:--Is that not all true about black women?
28039A VOICE:--What are they doing?
28039A change might come-- even to them, but if it did not, ought they not to pity other women whose situation was less comfortable than their own?
28039A lady of society asked me,"Are you in favor of woman''s rights?"
28039A lady says to me,"What more can be expected of women if men fail to some extent in our military affairs?"
28039A thousand times in the last years, in this struggle for bread, have I been asked,"Why do n''t you let your sons support you?"
28039Again, if the right to share in the joint government is not inherent, from whence does it come?
28039Again, in the trial of the inspectors of election, why were both judge and jurymen so merciful?
28039Amendment apply to her?
28039Amendment declaring that it shall not be denied on account of either race, color, or previous condition of servitude, to be regarded?
28039Amendment speaks of all persons, etc., and declares them to be citizens, it means all male persons and unmarried females?
28039Amendment, are qualified to hold office?
28039Amendment, by what possible authority are they voting by hundreds of thousands throughout this country?
28039Amendment, the privilege of earning a livelihood by practicing at the bar of a judicial court?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendments secured suffrage to women as well as to colored men, who would be willing to admit that they desired to obtain suffrage through trickery?
28039Amendments, in some way or other, the colored man came into possession of this right of suffrage; and the question is, where did he get it?
28039Among these is the question,"Are women equal with men?"
28039And I say to the oldest daughter,"Can you shoot?"
28039And are there any intrinsic necessary conditions that go to constitute liberty in society?
28039And do you know why?
28039And has not also the moral and spiritual nature its inalienable rights?
28039And how shall provision be made for us unless we make it ourselves by voting for it?
28039And how shall we acquire this unless we are taught?
28039And how shall we be taught unless provision is made for us?
28039And if a man may divest himself of this right, what right is sacred from his renunciation?
28039And if a woman is bad enough to commit a heinous crime, must we absurdly assume that women are too good to know that there is such a crime?
28039And if exemptions which appertain to males may be recognized as valid, why not similar exemptions for like reason when applied to females?
28039And if it be either of these, shall we say that education has unsphered and unsexed her?
28039And if men can not live in this country in safe homes, except their neighbor men are enfranchised, can they live without enfranchised women any more?
28039And if not, is there any reason why she should not do directly what she does indirectly?
28039And if suffrage was necessarily one of the absolute rights of citizenship, why confine the operation of the limitation to male inhabitants?
28039And if that be so, how can their admission rightfully depend upon the majority?
28039And is not their political subjection as absolute as was that of the African slaves?
28039And is there a man who does not know, that when questions of justice and humanity are blended, woman''s instinct is better than man''s judgment?
28039And now, let me ask you, what are these men sent here for and who sent them?
28039And now, may a woman be an artist?
28039And shall an American woman shrink from her duty when there is so much power in her hands for good?
28039And shall it not also be pre- eminently so with woman?
28039And shall we say that a woman may properly command an army, and yet can not vote for a Common Councilman in the city of Washington?
28039And should not the ballot- box be as respectable, and as respected, and as sacred as the church?
28039And the great question of to- day is, How shall work find leisure, and in leisure knowledge and refinement?
28039And upon what principle ought they to be asked?
28039And what grew there?
28039And what has the great little Napoleon done?
28039And when I say,"Is it so?"
28039And where can there be a virtuous and happy home unless a Christian marriage shall have consecrated it?
28039And who does not know that they govern us?
28039And who, by common consent, is the educator of the world?
28039And why now, and why not ten, fifteen, or twenty years ago?
28039And why should not even Republican government take to itself other modes of administration without infraction of its fundamental liberties?
28039And why so?
28039And why?
28039And why?
28039And will our force all fail, having done that?
28039And would the gentleman also contend that a lack of power to cut off a thing not in existence also creates the thing?
28039Are lawyers, merchants, tailors, cobblers, bootblacks less skilled in their specialties because they vote?
28039Are not all our chief possessions held in common?
28039Are not these interests equal to those of the negro and of his race?
28039Are not women as much interested in good government as men?
28039Are not women people?
28039Are not"the truths as self- evident"to- day to the intelligent public as they were a century ago?
28039Are politicians so pure, politics so exalted, the polls so immaculate, men so moral, that woman would pollute the ballot and contaminate the voters?
28039Are the instincts of woman so low that unless man puts up a bar, she will immediately fall into man''s obscene conversation and disreputable habits?
28039Are the men alone to say?
28039Are there not large classes even among men in this country who are exempt from service in our armies for physical incapacity and for other reasons?
28039Are there seventeen students in Harvard College who take mathematical astronomy, do you think?"
28039Are there two laws in this country, one for the negro, and another for woman?
28039Are these to be excluded from the polls?
28039Are they capacities merely?
28039Are they capacities merely?
28039Are they degraded?
28039Are they lacking in the necessary intelligence?
28039Are they not also rights?
28039Are they not also rights?
28039Are they not shown to be subjects of the other half, who are the sovereigns?
28039Are we and future generations to be ever imprisoned in the uncouth alternative of monarchical or democratic forms as they now obtain?
28039Are we only a handful?
28039Are we sure that he, once entrenched in all his inalienable rights, may not be an added power to hold us at bay?
28039Are we to have no progress in the modes of government among men?
28039Are women not Saxons?
28039Are women politically oppressed that they need the ballot for their protection?
28039Are you a rich man, afraid of your money?
28039Are you to compel wickedness and crime?
28039Are you to force prostitution and wrong upon those people by these unjust laws?
28039Are you willing to believe, women, that your girls are sixteen times less valuable than the boys?
28039As I asked one of my friends one day,"What are you rebelling for?
28039As Milton so grandly says in Paradise Lost: What though the field be lost?
28039As capital has ever ground labor to the dust, is it just and generous to disfranchise the poor and ignorant because they are so?
28039As to her not being protected, what lady has ever said that her rights were not protected because she had not the right of suffrage?
28039At that time, in an article entitled,"Can a Judge Direct a Verdict of Guilty?
28039Ay, sir, did it not only respond to a demand which was there pressed, but did it not imply a duty, a pledge which this party ought to redeem?
28039Aye, more, that a principle He has made true, it is not safe not to apply?
28039Because a man is a father, must he needs be nothing else?
28039Because it is not a natural right, is it any less unjust to deprive a large part of the people of it?
28039Because some women are mothers, shall all women concentrate every thought in that direction?
28039Because the freedman has that talisman in his hands which the politician is looking after?
28039Because they have learned our Constitution?
28039Before the art of printing, were all men fools?
28039But I ask you, to- day,"Is it safe to bring in a million black men to vote, and not safe to bring in your mother, your wife, and your sister to vote?"
28039But are women, who are not infants, ever included in this category?
28039But at what age has any nation of any period or place become wise, rich, or even strong; to say nothing of good?
28039But did any revolution or any special trouble grow out of this recognition of woman''s right?
28039But does this concession belittle the importance of woman''s political rights?
28039But have they done as they promised?
28039But have women, then, no sphere as women?
28039But how could the amendment be written without the word"male"?
28039But how is it with men?
28039But how was it to be obtained?
28039But if she can make two dollars to his one, allowing him to carry out his part of the appointments of life, why should not she do it?
28039But if we are to have a new general in his place, we may ask, what has become of Sigel?
28039But is a self- made woman less honorable than a self- made man?
28039But is it enough, if the work for which the war is_ now_ prosecuted is not accomplished?
28039But is it true that the equality of man and woman would not be useful to society?
28039But it is asked, why make this disturbance?
28039But it is asked: What do you want of the ballot?
28039But it may be asked: If this be so, why was not the question sooner raised?
28039But it may be said, if the States had no power to abridge the right of suffrage, why the necessity of prohibiting them?
28039But suppose that a majority do not want the ballot, how does that affect the rights of the minority who do want it?
28039But the question remains, What relief can be granted?
28039But the war being over, and a new million of black males being added to the many million white males as rulers of the land, what do we find to- day?
28039But they can load all the four rifles, and he can not fire half as fast as they can load; and I say to the mother,"Can you shoot?"
28039But what are compromises, and what is laid down in those constitutions?
28039But what does election day do for him?
28039But what great reformatory movement was ever treated any better at the outset?
28039But what is an organ played with the feet, if all the upper part is left unused?
28039But what political agency has righted so many?
28039But what practical use will the ballot be to women?
28039But what put the dram- bottle out of the home?
28039But what was the result to the country?
28039But what were the rights?
28039But what word can I speak that will not be better spoken?
28039But what would it be if every foreigner and every ignorant man could not go out on election day, and prove that he was as good as anybody?
28039But when her duties called her there, who ever found her unfaithful to her trust?
28039But when they came to do that, they then asked themselves,"Where are our good right hands?"
28039But when was the consent of woman ever asked to one single act on all the statute books?
28039But who ever heard of a right being conferred by omission?
28039But who shall decide as to"spears?"
28039But who would be willing to banish from the literary world to- day such names as Browning, Hemans, Stowe, and Gage?
28039But why exclude women?
28039But would you, seriously, I am asked, would you drag women down into the mire of politics?
28039But yet I will descend a step lower; and doth not our law, temporal and spiritual, admit of women to be executrixes and administratrixes?
28039But, shall we have a woman for President?
28039But, the objectors continue, would you have women hold office?
28039But, to look at it seriously, what is the defect of this statement?
28039But,"said Sojourner,"where is Theodore Tilton''s paper?"
28039By Judge Selden:_ Q._ Did they advise the registry or did they not?
28039By what right, then, except that of mere force, do you deny me a voice in the laws which I am forced to obey?"
28039C. Storrs, a United States Commissioner, in the city of Rochester, when her case was examined?
28039CAN A WOMAN PRACTICE LAW OR HOLD ANY OFFICE IN ILLINOIS?
28039CHIEF- JUSTICE-- Coverture then incapacitated a woman from voting?
28039CONKLING.--May I ask a question?
28039Ca n''t get rum?
28039Can a ballot in the hand of woman, and dignity on her brow, more unsex her than do a scepter and a crown?
28039Can any one give a good reason why there should be such a difference between the rights of the widow and the widower?
28039Can any one tell a good reason why?
28039Can any one tell a good reason why?
28039Can any one tell me a good reason why?
28039Can it be said that the people acquire their privileges from the instrument that they themselves establish?
28039Can it be that any colored person feels like that?"
28039Can men do less than empty their pockets for the good of the race?
28039Can not they see, also, that two entire opposing civilizations are mustered into the conflict?
28039Can sex either qualify or disqualify a chooser, one of the people to cast a ballot for President?
28039Can such accusers look each other in the face and not laugh?
28039Can that be abridged which does not exist?
28039Can there be a more direct recognition of a right?
28039Can this court say that married women have no rights that are to be respected?
28039Can you Republicans so utterly stultify yourselves, can you so entirely work against yourselves, as to refuse us a Declaratory Law?
28039Can you longer deny us the protection we ask?
28039Can you think of any model so good as the divine model set before us in the family?
28039Could a State disfranchise and deprive of the right to a vote all citizens who have red hair; or all citizens under six feet in height?
28039Could ideas of justice, and liberty, and equality be more grandly and beautifully expressed than in the preamble to our Federal Constitution?
28039Cross- examination by Judge Selden:_ Q._ Prior to the election, was there a registry of voters in that district made?
28039Deprive a man or woman of that, and of what use is your habeas corpus act, of what use your law of penalties or acquittal?
28039Did Elizabeth unsex herself?
28039Did Southern slaveholders ever understand the humiliations of slavery to a proud man like Frederick Douglass?
28039Did any brave Englishman who rode into the jaws of death at Balaklava serve England on the field more truly than Florence Nightingale?
28039Did any despot ever say anything else?
28039Did his loyalty in the army count for more than her educational work in teaching the people sound principles of government?
28039Did it respond to no demand?
28039Did it show the wisdom of British Conservatism that it waited to grant the Reform bill of 1832 until England hung upon the edge of civil war?
28039Did man put woman in the parlor?
28039Did not Joan of Arc save France when the king had fled, and the armies were scattered, and English soldiers did their will in all that land?
28039Did that mean nothing?
28039Did the children, fully armed and equipped for the battle of life, spring, Minerva- like, from the brains of their fathers?
28039Did the coarse, low- bred master ever doubt his capacity to govern the negro better than he could govern himself?
28039Did the defendant vote in good faith in that belief?
28039Did the men of that period become mere satellites of the dinner- pot, the wash- tub, or the spinning- wheel?
28039Did the negro''s rough services in camp and battle outweigh the humanitarian labors of woman in all departments of government?
28039Did the sexes change places?
28039Did they say,"Go away from here; this is no place for women; you will unsex yourself?"
28039Did we wait for emancipation until the slaves petitioned to be free?
28039Did woman put man in that bar room?
28039Did you ever analyze a voter-- hold him up and see what he was?
28039Did you tell me that Mr. Greeley is a delegate to the Constitutional Convention?"
28039Do cow- boys, hostlers, pot- house politicians ever doubt their capacity to prescribe woman''s sphere better than she could herself?
28039Do n''t know?
28039Do n''t you perceive, then, the importance of the elective franchise?
28039Do n''t you represent her?
28039Do not all great thoughts come from the heart?
28039Do not moral principles, like water, seek a common level?
28039Do not the American people vote in this Senate to- day on this question?
28039Do our intelligent and refined women desire to plunge into the vortex of political excitement and agitation?
28039Do they desert their workshops, their plows, and offices, to pass their time at the polls?
28039Do they not vote in the House of Representatives?
28039Do they not, in that event, occupy politically exactly the position which the learned Chief- Justice assigns to the African slaves?
28039Do we expect any massive concentration of results?
28039Do we expect the whole- hearted sympathy of any monarchy?
28039Do we find any recognition of inequality of rights?
28039Do we not claim that here all men and women are nobles-- all heirs apparent to the throne?
28039Do you believe women should vote?
28039Do you deprive them of the ballot?
28039Do you know, my friends, what will take place if something decisive is not soon done?
28039Do you mean me, General?
28039Do you not know, Theodore, that we have vowed never to go disfranchised into the Kingdom of Heaven?
28039Do you point me to the Cabinet?
28039Do you say that Northern Republicans would not accept such a proposition?
28039Do you suppose if they had ballots they would not make their voices heard here and get for the same work the same pay?
28039Do you think the spirit of our society is wholly different?
28039Do you think we can disembarrass ourselves of history?
28039Do you, said she, own your own persons, according to the law of God, or do you not?
28039Does Congress intend to sustain State Rights?
28039Does any lawyer doubt my statement of the legal status of married women?
28039Does any man say that there is any sense or any justice in that distinction?
28039Does any one question whether Lucy Stone may speak?
28039Does any such principle of exclusion apply to them?
28039Does domestic peace exist in the exact ratio of a woman''s inferiority to the man she calls her husband?
28039Does he believe in the absolute right of women to vote?
28039Does he give it to his slave?
28039Does he not here recognize the enunciation of a principle as directly opposed to liberty as even Judge Hunt''s control of jury trial?
28039Does it mean the male freedman only, or does it mean the freedwoman also?
28039Does it not prove that there is nothing in the argument so far as it involves the question of right?
28039Does it, or does it not give to the possessor the right to vote?
28039Does it, then,"provide for the common defense,"to deny to one half the adult citizens of the republic that voice and vote?
28039Does not his republicanism revolt from such a sentiment?
28039Does some officer distinguish himself by an act of personal bravery in the army of the West?
28039Does the Constitution of the United States recognize or permit class distinctions to be made between its citizens?
28039Does the act injure her?
28039Does the creature extend rights, privileges and immunities to the creator?
28039Does the honorable gentleman think, therefore, that women only should make the laws?
28039Does the preamble look like it?
28039Does this really abrogate the servitude of the wife, and invoke in her favor the action of Congress?
28039During the Convention Lucy got a dispatch from Lawrence as follows:"Will you lecture for the Library Association?
28039During the dynasty of women and negroes, does history record any social revolution peculiar to that period?
28039EDMUNDS.--I am not asking whether I am mistaken or not; I am asking if the clause remains as it stood reported by the committee?
28039Enter any Western hotel and what do you see, General?
28039For instance, when we say"the ladies,"do we not mean them all?
28039For that reason, shall we say to a woman,"You shall not walk in the road?"
28039For what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
28039For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
28039For, what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
28039Forty years ago that conscience asked,"Do men have fair play in this country?"
28039Grew''s question-- why the_ Tribune_ does not inquire about these ignorant men who are abusing the franchise?
28039Has it come to this, that because she is a woman the defendant can not get a fair and impartial trial?
28039Has nature ordained that the lark shall rise fluttering and singing to the sun in the spring?
28039Has not each State a right to amend her own Constitution and establish a genuine republic within her own boundaries?
28039Has society been injured thereby?
28039Has the prisoner anything to say why sentence shall not be pronounced?
28039Have I not as many interests at stake as he has?
28039Have not 200,000 names been sent in to Congress already?
28039Have not petitions been already made?
28039Have not those who are training up sons and daughters an interest beyond the home, in the great outer world, where they are soon to act their part?
28039Have not"black male citizens"been heard to say they doubted the wisdom of extending the right of suffrage to women?
28039Have they been injured by mixing with the rude affairs of war in camps and among soldiers?
28039Have they not been as good wives as they were formerly?
28039Have they the means of giving their consent to it?
28039Have they, then, been battling for over thirty years for a fraction of a principle?
28039Have you heard of a State in which women and women only bear rule, and the constitution of which was made by women only?
28039Have you read the_ Herald_ too, children?
28039Having had considerable experience with officers of justice(?
28039He comes here, and what does he find?
28039Hear people say,"What will be the effect?"
28039How can man''s intellect determine what kind of legislation suits the condition of woman?
28039How can statesmen believe the Nation secure unless personal rights are held inviolable?
28039How can that form of government be republican, when one- half the people are forever deprived of all participation in its affairs?
28039How can the State deny or abridge the right of the citizen, if the citizen does not possess it?
28039How can we purify them?
28039How can you abridge a thing that does not exist?
28039How can you know it?
28039How can you know yours as women, but by obedience to the same law?
28039How could a woman be responsible for her deeds to God if somebody had control over her conscience?
28039How could anyone that had no self- government enjoy any inalienable right?
28039How could the four million negroes be made voters if the two million women were not included?
28039How could we know it but that, unconstrained by art, their winking eyes respond to that soft breath?
28039How do I know my sphere as a man, but by repelling everything that would arbitrarily restrict my choice?
28039How do they answer it?
28039How does he know?
28039How does he overtake her swift steps?
28039How goes the good fight?
28039How is it in military affairs?
28039How is it on the deck of a battle- ship?
28039How is it that our courts act in this way?
28039How is the voice of women on this subject to be heard?
28039How many of the male bipeds who do our voting are qualified to hold high offices?
28039How often have mothers governed large kingdoms, as regents, during the minority of their sons, and governed them well?
28039How shall we improve the one?
28039How stands the comparison, Aristocratic England and Democratic America?
28039How tame and bind her fiery soul?
28039How then could the defendant be lawfully deprived of the right to ask every juror if the verdict had his assent?
28039How was my presence regarded by the populace?
28039How would the honorable Senator from Massachusetts face the recent meeting of the Equal Rights Society in Philadelphia?
28039I am often jeeringly asked,"If the Constitution gives you this right, why do n''t you take it?"
28039I answer, there is an inconsiderable minority which deserve such epithets; but even if all women deserved them, who is in fault?
28039I ask honorable Senators of his faith how they are to answer those ladies there?
28039I ask the honorable Chairman of the Committee, whether he thinks that a citizen should have no vote because he has influence?
28039I ask what is our duty?
28039I ask you what sort of peace, what sort of prosperity, have we had?
28039I ask you whether the women of this country have ever given their consent to this Government?
28039I ask you, men of the Empire State, where on the footstool do you find such a class of citizens politically so degraded?
28039I can not ask you,"Is it safe to leave them in the hands of the Government or the city?"
28039I do n''t deny it, but how do you know it?
28039I have been asked"Why not wait for the settlement of the one that now fills the minds of men?
28039I have had persons say to me,"Would you, now, take your daughter and your wife, and walk down to the polls with them?"
28039I have sometimes been asked, even by sensible men,"If woman had the elective franchise, would she go to the polls to mix with rude men?"
28039I pray our opponents to tell us then what is conferred by this first section of this wonderful article, if it be not these rights?
28039I refer to this for the purpose of coming, by and by, to the question,"What ought to be done?"
28039I repeat, if they are represented, when was the choice made?
28039I said to her,"Have you no husband?"
28039I said to their shadows in another world,"Why did you leave this accursed system of slavery for us to suffer and die under?
28039I was often asked,"Why do n''t the Government pay my wife''s earnings to me?"
28039If Hindoo women could have shaped the laws of India, would widows for ages have been burned on the funeral pyres of their deceased husbands?
28039If I am asked what do women want the ballot for, I answer the question with another, what do men want it for?
28039If I am not admitted, the public will ask,''Where is Douglass?
28039If any man says to me,"Why will you agitate the woman''s question, when it is the hour for the black man?"
28039If duty requires him to go out into the world and fight its battles, who blames him, or puts a ban upon him?
28039If it does not belong to the individual whence does it come?
28039If it is a question of precedence merely, on what principle of justice or courtesy should woman yield her right of enfranchisement to the negro?
28039If it is proper that her opinion should influence a man''s vote, is there any good reason why it should not be independently expressed?
28039If it were, do you not perceive that it applies as well to infants as to adults?
28039If men can not be trusted to legislate for their own sex, how can they legislate for the opposite sex, of whose wants and needs they know nothing?
28039If not, where is the argument?
28039If seventy years be the life of a man, what should be the life of a nation?
28039If she believed she had a right to vote, and voted in reliance upon that belief, does that relieve her from the penalty?
28039If she finds the complement of her incomplete being, what more can she want?
28039If so, then did women acquire it by the same amendment?
28039If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.?
28039If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.?
28039If taxation and representation are to go hand in hand, why should they not go hand in hand with regard to the female as well as the male?
28039If that be true, why not incorporate some other element?
28039If the act of Virginia affects Ballard''s citizenship so far as respects that State, can it touch his citizenship so far as regards the United States?
28039If the framers of the Constitution meant they should not, why did they not distinctly say so?
28039If the question were put to me, If I thought the woman''s reform contrary to Christianity, would I throw it overboard?
28039If these Southern aristocrats are to be colonized, Mrs. President, do n''t you think England is the best place for them?
28039If they are capable and desirous, why not?
28039If this right of suffrage is not an individual right, from what place and body did you get it?
28039If we are given over to fashion, frivolity, and vice, does it follow that rights and privileges, duties and responsibilities will not help us?
28039If women should vote one day in the year, must every duty and function of their being be subordinated to that one act during the whole 365?
28039If you can not live in safety with irresponsible men in your midst, how can you live with irresponsible women?
28039If you vote, are you ready to fight?"
28039If, then, voting is a matter of State control alone, what authority had the United States to prosecute Susan B. Anthony?
28039In like manner, what determines the sphere of any morally responsible being, but perfect liberty of choice and liberty of development?
28039In making up His jewels at the last great day, will not the Lord say of her as of one of old,"She has loved much, and much is forgiven her?"
28039In that case would they think the time past for discussion and petition?
28039In that view of the case, is there anything to go to the jury?
28039In the first place, what has been the effect upon woman of enlarging the sphere of her influence?
28039In the light of the history of your Confederacy, can any Southerner fear to trust the women of the South with the ballot?
28039In the light of the recent action of the British Parliament, is this asking too much?
28039In the name of all womanhood, and of all manhood, I beg to know why this may not be so?
28039In the oft- repeated experiments of class and caste, who can number the nations that have risen but to fall?
28039In what way is it different?
28039Is Susan with you?
28039Is a conscription itself consistent with freedom?
28039Is a negro a man?
28039Is a woman demeaned by dropping her ballot into the box?
28039Is any one afraid of it?
28039Is he a rational, accountable man or not?
28039Is it a credit to a_ man_ to be called a professional politician?
28039Is it a mere question of privilege or immunity?
28039Is it a natural right or an acquired right?
28039Is it any reason if I do not choose to avail myself of my rights that I should be deprived of them?
28039Is it for the court to say, in advance, that it will not admit a married woman?
28039Is it graceful, I ask, to walk on one leg?
28039Is it no wrong?
28039Is it not an anomaly that the lesser rights shall be held by the Nation, the greater by the States?
28039Is it not as safe that woman should govern in the halls of national legislation as in the family and in the school?
28039Is it not because we have no voice in public affairs that Europe is on fire now?
28039Is it not our election day?
28039Is it of any importance to you whether the dram- shops be closed or not?
28039Is it on the ground of color or sex, that the black man finds greater favor in the eyes of the law than the daughters of the State?
28039Is it only stupidity, ignorance and rascality which ought to possess political power?
28039Is it right and safe that the women of this country should have a voice in its administration?
28039Is it said that she influences the man now?
28039Is it said that this right exists by virtue of State citizenship, and State laws and Constitutions?
28039Is it strange that with such foremothers we should love liberty?
28039Is it that they ought not to go to public political meetings?
28039Is it the nature of flowers to open to the south wind?
28039Is it to perfect this bill?
28039Is it to vindicate a principle in which he believes?
28039Is my honorable friend from Maine afraid of it?
28039Is n''t such a position, I ask you, humiliating enough to be called"servitude"?
28039Is not change the primal condition on which all life is permitted to exist?
28039Is not that a distinction without a difference?
28039Is not that the kind of government, sir, which we wish to propose for this State?
28039Is not the only amendment needed to Article 1st, Section 3d, to strike out the exceptions which follow"respective numbers?"
28039Is not the property of a woman as secure under this provision as that of a man?
28039Is not the wife as much interested in the preservation of property as her husband?
28039Is not this a great step in advance?
28039Is that a reason for denying the right to those who would vote?
28039Is that born again?
28039Is that not enough?
28039Is the United States a Nation?
28039Is the gentleman in favor of the amendment he has indicated?
28039Is the giving of the ballot to a foreigner who comes among us a burden so great that he should not have it imposed upon him?
28039Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens?
28039Is the_ World_ Horace Greeley''s paper?"
28039Is there any doubt now as to what"citizen"means?
28039Is there any force in that?
28039Is there any one of us who believes that?
28039Is there any reason why Mrs. Smith should be governed by a goat- head of a mayor any more than John Smith, if he could correct it?
28039Is there any reason why that should not take place?
28039Is there any reason why the emoluments of place should more than repay the labor it calls for?
28039Is there anything essentially different in such duties and the powers necessary to perform them from the functions of legislation?
28039Is there anything in this world that has so great a reputation for lawlessness as a camp?
28039Is there no part of God''s great work in providence that should lead you to be discontented with your ease and privileges until you are enfranchised?
28039Is there no radical method, no force yet untried, a power not only of skillful checks, which I do not undervalue, but of controlling character?
28039Is there no remedy?
28039Is there not a clear distinction between the regulation of a right and its destruction?
28039Is there then any natural incapacity in women to understand politics?
28039Is this an extreme view?
28039Is this no injustice?
28039Is this right of franchise a conventional arrangement, a privilege that society or government may grant or withhold at pleasure?
28039Is this what Mr. Editor of the Albany_ Law Journal_ means?
28039Is"taxation without representation"justice established?
28039It asks another question,"Do women have fair play in this country?"
28039It has been sometimes said"Can this be done?"
28039It is alleged that women are already represented by men?
28039It is asked sometimes,"Would you like to have your wife or daughter go to the polls and vote?"
28039It is sometimes said as a triumphant argument in favor of the exercise of this power,"Has not the judge the power to order a verdict of acquittal?"
28039It seems to me that the voice of God''s providence to you to- day is,"Oh messenger of mine, where are the words that I sent you to speak?
28039It was pertinently asked,"If this may be done in one instance, why not in all?"
28039Let me ask you if you will agree to give every woman a family that has n''t got one?
28039Let the Democrats, as they are now called, get into office, and what would be the consequence?
28039Liberty is the steam, responsibility puts on the brakes, and then what is the safety- valve, I ask you?
28039Loyal to what?
28039MADAME DE HERICOURT said: I wish to ask if rights have their source in ability, in functions, in qualities?
28039MERRIMON.--Why do you want to go into a remote, sparsely settled Territory to make the experiment?
28039MERRIMON.--Why not try it in this city?
28039MORTON.--Does the Senator speak of the Constitution of the United States?
28039MORTON.--How?
28039MORTON.--Will the Senator cite what follows?
28039MY DEAR FRIENDS: I once had a neighbor who was for years entirely crippled with rheumatism, and she, when asked,"How are you to- day?"
28039May she sing in public?
28039May she speak in public?
28039May she vote, or sit upon committees in matters pertaining to local or National interests?
28039May they, therefore, be properly and justly disfranchised?
28039Men strike from their workshops and they succeed, and why?
28039Miss ANTHONY: I would like to know if the testimony of a person who has been convicted of a crime can be taken?
28039Miss ANTHONY:--Will some one put the motion?
28039Miss Anthony has made all my arrangements; but perhaps you will allow me to ask you if Mr. Wood is a democrat?
28039Mr. BAYARD: Did the Senator from Indiana answer the Senator from Vermont in the affirmative or negative?
28039Mr. BAYARD: I ask are the rights of children different from those of men?
28039Mr. BROOKS: How exclude them, when Chinese are to be included in the basis of representation?
28039Mr. BROOKS: How exclude them?
28039Mr. COWAN: I should like to ask whether the presence of ladies on an occasion of that kind would not tend to suppress everything of that sort?
28039Mr. DOUGLASS:--I want to know if granting you the right of suffrage will change the nature of our sexes?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: Morally, legally, and every other way?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: Suppose I should answer the Senator and say I do not know?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: What right?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: Which way was the report?
28039Mr. FOSTER:--What are these principles?
28039Mr. MERRIMON: What clause of the Constitution does the Senator assert creates the right?
28039Mr. MORTON: I ask the Senator, if there are natural rights, do not the natural and necessary means to protect those rights become a part of them?
28039Mr. SARGENT: Why not?
28039Mr. SEAVER rose to a point of order, and asked,"Who are the men shaking in their boots?"
28039Mr. STEVENS: Is the gentleman from N.Y.[ Mr. Brooks] in favor of that amendment?
28039Mr. STEVENS: Is the gentleman in favor of his own amendment?
28039Mr. STEWART: Is it a natural or acquired right?
28039Mr. STEWART: Then what right has society, the body of men, to govern an individual?
28039Mr. STEWART: What right have they to take from him his freedom in his savage state to do as he pleases?
28039Mr. TILTON-- How is it that you know so much more about corkscrews than about Galatians?
28039Mr. VAN VOORHIS: If the jury should find a verdict of not guilty, could your honor set it aside?
28039Mr. VAN VOORHIS: Then why should it go to the jury?
28039Mr. VAN VOORHIS: You took the two oaths there, did you?
28039Mrs. H. M. TRACY CUTLER said: Many of us have grown old in this work, and yet some people say,"Why do you still work in a hopeless cause?"
28039Mrs. MARY A. LIVERMORE:--Is it quite generous to bring George Francis Train on this platform when he has retired from_ The Revolution_ entirely?
28039Mrs. SPENCE asked( for information) whether they were willing to receive the Conscription law as it was?
28039Mrs. SPENCE: If your husbands propose to pay three hundred dollars, would you urge them to go themselves?
28039Must we be told that woman herself does not ask the ballot?
28039Napoleon once said to Madame de Stael,"Why will you women meddle with politics?"
28039Not rule?
28039Now what do we behold?
28039Now what is proposed by the reformers of the present time?
28039Now what is the ballot?
28039Now would Mr. Ward with Mr. Wade, do this, and so let me breathe and live?
28039Now, I ask if women are a part of"the governed?"
28039Now, I ask you, can a woman or negro vote in Missouri?
28039Now, I ask, why not take a shorter course, and ask to have the men do for us what we might do for ourselves if we had the ballot?
28039Now, could not twelve honest, intelligent jurymen be trusted to defend their birthright against one woman?
28039Now, is it not possible to have republican institutions and to eliminate or decrease largely this element of evil?
28039Now, ladies, what is really the legal status of marriage, so far as the condition of the wife is concerned?
28039Now, sir, to come down to the main question, I ask if the women of this country have given their consent to this Government?
28039Now, sir, what is the sincerity of this proposition?
28039Now, what are abstract rights?
28039Now, what does this discussion mean?
28039Now, what is his position?
28039Now, what is this idea?
28039Now, who is their target?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: How about Minnesota without Train?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: How is it now?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: What is it?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: Why did Republican Kansas vote down negro suffrage?
28039Of course, his conclusion is correct if his premises are true; but is the right to vote a natural right?
28039Of the three, which should take the precedence?
28039Of what crime are American women guilty that they are to be compelled to stand on a political platform with such men as these?
28039On what principle, then, do you deny her representation?
28039One gentleman remarked,"Why do you push Pomeroy forward in your movement?
28039Or Margaret Fuller, or Julia Ward Howe, do you call these women unwomanly?
28039Or do you say that she was an exceptional woman?
28039Or is it said that she is represented by men?
28039Or that they should not go to the polls?
28039Or, will it be said that women do not want the ballot and ought to be asked?
28039Ought it not to be as much as possible like the government of a well- ordered family?
28039Our Saxon men have held the ballot in this country for a century, and what honest man can claim that it has been used for woman''s protection?
28039Our household gods be desecrated, and our proud lips, ever taught to sing peans to liberty, made to swear allegiance to the god of slavery?
28039Please look at the paper now shown you and see if it contains the minutes you kept upon that occasion?
28039Pound, was she asked there if she had any doubt about her right to vote, and did she answer,"Not a particle"?
28039Pray, what means"loyal"?
28039Pretty soon, however, when the dinner reached the point of champagne, some one exclaimed,"Who has a corkscrew?"
28039Re- direct examination by Mr. CROWLEY:_ Q._ Was Miss Anthony challenged before the Board of Registry?
28039Robinson came to her and said,"Where''s Mrs. Stanton?
28039SARGENT.--What clause is he commenting on?
28039SARGENT.--Will my friend allow me a moment?
28039SARGENT.--Will the Senator allow me to direct his mind to one consideration?
28039STANTON.--Is such the law in case of a daughter?
28039STEPHEN S. FOSTER: Will you give us the evidence that the statement that the women of this country do not want the ballot is not true?
28039STEWART.--The Senator from North Carolina asks,"Why not try it here?"
28039STEWART.--Why not try it everywhere?
28039STEWART.--Will the Senator allow me to ask him a question?
28039Said a rumseller who is bitterly opposed to female suffrage,"What more do you want?
28039Says a French lady in a private letter received a few days since,"Oh, is it not time that women come?
28039Set bounds to the political, social, or religious liberty of a man, and what figures of speech would he employ?
28039Shall I give you a picture of him?
28039Shall I tell her that she is"owned"by some living man, or is some dead man''s"relict,"as the old phrase was?
28039Shall Maria pay a tax and have no voice?"
28039Shall an American Congress pay less honor to the daughter of a President than a British Parliament to the daughter of a King?
28039Shall it be heard from that class only who are satisfied with their protection, or shall the voice of the weak and the starving be heard?
28039Shall it not have it?
28039Shall nothing ever be done by statesmen until wrongs are so intolerable that they take society by the throat?
28039Shall our free presses and free schools, our palace homes, colleges, churches, and stately capitols all be leveled to the dust?
28039Shall the lawyer?
28039Shall the merchant?
28039Shall the minister vote?
28039Shall the poor man?
28039Shall the rich man?
28039Shall the right of suffrage be extended to negroes?
28039Shall the right of suffrage be extended to women?
28039Shall the sun of the nineteenth century go down on wrongs like these, in this nation, consecrated in its infancy to justice and freedom?
28039Shall their unthinking acquiescence or the intelligent wish of their thoughtful sisters decide the question?
28039Shall there not be one law for the brothers and the daughters throughout this entire country?
28039Shall we be beggars for that which is, of right, ours?
28039Shall we dare to go on for another period of our national existence knowing that at the foundation of our government there is a tremendous wrong?
28039Shall we not, in this"crisis of our country''s destiny,"imitate the example of these heroic worthies, if"hereunto we are called"?
28039Shall we prolong and perpetuate such injustice, and by increasing this power risk worse oppressions for ourselves and daughters?
28039Shall we refuse them?
28039Shall we send men to Liberia who are ready to tread the black man under their feet?
28039Shall we who are in some sense the weaker sex have no guarantee for our rights?
28039Shall women govern the country?
28039She gave an able address, answering the questions,"What is to be gained and what is to be lost, by giving women the ballot?"
28039She has a right to think,--has she a right to practice?
28039She has been growing up in the scale of power; has she been going down in the scale of moral character?
28039She liked the idea of working women, but she would like to know if it was broad enough to take colored women?
28039She looked up, and said,"What was I made for?
28039She said,"Is it possible that any person thinks like that?
28039She wished to know who, loving the black man, could take this pledge?
28039Should not our petitions command as respectful a hearing in a republican Senate as a speech of Victoria in the House of Lords?
28039Should she be placed in the militia to enforce the results of a ballot?
28039Some one said,"Who has a New Testament?"
28039State whether that is the poll list of voters kept upon the day of election in the first election district of the 8th Ward, of the city of Rochester?
28039Stone?"
28039Suffrage and amnesty to whom?
28039Suppose I concede that, what then?
28039Suppose the assertion true, is it a peculiarity of this reform?...
28039Taxes are not to be laid on the people"( are not women and negroes people?)
28039That the Border States will join with the now crippled rebel States?
28039That the balance of power between parties is held by a very small number of voters; and in practical action what is the fact?
28039That the elective franchise is conferred upon persons of African descent, or those who have suffered from a previous condition of servitude?
28039The CLERK: Gentlemen, have you agreed upon your verdict?
28039The CLERK: How say you, do you find the prisoners at the bar guilty of the offense whereof they stand indicted, or not guilty?
28039The COURT: Is there anything upon which I can give you any advice gentlemen, or any information?
28039The COURT: What?
28039The COURT: You presented yourself as a female, claiming that you had a right to vote?
28039The Democratic party obtained the control of the Government for two generations because it appealed to that sense of justice?
28039The LADY: What kind of soldiers would copperheads make?
28039The PRESIDENT_ pro tem._: Does the Chair understand the Senator from Missouri as yielding the floor?
28039The PRESIDENT_ pro tem._: Will the Senator from Missouri suggest the disposition he wishes made of this petition?
28039The SPEAKER.--Is there objection?
28039The SPEAKER.--With the names?
28039The ancients did all this, but where are those haughty omnipotences now?
28039The case of Cooper_ vs._ The Mayor of Savannah( 4 Geo., 72), involved the question whether a free negro was a citizen of the United States?
28039The men of Kansas in their speeches would say,"What would be to us the comparative advantage of the amendments?
28039The only question left to be settled now, is: Are women persons?
28039The only question to be asked in connection with this movement is, is it right, is it just?--not, is it expedient?
28039The practical question, therefore, is how shall this protection be best attained?
28039The question with me is, is it right?
28039The right to see came with the eye and the light: did it not?
28039The world says:"Why do you not labor to build up fortunes and reputations for yourselves if you will labor?
28039Then if we say,"Shall a woman vote?"
28039Then why say it to women?
28039Then, gentlemen, what would you gain by this exclusion?
28039There is no escape, and where is the use of courting disgrace and defeat?
28039There may have been slaves who preferred to remain slaves-- was that an argument against freedom?
28039These are certainly great ameliorations of the law; but how have they been produced?
28039These men tell what their wives have done, and then ask, shall such women be left without a vote?
28039They said,"How can we form a true Union?"
28039They_ do nothing_, why should we?"
28039Think you the women of America then had no interest in public measures?
28039Think you they would continue to be the servants of mere fashion, as too many of them now are?
28039This being our political state at present with reference to electoral action, what do you propose?
28039This being the case, is it presumable that a foreign citizen is intended to be placed higher than one born on our soil?
28039Time?
28039To correct your system?
28039To his wife?
28039To reform existing evils and abuses?
28039To study it as patriots, as men of reflection and good sense?
28039To what class, however rich, or intelligent, or honest, they would themselves surrender_ their_ power?
28039To whom do you owe the most-- your father or your mother?
28039To whom?
28039Under the operation of this Amendment, what will become of the family hearthstone around which cluster the very best influences of human education?
28039Upon what reasonable grounds does it rest?
28039Very well; do you object to that?
28039Visit the solemn battle- field, and in anguish we murmur,"My God, why hast Thou forsaken us?"
28039Was Elizabeth incompetent?
28039Was ever a more disreputable phrase penned?
28039Was everything turned upside down?
28039Was it an inherent right in them as a part of"the people?"
28039Was that mere euphuism, mere phrasing?
28039Was the defendant legally entitled to vote at the election in question?
28039We all came together by one common instinct-- saying,"What shall we do?"
28039We are often asked the question,"On what do you base your assertion that the ballot can achieve so much for woman?
28039We frankly say to fathers, brothers, Husbands, too, and several others, We''re bound to win our right of voting, Do n''t you hear the music floating?
28039We have got all Europe, and all Asia is coming, and who sends them?
28039Well knowing how a single petition is suffocated, would it not be well for all the States to unite, and be presented at the same time?
28039Well, may all orphan women, and unmarried women, and women that have no abiding place of residence vote?
28039Well, now, since compromises are coming into vogue again, will you compromise with me, and agree that until a woman has a home she may vote?
28039Well, would I go to the church to mix with rude men?
28039Were the Apostles and martyrs worth$ 250?
28039Were the laws of nature suspended?
28039Were they dwarfed and crippled in body and soul, while their enfranchised wives and mothers became giants in stature and intellect?
28039Were they not the more women?
28039Were you ever so cruelly hurt by any course of lectures before?
28039Whar did she come from?
28039What State of the thirty- seven has power to make a treaty, to form an alliance, to declare war?
28039What am woman?
28039What are the facts?
28039What are the privileges and immunities of citizens?
28039What are the privileges and immunities of the citizens of the United States?
28039What are we beside that giant?"
28039What are we to do with our conquered provinces of the South?
28039What are wealth and jewels, home and ease, sires and sons, to the birthright of freedom, secured to us by the heroes of the Revolution?
28039What are you afraid of?
28039What are you seaboard people doing to vindicate your honor?
28039What argument is not already familiar to the reading and thinking mind?
28039What better is it for those 10,000 men that they became naturalized?
28039What business man studies a business foreign to his own?
28039What can I say?
28039What can free us from their laws so unjust?"
28039What can liberty expect from such a man?
28039What can woman hope from such a party?
28039What did they say when the women came among them?
28039What did they think of the$ 300 clause about substitutes?
28039What do I infer, then, from all this?
28039What do the character and status of citizens import?
28039What do we gain in this?
28039What do we mean when we say the privileges?
28039What do you do with men who are past the years of military service and exempted by your laws?
28039What do you think, Sojourner, of free trade?
28039What does he have of it, then?
28039What does it confer?
28039What does it mean?
28039What does this article say?
28039What else but its recognition to drive every liquor- saloon from the land, making temperance universal?
28039What else does woman suffrage mean?
28039What else have they given women to do?
28039What else is needed but this principle to settle the vexed question of"Solid North"or"Solid South"?
28039What for?
28039What freedom have you given us to act independently and earnestly?
28039What gives influence?
28039What has brought on this war?
28039What have we done?
28039What have you given us to do well?
28039What if their mothers on this platform be angular, old, wrinkled, and gray?
28039What if woman did not carry the bayonet on the battle- field?
28039What if woman should even abuse the use of the ballot at first?
28039What is a slave?
28039What is an attorney?
28039What is he doing?
28039What is involved in the right of the Magdalen to be a woman redeemed and disenthralled from the bondage of sin?
28039What is it that the woman''s reform asks for woman?
28039What is it?
28039What is servitude?
28039What is the chief glory of our democratic institutions?
28039What is the difference between putting a fraudulent ballot in, and keeping a lawful ballot out?
28039What is the effect of it?
28039What is the high and holy mission of any woman but to be the best and most efficient human being possible?
28039What is the meaning of"regulate"and"establish?"
28039What is the motive of my honorable friend in introducing it?
28039What is the proposition now before the Senate?
28039What is the question?
28039What is the reason of this low valuation of woman?
28039What is the right worth if that be denied?
28039What is the right?
28039What is the sum total of his citizenship?
28039What is the trouble between us?"
28039What is the"white male citizen"--the voter in the Republic of the United States?
28039What is woman going to do with the ballot?
28039What is your State unless it is founded upon virtuous and happy homes?
28039What less than_ this_ would the loving Saviour of men have done for one like her?
28039What less would_ you_, who have battled half a century for her freedom, have done in a case like that?
28039What matters it that the tyranny be of many instead of one?
28039What means the right of the drunkard''s wife to be a woman?
28039What next?
28039What next?
28039What particular function does it require to vote?
28039What phantom can the sons of the Pilgrims be chasing, when they make merchandise of a power like this?
28039What place would henceforth be safe from the assaults of these irrepressible amazons of reform?
28039What privilege does the vote give to the"white male citizen"of the United States?
28039What privilege or immunity has California or Oregon the constitutional right to deny them, save that of the ballot?
28039What shall I say?
28039What shall we learn from the other?
28039What should the government of a nation be?
28039What then?
28039What thinking man can talk of_ coming down_ into the arena of politics?
28039What to either class was the nation''s life, so long as the flag gave them no protection against the humiliating distinctions of caste?
28039What to them were boasted republican institutions, so long as their rights, privileges, and immunities as citizens were denied?
28039What victories have been achieved, what defeats suffered with patience?
28039What was meant by them?
28039What was that woman to do?
28039What was the old theory of the common law?
28039What was the result?
28039What was the theory of it?
28039What were the conditions?
28039What will this law do?
28039What woman studies a business foreign to her own?
28039What would be the effect upon their minds?
28039What would he do here?
28039What would he naturally do, with his old world antecedents and training, when he is thus aggrieved as he conceives himself to be?
28039What would money be worth to you without it?
28039What would the family be with a father and without a mother?
28039What wrong is done her?
28039What, pray, does the resident alien acquire by the transmuting process of naturalization?
28039What, then, are the"privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States"which are secured against such abridgment, by this section?
28039What, then, is the basis of rights?
28039What, then, was the law upon this subject when the Constitution was adopted?
28039What?
28039When a man has seen the error of his ways and confesses it, what more is there to be done except to receive him seventy and seven times?
28039When she heard this she asked herself what part women had in such a celebration?
28039When such women come up now and ask for the right of suffrage, who will deny their request?
28039When the Democrats said that my vote should_ not_ go in the box, one Republican said to the other,"What do you say, Marsh?"
28039When there was no father''s hand or brother''s arm to help, what could woman do?
28039When we want a response from men how do we propound the question?
28039When you proclaimed emancipation, did you go to slaveholders and ask if a majority of them were in favor of freeing their slaves?
28039When you propose legislation so fatal to the best interests of woman and the nation, shall we be silent till the deed is done?
28039When you ring the changes on"negro suffrage"from Maine to California, have you proof positive that a majority of the freedmen demand the ballot?
28039When, therefore, the Committee declare that voting is at war with the distribution of functions between the sexes, what do they mean?
28039Whence arises the right of the majority to govern and the obligation of the minority to obey?
28039Whence did they derive it?
28039Whence, then, does he derive it?
28039Where a cave of dimensions equal to those of the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky?
28039Where are Cleopatra and Semiramis, and Zenobia and Catharine, and Elizabeth and Victoria?
28039Where are there any women, as wives and mothers, more beautiful in their home life than Lucretia Mott and Lucy Stone, or Antoinette Brown Blackwell?
28039Where are they so represented?
28039Where can I get some pamphlets containing the best arguments for universal suffrage?
28039Where does it reside?
28039Where does self- government begin?
28039Where has been the assembly at which this right of representation was conferred?
28039Where has been the assembly at which this right of representation was conferred?
28039Where has this provision wrought anything but good?
28039Where is the Democrat who favors woman suffrage?
28039Where is there a mob such that the announcement that a woman is present does not bring down the loudest of them?
28039Where shall we find another Niagara?
28039Where was the compact made?
28039Where was the compact made?
28039Where would Story be now, if living?
28039Where, gentlemen, did you get the right to deny the ballot to all women and black men not worth$ 250?
28039Where, when, and how did they get it?
28039Wherein is the foundation for any democratic society, predicated on the rights of individuals?
28039Which is the superior to- day?
28039Which shall I treat first, the wrong done to the individual or that done to society?
28039Which way am she gwine to?"
28039While all men, everywhere, are rejoicing in new- found liberties, shall woman alone be denied the rights, privileges, and immunities of citizenship?
28039Whither is a nation tending when brains count for less than bullion, and clowns make laws for queens?
28039Who belittle their capacities?
28039Who can doubt it?
28039Who can give the right to govern another?
28039Who can hesitate to decide, when the question lies between educated women and ignorant negroes?"
28039Who can say he is not just as good at twenty- nine?
28039Who controlled the family most effectually?
28039Who does realize in life all that in starting was looked for?
28039Who does she belong to?
28039Who ever knew a labor strike of women to succeed?
28039Who governed you when you were children?
28039Who has been?
28039Who has nothing to regret?
28039Who have carried the spelling- book to the South?
28039Who is it that ought to be protected by these republican governments?
28039Who is to carry them there?
28039Who is willing to shut the pulpit against Mrs. Mott, when she has filled it with such acceptance, in so many places, and on so many occasions?
28039Who knows but that to- night we are laying the corner- stone of an equally grand movement?
28039Who ought to possess the ballot?
28039Who says that she does not want it?
28039Who shall bring it up if he refuses to do it?
28039Who squeeze their minds?"
28039Who will venture to judge the future by any political almanac of by- gone times?
28039Who would n''t maintain the peace when entreated from such a quarter?
28039Who, asked Mrs. Rose, was the first to call a National Convention of women-- New York or Massachusetts?
28039Who, to- day, considers it improper for Lucy Stone, Anna Dickinson, Mrs. Stanton, Mrs. Gage, to appear upon a public platform?
28039Whose dull, dead ear has been raised to life by that vocalization of heaven, that was given to you more than to any other one?"
28039Whose laws, pray?
28039Whose right is it?
28039Why ca n''t you be satisfied?"
28039Why divert and distract their thoughts?"
28039Why do the British workmen at this moment so urgently demand it?
28039Why do they get up meetings for the colored men, and call them fellow- men, brothers, and gentlemen?
28039Why do they not at the same time protect the negro woman?
28039Why do we want it?
28039Why do you consult women if this right shall be given them?
28039Why do you give him the ballot, pray, or permit him to take it for himself?
28039Why do you scold us, poor weak women, for being fashionable and dressy, when snares are set at every corner to tempt us?
28039Why do you waste your time and efforts on this ungrateful soil?"
28039Why does that disinterested, noble- minded, freedom- loving man in vain ask of the Administration to give him an army to lead into the field?
28039Why had nobody thought about it?
28039Why have I so recently arrived at that conclusion?
28039Why have all former republics vanished out of existence?
28039Why have they not this right politically, as well as men?
28039Why ignore 15,000,000 women in the reconstruction?
28039Why is he not seen in the convention?''
28039Why is it that every father in this country is educating his daughter as well as his son in all branches of science?
28039Why is it that labor is oppressed and that working women and working men are in some respects worse off than ever before?
28039Why is it, my friends, that Congress has enacted laws to give the negro of the South the right to vote?
28039Why is this term"male"used in the constitutions, pray?
28039Why is this?
28039Why may a colored citizen be admitted to the bar?
28039Why may a colored citizen buy, hold, and sell land in any State of the Union?
28039Why not begin the experiment?
28039Why not further amelioration and adaptation?
28039Why not go back to the tribal custom of the desert, and let the patriarch do all the voting?
28039Why not let a woman, if it is desired that she should be a student, inquire of her husband?
28039Why not try it in North Carolina?
28039Why not, Mr. President?
28039Why not?
28039Why not?
28039Why not?
28039Why ought she?
28039Why say a man can not be a member of the Senate until he is thirty years of age?
28039Why should I not be sincere?
28039Why should I or any person be forbidden to select the agent whom we think the most competent and truly representative of our will?
28039Why should n''t they?
28039Why should not large reductions transpire in those opportunities that invite the most sinister combination for offices and spoils?
28039Why should not the landlady of that hotel over the way share the profits of their joint labors with the landlord?
28039Why should the African prove more just and generous than his Saxon compeers?
28039Why should the head of the household, or rather the_ hand_ of the household, be masculine rather than feminine?
28039Why should the woman who does not care to vote prevent the voting of her neighbor who does?
28039Why should the word_ male_ be in it?
28039Why should there be any restriction?
28039Why should they desire to overturn the existing order of things?
28039Why should this church be granted for such a meeting as this, but for the progress of the cause?
28039Why should we?
28039Why should women, whose supple fingers can set type-- why should not they be type- setters?
28039Why should you not throw them in?
28039Why such zeal, such more than Roman sternness?
28039Why this partiality to the black man?
28039Why this, if it was not in the power of the Legislature to deny the right of suffrage to some male inhabitants?
28039Why was it limited to those three causes?
28039Why, do n''t you know that a woman had seven devils in her: and do you suppose a woman is fit to rule the nation?"
28039Why, in organizing a system of liberality and justice, not recognize in the case of free women as well as free negroes the right of representation?
28039Why, in this hour of reconstruction, with the experience of generations before us, make another experiment in the same direction?
28039Why, then, should not the females have a right to participate in their construction as well as the male part of the community?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Will America obey heaven''s voice, or does republicanism exist only in name?
28039Will God perform a miracle to feed this multitude?
28039Will Mrs. Griffing let Mr. Sumner know what institution or person should disburse the money appropriated?
28039Will it be said that the renunciation of allegiance to the former implies or draws after it a renunciation of allegiance to the latter?
28039Will it be said that this sex does not claim a right to representation?
28039Will it not in fact sever those relations to which I have referred as being essential for the virtue and safety of a State?
28039Will men never learn that a principle which God has made true He has also made it safe to apply?
28039Will not their weakness render them subservient to the strong and their ignorance to the artful?
28039Will not these new electors you propose to introduce be more approachable than men who now vote to all corrupt influences?
28039Will that ever be remedied until woman has the right to vote?
28039Will the Clerk poll the jury?
28039Will the gentleman accept an amendment to that resolution that there shall be no distinction in regard to sex?
28039Will they not be more easily caught and enraptured by superficial declamation, because more incapable of profound reflection?
28039Will they not be more passionate, and therefore more easily influenced by the demagogue?
28039Will woman be deprived of the guarantees in this section and the right of trial by jury because the masculine pronoun is used?
28039Will you also give me the names of members whom you think would present petitions for us?
28039Will you be good enough to tell me which woman you think to- day is the superior?
28039Will you have Rome?
28039Will you let me know distinctly if you propose to commit yourselves to the idea of loyalty to the present Government?
28039Will you not give to every woman the power to maintain the integrity of her womanhood-- the ownership of herself?
28039Will you pay the debt that has been incurred?"
28039Will you tell me Democracy, Republicanism, consecrated by Christianity, is the remedy for all these ills?
28039Will you, sir, please send me whatever is said or done with our petitions?
28039With all this equity in their favor, may they not be allowed, without censure, to avail themselves of a legal right?
28039With its 75,000 subscribers, and five times that number of readers, what can the poor little_ Standard_ do for us, compared with that?
28039With the argument all on our side, the only question that remains is, does woman herself demand the right of suffrage at this hour?
28039Woman has been fined, whipped, branded with red- hot irons, imprisoned and hung; but when was woman ever tried by a jury of her peers?
28039Woman has been tried in every office from the throne to the position of the humblest servant; and where has she been found remiss?
28039Women of the North, will you not strive for your own enfranchisement?
28039Women of the South, will you not work for your own freedom?
28039Would he contend that therefore every new- born baby might at once grasp a musket?
28039Would it not be well for the women of to- day to emulate Deborah in her zeal and love of country?
28039Would it not turn the blackguard into a gentleman, so that we should have nothing but good conduct?
28039Would not the charge of cowardice, certain to be brought against you, prove more damaging than that of amalgamation?
28039Would revolvers, bowie- knives, whisky barrels, profane oaths, brutal rowdyism, be the feature of elections if women were present?
28039Would that policy in any way conduce to their peace, their purity, and their happiness?
28039Would the Senator argue from that, that they had no natural rights, or that they were consenting to their bondage?
28039Would you have it otherwise?
28039Would you not be branded all over the land as dastardly hypocrites, professing principles which you have no wish or intention of carrying out?
28039You may, perhaps, ask me, before I go any further,"What is the use of preaching to us that we_ ought_ to do it, when we are not permitted to do it?"
28039You might as well ask,"Are all men equal to each other?"
28039You say what of course you can not know, but even if it were so, what then?
28039You say you find the defendant guilty of the offense whereof she stands indicted, and so say you all?
28039_ First Clown._ How can that be, unless she drowned herself in her own defense?
28039_ Plaintiffs''Attorneys._ But is this law?
28039_ Q._ And on that advice the registry was made with the judgment of the inspectors?
28039_ Q._ And she was registered accordingly?
28039_ Q._ At the time of the registry, when her name was registered, was the Supervisor of Election present at the Board?
28039_ Q._ By and between whom?
28039_ Q._ Did she give evidence?
28039_ Q._ Did she name any particular amendment?
28039_ Q._ Did she, upon that occasion, state that she consulted or talked with Judge Henry R. Selden, of Rochester, in relation to her right to vote?
28039_ Q._ Did the Board consider that and decide that she was entitled to register?
28039_ Q._ Did the Board consider the question of her right to registry, and decide that she was entitled to registry as a voter?
28039_ Q._ Did you keep minutes of evidence on that occasion?
28039_ Q._ Did you receive the tickets from Miss Anthony?
28039_ Q._ Did you see her vote?
28039_ Q._ Do you know the defendant, Miss Susan B. Anthony?
28039_ Q._ Do you know the defendant, Susan B. Anthony?
28039_ Q._ From that poll list what tickets does it purport to show that she voted upon that occasion?
28039_ Q._ Had the Board of Inspectors been regularly organized?
28039_ Q._ In what Congressional District was the city of Rochester at the time?
28039_ Q._ In what capacity were you acting upon that day, if any, in relation to elections?
28039_ Q._ In what election district were you inspector of elections?
28039_ Q._ Into how many election districts is the 8th Ward divided, if it contains more than one?
28039_ Q._ It was canvassed previous to election day between them?
28039_ Q._ On what ground?
28039_ Q._ She was not challenged on the day she voted?
28039_ Q._ State generally what was done, or what occupied that hour''s time?
28039_ Q._ State to the jury whether you had separate boxes for the several tickets voted in that election district?
28039_ Q._ State, if you please, what occurred when you presented yourself at the polls on election day?
28039_ Q._ That she was a woman?
28039_ Q._ There was a stenographic reporter there, was there not?
28039_ Q._ Turn to the evidence of Susan B. Anthony?
28039_ Q._ Under that she claimed her right to vote?
28039_ Q._ Upon the 5th day of November, did the defendant, Susan B. Anthony, vote in the first election district of the 8th Ward of the city of Rochester?
28039_ Q._ Was Miss Anthony challenged upon that occasion?
28039_ Q._ Was he consulted upon the question of whether she was entitled to registry, or did he express an opinion on the subject to the inspectors?
28039_ Q._ Was not this question put to her,"Did you have any doubt yourself of your right to vote?"
28039_ Q._ Was she called as a witness in her own behalf upon that examination?
28039_ Q._ Was she challenged at any time?
28039_ Q._ Was she sworn?
28039_ Q._ Was the preliminary and the general oath administered?
28039_ Q._ Was there a poll list kept of the voters of the first election district of the 8th Ward on the day of election?
28039_ Q._ Was there any objection made, or any doubt raised as to her right to vote?
28039_ Q._ Well, was the question of your right to be registered a subject of discussion there?
28039_ Q._ Were you one of the officers engaged in making that registry?
28039_ Q._ What did you do with them when you received them?
28039_ Q._ What number is it?
28039_ Q._ What was the defect in her right to vote as a citizen?
28039_ Q._ When she offered her vote, was the same objection brought up in the Board of Inspectors, or question made of her right to vote as a woman?
28039_ Q._ When the registry was being made did Miss Anthony appear before the Board of Registry and claim to be registered as a voter?
28039_ Q._ Where were you living on the 5th of November, 1872?
28039_ Q._ Who were inspectors with you?
28039_ Q._ Will you state to the jury what tickets she voted, whether State, Assembly, Congress and Electoral?
28039_ Q._ Wo n''t you state what Miss Anthony said, if she said anything, when she came there and offered her name for registration?
28039_ Q._ You did n''t hear any such statement as that?
28039_ Second Clown._ But is this law?
28039_ What can woman do?_ has been with me from the beginning of this war a question of the uppermost importance.
28039and can those who are mothers be nothing else?
28039and did she not answer,"Not a particle"?
28039and how can any give what he has not got?
28039and what effect did it produce?
28039and what they would do if any class attempted to usurp that power?
28039and when was the choice made?
28039but what does that mean?
28039can there be an extreme view, when one is considering individual freedom?
28039or Mrs. Livermore?
28039or Mrs. Stanton?
28039or expired at last in sunsets of serenity and glory, and been embalmed and enshrined in the tears and gratitude of mankind?
28039or has achieved proportionally, so long a life?
28039or not?
28039or why woman as a student, a wife, a mother, a widow, and a citizen, should be held at such a disadvantage?
28039to exalt ignorance above education, vice above virtue, brutality and barbarism above refinement and religion?
28039to which the reply was,"Yes, now and ever heart and soul a woman"; that Judge Hunt should ask her"if she voted as a female"?
28039what came of all these dark forebodings of timid men?
28039when he classes adults as fully capable of exercising an enlightened judgment as himself with infants?
28039which commands most respect?
28039why do n''t these brothers of ours call us, the reserves, into action?
28039why do n''t they call the reserves into action?
5604--by this Respondent?
5604A moment only; but was it not enough?
5604About Mrs George?
5604After what you ve just done?
5604Alfred: how long more are you going to stand there and countenance this lunacy?
5604Alice, where is Soames?
5604Alice: will you come upstairs?
5604Am I not to use my reason to find out why?
5604Am I to understand that if Cecil commits a mur- der, or forges, or steals, or becomes an atheist, I ca nt get divorced from him?
5604Am I to understand that the whole case was one of collusion?
5604Am I your uncle?
5604An inch or a mile: what does it matter?
5604And I put it to you as one man to another: did you ever hear such crazy nonsense?
5604And nothing to hope?
5604And pray, sir, on what ground do you dare allege that Major Billiter is not a gentleman?
5604And what do you see there, at the back of Godspeed?
5604And what is a woman to live on, pray, when she is no longer liked, as you call it?
5604And you believe that many of our landed estates were stolen from the Church by Henry the eighth?
5604And you, Lesbia?
5604Any amendment?
5604Any seconder?
5604Anything else, Miss Grantham?
5604Anything else?
5604Anything you would like mentioned about Miss Lesbia, maam?
5604Are not the best beloved always the good actors rather than the true sufferers?
5604Are you ashamed of it?
5604Are you ill, Mrs Collins?
5604Are you in your senses?
5604Are you now speaking as a saint, Father Anthony, or as a solicitor?
5604Are you sure that any of us, young or old, like the real thing as well as we like an artistic imitation of it?
5604Are you sure you have any adequate idea of what the truth about a military man really is?
5604Are you sure you ll enjoy it as much when you are the husband?
5604Are you the sexton?
5604Are you throwing me over?
5604Are you, Miss Bridgenorth?
5604Because it frightens people into behaving themselves before you; and then how can you tell what they really are?
5604Before going to the church, we went to the office of that insurance company-- whats its name, Cecil?
5604Besides, do you suppose I think, at my time of life, that the difference between one decent sort of man and another is worth bothering about?
5604Besides, what does Miss Grantham know about either men or women?
5604But Cecil''s objection to go through with it was so entirely on public grounds-- EDITH[ with quick suspicion] His objection?
5604But did he always take her back?
5604But do you mean that she did this more than once?
5604But do you think I do nt know?
5604But how am I to know the lady?
5604But how could the world go on, Anthony?
5604But the bridesmaids?
5604But we''re all our own and one another''s equals, arnt we?
5604But where is he to go, miss?
5604But would you if it did matter?
5604But you had a charmed life?
5604But, my dear Rejjy, are you quite sure that Miss Bridgenorth is going to be married?
5604By the way, what has happened to the wedding party?
5604COLLINS[ awestruck] Has Mrs George taken a fancy to you, sir?
5604COLLINS[ equally startled] Did nt you believe in her, maam?
5604COLLINS[ his curiosity roused] Is Slattox taking an action against you, miss?
5604Ca nt nothing be done, my lord?
5604Ca nt you answer yes or no without spoiling it and setting Hotchkiss here grinning like a Cheshire cat?
5604Ca nt you guess why?
5604Ca nt you hear anything?
5604Ca nt you three brothers ever meet without quarrelling?
5604Can I be mistaken in him?
5604Can we help you?
5604Can you come down to earth?
5604Can you ever forgive me?
5604Can you find it for us, Anthony?
5604Cecil: do you mean to say that you have been raising difficulties about our marriage?
5604Christian fellowship?
5604Could I settle it?
5604DIVORCE WITHOUT ASKING WHY The one question that should never be put to a petitioner for divorce is"Why?"
5604Dare you defy me?
5604Did you ever bite a grown- up man?
5604Did you ever call both of them every name you could lay your tongue to?
5604Did you ever feel inclined to run away, Collins?
5604Did you ever hear such a thing?
5604Did you ever, after you were grown up, pull a grown- up woman''s hair?
5604Do nt you know that it annoys her more than any of the rest of your tricks?
5604Do nt you think it gives me a certain right to be present in Cecil''s interest?
5604Do nt you think so?
5604Do nt you?
5604Do you believe in marriage or do you not?
5604Do you call them Englishmen?
5604Do you call these chaps gentlemen?
5604Do you call yourself a gentleman, to use your brute strength against a woman?
5604Do you consider it right to let them?
5604Do you deny it?
5604Do you deny that?
5604Do you expect me to get married in the existing state of the law?
5604Do you find any real happiness in being your own mistress?
5604Do you know what a decent man feels about his wife''s name?
5604Do you know what it is to look at a mere real man after that?
5604Do you know what that feels like to a decent man?
5604Do you love me?
5604Do you love this absurd coal merchant?
5604Do you love your Jorjy Porjy?
5604Do you mean Incognita Appassionata?
5604Do you never feel nervous on these occasions, Collins?
5604Do you really think you re better suited to that young sauce box than her husband?
5604Do you remember who I am, and who you are?
5604Do you see my uniform-- all my medals?
5604Do you see nothing-- not a great light?
5604Do you see this face, once fresh and rosy like your own, now scarred and riven by a hundred burnt- out fires?
5604Do you set up any sort of pretence to be my equal in rank, in age, or in culture?
5604Do you suppose I ever wanted to marry her?
5604Do you suppose I''m going to visit you when you marry him?
5604Do you think I have never been in love with wonderful men?
5604Do you think I will give up my one advantage?
5604Do you think that I, a Bishop, approve of the Deceased Wife''s Sister Act?
5604Do you understand this, my lord?
5604Do you want me to flatter and be untruthful?
5604Do you want the Beadle as well?
5604Do you?
5604Does anybody want me to flatter and be untruthful?
5604Does it strike you that if we were all as clever as you at doing without, there would nt be much to live for, would there?
5604Does she approve of Mrs George?
5604Does she know what hour it is?
5604Does that help?
5604Does your present housekeeper do it for nothing?
5604Done what, Cecil?
5604Eh, Anthony?
5604Eh, Rejjy?
5604Even for George?
5604Excuse me, sir; but do you stay to breakfast?
5604George was a bachelor then, I suppose?
5604HOTCHKISS[ admiring her] Are you really game, Polly?
5604HOTCHKISS[ anxiously] When will George be at home?
5604HOTCHKISS[ gaily] Or take you as a matter of course?
5604HOTCHKISS[ taken aback] Do you mean that we should be alone?
5604HOTCHKISS[ to Collins] May I, as a friend of the family, have the privilege of calling you Bill?
5604HOTCHKISS[ uneasily leaning against the table and holding on to it to control his nervous movements] Need you tell me?
5604Half the cases are collusions: what are people to do?
5604Hang it all, Lesbia, do nt you want a husband?
5604Has Alice explained to you the nature of the document we are drafting?
5604Has he told you any stories this morning?
5604Has nt she got into her veil and orange blossoms yet?
5604Has--[he chokes] has your sister come yet?
5604Have you been out, my dear?
5604Have you children no affection for one another?
5604Have you come to an understanding?
5604Have you eaten anything that has disagreed with you?
5604Have you kept all your promises?
5604Have you never wanted to murder somebody, Uncle Rejjy?
5604Have you no imagination?
5604Have you reconciled them, Boxer?
5604Have you rubbed your head with the lotion every night?
5604Have you the least idea of what they are talking about, Mr Alderman?
5604Have you thought of that?
5604Have you worn your liver pad?
5604He did kick me out: what else was it but kicking out, to take my wife''s affections from me and establish himself in my place?
5604He did nt mind my calling him that, did he?
5604He wo nt be offended at my offering it, will he?
5604How are you to please them all?
5604How are you, Boxer?
5604How are you, Boxer?
5604How can I?
5604How can I?
5604How can he?
5604How could she have got her divorce if I had nt beaten her?
5604How did you know?
5604How do I know?
5604How do you come there?
5604How do you do, Mrs Collins?
5604How do you do?
5604How do you know?
5604How if there be no children?
5604How is the world to go on?
5604How would you like to go into a hotel before all the waiters and people with-- with that on your arm?
5604How?
5604I ask you, as an Anglican Catholic, was that a marriage?
5604I carried the child in my arms: must I carry the father too?
5604I have dared: I have gone through: I have not fallen withered in the fire: I have come at last out beyond, to the back of Godspeed?
5604I have something else to say; but will you please ask somebody to come and stay here while we talk?
5604I never read the report of a Committee: after all, what can they say, that you do nt know?
5604I never stoop to mere vituperation: what would my girls say of me if I did?
5604I never suspected-- I never knew-- Are you joking?
5604I paid the price without bargaining: I bore the children without flinching: was that a reason for heaping fresh burdens on me?
5604I wonder what my wife will say, Miss?
5604I''m to come on liking for the month?
5604If I choose to take ten kisses, how will you prevent me?
5604If it''s enough, why get married?
5604If not, what will it do with her?
5604If she puts on her veil and goes to Church, will you marry her?
5604In what way?
5604Is Edith to be given away by him?
5604Is Leo to be encouraged to be a polygamist?
5604Is he to walk in here to Edith''s wedding, reeking from the Divorce Court?
5604Is it a horrible dream or am I awake?
5604Is it you that s going to be married or is it Edith?
5604Is my destiny any longer in my own hands?
5604Is not love always falsified in novels and plays to make it endurable?
5604Is not the real thing accursed?
5604Is nt that what my reason is for?
5604Is that it?
5604Is that really the law?
5604Is the marriage to be for a year, a week, or a day?
5604Is there anything else before I go off to the Club?
5604Is this fair?
5604Is this out of a book?
5604Is your name Edith?
5604Is your, wife ashamed of your robes?
5604It was not the sexton, was it?
5604It''s so hard to know the right place to laugh, is nt it?
5604Kept?
5604LEO[ to the Bishop] Baptism is nearly as important as vaccination: is nt it?
5604LESBIA[ turning on him] Then why on earth do you want to marry a woman you do nt understand?
5604Like most men, you think you know everything a woman wants, do nt you?
5604MRS BRIDGENORTH[ petting Leo, but speaking to the company at large] But is nt all this great nonsense?
5604MRS BRIDGENORTH[ startled] Do you mean to say, Collins, that Mrs George is a real person?
5604MRS GEORGE[ beside herself] Where s the poker?
5604MRS GEORGE[ desperate] You mean it?
5604MRS GEORGE[ going to her past the Bishop, and gazing intently at her] Are you his wife?
5604MRS GEORGE[ leaving Soames and going a step or two nearer Hotchkiss] Why arnt you like him, Sonny?
5604MRS GEORGE[ looking after him triumphantly] Just caught the dear old warrior on the bounce, eh?
5604MRS GEORGE[ panting] Sha nt I though?
5604MRS GEORGE[ rising, at bay] Do you think I''ll let myself be driven into a trap like this?
5604MRS GEORGE[ rising] You wo nt then?
5604MRS GEORGE[ to Leo] Well, you ve more time to get married again than he has, havnt you?
5604MRS GEORGE[ to Sykes] Adorned for the sacrifice, arnt you?
5604MRS GEORGE[ turning to the railed chair] Who''s this?
5604MRS GEORGE[ waking] What was that?
5604MRS. BRIDGENORTH}{ What?
5604Mamma: will you tell Collins to cut up the wedding cake into thirty- three pieces for the club girls?
5604May I ask why, Lesbia?
5604May I ask, my dear, what she did?
5604May I go into the study for writing materials, Bishop?
5604May I have a word with you in private?
5604May I send up word from you to Miss Edith to hurry a bit with her dressing?
5604May not the three be one?
5604May one ask who is the mushroom- faced serpent?
5604Might I ask what the difficulty is?
5604Mr Bridgenorth: are you going to leave this house or am I?
5604Mr Kipling''s question,"What can they know of England that only England know?"
5604Must I mend your clothes and sweep your floors as well?
5604My lord; is this possession by the devil?
5604No assignations, you mean?
5604No music?
5604Now you know, do nt you, that your services to the community as a greengrocer are as important and as dignified as mine as a soldier?
5604Oh, do nt begin bothering about those-- LEO[ insisting] Have?
5604Or have we all gone mad?
5604Or is it your usual society small talk?
5604Or take you and canonize you?
5604Or the convulsion of the pythoness on the tripod?
5604Or the ecstasy of a saint?
5604Or to me?
5604Promises?
5604REGINALD[ aggressively] What s the truth about you, I wonder?
5604REGINALD[ out of patience] What s the good of beating your wife unless there s a witness to prove it afterwards?
5604REGINALD[ rising] How could I kick him out of the house?
5604REGINALD[ savagely] Will you tell me this, any of you?
5604REGINALD[ turning] Was it?
5604REGINALD[ watching them sourly] You do it yourself, do nt you?
5604REGINALD}{ What d''ye mean?
5604Reginald: do you think the Barmecide''s quite sane?
5604SOAMES[ sternly] Are you fonder of your wife than of your salvation?
5604SOAMES[ turning fiercely on him] What right have you to say so?
5604SOAMES[ whispering] Is she inspired?
5604SYKES[ looks irresolutely at Hotchkiss]--?
5604SYKES[ rising and coming to Collin''s left elbow] I put it to you as a sensible man: is it any worse for her than for me?
5604SYKES[ rising in amazement] What on earth do you mean, Bishop?
5604Shall we go upstairs and look at the presents and dresses?
5604Shall we try to get through the last batch of letters whilst they are away, Soames?
5604Sir?
5604So strangely mixed up with the story of the General''s life?
5604Soames: you re a Communist, arnt you?
5604Sooner than expose him to that, you would suffer a thousand stolen kisses, would nt you?
5604Suppose he kicks you out of the house?
5604Suppose the woman does nt behave herself?
5604Suppose you felt it to be your duty to shoot Slattox, what would become of me and the children?
5604Surely that s enough?
5604Sykes: are you ready to marry Edith or are you not?
5604THE BISHOP[ condoling] Yes: he repeats himself dreadfully, does nt he?
5604THE BISHOP[ reading the title] Do YOU KNOW WHAT YOU ARE GOING TO DO?
5604THE BISHOP[ saving her from falling] What s the matter?
5604THE BISHOP[ to Hotchkiss] Nothing like making people think: is there, Sinjon?
5604THE GENERAL[ aghast] Am I to understand-- THE BISHOP[ cutting him short] Now, Boxer, am I the Bishop or are you?
5604THE GENERAL[ coming forward to the table] Can anybody oblige me with some tobacco?
5604THE GENERAL[ coming from the garden door to the chair Mrs Bridgenorth has just left, and sitting down] Not more Ritualism, I hope, Alfred?
5604THE GENERAL[ excited by Reginald''s eloquence] Do you see my uniform?
5604THE GENERAL[ gasping] Do you mean to tell me that you did it in cold blood?
5604THE GENERAL[ jumping up] What right had he to be made room for?
5604THE GENERAL[ outraged] Do you imply that I have been guilty of conduct that would expose me to penal servitude?
5604THE GENERAL[ somewhat dazed] Well but-- excuse my mentioning it-- dont you want children?
5604THE GENERAL[ turning abruptly; he has been looking out into the garden] Do you mean to say that women write love- letters to you?
5604THE GENERAL{ both} What the devil do you mean by{ highly} This?
5604THE GENERAL}{ Eh?
5604That s cooled you, has it?
5604That she came back?
5604The Bishop''s wife?
5604The only question to be considered is, What shall the conditions of the dissolution be?
5604The question therefore arises: What is there in marriage that makes the thoughtful people so uncomfortable?
5604The relations between Leo and Rejjy and Sinjon are perfectly legal; but do you expect me, as a Bishop, to approve of them?
5604The sexton?
5604The world must go on, must nt it, Collins?
5604Then what use is it to me?
5604Then where s your gown?
5604Then why did you not do your duty at Smutsfontein?
5604Then why not dignify my niece''s wedding by wearing your robes?
5604Then why on earth should she leave him?
5604They d simply rot without us; but what do they ever do for us?
5604Upon what compulsion must I?
5604WHAT IS TO BECOME OF THE CHILDREN?
5604Was it not enough?
5604Was it not enough?
5604Was it not enough?
5604Was it not enough?
5604We all eat our rice pudding with a spoon, do nt we, Soames?
5604We do nt seem to be getting on, do we?
5604We sha nt be any worse friends, shall we?
5604Well, had nt you two better get married at once?
5604Well, how am I to express it?
5604Well, how else do you propose to settle it?
5604Well, we do nt seem to be getting along, do we?
5604Well, we do nt seem to be getting any further, do we?
5604Well, what could he do, maam?
5604Well, what do you suppose?
5604Well, why should we be ashamed of this aspiration towards what is above us?
5604Well, you do nt expect them to give themselves away, do you?
5604Were you going to throw him over?
5604Were you not paid then for all the rest of your struggle on earth?
5604What about his home?
5604What about the wedding?
5604What are you afraid of?
5604What are you doing?
5604What are you working at now?
5604What can I do now?
5604What can I say now?
5604What can he say?
5604What can you expect?
5604What could I do?
5604What could I say?
5604What dare he say?
5604What did Collins say?
5604What did they say to that?
5604What do you call it?
5604What do you know about it?
5604What do you say, Mr Alderman?
5604What do you think of the contract system, Collins?
5604What does she say when you tell her?
5604What does that mean?
5604What for, miss, if I may ask?
5604What has that to do with polygamy?
5604What is she reading?
5604What is the element in his proposals that produces this effect?
5604What is the first clause in an agreement, usually?
5604What is the social position of this lady?
5604What likelihood is there of any of us committing a crime?
5604What man ever has?
5604What on earth are you doing here, Sinjon?
5604What right?
5604What s the matter?
5604What s the matter?
5604What should we begin with?
5604What sort of servants?
5604What the devil did he do that for?
5604What was I to do?
5604What was your father?
5604What will he think of you then?
5604What will the King''s Proctor say?
5604What woman would not rather marry ten Pepyses?
5604What would you have said if Cecil''s parents had not been married?
5604When I opened the gates of paradise, were you blind?
5604When all the stars sang in your ears and all the winds swept you into the heart of heaven, were you deaf?
5604When its hour comes, what are the points the Cabinet will have to take up?
5604When will you be old enough to take no for an answer?
5604Where have you been all this time?
5604Where s Edith?
5604Where s Rejjy?
5604Where s the Barmecide?
5604Which parent is to own the youngest child, payment or no payment?
5604Who am I that I should rebuke you?
5604Who are the fathers to be?
5604Who asked you to cut in?
5604Who gave you away?
5604Who is Billiter?
5604Who is poor Cecil, pray?
5604Who is to be the judge of that, my dear?
5604Who kissed my hand?
5604Why ca nt I marry them both?
5604Why did Leo allow it?
5604Why did nt you tell me that before?
5604Why did you do it?
5604Why do nt I say that an honest man''s the noblest work of God?
5604Why do they want to marry us?
5604Why do you always call Lesbia my sister?
5604Why do you hang on to a scrubby woman in the next street?
5604Why do you say only the coal merchant''s wife?
5604Why is the man always to be put in the wrong?
5604Why not?
5604Why on earth should you kill yourself-- not to mention me?
5604Why should the taking of a husband be imposed on these women as the price of their right to maternity?
5604Why should they be tied together to sit there grudging and hating and spiting one another like so many do?
5604Why should they be, pray?
5604Why should we be held together whether we like it or not?
5604Why should you give yourself the trouble, maam?
5604Why were nt you dressed?
5604Why were you so unlike yourself when you spoke to the Bishop?
5604Why, who are the children to belong to?
5604Why?
5604Will she be happy when she finds you out?
5604Will somebody tell me how the world is to go on if nobody is to get married?
5604Will somebody tell me what an honorable man and a sincere Anglican is to propose to a woman whom he loves and who loves him and wo nt marry him?
5604Will the Labor Exchange find employers for her?
5604Will you be happy if you marry her?
5604Will you be so good as to join us and allow us the benefit of your wisdom and experience?
5604Will you be so kind as to tell me whether I am dreaming?
5604Will you give it up and get married, Edith?
5604Will you introduce me?
5604Will you not take me as I am?
5604With Cecil?
5604Wo nt you let me stay?
5604Wo nt you sit down, Mr Alderman?
5604Would it not then be well to try unlimited polygyny; so that the remaining fifth could have as many wives apiece as they could afford?
5604Would you marry now that you know better if you were a widower?
5604Would you steal a turnip from one of the fields they have no right to?
5604Would you steal a turnip from one of the landlords of those stolen lands?
5604Would you, a Bishop, approve of such partnerships?
5604Yes; but shall we take you and burn you?
5604Yes?
5604You amused the husband, did nt you?
5604You call it that, do you?
5604You call that work?
5604You could nt know that it was only the coal merchant''s wife, could you?
5604You damned scoundrel, how dare you throw my wife over like that before my face?
5604You did all this for Leo''s sake, Rejjy?
5604You do nt believe in women, do you, Anthony?
5604You do nt mind, Dad, do you?
5604You do nt suppose a man beats his wife for the fun of it, do you?
5604You have both given in, have you?
5604You hear that, Lesbia?
5604You know the story of his life, then?
5604You love me?
5604You or he?
5604You re not going to speak to me again, anyhow, are you?
5604You re quite done with him, are you?
5604You read my letters, then?
5604You see the relatives shaking hands with them and asking them about the family-- actually ladies saying"Where have we met before?"
5604You think the truth useless?
5604You understand that?
5604You will superintend the breakfast yourself as usual, of course, wo nt you?
5604You wo nt mind, old chap, do you?
5604You?
5604Your?
5604[ Aloud to her] May I suggest that you shall be Anthony''s devil and the Bishop''s saint and my adored Polly?
5604[ Coming a little nearer and bending his face towards hers] Now I put it to you, does it not show you the folly of not marrying?
5604[ Coming to Mrs Bridgenorth] How do, Alice?
5604[ Looking at Edith''s dressing- jacket] You re not going to get married like that, are you?
5604[ Passing on towards the hearth] Why so gloomy, General?
5604[ Rising] But what s it got to do with our business here to- day?
5604[ To Leo] By the way, who was it that joined you and Reginald, my dear?
5604[ To Mrs Bridgenorth] Do nt you think her letters are quite the best love- letters I get?
5604[ To Mrs Bridgenorth] Will you receive here or in the hall, maam?
5604[ To Mrs George] How much ought I to give him, Mrs Collins?
5604[ To Soames, coaxingly] You do nt mind, do you?
5604[ To the Bishop, eagerly] Was it you?
5604[ Uneasily] Alfred: why do nt you say something?
5604[ With great energy, becoming quite herself again] What the goodness gracious has been happening?
5604a man with his boots in every corner, and the smell of his tobacco in every curtain?
5604and had the strangest adventures with them?
5604how is it that we always get talking about Hotchkiss when our business is about Edith?
5604marriage is not a question of law, is it?
5604simply to get rid of your wife?
5604true, It''s about the wedding?
5604was I no more to you than a bone to a dog?
5604was it nothing to you?
5604were you dull?
5604what attention do they ever pay to what we say and what we want?
5604what man a dozen Nell Gwynnes?
5604what sort of Prime Ministers should we have if we took them for better for worse for all their lives?
5604what sort of friends?
53847Are you_ sure_ it will not?
53847But was n''t he a warrior, too and might n''t they be battle- axes?
53847Do n''t you see that_ r_?
53847So you found an extra_ r_, instead of an extra axe, in your way? 53847 That''s the_ best way to take things_, is n''t it, Bess?"
53847What did you_ think_ it made?
53847What were you going to make your extra axes out of?
53847Why,_ is_ it one?
53847Yes; but what has that_ r_, all alone by itself, to do with it?
53847_ What_ is too bad, Bess? 53847 _ What_ is too bad, Bess?"
53847''Tis dropping on your arm?
53847( Are you a tease?)
53847143. Who was the heaviest of mechanics?
5384718. Who was the first that bore arms?
5384793. Who cowardly a prince did kill?
5384794. Who built a city on a hill?
53847A squirrel, finding nine ears of corn in a box, took from it, daily, three ears; how many days was he in removing the corn from the box?
53847All children love to go to sea, and why?
53847And here, what''s this?
53847And that to which wives are inclined?
53847And the busiest tree?
53847And the dancing tree?
53847And the dandiest tree?
53847And the tell- tale tree?
53847And the tree in a fog?
53847And the tree like an Irish nurse?
53847And the tree neither up nor down hill?
53847And the tree of the people?
53847And the tree that bears a curse?
53847And the tree that by cockneys is turned into wine?
53847And the tree that forbids you to die?
53847And the tree that gives the bones pain?
53847And the tree that got up?
53847And the tree that is dear?
53847And the tree that is split?
53847And the tree that is warmest clad?
53847And the tree that makes one sad?
53847And the tree that never stands still?
53847And the tree that obeys you?
53847And the tree that to travel invites you?
53847And the tree that warms mutton when cold?
53847And the tree that was lazy?
53847And the tree that your wants will supply?
53847And the tree we may use as a quill?
53847And the tree where ships may be?
53847And the tree which is nearest the sea?
53847And the tree whose wood faces the north?
53847And the trees that must pass through the fire?
53847And what did it_ mean_, after all?
53847And what each must become ere he''s old?
53847And what guides the ships to go forth?
53847And what mother and child have the name?
53847And what round fair ankles they bind?
53847And what round itself doth intwine?
53847And what, think you, is our_ family_ name?
53847And who would suppose An orange and a pear Would grow by the side Of the garden''s pride?
53847Are the snow- flakes pearly flowers That in the skies have birth, And gently fall in gleaming showers Upon this barren earth?
53847At what distance must a body have fallen to acquire the velocity of 1,600 feet per second?
53847B gave C four$ 5 notes, three of which he borrowed from D. How much did B lose by the operation?
53847Bold, reckless, cunning, cool, or sly, What wo n''t they do?
53847Can a leopard change his spots?
53847Dear friends, your notice now I crave, For I''m a king, a queen, a slave; Each human being claims my name, And rightly, too, so where''s the blame?
53847Did Jonah cry when the whale swallowed him?
53847Did he lie, or did he tell the truth?
53847Every moment has its duty-- Who the future can foretell?
53847Far from all the care and strife, All the agony of life, Who would deem the sun could rise On earth''s thousand miseries?
53847Have you heard their fairy whisper?
53847Have you heard them shooting by us?
53847Have you seen the whispering spirits?
53847Have you seen these living fairies?
53847Here are needles and thread-- Let''s see-- shall we call it tre- mend(o)us?
53847How can a person live eighty years, and see only twenty birthdays?
53847How can five persons divide five eggs, so that each man shall receive one, and still one remain in the dish?
53847How can they all get to the opposite side, no lady being left without her husband in company with the other gentlemen?
53847How could they be arranged to suit the above conditions?
53847How did Jonah feel when the whale swallowed him?
53847How did he do it?
53847How did he manage the matter?
53847How did it come?
53847How does the wood- cutter invite the tree to fall?
53847How far is the President of the United States from the first man that ever died?
53847How far will the hound run to overtake the fox?
53847How is it that Methuselah was the oldest man, when he died before his father?
53847How is it that a hen knows no night?
53847How is it that a man with long legs can not travel faster than one with short legs?
53847How is it that trees put on their summer dresses, without opening their trunks?
53847How is it that you can work with an awl, but not with a forceps; while I can work with a forceps, and not with an awl?
53847How long ago were trunks first used?
53847How long is the whale?
53847How long would a ball be falling, from the top of a tower that was 400 feet high, to the earth?
53847How many black beans will make five white ones?
53847How many feet ought a thief to have?
53847How many had each?
53847How many inches in diameter must each one use?
53847How many soft- boiled eggs could the giant Goliah eat upon an empty stomach?
53847How many yards must a person walk, who undertakes to pick them up, and place them in a basket stationed one yard from the first stone?
53847How much silk is required to make a spherical balloon, 16 inches in diameter, without allowing for seams?
53847How near does a boy straddling a rail come to the President of the United States?
53847How old was their father?
53847How were the two farms divided?
53847How wide is the street?
53847How will you arrange four 9''s so as to make one hundred?
53847How would the proposed removal of the Pope to Jerusalem be a false move for the Papacy, and a true one for the Papal States?
53847How would you express in one word having met a doctor of medicine?
53847I prove 2= 1, thus:-- x= a; then x^2= ax x^2- a^2= ax- a^2( x+ a)(x- a)= a(x- a) x+ a= a 2a= a 2= 1 Who will detect the fallacy?
53847If I shoot at three pigeons on a tree, and kill one, how many will remain?
53847If a bushel of potatoes comes to$ 1, what will a horse come to?
53847If a fender cost six dollars, what will a ton of coal come to?
53847If a loafer, smoking a cigar, sets fire to the brush on his upper lip, is it a case of spontaneous combustion?
53847If a tough beef- steak could speak, what poet''s name would it pronounce?
53847If a woman stands behind a tree, how does the tree stand?
53847If the earth were annihilated, why would it be a pleasant pastime to make it again?
53847If you pull a rabbit''s ears, what will he say?
53847If you should lose your nose, what kind of one would you get?
53847In this silence, deep and still, Who could harbor thought of ill?
53847In what coin is its financial value estimated?
53847In what do grave and gay people differ at church?
53847In what does a dog differ from a groom in his treatment of a horse?
53847In what ship, and in what capacity, do young ladies like to engage?
53847Is it anger?
53847Is it possible to put twelve pieces of money in six rows, and have four in a row?
53847Is like the cold storm Which, in climates bright and warm, Where gallinippers swarm, Come shivering down from the pole?
53847Its flowers are bright, And they grew in a night, For yesterday it was bare Did ever you see An evergreen tree So fruitful and so fair?
53847Must we not, then, be a useful family?
53847My first is a female, My second the same, My whole is much dreaded-- Pray what is its name?
53847My first means more than one?
53847My labor never flags; And what are its wages?
53847Nose, nose, and who gave thee that jolly red nose?
53847Now let it come in torrents-- We''re snug as snug can be; What cares our brave umbrella For five, or four, or three?
53847Now we beg you will show, If you happen to know, Why the Editor, painstaking soul?
53847Of what trade are we when we walk in the snow?
53847Of what trade is the sun in May?
53847Once in a minute, twice in a moment, once in a man''s life?
53847One_ p_, one_ i_, four_ a_''s, two_ r_''s, two_ s_''s, two_ l_''s-- what do they make, and who has made a fortune by them?
53847Or, are they downy feathers, cast By little birds above, And hurried earthward by the blast, Bright messengers of love?
53847Or, are they fleecy locks of wool, From sheep that wander by The silver streams, that, singing, roll Through valleys in the sky?
53847R U L.( Are you well?)
53847Shall we try''Aunt Sue?''"
53847She can walk, and run, and ride-- In dance, or hop, she''s always great-- Prithee why not skate or slide?
53847Tell me why is it, if you lend But forty dollars to a friend, It does your kindness more commend Than if five hundred you should send?
53847Tell me, do you know it, surely?
53847Tell me, is it only blarney?"
53847That gentle picture dost thou know, Itself, its hues, and splendor gaining?
53847The Egyptian plague tree?
53847The chronologist tree?
53847The contemptible tree?
53847The emulous tree?
53847The fisherman''s tree?
53847The housewife''s tree?
53847The industrious tree?
53847The languishing tree?
53847The layman''s tree?
53847The least selfish tree?
53847The most yielding tree?
53847The reddish- blue tree?
53847The reddish- brown tree?
53847The terrible tree when schoolmasters flog?
53847The treacherous tree?
53847The tree half given to doctors when ill?
53847The tree in a bottle?
53847The tree that causes each townsman to flee?
53847The tree that in Latin can ne''er be forgot, And in England we all must admire?
53847The tree that in billiards must ever be near?
53847The tree that will fight?
53847The tree that''s entire?
53847The tree that''s immortal?
53847The tree to be kissed?
53847The tree we offer to friends when we meet?
53847The trees that are not?
53847The unhealthiest tree?
53847Then why put off till to- morrow, What to- day can do as well?
53847To whom drinkest thou?
53847Tom or I?
53847Under what shade can you dance best?
53847Under what tree is it most proper to make love?
53847Well, is n''t that a funny dress?
53847What Jewish king a leper died?
53847What Persian queen preserved the Jews?
53847What Scripture character was a stupid sheep?
53847What Scripture character would have made a suitable husband for a tall laundress?
53847What animal is like a stone- breaker?
53847What animal is like an apothecary?
53847What animal is the most windy, and why?
53847What animal resembles the sea, and why?
53847What animal that always has a cold chin is used to keep the ladies''chins warm?
53847What belongs to yourself, yet is used by others more than yourself?
53847What beverage will surely change our pain?
53847What biblical name is there which expresses a father calling his son by name, and his son replying?
53847What bird is that which has no wings?
53847What bird most resembles a peddler?
53847What boat is found in every ocean?
53847What brightens your house, and your mansion sustains?
53847What did Mary mean?
53847What do we all do when we first get into bed?
53847What does a frigate weigh when ready for sea?
53847What does the boy, in his first surprise, say to his_ water- wheel_?
53847What fish does a bride wear on her finger?
53847What fishes have their eyes nearest together?
53847What flowers are always under a person''s nose?
53847What is flatter than a flat?
53847What is it you must keep after giving it to another?
53847What is nothing good for?
53847What is that number which, if you divide, You then will nothing leave on either side?
53847What is that which burns to keep a secret?
53847What is that which every one can divide, but no one can see where it has been divided?
53847What is that which every one likes to have, and to get rid of as soon as possible after he gets it?
53847What is that which has eyes and sees not, ears and hears not, nose and smells not, yet is often regarded as the_ beau- ideal_ of a human being?
53847What is that which has many leaves, but no stem?
53847What is that which is invisible, but never out of sight?
53847What is that which is less tired the longer it runs?
53847What is that which is often brought to table, often cut, but never eaten?
53847What is that which makes every person sick except the one who swallows it?
53847What is that which strikes itself frequently, and yet does itself no injury?
53847What is that which the dead and living do at the same time?
53847What is that which will make you catch cold-- cure the cold-- and pay the doctor''s bill?
53847What is that which, supposing its greatest breadth to be four inches, length nine inches, and depth three inches, contains a solid foot?
53847What is that without which a wagon can not be made, and can not go, and yet is of no use to it?
53847What is the best key to a good dinner?
53847What is the difference between Joan of Arc and Noah''s ark?
53847What is the difference between a boy and his shadow?
53847What is the difference between a chemist and an alchemist?
53847What is the difference between a grandmother and her infant grandchild?
53847What is the difference between a sun- bonnet and a Sunday bonnet?
53847What is the difference between twenty four quart bottles, and four and twenty quart bottles?
53847What is the most cheerful part of an arsenal?
53847What is the most suitable dance to wind off a frolic?
53847What is the only word in the English language that can be written without pen, pencil, chalk, or any other pigment?
53847What is the political character of a water- wheel?
53847What is the shape of a kiss?
53847What is the sociable tree?
53847What is the water- wheel paradox?
53847What is the word?
53847What is there at the same time philosophical and ungrammatical in this sport?
53847What island in the Pacific is always at this sport?
53847What kin is that child to its father who is not its father''s own son?
53847What kind of a diary is productive of mischief?
53847What kind of a ship did Solomon object to?
53847What kind of cat is most valued in Sunday- school?
53847What kind of morals are most easily put on and off?
53847What letters of the alphabet come too late for supper?
53847What looks worse on a lady''s foot than a darned stocking?
53847What now shall be said?
53847What number is that which can be divided by 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, leaving, in each case, a remainder of 1, and by 7, without a remainder?
53847What number is that, which, added separately to 100 and 164, shall make them perfect squares?
53847What odd number will give, on being divided, a half clear of a fraction?
53847What part of London is in France?
53847What part of a house measures about two quarts?
53847What part of a ship was Cain?
53847What part of the horse resembles you?
53847What poet do miners value most?
53847What poet is least distinguished for brevity?
53847What poet is like a sly piece of bacon?
53847What relation does the soap- bubble bear to the boy who makes it?
53847What relation is the door- mat to the scraper?
53847What river in Bavaria answers the question, Who is there?
53847What sea would make the best sleeping- room?
53847What skillful housewife does not know When, where to place my first?
53847What smells most in a drug shop?
53847What species of cat has more than one tail?
53847What species of cat is most to be avoided?
53847What spice are the Hindoos fond of?
53847What stone opens and shuts at your convenience?
53847What the tree that in death will benight you?
53847What town in Asia is a fit residence for a wild beast?
53847What tree do the hunters resound to the skies?
53847What tree is that, which has twelve branches, thirty leaves on each branch, and each leaf white on one side, and black on the other?
53847What tree urged the Grecians in vengeance to rise And fight for the victims by tyranny slain?
53847What two female names express a chemist?
53847What two letters give a word meaning to debate?
53847What two letters of the alphabet do children like best?
53847What two letters of the alphabet make a prophet?
53847What two reasons why a young lady going to the altar is certainly going wrong?
53847What two reasons why whispering in company is not proper?
53847What two syllables of the marriage ceremony are most interesting to the priest?
53847What vessel is that which is always asking leave to move?
53847What was a month old at Cain''s birth, that is not five weeks old now?
53847What was his meaning?
53847What was the difference-- can you show-- Between the Prodigal in his woe, And Lazarus, in his low estate, Feeding on crumbs at Dives''gate?
53847What word is that to which if you add a syllable, it will make it shorter?
53847What word is that, of three letters, which, read backward, indicates the quality of many who participate in it?
53847What''s that you say, dear Nellie?
53847What''s the traitor''s tree?
53847When a boy falls into the water, what is the first thing he does?
53847When a boy falls, what does he fall against?
53847When are children in danger of forming bad habits?
53847When are politicians particularly sweet?
53847When are the letters like the keys of a piano?
53847When did Esau, the hairy man, lose his whiskers?
53847When did Job call nicknames?
53847When does a temperance lecturer say a grammar lesson?
53847When does the tongue assume the functions of the teeth?
53847When does the weather resemble a lawyer?
53847When does the weather show a good disposition?
53847When he is caught stealing, what does he catch?
53847When is a boat like a knife?
53847When is a chair like a rich lady''s dress?
53847When is a door not a door?
53847When is a fish a rod?
53847When is a political candidate like Samson''s guests?
53847When is a sewing- machine a very great comfort?
53847When is an Indian like a railroad engine?
53847When is roast beef most valuable?
53847When the day breaks, what becomes of the fragments?
53847Whence that sweet, inspiring strain, Pealing on my ravished ear?
53847Where did cherries come from?
53847Where was Major Andre going when he was captured?
53847Where were potatoes first found?
53847Wherein does a turkey- cock differ from a lady?
53847Which are the most entertaining of bats?
53847Which class of democrats does a hen show most, regard for?
53847Which of the English poets would be most likely to make a lion feel at home?
53847Which of the cats does a young man show the most affection for?
53847Which of the forest trees bears gain?
53847Which of the girls can answer questions best?
53847Which of the planets would the tortoise like best to live in?
53847Which of the reptiles is a mathematician?
53847While each star through the dark gloom of night, Lends a clear and cheering light, Who a doubt or fear can feel?
53847While in boyhood, what could match it?
53847Whose son profane his life did lose?
53847Whose wicked mother"Treason"cried?
53847Why are A B''s successors seedy?
53847Why are Cashmere shawls like deaf persons?
53847Why are buckwheat cakes like the caterpillar?
53847Why are chairs like men?
53847Why are children at play like a bird in her nest?
53847Why are different trees like different dogs?
53847Why are fowls the most economical things farmers keep?
53847Why are handsome women like bread?
53847Why are ladies sitting on the stoop, like an unfinished house?
53847Why are mortgages like burglars?
53847Why are most of the heroes and heroines in novels like the letter O?
53847Why are some kinds of pigeons like drinking- glasses?
53847Why are two heads better than one?
53847Why are unprotected hearth- fires like insolent beggars?
53847Why are young ladies like arrows?
53847Why are your nose and chin always at variance?
53847Why do girls blow bubbles better than boys?
53847Why do pioneers march at the head of the regiment?
53847Why do postmasters deserve the execration of all true Americans?
53847Why do trees often change their places?
53847Why does a fisherman blow his horn?
53847Why does a man in paving the streets correct the public morals?
53847Why does a miller wear a white hat?
53847Why is France like a skeleton?
53847Why is Fremont equal to eight honest politicians?
53847Why is Merry''s Museum like a good mother?
53847Why is Merry''s Museum like a good wife?
53847Why is Merry''s Museum like a note falling due?
53847Why is Merry''s Museum like a printing- office?
53847Why is Satan on a shed like a bankrupt?
53847Why is Tom Tumbledown like Adam when he saw the apple?
53847Why is a Turk like a violin belonging to an inn?
53847Why is a boy crying to be helped over a rail fence like a lawyer?
53847Why is a bullet like a tender glance?
53847Why is a cart- horse always in the wrong place?
53847Why is a coachman a generous man?
53847Why is a conundrum like a monkey?
53847Why is a coward like a mouse- trap?
53847Why is a cricket on the hearth like a soldier in battle?
53847Why is a dandy like a haunch of venison?
53847Why is a dashing young buck a favorite with the ladies?
53847Why is a dog like a clock- maker''s safe?
53847Why is a dog like a tanner?
53847Why is a drummer the greatest person of the times?
53847Why is a farm- yard like a hotel?
53847Why is a gooseberry pie like counterfeit money?
53847Why is a grist- mill like an orange- tree?
53847Why is a grist- mill like the court- martial which cashiered Fremont?
53847Why is a hog just purchased like 120 pounds of steel?
53847Why is a horse like the prophet Elijah?
53847Why is a hunter like an omnibus pickpocket?
53847Why is a joke like a cocoa- nut?
53847Why is a large fresh egg like a virtuous deed?
53847Why is a lost child like you?
53847Why is a man in debt like a misty morning?
53847Why is a man in snow shoes like a man barefooted?
53847Why is a man who makes a wager of a cent, like a person recovering from illness?
53847Why is a man with wooden legs like one who has an even bargain?
53847Why is a mouse like grass?
53847Why is a nail, fast in the wall, like an old man?
53847Why is a new married man like a horse?
53847Why is a parish bell like a good story?
53847Why is a passenger by the 12.50 train very likely to be too late?
53847Why is a person who never lays a wager as bad as a regular gambler?
53847Why is a philanthropist like an old horse?
53847Why is a picture surrounded by books like a happy man?
53847Why is a printer like a postman?
53847Why is a rabbit like a tailor?
53847Why is a rabbit not required to take the temperance pledge?
53847Why is a rose- bud like a promissory note?
53847Why is a sanguinary epistle like a surgeon?
53847Why is a sculptor like a man who"splits his sides with laughter?"
53847Why is a ship under full sail like Niagara?
53847Why is a sick Jew like a diamond ring?
53847Why is a side- saddle like a four- quart measure?
53847Why is a small horse like a young musk- melon?
53847Why is a soap- bubble like Adam?
53847Why is a spotted dog most reliable?
53847Why is a tailor finishing your pants like a polite host serving his guests with water- fowl?
53847Why is a tallow- chandler one of the most sinful and unfortunate of men?
53847Why is a thing purchased like a shoe?
53847Why is a thump like a hat?
53847Why is a tree like a French dancing- master?
53847Why is a used up horse like a bad play?
53847Why is a very large man always sober?
53847Why is a weathercock like ambition?
53847Why is a woodman like a stage actor?
53847Why is an Indian like a flirt?
53847Why is an Indian like a scholar?
53847Why is an avaricious man like one with a short memory?
53847Why is an elephant like a chair?
53847Why is an elephant like a lady''s veil?
53847Why is an inn like a burial- ground?
53847Why is an obstinate man like a mastiff?
53847Why is an orange not like a church bell?
53847Why is an unpaid bill like the moisture in the morning?
53847Why is green grass like a mouse?
53847Why is it dangerous for a teetotaler to have more than two reasons for the faith that is in him?
53847Why is it dangerous to flirt in a hay- field?
53847Why is it profitable to keep fowl?
53847Why is it that miserly people have never quarreled?
53847Why is marriage like truth?
53847Why is memory like the peacock?
53847Why is my inkstand like the leaning tower of Pisa?
53847Why is silver currency like CÃ ¦ sar''s army by the Rubicon?
53847Why is swearing like an old coat?
53847Why is the best baker most in want of bread?
53847Why is the boy that disturbs a hive like a true Christian?
53847Why is the butcher''s dog in the parlor like your mother receiving strange company?
53847Why is the cook more noisy than a gong?
53847Why is the elephant his own servant?
53847Why is the hottest country the best?
53847Why is the hour of noon on the dial- plate like a pair of spectacles?
53847Why is the largest city in Ireland likely to be the largest city in the world?
53847Why is the letter F like an incendiary?
53847Why is the letter F like death?
53847Why is the letter y like a young spendthrift?
53847Why is there no danger of starving in a desert?
53847Why is your favorite puppy like a doll?
53847Why is"i"the happiest of the vowels?
53847Why may muslin and flour be considered safe articles in market?
53847Why may not a woman skate?
53847Why may not a woman skate?
53847Why may not a woman skate?
53847Why may not a woman skate?
53847Why may not a woman skate?
53847Why may not a woman skate?
53847Why ought a fisherman to be very wealthy?
53847Why should a brigadier- general, with his troops, be able to cross any river?
53847Why should a hound never be admitted into the house?
53847Why should doctors attend to window- sashes?
53847Why strains my first his wearied sight, Across the silent main, And loiters on the lonely beach?
53847Why was Daniel like Nebuchadnezzar''s image?
53847Why was Noah saved without a Pope?
53847Why were the Amalekites never allowed to speak?
53847Why were the Hebrews called sheep?
53847Why were the Scribes and Pharisees like a great conflagration?
53847Why would it be sure to be better?
53847With what three letters can you express a sentence comprising ten letters?
53847[ Illustration] 3. Who prolongs his work to as great a length as possible, and still completes it in time?
53847bound when he sought a divorce from his wife?
53847did you?
53847indade,"says Mike-- that''s Michael--"Do you know it, Pat"--that''s Patrick--"Do you know it, Pat, for certain?
53847men?
53847what wo n''t they try?
53847who would have guessed?
53847would n''t I, would n''t I fly?
7013A what?
7013After whom is the king of Israel come out? 7013 And did they give thee my knife, together with thy leopard- skin purse, which I found on the ground, after I had dragged thee forth?"
7013And he said unto me,''Who art thou?'' 7013 And his name,"said Dick,"was Victor?"
7013And if he be the devil,replied De Bracy,"would you fly from him into the mouth of hell?
7013And nowhere else but where thou hast named? 7013 And sayest thou so, my dear?"
7013And, moreover, my brother, thou talkest of ease in the grave; but hast thou forgotten the hell, whither for certain the murderers go? 7013 Are you so foolish as to think you can please so many lords?
7013Black hair?
7013But how if this path should lead us out of the way?
7013But you maintained your post?
7013Can I rescue thee?
7013Dick, you have no conscience,replied Paul;"you surely would not deceive the girl in such a heartless manner?
7013Didst thou dream that I should be faithless and forsake thee? 7013 Do not be afraid,"said Paul; but he continued:"It may be a difficult affair if he is a powerful man-- what size is he?"
7013Do you aim at princes?
7013Father, are you mad?
7013Father, do you not hear a tumult in the streets?
7013For if a man find his enemy, will he let him go well away? 7013 For why,"said he,"should you choose life, seeing it is attended with so much bitterness?"
7013Front- de- Boeuf?
7013Had not lost an arm?
7013He may come to- morrow, as he used to do?
7013How can we reach him? 7013 How sayest thou, Corvinus; when and how have I contended with thee?"
7013How so?
7013If I''ll stick to you, captain? 7013 Is it thee, thou poor lad?"
7013Is she young, and perhaps beautiful?
7013Lives Reginald Front- de- Boeuf,said a broken and shrill voice close by his bedside,"to say there is that which he dares not?"
7013Look,said Christian,"did not I tell you so?
7013Nello may come here again, father?
7013No? 7013 Pray, did you know him?"
7013Roman nose?
7013Say he:''Dear James, to murder me Were a foolish thing to do, For do n''t you see that you ca n''t cook me, While I can-- and will-- cook you?'' 7013 Seem there no other leaders?"
7013That ridge-- the ridge which communicates with the castle-- have they won that pass?
7013The assailants have won the barriers, have they not?
7013The infidel Jew-- it was merit with Heaven to deal with him as I did, else wherefore are men canonized who dip their hands in the blood of Saracens? 7013 Then only the cook and me was left, And the delicate question,''Which Of us two goes to the kettle?''
7013Then,said the other,"Do you see yonder shining light?"
7013True,muttered Hutchinson to himself;"what care these roarers for the name of king?
7013Under what banner?
7013What art thou?
7013What boat''s that?
7013What device does he bear on his shield?
7013What do they now, maiden?
7013What do you think of my becoming an author, and relying for support upon my pen? 7013 What dost thou see, Rebecca?"
7013What is the matter, my child?
7013What remains?
7013Whence came you? 7013 Where be these dog- priests now,"growled the baron,"who set such price on their ghostly mummery?
7013Where did you learn that hymn?
7013Where is Front- de- Boeuf?
7013Where lies my way? 7013 Where, I again ask?"
7013Will the king''s name protect you now? 7013 Will you?"
7013Yes,added Dick Stone,"I think we can manage it if we''re all true friends; and may I ask your name, my dear?
7013***** Of all the characters in this story, which is the most important and the most interesting?
7013After a while, as he was thus musing, there appeared before him one in white garments, who said unto him,''Sleepest thou or wakest thou, Rodrigo?''
7013Ai n''t it, captain?"
7013Am I not a Philistine and ye servants to Saul?
7013An engine for assault or siege?"
7013And David enquired of the Lord, saying,"Shall I go up to the Philistines?
7013And David fled from Naioth in Ramah, and came and said before Jonathan,"What have I done?
7013And David said unto Saul,"Who am I?
7013And David said unto him,"From whence comest thou?"
7013And David said unto him,"How wast thou not afraid to stretch forth thine hand to destroy the Lord''s anointed?"
7013And David said unto him,"How went the matter?
7013And David said unto the young man that told him,"How knowest thou that Saul and Jonathan his son be dead?"
7013And David said unto the young man that told him,"Whence art thou?"
7013And David said,"What have I now done?
7013And Joab said unto the man that told him,"And, behold, thou sawest him, and why didst thou not smite him there to the ground?
7013And Jonathan answered Saul his father, and said unto him,"Wherefore shall he be slain?
7013And Michal answered Saul,"He said unto me,''Let me go; why should I kill thee?''"
7013And Saul said to him,"Whose son art thou, thou young man?"
7013And Saul said unto Michal,"Why hast thou deceived me so, and sent away mine enemy, that he is escaped?"
7013And art thou now nothing but fear?
7013And he bowed himself, and said,"What is thy servant, that thou shouldest look upon such a dead dog as I am?"
7013And he stood and cried unto the armies of Israel, and said unto them,"Why are ye come out to set your battle in array?
7013And it came to pass, when David had made an end of speaking these words unto Saul, that Saul said,"Is this thy voice, my son David?"
7013And must I answer for the fault done by fifty?
7013And the Cid made answer,"What man art thou who askest me?"
7013And the king said unto Cushi,"Is the young man Absalom safe?"
7013And then the men of Israel said,"Have ye seen this man that is come up?"
7013And when the king saw them, before Alvar Fañez could deliver his bidding, he said unto him,"Minaya, who sends me this goodly present?"
7013And when the lad was come to the place of the arrow which Jonathan had shot, Jonathan cried after the lad, and said,"Is not the arrow beyond thee?"
7013Art thou fled?
7013At this Pliable began to be offended, and angrily said to his fellow,"Is this the happiness you have told me all this while of?
7013But I trust there is no dishonor in wishing I had here some two scores of my gallant troop of Free Companions?
7013But how about the sentry?"
7013But she, the child that, at nineteen, had wrought wonders so great for France, was she not elated?
7013But what is Troy, or glory what to me?
7013Can his dear image from my soul depart, Long as the vital spirit moves my heart?
7013Can you find other similar expressions?
7013Canst thou not see the motto?"
7013Come presents without wrong From Danaans?
7013Did she not lose, as men so often_ have_ lost, all sobriety of mind when standing upon the pinnacle of success so giddy?
7013Didst thou think it was but the darkening of thy bursting eyes, the difficulty of thy cumbered breathing?
7013Does it seem at all strange to you that we should call this poetry?
7013Does this not give you a vivid idea of the helplessness of David and his hopelessness?
7013Dost thou believe me now?
7013Girt with a throng of Ilium''s sons, Down from the tower Laocoön runs, And,"Wretched countrymen,"he cries,"What monstrous madness blinds your eyes?
7013Have I been always a viper on thy path?"
7013Have you not, yourself, known dogs that were as intelligent, as affectionate and as faithful as Patrasche?
7013He means to say by this that God is strong enough to protect him and defend him, but is not his way of saying it more forceful?
7013He shuddered and drew himself together; but, instantly summoning up his wonted resolution, he exclaimed,"Who is there?
7013Her voice faltered and her hand trembled, and it was only the cold question of Ivanhoe,"Is it you, gentle maiden?"
7013How can I help you?
7013How couldst thou hope to inflict wounds on others, ere that be healed which thou thyself hast received?"
7013How did he git thar?
7013How far do you think he may be before?"
7013How fought these villain yeomen on thy side?"
7013How is it, then, that thou hast run away from thy king?
7013How think you, Sir Brian, were we not better make a virtue of necessity, and compound with the rogues by delivering up our prisoners?"
7013I looked then, and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,"Wherefore dost thou cry?"
7013I-- a dog?"
7013If so, how will this end, or how can I protect Rowena and my father?"
7013If we have such ill- speed at our first setting out, what may we expect betwixt this and our journey''s end?
7013In the forests to which he prays for pity, will he find a respite?
7013Is it a martyr''s scaffold?
7013Is it, indeed, come to this?
7013Is there not a cause?"
7013KATEY''S LETTER_ By_ LADY DUFFERIN Och, girls, did you ever hear I wrote my love a letter?
7013Knowing that she would reap nothing from answering her persecutors, why did she not retire by silence from the superfluous contest?
7013Look, doth it not go along by the wayside?"
7013Markest thou the smouldering and suffocating vapor which already eddies in sable folds through the chamber?
7013My dear brother Victor, a prisoner in England?"
7013My lord, have you no counsel?
7013Noble Cedric, wilt thou take the direction of those which remain?"
7013Nor did the glow of hatred cool, Till, wielding Calchas* as his tool-- But why a tedious tale repeat, To stay you from your morsel sweet?
7013Now when Saul saw David go forth against the Philistine, he said unto Abner, the captain of the host,"Abner, whose son is this youth?"
7013Now, as they came up to these places, behold the gardener stood in the way, to whom the pilgrims said,"Whose goodly vineyards and gardens are these?"
7013Now, girls, would you believe it, That postman so_ consated_, No answer will he bring me, So long have I waited?
7013O say, what may it be?"
7013O say, what may it be?"
7013O say, what may it be?"
7013Rather tall?"
7013Rememberest thou the magazine of fuel that is stored beneath these apartments?"
7013Seest thou nought else, Rebecca, by which the Black Knight may be distinguished?"
7013Seest thou who they be that act as leaders?"
7013Shall it be''Gabrielle,''or''Celestine,''or''Evangeline''?"
7013Shall my Lord of Beauvais sit again upon the judgment- seat, and again number the hours for the innocent?
7013Shall we be ruled by the Giant?"
7013Since now at length the powerful will of heaven The dire destroyer to our arm has given, Is not Troy fallen already?
7013Surety all is false; you never met the French prisoner at Falmouth?"
7013Templar, thou wilt not fail me?"
7013That sentence reached the public ear, And bred the dull amaze of fear: Through every heart a shudder ran,''Apollo''s victim-- who the man?''
7013The king said unto him,"Where is he?".
7013The man therefore read it, and looking upon Evangelist very carefully, said,"Whither must I fly?"
7013The voice, the glance, the heart I sought,--give answer, where are they?
7013The wealth of seas, the spoils of war?
7013Then Joab arose, and came to Absalom unto his house, and said unto him,"Wherefore have thy servants set my field on fire?"
7013Then said David to Jonathan,"Who shall tell me?
7013Then said Evangelist, pointing with his finger over a very wide field,"Do you see yonder wicket gate?"
7013Then said Evangelist,"If this be thy condition, why standest thou still?"
7013Then said Evangelist,"Why not willing to die, since this life is attended with so many evils?"
7013Then said Hopeful,"Where are we now?"
7013There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band;-- Why had_ they_ come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land?
7013Think you your enemies removed?
7013Thinkest thou Front- de- Boeuf will be singled out to go alone?
7013Up from the ground he sprang and gazed; but who could paint that gaze?
7013Was he merely a worthless beauty, and is he despised for that reason?"
7013Well, p''r''aps I never have, and p''r''aps Dick Stone''s a coward?
7013Were they not aware of this three years ago?
7013What boots thee now, that Troy forsook the plain?
7013What building is that which hands so rapid are raising?
7013What can we do to save ourselves?"
7013What else but her meek, saintly demeanour won, from the enemies that till now had believed her a witch, tears of rapturous admiration?
7013What else drove the executioner to kneel at every shrine for pardon to_ his_ share in the tragedy?
7013What else, I demand, than mere weight of metal, absolute nobility of deportment, broke the vast line of battle then arrayed against her?
7013What god, O Muse,* assisted Hector''s force With fate itself so long to hold the course?
7013What is my iniquity?
7013What sayest thou of the knife?"
7013What sought they thus afar?-- Bright jewels of the mine?
7013What was he saying to them?
7013What was it?
7013What were they?
7013What''s your plan, captain?
7013When the gods had expressed their pleasure in all that had so far been done, Odin said,"Where shall we fix our own dwelling?
7013When thy chariot was dashed furiously along the Appian way, didst thou not hear the tramp of horses''hoofs trying to overtake thee?"
7013When was your brother taken?"
7013Where is the use of our power and wisdom if we can not, out of this evil thing, make something good and beautiful?"
7013Where was his squaw that he should be obliged to make a woman of himself?"
7013Who can it be?"
7013Who is she in bloody coronation robes from Rheims?
7013Who is she that cometh with blackened flesh from walking the furnaces of Rouen?
7013Who is this Philistine that he should defy the armies of the living God?"
7013Who is this that cometh from Domrémy?
7013Who knows but that God that made the world may cause that Giant Despair may die?
7013Who knows but that he may have strength to draw the bow?
7013Who or what could disturb the domestic quiet of such a great and powerful personage as now sat in Grandfather''s chair?
7013Who push their way?"
7013Who stirred up the licentious John to war against his grayheaded father-- against his generous brother?"
7013Who yield?
7013Why liest thou here, like a worn- out hind, when the Saxon storms thy place of strength?
7013Why, then,_ did_ she contend?
7013Will they burn the child of Domrémy a second time?
7013Wilt thou not accept my guidance?"
7013Would Domrémy know them again for the features of her child?
7013You''re not a bad- looking fellow, why should you not do the love- making?"
7013[ Footnote:_ Derring- do_ is an old word for daring, or_ warlike deed_] A fetterlock, and a shackle- bolt on a field sable-- what may that mean?
7013[ Illustration: DAVID MEETS GOLIATH] And the Philistine said unto David,"Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with staves?"
7013[ Illustration: IS THE YOUNG MAN, ABSALOM, SAFE?]
7013[ Illustration: NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE 1804- 1864]"Who goes there?"
7013[ Illustration: NELLO AND PATRASCHE]"Dost much of such folly?"
7013[ Illustration: THE BLACK KNIGHT AT THE GATE OF THE CASTLE]"Who is down?"
7013[ Illustration:"FATHER, DO YOU NOT HEAR?"]
7013[ Illustration:"FOR DON''T YOU SEE THAT YOU CAN''T COOK ME?"]
7013_ Apol._"Thou hast already been unfaithful in thy service to him; and how dost thou think to receive wages of him?"
7013_ By_ THOMAS DE QUINCEY What is to be thought of_ her_?
7013_ Chr._"But I have let myself to another, even to the King of princes; and how can I, with fairness, go back with thee?"
7013_ Chr._"I have given him my faith, and sworn my allegiance to him; how, then, can I go back from this, and not be hanged as a traitor?"
7013_ Chr._"Who could have thought that this path should have led us out of the way?"
7013_ Help._"But why did you not look for the steps?"
7013after whom dost thou pursue?
7013and he answered and said,''I do not sleep: but who art thou that bringest with thee such brightness and so sweet an odour?''
7013and how, pray?"
7013and tell me what is this?
7013and what is my life, or my father''s family in Israel, that I should be son- in- law to the king?"
7013and what is my sin before thy father, that he seeketh my life?"
7013and whither are you bound?"
7013art thou silenced?"
7013cried Ivanhoe;"for our dear Lady''s sake, tell me which has fallen?"
7013exclaimed Ivanhoe;"does he blench from the helm when the wind blows highest?"
7013exclaimed the knight;"do the false yeomen give way?"
7013exclaimed the prefect''s son in a fury;"and was it thy accursed steed which, purposely urged forward, frightened mine, and nearly caused my death?"
7013false- hearted knaves, where tarry ye?"
7013have I been unfaithful to him?"
7013have you thus approved Ulysses,* known so long?
7013he exclaimed with fury,"thou hast not set fire to it?
7013he repeated;"but have I deserved his trust?"
7013he shouted,"art thou there?"
7013it is then thou who art come to exult over the ruins thou hast assisted to lay low?"
7013neighbor Christian, where are you now?"
7013or that he may, in a short time, have another of his fits before us, and may lose the use of his limbs?
7013or that, at some time or other, he may forget to lock us in?
7013or what if thy father answer thee roughly?"
7013said De Bracy,"will ye let_ two_ men win our only pass for safety?"
7013said De Bracy;"what is to be done?"
7013surely you can help us?"
7013thinkest thou that I believe thee, when thou hast lain ever as a viper on my path, to bite my heel and overthrow me?"
7013to enter in the wall?
7013what art thou, that darest to echo my words in a tone like that of the night raven?
7013what hath he done?"
7013who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost dew regain?
7013why leave ye the good knight and noble Cedric to storm the pass alone?
7013wilt thou deliver them into mine hand?"
49772''Evolution,''she said blankly,"''what is evolution?''"
49772''Ought to go alone?--ought to go alone?'' 49772 ''Roger Michael''--''Roger Michael''--Sylvie, would n''t you rather use your own name if you wrote?"
49772A nice, clean- looking man,said Elizabeth who was inveterate at finding good;"not very original, but then who is?"
49772Ah, Hagar!--Goodies from Gilead Balm? 49772 Ai n''t you been to college for going on three years?"
49772All the same,said Hagar,"go to bed before two o''clock, wo n''t you?"
49772Am I not? 49772 Am I tiring you?"
49772Am I? 49772 And Elizabeth?"
49772And each change is greater by geometrical progression than was the one before?
49772And that respect?
49772And the two over there with the stout man?
49772And then-- how many years?--Nine, is n''t it?--that night at that Socialist meeting, when you spoke--"What were you doing there? 49772 And what may be your name?"
49772And without a child?
49772And you call this home?
49772And you rest the conqueror?
49772And you told him?
49772And you''re aware that I shall work on through life for the fairer social order? 49772 And you?"
49772And you?
49772Another?
49772Are n''t we going to have some more poetry? 49772 Are n''t you lucky, too?
49772Are n''t you the selfish person not to be willing to go to Bogotá?
49772Are n''t you tired, Molly? 49772 Are they always going to call you that?"
49772Are we? 49772 Are you afraid of death?"
49772Are you better?
49772Are you cold?
49772Are you going again this summer?
49772Are you going in, Miss? 49772 Are you hungry?"
49772Are you interested?
49772Are you interested?
49772Are you so wild to go to Bogotá?
49772Are you speaking,asked Hagar Ashendyne,"of the Suffrage Movement?"
49772Are you very tired?
49772Are you?
49772Aunt Serena, what do you suppose he did?
49772Aunt Serena, what is''evolution''?
49772Be yez the new man? 49772 But are n''t American women the freest in the world?"
49772But if there really is n''t any one?
49772Ca n''t I go to Cooper Union to- night?
49772Ca n''t you come with me, Hagar?
49772Can you read aloud?
49772China Awake?
49772Christopher?
49772Consciously together?
49772Could n''t we have,said Fay,"a month in some old, green, still, English country place?"
49772Could n''t you-- won''t you?
49772Dangerous?
49772Did I startle you?
49772Did he ask for his wife?
49772Did n''t you think,murmured the latter,"that that was a very curious speech?
49772Did you have a good time?
49772Did you have a pleasant walk?
49772Did you-- ever have-- the asthmy? 49772 Dilsey, has n''t Miss Hagar come in yet?...
49772Do I mind seeing you here, in Brittany? 49772 Do n''t you ever wish for just a clear Nothing?
49772Do n''t you like people to like you?
49772Do n''t you want some burrs?
49772Do n''t you, too,she asked,"feel at home with the dear old imperfection?"
49772Do you believe that-- when it is over-- we shall be together still?
49772Do you mean that they ought n''t to-- to do anything to you? 49772 Do you mean that you wo n''t like it?"
49772Do you mean,asked Mrs. LeGrand,"that, against your counsel and advice, Hagar is really going headstrongly on to do this silly thing?"
49772Do you object to my swearing?
49772Do you remember Ishmael in the Bible?--his hand against every man and every man''s hand against him? 49772 Do you remember once I told you I was going to make a great fortune, and you made light of it?
49772Do you see them staying women?
49772Do you suppose,said Molly,"that, in Merry England, the milkmaids and shepherdesses danced about a maypole at thirty- two?
49772Do you think she would hate me if I turned up in that place in Brittany?
49772Do you think that only mind in man rebels? 49772 Do you think that... perhaps... he might like to go home-- to go home to Gilead Balm?"
49772Do you think there can be no home without a man?
49772Do you think they can change?
49772Do you want me to get up and say good- night?
49772Do you, now?
49772Do you? 49772 Does he really think, mother, that it''s serious?"
49772Does that happen often? 49772 Dr. Bude-- oh, Dr. Bude-- is my mother going to die?"
49772Even so, you could come to see me, could n''t you? 49772 Four years in-- in jail?"
49772Four years?
49772Free politically?
49772Got a chill?
49772Grandfather,said Hagar,"do you remember Alexandria and the mosques and the Place Mahomet Ali?"
49772Hagar!--What is that? 49772 Hagar, do you love me?"
49772Hagar,said Elizabeth,"if I give you two or three books upon the position of woman in the past and to- day, will you read them?"
49772Has Isham brought the mail?
49772Has Isham gone for the mail?
49772Have n''t I anything of my father at all?
49772Have n''t you any other name than Hagar?
49772Have n''t you got any pretty patchwork nor nothin''?
49772Have we got it in the library at Gilead Balm?
49772Have you been to Gilead Balm?
49772Have you got gipsy blood in you?
49772Have you got one?
49772Have you got to go? 49772 Have you had any since you set up in this remarkable way for yourself?"
49772Have you heard from Lily?
49772Have you heard from Rose Darragh?
49772Have you heard them say how many days it will be before I am on my feet again?
49772Have you ladies seen Hagar Ashendyne? 49772 Have you seen the evening paper?"
49772Her husband hurt and ca n''t get to him to nurse him?
49772Hi, Gipsy,he said, when Hagar came and stood by him;"what''s the matter with breakfast this morning?"
49772Home to-- to Gilead Balm?
49772How can you know that your judgment is good?
49772How is mother?
49772How is my mother?
49772How long are you going to be in Nassau?
49772How long since that summer at the New Springs? 49772 How many days have you now?"
49772How numerous do you think are those women?
49772How''s yo''ma this mahnin''?
49772How, you mean, can I help it? 49772 I did n''t suppose you could do that.--What_ do_ you earn?"
49772I hope I may be.--What are you knitting, grandmother?
49772I think that I''m going to have an apartment in New York this winter, and if I do, wo n''t you make me a pincushion? 49772 I wonder now,"she said,"if you''re goin''to grow up a rebel?
49772I wonder what you''d say if I said that charity-- charity in your sense-- is one of woman''s worst weaknesses? 49772 I''m old- fashioned enough to believe that a man can_ make_ a woman love him--""Are you?
49772If you''d rather not, Gipsy--? 49772 If you''ve said enough for to- day, grandmother, shall I get the mail?"
49772Indeed?
49772Is it like''Tom Jones''?
49772Is it proper for ladies?
49772Is it your answer?
49772Is it your vacation? 49772 Is it?
49772Is it?... 49772 Is n''t it?
49772Is n''t there another piece about the Campagna? 49772 Is she really going to work if he can get her a place?"
49772Is that your last word?
49772Is there anything else, sir?
49772Is your name Hagar Ashendyne?
49772It''s a pleasant old place, is n''t it?
49772It''s big enough for two, is n''t it?
49772Just what and how much did you tell him?
49772Law, no, chile-- What put dat notion in yo''po''little haid? 49772 Let me see-- what is there to tell?
49772Let us go somewhere where we can talk,said Hagar;"the gardens over there-- have you time?"
49772Live? 49772 M. Morel and Mr. Pollock and you, Miss Carlisle and Miss Bedford, will, I hope, take supper with our guest and me?
49772Maria going to die? 49772 Maria was perfectly spendthrift, and of course you take after her.--What kind of work do you mean you have been doing?"
49772Maria? 49772 May I go play awhile on the ridge?"
49772May I see Jim or his wife?
49772May I sit and talk a little while? 49772 May n''t I see it, too?"
49772Miss Ashendyne, wo n''t you?
49772Miss Goldwell, wo n''t you come, too, to see''Romeo and Juliet''?
49772Miss Smythe, wo n''t you come, too?
49772Money and women are you talking about? 49772 Mr. Chairman, may I say one word to our comrades, and to any others who may be here?
49772Mrs. Green, why are all the shutters closed?
49772Mrs. LeGrand, ca n''t I go into grandmother''s room and hear what Dr. Bude says about my mother?
49772My dear Miss Eden, how did all this begin? 49772 No one knows, Hagar, what''s going to happen in this old world, do they?
49772November or April, what is ze difference? 49772 Of whom are you speaking, Hagar?"
49772Oh, I think so,said Rachel absently,"but would it really amuse you, Hagar?"
49772Oh, Lily, how is your head? 49772 Oh, Mr. Laydon, a briar has caught my skirt-- Will you--?
49772Oh,cried Hagar,"do n''t they make you feel timid, cautious, and conservative?"
49772Oh,she called,"will you stop-- will you wait?"
49772Ought you to have run away? 49772 Out where?"
49772Pleasant fellows, are n''t they?
49772Ralph, do you wish still to be friends, or do you wish me to put you one side of the Equator and myself on the other? 49772 Ralph, why do n''t you study?"
49772Rose went to Brooklyn to- night?
49772Rose?
49772Serena,appealed Mrs. LeGrand,"_ do_ you think Hagar ought to be allowed to contaminate her mind by a book like that?"
49772She does n''t mean that she''s friends with those brazen women who want to be men? 49772 She was sorry to see you, too, was n''t she?
49772Since I came?
49772Some wave will swamp us?
49772Suppose you do not begin the arrangement until next year? 49772 That I am just the same?--That I love you still?"
49772That is very nice of you to look her up, but do you think you ought to go alone?
49772The Princess of Wales keeps her beauty, does she not?
49772The copepods? 49772 The other half?"
49772Then,said Rachel,"we will get along very well.... What do you want to do anyhow?"
49772There is a natural history museum here, is n''t there?
49772There''s a woman over there who has a wonderful face-- brooding and wise.... A teacher is n''t she? 49772 They are going to live on there?"
49772They are so excited over the prospect of your speaking to them after supper,said Mrs. LeGrand, her hand upon the coffee urn.--"Cream and sugar?"
49772They''d tell you, would n''t they, if my mother was going to die?
49772Thomasine Dale? 49772 Tired?
49772To Hagar?
49772To live at Gilead Balm with Bob and Serena?
49772Was it named''Evolution''?
49772Was n''t the Canal good enough? 49772 Was this-- was this New York?"
49772Was you looking for the Greens?
49772Water tastes good,he said,"does n''t it?"
49772Well, Gipsy, we always wanted to travel, did n''t we? 49772 Well, Reverend, if we''re only two words apart-- Are you going to stay here?
49772Well, and what do you girls want to see first?
49772Well?
49772Well?
49772What are you doing here?
49772What day of the month?
49772What did you do that for? 49772 What did you do?"
49772What did you do?
49772What did you like best?
49772What do you like to do and to talk about?
49772What do you mean, grandfather? 49772 What do you mean?--That you want to become a rich man?"
49772What do you say, Gipsy, to risking a South American Revolution? 49772 What do you want to do that for?"
49772What dress are you going to wear?
49772What else is there, mother? 49772 What have they got the dogs out for?"
49772What have you done now, Hagar? 49772 What is going on?"
49772What is it that you do want?
49772What is it? 49772 What is it?
49772What is my sort? 49772 What is the matter?
49772What is the trouble with Hagar? 49772 What is your name?"
49772What kind of people are they? 49772 What should I do with it when it was done, and if I liked it-- which you know, Greer, is not dead certain?
49772What time is it?
49772What we gwine do? 49772 What were they?"
49772What will they say at Gilead Balm-- oh, what will they say at Gilead Balm?
49772What would it be?
49772What would you like to do with it, Gipsy?
49772What you doin''dat for?
49772What you shakin''for?
49772What''s grieving you, little girl?
49772What''s happened? 49772 What''s here?"
49772What''s the matter?
49772What''s the matter?
49772What,he said,"is_ your_ vision of the country that is coming?"
49772What,she said,"does a man or woman do in a dusty day''s march of every great transit?
49772When may I see grandfather?
49772When,asked Hagar,"are you going to build another bridge?"
49772When,asked Old Miss,"are you going to marry-- and whom?"
49772Where are they gone?
49772Where are you going, dear?
49772Where did you send it? 49772 Where did you two find each other?"
49772Where is Thomson?
49772Where will we go to- morrow afternoon?
49772While you were with Medway?
49772Who is it speaking?
49772Who is it?
49772Who on earth can that be?
49772Who should?
49772Who''s afraid of a little bit of storm anyhow?
49772Why are n''t you at the University with Blackstone under your arm?
49772Why could n''t you,said Mrs. LeGrand,"do both?
49772Why do you call it that, Colonel? 49772 Why is it that women do n''t have any money?"
49772Why not eternally the man of the past? 49772 Why not?
49772Why should n''t you all go? 49772 Why should they set traps?"
49772Why, are n''t there books enough here?
49772Why, my dear father, what are you doing here?... 49772 Why?"
49772Why?
49772Will you be-- Are you much hurt?
49772Without a man?
49772Wo n''t you take them-- dear Hagar?
49772Would you listen, Ralph?
49772Wrong things?
49772Yes, Gipsy? 49772 Yes, and where else do you think I went?
49772Yes, but--"Can you sing?
49772Yes, father?
49772Yes, it is very pretty.... You did n''t see Sylvie Maine-- Sylvie Carter-- when you were in New York?
49772Yes, mother?
49772Yes-- much better.... Where shall we go to- morrow?
49772Yes? 49772 You are going down the river, are n''t you?"
49772You are going to England, too?
49772You are sleeping better?
49772You do n''t have friends and correspondents who are working for_ that_?
49772You do n''t mind if I sit on the edge of the porch and dangle my feet, do you? 49772 You enjoyed it?"
49772You liked it, did n''t you?
49772You mentioned the University? 49772 You remember Bessie, do n''t you?
49772You should have married Ralph.... All these years have you had any other offers?
49772You''re aware that you''re marrying a working- woman, who intends to continue to work?
49772You''ve heard of the cat that always falls on its feet? 49772 You, Hagar?
49772_ Do_ you want to go, John? 49772 _ Hagar Ashendyne_--You ca n''t be-- do you mean that you are-- Hagar Ashendyne, the writer?"
49772A silence while the trees and the flowering blackberry bushes went by; then,"Aunt Serena--""Yes?"
49772After all, why should it fatigue more than standing in cathedrals, walking through art galleries?
49772Ah, I understand Medway, from hair to heel!--What comes of it all?
49772An afghan?
49772And I thought,''Why not I as well as another?''
49772And Molly and Christopher would come to see her?
49772And now will you tell me about yourself?"
49772And now, my dear, will you tell Mrs. Lane that I want to see her?"
49772And still you could travel-- sometimes with me, sometimes without me-- travel often if you pleased and far and wide.... Would it be so distasteful?"
49772And that, generally speaking, the Woman Movement has me for keeps?"
49772And the people who work under your direction, and atom by atom give you power?"
49772And then why not feel that you had, so to speak, the rest in trust, and give liberally, so much a year, to all kinds of worthy enterprises?
49772And your people up the river-- why not_ not_ tell them until summer- time?
49772Are you a fisherman, too?"
49772Are you coming to supper?"
49772Are you feeling badly?"
49772Are you fond of the theatre?"
49772Are you going to the World''s Fair?"
49772Are you wilful?"
49772As they passed Mrs. Maine''s door she asked sleepily from within,"Did you enjoy the play?"
49772But I can take the morning train if you''d rather?"
49772But after that, oh, steadily after that, it lessened--""''Lessened''!--You mean that you are not in love with me as you were?"
49772But could n''t they work in the country?
49772But having done it, our own judgment has to determine at last, has n''t it?
49772But how to convey that fact to the old Bourbon up the river?
49772But she is too sensible a woman to think that I meant anything seriously--""Did you?"
49772But what could you expect?
49772But what have they to do with''freer''and''freest''?
49772But you yourself--""But I myself?"
49772Ca n''t I-- wouldn''t you-- can''t I-- give her just a little?"
49772Ca n''t you come with me and have a cup of tea?
49772Can you swim?"
49772Captain Bob, with his hound Luna at his heels, greeted the returning members of the family:"Well, Serena, did you have a pleasant visit?
49772Comment vous nommez- vous?"
49772Damn it, where''d we be but for women anyhow?
49772Did Mrs. LeGrand say so?"
49772Did she like it?
49772Did she live with Marietta Green and Jim?"
49772Did you drop out of the sky?
49772Did you gather, Gipsy, that Thomson had told him that he would remain crippled?"
49772Did you have a tiresome journey?--Is your trunk coming?
49772Discouragements?
49772Do n''t you know that little girls ought to mind?"
49772Do n''t you know, Gipsy, that something like that is the career for a man like me?
49772Do n''t you like it?"
49772Do n''t you want a hansom?"
49772Do n''t you want me to do your hair?"
49772Do n''t you want me to take you one day to see the shrine where he keeps his idol and watch him providing acceptable sacrifice?
49772Do n''t you want to go along?"
49772Do n''t you?"
49772Do the women fish, too?"
49772Do you chance to know Elizabeth Eden?"
49772Do you grudge me this half- year in between?"
49772Do you know any of them?"
49772Do you like this place?"
49772Do you mind, very much?"
49772Do you notice how they always put Wife first?
49772Do you remember the day we climbed there?"
49772Do you remember the great pine above the spring?"
49772Do you remember the rain barrel?"
49772Do you remember?"
49772Do you think I owe my father so great a love and obedience?"
49772Do you want to_ take_ me, regardless-- just as you''d take those millions?
49772Does he undertake to support them, stay by his bargain, however poor a one?
49772Everything all right?"
49772For instance,"said Hagar,"is it wrong to write on both sides of the paper?"
49772Glass of water?
49772God was everywhere; then, was God right here, too?
49772Got any rags?"
49772Green?"
49772Had he not gone over them to himself afterwards, in his homely, cheerfully commonplace room in the brown cottage outside the Eglantine grounds?
49772Hagar looked at her large- eyed,"Is my mother going to die, Aunt Phoebe?"
49772Hagar, how old are you?"
49772Has the University burned down?
49772Have I offended you in any way, Hagar?"
49772Have n''t you liked this winter?"
49772Have you been expelled?"
49772Have you broken your doll, poor dear?"
49772Have you got a holiday?"
49772Have you got that menthol pencil still?"
49772Have you heard from Thomasine?"
49772Have you?"
49772He is a great traveller-- we do not see as much of him as we should like to see, do we, Hagar?"
49772He is pretty badly knocked to pieces.--What have you got there?
49772He went an hour ago.--You''re hoping, I suppose, for a letter from that dreadful man?"
49772How can any thinking woman not think of that?
49772How do you feel about it?"
49772How long are you going to stay at Hawk Nest?"
49772How old were you the last time we met?"
49772How the devil did you get into that galley?"
49772Hurt?
49772I am here this winter with my father.... And you?"
49772I came up here to meet you because I wanted to find out-- to know-- to be certain, at once--""To find out-- to know-- to be certain of what?"
49772I do n''t believe you have ever really considered-- And I intend one day to make you see--""See what?
49772I do n''t remember.--A kind of crash.... What happened?"
49772I do n''t suppose,"said Dr. Bude,"that it would be possible for her to travel?"
49772I only want to know plain things-- A, B, C''s of how to manage--""About a manuscript, you mean?"
49772I should be bored to extinction.--What is your alternative?"
49772I went to school with her--""The writer?"
49772I wonder if you do n''t remember her, that summer long ago at the New Springs?"
49772I would n''t stay long.--And what have you been doing this winter?"
49772I''ll put you on the Elevated in plenty of time.--What people were you looking for?"
49772If I saw any end to it... but I do not--""And you wish to cut the painter?
49772If it was n''t going to last, what was going to make things better?
49772If only there was a little more compliance, more feminine sweetness, more-- if I may say so-- unselfishness--""Where,"asked the Bishop,"is Medway?"
49772If so, why?
49772If they could n''t pay the rent, how could they pay for six to go down to Virginia-- and the children''s clothes, and the food and everything?...
49772If you look pretty, how can people help liking you?
49772If you tell me the way I can find it--""You are not a Catholic?"
49772In what are they especially interested?"
49772Is father ill?
49772Is he coming home?"
49772Is he hanged or struck by lightning?
49772Is n''t he going to suffer?
49772Is n''t it better just to keep our own concerns to ourselves for a while?
49772Is n''t it divine?"
49772Is n''t that the thinking rôle for every properly brought- up girl?
49772Is n''t that thunder?"
49772Is that Hagar?
49772Is the word''rebellion''so strange to you?
49772Is there any one else who could speak?"
49772Is there anything else you can think of at the moment?"
49772It sang,''Yes, rather handsome, but do n''t you find her dreadfully unfeminine?''"
49772It took us so by surprise.... We had best, I think, just quietly say nothing to anybody for a while.... Do n''t you think so?"
49772Let me see-- where can we meet?
49772Luna here, now,--Luna''s got a roving disposition-- haven''t you, old girl?"
49772May I come in?"
49772May I have my letter, grandfather?"
49772Medway made an impatient movement,"We have had this before--""Yes, but not so determinedly.... Why not agree that the battle is over?
49772Miss Bedford, will you please wait here with me just a minute?
49772Morel?"
49772Mr. Laydon, Mrs. LeGrand says will you come into the parlour?
49772Mrs. Lane, wo n''t you go?"
49772No one with girls in their charge can be too careful!--What is the Gilead Balm news?"
49772No pain, no feeling, no people, no light, no sound, no anything?"
49772No; they were n''t going to do anything to him, they were just going to take him back.--He had n''t hurt her, had he?
49772Nor if I take off my hat and roll up my sleeves so that I can feel the air on my arms?"
49772Now are you-- now are you?"
49772Now, did I dream it or did Thomson tell me that he''d brought my daughter with him?"
49772Now, sir--"he turned on Laydon--"what have you got to say for yourself?"
49772Of what shall I talk to them?
49772Say, ai n''t they gettin''too big for their places?"
49772See my enormous advantage in marrying you?
49772Shall I sing you to sleep?"
49772She ai n''t notionate-- are you, Luna?
49772She had the address, and upon showing it to Rachel the latter had pronounced it"poor but respectable,"adding,"Are you sure you ought to go alone?"
49772She says she''s going to work with them?
49772She went on now with one of the children''s rhymes:--"Baa, baa, Black Sheep, Have you any wool?"
49772Simply turn round and say to him''Mr.--''What''s his name?--Layton?"
49772So you see,"said Mrs. LeGrand, smoothly argumentative,"what''s the use of stirring up the bottoms of things?
49772Tea?
49772The open road-- and a clear fire at night-- and to see all things--""Hagar-- Why did they call you Hagar?"
49772The true survivor-- wouldn''t you like to see him-- see her-- see_ us_, Molly?"
49772The very latest thing, I suppose, in fancy- work-- or perhaps you do pastels?"
49772Then the man said,"This is the nobler use, do n''t you think?"
49772Then was she wicked?
49772Then will you take your grandmother''s big knitting- needles back to her for me?
49772Then, as to Mrs. LeGrand.... Of course, I suppose, as I am a teacher here, and you are a pupil... but there, too, had we not best delay a little?
49772Tom will have told you that I sometimes use my tongue, and that''s the ancient woman, still, is n''t it?
49772Two women behind Lily Fay whispered together excitedly,"Hagar Ashendyne?"
49772Uncle Bob--""Well, chicken?"
49772Want to come along?"
49772Was Amy really to blame in"Locksley Hall"?
49772Was Hagar delighted?
49772Was it a constant; was it going to last?
49772Was it right to run away?"
49772Was it to me you were speaking?"
49772Was she five or six years old the last time she had seen him?
49772Was she missing Laydon?
49772Was there no one who could send them money?
49772Was there something direfully wrong with her nature, or was it possible for people simply to be mistaken in such a matter?
49772We''re all human together, are n''t we?
49772Well, Colonel?"
49772Well, what happens?
49772Well, what''s the use of a woman quarrelling with the world as it''s made?
49772Well?
49772Were n''t you at the lock up the river?
49772What am I to say--""To people?
49772What are you doing, Hagar, with an improper book?"
49772What could make me tired a day like this?
49772What did Mr. Laydon think Browning really meant in"Childe Roland,"and was Porphyria''s lover really mad?
49772What did it matter, all those things?
49772What did she think of Juliet?--What did she think of Romeo?--Was it not well- staged?
49772What do you know about''Tom Jones''?"
49772What do you make of them?"
49772What do you think they''re talking about over there?
49772What do you want to put your feet on the table and smoke cigars for?"
49772What else?"
49772What is it you want now?"
49772What is it, Colonel?"
49772What is it?"
49772What is that fragrance-- those strange lilies?
49772What is the matter?
49772What kind of a fellow is he, Hagar?--Like me?"
49772What on earth are you doing in Omega Street?"
49772What was Poverty?
49772What were they?"
49772What''s it about?"
49772What''s it all about?"
49772What''s that?
49772What''s the matter, Hagar?"
49772When are you going to hear?"
49772When, after another minute or two, they were gone from the room,"Were you waiting for them to go?
49772Where are you staying?"
49772Where on earth did you come from?
49772Where the cleanness and fairness-- where the order and beauty?
49772Where there is no love and honour, what is the use?
49772Where was the noble, great city?
49772Where were the domes and colonnades?
49772Where were the happy people?
49772Where?
49772Who could help being optimistic on such an afternoon?
49772Who ever supposed there were n''t Jacobins in every historic struggle for liberty?
49772Who will it be, Miss Gage?"
49772Who''s been writing to you?
49772Why ca n''t we just walk about until bedtime?"
49772Why could n''t you give a handsome donation-- give a really large amount to this charity?
49772Why do you change and grow from age to age?"
49772Why do you not change your mind and go?"
49772Why does n''t that moment carry on over?
49772Why had n''t Thomasine-- why had n''t Jim let them know?
49772Why not''The eternal masculine''?
49772Why not''There is n''t any other''?
49772Why should he trouble?
49772Why should n''t he help now that he can do so?
49772Why should n''t you come?
49772Why should the world pry into it?"
49772Why talk about it?
49772Why was Poverty?
49772Why will you, Denny?"
49772Why, who keeps anything from Thomson?
49772Why?"
49772Will you come to my flat?"
49772Will you come to- morrow at four?"
49772Will you have one?"
49772Will you let it all rest for a little longer?
49772Wo n''t you come to dinner with me-- both of you?
49772Wo n''t you come to the platform?"
49772Would he not take it with her father and herself?
49772Yesterday was lonesome and to- morrow''s going to be lonesome--""Have n''t you got a good book?
49772You go pick your raspberries, and maybe to- morrow you can see her--""Ca n''t I see her to- night?"
49772You goin''to play on the ridge?
49772You''re real helpful.--What was I saying?
49772cried Laydon, maddened, too,"are you going to say that?"
49772do you think I shall weep for that?...
49772exclaimed Mrs. LeGrand;"wo n''t you come here and talk to this little girl?"
49772he said with cheerfulness,"It''s a pretty comfortable boat, eh?
9817Am_ I_ dreaming true? 9817 And is there no punishment or reward?"
9817And now look at that old house over there,pointing to my old home;"how many windows are there in the top story?"
9817And what was this wonderful old lady''s name?
9817And who was this wonderful Duchess of Towers before she married?
9817By- the- way,she asked,"what kind of supper did they give you?
9817Confess what, you fool?
9817Do you know your own handwriting?
9817Do you remember when you first saw me, a sickly, plain, sad little girl, at the avenue gate, twenty years ago? 9817 Do, re, mi, fa, sol?"
9817Does he know of this letter''s existing?
9817Est- ce que monsieur est indisposé? 9817 Have you forgotten that?
9817I wonder how we could find out? 9817 Is it all right?"
9817Is_ that_ what it means? 9817 May I keep it?"
9817Mimsey looks passive enough, with her thumb in her mouth, does n''t she? 9817 Then came that extraordinary dream, which you remember as well as I do:_ was n''t_ it a wonder?
9817Was there ever,said I--"ever since the world began, such ecstasy as I feel now?
9817Well, my Apollo of the T square,_ pourquoi cet honneur?_ Have you come, like a dutiful nephew, to humble yourself and beg for forgiveness?
9817Well, my Apollo of the T square,_ pourquoi cet honneur?_ Have you come, like a dutiful nephew, to humble yourself and beg for forgiveness?
9817What on earth is that wonderful tune, Mary?
9817Where are those boys going?
9817Why ca n''t you sing, you d-- d French milksop? 9817 Why have you brought me here?"
9817''Ne le_ récollectes_ tu pas?''
9817***** And what does it all mean?
9817***** Oh, Mary, Mary, Duchess of Towers, sweet friend of my childhood, and love of my life, what must you think of me now?
9817***** Pray?
9817***** Repent?
9817***** Thank Heaven, pity is not remorse or shame; and what crime could well be worse than his?
9817***** What does everybody think?
9817***** Would I do it all over again?
9817*****"And the goal?
9817--"Oh Mary-- Mimsey-- what do I care for Vesuvius, and sunsets, and the Bay of Naples..._ just now_?
9817--do you remember your little drawing out of_ The Island_, in the green morocco Byron?
9817..."Can you forgive me this''entraînement de jeunesse?''
9817..._ She._"Was n''t it''Maman, les p''tits bateaux?''"
9817; or Italian,"Chi lo sa?"
9817After all, it was only for another forty or fifty years at the most, and what was that?
9817After this what can there be for me but death-- well earned and well paid for?
9817Ah, Gogo, is a man happier than a mouse, or a mouse than a turnip, or a turnip than a lump of chalk?
9817All he said was:"Awful shame of me to drop old Lyon for Chiselhurst, eh?
9817And after that--_que sçais- je?_ The thought was inspiring indeed!
9817And afterwards where should we be if some of us had n''t once had them on earth?
9817And hast thou done growing at last?
9817And then what business had_ she_, in_ this_,_ my_ particular dream-- as she herself had asked of me?
9817And these cobwebs?
9817And thus, as the boy is father to the man, should the human race one day be father to-- what?
9817And what canst_ thou_ say to us yet, Euterpe, but thy"ga- ga"and thy"ba- ba,"the inarticulate sweetness whereof we feel and can not comprehend?
9817And when once the human will has been set going, like a rocket or a clock or a steam- engine, and in the right direction, what can it not achieve?
9817And who''s that nice old man with the long green coat and the red ribbon?
9817Are two people happier than one?
9817As happy as we were--_happier_ even?"
9817As the female chimpanzee is to the Venus of Milo, so is the Venus of Milo to... X?
9817As the orang- outang is to Shakespeare, so is Shakespeare to... X?
9817Belle fille?"
9817But how about the avenue and my old home?
9817But of the thing for which I am here?
9817But what man would be a mouse or a turnip, or_ vice versâ_?
9817But what matter the words?
9817But where was the fée Tarapatapoum?
9817But_ was_ it a dream?
9817Can anything be less odd, less eccentric or interesting?
9817Can you make out my little parable?
9817Cloud to Paris?
9817Couldst thou, out of those five sounds of fixed, unalterable pitch, make, not a sixth sound, but a star?
9817Do n''t you really remember?
9817Do n''t you remember?
9817Do n''t you remember?
9817Do n''t you_ rappel_ it to yourself?
9817Do you happen to recollect once bringing me a note from at Ibbetson Hall?
9817Do you hear the waves tumbling and splashing, and see the albatross?
9817Do you know that tune?"
9817Do you like it?
9817Do you remember her?
9817Do you remember your father''s voice?
9817Do you remember''Parva sed Apta, le petit pavilion,''as you used to call it?
9817Do you remember?
9817Does the touch of mine tell you nothing?"
9817Et Mimsé?
9817Even in its madness there must be a method, so how could the will be free?
9817For what was I to the Duchess of Towers?
9817For who would fardels bear?
9817For whoever remembers having once been you, wakes you for the nonce out of-- nirvana, shall we say?
9817For you are Mr. Ibbetson, Lady Cray''s architect?"
9817Gogo-- gentil petit Gogo!--oui-- oui-- l''exercice?
9817Had I gone mad by any chance?
9817Had any youth been ever so moved by that face before?
9817Have you forgotten what he is doing now?
9817Have you no family papers?"
9817He began to snivel and whimper, and said he had never meddled with me, and asked what should I meddle with him for?
9817He is quite ignorant of the true relationship, which has caused me many a pang of shame and remorse...."''Que voulez- vous?
9817He put out his hand, and said,"You''re all right, ai n''t yer, guv''ner?
9817He who kisses and tells, he who tells even though he has not kissed-- what can be said for him, what should be done to him?
9817How am I to_ know_?''
9817How can I pay a fitting tribute to one so near to me-- nearer than any woman can ever have been to any man?
9817How can I tell for certain whether you are my son or not?
9817How does one_ feel_ them there?
9817I can understand that now; and yet on earth where should we be without eyes?
9817I cried,"shall we be transcendently happy again?
9817I looked round in despair and rage, and picking out the biggest man I could see, said,"Are_ you_ big enough?"
9817Ibbetson?"
9817If he could speak like this of his cousin, with whom he had been in love when he was young, what lies would he not tell of my poor daughter?
9817Is he beautiful enough?
9817Is it possible-- is it possible?"
9817Is it worth while?
9817Is n''t all the furniture rare and beautiful?
9817Is n''t it enough for either punishment or reward that the secrets of all midges''hearts shall be revealed, and for all other midges to see?
9817Is n''t it lovely?
9817It bids us"Rest in the Lord,"or else it tells us that"He was despised and rejected of men"; but, again, what matter the words?
9817It is a grand old name; but what does it mean?
9817It seems cruel, does n''t it?
9817It was there that Madame Seraskier died of cholera--... What is the matter-- are you ill?"
9817Look at this house; what is written on the portico?"
9817Mean while, what would you like there tonight-- the Yosemite Valley?
9817Monsieur ne parle pas le Français, peut- être?"
9817Mozart''s?"
9817My mother took the letter from the postman''s hand as he said,"Pour Vous?
9817Ortolans, nightingales''tongues, pearls dissolved in wine?"
9817Rossini''s?
9817She might have said--"Eh bien, et après?"
9817The blind and deaf?
9817The cause, the whither, and the why of it all?
9817The duchess said--"Was there ever, since the world began, such a_ muse en scène_, and for such a meeting, Mr. Ibbetson?
9817The height, the voice, the eyes, certain tricks of gait and gesture-- how could I have failed to know her again after such recent dream opportunities?
9817The sound of my friend''s voice, what is it?
9817The stars, worlds upon worlds, so many billions of miles away, what are they for us but mere shiny specks on a net- work of nerves behind the eye?
9817Though why should she be there?
9817Translate me those words into French, O ye who can even render Shakespeare into French Alexandrines--"Belle femme?
9817Was each so sure that when he reached his home he would find his heart''s desire?
9817Was n''t it idiotic?"
9817Was the bridegroom himself so very sure?
9817What are sight and hearing and touch and the rest?
9817What can I do to prevent his believing that I believe him?
9817What could it all mean?
9817What good would family papers have been to me?
9817What is a gentleman?
9817What is to prove all this to me when I wake?
9817What matter if it be a fool''s paradise?
9817What matters the foundation if but the bliss be there, and the brain has nerves to feel it?
9817What matters what anybody thinks?
9817What more could be wanted for a small boy fresh( if such be freshness) from the very heart of Bloomsbury?
9817What must thy songs without words have been, if thou didst ever make any?
9817What shall it be?
9817What turnip would be a lump-- of anything but itself?
9817What were they, those five sounds?
9817What would she think of me now?
9817What,''at the other end of the room,''were you?
9817What_ can_ be more enchanting?
9817What_ was_ your name, then?"
9817Who knows?
9817Who knows?
9817Who knows?
9817Who told you so?"
9817Whose is it?
9817Why ca n''t you talk French, you infernal British booby?
9817Why not Hecuba?
9817Why only two?
9817Why should so fantastic a thought have persecuted me so cruelly?
9817Why two ears?
9817Why, of course, those eyes, so lashless then, so thickly fringed to- day!--how could I have mistaken them?
9817Will that convince you?"
9817Would it ever get up steam for me?
9817Would you like a slice?
9817You and I, yes; because we_ are_ one; but who else?
9817You go to- day, do you not?
9817[ Illustration:] Where have we not waltzed together, from Buckingham Palace downward?
9817_ I._ Oh, of_ course!__"''Maman, les p''tits bateaux Qui vont sur l''eau, Ont- ils des jambes?
9817_ She._"With a yellow omnibus?
9817_ There!_ What did I tell you?
9817_ Who_ is a gentleman, and yet who_ is not_?
9817and that, both having died so near each other, we had begun our eternal afterlife in this heavenly fashion?
9817arrmes... bras?
9817by-- by two little jailers, a man and his wife, who danced and were trying to hem you in?"
9817faudrait- il autre chose?"
9817she whispered, and turned white again, and trembled all over,"what do you mean?"
9817some nerve that now can only be made to thrill and vibrate in a dream, too delicate as yet to ply its function in the light of common day?
9817the Bay of Naples after sunset, with Vesuvius in eruption?...
9817the Nevski Prospect in the winter, with the sledges?
9817the Rialto?
9817toujours mal à la tête?"
9817what had become of this Gogo in the mean time?
9817where and what were time or space to us then?
9817who''s the lovely young giantess that seems so fond of you, you little rascal, hey?
48731A lad of the name of''Little Gervais?''
48731A poor old priest who passes by, muttering his mummery? 48731 Ah, it is you still,"said Jean Valjean, and springing up, with his foot still held on the coin, he added,"Will you be off or not?"
48731And how long will it rest after the journey?
48731And how long will the trial last?
48731And it is a cross- road; stay, sir,the road- mender continued;"will you let me give you a piece of advice?
48731And it will go the distance?
48731And what did he offer you?
48731And who is the magistrate who has cause to complain of the agent?
48731And you wish to arrive to- day?
48731Are the assizes held there?
48731Are you going far in this state?
48731Are you going to Arras?
48731As a Mayor who had encroached on the police?
48731But do you not see that the cart is sinking into the ground?
48731But it must only be heard by yourself--"What do I care for that? 48731 But,"she continued,"tell me where Cosette is?
48731By taking post- horses?
48731By whom?
48731Can you mean it, Monseigneur?
48731Can you mend this wheel?
48731Can you tell me if there is any one of the name of Little Gervais in the villages about here?
48731Can you understand it? 48731 Come, will you lift your foot?
48731Denounced me?
48731Did I not tell you that it would be all right?
48731Did you not order one?
48731Do they die of it?
48731Do you know how to drive?
48731Do you know what they do? 48731 Do you not recognize me?"
48731Do you not wish to breakfast, sir?
48731Do you wish to buy them of me, sir?
48731Doctor,she continued,"has the sister told you that M. Madeleine has gone to fetch my darling?"
48731Does it attack children?
48731Does it make any difference to you if you reach Arras at four o''clock to- morrow morning?
48731Does it require much medicine?
48731Good gracious, cousin,she said,"what are you thinking, about?"
48731Harnessed in a gig?
48731Has she not a child that she wishes to see?
48731Has your horse good legs?
48731Have you a gig I can hire?
48731Have you a jack?
48731Have you been a soldier?
48731Have you been to what is his name, in the Rue de Chauffaut?
48731Have you come any distance?
48731Have you had a pleasant journey, sir? 48731 Have you thought, sir, that it is now winter?"
48731How is it going, sir?
48731How many are there of them?
48731How many beds,he asked him,"do you think that this room alone would hold?"
48731How many patients have you at this moment?
48731How so? 48731 How so?"
48731How soon will it be here?
48731How?
48731I beg your pardon, sir, but perhaps you are a relative?
48731I beg your pardon, sir,the traveller said,"but would you, for payment, give me a plateful of soup and a corner to sleep in in your garden outhouse?"
48731I presume that all of you consider me worthy of pity? 48731 I?"
48731In that case,the corporal continued,"we can let him go?"
48731In that case--"But surely I can hire a saddle- horse in the village?
48731In the next place, is the gig for yourself, sir?
48731Is he really?
48731Is it true that I am at liberty?
48731Is it true? 48731 Is it you, sir?"
48731Is not the postoffice in this house?
48731Is that true? 48731 Is there another wheelwright?"
48731Is there any one here?
48731Is there any one who lets out vehicles in the town?
48731Is there any way of entering the court, sir?
48731Is there no one here willing to earn twenty louis and save this poor old man''s life?
48731Is there not the Arras mail- cart? 48731 It is not that""What is it, then?"
48731Louis XV.? 48731 M. Scaufflaire,"he said,"at how much do you value the tilbury and horse you are going to let me, one with the other?"
48731M. le Maire, what answer am I to give?
48731Master Scaufflaire, he inquired,"have you a good horse?"
48731Monseigneur''s dining- room?
48731Monseigneur,the corporal said;"what this man told us was true then?
48731Montfermeil is a rather pretty place, is it not? 48731 Mr. Jailer,"he said, as he humbly doffed his cap,"would you be kind enough to open the door and give me a nights lodging?"
48731My dear sister, have we not some relatives in those parts?
48731My good fellow,he said to the ostler,"is there a wheelwright here?"
48731My good sir,said the Bishop,"is that all?
48731Of course, but will this horse carry a saddle?
48731Oh,she replied,"he is right; but what do those Thénardiers mean by keeping my Cosette?
48731On that bench?
48731On what day, then?
48731Sergeant,he shouted,"do you not see that the wench is bolting?
48731Sir,the little Savoyard said, with that childish confidence which is composed of ignorance and innocence,"my coin?"
48731Sir,the woman said,"my boy tells me that you wish to hire a conveyance?"
48731Sister,he asked,"are you alone in the room?"
48731Suppose the spokes were tied with cords?
48731Suppose you employed two workmen?
48731That I was in prison?
48731That it may rain?
48731The galleys?
48731There is one thing to be said about hiring post- horses; have you your passport, sir?
48731There''s the other beginning now; will you be quiet, wench? 48731 To nobody; but as the trial is over, how is it that the court is still lighted?"
48731To return the same distance?
48731Was it a bishop''s place to visit the death- bed of such a man? 48731 We discussed philosophy; which do you prefer, Descartes or Spinoza?"
48731Well, in two hours?
48731Well, one to sell me?
48731Well, what am I afraid of?
48731Well, what is the matter, Javert?
48731Well,he continued,"what is it?"
48731Well,she said,"where is the surprise?"
48731Well?
48731Well?
48731Well?
48731Well?
48731Well?
48731What are they?
48731What are you doing there, my friend?
48731What are you saying, my friend?
48731What deed?
48731What do you mean? 48731 What do you mean?"
48731What do you mean?
48731What do you think of Bossuet singing a Te Deum over the Dragonnades?
48731What has that to do with me?
48731What identity?
48731What is her age?
48731What is it?
48731What is that?
48731What is the culpable act you have committed? 48731 What is the meaning of all this nonsense?"
48731What is this?
48731What is to be done with the axle? 48731 What is to be done?"
48731What is your name?
48731What name did you say?
48731What ostler?
48731What other trial?
48731What tilbury?
48731What will they bring us?
48731What will you give me for it?
48731What''s the matter now?
48731What''s the meaning of this conveyance?
48731What''s the name of your bantling?
48731What, not a tax- cart? 48731 When can I start again?"
48731Where am I? 48731 Where are you going to, sir?"
48731Where is God?
48731Where the deuce can the Mayor be going?
48731Where would you have me go?
48731Where?
48731Which is the way in?
48731Who are you?
48731Who can have come at so early an hour?
48731Who is this agent?
48731Who''s there?
48731Why did you not bring it to us at once?
48731Why do you not go to the inn?
48731Why do you say,''Ah''?
48731Why not?
48731Why not?
48731Why so?
48731Why, are there not pewter forks to be had?
48731Why?
48731Will it not be able to start again to- morrow morning?
48731Will it not be opened when the court resumes its sitting?
48731Will supper be ready soon?
48731Will you be kind enough to tell me the way to the courts of justice, sir?
48731Will you not recover her child for her, sir?
48731Will you sleep here, sir?
48731Yes, inexorable,the Bishop said;"what do you think of Marat clapping his hands at the guillotine?"
48731Yes, you are let go; do n''t you understand?
48731Yes,the sister continued;"but now that she is going to see you, sir, and does not see her child, what are we to tell her?"
48731You are alluding to a woman, then?
48731You do not belong to the town, sir?
48731You do not belong to these parts?
48731; his defence was bad, but was that a reason to find him guilty?
48731A clock struck from a distant steeple, and he asked the lad,--"What o''clock is that?"
48731A moment after he added,--"Monsieur Jean Valjean, I think you said you were going to Pontarlier?"
48731A wagoner was sitting at another table, and he said to him,--"Why is their bread so bitter?"
48731Abnegation, why?
48731After all, who were the people interested?
48731All at once she cried,--"You are talking about M. Madeleine: why do you whisper?
48731All the world has turned me out, and are you willing to receive me?
48731Am I not dreaming?
48731An usher was standing near the door communicating with the court, and he asked him,--"Will this door be opened soon?"
48731And all this has taken place without my interference, and so, what is there so unlucky in it all?
48731And he added as he looked fixedly at the conventionalist,--"And Louis XVII.?"
48731And then, again, is it proved that he has committed a robbery?
48731And was this G---- a vulture?
48731And what does he oppose to this crushing unanimity?
48731And why has Heaven decreed it?
48731And you brought him back here?
48731Another time he said,"What would you have?
48731Answer me-- is it so?"
48731Are there many hills between here and the place you are going to?"
48731Are you afraid I shall bilk you?
48731Are you in a hurry, sir?"
48731Are you interested in the trial?
48731Are you not he whom the peasants call Monseigneur Welcome?"
48731At about half- past two Fantine began to grow agitated, and in the next twenty minutes asked the nun more than ten times,"What o''clock is it?"
48731At this moment there was a gentle tap at his bed- room door; he shuddered from head to foot, and shouted in a terrible voice,"Who''s there?"
48731At this moment, Favourite crossed her arms and threw her head back; she then looked boldly at Tholomyès, and said,--"Well, how about the surprise?"
48731Baptistine and Madame Magloire waiting for him, and he said to his sister,"Well, was I right?
48731Behind the first tree I found a man standing; I said to the man,"Whose is this garden?
48731Besides, who is there that ever attains his ideal?
48731Brevet, do you not remember me?"
48731But let me ask why you have come to question and speak to me about Louis XVII.?
48731But what was to be done?
48731But where was the evidence that this Champmathieu was a robber?
48731But why do you not go to the inn?"
48731By the way, what is your name, Mr. Landlord?
48731By what right do men touch that unknown thing?"
48731By whom?
48731Can man, who is created good by God, be made bad by man?
48731Can she not be brought here if only for a moment?
48731Can the soul be entirely remade by destiny, and become evil if the destiny be evil?
48731Can there be such a thing as a white lie, an innocent lie?
48731Can we imagine a man sitting close to a stove and not feeling hot?
48731Can you read?"
48731Carrier is a bandit, but what name do you give to Montrevel?
48731Cartouche?
48731Close the door on his past?
48731Come, help me, is it not Tertullian who says that the blessed will go from one planet to the other?
48731Could she be mistaken?
48731Could you do it,--for payment of course?"
48731Dahlia, while still eating, whispered to Favourite through the noise,--"You seem to be very fond of your Blachevelle?"
48731Did I exist before my birth?
48731Did he hear all that mysterious buzzing which warns or disturbs the mind at certain moments of life?
48731Did he understand too much, or did he understand nothing at all?
48731Did he wish to warn or to threaten?
48731Did she stand the journey well?
48731Did those Thénardiers keep her clean?
48731Did you not find her very pretty, sir?
48731Did you not hear me say that I was a galley- slave, a convict, and have just come from the bagne?"
48731Did you not state you were going to Arras on this matter in a week or ten days?"
48731Do not public prosecutors habitually act in this way?
48731Do you keep an inn?
48731Do you see those four windows?
48731Do you want me to pay you in advance?
48731Do you wish me to tell you your name?
48731Does he want for anything?
48731Fantine thought;"but where is the trade in which I can earn one hundred sous a day?
48731Fantine, who was looking at Javert, turned round to him,--"Am I speaking to you?"
48731Fantine, without changing her attitude, went on in a loud voice and with an accent at once imperious and heart- rending,--"He can not come: why not?
48731Father Duchêne is ferocious, but what epithet will you allow me for Père Letellier?
48731Fouquier Tainville is a scoundrel, but what is your opinion about Lamoignon- Bâville?
48731From time to time Favourite exclaimed,--"Where''s the surprise?
48731Had he any right to do that when I was passing gently, and doing nobody a harm?
48731Had he gone so far as to forget the Mayor''s presence?
48731Had he not another object which was the great and true one,--to save not his person, but his soul; to become once again honest and good?
48731Had she got clean underclothing?
48731Have I the right to derange what He arranges?
48731Have those Thénardiers a good trade?
48731Have you a stable?"
48731Have you been to Labarre''s?"
48731Have you done so there?"
48731Have you said all?
48731Have you seen him?"
48731He answered almost without emerging from his reverie,--"Why do you ask?"
48731He answered in a low voice,--"How is the poor creature?"
48731He answered,"Have you a piece of rope and a knife?"
48731He asked himself what he had meant by the words,"my object is attained"?
48731He asked,--"Can I see her?"
48731He broke off and added with a laugh, in which there was something monstrous,--"Have you reflected fully?
48731He broke off, hesitated for a moment, and said,--"Can you call to mind the checkered braces you used to wear at the galleys?"
48731He continued in a voice so faint that it was scarce audible,--"Then, the identity was proved?"
48731He did what he could; his sister worked too, but what could she do with seven children?
48731He heard through his reverie some one say to him,"Will you do me the honor of following me, sir?"
48731He is a very good- looking young man; do you know him?
48731He looked at the lad with a sort of amazement, then stretched forth his hand to his stick, and shouted in a terrible voice,"Who is there?"
48731He now said to Fantine,--"How much did you say that you owed?"
48731He stopped his horse, and asked the road- mender--,"How far is it from here to Arras?"
48731He then turned to the spectators, and asked with an accent which all understood,--"Is there a medical man present?"
48731He took her hand, felt her pulse, and answered,--"How are you?"
48731He will be here again to- morrow, will he not?
48731Here we must ask again the question we previously asked, Did he confusedly receive any shadow of all this into his mind?
48731How can people like that be allowed to go about the country?
48731How could she employ such nails in working?
48731How far is it to Montfermeil?"
48731How long did you take in earning these 109 francs?"
48731How many hours did he weep thus?
48731How was it that this man had not been tried by court- martial, on the return of the legitimate princes?
48731I am not satisfied?
48731I am very tired and frightfully hungry; will you let me stay here?"
48731I asked him,"To whom does this house belong?
48731I asked this man,"What is this place?
48731I have been only good to punish others and not myself?
48731I have not thought of asking where you are going?
48731I keep nothing for myself; but what do I care?
48731I shall be sent back to the galleys, and what then?
48731I suppose I can purchase a saddle here?"
48731I was even ignorant that you had left the factory, but why did you not apply to me?
48731If I disappear, what will happen?
48731If I do not denounce myself?
48731If the Fiend were to enter the house no one would try to stop him, and after all what have we to fear in this house?
48731In a word-- I repeat my question, Who are you?
48731In this situation, Jean Valjean thought, and what could be the nature of his reverie?
48731Is he not an abominable man?
48731Is human nature thus utterly transformed?
48731Is it a criminal offence, or are you a witness?"
48731Is it not very natural that I should want to see my child, who has been fetched from Montfermeil expressly for me?
48731Is it possible?
48731Is it really true that I saw that Javert, and that he spoke to me so?
48731Is it the innocent child?
48731Is it the royal child?
48731Is it true that it is so cold?
48731Is there any one here who has strong loins?
48731Is this an inn?
48731It was; wrong to destroy the gentleman''s hat, but why has he gone away?
48731It will be night, but, after all, what matter?
48731Javert walked into the middle of the room and cried,--"Well, are you coming?"
48731M. Madeleine made no answer, and the Fleming continued,--"That it is very cold?"
48731M. Madeleine merely answered his entreaty with the hurried question,--"And what does this man say?"
48731M. Madeleine said in a very low voice,--"Are you sure?"
48731M. Madeleine said to him,--"Well?"
48731M. Madeleine went to see her twice a day, and every time she asked him,"Shall I see my Cosette soon?"
48731M. Madeleine, who had taken up the charge- book again, said with a careless accent,--"And what was the answer you received?"
48731Madeleine gave a start, and Fantine asked him,--"What did the doctor say to you?"
48731Maillard is frightful, but what of Saulx- Tavannes, if you please?
48731Man is the eel; then, of what use is the Eternal Father?
48731Must she change her whole soul?
48731My good M. Javert, is there no one who saw it to tell you that this is the truth?
48731Napoleon, noticing this old man regard him with some degree of curiosity, turned and asked sharply,--"Who is this good man who is staring at me?"
48731No one on earth heard the words, but did that dead woman hear them?
48731No one was present but the nun and the Mayor; to whom, then, could this humiliating remark be addressed?
48731Nonsense, what good would that do them?"
48731Now, I am eighty- six years of age and on the point of death; what have you come to ask of me?"
48731Now, before being sent to the galleys, what was Jean Valjean?
48731Now, do you wish me to tell you who you are?
48731Of what nature was his apathy?
48731Of whom?
48731Oh, Monsieur Javert, you said that I was to be set at liberty, did you not?
48731Oh, whoever you may be, do you remember?
48731On another book, entitled"Philosophy of Medical Science,"he wrote this other note:"Am I not a physician like them?
48731On behalf of which do you protest?"
48731On hearing Javert''s roar, Fantine opened her eyes again; but the Mayor was present, so what had she to fear?
48731On hearing the peasant say"Can you be the man?"
48731One last word: Do you know who Aspasia was, ladies?
48731One morning, an old woman with a hypocritical look came into her room and said,"Do you not know me, Miss?"
48731Ought I to spare myself more than others?
48731Prudent, it will be said, and Tholomyès?
48731Sacrifice, for what object?
48731Secondly, yes or no, are you the liberated convict, Jean Valjean?"
48731Shall we weep for all the innocents, martyrs, and children of the lowest as of the highest rank?
48731She called herself Fantine, and why Fantine?
48731She opened her eyes, saw him, and said calmly and with a smile,--"And Cosette?"
48731She said to him,--"Oh, sir, my child will be allowed to sleep in a little cot by my bed- side?"
48731She was born at M. sur M.; of what parents, who could say?
48731She was young; was she pretty?
48731Sister, answer me,--where is Cosette?
48731So you are sulky, old fellow?"
48731Some one who met her said,"What has made you so merry?"
48731Suppose, instead of mending this wheel, you were to put another on?"
48731The Bishop could not refrain from muttering,--"Yes?
48731The Bishop listened to all this in silence, and when it was ended he asked:"Where will this man and woman be tried?"
48731The Bishop looked at him and said,--"You have suffered greatly?"
48731The Bishop remained silent for a moment, then raised his earnest eyes, and said gently to Madame Magloire,--"By the way, was that plate ours?"
48731The Curé, I suppose,--the Curé of that big church?
48731The President addressed him,--"You have heard the evidence, prisoner; have you any answer to make?"
48731The babe opened her eyes, large blue eyes like her mother''s, and gazed at what?
48731The convict met a priest on horseback, to whom he went up and said,--"Monsieur le Curé, have you seen a lad pass?"
48731The gendarme, who is a good- hearted fellow, nudges me with his elbow, and says, Why do n''t you answer?
48731The landlord, on hearing the door open and a stranger enter, said, without raising his eyes from his stew- pans,--"What do you want, sir?"
48731The man''s voice continued,--"Has the little one a stock of clothing?"
48731The nettle is also excellent hay, which can be mown twice; and what does it require?
48731The old man continued, with a half- smile,"In that case you are my Bishop?"
48731The simple question--"And Cosette?"
48731The stranger stood for a moment pensively before this gentle and calming spectacle; what was going on within him?
48731The stranger turned and replied gently,"Ah, you know?"
48731The sun is glorious, is it not?
48731The whole day through, conversations like the following could be heard in all parts of the town:--"Do n''t you know?
48731Then he asked himself if he were the only person who had been in the wrong in his fatal history?
48731Then he continued,"And where will the attorney for the crown be tried?"
48731Then she said to the soldiers,--"Tell me, men, did you see how I spat in his face?
48731Then the man I had seen first and questioned when I entered the town said to me,"Where are you going?
48731Then why go?
48731Then you do not want me to pay?"
48731There are birds in the clouds, just as there are angels above human griefs, but what can they do for him?
48731There is enough to settle a man, is there not?
48731They can not refuse to give up Cosette, can they?
48731They want to hear about heaven every now and then, and what would they think of a bishop who was afraid?
48731This day she was very feverish, and so soon as she saw M. Madeleine she asked him,--"Where is Cosette?"
48731This led to Blachevelle asking,--"What would you do, Favourite, if I ceased to love you?"
48731This was wrong, but should not his scanty intellect be taken into consideration?
48731Those who had declared the new- comer an ambitious man, eagerly seized this opportunity to exclaim:"Did we not say so?"
48731To what will enjoyment lead me?
48731To what will suffering lead me?
48731To whom am I speaking-- who are you?"
48731To whom were you referring, pray?"
48731Was a verdict of guilty brought in?"
48731Was he really conscious of all that had taken place in him and all that was stirring in him?
48731Was it for so paltry a thing that he had done all that he had effected?
48731Was it imbecility or cunning?
48731Was it you, my kind M. Javert, who said that I was to be set at liberty?
48731Was not this everything, in fact?
48731Was not this really charity?
48731We wonder whether irony, is derived from the English word"iron"?
48731Well, let me examine: when I am effaced and forgotten, what will become of all this?
48731What am I to do?"
48731What am I?
48731What became of his sister?
48731What became of the seven children?
48731What becomes of the spray of leaves when the stem of the young tree has been cut at the foot?
48731What can I tell you?
48731What could this outcast man say to this dead woman?
48731What did he do during the drive?
48731What did he say to her?
48731What did he think of this dogma or that mystery?
48731What do you mean by a good horse?"
48731What do you say of this punishment of Tantalus adapted to a woman?
48731What does she care?
48731What food did they give her?
48731What had become of the mother, who, according to the people of Montfermeil, appeared to have deserted her child?
48731What had taken place during these ten months?
48731What had taken place in this soul?
48731What have I to do on this earth?
48731What have you done to me?
48731What is he doing, and why does he not come?"
48731What is he to do?
48731What is it that I am going to interfere in?
48731What is more natural to suppose than that on leaving the bagne he assumed his mother''s name as a disguise, and called himself Jean Mathieu?
48731What is the estimated value?"
48731What is the use of being at the top, if you can not see further than the end of other people''s noses?
48731What is this story of Fantine?
48731What next took place in M. Myriel''s destiny?
48731What of it?
48731What should he do?
48731What sort of a house is this?
48731What truth, by the way, was there in the stories about M. Myriel''s early life?
48731What was I doing yesterday at this hour?
48731What was I told?
48731What was he thinking of?
48731What was it you said, that''93 was inexorable?"
48731What was she to do now?
48731What will be the result of this event?
48731What will occur here?
48731What would they say if I did not go?"
48731What, then, has happened?
48731When does that pass?"
48731When she returned, she said to Marguerite,--"Do you know what a miliary fever is?"
48731When the flash had passed, night encompassed him again, and where was he?
48731When?
48731Where are they going?
48731Where did he come from?
48731Where did he procure this blouse from?
48731Where is the ship now?
48731Where to?
48731Where was he going?
48731Where was she; what was she doing?
48731Where was the proof of the contrary?
48731Where were the other six?
48731Where were we?
48731Where?
48731While he went on thus with haggard eye, had he any distinct perception of what the result of his adventure at D---- might be?
48731While in this mental condition he met Little Gervais, and robbed him of his two francs: why did he so?
48731Who can this Champmathieu be?
48731Who is there that knows Father Champmathieu?
48731Who knows the ways of Providence?"
48731Who may you be, sir?"
48731Who said that?
48731Who told you to let her go?"
48731Who troubles himself about that?
48731Who was this Jean Valjean?
48731Who was this man?
48731Who was this man?
48731Who was this person?
48731Who were the Thénardiers?
48731Who will bring it to life again?
48731Whom do you weep for?
48731Why are they what they are?
48731Why did he feel joy at turning back?
48731Why did you not take them away with the rest of the plate?"
48731Why do I want to know your name?
48731Why does Madame always get out of her hackney coach before reaching her house?
48731Why does So- and- So never hang up his key on Thursdays?
48731Why does he always take back streets?
48731Why does she send out to buy a quire of note- paper, when she has a desk full?
48731Why does this gentleman never come till nightfall?
48731Why is everybody so spiteful against me?"
48731Why should we not repeat this almost divine childishness of goodness?
48731Why so?
48731Why was he going to Arras?
48731Why was he hurrying?
48731Why was she not laid in my bed so that I could see her directly I woke?"
48731Why was this thing at this place in the street?
48731Why, I owe more than one hundred francs to Thénardier, M. Inspector; do you know that?"
48731Why, what is all this?"
48731Will you give me some food and a bed?
48731Will you read it?
48731Will you take care of my child?"
48731With what will Monseigneur eat now?"
48731Would you not consider it matter of regret if we had met in vain?"
48731Yesterday he saw a horse pass with knee- caps on, and he said,''What has he got on his knees?''
48731You are following me, I suppose?
48731You consider it inexorable, but what was the whole monarchy?
48731You keep an inn, do you not?"
48731You must find all that very troublesome?
48731You must have been very cold in the stage- coach?
48731You remember how he said to me yesterday when I asked him about Cosette,"Soon, soon"?
48731You will let me stay, you will not turn me out, a convict?
48731Your little nephew is delightful: do you know that he is nearly five years of age?
48731and it is twenty leagues?"
48731and what could be desired beyond?
48731and, secondly, how can he travel post in this mountainous country, where there are no roads, and people must travel on horseback?
48731are we in any great danger?"
48731do you not know that you have been dead for a long time?"
48731have you ever walked in the woods, removing the branches for the sake of the pretty head that comes behind you?
48731he exclaimed;"what is the matter with you, Fantine?"
48731he said to himself;"what reason have I to have such thoughts?
48731how was she to pay it and the travelling expenses?
48731in the first place, what is the good of visitations at all?
48731is there no room?"
48731make her share her poverty?
48731may not a man have been at those two places without having been to the galleys?
48731no; shall I exist after my death?
48731old Fauchelevent cried;"is there no good soul who will save an old man?"
48731our beauties incessantly say to me,"Tholomyès, when will you be delivered of your surprise?"
48731said Marguerite,"what is the matter with you, Fantine?"
48731said Marguerite;"why,''t is a fortune; where ever did you get them from?"
48731shall I become again like that?"
48731she exclaimed,--"to go and fetch my child?
48731she exclaimed;"what can have happened to you?
48731she said,"there is nothing in it; where is the plate?"
48731she screamed,"does your Grandeur know where the plate- basket is?"
48731they want forty francs; where do they expect me to get them?
48731to go to Arras without a break?"
48731was he simply obeying a species of instinctive impulse which was obscure to himself?
48731was it not that he craved solely, and that the Bishop had ordered him?
48731what are all these destinies driven along thus helter- skelter?
48731what can he want one for in a town of less than 4000 inhabitants?
48731what did he do afterwards?
48731what else can I want?
48731what had he to see there?
48731what if the Jungfrau had hunger?
48731what is it?
48731what is there in which children''s games are not mingled?
48731what should he do?
48731what?
48731where am I?"
48731where am I?"
48731where am I?"
48731whether there had not been an excessive weight in one of the scales, that one in which expiation lies?
48731whether, in the first place, it was not a serious thing that he, a workman, should want for work; that he, laborious as he was, should want for bread?
48731whither did he go?
48731who tells you that I have not committed a murder?"
48731you know my name?"
48731you really lodge me so close to you as that?"
48731you will take a whole day in mending that wheel?"
6792''Tis said Thou killest all the English whom thy sword Subdues in battle-- why spare me alone?
6792--Who in that hour of dread could weigh the proofs?
6792--Wilt thou, who hast appeased mine enemies, My realms united, part my dearest friends?
6792A heavenly radiance shone around the height; When she upraised her voice and thus addressed us:"Why be dismayed, brave Frenchmen?
6792A juggling minx, who plays the well- learned part Of heroine, thus to appal the brave?
6792A maiden worked this miracle, you say?
6792A prisoner say you?
6792A woman snatch from me all martial fame?
6792Am I away from Dom Remi?
6792Am I encountered thus?
6792Am I then dear to thee?
6792Am I, a sinner, worthy of such favor?
6792Am I, then, sunk so low, That even friends, who read my inmost heart, Point out for my escape the path of shame?
6792And Orleans, say''st thou, will not be surrendered?
6792And all these miracles Thou hast accomplished through the power of God And of his holy saints?
6792And am I culpable because humane?
6792And am I now awake?
6792And am I really, then, among my friends, And am no more rejected and despised?
6792And could Saintrailles consent to give his voice To such a shameful compact?
6792And dare I here believe a miracle?
6792And there, where heavenly radiance shone, Doth earthly love presume to dwell?
6792And thinkest thou, with careless breath, forsooth, Ere blood hath flowed, rashly to give away The fairest city from the heart of France?
6792And thou art happy?
6792And thou wert really then no sorceress?
6792And thou wert silent to that fearful charge?
6792And thou''lt forgive?
6792And whither wouldst thou go?
6792And who assails me here----But why should I Stoop to dispute with you about my rights?
6792And who is conscious of such heavy guilt, That of our favor he must needs despair?
6792Are we not banded in a common cause?
6792Are you a man?
6792Are you so mad to entertain the thought Of cordial reconcilement with the Dauphin, Whom you yourself have hurled to ruin''s brink?
6792Art come, Anet?
6792Art thou contented?
6792Art thou indeed that noble duke himself?
6792Art thou terrified At thine own banner, maiden?
6792Art thou thus silent From consciousness of innocence or guilt?
6792Banished, because thou hast Snatched him from ruin, placed upon his brow The crown at Rheims, and made him King of France?
6792Bear you a soul so martial?
6792Behold''st thou not the Dauphin?
6792But where were then our heroes?
6792By the Dauphin?
6792By what authority dost thou presume To greet me with fallacious oracles?
6792Can I summon armies from the earth?
6792Can he supinely see His kingdom''s peril and his cities''fall?
6792Can it be true?
6792Can she return Back from the grave, triumphant e''en o''er death?
6792Can you endure her raving insolence?
6792Come, noble duke?
6792Come, tell us how you come by it?
6792Comes holy concord from the depths below?
6792Could I steel, And to each soft emotion close This heart, by nature formed to feel?
6792Could I, when I gazed Upon his face?
6792Could you so far renounce Your princely honor, and your sense of shame, As clasp the hand of him who slew your sire?
6792Dare I name Heaven''s holy light, nor feel o''erwhelmed with shame?
6792Deserved our earnest and laborious life Not a more earnest issue?
6792Did I dream?
6792Did I forsake the banners of my king, Draw down upon my head the traitor''s name, To be insulted thus by foreigners?
6792Did you know?
6792Didst mark her tottering and uncertain steps, Her countenance, so pallid and disturbed?
6792Didst then hear The voice of pity and humanity When others fell the victims of thy sword?
6792Didst thou observe her?
6792Do I alone retain my sober senses, While all around in wild delirium rave?
6792Do princes quake and fear Before the phantom which appals the vulgar?
6792Do the arts of hell, which on the field Wrought such disastrous ruin, even here Bewilder and befool us?
6792Do words With dread inspire thee?
6792Do ye see a spirit?
6792Do ye still Account me poor, when I possess the crown Of womankind?
6792Do you take part Against me with these thankless English lords?
6792Does she not With cheerful spirit work her sisters''will?
6792Dost thou presume the monarch of the French Thus in his own dominions to deny?
6792Dost tremble for thy lover?
6792Doth she continue with her wonted zeal Still bravely to withstand the leaguering foe?
6792Doth she work miracles with credulous fools, And lose her influence when she meets a man?
6792Doth some heavenly power Thus strangely stir my spirit''s inmost depths?
6792Ere we with her Have interchanged a word?
6792Evil I forebode?
6792For-- all my weakness shall I own to thee?
6792Hast thou attempted with my mother aught?
6792Hast thou beheld my child?
6792Hast thou thereon, as I commanded thee, Challenged the duke to meet him in fair fight On Montereau''s bridge, whereon his father fell?
6792Hath she wings?
6792Hath the wind borne her down?
6792Have I freely sacrificed to thee What is esteemed far more than gold and pearls, And shall I now hold back the gifts of fortune?
6792Have I thine applause?
6792Have we been routed?
6792He then is dead?
6792Heavy is thy hand Hast thou completely thrust me from thy favor?
6792Here on the ground I throw my knightly gage; Who now will venture to maintain her guilt?
6792His overthrow you have well nigh achieved, And madly now would you renounce your work?
6792Hope bringest thou, or not?
6792How came I here?
6792How came she in the camp?
6792How comes it that they trouble us again?
6792How did he receive my embassy?
6792How did she break these ponderous iron chains?
6792How did she demean herself?
6792How did you come to Rheims?
6792How is it with me?
6792How is it with me?
6792How may I do so?
6792How was it?
6792How would it stand with you if I withdrew With all my host?
6792How, Burgundy?
6792How, noble duke?
6792How, shall I separate two loving hearts Because you have no wealth to offer me?
6792How?
6792How?
6792How?
6792How?
6792How?
6792How?
6792I fell asleep beneath the Druid tree, And I am now awake; and round me stand The kind, familiar forms?
6792I march before him?
6792I permit a human form To haunt my bosom''s sacred cell?
6792I the banner bear?
6792If my words are true, Whence could I draw them but from heaven above?
6792In my humble home How could this splendor enter my poor brain?
6792Is a crown thus renounced?
6792Is it lawful, sire, To leave the English masters of the field, Without a single stroke to save the town?
6792Is it not true?
6792Is it so hard to loose it from our grasp?
6792Is it the work of hell To heal dissension and to foster peace?
6792Is not that Lionel who yonder flies?
6792Is pity sinful?
6792Is she below?
6792Is the divining- spirit mute in thee?
6792Is this fit language for a king?
6792Is this man mad?
6792Is this the mighty, the terrific one, Who chased your warriors like a flock of lambs, Who, powerless now, can not protect herself?
6792Is''t so?
6792Is, then, the sceptre such a peerless treasure?
6792Killed him?
6792Know''st thou what thou askest?
6792La Hire, where is the maiden?
6792May he approach?
6792My banner I behold not-- where is it?
6792My title he will recognize, And do me homage as his sovereign liege?
6792My word, Johanna, have I now fulfilled?
6792My wretched child?
6792No treasure left?
6792Not with you?
6792Now, in the name of the blest Trinity, Belongst thou to the pure and holy ones?
6792Of mortals the irrevocable doom?
6792Of what avail The leader''s courage, and the hero''s arm, When pallid fear doth paralyze the host?
6792Oh, if the Spirit doth reveal it, speak; Shall this alliance which we now renew In distant ages still unite our sons?
6792Oh, wherefore sent you not this messenger?
6792Oh, wilt thou not Repent thy sin, be reconciled to God, And to the bosom of the church return?
6792One of our country, or a son of France?
6792Or grow a cornfield on my open palm?
6792Saw you our sister?
6792Say, am I not your true confederate?
6792Say, did not justice raise her sacred voice, Within the precincts of my parliament?
6792Say, is it true, Duchatel?
6792Say, what is holy, innocent, and good, If not to combat for our fatherland?
6792Say, who art thou, Whom his bad genius sendeth in my way?
6792See you the rainbow yonder in the air?
6792See''st thou not The royal wave?
6792Seest thou the sun Declining to the west?
6792Shall I accuse my own beloved child?
6792Shall I again behold thee-- hear from thee?
6792Shall I in triumph enter into Rheims?
6792Shall I indeed withstand mine enemies?
6792Shall I, like that unnatural mother, see My child in pieces severed with the sword?
6792Shall the blame of our disaster rest With Burgundy?
6792Shall we mount up Upon the platform, or press through the crowd, That we may nothing lose of the procession?
6792Shall we prosecute our flight, Or turn, and with a bold and sudden stroke Wipe out the foul dishonor of to- day?
6792She a deluder?
6792She a holy one, By God commissioned?
6792She a magician?
6792She in golden armor, Who with the banner walked before the king?
6792Should I deserve to be heaven''s messenger Unless the Master''s will I blindly honored?
6792Should I have killed him?
6792Should I have lingered out a joyless life Because the curse of adverse destiny To a mad consort joined my blooming youth?
6792Since when hath nature been so self- opposed That heaven forsakes the just and righteous cause, While hell protects it?
6792Smilest thou that I discern what is remote?
6792So great the need?
6792Some new calamity?
6792Speak, how can I reward thee?
6792Still doth our banner wave?
6792The savior of my country, I, The warrior of God most high, Burn for my country''s foeman?
6792The soldiers will disband?
6792The stranger king, who cometh from afar, Whose fathers''sacred ashes do not lie Interred among us; can he love our land?
6792The victors of Poictiers and Agincourt, Cressy''s bold heroes, routed by a woman?
6792Thee, my Margot?
6792This strange emotion canst thou comprehend?
6792This, Burgundy, from you?
6792Thou art banished?
6792Thou comest, fearful one, to punish me?
6792Thou couldst not to thy father aught reply?
6792Thou darest?
6792Thou hold''st me guilty of this heavy sin?
6792Thou think''st That thou art rescued through the power of God?
6792Thou wilt indeed forgive?
6792Thou with one word couldst clear thyself, and hast In this unhappy error left the world?
6792Through whom besides?
6792Thy third petition shall I name to thee?
6792Thy tidings, herald?
6792To Lionel?
6792To fly before these weak, degenerate Frenchmen Whom we in twenty battles have overthrown?
6792Wake not contention from the murky cave Where he doth lie asleep, for once aroused He can not soon be quelled?
6792Was I concerned with warlike things, With battles or the strife of kings?
6792Was it all a dream, A long, long dream?
6792Well?
6792Were you then So resolute to work my overthrow?
6792What ails thee, maiden?
6792What art thou, double- tongued, deceitful being, Who wouldst bewilder and appal me?
6792What blest pair, Beloved of Heaven, may claim thee as their child?
6792What brain- bewildering planet o''er your minds Sheds dire perplexity?
6792What can be wanting to complete thy joy?
6792What could you do without his powerful arm?
6792What crime hath he committed against you?
6792What do I see?
6792What do I see?
6792What does that look announce?
6792What favored region bore thee?
6792What had we better do?
6792What has a tender maid to do with arms?
6792What have I done?
6792What importeth that loud trumpet''s call?
6792What insult are you called on to avenge?
6792What is it?
6792What is it?
6792What is it?
6792What is the matter?
6792What is the matter?
6792What is this?
6792What lost us Orleans but your avarice?
6792What makest thou Of me, Johanna?
6792What may this mean?
6792What may this solemn earnestness portend?
6792What must I hear?
6792What must we expect?
6792What news?
6792What news?
6792What now obstructs the march?
6792What other surety doth the duke require?
6792What say''st thou, sire?
6792What say''st thou?
6792What sayest thou?
6792What sayest thou?
6792What see''st thou?
6792What should I believe?
6792What strange power Hath seized the maiden?
6792What think you, Burgundy?
6792What tidings bring ye from my faithful town?
6792What tidings brought the fugitives?
6792What tidings?
6792What unblest words?
6792What whim is this?
6792What would you do?
6792What wouldst thou have me do?
6792What wouldst thou, Burgundy?
6792What''s the hero''s name?
6792What''s this?
6792What, holy maid, will be thy destiny?
6792What, now unarm myself?
6792What?
6792Whence comest thou?
6792Whence did she come?
6792Whence hast thou then this knowledge?
6792Whence this strange distress?
6792Whence this unlooked- for change of fortune?
6792Where am I?
6792Where am I?
6792Where halts the knight?
6792Where is Johanna?
6792Where is he?
6792Where is our father?
6792Where is she gone?
6792Where is she?
6792Where is she?
6792Where is she?
6792Where is she?
6792Where is the king?
6792Where is the maid?
6792Where is the maiden?
6792Where shall I flee?
6792Where shall I go?
6792Wherefore faileth she To grace the festival we owe to her?
6792Wherefore namest thou The Holy Virgin?
6792Wherefore not?
6792Wherefore this place precisely doth she choose?
6792Who are we, that we should seek With foolish vanity to near her state?
6792Who art thou, and whence comest thou?
6792Who art thou, mighty one?
6792Who art thou, wonderful and holy maid?
6792Who art thou?
6792Who began This fatal quarrel?
6792Who cherish thee in sickness and in grief?
6792Who cherishes a purer, humbler mind Than doth thy pious daughter?
6792Who comes here?
6792Who dares impede my progress?
6792Who ever sought me in my shepherd- walks, To teach the humble maid affairs of state?
6792Who fly?
6792Who is he, who yonder of the sun Taketh reluctant, sorrowful farewell?
6792Who is it, who for Charles of Valois, The Count of Pointhieu, in this presence speaks?
6792Who is she?
6792Who is the foe Whom eagerly thy murderous glances seek?
6792Who knows whom we to- morrow must obey?
6792Who now has wealth?
6792Who opened you a way into this realm, And reached you forth a kind and friendly hand When you descended on this hostile coast?
6792Who presume The spirit to control which guideth me?
6792Who sendeth thee?
6792Who speaketh through thy mouth?
6792Who the azure mantle wears Bordered with gold?
6792Who was it crowned your Henry at Paris, And unto him subdued the people''s hearts?
6792Who was not young among our youth, whose heart Respondeth not to our familiar words, Can he be as a father to our sons?
6792Who will provide thee food?
6792Whom do you entertain?
6792Whom else would it become?
6792Why am I here to combat against France?
6792Why are ye sorely pressed?
6792Why bid me falter and forsake my work?
6792Why bring This fearful omen to our peaceful vale?
6792Why check me in the midst of my career?
6792Why check the just decision of the sword?
6792Why didst thou leave the army?
6792Why do I behold her not?
6792Why do the people fear, the princes tremble?
6792Why dost thou follow after me and track My steps with quenchless rage?
6792Why doth he conceal himself?
6792Why doth the foe Again exalt himself?
6792Why hither always doth she drive her flock?
6792Why linger, why withhold the stroke of death?
6792Why smilest thou, Dunois?
6792Why stand we idly here?
6792Why this emotion?
6792Why tremble at the approach of death?
6792Why upbraid thy child?
6792Why was she silent when the gentle youth From Wales entreated thee to spare his life?
6792Why, Holy One, on me impose This dread vocation?
6792Why, is it not the diadem of France?
6792Why, maiden, now hold back my upraised arm?
6792Why, what boots it you?
6792Why, what is that to thee?
6792Why, whence can she obtain This glorious revelation?
6792Why?
6792Will she despise, and treat us with contempt?
6792Will she snatch from us the victory?
6792Will you wait Till in blind fury they o''erthrow the tower, And we beneath its towers are destroyed?
6792Wilt thou not look within?
6792Wilt thou, a captive, dictate laws to us?
6792With her?
6792Ye, who do thus make war upon the Dauphin, What rightful cause have ye to plunder him?
6792You come alone?
6792You do not bring His blessing for his child?
6792You do not bring him back?
6792You''re silent, And my Louison looks upon the ground?
6792Your own advantage did you so forget, As to offend your worthy friend and ally?
6792Your salvation lies In an indissoluble bond with England?
6792and who protect thee From savage beasts, and still more savage men?
6792can a fettered woman frighten thee?
6792general, shall we march against the foe And leave this raging fury in our rear?
6792hath the awe this banner doth inspire Turned back upon thyself?
6792here is Bertrand coming back from town; What bears he in his hand?
6792how then can we escape?
6792now Alas, who then would bear thee company?
6792shall I fly and owe my life to thee?
6792where flee?
6792where is she?
6792who comes here?
6792wilt thou with seducing words Allure thy victim?
7075After that, we will go to bed very early, to have our best looks ready for to- morrow, will we not, my little lady?
7075And Sundays?
7075And if she loves the Duke?
7075And now we will persuade him to go out with us, sha n''t we, mother dear?
7075And of what nature is to be the modest contribution I can make to your fête?
7075And papa''s written consent?
7075And she?
7075And that is?
7075And the forest?
7075And the lakes, cousin, what do you say of them?
7075And the other?
7075And what do you?
7075And you, sir?
7075And''_ Chimene_''?
7075Are you ill or insane?
7075Are you ill?
7075Are you still there, Jean?
7075Are you very upset-- unhappy?
7075At moments I even hate him, and...."And?
7075At this hour?
7075But could n''t you get the neighbours to bring you some water?
7075But does he care for her?
7075But does he really know what they do say of him?
7075But if I should be wrong?
7075But what is such a satisfaction in comparison with the happiness of a life? 7075 But where is her real happiness, I might say her lasting happiness?"
7075But why did she go this morning, instead of by the train with all the other artists this evening?
7075But will she be well in two months?
7075But--? 7075 Can you not be more definite?"
7075Can you tell me, sir, why they will not give the''Europa and the Bull''?
7075Correction of what? 7075 Could we not keep it as a secret?"
7075Deliciously restful, and you, my dear child, how did you sleep?
7075Did I startle you?
7075Did he not lunch with you, cousin?
7075Did you not know that the Countess is madly in love with the Duke, and that she had hoped to marry him this winter?
7075Did you see my daughter?
7075Do you believe that she loves you?
7075Do you believe, my dear, that I ought to let Esperance write to the Countess, as she proposes? 7075 Do you know who the other is?"
7075Do you know why they are fighting?
7075Do you regret your word already, Esperance?
7075Do you think he will receive me to- morrow, if I go to him?
7075Do you think it is a wig?
7075Do you think it will take vengeance?
7075Genevieve, Genevieve, why am I here?
7075Had you thought of writing to Countess Styvens before you read that letter?
7075Have you both gone crazy? 7075 Have you never been in love?"
7075He hesitated to give it to you?
7075Ho, ho,jeered one of the youths,"she settled you finely that time, did n''t she?"
7075How could I forget when I had given my word?
7075How could the Duke have known? 7075 How did you find her?"
7075How have Esperance and the Duke contrived to see each other?
7075How is it possible to hear her? 7075 How old are you?"
7075How should I know?
7075How? 7075 I hardly think,"he queried,"that I can well refuse this pleasure to my favourite pupil?"
7075I know...."You know?
7075I love your cousin; you know that, do n''t you?
7075I understand that the Duchess cared, since the election of her son is at stake, but the Duke, how would it affect him?
7075If you will allow me, Madame,he said boldly,"I should like to contribute my mite to your fête by painting the scenery?"
7075In God''s name,cried the Baron violently,"am I in the presence of a woman or a man?"
7075Is Count Albert Styvens of the Legation any relation of hers?
7075Is anything the matter, dear?
7075Is he as reserved and as serious as he looks?
7075Is it finished?
7075Is it true that you love Esperance Darbois?
7075Is it true that you want to marry her?
7075Is not this the time for us to go back? 7075 Is that my case?"
7075It is all plain enough,thought the young man,"but when, where?"
7075Jean,she cried with fright,"Jean, Count Styvens?"
7075Mama, you know that I am honest and honourable, how can I help it when I am the child of two darlings as good as you and papa? 7075 No, why should I have made myself so ridiculous?"
7075No, you know very well that I would not, but...."But?
7075Not even your aunt?
7075Now wo n''t you,said the charming Princess,"do us the honour to come to dinner at the Legation next week?
7075Oh,said Esperance smiling,"that is not the only reason you regret his absence?"
7075Say you are not sorry that you loved me?
7075Shall we walk a little?
7075She is still at the Conservatoire?
7075She is, I think, the equal to some of the greatest tragedienes,and when they told Esperance she said,"Is he still here?"
7075She must in some way be prevented from seeing the Countess Styvens,said Genevieve,"but how are we to manage that?"
7075So you are to make your début at the Comedie- Française?
7075So, you are a fisherwoman too, Mademoiselle?
7075Tell me, please, Mademoiselle, are you related to the professor of philosophy?
7075That gentlemanly young man, who is so considerate?
7075That is perhaps true, but what of it? 7075 That is some distance away?"
7075The Duke?
7075The actress? 7075 The realism of the ideal is very true, but how are you going to make amateurs or critics feel that?"
7075The three of you alone?
7075Then it is my place to ask you what you are going to do about it?
7075Then it was on my account, and to facilitate my admittance to the Academy, that you wrote?
7075Then you prefer this arrangement? 7075 Then you will allow me to join you for a moment?"
7075Then, darling papa?
7075Unless the one you love should prefer someone else to you?
7075Very good, we three will go there,he said, calling Maurice and Jean,"and we will bring you back lots of water?"
7075Watch and listen, wo n''t you, so that you can give me your impression after the first act?
7075Water?
7075Well, is n''t it all for her good?
7075Well, what do you think?
7075What about me?
7075What about?
7075What are you doing?
7075What are you dreaming about, Cousin Maurice?
7075What are you plotting against me?
7075What are you saying?
7075What are you talking about?
7075What can resist love? 7075 What did you see?"
7075What do you mean?
7075What do you say? 7075 What future?"
7075What happened to me?
7075What have you to say about Esperance Darbois?
7075What is it that you fear?
7075What is it, Esperance?
7075What is it, cousin, what ails you?
7075What is that?
7075What is the matter with him?
7075What is the matter with me?
7075What is the matter with you?
7075What is the matter with you?
7075What is the reason of this sudden call?
7075What means that haggard face, cousin, and the collar of your dress is all wet? 7075 What more has happened?"
7075What the deuce is our will for if we ca n''t exercise it?
7075What time is it?
7075What will take vengeance?
7075When?
7075Where do you live?
7075Where is Esperance?
7075Where will you meet?
7075Which way were you going, Mademoiselle?
7075Who freed you from your chains?
7075Who frightens you, dear child?
7075Who has told you?
7075Who knows what unhappiness may not be lurking for me, ready to spring at any moment?
7075Who knows?
7075Who knows?
7075Who sent you those, my child?
7075Who will she be seeing while she is away? 7075 Why did he go away in such haste?"
7075Why did you come to tell me yourself, instead of sending my man?
7075Why have you never told me?
7075Why impossible? 7075 Why not?"
7075Why should my father care to belong to the Academy at all?
7075Why so pensive, little daughter? 7075 Why?"
7075Why?
7075Will His Majesty, King Leopold, come this evening?
7075Will you get me a little warm water?
7075Will you give me your word that what I am going to say to you will be for you alone; that you will not repeat it?
7075Will you help me with some arrangements for the performance to- morrow?
7075Will you not both take my mother''s carriage?
7075Will you trust your daughter to me? 7075 Will you,"asked the Minister,"present me to your young heroine?"
7075Will you,the Duke asked Maurice,"make an appointment for me, and tell me as soon as you have an answer?"
7075Wo n''t you trust yourself to me?
7075Would it be impertinence if I asked you to let me see it?
7075Would you also regret having me for your cousin?
7075Would you not like me to call her?
7075Yes, to- day we must stay with papa, must n''t we? 7075 You are going to answer my questions with perfect frankness, Esperance?"
7075You are not afraid of what she will say? 7075 You are sure?"
7075You believe that he would dare?
7075You did not like it, papa?
7075You did the portrait of which the Duke de Morlay has spoken so highly?
7075You do n''t like the mountains at all?
7075You find that a virtue, Princess?
7075You have had a dizzy feeling come over you? 7075 You have my birth certificate?"
7075You have written to your father?
7075You know Victorien Sardou?
7075You know the Duke, they say that he is very much taken...."They know each other?
7075You leave me free to act?
7075You really love the Duke?
7075You think that likely?
7075You want to go to- morrow?
7075You were asleep?
7075You, dear,asked Esperance,"will you renounce the theatre if Maurice tells you that he wishes it?"
7075Your mother?
7075A cigarette?"
7075A comrade asked Perliez,"Is she any good, that pretty little blonde?"
7075Albert joined in,"Where is the spring?"
7075Albert?
7075Am I a wicked girl?
7075And before his mother could speak he went on:"I am jealous, it is true, but what happiness is not willing to pay for itself with a little pain?
7075And if she cast it aside, her loyalty, her promise?
7075And joy, the joy of the theatre, would that, too, be taken away?
7075And then, as the women were preparing to leave the library,"Tell me, Esperance, who is the Countess Styvens?"
7075And with his head in his hands he groaned despairingly,"How can we sacrifice that noble and unfortunate Albert?"
7075And without more ado,"We must rehearse, must we not?
7075And you approve of such a union?"
7075And,"he continued, pleased with his wit,"Maurice Renaud, that wild rascal, is he apt to inspire respect for Esperance?
7075As soon as he was left alone with the philosopher, the author exclaimed,"In the name of God, man, is this where philosophy leads you?
7075But tell us how did you contrive to hear her?"
7075But what happened?
7075But what would be the end of these two gallants, both so timid, so full of silent ardour?
7075But why do you ask that?"
7075But, perhaps you have a better understanding of these things?"
7075Darbois; this is the first time that you have worn it, is n''t it?
7075Darbois?"
7075Darbois?"
7075Did you insist upon it?"
7075Do n''t you see them, in that box far back?
7075Do you feel able to play so soon in a real theatre, before so many people?"
7075Do you know how he died?
7075Do you like him any better?"
7075Do you wish to see them?"
7075Esperance looks a little better, had you not better go away?"
7075Esperance... so much the better if you do not know her?"
7075Esperance?"
7075Frahender beside her, had asked,"How is Count Albert?"
7075Had the Count said anything to her mother?
7075Hardouin would accept me as a witness?"
7075Have you not said a thousand times that discussion is the necessary soil for the development of new ideas?"
7075Have you read the article he wrote in the_ Debats_ this morning?"
7075Have you seen what a glorious day it is?"
7075He chided her gently,"Daughter, are you going to break your word to the Doctor?"
7075He complained to Maurice whom he saw every day,"Can I not see Esperance?"
7075He is coming?...
7075He paused a moment, then asked affectionately,"Have you no hope?"
7075He put on his glasses, counted the stones, shook his head and grunted,"It is a superb bracelet, do you realize that, child?"
7075Her father, noticing the change in her, exclaimed,"Bertaud is quite right, you are sometimes abnormally pale; do you feel ill?"
7075How did Adhemar Meydieux happen to know the Secretary of the Legation?
7075How?"
7075I am a little tired and my heart is beating so.... What was that?"
7075I can not, indeed....""Approve of her going on the stage?
7075I do n''t suppose that you have noticed it?"
7075I do not know... a catastrophe... where is my father?"
7075I know very well that I shall be taken care of, but how can I struggle against the tumultuous ideas that assail me?
7075I must be trembling, does it not show in my writing?
7075I see that you are ready to go out; are you returning to the Conservatoire?"
7075Is Mademoiselle satisfied?"
7075Jean intervened,"May I say something?"
7075Mademoiselle is the daughter of the famous professor of philosophy?''"
7075Maurice, who had been strolling not far off with Jean, came up and noticing Esperance''s tearful eyes, said:"What is the matter?"
7075May we see it now?"
7075Must n''t I?
7075Must she wear fetters to keep faith?
7075No,"she said nervously,"But I was dreaming, I was far away....""Where were you, cousin?"
7075Of her answer?"
7075Or peace?
7075Perliez''s son, whom I used to know when he was no higher than that,"he said, stretching out his hand,"was enthusiastic?
7075Perliez?"
7075Perliez?"
7075Shall we go together?"
7075She can not wear pearls at the convent?
7075She found herself on a great map of the world, with a voice calling to her,"Why are you frozen there, why do n''t you move?
7075She looked at the water and asked with surprise,"This is the water you drink?"
7075She rejected the idea that he could think of her as capable of becoming his mistress.... Then, his wife?
7075She saw all her visitors to the door, and when Esperance jumped on her horse,"You are n''t afraid up there?
7075She will not deny us her light, our lovely little star?"
7075Should she unclasp it, should she not?
7075Suddenly she raised her head in fright--"What may that noise be?"
7075The Baron continued, more determinedly,"You do not intend to propose her as a daughter- in- law to your mother?"
7075The door bell rang, then they heard a voice,"In the salon?
7075The young man refused,"How can I give my word without even knowing the subject of your confidences?"
7075Then advancing,"It is to M. François Darbois that I have the pleasure of speaking, is it not?"
7075Then bending towards Madame Darbois,"May I be permitted, Madame, to ask your daughter to give me the cues of''_ Junia_''in_ Britannicus_?
7075Then the collar?
7075Then, as he was about to go, he turned,"Have you received your invitation for...?"
7075This dark grove is sparkling with sunlight and...?"
7075To- morrow I hope you will offer me the same chance again...?"
7075Was he feeling badly?"
7075Was it a kind of adoration for so much purity?
7075Was it of a higher order?
7075Was it physical?
7075Was not this man more to be feared than death itself?
7075We are n''t likely to meet anyone?"
7075Well, is it not noble to defend the poets, and introduce to the public all the new scientific and political ideas?"
7075What a pleasure it is to meet you-- but how does it happen that M. Darbois has allowed...?"
7075What can she have said?
7075What different armour should I need?"
7075What do you mean, cousin?"
7075What do you think?"
7075What happened to me?"
7075What is destiny providing for her?
7075What is his object?"
7075What is it?"
7075What is not my fault?
7075What man could have resisted?
7075What shall I be if she becomes my wife?
7075What time is it?"
7075What were you talking about that you should spoil your beauty with furrows?"
7075What will the ladies take for breakfast?"
7075What?
7075Where do you spring from?"
7075Where was rest?
7075Where were your thoughts?"
7075Which one of the judges had not been able to contain his admiration?
7075Which way is the prettiest?"
7075Who are you?"
7075Who is going with my goddaughter?"
7075Who is the inspired person who has arranged this mysterious flowery retreat for you?"
7075Whom have you chosen to give you your cues?"
7075Why are you so nervous?"
7075Why did he let me come here?
7075Why does he not come?
7075Why does the theatre draw me so that I am willing to sacrifice for it even those I love?
7075Why notice it?"
7075Why should he not declare himself, or at least try to find some encouragement?
7075Why?
7075Will you see if I may say good- bye to her?"
7075Wo n''t you come with us?
7075Would it not have been better to have run the risk of offending the Duchess?"
7075Would not you like to say good- night to him?"
7075You accept Maurice and Jean as your knights- errant?
7075You all displeased him; tell us just what happened?"
7075You do not intend, I suppose, to make her your mistress?"
7075You remember, do n''t you, mama, how disturbed you were by M. Dubare''s plea on behalf of the assassin of Jeanne Verdier?
7075You will excuse me?"
7075alone?"
7075are you ill?"
7075asked Mounet- Sully gaily;"do I not get my reward?"
7075is n''t that a pretty boat?"
7075look?"
7075retorted Adhemar, stung to the quick,"What do you mean by that, you fine painter fellow?
7075said Esperance with disappointment,"I can not wear them?"
7075said one of the maids,"you must be in love, eh, Jeanette?"
7075she is a good musician too?"
7075she moaned,"is he killed?"
7075suppose she is beginning to love the Duke?"
7075the Duke?..."
7075what is this I hear?
7075who then?"
7075why, why is Albert so trusting?
7075yes, very happy,"she murmured in a low voice,"and you would not, darling papa, spoil the harmony of our life together?"
36956O Lord my God, hast thou also brought evil upon the widow with whom I sojourn, by slaying her son?
36956( 2) Abraham and Isaac alone: what did Isaac ask?
36956( 4) The wonderful interference: what did this teach Abraham?
36956( What is its name?)
3695617:15- 18:5) And when Saul saw David go forth against the Philistine, he said unto Abner, the captain of the host,"Abner, whose son is this youth?"
36956280. Who was the heroine of whom we studied?
36956285. Who were the two hero friends?
36956379. Who was the prophet that followed Elijah?
36956A commission is a duty given to a man: what was Moses''commission?
36956About how far was Dothan from Hebron?
36956Abraham gave back the property that he had rescued: what should we do with property that we find?
36956Abraham had a nephew with him: what was his name?
36956And Abraham drew near, and said,"Wilt thou consume the righteous with the wicked?
36956And Ahab said to Elijah,"Hast thou found me, O mine enemy?"
36956And David enquired of the Lord, saying,"Shall I go up against the Philistines?
36956And David said to Abishai,"Destroy him not: for who can put forth his hand against the Lord''s anointed, and be guiltless?"
36956And David said to Abner,"Art not thou a valiant man?
36956And David said unto him,"From whence comest thou?"
36956And David said unto him,"How went the matter?
36956And David said,"What have I now done?
36956And David said,"Whither shall I go up?"
36956And David''s men said unto him,"Behold, we be afraid here in Judah: how much more then if we go to Keilah against the armies of the Philistines?"
36956And Eli said unto her,"How long wilt thou be drunken?
36956And Eliab his eldest brother heard when he spake unto the men; and Eliab''s anger was kindled against David, and he said,"Why art thou come down?
36956And Elijah came near unto all the people, and said,"How long halt ye between two opinions?
36956And Elisha said unto her,"What shall I do for thee?
36956And Elisha said unto him,"Whence comest thou, Gehazi?"
36956And Elkanah her husband said unto her,"Hannah, why weepest thou?
36956And Esau said unto his father,"Hast thou but one blessing, my father?
36956And Esau said,"Behold, I am at the point to die: and what profit shall the birthright do to me?"
36956And Gideon said unto him,"Oh my lord, if the Lord be with us, why then is all this befallen us?
36956And I asked her and said,''Whose daughter art thou?''
36956And Isaac his father said unto him,"Who art thou?"
36956And Isaac said unto his son,"How is it that thou hast found it so quickly, my son?"
36956And Israel said unto Joseph,"Do not thy brethren feed the flock in Shechem?
36956And Israel said,"Wherefore dealt ye so ill with me, as to tell the man whether ye had yet a brother?"
36956And Jezebel his wife said unto him,"Dost thou now govern the kingdom of Israel?
36956And Joab said unto the man that told him,"And, behold, thou sawest it, and why didst thou not smite him there to the ground?
36956And Jonathan answered Saul his father, and said unto him,"Wherefore should he be put to death?
36956And Joseph said unto his brethren,"I am Joseph; doth my father yet live?"
36956And Joseph said unto them,"Do not interpretations belong to God?
36956And Joseph said unto them,"What deed is this that ye have done?
36956And Judah said unto his brethren,"What profit is it if we slay our brother and conceal his blood?
36956And Judah said,"What shall we say unto my lord?
36956And Michal answered Saul,"He said unto me,''Let me go; why should I kill thee?''"
36956And Nabal answered David''s servants, and said,"Who is David?
36956And Naomi said,"Turn again, my daughters: why will ye go with me?
36956And Pharaoh said unto Jacob,"How many are the days of the years of thy life?"
36956And Pharaoh said unto his servants,"Can we find such a one as this, a man in whom the spirit of God is?"
36956And Pharaoh said,"Who is the Lord, that I should hearken unto his voice to let Israel go?
36956And Samuel said unto Jesse,"Are here all thy children?"
36956And Samuel said,"How can I go?
36956And Saul answered and said,"Am not I a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel?
36956And Saul asked counsel of God,"Shall I go down after the Philistines?
36956And Saul knew David''s voice, and said,"Is this thy voice, my son David?"
36956And Saul said to him,"Whose son art thou, thou young man?"
36956And Saul said unto Michal,"Why hast thou deceived me thus, and let mine enemy go, that he is escaped?"
36956And Saul''s uncle said unto him and to his servant,"Whither went ye?"
36956And a certain man found him, and, behold, he was wandering in the field: and the man asked him, saying,"What seekest thou?"
36956And had he not high honor?
36956And hast thou not there with thee Zadok and Abiathar the priests?
36956And he answered,"Thou shalt not smite them: wouldest thou smite those whom thou hast taken captive with thy sword and with thy bow?
36956And he asked them of their welfare, and said,"Is your father well, the old man of whom ye spake?
36956And he asked them, saying,"Wherefore look ye so sadly to- day?"
36956And he commanded the foremost, saying,"When Esau my brother meeteth thee, and asketh thee, saying,''Whose art thou?
36956And he lifted up his eyes, and saw Benjamin his brother, his mother''s son, and said,"Is this your youngest brother, of whom ye spake unto me?"
36956And he lifted up his eyes, and saw the women and the children; and said,"Who are these with thee?"
36956And he said unto her,"Behold, I have not told it my father nor my mother, and shall I tell thee?"
36956And he said unto him,"Go back again; for what have I done to thee?"
36956And he said unto him,"Oh Lord, wherewith shall I save Israel?
36956And he said unto him,"Went not mine heart with thee, when the man turned again from his chariot to meet thee?
36956And he said unto him,"What is thy name?"
36956And he said unto his daughters,"And where is he?
36956And he said unto them,"Why do ye such things?
36956And he said,"Art thou my very son Esau?"
36956And he said,"Be it far from me, O Lord, that I should do this: shall I drink the blood of the men that went in jeopardy of their lives?"
36956And he said,"Behold, the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?"
36956And he said,"Come in, thou blessed of the Lord; wherefore standest thou without?
36956And he said,"Here am I; who art thou, my son?"
36956And he said,"How went the matter, my son?"
36956And he said,"Is not he rightly named Jacob?
36956And he said,"What is the thing that the Lord hath spoken unto thee?
36956And he said,"What meanest thou by all this company which I met?"
36956And he said,"What needeth it?
36956And he said,"Wherefore is it that thou dost ask after my name?"
36956And he said,"Wherein have I sinned, that thou wouldest deliver thy servant into the hand of Ahab, to slay me?
36956And he said,"Who art thou?"
36956And he said,"Who made thee a prince and a judge over us?
36956And he spake before his brethren and the army of Samaria, and said,"What do these feeble Jews?
36956And he stood and cried unto the armies of Israel, and said unto them,"Why are ye come out to set your battle in array?
36956And he told it to his father, and to his brethren; and his father rebuked him, and said unto him,"What is this dream that thou hast dreamed?
36956And he took the mantle of Elijah that fell from him, and smote the waters, and said,"Where is the Lord, the God of Elijah?"
36956And her mother- in- law said unto her,"Where hast thou gleaned to- day?
36956And his brethren said to him,"Shalt thou indeed reign over us?
36956And his servants came near, and spake unto him, and said,"My father, if the prophet had bid thee do some great thing, wouldest thou not have done it?
36956And it came to pass, when Ahab saw Elijah, that Ahab said unto him,"Is it thou, thou troubler of Israel?"
36956And it came to pass, when they were come to Bethlehem, that all the city was moved about them, and the women said,"Is this Naomi?"
36956And now is not Boaz our kinsman, with whose maidens thou wast?
36956And on whom is all the desire of Israel?
36956And she said unto Elijah,"O thou man of God?
36956And she said unto him,"How canst thou say,''I love thee,''when thine heart is not with me?
36956And she said unto the servant,"What man is this that walketh in the field to meet us?"
36956And the Lord looked upon him, and said,"Go in this thy might, and save Israel from the hand of Midian: have not I sent thee?"
36956And the Lord said unto him,"What is that in thine hand?"
36956And the Lord said unto him,"Who hath made man''s mouth?
36956And the Philistine said unto David,"Am I a dog, that thou comest to me with staves?"
36956And the anger of the Lord was kindled against Moses, and he said,"Is there not Aaron thy brother?
36956And the elders of the city came to meet him trembling, and said,"Comest thou peaceably?"
36956And the king of Egypt said unto them,"Wherefore do ye, Moses and Aaron, loose the people from their work?
36956And the king of Israel said unto Elisha, when he saw them,"My father, shall I smite them?
36956And the king said unto Esther,"What is thy petition, queen Esther?
36956And the king said unto me,"Why is thy countenance sad, seeing thou art not sick?
36956And the king said unto me,( the queen also sitting by him,)"For how long shall thy journey be?
36956And the king said unto the Cushite,"Is it well with the young man Absalom?"
36956And the men of Israel said,"Have ye seen this man that is come up?
36956And the men of Judah said,"Why are ye come up against us?"
36956And the men of the city said unto him on the seventh day before the sun went down,"What is sweeter than honey?
36956And the people murmured against Moses, saying,"What shall we drink?"
36956And the people said unto Saul,"Shall Jonathan die, who hath wrought this great salvation in Israel?
36956And their heart failed them, and they turned trembling one to another, saying,"What is this that God hath done unto us?"
36956And they called Rebekah, and said unto her,"Wilt thou go with this man?"
36956And they said unto Moses,"Because there were no graves in Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in the wilderness?
36956And they said unto him,"Wherefore speaketh my lord such words as these?
36956And they said,"The man asked straitly concerning ourselves, and concerning our kindred, saying,''Is your father yet alive?
36956And thou shalt speak unto him, saying,''Thus saith the Lord, Hast thou killed, and also taken possession?''
36956And when Eli heard the noise of the crying, he said,"What meaneth the noise of this tumult?"
36956And when Naaman saw one running after him, he lighted down from the chariot to meet him, and said,"Is all well?"
36956And when she came to her mother- in- law, she said,"How hast thou fared, my daughter?"
36956And when the Philistines heard the noise of the shout, they said,"What meaneth the noise of this great shout in the camp of the Hebrews?"
36956And when the lad was come to the place of the arrow which Jonathan had shot, Jonathan cried after the lad, and said,"Is not the arrow beyond thee?"
36956And when the people were come into the camp, the elders of Israel said,"Wherefore hath the Lord smitten us to- day before the Philistines?
36956And when they came to Reuel their father, he said,"How is it that ye are come so soon to- day?"
36956And wherefore doth the Lord bring us unto this land, to fall by the sword?
36956And, behold, Saul came following the oxen out of the field; and Saul said,"What aileth the people that they weep?"
36956And, behold, there came a voice unto him, and said,"What doest thou here, Elijah?"
36956Are not Abanah and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel?
36956Are our troubles ever good for us?
36956As Jacob returned home, what might he have to fear?
36956As they went up the ascent to the city, they found young maidens going out to draw water, and said unto them,"Is the seer here?"
36956At last Saul made up his mind to do something: what was it?
36956But Jezebel his wife came to him, and said unto him,"Why is thy spirit so sad, that thou eatest no bread?"
36956But many loyal friends stood by him: who were these, and how did they show their loyalty?
36956But still the numbers were too large: what was the second plan to reduce them?
36956But what did the others reply?
36956But what did they say about the land?
36956But when Saul was determined to have David brought to him even if he were sick in bed, how was the deceit discovered?
36956But when they saw the army coming to meet them they said unto Judas,"What?
36956But will God in very deed dwell on the earth?
36956C. DAVID MADE KING And it came to pass after this, that David enquired of the Lord, saying,"Shall I go up into any of the cities of Judah?"
36956C. THE PROMISE OF THE LORD And Moses returned unto the Lord, and said,"Lord, wherefore hast thou evil entreated this people?
36956Can a father feel the same toward good sons and bad sons?
36956Can everybody have this greatest thing?
36956Can we often do good by violence?
36956Can you think of any reason why that city might have been dissatisfied?
36956Could Baal hear them?
36956Could it be applied to Abraham?
36956Could you have guessed it?
36956Describe the scene when these men were thrown into the furnace?
36956Did he boast of his own skill?
36956Did he ever think the happy dreams of youth were hopeless?
36956Did he succeed in getting his whole company over?
36956Did he tell his father- in- law his plans?
36956Did you ever have a great heart struggle about some duty, or over some temptation?
36956Did you ever know anyone who was sorry for doing wrong when the punishment came, but forgot his promises afterward?
36956Do boys often dream of their future?
36956Do the"smart"men always win?
36956Do you know any building about that size?
36956Do you remember a story like that in_ Tom Brown at Rugby_?
36956Do you remember someone attacking saloons with a hatchet?
36956Do you remember that several times we have called the heroes"magnanimous"?
36956Do you remember the dreams of Joseph?
36956Do you remember the story of the good old priest who had two wicked sons, and of the little boy who came to live with him?
36956Do you remember what great hero led the people to Sinai?
36956Do you think Jonathan knew that David was to be king?
36956Do you think Samson was a great man?
36956Do you think he was brave?
36956Do you think that he had done wrong?
36956Do you think this was a shrewd scheme?
36956Does it belong to any one of the states in particular?
36956Eli was a noble man himself, but could he not have done better for Israel than he did?
36956For how shall I go up to my father, and the lad be not with me?
36956Hast thou not reserved a blessing for me?"
36956Have not I commanded thee?
36956Have you ever known an act that was magnanimous?
36956Have you ever known forgiveness to do any good?
36956He had with him his noble son: what was his name?
36956He is sure that David will succeed to the throne; what therefore does he ask of him in the future?
36956He thinks that they will make one of two replies: what were they?
36956He told him three important persons would all have a part in the work, even after he was dead: who were these?
36956He was most anxious to do what God would wish, so what would he naturally think that he ought to do?
36956Here he interpreted the dreams of two men: who were they?
36956How are all his people called by it?
36956How could they do so?
36956How could they take off their shoes so easily?
36956How did Abraham hear of it?
36956How did Abraham settle the matter?
36956How did Absalom persuade the people that he would make a better king than his father?
36956How did Ahab behave?
36956How did David use his band of adventurers against the Philistines?
36956How did Elijah mock them?
36956How did Elisha help his people against the plans of the Syrians?
36956How did Elisha lead the army to Samaria?
36956How did Elisha say they should be treated?
36956How did Isaac arrange that it should be given to Esau?
36956How did Israel mourn for him?
36956How did Jacob at last consent?
36956How did Jacob feel toward Joseph?
36956How did Jacob feel when he heard of Esau, and what did he do?
36956How did Jacob receive the good news that Joseph was alive?
36956How did Jonathan act?
36956How did Jonathan inform David that the king was his enemy?
36956How did Jonathan show his pleasure in David?
36956How did Jonathan try to be the peacemaker?
36956How did Joseph feel when he saw his brothers after so many years?
36956How did Joseph''s brothers feel toward him?
36956How did Judas purify it?
36956How did Lot behave in the matter?
36956How did Mordecai offend him?
36956How did Moses encourage them?
36956How did Moses feel when he grew up and saw the sad condition of his people?
36956How did Moses lead them into safety by God''s good providence?
36956How did Moses learn of what had happened?
36956How did Moses show a still deeper reverence?
36956How did Nehemiah cheer them?
36956How did Nehemiah meet the plots?
36956How did Nehemiah plan his work so as not to be surprised?
36956How did Samson escape?
36956How did Samson pay his bet?
36956How did Samuel do as Eli had told him?
36956How did Saul die?
36956How did Saul feel when he heard it?
36956How did Saul follow up the attack?
36956How did Saul secure an altar where the animals could be properly killed?
36956How did all the people congratulate Boaz?
36956How did all this affect Moses?
36956How did he arrange for news to be brought to him?
36956How did he arrange so that nobody could say there was a trick?
36956How did he arrange with Zadok to have news sent to him?
36956How did he behave?
36956How did he change it when he heard of the decree?
36956How did he deliver his people?
36956How did he discover that Saul was coming?
36956How did he divide his men?
36956How did he foolishly sin and lose his strength?
36956How did he frighten Absalom and how did he flatter him?
36956How did he get Esther introduced to the king?
36956How did he get along with Saul''s armor?
36956How did he meet this ridicule?
36956How did he plan that bad advice might be given to Absalom?
36956How did he plan to gather an army?
36956How did he plan to guard the city?
36956How did he praise David to the king?
36956How did he prepare for the sacrifice?
36956How did he prepare his people for the visit?
36956How did he recognize them, while they did not know him?
36956How did he secure the blessing?
36956How did he sneer at David''s band?
36956How did he suddenly appear?
36956How did he try to get it?
36956How did it affect the people?
36956How did it affect them?
36956How did it all turn out?
36956How did it all turn out?
36956How did it all turn out?
36956How did it happen that Vashti was deposed?
36956How did it turn out?
36956How did she become queen?
36956How did she get her?
36956How did she help her husband to escape?
36956How did she reply?
36956How did the Hebrews behave?
36956How did the Syrians find that they were in the capital of their enemies?
36956How did the battle come out?
36956How did the battle result?
36956How did the famine bring Joseph''s brothers to Egypt?
36956How did the father feel about his sons?
36956How did the great day close after Elijah had defeated the prophets of Baal?
36956How did the hungry Hebrews behave?
36956How did the king feel when he found that Daniel had refused to obey the decree?
36956How did the king pass the night?
36956How did the master think it would be discovered that he had not fed them on rich food?
36956How did the men of Gaza think he was caught?
36956How did the new prophet begin his work?
36956How did the news affect Saul?
36956How did the old priest answer?
36956How did the people feel about the flight of the old king?
36956How did the people feel when they heard the news?
36956How did the people meet it?
36956How did the people respond?
36956How did the queen risk her life to save her people?
36956How did the story affect him?
36956How did the young men find out the riddle?
36956How did the young prince make a fine appearance?
36956How did these form themselves in Jacob''s dream?
36956How did they act?
36956How did they feel toward Moses and Aaron?
36956How did they get Joseph ready to appear before the king?
36956How did they mourn for him at his death?
36956How did they respond?
36956How did they try to gain the attention of their god?
36956How do you think Ahab felt about it?
36956How do you think the sudden attack of two men could have frightened the Philistines?
36956How does David respond?
36956How does he do this?
36956How does he think of God?
36956How does he think of himself?
36956How does one sin lead to another?
36956How does the Lord fit an earnest man for his work?
36956How does the armorbearer respond?
36956How does the interview end?
36956How large had his band grown to be?
36956How large was the army?
36956How long afterward did he die?
36956How long did it take them to find out about the country?
36956How long did it take this vigorous governor to repair the fortifications?
36956How long did it take to finish the work?
36956How long had Moses remained in the mountain to which he had gone to receive the laws?
36956How long had he forgotten Joseph?
36956How long had he waited?
36956How long would such a journey take?
36956How many animals were there in each of the five droves?
36956How many are there now?
36956How many at last were left?
36956How many divisions were there of David''s army?
36956How many innocent men went with him?
36956How many men did David have at the first?
36956How many men did he take with him?
36956How many of David''s brothers were in the army?
36956How many pieces?
36956How many remained?
36956How many showed fine leadership?
36956How many showed weakness of character?
36956How many sons had Jacob?
36956How many sons were born to him?
36956How many trusted God?
36956How many warriors did Saul have left?
36956How many went home?
36956How many were great patriots?
36956How many were there altogether?
36956How many were there of the enemy?
36956How many were there?
36956How many were unselfish?
36956How many years did Moses lead his people in the wilderness?
36956How many young men did he have in his service?
36956How many young men were there?
36956How much did she have?
36956How much does it cost?
36956How much more, if haply the people had eaten freely to- day of the spoil of their enemies which they found?
36956How old was the priest?
36956How shall we study?
36956How was David affected?
36956How was David informed of the council?
36956How was David''s expedition brought to an end?
36956How was Eli to blame for the wickedness of his sons?
36956How was Mordecai promoted?
36956How was Moses told to show his reverence?
36956How was faithfulness rewarded in this case?
36956How was he received?
36956How was it in this case?
36956How was it that the chief butler was so ungrateful?
36956How was the debt paid?
36956How was the feast arranged?
36956How was the glory of the Lord shown?
36956How was the king of Israel troubled, and what did Elisha say to him?
36956How was the news of the battle of Gilboa brought to him?
36956How was this arranged?
36956How was this room ornamented?
36956How were the people impressed by the holy law?
36956How were those storekeepers like Jacob?
36956How would a faithful servant of the Lord feel about it?
36956How would the two men feel as the day drew near?
36956How would this help her in gleaning?
36956How would you expect him to feel about Saul''s death?
36956How would you tell them the story of all that happened that day?
36956If I should say, I have hope, if I should even have a husband, and should also bear sons; would ye therefore tarry till they were grown?
36956If Jonathan finds that Saul is well disposed to David, what does he promise to do?
36956If Saul is evil disposed, what does he agree to do?
36956If ever the thought occurred to him that he ought to be their leader, how would he feel about it?
36956If one man sinned against another, God shall judge him: but if a man sin against the Lord, who shall entreat for him?"
36956If they do is it worth while?
36956In what condition did they find the temple?
36956In what spirit did Solomon reply?
36956Is Abraham magnanimous in pleading for Sodom?
36956Is Saul also among the prophets?"
36956Is a man wicked if he does what he thinks is right?
36956Is he yet alive?"
36956Is humility a good preparation for a great work or is confidence better?
36956Is it a time to receive money, and to receive garments, and oliveyards and vineyards, and sheep and oxen, and menservants and maidservants?
36956Is it a very large tribe?
36956Is it always safe to obey God?
36956Is it ever right to be angry?
36956Is it honest to charge all that you can get for something that people must have?
36956Is it not a grand story of the end of such a stormy life?
36956Is it not on thee, and for all thy father''s house?"
36956Is it not strange that after the great victory Gideon should forget God?
36956Is it the part of a strong man to go into temptation or to run away from it?
36956Is not the whole land before thee?
36956Is not this it in which my lord drinketh, and whereby he indeed divineth?
36956Is not this the word that we spake unto thee in Egypt, saying,''Let us alone, that we may serve the Egyptians''?
36956Is there also a hero?
36956Is there not a cause?"
36956Is there room in thy father''s house for us to lodge in?"
36956It was the custom to kill animals at the house of God as a sign of thanksgiving: what did Hannah take with her for this sacrifice?
36956Joab called a Cushite, that is a negro slave: what command did he give him?
36956Let thine eyes be on the field that they do reap, and go thou after them: have I not charged the young men that they shall not touch thee?
36956Meantime what was the condition in Israel, and Samaria the capital?
36956My lord asked his servants, saying,''Have ye a father, or a brother?''
36956Note the six distinctions he gave him and explain what they meant?
36956Once during the Civil War Abraham Lincoln went to visit Henry Ward Beecher: what do you think they talked of?
36956Ought we then to judge anyone by a single act?
36956Our wives and our little ones shall be a prey: were it not better for us to return into Egypt?"
36956Peradventure there be fifty righteous within the city: wilt thou consume and not spare the place for the fifty righteous that are therein?
36956Picture the loneliness of Jacob and describe how you think he felt that night?
36956Picture the scenes:( 1) The long journey: who went?
36956Rebekah was afraid: what advice did she give to Jacob?
36956Recite the song in which they celebrated their escape?
36956Saul felt that the Lord was saving Israel from the oppression: what oath did he put upon the people?
36956Saul is surprised: what does he say to Samuel?
36956Shall I and thy mother and thy brethren indeed come to bow down ourselves to thee to the earth?"
36956Shall I then take my bread, and my water, and my flesh that I have killed for my shearers, and give it unto men of whom I know not whence they be?"
36956Sinai?
36956So two of the states gave a piece of land, which was called a District: what is its full name?
36956Suppose Daniel had been killed by the lions, what would you think of him?
36956THE COVENANT OF THE FRIENDS And David fled from Naioth in Ramah, and came and said before Jonathan,"What have I done?
36956THE FIRST JOURNEY OF THE BROTHERS Now Jacob saw that there was grain in Egypt, and Jacob said unto his sons,"Why do ye look one upon another?
36956THE PLAN And Naomi her mother- in- law said unto her,"My daughter, shall I not seek rest for thee, that it may be well with thee?
36956The fierce contest was too severe for the old man, and he soon fell ill. What were his last words to his sons?
36956The first blow was struck at the town of Geba: what followed at once?
36956The king dreamed: how did this lead to Joseph''s promotion?
36956The next enemy was in the southeast: who were they?
36956The teraphim was an idol about the size of a man: how did Michal use it to deceive Saul''s messengers?
36956The town which is mentioned is well known to us because of one who was born there long afterward: who was he?
36956Then Abner answered and said,"Who art thou that criest to the king?"
36956Then answered David and said to Ahimelech the Hittite, and to Abishai,"Who will go down with me to Saul to the camp?"
36956Then how was it to be taken by sea to the port nearest to Jerusalem?
36956Then said Absalom unto Hushai,"Ahithophel hath spoken after this manner: shall we do after his saying?
36956Then said Boaz unto Ruth,"Hearest thou not, my daughter?
36956Then said Boaz unto his servant that was set over the reapers,"Whose damsel is this?"
36956Then said David to Jonathan,"Who shall tell me if perchance thy father answer thee roughly?"
36956Then said Saul to his servant,"But, behold, if we go, what shall we bring the man?
36956Then said his sister to Pharaoh''s daughter,"Shall I go and call thee a nurse of the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the child for thee?"
36956Then said the king to Ittai the Gittite,"Wherefore goest thou also with us?
36956Then said the king unto her,"What wilt thou, queen Esther?
36956Then spake the king Ahasuerus and said unto Esther the queen,"Who is he, and where is he, that durst presume in his heart to do so?"
36956Then the Philistines said,"Who hath done this?"
36956Then the king said to the wise men,"What shall we do unto the queen Vashti according to law, because she hath not done the bidding of the king?"
36956Then the king said unto me,"For what dost thou make request?"
36956Then the officers of the children of Israel came and cried unto Pharaoh, saying,"Wherefore dealest thou thus with thy servants?
36956Therefore David enquired of the Lord, saying,"Shall I go and smite these Philistines?"
36956They composed a little verse to sing: what was it?
36956They were poor, but they were happy all that harvest time: why?
36956They were very much distressed about the sad state of their people: but what could they do against the strong king?
36956Think what Saul and the servant were doing: whom did they meet and what did they ask?
36956Three causes helped to put the Philistines to flight: what were they?
36956Three classes of people are mentioned as joining him: who are they?
36956To what point did he bring them at last?
36956WRITTEN REVIEW Have you known a friend who was magnanimous when he might have been jealous?
36956Was Abraham''s prayer answered?
36956Was Jonathan jealous?
36956Was Moses justified in that act?
36956Was he brotherly?
36956Was he strong or weak?
36956Was it a reasonable request?
36956Was it natural for him to have this feeling?
36956Was not his hasty act unwise?
36956Was not this an honor and reward?
36956Was she willing to give up her power?
36956Was this a reasonable request?
36956Was this magnanimous?
36956Was this"magnanimous"?
36956Washington never sought greatness, but what do we think of him?
36956We do not know where Daniel was at this time, but what did his three friends do?
36956We have done away with slavery, but are not people still compelled to work in awful conditions?
36956We turn back in our story to what persons?
36956What American river has a rich country in all its wide valley?
36956What accident happened to him as he was trying to escape?
36956What act is the same in our lives?
36956What advice did Joseph give to the king?
36956What advice did he give?
36956What alliance did David make with them?
36956What answer did Nabal send back?
36956What answer did she send to Mordecai?
36956What appeal does David make to Jonathan?
36956What are its two chief cities?
36956What are we told of this handsome young man?
36956What awful punishment did Elijah inflict on the false prophets?
36956What became of Ahithophel?
36956What bet did he make with them?
36956What bold answer did Elijah make to the king?
36956What challenge did Elijah make?
36956What command did he give to Vashti?
36956What company of people in American history felt that God called them to leave their own country and come into the new land?
36956What conversation took place between the king and the Cushite?
36956What conversation took place regarding David?
36956What custom do we have to show reverence?
36956What danger was Moses in?
36956What did Abigail immediately do?
36956What did Abraham do with the spoil that he captured?
36956What did Abraham do?
36956What did Ahab do when he returned home?
36956What did Boaz give to Ruth to take to her mother- in- law?
36956What did David decide to do?
36956What did David decide upon as soon as he heard the news?
36956What did David think of the challenge?
36956What did Eli, the old priest, think about her?
36956What did Elijah do?
36956What did Elijah say?
36956What did Elisha''s servant think of this conduct of his master?
36956What did Gideon build there?
36956What did Gideon do himself?
36956What did Gideon do in order to find out about the enemy?
36956What did God tell Moses?
36956What did Goliath say to David?
36956What did Jacob do when night overtook him?
36956What did Jezebel decide?
36956What did Jezebel say that she would do?
36956What did Joab do?
36956What did Jonathan confess?
36956What did Joseph do during the seven prosperous years?
36956What did Joseph have to do with them?
36956What did Joshua hear?
36956What did Judah say to his father?
36956What did Moses and Aaron demand?
36956What did Moses bring down from the mountain?
36956What did Moses do when he found what had happened?
36956What did Moses say should be the last plague?
36956What did Naomi decide to do?
36956What did Pharaoh say to Joseph?
36956What did Pharaoh think of Joseph''s interpretation?
36956What did Pharaoh threaten Moses after the ninth plague?
36956What did Samson find this time on his way?
36956What did Samuel answer?
36956What did Samuel do as soon as he got up in the morning?
36956What did Samuel do for Saul?
36956What did Samuel feel just as soon as he saw Saul?
36956What did Samuel say to Saul?
36956What did Samuel think when he saw Jesse''s oldest son?
36956What did Saul decide?
36956What did Saul do about the present?
36956What did Saul do for the young victor?
36956What did Saul do?
36956What did Saul keep silent about?
36956What did Saul say to his daughter?
36956What did Saul say?
36956What did he ask the servant to promise?
36956What did he do first in Jerusalem?
36956What did he do to the three?
36956What did he do when the famine came?
36956What did he do with Joseph?
36956What did he do?
36956What did he do?
36956What did he do?
36956What did he give Solomon?
36956What did he immediately do as the first act of his leadership?
36956What did he obtain?
36956What did he request Esther to do?
36956What did he say Moses and Aaron were doing?
36956What did he say to Ahab?
36956What did he say to the leaders of the people?
36956What did he say to them?
36956What did he think about the vision?
36956What did he think of his advice?
36956What did he wish to give Elisha?
36956What did his brother say to him?
36956What did his parents think of it?
36956What did his servants say to him?
36956What did his surname Maccabæus mean?
36956What did it mean that he was adopted by the princess?
36956What did it mean?
36956What did she do?
36956What did she have?
36956What did she promise if she could have a son?
36956What did she say to Eli?
36956What did that mean?
36956What did the Hebrews say when they learned that Pharaoh was following them?
36956What did the Lord promise?
36956What did the Lord tell him about the way to judge of men?
36956What did the Puritans do to the witches?
36956What did the Syrian king think of it?
36956What did the angel say to him when he saw his powerful frame and how vigorously he was beating his wheat?
36956What did the chief butler do?
36956What did the grateful people offer Gideon?
36956What did the hungry people find in the forest?
36956What did the king and Obadiah undertake?
36956What did the king fear might happen if the Hebrews grew too numerous?
36956What did the king say about the Lord?
36956What did the king say to Daniel?
36956What did the king say to them?
36956What did the king think he saw?
36956What did the king want to do to them?
36956What did the little slave say to her mistress?
36956What did the people think of the hero who had saved them?
36956What did the rude shepherds do?
36956What did the shepherds think of David?
36956What did the women think of Ruth?
36956What did the writer of the Book of Deuteronomy think of Moses?
36956What did the writer of the last verses think of this great man?
36956What did they answer him?
36956What did they demand of Mattathias, and what did they promise him?
36956What did they do?
36956What did they do?
36956What did they get as a sample of the fruit?
36956What did they say?
36956What did they shout?
36956What did they tell Jacob?
36956What did they tell Nehemiah?
36956What did we mean when we said Abraham was"magnanimous"?
36956What difficulty soon arose?
36956What directions did he give to the young men?
36956What dispute took place between the soldier and Joab?
36956What do the Lord''s replies to Abraham''s prayers teach us?
36956What do we call these great words?
36956What do we mean by Ruth''s devotion?
36956What do you think each of these young men would admire in the other?
36956What do you think of Caleb?
36956What do you think of David in all this matter?
36956What do you think of Eli?
36956What do you think of Esau in this affair?
36956What do you think of Joseph''s request?
36956What do you think of Ruth?
36956What do you think of a man who gives up his purpose so suddenly?
36956What do you think of all this conduct?
36956What do you think of favoritism in families?
36956What do you think of his conduct?
36956What do you think of that?
36956What do you think of the bravery of the heroes and the conduct of the king?
36956What do you think they expected to do with the Hebrews?
36956What do you think they talked about?
36956What do you think were the feelings of Israel when they found themselves safe?
36956What does Abraham learn is to happen to the wicked city of Sodom?
36956What does he feel that God has done for them?
36956What does he hope that God will do for them?
36956What does he pray for?
36956What does the story tell us finally of Solomon''s wealth and wisdom?
36956What does this show of the character of the land?
36956What does this show of the size of his camp?
36956What does this show us regarding his duties?
36956What does"Exodus"mean?
36956What effect did it have?
36956What effect did this have upon the Philistines?
36956What excuse did Absalom give for a journey to Hebron?
36956What excuse did Jonathan make?
36956What followed?
36956What food supply did he secure?
36956What foolish thing did Daniel''s enemies persuade the king to do?
36956What further sign was given to Gideon to make him sure that the Lord was with him?
36956What good result came to Abraham?
36956What great American gave a Farewell Message to his countrymen?
36956What great American refused to be a king?
36956What great blow for liberty did this young man strike and so become king?
36956What great canal has since been dug there?
36956What great change of feeling came over Naaman?
36956What great feat of strength did Samson perform on the way?
36956What great objects had some of the earlier Pharaohs built?
36956What great prophet was the champion of pure religion?
36956What great wealth did these two men have?
36956What had Saul been doing since his return from Samuel?
36956What had been Daniel''s custom regarding prayer?
36956What had happened at Beth- el?
36956What had he been able to do in his shepherd life?
36956What had he done?
36956What had prepared these men for the crime they committed?
36956What had the Lord told him?
36956What happened about the money?
36956What happened in Moab?
36956What happened in the morning?
36956What happened just as they reached the city?
36956What happened on the king''s birthday?
36956What happened the next day?
36956What happened to Joseph when he reached Egypt?
36956What happened to Sodom?
36956What happened to him?
36956What happened to the ark?
36956What happened to the brook at last?
36956What happened to the kings of Midian and the host?
36956What happened to the two priests?
36956What happened when the Egyptians found that the people had actually gone?
36956What happened when the people heard the discouraging report?
36956What happened?
36956What happened?
36956What happened?
36956What happened?
36956What hasty thing did he do?
36956What help did Nehemiah feel that he had in all his work?
36956What high place did he hold?
36956What horrible vengeance did the Philistines take on the bride''s family?
36956What humorous and savage revenge did Samson take upon his enemies?
36956What impression did it make on the king?
36956What insults were offered to the religion of the Jews?
36956What interesting old custom is shown?
36956What invitation did she extend?
36956What is a challenge?
36956What is a hero?
36956What is his great hope that God will do for the people when they pray?
36956What is the best way to meet bad fortune?
36956What is the capital?
36956What is the name of the city that is still after 3,000 years the chief city in Palestine?
36956What is the name of the city that was built to be the capital of our country?
36956What is the position of a slave?
36956What is the river that Nehemiah mentions?
36956What kind of a place do you want in the world-- an easy place with plenty to get or a hard place with plenty of chance to do good?
36956What kind of a young man was he?
36956What kind of country would they have had to pass through?
36956What kind of feast did the king give?
36956What kind of feast was it?
36956What kind of labor were they compelled to do?
36956What kind of man was Saul?
36956What kind of man was he and what kind of wife had he?
36956What kind thing did the Lord do for the tired prophet?
36956What made him break his promise?
36956What made the crossing possible?
36956What message did Elisha send?
36956What message did the king send to his people?
36956What message did the prophet send to Ahab?
36956What might have happened if the Hebrews had seen that they would have to fight?
36956What noble words did he say?
36956What occurred regarding the other sons?
36956What offer did God make to him in the dream?
36956What office did he hold?
36956What order did he give so that there should be no more men?
36956What other story have we had in which the sandal was easily taken off?
36956What ought he to have done to them?
36956What ought he to have done?
36956What part of the house did they use in those days for visiting?
36956What people in our own history did we compare with him?
36956What places did Abraham visit?
36956What plan did Samuel use to be alone with Saul?
36956What plan did he use to make them sorry for their unkindness and to make one of them willing to be a slave to save his youngest brother?
36956What plan had Samuel made so that a good piece of meat could be kept?
36956What plan of Saul''s did she discover?
36956What plan of settlement did Abraham suggest?
36956What plan was proposed to secure a most beautiful wife for the king?
36956What plan was to be used to find out?
36956What plots did the enemies devise?
36956What prayer did Elijah offer?
36956What promise did God give Abraham after he came to Canaan?
36956What promise did the Lord give him?
36956What promise does he plead?
36956What promise had been made repeatedly to Abraham?
36956What proof does he give that he is able to build the temple?
36956What quality did Solomon ask for?
36956What reason does Solomon give why the Sidonians( that is, the people of Sidon) should cut the trees?
36956What rebellion did they plan?
36956What relation was Ruth to David?
36956What religious act did he perform wherever he went?
36956What report did they give?
36956What report was brought to Abigail?
36956What request did he make at the time of the shearing feast?
36956What request did he make?
36956What revenge did Esau plan?
36956What revenge did he plan?
36956What reward did this hero refuse?
36956What river was all that separated them from Canaan?
36956What route would Abraham take from Haran to Canaan?
36956What route would be taken to go from Ur to Canaan?
36956What separated the Israelites from the Egyptians?
36956What seven different things were these men to find out?
36956What sign was given to Gideon?
36956What signs of grief did they show?
36956What signs was Saul to have?
36956What solemn procession was held?
36956What special command did he give to the captains?
36956What spirit was he to have?
36956What startling message did he bring?
36956What striking thing did he do to gather an army?
36956What terms did the cruel king offer them?
36956What terrible punishment came upon him?
36956What test did Daniel propose?
36956What test did Elijah propose?
36956What then did Saul feel was his first duty as king?
36956What then was to be done with it before it was hauled up the steep roads to Jerusalem?
36956What thoughts do you think came to him when he returned to the spot where he had slept as a lonely young man twenty years before?
36956What time of the year was it?
36956What time of year was it when they returned?
36956What took place between the brothers and the steward?
36956What trees does he ask for?
36956What trouble did the Egyptians experience?
36956What trouble was caused by the increase of their wealth?
36956What two men were to be an exception?
36956What vengeance had he decided to take?
36956What vow did Jacob make?
36956What was Abraham''s confidence in God?
36956What was Elijah''s first question to the people?
36956What was Jacob''s plan to pacify Esau?
36956What was Joseph''s harsh decision?
36956What was Joseph''s plan about the cup?
36956What was Moses obliged to do because he had killed the Egyptian overseer?
36956What was Rebekah''s scheme to get the blessing for her favorite?
36956What was Samson expected to provide for the wedding?
36956What was Samson''s great feat?
36956What was Solomon to give Hiram in exchange?
36956What was decided?
36956What was done to Samson?
36956What was done to his enemies?
36956What was done with Absalom?
36956What was happening to Samuel all this time?
36956What was happening to them?
36956What was he doing?
36956What was he now afraid of?
36956What was his father''s name?
36956What was his name?
36956What was his name?
36956What was his name?
36956What was his name?
36956What was his new name?
36956What was his occupation?
36956What was its name?
36956What was the conversation between Saul and his uncle?
36956What was the difference between the two men?
36956What was the end of the discussion between the king and his son?
36956What was the first trial of Samson''s strength?
36956What was the king''s command to the people?
36956What was the name of the Syrian general?
36956What was the plan and how did it work?
36956What was the plan that he suggested to test the king?
36956What was the plan?
36956What was the promise that was repeated?
36956What was the result of all the excitement?
36956What was the result of all this to Daniel?
36956What was the result of the campaigns?
36956What was the result of the invasion?
36956What was the result?
36956What was the riddle?
36956What was the wish of this tyrant?
36956What was this journey, who went, why did they go, who remained behind?
36956What was to be his duty for the people?
36956What was to be his guide?
36956What was to be the penalty if they refused to obey?
36956What was to happen to all the grown men?
36956What was to happen to the children?
36956What wealth did he have?
36956What were Joseph''s feelings when he saw Benjamin?
36956What were some of the stories told about him?
36956What were they supposed to mean?
36956What were they to bring back with them?
36956What wise man did Absalom get on his side?
36956What wonderful thing happened to Samuel one night?
36956What would have been magnanimous conduct in Saul?
36956What would he need for his cattle?
36956What would he wish for them?
36956What would naturally happen if the high wind stopped after the Israelites had crossed?
36956What would the Midianites think when they heard three hundred trumpets blowing?
36956What would the reply of the messengers indicate about Esau''s life for the twenty years?
36956When David heard the news, what message did he send to the beautiful Abigail?
36956When Hannah prayed, did she speak aloud?
36956When Joseph was in the pit in slavery, and in the prison, whom did he trust?
36956When Moses was off in the desert, a fugitive from justice, could he help his people?
36956When Pharaoh was frightened by each of the plagues, what did he promise?
36956When did Solomon begin to build?
36956When the Philistines fled, what property did they leave behind?
36956When the enemies could not stop him by laughing at him, what did they try?
36956When the man had to flee for his life, how much had he gained by his deception?
36956When the two priests brought the ark to the camp, what happened?
36956Where did David flee?
36956Where did Elijah go?
36956Where did Moses die?
36956Where did Ruth go to glean?
36956Where did he come from?
36956Where did he go?
36956Where did he go?
36956Where did the Hebrews hide?
36956Where did they go to get the ark?
36956Where does David appear best-- when he threatens Nabal or when he spares Saul?
36956Where was David during the battle?
36956Whereas thou camest but yesterday, should I this day make thee go up and down with us, seeing I go whither I may?
36956Wherefore doth my lord pursue after his servant?
36956Wherefore should we live any longer?"
36956Which of his sons became the ruler of Egypt?
36956Which of them do you think the greatest?
36956Which of them was honored as the kindly helper of the needy and the wise adviser of his nation in days of trouble?
36956Which people would it have been most profitable for Moses to belong to-- the Egyptians or the Hebrews?
36956Which was the gallant soldier who defeated the tyrant?
36956Who accepted the challenge and how did the combat turn out?
36956Who did he believe called him and led him?
36956Who did they say would bless the people if they would be faithful and brave?
36956Who gave up his ease to work for his troubled people?
36956Who had chosen that country for his residence?
36956Who is watching all the time?
36956Who joined them?
36956Who made the boy''s garments?
36956Who prepared the bullock for the sacrifice first?
36956Who promised to be with him?
36956Who pronounced the benediction upon the people?
36956Who risked life and fortune to save the people?
36956Who showed a great love?
36956Who started out in his youth to be a good judge and ruler of the people?
36956Who took the lead after the death of the old priest?
36956Who visited him?
36956Who was Mordecai?
36956Who was Obadiah?
36956Who was called the Father of the Faithful?
36956Who was chosen to succeed Moses?
36956Who was he and what did he say?
36956Who was his favorite?
36956Who was his son?
36956Who was loyal to his conscience at the risk of his life?
36956Who was sent with Moses?
36956Who was the deliverer of the people from Egypt?
36956Who was the first enemy subdued?
36956Who was the first king of Israel?
36956Who was the first president of the United States?
36956Who was the king who sent to congratulate Solomon on his succession to the throne?
36956Who was the man who gave his name to the nation?
36956Who was the rich sheep owner?
36956Who was the stern rebuker of injustice?
36956Who was the wicked man that wanted to kill all the Jews?
36956Who was their champion?
36956Who was with him?
36956Who went with him?
36956Who were killed?
36956Who were these two great men that were sent to prison?
36956Who were they and where did they live?
36956Who were told to go home?
36956Who were with the ark?
36956Whom did David hear had joined Absalom?
36956Whose favor did he gain?
36956Whose side was Hushai really on?
36956Why could not the king pardon him?
36956Why did Elijah interfere?
36956Why did God tell him to go there?
36956Why did Jesse send David to the army and what presents did he send with him?
36956Why did Orpah return?
36956Why did Ruth refuse to leave her mother- in- law?
36956Why did he care so much about the ark of God?
36956Why did he do this?
36956Why did he not do so?
36956Why did he not go himself to battle?
36956Why did he not tell his father of his plan?
36956Why did he refuse?
36956Why did he say to the boy,"Make speed, haste, stay not"?
36956Why did his brothers hate him?
36956Why did not Ahab kill him?
36956Why did the girls think Moses was an Egyptian?
36956Why did they do it?
36956Why did they need to go to Egypt again?
36956Why did they not recognize him when he knew them?
36956Why did they think the Lord would not wish Jonathan to die?
36956Why did two men have to carry it?
36956Why did we call him the healer and counselor?
36956Why did we call him"magnanimous"?
36956Why do men with large flocks need to move from place to place?
36956Why do you think he did so?
36956Why is this?
36956Why saidst thou, She is my sister?
36956Why should we study the heroes of Israel?
36956Why was David an outlaw?
36956Why was Naaman angry?
36956Why was he chosen?
36956Why was he elected?
36956Why was the Lord pleased?
36956Why was their conduct wrong?
36956Why was this advice good for David?
36956Why was this such a hardship to the Hebrews?
36956Why was this?
36956Why were the Bethlehem women so surprised at Naomi''s appearance?
36956Why were the widow''s two sons to be sold as slaves?
36956Why were these men in prison?
36956Why would dry weather cause him trouble?
36956Why would not the man sell it?
36956With whom did Israel go to war?
36956With whom did Samson fall in love?
36956With whom did he live?
36956Would he have been wiser to pray secretly?
36956Would it have been a good thing for the Hebrews to have been happy in Egypt and to have stayed there and become Egyptians?
36956Would it have been well if the Pilgrims had been well treated in England and had stayed there?
36956Would it have been wise to go back to Egypt?
36956Would they be likely to dream about their former occupations?
36956Would you say that David was magnanimous?
36956[ Illustration: A CARAVAN IN PALESTINE] And Pharaoh called Abraham, and said,"What is this that thou hast done unto me?
36956am I not better to thee than ten sons?"
36956am not I a Philistine, and ye servants to Saul?
36956and it shall be granted thee: and what is thy request?
36956and my family the least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin?
36956and we told him according to the tenor of these words: could we in any wise know that he would say,''Bring your brother down''?"
36956and what is my sin before thy father, that he seeketh my life?"
36956and what is stronger than a lion?"
36956and what is thy request?
36956and when wilt thou return?"
36956and where are all his wondrous works which our fathers told us of, saying,''Did not the Lord bring us up from Egypt?''
36956and where hast thou wrought?
36956and whither goest thou?
36956and who is like to thee in Israel?
36956and who is the son of Jesse?
36956and whose are these before thee?''
36956and why eatest thou not?
36956and why is thy heart grieved?
36956and with whom hast thou left those few sheep in the wilderness?
36956for had there not been now a much greater slaughter among the Philistines?"
36956for the bread is spent in our vessels, and there is not a present to bring to the man of God: what have we?"
36956for what have I done?
36956for who is this Philistine, that he should defy the armies of the living God?"
36956have I yet sons that they may be your husbands?
36956have ye another brother?''
36956how about Jonathan''s?
36956how much rather then, when he saith to thee,''Wash, and be clean''?"
36956how shall we do?"
36956is it not I the Lord?
36956is it not so?"
36956know ye not that such a man as I can indeed divine?"
36956may I not wash in them, and be clean?"
36956or how can I endure to see the destruction of my kindred?"
36956or how shall we clear ourselves?
36956or shalt thou indeed have dominion over us?"
36956or what evil is in mine hand?
36956or who maketh a man dumb, or deaf, or seeing, or blind?
36956shall I smite them?"
36956shall we be able, being a small company, to fight against so great and strong a multitude?
36956tell me; what hast thou in the house?"
36956thinkest thou to kill me, as thou killedst the Egyptian?"
36956what hath he done?"
36956what is mine iniquity?
36956what shall we speak?
36956what then is this that thou hast done unto us?"
36956wherefore hast thou dealt thus with us, to bring us forth out of Egypt?
36956wherefore then hast thou not kept watch over thy lord the king?
36956wherefore then speakest thou to me after this manner?"
36956wherefore was I born to see the destruction of my people and of the holy city?
36956which of the men was pardoned by the king and forgot Joseph?
36956who shall deliver us out of the hand of these mighty gods?
36956why didst thou not tell me that she was thy wife?
36956why is it that thou hast sent me?
36956why is it that ye have left the man?
36956will they fortify themselves?
36956will they make an end in a day?
36956will they revive the stones out of the heaps of rubbish, seeing they are burned?"
36956will they sacrifice?
36956wilt thou deliver them into my hand?"
36956wilt thou deliver them into the hand of Israel?"
36956would ye therefore stay from having husbands?
45734A twelvemonth? 45734 Am I dreaming?
45734Am I to obey the command of this rude barbarian, and become his wife; not to cross him, but to obey him in all his moods, because he wills it? 45734 Am I, therefore, to go hang myself in my garters, or yours, if you will give them to me?"
45734And does that make this parting harder?
45734And how doth Harry?
45734And never a man among you all?
45734And not a bit changed, Nancy?
45734And pray, sir, what will Miss Kitty do?
45734And that is?
45734And the woman-- who is she? 45734 And what can I do?"
45734And you have taken it?
45734And you? 45734 Another of Miss Pleydell''s swains, I suppose?"
45734Are we playing a comedy?
45734Are you determined that blood should be spilt?
45734As if the Queen of the Wells could avoid having enemies?
45734But am I married?
45734But how shall my husband love me?
45734But she knew-- she must have known-- that she was actually married?
45734But where is he? 45734 But who is she?"
45734But why is he in mourning?
45734But why these swords, Sir Miles? 45734 Can I do nothing more for you, sir?"
45734Can I get you anything, sir?
45734Can nothing save him? 45734 Can we not be happy, even if we have a care which we try to hide?"
45734Can you tell me?
45734Can you tell me?
45734Canst thou weep any more over the misfortunes of Clarissa, with this poor lady''s sorrows in thy recollection?
45734Dear Miss Pleydell,she said, after morning service, as we were coming out of church,"have you heard the dreadful news?"
45734Dear Miss Pleydell,whispered Peggy Baker, as he appeared,"can his lordship have repented already of what he said beneath the trees last night?
45734Did he-- but I suppose he had forgotten-- did he condescend to speak of me?
45734Do you hope so? 45734 Do you mean to say, Will, that I did?
45734Do you really hope so, Miss Kitty?
45734Doctor Shovel, are we dreaming, all of us?
45734Doctor, what may that mean?
45734Does Will know that I am here?
45734Does it seem so terrible a thing,he said, leaning against the window with his hands in his pockets,"to have no cares?
45734Does she wish to see me?
45734Does the name of Kitty cease to charm?
45734Dr. Shovel is your uncle, madam?
45734Explain? 45734 For what did the grapes rejoice?
45734Further: have you any right of guardianship over this young lady?
45734Happier circumstances?
45734Hath not the Queen of the Wells arrived?
45734Have you asked him, sir?
45734He stood over me with grave face, and, in reproachful accents, asked me how I fared, and for what purpose I had come to him? 45734 Her name?
45734How can he do harm?
45734How did you amuse yourself in your village?
45734How do you know I am to marry my lord, Cicely? 45734 How is Will?
45734How should you-- how should any one-- release me? 45734 How?"
45734I have n''t offended you, Miss Kitty, have I? 45734 I mean, how can you exist when the principal subject for scandalous talk, and the chief cause of anonymous letters, is removed?"
45734I? 45734 If, Kitty-- what an if?
45734If,I said to him one day, being tired by such exhibition of temper,"if you do not like the place, why make yourself unhappy by staying here?
45734Indeed, why?
45734Is he not a peer? 45734 Is it not enough, my lord?
45734Is it not shameful for a gentleman to be carried home at night, like a pig?
45734Is it possible that your lordship hath forgotten your mistress of whom you would still be talking last night? 45734 Is it possible,"cried Mrs. Esther, seriously displeased,"that we have in this rude and discourteous person a son of Sir Robert Levett?"
45734Is it possible? 45734 Is it the voice of your sweetheart?"
45734Is our Queen meditating?
45734Is that all you have to say to me?
45734Is that really so? 45734 Is the house on the road, Cicely?
45734Is there any person,Lord Chudleigh asked next,"whom you would like not to be asked?"
45734It is only-- pray, gentlemen, were any of you in the book- shop this morning?
45734Kitty dear,cried Mrs. Esther in alarm,"what does this gentleman mean?"
45734Kitty, what would you have? 45734 Kitty,"he cried,"what does this mean?"
45734Kitty?
45734Know that--what?
45734Late vicar? 45734 Lord, sir,"I said, still in my feigned voice,"if you do not eat you will be ill. Is there never a body that loves you?"
45734MY LORD,In what words to clothe a most shameful story?
45734MY LORD,What to say next?
45734Married? 45734 Married?"
45734Marry a gamester?
45734Marry me against my consent, Will? 45734 May I only see her face?"
45734May I say Miss Pleydell?
45734Might have been, my lord?
45734My appointment? 45734 My dear,"she said,"before one''s father one can not say all that one would wish"--could such wisdom be possible at seventeen- and- a- half?
45734My lord,I said,"is it well to tell a girl one day that you love her, and the next to come out to fight with swords about a trifle?
45734My services?
45734Nancy,I whispered,"when you are married, will you never, never dress to please anybody but your husband?"
45734Now then,he cried,"what is the meaning of this?
45734Now, good woman,said my uncle to Mrs. Gambit,"are you satisfied that my niece is in safe hands?"
45734Now,cried Mrs. Esther,"was there ever such a man?
45734O Miss Kitty,she sobbed,"who would not cry to see you going away, never to come back again?
45734Or more beautiful eyes?
45734Pretty Miss Kitty,he said,"it is a fine morning; shall we abroad?
45734Real? 45734 Real?"
45734Refuse? 45734 Roger,"he said,"canst thou, at the present moment, lay thy hand upon a woman willing to be a bride, either in the prison or elsewhere?"
45734She? 45734 Should I run away because a rustic says he loves my Kitty?"
45734So this is the unfortunate young gentleman, is it? 45734 So,"he said, sitting down and leaning his chin upon his whipstock,"thou must go, then?"
45734Tell me, my dear, is he in love with thee?
45734Tell me, then, girl, will Lord Chudleigh marry thee? 45734 Tell me, would he be alone?"
45734The Doctor?
45734The pretty little girl who is always laughing? 45734 The question is, how do you know?"
45734The sweetest girl?--what girl?
45734Unworthy? 45734 Was I merry?
45734Well, sir; and, in the next place, how dare you accuse me of deliberately trying to attract my lord? 45734 Well, then, is Miss Kitty to live here?"
45734What can we do? 45734 What change?"
45734What charge?
45734What did I say, Miss Kitty?
45734What did you mean, Will?
45734What do women care for lovers''sighs? 45734 What do you say, Sir Miles?"
45734What do you see?
45734What do you think the business is worth?
45734What do you want with me, Will?
45734What has that to do with Lord Chudleigh? 45734 What have I done to you, Miss Levett?"
45734What have we to do with gentlemen?
45734What have you to tell me, my lord?
45734What have you to tell me?
45734What is it? 45734 What is she like?
45734What is the matter, Kitty dear?
45734What is the toast of the day?
45734What is this, Roger?
45734What is this? 45734 What kind of engagements?"
45734What matter as to that, when he will settle his money on his wife? 45734 What means the fellow?"
45734What other motive can I attribute to you?
45734What was her position, her birth, her name? 45734 What was it, Cicely?"
45734What was the ring, my lord?
45734What were you going to do on the Downs this morning, Harry, when they made a prisoner of you?
45734What wife? 45734 What will she do?
45734What''s that?
45734What, did your father not know the present residence of Dr. Shovel? 45734 What?"
45734When do you expect him to come?
45734Where is my wife, then?
45734Where is the other half?
45734Who are waiting, Harry?
45734Who else but the Doctor? 45734 Who else?"
45734Who giveth,the Doctor went on,"this woman to be married to this man?"
45734Who is my plighted lover?
45734Who is she? 45734 Who is that person, then?"
45734Who was my wife? 45734 Why did I not say Heloïse?"
45734Why did your lordship marry her? 45734 Why not?"
45734Why, Will,Harry replied good- naturedly,"what if she refuses?"
45734Why, child, what dost thou here?
45734Why, doctor, would you have all the world mad?
45734Why, if any one should compliment you, Kitty, who but I?
45734Why, my dear, how is Will to know anything? 45734 Why, who would believe that the great Doctor Shovel could be respectable?
45734Why, woman, you would not think the child in danger with me?
45734Why, you mean to look me in the face and tell me you do n''t know?
45734Why,he murmured,"what is this?
45734Will you let me see Sir Robert?
45734Wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded wife?
45734Wilt thou,the Doctor turned to me,"have this man to thy wedded husband?"
45734Would you dare, sir, to hint that I, Lord Chudleigh, had designed a Fleet marriage?
45734Yet it reminded me-- Is there anybody who loves me, child? 45734 You doubt my power?
45734You have read these papers?
45734You here, Kitty?
45734You here, Nancy?
45734You return me my promise?
45734You will not dance, Miss Kitty?
45734You will not even let me know the depth of my degradation?
45734You will not, then, even tell me where she is, this wife of mine?
45734You wo n''t?
45734You wretched, Lord Chudleigh?
45734You? 45734 Your lordship has come, I suppose,"he asked,"to inquire after the health of her ladyship?"
45734Yours?
45734Yourself, dear Nancy?
45734''Dear madam, did you remark the dress of Miss Pleydell?''
45734''Tis pity, but yet what help?
45734--oh, beating heart!--"you wretched?
45734A common parson of the Fleet?
45734A few days more and the men will be afloat again, all their money gone; and the women----""Will they starve, sir?"
45734After supper, my lord asked me if there was any friend of mine whom I would especially like to be invited to his party at Durdans?
45734All who lodged there were, of course, prisoners"enjoying"the Rules-- who else would live in the place?
45734Am I a Nero?
45734Am I not Gregory Shovel, Doctor of Divinity of Christ''s College, Cambridge?
45734An appointment?
45734And as for my wounded feelings, why, what is it but so much vanity?
45734And did you think that you would make me think the more kindly of you, should you kill the man who, as you foolishly think, had supplanted you?
45734And how do you think?"
45734And how stand by and let her be won by another man?
45734And should I give up my place?
45734And what chance had I of distinction among so many fine women of less rustic breeding?
45734And what did the man mean by his long rigmarole and nonsense about the Reverend This and the Reverend That?
45734And what do you think strengthened my heart the while?
45734And what hath poor Kitty done, I pray?
45734And what should I say then?
45734And what sort of love would that be where a woman should glory, as it were, in deception?
45734And who are you, my good woman?"
45734And with our means, what chance of teaching you to toss a pancake, fold an omelette, or dish a Yorkshire pudding?"
45734And yet, what could my uncle have to do with marrying?
45734And''Can you tell me whence she comes, this beautiful Miss Pleydell?''
45734Are my cheeks fat and pale?
45734Are they so blinded by vanity as not to be able to see, without being told, when they are disagreeable objects for a woman''s contemplation?"
45734Are we common rogues and vagabonds, that have no bowels?
45734Are we mad?"
45734Are we, then, Old Bailey prisoners, chained by the leg until the time comes for us to go forth to Tyburn Tree?
45734Are you a pin the worse, supposing he never loves you?
45734Are you quite sure?"
45734Are you sure you have forgotten none of your steps?
45734Are you, pray, the Great Bashaw?"
45734As I went through, I heard voices whispering:"Where is Lord Chudleigh?
45734As for barbarities, are we Protestants better than our neighbours?
45734Besides, were I free, what course would be open to me?
45734But how should he guess?
45734But permit me to ask if the young lady is connected with you or with your house by any ties of relationship or otherwise?"
45734But pray, Sir Miles, why on the Downs so early?
45734But should she tell him at once?
45734But suppose Miss Pleydell refuses to give her consent to this arrangement?
45734But we may suppose an appointment for the morning; an appointment made and kept; a secret marriage----""Would you dare to tell such a story as that?"
45734But what is to be done?
45734But what punishment shall be inflicted upon him for forgetting a lady''s face?"
45734But why in Fleet Market, child?"
45734But your ladyship must think of your lines; and where is your security against treachery?
45734By what act, or thought, or prayer, could I raise myself to the level where my lord''s imagination had planted me?
45734By what acts have I deserved it?
45734Can a tipsy man be married?"
45734Can he be in love with two maids at the same time?"
45734Can not a peer be a good man?
45734Can not he go by another way?"
45734Can not you understand that I was never engaged to marry you-- that I never thought of such a thing?
45734Can such a life as yours be contemplated with unmoved eyes?
45734Can we not break his heart a little?"
45734Can you, who have hope, not bear it a little longer?"
45734Come, little Puritan, what is thy idea of pleasure?"
45734Could I endure to think that his love was gone from me altogether?
45734Could I go down to him, in hoops and satin, to tell him in that squalid place the whole truth?
45734Could I seek out Lord Chudleigh?
45734Could Solomon have loved in very truth the whole seven hundred?
45734Could any man be found to forgive that?
45734Could one devise a braver and more noble amusement?
45734Could she be, afterwards, so cowardly as not to tell the man whom she had thus injured, even when she knew that he loved her?
45734Could they mean anything beyond an attempt to console a despairing man?"
45734Could this be my uncle?
45734Dear lady, would you wish your Kitty to be the wife of a man who loves the stable first, the kennel next, and his wife after his horses and his dogs?"
45734Deborah, how often we asked it!--what fault had we committed?
45734Did I dare, then, he asked, knowing as I did full well this character of his for resolution, to fly in the face of that knowledge and throw him over?
45734Did I hang my chops and wipe my eyes?
45734Did I ride well?
45734Did I take it ill that she showed a liking for Lord Chudleigh, who is worth ten of me, and a dozen of you?
45734Did I, then, go snivelling in the dumps?
45734Did I, therefore, insult his Lordship, and call him out?"
45734Did Sir Miles go sneaking to you with the news?
45734Did any gentlemen in the county drink harder than my father?
45734Did any of them, perchance, remember how one who knew declared that never had he seen the righteous forsaken or the good man beg his bread?
45734Did ever girl read more beautiful language?
45734Did he send you?"
45734Did he, night and morning, every day curse his unknown wife?
45734Did they never see a pretty woman before?
45734Do my hands shake?
45734Do n''t you see the Doctor?
45734Do we not hack the limbs of our traitors, and stick them up on Temple Bar?
45734Do you hear, sir?
45734Do you know me so well as to be justified to yourself when you attribute such a motive to me?"
45734Do you know me so well as to read my soul?
45734Do you never play cards?"
45734Do you not think so?"
45734Do you remember Mr. Stallabras the poet?"
45734Do you remember, Kitty, how he would tease and torment us, and make us cry?
45734Do you repent?"
45734Do you think nothing of a broken heart?"
45734Do you think, child, she has got everything, and is properly dressed?"
45734Do you want to talk to your husband all night?
45734Does not a man do well who says to himself,''This shall be my life; this my lot?''"
45734Does she ask for no money?"
45734Does your lordship comprehend?
45734Doth he propose to marry you?"
45734For myself, I knew that I was to be married to him; but why?
45734For what sin or crime of ours did this ruin fall upon us?"
45734For what trouble, what mischief, was he here?
45734For, should he really love you, what forelook or expectancy is there but that the love will turn to hatred when he finds that he has been deceived?"
45734Forget?
45734From such a father as was hers, could aught but good descend?
45734Gentlemen, by your leave: will you make place for his lordship?
45734Granted that she is the Toast this year: prithee who will be the Toast next?
45734Gregory Shovel, Doctor of Divinity?"
45734Had ever a girl so sweet a message from the dead, to keep and ponder over, to comfort and console her?
45734Had girl ever so unkind a brother-- ever so perverse a sister?
45734Has there ever been a single occasion on which he gave up any enjoyment or desire out of consideration for another person?
45734Have I a bottle nose?
45734Have I gone mad?
45734Have we nothing to do but to fight duels?
45734Have you seen him?"
45734Heard man ever so strange, so pitiful a case?
45734Here is this little flower"--only a humble crane''s- bill, yet a beautiful flower--"you do not, I engage, know its name?"
45734How came she here?"
45734How can I tell unless I see thy face?"
45734How can they call this a land of justice, when two innocent women can be locked up for life?"
45734How can we be so wicked and so cruel as, after marriage, to betray to our husbands the real littleness of our souls?
45734How can we rise to so great a height?
45734How can we, without abasement, pretend to such virtue?
45734How can you know?
45734How could I best go to my lord and tell him?
45734How could I deserve this worship?
45734How could I help knowing?"
45734How could I live away from this room wherein I wallow day and night?
45734How could a courtly gentleman like Sir Robert and a gentlewoman like her ladyship have a son who was so great a clown in his manner and his talk?
45734How could such a man, with such a face and such a bearing, go about with such a secret?
45734How could there be a mistake?
45734How did I dare to open my heart to you, my dear, with such a shameful story to tell?"
45734How if I make him pay all my debts, and so leave the Liberties and live respectably ever after?
45734How was it possible to have any sympathy with so rueful a lover?
45734How, indeed, could I know?
45734Humiliation for him?
45734I asked him presently, with a shout, what was the cause of a dreadful riot and tumult?
45734I cried,"what do I care about Thyrsis and absent nymphs?
45734I cried,"what will be my lot?
45734I cried;"can that man be in his senses who hopes to win a woman''s heart by insulting and trying to kill-- her-- her lover?"
45734I have enough to eat, I drink freely: what more can I want?"
45734I hope, Miss Kitty, that you do not like gaming?"
45734I said to him,"why do you not go?
45734I said, thinking of my own foolishness,"why do you cry?"
45734I said;"is there no other woman in the world who will make you happy, except poor Kitty Pleydell?"
45734If the Doctor were dead, what would prevent such a man from telling the story abroad and proclaiming it to all comers?
45734If these ladies were prisoners, why, what was she?
45734Is Dr. Shovel a man, think ye, to clap in a prison?"
45734Is Sir Miles a Lovelace for hardness of heart?
45734Is all well?"
45734Is he not a man of principle and honour?"
45734Is he not rich?"
45734Is it prudent to engage in such quarrels?"
45734Is it true that you are yourself the author?"
45734Is not this a noble and elevating career?
45734Is the girl mad?
45734Is there a prettier girl or a better- bred girl anywhere in the land than Kitty Pleydell?
45734Is there any pitfall or snare for me?"
45734Is there, anywhere, in any town, an acre more thickly covered with infamy, misery, starvation, and wretchedness?
45734Is this room, nightly desecrated by revellers, a church?
45734Is your profligate wretch Roger a clerk?
45734Is, then, my brother- in- law dead?
45734It would have grieved me sore had poor Harry, almost my brother, been wounded or killed; but what would have been my lot had my lover fallen?
45734Kitty Pleydell?
45734Know they of the fee?"
45734Lawrence Pleydell, or the rascal runner of a-- of yourself?"
45734Let me know what is to be done about thy father''s wish that thou shouldst go to London?"
45734Let''s pass, will ye, lord or no lord?"
45734May I request the good offices of one among you in this affair?"
45734Merry hearts?
45734Miss Kitty, do you remember a certain day when a baronet, out at elbows, offered you his hand-- with nothing in it?"
45734Mr. Stallabras, will you take Kitty''s chair?
45734Murder?
45734My appointment?"
45734My lord, I trust that Miss Pleydell''s performance has made you congratulate yourself on my declining the honour of the minuet?"
45734Nay, if such as he die not in faith, what hope remains for such sinners as ourselves?
45734Now tell us, Miss Peggy, before all these gentlemen, do those eyes squint?"
45734Now, madam, could a girl promise to two men within half an hour?"
45734Oh, how could such a woman as Lady Levett have such a son?
45734Oh, my love-- my dear-- could I bear to give him up?
45734Or Sir Miles?
45734Or Stallabras, now-- should such a creature as he presume to think of such a woman?
45734Or was it out of revenge, and in the hope of making me miserable, that you designed to fight this duel?"
45734Or,''My lord, you need not woo me, for I was won before I was wooed''?
45734Other Fleet parsons?
45734Phoebe carried a dish of tea; would the gentleman choose to taste it?
45734Pimpernel?"
45734Pray, Doctor, who is the gentleman?
45734Pray, Miss Pleydell, may I ask when we may expect his lordship back again?"
45734Pray, Will, if you can, explain what you mean?"
45734Pray, my lord, is it the custom, nowadays, to woo with a long face and a mournful sigh?"
45734Rather, when he has gone among his equals has he not become an object of scorn and hatred?
45734Return good for evil?
45734Saw one ever such untidiness?
45734Say I well, my lord?"
45734Seconds and principals?
45734See, now, would the skipper of a merchantman serve your turn?"
45734Shall I confess that, at the first blush, this proposal was welcome to me?
45734Shall a man sit down idly, and see his wife snatched out of his arms?"
45734Shall there be another Chaplain of the Fleet while I survive?
45734Shall we close this discussion?"
45734Shoes?
45734Should I explain, or should his wife?
45734Should I harm him, therefore, by deceiving him and marrying him, while I hid the shameful story of the past?
45734Should I leave to another the honour I have won and the income I make therefrom?
45734Sir Miles, will you please to sit?
45734Sir, which would the court believe?
45734Stallabras?"
45734Still who am I, to decide when a gentleman is too drunk to marry?"
45734Strange, indeed; since when before did a man dance with his own wife and not recognise her?
45734Such a girl as my Kitty for Sir Miles Lackington?
45734Take off your powder and your patches and your hoops, how are you better than Blacksmith''s Sue?
45734Tell me, Miss Pleydell, if there is any promise between you and this gentleman?"
45734Tell me, first, what there is between you and my lord?
45734Tell me, upon your word, sir, do you know anything at all?
45734Tell me-- the young man whom he wounded, is he dead?"
45734The Doctor?
45734The old men and old women are dead; the young men and women are, one supposes, hanged; what else could be their fate?
45734The place is dirty and noisy; but what signify dirt and noise when safety is concerned?"
45734The poor prisoners were allowed to beg, but how could poor gentlewomen like my guardians bear to beg for daily bread?
45734The register?
45734The supposed death of his wife, the destruction of the register-- what could be better?
45734Then she looked at me thoughtfully, and said--"Sister, I suppose this child has been accustomed to have a dinner every day?"
45734Then she whispered:"Do you want money, dear?
45734Then, when I come for you, will you return with me, never to go away again?"
45734Therefore, when the fountain runs dry, whither is that poor author to turn?
45734They must go into the country, must they, after the pretty faces?"
45734This is a change, is it not, Miss Kitty?
45734This is wonderful.... How shall I know that the papers are the only proof of the ceremony?"
45734Those books"--he pointed to the Register and the Prayer- book--"were those upon the table last night?
45734To- day we should all dine?
45734Was London bigger than Canterbury?
45734Was ever girl more barbarously served?
45734Was ever man so wicked as her lover?
45734Was girl ever so bested?
45734Was he a gambler?
45734Was he ever crossed in anything?
45734Was her life to be, like that of these poor ladies, one long prison among reprobates and profligates?
45734Was it becoming for a man to fly from the laws of his country?
45734Was it kind to the woman you pretended to love to bring upon her the risk of this great unhappiness?
45734Was it possible?
45734Was it really possible that I had spent six long months and more in this stinking, noisy, and intolerable place?
45734Was she some wretched creature who could be bought off to keep silence while she lived, although she was a thing to be ashamed of and to hide?
45734Was she thinking of her own youth, which had been so unhappy?
45734Was that marriage real?
45734Was there ever a single thing which he desired that he did not obtain?
45734Was there ever so saucy a girl?
45734Was this young man to be my husband?
45734Were parents ever so blinded by prejudice?
45734Were there, then, days when we should all go hungry?
45734Were they anything but a kind hope for the impossible?
45734Were you proud to see me coming in by a neck?
45734What advantage will it be to you, provided these two gentlemen fight and kill each other?"
45734What am I to do in return?
45734What ancestors did his lordship say that envious tongues would give us-- tallow- chandlers?
45734What are my countrymen thinking of?
45734What are the eyes of men like?
45734What are these wounds!--a broken rib-- a cracked collar bone-- a bump on the back of the head?
45734What assurance had she that her end might not be like unto the end of these?
45734What bells were rung?"
45734What boots it if one''s rogues bring in a hundred couples in a month?
45734What brought your lordship to spend the night in such a place as the Liberties of the Fleet?
45734What can come out of this place but youth, beauty, birth, and virtue?
45734What can they say to comfort any one?"
45734What did I remember of him?
45734What did he think of me, this husband of mine, the young man with the handsome face, the white hands, and the fixed, strange eyes?
45734What did it mean?
45734What did she cry for?
45734What did this mean?
45734What do you see?"
45734What does your presence mean?
45734What else did you do?"
45734What gentlewoman would consent to such a marriage?"
45734What good is that when a race is on?
45734What had I to do with that?
45734What had they to offer?
45734What have they in common?
45734What if Will hath refused to get learning?
45734What intentions?
45734What is a little toothpick like that, compared with a quarterstaff in the hands of a sturdy rogue?
45734What is her name?
45734What is the meaning of you in this house?"
45734What is there contrary to the Rubric in my calling?
45734What more can any man want?
45734What more, Kitty, would you have?"
45734What occasion has Mr. Temple to quarrel with my lord?"
45734What occasion?"
45734What plank of safety, what harbour of refuge was open to her that she too might escape this fate?
45734What reward am I to have for my trouble and risk?"
45734What room looks more comfortably furnished than one which has its books in goodly rows upon the shelves?
45734What room, in such a condition of mind as was this man, for advice so cold, so interested as this?
45734What shall I do with him?
45734What shall we do, Kitty?"
45734What shall we do?"
45734What single quality have we in common except a desire to be amiable and seem pleasing to the other sex?"
45734What the Devil, sir, does it concern you whether my lord talks gallantry with one young lady or another?"
45734What then shall I do?
45734What then to do?"
45734What then?
45734What use was it for Mr. Nash of Bath, to deprive the gentlemen of their swords when he left the ladies their tongues?
45734What was I to do-- how treat him-- in what words to tell him, if I must tell him, the dreadful, the humiliating truth?
45734What was I to tell my lord?
45734What was it this young lady sought of you?"
45734What was the record of their lives?
45734What were they to do?
45734What will become of me?"
45734What will they say to such a face at the ball?"
45734What would Fleet Street be without its bar?
45734What would Peggy Baker give to be lampooned?
45734What would my father have said had he witnessed this sight?
45734What, I repeated, being uneasy more than a little, could he do?
45734What, however, could he do?
45734What, indeed, is a present of ten guineas in return for such services as mine?
45734When I was married they might come and-- what was I laughing at?
45734When my husband came courting me, do you think I said yes all at once?
45734When will men cease to fight duels, and seek to kill each other for a trifling disagreement, or a quarrel?
45734Where bestow thee?"
45734Where did you get such graces from?
45734Where is Sir Miles?
45734Where is he?"
45734Where is my bride?
45734Where is she gone?"
45734Where is she?"
45734Where were the banns put up?
45734Where were the outward signs and tokens of that piety which my father had led me to expect in my uncle?
45734Where, he asked, could he go, so as to lie_ perdu_ for a few days, or a few weeks, if necessary?
45734Which of the ragged baggages and trollops among the market- women most takes your lordship''s fancy?"
45734Which of them was my uncle''s church?
45734Who are ye?"
45734Who can resist a brave fellow, all fire and passion, who marches to the attack with a confident laugh and a gallant bearing?
45734Who could contribute to his support except ourselves?
45734Who is the gentleman?
45734Who next?
45734Who would have believed that Will Levett would have dared to call himself my accepted lover?
45734Who would have thought, four months ago, that Kitty would be that wicked creature?"
45734Who would trust herself to a man so regardless of his profession?
45734Who, I would ask, when he reads the sorrows of Clarissa, thinks of the trade-- the mere mechanical trade-- in which the author''s money was earned?
45734Who?
45734Whose head should it be, I ask you, but Kitty''s?
45734Why did she marry me?"
45734Why did she stare, smile, and then look upon me with a sort of pity and wonder?
45734Why do men like horse- racing, I wonder?
45734Why do you look reproaches on me?"
45734Why had I written not one single letter?
45734Why should he run away?
45734Why should we remember disagreeable things?
45734Why was the vintage more than commonly rich?
45734Why, I say?
45734Why, could I have had one moment of happiness when not only was I surrounded by infamy in every shape, but I had no hope or prospect of being rescued?
45734Why, in the devil''s name, should they fight?
45734Why, what did he know of a woman in love?
45734Why, what would the Rules be without the Doctor?
45734Why-- after all-- what is one woman that she should set herself above other women?
45734Will you take another glass of wine?"
45734Will you trust yourself with me to view the shops in Cheapside or the beaux in the Mall?
45734Will you, sweet Kitty-- will you be Lady Lackington?"
45734Will your lordship take me to the dancing- room?"
45734Will your lordship, first, forgive her?"
45734With what eloquence would he defend Christian faith?
45734With what righteous indignation would he not expel evil- doers?"
45734Without forgetting and pretending, where should we be?"
45734Would I thus let him choose the moment to confess my shameful sin?
45734Would any king''s counsel or learned serjeant give you greater comfort?
45734Would it be agreeable to your ladyship to be turned off by such an impious rogue?
45734Would it not be a sin to write down those words of love and endearment with which, when the Doctor left us alone, he consoled and soothed me?
45734Would not the assault on Mr. Stallabras and on Nancy be noised abroad?
45734Would not, indeed, all the company know it?
45734Would the sweet country never more be seen?
45734Would they ever again find a minister so benevolent, so pious, and so active in all good work?
45734Would you believe that it was actually the voice of the very turtle- dove of which he was so fond?
45734Would you kindly, sir, proceed at once to the business you have in hand and then begone?
45734Would your lordship like speech with the Doctor?
45734Yet he is a pretty fellow, is he not?
45734Yet how hope to win her?
45734Yet if Harry came to claim a supposed promise at my hands, why should not Will?
45734Yet what am I to think of this generosity?
45734Yet what answer?
45734Yet what else can I do with thee?
45734Yet what help?
45734Yet what matters such a trifle in the habits of a man?
45734Yet what sin can there be in breaking vows pronounced in such a state as he was in, and in such a way?
45734Yet, what sort of happiness could a wife expect who every day had to fear the chance of detection and exposure?
45734You are not surely going to throw me over?"
45734You do not, I suppose, know its name?"
45734You have known that for some time-- have you not?"
45734You have seen Will?"
45734Your father died suddenly, my lord, or after painful illness?"
45734Your ladyship''s box?
45734and if Miss Pleydell and her maid of honour do but grant us the privilege of beholding their charms, what need we of anything but rest?
45734asked Harry, when the cart was out of sight,"by saying only a year?"
45734attorneys?
45734but that he should see within reach promise of preferment, and run into debt to maintain a fine appearance and a fine lodging?"
45734could I bear to see him turn away those eyes which had never looked upon me save with kindness and affection?
45734cried Mrs. Gambit,"are the men gone mad?
45734cried her sister, shuddering;"must we tell her all?"
45734cried my lord,"do you suppose-- would you have me believe-- that this affair might be construed into anything but an act of self- defence?"
45734did one ever hear of such an extortionate charge?
45734explain?
45734he addressed his clerk, in a voice of thunder,"hast thou been playing the fool?
45734he cried;"do you mean to say that you did n''t break the sixpence with me?"
45734he cried;"it is already becoming town talk, is it?"
45734he roared,"I enjoy the Liberties of the Fleet-- the Liberties, do you hear?
45734he said;"how shall I exist-- how bear this separation for twelve long months?
45734how could I look on in silence, and endure without a word the worst that a woman can suffer?
45734how interpret it?
45734how shall we struggle through eight long volumes?"
45734may I be in your service?"
45734my Lord Breaker of Promises, my Lord Trampler of Dependents, my Lord Villain and Rogue, how likes your lordship that your son should marry my niece?
45734or Solomon Stallabras a salamander?
45734or have they, which is a thing incredible, conferred preferment upon sheer piety?"
45734or the Thames without its river- gates?
45734petticoats?
45734said Nancy, who had now come to my aid,"how shall you be able to exist, dear Miss Peggy, without him?"
45734there is a bird whose note, I dare swear, you do not know?"
45734was it not a shame?
45734what am I, wicked and deceitful woman, that I should hope to keep thy love?
45734what can you do?"
45734what did it mean?
45734what is it?"
45734what is love?
45734what is the accident?
45734what ought to have been the shame and sadness of my face?
45734whatever in the world is it?"
45734where is Sir Miles?
45734who can have any doubt?"
45734why should I not?
45734why was not that man made a bishop?
45734with what face will you say to him:''My lord, I am that wife of the Fleet wedding''?
45734would n''t the doctor serve your turn, but you must needs look out for one in the Coffee- house?
45734would nothing serve you short of a coronet?"
45734would you have me send forth my newly married lambs without a word of exhortation beyond the rubric?
57139A stranger?
57139A woman in the case, eh? 57139 Am I the same to you as Joe Mixer and that lot?"
57139And that is your Nahnya?
57139Annie Crossfox?
57139Annie,she said sharply,"what''s the matter?
57139Anæsthetic? 57139 Are n''t there enough cities fouling the streams?"
57139Are n''t you going back?
57139Are n''t you going to speak to me? 57139 Are n''t you going to take me with you?"
57139Are the others behind you?
57139Are there caribou in this little valley?
57139Are you a good doctor?
57139Are you going in later?
57139Are you going to tell me where the girl is hidden, and the gold?
57139Are you jealous?
57139Are you scared off?
57139Between us?
57139Blindfold me?
57139Blond, brunette, or albino? 57139 Broken again?"
57139But what can I do for you?
57139Ca n''t I speak to you?
57139Ca n''t we be friends?
57139Can a white man be friends with a girl-- like me?
57139Can we get it out through the cave?
57139Can you cut?
57139Come of it?
57139Could the fat man leap it?
57139Cut?
57139Did n''t I tell you that? 57139 Did n''t you know any girls in New York?"
57139Did you ever find it?
57139Did you ever see Hamlet?
57139Did you get your own boat all right?
57139Did you hire Joe Mixer to bring you after me?
57139Did you see any gold?
57139Did you see him come?
57139Different?
57139Do n''t the boys ever want to get out of the valley?
57139Do n''t you think it''s a pretty name?
57139Do we have to take so many men?
57139Do you expect me to start on a wild- goose chase into the wilderness without knowing what I''m letting myself in for?
57139Do you know Joe Mixer lets on that he has won you?
57139Do you know it?
57139Do you love me?
57139Do you think I steal it?
57139Do you think every woman is in love with you?
57139Do you travel so far by yourself?
57139Do you want me to go back?
57139Do you want to marry me?
57139Do you want to marry me?
57139Do you-- do you mean men?
57139Does she think I did it for this?
57139Does she think she can truss me up like a piece of baggage, and then bring me to my knees again with a soft look?
57139Eh?
57139Ever hear tell of Tom Sadler?
57139For what you come here?
57139Girls? 57139 Gisborne portage?"
57139Going back?
57139Has he said anything?
57139Has this place got a name?
57139Have I done anything to make you sore?
57139Have they another boat?
57139Have you any remedies?
57139Have you any writings?
57139Have you got a map?
57139Have you no guns?
57139Have you, as Joe said, been trailing me all the way from the coast?
57139He tell you?
57139How about the girl?
57139How about you? 57139 How are you going to manage to- night?"
57139How can I tell what the moose will do?
57139How can a thing be dead which was never realized?
57139How can you shame me so?
57139How could you bring two boats up against the current?
57139How dare you?
57139How did I come here?
57139How did he come here?
57139How did he come to tell you about the other woman?
57139How did you drift off without knowing it?
57139How did you get across the hole?
57139How did you get ashore here without a paddle or anything?
57139How did you get me ashore?
57139How did you know that?
57139How did you make the Grumbler rapids?
57139How do I know you ai n''t lying?
57139How do I know?
57139How do you figure on going back?
57139How do you know he''s going back?
57139How does a man get up the Campbell River?
57139How far down the river does the steamboat run?
57139How long have you been here?
57139How long you live in Fort Edward, Ralph?
57139How many?
57139How many?
57139How much?
57139How should I know?
57139How the deuce are they going to manage about feeding me?
57139How will I get home?
57139How will I know the mouth of the right tributary?
57139How will you get it?
57139How you come here?
57139How?
57139I have taken it, see?
57139I hesitate? 57139 I suppose you and your brother think you can put it all over me now, do n''t you?
57139I think he is young, yes?
57139If I show you something, you promise not to tell?
57139If you want a thing you''ve got to fight for it, ai n''t you?
57139If you''d been plain and open with me from the first, would n''t it have saved all this trouble? 57139 Is he going with us?"
57139Is it Ralph Cowdray?
57139Is it still up North?
57139Is that all?
57139Is that the sort of man you like?
57139Is that the story you want to have circulated?
57139Is this being friends? 57139 Is this your friendship?"
57139It''s about twenty- five miles up the Stanley River from the Grand Forks----"Then you were telling the truth?
57139It''s not because of me, is it? 57139 Keep your lip out of my affairs, will you?
57139Kitty?
57139Me?
57139Must I ask you when I make a friend?
57139Must I go through with that again?
57139Nahnya, do you want to drive me mad? 57139 Nahnya, is Charley in your family?"
57139Nahnya, what is it?
57139Nahnya, what is the matter?
57139Nahnya,he said shakily at last,"ca n''t you talk to me?"
57139Nice girls?
57139Nothing about me?
57139Put off? 57139 Rice?"
57139Shame you?
57139Sleep?
57139So that is why you wanted to keep me out?
57139So that is your white man?
57139So that''s the sore place, eh?
57139So you know where he got his gold, and where the girl is hidden?
57139So you''re going to leave us?
57139Society, you mean? 57139 Suppose he has something good up there, how do you expect to get in on it?
57139Suppose the boys are not pleased with the girls you have chosen for them?
57139Suppose you kill them,said Nahnya,"what we do after?"
57139That''s what we say,she murmured with a burst of shy candour;"but how true is it?"
57139Then how in Sam Hill do you expect to go back up the river?
57139Then what harm to promise me?
57139Then why are you sitting like this? 57139 Then why do you treat me like an enemy?"
57139Think so?
57139Thought you said newspaper reporter?
57139Under the circumstances what else could she write?
57139Very well, if you want to go in there, you go by the front door, see?
57139Waiting for me?
57139Was that the first you saw of him?
57139Well, Stack, what do you want at this time o''night?
57139Well, what then?
57139Well?
57139Well?
57139Well?
57139What about?
57139What am I to say to that?
57139What am I up against?
57139What are the feelings?
57139What are we to do?
57139What are you doing here?
57139What are you doing here?
57139What are you going to do?
57139What are you going to do?
57139What are you going to do?
57139What are you going to do?
57139What are you going to do?
57139What are you making this trip for?
57139What are you thinking?
57139What can I do for you?
57139What can I do?
57139What can I do?
57139What can I tell these people here?
57139What can happen?
57139What can we do about it? 57139 What can you do against the four of us?
57139What did you come here for to- night?
57139What did you come to me for?
57139What did you think about white girls?
57139What did you think it was?
57139What do I want?
57139What do they say about me?
57139What do you know about me, what I am? 57139 What do you mean by friends?"
57139What do you mean?
57139What do you want to know for?
57139What do you want to know?
57139What do you want to live in the woods for?
57139What do you want to make another city for?
57139What do you want to make such a mystery of the trip for?
57139What do you want with her?
57139What do you want?
57139What does it all mean, anyway?
57139What does it matter when you go? 57139 What does it mean?"
57139What for?
57139What funny business has he been up to around your camp?
57139What good is your promise then?
57139What good would you be?
57139What happened to him?
57139What happened?
57139What have I done?
57139What have other men and girls got to do with you and me?
57139What is he saying?
57139What is it a portage to?
57139What is it?
57139What is love? 57139 What is plenty?"
57139What is the best way to go beyond Fort Edward?
57139What is the matter with me?
57139What is trust? 57139 What is your name?"
57139What kind of a place is Winnipeg?
57139What man could ever presume to master a woman like that?
57139What next?
57139What of it?
57139What shall I do if he tries to kiss me?
57139What shall I do? 57139 What terms?"
57139What the hell are you after?
57139What the hell are you doing here?
57139What town?
57139What truth?
57139What was your purpose?
57139What we do after?
57139What were you looking for?
57139What will they do without you?
57139What will you do?
57139What you do when you go out in New York?
57139What you think about Charley?
57139What you want?
57139What''ll you do for food, gun, blankets, to keep life in you?
57139What''s biting you?
57139What''s her name? 57139 What''s that, Ralph?"
57139What''s the lake country like?
57139What''s the matter now?
57139What''s the matter with you all?
57139What''s the matter with you?
57139What''s the matter, Nahnya?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the matter?
57139What''s the river''s name?
57139What''s the use of beating around the bush?
57139What''s this for?
57139What?
57139When do you want to start?
57139Where are they waiting?
57139Where are we?
57139Where did she get that proud look from?
57139Where did you get it?
57139Where did you learn about anæsthetics?
57139Where did you live before you came to Fort Edward?
57139Where do you live when you''re home?
57139Where do you live?
57139Where do you live?
57139Where does she hang out?
57139Where has he gone?
57139Where he come from? 57139 Where is she going?"
57139Where the hell did you pick up a pardner?
57139Where was this?
57139Where was your home, Ralph; where you were born?
57139Where will you get them?
57139Where would you advise me to establish myself?
57139Where''s Nahnya?
57139Where''s your pride, lass?
57139Who can tell how you feel by and by? 57139 Who do I ever see from one month to another?"
57139Who is she?
57139Who is she?
57139Who is with you?
57139Who knows what may be down there,he thought,"and what kind of a reception I will receive?"
57139Who knows?
57139Who the deuce are you?
57139Who the hell do you think you are?
57139Who told him about me?
57139Who told them?
57139Who told you this?
57139Who''s that boy?
57139Who''s there?
57139Why ca n''t she be open with me?
57139Why ca n''t she trust me a little?
57139Why did n''t Charley want to shoot him?
57139Why did n''t you open your eyes and look?
57139Why did n''t you scramble ashore and let the boat go?
57139Why did n''t you tell me?
57139Why did you run away from us like you did?
57139Why do you write it?
57139Why explain?
57139Why not?
57139Why not?
57139Why not?
57139Why postpone it?
57139Why should I hate you?
57139Why should I?
57139Why should n''t I come here if I want to take a walk? 57139 Why should n''t I come here?
57139Why should you feel badly?
57139Why should you?
57139Why waste talk?
57139Why?
57139Will he be long?
57139Will you eat?
57139Will you promise to let him go if I tell you?
57139Will you sell me food and a gun and a blanket?
57139Wives?
57139Wo n''t you put out the fire?
57139Yes?
57139You are the white doctor?
57139You followed me up here on your own responsibility, hoping to get in on my strike?
57139You know who he is?
57139You like it there?
57139You mean surgery? 57139 You promise me when you come back you never tell anybody what you see at my place?"
57139You promise me you never tell where you been?
57139You say you kill Joe Mixer and his men?
57139You shake hands and promise not to tell?
57139You speak English?
57139You still think there is something crooked?
57139You will come?
57139You will stay here with me after?
57139You''ll stoop to use a helpless girl to further your evil ends, will you?
57139You''re shy, eh? 57139 You''ve made this trip before?"
57139You,he said, indicating the half- breed,"what''s your name?"
57139Your father was a white man?
57139A silk dress?"
57139After a while she said:"Will you promise never to come back?"
57139Ai n''t you afraid to risk your skin among these rough guys?"
57139All about him?"
57139Am I a steam- engine?
57139And always I think what is this different thing in me?"
57139Are n''t you glad?"
57139Are you in such a rush you ca n''t stop for five minutes?"
57139As he resumed his place by the fire, Joe said with his fat laugh:"Nothing doing, eh, Kid?"
57139As she turned back into the room, Nahnya asked:"What is his name?"
57139At length she said very low:"Ralph, do you think I am a bad woman?"
57139At the same time the curious thought shot through his brain: what could the half- breed have against him?
57139Between the middle star and the behind star you see a tiny little star hanging there?"
57139But at your other college you have fun?"
57139But who can tell what will follow?
57139But why do I want to know what is ugly?
57139But why was she so passionately bent on keeping him out of her paradise?
57139By and by Nahnya asked:"You feel better now?"
57139By and by she said:"You come now?"
57139Can you fix it?"
57139Can you put her to sleep?"
57139Can you stand it?"
57139Could any danger have overtaken her without awaking him?
57139Could n''t we gather it up and refine some gasoline?''
57139Did she put you out here as a guard?"
57139Do n''t you like their nice earthy smell?"
57139Do you mean to say you rafted it down the upper river?"
57139Do you think I''ll bring a plague with me?"
57139Does that scare you off, Doc?"
57139Finally he said:"I suppose I can get an outfit from you?"
57139For why, if everything was plain and aboveboard, had she taken such desperate precautions to insure secrecy?
57139Has she been around here?"
57139Have you got a boat at the portage?"
57139He decided that she meant no offence, and went on:"What''s your name, girly?"
57139Heavy, welter, or light weight?
57139How can you stop what will happen, anyway?"
57139How could he venture to sleep and leave himself open to a night attack?
57139How could she help but feel betrayed on either hand?
57139How dare they set themselves up against a white man?
57139How did he come here?"
57139How did this happen?"
57139How do you feel about it now?"
57139I thought maybe----""What do you offer me?"
57139I wonder if it''s possible to follow all those little lakes and rivers down to the main stream?"
57139If he do n''t take''em,''tain''t my fault, is it?"
57139Is there any condensed milk left?"
57139Is this-- the end?"
57139It was n''t half an hour ago he said to me,''Wo n''t it be sport to surprise the Doctor?''
57139Kind of disposition you prefer, and amount of purse to be put up before you enter the ring?
57139Like that?"
57139Nahnya said dully:"What matter who tell?
57139Nahnya, not looking at him, asked quietly:"You promise never to come this way again?"
57139Nahnya, very intent on her sewing:"Did you know any of the actresses?"
57139Said the two to the tutor Is it easier to toot or To tutor two tooters to toot?
57139She take off the-- what do you call the sticks--?"
57139Something heavy and unfamiliar in the fall of it caused her to call out sharply:"Is that you, dad?"
57139The children become strangers to their mother, and who can blame her for going mad with rage?
57139The question tormented him, and finally sprang from his lips:"What are you thinking of, Nahnya?"
57139The whole scene touched a chord in Ralph''s memory; where had he heard of such a hidden valley?
57139There was a pause; then another voice said brutally:"Will you tell?"
57139Was he not going to her?
57139Was it possible they were of another race-- creatures existing in the bowels of the earth without sunlight or the stir of air?
57139Was it the possession of some ghastly secret that made Nahnya''s face always wistful?
57139Wat for you do that?
57139What are you doing in a man''s country?
57139What are you going to do about it?"
57139What can you do?''
57139What did he do with the two thousand?"
57139What did it conceal, that hole, a hideous crime, disgrace unimagined-- or a treasure?
57139What did you expect?
57139What do all these things matter?
57139What do you care?
57139What do you want me to do?"
57139What does she get for it?
57139What have I got to look forward to?"
57139What have you got against me?"
57139What is he like?
57139What is the matter with me, I think, that makes them bad?
57139What is there left for me?"
57139What is this father going to do with his children who are neither red nor white when they begin to grow up?
57139What is your name?
57139What must you think of me?"
57139What shall I do?"
57139What was to prevent him from getting a proper outfit at the nearest trading- post, and returning?
57139What''ll I bring her from town for a present?
57139What''s the matter with you?"
57139What''s the matter, Nahnya?"
57139When Ralph brought out the diary Nahnya said:"What do you write in your little book?"
57139When the cards were collected for a fresh deal Ralph asked coolly:"What are the stakes?"
57139Where could she have gone alone at that time of night?
57139Where does she live?"
57139Where will I be this time to- morrow?
57139Where will you get so much money?"
57139Who shall stop the fire from consuming the grass?''"
57139Who''s here?"
57139Why ca n''t we work together?
57139Why ca n''t you be the same to me?"
57139Why ca n''t you tell me what it is?"
57139Why ca n''t you tell me?"
57139Why ca n''t you trust me a little?"
57139Why did n''t you tell me?
57139Why did you look at me so when you came?"
57139Why do you want to be called a bad man now, and not work, and drink, and make trouble everywhere?"
57139Why does that distress you so?"
57139Why is that?
57139Why not?"
57139Why should I be blamed for what nobody could help?"
57139Why, after travelling hundreds of miles from the world of men, was there need of burying one''s self any deeper?
57139Will you take me as you find me?"
57139Will you take my I.O.U.?"
57139Will you wait here for her?"
57139Would n''t you like to see the world again?"
57139You like darkness and quiet, do n''t you?"
57139You think you will jus''step off the little bridge----""How did you know that?"
57139asked Jim curiously,"and him there?"
57139asked Ralph,"an address of welcome?"
57139he asked dryly,"the Rhine?"
57139murmured Ralph, confused, remorseful and still amazed;"I never dreamed of this-- I never thought----""Never thought of what?"
57139my young brother, what will I do when you double up and go back to deep water?"
57139or crazy Crusoe?"
57139said Philippe,"or the little scared one?
57139such a blue- green lake?
57139this time next month?"
57139what with the boys?
57139what with the girls?
57139you want to square yourself with him, do n''t you?
44982''CARE''? 44982 After doing what he did?
44982Against your will? 44982 All this what?
44982Am I forgiven, father?
44982Am I misbehaving? 44982 Am I so vulgar?"
44982Am I? 44982 And I''ve been wasting your time?
44982And are you in love?
44982And describe it? 44982 And he did n''t say anything?
44982And how old are you?
44982And if Babs were married already?
44982And if you''re wrong?
44982And now?
44982And she let you go? 44982 And what have you been doing ever since?"
44982And what would you think if Lord Crawleigh came to that same_ matinà © e_ and gave a display of juggling with billiard- balls?
44982And why did you go on to the stage?
44982And you believe that I can help you?
44982And you expect to play great parts? 44982 And you expect to play great parts?"
44982And you have been on the stage since long?
44982And you replied,''Only one?'' 44982 And you want me to leave him like that?"
44982And you want to know? 44982 And you won''t-- ask her to excuse you?"
44982And you''re going to add that-- with two more strokes of your delicate brush? 44982 And your father?"
44982And your informant?
44982Another new emotion, Lady Barbara?
44982Apart from a formal invitation, she''s made no effort to meet you? 44982 Are n''t you dancing either?"
44982Are n''t you feeling any better?
44982Are n''t you feeling well?
44982Are n''t you going to dance at all?
44982Are n''t you going to have any supper?
44982Are n''t you happy here?
44982Are those the Croxton buttons?
44982Are you coming to me for advice, do you think I can help you? 44982 Are you enjoying yourself?
44982Are you going?
44982Are you like Jim?
44982Are you never afraid of meeting some man and having to retire from the stage?
44982Are you very greedy, Jack, or only hungry? 44982 Back to work?
44982But I ca n''t help it, can I?
44982But I did n''t know.... Did I go off? 44982 But I thought I''d left that to you?
44982But Sir Deryk-- you know Sir Deryk Lancing, do n''t you? 44982 But does it do much good beyond affording a topic of conversation for congenital idiots?
44982But if she does n''t mean to?
44982But if she''d insisted? 44982 But what are you going to do?"
44982But what did I say?
44982But where was I? 44982 But why not?"
44982But why should I disappoint them?
44982But why----?
44982But why?
44982But you are happy?
44982But you''ll come?
44982But, if I want my own way, have n''t I inherited that from you?
44982But, if it were five years? 44982 Ca n''t you manage Easter at Crawleigh?"
44982Ca n''t_ you_? 44982 Can any one make him do anything he does n''t want to?
44982Closed?
44982D''you call me pretty? 44982 D''you despise me so much that you refuse to meet me?"
44982D''you feel you know me adequately now?
44982D''you like me, George?
44982D''you mean I''m wrong? 44982 D''you mean that every one''s paired off and left you?
44982D''you remember once saying that you wanted the tonic of a good scandal?
44982D''you think I should?
44982D''you think I''m unduly vain?
44982Di''monds an''pearls.... Di''monds an''pearl I have thrown away wid both hands-- and fwhat have I left? 44982 Did he tell you?
44982Did n''t...?
44982Did you come to see me or Aunt Kathleen? 44982 Did you know the girl?"
44982Did you see him when he was home on leave?
44982Did you try her?
44982Do n''t I? 44982 Do n''t you like to see me happy, father?
44982Do n''t you remember?
44982Do n''t you see that, with father, I was brought up in the limelight since I was a child? 44982 Do n''t you think it will?"
44982Do n''t you understand?
44982Do you get more than one man of character in twenty?
44982Do you imagine you''re quoting me?
44982Do you know his address in Hampshire? 44982 Do you know where I can find him?"
44982Do you mean that I''m not speaking the truth?
44982Do you really want me to?
44982Do you withdraw the invitation?
44982Does n''t Lady Crawleigh----?
44982Does n''t that appeal to your missionary spirit?
44982Eric? 44982 For giving her Val Arden instead of you for a partner?
44982Geor- gie, what did you buy, what did you buy for Maud- ee?
44982Have I_ ever_ refused to do anything you asked?
44982Have you discussed it with your people?
44982Have you got your car here?
44982Have you never heard of a_ subpoena_?
44982Have you tried very hard? 44982 He did n''t read it?"
44982How did you get hold of the story?
44982How do you feel?
44982How long did it take? 44982 How long will it last?"
44982How soon are you chucking up your staff job?
44982How soon are you going to be allowed up?
44982How was I to know?
44982How was he?
44982I believe Jack Waring has discussed me with you?
44982I ca n''t say anything that will do any good----"When will they know for certain?
44982I hope I''m not in disgrace?
44982I hope you''re not making the headache worse?
44982I know people rob and murder, when they''re in love, but why come and tell me about it?
44982I sat up to finish some writing.... My darling child, are you sure you''re all right now?
44982I say, have I said anything to offend you?
44982I say, what_ are_ you doing?
44982I say, you wo n''t catch cold, will you?
44982I say,_ have_ you seen about my precious cousin''s latest freak?
44982I should die happy,Barbara answered with a gurgle of laughter; then more seriously,"But why on earth should n''t he?
44982I wonder whether_ you''re_ responsible for this new outbreak of hers? 44982 I''m sorry if her party''s a failure,"said Barbara,"but-- if people prefer coming to me...?"
44982I''m taking Vi down immediately after lunch to- morrow, but, if you care to come round to- night----? 44982 I''ve not been for so long----""Is n''t that all the more reason?
44982I''ve said something awful? 44982 I?
44982If it comes to a tussle, the woman has to give in; so why is she degraded by recognizing it and promising beforehand?
44982If you''re feeling ill, why do n''t you try to go to sleep instead of making conversation?
44982In other words, you''re going to make_ me_ responsible?
44982Including to- night?
44982Is it declared?
44982Is it very cold?
44982Is my impetuous cousin learning prudence? 44982 Is n''t it true?"
44982Is n''t that the famous Lady Barbara Neave?
44982Is she good about the future?
44982Is there anything to heal?
44982Is there anything you''d like me to bring you?
44982Is your car coming back for you?
44982Is your cousin''s name in the condemned list?
44982Is_ that_ all you''ve got to say?
44982It does n''t do much good, does it?
44982It''s rather a mess, is n''t it?
44982Jack, in addition to the vanity, do you think I''ve got any pride?... 44982 Jack, you''re not grumpy with me because I cut your dance-- or, at least, you say so?
44982Jack, you''ve not forgotten our_ last_ meeting?
44982Jim has his own standards of loyalty, has n''t he?
44982Jim, I ca n''t sit with my hands folded.... What d''you think Judas Iscariot felt like during the Crucifixion?
44982Jim, are you angry with me?
44982Jim, ca n''t you see that I''m trying to save my soul? 44982 Jim, d''you know it''s just on two?"
44982Jolly floor, what? 44982 Lady Barbara, are you very unhappy about something?
44982Like what? 44982 Lilith?
44982Lord Summertown?
44982M''yes, I said that, did n''t I?
44982May I have that with you-- after Jim Loring?
44982Missing two, Babs?
44982Mr. Waring''s ingiged-- Oh, were you the lidy who just rang up? 44982 Mr. Waring----""Yes?"
44982Mr. Waring? 44982 My child, is anything the matter?"
44982My darling, have n''t you gone up to dress yet?
44982My darling, what''s the matter?
44982My darling, who ever said anything about it?
44982My dear Babs, how can I tell?
44982My dear Jack, how could you ever_ dream_ of marrying me-- thinking of me, as you do?
44982My dear creature, do you imagine you''re compromising me?
44982My dear, what_ are_ you doing?
44982My lady, your beautiful hair?
44982No more than that?
44982No...? 44982 Not in my own house?
44982Now, shall I behave like a perfect Victorian and leave you to your wine while I do a little embroidery in the drawing- room? 44982 Oh, but did n''t you say you''d got a message for me or something?"
44982Oh, what does it matter? 44982 Oh?
44982On a point of order, sir; was that singing? 44982 Original?
44982Ought we to be going upstairs? 44982 Outside?"
44982Shall I see you at Lord''s, Jim?
44982Shall we go down before the crowd?
44982She invited you? 44982 Should I know what I was telling you?
44982So it was all leading up to that? 44982 So that you could wait on Jack?"
44982So this was your revenge? 44982 So you''ll never believe anything I say?"
44982Starting behind scratch?
44982Surely not to help you out with one of your little dramatic scenes?... 44982 That means you_ do n''t_ care for me?"
44982The French do that sort of thing more easily, but you''ve not read much French, have you? 44982 The discovery of the Ego?"
44982The distinction between the articles in counterpoint, if you think of heliotrope quite accidentally included...."What have I been saying?
44982The first one''s mine, is n''t it?
44982Then the other was a lie? 44982 Then what about Monday?
44982Then you are going to be killed quite soon?
44982Then you do n''t despise_ me_?
44982These things always_ do_ get out----"Are you trying to frighten me?
44982This war?
44982To resist something that''s not a temptation?
44982To- night? 44982 Unpleasantness?"
44982Was I right?
44982Was that all you wanted to talk to me about?
44982Was there anything in it?
44982We can hardly leave it like this, can we?
44982We must fly, Lady Barbara, or we shall be horribly late, but wo n''t you walk with us?
44982Well, shall I do the talking? 44982 Well, was n''t it rather unfair-- before you even knew me?
44982Were you ever in love with him? 44982 What Mrs. Savage do you mean?"
44982What are you doing, Spurs?
44982What are you going to do? 44982 What are you going to do?"
44982What are you? 44982 What are_ you_ going to do, when you go down?"
44982What d''you mean?
44982What d''you mean?
44982What d''you mean?
44982What d''you mean?
44982What d''you suggest, Jim?
44982What deuce want spoil everything?
44982What did I say?
44982What did he say?
44982What did he say?
44982What did you say?
44982What do you find so very unsatisfactory in it?
44982What do you mean by''something more''?
44982What do you think of it?
44982What does n''t?
44982What does that mean?
44982What else is she doing now? 44982 What exactly was the row?"
44982What has happened?
44982What have you been doing since last we met?
44982What is your fee?
44982What man can choose from among a woman''s motives?
44982What may I have the honour of doing for you?
44982What nime shall I siy?
44982What the devil''s the good of telling me all this?
44982What were you trying to bring off?
44982What''s happened?
44982What''s happened?
44982What''s he been doing?
44982What''s she doing it for, then?
44982What''s the next item, Jim?
44982What''s the row?
44982When I''m trying to persuade you to come on with us?
44982When did we meet last?
44982When do your bar lectures start?
44982When he does n''t even know you? 44982 When will you be back?"
44982When will you dine with me again?
44982When you are happy?
44982Where are we likely to be undisturbed?
44982Where are you going to? 44982 Where was I this time?"
44982Where''s Pentyre?
44982Where''s the betting- book? 44982 Where''s the key of the chapel?"
44982Where''s the paper? 44982 Who are those two going out?
44982Who was the man?
44982Who''s the man with Babs Neave?
44982Who_ wants_ to do anything?
44982Why are you called Jack Summertown?
44982Why do you say you ca n''t marry me?
44982Why do you say you can never marry me? 44982 Why not?
44982Why?
44982Why?
44982Why?
44982Will he win his bet?
44982Will there be an_ inquest_?
44982Will you be good enough to say that Lady Barbara Neave wants to speak to him?
44982Will you kindly ask him to make an exception, then?
44982Will you marry me now, Babs?
44982With her vanity?
44982Wo n''t you have a cigarette?
44982Wo n''t you part friends?
44982Wo n''t you take off your veil?
44982Would n''t it be rather a waste of breath to talk like this to Jack?
44982Would n''t you like a chair?
44982Would that be agreeable to you?
44982Would you like me to come?
44982Would you like to come to Crawleigh for Easter?
44982Would you?
44982Yea, but,quoth Panurge,"would you have me so solitarily drag out the whole course of my life without the comfort of a matrimonial consort?
44982Yes, darling, I wo n''t keep you awake, but has there been any unpleasantness? 44982 Yes.... May I sit and talk, if you did n''t have too much of me at dinner?
44982Yes?
44982Yes?
44982You are dancing? 44982 You are married?"
44982You believe in all this?
44982You believe in something, I suppose? 44982 You believe that?"
44982You can get other people who know her better, surely?
44982You can not forget her-- but you will find some one else?
44982You could never marry a man who was n''t a Catholic?
44982You do n''t think there''s any hope?
44982You felt you needed an excuse?
44982You goin''to break away, Babs? 44982 You have been in love?"
44982You have met her? 44982 You have n''t told them yet?"
44982You know him, do n''t you?
44982You know what was in it? 44982 You mean I deserted my friends?"
44982You mean I''m not in earnest? 44982 You off?"
44982You play piquet? 44982 You really think that would be a crime?
44982You say that there_ was_ a change this morning?
44982You say you gave me a chance of warning you.... How was I to know? 44982 You think I ca n''t_ make_ you take me in to supper?"
44982You want to find out about some one whose life has crossed yours?
44982You were going to, were n''t you? 44982 You wo n''t smoke while I''m drinking port- wine, will you?"
44982You would n''t like to dine here?
44982You would that I explain?
44982You''d unlocked the door and pushed back both bolts-- Aston''s quite sure he bolted top and bottom----"And I went out like this?
44982You''ll be able to find some one to take on my room, wo n''t you?
44982You''re a great dancer, I expect?
44982You''re going-- just when we''ve been left a moment together?
44982You''re not really hungry, are you?
44982You''re not_ thinking_ of getting up, are you?
44982You? 44982 You_ are_--Lady Barbara Neave?
44982_ I''m not as bad as you expected?_Humility was a pleasant emotion, but a losing card.
44982_ Illness_ is hardly within your control, is it?
44982_ Pump Court, Temple, E. C.__ Have you ever done your duty by the University of Oxford?
44982_ What''s_ becoming a scandal?
44982_ You''re_ coming on, Val, are n''t you?
44982''Jim darling, you''re coming to my party, are n''t you?''
44982''What are our girls coming to?''
44982''Wonder how many of us will be dead?"
44982''Wonder what we shall be doing?
44982( D''you spell Death with a capital D?
44982A Modern Financier-- after our good Sir Adolf Erckmann?
44982A bottle of champagne had been mentioned; had Mr. Webster and Lady Barbara partaken of it in their idyllically democratic picnic?
44982A change I''ve noticed?"
44982A crime against Barbara?"
44982A girl told me the other day that you were-- what was the word?
44982A man like Val Arden does that so much better.... Lady Barbara, are you_ ever_ going to say good- night to me?"
44982A statement from you----""But would it be published?"
44982A waltz?"
44982Agree with me, Lady Barbara?"
44982All this me?
44982And I suppose_ you_ did n''t make a fight for me?
44982And arranged with Agnes for a cart to meet me?
44982And do you feel that it has been successful?"
44982And may I finish my goodish cork- tipped Turkish Regie?"
44982And now you say it''s untrue?
44982And shall I find you at Ross House on Friday?
44982And that then you will have an illness or this or that?...
44982And will you invite Amy and Aunt Eleanor here to meet somebody who ca n''t be admitted to their house?"
44982And, if I wanted to take the beastly stuff, should n''t I have it injected where it would n''t shew?
44982And, if you get ill.... Dear Barbara, to please me, will you see your doctor before you go back to hospital?"
44982Any more questions?"
44982Are n''t men ridiculously vain?
44982Are there any good palmists in London, Mr. Arden?
44982Are we growing old?
44982Are you expecting me at the Abbey next week- end?
44982Are you going to House of Steynes?
44982Are you going to behave like this at the bar?"
44982Are you ready?"
44982Are you taking her down?
44982As the car entered the Park by Albert Gate, she pretended to recognize a face and said:"Was n''t that Jack Waring?"
44982As the first chord was struck, Summertown called out:"Once round and then down, Babs?"
44982At the door she turned round and said,''Jim, you know the little paragraph"Among those present..."?
44982Aunt Kathleen''s quite irrepressible, is n''t she?"
44982Barbara felt that she was not entitled to throw it away; had she not almost been guided there?
44982Barbara, may I have supper with you?"
44982Barbara, will you dine with me some time to meet him?
44982Because it had never been done before, was that a reason why it should not be done now?
44982Bodmin Lodge?
44982But after dinner-- I say, have you had_ anything_ to eat?"
44982But an amusing one, do n''t you think?
44982But is she proud of his chivalry?
44982But one comes back to the old question: what is behind it?
44982But perhaps you''ve grown into your own pose?
44982But why do you do it?
44982By the stars and by crystal balls and cards and numbers and pools of ink.... What can a pool of ink tell you?
44982By the way, are you dining with Jim to- night?
44982By the way, does anybody know who we''re supposed to be fighting?
44982By the way, you''ve looked out the trains for to- morrow, have n''t you?
44982CHAPTER EIGHT A MATTER OF PLEASURE"But what will not ambition and revenge Descend to?
44982CHAPTER TWO THE COMING OF LILITH"What private man in England is worse off than the constitutional monarch?...
44982Can I drop you anywhere?"
44982Care come?"
44982Care to meet her?"
44982Charles, my lad, d''you think that, if we went back for just a_ little_ one, we could manage to get left behind?"
44982D''you appreciate that I should let myself in for a first- class row with my people, if I told them that we were friends?
44982D''you imagine you''ll ever be able to control her?
44982D''you know what I''m going to do when we leave here?"
44982D''you know"Deirdre of the Sorrows"?
44982D''you know, in the four years we''ve been nominally in charge of her we''ve been asked to have her removed from three different schools?
44982D''you mean this is all news to you?"
44982D''you propose to go regularly to Mass?
44982D''you remember Raney''s cheerful prophecy my last night in Oxford?
44982D''you think he''d see me?"
44982Did I ever tell you that the rowing push came to rag my rooms just because I chose to dress for Hall?
44982Did n''t I hear Jack Waring talking to you about trying to get a commission?"
44982Did n''t you get my letter?
44982Did you know that?"
44982Do n''t you?
44982Do you allow people to say that they''ll be glad to see you on condition you do n''t bring your daughter with you?
44982Do you know anything about the course of preparation before you''re received into the Church?
44982Do you know that for three weeks you only said''Good- morning''to me, father?
44982Do you know what''s happened to him?"
44982Do you like to challenge me over that?"
44982Do you mean, whether your-- friends will come through the war without injury?"
44982Do you now?"
44982Do you remember the man in Mr. Webster''s flat?"
44982Do you remember what you told him?"
44982Do you think you could telephone to find out whether he''s there?"
44982Do you want me to go to her and say I''m a Catholic?"
44982Do you want to be dismissed?"
44982Do you want to spend the rest of your life with a woman you despise, do you want to despise the mother of your children?...
44982Do_ you_ care for a bet with me?"
44982Doctor,_ is_ this simply the result of overwork, or is it something more?"
44982Does it make no difference to you when a man like that refuses to have you inside his house?"
44982Dramatic critic and assistant literary editor?
44982Draycott as an Academician?
44982Everything was arranged beforehand, but she had lost the means of finding out what Destiny had in store for her...."Is she worried about anything?"
44982Fancy dress-- she''s set herself to rival the Devonshire House ball.... Jack, is that the girl you want to marry?
44982George?"
44982Had they conjured up a spirit?
44982Happy?...
44982Has life lost its savour?
44982Have some capital kidneys and bacon?"
44982Have you been to many floors this season?"
44982Have you ever seen anything quite so grotesque as poor Johnnie Carstairs?
44982Have you had any supper?"
44982Have you met this new dramatist, Eric Lane?
44982Have you seen Barbara lately?"
44982Have you seen the darling boy''s mother?
44982Have you two been quarrelling?"
44982Have you-- actually put it to her?"
44982Having my personality submerged by his dead pomp and glory?"
44982He hoped to hear her say"Why?"
44982He would hardly want to marry her now...."Can you spare me another cigarette?"
44982He''s not been here to- day?"
44982He_ will_ read the letter?"
44982Herbert, will you get me the evening paper out of the morning- room?"
44982Here, I say, what''s the matter with this table?"
44982How are you, mother?
44982How are you?
44982How did you know?"
44982How does one start?"
44982How long...?"
44982How''s the_ magnum opus_?"
44982How''s your father?
44982I congratulate you, Lady Barbara.... Or were you convincing me of my mistake?
44982I do n''t suppose it''s any news to you that I want to marry your cousin Barbara?
44982I do want to be happy.... Wo n''t any one make me happy?"
44982I gave you every chance of slipping in a friendly warning.... Why did you do this, Barbara?
44982I hate writing letters.... Shall we dig together in London?
44982I mean, have you ever taken your M. A.?
44982I never feel that Jack could be gentle.... Do you know what I mean, Jim?
44982I remember thinking, before I met you,''If she were my_ sister_....''""What kind of things did you hear?"
44982I saw you did n''t come along to lunch; when did you last have anything to eat?"
44982I suppose there''s no news of him?"
44982I suppose you wo n''t be coming to the Abbey to- morrow?"
44982I think that''s the thinnest excuse.... Why did you insist on telling me about it at all?
44982I thought things were so slack?"
44982I want to run about.... Mr. O''Rane, what_ would_ happen if I took off my shoes and stockings in Hyde Park?"
44982I want to sleep; and I''m haunted.... What am I to do?
44982I was n''t in the mood then to quarrel with my worst enemy, so I said she could come.... Jack, have you seen or heard anything of her lately?"
44982I was n''t told the exact words, but you_ have n''t_ been to the house very lately, have you?"
44982I''d sooner die than hurt any one.... Have you ever flown?
44982I''m not as bad as you expected?"
44982I''m_ not_ trying to make a scene now, but do n''t you think you''ve been a bit hard on me?
44982I''ve got too much vitality.... Jack, you''ve seen eagles in captivity?
44982If I painted you to- day, there''d be a riot of blue----""Blue?
44982If I_ do n''t_ go, do n''t tell Aunt Kathleen-- Lady Knightrider, you know-- will you?
44982If Lady Loring consented to come, who less exalted had the right to raise her voice?
44982If he can do it, if the thing''s all right in itself, why should the professionals have the monopoly?
44982If he wants me----""Well, if he does?
44982If their lines cross yours, then you know; but, if they are separated.... You understand?
44982If you were just to say you were sorry----?"
44982In a case like this, is n''t silence itself an answer?
44982Is it not so?
44982Is n''t that what I have to fight against?
44982Is she--_proud_ of him over this?"
44982Is that Lady Barbara Neave?"
44982Is that Trunks?
44982Is that any good to you?
44982Is the guv''nor working?"
44982Is there anything I can do?
44982Is to- morrow any good to you?"
44982It is-- that name?"
44982It seemed hardly worth while going to bed...."Are you tired, Jim?
44982It would have been easier to treat marriage like a casual invitation to dinner and to say"Will you marry me?
44982Jim, did_ you_ know that Babs took her religion so seriously?"
44982Jim, may I take wine with you?"
44982Jim, wo n''t you take me down to supper?
44982Jim?
44982Just the things that matter?"
44982Know who mean?
44982Lady Barbara, why on earth did you ask me that?"
44982Life is simply self- expression, is n''t it?
44982Look here, I do n''t like to leave my present partner stranded, but, if you can hold out for twenty minutes, may I come back and take you down?"
44982May I?
44982Most of us are feeling that we''ve wasted a good deal of our time.... What did they spin you for?"
44982Mr. Waring says, Would you be kind enough to leave a message?"
44982Mr. Webster had dined at his club; could he remember what he had drunk with his dinner?
44982No?
44982No?
44982No?
44982No?
44982No?"
44982No?"
44982Now do you understand why I loathe the whole life you lead?"
44982Now may I get you a cup of tea, me lidy?"
44982Now, about to- morrow-- will you be up to coming to this show?"
44982Oh, fwhat have I left?"
44982Oh,_ who_ is he?
44982One is still remembered in London?
44982One''s friends are in reasonable health?"
44982Only a fortnight?
44982Or are you afraid to risk my friendship?"
44982Or are you just entertaining me with your latest escapade?"
44982Or would you like me to sit with you?"
44982Ought I to go back and apologize?"
44982President?"
44982Ragtime?
44982Say, how many blocks are we from the depot?"
44982Shall I tell you something about yours?
44982Shall we make up a party and go to- morrow?"
44982She''s writing to him----""To intercede for me?"
44982So you are in love with her?
44982Some fairly big sums of money changed hands?
44982Sometimes.... Did you see"_ Justice_"?
44982Sonia''s not here yet?"
44982Spurs as a judge?
44982Suppose we go a_ bit_ faster and then look for a fire?
44982Tell me what''s happened?"
44982The Gander as an ambassador?
44982The oldsters say''What next, what next?''
44982The other Spurs?"
44982Then you''ve been lying to me all along?
44982Then, as the others sat down, he added reflectively,"''Wonder where we shall all be in ten years''time?
44982There was a certain amount of gambling, was n''t there?
44982There''s not much left, is there?
44982This was well enough at sixteen or seventeen, but after another five years emotion- hunting...?
44982Too tired to smoke a cigarette and listen to me blaming myself?"
44982Was God Himself cutting short their quest?
44982Was I right?"
44982Was it coincidence that Amy Loring, of all unlikely people, should have given her the name at all?
44982Was n''t she Adam''s first wife?"
44982Was that your means of vindicating yourself?
44982Was the battalion to be sent out as a whole or used for drafts?
44982We had supper together then----""Well, you do n''t want to-- repeat it, do you?"
44982We need n''t go through this again?
44982Webster?"
44982Well, a cup of coffee and a biscuit, eh?
44982Well,_ I_ have n''t changed?
44982Were you afraid of losing some one?"
44982What I do?"
44982What are you acting in now?"
44982What are you doing to- night?"
44982What are you going to eat, Babs?"
44982What d''you like?
44982What did I say?"
44982What did he look like?"
44982What did he say?"
44982What do I have to do?
44982What do you think about going up next Degree Day?
44982What else?"
44982What had you heard about me?
44982What happened?"
44982What have you been doing with yourself?"
44982What is your name?"
44982What remained?
44982What shall I do to amuse you?"
44982What time shall I come?"
44982What was his bet?
44982What was the good of meeting any one, if Jack''s ghost intervened to thrust them apart?
44982What were you dreaming about?"
44982What would they think of her, standing alone on the terrace, running up to the car and insisting that she must speak to Jack?
44982What''s behind all this?"
44982What''s she been doing?"
44982What''s the time?"
44982When are they going to begin, and what''s all the fuss about in the hall?"
44982When are you going to be married?"
44982When d''you think he''ll write?"
44982When?"
44982Which of us will achieve fame in ten years?
44982Who and what is he?
44982Who are you?"
44982Who has made the latest Roman holiday?"
44982Who was she?
44982Why are we sitting still?
44982Why did you come at all?
44982Why did you drag me away in the middle?"
44982Why do n''t you and Agnes arrange something?"
44982Why do n''t you come too?"
44982Why not?"
44982Why on earth did you ask me to dine with you to- night?"
44982Why the deuce did she let you propose to her-- you did_ actually_, did n''t you?--if she meant to bring up this objection at the last minute?"
44982Will he kindly let me know when and where I''m to meet him?"
44982Will you be back before Easter?"
44982Will you come to Connie Maitland''s Consumptive Hospital_ matinà © e_ after Christmas?
44982Will you come?
44982Will you come?"
44982Will you go away?"
44982Will you go to Confession?"
44982Will you go to your doctor?"
44982Will you lead off?
44982Will you take the responsibility of not repeating our conversation to anybody?"
44982Will you?"
44982Wo n''t it be awful when we''ve done so much that there are no sensations left?
44982Wo n''t you kiss me and say I''m forgiven?"
44982Wo n''t you shake hands?"
44982Would n''t you?"
44982Would you like to leave it open?
44982Would you like to take me down to supper?"
44982Would you?"
44982Yes?
44982Yes?
44982Yet it was not an angel that she could see nor a sword that she could feel; it was an inhibition, an Authority.... Why not call it Destiny?
44982You admit now that there was nothing very sinful in this ball?"
44982You are thinking of looking in, George?
44982You do n''t mind?"
44982You do n''t want to come again?"
44982You have a brother?"
44982You have been everywhere, Lady Lilith, and met every one whom the world considers worth meeting-- they were not too numerous?
44982You have read the descriptions of the dresses?
44982You heard I had concussion?
44982You know he''s been sent down for good and all?"
44982You know that Oakleigh''s in the Admiralty?"
44982You know the full sad story?
44982You never intended to marry me?"
44982You remember the man in solitary confinement?
44982You see those two matches?
44982You still do n''t love him?"
44982You think I''m at the bottom of it?
44982You were n''t at the Poynters last night, by any chance?
44982You will come with me?"
44982You will make him work, wo n''t you?"
44982You will stay?"
44982You will stay?"
44982You wo n''t keep her up late, will you?
44982You''ll let me go to sleep, wo n''t you?"
44982You''ll see about paying the fine, wo n''t you?"
44982You''re not going to say anything unpleasant?"
44982You''re not going too, George?"
44982You''ve got no preferences?"
44982You''ve got some one to take down to supper?
44982You''ve not met him?
44982You''ve not seen her for a couple of months; why not wait a bit longer?
44982You''ve nothing more to tell me about her?
44982_ Do n''t_ you care for me?"
44982_ Do n''t_ you love me?"
44982_ Do_ you think you could find one of the cars and take this child back to bed?
44982_ Have_ I lost touch with reality?"
44982_ I_ was wondering whether you''d been ill.""Ill?"
44982_ If_ you''re wrong?"
44982_ What_ shock?
44982_ Why_ shock?
44982_"''What are the laws of nature, not to bend If the Church bid them?
44982and, before long,"Is anything going to happen about Babs Neave and Jack Waring?"
44982he demanded, in a hectoring aside, of Pennington''s late giggling companion...."Who''d like go next?"
44982quickly became"Who''s the man who''s always with Babs Neave?"
9389A waiting- maid? 9389 And did her mother really let her roam away, alone, on such an errand, to a perfect stranger?"
9389And suppose some of these terrible things should happen,--the last, for instance,--what would you do?
9389And what kind of a frock, pray, does''papa''wear?
9389And what name do you give to that white thing with blue sprigs in it?
9389And who in the room opposite, on this floor?
9389And who lives in the room just under mine? 9389 And you do n''t want the grapes?"
9389And you have kept the girl safe in the shelter of your honest home all these years? 9389 And you thought my superfluous time and wisdom might be transferred to you, thus making a more equal division of property?"
9389And you?
9389Any strange cases among the scholars?
9389Are you afraid to come up the ladder?
9389Are you not happy, Basil?
9389As much as if I went to school?
9389Basil, what man? 9389 But how shall I get in?"
9389But what do you wish, my friend?
9389But you like me better now? 9389 Catharine, whose pass- key was that you found in the door?
9389Did not they direct you to come to me to- day?
9389Do n''t I always?
9389Do n''t think to humbug any more, Shut up there in your shanty,-- But solve the problem, once for all,-- De Sauty, or De Santy?
9389Do you always pity people, when they love you very much?
9389Do you like me to be pretty, Sir?
9389Do you really think I can learn?
9389Friendless, when you are gone? 9389 Happy?"
9389Horrid old, is n''t it?
9389House or meadow? 9389 I?
9389Is that reward enough for coming?
9389Lady Gower? 9389 Matter?
9389May I inquire how you propose to effect such an exchange?
9389May I tell you another thing I do n''t like in you? 9389 May I?"
9389Mr. Geer, how can you sleep away your precious time so?
9389No, I do n''t mean that; but how shall I get in where you are, after I am up?
9389Nor Dan Norris? 9389 Nor Music?"
9389Possible?
9389Pray, my good Sir,ask legions of fond parents,"what do you mean?
9389Said? 9389 Sir?"
9389Sir?
9389Sleep? 9389 So you would not come and nurse me, and take care of me, and get me well again?"
9389Suppose we take a vacation to- day, and investigate the state of the atmosphere?
9389Then what can I do, Jean?
9389This?
9389What could put it into poor papa''s head? 9389 What do you think of that sample of mixed tobacco I gave you to try?"
9389What in thunder? 9389 What is the difference between them?
9389What is the use of telling it, then?
9389Where did you get that flower, Elsie?
9389Who is the tall lady who dined here yesterday with Miss Rocket, and talked so enthusiastically about woman''s rights?
9389Who''d''a''thunk it?
9389Why ca n''t we?
9389Will you go, love?
9389Wo n''t care?
9389Would not an appeal to Mr. Lyndsay reach him now, think you? 9389 You are?
9389You do know your letters? 9389 _ Savez- vous_,"asks an epicure,"_ ce qui a chassé la gaîté?
9389''"[ 2]"The diploma of Doctor of Music Marx received from the University at Marburg; and thereupon(?)
9389After all, is there anything very strange in silly men writing silly books?
9389Am I sufficiently obvious?"
9389And Grammar?"
9389And how about that other stupendous fiction of the harvest- moon?
9389And what is the conclusion?
9389And what was the end of all this?
9389And when do you write?"
9389And when this is both understood and felt, what rules shall be given to guide and control the construction and the delivery of discourses?
9389And you are not in the least vexed that I spoke to you about it?"
9389Are the Biddies given over to a reprobate mind, because you do n''t happen to like their vocalization?
9389Are you willing to go with me as my wife?"
9389Besides, nobody loves me enough to be pitied, except papa.--Isn''t it pleasant here?
9389Blocks or a primer?"
9389But as I ceased, joy conquered grief and wonder; for she clapped her hands like a glad child, exclaiming,--"Go with you, Sir?
9389But if you like to write in the evening, you would just as soon I would come in the morning?"
9389But know ye where she hides her nest, Beneath what balmy dropping eaves, The Dove that bears on her white breast The sacred green of olive- leaves?
9389But this is not climbing the hill of science, is it?"
9389But, Jean, you surely do not mean that Effie has no claim on any human creature, beyond the universal one of common charity?"
9389Can I never be more to you than now?
9389Can you be happy here, with no fortune but the little store set apart for you, and the knowledge that no want shall touch you while I live?"
9389Can you heal a heart- ache with a syllogism?
9389Can you plant a garden with weeds and then pull them up again in secure trust that no lurking burdocks and Canada thistle shall remain?
9389Did the girls of a larger growth lose their dangerous qualities on arriving at belle- hood?
9389Did the wilful girl go off without leave?
9389Did you think I should shrink from sharing poverty with you who gave me all I own?"
9389Do tell us_ what_ your name is,--come: De Santy, or De Sauty?
9389Do you inquire, To what good purpose do you thrust the possibility of failure upon the attention of the candidate for the ministry?
9389Do you like Arithmetic?"
9389Do you really believe that the solar and stellar system was arranged to accommodate"the reapers reaping early"of the little island of Great Britain?
9389Do you think you should like me for a teacher?"
9389Drawing, for instance?"
9389Effie bent suddenly, saying, with a look of anguish,"Do you regret that I am your wife, Sir?"
9389Eh,--eh,--something about Ivy, was n''t it?"
9389He greeted me as I passed in, addressing me in an interrogative manner with one word, the only one I ever heard him utter,--"Owasyerelthbin?"
9389How could I forget that happy night, long years ago, when she and I went floating down the same bright stream, two happy lovers just betrothed?
9389How long ought a sermon to be?
9389How shall one know which is which?"
9389I echoed, bitterly,--"how can I be happy, remembering what might have been?"
9389IS THE RELIGIOUS WANT OF THE AGE MET?
9389Is beatification dependent upon the platform- balance?
9389Is it Dalby''s Carminative, Daffy''s Elixir, Brown''s Syrup of Squills, or White''s Magnetic Mixture?
9389Is it of the soothing or the coercing system?
9389Is it only the Piccolomini and Linds of the feathered kingdom who have a right to practise sacred music?
9389Is there any reason why they should not?
9389Love, then, is a_ sine qua non_ in stories; and if love, why not marriage?
9389May not the command of a maximum speed of thirteen knots be obtained from the machinery now employed for a maximum speed of ten knots?
9389Might not Effie go to him herself?
9389Miss Ivy, what are you going to do?"
9389Must our ways lie apart?
9389No more you do n''t want to marry John Herricks, do you?"
9389Oh, Jean, why did you leave me when you went?"
9389Oh, Mr. Clerron, did you see the clouds this morning?"
9389Oh, no,--not at all,--but as Republicans_ do n''t_ consider it necessary, is it strange that they should, vote as they think?
9389Oh, that is it, then?
9389On the whole, you are not particularly fond of books?"
9389Pray, what set you--"The next morning the lady- teacher took to asking me this?
9389Presently he said,--"Ivy, how old are you?"
9389Shall I never know the blessedness of a return?"
9389Shall we proceed to History?
9389She cast a quick look into my face, asking, hurriedly,--"Am I to go alone?"
9389Some sudden hope seemed born of my regretful words, for, with an eager glance, she cried,--"Was it that desire which prompted you to part from me?
9389The enterprise of the more active spirits of our day is astounding; we begin to ask,"Will they stop at anything?
9389Was n''t this a pretty dish to set before-- not a king- but a young republican, who fancied himself the equal of kings?
9389Well, he is just as happy, and just as rich, and everybody likes him just as well, as if he knew the whole world full; and why ca n''t I do so, too?
9389What else could I think, when you came so often and were so kind to us?"
9389What has she to do with Effie, Jean?"
9389What have the innocent heirs of our name done, that Hannah should continue under numberless_ noms- de- plume_ to cater for them?
9389What have you studied?"
9389What is the Nursery Blarney- Stone?
9389What is the mission of the surviving Whigs?
9389What is the reason?"
9389What mattered it that slowly, almost unconsciously, I had learned to love her with the passion of a youth, the power of a man?
9389What other branches have you pursued?
9389What other city furnishes such a work as the Duchess D''Abrantes''"Histoire des Salons de Paris"?
9389What shall I do?''"
9389What shall we have next?"
9389What the deuse brings you to Paris, then?
9389What will they not undertake?"
9389What''s John Herricks and Dan Norris hangin''round for all the time?"
9389What''s the matter?"
9389What''s the use havin''her, if she ca n''t stay at home with us?
9389What, then, could she do?
9389What_ shall_ I do?
9389When will you go?"
9389Where is it kept?
9389Where is the child?"
9389Where''s the use?
9389Where, then, is the good of being opposed to it?
9389Where, we repeat, is the Nursery Blarney- Stone?
9389Whither?
9389Who so dull as to require an interpreter for such plain speakings?
9389Who was our geographer?
9389Why are you sorry?"
9389Why ca n''t we?
9389Why do civic wood- rangers choose the ailantus- tree for a bouquet- holder to the close- pent inhabitants of towns?
9389Why do our educated men of other professions so seldom and so reluctantly contribute to the addresses in our religious assemblies?
9389Why is the life of little boys and girls in books always pictured on the foot- lights pattern?
9389Why must we, then, be conscientiously constrained to mark out such a very different plan for our children at home?
9389Why not?
9389Why was I blind so long?"
9389Why was it made a crime worthy of Draconian sternness to address our she- comrades in the pleasant paths of learning?
9389Why was it-- except for the Blarney- Stone-- that we were always checked in any Sabba''day notes and queries of what we had noticed in the sanctuary?
9389Would not this be obviated by having a gate or slide to fill out the dead- wood when the screw is lifted?
9389Would you utterly discourage those who are already more alive to the perils of their undertaking than we could wish them?
9389You detect signs of a moral reformation?"
9389You do not see the connection?
9389You think I improve on acquaintance?
9389[ Footnote*: Might not a metallic stern- post, combining strength, lightness, and little resistance, be introduced?]
9389_"What do you want of me, Elsie Venner?_"It was a strange question to put, for the girl had not signified that she wished the teacher to come to her.
9389a bad habit?"
9389a substitute for lollipops or for birch?
9389but what can I do?"
9389exclaimed Ivy, with a great gush of gratitude and happiness;"do I, can I, do_ you_ any good?"
9389is it_ yesterday_ or_ to- morrow?_ LOVE AND SELF- LOVE.
9389nor none of''em?"
9389or rather, where is it not?
9389rock candy or rock the cradle?"
9389said Ivy, blushing, and quickly added,"Do you know I have discovered the reason why you like me this morning?"
9389that all?
9389upon your word of honor, Madam, you have not?
9389without even informing her parents?"
9389would you turn your Ivy out of doors and break her heart?"
9389you were a Phi- Beta- Kappa man in college, and know that you can write better than many a man in a metropolitan pulpit?
593''But where the devil do you expect me to find any women?'' 593 ''Come, come, Marchas, what are you thinking of?''
593''How many men are you going to take?'' 593 ''Real women?''
593''The priest? 593 ''Where are you going to dine then?''
593''Where are you taking us to?'' 593 ''Where did you find this wood?''
593''Who will lend his cloak? 593 ''You have travelers, then, at the present time?''
593A head was put out of the litter:''What is the matter?''
593A prophet? 593 After all,"he said;"why should I not tell you about it?
593All alone in the wood?
593An old, bent, wrinkled, horrible, peasant woman appeared and said:''What do you want?'' 593 And how is Mademoiselle Henriette?"
593And how is your friend?
593And now?
593And she was not frightened?
593And why that?
593And without any risk to me, eh? 593 Are you out of your mind?
593As long as I choose to permit it,she said;"but what will you do if I bring her back to your arms?
593But on arriving in Paris what did you do at first?
593But who can answer for himself, who can defend himself against such a danger, as the magnetic attraction that inheres in such a woman? 593 But you have at least found his house?"
593Can you do this?
593Can you show it to me?
593Consider well what you are saying; must this really be?
593Disappeared?
593Do you believe it?
593Do you remember that Dr. Parent sent you to sleep?
593Do you think so?
593For whom do you take me, pray?
593Has that not already happened? 593 Have you not yet been delivered from purgatory by our prayers, and by all the Masses for your soul, which we have said for you?"
593He has written to you?
593He is not a prince?
593How could he possibly aim without having his eyes open?
593How did it come about?
593How many have you?
593How much are you going to ask to stop with her till the end? 593 How should I know?"
593How? 593 I got up at last and asked:''Where is the parsonage?''
593I got up, for it was too hot in front of the fire, and Marchas went on:''Do you want an idea?'' 593 I persisted:''Nobody?
593I said:''Well, Madame Lecacheur, have you a room for me?''
593I would ask Mother Lecacheur:''Well, what is our demoniac about to- day?'' 593 I?
593Is it possible?
593It is, indeed, Madame,he replied;"do you often go into the country?"
593Next? 593 No, but what do you mean by that?
593No, thank you,she replied, and turning to the young men again, and pointing to their arms, asked"Do you never feel cold like that?"
593One day, however, she plucked up courage:''I would like to see how you paint pictures?
593Philip who? 593 Romanesco?"
593Simon what?
593So your husband runs into debt?
593The good woman, at once surprised and troubled, replied in a quivering voice:''My dear sir, what is it I have just heard you say? 593 Then the fat woman in the cotton dress said in turn:''Do you mean to call us thieves, Madame?''
593To kill her, because she has--"Because she has deceived me? 593 Well, is your mother dead?"
593Well, supposing I can do it, what shall I be then?
593What do you mean by that?
593What do you mean? 593 What do you want to do?"
593What does it mean?
593What is he doing?
593What is his attitude in this portrait?
593What is it, cousin?
593What is it?
593What is that noise?
593What is the matter with me?
593What is your name, then,went on the child,"so that I may tell the others when they wish to know your name?"
593What must he do besides?
593What next?
593What sort of an entertainment, captain?
593What''s the matter with her?
593What, you?
593When the schoolmaster heard the whispering, he continued:''Why, you are not by yourself?'' 593 When, pray?
593When?
593Where is he?
593Where is he?
593Where is your mother''s grave?
593Who art thou?
593Who is there?
593Who?
593Whose photograph is it?
593Why did you take even that trouble?
593Why do you say that?
593Why does one love? 593 Why not give one''s name to a woman whom one loves, and whom one trusts?
593Why not?
593Will you answer all my questions?
593Will you have isolated apartments?
593Would you care to receive any friends?
593Would you like one, Monsieur Dufour?
593Yes, well, what then?
593You have some means?
593You know nothing, then? 593 You must surely have been married as well?
593You wish to know about it? 593 Your mother?"
593''Covers for how many?''
593A being?
593A horrible doubt entered his mind-- she?
593After all, who knows?
593After questioning me for a long time, he said to me:"Will you consent, Monsieur, to remain here for some time?"
593Am I going mad?
593An Austrian count, who had a loud and silly laugh, said:"Who has saddled you with that yarn?
593And I repeated like an echo:''It is annoying, but what do you want me to do in the matter?''
593And do we despise those picked out to accomplish these butcheries of men?
593And even if he returns, if he takes possession of his shop, who is to prove that my furniture was on his premises?
593And first, what does that anxiety to conceal his personality prove, carried as it was to such an extreme degree?
593And he replied with a laugh:"What did you expect?
593And if you do not obey me, I will let you die like a dog, when you are ill in your turn; do you hear me?"
593And in unison they asked:"Are you getting on all right?"
593And she asked:"What are you doing there?
593And the thought enters my head:"Shall I kill him?"
593And then he added:"A little more rabbit, my dear?"
593And then, was he surely in the right?
593And what is that, I ask you?
593And, as he was trying to force an entrance with a few blows of a pickaxe, the loud voice of a guard demanded suddenly:"Who goes there?"
593Are we wrong?''
593Are you going to leave us, after I have become so much accustomed to you?''
593Are you satisfied, you great fool?''
593Are you sure that he commissioned you to ask me for them?"
593Are you trying to see the grass grow?"
593As soon as I had sat down near him, this queer creature said to me in a tranquil tone of voice:"How goes it with you?"
593As there was neither bell nor knocker, I knocked at the door with my fist, and a loud voice from inside asked:''Who is there?''
593At nightfall Honore returned, and when he went up to the bed and saw that his mother was still alive he asked:"How is she?"
593August 10. Who would ever know?
593BELLFLOWER 11. WHO KNOWS?
593Because of her natural impiety?
593But He would see me mix it with the water; and then, would our poisons have any effect on His impalpable body?
593But Simon suddenly ran to him and said:"Will you be my papa?"
593But coming back with a milk- pail full of milk, she stopped again before them, and said:"Would you like a little?
593But have you ever seen it, and can you see it?
593But how can I?
593But is it I?
593But she would smile sweetly, and say:"What can I do?
593But the lad who had brought the news, puffed up with the success he had met with, demanded:"What do you call yourself?"
593But was it a hallucination?
593But what could I know?
593But where would be the use?"
593But where?
593But who is he, this invisible being that rules me, this unknowable being, this rover of a supernatural race?
593But, then, it must have been a present!--a present!--a present from whom?
593Can anyone understand these things?
593Can not you guess?
593Could aught be more delicately incisive?
593Dead?
593Did he wear a vest?
593Did not the people know that they ought to be tricked?
593Did you say, four ladies?''
593Do n''t you see that he is robbing you of your fish?
593Do n''t you think so?
593Do not dogs occasionally bite and strangle their masters?
593Do those who are thinkers in those distant worlds know more than we do?
593Do you know what she intended?
593Do you think that you will catch anything?
593Do you understand me?
593Do you understand?
593Do you understand?
593Do you understand?"
593Do you work for yourself, or for others?
593Finally he stammered:"You say-- are you sure?"
593For his own sake?
593For that is a natural fault, is it not, and may be pardoned?
593Had he been dreaming?
593Had not he, perhaps, kept a glass hidden in his hand, which he showed to the young woman in her sleep at the same time as he did the card?
593Had she escaped through the forest?
593Had she left no friends, no relatives behind her?
593Had somebody found her, and taken her to a hospital, without being able to obtain any information from her?
593Has not your husband disinherited his lost son, and in his place made the Church his heir?"
593Has not your husband five thousand francs at his disposal?
593Have I lost my reason?
593He gave me a chair and said:''What can I do for you?''
593He had one single wish left, one sole pleasure; why not grant him that last solace constantly, until he died?
593He next asked:"What is there new?"
593He put a visiting- card into her hands, and said to her:"This is a looking- glass; what do you see in it?"
593He replied:"Do we see the hundred- thousandth part of what exists?
593He responded placidly:"With me?
593He thought for a few moments, and then replied"What?
593He was just going out, and he listened to me with a smile, and said:"Do you believe now?"
593Her evil laugh which makes fun of me, and her cowardly laugh which defies me?
593His body?
593His decided opinion was, that the old woman would not last out the night, and he asked:"Well?"
593His fixed idea, which had been intensified by a month of drunkenness, and which was continually increasing in his absolute solitude?
593His life?
593Honore saw them pass in the distance, and he asked:"Where is our priest going to?"
593How could I kill Him, since I could not get hold of Him?
593How could he suspect me?
593How dare I?
593How is it that I have not seen them?"
593How is this to be explained?
593How many days?
593How then is it surprising that he can not perceive a new body which is penetrated and pervaded by the light?
593How was I to manage?
593How?
593I am frightened-- of what?
593I answer:"You are alone, my boy?"
593I continued:"Do you remember what took place at your house last night?"
593I have I not explained to you by what constant, long, daily practice I have learned to plant my knives without seeing what I am doing?"
593I insisted:"But every day?"
593I looked at him stupefied and asked him:"But you have not always been like that?"
593I open my cupboards, and look under my bed; I listen-- I listen-- to what?
593I really do not know why?
593I saw a priest, who said:''Your mistress?''
593I wanted to be friendly, and I selected this phrase:"What are you doing now?"
593I was seized with pity for this pitiable and ridiculous Tantalus, and interposed on his behalf:"Please, will you not give him a little more rice?"
593I, at length, managed to stammer out:"And you, how goes it with you?"
593I?
593If He were not dead?
593In an equable tone of voice, he said:"Indeed-- does that amuse you?"
593In which?
593Is it I?
593Is it a cold shiver which, passing over my skin, has upset my nerves and given me a fit of low spirits?
593Is not that so, Melie?"
593Is that you?
593Is the world coming to an end?
593Is there a God?
593Is there not a married mayor, or a married deputy- mayor, or a married municipal councilor, or schoolmaster?''
593It could surely only be I?
593It is done; it is done-- but is He dead?
593It was Marchas, and I called out to him:''Well?''
593It was entitled: WHY?
593I{ of III??}
593I{ of III??}
593Luc said:"Are you trying to drink?"
593M. Lantin was disturbed, and asked:"How much is it worth?"
593Madame Dufour, will this suit you?
593Make an assault?
593Mastering his feelings, he added:"To whom was she married?"
593Monsieur, so you do not understand?
593My cousin, who is also very incredulous, smiled, and Dr. Parent said to her:"Would you like me to try and send you to sleep, Madame?"
593My heart beat, and the perspiration stood on my forehead, and Melie said to me:''Well, you sot, did you see that?''
593Nine times out of ten, what is the subject of these stories to which freedom of style gives the appearance of health?
593Nothing; but what will happen to- morrow?
593Now I remember the words of the monk at Mont Saint- Michel:"Can we see the hundred- thousandth part of what exists?
593Now, why did this man kill his five children?
593Only once or twice a year, to get a little fresh air; and you, Monsieur?"
593Or was her memory as stagnant as water without any current?
593Otherwise, why should she thus have concealed herself, have fled from the face of others?
593Perhaps a slight paralytic stroke?
593Perhaps?
593Perhaps?
593Philip what?
593Poison?
593Premature destruction?
593Said the jeweler:"What is your name, sir?"
593She demanded,"What is it?
593She turned her head round to look at him and said:"Fairly well, fairly well, and you?"
593Should we be here now, if they were brave?"
593So I replied:''Look here, Marchas, are you having a joke with me?''
593So you said that to her?"
593Some body had drunk the water, but who?
593Still lively, witty, light- hearted, and enthusiastic, or in a state of mental torpor through provincial life?
593Suddenly a heavy hand was placed upon his shoulder, and a rough voice asked him:"What is it that causes you so much grief, my fine fellow?"
593Suddenly a voice in the distance cried:"''Who goes there?''
593Suddenly she asked:"Have you received the last sacrament, Mother Bontemps?"
593Ten, twenty, fifty, or a hundred?
593That must be very nice?"
593The children shook with delight at the spectacle, while their father, who was also amused, said:"Is n''t the old man funny?"
593The greater part of the little monkeys finally scattered and then the Commander called out in a loud voice,"Monsieur de Varnetot?"
593The latter broke the silence by saying:"Will you leave this necklace here for twenty- four hours?
593The old peasant woman said"No"with her head, and La Rapet, who was very devout, got up quickly:"Good heavens, is it possible?
593The old woman took her hands out of the water and asked with sudden sympathy:"Is she as bad as all that?"
593The smith continued:"Is it the girl''s fault if she has fallen?
593The wise man says: Perhaps?
593Then she cried:"Is everything going as you like it?"
593Then what did you come here for, my dear?"
593Then, seizing him by the neck, he hissed in his face:"Can you not comprehend that we are living in a Republic, stupid?"
593Then?--then?
593There was somebody there, near the house, there could be no doubt of that, and he opened the door and shouted:"Is it you, Gaspard?"
593They called it mesmerism, hypnotism, suggestion, I know not what?
593To disembarrass myself?
593To which my rustic friend would respond, with an air of having been scandalized:"''What do you think, sir?
593WAS IT A DREAM?
593WAS IT A DREAM?
593WHO KNOWS?
593Was it a prescience of 1893?
593Was it not on my account that she wished to be laid at rest in this place?
593Was it not possible that one of the imperceptible keys of the cerebral finger- board had been paralyzed in me?
593Was it one of those strange appeals which cross the dreams of disquieted minds?
593Was not his body, which was transparent, indestructible by such means as would kill ours?
593Was she dreaming sadly, without any precise recollection of anything that had happened?
593Was she thinking of the dead?
593Was the noise in my head, in the impenetrable night, or beneath the mysterious earth, the earth sown with human corpses?
593We do not distinguish it, like all the others created before us?
593We stake our life every moment; have we not, therefore, the right to amuse ourselves freely?
593What age are you?"
593What are you thinking about?"
593What can they do more than we?
593What could I know?"
593What could it be?
593What could they accuse me of?
593What do they see which we do not?
593What does it matter to me?
593What for?''
593What forms, what living beings, what animals are there yonder?
593What had been her life?
593What had her infancy been?
593What had they done with her?
593What had they done with the woman?
593What has happened?
593What have I done to displease you?
593What is a being?
593What is the good of working?
593What is the matter with me?
593What is the matter with me?
593What is the reason?
593What kind of accident?
593What made me suddenly loose my grip of her?
593What matters He or She?
593What on earth is Philip?
593What passed in that despairing mind?
593What should he do?
593What was it that I heard behind me?
593What was it?
593What was there that would move this people, and bring about a definite victory in opinion?
593What was to be done?
593What was to be done?
593What would he be like when I met him again?
593What would he do with it, inert and trembling wreck that he was?
593What?
593When I went back home yesterday, I noticed his singular paleness, and I asked him:"What is the matter with you, Jean?"
593When did you have your first discouragement?
593When his head appeared over the brink, I asked:"''What is it?''
593When they got near the house, Honore Bontemps murmured:"Suppose it is all over?"
593When they were leaving the barracks the week after, Jean said to Luc:"Ought n''t we to buy her something good?"
593Whence come those mysterious influences which change our happiness into discouragement, and our self- confidence into diffidence?
593Whence had she come thither, all alone, a wanderer, like a dog driven from home?
593Where are you staying?''
593Where did you pick up your Philip?"
593Where had they taken her to?
593Who can tell?
593Who could it be?
593Who inhabits those worlds?
593Who is the culprit?
593Who knows?
593Who knows?
593Who knows?
593Who will save me?
593Who will understand my horrible agony?
593Who would believe him?
593Who would ever suspect me, especially if I should choose a being I had no interest in doing away with?
593Who?
593Whoever would think of accusing me, even?
593Why am I thus?
593Why did I at once experience a shock?
593Why did she love everything so tenderly and so passionately, everything living that was not a man?
593Why do you not?
593Why does one love?
593Why had her family thrown her off?
593Why is it not intoxicating to kill?
593Why not one more?
593Why not other elements beside fire, air, earth, and water?
593Why not, also, other trees with immense, splendid flowers, perfuming whole regions?
593Why not?
593Why on this particular evening, did I enter a certain beer shop?
593Why should a vague terror hang over these low plains covered with water?
593Why should there not be one more, when once that period is accomplished which separates the successive products one from the other?
593Why should we be the last?
593Why this transparent, unrecognizable body, this body belonging to a spirit, if it also had to fear ills, infirmities, and premature destruction?
593Why was it given her?
593Why, then, is it a crime to kill?
593Why?
593Why?
593Why?
593Why?
593Why?
593Why?
593Will you buy them also?"
593Will you make up your mind at last?"
593Will you show me?
593Will you still call me cruel?"
593Would anyone believe it?
593Would his men obey him?
593Yes, why?
593Yes, yes, it should be a pleasure-- the greatest of all, perhaps, for is not killing most like creating?
593You must be thirsty also?"
593You recall, of course, the castle in which I was brought up, seeing that you used to visit it for five or six months during the vacations?
593You two are always here, are n''t you?"
593You want to know with what I bait?
593are they not lovely?
593how is it, then, that since the beginning of the world they have never manifested themselves in such a manner as they do to me?
593she asked;''you are fighting?''
593so there are the others?"
593who knows?
593who-- who-- can it be?
6172But,you may say,"the poor, the failures, the wretched-- what of them?"
6172Who among you, if his child asks bread, will give him a stone?
6172( How could the perfect fall?)
6172( How could the"perfect"fall?)
61727) as saying:"For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto His Glory, why yet am I also judged as a sinner?"
6172Accepting Evolution, how can we believe in a Fall?
6172After all, may not even John Burns be human; may not Mr. Chamberlain himself have a heart that can feel for another?
6172And I take the opportunity to here recommend very strongly_ Shall We Understand the Bible?_ by the Rev.
6172And Moses said unto them, Have ye saved all the women alive?
6172And Pharaoh called Abram, and said, What is this that thou hast done unto me?
6172And do you believe that"our Father in Heaven, our All- powerful God, who is Love,"would first create man fallible, and then punish him for falling?
6172And he said, Who made thee a prince and a judge over us?
6172And how does it stand to- day?
6172And if God is our"maker,"who but He is responsible for our make- up?
6172And if God knew they_ must_ fall, how could Adam help falling, and how_ could_ he justly be blamed for doing what he_ must_ do?
6172And if He alone is responsible, how can Man have sinned against God?
6172And if He did so create and so punish man, could you call that just or merciful?
6172And if an earthly father would act thus wisely and thus kindly,"how much more your Father which is in Heaven?"
6172And if there never was a Fall, why should there be any Atonement?
6172And now, will you ponder these words of Arthur Lillie, M.A., the author of_ Buddha and Buddhism_?
6172And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith?
6172And what has it accomplished?
6172And what of Noah, who got drunk, and then cursed the whole of his sons''descendants for ever, because Ham had seen him in his shame?
6172And yet, what would a Christian congregation say of an"Infidel"who committed half the crimes and outrages of any one of those Bible heroes?
6172Are London and Paris, New York and St. Petersburg, Berlin, Vienna, Brussels, and Rome centres of holiness and of sweetness and light?
6172Are Mark and John dead, also?
6172Are the masses of people who accept it peaceful, virtuous, chaste, spiritually minded, prosperous, happy?
6172Are their international politics guided by the Sermon on the Mount?
6172Are their national laws based on its ethics?
6172Are their noblest and most Christlike men and women most revered and honoured?
6172Are there no good, nor happy, nor worthy men and women to- day outside the pale of the Christian churches?
6172Are these the signs of a triumphant and indispensable religion?
6172Are they witnessed and attested?
6172Are we Rationalists so wicked, so miserable, so useless in the world, so terrified of the shadow of death?
6172Are we, on the evidence of such a people, to believe that miracles happened two thousand years ago?
6172Are you not aware, friend Christian, that what was Infidelity is now orthodoxy?
6172Because a moral man would not say:"If I give up my religion, what will you pay me?"
6172But do I despair?
6172But if the spread of a faith proves its miracles to be true, what can be said about the spread of the Buddhist and Mohammedan religions?
6172But if they knew not what they did, why should God be asked to_ forgive_ them?
6172But is not this like sending flowers and jewels to the king?
6172But is there any reason to regard the Gospel stories of the death, Resurrection, and Ascension on of Christ as historical?
6172But suppose any pagan or Mohammedan general were to behave to a Christian city as Moses behaved to the people of Midian, what should we say of him?
6172But was it so?
6172But what are we to think of his offering his daughters to the mob, and of his subsequent conduct?
6172But what kind of Creator must He be who has created such a universe as this?
6172But without a Devil how can we maintain a belief in a God of love and kindness?
6172CONTENTS PREFACE FOREWORDS THE SIN OF UNBELIEF ONE REASON WHAT I CAN AND CANNOT BELIEVE THE OLD TESTAMENT-- Is the Bible the Word of God?
6172COUNSEL: I shall show that the act of resurrection was witnessed by one Mary Magdalene, by a Roman soldier-- JUDGE: What is the soldier''s name?
6172COUNSELS OF DESPAIR"If you take from us our religion,"say the Christians,"what have you to offer but counsels of despair?"
6172Can the man be justly blamed for the acts of the cherub?
6172Can there be a more horrible object in existence than an eloquent man not speaking the truth?
6172Can you believe it?
6172Can you bring evidence to prove that he was ever alive?
6172Can you find in all the world to- day two men as wise, as good, as gentle, as happy?
6172Can you suppose that such a creator would, after thousands of years of effort, have failed even now to make His repeated revelations comprehensible?
6172Christianity Before Christ Other Evidences THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION-- What is Christianity?
6172Consider these unhappy ones, what do you offer them?
6172Could He not have created him at once a wise and good creature?
6172DETERMINISM CAN MAN SIN AGAINST GOD?
6172DETERMINISM-- Can Man Sin against God?
6172Despair of what?
6172Despair?
6172Did Adam choose that Eve should have a stronger will than he, or that the Serpent should have a stronger will than Eve?
6172Did Buddha, and King Asoka, and Socrates, and Aristides lead happy, and pure, and useful lives?
6172Did Christianity abolish them?
6172Did Matthew see Christ ascend into Heaven?
6172Did Matthew see Christ crucified?
6172Did Matthew see Christ in the flesh and alive after His Resurrection?
6172Did Matthew see Christ quit the tomb?
6172Did Matthew see Christ''s dead body?
6172Did the Protestant martyrs prove Protestantism true?
6172Did the citizens receive them into their midst without fear, or horror, or doubt?
6172Did these dead saints go back to their tombs?
6172Did they correct the proofs?
6172Do they live worse or die worse, or bear trouble worse, than those who accept the Christian faith?
6172Do we not know that religion was so born and nursed?
6172Do you believe that the God who imagined and created such a universe could be petty, base, cruel, revengeful, and capable of error?
6172Do you believe that?
6172Do you deny that?
6172Do you know what the Christians call Tom Paine?
6172Do you think He is the kind of Creator to make blunders and commit crimes?
6172Does a strong man value the praise of the weak?
6172Does a wise man prize the praise of fools?
6172Does any man of wisdom and power care for the applause of his inferiors?
6172Does it prove that the Buddhist faith is the only true faith?
6172Does not history teach us that it is true?
6172Does not that sound reasonable?
6172Does not the long finger of the animal show the infinite badness of God to the insect?
6172Does that prove that Christianity was not true?
6172Does the Bible reveal any new moral truths?
6172Does the Bible revelation contain no errors of fact?
6172Does this prove that King Asoka or his teacher, Buddha, was divine?
6172Does_ that_ prove that Christ was divine?
6172Even when man was ignorant and savage, could not an all- powerful God have devised some means of revealing Himself so as to be understood?
6172First of all, then, what is the fact which this evidence is supposed to prove?
6172For if I had power to train a son of mine to righteousness, and I trained him to wickedness, should I not sin against my son?
6172From Glasgow to Johannesburg, from Bombay to San Francisco is God or Mammon king?
6172HAVE THE DOCUMENTS BEEN TAMPERED WITH?
6172Had this stupendous miracle no effect upon the Jewish priests who had crucified Christ as an impostor?
6172Has God''s revelation, as given in the Bible, reached all men?
6172Have you_ any_ witnesses?
6172How are Christians treating Jews to- day in Holy Russia?
6172How are we to know that these men ever lived?
6172How are we to know that they were correctly reported, if they ever spoke or wrote?
6172How can they think that?
6172How can we account for King Asoka, how can we account for Buddha?
6172How can we rely upon such evidence after nineteen hundred years, and upon a statement of facts so important and so marvellous?
6172How comes it, then, that the treatment of the poor by the rich is better amongst Jews than amongst Christians?
6172How did it fare with the poor all over Europe in the centuries when Christianity was at the zenith of its power?
6172How do they bear themselves in"the solemn realities of life"?
6172How have Christians treated Jews for fifteen centuries?
6172How is it that the gulf betwixt rich and poor in such Christian capitals as New York, London, and Paris is so wide and deep?
6172How long is it since Jews were granted full rights of citizenship in Christian England?
6172How many Christians have reached it yet?
6172How many centuries did it take the Christians to rise to that level of wisdom and charity?
6172How many cruel and sanguinary wars has that presumptuous belief inspired?
6172How many persecutions, outrages, martyrdoms, and massacres have been perpetrated by fanatics who have been"jealous for the Lord?"
6172How many stars are there?
6172How would he fare at the hands of the Press, and the Public-- and the Church?
6172How, then, can God blame the horse?
6172How, then, could God blame Man for anything Man did?
6172How, then, could God blame Man for the Fall?
6172I shall begin by quoting from_ Shall We Understand the Bible?_ by the Rev.
6172IS CHRISTIANITY THE ONLY HOPE?
6172If Christ died to save Man from sin, how is it that nineteen centuries after His death the world is full of sin?
6172If God blesses, who curses?
6172If God helps, who harms?
6172If God is a tender, loving, All- knowing, and All- powerful Heavenly Father, why did He build a world on cruel lines?
6172If God is all wise, and knows all that happens, will He not know what is for man''s good better than man can tell Him?
6172If God is just, will He not do justice without being entreated of men?
6172If God put a beggar on horseback, would the horse be blamable for galloping to Monte Carlo?
6172If God put a"will"on Adam''s back, and the will followed the beckoning finger of Eve, whose fault was that?
6172If God really wished to reveal Himself to man, why did He reveal Himself only to one or two obscure tribes, and leave the rest of mankind in darkness?
6172If God saves, who damns?
6172If He is a just God, will He give us less than justice unless we pray to Him; or will He give us more than justice because we importune Him?
6172If I am bad, does it make my offence the less that another man is so much better?
6172If You wished me to act otherwise, why did You not make me differently?
6172If he is all- powerful, why did He make man so imperfect?
6172If the success of the Christian religion proves that Christ was God, what does the success of the Buddhist religion prove?
6172If we do not blame a man for one kind of defect, why blame him for another?
6172If we pity a man with a stiff wrist, why not the man with a stiff pride?
6172If we pity a man with a twist in his spine, why should we not pity the man with a twist in his brain?
6172If we pity a man with a weak heart, why not the man with the weak will?
6172If you do not deny it, then on what grounds do you claim that Christ is_ the_ Saviour of all mankind, and that"only in Christ we are made whole"?
6172If, then, God put upon the bridge a weight equal to double the bearing strain, how could God justly blame the bridge for falling?
6172In the many massacres, and famines, and pestilences has God answered prayer?
6172Is Christianity the rule of life in America and Europe?
6172Is God all- powerful or is he not?
6172Is God so weak that He needs foolish men''s defence?
6172Is God''s revelation of the relations between man and God true?
6172Is He not rather the savage idol of a savage tribe?
6172Is He so feeble that He can not judge nor avenge?
6172Is He the Father of Christ?
6172Is he not blameworthy?"
6172Is he the God who inspired Buddha, and Shakespeare, and Herschel, and Beethoven, and Darwin, and Plato, and Bach?
6172Is it consonant with common sense?
6172Is it just or moral to forgive one man his sin because another is sinless?
6172Is it just, or is it moral, to make the good suffer for the bad?
6172Is it my fault that You fore- ordained me to be and to do thus?"
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it not so?
6172Is it the kind of theory a reasonable man can accept?
6172Is it wise, then, to sell even a fraction of your liberty of thought or deed for a paper promise which the Bank of Futurity may fail to honour?
6172Is not that a material difference?
6172Is not that free will?
6172Is that a reasonable theory?
6172Is that so lofty and so noble?
6172Is that the idea?
6172Is the Bible revelation so clear and explicit that no difference of opinion as to its meaning is possible?
6172Is the Christian religion loved and respected by those outside its pale?
6172Is the ethical code of the Bible complete, and final, and perfect?
6172Is there any earthly father who would allow his children to suffer as God allows Man to suffer?
6172Is there any man or woman alive who has seen Christ?
6172Is there any man or woman alive who has seen God?
6172Is this position supported by the facts?
6172Is this unspeakable monster, Jahweh, the Father of Christ?
6172It is stated by Paul of Tarsus that he and others worked miracles-- THE JUDGE: Do you intend to call Paul of Tarsus?
6172JUDGE: Are these letters affidavits?
6172JUDGE: Are they in the handwriting of this Paul of Tarsus?
6172JUDGE: Are they signed?
6172JUDGE: But you do n''t mean to, say-- how long has this shadowy witness, Paul of Tarsus, been dead?
6172JUDGE: Deposition?
6172JUDGE: Did he make a proper sworn deposition?
6172JUDGE: Do n''t know?
6172JUDGE: These statements of theirs, to which you allude: are they in their own handwriting?
6172JUDGE: Thousand years dead?
6172JUDGE: Were the copies seen and revised by the authors?
6172JUDGE: Who was Paul of Tarsus?
6172JUDGE: Who were they?
6172JUDGE: You intend to call some of these Gentiles?
6172Let us first think what would be the orthodox method of dealing with these two cases?
6172Matthew and John are"supposed"to have been disciples of Christ; but were they?
6172Matthew states very plainly that-- JUDGE: Of course, you intend to call Matthew?
6172My Christian friend, so jealous for the Lord, did you ever regard your hatred of"Heretics"and"Infidels"in the light of history?
6172Note next this, from Kant: What are the aims which are at the same time duties?
6172Now, consider, is the God of whom we have been reading a God of love?
6172Now, how did the finger begin to elongate?
6172Now, how does the creation of this long finger show the"infinite goodness of God"?
6172Now, in the opinion of these Christian teachers, is the Bible perfect or imperfect?
6172Now, supposing these facts to be as I have stated them above, to what conclusion do they point?
6172Religion has been attacked before, they cry, and where now are its assailants?
6172Shall we kill these, or revile them, or desert them, for the sake of the lurid ghost in the cloud, or the fetish in his box?
6172Should one be angry with a myth?
6172THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION WHAT IS CHRISTIANITY?
6172THE OLD TESTAMENT IS THE BIBLE THE WORD OF GOD?
6172The distance from our Sun to the nearest fixed(?)
6172The infinite goodness of God to whom?
6172Then how are we to account for King Asoka?
6172Then what about the insect?
6172Then"how much more your Father which is in Heaven?"
6172Then, if God made Adam weak, and Eve seductive, and the Serpent subtle, was that Adam''s fault or God''s?
6172This being the case, I ask, as a mere layman, what right has the Bible to usurp the title of"the word of God"?
6172This good man prays: for what?
6172This the Creator of the Milky Way?
6172Thomas asks:"How do you know?"
6172To bear the ills and the wrongs of this life more patiently, in the hope of a future reward?
6172To him the vital question would be, not"What will you give me to desert my colours?"
6172To the animal whose special finger enables him to catch the insect?
6172To what extent does the Bible revelation fulfil the above natural expectations?
6172To what stage of knowledge and science had those who created or accepted the myth attained?
6172Was Buddha God?
6172Was Mahomet God?
6172Was it before he ceased to be a monkey, or after?
6172Was it in the Stone Age, or the Bronze Age, or in the Age of Iron?
6172Was it when he was a tree man, or later?
6172Was there neither love, nor honour, nor wisdom, nor valour, nor peace in the world until Paul turned Christian?
6172Were such a man to arise amongst us and voice the awful truth, what would his reception be?
6172Were there no virtuous, nor happy, nor noble men and women during all the millions of years before the Crucifixion?
6172What are a few paltry, lumps of crystallised carbon compared to a galaxy of a million million suns?
6172What can it give you more than Socrates or Buddha possessed?
6172What chance, then, has a drunkard''s baby, born in a thieves''den, and dragged up amid the ignorant squalor of the slums?
6172What conclusion can we come to, then, as to the story in the first Gospel?
6172What does that mean?
6172What does that prove?
6172What does the success of the Mohammedan religion prove?
6172What does_ that_ prove?
6172What evidence is forthcoming that Christ did not recover from a swoon, and that His friends did not take Him away in the night?
6172What evidence is forthcoming that the Bible is true?
6172What happens?
6172What has this faith helped him to do?
6172What have we to do with such dreamy, self- centred, emotional holiness, here and now in London?
6172What is Paul''s evidence worth?
6172What is a"spiritual truth"?
6172What is it to you whether another is guilty or guiltless?
6172What is science?
6172What is that assertion or implication?
6172What is the Universe like, as far as our limited knowledge goes?
6172What is the nature of the evidence produced in support of this tremendous miracle?
6172What is the nature of the evidence?
6172What is there so superior or so meritorious in the attitude of a religious man towards God?
6172What is will?
6172What of the infinite goodness of God in teaching the cholera microbe to feed on man?
6172What of the infinite goodness of God in teaching the grub of the ichneumon- fly to eat up the cabbage caterpillar alive?
6172What was the attitude of the general mind towards the miraculous?
6172What was the"time spirit"in the day when this legend arose?
6172What would Christ think of Park Lane, and the slums, and the hooligans?
6172What would He think of the House of Peers, and the Bench of Bishops, and the Yellow Press?
6172What would He think of the Stock Exchange, and the music hall, and the racecourse?
6172What would a man think if his children knelt and begged for his love or for their daily bread?
6172What would be the orthodox method?
6172What would he think of our national ideals?
6172What would one naturally expect in a revelation by God to man?
6172What would you give us in exchange?"
6172What_ are_ we to think if the facts be thus?
6172What_ is_ Christianity?
6172When did a poet conceive an idea so vast and so astounding as the theory of evolution?
6172Where does he come in?
6172Where does natural selection come in?
6172Which day?
6172Which is worse, to be a Demagogue or an Infidel?
6172Which religion was the borrower from the other-- Buddhism or Christianity?
6172Who does not see that such facts as these compel us to remodel our whole idea of the past?
6172Who has communicated with God?
6172Who has entered that"region"?
6172Who has seen God?
6172Who is responsible for the quality or powers of a thing that is made?
6172Who made Adam?
6172Who made Eve?
6172Who made the Serpent?
6172Who were these authors?
6172Who, then, are the witnesses?
6172Why did Adam fall?
6172Why did Christianity with its spiritual and temporal power, permit such things to be?
6172Why did a good and loving God allow evil to enter the world?
6172Why does He not give the world peace, and health, and happiness, and virtue?
6172Why does He permit evil and pain to continue?
6172Why is religious intolerance so much more fierce and bitter than political intolerance?
6172Why saidst thou, She is my sister?
6172Why should I?
6172Why should we cling to this perishable body?
6172Why, then, did He permit evil to enter?
6172Why?
6172Why?
6172Why?
6172Why?
6172Will you, then, compare the Heavenly Father with a father among men?
6172Would a Liberal accept it from a Tory?
6172Would a Roman Catholic admit it from a Jew?
6172Would the Christian hearken to such a defence from a Socialist, or from a Mohammedan?
6172Would the Christians listen to such a plea in any other case?
6172You ridiculous creatures, what do you mean by it?"
6172_ Shall We Understand the Bible?_ Williams.
6172_ This_ the Father of Christ?
6172_ This_ the God of Heaven?
6172_ What is Religion?_ Tolstoy.
6172_ When_ did Man fall?
6172but"What is the_ truth_?"
6172intendest thou to kill me as thou killedst the Egyptian?
6172they will exclaim,"take away the belief in the Bible, and the service of God?
6172what is this?
6172why didst thou not tell me that she was thy wife?
4996A hostage for what?
4996A lady? 4996 Again then, may I ask, why wait?"
4996All a flam, is it?
4996And do you expect the police to leave the whole neighborhood severely alone for another hour?
4996And what then? 4996 And you can tell a Japanese from a Chinaman at sight?"
4996And you spoke to him?
4996And, pray, what can the Legation do?
4996And-- may I smoke? 4996 Any letters?"
4996Any luck?
4996Any news of the gray car?
4996Any noos?
4996Anything else?
4996Are n''t you pretty sure he was the man?
4996Are we justified in taking the law into our own hands?
4996Are you joking?
4996Are you quite safe here? 4996 Are you sure?"
4996Are you waiting here for some official of the Embassy?
4996As a gift or a loan?
4996As the weather was bad, you probably hurried in when your cab stopped?
4996Before I efface myself, may I be allowed to congratulate Mrs. Forbes on her escape?
4996Beg pardon, sir, but you are Mr. Theydon, are n''t you?
4996But do you know?
4996But how? 4996 But how?"
4996But is n''t that somewhat singular in itself? 4996 But what does it matter now?
4996But what has he done? 4996 But what''s this story of another shooting up in Fortescue Square?
4996But why adopt such a clandestine method?
4996But why?
4996But why?
4996But, dear, ca n''t you trust me? 4996 But, my dear Evelyn,"she said,"did n''t you yourself send for your mother?"
4996Ca n''t you speak plainly, Mr. Forbes? 4996 Can I do anything?
4996Can I drive you anywhere? 4996 Can that thing be operated only from the ground?"
4996Can you do it now?
4996Can you take a hand in the game? 4996 Can you tell me where I can find Mr. Forbes at once?"
4996Could n''t we contrive matters so that if the pistol were fired it need not necessarily inflict a fatal wound?
4996Dad, dear,she complained,"why did n''t you give me your confidence?
4996Dad,she said, with a charming smile in which there was just a hint of a pout,"are n''t you coming home with me?"
4996Did I give way like that?
4996Did Wong Li Fu recognize you?
4996Did n''t I drag the Chinese aspect of the crime out of him with pincers?
4996Did n''t you explain matters?
4996Did the police officers supply any theory of motive for the crime? 4996 Did you fly?"
4996Did you happen to see that car waiting near the house I came from?
4996Did you notice the number of the house?
4996Did you now?
4996Did you see or meet any one in particular while your car approached these mansions, or when you ascended the stairs?
4996Did you tell the police?
4996Do I look it?
4996Do I really resemble a Romney? 4996 Do n''t you smoke?"
4996Do n''t you think you ought to call in a doctor?
4996Do you expect him to arrive soon? 4996 Do you know where he is?"
4996Do you mean detectives from Scotland Yard?
4996Do you mean it is one of the cars which these men use?
4996Do you mean that I am to parley with these ruffians?
4996Do you mean that she is dead?
4996Do you-- know the lady? 4996 First, is Mrs. Forbes there, too?"
4996Had he a scar down the left side of his face?
4996Has Mr. Furneaux used the telephone, or did any one ring up?
4996Has Theydon gone to Fortescue Square?
4996Has everybody suddenly gone mad?
4996Has something unforeseen happened? 4996 Have the police yet obtained any real clew as to the whereabouts of the gang''s headquarters?
4996Have the-- er-- enemy made off in a car?
4996Have you had any news of Mr. Forbes, sir?
4996Have you informed Scotland Yard?
4996Have you invited Miss Beale to reside with you while she is in London, Sis?
4996Have you left the doors open?
4996Have you no friends in London?
4996Have you traveled from Oxford this morning?
4996He knew what hotel you were making for?
4996He knows that my visits to the Chinese Embassy are few and far between and generally have to do with-- but what is it now? 4996 He will turn up-- an American, is n''t he?
4996Heaven help me, why do you ask that?
4996How can I be sure? 4996 How can I?"
4996How did you know?
4996How do you know that?
4996How do you know,he gasped,"that I received an ivory skull this morning?
4996How long will it be before London wakes up to the knowledge of what is going on in its midst?
4996How on earth do you know I looked out?
4996How was I to deduce the true nature of these hell hounds''mission from a casual glance vouchsafed of one who may or may not be their leader?
4996I have not the excuse of the Canaletto,he said, compelling a pleasant smile,"but may I plead an even more distracting vision?
4996I regard you as a clever man, Mr. Furneaux, so may I remind you that this is neither the time nor the place for a display of gross humor?
4996I think we see now at least one method whereby the man who killed Mrs. Lester could have entered the flat without her knowledge?
4996I wonder whether Wong Li Fu is aware I have been liberated?
4996I?
4996If I agree, what time do you propose going there?
4996If the message has not come direct from Mrs. Forbes may it not be rather exaggerated in tone? 4996 If you did n''t send, who did?"
4996If you died, what would become of the two millions?
4996In Heaven''s name, how do you know anything of any letter?
4996In a side- car?
4996In a word,he said, at last,"you are Mrs. Lester''s next- of- kin and probably her heiress?"
4996Is George absent?
4996Is Miss Forbes a nice girl to talk to? 4996 Is Mr. Forbes in?"
4996Is any one justified in tryin''to get in here an''cut our throats while we''re asleep, sir?
4996Is it a personal matter?
4996Is it addressed to you personally?
4996Is n''t he at his office, sir?
4996Is n''t that in the far north of Scotland?
4996Is n''t that some sort of incense used by Chinese in their temples?
4996Is that all you know about it?
4996Is that the man who came with you from London?
4996Is that the meaning of the little ivory skull which my father received at breakfast this morning?
4996Is that why you covered up your tracks, even in this hotel, before you came to my room?
4996Is that you, Tomlinson?
4996Is that your telephone number?
4996Is there a detective or constable on duty there now?
4996Is there anything in the newspapers? 4996 Is there anything really impossible?
4996Is your name Wong Li Fu?
4996It''s rather odd, is it not, that nothing has been heard from him or his gang if I was to be held a prisoner in order to extort terms?
4996Japanese, you say? 4996 Japanese, you say?"
4996May I answer, Miss Forbes?
4996May I not make the acquaintance of these people? 4996 May I share the joke?"
4996May I take it that the car has not been dogging me by your instructions?
4996Meanwhile, are you and Miss Forbes going to the hotel?
4996Meanwhile, wo n''t you be seated? 4996 Mine?"
4996More bullets?
4996Mr. Forbes? 4996 Mrs. Forbes is quite well, I hope?"
4996Mrs. Lester had lived in China, then?
4996Need we remain here? 4996 No one hurt, and no one arrested?"
4996No one was injured, you say?
4996Now will you be good and tell me why Dad should receive a little ivory skull by this morning''s post?
4996Now, Theydon,he said, coming back to the sitting room,"what about that key?"
4996O, you''ve got one, then?
4996Oh, dash it all, what business is it of mine, anyhow?
4996Oh, mother,laughed Evelyn nervously,"you are not anticipating more horrors, are you?"
4996On suspicion of what crime?
4996Perhaps he has forgotten the name?
4996Please, may I look at the Canaletto which indirectly waylaid me?
4996Quite certain about that?
4996Say, can you boys eat a line? 4996 Seemed?"
4996Sensational?
4996Shall I wait up for you?
4996Singular thing, is n''t it?
4996Smell it?
4996So you''re still on the map?
4996So, while Mrs. Lester was being killed, the key of her flat was actually in your possession?
4996Surely not?
4996That you, Theydon?
4996That you, Tomlinson?
4996That''s hardly a fair question, is it?
4996The what?
4996Then it would seem that she resolved to come to me at Iffley as the result of something he told her?
4996Then you just invented the comparison as an excuse for colliding with the chair?
4996Then, if your surprise was so successful, what caused the fire?
4996There was only one man, then?
4996Was I not your guest? 4996 Was that all?"
4996Was the car empty? 4996 Was the detective a man named Furneaux?"
4996Well, a cup of tea, then? 4996 Well, what is it now?"
4996Well?
4996Well?
4996Were the ladies very much frightened?
4996Were there seventeen in the gang, all told?
4996Were you a sergeant at the time of the Surrey Bank robbery?
4996Were you at Daly''s Theater last night?
4996Were you delayed? 4996 What Chinese business, Bates?"
4996What can have become of that American?
4996What car? 4996 What did I tell you?"
4996What did the chief inspector mean when he said you refused to help him at first?
4996What do you mean?
4996What do you mean?
4996What do you mean?
4996What do you owe for?
4996What do you say?
4996What else can we do? 4996 What fiendish trick have you played on those wretches penned up inside there?
4996What have I to fear?
4996What in the world have the newspapers to say about me?
4996What in the world should each of us have thought if we had both been bound and gagged in that car?
4996What is it now?
4996What is it? 4996 What is the meaning of this?
4996What known facts?
4996What sort of accident?
4996What time does your train leave?
4996What time shall I call you, sir?
4996What was Mr. Lester''s business, or profession?
4996What will you do? 4996 What''s your name?"
4996What''s your telephone number?
4996What? 4996 Where are you staying?"
4996Where do you get your coffee?
4996Where is it? 4996 Where was the body found?"
4996Which place are you going?
4996Which way was he heading?
4996Who is it, please?
4996Who is it?
4996Who is speaking?
4996Who the devil are you, at any rate?
4996Who''s the toff who just left your lot?
4996Whose brainy idea was that-- yours or Bates''s?
4996Whose car is this?
4996Why a''gentleman''?
4996Why are we, your friends, to be arrested?
4996Why are you mixed up in this dreadful business? 4996 Why did n''t I jump in after Forbes?
4996Why did you hide your knowledge of Mrs. Lester''s visitor from your man Bates?
4996Why did you tell me that Mr. Theydon was a serious scientific person?
4996Why do you ask that?
4996Why do you say that?
4996Why do you think that?
4996Why have you visited these two houses, and not 412? 4996 Why not go to him?
4996Why not? 4996 Why on earth did n''t you mention such an important fact to the detectives?"
4996Why should any Chinaman single out poor Mrs. Lester as a victim? 4996 Why should this crime, in particular, have worried my father?
4996Why wo n''t you be candid? 4996 Why, what''s up?"
4996Why? 4996 Why?"
4996Why?
4996Why?
4996Why?
4996Why?
4996Why?
4996Why?
4996Why?
4996Will others go there-- friends of yours, I mean?
4996Will you ask Mr. Forbes if I am to turn up in time for afternoon tea? 4996 Will you be good enough, then, to set her to work?
4996Wo n''t you have a cigar?
4996Wo n''t you sit down?
4996Wo n''t you take us with you?
4996Would you care to have a word with Miss Evelyn, sir?
4996Would you mind if I just rang him up on the telephone? 4996 Would you recognize him if you saw him again?"
4996Yes, what of her?
4996Yet you treated your discovery as serious enough to warrant a prompt visit to the woman with whom association was dangerous?
4996You believe that the airship might develop along the unemotional lines of the parcel post?
4996You do n''t know, then, that a murder was committed in the Innesmore Mansions last night or early this morning?
4996You do not wish to fail, no? 4996 You had been to a theater?"
4996You have nothing more to tell us?
4996You have seen the-- the detectives in the meantime?
4996You just contrived to pick him up, and used him as an excuse for coming to Eastbourne? 4996 You mean they are anxious to find out what we are doing?"
4996You remember Dr. Johnson''s dictum:''Claret is the liquor for boys; port for men; but he who aspires to be a hero must drink brandy''? 4996 You see what I''m driving at, then?"
4996You soon got rid of your friend, then?
4996You think that some one had the impudence to follow us, watch us in Waterloo, and take up Theydon''s trail when we had revealed it?
4996You told him, I suppose, that Scotland Yard was worrying you, and he wants to know the result?
4996You''re ready to listen, eh? 4996 You''ve seen Wong Li Fu, and would know him again?"
4996You, Mollie?
4996You?
4996Your informant was not mistaken about the Chinese Embassy, I suppose?
499611 Fortescue Square, have thought of his master if told that Mrs. Lester''s last known visitor was James Creighton Forbes?
499617 Innesmore Mansions is dead-- has been murdered?"
499617 on the night of the murder?
499617?"
499617?"
4996412?"
4996After a slight pause, an agitated voice said:"Is that you, Evelyn?"
4996Ah, that touches you, does it?
4996And the railway tickets-- first- class, of course?"
4996And then his blood ran cold, because Forbes was saying:"Are you leaving us because of anything Evelyn has said or done?"
4996And what do we gain by waiting here any longer?
4996And what of the ivory skull?
4996And what would be the outcome?
4996And why did he try to force me into the car?"
4996And why should I strive to help it, anyhow?
4996And why should any car pursue you?
4996And why should he adopt the first of these alternatives?
4996And you wore an overcoat, which you removed on entering your hall?"
4996And, if you make an exception of Theydon, why are you doing it?"
4996And, wretched doubt, was she already the promised bride of another man?
4996Any orders for the morning?"
4996Anyhow, we held the thug dead easy, but did n''t press him any, as I had no call to butt in, had I?"
4996Anyhow, what was the man to do?
4996Anything fresh in that telephone talk?"
4996Anything new or interesting during my absence?"
4996Are these Chinamen likely to show fight?"
4996Are you a Frenchman, may I ask?"
4996Are you aware that the newspapers will get on our track now?
4996Are you worried about things?
4996Are your affairs in the hands of any firm of solicitors?"
4996Both?
4996But am I not right?"
4996But before you go wo n''t you enlighten me somewhat?
4996But do n''t you see the diabolical cleverness of the scheme?
4996But he schooled himself to say, with a semblance of calm interest:"What exactly do you mean, Miss Forbes?"
4996But what is it?"
4996But why this din of war, this smoke of arsenals, this marching and drilling of the world''s youth?
4996But why, in the name of humanity, should every such development of man''s almost immeasurable resources be dedicated to warlike purposes?
4996But will they own up if they do?
4996But, are you sure of what you are saying?
4996But, for Heaven''s sake, what is this you tell me about my wife?"
4996By the way, is that the latest thing in hats?
4996By the way, was any one looking after Mrs. Lester''s interests?
4996By the way, what is your name?"
4996By the way, where is the motor cyclist-- what is his name?"
4996Callous and calculating demon, is n''t he?"
4996Can I do anything?"
4996Can I give him a message?"
4996Can I give you a lift?"
4996Can you ascertain for certain?"
4996Can you be home by eleven?"
4996Can you give us the exact hour when you returned home?"
4996Can you?
4996Come now, Mr. Theydon, I think you''ve caught on to my scheme-- will you help?"
4996Could George assist if he were here?"
4996Could that pretty girl''s father, by any chance, be coming to visit him?
4996Croydon?"
4996Did Furneaux get hold of Forbes?"
4996Did it call for some one at the Embassy?"
4996Did my daughter tell you?"
4996Did n''t I make that clear?
4996Did n''t Mrs. Lester''s servant admit the visitor last night?"
4996Did n''t that horrid man knock you down?"
4996Did n''t the letter you received this morning tell you something of the sort?"
4996Did n''t you hear the hum of the engine as it went by?"
4996Did the crime possess a political significance?
4996Did you know who that man was?
4996Did you notice that?"
4996Did you see him?"
4996Did you see the driver and occupants?
4996Did you speak to Macdonald?"
4996Did you take a cab?"
4996Did you?
4996Do n''t you see the instant result of a war- limiting ordinance of the kind I advocate?
4996Do you believe they want China to wake up and organize before they''re ready to take hold?
4996Do you imagine that he killed Mrs. Lester?
4996Do you mean that they are stupefied?"
4996Do you mean that you were followed on leaving my house?"
4996Do you now vouch for it that the man was completely unknown to you?"
4996Do you recognize my voice?"
4996Do you regard him as the sort of man who would rush off in a panic to consult the Home Secretary without very grave and weighty reasons?"
4996Do you understand?"
4996Does n''t a pretty girl live there?"
4996Does n''t that opinion conflict with the known facts?"
4996Doris, is it, or Phyllis?
4996Eh, what''s that?
4996For whose benefit?
4996Forbes?"
4996Forbes?"
4996Good Lord, man, what do you mean?"
4996Got all that?"
4996Got that?"
4996Great heavens, are not these enough, without having our ears deafened by powder and drumming?
4996Had he, or had he not?
4996Handyside?"
4996Handyside?"
4996Have you been to my house?
4996Have you ever met her?"
4996Have you ever really seen Romney''s portrait of Lady Hamilton as Joan of Arc?"
4996Have you met Miss Beale?"
4996Have you seen his daughter?"
4996Have you seen the evening papers?
4996His tone seemed to annoy Furneaux, who broke in:"Do n''t you write novels?"
4996How about a square meal?
4996How about a wrap for you, Miss Forbes?
4996How can I have any guarantee that you and this other gentleman may not be his next victims?
4996How did such an extraordinary topic crop up?"
4996How did you come to know that my father was acquainted with Mrs. Lester?
4996How did you know it was a man?
4996How had they got there?
4996How many days''journey are you from the center of the city?"
4996How much did you promise the taxi- man?"
4996How much money did you provide for the revolutionaries?"
4996How much would you have paid, Jim?"
4996How often has impulse led me to the goal when by every known rule of evidence I was completely beaten?
4996How reconcile an immediate call on Scotland Yard with the guarantee of secrecy demanded by Forbes?
4996How was she killed?"
4996How would this be?
4996I have your positive assurance, too, that you are not exposing your own life in any way?"
4996I said half- a- crown, did n''t I?
4996I suppose I shall be wanted at the inquest?"
4996I suppose you know what that means?
4996I tried hard to baffle the detectives--""Again I ask''Why?''"
4996I wonder what the deuce Furneaux saw or heard?"
4996I would help you if I could--""Why?"
4996I''ll bet you sixpence nothing was said at the inquest concerning Chinamen?"
4996I''ll find the number in the directory, of course?...
4996I--""What do you imply by that remark?"
4996If Evelyn Forbes-- or, let me see, is it Phyllis or Doris?
4996If Furneaux had expressed himself differently-- if, for instance, he had said:"Had you ever before seen the man?"
4996If it held some member of the Embassy staff, why had no more been heard of it?
4996If not, why not now?
4996If some one said that of you to your husband, what would he do?"
4996If there were no Evelyn, or if Evelyn were harelipped and squinted, you would n''t hesitate a second-- now, would you?"
4996If you wish to examine Mrs. Lester''s flat why not seek the permission of Scotland Yard?"
4996In his distress he was prepared to hear Winter or that little satyr, Furneaux, say mockingly:"Why are you trying to screen James Creighton Forbes?
4996In the first place, is Mrs. Lester''s flat in charge of the police?"
4996Is it like that?
4996Is it likely that such an insignificant object as a chair, and a small one at that, would succeed in catching my eye?"
4996Is it true that my niece was absolutely alone in her flat on Monday night?"
4996Is it true?"
4996Is n''t it more than certain that he has plenty of determined helpers?
4996Is that all?"
4996Is that the lady''s name?
4996Is there any place in London where they know what a planked steak is?"
4996Is there room for two?"
4996It is quite agreed,"he went on, addressing the Chinaman again,"that I have full liberty of action in so far as preliminary arrangements are concerned?
4996It touched you, too, did it?"
4996Lester?"
4996Lester?"
4996Lester?"
4996May I ask your name?
4996May I come with you?"
4996May I see it?"
4996May we come in your carriage?
4996Miss Beale?"
4996Mrs. Forbes would have risen, but was restrained by the girl''s emphatic cry:"Mother, why wo n''t you behave like an obedient invalid?"
4996My sister?"
4996Now that we have reached more intimate terms, can you help by describing this stranger?"
4996Now, about last night?
4996Now, how in the name of goodness could I possibly entertain any notion of marrying the only daughter of a man in Forbes''s position?"
4996Now, how''s this for a proposition?
4996Now, what''s the next item on the program?"
4996Number Seventeen BY Louis Tracy 1915 CHAPTER I THE OUTCOME OF ARTISTIC CURIOSITY"Taxi, sir?
4996Of what avail will it be if this fellow, Wong Li Fu, is laid by the heels?
4996One more word-- have you heard anything of Furneaux?"
4996Or shall I try and reach him at Fortescue Square?"
4996Otherwise--"You wish you had the murderer here now?"
4996Paxton?"
4996Shall I get you something, sir?"
4996Shall I return, and strengthen your guard?"
4996Shall I wire an apology to the man I''m dining with?"
4996Shall we have some tea?
4996She kem here about an hour ago--""Who?
4996Should he, or should he not, tell the girl''s father of the rather indiscreet admissions she had made during their brief talk that morning?
4996Should one leave her alone or endeavor to soothe her?
4996Should she be given water or a stimulant?
4996Suppose we concoct an advertisement for the Times?"
4996Surely she had dealings with a bank or an agency?"
4996Surround the house with policemen, break in the doors, and fight?
4996That poor lady''s flat is next door to yours, is it not?"
4996That sort of behavior does n''t help at all-- does it?...
4996The gentleman you were dining with?"
4996The ways of the Oriental were not his ways, but a bargain was a bargain, so what more could be said?
4996There is n''t a Dr. Sinnett in Eastbourne at this date, but how was I to know that?
4996Theydon-- do you believe in that detective?
4996Theydon?"
4996Theydon?"
4996Theydon?"
4996Theydon?"
4996Theydon?"
4996Theydon?"
4996Theydon?"
4996This Miss Forbes-- by the way, what is her Christian name?"
4996Want a bet?"
4996Was he not bringing himself practically within the law?
4996Was he only assuming the fact, or have there been developments at Croydon?"
4996Was his hopeless admiration for Evelyn Forbes so patent that a sharp- eyed stranger could discern it after a brief hour in their company?
4996Was it placed over her heart?"
4996Was the Far East bound up in some mysterious way with Mrs. Lester''s death?
4996Was this poor woman killed for the sake of her few trinkets?"
4996Were they active allies of Scotland Yard or did they hold what is known in the law courts as a watching brief?
4996What can we do?
4996What did really happen?
4996What did you make of that?"
4996What do you say if we give a look along the front?
4996What else could I do?
4996What good purpose do you serve by holding forth these vague terrors?
4996What had become of him?
4996What is he to you?
4996What is of greater importance than the food we eat and the liquors we drink?
4996What is your favorite liqueur-- or shall we tell Tomlinson to send along that decanter of port?
4996What matter his fame or social rank?
4996What of her?"
4996What of the other fellow who was caught near Innesmore Mansions?"
4996What type of car was it?
4996What''s its number?"
4996When did you become acquainted with this Mr. Forbes?
4996When have you, ever before, admitted an outsider to your councils?
4996When?"
4996Where are you speaking from?
4996Where is it?
4996Where''s this place, Eastbourne?
4996Whether once or twice, why did you do it?"
4996Which one?"
4996Who more likely than he, I argued, to be a leading spirit among the Young Manchus?
4996Who was killed?"
4996Who would have expected this downpour after such a fine day?"
4996Who''s Handyside-- a mere acquaintance?"
4996Why are you constantly meeting detectives?
4996Why did you rush off to Eastbourne yesterday?
4996Why did you seem, at one time, to be taking sides with my father against a public inquiry by the police?"
4996Why do you mention Japanese?"
4996Why do you remain here, man?
4996Why not dine with us tonight?"
4996Why should Evelyn Forbes want speech with him at that early hour?
4996Why should he dream of fanning into a fiercer fury the flame of his love?
4996Why should you be so perturbed when I mention the Chinese Embassy?"
4996Why the deuce, then, ca n''t you mouth your incantations?
4996Why?
4996Why?"
4996Will you come, quick?"
4996Will you come?"
4996Will you go as quickly as possible to the chief police station at Croydon?
4996Will you hand in these three messages at the telegraph office?
4996Winter?"
4996Wo n''t you let me into the secret?
4996Wo n''t you let me order an egg?"
4996Would he have gagged me and taken me away to some lonely place, where I would be kept a prisoner, or even killed?"
4996Would n''t it be a reasonable thing if we drove a couple of screws into that door tonight?"
4996Would you mind telling me what happened at one o''clock, when my colleague, Mr. Furneaux, jumped on to your car and went in pursuit of some one?"
4996Yesterday it was an old woman, today a dictator, tomorrow the mob; who can foretell what shape the lava erupted from a volcano will take?
4996Yet why did he fail to turn up at the station?
4996Yet, what did it avail?
4996You all appreciate the fact, of course, that I knew nothing whatever of any quarrel between my husband and a faction in China?"
4996You follow me?"
4996You heard about those ivory skulls yesterday?"
4996You heard the conversation on the telephone?"
4996You remember that Ann Rogers, Mrs. Lester''s maid, was called away by a telegram saying that her father was ill?"
4996You see that, do n''t you?"
4996You think I am adopting some of the methods of the French_ juge d''instruction_, eh?"
4996You understand?
4996You vaunt the prowess of your department-- why are you not scouring every haunt of Chinamen in the East End?
4996You want to be sure that Wong Li Fu''s evil deeds shall be stopped?
4996You''re pleased, are n''t you?
4996You''ve seen no Chinamen, I supposed?"
4996he said;"that is, unless Miss Forbes has any objection?"
4996or"Have you now any reason for believing that you know his name?"
9502A heresy?--and pray how is it named?
9502Alluded to in the stanzas?
9502And Monsieur is so simple as to believe him?
9502And are they here, in the Belle Étoile?
9502And is he poor?
9502And is that rule in force still?
9502And may I inquire between what powers, and on what particular quarrel?
9502And nothing heard since of the epic poet?
9502And pray what is that?
9502And she?
9502And that particular?
9502And the lady?
9502And what do you think of the Dragon Volant?
9502And what prevents my reaching it?
9502And what prevents?
9502And where do you mean to go?
9502And where is Monsieur Picard?
9502And who is he?
9502And you think one friend enough?
9502But quite long enough, I fancy, to recognize him?
9502But who are they? 9502 But you are her friend?"
9502By my own good star, and hers-- or shall I call it our''belle étoile?'' 9502 By whom?"
9502Can I be of any use in this matter?
9502Can you give me a bottle of really good Burgundy?
9502Can you repeat them?
9502Can you tell me where they live?
9502Could you describe that room?
9502Did I not see you examining the panel of that carriage at the same time that I did so, this evening? 9502 Did the people die, or were they actually spirited away?"
9502Do you see much of him in this part of the world?
9502Does anyone love me?
9502Does my wife love me?
9502Does she wish to see me?
9502Enough?
9502First, say have you really thought of her, more than once, since the adventure of the Belle Étoile?
9502From what I have heard, however, I should think he can not be very poor?
9502Had you not better go now, Monsieur, and rejoin your friend?
9502Has he been often here?
9502Has he been suspected at any time of being out of his mind?
9502Has he no conscience? 9502 Has he not a daughter?"
9502Have you secured rooms in either of the hotels of Versailles?
9502Have you seen anything-- anything to disturb you, dear Richard? 9502 He is old, I believe?"
9502How can I find a way?
9502How long ago, exactly? 9502 How long have they been away?"
9502How long will that love last?
9502How much did you give him?
9502How, Monsieur?
9502How?
9502I always thought she was a little too--_a great deal_ too--"Too_ what_, Monsieur?
9502I have not got it; how could I? 9502 I mean the body?"
9502I should say, perhaps, a pity that its proprietor is not more wealthy?
9502I will cut his cock''s- comb for him,he ejaculated with an oath and a grin; and in a softer tone he asked,"Where is she?"
9502I will not meet you here; but you see a red light in the window of the tower at that angle of the château?
9502If he were to die the evaporation would be arrested, and foreign matter, some of it poisonous, would be found in the stomach, do n''t you see? 9502 In the hot coffee?"
9502Is he perfectly in his right mind?
9502Is it true,said the Count, changing the conversation peremptorily,"that there has been a battle in Naples?"
9502Is there room for another friend?
9502Money?
9502Much or little?
9502Old? 9502 Seen him?
9502Then his carriage, and horses, and servants, are at the château?
9502Then they are very happy?
9502There is nothing on earth-- I do n''t know what you mean,I answered,"and why should you care about me?"
9502They are poor, I think you said?
9502This is, probably, your first visit to France?
9502Was it not unnecessary to bring so much, seeing all these?
9502Well, I can, I suppose, have some rooms, any, I do n''t care in what part of the house?
9502Well, St. Clair, tell me this moment who the lady is?
9502Well, doctor, what do you think?
9502Well, my dear Eugenie? 9502 What am I to do?"
9502What apology can I offer to Monsieur the Mar---- to Monsieur Droqville? 9502 What causes her unhappiness?"
9502What do I most long for?
9502What do you mean, St. Clair? 9502 What do you mean?
9502What does Monsieur the Colonel mean?
9502What is a fellow to think?
9502What is my religion?
9502What is that?
9502What is this?
9502What stay do they make?
9502Where is she?
9502Who, he and his wife?
9502Whom do I love best in the world?
9502Why should I not?
9502Will Monsieur the Colonel try a glass?
9502Will that satisfy him?
9502Will you both do a very good- natured thing, and come and dine with me at the Dragon Volant tomorrow?
9502With whom were you walking, just now?
9502Yes; but I fancy we may say something more? 9502 You are rich, then?
9502You call me Richard, by what name am I to call my beautiful divinity?
9502You have got a bed?
9502You have then here this great sum-- are you certain; have you counted it?
9502You leave France, I suppose?
9502You will admit, then, that my hand is as beautiful as hers?
9502You will be at the place I have described, then, at two o''clock?
9502You wo n''t tell a friend, eh?
9502_ Garçon_,said I,"do you happen to know who that officer is?"
9502_ Must_ I promise?
9502_ Perhaps_?
9502After half- a- dozen questions and answers, he asked:"Whom do I pursue at present?"
9502Alyre?"
9502Am I forgiven?"
9502Am I loved in return?"
9502And what are they?"
9502And will Monsieur Beckett be good enough to say why not?
9502And yet, in the sight of angels, are we any wiser as we grow older?
9502Another ten thousand francs: is it down?
9502Are his night- shirt and night- cap-- you understand-- here?"
9502Are you ready to undertake all this for my sake?"
9502But the Count de St. Alyre is a good man?"
9502But was there not greater danger in attempting to communicate?
9502But what was your motive in mortifying a lady?"
9502But who is quite perfect?
9502But with an ally so clever and courageous as my beautiful Countess, could any such misadventure befall?
9502But, putting myself out of the question, do I love anything on earth better than my wife?"
9502But, this accomplished, how were we to get on?
9502Can I aid the Countess in her unequal struggle?
9502Can you tell me who arrived in it?"
9502Cautiously, therefore, I inquired,"What Countess?"
9502Could he possibly be induced to wait till morning?
9502Did he ever experience a return of it?"
9502Did some danger threaten?
9502Do n''t you think I know him?
9502Do they quarrel?"
9502Good wine here?"
9502Had anything gone suddenly wrong?
9502Had he actually gone?
9502Had not her husband, for such I assumed him to be, thanked me quite enough and for both?
9502Have I said enough?"
9502Have you been out of this room?"
9502Have you-- have you really kept the rose I gave you, as we parted?
9502He asked me if I were not Mr. Beckett?
9502Here were a pair of double- barreled pistols, four lives in my hands?
9502How could that be?"
9502How on earth was I to dispose of the remainder of the day?
9502How shall we recognize one another?
9502How was I to answer?
9502How was I to dispose of that interval?
9502How would this end?
9502I have pencil and pocket- book-- but-- where''s the key?
9502I hesitated for a moment; but how could she possibly tell?
9502I observed, pointing to the shield on the door,"and no doubt indicates a distinguished family?"
9502I thought we were in a luminous atmosphere, wherever a certain Countess moved?"
9502I was plainly to wait; but for how long?
9502In any case, could malignant fortune have posted, at this place and hour, a more dangerous watcher?
9502Is he not a certain Marquis?"
9502Is it wonderful, then, that I should falter in my belief?
9502Is it written?
9502Is not that enough?
9502Is one of them a sleeping apartment?"
9502Is she not beautiful?"
9502Is the Count at home?"
9502Is there so little light in these rooms, Monsieur, that a poor glowworm can show so brightly?
9502Is truth any longer to be found on earth?"
9502It is, of course, the venerable peer, and not the young lady who accompanies him, that interests me-- you understand?
9502It was very provoking, but what was to be done?
9502Jack Nuffles-- I met him here tonight-- says they are gypsies-- where are they, I wonder?
9502Monsieur Beckett will permit me, I hope, to place his name among those of my friends?"
9502Not know him at a glance?
9502One pretty little foot appeared, and could anything be more exquisite than her hand?
9502Or-- or--_what?_""It is_ that_!"
9502Pierre de St. Amand?
9502Pocket- book?
9502Really?
9502Shall I begin,_ mon sorcier_, without further loss of time, to question you?"
9502Shall I ever forget the heroic tableau of the hall of the Belle Étoile?
9502Shall I hold the candle for you?"
9502She has attributes?"
9502Suppose you get a red cross a couple of inches long-- you''re an Englishman-- stitched or pinned on the breast of your domino, and I a white one?
9502Surely you know something more about him than his name?"
9502The first question the Count put, was:"Am I married, or unmarried?"
9502The gentleman with the cross of white ribbon on his breast?
9502The innkeeper met me in the hall, to ask whether I should want a vehicle to Paris?
9502The man''s beastly drunk-- he''s sulking-- he could talk if he liked-- who cares?
9502Then I suppose I am a polytheist, and love a great many?"
9502Two?
9502Was I in a fit?
9502Was ever_ contretemps_ so unlucky?"
9502Was it actual death?
9502Was it just possible that, for once, the Count and Countess would take their chairs at the table- d''hôte?
9502Was she, as we say in England, hoaxing me?
9502Well, child-- eh?
9502Well, it all goes admirably?"
9502Well, who are they?"
9502What are we to do?
9502What can I say, or do, in this unfortunate situation?
9502What could possibly happen?
9502What did the beldame mean by saying,"Keep your secret, and I''ll keep mine?"
9502What is it?
9502What is it?
9502What room do you occupy in the Dragon Volant?"
9502When did it commence?"
9502Where''s the key?"
9502Which are Monsieur Droqville''s apartments?"
9502Who is that in the palanquin?
9502Who was the gentleman?
9502Whose clothes are these?"
9502Why did they not dispatch me at once?
9502Why did you not tell him to get it in smaller notes?
9502Why do I pursue them?"
9502Why had her very voice become changed?
9502Why had there come that dark look in her eyes?
9502Why need this lady have thanked me?
9502Why was she pale?
9502Will Monsieur try my snuff?"
9502Will you come here again tomorrow night, at a quarter past eleven?
9502Would I have receded?
9502You are certain you did not exceed_ seventy_?"
9502You are quite sure?"
9502You do n''t know me?"
9502You do n''t suspect the people of the house?"
9502You go on towards Paris, I suppose, in the morning?"
9502You have never seen her?"
9502You have not come here, of course, without introductions?"
9502You observe all this, Monsieur?"
9502You see?"
9502_ Can_ I aid her?"
9502_ Revenants_?
9502_ Revenants_?"
9502all that money?"
9502and what do they quarrel about?"
9502are you ill?
9502do n''t you know me?"
9502he exclaimed,"the miscreant did not get at my box- box?"
9502shall we ever be better acquainted?"
9502then mine is better?"
9502then you''ve seen him?"
9502what is the matter?"
9502who is here?"
4961?
4961A picnic picnic? 4961 Ai n''t_ here?_""No.
4961And I''m a perfect beauty, too, are n''t I?
4961And could we get some special stuff to eat?
4961And did you note who used it?
4961And how do you place Nietzsche?
4961And leave me here in the darknesses and wetnesses? 4961 And you did mind it, did n''t you?"
4961Back already, Mist''Wrenn? 4961 Billy-- was it something serious, the telegram?"
4961But do n''t you think he''d say,` when it''s convenient to you, sir''?
4961But how many kinds of tea_ are_ there, Istra?... 4961 But why did I swipe it?"
4961But would n''t you rather wait till to- morrow?
4961But you--?
4961But, anyway, you will let me play with you here in New York as much as I can? 4961 But-- what are you to do now about Oxford?
4961Co''se you''ll keep your room if you do, Mist''Wrenn?
4961Could a lady go there?
4961Dear child, you''ve missed so much of the tea and cakes of life, have n''t you? 4961 Did n''t like it much, eh, Bill?
4961Did n''t, eh? 4961 Did the janitress get the coal put in, Nell?"
4961Do n''t you wish your little friend Horatio Hood Teddem was here to play with you?
4961Do n''t you_ see?_ We must do something. 4961 Do you dine there often?"
4961Do you-- Are you all right?
4961For a party high tea? 4961 Get to London?"
4961Glad to be off at last, ai n''t you?
4961Go out to the areoplane meet?
4961Gogie-- square? 4961 Got a date for dinner this evening, Morty?"
4961Hard work?
4961Have I been so very grouchy, Mouse? 4961 Have I?"
4961Have a good trip?
4961Have n''t they taught you that?
4961Have n''t you always been lots of-- oh, have n''t you always''magined lots?
4961Here--Say, what do you think would be a good way for the secretary to tell the crowd that the other guy is the president?
4961Hey, Poicy, did yuh bring your dictionary?
4961Honestly? 4961 How about Twenty- eighth and Sixth Avenue?"
4961How about the place where you''re living? 4961 How do yuh like de fog- horn, Wrennie?"
4961How''d you happen to get back so soon?
4961I guess_ I_ draw two boxes, too, eh? 4961 I say, I wonder did you ever meet him?
4961If I heard him say you were crazy--"Would you beat him for me?
4961If she was a man?
4961It is beautiful, is n''t it? 4961 It is good to get back after all, and-- Mouse dear, I know you wo n''t mind finding me a place to live the next few days, will you?"
4961It simply ca n''t be, that''s all.... Did you curl me up? 4961 Keep house?"
4961Land?
4961Leland Stanford? 4961 Like it?
4961Like to smash windows? 4961 Little meat- pies?"
4961Little_ crispy_ ones? 4961 Lonely, eh?"
4961Look here; can I see somebody in authority or not?
4961Me, Miss Nelly? 4961 Me?
4961Me?
4961Missed you--"Did you think of me after you came here? 4961 Mrs. Zapp?
4961My room occupied yet?
4961No, I--"Well.... Oh, say, how''s the grub in London? 4961 No, but-- oh, there ai n''t any use of our-- of me being--_ Is_ there?"
4961Now what would you think? 4961 Now will you kindly''low_ me_ to talk a little, Wrenn?
4961Now, Charley,he said, cheerfully,"your bat''s over, ai n''t it, old man?"
4961Now, did n''t I tell you to call me` Miss Theresa''? 4961 Now, how can I tell, my boy?
4961Of course you know he''s a great man, however?
4961Oh yes, I--"Ever been married?
4961Oh yes-- uh-- let me see now; he''s-- uh--"Why, you remember, do n''t you? 4961 Oh yes.... How is it you are n''t out sight- seeing?
4961Oh, I will; indeed I will--"Did he spring any of this fairy tale just now?
4961Oh, listen, Mr. Wrenn; did you ever tramp along the Palisades as far as Englewood? 4961 Oh, please do think it over, Morty, old man, wo n''t you?
4961Oh, they''re_ terrible!_ Ca n''t you_ see_ it? 4961 Oh, you are, are you?
4961Oh,she said, softly,"is it you?"
4961Oh-- oh-- y- you_ are_ English, then?
4961Oh.... Did she say she was going back to California soon?
4961Or Spain? 4961 Out of order?"
4961Out on the moors they would come down by you.... What is_ your_ adventure-- your formula for it?... 4961 Please, wo n''t you come to the picnic to- morrow?
4961Pretty easy, heh? 4961 Ready partner-- you, Wrenn?"
4961Really? 4961 Really?...
4961Say, Mr. Guilfogle, you say there''ll be-- when will there be likely to be an opening?
4961Say, d''yuh think you can run me? 4961 Say, old man, ca n''t we sleep in your hay just to- night?"
4961Say, what do you mean?
4961Second class? 4961 So you thought of me, eh?...
4961So? 4961 Suppose Istra wanted to make up, and came back to London?"
4961Tell me, Mouse dear, why do you like the people here? 4961 Tell me, did you ever have a fight?
4961Tell me, what do these people think about; at least, what do you talk about?
4961Tell me,she demanded;"_ are n''t_ they green?"
4961That''s why you have n''t wasted any time learning Five Hundred and things, is n''t it? 4961 The play_ is_ going well,_ is n''t_ it?"
4961Then what_ is_ worrying you?
4961This is Mr. Wrenn, is n''t it?
4961Trouble? 4961 Uh-- Mr.--Trubiggs, is it?"
4961Uh?
4961Uncle Henry?
4961Unk?
4961Waste his travel- money?
4961We''ll find a place this morning,_ n''est- ce pas?_ Not too expensive. 4961 Well, who do you think it--""Jack?"
4961Well, why do n''t you, then? 4961 What about the old girl with the ingrowing grouch?
4961What did you see in England?
4961What do-- oh, you know-- people in New York who do n''t go to parties or read much-- what do they do for amusement? 4961 What if I did?
4961What would you like?
4961What''d she do if she had to be on the job like Nelly?... 4961 What''s scouse?"
4961What''s the trouble? 4961 What''ve you got in sight in the job line?"
4961What, are you back so soon? 4961 When did you see me-- to make up the story?"
4961Which one do you play with? 4961 Who do you play with-- know?"
4961Who said` shut up''?
4961Who would know? 4961 Why do n''t you write it?"
4961Why not have three of us-- say me and you and Mrs. Arty-- talk the play, just like we was acting it?
4961Why should n''t you?
4961Why, it''s all right.... What was it about some novelty-- some article? 4961 Why, you''re the waiter at Pat Maloney''s, ai n''t you?"
4961Why-- uh--"What made you think I was French? 4961 Why--""Next Sunday?"
4961Will you come, Miss Nelly?
4961Wo n''t you come in?
4961Wonder when they''ll get the Grand Central done?
4961Wot you doing here?
4961Would you go on a picnic with me some day next spring?
4961Would you mind so ver- ee much skipping down to Bachmeyer''s for some? 4961 Yes, miss, but--""My good woman, do you realize that your` buts''are insulting?"
4961Yes, would n''t it?... 4961 Yes.... You''re a romanticist, then, I take it?"
4961You apologize, then?
4961You do n''t know any of the people here in the house?
4961You do n''t like England much, then?
4961You mean like the babes in the woods? 4961 You mean the secretary was the daughter''s husband all along, and he heard what the president said right there?"
4961You must have been learning to sass back real smart, in the Old Country, heh? 4961 You''ve never fed at a boarding- house, eh?"
4961You-- It''s better now? 4961 Yuh, I guess-- Now where''s the devil and his wife flew away to with my hat?
4961Yuh-- sure-- won''t you walk down a piece?
4961` Me?'' 4961 ` Nutty''?
4961''Bout six o''clock?"
4961''E ayn''t been giving you any of the perishin''''osses, too,''as''e?"
4961''E did, did''e?
4961( Hey, Drubel, got any lemon merang?
4961( Well, Rabin, what is it?
4961--just could n''t sleep nights at all.... Then I got on the job....""Let''s see, you''re still with that same company?"
4961A Salvationist in the crowd, trim and well set up, his red- ribboned Salvation Army cap at a jaunty angle, said,"Wo n''t you come in, brother?"
4961A club or a reading- room for hoboes?
4961About nine?
4961Ah- h, is it just fearful neglected when it comes home all tired out?"
4961All she said was:"Oh, will you pardon me if I speak of it now, Mrs. Ferrard, but would you mind letting me have my breakfast in my room to- morrow?
4961Am I forgiven?
4961Am I shocking you?
4961And I swiped the gold and went forth into the night?"
4961And ha''p''ny tea?
4961And if he did, would he have to go on holding his breath in terror for nine more days?
4961And my footsteps rang on the hollow flagstones?
4961And now we''re just friends, are n''t we?"
4961And now would he be discharged?
4961And please do n''t look me up in Paris, because it''s always better to end up an affair without explanations, do n''t you think?
4961And see how I''ve faked this figure?
4961And silent?
4961And some silverware?"
4961And to- night you''ll let me take you to a music- hall, wo n''t you?"
4961And what could he say about the people, anyway?
4961And what''d yuh think I answers her?"
4961And wo n''t those others be trying to get the job away from you?
4961And woggly pin- cushions?"
4961And you are reading history?
4961And you would n''t like that, would you, honey?"
4961And, say, what do you think?
4961Another day-- but why paint another day that was but a smear of flat dull slate?
4961Are n''t they ever done a- ringing and a- ringing?"
4961Are n''t you wet?"
4961Are you a Presbyterian, though?"
4961Are you broke?"
4961Are you going to be a caveman?"
4961Are you nice and drowned?"
4961Are you saved?"
4961Artists.... Do you have your lesson in Five Hundred tonight?
4961As he hesitatingly entered she warbled:"Need n''t both be so lonely all the time, after all, need we?
4961As they finished their floating custard Mr. Wrenn achieved,"Do you come from New York, Miss Croubel?"
4961As they sat on a park bench, smoking those most Anglican cigarettes,"Dainty Bits,"Mr. Wrenn begged:"What''s the matter, old man?"
4961At last he cursed himself,"Why do n''t you_ do_ something that''d count for her, and not sit around yammering for her like a fool?"
4961Aw, lemme_''lone_, will you?"
4961Awful black.... Say, gee, I ai n''t talking too nutty, am I?"
4961Back so soon?
4961Back so soon?
4961Be you a bill- collector?
4961Because you''ve been so busy reading and so on?"
4961Been away, uh?
4961Besides, what had he_ done?_ Just gone out walking with his English hotel acquaintance Istra!
4961Bid a little seven on hearts?
4961Bore, is n''t it, the day of landing?
4961Bring me a hunk, will yuh?)
4961But Charley interrupted,"Say, did you hear old Goglefogle light into me this morning?
4961But I bet you--""Who was the other girl?"
4961But Mr. Wrenn went out of the restaurant with his old friend, the fat man, saying to him quite as would a wit,"I guess we get stung, eh?"
4961But hones'', Nell, do you think I might have a chance to land the assistant''s job?"
4961But of course I expect more pay-- two men''s work--""Let''s see; what you getting now?"
4961But was Mr. Hargis rude to you?
4961But what do you think?
4961But what the dickens did"left-- cat-- follow suit"mean?
4961But where, where, dear dormouse, are the hatter and hare?
4961But you would n''t have Istra disappoint a nice Johnny after he''s bought him a cunnin''new weskit, would you?...
4961But-- just the same, would he really ever get to England alive?
4961Ca n''t bluff you, eh?"
4961Ca n''t you come over and meet me, Morty?"
4961Ca n''t you see how I feel about you?
4961Ca n''t you see now that they''re hideously out of drawing?"
4961Ca n''t you see your cattle- boat experience is realer than any of the things those half- baked thinkers have done?
4961Can I have no peace, tired as I am?
4961Can you come?"
4961Can you want anything more than that to damn them?
4961Charley stopped swashing about to sneer:"Li''l ministering angel, ai n''t you?
4961Cheaper than it is here?
4961Cloud?
4961D''yuh think I''m talking to give my throat exercise?"
4961Did I give you only five dollars?"
4961Did you get a chill?"
4961Did you sleep well, dear?"
4961Did you?
4961Do about Oxford?
4961Do n''t he make you think of_ kiosks_ and_ hyrems_ and stuff?
4961Do n''t it?"
4961Do n''t you ever collect people?
4961Do n''t you hate red hair?
4961Do n''t you notice how I''ve juggled with this stairway?
4961Do n''t you realize that I took you along to take care of me?"
4961Do n''t you remember when I was baseball captain?
4961Do n''t you see now?"
4961Do n''t you think he was, Nelly?"
4961Do n''t you understand, my dear?
4961Do n''t you want me to show you some of the buildings here?"
4961Do n''t you want our business any more?"
4961Do n''t you want to murder me?
4961Do n''t you want to stay here tonight?
4961Do n''t you want to?
4961Do n''t you wish you-- could know all about art and economics as we do?''
4961Do n''t you_ hate_ to have to be serious?
4961Do you know, when I think of the jaded Interesting People I''ve met-- Why do I leave you to be spoiled by some shop- girl in a flowered hat?
4961Do you understand?"
4961Do you-- uh-- drink-- drink much, I mean?"
4961Does n''t that khaki soak through?
4961Does she live here in New York?"
4961Drefful in love?"
4961Either of you chaps been in Minnesota?"
4961England sure is queen of the sea, heh?
4961Ever hear such nonsense?....
4961Exciting, eh?"
4961Expect me to make firms pay twice for the same order, cause of your carelessness?"
4961Fact, I must go up and primp now--""Do n''t you care a bit?"
4961For Jersey?
4961From the capstan, where he was still smoking, the head foreman muttered:"What''s the odds?
4961Funny, eh?"
4961G''night, old Wr--""Going to the ferry?
4961Going to be with us again?
4961Going to be with us?"
4961Got anything on for next Monday evening?"
4961Got ta do what I say, savvy?
4961Got to make an impression, see?"
4961Great place, those Minnesota Big--"What''s a shoe- pack?"
4961Had it something to do with printing stories?
4961Had n''t They made this trip ever so many times and never got killed?
4961Had n''t he the right to love Istra if he wanted to?
4961Hastily,"I mean with Miss Proudfoot and Mrs. Arty and me?"
4961Have you tried to find another job?"
4961Have you?"
4961He bawled upstairs to Nelly,"Come on down, Nelly, ca n''t you?
4961He blushed and bowed as if he had been called on for a speech, stumblingly arose, and said:"Uh-- uh-- uh-- you met Mrs. Ferrard, did n''t you, Istra?
4961He followed up his conversational advantage by leading the chorus in wondering,"which one of them two actors the heroine was married to?"
4961He had been careful; old Goglefogle was only barking; but why should_ he_ be barked at?
4961He had but a moment to reconnoiter, for she was astonishingly saying:"So you were lonely when I knocked?"
4961He hastened to claim a part in that world:"Say, Mr. Morton, I wonder if you''ve ever heard of a cattle- boat called the_ Merian?_""I-- Say!
4961He overheard:"Who is the remarkable new person with the orange tie and the rococo buckle on his jacket belt-- the one that just went through?
4961He put his head on one side, rubbed his chin with nice consideration, and condescended,"What would you suggest?"
4961He stood before the bars, peering in, and whenever no one else was about he murmured:"Poor fella, they wo n''t let you go, heh?
4961He tempted her without the slightest delay, muttering,"Let''s take a walk this evening?"
4961He was conscious that the whole world was leering at him, demanding"What''re_ you_ carrying a cane for?"
4961He was feeling rather resentful at everything, including Istra, as he finally knocked and heard her"Yes?
4961He was to live in this heaven; he was going to be away from that Zapp woman; and Nelly Croubel-- Was she engaged to some man?
4961He went to the Nickelorion and grasped the hand of the ticket- taker, the Brass- button Man, ejaculating:"How are you?
4961He winked at Tim, the weakling hatter, who took the cue and mourned:"I''m kinda afraid we''re going to, ai n''t you, Pete?
4961Heh?"
4961Her voice was hostile as she demanded:"What?
4961Him a wanderer?
4961His knees grew sick and old and quavery as he heard the landlady''s voice loud below- stairs:"Now wot do they want?
4961How about''em?"
4961How are you, Mouse dear?"
4961How did you get going like this?"
4961How do you mean about` Interesting People''?"
4961How many kinds of tea are there?"
4961How much ahead of time to telephone the motto- printer that"we''ve simply got to have proof this afternoon; what''s the matter with you, down there?
4961How the dickens could he let the public know how truly great his president was?
4961How was I-- was I pretty soused?"
4961How would you like to go to the Red Unicorn at Brempton-- one of the few untouched old inns?"
4961How''s that for stinging your competitors, heh?
4961How--?"
4961Huh?
4961I been wanting to get away for quite some time, too.... How are you going to travel on ten dollars?"
4961I do n''t know how long we''ll play or-- Shall we?"
4961I do-- chloroform''em quite cruelly and pin their poor little corpses out on nice clean corks.... You live alone in New York, do you?"
4961I got a kind of party--""How many?"
4961I got a right to spend it the way I want to, have n''t I?
4961I got an awful hang- over, ai n''t I?
4961I just wondered if you could let me have a match?
4961I know I''m a-- what was it Mr. Teddem used to call me?
4961I mean it, see?
4961I might not be able to get you off till a week from now, but you''d like to get off on a good boat Saturday instead, would n''t you?"
4961I own all these cattle,''cept the Morris uns, see?
4961I sh''d be awful pleased to.... Have you seen the Tower, Miss Nash?"
4961I wish you''d be a little more careful, d''ye hear?)
4961I wo n''t say good- by-- I hate good- bys, they''re so stupid, do n''t you think?
4961I wonder if Pete_ was_ so hard to lick?"
4961I''d like-- Why could n''t we?"
4961I''ll take some eggs and some of that-- what was it the idiot was talking about--_berma_?"
4961I''m only twenty- eight, but I''ve been on my own, like the English fellow says, since I was twelve.... Well, how about you?
4961I''ve never rowed with you, have I?
4961I-- can''t we just go out for a little walk so-- so we can talk?"
4961If there''s anything I could do-- anything--""Article?"
4961In the New York Chinatown I saw once-- Do you know Chinatown?
4961Is n''t that lovely and complicated?
4961Is that why you have n''t never been there, too?"
4961Is this Bill Wrenn?"
4961It really was?
4961It was sweet of you to come in, Mouse.... You do n''t mind my calling you` Mouse,''do you?
4961It''s shut up, is it?...
4961It''s so nice your being--""Ready for Five Hundred?"
4961It_ is_ comfortable, and you get lots of sunlight and--""I''ll take-- How much is it, please, with board?"
4961Just something simple-- a canteloupe and some shirred eggs and chocolate?"
4961Let''s see-- it''s red fours, black fives up?"
4961Let''s see; suppose it really were her birthday, would n''t she like to have a letter from some important guy?
4961Little mollycoddle wants to sleep, does he?
4961Lived there long?"
4961Look here; it''s my money, ai n''t it?
4961May I ask you something about the play?"
4961Maybe oh, what was it I heard in a play at the Academy of Music?
4961Miss Mary Proudfoot tried again:"is it pleasant to study in Paris?
4961Morton hastened on, protectively, a bit critically:"You fellows sport around a good deal, do n''t you?...
4961Morton liked Miss Corelli so much; but would her works appeal to Istra Nash?
4961Mr. Poppins, said she, had spoken of meeting a friend of Mr. Wrenn''s; Mr. Morton, was it not?
4961Mr. Wrenn murmured to Theresa:"Say, do you see that man?
4961Mr. Wrenn on the couch was horribly agitated.... Was n''t Istra coming back?
4961Mr. Wrenn said to himself, almost spitefully, as she snubbed Nelly,"Too good for us, is she?"
4961Mrs. Arty sounded the occasion''s pitch of high merriment by delivering from the doorway the sacred old saying,"Well, the ladies against the men, eh?"
4961Must I argue with you?
4961My dear sir-- whom I''ve never seen before-- have I?
4961Nelly attempted, bravely:"Do you like New York, Miss Nash?"
4961Nice little ash- trays with` Love from the Erie Station''?
4961No?
4961Not get the job back?
4961Novelties?
4961Now do n''t try to do me out of my bit or I''ll cap for some other joint, understand?
4961Now she resumed:"Have you been to` The Gold Brick''yet?"
4961Now that he was moving, he was agonizedly considering his problem: What was Istra to him, really?
4961Now you want me to fix you up, do n''t you?
4961Now, do you want to get fixed up with a nice fast boat that leaves Portland next Saturday, just a couple of days''wait?"
4961Now, what did those mean?
4961Oh damn it, am I getting sentimental?
4961Oh say, Miss Nelly, why do they call it Five Hundred?"
4961Oh yes; somebody in it had said"Do you believe in fairies?"
4961Oh, tell me, have you ever read anything by Harold Bell Wright or Myrtle Reed, Mr. Wrenn?
4961Oh, we''ll have a reg''lar feast at the Astor-- artichokes and truffles and all sorts of stuff.... Would-- would you like it if I sold the play?"
4961Old Goglefogle been lighting into you?
4961Old Goglefogle did n''t consider him; why should he consider the firm?
4961On the terrace.... What is that_ shish kibub_?"
4961Or do you?"
4961Or is it blessedly possible that you are n''t a tripper-- a tourist?"
4961Or''d you rather have something else?
4961Pete snorted:"Who says to` shut up,''hey?
4961Picture, mister?
4961Please, sir, may n''t I be a countess now?"
4961Poor dear, is it worried?
4961Poor-- Oh, do n''t tell me you have a headache again?"
4961Pretty rheumatic?"
4961Remember how I ran onto Pete on the street?
4961Returning, he poured out one drink, as though it were medicine for a refractory patient, and said, soothingly:"Now we''ll take a cold bath, heh?
4961Savvy-- you see I_ am_ an American-- savvy?"
4961Say, Wrenn-- you seem to me like a good fellow-- why do n''t you get acquainted with the bunch?
4961Say, did n''t get over to gay Paree, did you?"
4961Say, did you hear him-- the old--""What was the trouble, Charley?"
4961Say, did you notice any novelties we could copy?"
4961Say, how about this:` The vice- president of the railway would like to have you sign these, sir, as president''?"
4961Say, is it much like this here bridge- whist?
4961Say, you do n''t know his address, do you?"
4961Shall I call for you, Miss-- uh-- Theresa?"
4961Shall I?
4961Shall I?"
4961Shall we go?"
4961Shall we?"
4961She detached herself from the hubbub of invitations to learn to play Five Hundred and wandered back to the couch, murmuring:"Was bad Istra good?
4961She looked at him sidewise and confided,"Will you do me a favor?"
4961She reclined("reclined"is perfectly accurate) on the red- leather couch, among the pillows, and smoked two cigarettes, relapsing into"No?
4961She sent him away with a light"It''s been a good party, has n''t it, caveman?
4961She turned away, but he followed her into the hall, bashfully urging:"Have you been to another show?
4961She went on:"Mrs. Arty told me you had a real big library-- nearly a hundred books and-- Do you mind?
4961She went to the mirror and patted her hair, then curled on the bed, with an offhand"Wo n''t you sit down?"
4961She_ is_ a_ fine_ person-- Do you think you''d like a girl like that?"
4961Should he get them at the Fourteenth Street Store, or Siegel- Cooper''s, or over at Aronson''s, near home?
4961Should he, Mr. Wrenn queried, try to get the position?
4961Sighing happily, Nelly cried to the group:"Was n''t that grand?
4961So Nelly likes to-- well, make b''lieve--''magine?"
4961So early?"
4961So it''s you, is it?"
4961So one night you--""Oh, was it dark?
4961Some cheese sandwiches?
4961Sorry old Siddons is laid off again.... Is the gas- stove working all right now?"
4961Straight now, are you?"
4961Summer hotel?"
4961Surely you, who''ve gipsied with me, are n''t going to be so obvious, so banal, as to blame_ me_ because you''ve cared for me, are you, child?"
4961Tell me-- you live in this same house, do n''t you?
4961Ten dollars pleas- s- s- s.""But when does the boat start?
4961Ten dollars pleas- s- s- s.""Well, what does that entitle me to?"
4961That was all he could say till he had digested a pair of thoughts: Just what did she mean by"types"?
4961The cat?
4961The grub''ll be--""What grub do you get?"
4961The man said"Oh aye?"
4961The manager:"Hear what I said?
4961The other candidates, Rabin and Henson and Glover, were all good friends of his, and, furthermore, could he"run a bunch of guys if he was over them?"
4961Then he set himself to the hard task of listening to Charley, who was muttering:"Back quick, ai n''t you, ol''Wrenn?
4961Then the fat man went on:"Wonder what Wolgast will do in his mill?
4961Then the secretary butts in-- my idea is he''s been kind of keeping in the background, see-- and_ he''s_ the daughter''s husband all the while, see?
4961Then we''ll talk about a job, heh?"
4961There''s going to be a vacant room there-- maybe you two fellows could frame it up to take it, heh?
4961They talk and talk and talk-- they''re just like Kipling''s bandar- log-- What is it?
4961Tired, Nelly?"
4961To Wrennie,"Say, Gladys, ai n''t you afraid one of them long woids like, t''eological, will turn around and bite you right on the wrist?"
4961Tom:"What''s the big hurry?"
4961Traveling or going somewhere?"
4961Twice-- the same order?"
4961Understand that?"
4961Unless you want to go to that music- hall?"
4961Very_ very_ dark?
4961Walking down to your store?"
4961Want to be a circus horse and wander?
4961Was it death?
4961Was it true that Mr. Wrenn and Mr. Morton had gone clear across the Atlantic on a cattle- boat?
4961Was n''t he making nineteen dollars a week, as against the ticket- taker''s ten or twelve?
4961Was n''t that young miner a dear?"
4961Was she the perfect among pink faces?"
4961We all get lonely, do n''t we?
4961We''ll forget there are any syndicalists or broken- colorists for a while, wo n''t we?
4961We''ll have a small fire, shall we?
4961Well, he''s got a secretary there in the office-- on the stage, see?
4961Well, how''s things going with the old show?...
4961Well, it''s good to get back to the old town, heh?
4961Well, what''s your plans now?"
4961Well, where did you go?
4961Well, who did you think it was?
4961Were you_ such_ a bad boy?"
4961What I wanted to ask you was, what''s the best place in Ireland to see?"
4961What could he be to her?
4961What d''yuh think of that?
4961What d''yuh think you''re doing?
4961What did he care if he spent all he had?
4961What do I know about tea?
4961What do you suppose we pay you a salary for?
4961What do you think this office is?
4961What do you think?
4961What is it they call''em-- carriages?
4961What is your opinion?"
4961What j''yuh go to that Jew first for?
4961What though he was a bunny- faced man with an innocuous mustache?
4961What was it Nelly had told him about"Peter Pan"?
4961What you bidding, Wrenn?
4961What you going to do about it?"
4961What you thinking about?
4961What''s her name?
4961What''s the use of a manager if his underlings use judgment?
4961When d''yuh start out?"
4961When would you like to go?
4961When you were a boy?
4961When''d you get back?"
4961Where areyou?
4961Where does it start from?"
4961Where j''yuh put it?"
4961Where you going?
4961Where''ll I meet you?"
4961Where''s N?
4961Where''s the nearest house?"
4961Which way is it?"
4961Who is she?"
4961Who was it, Satan?"
4961Who would want to marry me?
4961Who would want to marry poor little me?"
4961Whose death?
4961Whose house_ is_ this?"
4961Why could n''t you try and take a little bit of care of me, anyway?"
4961Why did she seem to be watching him so closely?
4961Why do I have to explain everything?
4961Why do n''t you go steerage, and save?"
4961Why, I did n''t see it no more''n-- Say you, Pink Eye, say you crab- footed usher, did you swipe my hat?
4961Why, he wondered--"why had he been a chump?
4961Why, you ai n''t been gone more than a month and a half, have you?"
4961Why_ do n''t_ you soak him?
4961Will you let me change my mind?
4961With flaky covers?"
4961With pickles and a pillow cushion and several kinds of cake?...
4961With_ me?_"He was up beside her, angry, dignified; a man.
4961Wo n''t you come in?"
4961Wonder if that''s that` Merry Widow''thing?...
4961Would he like her?
4961Would n''t They take all sorts of pains on Their own account as well as on his?
4961Would she call him` papa''or` sir,''do you think?"
4961Would the fo''c''sle always keep heaving up-- up-- up, like this, then down-- down-- down, as though it were going to sink?
4961Wrenn?"
4961Wrenn?"
4961Wrenn?"
4961Yes, but what did Mouse mean?
4961You ca n''t, eh?
4961You came from California?
4961You can tell him to go ahead, and then where''ll he be?
4961You come from Ireland, do n''t you?"
4961You come up to see me, did n''t you?
4961You did n''t get on the Continent, did you?"
4961You did n''t tell me that you went to moving pictures, did you?"
4961You do n''t care, do you, ol''Wrenn?"
4961You do n''t mind my comparing you to a butler, do you?
4961You do n''t?
4961You don''t-- do you?"
4961You go and forget me and enjoy yourself and be good to your pink- face-- Nelly, is n''t it?
4961You got a worse boss''n Goglefogle, heh?
4961You hated them, did n''t you?"
4961You have Saturday afternoon off, do n''t you?
4961You have been wonderfully kind to me, and I''ll send you some good thought- forms, shall I?
4961You know him?"
4961You know, like hating the cousin, when you''re a kiddy, hating the cousin that always keeps her nails clean?"
4961You looked it up, eh?
4961You mean` idiotically''?
4961You think I''m drunk, do n''t you?
4961You think you''re awful good, do n''t you?
4961You went to London, did you, Wrenn?
4961You will come back, wo n''t you?"
4961You will come down and see me to- night, wo n''t you?"
4961You will sober up, now, wo n''t you?"
4961You wo n''t mind, will you?"
4961You''ll be a socialist or something like that if you get to be too much of a poet and don''t--""Miss Nelly, please_ may_ I go to church with you?"
4961You''re Americans, are you?
4961You''re from New York, too, eh?"
4961You''re lonely in London, are n''t you?
4961You''re m''friend, ai n''t you, eh?
4961You''re much too respectable to roll on the grass, are n''t you?
4961You_ are_ a lonely child, are n''t you?"
4961You_ do n''t_ mind my asking such beastly personal questions, do you?
4961Your very first one?"
4961Zapp?"
4961Zapp?"
4961_ Are n''t_ you?"
4961_ Are_ you?"
4961_ Hear me?_"Yes, Pete heard him.
4961_ Picture?_ I do n''t get no chance to see any of''em.
4961_ Say_, why would n''t it be great to have the millionaire''s daughter say to her father,"Do you believe in love?"
4961_ Sir_ Thomas Lipton-- wasn''t he a friend of the king?
4961_ Understand?_""All right,"chirped Mr. Wrenn.
4961_ was_ it about jungles?
4961` And do you think he''ll walk in and get what he wants?
4961` Me?
4961afternoon and perhaps evening, Mouse?
4961and"how much a week they get for acting in that thing?"
4961he certainly does know how to jolly them, heh?"
4961that''s so; ai n''t it?
4961there must be kind of-- kind of adventure in them things, heh?"
4961to say I wish you were here?
4961you let me have fifty cents till Saturday?
5241''Run where?'' 5241 A precaution against robbers?"
5241All, you ass? 5241 Am I sportman?"
5241And good God, where d''you suppose Miss Vanderman is?
5241And he believed that?
5241And if I were to go with you to Tarsus, what then?
5241And is it possible you did not see the conflagration? 5241 And that man beside you-- who is he?"
5241And what did they say?
5241And who else can do it? 5241 And you left your friend to help me?"
5241And you on the plains?
5241And you?
5241Any young woman--"Of course?
5241Are n''t you afraid to travel with all that mob of women and cattle?
5241Are they all Armenians in Zeitoon?
5241Are they your men?
5241Are you Maga Jhaere?
5241Are you a fool?
5241Are you her father?
5241Are you that man?
5241Are you the party who talked with me at my construction camp?
5241Are you the rascal who did that?
5241Are you waiting here for us?
5241Aw, what''s the use? 5241 Aw-- what''s eating you, Monty?"
5241But a woman-- scarcely a white woman?
5241But could they stop it, once started?
5241But how about you rear while all that''s going on? 5241 But how can we, sir?
5241But if I am your servant-- if I must obey you for two piasters a day, how shall I serve my nation?
5241But just where do you come in?
5241But now you know me surely? 5241 But what nationality?"
5241But what''s the immediate excuse for massacre?
5241Ca n''t you guess?
5241Ca n''t you see crusading is dead as a dead horse?
5241Can I not question him?
5241Can you never see?
5241Can you ride?
5241Che arz kunam?
5241Che arz kunam?
5241Chicken, eh?
5241Come on, what are we waiting for?
5241Come----how soon?
5241Could n''t we shake those ruffians off the ladder, and climb up it and escape?
5241D''you get the idea?
5241D''you mean to say,demanded Fred,"that they''re going to be shot like bottles off a wall without rhyme or reason?"
5241D''you mean you used our predicament as a club to drive him with?
5241D''you mean you''re willing to leave a woman behind alone in that forest?
5241D''you mean you''ve got cartridges here?
5241D''you see Turks now?
5241D''you suppose they''d dare molest an Englishwoman?
5241D''you suppose those gipsies are really of that Armenian''s party?
5241Did n''t I tell you the man has''verted to Crusader days?
5241Did you ever hear tell of the Eye of Zeitoon?
5241Did you get them?
5241Did you hear the martyred biped suggest rebellion to her? 5241 Did you never see men try to cover a secret before?"
5241Did you shoot Maga?
5241Did you suppose I could n''t smell camel and khan the moment you came in?
5241Do n''t I talk American to beat the band?
5241Do n''t the Armenians know what''s in store for them?
5241Do you deny Kagig''s right to question prisoners?
5241Do you know your friend so little, and think so ill of me? 5241 Do you mean I should leave him?"
5241Do you never sleep?
5241Do you think you can watch her if I tie her feet?
5241Do you understand why you''ve been kicked?
5241Do you, or do n''t you?
5241Do?
5241Does he know anything?
5241Eagle scream?
5241Ever go fishing as a boy?
5241Fight?
5241First, what kind of Americans can you possibly be? 5241 For whom?"
5241Four Eenglis sportman?
5241Four?
5241Good enough? 5241 Granted,"said I,"but what next?"
5241Had you acted beforehand in the manner I advised?
5241Has any one seen him?
5241Has he been writing down all our sins in a new book?
5241Has n''t that Turk a harem?
5241Have you a horse?
5241Have you an American lady named Miss Vanderman with you?
5241Have you an American lady with you?
5241Have you any idea what can have happened to Miss Vanderman?
5241Have you guys taken root?
5241Have you had supper, Rustum Khan? 5241 Have you seen Maga Jhaere anywhere?"
5241Have you then a plan you never told to us?
5241He says that the Indian-- what is his name? 5241 He sent you to find me?"
5241He? 5241 Hide, and have them hunt for us, eh?"
5241His love- affairs?
5241Honest, Fred, I--"Have I known you all these years to be fooled now? 5241 How about Maga Jhaere''s way, when she and Will and the Vanderman meet?"
5241How about permits to travel?
5241How about the bears?
5241How are the ribs?
5241How can I help it? 5241 How did he know where I was?"
5241How did sunshine come into the garden? 5241 How did you do all that in time?"
5241How did you get here?
5241How did you get into the grounds?
5241How did you manage?
5241How do you know the Turks will walk into the trap?
5241How do you know we are not agents of the Turkish government?
5241How do you know what is in his diary?
5241How do you know?
5241How do you watch? 5241 How does it feel, old man"asked Will at last,"standing on ramparts where your ancestors once ruled the roost?"
5241How far away is the fighting?
5241How far to Zeitoon?
5241How have I lived? 5241 How long are we four loafers going to sit here and leave a white woman in danger on the road ahead?"
5241How long have ye dealt with Turks, and how long with me, that ye take a Turk''s word against mine?
5241How long have you been here?
5241How many of you?
5241How much food have you? 5241 How much truth is there in your assertion that you saw her lover?"
5241How much would you ask for your services?
5241How not?
5241How so?
5241How so?
5241How so?
5241I reckon you''ll be Miss Vanderman?'' 5241 I suppose we or the Americans could land marines at a pinch, and protect whoever asked for protection?"
5241I suppose you know that''s filibustering, to fly your private banner on foreign soil?
5241I tell you, that girl Maga--"Two of''em, eh? 5241 I, sahib?
5241If not to that,said Monty blandly,"then what agreements do you keep?"
5241In case of trouble up above here, but not otherwise, will you do that?
5241In the name of God, effendim, what manner of sportmen are you? 5241 In which direction did they take Miss Gloria?"
5241Inch goozek?
5241Is he good- looking?
5241Is he your husband?
5241Is n''t it bad enough to be prayed for? 5241 Is she not beautiful?"
5241Is that Rustum Khan?
5241Is that not much? 5241 Is that true?"
5241Is the poor devil hurt?
5241Is there nothing but hunting at Zeitoon?
5241Kagig-- what will he say?
5241Kagig-- where is Kagig?
5241Kagig? 5241 Look in there, and see, and tell me-- do the Turks treat Armenian prisoners that way?"
5241May n''t I fight?
5241Me? 5241 Me?
5241Meanin''?
5241Men, women and children-- how many of you are there?
5241Miss Vanderman? 5241 Monty, too?"
5241My agreement with Kagig?
5241Next?
5241Neye geldin?
5241No ancient buildings?
5241No?
5241Not tell you before? 5241 Now,"demanded Fred, who knew the signs,"what special quixotry do you mean springing?"
5241Obey, do you?
5241Oh, Kagig-- how shall they reich Zeitoon? 5241 Oh, do n''t you know?"
5241Oh, do they all love him?
5241Oh, very well,he said,"what is the use of making a scene?"
5241One plan? 5241 Or give it away?"
5241Otherwise, how should he have told us such a thing?
5241Perhaps you have bargained for your share of all loot? 5241 Precipitated?
5241Qualms at the last moment?
5241Really?
5241Remember Peter at the fireside? 5241 See here, Fred--""Look?
5241See what, Ermenie?
5241Send Miss Vanderman to Zeitoon with an escort and we three--"What did I tell you?
5241Shall I kill him?
5241Shall I live to see Turks fling thy carcass to the birds? 5241 Shall a man keep watch over a nation, and sleep?"
5241Should I have them vote on it?
5241Should I leave Zeitoon,Kagig answered slowly, unless I left a better man in charge behind me?
5241Since when have Eenglis sportmen waited on the weather? 5241 So that''s it, eh?
5241Surely not all?
5241Surely you are not cowards?
5241Tell about Armenian atrocities?
5241Tenekelis? 5241 That''s where the rest of us are,"said Will"Where''s Miss Vanderman?"
5241The chilabi are staying here?
5241The horses?
5241The name God gave me?
5241Then do n''t you see that if you were gone, and I told them you had gone to bring Kagig, they would let us go rather than face Kagig''s wrath?
5241Then if a Turk liked me, you''d doubt my social fitness?
5241Then what you want with''i m?
5241Then what?
5241Then why did you''urt two of them so badly that they run away? 5241 Then why think about it?"
5241Thought you were due to be sick for another week?
5241To what extent?
5241Use?
5241Was?
5241Well,Fred grumbled,"what are your plans for us?"
5241Well? 5241 Well?"
5241Were n''t the States good enough for you?
5241Were those six jingaan in the common room your men?
5241Were you on the roof?
5241What Tony''s?
5241What about him?
5241What about the United States papers?
5241What are they?
5241What are we waiting for? 5241 What are you waiting for?"
5241What are your plans?
5241What brought it back to memory?
5241What brought you here?
5241What care I for my belly, sahib, if you break my heart?
5241What countryman are you?
5241What did she say to that?'' 5241 What did you do to the Turks?"
5241What did you say?
5241What did you see, Rustum Khan?
5241What do you fellows say? 5241 What do you know about God?"
5241What do you know of Miss Vanderman''s where- abouts?
5241What do you know, sirdar?
5241What do you make of him?
5241What do you mean?
5241What do you mean?
5241What do you mean?
5241What do you propose to get out of it?
5241What do you suppose is that man''s nationality?
5241What do you suppose it is?
5241What do you want here?
5241What does he say, Fred?
5241What does he say?
5241What does she know about fighting? 5241 What else did you hear?"
5241What else would the roadside robbers like them to bring?
5241What else?
5241What else?
5241What else?
5241What happened?
5241What has Peter Measel got to do with it?
5241What has become of our horses?
5241What have you been doing?
5241What have you done with the German?
5241What have you done with the ammunition?
5241What have you heard about Kagig?
5241What if I propose a different quarry?
5241What in hell''s keeping you, man? 5241 What is it about Will that makes all women love him?"
5241What is it now?
5241What is it, Eflaton?
5241What is the difference? 5241 What is the thumping?"
5241What is your name?
5241What is your real name?
5241What next?
5241What next?''
5241What of the Turkish owner and his seven sons?
5241What the devil does he mean?
5241What then?
5241What were you doing there?
5241What you do with me?
5241What you know about eagles? 5241 What''s happening on top of the keep?"
5241What''s that got to do with it?
5241What''s the matter with Armenians?
5241What''s the matter?
5241What''s the straw for?
5241What''s the use of cavalry four abreast?
5241What-- are you that man-- Kagig?
5241What-- the Battery, New York--?
5241When and where shall the start be?
5241Where are the men?
5241Where are the rest of you?
5241Where else? 5241 Where is Kagig?"
5241Where is Lord Montdidier now?
5241Where is Maga?
5241Where is Miss Vanderman?
5241Where is Miss Vanderman?
5241Where is he?
5241Where is the book?
5241Where the devil''s Monty?
5241Where they hold you to ransom?
5241Where''s Kagig bound for?
5241Where''s Monty?
5241Where''s Peter Measel? 5241 Where''s Peter Measel?"
5241Wherefore didst thou come? 5241 Which Turk is n''t?"
5241Which of these men shall I pick to command the rest?
5241Who are you that says so?
5241Who are you?
5241Who are you?
5241Who are you?
5241Who art thou, Armenian, to frame a test for thy betters?
5241Who can refuse a beautiful young woman?
5241Who clipped the wings of a kite, and sold it for ten pounds to a fool for an eagle from Ararat?
5241Who gave thee leave to order him searched, Armenian?
5241Who is this who is arrogant?
5241Who is with you?
5241Who is your own man? 5241 Who knows?
5241Who knows? 5241 Who said who was afraid?"
5241Who searched him?
5241Who sold the horse to the German from Bitlis?
5241Who the devil made it for you?
5241Who was Umm Kulsum?
5241Who''d have thought it?
5241Who''ll follow me?
5241Who''s sneering? 5241 Why all that quantity?"
5241Why are you beating him?
5241Why did n''t she murder him?
5241Why did n''t you become a citizen?
5241Why did you follow her? 5241 Why did you leave Armenia in the first place?"
5241Why do they call you the Eye of Zeitoon?
5241Why do you travel with Armenian servants?
5241Why in thunder should she want it believed?
5241Why not go into Tarsus and claim protection at the British consulate?
5241Why not? 5241 Why not?
5241Why on earth--?
5241Why should I not listen, since my heart is in the matter? 5241 Why should Kagig choose just this time to guide a hunting party?
5241Why should Zeitoon need such special watching?
5241Why should we need an escort to safety?
5241Why should you obey him?
5241Why should you tell us all this?
5241Why wo n''t this one work? 5241 Why wo n''t you go?"
5241Why you wait so long? 5241 Why?"
5241Why?
5241Will the sahib permit? 5241 Will they?"
5241Will you be good enough,he asked blandly,"to call off your men from meddling with our mounts?"
5241Will you burn that book of yours, Measel, if we protect you from further assault?
5241Will you bury him in that same hole with them two?
5241Will you leave a good woman in the hands of Turks, Kagig? 5241 Will you?"
5241Would it help,I suggested,"if we were to be taken prisoner by outlaws and held for ransom?"
5241Would you have gone to Tarsus except on my account?
5241Would you know the man if you saw him again, Will?
5241Would you think of holding me to that?
5241Yes, but when?
5241You coming to Zeitoon?
5241You dance?
5241You fellows agreeable?
5241You fool, Kagig, what you fill this castle full of wood for?
5241You forgive her for my sake?
5241You forgive her, effendim?
5241You have the news, sahib?
5241You hear that?
5241You know about pistols?
5241You married?
5241You mean you will not go to Tarsus?
5241You mean,said I,"that the German government is inciting to massacre?"
5241You mean,said Monty,"that you''d like us to engage Kagig and make the trip, and to remain out in case of-- ah-- vukuart until we''re rescued?"
5241You not believe? 5241 You said Monty is in Zeitoon-- alive or dead?
5241You say, Colonel sahib, there will be no further use for cavalry?
5241You sing?
5241You summon me to lead? 5241 You take me to''i m?"
5241You understan''?
5241Your kingdom?
5241Your wife? 5241 s''Why did n''t you take refuge in the mission?''
5241............................. 243 XVI"What care I for my belly, sahib, if you break my heart?"
5241................................... 128 IX"And you left your friend to help me?"
5241Against whom?
5241Air you agreeable?"
5241All about what the Turks have done to us, and how much about us ourselves?
5241Am I Kagig, and do I not know who advised dismissing all Armenians from the railway work?
5241Am I Kagig, and do I not know why?
5241Am I wind that I should babble into heedless ears each thought that comes to me for testing?
5241Am I without honor, that my offer is refused?"
5241And I am to run with nineteen men to the rape of Tarsus and Adana?"
5241And has all happened as I, Kagig, warned you it would happen?"
5241And what are Armenians to you?"
5241And who buried them?"
5241And who is friend?
5241And who shall stand Since hireling tongue and alien hand Kill nobleness in all this land?
5241Are bribery and rich largesse Fair props for fat forgetfulness, Or anodynous of distress?
5241Are the clouds thy throne?
5241Are there any orders?"
5241Are you Kagig, whom they call the Eye of Zeitoon?"
5241Are you the lucky man?"''
5241Are you the only spy in Asia?
5241As Kagig''s wife what good would she be?"
5241As for quixotism-- is there any one here not willing to fight in the last ditch to help Kagig and these Armenians?"
5241Bear me witness whether Zeitoon trusted me or not?
5241Besides, I delivered the valedictory-- say, what are we waiting here for?"
5241But Turks are coming presently, and they keel Kagig-- keel heem, you understan''?
5241But can you see Will Yerkes, for instance, riding off and leaving you to play Don Quixote?
5241But how did you know?"
5241But how shall I marry Miss Gloria?
5241But how should they know it?"
5241But if you four men--""Yes-- go on-- what?"
5241But we must concede him something, or how shall he satisfy ambition?
5241But what about Miss Vanderman?"
5241But why do you make the proposal?
5241But, do you get the idea?
5241By whose leave came the wind?"
5241By whose leave came the wind?"
5241By whose leave came the wind?"
5241CONTENTS Chapter Page I Parthians, Medes and Elamites.............................. 1 II"How did sunshine get into the garden?
5241CUI BONO?
5241Can you contrive to let us talk for a few minutes alone?"
5241Chapter Nine"And you left your friend to help me?"
5241Chapter Sixteen"What care I for my belly, sahib, if you break my heart?"
5241Chapter Two"How did sunshine get into the garden?
5241Come-- how soon?"
5241Could a man want more?"
5241Could it be simpler?"
5241D''you blame him?
5241D''you know that girl was willing to be a murderess?
5241D''you notice how this rock is covered by that other one a quarter of a mile to the right?
5241D''you suppose she does n''t know we''re waiting?"
5241Damn you, Didums, ca n''t you see--?"
5241Days when the upright dared be few Are they departed, friend o''mine?
5241Did I know the very wording of the letters in your private box for nothing?
5241Did I tell you?
5241Did men name me Eye of Zeitoon for nothing?
5241Did n''t Cleopatra ride?"
5241Did not you shoot that other one?
5241Did waiting for the massacre like chickens waiting for the ax delay the massacres a day?
5241Did you find her, America?"
5241Did you observe his noble rescue work?
5241Do n''t you suppose he''s her father?"
5241Do you all use such extraordinary accents, and such expressions?"
5241Do you hear me?
5241Do you think I''d consent to your leaving your fine friend in pawn while you dance attendance on me?
5241Do you understand?"
5241Does he-- is he-- is there wickedness between them?"
5241Found it, have you?
5241Fred?"
5241Good of''em, what?
5241Gray are your days, drab are your ways, Strong are your fashioned bars, But, ye who ask if service pays-- Who polishes the stars?
5241Guess what is Kagig''s hold over the girl-- can you?"
5241Have ye not much to lose?
5241Have you a ring?"
5241Have you fallen in love with a woman, or taken the belly- ache, or fallen down a well, or gone to sleep again, or all of them, or what?"
5241Have you heard of Kurds?
5241Have you horses?
5241Have you seen?
5241Have you watched them at prayer?"
5241He thought to--""Dupes?"
5241How can we?
5241How could I leave them?
5241How is it your affair to drag that whimpering fool through Asia at your tail-- you a German and he English?"
5241How many have you?"
5241How many men did you kill, and he kill?
5241How many of you are there left to lead?"
5241How much ammunition have you left now?"
5241How much ammunition?"
5241How much backing have I had?
5241How then?"
5241How''s Gloria?
5241How?
5241I bring him food?
5241I give orders-- yes?"
5241I?
5241If thy memories and honor urge thee to come the way I take, is there no room for two of us?"
5241If you come without a''usband-- I will keel you-- do you understand?"
5241Is all thy freedom good for thee alone?
5241Is earth thy footstool?
5241Is it truly you?"
5241Is that the pretty scheme?"
5241Kagig says,''Can you send us reenforcements?''
5241Must I get into the papers, too, as heroine of a scandal?"
5241No?
5241Not for my sake, but for the good work she has so often done, and for the work she shall do-- you forgive her?"
5241Not going to die, then?
5241Observe my house-- is it not empty?
5241Oh, what shall I do?
5241Oh-- do you remember Abraham-- in the Bible-- yes?
5241Once in a harem, who would ever know?
5241One sportman to another-- do you understand?"
5241Or has he promised to make you Duke of Zeitoon?"
5241Or shall I serve my nation in its agony?"
5241Perhaps you do not believe all this?"''
5241Quite a sportsman-- what?
5241Remember what Byron did for Greece?
5241Seen her, either?
5241Seen him anywhere?
5241Shall I keep my word to you?
5241Shall I say what they did to the women?"
5241Shall I speak of Zeitoon?
5241Shall other peoples reach thy hand to take That gladdens only thee for thine own sake?
5241Shall we let him come with us?"
5241Shall we ride back and break in on the party?"
5241Since when has a crack on the shin made a baby of you?
5241So that was the way you took us into confidence?
5241Some, yes; but yours?
5241Sung it in school?
5241Suppose she does not want me?"
5241Surely you are not the men to let brave Kagig be tempted away from his post of danger at Zeitoon?
5241Surely you have n''t promised them to make us prisoner?"
5241That Fred?
5241That is easy, is n''t it?
5241The Turk must have worked his way around Beirut Dagh on former occasions-- or how else could he ever have built and held that dismantled fort?
5241Then Fred gave tongue:"That you, Kagig?
5241Then you dance-- then I dance-- to- night-- you understan''?
5241Then, when Gloria had said the last prayer:"What next, Kagig?"
5241There was only one burden to their lamentation:"What are you going to do with us?
5241They would electrocute me in New York-- for slaying the man who-- have you heard me tell what happened to my mother, before my very eyes?
5241To cackle like a barren hen that sees another laying?
5241To me forever he is Monty, my brother-- my--""Where''s Miss Vanderman?"
5241To whose advantage?
5241Twixt Thessaly and Locris when Leonidas''thousand men Died scornful of the proffered peace Of Xerxes the accurst?
5241WHERE TWO OR THREE Oh, all the world is sick with hate, And who shall heal it, friend o''mine?
5241We have mothers, sisters, wives--""Nothing to me, is it?
5241Well-- what does it matter how many you are?
5241Were n''t you afraid?"
5241What Turk tells the truth?"
5241What altruism for defeat atones?
5241What am I?
5241What are her relations with Kagig?
5241What are you doing here, Rustum Khan?"
5241What could I do?
5241What did they know?
5241What did you say?"
5241What do I know of women?
5241What do you say if we go and dine at the hotel?"
5241What do you suppose?"
5241What do you take me for?
5241What have you learned?"
5241What is he to thee?
5241What is that to do with you-- or with him?
5241What owe ye to the past?
5241What right had he to write that people in France should pray for me in church?"
5241What shall I do?
5241What shall I do?"
5241What shall hinder me from burning you alive this minute?"
5241What shall we do-- what shall we do?"
5241What were they depending on in addition to their weight of numbers?
5241What would Kagig do in that case?"
5241What would be the use?"
5241What''ll you bet me Kurds do n''t show up in pursuit before the day''s an hour old?"
5241What''s behind it?"
5241What''s the matter with you?"
5241What''s to stop him from doing it again?"
5241What?
5241When he stopped:"Has any one seen Peter Measel?"
5241When they finish getting that woman, then I send for you an''you come quick-- understan''?"
5241Where did you get the drink?"
5241Where is Kagig?"
5241Where is it now?"
5241Where shall we stow our guests?"
5241Where''s Lord Montdidier?"
5241Where''s Maga Jhaere?
5241Where''s Miss Vanderman?"
5241Where''s Monty?
5241Who carried your honor''s letter to Adrianople in time of war, and received a bullet, but brought the answer back?"
5241Who else is there?"
5241Who has counted?
5241Who has not seen how a cow will follow the calf in a wagon?
5241Who listened to me?
5241Who urged you to send your women there long ago?"
5241Who was it urged you in season and out of season-- day and night-- month in, month out-- to come to Zeitoon and help me fortify the place?
5241Who would care to help such miserable- minded men and women?
5241Why did he do it?
5241Why did n''t you tell us that before?"
5241Why did you not act, then, when I risked life and limb a thousand times to urge you?"
5241Why do you do this?
5241Why do you throw your life into the hot cauldron of Zeitoon?
5241Why labor the point?
5241Why not?
5241Why not?"
5241Why should I listen to you?"
5241Why should it concern you?"
5241Why were you beating this man?"
5241Why?"
5241Will not each of you take a dozen men and go and destroy those cursed Turks?"
5241Will you help me?"
5241Wo n''t you go to Lord Montdidier and tell him about it, and ask him to decide?
5241Wo n''t you listen?"
5241You get my meaning?"
5241You go now-- go to''i m, or else''e is get suspicious-- understan''?
5241You know Poor Blind Joe, eh?
5241You know this country?
5241You not believe?"
5241You speak to me of Lord what- is- it?
5241You think''e is busy at the fortifying?
5241You understan''?"
5241You would not have me be revengeful-- not toward my wife, I think?"
5241You''ear me?
5241You, effendi, you understand my-- necessity?"
5241demanded one of them( What would you like?
5241the Turk answered meekly, meaning"What petition shall I make?"
5241thundered Rustum Khan,"who gave camp- followers the right to impose advice?"
7960When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?
7960( map facing page 184)?
7960------_ What have the Greeks done for Modern Civilization?_( N. Y., 1909, Putnam,$ 1.50).
796013. Who was the"Apostle to the Germans"?
796014. Who were the"Apostles to the Slavs"?
796017. Who is the present Pope?
79602. Who were Baber, Kublai Khan, Othman, Mohammed II, Constantine Palaeologus, and Ivan the Great?
79603. Who comprised the"third estate"in the Middle Ages?
79604. Who were Belisarius, Chosroes II, and Heraclius?
79604. Who were St. Thomas Aquinas, Abelard, Gratian, Irnerius, and Roger Bacon?
79605. Who were Quintus Fabius Maximus, Mithradates, Catiline, and Cleopatra?
7960753(?)
7960After what French king was Louisiana named?
7960Are modern coins"debased"to any considerable extent?
7960Are unity of race, a common language, a common religion, and geographical unity of themselves sufficient to make a nation?
7960At what points is it probable that southern Europe and northern Africa were once united?
7960Augustus, 31 B.C.-l4 A.D., topic The Augustan Age)?
7960CHAUCER, 1340(?
7960COLUMBUS, 1446(?
7960Can you find examples of any of the Greek orders in public buildings familiar to you?
7960Can you give any reason for this characterization?
7960Can you justify this statement?
7960Can you mention any of Shakespeare''s plays which are founded on Italian stories or whose scenes are laid in Italy?
7960Can you name any savages still living in the Stone Age?
7960Can you suggest a reason why some historians do not regard Châlons as one of the world''s decisive battles?
7960Can you suggest any objections to the system of state pay introduced by Pericles?
7960Can you suggest any reason why the Arabs did little in painting and sculpture?
7960Can you suggest any reasons why Islam to- day spreads among the African negroes more rapidly than Christianity?
7960Can you suggest any reasons why the sources of the Nile remained unknown until late in the nineteenth century?
7960Can you suggest why Caesar''s conquest of Gaul had even greater importance than Pompey''s conquests in the East?
7960Could monks enter the secular clergy and thus become parish priests and bishops?
7960DESIDERIUS ERASMUS 1466(?
7960Did it have an official character?
7960Did religion have anything to do with the migrations of the Germans?
7960Did the medieval interest in astrology retard or further astronomical research?
7960Did the popular assembly of Athens have any resemblance to a New England town meeting?
7960Do you know of any modern columns of victory?
7960Do you know why Washington was called the"American Fabius"?
7960Do you see any resemblance in structural features between a Gothic cathedral and a modern"sky- scraper"?
7960Does this seem a fair description?
7960Does this statement appear to be justified?
7960Does this statement seem to be justified?
7960EXPANSION OF ROME OVER ITALY, 509(?
7960Establishment of the republic 449 Laws of the Twelve Tables 390(?)
7960Expansion of Rome over Italy, 509(?
7960For what were the following men notable: Pym; Bossuet; duke of Marlborough; Louvois; Hampden; Mazarin; William III; and Colbert?
7960For what were the following persons famous: Hammurabi; Rameses II; Solomon; Cyrus; Nebuchadnezzar; and Darius?
7960For what were the following persons noted: Chrysoloras; Vittorino da Feltre; Gutenberg; Boccaccio; Machiavelli; Harvey; and Galileo?
7960For what were the following places noted: Jerusalem; Thebes; Tyre; Nineveh; and Babylon?
7960From what Oriental peoples do we get the oldest true arch?
7960Had Pompey triumphed over Caesar, is it probable that the republic would have been restored?
7960Had the Italians triumphed in the Social War, is it likely they would have established a better government than that of Rome?
7960Have we anything to learn from the Greeks about the importance of training in music?
7960How are the pyramids proof of an advanced civilization among the Egyptians?
7960How can you explain the persecution of the Christians by an emperor so great and good as Marcus Aurelius?
7960How can you justify this statement by a study of European geography?
7960How did Vasco da Gama complete the work of Prince Henry the Navigator?
7960How did it get that meaning?
7960How did the Franciscans and Dominicans supplement each other''s work?
7960How did the Greeks manage to build solidly without the use of mortar?
7960How did the Macedonian Empire compare in size with that of Persia?
7960How did the belief in Purgatory strengthen the hold of the Church upon men''s minds?
7960How did the condition of Germany after 1648 A.D. facilitate the efforts of Louis XIV to extend the French frontiers to the Rhine?
7960How did the discoveries of Galileo and Kepler confirm the Copernican theory?
7960How did the expression, a"red- cross knight,"arise?
7960How did the founding of the Hellenistic cities continue the earlier colonial expansion of Greece?
7960How did the four English counties, Sussex, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, receive their names?
7960How did the geographical situation of Arabia preserve it from being conquered by Persians, Macedonians, or Romans?
7960How did the names"damask"linen,"chinaware,""japanned"ware, and"cashmere"shawls originate?
7960How did the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 A.D. affect the commercial importance of Alexandria?
7960How did the position of women at Athens differ from their position in Homeric Greece?
7960How did the revolution of 1688 A.D. affect the fortunes of Louis XIV?
7960How did the tsars come to regard themselves as the successors of the Eastern emperors?
7960How did the words"machiavellism"and"utopian"get their present meanings?
7960How did the worship of the Caesars connect itself with ancestor worship?
7960How did the"year of anarchy"after Nero''s death exhibit a weakness in the imperial system?
7960How do the crusades illustrate the truth of this statement?
7960How do they compare in number with those at Rome in the reign of Marcus Aurelius?
7960How do you account for the failure of the republican institutions of Rome?
7960How do you explain the almost total loss of original Greek sculptures?
7960How does Islam, by sanctioning polygamy and slavery, hinder the rise of women and of the working classes?
7960How does Mohammed''s career in Mecca illustrate the saying that"a prophet is not without honor save in his own country"?
7960How does it happen that the gulf of Finland is often frozen over in winter, while even the northernmost of the Norse fiords remain open?
7960How does it illustrate the medieval attitude toward Jews?
7960How does the history of Ireland illustrate this statement?
7960How does the opera differ from the oratorio?
7960How does the presence of few tameable animals in the New World help to account for its tardier development as compared with the Old World?
7960How does the preservation of the balance of power help to explain the Great European War?
7960How far can the phrase"government of the people, by the people, for the people"be applied to the Athenian democracy?
7960How far can the phrase,"government of the people, by the people, for the people,"be applied to the Roman Republic at this period?
7960How is it easy to evade laws forbidding usury?
7960How is it true that the expedition of the Ten Thousand forms"an epilogue to the invasion of Xerxes and a prologue to the conquests of Alexander"?
7960How many have you read?
7960How many holidays( including Sundays) are there in your state?
7960How many of Shakespeare''s plays can you name?
7960How many provinces existed under Trajan?
7960How many"books"are there in the Old Testament?
7960How much can you see and describe in the Alexander Mosaic( illustration, page 123)?
7960How was it with the Arabs?
7960How was"the victory of the Crescent secured by the children of the Cross"?
7960How, it will be asked, did these rights and privileges arise?
7960If the Athenian Empire could have rested on a representative basis, why would it have been more likely to endure?
7960In such cases how could truth be reached unless one reasoned it out for oneself?
7960In the classification of mankind, where do the Arabs belong?
7960In the face of his encroachments would Athens, Sparta, and Thebes, so long the leading cities, submit tamely to this Macedonian conqueror?
7960In the reign of what Roman emperor was Jesus born?
7960In what European countries do kings still rule by divine right?
7960In what century was the year 1917 B.C.?
7960In what city does he reside?
7960In what different senses is the word"church"often used?
7960In what lies the difference?
7960In what non- Christian religions is monasticism an established institution?
7960In what parts of the British Isles are Celtic languages still spoken?
7960In what parts of the world is English now the prevailing speech?
7960In what parts of the world is Spanish still the common language?
7960In what respects is the American system of education a realization of the ideals of Comenius?
7960In what sense does the date, 476 A.D., mark the"fall"of the Roman Empire?
7960In what sense is it true that the Holy Roman Empire was"neither holy nor Roman, nor an empire"?
7960In what sense is it true that"half Europe owes its Christianity to women"?
7960In what sense was Chaeronea a decisive battle?
7960In whose reign was he crucified?
7960In your opinion which of the two rival imperial lines after 800 A.D. had the better title to represent ancient Rome?
7960Is the English Common law codified?
7960Is this still the case?
7960JOHN HUSS, 1373(?
7960Legendary Roman kings 509(?)
7960May a nation arise where these bonds are lacking?
7960Might Rome have extended her federal policy to her territories outside of Italy?
7960Northmen under Ruric settle in Russia 870 Treaty of Mersen 871- 901(?)
7960ST. FRANCIS, 1181(?
7960They often debated the most subtle questions, for instance,"Can God ever know more than He knows that He knows?"
7960To what cities of Asia Minor did Paul write his epistles, or letters?
7960To what extent do we employ the same system under our government?
7960To what other cities in the Roman Empire?
7960Under what circumstances does the Constitution of the United States provide for the suspension of the writ of_ habeas corpus_?
7960Under what circumstances is it sometimes declared in the United States?
7960WILLIAM''S PERSONALITY What manner of man was William the Conqueror?
7960Was Caesar justified in leading his army against Rome?
7960Was Marius or was Sulla more to blame for the Civil War?
7960Was Rome wise in adopting her new policy of expansion beyond the limits of Italy?
7960Was a provincial system really necessary?
7960Were all the great cities in Alexander''s empire of commercial importance?
7960Were any of the ancient religions missionary faiths?
7960Were the Jews independent of Rome during the lifetime of Jesus?
7960Were the crusades the only means by which western Europe was brought in contact with Moslem civilization?
7960What American states lie in about the same latitude as Greece?
7960What European countries in physical features closely resemble Greece?
7960What European monarch styles himself as an autocrat?
7960What European state comes nearest to being a pure despotism?
7960What French kings did most to form the French nation?
7960What advantages has trial by jury over the older forms of trial, such as oaths, ordeals, and the judicial duel?
7960What are its special advantages?
7960What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of primogeniture as the rule of inheritance?
7960What are some of the best- known stories in the_ Thousand and One Nights_?
7960What are the advantages of local self- government over a centralized government?
7960What arguments might have been made for and against the removal of the capital to Constantinople?
7960What artistic objections to the use of"engaged columns"can you mention?
7960What books of the Bible contain the laws of Israel?
7960What circumstances gave rise to( a) the Petition of Right;( b) the Institute of Government;( c) the Habeas Corpus Act; and( d) the Bill of Rights?
7960What class corresponds to it at the present time?
7960What conditions made it easy for the Romans to conquer Magna Graecia and difficult for them to subdue the Samnites?
7960What conditions of the time help to explain the contempt of the Greeks for money- making?
7960What contrasts can you draw between Caesar and Alexander?
7960What contrasts exist between the ancient and the modern house?
7960What countries of Greece did not touch the sea?
7960What countries of modern Europe are included within the limits of Charlemagne''s empire?
7960What did civic patriotism mean to the Greek and to the Roman?
7960What difference did it make whether Clovis became an Arian or a Catholic?
7960What differences exist between an ancient and a modern theatre?
7960What differences existed between Phoenician and Greek colonization?
7960What do the illustrations on pages 38, 43 tell about the pomp of Oriental kings?
7960What do you understand by a"decisive"battle?
7960What do you understand by representative government?
7960What do you understand by"martial law"?
7960What does this mean?
7960What does this statement mean?
7960What does this statement mean?
7960What elements of weakness in the imperial system had been disclosed during the century 180- 284 A.D.?
7960What events are associated with the following dates: 988 A.D.; 862 A.D.; 1066 A.D.; 1000 A.D.; and 987 A.D.?
7960What events are connected with the following places: Soissons; Mersen; Whitby; Reims; Verdun; Canterbury; and Strassburg?
7960What events are connected with the following places: Zama; Cannae; Actium; Pharsalus, and Philippi?
7960What events in the lives of Clovis and Pepin the Short contributed to the alliance between the Franks and the popes?
7960What examples of pastoral and agricultural life among the North American Indians are familiar to you?
7960What examples of triumphal arches in the United States and France are known to you?
7960What famous examples of domed churches and public buildings are familiar to you?
7960What features of Athenian education are noted in the illustration, page 254?
7960What features of our"circus"recall the proceedings at the Roman games?
7960What happened in 987 A.D.?
7960What is a bas- relief?
7960What is a"Fabian policy"?
7960What is a"Pyrrhic victory"?
7960What is his residence called?
7960What is meant by a"robber baron"?
7960What is meant by calling the Church an episcopal organization?
7960What is meant by saying that"French is a mere_ patois_ of Latin"?
7960What is meant by the statement that Carthage is a"dumb actor on the stage of history"?
7960What is meant by the"Norman graft upon the sturdy Saxon tree"?
7960What is meant by the"berserker''s rage"?
7960What is meant by the"emancipation of the peasantry"?
7960What is meant by"sea- power"?
7960What is the Apocrypha?
7960What is the chief difference in mode of government between Presbyterian and Congregational churches?
7960What is the date of the accession of the emperor Commodus?
7960What is the date of the first recorded Olympiad?
7960What is the essential distinction between a"limited"or"constitutional"monarchy and an"absolute"or"autocratic"monarchy?
7960What is the exact meaning of the words,_ Hebrew_,_ Israelite_, and_ Jew_?
7960What is the historical importance of Augustine, Henry the Fowler, Pepin the Short, Charles Martel, Egbert, and Ethelbert?
7960What is the meaning of the word"martyr"?
7960What is the origin of each term?
7960What is the origin of our names of the two months, January and March?
7960What is the origin of our words_ pedagogue_,_ symposium_,_ circus_, and_ academy_?
7960What is the origin of the geographical names Andalusia, Burgundy, England, and France?
7960What is the origin of the modern city of Constantinople?
7960What is the origin of the name"Protestant"?
7960What is the origin of the name_ Delta_ applied to such a region as Lower Egypt?
7960What is the origin of the word"emperor"?
7960What is the origin of the words"monk,""hermit,""anchorite,"and"abbot"?
7960What is the present meaning of the word"chivalrous"?
7960What is the present population of England?
7960What is the use of alloys?
7960What is the"Socratic method"of teaching?
7960What is the_ Pax Britannica_?
7960What is your favorite Greek statue?
7960What is"the power of the keys"which the popes claim to possess?
7960What justification was found in the New Testament(_ Matthew_, x 8- 10) for the organization of the orders of friars?
7960What light is thrown on the beginnings of money in ancient Egypt by the illustration on page 47?
7960What modern countries are included within the Macedonian Empire under Alexander?
7960What modern countries are included within the limits of ancient Iran?
7960What modern countries are included within the limits of the Balkan peninsula?
7960What modern countries are included within the limits of the Persian Empire under Darius?
7960What modern countries are included within the limits of the Roman Empire in the age of Trajan?
7960What names of our weekdays are derived from the names of Scandinavian deities?
7960What officers in American cities perform some of the duties of the censors, praetors, and aediles?
7960What particular discoveries were made by Cartier, Drake, Balboa, De Soto, Ponce de León, and Coronado?
7960What parts of Asia were not included in the Mongol Empire at its greatest extent?
7960What parts of the world are most correctly outlined on Ptolemy''s map?
7960What people possessed it during the ninth and tenth centuries?
7960What privileges does it confer?
7960What productions of medieval literature reflect aristocratic and democratic ideals, respectively?
7960What provinces of the Roman Empire in the West were not included within the limits of Charlemagne''s empire?
7960What reasons can be given for the Greek victory in the struggle against Persia?
7960What reasons can you give for Hannibal''s early successes and final failure?
7960What reasons can you suggest for the universal worship of the sun?
7960What reasons for the growth of the Papacy have been set forth in this chapter?
7960What reasons have led the Church to insist upon celibacy of the clergy?
7960What reasons suggest themselves as helping to explain the conversion of the civilized world to Christianity?
7960What resemblances do you discover between the Olympian festival and one of our great international expositions?
7960What resemblances existed between the culture of the Germans and that of the early Greeks?
7960What resemblances may be traced between Islam on the one side and Judaism and Christianity on the other side?
7960What settlements of the Northmen most influenced European history?
7960What state of our union?
7960What states of the Greek mainland were neutral in the Peloponnesian War( map facing page 108)?
7960What stone implements have you ever seen?
7960What was the effect of feudalism on the sentiment of patriotism?
7960What was the importance of the Phoenician fleet in the Persian invasions?
7960What was the importance of the Synod of Whitby?
7960What was the origin of the geographical names Russia, Greenland, Finland, and Normandy?
7960What was the origin of the"divine right"of kings?
7960What was the original meaning of the words"presbyter,""bishop,"and"deacon"?
7960What was the significance of the fact that the Northmen were not Christians at the time when they began their expeditions?
7960What was the_ Pax Romana_?
7960What were the Roman names of England, Scotland, and Ireland?
7960What were the reasons for the failure of the Athenian, Spartan, and Theban attempts at empire?
7960What were the schoolbooks of Greek boys?
7960What were their contributions to knowledge?
7960What would be the effect on trade within an American state if tolls were levied on the border of every county?
7960What would you say of Holbein''s success as a portrait painter( illustrations pages 651, 658)?
7960When and by whom was he elected?
7960When and where was Jesus born?
7960Where are they still found?
7960Where is it obtained?
7960Where was each side weak and where strong?
7960Where were they?
7960Who made them?
7960Who was king of Judea at the time?
7960Whom do you consider the greater man, Julius Caesar or Augustus?
7960Why are modern coins always made perfectly round and with"milled"edges?
7960Why are the earliest laws always unwritten?
7960Why are they not so useful now?
7960Why can wars with barbarous and savage peoples be justified as"the most ultimately righteous of all wars"?
7960Why could not such an institution as the Papacy develop in the East?
7960Why did Balboa call the Pacific the"South Sea"?
7960Why did Italy remain for so many centuries after the Lombard invasion merely"a geographical expression"?
7960Why did Xerxes take the longer route through Thrace, instead of the shorter route followed by Datis and Artaphernes?
7960Why did heresies develop in the East rather than in the West?
7960Why did it prove more difficult to establish a despotic monarchy in England than in France during the seventeenth century?
7960Why did no one suggest that the New World be called after Columbus?
7960Why did the French language in the seventeenth century become the language of fashion and diplomacy?
7960Why did the Germans fail to take part in the work of discovery and colonization?
7960Why did the Germans progress more slowly in civilization than the Greeks and the Romans?
7960Why did the Greek traveler, Herodotus, call Egypt"the gift of the Nile"?
7960Why did the Mongol conquest of Russia tend to strengthen the sentiment of nationality in the Russian people?
7960Why did the Renaissance begin as"an Italian event"?
7960Why did the Romans call the Second Punic War the"War of Hannibal"?
7960Why did the cattle breeder in Italy have no reason to fear foreign competition?
7960Why did the classical scholar come to be regarded as the only educated man?
7960Why did the colonies, as a rule, advance more rapidly than the mother country in wealth and population?
7960Why did the existence of numerous slaves in Egypt and Babylonia tend to keep low the wages of free workmen?
7960Why did the reformers in each country take special pains to translate the Bible into the vernacular?
7960Why do great cities rarely develop without the aid of commerce?
7960Why do you like it?
7960Why does an American city have a charter?
7960Why does classical literature contain almost no"love stories,"or novels?
7960Why does the First Triumvirate mark a distinct step toward the establishment of the empire?
7960Why had the Arabs, until the time of Mohammed, played so inconspicuous a part in the history of the world?
7960Why has Alaric been styled"the Moses of the Visigoths"?
7960Why has Carthage been called the"London"of the ancient world?
7960Why has England been called"the mother of parliaments"?
7960Why has Froissart been styled the"French Herodotus"?
7960Why has Justinian been called the"lawgiver of civilization"?
7960Why has Lothair''s kingdom north of the Alps been called the"strip of trouble"?
7960Why has Marathon been considered such a battle?
7960Why has Marco Polo been called the"Columbus of the East Indies"?
7960Why has Siegfried, the hero of the_ Nibelungenlied_, been called the"Achilles of Teutonic legend"?
7960Why has Wycliffe been called the"morning star of the Reformation"?
7960Why has chivalry been called"the blossom of feudalism"?
7960Why has feudalism been called"confusion roughly organized"?
7960Why has it been called the"suicide of Greece"?
7960Why has scholasticism been called"a sort of Aristotelian Christianity"?
7960Why has the Baltic Sea been called a"secondary Mediterranean"?
7960Why has the Bill of Rights been called the"third great charter of English liberty"?
7960Why has the Delphic oracle been called"the common hearth of Hellas"?
7960Why has the Mediterranean been called a"highway of nations"?
7960Why has the Peloponnesian War been called an"irrepressible conflict"?
7960Why has the Roman Church always refused to sanction divorce?
7960Why has the Third Crusade been called"the most interesting international expedition of the Middle Ages"?
7960Why has the battle of Adrianople been called"the Cannae of the fourth century"?
7960Why has the invention of the bow- and- arrow been of greater importance than the invention of gunpowder?
7960Why has the medieval Papacy been called the"ghost"of the Roman Empire?
7960Why has the medieval city been called the"birthplace of modern democracy"?
7960Why have Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica been called the"suburbs of Italy"?
7960Why have queens never ruled in France?
7960Why have the consuls been called"joint kings for one year"?
7960Why is Greece in its physical aspects"the most European of European lands"?
7960Why is Hastings included among"decisive"battles?
7960Why is Roman law followed in all Spanish- American countries?
7960Why is an acquaintance with Scandinavian mythology, literature, and history especially desirable for English- speaking peoples?
7960Why is it likely that the bust of Nerva( illustration, page 200) is a more faithful likeness than that of Pericles( illustration, page 103)?
7960Why is it so much lower in modern countries?
7960Why is it true that civilization may be said to have begun"with the cracking of the slave whip"?
7960Why is it very desirable for the United States to adopt the budget system?
7960Why is modern civilization, unlike that of antiquity, in little danger from barbarians?
7960Why is the Council of Trent generally considered the most important church council since that of Nicaea?
7960Why is the First Triumvirate described as a"ring"?
7960Why is the Second Crusade often called"St. Bernard''s Crusade"?
7960Why is the defeat of the Moslems before Constantinople regarded as more significant than their defeat at the battle of Tours?
7960Why is there some excuse for describing a Gothic building as"a wall of glass with a roof of stone"?
7960Why not so well fitted as Asia to originate civilization?
7960Why should Mithraism have proved"the most formidable foe which Christianity had to overcome"?
7960Why should Rome have made a greater success of her imperial policy than either Athens or Sparta?
7960Why should the Phoenicians have been called the"colossal peddlers"of the ancient world?
7960Why should the discovery of fire be regarded as of more significance than the discovery of steam?
7960Why should the steppes of central and northern Asia have been a nursery of warlike peoples?
7960Why was Attila called the"scourge of God"?
7960Why was Europe better fitted than Asia to develop the highest civilization?
7960Why was Friday regarded as a specially unlucky day?
7960Why was India better known in ancient times than China?
7960Why was Mary naturally a Catholic and Elizabeth naturally a Protestant?
7960Why was Spain inconspicuous in European politics before the opening of the sixteenth century?
7960Why was Venice called the"bride of the sea"?
7960Why was a canal through the isthmus of Suez less needed in ancient times than to- day?
7960Why was it necessary to codify Roman law?
7960Why was the Parliament of 1295 A.D. named the"Model Parliament"?
7960Why was the extinction of the Ostrogothic kingdom a misfortune for Italy?
7960Why was the feudal system not found in the Roman Empire in the East during the Middle Ages?
7960Why was the island of Cyprus a natural meeting place of Egyptian, Syrian, and Greek peoples?
7960Why was the money- changer so necessary a figure in medieval business?
7960Why was the purchasing power of money much greater in the Middle Ages than it is now?
7960Why was the revival of Greek more important in the history of civilization than the revival of Latin?
7960Why was the rule of the Senate, unsatisfactory though it was, to be preferred to that of the Roman populace?
7960Why was the tyranny of Sparta more oppressive than that of Athens?
7960Why was there no antagonism between labor and capital under the guild system?
7960Why was war the usual condition of feudal society?
7960Why were fairs a necessity in the Middle Ages?
7960Why were the Hellenistic cities the real"backbone"of Hellenism?
7960Why were the invasions of the Mongols and Ottoman Turks more destructive to civilization than those of the Germans, the Arabs, and the Northmen?
7960Why were the reformers within the Church of England called"Puritans"?
7960With that of Assyria?
7960With what paintings by the"old masters"are you familiar?
7960Would import duties on foreign grain have revived Italian agriculture?
7960Would the crusaders in 1204 A.D. have attacked Constantinople, if the schism of 1054 A.D. had not occurred?
7960[ Illustration: CERVANTES] FROISSART, 1397(?
7960[ Illustration: Map, PORTUGUESE AND SPANISH COLONIAL EMPIRES IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY] FERDINAND MAGELLAN, 1480(?
7960[ Illustration: PLAN OF KIRKSTALL ABBEY, YORKSHIRE] RULE OF ST. BENEDICT, 529(?)
7960_ Founding of Rome_ 753(?)-509(?)
7960_ Quo Vadis?_( Boston, 1896, Little, Brown, and Co.,$ 2.00).
7960but were not yet provinces?
7960in 1066 A.D.?
7960in 1215 A.D.?
7960in 1295 A.D.?
7960in 1346 A.D.?
7960in 1453 A.D.?
7960in 1485 A.D.?
7960of Marseilles?
7960of Naples?
7960of Syracuse in Sicily?
7960of the Council of Nicaea?
7960of the Edict of Milan?
7960of the accession of Diocletian?
7960of the death of Theodosius?
7960of the expulsion of the last tyrant of Athens?
7960of"Greater London?"
7960the Germans?
7960the Persians?
7960the earliest legal code?
7960the first coined money?
7960the inhabitants of the United States?
7960the most ancient book?
7960the year 1917 A.D.?
9608''But how did you come hither, O my dear--?'' 9608 ''Indeed, my brother?''
9608''Then why, in heaven''s name, need a man test any of these wickets?'' 9608 A strolling actress is n''t supposed to be very particular, is she?"
9608Afraid?
9608Ah, but is not a judicious nastiness the market- price of a second edition before publication?
9608And Rosalind-- I mean the girl--?
9608And after that?
9608And found it--?
9608And have I ever failed you, Bettie?
9608And have you ever noticed, Mademoiselle Neroni, that every one of us is several people? 9608 And how was_ she_ to know?"
9608And how,queried Rosalind, presently,"came you to the Forest of Arden, good Jaques?"
9608And now,quoth she, seating herself on a fallen log,"what would you do if I were your very, very Rosalind?"
9608And so--?
9608And that,said Rosalind,"was the reason Jaques came to Arden?"
9608And was n''t it odd the Dragon should have come just when he did?
9608And who may you happen to be?
9608And why not? 9608 And why not?"
9608And why should you be living,I said, in half- conscious absurdity,"when she is dead?
9608And why, Avis?
9608And you will cross half the world,said Charteris,"in the green dressing- gown, or in the coat which Byam borrowed for you this morning?
9608And you?
9608Are n''t we friends-- Avis?
9608Are they?
9608Are you sure-- quite sure,she queried, wistfully,"that you would n''t rather have me Margaret Hugonin, the heiress?"
9608Before?
9608But I am just a little butterfly- woman,she would say, sadly; then, with a quick smile,"Are n''t I?"
9608But I might have known the mother would win,I reflected:"Why, did n''t Bettie say she would?"
9608But I particularly like that part--"Do you?
9608But ca n''t you imagine the knights talking over Lancelot''s affair with Guenevere, at whatever was the Arthurian substitute for a club? 9608 But it was Jack who broke his crown,"said I;"Was n''t it-- Jill?"
9608But not without an escort, I trust, Miss Gladys? 9608 But surely not while we are as yet involved in a question of plain logic?
9608But would Jaques be the sort of person who''d--?
9608Can you see, can you see, can you see? 9608 Can you see, can you see, can you see?
9608Could n''t you think of a better one, Peter?--of a more respectable one, Peter? 9608 Dear me, are n''t those roses pretty?
9608Dear me, did I say that? 9608 Dear,"said I,"is it not something to have been happy?
9608Did you know, Jo, that he is crazy about that too?
9608Do n''t you pity the poor Dragon, Gladys, who never gets a chance in life and has to live always between two book- covers?
9608Do you always get red in the face when you make love? 9608 Do you know, now, I would have been tremendously sorry to lose that?
9608Do you know, you are uncommonly handsome when you are talking nonsense? 9608 Do you really think so?"
9608Do you reckon,spoke a voice-- a most agreeable voice,--"we are in any danger?"
9608Eh?
9608Eh?
9608Eh?
9608Eh?
9608First?
9608For you will come with me, wo n''t you, dear? 9608 Forgiveness?"
9608Gladys,I said,"why do n''t you elope with me?
9608Have n''t I already told you I was a connoisseur in gardens? 9608 Have you not wondered,"said I,"that I have never kissed you, except as if you were a very holy relic or a cousin or something of that sort?"
9608I adore orange ices, do n''t you? 9608 I have heard,"said I, hopefully,"that there is consumption in the family?"
9608I never,she suggested, tentatively,"heard any more of your poem, about--?"
9608I say,queried Mr. Bulmer,"do you think this sort of thing is fair to the girl?
9608I trust they give you a sufficiency of it in the nursery?
9608I trust you had not entirely stripped me of my reputation?
9608I wonder now if it is not at a price?
9608I''m just a little butterfly- woman, are n''t I?
9608Is it necessary?
9608Is it nonsense, Elena, that for two years I have remembered the woman whose soft body I held, for one unforgettable moment, in my arms? 9608 It''s no use, Jill--""Is it another woman?
9608Jaques, is there another woman in this?
9608May one suggest,she queried gently,"that you are probably-- mistaken?"
9608Mr. Townsend, is it not? 9608 My dear fellow,"I began;"why, have you dropped from the moon?"
9608Never?
9608Nonsense?
9608Now, I wonder,I queried, of my soul,"what will be next?
9608Oh, but who wants a man to_ die_ for her?
9608Oh, well,said I, and stretched myself at her feet, full length,--which is supposed to be a picturesque attitude,--"why quarrel over a name?
9608Oh, what''s the difference? 9608 Oh--?
9608P.I.B., you mean? 9608 Pardon me,"said I, subsequently;"but_ have_ you seen anything of a watch-- a small gold one, set with pearls?"
9608Perhaps you are not aware,hazarded a soprano voice,"that this is private property?"
9608Rob,--are you ever afraid of dying?
9608Shall we say eleven o''clock?
9608Shall we say-- Hades?
9608Sum total?
9608Surely, that is the very last of your possessions any reasonable person would covet?
9608That fellow who just went out,I explained--"do you know the police want his address, I think?
9608The Prince demanded how if one found by chance the hundredth wicket? 9608 Then,"queried she, after a pause,"who are you?
9608Then--?
9608This handkerchief?
9608Verses?
9608Was she cruel, my boy, or was she kind? 9608 Well, Avis?"
9608Well, and what do you think of her-- of her looks, I means? 9608 Well, then,"she suggested, cheerfully, after due reflection,"since we ca n''t go down, why not go up?"
9608Well?
9608What do you mean by having such a name?
9608What do you mean?
9608What would you demand, then, of a book?
9608What''s the latest quotation on heiresses?
9608What?
9608Whence this unmaidenliness?
9608Who would n''t be?
9608Who wrote it?
9608Why not fall in love?
9608Why not? 9608 Why,"she continued, with a certain lack of relevance,"why not fall in love with somebody else?"
9608Would you mind returning to your sanatorium and allowing me to go on reading? 9608 Yes,"Stella agreed, in a curious, quiet and tiny voice,"it-- it''s very large, is n''t it?"
9608Yes,--we butterflies do n''t love one another overmuch, do we? 9608 Yes?"
9608Yes?
9608Yes?
9608Yes?
9608You care for me-- just me?
9608You do think, then, that, between you and me, it is really coming alive?
9608You mean we can not get down?
9608You mean--?
9608You mentioned your sanatorium?
9608You prefer to look upon writing as an art, rather than a business? 9608 You really mean it?"
9608You will come back?
9608You will know her?
9608You wonder? 9608 You would walk through the streets of this Fairhaven with me-- with a barn- stormer, with a strolling actress?
9608You-- you understand, dear?
9608Your husband,I said, quickly,"he does not love you?
9608_ As You Like It_?
9608''"I_ beg_ your pardon?"
9608''How else?''
96082"So you do n''t like my stage- name?"
96083 Once Bettie demanded of me,"I often wonder what you really think of me?
96083"Did n''t I know it-- didn''t I know it?"
96085"Dear boy,"said Bettie, when I had made an end of reading,"and are you very miserable?"
96085"Well?"
96086"Do you know why I want to marry you?"
96086"Will you not have me, lady?"
96087"And besides, why_ not_?"
9608Ah, what will she say, indeed?
9608Am I to blame if I succumb to the temptation?
9608And I reckon you really go to Heaven afterwards if you have n''t been really bad,--don''t you?"
9608And I?
9608And I?
9608And I?"
9608And besides that--""Yes?"
9608And did I think--?
9608And did you think, then, I was blind?"
9608And in consequence-- will you marry me, Avis?"
9608And in time, you will love me a little, simply because I want you to,--isn''t that always a woman''s main reason for caring for a man?"
9608And now when are we going for that pail of water?"
9608And perhaps--?
9608And so,"But why not?"
9608And the second?"
9608And then,"cried I, with a flourish,"and then, what follows logically?"
9608And what do you in this forest?"
9608And what is the meaning of this, by the way?
9608And what was she to do?
9608And why did you pout at me, Avis dear?
9608And why is your wife rushing on to Paris, John?"
9608And why the deuce should n''t I?
9608And yet-- I wonder now?"
9608And you are n''t a bad sort, are you?
9608And you are to spend October at Negley?
9608And you wo n''t forget the hall- light?
9608And, in fine,"Well, really now--?"
9608Are you going to deny him that chance, Avis?"
9608Are you sure it fell here?"
9608Are you up to it?"
9608Both had been planned to wheedle him, to gain this glorious chance for Peter Blagden...."You-- you are sure you are not lying?"
9608But may one allowably demonstrate the fallacy of this same point of view?
9608But they told me he was here?
9608But why make_ all_ the actions of your life so foolish?
9608But you''ll be honest with me-- won''t you?--and particularly when you do n''t want to be?"
9608But, oh, Peter, Peter, what possessed you to take the name of that notorious Robert Townsend?"
9608Ca n''t you-- can''t you fix it,--and-- er-- change it a bit?
9608Can you do that bullying, Bettie,--and keep it up, I mean?"
9608Could she accept his gracefully insulting semblance of a love she knew he did not feel?
9608Dear me, did I forget to tell you we were going to cut that out?"
9608Did I not see the pathos of poor Zeus''s situation with the god business practically"cornered,"and the Jews getting all the trade?
9608Did she set the dog on you or have you thrashed by her father?
9608Do n''t I know you for the bravest, tenderest, purest, most beautiful woman God ever made?
9608Do n''t you shudder at the effrontery of the minx?
9608Do n''t you understand even now?"
9608Do try to do the unpleasant thing sometimes, my dear!--But what''s the good of promising?"
9608Do you know, Robert Etheridge Townsend, there is about you the making of a very fine logician?"
9608Does it stand for Poor Idiot Boy?"
9608Even so, I wonder--?
9608For a moment, I wondered--?
9608For what other purpose do you suppose a gentleman goes into his library, pray?
9608For what will Mrs. Grundy say if we do n''t?
9608For, as you justly observe, what, after all, is this love?
9608Gladys wanted to know:"But what sort of house is a tete- a- tete?
9608Have I not always known that, Jack?"
9608He is rather like a muffin, is n''t he?"
9608He-- he is not faithful to you?"
9608How does it matter what we said?
9608How in heaven''s name does it concern them that a boy has dreamed dreams and has gone mad like a star- struck moth?
9608How_ could_ I love him?"
9608I am a poor relation, a penniless cousin, a dependent, a hanger- on, do you understand?
9608I conceded;"since the way in which a man talks to a woman-- to_ the_ woman-- depends by ordinary upon the depth--""The depth of his devotion?"
9608I cried;"what matter?
9608I hate to seem too urgent, but we_ must_, do you understand?"
9608I hear Francine is in Milan?"
9608I like cats, do n''t you?"
9608I ought to sing_ Nunc Dimittis_, ought n''t I?"
9608I said as much,"And it_ has_ been a comfort, Lizzie, because she does n''t come as often now, for some reason--""Why-- what do you mean?"
9608I said, aloud:"Well, Hardress, you would n''t have me dispute the veracity of a lady?"
9608I scoffed;"what''s temperament to two eyes like those?
9608I think-- ah, desire o''the world, what can I think of you?
9608I thought;"if everybody else is so extravagantly pleased, what in heaven''s name is the use of my being squeamish?
9608I was going to Gridlington; what more natural than to ride over to Fairhaven some clear morning and tell Bettie everything?
9608I wonder if you will never understand that what you take to be your love for beautiful things is really just a dislike of ugly ones?
9608I wonder now--?"
9608I wonder, by the way, if people ever survive that malady?
9608I wonder, though?
9608I''ve grown?
9608I-- I reckon you must think me very horrid?"
9608In consequence I must confess to have been wondering--?"
9608Is it like a palace?"
9608Is it simply a proof that I, too, am qualified to sit next to the Hatter?"
9608Is n''t it a little cold- blooded?"
9608Is n''t it queer, Bobbie?
9608Is n''t it the very sweetest name in the world?
9608It is poor stuff, of course, but then how could I write of Helen when Helen had disappeared?"
9608It is time the prodigal marry and settle down, is it not?
9608It-- it is for good, is n''t it?"
9608Men are so absurd, do n''t you think?
9608Methuselah?"
9608Now, is n''t that a sweet name?
9608Of course, she could n''t act, but, then, who wanted her to act?
9608Of course,"she sighed, quite tolerantly,"I know he is clean out of his head, for otherwise--""Yes,--otherwise?"
9608Oh, Avis dear, why are you so absolutely and entirely unforgettable all around?
9608Oh, how can any of us get on without you?
9608Oh, sainted Ebenezer in bliss, and whatever have I done with that ring?
9608Oh, why not be truthful?
9608Oh, you stupid man, how could I have_ helped_ knowing it-- that all the love you have made to me was because you have been playing I was Stella?
9608Only I wonder what_ becomes_ of all the first choices?"
9608Or was it Colonel Tatkin who offered me a heart''s devotion and an elopement?
9608Our little talk has been very interesting-- hasn''t it?
9608Perhaps he ground his teeth?
9608Perhaps the conscienceless tiger listened when she was"seeing the proper people were treated properly"?
9608She pointed to a stout woman, who, with a purple?
9608She used to know you, too, did n''t she?
9608She-- she''d probably be accustomed to it, would n''t she?"
9608Sheridan?"
9608Signorina?"
9608So after dinner-- in an hour--?"
9608So it is all off?
9608So now, you see, we have been quite properly introduced, have n''t we?
9608So what''s the answer?"
9608So why should n''t I?
9608So, suppose we say this June?"
9608So, you thought I was Peter Blagden,--the rich Peter Blagden?
9608Surely, that is at once apparent?"
9608That sounds as if I ate in the back pantry, does n''t it?
9608Then,"Signorina?
9608Townsend?"
9608Uncle George, do you think that a real lady is ever justified in obliterating a paternal relative?
9608Upon the following evening--"And why not?"
9608We are going to be friends, are n''t we-- Avis?"
9608We have altered a little, have n''t we?
9608We may, then, regard the Hardress incident as closed?"
9608Well, as it is, I pay for the luxury of thinking, just as you forewarned me, do n''t I, Jaques?
9608What does it matter now?
9608What good do you get out of having the gout, for instance?"
9608What if, after all, love tends, without variation, to yoke the most incompatible in order that the average type of humanity may be preserved?
9608What, have you never noticed that with''people,''to eat mutton once a week is a sort of guarantee of respectability?
9608Where are you going, anyway?"
9608Where are your Hardresses now?"
9608Why are you so-- Oh, as we used to say at school,"she re- began,_"Que diable allais- tu faire dans cette galere?
9608Why could n''t you have been named Polly or Lena or Margaret, or something commonplace like that, Avis-- dear?"
9608Why did you crinkle up your eyes when I told you that as yet unbotanised flower was a_ Calycanthus arithmelicus_?
9608Why did you mind my calling you a boy?
9608Why do you ripple all your words together in that quaint fashion till it sounds like a brook discoursing?
9608Why should I?"
9608Why, it is shooting, is n''t it?"
9608Will you marry me, Avis?"
9608Wo n''t you, Miss Montmorenci?
9608Yet do you not realize that not a month ago you were heartbroken over Stella Musgrave?
9608Yet, only yesterday-- do you remember, dear?"
9608You do n''t, do you, Bobbie?
9608You have actually begged me to be your wife, have n''t you?
9608_ He Advances in the Attack on Selwoode_"Well?"
9608_ che sara!_ You do n''t care for music, do you?
9608along with the veneering, eh?
9608am I never to see any more of you?"
9608and Lamoracke sagaciously observing that there was always a crooked streak in the Leodograunce family?
9608and sniggering over it?
9608and will You slay me, too, if I presume to use that power?
9608cried the Foolish Prince;''with so much to lose and, it may be, nothing to gain?
9608have n''t you been translated yet?
9608have you then forgotten that upon this forenoon we hunt the great boar?"
9608he said, suddenly;"have you seen_ The Imperial Votaress?_"I frowned.
9608how much would it shock you if I told you no woman really minds about that either?
9608it is done with?
9608said I, to the desk- clerk;"how long does this place keep open?"
9608said I, with a fine surprise,"so it is an anniversary with you, too?"
9608said I,"and you think you''re mighty smart, do n''t you?
9608said I;"eh?
9608said Mr. Bulmer, dubiously;"going back to renew associations with your first love?
9608said Mrs. Vokins, comfortably;"and who''s a- beating?"
9608said Peter, with a grin,"and besides that?"
9608said Rosalind; and then, remorsefully:"Was it a very horrid girl?"
9608she cried;"and I-- I do care for you,--how could I help it?
9608she said,"how did I ever come to raise a child that does n''t know his own mind for as much as two minutes?
9608she then said, impatiently"How often will I have to tell you it is n''t decent to be always hanging around your wife?
9608the Neroni said, with something very like a sob,"Or were you always-- just that, at bottom?"
9608the beautiful lady or America?
9608we have laughed, have we not, dear, a whole summer through?
9608what does it mean?''
9608what is sweeter?"
9608what is sweeter?"
9608what''s the matter?"
8149A musician like you?
8149After the social revolution?
8149Against me?
8149And all the other men and women do n''t count?
8149And do n''t you ever make mistakes when you go after them?
8149And even if that does happen, is n''t it better to die fighting for the happiness of those one loves than to flicker out in apathy?
8149And she was in Germany, was she not?
8149And you give that sort of thing to the people?
8149And you have come from Germany? 8149 And you have no other work to offer a musician like myself?"
8149And you offer that to me, to me-- me...?
8149Angry? 8149 Antoinette?"
8149Are n''t you well?
8149Are there only women writers in France?
8149As you do? 8149 But against my country?"
8149But for you?
8149But how could you sympathize with me? 8149 But how does that affect you?"
8149But how was it,asked Christophe, who was still inclined to be suspicious,"that they told me just now that Herr Kohn did not belong here?"
8149But is it necessary always to understand each other?
8149But is n''t it true?... 8149 But tell me,"Christophe would ask André Elsberger,"are you in touch with the proletarians of the rest of the nations?"
8149But what can I do?
8149But when one can not do them?
8149But why? 8149 But, in your heart, you had decided?"
8149But,he went on a moment later,"you knew?...
8149Ca n''t you be just to your adversaries?
8149Do n''t they pay you enough?
8149Do you teach them to do evil, then?
8149Do you think I should come to you with weapons concealed about me? 8149 Do you think I''m not competent to do the work?"
8149Dreyfusards?
8149For whose sake? 8149 Have you a good situation?"
8149Have you made treaties, and drawn up a plan?
8149Have you no blood in your veins?
8149How are we to live? 8149 How can a man and a woman live together if they do n''t think the same?"
8149How can you stand such a life? 8149 How do you make your living?"
8149How is it that I do n''t see it then?
8149Is it possible?
8149Is n''t it the common lot? 8149 Is one to lie to one''s neighbor?"
8149Is there enough in it to keep you talking for ten minutes?
8149It''s all very well for you to talk: would you take a woman who did not love music?
8149Lecture on what?
8149My poor dear fellow,said Olivier,"what do you know of France?"
8149My position?
8149Nor for love?
8149Out? 8149 So.... You.... You have come to see me?"
8149Suppose a common enemy were to threaten Europe, would n''t you throw in your lot with the Germans?
8149Teach what?
8149The Republic?
8149The house reeking of filth, the hot dirtiness of it all, the shameful poverty-- how can you bring yourself to come back to it night after night? 8149 The idiots of the market- place?"
8149The revolution?
8149Then you have come to see me because I can be silent?
8149To- morrow?
8149Well,said Christophe,"is that a reason for a Frenchman?"
8149Well: what are they doing?
8149Well: what does that matter?
8149What about Strauss?
8149What can I do?
8149What can we do? 8149 What do you mean?"
8149What do you want? 8149 What do you want?"
8149What does he say about it?
8149What else can one do? 8149 What good is that to other people?"
8149What has it got to do with M. Roussin? 8149 What have I done?"
8149What in thunder is that? 8149 What is it?
8149What is it?
8149What is the matter with you, then?
8149What more do you want?
8149What story?
8149What would have stopped you?
8149What would you have us do? 8149 What''s the good of treaties?
8149What''s the matter with the woman?
8149What''s the matter with you, boy? 8149 What''s the matter with you?
8149What''s this? 8149 What?
8149What?
8149What?
8149What?
8149What?
8149When shall I know?
8149When shall we all be equal, then?
8149When?
8149Where are they?
8149Where did he go?
8149While you are waiting for lessons, would you care to do some work for a music publisher?
8149Who are you screaming at?
8149Who knows?
8149Who?
8149Who?
8149Why do n''t you marry her,asked Christophe,"if you love her and she loves you?"
8149Why do you stay?
8149Why is it impossible?
8149Why is that surprising?
8149Why not? 8149 Why not?"
8149Why should one always be sacrificing one thing for another? 8149 Why?
8149Why? 8149 Why?"
8149With you listening? 8149 Without flinching?
8149Would n''t you much rather have been the Greeks, who are dead, than any of the people who are vegetating nowadays?
8149You are impertinent.... And then, even if it were so, is n''t that the right way to love music?
8149You do n''t know him? 8149 You have written music?
8149You need a great critic, a Lessing, a..."A Boileau?
8149You tell yourself stories? 8149 You think not?"
8149You want me to?... 8149 You would never have come to me?"
8149You''re not angry with me?
8149Your young poet?
8149_ You_ say that? 8149 A few dozen men of letters? 8149 After a moment Olivier, still busy with his own thoughts, said:Are you tired, too, father?"
8149After the first act he turned to Sylvain Kohn, who asked him, with glittering eyes:"Well, old man, what do you think of it?"
8149An ugly husband, eh?"
8149And Christophe asked Olivier:"Where are your people?
8149And Christophe:"What is success to me, now that she is dead?"
8149And are you even sure that the worms have not crept into your building- yard?"
8149And he said:"Is it like that all through?"
8149And the boy?...
8149And then, even if he remembered, how was he to find a poor little governess in that ant- heap of human beings?
8149And to what end?
8149And what could he do for her?
8149And when Céline took Christophe to the door and found herself alone with him, she said:"Do you know what he was reading?
8149And when she did succeed in escaping from the crowd, she made no attempt to go back: she was suddenly ashamed: what could she dare to say to him?
8149And when they insisted, saying:"Which matters most in music, harmony or counterpoint?"
8149Are n''t they good to you?"
8149Are not his days also like the days of an hireling?
8149Are they of all men unable to see the poetry of the world?"
8149Are you even a musician?
8149Are you ill?"
8149Are you ill?"
8149Are you satisfied?"
8149Are you trying to rob them of every scrap of courage to live?"
8149As Beethoven had said,"If we surrender the forces of our lives to life, what, then, will be left for the noblest and highest?"
8149As for art,--you see,--I strum and daub and make messy little water- color sketches;--but is that enough to fill a woman''s life?
8149At last Christophe looked straight at the young man, and said with a smile, in a gruff voice:"You''re not a Parisian?"
8149At last Olivier pulled himself together, and, in a choking voice, said:"Tell me frankly, Christophe: you were going away?"
8149Because they were united at my expense?...
8149Between ourselves, does it not seem as though that day had arrived?"
8149But Kohn called to him:"What became of you after that great day?"
8149But Olivier shrugged his shoulders, and said, wearily and ironically:"Grapple with them?
8149But do n''t you see that that is what keeps me going?
8149But do you think there is much fun in marrying this or that young man whom I know as well as you do?
8149But do you yourselves do anything to clear it away?
8149But instead of that, what happens?
8149But it was possible.... Well, then, afterwards?...
8149But to how many men in France does that ever occur?
8149But what can I do?
8149But what did it matter?
8149But what did it matter?
8149But what does that matter to us?
8149But what good would that be to you if your life and your work remained unknown, as they probably would without the Jews?
8149But what sort of work can we do?
8149But what the hell are you to treat me like that?
8149But what use are philosophy, history, and science to me?
8149But what was the good of her knowing it?
8149But what was the good of that?
8149But what was the good?
8149But where were the springs of their life?
8149But, if you go to work without a plan, how can you expect any good to come of it?
8149But, surely, they would always live like that?
8149But,"he said, as he looked at the photograph on the desk,"she was quite a child when you lost her?"
8149Ca n''t it be done?"
8149Christophe asked Madame Roussin:"Who is he?"
8149Christophe darted a look of fury at him, and went on:"You know many people in the German colony?"
8149Christophe mentioned M. Weil,--(the Commandant gave an exclamation),--and the Elsbergers,--(he jumped in his seat):"That Jew?
8149Christophe repeated:"Antoinette... Antoinette Jeannin.... She was your sister?...
8149Christophe returned to Madame Roussin:"Tell me, what is his name?"
8149Christophe went on genially:"What are you doing among all these people?"
8149Christophe went on:"Is your business doing well?
8149Christophe would shrug his shoulders:"French music?...
8149Come, Commandant, you have made war; is that fighting, or anything like it?"
8149Come, come, are you mad?"
8149Could I betray my conscience for her?
8149Could that be refused him if only in charity?
8149Could you speak for me?"
8149Could you''simplify''the_ Carnival_ of Schumann, and arrange it for six and eight hands?"
8149Did Madame Germain, in the egoism of her love, see it?...
8149Did the sun never shine in France?
8149Did you have a good time?"
8149Do n''t you lose heart with it all?
8149Do n''t you see that the heroic idealism of your country and every other country in Europe is actually threatened?
8149Do n''t you see that they are all, more or less, a prey to the adventurers of every class of society?
8149Do n''t you think it would be better to fight against it?
8149Do n''t you yourself waste energy in anger and bitter struggles?"
8149Do they teach morality in French schools?"
8149Do you even know of the existence of our young reviews in which such great faith and devotion are expressed?
8149Do you know where you are?
8149Do you think I am going to abdicate?
8149Do you think a working- man even knows what is being done in them?
8149Do you think there''ll be timber enough left for your new house?
8149Do you think you can take me in with looking anywhere but at me, and clipping your words?
8149Do you want me to adopt the old device of hate:_ Fuori Barbari_, or:_ France for the French_?"
8149Does not that foreign and uneasy quality exist even in the children of our own flesh and blood?...
8149Eh?
8149Even if he knew all and were kind to her, what could he do?...
8149Even if she had wished to do so, how could she?
8149Finished already?
8149For Heaven to take your affairs in hand?
8149For I do love you: but....""But you love the other fellow too?"
8149For long?"
8149For or against Reason?
8149For or against religion?
8149Glory?...
8149Go by the first train?
8149God?
8149Had he ever set eyes on them in France?
8149Have n''t you another room?"
8149Have not your worst enemies and your friends from the very beginning been Jews?"
8149Have you ever heard of our heroic deeds from the Crusades to the Commune?
8149Have you ever seen and felt the tragedy of the French spirit?
8149Have you ever stood at the brink of the abyss of Pascal?
8149Have you ever tried to perceive it?
8149Have you ever written anything?...
8149Have you many customers?"
8149Have you no poets in France?"
8149Have you read a single one of the books which are our faithful friends, the companions who support us in our lives?
8149He is free again?"
8149He must be a lusty lad: how the devil had he done it?
8149He opened it at the most somber words of all:_ Is there not an appointed time to man upon earth?
8149He said:"Colette, do you want us not to be friends any more?"
8149He said:"Shall we sit down for a moment on the seat here?"
8149He said:"Tell me, Christophe: could you... could you...?"
8149He took his hands in his usual uncouth way, and asked gaily:"You''ve been away?
8149He was wondering:"What is the difference between that and love?"
8149He went on in German:"And you come from the_ Rhine- land_?...
8149He would kiss her little hands, and jump her up and down on his knees, and sing the old song"What would you, pretty maid?
8149He would make himself ill with the thought of it...."Should he write and tell her to come back?"
8149He would not go.... Why should he not go?...
8149He would talk to her and weep... Where was she?
8149How can a man like you set so little store by the realities of life?
8149How could I hate, having no hatred, or, without being guilty of a lie, assume a hatred that I did not feel?
8149How do you manage to live here?"
8149How is your mother?"
8149How many Parisians have you met who have lived higher than the second or third floor?
8149How was it he had failed to feel the treasure of their goodness and honesty?
8149How would he find his mother, his mother whom he had deserted?...
8149How, then, should they not defend it against every menace of feudal reaction?
8149I am not fortunate enough to be like your German Gretchens, who can always create an illusion for themselves.... That is terrible, is n''t it?
8149I have sinned; what shall I do unto Thee, O Thou preserver of men?
8149I love France: but could I slay my soul for her?
8149I say to myself:''What is the good of fighting?
8149If in a few weeks he had fallen so low, where would he end?
8149If only mother had let me do it, as I could have done....""What will you do?
8149In Antoinette, too, there was the dark desire: but she fought it down: she wished to live...."Why?
8149In the darkness into which he was rushing Christophe sat wide- eyed, staring straight in front of him and thinking:"Shall I be in time?"
8149Is it better to give up living than to take the risks of life?"
8149Is n''t it pretty?"
8149Is n''t it revolting?"
8149Is n''t it right to teach them to see the sadness of things, as we do, and yet to go on and do their duty without flinching?"
8149Is n''t it so, my dear?"
8149Is that what you want?
8149It was he who asked:"Why have you stopped hurling that blessed Jew at my head?"
8149It''s silly of me, is n''t it?"
8149Let the troublous North and the loquacious South come to us....""And the poisonous East?"
8149Lucien Lévy- Coeur met Christophe''s eyes and paled a little, and said:"Were you speaking to me?"
8149Lunch with me?"
8149Many succumbed: they said:''Since it is so, why struggle against it?
8149Next day, and for several days after, as he walked about, he would suddenly bellow like a bull.... Why did he visit these people?
8149Nothing exists?
8149Often mediocre, and even coarse, what does it matter?
8149Olivier caught him up on the stairs: what was he going to do?
8149Olivier replied:"The people?
8149Olivier said to Christophe, who was silent:"Do you understand now?"
8149Olivier was thinking:"Antoinette, where are you?"
8149Olivier went on sorrowfully:"You would have fought against us?"
8149On the fifth day.... On the fifth day he hurled the paper away with a shudder, and said to Sylvain Kohn:"But what''s the matter with you all?
8149One evening, as he sat in his room, he could not restrain his tears: he flung himself on his knees by his bed and prayed.... To whom did he pray?
8149One must live?"
8149One way or the other, what does it matter?
8149Only...""What, then?"
8149Or was it the fat notary?
8149Outside the poor woman who looked after you, what do you know of them?
8149Perhaps we''re Jews ourselves?
8149Pretty bad, is n''t it?
8149Salome, the daughter of Ysolde.... And whose mother will Salome be in her turn?"
8149Shall I reach you before another wall is raised up between us: the wall of death?...
8149Shall we ever be together?
8149She longed to say to him:"My dear, my dear, that is nothing: but, tell me, what is the matter with you?
8149She stood by the door, and said thickly:"I came.... Will you... will you let me take her?"
8149She was ashamed... What was the good of it all?
8149She went to it with the Stevens: and she was tortured by the hideous sight of the rabble amusing themselves with insulting an artist.... An artist?
8149So you are the musician?"
8149Take us?
8149Tell me, what is hurting you so?"
8149That nothing is nothing?
8149The Abbé Corneille only asked:"Where do we stand as men?
8149The boy, where was he?
8149The impresario beamed and said:"Well, are you satisfied?"
8149The police?
8149The theaters of Paris?
8149The waters of his wretched life stirred and shifted above Him and never touched Him: what was there in common between that and Him?
8149Then how will you be better off?
8149Then, instead of answering, he asked with a shy, sweet smile:"And you?"
8149There is something the matter... You are hiding something... Has something dreadful happened?
8149There would be time for her to die before he could see her... Why had she not written to him, just a line or two, the day before?...
8149There''s loyalty and manliness in that, is n''t there?"
8149There''s no reason for doing anything?
8149They told you, I suppose?...
8149They worried their hair white in the search for new combinations of chords-- to express...?
8149They would send for Christophe, hum over their lucubrations, and say:"Is n''t it fine?"
8149Those Dreyfusards?"
8149To fight that common enemy, do n''t you think you should join with those of your adversaries who are of some worth and moral vigor?
8149To make our adversaries triumph?"
8149To put a stop to it, Kohn asked:"But how the devil do you come here?"
8149To whom could he pray?
8149Victory?
8149Was a little of the indifference of the Parisians creeping over him?
8149Was it impossible for people to think differently, and yet to retain their mutual esteem?
8149Was it that proud feeling of melancholy and pity that made him in spite of all sympathize with the opera?
8149Was it true that he was not in the least interested?
8149Was she ill?...
8149Was there not a great risk of bringing unhappiness on the woman he loved, and himself,--not to mention any children there might be?...
8149Well, any news?
8149Well, do you know what you are doing with your piano?...
8149Well, maestro, what do you say?
8149What are you doing this evening?
8149What are you trying to prove?
8149What are you waiting for?
8149What could they have said save a few trivial words?
8149What did it matter whether the fight appeared absurd to nations who called themselves practical?
8149What did it matter?
8149What did the rest matter?
8149What did they say?"
8149What do you do?
8149What do you say, you fellows?"
8149What do you want them to do?"
8149What do you want?
8149What does it matter to me whether the woman I love cares for music as much as I do?
8149What does it matter to us whether they live or die?
8149What does it matter whether your nation is the eldest daughter of the Church or the eldest daughter of Reason?
8149What good was it to have rebelled against Hecht''s offer?
8149What had become of him?
8149What had she done?
8149What had she to do with God?
8149What have you written?
8149What is it, after all?
8149What is it, then, if you please?"
8149What is left for us?"
8149What is the good of beautiful things if the eyes of the beloved are not there to see them?
8149What is the matter with you, really?"
8149What is the use of beauty, what is the use even of joy, if they can not be won through the heart of the beloved?
8149What man is free in this world?
8149What must he have thought of her?
8149What nation has the right to say:"These people are mine: for they are my brothers"?
8149What need had he of letters?
8149What should I do with the security you offer me, and your order and your impeccable discipline, locked up in the four walls of your Imperial barracks?
8149What was he doing?
8149What was the matter with her?
8149What was there to say?
8149What would happen if she were to disappear?
8149What would you?
8149What''s the good of tormenting myself?
8149When I lie down, I say, When shall I arise and the night be gone?
8149When all is said and done they think:"''Why wo n''t these people leave us in peace?''
8149When all is said and done, what do your ideas amount to?
8149When in the world was the like of the heroism of Cyrano ever to be found?
8149Where are your manners?
8149Where did I read that?"
8149Where had he seen her?...
8149Where have you had a chance of seeing them?
8149Where is man?...
8149Where is that which makes us live?"
8149Where is the poet in whose soul the height and depth of it were felt?
8149Where is the poet in whose soul this sacred agony is reflected?
8149Where was he going?
8149Where will you be when your France emerges from the Nile?
8149Where''s my hammer?
8149Who can say that it is not?''"
8149Who can say what gentle and chaste pleasure in itself there may be in so innocent a creature at feeling herself in sympathy with others?
8149Who could say that such a flower would not spring from it a second time?
8149Who was it said that the French were amiable fantastics who believed in nothing?
8149Who will say it?
8149Why did he go on visiting them?
8149Why did her head hurt her so?
8149Why did n''t you tell me?"
8149Why did she not try to break away from her condition and emancipate herself?
8149Why do anything?
8149Why do n''t they let us go for each other with fists and cudgels?
8149Why do you run away from life?
8149Why do you shrug your shoulders and make faces?"
8149Why do you want me to?"
8149Why force himself to gesticulate and make faces, like the rest, and pretend to be interested in things that did not appeal to him in the very least?
8149Why had he spent all he had on his dinner?
8149Why not do the same here?
8149Why not widen the scope of the fight?
8149Why should I bother to organize leagues and revolutions against them?
8149Why should n''t I understand it as well as you?"
8149Why should you think that your revolt will carry so little weight?
8149Why wo n''t you play?"
8149Why, then, did they live?
8149Why?
8149Why?"
8149Will you be my friend?"
8149Will you give me the pleasure...?
8149Will you please listen?"
8149Without you to trouble me, what should I have to live for?"
8149Would the members of your own religion come to your assistance?
8149Yes: it is only natural that you should know nothing of all this: I do not blame you: how could you?
8149You are interested only in the handiwork?
8149You are jealous even of your wife''s ideas?
8149You mentioned my name?
8149_ Lieder_, I suppose?"
8149_ Sat prata_....( What is that in Latin?)....
8149if I were a Frenchman I would give you portraits in music....( Would you like me to sketch the girl sitting in the garden under the lilac?)....
8149you, too, have suffered?"
8861And is it thus a brother hails A brother''s fond remembrance here? 8861 Bravely, old man, this health has sped; But why does Allan trembling stand?
8861Ill starr''d,[ 3] though brave, did no visions foreboding Tell you that fate had forsaken your cause?
8861Mathon of Lochlin sleeps: seest thou his spear? 8861 Orla,"said the son of Mora,"could I raise the song of Death to my friend?
8861Semper ego auditor tantum? 8861 Up, up, my friend, and clear your looks, Why all this toil and trouble?
8861What Form rises on the roar of clouds? 8861 What were the chase to me alone?
8861While all around is mirth and joy, To bless thy Allan''s happy lot, Say, hadst thou ne''er another boy? 8861 Why dost thou bend thy brow, chief of Oithona?"
8861Wilt thou leave thy friend afar? 8861 Years have rolled on;--in all the lists of Shame, Who now can parallel a Jefferies''name?
8861''Blest paper credit;''[ 20] who shall dare to sing?
8861''Imitations and Translations'', 1809, p. 200 And wilt Thou weep when I am low?
8861''Seek''st thou the cause?
8861''Tis morn:--from these I turn my sight: What scene is this which meets the eye?
8861--"And shalt thou fall alone?"
8861--"Calmar,"said the chief of Oithona,"why should thy yellow locks be darkened in the dust of Erin?
8861110 But which deserves the Laurel-- Rhyme or Blank?
88612. Who blames it but the envious fool, The old and disappointed maid?
8861210 Is there no cause beyond the common claim, Endear''d to all in childhood''s very name?
8861300 Shall fair EURYALUS,[16] pass by unsung?
88614 Dost thou repeat, in childish boast, The words man utters to deceive?
886140 Am I by thee despis''d, and left afar, As one unfit to share the toils of war?
8861420 Or prune the spirit of each daring phrase, To fly from Error, not to merit Praise?
88615 Shall man confine his Maker''s sway To Gothic domes of mouldering stone?
88615 While now amongst thy female peers Thou tell''st again the soothing tale, Canst thou not mark the rising sneers Duplicity in vain would veil?
88616 Shall man condemn his race to Hell, Unless they bend in pompous form?
88616 These tales in secret silence hush, Nor make thyself the public gaze: What modest maid without a blush Recounts a flattering coxcomb''s praise?
8861610 Hast thou no wrath, or wish to give it vent?
88617 Shall each pretend to reach the skies, Yet doom his brother to expire, Whose soul a different hope supplies, Or doctrines less severe inspire?
8861710 Or( since some men of fashion nobly dare To scrawl in verse) from Bond- street or the Square?
88618 Shall these, by creeds they ca n''t expound, Prepare a fancied bliss or woe?
88619. Who can conceive, who has not prov''d, The anguish of a last embrace?
8861960 Shall hoary Granta call her sable sons, Expert in science, more expert at puns?
8861?
8861A glance from thy soul- searching eye Can raise with hope, depress with fear; Yet, I conceal my love,--and why?
8861And must the Bard his glowing thoughts confine,[ lxii] Lest Censure hover o''er some faulty line?
8861And must we own thee, but a name, And from thy hall of clouds descend?
8861And shall I here forget the scene, Still nearest to my breast?
8861And shall we own such judgment?
8861And what do you think?
8861And wilt thou weep when I am low?
8861Angus said:"Is he not here?"
8861Are there no fools whose backs demand the scourge?
8861Are there no sins for Satire''s Bard to greet?
8861Arraign''d before thy beauty''s throne, What punishment wilt thou decree?
8861As rolls the Ocean''s changing tide, So human feelings ebb and flow; And who would in a breast confide Where stormy passions ever glow?
8861Ask''st thou the difference?
8861At length young Allan join''d the bride;"Why comes not Oscar?"
8861But how can my numbers in sympathy move, When I scarcely can hope to behold them again?
8861But say, what nymph will prize the flame Which seems, as marshy vapours move, To flit along from dame to dame, An ignis- fatuus gleam of love?
8861But thou, perhaps, may''st now reject Such expiation of my guilt; Come then-- some other mode elect?
8861But what is shame, or what is aught to him?
8861But when did Pallas teach, that one retreat Retrieved three long Olympiads of defeat?
8861But where is Cuthullin, the shield of Erin?
8861But where is Oscar?
8861But wherefore weep?
8861But who is he, whose darken''d brow Glooms in the midst of general mirth?
8861But why this vain advice?
8861But, who was last of Alva''s clan?
8861Can I forget-- canst thou forget, When playing with thy golden hair, How quick thy fluttering heart did move?
8861Can I sing of the deeds which my Fathers have done, And raise my loud harp to the fame of my Sires?
8861Can anything be more full of pathos?
8861Can guilt like man''s be e''er forgiven?
8861Can heavenly Mercy dwell with earthly Zeal?
8861Can the lips sing of Love in the desert alone, Of kisses and smiles which they now must resign?
8861Can they speak of the friends that I lived but to love?
8861Can vice atone for crimes by prayer?
8861Can we reverse the general plan, Nor be what all in turn must be?
8861Could I give his fame to the winds?
8861Could I see thee die, and not lift the spear?
8861Dear d-- d contemner of my schoolboy songs, Hast thou no vengeance for my Manhood''s wrongs?
8861Deceit is a stranger, as yet, to my soul; I, still, am unpractised to varnish the truth: Then, why should I live in a hateful controul?
8861Did Nathan ever read that line of Pope?
8861Dost thou think six families of distinction can share this in quiet?
8861Ere scenes were played by many a reverend clerk,[ l][ 27]( What harm, if David danced before the ark?)
8861For this, can Wealth, or Title''s sound atone, Made, by a Parent''s early loss, my own?
8861From whence?
8861Have I not heard the exile''s sigh, And seen the exile''s silent tear, Through distant climes condemn''d to fly, A pensive, weary wanderer here?
8861Have we no living Bard of merit?--none?
8861Hear''st thou the accents of despair?
8861Hence the question,"My Moira, what say you?"]
8861His life a votive ransom nobly give, Or die with him, for whom he wish''d to live?
8861How came it there?"
8861How now?
8861How view the column of ascending flames Shake his red shadow o''er the startled Thames?
8861I ne''er have told my love, yet thou Hast seen my ardent flame too well; And shall I plead my passion now, To make thy bosom''s heaven a hell?
8861I questioned him, why he had altered his declamation?
8861If ancient Virgins croaking''censures''raise?
8861If thus affection''s strength prevails, What might we not expect from fear?"
8861If unprovoked thou once could bid me bleed, Hast thou no weapon for my daring deed?
8861If you can add a little, say why not, As well as William Pitt, and Walter Scott?
8861In one, and one alone deceiv''d, Did I my error mourn?
8861Is it an exculpation?
8861Is it for this on Ilion I have stood, And thought of Homer less than Holyrood?
8861Is it not better to gibbet his body on a heath, than his soul in an octavo?
8861Is it so bad to unearth his bones as his blunders?
8861Is this a time for delay?"
8861Let Pastoral be dumb; for who can hope To match the youthful eclogues of our Pope?
8861Loud rings in air the chapel bell;''Tis hush''d:--what sounds are these I hear?
8861Mary, what home could be mine, but with you?
8861Mathon starts from sleep: but did he rise alone?
8861Mr. Hornem, ca n''t you see they''re valtzing?"
8861Must all the fame, the peril, be thine own?
8861No jest on"minors,"quibbles on a name,[ 57] Nor one facetious paragraph of blame?
8861No prowling robber lingers here; A wandering baby who can fear?"
8861No wit for Nobles, Dunces by descent?
8861Nor blaze with guilty glare through future time, Eternal beacons of consummate crime?
8861Nor find a Sylph in every dame, A Pylades[ 1] in every friend?
8861Now for a wager-- What coloured beard comes next by the window?
8861Once I beheld a splendid dream, A visionary scene of bliss: Truth!--wherefore did thy hated beam Awake me to a world like this?
8861Or Marmion''s acts of darkness, fitter food For SHERWOOD''S outlaw tales of ROBIN HOOD?
8861Or doom the lover you have chosen, On winter nights to sigh half frozen; In leafless shades, to sue for pardon, Only because the scene''s a garden?
8861Or dwell with delight on the hours that are flown?
8861Or pupil of the prudish school, In single sorrow doom''d to fade?
8861Or, in itself a God, what great desire?
8861Or, should some limner join, for show or sale, A Maid of Honour to a Mermaid''s tail?
8861Pray, Mr. Bayes, who is that Drawcansir?
8861Query: Which of Mr. Southey''s will survive?]
8861Remove whate''er a critic may suspect, To gain the paltry suffrage of"Correct"?
8861Say with what eye along the distant down Would flying burghers mark the blazing town?
8861Say, can Ambition''s fever''d dream bestow So sweet a balm to soothe your hours of woe?
8861Say, what dire penance can atone For such an outrage, done to thee?
8861Say, why should Oscar be forgot?"
8861See''st thou yon camp, with torches twinkling dim, Where drunken slumbers wrap each lazy limb?
8861Shall Peers or Princes tread pollution''s path, And''scape alike the Laws and Muse''s wrath?
8861Shall gentle COLERIDGE pass unnoticed here,[ 37] To turgid ode and tumid stanza dear?
8861Shall reptiles, groveling on the ground, Their great Creator''s purpose know?
8861Shall these approach the Muse?
8861Shall these no more confess a manly sway, But changeful woman''s changing whims obey?
8861Stalks not gigantic Vice in every street?
8861Such is the common lot of man: Can we then''scape from folly free?
8861Swift is the shaft from Allan''s bow; Whose streaming life- blood stains his side?
8861Tell us that all, for one who fell, Must perish in the mingling storm?
8861The Romans had a proverb,"Clodius accuset Moechos?"
8861The blood of Mathon shall reek on mine: but shall I slay him sleeping, Son of Mora?
8861The immortal wars which Gods and Angels wage, Are they not shown in Milton''s sacred page?
8861The prospect lengthen''d o''er the distant down, Lakes, meadows, rising woods, and all your own?
8861The song is glory''s chief reward, But who can strike a murd''rer''s praise?
8861The wise sometimes from Wisdom''s ways depart; Can youth then hush the dictates of the heart?
8861The word"Julia"(?)
8861These might the boldest Sylph appall, When gleaming with meridian blaze; Thy beauty must enrapture all; But who can dare thine ardent gaze?
8861These times are past, our joys are gone, You leave me, leave this happy vale; These scenes, I must retrace alone; Without thee, what will they avail?
8861Thine image, what new friendship can efface?
8861Think''st thou to gain thy verse a higher place, By dressing Camoëns[ 42] in a suit of lace?
8861Though none, like thee, his dying hour will cheer, Yet other offspring soothe his anguish here: But, who with me shall hold thy former place?
8861To Germany, and Highnesses serene, Who owe us millions-- don''t we owe the Queen?
8861To Germany, what owe we not besides?
8861To what unknown region borne, Wilt thou, now, wing thy distant flight?
8861Was this worthy of his sire?
8861What Brother springs a Brother''s love to seek?
8861What Sister''s gentle kiss has prest my cheek?
8861What child has she of promise fair, Who claims a fostering Mother''s care?
8861What does it signify whether a poor dear dead dunce is to be stuck up in Surgeons''or in Stationers''Hall?
8861What force, what aid, what stratagem essay, Back to redeem the Latian spoiler''s prey?
8861What friend for thee, howe''er inclin''d, Will deign to own a kindred care?
8861What is death to me?
8861What minstrel grey, what hoary bard, Shall Allan''s deeds on harp- strings raise?
8861What then?
8861What though from private pique her anger grew, And bade her blast a heart she never knew?
8861When cold is the beauty which dwelt in my soul,[ ii] What magic of Fancy can lengthen my song?
8861When fierce conflicting passions urge The breast, where love is wo nt to glow, What mind can stem the stormy surge Which rolls the tide of human woe?
8861When shall a modern maid have swains like these?
8861When shall the sleep of many a foe be o''er?
8861When thus devoted to poetic dreams, Who will peruse thy prostituted reams?
8861Where confidence and ease the watch disdain, And drowsy Silence holds her sable reign?
8861Which gave a lustre to its blue, Like Luna o''er the ocean playing?
8861Who breaks a Butterfly upon a wheel?"
8861Who inflicts again More books of blank upon the sons of men?
8861Who lies upon the stony floor?
8861Who shoot not flying rarely touch a gun: Will he who swims not to the river run?
8861Who will arise?"
8861Who will debase his manly mind, For friendship every fool may share?
8861Who will speed through Lochlin, to the hero, and call the chief to arms?
8861Who would share the spoils of battle with Calmar?
8861Whose Innocence requires defence, Or forms at least a smooth pretence, Thus to disturb a harmless Boy, His humble hope, and peace annoy?
8861Whose dark Ghost gleams on the red streams of tempests?
8861Whose yellow locks wave o''er the breast of a chief?
8861Why bend to the proud, or applaud the absurd?
8861Why crouch to her leaders, or cringe to her rules?
8861Why did I quit my Highland cave, Marr''s dusky heath, and Dee''s clear wave, To seek a Sotheron home?
8861Why did my childhood wander forth From you, ye regions of the North, With sons of Pride to roam?
8861Why do the injured unresisting yield The calm possession of their native field?
8861Why grows the moss on Alva''s stone?
8861Why is Epic degraded?
8861Why not?
8861Why not?--shall I, thus qualified to sit For rotten boroughs, never show my wit?
8861Why search for delight, in the friendship of fools?
8861Why should her voice curse Orla, the destroyer of Calmar?
8861Why should his harmless censure seem offence?
8861Why should my anxious breast repine, Because my youth is fled?
8861Why should tears dim the azure eye of Mora?
8861Why should thy doating wretched mother weep Her only boy, reclin''d in endless sleep?
8861Why should you weep, like_ Lydia Languish_, And fret with self- created anguish?
8861Why tamely thus before their fangs retreat, Nor hunt the blood- hounds back to Arthur''s Seat?
8861Why waste, upon folly, the days of my youth?
8861Why, Pigot, complain Of this damsel''s disdain, Why thus in despair do you fret?
8861Why, Pratt, hadst thou not a puff left?
8861Why, let the world unfeeling frown, Must I fond Nature''s claims disown?
8861Will not the laughing boy despise Her who relates each fond conceit-- Who, thinking Heaven is in her eyes, Yet can not see the slight deceit?
8861Willis?"
8861Wilt thou forbear, who never spared a foe?
8861With equal ardour fir''d, and warlike joy, His glowing friend address''d the Dardan boy:--"These deeds, my Nisus, shalt thou dare alone?
8861With toads, asps, onions, ornament the shrine, And reptiles own and pot- herbs things divine?"
8861With vests or ribands-- decked alike in hue, New troopers strut, new turncoats blush in blue: So saith the Muse: my----,[ 21] what say you?
8861Without a wondrous share of Wit, To judge is such a Matron fit?
8861Would aught to her impede his way?
8861Would you teach her to love?
8861Yet it could not be Love, for I knew not the name,-- What passion can dwell in the heart of a child?
8861Yet what avails the sanguine Poet''s hope, To conquer ages, and with time to cope?
8861Yet why should I mingle in Fashion''s full herd?
8861Yet, why should I alone with such delight Retrace the circuit of my former flight?
8861[ 121] 770 If chance some wicked wag should pass his jest,''Tis sheer ill- nature-- don''t the world know best?
8861[ 128]"Why slumbers GIFFORD?"
8861[ 129] 820 Are there no follies for his pen to purge?
8861[ 39] But why to brain- scorched bigots thus appeal?
8861[ 3] wherefore dost thou weep?
8861[ 45] Am I not wise, if such some poets''plight, To purge in spring-- like Bayes[ 46]--before I write?
8861[ 47] Thou first, great oracle of tender souls?
8861[ 54] who''ll buy?
8861[ 90] Shall sapient managers new scenes produce 590 From CHERRY,[ 91] SKEFFINGTON,[ 92] and Mother GOOSE?
8861[ Footnote 14: Poor Crib was sadly puzzled when the marbles were first exhibited at Elgin House; he asked if it was not"a stone shop?"
8861[ Footnote 157: A friend of mine being asked, why his Grace of Portland was likened to an old woman?
8861[ Footnote 3:"''Hoarse Fitzgerald''.--"Right enough; but why notice such a mountebank?"
8861[ Footnote civ:''Besides how know ye?
8861[ Footnote i.:''But Where''s the beam of soft desire?
8861[ Footnote ii:_ The memory of that love again._[ MS. L.]] AND WILT THOU WEEP WHEN I AM LOW?
8861[ Footnote xcvi:''But what are these?
8861[ Footnote xii:''Where is the restless fool, would wish for more?''
8861[ i] What disgust to life hast thou?
8861[ i] Why dost thou build the hall, Son of the winged days?
8861[ ii]"What God,"exclaim''d the first,"instils this fire?
8861[ iii] Or low Dubost[ 2]--as once the world has seen-- Degrade God''s creatures in his graphic spleen?
8861[ iii] Yet wilt thou weep when I am low?
8861[ l] If things of Ton their harmless lays indite, Most wisely doomed to shun the public sight, What harm?
8861[ lxxxviii] Then if your verse is what all verse should be, And Gods were not ashamed on''t, why should we?
8861[ vi]-- With_ souls_ you''d dispense; but, this last, who could bear it?
8861[ x] Or all the labours of a grateful lay?
8861[ xli][ 84] And common- place and common sense confounds?
8861[ xlii]-- 570 Tires the sad gallery, lulls the listless Pit; And BEAUMONT''S pilfered Caratach affords A tragedy complete in all but words?
8861[ xliii] Who but must mourn, while these are all the rage The degradation of our vaunted stage?
8861[ xlv][ 89] On those shall Farce display buffoonery''s mask, And HOOK conceal his heroes in a cask?
8861[ xlvi][ 93] While SHAKESPEARE, OTWAY, MASSINGER, forgot, On stalls must moulder, or in closets rot?
8861[ xvi] 360 Yet, why for him the needless verse essay?
8861[ xxii] What can his friend''gainst thronging numbers dare?
8861[ xxiii] Which holds on Helicon the higher rank?
8861a long farewell-- Yet why to thee adieu?
8861and by whom?
8861and dare I thus blaspheme?
8861and if he did, why not take it as his motto?
8861are so faithful as thou?
8861are ye dead to shame, 610 Or, kind to dulness, do you fear to blame?
8861at a first and transient view, Condemned a heart she never knew.-- Can such a verdict then decide, Which springs from disappointed pride?
8861can Sporus feel?
8861can no more your scenes paternal please, Scenes sacred long to wise, unmated ease?
8861can pangs like these be just?"
8861does the fell disease[ i] Which racks my breast your fickle bosom please?
8861from thy native heaven, What heart, unfeeling, would despise The sweetest boon the Gods have given?
8861give thy talents scope; Who dares aspire if thou must cease to hope?
8861have I not heard your voices Rise on the night- rolling breath of the gale?"
8861in solitude to groan, To mix in friendship, or to sigh alone?
8861is all sense of shame and talent gone?
8861must deserted Poesy still weep Where her last hopes with pious COWPER sleep?
8861must he rise unpunish''d from the feast, Nor lash''d by vengeance into truth at least?
8861must he rush, his comrade''s fate to share?
8861not a word!--and am I then so low?
8861nunquamne reponam, Vexatus toties, rauci Theseide Codri?"
8861o''er those boards shall Folly rear her head, Where GARRICK trod, and SIDDONS lives to tread?
8861once was asked in vain; Why slumbers GIFFORD?
8861once your own, When Probus fill''d your magisterial throne?
8861or must he be content to rival Sir RICHARD BLACKMORE in the quantity as well as quality of his verse?
8861or of himself?
8861our brains are gone, What nobler substitute than wine?
8861perhaps thou hast a_ Soul_, But where have_ Demons_ hid thy_ Heart_?
8861say, How first to Albion found thy Waltz her way?
8861see''st thou not a lonely tomb, Which rises o''er a warrior dead?
8861sure''tis late: Is this a bridegroom''s ardent flame?
8861the anguish''d Sire rejoin''d,"Nor chase, nor wave, my Boy delay; Would he to Mora seem unkind?
8861the self- same blunder Pope has got, And careless Dryden--"Aye, but Pye has not:"-- 100 Indeed!--''tis granted, faith!--but what care I?
8861thy endless blaze, Which far eclipse each minor Glory''s rays?
8861to whom?"
8861vagula, Blandula, Hospes, comesque corporis, Quæ nunc abibis in Loca-- Pallidula, rigida, nudula, Nec, ut soles, dabis Jocos?
8861what may not authors do, Whose Postscripts prate of dyeing"heroines blue"?
8861what was to be done?
8861when shall my soul wing her flight from this clay?
8861when shall the grave hide for ever my sorrow?
8861when, my ador''d, in the tomb will they place me, Since, in life, love and friendship for ever are fled?
8861where is KENNEY''S wit?
8861where is Lethe''s fabled stream?
8861where_ would be_ my Heaven?_ February, 1803.
8861wherefore should we turn To what our fathers were, unless to mourn?
8861whither bear you this?
8861who is yon Misanthrope, shunning mankind?
8861who would take their titles with their rhymes?
8861who''ll buy?
8861why do dark''ning shades conceal The hour when man must cease to be?
8861why early thus in arms?
8861why not on brother Nathan too?
8861why should the Bard, at once, resign[ xxxiii] His claim to favour from the sacred Nine?
8861why that pensive brow?
8861why thus disclose What ne''er was meant for other ears; Why thus destroy thine own repose, And dig the source of future tears?
8861why thus doth a tear steal its way, Down a cheek which outrivals thy bosom in hue?
8861wilt thou then resign A Muse and heart by choice so wholly thine?
55642A girl?
55642A waiting game?
55642About setting Miss Chent free? 55642 About what?
55642Agstone could not have been at the table then-- under it I mean?
55642Am I indeed?
55642Am I to consider myself arrested?
55642And Brisson, the man who shot him?
55642And Madame Marie''s fortune- telling?
55642And Vavi with her knife?
55642And are you really in love with Constance?
55642And are you?
55642And can you tell,asked the Inspector, turning to the other doctor,"how long Mr. Shepworth has been insensible?"
55642And from whom?
55642And have you got the new disease, Aunt Sophia?
55642And how did you find it?
55642And how do you know that Dolly''s dressing- room is in the other flat?
55642And see the police?
55642And the reply?
55642And then?
55642And then?
55642And under suspicion?
55642And what did he see, gentlemen of the jury? 55642 And what did the prisoner say to all this?
55642And what do you infer?
55642And what do you think is the truth?
55642And who do you think murdered Agstone?
55642And who got rid of Agstone?
55642And why are n''t you in bed?
55642And you believe him?
55642And you can swear that the masked woman killed Agstone?
55642And you did not re- enter this room until you came to see what the three heavy blows meant?
55642And you knew-- you knew all the time?
55642And you will allow me to help you?
55642Are those two fellows assisting Mr. Shepworth in the defence?
55642Are you about to accuse me?
55642Are you against me?
55642Are you hurt, Ned?
55642Are you hurt, Ned?
55642Are you in the mood to face danger?
55642Are you on my side or on theirs?
55642Are you on my side, or on the side of these blackmailers?
55642Are you sure of that, Dorry?
55642Are you sure that he did not?
55642Are you sure?
55642Are you?
55642At five? 55642 Aunt Sophia, how did you come here?"
55642Aunt Sophia, will you tell me plainly if you believe Miss Chent to be innocent or guilty?
55642Because he defends her?
55642Because he loves her?
55642Before the murder, do you mean?
55642Bless me, Mr. Shepworth, what then? 55642 But Ned?"
55642But are you sure, aunt? 55642 But did you know Agstone?"
55642But do n''t you think I ought to remain here until the truth is found out?
55642But do you think that this lady is guilty?
55642But how could she come to the ball? 55642 But how did he know that I had it?"
55642But if Bruge knew that I took it from Mona?
55642But surely he would not have accused Mona of a crime which he had committed himself?
55642But surely you do n''t suspect Jadby?
55642But the case?
55642But what is to be the end of it?
55642But what was the need of that?
55642But who placed the knife in Mona''s hand?
55642But why should I be astonished? 55642 But why should she have stabbed him?"
55642But would he dare?
55642By the way,said Prelice carelessly,"have you seen Miss Chent?"
55642Can I see Inspector Bruge?
55642Can I stay with my friend?
55642Can this smoke you mention, do that?
55642Can you explain the smoke?
55642Can you swear to that?
55642Confess what? 55642 Confessing what?"
55642Constance, how did you become possessed of the key?
55642Constance, what are you saying?
55642Danger?
55642Did Madame Marie say that Agstone hated Mona?
55642Did Uncle Simon go?
55642Did he wear that sham frock?
55642Did n''t I, Marie?
55642Did n''t you see it in the morning papers?
55642Did n''t your uncle tell you that he did?
55642Did you catch a glimpse of her frock by any chance, or did your senses fail you?
55642Did you get it?
55642Did you propose murder to Madame?
55642Did you see anyone on the road or on the Downs?
55642Did you? 55642 Do n''t you read the papers, doctor?
55642Do n''t you remember?
55642Do we not know each other now?
55642Do you believe that I am guilty?
55642Do you believe that she is guilty?
55642Do you call me misery?
55642Do you know her?
55642Do you know if Jadby has a boat, or a yacht, or a steamer of any sort?
55642Do you know where he is now?
55642Do you know who I am?
55642Do you love anyone else?
55642Do you mean Captain Jadby?
55642Do you mean to say that he murdered Sir Oliver?
55642Do you mean to tell me that a hard- headed man like Mr. Haken consulted you?
55642Do you remember Easter Island?
55642Do you suppose that Madame Marie herself killed Lanwin?
55642Do you suspect anyone of the crime?
55642Do you think it is good taste to discuss your husband with me?
55642Do you think that I have time to waste in discussing barometers?
55642Do you think that Miss Chent murdered him?
55642Do you think that Rover wishes to get Ned into trouble? 55642 Do you think that your husband wishes to get Ned into trouble?"
55642Do you wish me to marry him?
55642Do you, or do you not, wish your father to turn in his grave?
55642Does Inspector Bruge know it?
55642Does your mistress know Captain Felix Jadby?
55642Dolly? 55642 Dorry, do you really believe in these magical things?"
55642Dorry,Constance caught his hand, and passed her tongue over her dry lips slowly,"what do you mean?
55642Dr. Horace, can you show it to me?
55642Eh-- what-- you don''t-- er-- you do n''t say so?
55642Entirely, so far as I know,replied Shepworth dryly; and then wheeling to face his friend:"Why do you ask these questions?"
55642For what reason Dorry?
55642From Madame Marie I learned that Mr. Haken was going to Mrs. Rover''s ball to see his goddaughter and Shepworth, and----"How did you know that?
55642Good heavens, is it only half- an- hour since then? 55642 Had she fainted?"
55642Has n''t it brought me to you?
55642Has the will in favour of Miss Chent been found?
55642Has your mistress been in the South Seas?
55642Have a cigar?
55642Have they hanged that poor girl?
55642He is something of a poodle, is n''t he?
55642How are you, Miss Chent? 55642 How can I judge when I have n''t heard the evidence?
55642How can she?
55642How can you be sure?
55642How can you do that?
55642How can you?
55642How dare you search into my private affairs?
55642How dare you talk to me like that?
55642How did Agstone come there? 55642 How did I become possessed of it?"
55642How did she come to make the confession?
55642How did she manage it, seeing that she was in custody?
55642How did she treat Shepworth?
55642How did you become possessed of this, sir?
55642How did you enter?
55642How did you know that Dr. Horace had the herb?
55642How did you know that it was Miss Chent?
55642How do you come into the matter?
55642How do you do, Lady Sophia? 55642 How do you know?"
55642How do you know?
55642How do you know?
55642How long is this going on?
55642How long is this going on?
55642How long is what going on?
55642How on earth did you come here?
55642How on earth do you know, Ned?
55642How? 55642 I believe it is a lie, Dorry, and so do you; but will the judge and jury believe as we do, if Agstone appears and sticks to what he told Mrs. Blexey?
55642I presume that the new will would also have been signed by Mrs. Blexey and Agstone as witnesses?
55642I say, Ned,remarked Prelice thoughtfully when they were outside,"do you think that Miss Chent will be proved guilty?"
55642I shall do so; but why do you work against the man you love?
55642I thought you liked her?
55642I wonder how it comes to be here?
55642I wonder what she wants with Horace?
55642I wonder what this means?
55642I wonder why this man came to my ball?
55642I? 55642 I?"
55642If you did n''t guess, as I did, that the Sacred Herb was used to make that smoke, why do you talk of the matter at all?
55642If you do n''t, why arrest him?
55642If you knew of such things, Mrs. Blexey, why did n''t you explain in Court?
55642In Heaven''s name, why?
55642In what way?
55642In what way?
55642Including this murderess?
55642Into what matter?
55642Is Shepworth dead?
55642Is he mad?
55642Is he mad?
55642Is he within?
55642Is n''t there a cupboard?
55642Is that THE cup?
55642Is that all you have to say?
55642Is that all?
55642Is there any need of an explanation?
55642Is this the time to talk business?
55642Is your glass filled; your cigar all right? 55642 It belongs to Captain Jadby?"
55642It is natural that you should say so,remarked Bruge, with polite scepticism, then added significantly:"Did you expect Agstone?"
55642It is necessary that I should see Mr. Shepworth, and----"Will I do instead?
55642It suited him to swear in it, however,murmured Prelice frivolously; then added in louder tones:"What do you wish to speak to me about?"
55642It''s a woman?
55642Madame Marie Eppingrave?
55642Madame Marie had no reason to wish Sir Oliver dead?
55642Madame Marie?
55642Many lines?
55642Marriage covers a multitude of sins, does n''t it?
55642May I hear them?
55642Meaning Jadby?
55642Miss Chent?
55642Mona?
55642Ned''s message?
55642Ned, must I see him?
55642Not my property?
55642Now what do you mean by that?
55642Now what does that mean?
55642Odd, is n''t it?
55642Of two murders?
55642Of what, in Heaven''s name?
55642Oh, Dorry, Dorry, are you going to say that my dress was imitated by him, so that I might be accused?
55642Oh, Ned, is there anything wrong?
55642Oh, acquaintances?
55642Oh, dear me, how can you talk so, Haken?
55642Oh, sir,wailed Mrs. Blexey,"do you think that such a nasty man has run away with Miss Mona?"
55642Oh,Prelice spoke with calculated daring and cruelty,"do you then think that Mr. Rover will die?"
55642Oh,said Prelice thoughtfully,"so Mr. Rover took these flats above Ned''s, did he?
55642Ought we to follow Horace?
55642Perhaps Ned took Vavi for you?
55642Presuming it is, who inherits?
55642Presuming, as we must, that your husband wore this made- up thing, did he know what you would wear?
55642Probably; but who admitted Agstone?
55642Quite so,assented the Inspector;"but who admitted her?"
55642Quite so; but why should my remark about the Sacred Herb make you think that I referred to Lanwin''s murder?
55642See here,he burst out finally,"will you allow me to engineer this business?"
55642Senseless?
55642She is innocent, of course?
55642She''s free, is n''t she? 55642 Still, there is one thing to be said,"he added,"how did your husband enter Ned''s flat?"
55642Tell someone what?
55642That Ned has been shot? 55642 That is one crime no doubt; but the other?"
55642That will, you know, Dorry; the will made by Sir Oliver in favour of Mona?
55642The Lords of Karma?
55642The police? 55642 Then I can trust you to hold your tongue?"
55642Then Miss Chent is heart- whole?
55642Then Mr. Haken confessed to you that he desired the loan of this money?
55642Then how did you spot him?
55642Then none of you were in this flat when the murder was committed?
55642Then why ca n''t I chat with him also?
55642Then why do you come to me?
55642Then why expect the impossible?
55642Then why in Heaven''s name,questioned the young man, rising,"did you not volunteer your evidence to save her?"
55642Then you are still searching into the case?
55642Then you believe Miss Chent''s story?
55642Then you do n''t think that he is in danger of being accused of this second crime?
55642Then you have a theory?
55642Then you have made no acquaintances since I left England seven years ago, Constance?
55642Then you imply that Agstone murdered his master?
55642Then you think that Agstone murdered Lanwin?
55642Then you will go to that woman''s?
55642They accuse me of that, do they? 55642 To whom did he say this?"
55642To whom?
55642Wait? 55642 Was I ever polite?"
55642Was Jadby at your ball?
55642Was Sir Oliver dead then?
55642Was it a small white parcel?
55642Was n''t the first will good enough?
55642Was she in favour of this second crime?
55642Was the window, or one of the windows, open?
55642Was there any sign of smoke?
55642Well, I might say that I murdered Lanwin, might n''t I?
55642Well, Thornton?
55642Well, well?
55642Well,he asked, rising,"and what are your terms for silence?"
55642Well,he demanded quietly,"and what have you to say to me?
55642Well,said Prelice, swinging his legs on to the floor,"are you going to starve me?"
55642Were the books open at pages dealing with any particular subject?
55642Were you in the library when Madame Marie went to bed?
55642What about Captain Jadby?
55642What about Ned?
55642What about the herb? 55642 What about the will?"
55642What about?
55642What am I to do next, I should like to know?
55642What are you doing here?
55642What are you doing here?
55642What are you doing, my lord?
55642What are you talking about?
55642What book was he reading when found dead?
55642What can I ask Miss Chent?
55642What can you do?
55642What colour was the domino?
55642What confidence?
55642What did he mean?
55642What did he say?
55642What did she say?
55642What did you see?
55642What do you make of it?
55642What do you mean by mentioning Mrs. Rover''s name in this connection?
55642What do you mean by that?
55642What do you mean by that?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you mean?
55642What do you say?
55642What do you think about it?
55642What does Captain Jadby think?
55642What does Shepworth think?
55642What does it matter if he is telling lies?
55642What does it say?
55642What else am I here for, you dear, silly, pretty, sweet, angelic darling?
55642What else could he say?
55642What for?
55642What for?
55642What game?
55642What has this case to do with Sir Oliver Lanwin''s death?
55642What have you been doing with yourself? 55642 What have you done with the knife?"
55642What have you to tell me about Miss Mona?
55642What is n''t?
55642What is that?
55642What is the meaning of this?
55642What is the truth?
55642What kind of a smell?
55642What more have you to say, Captain Jadby?
55642What of that? 55642 What of the thick white smoke at which everyone jeers?
55642What on earth do you mean?
55642What other explanation can there be, Ned? 55642 What reward do you want?"
55642What sort of accounts?
55642What the devil are you doing here?
55642What the devil do you mean by that? 55642 What thing?
55642What time did your servants go to assist at the ball?
55642What was Lanwin doing when you left?
55642What woman?
55642What''s that?
55642What''s that?
55642What, with Jadby hanging about, already intending to blackmail me for Lanwin''s death? 55642 What-- the South Sea chap?"
55642What?
55642What?
55642What?
55642What?
55642What_ do_ you mean?
55642Whatever will his lordship and Mr. Shepworth say?
55642When Jadby comes on board with Miss Chent?
55642When did you discover the crime, my lord?
55642When does the inquest take place?
55642When was Agstone murdered, doctor?
55642When? 55642 Where am I, Ned?"
55642Where is the bronze cup?
55642Where''s Mona?
55642Where?
55642Where?
55642Which goes to Captain Jadby?
55642Which uncle?
55642Who by?
55642Who did he brow- beat?
55642Who do you think murdered Sir Oliver?
55642Who is George?
55642Who is she?
55642Who is that?
55642Who pulled me out of the water?
55642Who said that I did?
55642Who stabbed the man?
55642Who wore it?
55642Who-- who are you?
55642Who? 55642 Why a little beast?"
55642Why ca n''t you answer the question?
55642Why ca n''t you be plain with me, confound you?
55642Why ca n''t you talk sense?
55642Why did Sir Oliver wish to go into a trance?
55642Why did n''t she stick him herself?
55642Why did n''t you bring it forward at once?
55642Why did n''t you confess to me?
55642Why did n''t you give him in charge?
55642Why did n''t you give the alarm?
55642Why did n''t you?
55642Why did you tell Bruge about the second entrance of Agstone with the dagger?
55642Why did you write about me to Lady Sophia?
55642Why do you ask?
55642Why do you believe that?
55642Why do you do this for me, Lord Prelice?
55642Why do you speak of Ned so stiffly, Mona?
55642Why her particularly?
55642Why not? 55642 Why not?"
55642Why should I?
55642Why should Mr. Shepworth be afraid?
55642Why should you be afraid?
55642Why should you be?
55642Why should you think so?
55642Why the dickens ca n''t you live like a civilised being when you are in London?
55642Why to- morrow?
55642Why was n''t Agstone stifled with the smoke fumes?
55642Why will you not remain and talk over this strange matter?
55642Why with me?
55642Why, what is the matter?
55642Why, when you gave the same to Sir Oliver?
55642Why,Haken pushed back his chair, and rose with a chuckle,"did n''t Sophia inveigle you into helping young Shepworth and the girl he was engaged to?
55642Why? 55642 Why?
55642Why?
55642Why?
55642Will it be necessary to make a further examination of this?
55642Will it save her?
55642Will you be my wife?
55642Will you come to my house, my dear?
55642Will you come to this ball?
55642Will you give me a kiss if I drink another cup of coffee?
55642Will you go into a trance and see where Mona is?
55642Will you not wait and hear what I have to say?
55642Will you put that gun down, or am I to be shot?
55642Will you take a note in from me?
55642With your little gun?
55642Wo n''t Ned?
55642Wo n''t you stop here for the night?
55642Would it do any good if I gave you a thorough shaking?
55642You are not actually engaged to Mona-- I mean Miss Chent?
55642You are not going to confess that you killed him?
55642You are telling the truth?
55642You are too, my lord, ai n''t you?
55642You believe in the smoke then?
55642You ca n''t suspect him? 55642 You did not say that?"
55642You had dinner then?
55642You have said nothing?
55642You heard Belmain''s speech?
55642You imply then that Captain Jadby was frightened of Sir Oliver?
55642You know me?
55642You know my aunt, Miss Chent? 55642 You know that it is catalepsy, induced by some odour?"
55642You know then?
55642You like Madame Marie?
55642You silly ass,grumbled the doctor in his beard as he went forward to welcome his guest,"why could n''t you leave things alone as I told you to?
55642You will say nothing to her?
55642You wish me, then, to go on looking into the case?
55642You wo n''t scream?
55642You wonder maybe why I keep you here?
55642You wonder what?
55642You?
55642You?
55642A great traveller, is n''t he?"
55642And be abused in the penny press?
55642And the Sacred Herb, eh?"
55642And then?"
55642And what excuse could he make, without telling the whole truth?
55642And why?
55642And why?"
55642Are they-- whomsoever they may be-- fond of him?"
55642Are you afraid for a certain person?"
55642Are you busy?"
55642Are you going to use occult methods?"
55642Are you longing to be on the trail again?"
55642As she is now free, and the prevailing opinion seems to be that Agstone is guilty, why stir up muddy water and waken sleeping dogs?"
55642As to mentioning my name, what does that matter?
55642Aunt Sophia?"
55642Belmain( for the prosecution):"Did you give any portion of this herb to Sir Oliver Lanwin?"
55642Belmain( quickly):"How do you know the leaves were there?"
55642Belmain( significantly):"To complete unconsciousness?"
55642Belmain:"By Steve Agstone?"
55642Belmain:"How did Agstone become possessed of the herb to burn in Alexander Mansions?"
55642Belmain:"Then how did Sir Oliver become possessed of this herb, which, by your own showing, is to be found only in Easter Island?"
55642Belmain:"Then you think that Sir Oliver was experimenting with the herb when prisoner entered the library?"
55642Belmain:"What happened then?"
55642Belmain:"You are Emma Blexey, the late Sir Oliver''s housekeeper?"
55642Besides, he threatened at Horace''s to do me an injury, and what greater one could he inflict than to carry off Mona?
55642Besides, you told Mona, why should you not tell me?"
55642Blexey?"
55642Business at a ball?
55642But I say, Dorry-- yes, I''ll call you Dorry now-- I say, is n''t it rather sudden?
55642But Sir Oliver was writing out another will----""How do you know?"
55642But about this Madame Marie Eppingrave?"
55642But he did his best to get Ned into trouble----""By killing Agstone?
55642But he did not think that it was wise to irritate her at so critical a moment, so merely asked:"What is the name of the steamer?"
55642But how did Agstone enter?"
55642But how did Madame Marie induce Steve to murder his master?"
55642But how did Uncle Simon get the key out of you?"
55642But how did he come here?
55642But how long would such endurance last?
55642But if she could not trust Dorry in all ways, who could she trust?
55642But if that was the case, why had he become engaged to her; why had he so vigorously defended her of late?
55642But if this was the case-- and it was beginning to appear obvious-- why had the two agreed to marry?
55642But if you are so anxious to interview Ned-- and I quite admit the necessity-- why not go up to London?"
55642But meanwhile, Dorry, you could do me a great favour?"
55642But surely you knew-- you guessed that I loved you, and you only?"
55642But the second?"
55642But think, my dear girl, is it not better that I should find this than Jadby?"
55642But what can I do?"
55642But what did that matter, so long as Mona received him at dawn, in the enchanted gardens of the secluded Grange?
55642But what does it matter?
55642But what had a fetish worship in Easter Island to do with a murder in Kent?
55642But what happened next?"
55642But what woman possessed a motive sufficiently strong to urge her to murder Agstone?
55642But who admitted Agstone?
55642But why had he tried to put the blame on Mona both by placing the knife in her hand and by accusing her?
55642But why should such a familiar fragrance recall that desolate land, environed by leagues of ocean?
55642But you,"he glanced suspiciously at Prelice,"how did you know?"
55642By the way, did you give any portion of that herb away, Horace?"
55642By the way, if you know so little of the game, why detain me?"
55642Can you ask?"
55642Can you not guess what took place?
55642Did Miss Chent murder her uncle to get the money?"
55642Did you close the outer door?"
55642Did you come here to insult me?"
55642Did you make use of it?"
55642Did you recognise her?"
55642Did you swear yourself?"
55642Do I look like a tripper?"
55642Do n''t I tell you that I''ve called to see her?
55642Do you believe Agstone''s story?"
55642Do you know why I have come?"
55642Do you know why I take so deep an interest in this case?"
55642Do you remain here?"
55642Do you think they will hang him?"
55642Do you want to be disgraced?"
55642Doctor,"he glanced at the young man attending to Shepworth,"is your patient reviving?"
55642Dorry, have you a match?"
55642Eh?"
55642Eh?"
55642Has Ned selected you for that post?"
55642Have you any idea of what he means?"
55642Have you no reverence, Prelice?"
55642He wished to get the things over as speedily as possible, as he saw how strung up she was; and yet until he was certain how could he accuse Rover?
55642Horace?"
55642Horace?"
55642How did Mr. Haken know he would be there?"
55642How did it happen, Mona, my dear?"
55642How does he propose to save Miss Chent?"
55642How the deuce did you come to the Court, Dorry?"
55642How was she dressed?"
55642How will Lady Sophia like a scandal of that sort?
55642I kept to my part of the bargain----""And did n''t your husband keep to his?"
55642I know you are thinking of the will being brought here by Horace; but why should not his story be a true one, since Agstone is his brother?"
55642I must have a personal interview with Captain Jadby, and ask him----""Ask him what?"
55642I quite believe it; but where?"
55642I speak plainly, do I not?
55642I understand then that you, Captain Jadby, and you, Madame Marie, accuse Mr. Haken of killing Sir Oliver Lanwin and Steve Agstone?"
55642I wonder if this is what Horace meant when he said that I would be sorry if I searched further into the case?
55642If need be, he was resolved to shoot the buccaneer; and who can blame him, considering how basely Jadby had acted?
55642If the dress is in Dolly Rover''s wardrobe, what then?
55642In cross- examination, Cudworth for the defence asked:"Do you believe that prisoner is capable of committing the alleged crime?"
55642Is he here?"
55642Is that dress you wore at your ball in your room?"
55642Is that her real name?"
55642Lady Sophia almost screamed,"a masked ball, and at my age?
55642Martaban?"
55642Miss Chent?
55642Ned, are you in?"
55642Ned, you are engaged to Miss Chent-- why do n''t you speak?"
55642Now what am I?"
55642Now, Lord Prelice, you can see that if Jadby married Miss Chent, the elder woman would lose him----""Madame Marie, you mean?"
55642Now, if guilty, why should she destroy a document which gave her ten thousand a year?"
55642Oh, how can you be so ridiculous, Prelice?
55642Oh, what is it?"
55642On what grounds?"
55642Otherwise, why should she be scented with the perfume of the Sacred Herb, which has to do with both crimes?"
55642Prelice did so promptly, and inquired:"Why?"
55642Prelice was quite unmoved,"so you did make use of that key?"
55642Purposely?"
55642Rover''s?"
55642Rover?"
55642Rover?"
55642Shall I take it to the New Bailey, and give judge and jury and counsel a practical illustration of how Miss Chent and Shepworth went into trances?"
55642She told me there was some trouble over these murders----""You know about them?"
55642Shepworth?"
55642Shepworth?"
55642So Jadby was the Continental swell whom you told me that you were to meet?"
55642Surely you do not believe what she says in that shoddy room of hers?"
55642That I murdered Lanwin?"
55642That''s rather a German sentence, is n''t it?"
55642The lady who wore it was scented with tuberoses----""With tuberoses?"
55642Then you believe Miss Chent''s improbable story?"
55642This lady, who came in with Agstone, and waved the cup under your nose to make you insensible-- she wore a green mask, you said?"
55642To marry a girl out of gaol?
55642Until then?"
55642Was it Dolly?"
55642Was this what Horace had warned him against when he advised him to leave the case alone?
55642Well then, what happened?"
55642Well, and what do you say?"
55642Well, and what statement did he make to you, and when did he make it?"
55642Well, what is it?
55642Well?"
55642Well?"
55642Well?"
55642Well?"
55642Well?"
55642Well?"
55642Well?"
55642What did Jadby do?"
55642What do you intend to do about Constance?"
55642What do you mean by mentioning the police?"
55642What else is to be done, I should like to know?"
55642What happened next?"
55642What has he got to do with it?"
55642What has that to do with it?"
55642What honour?"
55642What is the matter?"
55642What is the time, Prelice?"
55642What is to prevent me from shooting you and racing on deck to swim ashore?"
55642What key?"
55642What next?"
55642What of him?"
55642What put that into your head?"
55642What thing?"
55642When will you marry me?"
55642Where are you going now?"
55642Where have I seen it-- where?"
55642Where?"
55642Who is Ned?"
55642Who is the other man-- the dead man?"
55642Who murdered Sir Oliver?
55642Who murdered him?"
55642Why are you so mysterious?"
55642Why at five?"
55642Why did n''t you write me that you were engaged?"
55642Why do n''t you accuse him?"
55642Why do you ask that?"
55642Why do you laugh?"
55642Why do you look at me like that?"
55642Why should I have expected a witness for the prosecution to call upon me?
55642Why should I?"
55642Why should he have murdered him?
55642Why should he?"
55642Why should not Simon Haken enjoy himself in this way if he liked, and turn Mrs. Rover''s ballroom into an office, wherein to meet his foreign clients?
55642Why should not that friend be Lady Sophia, whose support could do much to efface the stain of a Criminal Court?
55642Why should we?"
55642Will you go to bed?"
55642Will you place me in the dock beside Mona?"
55642Would I receive a murderess?"
55642Would you like to see your husband get into trouble?"
55642Yet what else could the girl say?
55642You ca n''t expect me to stand that?"
55642You can hardly have come to accuse me of these crimes?"
55642You can swear to that?"
55642You knew Agstone?"
55642You understand, gentlemen?
55642asked Bruge swiftly,"that the dead man is Agstone?"
55642assented Lord Prelice thoughtfully;"but how did Madame Marie learn what kind of a costume Constance would wear?"
55642broke in Prelice impulsively,"then you are a half- caste?"
55642cried Mona, sitting bolt upright,"then he did not accuse me again?"
55642he broke off, and his wild eyes went roving round the room,"where is the woman?"
55642now what the dickens do I know about Easter Island in connection with this case?"
55642said Prelice suddenly,"did Agstone confess the truth to Horace?"
55642what does it all mean?"
38796''Er? 38796 ''Pray what is that to you?''"
38796A lecture, was it, Miss Vintry?
38796A post- matrimonial flirtation?
38796About Harry?
38796About what?
38796Accustomed to waiting for me?
38796Ah, Jack, how are you? 38796 Ah, miss,"said the butler, who had just come to lock up,"so you''d missed it?
38796All you''ve ever had? 38796 Am I different from the days of the lame pony and Curly?
38796Am I the first person who has ever dared to make such an insinuation? 38796 Am I?
38796An old friend too? 38796 An opportunity for what?"
38796An unlimited supply of the water of Lethe, pater? 38796 And Harry?"
38796And I suppose that since the old man made his pile--?
38796And Isobel?
38796And Miss Vintry? 38796 And able to cry?"
38796And because we''re both very attractive-- aren''t we?
38796And did they chuck him?
38796And father would n''t let you?
38796And how about dust and dirt, and getting very hot?
38796And if I made you unhappy?
38796And if nobody had any spare cash, what would become of them, either?
38796And in your holiday you''re going to help Harry, I hear?
38796And she''s a good girl''erself too, ai n''t she, Tom?
38796And this is n''t a passing sort of thing?
38796And what have you been doing with yourself, Andy?
38796And what might you be going to sing in London next, miss?
38796And what, or who, is your ideal?
38796And what,asked Belfield, with an air of turning to less important matters,"about the life of this Parliament?"
38796And why you think that the pony--?
38796And you would n''t mind? 38796 And you''re not goin''to shame her by refusin''the money now, are you?"
38796Another cup?
38796Any hidden meanings, Miss Vintry?
38796Any reward?
38796Are you doing anything to- night? 38796 Are you goin''to stay at home, or goin''back?"
38796Are you going to marry her?
38796Are you going to marry him?
38796Are you going to try and put your oar in?
38796Are you in love with him?
38796Are you never going to give me an opportunity?
38796Are you quite sure they brought the claret you ordered, Billy?--What''s that you said?
38796Are you ready, Wellgood?
38796Are you thinking of match- making, like a good father?
38796As far as a respectful kiss?
38796At any rate you''ll give me a good character?
38796At what hour will you require the car, Miss Flower?
38796Been to hear her?
38796Being able to ride-- having the opportunity-- and not caring-- that''s pearls before--?
38796Business doin''well?
38796But do n''t you want to go on?
38796But if you do, why do you stay?
38796But is n''t there a terrible lot of misery, father?
38796But pearls by no means always pearls?
38796But the rest?
38796But what is there for you to want here?
38796But what''s the matter, Mr. Rock? 38796 But when a-- a person like you says that sort of thing to me--""A person, like me?"
38796But where are you going to set up house, Jack?
38796But who was it told you?
38796But you believe it?
38796But you like me? 38796 But you wo n''t go away altogether, will you, Andy?
38796But you''ll be there in this too, so far as you can, wo n''t you? 38796 By the way, I''m afraid I drive your friend away?
38796Ca n''t I? 38796 Ca n''t you leave Harry Belfield out of it?"
38796Came to tell you about it, did he? 38796 Can I?
38796Can it be because of poor old Sally?
38796Could anything be more nicely exact to my parallel?
38796Could n''t you take just one turn with Vivien''s companion? 38796 Dear Andy, have you learnt what we have, I wonder?
38796Dear, you really are happy?
38796Did she say that?
38796Did they join you?
38796Did we? 38796 Did you come only to tease me?"
38796Did you ever know a marriage where each partner did n''t say,''I give, you take''? 38796 Did you ever know such a fool?"
38796Did you gather whether Lady Lucy was a married woman?
38796Did you like the speeches, Seymour?
38796Dined at Halton, did you?
38796Disgusted? 38796 Do I look all right, Seymour?"
38796Do n''t you now and then feel like backing out of it?
38796Do n''t you, Harry?
38796Do things between men and women change much, in spite of all the talk? 38796 Do you come often?"
38796Do you find it helps?
38796Do you happen to remember that it was you who gave me the germ of that idea?
38796Do you know that Miss Vintry well?
38796Do you know what it is to see somebody asking for help?
38796Do you know, that''s sentimental?
38796Do you mean--?
38796Do you mind very much?
38796Do you never break rules, Miss Vintry? 38796 Do you really think so?
38796Do you see Wellgood before you go to bed?
38796Do you think it would be painful to Miss Wellgood to see me?
38796Do you two men want to be alone together?
38796Do you, Jack?
38796Do you?
38796Does Vivien know yet?
38796Does Vivien take it like that, do you think?
38796Does he say anything else?
38796Does it hurt so much if they do?
38796Does n''t it?
38796Does n''t love come first-- when once it has come?
38796Does n''t thinking about me help you there? 38796 Does the dashing Mr. Harry Belfield need to have chances given him?
38796Dropped your sixpence in the pond, Miss Vintry?
38796End it? 38796 Even if Master Harry was disposed to play tricks, I do n''t think he''d get much encouragement from--""''T''other dear charmer?''
38796Ever coming to bed?
38796Excited and anxious, is she? 38796 Flourishing, Hayes?"
38796Foot''s brother was there-- Gilly Foot-- and--"Did they ask what she was like?
38796For my good? 38796 For nothing?"
38796From Montreal? 38796 From a quarter''s salary downwards?
38796Gad, is it?
38796Going for a walk, Jack?
38796Going to take a cab, Billy?
38796Got over it?
38796Had enough of it?
38796Had they heard about me?
38796Half of it''s their own fault, and for the rest-- hasn''t there always been? 38796 Harry, are you quite-- quite happy?"
38796Harry?
38796Has anybody got a copy-- well, another copy of''Coriolanus''?
38796Has he any plans?
38796Have I got to go to the Lion, Mr. Rock? 38796 Have I put you on your mettle?
38796Have they done well with their speeches?
38796Have you any notion of what I feel? 38796 Have you been helping?"
38796Have you been there long?
38796Have you been to call on Mrs. Harry Belfield?
38796Have you called there?
38796Have you considered that this arrangement--"Which we have supposed--"Would make you my mother- in- law?
38796Have you got any friends you could stay a month with?
38796Have you heard it, or did you guess, Doris?
38796He does n''t want me to come to Meriton--"I say, Doris, did Harry Belfield ever try to--?
38796He wants me-- outside? 38796 He''ll have much more trouble with me, wo n''t he?"
38796He''s like that?
38796Heavens, Andy, you would n''t think of sacrificing yourself-- and perhaps her-- to an idea like that?
38796How are you, Miss Vintry? 38796 How did you hear of that?"
38796How do you like the scheme?
38796How do you--?
38796How does it-- er-- take you?
38796How far would you carry the doctrine?
38796How long has Lady Lucy lasted?
38796How shall I persuade you that I care?
38796I beg pardon, Harry?
38796I beg your pardon, Miss Flower?
38796I beg your pardon, Miss Vintry? 38796 I beg your pardon; anything wrong?"
38796I did n''t say anything about it then, did I?
38796I do n''t know that it''s much good trying to deny it, is it, Jack?
38796I do n''t mind saying it,she observed, and to Andy''s astonishment she asked him,"What about your old friend the butcher?"
38796I hope you told them I meant business?
38796I hope you''ve been making yourself amusing, Andy?
38796I reserved the right to change my mind-- you remember?
38796I say, you ca n''t mean--?
38796I shall get you into trouble if I come in, shall I? 38796 I shall see you soon in London, Andy?"
38796I suppose it all seems uncommon queer to you, Andy?
38796I suppose it was Nellie who was to have the small cheque?
38796I suppose no woman has ever been to Nutley lately? 38796 I suppose there is n''t a hotel in this place, Miss Flower?"
38796I suppose you could n''t give me an opinion, Miss Wellgood?
38796I suppose you do n''t see much of those chaps now?
38796I thought Mrs. Belfield was always so punctual?
38796I''m afraid that''s awfully presumptuous?
38796I''m still that to you?
38796I? 38796 If Andy--?"
38796If a frontispiece is of any use to you, Gilly--?
38796If marriage demanded mutual understanding, what man or woman could risk it with eyes open?
38796If we''ve got them?
38796If winning meant the kiss?
38796In a large glass, eh, Andy?
38796In fact you''ll do your best to get him boycotted?
38796Is he friendly when you meet?
38796Is it as much to you as that?
38796Is it nothing if you think you could feel safe with me?
38796Is it true, Isobel?
38796Is it-- real?
38796Is lame enough to let me risk going home? 38796 Is my opinion to be as wrong as all that?
38796Is she very pretty?
38796Is that all you claim to be-- to any of those boys?
38796Is that so sad, if the religion is proved not to be true?
38796Is there any good in breaking them-- for nothing?
38796Is this action of yours really best for Miss Wellgood, or what she would wish?
38796Is this-- nice?
38796It does make his position seem-- just rather betwixt and between, does n''t it?
38796It has got a little bit of-- of the feeling, has n''t it?
38796It is n''t possible to feel quite comfortable about it, is it?
38796It seems silly, does n''t it? 38796 It was about-- Harry?"
38796It was n''t hard to guess, last night, was it? 38796 It''s a bit of a waste, is n''t it?"
38796It''s a promise?
38796It''s beautiful, but is n''t it-- just a little priggish?
38796It''s no use trying to unsay things, is it?
38796Jack Rock? 38796 Join us?
38796Just time, Wilson?
38796Know her, Andy?
38796Lady? 38796 Looks like it, do n''t it?
38796Lost your nerve, Harry?
38796Lucky there''s somebody ready to take her place, then, is n''t it?
38796May I be a little bit of your riches?
38796May I speak to you-- or am I no better than one of the wicked?
38796Meriton''s?
38796Mother and daughters? 38796 Much armour?"
38796My dear girl, are you out of your mind? 38796 No reason to suppose it wo n''t, is there?"
38796No, is he?
38796No, surely I did n''t? 38796 Nobody except yourself-- who else should?"
38796None of what? 38796 Not frightened now?"
38796Not going to take it down yourself, are you?
38796Nothing more than that?
38796Now Wellgood''s back?
38796Occurred to us, Vivien?
38796Of Kensington?
38796Of course it-- well, it sort of defines matters-- ties you down, eh?
38796Of something then? 38796 Oh yes, you worship Harry, do n''t you?
38796Oh, I say, may I come?
38796Oh, I''m sorry: There''s always so much to look at at the other tables, is n''t there?
38796Oh, Jack, would n''t you have been jealous? 38796 Oh, are people gossiping about that?
38796Oh, are you? 38796 Oh, but must you go just yet?
38796Oh, did n''t he?
38796Oh, not particularly well?
38796Oh, so that''s it?
38796Oh, that''s the word you''ve been thinking suits me?
38796Oh, that''s your idea, Jack? 38796 Oh, what the devil''s the good of trying to talk business here?"
38796Oh, your feelings have n''t developed?
38796Or a carrier pigeon? 38796 Or as we thought he was?"
38796Or by not being Vivien''s_ fiancé_ any longer?
38796Or did you tell them? 38796 Or even drunk too much?"
38796Or ought to be, to a man not so slow as I am?
38796Out of what?
38796Patriotic-- Who are the heaviest creditors?
38796Perhaps I''ve had a wireless telegram?
38796Perhaps you''ll forgive me if I say that I''m not altogether taken by surprise either?
38796Perhaps you''re just a little bit partial to Andy?
38796Playing lawn- tennis at Nutley, were n''t you?
38796Pray what is that to you?
38796Rather a disturbed evening, eh, Andy?
38796Rather a silly thing to have in this world, is n''t it?
38796Religiously strict? 38796 Risk what?"
38796Seen somebody?
38796Shall I break the rules?
38796Shall I walk back with you?
38796Shall we call it settled?
38796Shall we move, pater?
38796Shall you see Harry?
38796Shall you tell him that?
38796She hates them both, you think? 38796 She''s very nice about it, is n''t she?
38796Should you like it?
38796Should you object?
38796Sleepy, was n''t it? 38796 So have a lot of things been lately, have n''t they?
38796So they''ve done it, have they?
38796So you and Gilly are making it go? 38796 So your teasing is to be considered as a compliment?"
38796Something I did n''t like? 38796 Sort of thing they like, is n''t it?"
38796Sounds ridiculous, does n''t it? 38796 Splendid of him, is n''t it?
38796Still lingering?
38796Sudden?
38796Suppose I said yes-- and changed my mind?
38796Suppose we say to- morrow morning?
38796Surely nothing but what''s happy and peaceful and pleasant can ever happen here?
38796Surely some discretion is left to the trusty guardian?
38796Tales out of school? 38796 That accounts for the foolishness of the sentiments?"
38796That sounds very reasonable, but--"The best thing to hope about reason is to hope you wo n''t need it? 38796 That was what you were lookin''so happy about, was it?"
38796That''ll be all right to- morrow morning?
38796That''s the name of the town, is n''t it? 38796 The dear old Rector''s a little tiresome, Harry, is n''t he?
38796The delight of the eyes?
38796The feeling which I''ve always understood you never felt?
38796The horse might be heard neighing?
38796The natural end?
38796The oldest question since men had sons and women had lovers, is n''t it?
38796The usual place?
38796There, Isobel, are n''t we good?
38796Things getting on?
38796Thinking of enlisting me in your own service?
38796This woman here in love with him? 38796 To a girl?"
38796To dinner then?
38796To him that hath shall be given, eh?
38796To meet Meriton and Wigram?
38796Too complete a realization of matrimonial solitude_ à deux_ before marriage-- Is that advisable?
38796Towards me?
38796Treadmill again, old boy? 38796 Vivien"--a jerk of his head told that Vivien was in the drawing- room--"has sent me to say''How do you do?''
38796Was I in good voice?
38796Was I serious? 38796 Was he?"
38796Was that what you were crying about?
38796We shall never catch them, shall we? 38796 We wo n''t talk of the old things any more, will we?"
38796We''ve not been taught to think that in this house, have we, Vivien?
38796Well, Sally, been amusing yourself?
38796Well, a wire''s not always absolute secrecy in small towns, is it? 38796 Well, do n''t you know, what would a fellow do without him?"
38796Well, have the lovers bored you to death with their spooning since I''ve been away?
38796Well, he ca n''t see her himself, can he?
38796Well, how is she? 38796 Well, if he''d have no chance anyhow, could n''t you sort of let him know that?"
38796Well, if it is natural, why should n''t he think so?
38796Well, if that is the meaning of it, it certainly seems rather-- rather a rum start, eh, Andy? 38796 Well, is it all right?"
38796Well, it''s the safe thing, is n''t it, old chap?
38796Well, lad?
38796Well, miss, no offence, I hope? 38796 Well, she is about with you a good deal, is n''t she?
38796Well, waiting for a wedding''s tiresome work for all concerned, is n''t it?
38796Well, we shall be married soon, sha n''t we, mother?
38796Well, what do you think of her?
38796Well, what have you got to say, Vivien?
38796Well, why do n''t you come down too? 38796 Well, why not talk to Gilly?"
38796Well, you''ve been behind the scenes, have n''t you? 38796 Well, you''ve had it out, have n''t you?"
38796Well?
38796What Gilly thought?
38796What about Parliament? 38796 What about lunch?"
38796What about the great cause I sang for?
38796What about yours?
38796What am I? 38796 What are you going to do after we''re-- after the break- up here?"
38796What are you two talking about?
38796What brings her here?
38796What can have become of Harry?
38796What did you say his name was?
38796What did you say? 38796 What did you see?"
38796What do you ask?
38796What do you mean by--?
38796What do you mean, Doris?
38796What do you think really, Harry?
38796What do you want with supper after a good dinner?
38796What does Billy know about it?
38796What does he want to do it down here for? 38796 What else is there to take?"
38796What happens?
38796What has Vivien got to do with single lives?
38796What has all this got to do with the practical problem?
38796What have we done to you?
38796What have you against Kensington?
38796What house?
38796What is it, Andy?
38796What made you afraid of that?
38796What made you tell me you loved me to- night?
38796What made you think that?
38796What the devil can they want?
38796What''ll old Jack say?
38796What''s happened?
38796What''s it got to do with me?
38796What''s it worth to you?
38796What''s that?
38796What''s the matter with him, I wonder? 38796 What''s the use of this?"
38796What''s this new fad, Isobel? 38796 What''s worrying him, I wonder?"
38796What, Harry love? 38796 What, are you going to retire, Jack?"
38796What, he wanted to marry you too once?
38796What, you''d really think of it?
38796What? 38796 What?
38796When are you going to be married?
38796Where did you find it?
38796Where do you come from?
38796Where to now?
38796Where''s Harry?
38796Where''s Vivien?
38796Where''s the hurry?
38796Which did you say was Harry''s?
38796Which for the husband, which for the wife?
38796Who is she?
38796Who told you about Sally? 38796 Who''d have thought of that?"
38796Who''s got what style?
38796Who''s put that idea in your head?
38796Whose peace of mind are you destroying down here?
38796Why did you let me meet him, Andy?
38796Why do you go on repeating''Vivien''s father''?
38796Why do you say that it''s incongruous, coming from me?
38796Why do you think so? 38796 Why does it amuse you?"
38796Why not?
38796Why not?
38796Why should n''t I be? 38796 Why should n''t it be the policeman?"
38796Why the deuce ca n''t he say what he means?
38796Why, how do I look?
38796Why, it''s never--?
38796Why, of saying how awfully sorry and-- and ashamed I am that I yielded--"What''s the use of saying anything about it? 38796 Why?
38796Will I come? 38796 Will they get her out of the way?
38796Will you now? 38796 With Jack Rock?"
38796With her?
38796Would n''t she be? 38796 Would that be the best way to win you back?
38796Would you like me to come with you?
38796Would you mind looking at my pony''s right front leg?
38796Would you think me wrong if I did?
38796Yes, Mr. Belfield; the old gentleman would have been proud, would n''t he?
38796Yes, and the result-- when you''re ready?
38796Yes, but do you remember a talk we had about it once?
38796Yes, but it''s the way a man''s mind grows, is n''t it?
38796Yes, he''s getting no end of a swell, is n''t he?
38796You brought one of the girls to hear me one night, did n''t you?
38796You can never tell about that, can you, Mrs. Belfield? 38796 You come back to supper, after the meetin'', miss, and taste; but maybe you''ll be goin''back to London, or takin''your supper at Halton?"
38796You did? 38796 You do n''t mean to- night?"
38796You do n''t mind my asking your father to let me come and swim, if I''m here in the summer?
38796You do n''t seem to consider being engaged a very joyful period?
38796You do n''t think much of us, do you, Sally?
38796You do n''t want him to kill himself with work, Isobel?
38796You do n''t want to stay here alone, do you?
38796You do n''t?
38796You draw that distinction? 38796 You eat meat, do n''t you?"
38796You have thought of the other thing-- and you''re sure of that?
38796You know? 38796 You like all that sort of thing, Andy?"
38796You like the fellow, do you, Vivien?
38796You love me?
38796You mean he was n''t pleased?
38796You mean he''s spoilt? 38796 You mean it all depends on Harry, then?"
38796You mean she does n''t really appreciate her advantages? 38796 You really advise it?"
38796You really think I sha n''t make a fool of myself?
38796You remember him, girls? 38796 You saw him on Thursday?
38796You seem to manage to keep heart- whole, Andy?
38796You think I ought to be looking out for another situation? 38796 You think I shall?"
38796You think I''m very impudent?
38796You think it''s safe, though, anyhow?
38796You think the world of Andy, do n''t you, Doris?
38796You want it all over, do n''t you?
38796You wanted to go, Isobel?
38796You wo n''t ask me to go any further, if I admit that?
38796You wo n''t give me one chance?
38796You wo n''t think it necessary to mention to Mr. Harry all I''ve told you? 38796 You wo n''t upset all my notions of you, because you''ve become a great man now, will you, Andy?"
38796You''d guessed my feelings, Vivien? 38796 You''ll come to me first-- you wo n''t go to any one before me?"
38796You''ll excuse me, miss?
38796You''ll have tea with me, miss?
38796You''ll walk with me, wo n''t you?
38796You''re enjoying it, are n''t you?
38796You''re goin''to the meetin'', miss? 38796 You''re not looking out elsewhere?"
38796You''re really going to take rooms there?
38796You''re surprised to see me out so early, Mr. Hayes? 38796 You''re thinking of-- of coming to Meriton?"
38796You''re-- you''re Miss Flower?
38796You''re-- you''re not very disappointed, Andy? 38796 You''ve been here longer than I have-- do you know anything?
38796You''ve been in no hurry about it up to now-- and you seem in none to say''How do you do?'' 38796 You''ve forgiven me-- quite?"
38796You''ve heard that Harry''s married to Miss Vintry?
38796You''ve not refused?
38796''Did he, dear?
38796( Could despair sound more despairing?)
38796A Tory at home, why was he to be a democrat-- or a Socialist-- at the Antipodes?
38796A permanent reconciliation with these it could not, and dared not, ask; but a_ modus vivendi_ till it, transitory thing as it was, should pass away?
38796A stolen kiss may mean very different things-- almost nothing( not quite nothing, or why steal it?
38796A vague protest stirred in him; were they not too serene, too comfortable, too fortunate?
38796After him?
38796After you got my wire?
38796Am I preventing you?"
38796And I gather that they have husbands?
38796And I should think it did you good?"
38796And I''m sent home too, as usual?"
38796And Isobel?
38796And after school?
38796And all for what?
38796And at any rate I suppose you''ll admit I did the right thing when-- when the trouble came?"
38796And at it here too, I suppose?
38796And even then-- the attempt to make it practical?
38796And for her-- how if his approach seemed a rude intrusion, the invasion of a desolate yet still holy spot, sacrilege committed on a ruined shrine?
38796And he dotes on her?"
38796And he would go on like that indefinitely?
38796And how are Vivien and I to get through all this business of the wedding?"
38796And how are you?
38796And how could anybody help being fond of her?"
38796And if he did, could he bring her-- at all events so long as Miss Wellgood''s at Nutley?
38796And in what connection?
38796And into his father''s?
38796And into his own?
38796And must not acceptance, after all, breed some return?
38796And never ought to have been bought?
38796And that pretty girl, Miss Flower-- does she go back too?"
38796And that was his conclusion about his hero, the man to whom he owed, as he had said, almost everything he prized?
38796And the same in Harry''s?
38796And then we could keep him here instead of his going back to Canada; we should all be so pleased with that, and so would you, would n''t you?
38796And to try to tell Harry so again to- morrow?
38796And what will it be?"
38796And where lies the difference between selling wood and selling meat-- wood from Canada and meat in Meriton?
38796And why should n''t you?
38796And why will other stupid people laugh at them when so presented?
38796And you saw him off?
38796And you wo n''t forget to come round and see me in my dressing- room afterwards, will you?
38796And you''ve been searching for it, miss?"
38796And, after all, it may be as well to give the lady time to get quite sure too-- eh?"
38796Any chance of your being there-- as a family man?"
38796Any favourite song, Jack?"
38796Are n''t you starting rather big subjects?"
38796Are we to be driven out of our home?"
38796Are you ambitious?
38796Are you at the Lion?"
38796Are you fond of bathing?"
38796Are you likely to see Mr. Harry this morning?"
38796Are you off anywhere for Whitsuntide?"
38796Are you?"
38796At any rate she''s got the best right now, has n''t she?"
38796At least I suppose you mean--?"
38796At whose challenge was the shaken fortress like to fall?
38796Been away since?"
38796Being with Harry, loving Harry, being loved by--?
38796Besides, why should they want my advice?"
38796Bought at a great cost?
38796Burnt to death for a witch, poor girl, was n''t she?"
38796But Harry himself-- was he quite to forget those two walks to the gate?
38796But I suppose even to ask questions about him is treason to you?"
38796But I''m sure you do n''t feel like that about it, do you?
38796But Mr. Harry''s been in love before, has n''t he?"
38796But an attitude of independence, without any particular desire to pay the bills?
38796But as a lover-- a wooer?
38796But do n''t they look fools too?
38796But for a lover yet unmated, a bride still to be, a girl in her first love?
38796But if you''re going to stay-- and I hope you are, old fellow-- you''ll want some sort of a place of your own, wo n''t you?
38796But is n''t it splendid?"
38796But is to take nigh on five hundred pounds a year to undervalue yourself-- you who are making a precarious two?
38796But it does look a little queer, does n''t it?"
38796But it was being rather absurdly touchy, was n''t it?"
38796But meanwhile-- the time before the wedding?
38796But perhaps you ca n''t conceive life at Nutley being dull?"
38796But supposing-- merely supposing-- Mr. Wellgood did n''t agree?"
38796But the love- making men marry?"
38796But what if the chances did not come one''s way?
38796But what of London, Miss Isobel?
38796But what?
38796But when you next see Miss Dutton, will you tell her I sha n''t forget her kindness?
38796But where was her old friend Harry with his congratulations?
38796But which of''em does anything for me there?
38796But who had put into his hand the standard whereby to assess Isobel?
38796But you''re different, are n''t you, Harry?"
38796But"--he smiled and lifted his brows--"it''s a trifle sudden, is n''t it?"
38796But-- well, what''s up?"
38796But-- would you sing to us, miss, same as you did at that meetin''?"
38796But--""Well, where were you?"
38796By riding you mean--?"
38796By- the- bye, how did you hear about it?"
38796Calculated to recommend him to his friends, and to the constituency?"
38796Chance had put a marked florin on the mantelpiece for Wellgood; what were the chances of its being stolen, and of the theft being traced?
38796Come, Isobel, you see now you''ve no cause to be afraid of me, do n''t you?"
38796Competition and self- interest were the golden rule in England; was there to be another between England and her colonies?
38796Could he risk discovering that, after all, Harry-- and Harry''s friends-- thought of him like that?
38796Could not work command success?
38796Could she carry out her dangerous programme?
38796Could she have heard-- and Harry uttered them?
38796Could that idea give Andy a rag of comfort to wrap about his wound?
38796Could there be such words?
38796Could unpopularity go further or take any form more glaring?
38796Could you share a heart, Miss Vintry?"
38796Cuts up well, does n''t he?
38796D''ye see that sign?"
38796Did he forget?
38796Did he not want her to know Miss Wellgood, his_ fiancée_?
38796Did he tell you what-- what passed?"
38796Did n''t you think her pretty?"
38796Did n''t you want to give me my lesson to- day?"
38796Did not one offer itself now?
38796Did she think it nothing?
38796Did she think that, was she honest about it?
38796Did she wish that it offered yet more?
38796Did she-- or only he himself, the man he was?
38796Did the fox?
38796Did these exhaust the subject?
38796Did they not give cause enough for a father''s anger, deep and righteous, demanding vengeance?
38796Did you find the atmosphere too romantic?
38796Did you go to the churchyard, Andy?"
38796Did you like my speech?"
38796Did you notice that?
38796Did you say anything about it?"
38796Do n''t forsake me, will you?
38796Do n''t you see him, Sally?"
38796Do n''t you want to take me up to see her?"
38796Do you feel sure of it?"
38796Do you remember?"
38796Do you suspect any particular Kensingtonian?"
38796Do you think he''ll rush on his fate?
38796Do you think you can face her?"
38796Does your wife like being managed so much?
38796Doris, did he ever make love to you?"
38796Eminent authoress?
38796Even foolishly in love with her?
38796Even if Andy had seen, how could he interfere?
38796Every day after that-- when he must come to woo Vivien?
38796Everything seems going on very pleasantly?"
38796Excellent hotel, is n''t it, Mr. Rock?
38796Father had the offer-- you know that?
38796Follow the hounds on foot?
38796Foot?"
38796From the beginning Harry had found nothing to say; what was there?
38796From the one he had given her?
38796From those he had given Vivien before?
38796Getting the fat off?"
38796Gilly Foot--""I expect they were a bit surprised, were n''t they?"
38796Gilly pleased with you?"
38796Going straight again, do n''t you know?
38796Going to buy a Derby winner?"
38796Going to do anything about it?"
38796Going to find another place?"
38796Grubbing away?"
38796Had he been at Nutley-- at Halton-- only on sufferance?
38796Had he halted midway between honest truth and useful lying?
38796Had he, then, any right to the conclusion, right in the abstract though it might be?
38796Had he?
38796Had it come about-- so soon after the stolen kiss?
38796Had not Isobel all the difficult virtues which it was her own woeful task to learn?
38796Had she lost her power to disturb it?
38796Had the wind taken it?
38796Harry?
38796Harry?"
38796Has anything happened?"
38796Has n''t husband and wives become a more appropriate parallel?"
38796Have n''t I always trusted you?"
38796Have you ever been in love yourself?"
38796Have you just got here?"
38796Have you seen anything that would make Mr. Wellgood savage if he saw it?"
38796Have you seen the girl at the Empire-- the Nun?
38796Have you?
38796Havin''your fling, are you, Andy?
38796Hayes?"
38796Hayes?"
38796Hayes?"
38796He felt almost insulted-- did she not think him gentleman enough to apologise?
38796He felt amazed-- had she no anxiety about Andy?
38796He felt curious-- did she not feel the desire for an apology herself?
38796He paused a moment and asked, with an air of being rather ashamed of the question,"Is the sinner himself very desperate?"
38796He paused a moment, then added,"If I get down for a week- end, may I come and see you?"
38796He took out his watch and, as he looked at it, exclaimed with great irritation,"Why the devil does n''t this woman come?"
38796He wants just what a steady- going sensible fellow, as everybody says you are, can give him-- a bit of ballast, eh?"
38796He''s filled out, eh, Simpson?"
38796Help him, how?"
38796Her Kerchy was of holland clear, Tied to her bonny brow, I whispered something in her ear; But what is that to you?"
38796How are things at Meriton?
38796How could affectionate and loyal instincts stand against it?
38796How could he have thought to hold it in for an hour longer?
38796How could it be in any legitimate way Harry''s business what Wellgood wanted of Isobel Vintry?
38796How could she refuse to forgive the thing which alone gave her the right to be aggrieved?
38796How could they have timed his entrance so exactly as to suspect?
38796How could you think of me when you were quite wrapped up in Vivien Wellgood?
38796How did I find out about that?
38796How did it all happen?"
38796How did you leave Harry?"
38796How do you mean?"
38796How far do you think it is to Nutley?"
38796How if the buffer, forsaking its protective function, encroached on its own account?
38796How many doors would it not have shut?
38796How many uglies go to make one beautiful?
38796How much do you think Wellgood knows, or suspects?"
38796How much will that mean with Harry Belfield?"
38796How was Vivien bearing the encounter?
38796How?"
38796How?"
38796I ca n''t be hard on poor old Harry, can you?
38796I expect you ride fourteen, eh?"
38796I hate this waiting till October, do n''t you?
38796I hope Mrs. Belfield is all right?"
38796I hope she''s not too much cut up?"
38796I know it is rather an unusual thing to do, but I do n''t mind doing unusual things when they''re sensible, do you?
38796I said nothing wrong, did I?"
38796I say, I suppose I ought to-- to think it over?"
38796I say, I-- I suppose I ought to accept?
38796I say, will you come and meet Amaranth?"
38796I say-- I suppose you-- you have n''t heard anything of Vivien Wellgood?"
38796I should be so much obliged if you''d take it; and will you give it to him yourself?"
38796I suppose she got her knife into me, did n''t she?"
38796I think you''d like to help me there, would n''t you?"
38796I wonder if I may say two, Vivien?
38796I wonder if you would ever care to hear me sing?
38796I''m really afraid we''re not amusing Miss Dutton?"
38796If Sally or I behave badly, who cares?
38796If he seemed to them a possible leader, ought he to turn his back on the battle?
38796If misogyny is bad, is misandry any better?
38796If the opportunity were offered to me, do n''t you think I should be wise to accept?"
38796If there were any man at all, who could it be but Harry Belfield?
38796If this were Vivien''s mood in the light of her study of what her lover was, how would she stand towards the knowledge of what he did?
38796If you were engaged, would you like every word-- absolutely every word-- you said to another girl to be repeated to your_ fiancée_?"
38796If your pearls are indifferent as pearls, and your swine admirable as swine?
38796In this case she had used it only to send him a little faster whither he was going already; but did that touch the limits of it?
38796In three weeks now, is n''t it?"
38796Is it of something I might do-- or say?"
38796Is it the policeman again?"
38796Is it to be supposed that bride and bridegroom are putting the matter quite that way in their hearts?
38796Is n''t it-- usual?"
38796Is she alarming?"
38796Is that comprehensible?"
38796Is that enough?"
38796Is that nature''s view, even as it is so often art''s?
38796Is that why you''re out hunting?"
38796It might have been arranged on purpose, might n''t it?
38796It seems absurd?"
38796It was the worst fate of all; yet what other refuge had the despair of his friends?
38796It''s all settled then-- and you''re to be the M.P.?"
38796It''s funny, Jack, that both you and I should have chosen the single life, is n''t it?"
38796It''s not so terrible after all, is it?"
38796It''s not the least use going on, is it?"
38796Jeany daintily can kiss; But what is that to you?"
38796Know and not like-- in Vivien''s fashion?
38796Less for the sake of her peace, or greater for her enlightenment''s?
38796Let''s see, you''re--?"
38796Life was taking chances?
38796Lord Meriton''s compliments, and would Miss Flower oblige him and delight the meeting by singing the National Anthem at the close of the proceedings?
38796Might n''t you just ignore it?"
38796Mother and Daughters-- nothing in that?
38796Must I go on doing it?
38796Must he accept it whether he would or not?
38796Must he be considered in the game she was playing, or could he safely be neglected?
38796Must you go, Harry?"
38796Must you shiver, or blush, for him?
38796NO GOOD?
38796NO GOOD?
38796Never feel that way?"
38796Never mind playing second fiddle?"
38796No cause of complaint then?
38796No doubt; but should not the fight be fair?
38796No end of a grind-- and what do you get out of it?
38796No-- I mean-- are you?
38796Not only for the match?"
38796Not seen her?
38796Now was n''t this good-- that she should be here, having tea, getting at him like that?
38796Now you see quite a number of young men, I daresay?"
38796Oh, Andy, why ca n''t people think what they are doing to other people?
38796Oh, but you''re a late- dinner man, eh?"
38796Oh, my dear, you do n''t think I should change to you just because of a little unhappiness?
38796Oh, you''re thinking of the fastidiousness?
38796Oh, you''re tired to death-- do you ever sleep?
38796One of the heap of friends Mrs. Harry is making?"
38796Only we''re friends now, are n''t we?
38796Only-- do you never mind it?
38796Or a stolen victory?
38796Or could she not bear to speak of it, because it was so much more?
38796Or did you think I said London''s?"
38796Or is it only pity, only chivalry?
38796Or is it your choice?"
38796Or is this not business?
38796Or like that one?
38796Or the depths of the first and the depths of the second poured into the depths of the third to make immeasurable profundity?
38796Or was she provocative?
38796Or was she to arrogate to herself the privilege of being the only thief?
38796Or why marry her?
38796Or why should n''t Mr. Wellgood?
38796Or would the response to his parley be that, though the faithless might be faithless, yet the faithful must be faithful still?
38796Or would you rather I went away?"
38796Or-- or what time do you have tea?"
38796Ought n''t he to be thankful for the chance?
38796Oxon?
38796People who work well are well treated at Nutley; people who work badly--""Are n''t exactly petted?
38796Perhaps you''ve seen my picture in the papers?
38796Pretty good, Andy?"
38796Rather liked it, did n''t they?"
38796Rather silly, but that''s not her fault, is it?"
38796Rather spoonily, as some might think?
38796Really?
38796Rock?"
38796Rock?"
38796Rock?"
38796Said he''d resign from the hunt if your boy showed up, did he?
38796Seems strange, do n''t it?
38796Shall I call again on your reminiscences?"
38796Shall we go into the drawing- room, Vivien?
38796Shall you be back to tea?"
38796She asked him a sudden question:"Do you think Harry Belfield a selfish man?"
38796She had heard no tread, but what could she have heard save the beating of her own heart?
38796She must get used to things, must n''t she?"
38796She turned her eyes to Andy, and, to his great astonishment, asked,"Would you like to come too?"
38796She was impatient with Andy-- would Harry never come back from that path?
38796She''s not going with you?"
38796So I-- may I stay a few minutes with you, Doris?
38796Soberly now-- soberly now-- had he ever expected to be a part of all this?
38796Still it taught you a thing or two, I daresay?"
38796Still, it''s a ripping fine country, is n''t it?
38796Suddenly from the other side of it came a voice:"Hallo, is that you, Hayes?
38796Suppose she did not assent?
38796Suppose she followed the way of her feelings, if so be that they led her towards Harry Belfield?
38796Suppose she fought for herself, treachery or no treachery?
38796Suppose she put forth what strength she had to upset Wellgood''s plan, to fight for herself?
38796Surely Harry would never send him to the butcher''s shop?
38796Surely I, if anybody, ought to know it?"
38796Surely if she spoke like that-- actually recalling the critical occasion-- she could have no suspicion?
38796Surely she could be honest?
38796Surely she had resolution to withstand it and to do what was wise?
38796Surely that ought to bring sympathy?
38796Surely, that ought to draw some question or remark-- that"at last"?
38796Take the chance-- the bare chance-- that he had not seen anything, or not seen all?
38796Talk rules the world-- eh, Wellgood?"
38796Tell me-- you saw her off-- well-- how?"
38796That arrangement of the tables of comparison?"
38796That does it?"
38796That does n''t count?
38796That does n''t sound quite so oppressive, I hope?"
38796That''ll be all right, wo n''t it?
38796That''ll look well on the sign, wo n''t it?
38796The best thing in the world-- was it actually to be hers?
38796The engagement seemed but victory in the first bout; was it forbidden to try the best of three?
38796The fox ran straight now-- but had he never a thought in his mind?
38796The saying goes that words are given us to conceal our thoughts; has anybody ever ventured to say that lips and eyes are?
38796The shoe pinched there, did it?
38796The sooner you go in the better, is n''t it?"
38796The world of Meriton?
38796Then is she to come with him?
38796Then it was not all to the bad?
38796Then she asked abruptly,"Are you ever afraid?"
38796Then what to do?
38796Then why ca n''t you say yes?
38796Then why not be true?
38796Then-- did they suspect?
38796There was my old seat, between Chinks and the Bird-- you know?
38796There''s no particular hurry, is there?"
38796There''s times in a young chap''s life when bein''able to put up a bit o''the ready makes all the difference, eh?
38796This penetration was new; should he wish that it might become less or greater?
38796To allow herself to remember, to muse, to long-- for whom?
38796To break his engagement?
38796To forget him-- what could that be?
38796To give lectures?"
38796To know in future only Vivien''s companion, Miss Vintry?
38796To put it more brutally-- how much of a bore was she to make herself?
38796To tell Wellgood, too, that from to- morrow there was only Miss Vintry?
38796To what state of things might he any evening come back?
38796To- morrow, when she had promised to meet Harry?
38796Too much love- making for your taste?"
38796Vivien seems to like him, does n''t she?"
38796W''ere''s the''arm?''
38796Was Andy in the end right in leaving her utterly out of consideration?
38796Was blood nothing-- race, colour, memories, associations, the Flag, the Crown, and the Destiny?
38796Was he ashamed of her?
38796Was he going to send her away-- now?
38796Was he never to feel quite sure of her?
38796Was he to throw the last chance away?
38796Was he, Doris?"
38796Was her department in good order?
38796Was it more sensible to do nothing-- which was to favour the"row"--or to attempt something-- which was to work for the marriage?
38796Was it really as long ago as that since he had been in Meriton?
38796Was it the butcher''s shop?
38796Was it wonder, or contempt, or such sheer horror as the devotee has for atheism?
38796Was life taking chances?
38796Was n''t it enough for a chap like him to earn a good living honestly?
38796Was n''t it lucky?
38796Was oblivion a necessity?
38796Was she not blessed among the daughters of women?
38796Was that art or accident?
38796Was that coming about?
38796Was that what the little shake of her head had meant?
38796Was the concrete-- the personal-- form significant?
38796We do n''t do what we can for one another out of kindness, but for love?"
38796We get on together?"
38796We like him so much, and you must be very fond of him, are n''t you?
38796We''ll both be in it, wo n''t we, Andy?
38796Well, by the most wonderful chance, Billy Foot''s brother( you know Billy, do n''t you?
38796Well, could he be expected to be pleased?
38796Well, if men choose to take off fine new shoes and leave them lying about?
38796Well, old boy, how do you like it in the House?
38796Well, was not this a more agreeable state of things than that Isobel should be simply a bore to him, and he simply a bore to Isobel?
38796Wellgood?"
38796Wellgood?"
38796Wellgood?"
38796Wellgood?"
38796Were not they pearls?
38796What are we to say to her?
38796What are ye to do with''em, Jack?"
38796What brought Belfield to town?
38796What business was it of Wellgood''s if Andy did forget his manners and stare too hard at the girls?
38796What business was it of hers?
38796What chance has she of forgetting Harry here at Meriton?"
38796What could you expect with a Liberal Government in office?
38796What did he expect anyhow?
38796What did they say?"
38796What did you think of the speeches?"
38796What do think she said?"
38796What do you mean, old fellow?"
38796What do you say?"
38796What does it matter?"
38796What else can there be of a public nature affecting me?
38796What else could one be engaged to?
38796What else had he to show for a good deal of time-- to say nothing of wear and tear of the emotions?
38796What happened?"
38796What have you been afraid to speak to me about?"
38796What have you got?"
38796What makes you--?"
38796What might happen while he was away?
38796What on earth was he waiting for?
38796What other comment was there to make?
38796What shall we do when it''s over?
38796What the deuce are you doing there?
38796What then?
38796What was the use of listening to so much nonsense?
38796What was the use, when there was only one question to be asked about him-- who was the latest woman?
38796What was there to be frightened at?
38796What was to be done?
38796What would Vivien think?
38796What would become of literature and the drama?"
38796What would everybody think?
38796What''ll you bet me?"
38796What''s that about not being Vivien''s_ fiancé_ any longer?"
38796What''s the difference between timber and meat?"
38796What''s the difficulty?"
38796What''s the good of it all?
38796What''s the matter with it?"
38796What''s the matter, Sally?
38796What''s the matter?
38796What-- you''re not going back?"
38796When Andy sat down, without any peroration, she said to Billy,"Was he good?
38796When did it happen-- and when is it going to happen?"
38796When did you say they were going to be married?"
38796When you were about town-- don''t you remember?"
38796Where are you off to?"
38796Where does the fun come in, Andy?"
38796Where have you been all this time?"
38796Where is one to go for quiet if things happen in Meriton?"
38796Where is she?"
38796Where the great success of which Vivien had been wo nt to talk shyly?
38796Where was ambition going to stop?
38796Where was the brilliant career?
38796Where''s Vivien?"
38796Which side is he?"
38796Whither?
38796Who at Halton had once talked about pearls and swine?
38796Who can take what fate never offers?
38796Who do you think came in while we were at tea?"
38796Who else sees her-- who else goes to Nutley?"
38796Who else was there?
38796Who first had undermined that accepted view of destiny, had disordered that well- schooled, almost Sunday- schooled, scheme of her life?
38796Who knows?"
38796Who should not listen if Harry loved to hear?
38796Who tempted him?
38796Who''s Lady Lucy?
38796Who, if not she, should know that neither his plighted word nor his hottest impulse could be relied upon to last?
38796Who, if not she, should know that you never could be sure of Harry?
38796Whose shawl?"
38796Why deceive when he loved?
38796Why did n''t he own up about Miss Vintry?"
38796Why did n''t you come in?"
38796Why do n''t you bring him here, Harry?"
38796Why does n''t he come in?
38796Why had Andy gone out-- and Harry Belfield not come in?
38796Why had she mocked, why had she hinted?
38796Why look at me?"
38796Why not a friend?
38796Why not?
38796Why should it not stand for them still, just as well as, or better than, London?
38796Why talk of happiness being murdered?
38796Why these heroics and this despair?
38796Why was the answer obvious?
38796Why waste him?
38796Why will people make our own most reasonable thoughts ridiculous by their silly way of putting them?
38796Why, you''re--""What am I?"
38796Will you bet me a kiss?"
38796Will you call Sally?"
38796Will you come?"
38796Will you keep me company indoors, and forgive my cigar, Miss Vintry?"
38796Will you stroll with me as far as Halton?"
38796Will you take them-- without reserve?"
38796Will you, lad?"
38796Wo n''t you give me just three minutes?"
38796Wo n''t you really let us have ten minutes more?
38796Worth that, is it now, really?
38796Would Harry accept the conclusion?
38796Would he brave the shot, or what hand would turn away the threatening barrel?
38796Would n''t you like a little on your own account?"
38796Would the flag dip and the gates open at his summons?
38796Would the interval of a few brief weeks have wrought a like change in her?
38796Would the mail from Montreal bring a remittance for the rent of the London office?
38796Would the visit come into play after all, unless she consented?
38796Would you like time to consider?"
38796Would you like to have another look in the shop?"
38796Yes, yes; or where lay the marvel of this repentance?
38796Yet he had come hot of heart, resolved-- resolved on what?
38796You did n''t know I was in town, did you?
38796You had n''t thought of that?
38796You have n''t pressed me, have you?"
38796You know he wo n''t hurt you, do n''t you?"
38796You know him?"
38796You know who I am, do n''t you?"
38796You know?
38796You leave the other side to put their three points?"
38796You remember I always said you''d make your way?
38796You remember?"
38796You said the timber was worth about two hundred a year to you?"
38796You think there''s that other motive?
38796You wanted Andy to have the shop, did n''t you?"
38796You were at the meeting last night, were n''t you?
38796You would n''t like to come too?"
38796You''ll attend to anything that turns up, wo n''t you, old chap?"
38796You''ll be seeing Mr. Belfield soon?
38796You''ll go on being the old Andy we all know, who never makes any claims, who puts up with everybody''s whims, who always expects to come last?"
38796You''re Mr. Hayes, are n''t you?
38796You''re not afraid of me?"
38796You''re not surprised or-- or shocked?"
38796You''ve heard him talk about the Pentathlon?
38796You''ve something in your mind, have n''t you?
38796You-- you would n''t think it--?"
49035''Behave according''? 49035 ''Completely discovered,''you said, my son?"
49035Alice dear, what is the matter?
49035Am I a dreadful humbug?
49035Am I in my senses?
49035Am I never to get to the end of it?
49035Am I right,he asked,"in thinking this to be Woodroffe Church?"
49035And as for my other cousin here?
49035And he married her and deserted her?
49035And is he-- Dick''s brother-- to go on holding the place to which he has no right?
49035And madam? 49035 And my own people?"
49035And now you come to me for information about the child, who must be a man by this time?
49035And the age?
49035And the boy? 49035 And then?"
49035And then?
49035And what''s the good of it?
49035And when can I leave this place?
49035And who was the Lady Woodroffe who came to the hotel?
49035And you came here,he went on,"remembering my name, and wondering whether it was the same man?
49035And you think that you will find your child?
49035And you will not tell the boy? 49035 Another?
49035Anthony Woodroffe?
49035Anthony Woodroffe?
49035Anthony? 49035 Are you concerned about him still, Molly?--after that midnight walk of ours?"
49035Because she has taken a poor child and brought it up in luxury? 49035 But do you really-- live-- by playing to people?"
49035But if he were to go through this ordeal? 49035 But the reward?"
49035But what more do we want?
49035But you can not tell me how you remember them-- by what mark?
49035But, I say, Molly, is this kind of marble hall good for study? 49035 Can I?
49035Can I? 49035 Can you help me, Dick?"
49035Can you not remind her that she sold the child on the condition that she would never trouble about him, or seek to know where he might be living?
49035Cling? 49035 Come to that, mother, what do you know about keeping lodgings?"
49035Confesses?
49035Could you marry a man without loving him, Molly? 49035 Could you possibly marry this fellow, Molly, when you can not respect him or love him?"
49035Cousin Alice,he said,"are we alone?"
49035Cousin,she said,"do you go on tramp for pleasure or for necessity?"
49035Despise the brass?
49035Dick,he cried,"I have n''t seen you since-- since-- when?"
49035Did I tell you,the young man continued, after a pause,"of her last words?"
49035Did he call? 49035 Did he reveal his secret?"
49035Did my lady come from Birmingham?
49035Did she never learn the lady''s name?
49035Did you hear that name coupled with any-- creditable incident?
49035Did you help yourself?
49035Did you know the child again?
49035Do I remember him? 49035 Do you accuse me of substituting a strange child for my own?"
49035Do you ask how I am getting on?
49035Do you exhibit?
49035Do you know nothing?
49035Do you think he knows?
49035Do you understand it, Molly?
49035Do you understand what I mean? 49035 Doctor-- Sir Richard-- can I really trust you?"
49035Does Humphrey know anything about it?
49035Does one weep for a child four and twenty years after its death? 49035 Does she talk about Humphrey?
49035Exhibit? 49035 Good stuff should not be thrown away, should it?
49035Had n''t we better talk about the wisdom acquired on tramp?
49035Has n''t he had his schooling?
49035Have n''t I got a responsible situation? 49035 Have you asked yourself the simple question, whether it is possible for me to commit such a crime, and then to confess?"
49035Have you considered these things? 49035 He did n''t give you any hint of what that was?"
49035He died? 49035 He died?"
49035He wants you to marry him secretly? 49035 How am I to know what he meant?
49035How am I to tell? 49035 How can we make him, Dick, if he wo n''t?"
49035How can you prove that?
49035How could we, when some of us had n''t even got into the cradle?
49035How do I know? 49035 How do you know?"
49035How has the question arisen, then? 49035 How the devil, man, can I be your son?
49035How will Humphrey take it?
49035How? 49035 Humphrey,"said his mother, sharply,"what did she say?
49035Humphrey,she said,"suppose that in a moment-- all in a moment-- the things you value most in the world should vanish?"
49035I can do nothing to get that delusion out of your mind, then?
49035I have n''t seen you since last June, Dick, have I?
49035I may rely upon that promise?
49035I met you, I believe, at Sir Robert Steele''s?
49035If she had been in want,John Haveril added,"would you have helped her because she was your cousin?"
49035If that is the reason why I am to help you, why do n''t you help this cousin?
49035If the gift is a gift of love, repaid by love, what harm? 49035 If we surrender the sacerdotal functions, what have we in exchange?"
49035In that case, why not present him with the Boot?
49035Indeed?
49035Is he a credit to the family? 49035 Is it a man in rags?
49035Is it not enough? 49035 Is it possible?"
49035Is it possible?
49035Is it possible?
49035Is it possible?
49035Is that all? 49035 Is that all?"
49035Is that so?
49035Is the story true?
49035Is there a young lord, then? 49035 Is there anything more wanted, at all?"
49035Is there not danger of inherited vice, or disease?
49035Is this revenge or justice, Dick?
49035John--after the young people had gone--"did you tell him about his father?"
49035John,she said,"does he understand?"
49035John,she said,"what was it you were going to tell Molly and Dick?"
49035Know the child? 49035 Like that bounder?"
49035Like this Piccadilly masher?
49035May I ask,he said,"if this is Woodroffe Church?"
49035May I sing you one of my own songs?
49035Molly dear,said Hilarie,"has Sir Humphrey been pressing you?"
49035Molly, what about our good friend, the mother of this interesting changeling?
49035Molly? 49035 Molly?"
49035Mother, how much did you ask for?
49035Mr. John Haveril?
49035My Art? 49035 My cousin Hilarie has n''t the complete disposal of your life, has she?"
49035My dear lady, is it well to allow one single episode to ruin your life? 49035 My dear young lady"--the doctor felt that his ghostly machinery had failed--"will you kindly not interrupt?
49035My defiance? 49035 No-- no, not very; it was in connection with a-- a former wife.... How old are you, Dick?"
49035No? 49035 Not like it, Dick?"
49035Not really, Dick? 49035 Not to keep your husband from finding you out?
49035Nothing serious, I hope?
49035Now that all women want to work, will they continue to civilize? 49035 Now"--Richard read the letter twice before he began to think about it--"what does this mean?
49035Of your mother?
49035Oh, but have you got money, my dear?
49035Oh, is n''t he clever, Alice? 49035 Oh, they are not very interesting, are they?"
49035Oh, you mean when you dined with me? 49035 Oh, you noticed that, did you?
49035On my conditions?
49035On that very day when the child died?
49035One would think----"Has she any other reason to go upon besides the resemblance?
49035Other people do rely upon my secrecy: why not you?
49035Ought one to be sorry for you, Dick? 49035 Ought we to go, then?"
49035Pray, are you concerned with that person as well as----?
49035Quite a common creature, was she not?
49035Reference? 49035 Shall I become the heiress of millions, or shall I be hidden away in a box by a husband who is ashamed of his wife?
49035Shall I give you back your letter?
49035Shall we take some tea first?
49035Since I, for one, never heard that she was in want--again the teacher--"how can I tell what I should have done?
49035Since you are not concerned, it does n''t matter, does it? 49035 Sir Richard Steele, M.D., F.R.S.,"and in the corner,"245, Harley Street, W.""Who is Sir Richard Steele?"
49035Sir Robert? 49035 So I believe-- and then?"
49035Tell me, have you been long in the old country? 49035 Tell me,"she said,"if you have ever seen a place more beautiful or more peaceful?"
49035Terminate the whole business? 49035 That, I suppose, is the musicians''loft?"
49035The church built by the Archbishop and his brothers?
49035The musicians''gallery? 49035 The woman made no objections?"
49035Then what am I?
49035Then what does she mean by this letter?
49035Then who is the child that died?
49035Then, Mr. Woodroffe, can you not persuade that poor woman to go home, to be content with what she has seen and you have proved?
49035Then, sir, why do you come to me with it at all?
49035Then, why did the lady conceal her name?
49035Then,he asked,"you-- you-- you refuse-- you actually refuse this trifling assistance?"
49035To think of him?
49035Understand at once, make your principal-- who is she? 49035 Well, Molly?"
49035Well, but what does she know?
49035Well, but, Dick, what do you mean? 49035 Well, he isn''t-- is he?"
49035Well, what then?
49035Well, what would you have?
49035Well-- but-- if he is living, how can you be anybody else''s wife? 49035 Well; and why not?"
49035Well; but about the hotel and the register?
49035Well?
49035What about advertising''Lady Macbeth,''and getting ready a burlesque?
49035What about him?
49035What about them?
49035What am I to say to Hilarie?
49035What are the two other things?
49035What are you by profession, Cousin Humphrey?
49035What are you driving at, Dick?
49035What are you going to do for me?
49035What can I do, then?
49035What did he tell you?
49035What do you go on tramp for?
49035What do you mean by not being able to climb down, Dick?
49035What do you mean by saying that you must go?
49035What do you understand by those words, Humphrey?
49035What do you want me to do?
49035What do you want, again?
49035What does she do it for?
49035What does this man mean?
49035What dream?
49035What else,asked the spokesman,"could we do?
49035What have I done to- day that could suggest this date?
49035What is a wonderful thing?
49035What is it, mother?
49035What is that?
49035What is that?
49035What is this entry that she talks about?
49035What is your opinion, Miss----? 49035 What is your secret?"
49035What last words?
49035What more can we desire?
49035What shall I play for her?
49035What should I say about it?
49035What should you say, Dick, if it was to come off that way?
49035What sort of a fellow, Molly? 49035 What story can there be connected with a parcel of socks and shoes?"
49035What then?
49035What things are these, then?
49035What was she doing with all those girls?
49035What will she do?
49035What would my lady be doing at Birmingham? 49035 What''s the good of asking, then?"
49035What? 49035 What?"
49035What_ is_ the meaning of this letter, Dick?
49035When are these letters to be written?
49035When it affords them so much pleasure to give me things, why should I refuse? 49035 Where a few pounds would be the making of us, and them not so much as missed,"said the pew- opener,"why not?"
49035Where did he die?
49035Where do you go?
49035Where is my son?
49035Where is that child, doctor?
49035Where is your proof? 49035 Where?"
49035Who cares for a title?
49035Who else was concerned? 49035 Who is Dick?
49035Who is inquiring, then?
49035Who is this young man who calls himself the second baronet?
49035Who is your visitor?
49035Who was that child, then?
49035Who was that child? 49035 Who was the child that died?"
49035Who was the child that died?
49035Who was the child, then?
49035Why ca n''t you?
49035Why help him? 49035 Why is he unfortunate?"
49035Why not go to him at once without any letter?
49035Why not, mother? 49035 Why not?
49035Why not? 49035 Why not?
49035Why should I ask whether he''s dead or alive?
49035Why should he not? 49035 Why should n''t we?"
49035Why should the story come to light at all?
49035Why should you learn her name, or she yours?
49035Why, Molly,he asked--"why-- I put it to your feminine perceptions-- why was this good lady so profoundly moved by the mere sight of the fellow?
49035Why? 49035 Why?
49035Why? 49035 Why?"
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Will he be ready to go away with his own mother, to America, do you think, Molly dear?
49035Will you do this, Sir Humphrey?
49035Will you do, then, what I advise?
49035Will you ever have to ask my permission?
49035Will you give him an answer to- night?
49035Will you give me back those things?
49035Will you let me talk first?
49035Wipe-- your-- feet? 49035 Would it not be better, dear lady, to make up your mind to forget the whole thing?
49035Would n''t you help him now?
49035Yes; but surely---- Perhaps you had no more children?
49035Yes?
49035You another Siddons? 49035 You are a detective, or a private and secret inquirer?"
49035You are doing well, Charles?
49035You are happy, Molly?
49035You do n''t know? 49035 You do n''t like him?
49035You do n''t mean to say it''s that cousin of mine-- not Sir Humphrey?
49035You do n''t remember me? 49035 You give them all this?"
49035You have n''t promised, have you?
49035You here again? 49035 You here, Molly?"
49035You know, do n''t you, Dick, that it is impossible?
49035You think it is a mistake to give money?
49035You want me to go to the rooms of the gardener man who insulted me? 49035 You will play something presently, Dick, wo n''t you?"
49035You would like to go up to London this afternoon? 49035 You''ve been to see him, John?
49035You, with that face, with those lips, with those eyes? 49035 Your ancestor?
49035Your college, I take it, has something to do with helping people?
49035Your father? 49035 Your mother was a player, too?"
49035Yours? 49035 _ The_ whole story?
49035_ What?_"No shame for him at all. 49035 ( Did the child die in Birmingham? 49035 *****Molly dear,"Alice asked,"am I hard- hearted?
49035After four and twenty years?
49035All the world are cads, are they not?
49035Already?"
49035And he really is the best fellow in the world-- aren''t you, Dick?"
49035And suppose nobody takes any notice?"
49035And then-- then you came back to look for the boy?"
49035And then?
49035And then?"
49035And when----?"
49035And you are a good deal with them?
49035And you are the deserted wife, and the rich American is your husband?"
49035And you-- are you really another cousin?"
49035And yours, Cousin Dick?"
49035Are they made of rare or uncommon materials?
49035Are they not made of stuff commonly used for the garments of infants?
49035Are we sufficiently grateful to our daily papers and our leader- writers, for providing us with subjects of conversation?
49035Are you going to give''em money?"
49035Are you listening?
49035Are you quite certain?"
49035Are you ready?
49035Are you really working?"
49035Are you satisfied, Dick?"
49035Are you sure that you are keeping your word?"
49035As for kind hearts, how can you know, with your tables spread every day, and your champagne running like water?
49035As the lady was apparently passing through, did the child die at a hotel?)
49035As we are here alone, I would ask you which of these qualities he could inherit from you?"
49035At so early an age?
49035Because he is clever?
49035Because he is rich?
49035Because he will make you Lady Woodroffe?
49035Because you love the man?
49035Been to see my mother?
49035Believe me, if I may speak of pity for you----""Pity?"
49035Besides-- a chance resemblance-- again-- what is it?"
49035But have you told them of your engagement?"
49035But how am I to know that she has treated him well?
49035But how do you know?"
49035But if there was no concealment of the death, how could there be substitution?"
49035But what did he want with you?"
49035But what do you know about shops and what to charge?"
49035But why should we want to know?"
49035But would his proofs be accepted in a court of justice?
49035Can a man take any interest in anything who awaits his trial for life-- who hopes for an acquittal, but fears a capital sentence?
49035Can any woman of my age-- forty- nine-- be identified, by a stranger, with another woman of twenty- five or thereabouts?
49035Can it be the millionaire person whom my son met-- with you-- at Sir Robert Steele''s house?"
49035Can one go farther than a Jeroboam?
49035Can these things make a foundation for friendship?"
49035Can you explain why you take such an interest in my relations with my mother, not to speak of my personal character?"
49035Can you imagine Humphrey, with his pride of birth, calling upon the Hackney draper, and taking tea with the pew- opener?"
49035Cling?
49035Confess, now, my newly- found cousins, is it not a noble house?"
49035Court the empty praises or the empty sneers of an ignorant press?
49035Dead, is he?"
49035Dick the Tramp?
49035Dick who goes out in white- thread gloves, like a waiter?"
49035Dick, there''s a young fellow of your name-- a baronet-- son of an Anglo- Indian; are you any relation to him?"
49035Did he mean a reflection on the one work that had not been quite so good?
49035Did her ladyship''s family hear of it?
49035Did she come to the place before the child died, or after?"
49035Did the advertiser believe that he was such a juggins as to give away the story without making sure of the reward?
49035Did you work that?
49035Do any of us get our deserts?
49035Do maidens ever dream of the supreme happiness of having a great man for a son?
49035Do you find it altered since you left it-- so long ago?
49035Do you hear, Molly?
49035Do you imagine that the doctor is really and truly as ignorant as he would have us believe, of the lady''s name?
49035Do you like him?"
49035Do you mean to say that she sent you-- you-- you-- to tell_ me_--_me_--_me_ that?"
49035Do you observe the resemblance, Molly?"
49035Do you remember that time when daddy let me go with him, and you came too?"
49035Do you soon return to the States?"
49035Do you suspect anybody in the whole wide world?"
49035Do you think Lady Woodroffe was useful in talking about him?
49035Do you think, nurse, the sahib, his father, will think that the child looks his age?
49035Do you think----?"
49035Do you wish me to attempt that task?"
49035Does he know the meaning and bearing of his evidence?"
49035Does it bring you nearer to Mrs. Siddons?
49035Does it suit the cothernus?
49035Else, why did not the writer sign her name?
49035Fiddler Dick?
49035Give up that work for a miserable little shop, where you must cheat to make both ends meet?
49035Had the man never seen an attractive girl before?
49035Has it been prosperous?
49035Has my mother chucked her fortune?
49035Have I any feeling in me at all, Dick?"
49035Have you any children?
49035Have you any special wishes, mother?"
49035Have you anything to suggest?
49035Have you had adventures?"
49035Have you no heart, Alice?"
49035He comes to the college when I am staying with Hilarie, and, oh, Dick, ca n''t you understand the temptation of it?"
49035He goes on making love, does he?"
49035He''s a handsome boy, is n''t he, Molly?
49035Help him?
49035Here is a portrait of Anthony Woodroffe, who, we maintain, was his father: could there be a more striking resemblance?
49035How can I bear the disclosure?
49035How can you refuse what I offer you?
49035How could this majestic woman have done such a thing?
49035How could your husband desert you?
49035How do you explain that omission?
49035How do you know them?
49035How does that bear on the case?
49035How long shall I have to wait?"
49035How much capital had I to start with?
49035How shall we find him after all these years?
49035How should we hear and receive such a thing on the stage, Molly?
49035How will you do it?
49035How would he regard his new mother-- probably a vulgar old woman-- or his new brothers and sisters-- probably preposterous in their vulgarity?
49035How?
49035I am going to show you a bundle of things that I made with my own hands, for my baby-- mine-- woman-- do you hear?"
49035I ask you which of these qualities he could inherit from your husband?
49035I suppose, however, that you have heard of certain advertisements?"
49035I think you will admit that this is an important step?"
49035I was----""What was the matter?"
49035If he does n''t, who can?
49035If he means what he says, why does n''t he take you by the hand and lead you to his mother?
49035If it was adoption, why not come forward?
49035If not, why did she not come forward?
49035If not-- what did your American adviser warn you?"
49035If so, why did not some one else come forward?
49035If the lady persisted in her denial, why not go straight to the young man and lead him to his mother?
49035If you ca n''t see them, who can help you?
49035If you can help yourself, why do you want help?
49035In the morning the child dies----""How do you know all these things?"
49035Inexhaustible it must be, else how could the hotel bills be paid?
49035Is Molly in it?"
49035Is anything the matter?"
49035Is he Willy Pennefather?"
49035Is he a disgrace to the hotel?"
49035Is it a common lot?"
49035Is it a smash?
49035Is it coming true?
49035Is it his resemblance to a certain man-- her first husband?
49035Is it money, or is it love?"
49035Is it not possible for that woman to think of these things?
49035Is it possible?"
49035Is it, or is it not, like my son?"
49035Is n''t mother in a responsible situation?
49035Is that so?
49035Is that spent already?"
49035Is that what makes you so infernally independent?"
49035Is there another?"
49035Is there anything distinctive in the materials used?
49035Is this love, Hilarie?
49035It never does to treat those outsiders as if they were gentlemen born, does it?
49035It will be a very delightful exposure for me, will it not?"
49035Let me ask you if the boy has turned out well?"
49035Looks well on paper, does n''t it?"
49035Marry him secretly and go into hiding?
49035May I ask what your branch has been doing all these years?"
49035May I guess that your object is, apparently, to find this person who bought or took charge of the child?"
49035May I sit down again?"
49035Must I tell her?
49035My father was a vagabond before me----""Did he also go on the tramp?"
49035My genius?"
49035No mark on the child?
49035Nothing distinctive, then, in the fashion?
49035Nothing put up with the clothes?
49035Now do you remember anything about it?"
49035Now, Mr. Richard Woodroffe, what else have you got to say?"
49035Now, dear Hilarie, am I right to wait-- without his knowing why?
49035Now, what have you got to say?"
49035Of what nature is the wonderful secret?"
49035Oh, do you know nothing?"
49035Oh, why?"
49035On what pretence?
49035Once in the gutter, always in the gutter, eh?"
49035One of them is the only son of the late Sir Humphrey Woodroffe, a distinguished Anglo- Indian----""Woodroffe?"
49035Only, for Heaven''s sake, take away that wretched boy-- that living fraud-- that impostor----""Who made him an impostor?
49035Or will he take after his mother, and become a simple, honourable Englishman?
49035Or, he succeeds by his low tastes-- who, that respects himself, would pander to the multitude?
49035Or, he succeeds by vacuity, fatuity, futility, stupidity-- what self- respecting writer would sink to the level of the fatuous and vacuous?
49035Out of love and affection?"
49035Pray, what do you mean by''behave according''?
49035See?
49035Shall I go on?
49035She wants me----""Does she hiss''diamonds''in your ear?"
49035She''s not ill, I hope?"
49035Should they-- ought they-- ever to marry without love?
49035So that, for materials or for shape, there is nothing to make them different from any other baby- clothes?
49035Something serious, befitting the place?
49035Steele?"
49035Suppose that were to vanish suddenly away?"
49035Suppose you spring all this upon the world?
49035That doctor-- what is his name?
49035That is natural, is it not?"
49035That is strange, is it not?"
49035That is understood, is it not?"
49035That is your meaning, is it not, sir?"
49035That was a strange dream to come three times running, was n''t it?"
49035That wo n''t make the son respect the father much, will it?
49035The name-- is it an American name?"
49035Then what is my son?"
49035Then, madam, how do you know that they were made by your own work?"
49035There are, then, people in the world as unhappy as I myself?"
49035There, Molly, what do you think of that?"
49035They are also made in the fashion commonly used for children, are they not?
49035Things have changed, with both of us, since that time, have they not?
49035To make me happy by having to listen to this continual flood of contempt?"
49035WAS IT SUBSTITUTION?
49035WAS IT SUBSTITUTION?
49035Was his name Woodroffe?"
49035Was it, as some of the papers argued, clearly a case of fraudulent substitution?
49035Was it, as you say, hallucination?
49035Was she taken with him?"
49035Was she the wife of a certain American millionaire, lately spoken of in the papers?
49035Was the date connected with that event?
49035Was the death announced in the papers?
49035Was your husband a bookish man?"
49035Was your husband a man of unselfish habits and even temper?"
49035We are going into the church: would you like to come too?"
49035Well, have you proved your case yet?"
49035Well, he is n''t quite your sort, is he?
49035Well, may I call you Alice?
49035Well, now, what can I do for you this afternoon?"
49035Well, then, what next?
49035Well, what have we got on our side?
49035What about Humphrey?"
49035What adoption?
49035What answer shall I give him?"
49035What are we to do, Alice?
49035What are you yourself doing, however?"
49035What better for you and everybody?
49035What brings them?
49035What can I say?"
49035What can it be except an unknown sense-- the maternal instinct-- which is awakened in her?
49035What child?
49035What could I do?
49035What could it mean?
49035What did he tell you?"
49035What did she keep up?
49035What did she know about Humphrey?
49035What did she mean?
49035What do I care about his wife?
49035What do men understand of the wonder, the bewilderment, with which a girl looks on the rabble rout, if ever she is permitted to see it?
49035What do they care about gentlemen?"
49035What do you mean by going to sleep here?"
49035What do you mean by inquirers?"
49035What do you say now, doctor?"
49035What do you want now?"
49035What do you want to marry me for?
49035What do you want with me?"
49035What does it matter to me whether you married late in life or early?
49035What does it matter what he does?
49035What does it mean?"
49035What does it reveal to her, this mockery of the peaceful night?
49035What drivel is this?"
49035What effect would the discovery have upon his views of life?
49035What happened?
49035What has become of the money he gave you?
49035What has that to do with it?"
49035What have I to do with her dreams?
49035What have they been doing while you''ve been away?
49035What have you done for him?
49035What have you done with that money?
49035What have you got to do with them?"
49035What have you got?
49035What if the child should inherit these instincts?"
49035What is it but his own identity, which she alone can understand-- with her child?"
49035What is the Flowery way compared with the way of Love?
49035What is the good?
49035What is the matter?"
49035What is the truth?"
49035What is work compared with thee?"
49035What is yours?"
49035What kind of proof is that?
49035What more would you have?"
49035What more_ can_ you want?
49035What next?"
49035What reference do you want?"
49035What shall I find next?"
49035What shall I play?
49035What shall it be?
49035What should I have done, Dick, when daddy died and left me without a penny?
49035What tenderness, what kindness, would Humphrey have for the mother who had come to deprive him of everything that he valued?
49035What then?
49035What upon his opinions as to small trade, and the mean and undignified and sordid employments by which the bulk of mankind have to live?
49035What upon his politics?
49035What was it that the musician played?
49035What was the use of writing what everybody knew?"
49035What was there to say?
49035What wife would not willingly respond to such a pleasing taste in a husband?
49035What words?"
49035What would Dick say?
49035What would be the effect upon an educated and a sensitive mind?
49035What would be the effect upon his affections?
49035What would that mean-- to me?"
49035What would the world say, if the world only knew?"
49035What''s the matter?"
49035What''s the use, I ask any of you?"
49035What, Molly thought, would be Humphrey''s attitude towards his new mother, when the truth was disclosed to him?
49035What?
49035What?
49035When may I come again to visit Miss Molly Pennefather?"
49035When shall I come?"
49035When the morrow dawns the wine- cup still lingers in the brain-- but the gold pieces-- where are they?
49035When you come to proof-- how do you know that the child whose death is recorded was really the son of Sir Humphrey?
49035Where can we go?"
49035Where do you get all your wisdom?"
49035Where is that woman?
49035Where is the boy?"
49035Where is your other resemblance then?
49035Where were Rosamond, Agnes Sorel, La Vallière, Nell Gwynne?
49035Which of the two is his father?
49035Which of you has helped this unfortunate man?"
49035Who else was there?
49035Who is it?"
49035Who is''we''?
49035Who made that declaration?
49035Who made that entry?
49035Who was your mother, then?"
49035Who would expect to meet in a London hotel, in the person of a middle- aged millionairess, the elder Sultana?"
49035Who would not marry a great magician?
49035Who would suspect?"
49035Who would trust you?
49035Who would?
49035Who''s this?"
49035Who, then, was the present so- called Sir Humphrey?
49035Whom did she persuade?
49035Whose eyes, whose face, whose hair, do you see in that portrait?
49035Why admire or think upon the unattainable?
49035Why ca n''t I?
49035Why did he ask us all to dinner, if he does not know?
49035Why did not the lady come forward?
49035Why did she produce the child''s clothes?
49035Why did she smile?
49035Why did the doctor go out of his way to invite Humphrey to meet his true mother?
49035Why did the man call on me, then?"
49035Why disturb things?
49035Why do we admit them into our houses?"
49035Why do you ask?"
49035Why do you come here with it?"
49035Why do you come here with such a story?"
49035Why do you sing, and play that fiddle of yours better than anybody else?
49035Why not say at once that you do n''t care about it any longer?"
49035Why not you and me?"
49035Why not?
49035Why not?"
49035Why should I conceal the poverty to which I am reduced by the hard hearts of wealthy friends?
49035Why should I give you anything?
49035Why should there be any more hesitation?
49035Why, I ask, was she so much affected?
49035Why, how could such a woman, in such a position, face the world, and confess to having committed so great a crime?
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Why?
49035Will he astonish his friends by becoming a low comedian?
49035Will he reward the hand which inflicts this lifelong shame-- it can be nothing less to him-- with affection and gratitude-- or----?
49035Will my other cousin, Hilarie, advise?"
49035Will that do?"
49035Will that interesting babe take after his father?
49035Will you keep as quiet as possible?
49035Will you speak to them, and tell them that we are pleased to see them here?"
49035Will you spend some money?"
49035Will you take a drink-- two drinks-- to go?
49035Will you trust me?"
49035With victory assured?
49035Wo n''t you make him go?"
49035Would her son fly to her arms on the wings of affection?
49035Would it take the form of hundreds?
49035Would you go to a lawyer?
49035Would you go to my son?
49035Would you like to go into the church?
49035Yet who else could have done it?
49035Yet, what says the poet?
49035You all came for what you could get; now, what do you want?"
49035You are not jealous, are you, John?
49035You are not jealous, are you, John?
49035You are sure that there will never be any attempt made to follow and discover my name?"
49035You are working, no doubt, in the interests of the second baronet?"
49035You are-- you are---- Oh, how old are you?"
49035You ca n''t possibly want to see all----""And my old friend Dick?"
49035You can be silent?--for my sake, for the sake of the sahib?
49035You love me; and I-- well, shall I say it?"
49035You observe again a startling resemblance?
49035You place, I believe, great reliance on that entry?
49035You think it is Sir Humphrey Woodroffe, is it not?"
49035You were always ready to think about fellows being in love with you, were you not?"
49035You will have to explain----""All the world?
49035You would like to have the baby- clothes of your own son-- whom you sold-- would you not?"
49035You yourself?
49035You''re John Haveril all the same-- see?
49035You, sir,"he pointed a minatory finger to Cousin Charles,"you would like more capital, would you?"
49035Your husband''s name was-- was----?"
49035_ Sellinger''s Round_, or_ Barley Break_?
49035but a man''s reach should exceed his grasp, Else what''s a heaven for?"
49035have we given in?
49035how?"
49035who will help us now that thou hast dyed?"
49035why ca n''t I?
49035will he come to- morrow?"
51854Am I alive?
51854Am I under arrest?
51854And how about yourself, Arthurjean?
51854And made it twenty- two?
51854And now what do you think of me?
51854And the doctor did n''t keep away?
51854And what am I doing here, General Wakely?
51854And what are you going to do about it?
51854And what is that?
51854And what''s the drip about the Alaska?
51854And which do you prefer-- Scotch or rye?
51854And who is the Chief?
51854And who the hell, Arthurjean, is Mr. Willamer of the S.E.C.?
51854And why do you think the hospital will be letting you go, Mr. Tompkins? 51854 And why not?
51854And why not?
51854And why not?
51854And you ca n''t find a trace?
51854And you say that so far nobody has been able to help you?
51854Angles? 51854 Any kids?"
51854Any news today, Mary?
51854Are these checks good?
51854Are they going to make you an Ambassador or something?
51854Are you a friend of Frank''s? 51854 Are you alive?"
51854Are you all right, Winnie?
51854Are you catching the ten o''clock, dear?
51854Are you feeling okay?
51854Are you sure you need him?
51854Are you trying to tell me that he''s dead?
51854But how''m I going to get to Washington and do all these things?
51854But there''s no doubt that the Alaska went down like a stone?
51854But what about Von Bieberstein?
51854But what can we do?
51854But what did you want to see me about?
51854But what if the old girl dies within the next five years? 51854 But what is Z-2?"
51854But what is my moral responsibility in this predicament, Dr. McGregor? 51854 But you''re going to look, are n''t you?"
51854Ca n''t you at least check on the Jacklin angle?
51854Ca n''t you explain without touching it?
51854Can you drive me out to my place?
51854Can you give me a lead?
51854Celebrate what?
51854Change yo''luck?
51854Convince them of what?
51854Did he ever tell you that he''s head of Nazi intelligence in this country?
51854Did she make you happy?
51854Did they-- Are you-- Are you all right?
51854Did you ever see a wife who could n''t spot a sex- situation at a hundred yards up- wind on a dark and rainy night?
51854Did_ I_ say that you had no chance?
51854Do n''t tell me that I''m going to be offered a Morgan partnership?
51854Do n''t these treatments take a long time?
51854Do n''t you like it here? 51854 Do n''t you mean the Purple Heart?"
51854Do n''t you see what I mean,I grated,"or must I spell it out for you?
51854Do they let wives come and visit their husbands?
51854Do you realize you flopped with that blade in your hand and might have cut an artery?
51854Do you think I ought to call my lawyer in before I proceed with our talk?
51854Do you think that you can drive a wedge between me and my husband?
51854Do you want to make me ill, with your talk of collies?
51854Does n''t the State Department have something to say about it?
51854Drop in again some time and tell me, will you?
51854Exactly what_ is_ your mission?
51854Except what?
51854Expense account, you spy- catcher?
51854For me?
51854Frank said--"How do I know you''re telling the truth?
51854Goin''to leave your coop down here?
51854Good afternoon, Mr. Harcourt,I said pleasantly,"and what can I do for the F.B.I.?"
51854Got any comment on that, Graham?
51854Half- past sixish?
51854Has success gone to his head?
51854Have a drink?
51854Have some?
51854Have_ you_ anything to say?
51854He too?
51854He''s had no lunch?
51854Her chaplain?
51854Him? 51854 His little Wac wo n''t like it?"
51854Honeychile,I asked,"did you by any chance, think to bring me some of the office brandy?
51854How about Wasson?
51854How about Winnie? 51854 How about a collie?"
51854How about a drink, Merry?
51854How about barbershops?
51854How about commodities, Graham?
51854How about his food?
51854How about meeting me at the Pond Club at one o''clock?
51854How about my lawyer?
51854How about peace- babies?
51854How about some food?
51854How about the third charge?
51854How are you going to set out?
51854How did it go, Tompkins?
51854How did you guess?
51854How do you do it, Tompkins?
51854How do you think we boys on the Committee make a living? 51854 How does that fit into the picture?"
51854How in hell_ could_ I know?
51854How many women is it you''ve been trying to keep away from each other? 51854 How much do you need?"
51854How much will it cost me to be Ambassador to Canada?
51854How much?
51854How rich are we, anyway?
51854How''s Ponto?
51854How''s that again?
51854How''s that again?
51854How''s that again?
51854How''s your health? 51854 How?"
51854How?
51854How_ is_ he?
51854Hullo, Ray? 51854 I can see how Hitler or Tojo might want to get rid of Roosevelt but who else?
51854I mean, wo n''t there be a stink in Congress about it? 51854 I''m not leaving home, for God''s sake?
51854If God finds you, Winnie,she said,"I hope He does n''t arrive when-- I mean, it might be rather embarrassing?"
51854Ireland?
51854Is Merriwether Vail your lawyer?
51854Is he still asleep?
51854Is n''t it going to be a headache?
51854Is n''t that what a wife''s for?
51854Is that it? 51854 Is that what you wanted to tell me?"
51854Is that you, Jimmie?
51854Is that you, Ponto?
51854Is that your opinion, Phil?
51854Is there any particular man I should see at the Department, sir?
51854Is there anything_ wrong_ with me? 51854 Is there enough to eat?"
51854Is this a joke?
51854Is your name Ponto?
51854It does sound crazy, does n''t it?
51854It''s a good gag, Winnie,Tolan laughed,"but now you''ve had your fun, how about another drink?"
51854It''s not so bad, is it, Winnie?
51854Jacklin? 51854 Jacklin?
51854Jimmie too?
51854John Smith?
51854Just between us, Tompkins,he whispered,"who put you up to that Z-2 line of yours?
51854Let''s see,I stalled,"when was the last time I consulted you?"
51854Mad at me?
51854Merry?
51854Miss Briggs,I asked,"have we any brandy in the office?"
51854Mr. Tompkins,he said,"you''re a married man, are n''t you?"
51854No dancing in the streets?
51854No, did I?
51854Not so keen about it, eh?
51854Now how about my friends? 51854 Now let''s take a look at this paper.... What?
51854Now, Tompkins,the General resumed,"what''s this word about Von Bieberstein being dead?"
51854Now, what is it you want to know?
51854Of course, you''re going to stay with us, Myrtle, but however did you guess?
51854Oh, a buy?
51854Oh, ask him to see one of the other partners, will you?
51854Oh, come, doctor, who''s loony now?
51854Oh, he did, did he?
51854Oh, hell, girls,she said,"What''s the use?
51854Oh, is that so?
51854Oh, is_ that_ all?
51854Oh, that? 51854 Operation Octopus, sir?"
51854Or drugstores? 51854 Poor, darling Virginia,"she murmured,"why do n''t you go away and have a good rest?
51854Remember me, Winnie?
51854Roscommon?
51854Say you need half a million to start with and I put it up, what do I get out of it?
51854Say, Winnie, what the hell have you been up to?
51854Shall I ask him to wait?
51854Shall I bring my books?
51854Shall I tell Mrs. Tompkins you are here?
51854Should n''t he have a special diet?
51854Since Roosevelt was n''t murdered, what am I here for?
51854So that''s how it''s done, is it? 51854 So that''s the way it is, is it?"
51854So that''s what you call them? 51854 So you do n''t remember where you were before Monday?"
51854So you take it out on me, eh?
51854So you think she''s on the level?
51854So you want to railroad me to an asylum, eh?
51854So you''re still working for the bank?
51854Speaking of cashing checks,I reminded her,"how in hell am I going to get some dough?
51854Speaking of luck,I asked,"What''s the news from the kennels?
51854Stinky? 51854 Stormy weather?"
51854Sue?
51854Sugar- puss?
51854Suicide, eh?
51854Suppose I wo n''t play?
51854Sure you want to see this?
51854Tammy,I said,"will you get me the latest Social Register?"
51854Tell me, Mr. Tyler,I inquired,"did you ever hear of Axel Roscommon?"
51854Tell me, Winnie,she asked,"has anything gone wrong?"
51854That sounds wonderful, Mr. Willamer, but what has it got to do with me? 51854 That would be Harcourt-- A. J. Harcourt-- wouldn''t it?
51854That''s right, but they do it, do n''t they? 51854 That''s the one we lost, is n''t it?"
51854The doctor who bandaged Booth''s leg after the murder of Lincoln? 51854 The other night, I mean, it was all so-- What''s the matter?
51854The principle of vicarious sacrifice has been observed ever since that ne''er- do- weel Cain asked,''Am I my brother''s keeper?'' 51854 The usual, sir?"
51854Then what the hell_ is_ this?
51854Then what''s your advice, counselor?
51854Then why all this interest in me?
51854Then you ca n''t help me?
51854Then you''re still investigating me?
51854There''s much in what you say, Dr. Potter,I complimented him,"but what the hell can I do about it bottled up here in the Sanctuary?
51854This another of your tousled blondes?
51854To whom do you refer?
51854Today?
51854Tompkins?
51854Tonight?
51854Trifled with the Mann Act? 51854 War getting too much for you?
51854Was I tight, Tammy?
51854Was he glad to get home from the nasty old kennel? 51854 Was he murdered?"
51854Was he the one who argued that there might be several sexes? 51854 Was that it?
51854We ca n''t have our customers starve to death, can we? 51854 We''re both in what?"
51854Well, Miss Briggs, who''s next?
51854Well, are n''t we cashing in?
51854Well, gentlemen,I asked,"what will you have to drink?"
51854Well, have you anything to say?
51854Well, how''m I going to get some dough?
51854Well, then, gentlemen,I announced,"will you have one more round of drinks and then kindly get the hell out of here?
51854Well, what seems to be wrong with you, old man?
51854Well, what''s all this about?
51854Well?
51854Well?
51854Wha''yo''want, honey- man?
51854What about Commander Chalmis?
51854What about South America?
51854What about Virginia? 51854 What about me?"
51854What about that Great Smoky bear?
51854What am I supposed to have done, Merry?
51854What are you driving at, Merry?
51854What can he do to me?
51854What can you suggest?
51854What did you tell her, Tammy?
51854What do you mean''sell the war short?''
51854What do you mean?
51854What do you mean?
51854What do you really think of me?
51854What do you think? 51854 What do you think?"
51854What do you think_ we''re_ going to have?
51854What do_ you_ think?
51854What dog you talkin''about? 51854 What else would you call it?
51854What gives, angel?
51854What good would it do? 51854 What is it, Myrtle?"
51854What is your problem?
51854What job did he do?
51854What kind of go- round is this? 51854 What on earth made you confuse him with Von Bieberstein?"
51854What on_ earth_ happened to you? 51854 What proof have you?"
51854What shall I tell Phil Cone, though?
51854What sort?
51854What this dog?
51854What was that about kidnapping?
51854What will it take to get myself cleared?
51854What would you do if you were me? 51854 What you want, mammy?
51854What you want?
51854What''s all this fine print?
51854What''s all this_ nonsense_?
51854What''s eating you, Winnie?
51854What''s happened to you?
51854What''s he done?
51854What''s he like?
51854What''s it about, Jim?
51854What''s that?
51854What''s that?
51854What''s that?
51854What''s the charge?
51854What''s the matter with Ireland, anyhow?
51854What''s the second strike on me?
51854What''s the use of all this coy stuff? 51854 What''s_ your_ price?"
51854What''sa alla so secret, hey?
51854What? 51854 What_ is_ the matter?"
51854When I come-- came-- in with the bowl of water like you said, there he was lying on-- on-- your bed, like a Human, and-- and--"And what?
51854When did I ever threaten the President?
51854When were you ever at Kwajalein, Winnie?
51854Where can I find Him? 51854 Where did you come from?
51854Where did you know him?
51854Where have you been waiting?
51854Where is Commander Jacklin?
51854Where is Von Bieberstein?
51854Where is here?
51854Where shall I dump my hat and coat, Mary?
51854Where were we? 51854 Where''s the Marine Band and''Hail to the Chief''?"
51854Which is?
51854Which? 51854 Who dreamed up that swindle?"
51854Who ever mentioned pay?
51854Who is her commander and what''s his nickname?
51854Who said anything about the S.E.C.?
51854Who was that?
51854Who were they from, Tammy?
51854Who? 51854 Who_ are_ you?"
51854Whoever said you were n''t?
51854Whoever wanted Winnie to be half- way decent?
51854Why did n''t you try something comparatively safe, like robbing a she bear of her whelps or yelling''Hurray for Hitler''in Union Square? 51854 Why do you do this?"
51854Why if it is n''t Ponto? 51854 Why not, indeed?"
51854Why not, sir? 51854 Why that particular week?"
51854Why the twenty- fifth of March?
51854Why would I expose myself to a bad check charge just to keep out of a private asylum with my lawyer fully equipped with a writ?
51854Why? 51854 Why?"
51854Will he go to jail?
51854Will that help you remember? 51854 Will you arrange to have me see Colonel McIntosh tomorrow morning?
51854Will you dance, Miss Post?
51854Will you join us for dinner and a drink at-- what''s the best hotel here now we''ve a war on?
51854Winnie,she repeated,"_ must_ you go to a doctor?
51854Winnie?
51854Winnie?
51854Wonder what she meant by that?
51854Would that be true of that Mrs. R., sir?
51854Would you mind giving me a drink of brandy?
51854Yes, Jimmie?
51854Yes, Mary?
51854Yes, and who are you, sir?
51854Yes, madam? 51854 Yes,"I interrupted,"but do you consider that I am bound by this body or will I be returned to my own before I come to the Judgment?
51854Yes?
51854You all right, mister?
51854You are n''t, are you?
51854You do n''t seriously think that she knows anything about Von Bieberstein, do you?
51854You do n''t suppose that sex is any news to the Old Man, do you? 51854 You do n''t want any public scandal about your husband, do you?"
51854You fin''out what you wan''?
51854You have got yourself into a bad mess, have n''t you?
51854You know this dog?
51854You may be sure of your facts, General,I agreed,"but do you happen to know a man named Axel Roscommon?"
51854You mean sell it?
51854You mean this war?
51854You mean those five men following us, do n''t you, Winnie?
51854You mean you''ll lend me some?
51854You need money?
51854You overheard our conversation down the dummy, did n''t you?
51854You understand I''m acting as your attorney now?
51854You wanta me? 51854 You- all from the South, honey- chile?"
51854You_ have_ been drinking, have n''t you?
51854until Bill gets back,and what could he do for me?
51854''Him gone home?''
51854''Meet''and''Meat,''see?
51854''s been hunting Von Bieberstein for the last ten years and what do we find?
51854("How''m I doing?"
51854A good write- up in the papers?
51854A moment later a pleasant voice said,"Yes?
51854A skinny sort of s.o.b., was n''t he?"
51854A ticket to a prize fight?
51854Abba Jabba?"
51854After all, what is money worth if it ca n''t buy what is n''t for sale?"
51854After all,"Germaine added wryly,"the whole thing is pretty much of a family affair, is n''t it?
51854Ai n''t that something?"
51854Ai n''t that something?"
51854All I want to know is how you managed to imitate my dog?"
51854Am I going nuts?"
51854Am I repulsive?
51854Am I to be responsible for the sins the other man committed?"
51854Am I under arrest?
51854And Germany''s about to flop?
51854And how could he tell the medium how to imitate Ponto''s bark?
51854And is my soul involved in another man''s sins?"
51854And what are you doing there?
51854And what can we do for you?"
51854And what happened to Virginia?
51854And where, Mary, shall I leave my hat and coat?"
51854And who are you?"
51854And you?"
51854Any children?"
51854Any damage, I mean?"
51854Any other changes?"
51854Any suggestions of where I can find a hotel room for the next few days?"
51854Anybody in the Club?"
51854Anyhow the tax- collector will be waiting for you, so why worry?"
51854Are we all dead?
51854Are you all right?
51854Are you dead?
51854Are you free for cocktails or dinner this evening?"
51854Are you happy?"
51854Are you sure that you would be benefited by casting out the soul of Frank Jacklin and resuming command of your own personality?
51854Are you, by any chance, employed in my husband''s office?"
51854Blind- fold?"
51854Bought black market nylons for my mistress?
51854Bowels regular?
51854Business conditions and war- orders would continue, would n''t they?"
51854But if I''m not to pass word on to anybody, what''s the point of telling me about it-- assuming it to be true, which I doubt?"
51854But it''s all right now, Ponto, is n''t it?
51854But what happened to my ship?
51854CHAPTER 21"You were what?"
51854CHAPTER 27"What''s the big idea?"
51854CHAPTER 9"Say, old man, what happened to your hand?"
51854Ca n''t we move in there without risk?"
51854Ca n''t we try the_ other_ prescription-- I mean, give it a_ good_ try?"
51854Ca n''t you give me a hint?
51854Can I get her some aspirin?"
51854Can it be fits?"
51854Can you let me have some money?
51854Can you see him today?"
51854Can you take a look at my horoscope and tell me what the stars were doing to me then?"
51854Can you think of anything else?"
51854Come clean, ca n''t you?
51854Could Chalmis have deliberately destroyed Alaska and sacrificed his life in the interest of General Groves and the Army''s bomb?"
51854Could n''t you_ tell_ that it did n''t suit my plans to be clubby with Jimmie?"
51854Crazy?
51854Did he have a nice honeymoon, poor darling?
51854Did you finish copying what we said yesterday?"
51854Did you get a chance to give him a fill- in about the Navy and you- know- what?"
51854Did you hurt yourself?"
51854Didja hear me contradict anybody?
51854Do n''t you feel well, dear?"
51854Do n''t you know that all respectable married couples sleep in separate rooms, according to''House and Garden''?"
51854Do n''t you speak to your old friends any more?"
51854Do n''t you think it would be a good idea to send him to the kennels and have him bred?
51854Do n''t you think you could have trusted your wife?"
51854Do n''t you think you''d be better for a little special care?"
51854Do you know an Axel Roscommon, Arthurjean?"
51854Do you mind?"
51854Do you plan to receive them or shall I ask them to return tomorrow?"
51854Do you think you can get my check cleared through the bank or should I write Winnie''X''Tompkins, his mark?"
51854Does it hurt much?"
51854Elizabeth''s?"
51854Ever see a man die of malignant malaria, Merry?
51854Failed to notify the local draft board that I was taking the train to New York?
51854Folsom?"
51854Got a hang- over?
51854Got any ideas?"
51854Got any other passengers?"
51854Grant?"
51854Had n''t I better call the doctor?"
51854Had n''t my wife said something about girls in the office?
51854Harcourt?"
51854Has Ponto met his fiancee yet or have n''t the banns been published?"
51854Have you any other appointments I could help you with, Grant?"
51854Have you changed your mind again?"
51854Have you filled in that gap?
51854Have you had any luck filling in that blank period before Easter?
51854Have you tried hypnotism?
51854He had separated from his wife while you were tangled up with a lot of women....""But how did I know that Mrs. Jacklin had a mole on her left hip?"
51854He listened to what I had to say and then do you know what he did?
51854He was the one that had distemper so bad, was n''t it, sir?
51854He''s your dog, is n''t he?
51854He-- what_ did_ happen to your head, darling?"
51854He--""Who?
51854Help me, wo n''t you?"
51854How about a couple of dozen Cotuits and some black coffee?"
51854How about astrologers, say?
51854How about it, Jerry?"
51854How about it?
51854How about my tracing it?"
51854How about selling some of the war industries short?"
51854How about this nosey A. J. Harcourt?
51854How are you, hound?
51854How come you''ve skipped them?
51854How come?"
51854How did Harcourt know about Ponto when he had never seen him?
51854How do you get there?"
51854How do you think we ought to fight this war, anyhow?
51854How does Winnie sign himself at the City Farmers anyhow?"
51854How in God''s name should I act with her?
51854How in blazes did they expect to minister to a mind diseased, if they began by the old routine of getting the patient stripped and bedded?
51854How in hell do I find myself here?
51854How much did Willamer want you to put into his racket?"
51854How much will you need?"
51854How will the heirs feel when they have to take a loss of$ 60,000?"
51854How''d you like to be a Brigadier- General?"
51854How''s Ponto?"
51854How''s your golf?
51854Huh?
51854Huh?"
51854Hullo, Winnie, is this another of your homes away from home?"
51854I never knew dogs got drunk, did you?"
51854I turned to my secretary,"Do n''t tell me that you''ve shown my letters to this legal lout?"
51854I wondered--""You mean that perhaps we ought to patch things up between us?"
51854I would n''t know where the lavatory was, let alone her bedroom, and what should I call the maid who answered the door, assuming we had a maid?
51854I''ll see you later?"
51854I''m married to him and I ought to know my own husband, should n''t I?
51854If I kidnapped Tompkins, who am I supposed to be?
51854If I''m ever asked,''Grandma, what did_ you_ do in the second Great War?''
51854If Roosevelt has n''t warned them, why should you?
51854If he was to die, we''d have this Missouri guy-- whatsisname?
51854If it did n''t how could the President abolish it?"
51854In the meantime, why do n''t you follow up that Roscommon angle?
51854Internal Revenue?
51854Ireland?
51854Is Dalrymple satisfied?
51854Is he all right?"
51854Is n''t speculation legal any more?"
51854Is n''t that something that belongs to the Army?"
51854Is n''t that wonderful, now?"
51854Is not Winfred Tompkins a better and happier man under the influence of Jacklin than he was as himself?
51854Is she pretty?"
51854Is that a laugh, hey, Ponto?
51854Is that clear?"
51854Is that the game?"
51854Is that the way J. Edgar Hoover trains his Gestapo?"
51854Is there a room where we could have a private conversation and still get something to drink?"
51854Is this supposed to be heaven?
51854It began then, not so?
51854It''s always best to put these things in the record, is n''t it?"
51854Jacklin?"
51854Jacklin?"
51854Jacklin?"
51854Jimmie may think I''m mean but after that experience who wants off- spring, cannon- fodder or kennel- fodder?
51854Jimmie?"
51854Just for that are you going to go through hell just to have a little animal that will go''Aah- Aah- Aah''at you?"
51854Lamb?"
51854Let you go, with the Navy howling for action?"
51854Mr. Harcourt, have I no legal right to privacy in my hotel room?"
51854Neat, eh?"
51854Need vitamins?
51854No fooling?...
51854No star- gazer, eh?
51854No, I do n''t know what your game is but I''m on to you and we''re going to be real buddies from now on or--""Or what?"
51854Not so?"
51854Now you''re in trouble with the cops, so how about me helping you?
51854Now, would n''t that look nice on my record?
51854Of course, she was a fraud, but how had she imitated the barking of the Great Dane?
51854Okay, you take it up with Graham, will you?
51854Old Chalmis?
51854One of those flashy blondes from your office?"
51854Or do n''t you care?"
51854Or is it another woman?"
51854Or is that part of the gag?"
51854Or scopolamine?
51854Partners closing in on your assets or has your wife made book with your lawyer?"
51854Perhaps when you were a child, you hated your father?
51854Reinvesting?"
51854Right?
51854Roosevelt''s dead?
51854Root beer or Moxie?"
51854Roscommon?"
51854Rutherford?"
51854Rutherford?"
51854Rutherford?"
51854Say it''s spring or what- have- you?
51854Say, Andy, has n''t she a friend named Pierrot?"
51854Say, what do the initials A. J. stand for in your name?
51854Say, what is it you''ve supposed to have done-- kissed MacArthur?"
51854Say,"he added,"what''s come into you to make you act this way?
51854Shall I give him a hand- out and tell him to go away?"
51854Shall I phone the Pentagon?"
51854Shall I tell Mr. Snyder not to wait for you for gin rummy?"
51854Shall we say about half past five?"
51854Shaughnessy?"
51854She promptly referred me to Information, who told me that Mrs. Dorothy Jacklin was on Extension 3046, shall- I- connect you?
51854She used to put her arms around my neck and press against me and give me a smack on the back and a"Go on with you, ca n''t you see I''m busy?"
51854Should I send for my lawyer?"
51854So I put my arm around her, gave her a friendly kiss and said,"Name, please, and when do you get off duty?"
51854So I''m Von Bieberstein?
51854So why not shake hands and quit friends?"
51854Started to remember anything?"
51854Suddenly she cackled,"You do n''t say?
51854Sure you''re okay?"
51854Suspicion of kidnapping?...
51854Switzerland?
51854Tell him that, will you, old man?
51854Tell me, Winnie, have you got her on your string, too?
51854Tell me, what the President was like?"
51854That dog-- wha''s his color now?"
51854That time he tried to tattoo the little Masters girl-- But wo n''t they keep you locked up and do things to you?"
51854That will be the tenth, wo n''t it?"
51854That''s right, is n''t it, Harcourt?"
51854That''s somewhere in America, ai n''t it?"
51854That''s the only practical way modern wars can be fought, eh?
51854The Deputy Director looked slightly ill."He did, did he?"
51854The S.E.C?"
51854The dog was to blame?
51854The point is, where do we go from here?
51854The stars being mean to you?
51854The third- floor front had been made into a pleasant little two- room suite-- a"master''s bedroom"( Why not''mistress''s?''
51854There was a bomb.... Say, where am I and what day is it anyway?"
51854There''s myself, of course, but wives do n''t count any more, do they?
51854They build such lovely New England churches and they believe in infant damnation, or is that the Mormons?"
51854They have all sorts of gadgets but they all amount to the same thing: Is your nervous system functioning normally or is it not?
51854Think I could get a check cashed on it?"
51854Think I''d better join the Marines?"
51854This is a mighty fine little city, is n''t it?
51854This sense of special persecution, sir, have you had it long?
51854Thorium bombs, was n''t it?
51854Told fibs on my income tax return?
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Took a run into New York today and is that one mad- house?
51854Truman?--and what can he offer?"
51854Tyler?"
51854Von Bieberstein?"
51854W.P.B.?
51854Want a doc?"
51854Want me to make an appointment?"
51854Want to make anything of it?
51854Want to play ball and get next to the biggest break you ever heard of?"
51854Was your girl- friend nice, old boy?
51854We ca n''t have a moralist around here, can we, Myrtle?"
51854We do n''t want to keep 23 Wall waiting, do we?"
51854We''re buddies now, are n''t we, old fellow?"
51854What about it?
51854What can I do for you?"
51854What can we cook up?
51854What did I owe Roosevelt?
51854What did he ever do to you, anyhow?
51854What do we do to clean up?"
51854What do you think you remember from the blank period?"
51854What do you want to know?"
51854What do you want?
51854What gives with you?"
51854What happened to Frank Jacklin?
51854What happened to the Alaska?"
51854What has Ireland to do with your duty to the United States?"
51854What has changed?"
51854What have you done with her?"
51854What have you in mind?"
51854What have you invested in the only thing you will be permitted to take with you when you leave?"
51854What is it now?"
51854What is your own reaction to my story?"
51854What medicine did you give him?
51854What seems to be the trouble, Mr. Tompkins?
51854What shall I tell the gang?"
51854What sort of a guy is he?
51854What was he telling you?"
51854What was wrong with him?
51854What would happen to the market?"
51854What would you be doin''in Atlanta?"
51854What''ll it be?
51854What''s been going on around here?
51854What''s been happening around here, anyhow?
51854What''s cooking?
51854What''s cooking?"
51854What''s happened?"
51854What''s the big idea?"
51854What''s the idea of having me sign away my liberty like that?"
51854What''s the matter now?"
51854What''s the matter?"
51854What''s the matter?"
51854What''s the trouble with the black market, anyhow?
51854What''s the word?
51854What''s the word?"
51854What''s wrong about$ 25,000 a year guaranteed by your Uncle Sam?"
51854What''s your first operation, once you get the money in Inter- Alia to finance it?"
51854What''s your price?"
51854What_ had_ Winnie been up to?
51854What_ have_ you been doing, dear, that you ca n''t remember when our whole life may depend on it?"
51854What_ were_ your other plans, anyhow?"
51854When was Alaska commissioned?"
51854Where does my duty lie?"
51854Where is he?"
51854Where shall I tell him to take the dog?"
51854Where was I the week before Easter?
51854Who else did you expect?
51854Who is this Von Bieberstein anyhow?
51854Who wants to be happy?
51854Who was Stinky''s exec?"
51854Who would have dreamed it?
51854Who''s left now?"
51854Who''s that?"
51854Who''s this little guy from Montana, anyhow?"
51854Who''s to question a man doing Stations of the Cross if somebody else does''em at the same time?"
51854Who_ are_ you, Mr. Tompkins?
51854Who_ are_ you?"
51854Whoever told you you could touch my liquor?
51854Why did you admit anything?"
51854Why do n''t you let Jerry send you for a few weeks to the Hartford Sanctuary for psychoanalysis and a good rest?"
51854Why do n''t you let it go at that?"
51854Why does n''t anybody tell me these things?
51854Why not?
51854Why not?"
51854Why?"
51854Will you accept a check for your church-- say a thousand dollars?"
51854Will you go or stay?"
51854Will you please sign this form?"
51854Wo n''t he find out?
51854Wo n''t the estate be liquidated?
51854Wonder what happened to him?"
51854Would a million and a half do?"
51854Would n''t that just put me right in line for promotion?
51854Would this be murder?
51854Would you like to put in for one of the pups?"
51854Yes, I''ll stick here until you can get over.... What shall I order for you, a double Scotch?...
51854Yes.... Oh, Ned?...
51854You are n''t planning to murder anybody, are you?"
51854You ask what they can do to you?
51854You do n''t mean to go America First, separate peace or any of that rot, do you?"
51854You got any idea, Winnie?
51854You heard these gentlemen try to blackmail me and you heard me tell them to go to hell, did n''t you?"
51854You jealous again, old boy?
51854You know Manny Oppenheimer of Auchincloss, Morton, Caton, Beauregard& Oppenheimer?
51854You know how he used to lick your boots if you stood still long enough for him to kneel down and stick his tongue out?
51854You never heard of him?
51854You will have taken this other man''s wife, will you not?
51854You wo n''t tell anybody about it, will you?
51854You''d better see him quick, huh?
51854You''ll see that she gets the money, wo n''t you?"
51854You''re not a Catholic, of course?"
51854You''re not supposed to be blind to that, are you?"
51854Your operatives?
51854_ Now_ do you understand?"
51854_ Was_ it murder?
51854_ Winnie, what''s wrong?_"Not a pleasant spot to be in, even if it was only part of a trial- run in purgatory.
51854a run for its money and what could they do to me?
51854but red tape wo n''t let us, eh?
51854could I forget it?
51854for questioning?"
51854have_ you_ ever been introduced to a great big dog and told she''s your wife?
51854or what?"
848A new chamber?
848Alone?
848An she be so young, and so fair, and so wealthy, why do ye not bring her forth among her mates? 848 And Joanna, my lord?"
848And a man would be right glad to we d me?
848And did they knight you?
848And how came ye with Sir Daniel, Master Matcham?
848And how, dear Lawless,cried the lad,"shall I repay you?"
848And if I had forgotten it?
848And now, my lord duke,he said, when he had regained his freedom,"do I suppose aright?
848And she bemoaned herself? 848 And so ye go to Tunstall?"
848And so,said Pirret,"y''are one of these?"
848And supper?
848And this magic,he said--"this password, whereby the cave is opened-- how call ye it, friend?"
848And what came he smelling up so many stairs in my poor mansion? 848 And what make ye to Holywood?"
848And what will ye leave me to garrison withal?
848And where goeth Master Hatch?
848And where is John?
848And wherefore named he Carter? 848 And wherefore so?"
848And why so poor?
848And ye think I would be guardian to the man''s son that I had murdered?
848And yet, Lawless, it goes hard against the grain with me to die; but where whining mendeth nothing, wherefore whine?
848And yet,he thought,"of what use is courage without wit?
848And you, sir,added the young lady,"what do ye give me?"
848And you-- how call they you?
848Are we going ashore?
848Are ye Lancaster or York?
848Are ye dumb, boy?
848Are ye for York or Lancaster?
848Are ye here alone, young man?
848Are ye there?
848Are ye, then, a spy-- a Yorkist?
848Ay, Bennet,said the priest, somewhat recovering,"and what may this be?
848Ay, dear, ye are my lady now,he answered, fondly;"or ye shall, ere noon to- morrow-- will ye not?"
848Ay, good fellow,answered Dick;"for in that house lieth my lady, whom I love, and who should these be that lie about her secretly by night?
848Ay, gossip, truly?
848Ay, sir? 848 Ay,"returned Dick,"is it so?
848Bennet,he said,"how came my father by his end?"
848But are ye not ward to Sir Daniel? 848 But did my Dick make love to you?"
848But wherefore, then, deliver me this letter?
848But wherefore? 848 But why keep ye her here, good knight?"
848But your father, Dick?
848But, my lord, what orders?
848But, prithee, how shall I do? 848 Call me Alicia,"she said;"are we not old friends?
848Can we be, then, so near to Holywood?
848Can ye hear, old Nick?
848Can ye so?
848Carter, poor friend, how goeth it?
848Come sound ashore? 848 Come, now, will ye read me a riddle?"
848Could ye not see it was a wench? 848 D''ye see aught?"
848Dick,said he,"Y''have seen this penny rhyme?"
848Dick,she said,"is it so deep?
848Did I not tell it thee myself? 848 Did ye hear of her?"
848Dinner?
848Do these churls ride so roughly?
848Do they command Sir Daniel''s own ferry?
848Do ye hold me so guilty?
848Do ye not feel how heavy and dull she moves upon the waves? 848 Do, you see Harry the Fift?"
848Fellow,he asked,"were ye here when this house was taken?"
848For a witch''s spirit?
848For my Lord of Gloucester?
848For what cometh to mine ears? 848 Friend Dick,"he said, as soon as they were alone,"are ye a moon- struck natural?
848Friend Dickon,resumed Lawless, addressing his commander,"ye have certain matters on hand, unless I err?
848Girl, Sir Daniel?
848Goody,he said,"where is Master Matcham, I prithee?
848Hath, then, the battle gone so sore?
848Haunted?
848Have ye a last wish before ye wend, old brother?
848Have ye brought me Sir Daniel''s head?
848Have ye brought the priest?
848Have ye ever a penny pie for a poor old shipman, clean destroyed by pirates? 848 Have ye my Lord Foxham''s notes?"
848Have ye seen him?
848Have ye there the ring ye took from my finger? 848 He did?"
848He hath gone each night in this direction?
848Hey, Master Shelton,he said,"be ye for the ferry?
848Hey?
848How call ye her?
848How call ye him?
848How call ye your name?
848How can I swim the moat without you? 848 How if we lay there until the night fall?"
848How is this?
848How knew ye who I was?
848How many a rogue would give his two crop ears to have a shoot at either of us? 848 How many do ye count?"
848How now, brother?
848How please ye, sir? 848 How say ye now?"
848How say ye, Tom? 848 How say ye,"asked Dick of one of the men,"to follow straight on, or strike across for Tunstall?"
848How say you? 848 How so?"
848How, sir?
848How, then? 848 Hugh, who goes?"
848I, Dick? 848 If they live,"returned the woman,"that may very well be; but how if they die, my master?"
848Ill with_ you_, fair sir?
848In all civility, who are ye? 848 Is Ellis, then, returned?
848Is it decided, then?
848Is it even so? 848 Is it so?"
848Is it so?
848Is it you, my lord?
848Is not Sir Daniel here?
848Is the arrow black?
848Is this the maid?
848It befell at the Moat House?
848It is your lordship''s own estate he offers to Lord Wensleydale?
848Know ye Sir Daniel?
848Lads,he said,"we have had a shog, we have had a tumble; wherefore, then, deny it?
848Lawless,cried Dick,"are ye safe?"
848Lieth he there?
848Lion- driver,she said, at length,"ye do not admire a maid in a man''s jerkin?"
848Master Dick, Master Dick,said Bennet,"what told I you?
848Master Shelton,observed the outlaw,"y''''ave had two mischances this last while, and y''are like to lose the maid-- do I take it aright?"
848Must we not go down to supper?
848My Lord Risingham?
848My father?
848My lord duke,said one of his attendants,"is your grace not weary of exposing his dear life unneedfully?
848My lord,cried Sir Daniel,"ye will not hearken to this wolf?
848My lord,returned Dick,"ye will think me very bold to counsel you; but do ye count upon Sir Daniel''s faith?
848My lord,said Sir Daniel,"have I not told you of this knave Black Arrow?
848My masters,he began,"are ye gone clean foolish?
848Nay, Dick,said Joanna,"what matters it?
848Nay, Master Shelton,said Hatch, at last--"nay, but what said I?
848Nay, but against traitors, my lord, are not all sides arrayed?
848Nay, but what made he by the church?
848Nay, but where is he, indeed?
848Nay, then, shall I call you girl, good Richard?
848Nay, what matters it?
848Nay, what should this betoken?
848Nor heard tell of her?
848Not?
848On what probation?
848On whose side is Sir Daniel?
848Richard Shelton,said Matcham, looking him squarely in the face,"would ye, then, join party with Sir Daniel?
848Said he so?
848Say ye so, Sir William?
848Selden? 848 Sir Daniel?"
848Sir,replied Dick,"I am here in sanctuary, is it not so?
848Sirrah,said Sir Daniel,"your name?"
848So y''are to be true to me, Jack?
848Stand?
848Sweetheart,he said,"if ye forgive this blunderer, what care I?
848Then up and spake the master, the king of the outlaws:''What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood shaws?'' 848 Then, in honour, ye belong to me?"
848This favour of mine-- whereupon was it founded?
848Was he in the mansion?
848Was it to laugh at my poor plight?
848Well, Dickon,said Sir Daniel,"how is it to be?
848Well, then, lion- driver,she continued,"sith that ye slew my kinsman, and left me without stay, ye owe me, in honour, every reparation; do ye not?"
848Well,said the knight,"what would ye?
848Well,thought he to himself,"even if I lose my horses, let me get my Joanna, and why should I complain?"
848What ails ye at my face, fair sir?
848What can he do? 848 What d''ye want?"
848What doth he want? 848 What is it, Appleyard?"
848What made I?
848What made ye in the battle?
848What make I with your honour?
848What make they to- morrow?
848What make ye after me? 848 What make ye here, good brother?"
848What make ye here, my merry men, among the greenwood shaws?
848What make ye here? 848 What make ye?"
848What make ye?
848What maketh Bennet Hatch?
848What maketh he?
848What manner of room is it?
848What may this be?
848What meaneth he?
848What meaneth this?
848What of the birds?
848What said he? 848 What should this betoken?"
848What think ye, sir,returned Hatch,"of Ellis Duckworth?"
848What want ye?
848What would ye?
848What, sea- thief, do I hold you?
848When came they?
848Whence came that shot?
848Where goeth me this track?
848Where is my ship? 848 Where?"
848Wherefore arrows, when ye take no bow?
848Wherefore do ye that?
848Wherefore so? 848 Wherefore would he not tell me?"
848Whither, my son?
848Who else is there but you that could do aught in such a house with such a garrison?
848Who goes? 848 Who goes?"
848Who goes?
848Who goes?
848Who goes?
848Who hath done this, Bennet?
848Who is this?
848Why am I in this jeopardy of my life? 848 Why call me''boy''?"
848Why do ye take me?
848Why said ye he was rustic, Joan?
848Why, Dick,she cried,"would I be here?"
848Why, fool, did ye not eat at Kettley?
848Why, now, what aileth thee?
848Why, what are you looking at?
848Why, who the murrain should this be? 848 Will it please you, my lord, to alight?
848Will it please your lordship to set foot to earth?
848Will ye assault the house?
848Will ye put your oar in? 848 Will ye take my word of honour, Dick?"
848Would ye be led by a hired man? 848 Would ye evade me?"
848Would ye have me credit thieves?
848Would ye have me shoot upon a leper?
848Would ye lie there idle?
848Would ye mind a ducking? 848 Would ye shoot at the moon with a hand- gun?"
848Would ye shoot upon your guardian, rogue? 848 Y''are in a hurry, Master Dick?"
848Y''are weary?
848Y''have sent for me, Sir Daniel?
848Ye are not then appalled?
848Ye come too soon,he said;"but why should I complain?
848Ye have read this also?
848Ye have read this?
848Ye that fight but for a hazard, what are ye but a butcher? 848 Ye would leave me, would ye?"
848Yield me? 848 Young Shelton,"he said,"are ye for sea, then, truly?"
848Your father? 848 Your name?"
848''Good boy''doth he call me?
848After a while we shall return, when perchance they shall be less carefully upon their guard; and, who knoweth?
848All these years have ye not enjoyed my revenues, and led my men?
848And Sir Oliver here,"he added,"why should he, a priest, be guilty of this act?"
848And have ye the young gentlewoman there?"
848And is she shrewish or pleasant?"
848And is that the Good Hope?
848And meanwhile what do we?
848And now, Joanna, my fair maid of the woods, what will ye give your gossip for bringing you your sweetheart?"
848And now, what make ye?
848And now,"she continued,"have ye said your sayings?
848And then catching sight of Matcham,"Who be this?"
848And wherefore did ye slay him, the poor soul?
848And why spy ye after Lady Brackley like a thief?"
848And will men follow such a leader?"
848And with whom was I to marry?"
848And ye would have me eat with you-- and your hands not washed from killing?
848And, whether for one thing or another, whether to- morrow or the day after, where is the great choice?"
848Are we in good case?"
848Are ye my Lord Duke of Gloucester?"
848But had ye no hand in it?"
848But here is this"--And there he broke off, and pointing to Matcham, asked:"How call ye him, Dick?"
848But how mean ye, lion- driver?
848But how think ye?
848But if ye have so long pursued revenge, and find it now of such a sorry flavour, bethink ye, were it not well to pardon others?
848But if ye know her, prithee, of what favour is she?
848But marry come up, my gossip, will ye drink?
848But now that I think, how found ye my chamber?"
848But see ye where this wide glade runneth down before us, and in the midst of it, these two score trees make like an island?
848But shall we forth?
848But to the more essential-- are ye Lancaster or York?"
848But what have we here?
848But what made ye, sir, in such a guise?"
848But what o''that?
848But what said I ever?
848But what then?
848But what wrote ye in a letter?"
848But who''ll shoot me a good shoot?
848But why stand we here to make a mark?
848But, Dick, are your eyes open?
848But, come, now, what is it ye wish?
848But, now, what shall I do with this poor spy?
848But, prithee, how go we?
848Can it be clearer spoken?
848Can ye not speak in compass?
848Clipsby, are ye there, old rat?
848Come ye in peace or war?
848Could it conceal a snare?
848Did I put the fear of death upon you?"
848Do I bemoan myself?
848Do we lie well?
848Do ye make war upon the fallen?"
848Do ye not hear the water washing in her hold?
848Do you desert me, then?"
848For of what avail is penitence, an ye have no mind to right those wrongs ye had a hand in?
848For to get back, by the mass, we must have an offing, must we not?
848For what reason had he been given this chamber?
848Had Sir Daniel joined, and was he now a fugitive and ruined?
848Hath he not his bell to that very end, that people may avoid him?
848Have I been to you so heavy a guardian that ye make haste to credit ill of me?
848Have they told you of to- morrow''s doings?"
848Have ye chosen?
848Have ye not ears?
848Have ye not still my marriage?
848He held the clapper of his bell in one hand, saw ye?
848Heard ye not this Ellis, what he said?
848Here am I disguised; and, to the proof, do I not cut a figure of fun-- a right fool''s figure?"
848Hey, Dick?
848Host, where is that girl?"
848How call they the name of this spy?"
848How came my father, Harry Shelton, by his death?"
848How if I offered you a brave marriage, as became your face and parentage?"
848How if I turned me up stream and landed you an arrow- flight above the path?
848How if Master Matcham came by an arrow?"
848How say ye, lads?
848How think ye, Bennet?"
848How, fellow, are ye so bold?
848I have but a little company remaining; is it grateful or faithful to poison me their hearts with your insidious whisperings?
848In honour do ye belong to me, till ye have paid the evil?"
848Instantly, from the battlement above, the voice of a sentinel cried,"Who goes?"
848Is the arrow gone?"
848It doth appear, indeed, that ye have somewhat abused our gossip Arblaster; but what then?
848It may be; what know I?
848It was the law that did it; call ye that natural?
848Know ye him not?
848Know ye not a friend?"
848Look ye, now, when ye were but a name to me, did I not follow-- did I not rouse good men-- did I not stake my life upon the quarrel?
848Man Tom, how say ye to that?
848May not?"
848Nance,"he added, to one of the women,"is old Appleyard up town?"
848Nay, then, and by whom?"
848Nay, then, what a world is this, if all that care for me be blood- guilty of my father''s death?
848No women, then?"
848Now, what might you call a long shoot, Bennet Hatch?"
848Now, which, I marvel, of you or me, shall be first knighted, Jack?
848Of so many black ill- willers, which should he be that doth so hardily outface us?
848Or if he be fallen among ill company, whom should ye blame-- the lad that was unjustly handled, or the guardian that did abuse his trust?"
848Or sith that ye see me, for the nonce, some worsted, do ye think to quit my party?
848Saw ye this Joanna?"
848Say, Master Shelton, have ye found the maid?"
848Say, fair maid, will you we d?"
848Say, shall we go hear him?"
848See ye not how swift the beating draweth near?"
848Shall he then profit?
848Shall we attend their coming, or fall on?"
848Shall we go hear him, indeed?
848Shall we go once more over the dingle, or push straight for Holywood?"
848She in the murrey- coloured mantle-- she that broke her fast with water, rogue-- where is she?"
848Simnel?
848Sir Daniel, Sir Oliver, Joanna, all were gone; but whether butchered in the rout or safe escaped from Shoreby, who should say?
848Sore bested?"
848The Walsinghams?
848The verdict on_ Treasure Island_ was reversed in the other court; I wonder, will it be the same with its successor?
848Then, very suddenly, she asked:"My uncle?"
848There is, then, a question of it?"
848There shall we be we d; and whether poor or wealthy, famous or unknown, what, matters it?
848This spell-- in what should it consist?"
848Was it not more than probable that the passage extended to the chapel, and, if so, that it had an opening in his room?
848Was it not so it went?
848Was it, indeed, haunted?
848Was there a secret entrance?
848We have no priest aboard?"
848Were they not men of Sir Daniel''s?"
848What a murrain do ye keep me here for?
848What age are ye, for a wager?--twelve?"
848What aileth you?"
848What chamber?"
848What cheer is this?"
848What cometh of it?
848What do ye here?
848What enemy hath done this?"
848What force have ye?"
848What is in your mind to do?"
848What maketh he in Tunstall Woods?
848What matters foul or fair?
848What may this betoken?
848What meaneth it?"
848What of Selden?"
848What read ye?"
848What was to be done?
848What would ye have?
848What would ye have?"
848What would ye more?"
848What would ye?
848What, then, is lacking?
848What?
848When I took your ship from you, we were many, we were well clad and armed; but now, bethink you a little, who mustered that array?
848When ye saw me here, so strangely seated where I have neither right nor interest, what a murrain I could ye not smell harm and get ye gone from evil?"
848Where be all my good men- at- arms?
848Where hid ye?"
848Where is my wine?
848Where shall I conceal them, Will?"
848Wherefore did ye fight?
848Wherefore, then, fell ye upon mine ambush?
848Which, then, of this company will take me this letter, bear me it to my Lord of Wensleydale, and bring me the answer back?"
848Whither shall we march?"
848Who ever heard the like, that a leper, out of mere malice, should pursue unfortunates?
848Who hath done this, think ye?
848Who should these be?"
848Who should this be?
848Who, then, hath done this evil?
848Whom do ye require?
848Why am I now fleeing in mine own guardian''s strong house, and from the friends that I have lived among and never injured?"
848Why are ye thus sacrilegiously tricked out?
848Why do men come privily to slay me in my bed?
848Why sup ye not?"
848Why tarry we here?"
848Why would ye shoot upon an old, kind friend?
848Will he obey?
848Will ye be the last?
848Will ye stand a pinch for expedition''s sake, or shall we turn by Holywood and sup with Mother Church?
848Would ye be forsworn?
848Would ye rob the man before his body?
848Would you desert me-- a perjurer?"
848and at whose instance do ye join your supplications to ours?"
848and your oath to me?
848and, to make a clear end of questioning, to what good gentleman have I surrendered?"
848cried Dick,"when good fellows stand shot?
848cried Richard,"is this so?
848cried the skipper, tipsily,"who are ye, hey?"
848fair or foul?
848have I you in my hands?
848he cried,"what poor dogs are these?
848he cried,"you that were a shipman, can ye steal me a ship?"
848he said;"you that defended me-- you that are Joanna''s friend?"
848his old wood- companion, Jack, whom he had thought to punish with a belt?
848in what quarrel, my young and very fiery friend?
848is he of this company?"
848or had he deserted to the side of York, and was he forfeit to honour?
848or have ye no heart for your own kindly blood and the father that men slew?
848shall he sit snug in our houses?
848shall he suck the bone he robbed us of?
848shall he till our fields?
848shall they all die?"
848sots, what make ye here?"
848thought Dick,"can the poor lad have perished?
848to what earthly purpose?
848what doth faith?
848what said he?"
848what say ye?
848what seek ye here?
848where is she?
848will ye be a man?"
848would ye snivel for a word?"
57603''And what would Katharine say?'' 57603 ''Auntie,''"says Uncle Doctor,''would you mind marrying Father?''
57603''The Duke of Lee?'' 57603 ''Wibird hath iron will;''did you never hear that, Katrine?
57603A sister ought to wear her brother''s colors, what, Lissy?
57603All right, are you, Kitty?
57603All right?
57603Am I so_ very_ late? 57603 And not always such a long way after, do you think, Mr. Chanter?
57603And what about Grandpa Westcott, Aunt Johanna?
57603And you did n''t_ ask_ her whether she was comin''to stay? 57603 And_ how_ is Savory Bite?"
57603Any items for the Scribe?
57603Anything else?
57603Are n''t they_ too_ delicious?
57603Are they?
57603Are you sure it was Jimmy who took the liberty, John?
57603Are you very cross, Sarepta?
57603As you wish, Madam Flynt? 57603 Ask what?"
57603Ask what?
57603Because,said Kitty aloud,"you see, if one could make some one else-- some_ two_ else-- happy, perhaps it would not hurt so much; do you think?"
57603Bible doings? 57603 Bingo, how do you do?
57603Blubs, eh? 57603 Bobby, why did n''t you tell me?
57603But then-- that seems a little different, do n''t you think? 57603 But what is all this, Sarepta?"
57603But what is the outcome, I ask you? 57603 But you wish I had n''t, eh?
57603Ca n''t you hear it, Beloved? 57603 Ca n''t you hear them say it?
57603Cab?
57603Can it be? 57603 Can you check the animal, my love?"
57603Can you doubt it, Johanna? 57603 Come up, wo n''t you, and bring Almy?
57603Could you give me a lift, Katrine?
57603Did I drive too fast for somebody? 57603 Did Kitty say, Marsh?
57603Did he elderly marry?
57603Did n''t your Ma used to sing it now and then? 57603 Did who hurt me, darling?
57603Do n''t you love me?
57603Do n''t you think I had earned a little solitude, Bobby? 57603 Do n''t you think they might hit it off after all, Lina?
57603Do what?
57603Do you know what I think?
57603Do you mean it?
57603Do you mean-- do you think of taking a_ long_ rest, or only a few days?
57603Do you remember John''s remark to Mrs. Pringle when Emmy was engaged? 57603 Do you suppose Cyrus will think me all the more peculiar for trying not to be?"
57603Does he still live alone?
57603Drive''em single mostly, do ye? 57603 Eh?"
57603Ever drive more than three?
57603Ever drive six hosses, Tucker?
57603Expecting visitors, are you, Sarepta?
57603Flanagan, the cab- driver? 57603 Gee, Kitty, it was perfectly_ great_, as far as I am concerned, but I do suppose we were going a pretty good clip, what?
57603Get out, will you? 57603 Give a person an apple?"
57603Got home all right, Kitty? 57603 Got home all right, did you, Kitty?"
57603Had you so, my love? 57603 Has Sarepta got a young woman for me?"
57603Has she been to see you? 57603 Has she come to stay, think?"
57603Hedge? 57603 Here was Flanagan dead, warn''t he?
57603His Ma says the hoss was runnin''away; how about it, Kitty?
57603How Kitty is? 57603 How are you, Kitty?"
57603How could I? 57603 How do you do, Wilson?
57603How does he seem, Lissy? 57603 How many hosses you drivin''now, Tucker?"
57603Howdy? 57603 I beg pardon?"
57603I do n''t stand for crying when you do n''t have to, what?
57603I guess what suits the Boarders''ll do for him, what say?
57603I hope she did n''t suffer, John?
57603I shall find you here when I come back, Kitty? 57603 I was in to Abram Hanks''s just now to get me some lahstic for my boots--"( have I said that the partners wore elastic- sided Congress boots?
57603I was warblin'', warn''t I? 57603 I would n''t wonder but it rained to- morrow, would you, Almy?"
57603I''ve come here to be instructed, have I? 57603 Is Victory dead?
57603Is it for a baby?
57603Is n''t he?
57603Is n''t she killing?
57603Is she seriously ill?
57603It was-- do you remember that verse in the''Ancient Mariner''that always frightened me so? 57603 Johanna?"
57603John Tucker''s daughter, is she? 57603 Kind o''fresh last night, was he?
57603Kitty has not broken it, Clarissa, has she?
57603Kitty knows an awful lot about books, does n''t she, Lissy? 57603 Kitty,"cried Lina,"_ do blaze a tree_ at the place where you leave them, wo n''t you?
57603Know what that means?
57603Little goose, why do you suppose I came here? 57603 Mary,"said Kitty, as we scurried across the yard,"do you suppose I shall ever be more than ten years old, in blessed Cyrus?"
57603Mis''Lee, she''s gone, too, ai n''t she, Miss Kitty? 57603 Miss Croly left me?
57603Missent? 57603 Need you ask, Edward?
57603Next time I''ll have Podasokus, please, Kitty; or if he has left us, then that nice old woolly thing: Crummles, is he? 57603 Nice party, was it?
57603No need?
57603Not-- he has n''t been all alone, has he?
57603Oh, how do you do, Sarepta?
57603Pilot''s steady as a rock, is n''t he, Kitty? 57603 Pooty good show, was n''t it?"
57603Put that under my chair, will you, Edward?
57603Question is, what in hemp does it_ mean_?
57603Russ,he would whisper,"that you?
57603Say? 57603 Seems rather piffle, does n''t it?"
57603Sha n''t I open the window for a minute? 57603 Sickness or accident?"
57603Silence and Cyrus: both begin with C. Guess we can get along, even if he do n''t come at all, what say? 57603 Sister,"Miss Pearl spoke timidly;"could you feel to free your mind?
57603Six years old, warn''t you? 57603 So you_ will_ come, Kitty darling, wo n''t you?"
57603Something to do with corpses, are they?
57603Spec--_what_ did she say, Bobby?
57603The checks, Miss? 57603 The new ones are due to- morrow, are n''t they, Auntie?"
57603The same man, my dear?
57603The way what began, John Tucker?
57603Then send for her, will you? 57603 This is Mr. Boody, John Tucker, and this is Hero: is n''t he a beauty?"
57603To what do you allude, Sophia?
57603Uncle Ivory,she cried,"who is that nice man?
57603Was your Ma satisfied with me?
57603Was your Pa satisfied with me?
57603Well, do you know what she is up to? 57603 What are your ideas?
57603What d''he think I''d been doin''for forty years? 57603 What did I tell you?
57603What did the man expect?
57603What do you mean, Kitty? 57603 What do you mean?
57603What do you think of that?
57603What do you want of her, Miss Ross?
57603What does Kitty say?
57603What ground, so to speak, is there for this hypothesis- sis- sis?
57603What hen, John?
57603What in the world, Sarepta?
57603What is it Peggotty says? 57603 What is it, Cissy?"
57603What is it, Nelly?
57603What kind of man, Kitty?
57603What was I saying, my dear?
57603What was that tune you was singin''just now, Miss Kitty?
57603What was the name, did you say, Miss?
57603What you say, Mis''Sharpe?
57603What''s the matter?
57603What''s the matter?
57603What_ are_ you talking about, Wilson?
57603What_ is_ that tune you are forever humming, child?
57603Whatever has happened to your bonnet?
57603Where is Tom, Kitty? 57603 Where''s your father?
57603Who told you this?
57603Who''s comin''? 57603 Who--_what_ is that, Sarepta?"
57603Why ai n''t you dancin'', Wilse?
57603Why not call it the Fancy Shop once for all, and stick to that?
57603Why should n''t it be? 57603 Why should they be made to ape the semblance of sorrow?"
57603Will your Grace step out, or shall I bring a foot- stool? 57603 Wilson,"she said briefly,"what do you mean?
57603Wilson?
57603Would you mind if I kissed you, too?
57603You do n''t mean to say-- you do n''t mean Ruby_ has n''t told_ you? 57603 You do n''t mean you have n''t heard?
57603You do n''t mean you have n''t heard?
57603You do? 57603 You got my letter last week?"
57603You have, Miss Kitty? 57603 You scared of Pilot?
57603You was?
57603You were speaking of the good horse, my dear; has anything annoyed him? 57603 You''ve took him on trial, you say, Miss Kitty?"
57603You, Kitty? 57603 _ Was_ your Ma satisfied with me?"
57603''How''s the British this mornin''?''
57603''Member Bunty Jackson over to Tupham?
57603''Why ai n''t I goin''out?''
57603( Does every one know that a heater piece is the triangular space between two branching roads?)
57603A Dook is next to a king, is n''t he?
57603A trifle dull, what?"
57603About the driving?
57603Ai n''t you ashamed, Bobby Chanter, at this time in the morning?
57603Amos was usually a silent youth, with little more to say than"Yep"and"Nope"and"That so?"
57603And Kitty?
57603And Melissa?
57603And after all, why should one ever sit anywhere except in the Sitting Room?
57603And have they found a new Flanagan yet?
57603And how much of it was visible anyhow?
57603And if he never did anything but speed in a trotting sulky, you would n''t say he was being of any great use in the world?
57603And oh-- and oh-- and_ Oh!_ pearl of Poppets,_ do_ you see whom we are overhauling?
57603And the children?
57603And the door was opened by Sarepta, the faithful retainer, in her best dress, with tears in her faithful eyes?
57603And we''ve been friends ever since, have n''t we?
57603And why?
57603And why?"
57603And will you kindly leave the poker where it was, on the left side?"
57603And with Pilot?
57603And you the third, Sty?
57603And, oh, Bobby, do you want to be a_ perfect_ angel and look up_ Orchis Spectabilis_ in Gray?
57603Are n''t they_ darlings_?
57603Are n''t you driving very fast, Kitty?"
57603Are n''t you ever coming?
57603Are n''t you glad to see me?
57603Are you going to give me in charge for fast driving?"
57603Are you shocked?
57603Are you-- are you going my way?"
57603As Mr. Jason said, if they changed with every turn of fashion in fancy work, where would they be?
57603Because, of course, you''ll go right on till they--"John Tucker''s face was almost as craggy as Sarepta''s, as he faced Kitty again:"Found?"
57603Besides-- ought she not to leave them?
57603Bobby is going to take this to----may I Bobby?
57603But Papa scolded me, did n''t he?"
57603But how_ did_ you know?"
57603But now-- may I help you dust?
57603But-- well, if that is_ so_, girls, we shall see great times in Cyrus, what say, Pearlie?"
57603Bygood?"
57603CHAPTER X THE PARTY"Going?"
57603CHAPTER XVIII OLD LOVE AND NEW Why was Pilot put into the beach wagon instead of the buggy?
57603Ca n''t you see I''m sick?
57603Call this an express train?
57603Can you understand that?"
57603Chanter?"
57603Cheeseman?"
57603Come in, wo n''t you?
57603Come on in, you hear me?"
57603Coming events cast their shadows before, what?
57603Could it be possible that Bobby felt for once the slightest shade of relief on arriving at the Library?
57603Could she--_how_ could she?
57603Did I understand-- are you ill, Aunt Johanna?"
57603Did he hurt you?"
57603Did he speak to you?"
57603Did it do up behind?
57603Did she look like that now?
57603Did who hurt me, Lissy?"
57603Did you ask for the second, Rodney?
57603Did you come to meet me, too?
57603Did you ever hear of anything so romantic?"
57603Did you_ ever_, Mary?
57603Do I look as if I could n''t pay for''em?''
57603Do n''t you love a sweet, sad book, Kitty?
57603Do n''t you really care?
57603Do n''t you remember Father giving me the reins, and dear Mother being so frightened?"
57603Do n''t you smell them, Judge Peters?"
57603Do n''t you think one always seems to be going faster on a smooth road?"
57603Do n''t you want a lift?"
57603Do n''t you want me to sing your own song for you, John?
57603Do n''t you_ love_ her books?
57603Do you advise it, Gerie?"
57603Do you believe Podasokus will ever get well, John Tucker, dear?"
57603Do you ever hear from him, Kitty?"
57603Do you find Cyrus changed, my dear?"
57603Do you know?"
57603Do you mean that he does this regularly, John?"
57603Do you remember my quoting Peggotty the other day?
57603Do you remember, Almy?
57603Do you think Summer Sweeting is her own name or a_ nom de plume_?"
57603Do you think it is_ ever_ allowable?"
57603Do you_ see_, Pilot?
57603Drive up and down the street a couple of times, will you, my dear?
57603Duke._''Did you ever?
57603Eleanor, are n''t they darlings?
57603Ever hitch''em up together?"
57603Ever since the news of Mrs. Ross''s death came, Cyrus had been asking, what_ would_ Kitty do?
57603Father down yet?"
57603Find anything better than the Mallow House in them foreign caravans?
57603Flanagan was dead-- I did n''t kill him, did I?
57603Fond of flowers, perhaps?
57603For me?
57603Get Kitty to come in and see me in the morning, will you?
57603Getting out at Cyrus, ai n''t you?"
57603Gray dress?
57603Great, is n''t it?
57603Had Kitty_ meant_ to leave them behind?
57603Had he been a Nut all this time?
57603Had not Grandfather Ross laid it down fifty years ago, when oilcloth was oilcloth, and not, as dear Father used to say, brown paper and fish glue?
57603Had she been_ too_ horrid to him?
57603Had she changed much in these three years?
57603Had something startled him, or was it the inherent viciousness of which Melissa had always felt sure?
57603Had you given me up?
57603Has Miss Croly left you?"
57603Have I said too much about the Treat?
57603Have you any peppermints in your pocket, Mr. Bygood?
57603Have you come to arrest me for fast driving?
57603Have you found me a maid, Sarepta?"
57603Have you had a tiresome day?
57603Have you heard the news?"
57603Have you read''The Hollow Needle,''Bobby?"
57603Have you taken your wages out of this money?
57603He could n''t hear unless he held her hand-- both hands?
57603He had a glimpse of a white, furious face, that was somehow familiar; of eyes glaring at him in what looked like insane rage: what had he run into?
57603He refurnished the house rather more splendidly than Cyrus thought in quite good taste, but his wife came from the City, and what could one expect?
57603He shall be the duke-- you''d love to be a duke, would n''t you, Tommy?
57603He was Dr. Ross''s executor, and who had a better right, he would like to know?
57603Here is the train, and here is-- a fine lady?
57603Here was the Street, empty and silent: who was night- watchman now, he wondered?
57603Here''s the Life of Hannah More; that would be respectable, what?"
57603His furious ring producing Sarepta Darwin in a state of high tension, he could only gape at her, and gasp,"All right?"
57603His name is Hero, John; good name, do n''t you think?
57603How are the Wibirds, Nell?"
57603How are you, Sarepta?"
57603How are you, Very?
57603How are you?
57603How could Kitty?
57603How could a man be named Very Jordano and not be romantic?
57603How could she ever, ever,_ ever_ thank Kitty enough?
57603How could she?
57603How d''ye do, Mr. Jordano?
57603How did you get rid of him, Kitty?"
57603How do I know?
57603How do you like my jacket?
57603How do you spell''fish''nowadays?
57603How do, Bobby?
57603How do, Lissy?
57603How is Madam Flynt?"
57603How is the rheumatism?"
57603How is your mother, and Melissa?"
57603How long she goin''to stay?"
57603How many generations of children have you supplied with peppermints, my dear soul?"
57603How''bout that, Very?"
57603How''s Mary?
57603How_ could_ she?
57603I bet she does, what?"
57603I ca n''t seem to get time----""I''ll go look; may I?
57603I do n''t seem to have left much, do I?
57603I do n''t suppose you noticed,"she added demurely,"that one of the boys was named Tucker, did you, John?"
57603I grant that the sofa was shabby, but who cared?
57603I intend to take to my bed-- What is it?"
57603I might be carried in like that woman in''Barchester Towers,''in a white velvet gown on a red silk sofa-- or was it a red shawl thrown over the sofa?
57603I never_ do_ know how to introduce, do you?
57603I ought not to speak of this, perhaps, but-- Mother always used to come to you, did n''t she, Madam Flynt?"
57603I shall be out of college next year, Kitty, and I have a good job promised me; wo n''t you-- won''t you let me take care of you, my dear?"
57603I should have introduced him to her, should n''t I, Kitty?"
57603I suppose they are quite valuable horses, John?"
57603I suppose you can find me one?"
57603I thought I''d step over----""Where is John Tucker?"
57603I told you, did n''t I, it is he who has sent the violets all these years?
57603I wanted Tom to be happy, did n''t I?
57603I_ was_ a little imp, was n''t I, John?"
57603If a child of his acquaintance( and what child was not?)
57603If not, had n''t we better settle it now?"
57603If you do n''t find a woman for him to marry, I''ll have to marry him myself, and fine I''d look cocking in the parlor, d''ye see?"
57603Is Satan abroad in our midst, think?
57603Is he very ill?"
57603Is it permissible to ask which is the correct-- a-- version?"
57603Is it to be fine or imprisonment?"
57603Is n''t he a perfect duck?
57603Is n''t it awful?
57603Is n''t it funny, Sarepta?
57603Is n''t there anything of Summer Sweeting''s in?
57603Is she able to come, do you think, Kitty?
57603Is she boss here, or are you?"
57603Is she pretty?"
57603Is that, does Miss Bygood consider, correctly reported?
57603Is there any money left?"
57603Is this a Republic, I ask you, or a Monarchy?
57603It hasn''t-- eh?
57603It was like-- do you remember how I used to put the hollyhocks in the little black pool, under the trees?
57603It was very pleasant to hold the little trembling hands; if they were to be brother and sister-- perhaps?
57603It''s a pleasant picture to remember, is n''t it, John?"
57603John Tucker has always had his wages, has n''t he?"
57603John Tucker told you of our little arrangement?
57603Jordano?"
57603Judge Peters?
57603Just move that poker, will you, Kitty?
57603Kitty at home?"
57603Kitty comin''in?
57603Kitty opened her eyes wide with,"_ Why_, Sarepta?"
57603Kitty remembered?
57603Kitty, do you hear?
57603Kitty, do you suppose the affections run down like a clock if they are not wound up in the early twenties?
57603Kitty, my child, do the best you----""Drive like_ hemp_, will you, Kitty?"
57603Leave it inside the storm door, will you?
57603Lots of water in the''Tlantic Ocean, eh?
57603Madam Flynt?
57603Mallow?"
57603Mallow?"
57603Mallow?"
57603Man?"
57603March was n''t it?
57603Marshall, how_ do you do_?
57603May I ask, Miss Bygood, if you attach any-- serious-- a-- importance to Mrs. Sharpe''s-- shall I say singular statement?"
57603Might I take the liberty of offerin''you a pep''mint, Miss?
57603Miss Almeria, may I accommodate my steps to yours as far as the corner?"
57603Miss Ross was fond of violets?
57603Mother used to sing it, do n''t you remember?
57603Mother, you said there would be plenty, did n''t you?
57603Mr. Chanter was silent for some time: then--"And whom did you suppose the man to be, my love?
57603Mr. Jordano, will you be so kind as to bring me some more ice- cream?
57603Mr. Josiah, in anxious squeaks, wanted to know what all this_ meant_; hey?
57603Mr. Mallow was about to set out on foot, but if you could go, Kitty?"
57603Mr. Myers has to read enough deep things at Corona, do n''t you, Mr. Myers?
57603Nelly''s swain understood that Miss Wibird read the Encyclopedia through every year; was that so?
57603No one goes near him: where is the use, when he wo n''t let any one in?
57603No?
57603Not Johanna Ross?"
57603Not in any Cyrus, surely?"
57603Nothing wrong, I hope, Auntie?"
57603Now I am no spiritualist, Edward, but-- what do you want, Cornelia Croly?
57603Now, Kitty, say you''ll think about it?
57603Oh, how do you do, Mr. Bygood?
57603Oh, how do you do, Mr. Cheeseman?
57603Oh, what shall we do?
57603Or would he bring his own help with him, think?
57603Parks again, wo n''t you?"
57603People like my Kitty, do they, Almeria?"
57603Pettijohn?"
57603Poor little White Rose could n''t stay any longer, could she?
57603Present my kindest regards to your aunt, will you, Kitty?
57603Put another plate, will you?
57603Rheumatism?
57603Sarepta is a wonder, is n''t she?"
57603Say, have you got any of his stuff?
57603Shall we go in with Johanna Ross to that room where the love of her youth lies gasping his last hour away?
57603Shall we look upon her, kneeling by the bedside, holding the skeleton hands, looking tenderly into the hollow eyes?
57603Shall we toddle, Very?
57603She comin''to- day, you say?
57603She flung her Fate from her; tipped me out in the snow, did n''t she?
57603She has?
57603She was pretty old even then, John, was n''t she?"
57603She-- ah-- had not heard from any of her relatives?
57603Should she slip away and leave them together?
57603Shut the door, will you?"
57603Sister is in back with Father; come right in, wo n''t you dear?
57603Something in her face made him add impulsively,"Wilse had n''t been pesterin''you, had he, Kitty?"
57603Something in the fancy line, my dear Sir?
57603Stay by me, wo n''t you?"
57603Stylish?
57603Sure she did n''t want him to----?
57603Take a seat, wo n''t you?"
57603Tell me again just how it was, will you?
57603That seems sensible, eh?"
57603The keen frosty air went to his head; or had something else gone there before?
57603The one you taught me when I was a tiny?
57603The world held no tears any more; how should it, on a day like this?
57603Then who so happy as Clotho Kitty?
57603There-- there used to be three of us; do n''t you remember?"
57603They all wanted my little niece, eh?
57603They are my feet, Cornelia: I suppose you will grant that?"
57603They claimed Ruby Caddie had taken to her bed: was that so?
57603They stand out like penwipers, do n''t they?"
57603Thread it for me, will you, dearie?"
57603Three hosses together?
57603Treat you pretty well, did they?
57603Trebles:"_ Is n''t_ she?
57603Trot her out, what say?
57603Twenty, I think, sister?"
57603Warn''t?
57603Was Madam Flynt in league with Occult Powers?
57603Was it made D''rectory?
57603Was it silk, or wool, or melange?
57603Was it sold, think, or was it there yet?
57603Was n''t he there?
57603Was n''t it darling of them to come to meet me?
57603Was n''t it wonderful?
57603Was she flighty, or what you would call reasonable?
57603Was she sure Pilot would stand?
57603Was she-- a-- interested in the bulbs?
57603Was that a coach?
57603Was that so, or was n''t it?
57603Was that what you wanted to see me about, John?"
57603Was there gores in the skirt?
57603Was this the best she could do for him?
57603Was----was_ that_ what Kitty meant?
57603We learned that at High School, did n''t we, Lissy?"
57603Well, Ruby,_ what_ do you make of that message?"
57603Well, what kind of a gray dress?
57603Well, why did I do that?
57603What are you doing, Cornelia?"
57603What are you flashing at, Almeria Bygood?
57603What are you talking about, and what do you want?"
57603What are your plans?
57603What can I offer you this morning?
57603What comes of dancing and jigging and feasting?
57603What did I always say?
57603What did Sarepta think?
57603What did you do with them all?"
57603What did you say?"
57603What do people do without him?"
57603What do you think of that, John Tucker?"
57603What else were you going to say?"
57603What frightened you, Lissy?"
57603What had he been reading?
57603What if she had n''t meant that at all?
57603What is it, Kitty?"
57603What is it?"
57603What kind of things?"
57603What makes them shake so?
57603What more delightful than to drive to South Cyrus behind Dan or Pilot, with Kitty holding the reins?
57603What price molasses peppermints?"
57603What room shall we put her in?
57603What say?
57603What shall we do?"
57603What should they be doing on Saturday morning?
57603What was that Kitty said again?
57603What was that big wagon there all kivered up?
57603What was the strange magic of those two lines?
57603What was to be done with parents like these?
57603What were you saying, my dear?"
57603What wonder that poor Bobby Shafto was swept out to sea in good earnest?
57603What ye mean?
57603What-- what is the matter, my dear?"
57603What_ did_ she say?"
57603What_ did_ you do?"
57603What_ do_ you mean, John Tucker?"
57603When Kitty, wishing to be kind to this forlornity, turned to him with"Has n''t it been a delightful evening, Wilson?"
57603When may I come to tea, Miss Almegeria?"
57603When one is n''t driving or walking, it seems rather terrible not to be reading, do n''t you think?"
57603When?
57603Where are you going, Cornelia?"
57603Where did you get him, if I may make so bold, Miss Kitty?"
57603Where do you want to go?
57603Where does he live?
57603Where had Wilson Wibird got hold of something stronger than new cider?
57603Where is your housekeeping?"
57603Where next?
57603Where next?
57603Where shall I leave him?
57603Where were you brought up?"
57603Where''s Almeria?
57603Where''s Nelly?
57603White cockade in his hat, white bow on his whip, white rosettes on the horses''ears, brand new white reins-- who so glorious as John Tucker?
57603Who can tell?
57603Who could possibly help it?
57603Who is your_ favorite_ author, Joe?
57603Who sent you?
57603Who was old Tilley, Sarepta?"
57603Whose house is this, I should like to know?"
57603Why blink the fact?"
57603Why did n''t I go to a Rest Cure?
57603Why did they wear claret- colored frock coats?
57603Why do you look at me so strangely, John Tucker?"
57603Why give pain?
57603Why should it be, when it was in perfect condition?
57603Why should n''t I be?
57603Why should she leave me?
57603Why should she?
57603Why should they be?
57603Why should you pay board here?"
57603Why upon earth should n''t they?
57603Why was every one so good to her?
57603Why, would any one have believed it?
57603Will John Tucker see to my trunks?
57603Will he expect us to curtsey, do you suppose?"
57603Will you come?"
57603Will you hear about the wedding?
57603Will you mind very much?
57603Wilson Wibird had been the butt of her childhood and Tom''s; what on earth did he mean by assuming this tone?
57603Wo n''t we?"
57603Wo n''t you catch it from the dean?
57603Wo n''t you introduce me?
57603Would he give her a tonic?
57603Would they lose their Kitty, the rose and jewel of their little world?
57603Would you have let her carry it, if you had been prancing past with Pilot?
57603Would you like to see Sister, Johanna?
57603You are my little girl, are n''t you?
57603You are the greatest girl in the world-- bar one, I''ll have to say now, wo n''t I?
57603You didn''t-- you did n''t_ ask_ for these orders, did you?"
57603You do n''t believe the witness of these eyes?
57603You do n''t suppose I expected you to take care of me, do you?
57603You grant that?"
57603You had a good voyage, my dear?"
57603You have been meeting the trains and taking the dear people to drive, while they are finding some one in Flanagan''s place?
57603You hear that hen cackle?
57603You know everything is painted blue, floor, tables, chairs, everything?
57603You know there is a round hole in every shutter, near the top?
57603You know there is rather a sharp corner at the end of the street?
57603You may be a hen turkey, but I am_ not_--what is it?"
57603You remember Flanagan?"
57603You remember the song, my dear?"
57603You say she knows all about the Great Plan, John?"
57603You see me lift up his off hind foot?
57603You understand, Miss Kitty?"
57603You will allow me the privilege of calling on you, I trust, some evening in the near future?"
57603You would be glad, I should think, would n''t you?
57603You would put him in the Bird of Paradise Room, I presume?"
57603You''re gettin''quite gray, ai n''t you?
57603You''ve got three here, ai n''t you?"
57603You_ have_?
57603Your mother is well, you say?
57603_ If it were true, what did anything else matter?_ But that was no reason why she should be an unsociable curmudgeon.
57603_ Wait for me!_"Had"Psychic Wireless, Unlimited,"informed Tom that there were other aspirants for the hand he had so confidently thought his?
57603_ Was_ that what Kitty meant?
57603_ Why?_ It was freakish; Kitty never used to be freakish.
57603_ honestly!_ you did n''t think I could catch Pilot?
57603_ ripping__ perfectly stunning girl in green?_ I say, Bobs!
57603a flounced and furbelowed Frenchwoman, as Mrs. Sharpe predicted?
57603a trifle hard- bitted, is he, Kitty?"
57603and you have Pilot?
57603at least in his coach and six?
57603but I mean when you have your health?
57603but you do n''t think it is anything serious, John?"
57603comfy?
57603did ever you go up to the Asylum?
57603did he talk rhyme now, Kitty wondered, and if so, to whom?
57603did n''t you see how they were enjoying it?"
57603do you see the smoke?
57603do you think Father would like it?"
57603h''are ye?"
57603h''are''y?"
57603he says:''what''s that?''
57603holding the reins over Dan and Pilot, who wondered why they were harnessed together, but comported themselves with perfect dignity?
57603how about it?
57603how about it?
57603how did she appear?
57603how is old Mrs. Tosh, John?"
57603howdy?"
57603is that you?"
57603is there any more about him?"
57603now you might be--?"
57603said Kitty, surprised"Did you see us coming?
57603shall I say, other characteristics?
57603she said,"how is your poor nose?
57603this has been a wonderful,_ wonderful_ treat; has n''t it, Susan?"
57603too bad, ai n''t it?"
57603was that Cheeseman''s?
57603well, my dear, how does it strike you?"
57603what I say is, shall we ever hold up our heads again?
57603what are you a duke for, I should like to know?
57603what say?
57603what was that?
57603what would Kitty say to him?
57603what_ is_ going on in Cyrus Village?
57603what_ shall_ we say to him?
57603wo n''t you sing it all for me?"
57603you have seen Italy?
61925Where would you be without my army?
61925Where would you be without my money?
61925''A flirt?''
61925''A little, I think,''said Julian,''will you go?''
61925''A woman?''
61925''Ah, do n''t you see, Julian, when I am sincere?''
61925''Ah?
61925''Am I?
61925''And that is all you consider?''
61925''And then?''
61925''And what am I?''
61925''And what if she does?''
61925''And what will he do if you throw him over?''
61925''And why is that surprising?
61925''And why?''
61925''And you demand of me?''
61925''And you tried to kill me with a dagger; do you remember?''
61925''And you will remember my hint about the Davenants?''
61925''Any news?
61925''Are we all crazy?''
61925''Are you laughing at me?
61925''Are you tired of me already?''
61925''Asleep?
61925''At what time is the procession due?''
61925''At your dressing- table?''
61925''Away from Aphros?''
61925''Because I am sure she is the type of woman he would marry, stately and correct; am I not right?''
61925''But of course,''said Julian quickly,''you do n''t allow Malteios to suspect this?''
61925''But why apologise?''
61925''But why remain thus, as it were, at bay?''
61925''But why should she hamper me, Anastasia?
61925''But you will return, Kyrie?''
61925''But, Julian, what could I do?''
61925''But, dearie, what''ll your mother thay?''
61925''But-- marry, Julian?''
61925''Can I go up to Eve''s room, Nannie?''
61925''Can you never forget yourself?
61925''Championship?
61925''Coastal steamers, fort tugs, old chirkets from the Bosphorus-- who was the admiral, I wonder?''
61925''Come with the gipsy?''
61925''Come, Eve, why are we quarrelling?
61925''Could I stop you if I tried?''
61925''Darling, to please me?''
61925''Dead?
61925''Did you tell Kato?''
61925''Do I deserve that you should say that to me?
61925''Do I regret the course I chose?
61925''Do you approve of her very intimate friendship with that singer, Madame Kato?''
61925''Do you expect me to say that you are pretty?''
61925''Do you imagine that we have nothing to do,''Don Rodrigo Valdez said to him,''that you set out to enliven the affairs of Herakleion?''
61925''Do you think,''she asked,''that you will be believed?''
61925''Do you want to stop me from going?''
61925''Does one come, ever, to a clear conception of one''s ultimate ambitions?
61925''Does she usually behave like this, Nana?''
61925''For the Islands, and may I not say,''said Kato, spreading her hands with a musical clinking of all her bangles,''for ourselves also?
61925''For the Islands?''
61925''For_ maman_ Lafarge?
61925''Fru Thyregod again?''
61925''Fru Thyregod?''
61925''Glad I''ve come back, Nannie?''
61925''Has he still not arrived?''
61925''Have I?''
61925''Have they really taken you in?
61925''Have you a theory, Alexander?''
61925''Have you tormented me long enough?''
61925''He is completely covered over?''
61925''He told you he loved you?''
61925''Herakleion?''
61925''His grandfather?
61925''How can I tell what I have been saying to you?
61925''How dare you accuse me?''
61925''I expect you have seen a great deal; forgotten all about Paul?
61925''I have had enough of these topics,''he said,''will you leave them?''
61925''I have never seen that man before; who is he?''
61925''I knew you were hostile, how could I fail to know it?
61925''I should lose caste in your eyes?''
61925''I suppose they are really treated with unfairness?''
61925''I told you I had no strength of character,''she said with bitterness,''what are my gifts, such as they are, to me?
61925''I wonder how much you promised Zapantiotis?''
61925''I''ve called you changeling sometimes, have n''t I?''
61925''If I am mad, you are unutterably cruel,''she said, twisting her fingers together;''will you answer me, yes or no?
61925''If it were?''
61925''If you could find a woman who was a help and not a hindrance?''
61925''In the meantime, go back to Fru Thyregod; why trouble to lie to me?
61925''In the water?''
61925''Including me?''
61925''Is anything wrong?''
61925''Is life to be one long carnival?''
61925''Is n''t that too much to hope?''
61925''Is that a threat?''
61925''Is that all you were going to say?''
61925''Is that all?''
61925''Is that indeed so?
61925''Is that so, Eve?
61925''It is true that we have talked of them by the hour,''she answered,''have we talked of them so much that they and I are entirely identified?
61925''It is true, then?''
61925''It means revolt at last; you will not desert us, Kyrie?''
61925''It was a crafty thought, was it not?
61925''Julian, have I not been consistent, all my life?
61925''Julian,''she said,''I rarely boast, as you know, but I am wondering now how many people in Herakleion would abandon their dearest ideals for me?
61925''Julian?''
61925''Kato may return to Herakleion with you?''
61925''Keep away from Herakleion?''
61925''Kyrie,''said Tsigaridis,''should we not move into shelter?''
61925''Lotus- land, then?''
61925''Marry?''
61925''May an old man,''he said with his deliberate but nevertheless charming suavity,''intrude for a moment upon the young?''
61925''My little Julian, have you washed the lap- dog to- day?
61925''My young friend,''he said,''they tell me you are leaving Herakleion?
61925''No?
61925''Nobody that I loved,''she replied without hesitation,''but, Julian, Julian, you do n''t answer my question?''
61925''Not for the world, but why keep me in suspense?
61925''Oh, Julian, what is it?
61925''Oh, but you?
61925''Oh,''she said, carried away by her interest,''is that Julian Davenant?
61925''Only a toy?''
61925''Our losses?''
61925''Shall I make Julie sing?''
61925''Shall we be allowed to go free?''
61925''She is unhappy?''
61925''Since when?''
61925''Steal you?
61925''Surely even you must find it too hot for battle?''
61925''Tell me, Eve, how do you explain your difference?
61925''The men are all at their posts?''
61925''The mice can not run over his face?''
61925''The only occasion, I think, Julian, when I ever boasted to you of such a thing?
61925''Then why had Fru Thyregod her hair down her back?
61925''There was indeed,''he replied;''do you remember an absurd tiny republic named Herakleion, which has since been absorbed by Greece?''
61925''This can never be; have you bewitched me?
61925''To Aphros?''
61925''To me?''
61925''Tsantilas, listen: can you distribute two orders for me by nightfall?
61925''Was that fair?''
61925''Well, Julian?''
61925''Well, Nicolas?''
61925''Well, your verdict?''
61925''Were you calling Mith Eve, Mathter Julian?
61925''What about him?''
61925''What am I to do?
61925''What answer shall you send?''
61925''What are these stories I hear of you, young man?
61925''What do you know?
61925''What do you mean?''
61925''What do you want done with your clothes?
61925''What else is there to consider?''
61925''What is it you want of me?''
61925''What is it, Eve?''
61925''What is it?''
61925''What is there to say?''
61925''What must I do?''
61925''What qualities have you?
61925''What secrets have you with Kato, that you must keep from me?''
61925''What will the islanders think?''
61925''What,''thought Julian,''does this old scapegrace politician, who must have his mind and his days full of the coming elections, want with Eve?
61925''Where are you taking me, Julian?''
61925''Where did that come from?''
61925''Where is my father?''
61925''Where is the Eve of Herakleion?
61925''Where shall I put you down?''
61925''Which is the larger?''
61925''Which of you made this discovery?''
61925''Who is he?''
61925''Why did n''t you trust yourself to me, Julian, my beloved?''
61925''Why do I always talk about myself to you?''
61925''Why do n''t you steal me, Julian?''
61925''Why do we, every one of us, refute the experience of others, preferring to gain our own?
61925''Why do you stand over there, Julian?''
61925''Why does he come?''
61925''Why have you changed?''
61925''Why must she be his wife?''
61925''Why not?
61925''Why not?
61925''Why not?''
61925''Why should he want to marry you?''
61925''Why, I have been there in a yacht, I believe; a little Greek port; but I did n''t know it had ever been an independent republic?''
61925''Why, how do you think of me now?''
61925''Why, then, withhold Julian from the Islands?''
61925''Why?
61925''Why?
61925''Will there be fighting?''
61925''Will you go out to Eve in the garden, father?
61925''Will you not come with Eve to my concert on Wednesday?
61925''Would he remain in shelter for long?''
61925''Would she leave Aphros?
61925''Would you do as much for me?
61925''Would you marry me if I wanted you to?''
61925''You are going away?''
61925''You are going to marry him?''
61925''You are not interested, Eve?''
61925''You are not musical, are you, Julian?
61925''You have never got over that, have you?''
61925''You know, I suppose,''she said to him,''that Madame Kato is a friend of Eve''s?
61925''You know?''
61925''You odd little thing,''he said,''why the adjective?''
61925''You sound incredulous; why?''
61925''You vain, you delicate, unreal thing, do you understand at all?
61925''You want me to come with you?''
61925''You will never marry?''
61925''You would do that-- without remorse?''
61925''You would not?''
61925''You''d sacrifice Aphros to me?''
61925''Zapantiotis sold his soul for money-- was it money you promised him?''
61925A Platonic alliance?''
61925A bomb has been thrown,''--(''_Mais ils sont donc tous apaches?_''cried Condesa Valdez.
61925A glimpse of her life had been revealed to him, but what secrets remained yet hidden?
61925A philosophic friendship?
61925A question left the lips of the postmaster,--''President of what?''
61925Am I not right?''
61925Am I right?
61925Am I to understand that you have permanently replaced your cousin in the-- ah!--presidency of Hagios Zacharie?''
61925And how soon before you return?
61925And why should Malteios return to- day, when in the preceding week, according to Nana, he had been so casually forgotten?
61925And why?
61925And you will remember the goodwill of Platon Malteios?''
61925Anger revived her--''Am I to waste myself on him?''
61925Are all women so irrational?
61925Are all women''s friendships so unstable?''
61925Are all women, I wonder, as vain as you?''
61925Are you going to bury yourself on those Islands of yours, growing grapes, ripening olives?
61925Are you so self- centred, so empty- headed?
61925Are you taking me seriously?
61925Are you to be trusted?''
61925Are you treating what I tell you with the gravity it deserves?
61925As he said nothing, she added,--''Besides, have I ever shown myself any of those things to you?
61925At that moment Tsigaridis, overcome by his anxiety, stretched out his hands towards him, surrendering his dignity in a supreme appeal,--''Kyrie?
61925But Eve has told me that you do not care for music?''
61925But for Eve... a girl.... After all, what is Madame Kato but a common woman, a woman of the people, and the mistress of Malteios into the bargain?''
61925But how could I have known?
61925But they must be blind to have seen nothing?
61925But what is to be done?
61925But, after all, what is this society?
61925But, of course, I was forgetting: Madame Kato is your companion here, is she not?
61925But_ I_ remain; shall I watch for you?
61925Ca n''t I put it right?
61925Can I not entertain you until then?''
61925Can you calmly contemplate the existence of an independent archipelago a few miles from your shore?''
61925Can you ride?''
61925Cowardly?
61925Did her voice mock him?
61925Did she care for Miloradovitch?
61925Did you give yourself to Zapantiotis?
61925Did you mean to create a revolution?''
61925Did you mean to ship me off to Athens, you and your accomplices, while you waited here in this room--_our_ room-- for your lover?''
61925Did you perhaps promise him yourself?
61925Do I mean less to you than the Islands?
61925Do n''t you hear the call of Paris and the world?''
61925Do you care nothing for the Islands?
61925Do you ever look forward to the procession of your life?
61925Do you know that I am betraying all the truth?
61925Do you know what monstrous things I am thinking?
61925Do you pay me the compliment of denying me the mean existence of an ordinary woman?''
61925Do you understand?
61925Do you want me to return to such an existence?''
61925Do you want to go back?''
61925Do you want what I offer you?
61925Do you, mademoiselle, know anything of your sex?
61925Does Eve listen when you talk about the Islands?''
61925During those hours, surely, his private troubles had been forgotten?
61925Eve he certainly could not trust; could he trust himself?
61925Eve heard Julian saying,--''Nicolas sends for me?
61925Eve, what do I care?
61925Eve?
61925Familiar to you, what?
61925Fru Thyregod, for instance?
61925Grbits replied sententiously, with the air of one creating a new proverb,--''Herakleion is open to invasion, but who wants to invade Herakleion?''
61925Hand the Islands over to Italy?''
61925Have you a boat?''
61925Have you been wearing a cap of invisibility?''
61925Have you considered?''
61925Have you ever seen a dead man?
61925Have you forgotten that in the last generation a Davenant caused himself to be elected President?''
61925Have you heard this woman, Kato?''
61925He found himself banishing the thought of Miloradovitch....''Have you changed?''
61925He has created a ridiculous disturbance; well, let that pass; we overlook it, but this persistence.... Where is it all to end?
61925He insisted,--''When did you really become aware of your own heartlessness?''
61925He loved you?
61925He said, pursuing his thought,--''You have never the wish of other women-- permanency?
61925He speculated amusedly as to the priest''s difficulties: an insurgent member of the flock?
61925He spoke to Tsigaridis,--''You asked for me, Tsantilas?''
61925Her voice broke upon his reflections,--''Thinking of the Islands, Julian?''
61925Here were all the vivid traces of her passage, but where was she?
61925How am I to know?
61925How am I to know?''
61925How do you find your father?
61925How many secrets like the secret of Paul are buried away in your heart?
61925How much time have you?''
61925How soon will it be before you forget the Islands?''
61925How soon will it be before you forget?
61925How soon will the launch be ready?''
61925I forget whether you are twenty- two or twenty- three?''
61925I suppose you saw yourself holding Panaïoannou at bay?
61925I understand that you have organised a system of communications?''
61925I want to ask you, Julian,''he said at once,''whether the story I have heard in the club to- night is true?
61925If not, one must surely spend the whole of life working in the dark?
61925In shame the words tore themselves from him,--''Had he any trouble?''
61925Interested and curious, he said,--''To please you, I should give up Kato?''
61925Irretrievably?''
61925Is he here by appointment with you to- day?''
61925Is it not magnificent?
61925Is it possible?
61925Is it true?''
61925Is n''t that profoundly illuminating?''
61925Is one simply deluded by your charm?
61925Kato exclaimed,''you have heard, Platon has gone?''
61925Kato played louder; she bent towards him,--''You love her so much, Julian?''
61925Like Samson, she had her hands upon the columns....''Madame Kato lives in this house?''
61925Looking at the plan, are you?
61925Madame Lafarge addressed herself to the group of men,--''I did not see you at the races?''
61925Madame?''
61925Malteios, you say?
61925May I come and talk to you?''
61925Middle- age-- I have been told there is such a thing?
61925Must your outlook be always so narrowly personal?
61925My poor misguided boy, do you not realise that your effort is_ bound_ to end in disaster, and will serve but to injure those you most desire to help?
61925Not a sexless means?
61925Now, a man is arrested on the Islands by the authorities, and what happens?
61925Of course they were lying; how could they not be lying?
61925Oh, what is there now for me to do?
61925One of the messages which reached him as he sat in the assembly- room had been from her: Would he send a boat to Herakleion for Nana?
61925Only once she spoke, to ask a question,''He would leave Herakleion?''
61925Or had the expedition been kept a secret from the still sleeping Herakleion?
61925Or had they been present, gnawing, beneath the mask of sympathy?
61925Or is he coming to- night for his reward?
61925Or, better, will you come to my house on Wednesday evening after the concert?
61925Perhaps you will tell this imaginary woman with whom you are to fall in love, about our Islands?''
61925Poor Carl,''she said reminiscently,''perhaps I have made him suffer; who knows?''
61925Prince of Aphros?''
61925Rowing- boat?
61925Seeing that her companion remained silent in uncertainty, she murmured an introduction,--''Do you know my cousin Julian?
61925Shall I go-- to whom?--to Malteios?
61925Shall I have the pleasure of seeing her?''
61925Shall I help you?
61925Shall I refuse?
61925Shall I tell you something?
61925Shall we escape?''
61925Shall we play a game with them?
61925She added, smiling,''In the realms of the impersonal?
61925She had spoken the last words with such impatience, that, torn from his speculations, he asked,--''Annoying you?
61925She laughed, and danced away, stretching out her hands towards him,--''Join in the saraband, Julian?''
61925She might, who knows?
61925She murmured again,--''And what am I?
61925So she must contend, not only against the Islands, but against Kato also?
61925So you think Herakleion will beat me?
61925Stay,''she added, searching in her memory,''was n''t there some extraordinary story about him as a young man?
61925Still a horror held him back: was it Eve, the child to whom he had been brotherly?
61925Surely men and women live in different worlds?''
61925Tell me what you mean by sordid and ugly-- what is there sordid or ugly in love?''
61925Tell me, are you fond of Eve?''
61925Thall I tell her?''
61925That I should leave you?
61925That you went to Aphros, and entered into heaven knows what absurd covenant with the people?''
61925That you will never betray?
61925The house of Platon Malteios-- Premier or ex- Premier?
61925The lazy voice, after a moment of silence, queried,--''Nana?''
61925The tongue was babbling in an empty body while the spirit journeyed in unknown fields, finding there what excruciating torment?
61925To break the image, he called out aloud,--''You were very deeply immersed in your thoughts, father?''
61925To this they received no answer, nor any to their next remark,--''Why so much mystery?
61925Under the fury of his unexpected outburst, she protested,--''Julian, why attack me?
61925Unnatural existence; unnatural?
61925Very naïf, very charming, very candid, very fawn- like-- or is it, hideous suspicion, a pose?''
61925Was it money you promised Zapantiotis?''
61925Was it possible that Eve made part of a limited brotherhood?
61925Was it possible that Eve was mixed up in Malteios''political schemes?
61925Was it possible that he should be attracted by Eve?
61925Was it possible that the attack had finally drawn away?
61925Was no sense of proportion or of responsibility ever to weigh upon her beautiful shoulders?
61925Was she to blame for her cruelty, her selfishness, her disregard for truth?
61925Was the standard of cardinal virtues set by the world the true, the ultimate standard?
61925We will work together?''
61925Well, what do you propose to do, my dear Julian?
61925Were the most radiant moments the moments in which one stepped farthest from the ordered acceptance of the world?
61925What am I to believe?''
61925What are you?
61925What do I, Kato, know of the houses you will live in in England, or of your English friends?
61925What do they hope to kill?
61925What do you do there?
61925What do you know?
61925What do you think?''
61925What else did you suppose?
61925What have I done?
61925What have I to do with a banking house in Herakleion, you with a few vineyards near the coast?
61925What have you done to my Kato?
61925What have you seen?
61925What is he thinking about?
61925What is it you want?
61925What is the grievance of the Islands?
61925What madness made me do it?
61925What part have I got in this world of yours?''
61925What part would she, the spoilt, the exquisite, play if there were to be bloodshed on Aphros?
61925What report of Aphros could I carry to Herakleion?''
61925What right have you to dictate to me?''
61925What spoken or unspoken understanding existed between the inscrutable brothers?
61925What then?
61925What was it, this bond of flesh?
61925What''ll you drink?
61925What''s at the bottom of that instinct?
61925What''s this instinct of wanting to stand alone, to be oneself, isolated, free, individual?
61925What?
61925When he had finished speaking, she asked him another question,''He could never trace the thing to me?''
61925When their greetings were over, Julian said,--''I believe you were asking for my cousin, sir?''
61925Where can one look for fidelity?
61925Where is William Davenant now, do you know?''
61925Where was Herakleion, stucco- built and tawdry, city of perpetually- clanging bells, revolutions, and Prime Ministers made and unmade in a day?
61925Where?
61925Which are we to use?''
61925Who had betrayed him?
61925Who has?
61925Who in their senses would harness the divine courser to a mail- cart?''
61925Who is she?
61925Who knows that the two ruffians I saw winking were not the very men we were after?
61925Why do we fight against government?
61925Why does instinct push us towards individualism, when the great wellbeing of mankind probably lies in solidarity?
61925Why had n''t I the strength to remain solitary?
61925Why should Kato apologise to him for the unexpected arrival of her lover?
61925Why so patient, so long- suffering, with Eve?
61925Why suggest it?
61925Why this mania for capture?
61925Why?
61925Why?
61925Why?''
61925Will I exercise my influence with Malteios to get his brother released?
61925Will he think me bad?
61925Will you come?''
61925Will you kill me?''
61925Will you not come and speak to her?''
61925Will you take the responsibility of refusing it?''
61925With an upheaval of sheets he heard her sit upright in bed, and her exclamation,--''Who said you might come in here?''
61925Wo n''t you realise that I am responsible for five thousand lives?
61925Would he urge his father''s interference?
61925Would he, Julian, who was young, be merciful?
61925Would they never succeed in getting away from the topic?
61925Would you like the tropics, I wonder, Julian?
61925Would your cousin leave Aphros?
61925You are not very jealous of me, are you, Julian?''
61925You assume or bequeath very lightly the mantle of government, do you not?
61925You go to England?''
61925You will come back?
61925You, placid, unemotional, unawakened?
61925You, unimpressionable?
61925Young Zapantiotis called to him from another window,--''You see them, Kyrie?
61925Your eyes smoulder; I am near the truth?''
61925Your father said to me apprehensively,"I am told Madame Kato''s flat was wrecked last night?"
61925Your intentions, excellent; but your judgment perhaps a little precipitate?
61925Youth-- were the years of youth the intuitive years of perception?
61925_ Allons donc!_ You, apathetic?
61925_ Je me fiche des Balcans._ And you?
61925_ un tas de rastas._ Do you think I shall remain here long?
61925a fish?
61925a house with me?
61925a necessary repair to the church?
61925and want so badly that he can perform the feat of coming out here from Herakleion in the heat of the afternoon?''
61925any news?''
61925but you?''
61925can you explain?''
61925dying down like a flame, to revive again?
61925had a wave, washing forward, deposited it gently, and retreated without its burden?
61925he shouted at her, seizing her by the arm,''or was he, perhaps, like Paul, in love with you?
61925how could I have known?''
61925leadership?
61925me black?''
61925meaningless because unnecessary in such a realm of serenity?
61925my own generation"?''
61925never the inkling of such a wish?''
61925nineteen?
61925now?
61925only answer me, are you trying to tell me that you have fallen in love?
61925or Eve, the woman?
61925or Herakleion independent of Greece?
61925or Kato?''
61925or Kato?''
61925or is there a deeper truth?
61925or the Islands independent of Herakleion?
61925shall I tell you why?
61925she cried;''I would n''t have treated you so, Julian; why did n''t you trust yourself to me?''
61925she forced herself to ask, and then, relapsing,''Which will fade first in your memory, I wonder-- the Islands?
61925she interrupted with scorn,''what has reason got to do with love?'')
61925so material, yet so imperative, so compelling, as to become almost a spiritual, not a bodily, necessity?
61925so transitory, yet so recurrent?
61925so unimportant, so grossly commonplace, yet creating so close and tremulous an intimacy?
61925some crazy adventure he engaged in?
61925that swept aside the careful training, individual and hereditary, replacing pride by another pride?
61925their exuberance, their vulgarity?...
61925this fallacious yet fundamental and dominating bond?
61925this unique and mutual secret?
61925this wanting to take from me my most treasured possession-- liberty?
61925to be forgiven all for the sake of the rarer, more distant flame?
61925was indeed a citizen of some advanced state of such perfection that this world''s measures and ideals were left behind and meaningless?
61925was she, not evil, but only alien?
61925what do you suppose?
61925what have you heard?
61925what on earth do you mean?
61925when the social system in its most elementary form starts with men clubbing together for comfort and greater safety?
61925where are you going?''
61925which is it to be?''
61925why are they ringing the bells?
61925why are you dressed?
61925why do I want to be independent of my father?
61925why?
61925why?''
53802''Tis there ye are sufferin''? 53802 A South American diamond?"
53802A million dollars?
53802A special way of knowing things?
53802A stone, did you say?
53802Aboud how log would i d taig him to ged there ad thad rade?
53802Africa, perhaps?
53802After you had lifted the steamship up into the air,said Luther,"how soon could you get her across the ocean?"
53802Already done it?
53802Am I a liar?
53802And how do you know he did? 53802 And how much bigger,"asked William,"is this than the Sancy?"
53802And how vasd is thad?
53802And much larger than any of the famous diamonds?
53802And that it was a little different from the way I usually sing it?
53802And the Koh- i- noor?
53802And the Star of the South?
53802And the thing is no bigger than your two hands?
53802And they never deceived us?
53802And we have probably been there?
53802And what are your hopes?
53802And what did I say?
53802And what do you say she wants?
53802And what makes light travel so fast? 53802 And what''s that?"
53802And where is it now?
53802And which are you?
53802And you had no idea I was coming?
53802And you really believe i d?
53802And you, Cyrus? 53802 And your father?
53802And your teeth are gone?
53802Any greater age? 53802 Are you Dr. Alton''s son?"
53802Are you absolutely sure that Ruth did not tell him?
53802Are you pretending that you do n''t know why I am here?
53802Are you sure it''s your dollar?
53802Are you sure you can do it?
53802Are you sure,said William,"that we have all seen it?"
53802Are you sure?
53802Are you sure?
53802Are you sure?
53802Are you sure?
53802Are you sure?
53802Are you the only person in the house?
53802Are you the only person in the house?
53802Are you tired?
53802Ashamed of? 53802 Atlantis?"
53802Beads vairy dales, doesn''d i d?
53802Believe it? 53802 Bigger than God?"
53802Bigger than what?
53802Braver? 53802 But Ruth says you often know what people think, or are going to say, before they say it?"
53802But a Christian is lots better than any of the others-- isn''t he?
53802But are you pop sure it can do these things? 53802 But are you sure?"
53802But how can you get hold of the miracle?
53802But how do you know we have never been there?
53802But how will you be supporting Ruth all that time? 53802 But it means for dogs, too, does n''t it?"
53802But not diamonds-- not this same material?
53802But not long?
53802But once a city?
53802But suppose Cyrus is imprisoned for life, or hanged, as often happens to train robbers?
53802But tell me, Defender of Women, why do you wish for a girl? 53802 But tell me, Drowsy,"she demanded,"how came you here and why did you ask all those crazy questions?
53802But the Christian religion is the best, is n''t it-- to go to heaven with?
53802But the famous''Dresden''is that color, is n''t it?
53802But what part of the world? 53802 But what''s the use of so many?"
53802But who ever saw such a diamond?
53802But why is n''t there one?
53802But why not now? 53802 But why should they build their cities in those sunless chasms?"
53802But why so sure, Cyrus? 53802 But you do n''t care for that candy?"
53802But you do n''t remember?
53802But you know it is n''t?
53802But you really do n''t know when?
53802But you_ do_ believe it?
53802But, Mr. Heywood,said Cyrus,"what''s Ruth done that she should be punished and not have what she wants, and wants ever so much?"
53802But, are you sure, Bressani,said the Senior Partner,"absolutely sure that it_ is_ a diamond?"
53802But, of course, you are not absolutely sure it is the same material?
53802Call you? 53802 Can he play ball any better?"
53802Can you tell me, sir, where this is; what place?
53802Can you tell me,said Cyrus,"about how much it is worth?"
53802Changed my mind? 53802 Could n''t this have come from some other planet?"
53802Could our connoisseur be quite such a fool as that?
53802Could you read the thoughts of another person, do you think? 53802 Could you tell me,"he inquired, always deferentially,"the name of the nearest town?"
53802D''ye feel so bad as that, little man?
53802Did all those wives,he asked,"sit with Solomon in one pew on Sunday?"
53802Did he go up at all?
53802Did he say children, too?
53802Did n''t you even think of me yesterday or this morning?
53802Did seven hundred women like that sit around the breakfast table with Solomon every morning?
53802Did the little blond hero happen to notice how I finished the prayer song this morning?
53802Did you ever see the Hope diamond?
53802Did you find this piece all alone, by itself,--apart from others?
53802Didn''d he bake a lod of bunny all of a zudden?
53802Do I have to give it to you?
53802Do n''t know what?
53802Do n''t understand what things?
53802Do n''t you remember ever having seen a portrait of her?
53802Do n''t you see,he said,"the difference between eight and twenty is twelve, is n''t it?"
53802Do n''t you think so yourself?
53802Do n''t you understand how it was?
53802Do people always look around before choosing their religion?
53802Do they have a better chance than Baptists or Methodists or Unitarians?
53802Do they want your help as another doctor?
53802Do you feel that way?
53802Do you happen to know the town of Tarbes?
53802Do you happen to speak English, madam?
53802Do you know nothing of its history?
53802Do you know of any other respectable young woman of your acquaintance who has done anything like it?
53802Do you know of any richer period in human thought? 53802 Do you mean that you will stay here all your life, from a sense of duty?"
53802Do you mean to say that you do n''t know why I am here?
53802Do you mean,said her father,"that your voice carried from this house to his, nearly a mile away?"
53802Do you realize, Signora,he said at last,"that you have developed a most extraordinary faculty?"
53802Do you really think, Ruth, that Cyrus learned of the accident in that way?
53802Do you think Cyrus will get over this, Doctor? 53802 Does it hurt?"
53802Does n''t the Bible say anything about that?
53802Does n''t what?
53802Does your mother know what you have been doing here?
53802Done what?
53802Dried up at your age? 53802 Droitwich?"
53802Elijah what?
53802Father, was Jesus so very good?
53802Father, why is n''t there a picture of my mother somewhere round the house?
53802For you to keep and not give back?
53802Forgot what?
53802Fragments of what?
53802Has she never told you not to cut up books?
53802Have you ever been to Foix?
53802Have you never seen a portrait of her?
53802He knew that you could n''t hear anything_ he_ said?
53802How budge?
53802How could I? 53802 How did he do i d?"
53802How did he like it? 53802 How did that happen?"
53802How did you happen to know, this afternoon, that Mrs. Heywood had broken her leg?
53802How do you do it? 53802 How do you know I wrote a second letter?"
53802How do you know it ai n''t?
53802How has he deceived anybody?
53802How long have you been able to do this?
53802How many?
53802How much did the Cullinan weigh?
53802How much is the Great Mogul?
53802How much?
53802How old? 53802 How punished?"
53802How, funny?
53802I beg your pardon for being so persistent, but may I ask you one more question, even more foolish than the others? 53802 I guess it''s safer than any of the others, is n''t it?"
53802I mean what is it made of? 53802 I mean, which kind of religion is the-- is the safest?"
53802If one,said Cyrus,"is enough for men around here, why should your Solomon need seven hundred?"
53802If you speak English wo n''t you please say something? 53802 If you thought of me so much, why did n''t you write to me?"
53802Important? 53802 In America?"
53802In New York? 53802 In the state of Massachusetts?"
53802Irreparable injury? 53802 Is Cyrus guying us, Doctor, or is he only dotty?"
53802Is Dr. Alton at home?
53802Is God a Congregashalist?
53802Is a married feller stronger and can he run faster than the feller that is n''t married?
53802Is it not possible your own brain may have played you a trick? 53802 Is it so very remarkable?"
53802Is it some new form of electricity you discovered?
53802Is it the palace, or villa, of some King, or Prince or Duke-- or something?
53802Is it there now,--the machine?
53802Is n''t the circus better?
53802Is n''t there a famous Sancy diamond?
53802Is n''t this America?
53802Is she in France?
53802Is she not at home?
53802Is that really true, Cyrus? 53802 Is that true?"
53802Is that yours?
53802Is the district difficult to reach?
53802Is there a portrait of your mother here?
53802Is this a habit of yours-- making love in the dark to women you do n''t know? 53802 Is this much larger,"inquired Cyrus,"than that Dresden diamond?"
53802Is this really the end?
53802Is what?
53802It is blue, is n''t it?
53802Just a little one?
53802Just what did she say, Stella?
53802Just what do you mean, Cyrus?
53802Just what is it?
53802Know him? 53802 Larger than this?"
53802Me? 53802 Me?
53802Never?
53802Never?
53802No, ma''am,"Do you know when he will return?
53802Nobody in Longfields has more than one, have they?
53802Not Cyrus?
53802Not anywhere in the house?
53802Not even a minister?
53802Not like it? 53802 Not now?
53802Nothing else at all?
53802Of course he has told you where you were born?
53802Oh, Miss Ruth, are you ill?
53802Oh, it''s you she wants, is it?
53802On your way to my house?
53802Our children?
53802Perhaps what?
53802Really? 53802 Really?"
53802Ruins of what?
53802Ruth,he said,"do you know how Cyrus heard of your mother''s accident so soon after it happened?"
53802Sent what?
53802Seven hundred, all alive at once?
53802Shall we let him come?
53802She? 53802 So you will never forgive me?"
53802Sorry for what?
53802Stay here? 53802 Tell you what?"
53802That is funny, is n''t it?
53802That shows how relative all things are, does n''t it? 53802 That would be funny, would n''t it?"
53802The nature of the country?
53802Then how do you know they want me?
53802Then how does he get it?
53802Then it ca n''t be any part of Asia, or even India?
53802Then it is the largest you have ever seen?
53802Then she is here, after all?
53802Then she was your step- mother perhaps?
53802Then this diamond of mine,he said,"would be ten times bigger than the Koh- i- noor or any of those other stones?"
53802Then what state_ is_ this?
53802Then why be hiding something? 53802 Then why did n''t you bring a larger piece?
53802Then why do you do it?
53802Then you crossed an ocean? 53802 Then you think it is not glass?"
53802Then, how could we see it?--from a railway train-- or from a steamship?
53802These things were scattered about the ground?
53802This certainly is not a hospital, is it?
53802Thought what?
53802To what?
53802Vorty- eight billions of biles? 53802 Was he married when he was a child?"
53802Was he sure it was the Diva?
53802Was she Italian?
53802Well you look so, anyway; does n''t he, Martha?
53802Well, Countess, will you give me your solemn word of honor to guard the secret if I tell you?
53802Well, Miss Ruth Heywood, and Mr. Cyrus Alton, what can I do for you this morning?
53802Well, ai n''t it true?
53802Well, children, what is it?
53802Well,--isn''t He?
53802Well-- now-- is that a nice business, Ruth, for a model husband? 53802 Whad thigs?"
53802What are you saying?
53802What did she say?
53802What do they believe,--the Unitarians?
53802What do you mean, Cyrus? 53802 What do you mean, Ruth?
53802What do you mean?
53802What do you mean?
53802What do you mean?
53802What do you think I dreamed? 53802 What do you think did happen, Drowsy?"
53802What does he say?
53802What does it matter? 53802 What does it say?"
53802What for?
53802What hurt?
53802What is it, Uncle Fred? 53802 What is it?"
53802What is she singing?
53802What is still coming, Cyrus? 53802 What is that?"
53802What is the nearest town of importance;--the nearest city?
53802What is to take its place, Cyrus?
53802What is your name?
53802What kind of a stone?
53802What more can I say, Drowsy? 53802 What mountains?"
53802What on earth is that?
53802What part of France?
53802What state?
53802What thing?
53802What thing_ do_ you want to know?
53802What was it?
53802What was its history, Bressani?
53802What was this man''s name?
53802What''ll you bet I ca n''t hit Luther from here?
53802What''s a bad habit?
53802What''s bigger?
53802What''s the difference?
53802What''s the kind of good that it does?
53802What''s the matter, Cyrus? 53802 What''s the use of a ring?"
53802What''s the use of crawling about on the earth like a bug? 53802 What''s your scheme?"
53802When did Dr. Alton say he would be back?
53802When did he go?
53802When did that happen?
53802When do you expect her?
53802When was the last time?
53802When you say any quantity, do you mean enough to run a typewriter-- or an automobile?
53802When?
53802Where could I find out? 53802 Where did he live?"
53802Where did you get such an idea, Ruth?
53802Where did you get this money, Cyrus?
53802Where has he gone?
53802Where?
53802Where?
53802Which do you like best?
53802Which do you think, Joanna?
53802Which kind are the surest?
53802Which next?
53802Who but you could call me here?
53802Who is his bardner?
53802Who is it?
53802Who then?
53802Who?
53802Who?
53802Who?
53802Who?
53802Whose house do you think it is?
53802Whose idea is this?
53802Why blush?
53802Why did you never happen to tell me?
53802Why do n''t they tell us things worth remembering? 53802 Why do we come here, father?
53802Why do you ask, Cyrus?
53802Why not? 53802 Why not?
53802Why not?
53802Why not?'' 53802 Why of course not?"
53802Why of course not?
53802Why shameful, Countess?
53802Why, who told you?
53802Why-- what was it?
53802Why? 53802 Why?"
53802Why?
53802Will he ever gum bag, Jibby?
53802Will he stay long?
53802Will you do me a favor?
53802Will you please take this note and the flowers to Ruth, Stella, and ask if I can see her?
53802Will you promise not to be angry or say anything bad?
53802With no dynamo, nor motor, nor transformer?
53802With no instruments whatever?
53802Yes, but-- but in what ways is a feller better?
53802Yes, of course, but how long ago did you find you could do this?
53802Yes, of course, wo n''t you come in?
53802Yes, that is true, is n''t it?
53802Yes, you have done it before, but how do you do it? 53802 Yes-- that Worcester is the one you mean, is it not?"
53802You are telling me the truth, are n''t you, old friend?
53802You bead he is bious?
53802You came in that?
53802You do n''t know in what country you were when you found it-- or bought it?
53802You do n''t mean that you are not coming back to-- to Longfields-- to me? 53802 You do n''t really mean it?"
53802You do n''t want to grow up and know less than anybody else-- even less than school children?
53802You have never heard of any one else who has been there?
53802You know nothing of the history of those people, of their manners and customs?
53802You mean her-- her mind is affected?
53802You mean if he answered back you could n''t get it?
53802You mean no bad weather?
53802You mean what kind of glass?
53802You mean,said the Senior Partner,"it would be impossible to guess, even approximately, at its value?"
53802You remember Cyrus Alton, do n''t you, Uncle Fred?
53802You remember our wedding at the Unitarian Church, away back in that enchanted past?
53802You say these ruins are very old?
53802You say we have all heard of this country?
53802You say you-- you knew of the accident?
53802You think it might be rock crystal?
53802You will forgive me, Ruth, wo n''t you?
53802''Tis the belly ache?"
53802''What''s it going to cost you?''
53802206"But once a city?"
53802208"Older than human history"209"The dried bones of its own past, whatever it was"212"But why build their cities in those sunless chasms?"
53802A few days later, when he was curled up at one end of the sofa with a book, he asked:"What is the transmigration of souls?"
53802Across the water?"
53802Afraid you are going to die?"
53802Alton?"
53802Alton?"
53802Alton?"
53802Alton?"
53802Alton?"
53802Am I not even to correspond with her?"
53802And after all why should I call you?
53802And as for The Only Woman in the world, if other women had changed their minds why not this one?
53802And did he fix the vane?"
53802And he has regretted it ever since?"
53802And how?"
53802And if God is good and not mean-- why did he make Bobby Carter a hunchback?"
53802And if men are so smart, why did n''t they use electricity thousands of years ago instead of just now?
53802And it''s true, is n''t it?"
53802And was it a message?
53802And where did you think yourself?
53802And who cares anyway?
53802And why not keep heat all winter?
53802And why not, pray?"
53802And why not?
53802And why not?
53802And why should she, poor thing?
53802And you have really done it, Drowsy?"
53802And you really consider robbery an honorable business?"
53802And, anyway, why should a bird be so much better off than men and other animals?
53802Any greater age?"
53802Are we in Massachusetts?"
53802Are we to laugh at it?"
53802Are ye sick?
53802Are you absolutely sure no previous knowledge of each other''s intentions may have helped a little?"
53802Are you fond of pictures?"
53802Are you little or big?"
53802As he caressed the glistening marvel he asked:"Do other people know of these ruins?"
53802As he seated himself beside her, she asked:"Were you ever married, Cyrus?"
53802As the two men stood by the work bench, and Katz took a second look at his visitor''s face, he said:"What''s the matter?
53802Because what?
53802But dell be, is he really goig to dry vor i d?"
53802But did n''t he say when he was coming back?"
53802But s''pose I died in a few days, would you have to be married all the rest of your life to a dead boy?"
53802But what do we have to do after we are married?"
53802But what is it?"
53802But where will you go when you once get up?"
53802But where''s the fun of it?"
53802But where?
53802But who told you our Diva was here about?"
53802But whose is it?"
53802But why are you so interested in religion all of a sudden?
53802But why these questions?
53802But you prefer cocoanut pie to all the others?"
53802But, even more gently than before, he inquired:"You do n''t know what state we are in?"
53802By what mysterious agency had this yearning of a woman''s heart stirred the brain of the far away Cyrus?
53802Ca n''t you open them wider?"
53802Calmly, but with an obvious effort at self control she answered:"Do you think there is no gossip in Longfields, no comment on my unexpected arrival?
53802Can you beat it?"
53802Can you tell me what place this is?"
53802Coming a step nearer, he demanded with suppressed enthusiasm:"Do you care for snakes or mice?"
53802Could anything be more frightful than to know, at times, what people really thought of you?
53802Could there be a harmony between these two spirits so intimate as to render the written word superfluous?
53802Could this be a deaf and dumb asylum?
53802Could you tell me what-- er-- what state this is?"
53802Cyrus also smiled--"But tell me, father, just for fun, what religion is the best?"
53802Cyrus listened, and understood; then inquired:"Was He a Congregashalist?"
53802DREAMS?
53802Dear me, Cyrus, do you think of taking your wife to the moon?"
53802Did he ever get his bunny bag?"
53802Did he really go up that way with those fat horses?"
53802Did she die here in this house?"
53802Did you ever happen to realize what a self- starting, Johnny- on- the- Spot, up- to- date miracle your memory is?"
53802Do brave men run away?
53802Do n''t they all know that?"
53802Do n''t you believe what the Bible says?"
53802Do n''t you remember?"
53802Do you happen to be interested in electro kinetics?"
53802Do you hear?"
53802Do you mean a letter?"
53802Do you s''pose they all slept in the same bed?"
53802Do you think an unmarried woman can travel about the world alone with a young man as I did, and keep her good name?"
53802Do you think it would be funny to dig ditches all your life and drive oxen like old Sim Barker?"
53802Do you want to marry a train robber?"
53802Does a dentist do it-- or something like that?"
53802Does he allow you to do such things?"
53802Does it take long to have it done?"
53802Does n''t your mother punish you for telling such fibs?"
53802Dreaming you are a bird?"
53802Got the cash with you?"
53802Greek or Roman, perhaps?"
53802Has he been to the very center of the earth?"
53802Has he lived up to it?"
53802Have you any objections to being a millionaire?"
53802Have you lost any limbs?"
53802Have you seen it work yourself?"
53802He recalled the look in her eyes when----"Do tell us what you think of it-- just how you feel about it, Cyrus?"
53802Here the much embarrassed Ruth interrupted:"Please do n''t think, Dr. Gladwin, that----""That you treat other patients as kindly?
53802How are you?
53802How can you do such a thing?"
53802How could I?
53802How could you tell what I was going to say?"
53802How do you feel?"
53802How do you know?
53802How does the miracle get its power?"
53802How far are we from Worcester?"
53802How old are you?"
53802How old was he?"
53802How on earth could I get it?"
53802How var away is Bars, eddyway?"
53802How?
53802How_ can_ you say such a thing?"
53802If I got into a big cannon ball and was shot up into the air how many hundreds of miles would I go before I would fall back?
53802If she hated and despised him, why live?
53802If you are the faithful soul you pretend to be, why did n''t you write me months ago?"
53802In Australia?"
53802In a higher, thinner voice he demanded:"What makes one kind of electricity do what another kind ca n''t?
53802In a voice between a gasp and a shout of rage he demanded:"Who is that boy?
53802In this vicinity?"
53802Is Cyrus going to New York?"
53802Is Joanna your sister?"
53802Is he wild on other subjects, or is it only one screw that''s loose?"
53802Is it a desert-- like Sahara, for instance?"
53802Is it an emergency call?"
53802Is it better that way?"
53802Is it nothing but glass, after all?"
53802Is it your wish to sell this diamond to us?"
53802Is she there?"
53802Is that a joke?
53802Is that just what she said?"
53802It is rather pleasant here, do n''t you think?"
53802It said, distinctly, but in a tone too low for the taller people to hear:"How do you do, little stupid?"
53802It was Pliny, the elder, who said,"Indeed, what is there that does not appear marvelous when it comes to our knowledge for the first time?"
53802It was all by sea?"
53802Just for the pleasure of doing this?"
53802Just guess at it?"
53802Just tell me what kind of a place this is?
53802Just whad is i d?"
53802Kide of sleeby eyes, hasn''d he?"
53802Marry?"
53802May I touch your face just a little?"
53802Mine?"
53802Mr. Bressani in a low, somewhat awe stricken tone, said:"And there is really much of it?"
53802Not this very minute?"
53802Of others, beside our invalid, here?"
53802Of what good this sudden wealth when his best friend, after these years of economy and self sacrifice, was not here to enjoy it?
53802Oh, why begin all over again?
53802Or is it his unspoken words that you read?"
53802Or was he merely amusing himself at her expense?
53802Or was it an individual form of spiritual sympathy, some ethereal harmony attuned by superhuman guidance to a chosen few?
53802Our friendship is too precious for that, is n''t it?
53802Pointing to a dish of fruit on a further table, he asked:"Wo n''t you have an apple?"
53802Really, is it you?"
53802Really?"
53802She might be a perfect copy of myself?
53802So you think it''s perfectly natural for a man to hide from his old friends all knowledge of his marriage-- as he would a murder?"
53802Something on your mind?"
53802Tell me, have you the same wonder- working eyes and mouth and haughty bearing?
53802That I am no more to you than anybody else?"
53802That seems an awful lot for one man, does n''t it?"
53802That you are going to stay here forever?"
53802That''s fair, is n''t it?"
53802That''s robbery, is n''t it?"
53802The same message?"
53802The same, I suppose?"
53802Then Cyrus, after a good look into the face of the dog beside him:"Whose soul do you suppose is in Zac?"
53802Then Mr. Bressani asked:"What_ is_ this diamond''s country?"
53802Then as his eyes rested on a little music box that lay on the table beside him, he exclaimed, with enthusiasm:"You like good music?"
53802Then why pretend you did n''t know you were in England?"
53802Then, after another silence:"But where did he get it?
53802Then, with a smile:"I suppose you have often known what_ I_ was thinking?"
53802Then, without committing either of us, if you are still as blind, as reckless and perverse as you are to- night, you can----""Still alive, Ruth?"
53802There was touch of contempt in Cyrus''s manner as he replied:"You do n''t even know what I mean?"
53802This city of Worcester is in the State of Massachusetts, is it not?"
53802Turning to Cyrus, he inquired,"What are you going to live on?
53802Was he a wandering lunatic escaped from his keepers, preferring darkness to light?
53802Was he on the border land of the supernatural?
53802Was his son the master of a vital secret, a mysterious power now unknown to science but, in future years perhaps, to be common knowledge?
53802Was it in Cambridge?"
53802Was it long ago that she died?"
53802Was it the voice he had heard in the darkness-- in the motor, that night?
53802Was it within the realms of material science?
53802Was this hideous gloom a regular habit with English nights?
53802What about the surface of Abyssinia?
53802What are the products of the Cape of Good Hope?
53802What better test of my affection could you want?
53802What can it be?"
53802What do I have to do?"
53802What do we do first?"
53802What do you mean, Ruth?"
53802What do you mean?
53802What do_ you_ think it is, glass?"
53802What held him in Longfields-- or anywhere else?
53802What is going to be your business?"
53802What is it?"
53802What is that, father?"
53802What is the material?"
53802What things?"
53802What traveler, in his senses, could be so far astray?
53802What''ll you have, Ruth?"
53802What''s a tooth, an eye, or a few hairs more or less to an honest lover?"
53802What''s his name?"
53802What''s his name?"
53802What''s his name?"
53802What''s his occupation, now?"
53802What''s the news from Longdeado?"
53802What''s the process?"
53802What?
53802When the hat was again on his head, he looked calmly at the girl with the eyes and inquired:"Why did you call me stupid?"
53802When you get up to- morrow and wish to get well and strong you will begin to eat again, wo n''t you?"
53802When?
53802Where I am?"
53802Where are the Barbary States?
53802Where is he?"
53802Where is she?
53802Where is she?"
53802Which is the largest African Lake?
53802Who calls me?"
53802Who could believe a human voice or a thought could penetrate those black, appalling depths?
53802Who could enter this bower unless shadowed by the Breath of Scandal?
53802Who in the world, except Joanna would mourn, or even miss him?
53802Who in thunder cares for the climate of Uruguay or the exports of Ecuador?
53802Who in thunder wants to know about the products of Madagascar?
53802Who is he?
53802Who is he?
53802Who''d ever be such a fool as to want to remember the population of Thibet?
53802Why a boy?
53802Why be a skeptic?
53802Why did n''t you see it by day light?"
53802Why did you call me across the water?
53802Why do n''t they tell me things I want to know?"
53802Why do n''t you button up your coat in front?
53802Why do you think I do n''t like it?"
53802Why has he run away?
53802Why important, Cyrus?"
53802Why manufacture power when the whole universe is vibrating with it?
53802Why not keep some overnight to read by?
53802Why not?
53802Why not?
53802Why not?"
53802Why part again?
53802Why should a hen-- just a hen-- have wings and not a boy?
53802Why should they know it?
53802Why should you ask such a question?"
53802Why stick so tight to the ground?
53802Why try to improve an already perfect thing?
53802Why zo zlow?"
53802Why, Cyrus, what_ do_ you mean?
53802Will they believe that you, whom they have known from boyhood, whom they respect and like, would carry me off by force, entirely against my will?"
53802Will you?"
53802Will you?"
53802Will you?"
53802With some impatience William demanded:"Now just what do you mean, Cyrus?"
53802With the Bressani eyebrows still in the air their owner inquired:"You say this was lying on the top of the ground?"
53802Wo n''t you please say that in English?"
53802Wo n''t you walk in?"
53802Would a stone keep on dropping till it came out the other side?"
53802Would it be worth sixty times four hundred thousand dollars?
53802Would n''t it?"
53802Would that be all right?"
53802Would that be satisfactory to you?"
53802Would you be so mean as that?"
53802Would you get tired of me?"
53802Would you mind just telling me what part of the country we are in?
53802Would you mind seeing him just a minute, and looking at it?"
53802You do n''t really mean what you say?
53802You know what a box kite is?"
53802You mean fifteen hundred years?
53802You really do not know what I mean?"
53802[ Illustration:"BUT ONCE A CITY?"
53802[ Illustration:"BUT WHO EVER SAW SUCH A DIAMOND?"
53802[ Illustration:"BUT WHY BUILD THEIR CITIES IN THOSE SUNLESS CHASMS?"
53802[ Illustration] IX DREAMS?
53802_ Luther._ Do you promise to endure with all your worldly goods?
53802_ Luther._ Will you hold on for better than worse?
53802_ Luther._ Will you take this wedded boy for your husband?
53802_ Luther._ Will you take this wedded girl for your wife?
53802_ Luther._ You promise to obey?
9778A temptation?
9778Although one of them has traveled with third- rate strolling companies and the other has waited in a hotel? 9778 An armistice?"
9778And Mopsy?
9778And earn just enough to live upon meagerly? 9778 And her sister?"
9778And now you do n''t expect my prosperity to last?
9778And she did n''t answer you? 9778 And that is?"
9778And that''s the charm?
9778And trade upon it? 9778 And you found one?"
9778And you go about with Mrs. Marvin? 9778 And you?"
9778Another piece, or some tea?
9778Are any of you open to earn twenty dollars? 9778 Are n''t you carrying a good deal of sail?"
9778Are n''t you inclined to take hold of too much? 9778 Are ye no rather too ready to blame?"
9778Are you asleep, or thinking hard?
9778Are you comfortable now?
9778Are you coming with me?
9778Are you going ashore again to the show to- night?
9778Are you really grieved because I wo n''t take those hats?
9778Are you regretting the ten guineas, Vane?
9778Are you sure of that?
9778Been seeing the train away?
9778But ca n''t you realize how your action reflects upon my daughter?
9778But did n''t that banish the unrest and leave you satisfied?
9778But do n''t you really know anything about him?
9778But do n''t you think it''s getting on toward breakfast time?
9778But have n''t human progress and machines made life more smooth for everybody?
9778But if he put his money in partly with the idea of getting certain pickings?
9778But was there nothing easier? 9778 But what are you doing?"
9778But what do you want with pulping timber?
9778But who''s likely to hear or take any notice of the thing?
9778But why should he persist in leaving the city, when it''s to his disadvantage to do so, as you lead one to believe it is?
9778But why should n''t people enjoy themselves in that way?
9778But wo n''t you and Drayton come with us and have dinner?
9778But wo n''t you tell me your adventures?
9778But you are going to see them?
9778But you have been in Vancouver before?
9778But you''re not a milliner, are you?
9778Ca n''t we stay here just a little longer and gather some more?
9778Ca n''t you put us ashore?
9778Can either of you pick up a handkerchief going at full gallop on horseback?
9778Can you see anything humorous in the situation?
9778Can you take this sloop to Vancouver?
9778Can you wait a few minutes?
9778Could n''t you give her an order for a dozen hats? 9778 Did Mr. Vane tell you that I had promised to warn him?"
9778Did he say it was my idea?
9778Did n''t you mention last night that it was through Miss Horsfield that you got the tug? 9778 Did you attempt to give somebody money there?"
9778Did you never try to learn keeping accounts or typewriting?
9778Do these people owe you anything?
9778Do you believe in that kind of foolishness?
9778Do you consider that the arrangement you made with Hartley applies to the cedar?
9778Do you imagine that I''m going to live here?
9778Do you know,he said,"I''ve still no idea of my offense?"
9778Do you mean that if you do n''t find the spruce this time, you''ll go back again?
9778Do you mean they''ve left you alone?
9778Do you mean to put off the meeting and keep your directors waiting, to please a child?
9778Do you really believe that?
9778Do you really want the girl?
9778Do you suppose I should feel warranted in forming any opinion upon your conduct?
9778Do you want a drink?
9778Do you wish to sleep?
9778Does anything in connection with this bush strike you?
9778Does it matter? 9778 Does n''t the same thing apply to New York, Montreal, or Toronto?"
9778Does that make it any better? 9778 Evelyn''s coming here?"
9778Even if you bring nothing back?
9778Had n''t you better put this on first? 9778 Had n''t you better tell him to come out?"
9778Had n''t you better wash it and tie it up? 9778 Hartley told you he came straight down to tidewater, did n''t he?"
9778Has it struck you that your attendance in the front seats is liable to misconception?
9778Has she shown ye any of yon knickknacks when she has finished them?
9778Has the doctor been over lately?
9778Has the man no pride?
9778Have n''t you made up your mind yet? 9778 Have they tried?"
9778Have you any doubt upon the subject?
9778Have you any idea of recalling him? 9778 Have you been long out here?"
9778Have you ever gone up as steep a place as this with a load?
9778Have you got the young gray in the new cart outside?
9778Have you had any more applications for the new stock?
9778Have you had any news of him since he sailed?
9778Have you never let your pity run away with your judgment before?
9778Have you seen any papers lately?
9778Have you tackled Chisholm yet?
9778How are Mrs. Marvin and the little girl? 9778 How are you getting to work?"
9778How are you going to dispose of your money, then? 9778 How are your people?"
9778How could I? 9778 How could you have the sense to think of that?"
9778How did you first come to know Chisholm?
9778How did you know?
9778How do you like sailing?
9778How does Vane strike you?
9778How far was the valley from the inlet?
9778How hard were you driven?
9778How long will it last?
9778How shall we address you?
9778I dare say I deserve the rebuke; but are n''t you trying to switch me off the subject?
9778I do n''t know whether it''s a very suitable time to mention it; but may I ask whether you are any nearer a decision about that smelter? 9778 I suppose my congratulations will not be out of place?
9778I suppose that means that you''re convinced of the equity of your cause?
9778I suppose the Chinese and other aliens live there?
9778I suppose you could put in a few weeks here?
9778I suppose you have brought your pistols with you?
9778I suppose you have known him for some time?
9778I suppose you have some idea of how Evelyn regards you?
9778I suppose you will have to tell your partner-- what you have discovered here-- as soon as you reach him?
9778I suppose you will make another attempt to find the timber?
9778I suppose you''re bent on sailing this craft back?
9778I suppose,he suggested hopefully,"nothing could be done with it?"
9778I suppose,she went on,"you do n''t know that Wallace has been getting Gerald out of trouble?"
9778I wonder how the wind is outside?
9778I wonder if Mopsy is leading Mr. Carroll into any mischief? 9778 I wonder if you are sorry to get back?"
9778I wonder if you remember how astonished you were the first time you brought me supper?
9778I wonder whether the situation is an altogether unusual one to you?
9778I wonder whether you ever feel any regret at having left England for this country?
9778I wonder why?
9778I wonder,she said softly,"if you would care to tell me why?"
9778I''m sorry, he said"How''s Celia?"
9778I''ve come to ask what I''ve done?
9778If that is true,she demanded,"how is it that he is received everywhere-- at your house and by Mrs. Nairn?
9778If you think that, how did you reconcile yourself to the city?
9778In this case a good deal depends on the singing-- the interpretation, is n''t it? 9778 Is he likely to turn up?"
9778Is it always a struggle?
9778Is it your intention to marry Evelyn Chisholm?
9778Is n''t Miss Blake coming?
9778Is n''t it a matter for the board?
9778Is n''t it evident, when one remembers her patient sacrifice; her fine sense of family honor?
9778Is n''t that a slight on the profession?
9778Is n''t there every prospect of your obtaining a good deal already? 9778 Is that, in its wider sense, a characteristic of most bushmen?"
9778Is the timber very valuable?
9778Is there anything amusing you?
9778Is there nothing better open to them?
9778Is this the way ye intend to look after him?
9778Is this visit all you owe Wallace?
9778It conduces to unrest?
9778It strikes me you do us credit; and now I suppose I can announce that you''ll receive?
9778It was you who located the Clermont Mine, was n''t it?
9778It wo n''t have to be rebroken? 9778 It''s a little while since you landed, is n''t it?"
9778It''s possible; but what am I to do? 9778 It''s sad, is n''t it?
9778It''s strange what little things win some people''s good opinion, is n''t it?
9778Man,she cried,"what''s wrong?
9778Must I tell you? 9778 Narcotic?
9778Ominous, is n''t it?
9778Perhaps you had something to do with light canoes in Canada?
9778Shall I drop the peak?
9778Shall I leave this plank? 9778 Shall we walk back to the hotel?"
9778So he gave her up-- because he admired her?
9778So ye''re all ready to sail the morn?
9778So you believe you can get an engagement if you reach Vancouver in time?
9778Stocks?
9778Suppose it only lasts a fortnight, what will you do then?
9778That''s not much better, is it? 9778 That''s your own idea?"
9778The Wall?
9778The child who dances?
9778The flesh?
9778The letter? 9778 The lough?
9778The question''s rather indefinite, is n''t it? 9778 The three of you stick together?"
9778Then I suppose you''ve no idea what to do?
9778Then I''ll put the thing in another way-- do you mind telling me how I have offended you?
9778Then had n''t you better pump her out?
9778Then has any accident happened to him?
9778Then if I offered myself as a suitor for Evelyn, you would not think me presumptuous?
9778Then is it something Vane has done that is on your mind? 9778 Then it''s in other matters you exercise a little judicious pressure on the helm?"
9778Then what are we to do?
9778Then what did you mean?
9778Then why are you wasting your time here?
9778Then why is Mr. Vane so determined on finding it?
9778Too great a difference of temperament? 9778 Utility?"
9778Wallace,he advised,"would n''t it be wiser if you met that fellow Horsfield to some extent?"
9778Was Jessy no gracious?
9778Was that for us?
9778Weel?
9778Well, I should n''t like to disappoint her; but is n''t it curious what effect some things have? 9778 Well, how far was the inlet from the rancherie?"
9778Well,he added, in much the same tone he would have used to a distressed child,"what''s the trouble?"
9778Well,he replied,"I do n''t want to be officious-- but how can I help?"
9778Well,inquired Celia,"why did you tell us this?"
9778Well?
9778Well?
9778Well?
9778Well?
9778Were you compelled to work like that?
9778Were you surprised when she offered to sew it?
9778What about the Clermont?
9778What about the spruce?
9778What am I to understand by that?
9778What are some of the reasons?
9778What are their names?
9778What are you doing here?
9778What are you doing now; and how are little Elsie and her mother?
9778What are you going to do if there''s no sign of her?
9778What are you thinking about so hard?
9778What are you two talking about?
9778What can I say to convince you?
9778What did she do?
9778What do women who are left to their own resources do in western Canada?
9778What do you mean by that?
9778What do you mean by that?
9778What do you think of Kitty Blake?
9778What has his visit to the Clayton''s to do with it?
9778What has that to do with you?
9778What have you been doing?
9778What in the name of wonder is that?
9778What is amusing you, Alic?
9778What is your interest in her? 9778 What made you leave the Old Country?
9778What makes you think they''re rich?
9778What particular allowances do you feel it needful to make in Mr. Vane''s case?
9778What would ye say, Evelyn?
9778What''s become of the port light?
9778What''s become of the show?
9778What''s her course?
9778What''s the matter?
9778What''s the trouble?
9778What''s your idea?
9778When a man wo n''t take his friends''advice, what can he expect?
9778When do you expect to meet the steamer?
9778Where did I hit you?
9778Where has Mr. Bendle gone now?
9778Where have ye been?
9778Where left ye your partner?
9778Where will you get new planks?
9778Where''s he now?
9778Where''s the steamer?
9778Which is a course you have objections to?
9778Who would superintend it?
9778Who''s the Mr. Drayton you mentioned?
9778Why did you promise that child to stay here?
9778Why pleasure? 9778 Why should she no?
9778Why should you talk of shrinking? 9778 Why should you wait?"
9778Why?
9778Why?
9778Will she weather the point on this tack?
9778Will you come?
9778Winstanley?
9778Wo n''t they raise trouble at the mill about your staying out?
9778Wo n''t you look in the locker, and bring along anything you think would be nice? 9778 Wo n''t you sit down and tell me about it?
9778Wo n''t you sit down? 9778 Would n''t anything I could say in praise of Vancouver be a trifle superfluous?"
9778Would n''t you like this kind of thing, as well?
9778Would that appeal to you?
9778Would you be astonished if I were to ask you to marry me?
9778Would you do the latter?
9778Would you like Mrs. Chisholm or myself to mention the matter?
9778Would you like me to help you?
9778Would you like to see him?
9778Ye will no have said anything definite to Horsfield yet about the smelter?
9778You are content with this?
9778You fixed that limb, when it was broken in the bush?
9778You have decided rather suddenly, have n''t you?
9778You have n''t said whether you intend to authorize that extension of capital?
9778You know him then?
9778You know him, do n''t you?
9778You offered to help her in some way?
9778You think you''ll get it?
9778You will allow me to wish you every success?
9778You will not forget to wait at Nanaimo and Comox?
9778You will try to forgive me for the anxiety I have caused you? 9778 You wo n''t mind my saying that I''m inclined to be sorry for her?
9778You would n''t be afraid to face the future with me now?
9778You would n''t go to stay?
9778After all, is n''t it a pity that so many of the beautiful old handicrafts are dying out?
9778After all, is n''t that only exchanging one beautiful, tranquil region for another?
9778After all, were n''t you as well off at the restaurant?
9778Am I right?"
9778And have you offered it to anybody else?"
9778And he will not even postpone it, because if he did so this penniless girl might, perhaps, lose her share?
9778Anyway, had n''t you better hitch yourself a little farther from the fire?"
9778Are n''t you cultivating a critical faculty?"
9778Are you going to get supper, or must I do that, too?"
9778Are you going to take a share in the hunt?"
9778Are you never satisfied?"
9778Are you sure the microbe has n''t bitten you and Mopsy?"
9778As they could n''t have been like one another, how could they, collectively, have borne a resemblance to anybody else?"
9778Been up against it somewhere?"
9778Besides, if unrest and human striving were sent, was it only that they should be repressed?"
9778But I think Miss Horsfield was in it""Was she?"
9778But I wonder why you have taken the trouble to tell me this?"
9778But are you going to sit here and smoke?"
9778But had n''t we better be getting on?
9778But had n''t we better heave her over her anchor?"
9778But how long have you been back?"
9778But there''s a point that strikes one-- is your objection to financial scheming due to honesty or pride?"
9778But where have you left him?"
9778But your brother''s interested in a good many things, too, is n''t he?"
9778By the way, what do you think of Miss Chisholm?
9778By the way, why do you people reckon these things in guineas?"
9778Can I offer you some tea?"
9778Can your partner pull that boat ashore alone?
9778Chisholm?"
9778Curious, is n''t it?"
9778Did n''t they cut off their hair to make bowstring for their abductors?"
9778Did n''t they treat you properly?"
9778Did you notice that Celia never stopped sewing while we were there, though she once or twice leaned back rather heavily in her chair?"
9778Do n''t you see what brought those old- time heroines into my mind?
9778Do you expect me to be acquainted with all your recent actions?"
9778Do you remember the time we crossed the divide in the snow?"
9778Do you think Mabel has taken Carroll down the Stanghyll ridge?"
9778Do you think it''s worth while going on?"
9778Do you think the term''s more appropriate?"
9778Do you want to sell me your knowledge?
9778Does n''t it give you a feeling that in some degree you''re master of your fate?
9778Does n''t the flesh shrink from them?"
9778Every minute you can save is precious, is n''t it?"
9778Had n''t you better get back to Vancouver before your English friends ruin you?"
9778Had n''t you better heave the boom up with the topping lift?"
9778Had you no money?"
9778Has it occurred to you that you did something of the same kind when you were at the Dene?
9778Have you any idea of getting the money back?"
9778Have you ever been over there?"
9778Have you said anything about it to his relatives?"
9778Have you succeeded in your search?"
9778He spoke for a few minutes, and then asked abruptly:"What are you going to offer?"
9778How are you going to manage, if the boys ca n''t tackle the thing?"
9778How could I believe anything else?"
9778How did he gain the necessary experience?"
9778How did it and the people you belong to strike you after the absence?"
9778How far would you trust that man?"
9778How have you got on?"
9778How much does your daughter earn?"
9778I believe that I understand the position-- they''ve been hanging fire, have n''t they?
9778I mean the elusive resemblance to their latter- day prototype?"
9778I suppose no news of what has happened here can have reached him?"
9778I suppose you feel you have to consider them?"
9778I suppose you looked for cold- blooded assurance, tempered by what one might call experienced coquetry?"
9778I suppose you mean that Howitson and Bendle are turning against him?"
9778I suppose you really could n''t take me back with you to Canada?"
9778I suppose you saw a good deal of her in England?"
9778I was n''t surprised-- how could I be?
9778I wonder if that is all you meant?"
9778I wonder if, even in your case, it will last so long?"
9778I wonder whatever brought them to a place like this?"
9778I wonder whether you can realize what a temptation it is to get away?"
9778I''ll be able to walk without a limp?"
9778I''m acquitted?"
9778If you exercise your option, you''ll sure pay it down to Seely?"
9778In a way, they''re consistent-- having smashed one barrier why should they respect the next?"
9778Is Mr. Vane with you?
9778Is her husband living?"
9778Is it any comfort to me?"
9778Is n''t that a serious thing?"
9778Is n''t that rather fine of him?"
9778Nairn?"
9778Nairn?"
9778No doubt you''re acquainted with the reason?"
9778Now, I''ve been wondering why she should be anxious to leave home?"
9778Shall I tell you that you are scarcely moved as yet?"
9778Shall we go on?"
9778She paused and looked at the girl fixedly as she asked:"What of him that could inspire it?"
9778Six weeks is the shortest limit, is n''t it?"
9778That follows, does n''t it?"
9778The next question is-- what shall we have for supper?"
9778The question is-- do you mean to slight these advances and go on as you have begun?"
9778There''s just another matter-- now that I wo n''t be here to trouble you, wo n''t you try to think of me leniently?"
9778To digress, why do you most admire Jephthah''s daughter, the gentle Gileadite?"
9778Vane?"
9778Vane?"
9778Vane?"
9778Was he under any obligation to share the latter with his informant''s heirs?
9778We''re friends, are n''t we?
9778Weel"--as the door opened--"what is it, Minnie?"
9778What I have to ask now is-- where is Vane?"
9778What becomes of the others?"
9778What did you say?"
9778What have we done?"
9778What have ye been after?"
9778What made you think of it?"
9778What were you doing so far up in the ranges?"
9778What will you make of it?"
9778What would I do yonder, after this other life?
9778What''s in those bags?"
9778When he next spoke, however, there was no hint of altruistic sentiment in his curt inquiry:"Are you going to sit there until you freeze?"
9778When''s the wedding to be?"
9778Where''s Hoggarth?"
9778Where''s Larry now?"
9778Whom have I to thank for suggesting it?"
9778Why are we left prosperous?
9778Why did n''t you let Drayton settle with the man?
9778Why should I be more particular than they were?"
9778Will you excuse us for a few minutes?"
9778Will you let her drown?"
9778Wo n''t you ask me to the wedding?"
9778Wo n''t you go on?"
9778Would n''t it be better if you ran back there?"
9778Ye will have friends who''ll be glad to see ye yonder?"
9778You gave him a check, I suppose?"
9778You mean we''re the cause of it?"
9778You''ll do all you can to find that spruce?"
9778You''re fond of paddling?"
9778exclaimed Vane;"do n''t you long for another sight of it now and then?"
6056A hat?
6056According to_ your_ experience, do you think there is a chance of his living through it?
6056After all these years of patient watching and waiting is she going back to the man who could have had her but would not? 6056 All right; wo n''t you come in?"
6056Am I speeding him to his execution?
6056Am I to lose her at last?
6056Am I to understand, Dolly, that your father might not-- not quite like for us to be together even like this, and is that why you are leaving me now?
6056And George and his wife?
6056And are you going to take me riding in it some day?
6056And for goodness''sake, what do they think of_ your_ set? 6056 And his mother-- I do n''t see her about; is she at home?"
6056And not for your_ own_ sake? 6056 And the rest of the family?"
6056And this evening?
6056And where are you going at this minute?
6056And which side were you on?
6056And you and I will help with suggestions, wo n''t we?
6056And you blew it in, of course?
6056And you did n''t call me?
6056And you think that will silence her permanently? 6056 And you-- you,_ yourself?_"Mostyn now fairly implored.
6056Answer me, Dick Mostyn, why did you treat me that way?
6056Anything gone wrong?
6056Anything mo'', Marse John?
6056Anything special going on?
6056Anything you want?
6056Are they at home? 6056 Are they doing well?"
6056Are they going to operate?
6056Are you a member of any church?
6056Are you afraid your investment in this bank is not a safe one?
6056Are you already worried over business?
6056Are you going to church this morning?
6056Are you going to get married?
6056Are you joking?
6056Are you_ sure?_ That''s what I want to know.
6056As far as I know the-- women of my family have--"Have what? 6056 Awful about Mr. Mostyn, ai n''t it?"
6056Besides, I shall write you, if-- if you will let me?
6056Busy just now?
6056But are n''t the women going to- night?
6056But my father?
6056But the subject,Mostyn urged her,"what is it?"
6056But, of course,Saunders flung out, tentatively,"you will not remain away long?"
6056Ca n''t you come up here? 6056 Ca n''t you tell by the way they stare and blink, like scared rabbits?
6056Can that actually be me?
6056Congratulate me? 6056 Could n''t you go to the bank with me?"
6056Dick, what has happened?
6056Did any mail come for me on the noon train?
6056Did n''t you hear what Dolly-- what your teacher said?
6056Did you ever in your life think of such a thing?
6056Did you hear that?
6056Did you want to see me?
6056Do I look like a fool? 6056 Do n''t you think a drive in the open air would do you good?"
6056Do you believe in omens?
6056Do you know that people who harbor such ideas generally go insane?
6056Do you know what you''ll do in another minute? 6056 Do you know where Irene is?"
6056Do you really mean it?
6056Do you reckon he went and told it? 6056 Do you see them?"
6056Do you think I care a snap what you like or do n''t like? 6056 Do you think I''m crazy?"
6056Do you think an operation will be necessary?
6056Do you think so?
6056Do you think so?
6056Do you think so?
6056Do you think that''s it?
6056Do you think you ought to entertain such fine- spun ideas in regard to him when-- when he is living as he is?
6056Do you want Daddy to rock you to sleep?
6056Do? 6056 Does she still actually love him, and will not this trouble and his presence here unite them again?
6056Dolly, what is the matter? 6056 Dolly,"he said,"what is it-- what is wrong?"
6056For instance?
6056George? 6056 Got anything to eat?"
6056Got the mate to that?
6056Guess who had me on the''phone?
6056Has Dolly got home from school?
6056Has Dolly told you about Cross& Mayhew?
6056Has Mr. Mitchell had his supper?
6056Has Saunders come down yet?
6056Has anything gone wrong?
6056Have n''t I promised you not to think of Andy in-- in any serious way?
6056Have women the right to vote?''
6056Have you just got home?
6056Have you read the morning papers?
6056Have you taken his temperature?
6056Have you--"Oh, me?
6056He is getting to be a great lover of nature, is n''t he? 6056 He speaks of my business head; what would he think of the investment I have just made?
6056How are you, Dolly?
6056How are you, Miss Stella?
6056How are you, brother?
6056How are you?
6056How can I help it?
6056How could I know?
6056How could it?
6056How did you happen to know that?
6056How did you happen to-- to get it?
6056How did you manage to stay out of the fold among so many religious people?
6056How do y- all come on?
6056How do you think the baby is now?
6056How is Robby now, Tobe?
6056How is Robby?
6056How is that?
6056How long has he had fever?
6056How much do those things cost?
6056How was that?
6056How_ could_ she have?
6056I did n''t expect at the time to have you going so constantly with a man that--"Oh, you did n''t?
6056I hardly think so, unless-- Say, why could n''t you get in and go over home with me? 6056 I made the one great mistake of my life when I-- you know what I mean, Saunders?"
6056I presume it will be some time before the consultation?
6056I reckon she told you that I am sorter strikin''out on a new line?
6056I suppose it''s the old complaint?
6056I suppose you heard of that silly duck fit of mine?
6056I suppose you''ve seen the morning paper?
6056I suppose your father got back?
6056I? 6056 I?
6056Is he at home?
6056Is it really so-- so serious as that?
6056Is n''t it queer?
6056Is n''t it simply awful?
6056Is that anything new?
6056Is that you, Dolly?
6056Is the boy-- is-- he worse?
6056Is the meeting to be public?
6056Is the operation over?
6056Is there anything I can do to help you?
6056Is there anything I can do?
6056Is there something in the paper about him?
6056Is this my last word with him?
6056Is your father at home?
6056Lady with you, sir?
6056Looks like ham gravy, do n''t it?
6056Make a speech? 6056 Mama and papa said I must call you''Uncle Dick,''but you are not my really,_ really_ uncle, are you?"
6056Marry? 6056 Match?"
6056Me? 6056 Me?
6056Me?
6056Mine? 6056 Mine?"
6056Mitchell thinks I am a financial wonder, does he? 6056 My God, does she still care for him?"
6056My friend?
6056My-- my relations?
6056News,she said, with the eagerness of a child, as he pulled upward on the strap,"for me?"
6056No; what is it?
6056No; where has she gone?
6056Now you will sleep, wo n''t you?
6056Now, now can you see?
6056Oh, God, is it actually to be?
6056Oh, how are you?
6056Oh, is n''t it splendid-- splendid?
6056Oh, is that so?
6056Oh, is that you?
6056Oh, really, is it possible?
6056Oh, will you, Daddy, will you?
6056Oh, you do?
6056Oh, you do?
6056Oh,_ is n''t_ it lovely?
6056Oh,_ is_ you? 6056 Only_ one_ of them,"he repeated, with a sudden guilty start--"what do you mean?"
6056Perhaps it is n''t, but what does it matter?
6056Play? 6056 Ruin you?"
6056Run down?
6056Shall I see you again before you go back?
6056Shall you be in Atlanta again this summer?
6056She has no curiosity at all to know how-- how my marriage terminated?
6056So Dick declared himself?
6056So he''s lying down, is he?
6056So that''s got out already?
6056So you are here at last?
6056So you have come_ here_ to devil him, have you?
6056So you really are going?
6056Something about your child?
6056Such a serious step would seem funny in me, would n''t it? 6056 Surely not about-- about me and Irene?"
6056Take a drink? 6056 The way she is acting?"
6056Then from what you say I gather that she does n''t mention me?
6056Then you wo n''t oblige me?
6056They are both well, I believe?
6056Think they are goin''to swarm?
6056This is Mr. Mostyn, ai n''t it?
6056Uncle John, you know Gid is a moonshiner, do n''t you?
6056Uncle John,she faltered,"I want you to-- to tell me what he comes to see father so often about?"
6056Was it something serious?
6056Was it-- was it wise for us to arrive like this-- in the same cab?
6056Was n''t you sitting on the porch of the store?
6056Well, then, what is the matter?
6056Well, what is it, then?
6056Well, what luck have you had with your speech?
6056Well, you know, I presume, that his uncle left him a lot of money when he died the other day?
6056Well,she ejaculated,"when are you going to make a real clean breast of it?"
6056Whar''s your bucket?
6056What ails him?
6056What am I to do?
6056What are these people living for-- what, after all?
6056What are you beating about the bush for? 6056 What are you driving at?"
6056What are you fixing up so for, Miss Sally- Lou?
6056What are you thinking about?
6056What can be done? 6056 What caused this?"
6056What do you mean by mentioning_ me_ in that sort of connection?
6056What do you mean?
6056What do you mean?
6056What do you mean?
6056What do you propose?
6056What do you think I ought to do?
6056What do you think?
6056What do you want, Dolly?
6056What does she want?
6056What has happened?
6056What has this to do with his affairs?
6056What have you been doing to yourself?
6056What have you got to do just now?
6056What is Dick crying about?
6056What is it now?
6056What is it, Dolly?
6056What is it, dear?
6056What is it? 6056 What is it?"
6056What is it?
6056What is it?
6056What is it?
6056What is it?
6056What is that road, Marie?
6056What is that?
6056What is that?
6056What is the matter, Dick?
6056What is the matter, George?
6056What is the matter?
6056What is the use of talking about that, Marie?
6056What is the use to talk more of it?
6056What is the use?
6056What is this I hear Of your club- meeting to- night?
6056What is wrong?
6056What made you think so?
6056What man has n''t?
6056What more success could a man want than he gets? 6056 What sort o''cloth are you goin''to use in your waist?"
6056What sort of subjects does your society take up?
6056What the hell''s the matter with you?
6056What time do you all begin your meetin''to- night?
6056What time do you have luncheon?
6056What was it, Dolly?
6056What was she telephoning you about?
6056What was the matter?
6056What were you wondering, Dolly?
6056What will be the end?
6056What would be your price?
6056What you have found out?
6056What''s the trouble here?
6056What''s wrong now?
6056What''s wrong now?
6056When I get to sleep what are you going to do with me?
6056When do you leave?
6056When is he coming?
6056When will the letter reach him?
6056When will you ever drop that? 6056 When?
6056Where does it hurt most when I press down?
6056Where does it hurt you?
6056Where have you been all day?
6056Where is Irene?
6056Who did they ketch?
6056Who is it?
6056Who is that father is talking to, Uncle John?
6056Who is that man?
6056Who knows? 6056 Who told you you could be out o''school, young feller?"
6056Whose place was it?
6056Why ca n''t we come to an agreement? 6056 Why did n''t I say what I want to say?
6056Why did n''t you send for the doctor?
6056Why did you come, Dick?
6056Why did you-- do that?
6056Why do n''t you go out and play with the balance an''limber yourself up?
6056Why do n''t you throw it over and be done with it?
6056Why do you ask?
6056Why have you not worn it before?
6056Why not?
6056Why should you say_ if_ I will let you? 6056 Why, Tobe, what is the matter?
6056Why, what are you doing away out here?
6056Why, what has happened?
6056Why-- why,he faltered, his little lips puckered sympathetically,"what is the matter?"
6056Wo n''t you come into the waiting- room and take a seat?
6056Wo n''t you get down and come in a moment?
6056Wo n''t you take a seat?
6056Wo n''t you take a smoke before you turn in?
6056Would you advise--he began, hesitatingly,"would you advise me to return to Atlanta to- morrow-- on-- on account of this silly thing?"
6056Yes, I want to know if your wife has written or telegraphed you since she got to Knoxville?
6056You ca n''t mean that he''s ever gone so-- so far as actually to speak of me in-- in connection with his daughter?
6056You do n''t mean, Dick, that he really, really loves me?
6056You do n''t say?
6056You have it?
6056You have seen the Warner farm, have n''t you?
6056You heard me blowin'', did n''t you?
6056You heard what I said, did n''t you?
6056You make it as an offer?
6056You mean Dolly?
6056You mean that she saw me kiss you?
6056You say you did?
6056You say you do?
6056You say-- you-- heard?
6056You see that?
6056You see, you--"Did n''t like it? 6056 You want to know his pedigree?"
6056You were not expecting to see this mountain greenhorn down here, were you?
6056You will stop eating trash, wo n''t you, Dick?
6056You-- you give it to me?
6056Your fears?
6056Your sister and Drake, how are they?
6056_ Ought_ it to be? 6056 After all, had any man the right to inflict an ordeal of that sort upon an unsuspecting child? 6056 Am I the scum of creation all at once? 6056 And as for Ann, do you know you did me a wonderful favor in regard to her?
6056And when they are alone together, as they will be in a few minutes on the road, what more natural than that he should caress her?
6056Ann cried, her begrimed fingers clutching at Dolly''s arm,"what does it mean?
6056Are you blind?
6056Are you in a big hurry?"
6056Being what she already was, what would not opportunity, travel, higher environment bring to her?
6056Buckton?"
6056But could he possibly do such a thing?
6056But what sort of start appealed to you?
6056But what was the use?
6056But when are you going back home?"
6056But why think of that when the other thing hung like a sinister pall above him?
6056But, say, Dick"--she was eying his face with slow curiosity--"what is the matter?
6056Can I urge him to come-- will it be possible for me sincerely to pen the words which may seal my doom?
6056Can this be the beginning of my end?"
6056Could n''t we go together?"
6056Could n''t you be here then?"
6056Could that harsh semblance of a man be himself?
6056Could this full- blown rose of young womanhood, this startling beauty, be the slip of a timid girl he had so lightly treated three years ago?
6056Did Providence, Fate, or whatever the ruling force was, intend this as his crowning punishment?
6056Did n''t you make me what I am?
6056Did the doctor say there was no-- no hope?"
6056Did you ever hear tell of the Tom Collins gag?"
6056Did you ever in all your life hear of bigger fools?
6056Did you know that?
6056Did you run across him?"
6056Do n''t you know-- can''t you see?
6056Do you get at my meaning, sir?"
6056Do you know I did n''t sleep more than an hour last night?"
6056Do you know everybody is laughing over your interest in Dick Mostyn?
6056Do you know if he gets your stock that he will hold a larger interest than mine?"
6056Do you know the sort of election the women will hold, Warren, if they ever get a chance?"
6056Do you know what I think, Jarvis?
6056Do you know what I tried to see you about the other day when I was there?
6056Do you know what is at the bottom of it all?
6056Do you know what that''s meant for?
6056Do you know, Mr. Saunders, the queerest thing to me in all the world is that I am Dolly Drake?
6056Do you know, that poor woman has had nothing but sorrow as her portion all her married life?
6056Do you reckon they''ve got their paper yet?"
6056Do you suppose he could possibly know who I am?"
6056Do you suppose it could possibly-- in any way-- injure Dick''s business?"
6056Do you think that a man loses respect for a girl who will act as-- as boldly as I did?
6056Do you think-- do you imagine-- is it possible that you-- who do you think that man was?"
6056Do you want to run up and wash your hands?"
6056Dolly is in this plight simply because she saved you--""Saved_ me?_ What the hell--""Yes, she saved you from arrest and imprisonment as a moonshiner.
6056Going to the country this summer?
6056Had he not suspected Dolly, even when she had been most courageous and self- sacrificing?
6056Had he the requisite moral strength for a procedure so foreign from his nature?
6056Had the impalpable hand, reaching for him, descended on his offspring?
6056Have n''t I got a right to know about that child?
6056Have n''t you sworn that you care more for me than any one else?
6056Have you been blind all this time?
6056Have you been tryin''to pull that seine through the creek by yourself?"
6056Have you engaged yourself to this_ new_ one?"
6056Have you ever calculated how much they make out of you?"
6056Have you happened to see Andy Buckton about town to- day?"
6056He looked at me as if surprised that any one should ask such a question, and do you know what he answered?"
6056He makes money, but_ how_?
6056How can I refrain now when I have no one depending on me and Henderson has that helpless family of his?
6056How can he look at her, hear her voice, and not burn with triumphant pride?
6056How could Delbridge smile in his smug way, as he chewed his cigar and boasted of a new club of which he was the president?
6056How could Wright put up with his moderate salary and stand all day at that prison window?
6056How could he do a thing as silly as that?
6056How could he exchange platitudes, discuss politics, market- reports, or listen to new jokes?
6056How could he explain?
6056How could he part with her like that?
6056How could he think of becoming the son- in- law of a man like Tom Drake?
6056How goes it?"
6056How is it in the city?"
6056How is your plantation?"
6056How_ could_ a checker- playin''business like that tire anybody?"
6056I am a fool, and yet-- and yet-- what_ am_ I to do?"
6056I could n''t marry you--""You''d rather die than do it, had n''t you?"
6056I did n''t want to bother to go around to the gate, so what do you think I did?
6056I reckon you hain''t never"--Webb hesitated--"married a second time?"
6056I remember he called out to me just before bed- time,''Brother, how goes it?''
6056I simply trusted Mostyn with my all-- my life''s blood-- don''t you see?
6056I want to see Ann grow up and marry well, but what decent man would care to tie himself to a family of jail birds?
6056Is it Mostyn?
6056Is it any wonder that so many mothers of unmarried daughters consider him a safe catch for their girls?
6056Is it so?
6056Is n''t that awful?
6056Is n''t that nice?
6056Is there any likelihood of her marrying?"
6056Is there anything I can do for you?"
6056Is-- is he in prison?"
6056It has been all I could do to--""What''s the child talkin''about?"
6056It is a beautiful old place, is n''t it?"
6056It is n''t so, is it, Dolly?
6056It is n''t the first time persons have acted this way and come out all right, is it?
6056It is odd, is n''t it, to see a man mortified by the success of his own son?
6056It was this: Is it possible for human beings in the present day to obey the commandment of Jesus to love your neighbor as yourself?"
6056Love you?
6056Mitchell folded his paper, eyed her suspiciously for a moment, and then asked:"Is Andrew Buckton going to Atlantic City?
6056Mostyn still loved her in secret; of that Saunders had little doubt, for how could a man once embraced by such a creature ever forget it?
6056Mostyn whispered in agony,"what_ am_ I?"
6056Mostyn?"
6056Mostyn?"
6056Now, tell me, what did you do?"
6056Of course, Saunders told you of my land deal?"
6056Oh, God, am I really to lose her after all?
6056Oh, I thought-- I thought it was actually settled, but if-- if the paper tells the truth-- Why do n''t you talk?
6056Oh, wo n''t they talk at home?
6056Oh,_ ca n''t_ you see?"
6056Once the Governor broke in and said,''But how about_ your own_ case?''
6056Or, for that matter, why had she not telephoned him?
6056Or, in other words, can the mind of man develop in a busy, crowded place as well as in a quiet spot in the country?
6056Robby is n''t worse, is he?"
6056Say, Dolly, it ai n''t true, is it, that you intend to stand up for women goin''to the polls?"
6056Say, do you know I''m to blame?
6056Say, do you know how he got his start-- the money he put in this bank?
6056Say, you know him pretty well; do you reckon he will go?"
6056Seeing him, she asked:"Is everything ready, Jasper?"
6056Shall I-- mention you-- that is, would you like for me to express your-- sympathies?"
6056She said she was going to write you-- did you get a note?"
6056She was silent for a moment, then she asked:"Do you believe in premonitions?"
6056Should he go to the club, as he sometimes did to pass an evening?
6056Should he lie down and try to snatch a little sleep?
6056Should he wake him and explain the situation?
6056So it is really settled?"
6056Surely you do n''t oppose my-- my marriage?"
6056Surely you will not put us out to- night?"
6056That is the Capitol, is n''t it?"
6056That''s common sense, ai n''t it?"
6056That''s our county, is n''t it?"
6056The question was: Which is the better place to rear a man, the city or the country?
6056The time is nearly up-- only two days left, and I-- My God, do you think I can live after that boy is put in jail?
6056Then my own sister--""What''s wrong with Ann?
6056Then what did he do?
6056Then what do you reckon?
6056Timmons?"
6056Was he afraid that Buckton would gossip about what he had just seen, and that the public would brand him afresh with the discarded habits of the past?
6056Was his desire for reformation as strong as he had once thought it?
6056Was his interest in the girl grounded only in a subtle form of restrained passion?
6056Was his sister right?
6056Was it Mitchell''s petulant complaints of his daughter''s conduct, or was it what he had said about his grandchild?
6056Was it due to his return to his proper social plane?
6056Was it possible that he had really thought seriously of marrying her?
6056Was it possible that his imagination had tricked him into believing that he loved the girl and could make actual sacrifices for her?
6056Was it some strange psychic sympathy or bond of blood between his motherless offspring and himself?
6056Was it the fellow''s confident allusion to Mitchell and his daughter?
6056Was it the sight of Delbridge and his mention of Mostyn''s financial prowess?
6056Was it vague displeasure?
6056Was it wounded pride?
6056Was it, he asked himself, a farewell salute?
6056Was the other life sheer delusion?
6056Was thought- transference a scientific fact, as many hold, and was the insistent impression due to the bearing of culpable minds upon his?
6056Well, did he-- did he?
6056Well, do you want to sell_ me_ your stock?"
6056Well, well, what''s to be done?"
6056Well, what do you think?
6056What are Alan Delbridge''s operations to me?
6056What are you all talkin''about, anyway?
6056What are you talking about?
6056What can be done?"
6056What could be done?
6056What could be more glorious?
6056What could the limp, pale- faced stenographers in their simple dresses hope for?
6056What do I mean?
6056What do you say?
6056What do you say?"
6056What do you think he will do about it, Kitty?"
6056What do you think?
6056What does it say?"
6056What does the whole thing mean?
6056What had wrought the change?
6056What has got into you all at once?
6056What if Irene and Buckton were having their fun; could he not also enjoy himself?
6056What in the name of common sense does he come to_ me_ for?
6056What is it that always checks me?
6056What is the matter, brother?
6056What is the matter?
6056What is the use of holding out longer?
6056What is the use?"
6056What is to prevent him-- the helpless replica of myself-- from taking the way I took?
6056What man of his acquaintance could claim such a bride as she would make?
6056What mattered it now who held the office of president?
6056What more admirable course could a penitent man pursue?
6056What need had he now of money?
6056What was it that kept coupling this hurried trip of hers with Buckton?
6056What was it that kept whispering within him that here and here alone was the balm for such wounds as his?
6056What was to be done-- what_ could_ be done?
6056What would his fashionable sister and his entire social set think?
6056What would old Mitchell say?
6056What would the morrow bring forth?
6056What would you do with her?
6056What''s the use o''hurryin''?
6056What-- what are you going to do?"
6056Where have they put''im-- where have they put''i m?
6056Who bought it in-- my God, who do you reckon bid it in for twenty- five cents on the dollar?
6056Who can tell?"
6056Who knows, perhaps_ his_ luck will turn?
6056Who knows?
6056Who knows?
6056Who may I say it is?"
6056Who would grind the corn and till the soil and do all the rest of the dirty work?
6056Why am I constantly thinking of that old man, unless it is because he has predicted my ruin so confidently?
6056Why are you so awfully mysterious?"
6056Why did I think of him?
6056Why did n''t I tell her how I feel and throw myself on her mercy?
6056Why did you do so much for him?"
6056Why had he clasped them so warmly?
6056Why should I want to be like him?"
6056Why should he beat about the bush?
6056Why should he conceal from any one the knowledge of her shame?
6056Why should he let the matter disturb him?
6056Why should n''t I?
6056Why, did n''t Ann just as good as tell me t''other day, on her way home from school, that she was goin''to a fine finishin''-school in Atlanta?
6056Will you be ready soon?"
6056Will you come?"
6056Will you-- would you mind giving your old uncle a hug with-- with_ both_ your arms?"
6056Will you?"
6056Would he tire of her; would he be ashamed of her, here amid these surroundings?
6056Would n''t you be a pretty idiot?
6056Yes, she was his; her whole wonderful, warm, throbbing being was his; and yet-- and yet how could it be?
6056Yo''know what,''ooman?
6056You are not a cold- blooded murderer, are you?
6056You can see through that, ca n''t you?
6056You do n''t mean that he would throw up the job?"
6056You do not care a snap for your wife; what is it that makes you look like a ghost of your old jolly self?"
6056You know my manager, Hobson, of course?"
6056You know old Tom Drake''s place near your farm?
6056You know, perhaps, that Ann used to care a good deal for that reckless fellow Abe Westbrook?"
6056You never accept such invitations, so how could you expect people to run after you with them?"
6056You recall the picnic over the mountain last spring?"
6056You remember the big investments you advised him to make in wild timberlands in Alabama and North Georgia a few years ago?
6056You remember the time your ma thought some niggers had broke in an''stole a lot that was shelled?
6056You saw that fellow with Ann just now?
6056You say you love me, and I_ know_ I love you, so why should you_ not_ let me kiss you?
6056You seem to stay out of it, but what if you do?
6056You will be at the bank after a while, wo n''t you?"
6056You will let me say that, wo n''t you?"
6056You''ve got to settle with me, and quick, too, for something you did--""I_ did?_"he gasped, in slow surprise.
6056You?"
6056Your wife and her fellow are having a good time; why should n''t you?
6056_"Run down?
6056and did you hear?"
6056bother you!_ Is that the way to talk to me?
6056does she still love him, and will he always stand between me and my happiness?"
6056he asked, under his breath, and yet audibly--"that is, in case I-- I found another use for the money?"
6056he cried aloud,"are you close to me now?
6056he is lovely, is n''t he?
6056how did this ever come about?
6056how?"
6056if you women are so dead bent on splicin''folks why do n''t you keep your eyes open?
6056what could be done?
6056what happened?
6056you know now, do n''t you, how it feels to squirm under public scorn and lose something you hold dear?
44099), how is it that guns can kick when they have no legs?
44099A Dutch-- S. When is a secret like a paint- brush?
44099A lady asked a gentleman how old he was?
44099A man bought two fishes, but on taking them home found he had three; how was this?
44099A member of the Travelers''wants to know what dish he must have ordered for dinner to be like one journeying to Tangier?
44099A pudding- bag is a pudding- bag, and a pudding- bag has what everything else has; what is it?
44099And ere the day should dawn again, Where might the sailor be?
44099And if you saw a peach with a bird on it, and you wished to get the peach without disturbing the bird, what would you do?
44099And what do they do when they die?
44099And when is a charade like a fir- tree?
44099And, per contra, when does a man sit down to a melancholy-- we had nearly said melon- cholic-- dessert?
44099Apropos of blacks, why is a shoe- black like an editor?
44099Apropos of convents, what man had no father?
44099Apropos of money, etc., why are lawyers such uneasy sleepers?
44099Apropos of pork hanging, what should a man about to be hung have for breakfast?
44099As we are told that A was not always the first letter of the alphabet, please tell us when B was the first?
44099At what period of his sorrow does a widower recover the loss of his dear departed?
44099At what time was Adam married?
44099B R and Y, and O D V. Which are the two most disagreeable letters if you get too much of them?
44099Because Ham was sent there, and his followers mustard( mustered) and bre(a)d. Why is the Hebrew persuasion the best of all persuasions?
44099Because he makes A poke- R and shove- L, and gets paid for so doing?
44099Because it is a gal- pup- ill( gall(_o_)p up(_ h_)ill. What is a dogma-- not a dog ma-- a dogma?
44099Because they nose( knows) everything?
44099Because we_ must_ B before we can C. Why is the letter W like scandal?
44099Did King Charles consent to be executed with a cold chop?
44099Do you know the soldier''s definition of a kiss?
44099Do you know what the_ oldest_ piece of furniture in the world is?
44099Do you rem- ember ever to have heard what the embers of the expiring year are called?
44099Do?
44099Does it take more miles to make a land league than it does a water league?
44099Ever eating, ever cloying, Never finding full repast, All devouring, all destroying, Till it eats the world at last?
44099Give a good definition for ca nt?
44099Give the positive, comparative, and superlative degrees of getting on in the world?
44099Give the positive, comparative, and superlative degrees of the adjective solemn, with illustrations of the meaning of the word?
44099How can a rare piece of acting be well done?
44099How can venison never be cheap?
44099How can you instantly convict one of error when stating who was the earliest poet?
44099How can you make one pound of green tea go as far as five pounds of black?
44099How can you tell a girl of the name of Ellen that she is everything that is delightful in eight letters?
44099How can you, by changing the pronunciation of a word only, turn mirth into crime?
44099How did the sandwiches come into the desert?
44099How do angry women prove themselves strong- nerved?
44099How do lawyers often prove their love to their neighbors?
44099How do we know Lord Byron did not wear a wig?
44099How do we know Lord Byron was good- tempered?
44099How do we know that Jupiter wore very pinching boots?
44099How do you spell"blind pig"in two letters?
44099How does a tipsy man generally look?
44099How is a successful gambler always an agreeable fellow?
44099How is it you can never tell a lady''s real hysterics from her sham ones?
44099How many Spanish noblemen does it take to make one American run?
44099How many people does a termagant of a wife make herself and worser half amount to?
44099How many young ladies does it take to reach from New York to Philadelphia?
44099How so?
44099How so?
44099How to keep yourself dry?
44099How was this?
44099I seldom speak, but in my sleep; I never cry, but sometimes weep; Chameleon- like, I live on air, And dust to me is dainty fare?
44099If Hanlon fell off his trapeze, what would he fall against?
44099If I were to see you riding on a donkey, what fruit should I be reminded of?
44099If Old Nick were to lose his tail, where would he go to supply the deficiency?
44099If Tom owes Bob money and gives him a blow in the eye, why is that a satisfactory settlement?
44099If a Colt''s pistol has six barrels, how many ought a horse pistol to have?
44099If a bear were to go into a dry- goods store, what would he want?
44099If a bee could stand on its hind legs, what blessing would it invoke?
44099If a dirty sick man be ordered to wash to get well, why is it like four letters of the alphabet?
44099If a gentleman asked his lady- love to take one kind of wine, while he drank another, what two countries would he name?
44099If a man attempts to jump a ditch, and falls, why is he likely to miss the beauties of Summer?
44099If a tough beef- steak could speak, what English poet would it mention?
44099If a tree were to break a window, what would the window say?
44099If a young lady were to wish her father to pull her on the river, what classical name might she mention?
44099If all the seas were dried up, what would Neptune say?
44099If an attorney sent his clerk to a client with a bill and the client tells him to"go to the d----l,"where does the clerk go?
44099If an egg were found on a music- stool, what poem of Sir Walter Scott''s would it remind you of?
44099If the poker, shovel, and tongs cost$ 7.75, what would a ton of coals come to?
44099If there was a bird on a perch, and you wanted the perch, how would you get it without disturbing the bird?
44099If you become surety at a police- court for the reappearance of prisoners, why are you like the most extraordinary ass that ever lived?
44099If you drive a nail in a board and clinch it on the other side, why is it like a sick man?
44099If you met a pig in tears, what animal''s name might you mention to it?
44099If you suddenly saw a house on fire, what three celebrated authors would you feel at once disposed to name?
44099If you were invited to an assembly, what single word would call the musicians to their posts, and at the same time tell you the hour to begin dancing?
44099If you were kissing a young lady, who was very spooney( and a nice, ladel- like girl), what would be her opinion of newspapers during the operation?
44099If you wish a very religious man to go to sleep, by what imperial name should you address him?
44099In what age was gum- arabic introduced?
44099In what place did the cock crow so loud that all the world heard him?
44099In what respect do modern customs differ materially from ancient ones?
44099In what tongue did Balaam''s donkey speak?
44099Inform us concerning the difference which exists between a soldier fighting in battle and one who has had his legs shot off?
44099Let us inquire why a vine is like a soldier?
44099Letter E. Why is the letter D like a squalling child?
44099Mention the name of an object which has two heads, one tail, four legs on one side, and two on the other?
44099My first I do, and my second-- when I say you are my whole-- I do not?
44099My first is a prop, my second''s a prop, and my whole is a prop?
44099My first is irrational, My second is rational, My third mechanical, My whole scientific?
44099My first is not, nor is my second, and there is no doubt that, until you have guessed this puzzle, you may reckon it my whole?
44099My first is the cause of my second, and my whole ought never to be broken, though unless it be holy, and be kept so, you ca n''t keep it at all?
44099My_ first_ if''tis lost, music''s not worth a straw; My_ second''s_ most graceful(?)
44099Name the difference between a field of oats and M. F. Tupper?
44099Name the most unsociable things in the world?
44099O and P run a race; we bet upon O, but P wins; why are we then like the fragrant Latakiah which is given us when we ask for the homely bird''s- eye?
44099O tell us what kind of servants are best for hotels?
44099On what day of the year do women talk least?
44099On what side of a church does a yew- tree grow?
44099Pa- pa. How is it the affections of young ladies, notwithstanding they may protest and vow constancy, are always doubtful?
44099Page 11: What Island would form a cheerful luncheon party?
44099Page 22: Why is is a fretful man like a hard- baked loaf?
44099Page 24: Why are certain Member''s speeches in the_ Times_ like a brick wall?
44099Page 26: Why is a boiled herring like a rotton potato?
44099Page 30: and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruse?
44099Page 58: the other turns his quartz into gold?
44099Page 6: Because they nose( knows) everything?
44099Proposed, and was accepted-- need we say?
44099Some one mentioning that"columba"was the Latin for a"dove,"it gave rise to the following: What is the difference between the Old World and the New?
44099State the difference between a grocer selling a pound of sugar, and an apothecary''s boy with a pestle and mortar?
44099Take away one letter from me and I murder; take away two and I probably shall die, if my whole does not save me?
44099Talking about waistcoats, why was Balaam like a Lifeguardsman?
44099Tell us the best way to make the hours go fast?
44099Tell us why it is vulgar to send a telegram?
44099Tempest?
44099The beginning of eternity, The end of time and space, The beginning of every end, The end of every race?
44099The proverb says,"One swallow does not make Spring;"when is the proverb wrong?
44099There are twelve birds in a covey; Jones kills a brace, then how many remain?
44099To be said to your_ inamorata_, your lady love: What''s the difference between Jupiter and your very humble servant?
44099Transpose it, and to king and saint, And great and good you pay it?
44099Un filou peut- il prendre pour devise, Honneur à   Dieu?
44099Watching which dancer reminds you of an ancient law?
44099Watt''s Tupper''s Wordsworth( what''s Tupper''s words worth)?
44099We beg leave to ax you which of a carpenter''s tool is coffee- like?
44099We beg leave to ax you which of a carpenter''s tools is coffee- like?
44099We beg leave to ax you which of a carpenter''s tools is coffee- like?
44099What Christian name, besides Anna, reads the same both ways?
44099What Egyptian official would a little boy mention if he were to call his mother to the window to see something wonderful?
44099What Island would form a cheerful luncheon party?
44099What Islands would form a cheerful luncheon party?
44099What animal took the most luggage in the Ark, and which the least?
44099What are the dimensions of a little elbow room?
44099What are the most disagreeable articles for a man to keep on hand?
44099What author would eye- glasses and spectacles mention to the world if they could only speak?
44099What became of Lot when his wife was turned into a pillar of salt?
44099What can a man have in his pocket when it is empty?
44099What class of people bears a name meaning"I ca n''t improve?"
44099What composer''s name can you give in three letters?
44099What constellation most resembles an empty fire- place?
44099What contains more feet in winter than in summer?
44099What did Jack Frost say when he kissed the violet?
44099What did the pistol- ball say to the wounded duelist?
44099What did the rose say to the sun?
44099What did the seven wise men of Greece do when they met the sage of Hindoostan?
44099What did the sky- terrier do when he came out of the ark?
44099What did the tea- kettle say when tied to the little dog''s tail?
44099What does a man who has had a glass too much call a chronometer?
44099What does a salmon breeder do to that fish''s ova?
44099What does an aeronaut do after inflating his balloon?
44099What does an iron- clad vessel of war, with four inches of steel plating and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise?
44099What evidence have we that Adam used sugar?
44099What extraordinary kind of meat is to be bought in the Isle of Wight?
44099What fashionable game do frogs play at-- besides leap- frog?
44099What flowers are there between a lady''s nose and chin?
44099What fur did Adam and Eve wear?
44099What game does a lady''s bustle resemble?
44099What games are most played by soldiers?
44099What goes most against a farmer''s grain?
44099What great astronomer is like Venus''s chariot?
44099What grows the less tired the more it works?
44099What hairy Centaur could not possibly be spared from the story of Hercules?
44099What herb is most injurious to a lady''s beauty?
44099What is a good sleeping- draught?
44099What is a very good definition of nonsense?
44099What is an artist to do when he is out of canvas?
44099What is better than an indifferent singer in a drawing- room after dinner?
44099What is better than presence of mind in a railroad accident?
44099What is it gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor''s bill?
44099What is it gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor''s bill?
44099What is it that occurs twice in a moment, once in a minute, and not once in a thousand years?
44099What is more chilling to an ardent lover than the beautiful''s no?
44099What is most like a horse''s foot?
44099What is necessary to a farmer to assist him?
44099What is one of the greatest, yet withal most melancholy wonders in life?
44099What is taken from you before you get it?
44099What is that a woman frequently gives her lovely countenance to, yet never takes kindly?
44099What is that from which you may take away the whole, and yet have some left?
44099What is that thing which we all eat and all drink, though it is often a man and often a woman?
44099What is that thing, and the name of a bird, which, if we had not, we should die?
44099What is that which a young girl looks for, but does not wish to find?
44099What is that which belongs to yourself, yet is used by every one more than yourself?
44099What is that which every one wishes, and yet wants to get rid of as soon as it is obtained?
44099What is that which is always in visible yet never out of sight?
44099What is that which is black, white, and red all over, which shows some people to be green, and makes others look black and blue?
44099What is that which is put on the table and cut, but never eaten?
44099What is that which makes everything visible, but is itself unseen?
44099What is that which must play before it can work?
44099What is that which never asks questions, yet requires many answers?
44099What is that which no one wishes to have, yet no one wishes to lose?
44099What is that which stands fast, yet sometimes runs fast?
44099What is that which the dead and the living do at the same time?
44099What is that which ties two persons and only one touches?
44099What is that which we all swallow before we speak?
44099What is that which you can go nowhere without, and yet is of no use to you?
44099What is that which, supposing its greatest breadth to be four inches, length nine inches, and depth three inches, contains a solid foot?
44099What is that which, though black itself, enlightens the world?
44099What is that which, when you are going over the White Mountains, goes up- hill and down- hill, and all over everywhere, yet never moves?
44099What is the best advice to give a justice of the peace?
44099What is the best day for making pan- cakes?
44099What is the best way of making a coat last?
44099What is the best way to hide a bear; it does n''t matter how big he is-- bigger the better?
44099What is the best way to keep a man''s love?
44099What is the best word of command to give a lady who is crossing a muddy road?
44099What is the characteristic of a watch?
44099What is the cheapest way of procuring a fiddle?
44099What is the differedce betweed ad orgadist ad the influedza?
44099What is the difference between Solomon and Rothschild?
44099What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and Signor Mario?
44099What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and a Baptist?
44099What is the difference between a chess- player and an habitual toper?
44099What is the difference between a chicken who ca n''t hold its head up and seven days?
44099What is the difference between a choir- master and ladies''dresses, A. D. 1869?
44099What is the difference between a cloud and a whipped child?
44099What is the difference between a correspondent and a co- respondent?
44099What is the difference between a fixed star and a meteor?
44099What is the difference between a hen and an idle musician?
44099What is the difference between a horse who, being entered for a race, is withdrawn, and one who starts in a race and is beaten?
44099What is the difference between a man who has nothing to do and a laborer?
44099What is the difference between a middle- aged cooper and a trooper of the middle ages?
44099What is the difference between a mother with a large family and a barber?
44099What is the difference between a premiere danseuse and a duck?
44099What is the difference between a soldier and a fisherman?
44099What is the difference between a spendthrift and a pillow?
44099What is the difference between a tight boot and an oak tree?
44099What is the difference between a wealthy toper and a skillful miner?
44099What is the difference between a winter storm and a child with a cold?
44099What is the difference between a young lady and a wide- awake hat?
44099What is the difference between a young maiden of sixteen and an old maid of sixty?
44099What is the difference between an alarm bell put on a window at night and half an oyster?
44099What is the difference between an auction and sea- sickness?
44099What is the difference between an honest and a dishonest laundress?
44099What is the difference between homicide and pig- sticking?
44099What is the difference between killed soldiers and repaired garments?
44099What is the difference between photography and the whooping- cough?
44099What is the difference between the Emperor of Russia and a beggar?
44099What is the difference between the cradle and the grave?
44099What is the difference between the earth and the sea?
44099What is the difference between the manner of the death of a barber and a sculptor?
44099What is the difference between the punctual arrival of a train and a collision?
44099What is the first thing you do when you get into bed?
44099What is the greatest instance on record of the power of the magnet?
44099What is the greatest miracle ever worked in Ireland?
44099What is the height of folly?
44099What is the most ancient mention made of a banking transaction?
44099What is the most difficult river on which to get a boat?
44099What is the most melancholy fact in the history of Milton?
44099What is the most wonderful animal in the farm- yard?
44099What is the only form in this world which all nations, barbarous, civilized, and otherwise, are agreed upon following?
44099What is the proper length for ladies''crinoline?
44099What is the superlative of temper?
44099What is the very best and cheapest light, especially for painters?
44099What is the wind like in a storm?
44099What is this?
44099What is worse than raining cats and dogs?
44099What kind of a book might a man wish his wife to resemble?
44099What kind of a cat may be found in every library?
44099What kind of a cravat would a hog be most likely to choose?
44099What kind of a hen lays the longest?
44099What kind of a loan is surest to"raise the wind?"
44099What letter in the Dutch alphabet will name an English lady of title?
44099What letter of the Greek alphabet did the ex- King Otho probably last think of on leaving Athens?
44099What makes a pet dog wag his tail when he sees his master?
44099What makes more noise than a pig in a sty?
44099What mechanic never turns to the left?
44099What moral sentence does a weathercock suggest?
44099What most resembles a cat looking out of a garret window, amid a sheltering bower of jessamine and woodbine?
44099What musical instrument invites you to fish?
44099What must be done to conduct a newspaper right?
44099What number had she at first?
44099What one word will name the common parent of both beast and man?
44099What part of Spain does our cat, sleeping by herself on the hearth- rug, resemble?
44099What part of a bag of grain is like a Russian soldier?
44099What part of a lady''s dress can a blacksmith make?
44099What part of a lady''s face in January is like a celebrated fur?
44099What part of a locomotive train ought to have the most careful attention?
44099What part of your ear would be the most essential for a martial band?
44099What parts of what animals are like the spring and autumn gales?
44099What piece of coin is double its value by deducting its half?
44099What plant is fatal to mice?
44099What poem of Hood''s resembles a tremendous Roman nose?
44099What pomatum do you imagine a woman with very pretty feet uses for her hair?
44099What prevents a running river running right away?
44099What proverb must a lawyer not act up to?
44099What question of three words may be asked Tennyson concerning a brother poet, the said question consisting of the names of three poets only?
44099What relation is the door- mat to the door- step?
44099What river is ever without a beginning and ending?
44099What sea would a man most like to be in on a wet day?
44099What sense pleases you most in an unpleasant acquaintance?
44099What should a man''s wife be like?
44099What should put the idea of drowning into your head if it be freezing when you are on the briny deep?
44099What small animal is turned into a large one by being beheaded?
44099What snuff- taker is that whose box gets fuller the more pinches he takes?
44099What soap is the hardest?
44099What song would a little dog sing who was blown off a ship at sea?
44099What sort of a day would be a good one to run for a cup?
44099What sort of a medical man is a horse that never tumbles down like?
44099What sort of an anchor has a toper an anchoring after?
44099What sort of music should a girl sing whose voice is cracked and broken?
44099What soup would cannibals prefer?
44099What sport does gossiping young ladies remind you of?
44099What step must I take to remove A from the alphabet?
44099What stone should have been placed at the gate of Eden after the expulsion?
44099What thing is that which is lengthened by being cut at both ends?
44099What three figures, multiplied by 4, will make precisely 5?
44099What tongue is it that frequently hurts and grieves you, and yet does not speak a word?
44099What trees has fire no effect upon?
44099What vegetable does a lady''s tongue resemble?
44099What was Joan of Arc made of?
44099What was it gave the Indian eight and ten- legged gods their name of Manitous?
44099What was once the most fashionable cap in Paris?
44099What was the color of the wind and waves in a storm?
44099What was the difference between Noah''s ark and Joan of Arc?
44099What was the most honest bet ever made?
44099What wind should a hungry sailor wish for?
44099What wine is both food and drink?
44099What word is it which, by changing a single letter, becomes its own opposite?
44099What word is there of eight letters which has five of them the same?
44099What word it is of only three syllables which combines in it twenty- six letters?
44099What word of one syllable, if you take two letters from it, remains a word of two syllables?
44099What would be a good epitaph on a duckling just dead?
44099What would be a good motto to put up at the entrance of a cemetery?
44099What would be an appropriate exclamation for a man to make when cold, in a boat, out fishing?
44099What young ladies won the battle of Salamis?
44099What''s that?
44099What''s the difference between Charles Kean and Jonah?
44099What''s the difference between a Bedouin Arab and a milkman in a large way of business?
44099What''s the difference between a bee and a donkey?
44099What''s the difference between a calf and a lady who lets her dress draggle in the mud?
44099What''s the difference between a fish dinner and a racing establishment?
44099What''s the difference between a man and his tailor, when the former is in prison at the latter''s suit?
44099What''s the difference between a professional piano- forte player and one that hears him?
44099What''s the difference between a specimen of plated goods and Columbus?
44099What''s the difference between the cook at an eating- house and Du Chaillu?
44099What''s the difference between the fire coming out of a steamship''s chimney and the steam coming out of a flannel shirt airing?
44099What''s the difference between"living in marble halls"and aboard ship?
44099What, as milliners say, is"the sweetest thing in bonnets?"
44099When Louis Phillippe was deposed, why did he lose less than any of his subjects?
44099When a boy falls into the water, what is the first thing he does?
44099When a church is burning, what is the only part that runs no chance of being saved?
44099When a hen is sitting across the top of a five- barred gate, why is she like a cent?
44099When a horse speaks, why does he do so always in the negative?
44099When are a very short and a very tall judge both the same height?
44099When are babies traveling abroad?
44099When are handcuffs like knapsacks?
44099When are kisses sweetest?
44099When are sheep stationery?
44099When are soldiers most admired by an infant?
44099When are soldiers stronger than elephants?
44099When are thieves like leopards?
44099When asked,"What o''clock, and where''s the cold chicken?"
44099When can a lamp be said to be in a bad temper?
44099When can an Irish servant answer two questions at the same time?
44099When do we make a meal of a musical instrument?
44099When does a farmer double up a sheep without hurting it?
44099When does a farmer have the best opportunity of overlooking his pigs?
44099When does a gourmand find it impossible to bridle-- we ought, perhaps, to say curb-- his appetite?
44099When does a lady think her husband a Hercules?
44099When does a leopard change his spots?
44099When does a man double his capital?
44099When does a man have to keep his word?
44099When does a sculptor explode in strong convulsions?
44099When does rain seem inclined to be studious?
44099When does the eagle turn carpenter?
44099When has a man four hands?
44099When is a ball not a ball?
44099When is a bonnet not a bonnet?
44099When is a book like a prisoner in the States of Barbary?
44099When is a candle like an ill- conditioned, quarrelsome man?
44099When is a carpenter like a circumstance?
44099When is a cigar like a shoulder of pork?
44099When is a clock on the stairs dangerous?
44099When is a house not a house?
44099When is a lady deformed?
44099When is a lawyer like a donkey?
44099When is a man like a green gooseberry?
44099When is a man more than one man?
44099When is a newspaper like a delicate child?
44099When is a newspaper the sharpest?
44099When is a plant to be dreaded more than a mad dog?
44099When is a river not a river?
44099When is a sailor not a sailor?
44099When is a school- master like a man with one eye?
44099When is a slug like a poem of Tennyson''s?
44099When is a soldier like a carpenter?
44099When is a superb woman like bread?
44099When is a thief like a reporter?
44099When is a trunk like two letters of the alphabet?
44099When is a wall like a fish?
44099When is a wall like a fish?
44099When is a window like a star?
44099When is a woman not a woman?
44099When is an estate like a watch?
44099When is an umbrella like suet?
44099When is it a good thing to lose your temper?
44099When is it difficult to get one''s watch out of one''s pocket?
44099When is sugar like a pig''s tooth?
44099When is the Hudson river good for the eyes?
44099When is the music at a party most like a ship in distress?
44099When may a country gentleman''s property be said to consist of feathers?
44099When may a man be said to be personally involved?
44099When may funds be supposed to be unsteady?
44099When may ladies who are enjoying themselves be said to look wretched?
44099When may you be said to literally"drink in"music?
44099When may you suppose an umbrella to be one mass of grease?
44099When my first is broken, it stands in need of my second, and my whole is part of a lady''s dress?
44099When my first is my last, like a Protean elf, Will black become white, and a part of yourself?
44099When two men exchange snuff- boxes, why is the transaction a profitable one?
44099When was Napoleon I. most shabbily dressed?
44099When was paper money first mentioned in the Bible?
44099When was wit a father?
44099When were walking- sticks first mentioned in the Bible?
44099When will water stop running down hill?
44099When you go for ten cents''worth of very sharp, long tin- tacks, what do you want them for?
44099When, D. V., we get off this_ eau_, we''ll have some eau- d- v. How would you increase the speed of a very slow boat?
44099Where did Noah strike the first nail in the ark?
44099Where did the Witch of Endor live-- and end- her days?
44099Where did the executioner of Charles I. dine, and what did he take?
44099Where does a similarity exist between malt and beer?
44099Where is it that all women are equally beautiful?
44099Where should you feel for the poor?
44099Where would you come out?
44099Which animal is the heaviest in all creation?
44099Which are the best kind of agricultural fairs?
44099Which are the lightest men-- Scotchmen, Irishmen, or Englishmen?
44099Which eat most grass, black sheep or white?
44099Which has most legs, a cow or no cow?
44099Which is the coldest river?
44099Which is the more valuable, a five- dollar note or five gold dollars?
44099Which is the richest and which the poorest letter in the alphabet?
44099Which is the smallest bridge in the world?
44099Which of Pio Nino''s cardinals wears the largest hat?
44099Which of the feathered tribe can lift the heaviest weights?
44099Which of the reptiles is a mathematician?
44099Which one of the Seven Wonders of the World are locomotive engines like?
44099Which were made first, elbows or knees?
44099Which would you rather, look a greater fool than you are, or be a greater fool than you look?
44099Which would you rather, that a lion ate you or a tiger?
44099Who are children most sick of?
44099Who are generally most sick of children?
44099Who are the two largest ladies in the United States?
44099Who commits the greatest abominations?
44099Who do they speak of as the most delicately modest young man that ever lived?
44099Who is the greatest terrifier?
44099Who is the oldest lunatic on record?
44099Who took in the first newspapers?
44099Who was Jonah''s tutor?
44099Who was hung for not wearing a wig?
44099Who was it that first introduced salt provisions?
44099Who was the fastest runner in the world?
44099Who was the first man condemned to hard labor for life?
44099Who was the first man?
44099Who was the first to swear in this world?
44099Who was the first whistler, and what tune did he whistle?
44099Who were your grandfather''s first cousin''s sister''s son''s brother''s forefathers?
44099Who would travel fastest-- a man with one sack of flour on his back, or a man with two sacks?
44099Why am I the most peculiar person in the company?
44099Why am I, when prudently laying by money, like myself when foolishly squandering it?
44099Why are Cashmere shawls like persons totally deaf?
44099Why are Irishmen like the Pope?
44099Why are all policemen well behaved and polite?
44099Why are apples like printers''types?
44099Why are artists like washerwomen?
44099Why are bachelors like natives of Ceylon?
44099Why are ballet- women so wicked?
44099Why are blacksmiths the most discontented of tradesmen?
44099Why are book- keepers like chickens?
44099Why are cats like unskillful surgeons?
44099Why are certain Member''s speeches in the_ Times_ like a brick wall?
44099Why are certain Members''speeches in the_ Times_ like a brick wall?
44099Why are circus- horses such slow goers?
44099Why are clergymen like cabinet- makers when performing the marriage ceremony?
44099Why are convicts like old maids going to be married?
44099Why are coopers like musical composers?
44099Why are cripples, beggars, and such like, similar to shepherds and fishermen?
44099Why are deaf people like India shawls?
44099Why are doctors always wicked men?
44099Why are dogs and cats like school- masters and their pupils?
44099Why are fowls gluttonous creatures?
44099Why are good resolutions like fainting ladies?
44099Why are greenbacks like the Jews?
44099Why are hogs more intelligent than humans?
44099Why are hot- house plants like drunkards?
44099Why are ladies so fond of officers?
44099Why are ladies who wear large crinolines ugly?
44099Why are ladies''dresses about the waist like a political meeting?
44099Why are ladies-- whether sleeping on sofas or not-- like hinges?
44099Why are laundresses no better than idiots?
44099Why are lawyers like shears?
44099Why are little boys that loaf about the docks like hardware merchants?
44099Why are men who lose by the failure of a bank like Macbeth?
44099Why are persons with short memories like office- holders?
44099Why are plagiarists like Long Branch hotel- keepers with newly- married couples?
44099Why are seeds when sown like gate- posts?
44099Why are sentries like day and night?
44099Why are stars like an old barn?
44099Why are stars the best astronomers?
44099Why are steamboat explosions like short- hand writers leaving the House of Commons?
44099Why are sugar- plums like race- horses?
44099Why are suicides invariably successful people in the world?
44099Why are tears like potatoes?
44099Why are the Commissioners of Stamps and Taxes like sailors at sea?
44099Why are the Germans like quinine and gentian?
44099Why are the bars of a convent like a blacksmith''s apron?
44099Why are the fixed stars like wicked old people?
44099Why are the labors of a translator likely to excite disgust?
44099Why are the pages of this book like the days of this year?
44099Why are the"blue devils"like muffins?
44099Why are those who quiz ladies''bustles very slanderous persons?
44099Why are two laughing girls like the wings of a chicken?
44099Why are two young ladies kissing each other an emblem of Christianity?
44099Why are very old people necessarily prolix and tedious?
44099Why are women''s_ corsets_ the greatest speculators in the bills of mortality?
44099Why are young children like castles in the air?
44099Why are young ladies born deaf sure to be more exemplary than young ladies not so afflicted?
44099Why are young ladies the fastest travelers in the world?
44099Why are your eyes like post- horses?
44099Why are your lips always at variance?
44099Why are your nose and chin constantly at variance?
44099Why can a fish never be in the dark?
44099Why can no man say his time is his own?
44099Why can no man say his time is his own?
44099Why can not a woman become a successful lawyer?
44099Why can you never expect a fisherman to be generous?
44099Why did Du Chaillu get so angry when he was quizzed about the gorilla?
44099Why did Marcus Curtius leap into the gulf at Rome?
44099Why did the young lady return the dumb water?
44099Why do bishops become wags when promoted to the highest office in the church?
44099Why do girls like looking at the moon?
44099Why do little birds in their nest agree?
44099Why do old maids wear mittens?
44099Why do rusty iron spikes on a wall remind you of ice?
44099Why do sailors working in brigs make bad servants?
44099Why do teetotalers run such a slight risk of drowning?
44099Why do we speak of poetic fire?
44099Why does a Quaker resemble a fresh and sprightly horse?
44099Why does a dog''s tail resemble happiness?
44099Why does a donkey prefer thistles to corn?
44099Why does a dressmaker never lose her hooks?
44099Why does a girl lace herself so tight to go out to dinner?
44099Why does a man who has been all his life a hewer of wood, that is, a wood- cutter, never come home to dinner?
44099Why does a miller wear a white hat?
44099Why does a nobleman''s title sometimes become extinct?
44099Why does a puss purr?
44099Why does a salmon die before it lives?
44099Why does a smoker resemble a person in a furious passion?
44099Why does a stingy German like mutton better than venison?
44099Why does a woman residing up two pairs of stairs remind you of a goddess?
44099Why does a young lady prefer her mother''s fortune to her father''s?
44099Why does the conductor at a concert resemble the electric telegraph?
44099Why does the east wind never blow straight?
44099Why does the lightning turn milk sour?
44099Why had Eve no fear of the measles?
44099Why has Hanlon, the gymnast, such a wonderful digestion?
44099Why has a clock a bashful appearance?
44099Why has the beast that carries the Queen of Siam''s palanquin nothing whatever to do with the subject?
44099Why is A like a honeysuckle?
44099Why is A like twelve o''clock?
44099Why is Great Britain like Palestine?
44099Why is Ireland like a sealed bottle of champagne?
44099Why is Joseph Gillott a very bad man?
44099Why is Kossuth like an Irishman''s quarrel?
44099Why is Mrs. Caudle like a locomotive engine?
44099Why is a Jew in a fever like a diamond?
44099Why is a Joint Company not like a watch?
44099Why is a Turk like a violin belonging to an inn?
44099Why is a bad epigram like a blunt pencil?
44099Why is a bad hat like a fierce snarling pup dog?
44099Why is a baker like a judge in Chancery?
44099Why is a baker the cheapest landlord but the dearest builder?
44099Why is a beautiful woman bathing like a valuable submarine machine?
44099Why is a bee- hive like a bad potato?
44099Why is a black man necessarily a conjurer?
44099Why is a blacksmith the most dissatisfied of all mechanics?
44099Why is a blacksmith the most likely person to make money by causing the alphabet to quarrel?
44099Why is a blundering writer like an arbiter in a dispute?
44099Why is a boiled herring like a rotten potato?
44099Why is a boiled herring like a rotten potato?
44099Why is a box on the ears like a hat?
44099Why is a boy almost always more noisy than a girl?
44099Why is a boy like a puppy?
44099Why is a burglar using false keys like a lady curling her hair?
44099Why is a butcher''s cart like his boots?
44099Why is a cabman, whatever his rank, a very ambitious person?
44099Why is a candle with a"long nose"like a contented man?
44099Why is a cat like a tattling person?
44099Why is a cent like a cow?
44099Why is a city being destroyed like another being built?
44099Why is a coach going down a steep hill like St. George?
44099Why is a congreve box without the matches superior to any other box?
44099Why is a curtain lecture like darkness?
44099Why is a curtain lecture like darkness?
44099Why is a deceptive woman like a seamstress?
44099Why is a dirty man like flannel?
44099Why is a dog''s tail a great novelty?
44099Why is a doleful face like the alternate parts taken by a choir?
44099Why is a door always in the subjunctive mood?
44099Why is a door that refuses to open or shut properly like a man unable to walk, his leg being broken?
44099Why is a drunkard hesitating to sign the pledge like a skeptical Hindoo?
44099Why is a false friend like the letter P?
44099Why is a fashionable woman like a successful gambler?
44099Why is a field of grass like a person older than yourself?
44099Why is a fit of coughing like the falls of Niagara?
44099Why is a flatterer like a microscope?
44099Why is a fool in a high station like a man in a balloon?
44099Why is a fop like a haunch of venison?
44099Why is a fop like a haunch of venison?
44099Why is a four- quart jug like a lady''s side- saddle?
44099Why is a fretful man like a hard- baked loaf?
44099Why is a fretful man like a hard- baked loaf?
44099Why is a gardener better paid than any other tradesman?
44099Why is a girl like an arrow?
44099Why is a good anecdote like a public bell?
44099Why is a good constitution like a money- box?
44099Why is a good sermon like a kiss?
44099Why is a gooseberry- tart, or even a plum- tart, like a bad dime?
44099Why is a gypsy''s tent like a beacon on the coast?
44099Why is a hackney coachman like a conscientious man?
44099Why is a handsome and fascinating lady like a slice of bread?
44099Why is a harmonium like the Bank of England?
44099Why is a harmonium like the Bank of England?
44099Why is a hen walking like a base conspiracy?
44099Why is a hog in a parlor like a house on fire?
44099Why is a horse an anomaly in the hunting- field?
44099Why is a horse constantly ridden and never fed not likely to be starved?
44099Why is a humorous jest like a fowl?
44099Why is a hunted fox like a Puseyite?
44099Why is a jeweler like a screeching florid singer?
44099Why is a judge''s nose like the middle of the earth?
44099Why is a key like a prison?
44099Why is a leaky barrel like a coward?
44099Why is a little dog''s tail like the heart of a tree?
44099Why is a locomotive like a handsome and fascinating lady?
44099Why is a mad bull an animal of convivial disposition?
44099Why is a magnificent house like a book of anecdotes?
44099Why is a man clearing a hedge at a single bound like one snoring?
44099Why is a man digging a canoe like a boy whipped for making a noise?
44099Why is a man for whom nothing is good enough like a hyena galloping?
44099Why is a man going to be married like a felon being conducted to the scaffold?
44099Why is a man hung better than a vagabond?
44099Why is a man in jail and wishing to be out like a leaky boat?
44099Why is a man in poverty like a seamstress?
44099Why is a man looking for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune?
44099Why is a man not prepared to pay his acceptance when due like a pigeon without food?
44099Why is a man on horseback like difficulties overcome?
44099Why is a man searching for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune?
44099Why is a man who never lays a wager as bad as a regular gambler?
44099Why is a man with a great many servants like an oyster?
44099Why is a man''s mouth when very large like an annual lease?
44099Why is a melancholy young lady the pleasantest companion?
44099Why is a milkwoman who never sells whey the most independent person in the world?
44099Why is a miser like a man with a short memory?
44099Why is a miser like a man with a short memory?
44099Why is a most persevering admirer of a coquette like an article she carries in her pocket?
44099Why is a new- born baby like a storm?
44099Why is a new- born baby like a storm?
44099Why is a newspaper like an army?
44099Why is a note of hand like a rosebud?
44099Why is a pack of cards containing only fifty- one, sent home, as perfect as a pack of fifty- two sent home?
44099Why is a pair of skates like an apple?
44099Why is a palm- tree like chronology?
44099Why is a palm- tree like chronology?
44099Why is a partner in a joint- stock concern like a plowman?
44099Why is a pianist like the warder of a prison?
44099Why is a pianist like the warder of a prison?
44099Why is a pig with a twisted tail like the ghost in Hamlet?
44099Why is a plum- pudding like a logical sermon?
44099Why is a pretty girl''s pleased- merry- bright- laughing eye no better than an eye destroyed?
44099Why is a pretty young lady like a wagon- wheel?
44099Why is a prosy story- teller like the Thames Tunnel?
44099Why is a proud lady like a music book?
44099Why is a railroad- car like a bed- bug?
44099Why is a rakish Hebrew like this joke?
44099Why is a retired carpenter like a lecturer on natural philosophy?
44099Why is a rheumatic person like a glass window?
44099Why is a rifle a very insignificant weapon?
44099Why is a room full of married folks like a room empty?
44099Why is a rosebud like a promissory note?
44099Why is a row between Orangemen and Ribbonmen like a saddle?
44099Why is a rumseller''s trade a profitable one to follow?
44099Why is a school- mistress like the letter C?
44099Why is a schoolboy beginning to read like knowledge itself?
44099Why is a sheet of postage stamps like distant relations?
44099Why is a ship just arrived in port like a lady eagerly desiring to go to America?
44099Why is a ship the politest thing in the world?
44099Why is a short man struggling to kiss a tall woman like an Irishman going up to Vesuvius?
44099Why is a sick Jew like a diamond ring?
44099Why is a spendthrift''s purse like a thunder- cloud?
44099Why is a spider a good correspondent?
44099Why is a sporting clergyman like a soldier who runs from battle?
44099Why is a steam engine at a fire an anomaly?
44099Why is a sword that is too brittle like an ill- natured and passionate man?
44099Why is a talkative young man like a young pig?
44099Why is a theological student like a merchant?
44099Why is a thief in a garret like an honest man?
44099Why is a thoughtful man like a mirror?
44099Why is a ticket- porter like a thief?
44099Why is a tiger hunted in an Indian jungle, like a piece of presentation plate?
44099Why is a toll- collector at a bridge like a Jew?
44099Why is a torch like the ring of a chain?
44099Why is a turnpike like a dead dog''s tail?
44099Why is a very amusing man like a very bad shot?
44099Why is a very commonplace female a wonderful woman?
44099Why is a very plain, common- place female a wonderful woman?
44099Why is a very pretty, well- made, fashionable girl like a thrifty housekeeper?
44099Why is a village cobbler like a parson?
44099Why is a vocalist singing incorrectly like a forger of bad notes?
44099Why is a wainscoted room like a reprieve?
44099Why is a waiter like a race- horse?
44099Why is a waiter like a race- horse?
44099Why is a waiter like a race- horse?
44099Why is a washerwoman like Saturday?
44099Why is a washerwoman the most cruel person in the world?
44099Why is a wax candle like Mr. Dickens''--the immortal Dickens''--last book?
44099Why is a wedding- ring like eternity?
44099Why is a well- trained horse like a benevolent man?
44099Why is a well- trained horse like a benevolent man?
44099Why is a wet- nurse like Vulcan?
44099Why is a whirlpool like a donkey?
44099Why is a whisper like a forged$ 5 note?
44099Why is a wide- awake hat so called?
44099Why is a widow like a gardener?
44099Why is a widower like a house in a state of dilapidation?
44099Why is a woman''s beauty like a ten- dollar greenback?
44099Why is a worn- out shoe like ancient Greece?
44099Why is a young lady''s bustle like an historical tale?
44099Why is a youth encouraging a mustache like a cow''s tail?
44099Why is an Irishman turning over in the snow like a watchman?
44099Why is an actress like an angel?
44099Why is an adjective like a drunken man?
44099Why is an aristocratic seminary for young ladies like a flower garden?
44099Why is an artist stronger than a horse?
44099Why is an avaricious merchant like a Turk?
44099Why is an egg like a colt?
44099Why is an egg underdone like an egg overdone?
44099Why is an elephant''s head different from any other head?
44099Why is an expensive widow-- pshaw!--pensive widow we mean-- like the letter X?
44099Why is an infant like a diamond?
44099Why is an insolent fishmonger likely to get more business than a civil one?
44099Why is an irritable man like an unskillful doctor?
44099Why is an old coat like iron?
44099Why is an old man''s head like a song"executed"( murdered) by an indifferent singer?
44099Why is an orange like a church steeple?
44099Why is an umbrella like a pancake?
44099Why is an uncut leg of bacon like Hamlet in his soliloquy?
44099Why is an undutiful son like one born deaf?
44099Why is boots at an hotel like an editor?
44099Why is boots at an hotel like an editor?
44099Why is chloroform like Mendelssohn or Rossini?
44099Why is conscience like the check- string of a carriage?
44099Why is credit not given at an auction?
44099Why is divinity the easiest of the three learned professions?
44099Why is drunkenness like a ragged coat?
44099Why is fashion like a blank cartridge?
44099Why is fashionable society like a warming- pan?
44099Why is flirting like plate- powder?
44099Why is good gas like a true lover?
44099Why is green grass like a mouse?
44099Why is horse- racing a necessity?
44099Why is hot bread like a caterpillar?
44099Why is intoxication like a slop bowl?
44099Why is it dangerous to take a nap in a train?
44099Why is it dangerous to take a walk in the woods in spring?
44099Why is it easy to break into an old man''s house?
44099Why is it impossible for a swell who lisps to believe in the existence of young ladies?
44099Why is it impossible that there should be one best horse on a race- course?
44099Why is it not extraordinary to find a painter''s studio as hot as an oven?
44099Why is it right B should come before C?
44099Why is it that you can not starve in the desert?
44099Why is life the riddle of riddles?
44099Why is lip- salve like a duenna?
44099Why is love always represented as a child?
44099Why is love like a canal- boat?
44099Why is love like a candle?
44099Why is love like a candle?
44099Why is marriage with a deceased wife''s sister like the wedding of two fish?
44099Why is money often moist?
44099Why is my place of business like a baker''s oven?
44099Why is my servant Betsy like a race- course?
44099Why is my servant Betsy like a race- course?
44099Why is opening a letter like taking a very queer method of getting into a room?
44099Why is our meerschaum like a water- color artist?
44099Why is riding fast up a steep ascent like a little dog''s female puppy suffering from the rheumatism?
44099Why is steam power in a locomotive like the goods lading a ship?
44099Why is swearing aloud like an old coat?
44099Why is tea more generally drunk now than a year or two back?
44099Why is the Apollo Belvidere like a piece of new music?
44099Why is the Commander- in- chief like a broker?
44099Why is the Emperor of Russia like a greedy school- boy on Christmas- day?
44099Why is the Empress of the French always in bad company?
44099Why is the French cook at the Union Club like a man sitting on the top of a shot- tower?
44099Why is the Ohio river like a drunken man?
44099Why is the Premier like an alchemist?
44099Why is the Prince of Wales, musing on his mother''s government, like a rainbow?
44099Why is the blessed state of matrimony like an invested city?
44099Why is the final letter in Europe like a Parisian riot?
44099Why is the flight of an eagle_ also_ a most unpleasant sight to witness?
44099Why is the fourth of July like oysters?
44099Why is the hangman''s noose like a box with nothing in it?
44099Why is the history of England like a wet season?
44099Why is the inside of everything mysterious?
44099Why is the isthmus of Suez like the first_ u_ in"cucumber?"
44099Why is the last conundrum like a monkey?
44099Why is the law like a flight of rockets?
44099Why is the letter E a gloomy and discontented vowel?
44099Why is the letter K like a pig''s tail?
44099Why is the letter P like a Roman Emperor?
44099Why is the letter S like a pert repartee?
44099Why is the letter T like an amphibious animal?
44099Why is the letter_ l_ in the word military like the nose?
44099Why is the nine- year- old boy like the sick glutton?
44099Why is the nose on your face like the_ v_ in"civility?"
44099Why is the office of Prime Minister like a May- pole?
44099Why is the palace of the Louvre the cheapest ever erected?
44099Why is the profession of a barrister not only legal, but religious?
44099Why is the profession of a dentist always precarious?
44099Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom?
44099Why is the root of the tongue like a dejected man?
44099Why is the steeple of St. Paul''s church like Ireland?
44099Why is the tolling of a bell like the prayer of a hypocrite?
44099Why is the treadmill like a true convert?
44099Why is this book like an evergreen?
44099Why is wine spoilt by being converted into negus?
44099Why is wit like a Chinese lady''s foot?
44099Why is your considering yourself handsome like a chicken?
44099Why is your eye like a schoolmaster using corporal punishment?
44099Why is your first- born child like a legal deed?
44099Why is your night- cap when on your head like a giblet pie?
44099Why is"T"like an amphibious animal?
44099Why may a beggar wear a very short coat?
44099Why may a professor without students be said to be the most attentive of all teachers?
44099Why may the Commissioners for Metropolitan Improvements never be expected to speak the truth?
44099Why may turnkeys be said to have extraordinary powers of digestion?
44099Why must a Yankee speculator be very subject to water on the brain?
44099Why ought Lent to pass very rapidly?
44099Why ought Shakespeare''s dramatic works be considered unpopular?
44099Why ought a greedy man to wear a plaid waistcoat?
44099Why ought a superstitious person to be necessarily temperate?
44099Why ought golden sherry to suit tipplers?
44099Why should a broken- hearted single young man lodger offer his heart in payment to his landlady?
44099Why should a broken- hearted single young man lodger offer his heart in payment to his landlady?
44099Why should a candle- maker never be pitied?
44099Why should a man never marry a woman named Ellen?
44099Why should a man troubled with gout make his will?
44099Why should a speculator use a high stiffener for his cravat?
44099Why should a teetotaler not have a wife?
44099Why should a thirsty man always carry a watch?
44099Why should battle- fields be very gay places?
44099Why should not ladies and gentlemen take castor oil?
44099Why should painters never allow children to go into their studios?
44099Why should taking the proper quantity of medicine make you sleepy?
44099Why should the ghost in Hamlet have been liable to the window- tax?
44099Why should the poet have expected the woodman to"spare that tree?"
44099Why should the world become blind if deprived of its philosophers?
44099Why should the"evil one"make a good husband?
44099Why should there be a marine law against whispering?
44099Why should travelers not be likely to starve in the desert?
44099Why should we pity the young Exquimaux?
44099Why should well- fed M. P.s object to triennial parliaments?
44099Why was Blackstone like an Irish vegetable?
44099Why was Dickens a greater man than Shakespeare?
44099Why was Eve made?
44099Why was General Washington childless?
44099Why was Grimaldi like a glass of good brandy and water?
44099Why was Herodias''daughter the_ fastest_ girl mentioned in the New Testament?
44099Why was Leander voluntarily drowned?
44099Why was Louis Phillippe like a very wet day?
44099Why was Moses the wickedest man that ever lived?
44099Why was Noah obliged to stoop on entering the Ark?
44099Why was Oliver Cromwell like Charles Kean?
44099Why was Pharaoh''s daughter like a broker?
44099Why was Phidias, the celebrated sculptor, laughed at by the Greeks?
44099Why was it, as an old woman in a scarlet cloak was crossing a field in which a goat was browsing, that a most wonderful metamorphosis took place?
44099Why was the whale that swallowed Jonah like a milkman who has retired on an independence?
44099Why was"Uncle Tom''s Cabin"not written by a female hand?
44099Why were the English victories in the Punjaub nothing to boast of?
44099Why were the Russian accounts of the Crimean battles like the English and French?
44099Why were the Russian accounts of the Crimean battles like the English and French?
44099Why were the cannon at Delhi like tailors?
44099Why will scooping out a turnip be a noisy process?
44099Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult?
44099Why would a great gourmand make a very clumsy dressmaker?
44099Why would an owl be offended at your calling him a pheasant?
44099Why, asks a disconsolate widow, is venison like my late and never sufficiently- to- be- lamented husband?
44099Why, if a man has a gallery of paintings, may you pick his pockets?
44099Why, suppose we were to bore a hole exactly through the earth, starting from Dublin, and you went in at this end, where would you come out?
44099Why, when you are going out of town, does a railroad conductor cut a hole in your ticket?
44099Why, when you paint a man''s portrait, may you be described as stepping into his shoes?
44099Why_ does_ a man permit himself to be henpecked?
44099Wilt thou?
44099Yet seen each day; if not, be sure at night You''ll quickly find me out by candlelight?
44099You do n''t know what the exact antipodes to Ireland is?
44099You eat it, you drink it, deny who can; It is sometimes a woman and sometimes a man?
44099You like to pay a good price and have the finest work, of course; but what is that of which the common sort is best?
44099You mean to say you do n''t?
44099You name me once, and I am famed For deeds of noble daring; You name me twice, and I am found In savage customs sharing?
44099and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise?
44099but how did the sandwiches get there?
44099but what did the sun say to the rose?
44099like a retired waiter?
44099offer his heart in payment to his landlady?
44099what is a kiss?
44099what''s that?
44099when he was quizzed about the gorilla?
6627''Well, what is it?
6627After spending two dollars on me, will you not take five cents in return?
6627Ah, then you confess to a guilty conscience?
6627Ah, you blush, do you? 6627 All day?"
6627Am I not bound-- bound by that which is God''s link in the chain? 6627 And at some time in the future may I hope to enter?"
6627And can she sing like that? 6627 And did you send the exquisite flowers and fruit?"
6627And do you mean to say that you have no money left?
6627And do you mean to suggest that you do not know who wrote the note? 6627 And do you, without a cent in the world, mean to assume the burden of these four children?"
6627And have you been praying for her all this time, mother?
6627And how will you endure the long, cold hours, my friend?
6627And if you should drop it, do you think you would be much the loser?
6627And is that your best plea for falsehood? 6627 And is the Rhine like this?"
6627And now, sir,said Dennis, with a gentle, winning courtesy impossible to resist,"will you do me the favor of showing me your picture?"
6627And what has led him to this extravagant favor?
6627And what is my phase?
6627And what is the trouble with our entertainers?
6627And what kind of a God would He be who, having the power to prevent, permits, or orders, as the Bible teaches, all these evils? 6627 And will you stand by and see this outrage?"
6627And will_ you_ go?
6627And yet you hope to succeed?
6627And you mean to say that having a religion or not is a mere matter of taste?
6627And you will not wrong him any more, will you, Christine? 6627 Are you hurt?"
6627Are you not able to tell?
6627Are you sane?
6627Are you the man that just cleaned my sidewalk?
6627As to loving God, how can I love merely a name? 6627 But am I a Pat Murphy?"
6627But how about the rights of others? 6627 But how can you be sure there is a God?
6627But how did you learn to read music in that style?
6627But how-- how am I to gain this magic power to make faces feel and live on canvas?
6627But it is written, is it not?
6627But suppose one must sin?
6627But where am I to find a position at this season of the year, when every place is filled?
6627But where are the cake and fruit?
6627But which was the controlling motive of your mind?
6627But would she be willing?
6627But you would submit?
6627But, for the sake of argument, grant that you are right, what follows?
6627Ca n''t come?
6627Can I have no redress?
6627Can we trust such a boy? 6627 Can you doubt it, my dear?"
6627Can you save me? 6627 Christine, what do you do with yourself Sundays?
6627Come, what does the Countess say?
6627D''ye s''pose we''d hang out here over the bottomless pit for any such trifle as that? 6627 Did he leave no word?"
6627Did n''t you ever know of a gentleman who came from Germany to this country and was glad to do anything for an honest living?
6627Did you ever know an Irishman refuse to do what a lady asked of him?
6627Did you ever see such presumption?
6627Did you know who it was when you saved me?
6627Did you not know it?
6627Dis is Miss Ludolph?
6627Do you cure them, Christine? 6627 Do you know its author?"
6627Do you know that I think my change in feeling makes me grieve all the more deeply? 6627 Do you mean to say that you have no friends at all in this great city?"
6627Do you never intend to marry?
6627Do you not intend to go abroad at once, and enter upon your ancestral estates as the Baroness Ludolph?
6627Do you really mean him?
6627Do you really vant to be drunken old Berthold Bruder''s friend?
6627Do you refer to Christ''s weeping over Jerusalem?
6627Do you think you can forget her?
6627Do you think-- can it be possible that_ she_ sends them?
6627Do you understand the business?
6627Do you wish to believe as I do?
6627Does it rebel against a Being who from first to last tries to save men from evil?
6627Does she find Christ''s service so sweet, and do I find it so dull and hard? 6627 Ethel, dear, my more than wife-- my good angel-- what shall I say to you?"
6627Father, if I should have the smallpox and live, would my beaut-- would I become a fright?
6627Father, what is the use of treating me as a child? 6627 Father,"said Christine, abruptly,"how soon can we start on our eastern trip?"
6627Fleet, is that all you have saved from the fire?
6627Go back,she said;"how dare you disobey orders?"
6627Go to all the expense of furnishing a house, when we do not expect to stay here much more than a year? 6627 Has he come?"
6627Has he not shown his feelings?
6627Have I not paid for everything I have had so far?
6627Have I offended you?
6627Have you enough to last till next Saturday night?
6627He despises me, does he? 6627 He will live,"mused Mr. Ludolph;"and now shall I permit him to return to my employ, or discharge him?"
6627How can I ever pay you?
6627How can we ever repay you?
6627How could I tell you when the blow would have been death? 6627 How did you enjoy yourself?"
6627How do you feel, my dear?
6627How do you know it?
6627How is it?
6627How much could you give?
6627How often had you sung that piece before?
6627How so? 6627 How so?"
6627How? 6627 How?"
6627Human faces often seem Like the sparkle of the stream, In the social glare; Some assert, in wisdom''s guise,( Look they not with children''s eyes?) 6627 I will do anything you say, John; but why am I in a church?"
6627If our Lord,he mused,"helped His first disciples catch fish, why should He not help me find a good place?"
6627In what respect did you see such a close resemblance?
6627In what way?
6627Indeed, Mr. Fleet, do church members flatter?
6627Is he delirious?
6627Is it a Protestant church?
6627Is it anything serious, doctor?
6627Is it the man in the back parlor, mum? 6627 Is it the part of a true friend to refuse confidence?"
6627Is n''t that a distinction without a difference?
6627Is n''t there a difference between pride and self- respect? 6627 Is not this Chicago, whose citizens were nearly all poor a few years ago?"
6627Is she a relation of yours?
6627Is that in the Bible?
6627Is that the reason that Christ suffered with us-- that we might know He sympathized with us?
6627Is that the reason you installed him in Pat''s place?
6627Is this death?
6627Is this gentleman a friend of yours?
6627Is your mother dead?
6627Janette,she said, suddenly,"do you see that boy?
6627Knew what? 6627 Knew what?"
6627Look at Fleet,whispered her father;"could you believe he was sweeping the store the other day?
6627May I ask the reason?
6627May I see Mr. Ludolph a moment?
6627May I see it?
6627May I?
6627Miss Ludolph, please tell me what I can do for you?
6627Mother,said he, with a sudden earnestness,"do you think you can pray for us in heaven?"
6627Mr. Fleet,she gasped,"do you know anything I do not?"
6627Mr. Fleet,she said, pleadingly,"are you too tired to take me to my old home on the north side?"
6627Mr. Schwartz, ca n''t you teach the young men to throw a little ease and grace into the arrangement of the articles under their charge?
6627Mr. Schwartz,he asked of one of his clerks,"was Pat here this morning?"
6627Must I of necessity be an ignoramus because, as Miss Brown says, I sweep a store?
6627Must I, after all, come down to the Epicurean philosophy,''Let us eat, drink, and be merry, for to- morrow we die''? 6627 My own land?
6627Not for yourself?
6627Now, one question, and I wish the truth: Who did arrange this table?
6627Oh, Christine, do n''t you care?
6627Oh, Christine, have you heard the news?
6627Oh, father, what shall I do-- what shall I do, if this should be the case? 6627 Oh, is n''t it too bad?"
6627Oh, what shall I do?
6627Oh, you''re temperance, are yer? 6627 Perhaps you were interrupted?"
6627Pray what is mine?
6627Rather, let me ask, how dare you?
6627Shall I clear your sidewalk?
6627Shall I not give up my shawl to some of these poor creatures?
6627Surely a young fellow like you can be in no want of those articles?
6627That indeed would be the very extravagance of romance, and how could I, least of all, who so long have scoffed at such things, explain my action? 6627 That is a fair test; what has he done?"
6627There is smallpox around, is there not?
6627To what art or_ trade_ did Mr. Fleet refer?
6627Vat did der fool do it for, den, I''d like to know?
6627Was he perfectly straight?
6627Well, say on, then; what''s the trouble?
6627Well, what did he say?
6627Well, you have decided to promote him, have you not?
6627Well?
6627Were you addressing me?
6627What are Bridget and the children to me? 6627 What are you doing here with your ill- omened face?"
6627What do you ask for a small room and bed for a night?
6627What do you believe in, then?
6627What do you mean by rushing through the store in this mad style?
6627What do you mean?
6627What do you think of that from the man who sweeps Mr. Ludolph''s store?
6627What do you think of that, Miss Ludolph, with your German scepticism?
6627What do you want?
6627What has the devil got to do with it?
6627What have I done in driving him away with contempt in his heart for me? 6627 What have I learned, I''d like to know?"
6627What have you got there?
6627What is that?
6627What is the matter with Mr. Mellen? 6627 What is the matter with her?
6627What is the matter? 6627 What is the matter?"
6627What is the matter?
6627What is the matter?
6627What is the music?
6627What is the remedy?
6627What is the use of escaping without it?
6627What is the use of re- arranging the store?
6627What is your bill in advance up to Monday morning?
6627What kind of a friend has He been to me, pray? 6627 What kind of a place is it?"
6627What shall we do?
6627What the---- did you do that for?
6627What then?
6627What were you doing, Ethel?
6627What will old Schwartz say?
6627When before were you so sensitive to the opinion of clerks and trades- people, or even the proudest suitors for your hand? 6627 When have I ceased to love you?"
6627Where am I?
6627Where are we going?
6627Where did you get these? 6627 Where shall we go for the two hot months?"
6627Who did, then?
6627Who wants yer thousand dollars?
6627Who will volunteer with me to save that woman?
6627Who''s a- goin''ter get drunk, I''d like ter know? 6627 Whom did you see?"
6627Why are you so despondent?
6627Why did n''t you do it yourself, instead of going off to the gin- mills this morning? 6627 Why did you not tell me that Mr. Fleet had recovered?"
6627Why does he not do it then?
6627Why does this thought come so persistently now? 6627 Why must your life be solitary in the future?"
6627Why not toward a Catholic church?
6627Why should I care?
6627Why should this affair take so miserable a form with me?
6627Why wo n''t you tell, my boy?
6627Why, Christine, what is the matter?
6627Why, Cronk,he cried,"do n''t you know me?
6627Why, did you think he was dead?
6627Why, what is the matter?
6627Why?
6627Why?
6627Will Dennis Fleet come forward?
6627Will Mr. Fleet deign to receive my congratulations also?
6627Will it take the prize, do you think?
6627Will you accept of our Christian superstition?
6627Will you kneel on these sands with me in prayer to Him?
6627Will you let me see it? 6627 Will you let your friend make a suggestion?"
6627Will you please point out the original,said one of the gentlemen,"that we may learn to distinguish them?
6627Wo n''t you show me something that you are doing?
6627Would you be willing to listen to a suggestion from me?
6627Would you black boots, now?
6627Would you invite him to your house?
6627Would you please say a little prayer for a lone, sick body?
6627Yes, Mr. Mellen; but where is our tenor?
6627Yes; why not?
6627You are an Irishman, are you not?
6627You are expecting great reward, in some sort of Paradise, for your mission work, etc.?
6627You can no read Sherman?
6627You do n''t mean to say that this is a bad place, do you?
6627You do not mean to say that you can not tell them apart? 6627 You mean to say that you work from your old standpoint merely?"
6627You thought I was dead?
6627You took Pat Murphy''s place, did you not?
6627You vant to do him for exercise?
6627You would still wish that it were His will?
6627_ Helped_ you? 6627 ( Was she unconsciously uttering a prophecy?) 6627 After a brief but painful revery she exclaimed:But what am I thinking of?
6627And did he dream that I, Christine Ludolph, could give him my hand?
6627And how long is your list of the sick and imprisoned that you have visited, my luxurious little lady?"
6627And if you afterward should know that I claimed the name of Christian, would you not despise me as you remembered this scene?"
6627And now what have you to offer to solace the bitterness of coming years?
6627And now what is there for me?
6627And what compensation is there for it all?--what can enable one to bear it all?
6627And yet is there any true and better life?
6627And yet what chance have I?
6627Are yer ashamed to do any kind of honest work?
6627Are you equal to the fatigue?"
6627Are you nervous, Mr. Fleet?
6627Are you not afraid?"
6627Are you not in danger of becoming a''Jack at all trades''?"
6627Are you not in some way overtaxing yourself?"
6627Are you ready, with your aristocratic notions, to recognize chiefly Miss Brown''s title to position?
6627As Dennis looked and wondered, the thought flashed into his mind,"Could_ she_ have painted that?"
6627As I saw her to- night, so radiant and beautiful, and yet in the embrace of another man, and that man evidently an ardent admirer, what was art to me?
6627As he passed out, Mr. Ludolph asked, good naturedly,"Why, Fleet, what is the matter?"
6627As he sat by her side holding her hand, he said, softly:"Mother, are not these sprays of mint rather unusual in a bouquet?
6627As he was leaving the house in the morning, his mother whispered, gently,"Who was it that said,''Father, forgive them, they know not what they do?''"
6627At the same time seeing a policeman, he called out,"Will you please cause this drunken fellow to move on?"
6627At this moment Dennis stepped forward hesitatingly and said to Christine,"Have you the music that Mr. Archer was to sing?"
6627Bruder?"
6627But am I not right?"
6627But before he could add another word, a wild, sweet, mournful voice was heard singing:"O fiery storm, wilt never cease?
6627But could he ever claim his own?
6627But had she understood him?
6627But her face was so white, and there was such an expression in her eyes, that he started and said,"What is the matter?"
6627But how can I ever be sure it is true?
6627But how did he get his artistic knowledge and taste?"
6627But how is it, Mr. Fleet, since you are such an uncompromising democrat, that you permit a young lady to order you about in this style?"
6627But if I as honestly believe the Bible, am I not acting as you said a true follower ought?
6627But imagining the Bible story to be true, even though you do not believe it, is not the love of God revealed to us through His son, Jesus Christ?"
6627But should I not be false and cowardly if I held my peace?
6627But what could Dennis know of all this?
6627But what is a fellow to do, roughing it up and down the world like me?
6627But what is the matter?
6627But what is the use of these wretched''ifs''?
6627But what would Dennis have done among the merchants with"a head on him,"as the barkeeper understood the phrase?
6627But when Mr. Berder spoke he approached and said, kindly and respectfully,"Will you let me try to help you?"
6627But when his wife suddenly became a lifeless weight in his son''s arms, who in wild alarm cried,"Mother, what is the matter?
6627But when would the wonder cease if a German lady of rank followed suit?
6627But who pretends to live as this old and partially obsolete book teaches?
6627But why go over our experience in the West?
6627But why need I care?
6627But, after all, why do you think Mr. Fleet better than other people?"
6627CHAPTER XIX WHAT IS THE MATTER WITH HIM?
6627CHAPTER XX IS HE A GENTLEMAN?
6627CHAPTER XX IS HE A GENTLEMAN?
6627Can I never tell you of the love of Jesus, and the better and happier life beyond?
6627Can it all end as a miserable dream?"
6627Can it be even imagined that she, besieged by the most gifted and rich of the city, will wait for a poor unknown admirer?
6627Can it be possible that my daughter has contracted this loathsome horror?"
6627Can it be that he, like the rest of them, believes and acts on only such parts as are to his mood?"
6627Can it be wrong to be God- like?"
6627Can you explain this fact satisfactorily?"
6627Can you not trust me?
6627Christine had hardly joined him as he stood at the door when a gentleman entered and asked,"Who here are willing and able to work for fair wages?"
6627Christine hesitated a moment, and then thought:"Why not?
6627Christine looked in vain for her father; at last Dennis said:"Miss Ludolph, do you feel equal to the effort of crossing to the west side?
6627Christine''s heart stood still with fear, but by a great effort she said, composedly,"What news?"
6627Come, father when is the next scene in the brief drama to open?
6627Could I be a true man and be silent, believing what I do?
6627Could I hear the name of my Best Friend thus spoken of, and say not one word in His behalf?"
6627Could he be received, feeling toward his Father as he did?
6627Could he go home?
6627Could she have seen and read his ardent glances?
6627Could such prayers and faith be in vain?
6627Could this passionate, thoroughly aroused woman be his cold, self- contained daughter?
6627Could two human beings be more widely separated-- separated in that which divides more surely than continents and seas?
6627Could you distrust One who loved you well enough to die for you?"
6627Dennis looked at her earnestly, and after a moment said,"Will you please play that accompaniment again?"
6627Dennis turned eagerly to the doctor and said:"Can you not give me something that will reduce the fever and keep me sane a little longer?
6627Did He leave them to perish?
6627Did Pat black the shoes of the_ gentlemen_ of this store?"
6627Did n''t I tell you your last spree should be the last in my employ?
6627Did n''t I warn you?
6627Did not Christ take the hand of every poor, struggling man on earth that would let Him?
6627Did not you promise it?"
6627Did you not mark the effect of his singing?"
6627Do he say no vort about him?"
6627Do n''t vant anoder dinner yet, I hope?"
6627Do n''t you know flesh and blood can only stand so much?
6627Do n''t you know that I am Miss Ludolph?"
6627Do n''t you remember the young man you saved from starving by suggesting the snow- shovel business?"
6627Do you drink?
6627Do you expect to keep him?"
6627Do you imagine I will permit it?
6627Do you know of a boy who will answer?"
6627Do you not believe in the Bible?"
6627Do you not know that such deeds make men bad, faithless, devilish?
6627Do you not remember that he offered his mother''s services as nurse when I was dreading the smallpox?"
6627Does He not visit the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation?
6627Does human love alone constrain me, and not the love of Christ?
6627Even though she had stolen her inspiration from him through guile and cruelty, had he not enabled her to accomplish more than in all her life before?
6627Every science has its obscure points and mysteries, but who begins with those to learn the science?
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?"
6627Fleet?''
6627For a moment she did not answer, and when she did it was with a voice unnaturally hard and cold:"Have you heard what is the matter?"
6627For a moment they looked at the blear- eyed, trembling wreck of a man, and then Dennis asked,"Had God any hand in making that man what he is?"
6627For half an hour Dennis worked away lustily, and then called his task- master and said,"Will you accept the job?"
6627Had he no mercy?
6627Had not many won the victory?
6627Had she recognized the truth of his assurance that she must feel, and then she could portray feeling?
6627Had you not better have stood longer in the defensive?"
6627Haf you got any moneys?"
6627Has not my life been one long series of misfortunes?
6627Has the plant any special meaning?
6627Has your daughter been vaccinated?"
6627Have I not been disappointed in all my hopes?
6627Have I not been seeking in my own wisdom, and trusting in my own strength?
6627Have I not prayed again and again?
6627Have n''t I lived over every disappointment, and taken every step downward a thousand times?
6627Have n''t I, while lying here, hopelessly dying, gone over my life again and again?
6627Have you had any experience at all?"
6627Have you heard from him as to Mr. Fleet''s health?"
6627Have you in truth found and learned to trust Him?"
6627He asked coolly, however,"Have you no recommendations?"
6627He asked,"How did you make out with your sketch?"
6627He had been there but a little time when a light hand fell on his arm, and he was startled by her voice--"Mr. Fleet, are you very tired?"
6627He had voluntarily taken Pat Murphy''s place, and why should he complain at Pat''s treatment?
6627He removed his easel to an attic- room in Mrs. Fleet''s house; and every hour of Dennis''s absence heard him say:"Vat I do for you now?
6627He said, abruptly,"What have you been doing to Fleet, over here?"
6627He stopped and spoke kindly,"Well, Fleet, where am I going to find a man to fill your place made vacant to- day?"
6627He surely has escaped, do n''t you think?"
6627He was startled by a big, hearty voice at his side, exclaiming:"What makes yer so down in the mouth?
6627He was startled by hearing a sweet voice say,"Well, Mr. Fleet, are you not going to welcome a new laborer into your corner of the vineyard?"
6627He went off, muttering,"Why do n''t the people send for some of the youngsters that sit kicking up their heels in their offices all day?"
6627Her rather cool reception oppressed him, and the tormenting question presented itself, for the hundredth time,"Can she in any degree feel as I do?"
6627His eyes grew wild and almost fierce, and in a sharp, hurried voice, he said:"You do n''t think there is danger?
6627How are you?
6627How can a good God permit such creatures and evils to exist?"
6627How can a poor and weak being like myself prevent an Almighty one from doing what He pleases?"
6627How can you feel so toward our Best Friend?"
6627How could he help thinking of one for whom he prayed night and morning and every hour in the day?
6627How did you come to take his place?"
6627How have you spent the day?"
6627How many hungry people have you fed?
6627How many of the naked have you clothed?
6627How many strangers( I do not mean distinguished ones from abroad) have you taken in and comforted?
6627How much help did Mr. Berder give you in arranging this table?"
6627I expect, under the circumstances, you would look for very little remuneration the first year?"
6627I had the good fortune to rescue Miss Brown last night, at greater peril than this, and do you think I would leave you?"
6627I mean kinder pious work, that has n''t any smack of the devil you''re so afraid of in it?"
6627I wonder-- oh, I wonder if he has any spark of love left for me?
6627If he did not get anything to do on Saturday, how was he going to live through Sunday and the days that followed?
6627If her heart remained cold and untouched, if as yet neither faith nor love had any existence therein, what was the inspiring motive?
6627If the man who died on Calvary out of love for you I and for us all is also God, would you fear to trust yourself to Him?
6627If this test failed, would he not, in spite of all she could say or do, curse God and die, as he had said?
6627Imagining the Bible story true, can you not wish it true?
6627In a low, eager tone she said,"And can you still truly love me after all the shameful past?"
6627In a moment the woman was bending over the bed, and in a voice full of patient tenderness answered,"Well, dear?"
6627In fact I think it does, for did you not at first regard me as a painted lady who had stepped from the canvas to the floor?"
6627In his absence she asked, abruptly,"Have you seen Miss Ludolph lately?"
6627In reply she lifted an eager face to her friend and said,"Do you think he can love me still after my treatment of him?"
6627Is it too far-- would it take too long, to go to where my father died?
6627Is not one perfect plant better than a dozen imperfect ones?
6627Is not that a chance for romance?"
6627Is that painting but a''beautiful corpse''?"
6627Is there hope for me?"
6627Is there, can there be a path that leads through light or shade to a final and heavenly home?
6627Is this a part of my duty here?"
6627It will cover_ soon_ my standing- place, and then what becomes of Christine Ludolph?"
6627Life changed as quickly for them as for you, but did not their Divine Master see them as truly in the stormy night as in the sunlight?
6627Ludolph?"
6627Might she not be luring him on to his own destruction?
6627Miss Brown, have you such a book in the house?
6627Mr. Ludolph, being in a good humor, was disposed to banter Dennis, so he added:"Do you find time to be a missionary, also?
6627Mr. Ludolph, who was following his daughter, exclaimed,"What''s the matter, Fleet?
6627Mr. Ludolph, will you permit me to go home?
6627Mr. Schwartz, will you show him what it is necessary to do to- night?
6627Mrs. Bruder, will you pack up what you think I need?"
6627Must every one I meet speak to me as if I had murdered him?"
6627Must the torturing similarity and still more torturing contrast of the two occasions be continued?
6627Now if you''ve got plenty of clear grit-- Leetle disposed to show the white feather though, to- night, ai n''t yer?"
6627Nudging Dennis he asked in a loud whisper heard by all, which nearly caused Dr. Arten to choke,"The young filly is a German lady, ai n''t she?"
6627Oh, do you think you can save me?"
6627Oh, father, are you sure the Bible is all false?
6627Oh, no,"she added,"why should I think of him at all?
6627Oh, ye gods, what does it all mean?"
6627On one occasion Christine turned suddenly on her, and said:"What do you mean?
6627One day she wrote, feebly:"Would Miss Ludolph be willing to come and see a dying woman?
6627One thought only filled his mind-- Would they approve or condemn his taste?
6627Our boy must come back from college, and you and the two little ones-- what will you do?"
6627Papa sent them, did he not?"
6627She been breaking the commandments, too?"
6627She shuddered, but at last whispered,"Why have you kept this so long from me?"
6627She turned on him an indescribable look, and after a moment said in a slow, meaning tone,"Have you not heard my explanation, sir?"
6627She was at a loss how to introduce the object of her visit, but at last said,"Your husband is away?"
6627Soon after the company at Miss Winthrop''s, she said to him,"You received several invitations the other evening, did you not?"
6627Suddenly she asked,"Is it wrong thus to grieve over the breaking of an earthly tie?"
6627Suddenly the doctor looked grave, and asked in a stern voice,"Are you a heathen, or a good Christian?"
6627Supposing that he is poor, are not many of your noblemen as poor as poverty?
6627The French maid followed the doctor out, leaving the door ajar in her haste, and in an audible whisper said:"I say, docteur, is it not ze smallpox?
6627Then a smile of joy and welcome lighted up her wan features, and she whispered,"Oh, Dennis, husband-- are we once more united?"
6627Then calling the clerk in charge, he said,"Look here, Mr. Berder, I grouped the articles on this counter for you once, did I not?"
6627Then came the thought:"Have I asked Him to help me?
6627Then she said:"Wo n''t you go for Susie Winthrop?
6627Then she would become irritated with herself, and say, angrily:"What is this man to me?
6627Then you have us to love and think of; and remember, what could we do without you?"
6627Then, above, the words,"How knowest thou, O man, whether thou shalt save thy wife, even though she be an unbeliever?"
6627Then, as Christine seemed to smile upon him, she said to herself:"After all, what is their plan, but a plan, and to me a very chimerical one?
6627Then, becoming aware of her husband''s position, she exclaimed:"Why, Dennis, my husband, out of your bed?
6627Then, in a low, quick tone, she added,"Will you not stay as a favor to me?"
6627Then, looking at Dennis almost reproachfully, she said:"Could you not save him?
6627Then, starting forward, he cried,"Who will volunteer to keep the fire back?
6627There is no fear of his getting lost?
6627These words struck his eyes,"Art thou bound unto a wife?
6627To the question,"What is the matter?"
6627To what better use could I put my taste and knowledge of art than in helping you and furthering our plan for life?"
6627To what might he not have led her, if she had put her hand frankly and truthfully in his?
6627Vat for we keep mens here who haf no money?
6627Vat ish de druf?
6627Vat shall we do for you?
6627Von Brakhiem from New York, bound westward with a gay party on a trip to the Rocky Mountains and California?
6627Was he who gave those blissful assurances also exerting a subtile, unrecognized power over her?
6627Was her heart, awakening from its long winter of doubt and indifference, teaching her to paint?
6627Was it an apparition?
6627Was that the young man who was blacking old Schwartz''s boots the other day?
6627Were you not a little startled to hear such unwonted sounds echoing through the prosaic old store?"
6627What are the lives of a dozen such young fellows compared with the development and perfection of such a woman as you bid fair to be?"
6627What are those arguments?
6627What can I hope for more than a passing thought and a little kindly, condescending interest?
6627What can he or any man of this land be to me?"
6627What could he do for her?
6627What could her coat- of- arms be but the dollar symbol and the beer- barrel?"
6627What crosses do the members of the Church of the Holy Virgin take up?
6627What did he say?"
6627What difference did it make to the lady whether such as he was a fright or not?
6627What does all this mean?"
6627What fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?
6627What has Mr. Fleet been saying?"
6627What has happened?"
6627What have you got in that bundle?"
6627What if God restores him safe and well?"
6627What if he were right?
6627What if she had let the one golden opportunity of her life pass?
6627What if there is a future life, and we enter into it with no other possession than our character?
6627What is best?
6627What is right?
6627What is the matter?
6627What is the matter?"
6627What is the matter?"
6627What is the use of resisting this blind, remorseless fate that brings happiness to one and crushes another?"
6627What is the use of trying to lock things up and keep them from me?
6627What kind of economy do you call this, sir, especially on the part of one who has burdened himself with four helpless children?"
6627What man of all the large audience present to- night could have acted the part he did?
6627What shall I do?"
6627What shall I do?"
6627What shall we do?
6627What though all around are only dreary ruins, where the night wind is sighing mournfully?
6627What though the home before them is a deserted ruin?
6627What true congeniality can there be?
6627What would he not do next?
6627When alone with her soon afterward, he turned and said, sharply,"What does all this mean?"
6627When can we leave this detested land, this city of shops and speculators?
6627When in the middle of the room, who should meet him squarely but Bill Cronk?
6627When the woman returned her mistress watched her most narrowly and asked,"What did the doctor say to you?"
6627When was a man ever weak that the devil did not charge down upon him?
6627When will such a spirit dwell within me?"
6627Where am I?"
6627Where are you?
6627Where have you been hiding?
6627Where is Mr. Fleet?
6627Where is the thief?"
6627Where should he write?
6627Where you learn him?"
6627Who can?
6627Who ever heard of disputing the will of a bride?
6627Why am I not?
6627Why am I worrying about one who never could be much more to me living than dead?
6627Why could not the all- powerful Being you believe in take away the evil from the world?"
6627Why could you not ask after him, as after any other sick man?
6627Why do n''t people cry for help to other good men who lived in the dim past, and whose lives and deeds are half myth and half truth?
6627Why do n''t you wash your face?"
6627Why does He not do it in every case?"
6627Why does it not now?"
6627Why does n''t it seem so now?"
6627Why does n''t the question stay settled?
6627Why not?"
6627Why should I pain you by telling you the truth?"
6627Why should an all- powerful God take such a costly, indirect way of accomplishing His purpose when a word would suffice?"
6627Why should deep discouragement change suddenly to assured hope?
6627Why should he care?
6627Why should he let those who cared not a jot for him cause such sad injury?
6627Why should he take such an interest in this man?
6627Why should that Cross continually haunt me?
6627Why should the_ man_ who died thereon have the power to be continually speaking to me through His words that I have read?
6627Will you get a carriage and take me to the depot at once?
6627Will you give me lessons?"
6627Will you let me read you something about Him?"
6627Will you let me see what you brought?"
6627With his heart in his eyes and tones, he said:"Oh, Christine, what is the use of wearing this transparent mask any longer?
6627Would God reveal a duty and no way of performing it?"
6627Would a good father keep his child waiting?"
6627You have helped me so much; can you not say a word or sing something that will help them?"
6627You have not been exposed to any contagious disease?"
6627You remember Mr. Jones''s beautiful house on the north side, do you not?
6627You surely do not feel hardly toward him?"
6627Young, buoyant, in splendid health, with a surplus of warm blood tingling in every vein, how could he take a prudent, distrustful view of the world?
6627_ What is truth?_ He might have taught me.
6627am I greater than my Master?
6627and can you be so kind as to go on home with me?
6627and had she read in his face and manner that which had created a kindred impulse in her heart?
6627and how can you know such a comforting thing as the love of God?"
6627and shall I doubt God?"
6627and that the Bible tells us that His Son did, in very truth, die that we might live?"
6627and that which is called soul or spirit is driven forth from earth and the body as we have just been from our wealth and homes?
6627and then, as her husband fairly sobbed for joy, she started up and said, hurriedly:"What is the matter?
6627and what are borne by your great rich church, Miss Winthrop?
6627and who ever felt braver and more determined than he, with the needs of the dear ones at home added to his own incentives and ambitions?
6627and, even if He existed, how could I love a Being who left His world so full of vile evils?
6627do you suppose it was of the kind that he could extemporize?"
6627exclaimed the doctor,"you here?"
6627have n''t I thought till my heart is gall and my brain bursting?
6627he asked, feebly,"and what has happened?"
6627he of the duster and mop?
6627he said, on seeing Dennis;"vat you oop dis early for?
6627how?"
6627is the world burning up?"
6627or do you only cover them up?
6627or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?
6627said her father, hastily;"you are not going to faint also, are you?"
6627said her father,"why did I not think of it before?"
6627said she, with a half- scornful smile;"are you a disciple of art?"
6627said she;"how will he endure these changes?
6627she cried, in a tone of unspeakable pathos,"can I never, never see you again?
6627she exclaimed,"does his Bible teach him to forget and forgive nothing?
6627she exclaimed,"have you brought all the lost children in the city back with you?"
6627the gnawings of hunger are bad enough, but what must be those of conscience?
6627vat you mean?"
6627was he one of the victims?"
6627what for?"
6627what have ye got to say agin it?"
6627what yez doin''here?"
6627who cares?
6627who wants me?"
6627why should I?
6627why to this one man only?
6627you above your biz?
9748A thing of what sort?
9748Afraid--_of me?_"No-- that is, not of you personally-- but of marriage itself. 9748 And father and mother?"
9748And has n''t Edith any right?
9748And have n''t you-- quarrelled from the very beginning, too?
9748And not hate me?
9748And what happens afterwards?
9748And you expect me to wear it, publicly, now?
9748Any farther than Sylvia is above Thomas? 9748 Apparently he has found some means of escape,"said Sylvia;"would you care to read aloud to me this evening?"
9748Are n''t you rather extravagant?
9748Are you blind?
9748Are you ill, darling? 9748 Are you in earnest?"
9748Are you in pain?
9748Are you likely to be offended if I go on, and suggest something further?
9748Are you more interested in this stupid old farm than you are in me?
9748Are you sure you''re quite contented here, Sylvia?
9748Are you very tired, dear?
9748By what right do you consider yourself in a position to dictate to me?
9748Ca n''t you see how I have felt-- since Christmas night, even if you could n''t long before that? 9748 Ca n''t you understand Austin at all, and make allowances?
9748Can dose domestics hear vat ve say?
9748Come right in an''set down,said Mrs. Gray cheerfully, leading the way;"awful tryin''weather we''re havin'', ai n''t it?
9748Could n''t I have them both? 9748 Dearest-- will it make you feel any better-- if I say I''ll marry you-- right away?"
9748Did you do any other special business in Wallacetown?
9748Did you ever see me in a green muslin? 9748 Did you know I was going to be twenty- one next month, Sylvia?"
9748Did you say you were going to Tiffany''s to buy furniture-- I thought Tiffany''s was a jewelry store, and in the opposite direction?
9748Do men dare to be angry with angels sent from Heaven?
9748Do n''t you feel disappointed any,Mrs. Elliott could not help asking,"to have a feller like Peter in the family?"
9748Do n''t you think I''ve waited long enough already?
9748Do n''t you?
9748Do n''t you?
9748Do n''t you_ want_ to come?
9748Do you happen to know whether-- Sylvia''s been over here this afternoon-- or sent a telephone message or a note?
9748Do you know why?
9748Do you really think so? 9748 Do you see that great trunk?"
9748Do you suppose she''s going to die?
9748Do you suppose some of the others would like to come with us? 9748 Do?
9748Does he know?
9748Entrez, monsieur,she said gayly;"avez- vous apportà © votre livre, votre cahier, et votre plume?
9748Even to- day?
9748Ever anything good?
9748For instance?
9748Go out on the porch and wait for me,she commanded breathlessly;"you''ve got the motor, have n''t you?
9748Good- bye, dearie; sure it ai n''t too hot?
9748Has Thomas recovered?
9748Has every one else gone? 9748 Have n''t I convinced you that I do n''t need to think that over any more?"
9748Have you been seeing ghosts? 9748 Have you had any breakfast?"
9748How are things going in that quarter?
9748How did you happen to come back to ask me such a thing-- what made you think of it?
9748How does Sylvia take it?
9748How long have you and she been in love with each other? 9748 How long have you been here, should you think?"
9748How many years older than Edith are you?
9748How much longer are you going to be at this, father?
9748How much?
9748How much?
9748I promise-- Do you remember that in the spring Hugh Elliott came to spend a couple of months with Fred?
9748I suppose I''ll have to give in about the money-- but will you mind, very much, if we have-- a long engagement?
9748I thought you never guessed--- Since you did-- how could you go on loving me so-- how can you say what you just have-- about my--_goodness_?
9748If I''m cold, what must she be, in that linen habit? 9748 Is anything the matter?"
9748Is that the usual thing?
9748Is that you, Sylvia?
9748Is the telling going to be hard for you?
9748Is there a flower- shop near here?
9748Is your back tired?
9748It''s Austin in the carryall,she cried excitedly;"now, ai n''t that a piece of luck?
9748It''s a ver''varm evening, not? 9748 May I come again some evening and talk more?"
9748May I tell you now?
9748Mrs. Cary, dear missus,--vill you look after Edit''vile I''m gone?
9748My darling boy, what is it? 9748 My dear lady,"said Mr. Stevens, cracking open the egg she had set before him with great care,"where are your eyes?
9748My dear,he asked, lifting her face in his hands,"did you never joke because you were afraid-- to show how much you really felt?"
9748My, she''s a reg''lar goose layin''a golden egg for you, ai n''t she? 9748 No, no-- why did you need me?"
9748No-- Sylvia-- what were those papers you gave me to burn?
9748Oh, Austin-- could_ I_ buy it? 9748 Oh, Sylvia, you''re so brave-- you told the doctor you''d taken care of some one that was sick before-- who was it?"
9748Oh, do n''t you?
9748Oh,he groaned,"where_ can_ she be?
9748Ought I to have put on my dress- suit?
9748Pretty bad travelling, was n''t it? 9748 She''s dead right about the cows,"declared Thomas;"but what would be the use of getting good stock and putting it in these barns?
9748So you''re really ready for me at last?
9748Speakin''of weddin''s,said Mrs. Elliott,"why did n''t you have a regular one for Edith, same as for Sally?"
9748Start?
9748Sylvia, Sylvia, where are you?
9748Sylvia-- would you take a present from_ me_?
9748Thank you for telling me; but it''s rather awful, is n''t it, that any one should have to think of her mother as Sylvia must? 9748 That is, of course, unless you_ are_ ashamed-- are you perfectly sure of your own mind?
9748Then this does n''t seem to you dreadful-- to have me ask for this?
9748Then where would you like to go first? 9748 Then you mean-- that you want me to marry you?"
9748Then you will listen, and-- and believe me-- and_ help_?
9748Then you''ll accept?
9748Thomas, how_ could_ you?
9748To buy things like these?
9748To think whether you really love me?
9748Vill you gif me one chance to try?
9748We have splendid pictures in Burlington,he announced,"but this is good for a place of this size, is n''t it, Sylvia?"
9748We''ve got to stay here until morning, have n''t we?
9748Well, I suppose you''ll let me give these various things for Christmas presents, wo n''t you? 9748 Well, well,"she said playfully,"Austin''s cut you out, ai n''t he?
9748What can I do-- to make that better?
9748What did he say?
9748What do you mean, Peter?
9748What do you mean? 9748 What do you mean?"
9748What do you mean?
9748What for?
9748What has happened?
9748What is it, then? 9748 What is it?
9748What is it?
9748What kind of waste paper? 9748 What made you think I was angry?"
9748What makes you think I have?
9748What on earth--?
9748What would you do if I should?
9748What would you do?
9748What would you tell them, anyway?
9748What''s the matter, Austin?
9748What, then?
9748What_ are_ you talking about? 9748 Whatever shall we do when she goes away?
9748Where did you drop from? 9748 Where''s my brother?"
9748Where_ have_ you been? 9748 Which way''ve you decided?"
9748Who is it?
9748Why are you so bound to misunderstand and misjudge me? 9748 Why do n''t you ask your precious Mrs. Cary for the money?
9748Why do n''t you call me Sylvia, as all the rest do?
9748Why do n''t you marry Fred''s cousin, instead of Fred?
9748Why do n''t you say we need a million dollars, and be done with it? 9748 Why do n''t you?
9748Why do you look at me so?
9748Why not?
9748Why should I? 9748 Why should I?
9748Why should n''t I? 9748 Why, Peter''s all right,"returned Mr. Gray soberly;"what makes you ask?
9748Why, no-- what do you mean?
9748Why? 9748 Why?
9748Why?
9748Will the others believe me, too?
9748Will you make good things happen to me?
9748With no rest-- nothing to eat or drink?
9748Wo n''t you come in?
9748Worried? 9748 Would n''t you like to smoke?"
9748Would you feel to tell them?
9748Would you mind telling me, sir, where Sylvia''s mother is?
9748Yes, how is_ Peter_?
9748Yes, yes, yes, where are you?
9748Yes-- and you were sorry that you did n''t listen to me, were n''t you?
9748You do n''t consider Peter a suitable match for one of your sisters?
9748You do n''t mean to say you''re going out this torrid day?
9748You mean Thomas?
9748You mean to Wallacetown? 9748 You mean, that for some reason, you''re not ready to marry me yet?"
9748You promise me?
9748You''d never think that little soft- lookin''creature could be so set an''determined, now, would you?
9748You''re determined to have some sort of a bodyguard in the shape of your new friends to protect you from your old ones?
9748Your glove?
9748_ Don''t_--I love you-- and love you-- and_ love you_--oh, ca n''t I make you see? 9748 _ Eavesdropping, Peter_?"
9748''Any cows?''
9748''Any money on deposit?''
9748''Go on loving you''--how could I help loving you a thousand times more than ever-- when you won the greatest fight of all?
9748''Have you any idea when that''s goin''to be?''
9748''Then there''s only the poll- tax?''
9748--Then as Austin did not answer,"Now, tell me truthfully-- whose fault is it?"
9748Ai n''t men queer?
9748Am I all right, do you think, Uncle Mat?"
9748An''then there''s quite a bunch of love- affairs in the family already, ai n''t there?"
9748And as she nodded without speaking, her eyes filling with tears, he asked very gently,"Why not, Sylvia?"
9748And how can I write, and not say,"Thank you, thank you, thank you,"with every line?
9748And how can a clergyman so lose his sense of dignity as to behave like any common fortune- hunter?"
9748And may I truly stay-- right now?
9748And then she went on, as cool as a cucumber,''As long as you''ve got an extra stall, may I send for one of my horses?
9748And there are some, who, for a small village, are rich, and just plain stingy-- why do n''t you go to them?"
9748And what could I say again but''Yes, Mrs. Cary''?
9748And why should she want you so?"
9748And will you promise me just to-- to give this little slip of paper to your father-- and never refer to the matter again, or let him?"
9748And, oh, Austin, how could_ you_?
9748And-- and Peter?"
9748And-- and Thomas, and the girls?
9748Are you awfully busy?"
9748Are you going to wait for me here?"
9748Are you offended with me for making such a suggestion?"
9748Are you very angry with me, Austin?"
9748Are you willing he should come here, and sleep on the living- room sofa, as you suggested once before, or shall I take him to a hotel?"
9748Austin was silent for a moment; then he muttered:"Well, why does n''t she marry Jack Weston?
9748Austin, ca n''t you drive any faster?"
9748Austin, can you explain?
9748Austin-- don''t tease me-- do tell me what you mean?"
9748Austin-- if you can not secure a loan at some local bank, would you be very averse to borrowing the money from me-- whatever the sum is that you need?
9748Austin--""Yes, dear-- Sylvia, I think your cheeks are softer than ever--"I do n''t think Edith looks very well, do you?"
9748Both of you?
9748But I should have thought she''d have wore gray or lavender, would n''t you?
9748But her courage had apparently failed her, for she did not answer, so at last he went on:"You did n''t miss me much, at first, did you?
9748But how can he be sure he is through-- that the old sins wo n''t crop up again?
9748But surely you wo n''t want to now--""Why not?
9748But the question arises, is Austin?
9748But there''s another matter--""Yes, sir?"
9748But there''s nothin''like a large family for keepin''things hummin''just the same, now, is there?"
9748But, you see, I feel that perhaps there never will be any for me-- and that seems really only fair-- doesn''t it?"
9748But--""Do you mind being here-- alone with me?"
9748By the way, has it occurred to you that there may be some reason for Edith''s sudden turn towards domesticity?"
9748By the way, has she written you the good news about her scholarship?
9748CHAPTER XI"So you refused Weston''s offer of three hundred dollars for Frieda?"
9748CHAPTER XIV"Are you two young idiots going out again this evening?"
9748Ca n''t I have the fireplaces in my rooms unbricked,''she went on,''an''the rooms re- papered an''painted?
9748Ca n''t you feel the injustice of being poor, and dirty, and ignorant, when thousands of other people are just_ rotten_ with money?"
9748Can I?"
9748Cary?"
9748Come over an''bring your sewin''an''set with me some day soon, wo n''t you, Sylvia?
9748Comment va l''oncle de votre ami?
9748Could n''t you--?"
9748Delicate, ai n''t it?
9748Did you like my selections?"
9748Do n''t you know why I just could n''t go away?
9748Do n''t you think I know what you''ve been through this last year?"
9748Do n''t you understand?
9748Do you honestly believe-- if you will think sanely for a moment-- that you have had more joy than I?
9748Do you like petunias?
9748Do you like your teacher?"
9748Do you mind if I dig up your front yard?"
9748Do you mind if I take the motor?
9748Do you mind this dim light?
9748Do you remember how I took it to heart because we could n''t scrape together the money no way to get one of Austin when he come along?
9748Do you remember when we began to wind it up, Saturday nights,''together?--All this is the same, praise be, but--""Yes?"
9748Do you still love sunsets, too?"
9748Do you think I was wrong?"
9748Do you think you could help me, Molly?"
9748Do you want her to tie herself forever to an ignorant, intemperate, sensual man?
9748Does it seem as if you could n''t bear being so dreadfully uncomfortable that much longer?"
9748Enough so you wo n''t have to buy my cigars and shoe- strings-- aren''t you glad?"
9748Ever hear of any one who did n''t like roses, Thomas?
9748Gray?''
9748Had you ever thought of that?"
9748Has Sylvia taken leave of her senses?"
9748Has any one ever told you how pretty you are?"
9748Have I your full permission to try my hand and see?"
9748Have you a horse?''
9748Have you any insurance?"
9748Have you anything else?"
9748Have you decided what you''re goin''to wear for a weddin''dress?
9748Have you heard how the new minister''s wife is doin''?
9748Have you really been here-- all these hours?"
9748Have you taken any more ladies to Moving- Picture Palaces lately?
9748Here we are-- have you any suggestions you may not care to make before the clerks as to what kind of furniture I shall buy?"
9748Here''s the first verse:"Who is Sylvia?
9748His greatest desire, not possession, but protection?
9748His ultimate aim, not gratification, but sacrifice?"
9748Hot, ai n''t it?
9748How about Austin, too?
9748How are you going to convince her that you want to marry her because you love her?"
9748How can you guess so much?"
9748How could I be?
9748How could you think for one moment that our children could look down on their mother?
9748How did you happen to choose-- just this?"
9748How much chance for hope and salvation would be left for her then?
9748How old are you, anyway?"
9748How was he to disclose to Sylvia the wonderful secret that he adored her with the whole family sitting on the back seat?
9748How''s mother?
9748How''s the tax assessing coming along?
9748I ca n''t tell you about it, dear, and I''m trying hard to forget it-- you wo n''t ask me about it again, will you?"
9748I know it''s awfully bold, in another person''s house-- an''such a_ lovely_ house, too, but--''""Well?"
9748I suppose everything''s goin''fine at college, ai n''t it?"
9748I suppose some of those New York farmers have pretty daughters?"
9748I want most dreadfully to stay-- could you possibly make room for me here?"
9748I was at my wits''end, and could n''t think of anything to do but this-- are you very angry with me?"
9748I was only wondering if it might not help to pass the time if I told you a story?
9748I wonder if we''d better try it?
9748I''d be hurt-- oh, dreadfully hurt-- but I would n''t feel angry-- or revengeful-- that''s what you mean, is n''t it, Peter?"
9748I''m just going out to milk-- won''t you come with me, and see the cattle?
9748If I can accept all that from you, ca n''t you accept the clear title to a few acres from me?
9748If I had n''t been near the entrance to this wood- road-- Austin, what makes you grip my hand so?
9748Is that you?"
9748Is there anything else?"
9748Is there plenty of supper, Sylvia?
9748It seems to be coming off cold again, does n''t it?
9748It was just--""Yes?"
9748It was n''t my fault we burst two tires, was it?
9748It''s been running through my head all day-- I''ve almost got it down to hours, minutes, and seconds-- What''s the matter with Edith, anyway?
9748It''s tremendous-- lifts you right off your feet-- do you know what I mean?"
9748Le chat de votre mère, est- il noir?"
9748Meanwhile Mr. Stevens stood looking vainly about, and finally interrupted with"Where''s_ my_ girl?"
9748Now, tell me what you wanted to talk to me about, and we''ll try to do better-- those troublesome details you mentioned before you left the farm?
9748Now, then, what is it?"
9748Now, to answer your question,"What have I been doing all this time?"
9748Now, what is it, Austin?"
9748Now, what will you give me for a reward for being so docile?"
9748Oh, Sylvia, what can it be?
9748Oh, Sylvia, why did n''t somebody tell me?
9748Oh, do n''t you think she would?"
9748Or that you are not suffering twice as much as I am, or ever shall?"
9748Peter was hangin''round outside Edith''s door the whole blessed time, after her fall--""Strange she should be so sick, just from a fall, ai n''t it?"
9748Play something else, wo n''t you?
9748Pretty good, most of them, are n''t they, though?
9748Shall I tell first, or will you?
9748She seems to be stopping and looking around-- why do n''t you ask her if you could be of any help?"
9748She''s got plenty of money-- why should n''t she spend it?"
9748Some of it is rather indiscreet but--""Which of us do you think it is most likely to shock?"
9748Sorry you think it is n''t suitable for you to dance yet, for, of course, you would enjoy that a lot, but you can pretty soon, ca n''t you?
9748Speakin''of nightgowns, how are you gettin''on with your trousseau?
9748Suppose she took him literally-- though he had meant every word when he said it-- suppose he lost her?
9748Surely you do n''t think_ Thomas_ was thinking of the money?"
9748Sylvia made no effort to draw away from him; at last she asked, in a voice which was almost pleading in its quality:"Is that what you think of me?"
9748Sylvia winced, but she only said, very gently:"Then can you, with that knowledge, wish Edith to keep on seeing it all her life?
9748Sylvia, is it really, honestly true I''ve only got three more weeks of it?"
9748Sylvia?
9748THE OLD GRAY HOMESTEAD CHAPTER I"For Heaven''s sake, Sally, do n''t say,''Is n''t it hot?''
9748Tell me-- which of the Italian cities did you like best-- Rome-- or Florence-- or Naples?"
9748The fingering of that''Serenade''is awfully hard, is n''t it?
9748The garden an''the horse is all very well, but what do you think she lit into me to- day for?
9748The idea!--There''s really no chance, then, of our moving for several hours?"
9748The question is now,''Will you go?''"
9748The usual board around here is five dollars a week, is n''t it?''
9748Then, peering around to the back of the car,"Why do n''t_ you do_ something?
9748There''s something about a sunset in the late autumn that''s unlike those at any other time of year-- have you ever noticed?
9748They were almost instantly speeding down the road together, while she asked,"Have you sent for the doctor?"
9748They''re both flowers-- and fragrant-- and-- and fragile, are n''t they?"
9748Throw that rubbish into the fire for me, will you?"
9748Tires, too?
9748Was it possible--_could_ it be?--that she_ did_ like them?
9748Was n''t it pretty nearly a case of''first sight''?"
9748We have enough eggs for our own use, and some to sell besides-- I guess there wo n''t be any to sell_ this_ week, will there?
9748We''ll have a door cut through it into the hall, too,''says she,''an''is n''t there a closet just like it overhead?
9748Well, as I was sayin''to Joe about the minister''s wife-- What''s that?
9748Well, how bad is it?"
9748Well, what have you thought, honey?"
9748What about Austin himself?"
9748What are you going to do next, Austin?"
9748What are you thinking of?
9748What board did you say she paid?"
9748What chance has a weakling like Jack Weston against her, when she leads him in the same path?"
9748What could I say, but''Yes, Mrs. Cary''?
9748What did you do?"
9748What do you expect_ me_ to do?"
9748What do you know about her that justifies you in resenting it?
9748What do you mean?"
9748What do you say to Monday, Wednesday, and Friday evenings, from seven- thirty to ten?
9748What do you say to a little walk, Mr. Gray, before we turn in?
9748What had possessed her to come to this hot, stuffy place with Thomas, instead of reading French in her peaceful, pleasant sitting- room with Austin?
9748What has happened to her?
9748What has happened?"
9748What have you been doing all day?
9748What have you got here?"
9748What is she That all the swains commend her?
9748What is there to think over-- if you''re sure you care?"
9748What mischief have_ you_ been up to?
9748What streak of good luck is setting him loose?
9748What was it?"
9748What''s your next''detail''?"
9748What_ is_ the matter now?"
9748When we get to milking our cows, and separating our cream, and doing our cleaning by electricity, it''ll be something like, wo n''t it?
9748When?"
9748Where did you pick up all this information about farming?"
9748Where is she?"
9748Where''s mother?"
9748White?"
9748Who can this be?"
9748Who''s in it, do you suppose?
9748Why did n''t Austin show more eagerness to be with her, anyway?
9748Why did n''t I take better care of her?
9748Why do n''t you come home over some Sunday, and see how well I am bearing up?
9748Why do n''t you come over to us, if you''re lonely?
9748Why do n''t you come, too?
9748Why do n''t you say right out that you do n''t care to go?"
9748Why do n''t you take what you''ve a perfect right to-- if you want it?"
9748Why not?"
9748Why on earth should I?
9748Why, Peter?
9748Why?"
9748Why?"
9748Why?"
9748Why?"
9748Why_ is_ it so hard for you to accept things?"
9748Will this mean all sorts of fluffy pink and blue things, like what Flora Little wears?
9748Will you come up and sit down?"
9748Will you drink some milk, and let me bathe your face and hands?"
9748Will you marry me-- the first of September, Sylvia?"
9748Will you put it on yourself?"
9748Wo n''t she be busy, with just one week to get ready to be a bride, after she stops being a schoolmarm?
9748Wo n''t you sit down a few minutes?
9748You did n''t hurt your dress- suit any, did you, Thomas?
9748You look ten years younger, does n''t he, Mr. Stevens?
9748You think they''re both real nice, an''you''re glad he''s got_ some_ sort of a wife?
9748You wo n''t need to take another bath, will you?
9748You''re not cross, are you, Sylvia?"
9748and,''For the love of Heaven, how_ many_ horses have you?''"
9748he asked, with his hand on the door- handle,"or have I bored and tired you to death?
9748he said at last, when some semblance of order had been restored,"without Mrs. Elliott?
9748he said hoarsely;"do n''t you know by this time what I think of you?"
9748is n''t she pretty?
9748most decidedly, and went on repeating it, with variations, until I threw myself into your arms?
9748or,''Did you ever know such weather for April?''
9748or,''Does n''t it seem as if the mud was just as bad as it used to be before we had the State Road?''
9748she asked quickly;"is any one ill?"
9748she cried sharply--"and what do you want?"
9748she cried,"how can you be so calm and cold?
9748she said in amazement;"is anything the matter at the farm?"
9748she went on lightly,--"that I proposed to you, and that you accepted me?
9748though you may believe I fairly itched to ask,''Send_ where_?''
39826''S my whole life right''ere, see? 39826 1944?
39826A promise-- what is it, Callista?
39826After 3:30, when did you next see Callista Blake?
39826After going into the bedroom, what is the next thing that you remember positively?
39826After letting the body back in the water, what did you do next, Sergeant?
39826Ahead of me?
39826All her time?
39826All right, I know that, but how_ does_ it push,''s what I do n''t get?
39826All right, I see what you mean, but on that point the inconsistency is really glaring, is n''t it? 39826 All the persons involved-- Miss Blake, Mrs. Doherty, and others you may have heard about later-- were at that time unknown to you?"
39826All you learned, actually, was that some sort of love relation had evidently developed between these two?
39826Am I doing it too? 39826 An ordinary visit?"
39826And Callista?
39826And after that, you say, you saw her hardly at all?
39826And asked then if you were going to arrest her?
39826And crossroads?
39826And do you identify what I show you here, a woman''s blue slipper, size five?
39826And in this case there was some, but less than normal?
39826And questioned there-- do you happen to remember how long?
39826And she did give you other information?
39826And that one?
39826And the place, and the time of day?
39826And then?
39826And you told her to go back to the living- room, and she did so?
39826And you would do it?
39826Any head covering?
39826Any special accessories that you recall?
39826Anything distinctive about the sound of that car?
39826Are n''t the essentials much the same?
39826Are there bushes, scrubs, likely places for birds or nests, near the part of the grounds where you had that picnic?
39826Are we so terribly far apart? 39826 Are you all right, Cal?
39826Are you familiar with the perennials in that wild spot?
39826Are you going to cross- examine Sergeant Peterson?
39826Are you saying Miss Blake was nude?
39826Are you saying someone else gave her the poison?
39826Are you well acquainted with the defendant, Callista Blake?
39826Are you yourself familiar with that wild garden?
39826Are your duties as housekeeper fairly general, Miss Welsh?
39826As a housekeeper, you know dressmaking and such things?
39826At about 10:30 Monday morning, August 17th, who beside yourself was present, to your knowledge, at the Chalmers house or on the grounds?
39826At that picnic, August 7th, did you have any talk with her?
39826Bad, the last few months?
39826Before Chief Gage and others arrived, did Miss Blake do or say anything else you remember as significant?
39826Before we go into that, do you want to tell your side of that thing about the aquarium, Callista?
39826Before we go on to other things, is there anything in that testimony that you want to comment on, or add to, maybe?
39826Beyond psychiatry, is n''t it?
39826But I presume you must have been working up to that state of mind for quite a while?
39826But according to your observation, she was n''t what you''d call drunk, is that right?
39826But for you it would have to be a clear case, is that right? 39826 But last August 16th, in the deep twilight after nine o''clock, you could easily read it?"
39826But never met one who felt that he was, let''s say, a special sort of being? 39826 But only for a while?"
39826But the rest of the sentence, Miss Blake--''I wish I might set you free''--what did you mean by that?
39826Callista never told you much about the Dohertys, either of them?
39826Callista was not present at her mother''s wedding?
39826Callista, I must ask--"They were all destroyed, all his visions? 39826 Callista, I will ask you: was there ever any genuine hostility between you and Ann Doherty?"
39826Callista, after signing that transcript in Mr. Lamson''s office, did you receive medical attention?
39826Callista, is this your time of the month?
39826Can you be certain it was n''t her daughter you heard?
39826Can you establish the time you heard that car stop?
39826Can you give us the exact date?
39826Cecil, do you have many more questions for her?
39826Cecil, does it necessarily mean anything at all, when they stay out this long?
39826Cecil, what way does the jury- room face?
39826Could the_ lack_ of a positive finding be significant?
39826Could you tell whether the person was standing or squatting?
39826Did Callista Blake, while you had hold of her, tell you that she was ill, that she had had a miscarriage the night before?
39826Did Callista say anything to suggest she was thinking of suicide?
39826Did Callista speak later of seeing the Dohertys at that picnic?
39826Did Miss Blake ever call there when you were present?
39826Did Miss Blake explain her refusal?
39826Did Miss Blake sign anything during that interview at Mr. Lamson''s office, while you were present?
39826Did anything else significant happen before Chief Gage arrived?
39826Did anything in her appearance suggest she might be ill?
39826Did anything noteworthy happen then?
39826Did she call to you, or wave?
39826Did she give the occasion, the reason for Mrs. Doherty''s visit?
39826Did she have her field glasses that day?
39826Did she say any more, that month, about suicide?
39826Did she seem confused, inattentive to what you said or unable to understand it?
39826Did she seem in good command of herself when you spoke to her?
39826Did she take her apartment at Covent Street soon after she began to work for you?
39826Did that trickle into the pond create any current?
39826Did the quiet, you- be- damn manner fool you? 39826 Did they learn of your presence there?"
39826Did you again tell her she ought to change her story?
39826Did you attend the wedding?
39826Did you check the other contents of the handbag?
39826Did you employ the Gettler test?
39826Did you extend your search beyond the pond area?
39826Did you find anything else by the house?
39826Did you give her a ticket, Trooper?
39826Did you hear any other sounds beyond the pines, or maybe in the grove, after you heard that car door close?
39826Did you inquire what she meant by that?
39826Did you inquire, before others arrived, about this poison Miss Blake said she had?
39826Did you look for such evidence?
39826Did you meet Mrs. Doherty also that year--1955?
39826Did you meet the Chalmers family then too? 39826 Did you note the time?"
39826Did you notice a shoulder- strap bag?
39826Did you notice any glow from its headlights?
39826Did you notice any smell of alcohol on her breath?
39826Did you overhear anything else?
39826Did you say why you wanted to see her?
39826Did you see Callista Blake again that evening?
39826Did you see Dr. Chalmers at 10:30 or thereabouts?
39826Did you see or hear anything you particularly remember?
39826Did you see your mother or your stepfather that day?
39826Did you stick it out, Joe?
39826Did you suggest any other thing she might do that would, in your words, give her a better break?
39826Did you suggest that she ought to change her story?
39826Did you take the flashlight from your car?
39826Did you talk to her on the phone that week end any time?
39826Did you, for instance, call each other by your first names?
39826Do n''t look distressed, as you did last night, and ask me, what are we to do? 39826 Do they need more bailiffs out there?"
39826Do you at present do any artistic work yourself, besides photography?
39826Do you intend to be a famous prosecutor? 39826 Do you know when Callista Blake arrived?"
39826Do you mean her answers were unresponsive, unconnected with the questions you asked?
39826Do you mean they were embracing, something like that?
39826Do you recall seeing Dr. Chalmers on the porch, turning on the light?
39826Do you recall seeing me that evening?
39826Do you recall the circumstances-- what part of the day it was, say?
39826Do you recall who was present, August 7th?
39826Do you think Mr. Hunter will put James Doherty on the stand?
39826Do you think we have a chance?
39826Doctor, will you give the jury a description of the effects of aconitine in a lethal or near- lethal dose?
39826Doctor-- that''s an academic degree, is n''t it?
39826Does anything about this hole strike you as unusual, peculiar?
39826Does it have a luminous dial?
39826Does it mean we should n''t marry?
39826Does it really matter? 39826 Does it suit my complexion?"
39826Does the gravel drive extend to Summer Avenue?
39826Dr. Chalmers said to me:''Sam? 39826 Even from a blow that merely stunned?"
39826For anyone else?
39826For example poisoning by aconitine?
39826From the back porch could you see the opening of that path?
39826Going home directly, sir?
39826Got plenty, huh?
39826Got something all lined up?
39826Grab off a natural defense witness when I do n''t have to?
39826Happy, Timmy? 39826 Has Dr. Chalmers, in any later conversation with you, again brought up the theory that Mrs. Doherty might have committed suicide?"
39826Have n''t I already told Mr. Lamson that no one else knew of it?
39826Have you ever been the victim of a robbery or burglary?
39826Have you ever read Shakespeare''s play_ Hamlet_?
39826Have you met Mr. James Doherty any more often than that?
39826Have you met a great many of them?
39826Have you read the editorials in the Winchester_ Courier_ or the morning_ Sentinel_ on this case?
39826He roused at once and answered you?
39826He''s''Doherty''to you now? 39826 Her voice was ever soft, gentle, and low, an excellent thing in woman"--Lear, Act Five, last scene, I forget the number of the scene, do you mind?
39826Hot?
39826How honest shall we get, Terry? 39826 How long did she remain there?"
39826How long have you known the defendant Callista Blake?
39826How was Miss Blake dressed that day?
39826How was she dressed, if you recall?
39826How was she dressed?
39826How were you employed on Monday morning, August 17th last?
39826I am sorry for her-- who would n''t be? 39826 I suppose nothing''s happened yet?"
39826I, Judge? 39826 If it were like this, for instance?"
39826If it''s a zigzag, then you ca n''t look through from the lawn area into the wild garden-- is that correct?
39826If not happy, what are you going to do about it?
39826If she were still carrying it, what_ would_ you do? 39826 In a time when any bad sickness or injury was probably a death sentence, a general fatalism would be almost unavoidable, do n''t you think?"
39826In other words he was in a state where you''d hardly expect him to make a clear interpretation of anything he''d seen?
39826In that general talk, were her answers clear and satisfactory?
39826In that overheard conversation, Mrs. Jason, the name of Ann-- Mrs. Doherty-- was not mentioned by either of them?
39826In the hallway?
39826In what month were they married?
39826Including some kinds of poisoning?
39826Informal?
39826Is Car 48 equipped with two- way radio?
39826Is he deaf?
39826Is it all right for a queen to suck a pin- pricked finger?
39826Is n''t it possible, Doctor, to receive a head injury, perhaps from a padded thing like a sandbag, that wo n''t leave any marks?
39826Is that address near to 21 Covent Street, Miss Nolan?
39826Is that standard procedure, by the way, when there''s convincing evidence of drowning?
39826Is there a path through the grove?
39826Is there a street number on the Chalmers house?
39826Is there an outside light on the Chalmers''front porch?
39826It was a definite intention, my dear?
39826It''s what would happen if there was a disagreement, is n''t it?
39826Latent, you mean, do n''t you?
39826Later on did you check the temperature of the water?
39826May I sit at the desk and judge humanity?
39826May it please the Court, is Mr. Warner introducing some of the defendant''s art work as an exhibit for the defense, or is this just a love feast?
39826Meaning, I suppose, that you did n''t believe her story yourself?
39826Members of the jury, have you reached a verdict in the case now before you?
39826Miss Welsh, do you identify these garments as those that Ann Doherty was wearing when you found her body in the pond at Shanesville?
39826Miss Welsh, was your relation to Mrs. Doherty one of close acquaintance? 39826 Mother, do you happen to remember the time I spilled that nitric acid?"
39826Motor not shut off right away-- how long did it run?
39826Mr. District Attorney?
39826Mr. Judd, as a friend and business partner of James Doherty, have you often visited at his house in Shanesville?
39826Mr. Judd, did you speak of this episode later to James Doherty-- or to anyone?
39826Mr. Judd, you were deeply concerned for James Doherty?
39826Mrs. Jason, did you notice Callista Blake talking with anyone but the children that afternoon?
39826Mrs. Jason, how did you spend the afternoon of Friday, August 7th?
39826Must I answer that?
39826My God, do you imagine us taking one?
39826My love, ca n''t you hear me? 39826 My words are plain, are n''t they?"
39826No one else?
39826No, she''d just go white and-- walk away, or-- is it all right to say this?
39826No? 39826 No?
39826Not even as a child, having tantrums?
39826Not even the beatniks?
39826Not in fiction?
39826Now would you, as an observant friend, say that Callista is moodier than most people? 39826 Oh, something terribly important?
39826Oh, there''s more?
39826Oh, this morbid dramatizing, this neurotic-- quoting''Hamlet''at me as if I-- are you_ laughing_?
39826Oh, what''s all the fuss? 39826 Oh, you did tell me that, did n''t you?
39826Oh-- Jim said:''What are we going to do?'' 39826 Oh-- oh-- explain it by what follows, ca n''t you?
39826Oh-- there is something else in the letter that makes it consistent?
39826Oh? 39826 Only one heel- mark?"
39826Only the right one, you''re sure?
39826Part of the ritual?
39826Please explain those terms for the jury, will you?
39826Please tell me: is your own religious feeling so strong that you do actually feel sinful when you''re with me? 39826 See?"
39826Sergeant, after Miss Blake''s admission that James Doherty had been her lover, was she questioned any further, there at her apartment?
39826Sergeant, this bag has a tag with your initials-- is this your identifying mark?
39826Sergeant, when you first saw Dr. Chalmers he was in a state of shock?
39826Sergeant, when you found Dr. Chalmers on the back porch, did you speak first?
39826Shall I tell of this in my own words?
39826She did n''t appear angry?
39826She did n''t? 39826 She replied:''That''s how it is?
39826She said that? 39826 She was not at that time under arrest, was she?"
39826She went ahead of you?
39826She-- in the water-- I could n''t reach--"Miss Welsh, try to be impersonal, wo n''t you? 39826 So, if a body not breathing enters the water, you wo n''t see foam?"
39826So? 39826 Sunlight in the living- room windows, was there?
39826Take your time, Callista-- by the way, would you like a sip of water?
39826That is diagnostic?--congestion of the viscera?
39826That is still your story, Miss Blake?
39826That is, you had nothing against her except that she was in the way?
39826That part is a perfectly clear memory, Callista? 39826 That why you switched to premed courses this year?"
39826That''s quite a pragmatic attitude, is n''t it?
39826That''s where he flashed the morgue pictures at you, Cal?
39826The close friendship you speak of-- tell us more of that, will you? 39826 The episode with him was-- really no more than that, an episode?"
39826The junior partner is Mr. James Doherty, correct?
39826The moon--"Yes,''the moon, the inconstant moon''--don''t you remember I told you? 39826 The woman tempted him?"
39826The-- blank?
39826Then you do consider yourself an artist?
39826There was no question of dissolving your partnership with him?
39826These stockings: can you identify them as the ones Mrs. Doherty was wearing?
39826They did n''t learn of your presence, so far as you know?
39826They were just sitting there on the grass?
39826Was Doherty also undressed?
39826Was Dr. Chalmers standing in the porch light?
39826Was Miss Blake questioned about those letters, there at her apartment?
39826Was an innocent interpretation possible? 39826 Was he that short of breath the last time you talked with him?"
39826Was her response satisfactory to you as a police officer?
39826Was it a bright day, August 17th?
39826Was it turned on that evening, and if so, when?
39826Was she alone?
39826Was she driving fast, exceeding the limit?
39826Was she questioned there, in your presence?
39826Was she still alone?
39826Was she then wearing that shoulder- strap bag?
39826Was the water clear?
39826Well, I do n''t know what she had to be unhappy about, with--"Miss Welsh, may I have a responsive answer to my question?
39826Well, Sergeant, what did Dr. Chalmers say?
39826Well, a buzzy thing, and of course I--"Was the motor shut off?
39826Well, for that matter, did you ever hear Callista speak maliciously about anyone?
39826Well-- color?
39826Well-- no more about that? 39826 Well-- when I''d finished my call, Miss Blake said:''I''m getting something from the kitchen, I suppose you want to come with me?''
39826Were they, to your knowledge, engaged in sexual intercourse?
39826Were you aware of any constraint, or hostility, between Callista Blake and any of the guests at that picnic?
39826Were you given any information about your friend?
39826Were you in Shanesville on Friday, August 7th of this year?
39826Were you in a different mood that day, Callista?
39826Were you there?
39826What about after the first of May?
39826What are the origins of crime? 39826 What became of my father''s work?"
39826What did Miss Blake say?
39826What did he do after your conversation?
39826What did her mood seem to be at that time?
39826What did she say?
39826What else did she say?
39826What else was said?
39826What happened, Callista?
39826What is it?
39826What is the significance of foam on the lips, in a drowning?
39826What is truth?
39826What is your present assignment, Sergeant?
39826What is your verdict?
39826What makes you think I want Herb?
39826What part of the grounds could you see from that spot?
39826What the hell''s anybody going to do, now he''s in? 39826 What time was the picnic?"
39826What was her usual time for coming to work in the morning?
39826What way?
39826What''s that paper? 39826 What, dear?"
39826What,said Callista,"is the virtue of being in tune with the times when the times are corrupt?"
39826What? 39826 What?
39826What? 39826 What?
39826What?
39826What?
39826What?--you mean it''s a form of doubletalk? 39826 When did she leave?"
39826When did you first meet her?
39826When did you first meet the defendant, Callista Blake?
39826When did you last see Callista before her arrest?
39826When did you next see him?
39826When had you last seen Callista Blake before that appearance in the driveway Sunday evening?
39826When she did n''t come to meet your father, did you call her?
39826When was the last time you saw Mrs. Doherty alive?
39826When you found the body, was this hole visible above the line of a shoe, do you recall?
39826When you lifted the body part- way from the water, you saw a hole like this one in the right stocking, correct?
39826Where are you employed at present, Miss Welsh?
39826Where else were the footprints of that second set?
39826Where exactly were you at that time?
39826While you waited for the police you did n''t move or change anything?
39826Who was that policeman, if you recall?
39826Who were the others present, if you recall?
39826Why call it that? 39826 Why not?"
39826Why would n''t I?
39826Why''certainly,''Miss Welsh? 39826 Why, the-- the separation-- what I''ve said repeatedly-- I think I wrote about that in the very next paragraph, did n''t I?"
39826Why-- she died of aconite poisoning, did n''t she? 39826 Wild?
39826Will you describe that path, please?
39826Will you indicate it on this map for the jury, Sergeant?
39826Will you repeat the question, Counselor?
39826Will you take her a pack of mine? 39826 Yeah?
39826Yes some of the time, no some of the time-- that would be natural, perfectly human, would n''t it, Callista?
39826Yes, but Edith did know, do n''t you think?
39826You and I both know it, do n''t we? 39826 You are describing James Doherty as hotblooded?"
39826You can be certain they did n''t see you in the doorway-- how?
39826You consider that unhappy children should not have tantrums?
39826You could find it in your heart to forgive him?
39826You did n''t go over?
39826You did n''t offer her a drink then or any time, is that right?
39826You did n''t see her come out of that wild garden?
39826You did so this year?
39826You do n''t think so now?
39826You do n''t want to toil up to the sixth floor, do you? 39826 You drove behind her car, as far as the house on Summer Avenue?"
39826You gave up entirely on that letter, did n''t you?--I mean, you decided it could n''t do any good?
39826You go away on vacations?
39826You gon na quiet down now?
39826You had heard Mrs. Chalmers cry before?
39826You had n''t done anything with the brandy bottle after you first saw it had been moved?
39826You have n''t tried it yet, Terry?
39826You have no recollection of that?
39826You have seen a number of them, Sergeant?
39826You have seen monkshood growing there, with your own eyes?
39826You looked of course for evidence of aconitine poisoning?
39826You made that infusion of the roots in brandy?
39826You must be familiar with the term, are you not?
39826You needling me, Counselor?
39826You recall his testimony on the stand?
39826You remember my explanation of why I could n''t be there sooner?
39826You saw Edith every day that week, did n''t you? 39826 You see it, Red?
39826You see, aside from her own talent, Callista has that faculty of searching out whatever''s best in anyone, and--_ Why must Helen Butler look at me?
39826You stayed with her a while, I suppose?
39826You stepped into the pond?
39826You think the Fugues are dry, Terence? 39826 You think they might find second degree?"
39826You told him what you had inadvertently seen?
39826You wanted to reach her and not Jim, is that right?
39826You went down that steep path to your left, Callista? 39826 You went to a picnic at the Chalmerses'', 7th of August, this year?"
39826You were asking,said Judge Mann,"in general terms, whether or not the witness considers herself above the law?
39826You were n''t concerned for anyone else?
39826You would do virtually anything, would you not, for your friend Callista Blake?
39826You''d like.... You feel pretty big, do n''t you,_ Miss_ Blake? 39826 You''ll come to see me tonight, Cecil?"
39826You''re quite certain she went into the wild garden alone? 39826 You''ve been continuously acquainted with Miss Blake all that time?"
39826You''ve kept that apartment?
39826You, huh?
39826Your Honor, a word before adjournment if I may?
39826Your Honor, in view of my client''s exhaustion, may we have adjournment at this time?
39826Your business is real estate and general insurance?
39826Your full name and occupation, please?
39826Your full name and occupation, sir?
39826Your occupation, Miss Welsh?
39826Your shared interest in artistic work has been a large part of that bond of friendship, has n''t it?
39826_ Go away!_"Is the drug readily soluble in alcohol?
39826_ The world is too much with us_--if too much for Wordsworth long ago, what about now?
39826''Are we savages to be held in line by magic words mumbled in the mouth of a priest?''
39826''Assume a virtue if you have it not''--remember?
39826''How could you know, Callista?
39826''How do I love thee?
39826''The defense never rests''--yes, but what can that plumber foreman make out of it?
39826( Do you?)
39826(_ Did the jury see him go?
39826(_ Have they?_)"They offered no objection to her taking this job.
39826(_ So, T. J.?
39826(_ Where''s Jimmy, if it matters?_) Callista decided the smell was generated by the Lagovski, probably in heat.
39826(_ Where''s Jimmy?_) The jury was closer, much closer.
39826--do you want to comment on that sentence from your letter, Miss Blake?
39826--does the sound do something for them?"
39826--have you forgotten that?"
3982612 sure to go along with the majority: what else could he do?
398261944?
398264... O how can Love''s eye be true, That is so vex''d with watching and with tears?
39826A commonplace: why go on worrying at it, insisting that no one is expendable?
39826A lawyer trying to be useful according to rational ethics-- what is there to help him?
39826A mild form-- why, two years later he_ died_ of it, did n''t he?"
39826A mud bottom-- I--""Do you feel all right?"
39826A pretty girl, hot night and hazy moon-- had he hoped to be invited into the house for a quick check on burglars and a little drink?
39826A thick phallus not quite erect, a baby with the facial features gone, perhaps just a round- petaled flower or geometric design?
39826A true verdict render?--but what is truth?
39826A week later, Callista-- I mean Sunday, August 16th-- did you telephone to Ann Doherty?"
39826ANSWER: Does he?
39826ANSWER: How?
39826ANSWER: Must I answer that again?
39826Accept for the moment simply the fact of inner conflict; and then what?
39826Advocatus diaboli?_ He saw Terence Mann''s hand clench spasmodically and fall in a droop.
39826After helping him into the shade, what did you yourself do?"
39826After the letters, the State rests?"
39826Again it was Judge Mann who asked:"Those were her exact words?"
39826Against a voice that by its very restraint compels the subject to cry aloud?
39826Ah, I do n''t know, I''m talking like a fool-- who''s going to see thirty years ahead?
39826All by yourself?"
39826All right and so what?
39826All right-- how did you know it was her car?"
39826All right: you''ve got eyewitnesses, medical testimony, and a few fairly simple questions to decide: did he fall?
39826All three statements true?"
39826Am I in love with what I wish you were?
39826Am I occasionally beautiful, Cecil?"
39826Am I too much for you, Jimmy?
39826Am I?"
39826An impressive young stallion: any woman felt that much, and one could( sometimes) see why Callista--"Edith, what happened there, before adjournment?
39826An instrument of_ what_ something, greater than himself_ in what way_?
39826And I''ll ask: is everything you remember about those moments consistent with that?
39826And Miss Blake?"
39826And do n''t we all know of cases where ugly accidents have happened to children without turning them against the human race?
39826And drowning?
39826And every moment of compromise..."Miss Welsh, were you with the Chalmers family in 1951 when Dr. Herbert Chalmers married Victoria Johnson Blake?"
39826And had n''t he accepted, without enough examination, the doctrine that a judge is only an instrument of something greater than himself?
39826And he went out of the room, for quinine probably-- he had an allergic reaction to atabrine in the Army, did n''t he?"
39826And if he testified for the defense, what would Herb himself do about them?
39826And is n''t it time now?_ Yes, it was time.
39826And judges?
39826And knew positively that it was--?"
39826And she asked:''Are you going to arrest me?''
39826And since the question of religion is totally irrelevant here, what was the purpose of that remark if not to inflame prejudice?
39826And still-- flowers on the desk?"
39826And that fool lying frozen on the bed down there-- why, how long had that fool held herself frozen, knowing everything?
39826And then you were caught, were n''t you?"
39826And was there any rational formula anywhere in the law, except the principle of reasonable doubt, at all likely to save Callista Blake?
39826And what would Callista Blake do if and when it was time for her to take the oath?
39826Ann Doherty-- that is, Mrs. James Doherty.... Welsh?
39826Ann Doherty?
39826Any legal significance, you think?"
39826Anything more we should discuss now?"
39826Anyway, darling, you told me Miss Anderson is out with a cold, so this is sure to pass through no hands but yours, is n''t it?
39826Are any of those names familiar?
39826Are there other motions?
39826Are they?_ Mr. Delehanty made an indeterminate fogbound noise.
39826Are those words familiar to you?"
39826Are you implying that not everyone is snotty?"
39826Are you tearing it?"
39826Are you, inside of you, relieved?
39826As he finished undressing with his unfussy neatness, he asked:"Remember Cassie Ferguson, in my class?"
39826As if it were natural, and right, that in her danger and misery, in her green youth too, it should be Callista who possessed a power to heal and save?
39826As the original inventor of advertising was the one( man or woman?)
39826At 3:30, did anything happen important enough so that you now remember it and wish to tell it under oath?"
39826At what point, please, does it become impossible for you to respect the laws?"
39826Better, huh?
39826Blake?
39826Books mostly; some deprecating mention by Miss Butler of her landscape painting, or was it still life?
39826Burn and hang them like the seventeenth and earlier centuries?
39826But I ca n''t imagine that you condemn me in your heart( do you?)
39826But did n''t a defense counsel need some inner coldness to sustain him?
39826But he knew his voice was shouting, too loudly, and cracking absurdly in the shout:"Are you being humorous, Mr. District Attorney?
39826But how could she know the color of the word in his language?
39826But how in the world is she to prove it to twelve honest jurors who never saw her before the trial?
39826But if one is clearly greater than the other, is n''t the answer plain?
39826But instead of answering directly, the Old Man had said:"Red, do you understand she''s not certain of it herself?"
39826But is n''t it strange what words can do?
39826But may I keep my crown a while?"
39826But that is n''t quite the point, is it?
39826But that means, does n''t it, that your conscience is actually, to you, the supreme judge?"
39826But think about college for next fall?"
39826But this-- wasn''t it beyond technique?
39826But what about himself, aged forty- seven and for the last few minutes intensely aware of Edith Nolan as a desirable woman?
39826But would you describe them a little more, Sergeant?"
39826But you''re telling me seriously now that this is n''t to be called an attack on the man''s most vital and deeply cherished religious convictions?"
39826Call to you?
39826Callista Blake a borderline paranoid?
39826Can I go now?"
39826Can I look at that thing?"
39826Casual?
39826Cecil, will you give me a sharp honest answer to a question you do n''t want me to ask?"
39826Cesspool known as the world-- people are already forgetting Darrow, are n''t they?
39826Chalmers?
39826Chalmers?"
39826Civic virtue and so on?"
39826Coke?
39826Common sense says: Who''s going to switch bodies on the doctor?
39826Comprehension then; reorientation; qualified relief--_Is waking any better?_ It was, of course.
39826Consistent?"
39826Correct?--that''s your recollection of what you said?"
39826Could n''t you at least have got as far as a phone booth?
39826Could she have won that round, or partly won it?
39826Cousin Maud?
39826Cousin Trent?
39826Damn''em, why has n''t the Postoffice a Bureau of Hollow Oaks?
39826Devens?"
39826Did Callista ever express to you any hostility toward Ann Doherty?"
39826Did I miss anything important?"
39826Did I say that?"
39826Did Mr. Warner waive the opening?"
39826Did anything happen that day in the line of duty that had to do with the defendant Callista Blake?"
39826Did it, or not?"
39826Did n''t I have him a whole year before my face was burned?
39826Did n''t I tell you at the start, or try to, that I''m not easy to get along with?
39826Did others unsuspectedly ache with this kind of loathing for her?
39826Did she appear to be ill when you saw her?"
39826Did she blow?"
39826Did you happen to have your wrist watch on, by the way?"
39826Did you kill Ann Doherty?"
39826Did you know about it at the time?"
39826Did you say that to Callista Blake?"
39826Did you see him?"
39826Did you turn it on?"
39826Did you, Sergeant?"
39826Do n''t mind my doodling either-- see the border I drew around your true name while I daydreamed and my pen was thinking for me?
39826Do n''t you care?
39826Do n''t you see?
39826Do n''t you think we have enough in common so that if we both tried hard and honestly and lovingly, we could live happily together?
39826Do we ever know where we''re going?"
39826Do you have to break my heart completely?
39826Do you identify it?"
39826Do you mean quarreling?
39826Do you mean you believe that in breaking the seventh commandment you were merely doing what everyone does more or less?"
39826Do you realize how badly you hedged when I asked you almost the same thing two nights ago?
39826Do you think of anything you want to add at this time, Callista?"
39826Do you want to add anything about that?"
39826Do you want to get back to the Sunday evening now?"
39826Do you wish to look at the page again, Mr. Warner?
39826Doctor?
39826Does any particular event fix that date in your memory?"
39826Does anyone know?
39826Does it have any possible relevancy?"
39826Does n''t it?"
39826Does poor old Mrs. Wilks really do enough about looking after him?
39826Does that mean that in your estimation, your own estimation, you are really not much of an artist?"
39826Drunk?"
39826During that time, has your relation with her ever been cordial?"
39826During the eight years since 1951, has your relation with Callista Blake ever been cordial?"
39826East?"
39826Eleven-- it never got across, you know?
39826Everything beyond the level of, say, the Thursday Society-- destroyed?
39826Everything?
39826Explain, perhaps, why it''s not to be taken as an attack on James Doherty''s religion?"
39826Feeling all right, Cal?
39826For a while he was in that place:_ Well, Mr. Brooks,"container and thing contained": are n''t we always bigger than what stirs within us?
39826For instance, you''re familiar with the details of Callista''s life-- past history, opinions, tastes, temperament, things of that sort?"
39826For that matter, would a woman as outrageously lovely as Dolores ever get far enough from the sex arena for other elements of her nature to dominate?
39826For was n''t that the very essence of the principle of"reasonable doubt"?
39826For what after all did Rankin''s moment of rutty brutality have to do with the truth or falsehood of her story?
39826From you I would prefer a reasonable formality, do you mind?"
39826Get it, Judge?
39826Give him more of that, will you?
39826Glance at that abandoned wagon in long grass?
39826Go ahead and ask your question-- what do you want to know?"
39826Had he adored her then?
39826Had it been burning all day?
39826Had n''t Jim heard the idiot question?
39826Had n''t he simply regarded a judgeship as mostly useful work and$ 18,000 a year?
39826Had she fallen asleep sitting up?
39826Had that operation been going on since Monday morning?
39826Had you other reasons to check the time?"
39826Has he ever had a coronary, do you know?"
39826Have n''t you almost known it all along?"
39826Have you seen it growing there?"
39826Have you, sir, any conscientious objection to the death penalty?"
39826He managed to say:''The hell with that-- who''s going to take your word against mine?''
39826He remembered doubtfully a talk with Joe Bass the evening before-- anything more than a flurry of wishful thinking?
39826He said only:"Not hereditary-- how can you be sure, Jack?"
39826He said with care for the sound of his voice:"Is all this leading anywhere?
39826He was muttering at his mouth- corner:"Is that when he--?"
39826Heard now, under these circumstances, does n''t it sound pretty arrogant even to you?"
39826Herb asked:"Would n''t actually be twenty, would it?
39826Herb-- shall I project the voice at you, Herb?_"Where was I?"
39826Herb-- shall I project the voice at you, Herb?_"Where was I?"
39826Hidden significance, something that might be damaging if it came to the eyes of that lowest form of life, a district attorney?"
39826How can I?
39826How can we reasonably condemn anyone without at least some understanding of what made him act as the factual evidence says he did?
39826How can you make legal protest against the gentleness of a pair of hands?
39826How could life write on a face of dough?
39826How could you write that about her, and then in the very same letter talk about her meekly agreeing to a separation?"
39826How could you_ know_ she was dead?''
39826How do they do it?
39826How do you think that amnesia stuff is going to sound in court?
39826How does it look?"
39826How had he arrived at contemplation of that time- eroded grief?
39826How long before that fool was telling herself:_ I did n''t really hear her, I could n''t make out what she said_--how long?
39826How long has the office of judge existed at all?
39826How many can say that?"
39826How was he to glimpse the meanings of it in her own?
39826However, I assume from what Mr. Hunter says that his opening will not run much past five o''clock-- is that correct?"
39826Hunter asked mildly:"Something you wish to add?"
39826Hunter was asking:"Have newspaper or radio accounts caused you to give any advance opinion?"
39826Hunter will ask:''Why did n''t you go into the pond, if your story is true?
39826Hunter) is irrelevant.__ NOT IRRELEVANT( MY DEAR)--BUT WEREN''T WE DISCUSSING THE DEATH BY VIOLENCE OF ANN PIERCE DOHERTY?__ All right.
39826Hunter; Sergeant Rankin maybe; or could it have been that young Sergeant, Samuel Arthur Shields?
39826Hunter?
39826Hunter?
39826Hunter?"
39826Hunter?"
39826Hunter?"
39826Hunter?"
39826I ca n''t say I really knew Jimmy, either, I--"(_ Cecil, please give me a lift with this one_)--"well, I said something like that before, did n''t I?"
39826I can assume you gave up the notion of suicide?
39826I do n''t know-- must a love- letter be consistent like a dictionary?"
39826I feel fine._"You were attentive to all of Miss Nolan''s testimony, were n''t you?"
39826I frightened you sometimes, did n''t I?
39826I guess I said, did n''t I, that I''d wanted the baby, I wanted to bear it?
39826I lost.__ Callista, what have I done to you?_ III Callista thought:_ I am stronger than she is, and never knew it before.
39826I mean, you''re referring to something on the level of shooting a burglar to protect the household, something like that?"
39826I meant, do you remember the details?
39826I never asked you this before, afraid of the answer I think: what became of that work?"
39826I said:''Why did you do it?''"
39826I saw her hair, that real pretty reddy- gold-- auburn--""Could you reach the body from the bank?"
39826I should have married, maybe.__ Where does anyone find the vanity to become a judge?
39826I suppose you do know, do n''t you, that if you had to be free of me I would let you go?
39826I tell you, Jimmy, what we have( is it possible it''s only ten days?)
39826I was fighting to be a person?
39826I was going- on- five-- it''s difficult--""What details?
39826I was praying-- well, for her, though I suppose that does n''t mean anything to you, no offense, anyway I--""Did n''t your friend hear what she said?"
39826I was seven when he died-- you think I could n''t feel what you were doing to him, and ca n''t remember it?
39826I went back to my car because I thought I might be able to drive home somehow-- QUESTION: You mean to your mother''s house?
39826I''ll help you out-- you would n''t have left her alone with that brandy bottle when you''d as good as told her she was under suspicion, would you?"
39826I''m not crying-- see?
39826I''m not in tune with the times, am I?"
39826I''ve told you the truth, but it''s going to be like that?''
39826If Callista and Jim could have spoken each other''s languages?
39826If Jimmy had answered the phone, I do n''t know-- I suppose everything would be different, would n''t it?
39826If agreeable to the Court and Mr. Warner, may I make it now?"
39826If as prosecutor he could frame them, allowing rational objections from himself as defender, perhaps as witness( or accused?)
39826If his wandering middle- aged eye wanted a tickling, why not choose an obvious pin- up type like the juror Dolores Acevedo?
39826If it''s a clear case of protecting a friend''s life, the law generally calls it justifiable homicide, does n''t it?"
39826If so, what?"
39826If the moon had n''t come out of a cloud-- I wonder, Cecil-- would I have refused to understand she was there?
39826If you call and say I must n''t come, of course I wo n''t, but-- please?
39826If you''d been out in the living- room with her-- do you remember that bronze paper- knife you kept on the table, a handsome thing with a sharp point?
39826In fact could it, ever?
39826In how many lines, Miss Blake?"
39826In startled disgust Edith thought:_ Everything?
39826Increase of humanitarianism in the last century and a half?
39826Is Callista Blake subject to periods of depression, Miss Nolan?"
39826Is Mrs. Chalmers all right?"
39826Is Warner with her, do you know?"
39826Is he s''posed to eat in here, Daddy, is he s''posed to, huh, Daddy?_ The jury too.
39826Is it a fact?"
39826Is it turning cold?"
39826Is it wired for sound?"
39826Is it your custom to look at your watch when anything captures your interest?"
39826Is n''t it mostly a matter of being brought up in a certain way that automatically shuts out other views without seriously examining them?
39826Is n''t that why you cut me off from Aunt Cora Winwood-- because she knew better?
39826Is that a pin in your lapel?"
39826Is that correct?"
39826Is that what you wanted to know?"
39826Is that wrist watch the one you were wearing on the evening of last August 16th?"
39826Is this still in line with your thought, Miss Nolan?"
39826Is this the fourth time I''ve told you I did n''t push her in the water?
39826It is by chance a quotation from something?"
39826It makes sense to you, that this could be what happened?"
39826It must have been her arm, that whiteness, do n''t you think?"
39826It reads as follows:"Jimmy--"Did n''t you say you would call me Monday evening?
39826It seemed to her the question had been divided, an echo- voice asking of another with another name:_ Sam( where are you?)
39826It went on, you know, years, a hundred years, who could say?
39826It''s marked here--""Angled-- you mean the opening is on a slant?"
39826It''s not the same thing._ Was n''t that correct?
39826J.?"
39826JUDGE MANN: Is that agreeable to you, Mr. Hunter?
39826Jason?
39826Jason?"
39826Jim?
39826Judd looked bewildered and dismayed: what had_ he_ done?
39826Judd?"
39826Judge Mann thought: What of one who dies young?--a child hit by a car?
39826Just one, huh, please?"
39826Just what was it?"
39826Lamson?"
39826Later, unsmiling, she asked me:"Will it accomplish something, do you think, if I''m able to demonstrate with what peace a freethinker can die?"
39826Let me tell you one thing more?"
39826Like for instance asking a character I saw in the mirror: How about you, Jack, you going that way too one of these days?
39826Like the end of a sickness?"
39826Like trying to see a room in a twisty mirror.... Jack--""What, kid?"
39826Listen to them a little, unwillingly, like the nineteenth, until revolution stiffened into respectability, congealed in half- truths?
39826Look, can I get you anything?
39826Loud?"
39826MR. WARNER: Is the defendant on trial for changes in facial expression?
39826Mann heard a strong contralto drawl; it might have sounded warm and pleasant at other times:"Which is the clerk?"
39826May I continue?
39826Maybe a little bit happy, or proud?
39826Maybe, with good fortune.__ Or help another?
39826Mildness and indifference were needed here:"What did he say?"
39826Mildness, indifference?
39826Miss Blake then said:''Who knows what anyone believes?''
39826Miss Blake, by what reasoning it is possible to reconcile that remark with your alleged intention of asking Mrs. Doherty to agree to a separation?
39826Miss Blake, do you have a clear recollection of those letters of yours which were read in court this morning?"
39826Miss Blake, how much nearer could you come to saying that she was in the way without actually using the words?"
39826Mother, he was one of the gentle ones-- a fault if you like-- is that what you held against him?
39826Mr. Clipp''s hurt, astonished look inquired:_ Is that all?_ Without rising, Warner asked:"You do front end alignment?"
39826Mr. Clipp''s hurt, astonished look inquired:_ Is that all?_ Without rising, Warner asked:"You do front end alignment?"
39826Mr. Warner, if that drawing is n''t to be used further, as an exhibit or anything-- may I have it?"
39826Must we be so timid?
39826Must we have one of your-- your rather naïve philosophical discussions?
39826My lord, do you have any defense to set forth in favor of this mewling monster, this three- billion- headed lurching mooncalf humanity?"
39826Naturally your pregnancy entitles you to every consideration, but-- ANSWER: Mr. Lamson, did n''t I say I_ was_ pregnant?
39826No familiarity?
39826No ill feeling between you, was there?"
39826Nolan?...
39826Not bad for a beginner, do n''t you think?
39826Not to be judged by the standards we apply to ordinary mortals?"
39826Not''Jimmy''any more, just''Doherty''?"
39826Nothing you wish to add?"
39826Now I hear that the marriage sacrament to you is a superstition proper to savages-- that''s what you meant, is n''t it?"
39826Now as near as I can manage it, my wrist is about where an anklebone would come-- does that help you?"
39826Now, may I take that as a positive no to my earlier question: you do not believe in absolute ethical principles?"
39826Now-- did you tell her a second time that she would get a better break if she changed this story which you say you did n''t believe?
39826Now: when you came to the pond, just describing things impersonally, what did you see?"
39826Old photographs?
39826On the afternoon of August 7th, did you see Callista go into that wild garden?"
39826On the scratch- pad Mann''s pencil labored through the fussiness of Old English script: Which is the Clerk?
39826Or back to the streets and whatever dim hole of a room she lived in-- with small possessions?
39826Or blindness-- much kinder word, is n''t it?
39826Or did you just feel that if an unconventional, unreligious girl was n''t a whore she ought to be?"
39826Or had he honestly faced it at all?
39826Or just angry with me?
39826Or just to make Sam admit I must sometimes be person first, sweetheart second?
39826Or was it anything done or said?
39826Or would I become the whore who''led you astray''and''wrecked your life''?
39826Philosophy A, Radcliffe, Class of''48 and all that?_ All the same, she reflected, it_ is_ action, and the hell with Plato the Father of Half- Truths.
39826Please try to find out, will you?
39826Poor Jimmy, did you want only that May- day moment, and then discover the dryad had caught you fast and would not let go?
39826Psychiatrists?
39826QUESTION: A result of shock, or-- exertion?
39826QUESTION: But kept it there more than a week, where I suppose anyone might have stumbled on it?
39826QUESTION: Did n''t she knock?
39826QUESTION: Did you quarrel?
39826QUESTION: Did you, or you and James Doherty acting together, intend that poison for Mrs. Doherty?
39826QUESTION: Do you have any idea how many professional criminals try that amnesia thing?
39826QUESTION: If you did n''t say you were pregnant, how much did you say?
39826QUESTION: Just like that?
39826QUESTION: Not enough words?
39826QUESTION: Not even James Doherty?
39826QUESTION: She was n''t angry?
39826QUESTION: This is n''t an occasion for humor, is it?
39826QUESTION: Was anyone aware of your taking those monkshood roots?
39826QUESTION: Well?
39826QUESTION: Why did n''t you mail it?
39826QUESTION: You told her you were pregnant?
39826Raining again, is n''t it?"
39826Remember?"
39826Reputed saying of GAUTAMA BUDDHA I"The chips are down now, are n''t they, Callista?"
39826Rocking- chair?
39826Said, what about Ann?
39826Said-- you want what I said?"
39826Sandwich?"
39826Scared?
39826Scientist?
39826Scourge of the unrighteous, huh?"
39826See what Jimmy would do?
39826Settling their damn lunches?
39826Sewing- basket?
39826Shall I come to see you this evening?"
39826Shall I one day become a flower for you and know the sun?
39826She also recalled unhappily other words Cecil had spoken to that Martini:"Why did I order that thing?
39826She heard the clash of keys, clang of the iron door, high anticipatory whimpering( still that note of enjoyment?)
39826She held her hands at her sides, and before the melodious rumble( a concealed recording?)
39826She said:"Jim, do you still love her at all?"
39826She seemed to be expecting me to believe it, and--""But she replied:''Who knows what anyone believes?''"
39826She was repeating his name softly:"Cecil-- Cecil-- are you all right?"
39826Shoplifter, whore, drunk, another murderer maybe?
39826Should the life or freedom of a human being depend on the perfectly irrelevant strength or weakness of opposing counsel?
39826Simple white dress, you said-- correct?"
39826So we are, in a sense, and( unless one intends to do something about it) so what?
39826So why wonder that an earlier self becomes a creature of mystery?
39826Someone apart?"
39826Sorry?
39826Sort of getting on, was n''t he?"
39826Spring of 1945--he was invalided home a whole year before then, was n''t he?
39826Steady?"
39826Still, the way we''re growing all the time--""Interior finish?"
39826Stood on the path first and then over on the left side of the pond?"
39826Subject to depressions?"
39826Suppose I put it this way, Callista: is it possible now for you to add anything to what you told Mr. Lamson that day in his office?"
39826Teacher?
39826Terrible thing, specially if Ann--""Yes, you were concerned for Mrs. Doherty too, were n''t you?"
39826That all right, Red?_"Miss Nolan, I understand you were n''t present at a certain picnic in Shanesville last August 7th.
39826That he could n''t black your eye when you needed it?
39826That is what you mean by what you called a-- a naturalistic attitude, I think that was your term?"
39826That is, if he explained what had happened to upset him-- did he?"
39826That little man?"
39826That she hoped the affair was ended?"
39826That was the meaning of your question and the extent of it?"
39826That was too strong._"May I see the sketch, Miss Nolan?"
39826That would be wages of sin, I guess?
39826That''s a correct summary?"
39826That''s jealousy, is n''t it?"
39826That''s not an attack?"
39826That, plus old dislike for the representative of her accuser the State: how far can you go with such a bias before the judicial lid blows off?
39826The Face of the Hoag expresses a certain disappointment:''Wha''d he give up so easy for, and him a cop?''
39826The children could n''t have gone with her, or perhaps ahead of her?"
39826The conversation took place in the kitchenette?"
39826The defense introduces testimony at this point?
39826The fact of secrecy I do n''t particularly mind-- what business of anyone else is it that I love you?
39826The girl on the landing ran a finger lightly along the column of her neck-- wasn''t there slightly more fullness, softness?
39826The physical act of turning the key or throwing the latch or whatever it was?"
39826The satellite_ itself_ is the God- damn resistance, like you''re shooting a pistol, and the recoil-- you ever shoot a pistol?"
39826The way it was God''s will you should try out a virgin for variety, or kicks?
39826Then I was thinking, why not take a few, have them on hand if things got worse?
39826Then you''d be-- what, his inspiration?"
39826There is no reason to smile._"Did you then go to the District Attorney''s office, Miss Nolan?"
39826They used a hood, did n''t they, electrodes concealed by an intolerable obscenity of black rubber?
39826They''re trying the funny- looking broad with the gimp leg._"It left you suddenly, Callista, the depression?
39826Those were your words,''a better break''?"
39826To feel him out maybe, find out if he''d go along with you on some much more direct method of-- eliminating the woman who was in the way?"
39826To live is to destroy-- true or false?
39826Too big, and a weak line; who wants the great dangerous things anyhow?
39826Too early for the sickness of pregnancy, was n''t it?
39826Too weird and different?
39826Trooper Curtis, plaster casts and fingerprints and so what?
39826Try the door?
39826Wall them off, like the twentieth, with the soft barrier of democratic smugness or a steel barrier such as Marxian demonology?
39826Want to?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Warner?"
39826Was it possible for an accused witch to do that in a court of law?
39826Was it relevant now?
39826Was n''t it 1944?"
39826Was n''t it?
39826Was n''t that how he had reasoned two years ago, when his name was up in the election more or less unopposed?
39826Was she right, Callista?
39826Was that Italian?_""_ Latin.
39826Was that testimony accurate, Callista?"
39826Was there anything else?"
39826Was this State''s witness by any chance intending to pull the rug out from under Hunter?
39826We''ll probably open after the noon recess.... Is there anything, anything at all, you have n''t told me?"
39826Well, I know, you can beat me over the head with the pregnancy if you want to, but since it was n''t God''s will that it should live, what can I do?"
39826Well, did she then tell you what information it was she wished to give-- what she had in mind when she called the precinct?"
39826Well-- you drove on out to Shanesville?"
39826Went to the studio as usual?"
39826Were juries?
39826Were n''t his own wits wandering?
39826Were prosecutor and defender today any more concerned with truth than those bumbling muscle- men?
39826Were they, the three of them, treating her as they might treat a difficult child?
39826Were you at Shanesville all day Sunday and Monday, August 16th and 17th?"
39826Were you at that time, or any part of that time, actually contemplating doing away with yourself?"
39826Were you, ever?"
39826What about the suicidal depression?--change your mind?
39826What are you saying?"
39826What could be more medieval?
39826What did you say?
39826What do you want to know?"
39826What does this knowledge do to you?
39826What had you been saying?
39826What happened?
39826What happens tomorrow?"
39826What have I done?"
39826What if anything did you find there?"
39826What in hell do my skill and brains, or T.J.''s, have to do with Callista''s innocence or any of the other facts?
39826What is cruelty anyway, and how do you read it in another?
39826What is it, Jim?"
39826What is so private about a conscience if it directs the life and actions of a man?
39826What of one who dies young by act of the State, with no fair fame?
39826What stills the music, and where are the green shadows of Arcadia?
39826What was Miss Blake wearing that day?"
39826What was the purpose?"
39826What way does the front of that apartment house face, 21 Covent Street?
39826What''s happened?''
39826What''s happening now?"
39826What''s happening, Jimmy?
39826What''s the faculty of the mind that makes it possible for an intelligent being to look directly on a glaring fact and somehow will it out of sight?
39826What''s the matter, you nice people-- isn''t the Monkshood Girl putting on a good show?
39826What''s this, Edith?
39826What--""You did n''t hear what she said?"
39826When did it happen?
39826When did she go away?
39826Where exactly were you when it happened?
39826Where was the cross thin woman who talked sharply to Jim Doherty a few minutes ago?
39826Where were you then and what were you doing?"
39826Why are you crying?
39826Why are you crying?
39826Why could n''t you establish_ corpus delecti_ with Herb Chalmers?
39826Why did she go that way, and not straight on to the Chalmers house?
39826Why did you stop moving your hand over my hair?
39826Why fool himself?
39826Why had he never before noticed that the swirling grain of the oak resembled the smoke lines of a bonfire?
39826Why in the world were you moved to say to James Doherty:''No one can catch me except if I will''--why?"
39826Why must the small breasts push up so urgently?
39826Why not contrast them with the exact scientists?--who often have the same fault but in a different style?"
39826Why not escape from ugliness toward something better?
39826Why not let it go?
39826Why should he remember that night and not some of the livelier ones?
39826Why should he?
39826Why the devil must they stand up?
39826Why, Callista?
39826Why, Herb?"
39826Will I twitch my jacket back a little?
39826Will you fill in that blank?
39826Will you slap my fat wrist if I do it again?"
39826Would he now be able to bring out poor Herb''s first addled words, whatever they were, in cross examination?
39826Would they help, if he did?
39826Would you agree that such a remark, made under the conditions you have described, could be interpreted in many different ways?"
39826Would you now please describe the elevations of the ground in that area?
39826Yes, Mr. Warner?
39826Yes-- granted-- they ca n''t help it.__ YOU ARE ADMITTING YOU HATED YOUR LOVER''S WIFE?__ No, I''m not.
39826You admire Joan?
39826You did hear something then?
39826You did n''t save one charcoal sketch, one line drawing, one bit of a doodle on scratch paper?
39826You did n''t, a few minutes later, strike her across the face with the flat of your hand?"
39826You do not believe in absolute ethical principles?"
39826You going to claim the Volkswagen was n''t there?"
39826You have decided then that the majority does n''t consider the law against adultery important?"
39826You have, maybe, something of an older sister''s detachment?"
39826You know that t''ing punt''red his intestyne?
39826You read the license plate, or something like that?"
39826You really did want it, did n''t you?"
39826You remember how she_ looked_, do n''t you?"
39826You said, I think,''less than one expects to see''--correct?"
39826You spoke of having to work late because of Miss Anderson''s being out sick-- may I come there in the evening, just to see you for a few minutes?
39826You threw it away?"
39826You turned the body until you could see the face, right?
39826You want the State to pack up and go home?"
39826You want to bet?
39826You were in court, were n''t you, Joe?"
39826You were well acquainted with Ann Doherty-- Mrs. James Doherty?"
39826You''re a headshrinker, Jack-- why do so many minds cling to unreason with such a sullen fury?
39826You''re positive of the car?
39826_ All right now?
39826_ And what is honesty?_ She supposed that for Lloyd Rankin it would mean being no more dishonest than a majority of his peers.
39826_ And where in the pluperfect hell do I dig up a precedent on that one?_"Exception."
39826_ But can I?_"That''s reasonable,"said T. J.
39826_ But-- my hand-- My hand?_ Certainly no other.
39826_ By the way, Mrs. Chalmers, I''m your daughter-- remember?
39826_ Cecil, I just invented this: is it any damn good?_ Apparently he was not displeased.
39826_ Do they think I''m going to fold like Judd?
39826_ He may have saved her-- I do n''t know-- I do n''t know._"You respect the laws so far as you are able-- now what does that mean, Miss Blake?
39826_ How could I have slept?_ Cecil was returning.
39826_ How do you do it, Cecil, that casualness?
39826_ How''m I doing, Cecil?
39826_ I must be heard._"I take that to mean that you hold yourself above the law?"
39826_ If only you did!_"You would n''t kill in defense of Callista Blake?"
39826_ Indulged, you fool?_ It had been Callista''s own money from her father''s estate, plus her salary from Edith.
39826_ Mr.-Delehanty- which- is- the- clerk.__ When did judges start wearing black robes, and why black?
39826_ My first, my only, which for a warmblooded redhead is absurd, gentlemen, no argument._ What happens?
39826_ My way-- my way..._"Why did n''t he call me, Miss Nolan?"
39826_ Nice old Em Lake, you had such a time yearning after my friend''s mammaries-- how will these do?
39826_ O wind- sweet valley of Arcadia-- remember me?_ She noticed the chill, and got up then with a flounce of irritation.
39826_ Poor Jim, spelled"relinquish"r- e- l- i- n- q- u- e- s- h. E for effort._"Cecil, what did you say to the rising young lawyer that turned him pink?"
39826_ She can''t-- she mustn''t_--"And also contrary to law?"
39826_ So Terry sticks his own neck way out, his own feelings involved, his judgment slipping, and where does that take us?_"Exception."
39826_ So what am I then?
39826_ Ten minutes from now, Mother, will it dawn on you what I said?
39826_ The defense never rests, but_--_ Can anyone save another?
39826_ They could n''t take away the Me, could they?
39826_ What ailed her, going overboard for that bundle of bad luck?_ Call it chance.
39826_ What am I doing here?_ He could ask the question of Joe Bass and receive an intelligent answer.
39826_ What are we doing here?_ III Cecil Warner turned toward the cold gleam of the courtroom window; an eastern window, the winter sunshine long gone.
39826_ What are you going to do to us, Terence?_ In a sense, the Judge would do nothing.
39826_ What did we think we were doing?
39826_ What do you think you know about Ann, gentlemen?
39826_ What''s it to him?
39826_ What?_ Cecil''s voice had spoken something more.
39826_ What?_ Oh-- he was repeating what poor Herb had said to him.
39826_ When did I lose her?
39826_ When we get this one over with we''re done, are n''t we, Cecil?
39826_ Who knows for sure?
39826_ Why not to me?
39826_ Why?_"I guess you do n''t talk, you ca n''t be bod''ered."
39826_ Yes, Redhead, that helps-- some._"Were you at all acquainted with Mrs. James Doherty?"
39826_ Yes, they are wandering._"Do you recall, Miss Nolan, what day it was that this conversation took place, about Doherty''s letter?"
39826do you still love her( the name was Red- Top, remember?)
39826for relying on my own reason, being unafraid of doubt, interested in proof, critical of all self- appointed authority?
39826or think of her at all?_ Meanwhile--"She said nothing else, Jim, nothing I heard."
39826was he injured, and if so how badly?
39826was the bus company at fault, and if so what''s a just compensation for the injuries?
39826which she could almost never convey in spoken words?
32898Do they?
32898Do you not see that I am becalmed?
32898For stealing your pictures?
32898For what?
32898Not worth a farthing? 32898 What are Shakespeare''s works worth, all bound together?"
32898Why are there drums in the wars?
32898Why do lawyers''clerks write such wide lines?
32898Why do you ask?
32898Why,asked Moore, the poet,"is love like a potato?"
32898Why,asks a disconsolate widow,"is venison like my late and never- sufficiently- to- be- lamented husband?"
32898Why?
32898Wilt thou?
32898A Dutch- S. Why is the letter D like a hoop of gold?
32898A fig, for is it not an F I G( effigy)?
32898A hunter kills a brace, then how many remain?
32898A man bought two fishes, but on taking them home found he had three; how was this?
32898A necessary attribute of a soldier?
32898AGE CONTEST What age will people reach if they live long enough?
32898ANT CONTEST What is the oldest ant?
32898Actors?
32898And what do they do when they die?
32898At what age should a man marry?
32898At what age will vessels ride safely?
32898At what period in his sorrow does a widower recover from the loss of his dear departed?
32898At what time by the clock is a pun the most effective?
32898At what time of day was Adam born?
32898At what time of life may a man be said to belong to the vegetable kingdom?
32898At what time was Adam married?
32898Athletes?
32898B R and Y, and O D V. What must you add to nine to make it six?
32898Because a man must B before he can C. How long is the longest letter in the English alphabet?
32898Because he hated Abe L. Why is our army like an entry clerk?
32898Because he''s a Jew- ill. Why is an undutiful son like one born deaf?
32898Because his business is to work ore. Why is a garter like the gates of a slaughter house?
32898Because it is an auger- ill. What is the strongest day?
32898Because it is found oftener than any other letter d- o- ing g- oo- d. Why is the letter T like matrimony?
32898Because they are never re(a)d. Why is an architect like a newspaper writer?
32898Beggars?
32898By what female name would an egg object to be called?
32898CHAPTER II MYTHOLOGICAL CONUNDRUMS Where was Time raised?
32898CHAPTER III BIBLICAL CONUNDRUMS What three words did Adam use when he introduced himself to Eve, which read backwards and forwards the same?
32898CHAPTER IX GENERAL CONUNDRUMS Why is a baby like a sheaf of wheat?
32898CHAPTER V CONUNDRUMS OF THE CIVIL WAR PERIOD Why does our army differ from the army of the Revolution?
32898CHAPTER VI GEOGRAPHICAL CONUNDRUMS What would happen if a colored waiter dropped a platter with a turkey upon it?
32898CHAPTER VII LITERARY CONUNDRUMS What American poet may be considered equal to three- fifths of the poets ancient and modern?
32898CHAPTER VIII CONUNDRUMS ON THE ALPHABET What word is it of only three syllables which combines in it twenty- six letters?
32898CITY CONTEST What city is for few people?
32898Can you tell me why A hypocrite''s eye Can better descry Than you or I On how many toes A pussy- cat goes?
32898Chauffeurs?
32898Conundrum( can none drum?).
32898Crowds?
32898Describe a suit of old clothes in two letters?
32898ECHOES What must be done to conduct a newspaper right?
32898For what reason ought a Frenchman who speaks imperfect English and an Englishman who is equally unacquainted with French never to converse together?
32898For what was Eve made?
32898From this fact grew the following conundrum:) Why did a knight take place of a gentleman?
32898Greedy people?
32898Happy people?
32898Home lovers?
32898How can a whipping be ordered for a boy in five Old Testament names?
32898How can an actress appear in two pieces on the same evening?
32898How can you distinguish a fashionable man from a tired dog?
32898How can you instantly convict one of error when stating who was the earliest poet?
32898How can you make one pound of green tea go as far as five pounds of black?
32898How can you shoot one hundred and twenty hares at one shot?
32898How did Adam and Eve feel when they left the Garden of Eden?
32898How did Jonah feel when the whale was going to swallow him?
32898How did the sandwiches get there?
32898How do angry women prove themselves strong nerved?
32898How do eggs show their anger on being called Heggs?
32898How do locomotives hear?
32898How do seamstresses resemble rascals?
32898How do the young ladies show their dislike of mustaches?
32898How do we know Lord Byron was good- tempered?
32898How do we know that Jupiter wore very pinching boots?
32898How do we know that Noah had beer in the ark?
32898How do we know that there was a panic in the early days of Moses?
32898How do you call the ship that carries more passengers than the_ Olympic_?
32898How do you know that the Queen approves of the penny postage?
32898How do you make a Maltese cross?
32898How do you spell"blind pig"in two letters?
32898How does Patrick propose to get over his single blessedness?
32898How does a boy look if you hurt him?
32898How does a ray of light get through a prism?
32898How does a sailor know there''s a man in the moon?
32898How does a tipsy man generally look?
32898How does the Copyright Law affect the war?
32898How does the cavalryman whose horse has thrown him differ from the faithful orderly?
32898How does the letter Y work an impossibility?
32898How does the surgeon, whose bill for an operation has been delayed by executors, resemble his deceased patient?
32898How is a poultry dealer compelled to earn his living?
32898How is it England and Russia conjointly govern the ocean?
32898How is it guns can kick when they have no legs?
32898How is it that the affections of young ladies, notwithstanding that they may protest and vow constancy, are always doubtful?
32898How is it that trees can put on new dresses without"opening their trunks"?
32898How long did Cain hate his brother?
32898How long should a lady''s crinoline be made?
32898How many Spanish noblemen does it take to make an Englishman run?
32898How many apples were eaten in the Garden of Eden?
32898How many cows''tails would it take to reach from Boston to New York?
32898How many peas in a pint?
32898How many sides has a pitcher?
32898How many soft- boiled eggs could the giant Goliath eat upon an empty stomach?
32898How many wives are you allowed by the Prayer- book?
32898How many young ladies does it take to reach from New York to Philadelphia?
32898How should Messrs. Taft and Roosevelt now travel?
32898How should love come to the door?
32898How so?"
32898How was this?
32898How was this?
32898How were Adam and Eve prevented from gambling?
32898How would you express in two letters that you were twice the bulk of your companion?
32898How would you increase the speed of a very slow boat?
32898How would you measure a lover''s sincerity?
32898Hungry people?
32898Hypocrites?
32898If Dick''s father is Tom''s son, what relation is Dick to Tom?
32898If Falstaff had been musical what instrument would he have chosen after dinner?
32898If I kiss a lady by mistake, what weapon do I use?
32898If I walk into a room full of people and place a new penny upon the table in full view of the company, what does the coin do?
32898If I were in the sun and you out of it, what would the sun become?
32898If I were to see you riding on a donkey, what fruit should I be reminded of?
32898If Old Nick were to lose his tail, where should he go to supply the deficiency?
32898If Richard Jones were milking a cow too quickly, what ancient name would that animal mention?
32898If a bee could stand on its hind legs, what blessing would it invoke?
32898If a general should ask in vain for martial music, what word would embody his request?
32898If a man and his wife go to Europe together, what is the difference in their mode of traveling?
32898If a man attempts to jump a ditch and falls, why is he likely to miss the beauties of summer?
32898If a mercenary man were to ask a girl to marry, what flower would he name?
32898If a nice plump Member of Parliament were eaten uncooked by savages, why would he be like Louis Napoleon?
32898If a spider were late to dinner, what would he do?
32898If a tailor and a goose are on the top of a monument, what is the quickest way for the tailor to get down?
32898If a tough beefsteak could speak, what English poet would it mention?
32898If a tree were to break the panes of a window, what would they say?
32898If a woman asks her blind lover the color of a flower, what would he say?
32898If a young lady were to wish her father to pull her on the river, what classical name might she mention?
32898If all the seas were dried up, what would Neptune say?
32898If an uncle''s sister is not your aunt, what relation does she bear to you?
32898If the Greeks had pushed Pan into the Bay of Salamis, what would he have been when he came out?
32898If the acrobat fell off his trapeze, what would he fall against?
32898If the before- mentioned porker wished to demolish the pig''s sty he had built, what quotation would he make?
32898If the poker, shovel, and tongs cost five dollars, what would a ton of coal come to?
32898If thirty- two degrees is freezing point, what is squeezing point?
32898If we were going to kill a conversational goose, what vegetable would she allude to?
32898If you asked the alphabet to come to dinner, which letters could not accept your kind invitation till later in the evening?
32898If you lose a dollar to- day, why would it be a good plan to lose another to- morrow?
32898If you took off your boot and put your foot in the fire, what opera of Verdi''s would it instantly make you?
32898If you were to swallow a man, what sort of man would you prefer?
32898If you were to throw a white stone into the Red Sea, what would it become?
32898If you wish a very religious man to go to sleep, by what imperial name should you address him?
32898In what color should friendship be kept?
32898In what condition is a beer- barrel when it resembles old- fashioned curtains?
32898In what constellation are the two shooting dogs which never go down?
32898In what key should a declaration of love be made?
32898In what order did Noah come from the ark?
32898In what place did the cock crow so loud that all the world heard him?
32898In what relation does the President of the United States stand to Adam?
32898In what respect does an attorney resemble a clergyman?
32898In what respects were the governments of Algiers and Malta as different as light from darkness?
32898In what sort of family does the seventh night of the week come on the sixth?
32898In what sort of syllables ought a parrot to be taught to speak?
32898In what tongue did Balaam''s donkey speak?
32898Is that Ararat?
32898Is there a word in the English language which contains all the vowels?
32898Is there any bird which can recite the"Lays of Ancient Rome?"
32898It went before Queen Mary, it followed King William to the end?
32898Letter E. One letter''s a tree?
32898Like what four letters of the alphabet is a honey- producing insect when in small health?
32898Name the most unsociable things in the world?
32898Name two English words, one of which, being of one syllable only, shall contain more letters than the other of five syllables?
32898Nations?
32898Now of letters that rhyme You must guess them in time; One is an insect busy all day?
32898O I C U R M T. Why did Noah object to the letter D?
32898Of what color are the winds and waves in a storm?
32898Of what color is grass under snow?
32898Of what profession is every child?
32898Of what religious persuasion is the sea?
32898Of what trade is the sun?
32898Office- seekers?
32898Old people?
32898On a frosty day, what are the best fishes to fasten together?
32898On what day of the year do women talk least?
32898On what side of a church does a yew- tree grow?
32898On what supposition could a pocket handkerchief be used to build a house?
32898On which side of a pitcher is the handle?
32898One a bird, think?
32898One is a river that wends on its way?
32898One is a slang word it is best not to say?
32898One is to drink?
32898One means to agree?
32898Pharaoh got a check on the bank of the Red Sea-- crossed by Moses and Co. Why was Pharaoh''s daughter like a broker?
32898Plant a puppy, and what would come up?
32898Plant the setting sun, and what will come up?
32898Pray tell me, ladies, if you can, Who is that highly favored man, Who, though he has married many a wife, May still live single all his life?
32898Reporters?
32898Some one mentioning that"columba"was the Latin for a"dove,"it gave rise to the following: What is the difference between the Old World and the New?
32898Suppose you were to bore a hole exactly through the earth, starting from New York, and you went in at this end, where would you come out?
32898Telegraph operators?
32898That which every one requires, that which every one gives, that which every one asks, and that which very few take?
32898The Basutos of South Africa ask:"What is wingless and legless, yet flies fast and can not be imprisoned?"
32898The Teutonic form was,"What can go in the face of the sun, yet leave no shadow?"
32898The letter M. Why is A like twelve o''clock?
32898The letter"H."STORIES How do you punctuate the sentence,"I saw a five- dollar bill on the street?"
32898The letter"m."Who caught the fossil fishes?
32898The meaning of these letters is not full?
32898The name of what character in history would a person mention in asking the servant to put coal on the fire?
32898The names of which two Greek poems will you mention on alluding to their author''s peculiar manner and indisposition?
32898These letters do the best of all?
32898These letters form a literary composition?
32898These letters form a material to wear?
32898These letters form a tree?
32898These letters will decompose?
32898These two letters are not at all hard?
32898To what age do most people look forward?
32898Truthful people?
32898U- r- a- bu- t- l- n. What is that which occurs twice in a moment and not once in a thousand years?
32898Under what circumstances are a builder and a newspaper reporter equally likely to fail?
32898Unhappy people?
32898Upon what guard do the New York Zouaves most desire to be put?
32898Was Othello thinking of his wife when he killed her?
32898Was it John Byrom who, in comparing two celebrated musicians, said one was Tweedledum, the other only Tweedledee?
32898Was our mother Eve High or Low Church?
32898What Egyptian official would a little boy mention if he were to call his mother to the window to see something wonderful?
32898What English poet does a mummy resemble?
32898What Indian battle tried the metal( mettle) of the English soldiers?
32898What Tory do the Whigs want on their side?
32898What age are we forbidden to worship?
32898What age belongs to travelers?
32898What age do a number of people enjoy in common?
32898What age do milliners delight in?
32898What age do people get stuck on?
32898What age does the bride desire?
32898What age does the child in primary school dislike?
32898What age does the infant in arms pass through?
32898What age does the small boy enjoy?
32898What age is an indication of wealth?
32898What age is most important to travelers?
32898What age is necessary for a clergyman?
32898What age is neither more nor less?
32898What age is required at sea?
32898What age is served for breakfast?
32898What age is shared by a doctor and a lawyer?
32898What age is the young lady most interested in?
32898What age is used in turkey stuffing?
32898What age signifies the farmer?
32898What ancient king was often literally in his contemporaries''mouth?
32898What animal keeps the best time?
32898What animals always have gaiters on?
32898What animals are admitted at the opera?
32898What animals are always seen at a funeral?
32898What animals are in the clouds?
32898What ant hires his home?
32898What ant is a beggar?
32898What ant is an officer?
32898What ant is angry?
32898What ant is joyful?
32898What ant is learned?
32898What ant is obstinate?
32898What ant is prayerful?
32898What ant is proud?
32898What ant is successful?
32898What ant is trustworthy?
32898What ant is well informed?
32898What ant is youngest?
32898What ant lives in a house?
32898What ant points out things?
32898What ant sees things?
32898What ant tells things?
32898What are the features of the cannon?
32898What are the worst letters of recommendation?
32898What are those things, which, though they appear twice in every day, and twice in every week, yet are only seen twice in a year?
32898What author would eye- glasses and spectacles mention to the world if they could only speak?
32898What barrel is best fitted for a soldier''s helmet?
32898What becomes every woman?
32898What becomes of all the pins?
32898What benefit can be derived from a paper of pins?
32898What best describes and most impedes a Pilgrim''s Progress?
32898What bird made the Yankee dish, bird''s- nest pudding, and for what other bird was it made?
32898What burns to keep a secret?
32898What celebrated battle was fought in a dirty slum?
32898What change of identity did the"Beggar''s Opera"effect?
32898What city of the world do artists make the most drawings of?
32898What coat is finished without buttons and put on wet?
32898What comes after cheese?
32898What consolation has the homely girl?
32898What constitutes a weighty discourse?
32898What countryman is a ploughman?
32898What countryman is the devil?
32898What countryman was Burns?
32898What county of England, if you dislike it extremely, would you run the chance of being stifled in?
32898What death does the sculptor die?
32898What did Adam and Eve do when they got out of Eden?
32898What did Adam first plant in the Garden of Eden?
32898What did Io die of?
32898What did Lot do when his wife turned to salt?
32898What did Queen Elizabeth take her pills in?
32898What did a blind man take at breakfast which restored his sight?
32898What did the cat say when she looked out of the window of the ark?
32898What did the muffin say to the toasting fork?
32898What did the pistol ball say to the wounded duelist?
32898What did the sunbeam say to the violet?
32898What did the whale gain in the little transaction between him and Jonah?
32898What did they find under the Maine?
32898What divine law did the whale obey when he swallowed Jonah?
32898What do ladies look for when they go to church?
32898What does a hen do when she stands on one foot?
32898What does an iron- clad vessel of war, with four inches of steel plating and all its guns on board, weigh just before starting on a cruise?
32898What does that young man deserve who loves always to be in a playhouse?
32898What does the lamp post become when the lamp is removed?
32898What does y- e- s spell?
32898What evidence have we that Adam used sugar?
32898What fashionable game do frogs play at-- besides leap- frog?
32898What fish is most valued by a loving wife?
32898What flower most resembles a bull''s mouth?
32898What fruit is like a Guy Fawkes?
32898What fruit is on a cent?
32898What fur did Adam and Eve wear?
32898What games do the waves play at?
32898What garden crop would save draining?
32898What girl does Echo think can best answer questions?
32898What gives a cold, cures a cold, and pays the doctor?
32898What goes most against a farmer''s grain?
32898What goes over the water and under the water, but never touches the water?
32898What great astronomer is like Venus''s chariot?
32898What great scholar is this same Finis, because his name is to almost every book?
32898What grows bigger the more you contract it?
32898What had better be done when there is a great rent on a farm?
32898What hands are those which work night and day, yet never wear out; which, although they strike, do not stop?
32898What have ears but hear not?
32898What have eyes and see not?
32898What have feet and walk not?
32898What have hands but work not?
32898What have mouths but eat not?
32898What have noses but smell not?
32898What have tongues but talk not?
32898What have you now before you which would give you a company, a veiled lady, and a noisy toy?
32898What herb is most injurious to a lady''s beauty?
32898What herb is there that cures all diseases?
32898What impermeable fabric is a sparrow like?
32898What injury did the Lavinia of Thomson''s"Seasons"do to young Palemon?
32898What is Hobson''s choice?
32898What is Majesty deprived of its externals?
32898What is a better investment the worse it is?
32898What is a button?
32898What is a dogma?
32898What is a good way to make money fast?
32898What is a heavy incidental expense?
32898What is a kiss?
32898What is a man like who is in the middle of the Thames and ca n''t swim?
32898What is a ring?
32898What is a very frequent mistake clergymen make in their sermons?
32898What is a waste( waist) of time?
32898What is a young lady who refuses you?
32898What is an Englishman''s notion of woman''s mission?
32898What is an oyster heap likely to become?
32898What is better than God, worse than the devil, what the dead live on, and the living would die if they lived on?
32898What is better than an indifferent singer in a drawing room after dinner?
32898What is better than presence of mind in a railway accident?
32898What is disgusting to all but those who swallow it?
32898What is higher and handsomer when the head is off?
32898What is it that every man overlooks?
32898What is it that goes up and down hill, but never moves?
32898What is it that has four legs and only one foot?
32898What is it that is queer about flowers?
32898What is it that opens to all comers, advertises only the doctors, and yet is good for everything that ails you?
32898What is it that walks with its head downward?
32898What is it we all frequently say we will do and no one has ever yet done?
32898What is it which covers a multitude of sin(ner)s?
32898What is it which every one wishes for, and yet wants to get rid of as soon as it is obtained?
32898What is it which more people lie under than upon?
32898What is it?
32898What is larger than a nutmeg?
32898What is lengthened by being cut at both ends?
32898What is more foolish than sending coals to Newcastle?
32898What is most like a hen stealing?
32898What is most like a horse''s foot?
32898What is necessary to a farmer to assist him?
32898What is smaller than a mite''s mouth?
32898What is tantalizing?
32898What is that if you take the whole away some remains?
32898What is that thing which we all eat and drink, although it is often a man and often a woman?
32898What is that which a cat has but no other animal?
32898What is that which a woman frequently gives her lovely countenance to, yet never takes kindly?
32898What is that which becomes too young the longer it exists?
32898What is that which belongs to yourself, yet is used by every one more than yourself?
32898What is that which comes with a coach, goes with a coach, is of no use to the coach, and yet the coach can not go without it?
32898What is that which denotes the state of mind and of the body?
32898What is that which divides by uniting and unites by dividing?
32898What is that which every living being has seen, but will never see again?
32898What is that which every one frequently holds yet rarely touches?
32898What is that which fastens two people together, yet touches only one?
32898What is that which has a mouth but never speaks, and a bed but never sleeps in it?
32898What is that which has four legs and flies in the air?
32898What is that which has never been felt, seen, or heard,--never existed, and still has a name?
32898What is that which if you name it even you break it?
32898What is that which if you take away all the letters remains the same?
32898What is that which is above all human imperfections, and yet shelters the weakest and most depraved, as well as the best of men?
32898What is that which is often given you, which you never have, yet which you often give up?
32898What is that which is put on the table and cut, but never eaten?
32898What is that which is white, black, and red all over, which shows some people to be green, and makes others look black and blue?
32898What is that which lives in winter, dies in summer, and grows with its root upwards?
32898What is that which never asks questions, yet requires many answers?
32898What is that which no one wishes to have, yet no one wishes to lose?
32898What is that which the dead and the living do at the same time?
32898What is that which the fox has and the hare most wants?
32898What is that which travels about, goes much up and down, and wears shoes, but never had any shoes?
32898What is that which we often catch yet never see?
32898What is that which we often return but never borrow?
32898What is that which works when it plays and plays when it works?
32898What is that which you can keep even after giving it to somebody else?
32898What is that which, although only four inches long and three inches wide, contains a solid foot?
32898What is that which, the more you take from it, the larger it grows?
32898What is that which, though black itself, enlightens the world?
32898What is that which_ will be_ yesterday, and_ was_ to- morrow?
32898What is the action of the moon?
32898What is the age of communication?
32898What is the age of profanity?
32898What is the age of slavery?
32898What is the best advice to give a justice of the peace?
32898What is the best bet ever made?
32898What is the best day for making pancakes?
32898What is the best description of"rapid consumption"?
32898What is the best key to a good dinner?
32898What is the best kind of agricultural fair?
32898What is the best material for kites?
32898What is the best place to sow wild oats?
32898What is the best thing to do to enjoy the happiness of courting?
32898What is the best thing to make in a hurry?
32898What is the best thing to make in a hurry?
32898What is the best way of making a coat last?
32898What is the best way to double a flock of sheep?
32898What is the best way to hide a bear; it does n''t matter how big he is-- the bigger the better?
32898What is the best way to keep a man''s love?
32898What is the best way to make the hours go fast?
32898What is the best way to prevent water coming into your house?
32898What is the best way to raise strawberries?
32898What is the brightest idea of the day?
32898What is the characteristic of a watch?
32898What is the cheapest candy?
32898What is the coldest place in an opera house?
32898What is the difference between Kossuth and a half- starved countryman?
32898What is the difference between Nineveh and a donkey- boy?
32898What is the difference between Solomon and Rothschild?
32898What is the difference between a French pastry- cook and a billsticker?
32898What is the difference between a Roman Catholic priest and a Baptist?
32898What is the difference between a baby and a shipwrecked sailor?
32898What is the difference between a beehive and a diseased potato?
32898What is the difference between a bright scholar and shoe polish?
32898What is the difference between a butcher and a flirt?
32898What is the difference between a butterfly and a volcano?
32898What is the difference between a cat and a document?
32898What is the difference between a certain part of Africa and the shade of Hamlet''s father stalking in winter?
32898What is the difference between a chess- player and an habitual toper?
32898What is the difference between a cloud of rain and a beaten child?
32898What is the difference between a correspondent and a corespondent?
32898What is the difference between a cow and a rickety chair?
32898What is the difference between a donkey and a postage stamp?
32898What is the difference between a duck with one wing and one with two?
32898What is the difference between a farmer and a seamstress?
32898What is the difference between a fisherman and a lazy schoolboy?
32898What is the difference between a good and a bad governess?
32898What is the difference between a honeycomb and a honeymoon?
32898What is the difference between a last will and testament and a man who has eaten as much as he can?
32898What is the difference between a milkmaid and a swallow?
32898What is the difference between a mouse and a young lady?
32898What is the difference between a new sponge and a fashionable man?
32898What is the difference between a physician and a magician?
32898What is the difference between a piece of honeycomb and a black eye?
32898What is the difference between a potato and a soldier?
32898What is the difference between a professional pianoforte player, and the one who hears him?
32898What is the difference between a sailor and a soldier?
32898What is the difference between a soldier and a fisherman?
32898What is the difference between a spendthrift and a feather bed?
32898What is the difference between a sweep and a man in mourning?
32898What is the difference between a tight boot and an oak tree?
32898What is the difference between a volunteer and an omelet?
32898What is the difference between a wealthy toper and a skillful miner?
32898What is the difference between a widow and a window?
32898What is the difference between a young lady and a wide- awake hat?
32898What is the difference between a_ première danseuse_ and a duck?
32898What is the difference between an engine- driver and a schoolmaster?
32898What is the difference between an honest and dishonest laundress?
32898What is the difference between fog and a falling star?
32898What is the difference between forms and ceremonies?
32898What is the difference between killed soldiers and repaired garments?
32898What is the difference between living"in marble halls"and aboard ship?
32898What is the difference between love and war?
32898What is the difference between one yard and two yards?
32898What is the difference between perseverance and obstinacy?
32898What is the difference between photography and whooping- cough?
32898What is the difference between some women and their looking- glasses?
32898What is the difference between the Emperor of Russia and a beggar?
32898What is the difference between the North and South Pole?
32898What is the difference between the Prince of Wales and a fountain?
32898What is the difference between the Prince of Wales, an orphan, a bald- headed man, and a gorilla?
32898What is the difference between the ancient Israelites and modern washstands?
32898What is the difference between the cradle and the grave?
32898What is the difference between the earth and the sea?
32898What is the difference between two celebrated Saxon leaders of the fifth century and two others famous in these days?
32898What is the dryest subject?
32898What is the end to which all like to come?
32898What is the first thing you do when you get into bed?
32898What is the gentlest kind of spur?
32898What is the geometrical form of an escaped parrot?
32898What is the great motive for traveling?
32898What is the greatest eye- sore in a farmyard?
32898What is the greatest feat, in the eating way, ever known?
32898What is the greatest instance of cannibalism on record?
32898What is the greatest miracle ever worked in Ireland?
32898What is the hardest conundrum?
32898What is the height of folly?
32898What is the key- note to good manners?
32898What is the largest room in the world?
32898What is the last blow a defeated ship gives in battle?
32898What is the last remedy for a smoky chimney?
32898What is the longest word in the English language?
32898What is the military definition of a kiss?
32898What is the most difficult river on which to get a boat?
32898What is the most favorable season to have your letters from India?
32898What is the most indigestible age?
32898What is the most popular paper at a summer resort?
32898What is the most suitable dance to wind up a frolic?
32898What is the most wonderful animal in the farmyard?
32898What is the noblest musical instrument?
32898What is the oldest coupler in use?
32898What is the oldest lunatic on record?
32898What is the oldest piece of furniture in the world?
32898What is the only form in this world which all nations, barbarous and civilized and otherwise, are agreed upon following?
32898What is the only pain of which every one makes light?
32898What is the principal part of a horse?
32898What is the proper newspaper for invalids?
32898What is the ruling ant?
32898What is the smallest bridge in the world?
32898What is the smallest room in the world?
32898What is the superlative of temper?
32898What is the value of a word?
32898What is the very best and cheapest light, especially for painters?
32898What is the wandering ant?
32898What is the weight of the moon?
32898What is the worst kind of fare for a man to live on?
32898What is the worst thing to catch afire?
32898What is the worth of a woman?
32898What is wind like in a storm?
32898What is worse than raining cats and dogs?
32898What islands would form a cheerful luncheon party?
32898What key in music will make a good officer?
32898What kin is that child to his own father who is not his own father''s son?
32898What kind of a cat do we generally find in a large library?
32898What kind of a cravat would a hog be most likely to choose?
32898What kind of a pen does the plagiarist use?
32898What kind of a swell luncheon would hardly be considered a grand affair?
32898What kind of cottages did Adam''s sons prefer?
32898What kind of servants are best for hotels?
32898What king was he?
32898What lady of the Dante family is most often spoken of?
32898What language should a linguist end with?
32898What letter in the Dutch alphabet will name an English lady of title?
32898What letter in the alphabet is necessary to make a shoe?
32898What letter is that which is invisible, but never out of sight?
32898What letter is the pleasantest to a deaf woman?
32898What made the tart tart?
32898What makes a pair of boots?
32898What makes a pet dog wag his tail when he sees his master?
32898What makes more noise than a pig in a sty?
32898What makes the ocean get angry?
32898What man had no father?
32898What medicine ought to be given to misers?
32898What moral sentence does a weathercock suggest?
32898What most frequently becomes a woman?
32898What musical instrument invites you to fish?
32898What must all the letters of the alphabet be in order to possess infinite sagacity?
32898What nation has always overcome in the end?
32898What nation is it which, when allied to us, becomes the very home of despair?
32898What nationality were they while coming down?
32898What one sentence expresses the wish of both the Southern Confederacy and the United States government?
32898What one word will name the common parent of both beasts and man?
32898What other edifice does a man sometimes carry about with him besides a sty in his eye?
32898What ought to be Sir Edwin Landseer''s motto?
32898What part of Spain does your cat, sleeping by herself on the hearth- rug, resemble?
32898What part of a bag of grain is like a Russian soldier?
32898What part of a car resembles a person?
32898What part of a fish is like the end of a book?
32898What part of a fish weighs most?
32898What part of a lady''s face in January is like a celebrated fur?
32898What part of a lion is a new- born infant like?
32898What part of one''s head is fit to eat?
32898What part of speech is kissing?
32898What part of your ear would be the most essential for a martial band?
32898What pen ought never to be used for writing?
32898What person in the Bible died a death that no one else ever died-- and a part of whose shroud is on every dining table?
32898What piece of music did the Romans, at the time of the early Christians, most enjoy?
32898What poem of Hood''s resembles a tremendous Roman nose?
32898What precious stone is like the entrance to a field?
32898What prescription is the best for a poet?
32898What prevents a running river running right away?
32898What proof have we that Cowper was in debt?
32898What proverb must a lawyer_ not_ act up to?
32898What question is that to which you positively must answer yes?
32898What relation is a loaf of bread to a locomotive?
32898What relation is the door- mat to the threshold?
32898What remedy does an Irishman take for a scolding wife?
32898What river is ever without a beginning and ending?
32898What river is that which runs between two seas?
32898What roof never keeps out the wet?
32898What rose is"born to blush unseen"?
32898What route should our army take at the present?
32898What scene in the life of Moses, the lawgiver, reminds us of a gladiatorial show at Rome?
32898What sea is most traveled by clever intellectual people?
32898What sea would a man like most to be in on a wet day?
32898What sense pleases you most in an unpleasant acquaintance?
32898What shape is a kiss?
32898What should a clergyman preach about?
32898What single word would you put down for$ 40 borrowed from you?
32898What small animal is turned into a larger one by beheading it?
32898What smells most in a chemist''s shop?
32898What snuff- taker is that whose box gets fuller the more pinches he takes?
32898What soap is hardest?
32898What sort of a cold is necessary to insure your getting on well at Court?
32898What sort of a day would be a good one to run for a cup?
32898What sort of a face does the auctioneer like best?
32898What sort of a musical instrument resembles a bad hotel?
32898What sort of medicine is most like a sick monkey?
32898What sort of men are most aboveboard in their movements?
32898What sort of music should a girl sing whose voice is cracked and broken?
32898What sort of sympathy would you rather be without?
32898What sort of tune do we all enjoy most?
32898What soup would cannibals prefer?
32898What step must I take to remove A from the alphabet?
32898What stone should have been placed at the gate of Eden after the expulsion?
32898What the vilest?
32898What three acts comprise the chief business of some women''s lives?
32898What three letters give the name of a famous Roman general?
32898What toe would you rather kiss than the Pope''s?
32898What tongue is that which frequently hurts and grieves you, and yet does not speak a word?
32898What trade is more than full?
32898What trade never turns to the left?
32898What tree bears the most fruit to market?
32898What tree is of the greatest importance in history?
32898What trees has fire no effect upon?
32898What tune makes everybody glad?
32898What two Christian names read the same both ways?
32898What two ages often prove illusory?
32898What two beaus can every lady have near at hand?
32898What two letters do boys delight in to the annoyance of their elders?
32898What two letters express the most agreeable people in the world?
32898What two letters make a county in Massachusetts?
32898What two reasons are there why a young lady going to the altar is certainly going wrong?
32898What was Joan of Arc made of?
32898What was Noah busy about in the ark?
32898What was Othello''s occupation in Venice?
32898What was Pharaoh''s chief objection to Moses?
32898What was four weeks old when Cain was born, and is not yet five?
32898What was once the most fashionable cap in Paris?
32898What was the cause of the potato rot?
32898What was the difference between Shakespeare and Queen Elizabeth?
32898What was the first surgical operation performed without the aid of instruments?
32898What was the most melancholy fact in the history of Milton?
32898What were the last words of the bugler who was gored by the bull?
32898What were the odds at the battle of Aliwal?
32898What wild animals may be correctly shut up in one enclosure?
32898What will eventually change the size of the auto?
32898What wind should a hungry sailor wish for?
32898What word contains the five vowels in their order?
32898What word is it, which, by changing a single letter, becomes its own opposite?
32898What word is there of eight letters which has five of them the same?
32898What word is there of five letters, that, by taking two away, leaves but one?
32898What word makes you sick if you leave out one of its letters?
32898What word of four syllables represents Sin riding on a little animal?
32898What word of one syllable, if you take two letters from it, remains a word of two syllables?
32898What word of six letters admits of five successive elisions, leaving at each abbreviation a well- known word?
32898What word of six letters contains six words besides itself, without transposing a letter?
32898What word of ten letters can be spelled with five?
32898What words may be pronounced quicker and shorter by adding syllables to them?
32898What would a bear want if he should get into a dry- goods store?
32898What would a pig do if he wished to build himself a habitation?
32898What would give a blind man the greatest delight?
32898What young ladies won the battle of Salamis?
32898What''bus has found room for the greatest number of people?
32898What''s the difference between a bee and a donkey?
32898What''s the difference between a gardener and a billiard marker?
32898What''s the difference between a middle- aged cooper and a trooper of the Middle Ages?
32898What''s the difference between an Irishman frozen to death and a Highlander on a mountain- peak in January?
32898When Charles I was beheaded, of what dish did the executioner dine, and where?
32898When Louis Philippe was deposed, why did he lose less than any of his subjects?
32898When a church is burning, what is the only part that runs no chance of being saved?
32898When an old woman in a scarlet cloak was crossing a field in which a goat was browsing, what took place?
32898When are candles and women most alike?
32898When are handcuffs like knapsacks?
32898When are kisses sweetest?
32898When are lawyers circumstances?
32898When are sheep stationery?
32898When are volunteers not volunteers?
32898When are words musical?
32898When can an Irish servant answer two questions at the same time?
32898When can you carry water in a sieve?
32898When could you eat a lady''s hand?
32898When did Abraham sleep five in a bed?
32898When did fruit first begin to swear?
32898When did"Chicago"begin with a"C"and end with an"e"?
32898When does English butter become Irish butter?
32898When does a blacksmith make a row in the alphabet?
32898When does a cook break the game laws?
32898When does a donkey weigh least?
32898When does a lady think her husband a Hercules?
32898When does a leopard change his spots?
32898When does a man sneeze three times?
32898When does a man stand a good chance of being completely sewn up?
32898When does a man''s hair resemble a packing box?
32898When does a musician fail?
32898When does a pig become landed property?
32898When does a son not take after his father?
32898When does the House of Representatives present one of the most ludicrous spectacles?
32898When does the eagle turn carpenter?
32898When does the tongue assume the functions of the teeth?
32898When has a man brown hands?
32898When he makes a poke- R and shove- L. What did the old woman say when she looked into the empty flour barrel?
32898When is a United States soldier like a man with a ragged coat?
32898When is a baby like a breakfast cup?
32898When is a bank note like iron?
32898When is a beaver hat a wide- awake?
32898When is a bill not a bill?
32898When is a black dog not a black dog?
32898When is a blow from a lady welcome?
32898When is a boat like a heap of snow?
32898When is a bonnet not a bonnet?
32898When is a borough like a ship?
32898When is a boy not a boy?
32898When is a butcher a thorough thief?
32898When is a candle like an ill- conditioned, quarrelsome man?
32898When is a charade like a fir- tree?
32898When is a cigar like a shoulder of pork?
32898When is a clock on the stairs dangerous?
32898When is a doctor like a cross- tempered man?
32898When is a fast young man nearest heaven?
32898When is a fish above its station?
32898When is a fruit- stalk like a strong swimmer?
32898When is a girl like a mirror?
32898When is a lady deformed?
32898When is a lady''s arm not a lady''s arm?
32898When is a lawyer like a donkey?
32898When is a man a muff?
32898When is a man a spoon?
32898When is a man incapable of performing a bare- faced action?
32898When is a man like a cannon- ball?
32898When is a man like frozen rain?
32898When is a man most likely to get floored( flawed)?
32898When is a man thinner than a lath?
32898When is a man''s pastor really and truly his brother?
32898When is a member of Congress ferocious?
32898When is a nation like a baby?
32898When is a nose not a nose?
32898When is a pie like a poet?
32898When is a piece of wood like a queen?
32898When is a pint of milk not a pint?
32898When is a policeman like the good Samaritan?
32898When is a policeman very like a rainbeau?
32898When is a river like a young lady?
32898When is a river not a river?
32898When is a rushlight like a tombstone?
32898When is a sailor not a sailor?
32898When is a sailor not a sailor?
32898When is a schoolboy like a postage stamp?
32898When is a schoolmaster like a man with one eye?
32898When is a skein of thread like the root of an oak?
32898When is a slug like a poem of Tennyson''s?
32898When is a soldier charitable?
32898When is a soldier like a watch?
32898When is a straight field not a straight field?
32898When is a subject beneath one''s notice?
32898When is a superb woman like bread?
32898When is a teapot like a kitten?
32898When is a thief like a reporter?
32898When is a tourist in Ireland like a donkey?
32898When is a tradesman at the seaside, though in London?
32898When is a wall like a fish?
32898When is a woman a live wire?
32898When is a young lady like an acrobat?
32898When is a young lady not a young lady?
32898When is a young lady''s cheek not a cheek?
32898When is it a good thing to lose your temper?
32898When is it dangerous to enter a church?
32898When is it easiest to read?
32898When is love deformed?
32898When is music like vegetables?
32898When is she absurdly in love?
32898When is she actively in love?
32898When is she ambitiously in love?
32898When is she demonstratively in love?
32898When is she foolishly in love?
32898When is she treated too familiarly?
32898When is she weakly in love?
32898When is silence likely to get wet?
32898When is sugar like a pig''s tooth?
32898When is the letter L like a piece of unparalleled generosity?
32898When is the river Thames good for the eyes?
32898When is the wind like a woodchopper?
32898When is truth not truth any longer?
32898When is water most likely to escape?
32898When may a chair be said to dislike you?
32898When may a lady be absolutely pronounced to be quite past recovery?
32898When may a loaf of bread be said to be inhabited?
32898When may a man be said to be literally immersed in his business?
32898When may a man be said to be personally involved?
32898When may a man be said to be personally involved?
32898When may a man be said to be really over head and ears in debt?
32898When may a man be said to breakfast before he gets up?
32898When may a man be said to have four hands?
32898When may a man''s coat- pocket be empty and yet have something in it?
32898When may a room that is full of people be said to be empty?
32898When may a ship be said to be in love?
32898When may a ship be said to be in love?
32898When may an army be said to be totally destroyed?
32898When may ladies who are enjoying themselves be said to look wretched?
32898When may two people be said to be half- witted?
32898When may you be said literally to"drink in"music?
32898When she is asked,"What''s o''clock, and where''s the cold chicken?"
32898When was B the first letter of the alphabet?
32898When was Napoleon I most shabbily dressed?
32898When was beef the highest?
32898When was beef- tea introduced into England?
32898When was the first gambling?
32898When was the greatest destruction of poultry?
32898When were there only two vowels?
32898When will there be but twenty- five letters in the alphabet?
32898When would a farmer have the best opportunity for overlooking his pigs?
32898When you give a lady a lock of your hair, what else does she receive from you at the same time?
32898When you listen to your little brother''s drum, why are you like a just judge?
32898When you see a lady in distress, what should you pull up, and what bury?
32898Whence proceeds the eloquence of a lawyer?
32898Where are bank checks mentioned in the Bible?
32898Where are we most likely to find the sky blue?
32898Where can you find every word of your last interesting conversation with Miss all written down, word for word?
32898Where did Noah keep his bees?
32898Where did Noah strike the first nail in the ark?
32898Where did he go?
32898Where did the Witch of Endor live-- and end- her days?
32898Where does one see breakers ahead on land?
32898Where have you the most extended view?
32898Where is it that all women are equally beautiful?
32898Where is the cheapest place to buy poultry?
32898Where is the theater mentioned in the Bible?
32898Where ought children who bite their fingers to be sent?
32898Where should you feel for the poor?
32898Where was Humboldt going when he was thirty- nine years old?
32898Wherein did the prophet Jonah differ from the modern theologians?
32898Which animal is the heaviest in all creation?
32898Which animal took most luggage into the ark, and which the least?
32898Which are the lightest men-- Scotchmen, Irishmen, or Englishmen?
32898Which are the most seasonable clothes?
32898Which are the two hottest letters in the alphabet?
32898Which are the two smallest things mentioned in the Scripture?
32898Which constellation resembles an empty fireplace?
32898Which eat more grass, black sheep or white?
32898Which has most legs, a cow or no cow?
32898Which is better, getting the girl of your choice or a shoulder of mutton?
32898Which is heavier, a pound of gold or a pound of feathers?
32898Which is heavier, the half or the full moon?
32898Which is the better playwright, William Shakespeare or Brinsley Sheridan?
32898Which is the coldest river?
32898Which is the greatest number, six dozen dozen or half a dozen dozen?
32898Which is the laziest plant, and which the most active?
32898Which is the left side of a plum pudding?
32898Which is the merriest sauce?
32898Which is the most ancient of trees?
32898Which is the ugliest hood ever worn?
32898Which member of Congress wears the largest hat?
32898Which of the feathered tribe can lift the heaviest weights?
32898Which of the letters of the alphabet are the most authentic on a bill or bond?
32898Which of the planets would a tortoise like best to live in?
32898Which of the stars should be subject to the game laws?
32898Which one of a carpenter''s tools is coffee like?
32898Which one of the Seven Wonders of the World are railway engines like?
32898Which one of the United States is the largest and most popular?
32898Which travels faster, heat or cold?
32898Which word in the English language contains the greatest number of letters?
32898Which would you rather-- look a greater fool than you are, or be a greater fool than you look?
32898Which would you rather-- that a lion ate you or a tiger?
32898Who always sits with his hat on before the queen?
32898Who are the best astronomers?
32898Who commit the greatest abominations?
32898Who first introduced salt pork into the Navy?
32898Who first introduced walking- sticks?
32898Who had the first free entrance into a theater?
32898Who has most need to pray to be delivered from temptation?
32898Who is he that has a fine wit in jest?
32898Who is the first little boy mentioned by a single word in the history of England?
32898Who is the greatest terrifier?
32898Who is the man who carries everything before him?
32898Who is the most popular preacher?
32898Who is your greatest friend?
32898Who may be said to have had the largest family in America?
32898Who took the first newspapers?
32898Who was Jonah''s tutor?
32898Who was first interested in horse racing?
32898Who was hanged for not wearing a wig?
32898Who was the fastest runner in the world?
32898Who was the first man condemned to hard labor for life?
32898Who was the first postman?
32898Who was the first unfortunate speculator?
32898Who was the first whistler, and what tune did he whistle?
32898Who was the greatest financier of early times?
32898Who was the most wretched of all the murderers of Julius CÃ ¦ sar?
32898Who was the oldest man that ever lived, yet who died before his father did?
32898Who were the first mathematicians mentioned in the Bible?
32898Who were the original bog- trotters?
32898Who won the first horse race in the Bible?
32898Who wrote most, Dickens or Bulwer?
32898Why am I, when prudently laying by money, like myself when foolishly squandering it?
32898Why are Addison''s works like a looking- glass?
32898Why are American greenbacks like the Jews?
32898Why are Jeff Davis''s letters of marque like secrets?
32898Why are Parliamentary reports called"Blue Books?"
32898Why are a couple of first- rate breech- loaders like two beautiful young ladies?
32898Why are airship inventors like musicians?
32898Why are artists like washerwomen?
32898Why are bad women like ivy?
32898Why are baldheaded men in danger of dying?
32898Why are bells the most obedient of inanimate things?
32898Why are birds melancholy in the morning?
32898Why are bishops like superannuated washerwomen?
32898Why are bookkeepers like chickens?
32898Why are books your best friends?
32898Why are cats like unskillful surgeons?
32898Why are chickens liberal?
32898Why are clouds like coachmen?
32898Why are coals like poor laboring men?
32898Why are cobblers like a famous physician?
32898Why are confectioners so much sought for?
32898Why are corn and potatoes like Chinese idols?
32898Why are country girls''cheeks like well- printed cottons?
32898Why are cowardly soldiers like tallow candles?
32898Why are cripples and beggars similar to shepherds and fishermen?
32898Why are deaf people like India shawls?
32898Why are doctors always wicked men?
32898Why are eyes like stage- horses?
32898Why are fixed stars like pen, ink, and paper?
32898Why are fixed stars like wicked old men?
32898Why are frames put about tomato plants?
32898Why are good intentions like fainting ladies?
32898Why are good women like ivy?
32898Why are guns like trees?
32898Why are hogs more intelligent than humans?
32898Why are hot rolls like caterpillars?
32898Why are kisses like creation?
32898Why are ladies bathing like a Yankee drink?
32898Why are ladies like hinges?
32898Why are ladies who wear large crinolines ugly?
32898Why are ladies''eyes like persons separated by the Atlantic Ocean?
32898Why are lamps like the Thames?
32898Why are laundresses good navigators?
32898Why are lawyers and doctors safe people by whom to take example?
32898Why are lawyers like shears?
32898Why are lawyers such uneasy sleepers?
32898Why are mortgages like burglars?
32898Why are our fashionable ladies like a certain class of the city employees?
32898Why are persons with short memories like office- holders?
32898Why are pipes all humbugs?
32898Why are plagiarists like seashore lodging- house keepers with newly married couples?
32898Why are policemen particularly required in a hop ground?
32898Why are poor relations like fits of the gout?
32898Why are ripe potatoes in the ground like thieves?
32898Why are sailors bad horsemen?
32898Why are sailors in a leaky vessel like dancing masters?
32898Why are seasick excursionists like a strong opposition in Congress?
32898Why are seeds when sown like gate- posts?
32898Why are sentries like day and night?
32898Why are sharpers like sparrows?
32898Why are sheep the most dissipated of animals?
32898Why are sidewalks in winter like music?
32898Why are some ministers worse than Brigham Young?
32898Why are stars like an old barn?
32898Why are sugar- plums like racehorses?
32898Why are suicides invariably successful people in the world?
32898Why are teeth like verbs?
32898Why are the English the worst judges of cattle in the world?
32898Why are the Germans like quinine and gentian?
32898Why are the Royal Academicians the greatest swells ever known?
32898Why are the abbreviations of degrees tacked on to a man''s name?
32898Why are the actions of men like great rivers?
32898Why are the bars of a convent like a blacksmith''s apron?
32898Why are the fourteenth and fifteenth letters of the alphabet of more importance than the others?
32898Why are the hours from one to twelve like good Christians?
32898Why are the men appointed to wind up the affairs of a bank whose treasurer has defaulted, as bad as the treasurer himself?
32898Why are the pages of a book like the days of a man?
32898Why are the relics of the departed like a man whose pocket has been robbed and the thief escaped?
32898Why are the shot and shell of the blockading squadron like lovers''vows?
32898Why are the speeches of an orator heard through a phonograph like the State House dome?
32898Why are the"blue devils"like muffins?
32898Why are there more marriages in winter than in summer?
32898Why are they the greatest of coquettes?
32898Why are three couples going to be married like penny trumpets?
32898Why are two lovers pledged to each other like the Federal Army before Washington?
32898Why are two t''s like hops?
32898Why are two watches given as prizes like a happy married couple?
32898Why are two young ladies kissing each other an emblem of Christianity?
32898Why are unsuccessful contestants for a prize like Shakespeare?
32898Why are very old people necessarily prolix and tedious?
32898Why are volunteers like Lord Nelson?
32898Why are volunteers like old maids?
32898Why are washerwomen foolish people?
32898Why are washerwomen unreasonable?
32898Why are weary people like carriage wheels?
32898Why are women like churches?
32898Why are women so crooked and perverse in their conditions?
32898Why are wooden ships, as compared with ironclads, of the female sex?
32898Why are worn- out clothes like children without parents?
32898Why are you most likely to miss the 12:50 train?
32898Why are young children like castles in the air?
32898Why are young ladies bad grammarians?
32898Why are your nose and chin constantly at variance?
32898Why ca n''t a thief easily steal a watch?
32898Why can Satan never be uncivil?
32898Why can a fish never be in the dark?
32898Why can hotel boarders dine off the gong?
32898Why can no clergyman have a wooden leg?
32898Why can not rebels ever dress well?
32898Why can not the Irish perform the play of"Hamlet?"
32898Why can not you make a venison pasty of buck venison?
32898Why can the pall- bearers at a young lady''s funeral never be dry?
32898Why can the weight of an illuminating argument never be accurately determined?
32898Why can you never expect a fishmonger to be generous?
32898Why can you never tell real hysterics from sham ones?
32898Why could not Napoleon III insure his life?
32898Why did Adam bite the apple Eve gave him?
32898Why did Joseph''s brethren put him in the pit?
32898Why did Louis Philippe omit to take his umbrella when he left Paris?
32898Why did Marcus Curtius leap into the gulf in Rome?
32898Why did n''t he stay there?
32898Why did the Highlanders do most execution at Waterloo?
32898Why did the population of Rome decrease just before the fall of the empire?
32898Why did the young lady return the dumb waiter?
32898Why do British soldiers never run away?
32898Why do architects make excellent actors?
32898Why do dentists make good politicians?
32898Why do fat men love their ease so much?
32898Why do girls kiss each other, and men not?
32898Why do girls like looking at the moon?
32898Why do little birds in their nests agree?
32898Why do love letters have a financial value?
32898Why do not men and their wives agree better nowadays?
32898Why do sailors working in brigs make bad servants?
32898Why do so many people in China travel on foot?
32898Why do teetotalers run such a slight risk of drowning?
32898Why do the recriminations of married couples resemble the sound of waves on the shore?
32898Why do we all go to bed?
32898Why do we assume that Moses wore a wig?
32898Why do we speak of poetic fire?
32898Why do women seek husbands named William?
32898Why do you think that a judge of the criminal court is looked upon with contempt?
32898Why does B stand before C?
32898Why does a blow leave a blue mark?
32898Why does a cat rest better in summer?
32898Why does a donkey eat a thistle?
32898Why does a dressmaker never lose her hooks?
32898Why does a duck come out of water?
32898Why does a duck go into water?
32898Why does a fox- hound wag his tail?
32898Why does a man permit himself to be henpecked?
32898Why does a man who has been all his life a woodcutter, never come home to dinner?
32898Why does a nobleman''s title sometimes become extinct?
32898Why does a person who is ailing lose his sense of touch?
32898Why does a piebald pony never pay toll?
32898Why does a puss purr?
32898Why does a rich lady act prudently by marrying a penniless man?
32898Why does a salmon die before it lives?
32898Why does a student never lead a sedentary life?
32898Why does a tall man eat less than a short man?
32898Why does a tallow chandler live better than another man?
32898Why does a woman residing up a pair of stairs remind you of a goddess?
32898Why does a young lady prefer her mother''s fortune to her father''s?
32898Why does a young man study law?
32898Why does he continue in the profession?
32898Why does he leave the profession?
32898Why does the conductor cut a hole in your railroad ticket?
32898Why does the east wind never blow straight?
32898Why does the mayor order the saloons closed after a great fire?
32898Why does the rope dancer invariably have to repeat his performances?
32898Why had Eve no fear of the measles?
32898Why has Massachusetts done more towards the war loan than any other State?
32898Why has a barber more than one life?
32898Why has the acrobat such a wonderful digestion?
32898Why have chickens no fear of a future state?
32898Why have the inhabitants of the city of Boston less need of foreign bards than those of any other city?
32898Why is A like a honeysuckle?
32898Why is Canada like courtship?
32898Why is China a desirable country for a man to select a wife in?
32898Why is English grammar like gout?
32898Why is General McClellan like the Established Church?
32898Why is Great Britain like Palestine?
32898Why is I the luckiest of all the vowels?
32898Why is Ireland likely to become rich?
32898Why is Major General McClellan like Charles Dickens?
32898Why is New York City like a flash light?
32898Why is O the most charitable letter in the alphabet?
32898Why is O the noisiest of all vowels?
32898Why is Orpheus always in bad company?
32898Why is Paris like the letter F?
32898Why is President Lincoln like a mariner on a desolate shore?
32898Why is T the happiest letter in the alphabet?
32898Why is Troy weight like an unconscientious person?
32898Why is U the gayest letter in the alphabet?
32898Why is Westminster Abbey like a hearth?
32898Why is a Bostonian''s brain like a book of conundrums?
32898Why is a Freshman like a telescope?
32898Why is a Jew in a fever like the famous Koh- i- noor diamond?
32898Why is a Jew''s harp like a good dinner?
32898Why is a Wall Street lamb like a surgical convalescent?
32898Why is a Welshman like a beggar?
32898Why is a bad gimlet like a prophesier of ill events?
32898Why is a baker a most improvident person?
32898Why is a bald head like heaven?
32898Why is a bald- headed man like a hunting dog?
32898Why is a ball discharged in the air like an article for soldiers''comfort?
32898Why is a bankrupt husband an ardent lover?
32898Why is a beautiful woman at her marriage festival like one on horseback?
32898Why is a bee- hive like a spectator?
32898Why is a belle like a locomotive?
32898Why is a black man necessarily a conjurer?
32898Why is a blacksmith the most dissatisfied of all mechanics?
32898Why is a blockhead deserving of promotion?
32898Why is a blush an anomaly?
32898Why is a book like a king?
32898Why is a boy like a puppy?
32898Why is a bride, weary of her apartment home, like a wrecked automobile?
32898Why is a bullet like a tender glance?
32898Why is a butcher''s cart like his top boots?
32898Why is a butler like a mountain?
32898Why is a candle like an atheist?
32898Why is a carpenter like a languid dandy?
32898Why is a cat going up three pairs of stairs like a high hill?
32898Why is a certain kind of coach like the exclusive option on a certain girl''s kisses?
32898Why is a chicken served to a minister like a theological student?
32898Why is a clever wit like a chemist?
32898Why is a coach going down a steep hill like St. George?
32898Why is a comet more like a dog than the dog- star?
32898Why is a commercial traveler whose"walk in life"is selling eggs, certain to be successful?
32898Why is a committee of inquiry like a cannon?
32898Why is a competent lawyer like a bloodstone set in jet?
32898Why is a conductor on a car like a firefly?
32898Why is a congreve- box without matches superior to all other boxes?
32898Why is a cook like a barber?
32898Why is a cook more noisy than a gong?
32898Why is a corpse like a man with a cold?
32898Why is a correct knowledge of grammar indispensable to young clergymen?
32898Why is a cracker like death?
32898Why is a cross old bachelor like the preceding conundrum?
32898Why is a cunning man like a shoemaker?
32898Why is a dead doctor like a dead duck?
32898Why is a dead hen better than a live one?
32898Why is a deceptive woman like a seamstress?
32898Why is a defeated army like wool?
32898Why is a department store like a country sewing circle?
32898Why is a diamond in a cup of cold water like the Union?
32898Why is a dirty man like flannel?
32898Why is a discredited politician like an unpopular dentist?
32898Why is a dissipated young man like Berlin, the capital of Germany?
32898Why is a dog biting his own tail like a good manager?
32898Why is a dog like a man four feet ten inches tall?
32898Why is a dog like a tree?
32898Why is a dog with a lame leg like a boy ciphering?
32898Why is a dog''s tail like an expressman?
32898Why is a door always in the subjunctive mood?
32898Why is a dressmaker braver than an actor?
32898Why is a drunkard hesitating to sign the pledge like a skeptical Hindoo?
32898Why is a false friend like the letter P?
32898Why is a false oath like a trial in the criminal court?
32898Why is a fancy dancer like an old- fashioned country woman?
32898Why is a farmer surprised at the letter G?
32898Why is a father who frequently thrashes his boy likely to be prosecuted?
32898Why is a fiddle like a man who gives money to make up a quarrel?
32898Why is a fiddle- maker like an apothecary?
32898Why is a fiddler like a man in amaze?
32898Why is a field of grass like a person older than yourself?
32898Why is a fish- hook like the letter F?
32898Why is a flea like a long winter?
32898Why is a flirt like an india- rubber ball?
32898Why is a fool in a high station like a man in a balloon?
32898Why is a fortified town like a pudding?
32898Why is a fortunate man like a straw in the water?
32898Why is a four- quart measure like a sidesaddle?
32898Why is a gardener like a detective- story writer?
32898Why is a girl like an arrow?
32898Why is a glass- blower the most likely person to set the alphabet off at a gallop?
32898Why is a good husband like dough?
32898Why is a good joke like the modern ballot box?
32898Why is a good pun like a good cat?
32898Why is a good story like a church bell?
32898Why is a good wife like the devil?
32898Why is a gooseberry tart like a bad coin?
32898Why is a greenback more desirable than gold?
32898Why is a hack- horse a miserable creature?
32898Why is a hammer like a general?
32898Why is a hen looking into a rotten pumpkin like the Southern Confederacy?
32898Why is a hen walking across the road like a conspiracy?
32898Why is a high rate of fare on a railroad like an overloaded gun?
32898Why is a high wind like a dumb man in distress?
32898Why is a holly bush like a corpse?
32898Why is a horse an anomaly in the hunting- field?
32898Why is a horse like the letter O?
32898Why is a horse that is constantly rid, though never fed, never starved?
32898Why is a human being like an earthen jug?
32898Why is a jeweler like a prisoner in solitary confinement?
32898Why is a jeweler like a screeching singer?
32898Why is a joint company not like a watch?
32898Why is a judge''s nose like the middle of the earth?
32898Why is a kiss like a rumor?
32898Why is a kiss like a sermon?
32898Why is a lame beggar inconsistent?
32898Why is a lame dog like the side of a mountain?
32898Why is a lamp like a house?
32898Why is a lance like the moon?
32898Why is a lawyer like an honest man?
32898Why is a lead pencil like a perverse child?
32898Why is a leaky barrel like a coward?
32898Why is a little dog''s tail like the heart of a tree?
32898Why is a looking- glass very complaisant?
32898Why is a love of the ocean like curiosity?
32898Why is a lover''s heart like a whale?
32898Why is a loyal gentleman like a miser?
32898Why is a mad bull an animal of convivial disposition?
32898Why is a madman equal to two men?
32898Why is a man hanged better than a vagabond?
32898Why is a man just knighted like a nutmeg?
32898Why is a man looking for the philosopher''s stone like Neptune?
32898Why is a man marrying a second time like_ sal volatile_?
32898Why is a man riding swiftly up hill like one who presents a young lady with a young dog?
32898Why is a man taking a hedge at a single bound like one snoring?
32898Why is a man upstairs beating his wife an honorable man?
32898Why is a man who has parted from his bed like one obliged to keep it?
32898Why is a man who never lays a wager as bad as a regular gambler?
32898Why is a man who runs in debt like a clock?
32898Why is a man whose"heart is in his mouth"through fright, like a cabbage?
32898Why is a man with corns on his feet like a certain favorite vegetable?
32898Why is a marine painter like a large vessel?
32898Why is a mirror like a dissatisfied and ungrateful friend?
32898Why is a miserly uncle with whom you have quarreled like a person with a short memory?
32898Why is a missionary like a pig roasting on a spit?
32898Why is a mother rocking her child to sleep liable to arrest?
32898Why is a mother who spoils her child like a person building castles in the air?
32898Why is a mouse entering a mouse trap like a diplomat arguing his policy?
32898Why is a mouse like hay?
32898Why is a muddy road a guardian of the public safety?
32898Why is a music teacher like a baseball coach?
32898Why is a nabob like a beggar?
32898Why is a negro woman like a doorway?
32898Why is a new- born baby like a storm?
32898Why is a newspaper like a lame man?
32898Why is a newspaper like an army?
32898Why is a note of hand like a rosebud?
32898Why is a pair of skates like an apple?
32898Why is a patent safety Hansom cab a dangerous carriage to drive in?
32898Why is a peach- stone like a regiment?
32898Why is a pelted actor like a pardoned criminal?
32898Why is a pen manufacturer a corrupt man?
32898Why is a pensive widow like the letter X?
32898Why is a person of short stature like an almanac?
32898Why is a person who asks questions the strangest of all individuals?
32898Why is a photograph like a member of Congress?
32898Why is a piano like an onion?
32898Why is a pictorial riddle like a second kiss?
32898Why is a picture like a fine woman?
32898Why is a pig in the drawing- room like a house on fire?
32898Why is a playhouse like a punch bowl?
32898Why is a pleasure trip to Egypt fit only for very old gentlemen?
32898Why is a portrait of Queen Elizabeth like a wager which is neither lost nor won?
32898Why is a postman in danger of losing his way?
32898Why is a pretty girl like a locomotive engine?
32898Why is a pretty girl''s pleased- merry- bright- laughing- eye no better than an eye destroyed?
32898Why is a pretty young lady like a wagon- wheel?
32898Why is a printing press like the forbidden fruit?
32898Why is a proposal like the first conviction for drunkenness?
32898Why is a prosy preacher like the middle of a wheel?
32898Why is a proud girl like a music book?
32898Why is a prudent man like a pin?
32898Why is a race at a circus like a big conflagration?
32898Why is a ragged beggar like a clergyman near the end of his sermon?
32898Why is a resolution like a looking glass?
32898Why is a retired actor like an extortioner?
32898Why is a rich farmer like a man with bad teeth?
32898Why is a rooster on a fence like a penny?
32898Why is a schoolboy being flogged like your eye?
32898Why is a schoolmistress like the letter C?
32898Why is a sedan chair like the world?
32898Why is a ship in a stream like a nail?
32898Why is a shoeblack like an editor?
32898Why is a shoemaker like a true lover?
32898Why is a shoemaker more charitable than another man?
32898Why is a short man struggling to kiss a tall woman like an Irishman going up Vesuvius?
32898Why is a short negro like a white man?
32898Why is a sleepy servant like a warming pan?
32898Why is a smith a dangerous companion?
32898Why is a smith like a ferryman?
32898Why is a solar eclipse like a woman whipping her boy?
32898Why is a specimen of handwriting like a dead pig?
32898Why is a spendthrift, with regard to his fortune, like the water in a filter?
32898Why is a spendthrift, with regard to his fortune, like the water in a filter?
32898Why is a spider a good correspondent?
32898Why is a sporting clergyman like a soldier who runs from battle?
32898Why is a staircase like a back- biter?
32898Why is a statistician like a writer of one of the Six Best Sellers?
32898Why is a steamboat a good place to sleep in?
32898Why is a steel- trap like the small- pox?
32898Why is a straw hat like kissing through the telephone?
32898Why is a stupid servant like a church bell?
32898Why is a sword belt like a cow upon a common?
32898Why is a thief like a bolus given to a lady?
32898Why is a thief like a knocker?
32898Why is a thief like a philosopher?
32898Why is a treadmill run by convicts like a true convert?
32898Why is a true and faithful friend like a garden seed?
32898Why is a turnpike like a dead dog''s tail?
32898Why is a very amusing man like a very bad shot?
32898Why is a very demure young lady like a tugboat?
32898Why is a vessel being blown out to sea like a bankrupt householder?
32898Why is a vine like a soldier?
32898Why is a waiter like a race- horse?
32898Why is a washerwoman like Saturday?
32898Why is a watch like the moon?
32898Why is a watch- dog bigger by night than in the morning?
32898Why is a water lily like a whale?
32898Why is a wax candle like Dickens''last work?
32898Why is a wedding ring like eternity?
32898Why is a wide- awake so called?
32898Why is a widower in love again like a good gardener?
32898Why is a woman who tries to drive a balky horse like a successful actress?
32898Why is a woman''s beauty like a gold coin?
32898Why is a woman''s thought like the telegraph?
32898Why is a woman, when blindfolded, like an ignorant school teacher?
32898Why is a worn- out shoe like ancient Greece?
32898Why is a young lawyer in his office like one of his chickens roosting on his neighbor''s fence?
32898Why is a young man engaged to a young lady like a man sailing for a port in France?
32898Why is a young man who seldom attends church, sitting in the pulpit of a leaky church in a rain storm, like one who constantly attends church?
32898Why is an abstract of a lecture like a sentimental boy and girl kissing?
32898Why is an aged man like a deserted house?
32898Why is an airship bequeathed you by your father like the portrait of an ancestor?
32898Why is an alligator the most deceitful of animals?
32898Why is an apple like a good song?
32898Why is an apron like peas?
32898Why is an aristocratic seminary for young ladies like a flower garden?
32898Why is an artist stronger than a horse?
32898Why is an astronomer like a theatrical manager?
32898Why is an author the most wonderful man in the world?
32898Why is an autoist whose machine has been completely wrecked like a reformed autoist?
32898Why is an automobilist who exceeds the speed limit like a social reprobate?
32898Why is an egg like a colt?
32898Why is an egg overdone like an egg underdone?
32898Why is an elephant''s head different from every other head?
32898Why is an elevator man like an aëronaut?
32898Why is an extremely religious Roman Catholic lady only a very virtuous goose?
32898Why is an eyelid like the wadding to a gun?
32898Why is an honest friend like orange chips?
32898Why is an honest poor man like a dishonest bankrupt man?
32898Why is an island like the letter T?
32898Why is an office with no work to do like a good dinner eaten by an invalid?
32898Why is an old coat like iron?
32898Why is an old man''s head like a song executed by an indifferent singer?
32898Why is an orange like a church steeple?
32898Why is an organ an enemy to religion?
32898Why is an owl in the daylight like the President of the United States?
32898Why is an uncomfortable seat like comfort?
32898Why is an unskillful physician like Peleus''son, Achilles?
32898Why is any divorced man like a man playing at ten pins?
32898Why is attar of roses never moved without orders?
32898Why is chloroform like Mendelssohn?
32898Why is coal the most contradictory article known to commerce?
32898Why is confessing to a father confessor like killing bees?
32898Why is divinity the easiest of the three learned professions?
32898Why is electricity like the police when they are wanted?
32898Why is fashion like a blank cartridge?
32898Why is flirting like plate- powder?
32898Why is geology considered a deep science?
32898Why is gritty coffee like the Subway?
32898Why is horse racing a necessity?
32898Why is it almost certain that Shakespeare was a broker?
32898Why is it dangerous for a teetotaler to have more than two reasons for the faith that is in him?
32898Why is it dangerous to walk out in the spring?
32898Why is it difficult to flirt on mail steamers?
32898Why is it easy to practice rotation of crops on the prairies?
32898Why is it extraordinary not to find a painter''s studio as hot as an oven?
32898Why is it illegal for a man to possess a short walking stick?
32898Why is it impossible for a swell who lisps to believe in the existence of young ladies?
32898Why is it impossible for the government to grant the request of our Southern brethren?
32898Why is it impossible that there should be a best horse on a race course?
32898Why is it no offense to conspire in the evening?
32898Why is it not flattery to tell an old lady that she is"as beautiful as an angel?"
32898Why is it only natural that the memory of Guy Fawkes should be execrated?
32898Why is it quite reasonable that Dickens''later plots should be complicated?
32898Why is it that I can not spell Cupid?
32898Why is it that the sun always rises in the East?
32898Why is it unjust to blame cabmen for cheating us?
32898Why is it vulgar to send a telegram?
32898Why is it vulgar to sing and play by yourself?
32898Why is lip- salve like a chaperon?
32898Why is love always represented as a child?
32898Why is love like a candle?
32898Why is love like the Erie Canal?
32898Why is marriage with a deceased wife''s sister like the wedding of two fish?
32898Why is matrimony like an invested city?
32898Why is money often moist?
32898Why is no country free?
32898Why is one of the new Treasury notes like a young lady''s love letter?
32898Why is one stall of a two- stall stable like a pretty girl?
32898Why is one who uses hair dye like a suicide?
32898Why is opening a letter like taking a very queer method of entering a room?
32898Why is paper like a beggar?
32898Why is quizzing like the letter D on horseback?
32898Why is sealing wax like a rifleman?
32898Why is selling off bankrupt goods like preparing a dish of soup?
32898Why is swearing like an old coat?
32898Why is the American Union a puzzle to the most profound astronomers?
32898Why is the Bank of England like a thrush?
32898Why is the Brooklyn Bridge like merit?
32898Why is the Delaware River like an inkstand?
32898Why is the Emperor of Russia like a greedy schoolboy on Christmas Day?
32898Why is the Empress of the French always in bad company?
32898Why is the Fourth of July like oysters?
32898Why is the Hudson River like a shoe?
32898Why is the Isthmus of Suez like the first U in cucumber?
32898Why is the Republican Party like a celebrated English ruler of the seventeenth century,"Oliver Cromwell, the Blacksmith"?
32898Why is the aspiring poet about to approach an editor with his verses like a consumptive?
32898Why is the aëronaut whose airship plows into the earth like a successful speculator?
32898Why is the city of Washington like a despairing old maid?
32898Why is the crabbed old bachelor who made the above conundrum like a harp struck by lightning?
32898Why is the divorce court like certain newspapers?
32898Why is the dove a very cautious little dear?
32898Why is the emblem of America more lasting than that of France, England, Ireland, or Scotland?
32898Why is the engineer of a train like an aëronaut?
32898Why is the figure 9 like a peacock?
32898Why is the flight of an eagle a most unpleasant sight to witness?
32898Why is the fresh young upstart like an aërial postman?
32898Why is the game of Blindman''s Buff like sympathy?
32898Why is the glass I drank out of yesterday like Nebuchadnezzar in his debased condition?
32898Why is the humiliated braggart like the small boy who has drunk the washing fluid?
32898Why is the inside of everything mysterious?
32898Why is the latest thing in a fashionable gown like the South African bushman''s club?
32898Why is the leading horse in a wagon- team like the acceptor of a bill?
32898Why is the letter B like a fire?
32898Why is the letter D like a sailor?
32898Why is the letter D like a squalling child?
32898Why is the letter E a gloomy and discontented vowel?
32898Why is the letter F like a cow''s tail?
32898Why is the letter K like a pig''s tail?
32898Why is the letter N like a pig?
32898Why is the letter P like a Roman emperor?
32898Why is the letter R a profitable letter?
32898Why is the letter S like a pert repartee?
32898Why is the letter S like a sewing- machine?
32898Why is the letter T like Easter?
32898Why is the letter T like an amphibious animal?
32898Why is the letter W like a maid of honor?
32898Why is the letter W like a scandal?
32898Why is the list of celebrated musical composers like a saucepan?
32898Why is the man who falls in the kennel approved of?
32898Why is the map of Turkey like a frying- pan?
32898Why is the meeting of lovers like a battle?
32898Why is the most discontented man the most easily satisfied?
32898Why is the nose on your face like the v in civility?
32898Why is the nurse of an insane ward like a popular opera star?
32898Why is the old elm on Boston Common like the ladies of Boston?
32898Why is the palace of the Louvre the cheapest ever erected?
32898Why is the present moment like skim- milk?
32898Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom?
32898Why is the proprietor of a balloon like a phantom?
32898Why is the rebellion like the world?
32898Why is the road- bed laborer on a railroad like a hunted bear in the mountains?
32898Why is the root of the tongue like a dejected man?
32898Why is the rudder of a steamboat like a hangman?
32898Why is the rumseller''s trade a profitable one to follow?
32898Why is the science of self- defense like low tide?
32898Why is the steeple of St. Paul''s Church, London, like Ireland?
32898Why is the sun like a good loaf?
32898Why is the superintendent of a children''s play- ground like a stranded vessel?
32898Why is the tolling of a bell like the prayer of a hypocrite?
32898Why is the wall going to decay?
32898Why is the wick of a candle like Athens?
32898Why is the_ Outlook_ like a man of fourscore?
32898Why is there a bad audience at the playhouse when the pit is full?
32898Why is there no such thing as an entire day?
32898Why is traveling by the Subway dangerous?
32898Why is turkey a fashionable bird?
32898Why is twice ten like twice eleven?
32898Why is whispering in company like a forged bank note?
32898Why is wit like a Chinese lady''s foot?
32898Why is your favorite puppy like a doll?
32898Why is your nose in the middle of your face?
32898Why is your shadow like a false friend?
32898Why is your thumb, when putting on a glove, like eternity?
32898Why may a beggar wear a very short coat?
32898Why may a dyspeptic hope for a long life?
32898Why may not the proprietor of a forest fell his own timber?
32898Why may we doubt the existence of the Giants''Causeway?
32898Why must a Yankee speculator be very subject to water on the brain?
32898Why must a fisherman be very wealthy?
32898Why ought Adam to have been perfectly satisfied with his wife?
32898Why ought Charles I to have preferred burning to decapitation?
32898Why ought a greedy man to wear a plaid waistcoat?
32898Why ought cocks to be the smoothest birds known?
32898Why ought venison to be only half- cooked?
32898Why ought women to be employed in a post- office?
32898Why should Columbus be classed among astronomers rather than among explorers?
32898Why should a candle- maker never be pitied?
32898Why should a man named Benjamin marry a girl named Annie?
32898Why should a man never marry a woman named Ellen?
32898Why should a man troubled with gout make his will?
32898Why should a straw hat never be raised to a lady?
32898Why should a teetotaler never take a wife?
32898Why should alchemists and astrologers be females?
32898Why should free seats at church be abolished?
32898Why should good- natured people never go to small dancing parties?
32898Why should it not be loyal for a Union lady to accept a token of regard from a lover at the present time?
32898Why should men think there is a world in the moon?
32898Why should n''t you go to church if you have a cough?
32898Why should not soldiers meddle with nutcrackers?
32898Why should one never complain of the price of a car ticket?
32898Why should onions be planted near the potatoes in a garden?
32898Why should potatoes grow better than any other vegetable?
32898Why should the largest tree be near a church?
32898Why should the male sex avoid the letter A?
32898Why should the poet have expected the woodman to"spare that tree?"
32898Why should we pity the young Esquimaux?
32898Why should wire be used to train string beans?
32898Why should you always choose white cows?
32898Why should you never have a tailor who does not understand his trade?
32898Why should you never make love in the country?
32898Why should you never sleep in a railway train?
32898Why was Blackstone like an Irish vegetable?
32898Why was Bulwer more likely to get tired of novel- writing than Warren?
32898Why was Cain an enemy of President Lincoln?
32898Why was Cain''s murder like the main strength of his leg?
32898Why was Dickens a greater writer than Shakespeare?
32898Why was John the Baptist like a penny?
32898Why was Leander voluntarily drowned?
32898Why was Martin Luther like a dyspeptic robin?
32898Why was Moses the wickedest man that ever lived?
32898Why was Noah obliged to stoop on entering the ark?
32898Why was Paradise like a cucumber?
32898Why was William Tell like a post?
32898Why was it a mistake to imagine that Robinson Crusoe''s island was uninhabited?
32898Why was n''t Peary buried in New York?
32898Why was our last question like a young lady sitting on theological works?
32898Why was the Shah of Persia, during his visit to England, the best card- player in the world?
32898Why was the capture of Fort Hatteras like an English nobleman''s mansion?
32898Why was the country of Phoenicia like an automobile?
32898Why was the first day of Adam''s life the longest?
32898Why was the giant Goliath very much astonished when David hit him with a stone?
32898Why was the whale which swallowed Jonah like a milkman who has retired on an independence?
32898Why were the gates of Eden shut after Adam and Eve went out?
32898Why will Americans have more cause to remember the letter S than any other letter in the alphabet?
32898Why will scooping out a turnip be a noisy process?
32898Why would Samson have made an excellent actor?
32898Why would a compliment from a chicken be an insult?
32898Why would a pelican make a good lawyer?
32898Why would an owl be offended at your calling him a pheasant?
32898Why would it be impossible to starve in the desert of Sahara?
32898Why would the colors of our national ensign make a good dress for ladies?
32898Why would young ladies make good volunteers?
32898Why would young ladies of the present day make good pugilists?
32898Why, if a man has a gallery of paintings, may you pick his pockets?
32898Why, when a very fat man gets squeezed coming out of the opera, does it make him complimentary to the ladies?
32898Why, when the rebels smite us upon the right cheek, should we refuse to turn towards them the left cheek also?
32898Why, when you are out in a boat, should you never be surprised by a sudden squall?
32898Why, when you paint a man''s portrait, may you be described as stepping into his shoes?
32898Why?
32898Wild beasts?
32898Wise people?
32898With the Wolofs the riddle of the wind asks,"What flies forever and rests never?"
32898With what two animals do you always go to bed?
32898Y( why?).
5797''Bout over, hain''t it, from all I hear tell?
5797A month?
5797A week?
5797Afraid?
5797All the men, or just the steel workers and bricklayers and temporary employees on the new buildings?
5797Alone? 5797 Always?"
5797And hers?
5797And who be you, if I might ask?
5797And will you smile for me?
5797And you wo n''t... remember ANYTHING?
5797And you''ll be good to me?... 5797 And you... want me back?
5797And you?
5797And your father would n''t have it-- and threw you out... or did the thing that stands to him for throwing out?
5797Any relatives or friends?
5797Appears like you know a heap about him.... Maybe you know what he''s doin''now?
5797Are n''t you going a bit fast for a comparative stranger?
5797Are we going away?
5797Are you, by chance, a socialist?
5797Are you-- ill?
5797Axles?
5797Bargain?
5797Bonbright, if you find her-- what?
5797Bonbright,said Hilda,"do you believe me now?"
5797Bonbright?
5797Bonbright?
5797But are n''t you?
5797But ca n''t there ever be an understanding? 5797 But what''s this girl got to do with it?"
5797But who is she?
5797But you would n''t now?
5797Can I send a message?
5797Can it be made to work? 5797 Can you lend me Mershon for a while?"
5797Childless? 5797 DISAPPEARED?"
5797Did my mother sell her soul for luxuries? 5797 Did n''t I tell you to bring some?
5797Did n''t she leave any address?
5797Did n''t you bring no lunch?
5797Did you think she was?
5797Do I understand that you are offering me the chance to work with you on this experiment?
5797Do n''t I know it? 5797 Do n''t you love me?"
5797Do n''t you see,she said,"how impossible it is?
5797Do you class men with machinery?
5797Do you fancy I shall permit such a thing? 5797 Do you know there''s to be a mass meeting in the armory to- night?
5797Do you know where she is?
5797Do you know,he said, presently,"what a lot girls have to do with making a fellow''s life endurable?...
5797Do you know?... 5797 Do you like it?"
5797Do you mean you do n''t know where Ruth is?
5797Do you mean, mother,said Bonbright, his voice curiously quiet and calm,"that you would not receive my wife here?"
5797Do you really... WANT me?
5797Do you suppose I should tolerate her? 5797 Do you want to live with him?"
5797Does he think that? 5797 Does he-- seem cheerful?"
5797Does it recognize the unions?
5797Does n''t she?
5797Does that mean common labor?
5797Dulac,said Bonbright, in a voice that was low but steady,"is she well and-- happy?"
5797Dulac,said Bonbright, leaning forward as though drawn by spasmodic contraction of tense muscles,"is this true?"
5797Eh?
5797Eh?...
5797Engaged to- night-- and you''re going to marry to- morrow?
5797Ever hear the name of Frazer?
5797Ever run a lathe or a shaper or a planer?
5797Everybody?...
5797For the land sakes, WHAT''S HE got to do with this? 5797 For what?"
5797For you? 5797 Forced him to work on an unsafe machine or quit?"
5797Friend of your''n?
5797Friends give him a soft job?
5797Give back affection?... 5797 Goin''to work in them clothes?"
5797HE''S-- giving it to-- them?
5797HIM?
5797Have I got to get ready?
5797Have the ancestors been after you?
5797Have you got any trace?
5797Have you no respect for your family name?... 5797 He deserved it.... And you-- have you anything to say?
5797He''s good-- and gentle-- but if he makes up his mind-- If he had n''t been that way do you think he could have lived with me the way he HAS?
5797Here now--she spoke sharply--"you know who I be, do n''t you?"
5797His name is Dulac?
5797Hopes?
5797How about this construction work?
5797How can I go?
5797How do we know you''ll do it?
5797How would you like it if the unexpected-- chance-- had been carefully weeded out of your future?... 5797 How''s his wife?
5797How?
5797How?
5797Hungry?
5797I am sorry-- for all this.... May I come for-- your answer to- morrow?
5797I do n''t despise folks, as a rule.... Want to talk now?
5797I do n''t know why I said that.... Will you take some letters, please?
5797I do n''t know.... Why must I do something? 5797 I know you.... What do you want here?"
5797I may?
5797I see..."And you wo n''t be unhappy about it?
5797I shall want to ask you about it.... Perhaps you even know the man who is speaking?
5797I state your position?
5797I think that is all, gentlemen.... You understand my son''s position, I believe, so that if anyone questions you can answer him effectively?
5797I want the men to be able to do the best that''s in them.... You understand?
5797I wonder-- if he did-- it-- for me?
5797I''ll never... run away any more... will I?
5797I''m going to be married to- morrow--"What?
5797I''ve given them what is theirs fairly.... Have you found any trace of her?
5797I''ve got to think about something else....But his will was unequal to the performance...."Where is she?...
5797I-- loved him... and I did n''t know it.... That was-- queer-- wasn''t it?... 5797 I?"
5797If I demanded that you give up your work, abandon the Cause, would you do it for me?
5797If he does n''t?
5797If one of you has a grievance, what can he do?... 5797 If they must strike and cut off their earnings every so often, why do n''t they lay up savings to carry them through?"
5797If you could bring about the things I can-- the good for so many-- would you hesitate? 5797 Is he real, too?"
5797Is it her?
5797Is it on the level? 5797 Is it true?"
5797Is it true?
5797Is n''t it funny?
5797Is n''t it possible to keep on testing a piece of metal till it''s all used up?
5797Is she hidin''away?
5797Is that all?
5797Is that final, mother?... 5797 Is that there your auto?"
5797Is this the sort of thing she meant? 5797 Is this thing done often-- settling these things for-- what we can squeeze them down to?"
5797Is this true?
5797Is your proposition to manufacture ten thousand engines still open?
5797Is-- is that the TRUTH?
5797It hit you, eh?
5797It''s true?... 5797 Malcolm Lightener, the automobile feller?"
5797May I take him along, Lieutenant? 5797 Maybe you''d rather telephone yourself?"
5797Mr. Dulac,he said,"have you found her?"
5797Mr. Foote in?
5797Mr. Foote,she said, gently,"something has happened to you, has n''t it?
5797My name WAS signed to it, was n''t it?... 5797 My placard?"
5797New man?
5797No chaperons?
5797No,he said,"of course not.... Why should you?
5797No-- trimmings? 5797 No.... No....""Then what are you making all the fuss about?
5797No.... Why does he ask me? 5797 No....""What about me?...
5797Not a gentleman, eh?... 5797 Not that automobile man''s daughter-- the one they call the automobile king?"
5797Nothing?... 5797 Now,"he said when they were alone,"what''s to pay?"
5797Open shop?
5797Overalls?
5797Queer notions?
5797Rather bad-- how, Bonbright?
5797Really?
5797Resentment?
5797Right?... 5797 Rushing in where angels fear to tread, you mean?
5797Ruth Foote,said Hilda,"what''s the matter?...
5797Ruth,he said,"what do you mean?
5797Ruth,she called,"it''s Hilda.... May I come in now?"
5797Say,said Mrs. Moody, in a fever of curiosity which could not be held in check after they had passed outside of Ruth''s room,"who is she, anyhow?...
5797Say,said Mrs. Moody, suddenly awakening to the possibilities of Ruth''s mood,"who was your husband, anyhow?"
5797Scare you? 5797 Seated?
5797Shall I drag along a bishop or will an ordinary minister do?
5797Shall I go?... 5797 Shall I select one for you?"
5797She was going to you.... And then I came and told her your father was dead.... That made it all impossible, do n''t you see?... 5797 Some one I know?"
5797Son,he said, coldly,"you have n''t been picking up any queer notions in college?"
5797Sorry?... 5797 Sorry?...
5797Speakin''perty well of yourself, was n''t you?
5797Squabbling?
5797Strikers get you?
5797Suppose?
5797That girl?...
5797That was it?... 5797 That was why, was n''t it?
5797That young cub?
5797That''s good business, is n''t it?
5797That, I fear, was to have been anticipated.... Have you the particulars?
5797The man wo n''t be able to work again?
5797The men think I may be their friend?
5797The plan is practically complete, is n''t it?
5797Then what the devil did you stay here all night for? 5797 There are plenty of places--""Who fired you?"
5797There is a qualification?
5797They feed at the hash house across the street.... Hain''t broke, be you?
5797They turned you out?
5797To stay?
5797To- day?
5797To- morrow morning? 5797 To- morrow?
5797Trouble?
5797Trust him?
5797Two- seventy- five a day.... And now.... How''ll we live, with him in the hospital and maybe never able to work again?
5797Um.... Any corrections, amendments, or substitutions to offer?
5797Unionize?
5797Urn.... Strikin'', eh?
5797Very well, then.... Will you see to it? 5797 WHAT?"
5797WHAT?
5797Was that all?
5797We have n''t had a decent talk, and there are a heap of things to talk about, are n''t there?
5797We sha''n''t let it interfere with our evening.... Come, Miss Frazer, where shall we lunch?
5797We''re going to run it, dad.... Don''t you like Ruth Frazer?
5797Well, Bonbright?
5797Well, he did n''t hurt you, did he?
5797Well, young fellow?
5797Well,said Bonbright,"ca n''t you?"
5797Well-- could they?
5797Well?
5797Well?
5797Well?
5797Were n''t you a stenographer in the office where dad worked?
5797What ARE you going to do, then? 5797 What about him?...
5797What ails you now? 5797 What ails you?"
5797What answer could you give but one? 5797 What are you going to do about it?"
5797What are your theories?
5797What can I do?... 5797 What did YOU think?"
5797What did you say?
5797What did you want to see me about?
5797What do you know about this girl? 5797 What do you mean by coming here?
5797What do you want with her?... 5797 What does he want here?"
5797What has happened?
5797What if Bonbright did see you together? 5797 What is it to be?"
5797What is it? 5797 What is it?"
5797What is it?
5797What is it?
5797What is it?
5797What is this cub to you? 5797 What is this man-- this speaker-- trying to do?
5797What kind of a job can you give him, dad?
5797What of it? 5797 What they printed was in substance true?"
5797What you want?
5797What''s dad been doing to you?
5797What''s he going to do now?
5797What''s that you said?
5797What''s the good, dad? 5797 What''s the idea of putting up the boy as stalking horse?
5797What''s the matter, dad?
5797What''s this I hear now? 5797 What''s this about Malcolm Lightener?"
5797What''s wanted?
5797What''s your friend''s name? 5797 What''s your name?"
5797What-- have I-- got to do-- with it?
5797What-- what do you mean?
5797What? 5797 What?"
5797What?
5797When did you see him last?
5797When they go to climb back why do n''t you buck some more? 5797 When?...
5797Where are you going to live? 5797 Where are you going?"
5797Where do we eat?
5797Where have you been? 5797 Where is he now?"
5797Where you been workin''?
5797Where you goin''?
5797Where''s Hammil?
5797Where''s Hilda?
5797Where''s your overalls?
5797Where?
5797Who do you belong to?
5797Who was good?
5797Who wo n''t come back, dear?
5797Why ca n''t you let me alone?
5797Why did n''t you answer?
5797Why do n''t you answer?
5797Why do you always sit there watching folks go by?
5797Why not?
5797Why should you?
5797Why, Rangar,said Mr. Foote,"what''s wrong?"
5797Why, he-- If he thought that--"If he thought that-- what?
5797Why?
5797Why?
5797Why?
5797Will there be trouble? 5797 Will you come in?"
5797Will you stop it? 5797 Will you take the place?
5797Will your father raise the devil? 5797 Wo n''t the automobile manufacturers see that, too?"
5797Wo n''t the men have all their power and wealth to fight?
5797Wo n''t you be seated?
5797Wonder when it''ll peter out-- the strike?
5797Would it be-- impertinent,he asked,"to inquire what you said?"
5797YOU know-- don''t you, Hilda?... 5797 Yes,"he said,"this is Bonbright Foote.... Who is it?
5797Yes... Do n''t you remember? 5797 Yes... What is it?...
5797Yes?
5797You believe in it?
5797You do n''t mind being poor for a while?
5797You have n''t been scaring this little girl? 5797 You have-- thought about me?"
5797You love me-- you have n''t lied to me?
5797You mean REALLY?... You mean we''ll LIVE like that? 5797 You mean it, Ruth?"
5797You mean that my son-- a Foote-- could fall in love, as you call it, with the daughter of a boarding house and a companion of anarchists?
5797You mean that this man Hammil was hurt through our fault?
5797You mean you do not care to come back here?
5797You mean--?
5797You talked to him?
5797You think they''ll strike?
5797You thought she was with me?
5797You want me? 5797 You wanted to see me?"
5797You were n''t afraid of him?
5797You wo n''t recognize any union? 5797 You would n''t have MADE me marry him, would you?"
5797You''d better be.... Where you going to- night?
5797You''ll come, wo n''t you, Ruth-- now?
5797You''ll-- keep me CLOSE?
5797You''re defending him? 5797 You''re not going up there, are you?"
5797You''re not-- offended?
5797You''re sure Bonbright wo n''t come back?
5797You''ve found-- HER?
5797You-- didn''t want to go away with him?
5797Young man,growled Lightener,"why could n''t you have fallen in love with my daughter and saved all this fracas?"
5797Young man,he said, gruffly,"what''s this I hear?"
5797Your idea is that we could settle for less than a jury would give him?
5797... She saw you were the kind of man a woman could twist around her finger-- and you owned five thousand men.... Get the idea?...
5797Able to go ahead to- day?"
5797And I should make it my business to see that she was received nowhere else.... And what would become of you?
5797And what then?...
5797Anybody home?"
5797Are n''t you the greatest man in the world?"
5797Are you going to recognize the unions?"
5797Are you sure it is your final decision?"
5797Are you sure you were right?"
5797Are you sure, Bonbright?"
5797Are you sure?"
5797As if there was something that compelled me to stick by the Family....""How long have you been going to marry this girl?"
5797As, for instance:"Why do n''t you move that leather chair out of the other bedroom?"
5797Been under a bit of a strain?...
5797Bonbright?"
5797Boy, go to Mr. Foote''s locker and fetch his things....""Am-- am I discharged?"
5797But how about this girl, Hilda, does she belong?"
5797But how much of the final cost of its axles does raw material represent?
5797But she had hoped to do something... What was it she had done?
5797But what had happened?
5797But would they cast him out?
5797But-- but my idea was that maybe we could-- have our courtship now-- after we are married.... Mayn''t we?"
5797Ca n''t it be right away?"
5797Ca n''t the dishes wait?"
5797Ca n''t you see how-- hurt he is?
5797Ca n''t you see?..."
5797Can it be then?"
5797Capital is organized against you.... How can you hope to defend yourselves?
5797Clear?"
5797Could it mean...?
5797Could money buy that?
5797Did n''t you give yourself to me?
5797Did n''t you notice the name?"
5797Did she love Bonbright?
5797Did she love?...
5797Did you go somewhere with him in his car last night?"
5797Did you stop to think what effect this thing would have on other manufacturers?"
5797Did your mother sell her soul for them?...
5797Do I make myself clear?...
5797Do n''t you see?
5797Do n''t you see?
5797Do n''t you suppose Bonbright thinks you are seeing him?
5797Do n''t you think he''ll find out you do n''t love him-- how you feel when he comes near you?
5797Do n''t you understand?...
5797Do you imagine for an instant that I shall permit you to give me a daughter- in- law out of a cheap boarding house?
5797Do you imagine you can act and think as an entity distinct from Bonbright Foote, Incorporated?...
5797Do you know what you''ve done with your bullheadedness?
5797Do you suppose I should admit her to this house?
5797Do you suppose your friends-- people of your own class-- would receive her-- or you?"
5797Do you think I shall submit to an affront like that?...
5797Do you think so?"
5797Do you understand?...
5797Does n''t half a million a year extra profit make you think of anything?"
5797Does that set comfortably on your mind?"
5797Does that sound easy?
5797Eh?"
5797Enough to let him play around with my daughter.... Has he anything to do with the way you look to- day?...
5797Ever see him?"
5797Expect to find the Harvard manner in a man preaching riot from a potato barrel?...
5797Fair?"
5797First we know we''ll have her down on her back.... And then what?...
5797Foote?"
5797Foote?"
5797Foote?"
5797Foote?"
5797Foote?"
5797Get me?"
5797Got a friend of mine here?"
5797Got any idea what will happen?"
5797Got any money?"
5797Had the matter gone farther than the mere thrashing he had hoped for?...
5797Hain''t she somebody?"
5797Hain''t you listenin''at all?"
5797Have the wives of all the men who have worked and suffered and been trampled on for the Cause sold their souls?...
5797Have you any ideas?"
5797Have you got anybody?"
5797Have you had her looked up?"
5797Hawthorne?"
5797He NEVER knew it....""She''s clean out of her head,"said Mrs. Moody, irritably,"and what''ll I do?
5797He had never seen a woman cry so before.... Did girls always act this way when they became engaged?
5797He had none of her love, and she believed this man had it wholly.... She had wronged Bonbright all she could wrong him-- what would this matter?
5797He had to work on it or lose his job....""I know that NOW, Mrs. Hammil.... What was he earning?"
5797He must be shown that he could not, with impunity, outrage the Family Tradition and flout the Family Ghosts.... Again-- how?
5797He said the family was extinct?"
5797He sure got his son in bad.... What''s this I hear about him marryin''some girl and gettin''kicked out?"
5797He turned away, then said, suddenly, over his shoulder,"Got any bombs in your desk?"
5797He would think I came-- because his father was dead-- because he-- he was what I thought he was when I married him.... Do n''t you see?
5797Hear me?
5797Hilda leaned forward again and whispered to Bonbright,"You''re not getting much enlightenment, are you?"
5797His thought, unspoken, was,"If we''ve got so blamed much, what''s the use piling it up?"
5797How are they getting along?"
5797How can you force a betterment of your conditions, of your wage?...
5797How could he know as well as you do?
5797How did HE affect you?"
5797How do you know?
5797How long do you suppose she would stay with you?...
5797How was Bonbright to answer?
5797How was he to get his liberty?
5797How were we to know something had n''t happened to you-- with the strike going on?"
5797How''s he expect this room to make a showing if it''s goin''to be charged with guys like you that hain''t nothin''but an expense?"
5797How, then, is she to recognize it?
5797I can wait... when waiting will bring me so much.... At twelve o''clock?
5797I could n''t bear it...""Was it him or his father you was in love with?"
5797I did n''t have ANYTHING to do with it... Do you know what he''s done?"
5797I did not run to the police to have them charge the strikers again... Why should I?"
5797I had n''t, had I?"
5797I have n''t heard of your falling down any place yet.... Know what I told your father?
5797I held my work up to the window to see, and the van was a little darker....""Was n''t there a name on it?
5797I know you do n''t want to, and-- and all that, but you''ll come, wo n''t you?"
5797I love you, do n''t I?
5797I may live ten years or twenty years-- but I shall live them in such comfort as I can obtain.... Is there anything else you wish to talk to me about?"
5797I mean the placard, and bringing in O''Hagan and his strike breakers, and taking all these ruthless methods to break the strike?...
5797I state your sentiments, do I not, my son?"
5797I understand you leave it with me?"
5797I will come to- morrow morning?
5797I wonder if you ca n''t help me somehow?"
5797I''d set you to sweeping out the machine shops if I thought you needed it.... Maybe you figured on sitting at a mahogany desk?"
5797I''ll fix it with the judge if necessary.... And say, happen to recognize him?"
5797I''ll pick out the best place in the world, if I can find it, and you wo n''t know where we''re going till we get there.... Wo n''t that be bully?...
5797I''m his wife-- his wife.... Oh, what have you done?...
5797I''ve got to know what''s happened....""Are you going to tell her you love her-- and take her back?"
5797I-- I hate myself.... You''ll do THAT?...
5797If ALL of you have a grievance, what can you do?
5797If I loved him...."Presently she spoke aloud:"You wo n''t be angry with me, Hilda?...
5797If I tell him-- everything?"
5797If her father had given his life, would he not expect his daughter to give HER life?
5797If she could make Dulac stronger to carry on his work for social revolution, had she a right to withhold herself?...
5797If she did, where are they?
5797If she were his wife-- if her word might become his law-- how would those laboring men be affected?
5797If the guard made HIM bristle with rage, how would the sight of the man and his club affect the strikers?
5797If you''re sick what are you doing here?
5797Ill?
5797In the next room?"
5797Is n''t that enough for now?...
5797Is n''t that it, Bonbright?"
5797Is n''t that-- queer?...
5797Is n''t there... something you... ought to say?"
5797Is there anything you would n''t do to give THEM what I can give?...
5797Is this infernal newspaper story true?"
5797Is this sort of thing being taught in college to- day?
5797It can be done, can it not?"
5797It has n''t been worrying you like this?
5797It hit you hard, eh?"
5797It must n''t be....""Why-- what is it?
5797It was an unusual request in unusual circumstances, but why not?
5797It was possible-- possible.... And if it were possible, if she could accomplish this great thing for the Cause, dared she avoid it?
5797It was something about Bonbright... What was it?
5797It was something else... You wo n''t feel too bad... will you?"
5797It was too late-- THEN, was n''t it?"
5797It would look-- oh, why could n''t his father have made a will, as he was going to?...
5797It''s all over?"
5797It''s mean.... Why do n''t you take him into the office?"
5797It''s true?"
5797KISS me?"
5797Know him well?
5797LIKE HIM?"
5797Liaison?"
5797Like it here?"
5797Like the looks of it?"
5797Little, was she?
5797Man or woman?"
5797May I come?"
5797Moody?"
5797Must I cross- examine you as if you were a sulking schoolboy?"
5797My world would n''t have you, and your world would n''t have me.... Do n''t you see?"
5797Never own-- that-- business?"
5797Noon TO- MORROW?"
5797Not the-- ah-- ripe-- rounded type to attract a boy?
5797Now be honest, have you?"
5797Now she could give-- herself.... She could sacrifice herself, she could pass by her love-- but would it avail anything?...
5797Now that the job for you is settled--""Eh?"
5797Now, was n''t that name Walters?
5797Of course he would.... Then why should he not marry Hilda?
5797Or do you think yours will take me in hand?"
5797Ought I to quit, too-- to join the strike?"
5797Please, now that I''m here, wo n''t you get in?"
5797Presently he leaned forward and addressed a question to her:"Did you and Mr. Dulac mention me as you walked home?"
5797Presently he said:"Rangar told you you were to be my secretary?"
5797Presently she interrupted, weakly:"Who-- who is it-- about?"
5797Put your... lips close to my ear... like that... now tell me..."I think I''ll... sleep a little now... You wo n''t run away-- while my eyes are shut?"
5797Quit it, will you?"
5797Rangar?..."
5797Regular crush I''ll have on you.... What do you think?"
5797S''pose she was to be took sudden?
5797Say, was that breakfast all right?
5797Say?"
5797See?...
5797Shall I come again to- morrow?"
5797She did n''t tell even me, but I ought to have known....""And you have n''t even a trace?"
5797She heard-- but what did it matter?
5797She was interrupted in the transcription of a letter by a stern voice behind her, saying:"You''re young Foote''s anarchist, are n''t you?"
5797She''s so little.... What made her go away?...
5797Small-- was she not?
5797So far as the finer, the sweeter affairs of parenthood went, Bonbright had been, and was, an orphan...."Have you nothing to say?"
5797Something happened, did n''t it?"
5797Something has happened to her....""Have n''t you had any word-- anything?"
5797Something that has made you feel bitter and discouraged?"
5797Sort of excited, eh?
5797Sort of peaked and thin?"
5797Stir up a riot?"
5797Stop it, I tell you''... What''s the matter-- anyhow?
5797Suppose we just do n''t bother about it?
5797Suppose, in short, I should find it necessary to do as other fathers have done-- to disown you... What then?
5797THAT''S settled, is it?
5797That we wo n''t be married, but do like you said?"
5797That''s best, is n''t it?"
5797That''s it, is n''t it?"
5797That''s what I came to find out.... Are you going to stand it?"
5797That''s what I hire you for, is n''t it?"
5797That''s why we ca n''t go away....""You mean,"she said, dully, trying to sense this calamity,"that you will never go back?
5797The boy must be made into what he ought to be-- but how?
5797The men had experienced it; had felt the weight of Bonbright''s ruthless hand.... How could he make them believe it was not his hand?
5797The rest of that day, and of the days that followed it, Bonbright was trying to find the answer to the question, What does this mean to me?
5797Then:"Ca n''t you let him know?...
5797There is no reason why affairs may not go on for a couple of days as they are-- as if father were alive?"
5797There''s no need to wait, is there?
5797Think you can?"
5797This fellow you''ve married does n''t know what love is.... What does he know about it?
5797To do so would mean-- what would it mean?
5797To make it your life work to keep out of my way?"
5797To what else could his words be tending?
5797Understand?"
5797Understand?"
5797Unrest grappled with him blindly, urging him nowhere, seeming merely to wrestle with him aimlessly and maliciously... What was it all about, anyhow?
5797Upset labor conditions in this town so that business will go to smash?
5797Wants to smash hell out of the men just to see them smash.... How''d he strike you?"
5797Was THAT why you married me?
5797Was he-- could he be about to ask her to share his life?
5797Was her feeling toward Dulac merely hero worship?
5797Was her life to be filled with such ironies--?
5797Was it not a holy duty?
5797Was it the usual thing, or was something wrong with Ruth?
5797Was n''t I before HIM?...
5797Was she forever to eat of Dead Sea fruit?
5797Was this question coming up so quickly?
5797We can go back in an hour.... Shall we walk down now?
5797Wealth, position, family?
5797Well, then?
5797Well, well, what did he say?
5797Were you expecting him?"
5797Were you made to APPEAR as though it was you-- when it was n''t?"
5797Were you with Bonbright last night?"
5797What SHOULD she do?
5797What about me?..."
5797What about the unions?"
5797What am I to you but a girl, an incident?
5797What are you doing here-- with him?"
5797What are you trying to do?
5797What are you, then?"
5797What could a man do with five dollars a day?
5797What could his friendship do for them?
5797What could you do?
5797What d''you think about it?"
5797What did he-- do?"
5797What did it mean?
5797What do YOU know about it?
5797What do you care?...
5797What do you expect to get by hiding behind him?"
5797What do you think, mother?"
5797What do you want?"
5797What does Bon want us to do?"
5797What does that mean, do you suppose?"
5797What does your pledged word count for in a case like this?...
5797What else would he think?
5797What gives the axles the rest of their value?...
5797What good could it do?
5797What happened?"
5797What has your world or mine to do with it?
5797What idiocy are you up to?
5797What in goodness name have YOU got to do with it?
5797What is it they resent?"
5797What more can you want than you have and will have?
5797What more could she ask of him?
5797What other thing could do what it will do?
5797What right had a man in Foote''s position to stand in her thoughts beside Dulac?
5797What should she say?....
5797What sort of girl is she?...
5797What to do now?
5797What was to be done with this situation?...
5797What was to become of Bonbright Foote, Incorporated, with no heir to hand the business over to when his hands could drop it?
5797What work had his father and grandfather and great- grandfather performed when their positions were his position to- day?...
5797What work had it been the custom for the heir apparent to perform?
5797What would he do for you?..."
5797What would the authorities do with him?
5797What would your individuality be worth?...
5797What you cryin''about?
5797What''ll I do, and her most likely without a cent and all that?...
5797What''s happened NOW?"
5797What''s he got to do with this?"
5797What''s he know about it?...
5797What''s the idea?"
5797What''s the matter with the job you''ve got?"
5797What''s the matter?
5797What''s the matter?"
5797What, she wondered, could this boy''s father have done to him now?
5797What?"
5797When the word came into her mind she knew it was the one she had been searching for.... Why was he so grim?
5797Where did you get it?
5797Where else would he go?"
5797Where is she?.."
5797Where is there nonsense in that?"
5797Where would you be?"
5797Where would you like to go, Ruth?"
5797Where''s Bonbright?...
5797Where''s Dulac?"
5797Wherever did she get them?...
5797Who are you talking about?"
5797Who is going to run it while you learn?"
5797Who''d we notify?"
5797Who?...
5797Why ca n''t I just wait-- and let him do what-- whatever is done?"
5797Why can an army beat a mob of double its numbers?
5797Why could not he be left alone in quiet?
5797Why did n''t you go and git sick somewheres else?
5797Why did n''t you have him notified last night?
5797Why did she like it there?
5797Why did you stay away like this, without giving us any word?"
5797Why do n''t you walk out of this place and never enter it again?..."
5797Why do n''t you, I wonder?"
5797Why do you endure it?
5797Why should others hate him?
5797Why should the class he belonged to be hated with this blighting virulence by the class they employed?...
5797Why should this man hate him?
5797Why was he mixed up in the struggle?
5797Why?"
5797Why?"
5797Will you help me find her?"
5797Will you see to it?"
5797Will you?"
5797Wind up this business?
5797Wo n''t capital ever understand labor, or labor capital?"
5797Wo n''t you let me?..."
5797Would her word be his law with respect to them?...
5797Would she approve of doing this?"
5797Would the thing become public?
5797Would you be willing?"
5797Yes, dad''s more direct than diplomatic, and I inherit it.... Is it a bargain?"
5797Yet what else could he mean?
5797You believe me?"
5797You could n''t?...
5797You do belong to me.... Why should you stick to him?
5797You do n''t mean-- TO- MORROW?"
5797You do, do n''t you?"
5797You had made up your mind never to be caught like this again, had n''t you?
5797You know Lightener?"
5797You know why I''ve come?"
5797You say that girl-- the one who grinned-- is competent?"
5797You understand?
5797You want your friends to know her and receive her, do n''t you?
5797You wo n''t misunderstand, but-- but wo n''t you please-- go away?...
5797You work for me, do n''t you-- and ai n''t I responsible for you, sort of?
5797You''d be.... And we ca n''t sit by and see Bon and his wife STARVE, can we?
5797You''ll be in a devil of a pickle, wo n''t you?"
5797You''ll be patient with me, and gentle?
5797You''ll have to give it up, and then what?
5797You''ll... believe me, wo n''t you?"
5797You''re getting NOTHING.... Are you going to stand it?
5797You''re going to bull this thing through?"
5797You''re mine-- you were mine first.... What is he to you?
5797You''re not serious, Ruth?...
5797You''re striking at them through their wives and babies.... What do you care for them or their suffering?
5797You''re very, very sure you want me?
5797You''ve given all you can and done all you can.... You''d have to be God and create a new world... Do n''t you see?"
5797and to its companion question, What shall I do with it?
5797how could you?..."
5797wife?"
8744And is she aware of your intention?
8744And your father?
8744But what use is she to you?
8744But, upon my word, ma''am, what on earth are you talking about? 8744 Marya Ilyinishna is not receiving to- day; she is unwell.... What do you want?"
8744No, Piotr Petrovitch,said she,"no one disturbs me at Bubnova; but will that last long?
8744Then why wo n''t you part with her to me?
8744Was n''t she well off with us, pray?... 8744 What are you threatening the poor girl for?
8744What do you mean, what do you mean, you mad girl?... 8744 What do you want?"
8744What ever for? 8744 What?
8744Why should you be left here? 8744 Why, your family now-- will they send them for soldiers?"
8744Would n''t you, Panteley Eremyitch,says I,"let me run for the priest, sir?"
8744''A Jew?
8744''Ah, my dearie, why torture yourself?
8744''Ah,''I thought, looking at the dying trees:''is n''t it shameful and bitter for you?''...
8744''All gone?
8744''And I must die for a trifle like that?''
8744''And are n''t you dull and miserable, my poor Lukerya?''
8744''And has he been drinking a great deal of vodka?''
8744''And have you children?''
8744''And so it crushed Maksim?''
8744''And so you go on lying here all the time?''
8744''And what am I to do now without Malek- Adel?''
8744''And what do you think?''
8744''And what was he like?
8744''And what''ll you give me, granddad?''
8744''And what''s that to do with me?''
8744''And who are you to give orders?''
8744''And why should n''t he laugh?''
8744''And you''re not sleepy either, are you?''
8744''And, I say, what did he say, this rascal?--had he had the horse long?''
8744''And, indeed, how should you?
8744''Are you in pain?''
8744''Are you in the service?''
8744''Are you married?''
8744''But are you thinking of going to Tula yourself?''
8744''But ca n''t we,''I thought, looking at his wasted face,''get him away from here?
8744''But how are we to find him, your ex- shelency?
8744''But how can I?''...
8744''But how comes it?''
8744''But if they were n''t highwaymen?''
8744''But is n''t it your humbug, Gabbler?''
8744''But pe- ermit me to ask,''he rejoined,''is it a nobleman I have the honour of addressing?''
8744''But what am I to do, Piotr Mihalitch?
8744''But what am I to say to you?''
8744''But what are they waiting for?''
8744''But what do you find so awful in the circle?''
8744''But what''s the use,''he added, turning over on the ground,''of my telling you all this?
8744''But when would you go?''
8744''But where shall we go?''
8744''But who''s to begin?''
8744''But you had better tell me, have you read Polezhaev?''
8744''But, Vasya, suppose you were n''t a match for the Frenchy even with Mihay?''
8744''But, no,''he interrupted me?
8744''Ca n''t live with me?
8744''Come, at least you must let me give you some money-- how can you go like this without a halfpenny?
8744''Did n''t you know that?
8744''Do n''t care for it?
8744''Do you agree?
8744''Do you hear it?''
8744''Do you know the road well?''
8744''Do you remember, master,''she said, and there was a gleam of something wonderful in her eyes and on her lips,''what hair I used to have?
8744''Do you suppose we can get horses in this wilderness?''
8744''Got to wait a bit?
8744''Has Mr. Tchertop- hanov good hounds?''
8744''Have you been living all the time in Moscow?
8744''Have you had tea already?''
8744''Have you seen Motchalov in Hamlet?''
8744''Have you sent for the priest, at least?
8744''Hm... what about?
8744''How can I tell?''
8744''How can we tell?
8744''How did it happen?...
8744''How do you mean?''
8744''How do you sing them?... to yourself?''
8744''How is it, Ardalion Mihalitch,''I began,''that they did n''t fell these trees the very next year?
8744''How is that, my boy?
8744''How is that?
8744''How so?''
8744''How was it you did n''t think of them?
8744''How''s that?''
8744''I say, Filofey, is it far to the ford?''
8744''I speak the truth... with tambourines... and in an empty cart.... Who should it be?''
8744''I want nothing,''she went on, sobbing and covering her face with her hands;''but what is there before me in my family?
8744''I wonder,''he went on, after a brief silence,''how it is there are no fleas here?
8744''Is Yashka going to sing?''
8744''Is it you?
8744''Is there anything you want?''
8744''Is your master at home?''
8744''Kill you?
8744''Lie still, lie still, lie still.... Well, how are you?''
8744''Masha,''Tchertop- hanov asked,''do n''t you think we ought to give our visitor some entertainment, eh?''
8744''My name?''
8744''No, brother, Kapiton Timofeitch, if I must die, I''ll die at home; why die here?
8744''No, what would be the use?
8744''No, why so?
8744''Not very.... And tell me, please, are there any gypsies in Moscow?''
8744''Of whom?''
8744''Oh, nonsense; you''ll want to when....''''What?''
8744''Oh, why to Satan?''
8744''Once?...
8744''Or perhaps you can crow like a cock?''
8744''Panteley Eremyitch of the ancient hereditary nobility is dying: who can hinder him?
8744''Perhaps,''Mr. Shtoppel began again,''you can walk on your hands, your legs raised, so to say, in the air?''
8744''Shall you stay in Moscow?''
8744''Since when''s that?''
8744''Sing?...
8744''Sir... pe- ermit me to ask,''he began in a haughty voice,''by what right you are-- er-- shooting here, sir?''
8744''So bad as that?''
8744''Sold?''
8744''Surely; how could I fail to know it?
8744''Take the saddle-- do you hear?''
8744''Tell Fomka,''said Tchertop- hanov abruptly,''to bring in Ammalat and Saiga, and in good order, do you understand?''
8744''Tell me candidly,''began Mr. Benevolensky, in a voice filled with dignity and patronising indulgence;''do you want to be an artist, young man?
8744''Tell me, where''s my horse?
8744''Tell us,''pursued Mr. Shtoppel, much encouraged by the smiles of the whole party,''to what special talent are you indebted for your good- fortune?
8744''Ten days?''
8744''That?
8744''That?
8744''The road?
8744''Then do you wish me to hire horses to go to Tula?''
8744''Then is it really impossible for you to live at your country place?''
8744''Then is it really impossible?
8744''Then what if I kill you?''
8744''Then why does he live with him?''
8744''There, I said you''d begin,''cried the Gabbler;''did n''t I say so?''
8744''There, there, you''re a good girl, certainly,''he went on, with a complacent smile;''but what''s to be done?
8744''To death?''
8744''To the ford?
8744''Well, Vassily Dmitritch, any news?...
8744''Well, and what would you do with him?''
8744''Well, how do you feel?''
8744''Well, in the winter, of course, I''m worse off, because it''s dark: to burn a candle would be a pity, and what would be the use?
8744''Well, judge then, Moshel Leyba, my friend-- you''re a man of sense-- whom would Malek- Adel have allowed to touch him except his old master?
8744''Well, let''s say, then,''the Jew hastened to add,''in six months''time... Do you agree?''
8744''Well, what do you think?''
8744''Well, what of that?''
8744''Well, what then, if it is in Russia?''
8744''Well,''he began, still gazing away, swinging his leg and yawning,''have you been here long?''
8744''Well... is it much further to Tula?''
8744''Well?
8744''Well?''
8744''Well?''...
8744''What Bobrov?''
8744''What about?''
8744''What am I calling you for?''
8744''What are we to do now?
8744''What are you calling me for?...
8744''What are you going to live on, Piotr Petrovitch?''
8744''What became of Matrona?''
8744''What can make you infer?...''
8744''What department do you mean to enter?''
8744''What do I find so awful?''
8744''What do you dream of, then, Lukerya?''
8744''What do you say?''
8744''What do you want?
8744''What do you want?''
8744''What do you want?''
8744''What does she do all day long?''
8744''What fo- or?''
8744''What for?''
8744''What for?...
8744''What have they against you?''
8744''What if it really is so?''
8744''What is happening there?''
8744''What is he, a poor man?''
8744''What is it?
8744''What is it?''
8744''What is it?''
8744''What is it?''
8744''What of Polyakov?
8744''What song am I to sing?''
8744''What sort of gypsies?''
8744''What sort of little place is it that''s awkward?''
8744''What then?
8744''What was it happened?''
8744''What will Filofey say now?''
8744''What will you take for it?''
8744''What''ll I give you?...
8744''What''s my name?''
8744''What''s that?
8744''What''s the guitar for?
8744''What''s the meaning of this?''
8744''What''s to be done?''
8744''What''s too bad?''
8744''What''s wrong with you?''
8744''What''s wrong with you?''
8744''What?
8744''What?''
8744''What?''
8744''What?''
8744''Where are you off to, Vassily Dmitritch?''
8744''Where did you buy the horse?''
8744''Where?
8744''Which way did the gentleman go?''
8744''Who is it?''
8744''Who waits on you?
8744''Who''s that?''
8744''Why are you silent?''
8744''Why be sorry for them?
8744''Why beating him?
8744''Why do you go to bed before you feel sleepy?''
8744''Why do you stand as if you were dumb?
8744''Why have you killed the Jew, you christened Pagans?''
8744''Why have you killed this Jew?''
8744''Why hire horses?
8744''Why not?''
8744''Why should they?
8744''Why so?''
8744''Why take proceedings?''
8744''Why take proceedings?''
8744''Why write to them?
8744''Why''s that?''
8744''Why, does he draw?''
8744''Why, how so?''
8744''Why, such as hang about fairs?''
8744''Why, what is one to do?
8744''Why, what would you have me do?''
8744''Why?''
8744''Would you like me to show you my leash?''
8744''Would you like me to tell you the story of my life?''
8744''Would you like me,''he whispered to me suddenly,''to introduce you to the first wit of these parts?''
8744''Would you like to make a bet with me?''
8744''Yes, yes; what are you called?''
8744''Yes; what are you called?''
8744''You are starting to- morrow?''
8744''You carried her off?''
8744''You do n''t recognise me, master?''
8744''You had a jolly life in the country?''
8744''You wo n''t be angry with me, will you, my dear kind friend?''
8744''You wo n''t come back?''
8744''You''re always alone, Lukerya: how can you prevent the thoughts from coming into your head?
8744''You''re not asleep, I fancy?''
8744''You''re not married, I suppose?''
8744''You''re quite right, their legs are bandy.... Well, but suppose he tied your hands?''
8744A Jew came among us; and where he''s come from-- who knows?
8744A cunning rascal, I expect?''
8744Allow me to ask, are you from Petersburg or from Moscow?''
8744Am I to be under an obligation to you, hey?''
8744And I ask her,"Who are you?"
8744And I asked them,"Why do you bow down to me, father and mother?"
8744And a tall footman says to me:"What name shall I say?"
8744And besides, why should I weary the Lord God?
8744And everything as motionless, as noiseless, as though in some enchanted realm, in a dream-- a dream of fairyland....''What does it mean?''
8744And how could Tchertop- hanov fail to prize his horse?
8744And how explain that not a yard- dog had barked?
8744And the trouble, the trouble I had to get it?
8744And what could he gain by it?
8744And what do you think?
8744And what sort of a helpmeet could I be?
8744And would you believe it?
8744And, indeed, why not beat him?
8744Are n''t we, gentlemen, all here_ en famille_?''
8744Are n''t you a Russian?''
8744Are there positively no horses?''
8744Are you blind?
8744Are you staying much longer?
8744At last it got up, went hop- hop to the door, looked round in the doorway; and what did it look like?
8744Before me lay a living human being; but what sort of a creature was it?
8744Both you and I are respectable people, that''s to say, egoists: neither of us has the least concern with the other; is n''t it so?
8744But I said to him;"How about sinning in thought, father?"
8744But I''m a dull and muddy mettled- rascal, Who calls me coward?
8744But can it be, Matrona Fedorovna is so necessary to you?"
8744But do n''t you want to go to sleep?''
8744But how can I obey my father?...''
8744But how could it be kept combed?
8744But how did you come to know her?"
8744But if that is what people want of me?
8744But in what way had the thief contrived by night, when the stable was locked, to steal Malek- Adel?
8744But is it long since this happened?''
8744But perhaps you want to go to sleep?''
8744But rage against whom?
8744But there was one fellow, my bosom friend, Gornostaev, Panteley-- you do n''t know him?
8744But there, kindly tell me rather about the living in Moscow-- is it dear?''
8744But we are neither of us sleepy... so why not chat?
8744But what is that?
8744But what of it?''
8744But what''s the service?...
8744But where find another horse like that?''
8744But where is that Fomka, Tihon Ivanitch?''
8744But why so far away?
8744But you do n''t know, perhaps, what sort of thing a student''s"circle"is?
8744But you tell me...''''Tell you about my trouble?
8744But, master dear, who can help another?
8744Buy another horse, seeing the money has come?
8744Can it be fishing at night?
8744Can it be?''
8744Can one creep into the soul of another?
8744Can the pathways of heaven Be closed against him?''
8744Come, do n''t you know it?
8744Come, tell me-- you''ve felt the bailiff''s fists, eh?"
8744Could it be to Kukuyevka, her mistress''s village?
8744Do n''t you believe me?
8744Do n''t you know that for that... you''re liable to have to answer heavily-- hey?''
8744Do n''t you know what we gypsy girls are?
8744Do you agree with me?''
8744Do you expect me to believe that?
8744Do you feel yourself consecrated to the holy service of Art?''
8744Do you hear it?''
8744Do you hear?
8744Do you know Glinnoe?
8744Do you know what medicine that was, and how to get it?''
8744Do you know, for instance, the delight of setting off before daybreak in spring?
8744Do you like them?''
8744Do you mean to destroy me?
8744Do you remember, I used to be leader of the choir too?''
8744Do you see,''he added in an undertone,''how well I pronounce French?
8744Do you understand?
8744Do you want to kill me, or what?"
8744Does any one look after you?''
8744Eh?
8744Eh?
8744Eh?''
8744Eh?''
8744Eh?''
8744Filofey, do you know the road well?''
8744From two causes: first, I''m poor; and secondly, I''ve grown humble.... Tell the truth, you did n''t notice me, did you?''
8744Good- bye, how good- bye?"...
8744Has your master been confessed?
8744Have I offended you in some way?''
8744He had, as it were, roused a witness to his act-- and where?
8744He stopped, took off his green leather cap, and in a thin, subdued voice he asked me whether I had n''t seen a horseman riding a chestnut?
8744He was a perfect ignoramus, had read nothing; why should an artist read, indeed?
8744He''d come up to you like this, and say:"Koman voo porty voo?"
8744He''d have raised such a din, he''d have roused the whole village?
8744Here you are going away, and one little word.... What have I done to deserve it?''
8744Here you have a conclusion too: listen to our wise men of Moscow-- they''re a set of nightingales worth listening to, are n''t they?
8744Hey, Yasha?''
8744How are you?''
8744How can that be-- hey?
8744How could they cure me now?...
8744How do n''t you care for it, you low- born slave?
8744How does marriage come in?
8744How is she to blame?"
8744How often, for instance, have I chanced to ask a peasant:''Tell me, my friend, how am I to get to Gratchevka?''
8744How was it such a simple reflection had never occurred to him?
8744How''s that?
8744How''s that?
8744I am busy here with Venzor.... Tihon Ivanitch,''he added, raising his voice,''come here, will you?
8744I asked in a whisper,''Have they given him the sacrament?''
8744I asked,''Where is the sick man?''
8744I ca n''t, can I?
8744I can read, to be sure, and was always fond of reading, but what could I read?
8744I cried... and not knowing how to go on, I asked:''and what of Vassily Polyakov?''
8744I desire your good-- do you understand me?
8744I have only seen him one little time in my life, and where is he now, and what''s his name?
8744I repeated my promise to send her the medicine, and asked her once more to think well and tell me-- if there was n''t anything she wanted?''
8744I said at last;''what is it has happened to you?''
8744I said to her,"You mad girl, where are you going?"
8744I sha n''t live till the winter, you see.... Why give trouble for nothing?
8744I simply want to know from you whether you will part with your serf- girl Matrona or not?"
8744I suppose I''m not mistress in my own house?
8744I thought....''A joke?...
8744I will say more-- science itself?''
8744I''ll give you nothing.... Why, what are you?
8744I''ll tell you one thing; for instance, I sometimes, even now.... Do you remember how merry I used to be in my time?
8744I''m Lukerya.... Do you remember, who used to lead the dance at your mother''s, at Spasskoye?...
8744I''m Panteley Tchertop- hanov, of the ancient hereditary nobility; my forefathers served the Tsar: and who may you be?''
8744I''m not angry, only you''re silly.... What do you want?
8744I''m shy, do you see?
8744Is a storm coming on?...
8744Is he found?
8744Is it the heat thickening?
8744Is it you?
8744Is n''t that so?''
8744Is n''t that true, Vasya, that you''re a good fellow?
8744Is this how you cross the ford?
8744It''s true the people...''''They''re unkind, eh?''
8744Koltsov''s lines recurred to me:''What has become Of the mighty voices, The haughty strength, The royal pomp?
8744Lilies of the valley, now... what could be sweeter?''
8744Lukerya glanced at me, as much as to say,''Was n''t it funny?''
8744Maksim the foreman?''
8744Malek- Adel, who would never let a stranger come near him even by day-- steal him, too, without noise, without a sound?
8744Moonlight, and night, and the river, and we in it....''What is that croaking noise?''
8744On the Jew, Yaff, Masha, the deacon, the Cossack- thief, all his neighbours, the whole world, himself?
8744On whom was he to be revenged?
8744One asks oneself-- what more could one desire?
8744One more storehouse for hackneyed commonplaces in the world; and what good does that do to anyone?
8744Orbassan fell down?
8744Orbassanov?"
8744Over there, above the black bushes, there is a vague brightness on the horizon.... What is it?--a fire?...
8744Shall I tell it you?
8744She refused it at first....''What good''s such a gift to me?''
8744She was here just now.... You did n''t meet her?
8744Should we turn back?
8744So do you know what?
8744So he came up and said this and that, and"How could you do so, Piotr Petrovitch?...
8744So one night, as I lay in my bed, thinking,"My God, why should I suffer so?
8744Stole it, I suppose?''
8744Suppose the governor comes and asks,"Why is it the judge stammers?"
8744Taken the sacrament?''
8744Tchertop- hanov interrupted gloomily;''what other horse do you mean?
8744Tell me yourself-- wasn''t it nice?
8744The footman walked away; I waited by myself and thought,"I wonder how it''ll be?
8744The peasants learnt the article; the master asked them whether they understood what was said in it?
8744The relation flew to her, and began scolding me, while the lady kept on moaning:"What have I done to deserve it?...
8744The same voice shouted:''Come in; who''s there?''...
8744The sky grows dark over the horizon; the still air is baked with piercing heat....''Where can one get a drink here, brother?''
8744The tambourines... and whistling too.... Do you hear?
8744The village of Bezselendyevka consisted of only twenty- two serfs, no one regretted its loss keenly; so why not get some fun out of it?
8744Then why did you go trailing off abroad?
8744There are no books of any kind, and even if there were, how could I hold a book?
8744There is a sudden flying gust of wind; the air is astir all about you: was not that thunder?
8744There, I''ll confess, I did n''t expect; I did n''t expect... Have you been here long?
8744This Cossack; was he a young man or old?''
8744To drive past her mistress''s house was nice, was n''t it?
8744Was it not thanks to him, he had again an unmistakable superiority, a last superiority over all his neighbours?
8744Was it possible?
8744We set off to- morrow....''''To- morrow?''
8744We''ll stay the night there, and to- morrow....''''Come back here?''
8744Well, so I went into the hall and asked if the mistress were at home?...
8744What Jew?''
8744What am I doing?
8744What am I to do, since I ca n''t get over loving her?...
8744What brought you here?''
8744What brought you to Aleksyevka?''
8744What can I ask Him for?
8744What can I do?''
8744What could unite two creatures so different in the bonds of an inseparable friendship?
8744What did he look like?
8744What did n''t we do to escape it?
8744What do you mean by patience?
8744What do you think of him, your ex- shelency?''
8744What ever are we going to wait for?''
8744What for?''
8744What has become of her now?
8744What have you done with him?
8744What have you got there?''
8744What is it you want then, eh?''
8744What is there in common, tell me, between that encyclopaedia and Russian life?
8744What makes you suppose it''s sure to be wicked people?''
8744What sort of a road have you here?''
8744What was to be done?
8744What was to be done?
8744What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her?...
8744What''s your name?''
8744When suddenly, from the farthest end of the plain, as though from another world, there floated a scarcely audible reply:''Wha- a- t?''
8744When there comes weariness the divider, and calls the soul away to strange, distant parts, how is one to stay here?
8744Whenever I meet him I always say to him:''A rattle of wheels?
8744Where are we?''
8744Where could I find another teacher?
8744Where could I turn?
8744Where did I get the tears from?
8744Where did you get it from?
8744Where is he?''
8744Where now is the Wealth of green?...
8744Where should there be fleas if not here, one wonders?''
8744Who am I?
8744Who but the sportsman knows how soothing it is to wander at daybreak among the underwoods?
8744Who can enter into his soul?
8744Who had a blind faith in the lofty destiny of his friends?
8744Who''s waiting for me?''
8744Whom have you sold him to?
8744Why did n''t you stay at home and study the life surrounding you on the spot?
8744Why get sent to Siberia, my dearie?''
8744Why not our own?''
8744Why not?
8744Why put it off?
8744Wo n''t you have some tea?''
8744Would you be willing to exchange it for my Lampurdos?...
8744Would you like me to arrange for them to take you to a hospital-- a good hospital in the town?
8744Yashka''s got a bet on with the booth- keeper: the stake''s a pot of beer-- for the one that does best, sings the best, I mean... do you see?''
8744You have n''t been away to the country?''
8744You know I ca n''t marry you, can I?
8744You permit him to be led to your stable?''
8744You were sorry for your horses: were n''t you sorry for your wife and children?''
8744You''re a queer fish, Blinkard: we call you to come to the tavern, and you ask what for?
8744You''re surprised at that?
8744You''re wondering, perhaps, where I could have got the money?
8744You?''
8744You?''...
8744a jeer?''
8744as though he would ever deign to get astride of him?
8744but where is Mtchensk?''
8744called a voice in the next room;''Karataev, where are you?
8744deadly terror, or death itself?
8744die?''
8744gives me the lie i''the throat?
8744has he run home?''
8744have they discovered you even there?"
8744he added, moving closer to her;''flowers?''
8744he asked me in an abrupt voice;''or, rather, a few incidents of my life?''
8744he cried suddenly;''why should she sit in there alone?
8744he hissed like one possessed, and all at once he thundered:''Who am I?
8744he interrupted me hurriedly;''it''s a thing of the past...''''Well, what are you doing here, my dear Piotr Petrovitch?''
8744he shouted,''tell me what you want?
8744he would say, with a violent blow on his own head:''touch my people, mine?
8744how could it be met?
8744or are you constantly asleep?''
8744over the lake... is it a crane standing there?
8744she added, after a brief silence:''when will God grant that we see each other again, Viktor Alexandritch?''
8744she answered,''why do you say so?
8744they''ve taken the shoe off, I suppose, at least?''
8744to him, he''ll answer,"Is it?"
8744what Matrona?"
8744what is he running to and fro like that for?
8744what is there before me?
8744what will become of me, poor wretch?
8744what will happen to me?
8744when?''
8744where are you running?''
8744who championed them with angry vehemence?
8744who eagerly gave way to men who were not worthy to untie his latchet?...
8744who extolled them with pride?
8744who was innocent of envy as of vanity?
8744who was ready for the most disinterested self- sacrifice?
8744who will find you?"
8744whom could he ask?
8744why go back?...
8744you will ask....''Does she read?''
9365!_ Will you do them and me_ in_ them the pleasure of drinking tea and supping with me at the_ old_ number 16 on Friday or Saturday next?
9365A fine boy!--have you any more? 9365 Are you a Xtian?"
9365Are you and the First Consul_ thick_?
9365Do n''t you, sir? 9365 Ecquid in antiquam virtutem?"
9365For aye unbroken, shall her cruel BowShoot Famine''s arrows o''er thy ravag''d World?
9365For ever shall the bloody Island scowl? 9365 Lost his Wife?"
9365Nature joins her groans--joins with_ whom_, a God''s name, but the world or earth in line preceding?
9365Now,said Lamb,"you old lake poet, you rascally poet, why do you call Voltaire dull?"
9365Where is Coleridge?
9365Who can cram into a strait coop of a review any serious idea of such a vast and magnificent poem?]
9365Why not your father?
9365Why omit 40, 63, 84?
9365With me, sir?
9365Would you like to see him?
9365_ And who the promis''d spouse declare, And what those bridal garments were_?
9365''The hour when we shall meet again''is[ only?]
9365( And what if Monads of the infinite mind?)
9365(? 1715- 1773), the editor of Swift, a director of the East India Company, and the friend of Johnson whom he imitated in_ The Adventurer_.
9365*****"What is all this about?"
9365--does his mighty name work wonders yet upon his little frame, and opening mind?
9365117 Mary Lamb to Sarah Stoddart? March Mr. Hazlitt''s text(_ Mary and Charles Lamb_).
9365137 Mary Lamb to Sarah Stoddart? Sept.
9365154 Mary Lamb to Sarah Stoddart? July 4 Mr. Hazlitt''s text(_ Mary and Charles Lamb_).
9365197 Mary Lamb to Sarah Hazlitt?
93652 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge End of May?
9365204 Charles Lamb to John Scott? Feb.
9365212 Charles Lamb to William Wordsworth? Early Jan. From Mr. Gordon Wordsworth''s original.
9365223 Mary Lamb to Matilda Betham? Late summer From_ Fraser''s Magazine_.
936523 What monstrous Race is hither tost, Thus to alarm our British Coast, With outcries such as never yet War, or confusion, could beget?
9365251 Charles Lamb to Thomas Noon Talfourd(?)
9365252 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge? Summer From the original( Morrison Collection).
9365263A Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge? Autumn Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn).
936528 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge(?
936537, would not the concluding lines of the 1st paragraph be well omitted--& it go on"So to sad sympathies"& c.?
936539 Charles Lamb to Robert Southey? Nov.
93654 Can I, who loved my Beloved But for the"scorn was in her eye,"Can I be moved for my Beloved, When she"returns me sigh for sigh?"
936549 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge? Jan.
936549 Thus shall our healths do others good, While we ourselves do all we wou''d, For freed from envy, and from care, What would we be, but what we are?
936554 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge? April 16 or 17 Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn).
936555 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge? Spring Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn) with alterations.
936558 Charles Lamb to Thomas Manning? May 25 59 Charles Lamb to J. M. Gutch No date From Mr. G. A. Gutch''s original.
936560 Charles Lamb to S. T. Coleridge? Late July Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn).
936585 Charles Lamb to Thomas Manning? April Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn).
936588 Charles Lamb to Thomas Manning? Aug.
936591,"moveless": is that as good as"moping"?--8, would it not read better omitting those 2 lines last but 6 about Inspiration?
936593 Charles Lamb to John Rickman? Nov.
936594 Charles Lamb to Thomas Manning? Feb.
936596 Charles Lamb to Thomas Manning? End of April Mr. Hazlitt''s text( Bohn) with alterations.
9365?
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9365?
9365? 1808.]
9365? Early Jan., 1815.]
9365? End of April, 1802.]
9365A pretty sort of an office truly.--Shall I come?
9365About a harmless play why all this fright?
9365After a little time the comptroller looked down, looked up and said to Wordsworth,"Do n''t you think, sir, Milton was a great genius?"
9365After an awful pause the comptroller said,"Do n''t you think Newton a great genius?"
9365All the while, until Monkhouse succeeded, we could hear Lamb struggling in the painting- room and calling at intervals,"Who is that fellow?
9365Am I not unlucky?
9365Am I taking too great a liberty in begging you to send 4 as follows, and reserve 2 for me when I come home?
9365Am I the life and soul of every company I come into?
9365Am I to understand by her letter, that she sends a_ kiss_ to Eliza Buckingham?
9365Among all your quaint readings did you ever light upon Walton''s"Complete Angler"?
9365An epic poem of 800[?
9365An''t you glad about Tuthill?
9365And by what_ day_--coach could I come soonest and nearest to Stowey?
9365And does not Southey use too often the expletives"did"and"does"?
9365And does the face- dissolving curfew sound at twelve?
9365And does the lonely glade Still court the foot- steps of the fair- hair''d maid?
9365And how does the coach- maker''s daughter?
9365And how is he, in the way of home comforts?--I mean, is he very happy with Mrs. Stoddart?
9365And in sober sense what makes you so long from among us, Manning?
9365And now, when shall I catch a glimpse of your honest face- to- face countenance again-- your fine_ dogmatical sceptical_ face, by punch- light?
9365And then David Hartley was unwell; and how is the small philosopher, the minute philosopher?
9365And then, when grown up,''Is this your son, sir?''
9365And what do they do when they an''t stealing?
9365And wherefore in this barren shade Thy hidden thoughts with sorrow feed?
9365Apollyon I could have borne, though he stands for the devil; but who is Apollidon?
9365Apropos, are you a Xtian?
9365Are Wordsworth and his sister gone yet?
9365Are poets so_ few_ in_ this age_, that he must write poetry?
9365Are there not libraries, halls, colleges, books, pictures, statues?
9365Are these atonements?
9365Are they short, to copy without much trouble?
9365Are we NEVER to meet again?
9365Are we not flocci- nauci- what- d''ye- call- em- ists?
9365Are you acquainted with Bowles?
9365Are you acquainted with Massinger?
9365Are you acquainted with Mr. Pearce, and will my taking another letter from you to him be of any service?
9365Are you and the First Consul_ thick_?
9365Are you and your dear Sara-- to me also very dear, because very kind-- agreed yet about the management of little Hartley?
9365Are you not connected with the Crit: Rev:?
9365Are you not in want of anything?
9365Are you not now the happiest family in the world?
9365Are you on some little footing with any of them?
9365Are you still( I fear you are) far from being comfortably settled?
9365Are you yet a Berkleyan?
9365Beaumont?--Sotheby?
9365Besides, what will you do with the son, after all his pursuits and adventures?
9365Besides, who knows that you_ do_ read?
9365Betham''s"Lay of Marie?"
9365Bid Mem''ry, magic child, resume his toy, And Hope''s fond vot''ry seize the distant joy[7]?
9365Brief, and pretty, and tender, is it not?
9365But are you really coming to town?
9365But are you really coming to town?
9365But can not you write pathetically to him, enforcing a speedy mission of your books for literary purposes?
9365But did the animalcule and she crawl over the rubric together, or did they not?
9365But do n''t you conceive all poets after Shakspeare yield to''em in variety of genius?
9365But for oil pictures!--what has he[ to] do with Madonas?
9365But if you do go among[ them] pray contrive to_ stink_ as soon as you can that you may[?
9365But pray did Lord Falkland die before Worcester fight?
9365But should not you read French, or do you?
9365But the truth is, and why should I not confess it?
9365But what art thou?
9365But what is the reason we have so few good Epitaphs after all?
9365But what shall I say of myself?
9365But what''s the use of talking about''em?
9365But who the devil is Matthew of Westminster?
9365But why waste a wish on him?
9365By the way, may not the Ogles of Somersetshire be remotely descended from King Lear?
9365By the way, tell me candidly how you relish This, which they call The lapidary style?
9365By the way, when will our volume come out?
9365By- the- by, where did you pick up that scandalous piece of private history about the angel and the Duchess of Devonshire?
9365COLERIDGE?
9365COLERIDGE[?
9365COLERIDGE[?
9365Ca n''t you keep him out of the way till you want him, as the husband of Isabella is conveniently sent off till his cue comes?
9365Can Arcadians be brought upon knees, creeping and crouching?
9365Can anything go beyond this in extravagance?
9365Can that God whom thy votaries say that thou hast demolished expect more?
9365Can they batter at your judicious ribs till they_ shake_, nothing both to be so shaken?
9365Can thing so fair repentance need?_""Oh!
9365Can we secure a coach home?
9365Can you come down?
9365Can you come to us before nine or at nine that morning?
9365Can you quit these shadows of existence,& come& be a reality to us?
9365Can you recommend me to any more books, easy of access, such as circulating shops afford?
9365Can you send any wishes about the book?
9365Can you, from memory, easily supply me with another?
9365Canst think of any other queries in the solution of which I can give thee satisfaction?
9365Coleridge, I am not trifling, nor are these matter- of- fact[? course] questions only.
9365Colson was perhaps Thomas Coulson, a friend of Sir Humphry Davy and the father of Walter Coulson( born?
9365Come, fair and pretty, tell to me Who in thy lifetime thou mightst be?
9365Concerning the tutorage-- is not the salary low, and absence from your family unavoidable?
9365Cottle read two or three acts out to us, very gravely on both sides, till he came to this heroic touch,--and then he asked what we laughed at?
9365Could not he spend a week at Poole''s before he goes back to Oxford?
9365Could not the Chancellor be petitioned to remove him?
9365Could the blindest Poor Papish have bowed more servilely to his Priest or Casuist?
9365Could you review''em, or get''em reviewed?
9365Dear C.,--Why will you make your visits, which should give pleasure, matter of regret to your friends?
9365Dear Coleridge,--Soon after I wrote to you last, an offer was made me by Gutch( you must remember him?
9365Dear Rickman,--You do not happen to have any place at your disposal which would suit a decayed Literatus?
9365Did it ever come to your brother''s knowledge?
9365Did n''t you see it?
9365Did you ever hear of the invention?
9365Did you ever read Charron on Wisdom?
9365Did you ever read that garrulous, pleasant history?
9365Did you get it?
9365Did you get it?
9365Did you never observe an appearance well known by the name of the man in the moon?
9365Did you seize the grand opportunity of seeing Kosciusko while he was at Bristol?
9365Do I spell that last word right?
9365Do all things continue in the state I left them in Cambridge?
9365Do n''t you find he is always silly about_ poor Giles_, and those abject kind of phrases, which mark a man that looks up to wealth?
9365Do n''t you think Louis the Desirable is in a sort of quandary?
9365Do n''t you think your verses on a Young Ass too trivial a companion for the Religious Musings?
9365Do n''t your mouth water to be here?
9365Do the words"impetuous"and"solemnize"harmonize well in the same line?
9365Do you believe this?
9365Do you ever try it?
9365Do you hear if it is read at all?
9365Do you know Watford in Hertfordshire?
9365Do you know it?
9365Do you know the well- meaning doctor?
9365Do you like Braham''s singing?
9365Do you mean to have anything of that kind?
9365Do you provide any verses on this occasion?
9365Do you publish with Lloyd or without him?
9365Do you remember that you are to come to us to- night?
9365Do you take the Pun?
9365Do you understand me?
9365Do you want any books that I can procure for you?
9365Do you want it soon, or shall I wait till some one travels your way?
9365Do you?
9365Do your night parties still flourish?
9365Does Lamb mean"And yet, I dare say,_ I know as much_ as Von Slagel_ did_"?
9365Does any one read at Canton?
9365Does she know where she is by this time?
9365Excuse the cover being not_ or fa_, is not that french?
9365Exil''d in disgrace, Find''st thou in foreign realms some happier place[3]?
9365Fie on sluggards, what is thy Sara doing?
9365From the frankness of her manner, I am convinced she is a person I could make a friend of; why should not you?
9365Going about the streets with a lantern, like Diogenes, looking for an honest man?
9365Groans not her Chariot o''er its onward way?"
9365HUME?]
9365Had not you better come and set up here?
9365Had you any scheme, or was it, as G. Dyer says, en passant?
9365Has Sara no poems to publish?
9365Has he exhausted his stores of tender plaintiveness?
9365Has not Master Southey spoke very slightingly in his preface and disparagingly of Cowper''s Homer?--what makes him reluctant to give Cowper his fame?
9365Hath not Bethlehem College a fair action for non- residence against such professors?
9365Have I not enough, without your mountains?
9365Have I thanked you, though, yet, for Peter Bell?
9365Have these things been?
9365Have these things been?
9365Have you any commands or commendations to the metaphysician?
9365Have you cured it?
9365Have you got a theatre?
9365Have you let that intention go?
9365Have you made it up with Southey yet?
9365Have you met with a new poem called the"Pursuits of Literature?"
9365Have you poets among you?
9365Have you read the Ballad called"Leonora,"in the second Number of the"Monthly Magazine"?
9365Have you read"Coelebs?"
9365Have you received one from a Cornet Burgoine?
9365Have you scratched him out of your will yet?
9365Have you seen Bowles''s new poem on"Hope?"
9365Have you seen a man guillotined yet?
9365Have you seen it, or shall I lend you a copy?
9365Have you seen poor Miss Betham''s"Vignettes"?
9365Have you seen the new edition of Burns?
9365Have you seen_ Christabel_ since its publication?
9365Have you time and inclination to go to work upon it-- or is it too late-- or do you think it needs none?
9365Have you trampled on the Cross yet?
9365Have you_ room_ for me,_ leisure_ for me, and are you all pretty well?
9365He has a friend, I understand, who is now at the head of the Admiralty; why may he not return, and make a fortune here?
9365He is at present under the medical care of a Mr. Gilman( Killman?)
9365How are my cousins, the Gladmans of Wheathamstead, and farmer Bruton?
9365How can omnipresence be affirmed of anything in part?
9365How canst thou translate the language of cat- monkeys?
9365How could Burns miss the series of lines from 42 to 49?
9365How did the pearls, and the fine court finery, bear the fatigues of the voyage, and how often have they been worn and admired?
9365How do the Lions go on?
9365How do you all do, amanuenses both-- marital and sororal?
9365How do you go on, and how many new ones have you had lately?
9365How do you like my way of writing with two Inks?
9365How do you like the Mandarinesses?
9365How do you like this in an old play?
9365How do you like this little epigram?
9365How does Miss Chambers do?''
9365How does Mrs. Field get on in her geography?
9365How does that same Life go on in your parts?
9365How does your Calendar prosper?
9365How easy, as you come from Kensington(_ à propos_, how is your excellent family?)
9365How is Ball?
9365How is Dorothy?
9365How is Edith?
9365How is Mr. Ball?
9365How is Mrs.[ M.]?
9365How many more new letters are still to come to light, who shall say?
9365How often must I tell you never to do any needle work for any body but me?
9365How- do?
9365Hume?]
9365Hylas has[?
9365I am also obliged to you, I believe, for a review in the"Annual,"am I not?
9365I am sometimes curious to know what progress you make in that same"Calendar:"whether you insert the nine worthies and Whittington?
9365I believe you have heard us say we like him?
9365I can conceive Pindar( I do not mean to compare myself[ to]_ him_) by the command of Hiero, the Sicilian tyrant( was not he the tyrant of some place?
9365I certainly invented that conceit, and its coincidence with fact is incidental[?
9365I could be content to receive money, or clothes, or a joint of meat from a friend; why should he not send me a dinner as well as a dessert?
9365I did indite a splenetic letter, but did the black Hypocondria never gripe_ thy_ heart, till them hast taken a friend for an enemy?
9365I did not distinctly understand you,--you do n''t mean to make an actual ploughman of him?
9365I do n''t remember, he_ says_ black: but could Milton imagine them to be yellow?
9365I expect Manning of Cambridge in town to- night-- will you fulfil your promise of meeting him at my house?
9365I have heard a waspish punster say,"Sir, why did you not laugh at my jest?"
9365I humbly represented to him that his own eyes were dark[?
9365I mean, when we mean[?
9365I should like you, too, a good deal to enlarge the most striking part, as it might have been, of the poem--"Is it idleness?"
9365I think a letter from Maison Magnan( is that a person or a thing?)
9365I think if you could do any thing for George in the way of an office( God knows whether you can in any haste[?
9365I think it would draw another third volume of Dodsley out of me; but you say you do n''t want any English books?
9365I wish I was leprous& black jaundiced skin- over, and[?
9365I wish they did not resemble the latter in their scarceness.--And how does little David Hartley?
9365I write plainly about him, and he would stare and frown finely if he read this treacherous epistle, but I really am anxious about him, and that[?
9365I''m glad to see you like my wife, however; you''ll come and see her, ha?"
9365II"Whether the archangel Uriel_ could_ knowingly affirm an untruth, and whether, if he_ could_, he_ would_?"
9365IV"Whether the seraphim ardentes do not manifest their goodness by the way of vision and theory?
9365If God''s judgments now fail to take away from me the heart of stone, what more grievous trials ought I not to expect?
9365If with any, why do you delay to notice White''s book?
9365If you do this, she will tell your brother, you will say; and what then, quotha?
9365If you do, can you put us in a way how to send it?
9365If you had been with us, would you have laughed the whole time like Charles and Miss Rickman or gone to sleep as Southey and Rickman did?
9365If you know that at that time he had any such intention, will you write instantly?
9365If you prize them ought, Why should my_ Labour_, not enough be thought, Unlesse, I adde_ Expences_ to my paines?
9365Imprimis, is there any chance of success in application to Parliament for a reward?
9365In all his distress he was sweetly and exemplarily calm and master of himself,--and seemed perfectly free from his disorder.-- How do you all at?
9365In particular, I fear lest you should prefer printing my first sonnet, as you have done more than once,"did the wand of Merlin wave"?
9365In the ignorant present time, who can answer for the future man?
9365In what shape and how does it come into public?
9365In"The Force of Prayer,"which opens with the question-- What is good for a bootless bene?
9365Is Lloyd with you yet?--are you intimate with Southey?
9365Is Mr. Moncrief doing well there?
9365Is he likely to make a very good fortune, and in how long a time?
9365Is it a farm you have got?
9365Is it a feeling to be exposed on theatres to mothers and daughters?
9365Is it an untoward fatality( speaking humanly) that does this for you, a stubborn irresistible concurrence of events?
9365Is it as big as Old London Wall by Bedlam?
9365Is it as cold at Winterslow as it is here?
9365Is it not hard,"this dread dependance on the low bred mind?"
9365Is it the best sort of feeling?
9365Is life, with such limitations, worth trying?
9365Is now meditating a book:"Why should every creature make books but I?"
9365Is the Patriot come yet?
9365Is the chair empty?
9365Is the metaphysic well( without a bottom) drained dry?
9365Is the phrase classic?
9365Is there a possible chance for such an one as me to realize in this world, such friendships?
9365Is there no law against these rascals?
9365Is there no possibility of averting this sore evil?
9365Is there no_ lineal descendant_ of Prester John?
9365Is your being with, or near, your poor dear Mother necessary to her comfort?
9365Is_ morals_ a subject so exhausted, that he must quit that line?
9365It is a delicate subject, but is Mr.*** really married?
9365It will be unexpected, and it will give her pleasure; or do you think it will look whimsical at all?
9365Itidem comparationes istas tuas satis callidas et lepidas certè novi: sed quid hoc ad verum?
9365Jack,"& c.& c.& c. Now you have it all- how do you like it?
9365John Braham(? 1774- 1856), the great tenor and the composer of"The Death of Nelson."
9365LETTER 137 MARY LAMB TO SARAH STODDART[?
9365LETTER 147 MARY LAMB TO SARAH STODDART[?
9365LETTER 197 MARY LAMB TO SARAH HAZLITT[?
9365LETTER 204 CHARLES LAMB TO JOHN SCOTT[ P.M.(?
9365LETTER 259 CHARLES LAMB TO JOSEPH COTTLE London, India House,[?
9365Lamb got up, and taking a candle, said,"Sir, will you allow me to look at your phrenological development?"
9365Lamb seemed to take no notice; but all of a sudden he roared out,"Which is the gentleman we are going to lose?"
9365Lamb who was dozing by the fire turned round and said,"Pray, sir, did you say Milton was a great genius?"
9365Lamb?"
9365Laugh, e''en at kings, and mock each prudish rule, The merry motley priest of ridicule[6]?
9365Letter 251 Charles Lamb to Thomas Noon Talefourd(?)
9365Light Hymen''s torch through ev''ry blooming grove,[4] And tinge each flow''ret with the blush of love?
9365Like Horatio with Calista, he might wring his[ her?]
9365Lit._, Sara Coleridge writes, concerning children and domestic evenings,"''Did a very little babby make a very great noise?''
9365Little Fenwick( you do n''t see the connexion of ideas here, how the devil should you?)
9365Lloyd objects to"pourtray''d in his face,"--do you?
9365Lloyd, it minded me of Falkland in the"Rivals,""Am I full of wit and humour?
9365Loving all these as much as I can love poetry new to me, what could I wish or desire more or extravagantly in a new volume?
9365Macbeth''s witch has a good advice to a magic[?
9365Manning wrote:"I am actually thinking of Independent Tartary as I write this, but you go out and skate-- you go out and walk some times?
9365Manning, your letter dated Hottentots, August the what- was- it?
9365Mars, Bacchus, or Apollo?
9365May I, can I, shall I, come so soon?
9365Moreover, I certainly recognise that your comparisons are acute and witty; but what has this to do with truth?
9365Mr. Hook is author of several pieces,"Tekeli,"& c. You know what_ hooks and eyes_ are, do n''t you?
9365My Tragedy will be a medley( as[?
9365My dear friend, Before I end,-- Have you any More orders for Don Giovanni To give Him that doth live Your faithful Zany?
9365N.B.--Dirty books[? backs], smeared leaves, and dogs''ears, will be rather a recommendation than otherwise.
9365Need I turn over to blot a fresh clean half- sheet?
9365Neither could Lycidas, or the Chorics( how do you like the word?)
9365No doubt, many sons might feel a wayward pleasure in the honourable guilt of their mothers; but is it a true feeling?
9365Now love to linger in the daisied vale, Then rise sublime in legendary tale[16]?
9365Nursed amid her noise, her crowds, her beloved smoke-- what have I been doing all my life, if I have not lent out my heart with usury to such scenes?
9365Of this part a little is left, but so as without conjuration no man could tell what I was driving it[?
9365Oh, where be now those sports And infant play- games?
9365Once more she hears the well- loved sounds of,''How do you do, Mrs. Reynolds?
9365Only let me ask, is not that thought and those words in Young,"Stands in the Sun"?
9365Only utter[?
9365Or are you doing any thing towards it?
9365Or better perhaps, BOXES, in old English character, like Madoc or Thalaba?
9365Or dost thou soar, in youthful ardour strong, And bid some female hero live in song[8]?
9365Or dost thou still though banish''d from the town, In Britain love to linger, though unknown?
9365Or e''en regardless of the poet''s praise, Deck the fair magazine with blooming lays[18]?
9365Or have they any?
9365Or have thieves no politics?
9365Or perhaps the Comic Muse?
9365Or rather do you not write in the Critical?
9365Or shall I have no Apollo?--simply nothing?
9365Or steal from beauty''s lip th''ambrosial kiss, Paint the domestic grief, or social bliss[10]?
9365Or wilt thou spread the light of Leo''s age, And smooth, as woman''s guide, Tansillo''s page[12]?
9365Or, being pardoned, can she not teaze her husband to get him banished?
9365Or, faithful still to nature''s sober joy, Smile on the labours of some Farmer''s Boy[17]?
9365Postmark?
9365Pray are you King''s or Queen''s men in Sidney?
9365Pray tell your wife that a note of interrogation on the superscription of a letter is highly ungrammatical-- she proposes writing my name_ Lamb_?
9365Pray, are the Winterslow Estates entailed?
9365Pray, is it a part of your sincerity to show my letters to Lloyd?
9365Quid tibi equidem cum uno vel altero Caesare, cùm universi Duodecim ad comparationes tuas se ultro tulerint?
9365Quoth Jack,"Why what the devil storm''s a- brewing?
9365Recall, employment sweet, thy youthful day, Then wake, at Mithra''s call, the mystic lay[14]?
9365Rogers''poem begins:--"Say what remains when hope is fled?"
9365Samuel Taylor C. had not deigned an answer; was it impertinent of me to avail myself of that offered source of knowledge?
9365Saturday[? June 3].
9365Shall I appoint a time to see you here when he is from home?
9365Shall I send them, or may I expect to see you in town?
9365Should he go on acting upon this theory, which of our shelves is safe?"
9365Sing winter, summer- sweets, the vernal air, Or the soft Sofa, to delight the fair[5]?
9365Singly what am I to do?
9365Sleep, too, I ca n''t get for these damn''d winds of a night: and without sleep and rest what should ensue?
9365Some of Lloyd''s lines on Coleridge run thus:-- How shall I fitly speak on such a theme?
9365Southey(?)
9365Spirit of Spenser!--was the wanderer wrong?"
9365Still in her locks the gales of summer sigh?
9365Suppose you were to write to that good- natured heathen--"or is he a_ shadow_?"
9365THESES QUAEDAM THEOLOGICAE I"Whether God loves a lying angel better than a true man?"
9365TO CHARLES LLOYD, AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR Alone, obscure, without a friend, A cheerless, solitary thing, Why seeks my Lloyd the stranger out?
9365TO SARA AND HER SAMUEL Was it so hard a thing?
9365Teach fancy how through nature''s walks to stray, And wake, to simpler theme, the lyric lay[9]?
9365Tell me how I shall send my packet to you?--by what conveyance?--by Longman, Short- man, or how?
9365Tell, and would not that in the present state of discussions be likely to_ tell_?
9365That is not my poetry, but Quarles''s; but have n''t you observed that the rarest things are the least obvious?
9365The 2d Antistrophe( what is the meaning of these things?)
9365The beginning was awakening and striking; the ending is soothing and solemn-- Are you serious when you ask whether you shall admit this ode?
9365The concluding line, is it not a personif: without use?
9365The expression in the 2d"more happy to be unhappy in hell"--is it not very quaint?
9365The little room( was it not a little one?)
9365The most difficult thing seems to be, What to do with the husband?
9365The reading your lines about it fixed me for a time, a monument, in Harrow Church,( do you know it?)
9365The stanzas from which Lamb quotes run:--"What is good for a bootless bene?"
9365The three poems were"Address to a Child"( beginning,"What way does the Wind come from?
9365Then what puddings have you?
9365There''s your friend Tuthill has got away from France-- you remember France?
9365These, Coleridge, are the few sketches I have thought worth preserving; how will they relish thus detached?
9365They do n''t thieve all day long, do they?
9365They were the"Description of a Forest Life,""The General Lover"("What is it you love?")
9365Thy Watchman''s, thy bellman''s, verses, I do retort upon thee, thou libellous varlet,--why, you cried the hours yourself, and who made you so proud?
9365Till pleas''d, you make in fair translated song, Odin descend, and rouse the fairy throng[13]?
9365To come to the point then, and hasten into the middle of things, have you a copy of your Algebra to give away?
9365To familiar faces we do associate familiar scenes and accustomed objects; but what hath Apollidon and his sea- nymphs to do in these affairs?
9365To have made free with these cattle, where was the harm?
9365To relieve the former part of the Play, could not some sensible images, some work for the Eye, be introduced?
9365Ulterius progrediri[?
9365Unfold the Paradise of ancient lore[15], Or mark the shipwreck from the sounding shore?
9365V"Whether the higher order of seraphim illuminati ever_ sneer_?"
9365VI"Whether pure intelligences can_ love_, or whether they love anything besides pure intellect?"
9365VIII"Whether an''immortal and amenable soul''may not come_ to be damned at last, and the man never suspect it beforehand_?"
9365W. standing near the shrouds or any place of safety at the moment of sinking?
9365W._ now) Plato''s double animal parted never longed[?
9365Was Coleridge often with you?
9365Was n''t you sorry for Lord Nelson?
9365We have got a picture of Charles; do you think your brother would like to have it?
9365We have nobody about us that cares for Poetry, and who will rear grapes when he shall be the sole eater?
9365We next discussed the question, whether Pope was a poet?
9365Well, and how does the land of thieves use you?
9365Well, and how far is Saint Valery from Paris; and do you get wine and walnuts tolerable; and the vintage, does it suffer from the wet?
9365Were his limbs ever found?
9365Wesley( have you read his life?
9365What Review are you connected with?
9365What am I to do with such people?
9365What can I do till you send word what priced and placed house you should like?
9365What character does it bear?
9365What do I say?
9365What do the rascals mean?
9365What do you in Shropshire when so many fine pictures are a- going, a- going every day in London?
9365What do you intend to do about Mr. Turner?
9365What do you mean by calling Madame Mara harlot& naughty things?
9365What do you think of a life of G. Dyer?
9365What do you think?
9365What followed then?
9365What had you to do with one Caesar, or a second, when the whole Twelve offered themselves to your comparison?
9365What has Charles done that nobody invites him to the wedding?
9365What has happened to learned Trismegist?--Doth he take it in ill part, that his humble friend did not comply with his courteous invitation?
9365What have you to do among such Ethiopians?
9365What is Mr. Turner?
9365What is become of Cowper?
9365What is become of Moschus?
9365What is become of the rich Auditors in Albemarle Street?
9365What is gone of that frank- hearted circle, Morgan and his cos- lettuces?
9365What is the general opinion of it?
9365What is the matter between you and your good- natured maid you used to boast of?
9365What is your proper address?
9365What new idea is gained by this Title, but one subversive of all credit, which the tale should force upon us, of its truth?
9365What other news is there, Mary?--What puns have I made in the last fortnight?
9365What pieces are performed?
9365What progress do you make in your hymns?
9365What right have I to obtrude all this upon you?
9365What says Coleridge?
9365What shall I say to your Dactyls?
9365What testimonials shall I bring of my being worthy of such friendship?
9365What the devil!--are men nothing but word- trumpets?
9365When I laughed at the"miserable man crawling from beneath the coverture,"I wonder I[?
9365When do you come back full of riches and renown, with the regret of all the honest, and all the other part of the colony?
9365When shall I ever see you in them?
9365When shall scepter''d SLAUGHTER cease?
9365When shall we two smoke again?
9365When will he be delivered of his new epic?
9365When, and where, shall I ever see you again?
9365Where am I to look for''em?
9365Where is Coleridge?
9365Where is the Life?
9365Where the joyous troops Of children, and the haunts I did so love?
9365Where will you get holly to stick in your churches, or churches to stick your dried tea- leaves( that must be the substitute) in?
9365Wherefore to day art singing in mine ear Sad songs were made so long ago, my dear?
9365Whether God loves a lying Angel better than a true Man?
9365Whether Honesty be an angelic virtue?
9365Whether an immortal and amenable soul may not come to be damned at last, and the man never suspect it beforehand?
9365Whether pure intelligences can love?
9365Whether the Archangel Uriel_ could_ affirm an untruth?
9365Whether the Seraphim Ardentes do not manifest their virtues by the way of vision and theory?
9365Whether the higher order of Seraphim Illuminati ever sneer?
9365Who art thou, fair one, who usurp''st the place Of Blanch, the Lady of the matchless grace?
9365Who ever caught you, Dyer, designing a landscape, or taking a likeness?
9365Who is to read them, I do n''t know: who is it that reads Tales of Terror and Mysteries of Udolpho?
9365Who lookd over your proof sheets, and left_ ordebo_ in that line of Virgil?
9365Who put your marine sonnet and about Browne into"Blackwood"?
9365Whose head is competent to these things?
9365Why did you not add the Waggoner?
9365Why do you never drop in?
9365Why is he wandering on the sea?
9365Why is not your poem on Burns in the Monthly Magazine?
9365Why not adopt it, Coleridge?
9365Why not your father?
9365Why omit 73?
9365Why sing sad songs were made so long ago?
9365Why sleep the Watchman''s answers to that_ Godwin_?
9365Why sleep thy Bolts unhurl''d?"
9365Why the devil am I never to have a chance of scribbling my own free thoughts, verse or prose, again?
9365Why wert not thou born in my father''s dwelling?
9365Will Hartley be with you?
9365Will Miss H. pardon our not replying at length to her kind Letter?
9365Will none of you ever be in London again?
9365Will they, have they, did they, come safe?
9365Will you and Mrs. R. join the party?
9365Will you answer me two questions, and return them with the papers as soon as you can?
9365Will you drop in to- morrow night?
9365Will you excuse one short extract?
9365Will you reject all or any of them?
9365Will you some day soon write a few words just to tell me how they all are and all you know concerning them?
9365With modest pencil paint the vernal scene, The rustic lovers, and the village green?
9365Wordsworth seemed asking himself,"Who is this?"
9365Would not the people have ejected the Brunswicks some day in his favour?
9365You ask me about the"Farmer''s Boy"--don''t you think the fellow who wrote it( who is a shoemaker) has a poor mind?
9365You have seen"Beauties of Shakespear?"
9365You knew Dick Hopkins, the swearing scullion of Caius?
9365You will be good friends with us, will you not?
9365You will not make him jealous of his own son?
9365You will not refuse us them next time we send for them?
9365You would laugh, or you would cry, perhaps both, to see us sit together, looking at each other with long and rueful faces, and saying,"how do you do?"
9365You''ll come some day, wo n''t you?
9365Your picture of idiocy, with the sugar- loaf head, is exquisite; but are you not too severe upon our more favoured brethren in fatuity?
9365Yours very truly, C. L. Do you observe the delicacy of not signing my full name?
9365[ Footnote 4: In_ Spain!!?]
9365[ Sidenote: Is"_ morbid_ wantonness of woe"a good and allowable phrase?]
9365[_ Here is a paragraph erased._] What do you think of smoking?
9365[_ Lamb here erases six lines._] Is it not a pity so much fine writing should be erased?
9365_ A propos_( is it pedantry, writing to a Frenchman, to express myself sometimes by a French word, when an English one would not do as well?
9365_ Allons_--or what is it you say, instead of_ good- bye_?
9365_ Are you happy?
9365_ Ecquid meditatur Archimedes?_ What is Euclid doing?
9365_ Ecquid meditatur Archimedes?_ What is Euclid doing?
9365_ I_ rank thee with Alves, Latinè Helvetius, or any of his cursed crew?
9365_ The bed was very cold last night._ Feb. 21[? 22].
9365_ What god_ does he most resemble?
9365_ racemi nimium alte pendentes_?
9365and David''s mother?
9365and all of you?
9365and do you not repent going out?_ I wish I could see you for one hour only.
9365and has he found a gargle to his mind?
9365and how do you like him?
9365and how do you pass your time in your extra- judicial intervals?
9365and how go on the little rogue''s teeth?
9365and if he_ could_ whether he_ would_?
9365and is there any prospect of her recovery?
9365and what do you intend to do about it?
9365and what does your worship know about farming?
9365and what is likely to come of him?
9365and what the devil is the matter with your Aunt?
9365and whether practice be not a sub- celestial and merely human virtue?
9365and whether practice be not a sub- celestial, and merely human virtue?"
9365and"how do you do?"
9365are both yours blanks?
9365are men all tongue and ear?
9365are the women_ all_ painted, and the men_ all_ monkeys?
9365brick and stone walls in her way, which she can by no means eat through?
9365can you leave off harassing yourself to please a thankless multitude, who know nothing of you,& begin at last to live to yourself& your friends?
9365does she take any notice of you?
9365has he carried away any of the_ tables_, Becky?"
9365has he discovered Mr. Curse- a- rat''s correspondence?
9365his posthumous works and letters?
9365how- do?
9365is Magna Charta then a mockery?
9365is it as good as hanging?
9365is it merely to fill up his letters as he filled ours with Lord Nelson''s exploits?
9365my friend, I think sometimes, could I recall the days that are past, which among them should I choose?
9365not] hang a[?
9365nuts in the Will''s mouth too hard for her to crack?
9365or Patrick''s Pilgrim?
9365or are there not a_ few_ that look like_ rational_ of_ both sexes_?
9365or are they made of packthread?
9365or can a Frenchman_ laugh_?
9365or has any new thing come out against you?
9365or is he the same in this last as in all his former pieces?
9365or is it only such as Young in one of his_ better moments_ might have writ?
9365or is it the Pedlar and the Priest that are?
9365or lies the fault, as I fear it does, in your own mind?
9365or not rather to be reckoned among those qualities which the Schoolmen term''_ Virtutes minus splendidoe et terrae et hominis participes_''?
9365or what rare witchery, Impregning with delights the charmed air, Enlighted up the semblance of a smile In those fine eyes?
9365or"is n''t it better to lean over a stile in a sort of careless easy half astronomical position eyeing the blue expanse?"
9365said I,"Who are you talking of?"
9365sore lets,_ impedimenta viarum_, no thoroughfares?
9365they have sympathised in our sorrow as tenderly as if they had grown up in the same[ town?]
9365was_ he_ not an elevated character?)
9365what could he mean?
9365what is such a letter to you?
9365what shall I say next?
9365what things are perfect?"
9365what will your Mother think of us?
9365what you do or how you can manage when two Saints meet and quarrel for precedency?
9365whither[ wherefore] does the Northern Conqueress stay?
9365will she pardon my inefficiency?
9365would not"dulcet"fruit be less harsh, or some other friendly bi- syllable?
61878''Have you been shopping?'' 61878 A piece of paper?"
61878About what, my dear?
61878Ai nt they dear children, both of''em?
61878Ai nt we, Miss Christian?
61878Ai nt you glad, my darling?
61878All present?
61878And are you a mistress?
61878And do you mean to tell me? 61878 And how did you find that out, pray?"
61878And how do you mean to live?
61878And may I go and see Christian?
61878And may I toast the bread and put on the butter?
61878And now, do you think, Miss Christian, that you could let me have five shillings?
61878And then?
61878And we may do what we like for the next ten days?
61878And were n''t you shocked?
61878And what about to- night?
61878And what part shall I have?
61878And what was her name?
61878And why, pray,said Susan,"do you accuse me of this crime?"
61878And you are anxious?
61878And you know all about it?
61878And you resolved that it should not be told to the school?
61878And your father? 61878 Appoint me the guardian of this party, wo n''t you, Miss Jessie?"
61878Are n''t we schoolgirls? 61878 Are n''t we, Christian?"
61878Are n''t you very proud of yourself?
61878Are n''t you, Morris?
61878Are n''t you?
61878Are they all at tea, Rufus?
61878Are you better for your sleep?
61878Are you better?
61878Are you certain, Susan? 61878 Are you cold, Christian?"
61878Are you comfortable, darling?
61878Are you going to repent, Susan?
61878Are you going?
61878Are you in bed, Christian?
61878Are you really so fond of Christian?
61878Are you sorry, Susan?
61878Are you sure-- quite sure-- carpenter,she said after a pause,"that you will get that money?
61878Are you sure? 61878 Are you?"
61878At once, Star? 61878 At what hour is the feast generally held?"
61878Awful, is it?
61878Be you the sulky sort, as hugs their grief to''em and has n''t a word to say to their kind friends? 61878 But ca n''t you post it?"
61878But did you?
61878But do you know many of them?
61878But have they gone-- have they gone?
61878But how did you know? 61878 But how will you know what station to go to?"
61878But if she had died, should you or I ever have held up our heads again? 61878 But is it your desire?"
61878But is n''t it long past nine now?
61878But may n''t I stay near you all day? 61878 But suppose you do n''t want to see her at all?"
61878But that need n''t happen, need it?
61878But what about our feast to- night? 61878 But what has the poor child done?"
61878But what is it?
61878But what?
61878But when I run away from the strict- discipline school I do please myself, do n''t I?
61878But why could n''t she have more dinner cooked for the sick woman?
61878But why did we do it, Susan? 61878 But why not?
61878But why should she be unhappy?
61878But why should you, Star? 61878 But why so, dear?
61878But why this change in your views?
61878But why, dear-- why?
61878But why-- why-- why?
61878But would you mind telling me who the girls are? 61878 But you need n''t stay in bed if you are well, need you?"
61878But, all the same,continued Rosy,"we''re very happy; ai nt we, missy?"
61878By the way, Mary,said Miss Neil suddenly,"have you told the child?"
61878Ca n''t we get away from here? 61878 Can I do anything to help, Jessie?"
61878Can I endure it?
61878Can I help you?
61878Can I? 61878 Can we throw in supper, Miss Christian?"
61878Can you listen to me, Christian?
61878Can you not give me some hint, Star? 61878 Can you not recall that hot August morning when we first saw our little Christian?"
61878Children have done that before when they were poor, have n''t they? 61878 Christian Mitford''s secret?"
61878Christian buying a whole lot of things for herself at Dawson''s? 61878 Come,"she said;"we must be great chums, must n''t we?"
61878Dare you?
61878Dear,she said,"I do n''t wish to be unkind, but is this your school or mine?"
61878Death, you mean?
61878Did granny give her dinner to a sick person at the opposite side of the street?
61878Did n''t I tell you that we''d just get that money in the nick of time? 61878 Did n''t you care?"
61878Did she say anything about it?
61878Did they forget to give it to you?
61878Did you buy those things at Dawson''s?
61878Did you hear about the prayers in the chapel?
61878Did you know it, Chris? 61878 Did you know my granny, nurse?"
61878Do I think ducks will swim?
61878Do n''t you hear someone in the room, Julia?
61878Do n''t you realize that you are disobeying one of the most severe rules of the school?
61878Do n''t you think so?
61878Do n''t you think that sort of thing is very bad for you?
61878Do n''t you, you old skinflint?
61878Do we really care for sweets?
61878Do what?
61878Do you greatly mind, Mrs. Morris? 61878 Do you know me, Chris?"
61878Do you know that you are to go down to see your father and mother after dinner?
61878Do you know where Star is? 61878 Do you know, Christian?"
61878Do you mean Susan?
61878Do you mean to say positively that no girl is to go outside the grounds to- day?
61878Do you mean to?
61878Do you mind, Jessie,she said,"if I go to church at Tregellick?"
61878Do you object, dear?
61878Do you really care for sweets?
61878Do you really mean it?
61878Do you really mean it?
61878Do you suppose I mean to keep it dark?
61878Do you suppose it for a single moment, Susan?
61878Do you think eight sovereigns will go a long, long way? 61878 Do you think so?"
61878Do you think we are in danger now, Rosy?
61878Do you think we did very wrong?
61878Does Miss Peacock know?
61878Does that mean that the new girl, the victim, is your special friend?
61878Follow them? 61878 For what?"
61878Fresh eyes, Christian?
61878Frightened, be yer?
61878Girls,she said to one or two of her friends,"may I have this room to myself for an hour if necessary?"
61878Had it any writing on it?
61878Had n''t we better have a cab? 61878 Has Christian Mitford asked to retire nearly an hour before the usual time?"
61878Has anybody got a lollypop?
61878Has anyone anything more to say with regard to her case?
61878Has anything happened? 61878 Have you done it?"
61878Have you lost anything?
61878Have you talked this matter over with the teachers?
61878Help me?
61878Here we all are, but what is the matter?
61878Here, Louisa,said Star, pointing to what might be considered the place of honor;"will you seat yourself here?
61878How are you, Christian?
61878How can I say?
61878How could I manage it?
61878How could she? 61878 How do you know that?"
61878How is Christian now?
61878How is Christian, Rose? 61878 How is it, dear,"said Mr. Dixie, turning to his spouse,"that we always have ditch- water instead of tea on Sunday evenings?"
61878How is she?
61878How will you manage that?
61878However did you get here?
61878I am on the committee; you remember that fact, do n''t you, Susan? 61878 I am so awfully obliged to you for telling me your name; but where do you live?"
61878I in your power?
61878I know all about it, sweet? 61878 I ought not to say anything against Susan, but will you question her?"
61878I quite expected her to say,''And you will take me with you?'' 61878 I sorry?
61878I?
61878If you are well you will get up, wo n''t you?
61878If you please, Miss Peacock,said Susan Marsh,"need I stay?
61878In the grounds?
61878Is it I or is it another girl?
61878Is it true-- is it-- that the police can lock us up?
61878Is it? 61878 Is n''t it wonderful how nice it is to be naughty?"
61878Is n''t she worth guarding? 61878 Is she frightfully bad?"
61878Is she very, very bad?
61878Is that my old skirt? 61878 Is that so, Star?
61878Is there anybody there?
61878Is there anything I can do for you, lydies? 61878 Is there anything I can do?
61878Is there no hope, then?
61878It is fun, is n''t it, Rose?
61878It is your impression that there is going to be a very special feast to- night?
61878It is-- it is; but can you?
61878It sounds interesting,said Christian, who felt that she could enjoy it;"but does Miss Peacock know?"
61878It''s all very fine to promise that to yourself, is n''t it, but how do you think you will keep it up?
61878Know her?
61878Letters?
61878Maud, do you know anything of this?
61878Maud,said Susan, raising her voice to a pitch of agony,"you dare talk of that to- night?
61878May we go where I like?
61878May we have that dear little girl to play with us?
61878Miss Peacock,said the little girl,"you know, do n''t you, why Christian did n''t come to school with the rest of us?
61878My dear Stella, have you made up your mind to confide in me or not?
61878My dear,said her governess,"are you well?"
61878My dear,said her husband,"do n''t you see that the child is a budding genius?
61878My note?
61878No girl? 61878 Now, Jessie,"said Miss Peacock,"will you go downstairs?
61878Now, what is it, Rosy?
61878Nursey, did you ever hear that wonderful story about my granny?
61878Nursey,said Christian,"did you ever have the feeling that you were too glad and yet too sorry to be able to say what you felt?
61878Nursey,she cried,"what is the time?"
61878Of what nature will the punishment be, dear Miss Forest?
61878Oh, Miss Christian,she said,"what is it?"
61878Oh, Miss Forest, dear, do you mind if we all go for a walk? 61878 Oh, Miss Peacock,"said Louisa Twining,"if she is sorry----""Yes, Louisa?"
61878Oh, Rosy, what is it?
61878Oh, Star, ca n''t you understand? 61878 Oh, ai nt you a darling?
61878Oh, can I see her?
61878Oh, do n''t I love Christian?
61878Oh, do n''t you, miss? 61878 Oh, has n''t she?
61878Oh, have n''t I?
61878Oh, have n''t they?
61878Oh, how dare you say so?
61878Oh, is n''t it, Maud? 61878 Oh, is n''t that very silly, and very unkind?
61878Oh, who will give the poor carpenter seven pounds ten?
61878Oh, why Jane Price?
61878Oh, will you, nursey?
61878Oh, you are not blackmailing the poor child? 61878 Or your special enemy?"
61878Out of your own money?
61878Over weight? 61878 Please, dear Lavinia----""You would rather not be questioned?"
61878Please, sir,said Rose,"will you be kind to us?
61878Preparations for what?
61878Pretend?
61878Rosy, do you think anything will happen to us to- night?
61878Shall I announce you, ma''am?
61878Shall you sleep at all to- night, Rosy? 61878 She hates to be laughed at; ca n''t you see that?"
61878She seemed so astonished; although, of course, what she did was----"What did she do?
61878Shocked? 61878 Should you?"
61878So do you wish it, Miss Christian? 61878 Star Lestrange?
61878Star, where are you going?
61878Suppose, mother, I were to write you; when would you get the letter?
61878Susan,said Miss Peacock after a pause,"do you know the exact circumstances under which you came to this school?"
61878Susan,said Star very earnestly,"do you know why I was so awfully wretched last night?"
61878Thank you, Miss Christian; you could n''t, I suppose, let me have another half- crown as well?
61878That''s all very well,cried Rose,"but what about me?"
61878That''s the right thought, Miss Christian, ai nt it?
61878That''s what we mean to do-- aint it, miss?
61878The what?
61878Then how did you get hold of it, Susan?
61878Then what was the matter with you? 61878 Then, doctor, if it is really your opinion that Christian Mitford is suffering from shock, what steps do you propose to take to relieve her mind?"
61878Then, you mean to tell?
61878They have certainly gone; but where?
61878To granny?
61878To run away and leave me behind?
61878Trouble, dear? 61878 Very much so; but why should we quarrel with mere words?"
61878Was she fond of me when I came?
61878Was she very old?
61878We go to- morrow morning,continued Mr. Mitford--"your mother and I. Christian, child, why do n''t you speak?"
61878We have always been friends, have n''t we, Christian?
61878We have sent for you, Christian,said her mother;"we have---- You tell, wo n''t you, Patrick?"
61878Well, Albert,she said, at the sight of the tall man,"and what is the news now?"
61878Well, Chris, I am accustomed to it by now, am I not?
61878Well, Miss Christian,said nurse,"has Rosy made herself scarce?
61878Well, Susan,she said,"the time is up; what do you mean to do?"
61878Well, now, dearies,she said,"and how are you both?
61878Well, shall I go and ask her if you may have a fire in your room? 61878 Well, what is it?"
61878Well, what is it?
61878Well, your Satinship, have you got any sweeties, any fondants, any caramels?
61878Well,said Maud,"what do you mean to do?
61878Well,said her mother,"does my list of accomplishments appeal to you?
61878Were you wretched? 61878 What I should really like, Thompson dear----""What is that, Christian?"
61878What about the front attic?
61878What about the strict- discipline school?
61878What am I to do with you, Christian? 61878 What am I to do?
61878What am I to do?
61878What are you doing now?
61878What are you doing with yourself?
61878What are you going to do about-- about to- night?
61878What are you going to do with that account?
61878What can I do to help?
61878What can be wrong, darling?
61878What day did you say the dear child was to go to her school?
61878What did she want? 61878 What do it matter if she spoils her things or not?"
61878What do you accuse me of?
61878What do you mean by a bodyguard? 61878 What do you mean, Susan?
61878What do you mean, lovey?
61878What do you mean?
61878What do you mean?
61878What do you mean?
61878What do you mean?
61878What do you think?
61878What do you want Star for?
61878What do you want?
61878What does this mean, Christian?
61878What does this mean? 61878 What does this mean?"
61878What dress will you wear, Christian?
61878What for?
61878What for?
61878What for?
61878What have they to know?
61878What is it, Louisa, my dear?
61878What is it, Miss Peacock?
61878What is it, Rose?
61878What is it, Star? 61878 What is it?
61878What is that about Christian, and having much fun, and being all right?
61878What is that? 61878 What is the matter with Christian Mitford?"
61878What is the matter?
61878What is the matter?
61878What is the message?
61878What is the wish of the majority?
61878What is to be done?
61878What is wonderful?
61878What is your name, child?
61878What possible affair is it of yours?
61878What pranks would a poor girl like me be up to? 61878 What story, darling?"
61878What things, love?
61878What''s the matter with you, Star? 61878 What''s the matter with you, Sukey?
61878What''s the matter with you? 61878 What?"
61878What?
61878Whatever are you doing, nurse?
61878Whatever for, my pet?
61878Whatever is the matter?
61878Whatever''s that for?
61878When are you going to bed, Rosy?
61878When do you start yourselves?
61878When will you have a birthday?
61878When?
61878Where are you going?
61878Where did you say you locked Star up?
61878Where do you live?
61878Where have you hidden her? 61878 Where is it?
61878Where is my child-- my darling?
61878Where is what?
61878Where would you like to go?
61878Where, and when?
61878Wherever have you hid yourself, Christian? 61878 Who are they?"
61878Who is that pretty little girl?
61878Who would n''t be fond of a girl who was made ill at the school all because she had been unkindly treated-- a girl who is quite uncommon in herself? 61878 Who''s to make the tea?"
61878Who? 61878 Whoever heard of such a thing?
61878Why Rosy,cried Christian, immensely touched,"you are not crying just because I must go?"
61878Why ca n''t you speak? 61878 Why did you do that?"
61878Why do n''t you talk?
61878Why does Miss Peacock say that you were unavoidably detained?
61878Why does n''t she speak?
61878Why ever do you sigh so, nursey?
61878Why have I been dragged into this?
61878Why have you sent for us?
61878Why should he, I should like to know? 61878 Why should n''t you stay?"
61878Why should n''t you tell us?
61878Why, Miss Christian, what do you mean?
61878Why, Miss Christie, darling,she said to the young girl,"wherever have you been?
61878Why, Rosy, is she such a softy as not to know what chink means? 61878 Why, Star, my dear,"said Jessie,"have n''t you been to bed all night?"
61878Why, Susan,said Maud, in astonishment,"however did you get it?"
61878Why, what is all this mystery?
61878Why, what is the matter, Christian?
61878Why?
61878Will you be responsible for her, Louisa?
61878Will you have the goodness to tell Miss Peacock that Miss Neil and the little girl, Christian Mitford, have arrived?
61878Will you lend it to me? 61878 Will you spend the night?"
61878Will you tell me all about it?
61878Will you walk this way, please?
61878Will you, So- and- so, and So- and- so--she mentioned a few names--"get into that wagonette?"
61878Will you?
61878Would I what, Louisa dear?
61878Would you give her a chance?
61878Would you like Maskelyne and Cook''s?
61878Would you like a cheese- cake, dear?
61878Would you like to hear a bit of a story, my deary?
61878Would you really? 61878 Yes, mother,"said Christian;"but it seems a pity, does n''t it?"
61878Yes, mumsy,said Christian;"but you can imagine I am your very pretty little girl again, ca n''t you, mumsy?"
61878Yes; but what do you think of the Zoo?
61878Yes?
61878You are certain?
61878You are certain?
61878You belong to us, Chris, do n''t you?
61878You ca n''t, Stella? 61878 You can not?"
61878You did what, dear?
61878You did what?
61878You did? 61878 You do n''t mind the children hearing it, do you, John, my son?"
61878You do n''t really think she will die, do you, Maud?
61878You do n''t really think so?
61878You have nothing further to say?
61878You knew you were disobeying?
61878You know about it?
61878You like coming to tea with me, do you not dear?
61878You mean to tell me that Star has it-- Star Lestrange?
61878You must have been very glad indeed when you were asked to come here in such a hurry-- weren''t you?
61878You never, never took that bill out of my purse?
61878You would rather keep this thing to yourself?
61878You would rather the thing was unknown, buried, forgotten?
61878You would rather your schoolfellows knew? 61878 You''d like another cup of tea, would n''t you, darling Miss Christian?"
61878You''ll have to do what?
61878You?
61878Your poor little girl wo n''t like the change-- eh?
61878_ Noblesse oblige_ forbids?
61878A bit bobby, are yer?
61878After all, was it pleasant to drift out away from all the people on the shore who beckoned to her to return?
61878Ai nt we going to have a good time?
61878Ai nt you got any money about yer?"
61878Am I right in giving that message, girls?
61878And I thought I would n''t be scolded any more, nor have my finger pricked by the horrid needlework, nor anything of that sort; and now----""Well?"
61878And as to the thing you accuse her of-- namely, having got the cakes and things from Dawson''s in the High Street-- I ask you what proof you have?"
61878And did not his eyes, and his lips, and his whole strong presence say,"Come back to me-- come back"?
61878And do n''t you know by this time, Maud, that Miss Peacock-- the dear, blessed, saintly Lavinia-- winks at our little peccadillos?
61878And do you know what made me most unhappy of all?
61878And how did you sleep?"
61878And mother?
61878And was n''t Christian really brave?
61878And was n''t she stanch and true and faithful?
61878And was n''t the adventure itself quite a grand sort of affair?
61878And where was_ there_?
61878And while we are walking I want to watch and watch, and look and look----""At the shops, do you mean?"
61878And who is your nice little friend?
61878And why should I require one?"
61878And why, do you think?
61878And will you, Philippa, take the other chair exactly opposite?
61878And would n''t I just?
61878Are n''t we, John?"
61878Are n''t you strong?"
61878Are n''t you terrified?"
61878Are n''t you, Emma?"
61878Are n''t you, Maudie?"
61878Are there no exceptions?"
61878Are we to go and enjoy ourselves, or are we to meekly sit down and give up our bit of fun?"
61878Are we to have it?"
61878Are you certain that you will be rewarded-- that the people who advertised will give you as much for finding us?"
61878Are you certain, Louisa, that you have nothing more to say?"
61878Are you going to tell us?"
61878Are you still of the same mind, Christian?
61878Are you sulky?"
61878Are you sure she is happy?"
61878Are you taking your place in the school?"
61878Are you tired?
61878Are you very frightened of death, Maud?"
61878Are you?"
61878As to you, Maud Thompson, have you anything to say?
61878But come, Chris, what have you got in your head?"
61878But do you know that I am Charlotte Corday to- day?
61878But how had they got there?
61878But how have we got here?"
61878But ought n''t we to run away on Monday?"
61878But that is a splendid school, is n''t it?"
61878But where was the enthusiasm, where the go, the fire, the pathos, of her delivery a week ago?
61878But why did you do it?
61878But why should n''t they come?
61878But why were we disturbed just when we were enjoying a special supper with Miss Forest and Mr. Frederick?
61878But why, my dear child, should not a benefactress be able to sing and dance, and make the world brighter all round?
61878By the way, where do you keep your story- books?"
61878By the way, where is your bedroom?
61878CHAPTER XXIII THE RESOLVE OF THE BODYGUARD"Why have you sent for us, Star?"
61878Ca n''t you be sorry?
61878Ca n''t you get it for me anyhow?
61878Ca n''t you remember anything at all?"
61878Ca n''t you repent?
61878Ca n''t you thank God for being so good to you?
61878Ca n''t you try?"
61878Can you really believe that two young ordinary girls are going to do such a desperate thing?"
61878Can you remember all those things?"
61878Can you tell me how to get there?"
61878Christian did not speak at all for a minute; then she said:"When do you wish me to tell?"
61878Christian replied eagerly,"Do you know your way to Russell Square?
61878Christian, do you know what you are doing?"
61878Darling Miss Peacock is sometimes angry; but who could resist the fun who had the power?
61878Did n''t they, Rosy?"
61878Did we do wrong to speak of it?"
61878Did you ask Robinson to light a fire in her room?"
61878Did you not notice, Miss Peacock, when you were sent for to hear, her recite her portion from Milton''s works, how badly she did it?"
61878Do n''t you Susan?"
61878Do n''t you like it?
61878Do n''t you remember how the people used to remark on my very pretty little girl?"
61878Do n''t you remember the time when I took you out driving in your dark- blue velvet pelisse and your blue hat?
61878Do n''t you see what a splendid plan it is?
61878Do n''t you think her name sweet?
61878Do n''t you think it a beautiful story?"
61878Do n''t you think we are all a little hard on poor Christian?"
61878Do you agree with me, Star, that Susan is at the bottom of this?"
61878Do you know the little girl who has come with Christian''s nurse to stay here?"
61878Do you know what Coventry means?"
61878Do you know what I have heard?
61878Do you mean to say you are not sorry that we have been so cruel to Christian?"
61878Do you mind my putting a little bit of blue ribbon in my copy of the Arabian Nights, Miss Thompson?"
61878Do you mind?"
61878Do you remember when she insisted on giving up her own dinner to send it to the invalid who lived on the other side of the street?
61878Do you think I like her?"
61878Do you think Star and Lucy and Angela will join us?"
61878Do you think it could be found?"
61878Do you think they will be enough till we have made our fortunes by being tambourine and dancing girls?"
61878Do you understand?"
61878Do you understand?"
61878Do you want to be all that your mother could desire?"
61878Do you wish to take the bull by the horns-- to once and for all explain to the school what you have done?
61878Does anyone else want to go to the church at Tregellick?"
61878Does n''t it you, Angel?"
61878Does that mean now or after school?"
61878First of all, how old are you?"
61878Had she confessed whatever she had to confess to Miss Peacock?
61878Had she not, finally, almost screamed in her agony, for had not real pains taken possession of her, so vivid and intense had been her imagination?
61878Had she relieved the tension?
61878Has n''t she a nice face?"
61878Has n''t she eyes like stars?
61878Have I come to be called that by a girl of the Judith Ford type?"
61878Have I said anything very, very funny, Miss Thompson?"
61878Have you a cold?"
61878Have you any other desires?"
61878Have you any you could lend me, Maud?"
61878Have you anything to say, my dear?"
61878Have you anything to suggest?"
61878Have you forgotten, Star?"
61878Have you got any money handy?"
61878Have you got any money of your own?"
61878Have you quite got over whatever detained you?"
61878How am I to treat Christian Mitford?
61878How could she live through her life in the school when all was known?
61878How did you manage to get possession of it?"
61878How do you think your schoolfellows will take it?
61878How far would seven pounds go?"
61878How is it you have got so chummy with her?"
61878How is she this morning?"
61878How is the note to get there?"
61878How much is the fare, cabby?
61878How much, Miss Thompson, ought we to give this man?"
61878How?"
61878I do n''t want just to be----""Just to be what, dear?"
61878I have almost made up my mind----""What, Christian?
61878I have nearly done getting what money I want from you; and is n''t it better to be a little short of funds than to be hated by everybody?
61878I might as well be dead, might n''t I, Rose?"
61878I only had two sovereigns when Miss Neil left me; she said they were to last until----""How long, dearest?
61878I sat by the window, and then I knelt by the window, and then-- and then---- Oh, Jessie, is she dead?
61878I suppose, Mrs. Mitford, you will soon tell her now?"
61878I wish you would not have that----""That what, Maudie?"
61878I''m not rabid, I mean; am I, girls?"
61878If I do n''t really want to spend it, may I keep it?"
61878If her character was all that Star had imagined it to be two days ago, why should the shock of what she had done make her ill?
61878If it made all the difference between success and failure, between prison and liberty, which would you choose?"
61878If so, will you kindly tear it up in our presence?"
61878If we can get home without the police finding us, do you think that my dear nursey or Miss Thompson will lock us up?
61878If you come to think of it, it is almost like a a dying wish; is n''t it, nursey?"
61878If you could see the One who is always present, would you make such an answer?"
61878In the White Corridor?"
61878In what part of the whole wide world were they now?
61878Is it a matter of conscience with you to keep this thing to yourself?"
61878Is it far from Lunnon, lydy?"
61878Is it possible that you will not confide in me?
61878Is it too near the fire?
61878Is it yes or no?"
61878Is it your own desire?"
61878Is n''t it a comfort that the precious immaculate Star should have put her foot in it?
61878Is n''t it splendid, Rosy?
61878Is n''t it thrilling?"
61878Is n''t that a good plan?"
61878Is she dead, Jessie?"
61878Is she really getting much better?"
61878Is that correct, Christian?"
61878Is your fire all right?
61878It''s a contradiction in terms, is n''t it, Maud?"
61878It''s a good long walk back to the Manor; would you honor us by having a cup of tea with us?"
61878It''s queer, is n''t it?"
61878Maud, what do you say to a girl who brings up a basketful of tuck and then says she_ has n''t_ brought it up?
61878May I say good- night now, Miss Peacock?"
61878May I?
61878May she go on with it, and will you come and listen?"
61878Miss Peacock said:"Will someone place me a chair?"
61878My other name is Jones; quite a common name, is n''t it?
61878Not coming?
61878Now tell us, why do you go with her?
61878Now then, Christian Mitford, your age, please?"
61878Now then, who''ll write the note?"
61878Now then, will you come in to the refectory, or will you have something brought up to your own room?"
61878Now, are you satisfied?"
61878Now, do you know what we are going to do with you?
61878Now, girls, can any of you give a description of what the secret banquets are really like?"
61878Now, what had shocked her?
61878Now, will you kindly go upstairs to Mrs. Peach?
61878Now, you have almost made up your mind, have you not, that you will not tell?"
61878Nurse, will you keep Rosy until the morning?"
61878Oh, by the way, what is the news of Christian?"
61878Oh, what is it?
61878Oh, what is to be done?"
61878Oh, what?
61878Oh, where was the delight and excitement of the adventure that had looked so fair before it began?
61878Oh, you bad women, what have you done with my pet?
61878One pound to pay?
61878See, ai nt I thoughtful?
61878Shall I do it for you?"
61878Shall I fetch it for you?"
61878Shall I tell the story?
61878She did, did n''t she, when she went deliberately and broke Miss Peacock''s command-- and just when Miss Peacock was in such trouble?"
61878She has been far from good; but who is perfect?
61878She said after a moment:"Was granny like me-- in appearance, I mean?"
61878She was just dozing off into real sleep when a girl entered and said:"Do you know where Star Lestrange is?"
61878She''ll be too busy to fret; do n''t you think so, Patrick?"
61878Star Lestrange, my dear, will you fetch the entire school into the hall?"
61878Star called out when she saw her:"Christian, are you using your Greek history to- night?"
61878Star, is she to go?
61878Suddenly she said:"But may I keep it?
61878The bill is the thing that condemns, is it not?"
61878The girls greatly like the present set-- don''t you, girls?"
61878The point is this: why is Christian Mitford afraid of you-- so much afraid of you that she does wrong because you tell her to?
61878Then she added impulsively,"Is n''t she the very nicest and best woman in the world?"
61878Then you think she was unhappy then?"
61878Then, as to Star, was anybody ever before so gay, so bright, so willful?
61878Then, fixing her eyes on her companion''s face, she said,"I like Christian Mitford-- don''t you?"
61878They know it all-- everything?"
61878They tried to bully her a bit, some of the most mischievous spirits, but did n''t she crush them all round?
61878This is the victim; we will guard her, wo n''t we?"
61878Thompson-- dear, darling---- You do n''t mind my calling you Thompson, do you?"
61878To what have you made up your mind?"
61878Two of them are here, but where is Stella Lestrange?"
61878Until you ran away again?"
61878Was Christian innocent or guilty?
61878Was Christian really in danger?
61878Was it true?
61878Was n''t she pretty?
61878Was not her father there?
61878Was she hanging on to the ceiling anywhere?"
61878Was there, after all, anything to be very sorry about?
61878We had better finish our business, had we not?
61878We were all very keen for your arrival, but you do n''t suppose it was simply for the sake of enjoying the first night of your sweet society?
61878We will go straight upstairs, then; you wo n''t want to see any of your companions to- night?"
61878We will look like so many cherubs, wo n''t we?
61878We''ll teach her a few things, you and me; wo n''t we, Rosy?"
61878We''re both happy; ai nt we, Miss Christian?"
61878Well, what is it?"
61878What are you doing?
61878What can I do to make you give me your confidence?"
61878What can be the matter?"
61878What can it mean?"
61878What can you afford, Christian Mitford?
61878What did it all mean?
61878What did it matter when they meant to go away on the morrow?
61878What did you say?"
61878What do you mean to do, Ethel?"
61878What do you mean?"
61878What do you mean?"
61878What do you mean?"
61878What do you say girls?
61878What do you say to two letters?"
61878What do you say, Mary?"
61878What do you take me for?"
61878What do you think is going to happen?"
61878What do you think of this?"
61878What do you think we''ll want, Rosy?
61878What do you think?"
61878What do you want?"
61878What had happened?
61878What is it, Alice?"
61878What is it, Rose?
61878What is the matter, Maud?
61878What is the matter?"
61878What is the money you are going to give me?
61878What is the use in making her miserable?
61878What is to be done?"
61878What is to be done?"
61878What is to be done?"
61878What madness had seized her when she had hinted to Florence Dixie that she would like to go home with her?
61878What more could the most particular desire?
61878What shall we do, girls?
61878What sort of man is he?"
61878What thrilling moments had not her dolls lived through?
61878What was she to believe?
61878What was she to do?
61878What was the matter?
61878What was to be done?
61878What was to be done?
61878What were you saying to Maud?"
61878What, you wo n''t?"
61878Whatever do you mean?
61878When Miss Peacock had finished speaking, Christian rose and stood before her mistress, and said in a low voice:"And you now counsel me to tell?"
61878When eight spoilt children each want the strongest and the best, what can be left for a stranger?
61878When one can only indulge in a good feed of the most unwholesome things in Christendom once a month, is one likely to forget?
61878When we return you will be---- How old are you now, Christian?"
61878Whenever did Jessie find anything a trouble?
61878Where are they?"
61878Where can it be?"
61878Where can we be?"
61878Where have you put those young lydies?
61878Where is it now, Christian?
61878Where is it?"
61878Where shall we go?"
61878Which should she select as her own rôle to- night?
61878White lies_ are_ allowable, are n''t they?"
61878Who are watching us?"
61878Who could help it who was under the guardianship of Lavinia Peacock?"
61878Who does not?
61878Who is giving the address to- night?
61878Who will believe her now?"
61878Who will solve the riddle of the months of Christian Mitford''s life?"
61878Who will tell us one?"
61878Whoever made yer get into this scrape?
61878Why are you always following her about, or she following you about?
61878Why are you so chummy with her?
61878Why did she drift and drift?
61878Why did you force her to spend her money?
61878Why did you give that girl-- Miss Dixie, I think you call her-- a note?"
61878Why did you send Christian to Dawson''s?
61878Why do you laugh?"
61878Why has she, who is naturally amiable and good and honorable, deliberately turned round and become dishonorable and treacherous?
61878Why is she afraid of you?
61878Why may n''t we have a word in it now and then?"
61878Why should Christian spend her money on food for the rest of you?"
61878Why should n''t you be just as great and noble?
61878Why should this envelope lie on the floor of the front attic?
61878Why were you unavoidably detained?"
61878Why, I could get more than that from Miss Christian; ai nt she got it in a little bag under her skirt?"
61878Why, have n''t you been William Tell and Joan of Arc and Charlotte Corday for ever so long?
61878Why, too, should she spend her money?
61878Why?"
61878Will no one offer me a chair?"
61878Will you be present also?"
61878Will you be such a darling as to take me into a slummy place?"
61878Will you confess to her?
61878Will you say to her that I am going to speak to the Mannerses, and if we can we will comply with her wishes?
61878Will you tell us the reason?"
61878Will you throw yourself on her mercy?"
61878Will you?"
61878Will you?"
61878Wo n''t it be splendid?"
61878Wo n''t we guard her double quick?"
61878Would a poor neighbor who has scarcely tasted a morsel all day be welcome, or would she be unwelcome?
61878Would it not be better to tell her?
61878Would n''t that be jolly, girls?
61878Would n''t you all gape and scream and jump about, and feel that you must fight like anything, if you listened to my stories?
61878Would n''t you like to come in and have a bit of supper?
61878Would not this, after all, be the best way out of your troubles?
61878Yes, I think I will select----""What in the world are you doing, Christian?"
61878You ca n''t tell me about that which I have spoken of, and yet you know?"
61878You can dance, ca n''t you, Miss Christian?
61878You do n''t know them, do you, Miss Lestrange?"
61878You do n''t mind, do you, darling?"
61878You know it, do n''t you, Miss Peacock?"
61878You know it, do n''t you?"
61878You know little Rose Latimer?"
61878You know the whole truth, do n''t you?"
61878You looked for something?"
61878You love her very, very much?"
61878You love soles, do n''t you?"
61878You never cross Jessie, do you?
61878You were glad, were n''t you?"
61878You will do this for me, wo n''t you, Maud?"
61878You will do your best, wo n''t you, Star?"
61878You would like me to write that recommendation for you to- night, Miss Thompson?
61878You would n''t like that, would you, miss?"
61878You would n''t like, nursey----""What, Miss Christian?"
61878You''ll ask her, miss, wo n''t you?"
61878You''ll do it, wo n''t you?"
61878You''ll tell us, wo n''t you?"
61878You''re a bit of a soft, ai nt yer, cabby?"
61878You''ve got the chink all right, have n''t you?"
61878Your pink frock is new; will you put it on?"
61878are you going to drive with us?"
61878could n''t I make the whole thing shine?
61878cried Mrs. Carter, jumping to her feet and putting her arms akimbo;"and who may you be?"
61878do you think you deserve all these luxuries?"
61878said Christian;"what can be the matter?"
61878said Miss Peacock in a kind voice;"and how are you, dear?
61878said Rose"Did you ever hear of a girl running away?"
61878said Susan;"is she too good for me?"
61878said this discerning person;"has she not the very essence of poetry-- the thing itself?"
61878was it true what that awful girl said, that if she were caught now the law of the land would put her in prison?
61878what have I said?
61878who_ would_ have thought it?"
9665''Just yet''? 9665 Ah, she was good- looking?"
9665Alecto? 9665 Am I going to be in your school, Sir?"
9665Am I to help you any more-- with the jewels?
9665And I am told you are a writer?
9665And Mr. Lathrop has arranged it all for you?
9665And he himself does n''t intend to marry?
9665And it never occurred to you to apply to your guardian in such a matter? 9665 And now there''s nothing more to be got out of me?
9665And now-- now you ca n''t?
9665And the house is empty?
9665And the meeting here?
9665And the young lady went back to the forest?
9665And what about other people? 9665 And what became of the black mare?"
9665And what right have_ you_ to complain?
9665And what the deuce do you expect to get by it all?
9665And who will sell them for you?
9665And why am I?
9665And you are satisfied?
9665And you are settled at Maumsey?
9665And you really are in sympathy with these women?
9665And you think, I suppose, that Winnie knows a good deal about it?
9665And you will take part in no acts of violence, either here or in London? 9665 And you"--the clear authoritative voice addressed Miss Toogood--"can you take round notices?"
9665And you''re going on with it?
9665Another perfection? 9665 Are n''t we trespassing?"
9665Are n''t you back very early?
9665Are we? 9665 Are you Daunt''s niece?"
9665Are you Miss Blanchflower?
9665Are you at home, Miss? 9665 Are you going to stay, Miss?"
9665Are you going to tackle Miss Andrews herself?
9665Are you in love with her, Paul?
9665Are you taking that to Miss Blanchflower?
9665Are you tired?
9665Ask my guardian to provide me with the means of helping the''Daughters''--when he regards us all as criminals? 9665 At war?"
9665Because of what we said at Latchford the other day?
9665Because?
9665But determined to make herself a nuisance to you? 9665 But just after-- you remember Mr. Lathrop''s coming-- that day--?--when you scolded me?"
9665But the cripples?
9665But the important question with me is-- the further question-- am I not really bound to restore this money to your father''s estate?
9665But they keep somebody in it?
9665But we shall get it this session, sha n''t we?
9665But why, Miss Delia, are you so careful about this man''s feelings? 9665 But you could n''t wonder at it, Miss Blanchflower, could you?"
9665By my guardian?--by Mark Winnington? 9665 By whom, please?"
9665Ca n''t we say what we think of Sir Wilfrid-- because he happens to possess a beautiful house?
9665Ca n''t you be happy with us, Susy?
9665Can anyone help?
9665Delia, then!--we have come to understand each other much better-- haven''t we?
9665Delia, you''re not going?
9665Did I?
9665Did you know that the lady living with Miss Blanchflower was a member of this League of Revolt?
9665Did you-- did you-- have such urgent letters this morning?
9665Do n''t tell me you''ve dislodged the Fury?
9665Do n''t you know what an athlete he is-- or was?
9665Do n''t you know who I am, Mr. Daunt? 9665 Do n''t you remember that Christmas dance at the Rectory, when you were ten, and I was home from Sandhurst?"
9665Do you care what he thinks?
9665Do you forget that I am nearly old enough to be her father?
9665Do you know that you wrote me a very,_ very_ nice letter?
9665Do you know-- that I''m quite alone? 9665 Do you mind if I mention another subject?"
9665Do you really want to know?
9665Do you remember-- you promised to live with me for a year?
9665Do you see her, Sir?
9665Do you see that girl?
9665Do you think they''ll get what they want?
9665Do you think you would do any better with a guardian chosen by the Court?
9665Do you?
9665Does anybody live in the house?
9665Does it make you feel triumphant?
9665Gertrude Marvell?
9665Gertrude!--she raised her voice--"What do you wish to do?"
9665Give you up!--How?
9665Good- looking?
9665H''m-- and-- has Mr. Lathrop had anything to do with the sale?
9665Have you accomplished anything?
9665Have you ever been into the village-- for a month?--for two months? 9665 He did not agree with her views?"
9665Her? 9665 His own story?"
9665How are you? 9665 How are your affairs, Paul?"
9665How can he?
9665How did she discover them?
9665How do we know who or what that girl is?
9665How do you know? 9665 How much money do you want?"
9665How old did you say it is?
9665How would it help me-- to give me up? 9665 Hullo, Daunt, is that you?
9665Hullo, Hewson-- how are you? 9665 I may feel sure-- may I not?--that you will give it up?"
9665I suppose you have heard some of the talk going about?
9665I suppose you think-- like everybody-- that because I want the vote, I ca n''t care about anything else?
9665I thought she had undertaken to be your chaperon?
9665I wonder what he''ll say?
9665I wonder whether-- you quite deserved it? 9665 I''m always so sorry"--murmured the dressmaker--"for those others-- those women-- who have n''t lived to see what we''re going to see, are n''t you?"
9665I''m not bound to tell him of those other meetings I have promised? 9665 Is Miss Marvell here?"
9665Is he in love with her-- or is he not?
9665Is it good for a village to depend so much on one person?
9665Is it my way?
9665Is it shown?
9665Is n''t he there to pay the bills?
9665Is n''t there something strange about the girl?
9665Is she taking an interest in the property-- the cottages?
9665It belongs to Sir Wilfrid Lang?
9665It is no good I think discussing this any more-- is it? 9665 Jewelry?
9665Let''s leave the horrid subject alone-- shall we?
9665Look here--_is_ she as handsome as people say?
9665Marion Andrews?
9665May I have that cheque, dear-- before post- time? 9665 May I know what was wrong with them?"
9665May I perhaps suggest-- that your father was fifty- two when he succeeded to this estate-- and that you are twenty- one?
9665May I suggest that it is not necessary to go to perdition-- at all-- fast or slow?
9665Might you not say the same of the whole-- or almost the whole of our system of inheritance?
9665Miss Blanchflower!--can you come?
9665Miss Blanchflower?
9665Miss Blanchflower?
9665Miss Delia? 9665 Miss Marvell has left you alone?--_alone_?--at a moment''s notice-- with your maid desperately ill-- and without a word to me, or anybody?"
9665Mr. Lathrop, do you-- do you know anything about jewelry?
9665Mr. Lathrop, this ought to be a matter of business between us-- if you do me so great a service?
9665My dear lady, where have you sprung from?
9665Nora!--where are you?
9665Not bad?
9665Not very secure, is it?
9665Now then-- what can we do?
9665Now, suppose you take this pencil, and twist it in the knot-- you know how? 9665 Now-- have you got anything you could tie round the arm, above the wound-- and then twist the knot?"
9665Oh, Susy, must you go?
9665Oh, so you knew that farther fact about him? 9665 On behalf of the''Daughters of Revolt''?"
9665Only my discretion? 9665 Or in London?"
9665People? 9665 Perhaps you know"--she said--"that my grandmother did n''t always get on with my mother?"
9665Pray, what?
9665Ready for tea, Mummy?
9665Ready to hand the Empire over to them-- to smash like the windows in Piccadilly?
9665Shall I bring it to- morrow? 9665 Shall I come now?"
9665Shall we ever see her again?
9665Shall we join for a theatre, one night?
9665She is not thin- skinned then?
9665She''s told you?
9665So Miss Blanchflower wanted to keep her in the village?
9665So for you, they''re all heroines-- and saints?
9665So sorry to be a nuisance-- but have you got a spare handkerchief? 9665 So you still keep the electric light going?"
9665So you talk to him?
9665So you think we ought to give up the flat? 9665 So you were at another of these meetings last night?"
9665Still he might object-- Ought you not to ask him?
9665Stop these meetings? 9665 Suffragist?"
9665That I''m shirking-- giving in? 9665 The guardianship?
9665The meetings?
9665Then I ca n''t persuade you to give up these meetings? 9665 Then what on earth does she come and bury herself down here for?"
9665Then why did you threaten to give me up if I went on seeing him?
9665Then you do n''t trust me at all?
9665Then you have no more work for me?
9665Then you''ll be all alone?
9665They could n''t find you anything?
9665They say he''s never here?
9665Thinking of what?
9665This last week-- we have been very good friends-- haven''t we, Miss Delia?
9665Through this uncomfortable world? 9665 To this flat?"
9665Unkind to you?
9665Was that so?
9665Well, did you see Miss Blanchflower?
9665Well, mother-- how are you?
9665Well, what then?
9665Well-- and were you pleased with your raid?
9665Well-- did I-- did you-- make the physical difference between men and women? 9665 Well?
9665Well?
9665Well?
9665What about my debt-- and what do you mean?
9665What are his particular virtues? 9665 What are most women in hospital for?"
9665What are they? 9665 What are you really preparing to do to- morrow?"
9665What can I do for you?
9665What can he do? 9665 What can people from_ here_ be writing to me about?"
9665What can we_ do_?
9665What did I hear?
9665What did she matter? 9665 What did you hear yesterday?"
9665What did you say?
9665What do you mean?
9665What do you want? 9665 What does anyone know about a_ man_?"
9665What else could it be? 9665 What else does he expect?"
9665What else?
9665What fanatic is? 9665 What have I been wasting my time here for?"
9665What have I done?
9665What have we agreed on? 9665 What have you seen?--what can she be doing?"
9665What house?
9665What human being of any intelligence-- and I am intelligent,she added, quietly,--"ever confessed to being''satisfied''?
9665What is this?
9665What might you be wanting, gentlemen?
9665What on earth can that fellow be doing here?
9665What on earth made you do it? 9665 What promise?"
9665What school does she mean?
9665What sort of promise do you want?
9665What speech?
9665What talk?
9665What thing?
9665What''s that house over there?
9665What''s the good of arguing?
9665What''s the good of''faith''--and what does anyone mean by it? 9665 What''s the matter?"
9665What''s the nearest house-- or cottage?
9665What''s your business, please?
9665What-- the vote? 9665 What?
9665When does the House meet?
9665When have I ever shown you that I wished to desert you-- or-- the League?
9665When were you at Monk Lawrence?
9665When you took her into the back drawing- room?
9665Where are you going to now, Gertrude? 9665 Where has that money gone, Miss Delia?"
9665Where have you been?
9665Which means-- get into an ugly scrimmage with the police, and put your cause back another few years?
9665Who are they?
9665Who is her guardian?
9665Who is that?
9665Who''s a- makin''slaves of you, Ma''am? 9665 Who?
9665Who?
9665Why ca n''t you keep her in order?
9665Why ca n''t you work at it?
9665Why ca n''t you?
9665Why did n''t you tell me?
9665Why did you ask that horrid woman?
9665Why did you ever let us taste education?--if you are to deny us for ever political equality?
9665Why do n''t you go-- instead of writing?
9665Why do n''t you write another book?
9665Why do you suspect Miss Marvell, or a plot at all? 9665 Why is n''t he at Monk Lawrence?"
9665Why is she going?
9665Why must I believe it?
9665Why not out of sympathy? 9665 Why not?
9665Why not?
9665Why not?
9665Why should you take away all my pleasure in the little adventure?
9665Why should you? 9665 Why, darling, how could we do without you?
9665Why?
9665Why?
9665Will you forgive me if I ask an impertinent question?
9665Will you go, Delia?
9665With Miss Marvell?
9665With stones-- I presume?
9665With such a lot of wild women about, what can you expect?
9665With the movement?
9665Work?
9665Would the vote help you? 9665 Would you consider asking Lady Tonbridge to come and stay with you?
9665Yes, but what are you going to give us to_ do_, Miss Blanchflower?
9665Yes?
9665You are going up to London?
9665You are not hurt?
9665You are not musical?
9665You are, I think, from Sweden?
9665You call it life?
9665You dare n''t shew it?
9665You do n''t find many English newspapers in these Tyrolese hotels?
9665You do n''t mean that Lady Tonbridge lives in this neighbourhood?
9665You do n''t mean to say you''re going in to Latchford again?--and without waiting for some food?
9665You gave them all something to do except that Miss Andrews, Gertrude? 9665 You get so much pleasure out of it?"
9665You intend-- to see him again?
9665You know him, of course, already?
9665You mean I ought to take a commission?
9665You mean that?
9665You mean-- am I a feminist? 9665 You mean-- because of the divorce case?"
9665You mean-- that violence-- has been a mistake?
9665You mean-- you may have-- after all-- to give me up?
9665You mean-- you want to see him alone? 9665 You mean-- you''re-- you''re too deeply pledged to this Society?"
9665You really find it substantially better to walk with?
9665You really think so? 9665 You said you would like to come and see some of the village people-- your own people-- and the school?
9665You seem likely to have some disturbance here tomorrow?
9665You smoke, Madame?
9665You thought I was rich? 9665 You want me to promise not to do it again?"
9665You went to_ him_--instead of to me? 9665 You will be going up soon, wo n''t you?"
9665You will of course explain?
9665You will of course understand-- that I can not_ acquiesce_ in that arrangement?
9665You wo n''t be always saying''I told you so?''
9665You wo n''t offend-- insult him?
9665You''ll let me take you to the flat? 9665 You''re going up to town?"
9665You''re still-- quite_ certain_--that she''s concerned?
9665You''re sure?
9665You''ve been going on with the millinery?
9665You''ve found her?
9665Your aunt, Miss Blanchflower?
9665Your firm does the estate business down here?
9665Your poor maid? 9665 _ Ca n''t_ I persuade you-- to be guided by me-- as your father wished-- during these next years of your life?
9665_ Could_ you go and talk to Miss Andrews?
9665_ Tu m''aimes_, Mimi?
9665***** And Winnington?
9665***** What did she say?
9665*****"A rather nice old place, is n''t it?"
9665*****"Is Miss Marvell, in?
9665*****"Will you come and look at the house?"
9665--cried Delia,"where did you hear that?"
9665--he said slowly--"that she may n''t have been got hold of?"
9665--she recommended to us the lady who is now living with me here-- my chaperon-- Miss Marvell?"
9665A Swedish writer, a woman travelling alone?
9665A footwarmer?"
9665After a short silence, she said--"What will you do?"
9665Aloud he said--"Do you know anything about that lady Miss Blanchflower had with her?
9665An hour-- an hour and a half?--since you were there?"
9665And Mark thought no doubt she would have done the like for anyone else with a charitable hobby?
9665And as to that, should you not ask yourself-- had not your father a right, even a duty, to look after the disposal of his money as he thought best?
9665And as to their hopes and expectations-- why was it they now seemed to her so foolish and so ignorant?
9665And if a woman''s life dashed itself to pieces in the process, well, what matter?
9665And if not, how can men rightly share with women the act which controls those tasks, and chooses the men to execute them?
9665And is it still impossible that you should meet my wishes-- and refuse to see him again?"
9665And last-- who on earth would dare to attack Monk Lawrence?
9665And meanwhile, what was Mark Winnington about?
9665And now-- had the heart of flesh become a heart of stone?
9665And she-- could she, could I, could any woman I know, fight Mark Winnington-- and not love him all the time?
9665And the Fury?
9665And the old father says--''What am I to do, Miss?
9665And the vote behind them?--the political act which chose and sent them there?
9665And the wickedness of men?
9665And there seemed to me to be more volunteers than ever for''special service''?"
9665And there were many times when sitting up in bed alone, suffering and sleepless, she asked herself bitterly--"were we just fools!--just fools?"
9665And what about the beauty that men destroy?
9665And what''ll it do for them?
9665And when he had done her such a service, if he succeeded in doing it-- how was she to turn round on him, and cut him the very next moment?
9665And where is Sir Alfred?
9665And where is the drawing- room?"
9665And where-- is the rest of me going?"
9665And why should n''t one take up one''s policy from time to time and look at it, all round, with a free mind?
9665And why should n''t you?"
9665And why were her eyes filling with tears?
9665And"--his old friend put a hand on his arm--"May I go on?"
9665Are n''t they there to do such things?"
9665Are you against us?--or has Miss Delia converted you?"
9665Are you alone?"
9665Are you at all rested?
9665Are you hurt?"
9665Are you interested in it?"
9665Are you one of us?"
9665Are you quite comfortable?
9665Are you staying on with that lady in Hamptonshire?"
9665Ask if she will see Mr. Lathrop for a few minutes?"
9665At last he said in a changed tone--"Have I been saying anything to wound you?
9665Betray her friend?--go to Winnington for help?
9665But afterwards?
9665But at last she said--"You could n''t prevail on her to give up any of these performances?"
9665But do you think Miss Marvell would take much pains to protect it?"
9665But he had a great many women friends?
9665But how a feminist?"
9665But how can I, just yet?
9665But how could I tell?
9665But how could she help it?
9665But how to realise the jewels?
9665But now, may I know the name of the prophetess?"
9665But presently the lady at the table asked--"Is Miss Blanchflower getting up?"
9665But she merely said--"And the others?"
9665But she said nothing, except to ask-- as she paused in front of Gertrude--"Where are you going-- and who is going with you?"
9665But the great question for me is-- how are we going to manage him for the best?"
9665But then comes the question: Is_ she_ loveable?
9665But what was he to do?
9665But who could answer for the future?
9665But why has n''t he as good a right to his opinion as we to ours-- without being threatened with personal violence?"
9665But why was the fire gone out of the old faiths, the savour from the old hopes?
9665But you know her of course?"
9665But you seem to be without it to- night?"
9665But you still want it-- the vote-- as much as ever?"
9665But you wo n''t wire from the village?"
9665But you''ll let_ me_ shew her the house, I imagine?"
9665But you?
9665But, fundamentally?
9665But-- am I really to advise?
9665Ca n''t I do what I like with my own house?
9665Ca n''t you give us a hundred years for the Woman Question?
9665Ca n''t you see, Mark?
9665Can I go to bed?
9665Can I not persuade you-- now-- to give up the Latchford meeting, and any others of the same kind you may have ahead?"
9665Can the children find their way home alone?"
9665Can we unmake it?"
9665Can you manage?"
9665Can you trust yourself?
9665Chapter XV"Do you know anything more?"
9665Chapter XVI"So I must n''t argue any more?"
9665Could n''t the jealous gods spare even this physical perfection?
9665Delia looked up impetuously--"Then why, Mr. Winnington, did you consent to be my guardian?"
9665Delia made no reply, and Winnington took another turn up and down before he paused in front of her with the words:--"Ca n''t we come to a compact?
9665Did I hear you telling Miss Blanchflower you ca n''t let her in?
9665Did he ever guess that there was something else in her than this obstinacy, this troublesomeness with which she was forced to meet him?
9665Did it really rankle in her mind?
9665Did n''t I say all you expected me to say at Latchford?
9665Did n''t you think so, father?"
9665Did you write to him to arrange it?"
9665Distress of mind-- distress for his trumpery wound?--had shaken her, brought her back to youth and childishness?
9665Do n''t you find it so?"
9665Do n''t you think it rather a nuisance?"
9665Do you imagine I should want to dictate to you-- or tyrannise over you?
9665Do you know him?
9665Do you know that you have a face''to launch a thousand ships?''
9665Do you know what the Daughters have been doing in town?
9665Do you suppose you can ever turn me into a bread- and- butter miss?
9665Do you think I look the kind of person for nocturnal adventures?--a cripple-- on a stick?
9665Does she show any of it to you?"
9665Does that convey anything to you?"
9665Eighty women arrested-- Miss Marvell among the ringleaders, for all of whom bail has been refused?
9665Flourishing?"
9665For that_ might_ perhaps secure Winnington''s silence?
9665France?
9665France?"
9665Free to follow Gertrude or not, according to her judgment?
9665Frost do it?"
9665Gertrude gave an absent touch to the girl''s beautiful hair, and then said--"So you_ will_ take these four meetings?"
9665Gertrude looked up--"When did you say that man-- Mr. Winnington-- was coming?"
9665Gertrude went up to town this morning?"
9665Had Gertrude realised that?--counted upon it?
9665Had he ever faced the problem, as it concerned England, with any thoroughness or candour?
9665Had he perhaps discovered anything more?
9665Had it reminded her of that speech in the Latchford marketplace from which he was certain she had recoiled, no less than he?
9665Had she not for years desired few things so sincerely as to see Winnington happily married?
9665Hallo, what''s this?"
9665Handsome?
9665Has n''t it taken more than a hundred years to settle that Irish question, which began with the Union?
9665Have n''t I promised-- a hundred things?
9665Have you been talking to her?"
9665Have you done any First Aid?"
9665Have you got books to amuse you?"
9665Have you heard the news?"
9665Have you seen the_ Times_ this morning?"
9665He longed to persuade her, convince her, soothe her; but what chance for it, under the conditions she had chosen for her life?
9665He raised his voice sharply--"What''s your business here, Ma''am?
9665He smiled down upon the nestling creature--"Has Miss Amberley been to see you lately, Lily?"
9665He started, and looked at her keenly--"You know something I do n''t know?"
9665He was silent a moment, and then said, taking her hands, and putting them to his lips--"Wo n''t you explain?"
9665Heavens!--how does he endure it?"
9665How about the singing?
9665How could anybody tell-- she would turn out such a creature?
9665How could she recall her action?
9665How could they ever get on without her?
9665How long have you been with him?
9665How would Susan Amberley be affected by this new interest in Mark Winnington''s life?
9665I am sure you believe that?"
9665I could have lovers-- of course-- just like other girls-- if it weren''t"-- For what?
9665I hope I may come and see you soon?"
9665I hope you and Mrs. Matheson have had a good time?
9665I see that you are speaking on the same platform-- with Mr. Paul Lathrop--""And why not?"
9665I sit and spin yarns about Drawing- rooms and Court balls, and it all helps.--When did you get home?"
9665I suppose it was that made him leave the army?"
9665I suppose she wants you to sell something more for her?"
9665I suppose you have heaps of jewels?"
9665I wonder if there is anybody in the field already?"
9665I wonder why you left her out?"
9665I''m so sorry, but you wo n''t mind my coming to say so?"
9665If I agree to London-- say for six or seven weeks-- is there no promise you can make me in return?"
9665If I am to do my duty to the people on this estate--""I thought you were n''t going to live on the estate?"
9665If she could not provide money for the"Daughters"what particular use could she be to Gertrude, or Gertrude''s Committee?
9665If you really meant it?"
9665Including Delia herself?
9665Instead, he asked her in a guarded voice--"You are as busy as ever?"
9665Is it a hundred years since it was a hanging matter to steal a handkerchief off a hedge?
9665Is n''t he splendid?"
9665Is n''t that a sign of the times?"
9665Is n''t the science of government developing every day?
9665Is that all done with too?"
9665Is that why you want it?"
9665Is there any difficulty?"
9665Is there anything you can do to help me?
9665It would n''t be good policy, would it?"
9665Lady Tonbridge opened the drawing- room door with a scared face--"What is it?
9665Lady Tonbridge?
9665Lathrop?"
9665Let''s have a look at the back and the terrace, and then we''ll be off; Sir Wilfrid coming here?"
9665Lily!--don''t you remember me?"
9665Look here!--have you ever seen it?"
9665Marriage?
9665Marvell-- Gertrude Marvell?--I seem to have heard the name somewhere.--Hullo, Masham, how are you?"
9665May I come in?"
9665May I come to you?"
9665May I know your reasons?"
9665May n''t I come and help with some of your cripple children?
9665May we shut the door?"
9665Merian broke out indignantly--"I say, Lathrop-- why should you try and play up to that cynic there?
9665Militancy?
9665Miss Blanchflower?
9665Miss Marvell?"
9665More tea?"
9665Must I leave them out?"
9665Must the fairy herself-- Euphrosyne-- come to such a muddy vesture in the end?
9665No need for women in the home tasks-- the national house- keeping of this our England?
9665Now what can I do for Delia?"
9665Of course-- if it were Monk Lawrence--""Well-- if it were Monk Lawrence?"
9665Only-- could one entirely trust anybody like Delia Blanchflower-- so prosperous-- and so good- looking?
9665Or to your lawyer?"
9665Perhaps the young lady will walk in?"
9665Perhaps you''ll explain to this young lady?
9665Shall I be your messenger?
9665Shall I go and see if he''ll let us in?
9665Shall we go in?"
9665She came?"
9665She hesitated, but how could she refuse?
9665She was then a paid speaker?
9665So he had once been engaged?
9665So she was teaching one of Mark''s crippled children?
9665So you are Billy Andrews?"
9665So, all along, this very annoying-- though attaching-- young woman had imagined that Winnington was being handsomely paid for putting up with her?
9665Suddenly she said--"Do you remember when you wanted me to say-- I was sorry for Gertrude''s speech-- and I would n''t?"
9665Suddenly she went up to him--"Will you-- will you promise me to write civilly?"
9665Suppose he undertook it, on what lines could he possibly run it?
9665That I am sure you will promise me?"
9665The London lawyers?
9665The Suffrage and that kind of thing?"
9665The first page was entirely given up to an article headed"How LONG?"
9665The girl then was as handsome as she promised to be?
9665The local solicitor, Mr. Masham?
9665The vote?
9665Then Delia said abruptly--"I wonder when that man will turn up?
9665Then Mrs. France said, not without embarrassment--"Your father desired she should live with you?"
9665Then he said, looking away--"Do you think you need have said that?"
9665Then it flashed upon her--"Has she ever seen him?"
9665Then she looked enquiringly at Winnington--"You met that man going away?"
9665Then she turned suddenly on her companion--"Tell me really, Delia-- how long do you want to stay here?"
9665Then, after a moment--"So you''re not coming down to Maumsey any more?"
9665There was no such idea in your mind when we went over the house together?"
9665Until-- What had happened?
9665Was he at home?
9665Was it an onslaught upon men?"
9665Was it any wonder that Daunt bristled at the sight of her?
9665Was it hatefully true-- after all-- that she was being influenced-- drawn away?
9665Was n''t that strange?"
9665Was she alone to desert, to fail-- both the cause and her friend, who had taught her everything?
9665Was she jealous of that poor ghost, and of all those delicate, domestic qualities with which her biographer could not but invest her?
9665Was she less moved by the sufferings, the toils, the weakness of her sex?
9665Was she never to be believed, never to be taken seriously?
9665Was she no longer worthy of the great crusade, the vast upheaval?
9665Was she, perchance, the Swedish_ Schriftstellerin_ of whom he had heard the porter talking to some of the hotel guests?
9665Was such a form made for sordid violence and strife?
9665Was that Gertrude pacing outside?
9665Was that serious?"
9665Was that very wrong of me?"
9665Was there anything so brief, so passing, if she did but know it, as a woman''s time for happiness?
9665Was there ever a great cause won without setting kin against kin?
9665We can walk through, ca n''t we?"
9665We must come to some understanding with him, must n''t we, before we can do anything?
9665We shall get all we want before long?"
9665We''re not exactly in good odour just now, are we?"
9665Well!--have you read any Madame de Noailles?"
9665Well, what could it bring them?
9665Were these light- limbed, dark- eyed maidens under his eyes touched with this new anarchy?
9665Weston moved uneasily--"Miss Delia?"
9665What about that hunted- looking girl, the Captain''s sister?
9665What are you doing?
9665What are you here for?"
9665What but the lavished blood and brain of England''s sons?--that rude primal power that men alone can bring to their country?
9665What can I do?
9665What can we do?"
9665What could a girl do, all alone-- groping in such a darkness?
9665What could account for such an eclipse of all her young vivacity?
9665What could that have had to do with the sudden contraction of the beautiful brow, the sudden look of terror-- or distress?
9665What did he really think of her?
9665What did it matter how you played the old game, or with what counters, so long as it was played?
9665What did it matter?
9665What do you mean by that?"
9665What do you want with him?"
9665What does it signify?--a little sooner or later?"
9665What else have you to do, I should like to know, than your home duties?"
9665What had become of the imperious absent- minded young woman of ordinary days?
9665What had happened to her?
9665What had happened to the girl?
9665What hold should I have on this girl-- this splendid creature-- if I were merely to make money out of her?
9665What indeed could they do, with a young lady of full age,--bent on her own way?
9665What is it actually going to mean, in struggle for life and happiness that lies before every modern Community?
9665What is to prevent the women from attacking it?"
9665What is wrong with the world?
9665What more likely indeed, with this wild campaign sweeping through the country?
9665What must he think of her?
9665What nation could so easily as we evolve new forms out of the old to fit new needs?
9665What on earth had been happening to her?
9665What people?"
9665What shall we ever get out of her as a married woman?
9665What soil so rich as England in the seed of political ideas?
9665What was really in her mind?--or, for the matter of that, in his own?
9665What was she before she knew Gertrude?
9665What was she to do?
9665What was that blaze in the night, lighting up earth and sea, but an emblem of women''s revolt flaming up in the face of dark injustice and oppression?
9665What was the use of replying?
9665What was this strong insurgent feeling he could neither reason with nor silence?
9665What would Mark Winnington-- to whom she will give herself, body and soul,--allow us to get out of her?
9665What would be the situation, supposing he undertook what his old friend asked of him?
9665What would he say when he spoke again?
9665What_ are_ you doing?"
9665What_ was_ there at the back of the girl''s mind?
9665When Delia had gone upstairs to chat with Weston, Lady Tonbridge looked at Winnington--"To what do we owe this crowning mercy?
9665When Susy turned back towards the Rectory, Delia said abruptly--"She''s helped you a great deal?"
9665When shall I have them?"
9665When they emerged from the cottage Susy said shyly to Delia--"Wo n''t you come to tea with me some day next week?"
9665Whenever I go up town, it''s the same--''When''s she coming?''
9665Where am I?"
9665Where are you off to?
9665Where are you taking her?"
9665Where could one find four persons a day, in Maumsey, or near Maumsey, who want to learn French?
9665Where had he been all these years?
9665Where was Gertrude herself?
9665Where was the quiet lady in grey?
9665Where''s''Liza Daunt, I say?
9665Whither was he drifting?
9665Who could deny it?
9665Who dislodged her?"
9665Who knew it better than he?
9665Who would copy out his sermons, or help with the schools?
9665Who would help her?
9665Who''s coming to your tea- party?"
9665Who?"
9665Why ca n''t I come with you to the sea?"
9665Why ca n''t we be allowed like men-- to stumble along our own way?
9665Why deny it?
9665Why did n''t the heiress burn everything and begin again?
9665Why did she take the children away?
9665Why did that man take the guardianship?
9665Why do n''t you play the man of letters business?
9665Why do n''t you stop it?"
9665Why do you ask?
9665Why feel these things so much?
9665Why had she been such a fool as to come to Monk Lawrence at all, and then to submit to seeing it-- on sufferance!--in Winnington''s custody?
9665Why had she never thought of such a device before?
9665Why is Lady Tonbridge here?
9665Why not come up with me next week, even if the flat''s not ready?
9665Why not put up something temporary?--cross- bars of some sort?"
9665Why not?
9665Why not?"
9665Why on earth did he keep her waiting?
9665Why should I distress and inconvenience you?"
9665Why should n''t I have a vote-- as well as you?"
9665Why should n''t I vote as well as you?
9665Why should n''t a woman be allowed to die in her old home,--so long as she pays the rent?
9665Why should n''t he achieve it?
9665Why should she dream of such a thing?
9665Why should there be any more friction between them at all?
9665Why?
9665Will she stick to it?"
9665Will you take me home?"
9665Will you try the new car and have tea with us on Thursday?"
9665Winnington?
9665Winnington?"
9665Winnington?"
9665Winnington?"
9665Wo n''t you sit down?
9665Would any friend, any real_ friend_ have left you alone through this Weston business?
9665Would she have"purged"her promise-- paid her shot-- recovered the governance of herself?
9665Would she then be free?
9665Would you kindly take charge of the cheque for her?
9665Yet why"feared"?
9665You know Mr. Winnington has offered me a commission?"
9665You know her?"
9665You know that old woman, Mrs. Cresson, is not all there, and quite helpless?"
9665You mean they are implicated in these things?"
9665You say it''s a poor sort of fighting-- and what do we hope to get by it?
9665You say we can get a good man from Brownmouth?"
9665You think it might all be finished in a week?"
9665You will promise?"
9665You wo n''t be able to banish him!--Well, so the child is lovely?
9665You''re coming here to live?
9665You''re not exactly made of flint: Can you play the part as it ought to be played?"
9665You-- you wo n''t be doing any more embroidery to- night?"
9665_ Ach_, they have told you?--of that_ Vortrag_ she gave?--and the rest?
9665_ Ought_ the young to resent it?"
9665and interesting?"
9665cried Delia.--"You must let me help!--won''t you?"
9665or something?
9665or the school?
9665said Blaydes--"what''s the matter?"
9665she gasped, between her teeth-- then to Winnington--"Where are you taking me?
9665what have you done to make me love you so?"
41932''A handsome, graceless, penniless younger son? 41932 ''But how can he be popular,''I persisted,''if he is what you say?''
41932''But what will become of me when my parents find it out?'' 41932 ''But why?''
41932''Captain Studleigh,''I asked,''why do people call you faithless and debonair?'' 41932 ''Do they?''
41932''Do you really think so, Ulric?'' 41932 ''Estelle,''she said,''I hope I have not been foolish, and aided you in folly?''
41932''Good- for- nothing,''I repeated;''how is that? 41932 ''How will it be?''
41932''I will do all that I possibly can,''I said;''but----''''But what?''
41932''Indeed, where did you see it?'' 41932 ''Is a man''s heart made of wax, do you think?
41932''Is it true that all the Studleighs are faithless?'' 41932 ''Is she married?''
41932''My dear Estelle,''she said,''have you been long with Captain Studleigh?'' 41932 ''My dear Lady Hereford,''he said,''if her grace were at hand, do you suppose I should be allowed this delightful half hour here with you?''
41932''Sometimes you will let me forget graver anxieties, graver cares, the troubles of my life, in talking to you?'' 41932 ''Then what is to be done, Estelle?''
41932''Then why did you tell your mother you had been with me?'' 41932 ''Was she tired of Brackenside?''
41932''What am I to do?'' 41932 ''What can I do, Ulric?''
41932''What have I done?'' 41932 ''What is that?''
41932''What model do you mean?'' 41932 ''Where is that?''
41932''Who introduced you to him?''
41932''Who says I have done so, Agnes?'' 41932 ''Why can he never make money?''
41932''Why not?'' 41932 ''Will you tell me why, mamma?''
41932''You mean, help you to keep the secret of your marriage?'' 41932 A poet?
41932A young poet?--who is he?
41932AFTER SO MANY YEARS OF DREAD HAS IT COME AT LAST?
41932About our wedding, darling? 41932 After that?"
41932Ah, Dora, why have you driven me mad? 41932 Allow?
41932Am I a coincidence?
41932Am I looking so well?
41932Am I very beautiful?
41932And I wonder if she will love us?
41932And Mark Brace is going to keep the child, mamma?
41932And he is to be married, you say? 41932 And her parents have never been found?"
41932And how does that work?
41932And if there had been?
41932And it is a shameful story, is it not?
41932And not flirt with Earle Moray? 41932 And that was by her own especial desire?"
41932And there is a place waiting for me in the grand world?
41932And what did you think?
41932And what have you done with her all these years?
41932And what have_ you_ been doing?
41932And what kind of a child is it?
41932And what was he like?
41932And what will interest you?
41932And what would you call my picture?
41932And what would you imagine that reason to be?
41932And where is the phoenix of girls?
41932And why would n''t I?
41932And will you agree to what will make me happy?
41932And you call that honor?
41932And you marry a man who has almost none?
41932And you mean me to teach them?
41932And you say the child is healthy and pretty?
41932And you think it possible that I should remain for her sake? 41932 And you will be good to me, my darling?"
41932And you will come with me to my home, Linleigh Towers, and reign there as its mistress and queen?
41932And you will marry me? 41932 And,"interrupted the duchess,"have you heard any more?
41932Are there any new people?
41932Are you cold, my darling?
41932Are you not at home and happy here?
41932Are you pleased, my darling?
41932Are you quite sure you are not mistaken, Earle?
41932Are you?
41932As the man you have promised to marry, as the man who alone on earth has the right to question you, tell me how you are living here now?
41932Because I am so much like some one else?
41932Because,he cried, with sudden passion,"you are so much like her-- do you not see?
41932Before or after she had found her soul?
41932Bless the boy-- the poet, I ought to say; what does he mean?
41932Brought on by what?
41932But how and where, Doris?
41932But how can it be like a stranger I never heard of?
41932But how can you make her your wife, Lord Vivianne?
41932But how long will we have a home, Patty? 41932 But how would you get it?"
41932But if they come to reclaim her, as I have expected?
41932But if you knew me, and knew that I ought to recognize you, why did you ask for an introduction to me?
41932But is it ours?
41932But what in me seems to you the image of''_ Innocence_?''
41932But what would he think of this secret? 41932 But where can she have gone?"
41932But why not? 41932 But why with me?
41932But why, of all other places, did you think of Florence?
41932But would he and Lady Linleigh be willing to give up the remainder of the season?
41932But you have? 41932 But you love him?"
41932But you will not act in that way with Earle?
41932But you will not tell who or where is the original? 41932 But, Doris, you-- you love Earle?"
41932But, Lady Hereford, what is it that you think I can do for you?
41932But, my dear child, how can you be?
41932But_ why_ are you indifferent?
41932Ca n''t I wait-- an hour, a day, a week, a month, a year?
41932Ca n''t you tell me how to get what I want?
41932Can I give him up? 41932 Can I make you happy, Earle?"
41932Can I take it?
41932Can a girl have two lovers?
41932Can it be Lady Estelle Hereford?
41932Can we not ask him before then, papa?
41932Clifford,said Lord Vivianne,"do you know that girl-- the one with diamonds in her golden hair, and white flowers in her hands?"
41932Coming to- day, is he, papa?
41932Could you? 41932 Could your own mother have pleased you more?"
41932Dead?
41932Did I? 41932 Did I?
41932Did it? 41932 Did she ask you to help her to find a situation?"
41932Did she die?
41932Did she ever talk to you about any of her school- fellows?
41932Did she love her lover very much?
41932Did she run away from all her friends, too?
41932Did they see me?
41932Did you ever doubt it, my lovely, sentimental darling?
41932Did you like Downsbury Castle?
41932Did you make that poetry?
41932Did you not know that he was coming here in February?
41932Did you not put the things in, to begin with?
41932Did you not? 41932 Did you really?"
41932Did you think I was mad that day in the chestnut grove?
41932Did you, Doris? 41932 Did you?
41932Different?
41932Do I look as if I could work?
41932Do I look bright and brilliant again?
41932Do I weary you, Earle Moray, with these details?
41932Do I? 41932 Do not think me impertinent, my lord, if I ask whether there was any rival in the case?
41932Do they know anything at Brackenside of this wonderful story, Earle?
41932Do you know how I shall try to reward you, Earle?
41932Do you know that if they were real they would be worth hundreds and hundreds of pounds? 41932 Do you know that it is even a relief to me that the worst is come?
41932Do you know what I have come all the way from London to ask you?
41932Do you know what I wish?
41932Do you know, Estelle, I have an idea that Doris is very much changed? 41932 Do you like mysteries?"
41932Do you love me better than ever, Ulric?
41932Do you love me so very dearly?
41932Do you mean that you will never see it set again?
41932Do you mean to tell me that I was that child? 41932 Do you not wonder what has brought me here, Dora?"
41932Do you not? 41932 Do you realize that in destroying me you destroy yourself; that you will make yourself more hated and despised than any man ever was before?
41932Do you really mean this, Doris?
41932Do you really think so? 41932 Do you really wish that, Doris?"
41932Do you remember the farmer we went to see?
41932Do you see that light? 41932 Do you suppose he will one day go to London and be great?"
41932Do you think I shall betray myself, Ulric?
41932Do you think that I am scolding you, Estelle?
41932Do you want me to go?
41932Do you want me to go?
41932Do you, Lady Linleigh?
41932Does Earle know it?
41932Does it please you, Doris? 41932 Does she love me?
41932Dora,he said,"for the sake of old times-- of the old love-- will you not give me one kiss?"
41932Doris, do you know what I have done?
41932Doris, has that anything to do with your coldness to me?
41932Doris,he said to himself;"but how comes she here?"
41932Doris,he said, gently,"have I been so unfortunate as to displease you?"
41932Doris,he said,"my dear child, what are you going to do to Lord Vivianne?
41932Doris,he said,"you have always believed yourself to be the daughter of Mark and Patty Brace, have you not?"
41932Doris,said Mattie, anxiously,"_ have_ you any soul?"
41932Doris,said Mattie,"who could have believed that you were such a great lady after all?"
41932Doris,said Mattie,"will you come out?
41932Doris,said the countess, gently,"could you not fancy that I am your mother, and talk to me as freely as you would have done to her?"
41932Earl of Linleigh?
41932Earle, do you play billiards?
41932Earle, what has happened?
41932Earle,interrupted Lady Doris,"do you think Lady Linleigh looks tired?"
41932Earle,said Mark, suddenly,"will you tell Mattie about this affair when we are gone?
41932Earle,she asked, in a low pained voice,"are you still thinking of going in search of her?"
41932Earle,she cried suddenly,"do you know what I wish?"
41932Earle,she said, with a faint attempt at a smile,"I do not look much like the belle of the ball now, do I?"
41932Earle,she said,"do you remember how I used to long for a life like this?
41932Earle? 41932 Eh?
41932Eh? 41932 Eh?
41932Estelle, do you consent?
41932Estelle,he said, gently,"what is the matter?"
41932Estelle,he said, in a low voice,"who is it that young girl resembles-- some one we know well?
41932Estelle,said the duke, at length,"are you going to drive to- day?"
41932Estelle,said the earl,"of course the duke and duchess have not an inkling of our secret?"
41932Estelle,she said,"tell us where your child was born, and who helped you to deceive us?"
41932Give what up?
41932Gone abroad?
41932Had your lady any enemy?
41932Has Miss Innocence been unkind to you, that you look so dull?
41932Has she any heart?
41932Have I not said I love you Earle?
41932Have I not? 41932 Have I the pleasure of speaking to a visitor at the Castle?"
41932Have you any secret, sensible reason for what you ask, Doris?
41932Have you decided yet about your wedding- dress?
41932Have you enjoyed it, Doris?
41932Have you ever been in Italy?
41932Have you finished thinking yet, Doris?
41932Have you thought,she asked,"what, if you do this deed, the world will say of you and to you?
41932Have you? 41932 How am I living?"
41932How am I to leave you? 41932 How am I to tear myself away?"
41932How can I be angry?
41932How can I best atone for this folly and sin of my youth? 41932 How can I tell?
41932How can I wear such a splendid ring?
41932How can it?
41932How can you say such a thing? 41932 How could I,"he retorted,"while you were here?"
41932How could I? 41932 How did she leave you?"
41932How did you lose her?
41932How did you obtain admittance, my lord?
41932How do you know, unless you have read it?
41932How do you know,asked the earl,"that she had plenty of time?"
41932How do you know?
41932How do you think Lady Studleigh is looking?
41932How does he love you?
41932How foolish I was ever to think that I did not care for you, and to run away from you, was I not?
41932How goes the poetry, dear? 41932 How have I borne it all this time?"
41932How is it, Earle, that some people are so disagreeable and others so nice?
41932How much is there?
41932How much you will have to suffer?
41932How soon am I likely to see him?
41932How soon shall I be able to travel?
41932How was it?
41932How will she end, mamma?
41932How would you thank me properly for it, Earle?
41932How, Dora? 41932 I agree with you; but do you not think that she is rather sentimental?"
41932I am more than satisfied with it,said the young beauty,"What time will Mattie Brace be here, Lady Linleigh?"
41932I am to go home, Mark?
41932I am very glad, papa; am I not like mother, too?
41932I can guess, my dear; but why dwell on this, the darkest side? 41932 I do n''t feel to them as you do-- why is it?
41932I do not understand you,she replied;"and I repeat my question; when I gave orders that I should be denied to all visitors, how dare you enter here?"
41932I do not wish to seem unkind, Doris, but let me ask you-- what else besides coldness and gravity can you expect from me?
41932I feel sure you would,she said; then throwing back her veil, she asked:"Do you know me?"
41932I have lost you, how long, Dora, how many months? 41932 I have made no arrangements for you, my darling; shall we discuss them now?"
41932I have yet to see why he has lived in this affluence, while I have been brought up as a farmer''s daughter?
41932I like crossing the Channel; do you, Doris?
41932I look very much like a foundling, do I not? 41932 I must confess I do not understand it; do you?"
41932I remember Mark Brace,said the duchess;"how could I ever forget him?
41932I shall not be deprived of the happiness of seeing you until then, Dora?
41932I suppose you can not help talking nonsense, Earle? 41932 I suppose, Lord Linleigh, nothing more was heard of that dreadful occurrence-- the crime was never traced?"
41932I swear it then by your own falseness, and by your own deceit; can any oath be stronger than that? 41932 I tell you what-- I am going to the Castle again on Tuesday to renew my lease; will you go with me?"
41932I wish you would tell me why you hesitate?
41932I wonder if I am right?
41932I wonder if she would have been fond of me-- if I could have told her all my girlish follies and troubles? 41932 I wonder if the poor soul was married?"
41932I wonder, Earle,she said,"when you will think of anything else?"
41932I wonder,continued the duke,"if he is married yet?"
41932I wonder,he said, abruptly,"who that is-- a gentleman in the center box there?
41932I wonder,he said,"if you will be angry?
41932I wonder,she thought to herself,"why he disliked the idea of my being seen?"
41932If it be not a rude question, which of them did your ladyship dislike?
41932If she be not Dora,he thought,"what will she think of me?"
41932If she had loved you, and had been willing to marry you, she would not have run away, would she?
41932If that girl was young and innocent, if she had done no wrong, why should she have been killed on her wedding- eve?
41932If you felt so sure that I could never forgive you, why do you come here now?
41932In Heaven''s name,she cried, impetuously,"what has brought you here?
41932In Italy?
41932In one word, Earle, is it to be as I wished or not?
41932In what particular?
41932In what way could they be different?
41932Is Doris still in her room?
41932Is Heaven so cruel; would God let that sun shine-- those birds sing-- those sweet flowers bloom? 41932 Is he a great hero?"
41932Is he a great statesman?
41932Is it a lover''s quarrel, Earle?
41932Is it a loyal hand?
41932Is it anything of any harm to you, father?
41932Is it for sale?
41932Is it going to rain? 41932 Is it not right to be proud of God''s work and gifts?"
41932Is it possible, Lady Linleigh?
41932Is it some one who knows you?
41932Is it the hand of a loyal man?
41932Is it true, or not?
41932Is it true?
41932Is it, darling? 41932 Is it-- can it be true?"
41932Is she hard to manage?
41932Is she really ill, Mattie? 41932 Is she still beautiful?"
41932Is that all? 41932 Is that the way you mean to act?"
41932Is there a Lady Vivianne?
41932Is there anything more I can do to- night, my lady?
41932Is there anything particular among them, Earle?
41932Lady Estelle Hereford,he murmured;"but what is it possible that I can do to help you?"
41932Lady Studleigh, have you forgotten my terrible outburst of the other day?
41932Look, did you ever see anything so wonderful, so beautiful, in all your life?
41932Lord Linleigh,she asked,"do you see the gleam of the lamplight under the door?
41932Mamma,she said,"have you heard how the interview between papa and his agent passed off?"
41932Man or woman?
41932Mark Brace?
41932Mark, just what we owe?
41932Marrying the best wife in the world was about the only good deed I ever did----What do you start that way for again, Patty?
41932Mattie,he said, hurriedly,"young ladies live so fast nowadays; do you think Doris takes opiates of any kind-- anything to make her sleep?"
41932Mattie,he said,"will you take this to her, with my love?"
41932May I ask what it is?
41932May I paint you?
41932May I set you in canvas, in immortal youth and loveliness, to live years, perhaps centuries hence, in deathless beauty?
41932Met before? 41932 Mine is a strange story, is it not?"
41932Mother,said Doris,"you do not want me?"
41932My darling Doris,he said;"how came you here?"
41932My darling,he said, at last,"does not this evening remind you of Florence, and the moonlight on the river?"
41932My dear Doris,her ladyship cried,"what is the matter, darling?
41932My dear Mattie,was the coquettish reply,"_ could_ I look better?"
41932My dear sister, when will you learn that it is in bad taste to be always sneering at our father?
41932My dear, are we not good to you?
41932My jealous Earle,she said;"who do you think gave me this ring?"
41932My mother?
41932My own mother?
41932No, my dear Mattie,he said, aghast;"is there any need?
41932No,she replied, looking at him with frightened eyes;"what was it?"
41932Not even your lover?
41932Not? 41932 Now, will you leave me, Lord Vivianne?
41932Of course you heard the story of my terrible trouble?
41932Oh, Heaven, what shall I do?
41932Oh, why does not some lord with a coach and six come along and carry me off and marry me?
41932Oh,said Lady Estelle, shocked and remonstrant,"would you not like best of all to be good,_ very_ good?"
41932Out of my thirty- eight years, that was my only gleam of light-- does it weary you that I like to dwell upon it?
41932Papa,said Lady Studleigh to the earl, who was just passing her chair,"do you hear Lord Vivianne''s advice?"
41932Pardon the question,said Earle,"but would you live with him?"
41932Perhaps, then, the day after?
41932Perhaps,said the colonel, laughingly,"we should come to some surer conclusion if you would tell me whom you imagine it to be?"
41932Pray, what was that?
41932Quite thoughtful of him; and the child is pretty?
41932Remembering how entirely you are in my power,he said,"I ask you, is it wise to anger me?"
41932Shall I pity you without knowing anything?
41932Shall I see the duchess?
41932Shall we go to that shady spot in the woods?
41932Shall you break the door open?
41932Shall you go to the opera to- night, Doris?
41932Shall you not go and change your dress?
41932Shall you remain much longer in town?
41932Shall you wait for the ballet, Doris?
41932She expressed no fear last evening, but seemed just as usual?
41932She kissed me, and said, sadly:''You have secrets even from me, then?''
41932She looked pleased enough; then she said:''How is the young girl you brought to see the Castle?'' 41932 So do all ladies,"was the housekeeper''s reply;"what else have they to do?
41932So that is really the young beauty over whom just at present London is losing its head?
41932So you have sent for me, Doris, to be your bridesmaid,said Mattie;"you, who might have some of the noblest and highest ladies in the land?"
41932So you saw all the flowers at Downsbury Castle?
41932So?
41932Sorry, Mark? 41932 Soul?
41932Stephanie, my wife,cried the duke, despairingly,"do you believe this?
41932Suppose I should not?
41932Suppose you should not? 41932 Suppose,"said the lady,"that you succeed, that you find her, and that she is unwilling to marry you-- what shall you do then?"
41932Supposing that it is true, what then?
41932Surely to Heaven,he cried,"nothing has happened through that staircase door being left open?
41932Surely you are not ill?
41932Tell me again;she said,"what will my rank and title be?"
41932Tell me one thing,she said, caressingly;"do you think I have been as kind to you as your own mother would have been?"
41932Tell me, Mattie, have you noticed a change in her?
41932Tell me, Mr. Leslie, has Doris written to you since you left Brackenside?
41932That is all?
41932That is very nice,he said;"I wish I dare ask if you are likely to like me?"
41932That looks like the hand of a foundling, does it not? 41932 The little one-- our child?
41932The queen of the season tired of her honors?
41932Then she is clever and accomplished?
41932Then she left you and broke her promise without any sensible reason whatever?
41932Then the marriage settlements?
41932Then there is a secret?
41932Then why do you not be kind to me, and let me be quite free?
41932Then why,he said,"have I youth, and strength, and life, if I may not have love?
41932Then you will keep your secret no longer?
41932Then you will not suffer any great amount of pain if I tell you that Mark Brace is not your father, nor his kindly wife your mother?
41932Then you_ do_ care to please Earle?
41932Then, what have I done, my darling? 41932 Then,"said the low, sweet voice of Lady Estelle,"your_ protegee_ is provided for, Mr. Brace?
41932There is no need for that, papa: it does not quite follow that because he is not to my taste, he is not to yours, does it?
41932There is no place like Brackenside, is there, Mattie?
41932There was the young poet,they said-- but who would have recognized Earle?
41932They tell me, child, that you are really promised in marriage-- is it true?
41932This is what you love best?
41932This late? 41932 Time?
41932To all your tenants, papa?
41932To me?
41932To whom is she engaged?
41932To whom was she writing, Mattie?
41932To your rooms? 41932 Ulric,"she cried,"tell me what is the matter?
41932Ulric,she said to her husband,"will you tell for me?"
41932Vivianne, did you say? 41932 Was I pretty?"
41932Was he handsome?
41932Was there a very dreadful sensation, Earle, when they found out I was gone?
41932Was there any tramp or poacher to whom she had refused alms, or anything of that kind?
41932Well, who_ is_ to blame?
41932Were you?
41932What about Earle?
41932What am I to do?
41932What are those?
41932What can I do for you, Doris-- shall I stay and talk to you?
41932What can I do to win her smiles again?
41932What can I say? 41932 What can be wrong?
41932What can have happened?
41932What could we do? 41932 What did he say, Mark?"
41932What did sin matter?
41932What did that letter say?
41932What did that little note mean, Doris?
41932What did you hear?
41932What do I think of her? 41932 What do I want?"
41932What do men care for jewels or for flowers?
41932What do they say, I wonder? 41932 What do you mean by a settled case?"
41932What do you mean, Earle?
41932What do you wish me to do, Mark?
41932What does he want the ink for? 41932 What does it say, then, of cowardly men who, having won such a victory, boast of it?"
41932What does she look like?
41932What has become of her, I wonder? 41932 What has changed her, Mattie?
41932What has come over me?
41932What have we to hear?
41932What have you discovered?
41932What have you done to her?
41932What have you done to your pretty hand, Doris?
41932What have you to say?
41932What have you?
41932What if I tell you I love some one else?
41932What if we are?
41932What is father saying that I may not hear? 41932 What is it, Mark?"
41932What is it, papa?
41932What is it, then?
41932What is it? 41932 What is it?"
41932What is it?
41932What is it?
41932What is slaying by treachery in love better than murder?
41932What is that in your face?
41932What is that you want me to do?
41932What is that?
41932What is that?
41932What is that?
41932What is the matter, Doris? 41932 What is the matter, Mattie?"
41932What is the matter, darling?--what has made you ill? 41932 What is the matter?
41932What is the matter?
41932What is the poet''s name?
41932What is the result of your deliberation?
41932What is the warning, papa? 41932 What is this?"
41932What is your idea of being good?
41932What is your name, my dear?
41932What kind of style does my lady wish? 41932 What mystery?"
41932What need have I to fear? 41932 What odds does that make, so long as I am not ashamed of myself?"
41932What of Ulric Studleigh?
41932What of her?
41932What position?
41932What romance?
41932What shall I do for you in the morning, my lady?
41932What shall I do?
41932What shall it be?
41932What shall we do, Miss Brace?
41932What shall we do?
41932What shall you do with your beauty, Doris?
41932What takes half the world everywhere?
41932What time do you require?
41932What tiresome thoughts can I have, Earle, except that I regret youth and pleasure are not immortal? 41932 What was it?"
41932What was that, Doris?
41932What was the heroine''s name, papa?
41932What were you saying just now, Earle, about a glass, or some one''s eyes never being taken from my face? 41932 What will he say, Earle?"
41932What will it be?
41932What will that be?
41932What will the world say to a man who deliberately destroys and ruins a girl as you did me?
41932What will you do with all your beauty here on a farm?
41932What would they say?
41932What would you like best of anything-- tell me?
41932What, my child? 41932 When does my presentation take place, papa?"
41932When is Earle coming?
41932When is he coming home?
41932When?
41932Where are they all?
41932Where do they sound?
41932Where is Earle?
41932Where is Earle?
41932Where shall you live after you married?
41932Which is Lord Vivianne?
41932Which should be sent away?
41932Who am I, then? 41932 Who cares for the_ acting_, so long as one has the looks?"
41932Who could have thought it?
41932Who is he, Clifford?
41932Who is he, Earle? 41932 Who is that?"
41932Who made me beautiful?
41932Who said it was a sore subject?
41932Who wants this picture?
41932Who was the lady?
41932Who was the some one?
41932Who would be likely to be with you there, when you had reserved the morning for me?
41932Whose child can this be?
41932Whose?
41932Why are you laughing?
41932Why call her_ my protegee_?
41932Why did the little one run away from him? 41932 Why did they come?"
41932Why did you call that picture''Innocence?''
41932Why did you not speak to them?
41932Why did you tell me to say''yes,''and get my hair rumpled, and my dress all crushed up that way?
41932Why do that, if the little children gave them to you? 41932 Why do you call her faithless, Estelle?"
41932Why do you wish so ardently for London?
41932Why fatal?
41932Why has this come to me? 41932 Why have you never written to me all these years, Ulric?"
41932Why is he coming,she cried, passionately,"just as I was growing so happy, learning to forgot him and his terrible threats-- why is he coming?
41932Why is it a failing?
41932Why is it a shame?
41932Why not call a spade a spade?
41932Why not have called for help while these things were being destroyed?
41932Why not, if you desired him to love you?
41932Why not, my dear?
41932Why not?
41932Why not?
41932Why should I do such a thing-- why pass myself off as married? 41932 Why should I want you to go?"
41932Why should not I be? 41932 Why should they be mad?"
41932Why should you wish to forget me?
41932Why should you wish to win one corner of mine?
41932Why will they not do for me, then?
41932Why wo n''t I? 41932 Why, do you mean I would make a picture-- a real picture?"
41932Why, mother, how can you judge?
41932Why, my darling, if you are not free from care, who is?
41932Why, my dear? 41932 Why, my dear?"
41932Why, who could have told you?
41932Why?
41932Why?
41932Will I? 41932 Will it pass away?"
41932Will you come to my rooms?
41932Will you go with me?
41932Will you go, my darling?
41932Will you promise, if I tell you, never to mention it?
41932Will you tell me what to say?
41932Will you tell me why, Lady Linleigh?
41932Will you tell me why?
41932With the duchess-- why not?
41932Would you mind telling me whether that engagement still exists?
41932Would you mind telling me,she asked,"how you know this?"
41932Yes, I heard of it; who did not?
41932Yes, Lady Delapain told me; but have you never seen her? 41932 Yes, he saw you,"said Mark;"and now your next question will be,''Did he admire me?''
41932Yes, just that-- neither more nor less-- what do you want? 41932 Yes,"he replied;"now, what is the remedy?"
41932Yes,she replied, wonderingly,"what else could I believe?
41932Yes; but what of you, my dear?
41932Yes? 41932 Yet, why should I be angry, and in what differ from them?
41932You are not frightened at Earle, nor any one else, while you are with me, Dora?
41932You are not well, or are you tired; which is it?
41932You are satisfied that there is not?
41932You believe that?
41932You do not know what love is?
41932You do not like him?
41932You do not like it, poor child?
41932You do not mean to say that there is anything wrong?
41932You do not mean to tell me that this is my-- our son, Estelle?
41932You do not surely imagine that I am unable to take care of you?
41932You do not think I have purchased too much, papa?
41932You do not think, then, that it is anything serious, Mattie? 41932 You forgive me, Estelle, my wife?"
41932You have already,continued the earl,"made for yourself some reputation as a poet; now tell me, have you ever turned your attention to politics?"
41932You have been to Downsbury Castle, have you not?
41932You have brought nothing with you?
41932You have never been away from home?
41932You have not met her, Earle?
41932You have_ what_?
41932You know this one,he said, laughingly, while she, half- frightened, said:"How can I?"
41932You mean luxury and magnificence?
41932You met her often during the season?
41932You remember Ulric Studleigh,continued his grace,"that handsome''ne''er- do- well?''"
41932You remember, perhaps, the pretty child, and the romantic story?
41932You swear that before Heaven?
41932You swear that, likewise, before Heaven?
41932You think me_ beautiful_?
41932You thought I was going to do so?
41932You will be the Lady Doris Studleigh, only daughter of the Earl of Linleigh----"And my fortune?
41932You will go and see her, mother, to- morrow? 41932 You will keep my secret always, Earle?"
41932You will keep the ring, Doris, for my sake, in memory of the time when I first saw you?
41932You will meet me again,he urged,"say on Friday-- you will not refuse-- at this same time and same place?
41932You will not do what you might do-- take vengeance on me for my many sins?
41932You will try to forget me, will you not, Earle? 41932 You would do all that?"
41932You would like, perhaps,she added,"to wait and welcome Earle?"
41932You would not_ flirt_, Doris?
41932Your beautiful queen wishes to know, Earle, what you think of my lady?
41932Your last sunset?
41932Your name? 41932 _ Do n''t_ you understand that it was our chief aim to do what we were not allowed?
41932_ Moral nature?_ That''s just it,said Doris, with infinite satisfaction.
41932''What difference does it make?''
41932''Where was she, then?''
41932A servant was bowing before them, and Mark heard him say:"My lord is anxiously expecting you; will you come this way?"
41932A strange idea has come to me-- do you think she has any secret connected with that former lonely life of hers?"
41932Above all, why did he want to flatter Mark Brace?
41932After the first expressions of surprise and regret, she said:"''So you were married to him-- married to him all the time?
41932And can one be educated at Brakebury?"
41932And do you really think that she will never marry?"
41932And his manly, noble heart must then be crushed and flung away like that ruined rose?
41932And how could I possibly mistake that face for any other?
41932And if she had gone, where was he to look next?
41932And suppose the child grew day by day into her heart, until it seemed like her very own, and then that unknown mother came and took her away?
41932And was she not most beautiful?
41932And-- ah, Heaven!--what had she lost?
41932Another asked:"Where had Mr. Leslie found the ideally beautiful face so gloriously placed on canvas?
41932Are you a worker or an idler?
41932Are you afraid of losing him?"
41932Are you coming here often?"
41932Are you done with that butter?
41932Are you going for a walk?
41932Are you jealous of her, Earle?"
41932Are you not known, in all the country, as Honest Mark Brace?"
41932Are you pleased?"
41932Are you so very pleased to see me, Earle?"
41932As for believing what Lord Vivianne might say of her, who would do it?
41932As he passed hurriedly along he saw Earle, who, looking at his face, cried:"What is the matter, Lord Linleigh?"
41932Besides, how could the girl I took to Florence with me be Lord Studleigh''s daughter?"
41932Besides, if Doris gave consent to Earle''s wooing, would Mrs. Moray be well pleased with her son''s choice?
41932Brace?"
41932Brace?''
41932But do you remember your delight in the first?"
41932But then, if she said"no,"what lot would be his?
41932But what can it be?
41932But why should you, how can you, need time for reflection?
41932But, Earle, could it be that Ross Glynlyn spoke the truth-- that she is in Florence?"
41932But, if you drive a man mad with love, what can he do?
41932Can I leave him to Mattie?
41932Can she have met any one whom she liked better than me?"
41932Can you suggest to me any feasible or sensible plan of search?"
41932Can you understand how grateful I am to you, Earle Moray?"
41932Conyers?"
41932Conyers?''
41932Could it be Doris?--this lovely, high- bred lady in the sheen of her jewels and splendor of her attire?
41932Could it be possible that he had stayed purposely to see her?
41932Could it concern Doris in any way, this strange letter?
41932Could she do that?
41932Could she do that?
41932Could she have so mingled her love and life into another''s as almost to have lost her own identity, and to think of nothing except Earle?
41932Could she obey that unknown mother''s behest and keep this soul white and pure?
41932Could she who so inspired men tie herself to the narrow bounds of one humble, rustic hearth?
41932Could there be any truth in the idea-- the suspicion that his wife entertained that all had not been well with Doris?
41932Could there be any truth in this?
41932Could there have been a mystery in that young life, so soon, oh, so soon ended?
41932Could this girl, who received him so coldly, so indifferently, be his own beautiful, bright Doris?
41932Could you not throw off that languor, and be bright, animated, and happy?"
41932Did God send this?
41932Did I ever cheat in my men''s wages?
41932Did anything frighten you?"
41932Did not the Duke of Downsbury say you were one of his best tenants, and that you were a pattern of good farming and industry?"
41932Did she wish to see him?
41932Did you ever see a fly in a spider''s web?
41932Did you ever watch it struggle and fight and strive to escape, while the spider, one could fancy, was shaking his filmy sides with laughter?
41932Did you not feel sure of it?"
41932Did you not feel sure that when I had seen something of the world-- had allayed the fever of excitement-- that I should return to you?
41932Did you really think you would deceive me for long?
41932Did you speak?"
41932Did you think me serious?
41932Do I drink?
41932Do I ever go to sleep in church?
41932Do I swear?
41932Do n''t you remember the text about the rich man, the camel, and the needle''s eye?"
41932Do n''t you suppose it is always a very nice way?"
41932Do n''t you think people like it, mamma?"
41932Do you agree to my proposal, Lord Linleigh?
41932Do you agree to that?
41932Do you agree?"
41932Do you believe me?"
41932Do you believe the child we have loved and cherished has deceived us so cruelly?"
41932Do you know nothing of her?"
41932Do you know that I never fully realized that I was to make you my wife, though I have loved you so passionately and so well?
41932Do you know that I went mad over losing you?
41932Do you know that the loss of you changed me from a good- tempered man into a fiend?--can you realize that, Lady Doris Studleigh?"
41932Do you know to whom she belongs?
41932Do you know what I fancy sometimes?"
41932Do you know what I should have done if you had so trusted me?
41932Do you know what they told me, Doris?"
41932Do you know what you cost me?
41932Do you know why I was so gay, so happy, so light of heart on the day you left me?
41932Do you know why?
41932Do you know, can you guess, what has brought me here?"
41932Do you know?
41932Do you like it?
41932Do you mean that some one has killed Doris?"
41932Do you mean to tell me that a descendant of the Herefords has been born, and I have never even seen it?
41932Do you not know the Earl of Linleigh?
41932Do you not see that?"
41932Do you not see,"she cried, with sudden passion,"that you have spoiled my life?
41932Do you not think so, Earle?"
41932Do you not think you will be very happy with her?"
41932Do you pity me?"
41932Do you remember it?"
41932Do you remember, Dora, when I gave you a diamond ring?
41932Do you ride?"
41932Do you think it safe, Doris?
41932Do you think my love has grown less in that time?
41932Do you think she was frightened at any one?
41932Do you think she will like me, Mattie?"
41932Do you understand?"
41932Do you want me to love him?
41932Do you want to say something to me?"
41932Do_ you_ not long for fame?
41932Does he write books?"
41932Does it sound well?"
41932Doris, belonging to the Studleighs and the proud Duke of Downsbury-- what will she say?
41932Doris, my darling sister, do you not hear?
41932Doris, will you sing?"
41932Doris, you can not surely repent of having promised to marry me-- it can not be that?"
41932Doris-- dear Doris-- can you trust me?
41932Earle asked him eagerly if he knew the gentleman in the center box, who wore the white japonica?
41932Earle is a king; then why this strange desire for secrecy?"
41932Estelle, my daughter, is it true?"
41932Every one knew at once that the Earl of Linleigh was meant; but who was the lady?
41932Fair, fair, indeed, but was it not selfish of her to let those whom she deemed her blood, work, and she stay idle?
41932From them he asked the same question--"Had they seen a young lady who had come to post letters?"
41932Great Heaven, what shall I do?"
41932Had any one been there?"
41932Had he drawn it from the rich depths of glowing fancy, or had he seen a face like it?"
41932Had he not so declared, with passion and truth burning in his eyes?
41932Had she any heart, or was she a true Studleigh?
41932Had she grown weary of being without him?
41932Had she left him for any one else, or in one of her sudden caprices?
41932Had she lost all chance of this grand position which would fill the greatest desire of her heart?
41932Had she not dreamed of driving men mad for love, of making poets sing, and artists paint her charms?
41932Had she not run away from him?
41932Had she sent him a letter or token?
41932Has Doris changed her mind?"
41932Has Lady Studleigh gone out, do you think, and taken the key of the room with her?
41932Has anything happened while I have been away?"
41932Have I any right, possessing under ten thousand a year and no title, to monopolize, even for five minutes, the smiles of Lady Estelle Hereford?''
41932Have I failed to pay my tithes, or missed church on Sundays?
41932Have I lied like Ned Amwell?
41932Have I lost my reason?"
41932Have I really seen you before, Lord Vivianne?
41932Have I sent the poor empty from my door?
41932Have I swindled men like the bankers, who carried off my all?
41932Have you any nice book lying about here, Mattie?"
41932Have you any trace of her parentage?"
41932Have you ever seen that terrible phenomenon in natural history?
41932Have you no place for me in it?"
41932Have you not ambition?"
41932Have you noticed it?"
41932Have you seen her yet?"
41932Have you seen the japonicas here?"
41932Have you weighed this well?"
41932He is dead, Mattie?"
41932He looked slightly puzzled, but, as he said to himself, it was one of her caprices-- why not be content?
41932He said to himself,"Maid or spirit?
41932He saw the farmer clinch his strong hand, while he cried out:"In Heaven''s name, who is to tell Earle?
41932He should take his beautiful wife to Linleigh, and their daughter would soon join them; the whole story would soon blow over, then who so happy as he?
41932He went on:"Why were you not frank and honest with me, Dora?--why did you not await my return, and tell me?--why did you not trust me?
41932He-- to repent?
41932Her future is safe?"
41932His confession was made, the story told, the worst known, and what had he to fear?
41932How am I to thank you?
41932How can I tell what he would have said?
41932How can people admire him?"
41932How can you, with so keen a capacity for enjoyment-- how can you bear it?"
41932How can you?"
41932How could I bear to be near you, when you so coldly refused my prayer?''
41932How could I harm her?"
41932How could any man help loving such a dazzling creature as this Doris?
41932How could it be dull?
41932How could she bear it, this prosaic, commonplace life?
41932How could she think too much of a duke who stopped his carriage in a public market- place and spoke to her husband?
41932How did it happen, Ulric?
41932How did it happen?
41932How did she manage, I wonder, to get this situation?"
41932How did you come to get such books?
41932How do you dare to slander her so?
41932How else, if your face was like his?"
41932How long is it since I''ve seen his grace?
41932How was he to tell her lover?
41932How was it that Earle did not return?"
41932How would it be when they met in the same room, dined at the same table?
41932How, in Heaven''s name, was he to confront the mother of this unhappy girl?
41932I am sure she has done something to pain you, Earle-- tell me what it is?"
41932I am tired; can I rest while I tell it to you?"
41932I believe if I met her-- found her, and she refused to be my wife, I should----""Should what?"
41932I destroyed myself when I looked up into his face, and said;"''But even if I were willing, how could it be managed, Ulric?''
41932I do not repine, for you love me, Ulric, do you not?"
41932I have been long in finding you----""Earle,"she interrupted,"what has brought you here?
41932I know that something terrible has happened to Doris-- what is it?"
41932I sacrificed you once to my selfish love; is it likely that I should hesitate a second time?"
41932I said to myself, what could he possibly want there?
41932I wonder if things would have been very different for me if she had lived, and I had known her?"
41932I wonder what it is like, Mattie, to feel quite free from care?"
41932I wonder what she thought of me that day?"
41932If I am not presumptuous, what is it?"
41932If Mark Brace, with his kindly, simple heart, could not pardon her, was it probable that Earl Linleigh would?
41932If any one wanted his aid, why did the person not seek him in his own home?
41932If he fled from Brackenside, what pleasure would be left in life?
41932If he had the faintest possible idea of what her life had been since they parted, would he receive her, and think her a suitable companion for Mattie?
41932If her attempts at evading him were all useless, if he recognized her and insisted on the recognition, what could she do?
41932If she could make him so happy, why could he not suffice for her?
41932If so, why should she leave the lamps burning?
41932If that good Patty Brace could not succeed with her, could we, where life and fashion would fill her head with nonsense?
41932If you curse any one how can you look to have prayer answered?"
41932In two more days she would be his wife; then, who could touch her, what evil could come to her?
41932In what way?"
41932Is it English?"
41932Is it Indian or Italian?"
41932Is it any one I know?"
41932Is it any use suggesting to you that Mattie would be a far more sensible wife for you than I could ever make?
41932Is it because you are not marrying a nobleman-- is it because you are marrying Earle?"
41932Is it known who her mother was?"
41932Is it natural, Earle Moray, that one should long to be loved?"
41932Is it poetry or love?"
41932Is it really valuable, Earle?
41932Is it so?"
41932Is it some terrible fever-- some terrible plague?
41932Is it ten or a dozen that I have''declined with thanks?''
41932Is it the same, I wonder, with all those who love-- with all girls who surrender heart and judgment as I did?
41932Is it true?"
41932Is it true?"
41932Is n''t it a nice book?"
41932Is not this money a thing worth winning to lay at the feet of love?
41932Is that true?"
41932Is this ours?"
41932Is this your daughter?"
41932It might be that he would talk to her, that he would try every little ruse and every possible maneuver, but what would that matter?
41932It seemed only natural for him to turn to her and say:"Have you seen Doris this morning?"
41932It was Lady Linleigh''s voice that roused her, and she was asking:"What friend is coming-- who is coming, Ulric?"
41932It would require a strong ring to make you all his, would it not?
41932Lady Estelle had opened her fan, and she stirred it gently, as she asked:"To whom is she engaged?"
41932Lady Studleigh must be ill. Shall I fetch the countess?"
41932Leslie?"
41932Leslie?"
41932Let poets and artists rave of beauty-- let the dead girl answer,"What had beauty done for her?"
41932Like you?
41932Looking at me, Earle Moray, can you imagine what I was twenty years ago?"
41932Lord Linleigh asked:"Will you drive with me this morning, Doris, or would you prefer to ride or walk?"
41932Lord Linleigh lingered behind, while he said to Mark and his wife:"You are tenants of the Duke of Downsbury, are you not?"
41932Lord Vivianne, what is the matter?"
41932Love her?
41932May I ask what honorable parentage you have assigned to me?
41932May I ask, Mr. Brace, if it be true?"
41932May I go with you?"
41932Mortal or vision?"
41932Mr. Moray, will you look over these sketches by Dore?"
41932Mrs. Moray had opened the way, saying, frankly:"Have you anything to tell us?"
41932My daughter, the Lady Doris, is in the drawing- room there-- will you join her?"
41932No questions?
41932No remarks?"
41932Now comes the great difficulty of all, Doris-- what is to be done with you?"
41932Now that you have been kind enough to answer me one question, I should like to ask another-- do you live near here?"
41932Now will you give me a flower?"
41932Now, Mattie, does she not, as I said before, seem to move to the hidden rhythm of some sweet music?"
41932Now, is not that glorious news for a bright sunshiny day?
41932Now, tell me, have you the faintest clew as to where Doris has gone?"
41932Now, what do you think, Patty?
41932Of what are you sick?"
41932Of what avail was he?
41932Of what use was all her wealth, her luxury, her magnificence?
41932Oh, Lady Linleigh, how am I to thank you?"
41932Oh, Mattie, tell me what it is?"
41932Oh, Mattie, what is it?
41932Oh, Patty, why could I not let well enough alone, and not go and sign security for that villain, Amwell?"
41932Oh, Ulric, is it death?
41932Oh, what was she to do?
41932On this wild, stormy night, when other little ones may be out in the dashing rain and moaning wind, is it not right to pray,''God bless our home?''"
41932Once, and once only, he asked himself if it were possible to repent-- repent of his sins, his unbridled passions, his selfish loves?
41932One asked another,"Who is it?"
41932One of her old school- fellows?
41932Or other men?
41932Others sinned and prospered; why was she so heavily stricken?
41932Repent?
41932Report has not exaggerated her beauty?"
41932Say you will accept it, Doris?"
41932Shall I ever reach the poet''s utterance?"
41932Shall it be gay, brilliant?"
41932Shall you be pleased, then, dear Lady Linleigh?"
41932She is very tall and stately, is she not?
41932She looked involuntarily at the small white hand; a gold ring shone there-- was it a wedding- ring?
41932She opened it hastily, then read aloud:"MY DEAR MISS BRACE,--Need I tell you my picture is the great success of the season?
41932She promised to be my wife; why should she if she did not love me?"
41932She stood quite still for one moment; then she said slowly:"Will you give me time?"
41932She turned to Doris, with a kindly smile:"I am sure you must be tired,"she said;"will you rest here?
41932Should she refuse Earle Moray, on whose lips an offer of himself and his all was trembling?
41932Should she send him away?
41932Should she?
41932Should you not like to go to your club?"
41932So?
41932Speak-- has she gone?"
41932Suddenly I asked my companion,''Who is the gentleman to whom the Duchess of K---- is talking?''
41932Suppose you forgot to fasten the door leading on to the balcony?"
41932Suppose, too, that after all her humble cares, when the mother came, she should be dissatisfied and complain of the rudeness of the child''s rearing?
41932Tell me what I can do to make you as you were once to me?"
41932Tell me why do you dislike Lord Vivianne so much?"
41932Tell me, Earle Moray--''gentleman and poet''--I like the title-- tell me, have you ever heard me discussed-- spoken of?"
41932Tell me, are you content?
41932Tell me, has it ever seemed to you that some one must have helped Doris, or she could not have found a situation as she did?"
41932Tell me, have you no idea where she is?"
41932Tell me, is the duchess a lady of great importance?"
41932Tell me, no one else shall ever make love to you, or kiss you-- you will never be another''s?"
41932Tell me, now, do you really love this country admirer of yours very much?"
41932Tell me?"
41932That is a sorry compliment to England and the English, is it not?"
41932The earl had spoken of their going to London in May, if they did so, could Mattie go with them?
41932The only doubt was that having made one mistake, was it likely the artist had made another?
41932The question was, could she deny having been in Florence?
41932The white lips did not move, but the haggard eyes seemed to ask,"What?"
41932Then Doris said:"Do you not think it would save all trouble and discussion if you opened the letter?"
41932Then he added:"Would you like it changed-- this dull life of yours-- into one of fairy brightness?"
41932Then one evening he came to me and said:"''Estelle, have we had enough of this?
41932Then you positively prefer open shame and disgrace, the scorn and mocking of the world?"
41932Then, although you ran away from me so cruelly, you did like me, after all?"
41932Then, what could he do to help any one?
41932Then-- well, suppose it came, this discovery that she dreaded so terribly, what would he do if she refused to marry him?
41932There is jewelry enough here to have made a man''s fortune; if any one risked murder for it, why not have taken it away?"
41932There is never a word about the child in the parcels?
41932They are my own mother and sister-- why am I so different from them?
41932They came in a gorgeous coach, with men in livery that I thought quite splendid; the duke, a tall, grand man, and with him two ladies?"
41932Think of destroying hope, life, genius, morals-- for what?
41932To begin with, do you find yourself at home?"
41932To her Earle went, with the same question--"Had she seen a young lady pass by?"
41932To sway your fellows, to be rich, to make money?"
41932To whom has he surrendered his liberty at last?"
41932Ulric, when you have made your announcement, will you go to the vicarage?
41932Unlucky, is n''t it?
41932Was he in earnest?
41932Was he only trifling with her, this handsome lord?
41932Was her daughter_ afraid_ of letting him know that she was going to be married?
41932Was it a wonder that as she took a seat in the box, all eyes were directed to her?
41932Was it any wonder that it came about that when one child was to yield to the other, Mattie yielded to Doris?
41932Was it likely that in this altered position he would know her?
41932Was it not Dora who''dwelt unmarried till her death?''
41932Was it of any use in this her hour of dire need, praying?
41932Was it possible that her brilliant life, her triumphant career, her happiness, should all be ended by this secret coming to life?
41932Was it possible that her daughter''s passionate desire for secrecy had anything to do with Lord Vivianne?
41932Was she in Italy, Spain, or France?
41932Was she to remain hidden in this humble, lowly house, where no one saw her but Earle and the few men whom business brought to the farm?
41932Was the mystery of her journey to Florence ever explained?"
41932Was the world ever so fair, love-- ever one- half so fair?"
41932Was there any quarrel between you when you parted?"
41932Was this magnificent woman really his wife?
41932We will surely do that Earle?"
41932What are they?
41932What are you thinking of, Doris?"
41932What can be wrong?
41932What can he want us for?"
41932What could have happened?
41932What could he have done to offend him?
41932What could lessen such anguish as his?
41932What could she do?
41932What danger can be near my darling?"
41932What did it mean?"
41932What did you think of her, Doris?"
41932What disposition would this little one inherit?
41932What do I find out?
41932What do you advise, Earle?"
41932What do you mean?"
41932What do you mean?''
41932What do you think it is worth?"
41932What do you think of Lady Studleigh?
41932What do you think of a thousand pounds as a dowry for his daughter, and a thousand to be spent in improvements on the farm?"
41932What do you think of her, Earle?"
41932What do you think, Earle?"
41932What do you want?"
41932What do you wish to consult me about, papa?"
41932What does it mean?
41932What does the man look like?"
41932What dowager in her senses would approve of such a man?''
41932What dull, stupid apathy has come over me?
41932What else could I do but keep my sad secret all to myself?
41932What else have you discovered?"
41932What had happened?
41932What had she done?
41932What had she gained?
41932What happy fortune sent me on this road?"
41932What has brought you here?"
41932What has brought you to my father''s house?
41932What has happened?"
41932What has he to offer you?"
41932What has it to do with him?
41932What has my daughter to say to me?
41932What have I been doing or thinking about?
41932What have I done that I should win the love of that pure, young heart?
41932What have I said?
41932What here is worth seeing in comparison?"
41932What if I refuse?"
41932What if the earl should hear voices or see shadows?
41932What if this new lover, this rich young lord, should fail her, after all?
41932What if, tempted by the beauty of the night, he should come to the window, and look out?
41932What is he like, this Earle Moray, whom your father calls poet and gentleman?"
41932What is he saying?"
41932What is it?"
41932What is it?"
41932What is money to love?"
41932What is more lovely, more suggestive, than a wheat field with golden sheaves?"
41932What is my poor name worth, that it should be so highly honored?"
41932What is on your mind?
41932What is the matter?"
41932What is to be its price?
41932What is wrong, dear?"
41932What kind is it?"
41932What lady could wish to see him?
41932What mad folly had possessed him?
41932What matter the fashion of the hat that covered that luxuriant hair?
41932What more could she desire?
41932What motive could she have had in deceiving him if she had not really loved him?
41932What of her future?
41932What other course is left me?
41932What shall I do?"
41932What shall I live for except to love and to serve and to shield you?"
41932What shall I say to him?"
41932What shall be the price of my innocence?
41932What should I do if my mother found me here in this grove of trees with Captain Studleigh?
41932What should I have done if you had not come?"
41932What should she do with herself?
41932What should she do?
41932What should she do?
41932What then?"
41932What then?"
41932What took you there, Doris?"
41932What was anything else in the wide world compared to this?
41932What was bringing him now?
41932What was he to do?
41932What was her bright loveliness for if not for this?
41932What was her reason?"
41932What was it Mr. Leslie had said about him?
41932What was she to do?
41932What was this tortured, blighted life to him?
41932What were those words haunting her?
41932What were you thinking of?"
41932What will be said and thought by the different members of this establishment when it is known that there is to be a wedding to- morrow?
41932What will they say to me?
41932What will you do with so much beauty?"
41932What would he do if he heard this nonsense about Earle claiming her?
41932What would he say if he knew who had instructed her?
41932What would he think when he heard it?
41932What would the reality do?"
41932What, in the name of the most high Heaven, did he want there?
41932When did she forget that parting, or the last look on that face?
41932When had any day so beautiful shone before?
41932When shall I hear any news?"
41932When was a Studleigh either true to a friend or loyal to a love?"
41932When will you marry me?"
41932When would he be able to give her a diamond worth three hundred pounds?
41932Where did she go to, dear?"
41932Where did you see my daughter?"
41932Where is he?
41932Where is the mother, I wonder?
41932Where shall we go?"
41932Where, in those far off ages, shall_ I_ be?"
41932Who am I, that I should sit in judgment over you?"
41932Who and what was the young enchantress?
41932Who can see my soul?"
41932Who can wonder at it?
41932Who could abandon you?"
41932Who could have believed that so lately it had been gay with preparations for a wedding?
41932Who could have recognized the quiet, graceful, languid Lady Estelle?
41932Who could help being ambitious, with you as the apostle of ambition?
41932Who could it be?
41932Who could resist the moon and the flowers?"
41932Who could that some one be?
41932Who could, who would murder her?"
41932Who gave it to you?"
41932Who gave it to you?"
41932Who gave you the jewel you wear on your hand?"
41932Who is he?"
41932Who is it that says that"a prayer granted is sometimes a curse?"
41932Who is she?"
41932Who knew the pain, the aching in one lonely heart?
41932Who knows how much repentance the Father above requires from a soul?
41932Who sent you?
41932Who shall measure His mercy?
41932Who the calm, graceful lady?
41932Who the young man with the face of a poet?
41932Who was my mother, I wonder?
41932Who was she?
41932Who was the gentleman with the white star on his breast?
41932Who would believe him?
41932Who would have thought it?
41932Who would that some one be?
41932Who''s to blame?"
41932Why be cross with me, darling?
41932Why be so hasty?"
41932Why desire to meet him in Quainton woods?
41932Why did she not wait for me?"
41932Why did they not carry it to the poor- house?
41932Why did you not have my picture taken?
41932Why do n''t it grow made?
41932Why do n''t you speak, my girl?
41932Why do you ask me?"
41932Why does a bird of paradise differ from a homely linnet?
41932Why does a carnation differ from a sun- flower?
41932Why does he come here to talk about Doris?
41932Why is it, dear?"
41932Why not go and bid them farewell?
41932Why not?
41932Why should I be vexed or angry?
41932Why should I not be content?"
41932Why should I not be?
41932Why should I not win your heart if I can?"
41932Why should I say it if it were not true?
41932Why should he be confused, just because he had met me?
41932Why should he speak in that contemptuous manner of women, to a woman who was so young, so beautiful?
41932Why should she pretend?
41932Why should you want it so?"
41932Why sorry?
41932Why was he coming?
41932Why was the princess disguised?"
41932Why, Doris?"
41932Why, Earle, tell me what you are thinking about?"
41932Why, how many experiences should I have had at my age?"
41932Why, in all her life-- her brief, brilliant life-- she had never prayed; was it of any use her beginning now?
41932Why, then, have I such trouble?"
41932Why, what would become of you if you were to lose Doris, or anything happen to interfere with your love to separate you?"
41932Will he ever be famous and rich enough to make it worth while to nourish my little bit of love for him into real love, if I can ever love?
41932Will that admission satisfy you?"
41932Will you be my maid?"
41932Will you be my wife?"
41932Will you do that?"
41932Will you give me one to keep in memory of this, our first meeting?"
41932Will you give me your hand upon it?"
41932Will you go to Earle?
41932Will you go to- night?
41932Will you go with me-- will you be mine?"
41932Will you go, my darling, and leave this dull place?"
41932Will you keep true and sacred the trust I am going to place in you?"
41932Will you kiss me, and say,''Heaven bless you, my own mother?''"
41932Will you leave me alone, Mattie?"
41932Will you live and die a farmer?
41932Will you not spread the wings of your soul for a wider life?
41932Will you pay us a visit at Linleigh Court?"
41932Will you put off your lessons in wheat- stacking till next year?
41932Will you say you have taken charge of the child for a lady who has gone abroad?
41932Will you sit down here, Doris, while I tell you my message?"
41932Will you tell me what it is?"
41932Will you try to keep its soul white and pure, and bring it up simply, like your own, just to be good?
41932Will you try?"
41932Will you wait and see him?
41932Will you, Doris?
41932Will you, Doris?"
41932Will you, in turn, forgive me?"
41932With whom are you living, and what are you doing for a livelihood?"
41932Woman- like, her heart secretly inclined to the handsome stranger whom Mark kept so sternly at bay, but where could he have possibly seen Doris?
41932Would Earle never see that Doris was unworthy of him?
41932Would Heaven spare her?
41932Would he come later on in the evening and ask for her?
41932Would it be of any use throwing herself on his mercy, and asking him to keep the horrible story to himself?
41932Would it not be rather cruel than kind to give her notions, or accustom her to a life which it would be impossible for her to lead?
41932Yes, assuredly he did; how could he help it?
41932You are a gentleman, a man of honor, having my fair name in your power-- what shall you charge me for keeping it?
41932You are happy as the day is long, are you not, Mattie?"
41932You are so much like her that I could look in your face and cry out--''Dora, Dora, have you forgotten me?''"
41932You are the son of Mrs. Moray, of Lindenholm, are you not?"
41932You can not surely, Miss Brace, be angry with me for saying that?"
41932You deceived me once, and I fancied that you intended to deceive me again; you eluded me once, you will not elude me again?"
41932You do not like to tell me this story-- why do it?"
41932You had no great love for the simple farmer and his kindly wife?"
41932You have been to Downsbury Castle, Lady Studleigh?"
41932You have prayed, and that innocent little victim on your bosom has prayed, in her baby way, and has Heaven heard?
41932You hear me?"
41932You hear this?''
41932You hear?"
41932You loved my father, did you not-- and he loved you?"
41932You never, even in your own mind, doubted the truth of what you say?"
41932You remember my picture of''Innocence?''"
41932You say that I have not displeased you?"
41932You see it plainly?"
41932You see the solution plainly, do you not?
41932You understand all this?"
41932You will be happy with Earle?"
41932You will let me see you again?
41932You will not think me very fickle if I tell you something?"
41932You will try, will you not, my dear?"
41932You wooed me and won me, after your own honorable fashion-- what are you going to exact now as the price of your love and my mad folly?
41932am I safe?
41932and is not Mark Brace one of your tenant farmers?"
41932can not you live the truest life where wind, and rain, and water- fall, and birds make music?
41932could it be she?
41932cried Patty, in terror,"suppose the mother is in all this storm?
41932cried the girl, to the countess, who was just passing by,"what do you imagine Lord Vivianne says?"
41932do you not hear us?"
41932has my daughter so cruelly deceived me?"
41932have you been taking lessons of that gentleman poet you mentioned?
41932have you come to kill me?"
41932he asked,"that this is my wife-- that-- well, I had better not say too much; you do not think I shall wake up and find it all a dream?"
41932he cried, in a loud, passionate voice,"have you really gone from me, Doris?"
41932he said to himself,"where is she?"
41932how can I tell you?
41932how could I harm her?
41932how shall I tell her?"
41932long for gayety, excitement, wealth, pleasure, and perpetual admiration?"
41932murmured the earl; then he said aloud:"How would Mattie have talked?
41932or had she even gone further away?
41932or should she cast him from her and betray him?
41932or silly men for walking into danger, being warned?"
41932persisted Doris;"pretty women for just amusing themselves according to their natures?
41932she asked--"like the belle of the ball?"
41932she continued,"What was his name?--the man with the honest face?"
41932she said--"is it you?"
41932was it all right with her, do you think?
41932was it she?
41932what am I to say to you?
41932what could he want to buy that he would not let me see?
41932what did it mean?
41932what have I done that I should suffer this?
41932what have I done, that I should have this to endure?"
41932what is that?
41932what should she do?
41932what voice was it?
41932what will she say when she learns this?"
41932who knew the quiet heroism of the girl with the brown, kindly face and shining hair?
41932why have you made me ashamed of myself?"
41932why have you unmanned me?
41932with a proud, high- bred face-- not handsome at all, but very aristocratic?"
9858A fix?
9858A less expensive would do, would n''t it, mother?
9858A needle?
9858A what?
9858About the room?
9858Al, what are you doing to- night?
9858Albert, one of your colds coming on? 9858 Albert,"said Lilly, holding to the sedative quality in her voice,"do you feel ill?"
9858Am I mad?
9858And old Willie and Mr. Keebil and Snow Horton-- ever see any of them, Harry?
9858And you are one of us-- aren''t you, dear?
9858And you, Harry, what do you do?
9858And you?
9858And your parents?
9858Anybody admire your dress?
9858Anything else, ma''am?
9858Are matters unchanged?
9858Are n''t you going to be comfortable here?
9858Are we partners, then?
9858Are you crazy? 9858 Are you glad he is coming to- night?"
9858Are you in any kind of difficulty?
9858Are you studying?
9858Are you your brother''s keeper?
9858Are your parents returning home?
9858Audition?
9858Bath?
9858Beg pardon?
9858Ben, are you ready for breakfast? 9858 Ben, will you speak to Lilly?
9858But does n''t it ever seem terrible to you, Zoe, that I have n''t given you the opportunity to judge him for yourself? 9858 But how can I tell if I do n''t stretch and stretch?"
9858But is n''t it better for the baby?
9858But please, please, please, is there no need except that covered by vice? 9858 But you''re all red, are n''t you?"
9858But, Zoe--"Storks can not bring babies, can they?
9858But, mamma, wo n''t it keep until to- morrow? 9858 By inheritance?"
9858Ca n''t what, Lilly?
9858Ca n''t you eat, Lilly? 9858 Can only the unmarried mother be unfortunate?"
9858Carrie, Carrie, have n''t they told you time and time again there is nothing they can do now? 9858 Cat got your tongue, sweetness?
9858Certainly I do, only-- only--"Only what?
9858Did he?
9858Did you err, Lilly?
9858Did you think I''d forgotten you? 9858 Do I make you sad?"
9858Do n''t what?
9858Do n''t you feel well, Lilly?
9858Do n''t you love it, Lilly? 9858 Do n''t you think she is a bit too young?"
9858Do n''t you understand now a little better, Mrs. Blair, why this poor little fermenting grape could n''t stay on the vine?
9858Do these institutions merely function as machines? 9858 Do you ever feel that you would like to see him?".
9858Do you keep well, Harry?
9858Do you know what I should have done in your husband''s place?
9858Do you like it?
9858Do you really think so?
9858Do you think I do n''t, Mrs. Blair, whole nightfuls of tears? 9858 Do you think I''m pretty?"
9858Do you think that?
9858Do you think there might be something over at the office for me? 9858 Doctor, is it the Spanish influenza?
9858Does it ever make you unhappy among the other children to be questioned about your-- father?
9858Ever been there?
9858Exactly where?
9858Experience?
9858Fer Gossake, ca n''t you take a tumble?
9858Fix you up?
9858For pity''s sake, look at that downpour, will you? 9858 For suffrage?
9858For what, daughter?
9858Formula? 9858 Gedney,"she said,"could n''t you give her a note to Trieste?"
9858George, are you going to take good care of my husband to- night? 9858 Go on, mamma, what did he say?"
9858Going all the way to New York?
9858Harry Calvert live here?
9858Harry Calvert?
9858Harry''s gone-- to war?
9858Harry, are you in trouble?
9858Harry, did n''t you ever hear anything about-- well, about my marriage?
9858Harry, do you ever hear from-- home?
9858Harry?
9858Has she said anything to you, Ben, since yesterday? 9858 Hasn''t-- your-- brother-- told-- you-- anything?"
9858Have you heard her moving about her room yet?
9858Have you made different arrangements? 9858 Have you no friends?"
9858Have you seen this one of Rufus II, Mrs. Penny? 9858 Have you tried Trieste?"
9858Honey, Does You Love Me?
9858How can I take you at all when you''ve taken me off my feet?
9858How can anyone be chilly on such a night as this?
9858How can you say that? 9858 How did papa propose to you, mamma?
9858How did she look?
9858How do you do, Mrs. McMurtrie? 9858 How do you do, Mrs. Penny?
9858How do you know that some day your child is not going to turn upon you with the bitterest reproaches?
9858How do you know? 9858 How far is it?"
9858How long before we know? 9858 How long has this thing been going on?"
9858How long has this thing been going on?
9858How long, Mrs. Blair, did you live in it?
9858How long? 9858 How much do you think she weighs?"
9858How old?
9858How soon again?
9858How-- many?
9858How?
9858How?
9858How?
9858Huh?
9858I have your word-- then?
9858I must have been singing--''Faust''--what makes you and papa-- so angry-- with me-- dears?
9858I seem to have, do n''t I?
9858I suppose I am to surmise over the quality of yours?
9858I''m right, then? 9858 I''m right?"
9858I-- What if you should find that I-- I''m not-- not--"What?
9858If only-- You do n''t think it will be this side of January? 9858 If she gets well she''ll have to know, wo n''t she, that Harry did n''t go to war?"
9858If that is what bothers you, wo n''t you please, dear Mrs. Neugass, sit down and let me tell you the whole story? 9858 If you had your choice, Lilly, what house would you select for yours in Vandaventer Place?"
9858In God''s name, what are you driving at?
9858In all these years they do n''t know your whereabouts?
9858In what?
9858Is his name in the papers yet?
9858Is it horrid for me and Ethel to kiss?
9858Is it true you are going to try for the aviation? 9858 Is it wrong to have beaus?"
9858Is it-- Bruce?
9858Is n''t it nice?
9858Is n''t it, Ben?
9858Is n''t that assistant buyer down at Slocum- Hines''s, the one you say has thrown some orders in your way, named Penny?
9858Is n''t that what you want?
9858Is that her calling?
9858Is that him?
9858Is the father of your child your lawful husband?
9858Is three a crowd?
9858Is your grandmother just as wrapped up in you as ever, Harry? 9858 It isn''t-- Lilly-- Becker?"
9858Law now, Mis''Beckah, kin I help it if de best de kitchen has ai n''t none too good?
9858Letters?
9858Life is life and what are you going to do about it?
9858Like it?
9858Like it?
9858Like what?
9858Lilly, are n''t you ashamed to torture your mother like this?
9858Lilly, are n''t you ashamed? 9858 Lilly, is Mrs. Schum going to get well?"
9858Lilly, that you?
9858Lilly, what is the matter? 9858 Lilly, what seems to be the trouble?"
9858Lilly, will you be-- angry if I ask you something?
9858Lilly, your mother certainly got up on the wrong side of bed this morning, did n''t she?
9858Lilly,he said, topping her hand with his,"why did n''t you let me know sooner?
9858Lilly,she paid, eagerly forward and a highly specialized significance in her voice,"do n''t you feel well-- baby?"
9858Lilly-- Lilly-- can''t you see?
9858Lilly-- awake?
9858Lilly?
9858Lind-- what-- who?
9858Live there?
9858Mamma, ca n''t I please take elocution?
9858Mamma, have n''t you anything better to do?
9858Mamma, how can you?
9858Mamma, mamma, wo n''t you let me try to make up, dear, for what I have failed you?
9858Mamma, why did n''t you wake me? 9858 Mamma, will you and papa please come to my room?
9858Mamma,her voice directed upward toward the open register,"can I-- may I go out on my tricycle?"
9858Mamma?
9858Manage it?
9858Married?
9858May I come out and play with you, now that you are caught up and I can be your-- anything?
9858May n''t I stay up?
9858Me? 9858 Mine?
9858Mother Becker coming over to- day?
9858Mother,he said,"did you pack my throat atomizer?"
9858Mrs. Neugass, I-- What do you mean?
9858Mrs. Penny, did you go up to see that''June Blossom''sketch last night?
9858My limit? 9858 Name?"
9858No-- no--"Who is hounding you? 9858 No?
9858No?
9858Not Alonzo Penny of the old Trenton Stock?
9858Nothing can ever redeem that-- night-- except--"Except?
9858Now do you believe what I go through with, Ben?
9858Now what is it, dear? 9858 Now what is this nonsense, Lilly, you''ve been hinting these last few days?"
9858Now, Carrie, have you and Lilly been quarreling again? 9858 Now, Carrie, why do you say that?"
9858Now, Carrie..."What have we to- night, George?
9858Now, old lady, do I ever refuse you anything?
9858Now-- what is there to say-- Bruce-- between you and me?
9858O God, where are you driving me? 9858 Of course you are, dear; but why so angry?"
9858Of what, you queer, queer girl?
9858Oh, Albert-- Albert-- how can I make you understand? 9858 Oh, I know you let me decide for myself, but do n''t you think I felt the undercurrent of your attitudes?
9858Oh, Mr. Penny, did you really? 9858 Oh, mamma, can you get Katy Stutz to come in time to make it for auditorium next Friday?
9858Oh, then you''re musical, too?
9858Oh,she cried,"how could you?
9858Oh-- how-- do-- you-- do?
9858Please what?
9858Please, Lilly-- why do you cry?
9858Please, wo n''t you let me off? 9858 Producing?
9858Quite good or darn good?
9858R.J?
9858Ready?
9858Really?
9858Refreshments?
9858Say, doan''I know how things can happen? 9858 See what?
9858Sex?
9858Shall I knock?
9858Shall I sing''Jocelyn''or''How Like a Bird''?
9858She looked-- happy?
9858Silly, you do n''t think it''s Eugene I''m stuck on, do you? 9858 Sing?"
9858Slick, ai n''t you? 9858 So late?"
9858So these are the new diggings?
9858So this-- this is it?
9858Sometime if you would honor me by-- by accompanying-- I-- er-- Becker, did I understand the name to be? 9858 Sounds queer to you, does n''t it?"
9858Speaking of feet, have you seen the show at Forest Park Highlands this week?
9858Stage ambition, eh?
9858Story writing? 9858 Tear your dress?"
9858That you, Bruce?
9858The Hudson? 9858 The comic- opera Cissie de Veaux?"
9858The way I said it? 9858 The way I talked, what?
9858The what?
9858Then Brazil is n''t your home?
9858Then it did grip you?
9858Then she is your sister?
9858Then what is sex?
9858Then what is yourself? 9858 Then whyfore?"
9858There does n''t seem much for me to say, does there, Lilly?
9858Tight? 9858 Tired waiting?"
9858To whom?
9858Turn out the hall light?
9858Turned up, did n''t you? 9858 Voice?"
9858Was it sex to say that?
9858We do appreciate it, do n''t we, Lilly?
9858We''re middle- class, are n''t we?
9858We''re one on that? 9858 Well, Albert,"she began, facing him there in the wide afternoon light,"what is there that we two can say to each other?"
9858Well, Albert,she said, wanting to keep her voice lifted,"I guess we''re in it, are n''t we?
9858Well, I suppose that amounts to my_ congà ©?_She smiled with her brows arched.
9858Well, then?
9858Well, what was I saying so much, Mrs. Schum? 9858 Well,"he said, slapping the side pockets of his waistcoat,"we pulled it off, did n''t we?"
9858Well,he said, with a great dip of nose down into his smile,"whad can I do for you?"
9858Well-- what?
9858Well?
9858Well?
9858Well?
9858Well?
9858Well?
9858What are you doing here, Harry? 9858 What are you doing, Vera?
9858What are you that I am married to,he cried,"a she- devil?
9858What are your rates?
9858What did he used to say of your sister?
9858What did you get in algebra, Flora?
9858What do you do?
9858What do you expect, with an address like this? 9858 What do you mean?"
9858What do you mean?
9858What do you prefer to sing?
9858What do you want?
9858What do you write? 9858 What does she mean?"
9858What else are you going to be?
9858What else?
9858What else?
9858What end?
9858What fumes?
9858What has happened?
9858What hotel?
9858What is it, Lilly? 9858 What is it, dear?"
9858What is it, little woman?
9858What is it?
9858What is it?
9858What is that yellow on your fingers? 9858 What is the wonderful thing?"
9858What is this,she smiled,"a mutual- admiration fête?"
9858What is your favorite name, Lilly?
9858What is your name?
9858What is your work?
9858What is''radiantly innocent''?
9858What length?
9858What play?
9858What role?
9858What say?
9858What say?
9858What terms?
9858What the devil do you want, then? 9858 What then is bothering your little head?"
9858What word?
9858What''ll we do? 9858 What''s it now, daughter?"
9858What''s on your mind, Lilly? 9858 What''s the program for to- day, Lilly?"
9858What''s troubling you?
9858What, mamma?
9858What-- are-- your terms--_maestro_?
9858What-- interfered?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858What?
9858When did it happen?
9858When did you get in, youngster? 9858 When?"
9858Where are you going?
9858Where are your friends?
9858Where did you sleep last night?
9858Where do you live? 9858 Where do you live?"
9858Where is Lilly, Carrie?
9858Where is he?
9858Where is he?
9858Where is he?
9858Where to, miss?
9858Where''s Lilly?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Where?
9858Who Did It?
9858Who am I? 9858 Who am I?"
9858Who are you?
9858Who brought you home-- Roy?
9858Who ever heard of not doing your upstairs work on wash day? 9858 Who was there?"
9858Who''ll go down on a rope?
9858Who''s that?
9858Who? 9858 Who?"
9858Who?
9858Who?
9858Whose?
9858Why are you here and he there?
9858Why did n''t you come up afterward?
9858Why did you lie to me about that box? 9858 Why do n''t they play something with a tune to it?
9858Why in God''s name did you get me on here? 9858 Why not now?
9858Why should n''t he? 9858 Why, child, in Heaven''s name should it be?"
9858Why,he said,"you''re a big girl, are n''t you?"
9858Why,her lips writhing with an excoriating brand of self- pity,"who am I that I should want a home for my daughter, now that she is grown?
9858Why-- do you cry in the night sometimes?
9858Why-- what? 9858 Why-- why-- who?"
9858Why? 9858 Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Why?
9858Will you be wanting this room then?
9858Will you forget it as if it had never occurred?
9858Will you leave her be-- then-- Albert? 9858 Will you permit me to escort you home, Miss Becker?"
9858Will you, Albert-- leave her here-- Zoe?
9858With him?
9858Wooden kimono?
9858Would it be horrid for me and Gerald-- Gerald and I-- to kiss?
9858Y- yes, papa--"Now let us see if things ca n''t run smoother in our little home, eh, Lilly? 9858 Yes, but what about the underwear and socks of Mr. Becker''s that you get?"
9858Yes?
9858Yes?
9858Yes?
9858Yes?
9858You are a little opportunist, are n''t you?.
9858You are the Dolorosa, are n''t you?
9858You did n''t?
9858You do n''t care if I am a writer, do you, papa?
9858You do n''t know-- exactly?
9858You do n''t think this place will hold Millie any more? 9858 You hear that, Ben?
9858You mean that?
9858You mean to say you have fought this out alone?
9858You mean you do n''t see it, either?
9858You mean your sister?
9858You mean, Alma, there''s a way not to-- a way out?
9858You mean?
9858You promise?
9858You remember the night coming home from the Highlands? 9858 You say it has been the rounds?"
9858You see out there between those two chimneys? 9858 You understand?
9858You were broke?
9858You what?
9858You will see to her carefully until I return, wo n''t you? 9858 You wo n''t if you hurry and-- and, Lilly, what do you think?"
9858You''ll be your own natural sweet self, Zoe? 9858 You''m_ Goyem_, not?"
9858You''re Gentiles, ai n''t it? 9858 You''re not angry-- Calla Lilly?"
9858You''re serious?
9858You''re sure, Miss Neugass, they''re coming?
9858You''ve been happy, Albert? 9858 You''ve never heard me sing, have you?"
9858You''ve told him?
9858Your last address?
9858Zoe dear, had n''t we better drive home?
9858Zoe, how dared you?
9858Zoe, the world of human beings is divided into two great classes, is n''t it? 9858 Zoprano?"
9858_ Maestro_--you mean that?
9858_ Richas?_"Prejudices against us, like some. 9858 ----?
9858A boy ca n''t shake off his inheritance overnight, can he?
9858A boy like that can not be all bad, can he, Lilly?"
9858A nice young lady like you--""But what if I were to tell you, Mrs. Neugass, that I''m a mar--""You got references?
9858A patter of conversation sprang up between them, something like this:"Would you mind passing me the sugar?"
9858A window sill?
9858Ah me, the ways of young ones are strange I guess you have n''t heard about Harry, either?"
9858Ai n''t you ashamed?
9858Albert, do you feel achy?"
9858Albert, what hurts?"
9858Albert, wo n''t you let me go?"
9858Albert-- where are you?
9858All right?"
9858Am I chasing a phantom?"
9858Am I my conscious or my unconscious self?
9858Am I pretty-- for boys to look at?"
9858And Stella Loire, the class beauty?
9858And for what?
9858And remember Edna Ponscarme?
9858And so early in the run of"Who Did It?"
9858And then, with her old untrained probing after reality:"How do I know I am not dreaming?
9858And what if he did?
9858And you?"
9858Are n''t piano and voice sufficient?
9858Are n''t things well with you, Lilly?
9858Are n''t we all proud?"
9858Are n''t we, Ben?
9858Are n''t we?"
9858Are n''t you proud?
9858Are you alone?"
9858Are you angry?
9858Are you in concert?"
9858Are you in trouble?"
9858Are you sure her fever is gone, Carrie?"
9858Are you sure, Lilly, it is n''t him-- he?"
9858Are you?
9858Are-- you sad-- again?"
9858At three, it was"Zoe, are you happy to see mother this week- end?"
9858Baby, tell me-- tell papa-- aren''t you happy?"
9858Baby-- are you my baby-- are you mine?
9858Ben, Ben, how can we go home without him?
9858Ben, what have we ever done to deserve it?
9858But how was I to know who Eckstein was?
9858But how?
9858But it''s a fact, is n''t it?
9858But leave my baby here?
9858But take the shine off that creature?
9858But what is there I can say to you?"
9858But what-- what if he does n''t think I''ve the voice_ maestro_ thinks I have?
9858Ca n''t I show you my English teacher without having him on my mind?"
9858Ca n''t you see my back is breaking?
9858Ca n''t you talk to us out here?
9858Can I break through this-- this dream into reality?
9858Can I help it he says she''s an angel?
9858Can I help it if I got an invitation and you did n''t?
9858Can he?"
9858Can take her myself in the mornings, say, and you, dear Mrs. Schum, are to call for her?
9858Can you not conceive of a plight being all the worse because there is no provision for it?"
9858Clip the wings of her spirit?
9858Could you manage this banner, dear, and lead this section?
9858Dared what?
9858Did he give credit where credit was due?
9858Did he use my cutting of the banquet scene all those years after he struck Broadway?
9858Did n''t I read where you got married, Lilly?"
9858Did you consent to this engagement of your own free will?"
9858Did you hear what I said, Lilly?
9858Did you see the item in the morning_ Globe_?...
9858Did your grandmother feel badly that you did n''t wear the one she gave you?"
9858Do I?"
9858Do n''t I give you and Miss Lilly shampoos for two bits when I chawges Mrs. Kemble three heads for a dollar?"
9858Do n''t you ever feel that about them out there, Lilly?
9858Do n''t you know me?
9858Do n''t you like it lean?"
9858Do n''t you want to be exclusive and private?"
9858Do n''t you, Lilly?"
9858Do n''t you, Lilly?"
9858Do you ever think of her?"
9858Do you know that Zoe''s father does n''t know that he is a father?"
9858Do you mind if I unpin your sister''s curls?
9858Do you see?
9858Do you think I''d muss up one hour of his life?
9858Do you think my ambition is bigger than my voice?
9858Do you want a dress like that?"
9858Do you want to throw me back into that bowl with the greased sides that you managed to climb out of?
9858Do you, Ben?
9858Do you?
9858Do you?"
9858Do you?"
9858Do you?"
9858Doctor, do you think it could be that Spanish influenza?
9858Does n''t it seem too bad, Lilly, that you and your mother can not get on without these disturbances?
9858Does n''t the ache ever come over you, Zoe, to see your father?
9858Does self- preservation imply only selfishness?"
9858Does she appreciate it?
9858Does she still keep boarders?"
9858Does she still think that boy of hers is fighting?"
9858Dupree?"
9858Even if I dared?
9858Even if you were to come to me, on your knees, begging me to-- to-- marry him?
9858Ever see such a flower?
9858Ever seen him in''Hamlet''?
9858Everything all right?"
9858Fatten her little soul back there in that sluggish environment?
9858First, tell me, dear, how long since you have heard of my folks?"
9858For God''s sake tell us what?
9858Frightened?
9858Georgia, have you polished the door bell?
9858Get me?
9858Get me?"
9858Got money?
9858Had n''t you better go?"
9858Harry,"she cried, stooping to shake him by the shoulder,"has anything happened again?
9858Has Mrs. Schum said anything?"
9858Has he fever?
9858Have I ever come in second for you?
9858Have I made it clear to you about him?
9858Have n''t I promised to let you be, Lilly?
9858Have n''t you ever had that feeling, darling?
9858Have other girls''fathers who do n''t know they are on earth?
9858Have you kept up your music?"
9858He''s done well in the rope business, has n''t he?
9858He''s had a slip up or two, but the best of us have that, have n''t we?"
9858Hello, Albert?
9858Her mother-- father-- Albert?
9858Here?"
9858How can we go home without our boy?"
9858How could I what?"
9858How dared you?
9858How did language ever come to be?
9858How do I happen to be me?
9858How do I know that I am not really singing to five thousand?
9858How do you live?
9858How does one know whether or not he is crazy-- mad?
9858How good-- how kind-- how wronged by me?"
9858How is business, Ben?"
9858How is our girl on her wedding day?
9858How is your grandma?
9858How long since her last dream of self had vanished?
9858How would the Claremont appeal now?"
9858How would you like one for your chiffonier at home, Albert?
9858How you going to know where her intentions leave off her and your own begin?
9858How''s my handsome brother?
9858How''s that, Lilly?
9858How''s that, dinner at Tarrytown?
9858How''s that?
9858How, baby?
9858Huh?
9858Huh?"
9858I always wanted to be something--""Well, you''re a finished stenographer, are n''t you?
9858I do n''t know what-- never will know--""Know-- what?"
9858I keep thinking he''s over there somewhere-- Harry-- funny is n''t it?
9858I said to him last night,''Ed, why is marriage like quicksands?''
9858I take it you''re a professional, dearie?"
9858I took into my home a bad girl?"
9858I want to ride up to meet the sun, like the princess in--""She wants to what?
9858I''ll bite, you hear?"
9858I-- Not a-- I could only take the room for a few months, Mrs. Neugass, because I--""Say, doan''I know how it is with students?"
9858If you are what you say you are, what does it mean living around in decent beoble''s houses in a condition like yours?
9858If you could see your way clear to let things run on a few days longer, Miss Scullen?"
9858Is anything wrong?
9858Is he nice?"
9858Is it any wonder that my sister''s home- coming is a nightmare to me?
9858Is it any wonder, miss, you got no luck?
9858Is it shameful to want to love?
9858Is it wrong to desire in the man you are to marry that fundamental passion that makes the world go around?
9858Is n''t it queer, Lilly, to feel so happy you want to cry?
9858Is n''t it so, Lilly?"
9858Is n''t that nice, Lilly?"
9858Is n''t that terrible?"
9858Is n''t there a way to stop it?''
9858Is no provision made for the exception?
9858Is that a baggage?"
9858Is that a good hotel?"
9858Is there a divinity shapes our end, rough hew them how we will?
9858Is there no limit to sex self- consciousness?
9858Is there no provision for the woman who has n''t a man- made grievance against society?
9858Is this where you live?"
9858It ai n''t I do n''t trust, but business is business, ai n''t it?"
9858Know it?
9858Let it be the Park for a while, Lilly?"
9858Letters to suitors?
9858Lilly Parlow for professional reasons, but I want her christened by her full family name--""What is your family name?"
9858Lilly dear, do you believe me?
9858Lilly''s second song,"Mamma, Why Are You So Sad To- night?"
9858Lilly, Lilly, what is wrong with you?"
9858Lilly, ca n''t you see what I have n''t the words to tell you?
9858Lilly, did he ask to-- call?"
9858Lilly, have n''t I told you not to talk on your fingers at meals?"
9858Lilly, is what is between us insurmountable?"
9858Lilly, why do n''t you show Mr. Lindsley that poem?
9858Lilly, will you take me to another matinà © e to see Bernhardt?
9858Lilly-- have I ever failed you?
9858Lilly?"
9858Lonesome?"
9858Look at the crowds around that thing-- what''s that?
9858Louis?"
9858MRS. BECKER:"A what?
9858Marble-- terraces-- rugs that slide-- only I want peacocks-- that strut-- and tails that open like fans and-- starlight-- him--""Who?"
9858Marriage knocks it out of you pretty quick, do n''t it?
9858Meanwhile, why not help foot those bills with a little side flier in''The Web''?"
9858Millie du Gass, with the Milan Opera?"
9858Miss, is this lovely child your sister?
9858Mrs. Beckah, how cum you think that?
9858My boy''s dead?"
9858No posing?"
9858Not bad, eh?"
9858Not from smoking?"
9858Now?
9858Oh, I know it is n''t the kind of thing you''ve your mind''s eye on, but why not take that step over into the legitimate_ via_ a big popular success?
9858Oh, come now, sweetheart, I could wager he did n''t see, and suppose he did?
9858Oh, you mean my name?
9858Oh-- oh-- how can you?"
9858Oh-- oh-- how could you?"
9858Once she carried a composition to the piano,"Who is Sylvia?"
9858Only it is a warmish evening, and why keep the sun- child awake?"
9858Or is it that I am an instrument clearing the way for her?
9858Penny?"
9858Penny?"
9858Please-- please-- it is so-- isn''t it?
9858Pouring downtown?
9858Producing what?
9858Respect him?
9858Right?"
9858Sacrificing it on the altar of the old burned- out husk of a marriage?
9858Schum?"
9858She''s ruining our lives, Ben-- disgracing--""Lilly, are you sure that you are telling us everything?"
9858Some day, when success has justified this seemingly rash step, who knows what happy reunion may be in store for us?
9858Speaking of settling up, I guess the missus wants her Monday- morning allowance, does n''t she?"
9858Suppose they did sacrifice for me-- clothe me-- feed me-- what does parenthood mean but that?
9858That little dress with the nursery rhyme on the yoke-- how it was I did n''t get suspicious then?
9858That''s nice, is n''t it?
9858That''s why I thought if you-- Could you use me in the office?
9858The doctor, ca n''t he help me to wait, Lilly?
9858The tag of her own unbleached gown?
9858The valedictorian?
9858Then,"Girl or boy?"
9858There was to be a box for"Who Did It?"
9858They''ve gone in business together, have n''t they?
9858This mediocrity?
9858To drag me back there to join the sewing circle and the local society for the prevention of spinsterhood to maidens?"
9858To what era of her consciousness did their purchase belong?
9858To- day two weeks?"
9858To- night?"
9858Treat you like one?
9858Tristan, where are you?"
9858Trouble?
9858Twenty dollars?"
9858Understand?
9858Understand?
9858Understand?
9858Understand?"
9858Understand?"
9858Unless those roots have a drag?"
9858Visigoth?"
9858Visigoth?"
9858Visigoth?"
9858Was n''t it sufficient that I let you and Pauline settle her personal effects between you?
9858Was there any limit to this ecstasy of possession?
9858We''ll all try and do each his part, eh, Lilly?"
9858We''ve our own cows, sterilizing machines--""How much did you say, Mrs. Dupree, up to one year?"
9858What about the woman who is neither, but merely out on her own?
9858What are we to do, Ben?
9858What are you doing with your life?
9858What are you driving me on for?
9858What are you going to do about it?
9858What could I mean except that you have outgrown your job?"
9858What could have happened to her?"
9858What devil dance was in her blood?
9858What did he say?"
9858What do I get out of it?
9858What do you do up there so long?
9858What do you mean,''No thoroughfare''?
9858What does a father know?
9858What does it mean?"
9858What gave them the courage to meet the years of days cut off one identical pattern, like a whole regiment of paper dolls cut from a folded newspaper?
9858What good does it do you to earn, the way you spend?
9858What happens?
9858What have I ever done, I''ve asked myself all these years-- to deserve it?
9858What have I failed in?
9858What have I got to do?
9858What have you done?
9858What if I were Melba instead?
9858What if Melba were frying the sirloin to- night and five thousand people were coming to hear me sing in the Metropolitan Opera House?
9858What if he only rubs his hands and says,''very nice''?
9858What if my arm is too short?
9858What if she was moving away to another city instead of just settling down across the street?
9858What if, after all, an incredible fulfillment was gathering about her like a vast dawn?
9858What is it I want?
9858What is life, except doing for those we love?
9858What is my life compared to his?
9858What is the comedy?
9858What is the idea?
9858What is the use closing off any part of a house that was meant for light and sunshine?
9858What is the young generation coming to?"
9858What is your name?"
9858What is yours?"
9858What kind of a mother do you think I am?
9858What language could ever convey the boiling inside of me?
9858What mother could?"
9858What next, I wonder?"
9858What prickly rash lay under her being?
9858What right had my father to withhold his help?
9858What right has that little underbred girl to bring an illegitimate life into the world?
9858What was that?"
9858What''ll we do, Ben?"
9858What''s up?"
9858What''s your game?
9858What''s yours?"
9858What-- what did she say about me?"
9858When Isaac Neugass said,"Well, whad can I do for you?"
9858When are we all going back?
9858When are women going to venture from_ behind_ the man- made throne to sit beside, and make you men move over?"
9858When did you return from the Catskills?"
9858Where am I going?
9858Where are the knee dresses and the corkscrews?"
9858Where are you?
9858Where are you?
9858Where is she?"
9858Where were the visions for which she had climbed, spike- shod, up that loving wall of living flesh back there?
9858Where you goin''?
9858Where?
9858Which part of me is here on this front porch and which part is Marguerite with the pearls in her hair?
9858Which way you going?"
9858Who are you?
9858Who are you?"
9858Who elongated you?
9858Who ever heard of a girl having honey curls?"
9858Who knows?
9858Who peeled you to- day, Miss Bermuda Onion?
9858Who put such silly nonsense into your head?
9858Who simply wants her one- hundred- per- cent- right to live?
9858Who was calling?
9858Who?"
9858Why are we here?
9858Why are you getting up?"
9858Why ca n''t you take-- us?"
9858Why did we come?
9858Why did you run away?"
9858Why do n''t you eat your bread and butter after school?
9858Why do n''t you let one of the Visigoths hear you?
9858Why do n''t you nag your father a little with what you''ve been nagging me all week?"
9858Why do you always keep telling me that?
9858Why has it taken them so long to ask for their half in the say- so of things?"
9858Why not go down to your father''s office a couple of mornings a week?"
9858Why should it be a matter of course for you and, in most cases, a matter of comment and even vulgarity for me?"
9858Why should it provide for its birth?
9858Why should n''t I?"
9858Why should n''t I?"
9858Why should you set the price of our success?
9858Why waste it sitting around with the dog and trapeze acts?"
9858Why, what''s one baby''s brain more or less to you?
9858Why-- why can life be like that?"
9858Why?
9858Why?"
9858Why?"
9858Will you give it?"
9858Will you hear Miss Parlow now, Doctor Auchinloss?"
9858Will you-- will you let me talk to you as I would to my own mother?
9858Wo n''t you let me help you?"
9858Wo n''t you permit me to present my husband, Gedney Daab?
9858Wo n''t you sit down?"
9858Would you take a cab down to Ryan and Steger''s( the wife says they are the best for stouts) and select me a couple of right nobby waists for her?
9858Yes?
9858You ai n''t, by any chance, taking the two- five St. Louis Limited, are you?
9858You do n''t expect to see me stand by and countenance your craziness?"
9858You got my word it''s all righd, Miss-- The name, blease-- Miss what?"
9858You know her story?"
9858You know that, do n''t you, dear?
9858You live in New York?"
9858You mean the one with the yellow curls, madam?
9858You mean your mother-- father-- none of them-- know?"
9858You need--""What?"
9858You on?"
9858You remember her?
9858You remember how he used to love to take you out walking to show off your curls?"
9858You think it lacks range?"
9858You voice, dearie?"
9858You want to catch your death of cold?"
9858You were saying, Mrs. Dupree, three classifications?"
9858You''m_ Goyem_, not?"
9858You''re from the college?
9858You''ve heard no news, Lilly?"
9858Your husband has forty thousand dollars to show, and what have you to show?
9858Zoe, I-- Zoe, does-- does--""What?"
9858Zoe, are you real?
9858how could I--""Tie up what?
9858she said, half audibly,"what am I doing?"
9858what do you want?"
9858why will you refer to him that way?
55841''Are not my ideas like other people''s?'' 55841 ''Are you certain of it?''
55841''But do n''t you know that I adore you? 55841 ''Eva, are you ill, my darling, or unhappy?
55841''Have you nothing to say, Bellini?'' 55841 ''Monsieur de Béranger, are you acquainted with that new air composed for your_ Vieux Caporal_?''
55841''Nothing,''said my husband,''but the heat is too great; will you come home, Eva?'' 55841 ''Perhaps he is unhappy,''I said simply;''is he married?''
55841''Very well, then; why is your light not placed as it is in nature? 55841 ''What do you want?''
55841''What is your name?'' 55841 ''Why not wait the short time?''
55841''Why, why, Eva, did you not tell me this before? 55841 ''Why?''
55841''Yes; but why this haste?'' 55841 ''You Couture?
55841''You never saw such a flower- seller, did you? 55841 ''You think so; did you look at your model very attentively?''
55841And can you deliver her? 55841 And did Jesus give his flesh and blood, as he said he would?"
55841And did he deceive you? 55841 And do you promise never to leave me till I die?
55841And does the fool think making a good singer was not doing something great-- eh?
55841And how came you with Magas again?
55841And in what can I serve my honored patron?
55841And is he expected soon?
55841And is his name unknown?
55841And it is Chione who is this famous Leontium, who has made so great a sensation in the eastern cities?
55841And must this one example of vengeance work on for ever? 55841 And this letter, mother-- may I see it?"
55841And what is that?
55841And what will our families think when they learn this disaster?
55841And why not?
55841And yet you are not happy?
55841And you have seen her? 55841 And you think she knows how?"
55841And you will keep the secret to all the rest of the world?
55841And you-- you will always think of me; you will not love another?
55841Anxiety?
55841Archdeacon Jolly observed, without rising from his seat--''What say you to the Archbishop of Canterbury?'' 55841 Archdeacon Jolly: Well, then, her Majesty the Queen, whom the church admits to be''supreme''in all causes, spiritual as well as temporal?
55841Archdeacon Jolly:''How about the Privy Council? 55841 Archdeacon Jolly:''Might it be permitted to suggest the formularies?''
55841Archdeacon Jolly:''Will you accept convocation as your authority?'' 55841 Are there any for me?"
55841Are they not recoverable then?
55841Are they so very hard?
55841Are you a Catholic?
55841Are you also touched with this mania?
55841Are you speaking,cried the young Frenchman,"of the creator of_ Armida_, of_ Orpheus_, of_ Iphigenia?_""Ahem!
55841As the Roman keeps his foot on ours, eh, Magas? 55841 At what theatres has he appeared?"
55841Ay, by what right, base slave?
55841But do n''t eat his flesh nor drink his blood?
55841But how is this to be effected for ourselves?
55841But not his handwriting?
55841But what could take our boy- organist in that out- of- the- way direction at such an hour, and in such haste? 55841 But what good will it do them?"
55841But what remedy does she propose?
55841But what will we do?
55841But where can we get it to eat and drink?
55841But where will I get my soup?
55841But, Mr. Billups, is it all true?
55841But, then,asked Ally, pushing the difficulty,"do n''t we eat and drink what we_ believe_ we eat and drink?"
55841But, yourself considered, may you not be placed among the most favored?
55841But,she concluded, with an air of infantile_ naiveté_,"it would n''t have been anything but a great frog, would it?"
55841By what right dare you to interfere with the fairest muse of earth''s bright temple? 55841 By what right?"
55841Can he have imagined he does not know the true religion? 55841 Can not we hear music and see candles without getting out of bed for the purpose at such unearthly hours?
55841Can you believe that I will ever leave you again?
55841Chione, my niece; nay, my daughter in Jesus Christ, tell me, for pity''s sake, why do I find you here?
55841Cremato the husband of your daughter?
55841Did she?
55841Did you ever hear anything like this rustic?
55841Did you heed the words of the last hymn?
55841Did you see anything of her?
55841Did you see him, Joseph?
55841Did you see?
55841Died of heart- disease?
55841Do I not remember how the news of that marriage affected Vincenzo?
55841Do me good? 55841 Do n''t you see?"
55841Do people take bitters with their dinner?
55841Do we want an armistice, after having beaten those Prussians and Russians three times? 55841 Do you know I pity the editor of that paper?
55841Do you really think so?
55841Do you remember what he said?
55841Do you see that tall, thin fellow?
55841Do you think it is very prudent, sir?
55841Do you think so, sergeant?
55841Do you think, Monsieur Goulden,I asked, in great trouble,"that they will take the lame?"
55841Do you want anything, miss?
55841Do you wish some March beer?
55841Dost eat at this hour on the sixth feria?
55841Even on the threshold of the grave, could not that last insult have been spared?
55841Even to Magas?
55841For what earthly purpose?
55841Front rank, kneel? 55841 Froude, you say, puts the number at 10,000?"
55841Hallo, conductor, how long do you remain here?
55841Has he? 55841 Has not the graceless boy been robbing his majesty, who was pleased to place him in the conservatorio after his father''s death?"
55841Has she ever been to Athens?
55841Has she given no rule?
55841Have I found thee at last?
55841Have you not taught me early, beloved mother, that renunciation and offering is our destiny?
55841Have you nothing,at length he said,"to ask for yourself?
55841Have you spoken to any one in an uncharitable manner?
55841How can a man be at his ease,said the fat merchant, with a certain pride,"if he ca n''t eat the best of everything?
55841How can you wonder that a man who learns such nonsense in his childhood should say foolish things when he grows up? 55841 How does Froude stand in this matter of the rejoicings at Rome?"
55841How long ago was that?
55841How many wounded?
55841How should I know? 55841 How was it, doctor, that you first thought about it?"
55841How, my lord,cried he,"is it possible that you believe that these monks can forward your plans?
55841How,answered he,"how can you contradict yourselves in this way?
55841I am not an unwelcome guest, I hope?
55841I can easily believe you,said Monsieur Tardieu;"you want a pass to the city?"
55841I looked then,says Bunyan,"and saw a man named Evangelist coming to him, who asked,''Wherefore dost thou cry?''
55841I must hear her, Lydon; can not you smuggle me into her presence?
55841I would give something to know what the Jewish fellow did say; do you remember?
55841Indeed? 55841 Is he dead?"
55841Is it not as I said?
55841Is it not their trade? 55841 Is it?
55841Is my uncle at home?
55841Is she indeed dying? 55841 Is she really so beautiful as they say?"
55841Is that you, Joseph?
55841Is there any opening,I cried,"in the tower roof?"
55841Is this a challenge?
55841Is this the great philosopher?
55841Is this the way you go off without waiting for the passengers?
55841It shows their villainy,replied my aunt, and, growing more and more excited, she cried,"Will a revolution never come again?
55841Louis-- what?
55841Madam,said he,"will your majesty pray for your illustrious brother, especially for his soul?"
55841Madame Malibran, too?
55841May I ask,he began,"if a lady who some time since obtained shelter at the hospital, is still here?
55841May it please the Reverend Father Prior to grant me a short interview?
55841Merion, do you remember the Jew preacher?
55841Mr. Andrew,she said,"what should put me in mind of the frog that tried to swell to the size of an ox?"
55841Mr. Billups,said I,"do you know that Ally Button is ill?"
55841Must death resign the booty long due him in order to torment me? 55841 Must pictures of a miserable past swing for ever before me?"
55841My dear, de- ar child,cried Mr. Billups, quite distractedly,"what_ can_ you have been reading to put this in your head?"
55841My dear, what are you talking about?
55841My lord, may I venture to ask of you, do you believe, as some do, that Chione is in possession of a truth she dare not declare? 55841 My uncle?"
55841Nay, surely the divine Euterpe, aided by the equally divine Erato,said Pierus;"who but a muse could thus conceal herself?"
55841No? 55841 Not if you learn that he is concerned in hatching a conspiracy against the state?"
55841Notwithstanding the fog?
55841Often?
55841One word,said Magas, springing forward so as to prevent the old man from departing;"one word Is it yourself?"
55841Or him who dares foment sedition among them?
55841Plays the organ, sir? 55841 Say''st so?
55841See, Duchêne; you have only to go down the street, opposite that well, do you see?
55841Sentiments,said Magas;"what business have slaves with sentiments?"
55841Shall Ellen sing before you, Master Handel?
55841Shall I remind you of Voltaire, the inventor of the title_ The Infamous_, by which he designated the church? 55841 So the sacrifice of Mr. Basher did not consist in popping the question?"
55841Stop,said Magas;"where did you find that written?"
55841The Christian bishop?
55841The dreadful Cremato,continued she,"has he kept his word?
55841The future, father,she said--"the future without_ her?_""Courage, dear child,"answered he.
55841The subject of the picture?
55841The voice was heavenly,said Critias,"and the music faultless; but who could be the player, who the singer?"
55841Then we can apply the torture?
55841Then why have you spoken as if it were attainable? 55841 Then why is he not proclaimed?
55841Then will you say some short prayers, while I go and visit my other patients?
55841They are Christians?
55841They do not seek to emulate man;and when all is said, what is it, that M. de Maistre calls"emulating man"?
55841Thou dost not enquire whither?
55841To dry one''s self?
55841True?
55841We shall be able to save them all, father, shall we not?
55841Well, my child,said the curé,"are your labors over?"
55841Well, see here, Tom; when I was out of my head, did I talk much?
55841Well, what have you discovered?
55841Well, what next?
55841Well, young man,said he.,"will you have some, too?
55841Well,he said, smiling,"is it not true?"
55841Well,rejoined Critias,"and what did he say?"
55841Well,said he,"well; how goes our young man?"
55841Well?
55841What are the most ancient vestiges of man''s existence? 55841 What became of Ally?"
55841What book have you there?
55841What can we say of St. Catharine of Siena, who shares the glory of the great writers?
55841What can you expect? 55841 What can_ what_ mean, Magas, that you are here talking to yourself, and flinging yourself about like a madman?"
55841What could possibly take our organist away during church time? 55841 What did you do with it after having dried it?"
55841What did you hear at Ephesus that has so unnerved you?
55841What do you here, Miss Ellen, in this young man''s study?
55841What do you want?
55841What does that signify, for men?
55841What does the Captain say?
55841What does''oo say?
55841What fool can have made such a lock?
55841What harm, rather? 55841 What has happened?"
55841What have we to do with wars? 55841 What have you to wish for?
55841What is her doctrine?
55841What is n''t true, my dear?
55841What is that you are saying, you flatterer?
55841What is the matter?
55841What is this I hear of thee, my poor child?
55841What is to be done in order to draw well? 55841 What is your name, young man?"
55841What is your name?
55841What is your name?
55841What is?
55841What man? 55841 What may all this mean?"
55841What must we do? 55841 What number did you draw, Joseph?"
55841What possible fault can you find with the Lady Damaris?
55841What regiment?
55841What regiment?
55841What said Vincenzo to this?
55841What shall I do?
55841What sort of men are these?
55841What sudden caprice is this? 55841 What truth can he mean?"
55841What use are they?
55841What vinegar?
55841What was it like, Ally dear?
55841What will Cremato here?
55841What wish you, Messire?
55841Whence these wonderfully entrancing tones of home?
55841Where do you stop, sir?
55841Who are you?
55841Who is dead?
55841Who is her master now?
55841Who is there,he exclaimed,"who, at moments when the state of his own country saddens him, has not turned his eyes toward the republic of Washington?
55841Who is this_ Word_ of whom Chione speaks?
55841Why did you baptize that Iroquois?
55841Why have you slandered the noble chevalier, and striven to bring down his works and his character to your own level? 55841 Why not?
55841Why should he have sent this to me?
55841Why should they say it is n''t true, then?
55841Will the Lady Damaris consent?
55841Will you call at my house? 55841 Will you hear her?"
55841Wo n''t we have a feast?
55841Would John Sharon never move? 55841 Would to- morrow, think you, do, doctor?"
55841Would you believe it,he wrote in 1824,"I am every day growing more and more a Christian?
55841Yes, do you know him?
55841Yes, miss,responded Basher,"it is both beautiful and-- ah--"a look at Rosina--"and-- ah--""Very red, you would say, Mr. Basher, would you not?
55841You are much sinned against, Eva; but tell me how could Lord Montford marry you when he knew his first wife was living?
55841You can not read?
55841You can say that so calmly?
55841You did not weigh that speech then; did not observe its tendencies?
55841You find me very stout?
55841You have company, Mademoiselle Louise?
55841You have decided it shall remain where it is?
55841You know all, my darling?
55841_ Is it?_asked the composer, looking in the king''s face, and well pleased.
55841''Do you know her?--are you ill?--what is the matter, Percy?''
55841''Mid the grasses green, Or those dim boughs that mix above?
55841''Tis ability and courage, and not blood and rank, you depend upon?
55841''What do you think that the brute dared to propose to me?
55841''What will Malibran say to it?''
55841''Will you watch with me tonight, Arnold?''
55841''With whom did you study in Germany?''
55841-------- The Old Religion; Or, How Shall We Find Primitive Christianity?
55841--------{ 403} What shall we do with the Indians?
55841... And who will raise this building?
55841...''Are we, then, to give up literature?''
558419, Know ye not that the unrighteous shall inherit the kingdom of God?"
55841A brother asked him:"What does this mean?"
55841A game of ball he especially recommends,( who knows but there may have been base- ball clubs in Egypt?)
55841A word, and nothing more?
55841Abbot Marcus said to Abbot Arsenius:"Why do you avoid us?"
55841Above stood a sentinel, who, with his musket raised, cried out:"Who goes there?"
55841After a consultation of human laws, after a calculation of probabilities, did not Christianity appear doomed?
55841After a moment''s silence, he said:"Have we permission to go outside our quarters, old fellows?"
55841Again I should like to know what reasons Miss Edwards has for styling Claret''s work,_ La Clave de Oro_, a_ coarse_ work?
55841Again, When and how shall the books be distributed?
55841All this being so, and being one great ground of objection against the church, why is her system so_ subjective_, all the while, in other departments?
55841Am I mistaken, gentlemen; is there not a school between the family and the workshop, the primary school first and the professional school afterward?
55841Am I not Magas?"
55841Am I right in this?"
55841And I repeat, if the standard of conversation could be raised a little, drawn out of the monotonous circle in which it moves, where would be the harm?
55841And after all, with the truest aim and best powder-- who is hit?
55841And as the globe is large, why need we wrangle for a small spot of it?
55841And does_ The Churchman_ pretend that any man in the interest of science or any other interest has the right voluntarily to do that?
55841And he, hearing these words, was astonished and said: The field is thine, Father, and dost thou ask me?
55841And he, what name did he give himself?
55841And if so, does she present it as her own will, or as a will above herself?
55841And if they had it, who would obey it?
55841And if this is the cause of a"_ reformed_ religion,"what need has any honest man of any further arguments to convince him of its error?
55841And now where was the exile to go?
55841And of what use is it all?
55841And then the father replied,"Why, then, do you desire to take away what you have not placed there?"
55841And this Italy dares to demand that the gate of the papacy should be intrusted to her safe- keeping?
55841And up yonder, do you see?
55841And what did Tom mean by saying that"we two knew best?"
55841And what name did he bear?
55841And what other could she hope for?
55841And what was the origin of this institution?
55841And what was there below?
55841And when there is a corrupt understanding between the trader and the agent, what chance has the poor Indian for justice?
55841And when they had entered his cell, he said:"What hast thou done, brother, for I no longer see the grace of God in thee as heretofore?"
55841And who can read the following without emotion?
55841And why?
55841And you-- Bellini-- talk thus?
55841And you?"
55841Another soldier, seated near a pot, turned his head, saying:"It is you, Joseph, is it?
55841Are Oxford and Cambridge silent?
55841Are all Episcopalians feeling their way to something settled in faith and worship?
55841Are not women who have serious tastes obliged to hide them or make excuses for them by every means in their power, as if they were concealing a fault?
55841Are such friendships possible outside of revealed religion?
55841Are the Thirty- nine Articles, to which every minister effectually subscribes, no rule of faith whatever?
55841Are they superior to nature, or inferior?
55841Are thoughts of liberty foreign and unknown to Christianity?
55841Are we so much better than the gluttons of Egypt?
55841Are we who work by grace and merit the reward the same_ we_ that prior to regeneration sinned and were under wrath?
55841Are you a Frenchman, then?"
55841Are you a man?
55841Are you a young man?
55841Are you an artist?
55841Are you going to Quatre- Vents in that little coat?
55841Are you no longer Chione?
55841Are you not already as free as is safe for you?
55841Are you not ashamed of such pitiful behavior?
55841Are you not so still?
55841Are you satisfied?"
55841At the time of the French Revolution the nobility were corrupt enough, but were they more so than the people who warred against them?
55841At what point of the voyage did the pope''s supremacy begin to dawn upon him?
55841Aunt Grédel asked:"But what is this painted upon the face?"
55841Be it so, what then?
55841Be it so; but do these differences prove diversity of species, or, at most, only a distinct variety in the same species?
55841Because she sinks with the art that ministers to your pleasure, is it impossible for her to rise with noble, true, serious art?
55841Because you have never seen God at the end of your telescope, can you logically conclude that there is no God?
55841Besides, are you able to say what changes of land and water have taken place since men first appeared on the face of the earth?
55841Besides, could I not help him?
55841But God answers you, Where, then, is your faith?
55841But Hernando Cortez never besought the royal bounty; why, then, should Fonseca persecute him?
55841But all this while may not he be bawling the blessed truth, and I slinking behind the shutters?
55841But can not the clergy be appealed to as authorized interpreters?
55841But come, where shall I place myself?
55841But come: have we any more weeds to look at?"
55841But do n''t you think, now, Mr. Ned, that I ought to be very proud of Our Baby after that?
55841But does education as it is bestowed to- day often accomplish great things?
55841But does it follow that opinion has espoused the opposing cause, and that hostility and warfare against modern laws and ideas are generally favored?
55841But first, how many grains do you expect to find in this cattle- merchant before us?"
55841But for the Protestant, what apology can be offered?
55841But have we reached that point?
55841But have you, geologists, really proved what you pretend?
55841But how am I to get one?"
55841But how are they to secure their triumph?
55841But how are we to do this?
55841But how can there be psychology without ontology?
55841But how do they pass from being to existences, from the necessary to the contingent, from God to creation?
55841But how is it to be put down?
55841But how is the library to be supported and enlarged?
55841But how was I to get the thirty francs?
55841But is intelligence measured out to them in the same exact proportions and with the same limitations as physical strength?
55841But now, cease this dallying and confess the truth: was not thy song for me?"
55841But on page 166 we find the following:"Will the martyrs, who sowed the seed of the church in their blood, have no part in the final harvest?
55841But out of what was the"dust of the ground"or"the ordinary elements of nature"formed?
55841But suppose you have proved the antiquity of the earth and of man on it to be as you pretend, what then?
55841But the body of the church is a society of individuals; and is it meant that all individuals in the communion of the church are infallible?
55841But these laws, whence come they?
55841But to come to practical results, what are the faculties to be cultivated in women?
55841But what avail the best reasons, were they given by angels, when we have wilfully yielded ourselves up to the tyrannical mastery of passion?
55841But what could the vulgar habit of the colonel have to do with such a sacrifice on the part of Mr. Basher?
55841But what do I hear?
55841But what has the author proposed to himself in treating them?
55841But what if this same power is malevolent?
55841But what is a congregation or society of the faithful under Christ its head?
55841But what is a well- planned and well- organized workshop?
55841But what is saving faith?
55841But what is the sense of sticking a chaplet of roses on the top of your head where you can neither see it nor smell it?
55841But what means were there through which the will could operate when nothing besides itself existed?
55841But what reason has it to complain?
55841But when I first received a furlough and reached home, what did I hear?
55841But when the brake is old and shattered, how replace it?
55841But where can we find the beautiful realized with more vividness, more simplicity, more nature and grandeur?
55841But while I stood thus, the door of the kitchen opened, and Mademoiselle Louise, their servant, putting out her head, asked:"Who is there?"
55841But why can I not investigate the truth I do not doubt or deny?
55841But why seek so far that which is near at hand?
55841But, I''d like to know, if_ they_ did not lift these stones into their places, who did do it?
55841But, does nature when she presents the designs, the ideas, intentions, present the will whose they are?
55841But, have they any right, on this account, to favor unjust and unlawful attempts to wrest from him his temporal sovereignty?
55841But, here, I am smoking all the cigars; do n''t you smoke?"
55841But, in spite of these good and solid reasons for battling on, some are frequently tempted to ask,"Is the struggle to go on for ever?
55841But, on further consideration, will not this be found especially fit and serviceable?
55841But, speaking of this, can we not stop again before we come to Anse?"
55841But,_ à propos_, do you know it was a most happy coincidence that I obliged you to tell me your name, that you did not want to give me?
55841By argument, by moral means, in a just manner, or by violence and injustice?
55841By the way, who is it plays the organ so beautifully in Meadowbrook church?
55841By what power did that girl sometimes divine the thoughts which he had not yet owned to himself?
55841By what process?
55841By whom?
55841Béranger?''
55841Ca n''t I see you laughing behind your handkerchief?
55841Can it be possible that you have no parish library?
55841Can it become to each of us the personal and intimate thing, which may converse with us as a friend while we submit to it as an authoritative guide?
55841Can not our Catholic publishers wake up to the importance of correcting their proofs properly?
55841Can not the millions of Catholics do to- day what twelve fishermen of Galilee did?
55841Can our friend name anything more that can be an object of knowledge with Sir William Hamilton and his school?
55841Can reason operate freely without principles, without data, without light, without any support, or anything on which to rest?
55841Can the laws of science be denounced as forgeries?
55841Can the succession of several races, and their traits, be discovered, especially in Western Europe?"
55841Can we doubt that Father Sainte Foi experienced that charity, like mercy,"is twice blessed,""It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes"?
55841Can you believe, Raoul, that I will accept your sacrifice?
55841Can you imagine any use to which such information could be turned by the church?
55841Can you imagine anything more childish than listening to Bridget''s and Mary Ann''s reports of the daily life of their master and mistress?
55841Can you wonder that I craved to die, and hide my shame and misery?"
55841Can you write?
55841Catharine did not leave me; she sat by me and said, pressing my arm:"You will return?"
55841Connell?"
55841Could aught have been more dissimilar and contradictory?
55841Could military mechanism have accomplished such results?
55841Could military mechanism, when it was no more, possess a renovating influence?
55841Could there not, indeed, be hope for the soul of him whose first thought on receiving the death- blow was to say,"Pardon my murderer"?
55841Could they not put me in the cavalry?"
55841Could you?"
55841Critias laughed, and said,"Slaves have sentiment, and memory, and reflection; by whose permission I do not know; but how are you to get rid of it?
55841Developed from what?
55841Did Cremato leave relatives to whom I can return the price of this masterpiece?"
55841Did I promise you anything else than from the height of my cross I baptized you in my blood?
55841Did Monsieur the Mayor and the hospital surgeon say nothing?"
55841Did he leave Dover an Anglican, and disembark at Calais a Roman Catholic?
55841Did he think that the world would regard his compilations as a faithful reflector of ancient minds and ancient life?
55841Did he write to instruct the student, or amuse the indolent, or delight the world, or add to the lore of the learned?
55841Did it comprehend how much this was to be preferred, for the cause of religion and for its own sake, to former courtly favors?
55841Did it not share the ideas, principles, and even the good fortune and greatness of royalty?
55841Did it not submit to it with a good will?
55841Did it offer any opposition to the change?
55841Did not Christ say to his Apostles,"I send you forth as sheep among wolves"?
55841Did not Molière himself write this beautiful line?
55841Did not the Duke of Anhalt-- swear she was ravishing in beauty as in acting, with eyes like diamonds, and a figure majestic as Juno''s?"
55841Did the monks effect nothing for the good of humanity?
55841Did we not carry the battery at Fleuries?"
55841Did you become a Christian in order to enjoy here below all temporal prosperity?
55841Did you come out here with Leontium?
55841Did you remark anything in the city?"
55841Do faith without reasoning and pure instinct comfort us?
55841Do n''t you remember what Hallam says about it?
55841Do not duties, tastes, affections often appear to contradict each other?
55841Do not we see this every day?
55841Do the secular and regular clergy, the parliament, the laymen of every condition of life, all acquiesce?
55841Do these men, whose minds are so enlightened, not see that they are in the presence of an administration of supernatural power?
55841Do they not suspect the strength of the church militant ranged about its chief, and praying with him for the assistance of the church triumphant?
55841Do they not witness the pious eagerness of the people to venerate, to invoke, and to imitate the new patrons which are given them?
55841Do we depreciate the military mechanism of Rome?
55841Do we not feel a little ashamed at reading this?
55841Do you come and tell me that you are no creature?
55841Do you deny it, and say there is no God?
55841Do you hear me, Bellini?''
55841Do you hear, conscript?"
55841Do you know they could not?
55841Do you not recognize your old acquaintance-- the runaway Louis?"
55841Do you not see whole families, hitherto all but ignorant of the blessings of faith, almost transformed by a new baptism?
55841Do you promise me?"
55841Do you say ethnology can not trace all the kindreds and nations of men back to a common origin?
55841Do you take me for a fool?"
55841Do you think I do not know where the shoe pinches?''
55841Do you think of devoting yourself to dramatic composition?"
55841Do you think that such tall fellows as you and I were born to die in a hospital?
55841Do you wish to give me pain?"
55841Do you wish to have the proof of this?
55841Does a single bishop protest?
55841Does faith, of its own nature, produce charity?
55841Does he mean to assert that their intellectual efforts have been, and that they always will be, sterile?
55841Does it cost anything to speak?
55841Does nature will or act from will?
55841Does not Sallust assert the superiority of the Gauls to the Romans in war?
55841Does not a map surpass all language in communicating geographical knowledge?
55841Does not man himself, when bowed down by great affliction, feel that a woman''s heart is being born and awakening within him?
55841Does not the bird build its nest in the soft moss, under the shelter of the hedge and among the branches of the tree?
55841Does not the secret of living lie in the reconciliation of apparent difficulties?
55841Does social hierarchy, entirely prostrated before the force of numbers, constitute the grandeur of intelligence and virtue?
55841Does the century intend to belong to liberty and its severe duties, to the caprices of demagogues, or would it be fired by the military spirit?
55841Does the color make any difference in the warmth of the robe?
55841Does the end justify the means?
55841Does the pretence that the glory and advantage of Italy require it to have Rome as a political capital justify its forcible annexation?
55841Does there exist a more overwhelming proof of the poverty of our intellect?
55841Dyed garments are silly and extravagant; and are they not, after all, offences against truth?
55841Elsewhere, he asked, is the situation more favorable?
55841Epicurean that you are, will you never see harm till you hear the house is on fire?
55841Even for the young, who knows what its length maybe?"
55841Every time one of us moved, he would try to talk and say:"Well, conscript?"
55841Father Féral?"
55841Fifth question:"What are, in the different countries of Europe, the chief characteristics of the first epoch of iron?
55841Flower of the forest, that, unseen, With sweetness fill''st the vernal grove, Where hid''st thou?
55841Fonseca could not be just; how much less could he be generous?
55841Fonseca was never in the right; for what opponent of their idols could have any reason or justice on his side?
55841For a long while we watched their labor, while again and again we heard the sentry''s"_ Qui vive?_"It was the regiments of the third corps arriving.
55841For example: Has a child been angry with his companion?
55841For instance, can it be brought about that most women''s hearts will not yield to the necessity of praying and believing?
55841For on whom does the priest lay his hand?
55841Franklin?"
55841From nothing?
55841From the wind that sighs over Eva''s grave, comes there, my dear young reader, no warning to you?
55841From whom did they receive it?
55841Gentlemen, is all this what they call liberalism?
55841Gentlemen, what do the radiant looks of this assembly, this clapping of hands, these outbursts of enthusiasm, express?
55841Glory and misfortune have attended him through life; but what_ we_ call glory-- has it any merit in thy eyes?
55841Got your wits again, have you?"
55841Granted that Catholicity is objective in its essence, is it subjective in any of its qualities or manifestations?
55841Had he any settled dwelling- place?
55841Had they been traitorously ensnared and were they now languishing in some Moorish dungeon?
55841Had they fallen in the last bloody encounter?
55841Has Christianity never acted in accordance with them?
55841Has a pontificate ever shown this divine spectacle of the struggle of spiritual forces with the powers of materialism better than that of Pius IX.?
55841Has he any special bugaboo to- day?"
55841Has he eaten out of meals?
55841Has he eaten to excess and in an unbecoming manner?
55841Has it persevered in burning incense before God only, in adoring none but him?
55841Has it since guarded against the temptations which have surrounded it?
55841Has not Providence implanted this instinct in the heart of all his creation, even in the species inferior to ours?
55841Has not that system of elections, discussion, and censure which honors our modern spirit come forth from the very womb of the church?
55841Has she fine teeth?
55841Has she not her Franciscans and her Dominicans, her Benedictines and her Seculars, her Jesuits, and I know not who besides?
55841Has she told me the truth?''
55841Has she_ no flanks?
55841Have Episcopalians no settled forms of worship, and no fixed creed?
55841Have I not just said she is immaculate, faultless?
55841Have not more earthly and apparently less disinterested bursts of enthusiasm caused it to lose a goodly portion of the conquered ground?
55841Have not the Catholics of the world a right to sustain the papal jurisdiction as a part of their religion?
55841Have not those thoughts watched, rather, over the cradle of religion?
55841Have nothing to do with Pompey Simpson, my dear,"again addressing Ally,"or who knows you might be led away to become a Romanist?"
55841Have we not more need than ever of intercessors in heaven, and models of religious virtue in the world?"
55841Have we not more need than ever of intercessors in heaven, and models of religious virtue in the world?"
55841Have women the time to devote to intellectual pursuits?
55841Have you a ready pen?
55841Have you brought with you the picture of which the count has spoken?"
55841Have you no women aboard, conductor?"
55841Have you the means, or have you not?"
55841He flings at once into your face the terrible Antoninus with the cry,"Who shall change the opinion of these people?"
55841He glared with his little eyes like a wolf, and repeated,"Who goes there?"
55841He saluted us, and then said to the master of the house, in German:"These are recruits?"
55841He turned fiercely upon Merion:"Where is the girl flown to?
55841He went up to the hussar and asked:"What is that you say?"
55841Heaven and earth have abandoned me; why need you care for me?"
55841Here was a pleasant scene to open one''s eyes upon; but where was I?
55841Here; what for you send me the pay before you get the picture?"
55841Hers?
55841His last work?
55841Hold up our eyes in holy horror, but let our hands hang unemployed by our side?
55841How act upon them?
55841How are they to know whether we are all swindlers alike, or are only in the habit of appointing swindlers to positions of trust and responsibility?
55841How can Malibran survive him?
55841How can he be accounted virtuous, if at times he is vicious?
55841How can he be received as good, when he has advised what is bad?
55841How can one love a position which is to be abandoned on such or such a day in accordance with a caprice?
55841How can they be applied?
55841How can we be astonished, therefore, that a youth like Görres should have been carried away with the spirit of the age?
55841How can we denounce injustice from the pulpit if we exhibit an example of it in our own persons?
55841How can we effect this?
55841How can we hope to find earnest mothers of families among those whose youth has been spent in balls,_ fetes_, and morning visits?
55841How comes it, then, that, despite so many causes of alarm, in the depth of our soul we are calm, and our fears are mingled with so much hope?
55841How could I help it?
55841How could he better prove his devout obedience to the Holy Father than by seating himself at the very foot of the papal throne?
55841How could he help it?
55841How could she err?
55841How could that society be brought to respect the just rights of the church?
55841How did you come into this room, Frau von Albo?"
55841How does he do it?
55841How from any possible number of fallibles get an infallible?
55841How long has the unholy gift been in your hands?
55841How many gods are there in the''best society''?
55841How many of these debts do our readers suppose are just?
55841How often had I eaten bread and drank white wine with Zunnier there at the Golden Sheaf when the sun shone brightly and the leaves were green around?
55841How shall the books be selected?
55841How should I?
55841How should they when they rate the spiritual no higher than, if not below, the intellectual?
55841How then can he assert the universal reign of law?
55841How then do we enter that order?
55841How then, can she be not infallible?
55841How would American Catholics like to have King Victor Emmanuel and Ratazzi or Ricasoli dictating the affairs of the church in this country?
55841How, that is, from what physical causes, does that order come to be?
55841How, then, conclude that what in thought seems to be object is really anything distinguishable from myself?
55841I am cursed?
55841I am the child''s mother, am I not?
55841I ask, are such dwellings tolerable for the free citizens of France or Belgium; for men redeemed by the blood of Jesus Christ?
55841I called out in the alley:"Is any one here?"
55841I cried,''it is then here that thou art awaiting me?
55841I cried;"have you no ladders?"
55841I had never seen him so sad, and I asked:"Are you not well, Monsieur Goulden?"
55841I have just been to see your mother--"{ 157}"And how did you find her?
55841I have sinned and suffered-- will you hear me?"
55841I have traced her here; can I be allowed to see her?"
55841I ran on thus some twenty minutes, scarcely daring to breathe, when a drunken voice called out:"Who goes there?"
55841I should not wonder,"he replied,"if they had hit the right nail on the head there; I must read that article-- how is it headed?"
55841I still think they will exempt you, but who can tell?
55841I study military tactics?_ Yes, infantry tactics, you rogue, under Mrs.
55841I tell you there is harm; he preaches''equality''to slaves, and what good can come of that?"
55841I thought myself saved, when Monsieur the Sous- Préfet asked:"You are really Joseph Bertha?"
55841If facts, then, of the first magnitude are Overlooked in the new world, how many more will be overlooked in the old?
55841If he doubted the being of God, how could he expect to find such a principle or such a first truth?
55841If in their view we had become so corrupt, why have they taken for themselves the ritual which the doctor says is essentially modified by later ideas?
55841If inferior, how can they govern her operations?
55841If it be the ultimate judge of doctrine, must it not be the authority for which you are seeking?''
55841If not, what is Christianity, and what fate have you in store for it?
55841If religion is to wage war upon civil liberty, ought it not to be authorized to allude to beneficial freedom?
55841If she will not yield one jot or tittle of doctrine, why allow so large an oscillation in forms of devotion?
55841If so, at what particular spot in the Channel did he drop the Anglican articles and take up the Roman missal?
55841If so, how have they become distributed over the several continents of the earth and the islands of the ocean?
55841If the grace itself, how can it be said that we are rewarded?
55841If the senses are channels for communicating thought, why decry the legitimate use of any one of them performing its own function?
55841If the translators knew English but imperfectly, whose fault was it?
55841If they do these things in the green tree at Boston, what shall be done by a Dryasdust in London?
55841If they had a hankering after eel pot- pies, pray, is the taste unknown to ourselves?
55841If you open to woman the most dangerous and frivolous of all the arts, why close to her the others?
55841If you pierce your ears, he says, why not have rings in your noses also?
55841In a few moments a lucid interval occurred, and, noticing me, he said:"Doctor, why ca n''t we have Mass in our church?
55841In the meantime, gentlemen, what shall we do?
55841In the present paper Carlyle has used to perfection(?)
55841In what respect does the church restrain freedom of thought?
55841In what respect were the principles of the evangels and those of a free government incompatible with each other?
55841In whose name has the first stone been laid?
55841Instead of this, what are they?
55841Intelligence can speak only to intelligence, and no mind absolutely unintelligent can ever be taught or ever come to know anything?
55841Is Chione bewitched?"
55841Is The Charge In History Against Him Sustained?
55841Is it God, the living, personal God, who redeems, inspires, regenerates, sanctifies, and glorifies humanity, or is it not?
55841Is it any wonder that a shade was cast over the rest of her life, and that she was never among the light- hearted or the gay?
55841Is it because a secret conviction of her infallibility lurks in the minds of all who are Catholic by their reminiscences?
55841Is it by its will fire melts wax, the winds propel the ship at sea, or the lightning rends the oak?
55841Is it desiring to do all that he does?
55841Is it here that we are to receive them?"
55841Is it illness or magic that has worked this mental derangement?
55841Is it lawful to do evil that good may come?
55841Is it made saving by its quality of supernaturalness, or as proceeding from the grace of the Holy Spirit?
55841Is it mischief?"
55841Is it not possible that, had she been questioned at a later day, in other terms and under other circumstances, her reply might have been different?
55841Is it not quite certain that they will side with the antichristians?
55841Is it not so?
55841Is it possible?--Why not?
55841Is it radical revolution?
55841Is it really so, that the voice of the bishops is of no weight, that it neither declares the sense nor speaks the authority of the Episcopal Church?
55841Is it the brutal level which passes over all things to crush and to lower?
55841Is it the chronology of the Bible or chronology as arranged by learned men that you have disproved?
55841Is it to be supposed that we assert that Christianity has ever lacked enemies, and enemies acting in concert in their attacks?
55841Is it true of one race alone, referable to one and the same epoch?"
55841Is it we who by the aid of grace merit the reward, or is it the grace in us?
55841Is its cause obscure, badly defined, ill- defended?
55841Is man by divine right the sole proprietor of the domain of intelligence?
55841Is n''t it, mother?"
55841Is not intellectual ability a talent, and was not the servant of the gospel condemned for returning his to his lord unimproved?
55841Is not one king the supreme head of the church?
55841Is not science truth?
55841Is not the party under a better guidance than in earlier days?
55841Is not this horrible?"
55841Is she short?
55841Is she still in Meadowbrook?"
55841Is she tall?
55841Is the Book of Common Prayer no established rule for the order of divine worship?
55841Is the work to be accomplished by practices of high piety and by productions intended for the edification of skilled believers?
55841Is there a new conspiracy to denounce?
55841Is there any danger here?"
55841Is this a work that Catholics can prudently neglect?
55841Is this all the light that we can gather from this source?
55841Is this epoch anterior to the historical period?"
55841Is this for want of intelligence or aptitude?
55841Is this really the case?
55841Is this the unspoken word that Chione might not utter?
55841Is this what the Romanists call the Bible in the vulgar tongue?''
55841It believes and hopes in us; ought we to discourage it?
55841It says to every accredited opinion, Have you any right to exist?
55841It was Pilate''s question to our Lord:"What is truth?"
55841Know it?
55841Know you the true cause of alarm, the true peril?
55841Ladies and gentlemen, will you be quiet?"
55841Leger lay stretched out in his great coat, his feet to the fire, asleep, when the sentinel cried:"Who goes there?"
55841Liberty is a right, but, if there is no right, how can you defend liberty as a right?
55841Look at our generals who are married, do they fight as they used to?"
55841Look at this;"and I gave her my crucifix--"does not this teach you to love and hope?"
55841Many sects discussed and disputed: but truth?
55841May they not all be owing to accidental causes?
55841May we not advance the direct contrary?
55841May we not rather say, it was pre- Adamite?
55841Miss Madeleine, why should you say that prayer is better than sleep?
55841Moreover, is it lawful, even provisionally, in the interest of science, to doubt, that is, to deny, the being of God?
55841Moreover, what are we to do?--to what other party can we attach ourselves?
55841Mr. Morton put out two of his fingers with an icy,"How are you?"
55841Must they study the exact sciences, politics, the secret of government, military art?
55841My mother, could I leave her thus?
55841My name is Sister Magdalen; what shall I call_ you?_"She looked up with a sad face, and replied,"My name is Eva."
55841Nay, was he not one of that pestiferous brood which De la Mennais had hatched in the woods of La Chesnaie, and which the Pope had solemnly condemned?
55841Next question:"Has the dwelling of the primitive man in caverns been general?
55841No; not absolutely, perhaps; but how can you prove they could and have?
55841No?
55841No?
55841No?
55841Nor for mine, perhaps?"
55841Nothing?
55841Now tell me truly, did you not recognize me and address yourself to me?"
55841Now, do not be frightened; but I have decided to leave Paris by the midnight train: it is now ten o''clock; will you be ready?''
55841Now, tell me, sister, was not my punishment bitter?
55841Now, tell me, what induced you to act in this dishonorable manner toward your benefactor?"
55841Now, what can this be?"
55841Now, whose fault is this?
55841Of what account are they?
55841On the other hand, what place is to be found in true religion for the_ subjective_ principle?
55841On thy death- bed, hast thou after so many years kept thy pledge and made the shade of the murdered one at home in my court?
55841Ought it not to be encouraged to speak of it in kindly terms, to place it in the brightest light, to make us understand and cherish it?
55841Our Basher?
55841Our secret will be safe with you, of course?"
55841Percy,''I cried,''tell me, is this true?
55841Raoul, Raoul, do you know me so little?
55841Sardian, olive, rose- colored, green, scarlet, and ten thousand other dyes-- pray, of what use are they?
55841Say what has caused your absence?"
55841Say, Eva, shall this be?
55841Say, will you stay with me?"
55841Science borrows its remedies from the sap of venomous plants; why, then, may we not from passion, misfortune, or inequality draw much that is good?
55841See that hair; it is like velvet, and the shadows of the head, how transparent and strong; it reminds one of Titian; do you not think so?
55841Shall I ever make a tragic actor?"
55841Shall I have joy if thou dispense Thy bounty on their need, And if thou pardonest their offence Feel not the loving deed?
55841Shall I live to see true French art born into this world?
55841Shall I remind you of Voltaire, who invented the name wretch, by which he designated the church?
55841Shall blood flow again?
55841Shall the innocent again wander in misery?
55841Shall they pray in vain?"
55841Shall those wretches always be our masters?"
55841Shall we pass the woods of Orrigt?
55841She gave a quick start, and said,"Who are you?"
55841She was an old Alsatian, round and chubby, and, when I asked for the_ Capougner- Strasse_, she replied:"What will you pay for?"
55841Should you be satisfied to send her there?"
55841Since our Lord has declared that it is the''_ poor_ who are blessed,''and he himself asks,''How can ye believe, ye who receive honor one of another?''
55841Slowly, however, they are beginning to ask themselves the question which they should have asked in the beginning,"How shall it grow without a root?"
55841Sometimes I imagined she would cry out,"O Joseph what are you thinking of?
55841Spain groans beneath the yoke of the Saracen: would you not rather choose to be the deliverers of a great nation than the ruin of this fair country?"
55841Speaking of Dolickem reminds me of Basher and his heroic sacrifice, about which I was speaking, was I not?
55841Success must therefore follow our efforts; for if God is for us, who can withstand us?
55841Such authors as M. Quinet find material here for their eloquence,(?)
55841Suddenly she turned upon him with the question:{ 814}"And is Jesus Christ an inspired man, or is he God?"
55841Taking this view, what is nature?
55841Tell me, can I help you-- can I do anything for you?
55841That is nothing to the purpose; can it say they can not have had a common origin?
55841That one slave, as you see, has got that and more by heart; do you think it has no effect on him?"
55841That will is the will of the creator: and does the author mean to assert that the distinction between the creator and the creature is unreal?
55841The answer to the question, how?
55841The beautiful hymn of St. Thomas,"Adoro Te devotè,"is added:"Devoutly I adore thee, Deity unseen, Why thy glory hidest''neath these shadows mean?
55841The children then go to college or to a convent, and what becomes the mother''s chief care?
55841The crown had resolved to check the atrocity; but how could it be accomplished?
55841The fault of the writers?
55841The first series referred to the very essence of the Christian religion; what is the subject of the second?
55841The fourth was:"Is brass the product of indigenous industry, the result of a violent conquest, or the effect of new commercial relations?"
55841The guards at the French gate raised the drawbridge, and the old watchmaker said:"You have seen him?"
55841The ideas must be real, and therefore being; and what is perfect, universal, immutable, eternal, real and necessary being but God?
55841The impetus once given, one must reach the goal; otherwise, who can say how low one may fall?"
55841The men seeing me approach, looked distrustfully at me, as if to say:"Does_ he_ want some of our beef?
55841The night was clear, and as we approached the bivouac, the sentry challenged:"Who goes there?"
55841The old man asked:"You are rejoining your corps?"
55841The old man looked at him in astonishment, and asked,"Didst thou place them there?"
55841The old man, in a moment, continued his train of questions:"You were wounded?"
55841The princess was so struck by it that she went up to her, and said by impulse,"Madam, were you not a religious?"
55841The question put to us a few years since, with a smile of mixed incredulity and pity,"Do_ you_ believe that this country will ever become Catholic?"
55841The question was, did Las Casas, in 1517, recommend the importation of negroes?
55841The question, therefore, as between Christians, narrows itself to the simple issue, Which is the old religion, and what was primitive Christianity?
55841The same as in men?
55841The sergeant gazed at me and, seeing that I was yet so young, said kindly:"What is the matter with you, conscript?"
55841The surgeon unwound the bandage, and asked:"Have you the cross?"
55841The world demands liberty, but what avails a false and impracticable liberty?
55841The writer will be told, You forsake us; you are a Catholic in spirit and intention, why not be wholly a Catholic?
55841Their heroes are never wrong; for what hero in biography or romance can ever be wrong?
55841Then I said:"Do you think, Aunt Grédel, that I would be capable of giving a gilt watch to one whom I love better than my own life?
55841Then it is nothing, is unreal, a nullity, and how then can it ever be a force, or even an instrument of force?
55841Then still again, what are you who make the denial?
55841Then the story was true?"
55841Then they would ask themselves, What motive can these Catholics have to wish us so fervently to become as they are?
55841Then we may suppose her rhapsodies referred to the new sect?"
55841Then what excuse could she frame for intruding?
55841Then who will do the work?"
55841Then, as if awakening from a horrible dream, I cried:"But shall I not see Catharine again?"
55841There was the church, too, with its altars and flowers; who would tend them?
55841They replied at once, Eh, Monsieur Goulden, the young man is lame; why speak of him?
55841Think you that at once you will change them into thoroughly faithful Christians?
55841Think you that there is on earth another place so blessed and joyful as this?
55841Third question:"What relations are there between the men to whom we owe the megalithic monuments, and those who formed the lake dwellings?"
55841This miserable existence, so full of pain and suffering?
55841This sight roused the quartermaster''s indignation, and he cried:{ 741}"On what authority do you commit this pillage?"
55841To attack the vices, meannesses, and misdeeds of the time, must they not know them, and by their own knowledge?
55841To please the libertines?
55841To what end?
55841To whom are we to look for the realization of the good Abbé''s plan in our country?
55841Turning his eyes suddenly upon?
55841Two or three of the soldiers rose and left the room, and the fat landlord said:"You do not perhaps know that the large hall is on the Rue de Tilly?"
55841Undeniably she violates the holiest of obligations; but have you not yourselves been blind and guilty?
55841Undoubtedly, every man has the right to interrogate"every accredited_ opinion_"and to demand of it,"Have you any right to exist?
55841Was England, then, in error?
55841Was he afraid of ridicule or was he really convinced in making this concession?
55841Was he not a liberal in politics, a friend of liberty, an admirer of American republicanism?
55841Was it aware of the cause of this unusual kindliness of feeling?
55841Was it his precipitancy of action in the measure?
55841Was it marked by a buoy?
55841Was it not Miriam, the sister of Moses, who taught music and sacred canticles to the young Israelites?
55841Was it not most opportune, then, to enlighten still more and at once a public whose_ furore_ had but just died away?
55841Was it not possible to bridge across that chasm?
55841Was it not rather the traditions of Charlemagne it proposed to conform with, and was it not to prove a veritable Eldorado for Christian beliefs?
55841Was it not she who inspired his wondrous creations with their irresistible charm?
55841Was it not the mother of Samuel who proclaimed God the Lord of knowledge and the Giver of understanding?
55841Was it pre- Lutheran?
55841Was it quicker or slower in a heavy sea?
55841Was it to follow the example set by its predecessor, and was the world to behold for the second time the papacy closely guarded by_ gens d''armes_?
55841Was n''t it an excellent pun?
55841Was not the government of the church, in the early ages, the result of the free choice of the faithful?
55841Was not this enough?
55841Was she not his soul of all other performers in the operas?
55841Was the Median pea- fowl, we wonder, a more costly luxury than woodcock, or the Sicilian lamprey worse than Spanish mackerel?
55841Was the archdeacon quite sure that low- churchmen were the real or sole offenders?
55841Was this the real aim of the Paris Congress?
55841We complain of the vanity of women, of their luxury and coquetry; but for what else do we prepare them, what else do we inculcate in their education?
55841We hear it sometimes asked,"Why does the Catholic Church have so many canonizations, jubilees, and religious displays?"
55841We may have some great trials together-- who knows?
55841We wonder what learned and sincere Protestants, such as M. Guizot, think in their hearts of these bloody pages of their ancestors?
55841Well, are you God?
55841Well, what has geology done?
55841Were all the monks in pursuit of a purely contemplative life?
55841Were not respect for human liberty, love of justice, and opposition to tyranny and barbarity, the glory and actual essence of Christian belief?
55841Were there no founders of cities, no evangelizers of savages?
55841Were there no teachers, no benefactors of the poor, no cultivators of deserts, and woods, and wildernesses amongst them?
55841Were they to sacrifice to their religious faith that political faith just born within them?
55841What answer will the two hundred millions of Roman Catholics return?
55841What are the facts in their established order?
55841What are the friends of religion to do, when its enemies are so active?
55841What are the thrones of the universe compared to that last place?"
55841What are the words with which the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries achieved their success?
55841What are we thinking of?
55841What are you, then, I ask once more?
55841What are you, then?
55841What better could he do than seek refuge from detraction in the very bosom of the church?
55841What better spot for a convent of_ expiation_ than that consecrated by such memories-- that in which such innocent victims had suffered?
55841What can have made him think that our Episcopal Church is not true?
55841What can he mean?"
55841What can it mean?"
55841What can make a book more attractive than fine engravings?
55841What care I for the seasons now?
55841What contradiction and surprise but can be looked for nowadays?
55841What could the colonel do?
55841What defects does she blame?
55841What did Las Casas admit?
55841What did it mean?
55841What did it originally mean, and what does it mean now?
55841What did these fervent and sincere Christians, animated by a firm resolve, propose to do?
55841What directions are given for dress?
55841What do I say?
55841What do we gain by rejecting this definition, and defining it to be the word in a sentence that asserts?
55841What do we see before us but ruin?
55841What do we see in the first?
55841What do you say to that?
55841What do you say?
55841What do you take me for, sir?"
55841What do you think of that as a specimen of argument?
55841What does it mean now?
55841What facts has it observed and analyzed that warrant this conclusion against the Adamic origin of all men?
55841What general view of religion or of science does he seek to bring out, illustrate, or establish?
55841What harm, then, does the church do us when she presents us infallibly that truth which the mind needs for its support?
55841What has taken place in this dark workshop, in this hell, precocious but not the less hopeless?
55841What has the eighteenth century done?
55841What have they on the other?
55841What have you been doing since?"
55841What have you proved yourself?
55841What have you to do with who raised them or who destroyed them?"
55841What if you are hungry?
55841What is a well- appointed workshop?
55841What is approaching?
55841What is demanded of it not for its good, or that is not demanded by the very law of life itself?
55841What is gained by calling adjectives and adverbs_ modifiers_, a name appropriate to adverbs only?
55841What is here that does more than_ carry_, so to say, the great mystery round which they cluster?
55841What is it in itself, apart from its application, or the manner of its use?
55841What is it that is to come hereafter that makes us shudder at the mere thought of death?
55841What is passing here?
55841What is that Word Chione has offended?
55841What is that something?
55841What is that sound of hymns coming down the street?
55841What is that you are saying to relieve your mind?
55841What is that you say?
55841What is the character of the life born of this communion in God?
55841What is the chief end of one aspiring to be a queen in American society?
55841What is the effect, then, of this false estimate of men and things?
55841What is the meaning of this altered tone?
55841What is the mind without truth, or intelligence in which nothing real is grasped?
55841What is the natural consequence of this state of things?
55841What is the_ differentia_ of that faith which really justifies?
55841What is there to substitute in its stead?
55841What is this but the absolute egoism of Fichte?
55841What is this life to which we attach so great a price?
55841What is your name?"
55841What more do you want, Josephel?"
55841What more was desired?
55841What need was there to smash it?
55841What parish would miss fifty dollars?
55841What pleasure will you find in such reading?
55841What possessed you to come out here to a city of the past?
55841What priest or people begrudge it for so good a purpose?
55841What relation do they bear to purpose, to the fulfilment of intention, to the discharge of function?"
55841What right has the Italian kingdom to the Roman territory?
55841What science brings so much out of so little?
55841What sense can be given them?
55841What should I do?
55841What sort of man can he be who will persuade his fellow- creatures to enter into an engagement of this kind?
55841What thence?
55841What think you?
55841What thinks the world of the high Anglican position at the present day?
55841What was that probation?
55841What was that?"
55841What was the first thing you did with it?"
55841What was to prevent them from being both Catholic and liberals?
55841What were they?
55841What will happen when the boundaries are broken through?
55841What would appear on the other side?
55841What would he have said of the female writers of our own day?
55841What would you have them do?
55841What, in fact, is a nation but a great community of sufferings, miseries, weaknesses, and maladies of mind and body?
55841What, then, does he to whom belongs the wisdom and the power think on this subject?
55841What, then, does it lack?
55841What?
55841Whatever has turned his head to Papacy?
55841When I had knelt above an hour, she turned fiercely round, and said"Are you still there?
55841When I remember all my days, And note what blessings each displays, What words can speak my grateful praise?
55841When did it arise?
55841When he had departed to do so, she turned to Lotis, and said earnestly:{ 812}"Lotis, when you return to Athens, will you do me a favor?"
55841When or where did a Catholic ever"understand"the works of a Protestant in a Catholic sense?
55841When people ask_ me_ for anything, do you know, I do not even dare to refuse them?
55841When will I obtain the strength to look at thy earnest work?
55841Whence came the idea of inducing any one to sign this infernal compact?
55841Where and how begin life again under a new aspect?
55841Where are they to- day for the people of our great cities?
55841Where did Dr. Lord learn that patricians and nobles are synonymous terms?
55841Where do you see peace, order, or prosperity?
55841Where does she live?"
55841Where has he lived, and how, until now?"
55841Where has science done this?
55841Where in the world are you taking us, conductor?
55841Where shall a woman find consolation?
55841Where shall we find them and how shall we recognize them?
55841Where should she rest her weary head?
55841Where was I?
55841Where, then, is the evil, and in what consists the damage done to our nature by original sin?
55841Where, then, will you find the fire of charity?"
55841Where?
55841Which are they?
55841Which is to gain the day, science or the soul?
55841Which is yours?
55841Which shall win the victory?
55841Who believes, or has believed, that Demosthenes''Philippics are more brilliant than his De Corona?
55841Who brought those flowers?"
55841Who can read these spoken thoughts, spoken rather to God than to man, and doubt him still?
55841Who do you think it was?"
55841Who does not know that Elpicia( the wife of Boëthius) composed hymns adopted by the Roman liturgy?
55841Who does not see that we verge on socialism at present?
55841Who else could have lifted these immense stones?
55841Who ever said it did?"
55841Who has not, in fancy, at least, sat down to rest under the shadow of her forests and her laws?
55841Who is the painter who executed the picture of which you have spoken?"
55841Who knows?
55841Who objects to give it?
55841Who raised these walls, Magas?"
55841Who wanted it?
55841Who was its author?
55841Who will offer to her intelligence the rightful satisfaction it demands, and prevent her from feeling that she is a mere domestic drudge?
55841Who will trouble themselves about them?"
55841Who would complain of such a change?
55841Whom can it terrify by its temerity?
55841Whom does he bless?
55841Whom shall we have to work for us, when the slave thinks himself as good as his master?"
55841Why are there so many corrupt publications?
55841Why are you here alone, and miserable?''
55841Why attempt to wrest from the Catholic Church the rights to which she lays claim?
55841Why be so dishonest to yourselves as to refuse to see that which is quite evident to every one else?
55841Why beset her with invidious questions and excite captious quarrels?
55841Why cling to that fiction?
55841Why did Magas turn pale as he said so?
55841Why did her thoughts perpetually dwell on Magas as the only one who understood her, the sole being on earth who could appreciate her?
55841Why did you leave without telling me you were going?"
55841Why do n''t they make soldiers go on foot?"
55841Why do n''t you answer me, conductor?
55841Why do we so cling to it, and fear more to lose it than aught else in the world?
55841Why does not Mr. Alger ask himself the reason of this increasing immorality, and the diminution of the number of marriages?
55841Why else did she send me to you?"
55841Why have those causes been so combined?
55841Why have you called the human soul the divine image, if it is not capable of happiness?"
55841Why have you fired all hearts, in speaking to them of an indwelling God, who is to restore all things to more than primitive order and happiness?
55841Why instruct through the ear and not through the eye?
55841Why is this?
55841Why not write a tract, or a good article for a Catholic paper?
55841Why not, then, conclude that all the languages of mankind, extinct or extant, have sprung from one common original?
55841Why overtly batter its walls?
55841Why seek to change that which has always been?
55841Why shall the terrible accuser, who has the misery of thousands on his soul, return?"
55841Why should a reconciliation be at present peculiarly difficult and embarrassing?
55841Why should the church not be so?
55841Why then should we not leave to these missionaries the task in which they have made such satisfactory progress?
55841Why these onslaughts on Christianity?
55841Why thus retard our journey?
55841Why was it given to them?
55841Why wonder at all I have implied?
55841Why, he asks, should the church be so unswerving under one aspect, yet so pliant under another?
55841Why, if the deliverer is here, is he not announced?"
55841Why, then, did she hover around her destruction, as a moth hovers around the candle?
55841Why?
55841Why?
55841Will he say this is all philosophy can give?
55841Will it do for us to sit down and express our longings for the good old times when there were no printed books?
55841Will you let me put this around you?"
55841Will you lose the prize fame holds out?
55841Will you sacrifice my love, my hope, my happiness, for a scruple?''
55841Will you spend your life whining out loverlike complaints, like some silly Damon of his cruel Doris or Phillis?
55841Will you take some tea, ma''am?
55841Wilt thou now forsake him, to follow thy own passion?"
55841With a curious mixture of hardness, astonishment, and anger, he finally broke out into the words:"Whom do I see here?
55841Without religion, and above all, without Christianity, where is the remedy for all these evils, the consolation for all these misfortunes?
55841Would Magas give it her?
55841Would not intellectual progress pave the way for moral progress?
55841Would the old endeavors to form an alliance between the throne and the altar now recommence?
55841Would they give us an armistice if they had beaten us?
55841Would they not exercise a new and salutary influence at home and in the world?
55841Would you be kind enough to send me some?''
55841Would you be_ so_ cruel?
55841Would you master that task?
55841Would your learned critics change Gluck''s_ Armida_ into a nun''s hymn, or have his wild motets of_ Tauris_ sung in the style of Palestrina?"
55841Yes, you would, would n''t you, you dear old fellow?
55841Yet can any honest man say that he does not know what they mean to attack, or that he can not explain what"ritualism"is?
55841Yet have they gained any?
55841Yet why should I detain him?
55841You can sit there twiddling your thumbs as if you did not agree with me; but I do n''t mind you; for what do you know about babies?
55841You defend seven sacraments: how so when there are only two?"
55841You do not believe me?
55841You hate and slander him, then, because he honestly advised you to desist from useless efforts?"
55841You have brought it with you?"
55841You have loved her well, my poor Aimée; will you not give her up to His keeping who hath loved her best of all?"
55841You here again, old fellow?"
55841You know that pretty spot at the end of the lane, how smooth the sward is, and how gently the ground slopes down to the sudden brink of the Palisades?
55841You know the Lady Damaris?"
55841You recollect that hot Thursday in July?
55841You say he comes again?
55841You see very clearly that it is found on the chest, and you put it on the knee; why not on the heel?
55841You still disbelieve me?
55841You think my heart was beating fast?
55841You would not part with it now, Mr. Basher, would you, even for a lady''s smile?"
55841You, sir; perhaps his son?"
55841Your whole inner life claims expansion and sympathy?
55841Zunnier was wild with wrath, and wished to pursue him to Counewitz; but how could we find him among four or five hundred houses?
55841[ Footnote 18] Liberty for whom and liberty for what?
55841[ Footnote 22: Is it possible that_ waterfalls_ were worn in those days?]
55841[ Footnote 43] Did it disappear, this city of God, which was to be placed on the mountain and seen by all people?
55841[ Footnote 4][ Footnote 4: Does the reader believe these warnings uncalled for in American society?
55841_ Amico mio!_ will you be checked midway in your glorious career?
55841_ Did I agree with him?_ Of course I did.
55841_ Fact_ is something done, and implies a doer; what or who, then, is the doer?
55841_ Good gracious?_ Well, I do n''t mind your saying it now, after what I have told you.
55841_ Have I a black woman for a wet- nurse?_ No, I have''nt a black woman for a wet- nurse, nor a white woman either.
55841_ I am malicious?_ Not I; but a poor, dear baby that can not protect itself must not be abused with impunity.
55841_ I sprang up and ran after him?
55841_ Num quid Christianus factus es ut in hoc saeculo floreres?_"Let us look more closely into this great question.
55841_ Ought to be very careful of him?_ The idea!
55841_ People have wet- nurses?_ Yes, just as they have the cholera or the typhoid fever, I suppose, because they can not help it.
55841_ Si Deus pro nob is, quis contra nos?_"The necessity of a Sunday- school library no one disputes.
55841_ The divinity of truth and good is their bond._"What is this"divinity of truth and good"?
55841_ Which of course, I''m jealous of?_ Not the least.
55841_ You wo n''t laugh any more?_ Very well; then do n''t.
55841_ can_ you care for me; can you give me your heart for mine?"
55841_ you are very glad we can not?_ Pray, what do you mean by that?
55841_ you are very glad we can not?_ Pray, what do you mean by that?
55841a monster, the Duke d''Alba an executioner, and that they are solely responsible for all the blood shed in the Low Countries?
55841a soul without being?
55841and Marie Antoinette superior to them in either public or private virtue?
55841and a priest too, perhaps, who knows?
55841and do the chosen few themselves always set generous examples only?
55841and have you destroyed it?"
55841and is that tear for me?"
55841and what is the republic, but the natural government of a society that has lost all its former anchors and traditions?''
55841are we no longer veterans of the army of the Sambre and Meuse?"
55841are you a reality or a sham?
55841are you a reality or a sham?"
55841are you a reality or a sham?"
55841as witness this unmaidenly step of visiting these glades alone and unprotected?
55841asked the queen, with wondering eyes;"does the hero, my husband, know the possibility of fear?"
55841can I, dare I hope for it?"
55841can it be possible that my liege lord has forgotten the duties of a valiant knight?"
55841can it be possible?
55841cried Ally, appealing to me,"is n''t it true?
55841cried Mademoiselle de Locherais, who had just awakened with a start;"would monsieur by any chance ask any one to come in here?"
55841cried Pinto indignantly,"will you be good enough to put back that pipe?
55841cried the impresario, wringing his hands,"without a Geronimo or a Falerio?"
55841do I consent to sit?
55841do n''t you know that it is one of the dreams of my old age to have my portrait by you?
55841do you say you are not God?
55841exclaimed Ally,"what makes you afraid?"
55841five years ago, and you repeat it now, word for word like a task,"said Magas;"did you hear it more than once?"
55841for everybody?"
55841had repented of his wicked attack upon the church, what would he have been obliged to do to reconcile himself with Rome?
55841have I not promised you freedom if you but return my love?
55841have you heard such an one tell you so to live, as that death might only remove you to a place where there is no dying?
55841he said,"and how many have returned?"
55841how can I smoke and talk?
55841how did she offend?
55841how gain mastery over them?
55841how move their hearts?
55841how?
55841is he coming in here?
55841is it possible?
55841is n''t it?"
55841is not mine so to you?"
55841is not the Lady Damaris more a mother than a mistress to you?
55841is now,"How soon do you think it will come to pass?"
55841is thy justice?
55841may I never, never love thee again?
55841not forgotten that yet?"
55841or buy it and give to your infidel or Protestant neighbors?
55841or did an oracle speak?
55841or did sea- sickness in any way affect its development?
55841or science of the soul without science of being, that is, without ontology?
55841or was the transformation a gradual process, like the changes of temperature?
55841or, if she aims at accommodating and condescending in the latter, why remain inflexible in the former?
55841said Lepré, who had asked the cattle- merchant, in his inventory,"my friend, what_ is_ your name?"
55841said he,"Monsieur Goulden is not coming, then?"
55841that is, all that can be known or proved by natural reason?
55841that some divine hand is pressing down within her the word that is panting for expression?
55841that you will instantly inspire them with a holy fervor?
55841then why dally with the tempter?
55841thought she;"the new Sappho, the Aspasia of the age?
55841was it advising the importation of Africans, some of whom might have been captured in an unjust war, which incensed the Deity?
55841was it not most important not to adjourn, even by a brief delay, a decisive refutation?
55841was it philosophy?
55841was it poetry?
55841was so perfect, why did not the"cautiously conservative"movement stop with"that most perfect specimen of a_ reformed_ Catholic liturgy"?
55841were you a dream of madness, or the voice of the living God?"
55841were you good or evil angels?
55841were you spirits of darkness?
55841were you the envoys of the Lord?
55841what are those which are in the present day so much abused?
55841what are you doing?"
55841what can we say to him?
55841what did he say?"
55841what do you think of her, father?"
55841what do you want, old joker?
55841what else could it be?"
55841what if it has fallen into the hands of our enemies?"
55841what matter, when a brilliant star appears in heaven above us, If the lamp burn dimly?
55841what meets the eye and ear?
55841what must she do to appease the divine wrath?"
55841what shall we do?
55841what was that?
55841what was that?"
55841where will we sup, then?"
55841who will give a legitimate impulse to her sometimes over- excited imagination?
55841whose gains are the most genuine?
55841why are the poor Calvinists to be blamed for following their own consciences, and for asking for a revision of the liturgy?
55841why seek again what thou hast once abjured?
55841why so gloomy?"
55841will you plead for the unfortunates who are hidden by Hergereita in the forest, and wait for a gleam of hope?
55841would not one suffice?
55841would you check the expansion of that fairest of divine works, a soul where God has implanted a germ of ideal life?
55841you understand?"
55841{ 13} The whole question between Rome and the world, turn it as we will, comes back always to this: Is man God, or the creature of God?
55841{ 16} Society needs law, and how does the church harm it by teaching the law of God, without which it can not subsist?
55841{ 229}_ First thought always about baby?_ To be sure, bless his little heart, and the last too!
55841{ 230}_ Simply because Dan loves them?_ Simply because Dan loves them; and if that is not good enough reason, I do n''t know what is.
55841{ 283} Has not this manner of war, they say, ever raged between the lay spirit and the religious spirit?
55841{ 30} If all these names have been the names of saints whose aim and supreme inspiration was religion, why wonder?
55841{ 322} At last we gained the street, and Father Brainstein said:"You have heard of the great Russian disaster, Monsieur Joseph?"
55841{ 356}"She is not hurt, then?"
55841{ 363} Do you not observe, also, how many men mingle with the women?
55841{ 364} What were the intentions of the new empire?
55841{ 406} Is there any reason to expect improvement?
55841{ 420}"Why, that is your name?"
55841{ 435} The grace being given, constituting its subjects in the state of justice and sanctity, what was it?
55841{ 488}"''Why should we adjourn till another day what can be so well ended now?''
55841{ 588} What has Protestantism done?
55841{ 613}"And what do we gain by it?"
55841{ 648}"To take care of Cremato''s daughters shall be my work, but perhaps his student has found his way to the heart of one of them?"
55841{ 655}"You have read my book, they tell me?"
55841{ 677}"What harm is there in sunning myself on the river- banks awhile?"
55841{ 679}"Is it possible to remove her from the path of that Magas?"
55841{ 717} Have you heard such an one, in bidding you farewell, whisper that it was not for ever?
55841{ 735}"Yes, yes,"said the surgeon kindly;"and now what is the matter with you?"
55841{ 756} Where has he learned that the Virgin has been made the object of absolute worship?
55841{ 787} Did I tell you, sister, that the first thing I heard when I came to England was that my mother was dead?
55841{ 809}"And what religion was that?"
55841{ 843} Besides this, why should the bishop feel remorse for what was done ignorantly, when engaged in the holy work to promote the salvation of souls?
55841{ 854} Why is it less womanly to prescribe as a physician than to tend as a nurse?